HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-09-16 - Orange Coast Pilot• • •• IV8 ana a 1es
.. r•• .. •l
' Trash Compaetor Jllind Man, 70,
'• Death ~ Probed Begs for Delp;
By SA Police
,..
Nobody Liste~s
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DAILY PILOT -
* * * 10' * * *
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 16, 1977
VOi.. 70, NO. JH, 4 Sl!CTIONS,•42 '"AOIS
All a Joke?
. A'"WI"""°"°
'
BUDGET OIRECTO~. ATTORNEY FIND TIME FOR CHUCKLE
Bert Lance Confers With Legal Aclvlser, Clark CHfford
I
( Iiigh Ethics Met,
I •
'Bert Lance Testifies
W ASIUNGTON <AP> -Insist·
tng that "I have done more than
stay narrowly within the law,"
Bert Lance testified today that
his conduct both as a banker and
as budget director meets the high
' ethical standards set by Presi-
dent Carter for his administra·
t~n. ~
Lance also sald he withheld
Compactor'
·Death P~obed . .
BySA Cops
I
'
Surprise '·
Coast ·Get~
Light Rain
W est Orange Co unty
weatherman J . Sherman Denny
expressed surprise today .. at the
s li ght predawn. drtzzl~ that dam-
pened slreets in the Huntington
Beach region. resulting in
several accidents on slick pave·
ment.
Drizzles and wet pavement
also were reported in Costa Mesa
early today and other scattered
areas along the Orange Caost.
· · 1 was Quite surprised with
this current storm front so un·
predictable." said Dennv. the re-
tired general manager of the
Carter Aide
Has Praise -For Nixon
TULSA, Okla. <AP> -Former
President Nixon has at least one
fa n.ln the Carter White House.
Greg Schncldet'S, director of
White House projeclt, praised
Nixon as a good White House
manager to a group of
Democrats at a $100·a-plate Cund-
raislng dinner Thursday.
While discussing Jimmy
Carter:s abilities as a manager',
Schneiders said. "Rlohard Ni"·
on, tor all hls naws and faults, as
a manacer'dld a good job."
When scattered gl'umblln1
followed, Schneiders added, "I
admit that's not a popular posi-
tion to take at the White House
rt htnow." ~ "~ said Nixon, "arart from h1s
total lack of more leadenhip, ~lsw a '*t deal about bow tM l'fderAJ eovemment works."
.
fipnlington Beach Company.
He has kept weather records
and daily observations on
climate and atmospheric condi·
t1ons for several decades.
Denny, of 1745 Pine St., said his
raih gauge recorded only a trace
of precipitation that wasn't quite
measurable in fractions of an
inch.
He declined to guess whether
any real rain showers mlg))t
follow today's dampening.
"Of course this is September
and it's just sort of unpredicat.a·
ble. "l do notice light cumulus
clouds, so we can have light
sprinkles in the early morning hours,·' Denny explained.
He said, howev..er, it is quite un-
likely the Orange Coast can ex·
pect any real storm at least
before October or lat~r.
Denny pointed out September
is an odd weather month
throughout the U.S .. due to the
changing or the seasons and their
subsequent effects on. different
areas or the nation.
He specifically mentions Oooda
in Kansas City and Johnstown,
Pa., as examples of the unex·
pected atmospheric events that
strike ln the ninth month of the
year.
<See'DRIZZLE, Page A.%)
!111 lllooked ·.
SACRAMENTO <AP> "'-A blU
increUml ertJer .. C)' room doc·
tors• prote<?Uoo from malprac·
tice sults haa been ~locked in the
law1•r·doptlnat.ed A11ernbly. -
The bill would have elven virtual immumt.)' from Jaw1ulta to tur·
1eo111 and ~r •~laltata who ne ~allocl in u conault.ant. ln
emergency room~ .....
,.,.~
OPERA ST AR DIES
Marla Calla1, 53
Famed Diva
Maria· Ctdltu
Di.es at,· 53 "
Sl~yer
To Die -
' d~ Mon ay ·
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. CAP>~ The state Supreme Court toda
denied a stay of execution fo
John A. SpenkeUnk, the 28-year~
old California man whose e~
ecution has Men set for Monday
morning. 1
The court upheld t1le death1
warrant signed earlier this wee_~
(or Spenkelink, who was co~
demned to die in the electric1 chair for the murder of a drifter"
in a Tallahassee motel room .•
The attorney general's office
said there was no indication of
how the seven justices voted
after hearing oral arguments
late Thursday. No written opin·
ion was issued immediately.
Spenkellnk's attorney Andrew
Graham asked the court to spare
the condemned man's life tem-
porarily so he could J>UTSUe other
appeals. These would have to be
in the federal ~ourt system.
MeanwhHe, (1.S. District
Judge WHUam Sta,ford of
TalJahassee called a he'arint for
late today on Graham's attempt
to win a stay in the federal courts
if he fails in state courts.
Spenkelink. 26, a prison
fugiUve from Buena Park, Calif.,
was convicted of the Feb. 4, 197),
murder of Joseph
Szymankiewicz, 43, a traveling
comp.anion who waa an Ohl<>
parole violator. '
Sixteen death row inmattt re-i
fused to eat at Florida State
<See EXECUTE. Pa.te AZ> '
Weatb'er
Partly cloudv through
Saturday with lows to.nl1ht
55 to 62. Hilb5 Saturday
70·lo'76.
• INSIDE TOaA Y
...
.42 DAILY PtLOl s
Brown Suffers 2 Blows TuoScale
Mt. Everest
Mitchell ·
Hip.Need •
nate Kills Tax Relief, Canal Measures KATMANDU, Nepal
<AP> -A South Korean
and his Sherpa guide
scaled Mt. Everest today,
bringing to SS men and two
women tbe-leleet club of
climbers who have con-
quered the world'• hi&hesl
mountain, the Nepalese
Foreign Min.iltry reported.
Reported SACRAMl-:NTO 1Al'1 Ciov
dmUDd Brown Jr autlcr• a
double dt°ft'lll whc•n lht-11tule
~nutt> k11l1'i.J 11 $4.2 bllhuo t4tx rt:
hef btll .-nd uro..-n •• proposal tor
C'tinistructaon of the Partphcrul
Canul
Th"' ch)Slnit ~tss1on Thursthay
of thl' 1977 i.t-~'wn v. ui. th ..
DemoNatac govt'rnor·, wor!>t ·
Panamanian
Blackmail
Talk Denied
WASHINGTON «API Am
bassador Ellsworth Bunker de
nted toda> a rtport that the Unit
ed States electronically
eavesdropped on Panamimaan
negotiators of the Panamli Canal
treaty and was bla<.'kmailed by
the Panamanians after they d1i;-
covered the bugging
Hunker, summoned to discuss
the report in a closed session of
the Senate Intelligence commit-
tee, was asked by reporters if
t~ere was any truth to the story
aired by CBS News without nam-
ing sources.
"No, none whatever, .. Bunker
rephed. He ::tlso said in response
to another question that there
had been "no threats" from the
Panamanians.
Bunker was one of the two US.
negotiators who worked out the
treaty under which the United
States is to gradually transfer
l'Ontrol of the Panama Canal to
Panama's leader Brig, Gen.
-Omar Torrijos, s igned the agree-
ment last week but il still must be ·
ratified by the Senate
Some critics of the treaty have
raised the suagestlon that the
United States had been
"blackmaUed," under threat of
violen.ce in the Canal Zone, )nto
agreeing lo the arrangement bv
the.Pan.amunians.
•A spokesman for the In·
telllgcnce COO'lmitlee rerused to
comment on the broadcast re·
port.
Despite Bunker's blunt de-
nials. lhere was a special air of
urgency about the Senate panel's
meeting, which sources said had
been called two days ago by its
chairman. Sen. Daniel K. Inouye
<D-Hawau J
All 17 members of the commit
-tee and the S ale majority and
minority Icade s, Robert C. Byrd
10-W.Va. >. an Howard Baker
< R·Tenn. l, wer present. The
two leaders arc e orrici~ mem-
bers of the pant•I
<_:IA and State epartmenl of
f1c1ats also were · the room.
Committee sources said the
or1~lnal plan had been lo call not
only Bunker but also his co-
negotaator, Sol Linowitz and
A.dm. Stansfield Turner, th~ CJA
direct.or, but both of them were
out of town.
South Africa
Protests Grow
JOHANNESBURG , South
Africa <AP> --White and black
South Africans protested in
swelling numbers today against
the death of young black leader
Steve Biko, and there were in-
creuing demanda for the ouster
of Prtsoru1 Minister James T
Kruger.
Protest meetings were held or
planned at all four major
English-language white uni-
versities and at the two main
black ones.
Slol(ans r4ading "Kruger
murderer"-'and "Biko" were
painted on the doors or four post
offices in plush white suburbs
around Johannesburg. Jn Cape
Town. white students placed
do~ens of mournint notlcea ln the
Cape Times newspaper.
O"ANOI! COAST s
DAILY PILOT
dtty an thf' leg1•lwturo r.ince tak-
lnl ctt\ce32 monlht a10.
Whllt' lirown donh:d the vol~
wtm: u peraoo.al •ctl>~ck, hts bad
perl60l\ally ne10U1ted tenna of
both btUa and put tbf' full wei1ht
and presll1e of his omc~ bebJnd
the uffort to t·ruu:t thcm
Thl•1r ddcut lcuvcs u $4.3
bilhon 11chool btll as Urown ·s only
muJor legislative achievement of
the year. ~ lotenda to sign that
Saturday.
The votes were 21·15 on the tax
relte( blll and 21·16 on the water
projects bUI. Each measbre re-
quired 27 aye votes.
The tax bill promised anna.al
rebates averaging $239 each for
6 .2 million California
J.C::
Bridge Collapses
Hescue workers attend to children bt'n<.•ath tht• t\nsted
remains of a pedestrian bridge th<it \\as kno<:ked do\\ n
by a crane working to widen the street helow. Six
elem_entary school childn•n \\'(•re hospital11t•d 111 L<in ·
sing. Mich .. this morning aft<.·r falling lrom tht• ''alk\\a~.
FreaPageAI
EXECUTE. •
Prison Thursdav in an apparent
show' of support for Spenkellnk.
Prison Superintendent David H
Brierton said the 16 had been on
Spenkelink's wing before he was
moved to an isolated "death
watch" cell a few steps away
from the electric chair.
Graham is appealing a circuit
judge's refusal Tuesday to order
a stay of execution. The attorney
contends that jurors opposing
capital punishment should not
have been excluded from the
trial and that Florida judees dlJ·
criminate between whites and
blacks in handing down death
sentences.
In what may have been
Spenkelink's best hope of avoid·
ing execution Monday, Justice
Joseph Boyd ralsed the issue or
the U.S. Supreme Court
challenge filed by three other
death row inmates or state
clemency procedures. The court
has not decided whether it will
take the case.
"If we execute this man on
Monday and a few days later the
Supreme Court or the United
States says Gov. Reubin Askew's
clemency procedures are wrone.
what answer do you have for
that?" Boyd asked Atty. Gen.
Robert Shevin.
Shevin noted that Spenkellnk Is
not involved In the U.S. Supreme
Court case. He said he has main·
tained all alona that the clemen-
cy procedures are constitutional.
whlch the state court held re-
cently.
Sbevtn called Spenkellnk'1 ap·
peal frivolo\15. The Judie said ·•rt was not filed. In our oplnlon:
for any other numose than de-lay." r.,r--
If Spenkellnl ts put to death
Monday. he wlll be the first
penoo executed ln Florida alnce
Moy 12. UM. Utah murderer
Gaey Gilmore 11 the only'person
executed bl tbl1 country alnc• the
U .s. SUpreme Court upbtld death
penalty lawt In Florida lftd two
other atatel on July 2, 19'11.
Crash Kills
Rock Singer
LONDON CA P> -British rock
singer Marc Bolan. a onetime
teenybopper idol who recently
made a comeback from
alcoholism and drug addiction,
w a~ kllled )n a carcrash early to--
day, police reported.
The 29-year-old sin ger -
gultari&t died instantly when a
car driven by Gloria Jones, the
30-year-old American iJlnger with
whom Bolan llved for three
years, struck a tree in iuthwest
London, a police sp esman
said. Miss Jones was inju ed and
taken to a hospital.
The frizzy-haired Bolan shot to
stardom in Britain in the late
1960s and made 20 hit records
before dropping out in 1975.
Fro• Page AJ
CALLAS •••.
Meneghini, wealthy Milan in-
dustrlalilt 26 years her ,enior,
who had discovered an ungainly.
overweiiJ:it e!rl with a magnifi-
cent soprano voice and
auided her to stardom.
• Her nine-year liaison with
Onasals ended when he married
Jacqueline Kennedy in October
1968. She never met Jacqueline,
but continued to be h'ienda with
the shlpplng magnate until his
death In March. 1975.
Born Sophie C. Kales in
Brooklyn, she renounced her
American citizenship In 1966, ap·
parentJy to ease ttaanclal com·
pllcatlons connected with her
divorce.
Mlaa Callo be1an to study
mu.sic when 1h1 wu 8 and by 14
had won a number or amateur
radio contetta. Trapped abroad
at the bia;tnnl.nt of World War u ..
abe 1tudled .at the Royal
Conservatory.
She made her debut in
Ma1caant 's ••ca\'allerla RuaUcana .. at the Royal Opera
Hou8e ln Athena at. 1'. Bui her
career really ~ta.n when the
great La Soala Opera Howse in
Mllan offered her a rqle Jn
"Aid•" and then slgned her on as
a member of lb• company In
19&1.
She made ber A1berlcu debut
ln dM. otrformlna Lti• UUe role
of Ja•lll.ftl 1 ''Jlorma" at ChlrllO'• LY?Jc Theatet ind ln
tatll Ir"' ~n lbe WU wldelJ
eeela mi4 for "" role• ln "Purl~" 'ttottat" ''IMllA ..
Ud~ ........ -..... =·v-,.·· cor•RP.~I ............. 1111'.Mlt ·~-~····*
homeowners and $115 each for 2.6
mllllon renters. It also would
have phased out the business in-
ventory tax and imposed new
taxes on corporate profits, new
homes and new cars.
But It was attacked on all
sides. Some foes said it did too lit·
tle.Jor homeowners. Others said
renters were shortchanged, that
the new taxes were not needed,
and that the bill would lead to
deficiL'i and more tax increases in
lhreetofiveyears.
On the $4.2 billion water proj.
eels bill, The Peripheral Canal
was the focus or opposition
although it onl~ amounted to $640
mi Ilion of the total.
Mos t of the money was
earmarked for four major new
Northern California reservoirs
which were barely mentioned in
lengthy floor debate.
The vote was one of many de-
feats ror the 43-mlle canal, which
has been on the drawing boards
15 years.
Repre sentatives of the
Sacramento-San Joaquin River
Della area, who oppose the canal
under all circum'stances because
they rear it might steal their
water, teamed up with San Joa-
quin Valley scnafurs, who wanl
the canal without r estrictions
Brown approved to protect Della
interest$.
Assem bly Speaker Leo
McC.arthy and Senate President
pro tem James Mills immediate-
ly urged Brown to call a special
session of the legjslature on the
tax issue. '
But Brown said he was "not
quite yet" ready to call a special
session.
Brov. n said he wanted to gave
legislators time to reflect on the
iss ue and hear from their
constituents.
"Unless homeowners com-
municate more forcefully with
legislators, 1t will be dirficult to
gel a bill," Brown said. "There
m,ay well be a special session if
that's necessary.''
I le s aid he was confident botb
property tax relief and the water
pl:.in would be enacted even-
lu<dly.
f'ro111 Page A J
DRIZZLE ...
omc1als of the firm he headed
for years also consulted Denny as
a weather forecaster Wednes-
day. he said tod<.ty .
The Huntinaton Beach Com-
pany has almost completed a
new commercial omce building
complex at Main Str eet and
Yorktown Avenue and ex-
N'Utives are anxious to pave the
parking lot.
Denny !>aid they called and
asked hm1m 1f it was safe to do so
-bccau~e it looked like it might
rain.
So far, In the past year, the city
has re~ived 2.42 Inches.
Proposal Ready
WASl:DNGTON <AP> .-The
Carter administration Intends to
propose to Israel that I~ admit to
a Middle East peace conference
Palestinians who are not known
members of the Palestine
Liberation Organization, U.S. or-
ricials say. The proposal will be
made next week to Israeli
foreign minister Moshe Dayan
when he ii in Washington for
talks with President Carter and
Secretary of State Cyrus R .
Vance.
·Ko Sang-do became the
first-South Korean \.o stand
on top or the world. A
ministry spokesman said
he and Sherpa Perm a
Norbu remained one hour
on the ~.028-foot summit
and then climbed down t.o
t..he camp of the South
Korean expedition.
The previous team to
have reached the top or the
world was an American
bicentennial expedition in
October 1.976.
Fro• Pflfle A J
LANCE •••
told Sen. William V. ~ (R-
Del.). r-\
..... To simply say overdrafts
constitute an unethic~l altuation,
that is not the cue.
"There was no attempt to hide.
no attempt to coverup anything, ..
tempt not to disclose anything,.,
Lance said of tbe controveny
over his Calhoun checking ac-
count.
i Roth began hla questJonlng by
quoting Carter's statement that
staying narrowly within the law
would not be enough to satilsy the
ethical standards or his ad-
ministration.
Lance responded that he had
met that test and "certainly, I
have done more than stay nar-
rowly with.in the law.•·
During his appearance Thurs-
day, Lance said the question of
whether he had withheld in·
formation from the committee,
when his nomination u budget
director was before the panel last
January, was the most serious or
the issues raised against him.
Lance insisted he had told the
committee staff about his finan-
cial d~allngs, including the over·
drafts, during his banking
career.
Lance's assertion prompted
Seo. Jacob K. Javita <R·N.Y.>. to
say be thought members of the
committee should testify about
their interviews last January
with Lance.
,
.
WASHINGTON <AP> -
Former Atty. Gen. John !If':
Mitchell needs artlficial replace·
ment of h1a nsht blp because or
degenerative arthritis, lifs
lawyer said today in a petitt'n
asking his release from prison,]
Mitchell has served neatJy
three montha or an elght-yetf ..
term lor his role In the cover p
of lhe Wat.er1ate affair.
His petition lor leniency was
riled with U.S. District Judje
John J. Sirica who imposed .. e
sentence in February, 1975. '
Lawyers for H.R. Haldem•.
formerly the White House ~f
of stair, also asked for reduc*'1
or bis eight-year sentence, ple~
ing with the court not ·'lo pun1'h
Haldeman to the point of destrdC·
tion."
Mitchell is servin& bis time at
the federal minimum security
facility at Maxwell AFB in
Alabama. Haldeman is im·
prisoned at Lompoc. Neither is eU•lble for parole uolft late
December1'19. •
"Recent X-rays taken at a cov-
emmenl faclllty show that &he
defendant's right hip has suf-
fered severe destructive de·
generative disease,·• Mitchell's
motion said, adding:
"'lbll condltlon bu become ex-
tremely painlul to defendant and
his mobW. has become severely
t)pgp. Tbere la no treatment
(or such condition short or special
s u r g e r y w h i c b r e.-
quires ..• replacement with
substitute materials ...
In addition. the mutitfn said
that Mitchell suffers from an
enlarged heart "apparently the
r esult of hypertension." -; .•
Mi~hell told the judge he <'s
truly sorry for and regrets thofe
actions of ~~s tl'lat ·resulted in l(is
convictioo. ;. _ :
Haldeman wrote a penon)1
letter to Sirica expressing '""8
contrition and his repentancei7Js
well as his determination .... :J.o
avoid any such action. i.n Ulc
fulure," his petition said.
Outlook Healthier
BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP) -
The spread of cholera in the Mid·
die Eaft appeared to lue
momentum today. but bealtb of-
ficials throughout the Arab world
continued \.o t.ake precautiCJllS ·
and urge pUbllc vieUance.
.....__
Billy's Beer
<Arter Brother Bacla Brew
, LOL'JSVILL£. Ky, <APJ ·President Carter prob·
ably will have streets and other public projects
named after him. but his younger brother Billy has
already had his name gi\'en to an appropriate item.
The \\'ell-known lo\·er of hops appeared at a news
conference today to announce that Falls City Brewing
Compan~· will market a beer named after him.
It 'A ill be called "BILLY.·· and the top of the label
will cayry this endorsement: "Brewed especial!~· for
and w1th the appro,·al of one of America ·s all-tim~
great beer drinkers. Bill)' Carter ...
Plans call for the beer to be introduced in Carter's
home state. Georgia. then be distributed nutionallv
by ~O\". 1. . •
"For me. the beer thing was a natural. 'cause I
know a good beer better than an~·body ... he said.
··\\'ho knows? Maybe I'll become the Colonel Sanders
of beer ...
THE FOOTBAIJ, SEASON
You are possibly now In the process ·Of shopping for
carpeting, and have been talking to sales people at two or
three stores. If so. you no doubt feet like a "football," bounced .i
around with a bevy of conflicting atones.
Which ts the best carpet fiber? What Is the best texture for
your use? What kiad of padding should be used?
We think you will detect the straight~ aimyers at Alden's.
We've been helping PeoPle score .. toUchdOwns In Orange
County for over twenty years. ·
Orange ~•ast
EDITION
-T oday's Closin g
N.Y . S toeks
.... -.
VOL. 70, NO 259, •SECTIONS. A1 PAGES
8)' GARY GRANVILLE o.-.c..11,~s ....
lioard of Supervuori.
Chairman Thomas Riley said 1t
1s tlmt' for county rcl>&denls to
"balance pnor1lies · so that as
Orange County ~rows · '1t will re
mam what 1t 1s "
SupervlSor Philip Anthony said
that perhaps too much attention
is bemg paid to the county's un-
developed areas and not enough
to its mner l'it1t-s
Supervisor Hulph Clark
dcl'laredwwar un noise
Supervisor Ralµh Diedrich
c all<.'<i 1t a shame that Orange
County's young are forced to go
to R1vcrs1do and San Bemar·
J1ono Counl1~ for housing they
can afford
And Supt-r,·1sor La urence
Schmit said the county's 1977·78 property tax rate should be
o.111' ~, ... ,..... .., _,, .,,.,....
Driver Wallced A "'•11 ·
Costa Mesa police said a 23-year-old woman escaped
serious injury Thursday afternoon and emerged undt>r
her own power from this tan~led mess Charlotte Goulet
of Costa MC'sa told traffic officers she lo:it ~ontrol of C'ar
~ho111~· hcfor<• hittmf,! ll~ht pe>ll· on llarhor n oul<•\ ar<I
1war \'1l·toria SI l'l'l'I
Ex-countian .Denied .
Stay of Execution
TALLAJIASSEE •. Fla. <AP> ...
The state Supreme Court today
denied a slay of execution for
John A. Spenkelink. the 28-year-
old California man whose ex-
ecution has been set for Monday
morning.
The court upheld the death
warrant signed earlier this wee'k
for Spenkelink, who was con·
demned to die in the electric
chair for the murder of a drifter
in a Tallahassee motel room.
Tbe attorney general's offi ce
said there was oo indication of
how the seven justices voted
after hearing oral arguments
late Thursday. No written opin·
ion was issued immediately.
Spenl<~linf< 's attorney Andrew
Graham llSked the court. to spare
the condemned man's life tem·
porarily so he could pursue other
appeals. These would tiave to be
in the federal court system.
Meanwhile, U.S District
Judge William Stafford or
Tallahassee called a hearing for
late today on Graham 's attempt
to win a s tay in the federal courts
if he fails in state courts
Spenkelink. 28. a prison
fugitive from Buena Park. Calif .
was convicted or the f'eb 4. 1973.
murder of J ose ph
Szymankiewicz, 43, a traveling
companion who was an Ohio
pa role violator.
Sl~n death row inmates re·
fus.ed to eat at Florida State
Prison Thursdav in an apparent
show of support for Spenkellnk ...
Prison Superinlendent David H.
Brierton said the 16 had been on
Spcnkelii;ik ·s wing berore he was
moved to an isolated '\d~ath
watch'' cell a few steps away
frort1 theeledrlc chatt.
Graham is appealing a clrcuit
<See EXECUTE, Page·A2)
ORANGE COUNTY., CALIFORNIA C TEN CENTS .
Relate ·County . Problems
lower, but mentioned that, in
th r ee years as a county
s upervisor, he hasn't been pres·
cnt when county budget and tax
r atet. have been adopted
Orange County's five
~uperv1i.ors' remarks came at
the annual county Chamber of
Commerce "meet your county
s upervisor " lunch.
Riley sounded ttie keynote of
the five-man forum when he
pointed out that Oranae County is
California's fastest growing
• county in terms of population,
housing starts and employment.
"The growth means op-
portunities in employment and
lh•ing, '' Riley said. "Also, it
raises questions about the lon&-
term future.
"As we grow," Riley con-
tinued, "Uvina becomes more in-
teractive. thJngs that people do
increasingly affect others."
Riley explained hii; comments
by sayi.r)g what might be one
man's profits might be another
man's pollution.
"An airport can mean pubhc
aervice to one man and public
nuisance to another man," the
Newport Beach supervisor sald
as he urged "an intelllgent
balance or conflicting priorities
to provide maximum benefit to
the greatest number at the leaat
cost.''
Both he and Diedrich told the
chamber of commerce audience
that skyrocketing housing prices
"is probably Orange County's
number one problem."
Riley praised a recent study of
housing costs in Southeast
Oranae County for suggesting •
ways to drop bulldin~ costs and,
(See GROWfH, P•«e AZ)
.
Lance: -~thics Met
High Carter Standards Adhered To?
WASHINGTON IAPl --Bert
Lunce testified today that his
conduct. either as banker or
budget director, bas "done more
than stay narrowly within th~
law" and meets the high ethical
s tandards set by President
Carter for his administration
Lance denied repeatedly that
he tried to influence federal
banking officials or. luter, to con ·
ceal rnfotmallon from Senate in·
Blind Man's
Pleas Go
Unheeded
• DELRAY BEACH, Fla IAP>
A 70-year·old blind man who mis-
takenly got orf a bus in the wrong
city waited 15 hours on a bench
while passersby ignored his
pleas fof help. police said.
"I've been sitting here in the
hot. sun all day without food or
dri~k d nobody wlll help me," Eas Vickers told police who
~ tohlsaid
"Fifteen people passed by me
and I said twas blind and needed
help. but they just ignored me, ..
he said
Vickers told police he left
Miami by bus Wednesday morn-
ing, headed for West Palm
Beach, about 50 miles to the
north. But he got off at Delray
Reach, 19 miles short or his
destination.
When he discovered he was in
the wrong city, he felt around for
a bench and sat down about five
blocks from the bus station near
the main part of town. The tern·
perature reached near 90. •
"I cried for people to call
police but nobody listened. I
didn't know where I was so r
prayed and hoped help would ar-
rive," officers said he told them.
Vickers had a white cane. was
well dressed and clean-shaven.
police said.
"It was a sad sight ... we took
him out for a hot meal.·· said
patrolman Howard Goldstein.
On Thursday. pol ice put rum on
a bus for West4falm Beach.
Crash Kills
Rock Singer
LONOON~) -British rock
singer Marc Bolan, a onetime
teenybopper idol who recently
made a eom~back from
alcoholism and drug addiction,
was l(illed iµ a car crash early to·
day, pollce reported. .
The 29~year -old singer-
guilarist died instantly when a
car driven by Gloria Jones, tbe 30-y~ar-old American singer with
whom Bolan lived for three
years, struck a tree in southwest
London. ,
vestigators about his fmancial
dealings. ·-lie also told the Senate Gov-
ernmental Affairs Committee
during his second day in the wit-
ness chair that his ui.e of a bank
<.1irplane, even for purposes that
might appee1r partly personal.
was justified in the interest or
promoting ~ood relations and
new business for the bank
"l considered public relations
a major part of my job.·· he said.
Asked if he ever tried to ln·
fluence· the comptroller of the
currency or other banking reg-
ulators to have a disciplinary
agreement lirted from one of his
Georgia banks, Lance replied
"absolutely not.··
The same answer, he said, ap-
plied to the question of whether
he ever made any threats against
such officials
Billy's Beer
Carter Brother Backs Brew
LOL'ISVJLLE. Ky. IAP 1 President Curter prob·
ably will huve streets and other public projects
named after him. but his younger broth6!r UilJ~· hc.1s
already had his n ~me giveh to an appropriate itl•m,
The well-known lo' l'r of hops appettred at a news
conference today to announC'e that f''alls City Brewing
Company'' ill market a beer named after him.
U will bl' called ··BILLY ... um.lltie ~op or tht> label
will carry this endorsement : .. Brewed especiall~· for
and with the uppro,·al of one of Americu·s all·lime
great beer drinker•. Billy Carter.·· ·
Plans call for the beer to be introduced in Ca1tcr·s
home ~tale . Georgia. then be distributed nationullv by :'\ov. 1 ·
"For me. the beer thing was a natural. ·cause I
kncl\\ u ~ood bet•r hl'ttl'r thun anybod~·." hl' said
.. \\'ho kno'' s ·• :\I aybl• I ·11 hl•rome the Colon('! Sanders
of be('r ...
Lyric Prima Donna
Maria Callas Dies
PARIS CAP> -Maria Callas.
the Amef'ican-born prima donna
famed for her lyrlc soprano, her
fiery temperament and her
romance with Aristotle Onassis,
died today at her Parls home.
ShewasS3.
Her long-time artistic director.
Michael Glotz, said she suffered
a heart attack in her apartment
on Averuae George Mandel and
was dead when doctors arrived.
She tlad not appeared on stage
since 1973, but continued as a re·
cording artist.
Born in New York Clly to
Greek Immigrants, trained ln
Athens and propelled to fame ln
Milan, La Callas was worshipped
by devotees as their ''Regina del
Mondo" <Queen of the World>
and their "Divina," and critics
hailed her for bringlnf operatic
a<itlng to new theatric a · heights.
But the dark-eyed diva al.So
gained fame aa "opera'• bed
girl." ffe She battled with m naeen and
conductors -ttincl ding well-
p u b Uc I ied duels with the
Metropolitan Opera's Rudolf
Bina. She "alked out of ~rfonnances, on Ume cuttlnc
short • 1ala performance of
Be1Unl's "Norma" attended by
,. . ....,...
OPERA STAR DIES
Merla Calles, 53
the president or Italy, , aqd
fo\laht wtth ~erperf ormers.
"Of COUl'M LaJD dUncWt.." ahe
<SeeCAUAS, Pa1e.U>
Most of the questionin,1' posed
by Lance's Senate criucs cov·
ered territory already explored
Thursday, when the besieged
budget director held forth, point·
by.point, at length in efforts to
knock down the numerous allega-
llons leveled at him in recent
weeks.
Lance also said he withheld
nothing about financial dealings
<See LANCE, Page AZ>
CIA Silent
On.Charge
Of.Bugging
WASIDNGTON lAP> -'11le
Senate lQlelligence Committee
declined comment today Oil n\·
port.<> that the United States elec-
tropica Uy eavesdre>rp ed . on Panamanian Cana treaty
JH!Jotlators aod was blackmailed
Wli4!A th• buggin1 Wal di•·
covered. But the panel scbedul~ hearinp an the matter.
The commJttee met behind
closed doors ·with Ambassador
Ellsworth Bunker, a U.S. treaty
negotiator. wbo earlier told
newsmen there was no trath to
a lh?gations broadcast today -by
CBS.
!n P~ama City, two top Pana-•
manian officials also denied the
report.
Panamanian Foreign Minister
Nicolas Gonzalez Revilla called
the report "terrible, incredible,
re all~ wild'' when told aboutitln a
telephone interview with the As·
soclated Press.
Carlos Lopez Guevara·, a
member of Panama's negotiat-
ing team, called the report a
"fabricated atory that is un·
American. It is baloney. and
there la nothing to lt."
Sen. Daniel K. Inouye CD·
Hawaii), chairman of the Senate
Intelligence Committee, refused
after today'& meet.1.ng to provide
any details.
.. We are required by law to
maintain silence on matters of
intelligence," Inouye told re· •
porters.
He resPoDded with "no eom·
ment" to every question about
the a)Jeged b u agtn&. and
'1>Jackma11.
But Inouye did say ttiat.furt.ber
hearings Will be held, bednninlt
next week wl~ AJim, stanafield T1.1mer. d}rec&or of the.~~1.~nd treaty neaotlator Sol L~ t.o
appear as wltnes-.. He aald
''appropriate mem\)era of the~
telllgence co.-nmunlty'' wo,ald be
called to tesUf y.
2 DAil. y PILOT c ,rider, !!f>lember "· ""
Governor .
Dealt 2
Setbacks
SACRA ENTO <Al') Oov.
~dm\Wt Brown Jr autftred a
doubt.., d~f••t when lh• Ital•
Senate kill !Id ~ 54 2 billion tax r..
hut bill and Brvwo 'a pro)>Oaal for
<'Ollltrud.ion of th• PerlpberaJ
<.:anaJ.
The closing se~on Thunday
u f the 1977 •ession wu the
Oemocrutic aovernor'a wont
ctax in the lerullature atn~ ta.ll-ma bfllce ll2 montha ~o
While Brown denied the votes
were a personal setback, be bad
personally neeotiated terms or
both bills and put lhe full weight
.rnd prestige of hts office beb.lnd
the effort to enact them.
Their defeat leaves a $4.3
billion school bill as Brown's only
maJor legislative achievement or
the year. He intenda to sign that
Saturday.
The votes were 21·15 on the l'.Jll«
relief bill and 21 16 on the waler
proJects bill. Each measure re-
quired 27 aye votea.
The tax "bill promised annual
rebates averaging $239 each for
6.2 million California
homeowners and $115 each for 2.6
million renters. It also would
have phased out the business in-
ventory tax and imposed new
taxes on corporate profits, new.
homes and new cars
But it was attacked on all
sides. Some roes said it did loo lit-
tle for homeowners. Others said
renters were shortchanged, that
the new taxes were not needed,
and that the bill would .Jtad ·to
deficits and more tax increases in
three to five years.
On the $1 2 billion water proj-
ects bill, the Peripheral Canat
was the focus of opposition
ulthough it only amounted to $64()
mi I hon or the total.
Most of the m on ey was
,.earmarked for four major new
Northern California reservoirs
which were barely mentioned in len~lhv floor debate. The vote was one of many de-
feats for the 43 -mile canal. which
has been on the drawing boards
{s years.
But Brown said he was "not
quite yet" reacfy to call a special
session.·
Brown said he wanted·to give
legislaLors time to reflect on the
issue a nd hea r from their
constituents.
"Unless homeowners com-
municate more forcefully with
legislators, it .will be difficult to
get a bill," Brown said . "There
may well be a special session if
th at 's necessary.''
He said he was confident both
property tax relief and the water
plan would be enacted even-
tually.
Girl Injured
In Smashup
P olice said a 19·year-old girl
and her two-month-old baby
escaped serious injuries Thurs-
day morning in Costa Mesa when
the woman's car smashed into a
traffic signal pole and over-
turned a l the intersection of
Adams and Pinecreek Drive.
Debbie Ann Lett. of 19171
Coenson Circle, Huntington
Bcac~-wtls taken to Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital following the
8 a.m. accident. She was treated
for minor cuts and releued. Her
young son wu uninjured.
She Lold police she lost. control
of the c~ while tending to her
c·rylngbaby.
Bill Blocked
SACRAMENTO (AP> -A blll
increasinJ emereency room doc-
tors' protection from malprac-
tice suits has been blocked in the
·lawyer-dominated Aasembly.
The bUJ would have given virtual
immunity from lawsuits to S\Jr-
geons and other specialists who
are called in as consultants in
emergency room casea.
OAANQI COAST c
DAILY PILOT
.,. .. ...,....
BUDGET DIRECTOR, ATTORNEY FIND TIME FOR CHUCKLE
Bert Lance Confers With Legal Advlaer Clark Clfford
Heart Group
Joins County
Unit«(~ Way
The American Heart Assocrn
t ion has left Orange County's
AID-United Givers program and
joined the county's United Way
organization.
United Way s pokesman said
Thursday that the American
Cancer Society is expected to
follow suit in the next 10 days.
This would be another blow to
AID-United Givers, which has
been suffering declining dona
tions since United Way of Orange
County cul its AID ties in June of
1976.
Both fundraising groups com-
pete heavily for funds derived
from employe payroll deduc-tions.
AID funds have dropped 25 per-
cent to 30 percent since United
Way broke away.
Robert Clifford, president of
Air California and chiarman of
the this year's United Way fund
drive. has set a ~oal of $5 million.
So far. United Way has raised
about $1 million this year. Cllf·
ford said.
GROWTH ...
in turn., prices.
Diedrich urged acceptance of
d ensity bonuses. minimum-sized ,
Jots and limitations on the size of
hous'es that can be built as a way
in some areas to curtail rising
prices. .
"Yes, that probably means
less house than what we 're used to
seeing. but it will also meafl hous-
ing that middle and lower income
people can afford, .. the Fullerton
supervisor said.
Anthony suggested that a solu-
tion to the bome·price dilemma
might be to concentrate more ef-
fort on rebuilding and re-
furbishing existing housing In the
county's developed areas.
He sugguted that "what
already 1tand1" ml1bt be "a
great natural resource of Oranae
County'' lf rehabilitated.
Clark wanted It known that his
one·man war with noise ls cen-
tering its attack on traffic nolle,
"the noiJe of freeways, cars ,
trucks and motorcycles."
The Anaheim supervisor said
he wanted it clearly understood
that his recent attack on
motorcycle nol.Je wu directed at
motorcycles "without a muffler
that works" rather than
motorcycllstl u a claas of peo-
ple.
Clark said there are "laws on
the books now" which, if en-
forced, will go a lon1 way
towards tumin1 the nolae volume
down.
At the outlet of this year's
budget hearln1s, the Garden
Grove supervilor said county de-
partment heads should be made
to reduce their budget proposal&
a blanket 10 percent.
Fro•PageAJ
LANCE ••.
from Senate committee staffers
who interviewed him before con-
firmation hearings on his ap-
pointment as budget director.
Referring to his meeting last
J anuary with the comnyttee
staff, Lance said: "It was one in
which we had a total and run dis·
closure."
C h airman Abraham A.
Ribicorr <O-Conn. >. said that
after Lan ce fini s hes his
testimony, possibly on Saturday,
m embers of the committee staff
would be called to testify under
oath about their discussions with
Lance
Pressed by a Republican sena·
tor about his overdrawn check-
ing accounts In Calhoun, Ga .•
Lance replied -as he has insist-.
ed earlier -that the issue wasn 'l
a matter of ethics.
"In a place like Calhoun,
where you have a practice of
overdrafts . . . overdrafts· as
such is not an ugly word, .. Lance
told Sen. William V. Roth <R-
Del.).
" ... To simply say overdrafts
constitute an unethical situation,
that is not the case.
"There was no attempt to hlde.
no attempt Lo coverup anythlng, ··
tempt not to disclose anything ...
Lance said of the controversy
over his Calhoun checking ac-
count.
Roth began his questiontng by
quoting Carter 's statement that
staying narrowly within the law
would not be enough to satifsy the
ethical standards of hi s ad -
ministration.
Fro• Page Al
EXECUTE. •
judge's refusal Tuesday to order
a stay or execution. The attorney
contends that jurors OPPOsing-
capit.al punishment 's hould not
have been excluded from the
trial and that Florida judges dis-
criminate between whites and
blacks in handing down death
sentences.
In what may have been
Spenkellnk's best hope of avoid-
ing execution Monday, Justice
Joseph Boyd raised the Issue pr
the U .S . Supreme Court
challenge filed by three other
death row inmates of state
clemency procedures. The court
has not decided whether it will
take the case.
"If we execute this man on
Monday and a few days later the
Supreme Court of the United
States says Gov. Reubtn Askew·s
clemency procedures are wrong,
what answer do you have for
t.bat?" Boyd asked Atty, Gen.
Robert Shevln.
Settlement Near
CONCORD <AP> -Mt. Diablo
Unified School District has
reached a tentative contract
agreement with its classilie<t
employes but a teachers' strike
entered Its slxih da v Frid av.
Second Race Taken
By Courageous
there has been no indication In
either race -or the one t.bat wu
pbandoned Tburtd~ because
the Umo llmlt. eJCplred -that
Turn~rwoold falter.
Although the Australians
saJled their beet race of the
1etle1, there dld not appear to be
any cblnlt tn Turner'• tacUcal
armor. · •
The llnal mllfllA of victory
WU 1 a>JDUte I HeoDd4, llthouih
TW'QIS' led bY u mucb u a:aa at
th• t1llrd mark.
Auatn11a cut more than a
mlnuw ott Courqeoua' sparctn
cm t.a. Mh Mf, a nm dowawiQd. But H. wu JDOr• Tu.raer'1 con-
aervaUv• 1trat111 than' any
IQOft by tM Alltr.UIDI that c.autd tbe reduction ln the m~. ~ . '
I
Amphetamines
Coast Doctor
'Faces Charges
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Ol tN 0.11~ ll'llel lt•ff
A 78-year-old San Juan
Capi•trallo doctor, long con·
Bldered a plllar of the community
by dlatiy did timera. is facin1
misdemeanor charees alleging
he illegally distributed am-
phetamine diet pllla.
Dr. Paul H. Esslinger, who has
practiced medicine In the Mis-
s ion City since the early 19308, ls
free on his own recognizance
pending a pre-trial conference
Oct. 12 tn the South County
Municipal Court In Lae una
Nig1'el.
He was arrested in mid-August
a fter a five-month investigation
of his office practices by agents
of the California Office or
Medical Quality Assurance.
John Urso, chief or that con
s umer agency's Santa Ana
bureau, said today evidence
gathered during the long probe
was turned over to the Oranl{e
County District Attorney for
TONIGHT
KIWANIS TRAVEL ADVEN·
TURE SERIES -"Andes to
Amazon," J ohn Goddard lec-
turer, OCC' Auditorium. 8 p.m.
FOOTBALL Estancia vs.
Edison, OCCstadium, 8 p.m .
OCC LECTURES · "Art of
Communication,·· Fine Arts
Bldg. 119; ••Drama of Weather, ..
Science Lecture 1; "History of
Furniture," Science Bldg. .Room
10; "Stress Management in
Today's World, .. Fine Arts 116:
·'Success i n Competitive
Athletics," Science Hall ; "Un-
derstanding Sexual Interaction,··
Science Lecture 2. All 7:30 p.m .
MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY
RACING --Fair~rounds, 8 p.m .
SATl'1RDAY, SEPT.17
HOAG HOSPITAL HEALTH
FAIR ,_ Hospital grounds, 10
a .m . l.0'4 p.m.
prbsec.utioo.
Acc»rdlnl t.o Urso. the charaes
against EuUneer include nine
countl ot unlawfuJly preacr1bin1
amphetamines. one count of
altertn1 medical records and two
counts of improper labeling of
drugs.
JI convicted of the cba.rges,
Esslinger could lace a term in
county jail and /or a floe. •
The doctor wu not anllable
ror comment today on the
cbar~es pending aulnat him. Hil attome)', John D. Cocbrati
of Irvine, contended hla client la
innocent but would not elaborate
further on the caae.
'Ibe state lnveatJ1atlon re-
volves around aJlesaUona that
Esslinger wu dlltribuUna diet
pilla to paUenc.. without conduct·
ine physical namlnaUona be-
forehand.
That contenUon is at.o tho cora
argument of a wron1ful doath
suit filed agalnat E11Un1er by •
Riverside County widow, at.em·
mln1 from her huaband'1 death
from a heart attack last October.
The suit, however, ll separato
from the state caae a1atnat tho
doctor. "We know nothinH about.
a wrongful death ault, Uno
said.
EssUnger has been a doc·
·tor alnce 1928 and, tor years, he
was San Juan's only resident
physician.
He ls remenibered by lonstlme
residents for many good deeds in
the past.. including lavish
Christmas parties for the com-
m unity's children.
Only nine months ago. Eu·
Unger drew headlines when he
chased two bandits on the nm for
three miles after they held up his
office on Camino Capistrano Just
south of the old mission church.
With tJie help of Sheriff's de-
puties, Esslinger tracked tbe men
down and they were captured.
Alt.bough the state Investigator
would not reveal details of their
investigation pending court ate·
tlon, stipulatior:is In Ute Riverside
County lawsuit aUe1e that Ess·
linger had 3,000 to 4,000 cases and
toolc In an average of $1,500 a day
from his diet program by charg.
ing $7 for a month's supply of am-
phetamtne capsules.
F,....PageAJ
CA~LAS ..•
once said. "An art1sl who tne~
sincerely Lo meet the demands of
operatic muaJc must Wbrt under
extraordinary tensions . But I
know -and my friends would
s ay tJUs for me -that I am not a
monst~r."
The romance with Onassis
followed the stormy breakup of
her marriage to Giovanni Bat-
tista Meneghlni, a wealthy Milan ·
industrialist 26 years her senior
who dllcovered Ute overweight,
near-sighted girl with a..magnili·
cent soprano and aulded her to
stardom.
Jn Sirmione, Italy, friends of
Meneghini, near 80, said be was
bedridden alter suffering a heart
attack several months ago and
was not Immediately told ol Miss
Call85' death.
Her nine-year romance with
OnaaslJ ended when the sbipplng
mnenate married Jacqueline
Kennedy in October 1968. Miss
Callas claimed she harbored no
Ill feelings for Jacqueline, but
never met her and continued to
ace Onassis until his death in
&1 ucb 1975.
''He la my bes t friend, .. she
uld In 1974. "He is, be was. and
he always will be."
She said she never married
him because "l think love ls so
much better when you're not
married.''
In 1970, res>orts circulated that
MlH Callas ·attempted suicide
and wu taken to a hospital. But
ahe denied it, suing a magazine
that re~rt the alleged attempt
and aa · g: "I bav~ no idea
where ~e rumors come from. I
am very well.'· ·
Miss Callas was born Dec. 4. 1923~ and spent what she
described aa a miserable
childhood as a fat. ungainly iirl
in the Washington Heights sec-
tion of Manhattan, beginning
mualc l~ at aae 8.
In 1937 her mother took Maria
-14 years old and 200 pounds --
to Greece, where they were
stranded by the outbreak of
World War II. There, she won a
scholarship at Athen s
Conservatory and began a
serious study of music. A year
later· she made ber debut in
Mascagni's .. Cavalleria
Rusticana."
She continued studying in New
York after the war, and after two
years the Met olfered her the role
of Madame Butterfly. But she
turned it' down because of ber
weight, and went instead to
Verona. Italy, where sbe met Menegh.lnl. OCC LECTURE ·-"How to
P resent a Small Claims Case ...
Fine Arts 119, 8:30 a.m. Lo 12:30
p.m.
"PRIVATE LIVES" ·-South
Coast R epertory Theater.
Tuesday.Sunday through Oct. 30.
8p.m.
FOOTBALL -OCC vs. Golden
West, OCC stadium, 7:30 p.m.
Costa Mesa High vs. La Quinta al
Bois a Grande High, 8 p. m .
NB Jazz Etisemble
. Gets New Sponsor
Forum Dates
Reversed
A story tn Thursday's Dally
Pilot incorrectly listed dates for
two public hearings to be held in
Costa Mesa on the relocation pf
McNally lllgh School.
The Newport-Mes e School Dis-
trict's citizen advisory commit-
tee wlll bold public hearlnp on
the Issue Sept. 28 at Monte Vista
School and Sept. 29 at WblWer
School, with both bearlnp to
begin at 7:30 p.m.
The earlier story lncorrectly
revened the dates and locations.
The Daily Pilot rerrets the error.
The Newport. Beach
Parks. Beaches and Recreation
Department is taking over
~nsonhip of the Newport laz:r;
'Ensemble. a program foll)'oung
musicians.
Directed by John Lindfors, the
ensemble formerly operated
through the Newport·Mesa
Unified School District.
This year it will perform under
auspices of the city department,
although the program remains
open to school age musicians
from any community.
The program will be expanding
this year, accordin1 to Bob
Gr allier of the recreation depart-
ment. He aaid that, In add1Uca to
the Jazi ensemble, a second
group will be formed for less ex·
perienced players.
To be called the Newport Big
Band, the new proaram is Gpell to )
.
students In grades five to 12 who
·have a least one year experience
with their instrument. ·
The group will concentrate Qn
the music of the Big Band Era.
Interviews will be held Sept. 28 at
7 p.m. at the Ensign Middle
School band room.
The Jazz ensemble itself is
open to students in grades eight
through 12 with at least three
years experience. The emphasis
is on playing, performing and im-
provising Jazz.
Interviews for this group also
will be held Sepl 28 at Ensign. I Rehearsals tor both groups will
be held once a week and a fee of
$10 a month will be charged to
cover expenses.
Both groups will concentrate
on pl~g in performances.
For further information. con-
tact Granier at 640-22'11.
'FHE FOOTBAIJ, SEASON . .
You are possibly now In the process of shopping for
carpeting and have l>een taJkJng to safes people at two or
three stores. If so. )QI no doubt feel like a ·footb811 ... bounced
around with a bevy of conflfcting stories. .
..
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Bick;' Ouster DerUed A
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Cella Loses Battle
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LOSES IN PRE·TRIAL MOVE
Defendant Cella
Younger in County
~ Public Concern
Urged in Crime • . ~ ~
) I
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1
J
"CITIZENRY MUST HELP'
Attorney General Younger
Wiggins' Seat
Sought by
Mayor of Br.ea c
Rex D. Gaede, the mayor of
Brea. announced Thursday he is
a candidate ror the 39th·
Congressional District seat being
vacated next year by Rep.
Charles Wiggms CR·Fullerton).
Wiggins p~a{ls to retire:
Gaed~. 46, becomes the se<;ond
entry in next June's Republican
primary. He joins Assemblyman
William E. Dannemeyer, 47. <R·
Fullerton), who announced bi.s
candidacy two months ago.
Gaede, director of the coUl\ty's
Child Guidunce Ce nter.
describes himaelf as If
Goldwater·type Republican.
Mayor Gaede has served on the
Brea City Council for two y~ars
and was formerly a president and
trustee of the Brea·Olinda
Unified School District. ,
Kickjng off his campaign
Thursday in Santa Ana, Gaede
accused Dannemeyer of ••un·
fortunate opportunism" In run·
ning for another post so soon
alter being elected to the As·
sembly last Novem bcr.
Gaede also expressed concern
over the influx .of lllenl aliens
• from Mexico artd the Increasing
• burden it places on welfare pro-
crams
By ARTIRJR R. VINSEL
Ol IM 0.lty ~li.t St.ff
Crime cannot be held in check
as long as the citizenry leaves the
whole job to law enforcement
personnel, state Attorney
General Evelle J . Younger
declared Thursday.
Speaking to the California
Crime Prevention Officers As·
sociation at Anaheim's Dis·
neyland Hotel, the state's chief
law enforcement officer said the
key to stopping crime is com·
munity involvement.
Younger, currently considered
an active candidate for the
California governorship, alsip
said a uniform building code in·
creasing security of commercial
and residential structures is a
necessity.
"If you're going to legislate
safety requirements in case of
fire or earthquake, why not do
the same for security against
crime?" Younger told his cw·
dience.
The attorney general said.
however, efforts to toughen
buil<UJ\g standards to make Ure
tougner for burglars have run in·
to a solid wall of opposition from
the building and protection in·
dustry lobbies.
"The economic experience of
recent years and the continuing
impact of inflation a nd
budgeu.ty constraints . . . has
importatnt i mplications for
crime prevention in tbe future,"
Younger told tbe group.
"It makes essential a more de·
liberate and committed decision
by local com·munilles to share
with law enforcem ent its
responsibility to maintain or·
der," he said.
"The community must be wlll· inc to accept responslblllty and
recognize that the community
must• decide what level of
criminal behavior is acceptable
or tolerable and then exert com·
munity control," Youngeraaid.
The third annual tralnlq con·
ference for crime p"v~ntiolbof·
ficers drew nearly ~ such of.
ficers from police departments
throughout the state. The u·
sociat1on is divided tnto northern
and southern membership sec·
tlons.
Officer Stan Bressler of the
Newport Beach Police Depart·
ment is president of the southern
chapter.
Contract Ratified
SAN DIEGO CAP> -The San
DfegOTeacbers A8'oclatlon bu
ratified a contract. a1reement
neg~ted wt week.
One·time Orange County
political power Dr. Louis Cella
lost another court battle Thurs·
day when Supe~ Court Judge
Warren Knight refused to oust
Distrtct Attorney Cecil Hicks as
Cella's prosecutor.
Celia's attempt to have Hicks'
office taken oCf his case and
replaced by the state Attorney
General's Office centered around
an allegation that the district at·
torney is biased against him.
Judge Knight ruled otherwise.
He said defense lawyers acting
on Cella's behalf had failed to
show sufficient bias.
Tbat ruling means it will be a
deputy district attorney from
Hicks' office who will prosecute
Cella next month when he stands
trial on multiple fraud related
charges.
Last year, a federal jury in ~
Angeles found the former county
political kingmaker and two co.
defendants guilly or federal tax
and Medicare offenses coMected
with the bilking of fu{lds,.from
two hospitals once controlled by
Cella.
The SJ.year-old Santa Ana
physician is free from a ~nding
five-year prison sentence handed
him until the outcome on his con·
viction ap~al Is known.
Since that conviction. Cella has
spent a lot of time In Orange
County Superior Court as his at·
torneys made a long series or
pre·lrial motions.
A Cella co-defendant did win a
point Thursday.
Stephen Evans. a former ad·
minislrator at Mercy General
Hospital, Santa Ana, was told by
Judfte Knight that he will be
given a trial separate from Cella.
Evans' attorney~ James Rid-
del, appealed for the separation
because of what he said was the
massive amount of publicity sur·
rounding the doctor as his.
political and financial empires
began crumbling in late 19TS.
Cella 's demise as a potent
force in Orange County politics
came in Januar)> 1976 when
federal and county grand juries
simultaneously indicted him on
multiple fraud related charges.
In 1974, Cella was California's
ntsmber one political donor when
'he contributed more than $500,000
to at least 54 candidates and
poliUcat causes.
Heaviest recipients of Cella's
political generosity were slate
Controll er Kon Cory and county
Supervisor Laurence Schmit who
together raked in almost $400,000
Cella dollars for their '74 cam·
paigns
]olumy Irked ..
Over Potties,
Seeb Silence
DETROIT <AP> --Lawyers
ror Johnny Carson want a Utica,
Mich .• toilet maker to stop talk-
ing about the tele-psion star's
Sl.2 million suit over a line of
"Here's Johnny I" portable
toilets.
The attorneys contend Earl J.
Braxton, owner of Porta-John
Corp., Is using the lawsuit to gain
publicity.
Carson's lawyers asked U.S.
Diatrict Court Judge James
Churchill today to bar Braxton
from talking to reporters about
the "Tonight·· show host's suit.
Carson $Ued Braxton last
January after he brought out a
llne of portable toilets called
"Here's Johnny!" That is the
phrue used by announcer Ed
McMahon to Introduce Carson on
the TV show, and the sui\ charges
trademark infringements.
Caraon•s lawyers contend
Braxton has "regularly given out
interviews to newspaper re-
porters" about the cue. They
19bmltted as evidence copies of
slx r)ewBpaper articles on the suit
and 1 newspaper ad Braxton ran
ciUna.the 1ult ..
•
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JOHN DAVIDSON GETS CLOSE TO HIS AUDIENCE
In Cincinnati, a Benefit for the Survivors.
Rememher\ng
Concert 'A.Uh Fire Survivors
CINCINNATI <A Pl -Minnie Butsch clutched a yellow rose
while her 70-year-old husband, Pius, broke into a grin at singer
John Oavldson's jokes.
For a rew moments Thursday night, the memory of their
daughter's death in the Beverly Hills Supper Club fire last May
was tucked away, but not forgotten.
THE BUTSCHES AND TIIEIR FIVE grandchildren were
among a crowd of 7,000 attending a benefit performance at
Riverfront Stadium for the 200 children whose parents were
among the 164 killed in the fire at the Southgate, Ky., night club.
"This is a wonderful thing they've done here," Butsch said.
"I'm glad someone had the courage to put it on ...
Davidson, waiting backstage when the fire broke out, didn't
talk about the blaze that killed his music director, Doug Herro.
"JOHN'S HERE TO HELP THE children, not to talk about
the fire," a spokesman said.
Oavidson sang love songs and talked about visits to the Ohio
State Fair, and sometimes clowned with fans, who gave him a
· standing ovation when he came on stage. ·
Wallace 'Cruel?' ...
Told. by Cornelia
MONTGOMERY. Ala. <AP> ---
Cornelia Wallace says the reason
her marriage to Gov. George C.
Wallace broke up was "not in-
compatibility but the com-
mission or actual violence and
cruelty" against her by Wallace
"with danger to her life and
health.''
Mrs. Wallace made the accusa-
tion in a countersuit for divorce
filed Thursday, three days after
the governor filed for divorce on
9rounds or incompatibility.
There was no elaboration on the
charge.
WHITE ABELIA 'Whlte flowers backed by glossy
foUa1e make thla lllnab a handJlome
addlUon to any laodaoape. ~ SALE
1 Gallon Site
Reg.SUS
CAROB TREE
This compact 1rowln1 1bade tree add1 cooln to any landscape.
SALE
She asked the court to award
her a divorce and to grant her
, "liberal sums as alimony sup-
port and maintenanoe." •
Flight Sold Out
NEW YORK $P) -About two
dozen budget-minded, spur-of·
tbe·moment travelers showed up
at Kennedy Airport on Thursday.
hoping to fly to London at the new
Pan American World Airways
cul·rate $256 round·trip rate for
standbys.
PANSY. VIOLA It's plant1n1 time i.r these
fall·pllntint favorttes again. Great
for landscape or e<mtatner use.
Pony Pack/
6 ~lanta Rec.•
SALE
DAILY PILOT A3
Allaway
·Gets 2nd
]ur.y Try
Convicted mass murderer
Edward Allaway's defense at-
torney refused Thursday to let a
Superior Court judge decide if Al·
laway was insane when be abot
and killed seven people on tb13e
Cal State r'ullerton campus
months ago.
As a result. Judge Hobert
Kneeland set Nov. 2 as the date it
new jury will be selected to sit in
judgment al Allaway's sanity
hearLna.
One jury heard 10 days of sani·
ty tesUmony. but was unable
after four days of deliberation to
decide ii Allaway was insane
when be killed the seven people
and wounded two others on the
university campus.
Judge Kneeland declared a
mistrial last week and sent the
•'hopelessly deadlocked" jury
home.
The same jury earlier had no
difficulty finding Allaway gu.illy
or six counts of first degree·
murder, a single count of second
degree murder and two counts of
assault with a deadly weapon.
Bunny,, 'Body'
Tales Mark
Anniversary
A m annequin in the morgue
and a jackrabbit that laid off
three workmen were among
stories told of the construction of
San Clemente General Hospital.
whjch celebrated its fifth an· n~rsary this week. •
Two of the'bospital's-founders.
Ralph Graham and Joe Long.
each had a son working there
during the final construction
phase. A practical joker b'ad put
a mannequin in the hospital
morgue. and it was the" two boys '
who found it.
They d.idn 't stick around long
enough to find out the •'body ..
wasn't a corpse. Long told a
group of 38 employ.es who were
-honored tbls week for their five
years of service with the
hospital.
The jackrabbit story involved
three workmen, who were told~
.;walk through a large concrete •
pipe to work.
.. Watch out for snakes,
though,·· the foreman told them.
.. There are a lot of rattlesnakes
in thia hill country.··
The three m en proceeded
cautiously into the pipe openiilg,
one out in front with a gun, in
case of snakes. The other two
followed, with flasbligh.ts.
When their light hit a jackrab-
bit, hiding in the pipe, the
frightened animal sprinted
away. 'lbe gun went off. and the
hospital found themselves sad·
died with their first workmen's
compensation claim. ·
The gun blast had hurt the
men's ears. said Long.
PERIWINKLE (VINCA} -
f'ully·blbHomed plant• of this
tend• ~al add tnatant color
to the garden. SALE
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.44 DAil V PILOT s .
F'rld!y, !!pt«nbfr ti, 111'1
,I . .
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Saccharin Gets Ne~ Hope
Senate Rejects .. B""' Seeks Wa~ng Note
May Force
BeWith·You
FUZZB\JSTEaS: l now cer·
taanly agree walh one of my col·
leagues here on tbe paper who
observed the other day that
poltce radar traffic enforcement
is popping up everywhere.
There I was the other morning,
toollng alon1 good -old Pacific
Coast Highway in my usual
grump-in~work daze. My mind
was doing about one-half revolu-
tion per minute. I was groggily
reviewing what l 'd read In the
morning news and speculating on
whether or not the coffee
machine would be-working when
I got to the omce.
About then I was ro111ng into a
sector or the coastal route where
the speed limit drops in just a few
blocks from 55 to 45 to 35 miles
per hour.
Then abruptly, it happened.
I GIANCED \JP on a hilly
sidestreet and there he was.
The motorcop was parked on
the hill, sitting astride his
machine, a radar gun pointed at
the highway.
All of a sudden my pre-coffee
dulled mind came to a full alert
-as full as it gets, anyway.
"Good Lord," I said aloud to
the empty seat at my right.
.. HE 'S POINTING THAT
THING RIGHT ATME."
Now even with your mind in
the early-day glops, you should
know that by the time you see the
officer with the radar gun, it's too
. late. He's already· got you
·clocked and recorded. You are
either busted or you're home
free. -.
So for the next few blocks, driv·
ing ever slower, it was rear-view
mirror watching time. Is be com·
ing to get me? Do 1 see red lights
in the sunrise? How much will
this one cost?
He did not come get me.
THIS LED ME to the con·
clusion that CA) He couldn't get
his motorcycle started; <B> He
was just using hi5 radar for prac·
tice; <C> He waa in· a benevolent
mood (unlikely>; <D > He had dis·
c~vered a more interesting
t.~rget; or <E> I wasn't speeding.
Trouble was. I didn't realb'
know which conclusion was cor· r~cl. I'll never know. I• had been
driving along in the doldrums,
j\,lst sort of floating with the flow
of traffic. I didn't really know
what my speed was when l final.
ly spotted the motorcop with bis
Star Wars radar piAtol. .
1So it was pome fr~e this time;
not knowing whether you'd been
right... wrong or indifferent.
One thin& ia clear. There is
someLbin& moat. disquieting
about seeing one of tboae men ol
the law alongside the road, point·
ing that electroolt-bUooka rl&bt
a~you.
I guess that's why a number of
c\)mpanies are maklns a mlDt by
s!_lllng device• llke '\be
•7·uubuater" whlch/ou·lmt.all op your dashboard an lt alleaed·
lt gives you an early wa.rnlna Oil ~Uce radar with a butur and
flashing Ugbt.
The electronic age clearly haa W. in ita clutches.
ANY MORNING NOW, I ex· s-ct to come to work and find my
boss polntina all eltctrOnic platol
at me.
· It will be tellln1 blm if I have
rfty brain turned on yet. ·
WAIJDNOTON <AP> -l>tet aodu and other product.I con·
talnlnl aaccharln •~•11 to ..... main oo aton 1belv (Mat leut.
another 18 moatbl, b tbeyprob-
ably .-u have to caru a cancer ••mlaa almllar to Uiat print.tel
on dalfttta pacU,11.
Wbllt there II aireement on
Ult Med ror a cancer wamlnal •
fierce conara1ion1J tt1ht II oo-
veloplna over wbetbtr man:ulac· turen Should also be required to
hlclUde a almllar w1rnln1 when
they advertise product.a contain·
ia1 aaecharin.
THE SENATE VOTED 87 to '1
Thursday to block a 1ovemment
ban on aaccharln, which had
been acheduled to take etrect Oct.
l. The vote allo approved the re-
quirement that cancer warnings
be placed on all p~ucta contain·
ln1 the artlflclal sweetener.
Vendina machines aelllna such
proclf.acts also would have to post
the wamlna. as would dlaplays in
aupumarketa.
Durlna the 18 .t month ·
moratorium on the saccharin
ban, the 1ovemment wlll study
health risks and benefits of the
...
No Known Motive
4 Children Killed,
A.lone in Home
CLIMAX SPRINGS, Mo. <AP>-Four children were shot to
death while their parents were away from their home in an isolated
rural area, police said.
Sheriff's officers sar they have uncovered neither a motive nor
a suspect in the slayings at the h~me in the Missouri Ozarks.
"I DON'T KNOW IF ANYONE broke In or not," said Deputy
Sheriff Joe Vauhn. ''There's no evidence of any forcible entry.··
'The victims, the children of Mr. and Mrs. George Swift, were
two girls, approximately 15 months and 2 years old, and two boys, 12
and 14 years old.
He said the names of the victims would not be released pending
notification of a relative.
The bodies were discovered Thursday evening. ••we responded
to a call that there might be an injured party at the residence,•· the
deputy &aid.
VAUGHN SAID HE KNEW WHO made the call but declined to
identify the caller. "It.wasn't a neightbor. We really don't want to
release that information." r
Three of the bodies were found in the house and the fourth, one
of the boys, was found in the backyard. Vaughn said all were
believed to have been shot with a small-caliber weapon.
All were fully clothed, Vaughn said. The deputy said be did not
know how close the victims were to their assailant when they were
shot. He said they were not tied up.
... The home is in a rural area along a state highway, Missouri 7.
"There ~eally are~ 't any close neighbors.•·
HouSe Backs Hike
In Minimu~ Wage
WASHINGTON (AP) -The House of J\epresentativea la sending
the Senate legislation to raise the mlnimam wage paid millions of
American workers by 75 cents an hour over the next three years.
About 3.1 million persons work for the current $2.30 hourly
minimum wage, which will go to S2.6S ill January 11 the Senate agrees
with action taken by the House
Thursday. This would meaira $14
weekly raise for people working
a 40.hour week. <News analysis.
Page AB.)
The raise to $3.bs by 1980 would
be the most sizable since
Congress paned the first
minimum wage legislation dec-
ades ago. A aimllar bill already
has been approved by a Senate
committee.
Mmee Celeflr.Ca .
MEXJCOCITY <AP) -Ahalt·
mlWon celebrant.a crowded into
the capital'• malD plaza Tbun·
day nl&bt to watcb President
Jose Lopez Portlllo ring the
traditional bell ofir..ectom, com·
memoratJQa lndeptpdence from
Spain 187 years ap.
Lopes Portillo appeared on the •
balcony of the National Palace
for the time-honored re· enactment of Father Hidalao'•
signal of Mexican freedom in
1810.
. f'.wead APJf .. fffl
WASHINGTON (AP> -
Travelers with flexible 1cbedulea
can fiy from New York to LGndon
and back for $280. The Plan. ap-
( IN SHORT )
proved Thursday by ihe Civil
Aeronautics Board, will be
especially attractive to teachers,
students and others who spend
large ch\Dlks of time in Europe.
Under the plan, pusengen
can name the week tl)ey want to
fly but not the specific day, What
they'll get ls a fare $346 cheaper
tban' the normal New York·
London roundtrip coach fare of
$626.
l'lolellee KIU. JS
BOGOTA, Colombia (AP>
Police batUed scattered lfOUPS
of rioters in Bo1ota early. today
as Colombia'• wont violence
since the 1948-1958 civil war 1ub-
alded. Labor leaden whole na·
tionwlde strike set off the dis·
turbances vowed to continue
aaltatln& for bl&her wages .
Fifteen persons died and more
than 120 were injured in two days
of lootlq and rioting that t>etan
ddrinl a 24-hour 1trike Wedftes..
day acatmt President. Altomo
Lopa' ,-overnment.
COoi Weather Continues· ' .
artificial sweetener, which ha,
been linked to bladder cancer in
laboratory animala.
THE SENATE-PASSED bill
probably will win approval by
the House, which gets to act on it
next. House members have gone
on record as tavortna the delay
on the saccharin ban. They voted
for such a postponement earlier
thfs year as part of aJiothtt piece
ot legislation -a ta()tlc the
Senate didn't go alonJ with el the
time.
While there is widespread con·
A,.WI ........
Rlde'E•
# Opening da~ crowds at the
Pendleton <Ore.> Roundup
thi s week sa w J~hn
McDonald of R ed Bluff.
Calif.. take o.n a Brahma
bull. The rodeo continues
through S~turday.
gr~sslonal support for delaytn'
the ban and requlrin& a warntnc
on Ncch.arla products, the real
controversy II over adverlislng.
The Senate stripped from the
bill a pr"O¥ialon that would have
requtnd canc.-r wamin•s In
printed advertlttnf or In radio or televWon conuaelclall for ~
duct. cont.alnl.DI aaccbarln. . .
THAT ACl'ION prompted the
blll's •PMSOt. Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy (D·Mau.>; to repudiate
the le,WaUon. Kennedy 1ald al-
lowing 1accbarln products to be
advertiled without aprroprtate
wamlr\s.I "goes 11aln8 the rec-
ominendatlon of every health
expert fn.thls countey. ·'
Kennedy Hid a warrun. on
saccharin products tsn 'l enough
to alert consumers to the rt.ska of
using the IUCar IUbatitute.
He tried to get the Sen•te to re·
turn the bill to his Senate health
subcommittee, but. wben that
failed. on a 69 to 24 vote, Kennedy
voted against the entire bill.
Kennedy and others who want
the advert.laing warnlnas -in·
eluding the Carter admin.istra-
t'ion -are looking to the House to
revive the proposal. A House
health subcommittee bas ap·
proved the saccharin legislation,
but without sucb a provision, in a
bill that goes before the full
House Commerce Committee for a vote next week. ···
A,.Wl,...._
RAPE SUSPECT
Oscar Edward Kendall
Avedon Imposter
Suspect Arregied
W ASJUNGTON <AP > -Police arrested a man Thursd~y nl&ht on a
rape charge and said they believe he is the man who has been im·
.personating fashion photographer Rictntrd Avedon as part of a con-
fidence ea me.
Police in a number of states have beeA seeking a man who has been posing as Avedon. allegedly
swindling at least 30 women out · Detectlve Joe Satterfield aald
of money while promising them ~endall was charged with a rape'
careen 11ffuhion modeling. in Washington three years ago in
Metropolitan Police detectives which the assallant claimed to be
said the arrest came after a Avedon.
bar\ender told police that a Authorities said they had is·
customer resembled a photo-sued a nationwide bulletin
gr'hpb of the alleaed Avedon im-earlier Thursday seeking Ken·
personator and that the man dall in connection with tbe
"was representing himseu·· as Avedonimpersonatlon. ,
the famed photographer.
POLICE IDENTIFIED the
fnan arrested Thursday night as
Oscar ~ward Kendall, 33, of
Queen Creek. Ariz.
You Can't
. J .
A PHOTOGRAPH OF the al·
leged imposter appeared with a
story Th\11'$day morning in the •
Waabinaton Post.
. Tel I The Players
new• now
'
..
.Aqueduct
To Ope n
Tuesday?
LOS ANvEl.ES CAP> nun.
t y homeowners and aniclo""
1rowen ar~ hopin11 the op
tlm11Uc pred1rtors are rt&ht and
lbiat watt.-r will once 01aln now
tbrou&b thl• Colorado River
Aquedut·t to R1vcn1de and San
.D1eao Count1e by th~ "eekend
But thu Metropolll4ln Water
tllstrict held to 1tJ. more cauho\1.\
-claim Thur.,day, saying that the
aqueduct wUl ht! clear or rockb
~nd debm. by Tuesday FOT the
mtenm, emergency efroru were
begWl to divert dwindhng water
· ~upplies to areas in the greatest
need.
.Klufnge r Honored
LOS ANGELES <A P >
'F'ormer Secretary of State Henr)'
Kissinger has accepted the
Humanitarian Award of the Na
( STATE .J
tional Conference of Christian~
and Jews, unperturbed by pro·
tests from antiwar activists.
Representatives of antiwar
groups complained before Thuri.
day evening's event lbat Kisl>·
inger'sinvolvcmentin U.S. policy
in Southeast Asia made :i
mockery ofthc award.
Prior to accepting the honor at
Century Plaza Hotel ceremonies.
Kissinger responded to hil'-
<:ritics.
Odld Porn F laye d
SACRAMENTO CAP>
Legislation designed to crack
down on what some officials have
described as a growing business
i n c hi I d po r n o g r a p h y h a-s
reached the desk of Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr
The bill. by Sen Robert
Presley CD-Riverside), would
make it a felony to use persons
under ago 16 in pornograph1r
publications and film~
Fire llghte r Kille d
MONTEREY CAP l One
firefighter was killed and
another injured while battling a
S50,000 condominium fire at
Carmel Valley Golf and Country
Club, officials reported.
Mark Worley, 32, of Carmel
Valley, died late Wednesday or
intense hcf.it and respiratory dis
tress, said 'Monterey County
Coroner Harvey Philburn. Th~
firer11an had been pronounced
dead on arnval al Community
Hospltul, he said .
Post Nephew Name d
SACRAMENTO. (AP>
Retired legislative analyst A.
Alan J;>ost is being replaced by
his nephew, William Hamm, in
the S47,549·a·~ar job.
The appointment was an-
nounced Thursday by the Joint
Leg1slat1ve Budget Committee
whose chairman. Sen. Dennis
Carpenter <R-Ncwport "Beach).
added: •·we considered the coin·
cidental fact that Or Hamm is
Alan Post 's nephew and de·
termined that this alone should
not preclude his appointment. ..
.·
Friday, September 18. 1971 DAILY PILOT A4
.Rock'S Tops NaJ11ed
• f Wonder, Ronstadt 'Best Vocalists '
POLICE DI SCOVER $2.5 MILLION 'MAGIC.MUSHROOMS' Lt. Robert Plummer Inspects Hallucinogen Rel ated to LSD
$2.5 Million Baul
Illegal Mushrooms
Nabbed by Police
-FREMONT (AP) A 32-year-old plant store owner has been ar·
rested for investigation of cultivating more than $2.5 million worth
of 11legalhallucmoge01c mus hrooms. authorities report.
Police said Thursday the garage and basement of Larry Van
Williamson's home was a "mini-warehouse" of mushrooms and
spores containing psllocybin, an hallucinogen related to LSD.
CIDEF ROBE RT W~ERMAN said it was believed to be the
largest psilocybln bust in state history and the largest bust of any
kind in this surburban, east San Francisco Bay community.
The so-called "magic mushrooms" reportedly cause muscular
relaxation followed by emotional dlsturbanc~ and visual and
auditory hallucination. Eventually the user reaches a dreamlike
stat~.
ABOUT 2,500 POUNDS, or 2,500 square feet. of mushrooms
were confiscated in a raid Tuesday night which was prompted by re·
ports from an officer patrolling the area. ·
He had spotted the bounty of fungi through an open window last
Friday and picked up one mushroom. When police confronted
Williamson. he said his plants were "Black Forest" mushrooms
which he plaJVled to sell as delicacies to gourmet restaurants.
HOWEVER, CHEMICAL analysis of the mushroom showed it '
contained psilocybin. When officers descended on h1s house Tues-
day, Williamson ran several blocks, fell and was captured.
He was booked for investigation of ~ssession for sale of
psilocybln and was held on $9,000 bail.
THE MUSHROOMS remain in damp. cool. 8 by-10 fool bins of
mulch and peat moss where they were cultivated. A guard has been
assigned to watch the mushrooms while police considered how to
diapoee of the~. . .
Investigators were trying to determine the source and destana·
lion of the mushrooms and wh~lher Williamson had any partners.
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Rock
music, in the first or many. many
awards shows in this new
television season, baa named
Stevie Wonder pop-rock's sillier
of the year.
So what else is new?
Wonder, who swept last year's
Grammy Awards, was a big win·
ner in Thursday night's Third
Annual Rock M\1$iC Awards, be·
ing named Best Male Vocalist.
His album, "Songs In the Key of
Ll(e," won the best rhythm and
blues award.
Linda Ronstadt was rock's best
female singer, according to a
panel of rock music critics whose
winners were honored in NBC's
nationally televised production
Thursday evening. Fleetwood
Mac was named the year's best
group.
Fleetwood Mac, whose album
''Rumors" was atop the charts
tht'ough most or the year, was
also named rock personality of
the year. Their album also won
the bestprod~er award.
As is common with television
awards shows. Thursday's rock
music affair was as much an ex-
cuse to spend two hours in front
of the television cameras as it
was an homage to an art. But
rock impresario Don Kirshner's
nationally televised ex -
travaganza was at.least a snappy
bit of razzle dazzle offering some
of the best rock acts available.
Among those performtt\g m
quick-paced show were Rod
Stewart. Stevie Wonder, Dolly
Name Riles
Feminists
SAN DIEGO (Al» -The
Jetliner s of Pacific
Southwest Airlines may be
-grinning birds, but there is
no smile on the fuselage of
feminists on the payroll.
A new $.5 million com·
puter making PSA flight
reservations is called the
"Happy Booker ...
"A direct in -
s ult ... implies the
employes are prostitutes
and pimps," said the San
Diego ·chapter of tbe Na·
tional Organization for
Women.
Among 341 reservations
· agents who voted on the
name, an airline publicist
said "about 80 expressed
dissatisfaction with it "
TOP FEMALE SINGER
Linda Ronstadt
Parton. George Benson. and host
Peter Frampton.
Much to the delight of the
crowd at the Hollywood
Paladium, Wonder turned over
his "Rocky" td Olis Blackwell.
composer of some or Elvis
Presley's most popular tune!.
Wonder paid an emotional
tribute to Presley who died
Aug. 16 -and gave his statuette
to the man who wrote such
Presley tunes as "Don't Be
WINS TWO AWARDS
Stevie Wonder
Cru~. ··and" Return to Sender."
·~Klrshner 's music awards
show. one or several awards
shows honoring pop musicians.
named Boston the best new group
of the year and Yvonne Elliman.
whose "Love Me" was a big hit
this year, best new female
sang er.
And Elvis Presley, to no.one's
surprise, was named this year't.
inductee into rock music's Hall of
Fame.
Candy 'Not Dandy'
SACRAMENTO <AP> --Sell-
ing alcohol-spiked Cl;\ndy to
children will be against
California law starling J an. 1,
under a bill signed by Gov. Ed-
mund Brown Jr.
Brown said Thursday it will be
a misdemeanor to sell or give
candy, calce, cookies or chewing
gum weighing five ounces or less
cont'llining alcohol in excess of 2
percent to any person under 21.
The bill by Assetnblywoman
Leona Egeland <D·San Jose>.
was. aimed at Babarums, which
have been sold in California since
last September. said Bert
Barker, spokeswoman for Mrs.
Egeland.
Babarums, ·packaged like can·
dy and selling for 25 cents, have
been bi& sellers at conventence
markets near schools,· Ms.
Barker said.
..Kids are eating them for the
effect, not the taste,•· she said.
Ugi,slaton
<;et Pay Hike
SACRAMENTO (AP> -A 10
oercent pay raise for state
legislators an December 1978. \J
increasing their salaries to
S25,555, was signed into law
Thursday by Gov. Edmund
BrownJ r. -
The raise averages 5 percent n
yenr. t h e maximum t he
lawmakers can receive under a
constitutional amendment ap-•
proved by voters in 1966. '
The l egislators· last
raise was in December 1976.
They now make $23,232 a year. '
.~ WHEN SOLD in this country, the mushrooms usually are dned
or powdered and capsulated. Police said the price varies between SS
and $15 for two mushrooms. depending on size. or about S60 to Sl50 a •
gram. · . . Part o( the m ushroom's mystique was related lo its relative
rarity and its exotic history as a curative and ritual drug ahtong
some Indian tribes or Mexico and Central America.
Convicte d "
BAKERSFIELD (AP)
A Tulare County man
has been convicted here
of selling 15 ounces of
heroin worth $150,000 on
the street. Sentencing of
Reynaldo De Leon, 32, of
Alpaugh was scheduled
for Oct. 7
FINAL2DAYS
According to Jonathan Otl's "Hallucinogenic Plants in North
America," a mushroom containing psylocybin is used today by the
M azatec Indians in Oaxaca, Mexico. '"J
JGPenney
H~W~ORT. CENTER
FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY
MEW GARDEN SHOP HOURS!
'Sat. 8:30 to 6 p.m. -Sun. I 0 to 5 p.m.
f All IS THE SEASON TO
PLANT BULBS FOR SPRING COLOR.
CHOOSE FROM. . . I
• UNUMCULUS
• TUUPS
•DAFFODILS
• tlNEMONES
•STAR OF
BETHLEHEM
~ SPIDER UUES
• FREESIAS
OF•R
'
..
/
I
. .. ' : .. t: . .. . '. . . • • • I • . ..
EditOrial Page ..................................................... • Orang Friday. &eptemt.r 11. 1m
Robert N. Weed/Publll~r ThotNI l(eevll/Edi\or
Archaic La~ Sets
Off a Risky Plan
Now comos Interior Stcreuuy Cecil 0 ~n<1ru1 with a
propoMI to change the Whole picture of WHttrn agriculture
by 1t8f't1ng to enforce 1n arctta1c acrt11ge llmttatlon law. lt'a a
move that lo ds one to wonder where the 1ocretary hat been
tor the ~t few decade•
The 1902 law set1 1 180-acrt limit 0t1 t1rm1 Nrved by
lederal water roclamatton protecta. It waa designed to
promote "f am1ly farming and to keep landgrabt>era from
buying up vast acreagn of• land opened to productMty by
Bureau of Reclam1t1on water pro1eet1.
In fact. ttio law was never seriously enforced and the day
of the 160-acre family farm has long gone. Farma of from 500
to 2.000 acres now are common In the 17 Western states
where Andrus proposes to break up land holdings. In
CaJ1f0<n1a up to a million agricultural acres would be affected.
His plan 11 to force owners to sell off their excess land
at a price fixed by the government to small farmers selected
by a government lottery.
The landowners. Andrus argues. should not be permitted
to profit from the use of formerly and land made productive
by the use or cheap water
This is nonsense Obviously the big corpoi'ate farms have
contributed enormously to the growth of Western
ag riculture. which in turn has benefited the entire country
and has been very important in helping feed a hungry world
And the government should take pride in the fact that its
water reclamation projects have made this growth possible. V Secretary Andrus wants proof of the foolishness of his
proposal. he might look below the border and see what
damage a similar "land reform" did to Mexico's agricultural
economy
Juvenile Junilile
Nothing better illustrates the chronic ailments of Orange
co·unty's 1uven1le JUSt1ce system and the bureaucracies that
that control 1t than what is n ow the almost comical demise of
McMillan Reception Center.
What happened at McMillan is that the iuvenile court
decided to quit using it as a place to send youngsters
involved in such noncriminal offenses as truancy and running
away.
Judge Raymond Vincent can't be blamed for seeing the
futility of sending chronic runaway youngsters to an unlocked
place where they can run out the back door almost as fast as
they are checked in at the front do0t.
But while McM illan has fallen from the courts graces and
into virtual disuse. 1t is still staffed with 33 persons and is
somehow costing an estimated $25,000 a week to operate
Deputy Probation Officer Rex Castellaw said he had the
answer for the $25,000 a week dilemma He told county
supervisors that McMillan could be put back to use as a
secure detention facility for juveniles serving less than 30-day
sentences.
Supervisor Thomas Riley put that suggestion into
perspective when he said, "Well. then that puts us back right
where we were a year ago
The whole McMillan expenence 1s 1ust one more indication
that the bureaucracies responsible for the juvenile justice
• system don't know. or seemingly care, 1f the right hand
<f'oesn·t know what the left hand 1s doing.
Study Essential
Newport Beach city otticials are understandably touchy
about the subject of shorellne currents and what they can do
to beaches. The city has suffered considerable damage in
years past from beach erosion. a problem that is just now
beginning to be contained.
It 1s not surprising that council members reacted with
concern when they were notifl&d.that the Department of Fish
and Game plans to sink an old lrlberty ship off their beaches
to establish an artificial fishing reef.
When they first heard of the plan in June. city off1c1als
asked the Fish and Game people to provide them with the
scientific data that leads to the conclusion the reef won't alter
the currents along their beaches
Apparently officials at the state agency don't think the
city people are serious. because so far. they·ve provided them
with nothing. ·
Councilmen ere now beginning .. o talk about legal action
to halt the project until a thorough sclentltic study Is made.
The Fish and Game authorities have go(ten themselves a
declaration of negative environmental Impact -In effect a
._non-study. ·
We agree with the folks in Newport. There ought to be
some substantial study done by experts In the field before
that ship is sent to the bottom.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot.
Other views expressed on this page are tho~ of their authors and
artists. Reider comment is invited.
&yd/Stevenson
By L.M. BOYD .,
It has been more than a
quarter of a century since .
that sensitive soul Acftai
Stevenson jumped into the na-
tlonal scene to run for the U.S.
presidency against Oen. DwiCht D, Eisenhower, on.LY
to loee not once but twJd,
much to the sorrow of tu.
Uterat. le8'0lll. Moel Of them never knew about two hap-
peai.Qp that lrad affected
GoY. Steven.ton'• nr. pro·
found)y. All a youngster, he'd
accidentally shot to death
another youth. SubsequenUy,
he flunked out of Harvard
Law School. Later, be was to
earn his law decree from
Northwe:!Mm In fairly abort
order. But bis atonement for
th• kllllna wu lifelong and
too penoftal for any further
talk of it.
That Gutenberg printed the
flrat monbl•type Bible oo
doubt you know. But were you
aware be did tt -on a wine
preu?
In Af rtca, tho alx·foot·lanl mUlbrooms round m tennlte
hllli are sold by the.foot. l'io \Old. .
AbaUt 84A1ambi Fr&nklln'• e.x~ wttb decU1clty:
He wa the flrit to •.fP.!J. :!I web ... u "jiiikt -•
"netatlri" u well u "bat· tery,' • • 'cond•c tor ... ··~till'ft" an. "dllc,ar111t?
AYfl'~•;.,.:ot farmen ln lllO,~,. .... , .....
I m.oatbl. AQd that aver ...
••• eb\btd neiidtlJ WtW ft
1o& to 53 yea,~ l snOdth ln
1tl0. MoW. tboU&h, It'• back to llballl.,. 40. How do you u -
L~ln tbe fact that the f armett
'..W .... )'0Uft8Ut
TRB ..
Voting Rule Changed· Hist~ry
1 am probably one of the few
ldl In Washlntton who still
hates Henry Cabot Lodge
Grandfather Lodge. that is
Republican Senator from
Massachusetts; 1850·1924. He did
in 1919 what Republican Senator
Strom Thurmond from South
Carolina ls trying to do today, de·
feat a treaty with the aid of the
Founding Fathers. 'fhe Fathers
put that two-thirds joker into the
law <Article 11, Section 20): a
treaty is ratified "provided two·
thirds of the Senators present
concur." Thi.rtr·four "no'' votes
will kill it if aJ 100 are present;
and less if some are away. And if
a Senate minority reject.a the
Panama Canal treaty, which
was s igned in a glittering
ceremony in the big hall or the
Pan American Building here
September 7 -the day
Congress returned -we will
have another guerrilla war on
our hands with all Lalin
American countries and all Third
World countries against us. And
before long somebody will toss a
grena<Se into one of tbe Panama
locks and then we shall have no
Canal for a while.
ELLSWORTH BUNKER, 83,
one of the treaty neg'otiators. told
me the other day that he was 25
when Lodge defeated the League
of Nations. He 1s white-haired
and pink.faced. and looks as
fragile and elegant as a piece of
kind of war? A war far more ter-
rible, he said . "There were
destructive gases," he said,
"which were just ready for use
when the war ended -yes, and
great projectiles that putded
thtmulvn <my italics> and
wenl for hundreds or
miles ... What the Germans
used were toys as compared with
what would be used in the next
war .. inventions that were
just about to be used for the
absolute destru C'tion of
man.kind."
He told them ; they didn't
listen. Yet he pleaded (Denver.
September 25 > that with the
League "the littlest nation, along
with the biggest -Panama, to
take one of our near neighbors -
can stand up and challenge the
right of any nation In the world to
do a thing which threatens the
peace of the world. It does not
have to be a big nation to do 1t ··
JIMMY CARTER on TV cim
reuch the nation in discussing
Panama in less time than 1t took
Woodrow Wilson to pack his
trunk. But at the end of it he s till
facci. the hurdle of the two-thirds
vote, lUld if he needn't fear the
overeducated, poisonously
parlisan Lodge, it will be some
other pa11lonate aotaconlst.
Strom Thurmond ran for Presi-
dent as a Dtx.feerat and became a
Republlcao ln 1964; be la famous
for h\8 antl-clvtl rigbta flllbuster
of 2' houn. 18. mlnutea. But U
takes on1J 60 Senate vot.I now to
break a filibuster; it takes a
Constttutlonal 87 vot.ea (with all
present> to rauty a treaty.
Why did Senators get, such
power? John Jay explakf ed In the
Federalist Papera <Nu mber 64 >
that they would be picked by
state legislatures <they no longer
a re, of course) and woµJd be "the
most enlightened and respected
citizens." By contrast with the
popularly elected House. said
Alexander Hamilton, fFtdmJU1t
75), Senators would have "ac·
curate and comprehensive
knowledge of foreign policies. a
s t eady and sys temalie
adherence to the same views: a
nice and uniform sensibility to
national character; decision.
~ecrecy, and dispatch . . · · A
s uper.body an truth. worthy or
Strom Thurmond, Jesse Helms.
North Carolina, Orrin Hatch.
Utah, and other patriots.
WOODROW WILSON in his
fight for the League had the sup·
port of floor-leader Hitchcock.
china but with a deliberate kind .-f.~J-:::::::.-------.11"\l:tl
of mental agility that causes a
gaggle of hard-boiled reporters
to exchange adminnc ejacula·
lions. Yes, he agreed with me ar.
terwards. there have been few
times since 1919 when so much
hangs on a difficult two-thirds
treaty vote. And remember -
Wilson predicted what would
ha ppen if be lost!
Few or you probably have read
recently the compilation of 4-0
Wilson speeches that be made
between September 4·25, 1919 u
he heroically whistle-slopped
across the n ation . without
amelifiers. without radio. stand-
ing up waving bis top hat in end-
1 es s automobile processions
while flashpowder cameras
popped. Eloquent and
passionate, be made his last fight
for the League and failed. "I cun
predict with absolute certainty,··
he said, "that within another
generation there will be another
world war if the nations or the
world do not concert lbe method
by which to prevent it.'· What
Paul Harvey
'If we lose the Panama Canal, which of our foreign possessions
will be next? Taiwan? South Korea? West Germany?'
But can Carter count on M~onty
Leader Robert Byrd? Tho latter
reportedly told the President la.st
week that "he has an uphill road
to travel to ratUlcatlon" and
added that be is d~Jaylng bis own
personal decl~lon. What a
leader! A floot lea'der ls
enormously important l.n the
treaty Cree·for·all. Wilson should
have won his ft1ht: at all times
during debate three·fowtbs of
the Senate were ready to accept
some form of admlsalon to the
League. Lod1e exp1oited
Wilson's obstinacy. The small
band or Borah irreconcilables
firsl voted with the Wilson
Democrats agaimt any reeerva-
tion, and then switched to the
Lodge side to block the necessary
two-thirds. Ratification <March
19, 1920> received a m-iontyof 491
to 35. and lacked only 1 votes for, a Constitutional two-thirds; of
the 12 absent at least 8 were,
favorable to ratification. World
War II came punctually.
My bet is that the treaty will
pass. But lr is tricky. The two·
thirds rule makes lt an entirely
different ball game. It is
t?nonnously emotional: building
the Canal was the Moon Shot or
the era, the schoolbooks have
boasted about It ever since, and
with justice.
BUI' IT IS also colonialism and times have changed; that was
stressed at the gaudy sh.ow at the
Pan American Union her~ last
week. Never mind that the beads
or most of the Latin American
s tates here to see Carter are
.cenerals, dictators, and junta
leaders. We have been trying to
work out a better arrangement·
with Panama for 13 years;
negotiations have been backed
by four administrations; Jerry
Ford and Henry Kissinger, to
their credit. s upport the move·
ment. Those against it, like
Ronald Reagan and Strom
Thurmond, ironically enough,
h ave the s upport of the
diminutive Communist party in
Panama: it opposes any accord.
Finally, this is a test of Carter
leadership .. Is he an effettive
President? Can he govern? Is·
s ues are coming on thick and fast
now. A great deal more rides on
the P anama treaty than lhe
treaty.
TRB i& a longstanding Wmhington
byline. Its author currently b
Richard Strout of th• Christian
Science MonitM. Thi• ,artick is
reprinted from New Republic.
A Different View Of 'Double Dippers'
You have heard that there are
"double·dlppers" working for
o ur government: Retired
military people who are continu-
mg to collect their retirement
pensions while earning addi-
tional money as government
... employes.
And you've heard aome de·
mands that th~se double-dippers
be required to
give up one or
the other or
thelr in·
comes.
Why?
Bud Jones
was picking
t"olton on a
leached out
Texas farm
tbe day the
Japanese attacked Pearl
Harbor.
Ho wanted to enlist lmm~
ly but be was only 13.
Outra1ed Americans were
Charles McCabe
everywhere lining up al recruit·
ment centers eager to serve. t-0
save their country.
Bud Jones had to keep p1ckin&
cotton,
Shortly after he turned 17, be
signed up. It was now 1945. With
limited scbooling and skill.8, but
uncommon aptitude, he began to
move up through the ranks.
EACH re.enlistment time he.
was reminded that our nation
needed trained professional
military. Legislators were im·
proving benefit& and incentives.
Pride, patriotism and honor were
emphasized. Bud believed in the
principles and the prom.hes, and
so he signed up again and again
until one day he'd had 20 years in
uniform -and waa retired at 37 .
At 31 be st1ll bad a cblld tn
acbool. Betirement J:Gm was
not enough. So be ~ded he'd
have to have another job.
With extensive technical train·
ing and experience which he
could still offer his country, M
went to work for the government
as a -civilian for anotller 10 years.
Now he is 4.9. Bud bas served
our country for 30 years. He is
highly qualified for his present
government job. His skills are
less adaptable to commercial
employment.
UNDERSTAND, bis total
military pension last year was
$3,628. That's less tban the
acknowledged "poverty level."
If he were not working. be would
qualify for welfare. ·
ti be were not working, his
training and skills would be
wasted.
As ia -and bear this -Bud
Jones is 1ettln1 a military
penal.on ol $3,826.
But be ls ~income taxes annually amountma to mcntban
lhat-$3,737 lutyear.
He is more than paying his own
way.
And yet there is agJtat:lon lo
Congress to require the diamiasal
from government emplo>;nent of
all double-dippers -'U thouih
they were somehow tattq ad-
vantage c:A us taxpayers:
TREY ARE taxpayers. Bud
Jones ls paying more in taxes
than be ls collecting ln pemdoa.
Congress ls tryin& to eta.Qae
the .rules after the 11me ls over.
Bud cannot remake bis decisions
of 30, ~. 10 years ago. He did not
glve lea than wu asked. He does
not ask more than wu prombecl.
And in a soclety of con·
gresamen on the tat~ and
pardoned draft cJoqera and sub-
1klbed lolfen. tt ls.undW'ltanda·
bit ti tM Buel JClbelel wbo have
worbd twice a bard u IDGlt are
hqlne•nc to 1"JOder why.
Gmnb~ Increase Spells 'frouble for Tahoe
Taboeaty
Jmt about nel'J'bocb' wbo
com• .-ap..ber.e.Aurina tbe sum-mer airees that.. except-for the
•ceGerY and the 1amblln1, :! at Lake Tahoe are awf\ll -
1lue-rnovln1 qafftc, tbe • erowdina. tbe DaitJ browll lmof . over the cuinol, the poltual ar-r 01 an c e of th• c ••lno•
Uaemselv., the '"4Y echk>ek ov~ Oil UM Callfomla north u• tbe lnadequat• ...... 111tem. etc. etc . And. Tibet .. propoted to be
ctone? Jli•ht no• the 1re1 bu 10-
lnt for tt a
cra•b pro-
srmtomake
•"erytblna
that I• bad
Ju1t about twiM a bed.
It mt1ht be
c •ll•d tll•
Doiblln1 or
Td08.
. ft• crash ~ 1tutl wttll tbedoU= ol ......... ICttYtt1 ., Ult ·~·:th.la wlll,'"an • douWina M ;opui.uon; tbl' envtnlimea·
tallstl say. Mote tblD lMOO hotel
empJoyees wU1 be added to the
population ol South Late Tahoe.
This wU1 brlnl a total of ~.ooo
more ~anent residents to an
area wblCb aow hu 29.000 people
tnlt ..
Jual u eertalnly. vebltuJar tramc would be doubled. u tbe c .. b* were to aurvlve at tbelr
pretent econom1e l9Yel. th• four·
lane bllbwaya on tbe Nevada
alcle ol the ·1a.1ce Would Ila" to IO
to 1tx. Htrbway 50 on tbo
Callfoi"cda 1lde would ha Ye to co to._ l.,... 0th~• taetndflc
wCMald be'*" cbaOI.
-aewaae out d tbe cimdaol wtn retdl levels that will .. ap
remalalDI capacltJ OA the
C•llfornla tide. Some 1pare
•ew*le capacll.J wilJ .remaiD on
tbe Nn.t1 alde.
-pwnand for domtltle nts
to the euino lndUltll Will II"'!'
from m mlllloD salloea •IMr to
503 mmp, ... laal.
nnanoumanklitto
belieft aa .. JOU CGi.llt U.u
Of the new ICMltb ...S MIMltrue-'
tloo. Rqht.nat to Barnla .. Club
1'111 ..... the t•l&Ol7 BdPw•• llotel-eutno. rnM 1:i11, .... will
. hue niarly ••PM• ID kl
pafklng 1otl .... ftnllbed. Jt la
now about~ doae.1' wtD
UH 40.000 lqtlV8 feet ~ etiiilDo
1pace. employ 1100 1urn1aer
workers and h1H 4N .._..
rooml.
Harvoy•aw..-~ ....
• U.S. $0 from tbo Edlft .. .t:
approval for a a.n •••> culno tower that WlU •lf•f Ml
iambi.Inc area by ao,ooo ....,.
feet.
At lhe m11by Nevada J~ ot u~ eo wt. u. xtft11bur7
,
1
DAILY PILOT "7
Time Bomb Buried Mexico.
Okays
CB Use Fuel Pipelina Pose Explosion Threats
M08T ACCIDENTS QE not
fatal-. but some have been
holocalllts.
Nine people were killed and 14
injured last year in 1uburban
Venice when a &aaoline pipe ex·
ploded after it was ruptured by
excavation equipment.
On Labor Day, a man waa
killed and bis brother critically
injured when their moving van
ignited a cloud of natural gas in
New Cuyama. in Santa Barbara
county. The brother died Thurs·
day.
THE LEAK. STILL under in·
vesligation, occWTed in a 26-
year-old AUantic Richfield Com-
pany pipeline from a gas
compression plant along a
highway.
And last month, a Vietnamese
couple touched otf a block-long
fire in a Lakewood street when
( NEWSAIVAU'SIS J
54 oil netdl 1n lM An1elte County.
and t.belr producUoo ln 1t1'S was
t3 m1Won barrela. But ottlclall
aaJd on1,y cne of 11 clU• 1n the
county -Los Angel ea -requires
tbatoll lines be Lated.
Pf!DEBAL RBGULA'nONS.
auued in l.9S9, require oll com·
pan.Jet to test pipes before in·
stalladon and every flve years
thereafter. When a pipe ls ex-
posed, the companf muat test it. _,
But federal officials say It's
difficult lo enforce the laws,
which require penalties of $1,000
in fines and a five-year Jan term.
"We've had a bard time en·
forcing safety regulations
because of that penalty," said
J act Overly. the western re·
gional director of the federal Of-
fice of Pipe.line Safety Operation
in Burlingame. "Can you Im·
agine the president ol an oil com-
pany goinl to jail?"
THE RULES ALSO sate that
"pipeline right-of-way must be
selected lo avoid, as far as possi·
ble, areu containing private
dwellings, Industrial buildings
and places of public aasembly."
But Overly said federal of.
ficials have nqt identified all the
lines the government can re-
gulpte. A4 a result, both new and ---"'l'lletf uep dlflfll•fl -111 ,_,, ltear a elallfl,
tltftl llgtlre tltefl'"e reaeJaed ilae pipe, theta
'""11 It bade 11P au dotl't •q-a tlthag.'
they unwittingly drove through
what looked like a mud puddle.
Corrosion apparenUy had caused
a leak, which oozed into the
·puddle.
Their engine jgnlted it, said a
spokesman for the pipe's owner
and the resulting explosion In·
jured a woman.
EXTERNAL PIPE COR·
ROSION, the main cause of
failures until 1974, resulted In 41
accidents in California durinc
1976, the National Transportation
Safety Board baa reported. Since
1974, when pipe design was im-
proved, the main cause of acci-
dents bas been construction work
above the pipelines. But many
older pipes remain in use.
"Most construction companies
excavate by sound, .. said Lincoln
Sanders, an eneineer in the Los
AD&el~ Departm~t. oL.Pvbllc Utflltles and Transportation.
·'They keep digging unW they
hear a clang, then figure they've
reached the pipe."
THE PIPE'S PROTECl'IVE
coating often ls nicked, wtfich
causes corrosion. Sanders said,
but worker.1 often "bury it back
up and don't say a thing."
A Los Angeles County law bans
such practices, although it does
not require checks for com·
pli ance 6r annual tests for leaks.
The Western Gas and Oil AB·
sociatlon estimates there are 62
old pipelines still underlie the
urban sprawl.
Federal re&U)aUon.s do not re· •
quire oil companies lo register
their interltate pipelines, ao "we
have to do a lot of diggin& to fmd
them," Bill Whiteman, an
engineer for the Office of
Pipeline Safety Operation, said
in a telephone interview from his
Burlingame office. "We know
about some and don't Jrnow about others ...
WBITElftAN SAID BIS agency
sent 2SO letters lo oil companies
across the nation in 1978 lo iden-
tify their interstate lines.
In California, Arco, Chevron
U.S.A., Inc., Mobil OU Corp.,
Shell Oil Company, Texaco; Inc.,
and Union Oil Company denied
that their Jines crossed stale
boundaries and so were not sub-
jed lo federal reawaUoo. said • E"a ~gan d the fede1'll ptpeJlne
safetyafficein Waabington, D.C.
The Calllomia Public UWities
Commlaaioa ls investigating the
same five companies for possible
state reeulation.. But the state
also has bad trouble enforclni
pipeline safety regulations
because many California oil
companies deny that their
pipelines are "common car·
riers" dedicated lo public use,
s aid PUC attorney Richard
Neuman ln San Francisco.
COMMON CARRIERS
originally 'were defined tn ll 1920
PUBLIC HEARINGS
will be held at
WILSON ELEMEMT'AllY SCHOOL
IOI WILSON
COSTA MESA
federal act u any pipeline cross·
tn1 U.S. aovernment land,
Neuman aaid. But the atat.e
Supreme Court ruled in 1980 that
such pipetmea 1nWlt be declared
public utillUea before the PUC
may re&U)ate t!Msm, be added.
Because the oil companies COO·
llnue to operate u private buai·
nesses, the PUC has been power-
leq, Neuman said.
"California ls the only state in
the nation that bas been unable td
enforce the common carrier
laws," be aaid.
OIL COMPANIES SUCH u
Mobil and Chevron arsue that
th~ir pipeline systems are rel·
atively safe, pointing out that
accidents involving explQSaoos or
fires happen rarely.
The major companies have
com~ that detect pipeline
leaks almost immediately, and
can shut down the system in a
matter of minutes, Mobil and
CheVT'Oll spokesmen both said.
H.E: Gillispie of Chevron:
whose gasoline Une ruptured in
Venice last June and caused an
explosion that killed or injured 23
persona, says the company bas
done nothini to uppade safety
precautions along it.a SOO.mlle
Los Angeles County system
because construction workers
were responsible for that dis-
aster.
"WE WERE SAFE before
June, 1976, and we're safe now,"
Gillespie said. ,
To help eliminate construction·
related accidents, Los Angeles
County approved an ordinancct
last February that new pipes car·
rying ha2ardoU1 sub&tances such
as crude oil, petroleum products
and natural gas be buried about a
root deeper. and that excavation
be conducted more carefully.
There are no penalUes for
violations of the county's new or·
dinance beeause "there have
been no problems with non-
compliance." said .,county road
commi11loner Irvine Mohar.
"Generally, the construction in·
dustry bas complied."
ONE REASON, MOHAR said,
is that construction companies
must pay $500,000 in llabWty in·
surance, plua half the cost of
materials and labor for luly coun-
ty project.
• However, companies working
on projects not belonging to the
county must post a maximum
bond of only $2,000 lo pay for
replacing pavement, aald assis·
tant road comml.sioner Donald
Dreher.
Mohar sald the county la con·
sldering adopUn• a "on~all"
sys~m to help eliminate con·
structioo·related pipeline acci-
dents. Under the system. a con·
tractor theoretically may dial
one telephone number for in-
formation on all pipes in a etven
are~.
Snd~E'fdo .... .,........
LOS ANGEL~ <AP>
-A pro&ram to promot.
Increased tourism ln
Mexico, tncludln1
permittinl the uae of
ciilzen band radios, bu
been announced by ,tb•
Minister of Tourism.
Gulll~mo Rcesell de
la Lama told a newa ~ference the regulationJJ
were signed by Mexican
President Jose Lopes
Portillo.
ROSSEU SAID radio
communication is strict-
ly controlled in Mexico
and that this is the first
lime private use or
radios bas been allowed.
You might call this mugging for the photographer. This pooch in
Bozeman. Mont., makes sure the cameraman gets his best side.
He said the move was
one of several steps
taken by Portillo to
make travel more en·
joyabJe for the more
than 3.5 million tourists
expected to visit Mexico
this year.
Smoking D~cline Seen NEARLY M percent of
these tourists are from
the United States.
Rossell said.
Another convenience •WASHINGTON (AP> -Per-capita
cigarette smoking will decline about
2.5 packs this year from an averaae of
20:>.S packs puffed ln ltr78, according
lo an Agriculture Department
forecast. -
The department said that on a per-'
capita basis Americans 18 years and
older will smoke an average of 4,060
cigarettes this year compared with for travelers, Rossell ·
4,110 in 1976. A pack contains 20 • said, ls an all-purpose
cigarettes. telephone number for
louriSt Information ~nd
OFFICIALS EXPLAIN, however. assistance throughout
that the statistics include all people 18 the country. and older, non·smokers as well as
smokers. The figures alao ignore • ROSSELL SAID the
smokers younger than 18. number is 0123, preceded
Regardless, per-capita cigarette by the area code for that
UT l C l G• smoking aa def'med by USDA will be part of Mexico from w e8 088 I Ven the lowest since the average was 4,043 where the call ta made.
cigarettes -sllghUy more than 202 The program include• Car. Pn·ce Break "' packs-in 1972. elimination· of many of
MILFORD, Mich. <APJ -In the IN 1963, PUFFING was at a peak of ~~d~= ~~·w~J~
latest salvo of its batUe agaiost small 4,345 cigarettes or more than 217 have only one bagaage
imports, General Motors Corp. is packs on aper-capita basis. inspection at the border
chopping as much as '600 from the But following the U.S. Surgeon· if they drive and none if sticker price of ita 1978 subcompact General's report in 1964 about the th n
Cbevett.es sold on the West Coast. The health hazards of smoking, a decline ey y.
price in other states will be about $282 in per.capita cigarette use bottomed c.11 642-5178.
under that of a comparably equipped out at 3,985 cigarettes or about 199 Put a tewword•
1977 model, GM said Tbursd=a:::Y:.:.· ___ !:.P:•c:.:ka::.,:in:.:_:197:,:0::· _________ _:::=::::'o::w::o::r::k:::to::r::!::o::u.:::::::_
NO~.
NO PUNS
WASHINGTON (AP>
-Wben Sen. Dale Bum-
pers CD-Ark.> found be
had trouble underatand-
iD& the intricacies of a
proposal to encourage
truck owners to aend
their trucks back loaded
alter deliveries/ be
aaked the staff o the
Senate Energy Commit·
tee lo diaaram it on a
blackboard.
There wu only one
trouble: the committee
had a blackboard all
right, bUt nobody could
find any daalk.
rare opportunity to add to
AMERICAN
INDIAN
JEWELRY
50%0fF
SEPTEMBER 15th
THROUGH 25th ONlY.
ORIGINALLY '12 to 52,000
SALE 16 to '1,000
ON Sll'TIMIER 201 I tn
IM THE MULTI-
PURPOSE ROOM
AT7:JOP.M.
Come in for
FREE pop com! your own collection of
American Indian jewelry at
50% off the orlginal price. Each intri·
*** MOMl'l VISTA
B.IMENTAIY SCHOOL
JtO MONTI VISTA
COSTA MESA
OM SB'TIM• U. .I t77
IM THI MULTl-
PUIPOSl IOOM
AT7:JOP.M.
* ** I
<l...rully tall ""'eJepnt
'ARECA' PALM
One of tile ftMllt Indoor
Dlan&I t« tiome, ofllce. None ._ ~ 5' tall
REO •• PRICK 'l'tlN
G0.915 tlijlt. 20
GET READY
FOR SPRING
Plant 8prine.81ooming
Bulbs Nowl
RANUNCULUS
'umbc>tllze bulbs 2.89 DOZ.
BrUUant 1JJrin8 blooma.
Mon to plant now ....
DA,FODILS • 'ruLIPS
FnEEslAS • &PARAXJS KYACIN'l'ffS
AU Bulh Net. 1 <lf8(1c.
FRRR Plan .... Guide.
,
eatery worked piece from our
remarkable collectlon Is an
work of natfve art from the
NavaJo or Zuni trlbel. The
I
vltalltvof anentJrepeoptelsexpresaed
earrings.
' In theCN8tfon of theee
turquoise. coral. -mother of
pearl •••
eachfntlt· .
tinge of hendwotked STERUNG. And l"9 ~~
..
tr __ _ ....... Ml ...... _. __ ••
Fr!d!r. !!ptem~r 18. 1177 t# DAILY PtLOT
~ ·----__,._ W . A
.49
,
STEP TWO Bag beains inflation . ·passcn{.!t'r·· Brue<.•
~l ttcfden. L'S Oepartm t.'nt ofTransportatil)n. watch<.•-.
STEP ONE Urt\~t Hu·hJtd Au~ltn ~I H·hq.!80
'>t't n ·t.11 \ nt -.1.1tt• "·ttJt .. , in for lht· dt•mon!ilrullon
0
• STEP THREE \ir bag pre\ ents dr i\ er· from
1 hrowr forward into "heel or windsh it.'ld
f.Answers Deflate,ltlyth About ~it•Bag
. -
DETROIT <AP Wi thin f1'<#t
years, you probably wi ll be rid-
ing lD a l'ar equipped with air
bogs.
Unles s C on g rcs~ d ec ides
otherwibe this fall , the govern
ment · uire full-size cars to
\.\Ith a passive occupant
er protection device air
bags or automauc wr ap-around
belts -an model yeCJr 1982. Mid·
siie cars would be so equi pped in
1983 and sm,;.tll cars by 1984
THERE IS STILL much d1s-
a g r eem en t about t he con-
troversial devices. Are they
more effective than scat belts?
How much do they cost? Ho\.\
many lives w.ould they save? The
a nswers vary, depending on who
is giving them
The fo ll owing Jn~wers are
based on mformation supplied by
the Natwnat Hig hway Tram e
Safety Ad minis tr ation in
Washington. U.S a utomakers
and the insurance mdu!!try
Q. WHAT ARE air bags"
A They are nylon bags cov-
ered with a rubber-Uke plastic.
They iDtlat~ autom alicaJly Vi fron~d crashes to provide a
protective cushion for front-seat
11t·rupants
(~.WHERE ARE they located"
!\. On the driver's side. a small
bag it. located in a compartment
in the steering wheel. On the
passenger s ide, a larger double
hag (a bag within a bag 1 is stored
to a panel underneath the glove
compartment. Both are out of
sight.
Q. HOW DO they work.,
A. The bags are triggered by
ont' of two sensors on the front
hu mper and fi rewall The
o.;ensors measure sudden change!\
in speed ff a car slows mort>
abruptly than Crom normal brak
ing, the sensors determine thal a
rrash is occur ring and activate
the air bag system . A chemical
stored under pressure in a con-
la iner is released, causing a
small explosion. The bags break
( IN HIGH GE.4R "]
I hrough the padded com part·
ments and inflate.
Q. HOW QUICKLY do the bags
inflate and deflate ''
/\. fl takes a tiny part of a
second -one.fifteenth by some
estimates -for them to inflate.
General Motors says 1t occurs in
less than the blink of a n eye. The
drivers-side bag does not defl ate.
but because it is relatively small.
1t can be pushed aside easlly if a
driver must make a quick exit.
The passenger-side bag begins
defl ating immediately and is
defl ated within a few seconds.
Q. AT WHAT speed do the b~s
infl ate"
A Al an impact speed of al
least 12 miles per hour. GM says
12 m.p.h. was chosen to avoid
Generations Do . Battle
Ol~ Young Struggle for Employmenl
UyJOllNCl 'NN ll'F
AP aw•ifttU Aft•IYtl
\\'c arc witnessing. or perhap~
are involved in. lhc battle of the
generations for job~. the pitting
• of g r a n d p a r e n t aga ins t
g randchild in a fi ght to be an ac-
tive mem ber of the labor force.
For leen·ai::crs it 1s u matter of
• gaming a foothold in a labor
market for which lhDy have been
poorly trained. For those 65 or
over the task is one or convincing
e mployers thot the :oski ll it the~
h aVC' Me still of USC
,\ND WHILE SOME may
wonder why there 1sn 't room for
both, the less thc.'Oretical among
the populace a re concerned that
chaos might result 1f those on top
don't make room for those com-
ing in at the bottom.
Who should be ser ved -·youth
or age'! Or can both be served"
The 1 m
mc d \'a l e
legis l a t h ·e
considera tion
r~gar d1n ~
yo uth 1 ~
whether and
hy how much
we s h o ul d
r a i se t h e
minimum
w a g e . n 0 w CUNNIPP
$2.30 an hour . The chances are
high that it will go to $2.65 an
hour this year. a figure \hat
represents a compromlae.
Or1anized labor wanted the
figure ~er, but business in·
NEJllS ANALYSIS
terests sought to have it remain
the same or be lowered. especial-
ly for teen-agers. As H. was, they
said, it constituted an lmpedi·
ment to the employment of the
unskUled.
A lower rate, said the latter,
would enco_urage s mall business
enterprises to employ young.sters ..
at )obs involving minimal skills
and enable them to acquire train-
ing on which they could later
capitalize.
INSTEAD, IT IS ar(ued. the
jobless teen-ager makes his
anger known through crimes. Or,
if all aggressiveness in him is de·
teated, through idleness and
various forms of emotional dis-
orders.
'The elderly --the connotation
mlsrepresents in that the expect-
ed life span of a 65-year-old male
1s 78.7 years . and ~ 65-year-old
woman. 83.1 years · · defend
themselves with a disturblngly
direct logic. In a country that stresses in·
dlvidual liberties, they say, it
seerm more a convenience of the
establishment than a rational act
to declare everyone age 6S to be
In need of retirement.
TO ARGVE THAT makes no
more sense than to declare sum·
mer over because La bor Day has
past That assumption also ls
meant to serve the bureaucracy
which states that effi ciency die·
talOt> that school begin then. It
has little to do with the tern ·
perature.
Neither does age 65 have much
to do with physical, mental or
e motional condition. It has in-
stead to do with labor contracts
and pension regulations and
custom. As a result. some are
rorce-retired at the height of
their skills.
Cast adrift, many so·called re·
lirees are arbitrarily forced to
lower their standards or living
a nd often must accept odd Jobs
for daily cash payments. leaving
no telltale record to inte rfere
with Social Security benefits
DISCRIMINATION? Of
course: and the fact that it is
legislated hardly ennobles it with
morality or j ustice.
Perhaps the real questions cµ-e
being avoided. Why. fo~ exam·
ple, is it that the economy cannot
accommodate the very young
and the older members of the
community" If you ask the economists you 'II
get in return as many q1,1eslions
as answ~rs. ot so many explana·
lions or why It haa to be that
you'll recognize qulckly that the
framework from which\ they
speak is limited to defending
what is.
But almost all of them agree on
one thine, that any wasted skills,
for whatever reasons, represent
a net loss to the community.
deployments 10 >ases of parking
lot fender-benders and because
of chances of receiving an injury
requiring medical attention at
less than 12 m p.h. are "very.
very sli m."
Q. DO AJR bags work m all
crashes"
A No, only front-end collisions
and those within a 30-degree
angle from the front. They are
not designed to deploy in rear·
end, broadside or rollover acci-
d ents. The a uto indu s try
estimates front-end collisions ac-
count for only 50 to 55 percent of
traffi c fatalities. The gover.J1·
ment~timates the per centage at
<·loser to 75 percent.
Q. DO AIR bags protect back-
seat occupants.,
A. No. because of technological
and design problems. Detroit
says. But statistics show the
chances of injury or death in the
back sent are much lower than in
the front.
Q. DO AIR bags eliminate the
need for seat belts?
A. No. Occupants still must .J
wenr lap belts for optimal prottt
t1on. However . shoulder har·
nes~es are not needed decline S32 a car because of lower
medical costs resulting from
Q. DOES THE system work fewer deaths and injuries. Th~:.,
ov er and over again? ----Aadded cost for collision coverage
A. No. It operates only once. to replace a n air b,ag system wal-1
then must be replaced. That is put at Sl.
another reason fo r using seat
belts the bags do not provide Q. COULD AIR bags acc1den
protection in a seco~h re tally deploy ?
suiting from the same accident.• A. 'Yes. GM. which built 10.000
such as a car bouncing from one cars with air bags between 1973
vehicle into another . and 1975, reports 11 cases. None
Q. HOW MUCH would air bags
add to a car's cost? ,.
A. The government estimates
that when bags a re mass pro-
duced. they will add $112 to the
cost of a full-size car, in 1977
dollars. That includes a sso
m arkup for company and dealer.
The government estimate for
replacing a deployed system is
S325. GM estimates initial added
coa\ at SI93, including a dealer
markup but no manufacturer·s
profit. GM estimates replace-
ment costs at $500 to $600.
Q. WILL AIR bags raise in-
sur ance costs? '
A. Insurance firms say no. Na-
tionwide Insurance Company has
said if all cars had air bags. an-
n u u I insurance rates wduld
Ov .. r The Counter
NASO UstilMJS
c aused an accident, but a
passenger broke a fin ger. The
government says the "chances of
an accidental deployment are no
more than 1.000 to one. and tough
quality controls will be required
to insure that the chances of ac·
cidental deployme nts remain
tow.
Q. CAN AN inflating air bag
cause an iOJury:'
A. The government says 1t 1s
highly unlikely. But GM cites
four or five cases out of 125 re-
corded deplbyments in which the I
ba~s may have aggravated in-
juries, GM noted one accident an \
which the inflating bag may have
broken a driver's arm. GM say~
more research is needed before 1t
can draw a conclusion about ai r-
bag caused injuries.
' 2 J
..
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PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
~CTl'10UI IUSINIS$
• NAM&STATSMllfT
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
CITYOllf POUNTAINV~V,C:AU~IUftA
NOTIC• INVtTJNO •IDS
llfDlnN•CCHtlTltUCTIONOllfWtU.H0.1 -PNAH I
... MUTUAL FUNDS
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NYSE · COMPOSITE
-
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TRANSACTIONS
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Frid!y, S.p'-Mbet US, 1t77 DAIL v PILOT A.
Fight Fades
Salea Hopes Buy Peace
1 By MILTON M~ltOWITZ
tbrdly a week passetts without aome new bleata rroa{
American ~mpanle» about "un!alr" compeUUon fr~
J apaneae producera.
The charae ii uau&lly that that Japanese dump tbelr
products here at prices below wbat these same ltema 5el1 fat
in Japan.
' THE STEEL COMPA.N1ES HAVE complained. The
television set manufacturers have complained. The lateat tQ
join t,he wailing chorus are Monsanto, a major chemical ~
producer, and E.F. Johnson, the leadins U.S. maker ot CB '
radios.
Monsanto hu built a new plant at Chocolate Bayou,
Texas, to produce aorblc acid and potua1um aorbate,
chemicals that are uaed u p~ervallves ln food process·
ing. The company cbar1e1 that the Japanese a~ dumpinf
these chemJcals here at • ~
prices 40 percent below
what they command In
Japan. Monsanto says
the viability or its Texu
planlis threatened.
The U.S. Intern&·
lion al Trade Com -
Money
Tree
mission is investigating rising imports of Japanese-made
CB radios. E.F. Johnson warns that lf "quick action," in the
form of quotas or tarlfts, is not taken, Japanese makes will
take over the American market.
However, look what's going to happen in the coming
Christmas sales season. You are going to be bombarded·
with pitchtm for an expensive new Japanese-made toy .....
and there won't be a whisper ot complaint from U.S. com-
panies. · ·
" THE "TOY'' IS THE HOME videotape recorder. which
the electronics industry ls counting on to become the big
ticket replacement for color television sets. The recorder is·
a unit that will enable you to to t.ape tv shows you are nor around to catch, so you can play them back at your con ..
venience. It's capable of recortling a program orr one cban··
nel while you're watching another channel.
Sony has been selllne such a unit here under the name
Betamax for $1,300. The units being moved into the U.S.
mark et will sell for as low as Sl.000. ·
The TV recorders to be marketed here will be sold un-
der a variety or brand names -RCA. Zenith, Sylvania,
Panasonic, Quasar, Magnavox. Sanyo, the Sears, Roebuck
house label. But the var~ety is less than meets the eye.
WHILE U.S. MANUFACTURERS HAVE been working
to develop a recorder, the Japanese have clearly beaten
them f.o the punch. As a result, all the units to be fielded here
in the coming months will come from two sources: Sony ~r
Matsushita.
Matsushita, the world's largest maker or TV sets.
markets under the Panasonic and Quasar labels, but its
video recorders will also. be sold under the RCA,
Maganavox, Sylvania, MGA and Curtis Mathes labels.
Zenith, which led the fight against the color TV invasion
from Japan, will market under it.a name tbe Betamax re·
corders made by Sony. In addiUon to Zenith, Sanyo, Toshiba
and Sears will buy their recorders frc>m Sony.
THE SONY AND MATSUSIDTA units are not compati-
ble, meaning that you will not be able to feed a Sony tape
cassette into a Matsushita recorder and vice-versa.
Despite the profusion of labels then, this contest will be
basically a battle between two makes. And it will be an all· '
Japanese e&ffair. There are no U.S.-made sets for the
Japanese to undercut.
lrwestors Worried
Over Money Supply
NEW YORK <AP> --The stock market turned down to-
day, giving up some or its modest gains or the past ~o sessions. r• ·
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, up 6.23 points
Wednesday and Thursday, dropped back 3.98 points to
856.81.
Losers look an 8·7 lead over gainers among New York
Stock Exchange-listed issues.
Trading was relatively light. Big Board volume totalled
18.34 miUJon shares. ·
After0Thursday·s close, the Federal Reserve reported
an S800 miUion· aecllne in the basci measure of the money supply.
But aJfalysts said many traders stlll seemed concerned
that the tonger term growth trend in the money supply
would prbmpl the Fed to tighten credit further in the com-
ti:ig months.
H~"" Y-1/1.PI Flntl 0--..l_U.,..r~
ITOCICS b..,. HI~ Low C1oM e ao Incl -'62;» 16 .a W .52 UU1-, 20 Tm 2ua 21 ..12 214.0t 2u.11-...
11 Ull 117.JO llt ... 11U7 111.t.J+ 0.40 .s s111 m .u nuo no u m .oj-o,.. tndus ............ ,,. • • • • 1,Jlt,200 Tren • . .. ........ 252,700 ~11~~ ., .. :.:·.::·::.::::::·: ·.:· 2.m::
M'Jaat Stork• Old
Nl!W YOIUC (API
$A1.H Wer111L 110 n 1u1 u~ .... . WUhOtUll I 31 U ..... I NllW YORK IAP) •HY SICKll N'-1 W•alltql AO 6 1 111'1 .... . W1111511 1,20 II It 25 -'Ill Wall~ t.16 t .. 22~ + \to w.. .•11 u u~ ..... Wiik f<J .» U 2' 24 • ..
'
I
I NEW YORK !II.Pl· S.let, • II.ft!.~·
end not CNllOt of h ten '""' «ti ... , 41Mf1<.M 51o<11 &lf(Mftfe 1-.
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AMaJC UL.I
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.......... YMI' ............... '1.--
~''=-=-J~·~DA::::;;:l~LV.:..:...P•~L~O~T----------~~~~"-d!X~·~·-!2.....,19"lOl----f·_I0~,-'9-'-' I _ ___,,,
• QUEENIE ly PhU lnterlandl PUIWC NOTICE I PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
----------------------------l·------------------·1-------------------fl NEW? FOR ORANGE COUNTY SOUTH
COAST
NOTIC111'0Cl*YHCTO .. ... ._ ......... WlllMr.cti ..... et
Ill• OlllU et Ille Oep.,1"'•111 ef ... ,.,.,. Utf MlllM,,y ltr.el,
...... ,_.., c:.tllllnU tt• Mlt t • . "' -"-· ~ ....... ""· .. Wfll<ll .. _ ... ,._ ... , "''" '"
..... l(ly ........ ·-·..,Ille~ •lnKll9' II 8 lleffetllt .-.!Mii, M Ille
Oepe •l-ftf et '•"qry, a1 Tete
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......... _.,, ........ ..,fr•
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•ltlt tMC.ret• ~left Md CiMCrtf• ,,.., ttoor, <AtW;m• ,_..1111119 •••j•·
"'"' ¥lnyl tlftlall 1-lne, dry well "
IMIW llNWI, ~ llWU •1111 CIMt "A"
composition alll"''"· ehctrlC•I, ~....V,•lendpl~ ... --.
Or ntlftllt lfMI &pee: II lc.M IOllt lw H ·
......... Ion ...... Ill• In °""'' of -O.INrvn.nt of l'cw .. lry, U14 Mulllerrv
kt•t, Rl1190ld9, CA n.Mn, non It
T0to Roed, fl Toro, CA tulD, Oft IM~ •II•. end Secreme,.10 olllce, et\CI
••rlOlllllull-•l!•<~Offket
C°"'ralon mey N)leln drewtr>Qt,
WMKlfi<etl-. -or-.-1 lormt lor 1111• worll by reQ .. >llllO tlwm from the
Celtlor,.I• 0.per1m•nl Of l'arfflry,
"CTITICl'n •uttM•ll
MAMmlfATaMaNT TlltNllNlnt,.,._.,.,....._.. .......
C.C.CAMl"eltUIND, 111UH ...... 11 ..... ,a.,...c;..,..,CA.,...
0-.. & Jffft I( Wlfllltt<f, 1021 1(1"91 "'8., ~ 9te<ll. CA fl'6) Tiii• lllJllll-la~ ltY llfl i..
Cllvlw.I. °'"-Wllll ltld
Tltll 11.C-..! •• llled wftfl "'9~~;;;;~;;;;~;;;5;;5;;;~i1 c-1.,o.'lt., 0r-c-i.,.._ "-'·II
P\lbll "*' Or.... eo..I Def ly .. lltt • ... n. • .... .,, ALLERGY? ,...,o Sept.•. ••. n. a. ""
"""''.,,... 0r....-CNtt 0•0Y ~IOI. ,.., .. 71 C2 I 3J '21 .. 2556 .t.11911'42',s.Oltmbert.t, 14, tm ------------1 ... • *'"" PUBLIC NOTICE (7 I 4t 143-9624
STATIMaNTOUHlfOOMMINT R e c o· r d e d o .. u •• o.. M "CTITIOUI IUllNISS .. ICTITIOUI IUll~ ... NAM• essage
NAM•ITATaM•MT Tiie tollowlng perdllb -....-0
Tiie tol-119 119'-.. dol119 bull-.... "" of Ille fl<tltl-111111...,, NIM A l L ... I'" ' c 0 " Tl 0 l Mu". woi.1.0 WIOI HIAl.TH llltVICaa t •
MADDOX A,.n .• 10s M•ddoJC, •UI025e,.O.brlel Circle, a_..,. • ..-_ F•ATIOM
Hut1llftQlan lee<ll, CA CelltorllleG211.
Menl I.. Blwlumlk, '20 Seco St., Tiit flctnlou>bli.iMHtl•"'9 referred IOI 1513. Oranp ca 12661 .......... Ct\ttlO> 10 tboll9 -m .. 111 eeun1., on "-"1
PUBLIC NOTICE
**MUSIC CATERING**
H•vlng a party, reception, or Hlff bOOster event?
Heda problem with llvt music?
Custom music systems are now availa-ble for your home, hall or bUslness.
Complete Installation & operation
/ealurlng a Dimenaioft 1 disc Jockey. Super
sound muslcal lights. Your music or ours. Reasonable rates. five hour
minimum. Early reservations are sug-
gested.
CDB
Charlle'a Diaco Bualneaa
After Six please:
Charlie (714) 95~35
Danny (213) 691-99'4 Featurlngbll);J
Thi•..,..,.... I• COCIClueled bV ... ,,.. 10. "''· Writ. ;., ,.,_. i.t .... ,_
dlvl-. Oolcwn M. 1Cellff1 l'°2 Se" O.brl•l1'!=======~===~------------------------Menl I. llll•umlk Circle,.._. Park, t;A.. .0.JD I
Thh llM-t WH flled Wltll IN llll1bullneuWllUAlllCNc:ltdby011lfl•
C-ty Clef'll ol Orai>Qe Coumy oft~ dlvlclUal.
ltmbt~ 12, ttn Sl9r*1 Dotorea M. l<eller
L.;;.:..~--..:.=.-;::::.;:;;;;;;o-...;;;;;...o;;.;..;;,;;;:;;.;,;.,;.-.-.. ___ ...., lSU Mut-rv $Ir .. , i.1v.,,.c1e. CA
9U02 Nodt-11 wlll lie requlrH, Allff • I und1•r:.lJnd lhc highway comm1'l'i1oner u!>ed lo own a 1"" bid -"'""· 1he dr•••"I• .,..,
toi.d!>ldl' fru1I st.mrl •· "'9<1fiatl-.,. to De r.tu......S totlle
,.1n• Tiii• r.Mll-t -filed wllll n. 'uott-Or-Coa•l Dally Piiot CountyOtrllofOr .... c..wnt,OllS.,C.
Sept."· n. ». 0c1. 1, 1911 .on-n 1, ,.,, Where else can you get this?
Pu1111nc1 Or8ft99 Coest Delly , ... ------------------------·~1· DEPARTMENT OF
FOREST RV
LA ,,_..,, Q;recior
PUBUC NOTICE Sept. "· 2l. JO, -OcloDer,. 1'17 .0.1·11
Baggage ln•ured -Mo••l11
DEAR PAT: I'm planning to visit my pa rents in
New York for a month this fall. Because or m)"long
:,lay, I 'II have to take a qui_te a lot of clothing and lug-
~age. Do airlines provide insurance coverage for
haggage,ordo l havetogetmyown?
G.P .• Huntington Beach
On domestic fUgbts, the canter's maximum
liability is $500. If your baggage ls worth more, you
may obtain addition al coverage by declaring excess
\I alue and paying a lee for extra coverage.
'l 'el.egram• A re Guaranieed
DEAB PAT: I sent a •night letter recently and
\~as very upset to learn later that delivery had
taken eight hours. Doesn't Western Union have to
observe delivery time limits?
H.H., Newport Beach
Although it's not generally known, Western
lJnion offers money-back guarantee on delivery
time for all types of domestic services. Night letters
are supposed to be delivered within one and one-
ha tr to two hours by phone, or within five hours if
delivered by hand. Mailgrams should be expected
lo arrive in the first business mall delivery the day
after being sent. If you did not get service within
these lime limits, you are entitled to a full refund or
you may have your message resent at no charge.
Contact your local Western Union customer service
operator to file a claim.
tthat Does •K.o•her' Mean?
DEAR PAT: I love kosher meats, but it seems
that usually they are more expensive than other
varieties. The same thing applies to other foods
labeled "Kosher." Are these foods prepared to
Jewish custom. or does it amount to special recipes
being use<t? ·" "' B N .• Dana Point
The use or the "Kosher'' label Is regulated.
Kosher meats must be prepared In accordance with
ritual. The way an animal or fowl 11 killed, b!>w it
must be dressed, treated and prepared for human
consumption has to be In accordance with J ewish
law and custom, according to the CaUfomJa State
Bar Association. Advertlllng to the contrary ls a
crime punishable by a $.100 fine and up to 90 days In
jail.
Death Nodce•
KOllHIO PU.-cl •••Y S.plembclr 1', 1•11.
LILLIAf'j ICOENIO, ruldeM of Survived by two d•ugMert, """
I •oune 8'!.tch, c.111oml• tor 21 n•r~. Cempbell of Newport Bea<h, C. .. ....,
P••M<I awey on September 1', 1'77. Olive Coo• of Tiburon, '•·• sl11 1 M•eo lwr ..epflew Orme Hering of gre,.dcl\lldr•ft, end slll or••t·
Tuoon,Arltone. PtlveleMfVICHWtrt greftdChlldreft, 80rft In Oe,.ve r,
ll•ld lnl.,ment MelroH Abbey ColoredO on April 21, 1•1. Prlvele
MemOfl•I P•r•, M •llelm, c:.. Sllefftf' i::mlly MtVICU '" R•dle,.dl, C•. L<tOU"• B•Kfl Mortuary, ti• South PecltlcVi.wMMtu rt<tors.
Coe•I Hlghwey dlrtetorL
'ATTllltSON KELLY. PATTERSON. Aoe 2S died
'>•Pl•mt>er I•. Survived by h•r
O•UQM•r. l•r•h """ W•k•ll,.Q,
molt,.r 0.llY Getldron, let .. r 81sMp
Pelle,_., sl1ter Geor9f• "•lttnllft,
or•nGper-• OouQ Str\1111, Mra. Helen
Buo Mid Mr A Mn . Jemes "•Utf'10fl.
S.Nke S.turclo 10 AM •I HoltOll -!ao4I Mortlw"t. L.onq Beecll wllll 1 .. 1 ....
...... 1 '"All Soul• c.m-,. ~·••MAN
HELEN HAllER FREEMAN, rnl·
deftt al Newport he<ll, C1tltor,.le.
Deatlu
E~ewheret.
WILKES-BARRE Pa .
CAP) -Former U .S.
Rep. Mlkbell Jenkins,
-------------81, suffered a heart at·
..
laLHOADWAY
...OITUAH
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
842·9150
SMnM nmaL LAMI
COSTA MIS. CHAPIL
427 E. 17th St. ~sta Meta• ~8 Santa Ana Chapel
, 518 N. Broadway .
Sant1Ana • 547.-4131
PllRC:. llOTHIH lMmtl' MOlrTUilY '
627 Main St.
Huntington Beach
~I> •
........ y
CCM.OMIAL .........
HOWi 7801 Bolu Ave.
We1tmln1ter
893-3525
•AClfltC YllW
MIMOllAL PAU
Cemetwy Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Plclflc View Drtve
Newport. ca11romla
844·2700
tack Thursday and died
at Wilkes-Barre General
Hospital. .
WATERTOWN, Mass.
<AP> -SUvloCosda, 77,
a French horn player
and voice coach with the
Metropolitan Opera for
36 years, died Thursday
at hi.a home here or an
apparent heart attackl
..
Pubfl"'9d 0rMIQe Coe•I Delly P1..,.,
S.iM. "· n. JO. "n
PlJBUC NOTICE
"CTITIOOS e~S
NAM• STATEM&NT
Tiie IOllaWlng ,.......,, ere 001"9 bull·
neu •• NEWPORT INSULATION,
NEWPORT POOLS. 223 Woe SI.,
l.eg~'!"f."~d::.;.~:.s~?3 We .. St ,
l.eQllM Beech, Cell! tl•SI
Ed Jeck>0n, 241 VIClorle, Cotte Mue,Cellt.'2'21
Tiii\ Ou•ln•u I• <andu<led b• • generel ,..rtnerlillp
Brute t: M<GOw•n
Tiii• >U01..,._t WH Ille<! with Ille
Co<irtty Ct-OI Orenge Counly 0115eot.
l , ""· ... 14'1
Pvbll....., 0renQll CoHI Delly Piiot
S.pl •. 1'.1l. l0. 1'11
PUBUC NOTICE
"CTITIOUS BUSI NEU
NAMUTAUMENT PUBUC NOTICE
TM tolloWlnQ ,..._.ere dOl"9 tM.ttl· l------------1\eU H
THE Qi.ANGE COUNTY AN·
TIOUE SHOW & SALE. 1'1' Cre11a,,. A,...,~,_, C:.. 9°'211
JOMl)fl 0.811 Grlmet, ,,.. 0..,..,1
Wey, Rl .. nlOe, C:.. '2SO.
Bettye S.YOle Grimes, "61 O..ryl
Wey, Rtwnlde, Ce. '2SO.
Tlllt buSIMH It COlldl."led by e
Qtn.rel PfftM""lp.
JoMc>ll o.'en °' '"'" Thi• 11•1-t wes llled wltll the
Cou11ty Cieri< of 0••"99 County °" AUQIHU. 1t71 ,...,
Pubfllhecl Ore .... CoHt Delly Piiot
S.PI. 2, t, 1•'. 2:1, 1911 3111).11
PlJBUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINHS NAM• ITATIMINT
The fotlowl"ll per-. I• CIOlnq bud ·
~ ... ,
Pi.OFl!SSIDHAL UINOSCAPING
ANO GARDENING SERVICE. '717
Humboldt Ave., Westmlftsler, CA.. .,..,
S.lv_. T. Remlrer, '712 Hum-
bolelt A.,., we-tl""Mter, CA. 92"3
.... " SUNltlOll COUltT 0" TNI
ST A Tll CW CAl.1 POil MIA l'Oll
TH•ClOUNTYO .. OttA.MOa .... ....,...
NOTICI Of' H•AltlNOOI' ... TITION
l'Olt Pll09AT't 01' WIU. ANO POii
Lln•llS THTAMINTAllY ANO
~Oii AUTNOlllZATION TO AO·
MINllTlll UHOElt TMI
INDl ... NDINT ADMINtnllATION
0' HTATHACT.
Ealete of ANNA MAY
HALDERMAN, DKHMCI.
f'j0TIC& IS HERl!IY GIVEN lllet
JOSEPH II. HALOl!RMAN flH flied
herein • petlllon for PrOltew Of Wiii Ind
for lssuence of l.ttlers lfflMllent•rv
end for AAl!llorlr.ellon to Admllll•l•r 1111•
cler lhe llldtpet'°"lf AdmlftltlrlltlOf>
E1tetnAcl, reference towtllc.fl 11
for h.1rtllor !lllf11<tllen, end tlWlt tflt
UM41 at\CI piece_, flffrl,. ltw -hall
-.. w11or0ct.4. lt77,e11o:ooe.m .,I
,,,. cour1..-n tf Oetier1mtlll Ne. a
MICI ~ • .C 100 Ovlc Ceftler Drt"'I
wn1, In tfle City of leftl• ,. ...
c.llfomla.
o.1ec1Secit.1f. tm. wtWAMl.M.IOMN,
CP·SI" Tiiis bullMU 11 ~ by eft If\.
NOTICE TOCltlOITOi.s dlvl-ls.I T. Remlre1
Oulty Clerlt
MILi.ait eMAllTINO ..... .,~ ......
s~~~~'::~~~~~~iAT;:. lllh •t•lemenl wn flled w1111 flW
THI! COUNTY 01' OltANOE County Cl-of Oreftge Co<ll\ty or
...... CA....,
Tel: ttUl.....,,J
Alt_.,._,...._ H•. A-mo AUf11dl 23, 1tn ~
E stale ol E OWA RD F II OST Publl\hed Or-Coest Delly Piiot,
Plllbll....., 0rar>9' 00HI Delly fOI
Sept. 15, "· 22. 1'11 .,..11
HODGDON, OecuMd ------------1 f'j0TICE IS HE A EBY OIVEN lo llw AUQvll 26, Sept-r J, t, 1', 1'11 credllors ol uw et>o .. ftemH de<-___________ n_•_1._n
11 .. 1 ell person$ r\ewlng clelms eg1lft1I
the wid dt<eclenl ••• required to Ill•
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
them, with the ,.<enary "°"'"""· '" ------------PICTl'nOUI aUllM•U
Mit.Ma ITATaMUff the Office of Ille <lerlt ol IN et>owe .,..
lllled court. or lo pre~• them, wltll llW
ne<euery vOU<hers, lo the u"cMf'llQl'Md
., c IO W1lll•m E Pow•ll, Pelllloner, ••
1600 Do\19 St • a 110, NewPOrl Beech,
Celllorftla. which I• '"" pleo of 1>u1I·
MU ol the undenlgned 1,. ell mettefl
iwr1elnlno 10 lho eslete of wld <lee•·
oenl, wllllln lour month\ •lier ti.. flfll
pub II< allon o! 1111• "°"'•. Dated !.eptem\>l'r 13, 1'77
WI LLIAM E POWELL
Pernloner IEJ<ecutor of ll1e
w111 of lhe ebove nemed
dl<4'denl
OIENISL KASTEN , ... Oo,,. St.,• 110
Newpert 9N<ll, CA
hi• 171•1751-wJS
AttorMY ... P.t.ltlener
Pubflw.ed Or..,ge C:O.•I D•lly Pilot,
S.pl 16.13, JO, Oct 1, 1911
"CTI TI CIUS euSINEU
NAMll ITATllMaMT
The toflowtng llfflOM ereclel119 ltlltl·
neu:~y Cl.EANf;RS,.., so. Brlstal
A,..,, SellUO Me, CA
i.oberl 1.. CM11enttr Jr .• 311 Alve
Ln.,Cotte-.,CA'2621 Robe~I I.. C..rpeftltf' S«_. »:le
NtVede St., C...te Mese, CA
Tiii• bualnen It conoucted tty •
oeMtel pertnertlllp.
R-., L. C...pell1tr Jr.
T11l1 118t-• wn · flled wllfl IN
eovmy o.ni of 0r-. County o" s...
temtiert2,1f71
TM tolfdWl119 .,.,_ ........ llvt.l-...u n ;
TOOi. Tl!CH, 1116 Morll'ovfe, Ceala
MtW Cllllfoml•f»27 Robert J . L•ftCHltr, 209
Edgtwetw, Belboe, C..llfoml•tM1
Vklll S. ~.tot l!C19eWeter,
kltioe, CA!lfonlletMI
lllla NlflHI b conducttd by 8fl I,._ dlvldllel.
Aoe:..1 J . l.ent••ler
Thia ltM-" -tiled •1111 tM
Cou111v Cl«ll of Or•ft99 C-ly Oft
AUQll'll 2', tffl
f'lt11t
Pub!"'*' OrMQlt c:.st Delly Piiot,
"''"' 5eptembw2,t, 1•,2l. 1m J111.n Publlst.cl Ore1199 Goeal Delly Pllol,
Sept "· 23. ». Oct.1, 1971 402A-11 PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE f'ICTl'nOUI IUllNEIS
MAMm ITAT•MaMT "CTITIOUS•UllMIU Tiie folloWlllO ,.,._ 11 OOl"V ltlltl·
NAMllTATEM8WT · MU•: PlJBUC NOTICE Tiie lolloWlftO,.,.... .. dOfft1I ..,,.. CLASSICAL CAllNllTltY, •21 ------------1 Mllel N~I Street. CMle Mew CA fln7 Pi.1MO ASPt4ALT, uo11 a-..s 0on wetter at111o. "°6 Hotloey LAI,.., .-lftQIOll 8Hcll, CA '2"9 Ad-,..._, tletcfl CA.. ftMO
JoMclfl 0. WlltOll, 11't'2 Teli.rt, T~I• IMlftna Is~ • .., by .. ~ HUftllngton .. edl, CA '7MI dlwkluet
T hit bullrlelt 11 condUCted by ell .... • Don Otlll9
dlvld<.oel .__..0 Wll Tlllt a~ wn flleel with 1M
,,_,..., ' IOfl C-ty Oen ol Or-CowmY Oft A4'9. Tiii• \UOl-t ... flled Willi ,... " 1971 COwntv o-of or-. eo-, on u. • ·
1m
1'1CTlllOUI aul•N•H
MAM• ITAT•MINT
Tiie folloWlng Pt<-ere ...... bllsl-
MH :~ 1 U .f Pl MAIONI! S'l'Dllt!S,
21U NtWPOr1 Bowleverd, N-POrt
8ffell, CMllOmlettMO Pltllllps Merine Storti, 1 .. c. I•
Otfltorftle corpore11on1, m w.11 ••WI
SlrHI, Newpot1 .. ec... C..lltor11l• .,...
l ltl• bldllwla •• clOfldllCted llY • ~
porellon.
""11.Ul"SMAAINI!
STOl'lS, INC. ... , •• DelMlll. ............ .
Tlll1~-flltdwllfltlle
CoulltY Cleft.. Or ... °""""' ... ~ loMMW 12. 1'71.
PUBLIC NOTICE
ouARANJ'EED v AWE EXCHANGE CERTCFlCATE
ge1.cwcme
GU.UJJt1"U.t waGUAaMITltl. ft)~F.. fNIA.iWW&CJMWI• f.t'll .. \A.ND,.Pn' IM•
fUU Nat:HAlill ...... lUWAAD A LJ1C.1 ~ U1 ..... -Mii VAlUI ANO Mtiu._U WiADIL
'ftMt• 1K~ •AIJJI ~~ft wtU 14t YA.UO..Mf'tTIWtt _.. ••.
Uf' TH\. QA Tl Uf MJllOiA'i:...
We furnish the above guarantees
on' all coins and meet the standard
of the ANA Grading Board
when applicable.
2630.C ··-Slnet MeW'p!f'l leach 645-1744
(Behind Mariners Mlle)
Tuea. 2:00-5:30
Wed. thru Sat. 11 :00-5:30
Cloe.ct Sun. & Mon.
NEWPORT BEACH ONLY
STOCK ELIMINATION
EVERYTHING ·GOES!
NO ALTERATIONS
~LL SALES FINAL
MO REFUNDS OR EXCHANGES
'
/
p-
•
MARMADUKE by Brad Andt"on
Q ,_/
"It seems the new mailman's wife has a
trench poodle."
.
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
MISS PEACH
............. -.-
by Tom ~atiuk
IHE" ~RKING
LaT. !
~I!> 15 A MA~~
ING BAND NOT A
CIRWS//
TANK McNAMARA
MOON MULLINS
TODAY'S CIDSSIDRD PUZZLI
ACROSS ilme Preli•
50C111end1r 1 Slight t>y at>t>r
ignoring 52 Preserve
5 Careless one ,
dressers stand1nq 2 ICE Indian worda
carpel 54 Cul dOwn
14 G•YE' an 56 F1ral
edge 10 u s s R
15 Fem.none premier
ouahly 5g •• way
16 Sleel slreel
ongred enl 60 Ouanhty ol
I 7 Coon ol India him •
16 Walelllul 62 8PISY and
19 Awkward Diana
lellow 85 Poaes
20 w:irmong 6 7 Mullny
device 11e,sel
22 h igency 69 Colony ol
24 Ul1l1zal1on t>ees
:>5 Semesters 70 The
27 Fell in P1nlaleuch
globule a var
2q Fish 11 Sea eagles
32 Palm 72 Atways
Springs. lor 73 Solid orec1p.
one 7 4 Nose Slang
33 Boal 75 Fender
accessory blemt1h 34 Synthellc
I tiler DOWN 36 Check11 lh1
course ot I Suoreme
•O Slldanese Pcrs1t1n
monelarv ruler
11n1t · 2 MobOdv
42 1cecream 30t>v111llng
co,,coctoont lw"' a norm
44 lnterrogat oo,, 4 KllChPn toot
4 5 Tllofoughlare 5 8Ha. e g
• 7 On no G Noar IN!
occaaoon hOftton
49 Belore 111 : 1\'!\btan Sea
UNITED Feature Syndicate
r I:'
gull
8 ·····Alaska
9 Jeers
10 Be unwell 11 Assemt:>lage
12 Sour
13 Fed the killy
21 Work Prefo•
23 Lowers
26 Athenian
pool
26 Meat 01e
29 Ra1l t:>lrd
30 Follow. In·
formal
31 Knobs
35 01 an tfmed
torce
37 Out(IOing
38Grape
relusa
39 Peter Pan
pirate
41 "····W8
1oroet"
•3 Most dire
46 12 months
48 Nevada
1ourl1t
center
51 Portion•
53 Trolled
54 Prices paid
55 01 a labor
group se Backward
Prefix
57 Acquire
through ex-
perience 61 Printing
machine:
lnfotm11
63Tranqu1I
64 Span11h
D1lnter
66 Carpenter' a
lool
68 New form:
Prefix
by Jeff Millar and Bill Hinds
GORDO
JUDGE PARKER
TUMBLEWEEDS
WHAf WOULP 't1:)CJ SA'(
I~ 1101.V YOU I WAS
11f5CftJOEW FPDM R01A&:rtf
ll*1e ~v?~
'
·-·
Frld!y. s.ptemw te. ttn OAJL y PILOT A J 1
PEANUTS by Charles M. ~'1ulz
Diddle. diddle
dwnpli!'¥J, My son uohn ...
DR . SMOCK
by Mell
[
E
G ReAi" .'
CURE?
ve;AH .1
Ge-r R t!:::> OF N\Y
R OC.K
Ff:Vf:;R .1
MOTLEY'S CREW
NctN L l~EN I MOTL~Y. r,:: '(OU DON'I 51i\.R'f
-r~E:ArtN6 M& wm-4 /.. 1..rr·n .. ~ R6.~~cr ...
N\Y CAVe ROi".'
by Gus Arriola
by Harold Le Doux
IT'5 AL-50 ve~·
GOOD FJR THE
GROUND ...
lRR. A DUMPLIN6
MAD£ OUTOf-
01001..E DIDDLES
T 5 GuJv F2;\ "12~;:
t1E~T ,.\~i:' '1'0t~ LEc:;
AND ~OVi\ FEET
•l ''"
by George Lemont
ON A weP....,EESPAY
~ 11
by Templeton and Forman
GERIATAIX
... ~OU 5 1MPLY
HAVeN'T ™E
PROPER
VOCAS.ULARY
IC COPS WITH
r:=R&E;WA Y
DRIVING~
....
,
l
MARMADUKE by Brad And1non
•
"It seems the new mailman's wife has a
french poodle."
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
---
MISS PEACH
. ...............
by Tom ~atiuk
fHI: PARKING
LOT~!
1H I!> 15 A MA~c.H-
1 NG BAND NOT A Cl~W5//
TANK McNAMAR"A
MOON MULLINS
WONDERFUi. 'TIME" OF DAY
IHE PAY BUGS HAVE
GONE iO BED ..
· ,AND TH~ N~HT
BUGS HAVEN'T
STARTED TO
WORK YET ...
~ ... ~orrr:-)!)
TODAY'S CIDSSlllD PVZZLI
ACROSS ilme· Pre11x
50 Calender 1 Shghl by abbr
ignoring 52 Preserve 5 Careless one 9 dressers s1and1ng 2 10 E lnd11n words
car~I 54 Cul down ·
14 G '"e an S8 Firsl
edge 10 us SR
15 Feminine premier
auality 59 •• way
16 Steel street
ingredient 60 Ouanhly ot
1 7 Coin ot tnd11 1ilm •
18 Watchful 6:.> Betsy and
I 9 Awkward Diana
tettow 65 Poaes
20 Warming 67 Muhny
device vessel
22 Exigency 69 Colony ol :.>4 Ullhz1t1an bees
25 Semestere 10 The
27 Fell in Pentateuch
globulet var
29 Fish 71 Sea ogles
32 Palm 72 Alwaya
Springs. !or 73 Solid preclp.
one 74 Nose Stang
33 Boat 75 Fender accessory blem11h
34 Syntt1811C
1tblr DOWN 36 Checks the
course ot , t Suorerne
•O SudlneH' Pers111n
monetarv ruler
un1I • 'l Nobody
4 2 Ice cream 3 Oev111tlng
concoc1ton1 tn1111 a norm
44 lnterrog111on • K11c:ht>n tool
45 Tt1orougt1l1re s S..1. • g
4 7 On llO G Noar the
OCCHIOl'I hOmon
49 Berore 111 / At.ib11n Sea
UNITED Feature Syndicate
gull
8 ··-··Alaska
9 Jeers
10 Be unwell
11 Ad'emblage
12 Spur
13 Fed the kitty
2 t Worl(' Prel1x
23 lowel'6
26 Athenian
l>OOI
28 Meal pie
29 Rall bird
30 Follow In·
lormar
31 Knobs
35 01 an armed
• force
370u1001ng
38Grape
retu11
39 Petf'r Pan
l)lrart
•t "····we
f«get"
43Moatdlre
4612 montha
•8 Nevllda
tourist
centtr
51 Portions
53 Trolled
54 Prices paid ssor 1 labor
• group ·• 58 81ckw1rd
Prefix
57 Acquire
through ex·
perlence
61 Printing
machine·
Informal
63 Tranquil
64 S111nrsh
1>11n1t r
66 Carpe ntt r" •
tool
68Newfor1111:
Preh-
by Jeff Millar and Bill Hinds
•
JUDGE PARKER
' Fridey, Septembef 19, 1977 DAIL v PILOT A ' I
by Wm. F. Brown and Mef casson
. Ar-lo IH~ 51AMP 15 weu., Grl="f PEANUTS · by Charles M. Schulz
1~1'21f'.6N CEtJ15 \ W2AP I~~ ~-----,--51AMP,
WI t.L. "l'bu ?
...
~Ave YOU ev~ HEA~D
OF Drr. ANO MC~. JiKYL} ~o Mr.~o Mlt'i MYDE •
0
DOOLEY'S WO~LD
Diddle, ctiddle dWl1pli~, My son uohn ...
DR. SMOCK
GF<E:A-r.'
CURE
MY CAVE;
F<O"f".'
by Melt
[
c
Y'C::AH I
GEi R t D
OF MY
ROC.K
FeVER .1
MOTLEY'S CREW
~ Ll~EM, MOfL~Y,
1;: YOU DON'I 51ARI 1'~EA1'1t-J6 M& wrn~
A 1..11 .. f\...~ ~s;SP6.CT ..
P.: l'LL R~ISE ~ YOUR ~OPE~1 T
1AXES JUSf L\KE
by Harold Le Doux
1T ~ AL:-J vER'1
GOOD FJUHE
GROUNO ..
fr:!R .. A DUMPLING
MAD£. OUT Or
DIOOLE: DIDOL(S
"7" 5 GJJti F0~ 'f2~.\
rlE~i ~r-..C' tfOU~ LEC~
AND \jQl:R FEET
I'"'
by George Lemont
ON A
WEPNESPAY
. ?!.'
: GcJ?
by Templeton and Forman
GERIATRIX
,, .. YOU SIMPLY
HAVeN'T ™E
PR.OPE:~
VOCABULARY
IC COPE. WITH
r=R6eWAY
• DRNING!
DENNIS THE MENACE
I
J~ DAILY PILOl f 'rld!y, S!p!ftnbet ti, 11n
1'11E F MILY CJR<.:US By IJll Kean~
"Wont me to put the handles on those little
hot dogs?"
No 'RingS"
Last Tolkien
Best Seller?
LONDON <AP I --J .R.R. Tolkien's posthumous
epic "The S1lmarillion" has been published, and
critics agreed that it's not up to "The Lord or the
Rings.·' But the publishers arc sure it will be a best
seller.
"We have a first-edition print of 800,000 in Bri-
ta\n and the United States," said a spokesman
Thursday for Allen and Unwin, the British
publishers.
TOLKIEN, A PROFESSOR OF English at Ox-
ford University 31 years, started ''The
Silmarillion'' in 1916 but left it a jumbled mass of
much-rewritten manuscript when he died in 1973 at
the age of81. It was assembled and edited by his son
Christopher. a lecturer
in English at Oxford and
his Cather's literary ex-
ecutor.
The book. planned
as Tolkien's final work.
1s a descriptive pre-
history or the mythical.
a ll cgorical world of
Middle Ea rth that
Tolkien created in "The
Lord of the Rings" and
populated with the Hob-
bits, a race of 1ittlc peo-
ple given to overeating
and family trees.
''The Lord or the
Rings" is a collection of
adventure tales describ· ing the heroic quest of a Hobbit named Frodo to
destroy a fatal ring -the source of evil -and his
encounters with monsters, natural dangers and t-he
power or evil.
..
TOLKIEN
"THE SILMARILLION," WHICH the
publishers call a "prequer· to "The Rings,·· opens
in the land of Numenor, a star-shaped island from
which lh"e characters journey to Middle Earth
before the days of the Hobbit.
It explains the creation of Middle Earth. covers
1l!> First and Second Ages and makes clearer the
pa:.t often referred to in "The Rings." But it refers
to the Hobbits only once.
··is it as good as 'The Lord orthe Rings'?" critic
J ohn Ezard asked in his review in the Guardian.
"No, not b~ a long chalk. Yet ... the stories, even
in their undeveloped promise, come close to the
best !n European legend."
EZARD AL.50 SAID THE NEW book was
1'olkien 's "Genesis, Exodus, Paradise Lost and
Drowning of Atlantis rolled into one."
Student Press
Freedo01 Okayed
Grocery
Pricing
Required
.... ,
EEP!
2 BIG DAYS OF SAVINGS AND SPECIAL BUYS. THESE ARE JUST A FEW-
HUNDREDS OF UNADVERTISED SPECIALS AT SAVINGS FROM 10% TO 50%
'
SAVE 43o;0
Outaoor storage locker
for convenience, space.
19~4.99
• Loads of uses ~r yards of all sizes
• Store work implements, sprays, more
• Protects from dampness and hot sun
SAVE $JS
l~ch electric chain
saw with 1314-hp motor.
44~7995
• Comfortable rubber grip for handling
•Safety trigger included-#30039
• 179.95, 14• gas chain saw ........ 139.88
SAVE $38
31/z-HORSEPOWER ROTARY MOWER
2<f rotary mower makes 10488 lawn work easy. Height
adjusters; pull-go starter.
172.99, lawn mower, 137.88 REC. 142.99
10x9' Steel building.
• Extra storage area 17 9 88 • Durable, convenient • Protect.a tools, more REC. 229.95
Outdoor plants.
• 4" potted plan ta 2 I 9 9 c • I~ bloopi, ready no~
• L1ven,up th garden
All indoor plants.
• Great assortment 2 OITI OFF • Get into wing -10 REG.
• Variety of:iz.es PRJCE
...
Save $15.
4-pound Kodel® polyester
insulated sleeping bag.
4-!bs. of _polyester insul-
ation to. keep you warm
and comfortable. Cotton
shell, co'tton nannel lining
and heavy-duty full zipper. 1488
REC.29.99
BBQ Clearance.
Assortment of in-stock
BBQ's and accessories. . 20o/o to SOo/q,:
• Choose from a lar ge assortment today
• Featuring Wards usual quality brands
• Family sizes: durable features, more
•regular low price
14-oz. propane fuel tank.
• Use for welding
• Many other uses
•'Limit 6 per person
$} .
REC. 1.59
. All in-stock ladders.
• Step or extension 2 Ont. OFF • Commercial, home -/O REC.
• Choice of lengths PRICE
AM/FM/8-track stereo.
• domponent system 14988 • Automatic changer
• High-quality sound REC. 199.95
Discontinued and
Blemished tires.
Theae tires ha\le small
imperfections s uch as
clot in whitewall. .. Bias-belted fibergla11s1
2nd tlre•
$ *
11teel-belted. steel-belt-
ed radials. If perfect,
111ell for $37 to $103 ea.
Add l.73-3.28cach tire. •when you buy fira• tire
at regular low price ea.
Special.
Styrofoam® ice chest for
lightweight food cooling.
57c
• Adapts quickly to many cooling situations
• Use it for camping, at Che beuch, anywhere
• Maintains low temperatures; convenient
SPECIAL
30-GALLON GAS
WATER HEATER
7988
Glass-lined tank helps
wat.erstayclear,clean.·
Fiberglass insulation.
38,000-BTU gas input.
Hi-temp. safetycut.ofT.
40-gallon ..•..... 89.88
New radial arm saw.
•Workshop wonder $259 • Many features
• Takes big loads REC. $3~
Upright vacuum cleaner.
• With attachments 5988 • Powerful suction
• Hardworking motor REC. 79.95
Microwave oven.
249~~329.95
• 50-pound bag • For all 10f\eners
• For pure water
..
t
From left: Edison High freshmen Kris
Odgers, Kari Penso and Joanne
Rike/man dress differently but all
have pierced ears.
Edison freshman
Beth Cummins says
tt'S a. 'Ii~
scary· coming to
high school the
first time.
darbor High s;,,ior
Julie Anderson
dons a feminine,
peasant look.
.. .... -------------=~ -=-~
Ken Babineau, 13, Harbor High:
OP shorts and shirt, book bag.
Adidas tennles?
'No,' latJgh Edison
freshmen (from left)
David Barclay,
Marie Santos
Tefano, and Glenn
Springer.
'They're J.C.
Penneys.'
Friday, September 16, 1977
Campus
81
•
Cleanup
By CHERYL ROMO ott• o.lty ..... ...,.
The pUblic address sys~m at Newport Harbor
High conveyed the greeting, "This ls the second day
of school. Welcome back!"
Some of the kids laughed and one of them said.
"Maybe they thought we forgot to come the first
day."
Orange Coast youngsters bounced right back
into scboOl this week, some with mispvings about
giving up Joni, lazy days at the beach; but others
were just glad to get back into the social swing of
things, greetioe friends with "lllyas" and bugs. ~ And they looked different this year -even
' school offlcials commented about it: area teens re·
turned to school looking clean, healthy and well·
groomed. And they smile a lot.
Gone is the scraggly hair. the torn jeans and the
bare feet.
There are aome similarities though --
freshman still look lost. ·upper classmeo look confi·
dent, teachers and counselors loot harried and the
parking lots are Jammed with banged.up VW's and
Mopeds.
Gordon Thorin, a 17-year-old senior at Edison,
was proud to show the interviewer a picture of bis
car he "totalled" this summer. He carries it around
in the pocket of his Osb Kosb B'Gosh bib overalls so
everyone will know why be walks to scbool .o(.his
year. ·
For a closer look at the young trendsetters
our area. we visited three bigh schools: Newport
Harbor, Edison in Huntington Beach and Irvine and
talked with teens themselves.
• . All three campuses abounded with OP, Hobie
and Hang-Ten shirts fo'r guys. OP walking short
were also a bi& number as well as form-fitting B · .
tania jeans and brown corduroy pants. Polo shir
<SeeCAMPUS.Pa&eBZ>
Left, Irvine sophomore Debbie
Dierker in shorts, t-shirt, scarf
and all-American apple; right,
Gordon Thorin of Edison carries a
picture of his wrecked car in his
overalls.
1be local chapter meets once or twice a year
,with NMF afflll•ted phyaiclana for updates on re·
cent medical developments.
Mrs. Mucbete bas been sufferina from what is termed a clataic mlaraine since abe was 19
years old.
A clualc mlaraine ii moat common amon1 women. fllually ~n the ages of 20 and 40,
and can bf provoked by physical and emotional
stress.
..
J
DAILY l'ILOT
From 81
... Migraine
prophvhet·1 u u!te uf u ~\• t1IOfklnt •I nt called
lndcral
"'OU. ~· t t.C'f~ o• dfervuceol 1tJ1plnn
art' l!'W> und•r ~tudy but r uJta ar• nut expected
for al leul • y~ar. '' ht· U)''ll
Acrordana t<• 11 'llpokt~man for the round•·
lion. ht"adach~ m•y t>t• tr11&eted by c•rUUn
foods. beveraac.-a or ... tulillons Somt common
ft-.od"l tu be avoided lill'" chf't-se, chocolate, cured
1nl•ata. Otleotol food!I cont•lning monoaodlum
.:lut.amate, ahl'llrl•h and certain frulU.
Al.lo tu be uvolded 111 •ny type of alcohol
t•i.ptt1lllly wine
In MN Miucht::ic ':. cllitt', c11aret.te or c11ar
:.mo&c trig"cn an udverst.! reaction and thla
t•auses her to avoid most public places, lncludin&
reatauranu. <1nd m•ny of her huaband'a bU1lnes•
runcuon. .. 'It h..i .. put d :.tru111 011 1>ur inurnage." 11he
, .. ys :.adly ·because I h•ve not been able lo at
lend a lot of thmai. with my husband "
808 BIUK>Kl'\, cJ rohu .. l mall 111 h1l> t urh
50':.. i.ulfcrs from u type of m1grame called a
duster. It ha:. been de:.cnt>t:<l ws one or the mo:.t
excruciating pa1n11 known by doctori. who
specialize m hei.dacbe re:.earch
Clu,,ters often at.rake with no warnan& when
the victim is i.leeplng and attatcks may last 45
minutes to an hour but wUI return again during
the duration, which usually lasts intermittently
for about two months. according to an NM F
spokesman
These headaches may oecur every thn:e t'/
four months. Studies 1nd1<:ute dusters are probably
hereditary and may be genetically linked. They
occur m a ratio of four to one, male to female.
and arc generally considered a m ale disease
Research by Or. Kudrow indicates there
may be a physical type more prone to cluster
headaches Cluster sufferers, according to his study, are
oflen taJI. have high c heek rxmes, hazel eyes and
"orange peel complexions."
Brooks has been 11uffcrmg from C'luster
headaches for 33 years.
"I had my first attack in the army during the
Battle of the Bulge," he says '"The pam 1s so
bad. clw;tcrs are often called su1cidl' or killer
headaches because of the s u1c1de rate of ... ur
fer<'rs
1·1 lost my trucking bus tnl'SS because I
<·ouldn'l drtve. I've had doctor:. tell me I must
have marital or sexual problem11 "
Eventually Brooks lost another l.Jusancs:. · · 1
went broke and considered su1c1de, · he says
looking down at the floor
"So,, my wife and I came down here to
Newport to hve in our summer cottage. I thought
maybe the whole thing was just pressure, you
know, tension or something "
But living a tranquil life at the beach didn't
stop the attacks, and, in desperation, Brooks
began reaching for anything for relief. Transcen·
dental meditation, yoga, tranquilizers, nose sur-
gery . . . •
Dr. Kudrow st.ates there is no evidence that
any of these remedies are benericial and the only
drug available at this time, that appears to bring
some relief, is Lithium.
''It's just so frustrating," Brooks says. "And
it's financially devastat.lng." He says he's been
headache .free recently, has started a new
business, and "1s hopeful." -CHERYL ROMO
Ann Landers ·
Teenager
\
N e eds Help
l>t-;AR ANN LANDERS: You will erobably
think Utll letter is a fake but I give you my word of
honor il is real. .
I am 15 yeams old u girl. Jn the lust year or so
I huvc had a problem that has caused me 1a lot or
l'rnbarraasinent. Whenever I laugh hard I \qt my
punt:.. Lately It's been happening almost every
other day, but so far only with girlfriends. If it
i.hould happen when I 1Am with a boy 1 would just
dw
I a11kt.'<i my mother what lo do about 1t and she
,,11d 1t would go away und not to worry that she
had the :.ame problem when she was my age.
CWl you give me :.ome advice" NORMAL OR
WllAT"1
DEAR 0 . W.: I took your problem lo a top·notch
urologlsl, Dr. Russell B. Roth or Erte, Penn·
sylvanla. lie called It "stress Incontinence'' -a
fancy name for not being •boul to bold It.
Acc:ordlng to Dr. Roth, tblB condition ls com·
mon among women who have had children and ex·
perienced a l(eneral weakening or the muscle 1Ungs
that normally hold the bladder ln place. When these
m uHdeA become weakened they cannot do the Job of
pro~ting agalnllt a 1udden surge or pressure
caused by coughing, sneezlng, laughing, jumping,
or c:omlnl( down from a hlgh step.
First you should be examined by a uroJoglst lo*
make 11ure you don't have an organic problem.
CChances arc.very good that you don't.) If you are
O.K. physically, the trouble ls that you let your
bladder get too full. (Some teenagers drink a lofof
m Ilk or pop end gel too busy to go.>
The remedy ls two-fold. One: Empty your blad·
der more fr~uently. Two: Exercise the muscles of
control by starling and slopping J.he urine flow
voluntarily -several times a day. Tbls should
solve the problem.
DEAH ANN LANDERS. I huve two adorable
,;randcht&dren. six and nine years of age. 'l'heir dad
left my daui.:htcr last year and ever since that lim~
she has had one man after another living with her. l
"usn't brouRht up that way and 1tjust kills me.
Last week she let a miserable creep move in
cJnd this one 1s the worst. He hasn't got a job and the
two of them i.leep till noon. The little girls get their
own breakfast and do everything for themselves.
I have offered to make a home for the children
but my daughter moans. "I couldn "t give up my
children. Whal would people say?·· I woJ\der what
she thinks people arc saying now with such a
parade or bums moving in and out.
l 'm hot writing for advice. Ann I know you
can't solve this problem, but I hope you will print
my letter. Maybe if m y daughter sees herself in the
newspaper s he 'll sh ape up. ASHAMED
(;RANOMA
DEAR GRANDMA: llerc'' your lelter but
don't expect any miracles, dear. You can do nothing
except stay close, try to be a poslllve Influence In
the family and hope your daughter cleans up her
act.
CONFIDENTIAL To Walling For My Slllp To
Come lo: I read every word or your five.page letter
and now I have a question for you. Are you sure you
sent one out.,
Wine
Party
The Junior EbelJ Club
of Newport Beach will
hold ll wtne-tasUng and
buff el dinner at 7 p. m.
Saturday. Sept. 17. at
San Antonio Winery in
Costa Mesa.
Proceeds will be pre-
H nted to Vick Knleht
Director of Community
Relations for Children 'a
Hospital of Orange
County at the Sept. 22
&eneral meeting.
Mrs. Arthur Yeary, left. Mrs. Robert River.
From 81
... Campus Clean ~ook
are in, but U looks as if Hawaiian surfer-style sttirtl
have taken a breather on campus this fall.
Colored tennis s hoes wlth white stripes.
sometimes sans socks, or surfer thongs adorned
young male feet. Many sported canvas book bags
over thqlr shoulders and there were a few "Star
Wars'' and California surf shop T-shirts.
Blb overalls, a big number last season, are not
as common on campus but they're sWl around.
Girls are wearing a variety of styles -from tbe
soft, peasant took to form-fitting Dittos and waist-
hugging T-shirts with hoods on the back. Mini-ski~ are completely gone, with the ex·
ception of cheerleuder outfits, and dresses and
skirts are popular with lengths ranging from just
below the knee to mid-calf.
Platform heels are popular -both with pants
and skirts, and many girls are donning nylons.
More athletic females are seen on campus in
tennis shorts, colored tennis shoes with white
st.ripes and shirts with logos like "Sweet and Inno-
cent" and "Come and Get it."
Handbags range from denim to leather and
women, just as they have traditionally in the past,
curry their booka ln their arms.
Guys don't appear to be much into jewelry, with
the exception of diving watches with Velcro bands;
but the girls are very much into delicate. feminine
Jewelry like gold chains <sometimes two or more wornover~uchother> and tiny pendants, rings, baby
hcartsandantiqu~lock~ts. ,
Pierced ears are in and some .r the youn1 tffn.s
interviewed had their ears pierced twice and wore
two sets of tiny. delicate studs.
Makeup was sparse, if any, and most of the
girls wore only a touch or mascara and maybe a
dash or rouge. The look is naturl\I. Nalls were
manicured and often painted in shades of soft coral,
beige or red tones.
A few of the girls sported Farah Fawcett-
M ajors locks but most <guys as well as glrls > had
!lhort or medium-length hair, cut and well 1baped,
requiring nothing more than a daily wuh and a
good hair blower.
Welcome back Cius of '78. '79, '80 and '81 !
Dan Garff and Sue Temps, lrvme High.
FUNDRAI ER-RALLY
Help send the band to South Bend this year.
Bring your 1r1ends and enjoy hsterung to the
USC-Oregon game at Roger'• G.rden•. * Food ...ton• • ... store filft ,.._ * ,,. MarcWRC) .....
Sagittarius: Res _ist Temptation
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, at
6:00 PM
DOHA TIOM $5.00 per pwsoa -BO'S WDOtS. WI JOmM II.LS IGAD
SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 17
Ry SYDNEY OMA RR
to empha1>1z~ creative
means or communica·
ti on.
22-l>ec . :.!1 >; Ke111st
temptation to lake ap·
parent shortcut. Go the
way that breeds quality.
Accent on secrets, long-
range results, awareness
hgure in scenario. Older
person asks you to aid in
long-range plan. concept
or policy.
If September 17th Is
your bll1hday, you arc
no weakling • you ure
passionate, u critic,
' perceptiv,, wllllng to ac-
cept respC>NJlbUlty, very
attractive to opposite
i.ex; you "have a way ..
wat.h older persons and
you are a rough-and·
tumble competitor.
C aprl corn, Can eer
persons play important
roles In your life.
AT llUCAITHUI IOULOAll, llWPOIT IOCR.
ARIES <Marc h 21 ·
April 19): Emotional
needs are fulfilled. You
breathe sign of relief as
tensions vanish. Taurus.
Leo and Libra rit into
picture.
VIRGO (Aug. '23·Sept.
22 > : Follow through on
ideas -teach and learn.
rise above petty envy,
differences. Close
neighbors, relatives
-!'igure in jigsaw ·pieces
will fall together.
of polen ti a I. Stick tQ --1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~=·iijii~~~~---iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~· number ''S."
CAPRICORN (Dec.
22-Jan. 19): What ap-{
pears to be a block, op-
position, a detour to
nowhere can be • bleas-TAURUS <Aoril :.!O·
May 20): You may be
reaching for something
that is more puff than
t1ubstance. Key \s to be
a ware. se nsitive.
dynamic, imaginative -
a nd to avoid self·
deception.
GEMINI <Moy 21-June
20): Separate fact and
fiction. Be receptive. not
gullible. Obtain hint
from Taurus message.
CANCER (June 21·
July 22): Way ls paved
lor you to progress in
many areas, including
financial and emotional.
Key la to perceive poten-
tidl, to reach beyond ap·
parent llmllatlons.
LEO (July23·Aug. 22 ):
'( ou might find younelf
in new or different en-
vironment. Key~ to take
stock, to make contact,
BE
CONCDNID
PRIVINT
.....
LIBRA CSept. 23·0ct.
22) · Entertainment,
social function -these
Cigure high on agenda.
Forces tend lo be Acat-
tered -leave details for
another lime. Enjoy
view, accept invitations.
compliments.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·
Nov. 21 >: Cycle is such
that you dig deep enough
to strike pay dirt. Ques·
tions are answered, you
receive valid direction.
,Aquarius. Taurus, Leo
persons are part or
scenario.
SAGITfARIUS <Nov.
i ng in disguise. Family
member comes through
with assets saved for
proverbial ralny day. ,I
AQUARIUS CJ an.
20.Feb. 18): You learn
what ls real, of genuine
promise and what t. talk,
frail. foolish, deceptive
Pisces. Virgo individual:.
are In picture.
PISCES (Feb. 19·
March 20): You get re·
suits. Past efforu pay
dividends. Stand tall for
principles. Capricorn .
Ca ncer individuals
20% OFF*
Witt\ Thia Coupon
« ANY PURCHASE
-the best in C9Unt7
stores I
OPEN
SUNDAY
12:00
to
5:00 P.M.
..
•
_.. ------
Orioles Quit,
Leave Field;
1
Forfeit Game
TORONTO CAP> -Tho ro-
µ4!rcu:.a1ons of E~rl Weaver's d
nslon to P'olll bb team off the
n un soakt'd field, reaultin1 ln
forfeiture. may not be fully
known Wllil the conclusion of the
A mencan League schedule. --
8 ut the Ball1more Orioles
man ger contends he did lhe on
ly ttuna be could do.
"I couldn't afford to leave my
players out there," Weaver said
Thursday or his flftb·tnning de·
cis100 which produced an official
9·0 loss to the Toronto Blue Jays
and left the Orioles tied for
~econd place 21r.a games back of
the New York Yankees m the AL
East Division. Toronto was lead-
ing 4-0 when the game was
stopped.
The last forfeit in the major
leagues was in 1975 at Cleveland
wh&Q. the Texas Rangers were
awaraed a game when Cleveland
fans stormed the field during
10-cent ''Beer Night.··
·In 1971, the Washington
Senators, now the Rangers,
forfeited the final game of the
season to the New York Yankees
when"Wasftington fans
Pros Duel
At Laguna
dHcCDded upon the field to pro-
test the Senators' move to Texas
Weavu r equested that a
tarpaulin, unchored by bricks
and covcrrng the mound lo tht:
Toronto bullpen down the left·
field line, be removed despite the
ate dy draule. Third base um·
pare Marty Springatead refused.
Weaver said he expressed to
the umpiring crew his concern
for the safety of his players,
particularly left fielder Andres
Mora. who had stumbled cross·
mg the mound while making a
catch in '!Vednes day night's
gaRle.
When Springstead refused to
order the tarp removed, Weaver
pulled his squad off the fleJd. The
Orioles held a meeting m the
clubhouse where, Weaver said.
the players unanimously agreed
that unless the tarp was re-
moved, the team would not play.
"The players agreed to suffer
the consequences ," Weaver said,
adding that the safety of his
players was foremost in his
mind. "I might have. s av e d
someone's career ... Weaver said.
"'There's only four feet of space '
between the foul line and the
mound. I had a guy <Mora ) slip
out there last night <Wednesday>
and wasn't about to le,t it happen
again. If you can't go four feet and
catch a ball, there's somelhlng
wrong."
He said he hoped that when AL
president Lee McPhail reviews
the situation, "he'll see our point
of view."
Oelr P419t Staff "'9t9
Tom Leonard, upset victor
over Roy Emerson in the first
round, advanced to the
quarterfinals of the Laguna
Niguel international tennis
tournament Thursday by defeat-
ing George Hardie, 6-2, 3-6. 6-2, in
action at the Laguna Niguel Ten-
nis Club.
Springst ead s a id We aver
"complained they had bricks on
top or the tarp and he wanted
them removed. I told the ground
crew to remove the bricks. But
then he (Weaver> came back out
and said he refused to play unless
the tarp was removed.··
ROD LAVER. LEA ANTONOPOLIS GET TOGETHER FOR TENNIS IN_ IRVINE:
Host pro Randy Verdieck. the
man who toppled defending
champion Billy Martin on open-
ing day, lost to England's John
Lloyd, 6-4, 6-4.
Others a dvancing to the
quarterfinals singles play in-
clude Colin Dibley, Trey WaJtke.
Russell Simpson, Brian Teacher
and Andrew Pattison.
The tournament will conclude
Sunday with the singles cham-
pionship at 1:30. Third place will
be decided al noon with the
doubles finals following the title
match.
Saturday·s singles semifinals
will be played at 12 and 1: 30 with
the doubles semis to follow.
In today's action, Lloyd met
Waltke; Dibley played Simpson:
Leonard raced Teacher ; and Pat-
tison battled Fleming.
s.oMlt ..... ~•
John Lloyd do1 A-y v ... dieck, .... , .. ; Trev
Wallk• Ml .ionn Yuill, 4-6, •·2, 6·1; Colln Olblltv
def. John Whhllnoer ...... •.o: Peter Flemlna def. IJoO C.rmld w1111, ._,, 1·4: Ru,...,n si..-def
Tim Wlllll-., .. ,. 6-3; Tom L-..rd ttef. Ge«o-
Hlltdle, .. 2. i.. • ._2; 8rlM\ TH C:-dtf. P..,I
Gerken. ... 2, ... 2; Andrew Petti MW> ct.I. Aock Fl'"
.~r.1•.'"'-
0..-ilft•h -Flomlna·W•ltU def. Fl-Whllll-.1•. 7 ~
TetscNtr·Wll•l"°"'def Llovct-Yulll, .. ),6 ...
"It's the s ame thing in
Cleveland. Detroit and Chicago.
where they have similar parks.
When it's r aining, they put the
tarps down ," said Springstead.
the chief of the umpire crew.
Springstead said Weaver was
warned that if his players had not
returned to the field within 15
minutes,. the game would be
forfeited. When the time limit ex ·
pired, home plate umpire Larry
Barnett signalled that the game
had been forfeited.
First base umpire Jim Evans
said Weaver had been told he
could have protested the game
a nd allowed it to continue, but
the Orioles' manager declined.
Weaver said he didn't lodge a
protest "because I value the s afe·
ty of my players. I'd rather take
the loss and leave here with my
whole team."
The Orioles and Blue J ays
have a four-game set remaining
m Baltimore, beginning Sept. 19.
and "the only sensible thing is to
finish it <the g ame > off in
Baltimore," Weaver said.
Uat~h at Irvine
Ran Out of Gas,
Says Beaten Laver
By GLENN WHITE
Ol lhe Delly l'llot Staff
V ttas Gerulailis said it was the
ht.>sl h<' has ever played against
Hod "The Rocket " Laver. And
his best was indeed good enough
to defeat Laver . 6·3, 4-6, 6-4.
before an overflow turnout of
3.388 at Irvine Racquel Club in a
$20,000 challenge tennis match
Thursday night.
The combatants put on a dazzl
ing display of tennis, then turned
over the ir winnings to the
benefactor or the proceeds, the
Harbor Day School.
Gerulaitis, often victimized by
La ver in World Team Tennis
play, was the rriaster Thursday
ni~hl.
His fitncs:.. speed and service
strength proved too much for the
game, but tiring, Laver to over-
come. The two-hour struggle reached
marathon proportions in some
games. The loth game of the
second set went to deuce eight
times before Laver won it -one
of his four service breaks of
Gerulailis, who is 16 ye~rs his
junior.
However, it was Gerulaitis'
fifth break of Laver's service
that finished the match.
Laver had broken his New
York City adversary to tie the
game at four. But Gerulaitis
came right back to break Laver,
then held service io wrap up the
triumph.
1 •( guess I ran out of 'gas, ..
Should Win 300-·Se·aver
Laver said. "I haven't hit a ball
in three weeks. When you aren't
fit, you tend to go for broke too
much. Vilas played awfully well,
he was v~ consistent."
Asked wbat part of bis game
might have been better, Laver
replied, "everything." Champion _Reth Def eat fA Agaii:i
LOS ANGELES <AP> -·Tom
Seaver had just won his 200lb ma·
jor league victory and he im-
mediately began talk.ing about
300 ..
•·If I stay healthy five more
years I should win 300 with this
club," said the Cincinnati right·
hander after hurling the Reds to
a 3·2 victory over Los Angeles
Thursday night. Tonight the
Dodgers host Atlanta, 7:30
<KABC; 790 >.
Seaver joins four others among
active pitchers who have won 200
or more games -Ferguson
Jenkins. Gaylord Perry, Jim
Kaat and Jim <Catfish) Hunter.
"It wasn't easy," said Seaver,
who retired the Dodgers in order
only twice.· although giving up
ju.st six hits ... I made lt tough on
myself. I was wild and I was high
most of the night.
"I didn't really thlnk about 200
until the ninth inning. a fter t got
past Rick Monday, and then it
dawned on me."
The victory was the 18th in 24
decisions for Seaver and his 11th
since coming to the Reds June 15
in a controversial trade with.the
New York Mets.
Monday staked Los Angeles to
a 2-0 lead in the fourth inning
with a two out, two-run homer.
The lead lasted only until the
top of the filth. The Reds were
held hJUess fpr four innings by
Doug Rau, After Johnny Bench
walked to lead off the fifth, Dave
Conception lined a double to
center. Bench came home when
Bob Balley grounded out and then
Dan Driessen singled home Con-
cepctoo to Ue tbe game.
The Reds b.roke the tte m the
seventh when F<>1ter and Bench
opened the inning with alngles.
Mike Garman replaced Rau, but •
gave up a run-scoring:single lo'
Concepcion.
CINCINNATI
ROH lb
Grlfteyrl
MorQ9<'21>
• •b r II Ill
'0 I 0
'0 0 0 7000
4 I 7 0
3 I 2 0
4 I 7 I
7 0 0 ' 0 000
2000 0000
3 0 2 l
G f'ott.,..11
e~ncnc
Cont •oc-n
ea11ev11
Lum pt,
ICnlQfll tf
Geronimo ct
Ori•'""' lb
LOIAHGt!US
Lopes lb
Ru•.ell~ Smith rt
Cev>t> c.e. .. ,,l>.
11•11.f'f'lf
Moncleyd
ourhpr Vtt.,-c R•u~'-P
So,.p
Motnll Raup
Germanp
Grolec
Oe'M!llloelll
•It r II 114
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Tolell 31 l ' J Totals at t 6 2
Clncln""'I 000 020 100-4
LosAngelft ooo 200 ooo-2
t!-conce~1on. 01>-onc1n,..tl 6, l.ol A11991ft
' \..09-ctnctnnetl •· Lot ""911• a. 211-v-... ~Ion. on-HA--Mondrt OJ), 58-
Lopel i. s--··
*-IW.IM) Rau IL.IMI
°'""'*' A•u~ s-
T-41'4 A-52.2'2•
II' H • •• N IO '622.S•
• • 3 • • •
0 1000 ..I
... 0001.,,
,.,, ' 0 0 • 2•
Gerulaltis said, ·'he let me in, .
in the last" game. He didn't play
that .well, maklog errors he
·usually doesn't make. The court
was slow and that helped me out
bicause ll made the mat.ch last
longer. · -
"My forehand was working
well and I was returning well.
rve been working hard on my
serve lately and it waa eoing wen.··
Laver seemed to be stnJU).lng
with service, suffering four dou·
ble faults and finding great·dif·
ficulty getting bis first service in.
H1s shots to deep court were go-
ing out and overall his tim1na ap-
peared comlderably off. Yet be
also ualeasbed seme of tbe great
1ho'8 -the kind that bad him
atop world 'rankinp for alx eon·
secutive yean.
lo the companion match,
Gerulaitis and Tracy Austin
topped Laver and Lea An·
tonopoUs. 8-6, In mh:ed doubles.
The Angels' Jerry Remy loaes
an argument with the umpire.
Ho, H11m;
Ange~~se
ARLINGTON, Tex. <AP>
• Willie Horton. singled home two
runs and Mike Hargrove
slammed his 16th homer of the
year Thursday night as tbe Texas
Rangers rode the stout relief
work of Adrian Devine to a 6-4 victo~y over tbe saeglog
O.Tl'T•• ... I
OJaatlel s ., &a•
California An&els, wbo are now
21 ~games out of flrlt place.
Starter Nellon Briles, 6-4. went
six lnoinp and allowed six bl.ta,
includina Don Baylor·a 22nd
home run of the year. John
Canelra, who •was C!Ombed for
five bits in a 4146 lnnlnp, suffered
bis flrst loss against one victory •
Devine came on 1D tbe seventh
inning to earn bis 12th save of the
year. The Rangers scored rour runs
In the first lnnlne on a allagle, two
walks and Horton•s bases·
clearing sln1le. Two runnen
scored on the Uner to rtibt field
and a third came home Ylben
Bobby Bondi misplayed the ball. ,.... ....... ".,.,.,_ * a t , , ~·s•t• 1).-.,tt • 011 ".,.,.... .., .. ....... ...,. ...... .., ..
~c 1tll ,..,..,.~ '' t, ....... " ....
• DAILY PILOT ,3
U.S. Ups
Cup Lead
To Three
BLACKPOOL, Eneland -
Tom Wataoo and Hubert Gr~n
blitzed their opponenta s and 4 t,o...
day and pointed America's
heavily-favored forces toward an
apparent rout of Great Britain·
Ireland in the ~d Ryder Cup
gqlf matches.
The Uolted States compiled a 3~-1~ lead in Thursday's open-
ing play and the romp by Watson
and Green over Brian Barnes
and Tommy Horton in today's
first match gave the Americans
a 4'Al·l~ edge.
Kmg.aa to NY
NEW YORK -Dave Kingm an
re~rted to his fourth club of the
season Thursday night, but he b
·back lo the city where he started
the year. ,
"I feel great. I have come full
circle." the 6..S slugger said after
reporting to the New York
Yankees, whnclaimed him from
the California Angels on waivers
earlier in the day.
Kingman began the season
with the Mets, who dealt him to
San Diego on June 15. California
obtained him from San Diego
after Kingman passed through
waivers.
~Til'82
Chuck Knox, who bas guided
the Los Angeles Rams to four
consecutive division titles, has
been given an extension of his
contract, the National Football
League club said Thursday
Knox. with a 44-ll record in hi9
four years at the Rams· helm,
had a contract for this season and
three more. The new agreement
is for five years, and is "revolv·
ing," meaning one year is added
after each contractual year.
Sfttr.e..etat
NEW YORK -The Golden·
State Warriors wiO receive u
first-round draft pick from tht!
Los Angeles Lakers in t})e 1978
college draft. plus $250,6oo, as
compensation for the Lakers·
signing of forward Jamaal
Wilkes earlier this summer, Na·
tional Basketball Association
Commissioner Larry O'Brien
ruled Thursday.
It was the first major com-
pensation dispute which O'Brien
was ~alled_upon to settle under
the collective bargaining agree· •
ment between the NBA and the
Players Association.
Wilkes. a 6-6 forward from
UCLA who was the NBA 's Rookic
of the Year in 1974 and has been a
starter in all three of hi.S pro
seasons, played out bis opt.ion
with the Warriors last winter and
signed with the Lakers. The two
teams could not agree on com·
pensation, so the case went lo
O'Brien.
DouWes Bendt•
HOUSTON -Top seeded Bob
Hewitt and Frew McMillan were
to meet Sherwood Stewart and
Freddie McNair today in a
"quarler-fioal match at the
$125,000 U.S. Pro doubles tennis
championships.
Hewitt and McMillan ad·
vanced with a 6-3, 3·61 6-3 victory
over John Feaver a nd John
James while Okker and Riessen
ou.sted Manuel Orantes and Den·
nis Ralston, 6-3. 7-6. Tim and
•Tom Gulllkson pulled off the big·
gest upset of the tournament with
a second·round 6-2. 6-4 victory
ov.r second-seeded and defend·
ing champions Brian Gottfried
and Raul Ramirez.
In another pair of second-
round upsets, Jaime and Alvaro
Fillol defeated sixth-seeded Ross
Cue and Geoff Mastera. 6-4, 6-4;
and Mayer and Menon defeated
seventh-seeded Syd Ball and Kim
Warwick, 7-S, 1-6, 7-6.
Io other second·round
matches, fourth-seeded Stan
Smith and Bob Lutz defeated
Mike Cah1l1 and Terry Moor, 6-11 1-6; Stewart and McNalr defeat-
ed Vijay and Anand AmritraJ,
7-6. s-1. M; and Owen Davidson
and Fred Stolle defeated Byron
Bertram and Bernie Mitton, 2-e.
6-3,M.
Sizzling Royals
Wm Two More
KANSAS Cl'1'Y -The Kansas
City Royals and Oakland
A1s ••• what a dlfference •
aeaon makes.
A year ago, the vp.and-com1n1
Royall were fendlnl off a late-
summer ehallen1e ~>' tbelr
1reen-and-f0ld nemesis en route
to tbetr ftnt Americ:an Leatue
WesttlUe.
Kw11 Clt)' now baa lta •1itata
on • eeeond division el"DWn, but ~ tlme a 1t.unnlq J.1..11me win·
nJ.n• streak bu destroyed all
Mmbllfteeof a race.
X-CtQ, racklnr up lLs
HcODd. tw1D-btll vlctoh' over.
Oakland In two Dlebu, M, ?I~,
DOW OWlll the IODCilt w1nrilna
1&.rtnt alae• tlae New Y'rk Y...._ ww 11...._ lallla.
TMIOJali''~-w·•tw wlllililU.ALWttdUU.80# .............
fill DAILY PILOT
SPORTS
Newport
In 3-0
Triumph
• By ROGER CARLSON
Of 111e O•llY P'lletSutt
Newport Harbor High's Sailors
rode the foot of Mark Hales and a
rock-ribbed defense Thursday
night to record a 3-0 non-league
football victory over visiting
Long Beach Millikan before 3,200
. Cans.
Hales kicked the winner from
42 yards out in the ::.ccond quarter
and the Sailors' defense did the
rest, turnini;: the Rams of
Millikan away in impressive
fashion in the 1977 opener.
The Sailors got a scare,
however , with 54 seconds re-
maining when Ram s
quarterback Al Hawkins hit
Thomas Morns with a quick pass
over the middle on fourth down
for what would have been the
winning touchdown from the
Newport33 But a nag was falling to the
turf for an illegal r eceiver
downf1cld as Morris was
catching thr ball and the ap-
parent score was nullified.
Newport coach Ball Pizzica
was looking for a highly im-
proved offensive thrust Thursday
'over the '76 edition, but he didn't
ge t it. The passing o f
quartrrback Craig Lyons was the
only bright spot in Newport's of-
fense, which was limited to 106
yards net.
Still, it was enough with Hales
available. The 170-pound senior
split the uprights with a couple of
yards to s pare with 3:07 left in
the half after narrowly missing a
31-yard attempt in the first
period.
Abide from Hales, the story of
Newport's victory 1s wrapped up
\\1th the defense, which had
::.tandouts in every direction.
Critical defensive efforts were
turned in by Wayne Kasparek,
Don Barker, Jeff Bitetti, Jim
.Corum and Dana Wandrocke.
1\nd inside the Tars were bottling up the quick Rams running
J.(a ml' with Mtkl' Ashen and Doug
Brotkmeycr.
lnd1vidually, and as an entire
11n1t, the Sailors' defense did
etverything asked of it. Millikan's
·only threat of the game was in
.those waning moments when the
Rams got to Newport's 25 after
recovering a fumble on the
Sailors' 43 with 3:20 left in the
.. aamc. c: Lyons was clicking well in the
..t)econd series of downs for
rNewport, hitting three of four at-
:'emPts for 46 yards. ~ But the Sailors' runni! game
.. .,as boUed down from t outset ~ind the issue turned In a de-:r ensive duel. ·z The decider was Hales, but it
·was Barker. Kasparek, Corum
.. and the rest of the defense which 4preserved1t. • :.. * i: . * * OAM~ STATISTIC.
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''ldaX1 8eetember 10, 1977
D~ngerouS Edison
.,,
Takes. on Estancia
In a 1amt of contr11Un1 atyles
and 1ltuatlOOJ1, Ealand• <Calta
MHa> Hltb'a E11lu and tbo
Edlaon Hiab <Hunt1n1t.oo S.eeh>
Charcers eollldt toni1ht <8> in
non·lea1ue football at Oran1•
Cout Colleao.
Eatancla coach Jlm Branen
and hJ1 Ea,rles enter with a
veteran olfenaive llne that hu
been intact ·for four years and a
on.i-two offensive punch of
quarterback Dave Jeranko and
receiver Mike Cantf>, considered
the most lethal at Estancia in
years.
Edison, on the other hand, will
be relying on an untested usault
which haa only three returning
:,tarters.
The big item is at quarterback
where Frank Seurer (pro-
nounced sigh-er> becomes the
first sophomore starter for the
Chargers since 1969 when Edison
had no seniors.
Seurer is only the second
sophomore to ever be on the
varsity squad-the other .
quarterback Nate Ching, who
was an understudy to Dave White
and Craig Way before getting the
starting nod as a senior.
The Chargers rely on the
power game out of the 1·
Major
League
Stand.ings.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
New York
Baltimore
Boston
Detroit
Cleveland
Milwaukee
Toronto
W L Pct. GB
90 57 .612
87 59 .596 21 ::
87 59 .596 21 2
69 78 .469 21
66 81 .449 24
62 87 .416 29
49 96 .338 40
West Division
Kansas City 91 54 .628
Chicago 81 65 .555 10' 2
Texas 80 65 .552 11
Minnesota 79 68 .537 13
Angels 69 75 .479 21 1 :l
Oakland 56 88 .389 34 1 ::
Seattle 57 91 .385 351 2
TllurMl•Y't O•mH
ICtMU CllY 1·S 0.kl..,O .... 1'1 ~-11 1n
n1r>0i.. ~ 101,,.,1~ Toronto•. ea1u,,..,..eo. forftil
8oslon7,-YOl"kl
MIMHot.7.0lict002
TeHs6.Celltornle 1
Onl v 09"'" sdleduled
T-y'1G-•t
llot101••A.tw ~I) ti Belllmore f Ptl,,_ t .. 111 n
Toro11to !Byrd '!-IOI al Cleveland IEcke,.i.v
U-IJ).11 New York ITIOrow IM or t40lttmeft , JI ••
DelrOll 1Arroyo7-tsl,ft
CAlllO<nl• lHtrt,.u 7·101 •I C.lllCtOO •Kn•DD
11-61.n O•klenel (Coleman 2·41 ., Mlhllltuk .. IHU\
10.101,n S.•111• IMeellcll 10..l •I Kanstt O!y lP•nln a.11... ' Mlnnetot• !Redfern,.,,., TuH IMor•I> ,, n
s.turNY'I Otm"
Toron\oetCltV91-
BCKton at !•lllrnOl"e
N..,,YOl"ll•IOelrolt
C•l ltornfe ti Clllt.,o
MIMHOl••tTe•H.n
S.a1Uu11 Ken .. , City. n
O•klenc:t et Mllwtuk". n s..,..u'• o ......
formation. In contrut to Eatan-
cla 'a rollout opUona wlth Jeranko
runnln1 or pualng.
Th Ed1aoo returnln1 starters
a-re 1uard Brlan Gloshen,
fullback Dan Bo1dan and
noaeguard Don Weisman.
"We've picked some starters,··
says Edison coach Bill
Workman. "But we're not sure
they are our best. We've fot to
find our starters and we fee we'll
play a lot of players tonlfht re·
aardless of the situation."
Edlaon'a injury plight bas one
addition-Weisman bas a
strained foot-but he'll play, ac-
cording to Workman.
The Chargers are lO'h-point
favorites, however, with tailback
Rob Milucky and the always
rugged Edison defense the major
reasons.
Edison enjoys an advantage In
enrollment of 1,600 more stu-
dents and worked the Eagles
over in '76 at this same site, 28-3.
Estancia enters almost
l'ie at Ne.eport
at full stren1th with only guard
David Pilarkll out (fiu).
•'Our tophomorea were hlt with
the nu earlier this week,·· says
Bratten. "But Plaarsk.l ll the on-
ly varsity player out at this
point."
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T e.cftlor
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RG 0-.. c ... , ....
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WR CtewforO 08 Seufer
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20S 147 S!Mft llS 1U Wlll!Mw
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115 l'IO M. c.ntp
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170 115 C&.wllff
1.S IU HtMll
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LB
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20t 11S ...,,. DE
nt Ito Fri'* OT 17S ttS w.i.,,..., NG
101 1'5 l'-IMn OT
190 1'2 C-DE
210 11 S °""'*' L 8 110 ,., .....,. LB
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17 J HO Pander C 8
ltS 190 0.VIJ S
lU 170 (Mou~ SS
Marina, Sea Kings
In Passing Duel?
Two tet':ns that figure to be Marina coach Mike Henigan.
throwing the ball quite a bit lhl.s •'They're running the option
football season clash tonight (8) more than they did last year, but
in the 1977 opener when Corona tbev also throw the ball well. AB
del Mar High duels Marina of far as we're concerned, we·re
HunUn~ton Beach at Newport ready to play. We're tired of hit·
Harbor High. ling ourselves.··
The CdM Sea Kings· offense is The key for Marina, says
geared around quarterbacks Henigan, will be the play of the
Kurt BroclCman and Rick offensive line. "That's the big
Starnes while Marina's Vikings key-whether our offensive line
are led by QB Joe Sartain and can block well for both the run
running back Ron Roy. All are and the pass."
juniors. Morris says he has been im-
"Wc 'rc very happy with our pressed with the Sea Kings• de-
qu\(terback situation," says f_ense. "Our defense is strong
CdM coach Dick Morris. "We again this year. It's as good or
have two very good quarterbacks better than last year. Our secon-
who can pass the ball well. And dary Is young, but we have good
we have four or five very good re-athletes and they'll get a good
ceivers." test against Marina because we
Brockman. a s tarting de· expectalotofpassing.'"
fenslve back a year ago, will Tonight's game is the second
open at quarterback tonight with meeting between the two teams.
Starnes starting at safety. Corona del Mar logged a 7-0 vic-
Sartain waged a tight duel with tory over the Vikings last season.
senior Scott Salee and has also
looked sharp. But Roy could be
the key. He was a starting run-
ning back as a sophomore for the
Vikings last year.
·'Before the season began we
expected Corona del Mar to be
down, but they have some good
juniors and we've been im-
pressed with their defense," says
Cyclists Vie
Tonight at CM
"'-'In• Surth•t LIMllftl
Off-
TE LU911n
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ESTANCIA HIGH ST~NOOUT MIKE CAMP FACES EDISON.
RB, Garden Grove
In Grid .Collision ....
When Huntington Beach High
kicks off its football season at
Garden Grove High tonight
<7:30), it will have to do so
withouttwoofits biggest men.
And that is of qiajor concern to
Oilers coach Dave Van
Hoorebeke who lost tackles
Donald Grosc06t <6·1. 235> and
Sten Lundquist (6-3, 210 > to in-
juries this week.
"Garden Grove is bigger than
any team we play this year."
Van Hoorebeke said of the
Argonauts who have only one of-
fensive lineman under 200
pounds and boast a 270 Pound
nose guard on defense.
Van Hoorebeke said he was
pleased with the Oiiers • defenae
in last week's scrimm age
against University but still is
worried about the offense. "It
just'hasn't come around like we
want lt to,·· he said. "I felt last
year, the defense played very
well but we just weren •t consis-
tent enough on offense.··
Ironically. the only win Hunt-
ington Beach recorded last year
was over Garden Grove, which
won the opener between the two
teams 14-0 and then had to forfeit
all its season wins due to an in-
eligible player.
· With 16 starters back, includ-
ing nine on offense, the
Argonauts are solid nine point
favorites in tonight"s game.
CllllOf'nlut Clllteoot
N f!W Vorl! et Detroit
Toronto at Clevel..,d
B<Klon et Btltlmore
MIMHOte 41TtHS2
S..eltleelK.....,Clly
O•kl•nd •I Mllw<IUkH
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East DlvlJloa
W L Pct. GB
Philadelphia 91 5S .623
The final speedway motprcycle
qualifying race of the season will
be staged at the Orange County ·
Fairgrounds In Costa Mesa
tonight (8) with 14 of the 32 riders
maklna lt to the national cham-
pionship event on Saturday, Oct. 15 ..
Tonight's action will be the
1lnal event of four qualifying
rounds. A new format finds only
the lop 16 riders advancing
ljeyond lbe first two rounds with
a chance to get Points.
Powerful Barons
Tackle Redlands
The big men up front on offense
for the Argonfluts are center Dan
McKie (6-5, 240) and tackle
Kevin Alexander (6-4, 235), both
of whom wer_e all-league
performers as sophs. The de-
fensive giant is nose guard Dan
Leonard (6-5, 270). ·
Huntington Beach witl also
have to contend with Garden
Grove's all-league passing com-
blnaUon of Tim Golia (5·11, 185
quarterback) and Clay Harris
(6-2, 180 wide receiver).
The O~ counter with a
highly-touted quarterback of
their own in Marco Pagnanelli.
Joining him in the starting
backfield will be Jim Thomas at
halfback and Bob Guzman at
fullback. Nose guard Craig
Nikcevich anchors the Hunt-
ington Beach defense.
Plltaburgh 84 64 .568 8
St. Louis 77 70 .524 14l2
Chicago 75 70 .517 is•.:z
Montreal 68 78 .466 23
New York 58 . 88 .397 33
West Dlvlalon
Dodgen
Cincinnati
Houston
San Francisco
San Diego
Atlanta
89 58 .GOS
78 70 .527 1112
74 73 .503 15
68 80 .459 21'h
64 85 .430 26
56 91 .381 33
Laruna Beach Kl1ti fllUNI to
have one of the better dtlea.alve
rootball teams ID the SoUth Cout
Lea1u• thl1 aeuoD~ut tli•
ArU.tl wlll 1•t a 1laat teat
toollht (1:30) Whtft U.., trlftl to
Brea Hllh lntbe lt'f7 opeMr.
Le1una llaebaol&erl BUI
Ooilillf <lte> and .IOM MIDti ,.,,, ..... -1rith mlMe ~
.!Jla'* MeCulkMIP C1*t> twiilill.eo
have d u.ey·cu blllldlitlrilin •
VIUil'tm wu.kltir olftftllft 1elln "
Steve But, a former national
champion. wlll trek to Costa
Mesa from Northern California
along wlth Mike Farla or
Richmon~ Dennis igalos, out with a
broken c ar bone, has gained
permlssl n from his doctor to
participate in tonight's event. He
had 'previously been listed as a
non·starter.
~ne Woods was disqualified
and will be i neligible to
participate In the quallfying
compeUUon. Aner tonJ4ht's action, the field
of 16 riders, including Mike Bast
and Bruce Penhall, wm be com-
plete.
Capo Film& Set
Films of tho Elsinore-
Capletrano Valley football 11me
will be abown Tuesday nl1bt
when the Capo Valley boOlten
dub meets at I at the Chlcaco
Plaza 11taff Oil Mar~r1tt .nd
Avery ,arkwaya ln Ml11lon
Vltlo. Plaques wlll be prest1tted to
the top Off enalvo and dtfenalve
players.
...
REDLANDS-Fountain Valley
High"s Barons unveil their 1977
attack tonight at Redlands
University where the Redlands
High Terriers await in non-league football .
Kickoff la at 8 and the Barons
of coach Bruce Pickford are 11 ·
point favorites to roll behind the
runnlng of returning All-CIF
tailback Wlllie Gittens.
Gittens scored 16 touchdowns
in 1976 and it started with the
first play or the season against
Redlands· with a 67-yard scoring
scamper to pace a 34·0 victory.
Redlands, however, haa 23 let-
termen and 11 returning starters a.a the Terriers attempt to re-
verse a disastrous 1-8 s~on in
'76, including six straight blanks,
beginning with Fountain Valley.
"I just hope our kids aren't sit-
ting around reading the press
clippings," says FV coach Bruce
Pickford. ''If we are and don't
play to our caP.ablUUea, we'll 1et
our tai11 beat. •
The Barons are without the
services of guard Mitch Finklea
<an injured toe> and Stan
Shibata 's effectiveness on of-
fense will be limited due to an in-
jured band. Too, No. 2 tailback
Kevin Romine is out with a ·
broken collarbone, probably for
·a month .
Still, the Barons have a lot or
aces, beginning with flanker Tim
Holmes <205>t quarterback Doug
Thompson and an offensive line ~ltb no apparent holes. Al
Koenig (232) and Bryan Cllldwell
<215) lud the way.
Redlands' attack revolves
around quarterback Gene
Larson, a retumin1 starter.
An addl1lonal problem for
Fountain Valley could be ln the
officiating at Redlands. In 1975
some quesUonable calls acalnst
Fountain Valley sparked a ia!t-
minute touchdown drive to giv<1
Redlands a gift 6·3 win. , ....... ~~~
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Pennant Race
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Valenruela Ct-1~. 211> &ad Don worked very hard In the oft ~ (f.O. •> ind middle HUCllL" c•iiritTodd AlliilW te-1, •1.---..... "-;o 1Na oOM1a Jla McAI ..... , a M a=-'
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Friday. S.ptember 115. 1977 OAILY PILOT
Area Water Polo Outlook for
/
l\Wll'll•rt••r .. r
Althouch they have bun
rocked walb J!raduation I0111•u11.
the alway• potent Newport
tl1rbur H1&b SaJlo,.. kr• qaln
f;avu~ tu rc.>ll lo th Sw\I l
Leoaue water polo ch1m
p1onsh1p .
Co.ch 8111 Barnett 'a Sullor"
han won lbe crown 10 1traa1ht
\Imel. h•Vll c•plurod the 4 A hllc
fuur time·~ and wer4' t.ccond
11 not.her four OC'Cailon~
Gone are Cl F player-of the
year Kevm Robertson and Cl t-·
~ A Cir.>t tt"am packs Jeff SteveM
~·nd Joe Beek. among otheri.
trorn \.h~ '76 tum wtllch lost only
twice -to C{(o' kanapin Sunny
llilla High or Fullerton.
The only returning starter 1~
Junior James Bergeson .
augmented by senior letterman
Jt.>ff Young Up from the juruor
varsity ure seniors George
Robertson. Mark Gauger. John
Iverson, Mark Buc:hanan and
senior goalie Cns Forsyth. Also
an Barnett's plans a re Hunt·
ington Beach High transfer Tom
Tay lor and sophomore Mik e
Grier, up from thefroah·soph.
Newport's strong suit is its size
and Barnett c;ays the major ques-
tion is whether his crew will jell
on defense. -
,.._.,.,,. ¥allefl
Although Fountain Valley Hig h
water polo coach Ray Bray has
three returning starters in lhl'
fold, he's still in the process of
d etermining the starting lineup
for his Barons as they gird for
Sunset League battle.
Seniors Mike Twyman:-Rod
Nelson-and John Chavez Corm thl'
nucleus for Bray to work around
and he has a steady goalie in
John Chavez.
Juniors up fro m a good
frosh soph group include Mike
Nichols. Brian Umphenour and
goalie Rick Nagura.
"It's a matter of buil ding
toward league play," says Bray.
"Newport Harbor is the team to
beat, as· always, but we would
like to finish among the top two
and make the playoffs. We think
lhl're is a strong possibility for
lhat. ..
Mari11a
Marina High Clluntington
Beach) water polo coach Topper
Horack says last year's ftfth·
place finis h was frustrating, and
he fuJly expects his Vikings to
show marked improvement this
season.
"Newport Harbor looks like
the strongest team, but we'll be
• competitive behind them,"
Horack says. "We have a couple
Of fast kids and a better attitude
than we had last season."
Four starters from last season
return to the varsity. and the best
of those is probably Scott Bozanic
int.he key position of goalie.
"Bozanic wa.s .good last year
and he improved a lot over the
summer," Horack says. "We ex·
pect a lot out of him. He'll help us
in releasing out or the goal. ..
Other returning starters are
Bob Hume. Dave Thielen and An·
dy Rosenburg. Other up-and·
coming players who have im·
pressed Horack are sophomore
Carl Morabido, junior Kevin
M cClynn and senio r John
Hutchinson.
tht• •ophomore tfam. which
l)liaytld v~ry Wl·ll IHt year." Oct·
ty '4•Y• •·r wua 11leu1nUy •ur-
prl1td ln our 11t·rtmmace thl•
wt'ek. We 10'1k~ 11rttty 1oocJ."
Bealde11 Moorhouse, Gtny·a
lop phayerg will be Darcy An·
dtlin , Tom P11yno, Larry
McNernt·Y. O.rna Taschner,
C'liaude J>unh . Ah1n Soule. Jtrr
lluahe!l, J ohn GHford and .a
l ran1iofer frum Puerto Rico,
ftuphael Cort'l·U.
EdUet1
l<:dli.on lt•i:h <Huntington
Beach> wuter polo couch Lou
lt1lt'y constders thu. year's edl·
taon the be~l ever al the Charaers
\'11mpus ~ut 1l ':. i.tlll basically a
flght for se<'ond place in the
Sunset League and a berth In the
Three seniors who started last
year are returntna-Bobby
Dolwt, John Olson and Mark
Paulson. An offenalve driver who
has also lmpretaed Schupp is
junior Alan Chacon.
Olson Is a bla, strong set mlln
and Puub1on is u take-charge
type wbo directs the offense.
Dolan CO)Jld poss ibly be She
Mustanas leading scorer th.is
year.
Junior Mlke Castillo Is starting
at goalie, backed up by another
junior, Matt Peurson.
"We won't havt:: to rely on any
1:1ingte player this season."
Schupp says. "We have few
weaknesses and more ex-
perience than last year.·•
O...BIU.
Clfi'4·A playoff!> that is al stake. J ack Dickmann hopes mixing
··we could ht.' better than I an· business with pleasure in the
t1 c1pate," i.ay~ Riley. "But s ummer can lead to a winning
nobody as gomg Lo beat Newport combination in the fall.
Harbor, not a team that works Dickmann a nd most of the
out eight hours a day all summer Dana Hills High water polo
and has a pluycr as outstanding players he coaches spent a week
as James Bergeson." In Hawaii last month. specifical·
Only three are left in the varsi-ly to compete ln. the Hawaiian In-
l y picture from the potent 1975· vitational water polo tourna·
frosh-soph team -t>eniors Doug ment. While South Coast League
Pickford, Tim Spaeth and Larry kingpin University High of Irvine
Isr aelson. won \.he 16-and-under title .J1.nd
Israelson. a 6·4 goalie, is a re· Long Beach Wilson copped 18·
turnang varsity starter along and-under honors, a combined
with Pickford and senior Steve team of University and Dana
Kluk. Hills players captured the open Others who make Edison tough crown.
are juniors Dan HoHman, Scott In the process. the Dolphins not
Melvin and Bob Bcrgholtz. only improved a.s individuals but
The eighth spot on the squad is as a team to a point Dickmann
the one question mark for Edt:.on feels they can be contenders in
and fighting for the berth are the always tough South Coast
Mark Reddick. Jon Goetz, Chuck League.
Crawford and Bob Hamm. Three seniors and four juniors,
Spaeth is the best ball handler all but one of whom started at
and along with Pickford. figures various times in 1976, comprise
to produce the mos t scoring the bulk or the roster. Leading
punch for the Chargers. the way is senior Paul Milosch,
lhd~nlt9 the team's most valuable player
a year ago. To hear m ost South Coast Seniors Pat Beeman and Scott
League water polo coaches tell it, William,i, along with juniors Joe
University <Irvine) High is the Delaney, Dave Varney and John
team to beat for the loop cham-Tweedy were also starters at one
pionship. especially with All·CIF time or another. Newcomers in·
goalie Jack Graham returning elude junior Chuck Wood and
for his third season in the net. sophomore Ron Suttle, who will
But Trojans coach Gary start in the goal. Sophomore J oe
Robinett, in has firs t year at Beeman will also be brought up
University after coach lnf to the varsity squad on occasion. Laguna Beach last year, isn'
quite as convinced. Cerell• flel 1'1ar
"If we keep playing the way we When water polo coaches
do right now, we should be in the around the South Coast League
top t'Our," Robinett said, down-hear that Corona del Mar is in a
playing a team that advanced to r e building year, they might
the quarterfinals of the CIF heaveasighofreUer.
playoffs last fall. "On paper, I. think we'll be
The reason for his cautious ap-somewhere in the middle of the
proach, he saad, is ~pie. The league when the season's
competition in the league is finished," says CdM coach Jim
lougher than ever . Kruse "But we have a good
"Anybody can beat anybody tradition here It's just a matter
else in this league," he said. of bow we improve as the season
"You have to take everybody p rogresses •·
seriously. Jn this league, teams Good·tradition is right. For the
get keyed up for every game, past two years Corona del Mar
alwaystryingtopullanupset. has advanced to the CIF
"All we would have to do is re-quarterfinals before being
lax one week a nd somebody eliminated, and the year before
would pass us." that the &a Kings won the CIF
That goes for University prac-crown. Corona del Mar also won
tices. "We have quite a few CIFtiUesln1969,1966andl.965.
juniors who are putting a lot of "Our team S{>ted isn't bad this
pressure on the seniors and that's year," Kruse says, ."but we're
what is helping our team right awfully small arid we have a lot
now," Roblnett said. "Back-up of inexperienced players. Our
goalie Tim Ha llman never let.a strength so far seems to be on de· Graham taJce it easy which keeps fense."
his competiUve edge up." Mike Bercaw will atart at
Seniors Peter Campbell and goalie, with the other ritarters
Gr eg Hanle along with junior currently· lilted aa Chm Silva,
Greg Borsuk were all starters Greg Walker, Rwss Jenkins, Eric B1a1tl119to11 Be~h last year while Steve Kishineff Kredel, Eric Piper and Scott
When Huntington" Beach High and Steve ~ruan lettered· Turkmette.
water polo coach Duane Getty C..ta Jfaa Vying for a startlng position ts
looks out into the pool and sees Villa Park Hl&b transfer John
Part or the problem at El Toro
111 the ab&ence of a year·rou.nd
waler polo program. "Most or
our ki<hi are basically swimmers
so they don't play in the sum·
mer," Farris says. "It's like
starting out new every .year."
Though he calls them an easer
bunch, Farris admi:!f the
C harge rs will be s tr gling
again in the l.ough South Coast
League. .
Goalie Bob Marshall ls the only
senior starter for the Chargers
with the rest being juni~rs: John
Awerkamp, Matt Sm.it\. Brad
Richie, Frank Hughes, Bob Cul-
lie and Tony Choquohuanca.
Other varsity members include
i.erl\ors Steve Fluss and Dave
Richie. sidelined until late in the
season with a broken neck, and
J unlors Craig Farrington and
Mark Majors. ·
Sall ae.en•~
In his first year as head coach
of the San Clemente High water
polo team, Mike Sutton has set
his sights on a berth in the CIF
playoffs.
He's also lhe Cirst to admit it
won't be easy.
"They take three teams from
our league (the South Coast) into
the playoffs," Sutt.on explained.
"It's a very tough league and it
would be e.reat to at least g~t
third place but to get there, we
have to beat several excellent
teams.
"We would have to beat Mis-
sion Viejo and we'd have to beat
one or the other top teams.
Corona del Mar, Costa Mesa or
University," he added. "Actual-
ly, all of our games are tough in
lUgue. Ir you're not hot for
Laguna or El Toro, they'll beat
you."
One reason Sutton can afford to
be so optimistic is experience.
Six of the eiaht seniors on the
varsity squad sfarted last year
when the Tr1tons finished with a
9·8 record and were fifth in the
South Coast standangs.
Mike Gibbs. who will operate
as goalie, and Marty Graff are
the only underclassmen on the
varsity. Seniors include Mitch
Kahtt. Dan Lineback. Dave Bora,
Don Murphy. KevJn Haskins.
Peter Hart and Dave Wysopal. .
MbnoaV&e-Jo
Mission Viejo Hlgh's water
polo program has been beefed up
with the addition ot coach Ken
Bonaly, who steered Los Altos
High <Hacienda Heights) to four
league championships in the past
six years.
Among Bonaly's crew are re·
turning starters Mike Woods and
Brian Okazaki. along with varsi-
ty lettermen Mike Bush and Jon
Peterson.
Andy Kontrimas is in the goal
with others expected to help in-
c I uding Mike Scolman. John
Silvers and Bob Jac~s.
"We'll use a center-forward of-
fense and mix our d efenses."
says Bonaly.
Among Bonaly's products at
Los Altos are back-to-back first
team All.CIF goalies Sean Foley
and Bob Evjene.
"We're in the toughest league
in theCIFwith three teams rated
among the top 10," says Bonaly.
"Wath only two 101ng to the CtF
playoffs from Heh league, at will
make ll very difficult for us."
Lagtma 8eaelt
Uni versit y ll1g h <Irvine),
Costa Mesa and Corona del Mtr
are among the Top 10 in Cf.F
water polo, but all figure to ha~e
a tough time against the Lagurta
Beach High Artists.
Coach Lee Graham, In his first
year as head coach, returns to
Laguna Beaclt with a group of
seniors who were on his frosh·
:.oph team of 1975 -whlch re·
corded a 20· 1 record.
"A lot or those players are
:.enlors now." :.uys Graham .
"We s hould be pretty com·
petilive. although we lack some
experience due to the lack ·of
summer league play. We h~e
good size, however."
Laguna Beach's leading
players are goalie Mike Malone.
Tom Grindle, Rich Christensen
Tim Houts. Mark Stott, Brucl'
Cunard and Craig Brashier.
The Artists possess good siz(·
M lh Grindle and Christensen it1
th~ 180s.
Racquetball Set
The firth annual state out.door
three-wall singles racquetball
·championships will be held at
Orange Coast College Oct. 7-9.
Entry fee is $12 ror the first
event and S8 ror each additional
event. Deadline for riling enlrie:
1s Oct. 5. Competition will be hehl
1n four divisions for both men ancl
women.
Tars, BB
Collide
Capo Valley Tabbed
First-ever Game Set Tonight
LONG BEA CH -
Corona del Mar Iligh's
water polo team scored
four goals in the 'first
period and went on to
·notch an 11·4 victory
over Santa Ana High in
a first-round game ot U\e
Moore League Tourna-
ment at Long Beach
Wilson High Thursday.
The Sea Kil\is got
balanced scoring as five
of their players each
scored two goals.
E L S I N O R E --perienced players on the
Capistrano Valley High Cougars squad including
School will play its first-s tarting quarterback
ever football game Brad Parker . Parker
tonight i7:30 ) against moves over from San
the host Elsinore High Cleme nte along with
Tigers and, surprisingly, starting tackle Todd
the Cougars of Capo Fulladosa.
Valley will be favored. Robin Charles, a de·
Coach Bill Cunnerty's fensive back at El Toro
Cougars are picked by last season, has taken
7'h points in their In-over at a halfback post
augural gridiron clash, for the Cougars along
largely due to the small with his cornerback posi-
tumout al Elsinore and tion on defense. Parker
the fact that several key plays free safety and
players for the Tigers Fulladosa defensive end
have been lost. when the opposition has
Both teams have an the ball.
outstanding field goaJ Els inore, 1:8 last
kicker. Elsinore coach season, has had prob.
Randy Haskin has stated le ms with personnel
thatlheTigersmayeven this campaign. The
try ror three point.a on Tigers are down to 22
first down lf the team is players after several
quit the squad and othert-
transferred or were in-jured.
Th e team't
quar terback, David
Valle, is small (S-6, 140)
and has never played QI
the position before.
C..,i.tr-Vallay OfftflM
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llO
Newport Harbor High
split two games at Long
Beach Poly High, losing
to La Serna or Whittier
9·5 and beating Santa
Monica 18· l. Scott
Devries scored 1e~en
goals in the two games.
Tonight Newport plays
Huntington Beach at 5: 30
at Poly. · close enough. That's bow -;;-==;;;;;;;~~~~:;=:;;~:;;;:;;=;;====~ bad be reel.a bis offense -,__, 0 P£1~i ti &1..,f.i1 0 -..":::f.;;""',,.. bas been riddled. His
""....._..oomM.n... kicker, Kenny Hardcas· LEASE FIAT ~'~"t:" · •, 3
2 \2;-.2; tle, bas hit Crom 40 =~=.~~;~,: ~Mi:1~fu'~~ i~~: •· '=!1 •=r M:;~r;e111e_1119_,,.i..!t.~ 2 C>-4 Johnson, a senior capa· _ !i _ __
._,..,,.19101"....,... .... ec• ble of hJtUn1 the mark
•-Plltl a 1 • o..... from 50 yards out. He
HUl!tl"9!01'11Mc11 , 2 , ,_, clayed soccer in Chile 120W. WAINER, SANTA ANA 557-2132
Huntll>Ql!Oft 11eec111eo•lft0-cot•.. ~•a::=ir ,,_._..a.M<N-.,2. aatyear. Mntt~•h•~•1•1c111~-~c~w~~~~~h~u~~~~e~e~e~x~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ AW9 .. H11ntlllglM keel! • ' J 1 3 .,_ ..
LotA...... S 4 2 I I 0-U
HllfttlftQIOll l•ed1 HOflllt -. ~. I, Corrte J, TUC'-• 1, GllfonU.MclHmeyl,
CWMe•MerC101611.tMoAINI S-.lllY~ C:O-dlt~r • J t 2 -11 hla 1977 team,. it reminds him of Costa Mesa Hlgb's water polo Kercera and four sopbomores-
his league champlonabip squad program is undergoing a gradual Jon Piper, Brian Buck, Mark .
.orthree seasons a10. change in leadership but the Czaja and Scott Baldridge.
hftla Alie I 2 I I -• korlfl9• CorONI def M¥-Wolll., 2,
Kr•9"1 2, TurllMtt• 2, P'lper 2,
.. Just Uke with that team, we Mustangs are once again con· El,.._
have no dominating guys, but we sidered contenders for the South ••• -
play well together as a unit,.. Coast League title. Young and lnexperienced in
Getty says. "ll's a young team, Head coach Terry Bowen will 1976, the El Toro High water polo
but an intelligent one." leave in January to take a posl· . team will flt the same bill this
Only one starter comes back lion al Cuesta College In San Lula fall.
from the team that finished Obispo, and Bob Schupp is mak· "We have six returning varsity ,
second in the Sunset League a Ing the transition to head coach players wh ich sounds im·
year ago-Dan Moorhouse. He at Costa Mesa. pressive," says Cbar1ers coach looks like 8 favorite to become .. Universit y <Irvine} and Steve Farris, 11but we were a
Huntington Beach's top scorer Corona del Mar will be tough," very young team last year and
and Getty ta building his offense Schupp says, "but we'll be ln the we sun have mottly a Junior
around Moorhouse. running, too. We have a very •team. We're atlll a small and ln·
"Most of our auys are u.-=:p..!f.:.;ro~m:.::.,. __ b_a_l_an_c_ed_t_e_a_m .... -thl_s_s_ea_s_o_n_._ .. ___ ..,..e_x .... ee_..._ri_en~ce4 team.••
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G«INll2, ~t.
GoUReport • LEASE • 9110DAYS
SEPT. 10 THRU 18
OIOIOI COLOUlll Ith ANNUAL
Football, Polo
•
FRONT END SPECIAL
lnclude9 Complete
Allgnmont and FrontWhHI
Salanclng.
s10"
Front Diec Pads ln1tmlctd
MoatC.. '29.96
Includes car Lube
011 Filter
Up To
6 Ota. 011 59"
B7S.13
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Area
Running San Cl~mente Invades ··BG Tonight
..il'11on u.Culn'\t the halfback slots across the Tr-1t11ns attempt to
MJIJ1lc11·, from Rui.1> Immel (5-6. ctvenge a 28 14 defeat
sun < 'lt•m.t·ntt-111 "h
w 111 u 1111 J rt' 11 l I y 111
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17 J11 1 1111 lht• W77 fool
Ii.ii I upt'lll'r
Bolba Grande is a young
team with juniors (41) .SE
outnumbering seniors ~
1151 on the squad, c
MD Faces
Explosive
C~gers Outlook W1• hk1· tu \\IO thc•m 1501 they suffcrctl to Boli.a
ull mak1•nol.><>nN1 about Wudc, who went both Grande 1n 1976
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rn..i1·h Alli~ Sl·hutr !'lal1I
t'ould h( <•nl• of lhv btillt't
ti.11 k!'i Jn Oranl(l' Countv.
11111111'(1 h111 kfl1·c In pr uc
I ll t• Wt• d 11 t• it du y u n d
~1'11 .iff suld If ht• Ill not IOO
pl'I 1·1·nt he wall not 111•t•
lhJl," Sc:hart "u1d after w11ys for the soph team Thucsday's practice.
Thur• cl u) ' 11 g ht last year, will also start Schaff said, was a .mat-
\q1rkout "Hut af we have on deferu.e al safety Im-ler Of going thrOURh the
•• 1·oupk 11( k let... who mel as also pegged for motions "We dadn 'l do
,u1·11 l loo pcrt·1·11l , two-way duties a long anything special, Just
th1•1t•' nn "•IV \H"ll put with offensive tackle run through our offense
thl0 ll1 In .i prl'\t'J\on defens ive end John and defense," he !>aid. In
uanw · Edwards CS·ll. 170) and. tonight's game. he said
HowM.''.t. who ran Jot 7 fullback·nq_se guard Carl the Tritoni. would at w when -.tall not in top Uash C5-10. f85). tempt lo concentrate on
11h11rX'. wall lw n·pluccd Murk McElroy, one or exerulion and play good
hv M11:hu<'I Wade (b I . two starters back, will football both wayi.
The main Matadors ~
scoring threat is junior n
wide receiver Darius ~=
Durham (6·3. 187) who He
runs the 40 in 4.6. In last He
year's opener. Durham oe
caught two passes for 100 ~
yards oc
$1 ....... 11
ltOdr'-• W.lllQ "UO.C""• Mtl!lrov 81111 w-·-.... C.._...e OwfenN
Ect•ero..
MIKDllY
-OYI Byrd
81"1 S•-•n llndw
Immel B..,..., ,,.,_
uo
II\
110 110
1.0
llS
1.0 uo
''° ti\
1.0
GOLETA-Mater De1
(Santa Ana> High opens
the 1977 football season
tonight (8) at UC Santa
Barbara against Dos
Pueblos High of Goleta
and the visiting
Monarchs Cigure lo have
their hands full trying to
contain an explosive of-
fense.
Quarterback tom NG
Stormer (5-10, 185) threw t:
for nine touchdowns cB
liio I al 0111• ol tht• •iµen at quarterback as Lake San Clemen te, last year lo lead Bolsa ~8
Grande to a 6·2 record. cB C..l .. ft
160
tts
10
l\S
llO 1)1 •.o
ltO
Both teams have five
returning starters. a
s peedy runner in the
backfield and operate a
veer offense. But the
C hargers have a
quarterback, Alan Saller
l6-3. 220). who weighs as
much as Mater Dei's hef-
tiest •tarter. offensive
guard Jim Ingram (6-0.
220>.
I II\(' '" llltll'I (II .... ,.,
111 th1· li•aJ?Uc Clc•nn Dill
lilt• 111'>1 \l'JI tw,1d Olilll
,,f th~ 1)1Julo., dll hul
t'Unl'1•1fr:o. lhl' tlllt• tu
1·11..,ta ~lt·:o.J ll1~h. the dt·
lt·nct1ni.! Cff J A chum
111un "h1ch hd:o. "tJll b·I
t'OnM•l'Ull\ t' It.' ague du,11
111 l'l'h Jilli I:. ht.-ad I: d
IU\\ Jrtl Jnolhl·r hJnnl'f
'><:J:.un
Highly-rated Diablos ·Baseball
Clash With Saddleback Top Ten
I thml.. "e II llt> \ t'n ,
\ t'r\ tough, · Dill .'>aid
If "c \\ <.-rcn t w th1.:
'cimc lc.ti,:uc "1th CuslJ
\le:.a. \\e'd ha\c a l(O<>d
chantt• tu'' in thl· tllll·
A:. 1t 1,, thl' l.)1abl11:0.
\\Ill probJb)\ h.t\C th
'>hoot for beins; r-.o. ~.
which \\On't be an ea!.V
ia:.k in itself This year,
ttw Seuth Coast appear:.
c~ugher than C'\'t'r from
·op to bottom
1\monl,l fin• varsity n.:
turners. 0111 has" h;il he
cttlls ont· of the bctkr
runner!. 111 Orange Coun
I), ~lark LaHontc Tl)c
~o 2 mJn la:o.l ~·t·ar.
LaU011lt• l'Jtl .1 !.I 19 l\\o
mall' and 1:21 male in
track
Tunaghl M1:.:.1on V1cJo
1 lagh football coach John
~uno gets a chancc lo
stilrt proving has pre
-.cc.1son boasts that has
:~~~ t~a!~'~~ ~v~~~~~c!~
M1ss1on "
Th1.: Diablos' host Sat.I -
dle back lligh of Santa
Anu at 7: 30. Mission Vae-
JU 1s picked by the Daily
Piiot as a seven·poant
fJvonte
Th<· Diablos will start
Scott Spear at
Cl uarterback and Muno
has promised that Mis-
sum Vi<.'jo will pass more
this scuson. The "ide re·
tt•1vers are Mik e
Rra"'lcy <6·3. 185) and
DC'vin Rower (5· 10. 160)
J l' rn Wille '>J \' ha'
:.tn·ngth IS an lhl• uf
fen1>1\e skill poi.1lsons.
and fears thal M1ss1on
V ll'Jo will rorn· hb un
ll•Sll'CI defe1t'>l' lo '>lllk or
S\l.lm
.. M1:.:.1on \'1l'JO 1s ...
\\ell ('Oath<.'d ufft'nM·
minded ll•Jm th1i.
sc>ason.'' W1ttc :o.a,> s
"They 're cupuble <Jf
~coring a lot and I really
thank their tleft'n:o.e 1s bet
tcr than ours "
The tcarn:o. match up
prl'tty cn•nly a:o. far as
s1w gol·s, but 1r Mission
ViCJO can run through
the Satldlcb;ikck lln<· 1t
\~ 111 find a Mopper n~hl
behind 1t lancb:.acKl'r
George Garcia, a rtturn
ing all le;iguer and
honorable mention All·
Amercacan for Sc.td
dlcback.
Saddleback also ha:. a
b a g, experienced
quarterback an Chuck
L>eLaMater <6·1, 195J
MluiOI\ ViJjo OH.., .. SE M~1i,.•r•wt•1 ·~1 RT JON\ Ht-MttSl'V 110 RC llov1n M<K Oon• 10 180 c JohnPf"tlt 10 LC. JOllnWhol• llO i.r Jerry'-'~''°" l'<O TE flmStrewintr 1'S Ob '>co11So..ar l'IO re MltcnHooo l•S Tll Alllf\Partc9'1" IOI WR 0.vm8owu •SS
Nt•uton V••10 O•l•ftM l f 8ol>C•'°"' 181 I. r JOhn HPMt'\Sif'y 110 N (; R1(\ 011tv1d\On II\ RT Jf!rry N~•\On l'IO R£ Ml~· 0c "°" 180 l ll Oan·Cf'l•rnlh " • 181
l 11 S<on Spear l'IO R P•ulUtO•t-IH CB Otv1n Bow..,-llS Cl! l4n<:P IUct\•r<hOn IH s M1~~ Br•wffy Ii\
Seniors Dannv
:\lercado, Mike Shrave"r
J n d ;\l ult !\1 iJ n n a n cl
Junior Kl'n O:o.hornl' arc
the other returning
'arsit.\ runners H'1un<I
1ng out lhl· 'iqua<I "111 IJl'
JUn1or Kt.·n McJ\fcc Jnd
~01)h:o. .JC'ff \'undcrN•m"
.ind Tro~ ~clb
Rut Mis:.1on V1eJO will
:.tlso have a potent run-
ning auack behind re-
turning letterman Alan
Parker (5-9. 165.J and
nc\\ comer Match II opp
15-10. I~>.
OCC Poloists Play
Capo "alfefl
Indeed. it appears lo
bt• a daffl•rent team than
lhl· one that lost to Sad-
cll eback High in l ast
year's season opener.
13·0 While Murio as
!>tres!.ing defense. as
alw<1ys, he appears to
have u balanced, potent
offense fo r 1977.
Saddleback coach
Orange Cou~t Collc·gt:
laul!J.·hed its "all'r polo
s ccf:.on t od:..iy . hut
Parules coach Jatk
Fullerton 1:. unsure of
what kind of tl•am he'll
have or who the startc·rs
will be
OCC <lidn't havtc• its
fjrsl practice until
Thursday, primarily
because FullC'rton and
Coach Tom White is
lr3'1ng to make som e
sense out or the confusion
that typifies first-year
school Capis trano Valley
-fligh, and through the
jungle he secs a good
cross country team lurk
tng.
Uni Kicks Off
"We had four kids G •d c •
transfer In JUSI today n mnpru, gn who run cross country,··
White said. "I don't \
know how good they arc. With sC\ en pla) cr:o. • spec1albt in mltl1l1on llJ
but I think we'll have a playing offen!.e and tie duty ut halfback and dt·
rcspN·lablc team \.\ t: fcn:o.e ancl the \'ersatale f ensave back •
l'X pe<'t to" an some · 0 a " 1 d La n g m a d c Tustin has a Ol'\\ loo lo.
Currently the No '>tdcltned with a sprained \\1th thl' ubscnct> of
runner 1s junior Tom anklt.'. University High quarterback Tom Bank-.,
Fogarty, a transfer from <In-me> opens the 1977 lin·ebacker R1c·hard L'm
San Clemente who was fnothall season tonight phrcy and ta~ht end John
last year's Soulh Coast <fl> at Tustin High 111 a Jessup.
League champion on the non-league skirmish But Tustin coach Jeff
frosh-soph level The Tr o j ans of J ei.pt•rsc11 says he e:.: ·
No 2 is Sean Red-Un1vcrs1ty fought to a petts a bctt<·1 team than
dinglon. a junior who scoreless lie with Tustin has '76un1t.
mun)' of his team mcm
hers d1dn 't arrive back
from a rour·week tour uf
Europe until Tuesday
"It could be as good a
ll•am as we've ever
had." says Fullerton.
"But al this point we just
don'\_know."
The Pirates have 10
sophomores returning
from last season's cluh
that finished third in the
state including
:--tnrters Jim Davidson
and Enc Elder.
The other sophom ores
an• Erik Klitzner. Bob
II aug. Stevc Soros. Er1 n
Sloan. Phil Gumbert.
SteH' Sutherland, Doug
Pritchard and Chri'
i\ rnold All hut Pritchard
<1nd Arnold pluyed in
Europe.
The key incoming
pl a) ers figure to be
freshmen 'datt Smith of
Villa Park High, Steve
McGowan of Saddle back
High and Kevin Thene. u
transfer from Humboldt
State
110..oon Jl\41 R•I
HAllONAlll!AOUI!
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10 S\9 llJ 111 )ti
Ill OS 100 ••• J•• 111 .. I •l IS1 310
11' 4'11 IS Ill JOI
141 )~ 'IO 111 )OS
HO-RUii•
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lll'I CM•~v lo• Alr>Q<'lh 10'1, Au•
ro'Lon' Alllanla, IOI PllClllPICI 114 0Hlli0f'lt I
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R F-01\(n, '>I l Ou" 11 • /]q
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tu n,on PP'lll•dPlphl.t 1\ t. ..,114
R A,..u,cn.-1 '"•C•t.IO 1• 8 104 C ,., lton Phlledf'IOn1.t 1 t q 100
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ll•!o<-don lll•I B•I\
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() Al It M Pct
(4••# Min 14/ St/ II S ?lb 3'1
<,1nQlf1on BAI I Jh •II I" lfl/l llS
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140 Yl'l •1 1'1 374
10 Siii ·~ "" '" J<•-.r\NY 111 \l'I &•111 311
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kumr:.rv 1io11 I•~ l"4 •• 14) lOI
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R1t .-8 0 .. ton '8 ,_,,.""' N•w Y Or~ J; Uondi. (•llfn rn1n J4
c; '><.oll Boo.ton JI C.•mbl~ Cnoc aou ,.
"""' 8afle<lln H 1-.h Minnr">t" 11) Rf<• Bo\t.on
10'\ Bondi. t •11torn1l't 10\ HOb\on
Ro,1on. 100 Thoml>'On 0~1ro11 100
P1lch1r111114 Oeclllon\ I
l v•~ N•'W Y°'> 11 • ISO Oulhll
t'fl .. w 'Vod .. 11 • 131 l\;HrtO\
Cn•• •qo, IJ S 171, l•a•qw H~•
l t1r' 10 ; 11• l-\ird, K''""'' City
10 ' 1l'. Gv1dr\/, Nt·w Vorti 1.t 6
lfYJ Sp1111ortl lt~n'"'' C1IV I<&. 100
w10 lioo.lon II ' blMI
Girls Tennis
YAltSITY
S..n Clememe C•I 19) £1 Cami"° s1,..1u
M ~·--. IE I <k'I luna & I ~·
Vaktll •I A M#lbour,,.1E 1 w°"•~
6) 1(10Q •Sl °"' All'" l C Mt AYOy t EI 0.1 St~rll"9 6 1 <k't 01• .,,
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l ,.Wl\M 'S.'\C't111& RO\CAmc>-T~r1or
S I 0"' Hrncir H Crrm•nn • 1 MCOon•ld 01• SI det M•n~I••
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6 I LtWI\ M !lo\(L tSl e!<!I HHIOt' H
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drt Ro•omp. l1ylor 6 1 Sal••ou
»ndltr IE I def Mt OorwtlOFo"'"no•r
.... llnde C Cl'<• ISi O..f Mlnklrr
Pattertonl S
Tonight at8
Dana Hills
Battles Lobos
Dana Hills' football
team will display its new
I offense tonight as first-
y ear coach Don
DeGroote leads t h e
Dolphins agajnst the Los
A m i gp s ( F o u n t a i n
Valley) Lobos at San
Clemente High. It starts
at 7:30.
Directing ·the offense
wlll be quarterback Todd
feni.1 ve rover-. but h t.-
won't be able to double
on offense an the season
opener.
Calonico says his Los
Amigos team will have
to contain Olsen on the
sweep and Thornton on
his rollouts if the Lobos
are to come out with u
victory.
Thornton. a 6-2, 170-O•""""'•<>fl•" .. FL-!>le•• HaytllorM p 0 U n d b a C k U p RT-SltY<tAnderson
quarterback on last RG-<1111.auor,w••o C-Cro1110 WIMlllQl\011 year's v~rsity. lG-0.wE~ow
L T-llotl HenclrlcUon lib primary ballcar-TE-O.O.Mokl•wl(l
raers will be fullback oe-Toml1"10tn1on
Steve Gramlich and ~==~~mi1ch
tailback Jeff Olsen. SE-Pllt•~nlftO
llowever. the biggest
Dos Pueblos scoring
threat is running back
Don Dailey < 5-10. 175>
who runs the 40 in 4. 7.
Maler Dei counters
with speedsters of its
own in quarterback Tim
O'Hara <6-1, 180) and
two-year start~r David
Gonzales <5·5, 165) at
running back.
Only one of the
Monarchs will s tart both
ways, fullback-safely
Make Dotterer (5-11,
180 ).
Don Pueblos likes to
pass out of the veer while
defensively, th e
Chargers operate a 5-2
alignment.
* * *· DeGroote says Olsen •o..-.H11110., ..... . I E '' ,_ -.o.iotffft .. was partacu arly im-o -cu ....,.,. •• ,a ~ sE R~, 160 us
110
1'0
190
19S
' • D H"l l , OE-.. ~P·•1 .. ~n I•~ lT 9 r,...,_, press1ve m ana 1 s or-e;;;;;.,.;10;;,.. 100 1..G ;,;.;;;•
scrimmage Saturday or-R1<•Sw.n""' ~ c ~·
against Tustin. ~G-<>enni••cs.ms ~';"0 Re. 0omt-..1
LB-o. ... £n•-•IC RT c °'"""
Los Amigos is stronger ~=-~·=':="""'" ioo ~E ~
on defense than it was ce-M1k•Gome1 1io 08 O'H••• last season, according to R -MllcllM<Cte90' 1'° Re o Go11 .. 1 .. <:. Mil•c t...••• 160 R 8 Oott..-er
''° hO
19()
1&)
110 coach Al Calonico. and MaW 1>e1 o.1 .....
last year the Lobos beat Lr TOfll 1•s
Dana Hills 13-3. Cross Country ~g ~':.=. 1~
But DeGroote expects •H ••11• 110 l"r• ... Sotoll 1..8 S.~-t7S his Dana Hills team to 1,.,,1 ... 117112111..osPI"" 1..e 8o1e1uer110 11~
ShOW a more potent Of· I Fero Ol 1t"S6 •. 2 Nuner ll) t: ~~ :~
fense than last year , em-n:t• 0• 3· H""""'r~v 111 11 lf o: ' CB s111e•d~ '1s Sal.-,.ack II) 12 ~ 0, s V3n Nol Ill •• ~ Phasizing thatbisswitch u.u,o.t..MHsec 1u1M10 CB T.Go<Ua•n .., s 0ott.... 1110 from the veer to the I is ----------------------m orc s uited to this
year's personnel.
Los Amigos has been
1ntstalled as a l 1h-point
lavoratc by the Daily
Pilot
The only major injury
either teom reports is to
Dana Hills' backup
quartc:rback. Tom
Champ1eux. lie suffered
a hairline fracture or the
elbow during practice
and "ill be out in-
definitely.
Dana Hills' returning
a ll-league tight end.
Milch McGregor, is suf-
facaently recovered from
" le~ IDJury to start at de-
•9t\11+11·Jl:ljl•l%iitJ+i
•GRAND PRIX
•TRANS-AM
0........_ ..... ,..._0.Al..._..t
,_ OdelMr Dtl"'J
Help send the bend 10 Souttl Bend this year .
Bring your friends end enjoy llatening to the
USC-Oregon game at Roger's Gardens. clocked 10:03 in the two-in 1976, but the TroJans Pucin~ tht· Taller' of
mile. Other lop runners figure to possess better Tustin ar(• quarterback
are sophomore Scott scoring potential this Rich Driscoll u n d
Campbell and juniors time around. l;.ailbuck Joe Henry. El Toro Tests Tigers Don Hayes a nd Bob I t begins with T h ose who must
Martin. Also contending quarterback John Davis . perform on offense and El Toro and Valenda "We've spent a lot of
for a spot in the top seven a returning starter, and defense for the Trojans (Placentia) high schools time on the wacUce field
are senior Mark Romero although Langmade. one are Ii n em en S le v e have two things in com-just learning the basics.
and junior Steve Weld-or University's best English. Tom Hughes mon as they launch the We'revery young and in-
meir. backs, Is lost for tonight, and Steve Titles. Dan 1977 football season experienced and Valen-
* Food and Drfftb • look sfor• Gift ltena
• TIM M..-chlng land
SATURDAY, OCTOBER
6:00 PM
17,
The four transfers of the Trojans have backs Schroeder and Perry tonight C8) at Valencia's cia is much improved,"
which White spoke are Gil Z~ldivar and John Totten at linebacker and Bradford Stadium: says Brown.
Blair Hardy from New Rogers behind a front the ortensive line, and Both are very green It wouldn't take much
Jersey, John Laderman line which includes two backs Rogers and a nd both have new for the Tigers to be im-
from San Jose. G r eg tightends. Zaldivar. coaches. proved since they've
Thatcher from Utah and Roche acknowledges El Toro's Chargers, only won one game In the
Mark Woodall from the dilemma with seven RE St~~1.~"'11 °'•-m under new mentor Phil past three seasons. But
B:oron players going both" ays, ~T strwenou,,. I'\ Brown. has only three new coach Norm Parker,
saying. "We've been ~c. -~k~":"::: ;: s tarters returning -. an assistant at Temple lrl{i11e condationing hke a bunch 1..o-ov1.1Crm' 11s strong safety George City High for six seasons.
fr.vine High c ross of bandits all year t~-=~t:~~ ::~ Jacobo. linebacker Andy is optimistic he can turn
country coach Jeff b~cause we've known 08-JolWIO.••s ..,so Dick and tailback Hector the program around.
Swigart and his Va-lb1s problem would exist. ::~::;• :~ Avella. "We are inexperienced
queros face a varsity "But we're ready and FL-.ioeerur •.1n And El Toro has had a everywhere, but we're
schedule without benefit anxious for Tustin. I u"' ... "'"o.."'.. lot of problems at taking a positive ap·
of seniors on a free lance hClpe we're quicker than oe-stow1,.11111 tti quarterback with Robin · proach. El Toro wlll be a
basis, but Swigart is OJ>' Tustin." :~::!:'~T:::~ ::~ Charles transferring to very formidable oppo-
timlstlc of his team's The Trojans, however. lO -st ..... r111.. 1n Capistrano Valley High nenl. It should be a very
chances. are also in trouble with ll Jo..,,0r1,,,.n 100 and Steve Key quitting . good football game."
"I think we can qualif-their kicking game with e:~~:~:.,., :~: Pete Changala, also the says Parker.
ty tor a berth in the CIF Langmade missing. He's ce-<;uz..c11 ... , 11111 free safety, will start at S~ior running back th t • t CB-NonnenBuroer 150 J. 1-A prelims a nd we're e earn 8 pun e r . ss-JohnRoclQm 11s QB for the Chare;ers Robbie Hoff (5-8, 150> is
• hoplnt our three best _.:..Pl_a_c_e_k_k_k_e_r_a_n_d_k_i_c_ko_f_f_,._s_.ioe_c_ru_r ______ ,_ss-.:t:=o~nlgc:.:h.::.:t. _______ --:;t.:..:h.;;.e _top offensive stand·
runners Can run in the
low l&I," says Swigart.
out for the Tigers.
And Parkei:: says he Is
also going with a green
quarterback in Scott
Benedict. ·'Scott and
Ger ado Hurtado have
been JV!Ck and neck for
the quarterback spot,
but both have no varsity
experience "
TE ll'T .... on-.. 14.rrOy OKk 170 Rl Bet1M<Coy llO ltO 0.l•MllcMll JlO
' Tim Albngftl 16S
lC. Jeff lM 17S lT SI•"" Pinn llO
WR ~w,,,,..... 160 l'l K.,..S.<H lu 08 ..... 0.."9111• 160
F8 OMnl\ On ml 170
T8 HeclorA .. 11• 1U ltTono.Mw
OE K.,..,,es ••s OE JIKk~llnelder 17S OT lom H•llllO•Y 23' Ol S1ewPlnos llO MG Mollrll M<C..•tllv 110 LB Andy Otck 170
lB RorvSmltll 175 CB Oreow.,...,.. 1.0 ce Hector.llowll• ISS FS Pete Ola••• 160 SS o.ot'l19Jec:OOO 16S
Juniors Tom Stapp,
Brad Oulso a nd
sophomore Malt Fero
lead the Vaqs, with
sophomore Mike Hum-
phrey and junior Jim
Doyle also counted on.
"Now in Fast.on Island, In the Bullocks-Wiishire Ext•naon
Stapp's best in '76 was
10:00 In the two-mile,
wblle Guiao and Fero
were In the area of 10: IS.
Prep Grid
Results
o;a,_ Coast COiie~
season Grid Tlc~ets
DONATION $5.00 per person
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.. Friday, September 18, 1977 DAILY PILOT •t
CO~STWATCH: Tonight's Tl' Fare
1 1<111\, 0 MOVIE
EVEHINO
beatert, IPPNt• at hla door
I G NEWS
ROOM22.2
t>Yd~
11:35 Ila CAPTIONED ABC NEWS
MORNING •, 5:«>••• MEWS
•• IA "King o r Th9 Khyber Alflel"
( 195-t) Tyrone Power, Mlchael
Rennie. A half...caate Brltlah olf'l<itr
prove• his IOyalty during • native
revolt In India. (2 tva.)
A Mexican-American boy, trying to
flnlah achOOI on hla own. has to
INtn that It ll no disgrace to
llCC*Pt help.
12:008 KOJAK
Roland. A Broadway pre>Q~
dec:ldea to learn bullflghtlng lh
ord., to collect stage Id.... (2
hra.L
2:25111 NEW8 2:308 8 NEWS 8 MOVIES
·.
·'
, • " , ,
~ ,
~ ,. • .
~ . • • ..
I TWIUOHT ZON
Wll.0. WILD WOT
Th• Night Ot Th• Bu1n1ng
Ocemond . w .. t fM)M • truer wh•J
dtM'lkl hquid from mtttted di•·
mond• 10 mo• 1\1.maeitf lnvlalbl•
• MICK!Y MOUSE CLUB
I DR!.AM OF JeANNll!
• SESAME 8TAEl!T
MISTER AOOER8
~:30 Q 8ASE84U
C~ Whit• Sox 119 Callfotn1•
~ W TOM AND JERRY CD AOOM22.2 e» VILLA ALEGRE
8:00 8 CBS NEWS
I D NEWS
MY PARTNER THE GHOST
WNln a psychotic killer se.k1ng
revenoe on Marty Hopklrk learns
the detective has died, he decides
10 go alter the ghost's llve wife
G) THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY
Ketth hH two dates for Saturday
night and trl•s to echeme his way
out of trouble.
ti) ALIAS SMITH AND JONES
Heyes and Curry need all their wits
and akllls to avoid trouble when
they encounter a supposed treas-
ury agent and his daughter
al) ELECTRIC COMPANY
Qi) INNER TENNIS
"Competition"
«IJ ABC NEWS
6:301J WILD, WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
"Hawaiian Wlldernesa"
0) THE ODD COUPLE
tJl) ZOOM CD SPECIAL
-coumry Cornet'" The roots,
music and function of Contra
Dance as a social rllual
(()CBS NEWS
(LO) MERV GRIFAN
7:001J THE MUPPETS
"George Burns"
0 NBC NEWS U ABC NEWS
0 CONCENTRATION
0) I LOVE LUCY
'Ricky's European Book"
G) THEF.B.I.
Erskine tracks down a brllhanl
aerospace engineer who has
lurned his talents to space-age
crime
fll) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT CD CONSUMER SURVIVAL KIT
"What Price Bliss?" Cutting wed-
ding costs and avoiding frauds.
(I) TO TELL THE TRUTH
7:30 1J ALL-STAR ANYTHING
GOES
CJ WILD KINGDOM
"Brink Of Extinction"
U @) HQ&..L YWOOD SQUARES 0 JOKEFfl~ WILD
0) THE BRADY BUNCH
Greg and Peter are convinced lhat •
Marcia Js a traitor when she dates
a school rival.
LAWANDA PAGE will con-
tinue In role of Blble-totlng
Eather. character she creat-
ed on Sanford and Son,
forerunner of new series
Sanford Arms, premiering
tonight at 8 on Channel 4.
tJl) 28 TONIGHT
CD PROALES
ll) THE MUPPETS
Guest: George Burns
8:001J (I) WONDER WOMAN
(Season Premiere) When an Inter-
national terrorist and his aide (Frllz
Weaver, Jeaslca Walter) threaten
10 reveal the eiustence of Paradise
Island by ualng tOday·s sophlstl-
caled equlp"l,8nt. Wonder Woman
convinces her mother (Bea1rice
Straight) she must once again
become Diana Prince and join the
f~ht for lreedom
CJ SANFORD ARMS
(Premiere) "Bye. Fred, Ht, Phil"
When Phil Wheeler (Theodore
Wiison) has trouble paying the
mortgage on the Sanford Arms, his
daughter (Tina Andrews) takes a
1ob as a scantuy clad cocktail waitJ
ress.
Rati11gs Guide
1-les .,., r•t..S eccordl"I to boll
• oltl<e et~e. Mo1tltt IOf' TY •re
'uOQ9d by • <rill<.) *. * * -Excellenl
.. * * -VeryGr.iod
* * -Good *., -Falf
* -Poor
D O SPECIAL
"Th9 MaJdng Of 'Star Wars• As
Told By C3PO And R2·02" A
~hlnd·t~ look at tM Jpe-
claJ eHec:ta In 1977'1 hottest m<M9. II MOVIE
*** "SMwOlf" (1974) Edward
MMl<a, Raymond Haymatorl. A
ruthlesa eea captain deal• out bru-
tal punlahment to th9 men on his
lhlp. (2 h,..,,
0) KING OF KENSINGTON
ti) PERRY MASON
Mason defends a ludge ecc:uMd of
murdering a wltneu who wu plan-
ning to expose him u •crook.
Qi) elD WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW
8:30 D CHICO AND THE MAN
(Seaaon Premiere) "Who'• Been
Sleeping In My Car?" Ed and
Louie, returning from a flahlng trip
in Tijuana, discover they caught
more than they thought when they
find a 1towaway (Gabriel Melgar).
W CROSS-WITS
fl) C!) WALL STREET WEEK
"Wall Street Goes To The Movies"
Guest: Joan E.. Lappin, Senior
Analyst, The Dreyfua Corp.
9:00 D R~KFORD ALES
(Season Premiere) "Beamer'• La1t
Case" While Jim Rockford la on
· vacation, a mechanic (Jamee Whit-
more Jr.), fantaalzlng, UstJmea hl1
Identity, u ... hi• credit card• and
man~ges to loll a Mafia takeover of
the taxicab buslnelft. U (1J ABC MOVIE * • * (Seaaon Premiere) ''TM
Curse Of The Black Widow'' (1977)
Tony Franciosa, Donna Mlll,.,A prl·
vate Investigator attempts to
unravel a eerfes of bizarre kllllnga
the police are trying to keep quiet.
0) MERV GRJFFIN
(I) BILLY GRAHAM CRUSADE
fJ!) REAL WORLD
•·Farouk: Last Of The Pharoahs"
An In-depth look at Egypt'• lut
king wtio began his flamboya.nt
reign In 1939 at the age of 16.
'11) FIRING LINE
"The Race Against Jerry Brown"
Guests: Pete Wiison, Mayor or San
Diego. and Aasemblyman Kenneth
L.'Maddy.
9:30 II (I) LOGAN'S RUN
(Premiere) A man (Gregory Harri-
son) and a girt (Heath« Menzies)
aided by an android (Donald
Moffat) escape from their Domed
City to search for something better
In the outside world.
10:00 D QUINCY
(Seuon Premiere) "No Deadly
Secret" Quincy's romantic evening
with e stewardesa (Elaine Joyce) Is
Interrupted when a man. eeverty
• B8C OUTI.OOK
"Bomb D11poaal Men" GD MOVIE
***~ "400 BlowS" (196Q) Jean-
• Pierre LHud, Patrick Auffay
Negi.cted at home and unwanted
at 9Chool, a young boy sink• Into •
privet• end fugitive existence that
leeda to reform ac:hool. ( 1 hr • 30
min.)
10:30me NEWS
11:008 De()) tm NEWS D HOLL YWOOO CONNECTION D MOVIE ~'"'***'Ai "Midnight Lace" (1960)
Doria Day, Rex Harrison. After a woman la married tot three months
to a wealthy man, 8t'9 begins to
l'90elve frightening obacene phone
calla. (2 hrs.)
W FERHWOOD 2NIGHT
Gueeta: Happy l<yne, Susan Cloud.
Cl) MARCUS WELBY, M.D.
Dr. Welby helps a Japanese-Amer-
ican boy .ctlleYe a change In atti-
tude toward• hi• rather.
11:05 9 BLACK PERSPECTIVE ON
THE NEWS
11:308 M•A•S•H
Hawkeye and Trapper John
arrange a party and rattle to raise
tuition money In order to send their
Korean houaeboy to Hawl<eye'a
alma mater. (R)
Cl TONIGHT
Hoat: Johnny Carson. Guests:
Charlton Heaton, David Horowitz,
Steve Landeaberg. M cLean
Stevenson. 8 LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE
Wh9n a woman forgives her
husband'• phllanderlng, he
decides to earn her full lorglve-
neu.
GO BARETTA
"Aggie" A retarded girl (Shelley
Duvall) Is marked for death by a
narcotics officer (Richard Jaeckel)
when she wltneaaea him kill his
Q!_rlfrlend. (R) m NEWS
G!) MACNEJL I LEHRER REPORT
(J) MOVIE **'h "The Seventh Dawn" (19M)
Wllllam Holden, Capuclne. A plan-
tation owner faces an enemy who
turns out to be a former war
Sports on TV
FRIDAY
EVENING
5:30 8 BASEBALL
Chicago White Sox vs. Callfomla
Angels
12:00 m NFL GAME OF THE WEEK
"Deadly Innocence" A lather (Tlge
Andrews) enc:oura~ his son to
kill In order to cover up • frame
Involving a former policeman on
Kojak's stelf. (R) 8 TWILIGHT ZONE
"The Whole Truth"
0) NFL GAME OF THE WEEK
CD MOVIE
** "The Climax" (1944) Borla
Kar1oH, Susanna F08ter. A beauti-
ful opera sing« becomes the
obtec:t of• musk: teecher'• bizarre
fantasy. (1 hr., 30 min.)
12:30 l!t MOVIE
** "Er'Y Man A King" (1970)
Pier Arigell, Wllllam Berger. A
new1paper man captures the
mood and events l\lrroundlng the
Six-Day War In lsr .. 1. (1 hr .. 55
min.)
0) MOVIE ** "Island Of Death" (1987)
Cameron Mltchell, Kai Fischer. A
group of tourl1ta on an Isolated
Island find themselves being aya-
tematlcally murdered. ( 1 hr., 30
min.)
12:35 D SUSPENSE THEATER
"Chatlle. He Couldn't Kiii A Ay"
Keenan Wynn, Richard Kiley.
12:40 9 MOVIE
***'~"Marie Antoinette" (1938)
Tyrone Power. Norman Shearer.
The Austrian bride of Loula XIV
meets a tragic fate during the
French Revolution. (1 hr., 50 min )
1:001J T ALKABOUT
Host Truman Jacques and his
guests aJr the Issues Sl.lrroundlng
media coverage of terrorist acts. 0 MIDNIGHT SPECIAL 0 THRILLER
"Knock Three-One.-Two"
1:30 (!) MOVIE:
*'Ir "Hercules,· Samson And
Ulysses" (1985) Kirk Morris, Rich-
ard Lloyd. The legendary charac-
ters of ancient Greece come
together to defeat Greece's
enemy, the Phlllstlnee. (1 hr., 30
min.)
1:350 NEWS
2:00 0 MOVIES ***'fl "Man Of A Thousand
Faces" (1957) Jamee Cagney, Dor-
othy Malone. Lon Chaney
becomes renown for his remark·
able ablllty to use make-up to
aaaume different appearancee. (2
hrs.) **'h "Aood Tide" (1Q58) George
Nader, Cornell Borchers. A man Is
convicted of murder by the testi-
mony of a chronic llar:(2 hra.)
• MOVIES
***lh "The Brigand" (1952)
Anthony Dexter, An'lhony Quinn. A
royal guard, who beara a striking
resemblance to the king, Is
accuaed of a polltlcal ....-aln ..
tlon. (2 hrs.) ***'Ai "The Bullflghter And The Lady" (1950) Robert Stack. Gilbert
** "Raw DMI" (1Ma) Denni•
O'K•te, C&alre Trevor. A oonlllct
eecapea from jall to seek l'9\l9lnge
on the mob that lremed him. (1 hr.,
30mln.) ** "Beware Of Chlldren" (1981)
Lealle PhUllpa, Julla LockWOOd.
After Inheriting en •tate, •young
couple decidea to tum It Into a
home for disturbed chlld!W'. (2
h,..,)
3:00. NEWS
3:0511 MOVIE ** * "Hell To Eternity" ('1980)
David J8"SMn, Jeffrey Hunter. A
young man. ralMd by a Japaneee
family. find• his k~ of the
Japaneae 181'1guage en aaaet when
he enllsta In the Marines. (1 hr .. 25
min.)
" ..\ T I ' R I> :\ Y
MORNING
7:001J MARLO AND THE MAGIC
MACHINE II C.B.BEAAS D 9~YMPICS a PnCLUB
0) ELEMENTARY NEWS
ti) SAM YORTY
Ol) YOGA FOR HEAL TH
(I) FOOD
7:30 U PACESETTERS
Welfare rtghta repr..entatlvea wlll
discuss th9 Carter welhll9 refOfm
pacttege.
0) MOVIE **'h "Santa Fe" (1951) Randotph
Scott, Janis Carter. Upon returning
from the CMI W&T, three brothers
join an outlaw gang whlle one goes
to work for the rallroad. (2 h,...)
f.D DOCUMENTARY SHOWCASE
"1.F. Stone's Weekly" A pottralt of
the Intensely lndMduallsUc news.-
paperman, considered th• potltlc&I
conecJenoe of the WaaNngton
Presa Corps.
(I) FOLK MUSIC
8:001J (I) BUGS BUNNY I ROAD
RUNNER
D THUNDER
~MOVIE
** "Zorro Rides Again" (1958)
John Carrou. HeMln Christian. Zor-
ro come. to the aid or a pair of rail-
road owners. ( 1 hr .. 30 min.) G MOVIE *** "Target Unknown" (1951)
Mark Stevens, Aiex,, Nichol. The
French underground h•IP9 a
downed bomber rxew get Informa-
tion through to the Alllea concem-
1~ occupied France. (2 hra.)
Q) ROMPER ROOM
8:30 II ARCHIES I SABRJNA ED SPECCAL
"lnctudlng Me" Six handicapped
children reach their potential with
the help of encouraglog parenta,
teacher• and tt19nd1 •
:.~----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------"!'-________________________ _,, • . . ~ " ~ J
>----• • , __ A Bumbling Utt
,·
~im Conway Vp for Arwther Special
% • =:: By JERRY BUCK said. "If you'r e capable. why not get
:• the best. All I'd have to do was ask
•: LOS ANGELES (AP) -Think of him where he was from or had he ever
;!;'im Conway and the word that comes shot a gun before. He'd m ake up
.. ~o mind is bumbling <> weird things.
:• First. there was the bumbhn~ .. .
:•transportation manager for the . When I as~ed ~am 1( he d ever shot
: Cleveland Jodians on "The Steve Al· a gun. he said. Yeah, back on the
:·ten Show" back in the early 1960s. lie farm. J sh~t ":'Y step brother. out of a
::11ever knew where the team or the tree. I.le did.n t have no bus1;11ess ~P ~uses were t~cre O~v1ously. you can l wnte ? T hen. us E n sign Farker on d1al~~ue like that, 1l JUSt com es to ~'·Mc Hale's Navy," he nearly scuttled fast.
~PT boat nut. He's bumbled his way My favorite among the sketches i s
~h rough CPUD.t.less television guest ap-Conway~ a r elinn general giving his
pearancn. three series of his own and fa re well, speech to the accompani·
";t>isney m ovies to his present berth on ment of an echo. At rirst the echo only
CBS' "Car ol Burnett Show.·· repeats what Conway says. Then it
SATURDAY YOU can see hi m
............
TIM CONWAY MUGS WITH BERNADETTE PETERS ON SPECIAL
Tonight's TV
Highlights
CBS fJ 8:00 ·Wonder Woman. The
gorgeous Amazon has found a home on
CBS with a regular series.· debuting
tonight and changed from the Forties to _
the Seventies. Beatrice Straight plays
her mother.
ABC fl 8:00 ·-The Making of ··star
Wars:· Robots C3PO a nd R2-D2 narrate
this special, taking viewers behind the 7:
scenes of the hottest movie of the year.
NBC D 8:30 -Chico and the :\Ian.
The new season begins with some new
cast members and a stowawa~· cGabriel
Melgar' from Mexico.
KOCE 9 10 :00. "The 400 Blows.··
-~alule the armed forces -in his own
.... bumbling way, of course -in his ~ lalesl special. "Uncle Tim Wants
~ You." Bernadette Peters and
; Jonathan Winters join him at 8 p.m .
i on CBS. Channel 2.
; Conway has honed an enduring
~ character who vari~s with the sltua-
1 tion but remains basically the same. ~ Me describes him thus: "He's a guy ~ who thinks he's right but Is dead ~ wrong and doesn't know it. It's up to
J-the viewers to see hfm for what be ls.
~ a bumbling idiot. No matter what dis·
~ aster strikes him, he plows straight
begins to correct his grammar and
finaJly his claims of a distinguished
military career .
AFTER ''McHALE'S Navy,"
Conway tuted his wings in three
series or his own, "Rango ... "The Tim
Conway Show" a nd "The Tim
Conway Comedy Hour." All failed.
·A Guy Who Think• He'• Right But 11 Dead Wrong and Ooetn't Know It'
• 'Sanford' Rel'amped
'Logan' Starts to Run
This French classic movie tells of a ,
, neglected boy's lonet~· life and subse·
\ quent commitment to reform· school:
DE
~ahead." . ·
~ Jt's a malt.er of attitude that turns It
{ from drama to comedy. "Look at all
' the things that happened to the (uy in t 'Taxi Driver .' " he said, refeTritJI to
~ the movie in which the driver reacts
j by going on f klWng blnee.
#. "You could switch tbal around and f make it a comedr. That's wbat com-1 edy is -you take the serious thine• In J Ufe and look al thetn humorously.
I TIUS SPECIAL IS a salute to the I mUlta.ry. but Conw,.ay aald, "U'a just
~ an excuse for a aJ)ffial. We make no
statemeJtta about war or ~lety. We
' Just as well could have a salute to
do11.'1
A runnlnf ca1 bu blm aa a German
soldier t.rylng to kUJ Gen. George Pat·
ton in a parody of Geora• c . Seoll's
speech before th• huge American n11
to "Patton.'' COnway 11 aotncpt with
an UAC>rtment of weape>n1, all of
'th~i~ ~backfire on him, that the ,......., I.I never aw1ro of hla presence
behindJtlm. Coeft.1 a Wlnterl AN especially erteetl~ u they ad llb thell: WA1
th..OUO auetcl\ ln wblct-CGnwa~. u
a drllJ ~ant; trt• to lbow recrialt
Wlnte-a bow to a1M111bl• Mi Ml ttn•.
"IONA'IRAN W.\NTED to~ tt.
That'• the WQ' h• woru belt, .. tle )
"I 'm very happy on 'The Carol
Burnett Show,' and have no desire to
try my own series again." be said.
.. I· m working almost an .hour a week
now. When you're working with the
best people ln the business it'd be sUly
to go somewhere el se and try to
pr ove somethlne."
Why .didn't his own shows make it?
He replied, "I imagine because they
weren't that eood. I guess the answer
is that lC you're 1ood people will find
you."
CONWAY ISN'T stand1nt"Mllyoy.
however. He wm do a sequel with Don
Knotts to their hit Dlsn~ movie, 0 Tbe
Apple Du.mpUns Gang. • He recently
~ompleted "BUllon Doll'ar Hobo" for
tbe Atlanta-based Jnternatlonal Pie·
ture Show .company and will write
and star in three mor, movies Cot
them.
Jn tho first, ha and Knaua will team
a,ap u two small town policeme'f\
c:ollecl on b)' tti.. eovernor IM an un·
dercovor a11i1nment {n the stale
prison. Disaulsed as prlsonen, the.Ir
job is to flnd out where a banlc robber
hu hidden· ht1 loot. OnJy Ule iovernor
knOWt they're not rHl prlaonen -and, of coune. h• dl11 and tbQ'n
a&uck ln prilOft with no Ont' to b4iliev
etr1tory.~
H~ ('Olfte to kDOW ftat to C!X•
peel um ln • 9M)VW 01' oa TV .......
you aay Doo Kuatll or Tim~·~! l'lley know n.t t11ey• 'IOIAI to IM·
You 'rrtbeiU.., th• eucl....ee lf '°" don't .tve tMm &bat. Tba&'• "1 I
never& anythla• dr•maUc."
By JAY SHARBtrrr
LOS ANGELES CAP> -CBS' new
version of "Loean's Run" starts
tonight at 9:30 on Channel 2. Like
"'The FugiUve" of yesteryear. there's
a whole lot of fieeina 1olna on. Only
now the year ls 2319.
The lead fugitives, Greeory Har-
rison and Heather Mensles, are on the
lam from the law beoauae it limits
their Uves to 30 years. Whfcb means
they1I never get to open a diaper
service in Sun City, J 1ueas.
Tbelr 90-mlnute "Run" tonltbt
features good acting, lavish seta. fine
special effects. but poops out after a
rouatn1 atart.
ing Sandman. He meets Heather
while ehasing a runner she's aiding.
Another Sandman Randy Powell zaps
the guy. But Harrison says hmmm,
knocks Powell out and decamps wttb
Heather to the uncertainty of the out·
sldeworld.
TIDS CAUSES pursuit by three
Sandmen: a visit to a paci!iatic tribe
gone underground i n Washln1ton,
D.C.; S\ jou11t with hone·mounted,
ray.gun bearing "Riders" and much
trouble In Mountain City.
Fans or "Star Wars" may dJe tbls
acl·fi jaunt. but be warned: Much of
the Ahow ts padded peril. You may
wlnd up urgin1 the fualtives to aur4
THE STAtT 18 in the Domed Ci,y, render on c~arges or anticlimax and
Thero, 200 yeare after a nuclear af .irava~ eeing.
holocautt end• matt Ute on earth, a •
computer-run °Pedect Society" pro· EUUEll TONIGHT, NBC pre· vldlnl lot all human needl 1-under mleres .. Sanford Arma,·· the
wayundel'al.UI. j unkyard aeri .. that underwent
A problem: 'lbere'a Just IO much radical ch1nges art.er Redd Roxx and
room available. ~ each birth la • Desmood Wiiton te~ what uaed to be
m atcbec! by • departur•. Everyone ·'Sword and Son," at 8 °" Q,annel •·
bit.tlQl30mu.1t1otothe••cU'OUlel"to Tbelr rundown home now ii a run·
be wafted (great wiftlne here> up to a down bot.el operated bJ Phll Wheeler
"greattleep." P1A19d by fteodore Wllloo. an eit·
Such actions oceur u crowd of t.-eme!Y JOOd. capable 1ctor.
younpr folks, poulbly atlies pro-Wheller Ii a widower, an Army vet
duc ... cry, "Reoew! R~!" trJtnl= the botel't "100. mon· tblt4a ... wbJl• copb\i' witb 'th•
lOOt·led>' aWailcta Pace and r&llin• hta two kta.:rlaa ADClrtft aid Jolul
SUL
.,,,... ~ 'ilbWt ~ fl!ol'tl.,e, ii a
mtt. ua./bil& tM pace iicf act.Isac ll
nnt.rate. It'• ....... --~--bit Jtrepl.IM!ed.
-OAIL Y PILOT r11day, Septt,..,bet, HI, 1971
. ·World Champi o nship Clo~k Halts-Cup
Tun Yachta Will Try It Again;.odayRttM~-----Catamarans Cfush
By ALMONLOCKABEY
o.i'Y "'1et ... t1119WrlMr SAILING THE BOAT requlres
agility and brute strength on the part
of skipper and ooe-man crew. The
boat uses a tras)eze to give more
leverage to the crew when hlkin1 to
weather ln a breeze.
NK\\ PORT. R.I. <AP> -ft'athcr Tlm~ v. aJta tor no ono rwt even
Atlanta 8r1tvf'11 ' own r Ted Turner
\ltipp~r or the 12·meter Yl<'ht
Coura1;"ou.'
At the fifth mark. Coura1ieoua had a•
) 35 iadvant1taie but only l , 10 to beat
hi• wuy thrOU(th the final windward
ll'6' und finlJh the nace
T•cklna back and forth to keep up
hU. boat 1pced. Turner was about 550
Nearly &O orthe world's fa.ste!t.saU-ing catamarans wlll be fiying bulls off
1'urnt-r. nicknamed 'Titptaln
Coura,eou~ · and ''Tb• Mouth of lht
south'' for ht' outspok~n maMer, wa11
within h.•w hundred )'ar& of tht•
fuui.h hnc Thursday when llme ran
out on the-America 'a Cup COUl'Be
yards from the f101s.h hne when the"• ~.-.ai..or•
· Long Beach Harbor starting today
when $kippers and crews from 13
countries atart competition for the
world champlonsblp ot tbe 20·foot
Tornado Class out of Alamitos Bay
Yacht Club.
The Tornado was designed m 1966
by Rodney March, Terry Pearce and
Reg White of ~ngland, JntemaUonal
status was granted the Tornado as the
result of tbe outri&ht wlnnin1 or the
lnternationat Yacht Racina Union
<IYRU) trials held In England ln 1967.
In 1968, 72 Tomados had been built
and the first world championship was
held at Kiel, Germany with 14 boats entered,
Ntiw York Yuchl Club ruce committee
.. aanaled that the 5'i·hour tame hmll
'-'XJnred and ended the match,
"If )OU've ev~r hnrd 11 erown men
cry, 1t Wlb ~hen they fired the 1un on
tbt: comm1Uee boal.00 we knew llme
"ould run out," Turner said between
puff:. on a borrowed cigar,
AtJ&'TRALIA WAS about u mile
behlnd.
"A.LI;-. OF US were crym~· . .' he added, Yl>u know. boo boo, boo,
As had happened m the first race
ugaJllSt challenger Austraha, Turner
lost the :.tart. but made up the slight
disadvantage on the first windward
leg and led the rest of the way
"My good friends, the mayor of
Newport and the governor of the stat~
of Rhode Island, have asked me to let
this thing ao on as long as po:.sible."
Turner joked afterward, "Also. the
!Newport) Chamber of Commerce,
'So we just figured. we feel 1t would
be real sad when this is all over and
we have to go back lo our jobs,"
The time differences at the second
and third marks were 20 and 44
seconds, respectlve4y. However. on
the second winward leg, the wind had
fallen from 10,15 knots al the start to
about three knots,
TllE RACE BEGAN on lime at
12: 10 p,m, and was abandoned at 5:40,
A bout 30 minutes later, the committee
said the yachts would r ace again to-~
day,
TURNER READ TUE wind shifts
correctly and skipper Noel Rq_bins of
Australia sailed off into a lull, 1'A.Ung
Courageous increase her lead to 10 45
at the fourth mark,
JW,ii;l;.w;~~~r4
·c oa•tal Weather
Rules governing the America's Cup
competition give the le.ad boat 5112
hours to complete a race, The second
weather leg took l : 18 to finish an
winds of eight to 10 knots so the race
appeared doomed as the yachts
rounded the fifth mark,
Partly cloudy lllrOUQll S.lurdoly,
ll9"1 •••l•bl• w1ncl• nl9hl •nd rT1ornl119 "°"" H19"• ~1urdoly tn ,.,. 70\
Alan Bond, syndicate boss for
Australia, was asked how he fell when
the gWl was fired,
Co,•l•I ltn'IO'""lurH wlll r•nQe between 67 and 71 tnt•ncl temoeraturn will r..iQe bel-n Ml and 14 TM waler temperalurt ,..,11be70
l'ltlDAY
"WELL, WE WOULD have been
greatly disappointed if the time limit
hadn't run out because this would not
have been a true test," Bond said,
St .. condlow
S~conCI h1Qfl
• 110"1 11 1Sp m
0 5 • 3 "The race, of course, wa~ no race."
t--ir~llow
F1r\l hl91>
Second I-~UNOAV
5 54am 11 ?Op m I 14p m
I 6
II 06
Bond added, "A race like this shows
the wisdom of the 51 ~-hour limit
because it's not fair, ..
F "'' 111911 Fir\\ low s~condn19n
Second low SYnttW\• )1• m \4rtl• Slpm
Moon""'' t0.04""' , Mtlst· 110"'
' ll•"' • •ta.m
1 ttom
I 400 m
,,
, 1
S I
0 I
Race committee Chairman
Frederick H , Scholtz said the
American and foreign yacht clubs in-
volved in the 1977 races agreed on the
51h -hour limit in advance,
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
,.ICTITIOUS •USINISS l'ICTITIOUS aus1N•H
HAMI! STATEMENT NAMESTATUHNT
TM 101towl119 person Is 001n9 busl· T._ lot I-Ing per'°" It CIOlnQ l>usl, nen ... ntti~~ " • SOLARSAVE IO~ll Ellls Ave TURH·KEY ASSOCIATES, :Ml71
Founl•in V•Hey CA f270I " Ruity L..tntern, Oar.a ~lnl, CA '262'
Phllllp All~ Olbb, 11150 S•nd Rotien G, Tur,.,, J.1171 Rutl'( ~n-
OuM\ Cl., Fountain Valley, CA f270I tern, 0-Polnt. CA'2U9 •
Tf\IS buslrons Is conducled by •n In, Thi• """-' Is. c.onducled by an ln-
d .. l-1 Clh•ld\lal Pllltllp A OibO Aoller1 G, Tut,.r
Thi\ >laternent wH liled will! Ille This sUll-1 was llled will! I,.
Cou111y Cl•rk ol 0••1199 CounlY o11 Covnly Clel1< al OrM\99 County August
A119usll, lf71 1l, 1917 ,.,..,. "'91M
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS auilNEIS
NAME STATl!MENT
The lollowi119 perfOtl Is CIOlnQ bvtl-
MU •S;
GYR080AROS. P.O. eow TJ92, n• ACl•n'I\, Colla Mew, CA .,,,.
Sl•PN" Gir...cs. 409 E, Plenty,
LOllQ leach, CA~
Thi\ Mlnesa ls condU<led by an •n·
dlVldual,
Sl .... Glr-
Thl1 \lal..,,.nl •ws filed wllh ,.,.
County Clenc al Or""ve County A119 tt. 1'71.
"'"" Pvbllsr.d Or-C.0.SI O•llY PllOI Publl$1\ed 0r•"9" Co•il Dally Piiot, Pvbllsi.ct Or-Coast Dally Pilot,
Au9u•I M, -$eolember 1, 9, 16, 1917 Sef)I 1• 9• 16• 22• l'l7J J7M-77
37 .. 71 ,....,711 ----------~
Sept. 2, '· 16, 23, 1917
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI IUllMEIS SUPEltlOll CIDUltT 01' TNC
PICTITIOUS BUllMHI NAME STATE MINT sun°" CALI P'OllNIA l'Olt
HAMESTATIMeNT The lollo•lnQ petaonl .,. doln9 TMICOUNTYOl'OltANOE
T ... lollowl1>9--a••dcH"1bltll· bvaln•Uet' ... ,A.ftttl nesus A, & E. l!NTIAPAISl!S. 32' NDTICI OP NIAltlNO 01'
WEAA 'H SH~AE, 11U Vlclofla Sydf>ey l.Mlt, Colla Mew, CA PETITION P'CM ""DllAT• OP' WILL
SlrHl.Su41eJ,C:O.llMew,CA Mic'-' GUber1 Alley, m Sydnay AND l'Olt LITTlltl 01'" AD1
It-rt Oe Jon9, 221 6111 ~I,, LeM. Colle Mesa, CA, MIMllTRATION WITH WILi. AN,
NewPOr1 llNcf\, CA '2 .. l Ml<Mtt Thomal Ell loll, IU See IHXeO
Audrey L, 0. JC>n9.,n7 6ht St.. Gull~. "'-POf't ... , ... CA Ell .. "' ~LO w ltHOOl!S,
NewPOrt 8Hcll, CA'2 .. l Tllll tiualnns 11 conducted by • Oeceesed,
This buiiMtl ll conckKled bv •ft lft: tene'-' ~o, NOTICE IS Hl! .. &BY OIVEN ll!el
d1vl-t ~ G, ttllev OEAHHA RHOOel Mt llltd lleffln a
R-r1 De Jorl9 Thll .. ........,. •n filed wllh Ille peitlllelffw ~ ef will .... tw NI:
This 11a1.,._1 wu llleel wllll llM County GltA Of OrenQe Counly 011 ters of ednllnlstrllllOn •1111 wlll -
Coullly Clt11< al OranQe County on Sep. AUQllJt n , 1m. Mlled, ,..,_.to wtll<ll 11 l'\edt •~
ltn'lbet n. 1977 l'llnt Pllbllllhld 0raft911Coall Oallyl'= :r~":J:~u:,r:r:d !:! ::
·Pvbllshed Or-Coast Dally Piiot. A\1911111', SeplernCltr 1. t, ''· 1'77 tlHft Mt tor OctGeff 4, at 10:00 a,m ,, !>ept. 16, 23, 30. Oct, 7, i.77 '°27·17 a7?>1n Ill tlle ~ "' [)eperlment Ho, ,
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
MO'flCe tMVITIMOBIOI
P'O" TI4E CIDMITltUCTIO-O~WELLHO.J-"HAH I
"ltO..llCT MO, 11M NOTICE 15 Hl!REIV GIVeN tflat Ille City Council of Ille Oty of l'-taln
Valley, Calltornla, wlll receive ... 1.., pr_..t1 untll tlW ~of IO:JOe,m, Oft
T...-V, ~ V , 1m for construction Of Ille w.11 He. J -PhMI 1, 1n ec-<~-..U wlltl Ille plMI Md ..,_cHlutloM, ,.,...,.... tllall 1111 ,,_llCI llM9r
w•lld c-r end tflell IM tc:UimPllftlecl IW -of tlle IWllll tll bld&Mf'• wcurtty req11I,.. b¥ s.ctlofl US el tM SllKHie.tloM, All pn!llOMll llwll .. marked
"P"OPOSAL l"Otl Wl!lL N0.1-PHA$1 I" _..IMlleder•ll__. ... ,tolll
In Ille ....... tll IN Clly CMtll ttilef office lft h CllV HM!, loaf Sitter A-.
Foumaln Velley, C..llf'omla, et wtlkll ti-111 bldl ,....., wtn Ill puMl<ly -'*'· 1umlned and dt<laff4 ity IN Oly Cler1t, ,iddlf1 llllCI lfte P<lbllc ••I~ vlted tobl preterit et U.*<l•retlOflof wld prOl)OU!a. All llldt 10 nlClll"9Cl,eumlMd Mddecllred•Ml lie Nletftd by Ille City Clerll
to the CllY E,._ .... tN Clly At-y l.r dlKll .... •"" ,..., le tile City
Counclletltsreoutar..-Unton0c'°41et4, tf71, Ptlortoc-lft9-1llNeertlrlCtllr,..,llltukefttnc:ton,1hllloll4alft
a bltll...u llG-from t11e Clly of ~Valle'( In~· wllll Title S,
Chapt..-5,0.of IN F-1aln VelleyMUfllc ..... C.edl,
Ho bid wlll lie cenaldetecl Wlltu It la !Tiede°" tlllt off ~l•J blonk fonn fvrnl shed
by tlle City aftd 11 mede In KCOt'Otn<e Wlltl thl Pt'OVlllOfll o( tl,ff Notkt -tM
P,_i reqyl-n1• and cOftdltlons Mt I.,,,, Uftdtr S.Ctleft 2 of tt.. ScoKlllee-
llofts, Eecll bldller mvte lie llceftMd lft ecc;enMnce •ltll all...,.~ Stet• I•,..,
All bids Ill'• lo be c-nct Oii tM ._.11 of tile IO!lqw'"9 tc-114e of -k
Item a: ITeM OStcltl,.,.10..CM'WOtUC 4tUAMTIT'I' 1 FurnlSllalleQU~.IRor,n'laltf'~ll ..... -~ .. tOCOftlltllCt,dtvelOplftd
teat oump-14-ln<ll lnslcltdl-• wet., ftl'9dUCtlOn ... ll IO IN dtptllof •i.tt In eccordlne• wltllllle Pf 1111 encl lteeff lcallOnt, lncludlno:
• «I'' hole and 12'' I, DJIO.l 12" condUclor casing Complettoroulecl If! pleQ,
b JO''dl....t•borttllldlt''l,O,.wS/16"
CM1119c;om,iete9rwte411\plece
c .ll"llOlellftdl4"1.D,x114"'*'111Mll
welluslftQcompletelnfMKewltll.,-e\lltl
~,
d.W'holeendU"l.0.•1/4"11eelllllltter •
1Creencompletelnplecewltt11revet
,., .. , .... ,
uoi.et
--'' UOlwt
In ec~ """"the ~•hlll• et Seclloft 1111to1m lflClullwe, « t11e u•
Code OI ltle st .. e of Cel.....,..., .. ~ty ClluncH OI tflt Qty .. ,._...,.Valley 11111
by retohlClon •-tUIMd the prev•lllnt '*-IV re" of -.. for eacll ueft.,
..,.. of _.,,_ er IMChonlc ,..... • t.cllte tlle elfttreet ~ wlll IM ewefWdtet'9~"'41*r. ,.,..,.,.,.."'..., l11clatmulliNllMt~
for .., retOMlaft llNll lllt • teea tllM .. ,,_ rfflnt .... ~-tw "" °'""' GlulltY•-• ,.,..,......,., .. u.1, ~et u,.r,1M 1a11e 9'ttftttNlllttle'-t"41ftttlt~llMd.....,elMlnlmumW ... ,
.......... lfketloM ... Oftkaet _,.,.....,_teWlllM fW lltdlllf'tCMI ..
eot..._...Wytt U.ofllaOI Ole City~. City Hell, C.ttll .... ..._ ...
Spedfk.etMM It ll0.00, lllCIWl11t WL 11 Ille.._, '""91ta tllllt tllt ,._..,.
loecffk»tlellt .. Wit 11Y 111ell, ,,. melllflt ... haN!lnQ CMrtttMll W ....... . !IMelllM Nelllltr .. c.ttof tflt ,..,,ltMS.-lflcmi.M,_. ... , ..... ,,... ••
1119 •MNlllfltwiK .. "'f!IMM. Tiie City ......... tlll fltM .. t•lect t11V er ell ..... o.ttcl: .... ......,.1 .. 1'71 Ewty'llMc~ OWOwil .. _Clf\'ef .......... ley.Cll...,,..• "'*'_....°' .... c..tt C)el'Y ....... ........, , .. ,.,,
of aald <OUl't, •• 700 Civic Cenl.,
Otlve ~. '" Ille c11y of S.ma Me.
C.llfewnla,
Deltd September 14, 1'77
WIWAMl,MJOHN, CMMty Glet1I
Ct4AIU.Q tt, MART,'"' ltHOOS"S, llAltMAltD, MAl.ONIY,
MAltT &MUU.IM ".o, ... ,... .... _...CA,._
T .. : (7Ml..,_.,,4
Atl-ysfW: "9tltl-
Pvblllhed Oraf\99 Coa1t Dally l'llol, Se~ IS. 14, n, 1'71 .OJS:77
PUBLIC.NOTICE
("·'"' NOTIC• TOCtteDITOH
OP IUUt TRAN_, ••
llec:L 6111-t 1'1 u ,C, C.. l
Notice Is ll•••bV given to the
creditor• of M, P, Merttelllnt . t/•Mlenlr, ..._ IMHI-eddr"t 11 1664 Iii-' Awe,, Clly of GOllll MIN,
C-ly Of Or ...... StetfW C..llfernle,
that a IMllll Ir.,,,.., Is abou1 to be -
10 o-C•••ll and Sancsre c1ar11,
Ttontlwen,-. MIMS• .-rns 11
1664 N-1 Awe,, OIY of CNte Mesa,
Counly al Or ...... Stet• of C.llfOnol•,
Tiie p,-operty 10 lie tton1t1tred It
loc•ftd et 1"4 Newport Awe,, City of
Cotle Mtse. Co\Wtty of 0r ...... Stal• Of
Celllot'flll,
Seid fll"OIWtV 11 dttitrltled '" gmneral H : All AOCll lft ttade, lhlhlt'tl, -111-
ment eftd ODOd wlll of lt\et lletr end
wlN lawem i.n1,.., k-"THI!
ISCA"A0£ ROOM eftd IOcettCI 11 1"4
NIWPOf1 Aw., City of C..ea Mesa, c-tvofOrenge, MMeof c:.111om1e,
TMMll trlfttlw•tll 1111-met·
tel on., aoltitr tllt Hiii dlty el Octoaer,
1'77, et IO e.m,. et Grower l!tcrow COrllOrttla\, _._ ...._ Is I~
""Jt1teNC., Tllllllfl.C.llf9mle, So fer ft I• II-to tM Trt11•ttrM,
all bllslfltU '*"91 Mid INIClr-11Md
by tt1t Tr_._ for Ute jloett llv• Yt•r••t:.-. 0-..Cltn
ltndr• Clent Tr_..,_
Oellld: Selltemllef-!, 1'71 ••ove• acaow COR'°91ATIOtt fl'.o ... m
T_...,CMIMnllle,_ •tt--.. l .1'*'° llllllllttllld Ortnee CMlt 01ny f'llOt
lep1C11..,.1 .. "" ...
TIME RUNS OUT ON AMERICA'S CUP RACE
Lengthening Shadow Saves Australia
The Tornado is the lwln-hull craft
thosen for the-yachting Olympics,
participatlna for the ltrst time at
MontreaUn 1S'l6.
The cbamplonship aeries will con-
sist ot one race each day over an 18·
m lie cour"e off the Long' Beach
breakwater. Racing starts each day
' at 1 p.rn, There wm be a layday on
Tuesday,
CREWS ON HAND for the title
series include champions from
Europe. Australia, New Zealand.
J apan, So~America, the United States and anada,
Chalrm Pete Jung said there
were 56 eni band Thursday and
that several mor ected by race
time would run the entr list to 60,
The Tornado is 20 feet long, 10 feel
wide with a 31 foot mast , It is s loop
rigged with a run batten main and
carries a maximum of 235 square feet
of salL
In 1969 there were 165 or the spee4y
crafl in existence and the second
world championship was held at
Melbourne, Australia with 23 boats
particlpaLing. In 1971 the Tornado was
accepted for the first time at the
CORK Regatta in Ontario, Canada,
IN 197% THE Tornado was selected
as one of the six Olympic classesl
marking the first Ume a multihul
class bad been sailed in the Olympics.
The selection by the Olympics
caused a boom in the class which now
numbers over 2.000 boats throughout
the world.
Yacht Cl.obs Greet Fall
T tie Balboa a nd elude the Laser A, Laser has scheduled U. classes
'Newl)Ort Harbor Yacht B, Lido-14A, Lido-148, fOrstartsint_heoceanoff
Clubs join forces in in-Lehman-12, Sabot A, Balboa Pier. Two·races
itfating the autumn SabotBandSabotC, wilt be sailed Saturday ,
yachting season in __ T;;...h;..;..e;;..B=a;;..;;lbo=a:..;Y:..;a::.;c:..:h,:.:l~C:::..:l~u~b_a,;.,.n,;,.;d,;.,.on:.:.....:e::.:.o;.;;;n;.;;;S;.;;;un;;;;.;;;d:.=a.'!..y,;_, __ _
Newport Beach with the
a nnual Fall Regatta
Saturday and Sunday, Bodega '
INTE RIOR O F A 48 FOOTER
The Newport Harbor
Yacht Club will handle
the inside classes con-
sisting or eight classes
with three races on
Saturda'y artd two on
Sunday. Inside classes .._ scheduled for starts in-.,,.... _________________ ..... _
The Toyota C9rolla SR-5 liftback.
Sports .car look. Station wagon room.
B_uilt for go and cargo.
The "looker" is t?u•ll to be a ·1oog.1as1er· 100
Welded unitiz~·body construction Steel
remtorqed doors. Trans1stonled 1gruhon, II s
enough to say that Toyolas are bull right lo
help them st~y llgt)t
cargo goes, Put the hflback
up and lake your cholce-
bolh rear seats down-one
rear seal down-or no
rear seats down People or cargo-either way
it's a snap With lhe
Corona L1flback,
In the middle of the Corolla SR-5 Liftback you'll
find pure pleasure, Bucket seats that go mto
more pos111ons than you could imagine
Carpeting door to c:Joor, AMJFM radio, Center
console/armrest Tinted glass All standard,
and there's more-see your dealer,
Up front IS where the ·go· goes. A 1.6
Iller hemi-head engine puts out the
power. A 5-speed overdrive
transmission puts the power m the
road, It adds up to sports car go,
'
!
..
o.lly !'lift .._.. ..., GMY A,,..,_
URGES COUNTY CULTURAL CENTER
Newport Musician Henry Brandon
Conductor in Tune
With Pop Music
"SummD"hme,
By TOM BARLEY
OI Ult Dall'/ l'ltllC Staff
"And the li vin' iua.!y.. "
Orange Coast music man Henry Bran<ton finds it hard to hold
back a wry smile every time he offers the George G~ahwin
classic to his summer concert audiences.
The man who has just completed 10 years of the popular
Fashion Island concerts he brought to Newport Beach bas a Car
from easy time or it during the high summer season. .
But undeterred by an agenda that would tax a man half his
age, Henry, 61, reels them off:
"TUESDAY, WE do a mer ants' concert in West Covina;
Wednesday, we go to the yin ange; Thursday, it's P,e Glen·
dale Galleria and on Friday1'9ami~ two. The Mall in Orange and
Fashion Square in Sherm an Oak
Brandon will never be able say that he has made a mlllion
dollars out of such performanc by bis SO·piece Sympbanette but
he finn!Y believes -and stands uncontradtcted -that tfe has
brought pleasure to milllons with his popular claaslcs and show
music. But with the pleasure there are regrets.
He believes that Orange County is long overdue Cor a multi·
purpose facility that could seat 2,500 to3,000 patrons.
BRANDON QVICKLY acknowledges the fact tb1t.dedic1ted
people in this county are working to obtain funds tor such a
cultll('al center with facilities for the county's mu.sic, billet and
theater ortanizations .•
And he comments with obvious pleasure on ttie lrvtne Com·
pany's offer to donate land near Fashion Island to a group that
can bring such plans to fruition.
"But the time is passing very quickly and it's something we
ought to be using now," he said. "The kind of center I have iD
mind would cost something like $16 million and .It's hard to
believe that we can't raise that in Orange County.
"And that's no slight oo the volunteer individuals and or·
gani.zations who work so hard towards this goal," he stressed. "I
have nothing but admiration for them."
SVCH COMMENTS lead many admirers of the Orange '
Coast's music nfan to note th•t Henry Brandon has not~,..
behind the door when It comes to volunteer work. He has donated many thousands of man-houn to the Orange
County Philharmonic Society's youth music programs, which
have bro~ght claaslcal music and discourses on the art form to
more t.Din.~;«X>~rschool clillaren. .
Backed by the local Musicians' Union and the James Irvine
Foundation, Brfndon has also featured h1s Symphonette ln a
televlaed music series that was balled as possibly tbe finest
cultural program of its kind in terms of music education for
youth.
He firmlY 1>elleves that an orchestra on the lines of his Symp~ette -possibl' expand~ to S4 members -should
become Orange County's own personal properlY1 headquarter~
In tht cultural center that he hopes be will see.someday.
QIS MANY Fashion Island followers •ill not need to be told
that Brandon strongly supports such tmpre11rios as: Arthur
Fiedler and Carmen Drqon ln their view1 on muaic for the
maaaes.
.. Let's face lt, popular cluslcs are popular, .. he ennned,
"We olfer a wide range ot muslc and we bellen that the public
want.I I\ that way -classlcll, Utht and show mualc, bi1 band and
Jazz." H1.a own contribution to American rnuatc bas been codsidera·
ble and be obviously rerr~ that he can rarely find lime to turn,
in creative mood, to the rna1t11ficent ltafdwln piano In his
Newport Beach home.
-.. ........
,.,.
l .
Arts I Dining ... Qu
#
Entertainment
Friday, September 18, 1en DAIL.Y PILOT
.. .
Newport Haroor Art Museum Opening \
No lyory Tower in NB \
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of tlll O.lly .-Ji.t Staff
Three phone lines were ringing
simultaneoO.aly and Thomas H.
Garver was talking rapidly on a
fourth in his office in the new
Newport Harbor Art Museum
building.
The past (1968·1972) and now
returned museum director
looked up from the phone Jong
enough to hand a brochure or
Tony DeLap's work -on display
in one of the.museum's galleries
-to the artist, who had just
stuck his head in the door.
Autside, a woman writer from
Art Week had come early for her
interview with Garver and was
deep in conversation with
museum educational director
Phyllis Lutjeans about the
museum, which was in the proc·
ess of completing its move from
tiny quarters near the Newport
Pier tothe new $1.5 million struc·
tu re at 8SO San Clemente Drive in
Newport Center.
AS SOON AS Garver set the
phone down, a photographer
from a Long Beach newspaper
excused his way into the office.
posed cwator Betty Turnbull
next to Garver and began snap-
ping pictures of the two at the
director:'s desk, in front of a bare
w aJl where a ~'Plinting will go,
when it turns up.
When the pbetographer depart·
ed, Garver, himself stilJ in the
process of moving from San
Francisco, looked up and said, "l
hope you'll excuse me, I just
have to make a quick phone call
to Sears-Robuck customer con·
venience or I'm afraid my mar·
riage will be in danger.''
As he dialed, museum person·
net visible through a glass win-
d ow were scurrying about
· completing arrangements ror the
museum's official opening,
which wtll be from noon to 4 p.m .
Sunday.
Along with DeLap's paintings,
on display is a major retrospec·
live of works by David Park . .ln·
eluding more than 150
watercolors, paintings and draw·
ings from the realistic genre or
the 1930s through his cubist,
abstract and figurative work, up
to the time of his death in 1960.
PIECES FROM the museum
collection will also be shown. Ad·
mission is free, and the shows
will run through Nov.·13. Hours
are noon to 4 p.m. Tuesdays
through Sundays, plus 6 to 9 p.m.
OJ:) Fridays. ·
"No thanks, I'll call back,"
Garver said into the phone and
hung up. "I don't know why they
Two methods
of painting
similar
s.ubjects
are shown
in David
Park's 'Woman
Playing
Solitaire, '
1937 (right),
and
--'Solitaire,'
1954 (below).
call it customer convenience. It's
customer inconvenience."
Then Garver relaxed, leaned
back In the chair behind his desk,
and began to explain why be left
his job as director in 1972 to ac-
cept the position of curator·ln·
Opening
Film narrator ...
Orson Welles Is f-.atured In
the film "The Challenge: A
Tribute to Modern Art," with
footage of great modern
art lats In their studios. The
hour and 45 minute film wlll
have Its West Coast premiere
at tt'I• Newport Harbor Art
Mueeum at 1 p.m. Tuesday.
Wedneeday and sept. 23. . .
On Thuflday. spec:lal ~ormances ari achtdUled between
noon mid• p.m. At 1 p.m.. South COMt Repfrtory will pre-
sent .ntertalnment In the lecture room. At 2:30 p.m., the
Nancy Mock MOdern Dance Company wlU ~ featured In the
mUMUm'a ecutp\uie garden.
charge; department of exblbl·
lions at the Fine Arts Museum of
San Francisco and why now, five
years later, be has returned.
"I left because I felt I wanted
more experience In a larger
museum concentratin1 on the or-
Events
Grand opening. · ..
The public can view the David
Park retrospective and works
by Tony Delap from noon to
4 p.m. Sunday. At 2 p.m.
ourator Betty Turnbull wlll talk
on David Park, a Northern
California painter who re-
belled agaf n•t • abatract ex·
presalonlsm and used that
echoof'e painting technique to
portray people. ·
ganization of exhibitions. What
found was that rµy ·time wa
spent oo lots of low-level peaog
oel problems," be said.
G A a v E a s A I b t b ~~ -
bureaucracy of large ~11 \
work "disagreed with my eens
of impetuosity. If r have an Idea ~
(want to worlt on it right away." .:
However, he added, •'The es :
perience was extremely usef\al t< :
me. I learned a good deal marl
about musem man•gement bot!;,:
positively and negatively." :
When Garver left the Ne~.:
art museum five years ago,~· was the only full-time emplo
He had personally supervised
move from the old Balbo;
Pavilion to the Newport Pie.
area headquarters, which be de
signed, but had, at that time, i
need for bigger and better things
"I think it was a fortuitous se
of circumstances that broulb
me back," he noted. "I bat
looked at a number of museul)"
posts outside of CautomJa ancl
they really didn't interest me foi
a number ot reasons, includinr
the climate and the sense of '
lack of growth.
"I TIDNK those dark gray di mant periods in the weather
matched in some places by
way people think."
Returning to Newport does oot
feel at all like a step backwUAl,
Garver said.
"I think the institution ha(
gone forward and I think L tO(
<See MtJSEVM, Pa1e Cl)
~ ....
Special days. ~
Civic groups. Inch. merchants, professionals · ,,
fraternal organizations, a
vlted to the museum •
noon to 4 p.m. Wedn •
Julia Baldwin Conner af .H;
. California Arts Council iiVd{
speak at 4 p .m . Tft'•it
educators wlll be wetco""8Ct
from noon to 4 p.m. Sept ~.
with a talk scheduled at 2:15
p .m. by Bonnie Bat~
curator of education at Ml'
University Art Museum;
Berkeley.
• -a DAllV PILOT F11cs.x. September 1e, Ut77
'J'lle A rt• t• B rief
A Mw tea on ol 1how1 wm ti.aln thl1 month ln
the Orance C'na1t Collea• planeUUium, 2701
t-'.Jrvtn. Road, C:O.ta Mtu
Pt'rformanch "111 ht: ut 7 JO 1.1t1d 9 p m
P"rlda~. and 7 30 p m Saturdays with nn addl
llonal 9 &> m Saturda)' pt'rformuncc for the run ol
"Tht' ShH of lkthlchcm " 3 p m m;6tinecs wilt
be h~ld on Oct 15, Nov 19, Dec 17 and Jan. Zf,
Ht't1ervat1on11 urt.• ..ivu1lable at 556-5772 and ad·
minion 1~ frttt!
Ot.>tu11J on 11pectul group shows are available
at ~58-5816 Lecturers are Jim Pltton and George
ltuiney
Coast H11hway, Malibu, which closes on
Saturdays due to beach tral!lc during the surn-
mer, will resume a Tuesday through Saturday
schedule next week. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Admission Is free but parking reservations are re-
quired and can be made by calling (213) 454~1
three days ln advance.
~
Hyman tb be staged at 8 p.m . Friday. Sept. 30 and
Sunday, Oct. 2 altbe Irvine Harvest Festival, Bar·
ranca Road at Culver Drive.
•
SCheduled are "Relatlvi~ and Cosmology,"
Sept. 23-0cl. 15: "The Invasion of Mars," Oct.
:lllNo.v. 19: "The Star of Bethlehem," Dec. 2-17 ; ( ~
"1'heLooeUnea1F•ctor," Jan.6-28. -Auditions !J
( Concert Ser ie 5 ] An openlnc reading for Nell Simon'• "S"::''
AdmiasM>n of $2 bene!lts Bl& Slaten of Oranee
County, with reservations available at 834-1118 or
S56-4226. The ploy features Steve De Naut of South
Coast Repertory, Katharine Atherton, Tanya
Siabo and Adina Ross. who hu appeared on
"Stanky and Hutch" and "Police Woman."
_ _ Favorite" will be held at 6 p.m. ~unday a the
Laguna Moulton Playhouse, 608 Laguna Caa.yon
Road, Laguna Beach. Jan Arvan will dlred the
comedy, which opens Nov.1.
Ventriloqukt
Edgar Bergen will bring his sidekick
Charlie McCarthy to the Orange Coast
College' Auditorium, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa, at 8 p.m . Sept. 23. Tickets
are $3 and may be reserved by c~lling
556-5.527. The pair have performed for two
U.S. presidents and for royalty in England
and Sweden.
Comic Sticks
To Nonsense
Tickets are $12 for the seri~ and $5 per con-
cert in the Newport Harbor Lutheran Church's
1977-78concert schedule
It includes : Oct. 23, guitar duo Peter Kraus
and Mark Bird; Dec. 4, Christmas choir festivaJ,,..
wlth handbell and children's groups; Feb. 2ff.
Jester Hairston and lhe Costa Mesa Concert
Choir; April 16, Mus1que trio of Judith Vaccaro,
voice. Mike Vaccaro, woodwm~. and Jack Reidl-
ing, piano. Concerts will be at 7:30 p.m . at .798
Dover Drive, Newport Beach. For information.
call Shella Radies et833·3851. _. ·
•••
Trinity United Presbyterian Church, E. 17th
Street at Prospect, Santa Ana, will present a
1977·78 season featuring Carol Stewart, pianist:
Musical Offering, a baroque ensemble: the
Norman Luboff Choir; and John Fischer, contem·
poriiry singer. .
Season reservations are avllilable until Oct.
11, the date of tbe first concert. Forjnformation,
call Leila Paula at544-7850.
••• The Orange County Philharmonic is oHering
twoconcertsenes. "A" and "B," bothat8:30p.m .
in theSantaAn<.1 lhghSchoolAuditorium. ·
''A" includes: Oct. 30, Rotterdam
Philharmonic; Dec. 11 and April 12, Los Angeles
Philharmonic with Zubin Mehta; Feb. 18, Los
Angeles Philharmonic with Erich Leinsdorf.
"B"includes: Nov. l2and Feb. 4, Los Angeles
Philharmonic with Zubin Mehta: Jan. 14, Los
Angeles Philharmonic with Jesus Lopez.Cobos;
and March IO, Minnesota Orchestra. .
~discount is offered when both series are
purCfilfsed. Prices range for "A" or "B" from $30 By MICHA EL PASKEVICH to $38 ·• for both series, from n: .. to $68. Information Of tM D•lly l'HeUUff ..,.... ~k comedian Steve Martin what made him is available by calling 558·5811.
funny and he says, "Orange County-Disneyland." .---------------....... n ·s a somewhat su~rising response from a ( D Se . . ) .
man who ad mi ts to have • done tern b1e things to my an Ce r I e S dog with a fork," and once gave his cat a bath, but had a terrible time getting the furo!fhis tongue. · .,.. ______________ __,
Dut Disneyland is where one of America's
finest young comedians got his stvt. At age 10,
Martin bicycled his way from his home in Garden
Grove lo Frontierland where he dressed up in an
1890soutffl ond <lid m agic tnckson the street.
Today, in a brown cardboard box at Martin's
parents' house in Corona del Mar, there is a signect
program from "H's Vaudeville Again --A Wally
Boag Production." Although Martin cites Lenny
Bruce, J ack Benny and Red Skelton as early in·
nuences, it was Boag, a companion at the Dis-
neyland's Golden Horseshoe Revue, he loved most of all.
He memorized Boag's act because there was ~omething clean about it. Good Jokes and delivery,
· and balloon animals that are still a part of some or
• ~artin 'sown bits.
· Martin later became a comedy writer !or the
: • Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour (!or which he won
: an Emmy), Sonny and Cher, Pat Paulsen, Van
:· Dyke and Company and countless other TV shows.
Four performances arc included, in Ballet
Pacifica's 1977·78 subscription series. All con-
certs will be at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse,
606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach.
Scheduled are: ''Vivaldi Octet," "The
Seasons" and "From Dawn to Dark," 4 p.m . Oct. 2
and 8 p.m. Oct. 3: "The Nutcracker," 7:30 p.m .
Dec. 8, 9, 12 and 13, and 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Dec.10
and 11; "Three Plus Two" and "Carmina
Burana," 4 p.m. Feb. 5 and ltp.m~ Feb. 6; and
"Coppelia, "4p.m. Marchl9and8p.m. March20.
Subscriptions at $12 are available by calling
494·1148.
( Fall-Winter Hours)
Sea World or San Diego is now open from 9:30
a .m . to6:30 p.m. dally, with the ticket booth clos-
ing at5p.m. It Is locatedJustofflnterstate5onSea
World Drive. ..... • However, a couple of his performances on The
~ Smothers Brothers drew his writing career to a
"; quick close. Now he's one of the hottest acts on the Th J p l G tt M 17985 p ifi ~~club circuit and occasionally fills in for Johnny on ____ e_._a_u __ e_Y __ us_eu_m_, ___ a_c_c __
S' the Tonlght Show. f ~ UNLIKE OTHER lal~led young comedians -a/inti 1SLAN ~
• a group that includes Rlcflard Pryor, Robert Kleln ... EASY TO GET THERE ~ and Franklin Ajaye -Martin's actis almost devoid ~~~ ~5 TRIPS EVERY DAY f t!r~~i~. comment, pol~cal views or hip drug re-~-L .... o""'N~G-B .... E.J...;.A~C.:.:H:.:./:.:..C..:A;..::I::.;'A:..=.:.L:..:IN:....;A::.:..:.C.:....;:R1...U-IS__.E-S.........,
• He ~rformed much of his last set at the Golden • GO THIS WEEKI nw111 • 132·4521 • (714) 521-1111
: •• Bear with a fake arrow through his bead. He wore a -==================::!'.' " giant panda bear head while interviewing Laverne ?: tor was 1tShirley? >on a recent Tonight Show.
: As hos.t on NBC's "Saturday Night Live,·• ! Martin, with a haggard-looking German Shepherd
at his side, introduced the world's first dlg1tal
"' watchdog. Besides the dale and time, a quick pull
: on the dog's ear gives the owner his aee in dog
years.
~ The digital shepherd even survived 45-mlnutes ·
:--· fSlrapped beneath a powerboat; "and it's still tick-
::.. l111 ...
IN A SMALL club, Martin is devastaUne. de·
ivering b.ia nonstop absurdities with a refreshinc
air of fal1e sincerity that mimics every Las Vegas
lounge a bow ever presented.
"My act ia intentionally apolitical," he says.
"It's about what people think, not about what busl·
• nesses do, or what governments do. It's about in·
-dividuals and how distorted their thoughts can get
jwst being alive In the world, and how you have to
' .completelybeeomecrazyinordertosurvive ... "
-Thia philosophy ls evident on Martin's Just re· lhsed debut al bum, "Let's Get Small" <Warner
·Bros. BSK-3090>. Nert wanUn1 to ruin the fun, I'll
' just say lt's typical Martin Insanity, includln1 hls
"Ramblln' M8J\" theme and warped looks al Vegas
and 1mok1n1.
JAZZ NOTES: Popular Jan·rqck group
Seawind la at the White House in Laeuna Beach tonllht and Saturday. Reservations rec:ommended.
ext Tueeday lbrouab Saturday, lt'a Jan atn1er
Carrie SmJtb, who reportedly aan1 Sarah Va\lchn di the 1ta1e at a recent ft1tlval. She's performing
at the Monterey J111 Fesuval thls weekend. The
\Oraqe County Rhythm Machine and Wlnd Ensem· l»la CDQUnUM tt.t Monday nlibt venues al lsadore'a
til M~. ;
---m:x l:Ur:Ntt----.
.----T it t=M;Uf)U----..•
1--nc; ~()lNI)
SUNDAY,·OCT. 23 at 7:30PM
al the .
ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER
ANAHEIM EAST ROTARY CLUB
by arrangement with
Columbia Artists FHliv1l1
preaents
w11h Special Guesl Stars
*~A,,fRW *
IYclula ~elly & The M()dernaims
l3U1Ui ill ·J()4~ ED;. ~ * STl.MIJr ~ *
TICKETS $7 .00, $6.00, $5.00
AVAll,ABLE BY MAIL ONLY
MJkt cheek or money order payable to
Anaheim Convention Center,
800 W. Katelle Ave .. Anehelm, CA 92802.
**•
Tryouts for Oranie Coast College's Five Pen-
ny Opera Company will be held from 4to1 p.m.
Monday and Wednesday In the ~olleee
Bltdltorium. !701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
Scheduled productions will be Menotti 'a
·•Help, Uelp, the Globolinks!" Jan. 13·20 and
Bizet's "Carmen," April28-May6.CaroleBoelter
directs . ... .
The Matti Lascoe Dance Theater Company
will hold tryouts for male and female dancers at
2:30 p.m. Saturday al Dance Loft Studlo, 118 W.
4th St .. Santa Ana (between Proadway and
Sycamore). Also needed ia a remale dancer who
can act and slng for a touring chitdren 's revue.
For Information, call 542-86:50.
( Other Events )
Yellow Brick Road Shows has two children's
producUons available to tour: "ATaleofTwoSis-
ters,. "a Scott.ish folktale, plus "Quantum-Trap,"
a science fiction adventure. Information is avalla-
ble from the group c/o Access. P .O. Box
5728, Huntington Beach, CA, 92646, or673· 7450.
•••
Tickets are still available for "Fantasies,·· a
world preroiere romantic comedy by Jackie
r----47,;:u=~---1 I <@' 1M openU.. oF' I
' FEATURING !.1e~~RA'f !!o~£~l10N t t of ORIGINAL BRASS PIECES t
Tables, Lamps & Unique Deooratlve Accessories
t for Home and Office t
ALSO THE HELEN CERDA COLLECTION
t of FINE HAND·EMBROIOERY t
Shirts, Skirts & Handbag•
Order Early lrY CllM~ t 141 ~An .. s.ta AINI 546-6600 f
M ~ ~ Mallotd Wil!On r-. probably r+. qeotw
~ ladKape ortnl (1775-1851~ •. T""" painted fan Oftd lluenf.
~. t.ft IO r+te WOlid -lOO ponrqi. lOO ~ Old obout
19.C.OO ~ The wonder it not l+IOI IOl'lle of M effo.n -•
me&oa.. bl that '° ~ -• f'"'<ftlfe. ti1 mosterpiecet can be ,_ in a'I mctO' ~ arc.rd ..._ ~ dthauoh ..._ Tote
GalltlY in London hos probably ,.. boqW ccleaoon. Old World M 1cj_, prid. ., ~ ~ of r,,,. ~orly.
and M9 a'I 01 la.ien to '" Old ~ fpr 1~ !J
merchcnN carrift on ~ional 7-dQy moneyboci ~ ...
0,..1.,.,... ............
Art Auction
FRIDA y I SEPT. 23rd ..
PREVIEW 7:00 P .M.
AUCTION 1.1»0 P .M.
Low Starting Bids!
Excellent Investments!
THI OltAMGE COAST
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LOOI< AT THISI f IXAMPUS Oii OUI SUNI
LOW ftRICISl AMD YOU ..r -,.IWPOtlT
PlODUCI 9UALITY"
J t ' • I t
f • f
l • i
•
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Deily ,.,.._le.ft ,....
Friday, S.ptember 18. 19n DAILY PILOT • C3
0
MUSEUM OPENING NEW FACILITY •••
(From Page Cl)
have changed ln the sense that 1
know more now about articulal·
inl and formulating directions."
For one thinj, he said , "I have
Thomas Garver pauses
before office w all
hanging, Robert
Motherwell's
'Plus Fours·
a desire to aee a more complete
institution, which would include
more community involvement,
issues <:A which I reaJly had no
consciousness before.
"MuCH OF Wbjt a museum
does ln its galleries is not fully
explained. We'r~ more verbally
literate than viaually literate. I
think that's why people at ex-
hibits Spend more time reading
<identiflca,tion) labels than look·
ing at work.
"Many people are intimidated
by art and we hope to avoid
that."
Taking over from departing
director Harvey West Just before
the building's openine "present-
ed soma short-term problems in
completine some things and
making some changes in things
that might have been start.Gd and
no longer fit the situation,"
Garver noted.
Although most exhibits are ar-
ranged by curator Turnbull,
Garver said be wW o~ganize ooe
or twosbows a year.
"I will want' to do somelhine in
photop'aphy," be said, and also
hopes to bring an exhibit of Louib
Comfort Tiffany desiens. •·I
think there's been a loo.a period
of exploration in the area of
ceramic sculpture, and that in
tereats me too,'• he noted.
BtJT BEFORE be aets to that.
Garver bas to supervise the
thousand details lnvolveclc in
opening a new f acillty. plus, Gith
wife Natasha Nicholson, set up
housekeeping in tbeir new con
dominium. "OUr furniture ar
rived yesterday," be sighed, tht-
t.en.sioo and pressure beiinoing
to show in his face a1aln.
As soon as be opened the door
to his office. the buzz of pboneb
rushed in.
Garver said a polite farewell
and then turned back to the miss
ing membership brochures, tht.>
lady from Art Week, tht>
customer inconvenience and
tucked among the worries and
busies, the delight of opening .i
beautifulJ11lfW museum.
View of Bay Whets Ancient Mar,iner Appetites
Sunny September days and
balmy evenings offer some of the
year's· finest hours for. dining at
the seashore. The time and place
are as compatible as Romeo and
Juliet.
Choice of place last week fell to
the Ancient Mariner in Newport
Beach. a spot with a scenic
marine view that's virtually
beyond topping. Once settled
down here, in fact. you can't bear
lo leave.
IN ADDmON to the sight ol
. bay and boats through a full ex·
panse of ceiling-to-floor win-
dows. the breei;y nautioal decor
throughout is an everpresent re-
minder of the loc~le. Combine
these surroundings with great
food and you have what could
easily become your home away
from home.
For luncheon or dinner, the
Mariner offers diners a,menu at
once small and select. Fourteen
items on the midday bill of fare
range from a -low of $2.SO for
chowder and salad to a hi1h of
$5.25 for the steak sandwich.
In between are such choices as
turkey and swi ss cheese
sandwich, $2. 75; the Mariner
NOW!!
BOBWHITE
PUis
LISTZ&
COMPANY
hamburger (on a esh roll
topped with melte cheddar
cheese), $2.95; chick teriyaki,
$2.95; scallop broch e. $3.50;
lbeefdip, $2.'15; latos , $4.95.
All luncheon sel ions are
served with your boice of
Mariner fl.sh chowd a fresh
spinach or an ice· d tossed
green salad, bot ugh and
squaw bread, •col slaw or
French fries.
NEARLYAlikenu rofdin-
ner entrees extend l'Om beef
brochette, mahi oabi or
huachinango (broil ed snap-
per') at $S.95 each high of
$12.95 for a t,op sirloin d lobster
combo. By way of mething
quite dlBerent in a b /seafood
upiop, the Ancient iner also
offers a top sirloin teriyald
shrimp combo, $8.95.
You'll doubtless vor any
choice but we wer espcially
pleased with two electioos
the night ol our visit. ese were
a perfectly broiled petite sirloin
(a smaller cut but the same beef
a.s the aged top choice>, $6.SO,:
and the heel brochette <chunks of
tender sirloin surrounded by '
sauleed mushrooms, onion and
bel I peppers), $S.9S.
Our entries, like all on the
evening bill of fare, were served
with a choice of Mariner
chowder, fresh spmach or tossed
green salad, sourdough and
squaw bread, fresh steamed
vegetables and pilaf.
We also noted the restaurant's
highly efficient service,
performed by enthusiastic peo-
ple with a young and healthy air.
Youthful verve likewise car-
ries over into the two current en-
tert_pjnment attractions. Wednes-
day through Saturday that's
"Voyage," whose talents give
way to those of "Sparrow" on
Sunday, Monday and Tuesday.
.. The Ancient Mariner is located
at 2607 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach, 646-0201. Lunch
is served daily from 11:30 to 3;
dinner nigh Uy from s: 30. ••• GERMAINE, one of Orange
County's few living legends as a
FOR AREAL
TASTE TREAT crJ. # J quu-.-J.o,e.
~i!P°rter
ANEAN AM. 18700 MAC ARTHUR BLVD. S 10-3 PM • DANCING NIGHTLY ~CA ET LOUNGE IRVINE. CALIFORNIA
• CAPTAIN'S TABLE COFFE OP -24 HRS. (Opposite 0rlfl98 CooncvA1rport)
(714) 833·2770 .
••Probably on• of th• funniest
comedies you will ever M•."
=-·~oot> ''1~ • '''-~· cou ..
For Information & reservations
call (714) 492.9950 or at the box
office Sebaatlan 'a/West, 1«> Avenlda Pico, San
Clemente.
club -'itertainer, is wowin& •em
as ever these nights at the Hunt-
ingtdn Bea~b Inn. Backed by the
talented all-male group Clear
D4lfS, she's on stage nightly
through Saturday, from 9 to L
Every Tuesday, however, Ger·
m aine departs from the format of
her show on the other niebts of
thea week to stage a special
··celebrity Night." In recent
weeks these increasingly popular
shows have spotlighted such
guest artists as the Drifters and
Johnny Smith's Ori1inal
Alphabetical Ink Spots •
If you're a la~mer to the
Celebrity Night action, a gooa
time to get started is next Tues·
day, Sept. 20, when the Coesters
move front an<,\ center.
, As their engagement last
month clearly proved, "Yack.ity
Yak,·• "Charlie Brown,··
••searching," "Along Came
Jones" and "Little Egypt" still
have magic appeal.
THE BIVINGTO NS will
perfonn on Sept. 27. Among their
remembered big bits are "Pa-Pa
0 Mau Mau" and ''The Bird".
The Penguins of "Earth
Angel" fame will appear on Oct.
tf1 ghesl Quahly
Native Mexican Foods
-4 to be followed by Donnie Rrooa en Oct. lJ. His r~rdings
include "Memphis," "Doll
House" and "Mission Bell."
and get a good seat" basis.
The Huntington Beach Inn 1~
located at 21112 Pacific Coast
Highway, south of the Hunt
ington Beach pier and on the op
posite s ide of the Highway
Telephone for further informs ~on: 536-1~1,
There's no cover charge for
these shows at the Inn and no
reservations are accepted. Alt.en·
dance is strictly on.a •\come early
IN TUNE WITH POP.
<From Page en ·~
lightful to me each time I play it as it did on the first time I beard·
the music." An added factor to Brandon's love affair with ''The
Nutcracker" is the presence of so many children in the audience.
THEY CLEARLY delight hi~ and that same love of children
and the desire to let them hear music as it should be' played and·
explained has been the spur .for many of his youth concert. ac·
tiviUes in Orange County. "They're so good for my &QUI," he mused. "Gee, bu tit's good
to put my love of music into those young, fertile minds.
"U ooly we could do more of it," he said. "Millions of dollars
that could be devoted to such a worthwhile cause are being wasl·
ed every day when they should be diverted lo a No. 1 priority like
this." Henry Brandon finished bis diet lunch on the sunlit terrace,
looked over the glittering waters of Newport Bay and hummed a
bar or two from his latest Fashion Island concert.
"It could be done Cor $16 million," he mused. ''You know, that
iso'ta lot of money for this part of the world to raise. ls it, now ?"
Open 7 Days
LOS CASTIUOS -A FRJ94DLY PLACE TO DIME
-·· .. Mede• food ........ ,nc..... ... IM~.
ca d1hl....,. _ ........... nw • .., s..,.
1 IOll .._......_.Wad ' ht. atMl 47
WHAT'S IEW at the HYAm
e
Shol¥Place
MON .• SAr. 9 P.M. CLounge
THI fMULOUS
""FOOTNOTES1'
All ~TS EVENTS
GIAITT 7 FOOT 1V SCREEN
Mon.-Thur. 11 :30 o.m. to 10 ~.m.
Fri. & Soi. 11!30a.m to II p.m. COCKTAl"LS Sunday '4 p.m. to 10 p.m.
. 9093 E. ADAMS, HUNT1NGTON BEAOf 962.7911 ED Anaheim
1700 soum HARBOR BOULEVARD
<JllOOlll• Dl•IMIYla,.-(114) 772·S900
... ... 1 ....... -----~...._....---·---·------.. ......:..:..; ':-:. ...
..
g DAIL V PILOT
Blockbuster Unfocused
. --------------•, ~ ~A'r~£c~~~ Featurtnc Tropical DrtnJca • It Afttt 1Jx nl1hta and .. doun
houu of vlewlnl lh• TV
blockbuater "W uh ln1ton :
8 hind Cloud Doon," the
crlUcal consen.aua appean to be
tllat. while 1ome 1rrHlln1
rrormancn emeried from tho
t.bmly chsawaed pre Wat.er1ate
etit:. lt neverlheleu lacked the
ltndrnarlc quality or the 1how
U.at paved th• way for It a year
••o· the multl-Emmy-wlnnJn& ''Roots ...
lntermlask>n
Tom Titus
1crlpt and the expertlae fo handle
them. Robardl should have an
Emmy ln h1I pocket and Vaughn,
uaed 1paringly after an electric
first two nights. also is worthy of
one.
I BAMBOO SEPTEMBER
I TEIR&CE SPECIAL
I x._ '-ft .,.... ,.,. Tw.. w... ·rr-u.,., ... ,..,.... I ... "'"~-
BEYOND THEM, the most in· I A'"''---... ro11. '""'""',..· Iii ...... Mee Sl.25
tereating character in the show I j ~~= ~ ·.;:-....;.
proved to be Prior as the erratic ~l'ICl9· ... w~
underachiever thrust into prom-I .J, •.t.\c ~aormcn0orn1.oww.r°"
inence by the axing of Barry I ~-r rr Ollltbl*W......,,..,ID.•tT7
Nelson (who, by his ailence, took . 153 EAST17TH .•• COSTA MESA
-L.A. and SAi FRAICISCO
know wh~ and ntMJt~~ YOUR chance b;;O;e ltW YORK
and LOIOOI find out ~
why .•.
....
The reuons for lhe apparently
l uk ewarm reaction t9
"Washmeton" vary, bui one
aspect that straneely haan't been
touched upon 1s the problenwor
foc us. Even a 12 hour mlnbe~es
nteds a central character or
situallon, and "Washington" just
ahort.er span, four years, and
from tho outlet \he problem of
focua wu evldent. Given \he
mulerlal at hand, the producers
ml1ht have chosen to empha.slze
either the moat Interesting
characterts (Juon Robards' vln·
dlcllve president, Robert
Vaughn'• steely chief or slam.
Or they might have taken It from
the other end and rocu.sed on the
three yoWlg campalen workers
<Tony BUI, Nicholas Prior, David
Selby) and their dis parate
stories.··
tho r ap for ~ior>. The .. __________ _
metamorphosis of a harmless --------,_.,,.--.-..,...,..,.....or-_.,.~~-
)
ceuldn't seem to make up 1t-s
~ mind In that regard.
IN THE CASE or "Root~:·
even though it spanned two cen-
Instead, scripters Eric
Bercovici and David W. Rinlels
honed in on CIA director Cliff
Robertson. a most lackluster
character, and his oft-again, on·
again marriage (to Lois Net-
tleton> and affair (with Stefanie
Powers). As a keystone for such
an elongated drama, It simply .
didn't hold up.
.
i
tw1es, Its focus was clear and
sbarp. In the first episode LeVar
Burton was the central figure; an
tbe second, John Amos; 1n the
third, Leslte Uggams, and so on.
Each episode was a story in itself
with a beglnnin&, a middle and
an end.
"Washington" covered a
Puppet Love
No such worry, however, when
Robards and Vaughn were in
front of the cameras. As the Nix·
on-Haldeman power brokers,
they had the meatiest roles in the 4
Walter Willison plays a puppeteer who
can only express hi~ love for Cindy WeHs
throug h his puppets in the mus ical
"Carnival." playing now through Oct. 2 at
Schastian 's Dinner Playhous e at the
Grand I lotel in Anaheim. For reserva-
tions. call 772·7710. Price of Sll to SlG in ·
<:lud~s dinner.
flunkie into a power-thirsty heel
was beautifully interpreted by
this heretofore unknown actor.
But "Washington" was in·
evitably weighted down with the
stuff or which soap operas are
made -Robertson's dalliances,
Selby's womanizing, even
Prior's sophomoric conquest. It
was a "something for every·
body" ploy that weakened the
real drama considerably.
One last observance: In a 12-
hour dramatization wherein ac·
tual Nixon administration
figures were so thinly disguised,
where the hell was Spiro Agnew?
One thing "Washington: Behind
Closed Doon" could have profit-
ed from waa a Utt.le comic relief.
'Odd Couple' Not Up to Par
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TUESDAY thru SATURDAY e-"i
BUFFET & LUNCHE * DINNER * COFFEE SHOP
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QI als made lust -If nr! ind durln1 WarldVfar II -~•n 'l f~'::.'!:
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.. A GREAT BIG HIT AND,
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t Ml Casa. On• thins 1ou must bring to our two
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comblnadon ..• and ,, .... aot lots of., •• too.
I
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Bead liner
Singer Vikki Carr will star with Helen Red-
d ). Lou l«rn I and G~org~ Carlin 111·
KMPC's "Show o( the World" Oct. 1 at the
Ing lewood Forum. Tickets are available at
Ticketron anCI Mutual aaencies.
A NEW DINING ADVENTURE mAnDAn1n CHINESE Geurmet cu1s1NE
PEKING •SHANGHAI
~1\+A..tl. SZECHWAN •HUNAN £ ~~ii Daily Lunch I
. . •
.. . ~,. .• And Dinner ~
Yow Host ...t Hosteu -•
Mib...tA.-CWcmg rta
(Former Chef of the IO
Twin Dragons-Anaheim)
1500 ADAMS AVE. c•t K....,. II•&•
COSTA MESA . 540-1917
FROM LAS VEGAS
DIAMOND JIM'S r11sENrS
SYLVIA PERRIN &
EARLE WILLIAMS
W eel tlru Sat • 1:30 to I :30
LUNCH SERVED-Mon thru Sat
Mdndoy Night Footbal • m. Hot Dogs
SUHDA Y JAM SESSION
3:00 to 1:00 PM
1170 Balcer St. CostaMno 540-0573
~
..XllCAll ... FA•Allr ;"
,.,.. AMtt Melle• ....... Qr_,. Ce.ty
KAVI 4 FREE APPETIZER OH us
WITKTH1SAD
DINING • DANCING
ENTERTAINMENT
Busmes5men·s Lunch Spec~als
SU.FOOD• COCKTAILS•'°°° TO ~O .
HH(j>UETS • PlllVATI P.uTllS
CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH SUNDAYS HAPPY HOURS 4-6
1 750 W. Lincoln • Anaheim
991·0540
547 W. 19th St •Costa Mesa
642·9764
PLUS
.MONDAY
THAU
THURSDAY
SPECIALS
(Fri., Set., Su11.,
'til 8 p.m.)
RED SNAPPER ...... 3.46
MAHI MAHI ........ 3.95
GRILLED SEA BASS • 3.96
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK 4.26
NEW YORK STEAK •• 4.95
LOBSTER TAIL ••••. 6.96
STEAK AND LOBSTER 6.96
and dozens of otherB
SOMET141NG NEW
Omakase
''Leave It fn our haMts." I And who better would know whloh out1tandlng
seasonal selection• will be vactty perfect for
thl• Vtty Spec:Jal Jaotl'\tM Olnntr. Our Chef
knowt )'Our tu'91. Hie aeltotlons will abun-
dantly pleaee your palate. We promise you a
Superb Gourmet Dinner of at 1ea1t flvt courtet.
H.on '1Y0tuvm Soup &rkicl
Jl!lf"'~O ~altimo110
RICE• ORllN TIA• T8Ut<IMONO ........ ~.__
.. ----------
Frid!); !!ept.mber HI. 1977 · DAIL y PILOT C5·
Mendes ShiftS Years
STATELINE, Np. CAP> -
Mualclan Seralo Mendes says he
• 'compltttly reahutrled the
ca.rdl' In developlnJ hla "New
l:Jrull 71." But It you llked hla old
"Brull 64," you should Uke the
new aound, loo.
Mendes draws on hla Brui11an root.a. American Ja11 and con·
temporary pop mualc to create
hla new aound. That 'a pretty
much what be did to create the
old sound too. whlcb produced
record hit.a llke "Maa Que Nada"
and "FoolontheHUl."
But Mendes saya his group now
11 Into .. a new beginning." Of the
'o r iginal "Brasil 66 ," only
Mendes and guitarist Oscar
Castro Neves remain. The other
eight members, all from this
country. joined the group a year
ago.
.. WQEN I formed 'Brasil 66'
and we established a sound, a
trademark, we lived with it for
many, many years," Mendes
says. "But after awhile it was
sounding a lltUe bit the same, so I
decided to completely reshuffle
the cards and start fresh."
"For me, it's just part of my
'Star War•'
The characters from
"Star Wars" <from
left Chewbaca, Mark
Hamill, Alec Guin-
ness and H a rris on
Ford) are featured in
"The Making of 'Star
Wars• as Told by
CJPO and R2-D2 .. at
8 o'clock tonight on
Channel 7.
own growth as a muslc1'n. as a
person, cbanaLne. learning, aet-
tln& exposed to new sounds, new
thln&a," says Mendes.
Now the "New Bra.sil 77" plays
and sings songs like Chica1o's
"Ir You Leave Me Now," and
"The Real Thing," a song by
. Stevie Wonder and Mendes'
favorite on the new album by
"Brasil 77."
There seem to be similarities
between the old and new -like
the Latin influence, the drums,
the smooth blending of voices,
guitars and keyboards which
Mend.es plays.
BUT THE NEW sound has
"more drive, tnel'e funk, more
pulse," says Mendes. "The roots
wlll stay there, the basic identity
of yourself from the beginning
will stay -;:. b,ut the change will
come.''
The old and new sounds, says
Mendes, were "both new for the
time. In 1966 it wu a fresh, new
sound. Today it's new again.
That's the only way I can put It.
It's fresh again."
Beyond that, Mendes makes no
comparisona. You have to listen
fbr yourself.
Mendes, 36, arew up in Rio de
Janeiro, starting piano studies at
•I• 7. In his teens he picked up
keyboard styles of jazz artist.a
like Dave Brubeck and Bud
Powell. American audiences
were first Introduced to his
music at a 1962 Carneiie Hall
concert.
THE AMERICAN bosaa nova
boom followed, but while Mendes
aays his first group had the same
"ethnic flavor," the "Brasil 66"
blend of samba styles and
American Jazz was "more open.
a litUe more free." '
Mendes now spends about
seven months of the year on the
road, mostly doing concerts
throughout the world. He takes
responsibility for the direction or
his group, leaving room for
·'spontaneity and creation'• by
individuals.
Other recent projecta include
the scorlne of mualc for a rum on
the famed Brazilian soccer star
Pele. Mendes alao plans to in-
troduce Americans to other
Brazilian musicians through
album releues.
LA County Fair OpeniDg
..._...""" ..... Oft~· .. "·_ ... 71JO p.rn. Tuttd•Y •I S.nl• An•
TONl9"T, U"9Me•1t 1'
LOI ANOU.•I COUNTY l'Allt -
T_., ... °""' Od. 2 .i fefror....w11" ,. __ UlletlO<ll, fins ans end In·
d<Jtlrl.tf -. ..... recl1>9, CMnlY•I
rldet -•.n.•-L ' a.m. to 10 pm.~~.•e.m.1011
p.m. I'~ and S.twdos. SI.JS
Times/Places
C0119ge, 11'tl -9r1Slol 1trff11. "''" but ,_,.Mlant required, I U ·lOOO
eat. >11. Colltf11un •I 7:JO p.m.
Tuetda'I" Md T'lllnda'fl.
adUltl, '°cf"' clllldrM .. 12, -· 6 ''"·
l'LAMaMco OAMU -Wftll LH
MoHnat Delle• Coomparrf, 7:alo'clock
IClftigM In ~ ~ Coll9De OUl-
ampl11tlla•ttr, 11111 .,.. er11101 .,,....,..,.,
MICMAllL ,.,ltPt«llY -And o.w.y O'IC_,t, ..._... .... 0..... ... r;
I06 l'«lf!V C..11 Hleltwe.,, HIHll•
lllCltM llMCih. MoftN\I: AIWty l'rett.
Sept. D _.. 2A, Oo. Seilf, 21, 91Mdlt .
~.
l'LUT• C:ONC•ttT -9Y Jolln a.re.flare, I o'Clock '°"llllht et OIJ
SClllt LMll .. acll Studio TIINttr, •101
fl. 1"' ... -a.'° ...,.,.,, s1 •Wde91•.
(211) ftMi4D.
CATALINA l'•ITIVAL -•rt t it•
lllblb , lodfY 1-.otl SW.day, plut dlnntr....Ct 111 C.slM ••llroom ..... '9M {17.511. 9oat ,,.,._.,.,loft
1110) fNf!I Lo119 a .. c .. /Calllh1e
crvi.s, 121·7111orTICUtnlft.
•1c• l'Ot.UU' -wi111 ""' ....... 11an, at tllt 1no1-ooc1 P:orum, I
o'clock tanlgM; 1, J, Ind• p,m. s.tur•
de.,, ancl 2 ancl 6 p.m. SW\...,. 6'-i7
adults, """°" ...-r 14 llalf .... let.
TlckabMTICIC.ttr'llll. -
lonlllllt e'ld Sept. •• -... m.111 ...
041 • "•Ir Drive, Cotta MMe, el OrenQO County l'elrQroundt. 1150
•dull1, U.lO funl°" IMS, '° cent• <lllldreft. F._ ...,-lllllQ.
'MY OAUOHT•lt •AT•O X' -
Comtcly, lonl9N 111r...,. ...,., u at e.,..... .. .._,._,w.....,,_
9011ltvtrd e11d l'•cfflc Coest HIQllW..,, Lang 9t1Cll, Wlllt dl-r,
n&.0513.
HIA.ITllM'SOINM•tt TN•AT .. tl
-"Tiit Odd Couple;• now at I"°
Awfllde fll'IC.o. 'Sall°"*"•· ..., ... 50,
tlNIS; "Canllval," -""ouafl Oct. 2 et the ~_,.. Hetti, I Hotel Wp\
Anfllelm. 7n·77IO, 111 .. 16. ...
COM«OIAM -At Leff Stop, 2ttt s.a, .,._. M., Newport 11 .. c11. r ..
Ny~ sw.i.y1 Aft AltlNll, °"'91 Wtll-ancl Gltn l'lptf-. lept •
10-2': Mllltdtitr Md Jeck Menaft. l :JO Ind 10 p.m. _..,.!Qllla <S2.SO
114111 -Cltlnll mll>l-1; 1:30 and 10·• p.m. P'rlcNYt Ind Salvrdays
CS.UO pha twe Clrlnllt I.
UNIV•ltSAL AM'°"ITM•AT•lt :_ J eck_, a,_ Wltll , ... SKllOfl,
1011111111 lllrouo" Sullde y; Linde
Rontwell, Sept. 20-U end '""· 21-0c I, 'TH• .aY&L l'NllULY' -ICAMlflftM. 2. !21J1..at.
l'e"'9r -..ty, 1:• o'clecll tanltM
111"'"'911 'Oct. 1, TllelcMY•letwdeyt,
pl111 a:ao "·"'· mall"" Sulldey,
"""'741Uir 1 """
••c•u1'ott.IL V•M•CL• SHOW
-Vant "'4 11oa11, a t A11e11a1m
Stadli.n, 4 .. to o'CIOcll IClftltM. -
to 10 ,.I'll. Selunlrt, -to I "'"" .......... u: .
THa .... o•••IC TM•AH• -
llfl9elbeft ~lllCk, '°"""' and S.turoty. GltdYt Knf9M & Ille Pipe
plus Jl"""I• Welhr. Wednttdly tPlrOUlll lepU4. um ....
OAMC9 Cl*Cllll'TI -"•wrttllffto
but • lc11nra De11ce," II'/ tll• klltt!tnl_. Plewa. l :JO o'c!O(k
tonlllltt tlnu9lt luflde'( Ill Artltur'a etnt, Hlr"-lt "9r1c, 12t74 •uclld St,.
Oe~O.-. SM-Mt t, .... IYAT9. UVH' -No.I ~
cOf'Mdl', -ttvougll Oct .... loutlt
Coast 1t...norv, 1827 Ntwp9tl 91\'d., eaat.t-... .... 1361 COMTIMUINO llt LOI AMG•L•I -..... Coltrad Qjf'lt ... " tltr°"9fl S.pt.
..... DWAY ••c•• -I o'clecll 2S ·~ tM Matti T..-Forvm; "Tiit
GBWINE CHINESE MANDARIN DISHES
Specializing In Chinese A Lo Corte Dishes .
I
lUNO....OmNER DAILY
Food to T• Out 11 :30 AM. to 10 P.M.
COUNT Mii• -Alld lllt on:llHtre,
71>0 p,m. Ttlund•y et Clt•Pm•"
COJl9"'1 llW"'°'lel Harl, J.U N,
TONY D• l'aMCO -Alld Tiit De Gitt .... It,, °'81111f, t6. ft end •1t.
l'r•nco Femll.,, I and 10 p.m. Satur· "7...._
day and 5uftdev ti ~c Mounteln J11
VeltftCla.
COUMTIIV MUllC -2 Md 4 p m.
Saturdrf, tN WHl-1 et HIHll· lnOIOl'I Calllr, 1171 EdfflCltr A.,t.,
HIHlllngton 8"cl\. l'r•.
••LU UWITDY OAllC. COM-
l'ANY -1:30 p.m. S.IUf'dey '" Ille
M9n'I CW-lum, Cal Steta LOlll
llHCll, 2101 E . 7111 SI, 12, l2UI
~.
HNIO!t CITIHNI W••IC -At Lien
Co11ntr., Setul, HtO M•dllon
l'wtiwey, l..eoww Hlllt, $ttlt. 17·U . U.'° edm!UIOll for persons SO Ind
o ... r. l11tl•• dr1ve tllrouott wlld
efllmel '*"'· "'"' Wlltf181MMflt Ira• ouiw1111eous1. t:4J a.m. to''·"'·
'IW•Dt .. SUMMS•'-~9"1 fllM
MOD•ttM DAMC• CONC•llT -
Jemes °"""""*" Ind aw Aame DeMe ~.I p.m. Sept. U-2A In
Ille Cal StAIM fl'Ullertclll Lilli• ni..ttr, a H. Stae 0111811t 91...S. .... l10-IM1 _...,..,
l!DOAlt ••ttOSN -Wltlt ct-v
OW1 It McCa r111'/, I ft.m, Stot. U In
Or~ Cilest Co4C.0.'t Audltortwn,
1101 P:alrvlew "-'· CoeW Mne. ti. J»-4427, or et t lclctt aft Ice I 11 ect-ntllllttr..._ ........
OllOA•••CITAL-:-e'l'~IWM'
Jottpltlclwlll.l•m. a.t. Uat 1'1nt aaptlllt OluRll, 1llO w. t7111 It., .....
A111, Musk Illy etc11, Hl111Mntltll,
l'rlflCll end"°*"" S47-2SS7, • COIN MO SYllMP •Xf'0-10 e.111.
to 10 "'""Sept. a• M, 10 Liii ... • "·"'· ..,.. u .. Loa AllONt Clelt-UM CAM.-. ti Mwltt, llllCIW ttfrte,
MtTetld .. Didi ~. 7:• "·"'· -----------Tutlldey at Sanla A111 Coll ... 'a
""'"•Hall, t7VI ........... It,.... ....... C.11 Ha-5171.
Put a ftW Wotdt
to work fo ou.
'What we have here is a
total lack of rtspe<:t for
the law!",
Burt Reynolds
''Smokey .... Bandft''
Sally Fleld ·.Jerry Reed.,,
.Jackie Gleason 1 •• Snt<·ll e.i .. o 1 M•<• 1
Scre~ay by JAMES LEE BARRETT dnd CHARLES SHYER ~
& ALAN MANDEL • Story by HAL NEEDHAM & ROBERT l LEVY
Mose by Bill JJSllS dnd JERRY REEO Otrtele<I by HAL NEEDHAM
Prodoctdby ~()RHNG(LBERG .. ~ • .. •· • •• .., ••• , ..
A RASTAR PrOOUChon. A UNIVERSAL Plctlle. TtctncOlofK
""""' ., .. .,.. L-:.m&11a
LA MIRADA 4 • LAKEWOOD 4 WAlll4N UllOAIN "llCl tt 10
lllOllOAY ..... IATUllOAY ~-fl) 12:~ 1<00
LA llllAADA 4 ONLY IUNDAYI I NOl.IDAft 1~• 1e HO
FOllNTAIN ~ VAL l FY
ri111v1 tN
,.: '·,11111 11:3..~ . . tliif:~1
llCllUll PUHi
MUllWALK(9)
'"" Sill MACMINI 11t
....... MCWlll
•
,.
I ; •
R DAIL y PILO f ,.,10 r. S!pt.mt>er !I, 1971
Photo Show· Feat1•red in Lido
PtlOTOGllAPUIC WO&K Ry Herry
< 'iallld\IU\, U>d•y throu1h Oct. 29 •l Susan Sptr1tua
t;ullt'ry, JJ36 Via l.1do. Udo VU1e1e. Newpor}
Rnc:b Rl'.t>\!pUun T to 10 p m. Sept. U . Houni · 1 \
.1 m . to~" m Tu d•Y• T'hurade)'ll. ll a.In to 6
11 m I' nd.Dv• und baturd1y1. ,..,.. •
.,Ol Tln;RN t 'AUFOaNIA ARTl8T8-Palnl
1na~. &culptur•11 •nd 1rephlc1, Wedne1d1y
throuih O<-t. 30 at Ln1unu Beech Ml.&Mum ol Art.
107 ('liff Dnve ll.30 am. to 4 :30 p.m. W~l·!'wd~yb Monday1 Admlaaionbydonatlon.
T l .. :"'BLURJlED Wl\TEltSCAPES' · Photo
.:rjp~ by Joseph Jachna. now lb11C>U&h Sept. 30
in th,• Orange Con:.t Coll~ee Photo Gallery, Fin~
\rt'> Hu1ldtnR. 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Meaa.
H .i m to 5 p m ~el< days •·ree.
PASTEL POR'tltl\ITS By Alan Murray,
now through t:nd ot September at Haggenmaker
1.allt•raes, 372 N Coaaot lhghway. Laguna Beach.
I to 5 pm. dwly. Free
'WORKS ON PAPER ttOO·lMO' By Chagall
Dalt, ErnM. Klee, Matisi.e, Miro, Motherwell.
Pu:asso. Pollock and others, Sunday through
t)ct 27 Cit the Montgomery Art Gallery, Pomona
College. Claremont. Receptton 8 to 10 p .m. Satur·
dJy Hours· 1 to 5 p.m. daily <ind 7 to 9 p.m .
Wt-dn~ays Frec
t<A \' JACOB DRAWINGS Sunday through
t kt 18 at Ett.mger Gallery, Laguna Beach School
11( i\rt. 2222 Laguna Ci:tnyon Road. 9 a .m. to 4:30
µ m. weekdays. Free.
(;ALLERY OPENING Richard's Gallery,
121 E. 18th St.. Costa Mesa, featuring works by
Wilham Verdult and others. 5 to 10 o'clock
tonight and Saturday. guests tonight the Lennon
Sisters. Fr~.
\RT AUCTION From Robert Sills Gallery.
to benefit child care center, at Golden West
Colle,:ie Community Center, 15744 Golden West
St . llunl1ngton Beach. Preview 7:30 o'clock
tonight, auction 9 o'clock. Free admission
·ECHOES OF THE PAST' --Contemporary
\\.Orks by 12 Indian artists and craftsmen. now
through Sept. 26 at Mills House. 12732 Mam St..
tiarden Grove. Noon to 4 p .m . Thursdays-
~tondays. Free.
TWO.PERSON SHOW , By Merrill Everett
.ind ~arg1t Omar, now through Oct. 2 at DJB
Callery, 1535 B Monrovia Ave .. Newport Beach
10.1 m toJp m. Wednesdays-Saturdays. Free.
\HT PJ\Nf.:11 DISCUSSION On Amencan
Inds.Jn ;.irt, 8 to 10 p.m. Wednesday at Mills House
\rt Gallery. 12732 Main St .. Garden Grove. Free. •
l.A~DSCJ\PES, DRAWI NGS · Landscapes
and scas('apes in oils and pastel portraits by
Louisa Collins, and drawings and prints by Glenn
Martin ... ow through Sept. 29 at Glendale
1··cucro.rt:ravmgs and Loan Art Gallery. 100
:"lcwport Center Drive. Newport Beach. 9 a .m . to
I p.m. Mondays Thursdays, 9 a .m. to 6 p.m.
f''ndays Frt.'t.'
\KT AUCTION Work!> by well-known
.1rtisls. viewing al 7 p.m .. auction 8:30 p.m .
Sept. 23 at Orange Coast Unitarian Universalist
Church, 1259 Victoria St.. Costa Mesa. $5 .
iJ0-9423. 84.2-9468. or 646-4652.
'iEWPORT HARBOR ART MUSEUM
OPEl\lNG · Grand opening of new facilities.
v.1th retrospective of Dawd Park works plus
rom· l>d.ap pa1nt1ngi.. Sunday.~ Page Cl.
THIS MOVIE
IS TOTALLY
.OUT OF
CONTROL
Nt-0 TC)PHAM Pf'f,_../'nl A IW'ITUO<Y F'lam lM:'Jmlt; Pft<X>lK'llUl't
"'n*.. tcDl'IUCJ(V ~ MCMr
"-•M<·l\o• .. ••INIH\ 1<1""111('ifl'•l,,.._·~"""'•N'l ll•Mlil\-.i\
...,,1,.ip-,1, ~~ lllt"l\IR -~.!'~"414 fw.f111k"l\lf(
l\••i... .. 11, l«Wkl K Wfb."•l ... •ll•l" R~IA-'lll'
HI 1 IA ... ~•HY INn 1•1'11,Mltt-mlllJTl(lt'\('(~'Y '-"'
0 l'~H.H4 Flt~ L\(' (BJ~
Galleries I Exhibits
~ ~
FACULTY ART EXHIBIT Tuesday through
Oct 16 In <'..olden West College Community
G11lh:ry, 15744 Golden West St .. Huntington
lit!ach R~ephon 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday. Hours : l
to4 p.m. wt!ekdays. Free.
William Verdult's
'Connecticut
Snowstorm ' will
be ori display ai
tonight's opening
of Richard's
Gallery.
DAVID CARJUJI)INE
OCAD JACOCSON
It's 250 Proof Pun!
as they bust up the
biggest moonshine
racket in the
~.
.. ... In 'Rose Garden· there 1s the flawless performance
of Kathleen Quinlan ... I was unprepared for the
staggering unaffected integrity
Of this performance." -JnnnS1mon NV. Ma0&11ne
"I Never Promised You
a Rose Garden' 1s a
powerful but delicately
structured film ... There are
scenes that brought tears
to my eyes, and scenes that
filled me with joy ... A rapturous
young actress named
Kathleen Quinlan is nothing
short of brilliant."
"It 1s a moving reminder of the
strength and indom1tab1llty of
the human spirit...The
performances are all
superb ... lt is Kathleen
Quinlan's performance
as Deborah that
truly illuminates the
whole film ··***'*"
'Quinlan mirrors Deborah's
inner turmoil ma strong
and sensitive
performance."
t fltt'.f1111f11•1JJ1111111f11•111
l11tlt• M,t~;t/111r
"Kathleen Quinlan gives a remarkable
performance. 'I Never Promised You a Rose
GIJr(jen· is kind of a strong testimonial to the
Incredible .machine that Is man's spirit. ..
SALLY "EU) n1111YllHD
PLUS(R)
'ANNIE
HALl'
STAii iii NG a1a1 ANOellM>N ICATMLelNOUINLAN SYLVIA SIONIY DIANI VAllSI
HARIOR AT ADAMS. COST A M!SA
OaTE MESAVl•DECEHTE• 979·4•4•
~~-l'he story "TEASE RS"
O~T of a winner. PLUS <R> ~~--~<PG> "GIRLS WHO Q1\TElfll; Vt w I LL ~~WOODYALLE~ DO ANYTHING"
IN "LOVE AND DEATH" (PG)
MA.JO.-iTUOIO .. llflVllW .. lllOAY I • fHE MOST IXl"l.OSIVI! .. ICTUlllO .. THI
Yt!Alt'~aLI .. MOH" •••":::,.:;.:!~~~"
P LIZA MINELLI Off ROBERT D£MIRO
·NEW YO~.
NEW YO~·
, edwards LIDO Clt«MA "
HfW,ORT ILVD. AT VIA LIDO
,NEWPORT BEACH 673-SJSO
c1ll11.A1C1 MOMSUR
lfjliO l1i!iOTRtJ~ _,,.,.
e.dwards MESA CINEMA
NfWP'ORTILVD.AT 19THST.
COSTA MESA 548-1552
I
( ,
i
(
•
•
i
>
TVLog TOday'a TV log, in a
new, expanded format,
appears on Page 87 1n
stead of in lhe
Weekender Section.
"I had to stand up
for fT\YSelf alone. and you
know what. they did to me.
Untll all men stand up
for wha.t they believe in ...
the same thing ca.n
ha.-ppen to you'.'
Sheriff Buford Pusser
He fought wars and won them.
He defied Presidents -and mlpt
have been one.
f'riday. September 16. 1977 \ OAIL y PILOT C7
'Garden' Acting Tops
B! 1IOB THOMAS ~~-... NBVE a
· PaOMl8ED YOU A
a o GAaDSN' • tell1
the harrowlnt 11tory of a
teen-awer'a 1tru1tlt to
conquer mental illness.
UnUke the realdenll of
"The Cuckoo '• Neat,"
•he ¥UCCCCds, and the
film ends on an upbeat
note. It Is rouih 1oln1
until then, us Deborah
lurche i; from one
suicidal act to another,
bedeviled by cloudy,
caped phantoms of a de,
sert landscape. Her re-
covery is hampered by
the other patient.a and a
.sadistic orderly, but her
s alvation ia the com-
p asslonate doctor,
sensitively played by
Bibi Anderson. There is
a same:nesa to the antics
of patients in asylum
movies. 8ut this one Is
enhanced by a stunning
performance by
Kathleen Quinlan, a de-
se rvlng nominee for
Academy consideration.
Rated PG.
( A Quick Look . at the Movies J
could rau to be enter-
tamed. Rated PG, large.
ly because or the
lanauaae.
"IC•MTUCKY fl•t•D MOWt•" •s-
Mlllb tlle ._,, Mw .. ~fUM Of tlle time, Nt • ..._ .,..r._. In teoey't
•Im -Id. It's• comedy rev11e wltll
tlKH rMtlftt lrom 3kecolld bOtlH TV cemmercl•I• to • K11n1 1'11 mlnl'-ure. TIMI _,.up of Ille POm-
~· l'ollll-Coufll9"IOlftt Of CIS' "to MlnutH" It wortll tile lldmlulon
11tltt. The comedy reon heevlly OR
w•, nYdtty 11111 .. pltllw., '*'<• Ille
,Ar.ti,._
"M•W YOttK, N•W YO•K" tUC•
Ce.ft In ceoNrll'Q the -·· atylft ..... lftOOdol tlw blQ bMd era foll-Int World w., II. II tells In ac:hlevlnt
worllable se.tw1 or •Ydlence lntettst
Lit• MIMtlll I• in •"'9n<l•d voke •nd <r••I• 1.,._tlly es !tie patient wife.
RMef't DIHlro eo<ttlnYft IM'IM\U• ,._IMd Ylolen(e of "Tul Orlwr." R~PG.
"MA•CM Oil 01•" lltlrtt "'9 eOOt ot tre,....IY encl k>o o11 ... fell\ over ttot
btlnll. Uftlll<o Mar1Y Feldm•n"s re·
uni ettort, tllh Fo<elvn L99'°" movie ''not"--"''° be• comecrv. but It ,..,..,tl•'-••-H laUQM.,. end wllh
O••ndl'°"'*'t -llH and abt<lnl ectlOI\. Too twld, beeavM Wle Ulll It
lmpreulve •nd tlwi photov••Plly s..aoenor. PG.
''OUTLAW at.UIS" Is stertlll'Q -· vrlt~movi. ... 1111c.,.rmerld
...,_.., ....... ....-Is• follt·slntlnt
convkt who 1-P<ltM IP 1 .. r,. th•t
• country music ll•r (Je mu
C•ll-1 1-hit hit IOftQ, M uslc-wlte Su-. Salm Jame~ lllflps Fonda
achieve relrlbullon. 8 w L. Horton's tlewrtcrlPI and AkNrd T. Htlfron'1
•ure"'hendecl direction mdlt~ "Oullew
Bh•s"uurnmercltllQht. PG.
tlllf Olwwy~. n.1111methell\o
ttlllfanl VW Is.....-ine r...i rec. ... ,_ .. ,,,,, Md Mef\K• eftd •
....,..,_ wl .. • lelClllnQ lllOWOff·91119
t.•n<le pllOlecl by Jyfe $0tnm••t.
He..ie•1 *"suffer Int ewMr I• 0.tft
'*''"·MCI 0on Knocts 11Ill1 llllf'Obllnv me<~. The lllm conl•lnt ewry.
tlllng ucepl -•-• wit. ••tee! o.
"TM• lftY WHO t.OY•O Ml" It
11lnl• .. lond; 11111 ume ,.,. 111. delat1Qab4o 001 jolM with 1111 fotm.f
eMmlfl of KOi, ptlnc1.,.11y • 11\llllle
••-played by a.orb.are llt<ll, In
cemballng • INPP1119 "'6111<11• -Ci.rt Ju~ -wllO collecb nuclNr .uo.
rnulne1. Olrector Lewis Giibert
mlllnl.iM • modlc~ of bell•v•&lllly
..,cl Rllllf' Moore no'°""'' ... mt un· comfort.ot• 1oiio.1no ~ Contwry's eel. Raled PO.
"THI UIT •llMAK• Of' a•AU
o•STI" ....... H. 9'9-trv •t lll'ldlnt lauQht In • W>OOI ol foreign l499lon
movlet. Some ot '"" 9'9Qt are out ra0tOU$IY tunny, m..,y are simply
oul••G"ul Marty F•ldman •nd
Mlt .... I Yorll o••v klenllc•• twin•
llwlnsn -jol11 ,,.. 1091on An,..
Margret h 11'91r lalCIYIOYS lleP..
mother. Peter Usllnov pleyt the
t.adlstlC MrOHnt. PG.
"A a•100• TOO f'A•"
rtpt~tt•WOfldW•rllooe<•lt0<>tn
• lavllll llYI• th.al Ille ... r1.,,.. AlliK
touldK.,Ulyattord. TIMwietlM:lo 11
lml>'"61,.., ...o !tie hu,,..,. uorltt .,..
lntell~ly dlrKled A.Cecl PG, Ille
fll m c.onlAllM much bametltkl oort
"ITA• WAllS" 11a1~11 film •
ewor1<ottucll-rlntlm499lna11ont"'9t
II wlll Mtl tllndll•dt for YHrt t.o tome.
TIM <•II. hN-by Ale< Gulnell,
Marl< Htrnlll •nd C.rrl• Ftthtr, IS un-iformly 90'>d, but llW •NI ttars ere lhe
N>e<ialtttectswlurctt. A•ted PG.
"THI 0•1••" ••• IUCle•b IKlven-
ture. not K llorrlfytno •• "J•w.-• but more Mtl$1ylr19. Tl'9 "-ter 8oru;hley
ON• Ott Ottl!" 11 -tiler h-y plot lnvolvea • <•Ul>M (Jac:q.,.tlrwa
wmrrMr W<l>(fM. an unprelentlous llluat, Nick Nolte! wllo dla<over a
lllm brlmmlno "'"" htart and WorldW•rllwrtc:kona Kuba·dtvlno l•uQhter. lltobbv Ben"°" h an .,,.. v•catlon In S.r,.,,.,d•. The t•roo.
def\IHd b••ll•tb•ll hotshot who morptllne. Undernulh Is •n ancient ••••n• ... Pltf•ll• ,,, ... att14•tlc I•<-•hip with Sl*llSll 90111. TM P•lr .,. tory ..,_ •nd his !ether, Jerry. helped by '"·wlM diver (Aoberl
"SMOKEY AND THE
BANDIT" has been
described by its director,
Hal Needham, as "pure
f u n -·anyone who
believes a word or it
s hould see a shrink.··
Fair enough. This re·
viewer caught it late, in
the company of factory
workers a n d sub·
urbanites who seemed
totally amused. The plot
Is purely kinetic. Burt
Reynolds is point man
for Jerry Reed, who is
racing a truckload of
beer across several
states. Jackie Gleason,
who plays lhe redneck
mont ~ dl...ctecl with an..,.. H•lllanlLOul1Gooalt1 PG. "THEOEEP" EDWARD'B~ LIDO
cltritandlnQOf ti. camous sc-. Ital· -:::=========:::;:--
s.o-1, -· ine -re Krlpl, -La· s ... wl ...0 ~d by • murderous ~
ed PG, but 1her•"• nttte .., a.,,. C•ll 642-5678. wlll be shown before Newport _ v 1·9 L·ido
clllld,.....-,i. Put • few words and after the preview.
''MACA•THU•'' conv1nclngty -~~~to~w~o~r~k~f~o~r~o~u~.~~~~~~~~~~~~!N~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~!-!~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~ ,.Df-.C..S the -end 1 .. 1 ol IM wer• In , ... P..:lllc end Kore•.
sherifC, is in hot p.ursuit.
The action is so fast. the
humor so down·home.
the stunt.q so outrageous
that on(y a sourpuss
G•990'Y ~II ---ltle P"r>lcal be••'"' -"'9 llffolc q.,.11ty of the l•roer--.Hle werrior. but his,_
Pl••llln ere not c911t......, In IN Hel
ll•rw-.Metthew It-I'" t<tlpl
Splendtd '-' ,...,_ lrom Oen O'Herll...., H ,._Iden! A_,..lt end
Ed Flandit<t es Preslcltnt TNmen
R•tt<I PG
"The Year's Best Movie
•star Wars' has brought fun back
to the movies and glowingly
demonstrated they ttlll can
make •em Hke they used to.
A grand and glorious fllm."
lrne ~
"A t:lell of a lot of tJn .. brirtis
with adventure, charm
and marvels, I loved It.''
Joe' krot ,..,~..,.... Mogoil"9
MOVIE RATI*18
FOR fMENT8 AND
WUNOPEOPLE
Jiit ttffC ... "' .... ,....,, .... ""-,., .... --__ _," _ .. ,_,., ........ ., _ ,,.,... ...
&U ACU Allll lllO ""4rll...,..., ,;: ..
All &CU Aoet1nro
'"'"'•' wt4111114 ~IM ·:!·
au mm•
~., ..... , .... ~ '""'" .... "~ 0
® 10 -UllOO 11 IOtllfllD IA.-111• .. INY•...,
Ill'"'"" M iii
"' . ,,,, ... .. ·~·· .. ""· ....... o .. ....
..... llC ..... C..•at~· ..... ....
..
A ·A"
'THEATRES-ORANGE COUNTY.
U8'S "THE SPY WHO .,,. &Ar-
a-.. " SO. COAST PWA l..OVEO ME"' CPGI ,_ 10:21 c..... "RETURN OF THE PIMK ~• ~~ PAMTHElt" ait!:(~~•
IUll'S SO. COAST PWA ....... ,.._..,
1111
"LOVE AND DEA TH .. ,_,..,.
IAT/1'JM.>,»_l.,H
"ROCKY"
.... 111 •M IAT/-h»WN:JI --...... ~--~------:,.::::::::::;;;
IAB'S so. C8&ST PlW ....... •au
1181 ,.. ... ........... .... --
"A STAR IS IORM" •-t•.Jt U.T/,_h,._.t .. >e
.. CASAR.ET'' ..... ,~
• .._.." ... .. ,._._.,.,..
''&fD OF TH! WOllU>"
. '
( ..,
I
(
t
. ., . . . . . f •
Q OAI~ y PIL_O"--r ----r _____ F_•-.•d_..•r._·..;;;~ .... ·p.._1.;;.;or_nbo;;;.;;.;,.r ..;.1 e ... ...;1.:.97::.:...7 . '
English Rock:
Punk' the Word
Whal'• reall)' haprwn
1na w1th the punk !or
B1W ao IN~N [ J
"new wo••" > ac•n• on ROCK. T .4LK
t:naland'" I• 1t •• b11 as
tht' overseas pr<·~• would
ha\t' lb bt'h~v~" When
ur.-tht l' aroupi. coming
to Amenca, ond v. ho, 11
uny ol them, v.111 "mah
H" here"
He~'s the update
THE PUNK population
In London IS growina.
Each week there are new
bands and new clubs (the
Marquee, the Vortex and
the Nashville present
bands regularly>. a nd
there an~ stars and a
d e finite hierarchy
even in a scene that a
year ago hardly existed.
o nly Britis h "punk"
bond who hav e
performed In Amerlc11 -
1n New York and Los
Angelt•s. But with their
m'ukeup und glltttiry
thcutracat :,luge preis
ence, they're not really
indicative of the "real"
UK punk scene.
OTHER UK punk band
news: Eddie and the Hot
Rods are changing their
name to The Rods; a new
band called 999 got a
great r esponse when
they played The Vortox
last week; the Adverts
single is hot; Generation
"Ch1C'ago 1970" by Joseph Jachna is one
of that photographer's works in "The
Blurrt'<.i Waterscapcs ... now through 'Sept.
30 in Orunge Coast College's Photo
Gallery m the Fine Arts Building, open 8
to 5 p.m . \\oeekdays . Admission 1s
• Top of the heap, of
course, are the Sex
Pistols, whose singles
have been No. 1 in
England, but who are not
yet sig n ed to an
American label. The
word is that they're ask·
ing something close to a
mlllion dollars, a figure
that the big record com-
panies here are reluctant
lo spend.
~·& single «Hied ''Your -~~------------~---~~~~~~~~~~
Because 01 their rep·
utation, the Pistols Mill
have trouble getting jobs
in England. so when they
do perform, they do so
under an assumed name,
and if word gets out, the
gig 1s 1mmed1alely can-
celed ·
THE PISTOLS even·
tually do plan lo come to
the U.S. for that Russ
Meyer film manager
Malcolm McLaren has
been working on .
McLaren h as a ls o
mum bled something
about performing an af.
ternoon con cert in
Madison Square Garden,
·but J wouldn 't call for
tickets yet.
The Clash have had
huge ~oncert s uccess in
Londltn (they sold out the
Rainbow last ·spring>.
<1 nd the ir debut CBS
album was on the UK
c h arts But their
manager , Bernard
Rhodes. says that he
doesn 't plan lo bring
them here for two years
because ''America isn't
ready for them and
• they're not ready for
America " One can 'l be
sure if he's seriou$· .
The Damned are the
-~_..~
AUCIHCMA .. UJIGAIHlllATS. IYH YOAY'TI. 2·>0•111 •ti U
-DC>t.R•ACK fOLAZA t IM• ... 1111.I II tit ............. .,.......... .. .. "'•
..... ,,::... ~p ...
~ ~ THUT auro '""
-~-~ ?>II . . ..
~ ,,.., ....
"JAllHWM.1'" Ill
Ill ,,, .. " ... "" '"TMI SIX
MACHINI" Ill _,,.
"WAI Of
'THI WOILDS" IGI loJM<J .. , ..
"'WHIM WOILDS
COUJDI" IGI ,_ .. , ...
"WilOFntl WOll.DS"l6t
... MollWclt
"WHIM WOti.DS
COUJDrl4JI Ill.._ ....
Generation" a nd pro-
duced by Sweet's pro·
ducer > is eagerly await·
ed this week ; and Stiff
Records' Elvis Costello
performs every Sunday
ni g h t to mobs a t the
Nashville. ·
Everyone in the Lon·
don scene was dlsap·
pointed when the
Ramones cancelled their
scheduled Nove mber
lour (due to a dispute
with Phonogr am, their
UK record company).
but as or this week.
problems m ay be re-
:,olved so that they can go
there for a mini-tour of
seven or eight dates.
SOl'Tll COAST .
· JHf A fUt
l Ar.IJNA er ACH q.n l\t-l
P"Ni9MIY Mat!Me~ • Sot. -Sun. I :45
THEATRE I
"THE SPY
WHO LOVED
ME" (PG)
THEATRE 11 --
"WAR OF
THE WORLDS"
"WHEN WORLDS
COWDE° CGJ
15&1 W. SUNFLOWER
W OF BRISTOL C M. 540 05M + "STAI WARS" U'GI
A_ "JAllllWAU(" llJ
? "A IRJDGI TOO FAI"
''lllMTUC1CY RllD
MOYll" Ill
"THE SPY WHO LOVED ME"
"T~E SORCERER" (PG) .
"SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT"
"THE STING" (PG)
·~NEW YORK. NEW YORK" (PG)
fUffiJRN-OF-fME PJNK PANT~::a.---.
"FANTASIA" (G)
3 -60 min.
CASSET.TES
•4.42
CASSETTE
OR 8-TRACK
HEAD Cl'..EANER
•1.42
CINEDOME 23
3000 W ()HAPMAH AY( 011AHO£
IM-2113 ........, ... ,......, ......... , ... ........... , .... , ..... ...
PACIRC'8 rmI1LtIJ DOME
.,_.,....... aciurwooo .. ,. _ ... , ............ _
. . ... -.
A FRANK YABLANS PRESENTATION
MARTIN RANSOHOFF-FRANK YABLANS PRODUCTION• "THE OTHER SIDE OF MIDNIGHT'
CHARLES JARROTT FILM • Stair"'& MARIE·FRANeE PISIER •JOHN BECK • SUSAN SARANDO
RAf VALLONE • flrooiac1 by FRANK YABlANS • Uecutive Prodl.cer HOWARD W. KOCH, JR.
0or«:1a1 by CHARLES JARROTT • Sa~ by HERMAN RAUCH ER aro DANIEL TARADASH
....... SIDNEY SHELDON • Music by MICHEL LEGRAND
I
c
1
i
(
l
, .
,
#
' }
FORD'$ NEW
FIESTA
FOR 178
HERE NOW
-1.6 lttre OHV engine. frt>nt wheel drive. 4
speed manual transmission. Several models to
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TEST DRIVE
ONE TODAY
lOMPGCITY-
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YOUI MIUAGI MAY YAIY
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arpeting. 302 Cl D engine. aelect·ahlt
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Ins-complete. Stk. #5377. Ser. t7K91F172318
Friday. September 18. 19n
•
5 100 •. DOWN
WILL DELIVER
AMY MEW.OR USED CAR
OR TRUCK
IN STOCK
SE HAI~ ESPANOL f'~ ' . .
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DAIL'( PILOT DI
2 Year-
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thru 1977.
~ow, LOW PRICES!
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Power steering, V-8 engine. cfulse-0-Matic, WSW radial tires. front & rear bumper guards,
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NEW'77
FORD F-250
Ill CUSTOM STYUSIDI PICKUP
DISCOUNT
5 155'55
1970 BUICK
SICTUD
MEW 177
PINTO
2DOORSEDAH
Light Blue 2 3 Litre ~V engine. 4 speed
manual transmission, front disc brakes, Rac:lt &
Pinion steering, vinyl bucket aeats. color
keyed carpets, mini console, elec. rear
window defroster, steel belted radials. wheel
covers. deluxe bumper, Caltl. emission. Stk.
#8426 Ser. I 8R 1OV405896
53177
MEW 177
FORD
llAMCAEltO 500
351 CID V-8 engine. AM radio, tinted glaea.
Ser. #7M7H183071. Stk. #5413.
1969 PONTIAC
IXICU11YI Z DOOi
4 cyt.. 4 speed, It. blue beauty.
(177KEL) 52577~
V·8. auto. trans .. factory air
conditioning, pawer steering, PoWer
brakes. radio, driven Iese than
10.000 ml. a year. See to appreciate.
V·8, auto. trans .. factory air
conditioning, power steering, power
brakes. radio, wide track cherry.
()(YS048) •
1972 MUSTANG
PAITIAal v-e. auto. tran... p0wer 1teerlng.
radio, whitewall tires. Landau toP.
Sharpeat In town. (739POEl
s2777
1972 DATSUN
llO
4 cyl., auto. trans.. vinyl Int.nor.
Super little car. (817GNI)
51677
(913ETB) ~ 1777
1971 FORD ,.... -
V·8, a~tc>. tran1.. factory air
conditioning, full power. vlnyt roof.
vlnyt lntertor. Hard to find model.
(217GR0)
'1777
1971 TOYOTA
CalCAST
4 cyt .. 4 speed, air conditioning,
radio. mags. Sharp and ready.
(945DVX)
52477
5 1677
..
,,
,,... ••
r •
8% DAILY f>ILU I ' 1 uJer ~pt1mu.r 1 e 1vi1
If your hon1e town is in the Soutti Coast Alea,
we're your hon1e town real estate companyl
"WE WORK HARD TO SELL HOMES .RIGHT!"
txrANSIVE VIEW
ONl Y $ 128,.500
1 his l'll'11•n• honw \oh h11li on "
11111 with. dlOl(l' ••l·W l gel \IOry
w11h 4 bdrm1 3 b .. th\ 2 lrplu,
trml din ron jc.ir l!<ll•~e&only 15
mu \ old
(7 H I 759·1501
IRVINE BARGAIN
Only S76,000 buys 1h1s lovely
family home in choice lrv1nl'.
Clo~ to schools & shopping • 3
lge bdrms, 2 baths, newly carpel·
ed & freshly pa1nied.
(7141 759-1501
SPANISH CHARMER
IRVINE
Only S98,SOO. Home for JC!IYI~
fmly clo\e to 1enn1s Ct\ & lovely
p4rk, 4 lgc bdrms, family rm Ille
roof, btll vc1uhed ce1 hngs. sn..\
like a model.
(714) 7S9-1S01
GOLF COURSE BEAUTY
Pnced JI S147,000 1his cholcl!
Mt:\d Verdl• execullve home. 5
lge bdrm\, 3 b.iths. huge fJmoly
room, w/lge frplc Cool 0C1.·an
hrl'l'lf'\ (714) 759-1501
BTFL 3 BDRM
' 2 b.11h, don rm, fmly rm, paiio &
• _. comm pool.FHA/VA terms OK -
Submit. (714) 963-5671.
CHARMING CONDO
$68,SOO
~1111(14' \Wry· \how-. l1kt .i mod1•I
5p4tf! for your c.1mper Of bo.u
lovt'IV pool & clubhouse. All of
1h1\ µlu\ monuu•s IO beo1<"h.
(714) 759· 1501
UNOBSTR.,CTED VIEW
Of enllre uppet Back 8.ty &
sparkling loghrs at night. Superb
pride of ownership evidenced in
1h1s spacious 3 bdrm, 3 bath, Npt
Sch execu~ home. __.r (714) 646-n n
BEACH BEAUTY
B1llly decoraced 3 bdrm 2 ba1h
charmer. Sunken li11ing rm
w/cathedral ce1hni;is. Councry
kuchen leads 10 lge redwood
decking area wt gas BBQ & fire-
pit. Terrific area close 10 beach.
(714) 646-7711
BOAT SUP
h c1vailable wl1h thi\ 3 bdrm )
b.ith beach beauty only S yrs new.
Sp.idou\ rm Sil~. frml don rm &
superb professional decorating.
BE-.ich livlns at In best!
(714) 646-7711
BTFL 4 BDRM
2 ba1h -fmly rm, pool & much
more. Anxious owner -Submit
Terms. (714) 963-5671
WAlk TO BEACH
from this 4 bdrm 2 ~lh w/dinong
rm l.,ge lmly rm w/conversa-
toon pit & fireplace. 111 mile from
ocean on quiet cul-de-sac.
Proleuion&lly landscaped. Real
pride o f ownership home.
(714) 646-7711
MESA DEL MAR
New llsllng -Immaculate inside &
out. Lge fmly rm, 4 bdr~. 2
baths, abun<bnt storase. Walk to
K hooh & shopping. Call for
more Info.
(714) S45-9491
VA TERMS -LOWDOWN!
Sharp 3 bdrm & fmly rm o" tree
lined streel. C real floor plan.
Hrwd floors. Wilk 10 schools &
shoppin3. Betcer hurry it's o nly
SSS.~. (714) S4S-!M91
RECENTl Y REDUCED
$4,000
Over 2300 sq fr of "Clas\1c"
beauly w/va.uhed ceilings, wi1lk-
1n bar & Kreal \lorage. 4 bdtms,
fmly rm & frml din rm. Bric.k en
yc1rd tntrdnce &-only 10 mos old.
Ne.ir 5o. Coasl Plaza. At S93,99S
1h1\ won'1 last! (714) S45·9491
WALK TO BEACH
4 bdrm 2 ba1h -d in rm, luxury
111ras -Anx1oui -Submll.
(714) 963-5671
MESA VERDE BEAUTYl
Lvly lge 3 level fmly home In btfl
.irea. Very nicely deoorated & on
xlnt cond1t1on. Has 4 bdrms & lrge
fmly rm w/frplc. Lots of tre~ &
cement volley b<ill or piddle
tennis court.
(714) s.45-9491
GREAT MESA VERDE
FAMILY HOME
4 lxfrms, hufe fmly rm, w/frplc &
rm for poo table. 8tfl gardens,
tastefully upgrade~Be sure to
.ee 1h1s one h's pn right1
( 14) S45·9491
VETS..
$65,500
Is 1he unbelievable low price of
this super clean 3 bdrm MC
home in one of the ~t neigh·
borhoods you'll find. This spa-
cious residence will make 1he
perfect "starter" home.
(714) 897-0321
NEW LISTING
Spacious 3 bdrm home on prtm('
H.B. locale. Nestled at 1he end of
c1 child ~afe cul-de·\.te. Tho~
immaculate ho me feacure\ .i IKl'
"French" kitchen, uram1c Ille
entry, brick frplc, hardwood
flo0ts, trailer accessl Hurry!
(714) 897-0321
GARDENER'S DEllGHT
Is the only way to describe this
immaculate 3 bdrm 2 b;ich home.
No lawnmowt'r needed here Juu
en1oy the btfl cool tree \hided,
grounds from your lge cov'd
p.mo. A v.ilue buy under S70,000.
(714) 897--0321
COOL Off
This summtr m the sparkling
w;iters of your own H & f pool
. This btfl C.G. liomulso offe" gu
BBQ, malntenanc.! free yard,
new crpt, wallpaper & p•ont
Priced under $70,000
• 171'11 897-0321
$58,SOO "All TERMS"
GI welcome, 111ra sharp J bdrm.
d!!n 2 ba1h. Plus enclosed pa110.
family kttchen. Bullt-im, no wJ~
floor, wood cabinets, used brick
lrplc. Can't last, see & compare.
(714) 546-17S4 or (n4) 968·3371
BIKE TO BEACH
Btfl Seabreeze Condo, spiral
wrought iron stairway, loft ms1r
bdrm, l1plc, private patio • btfl
condi11on. Lowest price in area
(714) 968.JJ71
FIX.ER -UPPER
Best H.B. buy -562,900. 3 bdrm 2
bath -nice house. Seller will pay
$1,000 buye" C.OSC -Submit .
. (714) 963-5671
SAVE $S$
I ho~ ne.ir new 4 bdrm, 3 bath, 2
)IOry Cl;is~1c home neecb land-
\caponR HH mo1ny upgr.idei.
rrml don rm, fmly rm, wet ~r.
bdrm & b.ih on 1st floor. Vaan1.
pnc<'d under mark~ at S9J,900
for f.i\t \.tle--See & compare
(7141 S46-17S4 or (n4) 9611-337'
4 BDRM -2 BATH
PAINT & SAVE
N~ds redecorating • Pflced
right, only $74,900. Vacant,
'ubmll tefms -F.v. HI.
1714) 546-1754 or (n4) 968 .• 3371
7 MOS NEW
"(c1\tmong Villa". Spacious 3
l>drm 2 bath ·sec. patrol. -1.u~ury
~lrilS incl electric 3arage door -
cu\tom decor : Hurry can't l;astl
(714) 963-5671
3 UNITS
GI term,, return 1st yr. JuH
reduced $5,000 • Call for Info.
(714) 963-5671
3BDRM
l bath -pool • CIA· An~1ou\ -
Seller will pay $1,000 of clo$lng
cost. CRV $65,000.
(n11 963-5671
Walker&. Lee Sold 13,889 homes in 1976 ••• and that's a record! List your home for sale with the hard-working record setters!
a er ee
m· COSTA MESA FOUNTAIN VALLEY HUNTINGTON BEACH
OFFICE: OFFICE: MAGNOLIA ADAMS OFFICE:
klA\flJk• 2790 Har~~ Blvd. 17213 Brookhurst Street 9032 Adams Avenue
Costa Mesa, A 92626 Fountain Valley, CA 92708 Hun~ton Beach~ CA 92646
(714) 545-9491 or (714) 545-0465 (714) ~-1754 or (714) 966-3371 (714) -~671 or {n4) 556-7035
PUBLIC NOTICE
s.""2t
SU ... RIOll cou•r 0111 THI
STAH ot'CALI lllOllNIA lllOR
THI COUWTYOlllO•ANOIE "···-NOTICIEOlll ltl[A•INOOlllf'ITITIOH
pro• P'ltOIATI 0' WILL ANO '0a
LIETTE•STISTAMINTAaY
E\tete of MARJORIE E BEALS,
•IM> k-n M. EVELYN BEALS,
De<•~..,
NOTIC.E IS Hl!Rl8Y GIVEN 11\el
MIL OREO TAYLOR 0..\ IU.cl ... r•ln e
P"lillon lot ProWI• of Wiii •nd ,.,. h
\V•r><• of L.el•rs THl-lery lo It•
""""-· rt>ler...ce lo Wfllcl\ Ism-lor r1K1""' tiitrtlcul•"'· ...., IN! IN
11me -Ola. of Nerlno '""Mm•"•• o .. n .. 11« Oct •, 1'77,•110:00 • "' , In Ill• coun.._.. of Oe~rt--n No. 2 of
.... ,o coun, •• 700 Cl¥1c Certlff Orlve
Wot, In Ill• Clly ol !>•nl• An•,
Celllornle. Oel..S~pt. 12, ttn.
WIL.UAMe.MJOMN,
CowltyC!erk
CALL.ISTea & CAWSTe• suw.., .... ..-
L••A ........ CA.•1•
....... Cllll.-W
An.....,tw...U .....
Pu1>11''*' or-c.oett o.1111 f'llot s.-p1 u, 1•, n. 1•11
«l»-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICAI 0, -RISf'ONSI llLITY
Hotl<• I• lw••blf 91ve11 10..1 1N "" de"IG'*f Wiii nol be r_fl .... I«
•nv _,.,. 11.ollhltt contr.c:ted ..,,
•nyonl' -r ti-mywtf, on or •lier
lhi\Clet• O•ted t111s 1•111 .,_., of Septem-. ,.,,
Jo""W Jllltner m ~Ide eo-4 wut
Newport 9Ncll. CA '7"'41
Publl"""" ()>'-CM•! Oelly Piiot,
Sept-r IS. 1', n, 1'11 ~).77
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUlaUSINIESS
NAMISTATIMl[NT
T lie lol lowlftQ pet_. .... CIOl ftQ busl •
nett•\
8AL80A C INEMA ANO
WIL.5"1RE'Tl4EATER, 70t I!. 8olll0e,
-pot18oocll, CA'2'41
Me9l, L•tern Enterprlut, •
Cellfomlo CMP«•llen, 709 E. BelllO ..
Hewpott e.odl, CA '2"1 o-Hoyt, "17 Al'lenl, Huntlnglaft
Bff<ll.CA •
Tlllt la*nee It '4ftductecl llY a<«·
-•tlaft Mofl<LollttW'lt ~"" Oe.nciHoyt
f'resldllftt
Tiiis .._... -lllod Wltll t1le
Coufl(y OOt1I °' ... Or-Col;My "" AYQl>St!t, ttn 11111 ..
PuDllttlN or~ c:-t Delly f'llot.
5-pt 2.•. 16,22,""
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
llllCTITIOUS IUllN•ll
NAMI STATIM•NT
TN lol'-1119-wo•no ......_
MUM: LUXURY LIVING MOBILE:
HOMIS, 2n Hottft Henow llouleverd, S.nt• Afte, Gelltotlli• f'l7Cll
8 & 8 RESALES, INC .. le
Celll.,_,. cor.,.r•llonl, JU North
Herbor 8ouleverd, S•nto An•,
CAll-•'71113
Tiiis butlnht Is~ "' • <«· ooreuon
8 & 8 RESALES. INC em P'rl••mutll, Tr_.ff
Tl'll\ "~-wet llllCI wllll tM Counly Cieri! ol Or•~ Counl11 on
AUVull 2S, 1'n ... ,_
Publl,...,, Or_,. <=oett 0.Uv Pllo4.
Sept. 1. '· "· u . 1m mt-n
PUBUC NOTICE
C~I ,..,Ill
'f'ICTITIOUS IUSINIH
NAMll nATIMINT TM'°""""'.,._ Is dOlnv lllnl• neMot:
IAMMV'S HOLi IN TME WALL. Ult 9aMr street, Colt• #IMM, CA tU1'.
Rica JIM Mer'Mlle, c/9 ... c.plW
Slreet, Colle MeM. CA. f Tlllt ........ It <-.Cl.., by.,• dlvldl*.
Rice.-.. MoneKe
Tlllt .. ....._... .._. flled wit!\ llftO
c-ty OM1•0r-. COWlty Aut 2', ""· oaov1a 11e.ow CICMlll'OttAnOM ,., ...............
~c. . .-•1er.--.11Mf .....
Pulloll ...... or-Coelt Deity ~$o91. z. •. ,,, n, cm
PUBUCNql'ICE
PUBUC NOTICE
SUNRIOll CIOUllT Ofl THI
ST AH OP CAU,.,.!YA 'Oil
TMR COUlfTT OP OllAllOll ... ~
NOTICR 0111 MIARING 0111
lllRTITICIM flCMt "°9ATe 0111 Wl&..L
ANO LITTaas 0' AO ·
MINl"RATtON WITN WILL A ...
NllCIO
E,1411• Of AGNES E MEHl.LER,
DK•...S. NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVl!H '1Nit
JAMES E He11111, PUBLIC AO·
MINISTRATOA ... ftled 119'9111e11911-
tlClfl w .,,....,... OI wlll end letters
of edmll'llotreCIClfl wl1h Wiii ·-•ICI,
relffenc.• IO~ I• m-fOf IVf'Nr
penlcul.,s -tll•I llW ""'• enCI
pl•U Of llffrlno 1,,. wme llH """ wt lo<~ 5. 1'71. et 9:00 e.m., In
!he courtr-'! of o.s>ertl'Mllt Ho. J of
seld COUt1. el 100 Ovlc Center Orlve
WHt Ill IM Cl!Y of S.11•• An•, ceutomle
0•ted~14,"11 WILUAMl.llJOMH, c-ity~
ADRIAN ICUYNR,
COUNTYCOUNHL
JUL.le R. IAMI, DllllUTY
611 QwkCIMllr OW. w ... 111.0 .... tm
Jell .. AAe. (alifwllfl 91711
Te410 MI..._,
Att~ .... : .......
~, .... or-. CNlt Delly ~lo«. S.Jk ,._ IS, ... 22, 1m ....,,,
PUBUC NOTICE
ea s a e
HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH NEWPORT/IRVINE @ SPRINGDALE BOLSA OFFICE: OFFICE: OFFICE: --2640 San Miiuel Drive -6042 Bolsa Avenue 2043 Westcliff Drive
Hunting,ton Beach, CA 92647 Newport Beach, CA 92.660 Newport Beac , CA 92660
(714) 759-1501 (714) 897-0321
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICI[ TOCRIOITOaS
Wf'l••oacouaTOlllTMl
IT A TS OP CAU lllOll NI A lllOR
TMI CIOUNTY 0111 ORANOI ..........
Estel• OI HANNAH HOT ICI HS,
OK-.
NOTICE IS Hl!Rl!8Y GIVEN lo,,_
Credi ton of IN MIOY't ftemed de<edelli
tllet ell __,. llevt119 Clelmt -O-IMI
-wk! OK-en f'eCIVI,..., to Ille lhem. wlll\ l"9 nKMMrV vouchers, In
IM offl(.e ol IN Clefll ol llW allOw ert-tlt--.n, w to-' tllom, wit!\ 1119 _ _,, -Nn. lo 1119 "'*'"9Md
et HICJ(fY & NEULANO, AltorM'f' el
~ ... :1»91 ~I Ml'MI. Ste. sot..
l!I TOf'O, CMlfOf'fll• ••ao. Wfllcll " '""
ploce of"""""' ol 11• -n•QftOCI In •II m-'Mri .. IUllllflO lo CM ••tel• ol
l'tld oeotdtnl, wlll\ln tour mofl!M •fter tM f Ir• &llllll~tiGll ef 1111• notlc.e.
Oot.ct...,.t 10, tt17.
MAllllC I!. HOTICINS
l~ollheWlll
o11NaboWN1meddK-M
MICICrt 8 NaULAND ... __,_ .. .... t:lt9t.....-n ........... .
a1T-.CA ....
A .................
Pulllltlled Or11191 Coott Oell'I PllOt .... .,..,...,,,,tt,tm m..n
PUBUC NOTICB
(714) 540-8944 or (714) 646-7711
PUBUC NOTICE
pr1CTIT10UI aUSINHS
HAMalTATllMllfT
Tllo .......... #W9Dft .. dol119 buM·
-ft: "\ SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Sf'RINTl!R, "" w .. w1119 Clr<I•, C.to Mose, CAma.
~ 9. Woll. 27'9 Wowl119 Cir·
do, COJi. Mne. CA '2•». Tlllt llYllMl• I• Condwded by en ,,,_
clYICIWll
~8.Wolf
Tlllt Itel-Wb flled Wllll Ille
eouncv O«'ll °' Orenve c.ountv on A.,._ 2',ltn
11111n2
Putlllslwcl Or-Coffl Oally PllOt
Sept 7, '· 1', 23, Hn
319+11
"'" ................... ar...,.c.. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
--------1House. For We EaRORS: Ad•ertis.rt •••• ••• • • ••••••••••••••
should chKk ~k ads G.-rol I 002
':I ..::di~ Te;;••··~~~~;~~:~~~····
DAILY PILOT GIMl'MI Chance oC a lifetime to
lability for the first ift.. buy in De yshor~s. 3 cornet inieriiononlv. Bdrms., 2 baths ; pnvale ---------'•! pa l10. Completely re-modeled garden home . -----------rftubl1her's Hoffee: You musl see It to believe
PUBUC NOTICE All real eatate advertised It. Call for app't, $159,500
llllCTITIOUI IUSINISS
NAMIUTATEMINT
Tiie follOlllftg--0'9 clolnv llull--• •: SPORTS HOM&S. 10092 Gertleld
Avenue, HwttlllllOll 8HCll, CA. '2 ... l'tllllp H. McNarMe, llSI .. mer
Drive, eosi. -.. CA. tU» Dew Slmtwo. ,,. ~lie Ter-
rec.e, eor-• ,,.., . CA. mu 'tlllt D<ISIMH ,, conel\ICIM by •
..,.r .. per\Mntllp.
OeleSl,,.,,.o
Tiiis stet-I w• llMll w1t1t U.
Courtty OOt11 °' 0r-. c-.c... on A4'0o u.cm.
111•r• PU!llltllod 0..... Coftt Delly lllllOt,
A.,.,.a».-~r2,t, it. 1'11 11;.n
in lhia newspaper la sob· C I _......
Ject to the i-~ederat F111r • F. ~O 8SwU1 u•z llousing Act ot 1968 a111A•f RS , .... •o o which ma,lte.s It llleial to1_..-.-_____ •_wv __
advertise "any pre·1·----••••-
rerence, limitation, or PLEASE call "have us
dlscriminaUon based on tell )'OU about.a terrific
race, color, rell1lon, aex, b u v i 0 beaut 1fu1 or national orlgln, or an ' Intention to make any Eaatbltlf. A 5 bdrm., 3
auch preference, UmUa· bath, with dlnln&,rm. & a
tion,ordiscrimlnatlon." view, too. Walkw pool, tennil, schoob, churches This newspaper will not " .. ..: 1 ... knowingly accept any Suvpp,...
adverlislnl for re1I
estate-which ii in viola· ----------t Uoooltbelaw. l'HIJ 833-9781 Hester-Brown · Pf Al 10~5
PUBUC .NOTICE ......... u.
I
c
1
l
(
t
'
'J
___ ..,_.., --_....,.
I I ~!~.~~.~~ ...... j~~:::~~~.~~u•u•o• ~~:::.~~.~~ .......... ~.~!:!!.~~-~~.• ........ ~~!!!!.~~.~~.~ ........ / ~~!:!!.~~~~....... Friday Septombclr 16 1977 DAILY PILOT D3
., .. ,_, IO~C.tMrel 1001 .-rof IOOZ GtMrol 1002 ~=.-:a! .......... !~.~~!:~~~ .......... !~.~~ ~~~!!!.~~~-~~ ........ ~~!!!!.~~.~~ ....... ,~~!!!!.~~.~~.•: ...... .
•••• ••• • ••• • •• •• ••• •• •• •• •• ••• ••• • • • ••• ••••• •• •••• • • ••• • • • • ••• ••• •• •• ••• ••• • •• • • • ••••• •• •••• Gr..-rol I 002 G..-.rol I 002 GeMf>ol I 002
-DUPLD AD CORRICTIOH
Wl" h ve dvert.l l'd 1 dupleox with 4
bdrm." 3 bat.hi; & 1 hdrn\ untt with
1 bath We have ml•nuont!d ~onu•
possibll' nexablhty lo lhf rlrat noor •
huv1n.c 4 bdrms • dtn & 3 bulhi.
howeH•r. lcl't. muke st ell'ur, the pro
Pl'rh '' R -2. with 2 I ·gal 1111ih
$1~.000
YOVU Ull OW UP
ext>«'r•enc<.-d Jl~b per~onncl
759-081 I
Fiul .,_,
6'u! Wut.na SU,.
1 ooi Gew«ol 1002
··•···········••·•·•••···················••···
SUPER CLIAH, HIDDIH 2 SJORY
Fabulous family home! A 2 slory that
looks like a 1 story! 4 bdrms, 3 baths.
formal dining, island kitchen. an
added lanai and lush backyard with
maximum privacy. A new listin~ that
won't last long at $136.500.
U~lf)UI: fi()MI:§
REAL TORS'. 546·5990
1525 Mesa Verde Drive, East, Costa Ml'$d
dlso m Coron.i dcl M,11 . JI GJS GOOD
G•Mrol I 0021 G~nerol 1002 .....•..................•...•..............•..
UVE IM GRUH VA.WY
Finest of toes. A Fountain Valley
planned comm w/21 acre park. 3
pools, 2 clubhses. Nr. schools, ~
shop'g, golf & Mile Sq. Park
...._ 3Br. 3ba w/ game rm. On park
$103,000
3Br. 21Ja. w fam rm. Nr adlt pool
$83,000
<iRHN VALLEY HOMIS
ly Dde Howcrd '61·6' I I
-----------------
Gnerol 100 G.-rol 1002
···················~··
B/uffi Owner~Jup ··•••············•••·•· •••....•....•..........•......................
~r $5000 2Jown
UMIWIYAIU7 NO!
Ow11v1 \l(t·11t ~ 111 wit Bluff• Condo 2 Bdrm
homt• oo ~·ontr .tC'l for 1.ta Uttl., as $5000 down.
Ae.k111w prl\'t' M:rl below market at $90.000. For
1nlur11i.1t111n or .ippomtment to lit-~· c• U0..2779 or 5514f67
OfllM HOUSI Fri/s.t/5-dey
Sept 16, 17. II from II AM to 4 PM
23~3 Vista Huerta
I I 002 GeMrol 1002 ..•..•••••.••.....•.....•••..•••....••......••
THIS IS IT!!!
No yard work. yet an attractive. 4
bdrm. condominium with 3 full baths
& an abundance of s torage space. Of·
f ered at $162.500. Make a big red
c heck here'
673-4400
Division of Harbor ln•estmettt Co.
I I 002 GHerol 1002 .•••.....•..•••...•.•.....•.••••......•••.•.••
llAUTIFUL IUlUHGAMi
In Harbor View Hills, a Burlingame
model: the 4 bdrm with game room
that can convert into 5th and 6th
bedrooms and still provide a family
room, formal dining and large living
room. This Unique Home has moun·
tain and ocean views from a serene
selling of trees, lawns. shrubs with an
occasional cow meandering along the
hillside trails Presented at $278,000
MOO-O·O'
UNlf)UI: fi()MI:§
REAL TORS'. 675·6000
1443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar
..,1~0 rn Ml'Sd Vt•rllc, JI 546 5S90
I
1002G......t 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
WESLEY N
TAYLOR CO.
KEA LTORS ~1 m ·1· UM()
NO
HAY
But lotli of· room tor
hor:ies ! ~ Acre near
Newport's Back Bay•
Owner must sell nuw 1
Pnce reduced lo ~9.900.
Call Red Carpel. 754-1202
WOODBRIDGE
MADISON
llEDUCED
Woodbridge E state:.
most popul11r plan re
duced $10.000 for fu:.l
saJe. Dramatu: cathedral
living room opens to de
hghtful gourmet k1t.chen
and family room. Exotic
master swte plus twin
:s1i.ed ram1Jy bedrooms.
Owner s11ys "Sacnfice"
llurry. call 962·7788
-Q.. K€Y v 1 P.€ALTOP.s •
Need
4 Bedrooms?
FOR $72,500? A grel*l
Santa Ana urea Nice
homes. nice s treet.
Paneled. l'Onvert1ble
dble gardgt'. 4
Bedrooms, 2 haths. large
yard. Large family d10-
1ng rm. All terms.
UDO PENINSULA
YUMMY PENTHOUSE Wllh t:xhtl&Jrut
in~ view of Newport Harbor 2
Bdrms , 212 baths plui. ::.aun.i orr m!>tr
suilc: microw<.ive oven. Security con
trolled condo. 1acut11 & pOOI S425.000
LIDO ISU
CHARMING 3 bcirm. home
beam construction. spacious
street to street lot $189,500
Open
patio
NEWPORT CREST
BRIGHT & CHEERY 3 bdrm. condo:
frplc .. wet bar. trash compactor.
s wim pool. tennis cts . sauna $139,900
COSTA MESA
PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP. 3 Bdrms ..
family rm., lge . enclosed patio. 67xl00
F't. lot with trailer a ccess $18.000
EXCELLENT EASTSIDE
LOCATION. 2 Bdrms . 2 baths. den.
rock frplc .. shake roof, s pacious
garage, pool. $95,000
HUNTINGTON BEACH
3 BDRM. CONDO. Solarian noon; m
kitchen. upgraded carpets, mirrored
closet doors : dining area features
mirrors & pecky cedar. $63,000.
.. .J,,, <:.'(Vf?.oo 1u;,u :n {~77 Ylo Lido, Newport leach
" 673-7300
IA YSHOlEs-IHCLUDES THE LAMO
Charming home on ·quiet street.
Rustic L~ DR with cathedral ceil·
ing, lovely ~R & de• with wet bar,
gorgeous hardwd floors. Smart
newly remodeled kitchen. huge guest
bdrm & bath over 2-car gar. Redwood
jacuzzi in secluded patio. $180,900 FOR All GeMrCll I 002 Ge.rat I 002 ~~~lll~AIW~:1 ·•••~:;~~·~:··~:~··~:~··~:~:••••• LUXURY waterfront condo, 2 BR, 2112
ba. Pool, jacuzzi. 24 hr. security.
Brand new: comp. furn. $220,000
PENINSULA. 4 BR. 3 ba homt:. All
amt:ntlits Lovely area. $195.000
LIDO ISLE, 4 BR. 2 Ba. Nicely decor.
Lge. patio, beamed ceil's., hdwd Ors.
48 Ft. lot. $225,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Ru y~1d1· 011v" N B 675 · 6161
G....-rol 1002 GeMrol 1002 ...•••••••.•..••.......•.•....••.....•.•••....
21 I I San Jooqllln Hills Ro.t
NEWPORT CEHTEI, M.I. 644-49 I 0
GARD9' GROVE
GetMral 1002 GtMnll 1002 $60,950
3 BR. n~ ba, cov pul10,
..,.___,.,.~,,....,_.,.-,,....,-. .. ~,,....,_..,.-,,....,_. ... -,,...., __ 1•--------i dbl gar. Priced to sell.
DUPLEX call now
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
WATERFRONT
Brand New Lake Forc~l
Pnl'c inl'ludes Jund! En
JOY ::.;.11hnJ( from your
own dock Coolini;
breezes and panol'amll'
view of lake. 3 Bedrms &
fam rm. fplc. large
master Mule Exl'ellenl
term~ an• available to
the luck) l>uyer.
WEST NEWPORT 646-J92S or 545•34113
Lachenmyer Nt'w on the market: 3
bdrms .• 2 baths each. On
fee land. Steps to the Re;iltor
beach . Xlnt sum---------
mer/winter rental. LOOK Priced al $189,500
673 3663 675-4777 Eves
VA TERMS HELP! PETE BARRETT associated
011 0 1< (A ':. REAL TORS
J01'. V. Polboo 1. 71 Joo I
LIKE
LOVE DOLL HOUSE
J bdrm rulle on QWl'l t ul
de :.uc street. Very dt·un
& sharp Great fml} rm.
microwave oven 1nrl
S I' (.;.111 now' Only
s&l,500 545 !H!ll
HELP! -REALTY-
Th1~ owner 1s dcsp;:ratc 6~2~5200 and nt!eds to unload this •~.,........,_,,.......,.......,.,,.......,.....,,_, _________ 1 that's what'll happen
'>uper J bdrm Freedom I'" when you see this lovely
home on a 65x100 ft. lot. home. 4 Pedrm, 2 story.
(;n•at starter home or NEW OUPLEX/IEACH sep fam room, form din n1n~ mve:..lmcnl Uon l S 175,000 room & pool All on Ii
he shy! Let 's go for 1t fk:..l rental urea in manicured corner lot in
Recent acquisition of additional office
space has· created several sales open·
ings (only 3 remain). Unique is now
looking for experienced. proven
performers who want to s hare in our
fine reputation. accelerated com
mission schedule (up to 707' > and ex
citing ~marketing techniques. If in
terested, contact Tom Boland at
714: 675..oooo.
1002 GtMral 1002
• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
STEAL OWNER
DESPERATE
•. ;-~ 'MESA DEL MAR TllYVACllll646·7171 ON THE MARKET! NewPort Beach. Great Costa Mesa $115.000.
this big 4 br. 2 ba beaul)''
Many pluses included
family rm. patio. frwt
trees etc. etc. Priced
Sl.OOO's below mrkl. al
$64,950. Convl or VA
loan OK. 675·2626 Ai:rt. '"'' ~·" ">'1 u1 '• ,. Summer/wint.er income. Century 21 Westcliff Real Estate I I Pamt is barely dry on 645-7221 --
!'.1us l sell. big cu'>tom1tcd
home near Mesa Verde
C.OWllry Club. 4 Lari.:e
bedroom.., and loll .
Pnvale ~w1mmmg pool
Asking price just re·
duccd lo Sl<IS,000 CJll
540-1151
41::~· HERITAGE SPECIAL · $82,900.
Cls. to parki.. schls. ten·
nis rib Big .t br's on huge
lot. 2750 Portola, CM .
$60.000 Assumable loan
Over 2000 sq.ft, Less than
l yr old, Low monthly
payments. Priced for
otack sale Call. 96.1-6767
NE~~~:~NG ~ lft!ltll ~:~·?£.~~~{;~:'. ~E~:i~l~~~: ·---~-U-PL_EX _____ T~~~[~im~~~1~~~~ ~~1~1---------
x1nt early Bluffs lot•a-,._ ________ dishwasher & roof! Try ACROSSfrom ---------
. • REALTORS
two llandsomc gn'en •· to beat lhb at $79,900. BEACH Genercrl ·I 002 Getteral I 002
bell area Bcaullfully de· LAGUNA 546·414 I $1.75,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ol'f'°i l•I Y • 11 ~ ~tJN I )bl l.{f
752-0861
rorated "D '' plan 3 Magmllrenl ocean Hew ,... ~drms. 2 •2 halhs An lot' Three Arch Ba y. Best rental area of
xlnl valul' al SIS!l,500 hwld the house or your llAl.llOA ISl.A:\D Newporl with sum·
6738550 dreams in exrlu~ive. • 673•6900 • mer/winter income.
I. l l Spacious units w /2 2STORY·41DRM , .. .,,,. o. ' ' "'' ' pr va e rommuni Y bdr .. '° each. Balconies I ~ I w ,guarded jlatc•. • .... :~~ie~~~~~~~ 'Ol .. llildl\\1 ::~2~:01i~~:,~. 1---------· Su~er Condo ~~?~'0r':~r ~~j~ny~
througho ut. Walk to -hndRe. Irvine. 2 sn + CONDO Near new, 2 bedrm, 2
beach from this de· SPACIOUS & dining rm.+ eating arc.i b~ one story. Localed
!®11i1mq
corator 11arden home. CLIAM m kitchen. 'Goq~eous Adult occupied condo. in park-like setting --------•! Priced at $72,950 for Priced to sell! Den, Cami-bnrk frplc. Low maint Charming end unit with wiSpanlsh architecture. ---------• QLDCk sale. Call 963-6767 1y room, dining room and yard. $98,SOO! secluded entry. pools, Good lerms.
WATERFRONT
HOMES
REAL ESTATE
'631-1400
Ol'fN ''' o. ,, ~ ivN rn1t1 ""'. lndry room ls set around COST A MESA tennis courts. Walking SS8, 900.
HST VALUE I~ hi this 3 bdrm home with an distance to shopping and
2 ~aH:e~·~R3v~:m. ·~ ll~Nllt c~~B~815~.J<li:m. Ft~~~i~~~:;~~l.7~cRnl library6~~6~all
Delightful patios. yard ~-. =~•~ 1110·" SllJ'~ ro11u. , lolboa Boy Prop. ~ .~1 11. COSTA MESA $79.900
3 +Cam rm/Ip + guest
• Irvine/Deerfield S89.500
3 +ram rm, patio home
ll 1 g h I y up g rad e d EASTSIDE R·2
lmmed. occupancy. With charming 2 b<lrm R.afton COATS & WALLACE
: ANYTIM~ Newpo~.~k Bay
CORONA OEL MAR
DUPLEX
Lovel,9 dupleK, each unal
having 2 bedrm!f each.
Walk to beach Priced to
sell
.-rn~
,,, .... ll lll \1 1\
'· I '
home bnnging income 1 =~~~~~~~ • 675-7060 "*
while you develop ~ 1--------• You can live in the pre-RE AL ESTATE , INC.
J + bonus rm + 2 sty
Cewtury 2 t Airport
751-1910 :mothh unit. C1ose to LEASE-OnlOH .._ R .._RE 0 ...,E allgious hllls or Turtle
shopping & transparta-S&S Redwood model in ~ ~ " Rock. Sparkling brlaht ;;;;;;;;~~~,;.-.-.-.-.-.-. lion. Just listed. Better Woodbridge. 3 Bdrms. 2 Qf a kind J bdrm. 2 ba PANIC PANIC cheery home ln move-In
takealook.646-7711 baths. hrelace. r-'ull chaJ"mlng home in CdM Owner must sell Cast! 4 coodllion.3largebdrms, HARBOR HIGH pnce SHW,500. Lease for with 1 bdrm guest hoU$e Br,famrm,2ba.2169s.f. 2ba, atrium, many
1475i mo whjJe you suve for income or guest.'!· the Pool rm & table Very c u a t o m b u i I t I n Undbet fjlt/KaiNr
your down payment Call ma in home is u n close to beach. Reduced bookcaaes. Only $118,950. for your cbtkiren if you
673.8550 believably charming toS108.000. Lowest price In Turtle buy this great4 bedrm. 2
You will dream about il. Roc:k areu. By Owner. bath home. On large, Real Estate
CUSTOM IUILT ,.,..,,., 1, y .. , . rMi.. Owner anxious asking Prin only. Open Fri-Sun tree lined lot. A bargain
ACCINTOH ~~~~~~~~:~l•'lliHI [~~1-:iJif.r~111 ________
1~·::9:FT-.--:()pen~it:f.5¥~~::~1
VALUI J IDltM ~! ::a:ic:!~~?°o:'e~o ~, ~~~~11:!\t..::~1:~::11~1.~i:o~·~I ·'•i tt(fU)A --------s. Coast Plaza ar~a. 4 er 1.5 PM
JACUllJ \'i:.leand balcony wit~ MES"-DRM_..R , -=•-•:iimn:!!!'! CAPE COD 3 Ba, seperate DLD Rm. ·
Best buy In beach area. Jar breakfast nook. "' "' DUPLEX ~~~paRu':, allw ~-:'p!!:d~~·. 10!.llr~,. FOR. JM
l~i; I LGJI" H•1 Co''"~'' Iii
Just listed, Owner Cal for your appo\nt· $79 900 RO .. •· '""" ."'4·•-Ml•~-
boU&hl another want• ment. 546-2ll.3 Lar•e 4 f>edroom with 'CUL-D~SAC CO NA DEL MAR-2 2 yrs old. Sue com· ~~--~l!~~~~·~ ... ~~~1 r~ sale. Large bdrtl'IS Ol'rNruo•11Hi.tJ1d11ttt(i•· '-a~tif11lly""dedfamllv MESA VERDE 4 bedrm. fireplace, front miaslon , by owner. ••· .
big fam kitchen, covered I . s 11 ; uoi: '""' 1 bedroom, 2 bath. large unit, enclosed yard. Up· P .000. 751·5189 •
redwood dei:k w/buill·ltl •• ~ 111·~· room on a quiet street In r rl d per unit-beamed cell· jacuui . don't wait, call . J '. ~ta lies.a. The own~r 1a~mi!,ert.es.:!t!r~~r. inp. l bcdrm. Walk to --------•I IUEMA VISTA
now!M2·Z35 . ,,~ ... ~ ·-· 11 a.rutloua lo sell and !S double fireplace &dininR shopping end beach. MEWUSTIHGSI IAYFtlOKT
Cl'fN r11 o•" s IUf:l IOtll Nlfl • ., o(f~ng VA terms at thlS rm. Prlced r1oht. Call A.sklng $154,500. 644-7270 CORONA DB. MAR .~ -low prtce. CALL qwckly " Commandml a premiere
1s1-auu. MG-5880. .v ;:1 ~~. 111>.-. !f_!,.bdaT·1:. view of Newport Harbor CadlUaca toG~>-C1&rtl
Wltalever the Fad
Roll 'em olttbe m...-et
With a Clutlr1ed Ad
Call Nowl M2·&1'78
~ "'4Utti ""'~ ot: -·-.. & 'ot tu a l•lan.da. lit.a
•
Ss;;.LECT '1.-.-A.M. mac. Must see! Open unique home combines
PROPERTIES '?""".,............. Sat/Sun. 1 ·5. 714 d .£•lJOlS M-... _,... every mo ern conve--.. - -anJ ..... 1139.500 nlence, with timeless
TV.._ -ocw charm & understated "n·-" eltaance. Not.blnJ was OpenSun.1~. BeautltuU overlooked In crealia& , _________ ,bdrm., famUY rm.1 pool one of the· tlneu
It jacuul. Artl1t cally 1'&W'front homes ever to decor•¥ A mmt nel be bullt in Newport
5322SMrraRoJa.113'7,600 Beach. 4 Bdrrria., '"' bop., S ~placn, bay
view study, 2 run base· menu, ~Y terrac~ with
lawn, treH Ir undy
t.acb, A truly remarkll·
ble bi.I fl h..-1 kftcb i'I, with doublo everythlnt
for Informal 1outm•t en· tertalnlna. "Flnest •P·
polntmentt thruout.
1950,000, On tit1:ollenl
~. Brochure un ro
~
macnab I Irvine
realty
FINER HOMES
FROM $51,500 TO S 1,250,000
"DEC ORA TOR PERFECT'
Don't miss this perfect family home
in The Colony! Beautifully up-
graded w/ cozy wood & brick in
family rm +no-wax floors in
kitchen & entry. Air conditioned +
custom window treatments. Comm.
pool & tennis! S 125,000. Holly
Markas 644·6200. CP·ll>
CHAU.EMGES COMPARISO~
Lovely 3 BR + beautifully paneled
den w/handsome built-ins (or 4BR>
on exclusive Lincoln Ln. Formal
dinin~~ olav-room: eating area in
kitchen; pool + swing. Top condi·
tion & immaculate! Fast escrow.
Elaine Svedeen 642-8235. ( P-12)
IA Y YIEW ltil IWFFS
Low price! New on the market!
Professionally decorated 3 BR ·-
2'h bath "Trina" model in front row
location w/lovely view of bay &
lights. $147,500. Jeanne Barnett
644-6200. <P·13 )
HEW DB.UXE DUPLEX
Corona del Mar -So. Bayside Dr. 3
BRs-2 baths each. Lg. living rms,
!.&replaces & gourmet kitchens.
Steps to beach. 1 leased -1 availa-
ble. Reduced to S259,500. Harriet
Perry 642·8235. <P·l4>
OCEAN Ii POOL
BeauUf\JI 3 BR home In Cameo
Shores . Formal dining rm
w/ private garden -cozy den -
maater BR w /11Mr . .& Mrs!'
separate bath. Light & •lry
w/Catallna view. $325.000. Barbara
Aune 6'2·8235. (P·lS>
DAMA POtMT HIU.SIDI LOT-
IUILD•'S UIAJO
View of ocean 4c 2·blks from Marina
entrance east of PCH, Approx.
6()x8'7x42x91. New const. all around.
Priced for immed. sale -'45,000!
Tom AJlinson 842-8235. <P-16)
\
( ,
• (
I
. ' . .
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!!4!'!~!:.~~.~'!! ....... 1 ~~!!!.~.~ ....... ~:!:!-;.~ ....... ~~-~~~ ..... ! .. ~4!'!!!:.'!~.~ ..••...
HMntift9ott leoch I 040 Hwlttngton leQCh I 040 lrYttM ' I 044 1 ... -. I 044 lr¥1M I 044
84 DAILY PILOT ''ldey, September 11, 1971
.._.., Pw s. ........ ,., '* ........ for s•
·····•·••••••······•·•· •!••••················· •••••••••••••••••.••••••••••••..•••...••••....•......••.•••••••••••.• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
e 11 I .. I OOJ C.... del Mw I OJI ....... V•y I 014 Fount• Valley I 034 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ' Golfers Dream \'t•r) nll O 3 br,:? ba" I br
u , r•nt •I . ~I U;!,UOU
•t •II "rr d • ' m otl Lt'lll f' •J1•l 1t111 Jl U UUll
SPl<X:1 ACULA R hocnr. ~ flown Ow11i•r ti-W 7oo0
UR, 4 b,., fo R. Oil, l..H,
~n~h 2 •tory, '• 11trc l>u111.,, i hr. Zba hi1
l b(• J;UU ("OUl'"!\C' I!! your + :t la. :i b II .. pt ()\ ~ r
h;ar k Y•l'\l 01~n ltowie 'I a 11 r • IC<' $ l 7 I , 5 O O
da)• I ) 1 V•n•Y C..:lr l..1H k1p11 r 500 bl k
d \in ro '** !'>44 !Qtl.1
!Mil------""'~----
MO IULl
DICUTIVI F41lM IN.TOWN
15 1'~rult trees. veS(ctable .carden.
blruwbcrries, boy~enberries, wine
.irupos, Japant!~e gurden, tea house,
room for pool Lgc patio, lot size
60x168.
COHVBTllLI A.MD CO%Y
Spacious 3 or 4 bdrm , huge living rm.
with some stone frplc;. large family
rm. Cul de sac location. Pride of
OWJ}ership neighborhood. Priced at
$81,900. Won 't last! Ask for Madeline
SSS,000 Colofty "-I 00
la all that ii btlbt asked Owner HlHn1 •uper
( t... 2 bed ~Br, !ba, r~m rm. or ... a neat room tch w/aolarium. tondo in desirable u .... .v1.. ' Wall\ut Square or Irvine .,., .. " ~r. II lltru-out. Comm poo , park & ten Convenient to 1cho0l1. n11 crti. '84,000 Ph park. pool and fre.:w11y M2-30rl
41ccesa. Call lo see --------
WALNUT S9U41ll
Oval Rd., crou streets
TWOIDlM STAITH•a.ooo
Spectacular College
Parle Sta.nf ord. Be1uuful
bc'tck frplc. Sun iu>1rltlca
lhro'!lh wall ol tlua an
k.lteben & ramily room
Sepaute muter wan".
Beauhfully landscape<!
around•. Ca.11 now
752·1700 I. . . Open dalJ)' 2-4. 141131
Walnut & Kazan ; 2 ~N 111 9 .,1S1UN 1011Noe1 •
Lout bWlder •••ft SPICT 4CUL.AI ..._. •w okl fod1loallll t.. "-" PEMielMGTOH PROPIRTllS HM•O.Z bdrma family rm 2 ba I I ::'~~· C::.:'.:~! 11 yuu ~~'~ .. u.r111d ~~l:k~\,~~~~~~~~~ms. Kitchen t~~o ~~~~-Y:':t~i~h:~~ : . , lt~ftJI~ ~ T..-......., ad-~1th 1tw orclln11rS' or <"On end unit. Convenient. loc. I~·;"~~~-=~-~=~=~·~·~-~ .... ~
d-oH, ,.., •• ,,. •Rlt Mdn ta ll· too !\hurt to •ur Call Don Biel 546-8104 A~ent B Toro 1032 tWinc)tott leach 1040 RANCH RIALTY Priced Ji&hl at 164.900.
round youn.t-lf with hum •••• .. ••••••••••••• •• •. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 551·~000 EVB. YM COPILAMD Woodbndge Crosslag 2br, Pr OP• rt Y · f AST dru111, t.'Orusld1:r thh1 ex ATTN · Build Chol ------------1 REAi.TOi 552·0434 den. 2~ba, A/C. Near ISC:IOW . Call '~pt 1 un11 1 tir11t t 111H· CottaMeaa 1024 CottaMeaa 1024 VAorlO%down,3bdrm,, · er1. ce COUNTRY Lake&ruturuhops.Opn 64M201 • ....:,..., nfft•nni: of" quuhty ni•11r •••••••~••••• • ••• •••• •••••••• • ••• •• ••• • ••• •• nr park, alr conditioned, lula nr bch. 75'x117 '. l(l'l'IC uEN Sparklln1 'l'urtle Rock Sat/Sun J..2.4. 6'4-736' . ______ ,_··--·! nt-w 2 lift homt1 with Vi th super ga rage for hob-Reas. ofr. 213.799.5627 "' a home ln movCJ·in c:ondl·
\l1ulteu \lo oud b~amed 18W 8 b~l~t. trailer acces, nu CONDOSPEClALIST Makei this 3 bedroom tian. Brtght CbeeQ' open MAGHtPfCIHT OVEllLOOIUNG l'l·•llni; th\• tin1·i.1 kitchen G hslUJg has more lo offer Htg Bch, CM. P't Vly J~ rooms. &are Plan MANOR
THE, R" JµJ)o l11 l 111 c11 l11 with 0lfCOUrSe ~an aSeny c,·omparlfblre TouchstoneReally nefa:1tllhoymbeo.mHe"~creenalrllayl I . 3br, 2ba, aat.rooourt, lnthetudort d.Jtiom t A IJ1.-autiful oak culJ1n CJt --. . Lovely clcanhome,large me. e or yourscl · 963·0867 -doubl~carearaae.Many ra ye
L4rlle I IM!drriom with ~ork Lhru-0ut, f1replaceit RIME l''>vc red pat 10 , J ~:~1 f68~71~ Assoc ~ ~DITJON~NG e t:I st om bu I l t I n ~li~bati~ be~l.
wdudl!d ma~t~r .... u1h· 1n tiv111g room & mai.ler STSIDE bt.-drooms. dining area. Sharp 3 BR, comp re· · e c aanee oor booltcaaes. Large lot. mis.. a .. ami Y
,cp.irJlto"1I fru rn t h1· lll·droom leaded gt .. i.s EA family r oom. bric k modclt.>d, deluxe kitchen opener. Also s pnnklera Leutexpenaive1n area. ~·::.~~::~!~~~~
l hildr.-na .. n ·J ol l hh v.mdov.~.an.da ceram1c COSTA.MIS.A -11replace. d el uxe ~-1.-1-y-1•-y 1034 l)tc lot, nr parka & fronlandreartoeaselbe By Owner. Prin onJy. b
h Th I I th k h .--.-rum us..-:.choob. 41) blks ~ch yard work. Beller take a o F s 10 6 t e viii age of Wood· &pac1ou:s onw 1,,onl· 1e1ucua11n emaster DUPLEX 1lc e n. r educed t o ••••••••••••••••••••'••• look Call pen r1 -un •. bnd&e.$132.!iOQ
has It .al l (;ourml'l bJth 3 Bedroom upper ~oJt ~.950, BKR, 540-1720 CONDOSPECli\l.IST ~2938 - - . today. Alki.QB &13-ZZ2'7
kitchen and a dJoming PLUS h d k I 2 F1' m.ooo ---------~
fdmtly room Ell'llric.: a chJrmUJg2 BRRental ~ sun e~h· o~ercd TARBELL HtgBch.CM. Vly ' llfksfromle • ;: Under 5527000 ,, i:ar age o!)t·nl·r . douhll' with fireplace and a room wi enc 0~ Touchstone Really Beautlrul 4 Bdrm. ele •
0 d '· ll ll k d k pul10 & yard Kuig 111.ced 963-0867 , sto ry' in "rac o s $60 0001 \en an uw 1nl> m.: ::.epurate pauo ec . bedrooms, individual •• •• " THE ·. · · ~~~~~e .. $84,900 CALL 644-7211 lauud"" areas. built· In f I IR Calfontia" neighborhood J\lr1u , •
....... '"""" ·1 w1trop1cal plants. Wood Unbelievably ;riced VILLACE · ·
!p SELECT r~nge, oven. garbage M&5A VERDE NORTH In law Quarters parquet froot entrance. Oranactree towllhome, · ·· disposal, & dishwasher , J it •'-j t entry hall b'" living REAL TORS Just 5 years old. o wner All new ,Prof decor d, 3 Br acu.iz ype ... erapy e s • .. ______ ...... __
PROPERTIES desires exchun"e for ad 2 Ba, Din Rm, Fam Rm, AND/OR In muster buth. 9154! room, new appUancu, UNIV PARK •--------.i---1111i:...111i:...11111i:....-.,._.u1111.c~.c~ . .c~.i~1i.~1:..~i:...~.,.~ff~J~.O::: ditional units in San fplc, atrium, vaulted THnager• I.tr.at Bermudo. Take Pac: RAMC55Hl·,!llAOOOLTY ~r!!':eadKcRI°!!;•,· ,!nly Edlnburg3.Bdrm, 2•L ba. Clemente. $1-46,500. c Ing s. 1 un ken tub. $66,900 Cout Hwy to Magnolia, 6 -·"""· • -.,.1 «.v .. ~ $58,750 •MEW LISTING• COLEOFMfWPORT 642·2A22. S9J.ooo ~rmrtuhda2. b toe k 1 to Lowest pnce on market. llus:c family roorn with D 0 y 0 U NF.ED l °"' UNIVERSITY PAO Good inves tment OP·
u:.cd bri ck wall und btTIMEOFFERED 675-5511 REDUCED HOMES IN ONF.'! Try Calfunnan.A11oc $9 ... 950 PQrtunity. Owner mul:lt Rare Old CdM Trir>lcx on -09• • sell «>" 500 or '--• orr t1r<·Pl"l"l' :1 l~ .. drrn, 2 this French Chateuu ~ 96"2421 E ' · Edi b · -&.. .&111• •
v • •15' lot. 1 Bdrm mini "SLEEPER.. $IO OOO .,.. x c1t.1ng n urg "'*1 '-C-''...,-1 .. Call6408248 bath, dble car i.:aruge. home w /walled garden, , Lots of "old world " model townhome w r3 TT "' -"""' O ---·------
new IH' Dliul(hboy pool & !.late fl oors. high l'cil'gs WAKE UP to this 3 Assume existing loan at t harm, from woodon YOl.I'•• EarMd It' bdrms, family rm. 2~ OWHBt SAYS TURTLEROCK $S,000.
t •It er A 11 th•:. on u l'LUS two l Bdrm units, bedroom home on largl' low under the market in· shutters & cedar 11hin1llC:. WllY NOT ENJOY IT? baths. Huge backyard below mrkL. Anxious!
secluded street. Hurry, ea w;own pvt patio. New fenced lot, newly painted terest rate. Seller anx-lo tho suspended , wind· Country club hvlng atlhe wi brick patio & flrcplt. •• SEU.1
0
Jmmac. 4 br, faqa rm,.
call546·5fl80 cpts, drps. Mint cond m and out. $66,000 or ious. Will carry 2nd TD. ing staircase. Beautiful beach Bcuullrut llunt· WaterfrdntHomea -s.SO VA·OK highly upgraded. Nr
Sl85,000. Brk 759·0358 SUBMlTOFFER. Spuc. SpanU>h style, red plush carpl!llng a nd ln11ton Landmark Con· ____ 113_1_·1_4_00 ___ _. Quiet tree tined c11J.de· park " pool w/vif!w of ~jA.. HERITAGE
• • REALTORS REDUCED II .• Quail~ t1ICJ roof. formal dining. 2 c~I t.ohm dr~s. Secluded! do'• Crom $54,500. Million s ac . Wood but ll·lns hills . $124,900. By owner.
fplcs, sittinit rm. qwet P us patio. Aci:el> 0 do 11 a r rec re at 1 on VERY POPULAR enhance llvl.hg room & Open Sal1Sun 12·4. S342
_______ ... _, A classical Victorian de· Plac• cul de sac. II urry ! green grass & towenng raclhtles. manicured -family room Sunklssed Sierra Roia,833-1061 trees s urro und lh1!> ·•-ncJ h '
sign, totaJly repone w I 1 Prap..-ll•a 645-0003. J:roun~ a 24 r secun-In culverdale is this 4 family kitchen. 2 Queen TURlU ROCK po Pu I a r TN II S I:: + ty All rt-s1dcnts mll!tt be bedroom family home In sized bedrooms. Lushly
private apt! Call now. <£t leui.t 40 yrs or age. For ont: of the best family planted backyard & 3 Bdr, 2 Ba. F.DR. wood
ltus unique home won'l more lnformalioncall: • areas or Irvine. Single patio. Brlnf. your VA deck . lrg. l ot. Only lalboa lsJand I 006 Yr. warranty & fealurin~ 752-1920
••••••••••••••••••••••• u most dramatic view ol 1400 OUAILSt HlW..otiT llACH
.I Br 11 ~ Ba. xtra ll{e lol. l h e b a y & o c. e a n . 3 IDRM
FORESTE
OLSON °"" nr •t.•fJlll ..
last! ! Jock Rck & *4ssoc. story and In the center or bu.Yen. Don t wait call ll.10,000. Owner wants 213·592·L346i7t4 ·963·8961 963·0926 the development. makes 752-1700 a ction . Open House Day '1ew Dy owner
$185.000 673 sow Drastically reduced by POOL HOME • $30,000. Owner 1s ver}
mouvated. VA TERMS $91,000.
COLONIAL R. E easy ace~ to the com· oPtN ''' o." s ,,,... •011 N(I t 5at1Sun 1·5. UM91 Sierra :lffi!::i ~"f~,~·.::r•;~ [~1&111 =°ma• ow•u:::~ ---
V.AUEY 640-9900 Lvty 3 bdrm, 2 bath. tgc Submit ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cmly rm! Gorgeouli heat·
Balboa Ptttinaula I 007
~~~~R.u~le~~ 4 s~~s~~ '~~ ~_:esr~r:1an~.m~~: Antsy Own~rs!
Pool home. $58,500 3
Bdrm, 11!1 ba. New ci>ts
913 So. Austm. 8J9-4821
Owner. Pnnc only 675-2321 ~ lion. Fantastic rear yard Neat ari<i clean .. big cov-......-=======~ w/gas firepit, huge cov'd ered patio, trailer pa:k· 1------------------1 HOUSE+ lnc:o.... patio for year round en· mg, 3 bed~m~. eating S • h Ch PENINSULA N ' a Bd ho • .th joyment. New tisting area. red bnck rareptace, ~nlS arm Oe~anfrontTriptex n~~4 car~~r+~;low~2 mustsellfut.586-4000 ' $64,950,BKR,540·1720 Lovely 4 bedrm, 2'h
Top location. Close to Br, 2 ba apt over. Asking (~Ir "!'I A TAlllU. baths, quality improve.
:~l~l~~!~~~:~ I .,, . mac·n·a •• b •• / •• l.r·v·l·n··e······· ••
celling. Complete with ' owner's prlz.ed pool table
and bur! FOtmal hving It rm with dramatic 2nd . rea y
everything. Now install $180~. Ph673-05TI .. -_t !!_!,\Wl~'tlf ments. new cabinets. fplc ! 4 BR '11. Manicured RANCH RIAL TY nei ghborhood. Just re
dix:cd. BK R 536·!131 t. m i: copper plumbing Ceramict1le. $83,750.
lhru·oul. Will be com ---------1 Real Estate "#1 lnCallfomfa" II ': • • '• ' '
ptetcly repu1nter1 in & SPYGLASS HILL -'''
out. & recarpeted /\ 8 MORRO BAY BY OWNER By owner 6 mo old. 962·4471(2tl: 546·8103
hard to find it em & Sharp2sty, 58r , l ~Ba, modcrn Condo.2 Bdrm.2 ---~-----·
priced RIGHT. Op Fri/Sat/Sun l-S home w/new pamt, cpl~ bu. S74 000 Cal1548·9718 OPEN SAT. 12-5, 4 br, 2 $230.000James DTatum & drps. auto gar opnr, ' · ba, fam. rm. Brand new
752-7799&494·1681 many other xtras, only MESA VERDE 957-070tAg(. --------1 $82.900. 1122 Charleston, EXECUTIVE HOME
HIGH OM A. HILL
4 br, 2 ba on quiet Cul·de-
sac. $77.500.
Real Estate
Prof99~1
963-1377 I 024 557-43117 Just Redl&ed $5000 ............ •ach I 040 1--------••••••••••••••••••••••• EASTSIDE CUTIE to sts4,900.10% dn to ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------
Sharp nlcety decorated 3 qualified buyer. Pool & S&SResaleSpeciaUsts.J, BY OWNER : OPEN
bdrm home on tree jacuz.zispa+4Bdrms,3 40r 5 bdrmmodelsavail. SAT/SUN Beacbwalk
shaded street.Lgestone ba, ram rm, dan rm, somew/poola,963-4602 Condo.3br,21Ai ba,bonus
ssa.zooo
lrvineGro• ..
21.eda
1100 Sq .rt. 3 Jluge
bedrms, formal dl11e,
ram rm w/Cplc, brkfsl
area. Auto gar door
opener. Comer lot. 11000.
carpel allowance . A
great buy, come see!
S95,950. 875·3411, Lusk
ReaJty.
..
STUMMIHG!
Woodbridge Crossing "Easton "
model w/ all the upgrades & just re·
duced $4,500 ! Cbarming cul-de.aac
location -walking distance to
boathouse. lake & s pa. Don't miss
this one! Amy Brown 752·1414.
<P·l7>
· Capistrano .. och I 0 18 SUBTLE
CHARM
Crplc In liv rm. Great Walk lo golf course. Pennington Properties rm. option. 6 blk lo bch.
neighborhood. Walk t D Id lourb Rltr -Pools, s auna, jacuzzi. ---------mrkt & b1J11 slop. Shdmg '"546-9950 ' BY OWNER Hunt'g 19666 Surfbreaker Ln .
IMVISTORS -'IMI COLOMY
Beautiful 2-story "cul-de-sac" home
w/ 4 spacious BRs, 2th baths. sun-
ken livi11g rm, formal dining rm &
high soaring ceilings. Terraced
kitchen w/brk bar. Low-maint.
yard & close to parks. pools & shop-
ping. $119,500. Lorraine Rennie
742·1414. (P ·l8)
•••••••••••••••••••••••
OCMFROHT DUPLEX
$255,000 644 8185
glass doors lead to m vit· ---------Landmark adult condo. 2 S t 1 O . O O O . D a Y s
mg side patio past fish XJnt 38r, dbl garage, Br, 2 Ba. brand n ew 213-648 ·6126, aft 6PM
pond l6 very ruce back owner anxious $74.950. plush ept & drps. Call S36 1194 Corona del Mer I 022 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Comfort, charm & true
prid e or owners hip
describes this expertly yd. Hurry!' Only $75,000. 673-3430. 751·3082 _548_-4595 __ . ______ •--------•
S45-9'9l RARE FIND ,, J LG SUPdEulR DLX CONDO
4 Bdrm, family condo. For a ts over 16 yrs
CentralJylocated. $83,950 Must leave area by
Try f7000down or trade. owner, bargain price. -----~---i HAL PIMCHIM ~.900. Consider a ll of·
COrlDOSPECIALJST Rf:ALTOR rers. ~; 842-8073; Htg Bch, CM, Fl Vly 675-4392 544.2477
CDM BEA.CH decorated & maintained
COTT"'GE home. Fam. rm & "' generous bonus rm, pro· Lots of wood and stained v1de gracious entertain·
glass. $139.950. ment for your guests &
R.C. TAYLOR CO. family. Oul back on the
Touch.stone Realty
963-<*n
955-0350 patio you can smell the
steaks cooking on a Sun·
. A ST ARTER day afternoon. Designed LOTS OF LAND
Homeonl>Cean v1ewsile. by former U.S. presi· ---------4 Vets Atletltfon with small 2 bedroom
FANTASTIC I!
3 br, lg. fom rm w/frp~c.
111! ba. BeaUt. yard le
convenient toe. 1611,950.
ERA./W"hfde Rtty, Inc. 841·2323
·····~················· l.Jke new. 2 bedroom, dent's de<.'Orator. Hurry CRY $80,000 VA appraised value house. Ready to expand.
bath, $122,500. Try -Call $80,000. Offered al OnlytfB.900. $15,~~~PIHcHIM FIXER -VA :::ge':~~taMesa. :,~ .. ~u~~t. bS°~!k! sc~:z.~~~TY w~~;:i;,HT
REALTORS MoDow.YA. rool, brick fplc, 675-4392 Low down payment & 55 .... _7777 hardwood nu. Near --------•! New llltlnf by orl
PRICE SLASHED!
Super 2 sty sacs home. 4
br, 21.fa ba. Highly up•
graded thruout. Nr. park
& comm. pool. Best b uy
at onJy S106,000. Hurry on
t.b.is one! Call now?
963-0ltl
---------• amall monthly payment -1cbooll & park. Vacant, tstT1J11eOfftncl owner. Beaut Davenpo
CORO .... "' provide an xlnt chance to Wortd RMI •t.te aee an>' time. Ca 11 Jsld 4 Br,' 3 ba. Supe lite•_ T.~ r t le r o c k
""' own this spacious home ~llll. Seller has bou1ht other plan. '/Br down, Mute m~. Piao I with 4 HIGHLANDS. & make $$$ on your in· N Condm B \.-2 B ~rt!:..~r s'"~vel. on water " 1 more up. Br, ram rm. '167,$00. The ideal romblnatton 0 vestment. Popular ttW , ,2 r. Z a, um...._,,.. ley-vown FantaaUc view or Main 75a-OS110Wft/A&t
a new home In 8 n neighborhood. So. Cat. 2 frplc 1, ceramic UI ram rm overlooking Channel. Huge iar
e 1 t a b I 1 s h e d Plaza area. Bland new kitchens & bath. Pool gorgeous pool. 'Al mile to 1undeck+4S' boat doclt. PRICED llDUC•
• ne1"'hborhood, re"turl cpt. Seller anxious! spa.87~12Broker ocean. Quiet Cul-de-sac 118.000dniQnew$250, $7,000 • • .. ..,2 t<IV\ Cal'•· street . (213) 01·9922, Joan • all the la test appoln . •• ·"""· •• save. LeaMwfttt()pffotl 431•3105 .. • .. CB.Ll ..... LTY Tree Uned cuJ-de-uc.
!
m e n l s . o v er 1 ii e d v..,. J...._ Rlty To IUf 3 TOWHHOUSH .-v" -TIJe entey. Formal 1tep· ~=r~.11:te~':f:!n ~~:~r 540-4646 4 CUSTOM HOMES ~;a~:o.!~~tc;:~~=!~ ~MGAw: (71
4)848-2M8 :J1nv:.'H'::1i1~t~
mlnioceonvlew,alllully Leaseexe lsablel-1-79 Treat youraelf to the 38r, 2Ba. sln&le story family combo. Walle in ~:~~!c~gc<IP;,~:~!'~a~~: S89.950 <~1::: t~~~TI~:n ~o:;~-e~~e~Tn~~a~~ ~yappt' ~·shown IYDTHREAMI s•• ~8:,t{l, =f •. ~;c•a;~~~ Mesa Verde 3 Br + Fam ) 5"' tied bed "' St95,ooo. '"· Rm, vacant. 771-2386 e 64().5357 Fulfill your drtame In q~ 1 J'QOms. CA.LL 644-7211 Tues thru 1751·3850 IY OWMIR thle r eaplendeot 4Br • Don't wait. Call '752·1700
~NIGEL
UJ\IL[Y 1-..
J\55UCI/\ TE r1
11JB•toOcem1
~~ir .11
l'(d\ I Y \
J\'1'>lll 1/\1111
Ct' rt A 'l)J]£P JJR
lEDUC:ID SJ,000
TOSB.L
East.Ide 2 Br 1 Ba Doll house. Readytomovelnl
Seller llk.tlvated. Call to
Sat thru on 548-83lO Ru.Ilic aeml c141tom bit 2~Ba honte by lhe sea. r!Cl"t~H~ll<~•i••i!iH''llUN•'°~!li
JUSTREDUCED 0..PoW 1026 w/uaed brick. Atrium, Thia faahionabl
r77,900, College Park •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• patio, Crplc. 4 Bdrms, 2 nelgbborhood,.l:reaheoed ', .. -.,...1"'
Br 2 Ba, RV access. 11.ACH HOUSE ba. lam rm, highly UP· by tho Ha breeze• pre h'"~' ~~Mj~~~~
Move in cond. 831·1340, 2 Bedroom loaded with grd'd . Next to aolf se~ not Just a graclo :: A~. charm, outside deck, coune. 1~ mi to ocean, lrl·level home. but a wa -----------c ocean view, & bonus nr schls, cbllrchea; • of life. Detlgned for lh
area. Clost to marina. park. '97,000. 5802 executive, wllh tlle roof
F.acapo to the beach. Tbophy Dr. IM&-8989 private entry, low main
Alkin11&2,:IOO. 1.111••y,....... THIS! taneoce landscape and ~ """" 3 car aarace. Tbll Is ...CHOU.. Owners have bou1hl flno val11• at 1182,600 .
.-. another fa are 1nxk>ua to For full ptrt1culan and WllS1'M ... ~ sel..I w.' bdrm., a bath print• •howln1 cal C7t4t 496-771 I home, nt. beach, schooll NOWI "~ .... 181 .900
OHM SUM 1·5 MIWPOIT MACH I ~ 9DNCNtt
83181.GOldenLantem Dr. UAL.TY 671-1642 ll.-ty
Neat 2 br. Ckean view. 146-1173
4 BR, 2 Ba, aH1.1ma ~--------1
137,000. 7~ VA or new HAR~RPACJPtC
finuclo1. ~.OQO. va. Blach condo. Beaut. up
cant. 9391 Neolanl Dr. atalr1, comer lbr unl ---------~ dA)'I, or .. 132-ZUT w/ocean view, Pool ---------11 Jacuut, •ttJeW"bcb a. U 8Y owRtR ·SAVl: quor m•'*· Feel the cool
tmmac ~· U¥ll\I al oc .. n br•11•, whOe JHtt~day • prtce. Ul&enln1 lo the waves Ouaffi(3), BdiJDa (4/5) bnut H the IUD Ht.I .ea '3), IU.dO llf dtotltl Spic. to build loft. 1542
•J>klrs, t\£11 op1r1ded ln· PCH No. *· By The Sea
terlor.r.te3·5891/m-utJ RI t Y, t 4 • ~• 417.
()pieij.ttOUNluP. J2·5 +it ~2~~~-~·217~1 _.:;~:2:?.l~~~~~~~!i
.,,,
WOOOlllJDG!-A.VAILAIU MOWI
Move into this brand new 4 BR
Broadmoor ''Aspenwood'' upon
loan approval. One of the .~
popular floorplans featuring central'
atrium, lovely gourmet kitchen
next to glass-walled f amity rm &
,!ntge living/dining rm w/massive
1.. (jreplace & soartQg ceUtngs.
, Owner's plans changed -priced to
sell -$108,500 ! Forrest Powers
752·1414. CP·l9> -DCB.LINT VAWI
4 BR on quiet street In The Colony.
Bright & roomy family rmlldtchen
combo; nJce yard w/sprlnlders;
community pool & tennis; steps to
•hopping. Only $88,000! A super value! GU Ide 752·1414. CP-20)
O~IAYS:
'TU. COMSIDll ~u. OU I as·
Woodbridge Estates! Ltnco)n
model-beautifully planned w/~ BRa,
21AI baths + spacioua family rm.
Salling, adult & family pools +
future tennjs club a11e just a few
a~Ues ofrered by the assoela·
ti on. Will consider lease/ opUon. tuo,ooo. Natalie Benjamin 752-1414. CP'21f
.J. !
I
,
(
1
\
(
l
..
.. . '
. ...... ._ -t::~ ._ s• ........... S• I HCMM1 '°' SGN rM041stl For sai. Hou1H. For SCllle Frld!y, S.ptember us. 1977 . DAIL y PILOT 85 . . .. . . . . . . . . .. .. .. .. . . . ....................... ·............. ..... .... ··· · · · · · · ·· · ····· ·· ···· ····· .... · ·· ·. · .... ···· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ··· ··· ··· I oet.r .... Is .... ~·-' 1041 t.edt 1041 &._,...HI... 1012 L..-.H.... 1012 L.GIJlllGHlgwl 1052 ~~.~.~~ ••• !~.6.! ~~!!!.~~.~ ....... ~~!!!.~.~~••••••• ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... rt• h I 069 Mabu. HoMta
Lingo
Rul&mt
IUILDAILE LOT
-......... • I' 111 ~a...:. lot a. w.-Co•-. T,_.. ....... wttt. ,_...
,. ..... oc ......... 71' ..... ...
St7.SOO.
I>'\ . .'\/ ' POIVl'
.(98 l!KU
495-1720
SOUTH
LAGUNA
499-<&5St
LAGUNA
U.EACH
4li7·2'81'
•
---------------... ---------PR1Ml!; Newport tkJth J Newport leocJt I 069 wpor oc For StM 1100 J 8 n 2 bu ("' m rm •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• OESPERA TE-ORASTICALL y REDUCED! 11 .. ..., Av.i ..... ., p u B L I c A u c T I 0 H ~·~;:,;1E~p::; Lar11c Custom llornc,
Lido Ii.II• Pool i11.tl.' Jol Own'" U1 health requir• Rrot under $130 3 mj lo
01,000 uHt•rs i-1exlb1h lmmecUat~aale oeean. S27 .~00. By
ty on 1nll•nor feulures TWO CHOICE BEACHFRONT PROPERTIES Owner 645 ~7.646-Q7.
H < 51 ''"3 8 k NEWPORT BEACH, CAUF 1
.,, o JJo ro er DELUXE FURNISHED DUPLEX-
lOOperallon. CORNER LOT WITH BEACH COTTAGE
IA YFR'ONT To be ofrerect separately
LUXURY Co..,.DO and in Its entirety
"" SAT SEPT. 17, 19TI Big Bayt<X·ean vu. Adult 2 P.M.
sec bldg. Boal slip, pool. 3503 Seaabore Drive
Lgo 2br, 2ba. Sac. Ry Newport Beach, Ca.Ur.
Own. SI 75,000. Opn 10-5, Sale lo be held at thealte.
Sat/Son, 310 Fernando, Inspection: Sat. Sept. 10 thr~h .Friday Sept.
Bal Pen. #408. Carey, 16; 10 A.M. to 7 P.M. Each day, and prlor to 213~t -OJ6l sale Ume oo Sept. 17.
•
HARIORVIEW
1
' PALHMO
By Owner-Lux upgraded
mobile hm. SJC. )Jany
xtras. Price reduced
S!OOO below apprabed
valu. Adlts. no pel1>.
Dan 496·798', Eves
400 2824.
Walk t~ beach frQCD thm
lovely 2 bedrm, 2 ba
home or enjoy pool &
clubhouse activities. On-
ly $2 1,500. Just listed.
A&ent 6'5"380 4 or 5 bdrm + 3bd. View & Butt~rOy shaped pool. Now
rcdurE..'<J to $112.500 this weekend only. Vogue Real Estatt. 540·~. 495·6463. Open House 1·5, Sat. & Sun.
1mn. 1044 •• ••• •••••••••••••••••• LG1J111M1 leoch I 041 1
1
__ _
4Br, 2Yt8a, ram rm, din
rm, prof lndscpd,
JICun1. Owner ut re
duced price of $179,500
Lease hold or $193,250 f' ee 644 IM!2 l
Four bedrooroa and two baths en the lower level -two bedrooms and one bath on the
second level. Sun deck, two car 1arace.
Completely furnished lncludlnc all cooklnc
utensils, dishes, linens, flatware etc. Lot aclJotn·
ing the duplex measures 2S' x W Beach cottaae
2 BR, fantastic ocean
view, sundeck , So.
La1uoa. l'lUOO. 499-2630
••••••••••••••••••••••• loguna HrCJ11114 I 052 ..._,......,, MH)uel I 052 Mist.Ion Viejo I 06 7 8&1l:>l:>li11C) ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fountain
Of! the lot.
Duplex was desl«ned and c\15lom built by the OWNER. The quality of has skilled
~for .. 1200 •••••••••••••••••••••••
and M.11.ihu hi.;ht1n11 adch
• hJ1111 tu the lovely
pl.ink & t.il0<·k multi level
patio 3 tklrm!> 2 ba
+lam. rm Ed1nbur11
:'11odel 1n Viii !-Th
tteclU!>IOn O( J l'Orncr lot
11'\iJkes lhL'> .in ic.lcal farn1
ly home W'J,500
lf523 C.otPU5Dll~fRVIWE
LIVEIM
VJLLAGE Ill •
~.OJOY the wade open
i.:rcenbells, the fully
~rown trees, poolii, len-
n1s and relaxkthe Jacuu1. All this p an
improved oxror odel
wllh fresh paint. new
l'arpeLs, new drapes and
1cady tor the family that
nl.~-ds room. Can be u..,ed
as either a 4 ors bedroom
home. Priced at a
modest Sl~.soo and you
own the land•
NORI NS
REALTY
AFFORDAll.E!
Possible the moi.t uf·
fordable property 10
Laguna today. Brlghl
and airy, 2 Bed. 2 Bath,
O·Y·O just I block t(J
beach. Newly redecorat
ed, you can move 10 with
on ly US,000 d own .
$8.5,500.
ODDortunity is Knockinq
This ..-clta~~l~g remodeled 3 Bdrm
home h as· new landscaping, n ew
carpets, new doors, new bathrooms
and more, which add up to a bargain.
Great starter or investment for only $99,999.
Assumable VA Loan at 8~% Interest
Architects Custom
Brand new 4 Bdrm home with out-
s landing features. Including: high
beam ceilings, skylights, and an open
feeling. Read)' to move in now. A
Bargain at $139,500.
Both homes will be open for
inspection Fri., Sat., Sun. Call for
directions.
craftsmanship is evidenced throocbout.
TERMS: 10~ deposit oo day or sale, balance
-SS ll New 2 Br + den, 2 Ba. upon delivery of deed and marketable UUe.
1 • ·~·-\~ alnum Comer lot on eul Buyer will be required to arranae flnanclna ----de sue. Guard, pool & prior to the saJe Sales are subject to confirm•·
jacuu.J, ownr. 640-2365 tion of seller. 1976 R.E. taxes: Duplex, 12211 Lot Let our profess1onal as· $1906 ·
socu1tes provide you m * UDO ISLE BROKER COOPERATION )NVJTED
d1v1dual attenuon tn Lge elegant 5 Br, 4 ba, FOR BROCHURE, CAU.OR WRITE:
SEA VIEW
ATTENTION
DIVaOPBS
Riverside County in Son
nymead, approx. 490
acres. Perfect for mm1
ranches. 5 .Miles from
Lake Perris.
R.C. TAYLOR CO.
955-0350 securing the home or tom rm w/bur+4>00l ta· FOX AND CARSKADON
Y 0 u r d re a m s i n ble. Frml dm rm. 3 car 951 South El Camino Rea.I 20 ACRES
America's most suc· gar. $345,000. Dnve by San Mateo, Calif9M02 Xlnt tor investment or
cessfuJ new community. 400 Via Lido Soud then (415) 342-7701 can be split. Some with
Escape to an aura of make uppt. 673-9401 views, loaded with oak cusual, q uiet living trees. Seein& is believ-
11waiting you in '110 Sad· i---------1 111g. BKR. ~~~~~k Valley. Call us DRIVE BY ~~~.~~~ ••• !~.~~ ~~~.~~~ ... !?.~! <g~~~~T
714/837-9500 OWNER · OPEN condo. REOUCB> TO SELL --------
714/581-1000 UlOO DOVER DR, NU N cw port crest. 7 Unobstructed view from LOADED W /OAKS
Tftlllis Swim Golf VACANf 4 BR. 1-~RPLC Goodwill Ct. Tastefully COM to Costa Mesa. 5 Acres loaded with oak
$129,500. TERMS , decor. 2Bd .. + den. overlooking beautiful trees in the Cleveland By owner. Mad'r1d 671. 4 2\AJBa. Xlnt Joe. $125,000. Newport Bay, ocean & National Forest, So. of
br Casa Saria. Spet.1., 645-5 04 4 548·3235 Catal!na. Del Peso entry. Orange Co. Municipal unobstructed mountain d 11 3 waler, gentle rolling &gol!coursevu.Walk to NewpartJle1ghl.aRealty BIGCANYON plustere wa s,. I f . .
bedrooms, 2 baths & all knol a or view •ate:.. M A Y 0 C K golf course, lake, rec Townhome. El Dorado electnc kitchen. l-·enced Owner will carry. Agt. DUAL center. Prof. lndscpd, mdl,new.962-6898 off oversized heuted & (714)677-SClll beaut. decor wiall UP· ORS22-0S30 POSSIBILITIES CORPORATION grades. Aft 6 wkdays filtered pool. Now only, ________ _
Duplex on Balboa Pen 837-8260 Bein buy .Beaeh Duplex, 4 $210,000. 014'.ne r will Trabuco Mesa & Canyon ninsula, 1 block to bearh LAGUNA BEACH BR & 3 BR. Pnne. only. earry "buyer. Submit un
236
Acres, $630.000.
40
.
2 Bed. upper. studio By Owner. El Joya 4Bd, _67 __ s.232_1_c_all_fo_r_a..;;..p.;._p. __ , der29~down. acre ranch site, SllO,OOO.
lower. Use your 1n ~ 494•2146 prof. landscaped. Super Bayfront Exdus. M.M. Lalor• RJtr. 30 acre ranch sit e,
mag111at1on for remodel upgrades. Pnnc. only. Lido Nord Pier & Dock 4 ~~~~5~41~·~1~4~0~4~~ ~000. 155 acre ranch or enJ· oy Its intrinsic 581-0472 t ~80 000
w l &
+ F, Bayfront Prop. s1 e, -• . a er ~~~S:;li~R-2 toning LCMJUnaleoch 1048 l:agunaNlgwf 1052 SUPER Sharp, Many ex· ~i&imirrrr~~l 642·5002or645·5000x216 S.Cle•Ht• 1076 electricity avail. Sam ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• tras. 3 br, 11· ba $71,u-.). Porter,493·2781
• ""' Ht R •••••••••••••••• ••••••• ---------COZY HA VEN HORSES, HORSES Award landscape .1--------·1 Npt s ome 355 QUALITY acres in red hill~:.:.
552-7500
Duplexplusgueslstudio. Raneh home w1lh 2 SPARKUNGrOOL 58l·98lS Custom bit beauty. Uni · S.,/lenl/Trade Lake County. Suitable
EnJOY Old World charm Bdrms. & 2 baths in plus Jacuzi1 Is yours lo HARBOR VIEW ~~tnt>~sp~a~,o~ ~~·a~ Beaut. ocean view home. ranchctte, mobile home
of Corona del Mar. WaJk Laguna. Owner will enjoy In this highly up. •EL RIBERA Carmel i.:arden. Frpk. FA heat. Overlooking Dana Point park, agriculture elc. ~~~~~~~~~ to beach & shops, t~is carry 1st T.D. S\17,500. graded home. Charming 5 br, 3,ba, bale & Vu. AC. 3Br, 2 &. fam rm. din $1 45 000 Harbor. Price reduced to Owner selling all or part.
L_CICJ'Wl ___ a_Beach I04" & rec. center. '"J!~t Causey&Company COWllry kitchen, family $7,500. in upgr ades. rm, fee land. By owner THEC.ALLISONCO. $1Z7,9SO.Call Package lncld's 2 br
••••••••'••••••••••••• now, enjoy fore er. 1104So.C:oastHwy. room,den&4bedrooms. StOJ,000.581·4255 640-8925 R.:: .... TOR SCOrrREALTY house.Ownermotivated.
Ncxl door to i::merald $184,500. LAGUNABEACll Pncedrightats139•500. ----------------2819 ~11 .. d. 536-7533 Agt. o>99H 500.
Bay.lovelyrcfurb1shcd2 * 494-8057 * 497-2457 PRIVATE toWwporta.ach 1069 REDUCED " .... ~,...... .. ----... --c.mtt9!YLots/
br, 2 ba home w/vicw, ---------1---------PARADISE ••••••••••••••••••••••• THOUSANDS' Mewportleh. Cryph 1500
heam ceilings, fplc, lgcl---------1 OPEN HOUSE Price reduced Sea Ter· $BEDROOM • 675-4961 Townhou!le, 3Br. sec. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Jandscpd lol, $182,000. OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 SUN IPM 5PM race home on large,lot, FfXER Not one-but"l_Newport gate, pnvate tennis crt, Last
2
available Crypt.I al
Owner. 714 .497-3107 or 1116 MIRAMAR • • with 3 bedrooms, family Crest Townhom~s. Both UNIQUE EXTRAS pool & jucu;zi. Adult Harbor Rest ~O ea. ~13·431·1588 Spectacular ocean view, 28?0ZELLORfVE, room & dining room. Bring your paint & sellers anxious. La rge Extra livmgspace +ex-comm., 101o down. ~7·182S
---beam ceiling living rm ~ WHLAGEHUNIT~SBREIAGCHTll Ideally localed on quiet LLt.~·uf:c::;, this . ladg~ llvtng rm with balcony. lra rec. space. Excep-$87,500 Seller cames 3 ---------
EXCELLENT w/frpk, 3 BR, 2 BA. cul·de-sac with view of s me pnce Spac. open master taonal Harbor View year. 10% only, 2nd TD. 2Muoniccemetery pJot.s,
MOTEL owner anxious. Make YOU KNOW IT!!! Gel rollinlg hbeills.hSecuri1·t>:· se~~~':~f:>R CO. bedrm.h xlnt pnc~s.1 Bet; Home. Take advantage 49J.20(J S340 ea. Contact Pacific
Heart of Laguna Inca-ofr.Asking$142,000. lBdhe/mee.•. o2f,~hJSbafathbulhoousme3 pnva e ac • poo "' 955-
0350
ter urry, wont ai.l. &eallnowi SanJUmt ViewinNwptBcborO.L.
lion; xlnt condition, OPENSU .... D"Y I 5 ... tennis courts, afford the 645-0303 CENTURY 21 r-.i
1
....__ tOJI Denton.3050GramteDr.
1.. I •· ti " A • with country kitchen. best of Uvine. A vaJue at ----------...... ~ n-----An ... ,.,.1 ...... wrge poo "' ret·rea on 703 I "LIO" $1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.. ·~vu, i.. .,.,..., ,,. _ area. Short walk lo A A spacious master 29,000. • Sandpi~640.4950 call(602)44.S.,9136
beach.. For information PORTAFINA·LAGUNA bedroom with dressing SEA TEARACE DOVEA SHORES 1---...:..-=------CASITAS, spacious 4br. ---------
call Oeean & Catalina sunset room. patio&ocean view Nearthesea with partial IEAUTIFULLY ap• STEPS TO BEACH 21,A.tba, crpts, drps, bltns, Coma.rclal
RIYfet"CIRe'""'-views.3BR,den,3
1
'2BA, of the sunset over oc.oeanview.NearnewJ pointed 4 bednn, 2 Sl6',500 Crpk. pat.io, gar. com-Property 1600 49'"5678 .. ,-, •• '2800 3 frplc's, wet bar & Catalina. HURRY. bedr oom. 2•,:1 bath ........._ .__ Sep d '-1... -•·~-~ Huge 4 Br. 2400 sq.n . mwutyrecfac1ht1es. ••••••••••we••••••••••• ,... ,. jacuua.Asking$200,500. OWNER ANXIOUS'. _......_. • '"'"9 -==---------... 6900 Ownr Pn Co I
townhome with 26 ft ·--------home. You own the land. •• · · me mm. cmr ot. OCEAN & CITY SH9,500 master bedroom with r11t, formal Uv rm, Just became available. 493-595Sor493-7780 70xll7 Nwpt Blvd. Sm
VIEWS MEDITERRANEAN Causey&Company fireplace.Seetoday,onJy brick fplc. 2 car OuhtandinqValue Hurry! SAVETHOUSANDS! bldn'g Gd prkn'g, vJ1 .. VILLA JIM So. Coast Hwy. $122,950. garOCJ•• lands pd & ONL V Sl6;f.OOO 1b1hty. 646-7171 2 br. 2 ba, frplc, open SA:"/ CLEMENTE, ap. LAGUNA BEACH prinldeoreci t. t 1u .. 3 Bdrm, family or den, 4 BR, 2'':1 Ba. upJ:raded ---'-------
bt!umed ce1l'"s, lo m111nt 21L A 16 497 L;Ts: Hi9Mf Realty s 1 .... , 2•L ba, S"'P din rm home. $79,900 /negotia· 1111 W. Chapman.Orange " prox " crcs, rooms. ·2457 13 5050 '"9L '"040 t thl I I ,~ .. yard S123,500 6 BR, 8 BA. Tennis crt, __ ___ • .. .,.., •ft • eac us •• 150'>.80'+ Back bay. •u•o..t-s blcOWC.492-43.17 Early 1900, 2 sty house, '°"' pool, ocean & htll views. G t --~ n • i CJ h b or hood . ocean view lot. 548-2886 ~ o"" HOllM 1tuLn zoned C-2. Corner lol. ---,<WI~~ sec. gate, fruit orchard. UeS $146,500. Owner will 11030.~.eo.1...... REDUCED! xlnt for any bwiiness or --~~ Call fordetails. Apartme.nt help finance. 645-9161 Jbr home. New nrea. live in. Owner will con-
AMERICAN HOME Workl Wide Brokers UDO ISLE 4 IR ----'-------i f'nrd, J<'rplc, etc. $76,900. sider 2 yr lse. Agt. 1990So.C~t:..H~'(.~J ..... ~J19 REALTORS This charming, well VILLA PACIFICA t Brw/pvtentry. Agt. NEAR OCEAN & BAY Mike Madagan , Agt. tl)997·2SOO. OCJ:!;ANVIEW
Sacrifice! Job reloca·
lion, 3Br , 2Ba, frplc,
many xlras, S118,000 or
muke offer. By owner.
1!14 7739 ---------
HOtM + lneotM
875N. Coast Hwy localed Soulh Laguna Beautiful 2 bedroom, de-' 673-4545 ~29.000.1·661-2626 •DUPLEX• 492-5151 --For-----·.-or-
1
-__ -_-
'
0
'
7 I cottage has separate t"ched patlo home Well ----------....._ 4 4· I 0 I 4 4· 5 l rented "uest quarters, " ·· WESTCLlFF dlx 3 br, 2 Lovely beamed ceilings, 2 BR. 1 ba home. Wood 6000square reel
ocean views and access decorated & landscaped. WATER FR 0 NT, ba, country style fam one fplc, well kept. deck & encl. yard, •Prime comm'l proper·
to the finest beaches . Pnvate community with Newport Shores, 3 Br, rm, outdoor entcrlainin1i1 Owneroecup1ed. sm,ooo 29412 J:o;dgewood ty •Xlnt investment opp.
Sl:J7,500(l08) clubhouse. pool, Jacuzzi, den3Ba,2 Cplc ·s.comm patios. Open daily, 1201 30535thSt. Rd.SJC.495-5216 ty •Nwpt Bch, Costa
etc. $87,.500 ,.. pool & tennis. !)139,500. Pembroke. By owner, Mesa
11
rea •Must see to
By owner. 675~1_7 __ $149,000. 646-9836/Evcs apprec.
,,..,,0100 RANCHO
IEST VALUE '""' CAPISTRANO Ashwlll-lurke
Super view, 2 blks. to OPEN 1·5
beach, on dbl. lot; 2 J73McAuley .... 229,000.
Cb Co ldwell Bon~er
bdrm., frplc. & big deck, 38r,3Ba, Victoria Bch
with l·bdrm. apt. + laun New Cont ruction ~~~ 3 Monarch Bay P laza IN HAUOR VIEW 2~;. acre paraels. lo'rom 634-2500 Laguna Niguel Wahrfrottt
496-7ll.Z 831·0136 1951 Port Lockslc1gh C Cod Own 2 fabuJuous Newpart SJ.0,750. National Forest Dupleua/
dry rm. & workshop ---------i "" Great property at only ~~~~~~~~~ OPEN SAT/SUN 1·5 ape homes. Both fee . must area. Idealforhorses. <w..-. 1800
=:!!!=m!IE. -Sll9,llOO. 2 & a den or 3· 3 Bedroom home w /boat sell one. Harbor View PREVUE REAL TY ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl79,500. Open Sun. 1·5
2817 Rouns~vel Terrace.
White Water View
Prime -North end 3
bdrm., 2 ba., den, 2
frplcs .. oak firs., stained
glass, deck. brick walks,
g reenho us e, e l ec
garage. Real value for
S184,500. Open Sat. &
Sun. 1·5. 1640 Hillcrest
Bargain View
Only 2 blks. to beach In
South Laguna. 2 Bdrms.,
Crplc., deck & lath ho~e,
on big lot. Ch arm in e
starter home for onl)'
$129,500. Open Son. 1·5.
31788 5th Ave., \South
Laguna.
• 4t4-7HI *
ANIMAL LOVERS "·d 1 o 6 mo ths large bedrms, formal d · f
73
-0333 c:~ a
983 ni gev ew r. n d. . L ock an ront. $189,500. PortoCino, 2600 sq.n .. ·~ I or '"4.., 4 PLEX·S243,000 UNITE!!! 1, acre In new, 3 Br 2 Ba, last •ning room. arge p I A Se I ded 20 Fr ·t
Lal(una with commercial chance al $129,900. To R. breakfast area. Freshly ecJCJY roms ere. c u · w s.to AINI I 010 Blk to beach
kennels, stables, groom-E.10/1.495-6119 painted." Thick plush Realtor 64§.1531 ~~e~~t~e~~~;~V~~~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• l0%down1161-5700
Ing area & office. Lots of carpets. One of th ej~~~~~~~~~j u95,000. (2) BROAD· ---------htc0ft9 'roperty 2000
room for expansion to NORTHVIEW' largest, most delightful MOOR SEAVIEW: 3 2 STORY/POOL ••••••••••••••••••••••• make Uus a real money 3 Bedroom, 2Y, baths, 2 back yards in area. With Newport Crest 2 Bdrm, Bdrm oceanview lot. will 2'1 UNITS, INDUSTRIAL
maker. 0 . W.C. l.Bt T.D. story model 282. $118,950. patios, &ardens and cov. 21fa !i trl-level. Lowc~l complete Oct. $240,000. ON1. y $89, 900. PARK .. Annual lnciome
$197500 J£YWYl!.£TS ered decking. Wosuide prlc plan 2. Upgrade · Shown'by appt. Eves ,"""'-4bedrm,2bathCen· $109,000. Priced at C ' · & c A """ sun exposure. Immed. End unit, steps to PoOI & """
TOP OF WORLD aus.y ompany CO occupancy. A must see! teMls. $113,500 o nr/Agt wknds (714 >644·0652 tW'Y Home Is on a large $830,000. Seller •/carry
Altr. 3 bdrm., 2 bath 1104So.CoastHwy. 67$-3411,LuskRealty. 675-0105ot675·5200 Wkdys(213)860-l323 lotalendofquietcul·de· contractalK.Princon-
home; family rm., din· LAGUNA BEACH 499-2237 -BY OWNER sac. M~ny upgrades. ly. Bkr, 556-6171.
ioa area, frplc. Lge. 497-2457 THEILUFFS LEASE-OrtlOM Must sell 3 br Newport Low maintenance yard SAMCLEMEHTI fenced yard. Some view r ---HI 0 Exc:;s1·vell Hett.er than new! Lge, 3 $500.VIEW Sh 646 with RV aece11s. Good
from deck. Patio off ........,.._ U5 I 05 •• bdrm. split-level with FantUUc Newpart Cre11t · ores. S79•950. ·780l schools. Close to South TRl·PLEX-extra nke 3 mstr. bdrm. Owner buy.••••••••••••••••••••••• Five m on PoOI· bay & ligbtl view. Total· Condo, 1900Sq.ftofsbeer Nwpt. Crest Condo Coast Plaza. Seller has BR, 2 BA owner's Unit
inll another home, anx· DUPLl~VllW sized lot with mature ly new interior decor. elegance. Enjoy the 3 +bdrm retreat. 2'4 ba, bought new home. Call w/frpJc. Wal.k to beacb &
iouatosellf $117,000. $72,900.$69,900 =:r!ll& ~!T~Y~~ft Truly outstanding at breathtaking view of 2000 sq. ft . Ocean Vu. foradditJonuldctails. park.1152,500. ..,
MAURYSTAUFFER On bluffs, overlooking th.la and more; 8 must S138,500 ocean & harbor Illes. Open Sun. 1·5, 19 Jma · 546-4141 DUPLEX-sharp
2 41 1 SEA LION REALTY Leisure World. Buy one see home. Now selllnJ AGENT640.5560 1bis 3 bdrm dream won't Loa Crt .. 21.3·429-5901, near beach & park. 1213 N. Coast, Laguna unit or both each has a r ...... 500 (2l8) Jut at only 1149 000 Call eves431·7663.
,,,.,,!1)< ('c "'JM ') ;
t' i\l. ( (),.
497·3318 644-2212 view; con'slsts of 3 or.~, Portoflftot.auty 752-1700 ' BLUERJBBON 191•500· ~~~~~~~~~ ..,, __ 2 ...... _ In 1 • More aq.n. th1tn any Ol'fN1119·11Hu"'ro11tN<t• RE INC _ uwm..,., .,....,,,., x nt thtr model ln ll bo . .
~1':/}
COATS & WALLACE ~::t~~':"~~~ ~~·~~~ [•·11111 FOVR·PLEX-&st bpy
near beach. SJ.a,500.
ARCH llACH HTS. nus' bdrm. home off en for auesta. teenaeen or otnce. Lee prlitate lot, IA YCIEST IEAUTY color 11lore, Nddle tel)·
nts court It all th• Sparkllnlt clean Ivan
amenlllea. By owner Weill dttiaoed .a BR, .a
1170,000. By appt. BA, W/fltMm "dJntn1
"'4-5121 « "4-2071 ext rm. Pvt. low malnt yard
1_250_. ___ ....._ ___ , wn, fn.dt tret1. Ideal
mov•ln rood. 1 Yr. war· rant,y. YAU.ff
REAL ESTATE, INC.
MUST SEE NOW!
0,.•Sat/S.. l·S SOllfh~ 1016
BERTHAHl!NRY
REALTORS
2U Del Mar '492-4121 Price will soon be In· •••••••••••••••••••••••
creased on t.hla tmmac. 3 MOVI IH HOWi 1--.. -.. -.-v0-N-• yT bome on lu.'b \4 acre. ..,.......-A
over ~ trees. des1an~r·s Pet'fect tor a •tarter ~ • COUISI pool " apa. 2SOO 1q tl of home. 2 Bdrnu. & 2 WVW""
t.al&dull)' appointod llv· tralba. Just atepa lo a Gre•'C>PPOrtwlb'tlocnm ln1arta • .aBdnn,2~ba, private beacb Jn So. beaulltut units on
livlnJ rm. din Int rm, Lll\lna. '136,000. M ••do w l u k Go If
family rm. 3 car 1ar. C-.y & C:411a .... -•-Y Coul'H. a Bedroom. 2
$225,000 _, 11.IMSo. Coast Jlwy. t>Qth owner11 t.lo1t wllh 23UWl~mti.aae LAGUNA BEACH drepl•ce. Oill1l1r n.tw.
Catl64M821 497·2457 AlklD1sm.ooo.
I
'
, ..
DAILY "ILOT ,, .._,.., U•~ Ho.H Unfun.hh.d Holt••• U11fUl"ftithed HG.•t U11funll.a..d A.portm ... ta ...,,.Wd Apartmetttt Unfw1'. .. •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• °""" lHI It.... Ottwr .... •t• ' th mu,.,....... Cotttl MtM 3 224 P•tt• y......._ 3Zl4 LA1cJ11M HIAs 3250 Newport leoclt 32'9 lalMHI PHIM.ao 3707 Newport hoch J7'9 ·•··•••················ ···············~····· .•..•.....•............ ·········•····.········· ~, .•...........................•.••..••......••.••.•.•..........••.•••••••.••••.•..•.......... · 19 · •••••••••••••• ••• ••• ••• 2 Br upper ~1.nfronL ...._,.,.,.,,, JOOO M08'.LI HOM 9 ~le'11elt 1 141 ~~ ~t co°od_?AI ~~·Beaut. 3 bedrm, J bath, Nvew 3 A8rc. 2 ba rondo. •l'l'rWATIANOHT 1&28Rnexttobeach AR Av1ul till nee 1. Util pd -··-••••••••••••••••• TRlJll PAKI 2300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • r c '"'• ... • hut• bonus room-lplc, low. I • pool, tenn&S 3 Br, bltna, frplc. Yrly 5.30PM • $325/mo.11:'1·31&8 •-THI 11.....,,... •••••••••••••••••••••• •1 droo1 m, l\'1 bath1, d.rpe, auto.dr dbl sar, all fJW c ... • drpa iuper La&una V1ll~e. No peu. lie. Daya, '7'H-431W or ~ 673 9034 -• • ....,... ar1e lvlnti room . 2 mJr appl, pvt patio, ten· nelih~ihoed' S4H M5C).8"-9804. eves/wknda87Wl68 -2 Br wmter rental,"°' blk
1-4-U! a ii. Un1t1. nu~h IY THi SIA prlv•l• palloa. a <'Ur nil, pool, Jacuui,no::l 963-4.Wl .& ...... t 'f • anfronl ull elec, rum to oceaa. $3ZS mo .
iA1and 0.-aa&t' Coun Ukt new. 2 HR. family .CllJ'••ea Inv•':>' pupulur S4Ml mo 540 .__. , no ee. J Br, 2 b~ A/C, bwlline. LARGE 3 BR. 2 8A home, 1 Br incld gar S300 mo: trr.J.GlO
t• •a for h11hH1 nn, 1lua rm, many H arn. Aull S4!pt :wth 1 ......... •leedt 3240 $375 mo. Nr. Moulton like new, Lido lale. Ap 642-2164or673·0782 ------------
v.Jm Call mam, Hob lr1&1 1 pntaduJt p•rk Cot )'Hr llround ltllH M a Verde 3 + family, •••••••••••••••••••••• Plaza. 23708 Sorc1in.a. prox. 2:200 1q. ft. Long SfEPS TO BEACH 2 Br, ~orauu Pn<'~ to tell. ?Odl'.~ llper nlUflth 1• .. b,.. now paint. $400 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, m~or95S-2200. t 0 rm 11 e. av" i 1. OCEANFRONT deluxe. pr, win~.127S. Adwt11,
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irl Gl> Mo. No~l.11 iorccows brand oew unit Lovely bome, 3br 2ba, 11300/moot.h. gar, blln1, wm~r. 1 Br, nopeta.67:Hl840
(.'OlJ KTHSYnt;ALTY newater -Aaenl&33l7ea wllb 1 tr1 patio, aar, frplc,apU,drpe,htltna, BERKSW~EREALTV no;o.3 Br,SS25.ti73·6640 OCEANFRONT Claai.
1i1Z TISI ~ 1 c--•rt hw.-1 ~· close to tranap. A/C, 1Wldeck, fncd yd, '1900 1000 W. Oceanfront, opn "A" No pets. 3 Br, 2 Ba.
t1 _, .. o...rt, REAL ES TAT[ tt.ilorc you pay some 846-J:lei. ~~O. Call eardener. ~ mo. Call BLUFFS CONDOS 12-5 Sat/Sun. 3 Br pluah. 675-4688 No students .
..._. 2400 1350 S.Coa 1t Hwy. u11encle• for the "run or61 . •at· wtmda76M753 Lea.tea starting at $500 ~. Winter.5!58·74911 Newport Oceanfront. 2
••••••••••••••••••••••• 494-,536_ ~round ' ' ca I 1 Real nlce J br, 2 ba, c~ Leue w/option le> buy, Month. Aaent6"·U33 Bal Pen Point. La 1Br, nr Br,2ba, bltina.Avall l-0/1 THIMICIMCf OF ~Hila 3 150 ~10NS~MERSd GUI~~ drPld 2 car aar., fenc new'a BR, 2 Ba Condo. Xlnt family home 5Br bay & ocn. yrly II• $275 lo 611. $450 mo incl util.
PALMSPllMGS7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lh:fdi:.v~~~.![~e~s. ~·~ :oc~f::_H. Fully u praded Ip 3~ba,lge lam r~.lg~ mo.833-8111 <714)673·0881 or
T'lunk Qf a luxunom ~ Leillw-e World Condo. <ibr, pJex·a & ap\'a available • im • o :{tflbt eartr tores. Cuat kltch, nr achla & shops. Winler-1 Br er l drps (213_>11HJ_._00_1_8 ____ _
BR. 3 DA. 1700 1q. n Ba1ba. c•rport. 5400 mo NOW! At beach or ... Up CLOSETOBEACK Panor!~lc ~fe!' ;.t;f,· ;:,-~~F/mo. Yl'ly Paho. $22~ Ut~1: paid: Winter Rental. Lge 3Br.
'"nhin w/pcl()I, JUC04zi. ~$4$·3722 _ to 100'1 of NEW li.allnga Clean 2 Br, formal' din· mo.S8l-007&oreS4:S"6 · · · C811894·3S23 2ba luxury apt. Beaut
""'-" bar, , mplll'y furn. M.w ri • h l 169 each day . Sm a 11 rm. 1 sty p aUo h~e. BLUFFS WATER VIEW -furn. AvaJI Oct. lat tbru <.:"-' to d~nlwn Palm ... :'?:': ... ~......... fee/FREE life service. w/lplc, wetbar, .relng. LacJ-aMIC)llet 3252 3 BR. & lam., beaut. gat· Winter Rental, super _lex;. Jwie 15. Block to bch.
Sprinaa ~or detail• Lovely bayfront 3 br, 2 ba MS-4900 D/W, bltna. Tenru1, pool ••••••••••••••••••••••• ed courtyd A.I). M4-lU3 . r~cmg bay beach. Light $525 /mo. 673-3057 or
phone at:l 81l3·477'3 or bcbhse l>lbwhr wat"her ••C.......nGulde & RV storage. $42S mo. Beaut. pvt. area twnhme atry, 2 Br 2 Ba lower (213)1MB·598S 8118711..\5 & d e.r (2l3)007-6087. --9722 Verde Mar Ocean view, :i Br, 2 OntheBay,2Br,2ba,un· duplex. Resp adlts, no
• 1213;?49 ....... 5 • $400. New E·a1de 3 br, 2 ( Brook h u r 1 t & ff'PlCS. Pvt heh, tennil, dergnd prk'ng, full aec. pels. $400. 675·~9 Winter rental, 3 Br 2 Ba,
IUCBt:ARLAKEFRONT _ -----ba, yard, encl. garage, Hamilton) 545·3359; pool.~/mo.834·3333or Redec. 1 yr lease. Oceanv1ew. l0935lhSt. $159,000. 5 C1&b1ns Bcoch duplex. 3 br. W/D. No pets. 848-2600 494-3320 f150/mo. 833-9442 Eves. BaJfronlj.nplex unit. 3 br, NB. $400 mo. 675-6124
Ai1-494 tn27 494 9704 Winter ~95 Students ok TSL Mgmt 642·1603 "· l • ba, &araae. luundry · Avail 9 15 751.9392 · 3 Br, 2ba, cpts, drps, 2 car NJGUu. SHORF.s, pnv. Newport. Creal Condos. Winter $350/mo. Yearly $186 Bach. ~lnl bch loc,
0Mt of C~ . 3 BR, 2~i BA, gorgeous gar, fenced, frplc. $400, commun., dramatic 3 ocean VU( "2t>r, den, ofc, MSG/mo. RoblMOn, Bkr View, patio, uUI pd,
WllMilMillililiillflilllilillill"-illil ~ 1550 SHORT TERM RENTAL brand new condo. W1lb 2 675-5810,642·0393 BR . 2 b a ·• com P · lrplc, all rec facil. Also 548·5647 or67~64 adult• re la. 1111.1\ler "
•••••••••••••••-... •••• 2·4 mos. Pvt bch comm lrg. patios, 2 car garage, pnvacy; StePI to pool, lge 3br, fam rm. (rplc ,. __ .... __.Mer 3 722 67~ TWENTY
UNITS
Hancho California , ............. u-•2or3Br2 .. a poolJac .. ••ttenn'•Sub· lBedroomcondominium tennis. beach. $550. ~ui\ ea Sell Sl'"'OOO __ _.. ---------~ f ru .. ., w . • D • ' ......... • .... I d t I ~· . &M, •••••••••••••••••••••••• Yrly lrg 2br Huge patio Teme<-ula 5br, am rm, fplc , bay view. Grdnr. mil on kids & pets. $495. q.ear poo an eon 5· 493-7278 673-2332 • · 3ba , lrplc. wet bar: Reducedrate s.18-0554 call549.37100r536-l9S6. $2900/month. Call Avail. yrly, l BR on w/oceanvu,stepatobch.
Priced for qwck1c SJlc-Premium lake & mnl vu. 646-4477. OCEAN VIEW 3 Br. 2 ba, frplc, lge yard. beuch, pvt gale. S375 mo $375 mo. 213·355·1379
Oceanside $<135,000 Clbh.-.e fac. 2600sq ft. ()c. Wmter rental, clean cute New 3 Br 2"°' Ba lwnhse, Sltl 2 Ir, ttO LM. Adults. 2Br. 2 ba. Frplc, $400mo. < 213) 928·18 4 4 or Winter Rental, 3 Br & 2
•Maua.il ~ liilPlac• Prap1trti•• 7s2-tt20
l400 OUAll U HIW~J llA<H
r upancy Oct L $125.000. beachcouage,2Br,S285 reCng, W/0, 2 car gar, 2Clubhouses,J acuzzis& 675-4912Bkr (714l67S.7'164 Br, completely re-
Uill owner at 644-4779 or mo. lnclds patio, i;ar, tenrus, pool, jacuzzi, rec Circle this! Fncd yd, + pools. $460/mo. 7~·9260 nf 8 1 BR, adults, no pets. UP· modeled, y, blk to bch.
M6 ll400orS48-1789 ulll. 2091,, JJrd St. Open rm, $485mo. 640-5751 more. Nice area. Call the Ocea ront 2 R. 2 Ba, per rear, r""lic. Call Encl gar. $4.25 & $325. 1st.
House Sept 17 & 18. experts, many more avl. 3 BR, 2 ba home, pool, gar, crpt/drps, refr1g. a•n71:•c ..., •·last+ dep. 673·9404 aft 8 UMIT .A.PT. 674 Cove St. 3 Br l 'h Ba, Small fee. Pix. Prof rent new cpt, $475., 1 mo free ·Yrly lse. $650. 642·3443 .....,. ....., eP"
2 Bdrm, 2 ba. Lo vacancy Winter Rental, 2 Br, steps huge Fam Rm & fplc serv 64s..4900 rent•"'/l yr ••A "'•" "'""4 Co tau--3724' --~--------d · · .. ""'· .....,._, 4 Br 2 ba 1444 Santiago • ....... a ·-. area 4yrsold.Aircond. to oceuo. $275. A lt11 , Fncdyd.$425.642·0282 **~Guict. • · • 1 BR kl ~88 ooo 645-8657 ------..----•Adults, 2 Br 2 Ba, condo. N.B. $1500 mo. Agent, ••••••••••••••••••••••• • garage par ng, _________ , ' • 3 bdrm 2 ba. builllns, $215, check t his! Nice 2 Frootrowongolfcoursc. 541-5032 $40.00WEEIC&U, steps to beach. S250.
LAGUNAUEACll,Z una C..llMr.Frey 542·~ Bayshores, xlnt area, carpcts,drapes,d~lc~r Br.kidsOK,xlras,rent $400mo.831·2738 •Studio&lBRApts M4-68990t 675·7598
lot. Both with sur,cr ~EN lllNKLE R.E. neur water, 2 Br. lge Liv gar. fenced yrd, w1pa~10 serv, fee. No last mo. •TV & MaidServ Avail SanCa.n11..ta 3776
ocean view. New :J l.39Acrei Rm,$400.842·3315 cover. Gardener paid. Mustsee.845.4900 tiMuloftVlejo 3267 SanCa.m.nte 3276 •PhoneServ,Htdpool •••••••••••••••••••••••
bedrm, <! bath, fpll·. 2 184.1 ...... 327.'74' $45() pr mo. 833·1084 aft C G I• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2376 Newport Blvd, CM
decks. dynamic design Fenced ~t trees 2" ONTHESA.HD 5:00PM.Nopels. ** OMUIMl'S u CA.STA.DELSOL LG. 2 br, \ ba home. 548·975Sor845·3967 i;~:~ul~te!Bu"~ldb::tl:
+older up11radcd 2 · • Beautiful3br.2ba,patio, 4 B "1s' Ba tad 2 o. 2 Ba d s Stone's throwtolbebch. ----------" wtr line septic lank new crpts, drps. A vi.ii NEW Family Condo, 3 lg. r -r•. • cp • rps, ta-cul'ar v1'ewc.00Afote' r 6pepmc· Xlnt. ocean vu, pat1·os. FUm. lge & small 1 br, S275/mo. 49-t-7287 beerm w • fpk. J>ri <'rd to workshop 2A 'x40' & olhe; immediately 'tll 6178. bdrrrui 2'n ba A/C elec bltns, bike to bch. $450. wkdys. 837-8260 garden, newly decor'd closed in gar. incl 'd.
sell at $232,000., i.ubm1t bldg~. 220 elec. 22091 5600. 752·7410 dys, eye dbl. ga;. Cpig & 848·9'68:842·9700 w/newcptg. S385·moincl Adults, no pets. 2110 ~lnwftb
your terms. World Wule Walnut. (Sedco Dist.) 494-4851 evsiwknds drps, all appl's. Tennis, 3 Br, l~ Ba. Nr. Warner & 2 BR, lV• ba, AC, rrplc, lllils. 492-6l88or 547-0361 Newport Blvd. u..fur'llilhed
Brokers, 673-4M5, J ean Lake Elsinore. $28,000, LL....--•a..L-I L-...1 pool,pvt.pallos.Nopets. Graham. $400/m o . bllns. landscpa. $375. •••••••••••••••••••••••
nie. $8,000 dwn OWC Bal at ~ vnTW"n Snwu $47Smo..M4·5861 846-7250 581-4255 New MiraCostaTwnhme, Sl95. l Br, incl util. Crpta, lal»oalsland 3106
9c;., Cont.at.--l owner {503) ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br +den, fplc, SJ60 mo. drps, patio, qwet adults. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 535-6721 GeMt-al 3202 4 Br, 2 ba Mesa del Mar. 3 br, 2 ba, fenced yd. LUX 2 Br 2 Ba +den con· 49'1·Z147 or640-6878 644~58 Quality Tn·Plex, lge 3 Br ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cl.n, frpl, nu cplg, cov ,_,Id k .....,,,, do l I blln I g II ---------FROM S'l2ST0$750 owners unit, 6 yrs old. Ranches. Farms, I & A RENT A.LS pat. $450. 640-0008 ";;&.~n ° · .-v. mo. view~ Yc~rd . .:S.= • 0 Bach Apt. Adult/no pets. All yearly; also houses ~a0040n. S$al4n6C.0001em. Brkr. Gro•es 2700 Why pay $25·$30wbcn c· I t.h.i N. I Sm Juan Close to everything. In· lnchJded. _ .. _.., ______ . __ ••••••••••••••••••••••• you can get the besl for $!15! irc e s! ice oc, Neat, 2 br, 1 ba home, Hewport leoch 3269 Capl•tr.o 3271 quire 186~ Roctiest.er. Rumbold Really Invest.
CORON ... DEL M ""R WANT Bch hse, duplex, less, $15. fee. 7 Days call the experts for the w/cpts, drps, 2 car gar. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • --•-ocL 3748 675-4822 ,_ "' uruts or for exchange of serv. you 'II like. Fee, F ed d NI __,... .. -• 2 unils +guest Ideal .._.EV RA.._.CH Sl50Furn4·Plexulll pd plx.64S-4900 enc yar . ce area. ShorecliCCa. Qual 2Bram Lovely 4 br. 2 b~. fplc, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Yrly N1ce2 Br unfum apt
location. Owner will "" "" ~~~P'*ir:. ~rpc~.uyt~~pd * •COMUDWrl Guide F· 963-4567, agent, no rm home. Lge patio & rNI. cpts, drps, kida/pet w I f rp I c. No pet s.
finance. Sl67,500. Agt 12 Hldgs, 8 wells, 300 ee. back yard. Pvt bchs. ~.4J,0°t t!~e:~f::.25· Nicely furnished yrly S350/mo.675·2975
494-4118 PLUS level acre. 'Close il801 BR, pool, ulil pd Check tbl.s 2 Br 2 Ba kids 2 BR, bltns, new crpls & flOO/molae. • g ' rental. 1 Bdrm, $300/mo, ·-----p-t--. .a-3807 C A I ine, $420,000. s;ioo 2 B~ 2·Plx, will con· ok, fncd yd, putio, gar. drps. Beach/Garfield. Lido Isle 2 Br+den 2 B d bit I GI 1 blk to ---AN UNUSUAL 673-2617. · sider children Call the expert rental · ' r + en, ns. poo ' on enneyre, ••••••••••••••••••••••• $22.5 2 BR c.~. Apt. serv. Pix. Fee. 645-4900 no;o. mo. 554·7210 view. $800/mo lse. la.Ices. rec. fac. S37S/mo. bch. 67J.S093or 494.4420 $325. 2 br, 1 ba, block to
ON£.2:'i.::IMD &tat. S2703BR,k1dsOK ••CCIMUIMNGulde 4 Bdrm. family rm, 2 ~/sle. 2 Br+den. 8J8.380'7l3l·l248 beach. Nr. all. Garage.
Exc:t.anc. 2100 1826Newport81,C.M. bath, built-ins. lrplc, On Wmoate.r. 3Br +orra·ce, Victoria on beach side, TSAdLultsM/""mtpet.s. Yearly. Large Coral Trei> in •••• ~.;~~•••••••••••• $15 fee 645 5990 $27 B Ba kid r rde N pets s.uto Ana 328 g 642-1603 courtyard, bubbly foun· Whypay laxes?·Trade · · 5· 3 r 2 • 8 pets pa 1«;ga ner. S · fam rm. din rm. Lge 2·2Br, $400 & $4SO. ~pl· __ ......;:; _____ _
tain. BBQ. No one llv1n~ frank Zelamey Reullor HOMEFINDERS OK. Pool, etc. Must see. Nr rabam & later · home w /comp I el e ••••••••••••••••••••••• ne • fr P 1 c • v 1 cw• 1 br, steps lo beach $250
above your t enants. 4~-8~ Calt~he rental expert S47S/mo. ~ privacy. On water at Greats bedrm, 21h b~. 499·3858orS8l·2999 mo. yrly. Jnct. util.
Pn.vacy abounds. Lots of Real Estate Ca~~~t~::r!:sl serv. Plx.1'~ee. 8454900 898-2tl28 Eves. 3·9431 turning basin. VIEW. fplc, or, cpls. ~xs, 1 Br apt Victoria Beach 675-5800, Bkr.
pride shows he re . Wam.d 2900 $1451 br(um. Orange ••eo...-nGttlde 4 Br 2 Ba, 2 car gar. fully Sl.500/mo. ~~/~t ~~.:;,~~.a~: area. 125()/mo. Utll: Incl. CoroflacW Mer 3122 SINl60V.~MSOEUNTTJ841 ~.01JAS03'T •••••••••••••••~••••••• SlSOlbrkids,plex IMSTA.NTMOVE-IM fncd, bltna, .&cpltsl, Odrp7s, SUps to beach, 3 Bdrm, Q63.4S67 Agent nofee. 494..:111 •••••••••••••••••••••••
...... u " $170\br,k.ids,unil N t: h 1921 S395 mo. rv I 7 'beaut decorated, ' '
TWO .. ~.. lot B O W N Properly in Sl902br,air,uml Anahr. nelemwStwn.2Br',e1.•Lba, 894--0810 .,50/molse. Swimmin"pool,3br,2ba, Clean 2 Br Oceanfront, '""""es on . y I~lewood, Hawthorne ~ •• • fplc gar lge deck Qwel -owner. $67.~. lncome orSo.Bayarea? S2102br,kldsok sm. pet·child ok • .A11 JBr,2 ba,frplc,patio.5 WATERFRONTHOMES lam rm w/lplc. good • • · ~ '"v l620/mo. Only 10% d.own. WILL PA. y CA.SH!! $2352 br, plex, C.M. blt.ns + 811'. Only SUS blks ocean . .Bltl.na, 'New CALL631-1400 neighborhood, children ~ts. ~~ts. Wmler, V if. ___ ·_ .
510 So. Garnsey, Santa Ph.TomD'Alleuandro ~~~~~~=~~~~ _mo_.CallMgr.64$-46M cpta/drps.2J3..e.03H ~en:!~le:!fi ~!1~: Oc_ean_.t_Fr_on_t _w_ln_t_e_r _2_B_r_.• 1' ~
Arut.83!M82l T.O.PROPERTIES S3753br,pool,condo Meaa Verde 3 br 1~ ba, Hall~-For Lse. ·•seavlew" Meyer,714:1140-5357 2Ba, f~lc. TV, deck. CORONADELMAR
5 HOUSES <213)674·6907 or (714) Open7days Fee Fam. SUS. tat. Lat. $100 t .. tuiw 3242 wts1w!m1 ·tcnnisNclub Vacant.2br l~baCondo super kitchen, gar, no
546·6201 anytime or 557·0822 sec.NewCf'D::.drp-pnt.No ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• pr v . eges . ear . • petsS450 494•5792 2 Br Townhouse, frplc. All 2 bdrm, beam ctil· <714 )846·522laft.6pm • peta.S51-662!r'aft6PM. Wik to bcb, t e nnis, "Spyglua Hill"! Sbf'; m family area. Hlgbly -=-----·------• Pool, tennis. Some ocean
lngs wood frplc's pvt .1d lalaoa l"-d 3206 U new, vacant. Make offer. upgraded. $275. BKR 1 BR, lYJ ba condo. Utils & Catalina vlewa. Close
ards• PLUS 3 Id· Local but er wants ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3Br, 2Ba, bltna, recen >' marina. Elegant clean, Red Carpet Realtors, 962-4471968-1317 pd.Gar,pool,ocean.S400 toshopping4'fmebeach. ~ 0 er un· bu1ldable property 3 Br 2 Ba, (pie, din rm, carpeted&palnted,fncd 4Br, 3ea;2 fl'plcs, f100 7u12QZ 4949601 64426
its. A!l for $270,000. Newport, Costa Mesa SS25 mo. Consider qwel yd, coveTed patio, boat mo. 8 48-9585 d aya' .,.-3 Bdrm luxury Condo nr _mo~.;;-·-;:;,:;;;:~::::~l~~·~l~l~~~~~~
Easts1 de C. M • Agt area. Tear-downs, add· students. 494.3223 OC' RV atorage area, $375 ~eves BAYSHORES nearly new So. Coast Plaza. Pool, BACH, terrific ocean
645-1103 ons. multiple unit pro· mo. 9'79-6161 ....._ 3244 2 Br den 2 Ba, lge patio, 1 gar. $365/mo. 640-4462 view, util pd. $2~ mo. Oceanfront 1 br, f/p._ gar.
Nw pt Hgt s t ~ i PI ex. ~~Ta~~~~W. 11:~~ ~~~c~ c:~~g~~~ 3 Br, 2 ba, cpt.s, drps, kida ••••••••••••••••••••••• bllt to pvt bch. $800 mo .• Beautiful 3 br, 2 ba, with 497.~7 Adlls no pets. Winter
Slll},500. Three 2 nr un Bill, at67S.3859 ok. 2 car gar. $410. grdnr . llMTALS yrly. 675-3568 brick fplc, cpta, drps, ....... •-h 3769 $350, yrly $425. 673·7787
1ts. Agt. 581·0421 o Will h ( in I 8319081 BLUFFS 3 B 2 Ba I lovely area nr ML Sq .._wpart _ac 5 ...... 1 I d I 540-9007 a~ eit~~~C1ash0~ ~01'f as'°:! ... M• .. 3222 c . . 2 BR,2 ba ' ......... M40 r ' ge P k Kids/pet OK $395. •H•••••••••u••••••••• ~::. ~:w~pt~:~~
Scot.tRealtyS36-7!>33 Eastslde tge 1 br house. 3BR,2Ba ....... $435/700 r;,~o, ~.St~eat loc. ~ Agentno f~ . On the beach·winter ren· Wlktobch-sbp'g.Grdnr Chll Chari• Loe. Beamed clnga, fncd yd. 3 BR, 21,; Ba.·····••· $450 mo. ' · tal. Duplex 3 BR, 2 Ba
E/side front dplx., 3 hr Wanted to buy bu!ldable SPYGLASS ulit pd. No dogs. $235. 4 BR,2'h Ba .... : .... $795 NewNpt.Terrace3brCon· Wwts••.... . 3291 up,$495.2BR,1Badown 1;~~t!'~~~r~~=!:
hse, all new reel wood lot. or house on the canal DELUXE/ PROF mo. 648·6680 4 BR, 2 Ba · ·' • · · · • · • $420 do, nr heh. SS2S. 634·1441 •••0 •••••••••••••••••• $395. Both wt ear & frplc. 4 Br 3 ba fam-rm 2100'
encl. patios. all encl in Newport Shores. Prin· · DECOR aBR.~=~~~.MSO d)'l645-3763ev1 Very nh:e4 br, 2 ba home Mature adults. 2914 W. $11>5/moAdult.spref'dNo garages, pool . rrpl. clples only. John 673-9211 4 Br, 3 Ba, Fam Rm , 3 Enchanting 3 Br 2 Ba~ wtth UW, drapes, cpts, 2 Oceanfroot.646-2030 petsS09Acacia64S·7048 1 n cl K <' p R. s 14 2 . ooo. car gar, 2 fplc's, micro great loc. quiet nbrhd, car gar., eood area. S395. Oceanf 3 BR 2 B
642·0759 & 752·1920 Gen R...tals wave oven, wetbar. atone fplc, yd W/cov'd Sea Wind Condo 963"'567A&ent,nofee. ront ' a, Lge2 br,2 ba,beautview
Ryan __ ....................... Panoramic view. S900 patio, dbl garw/opnr. Nr ~ Lease this beautifully Homet,_..shldor !~~~·.June. or yr· or bay. Private. $500. LL....--Fournithed mo. Lease. Call Onnle, fwys, $475. lan 645-8908; maintained2bedrmCon-•L....L-1_a..._..a 3300 03· '675-5205;673-4841 .
--------1.--. Aaent.644-7211644-8i32 Jeanne646·7173 do l N rt Be h ,.,......_ OC"" .. "'FRONT t2B ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1~~~~~~~~~~! n ewpo ac . ••••••••••••••••••••••• C.tM.. , nea r -1: OPTION to buy S335 mo. 3 Refria./wHher/dryer/ Uveon BAYFRONT le en· w/gar. Adlta, no pets.
br 2 al)' condo. 1 m1 No of traab comt:'ctor lftcld. joy llvin ... Near 4 br 3 S34 5 m 0. w In ter. 1.n.2 .. !e3xesbdrm& .Anum· .e
1 Mar.nab lrwme
REAL.TV COMPANY
So. Cat Plaza. Comp. sec. 14'1S/mo. R D CARPET ba, din. rm. Pier. No _2_13-_195-__ 30_11 _____ 1 ~... f)ri
No children under 16. REALTORSMS-3474. ..... ... *''00/mo.8'75-0525 Ml.&-.-~ .--~ '"A•-.rft~• Corona d el Mar loca-
MS-309'7 2 BR. lwtury condo tlom. A&f.. 615-2311 days.
FuUyfuril. $1500Mo. ~
BILL GRUNDY
REALTOR 615-6161 IUATHrAICIMCi
JITTYVIEW
Upgraded 3 BR upper,
OCIAMROMT •Pl to China Cove. f750.
WINTERRENTALS Mo. Call Nisei . at
2BR,tba. $370 644-7211Agt. Lge. 3 BR, 2ba. s.550 ---.....;:;'------
2BR,2 ba. S400 2 Bdrm. BuUUna, frplc, STIPS TO llACH pool. a undeck, patio.
2BR den 2ba $575 Adults. No pets S32S.
1 BR yearly tinn 6 7 3 -1 • 1 a e v e a o r • " ~ weekends.
associated
ti U fl I r h' '. U ~ Ii I 1 ' ol rJ
~---~--~~ 2 8'\. 1~ Ba, new crpts
drpe. Cklle t.o ~b. .$365.
mo. Daya ~. evea , , \\ 11 , , I I
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ltf a bHtl ~ ... taeah u.tw., .... twah u.tw.. Office R...t• 4400 Office Retttail 4400 awe;:,:...... Friday, Sepltm~ 18, 197]
•••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ······················~ ffy 5005 c:..tw...... l124 c..t.ei.c... 3124 .... ,...... h6t ....................... Lolt&Found 5300 JobsW4'1fed. 7075 Het,WantH 7100:
•• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CJGARF.TTESUPPLV ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••' ~
lledtl1wY.._ z Hr ap41, • z Br hH EXECUTIVE ROW Inc DLSTRJDU1'0HSJUP LOST. s mo old Cat, Male,25,wklelectriclan Babys1uer.1yroldell'lr•
IZ.lW WllwnlM!oto -1ar.t1ita. llld.IOK,nu rAbMIWPOIT P-·~,.~~ --··· ·-· ·-.. ·.w-.:. l'artor•'ull'nme hlk1brn w/ore mrk'11. or lll•intenance job 4 yr old boy my homl'." rl:IKNORl'NYURN ~ta IZ~~ 131 1 H•~b•lor1, 1 or 2 ••• ....-. ~ ... _... fmmcdlatenecdlnCt):jlu wh!lcbc:lly&pawa. Vic w/veryaoodmcchanlcal Mon·Frl 28, start 0<.1..
-ar\o--nhumew h'pl WRP 1• b-Btdrooma•Townho.uH lctt/ --. T...W Na ...... ......,, Mt!llu und or isurround Pnncel-On & Greenbriar, aptitude. Wkdy an 4:30, Cat. refs req. CciM ·tee ~Uo •~DC carait I bi • Inc 1 ltna V.-om 13114.50 tel••••• ....... MrYIH. c_,.,tttc• 1 n I town 1 r or d I 1 c M. 548· 7378 wknd anytime, t'Jll-3827 OMfiurea) 754H310 •Alb<a, ehild 11 , 0 ,•r + D W, no~~· kid• OK Spettacular 1p11, total ..........._ Lributor11. AU rt'lail oul· uk for Nairn. -•
PooUijacu.UJ av111. RZ5 Ml 91fl (;W't rtcrullon proaram, ,..,__---.a... .. .,.. llt/ ... l•lllt -teta a.re se<:ured by com· Lost, lge grey/white Tab· BABYSITrER Wanted tu
IAITSIDI llOclaJ pro1rurn. I pooi,, ti Mi •lw. ....... & cepr P lf'I IS........ pany. therefore no by Cat "Demian". Vlc. PATTERN CUTTING· tiakc &· pl ck up m1
J Or, t 0.., l •We'). •h•I lenoil ~ At r .. hioo ............ •::r;tertu4 .,,......... product selling. Become II arbor Vtew H1l11. mo•t pattern11 7Sc·Sl. datJihtcr from sch!. SI dr•P••. patio, frplt. Jbr, Jba. t'rpt1, drp1, Jalaod, Jambor~• Is S..n c fl" Maa Mrrictt •••llll• • dlatnbutor for such 011• 640-7316 Can pickup and deliver. hr, CM area. Pill call. m' ti . dbb -uher. bJl.AI, Xl111 lr• c1 .. n. 11 Jo.q~nH1llaRoad ..... .,... tionallf advertised -5413182 9797735
icar. •duJu aiao. ~ t'lnMU. pvt ••rd.a. PIO. 17141644-1900 ... SJfO ,.,..... claarettes as Winston Lost : Male mlQiature --------
1-:idrn. ~ C4lll (7141 7SZ.. 7170 Otmela Marlboro Pali Schnauzer, CdM' area, OCC accounting major de· Babysitlioa. my h.oma.
--New duploxc1 z.3 br $.150 Mall Salems Kool answer s to Alfie. airea work exp. oppty. 8:30to3:30,Mon·Fr1.Npf
. DAILY PILOT 01 ~
I
.! ,t, 3 Bdrma, matur. I Ur r.tudlo, I..._ 8a, patio, ~ yrb' ll'ap.tUy " peta Kent.'et.c. To qualJ(y y:~ Heward. 640-858S w/busy CPA firm; lµJI or upper bay. Aft. 6pm, c1tll ~ll. 1u pd m S<-ott 1ar.12ao. olil. 67A-4tU . must havo a car 2·8 bra MJS!lng from Mna Verde ~Ume. Mature, t,:d. bus. _M_7_-64_34_. ____ _
.,,,-... Pt 6U
507
SU tm7 Sl't!PS TO SAND deluxe ltOCM111 4000 OHie. R...W 4400 per week (daysorevea>. area, 1 man'• black p•~~!~·1~"mc!..~cayaeakJPl1sat· BABYSITTER Needod t\AKFUD<iE~ILLA Adu.It. Ea1ta1de l br cot-8 Ba ' 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••-••••••••••• PLANLAN l... $4000 briefcase, lnltlala GDM WlOl'·--~.,,. llUVt..,_
4
' Wkdys. 11 :30AM-3PM. 3 br • ., .... b~s c;-11dr-tqe, pool, J•cuul, encld 3 r, 2 ' ll1tr, b tni, l?T.SO PER WEEK P 11... '8000 In gold . lm portant _,..,,..........,, My home. Call alt 6PM •
1
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I
• .,. .u .... aparkllng clean. $450 mo lBLK FROMHCH HB NO.COSTAM!SA PLANlll
welClOtne. $2 s ass W a•r, laundry, bJtna, $3()(1. yrl,y. Call l·D85-4E52 or S38-4728 LVE MSG · •Private office $7S ""r ... . $25,000 ,papel'll. Reward ll found. IXftC MGMT SICTY S38-876S CflttttSt ...,,a. 644«78 1 ....,. .,..... • ..-For more information 764·7788 557·2566 ,.. t AB ---------._............. month incl util. write lo "CIGARETTE • •• a urc, resp woman, Babysitter my home Univ
lotto EISldo tnplelll, 3br, 0.. ,... llZ6 A TOUCH OF CLASS Cla111fled ads sell bl& •«O SQ. fT. Carpet, DIVJSlON #23, P.O.Box LOST: Male Doberman. 1 decree <Ena MJr>. Latin, Park. 2 CluJdren. Own
Jt>..trplc,yd,encl1ar ••••••••••••••••••••••• Charmin11 1 br w1b1y item•, s mall Items or dra~,air cond.$19Sper 14, Rosemead , 'Calif. yr old ears not clipped, types over 80wpm, lr81l8p. WllUtti lo dr t(>f
TSLMcmt 64.2 UI03 Maan1f1cenl Mitrina vi4iw. Mature adults. a ny Item. Jut call monthincluUI. 91770. Please include vie 2088 Nwpt Blvd. CM 8
1
peedwrtUna
1
•
1
•peciuUat schl & back 3 days. Nd_i~
..,_ View, aoriteoua l, 2 &3 br Mu.at aee! lSlO W. Balboa M:U678. •Two office suites, 830 phone number. !Ulwardl 64.5--4539 o compoa t on, cor· hskp'a. Sal open. Meats. iJSO. ,_w 2 br, 2 ba. 4 Apc.s.49.J.007s (all.5th) SQ. FT. S22S per month re1ponde n ce , die· Rel's.Aft6pm,559-l960. 1 ~·•· Encl yd, l1tund. -Room & loord 4050 incl utU. Trade name nxtures & FOUND: Bicycle. Vfc. la phone. Hvy phone •
blt1n1 Paruu-oma view, new l lc2 ~~ 3 br, 2 ba, ezicl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~2200 (213)1!9'7·2064 eqwp. of Jr. wear store, Big°tanyon. Call to iden-backeround, some le&al, BABYSITTER, som • 'l'SL.M1mt 642160.J BR If Den 4·Plex. tilo gar Block to beach Roo . . Balbao Isl., 2S yrs tily.&w.22ofS ed1t,teachingsk1ll11,peo. hsekpng, Mon-Fr!·2
ptL'I \1 gr 4961097 l>lil . d.N ta ' mwiorwithoutmeals Dix oUi cea w /secy goodwlll.833-3622 pie co-ordmator, other t.eacbcr,olfAU8oLa,Ht\af :!br. l~ba 1tud10 type. TStifgmt 0 pe 642 1603 In pvt Mesa Verde home. service, xerox. Nr. O.C. _ Found 3 Bikes. (1) UD· valuable disciplines. Top 536-3'03 ~
palJO, pool Kid OK. no 2 l:IR, magruf1cent ocean · Xlnt food. 545·2095 Airport. $250/mo 7S2·S626 'SAN CLEM ENT E known Mini Bike. < 1 > 11lary required ror top --------
pets, nr achl. $29S & up vu Woodburnmg frpl. WESTCLJFF 2br , 26a. VocaH011letttafs 4250 EC YES In HEALTHCLUB Schwinn, (1) Sears. polttiveresulta. Write or Babysitter wanted, 11 ~r mo. 2310 Sanla Arui, Av I. 10 1 $37 5 mo. adulta, no peu. S31S. lnq. ••••••••••••••••••••••• EX UTI. U S FOR WOM l'.:N Owners Identify by serial wire Eunice al Box 2&2, days a Wffk :· 2 small ~S088or21.3·371-4032 493-5845 l700WestclifCDr Apt 18 Pl . Deluxe pnvate oflice. W11J train in cxcerc1se & no .• color, date & loc. Newport Bch. CnllC. children. Own tran:.. ---' an your winter vaca· Sunny, air coed. nutrition couni.chng. All lost. F.V. H.B. Police 92663. Ph (714)641J.7838or Collel{e Park area . . MESA VERDE area . ..._ ... Oft leach 3140 4 Br, 2 ba. garage, new lion. Palm Desert Tennis Pel'500aliied phone cov· e qul pment ancl uded. Dept. 536-5622 846-2957 S49-84S6
Home atmoepbere 2 le 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cpts/freshly painted. Club. 3Brcondo.639·32'71 e rage, s ecr etarla l Greatopportumly. ---------
b)'deluxeapt&,$4G·1034 FAMILI ES Ylrylse~/mo.34thSt. Cabin-BioBear.Slpsl2. service. Easy fwy ac· BERTHAIJENRY Found: 1 Year ol d Uraeot lady seeking Babysitter,evea,very lite
BR.AND NEW CONDO 2 STOP HUNTING Closetobch, 532·3331 Pool tbl, ~Ir TV. MJ\ day. ceaa. 666:8-ker St., C.M. REALTORS Doberman, Vlc. Monte perm. Wa1treu job. Yra hskpa .• in exchange ror
..,., Nr OC Airport S46 2982 215 Del Mar 4 . Vista & Newport Bl, CM exp. at Hilton Hotel. room & board; college ' 'Br 2•,2 Ba. 1''plc , LUXURYadultl&2br, 494-8611. • · • 673-0514. C.Club, Top Reata. student OK. Female
dsbwahr. Lnah cmptr, WE HAVE IT ALL AT step to beach, oceanvu. Rent or lease Desert 30fffcffA¥0H •·-t---,w-.a.-..1 5010 FOUND·. German ~-392Sby10:30am prer.64HIU3 pvt patio, $400 yrly. BANBURY. CROSS. 5515 River Ave. Lse. fleVeat,alrco~d.,l BR -~ -·--::;~;:;::~::;:;-::=::JI.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:" 642-3783 eva, ~f9PM Close to beach, schools, 8'2-2566 modern house. Elcc. ap. at 419 ftiwn St. Hunt Bch. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Shorthaired Pointer, Reliable youna women ( 500 ~q ft. Ideal for am.all TRAVEL AG ENCY a· ny 0 c ea n Hi II a , Sa n looking for housekeeping BANK ? Br, adulta, clo.e lo shop-reeways. pll 's. Artesian hot business Secretarial • Cl
" Pool •J nJ · . size Orange· Co or LA emeotearea.496·2748 j obs. San C l emen . ping, no pets. * •* acu * BACHELOR mineral spring, adj to 24 service oo premises. n.. i N B (71• l7S9-06t·o · . le/ Dana Point areas 64.5-3939 2 Bedrm from $2&. hr free hotlmlneral bath. 536·6688. rre · · · .. FOWld young Siamese kit· 492.0062 &42·6604 F\lm or unfum. 529·0041 MoMy to Loan 5025 ten in Park Huntlnb'10n ---------New CONDO 2 br. 2~ ba. V1ewpoln't-La. off Beach APT days,or675-9087 wknds. li170 o~ Av•. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tract, H.B. 968-0630 after Help W.ted 7100 2 frplca, blllns, pool & betwn Warner& llell • • •r"rrf"' ecep•·loo area s·JO ' ALLU"'ILS PD1 """' ·••.,r .. · It 2-..1&3 dTD ' · ••••••••••••••••••••••• :1pa. $425 mo. 675·4912 " · · 2 of aces, pvt restroom. I , nu r • • 1
Bkr ~~a!~~ r~~e~~r1~~~ ~o~~ i ~~0 :0!~e 2°0c1e11~: R.tais to Shor• 4300 5225. 548~96 ~~~~t~~11~~~1~~ ~~1l~.~;~. :~~:~i~~ Acctng BkkPlg
Npt Hats area. lbr, nu Holly. 848-3896 Balboa Blvd. Only $250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Deluxe office space S25' lrolcer, 493.3 t 02 Culver & Walnut,lrv. TEMftORARY
crpt, wtr pd. '240/mo + per mo. NO FEE. Call: Male to share fornishe<f; 3 ~ Newport Blvd, CM. Ml~ Regist.er Today to work
tst & last + dep & cln'g APT MANAGER ; Rent Sueat556-7777 anytime bdrm, 2 ba home 1n :llcft. SSS-.lSl.644-222S MoMyW.t.d 5030 ---------on various accounting& ree.213~·5108 deduction on new deluxe Irvine's University ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOST: Sm. Wht. Poodle, bookkeeping aaaian-
unltS in Hunt. Harbour Park. $2.W/mo. 552-9606 Corona del Mar, outaide H you're not getting f ., vie Hunt. Bch. mcnls. Work close to ta&t.sidebeaut.3br,2ba. area.Adultcouple.Write Westcllrf 2 hr, l'h ba or752-637S entranc~. second Ooor, lJ.8~;. .. returnonyourln· R ward. S36·S840 o r your home. Figure
$360/mo. Clusif1ed Ad #21, Daily townhouse. Adults, no Ocean view, pvt bath & vestment, call Sandy Clerka to Sr. AccoUD· . 548-6885 Ptlot, P. 0. Box 1560, pets. S300/mo. 1728 Bed· Female roommate to ahr storage. Wallc lo ban.t &c Ross, Ajax Co. 837.3744 _,_ ________ , tent• needed tbruout.
EXPERllMCED
PART· TIME
TB.LER
UNITED
CALIFORNIA IANk
630A Newport Ctr Dr
Newport Beach
1714)644.6464
AnEquaJ
Opportunity Employer STUNNfNG 2 Br 2 Ba Coeta Mesa 92626 ford Ln, S4fM5l3 ~trk ~:!~0:z1~9~-:n~~ resuaurants. Sl20 per mo. •Average yield on pay. of~~·:~~;:;~ Orange Co.
garden apt, pool, rec rm, Uruque Health Spa Condo, Block from wa~r. Shores 64G-4J.80, 639·2'41 ~e ~ ;s~.r.~~~ly offs to Ajax investor . S.A. 7Sl~ ARoc~!!~,! Banking S27S. 7lOW. t8thSt. charmingsplltlevel I Br, area. 4 bd. 2 ba duplex. · Jan. thru July, l . .. .................
alnum, balcomes, fplc's, Yr lse. (714l9S6·Sl71 M/F Shr Beant. 4·bd con· State law permits pre· FOUND: Female It brwn N~~~:.·.~J:~-'-lredl SKrelary 1 Smitll l bedroom. onlya20umtcomplex. do Woodbridge-Irv. 4UHITILOG paJtnent.penaltyc argc sm Whippet, v·ic "-'Independent bank seek·
AU utilities paid W1teMis, gyms, sauna, OCEANVJ.EW yrly nu Amcmllea. Mark 559-7111 • eqf.dvalent to 80% or 6 Magnolia & Warner F.V. In TheCltyofOran1e ing bank exper. branch
8311-1742 volley ball court & pool. cpt.s & paint, 2 l:lr 1 Ba :n>sq.ft., A/C, priv balh, montb1 unearned in· !168-4166,847·7588 714/835-4103 ae<:retary. O.C. Airport
-----Complrec rm encl gar dplx. $450 mo. 644-6780; Need M/F roommate, nearfreeway&So.Coaat tereat on the balance.---------• OpenSat8:3CH2:30 area.ApplyAt;.
l''OUR SEASONS APTS d · • 642-3639 Nwpt Bch. 'h blk to Plaza. $1.SO. Mortaage Brokers. or. p_..Ollals 5350 !~~~~~~~~~ SantlOCJO .... Spacious2br twnhse, l \.<J pvt Y s. Adults onJy, no beach. $158 + utll. RoyMcC.-cle fered to California real·••••••••••••••••••••••• 53SE.latStTuatin
ba, pool, pvt patio, child pets.$325.842·8779 3 Br 2 Ba upper duplu, 549_.199 RHltor 1810N•wport dentaonly. Dnnkingproblem? Acel'i clerk. Bank de· F.qualOpporEmployer ok. No pets. $260. 73S $21.Simo. 2 Br, 1 Ba . encl gar. Call aft 6:30 or C:O.t MeMS4' 7729 CallALcoholHelpline posita, lilin1, check In· Joann St. 646-64113 gar. No pets. 1 child OK . wknds 71Hl7543ll YNG. Businessman wants • • Mort9C!4Je•• T,...,.t ac hrs a day 835.3830 voices. 10.key addlni &._ _______ _
I n" .,.0 ... EW Sngl story. 962.4522 M/F to ahr 3 br, 2 ba hse. Dffib 5035 bkkp'g knowledae re· Bank.in&
11\.An " _..;.__..;._ _____ 1 Lge bach, ocean view, in Meaa del Mar, CM. ••••••••••••••••••••••• PREGNANT? qr'd. S46-0806 Tal.ER 2 br, 2 ba, all bltns, frplc, 3 Br Studio, 2 car gar, patio encl gar, refrig. 1 Very pvt many xlras Caring confidential
blk to beach. S2SO. Incl utll, .;.;2S. 540-7196 · ...._.sR...tal 4450 LOANS 9% AH EXTRA SSOOO. P/tlme. Branch office encl. gar. Balcony, patio, bltins. Wtr pd. $39S/mo,. l>.,1_...,.,,.. .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 counseling & referral. .,,_ ..... ng Ta-...... ,,.., p--' .eeka bondable teller to laundry rm -.$325. • 552-8364, 848·0800 ..., _,. Abortion, adoption & uun ".....,_ .....
TSL Mgmt 642-1803 Cut doww 4 Dauxe OFC'S Also 2nd TD LoOftt k · time, u an Income tax work &:me. Ex per. ~re-
---..::.----..,7--12br, 2ba. Wik to bch, 3boB~2J'ba.condU ~3SFt. UvlnghpenMs! Cont. rrn., aea\ 25, all FalrestTermaaincel949 ~1AKE 547-2543 preparer with Tu Corp, ~~vea~<~•Hil>s:!~--~I'*'
-
$260. 2 Bdrm, cpts, arps, shop'g & bike trail. $295. a 8 pava · ..,.,.,. Suire a home or aptment paneled, sm. wbae in re· SatflerMkJ. Co. ol America. No exper. ·-, .....
bltins. 1 mile to bch. 792 963-7080 963-0301 2 BR, 2 ba. ba)'{ront con· ar. 1 or 2 yr. leaae. Lake 642-2171 545..061 I LINDA Ir VICIJ req. We train. HJ&b com· • Wftteftl
Shalimar. New paint, no ' doln1HJCuritybldg. Pool. Qoun-Cl2AruUM.IMnm Forest area . Kent OutcalM miaaions&presUge.CalJ FedltalSavlftgs .•
pets, ()pen house Sunday •ALL NEW APTS l, 2, & 3 S7SO Mo. A&t. 67S·l642 Uk~~ c..JIQ«ht• Harkins. Retired COQPle ha.a money For the ,:of'j. 552-9600 or 848·3898 or 2744 E. Coaat Hwy
«callSaturday67S..7479 bd r m s e n cl. gar. rvv.-vlBd l 1 1 c.>~b.x.t~ 714-Slll-9393 to•---ooiat&"-.. TD'a. ~.l CorooadelMar _____ ..:;_ ___ ,rt r eplaces, b i t -ins"""'-• rm, rp c, poo -... -. .._.. u.iu ServiQeaUOraqeCo.
• 2 Br+ studio, encl gar, (n4)846.-0l817daya. & jac. Kida OK/no peta. FotoverS)'l'l.132-4.lU SHOPllliNTAl.S A&cnt.496--0800 88>7313 EOE/M/F
C)Q, kids OK. No peta. 1261>/mo. MNIOZ 2 BR A-"' 1 .,. hr saio. See Bart 376 E. 18th 2 Br. l ba, 2 bib rrom -rv · ,.. em. s Artiatic atm01Jpbere WE BUY Fl RS T " SplriW .......
• St. oceJHt. Adulta/ainalea. S. CM•..ta 3176 w/ume .. sno + utll. CAt*llRY Yiu.AG! SEC 0 ND TRUST J.8lSSo. ElCamlnoKeal •un-S'llDJXU"l•.2..-0NIST
---------• 140f'Olive.S36-2646 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5S9·1827bef.3pm Severalavallablefrom DEEDS. SanClemem.e.F\IUylic. ..-. __.,.,,
2 Br l Ba, $32$ mo, l Br 1 . 2Br., l~Ba. oear Beach, Shan auper condo 2br 16S~$'31>permo. AGENT 714-C96-o&oo Forappt.ca.7'298 J::-Natiooal&nk
Ba, S210 mo, util pd, lat. Extra long single garage. ms. 237 w. Eacalones. 2ba frplc pool clbtise' PVl' PTY will pay more ---....:..::~----' ct Bob Creighton
IMt & dep. 548-8204 or SJS.mo.DowntownHunt. 492-5557or~ St50 67H332.645_7953 · foryour2ndT.D. •MICHELLE'S* . -:-:-::-:-=:-::-=:':"':'-:---J..--m..:J7=.::.:.:00:::..:.E:::.·:.:::O:.:.:.E:::.·:..._...:., 646-2316, CM. Beach. 962·3S33 · •
---------•---------•aeanneat2Br1Br,2 blka w t •1 ._7 64.2·3573 OutcallMuaage
2 Br 1 Ba w/1ar, lndry 3br, dbl gar, Condo. Pool. from bch, see manager ~11'::~7:=· ,.360 2nd TD be 10All·2Alal 731--4462
facll. S2SO mo. 2009 Ma· S400 mo. 962·3Sl9 1602 Calle Las Bolaa aft •SHAREAHOME• 'r12o:ooo. ~n· ~~i~~
pie. Mar Apt K. 548-6185 eve./wknds Fred SPM. Laguna oceanvlew re·
Nice 2Br, lBa dplx. cpts, 2 Br rondo, 1 Ba, bltrus, S..._ 2b bedhroom 7apt nea11r Ret.ail.COmmerclal, front 1ldence, In escrow to
ru,., earage, S21S mo. utll rm , pool, Call Capistrano 3171 S:~e · J!~o5~o:ft~ 6 =!c!:::;': .,W~~= Dod.or at 1267,000. All _49S~ or 973-1712 84.2-0LS2 aft 5PM •••••o••-•••••••••••• PM. • Go b •. 1 h due 45 days, Dlacounled _ now. Y"' ook. t .en to I Id 20~-. . ftllllT & COOL l~ ml from Marina & call 752·1.830 for Info. is.4 Ye -'°per annum. !Br. util.itiea pd, cpts, ,..... beach. Decorator's 2 Office R...tal 4400 Newport Blvd. CM. 751-4827 OC''493·W 3
d.rps,S210 mo. Lge2br,l ba,gar~dry bedroom townhouse .••••••••••••••••••••••• C ASH FOR MORT· 838•5172 facil. No £its/chi"fiil.en. AiC, communlt~ ec>ol, 65• ,!R SQ FT GAGEs & lST T.U.'S.
2 br apt remodeled. Water $235/mo. 4 l2th St. dishwasher. SDac1ou1 1817 WESTCLJFF·NB lndustriaf R...tal 4500 Call <714) 962·6292.
pd, no pets. Refs. 1275 ..... t~Oll areen areas. Cloae to AGT. S41·5032 ..................... ..
mo. lat, last+ deposit. Hcrbow 3842 ~'int S32S. 498·0500. •HEWPORTllACH• ..,.w..,....../
64.5-881B; 675-98118 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cal at y. 150 I W..tclff Dr. JtlQQ Sq. Ft sprinklered. PflnON!lt/
You deserve to meet so-meone you belona with.
Call
3 Br, 2 ba, 2 i-ara1ea. Kida S... &..,.... 3116 Newport Financial Ct.r S633 per mo a-rou. Agt. Lott & PoUnd MEW OWNERS OK. No pets. $405/mo. ....................... Lemi.g Office S,.C• Call 752-5041. ....................... EXOTIC GIRLS
HIWMANAGIMEHT Call848.oo'Z3 1 & 2Br Apta w/pvt bch. CallonSlteMan.ager L.od&..._. 5300 Masaqe&Modeling 1275~$4.50 499-4644 (714l&U-3Ulext2'6 btcl.~W/ofc ••••••••••••••••••••••• Outcall542-3189/54.3-32SO SUMFl.OWIR L.al)IMe .. och 3841 mo. ' ~sq.rt.from19". LOST: Male German 1 bdr'M-.d... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 486-7lilaft6PM DELUXIOl'ACES IMMEDOCCUPANCY Shep & Great Dane mix RELAXING~SAGE 2..., J bclnM l BR, No. Laauna, furn or 2Br, Apt appro• 1000 sq ft, CommJ & lndatl apacea, Leasing ofc open 9·5 dai-at oc Collefe, Auf. 30. Bo&!.::Ut;:~~~ lbrtowntll.,.. unfurn. UUI pd. Adults. wJkey lo pvt bcb, no kids 200 to 2000 sq. ft . .M low ly, Sat. 9-noon. 711 W. Wearing choke chain & ____ .._;; ____ ,
No pet,. Walk to bch & or peu, lee prefe rred u 3:i' sq. ft. Laa Niguel• 17th St.#C..t or macrame leub. re found Cwfttt fluplec") 1bop'1. S310. mo. 494-3541 MSOmo. 4"-4001 Mlulon Viejo areu. 642-4463 pleaae call: 548·11698; •SHARON'S* 3 POOLS Ml If -t--tw 3191 Handy to S.D. Pl'wy. M'J.7675 Otrl'CALLll~SAGE LIVE JN A CASTLE "• IW CaJI: 831-1400 Uh Mfo.l.,.1
JACUZZI Lie iardena, wide ocean ••••••••••••••••••••• • • 390-500 aq.h. SJ50.l1200 LOST: Female Cocker
SUAMA vrew. 1 br apt, pool & LG, Attractive 2 BR ~OHien· mo.UUJpd.646-3357 Spanla.l.Aprlcotcolored. ape. F.atate living. Cloee w/refrig, bltna, atv, cpt, 9i9 Beacbwalk Condos Clole lo S.A. frwy •So. to beach & •hopping. drps, cln, quiet bldg. NTH FREE Stm "9* · 4550 ReWard! 538-4048 ·
Cat 1hop'1. Tiny Tota Mature adult. l37S/mo. Adlts, no pets. S22S incl F\tU aervlce. No lease re-••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------i
welFlcoOmeM. 3 plS2aylalroUundtP Incl. util. 494-4853 or all uUJ,. 538-4490 ~~d·p=g~q·2~a!'s~~ Storaae 1arage 125, 1959 Loet: Youns fem neutered ___ _..;.;._....;,__--l
Bankin
TIRED OF
COMMUTING
TO YOUR ·JOB?
Excellent employment
opportunities at local,
aavinga & loan offices in
Mission Viejo, Laguna
Beach & Laguna Hills.
Exper'd personnel pre-
ferred. For further in-·,
formation call Mrs.
Jenae -SADDLEBACK
SAVINGS
759-0181
~17 Brlatol St, Newport Maple Ave:. CM. Mar at bla~k cat. Mesa Verde ---------2511 W. 5-flowtr. 8 .,., 2 8 2 Ba d 1 O\q>le. 4 BR, 3 Ba, 2 car Beach. 557-?0lO Apt s. 646-MOS area. Reward. S4t.5098 --------
157-4100, S.A. ~ v1!n. 1~ blb e~ l:fs. ::.~~~peta ok. Retttah Wanted 4600 LOST : Reward I Black
7 ciaya, 10.5. No pets bch. Lower, MOCli upper ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lab, full arown male. "25. Aii./Jobn ~06 ... a twwlll1 ........ d WANTED tBr/itudfo UD• Vic. La1 Bcb. 497-2138 or~ lfOO r t s200 •2"'0 Gemleman in 308, attrac. MESA PINES c. Condo Blue La(OOn. z Bd, ••••• ;;~;;;;.""';;I.•••••• urn ap • •• ., · Lolt: S.L 1mall bit fem. BRAM> NEW. Studlo/l pool, tennis. Sec, pvt bch. ntE EXCITING Mature workin1 woman, C.t., ft'/fiea coU.r. Vic. ----------1
1
_.;;.:;.....,,_.. ____ _
"2 bdrnia~ mo.~ s.'!00/rno yrlx, No peta. PALMMDA•ns ~~....... 8'73-981M Bucknell & Carneale, BEAVTYOPEB.ATOR 'H. S:WO.lmmed.occupancy. -.-.or~a M"'"-~TONPT. ~=-CM.S4M839Reward. Pool, Jacun l, frplc & a.nvu:.o ~NI.._....... ......../lftv ... / ~~.;..;.;.......;,_....;.:. ___ ,, _______ _.,. dab""1', Adultl. no pets 1 BR view apt., nr Hotel DCB. .,....... .... "'-M• LOST: Tabby, male, ,.
1
____ .....,. __ _ O~n d ally . h -1/4·6: Laauna, SZ7S. Rf!'• re· Bacb,WBR. ~..., ...... .., •• ..-.................... neuteNcS. wtnea collar
WJmda 11-4. 3850 Harla q'cf. Apply, NI~ffOLS fromm>.aiup. ....... tied w /1trint. Ans
St. C.M. (l .. sa Verde Real Eat.ate, 1508 So. Adu~,NoPeta 0,pa..._.,r. IOOS "Spook7". Irl1, CdM.
Dr.ottH#borBl•d.> c.oa.tHwy,La1Bch. 158lmeul)wl. • ...................... 844-7262 AJtuhJc-Reeord put We
lMONTHl'RJ!:E (IBJbEaatolNewport ana1, ... W/couutUna 50-2&41 $130. incl. utlUUea. Un· Blvd.) to0toSI01q.ft.9'.29Bak•r. 24UHWMOTa ~: ... Male Lab Sett~ bymetaphyslcalftn.w/ ---------.. funt. bachelor, crpta, ~ CM.8:10lo5.~A·l NEWPORT BEACH uui;, .-.c 1W\ 41& Plaeenwa 2 Br w/pr. szso. Nu cpta d1111. arnall kltcbea. •~ 4000 Apt..SuPPb' PRINOPALSONLi(
thruoul. Water pd. Quiet. Nr. atoroa. No -"0 " PlaceoUa Call bet 1 pett. Call C211)4C.a4tt ................ '•••••• SAM CLIMIMTI
.,sl3Mll0 ZB~ ••• t.11cbu. trplC!, san "!:. -::::-1r':1: .~::c!t: ':!:u1
2br, 2ba. Adlt• only. q et area $3115. Adulta, bath. Shown M1>n·Sat IUAtee PIUlh oarpel.a " Qxn~ ndeco. pas, nopm.01.me "onl1". Call Al\ t pm. ~l air •151 per I\.
AvalllO.L-__, '-Ima..,_. J112 Rell req'd. 5lt.odSI or ~Y'EATSOO.
2 bedtoom 1 beth, newly .......... .-.;.......... ,.... .._ Gf.m1
dtcorated. c:z:ta. Oeluxe I Bil Apt. beaut. ROOMS 121 •k 6 up. JCUc'41h•• otnc.e ap4ee !•------...-...... •mo. 171, loc. Nt. kb. Pool A""' Wik~ • .., .. wt le lochadt11r recepU01u1£ 54MUI rm. II.JO.UP -+ d4f'p.: Gu "!· Apta. Jtl.1'711 from tuO mo. to ... mo. •wtr~e:u..11N Plwtl11. IOI:~. Gall
I
j
I
~, N OAl)Y ~OT ,!1d!i, Bepe.mmt l!, 1971
•
A it...Bulld lt...Olaper lt. •• Hammer It ... Carpet SERVICE lt .•. Cement lt ... W1re lt .•. Hoe tt ... Clean lt...Move
It. .Press IL.Paint lt. .. Nall lt...Plaster It. .Fix It .. DIRECTORY
*"'•i:•..,. /Ce.creh m.ctric.I G_r .. Senlc.. ......_~ looffng •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
DltJ Appbanc•St-Tv MAN Crn• $ )'tll u P:l.P.C'TrUClAN prked llANDYMAN-Home1 • Want a REALLY CLEAN 8 )'ff t\lper, fNe e.t. at.o WORX GUARANTEED Pamt1n1. Hom~s. 1n\r " ROOFS l'OR LESS
11UPC'llARG£ SJO pr pounn1 6i 11n1'hlllC' ra1bt ftC'c t•.,tlmale on Apte Couclentloui HOUSE? Call Glntham lndaCJJQS material avail, ln~rtor/Extr. Free est. eitterior. Apt9: Sptmal· All types. fln1m avail. ~ M•aa. A Stotywrownlorma,11v• hu·1•0t1rri•llJob•· Crallim•n.Ph~ Glrt.Freeest~U3 cleap up• re1'1. Jay 25yniexp.$4Z-029S ty.Lorates.631·2* Fr~ est, l~c/bond'd1 In, " zi ~7.01 tneblY Ml :iM:U &;c· 61:JCWO 848-'043or•215$ sr Seniorc:1tlict11dl.fcnt.. -Profeulonal window IMMACULATE CLEAN· , Koowlu Paln tln(. Plasfer/R.,.W 1194-0alanyUme
Ct.:M ll':NT WORK. All G.r•aab9 wuher. Palnlln 1n· ING. You DESERVE\M •·Hlflf loll Ex~. comm~rclal oueuh•••uueuuu •
lllnda Rca.oneblto .. Jl"r ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• trieKtr, odd jobt. 'ierry BEST.149.()371 ••••••••••••••••••••••• apts, re11dentia I " VERV N~AT PATCH Repairs. Lied & lnard. Carpeolr). any t>Pt-. ta C•ll'T~ WMl:OlNCi CL,l!:ANUPS ~IU9'1 , Brl~kwork. SQ>aU Jobs. mobilehomes.83tHUO JOBS&Tl!:X'fURlo; All types. Free est Call
Pa11el. dnon ~c Al W~klyMamt.en•ncc.-&.emarle1 Houseclean· ~.Costa Mesa" f'reeest. 893-1439 anytlmeS41·!mOWatt"' Cocnmi. hcl•l Ar\ ~. 0 6 D Conrnto All ~\" cat M2 9ll0'7 Gnllltl lng. Xlnt wor1t, reft, &d Jrvlne.e?~17Seves. YOUNG11Man, 5 yrs !xpr na. ~ 21,9 ~ ~cA'lo, bloc'k .. .. ........ •••••••••••.. rat.el, own trans. 642.1403 Id wa covering. .. ree ~
btlclr. work Yn~c: r•l• G•rdl•n•na Servu:e · rlean Sk I d d tr k Mo•illf · eltl. ~76, Andy ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~h Ii .. wi.h. r('mod, Lu:'d 6 bood.cl 675 9720 US> & h11ulln1. weeikly ~~g erne ~rk 8~~d: Houlecleanlng by 1-'eUable •••••••••••••••••H•••• lnt/E)Ct de od bl HOMESAVERS. Plumb· CERAMIC TlLE. New or ~r. •1unn1" plumb C ~at -malntenimce R~•aooa· me de~o etc751.8930 couple. Referencea. Local " Loni Diatance 1 U ~ ~.Jjreu. 1lli & Heating & air con· ~model. Free at, aml
•e• <.'~&om Cupontt')' 1 u-w blc-ratca. lrt.~ e•tuna~1. --· ' 963-681Jor 1·626-6126 Mo"ina. Lowett rates reees '!'..8r: ~"' ay dilloni.Dg. Free est SlO Jobi welcome. 538-12" -,... • • • • • •• • ••• • • • • •• ••• • • • .. · r 0 u-•-f Iii l • • .....,. '.,..., ' alt 5 _....,n . Aat•r 4 30 u11k ur "on. -----fl4J H 1 in-Extr le H l. e cent service. hr. Honest & reliable R J. lhllm•n 11 Scm, Gt-n ~ 0511 or ~4987 ••••••••••••••••••••••• o~ebcl eaJn .. d Free et t Maj est 1 c Sml paUallng co small eervice Bo!A M/C OK ~----C-,.-1 -,-i--c.,.t s.r.tce Cotilr Cuatum All" Add reua e apanese 1 y, u...a~ u • · ....,. .,..,.. • • • • .... _w ••••••••••••••••••••••• ti bl t . VEKYUJWf'RICES' ~Ina.moving.cleanup Nds transportation ........ ,rn .. oven_._ pri* 181.J Extr. Oepen· 751·31.50 ••••••••••••••••••••••• P 11 o • · c • n e -· ~up. Treework. Reas., . dable. Work auar., free ~t falem w1I !Jay ynurs torrruca. New curut Rei on 1p.rdenln& main· 1,..1 freeest8"2-4S97 642 43119 . '-.tiftgf'.,..,."9 eist. 754-mal DRAINS CLEARED Window Washing! Reaa.
or mint) R•pa1ra " It comm. 645·46441 U!nan'--e.•Goor&eS4920l5 ' Xlnt housecleaning by ••••••••••••••••tt••••• FROM$3.50 Reltable work. Rera.
d.,anint tou! Guar work ~Lie Bonded l'rol J -La ds -OCC Student. Big ~ T day OwntranaportaUon PETERS PAINTING PAINTING. Jntr/Extr. Call751.fZJ42 Fr~est. Mark,613-4417
•l b111er 11.&\inp . Free -----»pan~e n CllP· truck. Trash. tree tnm, ~ · Expr'd. Reu Bales. Expt'd, honeat, ne.t. . ,est, MS 364IS DrywalJ And Acou11t1 c ini.: & garderu'!B. Ma1nt etc. Randy 642-5703, Free Eat. Call Gene Reas. Llc'd. 964-1045 Any plumbing. water
-~ .. St. Lie:. &38·57311 or incl mow:}n trftnmang, ~3666,. COMPETENT, DEPEN· 55?;04S8 Dave ser"· le~ks, bathrm encl, for Ad 1""-R ~mpoo 4c steam clean. <213>422-0279 apr1.1ym[(. OO<Jang. l''ree DABLE custom service ceramic tile. Reas. MU9
Color bnghteners; wbl a.ctriul eel ~7 CHEAPEST hauling in HB/Npt 848-0641 . Paint Your Castle QdtvP-..Mg 832·2'68 Call a·
cllU 10 min bleach. Clean G -alt--· town. Fr ests. CHEAP! · A ~ t is•-• ...,,5 •LowestPrlces •-"-llv, din rm. h•ll Sl.5. Avg ........................,..r _.... ... tc•s 642-~or~l.390 HoUBecleanlng Weekly. verage x r "" _.. * u-·-es/Apt.s, _ ... .., Dailj" Pilot
nn $7.SO, couch $10, cbr ELECTRJCAL SERVJCE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Good work. Good ref1. 2Story SSCS. lntrSoUr.m .nuuo ln'-/E ... •. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Guar e!Jm pet odor CALLSSLShr,&SMALL HANDYMAN: Carpentry,~ E.xper 6?5-9589 Pnctsinclmatr'l·labor •W kG., """Rf ROOFS installed factory
CPt rep4tr. IS yrs expr: JOBS842-8233 electncal, plumbing & ••••••••••••••••••••••• . Guar/lasrd. Free est. • Ft°!e ~Mi~~.. direct; estub·l 3~ yrs. an VISOR
Do work cnyself Refs ftoors646-6851 ,847·2787 H DUTCHCOUPLEtoc:lean Ted62'7·'1900or63&-708& · 5 Call Harold Gunn . ftU"
531·0101 . · ....._...&dric --HANDYMAN a°~~~~~~~fi~b~~ occupied & vacant PROFESSlONAL Paint· Quality work. Jnt/E•tr, 5'9·2961 642-5611
Llcl27l36 64.5-ti974 NOJOBTOOSMALL service, Janice's Ras· homea.842-0720 Ing. Inter/Ext.er. Reu, Av& rm $3S, Ref&. Free Have something lo sell?
Want Ad Reeults 642-567 Want Ad Raul ts &42·5678 675-2440 gedy Anns at 87~ Want Ad Help? 642·567 work auar 542-0388 ell, Dan '31·21118 Classified ads do it well. i---------
, ~.~~ ..... !!~~ ~~~-~ ... !!~~ ~~~~ ..... ?!.~' ~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~! ~~~ ...•• ?!.~ ~~~ ..... ?!~ ~~~ ..... ?!~!
---------·· -------COUPLES needed to help Draftsperson GEN Ofc. girl, p/lime, lile HOUSH•• Medical sec'y. Must have OPTOMETRIC TECH .. manage family business. · Mechaaic:Clll ~ olc duties. Must be de· KITCHIN HaPIR Ill k
4-BOYS & GIRLS ·
P/llme.ss1-0215 5•10 Yrs exper. in pendable&haveowncar Aculo care boepitat haa Part~Moat.b.ruFrl. Jns.exp. Wi ngtowor approx. 30 hrs p/wk. d HB opening for u exper'd .. _ in a b u s y o f c Hours flexible • Exper. mechanical design & lo run e rran s. . Homekeeper, day ehJR. 2•u•§MI! y,$49·9'46 w/d!verisfied duties. Hrs req. Minion Viejo. CREW
MANAGERS
drafting of devices, pre· 898-239'2 Ooodpay,benetll1. .,,,....,...__ s~ .. d 9·6. Mon· Fr I. Ca II 831-0581 evea.
Aftt:r school and evening work
Earn $20·$30 per WE:ek or more
Apply now by calling 646-2443
bE:tween 5:00 and 9:00 p.m.
Monday through Friday.
uure vessel» or rot.atln& . 1 "n.......,. nrw 640-6000
mechanisms. Duties lo GIJll~am GJrl housec ng PCldffce ......,... P~ Counl-t')' Club, Ex pr. ---------OUEll l'ROCESSIMGr · 1 d d l 11 d · llttVlce nds women p/l. 18'192Delaware HD v •-t.e ED C me u e ea es!gn, tops, carnec645.5123 CalJS42--0lll nece111ary • .-or ... rv1ew •M I AL• CLERK .
Part time, evenings and suppart for engineenng, call 8'4·5404 Serving aH Orange Co. Busy olc & phones. Use
Suturdays managing checking & drafting. Sal Girl Friday for busy olc. HOUSEKEEPER. Live LEGALSECRETARY Trainee to Specialist. cakulator, type, follow.
juruor sales persons sell· c:ommensurate w/exper. Need person for light in. Newport Bc:b lady. C •1 .. 'd DR. PHSOMHE&. up. Forei""' marketln" ing subscnpt10n.s door to Apply in person w/wo~k bookkeepinl & t)'pini. La Un glrl w /some or90ra. on. r..J(per · Org. Medical Complex .... •
door. Requires van or sa~1;>le& to Sclenlihc Careful atten. to detail, a knowledge of EngUsh. Newport<:etlter. 640-08!>0 6J3.9'140 Free/ Fee ~:~C:e:~:a~l~v~~~
large station wagon. Drilling Controls, 4040 must. Pleasant ofc area. Pleue wt'tle to P .O. Box Leta! NC'y. Exp. l to 2 sume or letter lo Pert0n·
Contact ~la~ Presley Ca!!!!'uEsOEDr, N.B. Re&ular hra. Call Ms. 2187•.NwplBcb. yre. xrnt typini. no MESSENGER Person nel, PO Box 2415•
at the Darly Pllot, 330 W. 551 . .....,1. · Miner for appt. 645·2640 abthnd. Call 752-2$18 for w/car. Guar. 2$ hrs per Newport Beach, Ca :::n~l6..'£>:~1 ~:;•a~~ Drapery Manut. needs G~l Friday, Ute bkkpng, H~U~JC::E~:~~a~~ tnt.ervlewappt. :!'au+:~~~a~~us~~1_9'S3 __ . ______ _
HltpW..ted 710 HelpW.ted 7100 poiotroenl. full or p/tl~e female hte machinery work. ing, ~acberofconveru· Liquor clerk, pa.rt time 9 & 4PM. Call: Dav1d PAIMTER/EXPll1>
•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• help. Experd or will ABC Locksmith, tlonal Greek to 2 weekends.CdM Smith 549·8871 Bookkeeper/Secy, no yp T DELI GIRL train. S2.7S·$S br. EOE. Newport & L aguna childre n . $.07 mo. 6'T3·7S30'1Nkdays ' CallS48·l99"1 shorthand. H.B. area. CLERKT IS Over 18. Some exper. Also, need Installer, areas. 497·3233 or Employment Develop· MODEL INSTRUCTOR P"'ITS/ST~., Salary commensurate Trainee pos. tor In· F /ll me. orr Tues & m~e, full or p/U~e. E.x· &f.2..t782 meat Dept. $.'58-4.544 for LIQUOR CLERK needed. to take charge or A ..,..."
wiexperience. 846·1328 suranoe .. ~Jn NSal.B. Goodl Thurs. CdM. MHlOO. per dt.ort will lr&UI. PW1ildl GIRL ~1D•Y dltedlons. Ad pd for by P/Ume, over 30. program. New school, qE'xdpewr·,·11dter1a11.rnedM, u~ott parse,· typtng ..., . .,.,. ary o ----------t nego 1a e wages. a "' ,,_ em lo er. 642-6S37 legitimate. Send resume · . · " Bookkeeping $500 & good co. benelils. DeUvery hol & vac. Apply, l83S Type S5WPM, 10 key, P Y & photo to Box 51 c/o ,co. physical lnclud. back
WHY IBRE A BKKPR? 833-84:;6. AUTO CARRIERS Whittier Ave, Unll 8 ·1, non-smoker preferred, NOUS8CllPER LOTMAM Daily Pilot, P.O.' Box X-rays. Call for appt.
Use our computeriied NEEOED C.M.orcall642-1843. good pay, hours to suit. 2 daya a week. Own Good hours • Good L560.330W.BaySt,Costa S4().7639E.O.E.
' bkkp'g service designed ~<>;.~~~ WORK FOR Driver for compressed 691 Randotpb, C.M. transportation. La1una bet_lents.Applyinperson MeSICa,9262.6 Part.limesbifl,8-lorl-6, for s mall businesses. gas. Will train. Must be 540-6791 Niguel. 496--o9:s8 Fri., 9/16/?kt to ~r. Bill Telephone Answering
Simple entry, inex-Leamin40hrs themost YOURSELF able to work all hours. AllLSi..a.-&A Houae .. eepinJ •-Haiold or r. B1U Her· MO'l'.ORR~UTE Bureau, work 00 busy peni;ive. 1·634·1505 call exciting, glamourous, IY woa111a...1r--"-"'-" .. rera. The Daily P.llot hu_ a switchboard EOE Amrt. ruebly paid profess. Day " "• Start immediately. Call Sandwicb del. 5 Day wt, ChUdcare, live·id or dai· large route 1n M111s1on 546 3333 • •
---------1 or eve seasions. Place-WITH US. 492.1240, American 4 hr day. Own Uad1. ly buil. 644.fi887. Nwpt, Viejoarea,goodtorhigh --·-------Bulldcr's Hardwar rnenlassist.Goodjobop· Many men •. women ~it RespiratoryTherapy Earn over IUO hr. Call Bch. 540-5630 scboolorcollecesludent. Part Time specialty co. in N.B. .,. .. P..,_•540-8339 · seeldng"cleancut man fo por. over Orange County PRIVEAS 8am-lpm. ':::l' . HOUSEKHPER Approx eammes $300 per SUNDAY ONLY
pe rm employment. C•7l4/751·tl94 have been earning extra Early AM, 3-6. delivery GIOC.YCLEIJC ·NptBch. =~~<;!1116:J:::,~:nd D!ivers to ~eJlver Dally
548·34S4. So. Calif. Cocktail maney lor years by de· LA TIMES. C.M. $300 ,.11 ., .. _ 1 1 3 Live·ln, muat have car, 2626u"'RIORILVD. P1lottocamera.Muslbe ----------t Waitresses, Inc .. 17922 livering a Register mo+.MS-0770BobNl •· ~~}P~·~:·7,. room, board, salary. COS~"' Mu• 18aodbavegooddriving
BUSBOY wanted, exper Sky Park Bl_ Ste C. oewspaperroute. /hr 6•10 .-1·--r· " 751.7125 daya, 645·4128 •~ 11-NEW IN TOWN? Dis· record. Reqwrea station
· ~. luncb & din· Irvine.Callrl714. YOUCANTOO! Eldetrly C~le P r au •r no, eves/wknds. LV.... satia(led w/present posl· wagon or van. Call ner. apply In person. The only Investment is 751-4652 " fU'> ..... 1 a-"' • n ... .... LeDianil:r. Frencb Cafe, COCKTAIL Waitress. about 2 .. _ .. ...,per day of Needs care aever daya "--.-..-•/lJve ,_ bl F'11J le p/tlme 3-c·ao tion? Would you like A ~-' -ior ..... . ""~ ___ .. _.~ A nu..... •. n!nh•· per w--'-Nl,.... Gu•us ~-..-Ult • • • Career oppor. w/mulli """"'Icy. 414 N. Newport Blvd. """". P not .............. ;,. P· --. .. time. (before 6:30 "' ...... ..,.,.. ""' ,. ling··-• OK Balboa 1-• .iii.A Good Hl 4' :Jc 1---------"""8 30t 8 ""PM tTb .. ~ b h .... • .... · · millioll-tlrm! £amiog NewportBch.~00 ,,.., : o :..., a e AM>.Tbeseareperma· apt. pvt r m & at . Univenal ls eirpanding CbUdren.'15-507' Pleaseapply,ParkLi o -PIXAlllS.c()pn
• Confetti Factory, 23861 nant part time openinga. 6404Ml6. $32perday. tts operat.i.ou in Orange Con v. Center, 466 potential in excess of Im ed 1 A 1 . C... loy /~k Hc.d El Toro Rd., El Toro (top Ideal supplementa l In· County It nMdB 40 part & HOUSBHPIR Fl 111 s bi p Rd, N. 8 . $20,000. WilJ train. CaU in ~~pet!t~~·9a:;r l
tocrewooSoulhPaclfic fir. of Home Savin1s comeforrdiredpenons, Elii.lneering full time security of· Enallabapeaktnf. Small 642-80W. 751-9134. 4pm Mon· Fri. 155
cruise. No expr. nee. _bl_d_g"-)--------c housewives, students, MEW PRODUCT fioen lmmed. Ellper. not family. Pvt roooi & bat.b. Roe: heater St, Costa
Great u:avel opportuni· COMPETITIVE SWJ M etc. Must have depend a· DISIGM EHGIMEER ~: ~P1110w.::. ~!. eA Lloda lale, NB. 87~. •• LY .... (or R..., ) NURSE/ Aide/Companion _M_es_a. _____ _ ty. Asking ages 19·20. TEA,.. __ _,_ coach for ble car & be 18 years old. To "reate original de· -..,.. .... .n. "• ........... ve car 9·30 A to M t be d d bl I • UCO>Ua u.~ •-'" phone rtq, ·21 • over. HSKPR, care of t.dy bJ · · """'' .... · · PIX Aasww Sen us epen a e. age ·group swimmers. ·-·....,•-each signs of miniaturized Veterana • retlrees Wheelchair. Must drlve. to work in c:Uotcal lab Id 1:30 P, Mon lhru Sat. S3
t n t ere st e d ca 11 Write SCAT, P. 0. Box FouRt• Valley precieion aluminated -41--H.B .,... ,...... Newport Beach. Full hr 645-3953 Wanttowork days, after·
1·213·968-1188 Dr. Scott. 203.1. Capistrano Beach. C:AU. 84Z.. I 468 switches & assembUea. welcome. UUQ.W"DlalW11. . area. --time " p/time positio~ . .. noons & evenings in N. B.
Cat..hria .........._ 9262A or call 0>492·73561---------1 Wellestab'l Orfe14Co. ~Y~"':;~f~C:9~· llskpr/Comp, chauffeur avail. Call for appt. Nurses Mde, exper'd on· & COM areas? Work
.--..,... eves DELIVER .. ISSED ST"'COSWITC: •i..ac -· .., t-• '-tmo.Septl9to0ctl' 640-0140 ly. Pvt duty. Elderly f/llme or p/time. P/lime work. Mio 3 hrs. · R E G I s-T E R "" "" lW""4111'0ttdw (;cpl on waterfrnt. N~ --------gent wheelchr. Conv Weekends a must. Xtra
_ ~-u.:_t&h~~ !::~s.CAMp~ COe~~apucartTJJ&ONcSUPTond,.., NEWSPAPERS. To A.M. 1138ag~;.C<Js104~ Maa lll6 W. Sth St. U. smoker req'd. 8'6-6565 or •--~-·c·H-, .... --•1 !'.~·~Sat/Sun 12 hrs. pay for ex p e r · d .. ..,.... .... Customers in Huntin"'on • 557-9881 -f'llS .....,._...., Leave name & operators. Call 640-329'2. ly, Newport-Mesa HBarea 536-4022 &• F.qualOpporEmployer lft..u••"'S OPllATOl pbooenumber EOE Unl·r,· •d School Dist ----· ------1 Bcb, Fountain Valley .., ~ : ...... __ ·-~ . 1 __ . _._. ------"' · • area. Mon t.hru Friday. ea.ta 111 Start s;t.70 ---~"r~ Small preclaion awitch Food Service Dept, 1857 •COOK Ideal for housewives per hr. u•:M·7AM sbltt. Secretary & Sa es. componenta. Operaie 1--------•I PERSON ForMltilM
Placentia Ave, CM Broiler man & KJtch1h with children in school. ESCROWSECY Uniforms f urnished. Salary It comml11lo•, variety ol machines ln· NURSES work. Telepho11e.
I 556-32'13 help wanted for dinner Must have dependable Mariners Savings la Over sc>'-. car It phone prefer tom• J.oaurance clud. turret lathe, verti· AIDES to $40 co.fer ........... c.h ......
h C II I t seeking a qualified ;,•• HB cl mllls b •--....-· .,... CARPET Cleaaer, f/tlm ouse. a or app ' car. be over 18 yrs old & Dcrow Secmary for its nee. Call collec~: exper. area.963-5841 e • punc preaa,"' 1r11rkh19 ltt, hmtdlhtt or p/lim~ Will Uaio de 494-9991, ask for Don, be able to work from (213)172-7378 . dJ1P pl'81S. Short run pro-3-11 It 11·7
pendable person. H.B.1-;Lae;:;un.a;;;Be;;:ac;b.;;;;;;;;;;j..:AM.::::...:to~ll~AM~.~8'2-~1:.:..:468;.:__ N.B. ofc. Min. 8 mo'• ex· --------1 INSUIAMCI duCtfuo, •tnall ebop, daya Stllff & P.t Duty t_ apeWlrt•1~. typ. Ph. appt. 846·8802 or1• per' req 'd. Xlnt tal, HANDY MAN. Jack.of-all GENERAL AGENTS! onJ,y. Exper. & Reta Req'd -.. .. .._ Apply:
846-3771 DENTAL worldngconda&beoef&ta trades to work 10-12 hn lmmed. openll\gs for Sl'ACOSwncMIMC. Chotl........... Co It Dr•'• r y
f.lupet layers helper . Op·
portunlty to learn good
trade. Muat be responsi·
ble & dependable.·
557-8103 between 1
lOpm ..
COOK Glrl Friday f or lnclud.dental per week at. Npt Bth General Agents td n.9abl'Coetll)(eaa •• ..11-1.-cost c1 ........ 1702 Da-Only Ortbodootlc office. Good Appl,y At: home & ore. Nd.I to be t D t .. 149 •041 A -.......
Appiy'i;,persoo typbUFtr.642-5997 MarinersSavings familiar w/electrlcal, =::e~~npr::r.-; ......... ~E lo • WCOUUE Newport ll•d., CM.
After3PM DENT'"" •OSISTANT lSl.SWeatcllffDr ~bin&" other flx·il ~-"" ...... mp yet ......... _....... ·~'4_2"027_· __ 40 ___ _ .......-. • 1 ..e u.-: n&.n<> Newport Beach . An xtnt oppr fior • lndlv•duala & Group. & 'IU-~ _. ;!':"1 T .-,_. ...c • ,_....,.... "1ll-time, exper. or re· OrC.U Personnel mature, capable person tJnllmlted oppor. ln one .• MAl!MJ * ~c .. ...-• ces 'EST CONJiOL .•
280'7W.CoastHwy,NB centirad.?'(8.644-9211. F0t•Pf5 842-4~ foraperlnposltlon.Seod :!ct~'~!af~~!~: '1'19elnbatLuuna 351 HoeptalRd Study job for rlght
. DENTAL~.chairslde F,qua OpporEmployer briehtatementofnp.& semc-.C..U 2700. 2111".Cltffw)',Lal\&Da ... ,.,,... .. _.. pel"IOft. No exper. nee. car Wash Caahlen. Ceo COOK to work w/GP. X-ray ~-., ....... .._,_ hrly w1ge requested to AcroNfromHoa.gHosp ProOl •bartne " group
t.ral " So. Or&n1e Co. DI c It church• s cert. nee. F /Ume. Sal ~~ ~';!: Ad 1940, Dally PIJot,•------••I Maltelen•c1 M-. CALL TOU.FRH health. Apply Friday,
_ea_U_84_•_4_480_·-----1 R estaurant. 2Cl98 open.84U880. Exper. nee. Call P.O. Boll 1580, Costa •••c•s.les Elqw'd. ~er JO_. Must 64J.9tl5 540.9'54 8-nooo. Lloyd Pest Cotl·
--------.. Newport Blvd, Costa Marcaret, 557·0150 Meaa,CA92828 UnJfmftecl lead.a for top bow emergency plwnb-1--------• trol.5818.DyerRd.S.A.
CASHIER Mesa, $4MI01 Dental Exper OrtbodonUc wkd)'s 8;3CM:30. mp sthool fltl part time, C~Uf. Stock Co. i.o. non· int. SUb thru Thurs da.)'8. NURSES •IDES Pla1Uc Medlcel tubing.
--'"------• recept.lonist needed for FACT. ORY ' 4-3 PM. Harbor/ Wllloo I*' rat.ea w/hlJb corn..,. Call for'appt. "9·2988 or "' Nd u..----peck~. Jl'o COOK l>Uty Irv. otnce. 552-7800 a renewalt. 1mmedl1 -.1'35 All Shift Good be ...... ~ F/Ume for R9'all Store . ,.,..11.l!f..115 uu,CM.61J·302t doJlara l,;ld on aub· s. ne. exp. nee.:Mct. Best tulted in Faahion laland. 9AM· Ex"Per'dforoaov. hosp Dl!MTAL/ASSIST ~-,.. MAINTENANCE MAN Apply Garfield Conv. for women, but aU may
ePM Mood1y Um& Fri· i'/time. Good aal & Female. Merit ral.et. HOSPITAL miaaklo. p'd only. Call • Hosp, '1'181 Garfield Ave, apply. lit. 2nd • 3rd
day. bene.ApplyParkLldo, fe'::!d~~,!t~~.I~~; 1S37MonrovtaAve,N.B CUSTODIAM 5'9-&2or871 ~~~e~°J~~ H.B.8"7·9871E.O.E. ahlttt. Smooth-Dor Ap~ly In Person 4i116P'8gshlpRd,N.B. handed dentistry , 5tt·SUS. • lmmed. opeojn" for lead Olurch. aa1aJ7 + 1tudlo PlastSca, 23322 Del Lara~ At Ease . ___ 642-IOM ____ -I eene:ral practice. Mon· FACTORY wou•s po1itlon 3..11 :30 ahlft. JNl'IRIOI DISl4IMB apt. ~~· w. R. NURSIS AIDIS Dr, ear Hilb. !lt•tS30
Coot, Part time, some ex· daYI only w/posaible •d· Manufacturing plant Prior aupenisory & ~llW'd IJld.eetlooal to ~_._. ~!rn':;:~~;~~
"J'ahloo lalancl per, apply ln person dftlooa1 hn. Hunt. Bcb needs factory help. Call acute care facility ex per. WOfk la r.,.. Auheim --------•I Pl..ucs
•-•N•ewllillport-Bea-111ch _ _. Derb~urant. lJG2 _MT_-8097 ______ ,, •-•o ............... nee. Apply lo person" Fornttu.-. ~ ..ulnc ,.._1_.!.. __ ...... Sept.216th.1Earnw,h1le 1 ... -~
S • cu •«""' · ..._,,_.. uk tor Mrs. Coco, San b d __ .. )'OQ earn. ""-''"" ---------c ,.,,, ' ... •DENTAL* Oement.eGen'lHosp,854 many name ran •· . ..AIWIST App\Y,ParltlJ4o MOLOSIT·UPS ,
CASHea COOIS ci-.1 .... aUOranpCo Fm'!.~.':!v!,~°naMnon•.;:i•, Camino de Joa Mares, P,r!.!J~_t.!..•!~•r SBYICIS ConvalescentCenter ~ledp f1' wn•t.Malt
Fftfme. abarp, srowth Lunch or Dinner. ex.-. '1;.~t.oSpe~laU..t. ~~CallS18:MleH. San Clem. ';e~n:m0p'!.."':.1~u;;;k•b; Prod• ... UoaP'aclll•• •FlagahlpRd,NB 6 tx~r. w/Ht•up •
co. 5 Loe. Over 20• we only. Applf btwn aa~. Olt.PBSOMN& -.. •--------• N.Baru~i.tofyur JRVi'N!:,CALIF7 642-ao.4 opera\IOI\ of bUedSoft •
train. 4J)m. Harry's Bat & Ort.lledicalComplex FLOORWAX!R,Ff1lme,a-HO-S•ns-S•/•~-SHl-•a-I whenbmlchwlllo_penla Aci e•~llent Job op··--MUl--S-IS_A_l_D_l_S __ , tranater mor~ln• of Ml'llO~AIWASH Grill, '241 llantn•ale ~'° hee/Fee required. Call Wtttcltff Plau. , pot\Unl~ .Cbr 1 perton -Full & p/Ume. 3Pll· •mall precllloo Nrtt. 21150llafbor81,C.M. Way N.B. -ApplYlaPM'I09 Blette.'• W/m;chUJcat abllit.Y • ••IMI ,._ P"" •U J>a.ySbift. :.-:---::--::-:::----:--t·..;.;..;;;;:..:.;;:.;;.;.;;;.;._._ ___ -f•~-.--111t-..i-p:!-.U111111!111..--... ._-.,-.-..._...._ .. ~ ... ._-.,.1 Dall)'Bet"sarspm Furnit~ atiequate lcnowl~e \n .ur-• 11 ••'7.-.. , •x· STACOSWITCM .. C
Cbemleal Operators, C,,._.w•~. l>ttEQ"r/Elec to'1500 ---------...Alll1i•......... ., -•-..i..,,.-.c al•-, to S'et'd or traineee. M•a 10-n· .. ·-"'---A50/br w/periodlc re. vva ""'....., .. ·-2:21.... "1WA ~·c •Pll•m "' Verde COnv Hoap, 881 ~u.....--.-... lll•• • .t.__;.,., Sb'"'·•-"•.""' or FuU-thoe " P/tlme. Elec/MtcbToc:b \oll.200 21Cn'W.Cout8wy,NB Anahelm 71"5381 mako r.~n '5 prevtn• ,.~ .... c:. cu-~.,..,,. 14f.JCMI ·~ • u ... .....,. -u .. Jndust'I En~t $1!00 •• ••t -1 •.....a ~ ~.. • ... -·-,, a:»mfdn.lpL' Mon-FrL Au • any ""• morn. "' lBONER, 90~ ~to do uve mtou eoance w. ·-EquaJOllPot Smploytf'•
ua ..!:.:m ....... -_ .. pref'd.Expar.prerd.Sal ~Sec)' $IOO procett •qulp111M8t "1'~==-~~~~-~~~~~~~~ ~ __ , -....... A~l ........... lrviMPenooMl'lfeney Coutln-lftCweekly~ • .M.·So. bdld~. -exr.· w/ctwmlcall -. a::· n ...-~··• -.,. "'" ,.__.6 ·-a• e .. ... --, _ _._r ......... ...... _.,.1,.u~ eta -... L ... 1 JI •'np••co. ,. MN281 ••m·5pm. m. ~ u.~ ;9 .... -&1 teiN ac.u10 smsnTs. E.O.&. ~ .... .,y, · q..aOpp«Emflonr
ctmSlMAS IBP =u~'ii!<:,i;-:.r:· -....... Call ('11•)~1 ~ io tell wtnchtlll Doo\l\t 2S3 E. a .. tavrot le c:91D· Work 10.U l'ftbSt.C.111. , miWcl.a blteltO-r. Mln 2
..,.. wk.; earn •PPi'Oa •· yn txper, capablt of 1'9' train, Call. Nanc1 • o.MrGlrl, ~App. ~ liir ..-••·
Maia 0*'1 Sa~ t to 12 ~. (Japt. NUce a l'lth tlon!,wJth cllent, idntliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ..._ta.#M ny,&1.SW. l9tbSt. CM ....,..,, aaJar.r open.
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!~.~~ ..... ?~ .. ~~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~.~~!.~ ..... !~.~~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~!~~·~:! ..... ~!.~~ ~~~! ....... !~.·.~ Frld!Y. S!ptember 18. 1977 DAIL y PILOT • .; (--------mf-----•-111'1---------1 ..... __ ....,._.tow11t.ch'wo ...... y ... "''--1.._.T • New~p freeze 15~ (U. FreetoYOll ' 1041....... 1050 n.-s.19 aOll •-·• ~ .... _, --._,.,.. • •-511. ""-" fl Enameled 1teel In· ••••• • •• -...,... -l•t• I 1prraon * s .. LES* ~wwnu cbildno •••• all and c 0 • ~1 :._ "A D-• .. .. 9 • • •••• ••••••••• •••••••••••• ••• • •• ••• • • • •••••••••••••••••••••• • ..._ COMMllMOM ~ -1 el&b.t alter school l2·5 areer ppur ~ a~ro st. . ...,, ..-au.y .. ), Stn.U miucU YI' old male
We hrn l 1" du 11 -HOT& •In IHOP S8CIOI Piii) ln their hom trev~I exper. req d. Call ..!:!1· 541.13311 dof. Good w/chiJdren. INSTANTC~ll Movln•· ev~rythln11oa1 \41~• Hcmuy 6 lmnwdlatAt openln• ex· Prefer hlab achool ~ M4-13'71 . lj' Upncht Free~er like ~en. &M-toa Por apple's, rum, tools" t'Um. lippl, kitcheoware.
i.u for• l*>t>L urtented llCllf AlY Uvltlc lo vklnity of~ Tutor needed for 1ludent "new avocado c'otor Fr-ee Guinea Pia to aoott aotqa. Anytime963-52U6 ~"!~"~oo.~8u:1~;
LA CASA 11.TT e•raoa •ble lo worlr. We ar• an electtonlca itreet Uld N41wport In lat year or French. 540·1760 home. 7 Weelta old. Klna S~ hcadbrd, velvet. 23.'iiCollege Dr, CM . a.mt e~.fL'tl0'1J'1 VC'Olnlbow-1.EnJoyu ul ct t Blvd., Ct.t , 120.00 per CAllKeeloy&c.S-5064aAer Fr' Id i Rf t ~ blbqull turted Ii c •II• n t co ru p • n Y man a u,..r o com WHk. Pleas• phooe 2:30Jmport~nt! aa Ila rte onde "t ger~::,r Wh't kit'· bl ,, m11tchlnii hvy quHted SAT ONLY. Mud tlr ... '1efll1. IMcr eqUlprncnt with an Al·llU after & PM. exce en c 1 100 ..,,,. 1 • ... n. ue eye1, lipread Peralmmo" col· '1 . so" l 6. near new, RKAL ~'TAT • ApplYV•m·noon M4Hl·Frl lmmediaa. opcnln" tor a TYPIST 645-4589 very playful. Weaned. 6 · ld C l ~ Hickock ScoPo tobolC· ..... S,..LES• f•enonnelDept. Scnk>f S.CNU.r)I with a Stationery Store In Fut, Accurale. s Daya STOVE-Apartment aiie 648-7895 , :i1 .. ~°'.'2on11' h:!to~,· gan. cycle 'paa rta ,
Jlf A MAllllJOTT HOT& mlnl1"um ol S yeart ,... Cotooa ckl Mar need• ex-k • •Ao h I t l b hid w t:.al•t~ ule•i::Ph• llOUNew-CtrDr cool ut1•~•rlal ex· per'daalc•ladyfuH·Ume per wk. Pleasant wor · excellent condltloo $.'SO. Klltena, Y. Siamese. .Beasett, all wood M ll. c me 11• m •c., 8 ,ut ..,... .... ... ,nee. -·-""•1tlon Sdav", "Int worldna coo· ing conda. Co. benefita. ~ weeks, boxed tral.oed. *"5ea. 962·1961 llems.173190akSl. F .V.
)"OUI' ure l ua Newl)Ort bta~h ,..... uu.a .,.., V 1 .. _ ,. "laJI fl U Apply, PeMyaaver, le60 C.115'5-~'1 S I l help )<IU tntu lhe bwl FAaual()pp!mpl)'rm/f wtu re.pott to OW' . •. ""• eapec Y ne c en· Placenlla,C.M. Washer & dryer. , DJVORCE Neceullates Garaac a e , Map o
M61 -jotn a cumpany and Oener1.t Mana1er tele. 675-1010 ---Wh irlpool, heavy duty, He'a Too Blg-4 mo. y. Bull aali or quahty (pro· Headboard (dbl I, Sal
nanw HI>'""~ in Oran1• Mu•t biave uoll.nt TVPISTCLERK/RECPT barveat gold, l yr old. \ MaaUI '°' Blk Lab, had lesslonally decorated) Bed w/matt Coffee Tbl,
t:ow.t:r l:•ll l'lair. Of'~ll lpwal\lt!d.f\lllor Ilk.Illa with typ1n1 at 7~ StocJtboyforloeallight· Ouay olflce, .heavy $450.5'5-8878 ebota,loveable538-192.S furnhhlniis "ac· grn velvet Chn,
War rt n • t R • AL part limo. Apply tn wpm and lhortband at lnJ fixture store. Pull phone1t & typin& in· cetaoriea. 2 children·11 Blrdcaae, misc llean.
ESTATEby \l4V Y, pen<m The Pen1lmmon UIOwpm.Mu.ltaJ.ohave E.x f ~ b volved. Incoming · Aucffolt 1015 KJttena, I wka. Mother Bdrme-green/w.hlte & Sal. only I 1775~ 1114114J·fl7 I Tre~ Inc Zit Marine tbe ablllty to handlt :::e"5e:O:r' ~~ply ~ outgoing mail. CaJl'San· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Silver Persla.o. 1115 E. yellow, etc. TV, chn, ek. Anaheim Ave, C.M.
Real &lalt! S..1.-s Proplt! ~~~bo°:1~i ~~~· o;;~~! =~;::l~I~ ~:~1~:. pet'9Cll, 222 Victoria St, dy, 549'2117 PUBLIC YUR.Nl'ruRE Balboa Blvd, &J. ti73.a883. 901 Almond Pl, Eaelbl~.
wanted t p tu 90 10• f'crunaula u•l•tanc• to our con· CM.Mf.3737 WAITRESS • ,_.,,.,. 1050 ROUND TABLE 4 Cap-NB . Frl /Sat 10·3.
l"Qn)m :1plit. Swpt Bch SALES.-H-o-r-rl_b_l•_J_o_b_1 trollcr. Dullea will In Friday lunch Sitt/Sun * Al£TIQN * •••••••••••••••••••••\~ t&ln's chrs, solid wood. Children's loya, deab,
548.-\4 elude alllll meetinaa. STOCK PERSOM breakfast. Good hourly 1.-"-7 •• ~orM STOREWIDESALE . dining or game, re· clothtng, TV, crpte & --------Rauen Urs. Mean Bon t1P'nl ol lllWlelal 1t1te· F 1t 1 m.. •-p / t Im e. salary. 673.3515 _,. • New" Uled tum, appl's, flnlshed. S41J.l4S4 drps, achl Items. 759-93$9 H E C E I V I ~ G & R.t.'llreet accepted. 12.15 ts ncl tin " "' ID.oilen Wek0tne) m!Ac Wllson'a Ba I
MAltK I NG I' El<SON hr+ comm. 531·0842. :_e~ce"to o:r°:~eceuu! llnmed opening. Retall WAITRESS rt t' STORAGE LOT Nook S4S It 814 W rt:ti Lovely "like new" 4 pc Garage Sale: Collectable Eit~r d in hardwart> ---Store. '151·11$1 Williams • pa ime. CM.Go-7930&$48-W • Spanleh sect Iona I, 1l.asa, hsehld itema, belf'"'. Ap1>ly in '"•rson SALaSLADYS 11twr. Sonoma, So. ~aa*tf»laza. Some exper. Apply in CONSIGNMENTS wooden lountJAin, wood & mm:. Cash only. Sat/Suo ... ,,_ "'·I nd · per so n . D erby Lovely bdrm sets, UM 106 Lexinnton Ln Bu Id" «.:row 111102 ruJtlmea part time. Excelle.nt opportunity SUMMER 18 OVER. Restaurant, l262 s. E. dre11eM1 , cheats. **'BUY•* metalwaUdccor.SUper. . •• • Culvt!rDr '" needed for our 'South f b .. h b 1 l 1 1 962·2:)00 C M. <lo Monticello C oast P l aza & ora n.,.t,ent uaaatc WHAT NOW? You can Bnst.ol,Costa Meso. awnmowers, n &ht Good ua~ Furniture & Townhouses, otr "career oriented in· get skill tramlng, gain ----slanda, headboards, m1r· 't: bed 1 dbl · I RECEPTIONIST W~lmlrulter Mall loca dlVldu.al who work$ well val-1H1ble work ex· WAREHOUSE MAN. rors, deau, bunk bed, AppUancea-OR I will n az . a so _F_a_irv_e_w_> ____ _
f.·x,_r , ror hvy p"'ones, \Jons. Exp'd only need · ,.__ .J ... • and t d I shi'pping •·receiving I t.o dinj ir•bl I sellorSELLtorVou. ed. no mar formlca . S f ,.... " 1 tn u.., manwa'"""unng en· penence at en co · "' · g aso P "• • , a so MASTBSAUCTIOH dinette set w/6 chrs, G1g.anuc ale, um, an\a· gd typ1:.t for dU;lnbul.Jon 8)P y. lo at--"--vlronment. We otrer ex· Jeae m the Army. Your 540-3236ask for Zeke game tbl, hide-a -bed, 64~ •616 & IJ~ .9625 recliner w /vibrator, ques, clotb1nai. 9C8 Park..
warehouse, pleabant of age yM •••""r cellent starlin& salary Army Recruiter will ~ ~ sofas & loveseat.s, oc· -.. other easy ch.rs, reezer· Lal!A"aBcb. nee, dnl benefJt.i. Ask 5575134 with liberal rr1nge show)'ouhowjolningthe '0(0/ caslonal chrs, rockera, hatt 6'S-l786 -~.~·0'1'10. SAL~SLADY Wanted . benefits. Please apply In people who've joined the · ~ ~fee & end tbls, blk & C~QPAID c ype. RELOCATING:
penoo or send resume Army can get you in the white TV's, stereo, & For gd used, furn, anti· 8' Sofa lounge chr & ot· Everything must. 10. RECEPTIONIST ff':1~~=~k 8:~rt0 /' ~:;:Y t.o: training you want, as· WESTERN PACIFIC modern telephone bench, quea & cir TV 1 • 957-8133 t.oman', · xl.nt cond, $125 furn, art, auto, etc. 2 pc
General ofc, Ille typing, shop 840-1$57 signmenl you want, col· rerraaerator, apt size LOVELY takesall.S4G-7663 velour sect aofa. Wal.ft\lt.
10 key :uid helpfol, but · TREND.AT.A legecreditaandhowyou PERSONNELSERVICES s tove & sink. PLUS LikeNew1'SoCa & glass cortee & end not mandatory. Informal SALESMEN wantc<I , Ex can earn up to S8100 for 20902 Brookbul'lit LOTS OF MISC. 1100 ., 963-Z082 Dng rm set with 4 chrs. tables w/lamp, table
orticc. Costa Mesa. per. In retail-i.tert!o CORP. school after your enlist· Stew. Huntington Bch SAVE SAVE SAVE ' · Uke oew $95; 3 pc crner lamp, hatchcover table
Salary SJ 50 hr. Call !lales.Call5!i8-0420. STANDARD ment. Check 1t out. Call (714)963-0804 We honor' BorA. MC. WATER BED SALE. grp, near ne w $150. on 12'' wood treble
Mtllle after 9 AM , MEMORIES Army. Caahler'a Checks & 1179.95 crnplt w /btr. 644·'1240 blocks, green velvet
645·5800 · SALESPERSON p/time, Costa Mesa 540-1026 CASH N I Save 150 FLOAT & . c h a I r , c h e e r Y ---------1 mature. Hunt Bch. Jiirl DIVISIOH . Have something you want . o persona DREAM WATERBEDS, Dining set w/4 chrs. P.d yellow/white kltch 'lie\, • --------llllf shop. 003·0000 or 963·6006 An Applied Magnetics Co lfuntmgton Bch 962·8821 to sell? Classified ads do cbeckl PLE~El Food 2U64 Beach Bl, at AUan· $120, stUl Uk.e brand new• ref rig, wshr, gas dryr • RESALES 34-00W.Segerstrom LugunaHllls '168·5251 itwell.642·5618. ~;;~~~I~. llems subject ta,H.8 .!Ml().320'l. Sell$65.848·28S3 green cpt. New 5 pc Qn
LUSkREALTY s.1lt!!!pcrso!' needed Wed. SantaAna,CA92'704 SUrlltVISION Merchandls• MASTERS•CUTIOM Two two beds, hlk bdrm set, solid Oak +
. ls operung a new resale Thur.., Fri 1.oam·6pm f~r HooftDlllyAI• GlantRumma1eSale. hdboarda$3S D mirrors & lamps (2) omce in the llunlington rcla1I store in N.B. Must Equal Opportunity aJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• WS Newport Blvd CM Sept. n & 18. dea. r~~~ Panasonic stereoe many
Beach urea Needs both be mter~ted ii.energy & Employer M/F JV, bn per day. S S3 hr. Antiques 8005 833-9625 64~ 1964 Orange Ave, In halt. ru. Antique resser, '""' orig art pcs, 'tncld
manager.sal"ry +"om-water conscr vation.1---------Apply lo, l rvme Unified ••••••••••••••••••••••• repalr$15.642·9731 c · t . Id
u .. -615-61 School District. 2941 Drexel "•me table set . . iovenne t1 , ac on
m1ss1on and sal esJ)(.'<>ple. -30------i---------Alton Ave, Irvine. m4 > Wonderland lkydff 1020 w/cred:nza $500. <714 ) TnP.le White Cheat for st.eel. Plants, kitch ware, He ller than average SALESPERSON: t:vt>n· •SECIETARIES 556·4900. Equal Oppor. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• '168-S737 cbllds room. & cherry books magazines, tools,
comm1ss1on + m<·l·nt1~c ings. Enthus i11i.t1c & ToS14,400Local Employer. Of Antiques! 2-SCHWINN 10 s pd wood cheat. sso ea. 73 Dodge Sedan, AC:• plaleaW1.Thlsorrkc~•ll l'ncrgetic. lllCKORY W.LAAreaS22K HUGE warehou se Vars1tyblkes,boy's,gd. Custom 9' Sofa down 548·1153; 1717 Hum· PeugeolAC,F\.IJllOepd
be approx 1800 i.qJt. with t'ARMS, WestclJrt Plaza. Employers Pay All Fees Teacher·Pre·School, Cert. crammc<I with over 500 cond. ~ea. 644--0M6 CWlb. Xlnt coqd. 'eat Of· mlngblrd Dr. CM. & much more. 642·'7703,
u lot of company support. 642.0972 Liz Reinders Agency ot exper. for morn. class. music boxell, nickelo· fer. Mt-2932. 184SAnabeim, CM. 116C.
CollPauJ.114:675-3411. ---------4020B1tchSt,Stel<M S2.60Hr.640-8820 deon pianos, circus or· VOLKSCYCLE GwaipS• 1055 Sal/SUnl0.3PM S •LES I 10 Spd. $110 Couch & matchlng chair, ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,. No~rt llea<!h 83.1-8190 TEACHER-Part-time, gans. w al clocks . Call548·76SS bm Ii wht check. Man's G"'• "'GES"'LE V.Uo~g Danish , Sof~. R.F.. Sales Part time, 5·9pm, Mon
Fri, perfect for College Callforappttcstab '85 Physical Ed. Christian grandfather clocks. 10.apd.bike 6'2·3338 -"' hme1gold, 4 Dan11h dm
School 962·3312 fuscmattnA antiques. 10 Spd Molobccane Grand • Saturday & SUnday chrs gold, pine dropleal
$179'4 Student, no press ure __ S_EC_R_ET--.... -y--
sales or quqtas to meet. ""
!'>Jl -<.611 Sales " AdminsU:..tl\ c
ia HM fllOftthly
Dept. for Interior Design
Firm. Shorthand & ac·
curate Typing req. Apply
at 2SO Fischer Ave Costa
Mesa. 540·2880 a .. roge of our
Salespeople! We're ex·
punding ! Room for S
•SALE$•
Retail salesperson,
jewelry & gift wear. App-
ly at R.M. ABRAHMS, 1819 Newport Blvd, C.M. i--5-IC-R_ET_A_R_Y __
more people! Loo~ing Sales, telephone. Nu·
for a huppy place to tionwlde sporting good
make mont!y? C1tll Tom mfr. Good hours, xlot $.
Turner 754 1202 54<Mll42
RED CARPET --------
IMMED. OPENING
Sh pref'd. but not essen.
Use or 10 key C1tlculalor.
Good bene. Call for appl.
536-2541.
Restaurant work av1t11. SALES Secretary /Office Mgr.
1mmed. Athletic Club YOU DOM'T Small Newport Beach in·
Health f'ood Bar. Mature HA.VITO vestment R.E. company
person lo handle all STA.MOON needs all around office phases of restaurant mgr. Lile bkkpng, SH
work full or p/t. Xlnt YOUR HEAD and typing skills req'd.
benefits. Inquire btwn TO FtMD Salary Commensurate
12·S, Mon-Fri, all day A.GOOD.IOI! w/exp.Excet.1rowthop·
TNphoMSales
Want to make money?
Can you sell on the
phone? Top Sin our busi·
ne". 646·3030, ask for Ray.
Telephone Sales
10-4
ON THAT
SALES JOB
GOOD
BUDDY!
1Ms 11 the tftOSt lloMst,
Over Sl .000,000 Worth Tounng, 25 ·· frame. Xlnl Couch SSS, lge coffee tbl B 0 0 kc as e • h u t ch · tbl, misc. Sat/SUD 11-4 Amencan lntcrnauonal cond Sl4.5. S48..i886 $55, Oster Vegetable marblelop end table, 846-11137 • Gallenes; 1802·T Ketter· juacer"2,64S-8616 portable washer, gai; ---------
1ng St ., Irvine . Te l. luildiftcJMahrialt8025 dryer, PLUS LOTS OF GARAGE SALE Sal/SUn
7~·17'17. Open W~ thru ••••••••••••••••••••••• RuralFreochDin.rmset. OOODIES! 10·4 Misc. furn &
Sat.9AMto4PM. Visit! 1 hundred so lb boxes of Chlna cab etc. $2600. 2221WaUace,C.M. motorcycle, 4552
green sinker nails. 554-72llor888-7494. 642-5581 Wyneate Circle, Irv.
112/box. 675-941'1 Bob ... IUC "'UCTlou ~'!1~~W1llowa Tract, _________ ,Redecorating Sale : r-v "' " oN .....,..,
SI 1ding glass doors with M e d i l • 8 ' c Ou ch · MANY FlNE ITEMS OF ---------
screens, 9 & 10 n. S75 matching loveaeat & ESTATE JEWELRY, MOVING S~Stereo chair 1375. Stereo ART OBJECTS, AN· tape w/spkra o. 8 trk
cabinet, 4' decorative, TIQUES, FlNE FURN .. tapes S2 ea. tools,"
could be used as a bar ETC. PHONE FOR IN· lots ot goodies. l Dan·
SSO. Glaastop corfeetbl & FO. at BROCHURE. bury. H.B. rl·Sun matching end lbl $120. ~2200 9611-3162
Blk 8' vinyl couch, nds ---------
recoverlng $40. Kitchen 1940 Pedal sewing mach, Sat/Sun 9-5; 3390 Cannel 8030 tbl formic• top, 6 swivel pwnporaan + Miac. 3210 Dr. C.M. Office equip.,
chairs. S14S. La%)'·8o)' WuhlngtOSl Ave. C.M. cuat furniture, tools,
recliner 575. Port. ref rig. l)'i/Sat/Suo 10.5 palnUngs & pictmea. &
$80. Unicycle ·SlO. much,mucbmore.
840-4480
wtmdsat.3601Jamboree, Time-Lite Libraries haa portunUiea. C714)
_N_._B_. _______
1
absolutely the finest _844-8 __ 153_. _____ _ ........_,.... & fwt saa.s --------
--------• p/time sales jobs avalla· ble In Orange Co. No SECRETARY Rei;taurant
COUNTER
PERSONNEL
FUll-t1me, Part-time
Days & Nights
18 or over for nights
Apply in person:
2·S p.m.
Tuesday ·Saturday
door to door & no pre·
ssure tact.lea. We use a
nice fnen<lly approach &
our reputation is number
t ln the buslnen.
We orrer a baae salary +
R. E. ofc. Prop. mg mt. Sh. typing. Non-smoker.
Send resu m e to
Classified ad no. 954, c/o
Dail)' Piklt, PO Box l!i60,
Colt.a Mesa, Ca 92826
a commission & a 1reat Secretary, Travel A gen.
bonus plan. There la ex· cy, for busy office. Ac·
cellent money on the job curate typing, flUng 4'
+ the atmoapbere. la phone akllla. Laauna casual & Jun. Try a Job Hilla area. 83'7·3720
you'll enjoy for a change. ---------
c "'RL•S JR. We have <3> Part-lime ti--------•1 "' shifts & Full·Ume Is, of ~Secretaries, Clerks,
1720 E. Dyer Rd course. available. Our Typists, Switchboard
•-•Sa-n.ta-An•a•'•C•A--i st.aff people enjoy ex· Operatora. Immediate cellent. benefit.a tocludin1 ()penh\p,
---------• health 6: Ute ba~ance. Thnebv.n Tempor•...,
'· T1Jt Y•'I Service 133.n$s ' RETAIL n.tt1
lob iill Or9MJ9 Co. W•
offer a baM pay. o
9ood COlftM., •Int
boMs & casual at·
• .,...,.. to CJO aloRc)
w /ow stoff IMMflts.
'< CLERKS GIVEUSACALL '= For A PersooalloteTvw 11Securl--•ty ______ 1Telephone Sales, Ad·
133-8095 PIH vertlslnt. Wiii train. UTOTEM TIM E·LIFE JC MIYS Some aales exper. f\111 &
1------1 D09S GLASS.CHINA
& POTIIRY SALE
SEPTt'l& 18
•••••••••••••••••••••••
DOG TRAJNING
Your place or Mine
675·2440 ------~~-~1
...... FiMst HOMt
Entire contents must be
11<>ld! New "•lightly used furn . & appl 's.
EVERYTHING! $707
LIBRARIES Z4 F•hlu w.d p/Ume. S3 hr + comm. EquaJOppEmplyrm/( Mewport•11eh m.7296or835-9892. 1.-._ .... _____ 1 la Now lnt.ervtewln• For TalPHOMI 4FcmllyG•._. .... c ....... Secwtty Offlctr SOUCtTORS
Hn. M.Ol(beftextble Workatbome. Will train.
Oulltandhtr Beoellta
ApplY ln Person
Mon·'Frl 10AM-4PM
Equ..J Oppor. Employer
Medlt styling, Pecan LIDO ISLE, wool rug, Ice akatea, Walnul Qb
wood, 4/pluah beige belae 1Sx17, Lge wbt hdbrd, Cpta le rua1.
velvet hl1h back chn, awlvelchair , Office desk, Adult le children'•
xtra leaf tor tbl. $uper many, many other ltema. cloUlea, furniture, t.oola,
eond, but must sell now. 811-Zta5 toys, lrplc irate, elee
S3SO/oft. Also bu.tcber 5 FAMILY SALE·Fum fence unit. Mlec. 2531
block bar w/5 bar stoola alaasware, collectibles: Buckeye (E Blulfl) NB.
S300.Toaea,caUaf\Spm, clotbln1. misc. 8211 SatontyS ... pm.
64$-18$1. C.M. Evelyn Circle H.B. Thur· MOVING SALi
DlNlNG Rm. table le 4 SUD <AUant .. ,Beach> MostJy furnlture. Ver¥
chra. Drexel. Ant.q whl. 3FamllyCarportSale.210 reasonable. 4114 ·A. w/pecan top. Xlnt. cond. Cyprest, Balboa PeniD. H ii a r 1 a W J y, NB.
SlSO. 53M8&8 or $3WllN Set, UM .•• Toyota+ 631-<1663. *-'-t C• IH Somelbint Un iq u •,SHAD ___ Y_Dr ___ G_ar_ac_•_$a_l.i-,
SlfO 5'1·7155 ~be ADUque for 2nd Twn. beds, surfboard_,
..;_-----.-----1 "-'.a l t 8, --• ... lo homes or yowaa 1over1. lawnmower, baby bed '• """' ve ve -• • ve ~m. dJlabe9 le •ccea. equlpmt.. 12" Band Hw
Nothlq over sioo. Tbe lg. atalnlesHteel coll. tbl
no llhtfa, 450 GavM>ta, NB. base, 1Jasa t.op paUo let.
Sat/SUD, l'1th & 18th, '1.anf misc. itema. 4t8 Sliady Dr., CM (Off Gi\~BSALESat. lrv\ne, nr.17th)Satt&ASI Diji1q nu a.et w/8 chra & --.;._..,------
aerver, eaec desk It chr, PATIO $ALE f'aoM
quten Ii: twin bede1 ~itc. ESTATE: Oak & Vic•
2113HllMewDr. <D.i>lnd tori•IJ cbrs; Vlctort-.
---------• Ralph's Market It. ford ari prints; am bllmW: ad takiles, chandelier; l•mP•; collectablH:
,,
DAILY PILOT
llermu ·uw" uddlc
w lltlltlp Bnnd new,
never med ~cub
~U50'7
1•. 1977
-llln ...... rorC't1ll •••• 0 r Hay Nar ... aentle . Toomaa ora11n, 11d cond n• C'omplete s lo
U-.mod tbd 11111 ahot.a, -..> t'l 111 bed, comp., Lad.I" Goll Clubl + ba11 , 11'-~ormlld u luna 1225. 51:i,, Ctw11t 1:.w. 2 m11~lti ~firm. 640.06?tl
1~.1~ ~ntlOOl• SM 642·3280
JeW9iry 1070 MA'ITRE..')SSALY.-TY,! ... • >
•••••••••••••• ••••••••• S111vti al 40'.t, Beuutyre.!lt, "'"·Stereo 1091 WANTED :,11nn.:.ur, Sl•rta. twin ••••••••••••••••••••••• ro .. CA'-ll D')LLAll i.ets tfl* 1'\1111911 Queeni. ll·lrack stereo AM /FM "' ' siai Kw&a SJ49. "The Re&li11t1c Concert Mate. PAID !-'Ott YOUR Limey 'a Ma tt reu ~.'9'7·2417
H :WKLRV. WA'H'llES, W.:arehoua_e" 1145 8aker 50 --NY--B-ET_A_u-.. -,X-V_l_D_E_O AllT OllJt-:CTS, GOLD, St " ) C M ~ SILVER S 1-: Ii V I<' F. ~~ c airview . RECORDER, S82S.
1-' IN E fo' U RN & AN M2·2U3
TIQlJES 845 :!4!tJO l'WR Lawnmower, uatldl•--------• M<'Lanc 7 blade front l'ASll l)J~H.1>1.\TEl.Y' throw w <'atcher. 3HP NEW ULTRALINEAR IUGHl'~T PRIC f.~'-) H>R Bngga Strati.on t1elf pro· 2160W ''Diaco Mont.or &
G O L U . S I I. V 1': n . pelted SZ25. 536.6868 or apqken. Lut PIO ea.
J E W ~ I. R Y . SJ6.5894 Atlantic Music's sule Uli\MU~D~. D1':NTAI. pnce$149ea.
<.;OLD. WEDDING 'Contractor s 4' Ha11-ATLANTICMUSIC
UA:'llOS, STEllLI!\(;, dymcn• 4 whJrlpool gas 44SE.17lh C.M
CLOCKS. WA1'CllE.S IN furnaces w/water coil ---------
ANY C 0 N)) IT I 0 N top. new, still in the ship· ---------
SILVER COINS TO :l ping cases $150 ea. set. Sansui 331 Receiver & 222 TIM~ FACF: VALUE. P.P. MS·lJ38 turntable, Fi.sher XP 75
M 0 RE F 0 R RARE ---------spkra, 3 months old. No
CO J N s, Go I. D & Rubber dinghy, break· reas. offer rerused. Gene
D O I. L i\ R s . upart rowboat, $75 each. 548·36&4
BENTLEY'S, <!20 F:. 17th Washer $75. 962-7987 ---------s COSTA MESA -Magnivoxstereo/TVcom· 6 ~5 .65 8 5 <C l oised ROTARY Power mo~er. binalion .. Beautiful
Wed ·sat) starts easy ~-Canister walnut cabinet. 4 Yu 1 • Vacuum US. 646·1525 old. $200. 552·4056
Unstock 8075 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Beu ch Tennis Tape deck/recorder, new, F~ M " k Club M mbrship. $1000. reel to reel, retail $425. ,eg. organ mare, .. ro c Call 675·6675 Price $325. 552·8180. to riiJc & drive. blk --------
parade Morgan gelding, Irvine Coast Country Club Used ~ .. Sylvania color
Eng, Western (714 ) Membership, rast sale, TV. li~e ne w. Maple
338·1011 $650 + transfer fees. cabinet $200. 586-6429
Machinery 8078 499•2316 Boats & Mariite EquiptMRt . •••••••••••••••••••••••
220 Volt Arc Welder Seari.
60 ump. Never used. 4"
Rockwell joiner. Motor &
stand. $400 for both.
963 3S32 .
One Autumn Haze, mink
Jacket stole. Good cond.
S200 or be~l ofr. ~IH>576
Walnut dming table, 6
cha1ra $350. Walnut buf·
fct .S150. Amana refng~
Misctf1GMOUs 8 0. 0 610-l395 ..........•.........•..
WANTED MiscellOMOUI
.Wanted 1011
TOP CAS H DOl,LA n •••••••••••••••••••••••
PAID FOR YOUR Want to buy: pair of
JEWELRY, WATCHES. 6.50xl6tires.
AHT OBJECTS. GOLD. 642-3379
•••••••••••••••••••••••
GeMral 9010 •••••••••••••••••••••••
30' SEA RAY
All Models
HARRISON'S
SEA RAY
2327 So. Maln, S.A.
540.6555
3101 Coast Hwy, N.B.
631-2547 SI L\'-ER ,St;HV I CI'~. ---------FINE f'URN . & AN· Wanted: 10" table saw ------..1------
TIQUES.645·2200 also bench grinder. loats,M__..ne 9030 ----·-Please call 548·1487' Eca'pmtttt LUGGAGE TAGS . · •••••••••••••••••••••••
Wanted : P 1 ct ures , ZODIAC f~om your busim:ss card. manuuls & parts for 1!>38 *
lhe Only Boat
~f you c... ftough to
buy .... .,.,, best!
• 1978 MODELS•
at 1977 PRICES
While Oft display
AT THI AHAHIJM
IOATSHOW
AHGB. ST AOIUM
SEPT. 9·11
All Model Sizes
19·20.22-24-26-30
OPEMIOWV
SUN RUNNERS
CUTTY CAllNS
SUHDAHCERS
WHKEHDERS
SPORTIRIDGES
OCEAN CRUISERS
WARNING!
Thesewlllt>.
the lowct1t prices
you1t-. ....... °" 19 78 Modeh ·for the ttttire
rnoct.I y.ar!!
lriftCJ check book!
* s.a Ray Pow..-•
Mere. Cruiser,
OMC, Volvo
7·15 Yr lank
Financing!
See you at
the Show!
HARRISON'S
SEA RAY
2327 So. Muin. S.A.
540.6555
3101 Coast Hwy, N. 8 .
631·2547
S<:nd one l'ard fo r each p ck· rd. Port-A-Marine
l111C plus one spare We 41 a f,42.3379 Inflatable Boats 20' GULFSTREAM. lm-
rct urn perm anently -292SCollege, C.M. mac, fast 160 Mere 1/0 .
sealed attractl\e t.ig & Music.al • _ (714):>40-2070 Lo hrs-wi :l5' Newport
strap, meeting airline lnstrurn.nh 8013 ---------slip. S37SOiofr. 549·2547
I 0. reqw rcmcnls. Pre ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1974, 7 .5 HP Mere Out· ,
\Cnl loss & theft! For a Accordlan, like new. Used board, long shaft, remote 27 Owens twin engine
persooabied tag enclose only 5 mo'a. Luisetti controls, good cond $375. Cabin Crwser, xlnt cond.
)Wallpaper, fabric or W/plckup. Make orrer. 768-9052 Sips 4, bail lank, etc. On· "'Day Glo" pa~r & we Kdl\..J288 • ---------ly $5,500. 493·5192 or
wtll back & tnm your ~ Tamaya~sextant 49'7·1666 ______ _
tags. Or try two cards Gememhardt flute. Xlnt S225. DRAKECRAFT '76 36'
back to back rood. $125. P/P. 83l·21682 Fly bridge Sedan. 90'/c,
PRICE.<; 751-GSOJ,556-1277 Krueger hydraulic comp.$30,000.orofr. PP
S2 ea or 31 $.5 d SJl ""ll 4 5 tags Sl.60ca G_ E M EI NH A R D T backstay a jW1ter, $450. ·-
ti 9 lilg.s Sl SO ea STUD ENT FLUTE 6 mo. ____ 8J_l _·26S2____ ' 7 7 S e a R a y , 2 4 o
IOor more SI .40 ca new, barely used Sl85. 2 Man rubber raft Weeke nder. 454 Aero
Sales Tax Included s.is.5735 $35. Manne, radios, depth
NO CARD" Alpo clannel $80 768·9052 finder, 69 hrs total lime.
Draw your own or send Violin S9S $18,500. 540·7494 or
name. address. phone & OO·l.897 Weber carburetors 48 IDA 642-7323 ask for Jim
we'll make one card per ---------i on McKay manifold for ---------
lag. Add 25' each. Conn E Flat Alto w/case. small block Chevy, throt· 20 Foot GLASTRON 6-cyl,
Send check or money or· s:;o. tle linkage & fuel lines deep V hull, ISO hp tn·
derto: · 673·1838 complete&reodytorun. board-outboard e n g.
PILOT PRINTING $850 or ofter. 631·209~ Completely overtiauled
p 0 Bo l5tiO Student Clarinet days or 979-6247 evea. "zero-hour" on engme. r~~ .M. XC 92~ $75.00 13700. 630-1710 """ta csa, a. u-644-1016 loats. ftower 9040 · ·
PUIUC AUCTION ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• 32' Pacemaker, 1975, to
MANY ITEMS OF FINE Yamaha flute. Gd cood. lB' Electric .Boal. hrs, Bristol, aee al, Lido
ESTATE J EWELRY, $l25. Just like new. $4000. Village Boat ahow. Fri·
ART OBJF:CTS, AN· ____ 64_2·_5008____ AJterS,645-3262 Sun.Call675-8711
TIQUE.5, FINE l''URN .. Conn Trumpet & case, In loah. Soll ~IC. PHONE FOR lN· xlntcond. Makeoffer. MUSTSILLI •••••••••••••••••••••••
FO. & BROCHURE. 979-040 33' CHRIS CRAFT 1975 18' Sol Cal, 5 0% sails,
645·2200 Offlc.e Furwlture Ir Powered by Twin Freeh duel trapeze, cslm trlr,
Bar stools, sunar plush. £-.1-nf 1015 Water Cooled Chrysler x 1 n t con d, $2, o o o. .,... ....-r·-V8's. Quality double l·~ tufted backs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• planked mahoaany con· ---------• 962•1597 MOVING SALE atrucUoo, excellent flab· '77 West.uil 32. Fully
Free estimates on up· Deab, 135-175, chn all in& capability. Includes equl pped. Sacri fl ce
holstcnng, sofa hide·•· styles SS·S3S, drafting color TV p electronics. S49,SOO or trade for O.C.
bed special. 768-8494 tbls 175, letter & legal az You mual see. Only Real Estate. Pvt ply.
files $3().$80. reception SlS.999. 637 ·5125 or 873--'220
Kmg size mattress. firm, room furniture, work 673-95iO -H-o-b1.-e-C_a_t_l_4_'.-m-o_v_in_1_1
new $185, Trundle bed lb'·. • ---------
$175 768 •un• "' 18' Runabout, divided must sell. S850bslofr. · ..,...,.. C.E . SUPLUS windshield 35 Johnson 646-1291 or675·5707 l"URNITURE ' --------1 R VINE <;:OAST C.C . 900Weall9lbSt CM w/lrlr. Lots of xlrat. Byowner.l2'D.E.Atklna
membership $650. QuJ ck 631·2'777 631.2570 11100. Call 5e·3504. 'Eric ' ketch. beautiful,
sale + transfer fee. Call • S rta all /40 llP loaded. Located Yacht _7~·5041. Exec Aesk & ~xec chalt. 1~oh~on~ trl~ xtru. Haven #2, Wilmington,
Camper shell $75. '76 Pin· Sacnrice St75 both. Like XJnt cood. $1650. 847·1863 \AJ mi W. of Ford brldtre.
l · •-t """" new cond. 652-0057 ONt:/245 1830 ·r o eng1n:.9'.'12f:n.s ...,.,.,. 17' REINELL. O/B. 50 bp """ . •' no aruiwer
---------1Take over leue on RX700 Mere. H/D trlr. Extras. _2_13_1_5_18-_1_09_1 ____ _
130 Yrds or Brown Pluah photo cCfller. including Perf cond. Beal ofr. WANTED lo excban1e:
Carpel. $4.50 yard. Ph supplies: S108 mo. lBM 642-3335or&U-60'78 40' motor/salter ketch
675-9417 Bob Exec typewriter $275. for houae or condo tn
---------• 642·3755 days, 642·0176 M A RAU D ER 2 4 • • Pal'tn Desert or Palm RmRED ACTRESS eves. Flybrid1e. twn screw, Sprinp. Pvt party. Call
will sell beauuru1 collec· 2 typewriters IBM elec· low hn, VHF, like new. 714/833-3M4
Uon of unusual colored trtc $295. Sn°lith Corona ~=:·;:JU00:.,50• PP. _'73_H_o_b_lo_l_6'_w_/_tl_r.-cl-b-l1
Jade\ fine jc~elry, portablo electric $9S. • t.ra Ufe Jacketa wbt fl1ur1nes, Clo1 sonne, 968-2665 17~ Volvo motor pinto h·ap, bl aJla "~ ,._· ivoriea screens many • ulla, u s · _,, .....
out.It.anding misc. Start· Cfffce desk. blk & chrome drive, fibet;&lau boat " 556-4729. SllOO/obo. Must
lnl 11 AM Fri/Sat/Sun, "woodgralntop.40rwr. lrlr.493-0397 _Se_ll_. -------•
Sepll6,17,18. Matching deluxe swivel 20' CABIN Crsr. Many ex· lJOO 14 w/trlr. No. 2200.
MARRIOTr HOTEL chr. Both like new. Sl2S. tru. All nbertlaaa. VI, 4 Xlnt. cond. •. M4-f1J5
NeWpOrt Beach IBM Electric typwr1t«ir, wb.1 trlr. Dana Pt. slip orf4.M4.51
2 hi ba .. ed 'I bl 5 yrs old. Needa cleaned avail. JZSOO. Firm. ---------• c.. m ro · u $.'SO. 552-4056 $2828 18' O'Day Sallor. W /•bore ch•ln1t4()ea.LaaVe1as moorlna on Penn . dice cla. box, coll. Item P... IOl7 25' SEACRAFT twn 1/0'•· 6'1M81Sev1/wknda m. Kodak 8mm proJ .• •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• Pwr w/full cntrla. VHF, ---------1
llke nu + screen MO For sale red beaded par-outrt11era. Lrlr w /braka ll&' Double tndfr. 10 HP
both. ~ rot: very youo1, doe• + many other Hiru. auxlU•ry. Cluslc folk
ear w/a htah back atools, talk.1200. 84!·911» l8850. '40-7000 or 545-7521 ~ Xl.ot ccod. w/allp.
&1c brwn vinyl. Cabinet rt... a°"""' 1090 eves. =!~.~75-dll dya,
tD b&r hu locka for LI· ••••••••H•H••H•••••• '73M'LAPAZ
quor $400/bst orr. Small '4" Studio tTJhiaht Dresel, H/C pteH wtr, 1'' 81llboat w/eabln, J
Con10lt Packard-Bell piano w /bench uoo . sbowel't.. VHF, AM 1-trk, aalls, main &Jib, new a.a
Solid Stato AM/l!'M 675-08IW A/P . rropade 1 h • l1P mtt, OIH)' l tf H
at oteo w /turnOble oven.saa,900.C?MIN SUOO.Mr·.SalUPM SIJOlbit Oft. 549-3351 an. 5 Kawai '4" Plano cootoJe -
pm. w/bench, walnut, •is "7Ur.XARAUDER u· Clau D"lp , re• PP.ta4112 151Mere,&tq·~~--11 .. trakt hall W/WhM Completed boat/movlnf .-. teOO. ~ tat; tleop rtat111,:1ll 1Mia Hl•~ l'\lrn. •PPL BAL&rNIN' fi rac ..... ,..Mtdd
brdwate,•tools, t ler90. SP.INITPIAMO ' ao• QlilMCIMa ~. trtr. if:tt Ne. I&·-. ~ Wart, Sabot. mlK WbJ MUie ror liaU Uaan ft•PNIMtln. lee • Wild a n. Ul 1111, bcielP¥rta. ..... 121. U. ftllllil&I Waln~ Xblt IMDoft•.m-ml .-1.,-bdlf•1'll
WAn:lUIBD, brarichew, eood.r.-.N.B • .,..._ ... ~. new
kln1 1lH deluxe w / 9°'11l Uptff lat P111tr vatnlahi n-pt. v!Matot, tlOO. ~•lue, .p.&aao. X at cond. •aa. ... a pa •·
lmallMIJI «MIO. m.2300 •lmUllMIJ. TIMl• ..._
CAMPER SHELLS
'73 Jeep CJ5 Basic, 14,000
ml, A·l Shape, tell or
trade 646-6813
Chevy Mags, like new,
wit1res, aJso VW adap.
tors ~-768·9052
(5) Goodyear AT
Truckers. lOx 15 while
spoked wheels. S225. 83().9l51 eves.
A name to
contend
with~
s.-1•
DICK MILLER MOTOR
IJO W. WARMER, SAMTA AMA
114/551-2132 110f4B
IN THE NEW IRVINE AUTO CENTER
ORANGE COUNTY'S
•EWESI
Ll•COL•MERCIRY
DEALER-NOW OPEN
LAKE FOREST EXIT, SAN DIEGO FllEWAY
MARK V'S
CONTINENTALS
VBSAIL1ES
MARQUIS COUGARS
MONARCHS
IOICATS
CA PRIS
COIJ.EOORS
ITEMI
'
c
1
l
(
'
lncu 'HO Awto, W•ted UU Awtoa. lmport.d .Awtoa, Import.cf Awto•, hnport.d Friday, September 18, 1977 DAIL y PILOT DJ l ····•········••······· •........•...........•.•.•..•....•............ ·············~········· .•.....................
lt1'~D
s..,.J•Plc ...
C.."ultom painl t. U\\41C1or
4 •l!Md. •tr (\il\l.I • '° .. mll l\Ollll»J l'rh· •
Wldlfbl1
llLL YA'RS
VW.fOISCHI
S..0Jwant'1p1 lr•nn
ll7400 •t J.411 I
ii ford Ran1;.hero OT
VII, rs. r" 8 11t
\ M F" Up\4 nuht<
$.)JOO !»t Ml 6024 1.11
~ l5IM
'1u.st cell 73 ().1111un Pl
um~r 11hrll w ooot
m1any «-xtru GOOO of
f'l!r ~100 l\'e mt:aaaa
rort.lt M11y
1961 Ford ~. Lon }' U. autc
lrall:I, v~ $1500 207
Harbor Rlvd . C M
~7401
'66 Chev V8, ,., Ton. W1d
bed Ask mg S900
~2100
'73 LW Pickup, AM/FM.
magi., lo m1. $2000. Cal
982.(JQH
'72 D o d ge Van ,
Tradesman 100, w/many
xtl'as. Must sell cheap.
496.8209, '92-U 21
'75 DODGE Tradesm an
100. Cptg. & ponel'g.
$l200 or best oCr. 645·1847
aft9PM'
'70 Ford S upe r va n
Ca mper, mlleage getter,
6 cyl, 3 spd. fac air, mag
whl1, 1tereo-tape deck,
perf cbnd. $1950. 645-8457
'62 Ford Van, mais, crp,
etc. Xlnl cond. B/O over
$1000. 538..()t34
'65£hev & '65 Volka ~need little work,
bestoffer751~
Auto LeaelftcJ '580 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lf71FORD
FtESTA
HottHt car on th e
market! 30-40 mi per gal.
Available for Immediate
delivery. Lowett lease
ra~oo the market. See~ at. CORT FOX
2518Newport Blvd.
MS.3661
A-. W-'-4 9590 •••••••••••••••••••••••
TOP
DOU.Al
PAID
IMW '712 o.t._ 9720 Aat 9725 n. Bluttt'~ on ttte ar.,.. eout
····~;i·i;.;w·ioor··· ····;·D·;,·v··.··:·~···· ;5·;.~:;·1;·5;;:r.-xi~t DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
KJu11 1 r.t7i0l it' " cond Lo mi's . G l95
SJ41t * UTILE ••. * ~311"2• 545•2751 You Can Seu It, Find It, ( 842 •5878 ) One Cell Service
MOTOICAIS SAVE A LOT '75 X19 D ark G r n Trade It wtth a. want NJ . . Fest c..dit ApprOWll
D'IUG~Ct AM/FM caaa. Xlnt. cond.
M1 , S p s.1600.W.l282or»l-21.S ~ ... ~ ... "! •...•.. !~! ~·.~~."!•••••••!~!! ~ ... ~ ... ": •....•• !~!! ~ ... ~ ... "! ••••••• !~!~
"77 I MW UOf .._. 9727
•
B•RWICK DATSUN
4 ilr I apd l l4Vll~
I su ....... 1.-0tn' CA 5 MOTOI CAIS
ALL MODW D'IUG.AMCI
'II I. ••1' •1.i I ,,,
831 13 7S 4 9J.JJ75
NEWPORT OA TSUN
•••••••••••••••••••••••
1..-c1Mew'77
HONDA Cars
MANY
WI
MUD
CLIAN
USIDCARS
MOW
CAUPUPY
540-5630
M7~~ FOil THI IUT To Clloole Frotwl
'111 lJMW 2U(U ··~·" l R.HTPltlCH UNIVERSITY AM/FM •lereo. ery j.ld Cal J im MH dhom o•.L-t..l .. cond '2lt001b1l ~fr --
l714)1160-l482wkdy .. lt 7, TODAY! Hoe.do Ccn • GMC
wluldll. tl8800VESTREET Trsb
Near MacArthur 2850 Harbor Blvd. '10 B~W 22,500 mllei. &J amboree Roads Costa Mesa S4-0-98CO
• u n f'd 0 r . A M I F M lll-1300
1011\'SO\ & SO\ cuse«c! ------_,,,, 9730 _fl_._100_. ____ 644 0363 1973 260 z •••••••••••••••••••••••
'di liavanJ, With auto. trans, factory 2626 HARIOlt ILVD. u.ioo it!M 11620 air cond., AM/FM radio.
• LINC 01 N M [ l!ClJHV
COSTA MESA "4!14-7768or41M 4855 (38775) -----$4390 WI IUY Capri 9715
USID C.AISJ ••••••••••• •••••••• •••. MIRA CL! MAZDA
We re the new Chevrolet 1971 Capri 1600, J cyl, n~ 2150 lfurbor Blvd., C.M.
dealerslup m Ule lr v1ne pamt & 1ntenor. Comp __ 645-5700
Auto Center. We need recond1t1oned. Sl21JS . SH
your used car' 673-41199
JOE 9716 MAC PHERSON ••• ••• •••• • ••••••• • • • • •
CHEVROLET
73DATSUN
Bill MAXEY
TOYOTA
181•1 lf'o<lit.li.4 1•1 I\\\
HUNT1 H<. JON ll ACU
JAGUARXJ6L
16 Showroom fresh, Lo miles. Not our line or car
and MUST Sell TODAY!
Long term rln. avail.
(360PQQ)
House of Imports
....... ,. ••••• •10. •••••••••
'55 .......
XKl40MC
$7419
MOTORCARS
D'S.EGAMCE
547.9250
1971 X.J6, Joaded, xJnt
tond. $5300.
833-8256
1974 XJ12L forced sale.
Silver wiblack, 16,000
ml. $8000/olfer. -'98-2130
WESTGERMAM
IMPORTS
74 Jaguar X.KE Vl2
l99'1KLN) •••••••• Sll,995
OUr Construction . ls Finished
SADDLEBACI( I
BMW I
COMllM&SEE
THE6JOCSI
NOW ON
DISPLAY
Outt COMPt.ITE
IODYSHOP
ISMOWOPEH
MISSION VIUO IMPOllTS
6 • I •,.' . . ... . . .. . .
831 114H 495 1704
These cars have never
been dri v e n or re·
gistered.
'73 6102dr. Yellowsedan,
xlnl cotld. Great buy!
Must see! AM/FM 8'trk, ,
new Ura. $1700. 673~~
'76 Xl9 Roadsters,
Choice or 12. 14295
'7612' Spyders,
choice of8. M99(5.
'76131, 4 Doora,
Choice or 11. S3295.
'76 t28Sedans, '67 PlAll Dat1un Sta
Wag. New mtr & many
xtras. Good 1:ond. SJ.SOO.
M6-1934
Choice of 11. 12538.
All you add to the above
prices Is tax & license & dell ver y & bandllna IMW RESALES '73Datlun1200, auto, FM, charges.
1974 3.0CSA lo ml '1 . Perfec t . Paclfic AutoBroken
Polaris 11Uver, aunroof, SlOOO/l»tofr.882-4687. 8111-4645
cruu1e control le all op-'68 DataWl 1600 Roadtter. '7S FIAT 17000 mi, A/C,
lions <4885LNT>9. 5 Nu pnt, valves. $1000. atereo tape. '2500/offer. 12,9 .(94.2130 491·3241
~-~~~~~~
11993002 Mtot. Mew 9100 Mtot. Mew tlot
Automatic, air cond., & •••••••••--•••••• •••••••••·~··• .. ••••• ..
AM/FM radio. A one
ownercJ?, (Zl\V449).
. .
PLEASE STOP Ill AllD SEE •R llEW FA(ILmES llOW
DUlllllOUR
HliE GUALITY.USED CAR CLEARANCE ._.,~Frlclay•SatuntayeSIMday,tepte111 .. r 1~thru25
EASY CREDIT RIMS
•APPROVED CREDIT
Askt1•181 ow"Powert1aln Pl••"
S.nlce Agn1~1nt
:.. ... ol'' lj~··J. ·~· ·~ £" ...... '.~ ... ..,~...-....~·· ..... --... ~~.: ' ·,'., ,,~.:-~'t";:'f~.~ ~' >'-,~., ''. "' .. .,, •. , .. ~ :~; .-•.• --'7 .~: • 'l\ ~'
,e" • ~. ,>.I~ . ·-. • . ' ..... ·,. .. -~ "' . .. r:
..
I
('I
T
in c
h·
Cl
sl
j
J
'
-
•12 DAii '(PILOT '"l?Y, !eptember 11 1171 ....... ••port.cf . Alltos. fntpot'W Mtos. lmporhd .......... ,...tect ........ ., .... ed .......... ,.,.t.ct --~ ...... --_.;;.;;;...__~----~--~;;.;;i:=;.;.;;;:~~~.. .. .. .• . • • . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . • . . . . . . . .... .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . .. .. . . .• . • •• • . . • ....•...... . . ••••• .• •.•••.•....... . ••••......•..........•
~.·.-:~ ....... ~.~r~ ...... ~~·.':'!~.· .. ~ ....... ~ ............ !?.~~ ~ ............ !?.~~ ~~-· .... !?~~ ~!~·-~ .... !?~~ ~ .......... ~ .. !?.~~ .~ .. :: ...... !?.~~
....... •TU ...._.W. •7H....... '7ll '75 RX4 wagon, Muto.
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• All1"2., t.ran.s warran· 1972 Ml% 250 '15 ~ SEL. $15.500 Low 19'11 Opel 1900, 4 dr • '58 Cpe. New mt. & pnt,
C 0 UP E L miles Silver 962-4782 or rad lo, 1ood tranap. compl r bll ena. Burn '' Jll Hlk w1t.n tnl ·n. AM l'M, n~w blu" "la M1udo ttX 2 Good t y J5,000m1. $3750.
toP lmmar &\,SW" p•1n1 n1J d en l 1 C'Ontl 53,000 ml '• 51UOl117 • eq\ipped With ID~x ~ire~ 842-9371 ' Sl025/bst. 968-3359 pel"'I, Kootl. ~lnl cond.
& 13 ln excellent cond•· Make orr. 499-4629 aft 5. fllr 17521\1 t.v n11m" SIV7!\1ofr Mu11l nil AM/l"M C111111utlci Alk· -
w b'lSliltil ~~.Cull~·l71!_ WaotAdReJSulU &42·5678 JI 0 H..._ ll•d. 1.9:16 Mercedes Beru 190, tlon, (6890WG ). Good 4-dr sedan. Gd 1hape. ln· ,......,. 9747 1968 912 Porsche. llblt
fldectloo of other MBZs tad.~. iw7•3778 ••••••••••••••••••••••• eng. Koru'a maas. new tlOO ......_Mew tlOO Alltot. Mew tlOO COlfo Mesa 6(5..1700 In stock. 74 PAHTIAA paint. '6800. 644·9030
'75 Mlt 45051 30.000 mlles, fully fnc · '71 914 Porsche. A 1>· ... ._........ ..... ... .. .. . . . . . . . . . . ... ...... .. . . . . ... . . . ..•.......... ---------
GUI THEY GO
O.r htlre Stock
wlll be sold at
Sacrlffce Prices
Guess which Car Dealer
Is MlD because he has
the world's lousiest
locatlonm
WE NEED ROOM
for the coming
1971 MODELS
MWllY IAU INDI lfff. l 9
Merudn ...... 9740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .....
Hew-UMCI
C)VER 100
MERCEDES
OM DISPLAY
ttous. of lmDOrts
AUTHORrzto
MERCED.ES DEALER
6862 Manchest.er.
Buena Park
S2J..72SO
On the Santa Ana 1-~wy.
'75 Ml% 4SOSL
With metallic paint ,
ster eo & 1s luxury
equipped. In 1howroom
condition. (447MXN>.
Prl ed t.o II I
MISSION VllJO IMPOllJS
••• t' \I 1., ... ' ..... ' ......... .
liJI 1148 49~ I 104
Mercedes 226SE. sunroof,
cpe. 4 spd, new mech &
ext. Have recelpta.1. $7500
mvest sac. $6,000. r·inanc
avl. PP. 494-6204 eves. --------1972Ml%250
4 DOOR SEDAN. Low
miles. AM/FM radio, air
cond. & luxury eqwpped.
(54 GBB
MIHION VIE JO IMPORr S ... . .. . ' ' ..... . ........ ,, ........ .
831 -1748 •9S-170•
'7 J 280SL, Tobac -
c·o1co,qnac Int. Auto, 2
to~. mint cond. Best ofr.
213.e.22-3325/714-640-61'08
Sunroof, crul1e control, tory equipt, (aer.H07296) pearance a roup. Moii~.
lciather & metallic paint. One of lhe tut 100 made. Koois, rbll eng, AM / FM
(Q.'IClM.1). $14,419 tape, Clean. $3300,
MIHION Vlf J'> IMPORTS ... '· .. . .,, . ~
8JI 1748 4'7~ 1704
HOUSE
OF IMPORTS
·-~)
BUY OR LEASE
NOW AYAILABLE
llJ ~FINANCING
48 Na,. LEASING
MOTotl CARS 496-846l
D'ILIGAMCE '70 914. Nels work. body m
6216-W17lh8A547·92SO aood shape. $3000 or bi.l
---------1 ofr. 675·1!127 Dave
•Pmhra'•* 12 Pantera ....•.. $l2,389 914 Porache 1.8 liters, 1!175
Yellow <Ser. 4234) Appear. G.roup, AM/FM.
73Pantera ....... $13,789 mags, PERFECT body. White (Ser. 5976) <114)595-4733
AU priced below market '65C. 4000 mi on new eng.
TeatDriveToday! New paint. new brk1>.
MOTOA CAIS Price mcls never opened
D'B.EGAMCE orig eng $5600. 536-3873
62SW. t7thSA547·9250 Porsche 69 -912, 5 spd.
P~ 9750 AM/FM cassette. xlra
••••••••••••••••••••••• clean. SS.COO. 6'2· 1811
SH US FIRST! Porsche 72, 911T. black.
NIW 1977
DATSUN
PICKU' $95!!
NIW 1977 DAJIUN
1210 HAfCHIACK
$96~.
MISSION VIEJO IMPOllTS
A• t, \I 1,,..,., . "' ......
831 1/48 495-1104
'74Ml%450SEL The best one-atop
Leather interior. pwr. I Mercedes-Benz dealer
windows. cruise conttol, has a lot to otter
i.unroo( & metalltc paint. EXEGITIVE CAR SALE
1r you are consldenng strong eng senow. offer~
buying or leasing your 0 n 1 y . p p . D y ~ •
nextPorsche. 213-578·0642 • Ev :., llLL YATES 114-998·9741
VW-POISCHE WEST GERMAN
• •-d. Set, •H61'10Dll97. Only U00 -•1'4 llS.21 -MO. lftcl, I•• & llC tat 41 ..-lhs O.A.(. DeNtred pyml Is UO,,,..._ APlt 10.1$.
C-prl<e tA111 II.
1977 DATSUN
. 1-210
211ew $90!!.
'72 MZB 280 SE. White,
tan mtr. Immac. clean,
x.lnt cond, low m i, ong
o wne r . 546·8900 &
5Zl·'0:91
Jn great condition ' •
MISSION VlfJO IMPORTS
6 • .-.,, lo' 'II r .. .,. ' ,.,(t ........ ,. .......... .
831-1748 49S 170•
73 Mer~i l&O · '71 280SL Mint! Silver.
Auto, air, power win-AMi r'M cass .• $12,SOO .. dows, Uecker AM /FM, 213.434.9189
$w. •HllllHI..., Dime. Onl'I' .. - -•t• PH me. ll>cf,
I•• a. 11<. lor • -o.A.C. o.fwred pyml I• S..JS.n Cati! price • P"·
ANl"-11. "'99• rlGIL 5«. •WPlFIOOJIOT1 Only UGO -eo'll ft7.l7,,., mo. Incl. ru & lie. for" monlllt O.A.C. oeter'8CI pymt It 1617~ c-prk• ........ '""' price kl02 ll
new Michehn 'is. 45,000 --------
miles, "Pnshne condl· '71 250c. Beaut cond. Lo
l 1 o n th r u o u l ! ' ' ml, loaded. $6400/ofr
"Probably the finest 879-2175,213·941·5675 used 280 anywhere''·
Mu1>t be seen und driven! '68 250.5, full power, steer·
<MlUIBl mg, brakes. windows.
air. low mileage, ivory
wtlh mmt red interior.
new radmls, xlnt (•ond
$5500. 979·11121, aft 6,
!198-1705
WE LEASE
MlUllll ..... .................. ..,.. ......... ____ .,.. ___ ,,,_ -
CREVIER
&I ST & HOADWAY
SANTA ANA
835·3171
TMtl UlTIMAH DflfVIHO M.\CHIHI!
'59 Limousine, o'ri g.
$13,500. or '! 494·8620,
494 1768 or 494·4855
The fastest draw 10 lhe
Wco,t .. a Doily Pilot
Cla1>s1fled Ad. 64.2 56711.
------'66 230SL 4 sp, stereo, both
lops, lo mi. 015000
'b'1 250SL rare 4 seal<!r
w /(ull leather. auto,
stereo, lo mi. 003408
Hoth in flawless cond.
Scnous inqwnes.
Aatot, Mew tlOO Autos, Hew (aoo Autos, Mew 9800
Overseas Imports
675-7903
··········~············ •...........•.•...•.... ········•·•••··••······
BRAND NEW 1977
GMC % TON PICKUP
hAyfoc""YE~
IS.. TO> l47Xj21904j
'tin TA.IC & UClH$f
TO RONA DO OLDSMOBILE 98 · OLDS DELTA 88
,,;;=.., DISCO;D
=~=~:.:: s24 7 ..,._, AM-#M ·--. ...........
CW.lU7VM721l711 ~61 Cll IACOl'f STDll /Ila
BRAND NEW 1977
••ANONIW
11117/tOYAU
AvtOf'lllOf•( .,l)f'timt\VQ!n, PO••' , ... ~. poww _,...._, pow..,
doo, l0<\i.t, ,,., dtfOQ91". tilt
wti...I. pow._ ...... ~ C.Oirl·
.....AM-#MtlrD
C'-"lMJ7l1"'35'7UI
DISCOUNTED
s1477
CUTLASS SUPREME Avl•-lk 1t-.io.., ,_... _..,.. -........ 1.,11.., ........ .,.., !W 1JS1C1
IUJOJ221J PlUS TAI &
uaHSt
$
'71 ''90NDA $1077 '71 fOU '73 GMC $3477 llDAll T·lllD JIMMY 4x4 --· r....=.=... .._.............,.., ... Miii.ti. ---..... -::::::-~-----~ ~"" CIJUWTI
'74 ClllY;.OT s1577 '72 CllD. '74 CHIYY SAVE YIM llAIClllACI IMPALA LUY ,.,.....-...,_ __ ...,._ ·--·----· -..... ---.............. ·--.. ~ --··"""' ....... ,
'73 fOllD '1977 '73 DODGI '75 CHIYY $3877 ""° IUMAIOUI IUaRIYAll PICKUP ........-.---;:.,."t,-:;:-...,. Al•c ..............................
~.~-· ~--= p:;1;1'i:i -· .... -llO'UI ........ Jlf1'TI
'76 HONDA .. '70 010 '75 DODGI $AYE CIVIC $3477 "IUPlllllUP'' CUStOllmDYAM ,.,...__.,.-~.: .• .'': :.t ...,._ "-.......... , ............ -o ......
=·=~(/ ::::: .=--......... ~..:: ....... ttOJal) ....... _ .. ,..,.
'70 fOllD '76 DODOI SAYE UYBICI COWi IUllLI TOP . ,,_ ..... --IOM-"TI
'ff TOYOTA
AllCOllD· , ..... _ --"J~
'77 450 SEL
($«, 61507)
'77 280 SE
(Ser. 75860)
'77 280 E
(Ser. 18949)
CALL FOR QuoTE
21 3/9'21-8588
714/523-7250
FactQtY Authorized
Dealer
MERCEDES
BENZ
WESTGERMAM
IMPORTS
12MBZ350SL
Convert. <068018) . S9950
2 More To Choose
450SLCs ....... 450SEs
220SE Cab .. 2SOSECpe
714/541°1186
San Juan Capistrano , IMPORTS
837-.4800 493·451 I 67 Porschc912
'76 Ponche 911S Targa. <TVTONY) ........ 16500
Xlnl cond, AM/FM tape
deck (114>735-1722
'TT Porsche 924. Silver. SUBrOOf, AM/FM stereo.
Alloy whls. 15,60 0
beautiful mil es.
$11,000/bst ofr. 494-8338
PORSCHE 9 l 4 2.0
'76 Super Sharp !
White/black. Not our line
or car and M usl Sell
TODAY! (535RZV)
House of Imports .., ........... ., .... , ........ .
J I•'•• '•t ''' ,,,,
2 More To Choo.,,.
62 Porsche Cabrlokt .
(S28MET) ...• Super ~I:
714/541-1186
R.....at 9755 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•RENAULT:
LE CAR!!
New~t Renault deulcr
has many l o c hoose
from. Come in and lc1>l
drive the new Le Car by
Renault. Ask us about
our Easy finance terms.
G~'~r.; Ca~-'
$7419
MOTOR CARS ,..,S()UIMllREAIOULtVAl>O . lll<IA
D'S.EGANCE 1""l'J07;1)() • 2"'"'"' ,,..,
547.9250 Rolls Royee 9756 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
'74 914' Factory appr grp. • •t DEALER IN US A Bra & cover. AM/FM I! • • ·
trk. S6100/ofr. P .P . ROY
SSl-0077 rRR CARVER '69 TARGA 911T, xlnt. ROLLS·ROYCE
cond. Must gee! Leather tMOJ•mbort•
Int w /xtras .. 548·5931 an Nurll!lrt .. ..,"'
5PM ........
Don't drop the ball! Gel a ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
job with a low·C06t Daily
Pilot C l assified Ad.
Phone 642·5678
MG 9742 •••••••••••••••••••••••
MG MIDGETS!
Will Rive FREE 5 yr .•
S0.000 ml. warr. with
p~chose of any new
Midget in stock. Many l<>
c hoose Crom. Call
~~ -~
H6&0UlH llf!CA llOUl.(VAllO • llMA
,,...,.,ll00 •}1~lll51
•••••••••••••••••••••••
1977 MGI
With AM/FM stereo,
rallye wheels. only 6,000
miles. (527RZO>
$4660
MtRACl.E MAZDA
2150Harbo1' Blvd., C.M.
645-5700
'74MGI
Grey C606MXX)
$3Ht
MOTOICARS
D"ILEGAMCE
547.9250
'75MGI
Convertible, 4spd., elec·
tric overdrlve, AM /FM,
radials, raJlye wheel1,
"Sparkling red w /black
trim" Nice thruout!
"Superb example''
(~NXM)
CREVIER
Ml\RQ DIS
MOTORS .
VOLVO & TOYOTA
SPECIAL TY CARS
. ---------------------lt7410YOTA
..WXPIC&.U'
Equipped with camper,
atove & Ice box.
(40135U).
'9'7fOID
MUST ....
Automatic, radio. air
cond .• & pWr. steering
& brakes. Showroom
new! (UIU319).
s3595 52195
ttUPOISCHI
fl2
Immaculate condJtlonl 4 •P••d & radio. A collector's tteml (IM9KBP). (RHY373).
s2595 55795
tt7JDOD411
COLT
4 •P••d. radio & 5 speed, AM/F M
heater. (871.JR<). stereo & low mllea.
(042NLL).
s.1995 s4595
IHtYW
COth•l.U
1'74YOl.YO •
.141WAeoM
4 •P"d. radio & air Automettc. air cond. &
concr. Super aharol I n • u p • r • n I c •
(iseet). condltlont (818LNS) •
. .
/..-
....... 1 ... ~ ..,..,, l.,or+.d Aufot, UHd 4tdot, UHd Avtoa, UHd Autoa, UHd F!!day:September 18. 1977 DAILY PILOT DJ3
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ../' Allt u d S.. t7' Vollbw.... t77 C .. lec tt II C--• 9911 Por-d 9940 Ford tf40 ~.°.!·!f!~ ........... ~!!·.~!~!'............ ...°.~· .. :: ............ . •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Pinto t957 Pontiac. f965
1m ab V4 M. ml '74 VW 412. 1ur. v1uy lt7J CHIVY 1976 fO•D "70LTDZdr Drgm. ~!!4!'!? •••••••••• !!.~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~=~ft' ~~~~•,ti~:, 12100. Nabers CAMARO UHCHIRO Auto'f~~PS :~·~Int 68 4 e;pd Mui;la.na super i3 Pinto SQwre wen. 4 . FANTASTIC IUY
Wtlh V-8, auto tran•. rac· \V\tb v ... auto lron.1, rac· ~1·0wn::.r~2~ enc n~ body ~ork & cyl, clean, hi mi. '1300, Mu.staell now!
T.,... t1H ... YW I•• ebecll CadlJJa tory 11lr cond .. power tory atr cond .• full tra~s 548 5081 8il5·2929 '75 Pontiac Traoa·Am ···-·••••••••••••••••• llGO cau5&U 4111 C a.Lt.<t·rioa. (717NXN> power. power at.eerlna, '68 LTD CoW\try Squire -· • AM/FM alereo w/tape
tt74 TO'fO"TA •· S2710 m.ll,.cont.rol. OC684Gl) Stn wan. iood cood. All '67 Muslana convt. Xlnt 74 Pinto RunabOut, Jo ml, daclc. Very clean. ~s.
CllJCA fH '12 Kl.OE t"W BUI New MlllACll MAIDA $4990 power 1'5(). ~·9336 cond. Orli ownr. ~. xlnl cood. M0-1144 or 957-0338
... U... Jl~ :mo Harbor Blvd .. C.M MIRAQ.E MAZDA 8'13-3•14 eves afl 6 538-38M -,67-Fl_R_E_B_l_R_D_•OO-, -.. liit Wlw 5 11peed, fact1W')' 111 UU «il:S ... ,und . AllClfM aterf'o, 645.5700 2~Jlarbor8Jvd.,C.M. Ma•erick 9t47 '6SM~lan1.wttlecl11ssic '71 HATCHBACK Gd. cood.$875Farm.
rllll)te 'lll'h«-b ctnU<TI 80 VW. aood tnruporta 645-5700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• white convertible. Pvt transporlation. P P 840-0571 •"'•JO t•-. nrw 1ntenur, .. ..,., 'b'tl Camaro 3SO, au lo, -'71 Ma ... rt k .. dr ... y •.. ""S. or reaa orr 1150. 673-5338 ctt873-3111 ..-~11 .,_, SUMMER PS/PB nu paint dot '10 Torino Convertlble v .. c ·'" • M r '."'"s u n d e r 1 • 19117 Lemant, new tires. MIUCLIMAJDA _. <'ond \n/oul. $1500. Engtne per<, nda minor n~.~5· (7l4)SZJ.7~orB2l-872' '73 Pinto Wagon. Auto. ball. !5,000 Ml, l_lnt
.!l.501larbor81vd ,C.M. '67 VW umper Nn SALE &e900t body work . $1500, ---Low mileage. Gd cood. oood.,'100.CalJ~
641-1700 pelnl, clu,cb, tlr4)1 • ~94_:_0387_, _ _ ~ury 9950 '68 Classic.· Red. n
1
ew 8 cy
1
1 $2000 Pb 64-0-51911 .._Am+'--' 9970 en11ne. w iwarr•ntv • 71Y·83'17, Auto, Air, P/S, ' . • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 3 ,_, ... • ---·you '1SOO ~32.'1 0r..,.c............ P/8, lilt &lcerlng 75 GRANADA Sliver, lo OD ""'GECOUNTY'S eng. 18'~ mpg, sp< '74 PINTO Xlnt cood. ········-············· Sii:L'Youl S.•l .. c• Perfect mech cood. Lo ml, uJung $3900. .IWW"..,.IWHT ~:as Sacra rice SlJOO. AMiFM 8 trk $1800. Oria. '72 T·Bird. FuU pwr. Ong
. ., vw UMJ.. Nt·~ (l<lllll miles. Sl99S.P /P 646-6285 493-5845 " -Ownr. SS2·61.98 owner. Very good oond TOYOTA. mkn111 111~ UNCOLN·MERCURY '10 Mustang Grande, 351 , -.._,..: 9960 $2500.PblO~ :u-••• for • lop d"llur 11M ~uo 1976 CADIUAC Che.,.olet ffZO '66COUNTRYSEDAN Dealership la now OPEN A"l "'M •tureo air • ., .. _ .. , - --------.~.,. -" " ~ W R'.1"1> " I r " ~ • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• V ff74 ...tim.tu' SIYILU ••••••••••••••••••••••• agon _.,,, RAYFLADEBOE loaded . Jmmac. PP . ecJO MAJt9UISTOYOTA 72VWIUG t"uli lualber 1.0LenOr, all 1976CHlvY 640-00'7& LlNCOLN·M1'.:RCUl\Y 675-42311 73 Duster; v.a, air·COnd, ••••••••••••••••••••••••
MISSION VIEJ<J AJr cood · JmmacuJ-.t~ powtr optiona. cruis EL CAMINO '74 Ltd Brougham. Lo l&al8Aut.oCenter Dr. ---ong. owner Fold down Yl6~ 76 in•lde & out J yr, 12,000 1.... M L'M 1• 0 F SDI:'.~. L k F t l Oldsmobi14t 9955 rear scat Only 39,000 m1. Lu.TCu••cu AT .J 1.•ttO 495-121 O " COll\rO .. A / .-sle With auto tran•, ractorv m s. l woer. u II •· ~r a e ores ex1 · ~ ..-"w • l'Nlt *&rr.mty 11va1hable. h 1 .... .,, X $299 IRVINE ••••••••••••••••••••••• SJ750 S3J..1768 ...,0 __. ( ... "'l<I> Wll t n pe P u ye r . air cond .. power at.eel'· power. tras. .S. ----DE ... 5 a__. t!8n1>.
Bii "wv t666RSH) i AM / Fu t 644-5209 830-7000 ·73 Toronado, lull pwr, '1 2 D u s l e r . G d a 1 r co D d . • et c 811 i 1799 · n g' •• 1 ereo • mu:;t sell! $2~. or best mechanical ('Ond Sl200, (6S(M5/3533), Wu~.
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
1111• l•o,,_,lh d 14 ' I \\,.
HUHTllMC.. f (IH ll &\. H
Copela.dJeep $9988 ~;:!~j~1;.~~)' custom 1973 FORD . WAY BELOW BLU BK! offer. !l68-3407orS48·9912 m ust Sl' 11 1 mm ed. OHLY $] lfl ~t F.~A ~ 8000 • $4870 PINTO WAGON '76 Mere Montego. All '77 CUTLASS Supreme 546-6673 HOW_. • ..,, Che.,..aet 1976 CADILLAC Automatic transmission. xtras. $2800. 642·4945 8 b A · c -V-'-o 9772 MIRA'"'E ...... _.., ... .1. r 0 u i am · / • For Sale 197" Du•ler. Dove..._ n.•0 ll "•-.,.. COUftEDEVILLES -....._,_ Realshan>l (008HSX) AM/FM stereocass,crac " " •"°"" ...... ••••••• ••••• • • ••• •• • • • • 2150 Harbor Blvd., C.M. ·s 1995 Mercury station wagon 10 Automatic A/C, 6 cyl. NEWPOR'l' ¥ACll (3) to choose from 64S.5700 passenger $7~. Trade cntrl, tit whl, all pwr. 8474461 lll-055'5
IEfOREYOU All with Cull power, llU. YATES 1ma1leror?494·6320 14,000 mi. ~,005 or best---------•---------
SB.L YOUR stereo. air coodition.ing. 't» Chevy Impala,' 2 Dr. VW PO SCH 9952 ofr. 64().2421dys,675·9626 '72 FURY Ill 74 Vea• wen. air, auto. VOLVO, etc. (218NIM).Pricfldas V-8,Aulo,air,&oodbody, • R E Mllst.MJ evs 4I>r. • $900 newt.Irea.
See us for a lop dollar Iowas tires, paint. runs great. SanoluanCaptstrano ••••-••••••••••••••••• Plltto 9957 640.0076 ~114'«548-8818
estimate! $7988 S4SO/flrm. 646-3818 837·4800 493-4511 '66 Auto 289. 57,000 ori1 ----m1 2 ownrs. Xlnt cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Sport F\ary. xlnl, only '76 Veia Hatchback, J.spd
MAR9UIS VOLVO • '7.C Monte Carlo. Full '71 Torino, com pl. rebuilt, $1800. 831-1548 '73 Pinto Sq. Wac w'rack 9,200 mi 011 full \\roly, AMiFM aterco, 15,000
MISSION VIEJO 1975 CADILLAC power, low mileage, air new paint. tues. eng --Make offer. AC. AT, PS. Plh•tt\ must m1 . recent tune-up,
131-2880495·1210 COU•fDKWfLLES shocks, new Uru. Mint $1800.497·3688 '67 Auto 289 wi PS. R&ll ; Call646·3S31 sellPP.$4250.673-'L'.12 minor int. dam agl'. r .,.,. ---.a r•" ...,.1 white wired ml. Good G d ... 550 -....... ~Ecouury (7)lo .. ~ I UA................... . w f d & ·12 p t R b l '63 Plym. 0un~ Ut)Od rcat COD ' ... . "'~ " c • ....,.e rom 64 agon. $.')25 or o fer. con , recent eng tune 1 n o u n a o u . "' ~ ., VOLVO Cloth or leather interior, 1964 Chevy Sedan. new Excellent' brake ovhl. Orig owner, 2000cc. Auto. new I.Ires, Needs body work. Make _642_·3190 _______ _
EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO all with power assists & motor, good cond. SS()(). 644·483!t _as~g Sl~. 008·0462 Sac. $1195. 536-8018 offer. 540-6551 75. 39,000 ml. reblt fat t -----------1 stereo. (874UJL). Priced 675-6462 g Int cmd 556-4467 Largesl Volvo Dealer aa low as -------Autos, Hew 9100 Autoa, N•w 9100 AMtos, Mew 9800 Autos. Hew 9100 ~~ ~ll '
inOranReCounly! 55988 '75 Monte Carlo Spt Cpc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••-•••••••• ---------IJ UY or LF.A.SE Air; tit whl, PB. PS. AM
DIHEC.wl' • PM stereo. wht wall:;
76COROUA ·--.. Auto tt•n• l•ctorv ••r Gond~ A,M •IOO•>. u<l<lef
20.000 -(360f'Ol(j
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
111•' lf'O<"' lhd I• 7 I\\~
""" TIHC. ro .... AC H
'76 Volvo 242DL, sunroof.
air, A M/f'M stereo,
overdrive. 10,000 m1,
xlnt. $5900. 645·3598 eves.
'63 VOL VO ~·l.t 1-'aslhack.
Super concJ in1 out. S97S
Ph646 lll58 -----
'jJ Cehca, 4 !>pd~ '70 14~ Station WJgon
mags, clean. &-st offer AM 11' M. rud1als. xlnt
!">19·2988 or 645-0049 cond. :i.1000 offer. 536·3629
!!172 Toyota Corona '75 Station Wago!1. Auto,
Veluxc. 4·dr, A/C, 4·spd, PSt. AIC. AM /J<M, stcr
economical, nu radial ca'i,..rf rk. l owner, buy
tires, Good cond. 96&-6630 ~04~r tal<e over Jse.
Triumph 9767
•••••••••••••••••••••••~.Used
•76 TR7 •••••••••••••••••••••••
l\M ,FM w/ c11sset1e. 3 Getlef"al 9901
more to choose from. •••••••••••••••••••••••
~!~~<t.~~lan buy or * $599 Sale *
-t...,SO\JlH 8RtA IOU\.fVARC) • f!HfA
It l'9'lO 1900 • 2 t )4114 l9' t ._.
VolkswOC)eft 9770 •••••••••••••••••••••••
73 VW SUPEI. IUG
With 4 speed, radio, MUST SELL-'61 COMET,
heater. t~HWF) good cood '61 LINCOLN
$1975 CONTINENTAL. run·
MIR.AC1.E MAZDA nlng, needs work 848.e937
2LSOHarbor Blvd .. C.M. AMC 9905
645-5700 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1974VW
WHtphalio Camper
'71 UORNJ.o;T. A uto.
economy car. $980.
Ph586-8441
1974 CADILLAC _DWO __ . P_P._835-_337_7 __
COUftE DEVILLE 76 Moot.e Carlo Landau, lo
Cruise control, AM /FM ml, xlnt cood. Make of·
stereo with tape fer.675-5074
Cabriolet top. (662MNF>. --------
$5388 '73 Nova, auto, P /S. 6 cyl,
•
ex. sharp, 45,000 ml
$1795. 673..J007
1973 CADILLAC '70 Chevy station wagon
COUPE DEVILLE AMiFM, nir cond, power
f\Jll power, vinyl top & steer. good cond. $1200.
tllt wheel. (Q219027 ). Kyle 673·6075
$398---~ 1974 Nova Hatchback. V·8
1971 CADILLAC eng. Xlnt cond. 57,000 ml.
COUPE DEVILLE fJ:'M Call S4S-3W btwn
Full power, vinyl t op,---------
stereo, tilt wheel & Impala, '65. 2 dr. VS. Xlnl v E R y c L E A N ! cond. $450, or bst: orrer.
<M<aCXW). 751MLS4 $2688 _l.9'70_C_he-vy-Im_p_a_la-, -o-ne
owner, good cond. muat
sell. 839-6298 •
OYERlSO
QUAUTYCARS
TO SELECT FROM
•
OPEHSUHDAY
•
Nabers
Cadillac
2f.flll H.11 b11r Blv<l:
C..m1.1 M1.•,,1 540·9 IOO
I 971 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE
Fully loaded·extra
sharp! <774SER). Price
bas now been reduced lo
ONLY $3395
llLL YATES
VW-PORSCHE
'70 Impala, 350 en&.. alr
cond. Auto.,.. pwr. steer.
&. brks. AM radio. Clean .
Runs fine! Orig. owner.
S8SO Ca.sh. 968· 73:11
'71 CHVY a c......o
wu .. ~ -4 tOMd. IMl81re ~ 177834J)
Bill MAXEY
TOYOTA
·······~•·t"l 'IJ" ••U'" r1Mr., '"--''• "' ,.,, ••
...
BEFORE HE 6£1S.
BACK OR WE'RE IN
REAL TROUBLE!
JUST LOOI!
NEW 1977 CAPRI I
San Juan Capistrano -:-Loaded including stereo '62 CLASSIC Rumbler, 137-4800 493-45 I I CJwysler <'11ssette. Jn excellent reblt eng, new trans & _________ 1 •••••••••••••••••••••••
l·ond1t1on! (392KL0). brkesS.S25.&16·5368 '73 Sedan de VIiie. orig. '74 N.Y 2-dr Brouaham
SADDLEIACK .... L owner, belQ)V wholesale Wht/Wht. Pvt prty. Lo : VALLEY IMPORTS -c• 9910 $3400. 494.0705 ml. Loaded. 642-6233 : 831-2040 495.4949 •••••••••••••••••••••••
• -·------'71 Bwck Rmera, eictra 76 C-.. • VIie
: KUCESELECTION clean, high mileage but Lowmilea&e ~
: USEDCARS very sharp. Sacrifice
$1,495. 840 4167 '68 Cadilloc
Top casH SS for your vw , -----LIMOUSIM! Paid for or not Call 68 ll1v1cra. Hc1.1ter, A/C, <WVMSO).
Kath or Jerry. r11~0. Rull!I well. 72,000 S:J4'f l BOB WITHAM vw m1. Toseecall673·9010 MOTORCARS
r 76/JOWestminsler /\ve. RIVIERA L d d • '71 oa e · D'EUGAHCE i 893·7551 or 638·7880 16rupa. reg. gas. New
75CORDOIA
Silver beauty with all tbe
extraa. <00337 >
$468'
MOTORCAR
D'ELEGAHCE
626 W 17th SA 547-9250
c:or.ett. 9932 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l 91VWVan,1971 eng, tires. orig owner. moo. ____ 54_7_·9250 _____ 1
{ &oodcondilion ~-271l6 '70 Cad Sed an. Full 3·spd. S3200. Call ~ Sl.525.496-9789 • .,., 8 k vs Good power,nullres&brka. 6PM •. 67S.3439 ~ ---------• "" wc . eng. $109S 54&·0285 • •73 vw Van <no windows) AC. Bestorrer. 75 Corvette T ·top 350
, xlntc:ond.Ma&!l.AM/FM 548·2930cve!I '74CpeOeVU1e,xlnt,full auto Every xtra.
" slereo,tape.7611-6640. .70 Electra Custom 4-dr pwr, $4950/Bst orr $7800/bstofr.998-1739 ~ . 673-3430751·3082 • 1600 Engine & Transaxle. H1T. Gd cood. Nu ateel U. Roadat«, both topa,
Gd cond. $400. radial.I. SSSO. 499-3658 full pwT, auto. 1973 T·
, Call840-1678 •73 BUICK ELECTRA 4 um .Coupe de Ville. Steel r~· M,000 ':f~· full P;;•
-. 'M VW Van, reblt eng, door, power brakes, ~n· radials, good cond. Sl995. '44-=eo, •new ·
new brakes. new gen. dowa, seat & steering. _642_·_960_1. ______ 1
Sl.200/trade or best ofrer. Tilt wheel, sas-1avlnl( une Cadlllac Eldorado w J C..,.. 9f l3
675-2515 cruise control. AM/FM astro sunroof. Fully ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---..-------1 radio. Low mileage· lop loaded. original owner. 1975 MIRCURY ·62 VW l.g. $600. cond. Only S3000. 548·3404 18700. 630-1710. 633·9264 COUGAR
___ 64_5-338 __ 9__.. __ ,Codllloc 9915 Only u,100 miles.
~ '"Tl Sqbck VW. Au.to. lo mi,
.. rtll)I xlnt. Muat sell now. • Sl%95. 588-2911
.. 'm VW Bua, reblt en1,
-ukinl $1.U), 642.4759 Ot'
8314161
Complete w /cruise con·
troJ. apUt seat. tlr rally
wheela. Jn excellent con·
dltlon. OURFD>.
$4995
M/\)/0'1 VII JO I MP<)tlr ~
/j J f I ',_.-•I I') I ) 1)4 ------
~ ~ar XR7. AM·ll'M
1-trk, l>B/PS, alr. Xlnt
coad.MHM5
This .c door haa reellnlng bucket
aeats. Is automatic with
Whltewalts, radial tires, eon90i..
bumper & decor groups, tinted
glass (Ser. 7W34L~SS43)
USED CAR SPECIAL BUYS!
18 Pl n10tl11t
SATIUJTI ·-"'"-· rldlo a .....,, Come In __ ....... e&3HH)
51186 SIJM $1081
1971 ft.MUTH IUIJa c-..
&!conomlcal t cyllnd•t.
tijlO ... allo "enlmlltlOll, redlo I ..... (11131CNI
t111 CtlYY
IT<llftOMW.I.~
l'llOI tldl Y9. WIOIM!le
''•"•Mlt1IOft, r1dio a, ···-·~· br •••1 . Allll ~lllWOll
,... . DAfLY PILOT 11, 1177
BRAND NEW
1977 PLYMOUTH VOLARE 2 DOOR SEDAN . ,
225 cid 6 cylinder engine, .utomatlc tran1mlsalon. left remote control mirror. protection •
rubber stripe, front & rear bUmper guardS. wsw tlr ... Ser. IHL2SM::7B-2M&e9
SAVE MOW WITH CUSTOM CAR
• LEASIMG-
UAU,... ALL~ COIDOIA Ate YOLAll OI ANY MIW
MAU CAI. TIUCI OI YAM DmlCT AND SAYll LOW
'COWlllllVI IATll-JIOI ~TIOM AMO PllCJS
CAU. PAUL DIFAlllS...146-lt34. fUIT SALIS:
•.
GIANT SAVINGS ON ENTIRE
INVENTORY OF BRAND NEW
I 977 CHRYSLER$ AND
· PLYMOUTH$, DURING ATLAS
CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH'S
CLOSE OUT ON ALL ~77s.
IRANDNew
$1977 CHRYSLER CORl>o .
. IA
,
360 cid VB '4CTQrr
tinted o•ass.~ne. bucket ee.ts, v -~
Jett 'emote eoot °'f'8dlo, un~tl tnyt root, f'81JiaJ ti r mirror. Ser t~c-~.:. d/Qltal ~ res~ ~ •teert . -.cJ7R 305017 IUfOIJ)afic transm1~· oow.,. disc ~ .. .. · on. waw , .... 1 1 .... es, Ill!!!!!!~= .... a tires.
-
lflANDN 1977 t& EW ~ . •01.uN':~ONs, I
ti
iJ f ~ Arc1.oseo~
SAVINGS!
FABULOUS VALUES ON FINE USED CARS •••••
'75 CHRYSLER . · '71 l!tYMOUTH · ~·
COIDOIA •IAM llURY
. .
'72 DODGE
SWIM&R
v ... artomatlo. air conditioning, l10Mlf ltelring.
POW9' brakel. redlo, Mater. wtllttwll....._ vinyl
roof. C•18MEB)
. ,
'73 OLDS
CUTLASS SUPllME
v-e. uomeUc. .ir conditioning, poMf' at~ng.
power t:wnl. radio. heater. whlt9Wlll ti,.., Vln)'C
roof. (011JJS)
•
. .
" Huntington Beaeh
Fo11ntabi Valley
eotTION
Afteraooa
N.Y.Stoeks
VOL. 70. NO. 259, _. SECTIONS, ;2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A FRJDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 1977 TEN CENT~
Huntington Squabbles
'
Over ·Election
By ROBERT BARKER
Olffllo.ilyl'li.MMt
Ao old issue once again re
ceived most of the attention
Thursday night as the Hunl-
inaU>n Beach Charter Rev11oion
Committee held its first public
h.earinp on proPOsed cban&es in
city, government
And resident Zoe Ralph said
she's eetting tired of 1t.
·'The city has t hrown the issue
Blind
Ordeal
Related
DELRAY B'EACll, 1''11.1 IAP>
A 70-year·old blind man who mls.
takenly got off a bus in the wrong
city waited 15 hours on a bench
while passersby ignored his
pleas for help, police said.
"I've been sitting' here in the
hot sun all day without food or
drink and nobody will help me."
Easton Vickers told pohce who
came to his aid.
"Flrteen people passed by me
and I said I was blind and needed
help, but they ju~t ignored me,"
he said.
Vickers told police he left
Miami by bus Wednesday morn-
ing, headed for West PJ!lm
Deach, about 50 miles lo the
north. But he ~ot oH at Delray
Beach, 19 mile~ short o( has
destmatron.
When he discovered he wus in
the wrong city, he felt :iround for
a bench and sat down about five
blocks from the bus station near
the main part or town. The tern·
perature reached near 90.
"I cried for people to call
police but nobody listened. J
didn't know where l was so I
prayed and hoped help·woutd ar·
rive," officers, said he told them.
Vickers had a white cane, was
well dressed and dean·sbaven.
pollceaaid.
''It was a sad sight ... we took
bim out for a hot meal." said
patrolman Howard Goldstein.
On Thursday, pol Ice put him on
a bus for West Palm Beach.
Meadowlark .
~port Rally
Set by Pilots
A rally to save Meadowlark
Alrport will get under way at 11
a.m. Saturday at the Huntington
Beach facility.
The event is sponsored by the
Orange County Pilots Associa·
tlon which vows to give airport
owner Art Nerio both moral and
leeal support in a battle to keep
·the airport open.
Pllou spokesman Jim Evans
said the rally will draw about 500
representatives from a number ·
of aviation groups in Orange
County and Southern California.
ffe said only about 50 pilots wilt
• fiy their planes to the facility at
Bolsa Chica Street and Warner
Av.enue.
Others will drive to the rally
that will offer a chili dinner,
beeq an exhibition of aircraft
and jJ>eechea by some poUtlcaJ
liaures,
"We're rallyine to the cause of
an endangered species," E vans
sald. He noted that if
!'fttadowlark is closed there wlll oe only two airports remttinlna in the area -Oranae County aru1
l\&llertbn.
• •Jt the city councll succeeds in
¢lostna Me adowlark we 'll
C!hallenj[e the clty to find an
alternate alrp<>rt sJte ln Hunt·
in8t.on Beach.'' tvans 11Jd.
'the rity council ts constckri"'
action that wouJd close the atC'POfl ln JS montN.,
ot an appointed city attorney ln
the laps of tho voter• four Umes
and every damned time we've
thrown it back," she said "Tbe
city attorney should be elected."
Mrs. Ralph was referring to
past elections an which voters de·
feated Rroposals to make the
position appointive.
Don Bonfa, the incumbent city
attorney, said that appointment
would be a mistake and woul~
place h1t office under the control
of the city council and city ad-min11trator.
He warned that too much
power concentrated ln a clty ad·
mlnlstrator ls not ln the best in-
terests of the people.
Mark Porter, pre!ldent of the
HOME Council, said a poll t.aJcen
by his group favored appoint·
ment of the city attorney.
He said electors do not have an
11.~WI ........
BUDGET DIRECTOR, ATTORNEY FIND TIMB FOR CHUCKLE
Bert lance Confers Wittt Legal Adviser Clark Cltford
High Ethics Met,
Bert Lance Te~~ifies
WASffiNGTON CAP> -Insist-
ing that "I have done more than
stay narrowly within the law,"
Bert Lance lclltified today that
his conduct both as a banker and
as budget director meets the high
ethical standards set by Presi-
dent Carter for his administra-
tion
Lance also i1aid he withheld
nothing about financial dealings
from Senate committee staffers
who inLerviewed him before con-
fi rmaUon hearings on hls ap·
poinlment ai, bud,el direct<\r.
Referring to his meeting last
January with the committee
staff. Lance saidt "fl was one in
which we had a total and full dis-
closure."
C h airman Abraham A.
Rlbico!f CD-Conn.), said that
after Lance finishes his
testimony, possibly on Sa1urday,
members ol the committee stair
would be called to testify under
oath about their discussions with
Lance.
Pressed by a Republican sena-
tor about his overdrawn check·
ing account.a in ClllhOun, Ga.,
Lance replied -as he h as insist·
ed earlier -that the issue wasn't
a matterofelhic:s.
"Jn a pta•ce like Calhoun.
where you have a practice or
overdrafts . . . overdrafts as
such is not an ugly word," Lance
told Sen. WilJiam V. Roth CR·
Del.).
" ... To simply say overdrafts
constitute an unethical situation,
that is not the case.
"There was no at~mpt to hide.
no attempt to coverup anything, ..
tempt not to disclose anything,"
Lance said or the contro9ersy
over his Calhoun checking ac·
count.
Roth began bis questioning by
Quoting Carter's st atement that
staying narrowly within the law
would not be enough to sallfsy the
ethical 1tandards of his ad-
m fnlstration.
Stormy ·perform.er,
Maria ~aUas, Dies
t
opportunity to evaluate the clty
attorney's performance.
Darrell Smith, a spokesman
for the city's Management
Employes Association, alao sald
the clty attorney should be •P·
pointed.
The charter committee recom-
mends that the post remain elec-
tive. '
Councilman Richard Siebert
criticized a proposal by the com-
mittee that a personnel board set
the city attorney's salary.
"I think that the public would
be inceMed lo see authority in
salary matters going to an ap-
pointed group.
"The personnel board is not
engaged in runnine the city and
is in no position to set sa1aries,"
he added.
Former mayor Harriett
Wieder lobbied for a full-lime •
maror, a plan opposed by the
m~Jority of the charter commit·
tee.
She said a full-time mayor
could serve as the watchdog over
internal operations ot the clly.
"It's hard to place the blame
on a body (city council> instead
of an individual when things go
wrong," she said. ,
Other speakers opposed the
CSee SQUABBLE, Page A2>
Death Warrant Upheld
I
·~ Stay of Executio~
Denied for Slftyer
TALLAHASSEE, Fta. (APl •
The state Supreme Court today
denied a slay of execution for
John A. Spenkelink, the 28-year·
old California man whose ex-
ecution has been set for Monday
morning.
The court upheld the death
warrant signed earlier this week
for Spcnkelink, who was con-
demned to die in the electric
chair for the murder of a drifter
m a Tallahassee motel room.
The attorney general's office
said there was no indication of
how the seven justices voled
after hearing oral arguments
late Thursday. No written opin·
ion was issued immediately.
Spenkelink's attorney Andrew
Graham asked the court to spare
the condemned man's life tern·
porarlly so h~eoold pursue other ap~. These would have to be
in the federa l court system.
Meanwhile. U.S . .District
Judge William Stafford of
Tallahassee called a hearing for
14te today on Grabam'& attempt
to win a ata}' ln t.be federal couru
if he fails tn state courts.
Spenkellnk, 28, a prison
fugitive from Buena Park, Calif.,
was convicted of the Feb. 4, 1973,
murder of Joseph
Szymankiewicz, 43, a traveling
companion who was a n Ohio
parole vioJator.
Sixteen death row inmates re·
fused to eat at F lorida State
Prison Thursdav in an apparent
s how of support for Spenkellnk.
Prison Superintendent David H.
Brierton said the 16 had been on
Spenkelink 's wing before he was
<See EXECUTE, Page A2 >
Weatherman
'Surprised'
By Drizzle
W.e s t 0 r a n g e C o u n l y
weatherman J . Sherman DeMy
expressed surprise today at the
slight predawn drizzle that dam·
pened streets in the Huntington
Be11c h r eglon 1 resulting in
several accidents on slick pave·
meat.
Drizzles and wet pavement
also were reported in Costa Mesa
early today and other scattered
areas along the Oranee Coast.
.,..,.......
FLORIDA SUPREME COURT DENIES STAY OF EXECUTION
Former Orange County Kiiier John Spenkellnk
Teachers t 'o Strike
In Westminster?
Westminster <elementary>
School District te achers were
meeting late today lo decide
whether to strike Monday if a
contract settlement is not reached.
District oCficials and teacher
negotiators met all day Thunday
with littl~ progress. Both sides
planned to meet today with a
st.ate-appointed medJ.ator.
Salary, fringe benefits and con-
tract duration appear to be the
major Issues at imp11s.e in the
seven-month Jong talks, said
teacher spokesman Bill Bianchi.
About 160 teachers and many
parents jammed Stacey In·
termediate School Auditorium
Thursday nig ht to pressure
Westminste r School Board
Compactor
Death Probed
By SA Cops
trustees into reaching a speedy
settlement.
Teacher pickets were baraaed
out.aide the auditorium by two un~
identified youths on mlnl·blkes
who threw water balloons which
missed their mark, Huntlngtoo
Beach police reported.
Earlier this week, teachers de-
cided they wUl walk. off their jobs
Monday jf no contract 11 reached.
The meeting at Sigler Parle near
Olive and Plaza Streets In
W elUnlnster ii to reafflnD the
teachen' position, Biancbilaid.
Teachen are askine for an 8.1
percent acroH·tbe-board PJY
hike, Gil ln addiUonal trtnie
benefits per employe, an arbitra-
Uon clause and a one-year con·
tract. ·
District oalclala have ottered
teacher& a five percent pay boost
for a one-year pact or a 5.5 per·
cent pay hike if teachers will ac·
cept a three-year contract.
Dls~ct ornc1ala are also ofter.
ing ah addltlonaf •2n pu
em ploye ln fringe benefits.
Partly cloudy throu1h
Saturday with low1 tonight
S!> to 62. Hl&bt Saturday
70-to76.
INSIDE TOD"~
An ~ ~-at Safl4a11'• optnJng o/ th~ N•wporc fla.rt>of MMMum ii on Pag1 Ct
o/ thf Wet~r. ,
041L Y f'll OT H F , r 10. . Stt tember UJ, trn t
Billy's Beer
<Art.er Brot~r Bacha Brew
LOUISVlLLE, Ky. CAP> Prt 1dcnl l' trlt.'r prob
uhh \'111 h<tvt• Mrt.'t·li; und other publle proJt>cb
n..im1.-d Jiit r tum hut t11 ... \'ounaer broth r Biiiy has
'1ln·.1d} h.ut h1!-. namt· .:1H•n to an appropriate ltt-m
The "'l'l I k no\\ 11 "'' l'r or hopb UJ>J>t.••u·cd ut a 11~" i..
conforcncc todJ) lo .tnnouncc.• thut Jt'ull& City Brcwtnf'
Co 1np..in~ "111 mut~l·t u bt.•t•r n.1nll'd ullt.•1 him.
It "ill he ('.tlh:-d ··HILLY ... <And th~ tup of lht· luht'I
\\ 11\ l'dt n thh. endon.~·ment ·· fkt.•wed t'b pcciall~ fo1
end \\ith. the appro\'al of one of Amt.'11c.·..i s all•time
);rent beer drinkers, Billy C&rtt>r. ··
Plane. rail for thC' bt.•l'r to tw 1rttnxlU('<.'d 1n Curlt·r·..,
humt• ... t.1tt•, C:t•or~1a, I hen lx.· d1 ... t1 llwll'd natwn;.tll~
hy :\m . 1
"For ml~. the beer trung \\as a naturJI, 'cause 1
I. now a good b£•t.·r bC'Uer than anybody... he said .
··Who know~! :\J a~ be J ·JI become the Colonel Sanden.
of beer.·
Doctor Faces Co11nt
In Diet Pills Probe
By WILLIAM SCHRf:IBEft ot ... o.11, ~•lets~
A 78-year·o ld San Ju a n
Capistrano .doctor. long con-~idered a pillar of the community
by many old timers, is facing
misdemeanor charges alleging
he illegally distributed am-
phetamine diet pills.
Dr. Paul H. Esslinger, who has
practiced medicine in the Mia·
sion City since the early 1B30I, is
free on his own recognizance
pending a pre-trial conference
Oct. 12 in the South County
Municipal Court in Laguna
Niguel.
He was arrested in mid.August
a fter a five-month investigation
of his office practices by agents
or the California Office of
Medical Quality Assurance.
John Urso, chief of that con.
s umer agency's Santa Ana
bureau, s aid today evidence
gathered during the long probe
was turned over to the Oranl(e
County District Attorney for
prosecution. o.11, ~ .... SUlf ,.,,...
PHYSICIAN CHARGED
Dr. Paul Esslinger According to Urso. the charges
against Esslinger include nine
<'ounts or unlawfully prescribing
amphetamines, one count of Heart Group· a ltering medical records and two
counts of improper 'labeling or
dr~gs~nvicted of the charges, Joins County
Essliiiger could face a term in
countyjalland/oraflne. um·ted Way The doctor was not available
for comment today on the ,
cbaries ~ndinl( aJ;(ainst him. The American Heart Associa-
His attorney, John D. Cochran tion has left Orange County·s ·
of Irvine, contended hb client is AID-United Givers program and
innocent but would not elaborate joined the county's United Way
further on the case. organization.
The state investigation re-United Way spokesman said
volves around allegaUona that , Thursday that the American
Esslinger was distributirig diet 1<~ Cancer Society is expected to
pills to patients without conduct-· follow suit in lbe next 10 days.
ing physical examina tions be-' This would be anolher blow to
forehand. AID-United Givers, which has That contention is also the core been suffering declining dona·
argument of a wrongful death tions since United Way o( Oran&e
... uit filed against Esslinger by a County cut its AID ties in June of Riverside County widow, stem-1976.
ming from her hmband's death Both ftmdralslng groups com·
from a heart attack last October. pete heavily for funds derived
The suit, however, ls separate from employe payroll deduc· from the state case agalmt the Uons.
doctor. "We know nothing about AID funds have dropped 2Sper-
a wron~ful death suit,.. Urso cent to 30 percent since United
said. Way broke away. Esslinger has been a doc-Robert CHfCord, president of
tOr since 19'Z8 and, for years. be Air California and chlarman of
was San Juan ·a only resident the this year's United Way fund
physician. drive, bas set a goal of SS million.
He ii remembered by longtime So far, United Way has raised
residents for many good deeds ln about $1 mllUon this year, CUf.
the past, including lavish fordsald. Christ.mu parties for lbe com-
m unity's children. .
t>nly nine months aao, Es~
linger drew headlines when be
chased two bandltl on the rub for
three miles after they held up his
omce on Camino Capistrano Just
south of the old mission church.
With the help ot Sheriff's de-
puties, Esslinger tracked the men
down and they were captured.
Allhou•h the state investigator
would not reveal detalla ot their
inv•U&atloo pendlna court ac-
tion. stlpulations in the Riverside
County lawauit a1Je1e that Esa-
l1n1er b&d a.ooo to 4,000 cues and
took in an averaie of $1,500 a day
from his dJet proaram by chara-
iqa f1 I« a month'• aupply ol am-
pJtetamlnecapsuJea.
""'
DAILY PILOT
Chairmanship
'Ihreatened
SACRAMENTO <AP) -In a dramatic power play, the state
Senate•• leader moved earlr to-
day to strip a long-tlme rival of
aa important com mlt.tee
chairmanship.
Senate President pro tem
James MUia told a startled upper
house be wu dem1.ndlna Sen.
George Zenovich &iv• up efforts
to topple him or Jose his In·
dusrtrtal Relations Committee ~hatrmanshlp.
The move came during the last
seconds of the 1977 aenlon and nearly sparked a showdown oa
the floor between backers or the
two Democrats. Milla <D·San
Dteco>. convened tbe
apolntment-mating Rules ·Corn·
mlttee, but the panel delayed ac·
lion untfl lt bad a chance to mtet wJth1.enovlch later today.
Dori Crashes .
C,:cle, Dies
Mitchell
Hip Need
Reported
WA S HINGTON CAP>
Former Atty. Gen. John N.
Mitchell needs artiriclal replace·
menl ot his right hip because of
degenerative arthritis, his
lawyer said todfQ' in a petition
asking his release Crom prison.
Mitchell has served nearly
three months of an eight·year-
term for his role in the cover-up
of the Watergate affair.
His petition for leniency was
filed with U.S. District Judge
John J . Sirica who imposed the
sentence in February, 1975.
Lawyen for H.R. Haldeman,
formerly the White House chief
of staff. also asked for reduction
of bis eight·year sentence, plead-
ing with the court not "lo punish
Haldeman to the point o( destruc-
tion."
Mitchell is serving hls time at
the federal minimum security
facility at Maxwell AFB in
Alabama. Haldeman is im·
prisoned at Lompoc. Neither is
eligible for parole until late
December 1979.
"Recent X·rays taken at a gov-
ernment facility show that the
defendant's right hip has suf.
(ered severe destructive de-
generative disease," Mitchell's
motion said , adding :
''This condition has become ex·
tremely painluJ to defendant and
his mobility has become severely
impaired. There is no treatm~nr
for such condition short of special
s ur gery which re -
quires ... replacement with
substitute materials.··
In addition, the motion said
that Mitchell suffers from an
enlarged heart "apparently the
result of hypertens ion."
Mitchell told the judge he "is
truly sorry for and regrets those
actions of his that resulted in his
conviction."
Haldeman wrote a personal
letter to Sirica expressing "hib
contrition and his repentance as
well as his determination ... to
avoid any su<'h actions in the
future." his pehtion said. •
Both men, a long with former
domest1<.· counselor J ohn 0 .
Ehrlichman. were denied review
of their convictions and sen-
tences by the U.S. Supreme
Court. Ehrlichman fJJed his peti·
t ion for reduction of sentence in
June.
EXECUTE. •
moved to an isolated "death
watch" cell a few steps away
from the electric chair.
Graham is appealing a circuit
judge's refusal Tuesday to order
a stay of execution. The attorney
contends that jurors opposing
capital punishment should not
have been excluded from the
trial and that Florida judges dis-
criminate between whites and
blacks In handing down death sentences.
In what may have been
Spenkellnk's best hope of avoid-
ing execution Monday, Justice
Joseph Boyd ra1sed lhe issue or
the U.S. Sup r eme Court
chanenge filed by three other
death row inmates of state
clemency procedures. The court
has not decided whether it will take the case.
"It we execute this man on
Monday and a few days later the
Supreme Court of the United
States says Gov. lleubln Askew's
clemency procedure.! are wrong,
what answer do you have for
that?" Boyd asked Atty. Gen. Robert Shevin.
Sbevin noted that Spenkellnk is
not involved in tbe U.S. Supreme
Court case. He said he hu main·
tained all alona that the clemen-
cy procedures are conaUtutlonal,
which the state court held re-
cently.
Shevfn called Spenkellnk's ap-~al frivolous. The judge said, 'It was not tiled, 1D our opinion.
ror any other purpose than de-
lay."
U Spenkellnk is put to death
Monday, be wUl be the first
person executed in Florida slnc11
May 12, ~. Utab murderer
Gary Gilmore la the onb penon
executed in tb1i countey alnce the u .s. SupNme Court upheld death
penalty laws ln Florida and two
otba 1tate1OQJuly2, 1978.
f',....Pflfll!AJ
SQU~BBLE
Dllltr ...... ,..... .. ...., ..........
Dri1'er Walked Awag
Costa Mesa police said a 23·year·old woman escaped
serious injury Thursday afternoon and emerged under
her own power from this tangled mess. Charlotte Goulet
of Costa Mesa told traffic officers she IOst control of car
s hortly before hitting light pole on Harbor Boule\'ard
near Victoria Street.
Policeman Resigns,
Ends City Probe
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Ol IM o.ity ~let Staff
An eighl·month probe and
hearings in the c a se ol a
Westminster policeman accused
of excessive force, Including the
Christmas D:iy s hooting of a man
in a routine holiday d1slurbance.
·suSpe~t Fre ed
In Huntington
Te en Shooting
A 45·year -o ld Huntington
Beach father was released on his
own recognizance Thursday af·
tcrnoon alter being jailed in con·
nection with the shooting of his
16·year.old daughter's boyfriend
earlier that day, police reported.
Wilham Kazuo Tomita, of 17091
St. Andrews Lane. was booked
int.o Huntington Beach Jail on a
charge of attempted murder.
said police Sgt. Bert Chadwick.
An official charge Is pending.
Chadwick said Tomita alleged-
ly shot Brandon Eugene Arakaki.
18 or 6372 Newbury Drive, Hunt·
ington Beach, while the victim
was in Tomita 's home.
Arakaki is reported in good
condition in the pediatrics ward
at Huntington Beach Intercom·
munlty Hoepital. He underwent
surgery Thursday morning tor
removal of a .38 caliber slug
from his left leg above the
kneecap, officialsaaid.
Hospital officials said Arakaki
was placed in the pediatrics
ward because no other room was
available.
has ended with the officer's'fluiet
resignation. •
City Administrator Carl Berry
confirmed today the city council
has accepted the decision of ex·
patrolman Hans De Haas, 29.
who was relieved from duty last
April.
The former officer's attorney,
Richard Kreisler, finally advised
him to drop eCforts to a void losing
his job a recommendation made
in a t~o to one vote of the city's
Metil Commission.
Proceedings. details and
testimony taken in the. lengt~y
process of upholding Police Chief
Robert Bonnet's firln1 of De
Haas ln April has been conflden·
ti al Wlder terms permitted by the
Ralph M. Brown Act dealing with
governmental secrecy.
"This whole thlng has been
confidential at. the officer's re-
quest,'' Berry said of the initial
firing the Merit Commission
hearu;gs s ubsequent to it and the
specific testimony on De Haas·
difficulties with excessive force
against the citizenry.
However, it ls known and also a
matt.er of public reeord that the
fired officer figured in several ln·
cidents.
The most critical involved the
Christmas Day, 1976, shooting of
a man, 21, seriously· wounded
when De Haas used his (UD dur·
ing a holktay d.iaturbance'Call.
The Orange County District ~t·
torney's office investigated in
that and at least one other inci-
dent, but in neither case was any
criminal charge filed.
One of them resulted ln an of·
ficlal letter of reprimand being
placed in De Haas' personnel
file.
GOvernor
Dealt
Setbacks
SACRAMENTO CAP) -Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr. suffered a
double defeat when the state
Senate killed a $4.2 billion tax re-
lief bill and Brown's proposal f<W
construct.loo of tbe Perlpberal canaJ.
The closing sess1on Thursd•)'
of the 1977 session was the
Democra tic governor's worst
day in the legislature since tak·
ing office 32 months ago.
While Brown denied the vote;
were a personal setback, he had
peN100al)¥ negotiated terms Of
both bills and put the fuU welg~t
and prestige or his omce bel\ind
the errort to enact them.
Their defeat leaves a $4.3
billion school bill as Brown's~
major legislative achievement 9(
the year. He intends to sisn that
Saturday. ·
The votes wer.e 21·15 on the tax
relief bm and 21·16 on the water
projects bill. Each 111easure re-
quired 27 aye votes.
The (ax bill promised annual
rebates averaging $239 eacb for
6 .2 million Califo rnia
homeowners and $115 each for 2.6
million renters . It also would
have phased out the business in-
ventory tax and imposed new
taxes on corporate profits, new
homes and new cars.
But it was attacked on all
sides. Some foes said It did too lit-
tle for homeowners. Others said
renters were shortchanged, that
the new taxes were not needed,
and that the bill would lead to
deficits and more tax increases ln
three to five years.
On the $C.2 billion water proj-
ecta bill. The Peripheral Canal
was the focus ot opposition
although it only amounted to $&tO
million of the total.
Most of the money was
earmarked for four major nefl
Northern California reaervoits
which were barely mentioned "1
len«thy floor debate. ·J'be vote was one of many de-
feats for the .CS.mile canal, which
has been on the drawing boards
15 years.
Representatives of tb.e
Sacramento-San Joaquin Riv•r
Delta area, who oppose the c~
under all circumstances because
they fear it might steal their
water, teamed up with San Joa-
q_uln Valley senators. who waot t~e canal without restrictions
Brown approved to protect Ddt.a
if\lerest..
Auembl' Speaker Leo
Mccarthy and Senate Presldeat
pro tern James MiUs immedia~
Jy urged Brown to call a special
session of the legislature on the
lax issue.
118 Station.
Robbed of $38
A red-eyed gunman stole S35
from a Huntington Beach sel!-
service gas station al the Beach
Boulevard·Adams Avenue in·
tersection at 8:30 p.m. Thursday,
police reported.
The bandit '1asbed a .38 caliber
blue steel revolver at the station
cashier who handed him the
money. The LaUn gunman fled
on foot west alone Ad a m s
A venue, police a.aid.
The thief was described as
about 23 years old, five-feet four
inches tall, weighing 130 pounds
with black bair coml)ed atralabt
back about three inches below
hia ears.
TBE -FOOTBAI,I, SEASON
You are possibly now in the process of shopping for
carpeting and have been talking to sales people at two or
three st~es. If so, you no doubt feel like a .. football.'' bounced
around with a bevy of co~flicting ~ories. ~
Which is the best cirpet fiber? What is the best textur!t for
your use? What kind of padding should be uled? .
we think you will diteet the ~ht answers ~ Alden ·s.
We\le been helping ~e score 'touchdowns 1n Orange
COur;W, for over twenty ~ ·
Irvine
EDI TION
VOL. 70. NO 159, ~SECTIONS, •2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Today' Closing
N.Y. Stoeks
I
TEN CENTS
Irvine Adopts Land-use Policies
Policies aovernang land use de
<0ls1ons for the futun• develop
mentor the Caty of Irvine were
approved J 2 hy lht tat~ rnuncal
Thursday
The vote followed c.1 (1 vc month
study of the lund u~e dement of
the city general plan, which
generally senc~ as a harbanaer
lo zonan((
The plannan..: J<'l1'>n paved the
way ror (IOtcotlul development of
lh o u sa nd s o f acres of
agricultural land, into housing
ranging from 1 unit for every 10
acres lo~ units per acre.
Council members Gabrielle
Pryor and Mary Ann Guido voted.
agatnSl the meas ure.
Today Mrs. Pryor called the
land use policy "a sham." and
said the council "as deliberately
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
..
.... ,,....,...
FLORIDA SUPREME COURT DENIES STAY OF EXECUTION
Former Orange County Kiiier John Spenkellnk
Ex-cowitian Denied
Stay of Execution
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP> -
The slate Supreme Court today
denied a stay or execution for
John A. Spenke1ink, the 28-year-
old California man whose ex·
eculion has been set for Monday
morning.
The court upheld the death
warrant s igned earlier this week
for Spenkelink, who was con-
demned lo die in the electric
. chair for the murder of a drifter
in a Tallahassee motel room.
The attorney general's office
said there was no indication of
how the seven justices voted
after hearing oral arguments
late Thursday. No written opin-
ion was iss ued immediately.
Spenkelink's attorney Andrew
Graham asked the court to spare
Riley Urges
Balance of
Priorities
By GARV GRANVILLE °' -Deity ,..,.. lt.tff Board of S upervisor s
Chairman Thomas Riley said it
)s lime for county residents to
''balance priorities" so that as
Orange Co4nty grows "it will re-
main what It is."
Supervisor Philip Anthony said
that perhaps too much attention ts being paid to the county's un-
de-veloped areas and not enough
to its inner cities.
Supervisor Ralph Clark
declared war on noise.
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich
called it a s~ame that Oran1e
County's youna are rorc:ed to go
to Riverside and San Bemar-
Jiono Counties tor houatn1 they
can afford. .
And Supervi1or Laurence
trying to fool the pubhc. The
public's been very badly de· celvcd."
Al Issue ure Irvine Company
lunds in northern Irvine, north of
the Northwood development, and
property south of Turtle Rock, at
the southern city limits.
About 2•.ooo acres in Irvine are
under agricultural preserve con-
tracts Wlder the Williamson Act
and ure taxed at much lower
rates than land scheduled for de-
velopment, Mrs. Pr)'or said.
"lt seemed to me It was more
appropriate to leave that area in
the general plan as agriculture.
sjnce the Irvine Company Is get·
ting a huge lax bre1tk because we
have allowed them to put It into
preserve status," she said.
She claimed that, because the
Irvine Company pays less tax on
the property. taxpayers coun-
tywlde1wm have to pay the major
portion of the bill for roads,
sewers and fJood control develop-
ment that cnust precede grading
for homes.
The councilwoman sald she
wlJI approach the county Bo~rd
of Supervisors to persuade tMm
to pre-empt the lrvioe council
majority. and take the Irvine
lands out from the tax protec-
tions of their preserve status.
Brown Supports
Irvine Satellite
By PWUP ROSMARIN
ot IM D4111r f'ltet 'u"
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. has
given his personal support. and
pledge or assi s tance from
ham helf and scien ce and
technology assistant and former •
astronaut Rusty Schweickart, to
an Irvine Unified School District
satellite communications pro-
posal.
The district seeks a $50,000
EX-Mesan
Charged
With Rape
A Conner Costa Mesa man who
pollce said moved to Irvine
where he con~u~ an alleged
spree of sexual assaults a nd
burglaries, has been charged
with two counts of rape and
burglary and a 1ln1le cowrt pf al·
tempted raptt. · ·
James Hudson Thomas Jr., 25,
of 5081 Barkwood Ave .. Irvine,
was arrested by Costa Mesa
police Wednesday after an in-
vestigator noted a similarity
between an Irvine police com-
posite drawing and a description
of the suspect given by a Costa
Mesa woman who was raped in
May.
Police moved in and arrested
Thomas al a Santa Ana auto re-
pair shop. He ls being held today
in Orange County J all in lieu of
$50,000 bail.
Del. Linda Geisler said
Thomas allegedly raped a Costa
M~sa woman and then
burglarized her home. Police
said Thomas lived at 337 W. Bay
St., C-Osta Mesa.
Police said Thomas then
moved to Irvine where police
have charged him with the Sept.
9 rape of an Irvine woman and
the attempted rape of her cousin.
Police said the rapist rang the
front doorbell, posted a note and
sneaked \n the back door while
the two women read his demand
to be let in.
Irvine police have also charged
Thomas with burglary In the
Sept. &crimes.
In both cases, police said
Thomas lived within walking dis-
tance of hts victims.
Flood Aid Sought
SACRAMENTO <AP> -Gov:
Edmund Brown Jr. has request·
e-d federal disast er aid for
Riverside County following last
week'• Clash flooding and
mud1Ude1. Charles Manfred.
direct« of the governor's Office
of Emeraency Services, said
Thut'ld•.)' total losses in the coun·
ty were estimated at $482,500.
grant from the National Jnslltute
of Education lo develop a two-
w ay televised satellite com-
m una catton system between
Irvine and Spartanburg County
School Distract No 7, Spartan-
burg, SC
Irvine students wall be able to
bounce their sound 3nd video am
ages off ex1st1ng educational
satellites already orbiting the
earth, allowing them to see and
talk directly with students in
Spartanburg.
District officials said grant ap-
proval includes the necessary
federal permits to use the
satellite~.
ln a letter to Superintendent of
Schools Stan Corey. Governor
Brown wrote:
·'I am pleased to add my
personal support lo your pro-
(See SYSTEM , Page A2>
.. .. w ......
BUDGET DIRECTOR, ATTORNEY FIND TIME FOR CHUCKLE
Bert lance Confere With Legal Adviser Clar~ Clfford
High Ethics Met,
Bert Lance Testifies
W ASIIlNGTON (AP t -Insist-
ing that "l have done me>re than
stay narrowly within the law,"
Bert Lance testified today that
his conduct both as a banker and
as budget~rector meets the high
ethical standards set by Presi·
dent Carter tor his administra·
lion.
Lance also said he withheld
nothing about financial deallnga
from Senate committee staffers
who interviewed him before con-
firmation hearlng1 on hia ap·
Polntment as budget director.
Ref erring to hl5 meetln1 last
January with the committee
staff, Lance said: "It wu 1one ln
which we had a total and full dia-closure."
Chairman Abraham A.
Ribicotf <D·Conn. ), Hid that
a tter Lance finlahu hts
testimony, possibly on Saturday,
members of the committee staff
would be called to testily under
oath about their discussions with
Lance.
Pressed by a Republican sena-
'''fhe council Is saying." she
said, "that those lands will be de·
veloped, and, indirectly, that the
county will be paying for flood
control and roads.
"I think the Irvine Company
ought to start paying full taxes
now, becau&e we have said il
wlll be developed, and will not re·
main in agriculture."
The city general plan indicates
ISee POLICIES, Page A2>
. ............
OPERA ST AR DIES
Marla Callas, 53
Stonny
Opf!ra Star
Callas Dies
Partly cloudy throo1h
Saturday with Jowt tonight ~ to 62. Hl1hs Saturday
70.to76,
IN81DE TODAY
.U DAILY Pll..OT
Blind
Ordeal
Related
OEUlA Y BLI<..JI, l'llll <AP I
A 70 )'~I.Ir ohl blind m.&n who mu.
tak~nly aot off J bu"' in the wruni
t'll)' v..i1tcd 15 hours on iil bcnt'h
-. hale pubM~r..,by 11norcd blR
pl~~ for help, Vol tee aald
·'I've bct!n :.1llln1 here ln lht•
hot sun all duv "llhoul food cir
drink llnd nobodv wt ll•help m t'."
F.aston V1ckt>r:. told pullet! who
<'Ame to tus atd
·· Fillet!n people pass('<J by me
and I said I wa"' bhnd and n~ed
help, but lhl'y Just ignored me,··
he said
Vicker:. told pohce he l\'fl
Miami by bus Wednesday morn
1ng, headed for West Palm
Beach. about 50 mites to the
north. But he got off at Delray
Beach, 19 miles s hort of h1:.
de!.tination
\\'hen ht: dasco\.t'red he wu:. 1n
the \Hong <:1ty, he fe lt around _for
a bench and sat down about five
blocks from the bus station near
the main part of town. The tem-
perature reached near 90
.. I cried for people to call
police but nobody listened. I
didn't know where I was so l
prayed and hoped help would ar-
rive," officers said he told them.
Vickers had a white cane, was
well dressed and clean·shaven.
Police said.
''It was a sad sight ... we took
him out for a hot meal," said
patrolman Howard Goldstein.
On Thursday, police put him on
a bus for West Palm Beach.
E'ro• Page Al
GROWTH ...
increasingly arrect others ..
Raley explained his comments
by saying what might be one
man 's profits might he another
man's pollution.
··An a1rJ>Ort can mean public
servatc to <m<· m:.in and public
nu1sanc·c lo Jnoth<•r man," the
Nt•v. port Bc.wh !>upcrv1sor said
as ht· lll'l.:<'d "an intelligent
lwlant·<· ot eonflictin~ pri<>ritaes
to provadl· maximum h<:nc:fit lo
the grcatc::.t number al the least
<·Ost."
Both he and 01cdnch told the
chamber or commerce audience
that skyrocketing housing prices
"is probably Qrange County's
number one problem."
Riley pra1J:>cd a recent study of
housin g costs in Sout h east
Orange County for suggesting
ways to drop building cosLc; and,
an tum, prices.
Diedrich urged acceptance of
density bonuses. manimum·slzed ·
lots and limitations on the size of
houses that can be built as a way '·
an some art'as to curtail rising
prices
"Yes, that probably means
less house than what we 're used to
seeing. but 1t will also mean hous-
ing that middle and lower income
people cun afford, .. the Fullerton
supervisor:i;aid
Anthony suggested lhut a solu-
tion lo the homc·price dilemma
might be to concentrate more ef·
fort o n rebuilding and r e ·
furbishin~ existing housing In the
county's developed areas.
He s uggestect that "what
a lready s tands" might be "a
· great natural reRource of Orange
County" if rehabilitated.
Clark wanted il known that his
one-man war with noise is cen·
tering its attack on traffic noise.
"the nmse of freeways, cars.
truck$ and motorcycles."
The Anaheim supervisor said
he wanted it clearly understood
th at h is recen t attack on
motorcycle noi~e was directed al
motorcycles "without a murner
th at wo rks'' rather than
.. motorcyclists as a class of peo-
ple .
Clark s aid there are "laws on
the books now" which, if en-
forced; will go a tong way
towards turning the noise volume
down.
Schmit 8pent his time before
the chamber audience complain-
ing that the county's tax rate
didn't plunge far enouah this
year.
DAILY PltOT
Bridge Collapses
RC'scue work<:rs attend to chi ldrcn b<:neath the t wistt•cl
n :mains of a pccles tri.in hmlgc that wus knocked d<m n
by a crane working lo "1den the street he low. Six
Plemcnt;.ir\· ~t:hool ('h1ldn·n \\ l'l"f.' ho~pitall1t•d in Le.an
s m g. '.\lldi·. th1-., morning a fh·r f.tlling fr11m the\\ alk'' a\ ,_
Policetn.a~ Resigns,
Ends City Probe
By A RTH UR R . VINSEL
'-04 tM Dilly l'llot Sl•fl
An eight-month probe <1nd
h e a r i n g s Ln t h e c as c of u
Westminster polie1.•mun ac<:u.se<l
of excessive force, including the
Christmas Day shooting of a man
in a routine holiday disturbance.
has ended with the officer's quiet
resignation.
City Administrator Carl Berry
confirmed today the city council
has accepted the decision of ex-
patrolman Hans De Haas, 29.
who was relieved from duty last
April.
The former officer's attorney,
Richard Kreisler, finally advised
him lo drop efforts to avoid losing
his job. a recommendation made
in a two to one vote of the city's
Merit Commission.
P roceedings. details and
testimony taken in the lengthy
process of upholding Police Chief
Robert Bonnet's firing of De
Haas in April has been confiden-
tial under terms permitted by the
Ralph M. Brown Act dealing with
governmental secrecy.
"ThJs whole thing has been
confidential al the officer's re·
quest.'' Berry said of the initial
firing, the Merit Com m(ssion
hearings subsequent lo il and the
specific testimony on De Haas·
difficulties with excessive force
against the citizenry.
However, it Is known and also a
matter of public record that the
fired omcer figured in several in·
cidents.
The most critical involved the
Christmas Day, 1976, s hootmg of
a man, 21, seriously wounded
when De Haas used his gun dur-
Fro•PageAJ
POLICIES ...
city policy lowaJrd land use and
zoning, but is not zoning in itself.
The council majority ,said the
agricultur al lands, much of them
in the hills. should be developed
for the most part in low-density
housing, ranging from one unit
for every 10 acres to one unit per
acre estates.
Also included in the land use
decisions was a policy for de-
velopment of so.called Vlllaae 14 .
Planned for apartments and
condomlnluma, it too ls in
agricultural use, cbJefiy for the
harvest ol truck crops 1uch •a
tomatoes, lettuce and aspararus.
Vl~ 14 is bounded by CUJver
Drive the eut, the San Dleao
F reew on the south. San Dleao
Creek and Peters Canyon Wu h
on the west and Irvine Center
Drive on th&nort.b.
The council tied the develQP·
m ent ol the villa1• to f utur• de·
velopment of the lrvlnt In· dust.rial Coml>le•-Eut and an-
nexation of •artoulturaJ land
nonh al city Umite, wlthln tbt
Jr vhtt polltJcaJ •PMrt ot lD· nuence.
Developmenl ii plaanil ln pa..,. duriaa UIOto 1"'.\-, • ™ COUDcll prMJdtd)IMt .... ics.ualdft~-. tUIMlt.OC• cur a&._. ... WI,_ ortoWW
thu t.haH IWWD·,lia dae..:.....,
plaa WttbOllt. l,.eiM. ........... cm ttacll tl9il eoecll. T110M deutun rann Inna n¥eto•untu per acre.
JOI! a holiday disturba nce call.
The Orange County District At·
torney ·s offic:c investigated in
that and at least one other inci·
d ent, but in neither case was any
criminal c:harge filed.
One of them rc!>ulted in an of.
r1c·1al letter of rt'pri m and bemg
placed in De llaas· personnel
fih.•.
Following Chief Bonnet's firing
of De Haas. the patrolman de
mandcd a hearing before the
thrco·mcmbcr City Merit Com-
m 1ssion \\hi ch voted that he
should be booted off the force.
Jo~ollowmg that. De Haas· at
torncy vowed to appeal the de
clsion in Oran~c County Supenor
Court. but decided not to after re
viewing th<.• whole affair and has
!.lim chances of winning re
instatement for his client
A Westminster policeman for
eight years before he was fired.
De Haas was kept on the city
payroll P'ending .outcome of the
termination hearings .
Fro• Page A J
SYSTEM .•.
posed Irvine-Spartanburg com-
munication satellite project.
"The poss ibilities of sharing
human experience and broaden-
ing the understanding or people
around the planet through the use
of satellites are virtually limit-
less.
"Through the cooperation of
the school systems of Irvine and
Spartanburg. along with their
supporting communities, your
proposal can be the leading edge
of a wave of the future which will
brine people around the elobe
closer toðer."
The proposal also has won the
backina of the governor of South
Carolina, James B. Edwards.
The Irvine school district has
considerable experience in the
field of two-way educational ca-
ble television.
Wtth two-way t elevision
systems In the district office and
each of the district's 19 schools, it...
claims the most extensive such
operation with educational use in
the United States.
Mltauru Kataoka, technical
consultant on the project, said
t h e I r vine-to·S p artan burg
satellite hookup will afford bun·
dreds of •1one-to-one" ctassroom-
to-clasaroom experiences.
Tho c~s-country communica·
lion wiU be available to the 73
percent o{ Irvine, and 50 per cent
of Spartanbura, homes that have
cable t.levlllon. Kataoka Ckacrlbed lt as a
cross-cultural excbant~ of lMaa
and Information.
• • Jrvlnt ·Sp1rt1nbura Project part.lci~ta wlU have firwt·hand
knowJedao of eltera.tlve Vi•W•
and a broad ranae of croas·
cultural, re•ional and envlron-
rneat&J NSOUtcee prevfoualy un·
evllilatU ln ~ dlted, modltl•· lale, lorii, .,Xiitiolsa 1aJd. '*""' cilftdia. In '*la lnlne <4Uld •1t•r.t1•b.r·f art tD· ttsuuM* doU& UM c'*"-o( th,. n.ama u.. pant. pat MWU..1....,rtof
U..lwo"8U.f"IW'I· U .... ..r pf9Ml•I fol' the ••telllte l )itttn .,.,. td• abOut
al.X i*ltM.
Amphetamines
SJC Doctor
Faces ChargeS
By WILLIAM SCHR EIBER
OI ... Dally l'lltll Si.ti
A 78-year-o ld San Juan
Capistrano do<: tor, long con-
s idered a pillar of the community
by many old timers, is facin&
mis5eanor charges allegine
he i ally distributed am·
phetam e diet pills.
Dr. PaW If. Ess linger, who has
practiced medicine in the Mis-
sion City since the early 1930s, 1s
free on his own r ecognizance
pending a pre-trial conference
Oct. 12 in the South County
Municipal Court In Laguna
Niguel.
He was arrested in mid·August
after a fi ve·month invesllgalaon
of his office practices by agents
of the California Office of
Medical Quality Assura nce.
John Urso. chief of that con
sumer agency's Santa Ana
bureau. said today evidence
gathered during the long probe
was turned over to the Oran~e
County District Attorney for
prosecution.
According lo Urso. the charges
against Esslinger include nine
c:ounL-; of unlawfully presc:ribmg
a mphctamtnt.>s. one count of
altering med1c<1I n·cords a~d two
<·ounts of improper labeling uf
drugs.
If convicted of the charges.
-Esslinger could face a term to
county Jail and tor a fine.
The doctor was not available
for com m ent today on the
t•ha r~cs pendinJ? aJtainsl him.
His attorney. John D. Cochran
of lrvme, contended his client 1s
innocent but would not elaborate
further on lhc casl'.
The st<1te 1nvest1galaon re
vol Vl'S around allegalaons that
Esslinger was distributing diet
pills lo put1cnls without conduct·
mg ph;s1c:al exam inations be
forehand
That cont<•ntion is also the core
argument of a wrongful death
:-.uit filed against Esslinger by a
H 1 vcrsidc County widow, s tem-
m mg from her husband's death
I rum a hl'art <tlt:tck las t October.
· The suit, however , is separate
from the statt· t'liSc againsl lht•
clo<:tor. "W1.: know nothinic: about
a wroni.:ful dtwlh s uit.·· Urso
-.aid.
EsslinJH'r has be~n a doc
tor :,inc·e 1928 and, for years. he
was San Juan's only resident
physician. .
He i..s remembered by longtime
residents for many good deeds in
the past. in c lud in g lavish
Chrislmal> parties for the com
mumty's children.
Only rune months ago, Ess-
h nger drew ht!udlines when he
l'hased two bandits on the run for
three miles afkr they held up has
offat0l' on C.1m1no Capistrano Just
Flag Football
Signups Slated
Signups for• Irvine youth flag
football are scheduled from 10
a .m . lo 2 p.m . Saturday at
Un ivers ity Community and
Harvard community park5.
T he program is offered lo boys
and girls, in the third grade lo
s ixth grade of school, who wilt
play in separate divisions. B
League play begins the week of
Sept. 26.
Additional s ignups will be
taken next .Wednesday, from 3
p.m. to5p.m. at both parks. Fee is
$4.SO. which includes a football
jersey.
• liOUth of the old mission church.
With the help of Sberift's de·
puties, Esslinger tracked the men
down and they were captured.
Although the state lnveati11tor
would not reveal detaila of their
investigation pending court ac
tt0n, stipulations in the Riverside
County lawsuit allege that Ess·
linger had 3,000 to 4,000 cases and
took in an average ol $1,500 a day
from his diet program by charg·
ing $7 for a month ·s supply of am
phelamine capsules.
0.11, ~· ... "'" .._. PHYSICIAN CHARGED
Or. Paul Esslinger
130 Entries Due
In Irvine's Rodeo
About 130 pint-sized and half.
sized roping, riding and steer·
w restllng cowboys and cow1lrl$
are entered in this weekend's
second annual Junior Cham··
pionship Rodeo in Irvine.
Children aged 10 through 17
members of the Junior Rodeo AB·
sociation of California -will
compete in 13 events on the open
field rodeo grounds, localed next
to the San Diego Freeway at
Culver Drive.
Performances are at noon and
.............
Boy Crashes
Cycle, Dies
A 14·year-old boy who was
critically injured while ridin& an
unlicensed motorcycle at 1 :30
a m. on a Garden Grove Street
Sept. 1 died Thursday, according
to a police report.
James Barker, 14, of 13936
Dawson St., Garden Grove, died
in Palm Harbor Hospital from in·
juries s uffered w hen t h e
motorcycle he was riding col-
1 ided with a parked car.
Police said Barker was near
Glendora and Mallard Streets
when the· or(!road m otorcycle
s lammed into the parked auto
FromPageAJ
CALLAS. • •
plicalions connected with her
divorce.
Miss Callas began to study
music when she was 8 and by 14
had won a number of amateur
radio contests. Trapped abroad
at the beginning of World War JI .
s he studied at the Royal
Conservatory.
She made her debut in
M ascagni's "Cavaller ia
Rusticana" at the Royal Opera
House in Athens at 14. But her
career really began when the
great La SCala Opera-House in
Milan, ofrered her a role in
"Aida .. and then signed her on as
a -member of lhe company in
1951.
She made her American debut
in 1954, performing the title role
of Bellin i's ·'Norm a·· at
Chicago's Lyric Theater and in
subsequent years sbe was widely
acclaimed ror her roles in
"PuritanJ," "Tosca,·· "Lucia ..
and many other operas.
She also made numerous re-
cordings, includlna 19 complete
operas and 10 albums or operatic
selections for Angel Records.
4 p.m. Saturday: 1 :30 p.m . Sun·
day. Tickets are $3, with children
under 6 admitted ·tree with an
adult.
A barbecue dinner and dance is
scheduled after Saturday's 4
p.m. performance: tickets are
$4 .
Rodeo events include bull rid-
ing, steer riding, bareback rid·
ing, saddleback riding, steer
wrestling, calf roping, barrel
racing, team roping and goat ty-
ing.
Championship belt buckles will
be awarded first-place winners,
with trophies going to second and
third·place contestants.
The Irvine rodeo is part of a
series of rodeos in which junior
bronc-busters accumulate points
toward the alt-around cowboy
a nd cowgirl championships of
the year.
The local sodbusting contest is
sponsored by t he combined
merchants of Irvine.
IA Celebrates
Mt:xico F ete
LOS ANGELES <AP> -The
green, white and red flag of
Mexico flew over City Hall today
as Mexkan Independence week
neared completion.
· A jubilan t celebration.
cllmax<.>d by a traditional bell
ringing, rocked the Sporta Arena
Thursday night as Los Angeles
area residents joined eHy
-iJignilaries to celebrate the 167th
34exican lndependel\ce Day.
A loud cheer went up at exactly
11 p.m. when the "El Grito"
festivities began. Among the en·
tertainers were the inlerna
tionally known Ballet Folklorico
and singer-dancer CanliOas.
TOP S4lJS4GE
TAKES POWDER
CHICOPEE, Mass. <AP> -
Wh at was billed as the world"s
largest(Pol.i'sh sausage is miss·
ing. · ·
Officials ol the Cha m ber of
Com merce say t h at when
Chicopee Provision Company
workers went lo pick up lbe 107·
pound, 10..foot-long sausage and
put It oo dlaplay at t he Eastern
Stales Exposition in West
Springfield, all they found wer e
empty trays where the kielbasa
had been the centerpiece of the
fourth annual kielbasa festival
here. •
THE FOOTBALL SEASON '
You are possibly now in the proceas of shopping for
carpeting and have been talking to sales people at two or
three stores. If so. you no doubt feel like a •'football.·· bounced
around with a bevy of conflicting stories.
Which is the best carpet fiber? What is the best texture for
your use? What kind of padding should be used?
We th1nk you will detect the straight answers at Alden's.
We've been helping people score "touchdciWM In Orange
County for over twenty years.
Je'riday'•
lo i.nf!l Pr NYSE COMPOSITE
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TRANSACTIONS
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UnUal I .. 1 l 30\t + ''>
Up/Oltn 1,7017 UI 3A"'-" USLIFE 41 7 11>1 11\'f ... U\llltF ."9 .. lllll U~+ ...
Ul•llPL I 1610 117 20'"· .... VIPLol 2.IO • l9 21~+ ~
-v-v-VFCI> 1.10 t U 11-.-'-' Vlllf'Vln ,fOlJ 411 11'1 ••• V•rlon .2112 M 1111i-1, Varol~.209 4 67 Ill'\ '.\
Vtndo . S ~i.., + ·~ Vfnlc. .1Sl • • 3 TN.+ Iott V~stS. I.lit . 13 14''1 , V•t<o .10tH USI 20 -l't Vlocom 10 IS IOI 11"4-.... V•EPltr I '4 I l:Jt U1 t .... V•EP Pl• 70 • rlSO 41'/J, . V1£PP14IO .. 11500 SS'-+'<\ VeEPpll n .. 11000 .. ,., .. "" V1EPplUS,, US70108 ..... V•EP~2«> • 111 'll't• \lo
V1EP 1111.20 .. 11000 ~"'• + "'°' V•EPCJll.•S ,.., es -11\ Vor...CSO 21 6'~-141 v .. tcnM 1.10 1 • n ......
-w-w-Wechov .S' t 1cn 1614 + 'It
Wa<ll r. 1,10,. 10 ...... • Vt ::f~.lt 1i ,:: ,:l\+ ii;
W410'" I 10 1 11 I• ..... WlkrA I 4IM 1 • 2S"?+ l't W1118"$ ~ 1 3 It + 1'6 I Well""6 1.10 J 4 21 .. + Ii\ Wa1UM140. 6t 26>11-49 wa1u 1111 • .0 .. , ttv ......
Wardl"d . . a 114 + lot WtrNKO • , 1t t -l't WernS 1.10 1 17 20111 .....
Wl'llCem .10 • 11 mo+ \lo Warllf't. 1.10 T2 1657 2S'\,., , Wall\~ H• I JI 2S • .. • • Wa,,.!>ltl 111 • 1 lt'h ..... Wall\5111.2011 U 21 --.
WJll'!'l'I U• t 6t n.-+ " WuttM ,tall 2J U>4 .... . W1tkll\I .112 I) 29 1A , .. .. W•vOof ,4'14 I ....... ..
MM!Un .JO 4 I S~ ••• ., WHnpll,1t.. 4 H .... ,
WUtMd .fOtl 2tO 14\'i+ "' lllU+l't I
Friday, S.ptember 1e, 1977 DAILY PILOT
Fig•t Fades
Saks Hopes Buy Peace
By MILTON MOSKOWITZ
Hnrdly a week passes without atome new bleata Crom
American companlea about "unfair" compctlUon from
Japanece producers.
The charge ts usually that that Japanese dump \hejr
products here at prices below what the~e same items 1eU ror
in Japan.
THE STEEL COMPANIES HAVE complained. The {
television set manufacture!'$ have complalned. The latest te> ..
Join the wailing chorus are Monsanto. o major chemical
producer, and E.F. Johnson, the leadlng U.S. maker of CB
radios .
Monsanto has built D new plant at Chocolate Bayou,
Texas. to produce sorbic acid and potassium sorbate,
chemicals that are used as preservatives in food process-
ing. The company charges that the Japanese are dumping
these chemicals here at
prices 40 percent below
what they command in
Japan. Monsanto says
the viability of its Texais
plant is threatened.
The U.S. Intcrna
t1onal Trade Com -
Money
Tree
mission is investigating ri!>tng imports or J apancsc·made
CB radios. E.F . Johnson warns that iC "quick action,·· in lhr
form or quotas or tariffs, is not taken, Japanese makes will
take over the American market.
However, look what's going to happen an the coming
Christmas sales season. You are going to be bombarded
with pl~ches for an expensive new Japanese·made toy ·
and there won't be a whisper of compluint from U.S. com
panies.
THE "TOY" IS THE HOME videot1tpe recorder, which
the electronics industry is counting on to become the big
ticket replacement for color television sets. The recorder is
a unit that will enable you to to tape TV shows you are not
-around to catch. so you can play them back at your con-
venience. It's capable of recording a program off one chan·
nel while you're watching another channel.
Sony has been selling such a unit here under the name
Betamax for $1,300. The units being moved into the U.S.
market will sell for as low as $1,000.
The TV recorders lo be marketed here will be sold un·
der a variety or brand names -RCA. Zenith, Sylvania,
Panasonic, Quasar, Magnavox. Sanyo, the Sears, Roebuck
house label. But the variety is less than meets the eye.
WJDLE U.S. MANUFACTURERS HAVE been working
to develop a recorder, the Japanese have clearly beaten
them to the punch. As a result, all the units to be fielded here
in the coming months will come from two sources· Sont' or
Matsushita.
Matsushita, the world's largest maker of TV sets,
markets under the Panasonic and Quasar labels, but its
video recorders will also be sold under the RCA,
Maganavox, Sylvania, MGA and Curlis Mathes labels .
Zenith, which Jed the fight against the color TV Invasion
from Japan. will market under its name the Betamax re .
cordcrs made by Sony. In addition to Zenith. Sanyo, Toshiba
und Sears will buy their recorders from Sony.
THE SONY AND MATSUSHITA units are not compati·
blc, meaning that yc;{i will not be able lo feed a Sony tape
cassette into a Matsushita recorder and vice-versa
Despite the profusion of labels then. this contest will be
basically a battle between two makes. And it will be an all·
_Japanese ~!air. There are no U.S.·made sets for the
Japanese lo undercut.
lrwestoi:s Worried
Over Money Supply
NEW YORK <AP J -The stock market turned down to-
day, giving up some of its modest gains of the past two
sessions.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, up 6.23 points
Wednesday and Thursday, dropped back 3.98 points to
856.81.
Losers took an 8·7 Jead over gainers among New York
Stock Exchange.listed issues.
Aller ·Thursday's close, the Federal Reserve reported
an $800 million decline in the basci measure of the money
supply.
But analysts said many traders still seemed concerned
that 1.he tonger term growth trend in the money supply
would prompt the Fed to tighten credit furthet jn the com-
ing months.
Do8"Jone•A ueragea
Hew Y-IAPI 1'111111 l)ow.J_, ..... avtt
ITOCJCS °'"" HlQll t.-Clow 010
30 Ind .. , 11 '6s.lll llU.U ll6 I I-) ..
fO Tm 111 8' 71141 fie.GI 215.11-0 .. tS VII 112,JO ll2.M 111'1112,63+ 040 "su1 m.u 7'uo 2t0.•J m .os-o." lndol\ • .. • .. . • •• .. • .. 1,$11,200
Tr•ft .. .. .. .. • .. • .. .. .. • 252,100 UUll .................. , )IS,900 6S Stlt .... • ............... •• ,,11',400
A~rfran Leaden
NEW VORlt V.PI· S.lff, • 11.m . prtte Ind ...i <'lt"91 of the lln mq~t 1<11\11 AmerlcM '1od< £11<!\Mlol llwn.
trldlro ""''-"~ el mort tllM Jt. It-..... Ill..... IJ1,JOO O'A + "11 Ho<100M ... • •• .. tS,600 l7 .. ~ C11nl11111•io• A... . • 1~.soo 21~ • 14 CllatnP ~....... 51, 1IO 2 .. '-=mtfa 0...... •·'°°oo 'rt! + " 1'ff*I • • Sf, t .......... ~t<~ ... »..-.-. ---lm...otl it.. • 29,SOO 1.-. -'4
WYl'ft '"'"· V_. 14'-' + '111. lltllt (tell, t7,200 22"9 +I
M'hat Stoeh11 Did
NEW VORlt tAPI
ACIVenceO D•Cllnecl Untlla,..a
To11l I•~
Ntw ltTI 11•(111• N•w 1'77 low~
iALt!$
Due to late transmission
today's listing wlU not
• appear In the Oally Pilot.
WHA\' AMIX DID NEW YORlt IAPI
~It tAUI
~~.
TMly °""' ~ ,.. 1ff ,,.
'" JOS -1137 1• 0 ,, I•
Oue to late transmission
today's listfng wlll not
appear In the Dally Piiot.
StoclUl1t 'r-Spodlpt
..
\
J e CA.IL Y PILOT
QOIENIE
BGflflOf1e1111sured-Mostlfl
DEAR PAT· I'm planning Lo v1s1t my parents in
New York for a month lhis faJI. Because of my long
stay, I 'II have to take a qui_te a lot of clothing and lug.
gage. Do airlines provide insuranc~ coverage for
haggage,ordo I havetogetmyown?
G.P .. Huntington Beach
On domestic mghts. the carrier's maximum
liability is $500. If your baggage ls worth more, you
may obtain additional coverage by declaring excess
value and paying a fee for extra coverage.
Telegram• Are Guaranteed
DEAR PAT: I sent a •night letter recently and
"as very upset to learn later that delivery had
taken eight hours. Doesn't Western Union have to
observe delivery time limits?
H.H .. Newport Beach
Although It's not generally known, Western
Union ofrers money-back guarantee on deUvery
time for all types of domestic services. Night letters
are supposed to be delivered within one and one·
half to two hours by pbone, or within five hours if
delivered by hand. Mallgrams s hould be expected
to arrive in the first business mall delivery the day
after being sent. If you did not get service within
these time limits, you are entitled to a full refund or
vou may have your message resent at no charge.
Contact you'r local Western Union customer service
operator to file a claim.
What Doe• •Ko•her ' Mean?
DEAR PAT: I love kosher meats. but 1t seems
that usually they are more expensive than other
vanelles. The same thing applies to other food s
Jabelcd "Kosher." Are these foods prepared to
Jewish custom. or 4 oes it amount to special recipes
OEPARTMENTOI"
FORE, TRY
L.A Mot.,,, OltKlof'
Publl"*' Oranve co .. 1 O•lly Piiot,
5"PI 1•. ll, JO, lt?7
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTI nous IU$1Nt:S$
NAMISTATl:MINT
Tht lollowlno per'°"" are dolnq bull·
"''' es: NEWPORT INSULATION1
NEWPORT POOLS, 113 W•vt St .•
L•o~~'!"r.111.?~~:~~·n Wtvt St ..
~Una Be•<ll, <;.tlll. '2UI
Ed Jll(i;..,,,, UI Vlcto<la, CHU
M•W C.0111 t'K77 •
Tl'los bUilntu I\ <onducltd by •
~nertl P"r1Mrllllp &ruu I: MCOow•n
Thl1 •1•1-t WH 111.0 wllh Ille
County 0-ct Or-County on 5-pt,
1, 1'11
Pllo .. 1
PUOll""" ()r11n9e Co.a" 0.lly PllOt
See>I t, 1•, 1l, l0, 1'11
PUBLIC NOTICE
Cl'·S1M
NOTICI TOClllEDITOAS
SUPElllC>tl COUllTOPTHI
STATE OP CALll"OANIA 1"011
THECOUNTYOl"OllANGI
N•.A·'2742
Elltle of EDWARD FROST
HODGOON, DKHMd
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo Illa
crtdlloo Of lht •bove n•mtd oe<._I
Intl •II Pl!f\Ot\l l'l••lno tllllm• •O•lllll
Ille \•Id doc-nt ••• required lo Ill•
lhtm. w1111 ll>e iw<en••Y vouchers, In
11'19 ollKt Of tlw <Itri; OI lhe allow tn-
lttlPd court, Of to P'H•nl lhtm with,,,.
necowrv vo.Kl'oers, lo Ille unoenlon..s
at c 10 WUll&"' E Powell, Pe1J11on11r, •t
1600 Do.... St 11110 N•wporl Bu<n
C•lltorn•• whtch I\ 1hf e>l•c• of t>u\I
nen ol Ille uncltrilQntd 1n •II m•ll•rs
l>'l•l•onlnq lo I"" •'l•I• of stld Cl<'<•· d•nl wllhot1 lour monlM elltr Ille first
publlc•lionol 11'11\ nollct
D•leo 5'>P4rmller IJ, 1'71
Wll llAM E POWELL
P~l otloner fE HCulor ot lllt
Wlll oft"" •bovt n.amed
CllK-nl
OENISL KA$TEN
IMIO Dove SI.,• 110
N•wl'Cl<t ... cl\, CA
Ttl' 17Ml 7S2...,S
AttortWy ltr Pwtl-ff
Pul>llJheO OrM>Qe Cot•I Oetly Pilot,
~pt 16, 2J. 30. ~I 1, 1'11
PUBLIC NOTICE
PlJBUC NOTICE
"CTITIOU$ •u•11•1u MAMllTATIMllfT
, ....... low! ... --•• dolftf .,..... ....... ,.
MADOO)( APTS., 105 Maddn,
Hlllltl1\910ft 919'11, CA
Mani L &Nunlllo., l?O Sec• St .•
Pa~.CA•llOl
Tll" lloAlnen '' conoucttd t>y an '"' dlvlduet.
Merli L. llla<nnlk
Tnlt It.at-I WH 111.0 Wllll -
c-1 y ~ o1 0r efl99 "°""' y Oft s.p.
le Mb« IJ, 1917, p""' PuOllthed 0r•"9t Co.ad O.tly l'llOt
Sept. 14. D. JO. 0c:1.1, ttn .on-n
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOU$ IU$1NIH
NAMISTATIMINT
The louowino persons••• CIOl1191M1ll·
ntUH: THE ORANGE COUNTY AN·
TIO\JE ~ I. SALE. l•H Cr,Ktnt
Ave . 11utne P9<k, c.. •11uo
JQMClfl o. .. GrllYM•, 35'11 Clltryl
W•y. Rl,..rtldll, Ga '2io.
Bettye S.vote Grlmn, 3Jtt C/wryl
Nay, Rl,..nlcle, CA. '2SO.
Thi• l>Utlneu IS <OllOUCltd llY •
oenertl 11tr1ner1lllp.
JOMllfl °'.,, G<i.._ Tlllt •llll-t w•• llled wlllt tN
County Cltr11 ol Ortl\99 Covnty Oft
A1191111 S, 1'17 ,. ... ,
Pu!lllv..d Or•noe (OHi 0.ily Piiot
s.111. 2, •. 1•. 21. ttn ..,n
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUS 8USINl$1
NAMI STATIMINT
Tiie lollowlno perlOtl ll dolr19 lluSI·
nH>H
PROFESSIONAL LANDSCAPING
ANO GARDENING SERVICE. •142
HumbOldt Ave., WHtmln•I••. C,t..
'2.e.1
Salv_. T R.,..lre1. •742 H.....,.
bold! A .... w-.tmlMttr. CA. '2"3
Tllh b<DlntU ll t-UC1t<I D7 en In
dlvidutl ,.
Sal T Rllnllru
This sia1..,...1 "'"' llltd with tlw
County Cl-ot Otanoe Counly Of
Auou•I 23, "77 · .....,,,
Pu!lllSl\ecl Or-Co.a\! Delly PllOC.
AU1111SI 16, Sept~ 2, '· 1', 1971 110.n
PUBUC NOTICE
PICTITIOUS 8UllN•U
NAMI $TAT•MllNT
T,,. loltowlno persons tr• dolr19 !><Isl·
ntHH:
KEY CLEANERS, JCm So. 8'1•1ol
Aw.,Sotnlll...,..,CA
R-.i L CMpenter Jr .. 311 Alv•
Ln., C:OU..MHa,CA'2611
R-rl L C.,oen1.,-Sr , JJJI
NtY..S. SI , Colt& Mew, CA
This t>uslneu Is conducted t>y • Cit"'•"'' pertneri11lp. R-rt L. CerDentM Jr
TlllS Sllll-t WM flled wllfl the
County C...... ct Or-County on~
1.~n.1'n
PUBLIC NOTICE
ALLERGY?
NEW? FO R ORANGE COUNTY SOUTH
COAST
**MUSIC CATERING** Having• party, reception, or sales boOster event?
H.cj •problem with live music?
Custom music systems are now avalla-.
ble for your home, hall or business.
complete Installation & operation ·
featuring a Dimen8ion 7 disc jockey. Super
sound musical lights. Your music or
ours. Reasonable rates, five hour
mlnlrnum. Early reservations are sug-
gested. (2131 214-2156
17141 54J.9624d
ITATIM&NTOfl•IANDOttM ... T R e c o· r. d e
C)PUSIOP M I COB
PICTIT10Ul~:JHUAMI essa e
,..,. flolloWlftQ "-' ----
Charlle•a Diaco Business
After Six please : ~:.-: w~~~"e~ T~s~'v~'ii l l l EiC Y C 0 MT I 0 l Charlie (714) 95S·3535 et •sot s.n Gttwi.t Clrcle, e_.. P•t1t, fOUMIATION ·
c.11toml• t06111. 9'M!cl Danny (213) 691-994' FeaturlnglJ:ID:) 111e•1<11Uous11us1 .... , .... ,,,.,..._.., 811 1saJ. Dr1llll ca '"" 10 -wes lllecl 111 C4.l11ty on Aprll 10. ms. Write fer~ llltonMtf•
DolOrff M Keller. 6»2 Sen Gelltltl l~===========!...------.::...-----------------Clrclt,....,,. Ptt1l, CA. t0620 r
Tllll Mlntu w.-<011$1dtcl t>y •n I,..
dlvldlull,
S'9ned DolorftM. Ktlltr
Tllll 11.M-was flied wllll IN
C-ty Clti'tc °' Orefl99 Co<lnty Oii Sept. I, lt17,
Pu!llllNd 0refl99 Cotr>t O.lly Piiot
Sept. "· 23, '°· -Oc:toc.r 1, "" ...,.,.n
PUBLIC NOTICE
s...." SUNalOfta>UltTOPTNI
STATI OP CALIPOANIA POii
THICOUNTYOPOaANOI
.... ,..ftt41
NOTICI OP NIAAlltOOf' NTITIOH
l"Olt l'lt09AT• OP WILL ANO f'Otl
LITT•AI TISTA~INTAAT AND
POa AUTHOltlZATION TO AD·
MINUTIA UNDla THI
INOIPUH,.NT AOMINllTaATIOM
OP ISTATHACT.
IE l I a t t o I A N N A· M A Y
HALOERMAN, DKHMd.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Ill.at
JOSEPH B. HALDERMAN llH llled
htreln •petition !or Probate of Wiii Mid
tor Is-. of Let .. rs lHtementery end kw Auttorlzatlon to Administer,,,,..
der IM 1-peooctotot AclfnlnlltrtCIClfl of
E st.etff Act, rtfvtnet ta wlll<ll 11 n1
fOf tur111tr pert lcattrs, -I Mt time -plect of 11ffrl119 tlle um• llM been NtlorOtt. 4, 1'11,et tO:OOe.m ••
Illa c-1,_.. of Otptr1JftMI NO J
uld court ... 1'00 Oo;k GenlM Ori ..
Wttl, In 11\t City of 5•nlt Ane,
C.Ollfornit.
Dal.ad 5"11 12. 1m wtLUAMl.tt.IOWN,
County Cltr11
MILLla,&MAltTIHO * •••• Aftwrtce ......
Wl\lt1'w, CA. -Tel: UUl'41MS11
Alt~,_.,....._
Publlslled Or-C.0.st Dally PllOI,
S.pl. 15. 16, 22. 1t11 ~71
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTITIOUI IUSINIU NAMaSTATIMllNT
Tiie lollowlftf pet'tonS •r• CIOl "t buM-,....s as:
TOOL 11!0., 111• Mo<vovlt, Colt.e
Mtw·C::~nl~~:,.cuter , 10,
Eove-•. 8.albot. c.tlloml• •i.'1
Vldtl S. L.-nttst .... 20t EOOtweltr,
Btlll09, c.tlfomlatMI
Tlllt !Miine» 11 _.., t>y .., Ill·
dlvl-..i.
R-J. Ltn(•lltr
Tlllt --wtt llltd wltll lht Covnly Ckrlt Of Ora1199 CO<Hlly ..,
Auou1Ut,1m
PlttM
Pvbltstwd 0r"'9 CMlt Delly Piiot,
Where else can you get this?
Q¥bl tQI COY\h
GU.uAHTt ... wr CiUA•ANtPt. ro tle"MAN(,I T;· .. ~~= ~~~:~~:~IL~I~ ~ri.tH• rUlL i'\JM& 11.ui ...U lOW~M> 4 UKa tJ1UI t
n"4•· 11ft\\'AlVf ~a:at'lflCAf'&WtU••ALM'tAJfrft;ott 111>•--•
ot Jut. 0Afff ttl' ......... A,t-.
We furnish the above guarantees
on all coins and meet the standard
of the ANA Grading Board
when applicable.
2630-C A•• Street
~ leadl 645-1"144
(Behind Mariners Mile)
Tuea. 2:00-5:30
Wed. thru Sat. 11:00-5:30
Cloaed Sun. & Mon.
Pttm s.11temi.r 1, t, "· u. "" l1~n Publl"'" Or.,,._ CMll Otll'f Piiot. 1-------------1
Stllt "· n. JO, 0c:1.1, 1m .... n PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOU$ IUllNIEU
NAMaSTATIMINT PICTITIOU$1U•IN•U TN toOowl119 oert0n I• dol"f bin!· NAMI ITATIM9NT • ,,. .. eJ:
NEWPORT BEACH ONLY
hcang used? .,
B N., Dana Point
Tiie looowlno --.. clolno ~ CLASSJCAL CABI NETRY, •Jt -------------! neues NewMll Slr..C,Coslll Mew.CA. '2U1 l'RIMO ASPliALT, t.o21 Btll..:I Ooft Welt« OllllO. 2D Holl<Sey STOCK ELIMINATION The use or the "Kosher" label ls regulated.
Kosher meats must be prepared in accordance with
ritual. The way an animal or fowl Is killed, bow It
must be dressed, treated and prepared fO( human
consumption has to be in accordance wltti J ewish
law and custom, according to the California Stale
Har A'soclatlon. Advertising to the contrary ls a
aime punishable by a 5300 fine and up to 90 days In
jail.
. 'I.
Death Notice• Death Notice•
KOENIG Pesud .... y Seotern!Mt 14, 1•11
LILLIAN ltOENIG. roldenl 01 Survlv•d by two dauohleri, Ann
l•oun• OHcl'I, Gallfo,,11• tor 21 yurs. C•rn-11 ol N-1 Be.tell, Ge., .nd
P.o-.ed away on Sept•mber IC, 1'77 Ollvt Coo~ ol l•t>uron, C•. •I•
1.-.. v .. ,,., ,,..,,,. .. 0.-me Herl"O of orandclllldren, •nd •I• O"lll·
lu<\on Artton• Pr•¥•t~ wrvlC•~w•r• or•ndct\Hdren Sorn In Otnver.
h•ld lnl~rment M•lro .. Abbey Color-on Ac><ol 11, 1111. Prlv•le
Mtmoriel P•rk, Anehtlm, c .. Sllefl•r ;~mlly "'Vieu ln Rtdltnd~. ca
L•oune 8e..:I\ Mortuary, t7• Soullt PeclllcV-Mortu•rydlre<to"
Cool MIQllw•ydlre<lors
l'AnEIUON
ltELL y PATTERSON. Aoe 2S do..S
~•pl•mber 14. Survlv•d by lltr
"~uollltr Tarah Ann W•ktlino.
mother S.lty Gendron, l•I~ Bl\hop
Palle'W". 1111er c;.o.oi• PtlltrWft,
qr•nde»rtnU Oouq Smith, Mr~ H•ltn
Ouo ~nd Mr & Mr\. Jame~ Patterson.
.,...,,«~ S.lurdo 10 AM .at Hollon ""d
~n Mo<'lu.trv L-8e•<h w1111 Int••· m•nl 1nAJI !>out\ C.mtlffY
P'IUEMAN
HELEN HAVER FREEMAN, resl
(ltnl al N1wp0rt Buch, Calllornle
HUHOADWAY
MOUUAIY
11 O Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·9150
SMITH TUTHtU L.AMI
COSTA MISA CHAl'IL
.-21 E. 1 7th St.
Costa Mesa • 64M888
Santa Ana Chapel
518 N. Broadway
SantaAna * 647~131
PlllCIHOTHUS
SMITHS' MOl'TUAIT
627 Main St.
Huntington Beech
53M539
PlaF4MtLY
COl.OMl.AL JUMUAL
NOMI
7801 Boin Ave
Westminster
893-3525
PACllllC VllW
MIMOIUAL P.Alll
CemetetY MortUllY
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Ortve
Newport,
Ctllforn11
U4•2700
Deaths
Elsewhere
WILKES·BARRE Pa.
<AP) -t'ormer U.S.
Rep. Mitchell J enkins,
81, suffered a heart at-
tack Thursday and died
at Wilkes·Barre General
Hospital.
WATERTOWN, Mass.
<AP) -SUvlo Coscia, 77.
a French born player
and voice coach with the
Metropolitan Opera for
36 years. died Thursday
at his home here of an
apparent heart attack.
t..M, Jtunttnotan 8Hcll, CA-Rd., "'-1 8Hcft, CA "'60 JOMPll D Wllsan, "'2 T•la.rt, Tllll buSlntSI ,, conouct.o t>y an ,,..
Hunllngton llM<ll, CA m4I dlvlOU.t.
Tllll buslnMS 11 CondUdtd lly .., .,.._ Oon Otlllo
dlvkNal Tl\11 tllll-wn tlled With IN
Tiiis ~j ":~lltd "With IN County Ott1I ct Oranot Cout!ty Ofl Auo.
County Clerk OI Oranoe County on u, "· "77• p...., "n PlllM Put>lllNd 0ntnve Cetlt Dally Piiot.
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5tot.1•.n.:io.0c:1.1.1m 40»-n
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
,.ICTITIOUllUllNllS
MAMl ITATIMINT
The fol!OWlll9 ...,_ tre clol"t bull·
neu•s: PHILLIP$ MAlllNE STOR(S,
212S Hewpon 8oul•v•rd, Newport
8ttc:ll, c.tltomle t1660
PlllltlPt Marine llOf'fl, I"<· I•
C.lltomlt ~ellOft), '111 Wt• ....
Strfft, Newport 9ttcl1, C.lllorlll•
'2MO
Tiiis b&lness Is COftd\lctecl Dy • cor·
poreUoll.
.... ILLIPS MARl"'I!
STOIU!S, I NC.
Reoer I!. Ooetlll•. ~ . Tiiis .-W8' filed WlOI Ole
c-ty Cltf1I ct Ol'MOI CAMttl' Oft ~
'-"'IJ" 12, 1m. ,..,m
l'vblllhed Ortnee Cofft Dally l'llot
Sept.. ,.. %l, •• Oct.1, ''" C.17
PUBLIC NOTICE
EVERYTHING -GOES!
601'l 7·53
OFF
NO ALTERATIONS
ALL SALES FINAL
NO REFUNDS OR EXCHANGES
NEWPORT BEACH ONLY!
I
·Laguna/South Coast
EDITION
VOL. 70, NO. 2S9, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES
. SJC Doctor
By WILLIAM SCHRE18Ell ... Oellt ..... , ....
A '18-year-old San Juan
C,Jpl1traoo d(>ctor, lon1 con·
1ld~red a pillar of lhe community
by many old timers. is facing
mlldemeanor charges alleging
he illegally distributed am·
phetamine diet pills .
Dr. Paul H. Esslinger, who hl*S
practiced medicine in the Mis·
slon City since the early 19305, Is
t rec on his o~ recognizance
pendmg a pre·lnal conference
Oct. 12 in the South County
M un1c1pal Court in Lo gun a
Niguel
He w;is arrested in mid-August
after a five-month mvesUeaUon
of his omce practices by agents
of the California Office or
Medical Quality Assurance.
John Urso. chief of that con·
s umer ugency's Santa Ana
bureau. said today evidence
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Charged • ID
gathered durfng the long probe l:sslinger could face a term in
was turned over to the Oran~e chunty jail and/or a Cine.
County District Attorney for The doctor was not available
prosecution. 1 fo r comment today on the
According to Urso, the charges' char~flS pendin~ against him.
against Esslinger include nine Hrs attorney. John D. Cochran
counts or unlawfully prescribing of Irvine, contended his client is
amphetamines, one count or innocent hut would not elaborate
altering medical records and two further on the case.
counts10of improper labeling of The slate investigation re·
drugs. volves around allegations that
If convicted of the charges. Esslinger was distributing diet
Body ID Given
Writer Crashed in Ocean?
D.tlly ~lr.c S!Mf ......
PHYSICIAN CHARGED
Or. Paul Esslinger
OrJnge County Sheriff's an
vestigators have identified the
body of a man found floating a
mt It-off San Onofre Sept 8 as a
I lollywood writer who had rented
a plane tn Santa Monica a day
before his naked body was found
tn the sea.
Douglas Winfield scott Jr., 42,
of Hollywood, was found offshore
by people aboard a cabin cruiser.
Investigator W. F;. Stansbury
said the man was believed ac·
co mpanied b y a second
Hollywood resident, whose body
has not been recovered.
Nothing Witlaheld1
Conduct Met Rules . ~
1 l ~~~TO~~~~~~p=-C~~t?.~~t
"tng that "I have done more Ulan staying narrowly within the law
stay narrowly within the law," would not be enough lo s._tifsy the
Bert Lance testified today that ethical standards of fli s ad·
bl& conduct both ua·btlnkerund ministration. ~s'budget director meets the high
ethical standards sel by Pres\·
dent Carter for his admlnbtra-
llon. ·
Lance also said he withheld
nothing about financial-dealings
from Senate committee staffers
who interviewed him before con·
firmation hearings on his ap-
pointment as budget director.
Lance responded that he had
met that test and "certainly. I
have done more than slay nar·
rowly within the law."
During his appearance Thurs·
day, Lance said the question of
whether he had withheld in·
formation from the committee,
when his nomination as budget·
director was before the panel last
January, was the most serious of
the issues raised against him.
Referring to his meeting last
.lanuary with the committ~e
staff, Lance said : "It was one tn
which we had a total and lull dis·
closure." c h a i r m an Ab r a h am A . Lance insisted he had told the
Rlbicoff <D·Conn. ), said that committee staff about hls finan·
after Lance finis h es hi s cial dealings, includ\ng the over·
testimony, possibly on Saturday, drafts. during his banking
member.i of the committee staff career.
··we think thl'r e 's a good
chance another man" as with the
pilot when the rented plane went
down." Stansbury said
He said Scott rented a plane tn
Santa Monica on Wednesday,
Sept. 7, but did not bother to file a
flight plan. ·
"We think he might have an-
ticipated the crush," Stansbury
said, "and set the plane down
softly, taken off hi s clothes and
attempted lo swim ashore.
"That's · just an assumption.··
he added. lie said Oceanside of·
ficials found a left funding gear
from an airplane on Sept. 9, but
:-aid Orange County officials did
not hear about that discovery un··
ul Thursda.>
.. It looks like 1t is from the
rented plane,·· Stansbury said
11 c said Scott is divorced .
Sheriff's ocputies would not
identify the name of the possible
passenger on the plane, saying
the Los Angeles man has an ail·
mg mother who might be ad·
verscly affected by the news.
"We've got a missing persons
report out on him,·· Stansbury
'tJl<f
·~··,....... BUDGET DIRECTOR, ATTORNEY FIND TIME FOR CHUCKLE
Bert lance Confers With Legal Adviser Clark Clfford
would be cdlled to testify under
oath about their discussions with
Lance. Pressed by a Republican sena· ·LB Stitdents. Decline
Afternoon
N. Y. Ste,eks
~
' .,
'
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1977 TEN ceNTS
Pills Probe
pills to patients without conduct·
ing physical examinations be·
forehand.
That contention is also the core
argument or a wrongful death
suit filed against Esslinger by a
Riverside County widow, stem·
ming from her husband's death
from a heart attack last October.
The suit, however, is separate
from the state case against the
doctor. "We know nothing about
... ~
OPERA ST AR DIES
Marla Callas, 53
Stormy
Opera Star
Cal/Au . Dies
PARIS (AP) ... Marla Callas,
"· stormy American-born diva famed also for her romance with
the late Aristotle Onassis, died at
her Paris home of a heart attack
today. frlends reported.
M lss Callas had not appeared
on the stage since 1973 and in re·
cent years had been living quiet·
ly in Paris. •
Born In New York to Greek Im·
migrants, La Callas was trained
in Greece and established her
career in Italy. Her talent
brought her acclaim as one of the
greatest sopranos or the 20th cen·
tury while her fiery tempera·
ment and romance with Onassis
made front pages.
She fought with managers and
conductors, walked out of
performances and cancelled ap·
pearances and alienated herself
from other performers.
.. To me the art of music is
megnlflcent," s he once ex·
plained, .. and I cannot see it
treated in a shabby way."
a w,-ongful death suit.·• Uno
satd.
Esslinger b as been a doc·
tor since 1928 and, for .ars. be
was San Juan's only resident
physician.
He is remembered by longtime
resid,ents for many good deeds in
the past, including lavish
Christmas parties for the com·
munity's ~hildren.
<See DOCTOR. Page AZ)
Slayer's
Death
Upheld
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. <AP> -
The state Supreme Court today
denied a stay of execution for
John A. Spenkclink. the 28-year-
old California man whose ex-
ecution has been set for Monday
morning.
The court upheld the death
warrant signed earlier this week
for Sperikelink, who was con·
demned to die in the electric
chair for the murder or a drifter
in a Tallahassee motel room.
The attorney general's office
said there was no indication of
how the seven justices voted
after hearing oral arguments
late Thursday. No written opin·
ion was issued immediately.
i I I
Spenkelink 's attorney Andrew
Graham asked the court to spare
the condemned man's life tem· '
porarily so he could pursue other 1 appeals. These would have to be ~
in the federal court system.
Meanwhile. U .s. District ~
Judge William Stafford of
TaUShusee called a bearln& for
late today on Graham 'a attempt
to wi'n a stay ln the federal courts
if he fails in state courts. . -
Spenkellnk, 28, a prlson
fugitiv from Buena Park, Calif.. 4
was co vlc:tccl of the Feb. 4, 1973,
mu...i:.. r of Jo h
Szy · 3, a tta
com a
par s· death row Inmates re-
fused to eat at Florida State
Prison Thursdav in an apparent
show of support for Spenkelink.
Prison Superintendent David H.
Brierton said the 16 bad been on
Spenkelink's wing before be was
moved to an Isolated "death
watch" cell a few steps away
from the electric chair.
Graham is appealing a circuit
judge's refusal Tuesday to order
a stay of execution. The attorney
contends that jurors opposing
capital putllsbment should not
have been excluded from the
trial and that Florida judges dis·
criminate between whiw and
blacks ln bandlJ>g down death
sentences.
tor about his overdrawn check
ing accounts in Calhoun, Ga ..
Lance repHed -as he has Insist·
ed earlier -that the issue wasn •t
a matter of ethics. Enrollment Down 2(j(J Over Last Year's Total
The romance with Onassis
followed the breakup of her mar·
riage to Giovanni Battista
Meneghinl, wealthy Milan in·
,.. dustrialist 26 years her senior,
who had discovered an ungainly,
overweight girl with a maanifi·
cent sop rano voice and
In what may have been
Spenkelink's best hope of avold· •
lng execution Monday. Justice
. Joseph Boyd raised the !due of
t he U.S. Supreme Court
challenge tiled by three other
death row Inmates of state
clemency procedur•. The court
has not deelded whether it will
taketheca~e.
"In a place like Calhoun.
where you have a practice of
overdrafts . . . overdrafts as
such is not an ugly word," Lance
told Sen. William V. Roth <R·
Del.).
" ... To simply say overdrafts
constitute an unethical sltuAUon,
lhat is not the case.
A nose count of students on the
five Laguna Beach Untlted
School District campuses this
week shows a decline of more
than 260 students over last year's
total, district officials sald today.
But Superintendent Robert
·Sanchls said be expects that stu-
del'it l•P to narrow by tbe fir1t of "There was no attempt to hide,
no attempt to coverup anything,•·
tempt not to disclose anything,·· Rattlesnake Lance said of the contl"oversy
over hl5 Calhoun checking ac-
count.
Roth betan his questioning by
Coast
Weather
'Piartly c:roudy throuah
Souard•Y with lo,wa tontaht ~ to· 82. Hips Saturday
• 'IO·to 'JS.
INll•B~ODAY ,
Al,ert, lsaued
In Cle11Wnte
next week.
"We'regoing to wall until Mon-
day to determine the real enroll·
ment, •• he said. District officials.
S!lid attendance tends to be lo'!er
when school begins In midweek.
"WeJJtarted school on Wednes·
day last year and by the next
Monday. attendat\Ce had in·
creased significantly," Sanchis
said.
But he did admit surprise at
the large decline of first day stu·
dents.
Fisures turned In to the Orange
County Board of EducatiOJ'\
Thursday show attendance
figures 0!_~1016 for kindergarten through um crade. Last year's
student population tot•led 3,282.
The lower enrollment figures
wtll not have an eCf ect on th•
A ver~ge Dally Attendance
(ADA) measure for schoof
financing, Saochis said, because
those figures are not turned ln
until April.
"What our enrollment is today
does not determine what our
financial picture will be," he ex-
plained. "As a rule, our enroll·
ment has started lower and in·
creaaed to the amount we pre·
dlcted br next April.•·
He srud if attendance dtSei'bot
climb by next Wffk it will be due
to two factors: 15 a significant
drop In the number of kin·
dergartners ln the dtstnct.. and
2) the dlstmt will not have re·
celved the number of junior and
high school younist.ers to offaet
the lower kind erg art.en numbers.
•'Laguna ls typlcally a com·
munlty where students who do
come i,p the area aniupper 1rade
level ~la~. which offaet ihe
(See S'J1.1DgNTS, P"e A!)
guided her to stardo'!'. . Her nine-year halson with
Onassis ended when he married
Jacqueline Kennedy In October
1968. She never met Jacqueline,
but continued to be friends wltb
the shipping magnate until his
death m March, 1975.
Borp Sophie C. Kales In
Brooklyn. she renoupced her
(Sff CAUAS, Page AZ)
"If we execute thl• man on
Monday and a few days later tile
Supreme Court 0£ the Unit~
States says Qov. Reubin Altew s
clemenc1 procedures are wrong,
what aniwer do you have for
that?" Boyd asked Atty. G«t.
Robert Shevin. ·
..
• DAil y PILOT ·L ~c '"day, 8epi.m~r 1•. 1177
SupervisQ_:rs · View County
Chamber Hears Coniments on Growth Problems
8)' (iARY GftANVU,Lf:
O!•O<Mty~twt
Board of Supen1-or
Cbatrman Thom• Raley 1ot1d It
1 llme for county rc1ldcnb tu "bulianc:~ pnorlU ' ~o that ~i.
Oran1e County frow11 "It will••·
mMin what lt ts.·
Suµervllor Philip Anthony •aid
thiat perba~ too much nttentioo 1~ belna paid lo the county's un
1t~v~lopcd tln·u~ and not cnouwh
to Ill clU11.
Supervl•or Ralph Clark
d~cl.,.-Od will' oo not..o.
Supervisor Ralph Dtedrlcb
olll'd It '* &hame that Oranie
County's yOUnl MrO forcod lo jlO
to Rlvttr1tidtf a.nd San Demar
Jlono <.:ounll~ lot housln1 they
CMn afford.
And Supervi11or Laurence
Sl'hmit suid the county's 1977·78
property tax rate should be
Billy's Beer
Carter Brotlwr Backa Brew
LOL'ISVlLLE. Ky. <AP 1 ·-President Carter prob·
;.ihl) '"II have s treet-, and other public projects
named after ham . hut h1-, )OUnger brotht!r Billy has
• iln·.1cl) had hii-. n.imc given to an appropriate item.
The v. <:11-knov. 11 lover or hops appeared at a news
C'Onlerence today to annount·c that Falls City Brewing
<..'ompan~ will market a hN·r named after him.
It \\Ill ht•<:all<·d ··BILLY." andthetopofthelabel
\\ 111 t •.11Ty this t'ndors<:ment: ··Brewed especially for
,rnd \\tlh tht• appro\·al of one of America's all-timl'
).!l'l'al h('c•r rlrink(•rs. nilly Carter.··
l'ltn:-. l·all f'or lhl' bt•t•r to be introduced in Carter's
humt• stalt•. <;corg1a. then be distributed nationally
I> v !\:o\ . 1
· "For mt•. the beer thing was a natural. ·cause l
k11m\ a ~oo<I b<.•cr ht•tkr than an\'bodv ... he s aid.
··who kncl\\~'? Ma,·bc I'll become the Colonel Sander~
of hec•r... ·
Moulton Meadows
I
Laguna Reaches
Halfway Mark
By STEVE MITCHELL
Oft ... Oa41y Pl ... Sl•lf
Laguna Beach is halfway there
in an attempt lo obtain $800,000 to
<JCqurre a lO·acre ridgeline
parcel called Moulton Meadows
for use as a regional park. ·
With Orange County
supcrvii;ors ' approval this week
or $150,000 from the state's 1976
Park Bond Al't for the Moulton
Meadows purchase, councllmen
now have $400,000 in the kitty.
Another $250,000 has ~n set
aside in the city's federal rev·
enue sharing funds for the park
buy.
And councilmen instructed city
planners lasl week to ao ahead
and seek matchina funds
($400,000> from a federally-
ftnanced Land and Water grant.
The approval of $150,000 from
the supervisors this week was
\'iewcd as good news by City
Ma nag er Al Thiel.
lie said matching funds from
the federal grant would mean
S800,000 toward the purchase
price of the parcel. which runs
f'ro•PageAJ
DOCTOR •.•
Onlj Time months ago, Ess-
linger drew headlines when he
chased two bandits on the run for
three miles alter they held up his
office on Camino Capistrano just
south or the old mission church.
With the help of Sheriff's de·
puties, Esslinger tracked the men
down and they were captured.
After that incident. EasUnger
noted that, despite his age, he
keeps flt, never smokes or
drinks, eats only one meal a 4ay
and works hard.
Although the state investigator
would not reveal details of their
·investigation pendine co\1!1,.ac·
tion, stipulatlo~ in the Riveiirde
County lawsuit allege that Ess-
linger bad 8,000 to <6,000 cues and
took ln an average of $1,500 a day
from his dlet·program by charg·
ing $7 for a month's supply or am·
phetamine c1q>1ule.s.
DAILY PILOT
along the hilltops north of Arch
Beach Hei~hts .
The land b owned by Ahso Vie-
jo. a s ubsidiary of the Phillip
Morris Company, and Thiel said
an appraisal of the lend would
have to be made before a
purchase price is agreed upon.
104.hcir request from the coun-
l y supervisors. Laguna Beach
councilmen stressed the park
was lo be a ''regional" facllity.
While the county rarely con-
siders any park site under 100
acres a regional park, the council
believed the parkland can be
used by other countians than
those living in the city.
In its ap~ic,tlon for the
federal matching funds, the city
is stressing immediate acquisi-
tion of the oark "so that the land
may be purchased at relatively
lower prices:i-and to forestall de·
velopmentofthe area.
The projeet application warns
that should the parcel not be ac-
quired for public use, single
family homes could be developed
on the IO-acre site. The ridgeUne.
running between the
neighborhoods of Arch Beach
Heights and Top or the World, Is
currently zoned for residential
use.
l'.-...PageAJ
CALLAS ••.
American cltiienship in 1966, ap·
parently to ease financial com·
plications connected with her
divorce.
Miss Callas beean to study
mu&ic when she was 8 and by 14
bad won a number or amateur
radio contests. Trapped abroad
at the beginnin& or World War II.
s he s tudied at the Royal
Conservatory.
She made her debut In
M ascagnt 's "Cavallerla
Ruaticana·• at the Royal Opera
House ln Athens at 1'. But her
career really began when the
a-reat La Scala Opera House in
Milan offered her a role in
••Aida'' and then alped her on as
a member of the company in
1951.
She made her American debut
In 195(, performlne the title role
of BetHnPa "Norma" at
Chicaao•• Lyric Theater and in
s ubAQutttt years she .,., wtdely
acclalmed tor her roles in .. PuriUDJ... "Tosca;·· "Lucia··
and ~otheroperu.
lower. but mentioned that, in
three years as a county
auperviM>r, he ha.an 't been pres-
ent when county budget and tax
rates have been adopted.
Orange County's five
supervisors' r emarks came at
the annual county Chamber of
Commen:e .. meet your county
supervlaor" lunch.
Riley sounded the keynote of
the five-man forum when he
pointed out that Orange County is
California's fastest growing
county in terms or population,
houslne starts and employment.
"The growth means op·
1>0rtunities in employment and
living," Riley said. "Also, it
raises questions about the long-
term future.
"As we grow;· RiJey con-
tinued, "Uving becomes more in·
teractive, things that people do
increasingly affect others."
Riley explained his comments
by saying what might be one
man's profits might be another
man's pollution.
"An airport can mean public
service to one man and public
nuisance to another man," the
Newport Beach s upervisor said
us he urged •·an intelligent
bulanl'e of conflicting priorities
to provide maximum benefit to
the greatest number at the least
cost."
Both he and Diedrich told the
chamber of commerce audience
that skyrocketing housing prices
"is probably Orange County 's
number one problem."
Riley prajsed a recent study or
housing costs in Southeast
Orange County for suggesting
ways lo drop building costs and,
m tum, prices.
Diedrich urged acceptance of
density bonuses, minimum-sized
lots and Umitations on the size or
houses that can be buUt as a way
in some areas lo curtail rising
prices.
"Yes, that probably means
less house than what we're used to
seeing. but it will also mean hous-
ing that middle and lower income
people can afford," the Fullerton
supervlsorsaid.
Anthony suggested that a solu-
tion to the home-price dilemma
might be to concentrate more er.
Beach Cities
·Incorporation ·
Study Slated I
The reaalbiUty of incorporatine
Dana Point, Capistrano Beach
and Laguna Nieuel will be dis-
cussed Wednesday night at an in·
corporaUon study group meetfne
in Dana Point.
The cityhood meetine is
scheduled for 7:30 p .m . in Con·
ference Room 151 at the Marina
Inn, 34902 Del Obispo St. .
Represented at the meeting
wtll be the Dana Point and
Capistrano Beach Chambers of
Commerce and the Laeuna
Niguel Homeowners· Associa-
tion.
The drive for incorporatin& the
three county areas has been led
by Stanley Weissburg, a San
Clemente resident, whose Jaw of-
fices are In Dana Point.
Weissbur g said population
growth is inevitable in the area
and is not necessarily bad. If
wealth is brought to the areas.
the tax rate would be low. he
said.
Additional information on
Wednesday's meeting is availa-
ble by calling the Dana Point
Chamber of Commerce, 496-~
or Hans ~ossen, 831-9716.
Signups Set
For San Juan
Rec . Program
ReaJatratlon for San Juan
Cal)ilt.rano'1 tall recreation pro-
t ram MU betln Saturday at 9
a .m . 1n clty ball offices. 32400
Paseo Adelanto.
Stp.-up1 will be open unW noon
Saturday and will continue from
8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday throuah
Frtcl11 unw Sept. ao.
ctusee off erid through the
proaram this fall will involve
everyme from three-year-olds to
aenlor elUzens.
For edulta, tbe d\Y II offerlnt c1111ea ha CblaeH cooklnf,
bridge. disco dance, photocrapb,y ~d 1Dll11Y otlMa' tblnp.
SomlGttMJ-.fa .... elude Snatructloo tn IJmUIUea
'1ld creaUve 4ramatlc1, For
cldldnli .,. thrM to flve. the ~RI on .. a t.IJ\t tot ltory hov a a..&avt l>UPPeli:Y.
l'or more tntormatfon on
eoWMta.-tap, pboee -.ure
fort on rebuilding and r e·
furbishing exlsUng housing in the
county's developed areas.
He 1u11ested that "wh at
already stands" might be "a
great natural resource ot Orange
County" ii rehabilitated.
Clark wante<l it known that his
one-man war with noise is cen-
tering its attack on traffic noise,
"th e noise of freeways, cars,
trucks and motorcycles."
The Anaheim superviBor said
he wanted it clearly understood
that his rece nt attack on
motorcycle noise was directed at
motorcycles "without a mu!fier
that works" rather than
motorcyclists as a class of peo-
ple.
Clark said there are "laws on
the books now" which, it en·
forced, will go a long way
towards turning the noise volume
dowr. .
Schmit spent his time before
the chamber audience complain·
ing that the county's tax rate
didn't plun1e far enou1h this
year.
At the outset of thll year's
budget hearings, the Garden
Grove supervisor said county de·
partmenl heads should be made
to reduce their budget proposals
a blanket 10 percent.
HQwever, during the budget
hearings that followed, Scltmit
did not make a budget cut pro-
posal that was adopted by the full
board.
When it came time to adopt the
budget and set the property l8it
rate, for the third straight year
Schmit was not present ~either
endorse or reject what his fellow
supervisors determined was to
be the county's 1977·78 budget·
tax rate package.
Bridge Collapses APWI .....
Rescue workers attend to childrl'n beneath the t" isted
remains of a pedestrian bridge that was knocked down
by a c rane working to widen the street below. Six
elementary school children were hospitalized in Lan
!)ing. Mich .. this morning after falling from the walk\\ ay.
'Nobo.dy Would Delp'
mind M""' 70, Waits 15 Hours for A.id
DELRAY BEACH, Fla <AP>-
A 70-year-old blind man who mis-
takenly got off a bus in the wrong
city waited lS hours on a bench
while passersby ignored his
pleas for help, police said.
"I've been sitting here in the
hot swi all day without food or drink and nobody wtll help me,"
Easton Vickers told police who
ca me to hia aid.
"Fifteen 'peop1e passed by me
and l aald I wu blind and needed
help, but they Just ignored me.··
hesald.
Vickers told pollce be left r.oam1 by bua Wednesday mom-
..rg, headed for West Palm
Beach, about 50 miles lo the
north. But he got off at Delray
Beach, 19 miles short of his
destination.
When he discovered he was in
the wrong city, be Celt around for
a bench and sat down about five
blocks ffOm the bus station near
the main part of town. The tem-
perature reached near 90.
"l cried for people to call
police but nobody 11atened. 1
f',..,_PageAJ
STUDENTS
decline· in kindergartners. ••
Sanchis said.
"If the pattern <of decline>
holds," be said, ''we will bave
shown a decline lhtoucb all
grade levelt." .
But district officials are stilt'
waltina tor the Qrst bell to rlne on
M~~ay.
didn't know where I was so l
prayed and hoped help would ar-
rive," officers said he told them.
Vickers had a while cane, was
well dressed and clean -shaven,
police said.
"It was a 1ad 1;ighl ... we took
him out for a hot meal," said
patrolman Howard Goldstein.
On Thursday, police put him on
a bus for West Palm Beach.
Irvine Satellite
Proposal Backed
t
/
l'
By PIDUP ROSMARIN
OllMOlllf PlleUC.ff
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. has
given his personal support, and
pledge of assistance from
hims~lf and scien ce a nd
technology assistant and former
astronaut Rusty Scbwetckart, to
an Irvine Unified School District
satellite communications pro-
posal.
The district seeks a $50,000
grant from the National Institute
or Education to develop • twO..
way televised satellite com-munication system between
Irvine and Spartanburg County
School District No. 'T, Spartan·
burg,S.C.
Irvine students will be able to
bounce their sound and video im-
ages off exiatinl educational
satellites already orbiting the
earth. ~owinl them to see and tallt directly with students in
Spartanburg.
District officials said grant air
proval includes the neceuary
r.deral permils to use the 4
s a t.elli t.es.
In.a letter to Superintendent of
Schools Stan Corey. Governor
Brown wrote:
"I am pleased to add my
personal support to your pro-
posed Irvine-Spartanburg com-
munication satellite projecL
"The possibilities or sharing
human experience and broaden-
ing the understanding of people
around the planet through the use
or satellites are virtually limit-
less. -·
"Through the cooperation or
the school Systems of Irvine and
Spartanburg, along with their
supporting communities, your
proposal can be the leading edge
of a wave of the future which will
bring people around the globe
closer together."
The proposal also has won the
backing or the governor of South
Carolina, James B. Edwards.
The Irvine school district has
considerable experience in· the
field or two-way educational ca-
ble television.
THE FOOTBAJ,J_, SEASON
..
You are. possibly ,,ow in the process of shopping for
carpetJng, and have been talking to sales people at two or
three stores. If so. yoo no doubt feel fike a .. football,·· bounced
around with a bevy of conflicting stories.
Which ls the best carpet fiber? What is the best texture for
your use? 'M\at kind of padding should be used?
We think you will detect the straight answers at Alden's.
Wew been helping people score "touchctowna In Orange
COuntY.for over twenty yess., · · •
--
DAILY ~I.OT l SC
·Ge~ _NeWc HOP' •
4'a t ••
Senate Rejects. Ba~ Seeks Warning Note"' .....
Te•
arp•l•e
tfay Force
Be With You
l'UZZBUSTERS: l now cer
talnly agrt.-e "'•th one or my col·
leagu~ ht-re on the paper .~ho
o~served the other day that
POiice radar traffic enforcement
11 popping up everywhere
There I was the other morrung,
t.ooling alone good old Pacific
Coast Highway in my usual
grump-into-work daze. My mind
was doing about one-half revolu
tiOn per minute. 1 was groggily
reviewing what I 'd read in the
morning news and speculating on
whe ther or not the coffee
machine would be working when
I got to the office.
About then I was rolling into a
sector of the coastal route where
the speed li mit drops in just a few
blocks from 55 to 45 to 35 miles
per hour.
Then abruptly, it happened
I GLANCED UP on a hilly
sidestreet and there he was.
The motorcoµ was parked on
the hill, silting astride his
macrune, a radar gun pointed at
the tughway.
All or a sudden my pre-coffee
dulled mind came to a full alert
-as full as 1t gets. anyway.
"Good Lord," I said aloud to
the empty seat at my right.
·'HE'S PO I NTI NG THAT
THING RIGHT AT ME."
Now even with your mind in
the early-day glops, you should
know that by the time you see the
~fficer with the radar gun, It 's too
l ate. He's already got you
clocked and recorded. You are
either busted or you're home
free.
So for the next few blocks, driv-
ing ever slower, it was rear-view
mirror watching time. Is he com·
ing to get me? Do I see red lights
in the sunrise? flow much will
this one.cost?
He did net come get me.
TJDS LEI> ME to the con-
clusion that CA) He couldn't gel
his motorcycle started; <B> He
was just using his radar for prac-
tice; (C> He was in a benevolent
mood <unlikely); (D) Hq had dis-
covered a more interesting
target; or (E) I wasn't speeding.
Trouble was, I didn't really
know which conclusion was cor·
ri!ct. I'll never know. I had been
driving along in the doldrums, j~st sort of floating with the flow of traffic. I didn't really know
what my speed was when I final·
1)' s potted the motorcop with bis
S\ar Wars radar pistol.
So it was home free this time;
not knowing whether you'd been
right, wrong or indiffer ent.
One thing is clear. There is
s omething most dis quieting
al>out seeing one of those men of
the law alongside the road, point-
ing that electronic bazooka right at you.
I guess that's why a number ol
companies are making a mint by
&e 11 in g de vi c ea 11 k e the
"Fuzzbuster" which you install
dn your duh board and It alleged·
lf gives you an early warnlna on
police radar with a buzzer and
~shing li&ht. ·
The electronic age clearly has
'fin its clutches.
"ANY MORNING NOW, ) ex· JJ~ct to come to work and find my
b9ss pointing an electronic pistol ~tme.
It wUl be telling him if I have tPY brain turned on yet.
WASKINGTON CAP> -Dlel &odu and othtr productl con·
talnlfll aaccharin are Ukel1 to~·
maln on atore •b•lvea for at teut
nother l8 month.I, but the,v prob-
ably wUl have to carry a tancer
warn1n1 almllar to that p.rtnt.t on claamto packqet.
While there 11 11reement on
the need for a cancer warnJn1, a
fierce conercsalonal ll1ht ls de·
veloptng over whether manufac-
turers should allo be tequlred to
include a similar wamlna when
they advertise products contain·
1ne saccharin.
THE SENATE VOTED fff to 7
Thul'lday to block a aovernment
ban on saccharin, whlcb had
been scheduled to take effect Oct.
1. The vat. al4o approved tbe re-
quirement that cancer warnings
be placed on all products contain·
lnl the arWlcial 1weetener.
Vending machines selling auch
products also would have to post
the wamlns, as would displays in superm~keta.
Durlns the 18·month ·
morJtorium on the saccharin
ban, the aovernment will study
health risks and benefits of the
No K nown M o tive
4 Chil~en Kille"'
A.lone in How
CLIMAX SPRINGS, Mo. CAP>-Four children were shot to
death while their p arents were away from their home in an isolated
rural area, police said. ·
Sheriff's officers say they have uncovered neither a motive nor
u suspect in the slayings at the home in the Missouri Ozarks.
"I DON'T KNOW IF ANYONE broke in or not, '1 said Deputy
Sheriff Joe Vauhn. "There's no evidence of any forcible entry.··
The victims. the children of Mr. and Mrs. George Swift, were
two girls, approximately 15 months and 2 years old, and two boys, 12
and 14 years old.
He said the names of the victims would not be released pending
notification or a relative.
The bodies were d iscovered Thursday evening. "We responded
to a call that there might be an injured party at the residence,·· the
deputy said.
VAUGHN SAID HE KNEW WHO made the call but declined to
identify the caller. ''It.wasn•t a neightbor. We really don't want lo
release that information."
Three of the bodies were found In the house and 'he lou~ one
of the boys, WjlS found in the backyard. Vaughn said all were
believed to have been shot with a small-caliber weapon.
All were fully clothed, Vaughn said. The deputy said he did ndt
know how close the victims were to their assailant when 14ey were
shot. He said they were not tied up.
The home is in a rural area along a s tate highway, Missouri 7
·'There really aren't any close neighbors.•'
75e i n 3 ¥ears
House Backs Hike
In ~inimum Wage
W ASmNGTON <AP> -The House of Representatives is sending
the Senate legislation to raise the minimum wage paid miJliona of
American workers by 75 cents an hour over the next Ulree years.
About 3.1 milllon persons work for the current $2.30 hourly
minimum wage, which will ao to $2.65 in January if the Senate aarees
with action taken by the House
Thursday. This would mean a $14
weekly raise for people working
a 40-hour week. (News analysis,
Page AB.)
The raise to $3.0S by 1980 would
be the most siiable slnce
Congress passed the firs t
minimum wage legislation dee·
ades ago. A similar bill already
has been approved by a Senate
coqimittee.
JtfeziftJ Celellrate•
MEXICO CITY {AP> -A half·
million celebrants crowded into
the capital's main plaza Thurs-
day night to watch President
Jose Lopez Portlllo ring the
traditional bell of 'freedom, com-
memorating independence from
Spain 187 years a10.
Lopez Portillo •ppeared on the .
balcony of the National Palace
for the time•honored re·
enactment ol Father Hfdalao's
signal of Mexican ·freedom in
1810.
Fare Cid Anf'!eHCI
WASHINGTON (AP> -
Travelers with flexible schedules
can fly from New York to London
and back for $280. The plan, ap.
( I N SHORT J
proved Thursday by the Civil
Aeronautics Board, will be
especially attractive to teachers,
students and others who spend
large chunks of time in Europe.
Under the plan, passengers
can name the week they want to
fly but not the specific day. What
they'll get ls a fare $346 cheaper
than the normal New York·
London roundtrlp coach tare of
$626.
l'lolellee K.fU. JS
BOGOTA, Colombia <AP>
Police battled scattered groups
or rioters in Bogota early today
as Colombia ·s worst violence
since the 1948·1958 civil war sub-
sided. Labor leaders whose na-
tionwide strike set off the dis~
turbances vowed to conUnue
aeltatlng for higher wages.
Fifteen persons died and more
than 120 were lnju.red in two days
of lootlq anci rioUng that be1an
durtna a 24·hou.r strike Wednes·
dar qalnat President Alfonso
Lol)a' aovemment.
I
Cool weather COnthiueS • b • , law Temperature. 'frigger Tlruntfento,mu
artificial sweetener, which has
been linked to bladder cancer in
laboratory aulmala.
THE SENATE·PASSEI> blll
probably will win approval by
the House, which gels lo acl on it
next. House membera have aone
on record as favorinf the delay
on the saccharin ban. They voted
for such a postponement ~rlier
this year as part ofo¬her piece
or legislation -a tactic the
Senate didn't go along with at the
time.
While there 1s wide~pread con-
RIM 'E•
Opening day crowds at the
Pendleton ~Ore.1 Roundup
t h i s w e e k s a ,,. J o h n
McDon a ld of Red Bluff.
. Caljf .. take on u Rrahma
bull. The-r odeo continues
through Saturday.
gressional support~or elaytn,s the ban and requ:irin wamina on nccbuin produ , the real
controversy ls over vef\11ln1.
The Senate strip from the
bill a provision that would have
required cancer waratnaa 1n
printed advcrtittna or tn radio or
tele\lialOIJ oonunerdala for pro-
ducta contalnln8 aaccbarln.
THAT ACfJON prompted Ule
blll's aponsor, Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy (D·Mass. >;to repudiate tile leaf,slatlon. Kennedy said al-
lowing sacc'barin pro{lucta to be
advertised without jpproprtate
wamings "goes against the rec·
ommendation of every health
e:ltpert in this country.·•
Kennedy satd a warning on
saccharin products isn't taOOUlh
to alert consumers to the risks of
using the sugar substitute.
He tried to get the Senate to re-
turn the bill to his Senate health
s ubcommittee, but wben that
fa iled, on a 89 to 24 vote, Kennedy
voted against the entire blll.
Kennedy and others who want
the advertising warnings -In·
eluding the Carter admlnlstra·
t ion -are looking to the House to
re vive the proposal. A House
health subcommittee has ap·
proved the saccharin legislation,
but without such a provision, in a
hill that goes before the full
House Commerce Committee for
a vote next week.
APWl ......
RAPE SUSPECT
Oscar Edward Kendall
Av edon Imposter
Suspect Arrested
W ASHING'ION <AP> -Police arrested a man Thursday ni1ht on a
r ape charge and said they believe he ls the man who has been im-
personating fashion photographer Richard Avedon as part of a con-
fidence game.
Police in a number or stales have been teeking a man who ttas beeo
posing as Avedon, allegedly ·
swindling at least 30 women out ·Detective Joe Satterfield said
of money while promising them Kendall was charged with a rape
careers in fashion modeling. in Waabington three years ago in
Metropolitan Police detectives which the assailant claimed to be
said the arrest came after a Avedon. ... ·
bartender told police that a Authorities 'iatd they bad ls-
customer resembled a photo· sued a natlonwlde bulletin
graph of the alleged Avedon Im· earlier Thursday seeking Ken-
personator and that the man dall in connection with the
"was representing himself· as Avedonlmpersonation.
the famed photographer.
. POLICE I DENTIFIED the
m aB an-ested Thursday night as
. Oscar F.dward Ke;9_dall, 133, of
Queen Creek, Ariz.
A PHOTOGRAPH OF the al-
leced irpposter appeared with a
story Thursday morning in the ' Washington Post:
•
ONE DAY ONLY
E :
FINE QUALITY ORIGINAL OIL PAINTINGS
ALL PAINTED IY PROFESSIONAL ARTISTS
f,
.
I
Hicks' Ouster Denied
Cella Loses Battle
Over Prosecutor
0.11, ...... lt ..........
LOSES IN PRE·TRIAL MOVE
Defendant Cella
TO GET SEPARATE TRIAL
Defendant Evans
Younger in County
Public Concern
Urged in Crime
'CITIZENRY MUST HELP'
Attorney General Younger
Wiggins' Seat
Sought by
~yor of Brea
Rex D. Gaede, the mayor or
prea, announced Thursday he is
a candidate for the 39th
Congressional District seat being
vacated next year by Rep.
Charles Wiggins (R.FulJerton >.
Wiggins plans to retire.
Gaede, 46, becomes the second
entry in next June's Republican
primary. He joins Assemblyman
William E. Dannemeyer, 47, <R·
Fullerton>, who anno11nced his
candidacy two months ago.
Gaede, director of the county's
Child Guidance Center,
describes himself as a
Goldwater·type Republican.
Mayor Gaede has served on the
Brea City Council for two years
and was formerly a president and
trustee of the Brea·Ollnda
Unified School District.
Kicking Qff hla campaign
Thunday in Santa Ana, Gaede
accused Dannemeyer of "un·
fortunate opportunism.. tn run·
nlng for another post so soon.
after beine elected to the Al·
sembly la.st November.
Gaede also •xi>rnaed concern
over the influx of llle1al aliens
from Mexico and the increuing
burden it places on welfare pro-
&rams.
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of t11e 0.11, rllet It.ff
Crime cannot be held in check
as long as the citizenry leaves the
whole job to law enforcement
personnel, state Attorney
General Evelle J . Younger
declared Thursday.
Speaking to the California
Crime Prevention Officers As·
sociation at Anaheim's Dis-
neyland Hotel, the state's chief
law enforcement officer said the
key to stopping crime is com·
munily involvement.
Younger, currently considered
an active candidate for the
California governorship, also
said a uniform buildinC code In·
creasing security of commercial
and residential structures is a
needslty.
''If you're gomg lo legislate
safety requirements In case or
fire or earthquake, why not do
the same for security against
crime?" Younger told his au-
dience.
The attorney general said,
however, efforts to toughen
build.Ing standards to make life
tougher for burglars have run in·
to a solid wall of opposition from
the building and protection In·
dustry lobbies.
"Tbe economic experience or
recent years and the continuing
impact of inflation .and
budgetary constraints . • • has
importatnt lmplicalions for
crime prevention ln the future,"
Younger told the group.
"It makes essential a more de·
liberate al)d committed declalon
by local communities to share
with law enforcement its
responsibility to maintain or·
der." be said.
.. The community must be will·
ihg to accept responaibWty and
recognize that the community
must decide what level of
criminal behavior ls acceptable or tolerable and then exert com·
munlty control,'' Younger said.
The third annual trainine con·
ference for crime prevention of·
ficers drew nearly 300 such of-
ficers 'from police departments
throughout the state. The aa·
soclaUon ls divided Into northern
and southern membership 1ec·
tions. 4
Officer Stan Bressler of the
Newport Beach Pollee Depart·
men\ la president of Ute 10Uthem
t hapter.
Contract Ratified
SAN DISGO (AP > -'l'he San Dleco Teachers AsaOciaUoo W
rautled a contract aereeinent
neCQUat.ed lut week.
One·tlme Orange County
political power Dr. Louis Cella
lost another court battle Tburs-
dsy when Superlor Court Judge
Warren Knight refused to oust
District Attorney Cecil Hicks as
Celia's prosecutor.
Cella's attempt to have Hicks'
office taken off his case and
replaced by the state Attorney
General's Office centered around
an alleeation that the district at·
torney Is biased against him.
Judge Knight ruled otherwise.
He said defense lawyers ac;ting
on CeHa's behalf had failed to
show sufficient bias. _
That ruling means it will be a
deputy district attorney from
Hicks' office who will prosecute
Cella next month wben he slands
trial on multiple thud related
charges.
Last year, a rederal jucy in Los
Angeles found the former county
political kinamaker and two co·
defendants guilty or federal tax
and Medicare ofrenses connected
with the bilking or fonds from
two hospitals once controlled by
Cella.
The 53·year·old Santa Ana
physician is free from a pending
five-year prison sentence handed
him until the outcome on his con·
viclion appeal Is known.
Since that conviction, Cella has
spent a lot of time in Orange
County Superior Court as bis at·
torneys made a long series of
pre·trial motions.
A Cella co-defendant did win a
point Thursday.
Stephen Evans, e Js>rmer ad-
ministrator at Mer~y General
Hospital, Santa Ana, was told by
Judge Knight that be will be
given a trial separate from Cella.
Evans' attorney, James Rid·
det, appealed for the separation
because or what he said was the
massive amount of publicity sur-
rounding the doctor as his
political and financial empires
began crumbling in late 1975.
Cella 's demise as a potent
force in Orange County politics
came in January 1976 when
/kderal and county grand juries r si'multaneously indicted him on
multiple fraud related charges.
In 1974, Cella was Callfomla's
number one political donor when
he contributed more than $500,000
to at least S4 candidates and
polltlcaJ causes.
Heaviest recipients of Cella 's
political generosity were state
Controller Ken Cory and county
Supervisor Laurence Schmit who
toeetherraked in almost $400,000
Cella dollars for their '74 cam·
paigns.
Johnny Irked
Over Potties,
Seeks Silence
DETROIT <AP) -Lawyers
for Johnny Carson want a Utica,
Mich., tollet maker to slop talk·
in& about the television star's
$1.2 million suit over a line of
"Here's Johnny!" portable
toilets.
The attorneys contend Earl J.
Braxton, owner of Porta.John
Corp., is uslng the lawsuit to gain
publicity. - -
Carson's lawyers asked U.S.
District Court Ju4Je James
Churchill today tO bar Braxton
from talldne to reporters about
the "!I'ont1bt.'' abow host's suit.
Carson sued Braxton last
January after he brousbt out a
llne of portable toilet. called
"H&re'1 Johnny!~· That ls the
phrJ.Se used by ahnouncer Ed
McMahon to tntrOduce Carson oh
the 1V abow, and th.Huit charges
trademar.k infrtnet ments.
Canon'• Jawyert conten~
Bruton bu ''rel\llarJy elven out
interview• to newspaper re·
porters" about the case. They
submitted u evidence copies or
alx new.paper artlcl~ on the suit and a newspaper ad Braxton ran
citing the .Wt ..
Braxton'a lawyer, Allen M .
Krau, calla the request for a gac
order unreasonable and says he
caanot stop reporten from ask·
lng quest1onl.
'nle swt bu held up Braxton'•
application for a U.S. trademark
oMhe Phrue, whlch ta DeDCUM
the outcc>me of the 1ult. BrutOii
aald lie bu about 8,000 tolleta,
Whl.Ch bi rent.a tor uae ~t COil·
atrudbl attel, •Portl events Qd otberJ)laca.
...........
JOHN DAVIDSON GETS CLOSE TO HIS AUDIENCE
In Cincinnati, a Benefit for the Survivors
Remembe~ng .
Wncert :4i~ Fire Survivors
• CINCINNATI (AP> ... Minrue Butsch clutched a yellow rose
while her 70·year.old husbfind, Pius, broke mto a grin at Singer
John Davidson's jokes.
For a few moments Thursday night, the memory of their
daughter's death m the Beverly ffills Supper Club fire last May
was tucked away, but not forgotten.
' THE BUTSCHES AND THEIR FIVE grandchildren were
among a crowd of 7,000 attending a benefit performance at
Riverfront Stadium for the 200 children whose parents were
among the 164 killed in the fire at the Southgate, Ky., night club.
"This is a wonderful thing they've done here." Butsch said.
''I'm glad someone had the courage to put it on."
Davidson, walling backstage when the fire broke out, didn't
talk about the blaze that killed Jlis music director, Doug Herro.
"JOHN'S HERE TO HELP THE children. not to talk about
the fire,·· a spokesman said.
Davidson sang love songs and talked about visits to the Ohio
State Fair, and sometimes clowned with fans. who gave him a
standing ovation when he came on stage.
Wallace 'Cruel?'
Told by C~rnelia
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP)
Cornelia Wallace says the reason
her marriage to Gov. George C.
Wallace broke up wa~ "not in·
compatibility but the com·
mission ot actual violence and
cruelly" against her by Wallace
''with danger to her life and
health."
Mrs. Wallace made the accusa·
lion in a countersuit for divorce
filed Thursday, three days after
the governor filed for divorce on
grounds of incompatibility.
There was no elaboration on the
charge.
WIUTE ADELIA
'White flowers bacltfd by glouy
foUqe mate WI lhnab a bandlome addlUm to any laDd~ape.
1 Gallon Sl te
Reg. S:l.49
SALE ,
CAROB TREE
This compaet srowln1 1hade tree
adds coolnm to any land•c•a;»e·
SALE
She asked the court to award
· her a divorce and to grant her
"liberal sums as alimony sup·
port and maintenance." •
Flight Sold Out
NEW YORK SP) -About two
dozen budget·minded, spur·of-
the·moment travelers showed up
at Kennedy Airport on Thursday,
hoping to fly to London at the new
Pan American World Airways
cut·rate $256 round·trip rate for
standbys.
PANSY, VIOLA
It's _planting time ~r t hese
fall·phlnting favorites ••aln· Grat for landacape or container UM.
Pony Pack /
8 Plant.s Re1.a
SALE
ROSEBUSH
We're doalnc out our 1ummer
aeledloo of three-year-old No. 1
roe-. Hun')' whlle they lut!
SALE sr•
DAIL y PILOT A3
Allaway
Gets 2nd
Jury Try
Convicted mass murderer
Edward Allaway's defense at·
torney refused Thursday to let a
Superior Court judae decide if Al·
!away was insane when be shot
und kllled seven people on the Cal State Fullerton campus 13
months ago.
As a result, Judee Robert
Kneeland set Nov. 2 as the date a
new jury will be selected to sit ln
judgment at Allaway's sanity
heanng.
One jury heard 10 days of saai· ·
ty testimony. but was unab)e
after four days of deliberation to
decide if Allaway was insane
when he kllled the seven people
and wounded two others on the
university campus.
Judge Kneeland declared a
mistrial last week and sent the
"hopelessly deadlocked'' jury
home.
The same jury earlier bad no
difficulty finding Allaway guilty
of six counts of first degree
murder, a single count of second
degree murder and two counts of
assault with u deadly weapon.
Bunny, 'Body'
Tales Mark
Anniversary
A mannequin in the morgue
and a jackrabbit that laid off
three workmen were amon~
stories told of the construction of
San Clemente General Hospital,
which celebrated its fifth an·
n1versary this week.
Two of the hospital's founders.
Ralph Graham and Joe Long.
each had a son working there
during the final construction
phase. A practical joker had pul
a mannequin in the hospital
morgue, and it was the two boys
who found it.
They didn't stick around long
enough to fifid out the •'body ..
wasn't a corpse, Long told a
group of 38 employes who were
honored this week for their five
years of service with the
hospital
The jackrabbit story involved
three workmen, who were told to
walk through a larate concrete ·
pipe to work.
•'Watch out for snakes.
though;· the foreman lold them.
"There are a lot or rattlesnakes
Jn this hill country."
The three men proceeded ~ cautiously into the pipe openi.Dg,
one out in front with a gun, in
case of snakes. The other two
followed, with fiashligh.ts.
When their light hit a jackrab·
bit, hiding in the pipe, the
frightened animal sprinted
away. The gun went off, and the
hospital found themselves sad·
died with their first workmen's
compensation claim.
The gun blast had hurt the
men ·sears, said Long.
PERIWINKLE
(VINCA)
Pull1·blot1omed ptaot1 of thl1
tender perennlal add ln1t.ant color
to the 1mten. SALE
4" Size
Rea. 19'
TAM JUNIPER
Super-lar1e and full 1peclmens or
this trouble·fret. low·arowln1
conifer at a baraaln price.
I Gallon Slzo
Re1 .•. 9t
SALE
SALE
s4"
Orange Coast
EDIT ION
VOL. 70, N O 2S9, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A
TOday'• £lo•mg
N.Y.Stoek8
N TEN CENTS
Supervisors Relate County Problenis .
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of -O.Oly ...... $Utt B oard o r S uperv i sor s
Chairman Thomas Riley said 1l
Is time for county residents to
''balance priori lits" so that as
Orlltlie County gro\\ s ·'it will re
main what it L'i · •
Supervisor Ph1hp Anthony said
that perh<£p!> too much uttentaon
is being paid to the county's un
developed art.'..es und not enough
lu ll!:o inner cit ies.
Suptrvisor Ralph Clark
declared war on noise.
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich
called at a !>hame that Orange
County's young are forced to go
to Riverside and San Bernar
J1ono Counties for housing the)
can afford.
And Supervisor Laurence
Schmit said the county's 1977·78
property tax rule s hou ld be
,.,.wt ... fMt•
FLORIDA SUPREME COURT DENIES STAY OF EXECUTION
Former Orange County Kiiier John Spenkellnk
7 (Ex-countian Denied
I • Stay of Exec'utton
TALLAHASSEE. Fla. CAP) --
The state Supreme Court today
denied a stay of execution for
John A. Spcnkelink, the 28-year·
old California man whose ex-
ecution has been set for Monday
morning.
The court upheld the death
warrant signed ear lier this week
for Spenkellnk, who tJtas con·
demned to die in the electric
chair for the murder of a drifter
in a Tallahassee motel room.
The attorney general 's otfice
said there wns nci indication of
how the seven justices voted
after hearing oral arguments
late Thursday. Nb written opln·
ion was issued immediately.
Spenkelink 's attorney Andrew
Graham asked the court lo spare
the condemned man's life lem·
porarily so he could pursue other
appeals. These would have to be
in the federal court system
Blind Man •
Lost, Finds
Nobody Cares
DELRAY BEACH. Fla <AP)
A 70-year-old blln~ man who mis·
takenly got off a bus ln the wrong
city waited 15 hours on a bench
while pauersby Ignored his
pleas for help, police said. '
"I've been sitting here In the
hot sun all day without food or "# drink and nobody wlll help me."
Easton Vickers told police who
came to his aid.
"Fifteen people passed by me
and I said I was bUnd and needed.
help, but they Just i1nored me,"
hesald.
Vickers told police he l~ft
• Miami by bus Wednesday mom·
tn•, headed for West Palm
Beach, about 50 miles to the
north But M 1ot off at O.lray
Beach, 19 mil•• abort of bls
destination.
Meanwhile, U.S. Dis trict
Judge William Staff or~ of
Tallahassee called a hearing for
late today on Graham's attempt
to win a stay in the federal courts
if he fails in state courts.
Speokelink, 28. a prison
fugitive from Buena Park, Calif ,
was convicted of the Feb. 4, 1973.
murder of Jo sep h
Szymankiewicz. 43, a traveling
companion who was an Ohio
parole violator.
Sixteen death row inmates re
fused to eat at Florida Stale
Prison Thursdav in an apparent
i.how of s upport for Spenkelink
Prison Superl:ntendent David II
Brierton said the 16 had been on
Spenkelink's wing before he was
moved lo an isolated ·'death
watch .. cell a few steps away
from the electric chair.
Graham is appealing a circuit
<See EXECUTE, Page A2)
lower. but mentioned that. in
three yea~s as a county
supervisor, he hasn't been pres·
enl when county budget and tax
rates have been adopted.
Orange Count y's f ive
supervisors' remarks came at
the annual county Chamber of
Commerce "meet your county
supervisor .. lunch.
Riley sounded the keynote of
he five man forum when he
pointed out that Orange County Is
California's fas test growing
county In terms of population,
housing starts and employment.
"Th e growth means op-
portunities In employment and
living, .. Riley said. "Also, at
raises questions about the long-
term future.
"As we grow.'' Riley con·
tinued. "living becomes more in-
teractive, ttungs that people do
increasingly artect others .••
Riley explained hls comments
by saying what might b4J one
man's profit& might be another
man's pollution.
"An airport can mean public
service to one man and public
nui~ance to another man," the
Newport Beach supervisor said
as he urged ·'an intelligent
balance of confli cting prioriUes
lo provide mwmum benefit lo
Parkland Vote
' ; {.'·, ,#\,..
NB Needed .,.
lil
By JOANNE REYNOLDS Ol 1.,. Dally P'lie. Staff
Newport Beach city coun·
cilmen, who were shocked when
told of the cost to s mall de·
velopers or their newly enacted
parkland law. won 'l be able to
change it unless voters approve
the amendments first
City councilmen are slated to
disc.·u.ss the financial impact of
the new luw during their Monda)
afternoon studv session
City Allornt•y 0f'nnis 0 Nt.>11
!>a11I to<lav that. sho11l1' coun
cilmcn decade to alter the new
luw to give the small developers
financial relief. they will have to
~o to the voters first.
"The city council has no
authority to amend an ordinance
hased on an initiative," the at·
torney said . "Amendments must
be approved in a vote of the peo-
ple .''
City councilmen asked for a re-
port on the financial impact of
the new law laat week after they
were told the developer or a
seven-unit condomlnlum project
on the Penll)sula would have to
pay a fee of $22,000 because of the
new law. ·
The measure. enacted in May.
is based on the parkland in·
itiative pui;hed by Dr. Gene
Atherton The initiative upped
the a mount of parkland de·
velopers must give to the city
from two acres per l.000 ney.o
residents to five acres per 1.000.
But the new law also sets up a
formul a. 'to be applied to de·
velopers of projects or less than
50 units, where the land dedica·
lion would he loo small to be
useful
Dave Dmohowski, who pre
pared the report to be given coun-
cilmen on Monday, said t he fees
will not be assessed against
projects of rour units or less
But when applied, the fee wall
be based on the median fair
market value per acre of existing
neighborhood parks, a value he
!>el at S286, 189
In an example prepared for his
report. Dmohowski showed that
a development of 15 units on an
acre and a half oC land races a
park dedication fee of $68,685 in
addition to all other city fees and
taxes.
The funds collected are to be
used to buy parkland in the
neighborhoods where the de·
,·clopment. occurs .
O'Neil said thP city council's
only avenue of action to provide
r elief from the costly new
parkland fee would be to
eliminate other fees and taxes.
such as the city"s building excise
tax. · .#
The excise tax, which is levied
at a .rate of 20 cents per &Quattl
fool of building, is used to raise
funds ror parks, libraries and fire
stations.
According to City Manaeer
Robert Wynn , the Balboa
Peninsula condominiums of lm·
mediate con cern would be
lapped for about. $2,700 In excise
taxes in addition to the $22,000 tn
parkland fees.
., ..........
BUDGET DIRECTOR, ATTORNEY FtHD TIME FOR CHUCKLE
Bert Lance Confer• With Legal Advlser Clark Clfford
High Ethics Met,
Bert Lance '.Ees.tifies
WASHING'tON CAP> -l~lst
lng that "I have done more than
stay narrowly within Ute law,"
Bert Lance testified t~y that
his conduct both as a banker and
as budeet dlr~ctor meei. the h{&h
ethical standards itet by Prest·
dent Carter ror his administra-
tion.
I,,,ance also said he withheld
nothing about flnanclat dealings
from Senate committee staffers
who interviewed him before eon·
firmation bearings oa hta ap-
POintment as budget director.
t
Ref erring to hls meetln1 lasl
January with tbe committee
staff, Lance said: "It was one In
which we bad a total and full dis·
clo1ure." .
Chalrman Abraham A .
Rtbicoff (D-Conn.). Hid that
after Lance finiahea bla
tesUmony, possibly on.Salurday,
members of the comroiuee staff
would be called to t"U(y ~e.r
oath about thelr diacuaslom wlth
Lance.
Pressed by a Republican s~·
<See LANCE, Pa1e All
the greatest number at tbe leas~
cost."
Both be and Dledrlcb told the
chamber of commerce audience
that skyrocketing housing prices
·'is probably Orange Counly'a
number one problem."
Riley pralied a r ecent study or
housing cos ts in Southeast
Orange Countg for suagestin«i
ways to drop buildin« costs and. CW GROWTH, Page A!)
All'WI,.......
OPERA STAR DIES
Marie Calles, 53
Stormy
Performer '
SucCurnbs t
PARIS <AP> -Maria Callas.
the American-born prima donna
fam..S for her lyric soprano, her
fiery t•perament and her
romance .,-ttb AristoUe Onassis.
died toda)' at her Paria bome.
Shewas63. .
Her tong-time artistic director,
Michael Glot!, said she suffered
a heart attack in her apartment
on Avenue George Mandel and
was dead when doctors arrived.
Sl)e had not appeared on stage
since 1973, but continued as a re-
cording artist.
Born in New York City to
Greek immigrants , trained in
Athens and propelled to fame in
Milan, La Callas was worshipped
by d~votees as their •'Regina del
Mond,o" <Queen of the World)
and their "Divina,'' and critics
hailed her for bringinf operatic
acting to new theatric a heights.
But the dark·eyed diva also
gai~.fame as "opera's bad gtr "
S with managers and
conduc rt -including well·
publicized duels with ibe
Metropolitan Opera's Rudolf
Btnc. She walked out of
performances, one Ume cutting
short a gala performance• of
Bellini's "Norma" attended by
the president of Ita ly, and
fought with other performers\''r . "Of course I am difflcult;1~e
once aaJd. "An antst who U\es
sincerely to meet the de.m~
operatJc music must work under
extraordinary tensions. 1$\lt I
kftow -and my friends ~d
say this for me -that I am mt a
monate,r." ~
T)le rai:nance wltb Onii is
fellowed the stormy brt!akUp of
her marriage to Glovannl B1at·
Uata Menesbinl, a wealthy Milan
lndu.strtaUst 26 }'ears her seoior
(See CALLAS. Pa11AZ> ...
J
I
I
J
JI
• 0
0
!
• "rtday. S•ptamber 18, 1111
~PflW'!AJ
N DAIL V l'ILOT
Mitchell
Hip Need
Reported
CALLAS. . .
WASHING TON <AP>
Form•r Ally. C'°n John N
M ltchell nec."tb artificial r plac•
ment ul l\ls right hlp beeause ol
dec~nuatlve artbrlll•. hls
hueyer said today In a petition
a:tkinl h.ls release from prison.
M tlchell ha~ !>crved nearly
lh1 Ct' month:. of an c1ghl·year
t.-rm for h1~ role in the cover·uv
of the Wutergate affair
His pelll.wn for lentency was
filed with U S District Judge
John J . Slrica who imposed the
sentence i.n February. 1975
Lawyers for HR. Haldeman,
formerly the White House cblef
or staff, also asked for reduction
of bis eight-year sentence, plead·
ing with the court not "to punlsh
Haldeman to lbe point of destruc-
llon."
\ Mitchell 1s serving his lime at
the federal minimum security
facility at Maxwell AFB in
Alabama. Haldeman is im·
prisoned at Lompoc. Neither is
eligible for parole until late
December 1979.
"Recent X·rays taken at a gov-
ernment facility show that the
defendant's right hip has suf·
fered severe destructive de-
. ~enerative disease," Mitchell's
motion said, adding:
"This condition has become ex·
tre mely painful to defendant and
his mobility has become severely
impaired. There is no treatment
for such condition short of special
su rgery which re -
quires ... replacement with
substitute materials."
In addition, the motion said
that Mitchell suffers from an
enlarged heart ''apparently the
result of hypertension."
Mitchell told the judge he "is
truly sorry for and regrets lbose
actions of his that resulted in his
con viction."
llaldeman wrote a personal
lt'ltcr lo Sirica expressing "his
contrition and his repentance as
well as hts determination ... lo
avoid anv !'.uch actions an the
fut un·." his petition said.
Heart Group
Joi:ns County
United Way
The Amer ican Heart Associa-
tion has left Orange County·s
AID-United Givers program and
joined the county's United Way
organization
•bo cUac:overod lbt our lCht.
atar,.labted 1lrl with • mqnift·
ff.ft\ 1opr and culdod ber to
ttardom.
ln 8lnnione, lta.ly, frttadl ot
K..elai, D IO aald b9 WM bedn&dtn after 1ui#ertn1 a ~art
ullack MV ral month• •10 and
wa1 not lmmcdlatolv tald ot Mlu
Callus' deuth.
Hor nino·year romance with
Onawla ended when tho ahipplnc
ma1nate married Jacqutltne
Kenned)' In October 1968. Mlu
Callu claimed ahe harbored no
111 fet:Ungs for JacQueline, but
never met her and continued t.o
see Onassis until hls death in
March1975.
"He is my best frtend," sbe
sa1d in 1974. "He is, be was, and
he always will be."
She said she never married
him because "I think Jove ia so
much better when you're not
married."
ln 1970, reports circulated that
Miss Callas auempted suicide
and was taken to a hospital. But
she denied it, sulng a m agazlne
that reported the alleged attempt
and saying: "I have no idea
where these rumors come from, I
am very well."
Miss Callas was born Dec. 4,
1923. 'nd spent what she
described a s a miserable
childhood as a fat, ungainly girl
in the Washington Heights sec·
lion of Manhattan. beginning
music lessons at age 8.
In 1937 her mother took Maria
-14 years old and 200 pounds -
to Greece, where they we re
stranded by the outbreak of
World War II. There, she won a
sc h o larsh ip at Athens
Conservat ory a nd began a
serious study or music. A year
later she made her debut in
Masc agni 's "Cavallerla
Ru.sticana."
She continued studying in New
York after the war, and after two
years the Met ofCered her the rote
of Madame Butterfly. But she
turned it down because of her
weight, and went instead to
Verona, Italy, where she met
Meneghini.
The industrialist spent vast
sums and her career flourished.
The break-through came in 1951
with a mas terful "Aida" at
Milan's ram<.>d La Scala followed
by a contract with the opera
house. At the same time she
slimmed down to a shapely style-
setter and soon leet Menegbini for
Onassis.
Drown J7ictim
Identified
As Writer
Orange County Sheriff's in-
vestigators have Identified the
body of a man found noatJ.ng a
mile off San Onofre Sept. 8 as a
United Way spokesman said
Thursday that the AmerJcan
Cancer Society is expect.ed to
fol low suit in the next 10 days. This would be another blow to Hollywood writer who had rented
AID·United Givers, which has a plane ln Santa Monlca a day
been suffering declining dona-before his naked body was found
lions since United Way ofOrdh~thesea. County cut its AID ties in June of Douglas Winrleld Scott Jr .• 42,
1976 o( Hollywood, wu found offshore
Both fundralslng groups com-
pete heavily for funds derived
from employe payroll deduc-
tions.
AID funds have dropped 25 per-
cent to 30 percent since United
Way broke away.
Robert Clifford, president of
Air Ca.Ufornia and chiarmao of
the this year's United Way fund
drive, hag set a llOal o{ $5 million.
So far, Uruted Way bas raised
about $1 million this year, Clif.
•ford said.
Wrong Builder
A story in Thursday's Daily
Pilot Incorrectly identified the
. builder of the Newport Terrace
condominiums as Landmark
Homes.
. The builder or the three-year-
. old project was Leadership
Jlorpes. The Dally Pllot regrets
: fhe error.
N
DAILY PILOT
by people aboard a cabin cruiaer.
Investigator W.E. Stanabury
said the man wu bellUed ac·
companied by a 1econd
HollyWooct resident, whoee body
bas not been recovered.
"We think there•• a Jood
chance another man was with the
pilot when the rented plane went
down.•• Stansbury said.
He said Scott. rented a plane in
Santa Monie: a on W edne.aday.
Sept. 7, but did not bother to me a
flight plan.
"We think he might have an-
ticipated the crash," Stansbury
said, "and aet the plane down
soCtly, taken of( bl• clothes and
attempted to swim ashore.
"That's just an assumption,"
he added. He aaid Oceanside of·
flcials found a left landlng gear
from an airplane on SeJ>t. 9, but
said Orange Count1 otrlclala did
not. hear about that discovery un-
"til Thursday.
"It looks like it la from the
rented plane,•' Stansbury &aid.
He said Scott is divorced.
Sheriff's deputies would not
identify the name of the possible
pusenger on the plane.
UuterAide
HaJJ Praise .
For Nixon
Protective Car
• •
in lum. prices. Wedrich urged acceptance or
densUy bonuses. mlnimum·$lted
Iota and Umltations on tbe 11&• of
houses that can be built as a way
in some areas to curtail rising
prices. ,
"Yes, lbat probably means
lest house than what we 're used to
seeing. but ll will also mean houa·
ing that middle and lower income
people can afford." the Fullerton .
suQervisorsaid.
Ant.bony suggested that a solu·
tioo to the home-prlce dilemma
miibt be to concentrate more er-
r o rt on rebuilding and r e-
furbishing existing housing ln the
county's developed areas.
He suggested that ·'what
already stands" mighl be "a
great natural resource of Orange
Co\UltY" if rehabilitated.
Clark wanted it known that his
one-man war with noise is cen-
tering its attack on traffic oolse.
. 'the noise or freeways, cars,
trucks and motorcycles."
Governor
Dealt 2
Setbacks
SACRAMENTO CAP> -Gov.
Edmund Brdwn Jr. suffered a
double defeat when tbe slate
Senate killed a $4.2 billion tax re·
lief bill and Brown's propo1al for
construction of tbe Ped~ral
Canal. The closing session Thursday
or the 1977 session was the
Democratic governor's worst
day in the legislature slnce tak-
ang office 32 months ago.
While Brown denied the votes
were a personal setback. be bad
personally negotiated terms of
both bills and put the (\lll weight
and prestige of his olfice behind
the effort to enact them.
Their defeat leaves a $4.3
billion school bill as Brown's only
major legialaU ve acblevement or
the year. He lntends to sign that
Saturday.
The votes were 21-15 on the tax
relief bU1 and 21-16 on the water
projects bill. Each measure re-
quired 27 aye votes.
A Rhodesian woman and boy sit on the bumpe r of tht•
Tusker. a bulletproof. mineproof vehicle. in Salisbury
White Rhodesian families have been trading in cx
pensive family autos fo r equally expcnsh·c "armon·d
cars to protett themselves from terrorist attacks .
The Anaheim supervisor said
he wanted it clearly understood
that his recent attack on
motorcycle noise was directed at
motorcycles "without a muffler
that works" rather than
motorcyclists as a class of peo-
ple.
Clark said there are "laws on
the books now" which, if en-
forced, will go a long way
towards turning the noise volume
down. ' At the outset o( this year's
The tax bill proMised annual
rebates averaging $239 each for
6 .2 mlllion California
homeowners and $115 each for 2.6
million renters. It also 'would
have phased out the business in-
ventory tax and imposed new
taxes on corporate profits, new
homes and new cars. NB Jazz Ellsemhle
Gets New Sponsor
budget bearings, the Garden
Grove supervisor said county de·
partment heads should be made
to reduce their budget proposals
... blanket 10 percent.
However. during the budget
hearings that followed, Schmit
did not make a budget cut pro-
posal that was adopted by the full
board.
But it was attacked on all
sides. Some foes said it did too lit·
tie for homeowners. Others said
renters were shortchanged, that
the new taxes were not need~.
and that the bill would lead to
deficits and more tax lncreases in
three to five years.
Th e Newport Beci c h
Parks, Beaches and Recreation
Deparlment is t a king over
sponsorship of the Newport Jazz
Ensemble, a proeram for young
musicians.
Directed by John Lindfors, the
ensemble formerly operated
through the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District.
This year It will perform under
auspices of the city department,
although the program remains
open to school age musicians
from any community.
The program will be expanding
this year, according to Bob
Granger of the recreation depart·
ment. He said that, in addiUon to
the jazz ensemble, a second
group will be formed for less ex-
perteoced s-tayfrt.
To be called the Newport Big
Band. the new program iaopen to
studen1' ln grades five to 12 who
have a le~t one year experience
with their Instrument. n.e ICOUP will concentrate on
the music of the Big Band Era.
Interviews will be held Sept. 28 at
7 p.m. at the Ensign Middle
School band room.
The Jazz ensemble itself is
open to students in grades eight
throu11b 12 with at least three
years experience. The emphasis
ls on playing, performing and im·
provlslng Jazz.
I',.._ Page Al
EXECUTE. •
Jud1e'1 refusal Tuesday to order
a stay of execution. The attorney
contends lbat jurors opposlng
capital punishment should not
have been excluded from the
trial and that f1ortda judges dis-
criminate between whites and
blacks in handlng down death
sentences.
In what ma y have bee n
Spenkellnk's best hope or avoid-
inl execution Monday, JusUce
Joaeph Boyd raised tJte lsaue of
the U .S . Supreme Court
challen1e filed by three other
death r ow inmates of state
clemency procedures. The court
has not decided whether lt wlll
\akethecase.
"If we execute this man on
M.Obde.y aPCS a few days later the
Supl'eme Court of the United
States says Gov. Reubln Askew's
clemency procedurlf are wrong,
what answer do y8'1 have for
that? .. Boyd asked Atty. Gen.
Robert Sbevtn.
' ·Forum Dates
Reversed
lntcniiews for this group also
wi 11 be held Sept. 28 al Ensign.
Rehearsals for both groups will
be held once a week and a fee or
$10 a month will be charged to
cover expenses
Both groups will concentrate
on playing in performances.
For further Information. con
tact Granger at 640-2271
Talk Planned
By Publisher
l''rancis Dale. the n ew
publisher of the Los Angeles
Herald·Examiner will be the
gpeaker al a Town Meeting Tues·
day mornin1 a t the Newport
Beach Sheraton Hotel.
Dale wall talk abo u t
ne wspa pers at the breakfast
m ect1n1 s ponsored by the
Newport 'Harbor Area Chamber
of Commerce.
Reser vation s for the $3
breakfast may be made through
the chamber offic es, 644-8211.
Changes Set
ForCormcil
Newport Beach city coun·
cilmen are changing their meet-
ing schedule for the next six
weeks.
Councilmen. who normally
meet on the second and fourth
Monday of each month. won't be
doing that again until November.
The next council meeting will
be held Monday at 7: 30 p. m. in ci-
ty hall.
The t.wo meeUnp in October
will both fall on Tuesdays. Coun·
cilmen will meet. Oct. 11 and Oct.
25.
When it came time to adopt the
budget and set the property tax
rate, for }he third straight year
Schmit was not present to either
endorse or reject what his fellow
supervisors determined was to
be the county's 1977·78 budget-
tax rate package.
LANCE •••
10! about his overdrawn check-
ing accounts in Calhoun, Ga ..
Lance replied --as he has insist·
ed earlier --that the issue wasn't
a matter or ethics.
"In a place like Calhoun.
where you bave a practice or
~yerdrafts . overdrafts as
such is not an ugly word,·· Lance
.1old Sen. William V. Roth CR·
Del.).
" .. To simply say overdrarti.
constitute an unethical situation,
that is not the case.
"There was no attempt to hide.
no attempt to coverup anything,··
tempt not to disclose anything,··
Lance said of the controversy
over his Calhoun checking ac·
count.
Roth began his questioning by
quoting Carter 's statement that
staying narrowly within the raw
would not be enough to s alifsy the
e thical standards of his ad·
ministration.
Lance responded that he had
met that. test and "certalnJy, I
have done more than st.y nar-
rowly within tbe law."
During bis appearance Thurs-
day, Lance said the question or
whether he bad withheld In-
formation from the committee,
when his nomination as budget
director was before tlJ.e panel last
January, was the most serious of
the issues raised against him.
Lance insiJted he had told the
committee staff about hiJ finan·
cial dealings. including the over-
d r arts.
On the $4.2 billion water proj-
ects bill, lbe Peripheral Canal
was the focus of opposition
although it only amounted to $640
million of the total.
Most or the money. was
earmarked for four major new
Northern California reservoirs
which were barely mentioned in
ten,«thv floor debate. , Tbe vote was one of many de·
feats for the 43-mile canal, which
bus been on the drawing boards
15 years.
NB Security
Guard Nabbed
A In 'J!he/ts ~··~
A man employed as a security
guard was spending his off hours
Thursday as a burglar in the
Peninsula Point section or
Newport Beach,. police alleged
today.
Adam Martly Paige, 18, was
taken into custody Thursday
morning near the intersection or
L Street and Ocean Boulevard by
Det . John Furrow who had gone
to the area lo investigate the
theft of camping gear from a
garage.
Furrow explained lhat police
had been given a description of
the suspect's veblcle Crom that
garage burglary and he was sur-
prised to fand a ca matching that
description in the neighborhood.
/\ few m.tnutes later Det. Fur-
row claimed, Pili&e appeared
carrying several bottles of liq-
uor. Furrow alleges the liquor
bad just been stolen from another
nearby garage. Paige listed his employer as a
Santa Ana security guard firm ~
and gave a Palm Springs address
to arresting officers. He was being held today in heu
of $.5,000 ball.
THE FOOTBAI,I, SEASON
You are paasibty now in the process of shoPping for
carpeting, and have been talklng to sales people at two or
three stores. If so, you no dout?t feel like a "football.'' bounced
around with a bevy of conflicting ories.
"Which Is the best carpet fiber? What is the best texture for
your use? What kind of padding shOuld be used? ,
We think Y®. will detect the straight answers at Alden's.
We\/e been helping peopte score .. tOUChdowris In Orange
COOfltY. for over twenty~ ·
-___ . .........,.....,
Saddlehaek
ED ITI ON
VOL. 70. NO 2S9.' SECTIONS, '2 PAGES
Supervisors Relate
8)' CAR\' GRANVILLE
Of .. o.I" ...... , ....
Bourd or Supe r visor s
Chairman Thomai. Riley said 1t
,.., llme for county residents to
"balance pr1or1t1es so that a'>
Oran~e County grows .. 1t will re
main what 1t b
Supen 1sor Ph1hp AitUhony said
that perhupi. loo much attention
11> being paid to th<.' county's un
developt:d ar~J~ and not enough
to 1l& inner l'ille11.
Supervisor Ra I ph C lark
dt!clared war on noise.
Supervisor Ralph Diedric h
called 1l a shame that Orange
County's young are forced to go
lo Ri verside and San Bernar·
J1ono Counllei. ror housing they'
can afford
And Supervisor Laurence
S<·hm1t :.aid the county's 1977·78 property tax rate should be
Death Warra nt Upheld
lower, but mentioned that, in
three years as a county
supervisor, he hasn't been pres·
ent when county budget and tax
rates have been adopted.
O r a n ge County 's fiv e
supervisors' remarks came at
the annuul county Chamber of
Commerce "meet your county
supetvisor '' lunch.
Ril ey sounded the keynote or
the five·man forum when he
Stay of ExecutiOn
Afternoon
N.Y. S toeks
r
TEN CENTS 1
County ProhlelllS
pointed out that Orange County is
California's fastest growing
county ln terms of population,
housing starts and employment.
''The growth means op·
portunities In employment and
Ii vlng," Riley said. "Also, it
raises questions about the Jong·
term future.
"As we grow." Riley con-
tinued. "ijving becomes more in·
teractive.\thlngs that people do
increasiJ'\81Y affect others."
Riley explained hls comments
by saying what might be one
man's profits might be another
man's pollution.
"An airport can mean public
service to one man and public
nuisance to another man," the
Newport Beach supervisor said
as he urged "an intelligent
balance or conflicting priorities
to provide maximum benefit to
the greatest number at the least
cost."
Both he and Diedrich told the
chamber of commerce audience
that skyrocketing housing prices
·'is probably Orange County's
number one problem."
Riley praised a recent study of
housing costs in Southeast
Orange County for suggesting
ways to drop building costs and,
<See GROWTH, Page A2 >
Denied for Slaye_r .___
Victim's
Identity
Traced
Orange County Sheriffs in-
\'estigators have identified the
body of a man found noatine a
mile off San Onofre Sept. 8 as a
Hollywood writer who had rented
a plane in Santa Monica a day
before his naked body was found
in the sea.
Al'WI ........
TALLAHASSEE. Fla. IAP1
The stale Supreme Court today
clcnicd a stay of execution for
J ohn A Spenkchnk, the 28-ycar-
old California man whose ex·
ecution has been set for Monday
morning.
The court upheld the death
warrant signed earUer this week
for Spenkelink. who was con-
demned to die in the electric
chair for the murder of a drifter
in a Tall ahassee motel room.
The attorney general's office
said there was no indication or
how the seven jui.lices voted
after hearing oral arguments
late Thursday. No written opin
ion was issued immediately.
Spenkelink '11 attorney Andrew
Graham asked the court to spare
the condemned man's life tem-
porarily so he could pursue other
appeals. These would have to be
in the federal court system.
Meanwhile, U.S. District
Judge William Stafford of
Tallahassee called a hearing for
'late today on Graham 's attempt
to win a stay lh the federal courts
if he falls ln atat.e courts.
FLORIDA SUPREME COURT DENIES ST AY OF EXECUTION
Former Orange County Kiiier John Spenkellnk
Spenkelin k . 28, a prison
fugitive from Buena Park, Calif.,
was convicted of the Feb. 4, 1973,
murder of Joseph
Szymankiewicz, 43, a traveling
companion who was an Ohio
parole violator. Doctor Faces Co11nt
In Diet Pills Probe
Sixteen death row inmates re·
fused to eat at Florida State
Prison Thursdav in an apparent
show or support for Spenkelink.
Prison Superintendent David H.
Brierton s_aid the 16 had been on
Spenkelink's wing before he was
moved to an isolated ''death
watch" cell a few steps away
from the electric chair.
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Ol tllo Dally l'lle4Stall
A 78·yea r -old San Jua n
Capistrano doctor, long con·
11idered a pillar of the community
by many old timers, is facing
misdemeanor charges alleging
he illegally dis tribute.cl &M·
phetamlne diet pills.
Dr. Paul H. Esslinger , who has
practlced medicine in the Mis-
sion City since the early 1930s, is
tree on his own recognizance
pending a pre.trial conference
Oct. 12 in the South County
Munic ipal Court in Laguna
Niguel.
He was arrested m rriid·Aug ust
after a five·month investigutlon
of his offi ce practices by agents
of the California Office of
Medical Quallty Asauran,e.
John Urso, chief of that con-
s umer agency's Santa · Ana
~ureau , said today evidence
gathered during the long probe
was turned over to tbe Oranae
·County District Attorney for
prosecution. Accordinl' to Urso. t~ ch•rges
Partly tloudy throuah
SJturda,y with lows tonlalit
5$ to 62. Hlths Saturd1y:>1
70·l076.
INSIDE TODAW
An tMidc IOolc ot Sundo11'•
opcnhtO of the N~soporr
..J Horbor MUHUm II °" P• CJ
"O/CJa.W~.
against Esslinger include nine
counts of unlawfully prescribing
amphetamines, one count of
altering medical records.and two
counts of improper labeling or
drugs.
If convicted of the charges,
Essllng_cr•cou ld face a term in
county jail and /or a fine.
The doctor was not available
for comment today on the
charges pendinit aitalnst him. Ills attorney, John D. Cochran
of Irvine, contended his client is
innocent but would not elaborate
further on the case.
The slate Investigation re·
volves around allegations that
Esslin ger was distributing diet
pills to patients without conduct·
ing physical examinations be·
forehand. •
That contention Is also the core
argument of a wrongful death
suit filed against Esslinger by a
Riverside County widow, stem·
ming from her husband's death
from a heart attack last October.
Graham l!!eallng a circuit judge's refus uesday to order
a stay of execu on. The attorney
contends that jurQrs opposing
capital punishment should not
have been excluded from the
trial and that Florida judges dis·
<See EXECUTE, Page AZ>
TOP S4.US4GE
TAKES POWDER
CHICOPEE, Mass. <AP I
What was billed as the world's
la rgest Polish sausage is miss·
Ing.
Officials of the Chamber of
-Comtnerce say that when
Chlcopee Provision Company
workers went to pick up the 107·
pound, 10.foot-long sausage and
put lt on display at the Eastern
States Expos ition in West
Springfield, all they found w,ere
empty tr;ays where the klelbUa
had been the centerpiece of the
rourth aMual kielbasa festival
here.
'J;'he aul\, however. is separate
trom U)e stale ease a1alnlt the
doctor. "We know nothin& abo1Jt. ' <See DOC.TO•, P•1~At>
Al'Wh·••1e
BUDGET DIRECTOR, ATTORNEY FIND TIME FOR CHUCKLE
Bert lance Confers With.Legal Adviser Clark Clfford
High Ethi'ci -Me i ,
Bert Lance Testifies
WASJ-llNGTON <AP 1 -Insist·
ing that ''I have done more than
s,tay narrowly within the law,"
Bert Lance testified today that
his conduct both as a banker and
as budget director meets the high
ethical standards set by Presi·
dent Carter for his adminlstra·
tion.
Lance also said he withheld
nothing about. financial dealings
from Senate committee staffers
who Interviewed him before con-
firmation hearings on his ap-
pointment as budget direct-0r.
Refen1ng to his meeting last
J a nuary with the committee
staff, Lance said: "lt was ooe in
wblch we had a total and full dis-
closure."
Ch airman Abr a ham A.
Roth began his questioning by
quoting Carter 's statement that
staying narrowly with in the law
would not be enough to satifsy the
ethical s\andards of his ad·
ministrati1>n.
Lance responded that he had
met that test and "certainly, I
have done more than stay nar-
rowly within the law."
During his appearance Thurs·
day, Lance s aid the question of
whether he had withheld in ·
formation from the committee,
wllen his nomination as budget
director was before the panel last
January, was the most serious of
the issues raised against him.
Lance insisted he had told the
committee staff about his fin an·
cial dealings, including the over-
d r a fls, during his banking
career.
Douglas Winfield Scott Jr .• 42,
of Hollywood, was found offshore
by people aboard u cabin cruiser ..
I nvest1gator W. E . Stansbury
said the man was believed ac·
co mp anied b y a s econd
Hollywood resident, whose body
has not been recovered.
"We think there·s a good
chance another man was with the
pilot when the rented plane went
down," Stansbury said.
lie said Scott rented a plane in
Santa Monka on Wednesday,
Sept. 7. but did not bother to file a
flight plan.
"We think he might have an·
licipated the crash." Stansbury
said, "and set the plane down soft~. taken off his clothes and
attempted to swim ashore.
"That·s just an assumption,''
he added. He said Oceanside of.
ficials found a left landing gear •
from an airplane on Sept. 9, but
said Orange County officials did
not hear about that discovery un·
lil Thursday.
''It looks like it is from the
rented plane,·· Stansbury said.
Jie said Scott is divorced .
Sheriff's deputies would not
identify the name of the possible
passenger on the plane, saying
the Los Angeles man has an a il·
ing mother who might be ad-
versely arcected by the news.
"We've got a missing persons
report out on him,·· Stansbury
said.
Outlook He althier
BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP) -
The spread or cholera in the Mid·
die East a ppeared to lose
momentum today, but health or-
fl cials throughout the Arab world
continued to take precautions
and urge public vigilance.
Ribicorr <D·Conn . l, said that
a ft er Lance fini s h es h is
testimony, possibly on Saturday,
members of the committee staff
would be called to testify under
oath about their discussions with
Lance.
Pressed by a Republican sena-
tor about his overdrawn check-
ing accounts In Calhoun, Ga.,
Lance replied -as he has insist·
ed earlier -that the issue wasn't
a matter of ethics.
Stormy Performer~
Maria Callas, ·Dies
"In a place like Calhoun,
where you have· a practice of
overdrafts . . . overdrafts as
such is not an ugly wotd," Lance
·told Sen. William V. Roth <R-
Del.).
" ... To simply say overdrafts
constitute an unethical situation,
that is not the case.
"There was no attempt to hJde,
no attempt to coverup 1nythlna,"
tempt not to disclose anythinf,"
Lance said of the controyersy
over his Calhoun checking ac-
count.
.. ...
.42 DAILY PILOT se Worke-r~'~s~=~~~ Blind
Ordeal
Taro Scale
Mt. Everest Death
Probed
S nt• Ath1 voll1 l" Ut' 1n
\ c·'>llUttltnN tt11 rkulh t>f • loudang
dudl v.urkt•r "'bt.l'>l' t ru~hf'd und
hfel«!:>lt bully w•" f11unc1 an u lJ uh
tompaclor Thur.,d.t) bv 1 fellow
"orkt..,. ld~ntlftf'tf .. ., tht.· \ H'tlm wi.i.
John Tu)lor Wri.:hl, 4!:1, uf 701l
G unthcr St . ...,,.111 t ..a \nu
Ac~-ordmit to ..i t•oroncr a. re
l><>rt, Wra~ht ·, crumpled body
was found 1ru.1dc the lra.!!h c:om
pactor Ln .t work ) ard al Goodwil l
lndu.:.lne.. 2702 W hftb St . S<ln
ta Ana. about 7 a rn
Whal h~ pol ICC baffled is that
Lhc victim dPJMr<:nlly tumbled
mto the t·omµactor .. omet1me
ufter 6.45 p m Wednei..duy while
his work time card i.hows that he
left "ork almor.t an hour earlier
A coroner's deputy said the ex
set cau.cic of Wright ·s death ha'
not yet been determined.
Until 1t 1s and until a reasona
ble determ10at1on of how he was
trapped in the powerful comlJuC
tor 1s mudc, Sc.inta Ana police
said they will conl111uc to in-
\'e:,l1gale the my.sterwus deuth.
From Page A J
EXECUTE. •
criminate bdween whites and
blacks in handanl{ down death
sentences.
In what may h ave been
Spenkelink 's best hope of avoid·
inf! execution Monday, Justice
Jo:,cph Royd raa~cd the issue of
th e US Supreme Court
<:ha ll enge ftl"d by three other
death row inmates of s tate
clemency procedures The court
has not decided whether it will
take the case. •
"Ir we exec.:ute this man on
Monday and a few days later the
Supreme Court or the United
Stales says Gov. Reuban Askew's
demenl'y procedures arc wrong,
what answer do you have for
that?" Hoy<! a!.kcd Atty. Gen.
Robert Shevan.
Meeting Set
On Safety
Of Crosswalk
An Alicia Parkway school
crosswalk in Mission Vlejowruch
parents claim as unsafe will be
discussed Monday by Capistrano
Unified School Dist rict trustees.
The school board meeting 1s
scheduled for 7: 30 p. m. In district
offices, 32972 Calle Perfecto, San
Juan Capistrano.
Parents presented a petition to
the school board this week.
signed by 28 people, asking the
school district to provide busing
at least for the younger children
<k ind er~arten through third
l(rade >. who must cross the six·
lane highway to get to Barcelona
Hills Elementary School, near
Lake Mission Viejo.
Dis trict s uperi nte ndent
Jerome Thomsley will recom·
mend t o trustees that the
, parents' request be denied.
OJ
-~wi .......
A OURNMENT TIME BRINGS SMILES TO FACES OF CALIFORNIA'S LAWMAKERS
Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy (left), Art Torres Reflect Happy Mood
l'ro• Page A I By Senate -. GROWTH ...
In turn, prices
Diedrich urged acceptance of
dens ity bonuses, minimum.sized·
tots and limitations on the size of
~ouses that can be built as a way
Double Setback
Jn . some areas to curtaiJ rising .. •
prices .
Dealt tO Brown
"Yes , that probably means
less house than what we're used to
seeing. but it will also mean hous-
ing that middle and lower income
people can afford," the Fullerton
s upervisor said.
Anthony suggested that a solu·
tion to the home-price dilemma
might be to concentrate more cf
fort on rebuilding and r e ·
rurbistu.ng existing housing in the
county's developed areas.
He s uggested that "wh at
already s tands" might be "a
great natural resource of Orange
County" if rehabilitated.
SACRAMENTO (A P > -Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr. suffered a
double defeat when the state
Senate killed a $4 .2 billion tax re·
lief bill and Brown's proposal for
construction of the Peripheral
Canal.
The .clC1s1ng session Thursday
of the 1977 session was th<:
Democratic governor's wor~t
any in Lhe legislature smce tak·
ing office 32 months aJ,?o.
While Brown denied the votes
were a personal setback, he had
personally negotiated terms of
both bills and put the full weight
and prestige of his office behind
the effort to en a cl them.
deficits and more tax increases 1n
three to five years.
On the $4.2 billion water proj·
t•<·ts bill, The Peripheral Canal
was the focul> o r opposition
a lthough it only a mounted to $640
mi I hon of the tola I.
Moi.t of lhc money was
l'armarkcd for four ma,ior new
Northern California reservoirs
\\ h1ch were barely mentioned in
lengthy floor debate.
Tia.: vote "'a:, one of many de·
fr ab for the 43-male canal, which
hJ:-. bet•n on the drawing boards
15 year~.
Related
DELRAY BEACH. Fla (A P)-
A 70-yea!'-old blind man who mis·
takenly got off a bus ln the wrong
city waited lS hours on a bench
while puaersby ignored his
pleas tor help, police said.
"I've been &ittina here ln the
hOt sun all day without food or
drink and nobody will help me."
Easton Vickers told police who
came to his aid.
•'Fifteen people passed by me
and I said I was blind and needed
help. but they just ignored me.··
hesald.
Vickers told police he left
Miami by bus Wednesday mom·
ing, headed for West Palm
Beach, about SO miles to the
north. But be got off at Delray
Beach, l~ miles short of his
destination.
When he discovered he was in
the wrong citx, he felt around for
a bench and sat down about five
blocks from the bus station near
the main part of town. The tem-
perature reached near 90.
"I cried for people to call
police but nobody lis tened. l
didn't know where l was so I
prayed and hoped help would ar-
rive," officers said he told them.
Vickers had a white cane, was
well dressed and clean-shaven,
police said.
•'It was a sad sight ••• we took
him out for a bot meal," stid
patrolman Howard Goldstein.
On Thursday, police "'t him on
a bus for West Palm Bea~.
Shakeup Due
SACRAMENTO <AP> -A gov-
ernmental shakeup plan that
would dismantle the huge, prob-
blem-plagued state Department
or ttean.b has cleared its nnat
legislative hurdle. Thursday's
22-8 Senate vote sent the bill, SB
363 by Sen. Arlen Gregorio, D-
San Mateo, to Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. Clark wanted it known that rus
one-man wat: with noise is cen·
tering its attack on traffic noise,
"the noise of freeways, cars,
trucks and motorcycles."
The Anaheim super visor said
he wanted it clearly understood
that his r ecent attack on
motorcycle noise was directed at
motorcycles "without a muffler
th at works" r ath e r than
motorcyclists as a class of peo-
ple.
Their defeat leaves a $4.3
bilh.on :-.chool bill as Brown's only
maJor ll'gtslalt' e athievcmcnt of
the yNir. I It-intend-; to !>1gn th<it
Saturday. ·
Tht• votl·s V. l·rl' 21 I:> on the tax
n•hl'f bill and 21 Hi on 1hc wall'r
proJccts bill Eal'h ml•asure n ·
quired 27 aye vote~
Policeman Resigns,
Ends City Probe
Clark said ttiere a re "1-..ws on
the book.s now" which, af en
forced, w ill go a long way
towards turnmg the noise vol um~
down.
Schmit spent his time before
the chamber audience complain
ing that the county's tax ratt."
didn't plunge fa r enough thi~
year.
At the outset of this year's
budget hearings, the Garden
Grove supervisor said county de·
partment heads should be made
to reduce their budget proposals
a blanket 10 percent.
However. during the budget
hearings that followed, Schmit
did not make a budget cut pro-
posal that was adopted by the full
board.
When it came time to adopt the
budget and set the property lax
rate. for the third straight year
Schmit was not present to either
endorse or reject what his fellow
s upervisors determined was to
be the county's 1977·78 budget-
tax rate pack.age.
The tax bill promised annual .
rebJll..•s aver:.iging 5239 each for
Ii 2 m 1 I I 1 o n C a I 1 f o r n i a
homcov. nt·r~ and $115 each for 2.6
mi Ilion r<:nJers It also would
have phasc<l out the busmess in
vcntory tax and imposed new
laxt•s on corporcite profits, new
home' and new cc.irs
But al \\a:-. attacked on all
sadci.. Some foe!. said it dad too ht
tic for homeowners. Others said
renters were shortchanged, that
the nc·w taxes were not needed
and that the bill would lead t~
By ARTHUR R . VINSEL
Of tlM! O•llr ~llol Sl•ll
.An eii.:h t month probe and
h c<Jring:-. an th~ case of c.i
We~lmanslcr 1x1l1cc:m:Jn accused
of excc~:;i\ c force, including the
Christmas Duy i,hooting of 11 man
m a routine holiday disturbanct',
has ended with the officer's quiet
resignation.
Caty Administrator Carl Berry
rnnllrmccl lodi.ly the city councal
has <JCC(•pkd the decision Of CX·
patrolman llans De Haas, 29,
,.,, ho wai. rl'hl•vc•d from duty last
Apnl
The former officer '!> attorney.
Richard Kreisler. finally advised
ham to drop efforts to avoid losing
his job, a recommendallon made
in a two to one vole of the city's
Merit Commission.
Proceedings, details and
testimony taken in the lengthy
process of upholding Police Chief
Hobert Bonnet 's firlng of De
Haas In April has been conflden·
tial under terms permitted by the
Ralph M. Brown Act dealing with
governmental secrecy.
against the ciliienry.
However, it ls known and also a
matter of public record that the
fired officer figured ln several in·
cidents.
The most critical lnvolved the
Christmas Day, 1976, shooting of
a man, 21, seriously wounded
when De Haas used bis gW\ dur·
ing a holiday disturbance call.
The Orange County District At·
forncy·s office investigated in
that and at least one other inci-
dent, but in neither case was any
criminal charge filed.
One of them resulted in an of·
ficial letter or reprimand being
placed in De Haas· persoMel
file
Following Chief Bonnet's firing
of De Haas, the patrolman de·
m anded a bearing before the
three-member City Merit Com·
m lsslon which voted that he
should be booted off the force.
KATMANDU. N•pal C~P> -A South Korean
and h ls Sherpa &uide
scaled Mt Everest today
bringing to M men and tw~
women the select cl~b or
climber'$ who have con-
quered the world's highe~t
mountain, the Nepalese
Fore~inistry reported.
Ko IUlS·do became the
first Korean to stand
on top 1 the world. A
ministry s pokesman said ·
h e and Sherpa Perma
Norbu remained one hour
on the 29,028.foot summit
and then climbed down to
the camp of tbe South
Korean expedition.
Tbe previous team to
have reached the top of the
world was an American
bicentennial expedition in
October 1976.
CIA Silent
On Canal Pact
Bug Reports
WASlllNGTON <AP 1 -The
Senate Intelligence Committee
declined comment today on re-
ports that the United States elec-
tronic a 11 y eavesdrorped on
Panamania n Cana treaty
negotiators and was blackmailed
When the bugging was dis·
covered. But the panel scheduled
hearings on lhe matter.
The committee met behind
closed doors with Ambassador Ellsw~rth Bunker, a U.S. treaty
n egot&ator. who earlier told
newsmen there was no truth to
allegations broadcast today by
CBS.
Jn P1nama City. two top Pana·
mantan orficials also denied the
report.
Panamanian Foreign Minister
Nicolas Gonzalez Revilla called
the report ••terrible, incredible,
really wtld" when told a bout it in a
tel~phone interview with The As-
• sociated Press.
Fro•P119eAJ
SYSTEM ••.
With two-way television
systems in the district office and
each oltbedlatrict'1 l9 schools, it
claim1 tho most extensive such
op,ration wtth educational UM in •
tbe United states.
Mlt.suru Kataoka. technical
consultant on the project. said
the Irvine-to-Spartanburg
satellite hookup will afford hun-
dreds or "one·to-One" classroom-
to-classroom experiences.
The cross-countcy fOmmunica-
tlon will be available to the 73
percent or Irvine. and so percent
of Spartanburg, homes that have
c able television.
Kataoka des cribed it as tr'
cross-cultural exchange of ideas
and information.
• 'lrvine-Spananburg Project
participants will have first-hand
knowledge of alternative views
and a broad range of cross.
cultural, regional and environ·
mental resources previously un-
available in any direct, modifia·
ble, form," Kataoka said.
~ SVUSD Trustees
''This whole thJng has been
confidential at the officer•s re·
quest," Berry said of the lnllial
firing. the Merit Commission
hearings subsequent to it and the
specific testimony on De Haas'
difficulties with excessive force
Following that. De Haas' al·
torney vowed to appeal the de·
cision In <>range County Superior
Court. but decided not to alter re·
viewlng the whole affair and his
slim chances of winning re·
instatement for his client.
A Westminster policeman tor
eight years before be was fired,
De Haas was kept on the city
payroll pending outcome of lbe
termination hearings.
District officials in both Irvine
and Spartanburg are en-
thusiastic about the chances of
the project winning the grant.
particularly after the support of
the two state governors.
If approved, planning for the
satellite system would take about
six months.
.
Reschedule Meet
Saddleback Valley Unified
School District t.ruateea will meet
Monday, rather than Wednesday
as previously scheduled, to pre-
vent conflicts with the Jewish
holidayofYom KJppur.
During the meeting, which...W
beglnat8p.m. Monday in thedil-
trict offices, trustees will con-
sider accepting a formula to de-.
termine the amount of merit pay
salary increases given to ad-
DAILY PILOT
ministrative employcs.
Last year, the superintendent
gave raises ranging from zero to
six percent for mer\t raises
based on individual evaluations.
For this year, however, be has
apparenUy designed a formula to
determine the raises.
In other actiOR, trustees will
consider plans to install a
softball diamond at San J oaquin
Elementary School and the South
Mission Viejo Little League's re-
quest to use O'Neill Elementary
School for their games.
TM.1$lees also will consider con·
tract1ng with Human Factors
Research, Inc. to do a f ollowup
study of the June araduating
class.
p,....pflflCtJIJ
--I C~LLAS •••
O.lly ~Uot Staff -o
PHYSICIAN CHARGED
Or. Paul Esslinger
f'rota P119e Al
DOCTOR .••
e wrongful death suit," Urso
said.
Esslinger has been a doc·
tor since 19'l8 and, for years. he
was San Juan's only resident
physician.
He is remembered by longtime
residents for many g~ deeds in
the past, including lavish
Christmas parties for the com-
munlty'e chlldNn.
Only nine mqntha aio, Ed-
llnf er drew headlines 'When htl
chased two bandit.a on the run for
three miles alter they htJd ~P hi•
oftlco on C•mlno Caplstrano just
cqµthotUteold ml11lonchurch.
'With tho help of Sherttr• dt· putles, EHllngeft,racked the men dow~ and thoy were captut«l.
After that tncldent, Esslinger
noted U\at, despite 'hi• •a~ be
keep• m, never 1mokt1 e>r
drlnb, eata only one meal ' day
and WOr1tl bard. .
AltllguJh the ~ tnvestliator wOUJd not reveal ditalla or thofr lnN&~J~~ P*idJftl court ec· tloa. ~atkilll lD lbe IU""lde Count1 lawsuit alltae Ulllt Eil· Haar bJd J.GaO to 4.000 ce•• and ~·-....... °'·~-·day ,,_-... dllt ,....'! Nlan-lnl•ka~"i-._ oram· ~npialtl . .
.THE FOOTBALL SEASON
You are possibly now in the process of shopping for
carpeting. and have been talking to sales people at'-l.Wo or
three stores. If so, you l}O doubt f~l like a "football, .. boilnGed
around with a bevy of conflicting stories.
Which is the beat <*'P8t flber'l What i8 the belt texture for
your use? What kind of padding shoUld be used? .
We think YQU will detect the atralght answers at Alden's.
We've been helping peopte score ·1ouchdoWns In Or~e
County for over twenty years.
riday'• NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
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TRW.pf UCL. 1 76 + YI WlllltMt 4 60 ~·-V• Tetter. 1 1 11 tS\'1 ... ., Wit 11"9 I W I It 1•~+ 'II T•l«ltt D ' s•,-...... Wlll1tw1tr I ,. 6" ..... Tel,.., .70 4 1' ,~. ll't Wl<kat .ntt 1 61 1S • \II Tell~of 1.. ,. uv.-" w11t1kll .a. 1 J 1v. ..... Temoe11.1210 41 11ll\+ v. w lllerns 1 1 460 20 + v. T.-tr 7 tot mt-~ WlllllrO .12 t 1 ..__ ~ T~ • 1 IO'u •• ,.. WllWIO IM1' t 0111-14 Te....-,MU 16 ~ ~ Wll'll'ltl90 IS " J\>\ ... .. Tec/WtCI' A • SJ• tlV.+ ..... w1-J I ' 10 ~ ... .. t~= ... i H 1i~t ~ :1:~:S l~~': ~ 21 .... = t:; Tt"lm• .J017 "' JTh..... W &Gpf .SJ. L I itVr t 14 ltle<OI' .JO 6 ti •v.+ \It W11<Pl. 1..0111 ll 2114' ..... Teltdll t..ut 4 m "..._'" wl1<1'S 1 ,.. 1 10' 20v. + l't le""""' » 117 t•-\II Witco 1 S2 1 J6 H14-~ tei.. t JS ,_,,., . w11tro .60 s I02 1t'--v.
'hfll'ICO l 7 22S 't"'+ ~· WOlvrW JO 1 14 $\/).,,,, f •1'11'1< pfJ,90 . • 1 11 V. +a Wo!Mtc ·• 4 ,. 11 -.,.. TttOtO J., !Sa I... WllMQ) ,41\1' 1 4''t ..... T_,tlft.1' •• Jt 1"-+ 4' Woo4"9t.»10 •S ~-t
'felle<O 2 1 -llll>+ .... WetWllt IA 7 I .. S'~+ ~ T•110l'I 1,1910 tt aw.+ l'i Welwlll 2 211.. 1 ..... te11e11 ~.10 • '12 .n~ .. "' wrio~uo. tr t -¥ Ta,e.w~ tM.. • 27111-... Wu~ Al ' 10 814 + .... 'hi! U7.. 4 _,__ '-Wylaitt .ao 10 n 11'-..... Tex 2..«I • .. .. + I'> ll'ltyMUI .n 6 11 t''.+ ..., , •• ,,., 1.-0 -41 21"-"' wyty Cp • • ... ....... """* i.u11 m k-" -x-v.....z-T•. ~ 1l m Vl,.,1, X~x 1.6011 4'I Jt'll-" Te ,. ' 140 + " XT!t,t. ~ • .. ts -" 't11 ,UflJ t + 141 Va!H . S 1' 1\\\,.,1, Tft 1.AO' U I~ 1lt h!eCP , 1 2t !~ ••. \.; fllfl 1.iOM 2t tt\t.,... t•,.,,A JI!. • 11 ltY. +
e ":i'i J 44V..,.,, ~Mte .-• 11 I .. +~ • ra t no ~· ... yrt<:ll , " ....... Ttll1r J1 •• s al + "' 111111" I I 116 11"9-11'1 T••lr MO.. 1 Ullo-'-fflll'ld .40 ' It IJ .... ,
PfJC BO<!b State l'ofee
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Tbe
Clllfornla Publlo Utllltlea Com· ml111an hu urfed 1upport for a pro.
posed Sena.le v~nlon of the national enera bW that would aot. l>re-empl
1tate authority ill HtUnl utlllty rates.
It aent a wire Tbunday to members ot the Sen•~ Enern Committee iQd CaWomJa'• con1res1lonal deltJatl.oa
HYina lt btUevea th• Houa••ppi'O\"ld
bill "wtll hinder our abWty to con· tlnut our c.urrent active profram ol
rate reform oo wblcb •• ban
testiftld b9fon Con1reu."
s OAIL Y Ptl.OT ~·
Fight Fades
Stiles Hoj,es Buy Peaee
By MILTON MOSKOWITZ
Hardly a week passes wlthout some new bleats from
American coropan.lca about "Wlfalr" compeUUon lro"'-
Jopanese producers.
The chara~ la usually that that Japanese dump thelr
produda htre at prlcu below wqat these aame Items sell for
In Japan. ...
THE STEEL COMPANIES HAVt! complalned. The
televiJion set manuracturers have complalned. The la teat tQ
join the waiting chorus are Monsanto, a major chemical
producer, and E .F. Johnson, the leading U.S. mak~r ot CB
radios. I
Monsanto bas built a new plant at Chocolate Bayou, '
Texas. lo produce sorblc acid and potaasium sorbate,
chemicals that are used as preservatives In food process·
lng. The company cbaraes that the Japanese are du.mplni J
these chemicals he.re at
prices 40 percent below '\;~ -.
what they command in Money ... Japan. Monsanto saya
the viablllty or its Texas Tree
plant is threatened. ·
The U.S. Interna·
ttonal T.rade Com -
mission is investigating rising imports ot Japanese.made
CB radios. E.F. Johnson warns that it "quick action." in the
form of quotas or tariffs, is not taken, Japanese makes will
take over the American market.
However, look what's going to happen in the comln1
Christmas sales season. You are going to be bombarded
with pitches for an expensive new Japanese·made toy --
and.there won't be a v.;hlsper of complaint from U.S. com·
panies.
THE "TOY" IS THE HOME videotape recorder, which
the electronics industry is counting on to become the big
ticket replacement for color television sets. The recorder is
a unit that will enable you to to tape TV shows you are not around to catch, so you can play them back at your con-.
venience. It's capable of recording a program off one chan-
nel while you're watching another channel.
Sony has been selllna such t unit here under the name
Betamax for $1,300. The units belng moved into the U.S.
market will sell for as low aa $1,000. •
The TV recorders to be marketed here will be sold un-
der a variety or brand names -RCA, Zenith. Sylvania,
Panasonic, Quasar, Magnavox. Sanyo, the Sears, Roebuck
house label. But the variety is less than meets the eye.
WIOLE U.S. MANUFACTURERS HAVE been working
to develop a recorder, t.he Japanese have clearly beaten
them to the punch. As a result, all the units to be fielded here
in the coming months will come from two sources: Sony or
Matsushita.
• Matswihita, the world's large$t maker of TV sets,
markets under the Panuonlc and Quasar labels, but lt(
video recorders will also be sold under the RCA.
Maganavox, Sylvania, MGA and Curtis Mathes labels.
Zenith, which led the fight against the color TV Invasion
from Japan, will market under its name the Betamax re·
corders made by Sony. In addJtlon to Zenith, Sanyo, Toshiba
and Sears wm buy their recorders from Sony.
THE SONY AND MATSUSfDTA units are not compati-
ble, meaning that you wlll not be able to feed a Sony tape
cassette into a Matsushita recorder and vice-versa.
Despite the prorusion of labels then, this contest will be
basically a battle between two makes. And it wlll be an all·
Japanese affair. There are no U.S.-made sets for the
Japanese to undercut. •
Way to Cas h In
'Business' Arson
May Cut · Losses
NEW YORK CAP J -Americans are intentionally burn·
ing down their own buildings at an increasing rate in an ef·
fort to "cash in" wben they're in financial trouble, in·
surance officials say.
"Arson is a negaUve economic indicator," said Gene
Kacson, vice president of the Insurance Information
Institute. "During llmes or an economic downturn, w6
always have an upturn in arson claims."
..WE ESTIMATE THAT 11 PEI.CENT or all the fire
losses are attributable to arson," Kacson said Thu.nday.
"Arson bas grown over the last several years. But during
periods of bad economic conditions, arson doe.a rise."
The Insurance Services Offices, • 1taUstJcal organlia·
Uon. reported that fire in the United States caused an
etUmated loss of $310 million in July, the latest month for
which figures are available. That was $35 mUllon, or 12.7
percent, higher than July 1976.
The Oeure, which includes both insured and uninsured
losses, brugbt to nearly $2.3 bllllon the tot.al estimated fire
loss through the flnt eeven months or the year, up from
about $2.1 billion in the period in 1976.
(
Arson "tends to be commercial rather than
personal.'' Kacsoo said.
"IF THEY WERE
residences, they would
be apartment houtes.
D'\ore than alnJlle•f amll.Y
dwerun11," he •aid. "People very seldom bum down t.helr
own homes. We just don't find that occun very often~ It only
happens eomeUmea when someone wanu to tell their house
and can't. "U people 1tave structures thlt ate not uteful tn an
economk senae, there may be an fnductment to cuh ln,··
K1eacra aaJd. "Secondly, some people may find expemes
are bJCh and will aa~e anon u a way of 1ettlnf out from un·
d er aneaat1vultuat1on. "Jn aeneraJ, this ls accepted, by police, fire ind cov«n~
ment. oflSclall," be uid. "Durla• difficult. bualn.., cydes
we Wlll nnd w1.rehou1e fires at a blper level tllau durins
proepwdul Ume1
KACSON 8A1D INsuaANCE CO•PANil8 dOft't pay
claima "when it'• ob•loualy anon•• but tbat ln ma.ny cases
"it ia very bard to tell''. Industry apoUlmeo also HY -that an eatJmated 1,000 people~ lclOed ln dellberat.b' HUlns ut~ 7ear.
PaUI Sawin, 1pokelmM,for the N&Uoril111'lre Protet·
Uon Aaoclation Jn Bolton, a n=t cq&ftfution tbat
•at.bent IUIU.tl~ and prOrid• aUoe Oft tt.r., aald
anon ''baa been irowln.t at an abloh1tely •taall'riDI rate.
•'JN UM.;WS Da .. CtM'otanoa.•• IM1ald. ''In ms. welaad t'4,100CM&~ kill ln 'Mw• •.r-
mlWGit.. • .,.1&••~ '• .._.,_ ... ~
"
Je DAILY PILOT
..
BIJflflafJe l11•ured -Mosdg
DEAR PAT: l 'm pla nnlngt.o visit my parents in
N e w York for a month this fall. Because of my long
stay, I 'll have to take a qulte a lot of clothing a nd lug-
gage. Do airlines prov ide insurance coverage for
baggagc,ordo 1 havetogelmyown?
G.P .• Huntington Beac h
On domestic flights, the carrier's maximum
liability is $500. If your baggage Is worth more, you
may obtain addition al coverage by dedartn& excess
value and paying a fee rorextra coverage.
T~Wflranu A re Guaranteed
DEAR PAT. I sent a •nighl letter recently and
was ver y upset to learn later that delivery had
taken eight h o ur!>. Doesn't W estern U nion have to
o bservedehvery time limits?
11.H .. Newport B each
Although It's not generally known, Western
Union offers money-back guarantee on delivery
lime for all types or domestic services. Night letters
are supposed to be delivered within one and one·
half to two hours by phone, or within five hours If
de llvt'red by hand. Mallgrams should be expected
to arrive In the firs t business mall delivery the day
after being sent. If you dJd not get service within
thei;e time Ii mils, you are entllled to a full retund or
you may have your message resent at no charge.
Contact your local Western Union customer service
operator to file a claim.
What Doe• •Ko•Mr' Mean?
DEAR PAT: I love k osher m eats. but it seem s
that u sually they a r e more expensive than other
varieties The sam~ thing applies to other foods
t u beled "Ko~her ... Are these foods p r epar ed t o
.Jewis h custom , or docs it amount to special recipes
heing used'' ·~
B N., Dana Point
The u~e or the "Kosher" label is regulated.
Kosher meats must be prepared In accordance with
ritual. The way an animal or fowl Is kllled, how it
must be dressed, treated and prepared for human
consumption has to be In accordance with Jewish
law an4:.custom, according to the CaUfomJa State
Bar Association. Adverth1ln1 to the contrary Is a
crime punishable by a $300 fine and up to 90 days In
jail.
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS aUSINIH
NAMl ITATIMllMT
The fOl_I,. llef*'t ere clOI~ ""ti· neu ••: NEWPORT INSULATION1
NEWPORT POOLS, ?1> W••• SI .. Le~~~~~~~~!.5~u Wm St ..
Y9UNS.etll,C.111 '1U1. •
Ed J.CkMln, 241 Vlt111rt•. Colle Mew. c.tlll n.21.
Tiiis ""•lneu 11 conducted by • Qetltrel P"rt-lhlp, Bruuk.M<Oow•n
Tl\il •'-1""""'\ WH flt"° wllll 1"41
County ci.r11 o1 Orenoe Co<lntyon S.pt, 2. ltll.
1'114'1 Pullllt'*' Or-Coeat D•lly Piiot
S.1>1 '· 1•.11. JO. 1'11
PUBLIC NOTICE
Cl'·S109
NOTICE TO CREDITORS SUl'E lllotl COU llT 0, T ...
ST A TE 01' CAL"OllN I A 1'011 T .. ECOUNTYOl'ORANGE ....... mo
E•l•I• of EDWARD FROST
HOOGOOH, DkHtm:t.
MOTIC.E IS HERE9Y GIVEN to ltw
creolto" OI Ille etiove ,..,,,.d 0.<•-1
111•1 ell P"rloOfls hevl~ Cl•lfTIS egeln.C
Ille u la ~<•c»nt •r• r11QUlred lo Ille
lllem. wll1\ ,,... MC~ry "°"'tiers, In
Ille Olflal Of Ille clerk OI , ... •llO ......
lllletl court, or to pr•.-.• them, wltll 1M
ntus .. n••O<Kl>•tr" lo Ille undeolonecl •I< IOWllll•rn E Powell. Pellll-r, •1
1600 Dow ~I , • 110. N-POrl BHCll,
CelllMnl•. which I• Ille Pi•<• ol b\lsl· neu OI ,.,. ur>aenlQned In •II m•lters
~rtelnlnq to '"" •••••~ ol s•ld Of<•· dent. wltl'Wn tour months •lttr 1ne first
pubtlc.Honot lhl•nollce
Oe1e<1SeP1tml)er 13, 1977
WILLIAME POWELL
PetillOfl•r.E••cutorot II!•
Will Ol lhll •tiove ,..,,,.d
cle<.OW.1 DENIS L. KASTEH uooo.,..s.., #110
He_,.., INcll, CA
Tel: 1714)1JMtU Alt-y , .. ~9llll011•r
Pubtl-Or~ '°'"" D••lv P1101. Sf.Pl ll, 23, 10.0cl 1 1'11
40SI II
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBIJC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTICE
l'ICTIT10UI auttN•ll
HAM& ITAT•---T
l'ICTI TIOUI aUSINH.. Ttw loOOwl"9 --..... dolllO 111111-
NAM« STATIM•NT neu u : .
T "41 lotloWlno --en dot"9 llli~· TOO\. TECH, 1116 ~ovle, Golla neu as ~ Ge41fom1•'21U7 ICEV CL&:AN~RS, Jlll1 So. 8'1~\Cll flohr\ J . Leflc; U'• r , 1H
Aw ., Senta Ana, CA EOgeweter, 8etbN. Celllomte nMI
Robe<t L c.r....,1er Jr., 311 Alva Vldll s. Len<a.ter. 10t EdQewelet", Ln., Coil• Mew, CA f7U7 Balboa, cettfomle '2'61
Robert l . C1rpen1er Sf' , 133' Tiii• MlnKS i. condoi<t.,. by .., '"° H•"ect.S..,C:O.te!MM,CA dlvlduel. Tiii• 11;1,,,..,. ta concluc;ted by • lltabWI J . ~tier
Qeneret pertnt"111P. Tiits SI-.. ., filed with tlle
Aollfft L c.n-ntM Jr. CA>vnlY Clertl of Orenoe Coli"ty "' TlllS ste ............ tiled wltll ti• August2', tfT7 c-w Ci.tll of Or-c:.o...ty on S.-Petitt temw ti. 1971 PulllltNd a-.,,.. coast o.uy Pllot, Ntm ~i. t, t•,u . 1'7' J,..n
PlilllllMd Orenot GoMt O..ly Piiot.-------------1 Sept. 16, U. IO, Oct. 1, 1'71 402•n P\JBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTlTIOUI aUllNllll
NAMll STATSM•NT l'ICTITIOUlaUllN•U Tl'le followl"9 --i. CIOl"9 ~· NAMI STATllMINT ness n :
PUBLIC NOTICE TN foll0Wlt19 --•• dOl"9 '-'· CLASSICAL CABINUlltY. "' -------------1 neu,::IMO ASPHALT. 16021 a.tied H-"ll!I serwt. Cotta.,_. .. , CA. '7611 SUl'ERIOltCOURTOPTHI lAM,....,\lnatonS.e<ll,CA'?.,. Doll Wallet' Ohllt . "°' HollO.y
STATEMCALll'OllNIAl'O. Jo1e11f1 D WlltO'I. 1m T•IDert, A~j,==~~:by4"'llfl.
,. T .. ecou.::_r:.::,~uNoa "':~::::;,:~;~.:.= ... by.,. in-c1MdlMM.
NOTICIE 01' M•AIUNO DI' dlvklwt Dan0hl'11 ~IETITIOH l'Olt ... oaATI 0, WILL JoMtlllO.WllW'I Tiiis •IM-... Bled wfl'1 ll'le
ANO 'o" L•n••s nSTAMUI· Tiii• ... ,_ .... Iliad .. 1111 ll'le Co<llltyOerllofOr•nveeo..ntyon.t.ut.
TARY County o.rll of Or-co-ty on u. 1'· l917. ""61
Estel• OI JOHN l CRYER, .-. 1tn -·-· PUbll-Or-Gout Dall~ Piiot, JOHNLEWISORYER,Dec .. Mcl ..-. ... -..... •
NOTICE IS Hl!RE9V GtVl!"4 \11111 . P\lbll-.r Or .. eo." Delly Pllol_ A"9W(211>, 5'9lambert.•.1•.1'71
IRISE ORYERlle•fll"°IMlreln•oell· ~.1',2',J0,~1.1.1'11 ~n 11U·17
tlon FOR PROBATE OF Will ANO 1------------fOR lETTERS TESTAMENTARY to
lht PeUtior...r rl'f.r.nc• lo wllltll 11 PUBLIC NOTICE
...-tor turthtr pertlcul•n, -"'81 '------------1"41 lime ..CS piece of heerl"' tht &MM NOTICll INYITINO a1ot
11111_,s.ttorS.pt-r21, 1'11, •t NOTICl IS HIA•&Y GIVEN tMt
)0:00 e .m .. In 11" courtr_,, OI Depart .... ,.., proP01et1 lor f11rnl1lllllQ ell
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTIT10UI aUllNHI
NAMll ITAT•MaNT
ment No. 3 of Mid court. et 700 Chrlc 1ebor, meterlel1, equlprneftl, KOE NIO Peoecl •••V Sephmlle• 14• 1'1f. center 0r1 .. Watt, In Ille City 01 Senta tr•nspon.tton ano well other fa<lllUes LILLIAN KOE NI G, re•lde111 ol Survlv•d by two d•uQhters. Ann Ane,Celllorl'W•. 81 rn•y II• required tor '"•
Tiie lot-int,,.,_ •r• ClolnQ """•
11111$ ••: PHILLIM MAAINI! ITOPllS,
112S N-por1 llo<llevercl. NtwPOrl e .. c11, c:autorn•• 9"40 L•Qu~• BM<,,, Celllornlalor7t yun. c;emt>befl Of N-pon a .. c,,, Ce .• end De\ed59plfMl>er6,19n INSTALLATION OF TRAFFIC
Pn\41d •wav on SePIM1lll>r 14, 1'11. Oii•• Cook ol Tiburon. Ca .. slir WILLIAMl.St.IOHN SIGNALS AHO SAFETY LIGHTING IP•ves ht• Ntp/'llw Or,,.... Htrl119 of grendchlldrrn, end '1' great · CountyClera OH 8111ST~ STRl!l!T AHO &EAR
lv'•on, Arltond. Private ~rvlcn were grjlf\dtlllldren Born \n D•.,ver' aURRll, LAO•RLOI' 'T'REET, wtll lie rwc:elvecl by t"9 City
PllllllPS Merine StorH, Inc. I• c;elllomle c°'110rellonl, t10 Wtll 16111
StrHt, H-'1 e .. cll, C•lltornle
92640 hold lnt•rrnenl Mtlro" Abbey ColoredO on April 78, 1M7 Prl••l• SWll'T&YHICAL ofC.wMne,ettMOlflceOltheClly
Memorl•I Peril, Ana ... lm, O . Sllelltr l~rnlly HrvlcH In R•dle.,G•, Ca. s.twa.t C:lerll, 11 l'elr Drlv•, <:Mt• ~ ...
LaQun• Beech Mortuary. •16 Sovtlt P•<llk VlewMortuerydlrKton MJI WlhN,.. .. .-. C a 1 I I 0 r n t a , u " I I I I II e
CoHtHIQllweydlrectors ~ ........ CA-It l!our ot 11 Lm. °" ~ '· 1tn, 9'
Tiiis lluliMSI Is concf11Ct41d by a C«• POI'.,._
~ATTEllSON AttetMys fer: Pwtlll-Wflkll tlmt llWy wHI bu••Md DUll!lcl'( IC Ell Y P.HTERSON. AO-2S dl9d PullllJlllMI Or....-Coal! D,.ly Piiot. <1fM1 reed e1oW In Ille Oovncti O>em-
PMILLll"S MAltlNI!
STORES. IMC.
RoOH' .. Ooebltll. ~ep !Omb•r 1• survived b y "•r De"atm s.114.t,10 .... 1'71 11en.1ee1ec1prOll0'4i•S11et•••rt11111-d•ue111er, Terell Ann Wellelln9, JUl·l1 tleofllle_._!M_oflflebld-
motller Betty O.ncl•on, l•tller al\llop ,,., 11111 no oti.r cllltlntllltlllno ~
........ .
Tiiis ~ _, fll•"wltll tM
C-IY a.nt Of Or_. CiMttY 04' S..
..,.,,.,., i1. tm. Ntm Pau.rnon, si111r Geor91a l'•tttnon. • PUBUC NOTICE Ally bid ~lvecl elttr Ille ac-led
9r•-Mts Doug Srnllll, Mrl. H•len cloolng time ror ti. rec.eltlt of blcts r.111111 9u<k end Mr & />Vt Jemet Pett.,...,.., E J _ ,L _ be ,_......,to U.. blOder _ _., ti
S.l'Vlce S.1Urde110 AM •t HOiton et.cl f,lff!l,(JJrere HOTICS 01' aUt.K TllANSl'•a tl\ell m IN Ml• rftCIOl'llllllllY of IM
Son Mort.-v. l.°"9 S.etll Wltll ln\W• 1sec.a.•1t1 .. 1'7 U.C.C.l bldcMr '° * "'-' N• bid 11 rec.el¥H Ill
PublltNd Or-. GN .. Deity 1"119'
......... D. •• Ott. 1, ''" MIJJ.11
-nllnAllSoul•Gtf'Mlery. WILKES-BARRE Pa. Notte. 11 llerebY t lven to lllt ~time.
l'REEMAN S cr•dlton of GEORGE $MITH, Alttofpt-,So«lell'n'fl1lenund PUBUC NOTICE HElEN HAVER FREEMAN. J'fll· (A p ) -Former u .. Trentlttor. '""°"' ~""· ecldrtst" ecldltloM to 0.-el """'I"-to""
a.nt o1 Newport e.ec11, Ot11orn1e. Rep. Mltchell .Jenkins, 1lGO Oce•n Blvd , "'"POrt 8H cll, Sl•flClent Soec;"lcal-may lie •
uff ed h rt t c-ry of Or ...... Stele of ~lllornle, t•IMCI et ti. Office of U• City Ellll-. C""ttW
HUHOADWAT
MOITUAU
110 Broadway
Costa Meu
6<42·9150
Wint TUntlU LAMI
COSTA Miio\ CHAP&
427 E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa • 84M888
Santa Ana Chapel , 618 N. Bro.clwey ·
Santa Ana• 64~_.131
,_Cl.OTMIH
5Mm4\* MOllTUHY
827 Main St.
Huntington Bea<:h
530-e539.
,_fAMtU'
CWAt. NMHAl
NOMI
7801 8otM Ave. w .. trnlnster
803-3525
PACl'IC Yttw
MIMOllAL PAii
Cemettry Mortuary
Chaoet
3&00 Paeiftc Vltw Dr1vt
Newport,
C.Ulomla 84.4.-2700
81, S er a ea a . 11\et ellUlktrenilerlullOUtlobem• n '•Ir Orlw , CO.IA l!NM, cellfornla NOT'ICSTOCtllOITOH
tack Thursday and died to SAMUl!L H. GIESY Ill. Tren1ltree. -,_.,...lllldebl. peymene of as.oo. SUP9UtlOll COU•T OP TNI
t Wilk B G I Wl'IOM bUtlMH acldrHI ,, 11011 ....... An edlllllaNI Cl>trge ol St.GO Wiii .,. STAT• Of' CAL"OttfOA 11011 a CS· a rre cnera L•M . Huntlntlll'I tMt'll, Co\HllY of "'tdt It ll•llCllM bY "''"· Pl•M. T"ICOUMTYOl'ottANO•
H osp ital. Oranoe. s1e1eo1~11torf\le ,119cHkeltcm end oin« contract doC&I· N .. A_.....
The .,.._,, lo be tran•lerrtd h ,,...,.tt nwry ellO lie examined 9t Ille... E11Att of CAltL BONNER 01985,
locet.a el 2JOO O<Nn ltvd,. Ntwpon llctoltntCltvCltrttoftlWO tyofCot!A SR .. 1111.1 CAAL 8. Ol88S, SR,. •-• WATERTOWN, Mass.
(AP> -SUvtoOosda, 77,
a French horn player
and voice coach with the
Metropolltan Open for
36 years, dJed Thursday
at his' home here o f an
apparent heart attack.
a .. c11, County ol o,.n99, St•I• of "'""· jL &OHH&A Gll81 • .UCAltL a. c.eutorl\le. eec" bid 11\all M "'•" .., Ille es. DtcHlff. Seid ""°'*'1'1 ts dtK•flled In QOtneftl PrOpoMI form, .,...., p.' fflrOugll P.7 Tica IS HaReev OIViN to Ille H : All 1100 In tr-. flaturet, equip-pl'Olllclld tn the c;on\rec:t dOC\l"*'lS• c ton ol 11111.....,. named cltcedtnt
met\I end 9DOd wlll Of 111111 ,,., l"oocl •ltd tll•tt .,. KCOnlttll•lled wttll • I •If ,.,_ llt1t1l119 cl•lrnt ... ,,..,
R .. 1a11rllfll ll;ltlnen •nown •• 'Lii ctrflflecl w cMNff'• check Of' • 1114 the Wl4 ~ w• re1111ll"ff lo Ille
Ha11k1' 1111d ,_,led .t ncc>Oceen &Ivel., bond fer llOC I•• IMn 10 •rcet'lt of"" tlltm, .. 1111 Ult NC .. ..,., llO\Klle", '"
H••POn .. efl\. County ot O"""· ~ o1""111c1. m .. ,.yRle • tllt tile ottkt of tltt clenl of'"' ,.,..,,. e11o
S\tttofCl'f!Oml•. (Uy .. Olllta Mesa. ... ""9eMI r.111111 tltltdcourt,OflOllf'tMnltfMm,wltlltllt TM bulk trentt.,wlll bO '°""'rnrn•I· be ~ ..... _I_, DY MUMMY ~rs, •tllt underlltnH
eel on .,. after tllt 16th ....,. of s...-wtll ce'llllet'• Cl\tdt, CMll -' bldltr• a\ It• Tniat Oepenl'MnfkUO Nfllfl*1 ttmber, 1t71, at 9•nk of Amerlc:• 11on4. eenwr Dt1w, Post Off t aaa 17.0, , _____________ , HT&SA, ~ w. lttll Sir .... (flit,...., Ho bid #Miii be~'" Ullleft It,, "'--' BNCJ\, Celllomt• HMO, wltklt
c-1yofOrtlfl9',Slattol~ltfoml•. m11H111• .. -*lormfvrlll1ht4bytl9 11 tile pie<• of bull,,..• Of tl\t vn• PVBUC NOl'ICE Soferet•-10111tTr•11lfrM.•11 C:ll'f ef Clllte ,,. .. .,,., .. m.-111 ec:· dltl'llQMd 111 ell mettel't Ott'l•l,.1119 t• --------------1 1111 .. _ ......... end eddf-USM by cMM1U _.,II 1119 ttfW\tlettt .. the Ille...._ al .. 14 dt<Hellt, Wit~ IWt
Tr_,....,, i.t ttw tllf".,...., 1••1 ,..., ,,...._ ,....N!Nftl1. monlllt ettw the flM pullllcetNll ef tlll• NOTICll Oft INTINTION TO
aNOAO« IN TN• IA&.e 01'
llLCOi'tOUC NVl•AOH lfellfenll!tlromtllte-..•r•t "-· a.m ~ """' • ''-'"end 11t11<e. 0•1ecl Selllfmlw 14, 1'11. • .................... ,..,.'""' .... Deted ..... .,,..... 1t tfl1.
$j1mUt1 H. Oley Ill, Tllll CllY Clwlcll of .. City of c.tM H(UltlTY l'.ACl"C
TftMN<W ... _1Nr111!4te")e<ta11yw HA'l'IONAl.~IC HNICOflAMalllCAllT81A eMbkliL 9y:°"'f..._1Wl
MW.,,...,_ alLHNl",PHINN•Y TNllOHkM
c..e--.CA.tM2' Otyo-tltUM ~oflMWillef •ec-•ltr"1nl 0t"t41fCllNMIM tlla_..._,........,. "'*lellldOr .. ONlltOellr ..,.._, .........._Or-. c.eu& O.Uy f'tllt WILUAMV.ICMMIDT
..,.,..,tm •1.n ltlll.W.U.tm M6Mll,......OF.,,....• ..._77 .....,....._CA ....
..,4-,.,
T .. 111M>...-. -~ PWI""" 0r'"'9 CNlt Delly l'tl«. .-.... a.•.Oct. 7, tfn ....n
NleW? FOR ORANGE COUNTY ·SOUTH
COASf
**MUSIC CATERING**
H•vfng • party, rwceptlon, or Min bOOsttr evtnt?
Had a problem with llvt musl'? Custom music systems are now avalla·.
bte for your home, hall or business.
Complete Installation & operation •
featuring a Dimen.rlon 7 disc Jockey. Super
sound musical lights. Your music or
ours. Reasonable rates, five hour
minimum. Early reservations are sug-
gested.
COB
Chartie•a Diaco Bualn•••
After Six please:
Charlie (714) 955-3535
Danny (213) 691-9944 Featurlng[BQ
Where else can you get this?
. . ~~
ouARANTEED v AWE EXCHANGE CER11.FICATE
Q4U.NfTUt Wf C.tMMHTfl m UCJtAMlA tHt. A•WI n•N i'lli rt•tr\ AND Affl "I rtt•
tUU "*-"A.Vi~ TUWiUI> A llKI u •N Of" .... NI!• ~AJ.Ua A-..0 HM.Mtll c..tlADt.i
'TIMI.I 'II~ VAUJI QOt.UCI CUlTFICA Tl wcl Iii YALtn o\,..,n .... .,.... •.
tll' Tiit' Uo\U+\lf f'\141"--.IA'l
""~ ......
We furnish the above guarantees
on all coins and meet the standard
of the ANA Grading Board
when applicable.
2630.C A•• Street
Ne~ leach 645-1744
(Behind Mariners Mlle)
Tuea. 2:00..5:30
Wed. thru Set. 11:00-5:30
CloaeCI Sun. & Mon.
NEWPORT BEACH ONLY
STOCK ELIMINATION
EVERYTHING ·GOES!
60 TO 75%
OFF
<.NO ALTERATIONS
ALL SALES FINAL
NO REFUNDS OR EXCHANGES
NEWPORT BEACH ONLY!
..