HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-09-12 - Orange Coast PilotI
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a ' e ears
DAILY PILOT Game Show Champ Held
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MONDAY AFTERNOON, SEP EMBER 12, 1977
v~. "· "°" m . J HCTIO..t.
• • • •
Did Lance Use Bank for Gain?
Area Warrant
-Child Molester
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Ol tlle Dally "llet MMf
Jerry LeRoy Opson, a con-
fessed child molester who fled
th~ Harbor Area before he could
be sem to jail, is in custody today
in Colorado while authorities
there probe his.involvement in a
• series of child molestations in the
suburbs or Denver.
Opson, 46, was racing three
months in Orange County Jail
and three years probation In con·
nectlon with bis guilty plea to one
count of misdemeanor child an·
noying stemming from a series
of Harbor Area and Lagun1t
Beach cases last spring.
He fled. hotWever, before he
could be sentence<\ and a SS0,000
f µgitive warrant seeking his re-
turn was filed by the Harbor
Judicial District Court.
It was that wattant that led to
his book ing Friday in the
• Arapahoe County Jail in
Colorado.
Detective Jamea Taylor or the
Littleton, Colo., Police Depart-
' .ment said Opson was arrested there after a llegedly ap-
proaching a youne girl in a park
and attemptln& to lure her into a
ditch.
Opson was accused of luring
New TV Page
VJWeiled in
Pilot Today
The Dail)' Pilot has two fall '77
ffatures debuting in today's edl·
tion.
The r e are two items to
sttowcase: the annual football
fevorite, Pieskin Pickeroo; and a
brand-new-, up be at daily
t~levision llatin1t.
.l. ;t'be daily televlaio,i guide ls
U1e newest face ln the Uneup, em-
pt,ulzine tM latest changes in
spprts proframmln1, reatures on ·fl.,.. video shows, U1tlngs lot all Mfl Anaeles channel• as well as
§.• Diego ataUona seen on cable
urvlces, and all in blgger, tiiller to read type.
.. You Will find the Dally Pllot'•
Mir televlat.Ori liltlnl the bell
...,,paper 1ulde tn Oran1e
COunty. ltla on pace 84.
._pkln Pickeroo la a favorite
Utit com• back to the Dally.
P,Hot pa1ea every football
~.!Jl!OO· _Cb.cit the Monday to ~fllM!Cl11 Dall7 Pilot aporU nl(el'. for ditalll an the; Plokln .~ contest whJcti WUl nan ~~10.wMb. ft'• on pqe 82
~ name th• Wbanen each E1Mn118&1Mt~'1 Jl"8COll~ · ·-0~
four Newport Beach, Costa Mesa
and Laguna Beach youngsters in
to secluded areas and molesting
them when he was arrested by
Newport Beach police In April
Local police med four felony
charges of child molestation
against him, but those charges
were reduced lo the one misde-
m eanor count during plea
bargaining.
Opson was freed when court of-
ficials further agreed to cancel
his $100,000 bail in return for his
promis~ to appear in court for
sen tenci'ng.
Taylor said Opson was not
booked in connection with the
Littleton incident. He said Opson,
who has a lengthy criminal rec·
ord, is being held on the Harbor
court warrant pending extradi-
tion.
But the Colorado lawman said
Opson is a suspect in "several"
child molestations that have oc-
curred in the south metro Denver
area during the summer .
Opson fled the Harbor Area
just before he was to have been
sentenced on July 12. That sen-
tencing was the subject of some
controversy as local parents
groups petitioned the court to
have Opson committed to a stale
facility as a mentally disturbed
sex offender.
Heart Attack
'No Reason
To Quit Sex'
COPENHAGEN, Denmark
CAP> -If you can take a brlllk
one-hour walk covering two to
three miles or climb five flilhta
of stairs with no trouble, then you
can meet the physical demands
of sex, a F1Mi1h doctor reporta.
Cardlologlst Dr. JCarl
Saunamaekl, who works at
Copenhagen's NaUonal Hoapital,
1ave bil advice ln an article in a
physleal traininC club Journal ol
the Danllh heart disease ~la·
Uon.
He aald bavln1 • heart attuk 1J no reuon \0 1lve up aex. The
widespread tear of 1ufferln1
another au.ck ln the act ol aex ta
nothlnl !Pore than a m.)'th, he wrote.
Ttie cardlolo1i.t ,.., this
abltentlonlat myth JI ·~• In
the Unit.eel SUtet than In Den·
mark btcauH "mlddle-elua
pr•Judtce" and~~ tend to
convlnc• many Alnertcan.
pottcorOnary patleo&a that I '\be
wa,. of sin la lnOUl« heart at· taelr:':
CoMr..-:1 to tM Jl'•dltldtil ¥t..,o1 .. 11••ott111ftcilil
Cll911'S. .... AI>
Going for It I
Carl Hayward mounts an assault on the
Huntington Beach Pier during surfil)g
competition this weekend. This phuto was
taken during quarter-final action Satur·
Diiiy " ... -.., "" .. ...,.
day. Hayward finished third in the men 's
division of Huntington Beach's annual
summer Surfing Championships.
Elderly Man
Game Slww Champ Freed From
B l :J • . B k-. Garage Cell,
Parolee Also Held
e u in rea ins INVERNESS. Fla. (AP> -A 75-year·old man was reported In
By Alt'l'Hl11l &. VINSEL
ot .. Oelly ...........
A colorfUI prison parolee and
electronics 1enlus, who police al·
lege set up a legitimate firm with
$29,000 In TV pme show win-
nings, then bur1larlzed other
fll'ma to stock it with merchan·
Tide/With
DeathWuh?
Huntington Beach police
are tearchint blah and low
tor a pre-dawn thief who
snatched a seven·foot·lona
coffln with brus binc•• from a motorcycJe trailer
parll6d at the corner of
Hell Avenue and Beach
Boulevard over the'
weekend.
Coffla own.r Dennla
Klrbf, 35, Ot HunUnctcxl 8fac~ Hkl aomeone ld the .,., CCllft.n late Satur·
daJ ' illPt or url1 &unclay iri~ h'om the trail• M bat ,aried ta a vaeut ............ a ...
t1llllree)lllla,
dise, is In Orange County Jail to-
day.
Fountain Valley police detec·
tivea who arrested Daniel J .
Portley, 31, obtained two
criminal complaints over the
weekend charging him with
breaklni into a local realty firm.
Portley, 31, of Santa Ana,
already was stayln1, at least
temporarily, at Orance County
Jail, when charged with the
Fountain Valleyburalartea.
He was previously arrested on
Au1. 28 by Santa Ana police, on
char1es ol pouenlon of stolen
property and poueaston of a
firearm by a convicted felon.
Ball la automaticati, denied
when a penon on ~parole la
-arr••t•d und•r such
c:lrc~•· ''TM Orant• County Sbetltf'• ~l and otMr acenct•
b•v• bOldl on htm too," said
rouataha Valley Deteotln
Robert Moal11. who obtained c ........ aPlnit UM ...,.ct.
Ht ..S':Ma "'1Mf, n..etlve
TonJ ...... ,, befu .&Mir ID· ~=•UGe of tb• bursJanu • • tlP :.nuy nault-1aa nm °"" ara Ja&IMul•
I .-,.. ......... Al>
fllir condlUon after he was freed
from a small room In the back ol a garage authorities say may
have been bis prl.~on for 2"11
years.
The Citrus County Sheriff's
Department said deputies re-
leased Joseph Hampl from a
locked ei1bt·bY·12 room and
charged his aon, Stanley, "5, and
dau1bter-in·la_'!: Victoria, 31,
with false hnpnsonment. Both
were releUed without bond.
A department spokesman said
aberitf 's deputies dlacover.cl the
elder Hampl locked ln the unven·
tilated room, wearlnc only a T •
ablrt ud short11 when they
cheekeet a tip irom an lh·
ve1tl1ator to"' Utlca-Orapblc
Arlt Mutual ln1u.rance Com·
pant.~ The 1nve1t1aator told \M de-~ tbe firm, which bad '*"1:,·--workm•'• com· pee1-.. Cbletaa to HamDI fW 10
,..,_, WM ~ be WU
d91i1Wn .. -d91ca •••Mini
ca.-.b)'lbelGDJ or
TM •P*•man said a deputy
Hat to la...uiate ••••ay
mahllmi we1f t014{l:Jl'tll••
tllt7 Jad't ---. ,..,_,, un. n. -..., ,.
tW'Dlll(IM~~tbe
Fraud
Report
Studied
WASIUNGTON (AP> -The
Justice Department's criminal
fraud division is studying a re-
port by the comptroller or the
currency which reportedly shows
that Bert Lance widely used
bank-owned aircraft for family
and political purposes.
A spokesman for the Justice
Department confirmed Sunday
that the division received the
study. But· he said its referral
·was r outin e and did n ot
necessarily indicate there would
be any prosecution.
P resident Carter, meanwhile,
was said to be considering the
LANCE CASE REFLECTS
ON CARTER-Edttorlal, A6
postponement until next week ot
. a news·conference which almost
certainly would be focused on the
financial affairs of his budget
· director, including the question
of whether Lance should resign .
Press secretary Jody Powell
said today no d ecision has been
made on whether to put off the
session, originally scheduled
Wednesday. But he indicated the
President may want to wait unUl
Lance completes his testimony
scheduled to begin Thursday
before the Senate Government
Affairs Committee.
In Lance's native Georgia, the
presi<tent·elect of the American
Bankers Association said to-
day that the Lance affair "ls
casting a pall over the banking
industry ... it may give banking
a black eye if it goes un-
challenged."
A .A. Mulligan, ln a speech pre-
pared for the NaUonal Bank Card
<See LANCE, Pa•e A.2)
Coast
Weatlaer
Low clouds tonlaht. and
Tuesday mornin e,
otherwise sunn1. Lows
tonight in SOI to mld·60s.
Hlghs Tuesday upper 60s
and 70s at beaches to near 801nland.
INSIDE TOD~~
t
1\2 DAILY PILOT s Mono1y, Sep1em1>e1 12, 1t11
Nudity for Rieh?
Topless, Class Stnreture Tied
RO Mt: IA P • The 'lummcr of
1971 u~ moro h>pleu •un
bathlnc than t'ver b~rorc on
Italy'• buchH , but the Vatkun
maint&lns Uu.1t "nudity rema.ln.s
a phenomenon more or leaa ol th•
~ealthychw "
·'The 1reat ma1orlly of our
~o C•t Ce sts
pcuJ,lt• even today \hlnk dlf
f erently from the hedonlsUc
mMterlallam ot the minority,"
Haimondo Manzlnl, editor ot the
Vwttcao daily L'Ouervatore
Romano. wrote ln a froot-pa1e
4:dltorlal.
"The Uttlo and middle class
Amtrak Eliminates
Northeast Redcaps
WASIDNGTON <AP) -Start·
mg Tuesday, rail travelers alon&
Amtrak's Northeast corridot
between Washington and Boston
will have to haul their own bags.
In a cost-cutting move, the rail
corP<>ration 1s dropping its last 80
redcaps at 10 stations on the
route. However, elderly or han·
dicapped passengers will be able
to get help if they call Amtrak in
advance, a spokesman said.
Eliminating redcap Jobs
should aave the ailing, quaal-
pu blic rail corporation $1.4
million in salaries and benefits,
he added.
The 80 redcaps are among 180
railroad workers losing their
jobs in the cutback, at a total sav·
ings of $3.3 million.
The decision to eliminate red·
caps was made reluctantly last
week, s aid Thomas Ramsey,
Amtrak's manager of stations in
the Northeast corridor. H.e said
he originally wanted to hire four
more redcaps -two in
Washingt o n and two in
Philadelphia In the coming fi s.
cal year.
However, a $4 .2 million cut in
his $22.4 million budget request
forced a choice between redcap
service or ticket sales personnel
aloni.? the nation's most heavilv traveled rail sector, he s aid.
"One of our attempts was to
keep lines al ticket counters the
same length they are now," said
Rams ey . "More of our
F rora Page A J
STOCK ...
"The guy's a genius," Mosley
• says of Portley.
He alleges that Portley
burglarized the Red Carpet
Realtors office at 18151 S.
Brookhurst St. on two occasions
in 1976, taking a total of $2,620 in
videotape equipment.
One breakin occurred in March of that year and the second in
May, Det. Mosley explained lo·
day.
A black and white video tape
system was stolen in the first of
the two professional burglaries.
he said and the firm replaced it
with a more costly color
videotape system afterward.
"He figured he might as well
go back and get the good stuff,"
Mosley speculated in outlining
the case against the ex-con and
TV game show whiz.
Mosley claims Portley was
responsible for both of those
burglaries.
Authorities probin1 Portley's
background say he won $29,000 on
the TV game show ''Celebrity
Sweepstakes" achieving status
as the second highest winner in
the pf9gram 's history.
They said the investigation dis·
closed be uaed it to open up
Fauna Services Company in San·
la A.oa, a firm that closed earlier
this year after two years in busi·
ness.
The company which dealt In
various electronics equipment
was operated by Portley and a
business associate, whom police
have interviewed at length.
· "He even eot a business llcense
and everything," Det. Mosley
said today.
He said it will be at least
several days before a court ar·
railJlllDent date is set for Portley
OD the CWTeDt chart••·
customers benefit from that than
from our redcap service."
Amtrak req\lested a federal·
appropriation ·of $534.1 mllllon
for fiscal 19'78, but 1ot $C88.S
million.
Amtrak already announced
plans to eliminate about 22 daily.
trains from the 120 operated in
the Northeast con1dor, to reduce
turbo service between Chicago
and Milwaukee and to cut the
number or runs made by about
seven long-distance trains. It
also wants to raise ticket prices
next month by three to five per-
cent.
Elimination of the redcap
service along the corridor means
an end to a tradition begun
around 1896, when, accordlnt to
the Association of American
Railroads, the New York Central
Railroad began free attendant
service at Grand Central Station.
The redcaps, who were non·
salaried before 1973 and earned a
fee on each bag carred,.now are
paid $48.~ a day.
I F roaa Page A J
LANCE •••
Convention in Atlanta, said he
doesn't know if Lance actually
has done anything wrong, but
some of the alleged activities
"are clearly not typical of banks
in this country.''
While confirming the existence
of the comptroller's report, the·
Justice Department spokesman
refused to discuss the contents.
But the Washington Post said
today that the report says Lance,
who beads the Office of Manage·
ment and Budget, used two
planes owned by the Georgia
banks he headed to take personal
vacations, to fly his children to
•cbool, to commute and to take
part in politics.
The report came amid new
suggestions that Lance resign to
avoid embarrassment to Carter
and as the Senate committee
opened its second week of bear·
in gs into the case.
In another development,
Carter was fully briefed last
December on the restrictions
which had been placed on one ot
Lance's banks_, the Senate com· mittee was tola today.
The testimony by Roberl
Bloom, first deputy comptroller
fOf the currency, appeared to con· ~adict Carter's statement Satur·
day that he knew of only one
Lance financial difficulty before
nominating bis close tr1end.
The nomination was submitted
to the Senate after Carter took of·
fice in January, although Carter
announced his intention to
nominate Lance on Nov. 24.
Carter was asked the extent of
his previous knowledge 9f
Lance's financial dirticultles
while campaignlng in Newark,
N.J., for Gov. Brendan Byrne.
·'The only thing I knew was
that he had a problem Ln the 1974
campaign for governor of
Georgia and it bad been re·
solved," Carter said.
Asked if he knew or any other.
difficulties, he said, "No, I
didn't."
people did not respond and will
not respond to thia deafening in·
vltaUon to the striptease."
In fact, when leftists ureed a
massive strip on public beaches
Aue. 15 to show that working·
clau people had· the same rights
to "integral tans" a~ those who
can afford private beaches, there
was almost no response on public
beaches.
Nonetheless, there w~r.e more
women ln inono-kinis than ever
before on Italian beaches fcom
Venice's Lido to chic spots near
Rome to secluded coves on
islands. And on some -of the
trendier beaches men and women
alike sunned completely naked.
There was the usual spate of
denunciations by irate cham·
pions of traditional modesty and
police swooped up dozens of bare
sunbathers for offending public
decency.
But one judge in Genoa dis·
missed cases against two young
women last week saying that
Italians are mature enough to
look at b&l'e breasts without risk·
ing a breakdown of morality.
Italians youths known as
"Metropolitan Indians," who
spent the last year painting their
faces and performing Indian
dances in the streets, con,regat·
ed on the island of Sardinia for
the summer and decided that
even Indian loin cloths were too
restrictive.
Local officials called for help
and got a full-scale military raid
that rounded up thos e who
couldn't grab their clothes and
run fast enough to escape
One young girl who was arrest·
ed complained : ·'Here an
Sardinia, everybody goes nude.
only they don't say anything to
the rich people on the Emerald
Coast be-cause they are con·
sumers, while our principal fault
is that of not paying the vacation
fees."
Authorities s aid the raid · was
not because the Indians were
nude, but because they had
pitched tents on territory ·where
camping was not authorized.
~e Cats L~ Water
The turning basin of the North Lido Chan·
nel in NewPort Harbor looked like this
Saturday and Sunday ~ 229 Hobie Cats
showed up for the loth annual Ancient
Mariners Regatta. It was the largest
turnout in the history of the regatta, the
original competitive event for Hobie Cats.
To find out how it all turned oui, see Page
Al2.
Troubled Balloon ..
Flight Aborted
BEDFORD, Mass CAP >--
Two Americans attempting to
cross the Atlantic m a balloon de·
caded today to abort their
troubled flaght. Their ground
crew said the two would attempt
to reach Iceland, about ~ miles
away, by nightfall.
Al midmorning. a spokesman
for the tracking station said that
radio contact had been lost and
the balloon probably was down in
11 -foot seas west of Iceland.
However. before noon. he said
the balloon was still airborne.
"The balloon doesn 'l have
enough helium in it anymore."
said Mike Leavitt. "If they
stayed out tonight, the helium
would cool off so much that they
would be forced into the sea.
They have thrown off all the
ballast they can ...
Leavitt said the U.S1 Navy
located the balloon 80 miles off
the northwest comer ot Iceland
at midmorning. It had gained
about 8,000 feet of altitude and
pushed free of an air mass that
earlier kept the craft bobbing up
and down above the sea.
F,...Pa,,eAJ
CAPTIVE ••.
elder ~pl by bis son.
The spokesman said HampJ's
son told the deputy he bad to keep
hi~ father locked in the room to
prevent him from wandering
around the nei~bborhood.
The deputy said the, room was
furnished with a bed, small table
and a portable toilet. He said
there was no running water and
was told by Mrs. Hamp! that the
toilet was emptied once a weelc.
The deputy said the elder
Hamp! was dirty and perspiring
heavily and asked him for
something to drink and ~at. He
appeared to' weigh about 75.
pounds. the spokesman said.
DAILY PILOT
Bloom told the Senate Gov·
ernmental Arfairs Committee
that on Dec. 1, alter press in·
quities concerning the exiatence
of a so-called enforcement agree-
ment at the Calhoun Flnt Na·
tional Bank ln Calhoun, Ga., he
suggested that Lance fully brief
either Carter or b la press
secretary, Jody Powell, on the
matter.
"Subsequent eYenta confirm
that Mr. Lance followed my ad·
vtce," he said.
She's crying tor help.1 Are ~u listening?
~It's o warm, friendly environment.
where skilled tberapists help people to sort out their
own lives. And give them new tools to handle the.
problems, they thought were too big to handle alone. F,.....P ... AI
SEX. •• It you know someone who is exp~riencing an
emotional crisis, call the HOPEUNIT.
A trained counselor will ~ ut the othet' ond of the
line. Ready to help. Ready to onswcr any questions
you mny bavc.
Please ma"e the call that wm show bc.rsomebody
cores enough to Jiatcn.
Orange Coast
EDITION
VOL. 70, tJo. 2S5, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES
TOday'8 Closing ·
N.Y. Stoeks -.
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1977 c TEN CENTS I
Flood Trims
/
Ar~a's i Water Supplies
D~ERT HO'f SPRINGS (AP> -Soutbom -Callfornla •a main
water supply was cut on when
rari.nc floodwalen fed by a sud-
den desert thunderstorm sent a
wall ol mud. boulders and debris
crasbin& into a section of lbe
Colorado Rlver Aqueduct, tbe
Metropolitan Water District re-
i>orted. <Related story. AS>
MWD s pokeswoman JoAnn
Lundtrell · aald five pumpln1
plants al~ the aqueduct were
abut down SUnday after Saturday
nl1ht'1 lloodwalera ripped a
2.~pound atffl Ud off an access
hatch at the Fan Hills pwnplng
station, about 12 m! east ot
Desert Hot Sprtnes. ey sent a
torrent ot mud and ldon the
size of pool tables into the
system. cbokine off tke
Offered No Pleas
aqueduct. .
The MWD noticed the reduced
flow about 2:30 p.m. Sunday, the
spokeswoman said.
"But we didn't find out what
the problem was until 6 p.m.
when we found the entire transi-
tion structure over the pipeline
was destroyed and hu1e boulders
were lying next to the aqueduct's
pipes," she said. "That's when
Diedrich, Others
Face Jan. 30 Trial
Orange County s uper visors
Ralph Diedrich and Philip An-
thony and three codefendants
were ordered today in Superior
. Court to face trial Jan. JO on
multiple criminal counts con·
tained in a Grand Jury indict-
ment.
Diedrich, 53; Anthony, 41, and
codefendants Gene Conrad, 43;
Dr. William Kott, 55, and at·
lorney Michael Remington, 37,
d eclined lo offer pleas today
before Judge Philip E. Schwab.
Judge Schwab agreed to let the
ri ve plead on the charges after he
ruled on a motion by the defen-
dants for removal or the d istrict
attorney from the case.
Lawyers for the five told Judge
Schwab today that the indict-
ment was the result of bias and
prejudice on the part of District
A ttomey Cecil Hicks .
An indictment is a formal
charge made against a person by
a grand jury. It does not establish
guilt or innocence.
The defense attorneys suggest-
ed that the s t ate attorney
general's office should take over
the prosecution chore.
Fled Barr.or Area
Confessed Child
Molester {ailed ,.
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OftMOellyPfi.tMMf
Jerry LeRoy Opson, a con-
fessed child molester who fled
the Harbor Area before he could
Heart Attack
'No Reason
To Quit Sex'
COPENHAGEN, Denmark
(AP> -lf you can take a brisk
one-hour walk coveting two to
three miles or climb fi ve flights
of stairs with no trouble, then you
can meet the physical demands
of sex, a Finnish doctor reports,
Cardiologist Dr . Kari
Saunamaeki, who works at
Copenhagen's National Hospital.
gave his advlce In an article in a
physleal training club journal of
the Dantlsb heart disease associa-
tion.
He said aving a heart attack
js no reason to give up sex. The
widespread~ fear of sufferine
another attack in the act of sex is
nothina more than a myth, he
wrote.
The cardloloelst said this
abst.enUonlst myth Is stronger in
the United States than in Den-
· mark because "middle-class
prejudice'' and religion tend lo
convince many American
post-coronary patients that "the
,wages of sin ls another heart at-
1tack."
1 Contrary to the tr adltional
, view ot sex aa "one of the vtcea
taxlnc the body and sJ>ortenlnc
lite,'' Saunamaek.1 wrote, it could
1be an tnt•1ral part of the
l>Olkoronary paUent's physic•!
,ellerdle program.
CSee SEX. P••• A%)
rJJde/With .
Death Wuh?
•
be sent lo jall, is In custody today
ln Colorado while authorities
there probe his involvement in a
series of child molestations in the
suburbs of Denver.
Opson, 46, was facing three
months in Orange County J ail
and three years probation in con-
nection with his guilty plea to one
count of misdemeanor child an-
noying stemming from a series
of Harbor Area and Laeuna
Beach cases \ast spring.
He fled, however. before he
could be sentenced and a $50,000
fugitive warrant seekin1 his re-
turn was filed by the Harbor
Judicial District Court.
It was that warrant that led lo
his booking Friday in the
A r ap ah o e County .Jail in
Colorado.
Detective James Taylor of the
Littleton, Colo., Police Depart ment said Opson was arrested
ther e aft er allegedly ap-
proaching a young girl ln a park
and attempting to lure her into a
ditch.
Opson was accused of luring
four Newport Beach, Costa Mesa
and Laguna Beach youngsters In-
to secluded areas and molesting
them when he was arrested by
Newport Beach police ln April.
Lqcal police filed four felony
charces or child molestation
against him. but those charges
were reduced lo the one mlade-
m e anor count durlnl plea
bargaining.
Codefe ndant Marlin
Kirschner, also indicted by the
Grand Jury, was not present in
court today. His arraignment
will be held Friday before Judge
Kenneth Williams.
All six face trial on multiple
felony counts related to alleged
violations of state political cam-
paign and financial disclosure
laws.
Diedrich faces a separate trial
on two charges of perjury con-
tained in a separate indictment.
Judge Schwab set the trial date
for March6.
Kirschner. 57, and Conrad face
a separate trial o n perjury
c harges . Judge Schwab
scheduled March 27 for their
trial.
Pretrial action before Judge
Schwab will include the hearing
Nov. 7 on the motion to remove
the district attorney, a motion for
dllmJssaJ of charges on Dec. 5
and motions for suppreploo of
evidence, change of venue .WS
for separate tttals on Jan. 9.
New TV Page
Urweiled in
PilDt T~y
The Daily Pilot has two fall '77
features debuting in today's edi·
ti on.
There are two Items to
showcase: the annual football
favorite, Pigskin Pickeroo; and a
brand-new, upbeat dally
televtalon llstina.
The daily teleYlsion guide is
the newest face ln the lineup, em·
phaslzlng the latest changes in
sport.I pl'O(rammin1, features on
new video sbowa, llaUngs for ail
Los An1etes channels as well as
San Diego stations seen on cable
services, and all in biner,
euler to read tn>e.
You will fiad the Daily Pilot's
new television Ustint the best
newspaper guide fn Oran&•
County. It ii on page 84,
Pigskin Pickeroo i1 a favorite
that comes back to the Daily
Pilot pases every footl>~W
seaaon. Chec:k the Monday to
Wednesday Daily Pilot s~rts
pa&'9 Cor details on the Ptg1kin
Pick~ contest which will run
the next 10 weeks. tt•a on page B2
today.
Divorce Sought
, ?tlONTGOMERY, Ala. (AJ>) -
A divorce petiUon was filed in
clrctdt court here today on behalf
ot Gov. Geor1e C. Wallace, seek·
tni to end hb ahc-year marria1e
to b1' Wil•, Cornella.
r we shutdown all our planta."
The 242-mlfe-long aqueduct
r\ins from Lake Havuu on the
Arizona border lo Lake Mathews
in Riverside County.
Lundgren said heavy equip-
ment and dozens of work crews
were at the scf!ne tryine lo assess
the dama1e. Durtna the droueht.
the aqueduct has earned more
than a billion gallons of water "
day serving at>Out 11 million peo-
ple in Southern California.
She estimated that there are
about four to six feet of debru ln
the aqueduct's two 12-fool wide
pipes.
"If we can get It cleaned out
and back in operation in a week,
then we probably won't have 'to
ration any more than we've had
to up until now," she said. "But if
we can't set tt repaired by then,
then we'll really have to figure
out bow serious the effects will
be."
The plant.a have exceeded their
deaigned pumping capacity since
the drought began, she said. Tbe
planta, eath of which has nine
pum.-, are built for el&ht-pump
cepecity with ~e pump Lelle in
reserve.
BIKE RACKS WERE FULL AGAIN TODAY AT HARBOR AREA SCHOOLS
Summer 11 Over for 24,000 Newport-Mesa Elementary,and High School Students
Seven Seek Mesa
Sater Boaril :~eats
Seven eo.ta Mesans have reg-
istered as candidates in the
Nov. 8 election to select two new
directors on the five-member
Costa Mesa County Water Dis-
trict Boar4of board of directors
Two residents have liled In dis·
trict four to nu the post to be
vacated by Nathan Reed with the
remalnlnr candidates set to run
in district five, which ls currently
·represented by former Costa
• Mesa Mayor Alvin PlnkJey. Both
incumbents ate stepping down.
In district four, the candidates
are Steven JUddle, a real estate
salesman who lives at 181 Mor-
ristown Lane. and colle1e in-s tTuctor Hank Panlan, 436
Swarthmore Lane, Coata Mesa.
The dlatrict encompasses the
area between Harbo r and
Newport Boulevards and 1n·
eludes the Oranae County
Airport.
In district five, which covers
Costa Mesa's east aide, the can-
didates are optometrist Dr.
Thomu Nelaon, 282 Lilac Lane.
community worker Elsie C.
Kroesche, 254 CabriUo St.; water
•resqurces consultant Gary
EHcermann. 268 22nd St .. aeroepace engineer J . John In-
63Q Illegat Aliens
Nabbea b~ --atrol
U.S. Border Patrol aeents
picked up 830 Uletal aliens over
the weekend at the San Clemente
checkpoint, callln1 it a normal
weekend .roundup.
Al Janicki, senJor a1ent In
ctiarse of the border check office.
said abo"t hislf of those aliens
we~ captured alter ' p.m. Sun-day.
drlk~ 456 Esthtr St.. and in-
dustrial manager Marjorie J .
R ees. 384 Broadway, Costa
Mesa.
Candidates must live In the dis-
trict they hope to represent and
are elected by residents within
the district. Election winners will
serve four-year terms on the
board.
Noted Pilot
Leslie Hall
Of Mesa Dies
Leslie L. Hall, Costa Mesa resi-
dent and a private pilot who Dew
out of Orange County Airpon for
more than 20 years, died Satur-
day after a lengthy illness. He
was62.
Known by feltow pilots as "Mr.
Orange County Airport," }Jail
was co..pilot for world famous
stunt pilot Paul Mantz until an
air accident claimed Manlt's life
In 1968.
He was also pilot for Dr. Louis
Cella for 12 years and new for
1nany tnovie stars including John
Wayne, Gary Merrill and Sonny
Bono.
Mr. Hall is survived by his
mother Mrs. Florence Hall
Birch; a son, Daniel W. Hail. of
New Jerse~: two brothers.
Robert W. Hall, of New Jersey
and Thomas Birch, of San Fran-
claco; and a sister Mrs. Edward
Giddings, of Newport Beach.
Private family services will be
held with burial at sea. The fami-
ly; euiaests memorial contribu-
UOna to the Kidnt)' Eoundation.
Reluctant
Scholars
·uaveSun
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
Of .. o.tlyl"ltetSUff
~ predictable as the swallows
retbrning to San Juan
Capistrano, bus s tops were
Jammed with youngsters decked
"ul in new school clothes today.
Other. older students cruised
th eir way to classes on new
mopeds.
The 1977·78 school year bas
begun.
There was more trauma than
drama in the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District as an
estimated 24,000 elementary and
high school students made their
return to academe.
Many school officials, includ-
ing Superintendent John Nicoll
and Deputy Superlntenden\
Norman R. Loats, wer~ln the field early today for it wu
described as a •'smooth ~
eventful" transition from sun to
study.
"There were a few missed
buses and a few lost kids," ac-
cording lo district official ~ean
Harmon. However, she expected
most students lo be In their ritbt
places by the end of the day.
Meanwhile, the Oran1e Coast
College admissions 4epartment
was n othlna short of a
"madhouse" today, reported
employe Nancy Fetterllng.
"There's not a parking apace
to be found and the offtc:e is ftlled
Wlth student.a chan1in1 their pro-
1rams from day tQ nJaht ~
<SeescHOOL, Pa1eAJ)
I AZ DAIL' Pll Ol c Mondar September 12, 1177 ,
Lance Plane
Uses Probea
WASHlNGTON IAr) Th~
J U!tllCe Oepartmenl ·~ cnmanal
fruud diviMon 11 atudylnai a re
port by tht> c:omptroller of the
currmcy •hlch reportedly shows
that Bert Lance widely used
b1tnk ownt.'<i u1rcrwft for family
.md p(l.11Ul'1tl purpose~
A i.pokesman for lhe Justice
Department confirmed Sunday
TONIGHT
COST A MESA PLANNING
COMMISSION -Regular meet·
ing, City Hall, 6:30 p.m.
TUESDAY, SEPT. 13
SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB -
Communil~ Recreation Center,
Tues .. Wed .. Thurs. 12·3 p.m.
NEWPORT·MESA SCHOOL
BOARD Regular meeting,
Costa Mesa City Council cham·
bers. 7 30 p.m
Mesa Swirehes
Flag Football
Sigtwp Spots
Costa Mesa's Department of
Leasure Services has changed the
location of playgrounds at which
boys and girls in grades three
through six can sign up for flag
fvotball .
Beginninl! Tuesday from 3 to 5
p.m , youngsters can register for
teams to be formed al six play·
grounds including Adams.
Killybrookc, Wils on, College
Park, Sonora and Bear Street
schools
The change ehmanates signups
at Balearic and Lindbergh
Schools and Wakeham Park.
Signups will also be held Mon·
day through Friday from 8 a.m
to 5 p.m. al Cily Hall and on Sept
17 and 24 from 10 a.m. to noon at
Te Winkle Park in Costa Mesa.
Fee 1s SS per child. The price
includes a T·shirt and a tnp to
the UCrAUC Berkeley football
gameOct 22.
f'or more information call
556·5391
Mesan Held
After Scuffle
A Costa Mesa man was arrest·
l'd shortly after midnight Sunday
when he allegedly attacked two
police officers who were respond·
1n ~ to a neighborhood dis·
t urhance call.
Taken into custody on suspi·
c1on or assault against a police
offi cer was Richard Guy Dileo.
.19.of2017 MapleSt.
Police said Dileo scufOed with
officers Dick Rosser and Steve
Meadows when the pair began
questioning him.
that the dlvlalon recelvad the
"tudy. But he aa¥1 its referral
w aa routlne and dld not
nt1c arily lndicato there would
be any r.oeecutloo. Prendent Carter, meanwhile,
was IU&ld to be conslderin1 the
postponement unlll next week ol
a new• conference which almosl
certainly would be focused on the
financial affaln of hla budjet
director. lnchadlni the question
of whether Lance should resip.
Press secretary Jody Powell
said today no decision baa been
made on whether to put off the
LANCE CASE REFLECTS
ON CARTER-Editorial, AS
. session, originally scheduled
Wednesday. But be indicated the
President may want to wall until
Lance completes his testimony
scheduled to begin Thursday
before the Senate Govemment
Affairs Committee.
I.n Lance's native Georgia, the
president·elecl of the Americ!an
Bankers Association sald to·
day that the Lance affair "Is
casting a pall over the banidng
industry .. .it may give banking
a black eye if it goes un-
challenged."
A.A. Mulligan, in a speeeh pre·
pared for the National Bank Card
Convention in Atlanta, said he
doesn't know if Lance actually
has done anythlog wrong, but
some of the alleged activities
"are clearly not typical of banks
in this country."
While confirming the existence
of the comptroller's report, the
Justice Department spokesman
refused to discuss the contents.
But the Washington Post said
today that the report says Lance,
who heads the Office of Manage·
m ent and Buaget, used two
planes owned by the Georgia
banks he headed to take personal
vacations, to fly his children to
school, to commute and to take
part in politics.
The report came amid new
suggestions that Lance resign to
'}Void embarrassment to Carter
and as the Senate committee
opene9 its second week or hear·
mgs into the case.
Safe Boating
Course Slated
For Newport
The Balboa Power Squadron's
fall course in safe boating gets
under way tonight with registra·
lion at 7 p .m. at the Newport
ltarbor Yacht Club, 720 W. Bay
Ave., Balboa. Registration also
will be accepted next Ml>nday
niJthl.
The 13-week course covers
every aspect or safe boaliJ\1(.
The course is free to the public.
Instructors are experienced boat
operators and skippers from the
Harbor Area.
The Balboa Power Squadron ls
a unit of the United States Power
Squ adrons, largest boating
educational organization in lhe
U.S.
FromP11pAJ
SCHOOL •••
Course Scheduled
In Americanization
night to day,'~ she said.
Late registration al the Coa.sl
Community College District's
largest school will be held from 8
a.m. to 7:30 p.m. until Tb\lraday,
with the admissions offrce shut·
ting down al2:1Son Friday.
·'Americanization,'' an 18·
week course to prepare forelsn·
born people for U.S. clti,ensblp,
will begin Wednesday at 6:30
p.m. at Costa Mesa HJah School.
A RegistraUon for the clps of·
fered by the Newport·Mesa
School Dlltrlcl's Adult Educa-
tion Department, wlll be held the ~irst night of clasa ln room 171.
ORANOICOi\11' c
DAILY PILOT
""°':i:. °""" o.t~ ,. .... wtlll ~ .. ·-=~,:...~=.:=~-= =~~~~==:.~= ...., v.11-.. ,,..,,.., ...,.._, v.11 ... -......,... ... ~,.CMtl.4.,,_._,....,.. .....
tletl It ........,.. Utvr...,...,. S.-... n.e ~~~'.'L~~.:..lll wt;t ...
"""'"· .... __ , __ ,_
Hett•.~ VI<•~·-~ .. ...,
~··'*"' ·~· .. . ~~~M!".1!11,.,~--
c-'lff ... L4IM ............ ....... ..,. IMMlll,. Ml ..
Wayne Wolfe, associate dean
of admissions and rec:orda, said
enrollment already bas reaebed
about 24,500 students and wlll
swell to nearly 28,000 by the end
of the semester.
About 8,000 studenu are COD·
sidered full tlioe with lbe test
taklni U1hter 1cbedule1 or
enrolling lo evenlnt clu111.
.Newport Beach Police rtpOtttd
a hiih number of mls1ln1
teen.ager repol'tl Qled by parenta
over the weekend. "It happens every year at tbia
time," ooeoftlcer noted •
SEL ••
-.. --· .. --
Big Belcla 011 Be~la
Balloon
Voyage
Thwarted
BEDFORD, Mass. (AP> -
Two American balloonists who
had hoped to croa the Atlantic
ended their troubled night today
and were plucked from the sea
off the coast or Iceland by a U.S.
Ah; Force hell copter.
The two landed 800 miles short
of their destination in France.
''They had reached land and
then were blown back over thf
sea where they touched down," a
spokesman said. "They are be-
ing Down to the capital at Reyk·
javlk for a meetlng with U'.S ..
Embassy officials.••
Darkness had fallen by the
lime ol the rescue, the Alr Force
spokesman said. He added that a
cutter from Iceland would at·
tempt to recover the balloon and
gondola, but he did not kno"'
when.
the helium balloon and goo·
dola landed fi ve miles offshore in
the Five Fingers district on
Iceland's northwest coast, 120
miles from the capital.
Oil and suntan lotion mix 111 this photo
taken Sunday in Huntington B each .
Beach~oers r elax as crew of t a nk e r
moored off Huntington Beach blows out
boilers, sending black smo~e from ship,·~
stnck.
The landing and the pickup of
the two Americans capped a
momin& of problems.
Jewish Begin
High Holiday Toplessness up in Italy
The Jewish ~ew Year 5738, or
Rosh Hashan~, begins at sun-
down tonight, marking the start
of the solemn High Holy Days.
ROME CAP) -The summer of
1977 saw more topless sun·
bathing than ever before on
Italy's beaches, but the Vatican
maintains that "nudity remains
a phenomenon more or less of the
wealthy class.··
"The great majority of our
people even today think cllt·
re r ently from the hedonistic
materialism of the minority,"
Raimondo Manzini, editor of the
Vatican daily L'Osscrvatore
Romano. wrote in a front-page
editorial.
"The little and middle class
people did not respond and will
not respond to this deafening in·
vi talion to the striptease ...
In fact, when leftists urged a
massive strap on public beaches
Aug. 15 to show that working·
class people had the same nghts
to "integral tans" as those who
can afford private beaches, there
was almost no respon&e on pubbc
beaches.
Nonetheless, there were more
women in mono·klnis than ever
before on Italian beaches .from
Venice's Lido to chic spots near
Rome to secluded coves on
islands. And on some· of the
trendier beaches men and women al~esunned completely naked.
There was the usual spate of
denunciations by irate cham·
pions of traditional modesty and
police swooped up dozens of bare
sunbathers for offending public
decency.
But one judge in Genoe dis·
missed cases against two young
women last week saying that
Italians are mature enough to
look at bare breasts without risk·
ang a breakdown or morality
The lo-day holiday for world
Jewry ends al sundown Sept. 22.
when the blowing of the shofar.
the ram's horn, signals the end of
YomKippur.
Murder Charged
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A 24·
year·old man, Kenneth Alan
Coolidge has been booked for in·
vestigatlon of murder in the
death of his mother . Ruth E .
Coolidge, 45, police said.
-.
utric horror show. It's a warm, friendly environment,
where skilled therapists help people to sort out their
own lives. And give them new tools to handle the
problems, they thought were too big to handle alone.
1f Y.OU koow someone who is experiencing an
emotipnal crisis, call the HOPEUNIT.
A trained counselor wiU be at ~he other end of the
line. Ready to help~ R~ady to a"fwer any questions ·
you may have.
Please make the call that will show her somebody
cores enough to listen.
(
l
-
.\2 OAILYPILOT c
• . ' Lance Plane
Uses Probed
WASHJNOTON <AP > The
Justice Oepaattment'a cnminal
fraud d1v1~mn ll atud)'IOI a re
port by the comptroller ol th
<'urrency which reportedly &bows
thut Bert Lance widely u~ed
bank owned iurcraft for family
JJld pohlJc1tl purpoM!l>
A spok~m•n for tbe Justice
Department confirmed Sunday
TONIGHT
COSTA MESA PLANNING
COMMISSION -Regular meet·
ing, City Hall, 6:30 p.m.
TUESDAY, SEPT. 13
SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB
Community Recreation Center,
Tues .. Wed .. Thurs. 12-3 p.m.
NEWPORT·MESA SCHOOL
BOARD Regular mee\ing,
Costa Mesa City Council cham-
bers, 7 30 pm.
Mesa Switches
-Flag Football
Sigtwp Spots
Costa Mes a's Department of
Leisure Services has changed the
locallon of playgrounds at which
boys and girls in· grades three
through six can sign up for nag
fvotball.
Beginning Tuesday from 3 to s
p.m ., youngsters can register for
teams to be formed at six play-
grounds including Adams:
Killybrookc, Wilson . College
Park, Sonora and Bear Street
schools
The change eliminates signups
at Balearic and Lindbergh
Schools and Wakeham Park.
Signups will also be held Mon-
day through Friday from 8 a.m
to 5 p.m. at City Hall and on Sept.
17 and 24 from 10 a .m ~ to noon al
Te Winkle Park in Costa Mesa.
Fee 1s $S per ctuld. The price
includes a T-shirt and a tnp to
the UCLA-UC Berkeley football
J!ame Oct 22. For more information call
556-5391
Mesan Held
After Scuffle
A Costa Mesa man was arrest-
ed shortly after midnight Sunday
when ht: allegedly attacked two
pohct> officers who were respond·
in~ to a neighborhood dis ·
lurhancecall.
Taken into custody on suspi-
cion of assault against a police
oHicer was Richard Guy Dileo.
19, of2017 Maple St.
Police said Dileo scuffled with
officers Dick Rosser and Steve
Meadows when the pair began
questioning him.
lh1i1t the dlvlalon received the
i.tudy But he u¥:l lta referral
wu routine and dld not
neceuarily Indicate there would
be any J!OSCCutlon Prendent Cisrter. meanwhile,
w us au.id to be considering the
postponement until next week of
a news conference which almost
certalnly would be focused on the
financial affairs of hla budaet
director, includJ.n& lhe question
of whether Lance should realen.
Press secretary Jody Powell
said today no decision baa been
made on whether to put off µie
LANCE CASE R~FLECTS
ON CARTER-Edttorlal, A8
. session, originally scheduled
Wednesday. But be indicated the
President may want to wait unW
Lance completes bis testimony
scheduled to begin TbuNday
before the Senate Govemment
Affairs Committee.
I.n ,Lance's native GeoTgia, the pres1dent·elect of the American
Bankers Associatfon sald to·
day that lhe Lance affair "is
casting a pall over the banking
industry .. .it may give banking
a black eye if it goes un·
challenged."
A.A. Mulligan, in a speech pre-
pared for the National Banlt Card
Convention in Atlanta, said he
doesn't know if Lance actually
has done anything wrong, but
some of the alleged activities
.. are clearly not typical of banks
in this country."
While confirming the exts~ce
or the comptroller's report, e
Justice Department spokesm
rerused to discuss the contents.
But the Washington Post said
today that the report says Lance,
who heads the Qffice of Manage·
ment and Buaget, used two
planes owned by the Georgia
banks he headed to take personal
vacations, to fly his children to
school, to commute and to take
part in politics.
The report came amid new
suggestions that Lance resign to
'lvoid embarrassm ent to Carter
and as the Senate committee
open~ its second week or hear-
ings into the case.
Safe Boating
C~urse Slated
For Newport
The Balboa Power Squadron's
fall course in safe boating gets
under way tonight with registra·
lion at 7 p.m. at the Newport
ffarbor Yacht Club, 720 W. Bay
Ave., Balboa. Registration also
will be accepted next Monday
ni~ht.
The 13-week course covers
every aspect of safe boatinJl.
The course is free to the public.
Instructors are experienced boat
operators and skippers from the
Harbor Area.
The Balboa Power Squadron is
a u[\il of the United Stales Power
Squa drons, largest boating
educational organization in the
U.S..
From1PageAJ
SCHOOL •••
Course Schedoled
In Americanization
night to day,'· she said.
Late registration at the Coast
Community College District's
largest school will be helcJ from 8
a .m . to'1:30 p.m . until Thursday,
with the admissions offfce shut-
ting down al 2: IS on Friday.
i 'Americanization," an 18·
week course to prepare roreign-
born people for U.S. citizenship,
will begin Wednesday at 6:30
p.m. at Costa Mesa Hilb School.
Ao Registration for the class of-
fered by the Newport-Mesa
School Dlstrict 's Adult Educa-
tion Department, wlll be held the
first night of class in room 171.
DAILY PILOT
Wayne Wolfe, associate dean
of admissions and records, said
enrollment already bas reached
about 24,500 students and will
swell to nearly 28,000 by the end
of the semester. ,Al
About 8,000 studenta are coo·
sidered full Ume with the felt
taking llabter ached\llea or
enrolling iD evening etas••·
Newport Beach pOllce reported
a hl&h number of mlnln•
teenager report.I filed by parenta
over the weekend.
"It happens every year • tbis
time," one officer noted.
SEX •••
o.lly .,. ... ~.., ....... , ..
·Big Belela 011 Beach
Balloon
Voyage
Thuiarted
BEDFORD, Mass. <AP> -
Two American balloonists who
had hoped to cross the AUantic
ended their troubled m1ht today
and were plucked from the sea
off the coast of Iceland by a U.S.
Ah; Force helicopter.
The two landed 800 miles short
of their destination in France.
"They had reached land and
then were blown back over thf
sea where they touched down," a
spokesman said. "They are be-
ing nown to tbe capital at Reyk-
javik for a meetlna with U.S ..
Embassy officials.,.
Darkness had fallen by the
time of lhe rescue, tbe Air Force
spokesman said. He added that a
cutter from Iceland would at-
tempt to recover the balloon and
gondola, but he did not kno.,,.
when.
The helium balloon and gon-
dola landed five miles offlhore in
the Five Fingers district on
Iceland's northwest coast, 120
miles from the capital.
OH and suntan lotion mix in this photo
taken Sunday in Huntington Beach.
Beachgoers re!ax as crew or tanker
-... ,
moored off Huntington Beach .blows out
boilers. sending black smoke from ship.'s
stack.
The landing and lhe pickup of
the two Americans capped a
momina of problems.
]ewUhBegin
fflghHoliday Toplessness Up
ROME (AP) -Thesummerof
1977 saw more topless sun·
bathing than eveT before on
Italy's beaches, but the Vatican
maintains that "nudity remains
a phenomenon more or less of the
wealthy class."
"The great majority of our
people even today think <111·
f erenlly from the hedonistic
materialism or the minority."
Raimondo Manzini, editor of the
Va tic an daily L 'Osservatore
Romano, wrote in a front-page
editorial.
"The little and middle class
people did not respond and will
not respond to this deafening in-
vitation to the striptease."
In fact, when leftists urged a
massive strip on public beaches
Aug. 15 to show that working·
class people had the same nghts
to "integral tans" as those who
can afford private beaches, there
was almost no response on public
beaches.
Nonetheless, there wen! more
women in mono·klnis than ever
before on Italian beaches .from
Venice's Lido to chic spo~ near
• m Italy
Rome to secluded coves on
islands. And on some· of the
trendier beaches men and women
alike sunned completely naked.
There was the usual spate of
denunciations by irate cham-
pions of traditional modesty and
police swooped up dozens or bare
sunbathers for offending public
decency.
But one judge in Genoe dis-
missed cases against two young
women last week saying that
Italians are mature enough to
look at bare breasts without risk·
ang a breakdown of morality
The Jewish New Year 5738, or
Rosh Hashanah, begins at sun-
down tonight, marking the start
of the solemn High Holy Days.
The 10-day holiday for world
Jewry ends at sundown Sept. 22,
when the blowing of the shofar.
the ram's horn, signals the end or
YomKippur ..
Murder Charged
LOS ANGELES CAP> -A 24·
year-old man, Kenneth Alan
Coolidge has been booked for in-
v estigatlon of murder in the
death of his mother. Ruth E.
Coolidge, 45, police said.
atric horror show. It's a warm, friendly environment,
where skilled therapists help people to sort out their
own lives. And give them new tools to handle the
problems, they thought were too big to handle alone.
lf y_ou know someone who is experiencing an
emotional crisis. call the HOPEUNIT.
A tntined counselor will be at the other end of the
line. Ready to help. Ready to 311fWCr any questions.
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Please make the call that will show her somebody
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L
.....,....,. . . .... . ... . . ... .._... ......... -..... \ ... .................. -......~ .. ..-.....--......._._.
Monday, Sept.mber 12, 1977 DAILY PILOT t' 3
Photog Dupes Wo.uld-fJe.1tlodels
ST. PAUL,
1mpoit 11 ol a football
lineman who po1u •• a famoua
IHhlon photocraphtT hu duped
'many women. lndudms ()ftt who
•cave up Sl.400 In uvln11.
aulboriu uy
tto has ltft • trall or broktn
dream.'i for tht' youn1 ladi from
St Paul to M1am1 and lfawah to
Ntw York City. 1uy pollccs who
udd thut he alle1edly ha. rapc>d
~omeof tus vttUm11
-Somo othert roportt:dly hud
1cx r laUont with him wUllnaly .
notwlth.lltandina hh1 bad teeth,
"''nO. body odor and bulk Police
uy 31 women havt' reported h11v
lntc been approeched by the man
Al author1Uc11 here, 1n
Wwihintton, D.C und elsewhere
relate the man's con game, th1-.
1i. tht· buckground
lit< Pott~ aa Richard Avtldon, 1:1
photogrttpher with Voguc
m aaazlne. or uses the name
QUEEN'S SILVER JUBILEE HONORED
Elizabeth Taylo~ and Husband John Warner
Queen Feted
Liz Joins in Totuting
NEWPORT, R.J. <A P > About 225 people including actress
Elizabeth Taylor and her husband, former Navy Secretary John
Warner, turned out at Beeehwood mansion here to honor the
Silver Jubilee of Britain's Queen Elizabeth II.
The $75-a·plate dinner benefitted Newport's English·
Speaking Union and the Amencan Sail Training Assoc1at1on, or-
ganizers sairl.
Rhode Island Sen Claiborne Pell and the head of the
Australian America's Cup l>yndicate. Alan Bond, were a!'io in lll
tendance. but other invited guests. including Gov . J . Joseph Gar
rahy and Sen. Charles Percy IR·lll. J, failed to show up
The evening was capped with a toast to Queen Elizabeth by
John Slocum, one of the orguni7ers
Who Can Market
Presley Statues?
MEMPHlS, Tennr <AP> -
non-profit Memphis group and a
private Delaware corporation
are at odds over who has authon·
ty to market an eight-inch Elvis
Presley statuet\.e
·John Stevens. executive d1rec·
tor of the Memphis Development
Foundation. says his group feels
it has a right to dis tribute the
statuettes for a charitable cause.
But officials of Factors Etc.
Inc. of Bear, Del., said they
would file suit if necessary to halt
distribution of the statuettes The
firm says that on Aug. 23. it
reached an a~reement with
Presley's father, Vernon, and the
late singer's business manager.
Col. Tom Parker, to mark et all
Presley memorabilia
Daniel I.id man, a Beverly Hills
attornc·:v representing lhe
Oelawarc company, said the non-
profit status of -tht development
foundation makes no d1frerence
The foundation announced l<1!->t
week that Penns) I van 1 a !->CUI ptor
Erk Parks had been com·
missioned to design and build a
25-foot. 50-ton bronze statue or
Presley al an estimated cost of
$151.000.
Funds for the statue, to he
placed an Mcmphil>, arc to come
from donations, Stevens said
The group has offered the
Presley statuell c to persons g1 v·
ing $25.
Stevens said his group's right
lo handle the io.t;.ituetle "is treat·
ed ac; a purely personal nght
which dies with the individual
a nd does not p<1ss to his estate.
heirs, or legal representatives "
Meanwhile. c1ly officials said
th<.' group does not have a permit
to solicit donations.
H IC'hard Avedon Jr .. John
A\ l'<ion bUpposedly Avedon's son
or C:hrn1topher Daniels. a lie·
llt10W1 name but supposedly a
frnmdof Avcdon.
I le has been pursuing womeo
ut least since 1974, when police
heard compla1nts or him in
Washinaton, O.C., promising
them big things in the new York
fushion world.
An 18-year-old woman was
ruped by the imposter al St. Paul
Jewelry
May A.id
Manhunt
Newport Beach police, still
seeking the identity of the man
who raped and then strangled a
Corona del Mar woman last
month. are concentrating their
investigation on jewelry ap·
parently taken by the murderer.
Detective Sam Amburgey said
today he has sent flyers describ·
ing four pieces of jewelry stolen
from the apartment of Jane El-
lt•n Henntnr:l.Qn lo all pol ice agen·
l'IC~ in the stall· Mis~ Bennington. 29, was found
1n her bedroom Aug. 2, by her
roo mmate after the two women
had been out lo a popular
~ewport night spot the previous
evening
The roomm<1te told police they
left the disco separately and
police theorize the woman re-
turned to her apartment alone
onlv lo b e assaulted and
murdered by the unidentified In·
tructcr
Amburgey said the 1ewelry
could provide 10vcst1galors with
;.i ltnk to the su!>pect 's identity.
The four missing pieces are:
A gold locket. about one inch
1n diameter mounted with an
oval of green Jade. The stone is
bordered by a llny rope or gold.
A green jade pendant hang·
1ng from a gold chain and bear·
1ng gold Chinese characters in
tht' center lhal ~ignify good
forlunt• The C'hurat·ters <1re held
in place with l\.\-O gold spikes thal
run through tht· stone and are
.,m:.ishl'<l. rtVl'l q} ll'. on the re-
' l'I ~t· ~t<lt· of lht· pendant
An ant111ut• cameo pendant, a
hulf 1m:h 1n diameter showing a
woman's prof1ll' tn white mount·
cd on J pink butkground
An O\ ;.ii unt1q ue cameo, also
wh1U! on pink. set on u gold ring.
It 1s ~1m1l.H tu lhc cameo pen·
!lanl. although not an exact
mulch amJ lht• rin~ cameo is con-
s1dl•rably \\Orn down
Ambuj(ery said anyone who
m1J:lht havt' seen the jewelry can
contact him :.it 644 3781
Couple Tied;
Woman Raped
LOS ANGELES <AP> Three
men who bun1t in on a West Los
Angeles couple in their home lied
up a man and forced his wife into
the bedroom. where she was
raped by two ~ the intruders.
police said
The men entered the home as
I ht• two were "'atching telev1Sion
Saturda~ night. and demanded.
"Where''I your diamond''" police
i;aid
After tying up the m~and rapm~ the woman. the o left
with more than $1,300 in ewelry,
('ash and the television set, said
11ol1t·c
A Collection
I Of Kojaks
BROCKTON, Mass. (AP) -
Actor Telly Savales, otherwise
known as TV's Kojak, saw
himself coming and going nearly
20 times in three Greater Boston
mmunltleR that had contests to
who looked most like him.
The contests, which were held
In Braintree. Brockton and Bur·
llngton on Saturday, produced
one unusual winner who held up a
sii;{n reading. "l am the black Ko-
juk." after hi11 victory was an·
nounccd
He was New England mid·
dleweighi boxln1 champion
M arvln Hualer who won the
Brotkton conte!t by recelvina
the most audience applause.
OC Residents .
Win at Fair
when be wu in this area July
9·10. He promised, durln& drinks
at a cocktail lounae. he'd make
her a star model.
On July 12 at Milwaukee. the
suspect used Avedon's name to
Influence a young woman to quit
her job and withdraw savlnas of
$95 from her bank account. When
he told her she'd need more
money for clothes, photos and
hairstyling, she was persuaded
to sell her car and give him the
$11400 proceeds.
.
He slipped away while she was
at. a beat.lty &'hop, and after he'd
Upped the beautician $100. He
took a cab to Chicago and hasn't
bffn heard of since.
A vedon is "furious that this
guy was Pt1slng aa him," accord·
Ing to Detective Tom Kelly of
·Washington, D.C .. police, and the
photographer forwarded a pic-
ture of the man to authorities.
A vedon explained he'd re·
celved it from a woman who had
been al .. gfdly swindled or $600 in
Hawall. A roving photo1rapher
had snapped their picture In a
c~ktail lounge.
AuthoriUe1 describe the Im·
J>()lter as about 6·feet·4 to 8-feet·6
feet tall, about 2SO pounds, with a
tattoo on the right bicep, large
scar on hla Up and a deep scar on
his left shoulder. He'd had a Ko·
juk-style head shave when he
operated at Minneapolis-St.
Paul.
LINDA STEVENS AND A 'PLEASANT DISCOVERY' ALONG PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY
Twenty-two of Her Palntlng9 Are on Display at Huntington Beach Library
H E f r Beauty Trio Held er ye o 9 M L,,. ont1UJ; G!9:~~~~E~~~,~~~~~~. 2 C~rged
Being one herself, Linda touched that she was inspired to
Stevens has a natural eye for do the water colors that are now
beauty. on display at the Huntington
She finds 1tin simple Cahfornu1 Beach Library. 7111 Talbert
countryside scenes that the rest Av~nue ..
of US seem td be too busy lO ''The scenery IS SO peacerul
notice. aqd ~ppiled that I call my ex·
Mn. St.evens says a gully in a Kitftloo ·Forgotten Places,,'' 1he
field of brush near the Pacific said.
Coast Hlghway between Corona Twenty-two Qf her paintings
del Mar and Laguna Beach 1s one will be displa)fl!d ~ the library
through September,
Beheading
Stin Furor
PARIS CAP> -Tunisian
farm worker Hamida
Djandoubi put on his
arlHicial right leg and
walked to his ownguillotin·
ing.
It was the second
beheading in France m
less than three months,
ana because the con·
demoed man was han-
dicapped the national row
over capital punis hment
grew hotter.
Michael d 'Ornano,
minister or culture and en·
vironment. called for an
.all-out parliamentary de-
.bate on the death sentence.
"even if it raises the in·
evitable passloos and pre·
Judices.
Mrs. Stevens, an art teacher al
Marina Hlgh School, also haa ex·
hibited her works at Long Beach
State University and at the San
Diego Watercolor Society.
. She observes that an artist's
work is one more of perspiration
than inspiration.
"You hav~ l() make up your
mind what you want to . do and
keep plugging away," s he
declares. Mrs. Stevens said she paints
about five hours a day in a studio
of her Huntington Beach home.
She can complete a painting In a
week.
She says she loves her work
and it also may become profita·
ble because of recent sales.
But like any artist. Mrs.
Stevens suffers.
"You can't paint and h~e
pretty fingernails. Mine a
always stained with wild com
bin ations of colors.
"I also sliced one partially oft
recently while making picture
frames," she complained.
NEW YORK CAP) --A
Manhattan palm reader and her
uoyfriend have been arrested on
kidnaping and assault charges
for allegedly holding a widow
and her two teen-age children
captive fn a Lower East Side
apartment for nine months. ·
While holding her prisoner, the
couple shaved the woman's
head. beat hel' with a baseball
bat, burned her with cigarettes
and would not allow her to bathe
for months at a time, according
to the ~omplaint filed with the
city Housing Authority police. It's
responsible for law enforcement
in the city-owned Waid housing
project where the widow lived.
Police said the pair also forced
the widow, Marie Nieves, 37, to
sign over $5,000 In Social Security
checks to them.
The suspects, Mary
Hernandez. 28, a resident of the
Wald houses, and Eleuterio
Torres, 27. were arrested aft.er
Mrs. Nieves. wearing only a rain·
coal and a pair or shoes, left the
Hernandez woman's apartment
Friday
Hous ing Police Sergeant
Morton Stertl said Mrs. 'Nieves.
her daughter I)ebra, 16, and her
son, Dionisio, went to Miss
Hernandez' apartment last No·
vember because Miss Hernandez
claimed to have faith•healing
powers that would cure Debra,
who is crippled. 1
h.itt.on down ginghams ' I
colorful gingham checks
of f!iVY,rol,or brown.
offend in slnrt or long
slaves.just right for
s~ordress.
made forue by
Cnlgh.iol\ """'-IM
• • • u
I
.lad •• ·
.......
Te• ~lalae
SCHOOL DUE: Did alarm
l'loclu go off at oddtv euly hours
;.iround your nP1ghbol'hood thJs
momJnc., Did every street cor·
ner look Like» a at.henna ol Teena
for America at dawn'• early
111ht"
Did you huve to drift your way
throu&h so many buaea on your
way to work th111 mornin1 that
.> ou naured the Oranae County
Transit D11>tr1ct had just ex
panded again"
H so, and all or lh11 struck you
as rat.her strange aoincs·on, then
you've grown beyond the school
years around your house.
But one of my fellow workers
here at the paper, 1tlU with
school younastera, observed wry.
Jy, "Why is It around my house.
the first day of school comes and
we all act like it's a surprlae?"
t'UNNV HOW, durln1· sum·
mertime along this beat of all
possible coasts, a kid will leap
out of bed at dawn. charge out the
front door and head for the beach
to <'heck out surf conditions.
Rut when dawn arrives on the
first day of school, they creak
around the house like they were
.iged as the little old winemaker.
They move like they were going
th rough the agonies or the
damned. Molasses moves Caster.
Somehow, however, they'll all
get themselves to1ether and
make it to EngUsh l ·A.
Prowling the coastline early to-
day, your correspondent sPOtted
a few slices of Back-To-School
hfe. On one street corner, there
was the big yellow bus, loaded
with young students. The yellow
lights were flashing. The driver
'i tood on the curb, l eaning
against a llghtpole. His race
looked like The End Was Near.
Here It was, the first day of
-;chool. and already he was
broken down.
Mid-block, in another sector of
our coastline, another vehicle sat
by the curb with llasbin& lights.
This was a pollce unit.
THE OFFICER had just
s topped a high school-aged
-bicyclist. The charge was rather
obvious: Riding down the wrong
side of the street.
The officer had out his pad and
pencil. No doubt givlng the er·
rant lad his first writing lesson of
the new school year.
''Now, son, consider the letter
C. C stands for Citation, Court.
and Costly. . . "
Unlike the broken-down bus
driver. this bicycling student's
race didn't look like The End is
Near It looked like The End Had
('Om ('.
Ah, but there were oth~r Back·
To-School s igns that were hap·
pier in our region early today.
Consider the parklnl lot at one
t•ampus 1 happened to pass. The
place was packed with two·
wheelers-bicycles and those lit·
tie engine-driven mo-ped1. It
looked bke a mo-ped convention,
in fact.
THE HAPPY PART about this
ia with all those mo.peels parked,
it meam that they were not out
a mong you, natterinl around in
traffic. · Then consider the hilb school
young lady. crosaing the atreet
carefully carrying a 1inale red
rose. For teacher, no doubt.
That's starting the tchool year
right.
Temperat• .. e•
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All9ftta .. ..
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ht ton 10 S2 ,,.._.,.11. •S 11 ,_,.. ... .. ,.
Cltk ... 77 ..
CIMlllNll H SS Cl_...., 10 • 0111~,.,.w.1 .. .. ,.
t»ttv# .. ,.
!'fl 0.11'9!t ,. 4
Hel9fte 11 .,
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JKkt'vllle ., n
ltM'ICllY " " ,.,.
yaV•tH • JJ .IO
LIU .. .-eu a tt
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Mpl .. 91 '· n a ,..-Ori_. '° 71 .06 -v--70 ti
0101.CllY u 1t
Ol'llllM 1J .,
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CIA, Media Linked
Rolling Stone Article Denied
N£W YORK <AP> More
than .oc> Amtrlcan Jouroall1t1
HCretly carriM out a11i1nmtnts tor tho ClA durint tht put 25
YHrt. 8CcorctlDC to Rollln1 stone
ma•uln•.
The article. tcbedultd for publ.l~aUoo Oct. 4 and written by
former Wubtn1ton Po1t re·
port•r Carl Berntteln, aaid
American Jou.rnallstl were used
''to belp rffrult and band le
tor.._.. u. qentl, to aequire
and evaluat.e lnlormauon ad lo
plan.t fal.ae lnlormatlon wtth of·
flclalt ol toretan 1ovemment1."
MANY OP THEii rePorted lo
CIA otllca abroad and othert
provided Information to the CIA
upon returnln1 home from
forel1n auicnmenu. the
mafuine aald. It aald 1ome
Pu lther .. rhe·wlnnln1
j ournall1t1, columnist• and
network correspondenta b-4 CIA Unkl.
The article •aid CJA neordt
•how that bl1h·level edltort.
publisberi and broadca1t of·
ficlala r.•aced a1enta with no
journal 1Uc tralnin1 on their
n1lt1 and dlrect.ed members of
their alalfa to aupply information
to the agency.
News or1anlaatlons contacted
Sunday del1led the alle1ations. as
they have denied similar allega-
tlona ln the past.
THE ARTICLE SAU> CBS, the
New York Times and Time, Inc.,
were "by far the most valuable"
in Pf0Vidln1 information lo the
CIA. ·
CBS Chairman WUUam PaJey
provided cover tor CIA
employes. the ma1aline said,
1ave the a1ency accea. to the
CBS newsfllm library, provided
unaired newsfilm to the a1ency
and allowed reports by CBS cor-
re1pondent1 to be monitored by
the CIA.
CBS Newt President Richard
Salant wu quoted aa aaYtng that
in February 1961, he "1otaphone call from a CIA man who said he
had a workin1 relaUonshlp with
(former CBS Newt President>
Sil Mickelson .••. I sald no on
talkJ.n1 to the reporters and let them aee broadcast tapes but no
outtakes. This went on for a
Arabs Bejeet Ideas
number of years into the early
sevenUes."
SALA.NT SAID SUNDAY that
he bad not read the arUcle and
had no comment on tt. A CBS
s pokeswoman said that slnce
Salant came to the network in
1961, it .. haa had absolutely
nothing to do with the CIA." She
s aid that during the cold war of
the 1950s, it was "standard prac·
tice" for journalists to debrief
the CIA and that "everyone did
it. ..
The Times provided cover to
about 10 CIA agents from 1950 to
1966 under a rranfemeots ap-
proved b y the ate Ttmes
publisher Arthur Ha ys
Sulzberger, Rolling Stone said.
A Timea spokesman saJd Sun·
day nilht that the newspaper
"has absolutely no information
to add to the statements maddby
publisher Arthur Ochs
Sulzber1er ln 1976. At that time
Sulzberger said: 'I never heard
or the Times belnl approached
either in my capacity a s
publisher or as the son of the late
Mr. (Arthur Hays) Sulzber1er'."
· ANNl!TT'E ADAMI, CENTER, TALKS WITH A!PORTIRS
Planked by Parent•, lh• Tell• of Oood Treatment
Israelis Stick to Plan
Kidnapiug Victim
Reports Good Care
MARYVlLLE, Tenn. (;A.P > A banker's daughter held for a
$150,000 ransom says her lddnapers treated her well during her 56
hours and 2S minutes in captivity. They even save her S25 as they aet
her free in a North Carolina motel par kins lot.
TEL AVIV. Israel <AP) -The
new Israeli peace plan that
Prime Minister Menahem
Begin'• 1ovemment 11 sendln1 to
the United Stat.es next week ap-
parently diften UWe in ill major
provisions Crom what prey1ous
Labor governments )Vere pre·
pared to offer.
Begin's cabinet. at. its )Veekly
meeting Sunday, approved the
oroPOSed peace treaty Forehtn
Minister Moshe Dayan will
take to Washington and the U.N
General Assembly. Orflclally.
the details were secret, but the
major provisions have been
leaked, and the Arabs have
already rejected them.
Israel's territorial demands
the key issue as far as the Arabs
are concerned -are not outlined
ln the draft treaty but are con-
tained in an accompanying letter
that Dayan will deliver to Presi·
dent Carter and Secretary of
State Cyrus R. Vance.
( JNSHORT J
l'l~l•J .... 4
CHICAGO (AP) -Eleven
persons were arrested and four
others hospitalized . three in
serious cond1llon. in a dem·
onstration by whites opposed to
a voluntary school busing plan.
Ten of those arrested in Sunday
night's incident were whites and
nil the injured were white. The 10
whites were arrested on a variety
of charges ranging from dis·
orderly conduct to failure to obey
a police officer's order to dis·
perse, police said. ror1cr ... ws....,.i
SEOUL, South Korea <AP> -·
The opposition New Democratic
party demanded a special
parliamentary investigation of
Tongs un Park and his alleged in·
.
Boy Kills ~rother
In 'Dirty Harry' Act
COLUMBUS, Ohio <AP > -Just Uke he saw the star of "Dirty·
Harry" do the ntght before on television, a 14-year-old Columbus boy
faced off againlt b11 U-year-old brother and killed him with the pull of
a trigger, policetald.
Komlclde Detective Lester Maynard said Micros Thompson was us-
ing a toy pistol, but hla older
brother. Delpbua, 1ot his fat.lier's
.22-caliber derringer Sundiy to
reenact a scene from the movie.
The older boy, playln1 the role
of the ttar, Cllnt Eutwood, who
had a .44·callber Ma1num,
aimed the two-shot derringer,
the detective said.
"HE CALLED FOR bis
brother to 'go for lt' <the toy
gun)," Maynard said. A 1lngle
.. hot struck Micros in the chest
near the heart.
"The bullet went through him.
hit the wall and ricocheted back
onto a table,'' the detective said.
"The kid 1ta11ered out of room
and fell inlo tht hallway." ·
Delphus was charged wlth
delinquency in connection with
negligent homicide in the shoot·
ing, which occurred in the
bedroom or their northeast
Columbus home.
"DELPHUS SAID THEY had
watched 'Dirty Harry' on
television Saturday night," said
Maynard, who Interrogated the
sobblng, stuttering youth.
"They were playine around
like kids do. They sort of squared
orf a1ainat each other like the
one-on-one confrontation in the
movie when the tension and emo-
tion wu high."
A fire department rescue team
tried to save Micros, but he was
pronounced dead at the scene,
Maynard said.
fluence buying in Washington.
The party charged that the scan-
d a l has damaged relations
between the United States and
South Korea.
Two suspects arrested and jailed in Charlotte, N .C., faced a hearing
today where officials will seek to
remove them to Tennesaee for
The New Democrats' ex-
ecutive council said after a meet·
ing that President Park Chung-
hee's government has created
the Impression that it supports
Tongsun Park.
Br8.,• Nize• s..,,,.ri
ANCHORAGE, Alaska <AP >
California Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr .. has rejected, at least
for the time being, Gov. J ay
Hammond's call for opposition to
the selection or the Ale an natural
gas pipeline.
However. Brown said a
western leg to the Alcan line is
essenUal and some critical ques-
tions remain unanswered about
such a spur. ~rown said he still
has questions about when the
Alcan spur will be built, how
large It will be and how much it
will C05l.
trial. ,_
"I was oot hurt. I was well
treated .•. They never
threatened to hurt me at all,"
said Annette Adams, 19, who
spoke with reporters Sunday in
the driveway of her home here,
180 miles from Nashville, hours
after she'd been freed.
MISS ADAMS -whose lather,
W.C. Adams, is president of the
Bank of Maryvtlle -said she
was blindfolded arid moved from
one motel to another during her
captivity.
"I could usually ~l where I
was by leaks in the blindfold and
such. I'd never 1een them before
but I'd know them U they walked
up to me now," she said or her
captors.
Police and FBI agenta said the
news media helped &et the
woman freed and helped ln the
Dear World
MY YOUNG SON atam to 1cbool today.
.• It's all going to be .ort of strange and
new to blm for awblle, ud J wtab you
would sort ol treat him 1eotly.
You lffrUP to DOW be'• beea ldaC of tbe
roost.. •• He's been boo of &be backyard ••
.HI• mother baa alway• been •ear to
soo&be bis woaad• and repair b1a feella&1.
recovery of about $148,0QO of the
ransom money by keeping silent
about laat Thunday'a kidnaptnc. ~
FEDERAL OFPICJAl.8 said
the lddnapers threat.ened to kill
thelr hostage if the abduction
was publicized.
Police identified the suspects,
arrested alter a chase. as Shelby
Ann Baker, 2~, and Wayne•
Edward Garrity, 29, both of
Statesvllle, N.C. They were· ar·
raigned Sunday on kidnaping
charges.
As he was being led to jail Sun-
day, Garrity was heiwl by re-·
porters to say that Mita Bal<er
also had been kidnaped and was
not lnvol ved criminally.
Ml.SS ADAMS WAS kidnaped
as she left a fraternity party at
the Vanderbilt Univenity cam·
pus in Nashville, where she ls a
student.
But now things are 1otn1 to be dllferebt.
This momlng be'• 1oln1 to ~ walk down
tbe troat 1teps. wave b1a baad, ucl •&art
out oa tbe are•* adventure. • .It la u
adventure that ml1ht take him aero11
continents, acrou ocea••· . .It'• an
adventure tbat wW probably lnc:l•de wan
and tragedy and .orrow .•• To Uve Ills life
In tbe world be wUI have lo live ID wlU
require faith and love and coara1e.
So, World, I wish you woald aon of look
af&er him ••. Take blm by &be laud ud
&eacb blm tblap be wlll have to bow.
Try aot to 1lve my toa tbe 1&ren1th aot
to follow the crowd wbea everyoae lf
settlq oe tbe baadwa1oa ••• Teaela blm to
lltlell lo all mea-f>ut teacb blm alao &o
fllter all be bean OD• 1ereea of tratb and &au Jal &be aooct that •lpbom t1aroa1b.
But do It 1ently, If JOU caa.
He will have to lean, I bow, tbat all mea are DOt Jut, U.u all m• are aot &nae.
But uaeb him al10 that for every
1coaadntibere la a laero .•• Ulat f• every
crooUcl pollUclu Uiero II a peat ud
dedJca&ed leader ••• Teacla Mm &Ut for
every ... .,. &hero II a frteed.
8&eer IWn away from .. .,., If, .. cu •.
.aad teacb blm t111e Hcret of ••It&
laaP&er.
la aebool, World, teac• Illa U II far
more boeorabte to fall daaa &e cMal •
.Teecb la1Ja to bave falU. la lall on ldeu,
e•n II eYeryoot 1u1 &Mr an .......
.THcb ldm to be 1nUe wtda •..U.,..... and..,. wttb ..._.. ;eople.
Teadl blm, If y• cu1 . bow to lau1h wU. be'• 114 ••• Teadl a1111 tben II ao
altame Ill tean ••• Teacb Mm Ulen cu be ,,_,la fallue Hd dffpalr ID 1accea.
Tna& Ill• 1eaUy, World, lf you eu. Bat M't coddle blm •.. Beeaue only die tea
of fire makff fine 1&eel ••• Let him have
&ate coua1e to be lmpatleat ••• Let ldm lane tapit paUeace to be brave.
La blm be llO mu'1 maa ••• Ttacla falm
afwaya to llan nbUm• faJUl t. ld...U •
Beoa•H tll•• be will alwa11 Jaave llblhM faltb la mQklad.
Tim II ..... u order, WOl'ld; 1Nt 1M
wlaat ,.. cu de •• ·~• ... a ldoe lu.lie feUoW,., ... t
•
~AUF.GW&I
162S GISLER ~VENUE
COSTA MESA, CALIFO~A 92826
l
.... -......... -,. -"-'·-... .._ -~--..-4------.. -J... ....
~F Slayings C1imb
Special Task Force Hunts Gangs
SANF'RANCISCO <API ~y prurnptod M11yor Cit:orae
tna thc!lr city la Uvtna under ~n Moscone and Pollc~ChlefCharlcs
"atmosphere of fear" ~cause of Gain to announce oraanizaUon or
ext ended w arh re • monic the 1s.member1ana1quad.
Chtn youth 1•n11, officlahl Al • nowt conference Sunday
have fonne!d a apeclal taak forct1 Moscone uld, "There can be no
uslped to break up the 1ane gruttr cri•ls than this. The
fl1ht.lna eanaa have put this city under an
The poho action waa an atmospbereorrear."
nounced Sundal' after an early Galo aaid the unit's job would
momlne. exeeuUon-atyJe ataytng oo to ldenllfy aang members and
ol a reputed 1an1 member at bis the adults believed responsible
home ln the usually peaceful for eang activity. The unit will
Richmond District. remain intact "for as long a~
Aut.boritie& believe the dead necebsary and 1t may take
youth and a critically wounded years."
companion wer~ shot to avena~ THE CITY has offer ed a
lail week's s hootings at B $25,000 reward for information
Chinatown restaurant in which leadmg to the arrest of those
five persons were killed and 11 respons ible for the Golden
injured. Dragon shooting, and $10,000 1s _;/> __ T_H~E~L~A_T_E~S_T~_s_h_o_o_t_ln~g~_b_e_1n~g::..._o_Cf~e-red~-'°-r~S-u_n_d~a~y-·s_k_i~ll·
LEAD ACTOR
Louis Goaaett Jr.
BEST ACTOR
Ed Asner
'Roots' Sprouts Nine
_Emmy Show A.wards
PASADENA (AP > "Roots" gathered up nine Em mys in an ~wards show t~at made up for a four-month delay by being the lon"gest
m the 29-year history of the Television Academy.
Th~ ~-hour ~inis~ries .seen on AB~ last January won Emmys for
best lilQited series, directing.. and writine. with actine awarda 1oing to Louis <'.rossett Jr., Edward Asner
and Olivia Cole. The three re-. . maining Em mys for "Roots " . Beatrice A~ur, go1~~ into her
• were in craft categories. s.1xth year as Maude, won her
The Sunday night Emmy ~1rst Emmy as best lead actress
Awards Show on NBC, delayed in a comedy ~erle.s .
four months by a squabble that A list of the m a1or winners:
split the National Academy of 0.--;v~":.::;'?': '" • Com..tY s.ri..
Television Arts and Sciences into .. 11.st ~•no Ac•r•u 1n • c~ 5eri.i
an Eastern National Academy ~:~~~1 Plu•. "M.,v Hertman, M•rv
' and a Hollywood Academy, ran a -&Ht~'"" .t.c•Of' '" • or-• s.+,
1 record 3'h hours. It was 40 GarvFr-."Fam11v ..
1 • IMtl s.--tlnq A(lrH\ In • Or_. !itroH minutes longer than the previous K•l•tvMcNl<1'ol, "l'am11v. longest show last year. -LHd Actor In • SlnQle Par1ormanc• In A S.rlH . LoulsGon<llt Jr .. "lloeta." THE HOLLYWOOD Academy ._..., ActrHt In • Slnv•• .,.,form.,.c• In "
handed out Em mys in 42 prime s.r1e1 11eu1a11Bonc11. "Ti..wa11on1 .. ksl s.--tlno Actor In • Varlely Sef'IH time categories, with 27 Emmy& nmeonway."<:.aro•eurnettsr-•·
going to ~BC, 21 to NBC, 17 to hit Act,.. .. In • s1no1• Pttrlormanc:e In ... CBS and eight to PBS at the V•rlelyShow:All•Mor-."TheM-ISl>ow." 8Ht ~r11nQ A<IM In a ComeclY Or Or-6 ceremony held at the Pasadena Sc>ecl•• eur9uaMer-.d11r.. ''l•llGun,,.rJ<MJ ..
Civic Auditorium. • &Mt ~·no Aet""' '" • ~or Orema Soe<lal. Olene Hyt-, "Tl-. 8oy In ,,,. "Eleanor and J'ranklin: The PtHtk &uOCll•."
Whit H Y ,. -lktl Actor In a Or-• Of' Comedy $41e<lal · Ed e OUSe ears, WOn seven Flanden. "HarryS Trumen: PtalnkJMltlno." • awards and tied with "Sybil" for -llMt Actrtu In • Or-• or ComeclY $41e<lat·
din d al S.lly FlelO, "Sybll " outstan g ramatic speci . _ llftt Actor in• Sino'• P•rlo~• 1n •
"Sybil" won four awards. in-s.r1 .. OUv4•Co4•."Aoou."
"'ludlng a a ard to st Sall -a.st Actr•n '" • s11191e Pttrfonnan<• 1n • ~ n W ar Y s .. 1e1: Ollvl• Co••. "Aooh ." Field, who was named best ac· -lndlvlcklalAward "lonl9'1I Show ..
I tress in a drama special for her -8Mt uac1 Aet°' '" • com~v s.ri.s: ca.roo O'Connor, "All In T 1-. F•mlly 1 portrayal of a woman afflicted . o.it Lull A<t..-u in a comedy s.r10
by multiple personalities. e .. 1r1e••nr.ur, "M8Ycte ..
Dick Van Dyke's variety sno..~11 <:om.av s.ri.•· "Mer• rvi., -·
series, ''Van Dyke an<t Co .. " can -..,. v1r1.iv Soec1e1: "T1w ••rrv -.vn11-
celed by NBC last year after 11 Spe_cr;.:, Director Of • V•rt~·· ~rles: Dave
I performan_CeS, WOn as best V&Me· Powt"· "C:.rot 8 urnel1 ShoW '
l · "Th B M nil eettV•letySerlet:"VtnOylte-Co.''
1 Y SeMes. e arry a OW • 8t1t 1.Hd Actor Ill e LlmiltO SerlH' Special" wu named outstanding c11r111-P1um,,,.•."Ti..~yChengen " • variety Sl'VM'ial. ' -.. " i...o AetNH In • Limited Series: .,.. .. ., ..-~ OulWAltln, ··c.ciu1niendtl-.Klno1 " ED FLANDERS was named -8"11.1tn11ec1s.r1n:·•Aoott ••
outstanding lead actor tn a G;;,:;:~~oc~::,.·~.~-· Ser1es: ,.,_
dramatic special for his feisty -anti..MActNUln1or..,1s.rT .. :t.1notel'
I f w...,, ''TM a!Onk w-n.·· portray a o tbe preaident in -•t1U>r-s.r1a: ··UPll••n .o-.e.1" ·•
••fflllTY S Truman: Plain Speak· -... t Dl'erna"' Comedl' 1pec111: ··£•-Ing." aflCt ,.,..,..""· Tiie Wfllte Hou .. v .. " .. encl "SylMI" lllel.
mg, Gwn sa!d.
Chinatown is where most of the
gang·related extortion and
gambling aoes on. and where the
majorily of 44 other gana·related
murders since 1969 have taken
place, police say.
The Richmond District is home
to many Chinese families with
enough money to escape the poor
,housing and crowded Uvlne con·
ditioos of Chinatown. Many eang
members also have moved out of
Chinatown, accordine to Officer
Sherman Ackerson.
"WHEN THEY m ake $100 a
day working for a gang they don't
have to live in a s hack in
Chinatown," he said. "They go
out and gel a nice house or apart-
ment in some place like
Richmond."
..
Al"Wl,....tl
The house where Michael Lee,
18, w as killed and Lo Chan, 19,
was Utjured Sunday ls five miles
west of Chinatown and only half a
bloek from the serenity of Golden
Gate Park.
SAN FRANCISCO'S CHINATOWN SPAWNING GROUND FOR GANG VIOLENCE
Reputed Gang Member Slaln Executlon-1tyle Near Blighted Section
Women's Woes
Movement Seeks Answers
SAN JOSE <A P> The women's movement, says
Gloria Steinem, is "a majority movement," its major goals
such as the Equal Rights Amendment backed by the public
in opinion polls.
So why has the movement seemingly run into a
roadblock in 1977, with ERA ratification lagging and federal
abortion funding cut off?
Leaders wrestled with that question during the
weekend's third biennial convention of the National
Women's Political Caucus.
There was much talk of the so-called radical right -not
only longtime antifeminist leader Phyllis SchJaOy, a name
invoked often with indignation, but groups like the John
Birch Society and Ku Klux Klan, both reportedly involved In
antifeminist activity at International Women's Year con·
ventions. Opposition from religious leaders was also dis-cussed.
AT A MEETING OF delegates from unratiff~states
Sllllday morning, there were complaints of lack of c rdlna-
U'on between ERAmeric a and other groups .
.,.. The dissatisfaction was reflected on the <Of) veniion
floor when a proposal to pass t!le hat for ERAmerica was
changed to give the money to the caucus for EijA purposes.
But leaders of the group vo~ to redouble th~ir efforts
as the deadline approached. T e rocus ls expected to be on
North Carolina, Florida, lllino • Nevada and several other
states where past votes have been close.
Tuesday
BEGEO·OR FALL ANO WINTER
LEATHER COLLECTION
Thursday
ROBIN KAHN
presents his innovative
JEWELRY COLLECTION
in 14·karat gold and
textured sterling silver
Thursd1y and Friday
TRAVILLA FALL COLLECTION
for l ate Dey and Evening
Friday
Meet Hat Designers
EILEEN CARSON &
PATRICIA UNDERWOOD
on their first West Coast tour
Saturday
British sportswear designlf
GERALD McCANN
presents his
FALL COLLECTION
this meek at 1.m1gnml1magn1ns1ulh al p~za
· South Coast Plaza Costa Mesa The group's new chairwoman. Millie Jeffrey of Detroit,
said ERA s upporters have more money than they've had in
the past and more "indignation and an er.'' .-:--:-~~~~~~--'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Rain Closes
State Highway
Near Brawley
BRAWLEY <AP ) -A
downpour of rain left California
78 closed today between Brawley
and Palo Verde. where the 4el-
uge forced evacuation of 10 pe<>ple
from alrailer park.
Another 75 trailer residents re·
fused to leave thdr.homes.
Two sections or the asphalt 1
highway were washed out Sun·
day. ·
Several mobile homes were
damaged. .
Rainfall was measur~t two inches at Palo Verde, a he edge
o f the Colorado R er In
northeastern Imperial unty.
Brawley got an inch.
There was little or no rain
elsewhere in the valley from the
weekend storm. Skies generally
were clear today.
FLASH FLOOD warnings were
posted Sunday night for Im-
perial. Riverside and San
Bernardino counties, but the Na·
tional Weather Service predicted
fair weather for tbe regions to·
day .
More than 50 homes were
flooded Saturday after a dike
broke ln the Calle Helena area
just north of Thousand Palma in
Riverside County, authorities
said. No iQiuries were reported.
·THROUGH SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,
. A FREE GIFT
WITH YOUR ESTEE LAUDER PURCHASE -
TfiE GREAT BEGINNINGS BEAUTY KIT, AN 18.00 VALUE, YOURS FREE WITH A 6.50 OR MORE EST(E
LAUDER PURCHASE. European Performing Creme, Maximum Care Hand Creme, Automatic Creme Eyeshadow,
Tender Lip Tint and an Eau d'Aliage Pure Fragrance Spray. Now, while the Sp ice Market Colorsarrive forfall. One
gift to a customer, please.
Tee11 Bl..,. Fal .. le Deae•
I. MAO NIN, please send mt the Great Beginnings Beaut~it with my purchase of moist •rllt...color-rich Automatic
lip Shine in the new Spice M.rket Colors: Candled Plum U , Cherry Tea 0 , Pink Ginger LJ , Mulled Claret 0 ,
or Bleck Currant 0, 4.60 each. Basic Cleansing Bar 8.50, for normal-to-oilv O or normal-to-dry 0 . SWiss
Performing Extract, 7/!_oL 10.00 0 , 1% oz. 17.60 0. Maximum Care Eye Creme, 1oz.16.00 0 . Estoderme
Emullfon, 2oz. 9.00 D . Skin Lotion, 18 oz. 9.00 0 . Orv Ory Skin Astringent, 8 oz. 7.60 0. Youth-01w
Boutique Eau de Plrfum Spray, 2% oz. 8.50 0 . Youth-Dew Body Satinee, 4 oz. 6.60 0 . Youtft.Dew Dustjnp
Powder, 9 oz. 8.60 0. EltltSuptr Cologne Sprey,.2. oi.. 11.00 D . Aliage Sport Fragrance Spray, 214 oL 11.00 LJ.
Private Collec:tlon Parfum Pul'll Spray, % oz. 12.50 0 . Or the Ettie Lauder preparation you prtfer. Cosmttfcs.
LA CANADA (AP>-An 18-year-014' "1ier In the
An1eles NaUonal Forest wu fatallY Injured aft.er
falllnt from the top of Swiller Fall.I W. weekend,
authorities said.
Mlcbael Cudelack ( ) dled at Verdu10 HUia Sl'IO'E_ Hoepltal, llfter betn1 car-, __ ..... ~ __ ....,._.... __ _
rled out by a-1hfrllf'•
1earch and rescue team
Sat'UfttlY, otftclala Hid.
S.lu tlX and shipping (btyofld our local United Parcel d9'ivery ar11) will be addttl to ttftphone ind mail ont1rs.
~ Chtflt aount catd no • ._I _ __..__. N1m1.....,_.._.. ______ .._ ____ __,,__ __ ....... _...
Addma1-.......-;; ........ _._ .............. ;....;,._..;.;.;;.~.;.;._...;.;._
Cltv'--..,_...,~.._ ......... .-....-.-.11
I
t
I
..
. . .., ... -
Or nge Coast Daily Pilot Editorial p ag_e ________ M·o·n·d·•Y.· .sep_•·.m·be-r 1.2 ••• 19·7·7·----·R·o·be·r·t s.Na·r·:·e·:.:.p.r:.~b.':.:~.'.~.d.lt.o.~1.::'" •• p.:..s_:.:.:.t~.".E·d·lt-or
Lance Affair Hits
Carter's Judgment
Whethor or not Bert Lana. realgna his poat u director of
the Office of Management and Budget-.nd Indication• are
that he wtll ~ may survive the ourr9nt debacle better
than hts friend and aupporter PAlll~nt Jimmy Carttr. ·
L.ice Is clearly • e11g9y e>perator tkllled In financial Jug.-·
gllng 8fld abl• to walk tt!e harrllne o{ tegallty to hla peraonal
benefit.
But the Lance·atfalr ha beamed• spotlight on Carter's
personat judgment In flrat appointing, then stubbornly sup-
porting t\ls friend from GeorulL
It all may be. as some nave auggested, another typical
Washington witch--burnlng, but the most casual observer can-
not fail to note the incongruity of putting • man who has
engaged in such shaky banking practices In charge of the eQ·
tire nation's financial management.
However, the unhappy affair may have a couple of
beneficial results.
• First, several congressiqnal cocnmlttees are moving to
look deeper Into the back-scratching practices which Lance
insists are common enough In banking clrcle..,..hough many
bankers vigoroysty deny this.
Second, harking back to the very speedy conflrmatlon of
Lance's nomination, legislation has been Introduced to
create a special Senate office on nominations to delve more
deeply into the background and Integrity of persons nominat-
ed for high government posts.
Such an office, had it existed earlier, might have saved
Lance, the President and the taxpayers a great deal of time.
money and turmoil.
Fiction and History
The folks at ABC· TV struck an unexpected goldmine in
their spectacular presentation of "Roots" earlier this year, so
they decided to apply the night-after-night saturation formula
to another pseudo-documentary last week.
For six nights in a row, the network brought "Washington
Behind Closed Doors" Into America's llvlng rooms. And on ~
the opening night an estimated 16 million homes were tuned
in, to give ABC another victory over Its competitors.
It was an interesting show Indeed. But this time we
weren't watching a fact-fiction representation of some rather
ancient history. We were watching announced "fiction" so
well laced with apparent facts from very recent history that it
all seemed quite real, if somewhat overblown at times.
"Washington: Behind Closed Doors" was an adaptation
of former White House aide John Ehrtichman's first novel.
The characters and incidents were supposedly fictional.
But their resembl~nce to the real thing was more than ob-
vious. What wasn't quite so ob11ious was who and what was
tact and who and what was fiction, though part of the game
was trying to figure it all out.
And the solemn comments of TV news people after each
segment made things even more confusing.
It's all quite good entertainment, if not taken as gospel
But there may be reason for considerable concern if this
portends a new wave of fictionalized current history -or
documentary-style fiction.
-A .Day of.Quiet·
It was strangely quiet around the house for most Orange
County mothers today.
Another endless summer has passed and the youngsters
are back to the classroom grind. .
For most the change is timely and welcome. Summer
gets pretty old by Labor Day -time for both bored kids and
their frazzled parents to get out of each others' hair.
For the small ones just starting their academic adventure
-courage and good luck!
For those only too familiar with the trail -remember that
each semester completed brings liberation closer!
For Mom -take It easy for a change; you've days and
days to sweep the sand out of the house and put the beach
gear up for the season.
And for all those behind the wheel -watch out for those
wobbly bikers!
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the 0.11Y Piiot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment ls Invited.
Boyd/ElviS
· By L. ~iBOYD
Argument continues over
which national TV show Elvis
Praley flnt · appeued Oft.
Wasn't Ed Sullivan's pro-
gram, contrary to
widespread belief • .-Sullivan
vowed he woul~'t have tbat "sneering squirming kid" on
his stage. But Steve Allen,
emceeing a rival show op-
posite Ed's, invited Elvis
there. And for Ute flnt ~me-..
Steve topped Sullivan ln the
raUnp. Ed aent Allen a con·
aratulatory telegram which
read: "You tat.'• And Elvis
then was asked onto tbe Ed
Sullivan Show . That
performance infuriated
numerous Elvis devotees.
The cameraa only focused on
him from ~e belt buckle up.
·.Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Fiercely female archivists
Jn Great Britain now contend
Lad_y Godiva 4id not ride
nude· throUgh th., streets of ~Ventry ~cr·1~an aao.
but iode that ~te hone ·~•tripPed ~Y of: all signs of
her rank ... And '91ere was no
Tom the 'l'attor, Who peeped,
and then went blind, they
aver. I do not choose to
believe them.
If you get the feeling
sometimes that you can't
.keep up with the rat race, sir,
you must be slowing down
considerably. Top speed of
the rat is only about 5 m .p.b.
You can't b9 ')a licensed
hatrdre11er lo Colorado
without 1.550 hours of 1eneral
ln1tnJctlon plus 100 hours of
supervised shampoo lessons.
Rowland Evam/Robert Novak
CIA Chief Probe Poses · Risks
°WASHINGTON -President
Carter mutit decide soon bet.ween
permitting or blocklnt criminal
,prosecutlon of former ClA dlrec·
tor Richard Helms, an ~eoniztni
choice of whether to fulfill bis
campalen pledees for .. apen"
government at the cost of the na·
ti on 's hieber interests.
So dangerous to this c:ountry
are the ·impHcatiOM...t>f the un -
precedented ·
grand jury In·
vestiption of
Helms on aus·
pi·cion of per-
jury that Mr.
C arte r has
been secretly
warned by in·
formal ad-
vi s ers be
must never
let the case go to trial. One emi·
nent Democrat, deeply involved
in high intelliglnce matters for
many years, has said privately
that Helms 's indictme~t and trial
·'would be the s ingle most
damaging thing that could be
done to this country." .
These "damaging" conse-
quences would include further
deterioration of U.S. in lei ligence,
an end of any further intelligence
cooperation with the U.S. by"'al·
li ed nations and exposing the na·
tion and its recent Presidents to
o bl oquy. In s hort, s elf·
flagellation or the nation would
reach a m asochistic peak.
TO PREVENT this, the Presl·
dent must block the grand jury.
now well into its second year or
probing the trulb of Helms's.~973
Senate testimony on Chile. Mr.
Carter almost certainly would
have to instruct Atty. G~n. Gnf-
fin Bell to veto an indictment and
thereby prevent trial. Such a move would infuriate
the liberal community, including
large segments of Congress and
t h e press . Mo r eove r . Mr
Carte r's campaign trail was
strewn with pledges. calculated
to make him a ppear different
from President Ford, for govern·
ment operating "in the open," as
he declared in the first presiden·
ti al debate.
Jack Anderson
That the grand J\lr.Y is moving
toward itldlctlng Helms by no
means suggests auill. In fact, ex-
perienced lawyers and politi·
clans here believe the chance of
finding the· form·er/.""".....,..'-.::.£.1(_~
guilty of perjury is, i e wor o
onela-.tyer, "exac y zero."
ESS, in hls de-
ould be compelled
to reveal th t aecret Oval Of·
fi ce and National Security Coun·
cil deliberations .. This unques·
tionably would invalve former
Presidents ih what the CIA 's
critics call the .seamy, squalid
side of the intelligence game.
·Helms would be relieved fro~
proteetiol sources and directions
given to him. even by a Presi-
ent. lf forced to defend himself
in a public tried. .
The President could be ta,Jcen
off the hook by Geof'le A. Carver
and Robert G. Andary, Justice
Department criminal division
l awy~s ln charge of the Helms
investigation. They could simply
rule the grand jury had '.'no
case." . ·
The President is not gotng to be
so lucky, well-informed sources
have told us. The youthful in-
vesligatort who have spent so
many months buntln1 Helms
down ww to confront. blm in
open court as prosecuton.
The srand jury probe Jlaa sub·
poenaed every scrap of ~r In
th' Central Intelligenco Aaency
bearing on clandestine opera-
tions against the late Marxist
President of Chile, Salvador Al·
lende. It has qu~Uoned for long
hours soores of top CIA oUlclals
and former offic1als. Jnch.aded
are 1bomas Kar~roeiaalnes, who
for many yws ran clandestJne
operations, aod Elizabeth
Dunlevy, Helms's longtime con·
fidential setretary.
INTEROFFICE mecpos,
personal logs, calendars and rec·
ord~ of every traceable
telephone call made out of
Helms'• office during bis seven
years as CIA director -aa well
aa thousands of calls from CIA's
Latin:American aection -are
under grand jury scrutiny.
Accordingly, prosecutors
Carver and Andary would no
more welcome a presidential or·
der barring indictment and trial
ttian would liberals in Congress,
the media and elsewhere who
have expended s o much
righteous energy against the
oncesuper·secret CIA.
ThatJiShteous energy and
Helms'srpredicament both stem
parUy Crom bad decisions made
in the Ford White House and
Justice Dep~ent durine the
post-Nixon ~tnand for pursing
W aternte wickedness. The
erand probe of BelmJ was star~ y Ford•a Aitomey
Gener81. Edward Levt. an ac:l:lon
viewed by one seasonfd lawyer
here with liberal connections as
••anoutrace.'' ..
With post-Watergate morality
' reinforced by Jimmy Carter's
promises never to run other than
an "open" government, a pres-
jdential decision to block indict-
ment of Helms would not be easy.
aut the el tern a ti ve, exposing the
nation's intelligence system and
put occupants of the Oval Office
-to further abuse, oiiabt well be
pondered carefully by tbe Presi-
dent.
WA~~t~~ ~.~~~~ •• ~~~~ h!jr~~~~.~~vi~~~~~~l~~ ;n.·
game hunters who are slaughter· nowhere except in the windows of 'r>alance' to the delegation." terior Dept. formally threatened
ing endangered animals may chic fur salons. · to take him to court for allegedly
have found an ally at the interior Until recently, the United HERBST insiata, however, authorizing the slaughter of en-
Depl. States has been leading the fight that the hunten sbould have a dangered Umber wolves. Herbst
The hunters are taking careful against wholes~e slaughter Qf vote et the convention. "They. · maintained the regulation.a were
aim at the list or endangered endangered animals. But that represent a certain element of confusing. · •
s p e c i e s . policy has now been jeopardized the conservation community that
w bi ch pro. by the Interior Dep#lrtment's top bas a right to be heanl, u be WE RAVE ·discovered that
t e c t s s uch official in charge of protecting lold us. "I just saw it u a fair Herbst misled the Senate when
r a p i d l y wildlife. thing to do.'' he testified at his conf'armation
vani s hin g HE JS the pipe·smoking, Herbst made up his mind after hearings that he tried to change
animals as personable. Robert Herbst. who huddling privately with three of-the wolf's status from ••en·
the leopard, bas quietly caved in to the de· ficlals of Safari Clubs lnterna· . dangered"~ ''threatened ... We
zebra, an -manda of the hunting lobby. He tional E.ven though th~ .hunters ! have obtaiqed a letter in which
tel ope, quail will permit a hunter to be one of fierceiy oppose U.S. policy on en-' Herbst requested that Minnesota
and Mexican. two private U.S. representatives dangered species, Herbst wolves be re.moved from all
duck. If the to an intematlonal conference permitted the Safari officials to federalprotection.
hunters water which will decide whether many choose one of their own to attend The hunters, however, were so
do!"! the safeguardB', they will be endangered species will 1urvive. the cOoference. Growled one in-impressed with Herbst's pre-
able. to kill and import greater That decision, fumed one en· terior oUicial : ••Everybody vtous performance that they en-
numbers of the imperiled vironmentallst. ••tslikesendinga foundoutaboutitafterthefact." tbuaiastically supported him at
animals. Should restrictions be member of the Klu Klux Klan to , During Herbst's recent his Senate confirmation bear·
lifted, for example, the sleek an intemtiional conference on tenure as Minnesota's top ·1ngs.
Paul Harvey
Search for Consbint Happiness Bri:Dgs Tragedy
It i8 a paradox that 10111e of the
moat affluent are the least
happy.
Periodically. the so-called "ex-
perts" try to explain the
depression which leads to
suk!lde.
Here is one study which con·
eludes that "most suicides occur
tn winter."
Here i s
another which
which says
• 'Suicldes
moat prev-a l e n t i n
Spring."
$om e.
psychologist
tbeorlze1 that
the per-capita
rate ot aUicide is hleber durine
prealdential campaigns.
Another presumes to blame
psycboloetcal depresslon on
economic recesaion.
But the UleOty\ which appean
m09t v.Ud in m01t cues waa ex·
t preued by Dr. Harold Treffert of
the Mental Htalth IoaUtut• 1n
OshkOlb, Wl1.
l have measured hl1 theorY.
a1a1n1t each day•a news for tlHI
puttwoyeara; ltatand.I up.
RE' 8AYS Americana have
bff1l 10 tic.Illy bleued wltb
material thln;'I tb1t the)' are
apolled. He 1ay1 we com• to
believe that we are 1u~ to
be CGllltant.lY happy.
ArOund the world, tOOO r~e
kUl themttlve1 every day and
10 OOOtry.
Attempt• are lncrea1ln1.
especially amoec the1youn1. •
And the btp.t suicide rite 11
in the countries where the stan·
dard of living la hilh -HUD1ary.
Denmark, Finland and the Unit-
. ed States. ·
Freddie Prioz had it all -
handsome, healthy and wealthy.
But because be was not con-
stantly happy, he (ned to sustain
his hiehs wtth drues. The drugs
worsened the depression until he
put a pistol to his bead.
THAT MOST dru11 and aU
booze are P'1YCholo1ical
depressants ls ln no small way
respoQSlble for tbe accelerating
suicide raUt. A cause-effect rela-
tionship la dJfltcult to establish,
TllB• LOV&RS AND O'l'llEa
STOBIP.8; 1By Pearl S. Buc:k.
Jo.hn Dl)':21! Parea. S7.9$.
Adm.lren ot , tl'9 wrltinp of
Peart S. Buek aH lucky. nity
ltave a vut itlectlon of the Nobel
and P\l?lt1tr prlae wlnnln1 autbOi''• WOri to ~ holD. A
proutlt Writer, Mlil BUck ha
mon tblli 1' bOOlfa to !Mr. Cnd1t
-.... autllOt ~ lift IMlt'W~bid matenJI
MlilM .n.:tMre,Mh m\frl.
A~·pabllabef, oa·
ly oned ~ ltenli -a DO ..... ddilXI~ ..... -~
ln .. Ta~y4ra 111.~ OUtti
StOtt•' \ MW I pre'fiOUllJ publ!IMa. UI, 8\19 fOIJowwa
but the mcreases in both are pro-
partionate and parallel.
Singer Tony Orlando pulled
himself up from Hell's Kitchens
to Hollywood. and suffered no
psychological problems until be
got rich and famous and spoiled.
When adversity struck -'the
toss ol his TV program and the
death of a retarded sister ...... he
couldn't cop&.
Confused, exbau.sted and emo-
tl on a 11 y sbaUered. he's
bospitallied for an indeterminate
period.
A related frustration -I have
everything and nothinl -caused
tbe cbildHn of actora Dao.
have a treat ln store for tbem.
Wb1le aU Ot the Items lntlud4ic.t
In tbe book are 1ood, tome are
better than others. The best 11 a
eolsnant 1tory titted "Neat
,Saturday And Forever.•• .Jt•a
q\llte brief aDd '*"* I.ta wry bri.,.._ Ii what maka ttndl a
memorable tale; It coacerm a
mu aicl a womu, no -...
youq. wbO an lll 10 .. , ·.Cit~ fOl'tuli.abb. botll .,,. mun.d..-.. ~ tbe woman 1 hHMd
bu dillln.i her -to~ Md
tb•1 clO ba•• • ""*'""' .., e~ 11M7 meet once= IQ a ..-1•1•l for •1 .. and dl9 11J91't to rit4rD LO &Wt r•~ ramlUt1 and driun ot
•
Dailey; Gregory Peck and James
Arnesa to end their lives ln their
twenties.
AMONG Americans between
the ages of 15 and 24, suicide 11·:1
now the aecond-ran.ldng cause of
death -second only to accidents··
-and nobody knows how many
of those are suicides.
· The conclusion appean. in-
escapable: We eet 1p0iled. We
come to belle'H tbat we are aup.
pased to be constantly happy.
And nobody is:
And aome retuse to ae«ie for
less.
...
SEA woaLD, "'"' Dlf.CO . ! · T he Investor Club is our way ·
encouraging you to save. On -·
you join, you'll be able to enjoy
everything you see here and much, much
more. You can become a member simply
by maintaining $2,500 in any type of
1 account at Home Federal That's when
your inv.estment beconies Smart Money
-an5i the fun starts for you!
Enjoy money-saving discounts on .
p0pular recreational attractions like Lion
Country Safari, Universal Stud•os Tour,
Marriott's Great America and the San
Diego Zoo and Wild Animal Park .
. 8ee the ~ountry and tbe WO~
dJluxe aa:ommodations at special group-
. . .. .. . . .... ..... ~ .._._ .. ·
rates. Travel to cosmopolitan San
Francisco, rustic New England, historic
London· and colorful South America.
Relax In comfort in a plush Investor
Club lounge at most of our 51 offices
statewide. Read the latest nevispaper and
financial publicaiaions, savor a hot cup of
cotree, use the adding machines to
balanec your budget, or just get away
from the world for awhile,
Take advantage of special services .
at no e~ chaqe, like mobile home and
home improvement loan discounts, ~ill
payment service, discounts at many
leading local merchantS and telephone
transfer service.
...... ~ ..... -, -· --------.. . -~--.
Mofiday, September 12. 1977 DAILY PILOT :4 f
Save yourself more money .. with no-
service-chargc checking at a major
California bank, ·a safe' deposit box,
notary service and either American
Express or Barclay's traveler's checks.
..
• To top it all off, we even have an
account that will double your investment
. in less than nine years when you leave "
your interest on deposif. ~
Take. a good look at the Investor •,
Club .. It's one more way we'll help you ••• in ~
Home Federal Country,
your place in··1he sun. HOME -
FFDERAL
Sl-\VINGS ofSari[)iego
. -
..
' I
YHr 11 Bill/on Family Financial Ctntw ,
Ho .. Federal ~Ylop 1a4 Lou Alloclatlo• of Sui Dltao
~ .
"'
• •
. ' '
........................ __ _ . ---..,. DAILY PILOT Mondex, S!Pl•mber 12, 1977
QUEENIE
lY
.. . .. .......... .
Bv Ph lf fnterlondl
..
·-. • -r ~~c'
-...... -"l-17
't nu 11 •. ,,·1 "anl 10 ~l'l' the hkh of mt around 11 .. 1 l I 111
tn mit 1 .. ~..i .-noul!h 1ogt.'llwr for d mopt-d "
Travels Light?
Mo~Trip ..
For 'Family'
By ~TEVE MITCHELL Of ... Oelly ...... lteft
...
L~"una Beach aculptor Harold Pas torius uMd
h1'4 thrcti-quarter ton pic kup truc k to move hia faml·
ly to thtJ ctty of Brea.
He did 1t m only two lrlps Friday, but then, thla
fu m1ly d~::n'l have much in the way or personal
belongings
Pa!itorius' ··Family" as a 3,000 pound. steel
11r ulpture created by the 41-year -old artist in his
:.tudtoon Luguna Canyon Road.
HE WAS COMMISSIONED to create the 2Cl·foot
high Cor-Ten steel structure by a developer to grace
the front or a new housing project in Brea.
"Famdy" is compnsed or a 1,200 "father," a
slightly smaller "mother ", and two "siblings", the
lightest being a 500 pound tot .
Pastorius cut sheets of hot rolled steel into
shape, then welded the pieces together, like fittine y
Jigsaw puzzle-. ~
PUBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE
r--r.~"""·!'!!""mmmr---.• Baldwin EARL'S Pl•no1
P'\.llMtffj• • n d HUT.... • St~~~~:~, Organ• ·-el V•• o.o-'Hf0/'1 Flnettclng
• CCAlll 5-e NNrftt Y°"' Art•I LESSONS• INSTRUMEHTS
Deaths Elsewhere
A CONCRETE foundation, geometrically cor·
rect, awwted Pastorius and hL$ clan, along with a
rented crane to place the hefty family into place.
Pastorius, who has shown his unusual sculpture
work at the Festival of Arts for about 10 years, sald
he does the designing, fabrication, lmtallation and
engineering for large projecta such a.a this.
'FAMIL HOISTED FOR MOVE
Scutptor Herold PHtortua
COSTAMHA°'42•1753 ' ••
. ·M1ss1:'v'::4e~401 ii,~~~ 2lt22 C:..fftlne c.ttV-,_ ... ,_ t-•--.....__ fSM 1>1-.. Frwv ... a_., l'ltwy.I _...,.... --_._ _,, .......
WI NSTON-SALEM .
NC. <AP > William
Marshall Magruder, 54,
who directed the ill·
fated U.S. supers onic
transport program in the
Nixon adm inistr ation ,
died Saturday of a n ap
parent heart attack
thoped1c sur geon 1n
Sacramento for nearly
half a century. He died
Satur day at a loca l
hospital.
SJC Names
Man to Expo
"It's my project from beginning to end.'' he
said.
HE USES A SOLUTION of salt water and
vinegar "to oxidize the metal." he e~plained.
.. After a few days rus t forms on the surface, but the
property of the steel kee~ the oxidation on the sur-
f ace and seals the rem aining steel from further
r ust." .
He said at takes about two years for the "final
patina st.age," when the figures arrive at the cor·
rect texture -a dark brown, pitted surface. .
Classes
.Offered
San Juan Capistrano's
Community Couns eling
Two of our regular Teriyak1 steak dinners with your
choice of soup or salad and potato or rice, served with
warm bread. Specially priced at $7.95 for both. ' 7k·•on ·0 ofte" · ~ ·~ ~ RE;TAUfiANIS
PARIS <AP> -Prin-
cess Souvanna Phouma,
•65, divorced wife or the
former premier 'of La<>1.
died Wednesday of a
heart attack.
San Juan Capistr ano
r es id e nt Maurice
Koeberle has been ap·
pointed as the city 's
representative to the Ex-
po 81 committee in On·
tario.
"That's why I use this kind of steel," he said. "l
can guarantee my work to la.st my lifetime."
C enter is offering
classroom presentations
on alcohol and drug
abus e to junior and
senior high school •tu·
den ta.
The profeaslonal •;-~~""""' educator~ucted one I
I LOS ANGELES <AP)
-Funeral services are
scheduled Tuesday for
Ouo Nauer, 67, a civic
leader-and restaurateur
who died last week or a
h eart a ilment a t St.
Joseph's Hospita l 1n
Burbank. Nasser, who
founded Otto's Pink Pig
in Sherman Oak s 31
years ago, was sched·
uled to become president
o f th e So u t h e rn
California Restaura nt
A!\SOCi at ion.
~po 81, the first UJ1it-
ed States World's Fair
since 1939, is 11cheduled
to open May 1, 1981 at the
O ntari o M o t or
Speedway.
OCWomen Meeting Set to three-hour proarams ·
also are available to con. I . tinu ation and adult . Th1scoupangood forTwoT~tlyakl Bua1'9htt!C..,ter AneMlal Chapter 816 of tba Na-
1 .1 d tional Association of DVI e R e ti red F e d e r a l
ed Steek Dinnen, specially pnced /!we ucatioo studenta. I at IU5t S7.95 for both at any of the 8379 i.. Palme . 22so e. Uncoin
For more information, restaurants listed bet ow. 995"7811 ~ ._
Phone 4 JJ 3 • 7 3 3 3 or I Costa Mea Newpott BMcn Irmo Seaoort Village
-----To. Center PUBLIC NOTICE
SACRAMENTO CAP>
--Services a re to be to·
day For Dr.· Raymond
M. WaJJertus, 76, an or-
HOTIC~ INVITING alDS
~ltemNo.W
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN !NII
"'•lt<I P«>e•o~I• will be rKeowd by II><!
City of Co\t• Melo. to wit Tiie City
co .... cll, P o &o• 1200. Cool• Meu .
Cal llornla 9'6'6, on or befofe ltw nour
of 11. 00 a m., on Friday. Sept ember 23.
1'11 It 5Mll be Ille rHC)On1lblll1y of'""
bidder to dellwr hls bid to Ille Cely
Clerk't offke Ir( Ille procw.r announc4'<1
lime. Bids wtll be PUbllcly -ed ono
rHd aloud 01 11:00 em. or °' ......,
lhereof•r o< proctlcoble on Frklov.
Saptan1ber n. 1•11. In ,,,. Council
Cllomt.n. CllV Hell. 71 !'err Drive,
Cosla MeH, Ca lifornia, for Ille
furnl1ll l n9 of O NE (11 EA
THERMOP\.ASTIC MEL TEii. HAN O
APPLICATOR ANOTRAI LE R.
'Addlllonal Mii Oil u.e ~111,allat"
D
"
~ 1 mey be -..ined •I ti.. offk• of '"" eat l"fl0t•Ce• · PvrcllaMnQ A9tflt at 11 Felr Orlw ~IA Mew. Callfoo"nla. Bids should be
.. 1urntd lo tlW all.,llOft af Ille Cllv
•ICJCITTS Cltr•. wltnln w kl tim. llmlt. In a MARGARET ANN RICKETTS. rn l· tH led .....,._,Identified°" UM GIA·
de11t of Corona <lei Mar. Calllornl,11. tide wltll the Bid Item NumOtr ano Illa
PuMCI _.., °" Sfflember t, 1'11 ()penlft9 0.le.
Survived by lier llu1bo11d Jamu EacllDid-llooecllyeem-evHY Rlck_.ts, Vice PrMldenl OI NOf'tlwOP Item es Ml lortll In tl!t N1Klll<all-.
Corparetlon In An•lwlm, Ce., "°"' """end a11 nceot1on1 to Ille -llldl· Jemft, 0. .... 1 •• G"990'Y, .Htfrey, R-"°"',.,..,be clearly Haled In IM bid,
dall -Donavan Rlcllatlt and her and fellU"e 10 Ml forttl .,.., llan1 In tllt
d•UQlll..., Debbie -lkOllM ltk kell, ~cllkatlons '"°" be 9roundl for ,.... lllrtt 9randclllldrlft, Erin, Dana -Jectlonf1//1Nbld.
NllNlnlel. AO!Mlry wlll be held°" 5"1-Eecll bid"'°" Ml 10'111 the fUll Nmet
•ember 12, llfll9ht ti 1:00PM •nd end residences Of all .,.,...,,., a,,.i
Memonel Mau°" TUOW.v September parties lnterHled In Ille pr-I •• 13 ••• 10 OOAM, llOtn •I°"' lady OU.... prlnc:lpel .. In COM Of c~•llon•. Ill·
ol t"9 ""9tll, NtwPon eHch, Ca. In· CIUff llM n•-1 of the PrH ldent. terment 11 privet•. In lltu of flOwen Secretarv.Trea""'r .... -Manaver.
e1011allon• mav be m41de lo ti. HHr1 TIM Cllv C.OUncll of 111e Cllv of «osto
Fund or your favorite chlld charity. Me'° ntMrVet lhe rlQlllto reject •"Y or
Baltt 6er11"on Funerel Home <.ot'ont •II blell
O.I Mar dlrecton. · OATeO: ~ember 6, 1977
UM•l•HAM PubllSIWCI Or•nve Coall O•ll'f Pilot, IRENE "POOKIE" UMBliRHAM, Sept. 12, 1977
T he Or a nge· Coast
College Women's Center
will conduct a n o~n
house Sept. 20 Crom 10
a .m. to2 p.m .
The center, which of
fers many programs and
ser vices for women on
c a m p us as w e ll as
women in the local com·
munity, ls located in the
OCC Studen t Center
Building. It is beginning
its fifth year of operation
on the OCC campus
A noo n p r og r a m
will desc ribe special
services avail able to
women on the OCC cam-
pus . . ,
For informallon about
the op e n h ous e or
Wom en 's Center a c
tivities, phone 556·SS57
Cancer.·
Topic of
FVForum resident of <:orone del Mar, Callfornla. 3'74-77
P•n •d •w•y S•Pttmbe r 10, 1tn.1------'------1 Fountain Valley Com-.
Surv1,..., bv her""""""' CIMrl. brother PUBLIC OT CE •nd •h ltr·ln-lew Jolln W, & l!lltn N I munity Hospital officials
K•n9u Of Mlh .. uket , Wltcon1ln, ------------1 Will hold a free COM-
molller Anqa Ke119u of Hancock, PICTITIOUS aUSINISS muru'ty health forum On MIClllQM •nd -e .... t Marv K. ICel· NAMI STATEMENT
lontnol Detroit, Mk llloan. rllec01.S-Tiie fOllOwl119 S-ton It C10f119 bull· all a spects Of Cancer
Ora K.,...., ICallllMn C .. an4 Teri M.... S t 28 at 7 30 in IC•: •II !' Mii"°"'"· WIKtllfffl, ~fTCHEl.l. TRUCKING 711 ep . : 1>.m. ~~ ":~,.~ ::'o=b.'::; =""' SI .. Hunt11111ton eeec,;, CA the hospital auditorium, ~~~ vr~"'"'•' ..a Mllchell, 711 w1111 ... .,. St.. lilOO Euclid Ave. · ~· J ~1~•oc11.CAn.,.1 A panel ot doctors, pa-
P1tAN1t 1. LA~1az1. ttt141ellt ff 41,~ir.u 1' <ondu<led by •n '"" Uenta, psycbologlsta and
s.11 .1w11 ~"'-· ce111at111111 •1111 ttewnM1tchel! American Cancer Socte-._,..., ""*"' ~'""" .._." ! Tiii• •lat-• ••• "'.., .... ,, ,,.. ty officials will answer ~f. r:rrn:~~IAlml~~: .... :~~ i:~.n.~ .. °'0 "" County on questions and d lacuaa .,, • ...._,....., .,, .,,..,"' "", l'IWit • '•1•1• diagnosis, treatment, re-1.tt11N 1Mc11i.wt.1trw,4l1r.-.,, ,.11 ... 11~ ~-ea.et bell•'" ... .. ._ • • ., h a bllitat i on and
........ lJ. "· •• "" , .... 17 psychological effects or ------------c cancer. PUILIC NOTICI Thoswho wish to at-
1
...._no .. wu •m•o
110 ~ro1dw1v Cot I Mtll .. ·1180
SMITM niiifiU. uMI
COSTA MISA CH4NL
"~~~·-17th St. Costa Mwa * &<4M888 Saota Ana Chapel
, 618 N. Broadway
Santa Ana• 5"7.-4'191
'1UCI lltOTHllS
SMITMI' ~41tY
627 Main St.
Huntington Beach
53M539
Plll,4MILY
COlOMIAL p.uMflAL
HOMI
7801 $<>Isa Avtt.
Westmi"'ter 893-3525
PACINC YllW
....OllALPAH \ c.m.tery MortlMIY Chapel
3SOO Pacific View Dri\le
N9'VPQf1,
CallfOfnia e44·2700 ...
McCOIMICK
MOaTUAalH
Laguna Beach
494·9415
Legun• HHlt
78&-0933 S.n Juan Capflfrano
41&-177$
•. _.._ ________ , tend are asked to make
."L'!i..~ftlli'!l.!IJf reservations by callin&.
.:.:' t.a'111 l.'J•T. ~Ill..,.._ 979·1211, exteoslon 281. , ... !ft!;_,_, 'l.AIA C:l.;ANl\1, -------mu iti(,. llw .. ~1111"61.r, CA PUBLIC NOTICE
Aalptl W. McKenrle, Jr .. 17131 Sall-1------------1
" Rita, FOIMltaln Valley, CA '770I Tift IOlloWl"ll perlOl'I• .,. dolno bial· Tiii• bullNU 11 C-.icied by •n In· ....... ,
dlvlduel. 1Nl li ltNAT ION41. Rl!A'l. Aalpt!W.M<Kenrle,Jr. •sT TE I T l!O Tllll ttaf-1 wes fHad wl'"' lhe " A N WORK, M Al.LION u• RE.Al.TY, lllM Brookh\ll"llt 51., ~--County Clel'll of Ofanoe County on taln va11..,, CA '270I
All9UIU1, 1'71. Ch•rlt t Hareld Mcl.ey, 1UJ1 ~1.,_ 0r..,.. C:O.il O.lly":::~ ::~· Huntl"9f0ft lktcll, C.llforrila
Sett.I, t2. lt,26, lt77 Synnon l.. ausce rnl, 11231
. lltt·n Carl•b<ld Co11f1, FO\llllt lll Va lley,
PUBUC NOTICE
~IC1'ITI0'1S auttNIU
NAMI ITATIMINT
TN loOMlno l)e<ton II dolnQ bu•I
lltU"! AOAMS l'I T CLINIC. IOUO
Actamt A-, """11119\0ft Beecll,
Callfen!lt.,._ ~.I.~.,. 1Sf7 NtWpott e1ve1., C:O.ta Met•. Ct llfornle •1'27
Tiii• but IN•• ,, t Otldutlecl l>v t n In·
411¥tdl.le4 O.J.c.m.,.,
TW• 11411-WM filed Wltlt the
eeuntv Clent Of Oraft99 Cou11ty o" ~11,"11. ......
flll!lllS!ttd Or..,._ Cots! O.Oy PllOt
Aut. n. 2', S4pt. s. 12. 1•11 211•·11
Calllorllla'71CI .
J-H. autler, '°'2 hNl'ludo
Orlw , Huntlftllon Betc"· Callfornle
·~ Tllh l>usl.,.u 11 COftCIUCltd by • QeMrtf -1 ..... tlllp
J _,H Butler
T11l1 stat-•H filed wllll Ille
GollnlY Clt rtl of Ofanee County en AU9V1Ul, ttn
l'tllD
Pvlllltllld 0r.,. ClMtt O.hy 1111 ....
Sept. S, lt, tt. 2', 1t7'
... 17.
Call eu-&111.
Pul • few wordt lo work for ou.
Employes will meet
Tuesday at 1:30 p.m . in
San Clemente's Com-
munity Clubhouse, 100
Avenida De l Ma r at
Calle Seville.
831--0616. I 2300 liJrtlor BIV<I. 3333 W. Cout Hwy 1727 E. ~Rd. 168 MaflN Or. ~S35 642·2295 64~00 59&-9431
Call 642-H78.
· For more information;
-pt:Jone 492--0158.
Put a few word•
to work for ou.
I
s . a~~
Love.
A word with many meanlna•·
One of them involve1 helping
those we cherish.
Love is a parent who
foreps his own imlfledlatt
desires and instead put1
.aside money for a chlld'a
education. Or saving money
to avoid the bitter worry that
comes when rim.es a re not so
good.
In today's afflucnr
&Ociety, the simple act of
savina ~be really difficult.
After all, there are so many
attractive things to buy.
That's whv the type of
love that involves self ,denial
is all the more meaningful
today. In fact, we're thinking
of chanpog our name. How
does this sound to you? ...
''Fint Fedmtl Savings &
Love!'
I Balboe latand Dllna Point Marinll LM• ForMt S.tntl Anli
I 200 Manne Ave 2!> 100 Ol>I Prado :??873 Lake FOre91 Or 33 Fosh•on Souare
b13-8720 496-0655 168·4999 !>42·3307
I Thi-; oller '" .1lv1 a11a1labln .11 our Alooer Aoata\lfant, Fa,h1on l~l.mr1. Nnwport I
Bf'ach ()pen MQfl . Thur!" & fra 10 10 00 PM. II•••••• OFFER EXPIRES SEPT. 29, 1977 •••••••
u~•~MI• ·~·· ........
. . ~ . ~ ........ -
... .. .
Monday, Septem!Mr 12. 1977 DAILY PILOT .' .49
Marriage Stability Honnone ~
Degree~ Can lielp =::
. WASHINGTON <AP> -Married persons with
coU11e detrte1 and family incomes of at leut 920,0GO a year are more likely to have stable mar··
rtac• than coupl11 with less educaUon and money, a CeqlUI Bureau r.-port abQws.
The census survey of some 18.3 mllllon married couDI• wttb the hua~and 35 to 5' years old showecl
that amoni couplM where both husband and wife
were coUece 1Taduata, ~.1 percent were in tbelr
firat marrtqe.
mE PERCENTAifE IN T~R FIRST mar··
riage. dropped to 70.9 percent in cues where both
were high achool 1raduates.
Where the family income wa& $20,000 and
above~ tho per~enU.ae or couples in their first mar·
riase waa 82.6 percebt. This percentage dropped to
77.7 percent. wt;iero in<:ome was $10,000 to $19,999
and moved down to.12.4 percent tn cases where in·
come was under $10,000. •
The bureau's figures are based on data collect·
ed through the Current Population Survey in June
1975. The over-all figures showed that 77.7 percent
of married couples where the husband was in the
35-54 age bracket were in their first marriage in
1975. \
Other findini1 in the report:
-83 percent of cbildren under 18 years of aae
were living with two parents, 13 percent were living
with their mot.her only, 1 pereent with their father
only an<l the remaining 3 percent llvin1 apart from
their pareftts.
-The proportion of children who live with a
father and a mother diminishes as the age of the
child increases: 88 percent or children under 3
9ears of age live with two parents, while 79 percent
or those 1.4 to 11 years or age do so.
WASHINGTON' <AP>
-Tbe deadllne ta Sept.
20 for comments on a
plan to require warnlnss
for women beln& alven
sex boml<JDes.
The Food ud Drug
Adm1DJ.itratloa want.I to
require that women be
provided with a brochure
wU'lliq that wse of the
boromones early iD preg-
nancy can increase the
rilk o1 birth defects.
The hormones, pro·
gestina, are often used
by women with
menstrual problems.
' If you want to com·
ment on the plan, write to the Hearing Clerk,
Food and Dru& Ad·
mlnlatration, 5600
FiJhen Lane. Rockville,
Md .• ~7.
Gates to Head
·c ommittee
ON THE STAGE
Robert Cummings
STAOE FAVORITE STIU POPULAR
V1rglnla Mayo
-MORE WIDTE CIDLDREN OF European
background have parents with stable marriages
than black children or children or Latin-American
origin.
Roana f Qr BafJy
Orange County Sheriff-
Corooer Brad L. Gates
has volunteered to chair
the South Area Fund
Develop~ent Committee of United Way of Orange
County N rth/South, IC·
cording Mrs. Marian
Bergeson, leadership
chairperson. Mk:key Rooney The Navy has approved new winter blue.
left, and service dress blue uniforms for
pregnant officers and enlisted women.
The overblouses may be worn with either
skirts or slacks. Until the new uniforms
were adopted, women had to switch to
civilian clothing when they outgrew con-
'Old Stars ' Twinkle
On Commnnity Stages
Among children of European backaround un-
der 18 years of age, 70 percept were living with their
two parents by birth, both Of whom bad been mar-
ried only once. For black children, the comparable
proportion was 46 percent and for children of LaUn·
-American origln, 61 percent.
.. •.
ventional uniforms. •
The South Area group.
is one of tbi'ee commit·
tees organhed recenUy.
A record 1oal of
'4,375,000 baa been set
for the 197'7 United Way
county campaign .
By BOB THOMAS
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Old movie
stars never die, they simply go out
and play dlnner theaters.
They are a fairly recent
phenomenon in American show busi·
ness. The gimmick: you pay about
$13 for a passable dinner served buffet
style, then watch a play starring a
Hollywood name.
THE Pl.A Y MAY BE a standard
like "The Odd Couple" or "Barefoot
in the Park." Increaainsly, the
theaters are presenting original, non·
Broadway shows that are wholesome,
• surefire and somewhat hokey. The Drury Lane operatkm of Tony
DeSantia in Chicago wu the pioneer
in the field; he now has three theaters
operating year-round.
Similar theaters have spnm.a up all
over the country, often in new, af.
nuentsuburbs or metropolitan areas.
AGENT BEN PERASON, who
books name talent, estimates there
are 50 to 60 such theaters.
Among those who regularly work
the dinner theater beat: Mickey
Rooney, V~ Johnson, Myrna Loy,
Ann Sothern, Robert Cummings,
Dorothy Lamour, Cesar Romero,
Richard Egan, Don Ame<:he, Forrest
Tucker, Carolyn Jones, Pat Q'Brien,
Broderick Crawford, Gig YOUlll. Cyd
Charrlsse, Virtinla Mayo, Gale
Storm, Ano Miller.
''I PIA~ 'EM BECAUSE they're
fun and I riiake a lot of money," ex·
plained Cesar Romero, whose career
is largely devoted to dinner theaters ..
In the put year, he be.a played the
same show, "Never Get Smart with
an Angel,'' for 14 weeks in Chicago, 10
In Florida, six in Phoenix. Just re·
turned from Houston, he la leaving
shortly for a run in Seattle, then
Loulsville, retumina here Nov.12.
"You can play the clrcult from now
until doomsday,•• Romero added.
''And the money Is there. If you don't
believe me, look at thiJ."
BE DISPIA YEO A CONTRACI'
that spedlled ~.ooo a week -"that
. doubles what I made when I was un·
der contract to l'os.'• .
Romero ltart«t at the Drury Lue
lour yean afO With aomethtq called
0 Mr. Barr)''• Etohlnaa.•• J{e toured In
"My Three Angels" for 50 weeks, now
has a sure winner jn "Never Get
Smart with an Angel." He plays an
Italian shoe manufacturer who can't
understand why his daughter wants_ to
marry a non-Italian. "Abie's Irish
Rose" covered the same territory.
The new carre r h as changed
Romero's lifestyle. For ':TT years he
lived in the same rambling house he
built in Brentwood. He recently sold it
for a band.some profit and moved to
an apartment nearby on San Vicente
Boulevard.
"rr DIDN'T MAKE any sense to
keep the bi« house, since I was seldom
there," the New York-born actor ex-plained. "I couldn't alt at home and
twiddl~ my thumbs, wailing for jobs. I
did a picture in Rome last year and
another on -location iii Phoenix, plus
some TV here and there. "But the business has changed, and
I don't want to wall around to do some
meaningless TV show or a crappy
movie. I'd rather be out there work·
ing."
But how does a Hollywood actor
pass the time when he's stuck in a far·
otf clty for slx-elght weeks?
"TIME PASSES," HE remarked.
"You travel with the same people and
you ftnd things to do. AllQ, I have
friends in various cltlea.1'or instance,
in Houston I spent a lot of Ume with
Gene Tierney, iNhom I had known at
FoJ."
' .
Let Us · Help
... A father discovers his adolescent daughter is experimenting with dru9s. He doesn't know what to
... A lonely wife sobs into a pillow. Her marriage is breaking up. Her elderly parents have become a
burden. She can't cope ...
...A middle-ag ed man with a good job shakes uncontrollably/s he re.aches for. a bottle of booze. He
tried to stop drinking, but failed. .
(
'
These scenes are common everyday experiences. Al I of us have problems an~ we se·arch for their solutions.
Sometimes we succeed. Other times we can't. Then we need professional help. Where to find this help " . . . . can become a problem. PROBLEM TALK SHOP helps people find answers to t~e ir problems.
Though the handsome hair has
whitened, Cefar Romero at 70 sWI
looks as if he could tango all night. He
enjoys 1olng out to meet the au·
dieoces who remember hla long atrln&
of movies -musicals with Betty Gra·
ble and Sonja Henie, adventures like
"Captain from Castile" and "Vera
Cruz." PROBLEM TALK SHOPS are free counseling and referral services located in Orange County.
'"They're \he people who come to
our plays -the older, mature peo-
ple/ he said. "You don't see th~ mid· PROBLEM TALK SHOPS are here to o,ff er you help through counseling and .r~ferral. Th.ere i.s no die-aged waiting ln Jlne to see 'Star Wan.'" charge for our service to you. We refer to both public and p rivate agencies in 0range County. FaciH-
J-L---o· .bar d ties to care for indivrduals are available on a 24-hour basis. That means we ca n help you whenever you
U1.1118UD l &C g e need help. Appointments are not-necessary. If you prefer to make an appointmer:it, day .and evening
d!f=~~i> John~: ~:.~~ hours are available. (Office hours: 8:30 a.m. -· 5:00 p.m .• ~onday through Friday. In extreme
~ethodllt HOlpltal today and said he emergencies. a counselor can be reached after 5:00 p.m .• and on weekends.) wu certain he would be ready for ·
Senate conllrQ>aUon heartnp by mid·
October. Let Us Help With:
f.
Single Parent Problems -The single parent ,.,ay
often .feel ignored in a couple-oriented society.
Trying to be two people, mother and father,
can be too difficult for one person to handle.
Alcohol and Drug Problems -More and mor'e
people are becoming dependent on alcohol
and of.her drugs. Specialized medical care and
a t reatment program are needed.
I I ndivldual Psychiatric Problems -Sometimes we
feel that our world·is caving in on us. TensiorJ,
anxiety, and fear may keep us from coping
effectively with everyday life. P$ychiatric help
may be your first step toward h.ealthy living.
.. .. . . . . ~ ..... ··-·""' ... .... ....... • J .. .,..,,..... __
,. DAILY Pll.OT
, Hearing Help Possible
Tr-eatmenl Available for Moat lmpairmenh
a1 ne Au•d•W Prut
Do )'OU rtnd yourHlf frequenUy uldn1 people to
repc.t lhln&s • Are yO\I turn.Inf lhe volume on tho
teleVWoo hf&her °'-"you UHd to•
part ol the device extending into the ear canal.
Theae aJds 1enerally are effective for mild hearing
1011
You may be t.ht' one I.ft nery 1~ Agieritana who
suit Crom a bearlnt lola and you probably can be
helped.
"APP&OXJMATELY 90 ~~ent or heann1
impaired lndiv1duai. can be helped either medical·
ly or throu&h suraery or wllb a heartaa aLd,' • wrote
Or. Gale Gardner of Memphla, TeM , in the
Amencan Family Physician.
The behlnd-tbe·ear aid is a amail device which
ma 1nu1t1 behind the ear. The microphone,
ompllller and receiver are ln one unit connected to
the ear mold by a small plastic tube. These aids can
be uaed for losses ranting from mild to severe.
THE EYEGLASS MODEL IS similar to the
behind·the-ear style except that the aid ls built into
eyealaaa frames.
A Federal Trade Commiuloo repe>rt on alle1ed
ubust"S ut t.he sale of hearinl aids hu focuaed aU.en·
taon on bearing loss and whatcauaea lt.
~ Better Business Bureau, in a euide to buy-
llli heanng 1Uds, says symptoms or loaa include in·
consistent responses to sound, lnatteotiveness, faul·
ty speech, ear infections, dluiness and, particularly
among the elderly, excessive frustration and
withdrawal
The body aid b as a lar1er microphone.
amplifer and power supply in a cue which can be
carried in a p0cket and linked by a cord to the re-
ceiver 'which is attached direc~y to the ear mold. It
1s most suitable for people with severe heating
losses.
Selecting a style is partly a matter or the type of
hearing loss and partly a matter of personal pre-
ference.
IN SOME CASES, BEAJUNG LO~ can be
treated and cured. That is why it la essential to visit
a doctor before buying a hearine aid or trying any
other remedy, and recently imposed FDA regula·
lions make such a medical evaluation mandatory
for most hearing aid pur<'bases.
"Vanity comea lnto it," said Vincent Giglla.
president of the Greater Philadelphia Hearing Aid
Guild, addinc that men are much more concerned
than women about the appearance or a bearing aid.
Women usually can hide a behlnd-the·ear or in-the·
ear device with their hair; men can't.
PRAcrlCAUTY IS ANOTHER consideration.
There are two basic types of bearing loss.
Conductive loss involves a problem in the outer
or middle ear. The quality of sound may seem the
same, but the loudness is reduced. The cause of the
loss may be any one of a
It would be impractical for someone who wears
glasses only part of the time to have the hearing aid
built into the frames .
ing wax hle<kin_g lhe ea• """DIC/NE vuiely or lhmgs, includ· ( J
canal, an infection an the ""c..
"You also have to take into consideration the
physical characteristics of the person being fitted,"
said Giglia. An elderly person who suffers from
arthritis, for example. would not want a device with
tiny, hard-to-haodle controls.
tissu€' lining of the middle All hearing aids take some gettmg used to.
Since a hearing aid magnifies all sounds -even
those you don't want to hear -you may find you
hear a confusing set of noises at first. Start by using
the aid in quiet, familiar situations and increase
usage gradually.
ear, a punc tured
eardrum or improper movement of the bones in the
middle ear In many cases, medical or surgical
treatment can correct the trouble
SENSORINEURAL LOSS, OFTEN called
nerve deafness, involves a problem with the inner
ear. ll is t.he result of damage lo the hair cells,
nerve fibers or both. There is a distortion of sound
as well as a loss of loudness.
Credi,t
Ducussed People who suffer this type of loss often com-
plain of difficulty in hearing particular sounds, such
as the ticking of a watch or the high notes of a violin.
Sensorineural loss often comes with aging. It is
usually not correctable and therefore is the type of
loss most commonly offset by t.he use of a hearing
aid.
WASHINGTON (AP>
-The Federal Trade
Commission has two new
pamphlets available dis·
cussing the Equal Cr edit
Opport.wtlt)I Act atld how
1t can help you .
A heanng aid is actually a miniature amplify.
ang system, designed to make sounds louder. r ~ ~
HEARING AIDS CONSIST OF six parts· a
microphone to pick up sound waves and convert
them into electrical signals, an amplifier to in·
crease the strength of the signal, a battery to pro·
vide energy, a receiver to change the electrical
signals back to sound waves and a fitted ear mold to
connect the receiver to the ear canal.
"The Equal Credit Op-
p or tun i l y Act a nd
Women '' and ''The
, Equal Credit Opportuni·
ty Act and Age" are
available without charge
from the Distri bu lion
and Duplication Branch,
Room 130. Federal
Trade Commission ,
Washington. D.C .. 20580
Tfiere are four basic types of hearing aids m-
the-ear, behind-the-ear, eyeglass and body.
The in-the-ear aid flu directly into the ear, with
Quana ftr~atea Dealt•
DEAR READERS : Medical
quackery lo California bas been
estimated as a $50 mUlloa business, of
that, during the past several years,
reported cancer frauda have In·
creued 80 percent, according to State
Attorney General Evelle J, YOUDger ....
How do you avoid beeomlog a vie·
tlm of a medical quaekf According to
informaUon ln a recent lane of Senior
C rim e Preventers' Bulletin,
publhbed by the State Department of
Justice, be very suspicious ol: -
those wbo offer a special or "secret"
c ure, formula or JD•chlne that
"cures" diseases.
-Tboee promising or lmplyinc a
quick or easy cu.re, often referring to
"pepping up" your health. -Those
who advertise "case blatorle." .or
testimoalals from "patlentl." 1
. -'l'bo.e refusing to accepl tried
and proven methods of medical re·
search and proof, wbo ofteD clamor
for medlcal lnvesUgatlOD ud .-o,ni.
lion, but wbO avoid actual &esta or'ilve
lnsafflclent data for acleatlflc evalua-
' tlOD.
t
some speflal appolntmeatl, such as
veterans &adjallmeat appolotmenta,
may be available.
TeU yoar •ro&.ber to reqaest tbe free
Depart-.at of Labor pampblet. "Out
of tbe Mrvlce and Looiblg for a
Job?.'.' Coaaamer I nformation
Center, Dept. 677E, Pueblo, CO 81118.
~
C~ B ... e Befpetl
DEAR PAT: ·You publlahed a
''thank you" from another reader
about the help she'd received from the
magazine action line, I also was able
to have an annoying subscription pro·
blem settled very quickly. Publishers
Clearing House was very effective.
J .S .• Corona del Mar
1 -Thole who claim penecatlon by
, the medical profe11lon wblcb the
• .qaaek dalma la afraJd of Ids competl·
.tloa.
-TbolM who clalm tbel.r metbod ol
ireatmeat la beUer tbaa pllyalctam.
A VS agrees wltb you tbai-.. free
service ls very efficient. All matad.ae
aubacrlptioa and cbuge.of·adclresa
problems submlued to ~ colama
are· forwarded to Magaaine Action
Llne, PubU.bera Clearing Bouse, 38Z
Cbannel Drtve, Pon WHhfnlton, NY
11050. Readen ca.a save time and
poa_tage by aabmltt1n1 unresolved
magaalae complal•t• directly to
MAL. Be sure to lDeludtf 111baulptloa
, detail• <name, add.re~, of pay. meat, datel hlvolftd •a.I.Ila&
label, If PC!Sl lbl ven If tbe
m .,ulnes were not oi'derecl tbroqb
hbllsben Clearbaf Boue, It puu.
tees •atbfactloa. Finally, tbe State Attorney General
aaya, oae of the best ways to avoid
qaackery la to bow yoar doctor (by
hit or ber qaallflealloH and re·
• ferences) and by 1ett1n1 bla medical ! oplldm oa uy bealtlt-rela&ecl matter
' wbea problem• arlae. .
t le• Belp Olleretl
DEAR PAT: My brother la. just
about to be diachareed from the
Marines. He'a written that he's wol'·
rled about finding a Job when he re·
turns home. I've heard that veterans
ean aet unemployment compenaaUon
if they can't find a Job rilht away?
. T .D., San Clemente
Vderaaa may be eatlded to U· ••JlloJ••t H•peuaU. If &MJ ea•DOt flacl a Jo• l.m•edlatel1.
l Somedmet, &be1 may ~-" dMt rtallt i a. nan to Old Jobi, u ,... tnt11er
}
.... IDGn e.ra1a1a1 ao oa1111 ,.,. •
aew c~!t..!M veeerw A rlltui• C•&ll' (UlJVAC) ot .... Bmlle.Y· ~meat lenke ma1 be able• te_·;wp
Mm •~ •·U..Job trabilllC, nc• tiea81••••1a1cac-.... .........
"• .. •rta1 1111 Ar•t.4 f'ercn a.,..._ .._ DDIH ._. IOdll
IH8rl&J CJ: W)H lat •111&1 I VIVAC
· VII rw are ........ eiupeclaJ c• uni.,. 1..... u.. v.a. a,u ...... a...~11_.. ...... ................................ A .. _ ........ ,... .........
...... -)M •H•laaelw; ...
oun .... c .. .,a ..... i•
DEAR PAT: I know that you deal
almost exclusively with complainta,
but I would like to compliment a con·
1>any for a change. You can see from
the enclosed data that we encoun·
tered a very frust.ratfng problem in·
volving a Shell Oil Cq, Liletime Gr°"'
27 battery. The two-year-old battery
began civina us problem1 in May.
Although it cheeked out when tested
several 'thnes, it continued to go dead.
One pboDe call to Shell OU'• corwumer
relatiant peopl• ~181) reault·
ed in arrmigementt betna made ln
about 15 minutes to replace tbe bat·
tery at a ecmventat ••rvic. ltation. I
wbh I'd taken thlJ action IOODet, and
I want to add that I have no penonal
connectloo wlth Shell OU. I haw since tow ou.t Ulat a battery can tett out
Pl'OPll'l1on1peciftc cravib'. but 1WI
b•V. a dead cell.
,.
... -..... ·--.. -~Tips Aid.
Part-time
Fanner
f WASHINGTON (AP).
• -Millions of Americana
have become pad:tJm•
farmers and gardenen
c seeking to make a little . , · t extra money or improve
l1rent •u 1uaJ I. l< t ll!;S. ~ th~!~~iat -them. the
• Agriculture Department
is i~ a series of fact
sheets with helpful sug. ..
Th. 13 t ti" t k gestions. B•••ztz' is ·cen commemora ve s amp mar · Single copies of the ~
mg the 200th anniversary year of the sur-sheets are available Tom M. Richards of ,
render of British Gen. John Burgoyne to without charge Crom the N e w p 0 rt B e a c h •
Gen . Horatio G41tes at Saratoga, N.Y .. Office or Communica· chief adminis trator
1777, has been disclosed by the U.S . Postal tion, U.S. Department pf at c 0 s t a Me s a
Service. The stamp will be issued Oct. 7 A g r i c u I t u r e • M e morial Hospital,
at Schuylerville, N .Y .. known as Saratoga Washington,D.C.,20250. h b d atthetim eofthesurrender. Currently available as een ma e a
-------------------are "Brooding and Rear-fellow by American ing Chicks for lbe Faml· College of Hospital
ly Flock" (AFS 3-6·1), Administrators.
"Keeping Layers for the ' Freeway Rock
·Throwers Guilty
Family Egg Supply" ---------
(AFS 3·6·2>. "Making DOG R.4TE and Using Compost••
(AFS 4·5.·U, "Steps in rnuur UP · Fertilizing Garden Soll" ~u ,..,.
SAN DIEGO (AP> -Two men musi pay $290
damages and spend four months in jail after beine
convicted of dropping rocks onto a freeway, damag-
ing cars below.
<AFS 4·5·2), "AnimaJ
Manure for Crop Produc-
tl on" (AFS 4 -5 ·3>.
·'Starting Plants from
Seed" (AFS S-9-1) and
"Vegetable Harvest and
Storage" (AFS8-1.3·.Ll.
LOS ANGELES CAP>
-Robert I. Rush, the
head of the city's Depart-
ment or Animal Regula-
tion, says there are just
loo many dogs in Los
Angeles -403,000 is the
Superior Court Judge Charles W. Froelich Jr.
heard the non-jury trial of william Pinkard Jr .. 23.
and Kim Allan March, 20.
The rocks were dropped from a Balboa Park
overass onto California 163 lastspring. Deputy DJst.
Atty. Thomas Whelan said the men admitted "10
or 12" such incidents in which a taxicab windshield
----------rough estimate -and
Cell 642-5871.
Put • few worda
to work for ou.
AHEAD
TURNING
OFFER.
ta-y_.1we...ei1111 .. dutwr• ................ ._ ....
•• I I 'I I ............
Take advantage of our
• head turning offer. A two
week introductory program
thats a great way to start
working towards a slimmer,
trimmer you. A firmer, more
shapely you.
With personalized pro-
grams featuring the latest
physical improvement tech·
niques and equipment
Steam. sa~d Mtlrlpool facilities. E¥ heated swim-
ming pools at ey locations.
Plus Jazznastics for women.
A unique and enjoyable
group exercise done to
up-tempo music.
Whatever membership
program you choose, our
service and facilities will
make it a terrific value. So
start with our head turning
off er. Soon, you11 be turning
heads yoU{Self.
)
predicts the.number will
continue to ttrow at the
.rate of l percent an-
nually.
. ...
... __ .,...,......,_
Monday. September 12. 1977 DAILY PILOT A J J
Credit Union ~roposals Supported ' I ,,,,-----------. ANIMAlogk¥ ~Nth...,
,L; I WA HlNGlON <APJ
Conawners aro 1bowln1 1tron1
mte t In a prop•HI for new
t yp ol credit union uvlnl"
plans.. the Nat.aonal Credit UN<m
Admlnlst.raUOn reporta
Four new &ypes or accounts
have been proposed by the a.aun
cy t wblcb aupervtse.• lhe 12,!l>O
reaeraJly chartered c~ll union~
t.1cru1S the country
Bt:l'WEEN lt AND 80 letters
from consumers have been re·
ce1 ved concemang the pro~aJ:>,
u response that an NCUA official
termed unusually good in such
rule propoula Gonerally an·
l•·reat la ahown prlmarll)' by
n •aiuli.tl'd 1ndu1Uie1 when
.. u<·h plun11 un· KUlltlled '
Trad1tlonully. credit uoion
member• h1h_, kept aavln11 In
the 110-c1alled ahar• accounts
They purchaae a share of the or·
1an1sat.1on, deposit funda and are
paid • d1vtdend at the end of the
year bued on how well the credit
union hus performed
SHARE ACCOUNTS would not
be affected hy the new rules, but
Ute .new at·counts would be
available in addition to them
. -
( CONSUMER J
T he propoaed new accounts in·
clu(le:
-The 8pUt Jhte Account. In
this account different dividend
rates would apply to different
portions of the account. For ex·
ample, 5 per~ent could be paid on
savings up lo S:SOO. 5\.'I percent on
savlnas between S:SOO and $1,000
and 6~ }>ercent on amounts over
$1,000.
-The Notice Account. With
this account, a participant would
have to 1tve 90 days written
notice before withdrawtn1
money. However, the credit un·
100 would be allowed to waive the
notice requJrement ror money
that had been in the account 90
days or more.
-The Mllllmum Balance Ac·
count. Thia account would re·
quire a minimum balance lo be
m alntaine<J throughout the
dividend cycle lo get a special in·
terest rate
The Share Certificate Ac·
count. This would be similar to
the certificates of deposit cur·
renlly available from som e
banks and savm~s and loan In·
·stitutions.
TllEtJE ACCOUNTS 1enerally
would have a $500 minimum
although that could be reduced
by individual credit unions. The
certlficatea would have to be held
for periods or from 90 days to five
yeara to obtain hi1her divldeoda.
The proposals also contain
other provisions allowing credit
unions to disclose, but not
guarantee, anticipated dividend
rates.
Persons interested in com·
mentina on the proposals have
until Sept. 20 to be heard. Written
comments should b~ sent to the
National Credit Union Ad-
ministration. 2025 M St. NW,
Wasbin1ton. D.C., 20456.
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'' /J<''1>t' W0'1X ! ''
Now theehanel legend is complete.
Announcing the unparalled Chanel Beauty
~ collection, at Robinson's port
Chanel. The undisputed fashion
_leader of our time. Her concept
of fashion always included
cosmetics. And now, we introduce
to Newport the line of cosmetics
that embody that fashion
philosophy. Chanel Beauty.
A simple,. understated approach
to makeup and skin needs.
A prestigious collection designed
to enhance your individuality.
You are invited to meet the Chanel
ana)yst to discuss your personal
beauty needs, and see for yourself.
Now, at Robinson's Newport.
Refining Toner. 8 oz. $10.
Firming Freshener. 8 oz. $10.
Eye Shadow. ~3 oz. S7.50.
Liquid Makeup. $15.
Moisture Balance Creme. $20.
Automatic Mascara. S7.50.
Gentle Cleansing Mask. $13.50.
Fragrance. 101.
-1
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A.JJ DAILY P1LOT Mo~day.S!pt.mber 12, 1971 ' ..
B aee •
Tornado SaiWffs .Set
):\
By ALMON LOCkAIEY . .....,~ ....... ....., "'
~ ol the world'• bottelt catamaran 11Uon
are alttad)l test.mi lhelr 1klllA. craft and crewa la
the wa . blf Lona Beach Harbor in preparat~
for \be world champlonahip re&atla for lb• 30•foot
Tornado Class
Moce than 30 of the aatlciP.ated 50 entri~ in the
rentta aa.aled tuneup out cit the AlamlfOli Bay
Yacht Club Saturday and Sunday with local and
Austrahan sklppers ðn& the pace.
' RANDY SMVTH OF HUNTINGTON Harbour
won the t1rst tuneup race on Saturday· and placed
second in Sunday's race. only to be tossed out for
not checldng in with the race commltlee before ·
start of th~ race .
The Austra!Jans maldna the best showin1 in the
'prehmmary sails were Brian Lewis, who placed
third on Saturday and came back to win Sunday,
and Chns Wilson who 'laced se<:ood In Saturday's
race
Haines Wins Cup ..
Robbie Haines of the San Diego Yacht Club was
the winner of the Walter Podolak Memorial Trophy
in the annual competition forSoliQB sloops sponsored
by the Balua Corinthian Yacht Club:-
Tbe regatta was sailed in the ocean off Newport
Saturday and Sunday with eight boats competing.
Runner-up was another San Diego Yacht Club
skipper, Ed Travellyan, and third wu Scott Mason
ofthehostclub.
Over 301
u Conipete in
· ·Udo Races ..
t'" Sailors ever 30 years of
., age planted tl'leir aging
derrieres in Sabots and
, J..;asers Sunday to try
~ their luck in Lido Is le
< Yacht Club's "Not So
. Sexy Spouses Regatta''
for Sabots and "Not So
Lusty Lovers Regata"
for Lasers.
Winner in the Sabot
Class was Cal Preston of
Newport Harbor Yacht
Club with a perfect score
r of 314 points for the three
races.
Winner in the Laser
Class was Al Nelson,
Leeway Sailing Club who
logged two firsts for a
score of 2 lh points.
SABOT -1 , Ca l
Preston, NHYC, 314 , 2,
Hal Brown, MBYC, So/•;
3, Mary Jane Nelson,
-LSC, 12: 4, DaveTlngler,
LIYC, 13; 5, Ada Love·
land, MBYC, 16. LASER-1, Al Nelson,
LSC, 2'r:r ; 2, Barney
Rickett, SCRA, 10 ; 3,
Bruce Twichell, VYC,
15; 4, Jack Malloy,
PVSA. 15; 5, Judy
Rawles, PVSA, 17.
Junior Cup
.ToGallm6n
Randy Gallman of
Mission Bay Yacht Club,
San Diego, won the Com-
modore's Trop}ly, sym·
bolic of the junior sailing
championship for the
Sou.them California
YachUng Association .
.
Thirty-four aklppera and crews have already
1l1Jned ln for the tllle match, includtn1 top saUor99
from Bel1lum, Weal Germany, Canada, Australia,
En1l1nd, Argentina, Japan, New Zealand,
~wltserland, Sweden and South Africa. Several are
put wocld champlo~and Olympic medalists since
the Tdtnado was lira£ sailed in the yachlln& Olym-
pics ln 1976.
THE TOtlNADO IS ONE OF the fa!ltest
catam&DenS ever desl1ned. It ls 20 feet long, 10 feet
. wid4l with a 3l·foot mast en which is rigged 235
square feet of sail. The craft is sloop rigged wlt'h a
full batfen mainsail. • •
The Tornado was designed in 1966 by Rodney
March, Tel'l')\ Pearce and Reg White of England
and developed in the Bri1htllngsea area of Britain
during the 1967 season. •
· When the Tornado was !\elected as an Olympic
clasa in 1972 there were 329 in existence. Since then
more than 2,000 have been bttilt and are being ~ailed
in 16 cowitrles lbrouahout the world.
• DESIGNER REG WHITE WAS the gold
medalist in the class in ltl6; David Mc Faull of the
U.S. was the silver medalist, and Jorg Spengler,
West Germany won .the bronze. All three are ex-
pected to be registered In this year's w9rld cham,
pionsbip at Alamitos Bay Yacht Club. ·
Registration will continue today with Tuesday
and Wednesday being given over to measurement
of boats and last minute registration. Opening
ceremonies will be held~t ABYC Thursday with the
first of seven races to be sailed off Long Beach
Harbor on Friday. There will be one race each day
startingatl p.m .
•
•
llohies Sail
Off Newport
It was shore-to-shore Hobie Cata tq Newport
Harbor Saturday and Sunday u 229 of the colorful
catamarans turned out for the loth annual Ancient
Mariners Reaatta.
The regatta, sponsored by the· Anclent
M artners Restaurant was one ol the earliest com-
petitive events for Hobie Cats back in the days when
only the l·t-foot class w u in existence.
~· .
IN TIUS YEAR'S ltEGA1TA there were en-
lrie!i in the Hobie-16, Hoble-14. and the new Hoble-11
classes .
The winner in the Jarcest class, tht Hobie-HA.
was Bob Beauchamp, with bla aoa.Robble u crew.
fromCoronadel Mar. .
Winner in the Hoble-14A· class wu Denny
Soden, Anaheim, and the Hobie-18 winner wu Bob
Haber-'Ibomas of Oceanaide.
WINDS FOR THE REGA'ITA ranced between
five and 10 knots both days, considered ideal aalllnc
weathedorthespeecty cats .
HOBIE·l6A-l, Bob Beauchamp, Corona del
.J. , lf Mar, 10~ pts; 2, Phil Berman, Lacuna Hills.14; 3. Atlsa.eS ope .ar w..._.. Jim Blacl<. Laguna ijills, 16; 4, Wendell Mayberry.
Costa Mesa, 22; 5, Wayne Schafer. Capistrano
The yacht Aus tralia sets her reaching chute 'Beach, 23.
in practice run before s tarting her coun-". HOBIE·HA-1, Denny Sod~n. AnabeilDL.8~; 2,
trymen's fifth bid for the America's Cup in Stephen Myrter, Dana Point, 9; 3, u ennla
the final best of seven series which will get Car~enter. Tusti~, 10~; 4, Hobie Alter Jr.,
UJ1der way Tuesday in the waters of Rhode Capistrano Bay, 14 , 5, Chris Wassman. Riverside,
Is land Sound off Newport, R.I. Noel Robins lS. HOBIE-18-1, Bob Haber-Thomas, Oceanside,
will skipper Australia against the defender l 'h; 2, Elnar Hughes, Dana•Point, 8; 3, Jim Wood,
.Courageous, skippered by Ted Turner. Houston, Tex., 10.
0 '-"1Hotd, U.S.A., \971
• '·, The four race regatta
was sailed in Lido-14s out
of Huntington Harboul"
Yacht Club Saturday and .. ! Sunday.
Se<lODd place went to .
Pete MacDonald,
Newport Harbor Yacht
Club, and third was Jeff
Busche-, Huntington
Harbour Yacht Club.
·.Races Won
.':By Thorne
.John Thome was ~e
wtoner of the Metcalf
Class fleet champtonahi.J>
1n a six-race re1atta
sailed out of Balboa
Yacht Club Saturday and
Sunday.
,, Run(\er-up was Bm.
LAwhom and third was ,~ Bob ltelJJy, all of BYC. . . ' Nine boats turned out
!or the championahlp re-
•atta. Nearly all of the
Metcalf sallora, are at
Balboa Yacht Club for
r; which the 14·1~ bu
been a club dlnchy for
'lntnY years.
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• Monday. September 12, 1977 DAILY PILOT Iii . ~
Beshore Leads U.CLA Against ·couga~
•
HO
Ud \UULDQW
ve led tonlcht at tht Hou ton
Aalrodom«' with aophomorr
ClUarterbHk Rick Bubore, an
Edison •U.b <H-...un ton Buch 1
product. tetlin1 the 1tartln1 nod
qainal th 1911 Southwest Con
ferenct co·cbamploo Houston
Cou11,.,
UCLA coach Terry Donahue
dttidod Sunday to 1larl Buborc
over Stove B\tktch. former
Newport Harbor K11b atar, •
Junior who hu rf'd·ahlrted one
aeuoo ln 1roomln1 for the berth
·"We'll atart Riek and aeo how
It 1oe1," uya Donahue, whott
Brulna enter with what la con
111dered an eatabllabed defense.
StartJ.ni runnlni back Aloia
Blackwell uya \he Houaton
Coucar11. with the beat
turnaround record In the nation
l111t year, now have two seasons
LO play
The fln.t season the non·
conference schedule begins
tonlcht wbe'n the defending
South-west Conference co·
champion Couaars host the
UCLA Brulnl In the ~strodome
belore a national television au-
dience. When the Cou1ars finist)
with the Bruins tonight, they re·
tum to the field Saturday against
Penn State.
•'We've 1ot a chance to l>e No. 1
in the naUon tf we beat UCLA and
Penn S~te." said Blackwell, the
outstanding offensive player in
Howiton's Cotton Bowl victory
last January. "But our season
won't be over If we )ose early. We
still have a shot at the Con·
ference title and the Cotton ·
Bowl."
There wu no such conaolaUon
priie for Houston prior to last
o.nr .. ._.,.
ONl•tlel 7 •••
sea.son. The Cougars spent their
final year or independence atrug·
gllng to a lMI recora m un~ but
shocked the SWC last year with a
10-2 record and a Cotton Bowl
championship.
Houston's chances of repeating
as SWC champions may well de·
pend on plugging up a gl'adua-
lion, defection, injury riddled de·
fense.
Unebacker Davld Hod1e, ex-
pected to aqch9r the def enae, quit
the team and starting nose 1uarct.
Robert Oglesby and his backup
Harry Wright are out with lef ln·
juries. The noso guard poeltlon
will be manned tonight by Robert
Harrlsoo, who's had five daya
practice at bis new position. •·vou don't go anywhere but
the bathroom without defense,"
;....:
Houston coach Bill Yeoman aaidi
"OUt def eose la coin, to havi,
to carry us for the early part '6.
the seuon." l>onahue said.
The Brul.n.s aren't without of ..
fenalve weapons, bowevei'.
They'll . open at runnlnl bacW
with 1,000-yard rusher ~~
Brown and Olympic hurd~
James Owens.
The defense Donahue is COW\t•
lne on so heavily is anchored tij·
llnebac:ker Jerry Roblnsof\. tackle Manu Tuiasosopo and CO'/
nerback Levi Armstron1.
.. ·
Vilas Silences Teiinis Critics ..
With Rout of Connors in Finals
0.llyl"li.t ~-
FORE.51' HILLS, N.'(. <AP> -
Guillermo Vilas is No. 1 today, a
proud, self-satisfied young man.
"I'm very happy with
myself," he said. "I'm a very
good friend or myself ...
His c ritics had said his
scorching clay court victory
streak of 45 matches was not as
meaningful as It seemed because
it included no matches against
the giants of the ·game of tertnis,
Bjorn Borg and Jimmy Connors.
But Sunday, the 25-year·old
Argentine with the extreme top-
spin backhand, outplayed Con·
nnrs 2-6. 6·3. 7 ·6. 6·0 in the
S462.420 U.S . Open cham-
pionships. He hasn't had a crack
yet al Borg, who had to default
during this tournament t)ecause
of a strained shoulder.
RICK BASHORE GETS THE STARTING NOD TONIGHT.
''This puts me very. very hap-
py for sure." the bright-eyed and
exuberant Vilas said after being
mobbed by adoring rans at the
West Side Tennis Club. The
crowd had decided the match
was over before the umpire did,
streaming onto the court as soon
as the linesman called a Connors
forehand long Reds' Demise
Lack Of Pitching
Turned the Tide
' Vilas, blocked by has admirers
and hoisted atop their shoulders,
never congratulated Connors.
who stormed away from the
stadium with his mother and en·
touragc 'I will apologize when I
see rum." Vat as said "1 wanted
to shake his hand · ·
"He is a great player," he said
of Connors. "I have a lot of
respect for him. I think he played
raar. 1 had nothing to lope. 1 knew
the pressure was on rum since he
had not won a major title this
year and this was his last
CINCINNATI <AP> Cancin
nati Reds' pitching has taken a
pounding in 1977 and It took a
--toll on the team's mental outlook,
according to catcher J ohnny
Bench.
"You have to play a confident
game and a lot of confidence was
lacking in certain areas," Bench
said Sunday after keying a 6-2
victory over National League
Western Division-leading Los
Aneeles. keeping the pennant
clinching magic number at eight
for the Dodgers.
Bench said pitching was the
chief ~ulprll In the collapse ~hat
Dodgers Slate
1 U p,m
7•Upm.
7;Upm
has the. defendint world cham·
plons entering the final three
weeks of the se.aoll .trailing by
ll'f.t games. '
"We have lo get good pitching.
Losing big leads was a r eal
damper. Incentive was very dif-
ficult to keep when we got so far
behind. It got away from all or
us." said Bench, whose two-run
double highlighted, a fdur-run
first inning, boosting hlmtto 100
runs batted in for the sixth time
in his career.
While Cincinnati's pitching
staff has been cuffed around for
almost four and a haU runs per
game, Bench feels he and the rest
of the Reds have to accept the
blamei too, for sub-par play in
tbefie d. ·
"&e didn't play very good fUn·
damentals. The deterioration of
our play hurt us," hesald.
• Mana1er Spark>: Anderson
turned to youth Sunday, lnsert1n1
recently-recalled Tom Hume lnto
the game in the third inning when
starter Jack Billing.f\am was
struggling.
Hume, who had a 10.64 earned
run average in a 22-inning trial
with the Reds earlier this year.
scattered five hits m seven in·
nings to notch his first major
league victory
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IAvuelll T-2 22.A~,6'4.
.
Area l"l•alUts
. chance ··
Winds swept over the court.
blowing great clouds of dust on
them from the synthetic clay like
Har-Tru surface. "The wind was
very strange.'' Vilas said of his
losing first set "He was hitting
rockets."
But in the second set. as Vilas
became more certain, coming in
on more balls, Connors grew
slightly tentative, and the Argen-
tine was able to break him in the
eighth game for 5·3. Vilas, the
No. 4 seed:7 drew a roaring stand-
ing ovation as· he took the ne"t
game with a backhand passing
shot.
The third set went to 5·5 and
each broke the others service at love, forcinJ? a tie-breaker.
The tie-breaker went to 3·3.
then Vllu moved up to the net for
a forehand voUef winner. ~D·
nors netted a 'fbreband('then
Vilas hit one wide, maklnl it 5--4.
Vilas hit a fgrehand 10 the
Newport Beach residents Renee Richards <left) and Bet·
tyann Stuart lost ln the U.S. Open women•s double!C
flnals at Forest lWls SWlday as Martina Navratilova
and Betty Stove combined to wtn, 6·1. 7-6.
baseline for 6-4 and won on a
swift forehand passin1 shot. •
That gave Vilas extreme con·
fidence. He then broke service In
the second game of the fourth set
with a crosscourt backhand that
touched the sideline, broke again
in the foflrth when Connors•
forehand volley hit the net, then
kept his serve, pummeling Con-
no rs at love for 5-0.
In the final game, the two were
ptayhig the second deuce. forced
when Connors double-faulted.
Vilas took the advantage when
the struggling Connors hit his
forehand approach into the net.
Their final rally had just begun
when Connors hit his forehand
too long.
Tbe linesman saw it that way
Vilas thought he had. Connor::.
stood and stared. Vilq' coacll
Ion Tiriac, stood at his c6u.rtaid1
seat and looked stern as a bull
The umpire said nothing. But th•
crowd had declde4. The umpir•
made ltofflcial moments later.
MlllH Dffltlet .........
8ttt'f 51-·Prew McMllltn bell BUiie JM~
Klnv·VllHGerulalll1 .. 2.W ,•.J.
•
FOR JIMMY CONNORS, THIS IS THE WAY THE DAY WENT AT FOREST HILLS.
Connors Stalks Off
.
'You Can Stuff This Crowd'
FOREST HILLS, N.Y. CAP> -The nice kid did it. The nasty kid
got a shellacking, picked up his armful of racquets and lammed, not
even waiting for his $16,500 check.
"You can take this crowd and stuff It. I a m goin1 to Monte Carlo
to live," said be~ten Jimllly Connors, the Bad Boy. rushing to a
w aitinli? limousine outside the West Side Tennis Club. · ·
Connors was gone--without a '.'Thank you" or a courteous
bow to his opponent, the officials and the crowd -less than 10
minutes after bowing to Argentina's Guillermo Vilas 2·6, 6·3, 7-6, 6·0
in the men's singles.final ofthe'U.S. Open tennis championships.
This was adieu to the old concrete stadium at Forest Hills, scene
of the U.S. nationals for 52 of the tournament's 96 years, and the
fiery c.onnors left it the same way he had lived It -with a curse on
his lips and a lack of grace. •
There was a sadness to the scene, amidst all the jubilation over
Vilas' victory, because CoMors, despite his bad court manners, had
proved himself one of the 1utsiest and most formidable players In
the game. Connors, notorious u a court villain given to bickering with um·
pi res, profanity and obscene gestures to the crowd, kept his volatile
temperament under a tight leash on this parUcular occasion.
But the people's memories were too long. .
When Connors missed a desperate forehart..d. losing the decisive
set at love, the crowd surged onto the center ~burt. hoisted Vilas to
their shoulders as they might some conquering matador and
spumed the restraints of the private police.
Tennis had moved into the 20th century. The day of stuffy
restraints and fan decorum were aone. This was a foot·stomplne.
tugging, tearing pro sports crowd. ·•
"l wanted to speak to Jimmy,:• Vilas apologized afterward ..
"But somebody grabbed my headband. I did not want them to 1rab
my head, too." ~
.•
Oakland Plane Forced Down .
SALINA, Kan. <AP) -A
charter plane carrying members ot the Oakland A 'a baseball team
was forced down at the Salina ·airport by turbulent weather
early today.
A spokesman for Frontier
Airlines. operafor of the charter
fight, said the.players left Salina
this momlna OJl buses for Kanaas
City, about 175 mlles away The
A's and Royals beifn a four·
camumes.toal1bt •
Th Boeing 737 WH carryln1
lhelr current contract.a, clUn1 h~1her pay for other all:pro
linemen In the leque.
Sarller,, the t111n l11ued a
atatement ca1Un1 the walkout
.. unfortunate" and lil1l1Uni that
furt.bei' netoUatlont are IA doubl.
SIUlblir heel Ht today u the
deadline for relGlutloft ot tht dll·
pute. But Nii•• and Gray IOld
him Saturday. Utti' a "~Uni 1MlioiD, he Would DOt ·,plQ the
ftnalmd~~·-......
dld not •hOW upl-4.,.
about 100 people when it landed
at the airport in Salina about 2
a.m. on a filght from San Fran-
cisco.
Airport oCflcials said the plane
was forced down by turbulent
weather. ll1htning and thunder.
and 1torms were reported to be
occurring up to 60,000 fut at the
time.
They said man)' of the players
played cards In the airport
terminal before they left for
Kanaa11 City thla momin1.
Sullivan told reponera tr be re-
necocJa&ed contract.a with Han·
nab and Guy. oth..-atan of the
tum eould dfmaad the aame
tr,atl'Mlftt.
The playera ·:probably wauld
1et lncreu•" lUbllr contraeta
had explfed, Sulllvu aald. But,
he added, ht wWMl renqotlate.
lllM•r'•G••• Mlam121i= Yen Otmta 21 N .. gq 8 • .A~JO
S• D111018, lee&tle 16 •
STARS C4PTlJRE
CIUMPIONSHIP
EL PASO <AP> -The Orangf
County Stars defeated the El
Paso-Juarez Sol 6·4 in the tie
breakinl fifth game Sunday
night to wilr the Intemattdnal
Volleyball Association cham·
pionship.
Player-coach Dodge Parker,
who received the JV A coach of
the year award at haUtime, led
the St&B with 72 assists and 34
digs.
The game scores were 12·3,
13·15, 10-12. 12-6 and 69'.
World· Record
For SoCal Gill
FUERTH, West Germ~
CAP> -Lone Beach's Katflt
Schmidt, maidn1 up for a OOQI\
showing at the World Cup m~
flung the javelin 227·5 Sunday to,
set a world record.
,
Steve Williams edled team·
mate Clancy Edwards in th~
100-meter d.ab, 10.29 to 10.35, Wt
Edwards came back to wtn the
200 In 20.23, soundly bea~
Italy's Plet.ro Menl')ea, 20.40.
Poland 'i Olympic med ..
alist Jacek W1110Ja won tb4!
high jump with a lelP of 7-8\),
then missed three attempts fiQ
clear a world record bel1ht ~ 7-sv •. American Rory Kotinet:
was nmnerup at 79''AI and ronno
world record holder Dwi~
Stones cleared 7·2"4 tor thlrd. •
Pote vaulter Mike Tully c.:
pealed hla World Cup vtctocf:
over Poland 'a WlacU1latw.
Kozakiewte% by clearing 18-2 ..
two inches better than bis rivllr
World Cup and Olympic ~bam
pion Edwin MOies eully won t.llf'
400 mtWr hurdl'9 In 48.(lf. tMI~~
tna rwe1 Williams, 49.'1, •¥'
JamesKln1, 4.9.59.
Amie RoblnJOn, another Olytf.
pie and World Cup winner, WM
u~aet In the lonf j\lmp t>t:
Franct'a Jacquea Ro.a1H~ 2'7~to~. ' ' ... But Ol)rmplc chamPiCD Jlft
Wllklnl eUlb' ~Oil the .....
with a azM incl At f'~ tOOk~labilt•tas:t~. -~7':""?
......, ...........
BOB HENDRICKSON (LEFT'). CRAfG WINNINOHOFF BOLSTER DOLPHINS LINE.
Dana Hills Switches
From Veer to I Attack
There will be a new look at
Dana Hills Hlgh this fall. both on
lbe field and olf iL
Don DeGroote, an assistant
~ch for four years, takes over
as Dolphins bead coach, replac-
ing Bill Cunerty who accepted a
similar position at newly cao-
structed Capistrano Valley Hl&b.
: One ol DeGroote'a flnt duti.-
: was to change the olf ense from a
~to an "I" formation. a move
be feels best suits the Dolphins•
talents. And in bis deb.ut, ·
DeGroote will have new players
at nearly every posiUoh sfnce on·
ly five starters return from the
1976 team that went M in the
South Coast League and flnbhed
Moverall.
But despite the lack ol ex·
perimce, DeGroote ian't writing
oft this campaign as a rebulldlnc
year. With mosUy seniors on the • aquad. there is no sense in point-
' Jnifortbefuture, he says.
1 • "We're not buildlu1 for f!e.xt
year, we're building for this
year," he claims. ''I wouldn't
• cbaract.erin tbla team as one in a
I
! •
I
I •'
rebulldiq year.
Tbe words DeGroote does use
to describe tbe team an cp.
petltive, dladplined. and com-
mitted. I
''The stroqest thlnc ls the
competitivenesa,•• he says. "In
the past,, we've atruccled
tbroqb with liWe competltioll at
quarterback, nmnln& back and
offensive line. This year, there's
Cood depth at all three polftlcms.
•'I would cbarad.erhe tbe team
u being very well diaclpti.ned.
very committed. We've already
invested a lot ol time on a well)at
program. This team will find it
very difficult to accept a 3-6
season again. I think they'll win
the close ones."
A lot of that burden is pinned on
five lettermen wbo are expected
to start on both offense and ff·
fense. Mitch McGregor. a 6-2, 180
senior wbo was all league as a
light end last year, ia bei.n&
switched to tailback where be
will lend leadership to an
otherwise untested backfield.
Cent.er Craig Winningboff (6--0,
.
Ryan Seeks 20th
At Texas Tonight
, Manager Bob Lemon of the
' Chicago White Sox bas a recom·
mendation for overweight
Americans interested in ~
ding their excess poundage.
Lemon's White Sox split a
doubleheader with tbe.Calllornla
Angels Sunday, winning UH! first
game 6-2 on a rour·hitter by Chris
Knapp and los.ln& a 5-' decl.siCln in
the second game on a succession
A-.etsSi.te
All--•ICMKllMle IMtt
S.llt.f10llltomleetTuet 5 J01>"' ~.UCllltomle .. T .. e• S Jlp."'
Sept. WCMllomlaetT .. n $:•p.m
of bad-hop grounders and fl y
balls that dropped out ol out-
fielders' gloves. .
The Angels open an eiebt-game
trip tonight at Texas. Nolan
Ryan, 19·13, will ettempt to
1*:ome the American Leacue's
nrst 20-1eme winner qalnat
Dock EWa. 1-12. '
CHICAGO .. ,, ..
5 0 2 I
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100• l I I t
) 11. .. ,, .. ,,
C 1 20
tO OO
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Mwlllllib• • I l I ..... 3121
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awi11r.a J 1 1 o
Ekt .. llM1Mc too•
Selaftellfl ••••
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T-. )ol 4 11 ~ T.uts Jl 6 It 4 Cl\k~ >Ot aot .,._..
CalHonll• -lt1 11•~ E-<>rt•t. 0-.W,.1. ~. O~t.
C.llro<nl• 1. L09--Qll~ot00 •. Ca•-• 1. za-
Le mon. Geinol• 2. Ken lnoer. ''°""' ....... Guerrero, Cllalt. S8-41eylor, a-s. $-
~ Sl'-lkYlor ., " ••• ••to f'l'MI 6\l'J 7 J I • l
H""'lllon "1 2 I I 1 I
$.MArtlNI ll,l>-11 1 I I I t I
SI...,... S~ lt 4 .f t t
..,,_ IW,2'U all'i 1 • o \ o yfl9cN II') 0 0 •••
S•v•-l.•Rocllo (IS). H•P-•y ''"'PIO•
u.-). T-4:~1'141.
180 > and tackle Bob Hen.-
drlclasoo (6-2. 190 >) will also see ·
double duty on defense. Win·
ningbolf u a linebacker and
Hendrickson again at tackle.
The other retum1n1 starters
are split end Pete Streng (S-9,
160) and linebacker Dave Ehlow
6-1, 110). Eh1ow is expected to
team up with Cliff Auerswald at
offensive guard.
· .Tom Thornton (6-2, 1,10). a re--
serve last year, has a alight edge
at quarterback ovez Tom Qwn.
pleux. (S-9. 160), up from the
sophomore team. Jeff Olsen
(5-10, 165) and Chip Mares (5-9,
185) will also see action at
tailba6. while Steve Gramlich
and Mike Gomez (S-11, 165) are
fighting for the fuUback position.
Dan Mlkiewicz (6-1. 185) ap·
pears to have the inside track at
tight end while Steve Haytborne
<S-11, 165) has the nod at the
flanker position. Junior Trey
Mitchell (6-2, 170) should see
plenty ol action at one of the re-
ceiver positions.
Mikiewicz and Dave Willock
(6·1, 170) are pegged as the de·
fensive ends with Dennis Adams <5-8. 200) slated for nose suard
duty. Bob Lund (6-2, 185) and
Rick Swanson (5·10, 180> will
leam up with Hendrickson at
tackle in the Dolphins' 5·2 de-
fensive alignment. McGregor,
Milce Facon (5·9, 155), Mark
Leara (6-0, 155) and Mike Gomez
(5·9, 100) anchor the secondary. -
DeGroote says changing of·
fenaes wasn't as di(ficult as it
mlgbt seem. ,;With the number
of starters we bad back. we bad
·to replace almost everybody
anywQ," be said. Goin< to the I,
be added, will help protect the
quartel'back from injury in addi·
tioo to being more suited to the
type of nm.nlng backs Dana Hll1s sports.
'"lbe J ii also better to pass out ·
of." Dellroote said ... I hope we
improve In that department."
DeGroote gave most of the
credit to the smooth transition to
offensive coordinator John
Callard, a former head coach at
Rancho Alamitos where be pro-
duced six league champions.
·'He's really helped out,'·
DeGroote said. "He bas an ex-
cellent offensive footbaJJ mind
and bas done marvelous work
with t.bequarterbacb."
Chlc1eo m*<te 14 errors ln Jos-m, four ol the· sJx 1ames plQed
against the An&els durln& the
put four days.
Baseball Standings
Lemon approached Anre11 •
broadcaster Don Drysdale at the
e;nd cf Sunday's doubleheader.
.. Want to know how to lose
weight?" Lemon asked
Drnd.ie.
Tbe former Dodgen• pitching
star WU interested.
"Try. manatln1," advised Lemcm.
ICnapp struck out 13 in the
opener and had a no-bitter wortdnf until Rance Mnlllnlb.
liJted a clean aln-1• wtth two°'*
tn the bottom ol the awmtb ln-mn,.
New York
Boston
Baltimore ·
Detroit
Cleveland
Milwaukee
Toronto
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eut DlvlslOD
W L Pd. GB
Philadelphia 89 S3 .6ZT
Pittsburgh 82 82 .SM .8
Chicago 75 66 .532 l31h
St. Louis 74 69 .517 151h
Montreal 65 77 .458 36
New York 56 8S .3!M 33
WestotTlllla
.,...,.. 11 sa .eoe
ctndnnatl 78 ea .sa u Y.11 ~ 11 72 .49116
• SanFraneilc:o • 79 .'5511~
SU Dleso M 11 .. 4U x
AUanta 5S 80 .3'11 34
'•
.
Mesa, El ToroAj DiliPlos, · . . .n s in Spotty P ay
No . 4 querterbaeka. Crall
Scbmklt aod Mik• Ochoa. were pleuantaurprllea..
Brown aald ... But there aplQ. it
was IDaperienc:e. ''
Cost.a Mesa Hl&h, a prime Con·
tender for lhe SOQ~ Coast
Leaeue footbalJ crown. lost to El
Dorado High (PlacenUa> 12·6
SatunlQ nJtbt in a acrtinmace
at Valenclal:Uth'sat~h.UQ.
Ocboa also. aparkltd at de-
fense. especially wben be was
awltched hm encl to llnebecker
to nu a void there cre~t44 by a
rub ot uuuries. Spear aanvat-
ed a aboulder lQjury be l\lffered
iJl practice wblle co--eapUID Dan
Chamltaki didn't see aJbt·action
because of a irotn pull suffered
1be <lLvler'I travel to Placcl·
tia Friday for an 8 p.m. 9M90ll
openeraplutValeaclamp: ,-_
Coach Tom l'rencb called lt a
spotty performance. and aald bis
Mwstanca have a lot ol work to do
before the aeuon openu Satur·
day nJght againat La Quinta Hlah
(Westminster) at the Bolaa
Grande High field.
"We had ·some bad moments,
.but aotb.lq that I'm extremely
dlssallsfied" wltb," French says.
"We looked good at times, and
not so good at times."
El Dorado scored first, and 1
Costa Mesa Ued it up on a ~yard
pass play from Jerry Cribbs to
Rick Ayers.
Cribbs ls heir·apparent to a
quarterback job left open by the
graduated Dave Mollica. last
year's South Coast Leaeue co·
player of the year.
in a workout. .
Murio aald he will haft to
shore up tho Dlabloa• linebacker
and defmslwe 1lne al.ta ... We're
aUU looklnS UODDd fOf' 80IDe
pe.noa.nel. We ba.. to mue
quite a few cbaDles."
Marlo ._ allo blP cm de).
fenslve tackle BUl7 Bater. Tbe
defense, be said. WU awrqe
but dldn 't eome uP WW. the bl& plQS when needed.
Mlsldoa Vl• opw =asoo at home tbla J1'rldQ q Sad·
dlebadc <Sant.a Ana). mr...
8-llWs EfteJJl for tallbllek Jett Olsen,
Dana Hills lllcb coacb Don
DeGroote too many
brl1ht s In the olpihlu. •
scrimm ae Saturday &aln t
Tu.atin.
"We 't do a very 1• b.
offeml ely or defenalnJy;•
DeGroot1 said ~nday after
viewinl-of tbe encounter.
'°Tbere wen a few britb1 spOts but there ...... 't any ('(IDlfstmt
eff orta bT anybody buldes Olam." .
01-:l pined SS yards on 1J ear-
rlea while Pete Stron1. wbo
caQIJ:rt three passes for• yards,
wu the only other -offeDalye
perfcnner ol note.
The scrlmmaee remained tied
until the wanln1 minutes ol the
hostlJ.!ties wt\en El Dorado
pushed across the winning
touchdown.
Costa Mesa had one Iona drive
earlier in the game which could
have given It the lead. The
Mustangs took over on their own
30 and marched ~ yards before b~ing stymied on the El Dorado
18.
El Toro Hl&b'• JOUtb and 1.Da-perienee abowed ID a CODtrolled
scrimmqe Saturday &1alnat
,. Sonora Blib in La Habra.
"We did not do as well u we apected. •• DeGroote aald. "We
dld.n't execute very well at all
and m.ile a lot ol mlst.atea. We
were really unaeiresalft. '!'be
hitting was good but I doa't think
we weredolna too much of lt.••
........ "'~'· Missfun Viejo High lost more
than a scrimmqe Saturday.
The Dlablos, outscore<1 l>Y
Foothill <Santa Ana> three
touchdowns to none in their finl
tesl of tbe season, lost the
services of linebacker Dave
Hodgewith a broken leg.
"He would have played a lot
this year," bead coach John
Murlo.tald of the 5-11, 178 aen.lor
who wb also blddinc for the
fullbaek POSition. "He WU a very
bigpartofourplans."
So was passing, aomet.binl the
Diablos dido 't do too well in thelr
home encol10ter ... We should
have done real well on passing
but we were a bit over-anxious,''
he said. :·we had receivers open
on every play." ·
Murio wa.sn'l pleased with
either or the two seniors expected
to battle for the starting QB·posi·
tioh, Scott Spear and Cary
Brockman. but said the No. 3 and •
The Oiarcers ot Pbll Brown
scored a palr ot toucbdowm but
gave up four, three of wbleh were
from a long way out.
"We got bammered pretty
good by them," Brown &dlnltted.
"We just need total Improve-ment."
Brown said it would be dlflleult
lo evaluate the Charaers•
performance unW tbe eoachtna
staff can view films ol tbe acrlm·
mage but he was pleued witb the
team •s aaresstve blttlna and the
ptay oltbe defemln unit.
..We've 1ot aome oflenalve
wort tJsat we've cot to improve
on. .. be said. un•a pretty diJftcult
to summarize the game. We
didn't COl1l!lt back and&&)'~ did
well becaiDe we d1dn 't. ·
"We just need total improve-
ment. total sticking together and
working hard, to overcome the
obstacle of inexperience."
El Toro scored on .a goaJUne
situation and ooce on a Pusina
play. Sonora tallied once on • goalline play · but three times
from way out, twice on long
runs.
"Defenaively, our kids really
hit hard but made a few mbtakes
which allowed them to score,"
FU.ms ot the scrimmap. ln
which Dana Hilla was shut out on
offense while aJlowlnc three
T\lttin scores defensively. re-
vealed some baste mistakes in
football. "We didn't pt oft the
ball at all," DeGroote aald ... We
bad aome mental errors, a couple
of breakdowns in tbe secoodary
and our antles of punu.tt were
notwbat they sbcMa1d have been."
With tbe Dolpblns roster dee·.
imated by lnjurtes lneurred dur-.
in1 pra~tice. DeGroote w.is
foreed to jUftle the lineup and 10
with Tom Thornton at
quarterback the entire scrim-
mage. Reserve QB Tom Cham-
pieux sullered a hairline fracture
aboietbe elbow last week, which
will keep him out of action in·
definitely. In addition, two-way
starter Mitch McOrecor. nutslng
a leg injury, wa!J kept out ol the
scrimmage. With him sidelined
and Tho_rnton going all the way at
quarteroack, Dana Hills used
relatively untested personnel at
the key "monster·· position . .
The Dolphins open the regular
season this Friday against Los
Amigos (Garden Grove> al San
Clemente High.
RULES
WIN PRIZES
WORTH
MORE THAN
S3,000
IN •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
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: AMISS ...... ·····....................... : • • : . Clly •••••••••••••••••••••••• Zip.......... : • • : .-. .................. : .. . . . . . . . . .. . . . .. : ! Clrcte teMts you 8'1* win wta tNs WMt'I CJMWS :
• • : Rams at Atlanta : • • Cleveland at Cincinnati •
Dalla• at Mlnneaota
Detroit at Chicago
San Diego at Oak1and
St. Louis at Denver
Miami at Buffalo
Kansas etty. at New fingland
NY Jeta at Houston
USC at Oregon State
Kanaaa at UCLA
$tanford at Tulane
or9gon •t TCU
Kentucky at Baylor
Houston at Penn State
Alabama •t Nebraska
. Dulce at Michigan
Notre Dame at M1 .. 111tppl
MtuOUrt •t lftl.nof1
Mlnneeohl at Ohio State
Princeton at Dartmouth
Air Fon:e at Cal
W•h. State at Michigan State
• • • • -.. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • •
I
I I,
BfoWn et Yale . -
Comeff et Penn
ClelMOll at Georgia
llOtton Coll ... at Tenn• ....
Olclahoma .... it Arkanut
&an DI• llat• at Arizona ~ Vl~ailt:re~••
• • •
,....-
'
Monday, September 12. 1en DAILY PILOT 83
·FV, Tars, Edison,Oilers, VikM Whmt'aDoing
Outdoor•
~IM NIEMIEC
lag11na
Defense
Shines Eye Sta-rt After Scrimmages
irhbln, ~ the lout.hland cot t remalna Lquna Btach H11h '1 F o u n ta l n Va 11 e y turn wlth an intercep· Davis paued well for
1ood for en wbo an ~Y"" tlll\l Jo.U ud footkll team picked up Hllh'• Barona Jlexed tloo> and Marty Green University, c:ompleUna
nceUer\l na ~.Sltloria. Albacore fl1hl~ hu wb•• it left off from lut their musclet· with an <sixv-anl nm>. etcht of JJ attempt.I, and
tapered off, but at•cc>rdlna JO reports from year with .. n 18-1 vlctory U-12 football.acrimmage Workman was pleased b~e afforded lood
Flahttmlft'I Landlllc'tn SM Dteao there I a lar1e ovt!r Caplgtr9no Valley dcclalon over Santa Ana 'Vltb the line pla7 of mOlt of the
1chool ot .ables In'" SS to40·pound elus aome no ~~~:Sac rt~~ mayangi!hta. t Valley Saturday ln prep· Casey Fitzgerald and '"f,ame. But even ao,
mll•9°'rt.h.tPolnt Loma. Party boatJ'l'WU\lnl lWo ~The Artist.a rollel t.o , arat1011 for Friday's Rick Baria, lnaddtt:loo to "'nh·eralty. couldn't ~nd th1" ~·trips out of ttw bordt!r clty,ar(' ..... r&Aord la•t season opener w~th Redlands his tailtiacks-Rob cener~!,11Yid1ublftu.nh UaJ
iett..U\I lntolOC1'eauc:lleat n1hln1t b:fo~ the w;.{ of an In-Hl&h at the University or Mllucky (8·30 yard•>: drives"'""'" e o e one
• Dall) srhcdultd trip of 1''0:ht rma.n'a ue .. lllibloJlayer turn•d Redlands. Jack Cannza (1-44) •na longpassplay. p1eluna up aWd numben of yellow(ln tuna to 4' ... "' "Redlands is back," Criss (6-31). Huntington B9ch. p<iubda, tom• albacore, yeUowtaui and do•phln, but tho reco around to 1·8, says Pquntaln VaHey •'Our qua~terbacks meanwhile, lbreJl'ened
loll ol sldpJ.e~ ll ts :.anronc: '1 •ueaa u to how the 4nd Capistrano Valley coach Bruce Pickford. played well toot• says twice and once aot down
Ushtna ,.,,,{be tbrou&h sept.mber. but as lonl as coach Bill Cunerty says who adds: "We ' ac-W.orkman. '"Sut we're to University's slx, 'but
the passenaen want to n&n out to r11hln1 1rounds L•IW'I• Beach wm agajn complished ·what we not ready yet. We're was turned back.
bo•t.s wtll t>. achedu1ed . Nawport and Dana harbor be • lea1uo title con-wanted in our s.crJm-makine a lot or mis-:·1 ... -really p1eued
sportl\shers iAre urryln1 very few analers., but tender. mage. Wecameoutofit takes." ·.~ with our hitttng,''
nabJQ£U 1~ for ba1s, mackerel, bottom fish and t Allbtdhn\e or LIJ&unu 's with nd' htjuries and we Morris was happy with Univeralty coacb .J)lck
some yeUowtall and bonito. Both the outer laands quc owns came on got to look at a Jot of his t.eam's·overall abllitr Roche aalct'. "We pl•yed
and \}le ~astaJ kelp ~have been productive. sbort.nms-John Mlll~r· klds." on goalline sltaationa good, a11reHtve de·
Bail 1lnd water cobdltlom are ideal· accordlnl to w,ent over from two Willie Gittens (3o.~ard an4 slneled out the play fense. Our kids really
reports from alllandln11. . . _Yards o\lt, quarterback -run), J1m Freeman (one. o t quarterbacks Jookedecrappy."
Bayflshin&sbouldbeofttheupswln1a.sboatfnl ~nt Gompf scored from yard run) .and Brockl!Uln and Rick Huntington Beach
pressure .haS fallen on in our bay. Spotted and bay five yards out anc~ "Matt quarterback Dou' Starnes, tailback Tom c o a ch D a v e V a ·n bus~ atlll hitting jlp very well when they are McCullovth plun~ed Thompson <two-yar9 Beauchamp, fullbacks Hoorebete~ eotertna bis
worked very slawly over cover. Silver jigs Are most over fromtJlelhree. · run) 1~oud for Jthe Dave Bright and Green second season at the
pl'oductive. Striped bau are e1ao hiUbtg in the back Fl.ra~-ye a r team IJaronsof FV. while San.' and l"ecelver Clark .helm ol the OUen, said
bay channel and are averaatns about 2 pounds: , C 8.J> 1 al ran o Val 1 e Y ta Ana Valley retallated Hayes. his team 's_maln problem
scored on a SS-yard pass with a couple of sco.rtng "Our'secoodary did an was that lt couldn't run
play from Brad Parker plays through the air in outstanding job," oys agalnst.Univ~ity.
to Fernando Salas. Salas the final 10 plays or the Morris. "It's further Quarterbac:k Marco
(i.ood marlln lis hinj h.s been llJ'OYidln& ran a 15-yard pattern, scrimmage ahead than our secon-Pagnanelli C9fTlpleted
Newport anilers wlf,lt IOC.. of actloa the past couple' <!aughrthe pass ~ ~ov-"At this point we're d a ry was in 1976." s~ven of 12 pa~es for 111l
orweekB.Most..ofthesplkebillsarem\heareaofthe ered the remaining 40 n ot polished," says Corona de! Mar's secon-~rds. so Huntington
east. end of Catalina, but there are also flslil being yards on his own. Pickford.· "But •our de. dary was credited ~ Beach's pass offen~e has
hooked around the 14 mile bank, off the West End, Luguna. Beach concen fensc played with a cer· 24 interceptions in '76 on started on a sound not~.
aroundthezetandonthe2711pot. · tra~edonilsqulrterback tain amount of en-the way to the South Scott Brummett was
Caml Gamier of Newport Beaoh w"lgbed In a ?Pl•on play and executed lhusiasm and -contained C oast ~ea g u e-co . .one ot his favorite re·
188poWldmullnlastweekwhlle flsblnaaboardbls It wel~ under t h e Santa Ana Valley's champio~. c ei.,yefs with five 11portfisber ''l>estlnator" skippered tzy Mike Oviatt. leadership of GomPf. the s pero fol' the most part.·· cat.Clles· .. Running back
Garnier 'fought the fish for over three hours on returnlng South Coast Our defensive ends. BB-lltd Deron uflsacum picked
medhim tackle off Church Rock. Garnier spotted League cg.pt ayer or the Bob St ant on, John ti n i ye r a it y ff i g h up 16 yards in just three
the taller a'nd b .. ted It willra llve mackerel. MarllD year. . Nicholson and . Carlos (I~ opens it.s foot· cames.
flsbingahoa.ldremain 1ooctfortJlenextmontborao, Bailon Ara~c carried Reyes, did a good job ball season Friday night Huntington Beach
wbn ll coaW peak aod then taper off lhrouJb,lhe the ball three times for and Gitt~ns was im-at Tustin High and lf opens its season at
restofOdober. ' Laguna Beach, picking presaiveoflensively u n I• 5 8 c r i.,;, mag e ~arden Grove Friday
Jlgs are produclag lots of strikes and quite a up2tyar~. But, like las t "And we cot some against Hunlingto"' rughtat 7:30. ·
• · few boa~ blllflsb. l'lre eye J)gs ln darker colors season, at was the de· great hit.S in the see0n-Beach Saturday' morning "N---.·1"D seem to be produclnc tbe moa sbjkes accordln& to fense that made the dary from a.to Padilla i~ any indication, the ~ .,_.,,._,. •
Whitey at Anpen Ce8'er ID Newport. Maoy anglen strongest showing. Tom Shaw and Sta~ Trojans will be another Ne\llport harbor lllgh
are stopplnc the boat wbea a mvll11 strikes at "~goal line defense Shibata." · tough, defensive team. r eceived e.Jl"Ce lle nt
raattrolledJlcs,morebookupsarefoi &a&tbatpoln& was fantastic," says "We'vegot a wholell~t t}ni\:erslty s,h4~o1,1tt.he P.erformances from its
than at gaff. Wbltey sugcats that an1lers bit the Artis ls coach Dennis or things to ~btron lhts host Huntington ·aeach linebackers and of·
tbrottJefor a second to betl> tbehookpeneuadetbe Haryung. "Miller did a week but we're en-Oilers 6-0 and, ~ile the f ensi v e · & l nem en,
bone of the marliD'• eoutlt, thereby lncreasln1 tbe' super job -at lUlebacker. couraged after a couple Trojans• offense !\:Joked although out-scored py
angler's chadtea oflandlnll a m•run. and at nose gua r d · J>[ dreary practice days. sporadic, its defense ap: M.4ter Dei HJgh <Santa·
Defensive end Paul .Cery You reach a point where peared as tight as the one Ana} four touchdownato lle.ert P~r IHn also looked good._'. . you get a little lethargic which last season re-two in. a controlled
1 "' 'the o nl y inJury practicing against eorded two shutouts in scrimmageSaturday.
Many avid big game a11glers were ~ery, either t eam reported yourself." its first three games. Tars head coach Bill
saddened lo hear of the death of Col. Eugene was a broken thumb lo The'scrimmage's only Pizzica or Newport
Walters late las t nront.h. ··The Colonel,·· as Laguna's second-string 'Bd&.-.f:d1" touchdown came on a Harbor also was pleased
everyone knew him, was responsible for developing free s af et y. Kevin Edi ff dh (H t i f .i b with th.. pl 8 y 0 f
of th f-.... l fi hi · I h S ( Ki' -selbach. He'll be out son 1•' un · sw ng pass rom .,o n • " . one e mes IS ng resorts a ong t e ea o ""' iogton Beach) out-scored o 8 vi s ._0 o a v id qua rJ,e rba ck C r a 1 g
' Cortez on Baja's tip. Rancho Buena Vista with its of action four to six visiting Corona del Mar, Langmade. The play Lyons and running back"
lush' gardens, white sandy beaches, comfortable weeks. 24-18, Saturday in a con-covered 65 yards, with B ,r y o ~ ~ a r d r n
accommodations and fleet of red and white Parker passed well ror trolled foot.ball scr im· Langmade gsitling most-Ne]Jpc:1t't s fa~t and final .
aeuoo opener at holo• Coran.a del Mar P'rtdq
a&ainat Millikan H11h of nl1ht, Marina Hl&h Loot Beach (8 p.m .>. (Huntlnatoll Bucb) held
.. We were pretty Saddlebaet ro,b of San·
Pleased with our scrim· 1'Ana to an·18-181crlm·
mace except for a couple ·ID_ace tie at Westminster
of mental errors tn tbe Jllgb Saturday ntabt.
late aotng when we lost Martoa coaefi Mike
our concentration." Rem,an says be scouted
f:zzica said. "The nan Corona del Mar's 1crina·
efense was excellent mace Saturday and PH·
ut the pass defense bad d.Jcll it will field an even
couple of enors that better football team thu
iOt'US in trouble. it did last year. wben ~t
"I was really pleastd woo a co-champions~
with the entire offensive. la the South Coa
line. I thought the of· Leque. ;
tensive line did a very But Hmlgan may hav
good job and is way a few aces up bis aleeve,"
aheadotwhat wed.id last too. IDSatu:rdp's scrt~
wear." mage.:tot partlcularb'
Pinlca praised the good ormances from
llnebacldna crew of Jim bis offenalve line ud
Corum. Dana Wand· runoln1 bad:a Grea
rocke. Mike Thompson Karman and Ron Boy.
and Don ~artesr. Re also Converted runntni
thought Lyons "did a bacll:GatfySprtqer,now
very good job'' at a Wide iieelver, bauJecl.
quarterback and was in a SS-yard toucbdowa
especially pleased with p a as to hi g h I i g ht.
the debut performance Marin.a 's offense.
of track star Ward. ·Marina'• first offense
"Ward was a s ur-ran30playsandtheSad-
prise." Piuica said. "He dleback nL'hers only got
has never played high lo the quarterback once,
school football before but a statistic Henigan saiil
heranverywell. be was particularly
"I think we're way pleUed with.
ahead of where we were The first and second
last year at this point, teams each scored once
especially offensively." for Marina. then die
Mater Dei scorin« junior varsity unit vlu
c a me on D a v l d Inserted and it also Gonzalea~ SS-yard run, a scored. Each of Sad·
27-yard pass from Tim dlebaclt'e three units
O'Hara to J?avid Reyes, alsoscondooce.
an~ a pair of one-yard Players who im·
blasts by Mike Dotterer preued Henlaan in·
in goal-line sltuatioos. . eluded offenslve iuant
....... and linebacker Mite
Howard. center and mid·
· In a tune-up for its die guard Alan Ptnner
season opener against and tackle Kent Tucker.
LEASE A 1978 PONTIAC
•GRAND PRIX
•TRAMS-AM
O..W. M.w .... T._O. Al._..
.... OchllwW..,
BOB LONGPRE PONTIAC
.............. w..
-~ .............
ltU651 • 63W500 sport.fishers has contributed to memories elf mJllly 'Caplslrano Valley, also, mage as the two prepare of th~ yardage on his interscholasUc tune-u.p hQ~~~~owrthe~-~~a~.c~.W~~s Md~e~sa"heex-~F~Q~o~~n . ,0~w~n~------~---~be~~~.~e~Th~~~d~a~y~~~b~t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ worked consciously in developing his resort and peels }\is QB lo be one of , But reactions to the .-._ I
thtough hls e£forls and very h1lrd work Baja the finest in the Prange conruct contrasted with ' tJ ,. •
California has become one of the best Cisherles on Coaslarea. · Edison co-a ch .Bill ~
the West Coast. Workman unhappy with
•During the pas t couple of years the f~ his team's mlst.UCes,
management of Buena Vista bas been under the while Corolla del Mar direction or Col. Walters' son. Chuck. We are.going With Aquinas High or coach Dick Morris ex-
to miss "The Colonel " his stories and especially his San Bernardino looming pressed satisfaction with
friendly manner. ' . Saturday night at Tustin his junlor-don;alnated of.
ftr few of the resorts along Baja are open, but lllKh in the 1977 football f .
most of tbe pOpular O!)eS-are d\le to open October opener for Irvine ffltb, e~-bung ln the-re with
1st. Fishing for stflped, blue, black marlin. Irvine coach Chuck thenl," says Morris./
sailfish, rooslerfish and dolphin should be good Sorcabal go.t aome "VOil have 't.o be pretty ·
through November. Tbere 11 plenty of room at pleasant answ~rs in a happy, especially with
resorts now, aoJook early. conlrolled scnmmaae our~ pla,yen." The
S•t':'"'ay. ~· KJnes of Coron d I D..,e B-tlag GOfHf Hts yaqueros took a e.o~Mar have seven Ju!io:S
• . • decis1Qn o~er viiltlna and a SOl)bomore ln tbe
A beUer than oormal dove' Olfener rreeted J?on Lugo Hlkh ef Chino offensive setup and
suUer gu:naen ID Soat&em Callfomla and wtth Use and U.e . only ne1atl ve figllre ..i..Umea to go with
unasu.U, bot we-tber &he hantlnf .-Jd be 1ood Sorbacal found was in onlyorieaenlor.
for aeoupleofmonweeta. Loc.sofblrdt •i:eatUhp conditioning as the Edlaoo llnebackert
north and la die central ulteys and these tilrds wlll scrimmage wore Gn. • Rick Stephens (elbow)
have to work through tbll J!oMh· ~ Dennis Nicked'! s~ored was the only~-aaualty ..
• ,the only touchdown on a · Edlson 's touchctowns
Eagles Fly High
At San Cle01ente
Estancia High (Costa ?qsa> Fepar~ for its
season opener •J•ln• .Edilon Hilb of Huntln&ton
Beacji by marchinJ past San Clemente 12·6 Satur-
day lb a scrlmmage -t San Ca.ment.e.
Eltlnc\a wUl face the always-powerful Edison
Char&ets •t Orange Coast College Friday at 8 p.m.
Sad Clemente opens Its season Fridn ni1bt. 7: 30 at
Bolaa Grande ffieb in Guden Grove.
Coach Jim Bra\\en'a Estancia E&&les r9Ued up
overal lone drives, and after spoLtlnt San
Clemente a &.o lead Oillke Lewis' run> they scored
three times, but bad one TD cl$lled baclc on a
~nalt~.
Bratten aaldJle was particularly pleued with
the performance of quar\eibacl Dave Jerwo. H ·
celvtt Mike C'amp al)d running back Andy no.
mlnguei.
"We came out With a kltof m~aJ iDLel\Uty Md
looked lib we were to&nrWn>mp, but we bad lome
men'-1 Jetdownl later, .. a ... tten HY•· , . All tn all,
l '4 ab "' look muh improved. ov r where wt
were lutyear at \h'9 tlme. •·
San C1e19ute coaell Aule Scblff 11reed wlUt
Bratten. • 'Tbls lt tbe l>wt Bat.net a Ml IOok~. If lt
had been a reat iamt tht1 m•lbt have stuck 't lo
our ear," hetilld. ·
Sstaoela etn•rted hoe the 1ame ,rltbOut an
1oJurt tM San Cl•m•te ,,.. reeetv•' Tt.n .,.rt
1uffered • poealba. a., ,,.~re. &rau~ 1alet Ke Mt4 fGur·startetl wt of U.. sc:rift!mll• to lnturt
tlNlil' path for t»MMOG .-er.
65-yard run ,and the de· were by Randy Ponder
fenae of ends Mark (30-yard run), Pete Tayl~~ a~d Steve Pastore (28-~..,,d pass Bodlun, Nickens at. from M.Ute ) Scott
linebacker and Herb Feeney (SS-yard 'return
Thompson and Mark wltb an Interception>
Swancoat ln the secol\· and .Um Crlas cseven-dary 1parkled. yatd nm).
Thompson and Swan· Corona del Mar coun·
coat each came up with tered with touchdowns a~ ln~eptlo~ antt Don by Martin Hubbard (two-
Lu gos runnaog aame ya rd run ) , Kurt w-. sealed oft-;-lls Brocknlan'" (90-yard re-longest gain an e11ht·
yard effort on a brolcen C wr.• 12th
play. ·~ wUU
Sam Clonts uo carries fot" 79 yards>, Nfcken1 BLOOMINGTON (AP)
<5·'75> and Thompson -Frank White drove In·
(4·34) were lhe leacllna the ~ahead run wltb a
ground 1a1Mr1. ftelcJer'• choice to start
Anot.beT bright spot the three-nm olntb ln·
wu the backup pJ~y ot nlni which carried the
quarterback Orea Kan.au Ci~ Royals to
Cre&ee, who aloq with their 12th consecuUve
ThompiOD. ran the·V1q1 •lctcrJ, a 4·1 declllon
otfeoaesmoothly. over the Mlnneaota
Twins.
• ·, ... Why '
House of.Windsor ~. is.iied::skelton'S
\!·.favorite cigm: ...
Rec;l Skelton~s tried some cigars that are more •
exPensive than Ho~ of Wnidsor Palmas, bqt nev~ ·
one that's better. . . . ..
.. -The .reasonjs that our Palmas are made from
only ~e choice5t im~er tobaccos bnd then.
carefully wtapped in speciBJJyc&elect.ed Honduran .
natural or candela leaL ..
The result: quality and value roD:ecl in.tO one riCh,
smooth~smokfug cigar. Hou8e of Wmdsor Palmas, ,
shapely Sportsman or l.MAS full-slized Panatelas--P~ they've got the kin4 of
tast.e that could make
..--. you forgetyou :
ev1HQ10ked .
an~else,
"
--.
.•
..
DAILY ftlLOT Monda I i.mbet 12 1171
--------------------------------<;UPOlJTANDVSE~-------------~~--~~~~~~
COASTWA.TCD: Tonight's 'IJ
• I ~~~~~_:·~,:;:....~::._..,;;;..;;.~:.....~~~~:--~--:--~---"' '',, \ \
E'YDINQ
.._ •••• Cl) NllWI
• 80NAHZA
A gr8ndmot'* and'* mountain c;aen ~ wl1h ~on n.r·
mind after Llttte Joe a. foro.ct to
shoot OM Of'* fM\Uy
• WflD, WILD WUT
-TM Night Of The Whirring Death"
Or. Lo~ oontlnuea to puraue
.,.. pean to male• part of Callf0tnla
• klnOdO"I tor cNtdNn
I MICKEY ~e CLUB
I OMAU °' Jf.AMNIE I SEaAME STREET
MISTER AOOE.AI
1:30. A8C NEWS
I TOM ANO JERRY
AOOM222
VIUAALEGAE
1.-00 8 C88 NEWS I HEWS
EMERGENCY ONE
Pawamec:llca Gage and DeSoto
bring e studio technlcl.n to Ram-
part Hoapllal for treatment of •
broken leg wh«• Or. Bn1chtt
diagnosea the man as a botullam
vlc11m.
D t1Jl NCAA FOOTBALL
UCLA at Houston.
ClJ MY PARTNER THE GHOST
Randall's usually dependable part-
ner, the ghost of a dead detective,
begins to report events which have
not happened.
JOHN GETZ portr•~• the young Hsoclate, and
sometime thorn In the •Ide of Dr. Sid Rafferty,
played by Patrick McGoohan, In the new
dramatic medical series Rafferty, airing tonight
at 10 on channel 2.
G) THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY·
Keith's scheme to meet a cute
newcomer through hla sl1ter'1
newspaper column bacttflrea.
CD ALIAS SMITH AND JONES
Heyes and Curry flnally get their
chance to earn full am!'lesty tor
their crimes.
fE ELECTRIC COMPANY
ell) SPECIAL
"Beyond Sand Ounea" Thalaaaa
Caruso narratee this documentary
on how the sand dunes at Cape
Cod appear to walk and swallow
trees.
8:30 fJ MOVIE
**'~ "Mr. Inside, Mr. Outside''
(1973) Hal Linden. Tony Lo Blanco.
Two determined, New York City
policeman try to atop a ring of dia-
mond 1mugglera. (1 hr., 30 min.)
G) THE ODO COUPLE
fl) ZOOM
81) PUBLIC POLICY FORUM
"The Federal Budget: What A ·e
The Nation's Priorities"
([)CBS NEWS
7:00 D NBC NEWS 8 LIARS CLUB 0 CONCENTRATION CD I LOVE LUCY
"Homecoming"
(I) THE F.B.I.
Erskine lnveatlgatea a unique kid-
napping caae.
&!) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT
Cl) TO TELL THE TRUTH
7:30 D FALL PREVIEW WITH PAT
SAJAK •
0 NEWLYWED GAME
?.
0 JOKER'S WILD CD NIXON WITH DAVID FROST
"Nixon And Watergate" An In-
dept h examination or the
unanswered questions. Iha down-
fall of a President and the pres-
sures °"' Nixon, the man.
· fD SOMETHING PERSONAL
tn "Birthday," Or. Lonnie Higgins
crusades to humanize medical
care for women giving birth 1n
hospitals.
a!) SOMETHING PERSONAL
"Vudle" Is an elderly New Yorker
who reflects upon her past; "Older
And Boldet" describes the attitude
of Buffy Dunker, a -70-year-old
retired music teacher.
Cl) $100,000 NAME THAT TUNE
8:00 II (J) YOUNG OAN'L BOONE
(Premiere) Daniel Boone (Rick
Moses) sets off to explore the
Cumberland Gap, unaware that a
hired killer (Jeremy Brett) waits In
ambush.
9 -LJTTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
(Season Premiere) "Castoffs" An
old woman (Hermione Baddeley)
Jtlovie Ratings
'8-on BoaOtllce ""9""•nc••
;.. •' • • -Excellent
• • • -Very Good
• * -GooCl
• ·, -Fair
• -Poor
·Switch Bit
·'Wonder Woman' N'!"' on CBS~
e~ DAN LEWlS ' · . c~ ~hanges. ll will first of all
t • H"LLYWOOD -n..r..ause of be retitled, ".New Adventures of ~ Y ""I r Wonder Woman," and will be l\DC's erflbarl"a.Hiria• hotd~ O seen On Friday nights from 8-9. . riches, Wonder WOtDaJ\ bu been ~ . .
translerred to O~S for next MOST fMPOll'l'ANTLY• the
I. ~e~sonbat. doesn't up•t .... ~~UP.er. series wµl be updated. That
· "\' me8JlS WQilder Woman won't be -gal. Real.life Lyndf Carter, • Jwst'chasibg Nazis (the character.
one-Ume Mid t.kS.A. and an en-• first surfaced as a comic strip in • fr~ in the Miu Unlvene com-•"•"'-' d · w .. 14 w m Petl on~ is· lo •tatuesque "beauty the ...-ilJ• unng o.., ar · ' '"'" "There will be more who keepar her breathtakine · diversification," Miss Carter ex-
figurre ip sh~pe by 40 minutes of pJal.ns. · "Her costume will un-
· noor exercl,iles c!ach morulng, dttrgo..aligbt alteration. And that
and ..,alneacb evenl.Qg.. · · · he Ill be a direct ·•1 ';ant to tell the world,'' Miss star m r erown w
Cal'ter declares. "That ABC Une to lb~. back on the Atlan-tic island. ire't-lasso wUI have n'ev'er.:canceled '',Wonder •some new: unusual powers. like
" Woman." They had ordered making her adversaries forget-jp oTe "Wonder Wom•n " ful." •
'peciala. But, .lha,t waa-not nearly She reports that there wlll be ~attractive as 22 shows -every mostly non-violent ac~on in the
week -on CBS.'' new format.
•
FURTHERMORE, Wonder
Woman has been promoted. No
longer just a secretary who
tHnsforms herself into aup&r
finds lhe adults of Walnut Grove
hoatlle to her becoming a member
of the communlt)'. Merlin Olsen
makes his debut aa a regular cast
member.
0 MOVIE •*'la "Dirty Heroes" (1968) John
Ireland. Curl Jurgens. Two
escaped POW'a and a Dutch parti-
san plen to rob Wehrmacht head-
quarters where the Nazis have
stored stolen diamonds, ~et
rocket plans and a list of Dutch
traitors. (2 hrs.)
8 MOVIE •*'II "The Tin Siar" (1957) Henry
Fonda, Anthony Perkins. A bounty
hunter and a young sheriff team up
to tame the town bully. (2 hrs.)
Q) PERRY MASON
A man, declared legally dead, con-
sulla Maaon in a child-custody
f~ht.
fJl) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"Upstairs, Downstairs; Wanted, A
Good Home" Virginia's son goes
off to boarding school and her
daughter agqulres a governess
and a puppy, which causes a major
ipset In the Bellamy hoosehold.
'1l) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"Upstairs, Downstairs: An Old
Flame" James, bored with llfe,
becomes Involved-with an old
flame and faces public scandal.
9:00 8 ([) BETTY WHITE
(Premiere) Joyce Whitman (Betty
White). happy wllh the lead in a TV
pilot, 11 disappointed when she
finds out her ex-husband (John
Hiiierman) will be the direct()(.
D NBC MOVIE
.... "Biiiy: Ponralt Of A StrNt
Kid" (Premiere) Levar Burton, Tina
Anckew.. A ghetto young1ter'1
effort• to-better hlmMll are trua-
trated When hla glrtrrlend beoomea
i:ireonant.
DMOVIE
*** "Von Ryan'1 ExptHt"
(1965) Frank· Sinatra. Trevor
Howard. An American officer lead•
a revolt against Nazi• taking the
Q!.OUP to Au1trla. (2 hra.)
QI MERV GRIFFIN m 81Ll Y GRAHAM CRUSADE
f.D SPECIAL
"A Tribute To Th• Am..-lca's Cup"
Entrant• are honored during a
concert performance at Fort
Adami. '
G DAVID 8U8SKIND
Part I "The Bare Fact1 About
Baldneu" Part II "Get The Coctc-
roachff Out Of Your Ho.me" 9 MOVIE . * * "The Ou .. tor Tapes" ( 1973)
Robert Foxworth, Mike Farrell. An
android robot, to all appearances
a human male, has the strength of
five men, but la lnc.pable of
emotion. (2 hrs.)
~8(1) MAUDE
(Season Premiere) "Maude'• Gullt
Trip" Maude, driven by a severe
case of gullt, e>etenda an Invitation
to her dllllcult Aunt Tlnkle (Bella
Bruck) who accepts.
10:00 8 Cl) RAFFERTY
80 NEWS
Cl) ROOM222
Whlle a 1urprlae party Is being
planned for Kaufman. a falllng 1tu·
dent struggles to regain hla place ·
on the track team.
fJD IN PURSUIT OF LIBERTY
"'The Curse Of Adam" The evolu-
tion of wor1c and the freedoms
Involved.
10:30 aJ g) NEWS
11:00880(1)~ NEWS
8 HOU VWOOO CONNECTION
0 IRONSrDE
"Grandmother's House··
G) FERNWOOO 2NIGHT
Guests: author Duane Goff, county
COl'oner Ruas Tuttle.
Q) MARCUS WELBY, M.O.
The marriage plan• of a beautlful
widow are threatened when she
undergoes a masectomy. Sil SPECIAL
"The Stages Of Pr~ton Jonea"
One of America'• newest play-
wrights ("Texas Trilogy") la
profiled.
I!) MACNEIL / LEHftER°REPORT
11:30 f) Cl) CBS LATE MOVIE * * 'h "Babe" ( 1975) Susan Clark,
Alex Karras. A biographical sketch
of 'the world's greatest woman
athlete.· Babe Dldrlkson and the
man aha loved, George Zaharlas.
(A)
0 TONIGHT
Guell holl: David Brenner
Guests: ¥•ogle Kuhn, Eartha K1t1
8 LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE
After being told by hi• girlfriend
EVENING
7:30 ta NUCON WITH '"01T
This sixth ~lal pr09ram ••· amines the ''unanswer•d ques-
tions" ot the first five •nd pro-bes th~ former president's
downfall after Watergate.
1:009 YOUNG DAN'L 800Na
The premiere episode of • new series with Rick Moses in Ule
tltl• role of the fam~ fron-J
tlersman, tonight sta~ed by •
hired killer.
that he hU no clau, a man under·
Q._oea a r.dleal tranafonnetlon. '
U MOVIE ·
**'* "Sergeant R)'lter" (1~)
Lee Marvin. Brattford Diiiman.
Aftlr being Nntenced t~ die efter
his first trt.,, an a!1eged tr'1tor II
allowed • second trtaJ. (1 hr., 45
-min.) e NEWS
• CAPTIONED ABC NEWS
t1Jl tRONStDE
"Over The Hiii Bluea"
1¢008 HTTY WHit• IHOW I ,...._ former M¥V Tyl.,. Moen
show stalwart tmbtrkS on htr own series tOfllght u • 'TV ~· tr9ss surprf slngly reunited
with her e>C•hutbet'td <review betow>. .
t;OO 9 NBC MOYll LeVar Burton (of "~oots")
stars In Biiiy: Portr~rt of a
Street Kkt" tile JtOrY'Qf. G"9t· to "fouth •nd his frustrating ef-forts to be(ter him self,
11th ~d ool• P.fcn ~ ftoOct
tht erltleb mwket. (1 ht'. 30 f'i\ln.)
~D~EWI 2:301 NlW$ . a.:00 NEWS
a:OI MOYie -** "The Rflbblt Trap" (1959) !tMat Borgnlne, O.vkf Brian. A.
herd-WOttclflO domp&ny mM puta
hl9~ before hi• tamUy Md
.irno.t io.... both. (1 hr .• 25 min.) •:toe NOOHTIME
MOANING ... 'I TaMSda.,•
'Da;,ti•e ltf o"la
MOANING
12:00 8 TWILIGHT ZONE
"Penny For Your Thoughts"
8MOVIE • * ~ "Berlln Affair" (1970) Darren
McGavln. Fritz WHvtr. Two
friends are pitted ~aln1t each
other by an aaaaaalnatlon agency.
(2 hrs.)
• LOST IN 8PACE
"Colllalon Of The Planets"
CD MOVIE • * "Myatery Submarine" ( 1963)
Edward Judd. J&me9 Aobertaon
Justice. After cat>turlng a ~_,man
U-boal, a Brltial'I crew lnftltrat .. a
German aubmarlne depfoyment. (1
hr., 30 mln.)
12:30 8 GENE 1'UTRY
Range war la threatened when
rancher9 try to retain free grulng
Jand.
(II MOVIE **1h "They Met In Bombay"
(1941) Clark Gable, Roaallnd
Aueaeff. A pair of jewef thtewe are
foroed Into fighting the Japanete
Instead of searching for the tame
treasure.(1hr.,30 min.)
1:00 D TOMORROW.
Motion picture director Frank
Capra will dlacuaa hla care.er.
1:15D NEWS
1:308 NEWS
r
Q) MOVIE ** ''Miiiion Dollar Manhwnt''
(1957) Richard Denning. C41ro1,
Mathews. An Intelligence egent
must track down counterfeit Eng-
Spor~aonTV
EVEHING
6:00 8111 NCAA FOOTBAU
UCLA at Houston.
9:00 Q ' MOVIE
*""* "Oeelre Under The Elma"
( 1958) Sophia Lor.n, Anthony
Perkin•. A Young man• becomee
attracted to hi• beautlfiuf atep-
mother. (2 h,..) • ,
10:00 8 MOVIE
**~"The &t1y Bird" (1986) Nor· man Wlldom. Edward Chapman. A
monopoll1tlc conglomerate
ettempt1 to put an lrldepec)dent.
milkman out of buUneal. (2 hra.)
AFTERNOON
12:00 • MOVlE * * * ":rhe t,4an Who Pl~ •
God'' (1932) George Anisa, Bette
Davia. Aftet beeomlng deaf, a
greet rmnlelari -growt morbldly d~. (2 firs., 20 "''°·> t:OO. MOYie
*•"Mutiny At Fort Sl\arp" (1965)
Broderick Crawford. B911leged by
rampaging Indiana, ·• Confederate
c~ dllObeya hla tuperlora and holda the fort (2 hre.) · ~
3:00 OJ MOVIE
**~ "Never Let Me Go'' (1953)
Clarie Gable, Gene Tierney. An
Amerlclln la ordered to leave
Moacow, but hla Runlan wife Is
denied permlaelon to ac:Company
him. f2 hra.)
3:30 D MOVIE * * "Ouna For San Sebastion"
(1968) Anthony QUlnn, Anjat)ette
Cotne<. Arriving In a sman Mexiean
.. v1nege. at1 Amty dea«tw ffnd1 he
I• mlataken tor in. new priett and
la upected to protect the people
fro-m the lndlanl. ( 1 hr., 30 rftfft.)
Betty ·White Show
Opens With. ~.inger
. ..
Monday, September 12, 1917
Memories of Groueho
11)' Tbe AaMCla&ed P,...
The followtnc are JIUlboatd't hot record bit.a for
the "'ftJt enchna ~ptembtr 1T 11 thoy appear ln
nut w~k 'a ia.ue of BUJbQatd r6aaul .
IUT l NGLES
1 I Jll~TWANT10 BE YOUR EV!:RYTHJNC
·-Anctv Gibb I RS<l.}
2. F'LQAT ON l"loaterr. (AJ:s(; >
3 BEST o•• MY L()VE Emollona CColum·
bia >
4 HANDY MAN James Taylor <Columbia>
5 DON 'T STOP -Fletlltwood .Mac (Warne.r
Bros.>
6. KEEP JT COMJN" LOVE -Jt.C. 6 Tbe
Sunshine Band <TK)
7. STRAW8£RRY Ll:T'l'Ell JS -B/othen
John:.on <.Ytll)
8. TELEPHONE LINE -Electric 1J1bt
Orchestra IUD.it.cl Artist.a.Jet>
9. SMOJCE FROM A DlSfANT FIRE ._ San·
ford-Townsand (Wamer Bree.)'
10. STAR WARS -London SympbOD1
Orchestra C20tb Century)
• TOPLP9
I FLEETWOOD MAC -Rumors <Warner Bros.) •
2. "STAR WARS" Soundtrack <20th Century>
3. ELVIS PRESLEY-Moody Blue (RCA>
4~JAMF.S TAYLQR-J1\(C0lumbia>
5. CROSBY, STILLS & NASH -CSN CAUantic)
EASY UST£NJNG ~· NOB<;mv DOES IT Bttl'ER -Carly Simon cu ru too Artists J
2. DON'T WORRY BABY -B J Thomas (MCA) ..
3. ON AND ON -Stephen Bishop <ABC>
4. STAR WARS -London Symphony Orchestra
(20th Century)
5.JiANDY MAN --James Taylor <Columbia >
COUNTRY SINGLES
1. DON'T IT MAKE MY BROWN EYES BLUE
-Crystal Gayle (United Artists)
2. I'VE ALREADY LOVED YOU IN MY MIND
--ConwayTwilty {MCA>
_3. DAYTIME FRIENDS Kenny Ro1ers
<United Artists>
4. WAY DOWN PLEDGING MY LOVE -· Elvis Presley <RCA )
5. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA -George Jones
&. Tammy Wynette (Epic)
SOUL SINGLES
1. FLOAT ON -Floaters <ABC >
2. THE GREATEST 'LOVE OF ALL -George
Benson CAiista >
3. KEEP IT COMfN' OOVE -K.C. & The
Sunshine Band (TK)
4. LET'S CLEAN '\JP THE GHETTO -
PtUlad.elphia InternatlonaJ An Stars (Phlladelpbla
International)
5. BOOGIE NIGHTS -Heatwave fE~lc)
Mystery Mo'rie Cast
LOS ANGELES CAP) -David Niven will play '
the col_oncl in the film version ol Agatha Christie's ~cl~ct1ve novel .. Murder on the Nile." Peter
Ustinov 1s Inspector Poirot in a cast that also in· clu~es Belle Davis, Angela Lansbury and\b1aggie
Sm 1th.
"ST.Alt W.AltS" IP~).
'"TIMTACLIS"' CNt ·
•A DIDGITOO P.Alt"
. ''THE SPY WHO LOVED ME"
"THE SORCERER'' {PG)
''SMOKEY AND THE~NDIT'"
"THE STING" )
"NEW YORK. NEW 'tORK" (PG)
"RETURN OF THE PINK PANTHER "
"FANTASIA .. CO)
------------·· 'Glad y OU Asked That'
by Marlly• and Hy G ......
. GROtJCHO WROTE A PLAY.with Norman
Krasna that opened in New Orleana back in Sep.
tember of 19~3. It flopped. On opeJ).101 nJ1bt
Groucbo made a apeech from hla alale seat. revlew·
tn1 hla own play: "Well, anyway," be told hls col·
laborator and the audience, "we had Geor1e
Bernard Shaw scared sUff -forthree seconds:•
Groucho, like other familiar stars, had dttncul·
lY\l)eaceful.ly eatln& 1n public. Once tn a PQJ>Ular
NeW. York "in" rettaurant. a wontan 1teppiid vp to
Grouebo'a table between coan• and ~ed heraelf u a typlcal fan. GeWoa no resDGIWI de uk~: .. Aren't )'OU Harpo Marx? .. "No~~W
Groucho, "are you? ..
During World War II Groucbo wat wltb a USO
troupe. Alter the abow he wu invited to tbe com· · mandlng general's quarters. Suddenb the 1aval
pardoned himself for a few momenta. While
Groucho sat there alone the phone rang and rang
and rang. GrouCbo finally decJded St might be lm·
portant, so he picked it up and 1Ud in a t.yplcal
operator's voice: "Hello, this la World War D."
LA lllllWIA • • LAIClWOOD • IWAl.11.ilc ~ l'lllCI iuo MONDAY tt\fv IATU.-OAY (l•-4 ~•I U :JO 10 6:00
LA llllllADA • DNl Y W lfDllYI a MOllDAYS U:!IO to 2:110
....~.
TMt IOICUll PlU1
TINrAClll IN)
e o .,. <
I
DAii, Y PILOT •a ~ I
...
r
J
!
I
a
. t
' I I
OAI Y PILOT Mondoy Septemti.r 12. t977
"'
•
·ar (
"
' .
\
\
I \
\
The spirit of Maflboro
· · .'in a low .tar cigarette.
/" .. ...
I • ~
• I •
_,
'
•
f ~ • t
. . . • I
Old cards:
Something that
brings back
:he boyhood.
0
Collectors
at a recent
card convention.
Once you get~;;
buf..
\
By MARCIA FORSBERG
Of-D.111' ...... IUIH
Television has been called a lot of things -
from built-in baby.sitter lo boob tube -but the
TV screen isn't a completely vast wasteland.
It's also a teach.Ing tool. .
Instructional television (ITV> has .ch~ed
over the years -lt's no longer Juat a ''talking
face" in front of a chalkboard.
Nowadays, It's colorful graphits, exciting
visual images and stimulating innovations.
In an effort to demonstrate the creative and
varied ways to use televlalon, KOCE.TV, Chan-
nel 50, Orange County's station, wm broadcast
"Televiaton Learnin1 Is Fun," a teleTiaed week ot activities acbeduled lhla week.
Sand)t Sauser, director of leamlng services
at KOCE·TV, aay1 the week is beln1 observed
"because we need to let more people know about
the excltina opportunity for learning °" Channel
50'1 programs. Learnin1 tbrouch televtslon isn't
borlnt-lt's fun."
. . . . --.
..
..
Monday, September 12, 1977
Heroes ·in ¥Our ~ J .
Bock Pockets
By DENNIS McLELIAN
OftMD.ilrl"f•fUH
Lou Sauritch was s,even when
h~ started ,.collecting baseball
cards in the 1950s. But like the bub·
ble gum that capne with them, he
outgrew the hobby by high school
and gavehis-earda away.
Sauritch, now 28, regrets doing
that.
The Chino photographer is one
of the growing nurober of former
boyhood collectors who have re·
turned to the hobby this time in a
big way.
Sauritch figures he has ac·
cumulated about 30,000 cards in the
lai;t Clve years.
"I'm collecting for my kid so
when he gels older h~'ll have all
that stuff," he says.
And Whal wi1L6-year-old Chris
Sauritch do with all those nostalgic
pieces of colored cardboud?
At the least he wlll have his
own s11c~ of Americana to shufne
through on rainy days.
But If he's lucky, his dad will
have accumulated some of the cov·
eted cards that have turned the one·time childhood pastime into an
arena for wheelers and dealers
looking for a good investment.
l.JKE MAKING MONEY on
any oth~r antique and collectable,
the key in baseball cards is
latching onto something rare.
One of the most talked about is
the 1910 "Honus" Wagner card-
onl y about two dozen of the few
printed still ex~l-lhal may sell
for more than $3,000.
Even a 1954 Hank Aaron that
"'ent for S2 two years ago may
bring S25 lo $50 today
Although a new pack-of cards,--
gum included-costs only 15 cents,
there's no telling what pne day may
be valuable.
And so It was that some 1,500
young and old collectors turned out
for the West Coast sports collec-
tor~· convenQon at the Quality Inn
or Anaheim.
. The lhree·day event was
· sponsored by the. 5-year-old
Southern California Sports Collec-
tors Club, the nation's oldest and
largest group, with more than 200
members.
The 64 tables in the convention h~ll-manned by .sell,ers Crom.
thrQughout the natioq-were filled1
with the stuff kids', dreams are
made Of: cards, programs, un-
iforms, autographs and publica-
tions .
' WIBLE UNIFORMS are one of
the latest lldditlons to the realm of
sports collectables_,everal ba,11
club locker .rooms even have bdn
raided of uniforms-it is the cards
that fo[m the backbone of the
hobby.
''M»aon goi me started collect-
ing," explained Cliff Lambert of
Ironton, Ohio, seated behind a ta-
ble. "He collected them when ~e
was a youngster.''
The 52-year·Qld personnel
dlrector has been to a different
sPQtts collectors eonvenlion every
weekend since April 8. His 34-year-
old son didn't make it to the West
Coast though: he was in Pittsburgh
buying more cards.
"What I usually do is get
something for our own collection,"
said Lambert. ''Since April l have
probably purchased more than
$1,000 worth of cards."
Handing ch an g e to a
buyer, he added : "Of course,
you've got to make up your ex-
penses."
Lambert, who estimates he has
100,000 cards, including a 1910 Ed-
die Plank worth $1,000, once col-
lected coins and stamps.
Why did he, like the nation's
more than 100,000 other serious col-
lectors, switch lo baseball cards?
"I REALLY CAN'T say," he
admitted. "I guess it's something
that brings back the boyhood in
me."
"I guess everybody hu lo col·
lecl something," offered Bob
Rathgeber, 31, scaled at the ned
table. "I suppose ar 1 was wealthy,
I'd collect Rembrandts. But I'm
poor, so I'll have to settle for
baseball cards.·'
Gavin Riley, 33, has been buy·
ing cards for 24 years. "It's usually
a passing thing, but once I got the
bug 1 never lost it."
The Cerritos resident
estimates he's got between a half to
three Quarter& of a million cards.
But, he added, that Includes "a
tremendous amount of
duplicates."
There are three major eras in
baseball card collecting, explained
Riley, who is treasurer of the
Southern California Sports Collec-
tors Club.
The first one dates back to the
1880s when tobacco companies
printed players' pictures on cards
wt:iich wer.e used as cigarette
package stiffeners. The Tobacco
Era lasted until around World War
1.
. NEXT GAME THE candy and
gum era, wJ:lich continued until
World War II. The third phase is the P~st War Era, which is mostly gum .card!. · Ana while this period also in·
eluded region.+~td&-in ever-ything Crom meat packages, cereal
boxes and potato chip bags-it also
saw the rise of Topps Chewing
Gum, Inc., which has grown to
dominate the field .
<se.HEROES, PageC2>
. . .
ge _llodge'
Metrip Man is
one bf the •
graphics which
Will be used
in a show on
metric system.
" . .. .
t') OAIL Y Pll U 1 Monda Se t•mbet I 2 I Y77
bo)rritncl. tiUU). ,.. • Ann Landers sa lary to deliver bad co llY 00 tbe lllb·
\ .. wt'ct auy, but now und personal letters to my Jee&: th~n I \ff ~11n~ of a l~tri employes. Nor do I p~ All mall addreaed to a blt'lempN oatt11' I forgave him. You coc.tld bave cou~o • my employea to read bulneaa <re1ardlea1 of
, t. a.t "'rldu y n16'hl Thentixtduymymoth"r badlnfedlon. thelr peraonal mall on wbetber or no& U Is
1 wh~n ~t' ..,. t•re hor'l1nR uw lb lt--et.hmuks and If tbal clowa ever bile• my Ume. Moreover, my marked "perao11al" 11 ll .nound on lhl· noor. I aot uked wh•t happttned. I yo• •l•lo, waall the employees have no right deUvered 1ccordJn1 to
a tOt-hold on him cl was ~oln& to put the wound wUll ao1p aod to use my typewriters the lutruetlona 11.ued
lt>omed It fron1 watt'h1n1t hl•nrn on Tutry tour' water, see a doctor pro· and wrllin& paper to by tbe bead ot tbe busl·
"'rcsllin& on TV 1 I think dog l, but dccld~ I'd bet· mplly, and send Bu11y carry on personal cor-neas -unleaa I& Is re· h~ went 8 htth: rrazy, ter tell the truth Whtin I for a Iona walk on a 1hort res~dence. Clltered mall.
Ann The guy Mtually bit told Mom 8uziy bit me dock.. 111 bet you '11 hear a lot If die bolt 11y1 all
me on tht: hand. I don t 1>hl' was horrified -said DEAR ANN I wu on this subject from mall dollvered to tbe
mean JUbl o nibble. I a human bite can be very licked off by the letter bosses all over the coun-mall room ls to be
melln u rl'11I tiale lhlll dunaerous h this true'> from the office worker tryandtheywiUallbeon opened, 10 be It
bro)<e the skin Wht:n 1 So far 1 am 0 K Please who complained because my aide. -THIRD EYE .. Personal and Conflden·
!t.:lW the blood I neurl y lt>llmeifMomisright J personal tetter was DEAR EYE: You tlal" baa no le1al r a uttt'd NJ P PED BY NICK opened by someone in were rtgbt. I did -and slgDillcance. This doe1
, Buuy ,,ud he wa~ Dear Nipped: Yes, sbe the mail room. they were. What's more, not mean, however, tbat
1 1 ... orr>. thJl he lo~t his ls rlpt. You were lucky. You can see from this .. an employer, 1 must the bo811 bu the right to
head .ind promised Every human mouth Is stallonery I arrf the prE!• say you have a polDt. open letters addres1ed to l_I never lo do such a thing loaded with bacteria. sident o( a well·known Read 00 u you want to others.
CALENDAR
POSTED
Newport Harbor Art Museum
• Council members (from left> Pat
Cox, Phoebe Brownell and Jeanne
Mackel preview the com ·
memorallve posters that are being
distributed throughout the county
announeing Museum Week Sept. 18
to25.
.. .---.
Tile wkk celebrates the ppening
or the museum's new bullcUng at
8SO San Clemente Dr., in Newport
Center. The colorful posters, by
artist Tony. Delap, can be
purchased in the museum shop for
SS . Admission to the non-profit
museum is by donation.
EL CAMINO REAL: The Woman's Club's
erafts and sewing section will be held at 10 a .m.
Monday. Sept. 12, in the Community House. A
bridge tournament will be held at 12 noon Thurs·
day, Sept. 15
FA"MILY DAY CARE HOME: A new Orange
Coast College course, on operating a family day
care home will begin at 7 p.m. Thursday, Sept.
15. Cathey Dunn, 534·2S92, will answer further
questions. .
Scorpio: New Friend
ALPHA OMICRON Pl : The Southern
Orange County alumnae chapter wlll launch its
19th year with a salad supper at 6:30 p.m. Wed-
nesday, Sept 14, in the Mission Viejo home of
Marilyn Elliotl
AU alumnae living in the south Orange Coun·
Ly area arc welcome Reservations may be made
by caJhng Mrs Elltoll. 831·9788, or Carol Frogue.
830-5218 KAPPA ALPHA THETA: A membership
luncheon will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday,
Sept. 14 Further information is available by
calling Nancy O'Conner. hospitality chairman.
675·3292.
r • PRENATAL CARE CIASS: How to Have a
' I lealthy Baby is the title of an 18·week three-
. credit course dealing with prenatal care, genetic
counseling and the prevention of birth defects. It
will be held at Golden West College from 6:30 to
9:30 p.m. beginning Wednesday, Sept.14.
The class is in conjunction with the Orange
County chapter of the National Foundation-
M arch of Dimes. Additional information is
av ail able from the evening college office,
892-7711 or the county March of Dimes, 979·2270.
1· ALPHA CID OMEGA: 1'The Gamm~ Tau
Ga mma alumnae cha,;ter will hold its first fall
meeting al 7:30 p .m . Thursday, Sept. 15, in the
Fountain Valley home of president Mrs. Stephen
:-Schiffman.
NEWPORT BEACH EBELLS: The group's r trad1tonal Cotton Party, featunng a showing of
intimate apparel and lounge wear, will be held at
\ J2noon, Thursday, Sept.15
I Reservations should be made by Sept. 12.
· 1 Further information is available from Helen
• Nyberg, 673-7797 or Evelyn Smith, 675·4390.
WOMEN 'S AMERfCAN ORT: The Orance
1 County West Chaple~ will hold its first meeting of •
' the 1eason at 8'"1Mn . Thursday, Sept. LS, at 1. Mercury Savings and-Loan in Huntington Beach.
' C.AMMA PHI BETA SORORITY: A wine
tasting pai:ty to rais~'funds for its chari~s will l
highlight the Call season for the Orange County
Alumnae on Thursday, Sept. 15, in the Villa Park
homeofthe Forrest Ertgllshes.
~
HUNflNGTON BEACH PLAYHOUSE: A
benefit fashion show will be held at the Hunt-
mgton Bea~h Inn at 7 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 15.
Reservations may be made by calling 897 -8157.
, CLIPPED WINGS: The Oritnge County
chapter will begin its fifth year with a mem-
bership luncheon Thursday. Sept. 15. Further in-
formation is availabl~ from Mrs. Gail Preston of
Mission Viejo or Mrs. Arlene Ullman of Irvine.
UO MEDICAL CENTER: Opportunities for
volunteer service will be discussed at an orienta·
t1on program for prospective volunteers at 1 and
7 p.m. Thursday. Sept. lS, in building S3 at the
Medical Center, Orange. 'Reservations m~ be
made by calling 634·5541. ~
)
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA ALUMNAE: The
Southern Orange County group will rtsume mon·
thly meetings with a ~offee al JO a.m. Thursd ,
Sept. 15, In the Irvine home. of Mrs. Merton Al·
lardice. Further information is available from
Mrs. Robert Wheeler, 673·8321. ·
AMERICAN LEGION AUXIUARY: A pot
luck. dinner will start the Costa Mesa \)nit 455
meeting at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 15, in the
Veterans MemorlaJ Hall.
LAGUNA BEACH JUNIOR WOMEN: The
Thursday, Sept. 15, meeting will begin at 6:30
p.m. at the home of Carolyn Zehner, Orange U1s-
trict president. Information is available from
Doreen Smith. 497-3745, or Mary Green, 495·6769.
ALTA BAWA PHILHARMONIC COMMIT·
TEE: Mrs. Stephen DuBow of Big Canyon will
host the first meeting in her home at 10 a.m.
Thursday, Sept. 15.
UNDERSTANDING SEXUAL INTERAC·
TION: The opening session of this four·part
Orange Coast College evening lecture series on
Friday, Sept. 16, will look at the role that myths
and fantasies play in sexual interaction.
Admission to the class, which will be held
from 7.30 to 9:30 p.m. in Science Lecture Hall 2
is Cree and open to the public. Further informa'.
lion is available from the college, 556-5880.
COSTA MESA WOMEN'S CLUB: Martin
MarioneUes will present a fantasy on strings at
the 12 noon meeting Friday, Sept. 16, in the
clubbouse.
SELF·HYPNOSIS: A free one-hour lecture
1md demonstration in the practical uses of kelf-
hypnosis ~ill f>c offered at 7:30 p.m. Tdesday,
Sept. 13. in the Huntington Beach, Fountain
Valley YMCA . · · t
The Y will offer a rive.week course in Seil·
Hypnosis for Self·lmproV'emenl, taught by
F'l"ank Genco.
OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH NURSES: The
Orange County Association will meet at 7 p.m
Wednesday, Sept. 14, in the Camelot restaurant,
Santa Ana. Guest speaker Nancy Smith, RN, director
or ln·Service Education at Saddleback Hospital.
will speak on The Nurse Practice Act.
CALIFORNIA SOCIETY OF CPAs: . The
auxiliary or the Long Beach-Oran1e County
Chapter will meet at 11 :30 a.m .. Wednesday,
Sept. 14, in the 20th Century Ltd. restaurant.
CIUNESE COOKING DtMONSTRATION:
:Margaree Klein, aulhor or the cookbook1"The
liappy Cooker," wlll appear at noon Wednesday,
Sept. 14~ in the Broadway, Newport Beach, to
demonstrate how to prepl'l'e gourmet Chinese
cuisine the easy, Americanfzedway.
~
ORANGE COVNl'Y It: All women pilots are
ln'Ylt.ce to attend the monthly meeting at 7 p.rn.
Wednesday, Sept. 14, al the Harbor Racquet
Club, Costa Mesa. Elizabeth Shattuck will present a program
on Safely i~ Flying. More information is availa·
ble from Gwen Haynes, 831·2919.
SOUTll COAST .
.\CTORS CO·OP
Is atravs searching for w or experienced talent for films, TV,
stage & commerclals.
(714) 957.0282
TUESDAY,
SEPTEMBER 13
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES' (~a rch 21 ·
April 19): New deal in·
dicated In connection
with work. security,
health. Cancer ,
Capricorn individuals
figure prominently. You
get what you need 1f
you accept fact that need
is present.
TAURUS <April 20-
May 20>: New Moon ac·
cents romance, creat1vi·
ly, children, change.
s peculation, coming
alive, being aware, alert,
ready. Imprint original.
unique style. Don 't
permit others to over·
shadow your efforts. "-
GEMINI (May 21-June
20 >: Home could become
happier place -you see
in new light, others
perceive you In more
plea.sant aura . Some
traditions, restrictions
are overturned. Long.
range perspective is
necessary.
CANCER (June 21 ·
July 22): Perceive subtle
meanings. Take nothing
for granted, especially
where relatives are con·
cerned. Gemlni. Virgo
persons could be
featured an your
personal scenario.
LEO (JQJy 23-Aug. 22 >.
VIRGO <Aug . 23·Sepl.
22): New Moon iil your
sign signifies time for in-
itiative. confidence, in-
dependence, style
creative now, love. [I.
lusion. glamour are very
much a part of scenario.
Individual you placed on
pedestal could cause you
to revise estimate.
LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct.
22): Bad dreams are er·
radicated. Pieces fall in-
to place, order comes out
of chaos. SUck to number
"8 ." beat with
Capricorn, Cancer
persons. Realize cycle is
moving up -be confi-
dent, direct, accept
challenge and more
responsibility.
From C1
s·coRPIO Wct. 23.
Nov. 21): New friend
makes life exciting. Be
open to experience; give
full play to creative ac·
tivity. Enlarge horizons,
be aware of potential.
You need no(be limited.
Aries, Libra figure in
picture. Stick to number
"'9.''
SAGITl'ARIUS <Nov.
22·Dec. 21): Accent on
prestige, duty. recogni-
tion of goals. Special ac-
colade comes your way.
You could be asked to
represent or lead a civic
group. Welcome fresh
concepts, new ideas -
stress greater indepen-
dence.
CAPRICORN <Dec .
22 ·Jan. 19): Lunar
aspect coincides with
communication. publica-
tton, being in "touch"
with those at a distance.
Relative may announce
marriage plans.
AQUARIUS (Jan .
20·Feb. 18): You are in-
trigued by puzzle or
mystery. You solve it if
versatile. Relax. One
who has much to do with
your financial status is
on your side. Accent
social invitation.
PISCES C Feb. 19 -
March 20): New Moon
emphasis on marriage,
binding 'agreement, ar-
rangement wh ich
enables you to build· for
future.
... Heroes • 1n Pocket
The company. which pays
players S250 a year to pose. now
prints 250 million cards a year.
It is just this glut or cards that h~s some serious collectors wor·
ned: there may be fewer valuable collectables in the future.
"That·s one reason why regional
cards are valuable.·· noted one
buyer. "They are limited in sup-ply."
StiU. it seems certain that like
the national pastime it pictures, ~aseball and collecting will con-
tinue as new generations of fans
plunk down their coins for the bub-
ble gum packs . .
"It's part of U~e hero worship
or a young kid aspiring to be a
player when he grows :up." says •
collector Mike Berkus, 31. "This is
Jrls closest connection with his
heroes: he carries the hi in his back
pocket."
Emphasis on cost!, loca· -;:======;;:;;;:;;;::;;:;;;::;;::;;;:;;::;;:;;;:;:;;;;;::;;:;;;:;;;::==;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
tion, lining up sights,
zeroing in on goat.
Define objectives. Be
positive about financing.
FA
TENNIS
LESSOMS
forW_..
I LES'°"S ~ 12so .
RMISTUTIOH
MOM: SIPT. I 2tt.
COSTAMISA
TEHNISCLUI
-557.0211 -
Bl lBINIO!
PRIZE MOllEY IALORE!.
ALL NEW .PROGRAM-ALL NEW HOURS
FREE COFFEE. SOFT DRINKS & POPCORN
ON SEPT. 13, 16, & 18, 1977
YWCA
I 41 I N. Broadway, Santa Ana
lbetweeft 14th & 17th St. °" 'HOrth lroadwcryl
I r .
Starting Tuesday .. Sept. 13, 1977
7:~0 p.m. Recjular Session
DO«i ... OM._., Mrty °" al .... a MW Snalon1 I
GUARAMTIED PRIZE MONEY GIVEN
OM EACH llMfaO GAME OF THE
IEGULAI 01 WIMI SISSIOMS
M.ARMAOUKE
. •
by Br1d Anderson BOOMER
.......................
MISS PEACH ,
"I don't think you should tell your
'dumb dog' story tight
now, Carl."
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
... --. ......
l;JHAi CO <.XX... rr,t,i;~; Tl-'r FCOT-
BALL lt.AM ~:EE~ THf FIELD?
1HE BAND fS PRACilC.ING
NOOJ !
'TANK McNAMARA
MOON MULLINS
~~ 'TJ.117 CONfRACi
ME.AN THAT 'ltXJ GET
10 R:R CCNf OF -AJ~T ~T -mt £)\%BALL 1tAM ~'6 W'£, CR
10 ~a;Nf{A
~~IM\~?
lfl
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLI
ACROSS
1 Pack clay
1nto a hole
5 Stulla
9 Biby earls
14 0ne
growing old
15 B109r1phtr
•••• Ludw•G 16lu Vegas
producllon
17 Magne11zed
•lem
19A1l1l1d
SOOnlario
community
51 H1v1n9
wings
54 Dressed
58 K1ndol
headache
62 Hoso1111
employee
83 Place 1n a
row Val
64 S0<:1al
UNITED Fffture Synd\Cate
engagement L:J.:~~~:G
2 words
66 Cryptogr1pll ~~~
GORDO
Ht'~ NOT
6Ul>POSED
TO tJE UP
TU/flia:f .
by Tom Batiuk
by Jeff Millar and Bill Hinds
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
.
............. ... . . ,. ..
IF' IT'~ Al..L. TMff
~M& ~ YOl.4..t !'O
~ATMerc r rcv TH•
FtfNO.f l-40flN ... 1
DOOLEY'S WORLD
._ ________ 'l 1!..
DR .SMOCK
:t'P SAY 1"HA"f"
WOMAN COUL.P ee UP AN' PA.NCI NG ey FRIPAY
MOT~EY'S CREW
by Mell
) maternally
20 Murder
Slang
Uoe<I
67 Overhang
68 Lived lrom
dav 10 dav
69 Ullered
undet 01111'1
10 Secured
w1lhrope
11 Minus
JUDGE PARKER by Harold Le Doux
21 Changed a
rooms
decor
23 Mouth
1o1u11on
25 Sode
lounta1n
ilt m
21 Valley
21 8wlmm111Q
atrOlt es
32 81d1pread1
37 "Adam
Bede"
aulhnr
38 Tapdr1n1<
39 Coo11s hv
bolling
'1 Program
llstlng
Abbr
42 Surt11c1
del)fllSIOnS
•5 Slnne
orooelhng
dflviee
·Ill Sub0rd1n111
IUblCllP-43 lo141f'I
hon tltftdler
11 C1ucu t111 4'Houtlftl ..
langu191 NICI
12 Unable to 41 °"'" l lltlll ., .... .,, ......
13 Plant In soil .. TkMfr
18 M1ktdi1-52 ......... tl
1 Mahcoous flnct ......
alo"es 22 Move in 1 53 a.-·:
2 Greek curve Chlrlne
IUtmbly 24 "Sh( btlla Y9'
J DSM or and ···· 55 Auto...,
V1ctor1a wellf" HPnlltlM
Croes 27 "···· aot" "-**
• Possess 29 Acc01T1panylng 57 TraMtlra
au1nor11v 30 Tfmblr wolf P'Ollftf
5 Stroke J 1 ERA or RBI fa 111ifto61 I,._
gently 32 111-brtd peo· dllftl
6 Cu old DI• 59 Tutn .....
7 T11k11 on 33 Ollve genu1 earth
lood 34 Elllt IOltatlenla-
8 '"Wasl'l1noron 35 ·•· Aviv land
OOWN
·····Here 36 Gulp 91 hetolr
!I Mike rl'edy •O Jagged pro-15 Hew~ I 0 Extended cubtrance Diet.
_..,1,.....,,~r.--)
•
WHEM LOLA
FLANDERS DOES
NOT SHOW UP.
ERIC STARTS
CHECKING HER APARTMENT ...
AND SUDDENLY .•.
ili~ IC'f:A IS 10 f'IOV~ (M'(
PROsn:cnve HLJEJEJY l Re, O~ 10 9 (-rnE r.JUS IC OF -me P~e'S) HeRS, ~'( eANs
OF MEnl()V)t OR ME1HOO'{.
0
~
'i
i . .
• l 0 l
.(
8 ~ t
) ,. ~
' t
1
Mondly. September 12. 19n
PEANUTS
WATCH SNOOP"f' ... I
TMINK HE'S GOING TO
PULL THE OLD STATUE OF u8frn4r' Pt.Av ...
DAIL v PILOT CJ •
by Charlts M. Schuli
HOW 00 t.(OU KNOW?
by Roger Bradfield
by George Lemont
by Templeton and Forman
'TH~ M~ F=ROM ;i
• Ml6510M l~PO!QllH .. 6 ~
GERIATRIX ---------..
W'C. ENJOYED ~i IM AFR.AID ~s ~efl.v1ce... GeORGe w1u..
~Fu~e 10 ATTEND
I~ YOU KEEP TAL.K·
l~G Ae;o.JT ._.,M
IN 'ibt.l~~S!
DENNIS THE MENACE
-.
(:4 DAl\V PILOT
PVllUC NOTlCB PUBUC NOTICE l'UBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PlJBUC NOTICE PUBl.lC NOTICE
•
..
(
t
.. . . .
PUBUC NOTICE
lftCTt'"*I •ut1 ... u ...,,..tTAT11M111n
Tl'le IOllOWlllQ perlOf'li •re Oil ...
IMltl-lti' tNTIAH.t.TIOHAI. lllllOllT Al-
~OCt•"flS, 110 Newport Center
Ort .. , Sollle 200, Hew~ lte<ll. CA
•i..o ....,_ C. Ol'M, Mt .._ON C>ri .. w.1,.....,..., .. edl,CA tt ... Niie A. CllM, .. 1 ~ontory Oftww.tl,N-'.._.,CAtt ...
fttt buWMU It .....-ic ... 'y •
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NtltA.Qlne
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AllQWlll ''· ttn. ,_.
'°"'111""" ~ C-.. 0.T l'llGll A119. tt. 2t l•U; ft, tm -.n
•
PVBUC NQTICE
,.,.
l"ubtlllled ~·· CNtt Olll'f Piiot .t.119. n . 2'1, s.111. s. 11, 1m 111s-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
• • -
•
Monday'
Clo inR Pri ·r. NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
...... ...
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Monday, Sept.mber 12, 1W7 l/N DAILY PILOT CS
Route to Slcilb
Apprentices
Work, Learn
8y SYLVIA '°aTEA . .
People who want to develop aldlll lbat can eommud
gOOd salariea and 1ecw-. Jobs abould coo.aldu appren-
.ticeships, oneotthe oldett ways to acquir••killJ.
More thao 100,000 Americana enw.d formal appren ..
tlceshlp proarram1 in. 1976 alooe. A formal apprenUceshlp
baa three advantacea:
( 1 > It is reco&nhed by employera u a thorouah tralnlnr
period.
(2) Completion or an apprenticeship eaaes entry into a
job. .
(3) ll lmproves chances ror advancement.
OOMPETITJON FOR APPRENTICESHIPS is keen.
The programs usually Involve two to five years ol OO·lb .. Job
tra.lnl.ng a.a well as some formal classroom experience.
Apprentices learn on the job, under the aruldance ot an
experienced craftaman. In addition to apendinar •few hours
a week in the classroom, the apprenUce alao may receive
ongoing technical instruction.
Although they vary from state to state, here are baalc
requirements for various ~prentlceabip poslUona.
-Plumben and pipefitters: Usually, apprentices 1nust
be at lea.st 16 years old to apply. It takes five years to com·
plete on·the-job training
and at least 144 hours or
related class room in·
s t ruction each year.
Employment pros~t.s
are good.
Money's
Worth
COSMETOLOGISTS: APPUCANTS must be at least 16,
have compl3ted the loth grade and usually must bave-
finished a state-approved cosmetology course. Job prospects
art' above average.
-Medical assistant&: Training is available in voca-
tional institut~ and in junior colleges. Most medical assis·
tants also receive training in a physlc1an'1 oflice. Employ-
ment prospects are excellent.
-Dental technicians: Tralning is done on lbe job, in
vocational high school or Junior colleee; applicants need
manual dexterity. Employment ouUook ls very good.
Other fields where employment prospects are above
average include cooks and chefs, ashes~ and lnsulaUon
workers, glaziers and dlspenaing opticians:
A.UM> GOOD EMPLOYMENT AREAS tor apprentices
are carpentry; cement masonry; construction electricians~
construction machinery operators; roofers ; structural, or-
namental and r~inforcln1 iron workers; ri4gers and
machine movers ; lnatrument repairers ; industrial
machinery repairers; electrlc sign repairers; maintenance
electricians and truck and bus mechanics.
Generally, apprenticeship proerams are joint : labor-
m an~ement efforts and are relistered with the Labor Department's Bureau of Apprenilcesbip and Training or
with a similar state agency.
For information, check with a local AFL-CJO buiiding-
and construction trades council; the Urban League and the
union representing thedeaired trade.
Veterans may be eligible tor beneflts or trainin' al-
lowances.
A li5t or priced reprints about jobs for which appren-
ticeships are available may be obtained by writiftg to the
Department or Labor I Bureau or Labor Statistics, Occupa-
tional OuUook Service, GAO Building, Waablngton, D.C.
20212.
A free reprint. "Jobs for Which Apprenticeships Are
Available," is available to those who send a postcard to the
Consumer Inform atlon Cent.er, Pueblo. C081009. ---...
Blue Ch ips SteaJ,y"
But Market Slumps
NEW YORK <AP) ...-The stock market declined broad-
ly again today, but bl~e-chip stocks steadied as the session
progressed. -
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, orr about 7
wints ,.i mid-day, was down 2.69 points to &4.38 at the cR>se. ,
Losers maintained a 2·1 lead over fosers among New
York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
Trading remained falrly quiet. Big Board volume came
to 18.7 mAllion shares.
Through the day lbe Dow struggled to hold above the
19month clc>eini low of SS..12 it reached Aug. 25.
The market began sliding Tbursda.y as the · Federal
Reserve listed a $3 billion rise in the basic measure or the
money supply for the latest reporting week.
Ntw YrilAP) Fl11tl Dow-J-•·-....
ITOCICI C1Dee HI " IAW Close OIO
JO 11141 au • .o ':11.11 M1.11 asut-u•
ll Trn '1•.SO W .11 21U 7 714."-I U Ull 111 00 112-" 111.4"1 llUO-0.10 St• Jtt.tt 2" SI 1lt ti ?ti.JS-I 11 llldUJ • • . 1,603,!0G Tren • . . . . SIJ,IQO
Ullll 2 ~.~ u 5111 .... _
A.-erfe!an Lead~r•
IJp • and Do.,ru
HEW YORI< (API
Due to l•te transmission
today's listing wlll not appear In the Dally Piiot.
WMAT AMIJC 010 NEW VOii!(. IAJ>)
AMII( ~LH
Due to late transmission
today's llstlng wlll not
appear In the Dally Piiot.
Staela 111 Tiie
S ,,Otll•i
• •
• ' .
•• 1
. .,
DAILY PILOT I t.mtw t2 1177 HMtH For ScN Houwt For S• Houses For SaM HouMt For Sdt Ho.nu F..-Safe ~~~~~~~~~~;-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~··········;~ ~~··········r~ ;~··········~~i;~··········i~i ~;··!·:·····;~
Thi licle•t~plac• on the C>rlnrt~•t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
DAILY PILOI CLASSIFIED ADS
~=:·=~ (842•5878) Otie Cal I S«Vice
Feat c..dlt Approval
.... htate •.•.•• ··"°°""" Lett .•.••. ~~ sr~· ... IOOO-...
bntGla · · • · · · · · • · )000.4'tf Sen6Cta 6000-6099 1 ni ... ~ 9Q00.9099
""6Mn. In.eat"""' & ,....,,,..,,. & ' Automoblil~ '& ·• nn.cJol · · · .. · .. · · 5000-5CMt itn .. .. .. 7000-7199 Tron crtton .... 9100-9999
..._.,,... w. ..._.. 11or s• ..._.. 11or w.
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
IUO•S: A~ I 002 <hMr.. I 002 G .. eral 1002 ......., cAlecll -..Ir ....................................................................... .
.., _, ....... .,.. NllVOU5
rora ..._.....,. n.. o-.au
DAILY PfLOT •~• '"" u y11 ''SF.l,L" lmmllcl
o ccupancy. Lowea t
pn~ In complex " 11n·
m.tculale. 5.\2,500
......, for .... flnt ..
cornd -~ -,.
1722 MITCHELL
UNIT70 ._... ... ,Motte•: ..... Kl S ,.y "'GE
All real t!i!lale advertised "" . A A HUL E$TAT1!: in ttua newsp1per 1s i.ub 64 .. 960 I Jec:t to the Federal Fair .,.
Hou11n& Ad or 19681--..... -~--... -G-T_O_N_-I
which makes it aJle&al to "'""' 1 '"
advertise "any pre · IEACH
ference, 11m1tauon, or . 4 U ... ITS discnrrunal10D based on "
race, color. reUglon. sex, Four luxurious units,
or national ongln, or an with spacious owner's
1ntent1on to make any unit. Almost <'arrles.
such preference , Lam1ta · Owner will help finance.
Uon, or das cn manallon." For profit projection in·
This newspaper wiJI not
knowingly accept uny
adverti&ang (or real
~late which 1s an viola· lion of lhe law. ___ _
. Houses for Sole
THE REAL ;
ESTATERS 1
CORONA
DELMAR
eluding tax s helter
benefits, call 962·7788.
,Q.. KE:Y
"7'1 P.E:ALTOP.Sft
3 Huge BR, 3 tile BA,
den, dining room, 2 sty
w/26' open beam cell·
ings, tile entry, Crplc, wet
bar, laundry room. over·
sized dbl garage. 3000 Sq.
rt or very unique hvin& space. $149.SOO. ....__....~-...,...,......~-......,......_.
JACOBS REAL TY
675-6670
CLIFFHAY84
That good country Ceel-
ing-ood noors, panel·
---------1 ing & brick (pie. a Bednn home on large corner lot.
Room for pool or more
garages. Reduced t o
$132,IOO.
IESTYALUE
IM HAUOR VIEW a & a den or 3 bedrm.
Deli&hllul patios, yard.
Highly upgraded.
Jmmed. occupancy.
COROMA DEL MAR
DUPLEX
PETE BARREll
-REALJ'Y-
'42·52ot
Lovely duplex, each unn, __________ ,
having 2 bedrms each.••
Walk to beach. P riced to
sell
~
I l \ " lj I< I \ I I '
' ' ' 7)1~ I (Oil! Hwy [ooun, dt• i.t u
GOOD VALUE!
• New on lhe mlN'ket 2 bed.rm or convertible 3
bedroom. 2 Baths. Good
condition! Hardwood
floors. Stone Cplc, priced
to sell at $71,950. Call _______ , 546-4141
~ Walkm & Lim
Real Est.lite
$25,000.
2 Bedrm, 2 bath. Mobile
Home. 20'"57'. 111 deluxe
adult, oo pct par~1 Call
for detalls. Ed klddl
ReallO( 646-881 l.
~
COATS & WALLACE
REAL ESTATE . INC.
EAST COSTA MESA
TRIPLEX
Walk to SUIM'rmarketa, bank.a, po.41t of-
fice <>r rtstaurants from this wall de-
•• signtd triplex. Front unit is ground
hsvel with 2 bdrms., convtsrt. den &
frplc. Middle & r ear units are studio
lYIM' with large living rm., dinette &
ldtch~ & ~ bath down, plus 2 large
bd.nns. & run bath up. Exceptional
buy at $142,500
YOUU UKI OUI ISP
... expt:riencoo sales personm:l
759-0811
W l<S l.l<Y ~
TAYLOR CO.
I< 1-. 1\ I ["(>IC-, "' 'I• I I.•· If i
OM .. CYM 90l.P COUUI Sltl,IOO
$Million view of fairway In 2 dl~c:
tions. Cor. unit Pinehurst mod"l
towiihome. 2 Bdrms. den, 3 ba. closed
dbl gar. comm pool. jacuzzi & tennis
cts. $18,500 lse/opt moves you in.
2111S.J ......... 1 ...
MIWPO«r CIMTll, M.I. '44-49 I 0
~~ .......... !~~,~~ .......... ~~~~
CAMEO SMOl.ES
3 Bdrm. home with vaulted beamed
ctillings; great patio & view of canyon
& ocean. $260,000
673-4400
SllK&,INl1 MINT FAMILY
HlEDRNLEAVJAVLCPAMY
NPHOPBBJSKBTRAOMAYP
PROLRAASCHHAOSURRSR
R E D N E V A L I Y E' S T P A B P E
OYPSEY M JIKNREA
T A U P H H Z E I A H T If E l E C It P
RSNSEOTHNGRTSVDOMRM
AMRYDRIHTHAOQN~RDMP
EADHNEMJ COLJMTOLIT CESRGHMIKMTEPRQSENE H~HAEOVYNURMOXAElTN ~OOAAUMRLTMASGYM1R~
OSROENHYYMEXEZRAJ~l
NREHTO~AGVAISPARHSS SCGONUL~HEROYHSYK£M
t -IPPI• • · wtrd, uo. down Of dlttONfly. ,lnd Nd\ MCI It In. ,. r 811• Horttlound Marjora111 j
Sas11 Ltvendar Roseinary j
Cltn1p Sage P1ppen111nt •
Hyssop Th,¥M Spear111 nt
T0110rrow: fallOUt Chemists
I ' I I ~Y.111
• 1 ..
AMMIYBSARY
ISTATES
Secluded 3 bdrm • 2 ba. country home oo a large
pool ahe lot, country
kitchen with microwave
oven · U$ed brick
fireplace • au BBQ and
best of all the modest
'Price. ca11 oow 646-1m ortMlll 0 •If S IVN IOllN •I'
r-1u111
MESA DB.MAR
$79,900
Large 4 bedroom with
beauUfullt added family
room oo a quiet street in
Costa Mesa. The owner
la anxious to sell and is
.offering VA terms at this
low price. CALL quickly
751·3191.
C:SELECT
T' PROPERTIES
AtOHT IOW CIM!a
In the Bluffs, front row center with an
unobstructoo view of the Back Bay •
the Cliffs of Dover and a twinkling
light line in the distance. This is a
rare R ·plan with all·t:lt:etric kitchen.
large master suite downstairs and two
add'l bdrms upstairs. A Uniqut: plan
in a Unique location. $179,500.
UNICJUI: liVMl:S
REAL TORS"'. 675·6000
2443 EaJt Coast Highway, Coron• del Mar
also in Mesa Verde, at 546-5990
YOUA'Sl<ED
FOil fT G....... lOOJ 1G1Mrol I OOZ
YOU GOT IT · a very •••••• •• • • • ••••••• •• ••• • •• •• • • •• • • • •••• ·~~··• •
hard to._ find owner OC· . ••
LUXURY waterfront condo, 2 BR, 2~
ba. Pool, jacuzzi , 24 hr. security.
Brand new; comp. furn. $220,000
cllpled pride of
ownenblp duplex on the
Newport -Balboa
Peninsula. Wa lk to
restaurants · beach
stores· you are THERE · great for year around or PENINSULA, 4 BR, 3 ba. home. All
summer rentals. This ameniti~. Lovely area. $195,000 property ba.s had great
care. 2 Outstanding 2
bdrm units on an easy
access wide street and
best of all a very
moderate price. Call WI
(or details 646· 7171 •
Ol'fN llt 0 . )1 s W N roar NICEI ---THE REAL ~
ESTATERS I __ ______) •••• ' ' t ~
ih' ,:i
MA~MIRCEMT!
Expertly upgrad.ed
tbruout. Featuring
special li&bting fixtures •
cfel plso We, beautiful
carpe ts le dra,J>e11 ,
atalned gtau w1naow1.
Close to pools tennl.I ..
beach. 3 Bdrms •• 2
batbsi· 2·•tor)', shake root, rrpJc. NEWPORT
SHORES. SlOZ.000 UDOIULn
673-7300
LIDO ISLE, 4 BR, 2 Ba. Nicely decor.
Lge. patio, beamed Ceil's .• hdwd nrs.
48 Ft. lot. $225,000.
Bl~L GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bur1d1• Dr•v•· NB 675 6 lbl
1002 GeMt-ol 1001
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
DUPLEX
WEST MEWPORT
New on the market; 3
bdrms., 2 baths each. On ~
fee land. Steps to the
b e a c h . Xlnt s um·
me r /wanter rental.
Pnced al $189,500
673·3663 ~75-tm Eves_,
associated
llROl<EH S 11£111 TC.f:'.>
101', W Bolb,, 1' 1t.1
~aliHhltr!J
' '' Ml.ROA ISLASI>
• 6'13·6900 *
~II. macnab I Irvine ?-realty .
WISTC&JRI -coeo·
The best location! Single·story,
spacious 2 BR. 2 bath + dining rm
w I great kitchen. Pool -patios -
walk to shopping. $84,500. Harrl~t
Perry 642-82M. (N-81)
I
I
VETS
••FREE••
VA COUMeffng &
Info. Senice
No Down Payment
FrHUstofVA
Homes in O.C .
• Orange Co's. Largest
VA Home Broker
Cal24Hn.
675-2626
WORLD REAL ESTATE
.. · $58,750
Huge family room with
used brick,w11ll &nd
It· fi~place. 3 Bed rm. 2
, • bath, tdblc car garage,
j ~ new 18' Dougbboy pooJ &
!,, filter. All this on a
l • . secluded street. Hurry,
call 546-5880.
...
PRICE REDUCED
One or EastblufC's m08l
reasonably priced 3
bedrm homes. We love
the neighborhood. P.S. l
tive here, too. Call
640.6161
~ COATS& WALLACE
REAL ESTATE . INC .
Balboa Dupleit, 4 Br 2 Ba
• 3 Br 2 Ba, SllS,000.
PriDc onlY. 1575-2321
/JD.NIGEL
BAILEY &
ASSOCIATE:S
/Jn NIG[L
01\ILEY &
1\550(11\TES
•
F=O~EST E
OLSON
'>i ...... ' ....
~~: ~~·r 1 Hf I' f't'\I
'I I r "1 .'\'I "I
..... ~ •• -"':. ~ -4 ' I T 'I.) -
M ~'J•& ...... /1 , ' ,
:AU...A..--., ; . '
I I',' I ! '· ,
t ,1 I 1 h i' I i 1 ' ' • ?~
-1ilMl~Sl~N VIEJO!'I .
:'.'-....,. q.~ ~'i':;. .-.:;-
Let -pro{enloDal 18$,,. IOdates pro'lide you in-
dividual 'ttentlon in seellrin1 the home or
your dreams In America 's most suc-ceadul new community.
l!llt!ape to an aura of
caaual, quiet living
••attlnl you ln the Sad· =~k Valley. Call us
11C/ ·9500 1UJ ·1000
---·-~ --------, II
I ·.
I
0AA. Y Pl4.0 T ~ lHI •tete ,.,.,Med "-"• U.fwa-.d Hauet UafwlltllMd H4Mlaet U•hnlalled ~ hae•hrw J19i1d ...............•...............•....•........•.........•.•.......•... ··················•···· ............................................. .
• ....._,_.. ............. 0Miitr-lt"9•.... ....._flroparty 1000 a..,..._,. 11 41 c;o.toW.•• l U4 H.atllMJf• .. O 3240 Mltwport .. ec91 J26t a.6NP•nleMlle 3707 ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................
Mt-rtlNdt tNt ... ..,.... ..... IOH ....._..._, Attb Bay. 2 Br, rrplc, • Bdrm•, a b a, Br, Fam Rml 110 Uv •..,.WATRFIOHT u,2eantxttobeacb.Alt
••• :?!': .................. ;;•MPW ..... ~~ ......... !!~~ -==SE =-~~·o:~.~-. ~so. ~~~.'~:Jf:yd?~t!°j~~i i!':-: ~=er ro~~,!;~~~ ~,:,r.D~~· /;f.1:38:r!~ S;30PM m.90"4 c,.:~ '!;m•. Bl•ad Nww View of park Greal opoort.Unlly to own incl •• 450. IS14081 Btwn: .:i~ Y~ G~ $4~°tv. '14 eva/wlr.nda 875-8168. .. W. l7ZZ
1161 w\Dctoww, barch~uod from •~rh' ruom. lbr, IOAH' Adu1~ over ~o. bt•utUul unlta on '1.~'!"i!:ln 3~0~:~•2 N 541-~ ac • mo. BLUFFSCONOOS •••••••••••••••••••••••
tlQOn Ruut p•lln It Z~b• condo ~" llao •Pac• r nl '8S/per mo Meadowlark Golf private pat,oa 2 ea Mtia Vsde S +family, Leuea atartlna al ssoo vall. yrly. l BR on
tamaly rm l'BK, wwlnJ t ~ l1 t • , ounrtu Small .f.n:O:-EfRf:.· CourM. I Bedroom, 2 iaraae1. l o very' popular l~ ba .. ~paint. MOO 1 BedtoOm condominium Month. Aaent8"-U33 beach, pvt &ate. $375 mo.
rm or nurMry, •~ HA, Court *·"°· I b •kdy1 beth owoer'I unit wtU1 area AvaU Se t ZOlh llo. No pett. near pool and tennta. ( 2 1 a ) t 2 8 . 18 • t or
.upa lo bay or ~an aft I . Mi lW COMPANY nl'fPlact, only l yr 11 w. for ~ear aro:S 'icue AatnUS3-1768 S2 to I mo o t b . Ca 11 Xln1 family home. SBr, (1lt)6'7S-7764 , ~~<n• AaJc.lni$227,000. ~ • 648-4477. 3~ ba, 110 f•m rm. laet---------
llOLLIS WOOU l.u1• (.'utlom Home, $1200/per month. C ... tl.IFI lew .. t kltch, nr 1cbla 4' 1bo119. Coth W.IO 1724
RF.Al.TOR l.ldo ..... Pool II& lot ~ D•for• you 'pay 10"'•. Br 2 Ba. 30xBS same ~m. Westcurr. *O/rno. Yrly ••••••••••••••••••••••• 12M,0001off•n. l<'lcxlbtb Acnepfw .. 1200 te .... .,.. et bar 2 fplc • lie •..aooOW!EIClrUP
-___ .,_).Wft ty on hrtcttor f•alurea •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• !\61Ha _. a1enclea for tho "run ww--•--~ .... Mall ...... • . ~mt. -• ~ ""' a rou nd•' ca 11 _,......__ • -· •Studlo&lBRAJ)ta ~• ~> MO •ISll Uroker ATTIM110M EAL ESTATE CONSUMERS GUIDE. MJ.'15el BLUFFS WATER VIEW ..XV&MaldServAvall REAL ESTATE rooperaUon. --DIV&OPHS Many have and are al•d SPACIOUS l level. 3 br, 2 !fR· •t•m., bea~t. aat· •PbontSen,Htdpool
<."te•U"• •prof eo. wlll MA.alOl YllW Riwl'91de County lo Sun-REAL TY INC. 1350 S.Coost Hwy. they dld. 100'1 of bse'a, ba, ~yard & garage. 1 eourtydA&UU ll.33 2378NcWJ)OftBlva, C~t ~lll bf' openln• otc'a In rALllMO 11ymHd, approx. 490 714/a....1371 494-8536 J:o<'• & apt'e avallablo chlld ok. No peta. $325. Ontbe Bay, 281',2 ba, un• 50-tnNor~
Npt lkh • c .M are•" 4Rr, 2"a..· faa:n rm. din ~=a;:c1e~J: '(;.~°i!; Mewport leach l '69 to : •• A~r~~~ oJ.iUnU~ 8122 Michael Dr. Daya ~d prk'na, full HC. F\lrn. l&e & amall 1 1n-.
W• have openins• tor rm . prof l ndt<'pd, LaktPerrl1. ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• h d S f1 M7-35U,eves536-3638 Re ec. l yr lease. c losed In 1ar tncl'd n I.' w "r • x P ~ r j,,. ii 0 e lit re ftt-&...-----.....1 eac ay . ma S7llO/mo ·--~Evea Ad l ··-. , .. tc.'Jlpt.n10N&m1inwho a.us · wn r l.C:.TAYLORCO. -.~.-... r-•r $250. Furn 1 br w/r.ar fee/FREE life aerv'lce. Slf121r,noU.. .,_... · uta, no peui. 2110
.,.,. interutcid ,0 • 1:~ C!a~u :: ::~;:m ·I MHO IcanfindlUorr,ou. 1pace. DL1plex. •1a blk to ~ Circle th.isl Focd yd,+ Newport Creal Condo•, NewportBlvd.
rarttr Apply by t·.,111n~ l"t."I.! ~cu P~:t:,e;o~~fc!~s. ~-~lnql. o120r cou36thpSJet .. ~r~ ••eo..-r1Wdt more.Nlcearea.CaUthe ocean vu, 2br, den, ore. l.apllGleoch 3741 for mterv1ew ----20 ACRI S t> ~-experta, many more avl. frplc, all rec CacU. Alao •••••••••••••••••••••••
631-•0400 *LIDO ISLE Xlnt tor' U\vestment or ::V':~:~~espro.:::i~: lylse. Water&traabpct. 87• Cove St. 3 Br l\t Ba, Small fee. Pix. Prof rent lge 3br, lam lrm, lrplc. Nice Studio. Nr town
1 0 e eleaant s Br, 4 ba, can be spijl. Some with Bel ~ t'-ri BAYSHORES fr buae Fam Rm & fplc. serv. 84S-4900 ~.;..,!•· Set $l2S,OOO. Wortdna male. No amok-~~~~~~~~-! f:m rm w /bur+ pool ta· views, loaded with oak worid WJar.e.:,.c:;. bch, 4 Br 2"' ·a:~s;s~ yr· Fncd yd. M2$. 6'2-0282 * •CWWMn Gvldt .,,,,.........,. lng or peta. $225. Pb
5 •RAIOOM ble Frml din rm. 3 car trees. Seema ta belJcv· Callf7~ ly. 642-8750; 213-796-8161 3 bdrm 2 ba, bullt1n1, .... c: b k th'·• Nl e 2 '94·2921 5lW' gar $34.5,000 Dnve by Ina. BKR. eatPett drapes dbl car ......... c ec .... c ShoreclWa. Qual 2Bram ---------FIXH 430 Vi.i Lido Soud then (71') 877 5691 Would like to rent studio gar f~ yrd' w/paUo Br. kids OK. xtraa. rent rm home. Lge patio & $200. Furn. Cbarm.log
Brana your paint ~ m.UCeappt.673-9401 ORS22·0S30 SllY'STif!LJMIT Qt tor Under $200. UUI cover. Gardener paid. aerv, fee. No la.at mo. back yard. Pvt bch1. bach. nr beach. Utll pd.
T .L.C. for lb11 lao:e 2-4-12 & ~ Untts. Beach pd. Frle.ndly but quiet $4.50 pr mo. 833-lOM aft Muatsee.64S-4900 $700/molae. Respempldadlt.~ F.a~bhtr home pnced to HARIOR VIEW LOA.Df.D W /OAkS and lnland Oran&e Coun· fem. Stephanie IM&-3818 s:OO PM. No peta. * •Con.-n Gtllde Lido Ille. 2 Br +den, 1--------
1) Sub ff Carmel 5 Acres loaded with oak t ,__ 1 ,, b h view $800/molse
lie LC. nvtoR CO. 3Br. 2 Ba, faro rm, din trees in the Cleveland Ja1;:'~~r ~g i:,5~ Lovely bayfF09t 3 br, 2 ba 'Br, 2 ba. Clean. $450 mo. 1mn. 3244 Lido' Ille. 2 B~+den. Nicely furnished yrly
rental. 1 Bdrm, '300/mo,
on Glenneyre, l blk to
bcb. 67WOQ3 Of 49'-4420
rm, fee land. By owner National Forest, So. of . . ' bcb * Dsb.wbr, washer w/opt to buy. Meaa Del ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. -/mo. t SS-0350 . ".ah"°'"' Orange Co. Munlclpal K.orCbns. & dr)'6r. (2U)ell7-6087; Mar~ __.,.,
---------1 ....,...,._, waler, gentle rolling (213)7~ • • RINTALS On Water. 38r+ornce,
~~ ... HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
REDUCED
$25,000!
NEWPORT CREST Caplstrmo 1078
TOWNHOM E. End unit. •••••••••••••• ••• • •• •••
2 Story, large living rm ASITAS, spacious 4br,
w/balcony. Spac. open 2't'.lba, crpta, drps, bltns,
• master bedrm. Xlnt frplc, patio, gar. com·
.. price. Won't last... ,Call mWlity rec facilities.
645-0303. $76,900. Ownr.
FO~ESTE
OLSON ...... '' ...
o493-SQSS or 493. nso
knolls for vtew iltea. 2 Br, cpta, clrps, middle 2 BR. 2 ba .......... 5"{) ram rm, din rm. Lge
Owner will carry. Agt. 2 I.Jr Duplex. 5 doora to aaed cpl prel'd. No peta. 3 BR. 2 Ba .••••. , ~1100 ho m • w I comp I et e
(714)676-5711 beach. $325/mo, wlnler. S27S mo. $100 dep . 3BR.2~Ba ......... S450 privacy. On water at Hewport .. tlCh 3769
OR 522•2060 lae. CaU 613-0158 646-~ 4 BR. 2" Ba ..•.•.... $795 turning bas lo. VIEW. •••••••••••••••••••••• •
•BR. 2 Ba .•.... · ·. • $4.20 $1500/mo. On the beach-winter rcn-
Stepe to beach. 3 Bdrm, lal. Duplex 3 BR. 2 Ba
be a u t d e c o r a led , up, $495. 2 BR, 1 Ba down
$750/mp lae. S395. Both w/1ar & frplc.
WATERFRONT HOMES Mature adulta. 646-2030
CALL631·HOO Oceanfront 3 BR, 2 Ba, l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I frplc, Sept. ·June. or yr-
For Lie. "Sea vlew" _l.:...y._996-6 __ 7_56 ____ _
w /awlm·lennla club OCEANFRONT,neat2Br
P,rlvtleaes ... ~ear w/gar. Adlta, no pets
Spyglass Hill · 3br, S34 s mo. Winter. new. vacant. Make orter. 21.8J195.3018
Red Carpet Realtor•, ---------
154-1202 WATERfltOHT
2 BR. luxury condo
FuUy rum. Sl.500 Mo.
BlLLGRUNDY
REAL TOR 675-6161
OCIEAHROHT
WINTER RENTALS
2 BR, 1 ba. $370"
Lge. 3 BR, 2ba. $SSO
2 BR., 1 ba. $325
2BR,2ba. $400
STEPS TO IEACH
2 BR. den, 2 ba $600
l·BR., yearly S400
associated
II II C JI<' f ll ', ll I fl, 'r, II'•
Jt1/', \IV II 1lt,.,., ,, 1 I I (
BACHROR
APT.
ALL UTILS. PD!
100' fro m the ocean.
Avail. now! 201 E.
Balboa Blvd. Only $250
per mo. NO FEE. Call:
Sue at S»T777 anytime.
,
•
. ' ~ .... ,..,.._ ....... ...lueahu.fwa. ....... .._.. 4300 .... ,u._... 44H a..t&'-d IJOO .......................................................................................................................................... DM..YPtl.DT
.....
2
... 1111 CllhMIM Jll4 .............. lllt room.mete to abr 4 DB.UXIOflC•s t: OrtJ Cocbtttl. IWDW..e.d 7100 tw.W-.hd 1100 w..... JdOO
-· .. •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••'•••••• .. •••••••••• I br, I "" tow'llboulMt at GDof, rm., 1eot 2S. all Taine. Banded. Promoe. ;.;;I••••••••••••••••••• ~HT••••••••••••••••••• ••••"•••••••••••• .. ••• :SJlr1 I ba. It, ab -..tii'rwnlw W TCt..11'1' lbr, lb-1, Put Newpott. $115 mo. puei.d, 1m. whle ln re-tGl'1 SQ' arn. a.,,_,., ACC~Cl.IAI AWoPuu. parta rUDDal CAIWAIH .._,
nrs. "'" "'° kid.a OI Dl w. Wl&.loDMl-illo •duM.11, nu Pf(a, Jnq. 1 80,l»-1441 ar. 1or2 yr. leaac. tako 1'7MS12 hlYOlvw eompatel' data • cioum. m.eo. Eaper. llYnorevw Pita........., .,JHNOllUNrURN W•tcuttDr,ApUt F'ernnoedaJrmmatnto Forest .area. Kent LOST: Malo G•tll)an eotry, utlll1lo1 pref. butwW.tralo. F\Jll MITIOCAIWASH
C. _ .. .._. IUJ 4lrtowllbomtw/frpl v .... 11 St.epa to bncb •bare dhc oc:n fmt •Pl lo Harkins. Shep" Oreat. Due mix typewriter lnd 10 by. "put tlme. Top PAY 41 2950BarborBl.CJI.
--•• .. ••••••••••••• •J.4tpallofrenc 1ar•1• Lie 21'-, all bUaa, frphl: N~ &Br, 2Ba, com· 714.ai.9393 at OC Coll•C•· Aq. 30. l•cl.ud .. lftPM•Uoa '6 benenta. 2 Storee. So. •Adtiall. dW lt over N'O pc!! t4l-M80 plettly rvm. 1200 mo. SHOP llMT Al.S Wurfnl choke dlal4 is mput ol accowm ~Ja· COUt Auto Sup~ CA.MB
,._6J1cualavalJ. -ffi4)888·fme AttllU umo. M macramtleub. Ufound ble. Abo cub nctipU, Baker&. C.11. P/llme, abarp, arowu. .... ; b 4 Br, 2 ba. 1ara1e. n.ew c P re plHH call: 54&·MH; bank depollta, n.uua • utror.Jlm co.I~ n, &/IJde 11 1 br, 1 • •· cpt11tre1hly p1lnted. hr Beaut. 4·bd condo CAMHBYYIUAGI M7-71'1S itaUIUeal tYP1DI·· Call Over20. Wetr1ln. 1.i!J-!.• cp&./drpl, eoc f:if.ardi. \ltry lM ~/mo. Mlh SL Woodbrfd1•·lrv area. Sevel'IJ av.U..ble from Pim 588·197' Sant At.rl'OMOTIVE MlnO CAI WASH
no Jllllll, Sl16.. l1lt.. CloetC.Obch.m.mi AmcnlU ... lbrkN9-TU1 '5StotQOpermo. Loa: Gold rtmmod dart Martuila Water Dia Mecll/fec:Wc'-21150llartlor C.M
• · ....... Pl'elCrlptJoQ GLASSes. t.rtct 11 v rar ..,. or pnpt B\atY • • CXllONA DILllAR I 6 1 Bdrm• ma IU a er, I be 71\1. MOO mo, hmale rooauuta. I Br, 2 lltwn Udo Ille • Hoat • · ' Cbn)' ..mce dept. ln CASHl£R •
2·1r ~. fr1>k, adwu , .. pclT7I avail OcL let. Call be •pt on Balboa Bl. Ho1pltal. Rtw1rd. APTMANAGR fHt·1rowtn1.0ran1• Dlipen1e suollno.
Pl:d. Soawlotttn PlMUm1 ~. AftttrTpmcalll75-SOU 17W251 llatu.recouplow/wUeto Couoty Jnduatrlal 8:45AM to a :UPM, 4
aC .. allaa "'""" Cloee LUXVRY aduJt 1112 br RMllTE Wanted to lbr. manacoee>tolOOnewun· Con>pltx to add H· days WHk. Set Mr • .. ...._..OMbeatls. Beaut. 1.: br ••rde ltep c.o beach. ocHnYU'. M1 mlnl est.le tn Mia "'••• IJIO lta CG6t.a 11 ... AduUa. Dtrieftftld new c:ar prep Cook. f ·11AM, Mobllo •...all~~~~ ~~~~~I •JU· I>lit rm, dlbwbr, 15&$ Rlver Avo. IA•. VfeJo. Pool jacunl, bf ululCllll ..... 4500 ....................... noP1t9.Aot+salarY. iecbolclan1. $t.60/br. CarWuh.ln.bat'IWUn
-;;: ~~·1 Pd•l ,!!t!;;.Z:.~· ~ bskpr. + Privacy. etc. ••••••••*-••••••••••••• Drtnklnlproblem? TSLMcmt ea.1I03 :cpl=:~LI ='i!:: Ave.CM. • • ~ 1 .,_. 1,... SIT • o · • · J.i'em or male. szoo 1no., •-~ •L...LL.wt~ CallAlcobolHelpllne ;. ... SHIR A~· • 'w"'i ucnfmt2br, tba, quiet cpl Ullla pd. cau BillUJ<!WO -_.... ,~ 24 hrs adayW.3830 Apt mana1er, couple in13. O_pp. for advance-"""' ,,,.ta DO P«"LI· nter OAKl<IOOE VILLA or 1 ainite S450 mo rl 150CM0001q.ft. from 19'. needed for 42 unlt com· ment. See Service Mar., aa Hn per wk. Tburs. -~ Yrl1 SUS. m Tll7 3 br, 2 ba, bttm. Children Xtru. su..esni ''Y y. orMl·653S IMVEDOCCUPANCY PREGNANT? pleit In Co1ta lleu. HOWARD Chevrolet, Frl. evenlnp, Sat/Sun ~'°'' hmuydupt a wt>kom_•· s:ns. 151 W AVOJDlNCOMPATJBLE Leutog ofc opeo t-.s dal· Carini confldenUal H~band may wort out. Dove • Quall St1 .• days, llu.stbaveexper.
t'\i>k•. New t•pt d,,,e Ccnlcr St. Mf.815et ROOMMATES! ly, Sat. 9-noon. n1 W. couuelln1 fl referral. No cblldreo or pet•. Newport Bucb. Kenn Rima Hardware
WUttobch·•bl>'a .Ordnr $110 t:'Side t.rtpJes, :Jbr, BACHllOR Moose-Motes832·4134 17tbSUC..or Abortloo, adoption A OroH aalary approx At.rrollOTlVE 21i68Harbor8l,C.ltf.
au wt.r W:L Yr\y leut!: 2ba, frplc, yd, tQrl aar. Takes Tbe Guesswork 64Z..446l k.eeplAn!E· ,..,7 ...,,. $.'550.e31·2950. •---· Lnn'i•d! • -• ... 1-· -1 TSL ... t ...... 1.,,. APT Out of Finding APCJ "' .,. ·--""-.. _. ... _ ·--mo ... am -·.... .u .. TRIGHTPERSON IND. Unlll w/oflice AllCHfTICTUUL Excellentpay&workJ.nt Cbriat.l&n llanttd Cpl lo 48"1bafamrmZ100' -. • "'""' •-.e.1rvtc1n td t di l & -imo Aduha p«!f'd No $375. New 2 br, 3 b&, 4. ALL UTILS. PD! S... SS It S..... 1.SOCM0001q.ft. from 1.9S .. ._"' "' DunsMAM coadltlons for an ox· provi. e cua o a . -•-E I d l _., 00' f tb Y "I IMMED.OCCUPANCY ..........__.M.,:.Tt -•-"-•--....... •·t .. /F perienced brake & fron. boulekeepln1aervtces in pe&aDAc&cial45-nM8 p • .:r. ac. 1 • au.,.., 1 rom •ocean. Leaalngofcopen9.Sdal· -,_ ... ,_'.:.... .,.. •• ._..-e,. •tend tedmician to' take alntle atadenl s
... B8.. ....... __ .JI ..... -•• TSLbl.t.iull. t ...... 1-. .. Avall. now! 201 E. Wanted: Yftt person to l Sat&-7UW 17th .. ! TypeV,M1n.l11"1Uper. over the one-man dept. dormltoriet. 8·5 Dally. "cntl~M~· fm ..,.,.. . ...,.. Balboa BlVd. Ooly S250 lhr 2 Br a Ba home. w/ ~C-4or~~ &nlqaUOranaeCo. to fill out {rowln1 for crowlac volume Saloego.Houalnloliiood
..._Z212 OT·S318 THESEVlLLE C mo. NO FJ!:E. Call: bachelor. Nr beach, as.Till Newport Beac Deelan Chevy &ialer in Oraqe benellla. Start lmmed. ---------1 "Br w/far. •'>60 mo. eat55e-TTT7anytlme public tranap, Dana Pt. olDce.&G-S-. County Joduatrlal No children/pets. • -Must be llral1ht, no Spfrf.......... ai W..16.rf t· C ndo Adlta, new cpt1/dr9s, mkr 1135 Cook ri So C mlnolteal Army Complex. Opp. for ad· Deliver or m J reaumes INIUA fD 0 ran&e, med yd w/paUo, We1tcUff 2 br l~ ba ~ectouti:·coet.,:.ia~ lBl.S .El a I II MED I ATE vancement. See toJohnCurti.a,So.Calit
Luxury bay front wtr pd. MUI "J" Santa townhouse. Adults, no Phone cbarfes spilt. SaDF<;:~Gz~~/ic. OPENINGS·Hlahly Bellan1er, HOWARD Colle1e, 55 Fair Dr. hlgbriH on Newport Ana Ave, 636-U.201 to5. pets. $380/mo. 1728 Bed· 6tl-l!Oll8 1300 Sq fl Manuf. space motivated hi&b llcbool Chevrolet. Dove & Quail Costa Me11a or ca 1l
Harbor. untum 2 br, 2 ,.. __ ,_1-& 31 .. 6 lordLn,548-7'33 wtrroot ofc, 1rt rear •MICum 1 ••S• eraduate1 for trainina Sta., Newport Beach. 556-3tUO. ba. C\llllt drps carpeted -uwn 6 Proletisiooals desire M drl ve·ln door• 220·3 ~ and work In locaUooa ln All appUance.S. Gar, full••••••••••••••••••••••• WBalat1er Re8nta, I, new or F to abare Ideal Nwpt Phue. a&Tennlnal Wy, . Outealllluu&• atatee and Europe.t---------ictean'I 1erva needs
security, pool, jacuzzi. M~&ntficent Marina Y ront 2 r, pie, wet· location. $150/mo + uUI. Unit24,C.M.646-0681 10AM·2AM 731"'"82 Generous beneflta. PX. AVON mature women. Rella·
Boat 1Up avail. Oct. oc· V1ew,1orgeoua1,2&3br bar, encl dbl gar, $.WO. &aecuiitJes.1'15·8586 Stof'w 4550 You deserve to meet so-Travel. Education OP· ble. refs, car nee . .. .-.. A""• 493-0075 Could be furnished -r-. . portunltlei Wor .. ex 6'2-1403 cupaacy . .,......, per mo. .,.... M0-187'9 AU & 8 nit d. ed ••••••••••••••••••••••• meone you belong with. · .. · 1--------
Adulta. Owner 675·2:188 Panaroma view, ocw 1&i 2 wift aia:e 1:~ge ~v:a~Y Storage garaae $25. 1959 CaJJ perience. Three & lour tao IXTaA CASH? CLEANING SERVICES ~ 3pm. BR Ac Den 4·Plex. No Promontory Point 1 BR, r urn. v le w b 0 m c Maple Ave, CM. Mgr at 631·2876 ri: =t~:·~:; Earninp are iood·hount needs mature, reliable
Lge 2 br, 2 ba, beaut view 'pell. Mgr. 496·1097 re•· Short or Iona term w/emply'd st.ralgbt prof. Apt 5. 646-6505 L O O K I N G F O R some aaaJpmenll. Joln :: ~yt8'~ ~'::r!~~·~~ ~":to clean hou.ses.
ol bay. Private. SSOO. Huiitlftgtot1 leach 3840 ease. 044•8415 · or .bus. ma~. $250. incld a...tals Wanted 4600 AMERICAN SPOUSE! the people who've Joined taUve. can St0-1041 or --------
l7S-$!05; 673-4841 ••••••••••••••••••••••Block from water, Shores ~i~maid, 1rdnr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• %1 Yr old Cemale, folk lbe Army. Call for de· 7.enitb7·13Se.
Gaage apt. 2 br, 1 ba, area. • bd, 2 ba duplex. Need studio apt lo beach ~cal dancer. never =•nltoa n... 91Zml~~~~~~~~!'J Qerlcal
compl redecorated! Slv IUMDHIW! Yrlse. <714>956-587l areaforquletbutfriend· mamed, want.a to meet lie _... BABYSl'ITERaeeded ft
& retri1· No peta No. of 2 Br apts 14ll Delaware N-ShoN! r Office I_,.. 4400 Jy remale. Priced S200 or widower over 30. Write: Coata eaa 5'0-l026 hi 2 bUdten. LeBaa d SENIOR CLERK Hwy m-8082 . HB 0 . 12 5 D ii i -..,. s, steps rom ••••••••••••••••••••••• under Would like CdM MJaa KJm Mi Ra, Kwan1 LatunaHllla .,.._5251 IC • c r
3 bdr. 2 ba rpet Mile :noce~n. ~·~1 ~e:: (~~)~.~~pl ex. 61• PIR 59 FT ~~.f: CJ!' ~388{8b area'. ~·=Ko~·:>· Box Artist· ,..t1 .. :17=a oi: vicinity H.B.
. . •new cp · Agt.536·1808 l.SlTWESTCLIFF·NB e..,..lll)JO ' ' lnFullertoa,publlsberor'-----
diabwuher, garage. 706 -..-. --..-. Bayfront Condo· 1pacious AGT 541·5032 EXOTIC 4'ilRLS Yellow Paiea. Full ABYSITTER Needed
We have an netting en·
try level ..,.WOO in our
~tai:Ucn.Control Dept.
available. Tbo qualified
candidate 1bould have a
mlnlmum or 6 months re·
cent work experience
and have quallficaUons
of seoer•l office ak11ls to include accurate typing
of 55 wpm, 10 key, and
some aptitude for
figures. We can offer you
an excellent starting
salary and excltlne eom· pany benefits. Come
grow with us ID our new
facility. Pleue apply ln person:
Iri1. $.'5SO pr mo yrly. --------------2bdrm.&den,3ba.,sec. · halftHt/lltYHf/ ~oflmanartdept. for2ync.£irls,3daywk. ~aner5:00 FAMILIES bldg. Boat dock avail. 1501 WestcUffDr. Anme• _ Masaa~&Modelln1 Ftnlab, 'pute·up, MyBalboahlanclbo01e.
New lbr apt. Pvt pool & STOP HUNTINCi SlOOO Mo. Agt. 675·5200 Newport Financial Clr ••••••••••••••• •••••• •• Outcall ·3lE/543-3250 camera, layout, pencU Terri, 844·2'54
carport.S300rllo. UcningOfffctSpoc• ..._. LluMla•D...W. rougba. 170·8800, Babysitter wkdys, N.B.
840-1589, 61S-02a Call on Site Maoager Opport.fty SOOS For a relaxinl masaaae <%1.S>S»l·SOlB ~· Rer1. Phone Mr.
(714)642·31llexl246 ....................... yourbomeoroffice. AS$IMll EIS Hood,~2900.~41.
We have aeveral units
Eastside country 1eltin1.
2 br, den. akyllehl, frplc,
deck. llO E. 21st Sl.
DELUXE OFFICES LJQSTORE·SANTAANA Servin1aUOrugeCo. We will tralo. Apply Babysitter, lyrold girl&
Comm! & indsll spaces, Gross.R:!~6~/qio. t7t4Jl24-0l06 7AM, MacGregor Yacht 4 yr old boy my home.
200 to 2000 sq. ft . .M low lonfterm lse. •SHARON'S• Corp, HU PlacODUa Mon-Fri 2-6, start Oct.
Princlpal9only OtrrCALLMASSAGE Ave,CJI · Car, refa req. CdM
For information call 4111J.1.224 UMlla aree) 7»1310
BERKSlllREREALTY mbly
675-7900 675·2173 RELAXJNG MASSAGE Alise
BobJaaiea·LiC Masseur cAll• REWORK
Babyaitter my home, 30
hra wk. 2 Boys. S.A. lllhb· ~74':M an 6pm .. OutulJ 9.9, 4.94-5111 VNii
Br•nty SALON OPlllATOR Babyattterrn1bomelJuiv n~ .......... ""' •I FneQllestlOll• Parlt. 2 ailldren. Own mli'lllUA 10 Stations, 1teady clien· Slater Anna readl canb Ir you have a mlnlmum traosp. WUllllg to dr to COIP.
tele. Owner leaving area. Tea Leaf Re.adlnp oil to 2 yean ln core re· sdl1 a& beet 3 days. No STAMDAlD
S28.000orsubmlt. · (213)461-SMS workooetacbandprint-~·,.Sal open. Meals. MIMOIJIS lfmW@1t1· .!lqA BEAUTIFUL NUDE ed clrcutt board repair, Refs.AtUpm,559-1960. DIVISION
9452-44111 ;:;;:am GIR~. 625 N. Euclid, and are famlllar wUb Baby1ltter wnted, 1~ ADApplledMainetJcaCo ~~~~~~~~~I Anaheim component removal, daya a week; 2 amall 3.ac>W.Se1enstrom
-559~150/S:IS-5363 tbeo. our Quality As· cbllcken. Own trans. · Santa.Ana CA9270. ' NURSERY SCHOOL auran~ Department baa Co1lege Part area. ' : (Lic·21) Costa Mesa, pro-EXEC . .ff yr. old man de· a posWon !or )'Oil. Come 5'&-84.5& • · . ~ual Opportunity
fltable leased schl $5000 sires educated, cultured, grow wi1b ua ln our new 1 .. 111' Calh req. Day 832·5334 affectionate woman for facility. We can offer the Babyaltter/Hlett>r, Uve mp oyer ...
--------·Evel'13-5121 companion 32-39. Prefer qlllllfied lndlvid&W an ln. Irvine area. Salary
---------• llhort blond/red bead. excellent 11tart.1n1 aalary nee. 752-41122; 1~·1003, .---------WESTCLIFr BLDG
NI WP< '111 Ill l\C,H ..... . . ,.. .
C..tll Mr tlow . .r<J
f.4!> t.101
Cam11ry Vlllw Seod letter & picture to with excttiat compao1 Mrs. Seely • JEWELllYsTOlrE Laurent, P.O.Box tGS, benefits to include a•-------sehool--..
Custom lntr. Burglar Anaheim, Ct. 92806 credit ~·After boor .8ABYSITl'ER aft
Alarm S11tem. Good lae. Sii lotervinl may be ar· for o yr old. Meea Verde. v.-r. W8 M Ir we Establiabed reputation. DIM.-A-VICI nncecl bJ' appoiDlment ~~
42.33.latSt.NB ESCOR~.LMODELS only. PlHM apllb' Us 1u.Wll'ft?G cld"9¥.MW ... b.ic M~AOE perlOD: _...,,_,, • accOmra lew fr It's
LAUNDROMAT W /agen· 84s.&818 ~j(): .... to ,.,. c• l(elty
cy in Capllt.raoo Bcb. Askforext.25 ..... DATA Permanent poaltlo'D Girt toda, I. w•'fl :ic:t = =~ Talent Referral Service ' CORP. I/time, typint required. .... ,_ ... w.,1
CLERICAL
Xlnt opp. for retired cpl. offers lmmed oppor for STAMDAID Xlnt cueet opportunity
---------• or famnr buslne11 TV coma-movie-theatre MIMOlllS & beneflta. Call Mn. Secret1rtes, Typists.
w/unlimited poteot.ial for ca.atlne + audiUone for DmSIOM Bald.rtdfe PBX. Accounti.n1 Clu, &
growth. Prln. only. comedJao1, muaJclans, *-8900 Keypunch. 837-6417 modela. Wdte PO Box An Applied MaineUeaCo Itey1tone Savings &
---------··---------1122'71DP.s.ataAna,Ca. 3400W.Seaentrom . Loan ·--------· 24UMITMOTa 91712 SantaAna,CAmo& EOEM/F WORK WHEN YOU
WANT. YOU DON'T
PAY, WE PAY YOU.
PAIDVACS.
,,
NEWPORT BIACH PtnOllClll Senlces 1360 ~,__.._--... Shop auto• fender PRINCIP~ONLY VJ'...,.._._. """"# BERKSHIREREALTY •••••n••••H•••••••••• . mployerM/F man. Exp'd. Pd ¥aca·
675-7900 875-2173 IMYISTIGATIOHS tlou, ho•pitallsatloo.
All typu • Mlaain1 ATTENDANT for ~~.~~w!'=es~~ penans. 821MMB, 21 bJ"I paral,yaed JDI woman S.A.
1-5. llOD•FrL Bal bl.--------.. ~ Bookkeeper/Sec1, no
---------. abortband. H.B. area •
PLEA.SE CALL
IE~
Sl!!AVIOBS
133-1441
er631-076S
....................... AUTOllOOIOC9a Salary commensurate'~~~~~~~~~
7075 1WUD1macla6autode-w/experlence.848-1321 a,vvv -'-bl ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• alenhlp e:icpeT pref'd --eXJ)er. •--e P Good typist ll 10 tey ad: BOOKKEEPER·l!'ull ln clothlnt atore. Call der by touch nee. Wlll CbarSe. constnact1on ex· _4_~_11!_'17 _____ _
train Oil coawuter. Hrs =~:ererred, C.M. CLERK
S.S. 5 da)'S. ~t co. to Early mornlne sub·
BOOllEEPlllC
Accouatln1 Is Fi111re
Qarb. Llke fiPN wort,
... 10 b)'. Top M • ftttUoll pey.
atitute caller. 6A.M·aPM.
$735 t.o SB85 per mo. TYP·
ing 50 wpm. Apply In
pel"IOb. Fountain Valley School District, Person·
nel Office, corner
I
................ • •,. I . .. . .. ,. •, ...
. . • .. ., • " .
Af .. •t•I.,. .....t/C..,._..e a.ctriul G••rtlSenlus Hari&ncJ LGRdscaphNJ Pm.tlng/Paperiitg P .... /P ......... ..••.•..•••••.......... ·········•··•·········· ....•.................• ·•••••················· .................................................................................................................. .
H •J AJ?J•hano S. I\ l!: MAN Cr w i )'ni•ic ELl':C'rJ\ICAL SERVICE HANDYMAN· Carpentry, CHEAPEST hauling 1n 8 yra exper, free l!Sl, also Knowl ea pa in tine C:O.tlilM raa.tt.g DRAINS CLEARED
TRtf•(UAHCiY.flfJ pr pourm1 Ir ltnlab1n1. CAU.s US hr,• S ALL •l•ctrtcal, plumbln1 & town. Fr ells. CHEAP! lndacpo1 material avad. Int/Ext , commerciai lnt. J!!at. European fl'ROKs:t.so ·
2'mS Maw,s A s.tyour~nfurma,10• JO~M2m3 _floor'l~Wl,8472787 642·2985or84S-L390 __ clean up & raf11. Jay apla, r eaide nlial ~ craftsmanablp. Qua l Call751-4J942
lKIZ ~7 owu f'OOntt)'. a.?J tt•~w418tctnc HANDYMAN Bl& truck, chea pnce· 84-4043or~ _ mobilebomell.836-U20 palnta. "lK. Off normal lloofiiMJ ~S..tc. H 6 V <:on<"rcl.-All l.lcSl7U6 f.&SW7• NOJOBTOOSMALL stroofhard·wor~l.n&11tu· MasoNy YOUNGMan,Syrsexpr ratea"67U92111'eeest ....................... .
••••••••••••••••• ph~ tUQ('f\'\.r, bloc:k It __ 0'75-2440 _ _ dent. 494 ·?669/494·1482 ••••••••••••••••••••••• in wallcoverh>I. Free WORK GUARANTEED ROOFS Installed factory
l •ri-t 1&n ~•II I•• ~our. bnl k "'orlc .,.,._. .. 1:1t11 1-;LU.'TRJCIAN priced HANDY~ N H ,.._ Crea Brickwork. Small Job!!. esta. 645-8S7f, Andy lnt.erior/Extr. Frff est. direct·, utab'l 35 v-. or min«' ltt p41 11 ,. " t .. u d&brm\.kd67$·t7lffl rlah\ tr1-.i ll1tlm11tu on mA -omes • ......._ __ 1.....-.1 Newport, Coata Me.au & --------.....;;..---4 ,, .• de4n1ni ton' tlu.ir ..,.ork lut11eor11mulljobtl Apta Conscientious ~"9 lrvinc.675-317~eves. Im/Ext dependable, reu. 25ynup.'42·0295 CaH Harold Guoo,
Al bta&t•r ~•\lllA:' ~rt•1· 'Y.Mto:NTWORK Palh•. U c 67!103S9 Crafbman.:..Ph~S-0302_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mo --rreeesUmate.CaJIJay Pladw/Repalr -~-__ 1 _____ _
f"1'1t.~~'6 ~.1111111l"r"'111,1~,·,!~'v·ev~~>'1"1r n..-...t-i-. i>rufe8111onal window Wanta REALLY CLEAN •lftcJ 645-7965 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AOOFSFORLESS . ' ., "'" ,, ,~ .____,, · HOUSE' Call Gln"ham ••••••••••••••••••••••• Alt fl M)4) ••••••••••••••••••••••• w•1her. r1unUn1. Jn· · • ~ Sml painting co. small VERYNEATPATCH types. oao avail. ~~~n",;,t.~.·,·.':' '1·:~11 Wl!:El>INt:·t;LJ.o;ANUl'S lr/extr, odd job11. Jtirry Girl. Fteeest645 5~ -Locul. & Lona Distance prices Int/Extr Depen. JOBSflTEXTURE Fre. eat, Uc/boad'd, in-,,..,.. 64S·8lt7 Moving. Lowest rates, · Fr er. Senior cttlzeoa dlacnt. , pt.s 1omin hll'•H" , t.•,an Controdor Wctikly Mi.lntcnunct: CARPET. Wl.NDOW: . fast, t!rflcicnt service. dable. Work guar., free eeat . 893-1439 81M..ooJ.anytlme
In d1n 11n ,h.ill \1., \11.;••••••••••••••••••••••• Jl)'~1·:ct 6429Y07 ~~~• FLOOR~EANJNG Frtle eat. Majesti c est.7.S.-6931 . rm~ so, 1'11~11 ~Ill I hr rt J ll·"fm··1l & S.Jn, (,' .. n • -· • --"9 Dut~h Ma inlenancc Modem Movcrs639·8S52 p NT ........ .., . Repairs. Uc'd & Inard. ,. <· 1 1 1 .., u • • v••u'1n&lllP:i~rv1l·e. cl11un ••••••••••••••••••••••• $ervice.'i37·1508 _ _ __ _ Al ING. Iotr/Extr. •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• All tyn.e ......,._ t. Call ~ •tlltr •· im I"' '" "' C:1•ntr 1·1~\om All & Atld & h I kl "----·-Expr 'd, honest, neat. HO,..ESAVERS Pl b ,.._. r•vv es t Pl rrpair 1~ -.r-. P>.pr ~· .. 1 1u11 1'11111ne1 •: up au ing, wee Y Sklploadcr, dump truck. HOUSECLEANING is our Pointi1t4J/Poperin9 RuH. Lac'd. 964·10.CS .,. · um • anyt.lme541·5930Walt ~~t .~,r~ m, "l'll ltt•I r1;111111 .1 N1•w t·"11wt lt~w ~Mtntt'nllnr cc R~u11ona· hauhn,, tree work. grad· B . R ll b I ••••••••••••••••••••••• D· Ina" Heatln1 "alr con-....._ .., "'" ". ~ u•erates, rcucslamatcs. lng,demo,etctlll -:1930 us.1ness . e a e ave dWonlna. Free eat SlO ,_
i\ • 11111m t.4~ 4644 / After 4 JO ;usk fur lfon service, Janice's Rag .PET.ERSPAINTJNG PAPER . PAINT 20 hr. Honeal " reliable•••••••••••••••••-••••
C.ta.,.,Aco.tic 5<&111~1Ltt l:Jonded ti4S-<611or~·4U87 u...u--g~yAnnsat675·6s.53 Exprd. Reu Rates. Sa...a..1 1 · yrs. service BofA M/COK CER.AJIJCTILE Nntor ••• r.•••••••••••••-·•• ----- -·-"'I ---------f'ree Est Call Gene expr . ......act on guar. 7513'~ ' · mod J Fr ' Room d d 1 l R··" bl ••••••••••••••••••••••• u -I l b 1· bl · "'"ve • no-a1·t. 838·...,..,5 · ~ re e · ee est. sml F A ll , , 1 ·• 1o11 i; .Wa e Expr Jupunc!lc n uusec ean ng y re 1a e 552-0CIB ..,.. ., .. ...,, Jo..._ ... el"ome. 5 ... ,...,.. ~Ym_Y1 ~~U>linc: ~u~ Hemodelin,, Cu1>tom Gardener ftcasonul>lc, lfouhn,, movtnj,\, clcaoup couple. ReCerences _.-5 -.. ._.......,.. 'v " t:i "'1 •"'· r t! ho~ by Layne· Exp'd, free est ~-5230Mlke $7 up Treework. Reas 963-581Jorl-626-6216 p-t-& y.--c ... u-PROFESSIONAL Paint-Toplueyourmeaaae ... i>aJrs, guJr, Lie lf.3291B5 rt'B!>OnJbk ~52 3475 ---· -· rast.freeest84.2·4597' Ulm -_,... mg. Jnter/Exter. Reas, bet'oreUMI •-,...---.--Ice__,. ___ _
rree cst536 1800 c11ci. Prof Japanese Landscap - ----Ho.asewortlReUabfe AverageExtrlStry$395 wockauar642·0386 readi""p••bla c,
OCc S 2Story •c:Ac: lntr .,,,c m ---a ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ing. & garderung. Maint 'tudent. Big 3 • T Own trans 548·0431 ......,, ~r pbo Hav~ ~m.e~1~1t you want O~wall Anal Al'OUl>llC met mowing. trimming, truck Trash, tree tnm, . ·. Pnces incl mwtr'l-labor Fine work. Slate lie & in· ne Removals, t rimming,
tu sell . Cla11s1f1ed .ada do Spec . St L1t, li36 5738 or spraying weeding. 1-'l'ce etc. Rondy 64Z·5703 SELL idle items with a Guar/lnstd, Freeesl. std. Exterior speclalisl. Dally Pilot pruning. Free eat. Lic'd ,
•t well. 642 ~8 <213)422·0279 esl. ~1"72 M9•3666 ' Daily Pilot Classihed Ad. Ted 627-7900or636-7085 Try me-Callco8J6.5SS5 Claasified,642-5818 Cully insured642-2624
HetpW..ted 7100 W~ted 7100HelpW_..d 7100HetpWonted 7100.W,W•ted 7IOOtt.ipWCllded 7100HelpW..t.cl -7100thlpW.ted 7100HelpW..t.cl 7f'OO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
t:ook,Duy11,cxpcr preC'd. Fiberglass Molders. ex ~ NURSES AIDES, needed ltECEPT,IT'YPtST Br~akla st & Lunch Dept Store per'd. Good wagci.. & MACHIHE for conv. hosp. Full & Pia.sties Needed full·tltoe for ~~1~r~~~\e~1.r~111 ~~;1t~· ROBINSONS ~r~~t~fi~~: Co~:.P11~u HOSTESS Smallo~~~!~~witch e/~~d~8~p~~~~t .~~~ry M~L'c,~?u~s ~:b~!hfn"gt c!.e~o~~
i-:xper'd Apply, ll11:gcr Newport Beach Plocenua Ave, t;M components Operate ~1anor, 340 Victoria, Knowledge of materials knowledae of spelJJng &:
Hestauranl, 16 Fashion Will Interview (3) General Maintenanc11 full·Time -Days.. variety or mochuwll in Cost11 Mesa. & exper. w /set -up & gr am mar euential.
Island, N.B applicants for · People needed. Apply in · clud. turret lathe. vert1 -------operation or injection & 675-3271
COOK COSMETOLOGIST person. 1131 Batk B11v f cle mills, punch' pres!>, & MURSES AIDES transfer molding ol ---------
For s mall retirement I AESTHETICIAH Dr, N B Good Pay & BtnE: its dnll press. Short run pro· All Shifts. Good bene. smalJ precision parts. RESTAURANT A 1 l
homt: m Lai:unu Deuch. ALSO Good Working Conditions ductton,small shop, days Apply Garfield Conv. DaySblft. service penonnel. Apply
ex per. pref'd in home HEAD CASHIER/ Gm~~h~i~"A, 1~s:e~~fy: Apply ln Person only 1111os 8P. 7781 GarfE 0ie1Ed Ave. STACOSWITCH IMC ~.fso~r!w': ~:fj~y· .~tyle cookrng. Good CASH OFFICE .. STACOSWITCH INC. · 847·9671 · · · U398akerCosta Mesa p --'-M v k d f. J fiberglasis. Small co DEL TACO ll:Jll Baker Costa Mesa 549·l04l a.nr.way, •. wor mg con s or tn f' time P<>Sitions . Xlnl Good advancement for OFFICE HELPER
terv1ewph_onc4949151! I co. benefits . Apply right people. $2 75 lo 549-3041 Architectural ofc req's F.qualOpPOrEmployer
COOIC·HfGHTS Personnel Mon thru Frt start.845-62.SZ 2SZ52LaPcald.~Hih EqualOpporEmployer help in m a il room,
2·4pm -- -~~~-arcbives.library,supply Also needs c.·ooks helper 2 Fashion bland GeoeraJ Office *MAIDS* room, etc. Must have .......... lepoinMtt/
RETAIL
CLERKS ~eft~uor~nt ~~-l ~;ply~ F.qualOppEmplyr Mff RECEPTIONIST Help Wanted 7100 .WpW•ted 7100 ThelnnatLaguna own transp. William L. Dr._"
2633 w Coast Hwy, N B. Our lovely exec. offices ••••••••• •• •••••••••••• •••• ••••••••••••••••••• zu N. Cst Hwy, Laauna Pe re l r a A s s o c . , If you dldn't take home UTOTEM
....
or call 642 8475 DISHWASHERS need an attractive. well HOSTESS f 1t1me dayR. iiuuranc~ MacA rthur at Ford Rd, s.w> last week-8ee us at groomed recept. who has over 21 Also. d IS· Agency, Secretary & MAID Wanted, p/Ume. NB. (714) 644-0620. EOE, EZR.ootA!r, 13375. Briatol Cotneftle11ee M ..... s
<.:oo.k.Parttlme,some-ex Apply, Bayview Manor acheerypersonahty&a hwasher f/time Jnqwre S 1 S 1 & . Exper1d. Apply, Sea M/F. st.SA. PoaitJocaopenllt.2nd&
per. apply 1n person Conv. llosp, 2o.s5 Tburin eo~d p~o~e manner at L 0' m bard,· s r!s~i~n ~r:r:r. so~~:. Lark M ote l . 2Z74 --0-FFt-C_E_W_O_R_JC_ER __ ----------3rd 1blfta in San
Derby Restaurant. 1262 Ave, C M 642 3505. _, a 01111 ul1es reqwre a Restaurant Saddlebuck surance' exper. HB area. Newport Blvd' C. M PRINTED CIRCUIT CBeleacmh.e~~--~.!"~c .. ~nvae s 1-: Bnstol. CM i---------I t~ing slull or 50 wpm Valley Plata El Toro. 963-5647 646-7445. Relier shift for PM's & IOAID SHOP v~ ..... _ ... DuitnbutorTrainee Th15is an entry level J>O!>. 581 7160 m ghts 1n retirement Looking for GOO o opening, also. No exper. COOKS
t:xp'd short order 1\ll
:.h1rtl> avail Apply 1n
person eves 7 IU.
:\1on1Tues1 Wed CIOIY Set'
C>avl'. P at•1f1c Coa,.,1
D1nH. 15111 W <.:11ul>t
Hwy, NO
COOKWAMTED
Full-time & P 1t ime
.\ va1l. any hrl>, morn
pref'd Exper prl'f'd Sal
open. Apply tn person,
Grinder Resta urant, 1400
_ E.Coasl Hwy, NB.
that includes xlnt work· -Maintenance PeNon~I home. Call 494-9'58 for machinist, plater, pro· req'd. Apply at an)' of LARGE NAT'L mg conds, benefits & 6 HOTEi. Recept1on1st . INSURANCE Wo rk & r ecr eation details. duction & quality control ouratoru. SUPPLIER OF mo. salary reviews. App neat. honest. willing to POSrTIO ... S center, Wed-Mon, 7AM· --manager. P lease u nd 2588NewportBivd ly. National Systems learn.Advanccmt!ntopp " 4PM.Goodbcncfits.Call _________ r esu m e to : 17581 CostaMesa 642-7702 HARDWARE & Corp.,4361 Birch St,N.H. tv 497·2446 Large insur. co. ha!> im· forappt.493-2305 OFFICE Manchester Ave, Jrvmel~~~~~~~~~
TOOLS (Nr. oc Airport) EOE . med Ope!ungs ror H s. IMMEDIATE 92714 ,_ -Housecleanin~. 2 Days grads. Xlbt workmg con----------· ----RM'1F/tf ..
NO EXPER. NF.C 1------... ---c wkly, !>hC>rt hrs Must bl· ds &benefits . Maint. Engineer Production Assist. AlDES
Eam $225 to $425 General OfClce eff11·1cnt. No smokl· No Underwriting Asst RODJNSONS OPENINGS Exper'd in production ORDEltUES
PerwHk HOUSEWIVES kids. Can ll\'C m. N.B. 2 Yrs bu:i expcr. 1·2 yrs DI • ForPeopleWllh s peclng (mark-up) ol f &M.entalHealth
Co & Bonuses SS SS SS S 642·3481. college Comm 'I rating Newport leach Secretarial, Clerical manusctipts for typeset· Workers.
Only ambitious need ap· Fall is here & ~~th~ugh 1t llOUSEKEfo:PER. h ve in exper. helpful. ls lntervlewlng l''or : Swltchbowd. Tv-'--, Ung & page layout. Xlnt CaU83l-l774
p ly . Mu s t be well maybeearly1t sllme to Mon ~·ri Ille cookin,g, Clerl!Typist MAIMTEtiCAHCE ,,....., proofreading abiUty re-1----------
Aroomed & neat appear-start mak1n_g som; extr.a mus 1 s JJ 1• a k s 0 m c 40 WPM. he11vy phones. EHGrlHEEJl 1Ceyp111ch or q 'd. $750 to start. Educa-RM~
ing.Xlntfringebenefits. cash for CllRISfMAS i-:ni.th s h . Hefs. rcii goodorganiiation. ~1.uJSt have exper. 111 atr DataProcessSkJlls tiooal Publlsbing Co. 1n 11·7. Xlnt. sat a fringe
CallForAppoinSment T1me/L1fe Libnml•:. has 6311925 R .. /MoilClerk cond . plumbing. clec· Choose the days, weeks C.M . Call Caroline, benefits. Mesa Verde 898-4485 the finest & one ol thl' Will tram consc1ent1ous trical wor k . Apply & location in which you 751·2113 Conv. Hosp, 681 Ceoler J
Counter Pen.on. mature. most prontablc p l1mt• HOUSEKEEPERS indlVldual. Penonn~I Dept. work. p 1'1'1-. COOKS St. C.M. S484585. ,
p /time ror qwrk scrv MR. GROVE jobs avail We off<'r 3 Mal u r c , e x Pe r . d Moint. Mechanic Mon·Frlday 2-4pm r£1 I • n...-
l>and w1c h shop Call Call Mon 81m·lpm shifts per day lo fit rnto F'tllme. Hayview Manor Work varied maint 2 Fashioftlaland Pvt. Country Club. Ex-SALESclerkfordairy,u. •
l>elwn8&3,8J3.8919 i---------•I your schedule, a bai.11 & Conv Hoap, 2055 skills. Ex""r. in "~e of Eq aJO E I petienced. IC interested st mgr, ma.ture penon hourly wage + J n1m Y"' ...., u ppor mp oyer Ill l or 2 dll)'s extra work over 18, Ftr. C.ll llon/·
CREW Doc~ COfttrol mission & an xlnt bonu., Thunn Ave, CM 642-3505 hand & power tooli.. Mui.t 1---------per week. Please call Fri 7.Spmoo.ly, ~-C~ril No travel. f ltml' 1., HOUSEICEEPER beOAxib:e·1 p MANAGEMENT • 6"-5404 '
MANAGERS Sm.ill Orange Co. firm avail English spcaJung. small P~lF£con PEOPLEPERSON fj~iSaWf?S ... ~~-.irr
hasneedforsetrstartmg TIRl':DOFTllE ramily.Pvtroom&balh Exec needs p/Ume ar. '-LI.Ac:;: ~.-..-.....,.,
Part time, eveninss and 10div. w/3·5 yrs exper. in ROUTIN t:;'> Llad4 Isle. NB. 675-0558 ~e Company soc. in wholesale supply l'empororyseMc:e Real ~tateSales~non YOUR INCOME
Saturdays managing document control. Typ· TIUSJOBJS FOR YOU ' 17570Btookhurst, F. Vly Fully ca pH a 11 zed lll-7755 10.00/oCOMMl5SIOH $$$$ $$$$
iunior saJes peraons!>ell ing skillsreq'd.Sal com· CALLUSNOWAT Housekeeper. li ve in. 8am-2pm 642·1634. ColdweUBanJcer Bldg We furnish d es k -PARTTIME
mgsubscnpt1onsdoorto mensuratew;expcr.Ap· 833-1095 Newport Beath. pr1v :\tonthruFriday -.-4040MacArtburB!vd telepbone-11ecretary & ._.l!!ll>HON•WORJC
door. Requires van or ply 1n person, Sc1ent1fic TlME-Llt'E r m 1 b a t h , g o o d Equal Oppor Employer MATURE W 0 MAN Ste 308 Newport Bch help. •ta.U" '"
lar)?e station wagon. Dnllmg C<>olrols. 4040 LIBRARIES sal11ry ,644·8395 p/time \o wekome LACASARLTY HOUSEWIVES
Contact Roland Prei.ley Cam Pus Dr' N . 8 . Equal Opp Emplyr M /F House-person, resident K h . nme"~hoamn4!!'.11P'l&ex1~bolentharcst.P --ar-a-le_g_a_l_r_o_r _s_m_a_l_l_l_a_w 495-1870 eve: 831·0737 COLLEGE STUDEMTS f!i~hsP.8~sr~10~::2-:~ 55-1..oo~i. E_O_E . - --F'rr. Prev. exp. required erp!'°1c ........ TRY OPR N;;. ca';, lite typing. omce. Airport area. N.B. I~~~~~~~~~ G uaranteed Hourly
phone 642.4321 rnr ap. DONUT SHOP work, GEH"L LAIORER to manage house & D~ "'A"'I 547·3095. Probate, tax return & JU!:A.L~AT}f .. Wage Plus Bonas. 5:30
pointmenl. night !>haft. No ex per. Trucking co. needll de, perform all housekeep-Day shift. In-house com · funding of trusts. Steno· SALES pm to 8:30 pm. Call
-nee Mr Donut, 135 E. pend. man who isn't in g dulies includ ing puters.Req'upeed&ac· MechCllllccalDHigner/ graphic skillsreq. Phone * * 646-422'3orcometo250E. •
Deliveryman, 1-'ull or 17th St.C.M. afraid of hard work to cooltini. 558-4544. Adv pd curacy. Key to dasc ex Draftsman 833·9982 · Real Estate salespeople l?thSt.,CostaMesa.
P1lime for party rental ---helploadboata&dogen'I forbyemployer per. helpful. Sal open. 5-10 Yrs exp er. in openyourfuturo.Letus
:;tore. Must be neal & DRIVER maint. work. See Bud, ---Xlnt ~netits & working m echanical des1gn & PARTS MAH help you into the buai·ia---------
able to do some heavy Dependable, conscien· Boat. Transit, 1343 Logan conds. Apply. National draning of devices, pre· Marine exper. pref'd, but nesa-joln a company SALES
ltrt1ng. A pply, Z025 t1ous man for freight Ave.C.M. 'INDUSTRIAL SBylstheSmtsNCBor<pN., 430C61 MurevesselsorrotaUng enno_,t1.nesre.qh'ardd. w&arfaer_!!1ae1 namel6yearla ·Cin0lrange SSCTUOLLEGD--ESS Newport Bl, CM company. F /time. Must i-------re • · · ear mechanisms. Dulles to .. "' ""' Cowtty. Cal la re or g, •
D_.1" MCN'I be21orover.64o--0501. GIRLFRIDAY Airport)E.O.E. include detail design, W.CoaatHwy,NewPQrt W a rren at REAL GetY ... P/TI ... '
-ny Type ~WPM. 10 key. VocoH°"wcrsfwl & we support ror enflneenng. _Bc_h_. -------• ~ATEby McV.~:y, JobLIMclUCMow!
Early AM 'times route, DRIVERS. & Helpers non-smoker preferred, cld ploy, ..ow tM boftk Kitchen Steward checking & drafting. Sal p.anTS/STOCIC C7l4t 842.-9371
• Huntington Beac h & needed. Local household good pay. hours to s uit. account's low Ii It's Pvt CoUAtry Club, Expr. commensurate w/exper. -Time/Lile L braries.
Costa Mesa areas Must mo111ng company, exper. 697 Randolph, c M. necessary. For interview Apply In person wtwork Exper. desired, nClt re-Real Estate Sales People Inc. offers xlnt money
have dependable cu. n ee for appt. call S4G-679l HMe to "'1'/• caM IC.cty ca11644·5404 sarn,\)les lo Scientific q 'd. Will train. Mus1pass wanted. Up to 90/103 for short flexible hours.
546-4481 847 7278 Grirl today & ••'II ·--------i Drilhng Controls, 4040 co. physical includ. back comm. aplit. Nwpt Bcb We have a ~
l>ell_v ___ o_nv~r/Sules EARN Up to SlB-$50 an GIRLSMUOED showy•thewayt Campus Or, N .B . ~;~E~~~k,for appt. _548_-86_1_4 ______ =~w:1: t:.,:;
FULL OR PfTI E evenme without exper. Sandwich del. 5 Day wk, LAIORERS 557-9051. EOE. ------------1•--------•I bonus. Our atmosphere M Sell Beeline Fashions al 4 hr day. Own trans Packagers. ~emb\ers. PACKAGrERf & Part-Lime in Hamburger REAL ESTATE ia•funcasualonefeallit 6-IOPM m·bomestyleshows. Use E.am over $3.50 hr. CaJI Warehouse. inventory & ASSIMILERS "Sandwich stand, CdM lakes to qoalifJ is '
lmmtd. OpNln91 of car & phone. Instant 8am·lpm. Phone S40.SJ3S General Laborers. Man.y Needed Now! area 673-3'30 Creative Ii prof. co. will PERSONALITY. U 1011
'lleed <9> people to work profit checks. Sample HANDY MAN. Jack-of-all WORK WHEN YO U Car&pbone a m ust Part Ume shift, 8-l or 1~. ff°" t~Tb°£ ofc'a in llk.e talking on the phone
Orange Co. area Must wardrobe at no cost. Call trades to work 10·12 hrs WANT. YOU DON'T •-----------• Telepbooe Anawerlnlf vf""b . , · an;s. "have a liWe11partde in
havevalidCalif.dr1vers forlnlerview,963·7470or perweekalaNptBcb PAY. WE PAY YOU. Bureau, work on busy eave openngs or yoorvoice,thiajobiafor
be. Ml·2103. home" ofc. Nds•to be PAJDVACS. s wltcbboard. EOE. o •," or e ~Per, your.F/tlmeiaavall.,
Eal'ftUpto $7 Hr i---------1 tamlltar w/elS'cttleal. 546-3333 ·aa espersons • m1ra. SOUNDGOQD? No Exper. Nece11s. l>lumbl.ng & other fix·lt ILLIY wbo a.re interested in a CALL US NOW AT 751-9790 En&lneenng jobs. An xlnt oppr for a ~ L.:J P_A_R_T--T-IM-E-co-l-le_g_e_1 career. ~ly by ca1lln1 13W095 j
D!'!IWG.!RIHOOGUCt.._."!R mature, capable penon se""vices man, Mon·Frl for fortnter6~1e.w0400 TIME-LIFE f DellveJ')' man, full time, .,,. " "'"'" for a perm position. Send 8_ 1441 lrYM 540..4455 ~work. $56-2730 ~ IJBRARIES neat appearance. Beach To create original de· briefstatementofexp.4' ~..-,,__.._ 739.1117-tl P-··lOppEmn•--mff
Stat.ionera, 4020 Campus 11lgG11 of minlaturhed htly wage requested to or63'-0765 -F;~l OpporE~pl~y;r ·PIXAnlSvcOpn ..,..... .,.y,.
Or,N.B.· • precls\on a luminated Ad 1940, Daily PUot,1~~~~~~~~~1 lfnmed. openlngt-Applyl":::~=~~~~~I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; switches, & assemblies. P.O. Box 1~60, Costa in penoo betwn 9am &I REALEn'ATSSALF.S
Well eslab·t Orange Co.,_M_es_a_.C_A_936:_26 ____ ,J~~~~:.::1ri: l....,P ...... , 4pm Kon-Fr i. 155 IS YOUR LIFE lN A
co. .. Driver Tralt\ing. 5 Yrs .Mature, exper d . Rocbelter St, Costa RUT? Let us belp you
STACOSWITCH INC Hic .... ry Farms exper. In the field nee to F/t.lme. Bayview Conv. Mesa. jump out fnto tl>e rlc.b
1139BakerCostaMeta NI quali fy for prope r Hosp. 20M Tbunn A~e. "X~SerY and rewardlnc world of S4f·304 f Wby not work durhll c r •den t i a J , ca 11 _CM_642-3SOS ___ . ____ , real eatate. W• have
EqualOpporEmployer YOW' spare Umo in tbe Cap l1tr1n o-La1un a Waotto'Wot'kdays.after· aupel' sales aod lloenM · pleuantsurroundlng.tat Legal secretary, 1en. noontlsevenmohlN.B. 1 1 .,, ------------•~--------1 lllckory FITnu. P/Ume ROP,498-a:US. pract.lce. exper. Xlnt • COM areas? Work traln nc. Ca 1 nofal
employees needed tor INSU•.a...a~I aldlls.Ref.83S-f441 f/tlme or p /time.1~Pnl~opert~~U~a~,~142-~,1'30~~·~~I
mont1. allna, " eves. """""° LEOALSECRETARV Weekends a must. Xtra 1.
Will train. Stop lo at GENERAL AGENTS : Corporation. Exper'd. pay tor • x P ~ r 'd S.C.pUonllt/Proprletor
Hickory Farms in So. lmmed. ope oinaa tor N-~ter.840-0900 operators. Call~. ~ ex~r. Jlrl wlth
Coaat Plaza af\er lOAM General Asenh to .... ...,.. ---------• E.O.E. . not typlnr. pleua'1t
daily. reprHenf t>entrtlt-A LfQUORCLERJC Prr. telephone voice, • a 1----------1 Dental Health Plan f0t ~~r '°., l or 2 nil•• PIXOPBATOAS ct.ar &ogical bead for
JndJvlduala • Group. ~ maoacemeat company 1 Ul\llmited Oppor. ln one PulH bosd, 'A.BX cord offlce. Salal')' quokd•------""----
of tbo talWSt 1rowlna A terdleu. Som• w~yp· after~l lfttentew. uctors or both care l11£startnow11 m • .,~1 · 1
MrTices.canm.:zqo. --------
'
'
• !~.~~ ..... ?!.~~!~~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~.~~ ..... ?!.~! ~~ .......... ~~.~! ~ ......... ~~.~~ ~·.•:.~: ..... ~~~~ MOnday, September 12, 1977 OAILV PILOT ' .. JJ
Sal tt r. over 2:S few IO yr old AntlquK: ROMWood mar• S'l'OREWlDE SALE Walt'rbed. King II. Hdbrd toah Power 9040 loah c--t • Neu fl60
TRAINEE
A w•l' for a hl•h cbool arodu1lt·
lO enter th nuwapapc.;r bustnt11
DAILY PILOT
This bl1bly s u ccttuful local
nuw1pape-r h11" a n optnlng for a
~ ln the carculauon ult.~ art=&a
S.oltieted applicant will rtcutve a
h~ral starUn ulary, regularly
scbesdul~ rai.I~•. bonus opportunlU4. .. ,
and many f nngc: bent-lits aucb as paid
vacation.-."1>atd croup uuurancts and a·
credit union. He will abo bts provldtsd
a compamy car with ~nonal use
p ri vi h:t: t"S
Applicants mu.!t bt: 18, hlivt: a clt:an
driving rttord, have a high school
diploma. Hour.> art gtntrally 11 A.M.
to 9 P M with som e Saturday over·
llnlt
If you un: qualitu:d and arc: intorestc:d
in l~ing mort: about wht:r«: this
trainmg ltads, comts lo the DAILY
PIUYr offict:, 330 West Bay Strtt:t and
ask f~ Milan Lf=avitt in the Ctrcula-
tion ~partment.
An Equal Opportunity Employt:r.
HefpW..W 7100 HefpW_.ecl 7100 ,,.. .•...•..••..••.........•...........•.•...••..
SALES MANAGER
Moblle Home rcaale cor ·
poratlon . Busy o"1ce.
Musl have exper. an
Mobile Home Resales &
Training ond Managang
Sales Force. Terrific op-
portunity for qualified
manager. Grcal op-
portunity for advance·
menl m expu.ndiog cor-
poration. lhgh carninl{s.
Send resume today, lo
P.O. Box 5373, Garden
SECRETARY
Resp. person. for food
sales brokerage firm.
N.B. Varied & challeng·
inM. some bkkping. Gd
stg salary. Jmmed. opna.
751-5743
Salesperson, p/time, ex·
per pref'd . Contem·
porar y Woman s
Sportswear . interview· ----------•
ing Mon. Sept 1.2. 9-UAM. S.cretary /Sdff
Bryson·Crawford, 210
Beach St. Laguna
SALES
Part lime, 5·9pm. Mon·
!..Au 0.11•1 No cool&· ble buffet C h•rry New&1.111edfum,oppl'1. ac healer. $150/bst orr. ' tra.1'.rrw-9010 -.,, . i v All 6 $73-6057 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -•••••••••••••••••••••••
lnM /hawrk. 7AM·3PM Oatel•I din na tablo, mile. Wilton'• Bar11ln • _ _ 31• CHlUS Crun T /S ('Ob •••-·••••••••••••••••• '7'3LWTruck, mais. JClnt ~:~:d;:r~nA~:~ ar•:id ~=· llnlJl8, trunu . ~84~~11:a~~9th, 130 SQ VOS'. shua cpl. crsr w/aUp. Xlnt <·ond. ~r movinR. muat sell. Int, areal buy at $18SO
H •fl n •.,. u o I, a>' -a voe ado gr~cn, ic I nl $8900. 979-22Sl clel&I\, aoud runnlnii aid 549-«JTS orl'1S·IM1•
8'7H7» ~uc~~~~·9~~=~-"~=t':,~ **I BUY** cond.$200 Call 7~2--•SklPJAcK• ~h~~1, C~~~yrie::: WematJonal '70, 2 Ton.
Spray Pt1lntvr hnlpcr lB made In 1900 for a Good used Purnlluro It Npt Bch Tenn111 Club 1'1yln& bndgc cruiser, tandem trlr. w/maa Dual rur whls. 4 Sprl
orover Nooxpne'' Jltu1t Pai ad en a Eat a l o . Appliance• OR 1 will mernberah1p, Sl.100. Call t1lps 4, twn 225 HP. 4~ wbll. $.2000 or beat. v.a, hvy dly. $1600.
have cur. Stari SZ.7S hr St"f\.'Cl with ho,..chalr It eellorSELLforYou. 9'79-4~11U.8·SPM wkdys MPH. f\lll electronics, 768·4639 7S2·l431
CQll 7~~74g ~very time you lay down MASTHS AUCTIOM Odyseey Game $50. King t111hint1 sel·up, fully VCMS 9570
Std-ted li!.1-.. on ll you fall atleep. 646-1616 t lll·962S alse bod $3S. Recliner eqwp'd , only 100 br1. Tr ... partatlola ...................... . ~ .,..,._ Great few vbltoral Deep cbair$7S.S.S·l39S Thls Bout ls beUcr now ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1-lon '66 Chev &lep-van
Pcmmn familiar w/all &old~orwltbculvetvet p: Cd~~'!!AflO ll USED L I.. ~~8:':i1:,h::a~;~s~~-C'::!f''• W./ w/'736cyJ. en&. 14 mpg J)haHI llrly cw pc work dtslfna. Frinaed velvet or I .....,.. um, an · .e new cptg. _ 91 JO evpeythlng aoO<i cood' t7S.Sl?Sev~ head covens & carved quea&clrTV'1,9SHl133 from8p71lass HH1home. 1964 Owens Tn-Yachl 42• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l4'x6' bed, windows, ex-
fecl. Heavy hardwood LOVELY Uk 7' r Sl. aq. yd. '96·6595 l w In Che v y 3 2 1 '71 ~o Va .. Cam..,.r traa. Call 645·3289 • frame. It take. 3 men to e new so a ,, ... .,.. """ move ll. Truly an un-$100. 983-2082 Palt of 14 Ford mars. ss w/generator. all clec, an Chlnoo Manr xtras . ,_&i&o __ 7""'°-----·
\ilUlll addl\ion to your n-U"'·' oJ' d ,., each. BaJa renders, hood 8' skit & da\•lls, sips 6. Beat otter. Cal MS-3813 •'73 Cb !;it t VS PS ..,___ hi uvau '"' 1ve ao w."tc & engine cover $30. Ford le a k deck 8 u r v e y Priv Pty evy 00• • • "'"'uc. Allio ¥ male og Prin t co u c b and truck IS" 5 tug wheel & $41 ,SOO. Sel't $39,SOO · PB• new Pa I 0 ~'
wool rua lh•L seta off mat~hlnl chair with oak Ure $S. F~rd truck 5 lug 1'988·5431 CAMP& SHILLS Ures/ahocu. custom ml. Er coucd ~-& ~~~ 88to fNmed noral print wall split rim JS" wheel & Would you Uke to pay sun roof. stereo +man>
,,.,.,t a van .. 1e . ........,1 hangln& It matching tube $8. 642.3379 whole sale prices, not re• xtras. Must see lo ap octu~ pillows. Lovely living SI lail? 646-43SO, ~-S prec. $4:i00. 8i3·2908 or
room suite -excellent Pool table. •x8 Custom * A UJ-2840 condition. $250 or oeter. built. Slate. with light Motoriud llu1 9140 .--------Irvine. SSZ.1790 979.4248 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 75 CHEVY Van. cstm
---•Must sell dining rm lbl, 4
cbrs, $375, met.al rn, cab,
pair of
'75 Whale Rickenbacker
4001 bass guitar w/case.
SSOO. Call 646-4931.
int., 6 spkrs, AM/F M 11 RAY* Mtnl bikes (four> brand trk. sunroof, m ags ,
new. Great off-street loaded w/xtras. ss.soo
bike for teena11er~. $180 lA42160. 847~3 pp The Only Boat ca.ssl-1708 --
..ff You C-a..-.....a.. to Mot°:f!~s/ Allot W.t.cl 9590 --... ......,,.. 9150 •••••••••••••••••••••••
buy the very b.ttl ••~•••••••••••••••••• WI WIU IUY
•1978 MODELS•
at 1977 PRICES
While Oft dftplay
ATTH!AHAHEIM
aOATSHOW
AMGEL STADIUM
SEPT. 9-18
All Model Sizes
19-20.21-24-26-30
OPEHIOWV
SUHIUMHERS
CUTI'Y CA81MS
SUHDAHCERS WEB< ENDERS
SPORTIRIDGES
OCEAH CRUISERS
WARNING!
'TMMwHlbe
ttMt lowest price•
you'U ever tH
Oft 1971~
forttt.Htfre
rnoc»I y•cir' ! !
Bring check book!
'74 Yamaha Enduro 360, YOUR DATSUM
excelle nt condition, PAJD FOR OR NOT
xtras $575 or bst. orr. TOPOOLLA9'
848·9506. FOlt TOP CAllS -r---.------1 New 1977 Yamaha 500 En·
dw-o. Ex. condition, 1200
mi, stall under factory
warranty, custom ex-
hawot, air operated front
shocks. Also :.lock ex·
hausl. $1450. 631·3109, or
lake over payments.
'76 Suiukt TS400, new
BARWICK DATSUN
..... ,I I. I I '• •1.111'
831 -137S 493.3375
WE BUY
CLEAMCARS
&rTRUCICS
cond .• never 10 dirt CONNELL $8901 b11l ofr. 892-4277
llooda 750. Low mi. xlnt CHEVROLET cond. Must sell. Best. of· fer lakes. 548-9865 2828 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA
1974 Kawasaki 500Cc 546-IZOO
$400 or best offer.
552·5344 WEPAYTOP OOLJ...AR
--------• FORTOPUSEDCARS '74 Kawasaki 500 Mach FOREIGN, DOMESTIC
111. Koni shocks,. racing -0r CLASSICS
pistons, front disc, 15,000 II your car l5 extra clean
mi. cln. $760 firm. Ask see us first.
CorSteveal495·J424 IAUEA IUICK
Harley Davidson 77 FXE 2925 Harbor Blvd.
only 1,000 ml. beautiful Costa Mesa 979·2500
bt«e w fapecial -.paint.
hurs. oil cooler, etc. Paid
$4,100 + T"1... sell for
U.395 Inc luding 2
hel°'eta. 84().4167.
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
FOR CLEAN
·\ S.AUSPERSOM ' For fane jewelry store.
" Know·1 of china, crystal,
silver, fine Jewelry &
window dii.play. F /t1me
Call 673-9334.
•S.0 Ray Pow•r•
MHC.Cniser,
OMC, Volvo
7·15 Yr lank
FinanclncJ t
WANTED : Good used
men's m otorcyc l e
helmet. Reasonably
priced. Call 536-:IMS ~~]
., -
SALES
LARGENAT•L
SUPPLIER OF
HARDWARE&
TOOLS
HOWHlllHG
SALES PERSOMHEL
NO EXPER. NECESS
XLNTTRAINING
PROGRAM
Good StariWMJ Pay
Earft $210-$400 wk
COMM ISSIO NS&
BONUSES
Must be well groomed &
neat 11ppearing. Career
"rapid advancement OP· portunllies. Xlnt co.
bencClts.
Cal Mr. l,...,inCJ
751·9134
Call Mon 8am-lpm
SALES/RETAIL
•SECRET AlllS
To S 14,400 Local
W. LA.Ano $22K
Employers Pay All Fees
Liz Reinders Agency
4020 Birch St, Ste 104
Call for appt/eslab '65
SECRETARIES
With & without sh. 5-0
wpm +. Short & long
terrn. Top $$$ & vacation
pay.
o~
T£ MPI Jll.llll '( Hl Lt'
l"IM 540.4455
Tudift 731·5731
Equal Oppor Employer
SICTRY /CPA Ofc
We currenUy have open· ---------.~ ings available In the •SEEKING FIVE• ------------• ---------following cla11Sl(lcatlon1: individuals w / 10•15 hrs Trumpet, Bundy, Ex-
S AL ·ES/Bu 11 dJ n a week to manage & TYPISTS cellcntcondltlon. Mat~rlalbe Cashiers , motivate others tor 4000 494·2417
Receavlng pt..Applyln ·+producl·llne dis· MJn. 45 wpm. Variety of Dogs 1040 ~~ & HcrriftClfCNI lrlbutorship. Call Mon. assignments. Long & •••••••••••••••••••••••
1275 Bristol, Cost.a MeAa 9/12 forappt. 549~117 ahort term. Top '" ~ DOG TRAlNING
Service Sta. Attendanl, vacation pay· Your place or Mine ---------1 exper'd. Full or p/time. John 675-34'0 SALES• STOCK Apply Atto StaUon, 17lb
Now b.lrinl for 2 loca-1_&_l_rv_ln_e_,_c_.M_. ----
tions, full " p/llme poa. 6 ~ Slbman Husky, 7 mo old
male. Call 552-6047 for
detAlla Must be avail. btwn . ce Sta. Night Attend
lOAM & 9PM. Spanish 2 Or S nlte11 •wk. Apply, Shih-Tsu pu111, 9 wka old.
• speaking desirable but Shell, 17th & Irvine, NB .,...... 540.44115 $275. AKC. Champion
If '.'1-'llHl\llV .. FI P
-· notnec.Apptylnperaon. SIRVICISTATIOM T.thl 7l1·17JI lloclt.&40.72Jli5 Panh Place ATTEHDAMTS Equa1()pporEmp1oyeT AKC West Hlgllland
8791 We1lmlnat.er Bl.. Afternoons, evu & Wblte T errier pupa.
Westminster WlmdA. Expr'd. Apply In Waitress Wanted, no ex· M/F . Champ back· , --------•I penon tlll 8 PM. Shell ptt. nee. Night shit\. Mr. around. 962·9513.
!.... SAUS Station. 3131 Hubor, D's, 3050 E. Coaat Hwy, Doble plqll, AJCC, cham·
Cost.a Mesa Cd.M. pion. aired, shots. eara
$25,000.SSO,OOO Service Sta. Help wanted, Woman t.o ~a. & do odd cropped~ Within 5 yra lo your """"' ownlnaurance 8us. exper'd onlt· FuU·tlme. chorea t or elderly WAllffED: Te mPorary
•Part·timetostut Ai>Plf In peraoo. 300 E. pmUeman. a bra dally. a_pac. for 2 female l.abe.
•l'ullcommisalons lTthSt,CM 4 :30·7.PM. For appt Call Valerlo Marlin.
•J'reetrainlnaproaram Service Statloll Atte o· 673-6406.CdM _8™J6.S3 ________ ...
-<>range County Of'flceA dant, exper'd . Day It WOOD WOllKBS Fr'ff to You 1041
Eve Appta. Call Now Eves. l'uU " p/time. Ap. ?.( ,. _,1 ,.._ ~~ p&y, Shell &&Uon. 17th. MW DMD. A ... aabltn, ..................... ..
JOE CONNERS Irvine, NB. ti Pure~ -·r.suna Nl1uet lll·1111 ._... s•a ,. ... nd._.A · CentralOCl'T0-77'4> ~nee .... ...~ DY
MOVIMGSALE
Desks, S3S-'75. ch.rs a II
styles SS·S35, drafting
tbls $75, letter & legal sz
files $30-$80. reception
room furniture. work
tbls.
C.E .SUPLUS
FURNITURE
900West19th Sl. CM
631-2777 631 ·2570
See you at llooda 2.SOXL. 4 mos old .. 500 ml, take over pmls,
1111n•, or ACH Hl V!l
t4UNT1•H, TON Ill AL tt
a.t i nt11 ~.1ouHJ
the Show! $45 mo. 494-SJSI IMPORT CARS
HARRISON'S 1::;~ soa./160 __ A_LL_M_O_D_EL_S_
SIA RAY •••••••••••••••••••••••
ZJ27 So. Main, S.A. MOTOR HOM ES WI
540.655$ FOR RENT MEED
J101Co8!'1lHwy,N.U. ~mSUO.wk.77G-OM4 CLIAH
1~~~6~3~1~ .. 2~5~4~7~~ RENT Fireball 23' Self USED CARS 1 cont. Auto/arr. CC. CB, MOW
20· GULFSTREAM.., Im~ atereo,alpe664S-2283 CAUPA,,Y
mac. fast. 160 Merc,l/O. It.Mio s.r.fce P.ts
Lo hrs·w/3S' Newport &AccessoriH 94o0 540 .. 5630 ~1p. S37St0torr.649·2547 ••••••••••••••••••••••• irttrMl\t&!)fi
lB' Electric Boa~ '84· '11 Used •t u1tan1 ·-!fll Ju.~t hke new. $4000. Parts 990 No. Parker, 1111-~-flil.illl-•ifli,~-IM-~-~lli.-~
After8, 645·3262 0ranie Call 9'7·2000 2626 HARIOR ILVD.
'75 J6' Tri·llull w170 HP Weberc~rburetona lDA COpA MESA -
Evinrude & Trailer. Fish on McKay manifold ror WI IUY
& Ski equip. $2800. smallblockChevy,tbrot· USEDCAltS!
545-6631 afl. 4 .. • Ue linkage & fuel Unea We're tbe new Chevrolet
9060 complete & ready to ron. dealership In the I rvine
ih S850oroffer. · Auto Center. We need
JS'Sol Cat: w/trailer. WANTED: Hardtop for yourusedJca.rOIE
---------Loaded! '1850 Bronco, Call 546-77llO a nd
1974FOID
MACPHIRSON
CH!VROLIT
21AutoCenleT' Drive
tRVINE
768-7222
W!'LLtUY
your foreign or compact
car, paid for or not! Call
Sales Mgr.
llLL YATIS
VW.roRSCHE
San Juan Capistrano
137-4100 493-4511
21' MORGON 01 IRONCO 4X4
Loaded with new equip· Automatic, air cond., Alltos.lmpcwfed
ment. Sleeps 8 adulta In radio & chrome mag· .. ••••••••••• .. ••••••••
comfort. Low Ume on type wheels. (611KKL). 01111ral 970 I
At.om.Jc 4, Genoal dlnay. A steal at ........... ••••••••••••
VHF. 8' 3" heao room. OHLY $4495 BENTLEY 82, 'bit, '62 More room than manv new e ,, "l t c d ' u•a0 UISTOYOT"' 0 •• "'n on • 321. Owner a oxloua. -..,.. "" $21000/bltofr 675 5048 675-1403or673-9ill brkra. MlSSlONVlEJO ' . .
831·2110495-1210 ..... 9707 33' LAPSTRAKE BLOOP .----------t .. •••M•••••••••-•••••
No.rwe«tan calm. dbl. AMc.J9 "13 FOX Xlnt. cond.
ender. Well found. Cruis· *I e n--u1o .. A IMl.50 in1 dteeel U veaboard " Ill allf. -vwu • ma..... .. · WE OUTSELL ALL 643-U39 sllp. SUK or ,otfer. •---------_______ _,. 6'7U388 JEEP DEALERS ._ .......... , 9709
------.,:----·t lNTHESfA'J'E ••••••••••••••••••••••• 19'1518' Sol Cat, 5 o~ sails, HUGI IMVEMTORY , •a eoovt. Good running
All Modela New & Used cood. Wire rlma
Lea.aina M-alla~ Sl500 U S-HU =w... IMw t112 2524 HARBJ:T LVJ>. .. .................... .
Costa Mesa 54N023
JEEPS '77" CREVI E R
'
Id
le
s
' ..-
• ~~~ ..... ?!.~~!~~.~:.~ ..... ?!.~! ~~~ ..... !!.~! ~~· .......... !~.~! ~!!'!!':'! ......... !?.~~ ~.-::.~~ ..... ~~.~~ Mo temt>er 12. um OAJLYPILOT CJJ
Salt Sltta'. o~erZS<or•1rold Ant.Iqua. RUNWood mar· STOREWJDESALE, ~•terbed. Kinaaa. Hdbrd loah, row.,. 9040 looh, s,..ct & "*"-9560
llld,y, Bal l1J. No cooll· blo buffet Cherry New&~f~rn.1tppl1. heater. SUO/btt "CC" ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sid 9010 ••••••••••••••••••••••· TRAINEE lnl/hawrk. 7AM·3PM Oateltl di nine table, mi6e. W1l10n • Bar,.ln ~6.~73 6M7. 4 31' CHRfS Craft TIS cab ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'T!LUVTruck m:.ias xlnt Wtwt..day1 Al10, need VIC1rola, lamps, trunks Noolc. 54.5 & il4 W. 19th, • b d I'\..__ t II ln · • -ay 'or a hilh IC'"_.... ru·-"ual.. wllnJ a-non ?am Spm 41J0.280G . CM 642 7930 4t 5411-11262 130 SQ VOS, shoa Cpl. cnir. w /a p. Xlnt. eon VWTI'l:'r mov1n1t. mua &e • t, grut bu_y at ~
-'' fllUU9 a.u "' Reta nee. UO/day avocado 1r~cn , lflnl $8900. 97i-22Sl clellll, aood rwmllla aid 549.o:175or67S.9414
l.Odllc:rth Jl"Wlpa~r UJlnt:ba m.47ss Bo1&utlful unusual couch **I BUY•• c:ood $200 Call7520412 SIC rJ•CK boat. 283 er Ch,vy en1, ,_._ u
1
'TO
2
T
& chaJr~t' Jong Custom * I A * Hallcratt, V drive, ... '"'"'-ona • on. DAILY PILOT Spray Palnwr heJJ>(lr 18 made 'i n l ooo tor a Good uaod Furniture & Npt Bch Tenn11 Club Flylna bridle crwser, tandem trlr, ... 1ma1 VDualS tth ar wdbJs. 4 ~0i>d0 nrover Noupnec J\iu•l P•••dena !!:state Appllance1-0R 1 will membership. Sl,100. Call &IPS .4. twn 225 HP, 45 wbla. $2000 or bc:sl , • , vy ty. $1 ... Tbla highly xu~us11fut local h•veur.Stans;?.7Sbr. WCcdW1thhorsehalr& seUorSELLrorYou 9'79-4891.S-SPMwkdya MPH. f\111 electronics, 76M839 --~31_._
nt:.-apapc:r hu 110 opt:nJn1 tor a CMJI 76811749 t1v~ time you lay down MASTEAS AUCTIOM ~yssey Game s.so. Kang fia1h1~1 aiet ·up, rully . v-9570
tr ln lht: ClrculaUon 1alt:S urea. on It you fall asleep. 64M616 & IJJ.9625 size ~ '35. Recliner equlp d, onJy lOO hr•. T~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• S .. t ...... t#-..a ppl'cant will l"t:c .. lve a SW .. dGlott. Great for vllltorst Deep cbalrS'lS.548-1395 ~s &;.at ts bott~ nooo()w ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 ton '66 Chev ihip van
.. '"'"" I v .. .,r1on famlllat W/all &old(l()lorwitbcutvelvet CASH PAID .,,an wen new. . . c~ S•/ w/'736cyl eng 14mpg HtH:ral starting 111lary, ra1ularly pb.,.... flrly CM' pc work detlpa. Frinaed velvet For gd used. furn, anU· USED Like new c:ptg. 759·0100or67S-3222 eves. Rtilt ' 9 UO everything good cond~
chuduJtd r i ~•.bonus opportunltitia. 87s.ans~v"' h~od covers & carved quea&clrTV s,957·8133 lromSp~flassHJUhome. 1964 Owcrui Tri-Yacht 42• it•••••••••• .. •••• .. •••• 14·x&' bed, windowi., ex and many fnnge bcntlrts 1uch u paid b'TOPI Art) you looluna ~eel. Heavt hardwood LOVELY like new 7' aota $1. sq. Y • 496·6595 twin Chev Y 3 2 7 '71 Dodi• Van Camper tru. Call 60·3269 :
y c1tJans. ptud IJ"OUP lnsurancfl and a for a job wilb a acnaa· rame, ,!t &T er 3 men to $100. 963.2()82 Palr or 14" Ford maaa. SS w/aenerator, all elec, alt Chinook Many 'Xtraa. 646-7698 ,..ail unJ H II -1--i.... 'dtd tioo t t Op 1n move · ru Y an un· each. Baja fenders hood 8' skit & davits, slPO 6, Beat offer. Call MS-3813 Ch CfQU on. t!Wl aa.:tU~provt av•~I. f~~r~.dvor~~11:: u.ual addition to youreeautiMoliveandwhltc &englnecover$30.'f'ord te:lk deck , survey Priv.Pty •'73 evy~too.V8,PS, comp ny car with pt:raonal US& repn:1ntatlvu with home. Alao u matcbJng Print couch arid truck 1S", slug wheel & S41,500. Sell S39,SOO. P 8. new P a In~' privilt'g~ lllr&e 1rowtna Oronge wool rue that shtalr off matchln1 chair with oak Ure SS Ford tr~k 5 lu.: l-.sca1 CAMra SHE1.LS Ures/a~cks, custom mt. AppUcanta must bt: 18. have a Clt1an Counly Publication. Your couch & c a to framed floral print wall spllt rim ts" wheel & Would yo11 like to pay sun roo M stereo +many drivma rteord, bavt a high school Salary + bonus la rom best odvanlaee. 6'6-41lB8 hanging & matching tube $8 64.o!-3379 whole aitle prices, not re. mas. ust see to ap
dip)ompa Houn.h· an: genSaer rdy 11 A.M. _ll94-4TS_l_forappt. WoQJ rug. Custom de· room suite -excellent Pool table 4x8 Custom * ...,._,__.udllke
9140
&18-2840 _ aJl P•nY be netlla Call or642-411 pillowg. Lovely llvlng . SEA t.ail?646-4350.~-S prec. MSOO. 893-2908 or
to 9 M wit some tu ay ovttr· llgned for a Pasadena cood.itlon. $250 or offer. built. Slate, with lllfhl. ..._._... a '7S CHEVY Van cstm
tunt: SUMMER JS OVER. FAtate in 1900 Beautiful Irvine.SS2·1790 979-4iis ••••••••••••••••••••••• ant 6 spkrs AM/FM 8
you arc qua I h;u an art: Jn 41r~ ~ c ... ora. ~P ose ac . Dark walnut flrushed 3 2 Brass lamp!l, $~00 new. Great off.street r... s unroo , ma1s
It 1 ,
... ..i d · t t·..a WHAT NOW? You can -• n...-R. b k RAY* Mini bikes (four) brand t ~· ' c
ln IE:aming mon: about whtire tt)is get •kill tralnlnt. gain ground Wtlh Oriental de· drawer dresser, French Surfboard $20. Guitar bik ( l S180 loaded W/Xlras. s.s.soo.
training leads, com~ to the DAILY ~:n~:la~w~~ltd e~1: sign o! b~~es ." ~~e:; Provincial style. Very $40. 2 Fishing poles, etc. Th Onl B t ea.~l~~706eenaaera. 1A'2160.847-4643PP
PlLCYr office, 300 West Bay Strt:t:t and lege tn the ~y~ Y~ur ~~~ sJ.i.
1 r~~d ~~oa. S65 MO-MSa u e ?.-~t ~°!!l!~s/ -Altos W.t.d 9590
ask fat; Milan ~avitt in the Clrcula-Army Recruiter will me. 'IJPIUCESAU ... you~--0 ·
9150
•••••••••••••••••••••••
lion ~artment. show you ™?w joi.nlog the Antique Oak Dlnl.ng,Rm Convert. Sora & Loveseut Cloth.in&,Sept 12 17, t..y the ""'Y Nst! ••••••••••••••••••••••• W! WILL IUY An EquaJ Opportunity Empl()yer. people who ve JolJMld the table & chairs, beaut. Like new. $250. TJCK'mel<ER '74 Yamaha Enduro 360, YOUR DATSUN Ar~caneetyoulnthe cond.552-4230 CaUSSG-621.S. THRIFTSHOP 1978MOOELS excellent condition, PAlDFORORNOT •twpW•hd 7100 HelpW..ted 7100 :J:nU:l~~~ ::~: !i: .... men 1010 Dbl mattress & box spr· 540 W.l9thSt.CM • • xtras $.575 or bst otr. TOf'OOUAI
,..••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• legecredltaandbowyou ••••••••••••••••••••••• ings, a lmost new $25. Full size lllde-a-bed, otl977PRICES 848·9506. FORTC>rCAaS
SECRETARY can earn up to $8100 for Washers, dryers. Clean Pecan wood dbl hdbrd herculon cover $179, While Oft dltpfay New 197
7
Yamaha
500
En·
Resp. person, for food school alter your enlist· late modela. $100, 1 yr $25.673-9499 Trundle bed w/mats ATTHIAHAHEiM d .,. d ·t· l200
ment. Check it out. Call guar. Free delivery. $ISO. Wall rebuild your 1o•rsHOW uro. "'"·con i aon, sales brokerage firm. Army. Mstr Chg. Will alao buy. Herc. couch & love ae11t, 2 mattress & box springs, ... NGEL"' St•DIUM mi. stilt under factory
N.8 . Varied & challeng. Costa Mesa 540·1026 638·2840. Hel"C cbrs. 2 Velvet chrs, twn or full both for A A warranty, cui;tom e x· ing, some bkkping. Gd kng bdaprd drp& shears · s-9 ll hawot, air operated front stgsalary.Immed.opng. HuntLngto.nBch 962·8821 FRGHT DAMAGED wrghtiron'cottbl bvy $39.SO.Ph:S.7-5636 _.,. • shocks. Also stock ex·
m .5743 Laguna Halls
768
'
525..1 llOTPOINT SALE. ~ glass. 536-263' ' 130 Yrds or Brown Plush All Mod~ Sizes haual. St450. 631·3l09, or SECRET,•RY Switchboard .Opr. Will W. Wamor nr Harbor, Carpet. ~.so yard. Ph 19 2"2Z z ... zL 30 takeover payments. _
A train. Superior Answer· Santa Ana. 979·2921 Lovely French Bed, 675-9417 Bob • "'" • v• Sales & Adm.lnstrat!ve ing Service, 250 E. l?th - -Napoleonic s tyle ., _ _ Oftf.HIOW·v '76 Suzuki TS400, new
Dept. for lntenor Design St SteJ Upstairs CM CASH PAID brushed steel frumc, .. ~, _.,______ SUHRUNNERS cond .. n ever 10 dirt.
Farm. Shorthand & ac-· · ' For Wshr/Dryr1/Refrig mattress & boicsprings. 3 '""~c__,._,. · CUTIY CAllH~ S8901b11tolr. 892-4277 curate Typlnl{ req. Apply TAXl Drivers, Laguna working or not 957·8133 side pillow!! & 2 end Wonted 8081
:.it250 Fischer Ave. Costa Beach & San Clemente . pillows. $400. 675·0!J02 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUHDAHCERS
Mesa. 540·2860 for Checker Cab Co. Elcc dryr $95. Kang sz ----Good used m en 's WEEICENDERS
M/F, must have mature bed, farm, new $185, Con\·er_t1blc 6' Sofa. motorcyc le h e lmet SPORTIRJDGES
pleasant dlspos1lion, Trundle bed $175. makesmtodblbed,hkc Reasonable price. Call OCEANCRUISERS neat appear, xlnt driving 768-8494 new S200. 675·099-a 536.J&U
Honda 750. Low ml, xlnl
cond. Must sell. Besl of-
fertakes. S48·986S
BARW ICK DATSUM
"' I ' I I ~ ' i: l I I I I ' ' • I! I ' I
8JJ.IJ75 493.3375
'WEBUY
CLEAMCARS
&TRUCKS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
546-1200 rec. Call Patty, 4~·72ll lilG SPENDER NEEDS 8' SOFA, S' loveseat, ohve Waot to buy pair of
Salesperson, p/time, ex-or493-8888 7·l1AM. REFRIGS: work1ng 1not gm. Xlnt. cond. Medlt. 6.5'ht16lircs
per pref'd . Contem -f.a-J.wSales phone price quote style.$325.962-0362 6423379 W .... ,.._..... 96()..4747 anytime Po r a r Y o m a n s 1 _________ 1 Want to make money? ---..:.....----1 Xtra long studio couch ~cal WARNING! WSPAYTOP DOLLAR ~~~~~~~~1 FORTOPUSEDCARS
'74 Kawasaki 500 Mach FOREIGN, DOMESTIC
1974 Kawasaki SOOc:c
S400or besl offer.
552-53-14
Sportswear. interview-Can you sell on the Litton Microwave oven, w/(itled cover & uphol IMtn.n.nb 8083
tng Moo. Sept 12. 9·11AM, phone? Top$ in our bus1-beaut Norwegian Blue back rest & storage. A·l ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bryson -Crawford, 210 ness. 646-3030, ask for Fox stole, 673-5759 aft con<:!. $95.540·6338 Upright Roseu~..1 piano Beach St. Laguna R tiPM wvvu
ay. Must sell dining rm lbl. 4 w/carv1ng. Xlnl cond.
WASHER/ORYEa chrs, $375, metaJ me cab, 11300...:.._ _ 675-9417
2 chrs. walnut & blk. '75 White Rickenbacker 2 Medit
SALES
Part lime, 5-9pm, Mon.
Fri. perfect for College, ___ _.;.,..;__ ____ ,
Student, no pressure Secretary-in either sales,
sales or Quotas lo meet. engrg or mklg. Type 60, ---------
TMsewlllbe
tlte Jowut priu1 ,. ......... ..
onl97t~s
forthe...tfre
moclet yeair!!
lriltCJ check book!
m. KonJ abocks, racing -0r CLASSICS
pistons, front disc, 15,000 If your car is extra clean mi, cln. $750 firm. Ask see us firsL
forSteveat"9S·l4U IAUE:R IUICX
Harley Davidson 77 FXE 29'l5 Harbor Blvd.
only 1,000 mJ, beautiful Costa Mesa 979-2500
bi«e w /special •.paint,
bans. oil cooler, etc. Paid
$4,100 + Tltl.. sell for
$3,395 Including 2
helfr\OU. 840-4167, 531·081_1 _ ___ SH 90. To $900 + med/·
, S •LESPERSO... dent. Rcccpt. type ss, • ._. "' " will be trained on ofc ~ For fine Jewelry .store. ll\llc·hinc. Xlnt med/dent,
•Sea Roy Pow•r•
Mft'C. Crufaer,
OMC, V°'Yo WANTED: Good used
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
FOR CLEAN
., Know'! ol chinu, crystal, be s d sih'er. line jewelry & nfts. ecretary-A ·
window d1spl:.iy. 1"/time min, cngrg bkgrd pre-
Call 6?3,9334. !erred. No SH. Video In·
---_ -----lerviews Personnel • s a I cs pe rson n ceded 1 _Se_r_v_ic_c'-, l_n_c_. S4_0._s~_..1...-_ 1 p/lime for retail store in ..._ ________
1 N.B. Must be interested ""
in energy & water con-
servation. 675·6730. •SECllTAlllS
ToSl4,400Local
W. LA.Area $22k '1" .. __________ ,
..
SALES
LARGENAT'L
SUPPLIER OF
HARDWARE&
TOOLS
MOWHIRIMG
SALU rERSOHNEl.
NO EXPER. NECF.SS
XLNTTRAINING
PROGRAM
Good Starting '"Y
Earn S2 I 0.$400 wk
COMMISSIONS &
BONUSES
Must be well groomed &
neat appearing. Career
,. &"rapid advancement op.
portunities. Xlnt co.
benefits.
SECRETARIES
With & without sh. SO
wpm +. Short & long
Jerrn. Top$$$ & vacation
pay.
6 ~
11 Ml'< 1Jl1\H' •H l "
lrvlnt 540.4455
men's motorcyc le 7-15 Yr Bonk helmet. Reasonably
Ffnancl119 t priced. Call 536·3645 ~ See ·vou at Honda 2SOXL, 4 mos old .. 1' 500 ml. take over pmts,
the Show! $45 mo. 4&4~l IMPORT CARS
HAR.RISOH'S 1::;~5·/, ,o.___ALL_M_O_D_EL_S_
HIRJ'i OF ACH Bl Vil
~HINT I'll{, TON Ul ACtt
84} l lB 1 ~·10 0.1.1;
SEA RAY ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE 2327So. Main,S.A. MOTOR HOMES
540.6555 FOR RENT NEED
3101 Coa.slHwy, N.B. ~om SUO. wk.170--0644 CLEAN 1~~~6~3~1~·2~5~4~7~~ RENT Fireball 23' Self USED CARS r: HOW
'75 16' Tti.fluJJ w/70 HP Webercarburetof'S'•fDA1---..._----=-
Evlnrude & Trailer . Fish on McKay manifold for
& Ski equip. S2800. smaJJblockChev7,throt·
545-6631 aft. 4 , • tle linkage & fuel Unea
· complete & ready to ron.
,,i.,. 9060 $8.50orolfer. · ''
WANTED: Hardtop for
Bronco, Call .546-7780 and
Call Mr. l,..,lnCJ Tu.tin 731·1731
Equal Oppor Employer '•
\
751-9134
Call Moo 8am-lpm $1CTRY /CPA Ofc
SA.1.15/RET AIL
We curienUy have open·•---------
' ings avalJable In the -...:..=-.-------i -~--------1
followine clasalficaUona: Trumpet, Bundy, Ex-
cellent condition'.
'494·2417 TYPISTS
Min 45 wpm. Variety of Dogs 1040
aasignmenta. Long & •••••••••••••••••••••••
1......; __ ...;..:. _____ 1 short. terrn. Top $$$ ~ OOGTRAINJNG
----.;.._----IServtce Sta. Attendant, vacationpay. VourplaceorMlne --------.i exper'd. Full or p/lime. Job.o 67&.auo SALES & STOCK Apply Arco &auon, 17th o~ Now , hirlnl for 2 loca· _& .... l_r_vln_e,;..C;..._M_. ___ _
Uons, lull le p/tlmo poa. ~
Must be avail. btwn. ce Sta. Nllbt Attend ft "·H'f 1J-<1/dl f H• Ii'
S.berian Husky, 7 aw old
male. CaU 552-60'7 for detall.I
1 lOAlll & 9PM. Spantsh 2 Or 5 nites • wlc. Apply, Sblh·Tau puPIJ, 9 wka old .
..., • speaking desirable but Shell, 17th & Irvine, NB '"-540.4455 $375. AKC. Champion
• notnec.Applylnperaon. SIRVICIS:'f'•TIOM r-.. 711·1731 a~.640·7285
'%· Pants Place ATTIHDAMTS EqualgeeorEwiplOyer AKc West ~lillland
8791 Weatmlnlter Bl., Afternoon1. evea le White Terrier .Pupa.
Wectmlnster w1mda. Expr'd. Apply In Waltress Wanted. no ex· M /F . Champ back. ~~~~~~~~I l)mJOn till a PM. Shell per. nee. Night ahltt. Mr. iround. 962·95ea . .. _ ·s•• •• Station. 3131 Harbor. D's, 3050 E. Coaat Hwy, Dobla pupt, AXC cbam-"'~ Cost• Mesa CdM, IHon. aired, ahOla. eara
$25;000.110,000 Service St.a. Kolp wanted, Woman to coot le do odd troJ>i>td 8'8-4664 ~~~~~>£.°:.': exper'd Ol111· FuJJ.time. chorea for elderly W.u\fED: Te.rnporary
•Part-time to at.art Awl>' Jn petSOO, JOO E . telU.man. 8 brt dall}t, ·~ctl fOf 2 female Labs.
•Fullconunlslloo• l1t.hSt.CM 4:30·'7J>M. For appt call Valerie MarUn.
•Free tralnlni Pr<>BJ"•m Su vice StaUoll Allen· m..6406, CdM _rn..ees3;.._..;.;.,;..;_ __ __,.___,
-Oranae County Office. da.at.. exJ>Gr'd, Day " WOOD WOUaS ,.,... to YM •1045
J:ve AJ)pta. C.11 Now Ewe. l\all Ir p/Ume. Ap. MW mea. Auemblen, •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ,...,.,_ ~ J>l7, Slaell St.atl«I, .t1tb • Saoder1, StalDtH Ii Purt~ Malo Britt.aY. JOE CONNERS _.lrvtoe-.,......;_, N_B. _____ 1 Spu7er1. Must boo
t
WEUIUY
your foreign or compact
car, paid for or not! CaJI
Sales Mgr.
llLL YATES
VW.p()RSCHE
San Juan Capistrano •
137-4100493.4511
•••••••••••••••••••••••
C RE V IER
,
I
l I
I
I
' • I ' 5 • ~
I
2 DAIL V PILOT Monda B tembef 12 1811 Autot, l,.porW Auto1, hnport.d Auto., Uied A.fo1. UHd
....:. • .., • ..w ....... l•rocw A111es.l•r•rtoc11 w.rc.dethM 9740 Volbw.-9110 CMvrolf.t H2ocn....,,.11 9930 ···••················•• ....................................................................................................................................... .
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
IMW 9720 ~ 9730 19'71 210SL . lmmH 'e8 VWFstbk.Ncedaen1. lt16CHIVY '72 Lincoln Coot'l Cpe.
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• thruout. Orl1ln1I tob· work. ll50. ~--74, al\ CAMARO Xlnt cond. Loaded.
SADDLEBACK
BMW
COMllH&SU
THIAUHIW
6lOCSI NOWlll
COMrLm
IOOYSHOP
MOWOPIM
SADDLU~CK
VAWY IMPORTS
lll·J040 49M'4t
73 Ba\llria 4 ,pct, At', 11tm
roof, AM FM ra<l10,
Wh1t1· blul" int l\1inl
l'Und Onai owru 5t0 JZJ2
wkd)t 8 5, PP
* DllVIA * XJIJ, una Sliver Mech baco ext w/bamboo Int ~146-9070 Automatic, pwr. steer· 588-2052al\6pm.
rnlnl S'7200 Complete malnt. records '74 VW Convert Near xlnt Ina· brakes· locks. air ,.. _ _,,,,,__ 9932 * U .... L * 41M 1911 af\ e on all money ln~•ted d · cond., Ult wheel, AM/FM _...... ......... · I I., • -~--lt:J,DC§O or orr. Call War-cond. Got /brw Int. radio, rally wheel• " ••••••••••••••••••••••• SAVE A LOT ._._....... t7ll rcn tor complete dell11l1. ~I /olr. 847·7151 keep • L . T . • pack a 18 . J.968 Corvette convt 327,
••••••••••••••••••••••• 6'3-7190aR51&wlmda .. ;, ni. (NtPQW). 3·11pd. $3200. Call art
"14 Karmann Otlla, ~traa. Sii /G...... ........ '72 VW Convert. Nda Uret1, OML Y $5299 6PM, 675-3439 ~./offer ·~ -·, aome body work. $2000. HAIMS UO llf.SV al\ 6 73 MBZ 450 SE. 538-1371 afl 5 or 962•2428 "'UTO c~ll!• '64 Corvette convt 4-apd. ---Be tusedcartnO.C. d)'8 "' _..,_ Ndllpnt. Bestofferove
'71, AM l"M. new blue Lo Mi PP 644·6449 · Dlv.·Nabera Cadillac $3000. 559-0162 ~• i o i , n o d o o t 11 ' ' ·m vw convert, red with H25 Baker St., C.H . 1975/ofr. Mu1t aell. 87 HOSL, mJnt cood. black, clean $2000. firm. "'bloekeast '75 Corvetle T·top 35
S.*7 AM/FM. 4 apd, new 6'5·7i07 ofHarborBI auto. Every xtra. fOITHlllST Mada 9731 paint, tlrea, $9000. S40.9l09 $7800/bstofr.998·1739
fUIT NICIS 548-8820 '74 PANEL Van $1200 " Ford 9940 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9746 takeover pymt.s. 'IB Chevy Imp11la, 2 Dr, .. ••••••••••••••••••••• C .. J ... Hee.._ ' Optl 960·3348 V-8, A~~/ air, good body, TODA YI ••••••••••••••••••••••• , VW Baj N in tires, pwnt, runs great. ...... oov•STREET 1973 GT. Very 1d cond. 63 a. CW pa t, M50/flrm. 646-3818 000 c.. Cust mags at pnl Lo mi Int, tires, eng. Clean &. ---------1 Near M11cArthur Batofr 842.8779 ' : faat. $1'50/bsl. '158 IMPALA. '4 dr, A/C,
I. Jamboree Roads · 494-2130 . P/S, Arr, xlnt lnlr. $750.
133-1300 p....... 9747 Call7~·9359 ------• C.... Mete 641-1700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '14 VW Beetle. Good cond. ----------1
t •
IARWIC M 0A1\UH
ti J I I . I ', I 'I l l > f ')
Nl WPUR f OA 1 SUN
1976 Datsun 8210 ---c.,t 9715 Hatchback. a track '75 RX4 wuaon, auto,
••••••••••••••••••••••• player AM/FM radio AM/FM, trans. warran·
76Capn II 6 l·ylAM t'M, CH radio, lo mileage'. ty. 15,000mi. 13750.
stereo lmm.u· 4 i.pd, ~ 54.5-2&5 Excellent 581-0077
74 PAH'TIRA Cust. up~ol!tery, chrome Impala '69, V·8, A/C,
30 000 II l II r whls, tares xlnt cond. R/H, 2·dr. $900. (714) , m es, u Y ac-52195. 492·5180 556-6889
tory equlpt, (ser .H07296 ) -----------------1
OneofthelastlOOmade. '71 Van. Clean. New '75 MONTE Carlo, A/C,
$14,419 radials, shocks. brka. R/H, tall whl, rallye
MOTOR CARS CraJg AM-Fl\f ca11s. nms, nr new tires. $2850.
D°EUG'AHCE &94-l.269 ~7~:n~-8265~-----.l--------I
826W17thSA547·9250 '688ug,Autoclutch,snrl, '7S Monza 2+2, AM/FM '73LTD.P/S,P/B,radio.
P~ 9748 reblt eng. $1200/offer radio, air cond, new 2-dr, blue. $1600. 675-7261,
--r-w 673-1204 Eves. brks, 26,000 ml, like new. 833-3380
• many frjlu ru $3600 <.'00d1l1on. Mercedes letn 9740 ~i~/~5 UM7 ,.n 7pm. 240Z.~971, mint cond. •••••••••••••••••••••••
so.ooo m1 . air, stick, SftOITSCARS
Dahuit '720 header exhaust. Best orr lougllf & Sold
• ••••••• •• ••. ••• • • • • • • • over $3,800. 497 · l69S
IU T THIE PRICE
IMCRIEASEI!! -················ ••• •• $2995/ Best f 980-3S3l ---------· Rat 9725 WESTGERMAM '70914.Ndswqrk,bodyin '75 7 pass. bus. Very or. · '76 Rancho Squire,
••••••••••••••••••••••• . IMPORTS gd shape. S3000or bst ofr. c I ea n . 8 I au punk t '76 Moni,e Carlo Landau. loaded, all elec. cruise 56 N L~W''ARS '75Fiat.Llkenew. 714/548-1116. 675-1927Dave AM/FM/cass. ·$4700. or air, KM /FM, loaded. 837control, $5300/bst ofr. ... "' offer 661 2ll4 Power .... ft.Cl\. 759·"""". -4926 ATTHEOLDPRICES $2900 Ponche 9750 . :;µ _,,.,.., ,_,., --------•
1\11 mocfols now ava1la· SJ0.2770 LeCIM ••••••••••••••••••••••• lip V)VVan, 1971 eng, '72 Chey. Full sz. Wag. '73 V-6 C.apri. Good cond.
bl<'. Cal~~.' lice us before '75 Flut 128. Yellow Wgn Mew• UHd SPORTS CARS good condition Xlntcohd. Xtras. $1400or Good pnce.
you buy . . . J8M mi, better lhan new. OYER 1 OO lought & Sold $1525. 496-9789 offer. 846-3727. 548·9708, Mike
$1995. 968·1062 MERCEDES -• 9772 '69 Chevy El Ca mi no 1972 Ford Gran Torino COSTA MESA
DATSUN
-·--·---1 v~vo te I di ls V 8 '74 Fiat 124 Spyder. OM DISPLAY WESTGERMAM ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1500/best offer coupe, s e ra a . ·. 497-3984 auto, P.S .. radio. heater, RI au punk l. AM I F M Hous f I rt IMPORTS BEFORE YOU bucket seats, vinyl top, 2.845 HARBORRLVO cassette, Tonneau, nr eo mpo I SEU.YOUR ' N 6 I . I f . be
540.6410 540-0213 new rudaals. Must sell AUTHORIZtD 714/ 548· 1I86 w ov\11~Y 'rmy rood• ~(~ ~~6 f}~d o~lnt~~
497.2M!) MERCEDESDl!:ALER VOLVO, oor s . , x nt con ,
'73 . 610 Sta Wgn, AC. 6862Manchester, '74 Carrera, Peru red. See f t d 11 80,000 ma, $1000. 848·1710 R./H, 4-speed , steel
roor rack , AM /FM , '68 850 Spyder. Lo mi Buena Park 7&8" wheels, air cond. esUm~te?r a op 0 or eves radlals,3-<ioorrunabout,
dean. lo m1. bdow book Xlra clean, runs perfect. 523-7250 Lthr Inter. P/W & ac· MAR9UIS VOLVO Continental 9930 9,000 mi, $3000. Evenings ~· 673 3472_ S1250/bst ofr. 548·3850 On the Santa Ana Fwy coss. $16,000. 556-S21S MISSION VIEJO ••••••••••••••••••••••• -M2~·-0_l29 _______ 1
'72DotsWt$650 Honda 9727 . MZB SE h -·70 914, 5 spd, AM/FM 831·2880495-1210 '74 Mark IV, P/S, P/B, '71 RancheroGT,429CJ,
9••••••••••••••••••••••• 72 . 280 W •te, stereo 63000miles. Red yellow, perf. cond. ndssomeengwork,A/C, Needs brake!> 646-977 --~ 1 tan mtr. lmmac, clean, w blk 'ant.' $3200. 644-9686 ORANGE COUNTY Loaded. Sole /trade. P/S, AM/FM stereo. nu Brunu Mew '7 xlnt cond, low ml. ong alt 6pm VOLVO &S6-6813 tires.964-1458ev. '76 Datsun280Z Alrcond, own e r . 546·8900 & · ------1
AM PM stereo w la pc, HONDA Cars 527·2297 '72 914. Xlnt cond. New EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO Auto1. Hew 9100 ...... Hew 9100 ~e:c.~~~ s~~~!~~e& ~~= MANY lmmaculate '74 Mercedes tires, ,new clutch. 46,000 ~~rs:n~~l~~n~~l~r ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
<·a?> i-.:xtra snow llrt"'I & To Choose From! 280, 4 dr. lo miles. 1714) ml. Alilung 54200· • BUY or LEASE
whee l:. inc luded. lm UNIVERSITY 892·7223 aft 5PM daily or 673-·6230----1 DlRECT mal·ulalc Pri. party Olds~L.f•-wknds. MUST SELL '70 911E
Cull 759·0!114 days , muu nr Sportomatic Nu tires, ~·,·~· ~.[~*f'~-·~ Ii 7 J . 0 5 4 4 n Ile s & Honda c~ • GMC '67 Mercedes 250S, s un Blue pnt. Konis. air. Xlnt
weekends Trucks roof, aulomat1c, PrS. cond.$6800.499·2712
2850 Harbor Bl vd. PI B. AM I F M. S3400 .
Selling anything with a CO$ta Mesa 540·9640 642-1965 7 3 Po rs c h e 9 l I T . 2025 S Manchester
~.Uud Mfoe.UMd ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
~ 9HO ,a.Hee 99'5 • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ORANGECOUNTY'S I 1975•POMTIAC HEWIST AUllRD UNCOLN·M EBCURY Only 28,000 •dUJAI miles. Dealership la now OP EN Aut.omat.lc, pwr. stee"i!rr RAY FLADEIOE & brakes. radio &. a r
LINCOLN-MF;RCUltY cond. Super clea11l
18-18 Auto Center Or. (708LMV).
SD Fw7·Lake Forest exit OMLY$4299
IRVINE • HAllllS 130.7000 AUTOC&n'Etl
MllltClllCJ 9952 D1v.-NabenCadiUae
• •••••••••••••••••••••• H25 Baker St., C.M.
·ea Auto 289. s1.ooo oria ¥1 block east
of Harbor Bl ml. 2 ownra. Xlnt cond, 54~9109 $1800. 831·1548
'61 .. 1tang $600 '72 Pontillc Ventura II. 6
~uto. 2 dr,. R/H, rblt See at 1549 Placentia I t !060• 842-4271
'67 Muatani, yellow w /blk '73 Pont. Grand Prix • Int, clean. $800/offer, Outstanding beaut. corut. ~ Loaded. Guaro. By o~.
66 4 spd, Mustang, super owner. S24". 831·7 S
eves eng, needs body work 4i
trans. 548·5081 '71 Catalina, 4 dr. A/C,
Pinto . 9957 P/B, P/S, under 30,000
••••••••••••••••••••••• ml, xlnt. $1.5.:!lO. 968-M49.
'73 Silver Pinto Fstbclt. n..dertMrd 9970
Good cond. Maa wbla, •••••••••••••••••••••••
AM·FM radio, 4 nu tires. 1977 T·Bird fully equip'd. Bst ofr over $1650. SHOO or best offer. 64G-2.356 846-t040
'75 Runabout. Avocado IYe«JD 9974 im. dlx lnt, v1n roof, tint·
ed alua, AM-FM radio. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Clean. 847-t902 VEGA '7&
Ptymouth 9960 HATCHIACKGT
DEMO. 5 speed lrans., ••••••••••••••••••••••• a Ir co n d., etc. '74 Roadrunner. Good (SS«i/3532). Was $.1795. cond w/many xlr aa. ONLY $3198 Must sell. $2300. OOl-1161
arts. HOWARD Chevrold
'76 Volare Wgn. VS, air. Dove & Quail Sts.
NEWPORT BEACH lS,000 ml, lug rck, Xlnt. 833-0555 $4.200. 556.2842
'73SatSebring, P/S. P/8, 1972 Vega Camback
A/C, Auto. $2300/best of. Wagon. All original
fer. 979-6612 After 6pm. finish in & out. hn-
maculate condition. I
'73 Duster; V..S, •air-cond, bought It new. Will
orig. owner. Fold down finance, will sell now
rear seat. Only 39,000 mi. $950. 834-2850 or 559-0592
$1750. 833-1768 72 GT Wagon, clean, lo
66 Baracuda, VS, PS, mi, saso, bestofr.
auto, sharp car, lo mi, 494-8351
runs perfect. $875. Alltos. New 9100 64.5-8614 ················~····· •
Daily Pilot Classified Ad SELL ldl "t . th Whlte/blk tntr. AM/FM Anaheim 750-2011 e 1 ems wi u stereo & 8 track Air Al· 111 a sample matter . . . '74 HONDA Civic, Dally Pilot Class1r1ed Ad. 1 hi 60M : su 'ooo
just call 642-5678.___ f!SOO. 751-3539 642·567S. ~~ ~ty ~.~1 ' • 1974YOL~O
145WAGOM
Auto~atlo, air cond. & in
sui;t!t nice condition!
(81SLNS).
At Phil lnng Ford at the
, all new Irvine Auto Center Autos, M•w 9100 Auto1, M•w 9100 Auto1, M•w 9800 '7,4 914. Factory appr grp.
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bra & cover. AM/FM 8
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Front Brakes, Re·
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I
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581-IJOTT
'69 TARGA 9l1T, xlnt.
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MAR9UIS VOLVO
MISSION VIEJO
831-2180 495-1210
SPM •---------
ROY
CARVER
ROLLS·ROYCE
tMtJamlllcwH Newi-tk•~ ,...._ __ _...,.....
CLOSED SUNDAYS
COMCAMMOM'S
HOR SEUSS
STABLES
Brokers of fine contem ·
porary
ROLLIS ROYCE
BENTLEY
automobiles.
Autos,UMd ••••••••••••••••••••••• GeMral •••••••••••••••••••••••
2711 E. COast Hwy '67 Special. Good transp
(714) 675·0930 car. $300/bst orter.
9165 642-4916 Toyota .
••••••••••••••••• ••••• • '72 Buie-Electra Ltd. 2
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SB.I. YOUR or~;~: $2100. 494.3039
TOY OT A, '76 Skyhawk, only 12,ooo
See us for a top dollar mi. Air AM·FM auto. estimate• • '
MAR9UIS TOYOTA ~~~a:sond. 5S1-1706 or
MISSION VIEJO
831-2110 495.1210 '71 Buick Riviera, extra
clean, hip mileage but
77 Toyota Corolla, very aherp. Sacrifice
AM /FM 1tereo, under $1,.495. 840-4161
~~ml, $3200/bst 9£r. Codlloc 991 s --------...................... .
1977TOYOTA
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wlth the 5 speed .
(5USPL>.
OMLYS4395
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M15mON VIEJO . ~
831·21101fS.lllO
'71 Toyota Coron.a. Stlck
ah.lft. Perfect condtl~.
'7~
NEEDSPASl'SALE
'78 Corona outa~dlor oond, fully io•ded, lo ml,
P750. 145·1671 day1,
M$-2llleve
,
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WE ARE PLEA.SID
TO AllllOllCE
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FORD'S llEW SMALL CAR
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• Quick acoeleratlon (0·60 In an ev•r•o• of 8.8 eec./D.1 ... c. for Callfomle eml181ons equipped model•)
•Good tnklng (50-0 In an averege of
3.3eec. • Solld "'C01-m""MM ..... "".,...""IQ
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• Excellent gaotlne mlleao• l'ltlnga (49
mpa highway -34 mpg city. '" cau?omia. 43 mpg highway -.,a '"" Olty).
1
H11ntlngton Beaeh
Fountain Valley.
ED ITI ON
VOL. 70, NO. 2SS, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES
,
CARL HAYWARD MOUNTS ASSAULT ON PIER DURING SU~!= COMPETITION
Thia Was Quarter-final Action Saturday; He Finished Third In Men'• Division
lnlitnder S~ Titli.St
J/ alley Youth ~epa Honan at Huntington
Rodney Livingston, a "landlub-
ber" from Fountain Valley, swept
top honors in this weekend's
seventh annual Summer Surfing
Ch ampionships In Huntington
Beach.
Livingston captured first place
in the men's competition and then
went on to defeat winners of six
other divisions Sunday in a super
heat and emerge as overall cham-
pion.
Livingston also won the David
Pangra Memorial Trophy, an
award named after a local cham-
pion who was kllled several yean
ago.
Meet Director Jim EncJe saJd a
large crowd witnessed the event
held for the first time at the city
pier.
Engle said the event attracted
150 participants who competed in
surf that ranged from four to
seven feet.
The championships were
s ponsored by the Huntington
Beach Recreation and Parks
Department.'
The winners:
Seniors Di vision Caged 35
through 44 ) -1. Chris Cattel,
Huntington Beach. 2. Chuck Lin·
nen. 3. George Draper. 4. Jim
Nolen.
Masten (25 through 34> 1.
Greg Wade, Huntington Beach. 2.
Jerry Smith. 3 Randy Lewis. 4.
John Davis. 5. Philip Benson.
Men's (18-24) -1. Rodney Liv·
ingatoo, Fountain Valley. 2. Bob·
by Neiahi. 3. Carl Hayward. 4.
Mark Richardson. S. Jerry Meyl·
Ing.
Women Call ages) -1. Bobbi
Smi\b, Huntington Beach. 2. Miko ·
Schmid .. a. Julie Dodd. 4. Lis a
<~SUllFER, Pa1e AZ>
3 Cameras, Stereo
Stolen in Valley
Buralara broke into a Fountain
Valley home ove~ the weeke~. and t«>k an es lmated $1,500
worth of imoto raa>hy equip-·
ment, including two stHJ
cameras and a movie camer•,
pollce said today.
VicUm Karen Ladwla, 181SM
Mt. Sherrod Cifele, reported the
theft, in whlcfa a etereo tape deck
aystem waa a1ao stolen, on Sun· •
day.
Coat
acreement on -a ai~ percent
acroa-U..boatd P-•1 bJke.
· ~eanwtrtle, Weatmlnster
SchOol Board trultea met Fri·
day nJcht and agreed to pay sub-
•l1tute teachen $80 per day in U'O
event ol a atrike.
Trustees also aareed to pay
teachers who cross picket lines 25
pel'cent more than their regular
salary t( other teacbers strike.
California Teachers Auocta-
tion representative Cobnie Kini
s ald WesUQ!nalet teachers are
panlnt out leaffeta to parentl
which call ror a po11lble strike
Frlda)' if a contract is not
reached
Dtatrlct ~~non are pr ... M fW •~,ear contract and are •..tnr u muda"' a•·' I*: cent pef. biDolt to tNdMJ'l..
But 'taeW ~-aay <a.TUCKS .... A*)
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1977
. .
Afternooa
N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENT
'He's a Wizard'
GaDie ShowChaillp
Held in Break-ins
By ARTH\JR R. VINSEL
Of .. Delty ...........
A colorful prison parolee and
electronics 1enJus, who police al·
lege set up a legitimate firm with
$29,000 in TV game show win-
nings, then burelarlzed other
firms to stock it with merchan-
dise, is in Orange County Jail to-
day.
Fountajn Valley police detec·
tives who arreated Daniel J.
Portley, 31, obi.atned two
criminal complaints over the
weekend charging him with
breaking into a local realty firm.
Portley, 31, of Santa Ana,
already was staying, at least
temporarily. at Orange County
J aii, \fhen charged with the
Fountain Valley burglaries.
He was previously arrested on
Aug. 216 by Santa Ana police, on
charges of possession of stolen
property and possession of a
firearm by a convicted felon.
Bail is autotnatically denied
when a person on prison parole is
arrested und e r s uch
circumstances.
"The Orange County Sheriff's
Department and other agencies
have holds on him too," said
Fountain Valley Detective
Robert Mosley, who obtained
charg~ against the suspect.
He and his partner, Detective
Tony Marley, began their In-
N8f'J TY P~e
UJWeiled in
Pf/DtJ TOday
1'be l>aitY Pttot 9-u lwo fall "tr
features debutlns tn today's edl-Uon. .
There are two llems to
showcase: the annual football
favorite, Pigskin Pickeroo; and a
brand·new, upbeat dally
television llsting.
The dall~ television guide is the neweet face in lbe lineup, em-
phuizlhs the latest changes ln
sports programmint, features on
new vldeo 1bow1, listings tor all
Los .Aqeles channels as well u
San Dteao staUona seen on cable
1etvlces, ~md all ln bigger,
easier to read tn>e.
You will find lhe D•lly Pilot's
new television llltlna the best
newapaper 1ulde · ln Orance
County, It is on page 84.
Pipkin Plckeroo la a favorite
that come!I back to the Daily
Pllo\ pages every football
season. Check tbe Monday to
Wednesday Dally Pilot sports
pages for details on lbe Pigskin
Pickeroo contest which will run
lbe next 10 weeka. lt '1 on page 82
today. ·
You name the'Wlnners each
week and ehar~ in the prizes -ii
you prove to Oe the beat pl'o& · nostfca~ on the Orange Coast. '
vestigation of the burglaries
based on a tip apparently result·
ing-from overheard jailhouse
gossip.
"The guy's a genius," Mosley
says of Portley.
He alle~u that Portley
burglarized the Red Carpet
Realtors office at 18151 S.
Brookhurst St. on two occasions
in 1976, ta.king a total or $2,620 in
videotape equlplnent.
One breakin occurred In March
of that year and the second In
May, Del. Mosley explained to-
day.
A black and white video tape
system was stolen in the f&rst of
the two professional burglaries,
he said and the firm replaced it
with a more costly color
videotapes'ystem afterward.
"He figured he might as well
go back and get the good stuff,"
Mosley speculated in ouUlning
the case against the ex-con and
TV game show whiz.
<See STOCK, Page A2)
Used Bank Pla•es?
New Lance Charge
'
Subject of Probe
WASIUNGTON <AP) -The
Justice Department's criminal
fraud division is studyina a re-
port by the comptroller of the
currency whicb reportedly shows
that Bert Lance widely used
bank-owned aircraft for family
and political purposes.
A gpokes.man for the Justice
Department confirmed Sunday that the division received the
study. But he said Its referral
was routine and did not
necessarily indicate there would
be any prosecution.
President Carter, meanwhile,
was said to be considering the
L.ANCI! CASE REFLfcfS
ON CARTl!R-£dltorfel, A8
postpc>Mmeot unW next week d
a news conferente which almost
certalnly would be focused on the
financial affairs of his budget
director, including the question
of whether Lance should resign.
Press secretary Jody Powell
s aid today no decision,...hu been
made on whether to pUt off the
s ession, originally scheduled
Wednesday. But he indicated the
President may want to wait until
Lance completes his testimony
scheduled to begin Thursday
before the Senate Government
. .Affairs Committee.
In Lance's native Georgia, the
president-elect of tbe American
Bankers Association said to•
day that the Lance affair "is
casting a pall over the banking
industry. . ·.it may give banking
a black eye if H goes un·
challenged,"
A.A. Mulligan, in a speech pre-
pared for the National Banlt Card
CoovenUon in Atlanta. said he
doesn't know if Lance actually
hu done anything wrong, but
some of the alleted activities
"are clearly not typical of banks
in this country."
While confirming the existence
of the comptroller's report, the·
Justice Department spokesman
refused to discuss the contents.
But the Washington Post said
today that the report says Lance,
who heads the Office of Manage·
ment and Budget, used two
planes owned by the Georgia
banks he headed to take personal
vacations, to fly his children to
school, to commute and to take
part ln politics.
The report came amid new
suggestions that Lance resign to
avoid embarrassment to Carter
and as the Senate committee
opened its second week of hear-
ings into the case.
ThiBf With
Death Wuh?
Huntington Beach police
are searching blgb and tow
for a pre-dawn thief who
snatched a seven·foot·long
coffin with brass hinges
from a motorcycle trailer
parked al the corner of
Hell Avenue and Beach
Boulevard over the ·
weekend. Coffin owner Dennis
Kirby, 35, ol Huntington
Beach, said someone took
the $500 coffin late Satur·
day night or early Sunday
morning from the trailer
he had parked in a vacant
lot and chained to a nearby
telephone pole.
Condition Serious
SANTA MO NICA <AP) -
Danielle Spencer, the 12·year-old
actress who plays a sassy litUe
sister in television's "What's
Happening," remains in serious
condition f ollowin1 a head-on car
collision, said a hospital
spokeswoman. ,
Dad, 75,
Captive
21/2 Years
IN\ERN~'" fo'ltt !API A 7~ y~ar old m•n "u reportl-d In
f,,ur cond1llon .tftN ht•" a~ rrc~
from u .,m.all rnom in the hack of
.i tt.ir.tgt' author1t1cs i.ay muy
h j vt• bt•t•n h1' prison for 21 ~
'H'.an>
Th,· <'1lru' I ounl) !->ht•rirf r.
l>t>partmt'nl ~aid deput1e1 rt
lui.~ Joseph llampl from it
locke'd eight by 12 room and
chareed lus !>on, StBnley. 45, and
daughter an la" Vac tora.a , 31 ,
"1th fal!>e 1mpn!>onmenl Both
"e re rclea!>t'<i without bond.
A depArtment spokesman said
!>heriff's deputies discovered the
elder Hampl locked in the unven·
tJlated room. wearing only a T-
s h i rt and :.horts, when they
c hec ked a tip from an in·
vest1gator for Utica-Graphic
Arts Mutual Insurance Com-
pany.
The mvestagator told the de-
partment the farm , which had
been sending workmen's com-
pensation checks to Hampl for 10
years. was suspicious he was4.
dead and his checks were being
cashed by the son
The spokesman said a deputy
sent to investigate Wednesday
morning was told by neighbors
they hadn't seen Hampl since
February 1975. The deputy re-
turned later and was taken lo the
cider llampl by his son.
The spokesman said Hampl's
son told lhe deputy he had to keep
his falher locked m the room to
prevent him from wandering
around the neighborhood.
The deputy said the room was '
furnished with a bed, small table
a nd a portable toilet. He said
therC' was no running water and
w:is told by Mrs. Hampl that the
toil et was emptied once a week.
The deputy said the elder
llampl was dirty and perspiring
heav il y a nd as ked him for
something to drink and eat. lie
appeared to weigh about 75
pounds. the s pokesman said
The deputy returned later with
a second officer and released
llampl after he confirmed he was
not under the guardianship of his
son. lhespoke!>mans aid.
Services S~t
For Crash
·Victim, 18
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday morn ing at
Westminster Memor ial Park for
18·year-old honor student William
f' Newton 111 of Huntington
Beach.
He died Saturday Crom injuries
suffered when his bicycle was
s truck by a car Sept. 4, police said today
Newton, a 1977 graduate of
Marmu High School, resided al
7562 Alhambra Drive with his
mother. Vivian and brothers Jef-
frey, 16, Darren, 14. and James 12 '
lie 1s the son of William F.
Newton II, a captain with the Hun-
lin~lon Beach Fire Department.
Traffic investigator Orv a Akins
said the driver of the car, Daniel
L. Hagerman. 29, Huntington
Beach, has been charaed with
felony drunke n driving. Akins
said h e will now seek a
manslaughter complaint .
Akin s said Newton and
Hagerman both were traveling
porth on Silver Lane when
llagerman's vehicle allegedly
rear-ended the bicycle.
Funeral services will be held at
10 :30a.m.
Assailant Shot
FONTANA <AP) -An off-duty
Los Angeles County sheriff's of·
ficer shot and wounded an On-
tario man wbo allegedly had shot
at two brothers during an argu-
ment outside a fast food
restaurant, Fontana police said.
<>f'AHOI COAST ""'
DAILY PILOT
IN!ly ~llet SYft .._.
WILL SEEf( SEAT
Candld•t• MecAlll1ter
HBSchools
President
Seeks Post
Don MacAllister, president of
the Huntington Beach Union
High School District Board of
Trustees, announced his can-
didacy for the Huntington Beach
City Council today.
MacAllister, 44, says he will re·
main an active member of the
school board "until I am eJeeted
next April.•·
He says he plans to resign from
the board in that eventuality. He
will still have one year remain·
ing on his school board term.
MacAllister says that he will
work at long-term master plan·
ning for the city.
"The council has tended to put
out brush fires in the past," he
declares. "We should start look ·
mg now at what we want the city
to become an the future."
Mac Allister is a member of the
Huntington 'Beach Recreation
and Parks Commission. He also
serves as vice president of lhe
Coast ~gional Occupational
P r ogram <C ROP ) board of
trustees.
I le Is vice president and the
manufacturer's represenalative
of A-FSales Engineering Inc.
Four council seats presently
occupied by Ted Bartlett, Al
Coen, Norma Gibbs and Harriett
Wieder will be on the block in the
election n~4 spring.
Care of Pets
F~us of FV
Free Class
A four-week course for Orange
County pet owners will begin
next Tuesday at Fountain Valley
High School
The Animal Ass istance
League, in cooperation with the
Huntington Beach High School
District, is offering the lecture
series at no charge for the next
four Tuesday evenings
Or. Rod LaShelle, an Orange
County veternarian, will be the
first lecturer In the series.
He will discuss problems
caused by fleas and parasites
and what can be done about
them.
On Sept. 20, animal control of-
ficer Richard Robillard will give
lips on how to protect pets from
wtldlife such as snakes a nd
coyotes.
A subsequent speaker will dis·
cuss how citizens can work to
change state humane laws to
make them better.
Classes will be held from 7to10
p .m. Further information can
be obtained by calling 644-8851.
Disabilities
Discussed
Registration for a
Coastline Community Collet•
course on the problems of the dil·
a bled beaina Tuesday at
Oakview Community Cent-. r.
"The Psycholoei' of Dlsebtlf ·'
ty," is the tlUe ~f the chw to be
taught by Ilene ~ldklnd for nine
weeks in the center at 1'73U Oak
Lane, near the interneUoa ol
Beach Boulevard and Wvnet
A venue In Hunt1n1toa Buch.
Houn are 8:30 to t :ao p.m. Stu·
denta may enroll u lati u tM
aecond seulon Just by cOiil1Dc to
cla11. No tuJUon la chars..t. And
.-..Jlandlc~ .,.. tq0GWl8eid toehrcU, I
FromP~AJ
' STOCK ...
Moaley cla1m1 Portley was
reaponalble for both of those
bur1larlt.1.
Authorities probing Portley'::;
bacQ'round HY he won $29,000 on
the Tv same show •'Celebrity
Sweepctakes" achieving status
aa the second highest winner an
the program's history.
They said the investigation dis·
closed he used It to open up
Fa""a Services Company in San·
t11 Ana. a firm that closed earlier
this year after two years in bus1·
ness.
The company which dealt an
v araous elec~ron s equipment
was operated Portley and a
business ass ate, whom police
have interviewed at length.
''He even got a bu!>iness license
and everything," Del. Mosley
said today. .
He said -it will be at least
several days before a court ar-
raignment date is set for Portley
on the current charges.
F,....PageAJ
TEACHERS
they want a one-year pact with
improvement in c lass sizes,
fringe benefits and pay.
W est min s ter t eac her
spokesmen s ay the proposed con
lraci duration appears lo be the
biggest stumbling block in the
seven·month old talks.
Teachers plan to meet with das
trict oHlcials Thursday and
again Friday with a state
appointed mediator if necessary.
Cycle Gangs
Get Warning
SAN DIE GO <AP>
Authorities wa r ned ri val
motorcycle clubs today against
trying for revenge an the killing
of two members of the Mongols
while they rode their bakes near
Escondido a week ago.
Rumors of pl ans for retaliation
have spread 'iince a bomb was
exploded Friday :it a suburban
mortuary where the two bochc!>
await burial.
M11~·i#il POTI!NTIAL. ANNEXATION 321 AC .
C=:J PROPOSED STATE PURCHASE ta4 AC.
c:J P'ROPOSEO COUNTY PURCHASE 50 AC
F:;~: .. :~~ llTATl OWNED 300 AC.
Pa c ific
Boba Claiea llpdate
" ;. , •.
• . .
,
' .
~
New mai> designates current planning
status of 1,600 acres of the Bolsa Ohica
marshlands. The Huntington Beach City
Council recently approved step• for an-
nexation of the northwestern blufftops.
More than 900 acres of marshl~d. which
the state is negotiating to acquire for an
ecolog1cal preserve, is not included in fhe
partial annexation. Area in extreme right
co.tner of map is pr9posed for county
purcha&e of a regional park. It also is not
included in annexation efforts at this time.
State already owns 300 acres of
marshlands.
Doctor Encourages
Post-coronary Sex
COPENHAGEN, Denmark
c AP> If you can take a brisk
one-hour walk covering two to
three males or climb five flights
of stairs with no trouble, then you
can meet the physical demands
of sex, a Finnish doctor reports.
Cardiol og ist D r . Kari
Saunamaeki, who works at
Copenhagen 's National Hospital,
gave h.as advice in an article in a
physical training club journal of
the Danish heart diseas e associa·
lion.
lie said having a heart attack
is no reason to give up sex. The
widespread fear of suffering
another attack in the act of sex is
nothing more than a myth, he
wrote.
The cardiologist said this
a bstentionist myth is stronger in
th~ United States than in Den·
mark because "middle-class
prejudice" and religion tend to
con vince many Am e r ican
postcoronary patients that "the
wages of sin is another heart at·
tack."
Contrary to the traditional
view of sex as "one of the vices
taxing the body and shortening
life,'' Sa""amaeki wrote, it could
be 41n integr al· p a rt of the
postcoronary patient's physical
execcise program.
But he warned against basmg
the exercise program on sex
alone.
Vandals Hit
15 Vehicles
In Huntington
Vandals damaged a total of lS
vehicles in two separate areas of
north Huntington Beach early to-
day, police reported.
About 10 autos parked near the
Cambridge Apartments at Bolsa
Chica and Warner Avenues, had
their tires slashed and other mis·
cellaneous damage, said Lt. Jack
Reinholtz. ·
Another fi ve vehicles were re-
ported damaged this morning
near the Villa Yorba Apartments
on Malaga Lane some five miles
east of the other Incident.
Reinholtz said t he tops of con-
vertible cars 3S well ~s tires
were slashed at the Malaga Lane
Apartments.
· She's crying·:tOr lielp. Are you listening?
utric horror show. It's a warm, friendly environment.
where skilled therapists help people to sort out tbeir
own lives. And give them new tools to hanule th&
problems. they thought were too big to handle alone.
1£ you know someone who is experiencing an
emotional crisis, calt tho HOPEUNlT.
A trained coun5e,lor will boat tho other end of the
line. Ready to help. Ready to answer any questions
you may have.
PleMe make the call that will show her somebody
·cares cnouah to listen.
lrviite
EDITION
,
~oclay's Closing
N.Y.Stoeks
..
VOL. 70, NO. 25S, 3 SECTtONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1977 TEN CENT~
p QQ 0
e Studies· Foreign •
'
Trade Zone
. By PIDUP &OS•A&IN Ol•Oel.., "'-' .....
~ Industrial League.
l,.ett.era are come out this week
• to Irvine industrial firms to
detumme what support exists
for establlshinl a foretcn trade
zone. llkeaed to an inland free
port, in Irvine.
A foreign trade zone would
have to be approved by the U.S.
ForeignTradeZonelJoard.
Irvine Finance OUicer
Barbara Henderaon said tJ>at
replies lo questloonair'es
included 'n the letters lo
blWl.\essmen wUL be compiled
and analyzed tor a report to the
City Council.
Depending on lndustry
support, an appJleaU01> would be
made.
According to tbe letter to the
lnd04b1allata, a foreign trade·
ZOO! la an enclosed, secured area
under auperviaion of U.S .
Customs officials. Goods traded
in the r.one may be imported,
warehoused or used in
manQfaet11ri.D.a without payment
The survey effort is being
conducted by city olficlals with
the backina of the Greater Irvine
Gohag tor It
Carl Hayward mounts an assault on the
Huntington Beac h Pier during surfing
competition this weekend. This phulo was
taken during quarter .final action Satur-
day . Hayward finished third in the men's
division of Huntington Beach's annual
s ummer Surfing Championships.
kvine cent@r EIR Due
City Council to Hear lmpaet Report
ably not very reallatic since we
will not have the oil available to
bum."
-Water Resources: Chief con·
cern here is poSllible siltation or
Upper Newport Bay caused by
runnoff water carryinl sedl·
ments from denuded areas of
such projects.
The project seeks to avoid that
problem by rerouting an exlstint
flood control channel.
After the project is developed,
the report notes, less sediment
will work tta way into the Upper
Newport Bay, but more oily sub-
itances, a~cb aa thole from cars
parked tn Iott, wlll pollute the
bay.
-Wlldllfe Reao'Urces: .Already
limited by the surroundinl
<See lllVINE, f a1e A2)
.
Heart Attack Eear Mith?_
COPENHAGEN, Denmark
CAP> -If you can take a brisk
one-hour wal~ covering two to
three miles or Climb five fights
of stairs with no trouble, th~n you
can meet the physical demands
of sex, a Finnish doctor reports.
Cardiologist Dr. Karl
Saunamaekl. who worka at
tbe Uolted Stat.el than ln Den·
mark becauae "m iddle-class
prejudke" and religion teld to
convince many America.n
post-coronary pitients that "Jhe
wages of sin i.1 mother heart at.
tack:"
Contrary to the tradlllonal
view of sex u "one of the v{cea
taxin1 the body and ahorteA.in1
llfe," Saunamaekl wrote, it could'
be an integral part of the po&t~~ paUent'.& pbfslcal
exercife pt'Olram.
But. be warned a1atnst basJn1
the ~erclae ~ram on iex
alone. Sn wvutd '-eff eeUve on·
ly if It Involves "techalQues call· lnc ttw comtant muscular eJtet·
tlon ci a aufftclenUy hl&h intensi·
t1 rcr • perlOd ol at least 30
mlnUtiii," Saunamaekl said.
of duty fees.
Jf the aoods leave the zone.
customs duties are usessed if
they are transferred to a point
within the United States. But if
: the goods are exported, there is
no duty.
Todd Nicholson. executive
director of the industrial league,
told businessmen there are
several advantages:
-Improved usb now. Funds
aren 'l tied up in duty payments
on imported goods held in
inventory, work in progress or in
finished goods awaiting
shipment.
-There are no quota
restrictions in foreign trade
zones until goods are withdrawn
for domestic use.
-No duty need be paid on
sub-standard or damaged goods
not used for manufacturing or
sales. Goods spoiled during
manufacturing are likewise
exempt from duty. ·
Only two foreign-trade zories
operate in California, in San
Francisco and San Jose.
Nicholson said the most likely
site for a zone in lryine would be
<Bee STUDY, Page AZ)
Area's Water
Cut by Flood
D~ERT HOT SPRINGS <AP>
· Southern California's main
water supply was cut off when
raging floodwaters fed by a sud·
den desert thunderstorm sent a
wall of mud, boulders and debris
crashing into a section of the
Colorado River Aqueduct, the
Metropolitan Water District re-
ported. (Related story, AS>
MWD spokeswom an JoAnn
Lundgren said five pumping
plants along the aqueduct were
shut down Sunday after Saturday
Trial Set
For County
Supervisors
Orance Count.y supervisors a.iwa l>*.\F.!ch an4 Philip An·
thort}' and three codefendants
were ordered today in Superior
Court Lo fac. trial Jan. 80 on
multiple criminal counts con-
tained i1' a Grand Jury indict-
ment.
Diedrich. 53; Anthony, 41, and
codefendants Gene Conrad, 43 ;
Dr. W'llllam Kott, SS, and at·
tomey Michael Remineton, 37,
declined to offer pleas today
belo,. JucWe Philip E. Schwab.
Judge Scnwab agreed to let the
flve plead on the c~r1e1 after he
ruled an a motion by the defen-
dants for removal or the district
attcmiey from t"e case.
f ·Lawyers fOf' Uie fivt told Judge
Schwab today that the indict·
ment was the result of biu and
prejudice on1the part'of District
.Attorney Cec l Hicks.
An indictment ls a formal
charge made a1ainst a person by
a.grand jury. It does not establish
guilt or innocence.
The defense attorneys suggest-
ed that t be 1tate attorney
gentl'al 's offlce should take over
the proeecutlon chore.
Codelendant Martin
Ki.hoer, also indicted by the
Gratad lury, was not present in . court today. HlJ arra1enment
wUI be held Friday before Judge
Kenneth Williams. AU she face trial on multiple
felony countl related to alleged
. vlolatJol'lll of 1tate political cam-
pallJl ·and financial disclosure
laws. • _ lliedrlch .faces..a~arate. lriai
on two char1ea of perjury con-s ln a •eparate Indictment.
Schwab aet the trial date
o .'ilarc.he. •
Klrachner, 51, and Conrad face
a •ei>arate Uhl on perjury
c bargea. Judie Scbwab
scheduled March 27 for their
trial.
night's floodwaters ripped a
2,500-pound steel lid off an access
hatch lit the Fan Hills pumping
station, about 12 miles east of
Desert Hot Springs. They aent a
torrent of mud and boulders the
s ize of pool tables into the
system, choking off the
aqueduct. ·
The MWD noticed the reduced
flow about 2:30 p.m. Sunday, the
spokeswoman said.
"But we didn't find out what
the problem was until 6 p.m.
Thief With
Death Wiah?
Huntington Beach po\icel
are searching high and low
for a pre·dawn thief who
snatched a seven-foot-long
coffm with brass binees
from a motorcycle trailer
parked at the corner of
Heil Avenue and Beach
Boulevard over the
Wfekend.
Coffin owner Denllll
Kirby, 35, of Huntington
Beach, said itomeone took
the $500 coffm late Satur-
day night or early Sun~ay
morning from the trailer
he had parked in a vacant
lot and chained to a nearby
telephone pole.
New TY. Page
UJWeiled in
Pilot Today
The Daily Pilot has two fal1"'77
features debuting in today's edi-
tion.
There are two items to
showcase: the annual footbail
favorite, Pigskin Pickeroo; and a
brand-new, upbeat daily
television liswig.
The daily television guide is
the newest face in the lineup, em-
phasizing the latest chanies in
sports programming, features on
new video shows, listings for all
Los Angeles channels as well as
San Diego stations seen on cable
services, and all in bigger,
easier fu read type.
You will find the Daily Pilot's
new television llaling the best
TI ew5pajrer g at ae-nro-r ange
County. It is on page 84.
Pigskin Picfceroo is a favorite
that comes back to the Dally
Pilot pages every football
season. Check the Monda=to Wednesday Dally Pilot.. s
pages for details on the l>i skin
Piekeroo contest which will run
the pext 10 weeks. It's on page B2
today.
Yoo name the winners each
week and share in the prizes -lf
you prove to 6e tne 'besl pro1·
nosticator on the Orance Coast.
when we found the entire transi-
tion structure over the pipeline
was destroyed and huge boulders
were lying next to the aqueduct's
pipes," she said. "That's when
we shut down all our plants."
The 242-mile-long aqueduct
runs from Lake Havasu on the
Arizona border to Lake r,fathews
in Riverside County.
Lundgren said heavy equip·
ment and dozens of work crews
were at the scP.ne trying to assess
<See FLOOD, Page AZ>
WASHINGTON {AP) -The
Ju1Uce Department's criminal
fraud division is studying a re·
port by the comptroller of the
currency which reportedly shows
that Bert Lance widely used
. bank-owned aircraft for family
and political purposes.
A spokesman tor the Justice
Department confirmed Sunday that the division received the
study. Bul he said its referral
was routine and did not
necessarily indicate there would
be any prosecution.
President Carter, meanwhile,
was said to be considering the
LANCE CASE REFLECTS
ON CARTER-Editorial, A6
postponement until next week ol
a news conference which almost
certainly would be focused on the
financial affairs or his budget
director, including the question
of whether Lance should resign.
Press secretary Jody Powell
said today no decision has been
made on whether to put ofl the
session, originally scheduled
Wednesday. But he indicated the
President may want to wait until
Lance completes his testimony
scheduled to begin Thursday
before the Senate Government
Affairs Committee.
In Lance's native Georgia, the
presldent·elect of the American
Bankers Assoolation said lo·
day that the Lance affair "is
casting a pall over the banking
industry .. .it may give bankin'
a blao• &-)4t if-I 1tee.~u---~
challenged."
A,A. Mulliean. in a speech pre-
pared for the National Bank Card
Convention in Atlanta, said he
doean 't know if Lanc9 actually
bas done '"ything wrons, but
some of the-. alleged activities
"are clead~ not typical of banks
in this couot.cy-.''
• ' 2 DAILY Pfl.OT ' 1m ·Nudity. fOr ·nie'.h? 93-1,10 Yean
For Terror Topleas, Claas Structure Tied '
Cl.NCINNATl <AP > -
Jette Coultft'. who main·
tainecl the ~levlaion ahow
"J\ootl" drove blm to hold·
ing 11 people hostage at a
home for unwed mothers,
waa sentenced today to 93
to 110 Yfl~ in prison.
ROME <A P J The 1ummer or
1971 ••w m111 t• toplu1 aun
b aUuoi than t'H'r b•fort' on
1taly'1 burht•a. bul the VaUcan
maml am.., th1.1t "nudity rcmllina
a pht·numNwn more or lt!~lll ol tho
"t•iilth\. C'I U" Thl' 1l1t•1H m1tJor1 ty uf our
p~oplt-«'•<'n todMy t hink dll
f1•n •nlly from the h•donsatlc
matc:n.ih~m of the mlnon ly,"
J H1.iunundu MJnt1m. editor ot lh~
F,....P~AI
FLOOD .••
l ht: dama1:e Durmi: the drought,
the aqueduct has carried more
than a b1 lhon gallons of water a
day ser v10g about 11 million peo·
pie in Southern Calafoqua.
She l'!>t1matcd that there are
about four to s ix feel of debris in
the aqueduct's two 12-foot wide
pipes
"If we can gel It cleaned out
t.1 nd back 10 oper ation an a week,
then we probably won 't have to
ration any more than we've had
to up until now," she said. "But 1f
we can't get it repaired by then. ·
then we'll really bave lo fieure
ou t how serious the effects wlll
bC' ..
~he plants have exceeded their
designed pumping capacity since
the drought began, she said. The
planLc;. each or which has nine
pumps, are built for eight-pump
capacity with one pump idle in
r eserve. Howe ve r , a ll nine
pumps have been working 24
hours a day, seven days a week
until now
Elderly Man
Freed From
Garage Cell
INVERNESS, f'la. <Al'l A
75-ycar-old man was reported in
fair condition after he was freed
from a small room m the back of
a garage authorities say may
have been his prison for 21:.
years
The Citrus County Sheriff's
Department said deputies re·
le ased Joseph Hampl from a
Jocked eight-by-12 room and .
charged his son, Stanley. 45, and
daughter-in·law, Victoria , 31.
with false imprisonment. Both
were released without bond
A department spokesman said
sheriff's deputies discovered the
elder llampl locked 10 the un ven·
tilated room, wearing only a T-
s h 1 rt a nd s horts, when they
c hecke d a lip fro m a n in
vest1g a tor for Utic a-Graphic
Arts Mutual Insura nce Com-
pany
The 10vestigutor told the de-
partment the firm , which had
been sending workmen's com-
pensation checks to Hampl for 10
years. was suspicious he was
dead and his checks were being
c as hcd by the son.
The spokesman said a deputy
sent to invest igate Wednesday
morning was told by neighbors
they hadn't s~en llampl since
February 1975. The deputy re·
turned later and was taken to the
elder llampl by his son.
The spokes man said Hampl 's
son told the deputy he had to keep
his father locked in the room to
I prevent hi m Crom wandering
Jilround the nei(lhborhood.
( The deputy said the room was
furnished with a bed, small table
and a portable toilet. He said
VaUcan dally L'Outrvatore
Romano. wrote In o rronl·P•&e
t'dUorlw
"'l'hti UUJ~ Mnd middle clUI
pl'ople did not respond llnd will
not respond to this deafenin1 In·
vltatlon to the striptease."
In fact, when leftlata urged • m usslve atrlp on public beaches
Aug 15 to show that working·
class people had the same rights
to "lnltlgral tans" aa those who
<·an afford private bea\ches, there
was alm05t no response on public
beacht!b
Nonetheless. there were more
women 10 mono-kims tha.6 ever
before on Italian beaches Crom
Venice's Lldo to chic spots near
Rome to secluded co_ves on
islands. And on sdme of the
trendier beaches men and women
alike sunned completely naked.
l'here was the usual spate of
denunciations ,by irate cham·
pions of traditional modesty and
police swooped up dozens of bare
sunbathers for offending public
decency.
But one judge in Genoa dis·
mU;sed cases against two young
women lasl week saying that
Italians are mature enough to
look at bare breasts withoul risk·
ing a breakdown of morality.
Italians youths known as
"Metropolitan Indians," who•
sp~nl the last yeur painting their
races and performing Indian
FromPageAJ
mVINE •••
freeways and agricultural prac·
lices, there remain some
animals.
Occasional coyotes chase after
the blaclctailed jackrabbjt in the
area. Birds of prey there include
the wh1teta1led kite, the bur-
rowing owl. the redlailcd hawk
and the turkey vulture.
According lo the report, there
a re no rare or e ndangered
species on the site.
The project proposes some
landscaped areas that might sllll
be habitable by birdlife.
-Archeologic Resources: Site
surveys indicate there would be
no adverse impacts to such re·
sources; no sites were found.
Shoot Victim
May Lose
Eyesight
Doctors at UCl Medical Center
are fighting today to save the
eyesight of a Santa Ana man who
was shot after being accosted by
a group of teenagers early Sun· d ay morning.
Police identified the shooting
victim as Richard Valdez, 22, of
810 S. Bristol St .. Santa Ana.
A report of the incident said
Valdez was driving home al 3: 15
a .}Tl . Sunday when he was
stopped in an alley behind 1020 S.
Bris tol St. by about eight
teenagers.
When the group demanded that
Valdez let them search his car,
be started to drive off, police
said.
This is when a youngster
"about 15-years·old" pulled a
gun and fired a single shot that '
struck Valdez in the eye.
Police said the wounded man
managed to drive to bis nearby
apartment and that a resident
there drove him to the medical
center in Orange where he un·
derwent emergency surgery.
there was no running water and
was told by Mr1. Hampl that the F'~-h J'..T.• t •
toilet was emptied once a week. '-ltUJ y re im
The deputy s aid the elder
Hampl was dirty and perspiring F'-11 -d 'Fa;r' he avily nnd a s ked him for t.AU."6 ~
something to drink and eat. He
appeared to weigh about 75 ~ ...... :LI_ • _J
pounds, the s]>Okesrmm m*"'d:---.?.U§l._..D~O,..,S~~l.,...tr-'1-Uld
The deputy returned later with
a second officer and released
Hampl after be confirmed he was
not under the guardianship ol his
son, the spokesman said.
OfttNGI COAST
A Newport Beach woman re·
mains hospitalized in fair condi·
tion today alter she was injured
in a head·on crash Saturday
night.
dances In the aweeta, coo1res•t·
ed on the island of Sardlnla for
the summer ~d decided lh•t
even Indian loin cloths were too
restrictive.
Local officials called for help
and got a full-scale mllltary raid
that rounded up those wbc
couldn't grab their clothes and
run fast enough to escape.
One young girl who was arrest·
e d complained : "Here hr
Sardinia, everybody goes nude,
only they don't say anything to
the rich people on the Emerald
Coast because they are con·
sumers, while our principal fault
1s that of not paying the vacation
fees."
Aulhorit.Jes said the raid -was
not because the Indians were
nude, but because they bad
pitched tents on territory where
camping was not authorized.
PrisOll Parelee
ln seltlencing Coulter In
Hamilton County Common
Pleas Court. Judie
Thomaa NurTe said, "I
think it ls a sh-,me that he
used such an outstanding
presentation as 'Roots' as
the eiccuse for perpetraUna
his crime."
Coulter. 42. of Utica.
Mich., maintalne.d in·
nocence by reuon of in·
sanity, His attorneys con·
· tended he was driven to his
acts last Febnaary after
watching the televised
series based on Alex
Haley's novel.
Game Show. Champ
Held in Burglary
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of .... O.lly ~llet lt•ff
A colorful prison parolee and
electronics genius, who police al·
lege set up a legitimate firm with
$29,000 in TV game show win·
nings, then burglarized other
firms to stock it with merchan·
dise, is in Orange County Jail to·
day. ·
Fountain Valley police detec-
tives who arrested Daniel J.
Portley, 31, obtained two
criminal complaints over the
weekend charging him with
breaking into a local realty firm.
Portley, 31 , of Santa Ana,
already was staying, at least
temporarily, at Orange County
Jail, when charged with the
Fountain Valley burglaries.
He was previously arrested on
Au g. 26 by Santa Ana police, on
charges of possession of stolen
property and possession of a
firearm by a convlct.S felon.
Bail la automatically denied
when a person on pruon parole ls
a r r e s t e d ·u n d e r s u c b
circumatances. •
"The Orange County Sheriff's
Department and other qencies
have holds on hJQl too," said
Fountain Valley Detective
Robert Mosley, who obtained
cb~ges again.st the suspect.
l:le and his partner, Detective
Tony Marley, beean their in ...
vestigatlon of the burglaries
based on a tip apparenUy result·
Ing from overheard jailhouse
gossip.
"The guy's a genius," Mosley
savs of Portley.
\ •
Police Capture
Child Molester
By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ... Dlllty fttlet le.ft
Jerry LeRoy Opsoo, a con· fes~ed child moteater who fled
the Harbor Area before he could
be sent to jail, la U:a custody today
in Colorado while authorlli~s
there probe his involvement in a
series of child molestatlo~ln the suburbs of Denver.
Opson, 48, was facing three
months ln Orange County Jail
and three years probation in con
nection with his guilty plea to one
count of misdemeanor child an-
noying stemming from a series
of Harbor Ar ea and La1una
Beach cases last spring.
He fled. however, before he
could be sentenced and a $.'50,000
fugitive warrant seeking his re-
turn was med by the Harbor
Judicial Di.strict Court.
It waa that warrant that led to
1)11 booking Friday in the
Arapahoe County Jail i n
Colorado.
Detective J ames Taylor of the
LltUeto.n. Colo., Police Depart ment said Opson was arrested
t here after alle1edly ap-
proaching a young eirl In a park
and attempting to lure her into a
dit~h.
Opson was aocused or luring
four Newport Beach, Costa Mesa
and Lafuna Beach youngsters in·
to seclUded areas and molesting
J,bem when he was arrested by
Newport B:e¥b police in April.
Local police mt four felony charges of chU molestation
apinst him. but those charges
were reduced to the one misde-
meanor count during plea
bargainh1g.
Opson was freed when court of·
Clcials further agreed to cancel
his $100,000 bail in return for his
promise to appear in court for
sentencing.
Taylor said Opson was not
booked in connection with the
Littleton incident. He said Opson,
who has a lengthy criminal rec·
ord, is being held on the Harbor
court warrant pending extradi·
lion .
Bul the Colorado l•wlflan said
Opson Is a suspect in "several"
child molestations that have oc· curred in the south m etro Denver
area during the summer
Opson fled the Harbor Area
jual before he was to bave been
sentenced on July 12. That sen·
tencin1 was the subject ot some
controversy as local parents
groups peblloned the court to
have Opson committed to a state
facility as a m entally disturbed sex offender.
Fre.. Page.41
STUDY •••
the Irvine Indu strial
Complex·East, n ear th e
confluence of the Santa Ana and
Sanl)iego freeways.
Mrs. Henderson said Irvine
has a number of large fi,rms
already in the area which might
use the wne, which also would
attract others once it was
established.
' SNOW-FIGIHING
SEER UNNEEDED
TUCSON, Ariz. CAP) -Tucson
city officials say an offer from a
Pennsylvania firm specializing
in snow forecasts won't be
needed this year.
Tom Price, director of opera·
lions, said the city received an of·
fer Crom Accu-Weather lnc. of
Slate College, Pa., to "take the
guesswork out of your snow fight·
ing operations."
That would take some doing.
because Tucson's snow fighting
operations are virtually nonexis·
lant.
DAILY PILOT t>olice booked Robert Llncoln
Brown, 44, of 416~ CarnaUon
A\'e., Corona del Mar, on felony
drunken drivin1 char1ea in COD·
nection with the crash that oc.
curred at 11:30 p.m. at Ford and
She's crying for help. Are you listening?
.IH•• ""'" Ylc• ..... l .. 1'1-0t""'111~
Y"-9t~ •1111•
Jamboree Roads.
Hospitallzed was KatblHn
Sherman. 60, of 2'38 Arbutus St.,
a puaen1er in Brown'• car.
Another pusenaer, Sally Bola.rt.
-45, ol La Jolla alao auffeN(} in·
juries in tht ml&bap but •bt -.,u , treated and rtleued from lloq
Memorial tto:~~l wbtH Kit. l Sbemum rem botpltaUHd.
Pollce all•••· Brown'J car, wbltb wu traveuu wistbound
oa Foc'd.. atniek ~ lbtn eroued
the center divider, 1ma1hlfta into
acar~Uu'ee"91llltrl·
atric horror show. ll's a warm. rriendly environment.
where •killed therapists help people to sort out their
own lives. And give them new tools to handle the
pcoblems, they tbousht were too big to handle ulone.
If you know someone who is experiencing on
emotional cnsit_ call the HOPEUNrr .
A truined coun.~or will be at the other end of the
line. Reaey to help. Rel\dy tQ unswcr any questions
YOU:may have.
Please make the call lhnt wm show her somebody
cares cnoup to listen. t
(
! • ' i
f
I I I
. Lag1•na/South Coast
. . .
Afternoon
N.Y.Stoek
VOL. 70, NO. 2SS, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY~CALIFORNrA MONOAY,~SEPTEMBER 12, 1977 TEN CENTS'
ay S'tEVE MITCHELL m-.~.-.w
Laaun• Beach City Council
m embers bave narrowed the
search for a clly anlmal lbelter to
three louUona, and now ~I
officials are trylnR lo fil\IN out
which WQU.ld be the beal baraaift
for the city.
Mayor Jon Brand, who baa been
Going tor Ii
mMlli\g with Irvine COmpany of.
riclala lo recent week•, aaid the
new owners ol the land develop·
ment company have "tentetlvely
a1reed"toaJlow La1uoah~to
conatnaet an ua.lmal •helter and leae company P?Qperty far at
least ftveyean.
Ke w:kted the city mllbt later be
able to purchase the parcel, a
1ravel parldna lot. located one.
quarter mOe north or the Art
Featival 1rounds on \he west side
ol Lacuna Canyon Road.
But Vice Ml)"Of Stl)y•Bellerue
expressed concerns tbe city i:nilht construct a permanent
shelter cla1y to ftnd lt bas to tumJt
b~t over to the Irvin• Comp&A)'
atmtmdofAveyeara.
Carl l layward mounts an assault on the
Huntington Beach Pier dur ing s urfing
competition this weekend. This phulo was
taken during qua rte r-final action Sa tur·
day. H ayward finished third in the m en ·s
d ivision of Huntington Beach's annual
summer Surfing Championships.
SJC Airpo~
· Compliance
Office_, Quits
One or San Juan Caplatrano's
lirst airport compli.ance officers
has announced his resignation
from the job du4 to "personal
reasons."
San Juan's three compliance
officers are responsible for en-
forcing the city's controversial
airport-control ordinance.
Capistrano Airport officials
sald today the resignation of San·
ta Ana resident Frank Lewis, ef·
fectlve Sept. 15, was due to moral
convictions.
"He (Lewis) felt he couldn't
morally enforce the new or-
dinance,'' an airport spokesman
said. ·
Lewis is expeeted to reveal hi,s
reallOOS at an ~~rt press con·
rerence scheduled Tuesday after -
noon.
Lewia • duties at the tiny
. airfield lnclGde monitoring area
flights th insure they follow
specified traffic patleru and re·
ceivin1 required takeoff and
landing forms from pilot.a.
The airport ;Jtdinance, which
authoriies the compliance of·
ficers to monitor airfield ac·
tlvlties, is the subject ol a lawsuit
by area pilots seekin& to have the
law naled unconstitutional.
City offidaln:onftrnmtUWtl
had tendered his resignaUori, but
said his letter listed reasons
"personal ln nature."
Man Electrocuted
LOS BANOS <AP> -A Fresno
man wu electrocuted here ·Fri-
day while wortin• on the root d •
mobUebome.
Game Show ChCimp
Held in Break-i m
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of .. CHllf ~ .........
A colorful prison parolee and
electronics genius, who police al·
lege set up a legitimate firm with
$29,000 in TV game show win·
nings, then burglarized other
firms to stock it w,ith mercban·
dise, is in Orange County Jail to-
day.
Fountain YaUey police detec-
tives who arrested Daniel J.
Portley, ·31, obtained t"o
criminal complainta over the
weekend charging him wit•
breaking into a local realty firm.
Portley, 31 , of Santa Ana,
already was stayin1. at lea.st
temporarily, at Oran1e County
Jail, when charged wlth the
Fountain Valley burglaries.
He was previously arrested on
Aug. 26 by Santa Ana police, on
charges or possession of stolen
property and possession of a
firearm by a convicted felon.
Ball is automatically denied
when a person on prison parole ls
arrested under such
clrcumatances.
''The Oranee Oounty Sheriff's
Department and other aeenciea
have bolds on him too," said
Fountain Valley Detective
Robert Mosley, who obtained
cha.rps &Cai.nit the suspect.
He a.M bis partner, Detective
Tony Marley, beeaa their In·
nattgaUou ot the bur1lartea
baaed on a tip apparently result·
ins from overheard Jailhouse
•ossip.
. "TIMI guy's a cen.lus," Mosley
aaya Of Portley.
He alleges that Portley
burglarized the Red Carpet
Realtors office at Ull51 s . Brook.bunt St. on two occasions
ID 1978. taking a total of $2,620 in
videotape equipment.
One brt1akmoccurred lD March
of that year and the second in
May, Del. Moaley explaloed to-
day.
A bh•~k and white video tape
ayst.em WU at.oltn iD th• tint of
the two profeulonal burJlaries,
he said and the flrm replaced it
with a more co1tly color
videotape1yaW1n afterward.
''Re fi,ured he mtiht u well
go back and 1et the •ood stuff,"
Mosley speculated in outlinin&
the cqe qainlt the ex..con and
1Vew1Y~ e-~m. O/Ji ll01ley ~Wnt• Portley wu
VJ •Jiid • re1pon1tble tor both o( those ·~i ... bur1larM1. ·~ ... Au&bGrithie )Wobtnc Portley'•
• backlroriirid.., h' won tn,000 on Pi ·~, ,.,~iiJ.i-.'tl the·_ty same •tiow "Celebrity Kl i UUCI .r hiepetiles, •t "bttnf status
a the leeoa4 bll.Mlt winner ln
the ...... ·1 blllo17.
3 Shelter Sites :
She sug1ested the city look into
purchase of the SPCA site, also on
L11una Canyon Road. Coun·
cUmen agreed t.o write to SPCA
oftlc:tals expressin& Interest in
purchueof thatsite.
A tb1rd alternative that wUI re-
ceive a closer examination by the
city, is the possibility of using lhe
city'• old dump site on the canyod
road as a place for an animal
shelter.
That site was rec9mmended t>Y
the planni.o1 commission a5 the
best location for the sholter, but
endorsement came betore
Brand's meetin1 wltb Irvine
Company officials.
"I think we should continue to
study all of the alternatives,"
I
Brand s aid, "but this Urvife
property) looks like a way to save
the clty a lot of money.'•
Councilmen last month allocat-
ed $Q0,000 in the 1977 • 78 municipal
budget for the animal shelter. The
city previously leased animal
shelter services from Canyon
Kennels.
A rea's Water
.
Cut by . F lood
D.ESE~T HOT SPRINGS (AP>
-Southern California's main
water supply was cut off when
raging floodwaters red by a sud-
den desert thunderstorm sent a
wall of mud, boulders and debris
crashing into a section or the
Colorado River Aqueduct, the
·Metropolitan Water District re·
ported. (Related story, AS>
MWD spokeswoman JoAnn
Lundgren said five pumping
plants along the aqueduct were
shut down Sunday after Saturday
$400,000
Reques_ted
For Park
Lq\&na Beach <:ouncll rpem·
bel"I are seeking aboUt U00,000 in
ma\ehiAg 1tate grant. morn!y to
aog,\,llre a lO·acre ridgellne
pattel called Moulto11 Meadows
for use as a regional park.
City officials expect to learn
from county supervis.ors this
~-whether they wlll receive
$150,000 in 1976 Park Bond Act
money to add to another $250,000
ln the city's federal revenue
sharing funds set aside for the
Meadows project.
ln the meantime, U,le council
ha.s ordered the planning staff to
apply for a matching a.oo,ooo
from the Land and Water
Grant.
If the county share ls approved
by IQPervisors, and ii the city re·
celve.s the federal matching
funds, $800,000 will be available
for purchase of tbe Moulton
Meadows and Crescent Bay Park
on the cliffs in west Laguna
Beach:
The 10.acre Moulton Meadows
parcel runs along the hilltops
north of Arch Beach Heights. It is
owned by Aliso Viejo, a· sub-
sidiary of the Phillip Morris
Company. ·
Councilmen last week Instruct·
ed c:lt)' 'Planners to include the
1 Tf'Ord "teeional" ln the applica-
tion for f edetal fundln1 to the
·Moulton Meadows park parcel.
Vice Mayor Sally Bellerue said
tM city w~ld have a better
ch&Me d obtalnin1 the crant if
the park was specifled for re·
gionaJ county use, and not for
"JustalittluarkJnLuwl&.'· _
--Uounc l members: Phyllis
Sweeney and John McDowell
were appointed to look lnto the
genenl plan amendmenta for the
proJectalte.
The park, when developed,
would provide opportunities for
plcn1Clkinl, walkln1 trails, tot
Iota, tennis, basketball, softball
and open areas for other ac·
Uvit1es.
night's floodwaters ripped a
2,500-pound steel lid off an access
hatch at the Fan Hills pumping
station, about 12 miles east or
Desert Hot Springs. They sent a
torrent of mud and boulders the
size or pool tables into the
s ystem, choking orr the
aqueduct ....
The MWD noticed the reduced
flow about 2:30 p.m . Sunday, the
spokeswoman said.
•·But we didn't find out what
the problem was until 6 p.m.
when we fQund the entire transi·
tion structure over the pipeline
was destroyed and huge boulders
were lving next to the aqueduct's
pipes/' she said. "That's when
we shut down all our plants."
The 242·mile·long aqueduct
runs from Lake Havasu on the
Arizona border to"Lake Mathews
in Riverside County.
Lundgren said heavy equip·
ment and dozens of work crews
were at the scf!ne trying to assess
<See FLOOD, Page AZ)
Stole n C ar Cr a sh
Kills Marine, 2 1
A 21-year-old Camp Pendleton
Marine was killed Sunday in
downtown San Clemente when
the•tolen car b.e wu drlvinc bit.a
palm tree.
Joe Valencia was pronounced
d~ad at San Clemente General Hospital, following the 4;:.J a.m.
accident.
At 3: 1S p.m. Sunday Raymond
Hocking, .of 200 Ave. Santa
Margarita, called police to re·
port his red foreign sedan stolen.
Hocking told police the car bad
di!appeared between midnight
and 11 a .m. from a parkin& place
in front of his house.
I
Lt. Clifford Gates said the
missing car was the same car in-
volved in the early morning
crash.
G•tes said Valencia was driv-
ina northboC&nd on El Camino
Real and lost control of the car.
Police found skid marks along
JSC!~eetof pavement, Gates said.
The car crossed the highway
and collided with a palm tree on
the southbound s1de of El Camino
Real at A venida Palizada.
Gates said the impact sent
parts of the car 100 feet farther
down the road.
Con/ e saed LB Child
Molester Ciiptured
By JOANNE REYNOLDS ment -said Opson was. arrestea
OftMDllltv,.lleutatt there after allegedly ap·
Jerry LeRoy Opson, a con· proaching a young girl in a park
fessed child molester who fled and attempting to lure her into a
the Harbor Area before; he could ditch.
be sent to Jail, ii In custody today Opson was accused of luring
in Coloracfo while authorities four Newport Beach, Costa Mesa
there probe his involvement in a and Laguna Beacb youngsters in·
series of child molestations ln the to seclUded areas and molesting
suburbs ot Deovu. them when be was arrested by
Opson1 46, wu facina three Newport Beach police in April.
months ln Orange County Jail Local p<>llce flied four felony
and three Yea{& probation (n con· charges of child molestation
ne(!Uon with bis guilty plea to one agalnst him, but those char Jes
count of mjademeanor child 80• were reduced to the one misde-
noylng stemmlnc from a series meanor count durinf plea
or Harbor f.rea and Lacuna bargaining.
Beacbcaseslastsprina. Opsoo was Creed when court~f·
He-fled; llowever:-Defore be -ttctlllrtufther aareeQlo cance
could be sentenced and a $50 ooo his Sl00,000 bail in return for bis
fugitive warrant seekin8 bia' re-promise to appear in court for
lurn wu filed by the Harbor sentencing.
Judicial District Court. TJylor said Opson was not
It was thll& "arrant that led to ~ed In connecUon with the
hla booktnc.. Frjday lo the LittletonincldenL Hesald<>Peon,
Arapahoe· County .{Jill Jn who bas a leacttay crlmlnaf rec· -Ot'd, la being held on the Harbor
Co=ve lamet Taylor Qt the u:rt warraat pend101 extrad:i-
UtUettxa, Colo., Police !>.part-•
. _.._._ --
.12 OAll y J'l.;:,LO;:;;,_T __ L _S_c __ ~M.;.on .... d ... •.ir•-b;.;.,,1;,,le;;;...;..m-.t>e;;.;,r...;1.;;;2;... l;.;;9~17
l•t lt'e.IC .. 1
Italy Topless
Bathing Grows
ROME CAP I Theaummeror
197'7 1111w mort: topleH aun
bnthin1 than ever before on
Italy's bHches, but the Vatlc1tn
maintalns thai "nudity remains
1t phenomenon more or less of the
weaJlhy class "
··The ereat miuonty of our
people even today tblnt dlf·
ferently from the hedonl1Uc
matenalllm of the minority,"
Ra1mondo Manzm1, editor ot the
Va tic an daily L 'Osservatore
Romano, wrote m a front-page
editorial
.. The little and middle class
people did not respond and will
not respond to this deafening in·
vi talion to the striptease.·'
In fact, when leftists urged a
massive strip on public beaches
Aug. 15 to show that worklna·
class people had the same right.a
to "mtegraJ tans" as tholle who
can afford private beaches, there
was almost no response on public
beaches.
BetiChgoers
]a~ Coast
In Sunshine
With sunshine, warm water
and school looming over their
heads, South Coast beachgoers
were out en masse durine the
weekend, keeping lifeguards
busy despite the small surf.
San Clemente city guards said
they made 62 rescues on Satur-
day, although only 13 swimmers
needed help Friday, and.only 14
on Sunday
Lifeguard Lt. Lynn Hughes
said nearly 12,500 visitors basked
in the sun each day during the
weekend, and another 11,000 vis-
ited the county's Niguel Park
area each day.
Stale lifeguards said two
suffers suffered minor head in -
juries near the "boneyard" surf·
ing area al Doheny State Beach on
Sunday, and said that park was
nearly filled lo capacity all
weekend.
Laguna Beach lifeguards
made only 15 rescues over a
weekend m which 20,000 visited
city beaches Saturday and 17,000
made it down Sunday.
LB Planners
Set Hearing
On Parking
Laguna Beach planning com·
missioners will hold a public
hearing Tuesday lo discuss a
parking management program
which could mean construction
of up to three parking structures
throughout the city.
Planning di rector Doug
Schmitz said the commissioners
will discuss several proposals to
rund the structures and will
also discuss establishing study
task force for the north and south
end of Laguna Beach.
He said the task forces would
probably be comprised of
merchants in the areas under
consideration ror parkin& struc·
tures.
The public hearing will focus
on parking manaaement reports
compiled by the plannln1 com·
mi11ion and a plan developed by
the city's Parking, Transp0rta-
tionand Circulation Committee.
The hearing will began begin
at 8 p.m. in City Council Cham-
berar
Funds Halted
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
federal judae ha.s halted the dis-
tribution of $&7 mlllloo in federal
public worka funds to Los
Angeles and San Dte10 counties
at the reque1t of 12 rural school
diatrlct.s 1n both area.
Nonetheless, there were more
women in mOl\o-kinls than ever
before on ltaJlan beaches from
Venice'• Lido to chic apota near
Rome to .ecluded coves on
islands. And on aome· or the
trendier beaches men and women
alikesWUled completely naked.
'!'here was the usual spate of
denunciations by irate cham-
pions of traditional modesty arid
poJlce ~ooped up do1ens of bare
sunbathers for ortend1n1 public
d~ency.
But one judce 1n Genoa dla·
missed cases •calrult two young
women last week saying that
ltallans are mature enough to
look al bare breasts without risk·
m1 a breakdown of m9rality.
Italians youths known as
.. Metropolitan Indians," who
spent the last year painting their
faces and performin& Indian
dances in the streets, congregat·
ed 1on the island or Sardinia for
the summer and decided that
even Indian loin cloths were too
resttjctive.
Local officials called for help
and got a full-scale military raid
that rounded up thoae who
couldn't grab their clothes and
run fast enough to escape.
One young girl who was arrest-
ed complaine d : ··Here in
Sardinia, everybody goes nude,
only they don't say anything to
the rich people on the Emerald
Coast because they are con-
sumers, while our principal fault
is that of not paying the vacaUon
fees.''
Authorities said the raid was
not because the Indians were
nude, but because they had
pitched tents on territory where
camping was not authoriied.
Mrs. Hiler
Of San Juan ~
Buried Today
Burial services took place to.
day in El Toro for Pauline Gard
Hiler or San Juan Capistrano, an
artist and longtime California
resident who died of injuries sus·
tained \n a traft\c accldent last
montb.Shewas85.
A spokesman for Lesneski
Mortuary in Sa.n Clemente said
today Mrs. Hiler died in the early
morning hours Sept. 8 at Sad·
dleback Community Hospital.
Funeral rites took place at San
Clemente Presbyterian Church
Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Hiler was driving one of
two cars involved in a colUsion at
the dangerous intersection or La
Paz Road and Moulton Parkway.
Louise Pearson, 84 , also ot San
Juan Capistrano, w·as a
passepger in the Hiler auto and
died shortly after the crash.
Mrs. Hiler, who had lived in
California for 45 years and In
Orange County for 18 years, was
active in south county art circles.
She was a member of the Arts
and Crafts Club of San Clemente,
the San Clemente Oil and Water
Color Societies and was a charter
a nd founding member of the San
Juan Capistrano Art AssoclaUon.
Mrs Hiler was an art and
home economic• graduate of the
Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, N.Y
and taught in both fields ln New
Jersey schools
She ls survived by a son, Dr
Emerson Hiler of Irvine, a
daugh~r. Jeanne Maroder of
Pal«l. Alto; a shster, Helen
Hornbeck of New Jersey, alx
grandchildren and one 1rea•
grandchild.
*J11._k Food'
Subject of
Board Meet
. DlflY .................
FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL (EVEA) FO~fONCOROIA ~INDERGARTEN STUDENTS
Maureen Roach (left) and Jo~n T•~" -~Teacher M•rou•rft• Sheet•
p,.._ P.,,e AJ p,.... P~ AJ
FLOOD DAMAGE •• •
the damage. During the drought,
the aqueduct has carried more
than a billion gallons of water a
day serving about 11 million peo-
ple in Southern California.
She estimated that there are
about four to six feet of debris in
the aqueduct's two 12-foot wide
pipes.
"If we can get it cleaned out
and back in operation in a week,
then we probably won't have to
ration any more than we've had
to up until now ,'' she said. •·But if
we can't get. it repaired by then,
then we'll really have to fieure
out how serioua tbe effects will
be."
The plants have exceeded their
designed pumping capacity since
the drought began, she said. The
plants, each of which bas nine
pumps, are built for eleht·pump
capacity with one pump idle in
reserve. However. all nine
pumps have been worldng 24
hours a day, seven days a week
until now.
SCHOOL •••
District teachers and ad-
ministrators currently number
763, including 111 new to the dis-
trict this fall. The number of dis·
trlct classified employes, includ-
ing clerical, maintenance and
food service workers, is up by 45
full-time employe1 since June.
The Capistrano school district
includes the communities of San
Clemente, San Juan Capistrano,
Capistrano Beach, Dana Point,
Laguna Niguel and part of Mis·
sion Viejo.
WASIDNGTON (AP> -The
Justice Depiu1ment'a criminal
fraud division is studying a re·
port by the comptroller ot the
currency which reportedly shows
th at Bert Lane~ widely used
. bank-owned aircraft for f amity
and paUUcal purposes.
A S'pOkesman for the Justice
Department confitJDed Sunday
that the dMiton recel~ the
study . ..Bllt he sldd it.a referral
was r.ou tine and did not
necesa4fil>' indicate thent would
be IDYJll'OICCUtlOD. Presfclent. Carter, m«urkhile. wu aa>d to be con.sldertns the
LANCE CASE Aef &.ECIS
ON CARTER--£dttbrl•I, A6
postponement until next week of
a news conlerenc& which alm~t
certainly would be focused on the
financial affain of his budget
dir'fftor, includln1 the question
of whether Lance should reelen.
Press secretary Jody Powell
said today no decision baa been
made on whether to put off the
session, orislnally scheduled
Wednesdity. But he indicated the
Prealdent may want to watt unW
Lance completes his testimony
schedule<t to begin Thursday
before the Senate Goyemment
Affairs Committee.
ID Lance's nativ~ Georgia, the pr~i<lent-elect of the American
Bankers Association said to-
day that the Lance affair "is
casting a pall over the banking
industry .. .it may give banking
a black eye it it goes un-
challenged."
A.A. Mulligan, in a speech pr e-
pared for the N aUonal Bank Card
Convention in Atlanta, said be
doesn't know if Lance actually
has done anything wrong, but
some of the alleged activities
"are clearly not typical of banks
in this country."
While confirming the existence
of the comptroller's report, the
'Justice Department apokesman
refused to dlscusa the contents.
...
--------
Orange Coast
" ' EDITION
Tod•y' Closing
N.Y.S&oeks
•
VOL. 70, NO. 2SS, l SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C"UFORNIA N TEN CENTS\
.
Flood Trims Area~s WateP Supplies
0&5ERT HOT SPRINGS <AP)
-Southern California '1 main
water supply was cut off when
ra&ina noodwaters fed by a sud·
d en desert thunderst.orm aent a
wall ol mud, boulders and debria
crashing into a section of the
Colorado River Aqueduct, the
Metropolitan Water Di.strict re·
ported. (Related story. AS)
MWD spokeswoman JoAnn
Lundaren aald five pumpln1
plant. alont th• aq11ecJuct were
shut down Sunday after Saturd~
nlabt's floodwaters ripped a
2,500-pound ateel lid off an access
bat.ch at the Fan HJlls pumpinJ
station. about 12 mlla east of
Desert Hot Sprlnp. They sent a
torrent of mud and boulders the
size of pool tables Into We
system. cbokina qff the
•
aqueduct. ~
The MWD noticed the reduced
now about 2:30 p.m . Sunday, the
a pokes woman said.
"But we didn't find out what
the problem was until 6 p.m.
when we found the entire transl·
Uon structure over the pipeline
was destroyed and huge boulders
were lyin& next to the aqueduct's
pipes," she said. "That's when
O/f ered No PlellS
Diedrich~ Others
Fae~ Jan. 30 Trial
Orange County supervisor s
Ralph Diedi'lch and Philip An·
thony and three codefendants
were ordered today in Superior
Court to face trial Jan. 30 on
multiple criminal counts con·
tained in a Grand Jury indict·
menl.
Diedrich, 53; Anthony, 41, and
codefend1JI1ts Gene Conrad, 43;
Dr. William Kott, 55, and at·
torney Michael Remington, 37,
declined to offer pleas today
before Judge Philip E . Schwab.
Judge Schwab agreed to let th-t
five plead on the charges after he
ruled on a motion by the defen ·
dants for removal of the district
attorney from the case.
Lawyers for the five told Judge
Schwab today that tbe indict·
ment was the result of bias and
prejudice on the part of District
Attorney Cec;_ll Hicks.
An indictment Is a formal
charge made against a person by
a grand jury. It does not establish
guilt or innocence.
The defense attorneys suggest·
ed that the state attorney
general's office should take over
the prosecution chore.
Codefendant M arti n
Kirschner, also indicted by the
Grand Jury, was not present In
court today. His arraignment
will be held Friday before Judge
Kenneth Williams.
All sjx race trial on multiple
felony counts related to alleged
violations of state political cam·
paign and financial disclosure
laws. ·
Diedrich faces a separate trial
on two charges of perjury con·
talned in a separate Indictment.
Judge Schwab set the trial date
for March6.
Fled BarfJor Area
Kirschner, 57, and Conrad face
a separate trial on perjury
charges.
Confessed Child
Molester .failed '
Crmh Victim
Ctdkd 'Fair'
~Ho1pital B) JOANNE REYNOLDS cw .. o.i,.,..... .....
Jerry LeRoy Opson, a con·
fessed child molester who fled
the Harbor Area before he could
be sent to jail, is in custody today
in Colorado while authorities
there probe his involvem-ent in a
series of child molestations ln the
suburbs or Denver.
Opson, 46, was facing three
months in Orange County Jail
and three years probation in con·
nection with his guilty plea to one
oount of misdemeanor child an·
noying stemming from a series
9f Harbor Area and Laguna
Beach cases last spring.
, He fled, however. before he
could be sentenced and a $50,000
fugitive warrant seeking his re-
turn was flied by the Harbor
Judlcial District Court.
' ll was that warrant that led to
his booking Friday in the
Arapahoe County J ail in
flolorado.
•'Detective James Taylor of the
Littletpn, Colo., Police Depart ment said Opson was arrested
there after allegedly ap·
proaching a young girl in a park
ahd attempting to lure her lnt.o a
ditch.
'Opson was accused of luring
four Newport Beach,.. Costa Mesa
aM Laguna~ yquncsten in·
to secluded areas 8.ftd molesting them when be was arrested by A Newport Beach woman re·
Newport Beach police ln April. mains bolJJ>itallzed in fair condl· Local police filed four felony Uon today after she was injured
charges of chlld molestation in a bead·on crash Saturday
aealnst him, but those charges ntght. ·
were reduced to the one misde· Police booked Robert Lincoln
d l llrown, 44, o( 416'Ai Carnation meanor count uring p ea Ave., Corona del Mar, on felonu bargaining. 1 Opson was treed when court of· drunken drtvlng cbtr1es ln con·
ficials further agreed to cancel nection with the crasb that oc·
his $100,000 bail ln return for hi.s curred at u :ao p.m. at Ford and
promise to appear in court for Jamboree Roads. sentencing. . Hospitalized wN.. Kathleen
Taylor said Opso11 was not Shlrman, 50, of ZJ.18iltbutus St .•
booked in connection with the a pasaenaer in Btown's car.
Littleton incident. He said <>Pson. Another pasMnser, Sally Botart.
who has a lengtby criminal rec· • 45, of La JoUa also suffered in·
ord, is being held on the H.arbot Juries in the miahap but abe Wi5
urt t di g ........ u~ treated. and relea.Hd frolJl!Jloag co warran pen n e .... ,,_.. u mortal H ·' a1 b M lion. _ , •• e osp1t w ere rs.
But the Colorado lpwman said Sliennanfemaiml\O&pltaUzed.
Opson la a suspict in "several" · Polld a.liege Brown's car,
chltd moldtatlons that have OC· • f which Waf travelin1 westbound
curred in the south metro Denver on •Ford, lttuc~ and then croued
areaduringthesummerz the cemer divider, smaahln& into
· Opson fled the Harbor Atta a car carrying three teenaaers.
just before he was to have been The jUvenlln, two boys aeed 17
sentenced on July 12. That sen· and a J.S.yeer·old alrl, all suf·
tencing was the subject of some fered minor injUries. One of the
controversy as local parents boys was hospitalized overnight
groups petitioned the court t.o and released from 'Hoae
have Opson committed to a state Memorial Jioepital Sunday.
facility aJ a mentally disturbed Brown was released from jaU
se~ ()(fender. on his own reeocnizance Sunday.
we shut down all our planta.''
The 242·mlle·lon1 aqueduct
runs lrom Lake Havasu on the
Arizona border to Lake Mathews
ln Rivenlde County.
Lund1ren said heavy equip-
ment and dozens of work crews •
were at the scf!ne trying t.o assess
tbe damage. During the drought,
the aqueduct has carried more
than a billion gallons of water a
'
day serving abOut 11 million peo-
ple in Sou.them California.
She estimated that there are
about four to six feet of debris ln
the aqueduet'o two 12•foot wide pipes. .
"It we ·can 1et it cleaned out
and back in ~ration in a week.
then we prob ly won't have to
ration any more than we've bad
to up until now," sb&sald. ''But ll
we can't fet it repaired by then,
then we'l Nally have to fieure out bow serious the effects will
be.''
The plants have exceeded their
d93iened P\HllPtng capacity since
the drought began, she said. The
plants, each of -..'hich has nine
pumps, are built for eieht·pump
capacity with one pump idle in
reserve~
BIKE RACKS WERE FULL AGAIN TODAY AT HARBOR AREA SCHOOLS
Summer Is Over for 24,000 Newport·M•H Elementary and High School Students
Ne~9rt Firemen Reluctant
•
Seek 'C.op' GontractScholars
Newport Beach'• firemen will salaries. -Uave Sun
ask city councilmen tonight to Co u n c i l m en a r e also
give them the same contract scheduled to ratify the police
councilmen recently awarded to contract at their meeting which
the city's police employes. gets under way at 7:30 p.m. at
Tb e 115 ·m e mber Fir e city hall.
Fighter's Assoc:iatlQn is the only
city &mploye group that has
railed to reach a contract settle· 7\.Tew 'l"'I/ PnH.e ment with the city for the 1977·78 l °tj i ,. --e·
fiscal year which began July 1.
Firemen were pondering a
two-year contract offer when Cl·
ly councilmen a1reed last month
to give the Wl·member Police
Employes Assoclauon a one-•·
year contract which carried the
J'etirement system changes
soughtbybothgroups. '
Since then, a representatjve of
the firemen hu asked for an
identical contract for hls group.
According to FranlC Ivens, As·
siatant to t:&ef ity manacer /the
cost of the on ·year contract for
firemen . would be $240,285, of
which $225,000 would be deferred
to the 1978·79 fiscal year by in·
stituUnc.. the retirement system
c~ge U. the final day or the
contract.
· The c ban1e given to
policemen and sought. by
firemen is ffom the current
system which ofiera reµrement
at ace 55 baaed on SO percent of
the averaae of the laat three years' salaries.
Tbe new 1y1tem often reUre-m ent at age 50 baaed on a
formula, computed at two per·
cent timeir the number of yean
worked, which is applled to an
averaie of the rast three years·
Urweiled in '
Pilot Today
The Daily Pilot has two fall '77
features debuting in today's edi·
tion. '"° There are two items t o
s howcase: the annual football
favorite. Pigskin Pickeroo; and a
brand·new , upbeat '1aily
television listing.
The daily television &uide i.s
the newestface in the lineup, em·
phaslalng the latest changes in
sports programmlng, features on
new video shows, listings for all
Los Angeles channels as well as
San Diego stations seen on cable
services, and all ln bigger,
easier t.o read type.
You will find the Daily PUot's
new television listing the best
newspaper guide in Orange
Co~tr-.IUs on paae 8'1 ptpk1n Pickeroo ls a favorite
that con.tea bade t{>. the Dally
Pilot pa11ea every lootbail
season. Cltetk the MOhday to
W ednesd•Y Dally Pilot sports
pagea for detans on the Ptcakin
Pick~ contest which wUJ n.m
the next 10 weeks. It's on page B2
tOday.
You na~e the Winners each
week .00 share in th& prlaes -lf
100 prove to De tbe 'best Ptol·
oosUcator oo the Or&Jl8e Coast.
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
CM .. o.lly ~Slaff
As predictable as the swallows
returning to San Juan
Capistrano, bus stops were
jammed with youngsters decked
out ln new school clothes today.
Other, older students cruised
their way to classes on new
mopeds ..
The 1977·78 school year has
begun.
There was more trauma than
drama in the Newport·Mesa
Unified School District as an
estimated 24,000 elementary and
high school students made their
retum to academe.
' Many school ·officials, includ·
ing Superintendent John Nicoll
and Deputy Superintendent
Norman R. Loats, were out in tbe
field early t.oday for what was
described as a "smooth and un·
eventful" transition from sun to
study.
"There were a few missed
buses and a few lost kids," ac·
cording t.o district official Jean
Harmon. Jlowever, she expected
most students to be in their right
places by the end of the day.
Meanwhile, the Oranee Coast
College admissions department
was nothing short of a
"madhouse" today, reported
employe Nancy Fetterlins.
"There's not a parkln~ space
to be fouod and tbe office I.a filled
with student. changine their pro.
era~ Crom d~y to n11ht and
(8eeSA1AJUES, Pa1e "2)
Coast
Lance Plane
Use s Probed
W A.SKINGTO N IA I' 1 Tht
Ju!>ltct• l~partmcnt * c n m1n1d
fraud d lYISlon ll tUd)'ln(l iA rt'
port h> the comptroller of I.be
t•urrency which reportedly lt\oW!I
th»t Borl Lance widely used
b..ink owned aircraft for famfly
.and pohtJcal purpos~11
A spokesmitn for the Justice
Department confirmed Sunday
Thief With
Death W~h?
Huntm~ton Beach pohce
are searching tugh and low
for a pre dawn thief who
snatched a seven-foot-long
comn with brass hinges
from a motorcycle lrailer
parked at the corner of
Heil Avenue and Beach
Boulevard over the
weekend.
Coffin ownet Dennis
Kirby, 35, of Huntington
Beach, said someone tooj
the S500 coffin late Sattar·
day night or early Su'hday
morning from the trailer
he had parked in a vacant
lot and chained to a nearby
telephone pole.
Woman Dies
In Newport
Auto Crash
Rosary will be recited tonight
ror Corona def Mar resident
Margaret Ann Ricketts who was
killed Friday mght in a traffic
_ accident near her home.
• Mrs. Ricketts was a passenger
in a car driven by her 17·year·
old daughter Dianne. Police said
it was hit from behind by an
auto drrven by Kenneth Ti scher,
32, of L~ng Boech. Tischer re-
m ains in custody on a charge of
manslaughter in connection with
the 6:40 pm. crash on Pacific
Coast J-ljghway in the Shorecliffs
area.
Rosary 1s scheduled tonight al
s even o 'clock at Our Lady Queen
• of the Aneels, 2046 Mar Vista
Dri v e , Newport Beach
Memorial Mass will be conduct·
ed al the same church Tuesday
a t 10 a .m.
In addition to her daughter,
who received minor injuries in
the crash, Mrs. Ricketts leaves
her h1..sband, James, vice presi-
dent of the Anaheim plant of the
Northrop Corp.; sons, James,
Demus, GrPgory, Jeffrey. Ran·
dall a nd Donavan. anothe r
daughter, Deanne. and three
grandchildren.
The family s uggests memorial
donations to the Heart Fund or a
favorite charity J
Front Page A I
SALARIES. •
mght today," she said.
Late registration at the Coast
Community College District's
largest school will be held from 8
a .m . to 7:30 p.m . until Thursday,
with the admissions office shut·
ling down at2:15on Friday.
Wayne Wolfe, associate dean
of admissions and records. said
enrollment already has reached
about 24,500 students and will
swell to nearly 28,000 by the end
of the semester.
About 8,000 students are con·
sldered full time with the rest
laking lighter sched ules or
enrolllng in evening cJasaes.
Newport Beach police reported ~ a high number of missing
teenager repom filed by parents
over the weekend.
"It happens every year at this
time," one officer noted.
ORANQIOOAIT N
DAILY PILOT
........ "'"" l'ttJI•"' .... """'Pllf Jac-•.C.t•; • .. V1t• ......... M .. O-.tl~ ,_ .. ~ •.. .,
TllMMIA.M_,..
M•"ff•llt l'ilW
CMfkt"·"-~ ........ \.A•""'-Ml ........... .,, .....
tt11at the division received the
:itudy Out he said its referral
w 1u rouun., and did not
neiceuu.rtly lndic ~to there would
be any pmeecution.
President Carter, meanwhile,
wu11 said to be considerln1 the
1>011tponement until nex\ week ol
it n,ws conftrenc~ wbicb alm95t
certainly WO\lld be focused OD the
financial affairs ot hla bud&et
director. including the question
of whether Lance should realan.
Press secretary Jody Powell
s aid today no decision has been
made on whether to put off the
LANCE CASE REFLECTS
ON CARTEA--£dltorlal, A6
session, originally scheduled
Wednesday. But be indicated the
President ma1 want to wajt until
Lallce completes his tesUmony
scheduled to beain Thursday
before the Senate Go~ment
• Affaira Committee.
In Lance's native Gt?ocgla, the
president-elect Of the American
Bankers Asaoclatlon raid to·
day that the Lance affair "ls
castins a pall over the banklng
industry ... it ma)' give banking
a black ~ye if it goes un·
challenged.''
A.A. Mulligan, in a speech pre-
pared for the National Bank Card
Convention in Atlanta, said he
doesn't know if Lance actually
has done anything wrong, but
some of the alleged aqiviUes
"are clearly not typical of banks
in this countl'y."
While confirming the exlstence
of the comptroller's report, the
Jµstice Department spokesman
refused to dbcuss the contents.
But the Washington Post said
today that the report says Lance.
who heads the Office of Manage·
ment and Budget, used two
planes owned by the Georgia
bankli he headed to take personal
vacations, to Cly his children to
school, to commute and to lake
part in politics.
The report came amid new
suggestions that Lance resign to
avoid embarrassment to Carter
and as the Senate committee
opened its second week of hear·
mgs into the case.
Noted Pilot
Leslie Hall
Of Mesa Dies
Leslie L. Hall, Costa Mesa resi·
dent and a private pilot who new
out of Orange County Airport for
more than 20 years, died Satur·
day after a lengthy illness. He
was 62.
Known by fellow pilots as "Mr.
Orange County Airport." Hall
was co-pilot for world famous
stunt pilot Paul Mantz until an
air accidenf claimed Mantz's life in 1966. I
He was also pilot for Dr. Louis
Cella for 12 years and flew for
many movie stars including John
Wayne, Gary Merrill and Sonny
Bono.
Mr. Hall is survived by his
mother Mrs. Florence Hall
Birch; a son, Daniel W. Hall, of
New Jersey; two brothers,
Robert W. Hall, of New Jersey
and. Thomas Birch, of San Fran·
cisco; and a sister Mrs. Edward
Giddings, of Newport BeJtch.
Private family services will be
held with burial at sea. The fami·
ly suggests memorial contribu-
tions lo the Kidney Foundation.
Safe Boating
Course· Slated
For Newp'ort
The Balboa Power Squadron's ran course tn .sale boatJfl8 aeta
unc:te.r way tonight wtth t'e&latra.
·lion at 1 p.m . at the Nt!wport.
Harbor Yacht Club, 720 W. Bay
Ave .. Balboa. RegistraUon alao
wm be accepted next Monday
night.
The 13-week course covers
every aspect of safe boaUna.
The course I.a frN to th~ public.
Inttructonr are e~enced bGat
operaton and skippers from tbe •
Uatbor Area.
Tbe Balboa Power Squadron lJ
a unit Of~ United Stat• Power Squadrone, lart Ht boatln1
educaUonal orpniaaUoo m &be
U.S.
,
Big Be"le• Ott· Beacla .
Balloon
Voyage .
Thwarted
BEDFORD, Mass. (AP) -
Two American balloonist.a who
had hoped to cross the Atlantic
ended their troubled ru1bt today
and were. plucked from the sea
off the coast of Iceland by a U.S.
Air Force helicopter.
The two landed 800 mi.tes short
of their destination in France.
"They had reached land and
then were blown back over· the
sea where they touched down." a
spokesman said. "They are be·
ing nown to the capital~at Reyk·
javik for a meeting with U.S.
Embassy officials."
Darkness had fallen by the
time of the rescue, the Air Force
spokesman said. He added that a
cutler from Iceland would at-
tempt to recover the balloon and
gondola, but he did not know
when.
The helium balloon and gon·
dola landed five miles offshore in
the Five Finaers district on
Jceland 's northwest coast, 120
miles from the capiU.l.
on and suntan lotion mix in this photo
taken Sunday in Huntington Be ach .
Beach~o~rs rel ax as crew or tanker
moored , off Huntington Beach blows out
boilers, sending black smoke from ~hip'::.
stack.
The landing and the pickup of
the two Americans capped a
morning of problems.
Kent Retrial Ordered CnmxlJJJam
NB's Beaches
CINCINNATI <AP) -The 6th
U.S. Circuit Cdurt of Appeals re·
versed a lower court ruling today
that had cleared Gov. James A.
Rhodes, state officials and Na-
tional Guardsmen of damages
stemming from the May 4. 1970, shooti.ng~ at Kent Stat.e Universi-
ty in which four students were
killed.
The appellate court declared
that ·a new trial must be.held
because at least one jury
member had been "threatened
and assa<ilted during the trial by
a person interested in its out·
come."
The $46 million damage suit de·
veloped after Rhodes sent Ohio
Na lion al Guards~en i,J\to the
Kent State campus In May 1970 to
control demonstrations by stu-
dents protesting U .S. troop in·
volvement in Cambodia dunng
the Vietnam war.
Four students were killed and
nine others wounded on May 4,
1970, during a confrontation
between students and National
Guard troops.
The damage suit was filed in
1975 by parents and victims of the
shootings. Rhodes and state of-
ficials were cleared in a 9·3 de·
She simply can't handle her problems by hersetr ~Y more. She needs help before it's too late. And
she's not•atone. Every day, people no different from
you experience an emotional crisis often provoked
by a-tr~ttbl~-personaJ.relatK>nship •
• Someone may become so despondel'\t she grows
fearful or nervous for no appa(Cnt reason. She loses
sleep over lnsipificant things. She explodes over
trivial matters like the car not starting. Sho caR't
., carry on with her f nmily.
She needs help .
Professional help. T lte only real hope tor regain·
Ing a normal, productive lire. • •
The kind of bclp ~vailublc ut the HOPEUNJT.
A profeasion&f psychfotric treatment progrnm for
people trapped in an emotional cri i .
It works.
lt's not an liolation w~rd. not some kind of piychi·
c1s1on after 15 weeks of
testimony.
The American Civil Liberties
Union filed the appeal to the
circuit court in 1976.
A spokesman for Rhodes said
the governor would have no im·
mediate comment on the ruling.
Chan Cochran. the governor's
administrative aide in Colum·
bus, said that Rhodes' attorneys
had told him not lo discuss the
case as long as litigation was
pending. He said Rhodes had not
received any notification of a re·
versal by the appellate court.
Ne~port ·Beach lifegua'rds
said today they had the beach to
themsleves after sharing it this
weekend with an estimated
170,000 visitors.
Accordi-ng lo a lifeguard
spokesman, riptides generated
by three and four.foot waves,
kept lifeguards busy Saturday.
res cuing 152 people out of a
beach crowd estimated at 85.000.
Sunday, an identical-size
crowd produced only 85 rescues
as the surf dropped and the off·
shore currents disappeared.
atric horror show. It's a warm, friendly environment,
where skilled therapists help people to sort out their
own lives. And give them new tools to handle the
problems, they thought were too big to handle alone.
-1f. you..k.now someone who is ex~encing an-,-=--~-.. ,
emotional crisl , call the HOPEUNIT.
A trai ned counselor will be at the other end o( the
line. Ready to help. Ready to answer a ny questions
yo u may have. '
Please make the call that will show her somebody
cares enough to listen.
/ Saddleback
EDITION
Afte,.rneon
N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 70, NO. 2SS, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 12, 1977 T§N CENT~ ;
~
17,639 Expecte~ ~VUSD Enrolhnent
o.llyf'li.t ...... .,, 0..,, ·-
IT WAS BACK TO SCHOOL TODAY FOR THOUSANDS OF ORANGE COAST YOUNGSTERS
Carol Marleau Showa Son Shawn, 5, Good Thing• About Cordillera School, Ml11lon Viejo
Student
Enrollment
Vp 1,650
Today was the first day of
school in the Capittrano Unm.d
School District, where about
1.650 more students were expect·
ed today than came to school last
September. ··we aren't aware or any major •
hitches in the openJn' of 1cbool,''
Charles Medearoa, ad -
ministrative services director,
said today. "We won 't know the
exact number of students we
have or the little problems that
always crop up until later in the
day."
The Capistrano school district
is the largest in Orange County
by area, comprising 20 percent of
the county's land, much of it still
to be developed.
Three new schools opened to·
day to accommodate the spiral-
in& number of students.
OftlcJaJ1 at the new Harold
Ambuehl Elementary School In
San Juan Caplstrano said they
expected about 500 students this
morning, but may have more
since parenta were bringing their ·
chlldren in thla mor"nin1 for the
liret time to reclater them.
ShorecUtts Junior Hi1h in San
Clemente, originally scheduled
for completion ln Aueust, will not
be llnished unUl November. In
the ·meantime, Shorecmlfs stu-
dents and ataff are meeting for
classes ln the afternoons al
Marco Forster Junior Hi1h In
San Juan.
Capistrano Valley Hi1h School
in Ml ulon Viejo opened on
schedule today, but students wUJ
go home at 12 :40 p.m . fortheflnt
week to allow construction
. workers to apply Ontthlne
&ouches, said prlncJpal J ohn
Smart. •
''T~ay was ,a utUe hecUc, with
<8eeSCHOOL, Pa1e.U>
A 2l·year-old Camp Pendleton
M arlDe W'8 kUled Sund~ Jn
downtown Sift Citroen~ when
the •tolen car be wu drMnt hit a
palrntret.
Joe Valencia wu pronounced
dead at San Clemente General
Hospital+ rollowln1the4:30 a .m.
accident
disappeared between mklnl1ht
and lli11.ra. ff'OJJJ a P•r~na place m fk'oat °' hl1 house.
By IAURJE KASPER Ot•o.11, ....... ...,
Saddleback Valley Unified
School District offlclala e:v>eeted
to see 17 ,639 students in tlleir 22
elementary, Intermediate and
high schools for the beginnina of
a new school year this momin1.
The district's projected
population indicates a 1rowth of
about 1,400 students above last
year's enrollment of 16,232 stu-
dents.
Although actual enrollment
Cigw-es were not to be made ,
available until late thl5 after-
noon, Robert Ferguson, the dis-
trict's director of planning and
development, said some schools
were expected to be ·'tight.''
He said the district does have
several empty .classrooms now
but he expects most will be fi!Jed
by the end of the year.
The district's newest school,
La Madera Elementary School in
Lake Forest, was expected to
open at or above capacity in
some classes:
Ferguson said lhe overflow
from these classes, wbkh appear
to be grades four, five and six,
would be bused to San Joaquin
Elementary School In Laguna
Hills.
Despite the tact that the schoof
already is crowded, Principal
Kathy Dick said the opening
went smoothly. "It's exciUng,"
ahesald.
Dr. Pat McDaniel, principal of
Rancho Canada Elementary
School, used similar words to
describe the first day at his
(See PUPILS, Page A2)
Area's Water
Cut by .Flood
DESERT HOT SPRINGS CAP>
Southern California's main
water supply was cut off when
raging floodwaters fed by a sud-
den desert thunderstorm sent a
wall of mud, boulders and debris
crashing into a section of the
Colorado River Aqueduct. the
MetropoULan Water District re-
ported. (Related story, AS)
MWD spokeswoman JoAnn
Lundgren said five pumping
plants along the aqueduct were
shut down Sunday after Saturday
night's floodwaters ripped a
2.500-pound steel lid off an access
hatch at the Fan Hills pumping
station. about 12 miles east of
Desert Hot Springs. They sent a
torrent of mud and boulders the
size of pool tables tnto the
system, choking off the
aqueduct.
The-MWD noticed the reduced
flow about 2:30 p.m. Sunday, the
spokeswoman said.
"But we didn't find out what
the problem was until 6 p.m.
Swimming Pool F qll
Fatal to Toddler
Five days after tam,., Into the ·
,family swimming p ool, 10·
mqntf\-oJd Sheri Pichler of
lA•una llins died Sunday at
Children'• Koepitll ln Orange. '4 •poketman tor the Orange
County Coroner'• office said to-
day the chlld never reuined con-
sclousneu alter the accident,
wblch occu.rred Sept. 6 at
about 9 a.m at 24881 Grissom
Road. •
Llttle Sheri apparently
followed an older chUd Into the
backyard to play and to~pted into
the pool!.. the coroner s deputy
·Prison Parolee
'
said.
Her mother spotted the child
face down io,.tbe water and pulled
her out. The tot was taken to a
neighbor's house , where
artificial respiration wa.s applied
until patamedics arrlved to take
over.
The coroner's deputy saJd to-
day that the child was stUI alive
when paramedics took her to the
hospital.
An autopsy was to be
performed this week to de·
termine the exact cause of the
baby's death, ttie deputy said.
when we found the entire transi•
lion structure over the pipeline
was destroyed and huge boulders
were lying next to the aqueduct's
pipes," she said. "That's when
we shut down all our plants."
The 242-mile·long aqueduct
runs Crom Lake Havasu on the
Arizona border lo Lake Mathews
in Ri verslde County.
Lundgren said heavy equip-
ment and dozens of work crews
were at the scene trying to assess
CSff FLOOD, Page A2)
Nudity Only
Pursuit of
The Wealthy?
ROME CAP> -Thesummerof
1977 saw more topless sun-
bathing than ever before on
Italy's beaches, but the Vatican
maintains that "nudity remains
a phenomenon more or less of the
wealthy class."
"The areat majority of our
people even today think dlf·
ferentty from the hedonistic
materiallsm of the minority,"
Raimondo Manzini, editor of the
Vatican daily L'Osservatore
.Romano, wrote In a front-page editorial.
"The little and middle class
people did not respond and will
not respond to this deafening In·
G
1 Sh c vitatlon lothestriptease." a _....e ow ha1t1p In fact, when leftis~ urged a ~ ~ _ _ massive strip on pubhc beaches
Aug. LS to show that working·
class people had the same rights • B gl to "integral tans" as those who In ur ary can afford private beaches, there
was aJmost no response on public
beaches.
A black and while \'ldeo Lape
system was stolen in the tlrst of
the two pl'Of esslonal bur1larles,
he sald and the firm replaced It
'With a more costly color
tldeotapesystem afterward.
"Re figured he mlebt as wen
go back and get the &ood stuff,"
Mosley speculated In outlining
the cue against the ex-con and
TV came.sf\ow Wh\J.
Authorities probing Portley's
1,>ackirbund say he won 129,000 on
the TV 1,me shdw "Celebrity Sweepstakes," acbllna atatus
' as the aecond highest winner In
the program 'a hlatQfy .
Nonetheless, there were more
women In mono-kinis than ever
before on Jtallan beaches from
Venice's Lido to chic spots near
Rome to secluded coves on
islands. And on some· of the.
trendier beacbe!l men and women
allkesunned completely naked.
New TV Page
Urweiled in
Piwt Today
.l2 OAIL'i',,ILOT ')fl ~~--~--:;:::~===s:=....--~ Stadium
Okay
Sought
S•ddltb.ar k t'olh•i t> tru\h:t'
"lll I>.• a-.k\'<J ton1aht to approvt•
pr~p1H taon uC prd11nlnary
drawma~ for t'(}f'*lrul'Uon ol "
Mlu10l'I Vh1Jo ompu1 1lhleU1·
-.tad1um lhul m1ay ult1m;ately
11eat up to 10.000 Pf'C)plf"
Or l':d llurt, a .,~l\lunt lo
Supertntt•ndt•nt Robert L<>m
bard!, s.ud to<h&y the drawinas
bt>lng souahl will be "rouah
srhemahcs" to determine how
the facility mteht look
llnrt noted th.At the <'olleae
board has already bud&eted
$200.000 for stadium llghlfi, whtch
are currently 1n the engineering phase
··we are asktn~ for the draw-
ings so we (•an relate the ll&hts to
the whole lhtn&." Hart said
Though some colleae offlc1ah
have indicated that the stadium
may ultimately hold 10,000 peo.
pie. including 5.000 permanent
and 5.000 temwrary seat3, Hart
said the 1nit1al seating will be
somewhat lci.s.
"lt will be expandable," Hart
said, noting that the Initial
capacity will be around 5,000
with expansion lo 7,500 or 8,000
within a few years.
1 lart .said 1t should be possible
to budget stadium construction
in the next couple of years.
Also on the agenda for the
board's consideration at Its 7:30
p m m('cling in the college
hbrary 1i. a request for approval
of gcnl!ral silt• development
plans for lhc northern district
campus in Jrvmc
Accordmg to Harl, college
planners are trying to get all the
necessary approvals to go to bid
m the initial development phase
by Oct 10· That would include
such things as grading and other
preparatory work 1n the property
at Jeffrey Road and Irvine
Center Drive
Mrs. Hiler
Of San Juan
Buried Today
Burial services took place to·
day m El Toro for Pauline Gard
Hiler of San Juan Capistrano, an
artist and longtime California
resident who died of injuries SUS·
• tained in a traffic accident last
monlh.Shewas85.
A spokesm an for Lesneski
Mortuary tn San Clemente said
today Mrs. Hiler died in the early
morning hours Sept. 8 et Sad-
dlcback Com munity Hospital.
Funeral ntes took place at San
Cle me'lte Presbyterian Church
Sunday afternoon
Mrs. Hi ler was driving one or
two cars involved in a collision at
the dangerous intersection of La
Paz Road and Moulton Parkway,
Louise Pearson, 84, also of San
Juan Cap ist r a n o, was a
passenger in the Hiler auto and
died shortly after the crash.
Mrs. Hiler, who had lived in
California for 45 years and in
Orange County for 18 years, was
active In south county art circles.
She was a member or the Arts
and Crafts Club of San Clemente,
the San Clemente 011 a nd Water
Color Societies and was a charter
and found ing member of \he San
Juan Capistrano Art Association.
Mrs . Hiler was an art and
home cconom1cs graduate of the
Pratt Institute In Brooklyn, N.Y.
and taught In both fields in New Jersey schools
She js survived by a son, Dr
Emerson Hiler of Irvine; a
daughter, J eanne Maroder of
Palo Alto ; a sister, Helen
Hornbeck of New Jersey, six
grandchildren and one great·
grandchild.
Body Reco ver e d
-' ALAMEDA (AP) -The Navy
has recovered the body of a re-
serve pUot killed in the cruh of a
jet air tanker into San Francisco
Bay.
DAll.Y PILOT
ClNClNNATI (AP>
JUH cowter: who rnata.
talntd the televl1lon 1how
·•ftoota" drove hlm to hold·
ina ll people holt•a• at a
homo for unwod molttera,
w 11 n ntmced today to 83
to J 10 ytus In pri•on
111 11tntt>nc:l na Coul\tr In
llamlll.on County Cosnrnon
Pl~u Court, Jud~e
Th1Jmu Nurre said, 'I
th111k it la a ahame that he
used such an outatandlna
presenluUoo 1ts 'Roots' as
th• •xcuae tor l*'~tratlnl
hlscrime."
Coulter, 42, of Utica,
Mach ., mai ntained in-.
nocence by reuon o( in·
sanity. Hi• attorneys con-
tended be was driven lo bis
acts last February after •
watching the televised
series based on Alex
Haley's oovel.
,.,....,__AJ
SCHOOL •.•
students and lnatructors tryln1 to
find \heir w-y around," Smart
uld. "But it 'really went pretty
well, all things considered."
Smart said he expected a stu·
.dent enrollment of about 1,400 at
· Capistrano Valley, although a
number of. parents new to the
area were showing up today to
register their students.
District enrollment is expected
to be about 16,295 studenta, com-
pared to 14,645 on opening day last
year, clistrict official£ said today
Student enrollment was 15,159 at
the end of school last June.
Dis trict teachers and ad·
ministrators currently number
763, including 111 new to the dls·
trict this fall. The number of dis·
trict classified employes, includ·
ing clerical, maintenance and
food service workers, is up by 45
full-time employes since June.
The Capistrano school district
includes the communltJes of San
Clemente, San Juan Capistrano,
Capistrano Beach, Dana Point,
Laguna Niguel and part of Mis-
sion Vie.io.
Heart Attack
'No Reason
To Quit Sex'
CO PENHAGEN, Denmark
CAPJ -If you can take a brisk
one-hour walk covering two to
three miles or climb five nights
of stairs with no trouble, then you
can meet the physical demands
of sex, a Finnish doctor reports.
Cardiologist Dr . Kari
Sa unamaeki, who works at
Copenhagen's National Hospital,
gave his advice in an artkJe 1n a
physical training club journal of
the Danish heart disease associa-
tion.
He said having a heart attack
is no reason to give up sex. The
widespread fear of sutrering
another attack in the act of sex is
nothing more than a myth, he
wrote.
The cardioloalst satd thla
abstentionist myth is stronger in
the United States than in Deri•
mark because "middle·qlas1
prejudice'' and rellelon tend to
convin ce many American
postcoronary patients that ·'the
waies of sin is another heart ft· tack."
Contrary to the tracUttonal
view of sex as "one of the vices
taxing the body and shortening
life," Saunamaekl wrote. lt could
be an intearal part of the
post-coronary patient's ph)'sical
exercise proeram.
But he warned aaalnst basing
the exercise procram on aex
alone. Sex Would be elfecUve on-
ly lf It involves "technique. caJl-
lna for conalan&.mu.cuJar eur ...
lion or a aulliclently hJ1h inttftai.
ty for a period of at least ao
minute!," Saunamaekl aatd. ..
Man Struck
By Auto, Diee
:t
In Hospital
MUsitians Wanted Thief With
Death Wuh?
SatMlleback R ecruiting Students Huntlnaton Beach police
are searching high and low
ror a pre-dawn thief who
snatched a seven-foot-long
comn with brass hinges
from u motorcycle trailer
parked at the corner of
Heil Avenue and Beach
Boulevard over the
weekend.
The Slddlcback Valley Unllied
School Olstrict'a 1hc elementary
lnatrumentul music teachen
hope to recruit 1,200 students into
their program during the next
tewdays.
The teachers are offerina
tralnin1 in violin, cello and other
tnstnunents during special pro·
srama featuring tunes from
"Star Wars" and "Rocky" at
each of the elementary schools
durlna ~· and next week .
Lust year, about 1,000 elemen-
tary school youncstera started in
the dbt.rtct's music program, ac-
cord.lna to Joanne Harris, music
supervisor. She said 900 or the
youngaters still were mvolved m
the proeram at the end of the year.
Youn11ters whd sign up tor the
program this year will be given
lessons twice a week durtnc Ute
school day. They also will have
the opportunlty to Joln orchestras
and jazz oands before school.
Mos t of the youngsters,
however, will be required to pro·
vide thelr own instruments. Mrs.
H•rrb 11td the district ha.a only
about JOO Instruments -mostly
the lar1e and expensive types -
available in the elementary
F ,.._P"fleAJ
PUPILS INCREASE. • •
school.
The Lake Forest school, which
la just starting its second year,
also is expected to reach capaci·
ty this year and have some stu·
dents bused to San Joaqul.Jt.
Ferguson said enrollment
arowth at tbeae M!hools is due
primarily to the many new
homes being built in the area.
With all the new homes going
up, he said, it is ditri.cult to pro·
ject the number of students who
will be attendina the scbOQJs.
Although projections are based
on pa.st averages, "the numbers
game sometimes doesn't work
out." he said.
About 2,579 students were ex·
pccted to enroll at El Toro High
School which has, with the addi·
lion of 10 ·portable buUdings, a
capacity or 2,600 students.
Mission Viejo High ~hool,
which has a design capacity of
2,300 students, was expected to
have 2,693 student.a In classes.
Some changes bad to be made
at both schools because buildings
have not yet been completed.
Ferguson said El Toro should
have the use of 10 needed pprta·
ble buildings by the end of next
week. Construction or an addition
at Mission Viejo High School
s hould be completed within the
next several weeks, he said.
Ferguson aald it ls fortunate
that Mission's students are used
to crowded condltJona and con-
struction on campus. "It's really
amatlng how those klds get
along. You really have to hand lt
to them," he 1ald.
Both schools are expected to
lose several hundred students
next fall when Laguna HJU. High
School open1.
SNOW FIGHTING
SEER VNNEEDED
TUCSON, Ariz. <AP) -Tucson
city ollicials say an offer from a
Pennsylvania firm specializing
in snow forecasts won't be
needed thla year.
Tom Price, director of opera-
tions, said the city received an of-
fer from Accu-Weather Inc. of
State College, Pa., to "take the
guesswork out oC your snow fight·
ing operations."
That would take some doing,
because Tucson's snow fighting
operations are virtually nonexis-
tant.
schools.
While the music proaram hu
been growing, she explained, dis·
trlct trustees have cut budget al·
locations for the purchase of new
instruments for the last.· two
ye an.
The music supervisor aaid
younesters should rent their ln-
struments from music store!i.
However, she admitted this may
preaeot a problem because
"there are only so many rental
lnatrumenta available ln
Southern California."
Mrs. Harris 1ald tome
younisters may have to go u far
away as Long Beach to rent the
instruments. "It's really a
serious problem," abe said.
Mn. Harris said the ~cl
probably will have 2,200 to ~.soo
elementary throutb hllh school
s tudents enrolled lo the in·
slrumental program.
The student.a will have the op-
portunity to participate ln ac:hool
procrams u well u the All Dis·
tricl Music Festival at the
Anaheim Convention Cenw in
thesprina.
Ptde8tinian
Role Sought
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
Carter administration, in a
further shift of it.a Middle East
poUcy, ls on the verge of assert·
ing a need for Palestinian
representation in Arab-Israeli
peace talks.
The State Department will call
soon for a Palestinian role at the
Geneva conference the ad-
ministration is tryine to set up
before the end of the year,
sources said.
The move ls being rn ade despite
the failure or the Palestin·
ian Liberation Organisation
governing council to approve
U. N. Security Council resolutions
i m plicity recognizing Israel's
right to exist.
Coffin owner Dennis
Kirby, 35, of HunUn1ton
Beach;so.ld someone took
the $.W> coffin late Satur-
day night or early Sunday
momin1 Crom the trailer
he had parked in a vacant
lot and chained to a nearby
telephone pole.
F ,....r.,,eAJ
FLOOD •••
the damage. During the drought.
the aqueduct has carried more
than a billion gallollS of water a
day serving about l1 mUUoo peo.
ple in Southern CaliforoJa.
She estimated that there are
about four to six feet or debris in
the aqueduct's two 12-foot wide
Pif.es. .
'If we can 1et it cleaned out
and back Ir\ operation in a week.
then we probably won't have to
ration any more than we've .had
to up until nowt" she said. "But lf
we can't fet t repaired by then.
then we'l re,.Jly have to fiaure
out how serious the effect.a will
b-s."
The plant.a have exceeded their
designed pumplng capacity since
the drought began, she said. The
plants, each of which bas nine
pumps, are built for eight-pump
capacity with one pump idle in
reserve. However, all nine
pumps have been working 24
hours a day. seven days a week until now. ·
Fare Cause Sought
. SAN DJ EGO CAP) -The cause
was sought today after fire left
$150,000 damage at a mattress
warehouse. No one was hurt in
the blaze Sunday al 33rd and
Market streets.
She's cryillg for help. Are JOU liSteniQg?
She simply can't handle her problems by herself
any more. She needs help before it's too late. And
she's not aJone. Every day, people no different from
you Qxperience an emotionaJ crisis often provoked
by n troubled personal relationship.
Someone may become so despondent he growit
·fearfu l or nervous for no apparent rca~n. Sho loses
,' slceP, over fnsigb ificant thlng&. Sh oxpfodea ovor
·~ trivial mactcn filce the Ctlr not startina. She can't cam on ~th her family. '
• .Slie neodJ help. \
Professional bclp. Tbt. only raal hope for regain·
fng a normal, productive life.
Tho kind o( lictp nvailabl~ a~ the HOP£UNIT.
A profcsaioAAf ~ychiatric tr.atn,cnt proaram for
~& pcd in en cmotion11I Cfisls. 1
1t works.
ll'a no& an isolation ward, not some kind of p ychl·
atric horror show. It's a warm, friendly envlronmenc,
where skilled therapists help people to sort out their
own lives. And-aive them new tools to handle the
problems, they thought wero too big to band le ulone.
ff you know someone who is ex·pericncing an.
emotional crisis, call the HOPEUNIT.
A trained ~ neelor will be nt the other end of the
line. Ready to he1p. Reody to answer any question~
you may have.
Please make1the call that will show her somebody
cuoa enouah to listed.
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•
Mond!y. September 121 19n S OAJLY PILOT d
Route to Sidi&
Apprentic~s
Work, Learn·
.,, SYLVIA POaTga
G . •
People wbo wanl Jo develop akllll that can· comm&Qd
1ood aalartes and secure jot. ahould consider appreo.
tJceshlpt. one of the oldest WQll to acqu!re s.kfils.
More than 100,000 Americans eat.red formal appnn.
Ucesbip programs io 1978 alone. A formal apprenUceablJ>
hu t.tiree advanta1•: ,
(1) It is recopized by employers as 1 tborouch tralD.lnJ
period.
(2) Completion or an appreoticesh.tp eases e_nt.ry Into a
job.
(3) It improves chances for advancement.
COMPETITION FOR APPRENTJCEsmPS la keeo.
The programs usually involve two to tlvo years of On·tbe.Job
tra.Ulini as well as some formal cluaroom experience.
Apprentices learn on tbe Job. under the guidance of an
experienced craftsman. In addition to spending a few hours
a week ln the classroom, the apprentice also may receive
ongoing technical instruction. .
Alt.hough they vary from state to state:bere are buic
requirements ror various apprenUceabJp positions.
-Plumben and pipefitten: Usually, apprentices must
be at least 16 years old to apply. It takes five years to com-
plete OP-the-Job training
and at least 144 boun of
related classroom in·
structlon each year.
Employment prospects
are good.
Money's
Worth
COSMETOLOGISTS: APPUCANTS must be at least 18,
have compb ted the 10th erade and usually mu.at have
finished a state-approved cosmetology course. Job proepects
J\re above average.
-Medical uaiatanta: Trainin1 is available in voc:.a-
tional institutes and fn Junior coUe1es. Most medical asi.s·
tants also receive tra.lning in a ph,Yllc.ian's olftco. Employ-
ment prospecta are excellent.
-Dental t«h.niclans: Tralnioa is done on the job, in
vocational 'hJgh school or Junior college; applicants need
manual dexterity. Employment ou.Uook ia very good.
Other fields where employment prospects are above
average include cooks and' chefs. asbestos and lnsulaUan
workers, glaziers and dispensing opticians.
ALSO GOOD EMPLOYMENT AllEAS for apprenticH
are c_arpentry; cement masonry; construction electricians;
construction machinery operaton• roofers.; structural, or·
namental and reinforcing Iron workers; riggers and
machine movers; instrument repairers; industrial
machinery repairers; electric sign repairers; maintenanC'e
electricians and truck and bus me<?banics.
Gen~rally,, apprenticeship proarams are Joint labor-
manascement efforts and are reeiatered with the Labor Department's Bureau or ApprenUcesbip and Training or
with a similar state agency.
For information, check with a local AFlrCIO building
and construction trades council; the Urban League and the
union representing the desired trade.
Veterans may be eligible for benefits or trainina al-lowances.
A list of priced reprints about jobs for which appr~o
ticeships are available may be obtained by writing to the
Department of Labor, Burea" of Labor St~~~~s, Occupa-
tional Outlook Service, GAO Building, "Wrnwston. D.C.
20212.
. A free reprint, .. Jobs for Which App~eotJceshJps Are
Available,•• is avallable to those who send a postcard to the
Con.sumer Information Center, Pueblo, C081009.
Seminar Explores
Vietnamese Trade
NEW YORK CAP) -0 Fifty million people. Vut re-
sources. A soaring import rate -up 33 percent last year.
And an urgent need for many of the products and services
that American buaiDes.s can supply."
With tempting words, the American Management As·
aociation ls inViting Its 80,000 members to take part In dis·
cussions about the "upcomin1 trade and investment op-
porturuties" in a foreign country.
The country is Vietnam.
A.ND ONE OF THE SPEAKERS scheduled at the Sept.
21 seminar ln New York is an international trade specialist
for the U.S. Department of Commerce.
Among the items that the planners say Vietnam micht
export are oil and uranium. but they do not explain bow
tuch potentially strategic items might be made avallable to
the Unit.ed States by< that country's Commu.niat aovern·
ment.
The amount of ( J uranium which mllbt be
IT'nY ~~~ NEW available was not w ~.I. .-;, speclfied either. In a
U .s. Interior Depart·
-----------ment report published last year -the most re·
cent such report available -Vietnam ls not listed among
countries possessln1 significant reserves of uranium ore, or
producing sipificant amounts of lt, In ms.
Subjects on the a1enda include:
-"The move toward normallzatlon."
-"DiplomaUc and psycbologlcal obltaclos. ••
-.. Possible U.S. roles In postwar reconstruction.••
-"Coogreaalonal roadblocks to the lift.lQa of the trade
embareo."
-"Vietnam's willlnpess i.o have U.S. oil CODlpanies
back on oil d.rtll.l.De sites in the South China Sea.••
-''Towiam.''
The American Yanacement Aaaociatlon repreunta
60,000 buaineu and aovernment manaiora. Paul Cun·
ninpam, coordinator for the seminar, aald tho mfftl.nc was
oraa.nbed ''only becatt1e some of our members voiced an ln·
terest" lnltanun1 about trade possiblllUM with vi.tum.
"VIE'l'NAM' 18 NOT OPEN TO trade at the 111omem."
Cunnlnpam aaJd. •'Thia wD.1 be attenct.d by people lOottnc
down the road five or tlx yean."
He estimated that about~ flrml will be repNHDted at
the cloeed seminar; but ti. rdused tQ dlaclou which °'*·
"Our memben com• from a wide ~m. lrom am&ll to •
very lal'le bualneaes," boaaJd.
A bJ'ocbure publicldq tbe Hmlnar HYI Ulat the Jteau
Vietaam needs lnclude macbl'De tooll. •ppUancts, veblcl-.
pluUet, PNuinactutlcala lad reftMd petroleum produeta.
• '
I
ft DAIL V ltlLOT ~onday, Saptembef 12, 1on HousH For S• Honea FOr Sale Mount flor $4e Houtff For 5* HcMtwt Pot Stle ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ··~···················· ··················r··~ •••••••··•··•·········· ········~············· ••..••.......••••.•.... CH.rot I 002 GeMral • 00~ G......a I OOZ GtMrel I 002 GeMt-al . I OOZ ., The ll1P1t Marketplace on the 0r.,... Coett ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
DAILY PILDI CLASSIFIED ADS AMMIVMSAaY
~:.~~:\=~ (842-5878) Orte Cal I Sefvice
Fast Oedit Approval ::J··-· ........ :!"' ' . . . .. . . . "'"
•w.u. "'"''"""' I ""°"' iel . • • • . . . . 5000. '°"
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• IUOIS: A4Y ..... Mn 1001 G ... rel 1001 ChMrWt 1001
.._.... c~ ....., ... ••••••••••• .. • .. ••••••• •••••••••••••••••••,••• •••••••••••••••••••• .. •
~ ..= ~ f; MBYOUS ..._.,. OWMll
DAILY PILOT .. ._. uy1 "SEL.t.". 1mmcul
l•Styforfflleflntht-occupancy. Lowual
c.erntct ............ Mly. prit'tld m l'OmplH " im · .--------1 •NICUl1tl4l. W.500. 1722 Mrl'CHELL
UNJT70
,...._.~Hoffee: MIKE SA V 11..GE AU re.J estate advertLSed ~
lo this newspaJ>t'r 1:. i.ub REAL ESTATE
Jf!rt to the f'ederal Fair 642-f 60 I
Housing Acl of 19681---------1
which makes 11 111eaal to HUNTINGTON
advertise · · .rny pre· IEACH
ference. llm1talion. or 4 UNITS
dlscrim1na1.Jon based on race, color, reUa1on, sex. Four lulturlous units, or national ongm, or U1I with spacloua owner's
intention to make any uo1t . Almost c arries.
such preference. hm1ta· Owner will help finance. Uon, or d1scnminalJon,'' For profit projection ln-
IESTYALUE
IM HARIOR VIEW
2 " a den or 3 bedrm. Oellghtrul patios, yard.
Highly up graded .
Jmmed. occupancy.
~
ll\h.lll Hl\11 '1
. ' " ' , I ]~I~ ( Cusl Hwy r.01an1 ·Jtl M11
C.52 Walker t; ll?c
Real Estate
•
c I ud in g tax shelter
benefits, call 962-7788.
Q. K€Y V 1 P.€ALTOP.sh
GOOD VALUE!
New on the market 2
bedrm or convertlble 3
bedroom. 2 Baths. Good
condition! Hardwood
floors. Stone (pie, priced
LoseU at S71,950. Call
546-4141
~
COATS &WALLACE
REAL ESTATE . INC.
•
• EAST COSTA MESA
TRI Pl.EX
Walk to su~rmarkE:ts, banks. post of·
flee or res taurants from this well dt:·
.• signed triplex. Front unit is ground
levftl with 2 bdrms., convert. den &
frplc. Middle & rear units are studio
type with large living rm., dinette &
kitchen & 1h bath down, plus 2 large
bdnns. & full bath up. Exceptional
buy at $142,500
YOUU Ukl OUR ISP
.. expt:rienced sales pt:rs~l
759-0811
/'\JEUJE\..L
,,.._"' inc h \i!r
l tqun 1 tit• 11 r1 :'J l t,·.ltt
\V I : S I.I : Y :-.;
TAY LOR CO.
HJ·:·\I 'llJfi'.--. "I ' • I. i 11)
OM -CYM 90&.P COUltl lltt.100
$Million view of fairway iri 2 dlnic·
tions. Cor. unit Pinehurst naodet
towilhome. 2 Bdrms, den, 3 ba. cloe~
dbl gar. comm pool, Jacuui & tennis
cts. $18,500 lse/ opt mows you tn.
21115-J.......... .
MIWPOUCIMTa, "-' • 644"4tl 0
G....,... aoozjG .... ral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
CAMEO SHOl.ES
3 Bdrm., home with vaul~ beamtd
ceilings; great patio & view ot canyon
& ocean. $260,000
673·4400
·HARBOR
DM1l0tt of HartMw ht•"hM"t Ce.
IOOJ G...,... IOOZ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Upper CORONA DEL MAR
VIEW
Gorgeous view of ocean,
hills and greenbelt. 3.
Generous bdrm a,
maulve fireplace.
sec.luded pool off fa mily
room & huge master
sulte. Highly upgraded
1245,000. Call tor appl.
dav. 673-8550
Ol'fN "' 9. " s 'UN ro" IJICI. l~INM
LUSK GEM
... amona Jewels; large.
low mainlenancc back
yard. perfect for your
potted plants. 4 Spacious
bdrms.. with comfort.a·
ble family rm., laundry
rm.&more!
ISTATIS
Secluded a bdrtn • 2 ba.
country hocne oo a larae
pool size lot, country
kitchen wilb microwave
oven • used brick
Oreplaco • 1u BBQ and beat ol aO ttie modes price. Call now .. 7111
0PtNlllll•llSl11"110 8fN I•
1~111
MESAOELMAR
$79,900
Lar1e 4 bedroom wltb bealitltully added Cllmlly
room on a quiet street lo
Coeta Mesa. The owner
IA anxious to sell and is
otferin& VA terms at this
low price. CALL quickly
751-3191.
CSELECT
T'PROPERTIES
YOUAStcED
•
,.OMT aow C9fTIR
In the Bluffs, front row center with an ~
unobstnicWd view of the Back Bay.
the Cliffs of Dover and a twinkling
light line in the distance. This ls a
rare R plan with all-electric kitchen •
large master ~uite downstairs and two
add'l bdrm& upstairs. A Uniqu~ plan
in a Unique location. $179,500.
U~ICJUI: liVMl:S
REAL TORS': 675·6000
2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar
also in Mesa Verde, at 546-5990
FOttlT GneNI IOOZ
'\'OU GOT IT • a Ver)' bard to find owner oo-____ !!ml ___________ _
-LUXURY waterfront condo, 2 BR, 2~
·ba. Pool, jacuzzi, 2' hr. security.
Brand new; comp. furn. $220,000 .
cupled pride of
ownership duplex on the
Newport-Balboa
Peninsula. Walk lo
restaurants • beach
stores· you are THERE -
ireat for year around or PENINSULA. 4 BR, 3 ba. home. All
summer rentals. This amenities. Lovely area. $195,000 property has had great
care. 2 Outstanding 2
bdrm units on an easy
access wide street and
best or all a very,
~erate price. Call us
fordetalla6'6·7171.
Ol'fN Ill 9 •II$ fUN 10 et NIC&I
~---'
THE RZAL
~~T~TEHS~
CITYUVIM~
COUHTRY
ATMOSP .. EIE
LIDO ISLE, 4 BR, 2 Ba. Nicely decor.
Lge. patio, beamed cell'•., bdwd firs.
48 Ft. lot. $225,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
;.~ I h" y •• otl t DI ' v.. N B 6 7 ';, f,] t, 1
I 002 GtMt"al • 1002 ..............................................
••NEWONMKT
PRIME
DU"-IX
WEST NEWPORT 3 bdrm-den plus 2 bdrm. Cbaletover 3 car pra1e. PENINSULA POINT
Ponderosa pines & your S275,000
New on the market.; 3
bdrms., 2 baths each. On ~
fee land. Steps to the
beach. Xlnl sum ·
mer/winter rental. Priced al $189,SOO
own picnic area wfth Exceptional comer loca-
BBQ. 28,350 ~q It or lion with easy walk to
land 11 Use u your ~-Bay & Oeeanfronl. Clean
try estate or sub-divide & fresh contemporary
lnto3 E·l Iota! 846-Till design home with unique 673·3663 67S-4m Eves_,
C;J Walker t; lee C. F. Colesworthv Rea1 Elltate
REALTORS 640.00fO -ACCENT OM
reatures. Opt>n 2 story. 4
bdrm + ramily & den.
Soari n g 2 sto ry
g reenhouse Insid e.
PaUos. balc'Qnles & ah'
s kylights. ~hown by
appt.
associated
HROKEA5 RF flt• 11l'.,
JU/', W 8ultr1ifo11 t6(), <#~HERITAGE
COROMA DEL MAR V ALUI • l IDRM
DUP'LEX JACU%%.J WATERFRONT DEL M,.. •
• • REALTORS
PARK LIKE HOME
You drive into a
beautiful sunny cul-de·
sac at.reel. Xtra size lot
and a newly decorated
three bedroom home. One of our most beautiful
homes -a must to see.
Ca11S46·2313
JUST ,,., block to big Best buy In beach area. HOMES MESA -
Corona beach. 2 Bdrm11 Just listed . Owner REAl.ESTATE SPECIAt.-$12,tOO.
In each unit plus a guest bought another, wants 631-1400 Cls. to parks. scbls, ten·
room for your overnight rut sale. Large bdrms i--------•I nls clb. Big 4 br's on huge v~ltors. This Is a must big ram kitchen, covered lot. 2750 Portola, CM.
see property. Call ror redwood deck w/buill·in NESTLED 75Z..0161
aoot.t.odav.673-8550 Jacunl ·don't wait, call RnREAT
oPfNm11·11sn1Nro111Nicc• nowl842·2S35 Nestled among I '1'.IRllM litif Ni rf~7.t~~f,~~ = -kitchen a pplia nces.
011N Ill q ·If~ flJfl 10 Pl r.Ol'I'
[®'lfltlJI Find what you want In EASTSIDE lt•2 Patio with r1re ring. Cal Daily Pilot Classifieds. Immediately. 546-2313
MINT FAMILY
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~, uq, kwn « ..... Ty. WJ': Ind IOx It in: ~
Bal• Hortttound Mar3or• "'
'Basil Llv~•r Ro1-ry j
Catnip Sae' h~tnt •
Hyssop lt\)W Spea"'tnt
Ta.of"l"OW: fa.us Ch•htt
•
With charming 2 bdrm ONN m 9. ir·Hur< rote NICP
home brlneing income
while you develop
another unit. Close to ahoppine & transport.a·
tJon. Just listed. Better
take a look. 64&-7711
TH-E REAL ~
ESTATERS : __ __,
NEWAND
SPARICLIN~
Brand new auractlve
end unit townhome over·
DUPlEX18EACH
t .... vESTOR'S looking tennis courts. 3 n.-bdrms, 2 ~ baths,
Best:" rental area in NewpOrt Beach. Great Summer /Winter tnc·ome.
Spacious units w 12
bdrms each. Balconies ror indoor/outdoor living
& year round enjoyment.
SPECIAL beamed ceilings in Uv ~ali!ihur!l $39,900 rm. Air cond. Two
Guarded gateway pro· recreational centers
lecta lavish grounds with w I poo I s & t e n n Is. . ' pool. Secluded entry to Includes kitchen blt·los, llAl.ROA ISl.ASO
executive liv. rm. refrlg-freezer, clothes * 673-6900 *
Sunshine gourme t washer & dryer. garage•-------•
kitchen overlook• door opener. Private private courtyard. patioe. Just listed. Xlntl•-------•
Spiraling staircase location near So. Coast _._ ..... ITY
winds to bdrm complex. Plaza.646-7711 _.-.-v1uvn
Owner anxious, submit PM>cks often when you
any orrer. The finest in use result-get.Un& Dally
twnbm II ving. Call Pilot Classlfaed Ads to quick! 847..ec>lO ___ Re_aJ_E_sta_lAI __ _, ~acb the Orange Coast
Ol'(N r1l 9. " s FUN l<fB( NICE. market.
••
-~ Selllng anything with a Pbooe6'2·'"-. ~ Dally Pilot Classified Ad ...,,o
~,1 . .i is a simple matter ••. ..._ _______ _
t;_ ~. ·~ justcallSU.5678. ,..
~:::::::::::::=::==~ CieMNI I 002 GeMral t OOZ --------............................................. . MAGMIFIC&n'I
Expertly upJraded
tbruout. Featurlo&
apeclat liehtinl fixtwet, del plao tile. beautiful
carpet• & drapes,
stained glass wtndowa.
Clole to poola, t.enn1s " beach. 3 Bdtms., 2
bath•; 2·•tory, shake roof, frptc, NEWPORT
SHOR~. '102,000
UDO.IALTY .
673-7300
~It macnab I lrvlne ?-realty .
WISTCUFF "'Cote0•
The best location t Single-story.
spacious 2 BR, 2 bath + dining rm
w/great kitchen. Pool -patios -
walk to shopping. $84,500. Harriet
P6rry 642-8235. CN.al)
'42-1215 901 Oowr Drlw
1rv1ne •t campua Valley c.nw
752·1414