HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-09-22 - Orange Coast Pilotnists Set U.S. Nuelear Suh
$37 ,000 Blaze mts Sea Bottom •
THURSDAY AFTeRNOON, SEPTEM BER 22, 1977
VOL. 7t , NO. 2'5, S S•CTIOHS, M PAOll
E'raudCO.e
Arizona SeeD
Viejo Man?
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER 01 the O.lly Pli.t SI_..
A 52-year·old land company ex-
ecutive federal agents believe
lives in Mission Viejo was indict·
ed Wednesday by an Arizona
grand jury on 23 counts of fraud
connected with an alleged $18
million land fraud sche m e
Eman uel Singer . executive
vice .president for land sales of
Consolidated Mortgage Corp ..
Police Arrest
Evel Knievel
For 'Assault'
LOS ANGELES CA P >
Moto r cycle stuntman Evel
Knievel, who apparently was en
route to surrender to police, was
arrested for invesUgatlon of as-
sault with a deadly we apon in an
alleged atlack on a 20th Century
Fox executive. authorities said.
Knievel was released Wednes-
day night after posting Sl,000
bond. He was scheduled to be ar-
raigned next Wednesday ln West
Los Anceles Municipal Court.
Police said Knievel knew he wu being aou1bt and it appeared
he planned to tum himself in
when he was arrested by a patrol.
Officer who spotted hlrn on a
freeway in North Hollywood.
Sheldon Saltman, 46, was treat-
ed for rompound fractures of the
left arm and a broken ri1ht wrist
after the incide nt earlier
Wedneid9.Y,, authorities satd.
The vlte preJident of the
telecomimanlcati• dlvlalon· ol F ox Studios told police that
J:llievel 81\d an un.ldenUfied man
eon.fronted him outside the studio
c:ommissary. He said Knievel b.it
bhn ..,ith a baseball bat, accord-tDi to J)OlJce.
}liarll: Erkkaon, an aide to ~· aaid Saltman uald to bt ·1 publicity a1ent and
UleeDllBV~ Pqe Al>
was one of six people named in
the federal mall fraud indict-
ment leveled against the now-
defunct mortgage sales firm.
One of those n amed with
Singer was confessed land fraud
figure Ned Warren Sr., who is
facing 36 counts of fraud in two
olher Arizona counties.
Michael Hawkins, U.S. At·
torney in Phoenix, today bad no
explanation for the listing of Mis-
sion Viejo as Singer's home town.
Ile said no street address was
available and there Is no listing
for Singer in telephone direc-
tories.
Hawkins not ed that in -
vestigators also dete rmined
Singer may have maintained a residence m San Mateo, near
San Francisco.
According to Hawkins. in-
vest igators are uncertain of
Singer's current whereabouts.
His arrest wlll be made by either
the U.S. Marshal's office or the
Postal Service, according to an
FBI spokesman in Santa Ana.
"He (Singer > is not in custody
at this time to my knowledge, but
it is my guess that when be is ar-
rested fairly Jow bond wiU be
set," Hawkins said.
"The people involved in thln1s
like this are -eenerally not escape
risks," he said. "They usually
come to court and eontest the <See SCHEME. Pace M>
Fal,l F aahion
PteViewin
n Sardinia Area
• • ICtllli esa un
ue fficer
Student of tlae Sun .
'UC Irvine student Molly Goodman of
Corona del Mar catches up on her reading
while catching the last rays of summer.
Autumn was with us offi ciaJly today. with
the a utumnal equinox. but the arrival of
the fall season doesn't change much on
t he Orange Coast. Not many leavqs
change color, but the crowds of tourists·
have departed and now the g~rls. on the
beach are doing th.eir school work while
working on their tans.
Nuclear Sllhmarine
Hits Bottom of Sea
damaae:• the Navy statement
said.
The Ray proceeded to La Mad·
dalena, Sardinia, under her own
p0wer and arrived there late
Wednesday, the Navy reported.
The incident brought a protest
from the Sardinlan aovera1ment's
minlater for the envlronment, ·
<>redo Erdas, a SOtlallt, U1d
the bue poses "a per~•t
daniet to alt °'e people 1n the area" because ot possible
radloac:Uve leoa1e.
The submarine base on La
<See sua; Pace AJ>
~7,000 ·Fire
lnHB&t .
ByAnOnUu
•
Attorney .
Says He's
Crippled
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Ot•Oeltr ..........
A Costa Mesa auto shop owner,
shot twice In the chest during a ~ Saturday altercation with an off.
duty Hawthorne police officer,
may be permanently paralyzed
from the waist down. his at-
torney alleged today.
Anaheim attorney Robert
Weaver, representing 34-year·
old shooting v.lctim Jon Allan
Mc Clure, said a $1 millloB
personal injury s uit will be ftled
against Officer Michael Moran.
No criminal charges have been
filed agahtst Moran who is re-
portedly on vacation from his •
duties with the Hawthorne Police
Department.
McClure remains in critical
condition today at Cost.a M~a
Memorial Hospital. having un-
dergone surgery for the second
ttme since the Saturday incident
in front of the A&A Garage. 2031
Harbor Boulevard, Costa Mesa..
CO.Sta Mesa police believe the
shooting followed an ar'1UIJent
between the two men.
Officer Moran appar1!ntly
drove bis car over a still-damp
<See \'IC'l1M, Paie AU
Weather
Matht and early mol'D.iu
low cl«Mlda wtth toe wlil
bam o« to sunny afte.r-
nooo1 through Frid ay.,,
Temperalurea a little
cooler. Low tonlpt :SO. Jil&ba Fl1day. ti) 18.
I
"
Z DAILY I'll.Of s
Lance Seeks 'Rest'
In Georgia Home
ATLANTA (APJ -Bert
• Lante, former bud1et dlreetor,
uad toda)' he plara to return to
Georrta .. aodaet a UW resl " '"T~U the folb in Oeorala we
ur~ dolna J~ fine,·: be a&ld ln an
inlervaow wltb radio atMtlon
WSB. "We appreciate lbetr •uP
* * *
port, loft. truat and ratLb more
lhan they can ever possibly
know.
· ''lbal 's been one or the thlnas
lhat sustained us throughout this
wholcthlnc.··
A1ked about his future, he
uld· "No decision yet. We'll
* * *
'Pro•le• Lifted'
Carter Eyes South
For New Director
WASHINGTON <AP> Pres1 ·
d ent Carter is trying to replace a
man he says is irreplaceable
Fighting sorrow at the resigna-
tion of longtime friend Bert
Lance as budget director, Carter
began the search today for a suc-
cessor. .
One of his first visitors of the
<lay was Sen. Jennings Randolph,
<D-W. Va.>. who told reporters
be found Carter calm, relaxed
and even m whal the senator
called a happy mood.
"In a sense. he feels he's bad a
problem lifted from him," said
Randolph, whose visit to the
Wblte House was to urge Carter
to increase fund requests for
economic development pro-
grams
•'There ~ i II be an orderly
transition." the President told a
news conference Wednesday
when he announced Lance's res-
' ignation. .. I wiJI decide begin·
ning after today on who a suc·
cessor might be "
Among names that quickly sur·
faced were.
-James T . Mcintyre Jr.,
director or Georgia's budget Of·
fice in 1972 while Carter was gov-
l'rnor and now deputy director of
the Office of Management and
Budget, which Lance h ad
headed
Robert Strauss, a former
chairman of the Democratic Na·
tional Committee and now the
U.S. ambassador for trade
negotiations.
-Allee Rivlin, director of the
Congressional Budget Office.
-Hale Champion, former
California finance direct.or and
now an official at tbe Depart-
ment of Health, Education and
Welfare.
Carter said the task of finding a
budget director won 't be easy
"I don't think there 1s any way
that r could rind anyone to
replace Bert Lance that would
be. in my Judgment, as compe·
tent. as strong, as decent and as
close to me as a friend and ad·
viser as he has been," the Presi·
dent said.
"Obviously. the government
will continue," Carter declared,
. · .. and I hope to do a good job as
. president, and 1 am sure a suc-
, 1 cessor will be adequate.
"But there has been a special
relationship between me and
Bert Lance that transcended of·
ficial responsibilities or duties or
even governmental service of tbe
last six or seven years.
"So he has occupied a special
place in my governmental
career, In my political career,
and in my personal life. I don't
think there is any way anyone
could replace bJm now."
F,.... Pflflf! AJ
KNIEVEL ..•
wrote the book "Evel Knievel on
Tour." The book told the at.ory of
the much-publicized but ill-fated
Snake River Canyon atunt which
Knievel failed to accompUab.
Erickson said Knievel ap-
parently was upnl with ·1ome
parts of the book.
DAILY PILOT
A ............
POSSIBLE SUCCESSOR
George's Mcintyre
Fro..PageAJ
VICTIM •..
floor of the garage shop, anger-
ing McClure and sparking the
dispute between the two men
During the ensuing argument.
Costa Mesa police assert
McClure brandished a three-foot
metal bar and charged at the of-
ficer while he was standing out-
side the shop.
Officer Moran allegedly pulled
a pistol from his parked car and
shot McClure twice with the
German automatic after he ig-
nored the officer's commands to
halt.
Attorney Weaver, however,
said he hopes to disprove the of·
ricer's claims that the shooting
was in seU defense.
"I'm not convinced tt was self
defense," Weaver said. "Mr.
M <'Clure carried the metal bar at
all times and at no time did he
raise it in a threatenln& gesture
at ofricer Moran," he claimed.
Weaver asserted he will pre-
sent witnesses who wlll t.eaUfy
thal Officer Moran abot MCCiure
for the second time after be waa
already down and lylna injured
from thefirsl gunshot..
Moran. who was eraduated
from Newport Harbor High
School and Orange Coast
College. apparently waa on vaca-
tion in the area wben he stopped
off at the garage Saturday alter·
noon at about 1:30p.m.
lmmedlat~y after the shoot-
ing, Costa Mesa police contacted
the Orange County District At-
torney's Office.k<>cal police filed
a report with the DA 's office
which has asaitned a special In·
vestlgaUon team to interview
witnesses in the case.
The investigaUon is still under
way. A spokesman at the DA'sof-
fice couJd not estimate when it
will be completed or if criminal
charges are forthcoming agalnst
Moran. ('~
McClure underwent surgery
Saturday night for removal of
two slugs in !Us chest.
Attorney Weaver said it ap-
pean1 McClure will lose the use of hi~ lower ewemities as a resuJt
of the abooU.ng.
He remains listed in criUcaJ
but stable condition in the
1¥>1pital 's intensive care unit.
Weaver said he underwent aur-
aery for a a.econd Ume Wednes·
day but bolpltal oftlclala would
not cooflrm the report.
Many wtthesses to the ahootln&
have come forward and a.re be·
lo• interviewed by Weaver and
the DA •a lnvestJ1aUon team. ,,...._,.J
talre that N we've been takin&
things. . .one day at a time."
As for his wife, LaBelle, he
aald, "She's doing just fine. She's
been a source or real streqatb.
The American people ..• saw
her ... for what she ls, one who
has a ereat faith In God and
believes things wort ln His
purpose. That's the way she ia. ••
Asked if be would return to
Georgia, La.nee replied:
"You know I've got to come
back to Georgia. 1 said that ln my
statement. That's where our
home is."
Alked lf be would take a publlc
job, he said, "No. We just want to
get back to our friends in Geocgia
and get a little rest."
Lance, resigned bis federal
post Wednesday.
The Lances still have their
50· room Butterfly Manna
m anslon, one of the biggest and
most elaborate estates in the ex·
elusive Buckhead section of
Atlanta.
The Lances put the mansion up
for sale for S2 million last month,
but it has not been sold. It was not
clear whether they would live
there. They also own a $100,000
house in Calhoun, Ga .. and a
vacation home on Sea Island, Ga.
Now ~hat he is leiving ·
Washington, Lance will no longer
010 CARTER 'FORCE'
LANCE TO QUIT?-A10
have to pay the $18,000-a-year
rent for his house in Georgetown.
and will not have to sell his stock
1n the National Bank of Georgia
at a loss.
He owned about $2.9 million in
NatJonal Bank of Georgia stock
when be took office, but it bas
declined in value from $17 a
s hare to about $12. He could lose
$1 million tf he sells it.
Although he owns 17 percent of
the bank stock, it was not clear
whether he would have a job with
the bank if he returned.
Robert Guyton, who replaced
Lance as president of the AUanta
bank, said Wednesday night,
"Obviously, we don't know Mr.
Lance's plans for the future."
One of Lance's biggest prob-
lems is a $3.4 million loan from
the First National Bank of
Chicago. Lance has to pay
$225,000 per year in interest on
that loan and had been counting
on stock dlvidenda to help pay for
it. However, his bank's financial
troubles forced suspension of
dividends on that stock in the last
quarter.
The Chlcaeo bank has de-
manded more collateral because
of the decline ln the value of the
Georgia banJc stock and as a re-
sult of studies of Lance's finances
by banking regulators. Lance
has put most of his real estate up
as loan collateral.
Al hjs confirmation bearin~.
Lance listed a net worth of $2.6
million, with assets of $7.9
million and liabilities of $5.3
million, but the picture may not
be as good now.
For one thing, Lance haa
personally bad to pay for a lot of
the work done to defend himself
at Senate beartnea and for re-
port.a by the comptroller of the
currency.
Lance also faces continued in·
vesUgaUon and possibly legal
costs from a variety of govern-
ment aaenclea lookln& into bis af.
fairs.
The Justice Department, lo·
temal Revenue Service and the
Federal Election Commission
are investigating his use of bank
aircraft, and the Securities and
Exchanee Commission is t.cying
to find out if he and bis bank
made enough disclosures to
stockholders.
Coast Guar4
Search Ended
EURERA CAP> -The U.S.
Coast Guard bas called off its
search tor a Washing ton state
man missing three days after an
abandoned, fully provisioned
sailboat was spe>Ued off the
Northern California coa.st.
The body ot Jeffrey Shields, of
Coos Bay, Ore., wu found ln the
water about four milea w•t ot be,.. Wedl'laday by a pua{ng
fishing boat. There was noslgnol
8•1 DeLeon. ot Everett, Wash.
Shield. and Del.eon had left
San Dieao last week en route to
Seattle. Thelr 2S-foot boat. the
V•iabond, WU found driltlfta 20
mUes nortbweat of here on 1\aes-dt.y,
Ailment 'COmmon' . .
LEIDEN, Tbe ~etberliuad1
(AP> -The mUd form ot 1.UOW
jaundice from which Uallud'•
{Dur-day-old sextuplets are aUf•
terln& ••t1a1 ahown IOlllt lD•
crease,:' a spokesman lot Leiden
llOllpelal 1t1fd today, but he did
not ~ppear \Ir.duly concerned.
Ooctort burned whtte eleetrlc
Uthl cm the four cJ.tla aDd' two
bop to COIDbll tbt Ja..--a aummt et'IDl!lfla to .... .._ sa.
I~
SCHEME •••
char1es and sometimes they
win."
Sinier and the othera conneet-
ed with the fraud scbemt bad
been under lnv•tl1aUOn fOf' 18
months by a untque tHm ol
federal qenta operatln1 out ot
tbe U.S. Attorney's office ln
Pboeolx.
HaW'kina said the team ol FBI,
Postal Service and U.S. Attorney
agents was created two years
ago to crack down on rampant
white coUar crime In Arizona.
"Until the last few years, tbe
state was trying to attract new
business and development 110
regulations on such thlnts u land
sales were almost non-existent, ..
Hawkins said. "A lot of good peo.
pleeameln, butsodidthebadpeo.
pie."
The Investigation that resulted
in Wednesday's grand jury in·
dictments contended that the
firm Sin&er and others operated
involved a fraudulent scheme to
induce invest.ors to buy lots in
several land developments.
The indictment alleeea fraud
occurred when the defendants
used the mail system to sell
fraudulent mortgaee contracts to
other investors.
Besides Singer and Warren,
others under indictment include
Robert Gunnison and Alvin
McCollum of Scottsd a le
Arizona; Donna Stevens of
Columbus, Ohio, and William
Na than of New York City.
If convicted of the charges, the
defendants face a maximum
penalty of five years ln prison
and a $1,000 fine on each mall
fraud count.
Charges of interstate
transportation of stolen property
have also been leveled against all
the defendants except Nathan.
That carries a penally of 10 years
in prison plus a $10,000 fine.
Extension Won
OAKLAND (AP) -Pleading
lack ol Ume, the Pacific Gu &
Electric Co. baa won an ex-
tension for installing water pollu·
lion control equipment at six
power plants on the San Fran-
cisco Bay. The board charged
with maintaining the bay's water
quality voted 3-2 Tuesday to ex-
tend PG&E's deadline.
~Caught
Red Hlllllkd
EAST WINDSOR, N.J. <AP> -The robbery ol a
bank here may have
brought a tear to~ eye ot
the holdup man, especially
when be reallied lie prof>.
abty will get caucbt ftd
banded, police said.
The gunman left the
Franklin State Bank with
the bag of money he asked
for, pcillcesald, but the bag
a110 C!Ontalned a canister ot
red dye that be hadn't re·
quested.
The canister is designed
to explode and emit a
powder that perinuenUy
atalns anyt.blng lt touches.
Black'• Beach .
Nude Bathers
Won't Cover
SAN DIEGO (AP) -"We'll
still go nude -they won't stop
us," a disappointed backer of
Amertca's only municipal nude
beach said after voters backed a
halt to "swimsuit optional"
bathing in San Diego.
San Diego's first referendum
on the nude beach summoned a
near-record turnout Tuesday,
and the message to the City
Council was clear: Rescind the
1974 ordinance designating the
900-foot swath of beach as
''swimsuit optional."
PauJ Omundson, 28, who iden-
tified blmaelf as an occasional
bather at Black's Beach. said
·'There are little pockets or
beach all along the coast where
people will always go nude ...
Worker Killed
JAKARTA, Indonesia <AP) -
An American oil rig overturned
off the coast of East Kallmantan,
Borneo, killing a Filipino worker
and Injuring three other men, the
government oil cor poration
Pertamlna announced today.
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SANTA MONICA (AP) -
Workers toiled throuth the night
scooptni up spilled Alaskan
crude oil in the surf and sand on a
popuJar surfin& beach in Santa
Monica.
The cleanup was expected to
be finished today, with no serious
damage to the beach or wildlife.
officials said.
The oil wu spilled from a
tanker moored off the coast of El
Segundo on Tuesday. About half
the 400 gallons that spilled were
quickly cleaned up in the area
around the tanker, but another
200 gallons were carried by
winds and tides to the Ocean
Park area of Santa Monica
Beach.
The oil, thinner and less gooey
than the heavy fuel oil tbal
clogged Santa Barbara's
beaches in 1969. spilled ashore
late Wednesday. The oil was
s hipped from Alaska on the
tanker Manhattan and was
bound for Chevron's El Segundo
refinery.
"It's a bad $pill," said U . Dick
Weaver, county lifeguard.
"Maybe not a really massive one
but a gooey mess, just tbe
same."
A Coast Guard report blamed
the spill on a "faulty valve" or a
"partially cl06ed" valve but an
investigation was continu'ing.
The Manhattan was chartered
by Exxon Corp.
Investigators said ballast
water -used lo malnlain
balance on the tanker -was
somehow pumped up into a fuJI
or nearly full tank containing
crude oil, forcing the oil out of the
top of Ute tank and over the ship's
side.
Chevron workmen using skim-
mers and huge oil·catchlng nets
were able to scoop up much of the
oil near the ship and more along
the surf line before it went
ashore, said N .R. LeRoy,
Chevron spokesman.
,
VO 70. NO. 2.65. S SECTIONS, S-4 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, SEP~EMBER 22, 1977 C TEN CENTS
Where Are AD Those Missing Kids?·
BJ llOCHAEL PASKEVlCH ._...., ...........
N port-Mesa Sehool D1stnct
ofCltia may want to file • rew
mwnns attident report.a 1,&.ao
lobeexacl.
Tbat.•s how rar enrollment h~
dropped smce last year, leaving
1he district with a total enrolJ.
JI\~ of 22,478 students, Deputy
District Superintendent Norman
Loats said today.
The drop was almost twice lhe
untlclpated enrollment loss and
leaves the distflct with between
2S and 30 teachers more than lt
needs. Since the instructors are
under contract for lhe full school
year, Loats estimates the district
will be spending $400,000 to pay
teachers it doesn't really need.
The decline in enrollment 1.5 ex-
pected to further fuel district ef-
forts to shut down more schools
to cut expenses.
The biggest decline occurred
at the elementary school level.
About 400 elementary students
projected through census bureau
figures •Imply diaappeared dur-
ing summer vacation. Loats
believes the students either
moved out or enrolled in private
or parochial schools.
Loats doesn't expect a
turnaround in enrollment.
Amel Loses
Judge Backs Mesa Homeowners
Members of the North Costa
Mesa Homeowner!! Association
won the first round Wednesday in
their bid to halt construction of a
$30 million apartment complex
Orange County Su~erior Court
Judge Philip E. Schwab upheld
the arguments of association
lawyers by refusine to grant an
injunction demanded by the
Arnet Development Come any.
The decision leaves association
members free to continue
SI Million
gathering signatures on petitions
which seek the placing of an in·
1tiative on t he March 8 ballot.
The initiative would place
before city voters the issue of
whether the 48 acres now being
devoted lo apartment construe·
Lion by Arnel should be rezoned
in a way that would Ii mit con
struction to single family homes
Association spokesman Don
Bull said he was delighted with
the decision and he expects
between 4,500 and 5,000
signatures on the petition by the
end of next week.
Only 3,600 signatures, or 10
percent of Costa Mesa's reg·
1stered voters, are needed to
pla<:e the initiative on the ballot.
Lawyers for Amel took legal
action against the association
with the argument that signature
seekers were making misleading
statements to area residents.
(See COMPLEX, Page A2)
Diedrich
Mesa Victi1n Plans Adds Agent
Suit Over Shoo.ting To Staff
Orange County Supervisor
Ralph Diedrich added a licensed
private investigator to his staff of
admin.latrative aides this week.
A Costa Mesa auto shop owner,
shot twice in the chest during a
Saturday altercation with an off-.
• duty Hawthorne police officer1
1 m ay be permanently paraly1ea
, from the waist down, his at-
: tomey alleged today. ·
Anaheim attorney Robert
W..V.. iwpruentina 14-year-old .._.., vlctlm Jon Allan
McClure, said a $1 mlll~on
• per~al injury sult will be med
against Officer Michael Moran.
. No criminal charges have been
filed against Moran who ls re-
portedly on vacation from bis
duties with the Hawthorne PolJce
J)epartment
McClure remains in critical
~ondition today at Costa Mesa
• Memorial Hospital, havmg un-
dergone surgery for the second
time since the Saturday incident
in front of the A&A Garage, 2037
Harbor Rlvd . Costa Mesa.
Costa Me!> a pol ice believe the
shooting followed an argument
between the two men.
Officer Moran apparently
drove his car over a still-damp
floor of the garage s hop, anger·
ing McClure and sparking the
dispute between the two men.
During the ensuing argument, .
Costa Mesa police assert
. McClure brandished a three-foot
•
metal bar and chargea at the of·
ficer while he was standing out~
.side the shop.
Officer Moran allegedly pulled
a piatol froni ~ parted car and shot M<:Clure twice wltb the
German automatic alter he Ig-
nored tbe officer's command& to halt.
Attorney Weaver, bo•ever,
sald he hopes to disprove the of.
ficer's claims that the shooting
(See VICTIM, Page A!)
Mesa Thieves
'Wide Awake'
Costa Mesa police are seeking
burglars who pried their way into
Dick Church's Restaurant, 2698
Newport Boulevard. and made
off with SO pounds of coffee
valued at $190.
Police said no other items were
taken in the burglary which was
reported early Wednesday by an
employe.
The selective burglars tOQk two
cases of grounds. each contain·
ing 2S pounds of Chase & Sanborn
.. Famous Yen" coffee which cost
the restaurant $3.80 a pound.
Diedrich said that John V.
Lynch. w~ reportedly w~ a ClA
a1ent ror 22 years, was 1'ot blred
tor his lnvestleattve talenta.
"Wt. have a lot. ()( •tarr wot)
lier•~ ~.peeM'dl-and d.lSlin* ........... j~ment. t thlnk·;;'Jolm llaa th
quaJlUes for that ltln!l of wcil'k.
That's why he was hired."
Diedricb's remarks were
aimed at dispellinc any notion
that Lynch might have been
added to his county staff to help
in his d efense against Grand
Jury charges accusing him or
con s piring to violate state
political campaign regulations .
Along with rour co-indlctees.
Diedrich is scheduled to appear
In court Nov. 7 to answer to the
felony charges which, if they re-
sult in a conviction, would result
in bis removal from office.
Lynch was a Republican can·
didate for stale Assembly in 1974
and in 1976 sought the state
Senate seat being abandoned by
the Republican incumbent
James Whetmore.
Both Lynch bids for elective of·
fice ended with bis defeat in
Republican primary elections
For example, there are 1,117
students in kindergarten com·
pared to 2,396 in lllh grade, "so
you can see what's ahead of us,"
he said.
District officials say lhere is no
area pattern for the enrollment
drop. Elementary schools in
Newport Beach as well a s
several in Costa Mesa suffered
declines.
A sampling shows Andersen
School in Newpprt Beach down 61
students and Paularino in Costa
Mesa down SO students from pro·
jcclions.
Enrollment also is down at
three Costa Mesa elementary
schools now being considered as
potential sites for the relocation
of McNally High School. Wtlson
School is down 1S students to 360,
Monte Vista is down 13 to 251 and
mgh Rise Housing
Whittier enrollment fell 4' stu-
dents to324.
At the high school level, EstaJ>.
cia and C'.osta Mesa both reported
losses of more than 150 students.
Only Newport Harbor Hlgh.
the district's largest school.
s howed an increase. Twelve
more students registered this
year, brmgmg enrollment there
up to2.650
...
Delly PllM -lly LM pay,..
C h ris Alvarez of Burlingame dem-
onstrates his car top lent. the• l atest
thing in housing on the i·oad. He currently
js travelina a•ong the Oronge Coast, an<l
says his tent is great for outdoorstnen who
don't like w ~•~,.,, on the ground. It a \so
can serve as an elevated viewing point for
such things as auto races, rock concerts
a nd other outdoor events. he notes. •
Ho~ver, it could ofter a rude awakening to restless sleepers who toss and tum a lot.
Uance Back' in Georgia
Retunu Homs Facing Debts, Uneerl(iinty
WASHINGTON (AP ) -Bert
Lance returned to Georgia as a
private citizen today, still facing
la rge debts, govern ment In-
vestigations and an uncertain
future.
The former budget director and
his wife flew from Washington's
National AJrport to his hometown
of Calhoun, Ga., on a private
plane that he rented himself.
"You know I've got to come
back to Georgia," be told Atlanta
radio station WSB by telephone
before his departure. "That's
where our home is."
Lance, who resigned Wednes-
day after eight months and one
* * *
day as President Carter's budget
director, said he plans to "get a
little rest" but has m ade no d~
cision yet about any other job.
"We'JJ take that as we have
been lal$ing things -one day at a
DID CARTER 'FORCE'
LANCE TO QUIT?-A10
time," Lance said.
In Atlanta, John Stembler.
chairman of the board of the Na-
tional Banlc of Georgia which
Lance ran until last January,
said, "Bert can have the job of
chairman if ·be wants it tomor-
row."
* * * I ..ance ReplaceIDeot
Sollght by Carter
WASIUNGTON CAP> -Presi-
dent Carter ls trying to replace a
man he says is irreplaceable.
Fighting sorrow at the resigna-
tion of longtime friend Bert
Lance as budget director. Carter
began the search today for a suc-
cessor.
Ftdl Faahion
Lance met with his attorney.
Clark Clifford, before leaving
Washington. He did not go to the
Office of Ma nagement and
Budget's offices, but an OMB aide
said Lance would return to the
capital Monday to host a recep·
lion for the budget and White
House staffs. ·
Four federal agencies are still
investigating Lance's banking
and personal financial affairs
prior to his appointment to bead
OMB.
The head of GeoTgf a 's Banking
Department, Jack Dunn. said
several questions about Lance's
banking practices would have to
be resolved before Lance could
take on another bank job.
··n·s not a clear yes or no on
Bert,'' Dunn said.
However, the NBG is a na-
tionally chartered bank and
Dunn's office does not have
jurisdiction over lt.
The Justice Department bas
been investigatini Lance's
private use of an NBG airplane to
see if he violated campaign laws
or was misapplying bank f\Dlds.
Lance flew on the plane a bot¢ 800
limes as bank president in ms
and 1976.
.
Co ast
I
W4!a tlaer
Night 8nd early m~
low clouds wtth fog will
burn oil to sunny after·
noons· lhroueh Friday.
Temperatures a little
cooler. LOw tonf ght SO.
Highs FTid.aY 68 lo 78.
INSIDE TODA 'Y
\
. ..
~ . .
•
--
~t1rt ~· ti.hap
TONIGHT
OCC LECTURE -"Slim.
• Chance i n a Fat World,"
Women's Center, 7 p.m.
.. PRIVATE LIVES" -South
• ~oast Repertory Theater.
-r.esday-Sund~ through Oct. 30,
' 8p.m.
FRIDAY, SEPT. 23
OCC CELEBRITY SERIES -
Edgar Bergen, Auditorium, 8
P·g1CC LECTURES -.. Art oC
Communication," Fine Arts 119;
''Drama of Weather," Science Lecture 1; "Stress Management
in. Today's World," Fine Arts
116; "Success in Competitive
Athletics," Science Hall;. "Un·
derstanding Sexual Interaction,"
Science Lecture 2. AJI 7: 30.
OCC PLANETARIUM -
"Relativity and Cosmoloey:•
7:30 and 9 p.m. · ·
FOOTBALL -Costa Mesa vs.
E stancia, OCC Stadium, 8 p.m.
Newport Harbor vs. Corona del
Mar at Newport Harbor, 8 p.m.
. MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY
RACING -Fairgrounds, 8 p.m.
COSTA MESA C IVIC
T>LA YHOUSE -One.act plays,
.. The Private Ear" and "The
Public Eye," Fairgrounds, Sept.
23-24 and Sept. 30-0ct. 1, 8:30 p.m.
FRIDAY NIGHT FILMS -
"Sometimes a Great Notion,"
OCC Forum, 7:~ p.m. $1..
Newport~s
Hawkeye Wins
Second Race
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Whistle Wing V, a 52-foot sloop
from the Santa Barbara Yacht
Club skippered by Hastin~s
Harcourt, held the lead in the St.
Francis Perpetual Trophy
Regatta after Wednesday's second race in the fou~race
series.
Hawkeye, a 48-foot sloop from
Newport Beach. won
Wednesday's second race and
was third in the standing of the slx
entries, behind Lightning, a 51·
foot stoop Crom the St. Francis
YachtClubofSanFranclsco.
The final two races are
sc'beduled for Friday and Satur-
day in San Francisco Bay.
In a competition or two·tonners
for the Keefe-Kilborn Perpetual
Trophy, Imp, skippered by Dave
AllenofSan Francisco, won Mon·
day and again Wednesday.
Pachena of the Royal Vancouver
Yacht Club, skippered by John
Newton, was second in the stand·
ings of seven enfries. WHliam F. Power•s High
B.oler of Newport Beach added a
victory Wednesday to one Mon-
day to lead in the City of San
Francisco Perpetual Trophy
series. Saudade, last year's win-
ner, and Scllndalows, sloops from
the host St. Francis Yacht Club,
were tied for second ln the stand·
iog after the finst two ol lour
races.
OfllANO£ OOAIT
DAILY PILOT
members l\lff ered minor lltjurle9
when tbo submarine struck the
bottom of tbe lledlteucean
durtns a routine m•aaJon IOUtb ot
Sardlnla. A Stureeoa clua attaclc
submarine, the Ray normally
carries a crew ot 12 omcers and
108 mllated men.
•'The ship1s nuclear reactor
wu unaffected and there was no
nuclear propulsion plant
U.mage," the Navy statement .wa.
'.l'be Ray proceeded to La Mad·
• daJena, Sardinia, under her own
power and arrived there late
Wednes«Mly, the Navy reported.
The incident brought a protest
from the Sard.inian government's
minister for the envir~nment. Another Lane for 'l'irtoria
Orazio Erdas, a Socialist. said •
the base poses "a permanent
danger to all the people ln the
area·• because of possible
radioactive leakage.
Costa Mesa traffic engineers figure traffic
on this stretch of Victoria Street near the
intersection of Newport Bo~levard will
flow easier when a new lane is completed
later this year. Intersection is one of area•s-
worst bottlenecks and the extra lane will
be put on the south side of Victoria. mak-ing it a five lane streeL
The submarine base on La
Maddalena, a tiny island off
northern Sardinia, has been a
subject of contention by leftists
for a number of years.
Newport Store Robbed
The Navy said the sob would
undergo a thorough Inspection at
La Maddalena. and that details
of the grolDlding itself were un·
der investigation.
The Ray, currently deployed
with the U.S. 6th Fleet, bas its.
>;?ome port at Charleston, s:c. ·
,
Two men, one armed with a
:knife, took $80 from the Arches
·Liquor Store in a holdup early to-
day, Newport Beacb police re-
ported .
Store clerk Thomas Froehle.
43, told police the two men, who
appeared to be high on
something, overlooked a st!lck of
Moyers Eyed
He May Replace Sevareid
NEW YORK CAP> -Dill 0 . Moyers of "CBS
Reports" has been offered the job of commentator on
the "Evening News with Walter Cronkite" to replace
Eric Sevareid, Richard S. Salanl, president of CBS
News, said today.
1 Ie said that Moyers has asked for more Lime lo
consider the off er.
Salant said Moyers is "a very thoughtful. in-
terugent and articulate guy who has a good eye for the American scene."
Moyers worked for public broadcasting before joining CBS News and was publisher or Newsday and
press secretary to former President Johnson. The
"CBS Reports" program is aired about 10 times a
year. .
Se\'areid will reac·h the network's mandatory r e-
tirement age of 65 in November.
Leisure Services
Registration &t·
Reg~tration for all fall classes
otrered by Costa Mesa's Depart·
ment of Leisure Services will
begin Monday from 6 to 8 p.m. at
the Downtown Community
Center.
A0 fU1l catalogue of classes is
available ln room 305 at city hall
where late registration will be
held from 8 a.m. to S p.m. beain·
niogTuesday.
Many of the new courses begin·
ning the week of Oct. 3 will be
held at the Community Center,
the city's newest recreation out-
let.
Formerly used by the Harbor
Area Boys Club, the city
purchased the site at 594 Center
St. about two years ago as part o(
the city's downtown redevelop.
mentplan.
Refurbishing of the center
began in January and was com-
.,.....PllfleAl
COMPLEX •••
Association members artue
that the planned construction of
539 apartment unita and 126
sloile family homes on 48 acres
bounded by Scuth Coast Plua.
Bear Street and the San Diego
Freeway will destroy the
neighborhood.
The assoclatloo becan the in·
ltiative drive after the clty coun·
ell approved Amel'sdevelopment
plans.
'I"· Indian •
Meei. Slated
htonnatloul m9:.£ are now beini beld for f • in· t.nlW Ila tM Oraqe CGllt 'Y'M·
CA lridlaa Ould•, Maiffol and
Princ:euel JlC'OCJ'lm. Deta1ls are avaUdle by c1llln1
"2-9980.
pleted in mid-May.
About $38,000 w,s spent to up·
grade the facillty' which r,,atures a swimming pool, a 1ym, a meet-
ing room, kitchen facillUes and a
large social hall.
Besides the programs to be
baaed at the center, the facillty is
open for rental to civic groups
and resldenb.
Registration for fall classes is
on a first come, first served
basis. Mail-in reristratlon will be
accepted beginning Tuesday.
For more information, call
556·!53>0.
Skateboarding
·Boy Crashes
Into Auto
A 12·year·old Costa Mesa boy
who apparently didn't see an on-
coming car while he was riding
his akatebolird on West Seaview
Lane Wednesday afternoon, was
. injured when he rode his board
into the etde of the movln1 auto,
police said. ·
John Santoni of 617
Brookview Wa,1 • Costa Mesa,
was treated at Mercy General
Hospital in Santa Ana following
the 4:55 p.m . accident, but
wasn't bos'pitall:zed.
Driver Helen Louise Walley of w Brookview Way, told police
the youth crubed into her ~ar as
she waa pulllne out of her
driveway. PoUce said no clta-
Uons Will be baued .
Ca~ Fire G~Ja
Meet in Newport
$20 biils during the robbery
which they punctuated by scat-
tering a cash register drawer full
of change about the West. Coast
Highway liquor store.
Froehle said he was vacuum-
ing the back of the store at about
1: 20 a.m. when be beard the front door bell ring, signaling that
someone had entered.
He said he was confronted by a
s ix-foot. 190-pound man as he
walked toward the front and a
knife was shoved to bis throat.
He was ordered to lie on the
floor but when the tall bandit's
shorter companion-about five
feet eight inches tall-couldn't
open the cash register. Froehle
was told to get the machine open.
The two men grabbed the
money, tossed the cash drawer
and its change aside and told the
clerk to lie down while they fled on foot.
Police said Froehle was the
victim of a similar holdup of the
same store about a year ago in
which two men kidnaped him in
bis own car ana torced bim to
drive to Long Beach.
There, be was shoved outo£tbe
car while the suspects drove off.
Police said they have never re-
covered the car nor have they
found the suspect.
Investigators say they have no
reason to believe the two rob-
beries were committed by the
same people.
Beoonte a stereo nut
~ F.&OtioalJypea.nuts.
• Jn 11 nutshell, herehll you need
to lcnow about stereo.
Turntables. FM/ AM stereo
radios. tape recorders. and •
speakers. Matched up for you by
pPOp!c who know aoousUcs and
E'l~ronics in• Ide out.
We're talkinQ about Sony
oompact stereo.
And you don't have ID spend a
mlnt to appreciate Jt.
Come In todAl&
Let us give you a demonstra-
tion. And a deal you've got to hear
tobelfcve.
"IT'S A SONF . .
ltBallhere
in black and 1.Vhite.
When it oomes k> blaclc and
whlta television. Sony hae lt all.
A. crisp, dear picture that gives
you striking oonb\\st and detaU.
Fine features and controls for
extra value.
Plus the klnd of outstanding
design that's mode Sony famous.
Hurry in. Sony's gotft all.
And we've got all the Sony&
"IT'S A SOD"
· F,...P.,,eAJ
VICTIM ••• 1
was lo self defense.
"I'm not convtocec! It was self deteue:• :Wea~er eald. ••11r.
Mcaure curled the !lletal bar at.
all tlmtll and at DO tin)e did he
raise lt ln a threatenln• lesbu'o at ofllcer Moran:' he claimed.
·we.aver Mserte4 he wm pre. sent witnesses wbo ·will t.eettfy
that Ofl1cer Kana aid Jllcaure
for the .aec:ond time after lie was •tre.d:F down and l1tDa -.urec1 fromtbetlntpnshot.
:Moran. who WU crBclUlted
·from Newport Harbor Hi&la School and Oranae Coast
Colleae, apparently was on vaca· tion in the area w1-en be atoppecl
off at the garage SaturdQ atf.tr...
noon at about 1:30 p.m.
Immediately after tbe lhoot-
lng, Costa Mesa police contacted
the Orange Count7 District At·
tome.y•a Office. Local police ftle4
a report with the DA1a oalce
which has~ a aped.al In-
vestigation te&111 to iDteninr
witnesses in the case.
The investigation is still andel'
way. A spokesman at the DA•s of•
fice could not estimate when it
will be completed or if criminal
charges are forthcoming qaiost Moran.
McCIU?'e underwent SUl'geJ7
Saturday night for removal of
two slugs In his chest.
Attorney Weaver said tt ap. J>e~urewilllosetbeuseof his extremWes as a resu1& of the shooting. .
He remains listed ha eritical
but stable ~ondtUon In the
hospital's intensive care unit.
Weaver said he underwent sur-
gery for a second time Wednes·
day but bqspltal offlclala wou14
notCOllfirDi tbe repon.
FitnaY Classes
Offered at YMCA
Adult fitness classes are 1lO'W under way at the Orange Coast
YMCA, 2300 University I>rlve.
Newport Beach.
Classes are held at 8:30 and
9:30a.m., nooo, and5:1Sand6:1S p.m. on Mondays, Wednesdays
and Fridays. Details are availa·
ble by calling 642·9990.
Reversal
Requested
By .Doctor
A c.c.ta Mesa physician wbo
was suspended from practice
after investleation of cbaraes
that be defrauded the at.te's
Medi-Cal plan moved lo reverse
tbe ruling Wednesday in Oranae
County Superior Court.
Dr. Ftank Kreitler of 275 Vic-
toria St. names lhe state's Board
of Medical Quality Assurance as
defendants in an action that
see~ the eranting of a writ of
mandate against the agency.
KreiUer was suspended for 180
days last Sept. 14 and placed on
probation ror five years aft.er ex-
amination of allegations that he
and X-ray technician Donald
Burk made false claims lo the
MediCal system.
Records attached to the
lawsuit indicate that more than
St ,300 was subsequently r e
funded to Medi-Cal.
Kreitler protests that the state
action against him was taken
without him being allowed to pro
duce evidence vital to his de
rense.
A hearing al which the judge
assigned lo his case wilf be asked
to !>Cl aside the ruling has not
yet been scheduled an Superior
Court.
Kreitler. who also pracuces an
Mojave, was further ordered by
the slate lo devote 20 hours a
week for nine weeks lo unpaid
community work and four hours
of unpllid practice a week for the
followm~ two ye1trs
Woman Sues
:j On Dog Bite
.. ! A woman who claims she was
~· attacked and bitten by a
•1 Doberman pinscher dog in a Mi!>·
: .. s1on VieJo pool hall sued the
: .. property owner and t.he dog's :~ owner Wednesday for $.W,000 In
:~damages.
:· Named as defendants in the
:-Orange County Superior Court
:: lawsuit are Daniel Bcndgen.
owner of Dan's Family B111iard11 .
• 25652 Taladro C1rt·le. and do~
owner Rusty.Stepp
Plaintiff Moille Sue Adam~
claims Stepp'-. do~ leaped on her
• and bit and clawed her June 14
when th<" rmimal was all owed 10
enter the J>()OI hall. . . .. .
1 . Woman Kil/,ed
i In Auto Crash ..
~ LOS ANGELES <AP> A
Pomona woman has died alter
being Involved in three auto acci·
dents in 10 m1nult's, police re·
ported.
, Shirley Scott, JG, died Tue!>day
: at Glendora Community Hospital
after her car crossed al\ avenue's
: center line and s m ashed head-<>n
~ with another car
The driver of the other car.
• Mrs. Gertrndc Tscharner, 70, of
Azusa was in serious condition
wUd animal part, bad been un •
d rec 1 unlqtM treatment for
tbe nnt broken 1t1 at tbo Ume of
bi. 1eeond. mlthap. h d Lloo CountQt velAlrlnartaM a
pl~ a flbttalall Catt on tbe
br.ak auffuod Au,. 17 lll • acuf· ne wflh a rhino. 1 Wal believed
to a,. tho first aucb treatment
ever attempted on • aln.ffe, ac
cordlne to a Lion Country
apokesman.
Llon Country officiuhs iodicat·
t:d earlier this week that the cast
miaht have bad to be removed
earlier than planned because
Pete wu weakening from his
lack ot exercise.
Wednesday, those Cearg BP· parently became reality when the
huge, gang.ling animal apparent·
ly s.l.ipped in tus stall and Cell
spread-eagled to the floor.
It was much the saote predlca
menl suffered by a giraffe m a
Bnush zoo. Thal animal also
died this week.
Veterinarians summoned by
Pele's keepers Wednesday d1!>
covered that the fall had broken
or dislocated the giraffe's right
foreleg near lhe shoulder -an
impossible injury to correct, ac
cording to the Lion Country
spokesman.
Pete was destroyed with a fatal
injection while his mate, Daisy.
"Jrnd his year-old calf. Chester.
munched th eir lunchc ~
elsewhere in lhe wild anim.il
park.
Lion Country oHicials noted
that when the cast was taken off
Pete's leg to examine it after the
animal was destroyed, they d.-
termined that his earlier injury
apparently had been healed
Tornado Race
uaders
Vnchanged
Light winds off Ale1m1tos Bay
Wednesday scrambled the 63
boat Tornado world c hum
p1onship fleet but did little to
change the point leaders after the
first five of seven -;chcduled
races.
The boats that had been
finishing among the top 10 in
heavier winds during the first four races finished poorl)
Wednesday and the lop fm1 shl·rs
had little if anything lo gain.
The series is being scored on
the best six of seven races. with
each skipper throwing out his
worst race. Based on this
system. Brian Lewis and Warren
Rock look over first place in the
standings despite an 11th place
finish which they would throw
out at this stage or the series
lcuvmg him a total of 17 .4 penally
points under lhe Olympie scoring
svstem
· f'in1~hm~ st.'n·nlh Wednesday
~as the Wc'tl <;c·rman team or
.I o r ~ S p e n g I c· r a n d R o I r
Oullenkopf whose be!->t four
fimshes give thl'm second place
with 21 points.
Keith Notary and Dave
Gamblin or the U.S. finished the
poorest or the early leaders with
a 12th, which could be thrown
out. 'leaving them with 29 I
points .
Fourth in the standings is the
New Zealand team of Peter
Douglas and Chris Timms, 34
points, and fifth is the team or
Larry Woods and John Burrows
of Canada, 39 7 points.
Board Fired
FRESNO <AP l All five
members of this city's Civil
Service Board were fired for or
dering a police officer to be re-
instated, offi cials said.
B~kToget~
\l~xandc•r Van Dyke. 5. i!> reunited with his German
'>ht.>phcrcl dog Sugar after the pet was separated from
I he Bakersfield family during their vacation in Clovis,
too miles away.
Four Men Sentenced
On Bilking Charges
f''our men 1nd1cted by the
Orange County Grand Jury on in-
1t1lll rharRel-1 that they bilked m
vcstors an an lrvine·based toy
hoat cnlerprise of more than Sl
million have been sentenced in
Supenor Court
/\II four princ1 pab an the now
clcfunl'l Excalibcr Toys, 17092
l'ullman St Irvine. were or·
tlt•red tu make resl1tut1on or
St80.000 lo fo1 mer investors and
pa) a f111e of SIS,000 .
Appearing before Judge
Richart.I llumillon were Hugh
Brian Wclcel, 29, o( Santa Ana,
Richard Roy McGresor. 34, of
San Marcos. J1tmel Grabam
R1teh1e. 32. or Ptacentia, and
Riley Wilson. 30. of San Marcos.
Arresting omcers said in
vestors paid an average $6,000
each to buy molds and supplies
from Excaliber from which they
manufactured toy boats in their
homes.
Investors said they were as
sured that there was a ready
market for the tiny craft.
particularly among hobby shop~
which sold them for use as radio·
operated boats.
Investigators said many in·
vestors put their life savings into
lhe Excallber venture and that
some botT'Owed funds above that
to Increase their stakes in lhe en·
terpriae.
~eelal SesiMita
Cordova Asks
Tax Restudy
By JOANNE REVNOLQS Of_ Del., ...... IUtf
Freshman Assemblytnan Ron
Cordova. wbo went to Sacra.men·
to in ..Jam.t•ey promising to de-
liver tax refon:n, told Harbor
Area realtors Wednesday be
want. the governor to call a
special legislative session t.o do
juattbat.
Cordova <D·El Toro) wu the
guest •Speaker at the monthly
luncheon of
the Women's
Council of the
Newport
Harbor-Costa
Mesa Board
of Realtors.
He told the
audience or
about 30 men
and women
t b a t t b e CIOllDOVA
reason bis campaign promise bas
been unfulfilled so far is that the
plan voted on twice by the
Legislature "was designed to pro-
vide relief for those who pay the
least amount of taxes."
The former prosecuting at-
torney said he has called upon
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. to re·
turn the now -adjourned
Legislature session lo work out
a new tax reform plan.
He said what he has in mmd
should be called homeowner lax
reform because it would "get the
monkey orr the backs of local
property owners" by forcing lbe
stale to take over the financing of
education and the administration
of welfare.
He noted that a one-cent in-
crease in the state sales tax
would bring in an additional Sl.2
billion to state coffers and he sug-
gested that would be ohe way of
raising money for stale finance
of education and welfare and to
provide a means of lowenog pro-
perty taxes.
He also said he will introduce a
bill which would "provide a
dynamic homeowner's exemp-
tion" giving residents a $2,000 to
SS,000 a year "reward" for living
in their homes. This would be in
addition to a ceiling on the
amount of annual increase that
couJd be applied to the assessed
value of a home.
Cordova, who won applause for
his stance against the recently
defeated lax reform measure,
told lhe group that be also op-
poses the Jarvis tax initiative. a
measure supported by the board
or reaJtors. •
That measure would set a one
percent annual limit on Ute in-
crease to assessed valuo ol prop.
erty and would limit all gov-
ernmental bnd1et increases to
two percent.
Cordova aald be doesn •t oppose
tbe measure's intent, but is
against it because of what he we·
dieted would be a drastic effect
on the abilities of cities, counties
and school districts to raise
funds.
He predicted that unless
"meanin1ful" tax reform is
enacted soon, voters either in
1978 or 1980 will throw lnco.m·
bents out of olfice "because t.bey
will have bad it with the lip
service and the empty prom.
ises."
* * * 'Freshnwn'
Cites Pride
ln4Acts
Freshman Assemblyman Ron
Cordova (D-El Toro> was asked
Wednesday which of bis ac·
complislunents in Sacramento he
was most proud of.
He listed four -two negative
and two positive:
In the negative column, be cit·
ed his opposition to ~ 154, the
tax reform measure which
passed lhe ASSembly, but died in
the Senate. For bis opposition.
Cordova was assaulted verbally
by one of bis party's leaders, As·
semblyman Willie Brown <D-San
Francisco).
One of the posili ve accomplish·
mentsbe listed was the passage of
his bill which be said will tighten
the continuance process in
criminal proceedings and force
more rapid trials. Cordova is a
former deputy Orange County
district attorney.
Another negative source of
pride listed by Cordova was his
leadership in opposition to a bill
which would have allowed city
and county governments to make
certain appointments in secret.
The last measure listed by
Cordova was the Beacon Bay bill
he introduced. He told Harbor
Area realtors it eventually will
pave the way for the City or
Newport Beach to renegotiate its •
lease on a piece of waterfront
property with the homeowners
who live there.
Judge llam1lton accepted the
dcflondants' plea of no contest to
conspiracy ch11rges and ordered
chargei. or rrand theft chsm1ssed
Each of the rour was placed on
I(} years probation under terms
"h1ch rule out the possibility or
anv defendant operating an an-
' l''ttmcnt scht'me along the lines
of the Excaliber plan
Special Promotion on
Le ather Sofas and Chairs
Fan Views
'&ar Wars '
lOOTimes
WICllJTA, Kan (AP! -Mal·
thew Miller has sat through
"SlarWars" IOOt1mes
"I like the movie." he says.
Ilcs1dt'.... the 19 year-old said
Wedne'>rlU) that he may set a
world rl'cord 1f the Guinness
Book of World Records is m-teresl{'<I
The film 1s 125 minutes long,
which mcuns Miller has total
star-gazing lime or 208 hours, 20
minutes
Sept. 22 through Oct. 15th
now
"~// ~ '8 4 l11ela
$799.
T op Gruba L e athe r
Sofas
Luxurious sofas with unmatched
comfort and elegance in top
Kenny Crockett, manager of
Mall Cinema which Miller
patronizes. said the theater is
keeping track of his attendance
and is letting Miller in free.
Miller, who is unemployed, said
h e paid for his firs t 30
performances at $3 a ticket.
Fi'Ve 1t y les to choo1e from
grain leather that grows more
beautiful with use and age
available in several colors of
leather.
"I came the first day and came
to all 11even shows. Arter a while I
cul that back to five and now I'm
down to only a couple at a time "
said Miller, who bas two ~
Wars T -shirts, a couple of
poste~. the book and the movtc
!lound track.
"I 'm not alm1ng al a specific
number now. At first I wanted to
try for 30 lo break my old record
1 he saw the orieinal "Airport'' 27
times> but when I got there I
thought, 'What the hell Why not
100'?"
We ar e a l s o o f fe r ing
generous savings on oth~r
leather sofas and chairs
-30 pieces on display to
chocise from.
\
GBTnNG ae Dan. -
One ol my fellow wotkert bete aL
\be ~paper hid 0-. k Qd or
arly mominS tl••L makes 1ou
want lo kiclr the dof. knock CJ¥er
Ibo trash can and beat your ftm
oa your tar hood In utter fn.uatni·
lion.
Ht» car wa:; his problem. It
plain ref\1.ffd to ala.rt
Si.ntt be lives up ln Santa Ana.
he decided on alternate
transportatJon. He would take.
the Orange County TransJt Dis·
tncl bus from Santa Ana to our
Costa Mesa omce
"I want you lo know this was a
real expenence." he reported,
puffing into work some time late.
He s a.id he got oo lbe bus near
central Santa Ana. • 'Tben we
wandered on down around South
Coast Plaza for awhile and then
drifted on out by the Santa Ana
Country Club," he explained.
AFTER TIUS DRIFTING, he
was beginning to wonder if you
could get.here from there.
Guilt11 of Jflurdft.s
Roger· C. Drollinger , center, has been found guilty in
Blackford Circuit Court , Hartford City, Ind .. of the
murders of four brothers in Hollandsburg last February.
He faces a mandatory life sentence for each murder and
will be held in Michigan City state prison until sentenc·
in g Oct. 17.
WASHINGTON (AP> -The only three men sWl in prison for
Water1ate crirnes, once Richard
Nh ixoo'a closest aJdet, will bave
1 earlno next rnooth on petlUons
10J' reduced senteace1.
U.S. District Court Judie John
J . Slrica set an Oct. • heartn1
Wednesday for former Atty. Gen.
John N. Mitchell, former White
House Chief of Staff lt.R.
Haldeman and John D .
EhrJichman, Nlxoti'1 former
chief domestic advlaer.
ALL THREE SAID ln their
petitions that they were sorry for
p_ast offenses, hact suffered con·
s1derably already and wanted a
chance to become u.seful mem· be rs or society.
Mitchell also said be needed
treatment for severe arthritis
and faces surgery to replace a
diseased hip, an operation be
said could not be performed
while be is in prison.
The three former Nixon aides.
serving terms o( 30 months to
eight years in federal prison
camps for Watergate cover-up
convictions, are asking for sen·
t.a>ce reductiona lo Ume already
served.
8181CA, WHO received his
first Watel'la~ cue ftve years
a10, has the authority to order
the lrnmedlate release ot the
three. He has IJ'Uted sentence
l"eductlons In the past to such
Watergate figures as John Dean
Jeb Magruder, James McCo;;i
and Herbert Kalmbach.
With lbe Watergate special
prosecutor•s office closed and no
known pending Watergate cases
being pursued by other
authorities. Sirica 's disposition·
or these latest petitions could be
the end ot the Watergate era at
the federal courthouse.
Haldeman, 50, entered a prison
camp at Lompoc on June 2L One
day later, the 6'-year-old
Mitchell, entered a prison camp
at MaxweU Air Force Base, Ala.
·Both men waited until a long
strin1 ol appeals was exhausted
before surrendering to federal
authorities.
EHRUCHMAN, DECIDING
not to wait to the end of the ap·
peals process, entered prison at
Safford, Ariz., Oct. 28.
EhrUchman cannot be pa.rolil:l
WlW June 1919. and Mltebell aiil
Haldeman mu.st rematn In Drlsclili untll December 1919 befo·ri
becomlns eligible for paiale.
EBA8~1cer
After another while, however,
the big orange and white county
bus rumbled on down Orange
Avenue to disgo r ge him,
whereupon he only had five or six
blocks to walk to work.
The elapsed time of his little
morning bus ride was 40 minutes.
Pal Offers 'Sam' Help
In addition to hls Wateri:ate
sentence, Ehrlichman is serving
a concurrent sentence in connec·
lion with a break-in at the office
of a psychiatrist who had treated
Daniel Ellsberg. Ellsberg made
public the Pentagon Papers.
Under the terms o( the prison
s ent ences ,t~ey received ,
Judy Carter, contributing
ed itor fo r Redbook
magazine and wife of the
President's son Jack, has
w ritten. an article ui·ging
"nice" women to work for
the Equal Rights Amend·
m ent in order to counteract
the "image problem" of the
"How long does it ordinarily
take you to drive from your house
to the office," I inquired.
Writer C~ Suspect Handsome, 'Close'
effort. ·
Action: Lights
Tijuana Salutes Caller
"Between 10 and 15 minutes,"
he sighed.
So in this little tale you might
suspect we have the basic flaw
that plagues the big brass who
are trying lo coax all of us into
more use or pubhc transporta·
lion.
We have been long conditioned
to the automobile. We like the
comfort and convenience of be·
ing able to leap in the old family
heap m the morning, whisk off lo
work and park it al the office
door.
Public bus systems may have a
rough row to hoe In luring aJI of
us away from this concept. It's
difficult for a bus system to com·
pete with door-to-door service.
SOME GOVERNMENT types
have even become so frustrated
in the effort that they've figured
the only way for the bus to com·
pete is to make it more distasteful
to drive a car.
Thus we have been treated to
the sptt~le or government try.
ing to restrl~t off·stl'fft parking
for busmen employes and taking
away freeway tramc lanes from
the auto commuter. Orange
County Supe r visor Ralph
Diedrich liked lo call these no-
tions "disincentives."
But maybe what we really
need 1!> more imagination in pro-
\'1dmg the public bus service.
The Orange County Transit D1s-
lrict already geL'> huge lumps of
federal aid cai.h. But maybe the
rederaJs have been providing us
with lhe wr~ng kind or aid.
WHAT WE REALLY need are
some CIA agents working to im·
prove the bus service.
Have you been readin1 about
the CIA hearings that have been
going on ln Washln&ton? Why,
the CIA figured out a scheme to
make Fidel Castro's beard fall
out. And they invented tear gas
launchers for aaenls who can't
throw straight. And they devised
drug-laced swizzle slicks that
would melt in your drink and
make you go goofy.
Clearly, the CIA has the Im·
agmative kind of government
minds we need to improve and
~treamllne our public bus
service
We might even end up with bus
service to Catalina Is land.
NEW YORK CAP) -A pen-pal
friendship apparently bas de·
veloped between the alleged
"Son or Sam" killer and a woman
who has offered him a "place to
stay when he gels out or the
hospital."
Rosina Belpedio, 40, said late
Wednesday she thinks David R.
Berkowitz is handsome and "very
close tome."
MISS BELPEDIO, neverthc
less , has sold for $100 a letter
Berkowitz wrote her. "I needed
the money. I was broke. [ hope
'Sam' forgives me,'' s he said.
Berkowitz replied to two notes
Miss Belpedio sent him at Kings
County Hospital, where he is un·
dergoing psychiatric tests. He is
accused of murdering six
oersons in a 12 month period.
In his note. Berkowitz lhankedl
"Rosina" for being his friend and
for her "lovely le tters."
promis ed he'd pray for her. but
beg~ed off on an appart-nl request
(er a get-together
" ... THERE ARE alot <sic) of
things that can never be, i.uch as.
the two or us getting together ...
the letter read It was signed·
"David B. CSAM > '
Rockefeller Estate
To Be SubdiVided?
WASHINGTON CAP> -Former Vice President RockefelJer's 2S·
acre estate in a posh neighborhood of the nation's capital reportedly
has been sold lo a housing development company for SS.S million.
Sources living in the exclusive Foxhall community said Wednesday
~hey learned that the. firm purchasing the property, plans to subdivide
1t and construct 100 11ngle-famil)
homes. T"eportedly ~a~; t.s million The sale apparently is cond1
llonaJ. The asking price for thf
estate, situated Ln rolhog terrain.
Mom Delayed
In Baby Bid
HAMMOND, Ind. <AP>
Welfare authorities have refused
temporarily to give a woman
custody of her baby, found 275
miles from his home.
State Welfare Department of-
ficials would not discuss the
case. Police Lt. William Olson
said Wednesday authorities ap-
parently wanted to know more
aboul the baby's disappearance.
The 5-month-old boy was found
Sunday in an alley. He a ppeared
to be well.fed and in good health.
Police located the mother, Cathy
Gibson, 23, Crittenden, Ky., atter
the baby·s picture appeared in a
newspaper and the grandmother
contacted police.
THE PROPl:ft.TY , wh.ich in·
cludPs a 90 'l'. r r1ld farmhouse.
pool , lt'nnt!-. rour t and pond, had
been on the market s ince late last
year
Hockefeller's lawyer. William
Yates of Briarcliff. N.Y .. s aid he
had no comment on the reported
sale.
Spokesmen for Roshansky and
Kay Construction Company of
Chevy Chase,
Md., the real
estate (lrm
which re ·
portedly is
buying the
estate, wer e
n o t i m .
mediately
available for
comment.
But resi· llOCltE,ELLt.11
dents whose property adjoins the
estate said they had been ap·
proachcd by a real estate agent
last week with offers to have first
bid on the land before it is sub-
d1 vided.
Rockies Might Get Snow·
YellmmtoneDriving Conditiom Hazardous
Tem.,.....t11rn
AtbU' .. "'"•"' .. llol•
IMlorl ,,_,., ...
lllft.iG
Olefttensc
Olk• CIMl!Wlft
Clenl9"d
o .. ~· 'Mii e>.11-0.t....i ... ,_ .
"°""""' ........
J9<h'"'"' ic..-.a., .... "'-Llttt.lllecll M*"' Ml ..... .......... ...... ~
D ~~~ k"ff'llA...:W~r> _,..
lotel eintv \'"'-...er ...,.n1119 winch U '° 3D 11111n ...-lloUr Ill .,. •wn. Tiie ~llf'Y wfll ~llrnb Into the ujl.
Pff10SMllleLMo\119etnC1vlcetftttr,
wfllle , .. ""1'Cllrr II\ IM MUNS""'"
IMl .... y ._,, 10 Tl!9 In! .. YllW/1, 111 c...,. .. W ,.,lllflto, wtlt ,..,.. lllglls
lfttMIOwlo'-•1'1.
Mlw'lltlil "-•turn wlll ••¥" l1Mttw•...,11ett.uootron.tswlll ...... ""9llt h'OIJI It IO •• T,_ '°"'*' •Mttawltllle-lwiw_,wlllt .. ....,,..,..,..,, ...... .... c .......... ,.,.
The existence of the latest
Berkowitz letter dated Sept. 11
was confirmed by an auto,raph
specialist, Charles Hamllton,
who said he bought It from Miss
Belped io at his gallery on
Wednesday.
Miss Belpedio said she offered
Berkowitz a temporary home
because "eventually he's going
to get out of the hospital and
when he does he'll need a place to
stay."
SHE SAID SllE'O still like to
go out with Berkowitz or see him
at the hospital.
"I tried lo see him one night, to
bring him a radio. But they
wouldn 't let me in. Jn ract, they
tried to put me in the G Build·
ing. ·• she said, referring to the
p sychiatric ward where
Berkowitz is housed.
"I hope people won't get after
me," Miss Belpedio said. "I just
want to be p helping hand."
TIJUANA, Mexico <AP> ··The governor-elect of
Baja California, Roberto de la Madrid. has a lot of
fans in this border town of 700,000 residenls··-he got
the city's lights turned back on after a night in the
dark.
Madrid called federal officials in Mexico City and
won a two-week reprieve in payment of $90,000 due for
federal electricity. The power had been turned off
Tuesday.
When the li ghts in city hall returned Wednesday.
Mayor Fe rnando Marquez Arce was us ing kerosene
lights. His employes were sent home at dusk the night
before. They usually stay until 9.30 \>·m·
A spokesman for the mayor said Tijuana doesn·t
have enough money lo pay the bill. which is up 500
percent since January becau~e of the peso devalua·
ti on.
The seriea of 15 ar11clH waa 'prepared by Dr.
Jerome Skolnick, director, Center fOf the Study
of Law and Society at UC Beneley. He and 13
noted legal scholars and writers contribute the
ar11clH which make up Courses by Newspaper.
The we.kly ar11clea may be rHd just for their
Interest value, but many reedera al10 enroll to
earn college credit from arH collegH Including
Coastline and Santa Ana Community CollegH.
COURSES BY NEWSPAPER
Dr. Howard E. Fradkin, nationally recognl1ed
advlaer In correction• and eoc:lology profHsot at
Cal State University, Long Beach, 11 course In·
atructor for 1tuc:lenta enrolling In the CoHllln•
CommunJty College. Completion of the blank
blow lnltl•l•• enrollment. The college• may re-
quire eddltlonal readings, one or two on-cempua
meetings and a final paper or HamlnatJon.
Since the Dally Piiot five year• ago began of-
fering Courua by Newepeper In cooperation
with UC San Diego htenalon and th• Natlonal
Endowment for the Humanities, 200 newapapera
have Joined ua In preHntlng the weekly "lee·
turH" re.ct w..kly by 15 mllllon Americans.
Thia aemHter, Cou,..a by Newspaper ex-
plores "Crime. Justice and Punlatiment In
Ametk:a" beginning Sept. 11 In the Dally Piiot
and contlnulna for 15 eonMCUtiv• Saturdays.
'
Th• Dalty Piiot offer CoursH by Newspaper H
a public service. Readers residing In the Sad-
dlebKk Community College Dlatrtet must obtain
a permit from that district prior to reglstertng tor
credit In another dlatrtct.
For convenience uae the mall reglstfetlon
t>Jank Of call 163-0824 for further Information.
------------------------------------------------
COASTLINE COMMUNITY COLLEGE REGISTRATION FORM
10231 SLATER AVE.. FOUNTAIN VALLEY, CA 92701
&r1illlll~ Soci ology 161 Ticket #134
(QMMW....._,
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• llttldel1C Adcttll While Atlendlnl COUlllne ~:
~~---:-~_;.,;r-~~'"'""'.'------=--~~--~----,...-------~--~~--.......... ..... a., ZIP
-MAlE-F£IMt£ '"*"Did""' ...... ..,-~....,..,. ____ ...;.... ___ Dey ____ ,_ ---
"" '" .......... clliM: -··-.... "". dlz-. ...... """' • lllN? --------.,... .... -----
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•
• RIVERSIDE <Al»
The head of a Rlversld
County bealta dinlc th
allegedly boasted •
cancer cure co.utlng c(
a ell« d distilled water
and lelDOD Juice WU ...,. rested on Florida
charges of selling UJ'L.
registered securities.
autbortties said.
Randolph .J. Rudd1.
operator of the Murrieta
Hot Springs clinic, was
booked at county jail
Wednesday after Orlan-
do, Fla., authorities is-
A sued WUTants charging
~!~!~.~!~ a modified Porsche 911 sails off
. a nmp at 100 miles per hour at Marina del Rey where the stunt was
performed for a Japanese movie. The car traveled more than 300 feet
.-........_ him with selling un·
registered securities
without re&i:straUon or a
license. before hitting the water. Divers removed the dtiver and he was okay but
taken to a hospital for examination. •
One Killed
IRSlwoting
OAKLAND (AP) -The two men talking in
Oakland's sunny Civic Center Plaza went unnoticed
until one yanked out a handgun and shot the other to
death before scores of horrified commuters.
"There were four shots," said Paul Roberson.
one witness to the 5 p.m. shooting Wednesday.
"Then the guy started sprinting. I was going to
waylay the guy when he was only a few feet away.
But then he drew the gun
a nd I c ouldn 't do(---------) 1 anything " State ~ Wit~esses pointed · f frantically to a passing
, motorcycle policeman as
the glUlman boarded a city bus. Five blocks later.
the officer overtook the bus, waved it to the
roadside and arrested the man.
.Ezploftofl l a jurn f'l.,e
SAN FRANCISCO <AP > -Five persons re-
mained hospitalized today, two of them in critical
. condition. after an explosion and fire leveled a two-
story building on Fisherman's Wharf.
Thousands of tourists watched as two Coast
. Guard cutters and three smaller boats aided
' firefighters in a 1 ~ hour battle to control flames
: ~ter the blast rocked the Wharf late Wednesday
· morning. Damage to the building was estimated at
$80,000.
:PoUeg Criticized
: LOS ANGELES <AP > --Warning that a new
' police firearms policy could turn the city into "a
jungle," Police Chief Ed Davis says the rules could
cause officers to end up with "guns in their holsters
•and bullets through their heads."
. "You have chosen to place the drawing of
firearms into a very tight policy constraint," Davis
said Wednesday in a letter to the city's Police Com·
mission urging that the rules be revised.
Oaarge• D r opped
LOS ANGELES (AP I -Charges of involuntary
manslaughter were dropped against two te'rmite f exterminators, who had been accused of killing a
, man when they fumigated a Lawndale apartment i house last April, after prosecutors failed to prove
: the man died because of the pesticide, authorities
; said. •
Daniel Coate, 24. and Gerald Vingo, 20, had
: been charged in the death of Nelson Pineda, 34, of
Long Beach when they fumigated his uncle's apart·
' ment. The pai:r told investigators they had issued
warnings to residents of the building by knocking on
. doors, but Pineda never answered. His body was
discovered afterward. and autopsy showed It con·
tained a high level of alcohol. officials said.
. 'No ~ Li•ited
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Although 17 persons
have died in county facilities during the last six
months after doctors ordered "heroic" life.
preserving measures withheld, the director of the
County.USC Medical Center says there is no policy
1 on when such orders can be issued.
. Medical Director Sid Bernstein told a county
hearing Wednesday that the so-called "no code" or-
ders usually apply only to terminally ill patients
who suffer a cardiac arrest.
•1feroic Effort'
CHPWarns
T ruck ers
On Boycott
SACRAMENTO (AP>
-The California
Highway Patrol warns it
would be "short-sighted
and unwise" for an in·
dependent truckers
group to boycott the state
in protest agains t the 55
mph speed limit.
The CHP said Wednes-
day it sent the warning to
Jim Griffin of Norwalk,
president of the 400-
m ember Sout h ern
California Independent
Truckers Association.
GRlf'FIN HAD earlier
written Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. that CHP
Commiss ioner Glen
Craig's crackdown on
speeding trucks con·
stitutes "cheap harass-
ment"· and ·truckers
would organ i ze a
boycott .
Also, Mike Parkhurst,
editor of "Overdrive·•
magazine and official of
the Independ ent
Truckers . Association.
said truckers might pro-
test by getting convoys
rolling along at exactly
55 mph. He said if other
motorists are annoyed
enough, they might put
pressure on the CHP.
Griff.in said iJoless
Brown act s by
Christmas,· ''we, the in·
dependents. will be
forced to take measures
that won 'l be
gentlemanly.•·
HE ADDED, "Ex-
amples of this are a com.
plete shutdown of all
trucks that haul produce
into the East. Since
farming is a $9 billion-a-
y ear indust ry in
California, I don't think
you would like to answer
questions to the people
affected."
On behalf of Brown,
Craig replied that there
was no harassment, and
that more private
motorists than truckers
have been cited for
speeding and tailgating .
CRAIG ALSO said
there's evidence that SS mph is more profitable
because higher speeds
increase engine wear
and fuel costs. an argu-
ment the California
Truckers Association
uses to support the
crackdown.
. ' ~ Bill for Inspectors
--
. . . Vetoed by Governor . ~ SACRAMENTO (AP) -Goy_. ,Ed-
11,1\iDd aroWll Jr. says it took "ilmost
.._ betoi.c effort" to stamp out the ot>-
scure state Board of Registered
,Constniction Inspectors, proof of the
endurance of bureaucracy.
The cbief ol the lart81t. state IOV· ernm.ent Pl'OClialmecl \'lctory over one ~ its smallest branches Wednescla)' m anillteni.w after his veto ot a bill
....... U.board. • •»Nii a rur _,., J concluct.d that !IMre Wll no juaUficatlon for this
-'oard, but It bn continued its Plldow7 existence,•• Brown said.
·state budget, but its •members have
been meeting at their own expense .
The blll, SB 900 by Sen. ~ Al·
quist CD.San Jose), would have given
the board $60,000 and aUo\ved mem·
bers to stay in office beyond the cur·
rent one-year Um it alter explratlon ot
their terms.
THE BOARD, created under Gov .
Ronald Rea•an. OYetsetl lnapeetorl
of ~Oil projects and atves
llcemln& testa to thole wbo want to bl
called relistered lnapectors.
However, llcenainl tan't mandatory
to do the wol'k. ,
"We can show you pict\l~ of build·
infs thlt ate f alllnc apart because
they weren't 1D1pected properly,''
said Joe Farber. a veteran lobbybt
hired by the board to prom<>fe Al·
qUisl'• bill.
Terminal Near Faults?
MUNICIPAL Court '
.Judge Philip LaRocca
ordered Rudd jailed
without bail until more
information arrives
from Florida.
The clinic Rudd has
beaded since April 1 is
being investigated by the
Riverside County sheriff
and the California
Department of
Consumer Affairs •
Board of Medical Quality
.Assurance.
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A state commission
has thrown yet another obstacle before Standard
Oil Co. of Ohio's attempt to build an oil tanker
terminal at Long Beach Harbor.
In a report Wednesday to the California Coastal
Commission, the commission staff challenged the
company's plan to locate six huge storage tanks
within shaking distance of four major earthquake
faults ..
It recommended that Sohio's application to con·
struct a terminal that would receive Alaskan crude
oil be approved only if 13 conditions are met.
ONLY
One of those conditions was that only two of the
proposed 615,000-barrel storage tanks be built on
the pier, with the rest located inland, to reduce the
danger of spills in the event of a quake.
The commission voted to postpone a decision on
the Sohio prolect for one month, Meanwhile the
commission staff will continue to explore such is·
sues as shiP safety and relocation of the storage tanks.
However. even commission members who bac~ed the delay said they expected to vote for the
pro1ect.
THE CLINIC, located in Murrieta Hot Springs.
came under scrutiny last
month.
Heavy cir, depe.dobility ond
wirscrie fobic cae oll ot one
• low ?ic• from Frigidore & DA Vls.eROWN.
526995 NOW ONLY s299ts
LARIE
CAPACITY
IE WASHER
Thot one f l!Olures 4 wot• 18\lell
& 2 WO!h/.spn ~
•••• 1 ... "-'-.. """" loads .. o.;, GE wo.i.., 1..,,.,.1n9
Ill-" a--. 2 """'*· ond (9i" O p prowen ~··
FRlllDAIRE'S
FlllESI ~ ~ =:r~:~
THIS SALEI
-~
OUR lllGEST
SELUlll
FRIGIDAIRE ·~===~
WASHER
Geri 18 pound copocity witb
pe<mor'811f pen CY'le and
"O'lf -feollftc,.
•
icholu Von Bollman
L
;To wrtte tM O.lly Pllot/&Olt 1$60-Coli. MeM. CA 92'a6
"ToCAU the Deity ,_1'M~1
' £7
Why Not Admit Panama Treaty's· a Galnble?
WA,g,llNGTON -Appanlllly.
tbe two dmm Sout.b American
dJdlllan ~ for \be aJp. brs .t tbe Paama Cual treat.I•
bad b••• 1cbool1d In our
..-slbilWll. NCIOI ol them wor•
the cram ad orante qniforma
wit.It IOld ticald IO mucb favored by tee eream ftDdon md heads
ol ltMea lD tbole IUDQJ cliDMa.
forelp •troal m• e1ctaui• pens Ind plaUtudie9 wtth OW' not-
t0-ltraal man. On tbe phu .aide, tb•
ceremonlel went olf well except
when the let ol tbumt.crn1 fill out ol the pant.I pock«I belonf-
inl to the fellow from a vile, little
equatartal tyruny dlltlnplabed
oaly by lta cream and orance oc-
t.a1onal poaue IWDPI.
teadlc.f. 1Jat what they've eome
up wtua 11 a deal in wblcb nobody
ii quite sure about what they cot.
in« it now. wbatever now is. · apendin& lt now, will save us
·money and trouble later. They
advance tbe tame propoa!Uon
with everyth1Jlf -1ellools, dope
addicts. iebabllltaUnl c~ tn
Jail -and It's true il you know
wbatJOU're ta1kiq about.
IN THE Panamanian altua-
tlon, nobody can know if we bave
reallJ bought ourselves 23 years
of pac:eful, continued OCCQPIDCY
or not. By then even Ronald
· Reapn wW be ready to live up~
century-old, Edward.lU·perlocl •
piece of public works.
The point la the ~ountty abouJd
be told that what la beiq mis-
lea~ sold aa a certaiDt;y Is a
· samble. It may.be a teuoaable
&amble. but a 1amble lt Is. not a
isure tblnf. \Ve'N not oat of U.O canal sttuation wtth tbflle .....-
menta, and lt could pop_ up
&D.Ytlmellftel'the Seaate ntmes. • A llltc:aune ot aetloD wGUk1 be to take the canal home wttb us
wbeD we leave. A nation with
Londcm Bridle in Lake Havasu,
Arts., aboul411ave no dlfftculty in locatma the Panama Canal ID
~C>UltowD. PL Tbe Rroftl men -whm not ln
• llbert7-l0Yin1 mood, we
Journalists
Now everybody bu alpecl tbe
treattea but tbe Senate and, aa
John Hay. Teddy Roosevelt's
secretary ol State, remarked, ''A
truty entering tbe Senate II like
a bull going into tbe arena: no
one can say just when or bow the
blow will fall -but one tb1DI is
certain -it will never leave the
arena alive.''
The conaervatlvH ot the Ronald Reaian school are wor--
rlecl lelt we flave liven the canal
up in the am~ lancuace ot
those many para1raphed
treaties. To that the AdmlDlatra-
tfoa la H.Yinl no, no we haven't;
the canal II OW'1I UDW the turn"'
tbe century, more tban 20 7'US from now. ... ................................................................................. ...
prefer to call ~-=::-.. dictatora
s1rm1men -
looked le~s ... P
s a v a c e 1 n .. ;,
their business
s uits,
altboqb the
one conceal-
ing the naked-
ness of
Panamanian strong man Omar
Torrijos was obviously new and
a tad too tight by North
American standards.
This probably didn't impress
the country at large, which
t.binka of the strong menu coffee
bean extortioniata if it thlnh of
them at all. Since the ceremonies
were on television they must
have irritated those who lost
their favorite programs wit.bout
convincing the rest of us who
aren't entertained by watching
·Quotes
"No mind is fertile enough to
think of all the ways we could lax
if something needs to be done."
-Sm. B.assell B. Long, D·L8.
CONSIDERING that 13 years
of negotiating went into arriving.
at this agreement. we might do
oursel?eS a favor to pause before
we refuse to ratify it. Canal
agreements are never easily
come by.
The reason Roosevelt foment-
ed a CIA-style revolution in
Colombia to create the ,.more
docile republic of Panama was
· because he couldn't make a deal.
''You could no more make an
agreement with the Colombian
rulers," the great TR pro·
nounced, .. that _you could nail
currant jelly to a wall -and the
failure to nail currant jelly to a
wall is not due to the nail; it ls
due to tbe currant jelly.''
Ordinarily documents like the
Panama agreements are com-
. promises witb s0melhing in them
for everybody. DoubUes~ that's
what the Administration in-
At the aame time Panama-
nians and Americana wbo want
the United States out of tbere are
belni told. that's what tbe treaty
does.
IN POLITICS mutually ex-
clusive statement.a can embrace
and make love if they find the
right place to bed down. Thus we
can give up the canal while still
keeping it, provided the Panama·
nian rabble don't decide that
their strong man bas finked out
and sold them to the Yankee im-
periallilts. ....
Should that happen, we will '
have to decide what to do if
Panamanian youth, seized by an
ill-considered love of its tropical
fatherland, hurl itself against our
bayonets to die in grotesque posi·
tions mumbling tasteless, com·
munlstical slogans. Fight, you
say? Perhaps a Panamanian
guerrilla war is what we need to
blood. our volunteer, i.e.: quasi·
mercenary army, half of which
wlU soon be made up of red cor· ~
puscled American girls. · .
The liberals of the Tri·lateral
Commission who're pushing this •
•thing are using their favorite
argument on il; to whit, that do-""™E lRtcK 15 '10 DISENGAGE wrn-loUTSEfMING10 AS\NDON ..... "
THE WEllS-FARGO REWARD: No-Charge Checking, Highest Bank Interest,
When You Keep. $2,000 in Savings.
Personal effort built Wells Fargo.That's why we introduced Personal Bankers to
offer you the utmost in personal setvice. ·
And now, a Personal Banker can deliver the biggest reward ever for people
who are serious about saving money.
Keep $2,000 in any Wells Fargo savings plan -passbook or certificate-and you get:
A checking account-no monthly setvice charge, no minimum balance, and
all the personalized checks you need. .
A safe de12osit box, $8 size -or $8 credit towards a ~er size box (availability
may vaiy from office to office).
Unlimited travelers checks-provided with no ser\rice charge.
· 1lp to 7Y2o/o interest-your savings earn 50;0 in regular passbook accounts, even·
more in longer term certificate accounts-up to 7V2% when deposite4 for6years'!'-
And a· Personal Banker to help with all your banking needs.
Someone Who will stay in touch with your individual situation
anCl help :y,ou get the bjggest reward for your savings.
•Federal law requires the fortel\1'8 of three mQnths' il"lterest anct the rectuctlon ot the ;tterest rate to that of regular.
paSSbook savings on~ funds w~hdrawn prior to maturity
•
1
!
•
Badhtim Says Mail Bpposes Xreaty
(
By c>. C. HUSTINGS and Joanne Gass, 1ST12 HumminCbiid Lane, H\ml· J\~. Robert 8~c!h!~"ffi.N:wport Beac~> says ingtooBeach. Reaidenuortheueawerelrivlted.
ruldtrit.a of his 40lh Contress1ona1 District are FOaMEft CALIFO~ Gov. Edmund G.
po1 by ~mer adminlstration. otth N "'-c 1011~ op eel to the Panama Canal treaty pro-"Pat" Brown Sr. will spuk Sunday at a aatherinc
• aaya man from hl.s constituents is running e ewport .,,,moeraUc lub.
buvlly aulnit the treaty Tbe con1ressman It's scheduled for 2 to 6 p.m. atthe home of John '
all't'ldY ha mode It clear that he opposes lt. and Joanne Carson of Corona del Mar. Fa(' reserva· ·
1bt ireaty hu been signed by leaders of both lions, call Lane Sherman, 6"-63919, 01" Vlrsinia Rell. •
t"e U.S. and Punama. but it mu.st be approved in a 581·9149. •
~
"Wont o piggy on your shirt, Doddy?"
t Jn::: F:. :~e.:.~~:de her
• plea for release from a state prison in verse:
"I learned my lesson and I learned it well
because in this pnson I've been t,hrough heU, .:
penned Miss Ford, 21, who was convictedlor her part
in a drugstore holdup
Lakeland Circuit Court Judge Thomas Langston answered in kind:
''This court does care and wants to be reasona· ~ ble an~ fai':-• but does believe, as you can see, that t sometimes 1t mustdisagree. "'
1 "Soin reply to your tale of woe, I must advise the 1 enswer's no.··
I
ir.'if e Wins Money
national election in
Panama and mu.st be
· ratified by q two-third&
majority or the U.S.
Senate.
In addition. ap·
proval by both houses of
Congres ia required to
fund the treaty.
Badham said he •·~.,...,, • .,
doesn't expect the
Senate to taJte up the
treaty untiJ next year ••• R EPUBL I CAN
Ted Ponticclli has an·
nounced hls candidacy
for north Orange Coun· BADHAM ly's 69th Assembly Dis-
trict seat. He probably won't be alone because the
current bolder of that seat, Republican William
Dannemeyer, has said he intends to. go after the
congressional seat currently held down by the
G'OP's Charles Wiggins, who plans to retire at the
end of his term next year * ••
TUE RACE TO occupy the congressional seat
occupied by Wiggins began in earnest last week
wh~ Brea Mayor Rex Gaede said he will seek the
Republican nominat1on next year.
Gaede wasted no time in letting al be known that
he S'fes the competition for the GOP nomination
between hlmselr and Dannemeyer.
The Brea mayor chastised Dannemeyer for
planning to give up a Republican seat in the state
Assembly "In this time of cnsis for the Republican
party in California."
• * •
AS PROPOSED BY one of its members, Ralph
SACRAMENTO CAP> -The wife of a man who
died from overmedlcation at Camarillo State
Hospital will be awarded $160,000 under a bill
signed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
Thomas Riddle, 38, died three hours after he · Co1111ty Bof A was admitted tp Camarillo under the infiuence of .
alcohohand drugs and was given a tranquiU.er. an ~
aide to Assemblyman Vincent Thomas said. p • ·p I ~omas ID Sa~ Pedro) sponsored the measure r1son ena ty awatdinf{ Betty Raddle the money to settle her
wto~ul death claim against the state.
• o~•h 1Wot1r .... F «;>IIQws Holdup
cHAR1.;~~~~~r~:~ ... M ,~ ~~~9:.':!~1'~':~~~!!~';:.;.,'7,, A Yorba. ~inda man who held up~ bank in ~.bid
slllent ot t.phtr-lluc:n. c.i11orn1• Hunt•not0<1 11u,11, ca·. Or•v .. hle t~q:in· p,ublic1ty fOl' what he told pohce were the
P••M<l-•yon Tli•tO•y Septomber 10 tervltot wlll be lltMI on Satwnl.ay Se~ SU ;; ..... ~minon' ties .. has been sentenced in Orange 1'71 Survt..., b'( his wllo Carolyn HIQ ttm-1•. ""al IO:OOAM •I tr.e Vood •-et • , ·
glnOOIMm, ~ ... SvunM •nd. ,,, S/lepl>erd Ctm<Hery, Pierce Brotn.,-s .C~ty &rper1q.r Court to six years an state pnson.
·-June Arey. H• WH. veler•n Wt\O SmltM' Mortllary dlroqor~ F•mllvr ~ I Judge Mason Fen•on imrvwed the sentenc• on Mrveo In ll>e united States M•rl"* wq11eds contrlbullo•" be.l'ff-to~.., • ~1,.~; . . ~ ,_.,.. · Corps ... /NIM. Hew•s . member Of 01-1• MelMrlll Hosollat Coronary nooen Castalhon Pay ares, 25, after the defendant 1'-VFWdfldtl'loAmerl<•n1.eo1on,a110 carevn11 pleaded guilty to reduced charges of assault with a • ,.,..,_, Of '"' Mllll•rv Orllert Of
World Wen, a member of IM L.IOlts EDDY deadly weapon
Club •f'CI wa. •PHI Pr*tlllenl lor two AVOllEY GEllTRVDE EDDY '~'' !!!",'',·,He WH active In <lvk •ll•lrs In d<'nl ol C.0.1• Me'41, Calllorn1a. P8'•od PAY ARES A'LSO WAS BOOKED on charges of
,..p s -B .. <11, CA., -II.tried, .......... on S.Pl~ber 11 1'11 Survived k'd ,.,._ d f I i ' t 1 F b all first VOIUfllHr Fire l><>Nrtment In by t\er """Ohl.,. Joan Sto4p 01 Costa I n&.-u,g an a SC mpnSOnmen asl e . 14 er
t• C•Phtrano B•ech, Ca. Fun•r•I M41'41, Ca Fritnc!s m•v ult at The ~ enl~ed Ute Yorba Linda br&Jl(h oC the ~ank of
Mrvlc:es will be held •I 10 OOAM .,,. Smllh Tu1hlll Limb Morluar Ch•Ptl rl"',. d h Id t • l h S.tunlay.Seotember 1•, lt71 •t Pacific from I) OO 10 S OOPM Thur~•Y Seti· me .ua a.I\ e WO WOmen ett\p OyeS 0Slage at
View Me'morlal 0..pet wllll tho ll~v t•mDer n 1971 lnte<rnent will De Fri the poLnt Of a Shotgun !'rri =~~1'::1~~~~~ ent°'"1 bfn•nt oav. Sec>t;..,.,., 2J. 1917, •t Rtverv1n 1 Pay ares forced both victims to telephone news < .......,. ,,....."'°'•I P•rfll Hfl'tQhh Cemetery '" KttU'\~w•tll F•mlly wl\htt contributions Ile m-W•\lllngton Smltll Tutholl L.amb Cost~ agencies With reports Of the holdup and demanded :0~~,~~~1at1on Pec111e view ~w Mor1U¥y tn <"''~ o4 1ou1 .,. that reporters be allowed to enter Ute bank and a~u ........ make his political views known to lhe public.
CALLIS
ROBERT CAL.I.IS, rHldent ot Con
<ord, Celllor"'• Passeo -•Y o" ~ !ember 10, 1911 ot llW ~ el • ..,. Is
surv veo by hit wife S.11v Colll• motn.r Mn. John Malcom..,.,. 1-•tf
ter,, CMotyn SNrbOftdY el El Ttro,
C• .• Christi"* Rt\Orer of P.l!Oenl•.
Arh-. one brother w1111.,.. C.IUJ el
Tu•lln, C. and thrH clllldr.n. '•mtlv ~, Memorl•I Centnbuttons to
Concord Ellu Ctub, Con<•d, C. kw
TM Cenbr414 P•ltv.F•f'CI
ftARL.•
Deaths
• He finally surrendered after police brought his
wife to the bank. She discussed her husband's
~rievances with him and left the bank with his gun
mherhand.
Elsewlwre UCl's Bookstore -l \.
Opens Wednesday
• i ~, .
RACE IS ON
WllDam Dannemeyer
Winkle!' of Los Alamitos, the Orange County
Republican Central Committee, by voice vote Mon·
day night. opposed the Carter adminlstration 's
Panana Canal treaty.
*** GOP GUBERNATORIAL candidate Ken Mad·
dy will be the speaker Friday when the South Coast
Republican Forum gathers for dinner al the Camelot
Restaurant in Santa Ana. For details. call, Butch
Flynn atSSl-1465. ••• ASSEMBLYMAN DENNIS Mangers <D·
Huntington Beach) will try to explain how things
are going in Sacramento during a neighborhood
gathering set for 3 p.m. Saturday at the home of Bill
Death Probe Signed·
SACRAMENTO CAP> -The governor bas '
signed a bill requiring every death of a patient at
any of the 11 state mental hospitals to be referred to a coroner's inquiry.
But Department of Health spokesman Bob
Nance says such inquiries have been strict policy
for more than a year.
The bill, SB 190 by Sen. Ruben Ayala, (D·Chino>
was signed by Brown.
It Wai proposed in the wake Of investigations or
about 400 deaths in three years.
The bill does l'lot require autopsies, which are
lert to the coronors.
AboutSOOpatients die annually, Nance said.
Toro Man
Joins Unit
El Toro resident John
L. Clark has been ap·
pointed an alternate
membe.-of the Orange
County Senior Citizens
Council by Supervisor
Ralph Diedrich.
At Diedricb's sugges·
lion, former Yorba Lin-
da Mayor Whit -Cromwell
was appointed by
s u perv1sors to fil I a
regular term on the
seniors' panel.
Union Aided
.ca thy
J~~
re.-.port beach.
co926tlJ
JAMES D PARLE, 1'•1'f .. nt of
Vl5to, c.111om1a. Puseo own on Se..-
••rri~ S, ttn In W11eonst11. W.vt.....Sllv
hi• brOCMr Marquis of Cof'on.e dtl Mer,
Co., el!d Everette of Ouansllle, CA.,
•Isler Mlldr..i Hoton of Wisconsin.
Private_.,,, .. ...,.. held on Wedntt-
day !tePlombtr 11, 1'11. Interment
Paclllc VI-Memorl•I Puk Pacific
Vl-MOnUdrydtrecton
PHIL.ADELPHIA
CAP> -Giuseppe
Rugnetta, 80, the reputed
"chairman or the board ..
of fhe Philadelphia
Mafia family, died Sun·
day In Somers Point,
N.J .
UC Irvine's new campus bookstore and student
services center will open its doors at 3 p.m. Wednes·
day. SACRAMENTO (AP>
• WOOOINOTON £Ob~ It, W0001NGTOH. -.e .,, ,,,.f•.••I ot Hunlfn9ton Bue~.
Calfl°'nl• PasMd .,. •• on Wl'OntW•V
September 21, 1'11 at Gltnd•I•
M4tmor1el HotOltal. Svrvl"'*d bv hit
wit• ~ltdrtd woocnnot01t, of Hun•
11141on lie.ch, Cll • tnr" clauohten
,.,_.," .. ~of M4trln.t clef ..... Ca
Muriel '*El-ot H.,,,111191.,,. 11 .. ch,
Ca. -Ol.w K•y °' Cost.a Me ... Ca . two 9'-hlidr<tft, Eddie Robtr1 aftd
Je1111v """" McEI-of H""t1noton BU<)\, CA Mr W-lnvtc• ......
rnemlott ol The Senior Men • Club of
MTH TUTHIU LAMI
COSTA MISA CH.APll
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa • 646-4888
Santa Ana Chapel
618 N Broadway
SantaAna • S.7-4131
f'tllCI laOTHllS
SNTHS' MoaTUUY · 827 Main St.
Huntln;too Beach
539-e539 -,_,AMI\.,
COi.OM~ fUHll.AL
NOMI
780t Bolsa Ave
Westminster
893-3525
UCI Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. will pre· -A southern San Joa·
side al the opening ceremonies. Author Truman quin Valley table grape
Capote, \\'OO will speak on campus later that day, grower has been ordered
LONl>QN....LAP.i. --Sh> ..wlllp111:tidwne. __ to Jet the_ United Farm
Erle Miller. a properly The two-story unit. located northwest of the W-oikers union organize
magnate who was one of Commons building, contains 14,SOO square feet. The among employes. The
former Prime Minis ter bookstore, operated by the United College state Agriculture Labor
Harold Wilson's big suP-Bookstores Company of Massachusetts, occupies Relations Board also or-
porters, died of an ap· lhe first noor Counseling offices, meeting rooms d e r e d J a s m l n e
parent suicide today. and lounge are on the second noor Vineyards Inc. lo pro-
Miller had been under in· Construction of the new unit, valued al $650,000. vide updated lists of
vesUgation by Scotland has been financed by funds from UCI student re· employes and their home
Yard. gistration ree reserves addresses.
On_Newport Blvd.
at 32nd St.
Newport Beach
Fine Arts Gallery
of Scottsdale
Hassan's
Cafe
...
Call 142-5678 .
Put a few word•
to work for ou.
ALLERGY?
(114) 543-9624
Recor11a11
Message •
AllEIGY CUfUl
fOUNOATIOM
aox 1 s13. 0r11111 ea ma
Wri .. t.r Fn. lllf ........
DIAMONDS • GEMS'rONES
Jewels by 1osephs ls searching tor diamonds and
gemstones from private ind1v1dvals and estates, Careful
examination and evBIUBlton by our experts Highest
prices paid. Call 540-9066 1(}9 delly. Saturday '1CMl,
Sunday closed. Ask tor Batty Grace or Frank VandefWall
iewels by ioseph
2700 W. Coast Hwy .... 11......W.I
Newport leach
Celebrating Our
First Anni~ersary
Across from
CitJHall
\
,.., to P1.1t n.irm 1'41 "Ill
cm Nd • ftw • • olld Gr.hon JiUU n• "
&o tOlw iivqwtw, 111 ""~ mmrnt und bttalllf'.U Afu1I pr q-ro Pat CJ1'lln, Ar YrnJr .~rv1tt!, Oronglf
Cciol Not, 1• O Bo:r I 'iii C'11s10 MrlO, CA
na9 Al lnOlly /.t'fln.s '1J puu&tJW II 111 f1f' u1U'W6'1MJ,
...., phoittd ''"11'"" ... IW '~""' """ 111eludin~ tM ttOdn'r }'8ll eo"'• orldrt'n arid l>wtntu """"' phon• m&M~~!Wf ,,_. NJJta!Mrrd Thu C"t>lum11opP*fJr•dal
,,~ Jat11rqt •.
D&AR PAT Can you atve me the name and ad
ol &JJemployment aeency in Honolulu"
G S • Corona del Mar
.1 _ 1)at latormatlon I.a avaUable from lbe HawaJI ~mot ol Laber ud IJlduslrlal aelaUoos, Box
M,llaoolaha, Hawaii N8".
~
~ ... ,.rat.,, .. n.et"
DEAR PAT How can I be s ure the telephone
time of the day is correct" How do they assure ac-
ouracy? L W., Laguna Beach
In large metropolitan areas telephone company a .. e sentce ls 1yuc:hroa.J.zed with lbe NaUonaJ
Jhrreaa of Standards -wblc:h broadcasts con·
tlllaoua signals. accurate to within a few
aouandlha of a second a day, on Its North
American short wave radloslaUon, WWV.
...... ,.......
!WftO ...... 1
Former television re·
porter Charles Royer
fmlshed fi rst in Seal·
ti e's ma yo r al
primary and will
face P aul Schell,
former head of the
c ity's community de·
\'elopment d e p a rt -
ment, in the Nov -
e mber election.
Bill Signed
SACRAMENTO CAP >
WASHING TON (AP) -Govemrnent studies
dlaprove fears that lt poor people got cash instud of
tc>Od sta,mps they would blow it on bc;c>ze and race
tracki. a top.Alriculture Depart~ent otnc\ats aa.ys .
Carol T\ieker Foreman, asaistant aecretarJ for
food and coaaumv services said the 1tudlt1
tbow that .. Po« people are aettlng a bad rap when
they are criticlied fa, oot SIM=Odinl their money
wllel,y.:'
UP. )()SBPR nBHEll <D·VA.> SAID some
conJliluent.a worry about what will happen If the mJlllooa of poor peopl• getting food stamps are
1iven cub lnllead. That would occur under Presl·
dent Cart.er'• proposed welfire prouam.
Fisher said some ~ayers fear that the poor
would "spend 1t. on liquor or on race tracks and not
on nutritioo. They doo ',t want their tax dollars aoing
for that."
Ms. Foreman said research by the U.S. Depart-
ment of Health. Education and Welfare shows that
"low income people use their money· more wisely
than those in the middle income range with a higher
percentage on food and housing and less on
transportation and entertainment."
SHE TESTIFIED BEFORE THE HOUSE
we lfare subcommittee, which began hearings on
Carter 's $31.07 billion welfare plan.
Ms. Foreman said more than 16 million people,
-$~ ·.;,
$6~86"
Limited Off er
. f
The Great Whisky Made Like Great Wme.
K"""'ly~ lloutbclt..,.,...., 96 '-'•&r""""-o.i .... Corp u...A& lt.JC1"17.
~pd Mat1 Fu• Wlthotlt f'~
DEAR PAT: I hope you can give me the answer
to my question. So far I've gotten conflicting ad-
vice. Does a person aged 65 years or older need to
purchase a California fishing license? I called the
Orange County Sheriff's Depart..ment, and was told
thit I didn't have to buy a license, but a place sell·
bli flS'h licenses says I must.
Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr. has signed legis lation
to reduce the number or
what the author calls un-
necessary embalmings.
especially of poor peo-
ple . The Democratic
governor's office said
the bill was AB 44 by Sen.
Peter Behr CR-Tiburon>.
or 63 percent or those eligible, currently receive l-:=:;:=====:;:::===========:::;:::;;:::::===;~=;:s=;:==:"-.'~~iB food stamps. Another three million people probably ••
. W G., Costa Mesa
. The CaUforala Department of Fish and Game Is
•e•df.DI a senior cltlsen free ftshing permit appllca·
Uod to you. If yoo qualify. fill It oul and mall it to the
adctreu Indicated. Bllslcally, persons •led 12 years
.,. older, wbo have resided In Callfonlla for at least
five years, and meet certabl Income requirements,
-ca• flUallly for a free flllblng permit. You qaaUfy
tJ.nlAClally If you receive• aJd from the California
Supplemental Program for tbe Aged or lf your in· . eo .. e does not e•cffd SZ50 per monlb If you are
ata1te. or SSOO per moolb If married. Applkatlons tre available from lbe Department of Fish and
Game, 350 Golden Shor~ Drive, Loo'° Beach, CA
MaOZ,orbypboneat CZ13)5IO·S134.
Sdtolorslalp Tip• Too Me~
DEAR PAT: I contacted Scholarship Search. a
i!Qmputerized research firm in New York City, on
j.1\pril 8. I sent a Sl check for a student profile and
then m alJed $30 on April 19 for a computer readout l>r scholarship opportunities. This organizaliotl ad-
'lertises a money-back guarantee if less than $.5,00C
in funds or less than five college money sources are
located for you. A notice In May indicated that help
iwas available from only two sources I checked thE
tonn to receive these two sources and also asked for
balf my money back. I've heard nothing since.
G.M .. Costa Mesa
Sc~larsblp Search told A YS It will check Its re-
~rds and issue either a partial tr full refund aJong -
, JWlU. the two scholarship soorces promised. This ! fira ieDda all appUcaDta add.ruses fol' state and ~I ed11c:atlonal offices, bUt these are not couaWd
In lite guaranteed five sources. SS claims It provides
an average of 17 sources per studeut. Several na·
tlonaJ publications have reported favorably on this
dompany, but a representative o( the American
CoUJ1cU on Education says the computer Usttng ls no
guarantee an appUcant will receive a scholarship.
No explanation other Ulan "wrong time to apply or
uasual area of study'' was offered lo explain why
you weret.oldofonly two sources.
Sentenced
...
will sign up if Congress ends the requirement to put
up some cash lo get the stamps, she added.
An estimated 11 million of the food stamp
recipients gel no other federal welfare benefits, such
as Aid to Families with Dependent Children or aid to
the blind, aged and disabled.
Baand·trip u law u ••York $181 'Wasbington,D.C._$131
Baltimore $181
llewp*t!lelll ml
Bic:1mmd. $174
FRESNO (APi -A
Ma~ena woman has been
sen~ to ts years In
fedtiral prison for a
Baket9field bank rob-
bery that authorities say
~mi&i1lted a f~\H'
county crime spree. U.S.
l>istri.ct Court Judge
:M.D. Crocker recom·
~ended that Magdalena
Reyes, 19, be committed
'o an institution whe re
ihe can r eceive lreal-
lrtent for narcotic addic-tioo.
.. "":"-1_,_""'".~ --Nowyouca.nflythe~sk1es to more Super
----Saver cities tha.n a.ny other a.1rl1ne. United'~ Super ~~r • Baver~ you9 Ea.sta'no1t1es e.t unbeatab1esaVingS.
Fly for as low as t231 rcnmd-trtp when you travel
TuesdaQrtb.rough Th~. Kids under 12 traveling with
you 11.v for 60% off the reguJ.a.r Coa.ohfa.re.
' You'll tlDd Unit.ad's exclusiVe "Qcea.n to Ocean" service,
too, on Super Saver filghts to New York, Waah1ngton,D.O.,
and Philadelphia.. It's Coach 1n a. class by itself.
To get your Super Saver sea.t,just buy your t1okst 30 ~
before departure ands~ 7 to 46 ~-Returnrught
reservations can be oba.nged, but you~ <fo so a.t least
30 ~before the new dat.e of your return or the cllsoount
for the entire tare 1B lOllt.
Beats a.re limlted;so CS.U yo'Clr Tr$vel Agent !or all the
details. Or-Q&U Unitec:iat 637-7621.Pa.rtners 1n Travel with
Western Internatfunal Hot.el.Iii.
..
(CHAS. McCAB~ J ~urs.tongue
;o.... -----. _, __ firmly 1n cheek
TO
New York
Ph1ladslph.1.a.
Washington, D.C.
Allentown
Balt1m0re
Hartford
N=rtNews• No
Rio cin.d'
laand·trip u law u
Tuell., Wed., Th\IJ'L Kan., Pr!. s.t..,Bun Rt«ll1&r COllcb .... ( RouncHrlp) (R.ourid-trtp) (Round-trip) (J{ound.t.rlp) • 1111 to
1231 $252 $273 $400 •use
231 252 273 412 181
231 282 273 400 199
231 282 273 408 l'n'
231 252 273 400 1••
279 300 321 428 169
279 300 321 410 .1s1 ~
,279 300 321 410 191 t
.. 274 296 316 398 lH I
I
I
I
I
.Path Rugged
Ballerina Forms Tr.oupe
coneert. •• •• recalls.
•'ftlB Nm •OaNIHO "8'd be
up earl)' an4 drtvln1 olf to the next
town.''
AND mat ... uoua d&)'ll and one·
na&bt stands have Jett their mark on
the attr ctJve redhead'• ouUook .
A.aide from the aJmosl ellbl years
MlH &Uney 1.,.nt. touring -lnclud-
lnl a adnt wtth Dlaney on Parade -
the bubbUnl dancer bu lived the bulk
of her life atone the Oranae Cout,
iitudyln1. at. a10 13, under La&UDa
Beach baJJerlna Lila Zall.
.. Every sta1e 11 dJlf rent:• the en-
thusiast.le vtt.eraa upla1ns. "Some
~ue ao small }'OU could hardly move
around. We'd have to chan1e our
presentatloo every nipt. ''
She performed in many Laguna
Beach baUet and dance productions.
Her most recent professional ap-
pearance was this month with the
Ballet Paclflca at Irvine Bowl.
M1S8 Stasney's experiences on tht
road came during a six.year stint with
the Oukht.omslcy Ballet Cluaique's
Amencan company.
BUI' JT WAS BE& stint as a culture
miasionary touring the United States
and Canada that brought her to San
Juan Capistrano slx years qo to open
a dance school.
'"THE &\SIC PU&POSE WU to
bring culture to s mall towns." she re-
Her desire to bring cultural events
to the Capistrano and Saddleback
Valleys prompted an appearance
before tbe San Juan City Council
where she argued to keep the old
Capistrano High School aymnasium.
"We just don't have the racilities to
show things off here," she says. "The
city doesn't even have a recreation
center or an auditorium where we can
perform."
lates. "We went t.o a great deal of
trouble and there were a few pro-
blems."
Many resulted from culture·shock
suffered by the stunned small·town
audiences during their first ex·
perience with classical dance.
IRONICALLY, ALTHOUGH the old
high school gymnasium was de·
molished, the gym floor was sold as
salvage and wound up back in San
Juan as the floor of Caroll's dance
studio.
"We ran into bostillties at some
places," she recalls with a sheepish
grin. "A lot of lhe people have never
seen men in tights before.
"My father found the flooring in
Arcadia," she explains.
In addition to conducting classes.
"THEY'D NEVER SEEN dance
h k e this -they just didn't lmow what
to do with it, bow to respond."
Miss Stasney has formed the
Capistrano Valley Dance Company, a
group of professionals perfcrm.in1 in
the area.
And the transportation between
whistle stops had its drawbacks too.
"We traveled around in two cars,"
Caroll explains. "We'd hit a town at
about 3 in the afternoon, be at the
theater at S o'clock, perform from 8 to
11 and attend a reception after the
THE TROUPE'S PREMIERE was
last April at San Clemente High
School, but the turnout wu-lesa than
she had hoped.
Undaunted, the tenacious dancer
plans another offering for valley resi-
dents next year.
Celebrates
'Bubble Boy' Home
HO USTON CAP > David, the "Bubble
Boy,'' observed hi s sixth birthday at home in
his pl astic isolator, with a special germ-free
cake. but without the miniature spacesuit that
1s designed to expand his world.
Doctors had hoped David would have been
able to try out the suit before his birthday, but
a mmor hitch postponed any trials of the gar·
ment which would permit him to explore out-
door areas such as woods and beaches.
DAVID IS A VICTIM of severe combined
immune deficiency, which robs the body of its
germ-fi ghting abltities. He was delivered lD a
germ·free area six years ago and placed im·
mediately in a sterile "bubble unit." He has
never been touched by ung1oved hands.
Last December. physicians reported on
immunological changes that eventually may
m can David is out1rowing the defect.
ON WEDNESDAY, A SPOKESMAN at
Baylor College of Medicine and Texas
Children's Hospital said, "We have nothing
new to report at this Ume. We had hoped
David would have tried out the spacesuit
before this birthday, but there were minor
problems and it was returned to the Johnson
Space Center for reworking." ·
Birthday plans included, as they have in
the past, a quiet family aet-toaether, includ-
ing a cake specially prepared, as is aJl David's
foods, to be germJree.
Despite his handicap, the boy reads ex-
tremely well, has a fantastic vocabulary and
Is curious and inquisitive about the world
8.l'ound rum .
THE HOSPITAL SPOKESMAN said it
was hoped that David can st.art malting short
tests with the child·slzed astronaut suit in Oc-
tober. The first of three suits was delivered
some weeks ago, but doctors found it unaccep..
table because of a defect in the container used'
in moving it from the space center to the
hospital.
Arter the spacesuit is teated at the
hospital. doctors believe David will be able to
spend up to four hours at a tlme in the rub-
berized garment which has a son transparent
plastic helmet. A 10-foot hose connects the suit
lo a ventilator mounted on a pushcart.
DAVID ALTERNATELY SPENDS six
weeb a1 the hospital and six wee.ks with his
pareots and &•year-old sister, Katherine, in
their ranch.style home about 45 minutes from
the boaPltal. He is scheduled to return to the
hoap1ta1 next month.
His parents have asked that their last
name and address not be reported. Hla mother
said ''anooymlty ia our best hope IOI' leadlnr
reaaoftably normal lives.··
·Assault
Charge
D ismissed
MILWAUKEE <AP> -
A judge has dismissed a
sexual assault charge
a1ainst a man arrested
by art undercover
policewoman, saying Of·
ficers "want. to go out
there and pos e a s
hookers."
"If you want to go out
there and pose u a lady
of the evening -that you
are available for money.
it is consent ."
Milwaukee County
Judge Ralph Gorenstem
ruled.
D I ST. ATTY. E .
Michael Mccann said he
would appeal, calling
Gorenatein 's reasonong
"absolutely out -
rageous."
Gorensteln dismissed
a fourth·degree sexual
assault charge filed
against Phllllp C. Minor,
23, who was accused of
indecenUy touching an u n d e r c o v e r
policewoman.
POLICEWOMAN
Christine Leonard was
standing al a street cor-.
ner early Saturday, pos-
ing as a prostitute when·
she "observed the 4efen-·
dant reach around her·
s houlder and grab her
left breast, kissing her at
the same time," the
police complaint said.
She .. never 1ave the
defendant consent to·
touch her," the com·
plaint said.
••THOSE WOMEN
want to go out there and
pose as bookers ,'·
Gorenstein 1a1d. "That's
the type of th1ni they're
going to ·have to do. A
battery la sometbln1
elJe. But a touchin1 of
thia type .. lmpUed con-
sent."
Earollme n t IJp
Review Lau&
LB Experiment
1AJuna Beach Unified School District olflolals
see many beaettta and fe• drawbacks lD tM one-
campua 1wnmer 1cbool profram nvtewed by prin·
elpal Lawrence A. Fbher.
More than 1,800 children, from ldndercartnera
to seniors in blgb school. attended summer school
•bla year on the La1una Beach Hl&h School campus.
THAT'S Zit MORE TRAN attended summer
school at two locations last summer, Fisber aald lD
a report to the board of trust.eea. •
. Summer 19'18 aaw chll4"n up to ei&bth s:nde at
Thurston Inlermedlate School and the older
younpten at the blab school.
Other than the usual first-day c:onfualon, and•
lot of furniture re-arran&ln&, Fisher said the aum·
mer program went well.
He recommended the one-campus concept for
next summer.
•'THE IDGH SCHOOL HAS THE facilities for
all summer school activities," Fisher said. cllina
·the track, wood.shops. kilns and classrooms.
He sald parents seemed to like the idea of all of
the youngsters in one school, especially if they bad
more than one youngster enrolled.
a.tty Pllll ............
..They could drop off their cblldren at one spol.
a central location, on their way to work.'' Fisher
said.
PROFESSIONAL DANCER EXECUTES BALLET STEP
Caroll Stasney Works for Saddl•back Pertorm•nce THE IDGH SCHOOL'S LOCATION near the
downtown. the beachesz . Boys Club and swim lessoot1 was another plus, ne said. • •
Carter 'Forced' Lance Act?
WSASHINGTON (AP>
President Carter decided
sometime Tuesday that it was
time to stop playing cat and
mouse with the future of Bert
Lance.
So Carter scheduled a long-
delayed news conference, a
decision that touched off a
rapid series of developments
that r e ached a climax
Wednesday with his announ-
cement that Lance, his
friend , confidant and
sometime banker, was re·
signing as director or the or.
fi ce of Management and
Budget.
ALTHOUGH MANY pre-
d e c es so r s were names
without faces so Car as most
* * *
Americans were concerned,
Lance was much more. He
waa close to Carter. A lot of
folks thought about blm as
''deputy president."
Jody Powell, the White
House press secretary, in an-
nouncing the news con-
ference, quoted his boas as
saying, "Why don't we just eo
ahead and have one? I'm
tired or moving the thine
around."
When Powell was asked lf
these were Carter's exact
words, he reported the Presi-
dent was "more vivid than
that."
IT WAS ONE slgu of the
emotional atmosphere
around the White House when
Carter decided to meet the
* * * 'Can't Believe'
Caner 's Sister Stunned
LONDON CAP) -Evangelist Ruth Carter Stapleton, Presi·
dent Carter's sister. said in London today she was stunned by the
resignation of Budget Director Bert Lance.
"I can't believe it." she told the London Evenin1 News. "I
know Bert and his wife, LaBelle, very well. They' are beautiful
people -fine Christians."
Mrs. Stapleton, aulhor of the book "The Gift of Inner Heal-
ing." was leaving Britain today after a four-day tour at the invita-
Uon of the children's charity, Ockenden Venture.
"I just can't believe Bert is guilty of the alleaaUons," she told
the Evening News.
press after holding off for a
week because be wasn't
ready with any firm anawe:rs
about Lance's fate.
The decision to hold the
news conference was closely
followed by buny-up meet-
ings climaxed by the Lance
resignation. Powell was
asked afterwards if Carter
had set out, in this fasbloo. to
send Lance the messaae tbat
lt was time to make some
basic decisions.
"Obviously, that was a
possibility," Powell replied.
A FEW DAYS earlier,
Powell had siid or a forced
Lance resignation, .. Certain-
ly that would not be an ea.sy
thing for the President to do.'·
So there was at least an out-
ward impression that Carter.
unwilling to fire his friend to
rid himself of a potential
politicalAiability. forced the
issue in a way that prodded
Lance into taking the in·
itiative.
Carter bad planned to begin
his nationally broadcast news
conference at 3 p.m. (noon
PDT>. But after talking With
the Lances early in lhe after-
noon, the President and
Powell decided to delay the
news conference unW s p.m.
(2 p .m. PDT>.
LANCE WANTED time to
consult with his attorney.
Clark Clifford, about the
* *
resiinatioo letter beiD.c pre.
pared.
Carter usea tile tsdra two
hours to leave the White
House west wln1. where bis
office is situated, and return
to the White House mansion,
where the family quarters
and formal room& are
localed.
Then the President dropped
by a briefing for sta\e of-
ficlals on the Panama Canal treaty. He gave no bint
the climax to the Lance case
that waa imminent.
S HORTLY BEFORE S
p.m., the President walked
across the private street
between the While House and
the Old Executive Office
Building and took an elevat.or
to the fourth floor. At seven
seconds after 5 p.m., he en-
tered the audlt.orium where
his news conferences are held
and said:
·•1 would like to read first a
letter that I have just re-
ceived from Bert Lance .• :·
Grimly, he answered ~ues
Uons. Within 34 minutes, be
was done. Without wailing for
the traditional closing,
"Thank you, Mr. President,"
that signals the end of a news .conference.
He looked at bis wrist
watch, offered his own
"thank you very much," and
walked away alone to the
Oval Office.
* * * *
Events Closed
In on Director
W ASBINGTON-(AP> -Followtna are the m 9jor
events that led up to Bert Lance's decilloo Wedoes-
daytoreslpaadirectoroftbeOfflceofManacement
and Budget:
laa. zt -Lance b conftrmed by the Senate on
Inauguration D17, two days after hi.a approval by the!
Senate Governmental Affairs Committee.
Ja17 U -President Carter asks the Senate com· mUtee to relieve Lance ol an aireement to aell his
N ~Bank of Georgia stock by Dec:. 31 because it
.has declined In value and be could lote over '1 mllllon.
l ab' zz -The Wuhiqton Post dlaclola that Lance toot out a $.1.4 million loan from• Chicago
bank Just one month aft.er the National Bank of
Georgia opened an interest.free account In the
Chicago bank.
'l'M PROUD OF HlM'
Mre. Lance to Reportere
WON'T SEE AZALEAS
Lance After Quitting
Inly ZS -The Senate committee tentaUveJy
clean Lance and indicates It would qree to extend-
lne the Dec. 31 deadline. It is disclosed tllat
Comptroller of the Currency John Heimann Js ib·
veatieatin1Lance. Azaleas Will Bloo"""
But N;ot foi-Lances
f
. WASJDNGTON <AP> -LaBelle
Lance .was wrona. She and her
husband lW'Clll't be around to see their
ualeu bloiom ~spring.
They're goiill back to Georgia.
Just a .... .,.o, the "1fe ol the former~ dJnet« oolnted to the
..... -ad Mr hwilbencl Md plantecf ta tbe bac:uard of tbelr
Geoq«own oouae u a atin al their
determination to rtde out the eon-
trQWny about I.Uce'• flrianc:ial at•
~mt.
Within minutes after President
Carter's press conference, Mrs.
Lance stepped out on the front steps ol
lheir fashionable Georgetown house
to make What ahe called a "statement. Qf railh." ~
H S ll Ut188AND. WBO bad
watched the telev .. ed press c:on·
ference a t bOm• with h1I wUe, WoWd
liave 09 ftirtber commfnt. abe Wd.
J,ut cleP'IJ. Mr,s. La.nee •ould.
Aq.1-Lance discloles that the comptroller ls
concerned about a $2. 7 million loan from the Manuf acturen BanoverTrustCompaey.
Aq. 18 -Tbe comptn>ller'1 repOrt..,. no
grounds c:an be found for proaeeut..lq Lenee. but It
discloses thal Lance and hi.s relatives bad IAlbltaft·
tial overdraft.a. Carter says tbe report clean Lance
and declares, ''Bert, I'm proudol;you. ••
Ms· • -Tbe Aaodated Preu reports that
Luce broke an qreementwitba N.-York MM bJ
pUtttq uptbe A me atott dlvlct.da u collateral for a.loafthom anotber bank.. I
. ~ $-Selit. Abri!WQ.~ JUblcclft <~>. Ud Oa8IW B. Pflie1 ~~). nnkiD8 mtimbeis OI
'the &mate c:o&Dmlu.ie. WI ~ Can.r CMt
l....e..._..rlliliabeeawolMW ....... dCQi flll·
llilalltY-
TllBY WOVLD aE ta W~
, to"~ the awe as bloof!1 alae s&Jd; But Lanct resltni!4 w ednesday and
aald he would eo home to Georcta.
... did 11« bv• anythlna to do wt.th
tile ..._tbi," Mn. Lance said ln a
voice tba& w .. tentative at tint.. then
grewttrona, and OnaJly broktaeveral
Um• With emollon. "As fer as J'ni
concem ed, my husband d.ldn 't have to
rdllSJJ." "I 1UU fffl-he could take a Job
'nywhere," Mra. Lance said shortly
after President Caruc announced the
rul1ncaUon on '"atlonal tel•vlalon. ••tt•'• honeet u4100tt. and I'm proud , olhbn." ·
In tact.. 1he counseled him not to,
aha laid: "1 told hJm I WoUJd ilOt,. •lrn, but .,ain, that wat •., M-
~lakln.''
THE DEPA&T• NT'S NaUonal
• JUPway Traffic Safety Admlnlstra-
:-dee Mid WedneldaJ it has be1un a
n-asb-tat prosram to measure the
•. poaible fire buud of small car fuel
• &a.DU.
Agency administrator Joan
CJQ'brook said full.sized autos also
will be teated for comparative
purpoees.
"Because automobile fires are
amoac the most terrifyin& safety
buards aJlYOOe can encounter, we in·
tad to pursue this matter quickly,"
said Ms. Claybrook. "We will find out
whether a safet.y defect exists, and if · so. wbatwecandotocorrectit.
~
..
.·
. . ..
..
..
THE AGENCY SAID that an initial
survey revealed that since 1975 a total
of 26 Pintos have been involved in
fatal fires claiming 3S lives.
The charges that triggered the in-
vestigation clatmed that 500 persons
bad died in Pinto fires since the car
first came out in 1970. But agency of·
ficials say they have no figures to sub·
stantiate that.
·. Dllll!S Ihle ,.,. ........
Civil court judge Burton S.
!· Sherman has ruled in New York
City that British actress Lynn ~ Redgrave (above> must pay
$913.93 in union dues because of a
law that foreign actresses who
appear in America must pay
... · higher dues. Miss Redgrave's im-
• migration status was at issue.
,•
The cbara .. were au1c1e m tM Sep. tember;oelober 1HH of Mother
Jone1, a Wett Cout·buid 1naauio•
wlt.b 150.000 •"*ribe,...
TRI! AatlCLE"S AVTROS. Mark now1e. daam.t rons Pn11c1ent Lee
Jacoeca w• in a naah to at.art J)IOduc-
lnl Lbe PlAto In 1910. Dowte aald the company tanorect. teats 1howln1 th• Lank wu ausceptlblo to 1aa leak•I•
after an accident because It "Wu toO cla1etotberearbumper.
Consumer advocate Nader bac~
the article'• charges, clahninf •. ''th.ls
b corporate callousness at the hi1best
level ot Ford Motor Co." He aald Ford
should recall all three mllllon Pintos
wit.la vulDerable fuel tank.a.
The article said that Ford bad
modified 1977 Pinto models and they
would not be subject to recall.
A FOllD OFFICIAL characterized
the allegations as "distortions and
half truths."
Ms. Claybrook, emphasized that
her agency bas made no determina-
tion that one make or model of car is
more fire· rone than any other. She
said the investigation is to identify
such problems.
lssire Argued
Over 'Star Wars'
PffiLADELPHIA <AP>-A federal
court has issued a temporary
restraining order barring 20th Cen-
tury-Fox from claiming exclusive
rights to reeordings of music from the
movie "Star Wars."
The U.S. District Court order Wed-
nesday was in response to a suit by
Damil Reeord Eales of Clementon,
N.J .. and its owner, David Miller, of
Middlesex, England, against the mov-
ie's producers .
Damll has distributed 100.000
albums, tapes and cassettes titled
"Star Wars Stereo Space Odyssey,"
performed by the London
Philharmonic Orchestra.
~·
. ·:
Son Francisco. Since that time we tlove opened 16
oddltlonol stores throughout the West. The publlc
response to our exciting new way to save on first qualltY
wallpapers Is very grottrvtng. In appreciation of your
support, we're bringing you our 2nd Anniversary Sole. ..
...
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Genuine
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PromolM9 ~.No &qjenae for CornfortA The music at the last party was
terrible <or didn't even show up)
And NOW you're having a party.
Will YOU bave the same problem?? PHILAD!.LPIBA (AP) -Tod11'1 rode tlan
U'J to oat.do 01M UOCW ilD &Mir udl.DI,
bt.u.mt of ea.cert~. •
ADd lMy Ulllall.J I UlillrrWW.. Promoten
'Top Treat'
USSR Acts Applaiu;kd
By W1LLJAM GROVER
• AP'O..-ottk
NEW YORK -"Estrada." which means varie-
ty in Russian, rates about 3'12 da's on an entertain-
ment scale of four.
The melange or singing, dancing and circus
acts Crom the U.S.S.R. premiered Tuesday night at
Broadway's Majes'tic Theater.
AFfER THREE WEEKS HERE, the bouncy
entourage goes on a three-month safari through ·
Boston, Louisville, Memphis, Las Vegas, Los
Angeles, San Diego and Baltimore.
Mo.5t of what the young performers do is classy,
smart, entrancing. In a strange way, the ultra
lheatncal polish detracts from the exotic charm
that in the earlier phases of cultural exchange sur-
rounded Slavic visitors.
Top treats are two musical aggregations: the
Orera ensemble with lusty and touching Georgian
folk tunes: and the Psnyary group who have applied
some Byelorussian touches to rock with ingratiat-
ing and deafening aplomb. For good measure, each
sang a tune or two ln English, including "Give My
Regards to Broadway.''
A DOUBLE DOZEN RECENT Bolshoi ballet
graduates who travel under the collective name
Souvenir are highly energetic in displays or brightly
costumed choreography, peaking with a "Sabre
Dance'' of flashing blades and scarlet banners.
On a more intimate scale, Natalia and Oleg
Kiriushkln do a pair of outstanding mime turns,
first with a balloon for a prop and then just with
their amazingly elastic bodies.
Deserving of a shruf rather than an outright
oyel are the efforts o a couple of acrobatic
vaudeville acts which gave an appearance of still
being practiced. Well, even Ed Sullivan's shows
used to be uneven.
THE PRODUCTION HAS BEEN staged simply
with visual appeal centered upon the lavish
wardrobe that has been provided by uncredited
craftsmen.
The Majestic Theater. incidentally, is glisten-
ing for "Estrada" with a half-million dollar re-
wlll spare no expense to provide fin~·clus com-
fortl ll tbo act ll bis enou1b.
A NOUVEAU-a 'OCK IDOL NAMED IHY Pop
•bowed up tor a 111 her• and Wormed the pro-motert ho would require an ambulance parked Just
outaldetheata1edoor. · "I 1:tt ao excited 11omet.Jroes that I want to hurt
myMll!' he explained and said ho would 10 on only
with th usurance that some means of.rapid transit
to the nearest hospital be provided.
Only slltbtly less demandlna, Joe Cocker re-
QUlrt.1 two cues of Dom Perignon (24 'bottles at $30 ~1 iilliiiiim=m==== a bottle> for his and bis band's use before •
performances.
TED NUGENT' PREFERS TO psych ·himself
fll.U
PBM nmvicte "Suoet".SOund" 1212 u advmlsed ln PLAYBOY and £.5QUJRE.
A tnmaon T Disc Jockey, fl"ltlb Ideas and NO bullcy suitcase t.ype ol equipment.
We have rates for any c.lrcumatance1. Let ua CATER
the music for your party. ReservaUoas. save money.
CDB
Charlie's Disco Business
After Six plNse:
Charlie C7W 95.S.3S35 Danny (213) 691·994•
Costa Me~ La Habra
· Provisions by Pacific Stweo, Costa Mesa ::=::\'::--' ~ ~ ,, .. ________________________________ ...
~-,__,.___
with chocolate candles, a pound of which must be * * * * * * * • • • • * 1t placed in bis dressing room. • r ··--. ------.• ---------------------------
The "riders," as the attachments to standard· + 1 •
contracts are called, may be as long as aeven *I •it
Pages, depending on the star's need to be treated ....
ed dlflt ' Jt I 1: .. specially or remember as 1erent. -..
While special demands are not new in the music •
business, extravagant ones apj:>eared with the ad· *
vent of rock. * *
T erm Set
SAN FRANCISCO 25°/o Off <AP> -A federal judge •Ill ""~ lbatets
sentenced an Oakland The Energy Store man who pleaded gullly to robbing an Oakland toO,_.c..t~ ..
savings and loan omce of ~ ~ 1
$2,966 to the maxlmun 20 ~--------"" years in prison. U.S. Dis-
trict Court Judge Samuel
Conti imposed tht! term
on Howard Fuller, 34 ,
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work for ou.
..
63 a year for X°ur money.
And you don t even have
to leave It a week.
Suppose you open a regular account with us
tomorrow. Any amount. Then later you decide you
need cash and you take some or all of your
money back.
Your money still earns at the full 6% rate, from
day-in to day-out There's no withdrawal penalty.
Anytime your account balance is $5,000 or
more, the interest rate jumps to 61h%. With the same
liberal withdrawal tenns. And whatever the rate,
we compound 1t quarterly.
No minimums, no tie-up, and 6% .. It'll pay you
to call us for the details. Available to individuals,
corporations. and organizations residing in
California.
COMMEl\.CIAL C~DIT
COMM ERCIAL CREDIT PLAN.
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774-6740 547-~I
CARPET TOWN'S FALL FLOORCOVERIE SALE
furbishing which is part or a clean-up campaign be-........... ,~r-..
ing conducted this year by the Shubert Organization
at several prime playhouses.
"Doesn't Daddy hove any friend1 his own age
• around here to play with?"
Step into a
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Heat set DuPont TOUCHABLE nyloli pile
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Scotchgard and ttatlc treated
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r
: Wit Soaked.
In Whiskey
: 'nm OOU111H8. LONG AND MllBUNG, of-
fttr a llpt loot at Nevada'• retldenta and a:ra..-..... often from the ~at a bar out. "'I'm a good alcobollc and I write about what I
see lmlde the bars In this state. You'd be surpriaed
about all Uaat you can learn iD these places." said
II~.
llurpby is a miner first, for economic reasons.
and a writ.er second, because tbat's what be wants
to do bat can't afford to.
His copy appears mostly unedited. His stories
are almost like letters to -and about -bis drink-
ing baddies. "I write my best
stuff while l 'm drinking.
I like to live and work in
a saloon. I was raised in
a saloon and these are
all my people. It's
where I bear all my
stories. Granted it's not
always the truth, it's
filled with some
Murphyisms. but it
represents a part of
life,"besaid.
TO FIND MURPHY . in Tonopah, once a
roaring mining town.
MURPHY the town where Howard
Hughes married Jean Peters in the late 1950s, one
needs only to keep walking into bars on the west
side oftbe main street until Murph pops up.
Sought for
OCTeens
The South Oran1e
CountY Youth Employ· ment Service (Y§) has
set a goal of finding 1.000
jobs for teenagenclurlnl
its tint aebool year ef-
fort. according to
Richard Strockls.
e1J1.Ployment.
coordinator.
The. YES official sald
recruiting bas begun for
youngsters interested 1n
working and potential
employers who need
part-time help.
YES offers free
employment services to
students and businesses
in El Toro, Mission Vie-
jo, Laguna Beach,
Laguna Hills, Laguna
Niguel, San Juan
Capistrano, Capistra.no
Beach, Dana Point and
San Clemente.
DR. DAVID W. FOEBSTER, A SURGEON at
the Baptist Medical Center who bas performed sex
change operations, says be is confident that the
operations will be resumed.
News reports have listed Oklahoma City as
among the nation's top centers for sex-change
operations. Since 1973, about 50 such operations
have been performed at the Baptist hospital.
Hospital officials have said there is a waiting list of
50 patients.
An undisclosed number of sex-change opera-
tions have been performed at Oklahoma City's
DIL NN LYNN, DEAN OPTRE Urdvenity ot
Okl•homa College ot Medicine. said aex-ehaqo ~are 0 lelitlmatemedlcaloperatlonl. ••
Ofl'lda18 at Unlvenlt,y Hospital baven 't dJs.. closed tbe number or· aex·chaqe opuaUou
pertormedattbebospltaL
. ESTATE JEWELRY &
Fine Crystal, Porcelains, China, Bionw. Rugs,
Fumiture,Silver, Oils.ate.
1~ Million Doliars Worth~
Don't miss this important sale! 5-.
lollofdilmond_..,_Flne J"': Frldar ......... a.din.._, rings, umnp. ~ ~ · Night,
.. ....._.,..,.,._n:.,atwitbdie-· Sept 2 3-1 nm
mondl, llllllllds. rabies, 11pphiras. " • r•-:
SMrll important largl tmtrllds lll5'EC
.. Slppbim. ~ CTIOll: • • • • •. • • • • • • • FRIDAY, Slpt. 23rd • Noon-5 p.m.. 7-8 p.a Fme crystal, china sets,
European furniture Vi .........., ....... ..,, ........ , of .... toi ::':t:;u:;;iis NewportL·Gad lleriaa
i18mS. , • t .
Hundreds of ~ 2542 wesr coAST·HaGHWAY
I NIWpOlt Bllch, Clliforaia go d ~ AarauttM-.etrom-ot.,. flMet--.tront · • r-.uninu In Soc.t1h9m c.llfami-.
chains ~ Cantlet us tar info on our Sltanlly llltl
Frt111 Admi#km"S SCJndty Dight Illes tJUI Wltk.
Public Md TEAMS: Ber*""-icsd ·~
0-Wrs ......,dlldc•Callt·SOIM•_... twmscanbe...,... w.lcam9 . q (714) 646-2200
CONSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED U. NTIL 5 p.m. FRIDAY
An LMne • Auctionler •
He lives above the Past Time Bar, but mean-
ders to the Rex Club at times, not to mention the
Ace Club. If things get too slow there, be might
cross ~street and visit the historic Mizpah Hotel.
Murphy has lived In Nevada many years, bunt-
ing and picking mining claims across the state.
When he wasn't doing that, be was tending bar in
Au stin, another famous Nevada mining town. He's
married, bul separated.
Stroclda said students
17 or younger can join
the listing of eligible
workers by filling out an
application at the YES
offices, 28382 Marguerite
Parkway in Mission
Viejo. ~~~~~~~~~~~--~--~~--------------------~----~--------------~~~------------
IF ANYONE PERSONIFIES THE rural
Nevada attitude about life and politics, Murphy
does. He is quick to nail President Carter in bis col·
umn on anything that seems to violate the canons of
maximum freedom, to which Murphy subscribes.
He wants to make sure he and his peers are free
to wander the hills or come into town and get drunk
when they want-that's freedom.
And he holds the No. 1 membership card in the
J)azara.k Llars' Club in Austin.
;: His favorite story?
• :· .. IT'S ABOUT A LOCAL rancher, Chet Meyers.
;He was fishing one day when be felt a snake nudge
;lli.s leg. He looked down and saw that snake bad a
•:frog in bis mouth. He toolt the frog and used it for
; bail. and paid.the snake Wlth a drink of rum. Well, ~Ile coUldn't handle all tbe frogs he caught that day,''
._.aid Murphy.
:: His current project'!
.... "I've been asked to write a 'Drinking Man's '.~uide to Tonopab'. and that could take a few clQS."
:~nesaid . • .
"7onwn Has . La3t Laugh
.: OMAHA, Neb. <AP> -A North Omaha woman
::was the victim of a purse snatcher, but the second
·:time around she ended up withthe last laugh.
• The 78-year-0ld woman's purse was grabbed
:! Aug. 26. Two weeks later, she told police, her purse
:: was snatched again, possibly by the same young
:: manasshewalkedalongacitystreet.
:: The second time, she said, the purse contained
:·only a notestating, "Ha, ha, thief."
Business es or in-
dividuals seeking
someone to do particular
kinds of work can use
YESasajobbank.
Sale Halted
SACRAMENTO <AP)
-The sale of 55. 7 acres
at Metropolitan State
Hospital in Norwalk has
been blocked by Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr., who
says state health of·
ficials want to keep the
land. Browo's office said
be votoed AB 424 by As·
semblyman Bruce
Young <D-Cenitos).
Thursday, Friday and
Saturday, September 22, 23
and 24, I. Magnin South
Coast Plaza invites you to
view an exceptionat{y
fine collection of
Rings, bracelets,
earrinQt, necklaces a'nd
pin~ including
m.-v one-of +kiod pieces.
E-T WIRE
DISH
WHEELS
CMILY PILOf
I.OS ANO L S CA.P> Robin \UHtd th
• JIUI Jow over hi• t)'H and lit • euru•t •
• a ood rutbt.>w'll find peopl dlnf on
ffflt7 CWDV', •• llobm Hid peettn, throuch th
w at t• c lac at th cru n1 can
t =· lhrou1 tb• p&lddlu on Van ~un
While there are sWl plenty of old Chevys, F~
and souped·UJ> Ptymoutbs seen oo the boulev~.
wlldly painted vans are a favorite. •.
M-.v have intenora that rival aputments for
creature comforts, includln1 plusb carpeting,
stereos, CB radios, beds, and compact refri&eratocs
fUll of cold~-•'
""Jl ON A UJNY GRT Ulco tblJ, moat ot ·"'iifBWi,...~
the peopt •• "'ho .... ~l htrc an tbo people w~ Jun won'\
SOMETJMES THE CA&S A&E lowered in froot
and raised in back, rolllna alonl oo oversised tins
with raised letters boldly proclaiminc they are Su~ SPorts, qr Wid~ Ovals. a aurnmer ev nln1. u man1 u ZS,000 youn1
peop1 bc-t-.t"Cn \.bo •I• o( 14 to 30 enstso the
boulevard lD •.arch O( a lood time
Ono HoUywuoc.t acrttmwriter called ll "the mo~lt ot tM car culture on the planet Earth ..
lndffd ltb. • CARS OF £VERY DESCRIPTION and color ~mpete for attention, as their drivers reUve the
l9SOs favorite, "cnminc the strip."
Tanned teenacera cluster on corners t-0 watch
the passane parade, eirchance cosslp, sbare a
smoke. Others prefer to ride
The young lreckle·faced blonde t.n blue jeans
idly popped her Ju1cy Frwt as she searched for a
rock station on the CadJllac 's FM radio
••1 COME DOWN HERE BECAUSE Ll 's a lot
better than staying at home," said Shawn, a 17·
year·old l>enior al Van Nuys HJgh School.
"It's lhe only place you can come totally broke
-and sllll have a good time," she added, turning up
the volume
.. People JUSL come down here to show off tbear
cars and waste gas." Robin said. "If they live close.
they'rehereeverynight "
ALMOST RELIGIOUS IN THEIR devotion lo
the Wednesday night ritual, they rarely fail to miss a chance to cruise.
It's an opportumty to show off a new car, meet
new friends or swap stories with old ones.
Inching along bumper to bumper in everything
from battered Volkswagens to customized vans.
they !)eem lo personify the California Car Culture of
Or S um1ne r Class
Schools Adopt
Fail Program
H<'Quirang a student who is behind academical·
ly to attend summer l>Chool or fail has been ten-
tativ~ly approved by Capistrano Unified School
District trustees.
The school board tn!)tructed Superintendent
Jerome Thornsley to develop a summer school or
fatl policy und bran!{ at back to the board at a future
meetmg
TllORNSLt:V TOLD THE BOARD this week
that rt>quiring a child to attend summer school
would dramatically call to his parents' attention
that he is h;iving learning difficulties.
"It shifts the responsibility to the parents then,
af they don't want the child to goto summer school."
he said.
·Philip Grignon, assistant superintendent for in·
struclion, told trustees the mandltory summer
school program ror failing students is part o( a dis·
trict program to involve parents, students and
teachers equally m children's schooling.
"TUE EMPHASIS JN INSTRUCTION has
changed in the last rive years." Grignon said~ "We
are now using prescriptive techniques -ascertain·
ing where a student is and prescribing assignments
to that level
·we recognize 1od1v1duahty of learning styles
of :.tudents in this district ·
A parents' homework program is also in the
works. Grignon said. Parents will be given specific
directions to work with their children in areas
\\here they are having learning difficulties, he said
Energ y Unit Asks
Public for Ideas
SACRAMENTO <AP> The California High
Energy Commission has a budget exceeding $20
million. and each oser of electricity pays a small fraction of it
So. John Q. Public, how should it be spent? asks
Richard Maullin. com
mission chairman
IN AN OPEN letter to
·'concerned Callfor·
nians, ". Maullin has is·
sued an invitation to the
public to send in ldeas or
··meet with us race to
face."
"This is the people's
money and we would like
their ideas on how ll
should be applied for •
better energy future,"
said MauJlin.
THE LAW that created
the commission, which
has authority to approve
new power plants and is·
sue Cb!Uervation regula-
tions, provides fundine
from a surcharae or 1"'
"'nch
tenths or one cent for
each dollar paid on elec-
tricity bills.
The average Calilot·
nian contributes 90 cents
a year to the commission
budget, said Stephanie
Bradfield, commission
spokeswoman.
MAlJU.IN SAJD com:
mission staff members
will be available to the
public Sept. 29 in Los
Angeles and Sept. 30 in
Sfcramento. Budget de-
cisions will be made in
public bearlaes Oct. 11,
14 and18. I ,
• T.be commi~sion ·~.
mailing adclrQiSS la 1l11
Howe Ave., Sacramento,
95825.
There's plenty or chrome to catch the light fro~
street lamps and neon slans. and some. proud
owners even go so far as to name their machin~.
such as tbe "Mldnltht Lady," one driver had on bis
jet-black Chevy van, painted in Caney .script across.
the back panel.
There are oars tor show and cars to 10; some
feature huge engines with racinc modifications.
and loud pipes that growl at stop signs wblle the
drivers search thestreetsforsomeooeto race.
· ALTHOUGH CA.BS ARE AN essential ingre·
dient, people play an important part in the Van
Nuys Boulevard scene.
Pattie, an lS.year·old Van Nuys School studedt,
says there is a sense of comraderie among the r~: gulars.
PENNY FREEMAN, SHELLY ALORtCK, ebrH 16, CRUISE VAN NUYS BOULEVARD
'Cruising the Strip,' a Favorite Attles Pastime, Revived In Loa Angelea
·1be other night we colleeted $130 in about 10
minutes and bailed out this &uY who was in jail for
two warrants," Pattie said ... He's a biker named
John, I really don't know him loo well, but he's out
here a lot and is Just a friend of ours.'·
the 70s, where four wheels mean much more than
mere transportation.
It's a way of life.
"IT'S A GREAT AMERICAN tradjtion out here
Wednesday nights," said Los Angeles Police Capt.
Tom Hayes, commanding omcer for the Van Nuys
area.
"I guess it's a slatus thing to be seen on V11n
Nuys Boulevard, cspeciully tr you have a flashy car
KODAK FILM camera
WITH PROWSING
......... )47
CI I 0.12 RLM ........ . 347
KMA 4'4 IMM FILM ..• 347
or van, and of course it 's the old boy meets girl story," Hayes said.
Van Nuys Boulevard is even featured in a new
film, "Stingray," starring Mark Hammill of "Star
Wars" fame.
IT'S AN ADVENTURE STORY which centers
around a customized Stingray and the young people
who devote their energies to build and display the
car on Van Nuys Boulevard.
THE POUCE ALSO CRUISE in lbeJr familiar
black ancl whites, keeping a sharp eye peeled for
traffic violations.
Angelo, a 20-year-old supermarket clerk who
drives a Mustang, said the police can be a hassltl.
but generally aren't 11 common courtesy is ob·
served when dealing with the officers.
"The cops are cool to you as long as you are cool
to them." he said. "On the other hand, I've seen .
guys call them pigs when they get pulled over an'd
they generally get written up."
WOMEN'S
RACING
SHORTS
294
50% potyester/50%
cotton Many color
combinations 1n sizes
S-M-L.
Minolta sr-T200
35MMCAMERA
; 199.??
'Drug School' Ordered
FOr County Newsman
m luUetln mau1•
Marun R. Olt n h bten
to parUdpato in 1 "dru1 ~hool" procram w1lh a ¥1ew to even ·
baal ol thara flled June
.It. Seta Au Munldp.tl Court Jude•
Jo H.. Smith Jr. ordered 01Mn, 0 ,
~ em'Oll in Oran&• County'• drul llh 1Clft PfOIJ'•m. Olacn •N or· dered to r.w.m to court Marcht, 1m. toe evaluatioo of bla procr
0 WOaUNG lo New York
for tho Freedom Newspapers croup
th l conlrOls t.be M1helm Bulletin
and the Santa Ana ~ter.
The newsman was arrested by
agents o( the St ate Bureau of
Narcotics Enforcement who said they
found marijuana plants arowing in
the back yard of his Santa Ana home.
Arts and £rafts
OLI NWAll4JL Donchara•ot
culllvattnt martjuana and poaaes Ina
rtt1ri,Juan1 Cor aale . The cuJuvaUon
char1• wH dlamlued by Juda•
mtth.
State lnve1UJa\Ora aald they wen.
directed to 011 n'a hom• on• Up from.
poUUcal financler Geno Conrad.
CON&AD, WHO FACES lrial In
Oranae County Superior and Loa
Anaelea ft.-deral courts oo multiple
fraud countt, readily admitted sup.
plying state olflcer11 with lhe lnforml·
tlon.
He told newamen that his action
waa prompted by his resentment of
the way in which newspapers con·
trolled by the Freedom group handled
reporting of bis alleged criminal ac·
llvlties.
SJC Offers
Child Classes
Patrick
Pleads
Innocent
BEVERLY HfLLS
<A P > Ted Putr1ck,
hired by parents to
"deprogram" children
who have joined re-
1 i g ious sects. ha s pleaded innocent lo mis·
demeanor charges that
he held a young man and
Children's classes ranging from Polynesian
dance instruction to-more traditional arts and
crafts courses will be offered this fall through San
Juan Capistrano's Recreation Department.
4-YeAR BATT\.E
John Lennon
BEAT THE SYSTEM
Charlie Chaplin
Pofumki May Join Select Star Aliem
LOS ANGELES (AP> -When
movie director Roman Polanski
pleaded suillY to havlnc unlawful aex with a lJ.year-old glrl, he
said he knew be risked deporta· tion. But Polans lcl. llke other
celebrity alleJ\I, muat alao know
that, l.n practice, few ot the
famous are forcea to leaw th•
United States forever.
THE .,_ YEAll·OLD Polan.ski,
director or s uch fllma as
"Chinatown" and "Rosemary's
Baby," faces sentenclng on the
aexoflen:Je.
As a French citizen of Pollab
descent. he ls subject to imml·
gratlon laws which provide de·
portatioo of an alien convicted of
a crime of moral turpitude and
sentenced to prison. Polanak.i'a
crime carries a possible sentence
ol one to 50 years in prison.
"I can't remember any
celebrity of stature who haa been
deported," saya Robert Sells,
spokesman for the U.S. Imml·
gratlon and Naturalization
Service here.
RICHARD FRAADE, a Bever·
l y Hills immigration
l awyer with numerous star
clients, notes, "Once an alien Is
in this country. he has a broad
panoply ot constitutional rights.
morals and political assoda·
Uons.
Chaplin's sexual dalUances
bad made headlines In a lurid
paternity trial, and he was ruled
to be the father or a child born out
of wedlock -a scandal at the
time. Also. the American Leeton
had denounced him for espousing
leftist causes.
Chaplin avoided deportation
proceedings by chooslne not \0
return. He took up residence in
Switzerland and has returned
only once, in 1972. to accept an
honorary Academy Award in
Hollywood and a tribute to bis
movi~ at New York's Ll.ncoln
Center.
OTHERS HAVE CHOSEN. to
battle the INS won-notably John
Lennon of Beatles fame who was
ordered deported -in 1972
because of a marijuana convic·
Uon in England.
L e nnon won permanent
residency status after four years
of court fights and hefty legal
fees.
"Most people could not alford
to do what Lennon did," says
Fraade.
He notes that immigration
laws generally favor artists who
seek admission to the country on
temporary work visas.
s mall ucment" of aliens.
lawyers say many or those ha.rd
hit by the INS rules are a.rUat.s
unknown to the m ajorjty of
Americans •
"IF SOMEONE IS very 1ood,
really has world r enown. lbey
have few problema," says Ruth
Popkin, an attorney with one or
the laraest immigration prac·
tices in Los Angeles.
''But you have lo be Isaac:.
Stem or John Lennon. We deal
with artists that don't have suc:h
big world names .. For in-
stance, we represent a few very
good pajnters. But they are not
Chagall."
The little known artist must
obtain Labor Department
certification showing that his
talent can't be duplicated by
available American talent.
SHE RECALLED representing
two lion tamers from Poland who
were offered permanent jobs
here.
"We had lo put want.ads In the
paper lo prove that It would be
very hard lo find other lion
tamers in America," sayd Ms.
Popkin.
"Some people can prolong
their stay here indefinitely,"
say:t Seitz. "One of our gangster
types went to court for 33 years
and died here."
Two sessions or Polynesian dance will be held
Saturdays from 9: 15 a.m. to 10 a.m. and 10 a.m. to
,10:45 a.m. at Nita Robertson's Dance Studio, 32951
Avenue Descanso in San Juan. The early class is for
beginners, the later class is for advanced begin·
ners.
woman agains t their ----------
"Anybody who gets himself an
attorney who knows what's going
on will get year s to s tay in
America," says Fraade.
The closest a celebrity came to
deportation was the 1952 Charlie
Chaplin case.
THEY ENTER AS "third
preference," a category citing
"members or professions and
persons of exceptional ability in
the sciences and arts,•· a category
preceded only by some relatives
of U.S. citizens and residents.
ALTHOUGH POLANSKI'S
case may be unique, his possible
legal path s are well -
established.
•: THE EIGHT-WEEK classes for six to 12-year·
!))lds wiU offer instruction m Hula, Tahitian, New
:$ealand, Oriental, Samoan and Fijian dances. t: Two classes in drawing and painting also are
lplanned for six to mne·year-olds and 10 to 13·year·
tplds. The younger group will meet Saturdays from :'2:;31) p.m. to 1.30 p.m. while the older kids gather
.from 1 :30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.
·:· Both sessions will be conducted at the San Juan ~~lementary School Multi-Purpose Room , 31642 El
:Camino Real. ... ... ·•• OTHER CLASSES oCfered this fall through the
·!recreation program will Include arts and crafts, ~llet. creative dramatics, puppetry workshop and· ~olk guitar. .::· Registration for these crasses continues Mon·
;!eays through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m . at San
ruan city offices, 32400 Paseo Adelanto. J:: For more information. phone 493·1171
~.· (•' •••
t8he Would Give
~=
i&>n to Widow, 71
~ .
~ ST. PETERSBU RG . Fla !AP> --The mother
~r a 4' ::·year·old boy has told a court she "'ould
3:ther have her son cared for by a 7l·year-old
, 1dow than by the boy 's father.
· ~e molher, identified only as a hotel maid. r-. .. old Pinellas Circuit Court Judge Jacke Page in a
-.:t-ustocly hearing· "I want Mrs. Lucille Williams to
lkeep him. He"s been 1n good hands and he stayed
S¥1th ht>r loo many years. she loves him.·· . .
• THE BOY'S PARENTS SEPARATED when he
-~us born. The child"s mother gave the infant to
rs. Willi ams' sister. Dorothy Jackson. But Mrs.
ackson became ill and Mrs. Williams took the in·
ant lo her home.
• ~ Last month, the child's father went to Mrs.
'~illiams home, and demanded she surrender his
~-n. but she refused. An argument followed and
~•..,vlice were called. ~.
THE BOY WAS PLACED IN state custody
~pending a court decision. li Alter laat w~k's bearing, Page delayed in· l~defin.itely a decision of where the child would live,
pe!1dtng the outcome of psychological tests of the
•• child and a determination of Mrs. Williams· health.
<I! Page said the child could be allowed to stay
~with the Mrs. Wtlllams. become a ward of the state
or be given to his father.
will.
The San Diego resident
was released on his own
recognizance Wednes·
day after arraignment in
Municipal Court on three
counts of false imprison·
ment and one of l'On·
spiracy. A pretrial hear·
ing w:c. scheduled 0l't
28.
HE AND five per~ons.
including the young
man's parents. "'ere ac·
cused of holding Pam
Shannon Wells. 17, and
Dennis Hauswirth, 26,
against lheir wills. They
are members of a Santa
Barbara sect known a~
the Brotherhood of lhe
Sun.
Fred and Katt!
Haus wirth pleaded no
contest in August to two
counts of false imprison·
menl and wer e each
given $125 fines and a
year's probation.
A PATRICK associate,
Sherri Dietrich, pleaded
no contest lo one count
and was fined $100 and
placed on a year's proba·
lion. Two other defen·
dants, Cliff Daniels and
Rodney Casey, have not
been localed.
Patrick wa:. released
from jail this summer
after serving three
months for a conviction
relating to a deprogram·
ming attempt.
Grant Won
LOS ANGELES (AP>
-USC.has received a SS
million arant from the
Seeley G. Mudd Fund,
, the largest gin ever to
USC by a CaHfornia
foundation . A USC
spokesman said the
money will be used
toward a Sl2 million
cl ass room ·laboratory
building for the college
of letters. a r ts and
sciences.
Robber Runs
FRESNO (AP> -A
holdup victim was so
sl'ared that the would-be
robber fled without get·
ting any loot and In fact
left SS of his own behind,
police report.
THE FAMED COMIC actor, a
British subject who bad lived
here for 40 years, was on a trip to
his native England when the INS
barred his re.entry unless he un·
derwent an i nquiry into bla
"Rock 'n' roll stars come in un-
der third preference," says
Fraade. "Anyone who would sub-
stantially benefit the culture of
the United States would come in
that way." .
Although Seitz notes that
drtists are "the smallest of a
He can ask the sentencing
judge lo recommend against de·
portation. H he complies,
Polanski's status would remain
unchanged.
Failing that, he can submit to
deportaUon hearings and launch
a series of appeals if ordered de·
ported.
---~----~-
White Do11se Pests
Better Mousetrap May Be the Anstoor
By FRANK CORMIER
WASHINGTON <AP > --Presi·
dent Carter may not know it but
he has a go-ahead from the
Humane Society of the United
States to kill as quickly as possi·
ble the mice that inhabit the res·
identiaJ offices.
Three Whi te House sources re-
Ported that special devices that
trap rather than kill mice have
been Installed near Carter's
private orricc because, they
claimed, conventi ona l
mousetraps are frowned upon by
humane societies.
NOTIDNG COULD BE further
from the truth. it seems. Said
Charles Herman. spokesman for
the national society:
"We stay away from rodents.
Essenti ally. we're for the·
Performing
Groups Eyed
For Center
With the former church at
Newport Beach's Ensign View
Park slated to be remodeled as a
performing arts center, city of.
fl cials •re looking for groups who
a re looking for a place t o
perform.
quil'kest possible kill for these
pests. We're against cruelty."
When the local society was
asked if it had advised Carter or
his people against using every·
day mousetraps, a spokesperson
responded. "Doesn't he have
enough problems?·•
IF ANYTHING, THE type of
trap that rests in Carter's outer
office, near the desk of personal
secretary Susan Clough, would
seem to be potentially objec·
tionable because it imprisons
rather than kills. Baited with
cheese, it has an advertised
capacity of 30 mice at a time.
Ms. Clough, never has had to
cope with any auch quantity.
however . When she finds a single
mouse in the trap. she prompUy
calls the General Services Ad·
ministration, which carts It orf
for belated, if humane. destruc·
lion. ••• Mice are so prevalent
throughout the White House com·
pl ex that a variety of devices and
metbod8 are employed to fight
them.
IN THE PRESS center. for ex·
ample,.c0nventional spriDI traps
are uaed -but wltb'an uneonveo.
tional bait. Instead ot armlng the
triggers with bits of cheese, GSA
employes periodically dab them
with peanut buUer.
mice, has occurred periodically
in recent While House history.
When squirrels began chewing
up President Eisenhower's
backyard putting green. some
animal lovers were outraged by
Ike's strenuous efforts to have
them trapped and carted off to
distant federal forests ..
EYEBROWS WERE RAISED
anew by a campaign to rid stale·
ly White House trees of squalling,
untidy starlings. The gimmick in
this case was to capture a starl·
ing, truss him bead down by his
feet and record bis shrieks ofter·
ror, which then were broadcast
from loudspeakers placed in the
trees.
In the inter vening year s.
technology has advanced to the
point where a more effective an·
ti·starling method has been de-
veloped . To wit : a
groundsk~per walks among the
trees at the roosting hour bang·
ing two sticks together. ....
There is one.dog, Grits, now In
residence at the White House.
But the President ts not so at·
tacbed to the m001rel, a lift to
daughter Amy, that be is likely lo
repeat the sin of President
Johnson.
LBJ offended a raft of humane
societies by lifting his daughter
Luci's beagles by the ears -just
to hear them bowl.
APWI ........
'MOST ELIGIBLE'
Prince Cher1es
Mothers'
Interest
Royal
ATLANTA CAP) -
The governor's offi ce is
unde r siege from
mothers who have their
eyes on one of the most
eligible bachelors for
th eir daughters -
Prince Charles.
"It's amazing. They
.ask when th eir
daughters can meet him.
where he's going to stay,
everything." said John
Hanson, appointments
secretary for Gov.
George Busbee.
Jim Wood, chairman of the
city's Parks, Beaches and
Recreation Commission, said a !If------------------------------schedule for the center is being
prepared for the 1978 calendar
year and he wants to hear from
groups look.Ing for a stage.
Neithe r Jimmy nor Bllly
Carter put them up to th.15. It's
simply a fact that mice often con-trive to eat cheese bait without
triggering a trap. When gooey
peanut butter is involved, the
task becomes impossible.
The 28·year·old Pnnce ot Wales 1s scheduled
The center will be oper ated by
a joint committee composed of
members of the PB and R com·
misalon and the city arts com·
mlaalon. The committee will
meet next Wednesday to prepare
a schedule.
Wood said representatives of
theater, mualc or dance groups
Interested ln using the building •
ehould contact him or the city's
department of Parks. Beaches
I ana )\ecreaUoo.
•
In press secr etary Jody
Powell's office. lbe trap of choice
is a long narrow cardboard box,
open ~t both ends, called a MQIUH
Tracking Station. ll contalnl a
green powder that Powell and his
co·workets arecauUoned-rllht
on the box -ftom tn1eatln& or
inhaling.
AN EMPLOYE IN Mra.
Carter's press oflloe reported
there were no traps ih those pre•
clncts -just a s~er filled with som~I that 1 llke oats but
presumably entails side effects
that are best.avoided. ••• Intervention by h~mane
socleti•, ..ithoU1b an lll·found9d narnor ln the case or Cart.er'•
•
to arrive in Atlanta
sometime in the early
evening" Oct. 21 from St.
Louis, Hanson said. A
dinner will be held that
night at the governor's
mansion, where lhe
prince will stay.
For other interested
mothers, the prince also
ls scheduled to visit
Charleston, S .C.;
Athens, Ga .• and
Houston.
Cops Exempt
SACRAMENTO (AP)
-Police officers,
1berlffs and hlehwa1
patrOlmen wm be ex·
empt from jury dutf un•
der a law signed by Gov:
Edm\Dld Brown Jr. Th•
move Is expected to
atreamllne the JurJ
aelec:t.loft process •
Canal Pact Bit
Many Americans Against Ratification
UNGTON CAI>) By an·
o" er belm•o1 mar1tn. the
Am ica.n people oppoH the
l~aty that would r•hnqw..b U.S.
~outrol ovtt the .. anam1 Caoal,
-AsRclated Pren pubUc op on poll lbo., .
• The poll found ~ JW'rctnt '11
• * *
those aurveyed 11 d tboy oppoHd
na rauncaUon of ttle lteat.Y.
Only 29 pet"eent favored UMt pact.
while about 21 perce.ot ex1"ftUOCl
nooplnlon.
THE OPPOSITION cut actoP
r flional, party. educational, •II•
* * * C o nservatives Eyed
: ,,
I
Opponents Mount
Costly Campaign
f WASHJNGTON <A P J ConservatJve groups are concentrating on · about 30 "ke)'." members of the Senate and probably will spend UP·
wards of a million dollars 10 an effort to block ratlfication of the
Panama Canal treaty.
The campaign, involvmg mass media advertising and an effort to
I
f
i
t
~
t
' ~ rl
bury uncommitted lawmakers
under an avalanc h e of anti·
treaty mail, is bemg mounted as
Committee prepares to hold
bearings on the tr eaty next week.
IN A "DEAR friend" form let·
ter signed by Sen. Orrin G
ll atch , IR Uta h J, the
ConservaliV(.' Caucus is :.eeking
contributions lo defray what it
calls "quite frankly . . the big
gest financial risk·· tn its history
The letter!> carry a "United
States Senate" letterhead but are
printed and mailed at private ex·
pense.
With a goal of $300,000 by Sept.
30. the group hopes to have
5475,000 by the time the treaty
comes lo a vote next year
THAT MAY SEEM hke a lot of
money. the letter concedes. "but
not if we are serious about de·
feating the President of the Unit·
ed States and almost the entire
liberal political establishment in
America "
Accompanying the letter 1s a ~ detailed "fact sheet " on the ~ Panama Canal. pre·addressed
~ postcards to he returned to
~ senalors and other postcards to
, be sent to friends, all urging de· ~ feat of the treaty r, The American Conservative ~· Umon. meanwhile, is running its ~ own mail campaign, with Sen. t Strom Thurmond <R·S.C. ), sign·
ing the letter. ll also contains an
• a ppeal for contributions, but
• ACU spokesmen say the em· f phasis is on the treaty issue
C rather than soliciting money . • THE ACU ALREADY has in·
: vested $400,000 in its anli·treaty
• drive and plans to spend at least
' $50,000 more on radio spots and a
• television documentary.
: Meanwh1le, 1l has a number of
' other projects m the works and 1s
: coordinating a loosely-Joined
• "Emergency Coalition to Save
• the Panama Canal, .. made up of
• about a dozen orga01zations with
' a total membership of at least 10
~ million. according lo ACU
• legislative director Gary
' Jarmin.
: The effect of the anti-treaty
C blitz, organizers hope, wlll be a
: deluge of mail and m essages . •
•YltD
IAKElt
pouring into the offices of
senators -in parl1cular those
who are uncommitted or, in the
Judgment of anti-treat y
strategists. might ultimately de-
cide to vote no.
MOST IMPORTANT AMONG
these are Sen ate Ma jorit y
Leader Robe rt C. Byrd CD
W.Va.>. and Minority Leader
Howard Baker <R -Tenn.), whose
own decisions could have impor·
tanl influences on party col·
leagues.
Baker has been singled out for
attenlion because he is up for re-
election next year in a state
where the canal treaty could
become the major campaign is·
s ue. Already be has been con·
fronted by large newspaper ads
declaring that "Senator Baker
alone can save the Panama
Canal."
IN ADDITION TO Baker, 17
other senators whose terms ex·
p1re this year are also targeted.
including Sens. Charles Percy
<R-Ill.J. Clifford Case <R·N.J. I.
J . Bennett J ohnston (D·La. 1,
William Hathaway, <D·Mainel,
Joseph Biden <D-Del.), Floyd
Haskel <D·Colo, ), San Nunn,
<D·Ga.), Wendell Anderson (D.
Minn.) and Walter Huddleston
(D·Ky.).
and income Unes.
Jt wu the first naUonwide sur·
vey conduc*1 alnce President C11rt.er and Panamanian leader
Gen. Omar Torrijoe slped the
treaty Sept. 7 "1th great fanfare.
Despite Carter'• efforts to
drum up support for the pact, the •
poll 1bowed he baa been unable to
convince a majority of his
Democratic party or the resi·
dents of bis home regioa, the
South. to back the treaty.
THESE F'JNDINGS OF
widespread opposition are
similar to the figures from other
polls.
The Senate is not expeeted to
debate the treaty until next year.
giving Carter at least several
months to work on public opi·
01on. The President has said he
thinks support for the treaty is
mounting.
The poll was based on
telephone interviews with 1.548
adults, conducted Monday for the
AP by Chilton Research Services
of Radnor, Pa.
DEMOCRATS OPPOSED the
treaty by a margin of 44 percent
to 34 percent. That was the most
support for the treaty among any
party.
Republicans opposed the pact
by 61 to 26 percent, and indepen-
dents by 54 to 25.
Support for the treaty was
strongest among those aged 18 to
29 and weakest among those over
60. AIX>ut 35 percent of the young
adults backed the pact. while on·
ly 20 percent of those over 60 sup·
ported ratification.
BY REGIONS, SUPPORT for
the treaty was strongest in the
East, where 34 percent favored
ratificatlon, 48 percent were op·
posed and 18 percent had no opi-
nion.
In the South, 49 percent op·
posed the treaty, with only 26 per-
cent favoring it and 25 percent
undecided.
In both the Midwest and West.
52 percent opposed the treaty. In
the Midwest 28 percent favored it
and 20 percent were undecided:
tn the West supporters numbered
~ percent with 19 percent un-
decided.
The opposition to the treaty in
the South contrasts with the high
ratings of Car ter 's job
performance fromJhat area. The
President got his strongest ex·
eel lent ratings in the South, while
the negative ratings of his
performance were the lowest
there
Tax-exempt
Role Probed
LOS ANGELES (AP> -St.
Paul Baptist Church faces loss of
its tax-exempt status because of
contributions to Atty . Gen.
Evelle Younger 's campaign for
the Republican gubernatorial
nomination, tax officials said.
An IRS representative said
Wednesday that two $1,000 con-
tributions by the church fall
within the IRS descriptfon of
polilical activity, which is
against regulation for any
charitable organlzaUon.
:· .............................................................................. .. . . • • .. I
i
i • ! ,
Fine Arts Gallery of Scottsdale
IN NEWPORT BEACH
3295 NEWPORT BLVD. NEWPORT BEACH , CA.
32nd ST. & NEWPORT BlVD. -OPPOSm art HAU
-ANNOUNCES -
PRECIOUS GEMS
FllOM
LARGEST PAWN & LOAN
COLLECTION
IM
NEWPORT NEWS, VIRGINIA . --
o.lty Net S\eff ......
JEFF DAY (LEFT) AND CAM DOUGLASS WITH MEMORABILIA FROM SUMMER RUN
They're Real Cross-country Runners-From Oceanalde to Jackaonvllle, Fla.
Dogs Plague Runners
NB Youth Relate Cross-country Trek
By WILLIAM HODGE
0111• D•lly ~Hot St.fl
Man's best friend became two
Newport Beach boys' worst
enemy thLc; summer while the
two were running about 2,500
miles from Oceanside l o
Jacksonville, Fla.
"Stray dogs were our biggest
problem," 17·year·old Cam
Douglass explained. "We would
be running in the country with
one dog following us and all of a
sudden all these dogs were run-
n mg out of barns JOtning the
chase."
DOUGLASS AND 19-year-old
Jeff Day carried <'ans of mace to
ward off assaults from their four-
leggedpursuers..
"We )>rought two cans or the
stuff on the trip with us but we
wound up using about 10 cans of
itz.w DouJtlass recalled.
Although most problems tn·
volved the usually friendly mem·
bers of the animal kingdom. the
two cross country runners had
some problems with creatures of
the two-legged variety.
"WE GOT CHASED by :.ome
young guys on the highway going
into Blythe." Douglass related.
"We thought they were coming
after us so we ran in lo the open de·
sert."
Once into the open desert, the
two weren't sure of each other's
position until young Day cried
out in pain.
"I was riding the mo-ped whcm
I heard Jeff cry out," Douglass
recalled. "I shined the bike's
Light in his direction and saw he'd
run into an electrified barbed·
wire fence.
"HE WAS JUST hanging there
and then fell off the fence and
didn't remember anything that
happened."
"I was kind or stunned at first
and didn't know where I was.··
Day said.
The potentially tragic incident
didn't slow the two down.
however. and they continued into
Blythe without further troubles.
But. they said. the first part of
their cross-country run was the
worst, travelling t'hrough the
western states and the miles and
miles of desert wasteland.
"IT WAS 125 degrees in the
daylime," Douglass said. "And
in the desert you can see where
you 're going to end up --it seems
like you're not moving at all."
·'The first two weeks seemed
like half the trip," Douglass ex-
plained. "We stayed al a hotel in
Phoenix to c:elebrate the Fourth
of July and talked about how
slow we were progressing.
''We figured out we weren't
doing loo well so we'd have to
start running three limes a day
instead oft wo. ''
THE TWO ARE convinced they
would never have accomplished
their feat if they had run from
east to west.
The cross-country so)ourn had
its inconveniences as well as re·
wards.
·•we ~ot used to being pretty
sleazy," Day explained, mention·
mg a lack of shower facilities
along a good share of their route.
"But that was the fun part of it -
we were kind of roughing it aJl
across country."
The trip took its toll on the
young fellows' attire.
"WE WENT THROUGH five
soles a piece,·' Douglass said of
their running shoes. "We went
through about a sole a stale at the
beginning orthe trip."
Back in their Newport Beach
homes, the two young men are
already talking about their next
adventure
''We were thmking of trying to
run across Lake Ene if it freezes -
up again this winter,'' Douglas
explained. "It ·s only 40 miles
across the lake, but the problem
wlll be running on the ice."
~·~9 KING OF THE
·:) GRANDFATHERS
SAVE MORE THAN. $1,000 ON
HERSCHEDE CLOCKS
r
.
Thurtd•y. Stet mbet 22. 1117 DAIL y l'ILOT A J f .
Mak Sex· Surveyed
First National Study.Since Kinsey Report
',IWYOJU< CAP) -Aatudynf
Ute M:xual pracllcu and pttf _..l'W'I ... ol Am ric.u men 1how1
tbal molt want lb Ir aex wiUUn a
coatat ol marriace and do not
, cemider lt t.M mort lmpiort.ant
.. pleasure tn life.
A larse maJont7 oC mco aay
: tb47 need or en.JOY 1moochln1 • even lf no .sexual lntercoutte i· ~'S and 'about ball aay th9y
.. ba~• never cheated cm their ~ v. hes or steady girlfttdds, ae-: cordina to the study • •
A.SllED ABOlTr WHO they'd
like to settle down with. more
opted ror brains tban beauty. but
m<111t wanted women wbo would
look after tbeir oeeds.
The ftndings appear ID an ex-
cerpt fl'Om "Beyond tbe Male
Myth," by Dr. Anthony
Pietropinto and Jacqueline
Simeoauer, in the current Ladies
Home Journal. The book, coming
out in December, is based on in-
terviews with a cross-section of
4,066 men and is described as the
first extensive national study of
male sexuality since the 1948
Kinsey report.
NO FIGURES WERE given on
how often the men bad sexual in·
tercourse, but three to four times
a week was given most often as
the frequency with which they
.wantit.
To the question "What do you
consider the ideal sex Ufe for
yourself?" 50.5 percent chose
marriage, with the wife being the
only sex partner. Another 19.9
percent chose marriage, but with
some sexual activity outside the
marriage. Living with one
woman but without marria~
was chosen by 10.6 percent.
GIVEN A UST OF qualities to
be desired in a steady sex
partner, the men checked off "a
FREE!
ILLUSTRATED
INSTRUCTIONS
USE OF SPECIAL·
IZED TOOLS!
EXPERT ADVICE,
PLANNING HELP
FULL REFUND
ON UNUSED TILE
woman wltb con-cern tor my
neocb" 28.4 percentortb Ume; a
1lncert woman, 23 percent: af-
f ectlonate, 20.8 percent; in-
lclUaicot, JfJ, 1 percent: self-
confident, 12.2 percent; sexy,
tl. l percent, aod havina a aenae
ol humor, 10.3 percent.
In all catqories. the survey
explained. t.buee 1urveyed could
Author Latlded
Evangelist Ruth Carter
Stapleton, President
Carter's sister and author
of the book "The Gift of In-
n er Healing," wowed the
B ri tis h press with her
· · moviestar" looks and
"dazzling Carter s mile'' at
u reception organized by
her British book publishers
in London.
cbooso more than one response, •
while "no response" answers
were admitted, which ls wl\y the
figures do not always total 100
percent.
Asked bow they felt about bU1-
glng and kissing, 59.1 l*'Ceftl
said they enjoyed it even wlthout
intercourse and 1.2.3 percent aald
they bad a real need for It. Elabt
percent said they hardly ever did
that eort of t.hlnl or did It mostly
to please a woman.
ON PREFERRED
frequency of sex, s•.s per-
cent or the men thought tbNe to
four times a week was ideal; 25.3
percent chose five to seven times
a week, wblle 18.2 percent opted
for once or twice a week. At the
extremes were 13.1 percent who
said more than once a day and 2.1
percent who ranged from once a
month or less to never.
Are tbey cheaters? Never, said
49.5 percent. Another 28.5 per-
cent said they were, but only with
one or two other women. 'lbir-
teen percent said yes, with a lot
of other women; an!l 5.5.
percent said they'd strayed with
the knowledge and con.sent of
their wives or steadies.
Oakland Fires
4Policemen
OAKLAND CAP> -Four city
police officers have been fired
following an investigation into an
alleged attack on a traffic
violator.
Chief George Hart said the
men used unnecessary force in
subduing the man, failed to re-
port the July 18 incident to their
superiors and lied to in-
vestigators.
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1: .. " ''ti •• . . ... .
TCU Losses
I b d alwaya been a runn1n1
b <'k, 1 wu ~curo ln lh•l poel·
tum. I kn w wbat waa expecl·
l'd Mt>Ylnl lO wide •roe vet
h11 o a whole dltfer ot
1amt," HYl lh 5.9, 1SS0pouod
n· W tmlMler H11h 1t1r.
Accomando 1aln ed 1,813
yards tn two 1eason1 al OCC.
•arnlnl rlnt team AIJ·
1n can laurels ln '15 when
the Pirata went 1 l 0. And he
WH TCV'• leadint ground
1alnu lut seuon, alt.houah
ru.11hing Cor only 283 yardl.
Bu& tho Horned Ftoas had a
wealth of quallly runQlnc
FORMER ORANGE COAST STANDOUT TONY ACCOMANDO.
Giants Rally
U Streak Ends
As Regµ,lars Rest
SAN FRANCISCO (AP>
Rookie Skip James' lWQ·run
single capped a three-run
seYenth·inning rally that lifted
the San Francisco Giant.s to a
5·4 victory over the Los Angeles
Dodgers Wednesday night.
The win snapped the Dodgers'
14-game winning streak at
Candlestick Park, where the
National League West Division
champions finished with an 8-1
record this season.
The Dodgers took a 2·0 lead in
the first inning ort wlnn~ Greg
Mlnton, 1·1, capitalizing on two
walks. a balk and two wild
pitches.
Rob Andrews' triple at:>d Dar·
r ell Evans' single gave the
Giants a run in tb~ botU>m of
the first, but a sintle by Rafael
Landestoy and ctou"lea by
Dusty Ba'ker and Steve Garvey
madeit4· l in the third Lnnlnc.
The Giants got an unearned
run ln the sixth and three nms
lo the seventh off reUevers
Charlie Hou1h, ·S-11, and Lance
Rautahan. Singles by Derrel
'l'bomas and Andrews started
tb.e rally and Gaey Alexander's
bases-loaded walk and J"1\es'
single scored the runs.
Gary Lavelle protected the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ..,...
Bari'y 8wu.r Del WoOdY.flayea
:-ft9I wllbiilt record bOoU at
111.ai' "6a«Jtl .. -know nilllionaJ CIOl._ laaelliell ehamplonahlp alr ~ UMli OklahOma-Ohlo
._...,.iOwnSaturday. ~ 1Chool li u old band •t wmnm1 the hate 1Uaoelated . ~ utlOnit ll'OP'1. Between tWa. t.M1~ Hftmpllshed ttii lftt .._ Wn• la llltjiOll'I 41· ,.......,.
~ ............ ~ ..r1o •. n eoiald .,.. ...... .,...
triumph for Minton to earn his
20th save, a club re<:ord.
The Dodgers, after clinching
the division title Tuesday night,
rested all of their reeulars ex-
cept Baker and Garvey.
Baker needs two home runs
to give the Dodgers the distlnc·
hon of becortting Ule first team
in major league history with
four players having 30 or more
homers.
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Frustrate • Ex-Dues Ace
bulca t<>minar ln and some top
ttcelvert (l'aduatin1. Plus Ac•
comando was one of the
1m1ller runnlna backa In the
Soutbw t. Conference. Thus
lbeswttcb. ·'They told me 1r l didn't
make lt al wlde receiver, they
would play me somewhere
else. And the tranaltlon came
Yery slow last. s prlne. . t
didn't catch the ball very well.
Bul I've felt a lol better this
fall and J think I cal) help the
Learn better at wlde receiver
than I can at running back,"
says Accomando.
Thus tar this seaaon Ac·
comando has cau1b\ three
passes in TCU's two 1ames for
33 yards and one TD. The
touchdown, a 17-yard aerial.
came last week ln a 29-24 loss
to Oregon.
While the switch to wide re-
cei ver has nol been easy,
TCU's lone Joslna streak may
be even more frustratin& to Ac·
comando.
In two seasons at OCC, Ac·
cocnando played on cham-
pionship teame. 'l'he Pirates
won 18 garn~ 1n '74 and '75.
But e.t TC,V.1 Accomando bas
Yankee. Tumlile
Bostori's G.oal:
Win· the Rest
BOSI'ON CAP) "We're still
breathing. This is what we want-
ed three days ago and now we'll
take our chances."
That was manager Don Zim·
mer's smiling comment Wednes-
day night alter his Boston Red
Sox completed a lwo-game series
sweep of the New York Yankees
with a 3·2 victory. George Scott 's
tie-breaking homer with two out
in the sixth inning and Bill
Campbell's clutch relier pitching
keyed the win.
The crowd or 30,212 turned out
Fight Erupts
As Angels
Lose Again
Champagne may finally flow
for a divisional title winner cit
Anaheim Stadium
Unfortun ately for long
suffering fans of the Cal.Jfornia
Angels. the corks won't be pop
ping 1n the home team 's
clubhouse
Kansas City, idle today, needs
one victory or one loss by the
Texas Rangers to capture its
s econd straight Amer1cun
League West Division cham-
pionship. If the Rangers beat the
Angels in lhe finale of a four·
game series here tonight. the
Royals would celebrate' Wlth a
victory Friday evening when
they apen a "eekend aeries m
A'1ahe1m against the Angels
Tonight's game is at 7:30 <K MPC
710).
The Rangers avoided ehmlna-
t1on with an easy 9·1 victory over
California Wednesday night It
was a quiet evening for the
Angels except for a home run by
Ron Jackson and an eighth in·
nlng fl&ht after pitcher Balor
Moore hit Ken Henderson with a
pitch following homers by Toby
Harrah and Willie Horton.
Jim Sundberg and Dave May
also homered for Texas with
Dock Ellis winning his sixth
straight game against the
Angels ..
There have been bad feelings
between the teams t hrough most
or the season.
"I thought he was throwing at
me," said Henderson, who
charged the mound. "I was just
trying to protect. m yself. I know
Joe Rudi and Jerry Remy were
bit by our pitchers earlier in the
season.
"It was a lousy situation .. ,,
added Henderson. "He was
throwing 94 miles an hour at
me."
Henderson and Moore were
ejected from the game. There
were no further incidents .
···-.. H•rl!T"l lb 4 2 2 t c.m....,.r~u • 1 1 o
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in 50-degree weather. boostlng
Boston 's home attendance to
l.960,335, in an all-time Fenway
Park record.
"We're 21 :i games out in the
standings. but only two behind
the Yankees in the loss column,"
Zimmer said. "We got 11 games
to go and 1 'm hoping to win every
one of them.
"That's nothing new though.
I've been hoping to win every
game since April 7. I missed
aboutOO (actually 61) limes."
"This is what we had to have.
two wins over the Yankees,"
Boston ve t eran Car l
Yastrzemski said as the Red Sox
dressed hurriedly for a charter
night to Detroit for four games
against the Tigers.
"Now we got. to go in Detroit
and win four 1n a row." he said
"Three out of four won't be good
enough We're right behind New
York but we're going to have lo
play like heck the rest of the
\\ay "
Bill) Marlin. the Yankees'
fier) manager, took the loss In
~tride
"We were hoping for at least a
~plit here but we didn't get il,"
Martin said. "However, we're
still two up in the loss column
over both the Red Sox and
Baltimore
"That doesn't sound like much.
but it's pretty big. It's not too bad
at all. The pressure Is on the
others "
After the Yankees pulled into a
2-2 tl() on Lou Piniella's two-out
single in the sixth. Scott unloaded
his first homer s ince Sept. 8
against New York starter Mike
Torrez. 16·13, a line drive Into lhe
right-center field bleachers.
Luis Tianl s urrendered a
homer lO Pini ell a to open the fifth
inning and then needed relier
help from Jim Willoughby after
Thurman Munson singled, Reg·
g1e Jackson walked and Chris
Chambliss lined to center, all in
the sixth.
MWlSon . who took third after
the catch of Chambliss' drive. at·
templed to score as Graig Nettles
grounded to third baseman
Butch HQbson. However, Munson
was caught in a rundown for an
easy out.
Piniella followed with a single,
sc oring Jackson, before
Willoughby ended the uprising by
getting Willie Randolph to
ground out.
Relief ace Bill Campbell took
over in the seventh and checked
the Yankees on three hits the rest
of the way. Willoughby was
credited with his sixth win
without a loss while Campbell
posted bis 28th save. tops in the
AL.
Mickey Rivers singled in the
Yankee ninth. but ScoU dived lo
bis right to spea.r Roy White's
line drive. then beat Rivers back
to first !Dr the game-endln& dou·
ble play.
Seales Wins
WICHITA CAP ) -Suaar Ray
Seales. rated seventh among
middiewei.lbts by the World Box·
ing Ass'oclatlon, scored a
unanimous declsion over Wichita
fireman Mike Hallacy in a 10.
rou.bdproteaslopal bout.
Seales landed puntshine blows
throughout the tight Wednesday
night, opening a cut under
Hallacy'a left eye ln the second
round and knocklng him down
briefly in the fourth.
S.ales, of Tacoma, Wash., Im·
pro-Jed his professional record to
40-4·1.
yet to see a vlctory. Last year
the Homed Frocs were 0.11
and they have dropped the first
two th.ls season. TCU bu been
defeated in 35 of its last 31
&•mes.
"Yes, it bas been ftustrat-
1na. And lt hurts even more
because I'm not &•:feQ' IOOd loser," says AceomaDdd.
But he's confident the streak
will not last long. ·
"Last year and tbis se~
are completely different. Wt!
juat dldn 't have the coaching in
\he right area a year aao. And
we didn't have the killer-type
insUncts when we were abud. But we've improved oa that
quite a bit."
But it's doubtlul TCU bas im-
proved enough to defeat USC-
allbough Accomando will not
admit that.
"We were down 24·3 last
w , e bact to \le the
gaJMllnd.UaenJosUt. Wobavo
ta-e C!Cllilldelc& to play with
aQJ'ooe, evoen thouah many
peoJ)Je say we're one of the
worst ~colleee teams. "~ woU.ld be kind of nice lo
beat 'USC ••• or at least glve
tbemagoodgame."
.. ,,....
l 'mpirc Bruce Froemming expresses his emotion while
calling out Philadelphia's Bake McBride Wednesda)
night. The invading Chicago Cubs won. 2·0. but the Phils
rt' main !'even games ahead in I he National League Bast.
Cuban weightlifter Roberto Urrutia strains on w_ay lo
world record 695 pounds total lift and 314 J?Oun~s m the
s natch during the world champ1onsh1ps an West
German~ Wednesday.
Uonard Tops
.·
l
I
I
I
(
l
1
1
1
(
l
I
(
j
I
-J
DAVE BACHLOR KEVIN OBYMAKO DAVE PISARSKI KLINT WILLIAMS
-,.
Haney Career:
Long, Varied
8}' HOWARD L. HANDY
Ot .. Del.., ...........
"l am deep!)' convinced that
Fred Haney should be given
serious consideration for the Hall
o f Fame in the old·Umers
category," says Chuck Stevens
a long·tlme player and baseball
authority.
Eagles' Offensive I .. ine
Strongest I..ink in Attack
"Fred certainly should be con-
~idenid for his ~tatandinJ coo.
tributioos to the game. l have
known him for a number ot years
a nd have greatly respected him
and his ability.
"'Ibis guy probably has the
best background in baseball as
anybody in the business."
Coming from a man who
played for Haney in the mlJ(>r
leagues <St. Louis Browns) and
sn the Pacific Coast League
(Hollywood Stars>. this is high
praise indeed.
By ROGER CARLSON 01 tM DAiiy "li.t St.II
Usually they are the no-names
of a football squad the offensive
interior linemen.
Defensive linemen have the ad·
vantage of using their hands to
shove them aside an their bid to
get at the running back or sack
the quarterback
You can easily recognize the
offensive lineman, he's got the
dirtiest Jersey. He hardly ever
touches the ball and he usually
gets tittle attention
But that's not the case al
Estancia !Costa Mesa I High
people are paying Htlenllon and
the ones getting their Jerseys
dirty are those with the oppos1·
lion.
* * *
Tackles Dave Bachlor and
Klint Williams, guards Dave
Pisarski and Kevin Obymako
and center Cr&Jg Crandall have
been a starting unit as freshmen.
sophomores, juniors on the 1976
varsity and now with the current
varsity.
Estancia coach Jim Bratten
pays the five a s upreme compH
ment in stating: "They are our
strongest Hnk."
They'll be operating agwn Fn
day rught !8) when Estancia and
cross-town rival Costa Mesa col
hde at Orange Coast College and
1f the Eagles of Estancia operate
in a similar manner as the open·
sng 16-13 conquest or Edison
* * *
If We're the Same
We'll Get Killed,
Says Mesa Coach
, ...
I
I
While thcrr 1s few, if any,
ncgativt'S surrounding the Estan·
c1a <Costa Mesu) High football
t•amp. the opposite is lrue al
<.:os t a Mesa H igh whe r ~
Mustangs coach Tom French is
drilling his squad for Friday
night's (8) duel.
Costa Me!>a and Estancia
tangle at Orange Coast College
and while Estancia is entenng on
the heels of a 16-13 victory over
Edison (Huntington Beach )
High. Mesa is trying to pick itself
out of the dirt after a 13·0 lacing
by La Quinta (Garden Grovel.
"I've been trymg lo find a way
for our game film s to self
destruct," says French. "With a
:.1milar performance against
Estancia we'll get killed.
"It was a poor coaching job
and our players played poorly. I
can't remember a worse effort in
an opener by any team I've
coached. l wasn't pleased with
anything and we are all paying
the price this week."
The Mustangs enter Friday's
cross·town rivalry without key
injuries. but the re are many
changes in store in the starting
lineup.
Tight end Joe Seeley and run·
ning back Dave Fontes move into
start.Ing !oles, along with de·
Sports in Brief
fens1ve players Chris Monahan
and Mike Moiso
Too, Paul Krikorian, Rick
Ayers, Scott Miller and ClifrTing
are being shifted around on de
fense in hopes of containing
Estancia.
.. It's not really a case or tryinR
to match up with Estancia," says
French. "We're just trying to
find the right combinations and
spots for the right people."
French adds that the game
means a lot for both teams due to
the cross-town rivalry and cites
the need for momentum entering
league play the following week.
Friday's test is a renewal of a
!>eries dating back to 1966, inter·
rupted only once (1976) when the
two schools were split due to re·
leaguing.
In the 10 previous meetings
Estancia holds a 5-4-1 edge.
Three games have been decided
by two points or less and only
twice bas there been a difference
of more than a touchdown.
The two will be back in the
same league in 1978.
EstM<i.c.ta-'"'" 1966~_,., .. , •• eosu 1111ssi 1,
1'67-<.Ds1AIMllYO, El\M<leO lfl•I
1 ... -<osta Meg 21, Et .... , .. 21
1~1a ,_..JI. E1i..>Cle 7
1'70-£~.n<le 11, eosta WA 1'
1'11~1n< .. ,., Cos1a -1 1'72-£sbncle JZ. Cos1a Mew 10
19~-n_E1\M<le2
1t7•-<.o51e MllM21, &1.iM><le 1•
1•7s-£st-.cle6.Cost.M.--.o Estanc••-.s+t.
Royals Clinch Tie;
U.S. Netters Lead
KANSAS CITY -Darrell
Porter's 16th home run of the
year touched off a six·run
~eventh inning Wednesday night
and the Kansas City Royals
cruised to a 10-5 victory over the
Minnesota Twins to clinch at
.J.east a tie for their second
tstrai&ht American Lea,eue West
title.
The Royals, postln1 their 20th
victory in 21 outinp, toot a 4-3
lead into the seventh aaainst re·
liever Roll Schueler. But Porter
increased the marlin to 6-3 .tth
a two-run shot into the riabt field
bleachers.
MOSCOW -Billie Jean Klnf
de!eat«l Ola• Moroiova cl tbe
Soviet Union 6·2 Wedn•day
ni1ht, as a four·m•mber
American squad won four or it.a
first five matches In a U.S •
So'flet tennis tournament at
Moecow's Leri.in Stadium.
Playll\g on a ftoaen bock•>'
rink with beavy·dUty carpets
toworina tho ice, the Sowlet
nlon•" Atox MetnveU downtd
Mike Ea~, M. l'he pl.ayers met
for i:lftb' OM Ht aplff'e~~·
Ki:iSt.len Shaw UMd a powahd
Mckbud to eulJy defeat~
Soviet cbamp_ion Yevge nia
Blryukova, 6-3.
In doubles competition, King
and Sbaw combined to beat
Morowva and Marina Kroshina,
6-4, and Kini and Estep defeated
Mo.rocova and Vadim Borlsov by
the identical score.
L•dlal8-oaLANJX>, na. -A clv'il suit
seeking at least $200,000 ln
damages bas been filed in Orlan·
do by former Texas Rangers
manager Frank Lucchesi
against New York Mets infielder
Lenny Randle.
Rand.le. then a Ranaer, turned
on b.ls manaier before a March
exhibition bueball aame at
Orlando, k:nocldftl blm to the cround :with bis fiats and pluWni
him in the bolpltaJ fO't ft•• clQi;
Randle •aid IM bed DO COOl·
mem about the auit wbtn aatecl
attef tbe lltb ~ IOU to Pttts-
bUtP.
... lil ... -a.
GREEN BAY. Wla. JObJ\
Brocldn•ton, "ho rvsbed for
tnore than t;OOO yards ln eacb cl
hia first three NaUoraaJ Football
lAque seuooa, but WhO bu
been a diHPPOhrtin•t tbi lat "'*'""· .... eut. .. , the Q"9n Bay Packen WC'cbu•i1.
tHuntington Beach>. they'll be
tough to stop. Estancia executed al mo~l
flawlessly. absorbing one f1H·
yard penalty <when it wanted t11
use all of its llml' to delay things 1
Much of the credit goes to the
five up front who cumc out of the· sta rtin~ blocks with precision.
then followed with the right kind
of blocking to open holes fo r the
Estancia backs.
Bachlor (227) and Williams
( 18.')) were especially effective sn
~eating off Edison derender~.
alonf? with Mike Camp and Mike
Yocum. who were alternating at
t1ghlend
"We were able to control the
ltne of scrimmage," notes Brat-
ten ... All five of them are just
i(ood, sound kids. They are an tn·
telligent group and they don't ex.
pect a lot of glory. They are JUSl
happy to win and do the job.··
"Last year our offensive line
was our weakest link A couple of
times we managed about 20
yards on the ground But our line
has come a long way It's hard to
single out an ind1v1dual, they
have just been very consistent.
They just don't make mistakes ·
All have decent size with
Obymako (205J, Pisarski (200 '
and Crandall <1851 providing a
::!00-pound avt!rage.
Pisarski, hit with flu earller.
went all the way against Edison
and left the field weighing 180.
Obyma.ko, Walliams and Crnn·
dall double up on defense.
With this the fourth year
they've been together and the
Eagles' practice of working four
hours a day with repetition the
key for the linemen, chances are
this group will ~et even better
CRAIG CRANDALL
Stevens goes a step further. "I
like to see a guy recognized when
he's still alive. That crap about
recognition after he is dead
doesn 'Unterest me."
Haney, now a resident of
Beverly Hills. reached his 79th
birthday in April, yet still mam·
tains an active interest in the
gam~. He goes out to the park
several times a week when
health permits.
His bas been a colorful career
one that included playing in th~
minor and m ajor leagues (eight
Top R11nners Vie
DH Meet Lures 29 School,s
Two of the Cl F 's No. 1 ranked teams bead the field of 29
Sl'hools entered sn Saturday's fourth annual Dana Hills cross
tountry Invitational.
Sherman Indian of Riverside U·A) and El Dorado High of
Placentia !3·A >. ranked first in their divisions in the CIF's initial
cross country poll, are favored to capture the medium small and
~chools div1s1ons in the 14-race Dana Hills event.
Upland, ranked fourth in 3·A. and Westminster are expected
to battle for the l ur~c d1v1slon title.
There will be four races, broken up by grades, in each or
the three d1v1s1ons plus two girls races. Seniors and juniors will
run three miles while the other races will be two miles.
Competition beg1ns·at8:30 a.m. on the Dana Hills track.
Orange Coast area schools entered include Estancia, El
Toro. San Clemente, Capistrano Valley and Mission Viejo.
Others entered are Tustin, Canyon (Anaheim), West Tor-
rance, Saddl@ac;~anla Ana), Magnolia (Anaheim), Santa Ana
Valley, La Sie?l-& verside). St. John Bosco (Bellflower), Bolsa
Grand<' ffounta1 Valley), Sunny Hills (Fullerton>. Brea and La
Salle (Pasadena>
Also, Troy <Fullerton>. R1vers1de Poly Norco, San Marcos
<San D1ego1. Arlington (Riverside>. Ganesha (Pomona),
Mayfair <Lakewood I and La Habra.
FRED HANEY
years); m a n aging in b oth
categones; serving as a general
manager on both levels ; and act·
mg as a sports broadcaster in
both.
Ile can sit down and go over his
baseball career that began in
1917 witb Portland in the
Northwest League, right up to
the present time, giving dates
<\nd teams he was associated
with in that time.
He was instrumental in a ma-
jor uruform change during his
tenure wtth tbe Hollywood Stars
of the Pacific Coast League in the
early 50s. The Stars wore sbort
pants and stockings that were
below the knees for several
seasons Wlder Haney.
•'I think they would all be
wearing them now if the game
had continued to be played dur-
ing the day in the summertime."
Haney says. "But night games
and cold weather eventually
forced them out."
When he went up to the Detroit
Tigers as an infielder in 1923, he
played under one of the most
famous na~es in the game-Ty
Cobb.
"He was a real gentleman, on
and off the field," Haney says.
.. Some of my most enjoyable
times in the game cam e with the
associatloo of people like Mr.
Rickey. John Ouinn and Ty Cobb.
"Cobb was the greatest. He
was wonderful and be went into
detail on everything.
"No. it doesn't make me sad lo
see his base st ealin g record
broken by Lou Brock. Every
record gets broken at one time or
another.
Haney recalls a n incident in a
~a m e with the New York
Yankees m Yankee Stadium.
"We CDetro1l) were playin~
the Yankees and J happened lo
hit one out for a home run. Al the
end of the mning, Babe Ruth had
to go by my position at third base
on his way to the Yankees dugout
from right field
"'When he went by, 1 said lo
him. ·you big so-and-so, you're
only 48 ahtad or me now.' He
didn't say anything then but I
think I had one home run to his
49
··A couple of innings later, he
hit one out and when be came
around Uurd. he asked me, 'bow
do we stand now?"'
Haney's most successful stint
as a manager came with the
Milwaukee Braves during the
1956-59 era. He bad been
manager of the Browns in the
American League from 1939
t hrough 1941 and or the Pit·
See Haney Page 84
Huntington Valley,
Liberty in Action
Eight-man football wars for·
the Orange Coast area ·s two out-
fits resumes Friday.
Huntington Valley Christian
High or Newport Beach tries to
Improve on Its l ·O record with a
game against Pacific Christian
High of Los Angeles at Eagle
Rock High in a 3 !30 tilt.
Liberty Christian High of HlDl\·
ington Beach, meanwhile, will be
tryina to bounce back from its
30-8 toss to HVC with a night. MW""".._. game (8) at Ambassador Chris.-
NEWPORT STARS DON BARKER (30), PAUL HELFRICH (14), DANA WANDROCKE. ti an High in Downey.
Tars' Barker. Geis ms Slglials St~aight
Defense wu the name ot the Durin1 his j unior season, c.oachti>kt~Dal1YPU0t.
game Newport Harbor played Barker bad 111 tackles lncludin& Barbe Is a dedica\ed athlete a&aWt M.1Uikan HIP ol LoQc lead efforts and uaists. He ls who~ bUd t...ltetp.ia shape
Beacb ID the 1eaaon opener aod also a .member o1 the Newport dortq the O«..asoa. Ht .ofted
coach BUI Plulea ti hilh in bls wrestling team In the lM·s>Ound with Weights during the .... mer
pralse oC the Tara' middlo category. moatbaudworkedataphjMcal
llnebacnr.BOn Barker. A eood student, he sporta a a.5 labor Jotitokeeplnahape.
· "He wu the leadlnl tackler on .Jrade point averaae and ls look· Du.rbig the football weuon, he
our team Jut aeuon," Pluic• me toWard a collece education at woru With welcbtl •t a a.titby
nys. ••He calls the defensive a major rour·year uriivertity. He health dub thrwe ti•• a week
1ipala arid ia an outsta.ftdln1 hu been contatttel tij at htut 15 along With hisloothaU activities
team lead«-. achoola and before tile year ls Barket also plays 1ome on of·
"He'• a bla kJd and he works ended, tbal number could be fenQ. especially when a tood
bilir'd. lea OW' lnaplraUobal ltade. doubled. •lrona blocker ii needH. He then
a lot cl tb9 smaller and youncer Hhs clusea 10chld4! ldvuced mo•• lato tM '"'llback .,ot.
ktd• on the wam follow biq, and EnaU.h and others of this nature. uauall1 to bUdle &M ~ Httern'iftithrm:· "He's u eueU \ 1tudent, '1 hll lineba.cbr. He iil&d eany: the
once aaa.LMt Millikan but his
primary objective is blocking.
But. b1a concentraUoo dW'lll&
football is oo defense. And, ..,_
parettUy, be called tbe riaht
slpall tn a 3-0 wlri over Millikan.
. ,no, AL A
t: Dffl&M
l. PcL GB tt Sl m
15 .57) 7
1 ..,, ,52() l&Yi 1a u ,a> t&h
iO ll .4't~
GO ti3 .m a5
otvbloa
&rl 00 .~
82 71 .536 101,
7f.i 7S .500 lS"•
70 83 .458 22h
65 88 .42S 271~
ant.a 58 94 382 34
r X·chncbed dlva.Mon title .-....y.-
~-·1 Sf '--'"1' CN<.eltt llNI-... •• lt1n~4-Vet~O ....... ,_)
Oft<•~l S..~7
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CIM11w..t1 •c.c>lli. 1 71 otl S.fl 0•-IS.,irl•t ,.,.
Cl"<-L•"'I> ._II •I Ptl•l-lphl• ~ro .,.,,
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•#-QI "
• .. At1.nt1 ~'°"'°" j..6) •t HOU\tOft '"iCf\ltG .,..Ill ..
°"''~-.-led ,.,....,.,c;.,,. ••
P11t\bu!'Qh •I Ch•c.•oo
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St L.Oulut Ne• Y0<k n
LO~ Anvetf'\ It HouSIOJ't n
S..n Fr;oncosco•t S... Dlt90 ,.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
New York
Baltimore
Boston
Detroit
Cleveland
Milwuuket:
Toronto
W L
93 59
91 6L
90 61
71 81
67 85
64 90
52 99
We!.t Divis ion
Kansas City 95 55
Tex<e> 85 67
Chicago 85 68
Minnesota RO 73
Angels 72 79
Oakland 59 91
Seattle 59 94 _ .... ,.o. .....
80\lon l Ntw VOf'9' 1
Baltlrnor,. • TorOf\toO
Otkl...01 0.1.-906
IC•~•\(tlv 10. M1nne--.ot• \
S.•l•I,. 11 MllW.Ull.f'1": 4
l~•d\' t.11,orrua I
On•y QA"1e\ ~f'W'dolf"O
TOd•y 'Game\
Pct. GB
.612
.599 2
.596 21 ~
.467 22
.44 l 26
416 30
344 401 ~
633
559 JI
S56 1 1 1 ~
523 16 12
477 231 2
393 36
386 371 ~
Tot onto L,.mdn< ,.. .. I/ 10 1'f ti111U1mo,t
lFl..14n.J<)art 11 lfJI n
Boc,IOtl .-,...,,. , ?) Al 0.HO•I Arroyo I '1l n
(h1(890 fRfl>nilo J 01 al 'iratttf" !M1lcN-11? &t "
lrsb\ tMorpt l-21 di C•llforn•• !H•'11til , ,, n
Onlyoo""" """""'•<! ,:rld•';''t G•mt\
M lfW6\Jkf'f' 81 MIOO(''Otl't
New Vork at Toronto. n •
Balllmore al Cl•wltnd "
Boston al Detroit "
Chicago at Seatllc, n ~••d••• 0.kland n KanwsOtvtlC.llfornl•"
Edison Girls
Run to Victory
T he E dison <II untinglon
Beach> lllgh girls cross country
tea m did what four or the
Chargers' boys squads couldn't
do Wednesday defeat Foothill
High of Santa Ana
Sweeping the first four places.
the Edison gals cruised to an
18·40 tnumph over Foothill.
The boys, meanwhile. were
having their problems as Foothill
won all four races. Scores were
24·32 in varsit y, 15·50 in junior
varsity, 20-35 m sophomore and
24-33 in freshman races.
Calhy Jones won the two.mile
girls' race in 13 :27 with team·
male Ta wny Ferree just three
seconds behind
J ohn Goldstein was the top
Edison finisher in the boys varsi·
ty race. placing second in the
three-mile event in 16: 60.
VAllSITY
-11111 1141 tnl U l -
1•-"'ll•I Oe1lr1 IFI •• 41. l Goldsltlft tE 11• !O J Scott
(Fl 17 0) .• unO\<m EI II 11 s Ourtn '"' n ·JO • B Thoner IJ'l 17 Sl. I Slobom ·E l 17 11.
I G•ll°" •El II OJ. t l<HI., IFI 10 :n 10 St..,l~y !F l 1a,.
l'llESHMAN
Ow•ft>ll•I -"'ill 1241 IUl Edi•• I Bull., IE) 17 S1. 7 Slt"l•v IF! IJ 0. J
Wol"""'°" El n 07 • (;o-11lFII)1J s 8'11· ·~ IF) I) IS;• V.90 fFI IJ 1' SOP'HOMOllH
t•r-ll•I
-Mll 111) CU I llfl-
1. S.-n IE I 11 :n t. Aci.ms ll'I II 0 J Soul""''-'"'" 01,. Herd't '"I"' .. ' W•• rtn IF I L HodQklM IF I " S1
JUHIOll VAllllTY
It~ ........... , -11411 IUI IMI ... _
I Anderle ll'I 11:1', l. ll~nton IP'l 11:4f J
Stee<lmen (I') ll:Q
OtllLS CllOSS COUNTllT
VAllSITY
··-"" 1411 f'tetltlll I JONS IEI 11:27; 2. f'errw l•I 13;31; I
ICl•-orn l&I 11:401 4. HutH tel '4106, s 1(-5-(Fl 14:29;. TN'upp 11•1 U tot; 7. l(ettv
t1'11u1; 1. Mol'•n Ill u.u ;t. Curry 111 \51&1; 10. H'9QIN (Fl 1'!11.
Volleyball Tryouts
The Orange County Volleyball
Association will hold tryouts for
girls in the sixth through eiahth
grades Sund~ (4 lo 8) at Corona
del Mar High School. 2101
Eastbluff Drive.
The tryouts are open to all eirh
in Oranie County. Dale Flick·
inger, coach ol the OCVB squad.
will cooduct the tryouts.
PIRATE SCAMPERS Orange Coast College's Leroy
Dads <26) returns <.l kickoff again st Golden West
last week behind the blocking of Manny Torres 189 1.
Delly ..... ,._ ... l'atrtcll 0'0-H
Others in photo include Kurt Flower s (34) and Vic
Lindsey (31). All will be in action Saturday against Sad-
d le back.
OCC Ripe for Upset--Tueker Top Polo
Powers Vie
In Tourney
Orange Coast College coach
Dick Tucker thinks his footba ll
team is ripe for an upset this
Saturday night.
"If ever a team was ripe for an
upset it 's this week," says
Tucker , whose Pirates battle
Saddleback al Mission V1eJO
lhgh.
"We always have a letdown
after the Golden West game,
whether we've won or lost We
face the same problem every
year. The game against Golden
West is always a hard-hitting one
and we're usually bruised and
sore," says Tucker
Tucker's analysis 1s probably
true, but it hasn't affected OCC's
Defense Key
In Excelsior
Turnaround
NORWALK When a rash of
injuries decim ated Excelsior
<Norwalk J High 's varsity fool
ball team last year, head coach
Art uro Lopez was forced to go
"'1t h a lot of unlesled
so p homore~ Naturally, they
took their lickings
This year, the still young but
now experienced Pilots plan on
returning the favor
After opening t he season with a
10·0 victory over El Monte, Ex·
cclsior shoots for win No. 2 f'n.
day 18 pm.> when it faces Dana
Hills lligh on the San Clemente
lligh field .
"We've only got eight seniors
on the team but most of our
juniors played as sophs last
year," Lopez said. ·'They got
beat up but they earned some
valuable experience.··
ll showed in the opener against
E l Monte. a team which blasted
the Pilots in 1976 but couldn 'l
score a point against them a year
later.
Quarterback Pharo Cortez
(5·9, 165) completed six of 15
passes for 139 y ards in the
opener. including a 24-yard TD
loss to Javier Aguirre. Halfbacks
Dave Gautney (5·10, 170> and
Bob Lowe 16·1. 175) combined for
132 yards rushing, Gautney pick·
mg up 87 on 16 carnes and Lowe
45 on eight.
Defense, however . is the
Pilots' forte. Excelsior operates
out or a 4.4 alignment which
Lopez says opposing teams have
trouble adjusting to.
Standouts include linebackers
Mike Baray (6·0. 185) .and Javier
Esnayr a (6·0, 190) guard Mario
Enrique <6·1, 190), safety Vern
Salvage (6·0, 160) and Gautney at
corner . " E x ce pt. f or tackle Raul
Samahlego (6·0, 230 ), the of·
rensive line is not partlculaTly
big with Jim Bean (6-3, 190 > at
tackle, Enrique and Chris
Barbosa (S.10, 190) at guard and
Bob Reeves (6-0, 190 ) at center.
T.hough they run out or a n~r.
thelPilots like to throw a lot. ''We
have a wide open offense wltb the
kind of guy (Cortez) we have JWl·
ttin& at quarterback," LOpez
aaid. "We attempt lo do both."
play that much the past six
years In that span, OCC has won
a ll i.1x gam es following t he
Golden West encounte r, includ·
mg a 26 0 victory over Sad·
dleback last season. The other
five were wins over LA Harbor.
.. Although Saddle back was
beaten by Cypress last week, the
Gauchos have an eJi:ceUent learn.
l said before lhe season started
that Cypress was very good and
1l 1s We JUSt played very well m
beating them <25·3 >," adds the
OCCcoach.
"To beat Saddleback, we're
again going to have to play good
defense like we have the first two
games. The thing that has really
At Valencia
helped us is the lack of turnovers.
We've kept the turnovers to a
minimum . We ha d two last
Saturday, but they were deep in
Golden West territory and they
really d idn't hurt us," s ays
Tucker.
Orange Coast has received out·
stand ing p lay fr o m its
quarterbacks in the two vie·
tories. Larry Ha U s parked the
Pirates in the Cypress game
while Gary Guis ness came off
th~ bench to complete 12 or 21
passes 033 y ards) a g ains t
Golden West.
Tucker says he'll only have one
li neup change starting Mike
Arguello al left guard.
Capo Valley Faces
Rugged Esperanza
Esperanza !Anaheim> 1-l igh'
Aztecs. rated No. 8 in Orange
County. loom as 14-point
favorites tonight <7 30 > al
Placentta 's Valencia High where
youthful Capistrano \'alley in-
vades
Capistrano Valle}. under
coach 8111 Cunerty. 1s faced with
the first of a tough 1 2 roadblock
on its schedule with potent
Bishop Montgomery lhgh of Tor·
r anee due nine nights later
·'We must deny Espera nza the
cheap touchdown and we've got
to contain the qua rterback. Mike
Ludwig," sa ys Cu nerty m asses~
ing lhe task
Cunerty's Cougars were Im·
presslve In ripping E lsinore in
the opener. 33-0, marching over
80 yards twice a nd playing
without fumblin~
But Esper anza 1s considered
head and shoulders better than
Elsinore. having already dls·
posed of Fullerton's Troy High,
which was boasting its best team ever.
Esperanza coach Pete Yoder
has Ludwig as the pivot to his at-
tack, but there 1s also a Cormida·
ble asset in running back Brad
Goettsche. who ran for 86 yards
m 18 carries against Troy
Testing a proven Esperania
defensive unit will be the same
crew which blasted Elsinore.
Cunerty has Brad Parker back at
quarterback after his ace was
knocked out or action in the
opene'r with a neck injury.
Still out, however, is Mickey
Two Stars All-IV A
Hitter-bl~ker Jon Roberts and
back row specialist Hilary
Johnson, both or the Orange
County Stars. were selected lo
the firsl team all·league squad of
the International Volleyball As·
sociation (IVA>.
Setter Dodge Parker , player.
coach ror the IV A·champion
Orange S::ounty franc,hlse, was
picked for the second team. The
AU-IV A aelections were made by
sport.a writers in the seven IV A
cl lies.
Romero with a knee injury
Romero provides depth at n-1n·
ning back and in the defensive
line when healthy
.. L u d wi g is as good a
q uarterback as we'll see this
year," says Cunerty "We can't
let him gel outside and run
We 've got to get good contain·
me n t fro m o ur o uts id e
linebacker and put a pass rush on
him. But Es peranza has a very
~ood running attack. too ...
* * * C.aphlr-VelltV 5ter111t1 Um"'"
~ o.1 ....
SE t-<nn 10 196 Full-•
LT Full""°"' , .. 218 S.nt•••-"
:.G s.n1as1even 711 201 Gitl11n
~ ,,.,.,. lOO 711 En•IQN
AG c;.lne• 20'2 us McElroY
AT Enright 212 ''° V1111PNrwm
TE VanPNr .. m 190 1U Genier QB Ptrlter llO 150 Sal• HB °"'""' lSS !SS O.OrlM
HB s.1 .. ISO 1SO Waner FB ColliM 160 ''° Parkttr
Orange Coast
Tabbed No. 3
Orange Coast College
h as move d up two
notches to the No. 3 posi·
ti on in this week 's
Southland J C football
poll, conducted by the
Daily Pilot.
Fullerto n <2-0) 1s
ranked No.l , followed by
Long Bea ch City College,
which meets OCC Sept.
30.
Golden West dropped
from ftrst to sixth after
its 13·7 loss last Saturday
to Orange Coast.
In the top 1ames thJs
week, El Camino (No. 9)
visits Fullerton and
GWC is at East LA (No.
10).
* * ...... ~.·'· Futleneft a.01 2. l.OfOQ hlKlt 11-41 I 3.0r ... Goesl !NI 4.S.~'1-411
S.P-ftofl
•• GoldllA .... (a. ti
1, S-.Meotc.a l'Mll .. s.q..,,.,. 11.0)
• •• , CIMnlN 1)41
lt,.hMl.AIMI
OE
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DE
LB LB
CB
CB
$5 FS
The best preo water polo
tournament in the slate is under
way at four Orange Coast area
~chools with action today, Friday
a nd Saturday featuring 32 highly
regarded outfits.
Action is at Newport Harbor
High, Dana Hills High, Mission
Viejo High and El Toro High,
beginning at J today and Friday.
and at 8 a . m. Saturday.
The championship ga me is
billed for Newport Harbor at 3
p.m. Saturday. • Top-seeded is Mira Costa High
of Manhattan Beach, which bas
all but one starter back from the
CIF 4·A semifinalist of 1976.
The Sailors of Newport Harbor
coach Bill Barnett are s eeded
second with Long Beach Poly
and University High (Irvine>
seeded No. 3 and 4.
F rofu Northern California are
Awalt High of Cupertino and San
J ose's Santa Teresa and Monte
Vista. Representatives from the
San Diego area include Patrick
Henry, Fallbrook and Crawford.
Among the 32·leam field from
the Orange Coast area, in addi·
lion to the Sailors of Newport
Ha rbor, are Corona del Mar,
Costa Mesa, Dana Hills, El Toro,
Irvine, Laguna Beach. Mission
VieJO, University (Irvine> and
Estancia <Qosta Mesa >.
Individual standouts include
Ste ve Kelsey of Mira Costa,
James Bergeson of Newport
Harbor, Long Beach Poly's Alan
Mouchawar, Long Beach
Wilson's Jody Campbell and
Jac k Graham, the goalie at
University High.
/
~I
EAST LOS ANGELES-When
the Eas t Loa Aneeles City
College Huskies host Golden
West College Saturday nl1bt
(7:30) in a non-conference (oot·
ball outin&, the Huskies will have
a bie and experienced line on
both offense and defense.
·'This bas lo be one ot our
s trengths this season." bead
coach Al Padilla says.
Th4'Huskies opened lb..e season
with a 34.7 victory over Los
Angeles Harbor, but Padilla isn't
letting this fact confuse hifll for
the GWC outing.
"Golden West bas a good foot·
ball team, particularly their de·
fensive line," the Huskies coach
adds. "They have a guy on the
left side in their secondary, I
don't know what hls name is, who
is also very good."
On the Huskies offensive line
are Edmund Dominguez (6·2.
212), Jesse Covarrubias <6·4 .
230), Martm Martinez (5·11, 200}
and David Guuerrez <6·1, 215).
Anchoring the defensive line
are Lawrence Gilbert (6..-., 215).
Denny Cothren (6·3, 225) and
Chns Tatum (6-0, 261).
E a.st LA has 27 lette rmen m the
fold th.is season,' including run·
ning back Randy Harris. "He's
our No. 1 sparkplug," Padilla
says. "He was injured part of the
time last season but he was still
one of our statistical leaders."
George Ramirez, a nother let·
terman. a nd Larry Kemp from
Alhambra High School, are also
included in Padilla's pl ans for
the 1977 season. Kemp had a 65·
yard scoring run agains t Harbor.
One thing the coach is con·
cerned about is the large number
of penalties assessed against the
Huskies. Close lo 200 yards were
called a gainst East LA.
"In these early games, a lot of
penalties are called and they are
going to hurt you," he says.
"Look a t Golden West -they
should have won that game with
Orange Coast except for a l&te
pen a lty. I guess 1t 's ea rly
seasonitis "
GWC.EutLA S.nH •M Eut LA77,GWC1•
1969-0WC 11. Ent LA 14
1970-E•" LA 37, GWC 1• 1'71-Enl LA 1•. GWC 14
1t72-GWC 7, Eesl LA 0
1913-GWCff. EHi LA I•
1'7•-Eest LA :M, owe 7• 1t7S-EHILA 17,GWC 13
1916-GWClO, Eest LA 1
EHt LA·-.. nu, s •
Services Held
For Racing Exec
GLEN DALE Graveside
services were held Wednesday at
Forest Lawn Memorial Park for
Webb A. Evere tt, longtime
thoroughbred horse racing ex
ecutive.
Pallbearers for E verett. who
died Sunday after a long illness.
in c lude d mus ic i a n B urt
Bacharach. film.maker Mervyn
L e R oy, a nd Joc k ey Bi l l
Shoemaker.
Also in the group of some 100
persons who paid fin al tribute to
Eve rett wer e actress An gie
Dickinson and actor Walter Mat-
thau. .
Everett, who was 82, served as
racing director at Santa Anita
from 1934 until 1953, and also
served as an executive at Del
Mar in San Diego County.
i I
~
I • .
Top QB, Receiver
Lead Bolsa· Gra~
Youth and pt-f'd lhat'a whal
lh.tn~ Oeacb llJah will be
up auut Saturday nJ1bt whetl
h tra" to"'ffol a Oran IUlh
cCiardm Orou> tor a 7:)() foot·
b tlsame
The •J!Hd is an obviOUI II.Utt,
but Baba Grande coach Geor10
HANEY •••
Centlaue4 From Pa1e BZ
tsbursb Plrate1> from 1953
tbrou&b 19!>5
H~ replaced Cbarlle Grimm as
manager or lhe Braves on June
14. 1956 when the team was noun·
denng around 10 fourth place. He
brought them up to be a COD·
tender and but for a late season
slump, they wouJd have woo the
pennant over the Dodgers, then
or Brooklyn.
"It was JUSt a case of getting
them straightened out and hav·
ing them bear down," he says of
the change
At any rate, the Braves won the
N atlonal League pennant on
Sept. 23, 1957 and went on to win
the World Series over the
Yankees, four games to three.
Lew Burdette won three of those
games and Warren Spahn the
other.
Then in 1958, the Yankees re·
versed the decision, winning over
the Braves, four to three.
Milwaukee hab taken a 3·1 edge
in the series before losing the
final three.
After the Braves lied for the
Nalional League pennant with
the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1959
and lost the playoff, Haney re·
~1gned as manager.
• A•I on con ldtn bl• team'•
youlb eomtwb1t ot a detriment.
aJnre Jt carrt .. wJlb it a lack of
.. per ent'tl~
Of GO play t11 on 111 v nslt,y
roatet, 41 arajunlors and four are
1ophomor . Bolla Grande h
J111t ono rctumin1 etarter tn the
olftnaive backfi Id, quamrback
Tom Stormer.
In Bolaa Grando'• aeaaon
opener Friday nJeht Stormer w1U1
on ta.rtet. eompleUn1 seven of 13
pH.es tor 68 yards. He also ran
for 4.1yardaon17 carries.
But on t.he scoreboard Bolsa.
Grande came oot on the short
end, 9-7, to host San Clemente.
Huntington Beach will race Bolsa
Grande with a victory under its
belt, 21·1• over Garden Grove.
Alt.bough Bolsa Grande lost,
the Matadors beat San Clemente
in every of!emive category ex-
cept scoring.
They outrushed San Clemente
by 35 yards, outpassed it by 59
yards and outdid the winner ln ·
total first downs 12·8.
Jell Sudyka finished as the
Matadors' leading ground &ainer
with 87 yards on nine carries, an
average of 9.6 yards per carry.
The other running back is Randy
Benton, who gained 62 yards on
12 tries Friday.
Huntington Beach will also
have to find some way to stop the
swift wide receiver for Bolsa
Grande, Darius Durham. Built
for speed, Durham is a 6·3, 181·
pounder who runs the 40 in 4.6.
Stormer threw nine touchdown
passes last season so, although
Bolsa Grande's offenst! is geared
toward a running attaok, Hunt.
ington Beach will have to be
waryofthe pass, too.
On defense Bolsa Grande has
two capable returnees 111 cor
nerback Tom Scarborough and
linebacker Eddie Purillo.
MARCO PAGNANELLI
Hunt.lngton Beach OB
"It wasn't because of the loss
to the Dodgers," he says. "J ohn
Quinn, one of the finest
gentlemen I have known in
baseball, had left the team as
general manager. I resigned
because he was gone."
When the Braves won the
World Series, players like
Burdette, Spahn, Del Crandall,
Del Rice, Joe Adcock, Eddie
M athl•w:.. Red Schoendienst.
1''rank Torre and llenry Aaron
were on the roster
North Riverside,
Mater Dei Clash
Aaron was later to break
Ruth's all -time home run record.
Does l laney have a comparison
between the two sluggers?
"No, not really." he says.
"There was no simil arity ln their styles. Bul both were bearing
down aJI the time.''
When Haney took over as
ge neral manager of the
formative California Angels, he
brought in a number of older
players like John Lindell, Rocky
Bridges and Bob Lemon.
"He's probably hired and
helped more ex-ball players than
anyone in memory," Stevens
says.
·'I wanted the older guys on the
team to help straighten out the
) oungsters and to bring them
along," Haney s ays.
When the old·timers commit·
lee meets to select former
players, managers and other
baseball personnel for the Hall of
f'ame, they could do far worse
than selecting Haney.
·•He was a very respected
man ager and he was fair to all,"
Stevens says. "He should de·
finitely be in the Hall or Fame."
Pirates' Tanner
Gets Death Threat
NEW YORK Manager
Chuck Tanner of the Pittsburgh
Pirates was under police guard
during Wednesday night's game
wilh the New York Mets after be
received a telephoned death
threat during the day.
Tanner received a telephone
call in his hotel room from a man
who rePortedly said: "Do you
know what Robcrlo Clemente
and Bob Moose (former Pirate
ballplayers l have in common?
That's right. they're both dead,
and you could be, loo."
Tanner remained in the duaout
during the Pirates' 4·0 victory.
On the surface, it might look
like large, powerful Mater Del
High <Santa Ana) from the Big
Five Conference of CIF will be
beating up on little North High
<Riverside) from last year's l·A
division tonight in a 7: 30 game at
the Santa Ana Bowl.
But underneath the surface are
the facts that Mater Dei lost its
season opener to Dos Pueblos
(Goleta). 8-6, while North com·
pletely dominated Corona High,
27-0.
"Mater Dei is much larger and
stronger than we are," says
Huskies coach Jerry Shearer.
"But they're not as quick, and we
think that could be a big advan-
tage for us ."
North has lJ lettermen back and nine of them are starters.
Last year the team compiled a
7-2 record and took second in the
Calendar
~rf4ay (Se ... HI
FoolDall-<:or°"" del Mar at N•WPOl1 H1rbor
lO"i! 8NcJI WlllOfl "' Fountal" Vellev at Hunt
lnQ\on Be•ch. Magnolia ,., M•rln• ••
Westmlnst..-, £sl""cl• vs C.OSta Me.,. et Or-
Cout (.ollfVo, Brff ~ El Toro at MIHlan Vl•lo.
lr•lne at L.ll9UNI Beach, EutltlOf' vs o.n.. Hilt•
•I San Clement• HJol>, NI l•ll •111; uni ... ,11,. V•
lO\ """490\ at G..,.Otn Grove HIQI!, u Quint• ,.,
Sen Cl..,,..,te at Bolu G••ncle Hl(lfl Ibo., at 7 :JOI
e-m•n tootb.111-llDeMy ChrlttlMI •I Am
bas~ HiQlt II pm I, HuntlnQlon V•lt•J' Cl\rl•
loan ~ Pkllic ""''" .... Al EAgl• Rock HIQI\ IJ•301. ,
Cron COUrrfrv-5anY An.1 at Oronge C:O.•I
Coll-13:301, Saddlel>.Kit Cotleot, Sout_t,.rn •t S... Olego IAl. I.A Hart>or" •l Golclel\ W.tt
Coll19P Cll, Fount.in V1llev •I L .. V991s lnv114 11 ......
Socttt-t.AC<:atOr_C ... ~lColi<'llt Il l
W•let Polo-<.oota -. Un1wrsltv, CorOOll Clot
M•r. lrvlne, Et TOf'O, Minton Vlelo. E•lanc .. Now~ Hilr11or, Y9UNI 8"<1\ at Soulh 0o ... 1
tourney; 0..... Hiits •I Val...c:le IOU<"Ny, Costa
Mew, Miss-V,.jo, N-oorl Hartlar, Founl•ln
Valley, Vnlwnlty •t C...ta ~ ... tro~--JV t..,.....v; __. H••bor, Esllncil, MarllW ear....,, lrvlne It Eslln<il trosf!.SOC>h tOU<nty
C•Pl\lrano VllltllV •I B~n• Park trool\·'IOC>f\
tournev. HunUnQlon BU<h •I VIII• P•r• ............
Edhon at l.-11 lourney; OranQ<t CoHI Coll-
Saddllt>e<k COii-Ind Golo.n WHI Coll-.t Mt. S..AnlonloColl-. Girts vallf¥ball-UC 1,.,,1ne •I S•n 0.tQO St&tt
lnvft1tk1MI, Lono 11 .. ch •I Gollltf'I Wl!\I Coll"oP
13:301, s.1111-It El Toro Ill, Wetlmll'l'llef "' Costa Mt11 (3: tS).
Ivy J .<'<i~U<' 1t lo!>l to Tr-u.~ I ltgh
< Fullc-rton > in a f1r!-.l·round Cl F
playoff ~ame
Mater Oc1 , on the other hand.
has just five starters back from a
team that went 4·5 last year It
"as only th<' second losing
season Mater De1 has had in 25
years.
But Mater Dei is in the Angelus
League, generally acknowledlled
to be one of the toughest in CIF.
while North competes m the
weaker Ivy League.
Directing the pro I orrense for
North 1s quarterback James
Harris, no relation to the former
Los Angeles Rams QB of the
same name.
Harns' fullback is Wilbert
Johnson and the tailback 1s
Runal Knox. The wide receivers
are Marcus Stethens and Layton
Dickerson, and the tight end is
Greg Porter.
Stethcns was an all-league de·
fensive back last season and con-
tinues to do double duty. North
also has a returning all·leaguer
io Lawrence Livingston, an of-
fensive tackle.
Ma1• Del Stllrtlng l.tM11pt
Off-Detellw
IMI R....-SE I. T TOC>f
I'S T,()f'adV LT l.GGtM-. no tnQram \.G RC Her,...-r
l'<!Sc""-c RT Avlla
ttO Oomll'IQUft RG l.8 Sav-
I'S C Gr.OV RT I.II RublltuD<I
lllO WlloO 51! l.11 01-.
tMI Dr.t1D<t Fl. I.ti S<Nt1
llO O'Ha,. 011 Cll McGowM
IU Gon1•I"' RB CB 8-•ro * Ooti.re• AB 5 Doflenf'
Prep Football
~ltHH"'1oN l'OO'TIA&.L
~ ..., 0-rtet"&
1•s
10S us
171)
17\
ISS
l"O
IAS
111()
llS
llO
Fount.On \/alley o I e -12
EClltOn 0 0 • 0-.
Fount1ln Vallo uorln11-Duoer. Bass
V.-nl-P .. T Gtraclot lpanl S.,091y Edi'°"
WOf'i~ Sftin
k•,. toy oi..rten
Hunt1,,..on leach o • o •-t2
O<•afl VI-0 7 IJ 0-10
H u"''"aton &tech l<Ot lno-Br•"tl•Y,.
Mcl'lllSI.,.
Edison· Rival Loaded
If things are on thearlm aide al
Edl.IOn High CHunUniton Buch>
lollowtns an opening 1&·13 root·
ball loss to Estancia <Costa
MesaJ, the outlook is even
bleaker wtlh potent West Tor-
rance next on the a1enda tor
coach But Workman's Chargers.
Edison meets West Torrance
Saturday nl&ht (8) at Oranie
Coast Colle1e.
Palmer (8-0, 20$ ar.> and re-
ceivers Rlck Tiberio and Keo
Halbert in tbe told.
Peterson bas bad fl ve
league chaJl)pions ln the
recorded an SS.S3·2 record prior
lo last week's H·'7 laclnl of
alway1-tougb Lone Beach
WU.soo.
J\ank~ No 2 ln lhe Coast Con·
rerence to Sa.Ota MonJca <which bested Loyola>. the Warrion.
rely on a pro-nt offense w1lh
Hons. a f.1, t&S-pound Junior,
showin& promise
Hons riddled Long Beach
Wilson's secondary for JM yards
us be completed 15 ot 23 passes,
including one for a 24-yard
toucbdown to Palmer. It was the brown·clad Warriors
who ripped the Charaers (34· 7) in
1976 and coach Fred Peterson
has slx def enalve starters back,
plus of/ensive whiz Todd Hons at
quarterback, running back Mark
The Warriors recorded a lo-2
record ln '76, losing only to even-
tual CIF 4 A champion Los .\ltos
(Hacienda Helsbts) In the
seml.flnals and to Palos Verdes in
a shocker following the rout. of
Edison.
Palmer scored botb
touchdowns and Lone !5each
Wllsoo coach Jon Meyer says;
"West Torrance is an excellent team. It deserves the ranking it
has in the polls."
College, ~ A1UU1&l Pa6ta Surfers
Pro, Prep · ,tJ •w •.••• ,.._.......... In Action
.: Orange Coast G •d Od...1 -HOW TO APPROACH APPllOACHINC J College's defending na-n lie i: Uonal champion surfing
UCLA's Bruins are
picked by eight points
over Minnesota in an in·
tersectlonal football
game Saturday in Min ·
nesota according to
Nevada oddsmakers.
Here are the odds for
the college and pro-
fessional teams from
Harrah's Reno and Lake
Tahoe race and sports
books•
c..11..,
VClAl.,,,.r Ml,,,..•ot•
Notre o.-100...,r Purour
B<Kton Co419Q6 11 over Army
WP\t Vll'91nl• I ov•r Kenlu••v
Geo<gla Te<hlover Cltm\Otl
Ouk• I• oYer Vlr11lnla
Mlssl"llll>I Stllelover Florlel<I
Mic l!IO&n 'l'I owr N<t•Y
W•thlnq1on &over ~vratU'\l'
Penn Stlltlo""r Marvl•na Ohio Slillv 2 over Olil•hom•
r,~~ 1 o~,. Auourn
Al•tw.nw UOY@r Vanoe-rD11t
Iowa 1.,.,., w .. nlngion ......
N•l>f'Mk• llover B•Yftw
c.,11torn1• 1 crw.r Ml'l\OUr 1
4it•nfot010ftr flllAOI'\
H Caroon.a St •ov•r W••• Jor•"l
~vtf\CMO(ln. 30Yttr C.4CH91e
F"touCWSl•tt10Yf'rMi6MI 1FI.-I
.,MUl.,..rTut-
Te••s T.c:" 2o\llltr T1x•\Al.M .. ,1,.,,.. Sl•te tlOYe< Or-St•te
WIKon\ln 1.,,,.r Or--M1nneM>t• u O'fl( T•mp• e • .,
· S.turd<lv ntQl\l 1
lOS Angettt ti OY•t Pl\0-lpl!I •
8a1Umont t)OYer New York .HI\
OttroH •o~' ,,......, Ort1•n\
W•\hlnqton• OYPf' Atl•n•• C•n<ln""ll 20.,,,.r S..11ti.
l<•nsa• cnv lover ..... 01tqo
OallH lloYt!• N-VO<~ C.1•nl\
SI l.-Sl0.1!<0.•<990
HOU'\tO'\ 30Vtr Grt:en Bev
OaktM<l•oYt!• Plthb<11'9n
0,.flW'r >lo-ttr Butfafo
M16mi COVf'f'Sdn f.r~H'l(l\tO
N'"wt Eool•nd 41 O'<t'rr Clevt-l•rtd MO"<IAJ' nlQl\11 ,,,.__
I !ere are the <><.Ids on
Orange Coast area high
school and junior college
teams as selected by the
Dally Pilot sports staff·
Hip-.JCa.t\
M...,P'Jrt Htrt>or owr Coron• d•I
M~r byJf-,
,,...,,,,.,,, v111ev owr LB Wll,.,.., bl'
tO
M~li•owrM«'tn•bv _.,,,
Est .-ic•• -C.O.t• Meu 1>Y) Brea-r E• Toro Dy•
"''"""' Vteloowr f~ln trt 1 LO\A""9!>'0Ye• Vn•w"'ty Dy 1·. l~ Bt«n°"" lrv1ftebY I•
l a Ou•nt•owrSanC.....,..,l•l>Y II'>
E uot..-oYer 0..-. Hiiis Dy S
Mlttr ()p,-rRlttniMNortllby S
E\ortM11.aOWor CtPoVatlf'Y bo; u
Wt-\,1 TorrMK~O'Hr Ed110n by•
Hu"tlnoton fJ••Ch O'ltr Bott•
(',ra"°"Dfl
0••-C:O.•t O'ref SidcN•l>a<~ bl' 11'"1
<iot .. ft WMt -r Ea•l l.A DY l "t
Tritons Fall
To Santa Fe
Alter s potting visiting
Santa Fe.a two.goal lead
in the first period, San
Clemente High 's water
polo team rallied to tie
the score entering the
final frame but wound up
losing, 10·9 Wednesday
afternoon.
Dan Lineback led the
losers with three goals.
Santa Fe outscored
San Clemente 5·4 in lhe
final period to break a 5.5
deadlock.
VAltSITY
k.,.llyONrt9" Sa~ta "-l I t S 10
s.n c1_.e 1 2 1 4 •
Slln ci...-. 'ICOrf1>9-t.lneblo. J, CMnt...a2.Murpl\y1 ICi .... ,HaSkett
~ team has lined up an
~ eight-meet schedule this
fall.
There arc t"O "llYS to plan your short mpproach
shots around the ST«n. Select the one thll works bc~l.
The first is to play all normal short shou wtlh the
.ame club. This sounds logical, since it seems euler to
master one club than several. The problem is that only
a highly-lofted club-a 9-iron or wedae-givcs you the
wide varie1y of shots needed around the sreen. And
these clubs must be swung harder than others to
achieve 1he necessary dist•ncc and the harder the swrna.
the greater lhe chance for error.
"" Coach Laird Hayes'
" Pirates, who rolled up an
8·0·2 record last season
and annexed the naUonal
crown, will host seven
meets at Huntington
Street Beach in Hunt-
ington Beach. All meets
arc scheduled for Satur-
day mornings and begin
at7
The second method is to use a different club for
, each Situation. Most of the lime this allows you to
make a shorter, easier swina with le"·lorted clubs.
1hus dccrcas1n1 your chance~ of mis-hitting the shot
But obv1ously, 11 docs require mastcr1n1 several d1r.
fcrent clubs.
Whatever technique you choose, alwa~ ta .. c: ad·
vantaae or the arccn's smoothness and la.nd the ball
on the green whcncvC1' you c:an (sec illustration). •/.•.,
GoH Resiilts
WOMEN~ GOl.F tman, 32 .... ; 3. Oofl• Hanch<huc;h,
lAGUN4 IEACH 3311).
Better B•ll of Threesome Tourna. 8 FHQM-t Atma R•l•ton, JI''> 7
The Bucs will open the
campaign Saturday,
hosting MiraCosta
College.
In addition to the
regular-season matches,
the Pirates will also
compete in four
American Surfing As-
sociation meets occ s.n .... k-le
Sept 24 Mlr• C.0.1• •I HUf'l1t1>9ton $l
O<t I l A Har-•t St O< I • (J'preu M Hunt1"91on SI
O<t IS l.OftQ 6eKI\ (tit' •I Hunt l1>9tonSt
$1 O<t l1 -S-t~lt •I H"""tlll9fon
O<t 1' v S S..ta --· at Hunhl>QIOASI
Nov J -u S San 0.-at Tr.stiff No• 12 tl #\,.,,...,c.n !iwilnQ Aun
All·Sl•-
No•. 1' -Gol.,.., West .e Hunl· l"'lt°" SI O.C ~ -Amefiun Su<iiflO Aun W~\tern Atl·Confer•n<• Cl\IM· "'""""I>' O•c '1 n -Am.,.lun ~rllnq
A"n All ""-lc.llfl .. lllOl>al °"'"'"
"'°""""' Jlln 71 1• -We•ttrn In ter<oll19l•le Tum ci..mp10•111\il>\ menl I c.at"v 0.lGnQ, M•rlan Hitr, Bell\ Brown, n : 3 ltlol Conni~
te lm M.trt•n. S1, ' 111e1 Mar9o0rlte Fu""""'"· Eunlc• Pwler'lon, n.,. Girls Volleyball Macl•rl•n•, Vat Morton. Thetm• C Fl'911t-I Mulne fltoret. 30•·, 7
roomov, Harroett MKOu11ten, 1<ay Vorgln4• Bran.i.v, :n Ooroc"y El•let, VAllSITY
RodVer>. Pat Wotll, S4 , 371 > Ml~°" Viejo d91. S...ta""" Vill•J'
Tl1"'9 Bllncl Miu Tourn-nt· A 0 FllOM-t Slllrt.yMcCurrv.30. 1 IS·J, IS-17
f'llqhl t. M.ilnan Hair, 41;' Helon Vef'f\I R~rn. 31; Alona Our-. JUNIOllVAIHITV
Orutllu\, 4l B Fllqhl 1 LI Ill an '"" IAl\\lOtl Vl•io Ott Santa Afta Valley Mir-S, 43, ' HArrlett MacO..lsten, 91GCAHYONCC 1S 10, lS-IO .... 3. l(lm Marlen, •7. c Flight-I, Better B•li of Par'\""" Tourno) -----------
"''"" 0.LonQ. u l.Anne Mtrrltt.•S. mtnt: A f"ligl\t-t Mtr~ Out>oo>, MESA VEllOE cc Marg .... t Hoooe. M, 2. TOtll Olil>l\•nt,
Crl\\ C~\ TOUrM,,..lll: A flight l<1y T~ .... B Fllel\t 1 Lil Skin·
IGros\I t lhel Sttli• SCety, .JHn nor, MMV Smith • .,; 2. HOPt' Ov1I•.
H•llY. H , ) Bolte H•mre, 45. N•ncy .lonols. M; J. Pat Burll"llfl•m,
!Nrll I (lie) Michl vernatsu, LYftela Rul>yAM 81r1ter, 67.
Crtwford, ll, l Mimi Smith, 33''> UN JUAN HILLS OC e Fllgnt IGr~l-t. AM lv•rton, TiveelorlMMoneyTourNment·A
.... f 1.uc11teMAn1ey, 411<'1; J. BIN'to.ra Fllol\f-1. Ille) -....... Voyles. t<..-n A~lllV. 4' INet)-1. Virginia l(klcMr, HOtmM.1';3. httyA-rne, ,, .... n . 2 Svlvl1 Pr•n•uSkl, Vondi 8 Fliglll-1, (tie) Cl\r1s Eellm, f'e9 R..,..klson,. Maacl\er, 111<'1; J. ltlol Jean
Polnt-T--..1·AFl1111\t-1. Don.-. --R ..... Mll. Betty O•re W.11•, 17, l Celt Bronw, 16, J. l.uma,AdtloMat'lln,31. •ti•> LOUIH Robinson, Phyltls <: Fll<lfll-t. Oot ~. 11, 2 Lea.ure,MtrlOfl$<1\utte, IS Helyft Gii"'-'. 2'; J. Flonrtte Ritter.
8 F119111 -1 B•-• ASl'llh'. lO; l 'l'I B1rbM• ~. tJ• J Ty HM'n-. 16; D FllGlll-t 51\al'OI\ S11'19Stff 1'' '•
' Ille) Dolt,. Frlf'ChCOftl, Barto.ri 7. Lii 8rauglll, 31.-,, J. LOU•SI -II\,
MallCll, 1S 33.
c FllQl!t t. May Tl'lompson, tt; l. Flltd Sftots Tournamt"t' Finl
ltlel Eoi. Gow, Jacki• He•!, w-a Fllol\l-1 S... Hiii, '°"· 2 eettv
SocM/r, 11, s l.ucllltMM'ltey, t•. Au•bo<lrne, O V.; J. H•el BoDby
Par Fours Tourn•ment: A WO-.MUr1Lwwl•, ..
FllOflt-1 M.il-1ne SlrlOI-. 41; 2 Sec.-Fl19"1t-t Maf1J1 .. ._rt.On,
Glnn1 Sinko, o 8 FllQl>t-t. to 4J; 1. e...tal\ .Jol\ns, "'· J Helen
Bartholomew •IV. C Flloht-t. "~=l~-I. J-Mlll~r. ~l'i;
M•rwl llrlQhl,3'11;. P. Fox, 41. 1. Madtllne Stanley. S2 J. Oor1l ltAHCltOSAN JOAOUllt CK
Eclec11c Tourn•ment U ·day, 01Vls,U.,.,.
NEWPORT
TROPHY
-#-AST IHGU VfMG-
67 ]•I I 40
406Jz.d~ .....,..._.
D•rt,,.,.s Dtttrr ball), '· L°" Wiiiey, Fourtll FllQ!lt-t. Sheron 5.mvst•r, Gill Hoyt, Sii; 2 S... £-n. MIXll\f! 4 \'t; 1. (ti.I -l•n £•to~ • ...,.,,. Strlcklano, sr, J . ltltl Ell•n M~&d@. SW.;•. (llel Vlrg1nl• ll•kef, .._ _________ ~
Mcl(lntev. 8Mbar• Smltl\, CIN'olyn IDISl>w'Pe,5'1'1.
W•lbrldlle, Trvay 11-. SI; s. Zo -----------------------
Bart--. M•trlon M<Gratl\, 5'; 4.
Ginny Sl•illo, Syblt Foster, 60;. 1.
M.,WI BrloM, TIN Elmo,.., 61.
Par Fours Tourn1ment: A
Ftlol\t-1. Malllnt Strf~kl4tnd. •1; 2.
Ginny SIMko, o . B Fll11111-1. Zo
Bartholomew, 41.,.,, C Flight-I.
M•rv•l Brlgl\t, 3'VJ. 1 P Foa,•t,
L .. ~t Putts Tournament-I. ltlel 8arDar1 O..rtler, Phil GoepPer, 31:
l Todclv e-. ll; •· Ill•> Sonia MCMUNI B¥l>MI Joftns, J4
MISSION VllfJO CC
.. Baghner
Bodega
COMING SOON Two hOte\-t,,._ were m"°' by
"'4!mtien tJI nw ..,.,._.,club ii Ml._ . ..._
1lonVleJoO>un1rvClubrecent1y. · ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:_ Muriel _.Pl\ aced Ille 1611'1 ""'-· -
1nl1>9 • 7·wood to c_, ti. 120 'l'•rds.
I I was lier 11\inl ace.
Grace "'°"ter ll1ld •._,_to cov-
er ti.. l4 lv1ro !Jiii llole reonuv. Siie Is, ... CllA>'s IOUl'Nlmeftl Chairman.
3·3·3 To..rMmenr: A Fllont-1.
Grau -ler. lOYt 1 Pl'lyllls Hof.
JC Soccer
~Wn1 ISi !JI Saft 0Mte Mew
,ROSH·SOPH Gol.i.n Wesl acorl1>9-Popov 7, s.c ..... ..., owart.., p..,i..., • ....,_, Raln .. aitr
Santa I'• 0 0 I I 1 H•llll-"ore: GWC2. SO Mllsl I. S....Cl..,,..,t• 1 l ' 1 t$ p.......,IJ)(JlCW ..... C.0.Jt
San 0..,,.,.1,. scorino--.... • Orano• Cout 1eorin11-L••· Hunt 3. R..,.yon, RunvOA 2. Gtofl 1. JOl\n"°"·
BltrbMIM, Rall1 HallllmeKM• Palomar?,GWC 1.
-----------------~---------------------------------------
Junior Tennis Women's A.thktics
• OlltUTaNNll by forf .. I; ICamlMllM IUI lotl 1-4, M , Tourney Set s. .. 0-te 1111 CO Calrillr-t4: Ci;lten IUl tost 1·6, 1-6, a .. 1
"tlll'f 'i..-lt IUl won M , .. 1, loo! 44>;
._.,. Mltc:llttl-M ... 1,lo\IH.
The Orange County Lund <lei *'· itedel "'· e1.1. ~ Junior tennis cham-,,_. H. *'· Mnllr\Cllmldl .. i: 11,....,..,.11u11"" <v1-M ... 1:
P. h . l'I b d V•kllllSCIWllft .. 2, .. 1.W ;Cttn lSCI orw.lt!CIS11i-1u1-•i.w ; IOOS Ip W « e e-Slatw anC1 MIMI! IV) won 74, 7-t/ term in e d at the -w.M."3. L--~1u11ot11"4,H
Capistrano Racquet Club Lewi• •nes ~;:_, ISCI Clef. JUN10ttvu11TY
Oct. U.23 with ainalea ~...,._-w11111m-..i. "'· , .,...,v~1•1u111'""""
and doubles compeUtion ::",,:: ~1'!.~:i: c.._ 1u1 '°"' w. '" u . u11 in five age groups (Or -T41Y!or tscl -W, .. ,, M ; M. ttfflaft• (V)tost._.,wonM ... t:H; boys and girls. Sl1llur1C1U•-•-4.W ... t. Cllf'll IUlleltN. .... H .
Ace groupa will in-v•""" wi,.,.. ..... =-!VI..,,,..._ elude 2l·and·undet; 18, ~V....,IM)lill~ M; ~-~ IU)letfN,
16 l __ ... I ....... , .. ,~-~ (U)IOftU.
, • .. JU 12. A payer •-1Ul1ot10..-11Y•rt•11. M;Odllal..e'--cu1 ... ·~must not have reacbtd •M; w 1trN11: ,,., .. aftCI w""" 1u1 U\• qe limit before Oct. _.,_11C1 .... _•1_IOOd_, _1v_,_ ... _1 _ ... _._...,~-~~--_ .. _t._w. _______ _
1.
Entries may be mailed
to the Caplstrano Rae·
quet Club, 32731 San
Juao Creek Road, San
Juan caelslrano 826'1$ .
GOSAILORSI
Swamp The Sea Kings
Ha.ltiday's Oassic: Bluer
100% wool flannel in Navy and Hunter
Green, or our perfect all season
travel blazer available in five
traditional shades.
. .
. .
. . . . . • .
I> • •
IUN••• COW•f •• 1Mt tHH .. '6U .... lllA,_ , .. <*J"1V9' oeMe« -.. ""' •ot1c11 o• ••••••• o• rtttt~ ,_~AHO#WIU.
•••,.. ~.,,.., un&111• ••• ~n•U fUTAM••T•lt• ., •• ., .... Wt ,,.,.. , ........... o .. 1a11•• ,. AO•
4'eMtlll ltTJ• tflllOI• Pt• Mt•Utll v111•11 lMI
lllM ..... lff .... llllf•&fl .. t•ot' .. llftlfl AMlllflTiaATIC*
.. IJnn>Aon, ~UT&l&UCT
• flf O\.Cl.• WIU• U.l•iA ........ ~·LU OlttUM'°"• '-'"'"' '"'°."'0" , • ., ..... ci.t•.-~ lilOll(I .. H •I IY OIY H !Ml
llOTI li WlllaH' O•Vlll ""'4 Yl•..ilA Doc•-_0. ... 0 0--
MI\. -··~U«lletl .... ••• ,_ l1t• N••"' a peM..,. I• -• ..,.,._,,, .... _ .. .-...... ,~ ... &..tlel'lt•'9-
.. -.-'lorV ........... 1 ............... ,fl>,,_• .... M-111W ---......---··-............. ~-· ___ ,,, .. _....Mt.•• ................. -... -........ ,_ •• -" _. " -,_ ,..,._ Wille"''"*"",_,.,,,_, ~w .. 1en. _.. _______ .._. -·--·--lllA<• .. ••~" ...
.. _.. .. _..__ .... llHO.. --.... -""'"' Oc-•.
-'-"'1. 4111 .. • AOL. • U. lf17,., •GD••· 11• .,_ c..ytl•-.. ~-· 0 I """ Miii ... 10lf 0.W""""' ... J ...... ,..,,, •I tot ~-... c • .-c.-°"1 .. .._1. r1.ic c-t• 0.1 .. we.i '"""' cuv .. -~---tal•I-• ............. C•l-"I• ~~11.19'7 Oaled\ntt"1'! ... rl) It/I
-.u.1-I .. _.. WIL.UAMI ti j()HM c.-. c-" tbu<o+f c• .. ~ 8"°°4U&f'IOUI •tHl'MllO,Mtal'"'•O•OU .. OA•
_____ .. --· .~IH
.. ...,..., .. "'"'" ~-" un ... l•t 01)1~ hi ()Ml--.__,...., """"-A_.,.._ C.-Pttltl.,.n
....... ~ ~-C...ll 0..IY l'li. 11"911-Or-C.0.>I O••IY Piiot, ,,,..._ u .. n. "" 4011 ~111. u. •• n ,.,, <OJI 11
PUBUC NOTICE
ftlCTlTlOVI IUMllllU
...,...STATtl-NT
T"" IOl-"11 --«e IOI,.. Dol>l .. ,,.,
CltEAllVE CAAFTS '"" C -''°" PW11w•v. ~ Hiii•, t A .,.Sl
Virqu,.. M ,,_.,. JllDI •"'9e Ill
Or •1'.L-Hoth CA•i.n
J-C Pwry JDllA>4901" O•
• 1' "-"' Htlll CA~
C..rol J '>IOfY llltJ Vt• S•n
M1-I ~Hiii\ GAttOJ
a-1ft A '-IOfy tnn Voa S.n
M>o-.~Holl\ CAthU
TPU'\ bu1UW\t t\ COt'IOU< t•O Oy •
,.,..,..., •• partnitt\h1p
VltQtnt• M Ptrr.,
Tltl> MAlltmeflt wott llled will\ ,,,.
Coun1vo.n. ol o. .. oa Coll"lvon~pt
IJ, 1'17
'"'" PutMlst..d Or'-Cot•I O•lly Pllol. Sept. 1S, n. ,., Ocl •• 1'11
3'30 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
SUf'E•1011 COUltTOI' THC
STATE 01' CAl3'01tMIA PO•
THl COUNTV 01' O•AMGI "•·•·"* NOTICE 01' HEA•IMG 0'
PUBLIC NOTICE
•Uf'IJllJ~ COUltT 0'CAl.l,OANIA
COUNTY 01' O•ANGE
,.ci-c-...0r1 .....
~ ...... (All,....,.
CITATIQH ll'JllOll.ATIE I
CASI NUMlllt Attn•
Malt•• or CAAlllE TERESE
JVALE Y min1>r
IHE PEOPLE OF TWE STATE OF
CALJFOllNIA
lo CIONAlOWAllO TIJALEY
VOAJ •'" rw-,.a, <•lfoO •no rtqutr.ct t<
•POe•r •t • M•t<NJ 1n ~·~court on O<
tODtr 1t 1917 c:\t • lO a m 11'1 Rm No J
IOC•le<I .. M Cuti< C.•ntn Drivf W•t1
~I'll• AN C..t1fo,nta •nd ro Qt\/• •fW
lf"Crl<il , ... .,.,.,., '#t'IV HCOn:linoQ to the
1erlfMKI oehtlwt '''f!d .,.,,, uus court
HELEN K CHRISTIANSEN •'-10 not
be al)l>Olnt..i C.uardl.,. of CARRIE
lE RESE fURLE Y
0Al.0 Auqv.i II .. 11 WILLI AME. StJOHH
(lff"lt s.,.,,,, L Buxton
()eouty
ltOY A.HOl',,l'.'41.
Utol £HI lmc>0rlat Hwy
l.tMlr..sa,Gil*»
""•""•'• Petiu ..... hi l21Jl").73111
Pulllt-O'-Co.t\I Ually Piiot
S.ol II. 21 l'I 0<1 •. 1911
&UN•tOll (OUH ~ 'nlC
IT AH Ofl C.AUl'OllNIA fl'CHl
'"'*IWfYOfd ...... ...... Mo11c:• o• Mt••••• o• •ITIT1• ll'Oll ~Tl CW Wll.I.
ANO PO• LtlTt•S 01' AO•
MINIUllATIOll Wlf" WILi. A•• ......
l•I• Ill OOHALO W IUtOOl:S,
()e .--
MOTi«. It M(•ltV 01\lllt IMI
OlAHHA ltHOO&S ,.._ W .. -'" I gwltl~ IW ........ Wiii -W i.I ... , .. ....,.,.._.,•llOI' "''"' will .,. ,,. ... ,.._.le w10<1t It m-..,
'II" ... ' 1Utllt11lenm .,,., IMI , ... ...... -............................. .
_,, wt "" On•r •. •I IO tO • m ,
I• 13'9 ,_,,_.. of 0. .. f\"-' Ho. 1
el wkl '°"''· •I 100 Civic Ce<\ltr Oft ... Ww1,. llO IN tlly 111 ~nle Alt•,
(~-· 0• .. S.!it-•1•. ,.,,
Wll.LIAMI ltJOHN, c:.uMVC~
C:HA•Ul••-HA.,,,.
ltHOOH,IA•N<O,MALC*IV.
HA•TUlllJl.l.•H
"o ..... "" Mllte ...... IU,CA-
Tfl (JMl ,..,_.17. A"_.,. ........ lllll'tr P'*'I"""" Or-C->I U .. ly l'llol
~P•-n. i., n . ttn ~) ''
PUBLIC NOTICE
C ...... I
flCTJ nous IUIJMIU NAM£ $T4TIMINT
f •• lollOWU>Q penon It OOlnQ l>U•I
t'\oe\ • .,
COUNTRY HILLS, L TO , ...
C•mpu\ o ..... Sulle II•. Newpart
a..cn.CA92~
8tddle De'f'tlopment Inc •
C•l1t0tn.• corPQ'•t1on. ..., C•mpui
Ori.. !lull• II• N•wpo<l 81ac11 GA
'"'° ll\1\ ous.nieo t\ cond-..<tfd by• limit
Op•tt,...-\1\•0
8h,at• Oev••~nt II\(
W S<o<I 81dlll0
Prf'\fOPl'lt
Tnl'\ \t•lement wA\ f1lf'd wltP\ ttw
Counh Clfrlr. ot Or•n~ Countv on
AIJllUSl 14. lt77
l'ULOP, ltOLSTC*,IUllNS
& MCKITT•tCK Att ...... .,. a1 LAIW ••00--11••· P.0 .9olZ71e
Mtw-1e.tcll,Cil._J
,_
Pud)ll"*' Or-Co.1st 0611y P iiot,
S.PI. I, 8, IS, 22, 1917 lllJ 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITJOUS tUSINEU
MAMIE STATEMENT l'ETITtON l'O• l'llO•ATI. 01' WILL ANO LETTEllS 01' AD
MINISTRATION WITH WILL AM
NEXIEO
4001·11 Thf •oUowtf'Q c»non •' oo+no t>"\i
e ..... o1 AC.NF'> f MfNlLEll
O~tlU("CS
NOTICE IS HEllEBY c.1veN t!WI
JAMES E HEIM PUBLIC AO
MINISTllATOll h•n 111.0 IW•tlna poll
11on tOf CW001t'1I d #1U •nd lttt.,\
ot •dm•f'M1.lt6tl0'\ won w1tt •~~I'd
r•1trtnee to whlth 1· mAM tnr turther
p•rtlt\ll•r\ •AO tnAt Ow 11m• •nd
OltJ<• at tw•rfnq lhl "4"'* M\ bttn
~tt tor 0<100tr 1 t•n. •I ' 00 • m "' '"fl courtn>0m ol Ow,,.,,,,.,..nt No J ot ~·O tourt. ;iat 700 Ctvl< Cf"tttr Dr iv•
W•\I. tn In• (lly (It S•nt• An•
C"lttof"n ...
O•tf'd Sfott-mbltr t.t tffll
WILLIAM£ SIJOHN,
Count• (l•r~
ADRIAN ICUVPEll
COU•ffY COUNSt.L
~~~~~-~\~~
PUBLIC NOTICE AMEA1{4N MORTC:. .... C:.E no
Ne'tltport C'nt~r D''"" Suite 100
NewPQf18e.c.n C.11ttorm4¥J..O ~TA.TfMENTOl'"WtTHDltAWAL Americ•n Morto•Of" lnv•\lmtnt
ftll:OMttA•TNERSHtlJ R~•lt• Corpor•tton ... (•tHorft••
O'EllATIMG UNOEA Corooralooo, llO Newport Ctnlor
f'ICTITIOUS IJUSIHl.SS MAME O• •• 'iuilt 100 Nrwoo<t 8U<h
T,.. touow1nq ~r~ "~ w1thOl•wn (Altt0t'n•~'7..0
.. , • orn,.r•t partner horn "'* ""'""",.'••S<OtMJuc.ttOO~ • uw ~f1,.r\htp Oc>O••ll"<I Ullde• llw fl<· por•llon 11110•1\ l>V\rnH\ .,...,e of WAITING ..,,_1CanMOf194190
CONSULTANT'S ASSOCIATED •t MO 1nwsi,...nt A••ll•
N••Port C,.ttt•r Oriv~. Sutt• 1'11. COfpor•Oon
Now-1 ~-" CahfOfflta •lMO. Sl"""""A c;r_.,, The ttcuoous bu~NS.-t Nme st•t•· SK,,.,. .. "'
m«nl fOf" Y'l!f p.1rtn.,.sh•o w•t tiled OI'\ Tht\ sl.tl'Mef'll .,., fllf'O w•I"' trit
AP<illl "7/•n-C.OunlyolOr-Coun\y (lfr1< of Ortl\90 C.ounty on
full N.tme ~ Atkhf'\\Of ,,..... Pltr'V>n AUQU\t10. "" Wlllldr-•r>q llatlllMn T .,~. 2003 1'11117
\'l\ltt (..&Udll NPwport 8tactt CA Pub11vw..t Ord~ Co•\• 0•1ty P•lot
97660 S.pl. 1 & 11 11 1971 un 11
MOTICll OtVmNO•IDI
NOTltll IS HllUIV OIVIN -
... 1 .. ~II ,., t-1lllllf ell
le lll1r. meter I eh, ••t1IPl'llelll, Het111Hrl•U•11 .... tllCll etlMr
'""""'" -1'1\8)' .. .....,.,.. lw ... COHSTIWCTIOH OI' HA• IUI!T
PJllOM tAKtll lfltlaT TO ST
C'-"1• SUlaT, wtU 119 1'9C•l....i 11y
IM 0,., .. Clll\e MIU .. tllit tiftt• el IN Ott Otn T1 l'•I• Ot'tw , C'olle
Mt .. CAl--.WllUl\NMll•efll ot • "' . .., ~ •. ,.,, , !ti-""",._
U..., wlll 119 IClellff IM#C)ll<IV -r-e!M "' h c;.-11 O..m•"· $ .. i.o ~ 1Mll ... , ""' 1111• •f '"' --....... ,.._ .. , ... ..._, btlt ... -t dltlll\tOlltltl"9 INf'l<J My bit,. . u••-"-... ~,..c1e.i,..11me let nw -~of~ tiwll • ,.,u, _ .. .,.. ....... __ ll•lllllllleh
Ml• r...-w1111mv of IN lllclOer to -
tltel ltl•bl<lh-elwdllt -r ......
A Ml el pl-. S!Mclal P""'ltll>M •lld
il<IGlllOM to~.., Prov1110ns to ""' ~·~ 5oe<llltatloM mev lie Ol>o l•lr.lldettlWotfktoftN Clly E1t91,_,
11 Vtl• OrlllOI, Colla M<IMt, C.1t1orn1a,
-l\Ofl•rtl-.bla peymenl of U .00
A" •ddltlon•I c1111r99 of \I 00 •111 De
med• II ltanoltd bv m•il ~l•n•,
\I>•< •llcall...,. """ .,,,,., contr ec1 do<:..,.
menh may •I'° b9 •••mtt'ld •t trw of·
Ilea ot ""' Otv Cieri< of Ute Clh al Coot• Mew
l!aclt !Md 111\all be m-on 11\t pro.
powt latm, "'-I> P·l lh•OUQh P 1 pro-
•ld.cl In tht cont•41<1 Clocumenu, ....,
""'" bo ace-led "'"" • caf1ttled or ce~t"s ~ or• 010 bond tor rlOI
Ifft IMn '°' of llW .,_.., Of lite bid,
ma<M 11evaot• lo Iha Cttv or Cotla
Maw HO "'-11 •hall be ton\1-.cl
llfll•U ace~ by \UUI u ..... ,.,
CIMO C-trl>l-r'sller>cl, Mo J)ld $NII be CO!tSldef.ct 11" .. U II IS
mao. on• lllan .. lorm '""''"""'by ttw
Clly of Coli. Mllw and I• ,,,_ "' ac· coroanc• ..,.,, tr"' pro•l•lon• of tM .,,,..
~·---· E lC" otOOtr mu~t be t1<entied 1nd
•IM> ~llfled•i r~lfed b'f 11•
T,,. OIV Council 01 llW Clly of C°'t•
M•u 1.-wrw, tfte rtQlht to r~fK l e.nw or
•11 l>ld\
Ell.EEN P PHINNEY
City Cl••' Of'""
C•tvor C°'ta loN-..
Pul>h"""' Or'Ml9t Coast Dally P1101,
S.pt u.-.1m
PUBLIC NOTICE
'3CTIT10US IUSINESS
HA.Ml STATEMl!HT
Ttta 1041..,lng --•are dot rig busi·
OfU,6'l
LAAWIN SOUAllE -TUSTIN,
H11 Nortf\ Flilrvlew, S•nt• An•.
Galllom1a, '7706
NEWPOllT·TUSTIN AS
SOGIA TES, 1)17 NOf1~ F•lrvltw, S.nla
a.ne, C.lllofnl•. 91/0io
Thi• bu•lneu Is ~onouct•d b• •
)tner•I pertnenhlp
C. NORMAN PULLIAM
Tl'u \l•t~t 'tlilll'U, tlled w 1tn ttw-
C°""'ty Cl<>•"-OI 0tan9f Counly on S.e>-
lt-mbrrr •• 1U 1 Fl1?Sl
Put>f1\1'4d 0.-•nqit Co•\t 0 .. ly PHOt
S.PI n 1' 0<1 •. u. ""
PUBLIC NOTICE
SUPEltl~ cou•T Of' THE
STATE OF CALI 1'03'HIA l'O•
THE COUNTY D' OAANGE
C.MNO A-
HOTtce Oft HtEA•IHG OF
PETITIOH f'Oll AM O•DER OlltEC·
TI NG THE TRANSl'EA 01'
PEllSOHAL l'JIOPEIHY PU•SVANT JULIE II SAMS,OEPVTV
6U Cl•I< Cen .... Of w .. t 1"1-1------------TO •••TTIE N CONTllACT 3'roO
P i)Olt\hl<t Or•"Q"' (04\I OdllV P•lot c.-. liO,U U 1'.0 ... .,,.
S•"t•AM C..llforn1oa'17Ctt
T•I 11 JO IM-1'0)
AnorNY"t tor flle1ttl_..•,.
Pvbfl\'-d OrttnOft Coa't o,uly Pilot
!oeplembltr tS, 1•, f? 1'11 •O~ll
PUBLIC NOTICE
... 0, I\ 71. l'I Oct. 1971 Pt.:BLIC NOTICE C.HAALL~ A UPLllNE y .~rl
C "ARLE'> A O>LANf Y MO ~-CHA ALE'> AU(';U'HINE ()<,LANEY
••&C A 8U00.LANEY
~~--~~-~-~-~-7-'-71 t ~~-,-,-CT-1-T-IOU_S_ll_U_S_l_M_E_SS~~-
puBUC NOTICE HAMEST•T£MINT Jhe tollowlnQ l>e'\On' 1r1do1no bu\f
flCTITIOUS IUSIHESS ~\\.,
NAME STATEMENT
TM toflOWIOQ oerton I\ 001no Ou.,,
-~-----~--~-nt,\., ASSOG PEllMIT SERVICE
C.ATEWAY CE NTE R A S
SOCIA TES, L TO . 1o1Sl Mlll•k•n
AvenU.; lrvlnt, C..lltorn11•1'13
CONSOLIOATEO AMElllCAN PllOPEllTIE~ '"· c.enerol Parl""'· 1•7.Sl M i ltlkfln Avenue, trv1n•,
C,.ll!om1• t7113
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN IMI
tho P<tlllton ot CtWl•lo< o D«L•no. E •
ec utor of ttw e\tat~ o, (nM It\ A
01'L•n4'11. df•CtOe-nt. tor dO ordf'r
41ylttorl1inq •nd Oitkt•f'\Q IM E•~culor
10 "" ttw per)Onal pt~rtv d~\< r1bt-O
bf'tOw IO fht Newport H•rt>O'
A•dl0400V AUOClf1ttt\ M"'01cal Group
fnc • in cornotl~• with U'W '"'"' ot • wt1tttn Stocll A.oemofion A9rttmt>nt
f'n,,.rfl'd into by dctceOW.t '"'"' Hfttlme.
4\ ~tlf'r. M'C3 b'Y' tht P\.lft ha\ er n.,nKS
""'e1n. •I bUyer N \ t>Pif'"' s.et for"""•'· u1q 1n Department J ot 1hf' •OOve-
tntlllt<I c ... 11 on Ott • 1971 •I t 00 ....
SUfteltJOll cou•TDI' THI
STAT•Ol'CAL1'0•HtA l'D•
THE COUNTV 01'0•4.MOI ....... .,, ..
AM£HDED o aoe• TO SHOW
CAUSE
In tt'e rn.tttrr of uw •rc>hc4'1ion of
JVLIE NOEL ROME 110. a minor Jor
cMnqtotN~
WHEREAS, C.LENN PHILLIP
3'0MEllO and VOLANOA MAAIE
llOMEAO pelllltl<Wn •• o,...tnl\ of •POll~I J1.11tl• Moel A~ro • mtnor
t11ve filed• oell1ion with ""' <••'" o4
1f"ll\ ceut1 tor an orctff <t\4tn9lnc;i •OO&I
<•n• \ N~ t'om Jul~ HO"I Rofftltro 'O
S,,.rrle N~ llom<>rO
I J IS OAOEREO 1P"l.tl All r>f''\Ol"l'l lft
tert\ted 1n llY •bov• entltlrd m•Utr
•PPf•r ottor~ ttw <our t Jf t t 00 a m
on Oct 11 191/ II'\ thf' C•1Uf trootn ot
0tCNirtmitf1t l 1n ~ta 41"1• C•hfornt•
and '\hOwCtNY 1t .-nv why IP\f peOl10t\
tor Cf\a"Q't 01 n•mt '~u10 not be
gr•nted IT IS Fl.IATHEll OROERCO !flat a
copy o4 tt. ordflr to \how <•utt bl'
publf\n .. a 1n thtt O•llY Piiot •
newspeppr ot Qllntr•t < lftvl•Hon or•rit eO•n l"9CounlyOl0r.,O<-onoa,.tell
tor '°"' const<"''"' Wftll\ Mlor to ow o••• \et •or ~¥~noon H'Wo pt1tt1t1on
Oalod Sepl...,bor ll, 1~11
Le't"r V1n T1ttnho\lf'
Juc!Qo o! tl'le S..,,.r1or Court
Pul>ll$r-<I 0r ... oe Co•" O•llY Piiot,
Sept 1S. 11, 1', Otl •. 1'11 40J2,,
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUSIUSJMESS
NAMISTllTEMENT
TMI04-lnQ--l•d04"90U\lneO •• TEO<NOLOOV ENlE llP3'1SES. P 0 &ol 1'11 SHI tloM:h CA 90740
?tOt e v 1 .. s...1e • o. O<•noa. CA n .. ,
Donald V Helf••<lf ... ,, O""'°"'
AllOI. _...,, CA -~
Tt\11 buitnt\\ 11 conouct.o bit •n '"
dl•IOl.ltl
Oor\t!OV H•"""'
T11ls si.1......,. was fllod w1111 ,,,.
Couflly 0-ol Or•noa Counly onS.OI
t , 1'11 ..... ~
Pud)ll""'° Or-CM., O•llV Pilot
.S.PI IS,tl.1' -Otd • 1'71
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUllNllH
MAMI STAT•MIHT
,,,. ""'-'"' --,, <lelnQ ""11 nenu
LIDO CLl!AH l!AS, t9U •o_,,a,
Hu,.tlrlflon ll•6Clt, t A.
G.,.,,,1,,.z11e, 1uao11 .. s1 .. "°'''" 1•111 V•O•y' Catlf. t2l'ce
Tltll Oull-• 11 tOftelu<tael tlY an '"" oM-..
Carmllltlil•
Trtlt llAlt-1 .. at tlleCI WOii Ille
c;.....,tv o.r-·o1 0r.,... °"""• *"....,.. U,1t71. -Pvllll"'" Or .... OlleJI Otlt\' ll'llee
Selit. '·'· u, n. ttn .,. "
PUBLIC NOTICE
1011 "(" Fulltnon Av.. Co\ta Meu .
CA '1617. Po Bo• JS6. Balboa i.1aoo
(A
V@oroe WttKl1r Hllly•rd Jr 2078
"(' Fullerton A.., , C°'l• Me\e. CA cn,.n
Tl'lh t>UM""' 1-. conouctf'CJ by dn '"
dl•ldutl
C.00"1" HlllY••d Jr l ht\ \t.ft"'"""'1 ._._. ft ltd With thf'
(O\lnl• Oe"' 01 0r•"90 Co~nty on S.pl
•• ttll
H100
Pt.1bll\l'W'd ~M\Of' Ca.SI 0.tilt p ,1ot
S.ol • t) ll l'I ""
Tf'tt\bU~~\f\COn<h..C1ta b'f' A limll
l'CI ~r1Mf\l'llO
Con!Ofld•lf<I Amtm•n
Prooen1"111,
AOl'nereta..rtMnntp
Bv Jon.n 8 P•rktr
venonl Part .....
TM' sUlfl!Wnt •• , tlltd W•tt'I ,.,,.
County C-" of Ot-co..n1y on S.pt
... 1'71
'ULOl'&AOLSTON,
IU3'MS•MCKITT•JCIC
]#\,, ------------! 01MMa<Af1 ... • ll•tl PMtOffiu .. al71e Pl'BLJC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
l f'I~ f·>llO'#Wir'IQ per'\On\ are 00tnq bu'' ",.,, .,
\VNAtSf PROJE(l PAAICWAY
PLAZA P41'.IFll" CFNTER SCOTT
tENTER VALLEY PllOJECT
tAMl:LOT PROJEr T \IHI lr••nP
Boule'tl.,rd $u1lf' 1 t t 1 uslln, CA 92~
P•v• 8ruc•n .. ,, J' 211 Sovtn
lllOIPl L-. Orar>go Cll t7"69
O•n Pott\, '182) l• Entrada
Yorbl ltf'da CA t7666
J Scott Fawct-tt 81lf'f Huo,on
River Circle, Fount•ln V•ll•Y. CA
92708
Wllti...,, C Mlr&m ... • J l.•9un1t•.
l49un• 9e1Klt, CA 9'2671 Th•• tHJ,1,._,, 1' conduct~ b., •
9f'MI' et pe""*' ""'0 J \cotl l'awtott
Thi\ \td~"""°"'' Wf''i tlled with ti¥
County CIP•~ of OrenQI! (ounh o., Auq
JS. ttn
J'etOO
PubllS-Or'br>go CDO\I DAiiy Pllol
S.Dttml>fr I I. IS. 12 19'1 )fU-71
N.,.,"""_11.CA'2ttJ Pud)ll""'° Or-C.0.\1 011ly P11ot
S.P1 n .1' Ocl-r • ll 1•'1
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTI TIOUS IUSINl'.U
NAME STATEMIMT
4130 11
TM loll-1"9 per-I\ 00•"9 bu1t
n~\\ .,
U C E •nO 'or UNIT COST
ENGINEElllNG .... or UCE UNIT
COST ENOINEERINC., 1t3' Alla Vl•I•
Or • Newi>Ort 11 .. c h Ca Ill 9'..0
J W. Lo..,.11, J• , 11>'1 Alta 111•1•
Ot,. NewJJO(I Bea(h, C•tl! '1"60
Ttu" btHl~i 1, cnnduct.a by •n In·
dtVlctua• J W t..oWUJr
Thi• S1•lem<1nl ,..., 11100 will'! th•
County Cl.,k of Oranoa Counly on AUQ
lS, 1'11
'"'" Publl-0.""90 Co.t .. O&llY PllOI
~Pl 1,1, tS, 22 1971
PUBLIC NOTICE
The _..,..1 pr-rty lo I» \Old "
de\crtbt-d a\ tor1Y ~•'11 \n•r~' of
Nf•OOf"'t HarOOt' A•d•OIOQf •u oc••le'
Medlc•I Grow •n" c•p1t•I 'totk
~1000-Y•llll U<h Af'f...-enc.ft 1\ N tf"C>Y m~ to thf!' ~ti
hoft on tit" ht'r-1n tor fu,.,,,,.,
cwrUcu•M~
D•lod S-pl •• 1011 Wlll1em l SI JO""
~ntv C.•t'll. •nO C••r• ot
~10S~"''°' Cour1
8• AOBERTINE HEALY
Ooputy
HUltWITI. llEMI. di M.t<OONALO
MEAOI • ltOSEMWALD A ,.,..._.,.._.I"°'-""°" All ... ,.yulu• we N...._, Cofl~ O,.vo, S11llo IUj " ... ,..,, .. ""~· "'""""'" ,_ l11 • l15'-0111
All.,...Y\ IOf P~ltl•or
Publl•fled °'""°" (Od•l O•llY Piiot. s..01 ti. u 1'. 1911
PUBLIC NOTICE
'
From AP Dlapateba
Slayer Charles M auoa'a effort to 1et two of bis
murder convictions overturned became or publicity
surrounding the case, was rejected by the
Calilomia Supreme COurt.
lt denied wttllout comment his req_uest. \0 re·
view a stale Court of Appeal decision upboJdinl his
conviction in the stabbinl deaths of Guy H.la.maa
and Dooald ••SMrty" Sbea in 1968.
The blab court earlier denied an appeal frorn
his conviction in the alayint of •ctreas SbUOll Ta&e
an<J six others In two separate Los A.nteles lncl·
dent.a in August 1969. • A Family Court judge refused to disqualify
himself from hearin1 divorce suits filed by Gov.
Geor,eC. Wallace and his wife Comella. Attorneys for COrneUa Wallacesald be could not
be a fair arbitrater of the case since he owes his posi·
uon to Gov. George Wallace.
Judie John W. Davis III was appointed to the
bench by Wallace and his father has been one of the
governor's physicians.
Davis said the argument that there waa a
"long, close, Ctien,dly re·
lation.srup .... is un· ,---------
founded and does not con· ( J stitute cause for refusal." PEOPLE
He pointed out that since . .
his appointment he has ----------'
been elected to the omce. • Is the world ready for another Knievel " It'll
find out Sunday when Evel's younger brother tries
to leap 112feet in a mini racing car.
Until recenUy Nie Knievel, 37, was a sedate
Eugene Ore. auto dealer, but he's trading his busi·
ness suit for the star·blazed,
flameproof garb of a stuntman.
The car he will use, powered
by a snowmobile engine, is a
modified version of a tiny racer
built tn Bulle, Mont., by
Knievel's father, Robert. • A lawsuit over a 1973
f1:.tfighl between Tom Laughlin,
the hard-hitting hero of the film
l(NIEYll. • • B i 11 y J a c k , ' ' a n d a
photographer who had been hired to publicize the
movieendedm a draw.
A Superior Court in Los Angeles refused to
grant either Laughlin or photo ber Geor e
Spear any damages in a legal
battle over injuries suffered in
the fight Feb. 6, 1973.
Spear filed a c1v1l s uit
against Laughlin, charging him
"ith assault and battery and
asking for $100,000 in damages.
I le l'la1med the actor held him in
a hammerlock, bruised his face
and damaged his teeth .
• LAUGH LIM
• The commanding general of the Marine Corps
RC'cru1t Depot at San Diego 1s retiring. happily, he
says, because he is "hulhsh on the younger genera·
lion "
"You would not believe the heroic acts of these
~oung men." said Maj Gen Kenneth J. Houghton in
announcing ht• will leave the uniform Oct. 31.
"Granted. I have a lot of tlccoralions. But everything
I wearisduetotheyoungMarinc."
In his 35 years in the Manne Cotps, the white·
haired Houghton fought in World War II batUes or
Tarawa, Marshall l slantls and Saipan and in Korea
PUBLIC NOTICE
and Viet.oam.Hecommanded UM lJtandWMarine
dlvlalons before tak1.n& over the San Die10 train.Ina
basetwoyean aio. •
Doris Keanu, bl<>erapher ot former Prt:lldent
Lynb .J:' son. HY• she la resMrCb1Da • book about the Kennedy ramlly.
Kiss Keams b the wife of Bkllanl N. Goonta. •
former speech writer for the late President loll• F. K~ and former President.
lll~lw'd Nlua.
She says sbe bas quit her
Harvard teachinl job to devote
full Ume to writing. Her dlapu~
with a Niw York pubUsher a
year and a half ago nearly cost
her a chance for Harvard
tenure . • Gov. Edanmd Browa Jt. Q-c.114••• pointed Apollo 9 astronaut Jtuty
~llwelckart as a special uslstant for aclence and
technology.
Scbweickart, tl, is J civilian astronaut who
served as lunar module pllot for the Apollo 9 mis·
sion and as backup commander for the first slt,ylab
mission.
Since last spring, Scbwelckart has been on loan
to Brown's office from the National Ael"ODauUc.s
aod Space Administration as a science adviser. • Charges by Kentucky Gov. Jllllaa Carroll have
made chances for a fair trial in the Beverly Hills
Supper Club fire .. practically impossible," the
owners say.
"Incredibly and without precedent, Gov. Car·
roll bas assumed the role of special roseeutor in
Campbell Cou.nty, Ky.. judge
and jury," the owners said in a
statement.
Carroll, after releasing a
state report on the May 28 fire at
the Southgate, Ky., club, that
killed 164 people. predicted the
owners might be indicted on
charges of criminal misconduct.
* George Bush is off to Chma
Cor his flrst visit since heading
the U.S. liaison office in Pekin&.
Bush said he and his wife, Barbara, were mak·
ing the private, unofficial trip as guests of the
Chinese People's Institute on Foreign Affairs. He
said the trip, would last about three weeks.
Bush left China in December 1975 to become
director of the Central Intelligence Agency, a posi·
lion he held until this year. He is now a banker in
Houston and a professor at Rice University.
• A judge declined to order rock star R~ Stewart
to paySS,OOOa month to h1s formergirlfr1end. actress
Britt Ekland, while she pursues a
$15 million lawsuit against him
Superior Court Judge
Edward Rafeedle also refused an
Los Angeles to have Stewart pay
Miss Ekland's attorneys· recs
Miss El<land, who hved with
Stewart for 2~ years, claimed
she was entitled to a property set·
tlementnow that they've spht.
The ruling et>parently did
not alter and earuer agreement nawuT
between Stewart and Miss Ek land Cor her to contlnue.
living at their Jto1mby Hills mansion while be pays
the mortgage and other house bills .
f'ICTJTIOUS aus1HeSS
NAME STAT£M£NT
TM to<'-•"9 ....--1 ert OOlnQ but4
M~\4lS
U.S. and Russians
NEWPORT TUSTIN AS
SOCIATES, Ut1 NOf1f\ F•ir••••. Santa
An.t CA9210t>
C Norman Pulll•m U3" So\1111
Ctr!M'nl~ Otol>O C.4 91110
J41<• e. ..... 11. JJOI Arah• Strffl,
N twPOt1 BM< fl. CA 92660 OeYld L. t.Wrrlll, 111156 Soutll Clrc ..
Orlw Whllt••<.CA'°601
AOl><''1 E SlnQOr, Utt M•ln Way
Ortw, 11 ... smoor '""'!Ono
Bruce E. s1noa1, lSO M•rln• Orlw,
a 6, S..•1 8eacfl, CA 90740
Thi• bYslneu It condu<t•d l>y •
gener•l P41rtnennlp
C Norman Pulll•m
Tiii• st•lemfnt wet fllllCI Wltll lht
County Clerk OI O<anoa County on S.pl.
19. 1917
l'IJtJI
Publlshtd Or'•"Ot Co.ut Oallv Pl101. ~pl 12, ?'I Oct •• 13. 1971
4171 11
Resume Meeting
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
United States and the Soviet
Union resumed strategic arms
limitation talks today, apparent·
ly prepared to concede that the
SALT I treaty will expire as
scheduled in 11 days without a
new agreement to replace it.
·'This is our house, welcome to
it." Secretary of State Cyrus R.
Vance told Soviet Foreign
Minister Andrei Gromyko as
Gromyko arrived at the State
Department for two days of
talks. ·
Under a proposed plan, the two
sides would informally ob.serve
the current agreement beyond its
Oct. 3 expiration date. but some
members or Congress are raising
both legal and political questions
about the procedure.
Fallout Oft /tlo1'e
SEATI'LE <AP) Fallout
from China's nuclear test caused
only a slight. rise in radiation in
the Northwest and posed litUe
health danier, federal officials
say.
The air mass carrying the
fallout was expected to move
northeastward and reach the
Great Lakes region today and the
EastCoaston Friday.
Mid-morning radiation checks
Wednesday ln SeaUle and
Juneiu, Alaska. showed n0 in·
crew in sround radiation. but
afternoon checks at Anchorage
and Portland, Ore., indicated
there was some rise In radioae·
t.Mt.y.
Giiii ..... Sltelled
BEIRUT, l..ebal'on (AP>
The Palestinian cuerrillas
claimed today that their coastal
iuns ft.red during the l\laht oo
faraell sunboa&a tbat for a& da>"
have been tryihl to blockade lb
.Palelt1allf"beJd pdrt or Tyre, OD
.th• aoutb IAban•• coast. ·
Paltld.ofan otncla.ls said the
iunboata were not blt and did not
retum the nre. But they II.Id tbe
fll"inl apparftlty forced lh•m
Ol.ll beyond tbe r..,. of the tho.re auna.
( IN SHORT J
airliner with an engine aflame
crashed and burned as it tried to
make an emergency landing in a
sunnower field near Bucharest
Wednesday night, killing 29 of the
53 persons aboar<(.lt was report·
ed today.
A survivor said the twin·engine
plane, bound from Istanbul to
Budapest. broke in two upon im·
pact and most or all of the dead,
including the eight crew mem·
ben. were m the front section.
Beotia Not Lfttlced
TUCSON. Ariz. CAP> -Police
say the death of the daughter of
the judge in the trial of two men
accused of kllling newspaper re·
porter Don Bolles apparently
was not connected with the court
proceedings
The casually-clad body or Lynn
Marie Thompson, 24, daughter or
Maricopa County Superior Court
Judge Howard Thompson, was
found late Tuesday afternoon in
an eastside house. ·
Judge Thompson is conducting
a trial for Max Dunlap, 48, a
Phoenix contractor, and J:unea
Robison, SS, a Chandler plumber,
who are cbar,ed with first·
de1ree murder in the June 1916
car·bomb murder of Bolles .
W...£~etaded
SEMINOLE, Tex. CAP> -
More than SOO Mennonite sctUen
have been ttlven a lo.day ex·
tensmn ot an order that they
leave the United States today.
"They bave been 8)ven d U•
teaalon to Oct. 1 to &i ve them an opportunJt.y to document U*I'
claim ot extreme b....Ublp," Jm •
mlsraUon and NaturaUaaUoa
Suvlc• anJclat Verne Davm tolc1
the Lubbock Avalanche.Journal.
••After Oct. l, •new decislm ,,W
be made.''
Tbe onitnal order aald II the
MennonJta dJd not. I ave voban• tarill. the~ wi:iUld be dePOrted.
Tho Mennonttia •rrivtd In w'•t
Tex• aevuu month.I ato &om
MeJd.to Md Can9da, TlllYf bed h@ed to ellablilli ~butt)i.;Pet
form-tt.ntcr.d comrnunUJ .
Farm Strike Threatened
Farmers anrl ranchers who want 100 per-
cent parity on farm ~upport prices a re ad·
vertising their v1ewpomts with sighs like
this one near Sprin gfield, Colo. More than
in a car avan today to Pueblo, where
farmers hoped to meet with Secretary of
Agriculture Robert Bergland. Farmers
threaten to strike on Dec. 14 if demand s are
not met. ,50 f arm ma chines were driven
MAYWIH
YOU91 rtaSOMAL
rHARMACY7
f t1 TIRltY
MAMT.· .......
' Isn't 1t u nice feclinl! to
come into a pharmacy
where friendly fuces greet you? Where you
·c a fl be s u re t h u t
• e'{eryonc is interl'skd m
·~ou and your per~onal
health? Where ever y
ac\lon indicates that you
;are welcomed us ;1
.)>etrsonal frrencl und
atwuys treot<.'<i hkc one?
Aren't you a bllle fed
'up with the too busv.
~uper.,.,11e retail .itianl".
wh ere you have lo
patiently wall ror d1smlere'>led c;crvire. or
.. omelrmt.'ll spend J long
11me ul a check·OUl counter? ThCf), let us be your personal pharmacy
and be happy again
YOUR DOCTOR CAN
PHONE US when yo1
need a medicine Pick up
your presc ri ptl on Ir
shopping nearby, or we
will deliver promptly
wil"ool exlra charge. A
great many people
e ntrust us with their
prescriptions. Muy we
compound your:1?
PAU UDO PHARMACY ,, 151 ....,.. .....
""" Detf•wy Mlwpcrfi IHclt 642· I 510
Seminar, Three Series
Slated by Colleges
L~adenlafp S t.aulfftl
A one·day seminar for business ex·
ecutives on motivation, decision·
making and leadership is being of-
fered at Orange Coast College. Costa
Mesa, Saturday.
The seminar runs from 8:30 a.m. to
4 p.m. in OCC's Fine Arts Hall and is
co·sponsored by the Newport Beach
Chamber of Commerce.
Pre-registration fee for the seminar
1s $10, and includes a luncheon.
Checks, made payable to Orange
Coast College, may be sent to Busi·
oess Management Development
Center. OCC, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa 92626.
Registration will be conducted at
the door on a space-available basis
onl y. Registration fee at the door is
$12.50. More information is availa·
ble at OCC, 556-5880.
Battldta9 Bi•t• Ottered
A lecture series on consumer bank·
mg will be offered this rail by
Coastline Community College.
The series covers bank services
available to the consumer, ways to
distinguish good service from bad and
what to do about bad service.
Types of bank charges, ways to
shop for loans at competitive rates
and ways to judge the need for credit
cards also will be discussed.
The series will meel on four Wed·
nesdays, Oct. 12. 19. 26 and Nov. 2.
from 7 to 9 p.m in Ensign Middle
School, Newport Beach.
There is no charge and students
may register at the first session.
Further information is available from
Coastline, 963·0811. • •
ln~..ent• Eqlaiaed
Orange Coast College, Costa Mesa.
1s offering a rive·part lecture series
this fall designed to help people set up
investment programs
The series will meet on Mondays,
begmning next week, from 7:30to9:30
p.m. in OCC's Fine Arts Hall 119. Ad·
mission is free
More information about the series
1s available from OCC, 556-~.
TO.¥ Str.-t atre Mulla:I
An overview of corporate tax struc·
lure will be presented in a new four·
part lecture series at Orange Coast
College, Costa Mesa. •
Tilled "Corporate Taxation," the
series will m eet on successive
Thursdays, beginning next week,
from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m . in OCC's Cine
arts hall 119. Admission is free.
More information about the series
is available from OCC, 556-5880.
TIME CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT Petitions Filed
In Federal Court
. $100,000 OR MORE . 6.75% 6.25%
180 DAYS 90 DAYS
Pacific Cal
John.,.._.
•. City 8an!!,_,~~J 4• 141-1234
8'lllled 10 --""""" lor-.ty--
The following have filed bankruptcy petitions-
in Santa Ana federal court:
AUOUST1S
-Denny Lane Fer1uson, 11>12
Euclld Apt C, l'ountel11 Valley,
!onner1V clolng 11141nest es Cuilom Or~ Shoo. l\eS llllff lleblll!Ms of "·"° -...... ol t6JD, J .......... ElllOC1 lle!I -astlgnacl to the case -Anthony "'••nk Carlo, HU 8rMl...i. Hunllnvton IHc:ll, "411 lllt·
ed llHlllU ... of Ml.9'0 -HM .. of ~1~1~mm~~~~[E:13~~==;:;il-~~~~ ™·-JUdg9 "· K. Pllelpe .... -•SSl!lf*I totr. cae. AUOUST16
-4-lans ltobtrt Hlllet'be<IC, '°" Zell Drive, L.egune &each, llH 111ted
llebllllln of •10,21• end ISHll of ''·"" -Tllo!N9 Olvld ...,._non, ,.. •• .,.,..on .... C>4. ....._, 8Nc:h,
""listed lllll>ltltlttof tl2•10lhlldlt•
.... of $2.«JO. ........ A. I(. Pllel~""
bM11 aasitN41 totllf QM. -llllam JoMph Harr Jr., 1nv.
Uftd Sl., ....._, .. Kii. Mt titted
118'11111 .. ol '4.'10I -••ts of •Uo. Jlld09 A. I(. PMlll!I hu bMn IH IQMcl ..... ~
t
NEW ORLEANS <AP) -A
blc. three-leHed oil drillln& ril with a unique system or sails de·
signed to save Ume and cut tow-
ing costs looms above passing
ships in the Mlss1ss1pp1 River,
ready for its maiden voy aee.
The rig, natbottomed and look·
ing like a weird spider, was to
have begun a trip downriver to·
day, jockeyed by 011e tug ln front
and another aft. •
I F AU GOES well, the rig·
vessel Rowan J uneau will unfurl
a set ol sall.s as bif u a football
field when it reach s t.M opca
gulf Friday.
It's hard for seamen to vis-
ualize sails on an offshore oil
"Jackup" rig -doubly bard for a
landlubber who bas never aeen
one of the exotic setups.
The $2.2 mllllon J uneau. which
carries a crew of 84. is a oew
Jackup built at Vicksburg, Miss.
The bull is shaped like a trianele,
with a 410-foo\ leg at each corner. IN COASTAL waters it can put
its feet down on the bottom. then
Energy 'GlamoUr'
Sought by Public?
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A California pollster says the public is
aware of the energy shortage, but may be waiting for a more
glamorous solution than conservation to come along.
"sense that the public is waiting for that precious galvanbinit mis-
sing element in the energy crisis-that inspiratton that involves
movement, discovery and inven· tion, .. Mervm D. Field of the on the energy shortage.
California Poll said at a seminar HE WAS AMONG nine energy
CPI R e lates
Mixed Tidings
LOS ANGELES CAP> ·-
Consumer price index figures for
August brought both good news
and bad news to Orange County·
Los Angeles consumers, the U.S.
Department of Labor said. .
First, the bad news:
specialists speaking at the one-
day symposium sponsored by the
Energy Awareness Project of the
California Council for Environ·
ment and Economic Balance.
Field said national polls in·
d1cate increasing numbers of
Americans are viewing the
energy shortage as a crisis, but
they are s till in the minority.
In this country's consumer-
orient.ed society, many people
believe it is un-American to con·
serve, he said.
jack at.self up its leg to stand ~
feet abO\le the \UH!l while 1t
drills for oil. Whtie being moved,
the rl& raises its leas slra11ht up.
They tower above the triple.deck
hull as it awkwardly shoulders lhroush the swells, lowed by a
17,000.borsepower seqoiq tu&
thaUooka like a Navy d~~>:Ct'·
Two steel masts were fitted on·
to Juneau's !rootlei while the rig
stood at New Orleana. Colin E.
Rataey, pl'eSldent of a New York
City aailmakin c firm that
normally outfits yachts, brou&ht
in a crew to handle the riJliJll.
"The chairman of the board of
Rowan Company. C. R. Palmer,
came up with the Idea of laying
on sails," said Ratsey ... He's a
yachtsman. They called me llJ>
and asked if we could handle
somet.b.lna like this. I said sure. It.
bas never been done before. With
the hardware, it's a $300,000
job."
THE SYSTEM WILL add a
maximum of eight-tenths of a
mile per hour to the Juneau's
towing speed. Tbat's with a brisk
wind from the rear.
It may not seem like much, but
officials of Rowan Companies,
Inc., of Houston, Tex .• take a dif-
ferent view. "You can figure us
days to tow this rig from here to
Saudi Arabia and those bif tugs
cost about $500 an· hour,• said
James B . Davis, a Row~n
engineer. ••on a trip like that. a
good wind could save up to
$120,000 in tug time. And the time
you save also gives you more
days to drill." Consumer prices locally ro:,e 1
percent during the month, ac· cording to Jim Wurth of the
Soul.hem California office.
He said t..be good news IS that
the increase is the smallest mon-
thly jump in Los Angeles smce
April, 1976.
Wurth said higher utility rates
played a key role in the modest
price hike.
HE ADDED 111AT people also
refuse to conserve because they
believe t.be energy crisis is a fie·
t1tious creation of t..be energy in-
dustry.
T he symposium was the last of
10 meetings on Cle subject in a
series funded by a $113,000 grant
from the Energy Research Ad-
ministration and the Federal
Energy.Administration.
The sail system is portable and
Rowan expects to use it on any of
its eight jackup rigs on long ,
hauls. For the maiden voyage.
the Jwieau ls making a short trip
-200 miles west from tbe mouth
of the Mississippi's Southwest
Pass to a lease about 30 miles off
the coast, south of Intracoastal
City, La.
Over T he C ounte r
NASO Ustings
l\l'a It\ 11~ 11'11t
lS I~ 1V., 1'111 2V. 2'111
6V. 1 1IV. 1914 135 lolO
11'/t """ . '"" ,...... 30'.lo 27'/t 23 .....
3 3'Vt -~ 11~ 12'1'1 2'11 3141
TKO Bell n~n~ T ampu 2911< :iov. Tech P\>b 271.fo 21.,, Tecum P SI '° Tennant · JD l2
Tllny Co ""' 17~ ToscoCp ~ •lllt Tramo 0 1<Alt 1~
INCO Pd ~ 41>4
Trltn OG ~ 6V. Tywn F 1~ 1'Vi Un McGll P4 ~ 8~ ~t. m: 1~~ VVe 8ks 1Mlt 1914 Up,,.,. p 10V. 21 Velt.y G$ IOYl 10~ Veno Air 10' .... 10 .... Vence s • •'I) v.rcro .... '"' VeN 8nlt It 70 Wads Pu "'" "" WSll NG ·~t·~ Webb Re II"' 1J weir, w 10',l 1~ We '1'I 2 ,~
~:::ng: .... ~ 4'1!. s·~ 'WJln MIQ ?Vi , .. w .. lmd '3 ~
WdWrd 1.. 1f'°" 2SV.
Wrlt:En ~ S"'
Wrl W • -Zion I B 21> 27
MUTUAL FUNDS
J
Vp• and DotmU
NEW YORK IAP> -Tiie fGllowlnq fill 'lhows \IW O\l•r • ttw • eo.inw
slocll• -w..-renu INI hew -111> he mosl --Ille most l>Mecl on rcenl ol CMftlll ~rdlftl of YOI-
r -*'-J.;, No MCur1 tr~ ti.tow S2 ••• Inc• • N4lt -P9r ltQe GllenQel ere tt\I! lf•.....ce I»-Ille Pf''""OUS C~ -d price -lOIS.IY'• ••t llld prlc..
VI'S -LISI .o;t. Pel I 1C1ywrn '"' VP JU
2 El«C.lh • + '• Uo 210
3 Af'ICIU '"' • 1'-t Up 212 • EMICO , ... . ~ Up 700 s No.le Co P9 • h Up 11 . 6 G.-l'• + ~ Up U6
1 c;..,tU<PI •lo< + ""'-Up n.s • Fie GI-1·~ + ... Up n .s • FrMm C 11.. + I.. Up ~s 10 ~~ • . .. \Jo 11 •
" ,~, + ~. Up II I n 0nwt1no ,,., . .... Uo \I I
ll Scrp!Jnl ,.,, + I.. Uo \I I 14 Cl-10 Sh + •• Uo lOO
IS Sl•81d "• + '· Up t s
16 St~ µ. +S-1' uo •• " ""'leot.b • . .,, Up t I " Sumll Pr 3 . ~. Uo • I .. ~yBr . ., + ... Up .,
:zo " ""' Pl
, ... . .. Up 12 ?I l11vs Am »• • '• Up 10
'll IEklonlnd JI 7 + ~. Up 7 1
7l El.clTeb , . ., + .,. Uo 11
2• F,_SM ., .. • 11>. Up 1 s
2S ~ ''"' • I Up 1.S
DOWNS -l..ut -~ Pel Comou• .,,. Off IH B:"'•' ,~ ''" -v. 011 11. r.:v Volt S'• -~ ~ 11.J F ._ 2V. -v. 10 s eon.tr ""' _, Off 10.J Whlle!IC ""' -Ill> Off 100 AMICO< JV. -'-Off ., Lli7i F 10 -1 Off 91 rnr • 1011) -1 Off ,,
It Tee '"" -v. 011 l .J SIMrn IN w. -"" Off 1.3 $1.lucle Pit ~ Oii 1.• 9r0'51Jll J -v. Off 11 Taco 8.rl 2219 -n• °'' 1.J V-T '"' -..., Off 1.1 Eleffutl "--~. Off •• IVAC Cp 2'1V. -2'1o Off •• Com"'"' 7''4 -..... Off •.s Redfm F ~ -v. Off tS BalOwl.y 1~ -I Off u c-.. r 7'11 "" Off 60 Bloel!Eng , \lo Off " '-"' 2 ... Off St FAS Int • ... Off H Pl«eGd 7 •• Off St Unltr Tel 1 "" Off s•
rur
cov CF Eqp.Olt
c.tll• GMnSk I 40 11 c-..n1Wt1 1 20 I) °"·~,: I.,. •
1.20 I
wy o~ • ~r11n l61J
"' ·-. mGt "" '22• Gn "1nO I b 14 Gn8clll .IO 1
Gneatll• 82 ' 00,,,.,. .II I
G«>Ovn ' CienEI 1.1012 GflFCll 1.M • C..nHoSI Ml 4 Cenlnsl.-I
•
M the treadmill turns, memben of the eeoaom.le r
and fll• are askln& whore lt leads or whether, lib a mef"7· aro-rowid. we bave meNil)r ~ted up the m•chlDvy I.Gd ID·
troduced a few ups and downs •
• We have Introduced lndexlnc Into our wai•s>rie•
ne1odaUooa, and Social SecWil.Y benef"ll.t too, lbt be'*
that worken and retlrees can meet the risln1 cost of Uv* Thus wbeO prices rise. so do lneomes.
WHILE ADMIRING nos, WE also wonder wily ll
lhot tnnatJon perslsta, wtien lt ts all but obvlous that to 10111•
desree we are perpetuatinf'the catchup sequence, ln whl
hl&btr incomes contribute to hither ~rices and. . . •
An attempt ls made to improve the lot of the workft
lowest. on the scale of skills by raiJJng the minlmum watt
from $2.30 l.o $2.65 an hour, with further Increases to ~me.
It ls bound to reduce the difficulties of some workers.
But for how lone? PtrsoMel executives already
511yb)g they will have to raise tbe wages or more akll
workers ln order to maintain the refallonsblp. That lead.I
innatton, which is dev as la Una for those on tbe boltom run;.
At the same time as we are consider·
mg increases In the minimum wqe, we
ulso are attempting to cut down on the
Jobless rate, wblcb remains stuck in the
area of 7 percent of the civiUan lebor
force.
IT IS ALMOST UNNE-O~UY TO
point out that unemployment is worst
among those who have the least skills.
and who are thus In the minimum wage
category. Does a higher mlnlmum waie
improve their chances for belna hired! cu._,,.
Again, as we moralize over the unemployment probl
we support a school system that Is demonstrably detlcl
in preparing youngsters for the labor market. and wh
con~inues to turn out teachers who can never hope to f
teaching jobs. .
In the stock market we have indexing too. •lthou1h,
another sort. It's the current cult. Instead of lrylna to
the popular averages and Indexes, an institutional port.fol
manager seeks only to keep pace with them. This ls n~
considered success. and a fee 1s charged for it. •
DOES INDEXING EXPLAIN WHY THE stock market
at least as indicated by the popular market averages, ha.
been gomg nowhere? It would seem so. In the put, at an:
rate, the stock market rose or fell on taking rather lhai
avoiding risk.
No basic industry has been on a more persistent tread
mill than steel, unless it is railroads. In fact, u steelme,
tell it, they have had their feet planted on different tread ~
mills going in opposite directions. :
They are being forced to expend hundreds 'of mllUons o !
dollars on pollution control. They hav~ been asked lo com .
pete with steel imports subsidized by foreign governments..
' I ..
SIMULTANEOUSLY THEY HAVE been pressured b~j ·
the federal eovernment to limit price increases they say an1 needed to modernize and make their plants more com :
petitive. Unable to do so. they lay off workers. Stigmatized 1
they are less able to raise money in the stock market ln or:
der to update their plants. . :
The examples are endless. though admittedly not -,1~.
are clearcut. Som~ critics of steel, for example, malntaut
the industry bas management deficiencies. And it hu neve1:
been declared by the highest authority that all problem:•
could or should be met in ways that satisfy all parties. '
But someumes you can't blame Americans for woodet.~
ing where it leads and why we can't seem to do much a~,
1t You can't help but lament that patchwork solutions must;
suffice instead of weaving new pieces of cloth. •
that the windmills of Washington only seerq \~
blow brief breezes across the sweaty treadmill, but seldom:
µroduce a real cool wave. '
Stock Market Off,
But Selloff Eases
• ..
~:
'
I•
NEW YORK <AP> The stock market showed a small
loss today, drifting through a slow session. i
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials wa~own 1.82 :
pointsto839.14. ,.
Losers held a 7.5 lead over gainers among New York '
Stock Exchange· listed issues.
Big Board volume came to just 16.6 million ahares,
Trading activity was reduced by the observance of Yom . .. Kippur, the Jewish holy day of atonement.
The Dow tumbled 10.82 points Wednesday to a 21-month .
low , bringing the average's loss from its bull-market hip ''
on Sept. 21 or last year to more than 170 points. . #
Do..,JonnArera~• M'hat S toelu Dlff
: ·' New Vorlt(API Fi .... Dow.Jona·--· STOCIU ep... Hitl' ~ C'-M Ola JO Ind D•MUSWt•mu-112 20 Tm 112" 11A U 111.11 ltJ 1'+ 0.'4 IS Utt 111.A.t 111.Jl Ill II 111 t4-0.t0
O Slit 11U2 119.1' JeS.•1 2'1 n -0.)•
111(1111 ............ ••• .... • ..... >Oii Tr•n ..• .. . ••. 1a.100 Ullll •.•. , . •• . • •• J00,600 U Slit . . . . • . • . . .. .. ... . . • • 2.lOl.!00
HEW YOlll( fit.Pl· SalH. A Pm P<K•
-.... <'*'9t of ....... -· «1"" ""'"le., Stock E-<ha"9e I,_
traclll>Q ,...._"' al ....,. -ti '""'''Ii Oil • • • 1',lOO JA 2" HouOllM • • ,.,_ ..... ~ OamtOn Oii • • n.5'0 \I
Gtl. a.m . •, 100 ~ "
Imp °""'" . tS-7 ... -'o HlltllY Oii...... . 1..-14 + 'II
00-""""' . , 11,100 atft I~ ln•Ol,..tt A.... • 11,.100 22~ C ... mp Ho, •• U,600 7
•urM 11111. ... • .. • U,iOO '"
Vff• and Doaen•
NEW Y~I( IAP) l'fe•. ; I
~~r-· ~l .
12' ws '°' ,. ,~, 1~:1
u "
·' :I
:1
Due to late transmission ·:·
today's listing wlll not ::
aooear In the Daily Piiot. ::
~' '
1.
T ... o; '
F=-m ?. ~::-:::. 11• .1 t:: ~:=s ,: !;
. ~· _.. t.4LH J.~ I
Due to lat• tran smlsstOft~
today's llstin9 will not !.
appear In the Dally Piiot •
~t22.llT7
COA. .'l'WATt;D: TonijJht's Tl' Far~
••• J N
BOH.ANZA
wtlO, WIU>
t Of n'8 ViCIOU9 V•i.thna
W•t llt'td Gordon encol.tflt.r •
IOC'let)' lltdy Wt'IO pllfll tO d\tngl
•hoe u a A in10 a monwchy •nd
re9' Ill QVMI\ m MICK&Y MOUSE CLUB e HEC.Clf AND JECKlE
• USAMiSTM~
• Yiu.A Al.EGA! :.30. TOM ANO JERRY
WAIT TIL YOUR FATHE~
a&rSHOM ID FREEHAND SKETCHING
l:QQ 8 C8S HEWS -UD NEWS D EMERGENCY ONE!
0 MY PARTNER THE GHOST CD THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY
Danny gets c.ughl being d1Shones1
and the whole tamo~ decides 10 try
an experiment 1n complete honesty
tor a day
Cl) THE ROOKIES m ELECTRIC COMPANY ml AS MAN BEHAVES
"Leatning To Learn
@)ABC NEWS
6:__30 f) MOVIE
-;"'*'h "The Assassmellon Buredu
(1969) Telly Savalas, Diana Rigg A
newspaperwoman is determined 10
expose an organ1za11on of assas-
sins for hire (I hr . 30 min )
ID THE ODD COUPLE
Felix takes refuge with hla triends
when Oscar in the throes of a
hangover. asks horn 10 leave
f1l) AS WE SEE IT
"Prejudice In Humor" Ethnic
humor: "Locked In These Rooms"
Generation gaps 'Pat And Evy"
Cultural pre1udices
fii) GROWING YEARS
"Studying Children'
CJ) CBS NEWS
@) MERV GRIFFIN
Guests Kareem Abdul-Jat>t>ar
AIH Haley
7:00 0 NBC NEWS -U LIARS CLUB
D ABC NEWS 0 CONCENTRATION
Q) I LOVE LUCY
"Lucy's Second Honeymoon·
«!) LET'S MAKE A DEAL ED MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT
fii) EARTH, SEA AND SKY
"Metter And Minerals"
(() TO TELL THE TRUTH
7:300 $100.000 NAME THAT
--rtlNE
0 NEWL YWEO GAME 0 THE GONG SHOW
(') JOKER'S WILD
Q) THE BRADY BUNCH
The Brady's neighbors decide to
adopt a son
I!) ADAM-12 ED 28TONIGHT
"Handicapped Children ·
~SPECIAL
.. A Tribute To The America's Cup
Lega l E agles
Squire Fncll·ll •ll'll 1 t!'> Frank H\ an and ToO\ Roberts i!'>
Jot> Ro:-.ett1 in lht· nt.>\\ ... enl'" Ro:.ett1 and R~ an. Jbout o
team ol la''~ t•rs 1.H't•mtl'rtng lonts,!ht at 10 on :\BC.
Chanm·I -I 1rt•\1c·" helo"
Entrants are honored during a
concert performance at Fort
Adams
(E TRUTH OA CONSEQUENCES
@) MATCH GAME PM.
8:001J (J) THE WAL TONS
John Walton Is laced with the per-
plexing ptoblem of how to tell an
orphaned black child (Todd Bridg-
es) he can't become a member of
the Walton family
0 CHIPS
"Undertown · A thoet and an 1n1ox1
cated attorney (Jim Backus) add to
the on-duly problems of the off•·
cers when Ponch is hosp11al1zed
Whole oft duly. the L A Rams and a
CHP team play baskelball 0 MOVIE * * * 'Wutherong Heights · (1939)
Laurence Olivier Merle Oberon In
Emily Bronte·s ctassoc a ricn
young woman lo1sakes lhe love ot
a servant to marry a social equal '
(2 hrs)
Q @) WELCOME BACK,
KOTTER 0 MOVIE • • * "The Fugilove Kind" ( 1960)
Marlon Brando. Anna Magnani
R atb ags Guid f•
M OVtPS ert-l'jltf~ stt <.Mf1tnQ I() bnlil
othc• dltf'lndat)(, M9 v11 ... '"' f v .. r,.
JudQr<J by Ill (ti ti( •
• • • • -E <rrllcnl
• • • -Very Goncl
• • -Good
• -Faor
• -Poo•
The arrival of a gu11ar-pleymg
drifter arouses the passions of two
Southern women (2 hrs J
Q) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL
'Miss Goodall And Tile Wild
Chimpanzees" Jane Goodell set
up a camp on Lake Tanganyika in
1he middle of a chimpanzee
reserve to record the primates'
behavior
(I) PERRY MASON
fl!) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
· Upstairs, Downstairs Woll Ye No'
Come Beck Again" While Richard
os fishing In 1he Highlands. James
reveals hos romantic feelings tor
Georgina
8·30 Q ~ WHAT'S HAPPENING II ~ason Premiere) · Rerun Gets
Married' The new gorl in school
onlatuates Rat and Dwayne bul
Rerun suddenly finds himself a
reluctant bridegroom when she
asks him to marry her
'1!) ST AR BOARD
"Jeff Pearson And Denny
Johnston"
9:00 0 (J) HAWAII FIVE-0
Flve-0 Chief Steve McGerrell os
101ned by the Coast Guard In his
search for the hijacked freighter of
a wealthy sh1pp1ng magnate (Ros-
sano B1azz1) •
0 MAN FROM ATLANTIS
(Season Premiere) "Mell Down"
Mr Schut>erl (Victor Buono) prom-
ises 10 stop submerging the earth
woth melted ice 11 Mark Harris
tPatrock Duffy) woll surrender to
l'llm
0 ®J BARNEY MILLER
"Goodbye Mr Fish" Del Phil Fish
returns lrom the mossing · t>ut
~Rosett i a nd R yan ' ..
Lawy ers Lose a Case
By JAY SllARBUTT
LOS ANGELES I AP 1
"'Rosetti and Hyan" is a new
"NBC series It stars Tony
'Roberts and Squire Fridell as
two wise-cracking bachelor
jawyers The barristers make a
:premiere plea of "watch me"
·tonight at 10 on Channel 4.
• But you. the jury, should first
·consider all the evidence. It Is
: found in a blunt instrument
• i:allcd the sen pt I enter 1t now as
Exhibit "A .. in a lengthy pro-.
.~ecding lasting an hour
• The script is about a flaky
•actress played by Juhe Cobb. She
sends our two tort-mongers a
,1.000 retainer fee and tickets to
e $100·8 plate bar association
·dinner
, CHIEF SPEAK ER al the
event is' a pro root ball
;quarterback, played by Robert
:Hogan. Attorney Rosetti doesn't
:want. to aUend the dinner He
•says no one will be there but
:-.thletes and lawyers. a dull lot
• But Ryan says "where there
are jocks there are pretty girls "
As the defendants are known
to c:hase pretty girls, lhey go to
the dinner. There. they meet
their benefactor. who tells them
~he is the "Muffin" lady in a TV
:COmmerclal. She then says:
: "Excuse me, l want to blast
~im before I aet drunk ... ..
,::.: WHEREUPON SHE
·withdraws a .45 and puts several
.. i'Ounds across the bow of the
•quarterback. 1l is stipulated she
wanted to scare him and make rum publicly confess he IS an
~· atl-tlme rat '·
r
T\' RE\'I EW
It is further stipulated the al·
lege<I rat conned her into appear·
ing in a movie that. with clever
editing, he turned into a porn
fi lm called "'Lust Horizons "She
alleges it cost her the "Muffin"
JOb.
At this point, entered as Ex·
ht bit "B," she is charged with as
sault with a deadly weapon and 1s
defended by the defendants
Al.AS, THE CASF: ts a!>
s1gne<I actor Dick O'Neill, cast as
J udgc "Hang-Em·High" Hard
castle He is a ran or the
quarterback and was the master
or ceremonies at the dinner
featuring the .45 appetizers
In the rest of the hour, there
occur twists and turns that we
contend were deliberately creat-
ed lo willfully, unJawCully and
perhaps illegally disguise the
fact that this show has no plot
During the aforesaid
hereafter, which we enter as Ex·
hi bit "C," a press agent name<!
Jim Gordon is slain at ttie home
of his friend. the quarterback.
The "Muffin" girl is accused or
the deed.
OTHERS GET lnvolved, in·
eluding tbe widow of the de-
ceased. whose marriage. il is al·
leged, was rocky on accoWll of
the deceased was fooling around
with the Wife of the
quarterback's coach.
'ruBE TOPPERS
Rlackma1l and point·shaving
.tlso arc alleged The show's
turning point, hereinafter re·
fl'rrnd to as "lhc turning point,··
dwells on how fast a quart of
pistachio ice cream can melt
Ladies and gentlemen of the
.1ury. before you retire to con-
sider deliberating the case of
· Hooctti and Ryan, .. I should re·
emphasize that thts proceeding is
what we in legal cirdes call "a
real dog "
I SUBMIT THAT it is a
willful, unlawful and perhaps ii·
legal waste of lime I know you'll
rind It guilty or aggravated
awful
A."i Lhe trombone player said
when he missed his bus. I rest my
case
'Jazz Singer'
Marks 50th
,'Talkie' Year
One of motion picture's all·
time classics, "The Jazz
Singer.·• gets some special treat-
ment on its upcoming prlmetime
presentation on KTLA. Channel
5.
Thursday, Oct. 6 marks ~
50th anblversary of the premiere
of Hollywood 's first 'talkie,' star-
ring Al Jolson and May McAvoy
and KTLA will televise "The
Jazz Sinter" al 8 p.m. -free
from commttclal interrupUon.
"The Jau Sillier" holds
special significance for KTLA,
since lt was filmed on KTLA 's
Sunset Boule\'ard baetc lot when
the site wa.s the original Wame.r
Brothers Studl06 ht 1127.
doesn't seem lo be able to ace.pt
the face that tNe Is hi• last day on
duty. CD MERV OAIFFIN
Cl) BOLO ONES fD SPECIAL
"Ko1cluazko An American
Portr8!t" A young Polish officer,
Thadde\11 Ko.tciulZko, came to the
aid of the ArMrlcan Continental
Army during the Revolutionary
War
ml THE AGE OF UNCERTAINTY
"The Prophets And Promise Of
Ctaaalcat Capltallam1• John Ken-
neth Galbraith tells of the flrat
great economists -Adam Smith.
Thomas Malthus and David Ricar-
do.
~ D III CARTER COUNTRY
Union Vs. The Confederacy'
Chief Roy falla Into a trap when he
treats his annual neoollatlng ses-
sion with the mayor as the game
they usually play The mayor has
hired a professional negotiator
(Wiii MacKenzie}
10:001J (]) BARNABY JONES -n. 1mpenonates a mercenary to
determine 11 a missing war veteran
has joined a commando unit
involved In an assassination plot
0 ROSETTI AND RYAN
(Premiere) "If You Can't Trust Your
Lawyers. · Rosetti and Ryan
accept a banquet Invitation from
client Kelly Muldoon (Julie Cobb),
not suspecting she plans to pull a
gun and lire at star quarterback
Eddie Sherwood (Robert Hogan}.
the guest ol honor
00 NEWS
0 ®l REDO FOXX
Redd conducts memorial services
tor 'Let's Make A De11I.' Slappy
White, the Reverend Ira Lynn Sing-
ers and Prince Spencer guest star
ti) ROOM222
EI!) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"Dickens 01 London" Unsuccess-
ful In his courting allempls.
Charles spends more lime wrilong
and is offered a lucrative contract
after some of his stories have been
published (Part 4 or 10)
fii) SPECIAL
'Art In Pubhc Pieces The urb11n
landscape ol New York City 1s
111ghhghted by outdoor sculptures.
murals and artworks by Picasso,
Jean Dubutfet. lsamu Nogushi end
Louise Nevelsorf
10:30 m m NEWS -m AMERICANA
"Number Our Days" The phght of
a close-knit community ol elderly
Jews in Venice, Calilornle
11 :00 0 0 0 Cl) ll]J NEWS -U HOLLYWOOD CONNECTION 0 IRONSIOE
Q) FERNWOOD 2NIGHT
Guests: ell-daredevil Vorg1I Simms.
gay llberallonisl Dr Emanuel
Kazinsk1
«!) MARCUS WELBY, M 0 . ED WOMAN
"Women And Hearl Attacks Part
I"
fii) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT
~ 8 (I) CBS LATE MOVIE -n "When The Legends _ Die'
(1972) Richard Wiclmatk, Fredtlflc
Forrest An orphaned Indian boy
strikes out on his own and Jo'na the
rodeo (R)
D TONIGHT
Host. Johnny Carsor'I Gueats·
Merle Earle, Diahann Carroll
8 LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE · D 41 POLICE STORV
"The Gamble" When desk otfleet
Lisa Beaumont (Angle Dickinson)
ls transte<red to the vice squad,
tempers flare leading lo an explo-
sive situation. Also starring Bert
Convy, Joseph Campanella. (R) m NEWS
fll) CAPTIONED ABC NEWS
MORNING
12:00 0 TWILIGHT ZONE -0 MOVIE ** *'"' "Odds Against TomOf-
row" ( 1959) Harry Betafonte. Ed
Begley A former Policeman, an ex-
convict and a black entertainer
scheme 10 rob a bank~ (2 hrs )
Q) CROSS-WITS
Cl) MOVIE * • "The Colossus 01 Anodes
(1961) Rory Calhoun. Lea Massan
In 300 B C • the Gree6<a try to pre-
vent the Phoenicians from gaining
control of Greece end of the shop-
ping lanes (1 hr. 30 min)
12:30 0 MOVIE --;-* * "Mambo ' ( 1955) Siivano
Mangano. Shelley Winters A
salesgirl rises to lame as a d11ncer
aided by an admiring count m MOVIE *'h "Beginning Qt The End"
( 1957) Peter Graves. Peggie
Castle. Giant grasshoppers munch
their way across the West. (2 hrs )
12·37 Q ®.) THURSDAY NIGHT ~ECIAL
"The Third Unofflc1a1 Miss Las
Vegas Showgirl Pageant" Steve
Allen hosts this parody of beauty
contests with Rose Marie as com-
men1a1or and Jayne Meadows.
Louis Nye and Professor Irwin
Corey as 1udg11s. (R)
!.;QQ_ 0 TOMORROW
Guests Gideon and Barbara
Seam, authors of 'Women And The
Crisis In Sex Hormones
1:30 Cl) MOVIE -n-n "Red Sundown ' {1956) Rory
Calhoun, Martha HyeL A sheriff 1s
aided In his fight against a ruthless
landowner and a klller by a
reformed gunslinger ( 1 hr . 30
min.)
~00 NEWS -0 MOVIES • * * • "Shadow Of A Doubt"
( 1943) Cesar Romero. Kay Kendall
Arrested for a murder he didn't
commit. a saloon owner aids the
police in their search lor the real
killer (2 hrs.) • * * ''• "Seven Sinners" ( 1940)
Merlene Dietrich. John Wayne A
Navy man must decide between
his career or a beauhful woman ( t
hr. 30 mm)
,WO NEWS
Queen Meets t he Fonz
2:309 NEWS
... MOVIES * Yt "The Third VialtOf" ( 1852)
Sonia ~. Guy Mlddi.ton. A
man. wanted by the poClce, fie. to
Engtend where lie b.cocnea
Involved In a rnurd«. ( 1 hf • 5$
min.)
• • • "Crimes Without PualOf'"
( 1934) Claude Rains, Matg0 A
lawyer find• hlmMlt entengled tn
the underworld life ( 1 hr .• 30 min )
8) MOVIES * *'-'I "Fethef 11 A BachelOf"
( 1950) Wiiiiam Holden, Colleen
Gray. A man, travetlnO wfth • medl·
cine lho1o11. 1dopt1 five children. (2
hrs.)
• 1,;, "Before I Hang" ( 1940) 8oN
Karloff, Btuce Bennett Searcl'llng
for a youth let'um, a aclentllt
injects himself wtth the blood of•
klltel'. ( 1 hr., 30 min.) m NEWS
f) MOVIE
"KOf'oshl" (1967) Patrk:'ll
McGOOhen. Amanda °'ake A Btft-
1stt secret agent comblt1 • band
ot assassins occupying 1n orientel
island ( 1 hr • 25 min I
~ f) NOONTIME
Friday's
Daytim~ Mo v ies
MORNING
iiQQ 0 MOVIE • * "The Love God?" (1969) Don
Knotts, Edmond O'Brien. The edi-
tor ot a nature magazine returns
from a trip to find himself the
object of massive affection and
also two lawsuits (2 hrs.)
~0 MOVIE
• • 'Jt "Tobacco Road" ( 1941}
Gene Tierney. Dana Andr-s.
Poverty-stricken farm«a In Georg-
ia suffer lrOf,, moral depravity {1
hr . 30 min I
AFTERNOON
12;00 G) MOVIE
• •·~ ··0es1re Me ( 1947) Greer
Gerson. Richard Hart Alter four
years In • Nazi prison ~mp. a mll'
returns to find that he 1nd his wife
have to make mS/ly adjustments
(2 hrs .. 20 min.}
4;21) 0 MOVIE • * "Geng War" ( 1958) Charles
Bronson. Kent Taylor. A crime syn-
dicate seta out to klll the only wit-
ness to a gangland killlng. (1 hr .
30mln)
~9 MOVIE * * • "Oedipus, The King" ( 1968)
Chrlstopner Plummer. Lilll Palmer
A young man rises to the throne
over the death ol his tether {2 hrs l
UQO MOVIE * * • "Ada ' ( 1961) Susan
Hayward. Dean Martin A sheriff
finds his pohtical career threat-
ened by his Involvement with •
young gorl ( 1 hr . 30 min )
.Ja nelle Comm1ssiong. the reigning Miss
Universe, shares a soft drink with Henry
Winkler and Ron Howard of the TV series
Happy Days. Miss Commission~. the first
black ~1ss L"n1verse. has received a one-
vear contract with Paramount Studios,
\vhich produces I lappy Days .
Heart in San Francisco
LOS ANGELES <API
John Korty, the Emmy-wlnntng
director of CBS' "Autobtorraphy
of Miss Jane Pittman •• does
things a bit dlfferentf y. For
starters. his omce is near San
Franciseo. not In Hollywood.
And in a boom era for balr·
hour situation comedies. with 27
set for this season on the networlc:s. a sitcom idea of his
caUed "The Trans port of
Delitht" may Wind up on public TV in several years.
It'• beine pitched by station
l<QED ln San Frandsco lo of-
ficial• at the CorporaUon for
Public BroldcuUna u a can·
didat.e for pai11al \Aftderwrilin1
for a pUol atto. that could lead to
a seri•. KQKD aaya.
when asked why he didn't taJce
his wares to NBC. CBS or ABC .
"I had the idea for three years ...
but I didn't want to do a com·
merctal series.•·
Re said he only wanted lo do
13 episodes a year. But if bis
series was on a network and
clicked, he feared the network
would demand the usual 34 or so
episodes annually, leaving h1m
no tlrt1e fol'otherprojec:U
•'TlfERE AJlE A Jot of good
people up here who find il very
hard to crack the Hollywood
scene. And 1et they're very
talented and know what th«l)'"re
doing."
Korty. 40, a transplanted
New Y-0rker born in Lafa:yetete,
Ind .• is among the small. but
frOWlfll, colony of San Franciaco
film folk who've cracked the
Hollywood scene with spee•
tacular SIJcces~.
Others who call the Bay area
home lncl\lde Francis ~· of
"Godrather" fame: Geora• Lucu, director-writer of Lhe hil
"Star War11," and tee Meo·
delson, who maket tbo1e
· 'Charlle Brown" speclali f of
TV
# a mon atuditod th• •old n loop Luiie·a plerud •at! alld
.,.,._""' M'J'1oUJJy. ·'I \h.l.nk lt could
be a little larser." The romed an
nodded ~t and busuecs urf for 4l
1araw piece of 1eweJry.
~
ill llolartJu role Played
n ''11\lrder aty Dealb.'' wltb •·
1l1tanc• frown DeL&alH, aecretary
EU._ ~. Sid Ca•ar, Jam
COC'O, John HuuiOD\an: Phil SUvenj Y mando Lamu, Abe V11ocla, Pau
Wllllama and .Nacol WUUtmlOO, J>l\d •
11'10 ~ 1wfftbearta: Aan-Mariret.
ocaatd Channlnf, J.,oull• Fletcher.
Maddirio Kihn. Marsha Muon
lf"Murdel''lty Death" WU ltr1bute
to IJUCh detecUves as Charlie Chan,
Nick Charla Ml11 Marple and Sam
Spade, .. 'lbe Cheap Detective" zeroes
ln on tho private eye of the llNOI. # .
Whal lS Ull America'• tnOlt IUC• "I 8TAJlTEO THE story with a
:.b1pboard romaoee, much u Boiart
had in 'Acrou the Pacific.' " ex-
plained Simon.
""~
ees.sf\sl pla}wri&hl fiVlDI advice on a
man~ earr&n&. It'• aJl part ot the
scene al the Burbank Stud.IOI, where
Coham~a Pich.ares u produc1111 the
latest of a seemanely endJeu outpour
ang ol comedic Literature from the
typewriter of Neil Samon.
SIMON IS ON lbe set dally, and you
m ight nustake ham for an efficiency
expert from the front office. Slight of
build, tbmmng of hair, bis wide,
bespectaeled eyes have a consistent
appearance of wonder. No doubt most
of the crew and extras don't realize
that be is the man whose comic vision
spawned lhe SS million production.
"But that didn't seem to be enough
to carry it, so I decided to have the de-
lective involved in six different
romances. And sol have borrowed not
only from 'The Maltese Falcon,' but
from 'CuabJanca, • 'To Have and
Have Not,' 'The Big Sleep,' and
'Murder, My Sweet.'"
Playwrights who emigrate to
California are traditionally supposed
to be doomed to a raUow life. IC
anything, Simon has flourished since
'he departed from his New York City
roots three years ago.
"Murder by Death," w)th its stellar
cast of s upersleuths. was one of
Columbia's big winners of 1976. "The
Cheap Detective" is even more am-
bitious. It stars Peter Falk in the
He wrote "California Suite," a
Broadway hit that will be made l.nto a
movie with 10 actors instead ol the
four who doubled in the four one-act
plays that comprise the evening.
.. WIURDS" f'lUS INI
''PHAMTOMOF
THEPAllAD " _ _.,....._
I AUC~MAH. I IYUYDAY'T1l2'~•.M.·tl2S
-.. -f' :!! .... -
.. OUNTAIN VALLaV bCK•.....:,i:ri~~-· • U • ..,. ••
~.
-an ...
--~.. , ..
CAr•IDlmALL "11
THEATRES-ORANGE CO
SOI• cmzw stso
SO. COAST PLAZA
)4IU1nt1U1 ~1111 ••1tMAllll
'"TMf SPY WHO -LOYID Ml" IPGI .............
"AlOM MOOtt TIL THllr -·-"''~.--·1:1•
"HOUYWOOO HIGH" Ill 1-• MT~ ~>.16-ttc41
'"THI TUSHS"
-"'',_ ia...-11
CINEMALAND
llll S. Ma111ot u •1•'3HUI ···-"SIOIW1HDH OMl" CPGI ,.., ....... ,,_.~ .
'1'BMISSIOH TO KILL" _ .. ,,_.IW....lt:H
CINEMALAND
1ms. ••..,·""*1m US1lll .... , .....
"ftMAl CHAna:
W AUCJ.-TALL" " .... ,. "'',,_-..,. .......
"HUSll.r INI .,."',,... ........
CINEOOME 23 ~ w CHA ........ N AV( Ol\NfG£
134-Zll63 .......... .._,,,.., ... , ....... ....
.. ...... ,.a-1.t.l:ll! , .. , ... ...
0,... HIC)htty
........... ·Sot. -Stm. I :45
THEATRE I
.. THE SPY
WHO LOVED
ME" (PG)
THUTltl 11---
"SIDEWINDER
OME11 IPGJ
~
L..EJINI
A
different
kind of
love story.
ONlHE SCENE
PlayWrtght Simon
WAMTID 10 KHOW (Rl AIOUT SIX"
"'ICINTUCIY NJID MOYfF'
~ WAUUMG TAU."
" "A lllOCM TOO f.U"
"HOUYWOOD 0 ... H"Cll
•cHAMPfOH Of DEA TH"
L. M. BOYD
INFORMS In the
DAILY PILOT
"YOU.LIGHT UP MY LIFE"
COHIT-''FUNNY LADY" CPG)
"SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT"
"THE STING" (PG)
"NEW YORK, NEW YORK" (PG)
"RETURN OF THE PINK PANTHER"
''FANTASIA" (G) .
"THE SPY WHO LOVED ME"
COHIT-"THE DEEP"
"ONE ON ONE" (PG)
"A BRIDGE 'tOO FAR"
Before he went on to biaer
things like "The Royal Huntolthe
Sun" and "EQu~:· playwrlibt.
Peter Shatter dabbled ln theater
of the more trivial varl~. pl'O-
ducinc things like "Tb• Private
Ear" and "The Public Eye,··
These are a. palr ol an.act
plays with two things 1n commoo.
The first is t.be1r oif-tbe--wall ap-
proach to romance, both border-
ing on intellectual farce; the
second is that. both are vasUy
overwritten.
Now on display wtekeACll at the
Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse
.,TMe NIV~ft eAJI"' & ""nte ..VIUC•Y•"
T-~ OOl'lllldl .. W """" .,..._, dlrectMI
by PN Wlllf#N, Ml ...,_.. lly~,
stage INllO•~ 1..•utl• L1mllel"I, IHI
FrkW(I Md 5.ltllf<MYI et ei• tlW Ott. I t4
ttw Otltil -CMC .....,_ M •or... C-tyl"~ .. __._ ..... , ....
"NIVAT8 IU" CAST T <Mlk • .. • • .. .. • • .. • • • • • • LAlllll kftlllllot
Teel.. .. .. • . • ............. IMll I[",_
0o.-... . . ........... DIM ~lffl ...
"r>UaLJC eve" CAST
Ovl-ou .. O..Wtlftell
CN'1•.... . ...• .. • TedlC-r 11e1.-. ... . .. .. . ... . YolllMlr'l"ll
through Oct. 1, ·'The Private
Ear" and "The Public Eye" are
well mounted by guest director
Paul Williams and skillfully in-
terpreted by what amounts to an
imported cast. Both plays,
however. could be markedly im·
proved by some judicious prun-
ing.
IN "THE PRIVATE Ear," the
better of the two, u chronic in-
trovert prepares to entertain a
female acquaintance, with the
help of his more worldly buddy:
He's a classical music nut and.
since he met her at a concert, as-
sumes erroneously that she
shares his longhair bent. In reali-
ty, she's a lady of rather simple
tastes and her attention la quicly
diverted to the more de-
LA MIWA 4 -WEWOOO 4
I 1erm· . ] To...TH....
I
WEINEU..'S BEST moments
are spent with his disbelieving
emplayer, stiffly interpreted by
Ted Knorr, who has hired him to
shadow his wife -then is as-. tounded at bow well Weinell
performs his assignmenL When
the wife (played animated]y by
Yolla Mering) fma.Uy arrives. the
joke has been just about played
out and things tend to bog down
from that point.
Fred Owen's convertible set·
tings are imaginatively con-
ceived and executed, resulting in
two separate scenic designs Cor
the low-rent fiat and Uie accoun-
tant's office. A fmepieceofwork.
"The Private Ear" and "The
Public EYe" continue Fridays and Saturdays for the next two
weekends at the Civic playhouse
on the Orange County Fair-grounds.
WAUUtt LUIOAIN "IUCE llM ltONQA'f-UTllADA'f II-~ , ......
LA MlllAOA. OMU IUNDAYI. HOllDA\'l 't:IO .. :tGO
"A MO'llf YOU'U NIVll POllOlr'
YOU LIOMT '" MY llfl INt "LUI
JUNHY LADY IN!
.. rZ.it=~~
tA•4AHR .. ~ LA HABlll\ OFll\I( IN _
~ ... U........MAn MClllON'
TMUHDll a ~'"' fllU9 MOVING VIOl.ATIOMINt
=~ •• ·' :l •• . .
More meo are needed for ~
Udo Isle Players' fall producUtn o f • ' A rs en i c a n d 0 1.4
Lace" .•. additional auditio61
will be held Mooday at 7: 30 Ln ~e
Udo Isle Clubhouse, 701 Via U40
Soud, Newport Beach. . . :
.. .. High Court
Play ReaJie~
LOSANGELES (AP> -Henty
Fonda and Jane Alexander wpl
star in a new play about Ole
Supreme Court. "First Monday
in October." '
The play, written by Robert E.
Lee and Jerome Lawrence. will
premiere at the J<ennedy Center
in Washington on Dec. 26.
It concerns a conflict between
Fonda, as t.::ie court's senior as·
sociat.e justice, and Mlss Alex-
ander, as the first female justJce.
I •
• . I I
r \
I : . .
SELECTED COLORS
1 'There's a countdown, I scream end
they 811 jump into the street,' says
Jorn Blalr, coach at CdMHS.
·'
L ~
.· ...
Ron Marki/lie gets
ready for the run.
Bill Coughlin. of
CdMHS in
the stretch
...
C1
. ·'"'
FitneSs Fever..·ts
' ~
-lntheBackBa~·
By MARCIA F ORSBERG
Of .. o.11., ~$Utt
Sweat pants and tank tops,
nylon shorts and' Adidas shoes.
See all those fitness-fever people
jogging around the Back Bay near
Corona del Mar High School?
Every summer for the past four
years, runners of all ages, shapes
and abilities have loped en masse
from t he parking lot by the
school's tennis courts to the paths
by the'Bay.
It's all part of the Tuesday
N ight Fun Runs organized by
John Blair, coach at CdMHS.
"The runs are open to anybody
who wants to participate. On
Tuesdays at 6 :30 p .m. t here's a
countdown, l scream and they all
jump into the street.•· he says.
"The person who ruQS a mile in
lO minutes has just as much fun as
the five-minute miler. It's no big
pressure thing."
Rwmers can set personal goals
and compete against themselves
and the clock, or they can use the
1-'un Run as a race. a workout or
exercise period, he explains.
Patterned after the Runner's
Es tee Brand, 5, jogs along wtth
fathe'1 Clyde, of Newport.
World Magazine Fun Run Pro-
gram, the distance runs off er • bonus - colored certificates th1¢
d istinguish how far a nd bow fast.,,
each participant has run.
First-time runners should chec~
with their doctors before starting.
.. A person who's done nothing
more than sit behind a desk or d~
housework should do some pr~
paration. You can't expect to go
five miles the first time, .. Blair.
reveals.
Beginning the first weekend ha
October, t he g roup jogging
switches to Saturday mornings a~
8 a .m. On Nov. 5 at 8 a.m .. there
will be a lO·man, SO-mile relay.
with each person running five
miles.
There will be 11 differe nt
divisions, comprise!] of age group
teams, open teams, women '$
Learns and police and fire depart-
ment teams.
"So any 10 people who want to
can get t ogether and run. We're
expecting 40 teams," he says.
Entry blanks. available from
nlair, may be obtained by calling
him at546-3663.
•
~, :· .. ·:. ·. =:: :· ' •. , . ' .. . · . . . ; . : ~ .· . . . . . .
. . .. . .
David Lewis of Corona def Mar warms up.
. . , . .. . ,
' : s
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------.... ; . '
1
..
Image of Chicangs ChaRging JJ
'Society is just going to have to accept we are just as well-qualitled,
;ust as articulate and just as well-ec:Jucated as anyone else.'
By CHERYL ROMO --~ ...........
~'Today, the burden of declsion on the
ethnic woman is to decide whether she ts
a Chicana fint or a woman first," says
Andrea Rivera-Cano.
''That's one of the reasons the ethnic
woman bas a harder struggle."
Ms. Cano, 29, is a ne'f breed or Chicana, a journalist With experience in
both broadcutina abd writilll, and e
spokespe.-son for both the Qrlcano and
feJ:Qbllt movements. 1
The ~Ua resident *9Dt.ly left 8'.0CB-tv, OlUnel 50, iD Huntl.Qlt.Oli
Beada WbllN lhe •• an .-ociate pro-
duc. aladwrtter. fer tbe station'• weekly '
polldul Jll"Oll'am.
8'8 mG lel"Yed U~ID fortll9 .. PtcipleWatcb" .
CUm!Dtly, ibe ti diNdor for
die Cdloniia Chicano News Media As·
aociatlon (• part-Ume..pGlltbl> Ind •t·
tendiq cal Stale Univenltt Fullerton workinc an an uildv1raduate de,,.e in
communiellltlona.-pablic llfalrl.
Tbe motlaer of .a 7·Y981'.·old son, llldliliaL ... ..,. ............ lot • f1111.ctme ildiluc.••tn bi'olldcillt1na.
"l waula'\N1 I'm~ richt nowtiee ... t•meom~ alit.,
other ways other than lust monetarily.••
Does sbefeel there 11.!1.SC:rimination in
employment for the Chicana woman?
.. Yes. fttst as a woman and eecood as an ethnic. In most of my positions, I ha'H
always been qualified .._ notbina has
ever been banded to me.
"The discrimination has come after
being hired in promotions ~ other ad·
vaneement.opportunitles ••• but 1 have
succeeded°" a numbet' ot occasions."
9hesays.
The young woman, born ln East Los
Anaeles -.;I Mexic..-beri\4", adds~
.. Sometimes we (Qaicanu)_J>fOvicle an
advantace because otour bllllllUal and
blcultural backsroeda. ••
Sbe heloap to numenu Ol'pnba·
i:ns lncludiq the Chicana C.\lcus of
e Natlmal Women's POUtlcill Caucus,
e OCTD Citbefta Tut F0ttet la oe the ~aid ottb"e NatloUI Youth Commbsion. and National Wom.s\ in Coamunic&·
. .
ChicllllOI have traditionally bad trouble
gettlnl into the field because ot the hl&h
standards required ror readi.nl and wrtt-int skills and the language ba.rrlen they
had to face.
''But th.is is changing. In cities, such as
Los Anleles, where there is a large
Chicano popu)ation , we have not bad a
fair amount of representation 111 the
media.
"Society ls just aotna to have to accept we are Just as well quallfied. just as a.rticulate and just as well educat.ed as
qyonee)se.••
But What of the imap perpetUteicl 0C ,
Latino culturea Mini ~
qd machlimo aiactthe women aa beiDc
subeenitlitT. ''Womeo.baYe never bemi really_.._
Nnlfat.'' she llillle6. ''It JOU loat IDtO
the a.leamo famil7, the womm ~
rul• the rOOlt. It bu been tou;ll to u.ro. um miqe out; 1 would Uh toaay
that tbe blaelt .1UPPorten ID IQ career purliilt ltaft bileD Cfalc8Doe."
Sbe N.)'I Chic--. whO feel tbe; lack
ui.-tiGn All.. lbcMllcl ... out other ~s er ~Fd• 11 as" "™ OI ffit. P.-~wlM> ... •1e11if\al. .. ........................ ....
belli.: .... lllQllea .............. .
<lee~ .... Q) j
''"
Personal Space
We should stop being so afraid of tearing up tract houses. We have been terrorized by real~rs to
think that no one else will /Ike It.' ~ or old r boUMa often do not b~e u:-:;:'niu .. a ·peraon .. wHta, but
bomeownen may b9 afraid to do too n:aucb t•·
modelinl fort ear of lotlnC ,.al nlue.
To a.11.y th • fears. and to altw pracdcaJ
auidelinel for f'Very pbue ol ~~ and re·
dee«at.lnl. lJCI Extculon 11 offerlq a 10.week
roune c.-alled Rcnovatln1 Your Home.
t~r or, Dick Cooper, regtonal engineer, General
£1ects1c.
The leries wijl conclude with a panel dis-
CUJlloo aboUt resale. Questions aucb u "How
much can renova~ enhance value? .. and 11Can
you over-renovate?' will be answered.
BecinnUli Mooday, Oct. 3, expert.a in the
builchnf, llthtinl and dealao fielda will talk
a boot all aspect.a of renewal and resale.
A special euest lecturer will be Tony
Gwunam, an architect who now ls working with
Buckminster Fuller on reassessments of deallJlS
for a new housing industry.
The series is part of UCI E.xtenaion 's new
emphasis on interior design as a professional
field. Extension now is offering for the first time,
beginning with the fall quarter, a certification
program in environmental and interior design.
The topics and speakers Include The
P ycholo,1cal Aspects of Your Personal Space,
Pat Hawk, profesa1ona1 des1ener and space con-
sultant; As.sessin1 Your Reasons for Renovat-
ing, Daurune Vinioe. desi&ner. The program on renovation ls designed for
homeowners considering some kind of remodel-
ing or those contemplating purchasing older
homes.
Also. Construction Materials and Availabili·
ty, Trent Harmon, eeneraJ contractor; Color
Theory and Apphcation, Claire Robinson and
David Bowen, des1eners,. and Lighting Your Io· It is being coordinated by Patricia Hawk, a
Hotel Lobby Is Back
By VIVIAN BROWN .,_, ..... ~ .... , ...
Single women who are
traveling alone for busi-
ness or pleasure will find
a new kind of welcome
mat at hotels. For exam·
ple, "lobby lounges are
making a comeback and
that ls good news for
women," points out in·
ternational interior de·
signer, Ellen Lehman
McCluskey of New York.
"Women don't want to
go into bars, but they
don't want to eat an their
bedrooms and be closet·
ed, even ii they are shy.
They feel s lrange alone
in formal dining rooms.
They want to see a little
life when they travel and
lobby lounges can pro·
vide it They can see the
world pass by and do it
without looking out of or·
der as they sip tea or
something stronger."
A leading anterior de·
s igner of hotels she
has been involved in
more than 50 partial or
complete decorating en·
terprises in hotels
Mrs. McCluskey 1s a big
influence on des ign
• thinking.
"In Washmgton the
Hilton lobby has a
modernized gazebo with
talliles and a piano right
in the middle of the lob-
by. an ideal location for
putting women at ease,"
she explained
At the WaldorJ-Astona
her octagonal gazebo at
Peacock Alley spills out
into the lobby. In London
s he put trellises in the
Women who don 't
like bars or dining
rooms when alone
feel more at home
in the lobby.
lobby lounge of the ed to take care of single
Churchill, and she has women, especially at
revitalized hotel lobbies hotels. And dinner dress
in Hamburg and Monte h a s be c o m e I e s s
Carlo. formal."
Some lobby lounges, Mrs. McCluskey sug
such as the tum-<>f·the· gests candlelight for din· century Palm Court al the Plaza Hotel in New ing tables because "it is more flattering to York, survived t~e ax women." and she often
when lounges disap· uses colored table cloths
peared decades ago. and real flowers. Hotels
Now Mrs. M cClus~e~ have become more com·
has begun a resto_rati.on petitive so they are gen·
of the ar~a around 1t with uinely interested in do·
a stunrung ru~ner and ing what is best she
carpet of English roses says '
that was c~eat~ from a B ·e d r 0 0 m s a n d
floral design m early bathrooms have better photogr~p~s of the hotel. lighting too, she main·
New ';'tl1tudcs are ~p-tains, so that "you don't p~rent m the reception go downstairs and see
J.!!ven to lone woman yourself in another mir· du~ers, Mrs. McCluskey ror and say 'oh, my
points out. . gosh' "as she has done. "In some hotels at · always has been a well Ever mindful of
kept secret where the women 's needs. Mrs.
dining room is located. McCluskey does not ig-
Now they are being up-nore men. She as careful
dated and one hotel has to suggest for women
partitioned a big area in· what will also please
to four s maller dining men. whether she dcc-
rooms, so lone women orates for residences.
need not feel strange as restaurants or hotels.
they do walking into an Right now s he is tn ·
enormous room . volved m the rebuilding
Headwaters are instruct-of Atlantic City to suit its
new image as a gam·
blingcenter, and she isn't
thinking along typical
lines.
"I'm emphasizing a
family point of view in
decorating the Palace. I
see it as a place, more
like Monte Carlo, for a
ramUy to go on a vaca-
tion. Atlantic City will
recapture more of the
gingerbread, art-deco
look of its heyday.
"We are not thinking
of the gambler foremost
an decorating those
rooms. Bright colors -
pomegranate red, aqua,
bamboo tan -will pro·
vide a resort look in
winter. We 'll use In·
donesian batiks, and
modem, but not opulent,
furniture."
Mrs. McCluskey, a
Lehman banking
heiress, was once an
aviator who taught
ground school pilot
trainees at Fort Bragg.
With her brother, Orin,
she established Just One
Break, a job training
program for the
physically handicapped.
She opened her own
decorating office in 1947
and her popularity has
soared. Her diversified
decorating has included
dininJ: rooms at the
American Stock Ex·
c hange, the yacht
Ultima, a coffee shop,
"lake an Eric Sloane type
of barn," and one of her
favorite personal spots,
the red, white and blue,
skating rink in the sky on
43rd Street.
Mental
Health
Summit
Anthropoloeist Margaret
Mead, left, meets with
First Lady Rosalynn
Carter recently at the
White House to discuss
mental health, a subject
in which Mrs. Carter
takes interest. The photo
appears ln this month's
Redhook Magazine.
Eating My Heart Out .5 Ar"
~ • WIT'S . : ,_., END
.... ~.
diligence and eating all Fro m t h a t d a y
their proper foods, I was forward, I gave up clean-
the one who 1rew up to ing my children's ~lates.
be big and strong, One The first lime I initiated
day, I turned on the dis-my new philosophy Isald
posal and as the motor to my son, "If you don 't
whirred around noisily, I eat this, I'm going to
But I did not stretch b e a r d o n e o t m y throw It out."
the truth one bit when 1 children's playmates "That's not much of a
told them to clean up shout, "Hey, Andy, I recommendation," be think I bear your mother said. their plates -they we.re calling.,, Now they tell me.
killing their mother. The ---=-------·-----------1 way I llclted their plates
clean alter every meal,
YOll'd have thought I
was sired by a cocker apanlel. I drank-milk out
of glasses that atuct to
my Ups, port chops that
have been uaed ••
1avels and whipped
pot.aloes that had served
u damaforgravy. ~
Abd d id they •P·
lridawtt? Tbey did not. w.·~have an entire
l tnintlon of kids grow-laf' Up (&8 percent to be
exact) who r e1ard
Wilklorf Salad as a form
Of punljbment. My klda •t~UJ>•Ull tbte "You keep
tblt 11>aDd I'll put you to
bed wmt8UPPERI ..
T b a Dk• to m y·
•
spaceplannin1 conaultant who also ls a member
of the World Future Society.
Her oJ)elllni lecture will deaJ with the use of
per&ooal space In an Interior. She will ult the
questions "What happens when YoU do ~gin space?" and "What does our culture of
spatial petteption?"
Personal apace ls "taking those functions
that a person does most often, s uch as sleeping
. and eating, and making them work for you u an
indlvi<lual," Ms. Hawk aald.
II a person needs a large area for eaUne and cookin;S then he sboud shouldn't be fearful of re·
modellna hla house to accommodate it.
"We should atop being so afraid of tearing up
ttract bousee," Ms. Hawk sald. "We have been
erroriied by realtors to think that no one else willllkeit."
How much space a person bu lsn 't u lmpor·
tant as what ita quality ls. she added. U Jt is high·
in quality it is lessstressful.
Americans also need to comider that. the
center of the their apace ls important too, ahe
added. People in this country tend to arran1e
furniture around the edte of a room instead of
dustering it to provide cooversatlon areu.
"'Ibis drives people apart." Ma. Hawk noted. ·~why should we bave separate llvinC. and
family rooms? It's our fault that our bouaes cost
what they do."
. Many people have not thouaht about tbe eon·
cept of personal space, Ms. Hawk said, but once
they are made aware of it they see bow lmpor-
tantitls.
She added that the course will not be simply
busines.s people trylna to push their services or
.products. "It will be bulldlnl and decoratlnl tips." .
Enrollment information is available from
UCI Extension. 833-SU4.
Fashionables
A wardrobe color anQ
line seminar will be of·
fered by the Volunteer
Association of the
Sherman Foundation at
lOa.m.Oct. 7.
For tickets and in·
formation call the
Sherman Foundation at
673-2261.
RU Ff ELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
W...Y•W.t ......
1911 ........ Yd.
c..t. W...-141-0JSt
Uberty of London
Tootel of England, Ltd.
Antonio of Italy
~on Corduroy
& Velveteens
Ribbons. Laces & Trims
FotkWear Patterns
(i)
geronlum1
·n 1un1htne
A Gallery Boutique
Volunteers Sue Matloff (left) and Milane Hauser.
Experienc e
'I 011 arc pampered 110111 1hc moment , . .,u
\\alk In lhe door ot ln~utute MJrengo. 1ht·
ah1111dance of free hanging p!Jnts. wooJ
beams 1nd natural lighting ln the three story
instilulc make It bolh relaxing and unique.
After :1 few minute~ wait while given time to
adapt to lhls plu~h cnvlrnnmcnt, I wa~
ushered IO ~c Mr. M:arcngo In hrs oflicc
where four bcau1y makers ln!'ked me over,
analysed my hair, skin, and al1cr they con-
sulted for a few minutes, they come w11h
what Mr. Marengo stated a "soph1st1cared·
sensual" look.
My first step wa) a quiet l:ic1al room, an
atJT1.l)sphcrc ~o relaxing, you would only fall
asleep. My ~km was 1horoughly clunsed,
lh<'n a m11l1J·
ruJe nf hcaut\'
11 ruJuch, cJ,i1
I ec Ir ng be lier
lhJn the last. A
"Jrm mist was
'PrJyed at ''"c pomt and m111~t
p3.:lcs were ap·
f'l1cd. At the
tnd of :111 this
llHcious indul·
gcnce (which
1:1kcs about I
hour) my face
WM Jlghtly YICU·
urned and I was
• ThU!!C!!y, S!p!!mbet 22. 1177 DAILY PILOT
~Kid Porn ': Another Term fOr Child Abuse
R AN LANDlll~ . I am wriUn8 to
tor Lbe vubht' c you t ndtnid In
tbe a an l child po npby. Becauae or
your r'ftel\t mlumn on lh aubl l. we reetivtd a
number ol c lt• nd I ttua I clUzeu wllb ln·
I nnauon aboul tndh&ddlt utd In 1uch ac·
U\l•l) loveMl«at~ d 1uth call led ut to a
hi bl)' placed profualonal .,_non wbo, ln·
crcdibb' nou h, ww wltb 10UDI children. We
1.arnfli that be baa b o en111ta1 Ulete
you l rs in porno rapb.lc acUvlty for Qt.dtt
some ume and wa a hopeful our lnvea.tJ1aUon
wtll end an a ronvlcUan ••
By educaun1 your readera to tbt1
reprebcn,51blt-crimlnal activity and alerting
them u to whom to contact you have performed
.a ervtce of mormous magnitude. ILANA
DIAMOND ROVNER, CHIEF, PUBLIC
PROTECTION UNIT, UNITED STATES AT·
TORNEY. NORTHERN DISTRICT or IL·
LlNOIS
Jacques Bellini,
who designs for
the stars, isn't
tor the off-the
rack shopper.
'Plain
By TOM JORY
Is
.NEW YORK CAP> -Jacques Bellini, who's
designed Cor people like Cher, Margaux Hem-
ingway and Liza Minnelli, has a philosophy
almost any size pocketbook can handle
"~ou are hc~o only once," says the direct,
sometimes caustic Eastside couturier, "and iC
you can afford the best, why not? If you can't af·
ford it, please do the little thmgs. It's always a
matter of taste."
Bellini's not for the average, off-the-rack
shopper. His designer's portfolio offers a fan·
tastic glimpse at the way the world's exotic and
beautiful people dress Salvador Dali, Lorna
Luft, Jack Haley, Polly Bergen, the Bay City
Rollers.
But his approach 1s down -to-earth· "Nobody
!S ugly, everyone has a right to be here and not be
insecure. No matter how I look , I have a right to
be here. But I can dress correctly to be more
beautiful."
Bellini was raised in the theater and danced
m night clubs and on the stage, both in Europe,
where he grew up, and m this country. As a
dancer, he designed his own costumes.
For the interview, he wore a trim gl"ay suit
and plain ti<.' and moved with the grace of a
dancer quite in contrast with the self.
conscious reporter. "When I have one good look.
I know immediately,·• 8<.'llini said at the start. "l
make a complete, physical list when a person
passes in front or me ...
Ann Landers
DEA.a ODEFz T'Uk Y011 for your ldad
wordl. I'• deU1hted &o leara ...... tlte eol•.m•
wu llfec:Uvt. Adult po....,..play la a bore. A•,_. wlao ea.Jo~• 1wcll ..,...,. d 1&eacly en·
tenalalMM •u• Ian• tl&nldel a. &be noodle.
.,Kid pona'' la •ot J..a PGl"DOl"•P'Y· l&'a eblld
abuse, aod u.roe• t.volved Ill Ula& 1eummy runt llll08ld 1et Ute mulmam. GOod luck on
.... eo11vtetloa.
DEAR ANN : You are probably fed up with
Jett.en from C.B. 'era but. I hope you'll find room
tor one more.
"K.A.I.D. · 7777 North Carolina" s hould bone
up before he calls "Mad In Illinois" ignorant.
Power or no power, sunspot.a or no aunspots, it's
11legaJ to communicate more than 150 miles from
Beautiful'
"Never brown shoes with navy slacks," the
designer advised, "bul the salmon jacket goes
well with the blue. The tie is too busy."
There are fashion designers who regard
Bellini a'i something of a rebel, perhaps because
of his rather simple message to clients: "When a
man or woman comes to me, they will be dressed
in a way that is good for them, not good for the
designer."
"Just because a woman can afford a strap-
less gown doesn't mean she can wear it," Bellini
said in a recent Interview with Celebrity
Magazine. "One has lo feel proper, comfortable,
in clothes, and frankly there are a lot of de-
signers around today who are more interested in
the bottom line of the sales slip than they are in tbe
client."
If there's a Bellini theme, it's the notion "you
can't be a stranger 10 your own clothes ." And to
the rich and not-so-rich, that means dress
tastefully, personality Included. And never
flashy
"The way you dress, that's the way people
see you," Jacques Bellini says.
That doesn't mean a full closet -"human
beings don't need a lot of clothes." And use lhf'
extras.with care "are you born with jewelry? ..
"Plain can be beautiful,'' Bellini says. "If
somebody likes you, they like you the way you
are. If they don't like you, they won't like you
with a scarf around your neck."
youralaUoo C.lJ. radios are not toys, bul that's
how the "skippers" use tbetn when they take an
ego trip to see how far away they can iet to say
nothing.
When you want to talk to someone locally
and all you can bear fs lbe same ratchet·mouth
bellowiftl, "Have a flne day!" it's enougb to ruin
yours.
The problem of meaa1 bogs doesn't mean
anything unUI you are strand~ 1n a car wllh a CB at your finserllps and you can't e~t threugh
to uk for help becauae the "ak.fppers" have all
the channels tied up -includin1 the emer1ency.
And bow sweet it la to be watchina TV and all Of a
sudden some "Good Buddy0 turns up tht power
so tUgh it knocks out your picture and tbe sound
goes dead -but you can hear him loud and clear
-calling Canada.
Ask the FCC why they aren't doing their job
of enforcing lbe laws, especially w n "the ••skip-
pers" are ldod enougb to ctve their addreUes
over the CB. -ALSO MAD
DEAR ALSO: O.lt. I Wlll. Deu F.c .c.: Why
are•'t you dolq , .. ,. jMf t'11 CB Oack
bucome•p ID •1 col•ma. diiRu alpeeple llave
poted tbe qaatt.t. U you ua come ap wttti an uawer I'll prlat l&.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recently you ad-
vised everyooe to bathe or shower daUy. I
haven't taken a bath or a shower for three years
and I'm fit as a flddle and smell like a rose. The
secret? I rub coconut oil on. myalt •ffl'Yday. lt
prevents sunburn, too. -TWO-OUN PETE FROMPUERTOVALL.ARTA
DEAR PETE: Did yoa aay three yean!
Thanks for letting me know wbere you are. I
don'ttbink I'll go there.
Cancer: Be Sensible
F.RIDAY,SEPT.23
By SYDNEY OM ARR
ARIES (March 21·
April 19>: Social hfe is
more active. You meet
interesting people. More
persons appreciate you
and say so -you could
win popularity contest.
TAURUS <April 20·
May 20): There 1s way to
resolve dilemma know
it and don't be intimidat-
ed by those who are
mired down with tradi·
tion, superstition, out·
moded concepts.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20): Your natural assets,
qualities come to
forefront -you know
what is to occur and
what to do about it. Com-
munications are
enhanced. You gain
through written word.
CANCER (June 21 ·
July 22): Defending
"family honor" could
take more of your time
and energy than is
necessary. Be sensible,
protect possession s,
don't be misled by
diversionary tactics.
LEO <July 23-Aug. 22):
Accent on marriage,
publicity, working with
time You rebuild, you
shake orr tendency to be
Move ment, exchange Gemini, Virgo persons ly do have your own way.
of ideas, clashes of play important roles in especially where the op·
opinions, relatives, vis-your life. You can win ~osite sex a r e con-
ils, tripsarespoUighted. your way and you usual· cerned. CAPRICORN <Dec. -=-~........;;.::._;..;.;,.;;;;...::..;;~;;;;..;,;.;:;.;_........:;.=..;...;.;;;;..;,;.;.._~~~~~
22-Jan. 19): Get to bot·
tom line where costs are
concerned. Practical ap·
praisal 1s necessary.
AQUARIUS (Jan .
20· Feb. 18): Lunar cycle
1s such thut you land on
your feel -you do what
should be done but you
are not aware or just why
you did it. One who pulls
strings takes a liking to
you.
PISCES (Feb . 19·
March 20 >: Give full rein
to curiosity -make in·
qu1ries, obtain answers,
open lines of com-
munication. Gemini,
Virgo, Sagittarius figure
10 scenario. Stick to
number"5."
If Sept.ember 23rd ls
your birthday, you are
perceptive, attractive,
capable of manipulating
situations and people.
SOUTH COAST
.\CJ'ORS CO-OP
'' ••••YI -r<hlng tor new or PXP•rl•nc•d t•tenl for films
TV ''-& commerlcelJ Ali "91l·IYPtl
Chemin de Fer, Alpaq
Jantzen, Cole
Elisabeth Stewart
IALIOA ISLAHD
67M770
Twin Contest
calling all twins to
participate in
Huntington Center Mall
contest presented by
Mothers of Twins Club this Saturday at 11 a.m ·
in the mall
{Registration at 10 am J.
Ribbons presented to
all participants and
awards aocordl119 to
age groups for
mosHook-ahke
and least-look...ahke. watchers welcome.
Beach Bllld & Ed1119er
at the San Diego Fwy.
r..;.t 4:"w..J ... .,..,~.,, ._.,., .......... .,'\"-'• ......... .-.._ ... _ •• ,,,, ....... -~ ..... \.'. ............. --::~ .,.. • .... • .. • ' ! ' ' ~-. ~ ' · Sharon Allen's · .,, ... • • I ' -.. ~ -)ERENITY . ·:
depressed, bogged down ~========~ or "cornered." You gain
:,..-. Skin Care Center .,)(~ ~···.. ~ ..........
. ' t
more recognition and
also arouse controversy. ,
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept.
22 J: Ste<.'r away from
get-rich-quick schemes.
Bring priorities into
focus. In personal life,
choose happiness over
Intrigue. In business or
career, avoid direct con-
frontations.
LIBRA CSept. 23-0ct.
22): Creativity is
featured, including in·
tensification of rela-
tions hips. Accent on
variety, speculation,
c hildren, physical at-
traction. Anes is very
much in picture.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23·
Nov. 21 >: Make new
start -stress originali·
ty, daring, inventive-
ness. Build on solid base.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.
22-Dec. 21 J: Collect
needed material. Deal
with Cancer nali ve.
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THERE ARE TIMES WHEN SOMEONE YOU LOVE
NEEDS SPECIAL CARE . . : WE CAN HELP
S""Jlcal s.Pln & Supports
Hospital Beds .. WMel Chai"
• • • Chicana Image Changing 1 1 N~
Ostomy ~·"· Most.c.tomy 8rai & Prothnis
SALES & RENTALS
l'='AJ::i'K L-ICC>
MEDICAL MART (From Page Cl) are making great strides. .. rwo out of the five national deleeates
elected were Chicanas."
S.. Us For
SACRO EASE BACKRESTS
351 HOSPITAL ROAD, NO. 11 2
N.EWPOAT BCACH, CA 92663
17141642-9102
Acros!I from Hoag Hospital
Congress from Chicago. She lost. but she
was the firs~ Chicana elected as a
member of the National Commission for
International Women's Year."
Andrea Cano adds there are many
strong female leaders nght here in
Orange County.
How does she view the Chicano move·
mentoftoday?
"We are no longer protesting ln the
streets; we are developing new ap-
proaches."
the numbers now (population). 'fhe suc-
cess of upcoming generations bas
always depended on lhe kind of mentors
the society's bad. Now we have the num·
bers and we can develop the proper ~=====::::==:::::;r==~==============~~ leaders.
Having JUSl returned from an NWPC
convention in San Jose (''I went as just
an observer. It was quite a learning ex·
perience . . . and a real eye opener for
me"). she says politically ethnic women
Does that mean she is working within
the system to achieve change?
"The system itself bas changed; it is
not the same system as 10 year& ago. We
have come lo a point where we do have
"I was not raised in a barrio; my
parents were middle-class. But no mat·
ter what economic situation you are
raised in -or how much education you
have -other people still perceive you as
an ethnic and what their own image of
what an ethnic means."
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DAILY PILOT
-. ..
· HAIR BEAT
9wtt!Oll: I WJVe b"'"" U\.n 1
the Ho! Roll•s °" rrw ho:iOr qu:•e
ohen. ,.. the-/ c1omo9'nq to the
ho;,? M•• LC.
Sonia ,.,'IO C<~ .... -. "~Oil what YO~ ,,_ 17,t ho,t, If YOU -
stolen, thttv could be \<trv
~ to.,,...., reoutotion one:
~ 'O VO.JI hair On .... °""" ~~ if ""'' moon i..cnd. it.en ......, O'' ~ ~ !o V(>oJt lg
CJltd YOU ~ uM ~"°"41'1
IQ bf(~ I Q.Wcf '" on ....
ho•.
q.att.c lio~~, ..
~Of Qt ~410._,Jo "•? Min W. T.Meio V.-de
MODELS
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REGIS BEAUTY SALON
NEEDS MODELS FOR
A HAIRCUTTING
SEMINAR ON
SEPTEMBER 26, 27, 28.
RECEIVE A FREE
BLOW CUT STYLED
BY. MR. NELSON
GORD0N 0F llQND0 N
•
-FRIDAY SAT.URDAY SUNDAY
Don't be short of shelves · Where to put the fun stuff
Get this full size walnut unit Ideal for books, records, knicknacks,
pictures and so much more. Solid core construction,
The unit has plenty of room tor a stereo re-
ceiver, tape deck, turntable and speakers.
Books, too. In simutated walnut finish
·.
·-·
... it.• • .. , :·: ·~· "
simulated walnut finish, handsome styling.
Easily assembled without tools.
17"x473/•"x593/•"H.
Model #1 760.
WALL UNIT,
Reg. 49.99
38.88
Stake out a bundle
Stake your claim to a bundle ol redwood lath
Use 1t to assemble an arbor, put together a trolhs
or stake a garden. 5/16" x 1Yi"x4' lath
50 per bundle.
#2 REDWOOD LATH,
Reg. 4.49
3.88
You can always use one
Extra shelves are welcome in IU9t about
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an attrecttvely-styled bookcase.
you'll like them even more.
Unfinished, ready 10 assemble.
-...:-... • 8Y2"x24"x36". Model #9236.
3-SHELF BOOKCASE,
• : ' Rag. 15.99
,, 12.88
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One tool, many uses
Sharpen knives, lawnmower blades, drill
bits. Grind, polish or brush. You can
do it 111 with this versatile tool.
Includes safety eye shields.
Model #3601 .
McGRAW EDISON BENCH GRINDER.
16.88
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assembled. No tools needed.
17Hx473f.4"x32''H.
Model#249.
MUSIC CEr;.JTER,
Reg. 28.99
18.88
Ring around the table
Create a versa111e table with a particle
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table bases to grace your next party,
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Lois ot uses. Ready to finish
5/1" thick. Base not Included.
PARTICLE BOARD CIRCLES
Reg. 2.29 . .
1.48
24·
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1.88
36'
Reg. 5.99
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Take It Off, Take It All Off
A super stripper that removes epoxies.
urethanes, lacquers, varnishes.
enamels, wood stains, etc.
Removes the stubborn finishes
even from hard to reach
places. Simply apply, then
wash away with water. Then
you're reedy to refinish
when the surface ls dry.
Needs no neutralizers.
Will not raise the grain
of wood. 1 gallon
ZVNOLITE
SUPER REMOVER.
2Wl01mil!E SIPEI
UlllEI
Reg. 13.59
9.88 ~
-----JI/
Meet a awlnger
This kitchen faucet ls newr a dreg. It hu no
washer• to wear out and replace. So you don't have• drip on your hands. Smoke colOr
lucile handles are 1 neat touch, too.
Install It yourself. Complete Instructions are
Included. 5 yr. manutacturer'e warranty.
Model #9210.
PEERLESS l<ffCHEN SWING SPOUT FAUCET. Reg.21.99
16.88
..
Furring for a firm found.tlon
Fumng strips are a necaaary beM tor flnlattlng
materlals like paneling and celling tiles. At this
low price you can also use thern for staking your
Qarden and othM odd job&. White wood •rips,
1x2 x 8'.
FURRING STRIPS.
Reg. 56c each
33ceach
Push-button decorating
Give your oldies but goodiea •fresh iiew look.
with a coat of Speed·e-NameL Spray on one
Of many decorator eofors, In a tough, extremely
durable f1n1sh. Use for all intenor and exterior
suriaces. Safe, lead-free, dries in minutes.
stops and prevents rusting. 13 oz.
ZYNOLYTE SPEEO·E·NAMEL.
Reg.99c
68c
Keep rooms cleaner
Plastic deflector.direct the floWof alrfrom ~lllng and wall reolaters. Thia wa'/, llr doe.n't
run up c.lllngs and Wlllt to soil them. Attaches
magnetlcllly to~ extends to 14•
Model #HD·5.
HEAT AND AIR DEFLECTOR.
Reg.1.99
1.28
'-----
"4C'I l~t•tla ...... . , ... ._. .. , , ___ _.... ... wi ...
--lCQciiM"'!llQ •lA116H lrN aa.ll °' ..... ,. ............ ..,,.,
.....,_ -C.ototwm• c.-...... 0... c • ,,. ,,. ..
l !N Le~ "911 l•U Cltr llUlll e.u n
,_ ~ • 4tUM \Mt """"' • (-Dr·• ~-CA •v• '"n -'WH k ,_,.., h • ..-. ... -... _,, __ _ ...... -............ .. ,_,, °""' ... Or-~, -...... -·-.... -..-..·-., ........ u•1•1 , ... QtJ ... ... .._. ...... °'-C.-wl 0..1¥ ...... '-tit a U-D 1't ,.,,
,.,, JI
P BUCNOTlCE
l'lC'TI nous IUSINIU
--•n•T&MINT
T ... --... --" ........ Dv•I .......
AMI ltEAl TV CO•l'OAATION IM ,.....,., C•"'*'. 0,...,. •Jot '""'" N...._, .. '"'.. C.lol9tfll0 ,_
.,_,l<MO ~ ... I~ ... ··-........ c.r-.. _ • C.lllwfll• cor
-•lie•'. DI...__. C...IM Or• ... . ~·~ 100 -8"<fl c.111 .... .. ,_
'"'' ta.N""'' _, cono...c:t.o .,., • c0t _ .. _
Alner~ ... -l_
'""""1..-1i...11y c.or_ .. _
~-·I:.<-• \lie,,,. •• ,
lt\tt> "~ ........ ••'" tN
County Cler• of Ot•ft99 Cou:"'" on A~9V\l.,. 191' .... _
-·-Or•nvo Coe" Delly P1101 S.o4. t,, o .n , 1.,1
PUBLIC NOTICE
P'ICTITIOOS I VSINl!U
NA¥1 STATUlllENT
The I01towl119 ponon I• 001no bu•I
neu.e' WESCO MFG . 1''IO "C · PloCMll•
Art • C:O.ta M .. a, CA 916'1 Wttley Alc ... ro JecOC>I, HOE IS\h
'>I .Cotlo~wo CA92UI
Thi\ bu\ttttH f\ (Of"lcJl.Kted by •n In
OIYi<".t•I
We' Jt Jacobi
lftl\ ,, .. f'~n( wa\ ftltd Wtth th•
'°""'Y Clerk ol Ora"~ County'"' Seot ... ,, , .....
Pubh'-hf<I Or~ to•'t O•HY JJ.1ot
5'1111 I IS. n 1' 1'11 ..... ,,
PUBLIC NOTICt;
l'ICTITIOOS I VSINEU
NAMl!ITATEMI NT
ftw to•IOw•ft9 penon I• dolno buM
f'\oeU~
0&8 SALV ... GE COMPAlfV UI
W 1~11 SI a H Co.le""-"· CA •lU1
JON\ Pntllp sn.MOn. 0 1 W 1•111
~I , a H C°"le "'-'41 CA 91UT
fh1i blA.,..u I\ <onou<•tld by •n 1n
d l••o..t•I
JoM Phlhp 51>-
Thh ,,.,,.mc·nt Wit\ tllf'd With the
County Cttttk of Ot•n'" Count't' on
AuQU\t ,), lit/I ,. . .,..
Publl\l\ed Or-"'l" C.O•H I O••ly Piiot.
'><'pl I I. IS 22. "" J/41 II
PUBLIC NOTICE
STATl!M&NTOl'AIANOONMINT
Ol'VH'.01'
l'ICTITIOOll VSINIUSNAME
Tne lotl-1"9 per-• neve •b•n
done<! Ille UM ol u.. llCllllou• bu1in•n name FAUSTA VITALI & HllENOS,
JllJl Coe•I Hwy L•CIUfl.t IHe<h Cl' 'l'Z•" TM FlctlhOU'l 8U\.tMU N•m• ,.
ferrt'd to ~,. w•i fifed 1n Oranfir
CountyonJ\lly U "" PMrl<I• J Foer\ttr 201 I ,._,t'\Q~
ACMMI. N-1 IHe<ll. CA. '2 .. >
G1111en G Foet\ter, 2011 Kono•
RMd, -.o<1 ~ CA. '2~
T "'" IMNnet\ wa' COftOUClt<I b'f Ml 1n-d•vKN.tt
P,atrl<•aJ ~O«\f~r
Thi\ \t.ll'""'"" ••\ t11ti0 w ith tn•
eo..ntv Ct••' OI Orenoe COUnly on '>eOI I ltl1 ,.,_,
P~hNd Or-Coe1I Delly Piiot
Sept •s n.1'.-0n • ""
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOU$ IVSINIU
NAMI ST"TI MENT
T ne 100owl119 peroon• •• • dolno OU•I n•n•' PET Pl(l( VP HISE119lend, Hun\
•noton &ecfl, CA m•
C.fOt o.t>ow. 91i Coronaoo. Cofl•
M~\O, C ... , '12t71
.,.,,.,,. 11.l•ller 111s C"91•nd. Hunt
lnolon lleecll, CA 916•
This bu'l"4U " COflduCltd bV •
9en.,rolper1M1"1lp
....,.,r.Kl1lltt
Thi• slel ..... nt w•• !ilfd Wiii! IM
CO<Jntv Cl•r1< OI Or•noe Counly on S.PI.
I , 1'11 .......
PublllNd OrenQIP Coell Oallv Piiot,
S.01 o.n.n .-Oct • 1t11
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICa TOCllllDITOllS
-A~ SVl'IElllOOll COVllTOI' THI:
\TATIEOl'CAlll'Olllfl ... FOii
THI. COUNTY 01' OllANOIE
•n '" Mall., of Ill• E•t•tt ol CECllE 8EllE AOA¥, O.c .. Md
Hollo I~ lier-'>., 91...., 10 cr..illon
M•lnv cl .. ms -Inst ti.. Hid dK•
dtfll lo Ill• H'<I dalm1 In ti.. Offlct ol
Ille ct ..... ol tho .. -.Id <-I or IO
praMnl I""" IO I ... -Ill~ at the office of ACkEAlil\AN, llNG &
AVSSEU.. '4' W OUOfl 8M:I., 5'111•
1CIOO. L*'9 9Mcl!, CA. '*2, -ld1 1•1
ter afftca lt ,,,. plea of _.,,. .. ol the
-undeni9fted In all melltn -1alftlno
to said er.tale S..Cll cle•m• wllll the
M<U~ llOUC."9n m;nt be !Heel or
pru..,1..i H atoru eld wllhlft fO<Jr
monlllt MIH Ille tint publlcellon ol lllh
notice.
Oat..i "'111 13. 1'11
Olcar M . AcMm
E-lllOl'afll,.Wlll
... DKeclltnl
ACKIEl'MAM. L.IMO & llVSHLL ._,....,._
444 w. °""" ""'· '""' "" l--..O.CA.-.... 111,.,.... 0reft9t CoHl 0.lly Pllalt.
s.pt. IS, n, 2', OCI, •• ~
PUBLIC NOTICE
•l<TlflGMSltVSl•l&S •~tr•T--.Mf l!W~--... ~ ..... ..... HWI Of' MOllfc;AGI•, 111
,_ -'' ...., 0.. ..... CA ·~ Ha"u <14 Mlrttet ... Inc., •
(ollll"'IN -..., ltl Ttwfl .... C_lry....._Qr...,.,CAftMt ,_ ....._...,. ~-....... •. , ._ .. _...,_, ""· lflll!P!O ... J .......
~-tMt ......,._ ... I-•1111 U. <_,, l••• .. o.-'-'" .,. ~M"n ~· c.A,•&na•DCIMM.D ., ,_ '' '-""'•· ... , ...... ,.,.. ........ .,.
• ...... it.A ft111 , .. ,_Cit ...... Co<o>I O.lly ltllf\. w• I, I, II. ti, ""
PUBLIC NOTICE
ST A HMt!N~ O• AMNDONM•NT
CH' UM OJI lflCTtTIOUI
llllOIHS •AM• , ...... -.. --.... -Ille u .. •IN tletlt'-~MUNme'
OONATElll'S ITAllAN
llf$TAVll•HT 00N1'TElll'S
llUTAU~T. "74 ...._, 8hd ,
COiia _.,CA '12677
Tflo 1'1<111-..,..llff, Name '""
i.t<ff la ...... w•~ loleo tn Or-
C-lyan Aprll 11, ltT• A.I'-J, 1'911-inl, llfl VIU.
E~lr-Pffw-18eac~.CA'26'0
Tn1>bu5lneuwescanduclad b¥.., ,,..
01v~
... J p .. ._ ....
TfllS ,..,_,,. we\ llled wit~ lhe
County Cl<!r~ ol Or-C....my on Sel>t . ,,,, .. _
PvbU....., Or•noe CO.•\ O•llV P•lot.
Sept u n ~. 0c1 •· ,,,,
PUBLIC NOTICE
4110
f'ICTITIOOS IVSINESS
NAMl!STATEMENT
I i..1011owl119 penon• •r• dolno bu~·
MU a\
COUNTERTOP SVPPl V, 10>0
North le<Tlon StrHI, S..llo "· Oranoe,
CA'2 .. ,
Modutorm, Inc .. a C•lllornl• co"
porallon, 16UA S Flguero• StrMI.
G1roona, CA W1'1
ThlS bulll .. U II ConcNCled Dy • CO<•
par•uon
'-!~rm lftc.
Tflll "llemant w•\ 1111!<1 wllll 11\t
coun11 c .. •k o1 <>ranoe Cot>"1von Sept
I• 1911
l'ltl42
PuDM.....i Or•t>QO Coe>! Dally Pllol
S.P• n ." Oct • 13 "n 4118-71
Pt:BLIC NOTICE
Cl'-1111
P'llJ:IS
l'ICTITIOUSIVSINESS
NAME STATl!MENT
Tne tol-·no --•r• dOll!il bu"· "'"•' UAO 8 U')INESS CENTEA UOI
AvocAdo Avt' • Suitt .oe. Htwc:>Ort
Buch.CA91MO
Jemf'\ A &<inton, UOt Avocedo
A•• Su11e .al, New-I Beech, C"
•1"60
H•fOld E Gt'etwm. ,..,, Avoc..:to
Av• S..11• loOtl, Ntwport 8t.Cll CA
•lM>-O
Oof\/110 F Wllllam\ 1401 "•O<-
Aoff , S..llt .al, Nt•oe>rl Baa<ll, CA
"1..0
f h1\ bu,iM\llO 1s conouc te-d by •
<a•Mr~ P11r1MrV\;p,
H•rotd E Gr an.om
lr\is \tAte~t wa• filed wlfn the
County Cltr~ ol Or-CO<Jnly on Sept
1, tt77
DE MAllCO, llollAl. OlllENelllG,
TH•ALl&SlVSHlll(Nel
UONt--'CaM.,.~ .• Ste.-
Newpon llffcll, CA '2wt
AllOf'MV'•H~w
Publl\IW<I Oran.,. Co••I Dally Piiot
Sept I. 11, 11 .,. "11
PUBLIC NOTJCE
l'ICTITIOOS IUSllllESS
NAME STATEM .. IT
Ti.. 1o11-.no per-I• 004119 .,....,. ,...,,,.\
WAl TER'S OA•PERIE!t I
CJ.A PETIN\; ti,. l'er-crell Or
Cbll•-c ... .,.v W•t,.., eerv c;r..,.111. P.O. eo.
11'4, Co11ta MoN, CA '26U, 11'1t
Per-creti Or Cost. AM'41 CA '2•1'1
Ttt1' bu-\.fntn ''conducted by •n i"'"
d1Yl-
We4t .. Gt'-n
TrU\ ~t•t""""" w•' flled with tf\e O::°""IY Cl•'11 al Or•noo C.O.."tv on Sep.
htmber1 1911
Fl146t
P~I"""' Or-CN>t OIOlly Pllol,
!ic>OI • IS, n. 2'. "n
PUBLIC NOTICE
CP·Slll
NOTICti TO Clll OtTOllS
SVPElllC>tl COUllT 01' THE
STATI Of' CALll'OlllflA ,Oii
THE COUNTY O• OllANGE
No. A·'2.MS
E\l•I• or ADRIEN CH ... AlES
PELlllTtEA. •-• AOAIEN C.
PEllETIER. ••• AORIE ..
PEll ETIEA, !>Kea-. NOTICI! IS t<EREBY GIVEN lot ...
cred•lon ot llW ebOye Ntned ci.c•
0.111 that all i»,_ navt119 cle•m•
•o•IMI tho Wld dlC-1 .... r«1ulr~ to hie •l\em •ltf\ the "1cei1•rv
w uchen '" ,,,. lllil<• ol Ille <•tr• 01
'"• •-9'\llllO<I coun, ot to orntnt ti..m w1111 Ille necnwn ..UCNrj to
IM ,.,,.,..\IQNd •I lhe 1 ... oHtce ot
E ANES T J SCH .AG , J A I
ProltU•-1 Lew Corp0rallon, HIO
Borell SlrHI !'<XI Otfle• 8o• 11a.,
NewPorl Buell C•hlornl• tUU,
wlllell It ti. pl.c• ol """~' ol Ille ~ 1ft ell rNlll.,.• pertalfttnQ
t• Ille "111• ol said dKedenl, wllllill
1ou, .,,.,,.,.. .,.., .,. ""' publtuuon
ol tlllsnoUce. Oeled~ JI, 1'n
OeNlda M. Pllll .. IH
l!..cutrla of Ille Wiii
of h aba\19 Nmed dit<edefll
lollNHT J. SCMAO, Jlt.
a l' ........... 11.aw~ .. ._
"" llrdt St-• 1'.0 ..... n.
.... ...,, ....... CA. tt .. l
T•I tTl411SJ.M16 •"-'I,. 9i11Klllrl• Publl!il!ed Of""GIO COlst 0.111' Pllol
Sept t, IS, 2f, '9, 1'71
PUBLIC NOTICE
t
-6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L y
p
I
L
0
T
TIW ~~·on the on.nc-eom
DAllY PILOI CLASSIFIED ADS ............ , ............ .. ..................... ,,,_ .......... ".,. .... ,._..r::r..,,........,
""' a '~· .•. -.Mtf ........... ..__,
You Can Sell It, Find It, ( 2 aa.e 1 One Coll Service
Trade It With. a Wont Ad 64 •..u • u Fast Credit Approval
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I 002 ~.. I 002 GtMrot IOOZ G...,ol ltoa •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
1--.... ----... ....---..... ----... -~
llG CAHYOH + TOWNHOMI
Carefree lifestyle offered in this
pr~tlgious & private area or Big Cyn.
Comm. po0l, jacuzzi & tennis cts.
"Greenbrier" model with lge master
suite & sitting rm upstairs & 2nd BR &
bath down. Large patios. $145,000
2 i 11 S-JOCICfllla Mis Rood
MEWP<>n CENTBt, till. 644-49 I 0
1002 GeMial 1002 •.......•...........•.• ···~···················
MESnlD
RETREAT OWNER
DESPERATE
Musl sell, big customized
home near Mesa Verde
Country Cl ub. 4 Large
llVIME COMDOMIHIUM
One of the ~st! A San Carlos model
end unit in Rancho San Joaquin with a
view or the park. 2 bedrooms. a den .
21h baths and added features
throughout. Location is near the pool.
near the greenbelt and of course.
close to UCI, schools and shopping. At
Sll9,500, U'd better C
U ,_., I VU t ti()Mt§
REAL TORS ', 675 6000
2443 East Coast H 1ghwav, Corona del Mar
dlso in Mesd Verde, ..it 546 5990
Your new home Is set ort
with soulhwesl landscap·
mg. 4 Bdrms and new
dr1tpes in l11m. rm and
liv rm. All new kitchen
uppli11nces. Patio with
rire·ring. Call soon
546-?.313
bedrooms and Iott.
Private swimming pool. Getter.,. I 002 G.net-al I 002
ONN "'I>-II s fUN ro ~f Nl(f'
[etlRftlfl --~---
VETS
••FREE••
YA Counsehc) &
Info. SerYlce
..
Mo Dowtt Payment
frHUltofVA
HomulnO.C.
Orange Co's Luri;csl
VA llomc Broker
Call 24 Hrs.
646-9898
WORLD REAL ESTATE
Asking price Just re· ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
duced to $145,ooo. Call NERVOUS 3'12 .ACRE
54().llSt. PWMER HORSE RANCH ... ::~· HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
GARDEH GROVE
$60,950
3 BR. P•• ba. cov patio.
dbl gar Priced lo i.ell.
call now.
646-3928 or 545·3483
Lachenmyer1
Realtor
says '1SELL". lmmed GRAHOTERRACE
occupancy . Lowes t NEAR HIVERSIOE
pnccd in complex & Im· Big .i BR home w 1huge
maculale. ~.500. r£>1· rm . dining rm & 1722 MITCHELL
UNIT 70 labulous pool PLUS 2 BH
gu~·:.t house MIKE SAVAGE Much, Much, Mor~
REAL EST ATE l!nhd1e\ able rmancmg.
6 .. 2 960 I 0\\11\!r will carry entire
"' • bul Jur 30 yr~ . meld 'g 8'."
-ml w, onl} 25r; d.:>wn
$240,000
JACOBS REALTY
-. 675-6670
TRl-PLEX
• ENJOY YOU9l HOME
• • Also your investmellll ~r the ·
period of many years it bas been pro-
ven that properties appreciatti Caste.st
that are located ON THE WATER OR
NEAR THE WATER! This prestigious
home is located just one door aw!-r.
from Ocean Blvd. or a "4 Wood Shat'
from Little Corona Beach. There are S ~
spacious bdrms & 6 baths + loads of
living & entertaining area. A total of
5,000 sq. ft. or living space, whlcq
must tell you something. The property
is located on 2 full size lots that are •
fee-no lease hold-a realistic price at •
$350,000 ·: .. · .
YOU'LL LIKE OUR ESP
. t-xptrienced sales personnel :: .· ·: 759-0811 =·
450 NEWPORT CCNTER DRIVE ?59·0811
1002 CMMrol • 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
$58,750
llugc lum1ly room \\llh
used bric k v.ull und
flrcpliH'C 3 Bed rm. 2
bath. dble car garagtJ,
new 18' Ooughboy pool ~
filter. All t his on a
secluded street. Hurry,
call M6·5880
~HERITAGE
REALTORS
CORONA DEi. MAit
DUPLEX
~~~~lpll.!~~l.J!i!!! 1----------1 Lovely duplex, each unil having 2 bedrms each .
I I I
Get GREEN c!ash tor WHITE elephant.s with a C1as11(14KI Ad
Call i42 S6T8
STEAL
th1~ big 4 br, 2 ba beauty•
Many pluses Included
(omlly rm, patio. rruit
trees etc, etc Priced
Sl ,OOCl's below mrkl. at
164.950. Convl. or VA loan OK. 146-9898 Agt.
Want Ad Resull.s
NEED TO SELL Walk t.o beach. Priced to
sell
~
1 1-. .. 11 1<1 \11\
'I•
~~ ·~ ! Caa11 H•1 Ct< tAJ w1 u.
a well priced home in the
"Hall ot Fame'' develop·
ment in North Costa
Mesa. Clean and neat with hardwood floors.
Owner aruuou.s. One ot
the lower pnced ones 1im---------
$7l,950.
546-4141
~
COATS& WALLACE
REAL ESTATE. INC.
OWHERWAMTS
OUT!
Local build•r w•1
bulldable property
~wport, Cotto M .. a
......, Tflr-doww.s. _..
d-o1H, multlpl• Hit
property. F4ST
ESCROW . Cati
640-8208 mtyffllW.
GoHers Dream
Mesa Verde's mos t
SPECTACULAR ho01c. ~
BR. 4 ha. l"R, DR, LR.
Spuni~h 2 Klory. '~ &<:re.
The golf couri.c is your
back yurd. Open House
WC14. thru Sun. l·~· 11116
Panay Circle Ag\.
5400608
DAI V '9llOr
~
"' ·J l __ _.._.....,, ..... _________ ~....,...,
. . . •t don't know if I like running away with you
or not..."
PUNKY WINKER BEAN
•.
MOON MULLINS
MISS PEACH
• AY2.TM\At
At-JSWE~~
A~~ -
' G\JESTiON I. __ ~ __ ~ _>~
"Y Tom Batluk
by Jeff Millar and Bill Hinds
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
@ --~~~~~~~~~-~~-~~---. . , .....
~ .,_ ..... l .... .... . ........... . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
('..,.,..._ ___ ... ---
TODAY'S CIDSSWDBD PUZZLI
ACROSS 50 Star-shaped
1 Vell1eles figure UNITED Feature Syndicate
'6 Wine 52 Charts ~ berrtls 54 Stolen Wednudey P\iale Sotved
16 Thick clay 55 =:,
soil: Var. 59 Armor piece
t 4 In a 63 .••• Suea: different TV
: IOl'm .. comed11n l l Can read 64 Blindly
h1m.!1ke • adoftng
f e s;k:ed meat66 NICkname
stew IOI'
17 Fru 1 Antionette ' 67 Remote 19 Yorkshire ttleceats:
river Colloq. 2° Kind of 68 fmpetuo11ty crayon 69 Nor 21 Gttted seuga
23 Sesame 70 Plfeona
•· Var. A pt ble .26 African river ~~n 8 atylus
.'I .. i6 Torn to 71 Move 101111 22 Hlglleat
p,.cts de note '30 Entertaining si 24 RtlftOVt
thing: Slang DOWN IOluble
• 34 Yellowlall conatltuenta
while 1 Irish 26 Lance's • ~-. 35 Curved limestone relative
structure 2 Forest ox :"7 Throw: In· ':'"' ¥ Mak• 3 Atka for format engravings alms 28 Oeaervect·
• .31 Erode 'lnaect !tilter Informal 49 Honot 5 Sent • IHI 29 Hlng down·
guards meutge ward
A?Early 6Mr.BurTO'MS 31 lmpaaaln
Nel>f111!1n 7 Kind peraon
inhabitant 8 Secred text 32 Outer: Mal. _ i3 Oecltr• 9 Overltead 33 Europe1n ~ positive~ Window river :~-:::tS Pronoun of 10 Allan 36 Merclleu l old t 1 Osamounled •o--• :... ~n frOnl 12 llaltan cetna atone
tne&at 13l<lclltd Cl~~ ... ., -'8 t. .... n In ta Record 1dlnc;e:2
•mount 011yer WOfds ...
" 6 'f I t
44European
republic •
47Tllurber
works
C90utdo 61 " •••••.
Stranger"':
Oldmovte
tllle
53 Jewish leaal
55 Indulge lo
e•cass
56 Dull person
57 So Alrican
coin
58 Eternal city
60Slandin·
dOlentty
61 Hawaiian
ftaat
e2Domes11c
&llvtolotd
65Pleeeof
land
. .
GORDO
JUDGE PARKER
•
DR.SMOCK
wet..t... t..t't,... GIRL,.,
"T"Ht!Re's YOUR New PAPPY
t..OOKIN ' A"f" YOU "'T"HROLJSH "Y"HA~
e1e. WINPOw •••
MOTLEY'S CREW
.ATfE~nO!J, eveRYow&/
1\.115 15 Mil. DRUD66 5P£Al<J~!
\I
p
I .. r ; ..
~ r •
by Miii
PEANUTS by C"arles M. Scbulz .
l'VE OEClotD I OON'T
W,.\NT Tu KICK IT
. .,
'
vt>t ··."··.":it' • t •
. -
by Roger Bradfield
HMM ••• ANc> 1"HS:Y SAY e>AL..PNess IS HeRePITARY
by Templeton and Forman .---------------A l..f >(),AU. COFn~ H~, ~I? 15 A 8~? A.Re PRl'Vkft; cx:fl ~~
CANClSL.ED UN'Tfl,, Aoeo66H' FU~MER ..ioncta I """ . ~flij \~
~ 1 ~
GERIATRIX
by Gus Arriola
by Harold Le Doux
DENNIS THE MENACE
llDUCID
110.000
t VEJ<D-e POOL·. l'D~ horn ond
.. tn..-nd :llt:I" uf r ruoo bit Uvlna!
For oo tutif ul r maly J vin.Jt, 1o1 4•bdrm
2 bath home "Ith firt:pluc ·. w<>od
ft-nct-d yard und po01 iwl 1n lov~I~
~. J~l roouc...-d Sl0.00(). -NOW
O~L Y $119.500
"MONACO"
and a princ~i> il i.,' In prommt:nl
llarbor Vlt.-w Uoant:a. urt'u on
~uutaft&Jly tunda<·<1pt.'d groW\da walh
~m nbundan.c~ of pr1vttc:y, r~lti thi1> rt--
gal 3-bdrm. z bath homt with
{1rt1plact: .-nd covt:roo p1tliu. and
'-'an ~ yours at. Sl44,SOO
"AUTUMN LI.AYES"
UPGUDID IUWOOO
Ruully cut.t (as Elkwoods &o! ). This
popular Oc:crf1cHtl floor plan has ~~n
upgraded. pamper~d. cuddled and col-
ort:<l Tu&tt:f ul decor includ~ solarian lloorin~. Levolor blinds, redwood
dcckin!! and air conditioning. And
ch:clnc garage door opt:ner. even !
The Elkwood is a 3 bedroom lrvtne
l'ut10 home for only $89,000. It's r eally
cult, period 1
UNlfJUI: li()Ml:S
A EAL TORS', 675-6000
2443 East Coast H19hwav. Corona dt!J Mar
<1h11 Ill Mh,1 Vl•ttli> ,ti 546 5990
(Qsl\tlli§i$i§fi
Real~t.at · --------1 AITIST'S
SPIC)AL-ltACH
2 STRY·S54,950
Dramutlc ltv . rm .
iourmet kitchen, dlne.
liweepiog stairs to bide·
away master 11uite and
&~t quarters. Hurry!
963-7881
GRHMllOOll
B~autifuUy upgraded insidt: & out. 4
Bdrms, formal dinmJ{, family room.
sunken living room. brick frplc. shakt:
roof. Low maintenancf: yard. 2 Patios
~ ont: covered, o ne not covered.
Sl~.000.
. ';}_,fi.oo RllALTl'
{ :-'i<" 3377 Vlo Udo, Htwporf IMCh
1i 673-7300
QP1r~1119 •1I PL'ITC>l.t1 1• Coro.e .. M 1022
[.
t j l~liij1tll ~·~~".: .. ··!·:~·~~".: ... ~!~~~~ ....... !P.~~ .t • V...LJ.LY.J.JSUWWWA.LJ.JJ.UA.IMI R
'·· · • ·:· ' 1 I/ B• to O oom For Boat11'rlr _ · 2 CeClft 3 Bedrm. 2 bu ram home
Co1npletely remodeled on corner lol Walk to
BalN>a ltaand I 006 on un oversized lot. A pnv i.w1m1tennb> club
••••••••••••••••••••••• smushing4BR1>lusden Only ~7 1,500. OuvHI plu;. tormul dining plu~ Bourke' Realtor, S46-W5u :! Hr H2 Ba. xtra 14:e lot.
Sar view. By owner.
gt&S,000. 613·SOW
hw:e family room w1lh -
open beams. nalurul
wood textures 1.1nd oceun V eh Attention
VACA~T
MESA NORTH
Super locullon -t•l<>:tt" lo
ahoc>p1ng o.nd ·"hoots 4
Bedtm home n\'cd• :.oml' TLC l:iellef' 111 very
mol1vul4"d , bought
a no tht>r :ind MUST
SELL.' Tulu: ud111uuage
now! Call MS-0000
FO~ESTE
OLSON
"•t .... •' ......
$84,500
SpJtn1sh sl)'lf' J l)r, QA h.1 + flam. rm & cmd. teo
N t• w c p l • p u i ll I & t1i11~1;opln11. All tb\f ln I.I
pnme f'ounuun \t•ll'-'.> toe.
·%U'~-
~'6739 ~-ltJ.4!0
Eottst• Duple•-The Locatiof. Open 12-4 Wed Thur/Fri Close to Mlle S uare
237 E.23rd St Parle and all s~ ls
Uu.ly $76.500. Gorgeous and spac us 4 SOON bedrm, buge fomJ~ r m , ER fireplace. dmlng reu REAL den. rully s prin cred
ESTATE luwns. SI09.900. KR,
631-2026 c·aUS<ll·25Gl. ' -~--TAR OPEN DAILY Hi
lmmac: ~br c:orner home. L
torm den. trplc. many .... 1 1 Calif--1 "
A plt:asing blt:nd of warm. fall color::.
:.catt.t:rt!d throughout thli. coiy 2-story
2 bdrm townhomt:. inspirts this Jovt:·
Jy ''Autumn Lt:at.t:!>" tht:mt: -in
WALNUT SQUARE arta! Only 4
years old. lush shag carpt:ting
fonct:d back yard with gardt:n art:a &
patio vit:w from dining art:a Prieto rt:-
ducw to S64.950! * HEW LISTING •
~ HARIOR VIEW HOMES I
and Jelly view lrom ~~~~! .......... !~.~~ ~~~~! .......... !?~~ ~.~~::i!~:!9!: .. ! ?~ ~ r!~t:~~,~ ~:::i~~~:
::;:!35.0UO.
VA uppru1,,<.'d 1111iul'
S80.000. Orlcrrd at
S79.500. Quality built :i
bedrm. 2 bath. Shakt'
roof . brick fplc
bard wood I lri.. Near
::.chouls & park V:icunt.
see anytime Cul l
540-1151.
xtras. S79.000 3158 Cork "' " -•
Ln.~·71lJ SPANISH HACJ~NDA,
DRIVE
BY
pnvatl' C'Ourtyard. 3 BR
r~ BA & 1-'am rm-~ew
earth tonl' cpts. Move-in
li>lld. Just •l!OO .. ~~k
for Roy. Agent 898•2f>36
968-9332.
This dtluxt: '· Phast H Paltrmo"
homt: b st:t likt a fint: jt:wt:l amid the
jovtly landscapt:d grounds. Acctnlt:d
by txlt:nsivt: brick work & ov<:rhangs,
t his 4-bdrm, 3 bath homt has formal
dining room. family room and TWO
firt:placts. A gem worth inspection
now! $188.850. St:lltr will htlp financt.
"GREEMIRIER"
llG CANYON
UNDER CONSTRUCTlON! Buy now
movt in later for fashionable Coun-
try Club li\'in~ with pool. tennis courts
& private gard<:n patio! You'll lovt:
your came:! carpt:tinJ.! with coordinat.
ing c<:ramic tile t ntry & k1l<:hcn -
formal dining room. fin:pl<.1ct. wet bar
and hugt masltr bedroom with sitting
room. Exclusive arta. $144.500.
IT'S LEGAL TO LOITER
around your own BANANA TREE in
your privatt room-for-a -gardtn
backyard. The balance of this 5-bdrm.
2 bath family home.· is ~ually uniqut:
from its wood frnmtd brick firt:plact:.
<·ustom drapes & plush carpeting to
the.· s pacious 20x13 upstairs bdrm'.
Roominess & stltcli vtntss mark this
fint home. S82.95U.
~~~:'! .......... ~ ?~~,~~~~!'! .......... !?~~
IRVIME TERRACE
lmmaculatt 3 Bdrm, den homt: with
pool. It is our plt:asure to show you a
really sharp home. $176.500
673-4400
DivisiOft of Harbor lnve-stment Co.
General I 002 General 1002
••••••••••••••••••••••
360VIEW
OF NEWPORT
This ls an architectural
delight. One or a kind.
Three story home with
extr aordinary design.
Lots of wood & ~lass and
nil the latest amenities.
New 10 and out. STEPS
TO OCEANFRONT
BAYFRONT. This is
something REALLY
SPECIAL!
.....................•.
WES TC LIFF
CONDO
Bright & cheerful end un-
it. lleuuttful highly UP·
graded 2 bdrm, 2 buth.
with comm. pool used by
on.ly 12 owners! Close to
Westdlff Plaza & "DO<!·
tors Row" Just In·
lroduced ti) market
646-77ll
LI DO ISLE 1.11tr;ict1H· 4 bdrm. 2 bath. singl~
o;tory. ustd brn·k frplc. Bt:amt:d ceilings.
hardwood rJoor!. L~" patio 48 ft lot S225,000
Lll>O ISLF: newl) remodt:h:d 4 bdrm. tJtn. 4
balh. living rm w cathedral ceilings Lge
mu:.t1.:r bdrm :.uik. $224.950.
Ll'Xl;RY w<1tE.-rfroot cnndo. 2 Bdrm. 21~ bath.
Pool. j1.1ruz:ti. 2-1 hr ~tcurity Brand ntw: comp.
I urn 52'.!il.O(M)
PE:-.l:-JlNSl'LA ~ lltlrm. 2 bu homt-All
:1m1:n1t1c~ Lovdy •~r"a Sl9S.OOO
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Boy\1de Onve, N B 675· 61 61
G~neral 1002 G~ral 1002 . ........................•.••...•...•...•.••••
JUST REDUCED
TO $81,SOO
li<-au11tul l\le:.a Yl·rdc
pattn hnmt: New carpel.
walll> ~ wmdow l'O\/cr
mg:-.
1653 New Hampshire
CostaMtta
752-0861
COMMERCIAL
5'.hl:;(I Lot Smi.111 build·
1n~ Hoom lo build addt·
tion:.11 ~ood parkinl(.
1'o" opN;ilu1g as beauty
:-.a lon. I :stat11Jn1> in·
eluded. Terrifll' walk-in.
Good for mun)' type:. ol'
bu::.1ncss c.;rcat op-
portunity Complete
~.900
io:.£11"~ FOR J.\I '~===""
•• *
Steve Fe~day
H601 Katun
Irvine
You are the winner 01
4 Tickets to the
Irvine Hcrved
Festival
Family Entertainment
Oct. t and 2
Woodbridge in Irvine
tCulver Dr. at
Barranca>
Please call 642-5678, Ext.
333. to clu1m
ticket.., .....
BEACH & OCEAN
Redwood Deck
Li.:1sure life lovers cull on
tht:-. itdult ocrup1cd ~
bedroom cxecutiVl'
home l/uict location.
di.Irk mom, larg<.' storage
area. Onb ss:!.000. Call
640-6161
$7
COATS&WALLACE
REAL ESTATE . INC.
Classified Ads 'ell h1~
items. smull itt·m:-. ur
an) ilcm 6.J~·S6'i8
A Jump for School
-
WAll:.RfRONT Real Esl<tle VIEW
HOMES Sensuous' bachelor con-
AEAL ESTATE LIKE.A MODEL dominium with beuch
631-1400 This s uper upgraded and ocean view from
--------• Newport Condo show's 3 master bedroom suite lrg bdrms. 21 ~ ba. mini plus secluded loft den.
()(.~an view and also u Cathedral living room ON THE IEACH mini price. Would you hosts Swedish fireplace
t br. furn'd . condo believe ~i.000. Thilil and overlooks private
w fsuper lagoofl view beauty will not la.ill. balcony. ~.900. Please
' Se bid h ' 646-i\71 call 962-7788. too. c. g. on t c oim1119·11~11.>Nh>BrN,.(• I~ 111" ~, ..-c
sandat$59.900.Call: ~-.. ,-, I ,Qi.. KE:Y v 7 m ~i-rn'-'\1._ w~%:::•· ~Ql'iJt~ VP.€ALTOP.sH
714-1.29·5966 ~~---~!·=fair:» MESA VERDE lhe 1umpt1 has a new twist
$79 SOO '" front above d 1ko1 lhaJ's
Sell things rast with Dail • 1u~I pe1lett not too lull or too
Want Ad Ht!lp? 1642·5678 Pit~ Wunt Ad's Y Great 3 bedroom. 2 ba'h na11ow FOi w~mie1 chmn and
· home with built·in t1mes.1tdoubltsau~lldress. en.tr.. I 0020......., I 002 k I l c be n • c r a cld i n e Clioost no·1100 blend~ l!lllts.
••••••,••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• (ireplace and fenced Prinltd Pallern 9301 Cb~-yard. Corner lot localion die11 s S11es 2. 4 6 8 Sl(t I>
for eattY RV 11ccess1 takes 1 va•d 54·1ntb la~ric
Priced for \oday 1s ~d Sl.25 for ucll ·pah111.
market. CALL 751·3191. ,_ 3SC for •-1! P1tt«11 t~ C SELECT ::1:. lird, 11111111i11i.
.T'PROPERTIES
Call 644-7211 DU.AL
POSSlllLJTIES
~HERITAGE
IHILl..tift.illllon leadtt040
Duplex on Hulboa own Peninsula, l blol'k to
beach. 2 Ht!d. upper. t •
studio lower L'sl' your •••••••••••••••••••••••
REALTORS
imitgination for remodel
or enJOY its intrinsic '!.~~~~~~~!.'.!~~ 2284 C I t
charm :is Is. R·2 zoning SPYGLASS HILL 0 QG e •VACAHT•i
MUST SE SOLD! SJSarp
4 BR. 2 sty "Presti.e" P. Y frplc. slate entry
Nr St llonavenOHl'
:\larmd Iii. ~.500.
PATTI WALKER RL°1'\
chang1ni,:toC-1. St21.500. 1--------·1 Immaculate 3 Blf. 2 BA ._.ORl..._.S RE•LTY Dramattcally situ11tccl. ---------•on a corner lot.
" " "' oc1:an&llayvu~w~.4 HR. M.V.GoUCourse.Owner THEllo.J C L * 494.&057 * l;im . rm., pool & Jacu1.z1. 5 Br. 3 ba. Newly up· 1"'111 AL
3Cargar.$289.500 graded i>l57 .lf5 0 645-7221 P/\UL MAHTIN 556-6076. ' .•
Corona•IMor 1022 HEAL ESTATE ti<lt-7382 ---CE .... TURY 21
••••••••••••••••••••••• ---. -4 HR. 2 Ba. lrpk. D IW. 1"'111
842-1418
COZY HAVEH Duplex 2br. 2bil hst' Mesa del Mar Owner
+2hr. :!ha. "P' O\"t'I 1\\atl now ~82.000. Westcliff Realty TROPIC.AL PARAQISE
-----Pool & jacuui, 38t, fam
rm w frplc. ull at a J)Tl<'<' Duplex plus i:uesl stu<.llu.
• Jo:nJO)' Otd World charm
of Corona dcl Mar. Walk
to bc1.1ch & shops. tcnni:,
& rel' l'cntcr. Invest
now. enjoy fnrc,•cr
$18.4.500.
MORIHS REAL TY
* 494.&057 * ---------
CDMBEACH
COTTAGE
Lots of wood and staml·d
glass. S13!1.!150
R.C. TAYLOR CO.
955-0350
A STARTER
JIOml' Oii ll('l'an \IC\\ ~II<!
Ltk<' llC\\, 2 hetlr1~1rn. :!
bulh . Sl22.:'>1Jtl Trv
Sl5.00U down ·
HALPINCHIH
HEALTORS
6 75-4392
Crochet and Knit!
Whip up snuaglf l>OOIS IOI
bazaat5. birthdays or the
holidays
Crochet high boots-knit low
bools! Use 2 strand1 knitting
.. orsted toeether tor both styles. lasy. quick for 1ast·m1oute tilts
Pattern 7214· Sim S. M. l 1ncl
Sl.25 f()( each pattern Add
3S• eacll pattern fot f11st.clasJ
amnail and handling. Setl4 to:
g a r a g e ::> 1 1 x . !> O o . 963·5993
BEST EASTSIDE ,·ou can afford. dQbe tu La1kspur. 500 hlk
5+HV03
CdMDUPLEX
616 t:old~od. 640-4708
~-~.000 ~~:.?.!:house
SPECTACULAR
Quality DuplH
An exceptional custom
bwll home with vaulted
wouel be1.1m c•ell1ni,:.
b<•aut11ul :.olid oak
<:1.1h1net:,; thru out
r1replaccs m hvmg room
und muster bedroom.
lcudc<l gl;iss w11Hluw:,
;in <.I .1 cl' ram It' ti I<'
Jac·uz1.1 111 the masler
b~1th
PLUS
•• drn r mmg :: hcd rou 111
llt•nt:il \11th t1n:plaq
and u Sl'paralc 11<1lw
11<.'ck
Cal 164-1-1211
~ ~
JASMINE CREEK
W;inl lo huy Plan 111.
Wa,·err('st model Prine
only. iS.1· 1 U:ll -----
ostaMesa 102AI ...........••..........
TAKIE YOUR PICK!
2 btO homes on Albat.ros.
1 of the loveliest streets
m Mesa Verde. U will l>e
hard lo choose us thl'y
are both wonderful fmt}
homes & offered at the
n ght price. Call for info
54.5-9491
Real Estate
MESA VERDE
EXCLUSIVE
Just like new thib cuslom
3 bedroom. 2 bath with
plu:.h pile c:1rpeting,
large family room, wtth
used brick Cirepl1.1n~ for
your dmmJ: & entertain-
ment. call :11,'t
540-3666
WHELAN
HOME scl\l & shoppmg.
l27 Sherwood Plul'l' Be«h Cliff R.I. ·
I Bdrm. pool ..::iban1.1. 963-7895 ·
lum1ly nwm. pristine _,
rleun. owner ready lo
M.art packing $135.000.
673.3663 tl73-8086
associated ·
Bl!OKEllS-REAl T'ORS
lOl~ W Oolboo P 1 l6b l
4-PLEXES
~asts1de Bu<:cola. 3 Br. __ _
T"'o tour-plcxes in pnmt>
Huntinlt\on Beach loco
lion. t\11 2-bedroomS', xlnt
investment. Watrh lour
money g row. UJ .000
each. Call WHELAN
llEAL ESTATt-.:,
!1911-785.s. fam rm. :r,_ue patto. Walk Mes;i Verde S7ll.llSO. Ll'I?
lO C3tholtc & NB schools. ~br & I ;im rm 2ba Prin ~.OOOow~ial(t. 548--ami onl~· By appt S56·15:JO ATI'EMT1~
FORECLOSURE
Owner must sell 3 Ur ..!
U<1. upprox 11!00 :.q rt
Hecenll~ pa1ntl·1l. lgt
l"am Hm. and gue~t ;q>I
111 rt a r lmml'd
po1o ~t·::.~lt'll 0 1\ C
Sffl.950 631·1<!66 A~l ---
YOU DESERVE IT!
•PRICE
REDUCED**
I VABUYER .., Obt Your Pleasur~ Hurry on th111 3.Jki. pool
Eastsick Duplex home l"antast 1c !~lion
0 w n t: rs u n 1 t 1· 11 m II nr lhl' twach. lira~ nc"
\\ modern hltn:.. lplc·. un nurkct. won't, 1-ast
"alb nl wood. l'nt•l pt1t10 lonJ.:
front unit toukl-onlo Beoch Cliff R.l.
b1•uut man11 urc1l lol 963·7895 .
C;.dl 101 appl 011 our 1•)1.
t:lu.'1' 1' ne\\ h!>l lnJ.! Jo;m llO\\l' Southlamlt·r'
t-;;ll 21:1:1
B ) u " II l' I p r I m <'
1';a,l:-.1d\.· lue :'\r ... e111::. &.
le11n1.., crl:-. Exterior
nt!wh remodt•le1t 3 ., t·1.1r
l!UI ·:-.hop + t rlr p;ut
~tun' xtra:. S ll:t-401!• aft
7pm ·Pnnc only
RARE OFFER
·~s He~ulc Spt'tlalli.t.. ... :1
I •ir::. burm modeli; a\'u11
~oml• w pools. OOIS-400.2
I 'enrnn11to11 l'ruperttc:.
BRAHDNEW
2Hr .., retreat. life roo1
c·ommumly pool. :.wu1w
& pt·uzz1. locuted on
Gr1.coenbelt.
Beach Cliff R.E..
963-7895 An t'nclosed tront courtyard invite" you in· New 3Br. JBa homt' wm· .
to this urt1:1t1call~ de· ti.ow coverings thruoul, n; OWNER Hunt ~
corated 3 bedroom. 2 ! n tl-.. 1· pd i rn mt· d Land.mark adult rondo.~
balh lumily home tn lo\. possc!>Slon. uuto door op· Br 2 Ba• brand new
c 1) M t:S A VF.RD E nr & "pnnklc·r -.ystl'm. pllL:r cpl & drJ)5 C:ill
AREA Cocoa hrnwn IJwn<.'r may help linunce. f>.!8· 595·
ca r pc t 1 n g , c u s t o m Otfercd ut $85.!JOO.
drapes & remodcll'd s~viHeProper+i~s ·
kitchen area PLUS (7141549-2467
brand new pool & Jacuui -------
& covered patw. NOW ut Dana Point I 026
S85.000 OPl-:N MON-••••••••••••••••••••••• CRY $80 000 ·rnunst1l8:JOPM
Sharp 4 br in eo'sta Mesa.
OCEAN VIEW?
PARK
HERE No Down VA Plac• 551 Pierpont St. Jm. jQuail ~
556-7777 Prap•rti••. World Real Estot~ 1s2-1920 , _________ I 1400 OUAllst. NIW'°" HAC"
31DRM
POOL HOME
V .A TERMS $91,000.
Lvly 3 bdrm. 2 bath. lge
fmly,rm ! Gorgeous heat-
ed & tillered pool. Up-
grades too many to men-
tion. F~ntastic reac yard
w /gas flrepit. huge cov 'd
patio For year round en·
joyment. New listing.
must sell fast. 586-4000
New Condos. 2 Br, 2~ Ba.
2 Crplc"s. ceramic tile
kitchens & bath. Pool &
spa. 675-<4912 Broker
~ Walker C Ltm
Re.al Estate
Hurry!
Submit Offers!
Owner anxious to sell.
Coverd patio Covered
patio. trailer parking. 3
bedroom f'rt•edom
home . red llriek
rireplace. livm~ room.
eating area, S64.19SO.
BKk • ..:1;11540-1720.
Yau-bet.!. Thu one ,>ear
new duplex has v11:\\::.
lrom both un111> ~
I 1 replace:.. lw ltonie1>.
and low maml landscap-
ing. SlJS.000
WiCJCJefthom Rltn
675·6160 673-#ii
ALMOST N~W hugl.'
duplex ParkenJ! lor 4
cars. Oce<inv1ew from
3 Bedroom. 2 bath on cor
ner lot. Priced below VA
appraisal. Watk t i'
~chools. shopping ano
the park. Only S19,500
Open Sat & Sun l·S al 884
Presidio. Call WHELAl\
REALf;5TATE
540-3666.
upper Pr1cC'1I rigllt ·--------~16.5.000
BOND REALTY
831-9411
BToro t032 .•.....................
FAMILY
DELIGHT
Beautiful 4 bdrm home
on qwet cul-de-i.uc Plen·
ty or extras Family
room, co"ered patio &
large £enced yard. Walk
Lo the hl&h school. Ask-
mg $84,000.
LOTSOFLA~D
with nice 2 bedroom
house. Ready to expand
Only $W,900.
SCOTT REALTY
536-7533
HIGH 0 .. ~HILL
4 br. 2 ba oo quiet Cul·de
sac. S77.SOO.
Rtall$tate
,~.
96Wln
m~~IPil~ ~ .uq G()RGEOU$ G.l
499"2800 3 br, l ll{a ba, no dowti
,.... Valey •I 034 pymt. tr you quall(X Cls
••••••••••••••-••••••• to ocean. $Uper, ®per 1-llllii------•l loc! Onl)' ff4,9SO. Won't 1st!
HA/WnttkU .
Iffy, Mc. 141-2 l
,
SO\!TJI
LAG\JNA
498-4551
DANA
POINT
493-8812
107' ••••••••••••••••••••••
at an affordable pnce. s i----------BR, I BA townhom1.
Located In presUgious
Newpori Crest comm. Reduced for lmmed.
11Je. 8e1t buy for an
oceuView ~ •• Can be seen anytime. v y
Sell~-",.. Beaut. ocean view home.
Overloc>ldq Dana ,olnt
Harbor. Ptfc. r.Suc.O to SlJ7,860. Call SCOTTUM.n
H6-7HJ
Bf:ACHT'IU·LEVEL • SLASHED S2'0,500f Spectacular ocean view,
5 .EDIOOM
eue. 4 bedroom. den, 1 ________ _
family room, 1ame ~Sc_.._· .,..... · FIXER room, RV parldnt on ap. -..w • 044 LOIJllllMI leach I 041 Brin& vour paint " prox.. t;1i acre. Bou&bt 3'xt10 aulltul Hunt .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• T.L.C. for this large another, MUST HAVE lnclon Beach adult park.
Woodbridge, 3 DD 2 BA Next door to Emerald EastbluHhomepricedto OFFER , Now only 2 LI• bedrma. 2 Cul
,.,,
Broadmoor paUo home, Bay. lovely refurbished 2 1eU. Submit offer. SUll,000. bathe many, many e:& Mt1m ....... _....._ .,......,
_________ , i«geotaS Inside and out. br. 2 ba home w /view, lt.C. TAYLOR CO. BERTHA HENRY tru. Hurry lorthllJ one. II-+· 2400 POOL H9MI $112,900. Owner Ml-4038 beam ce1Ltn11s. fplc, lge 955-0350 RJtALTORS 531-:51100,ewea.JU-8434 •••••••••••••••••••••••
lo beaUUlul Greentree or
lrvlne • bedroom•.
--------• aenerous spaciousness and walk to 8Chools and c..-. .........
Owners 3br, 2»ba +3
2bs .UU. 3 yrs old. Full
price $116.000.
Cnallve Investments
~. 644·9513
sqlO
Grab It Quick
Bln'faln pr1ce<t Condo. 4
bedffns or den, dining
U"aa. forced air heat, lgc ~ter suite, call today. mm. 942.zss1.
.~ -
parka. Th.LI extra s1z .. lot
is one of the lew IJl the
area . Now 1sk1ng
$104,950. call tod.iy ror
details
RAMCH REALTY
551-2000
HEAR THE LAKE
PUSIDEMT
HOMES
.Choice of 2 new list.U\ai.
in lhi.s preeltigious area.
landacpd lot. 1162.000. --------215De1Mar 492""4121 W'IUNetwortr THl ... 11..u.t. OF
Owner 714·497 3107 or1---------I•-------• " ~
213 43M588 DOVER SHOOS ~ = ~~e-FOR SALE !~ot SPRll HuriG573
REDUCED IEAUTIFULL Y •P· n1en ot Clean Cozy 1 Br mu&& a ux oua -'---------
•;acre In Laauna w1tb = 4 .,...._ 2 priv~:Y ot
8
a ~{:) bome.CallMl-96S2 ~ 8w~~°:'j!:~z!: HOMEFIMDHS
Immaculate 4 bdrm, commercial kennels, ""-<-~ de1ree ocean view) •-.a-.. l200 .. ~ .. __ m IU' r c·"•~•a•a1a--t abl I & -· -r ~ 496-0771 a101 Calle ....___,...,_-.. .,.. ...... c p y um. ..... .,..... • .....
vtew. large lot. $159,000. ~}nc:.'·~~ ~e~or rm. for•al II• rift. C •••••••••••••••••••-•• ao.e to dwntwn Palm SlneeUU k th. brick fplc, 2 car _utno __ .______ ATTIMTIOM Sprinl'· F or detalls SUOlbl',plex,ldda/pets
3000 sq.fl • 2 alory • 5 exPf"lon to ma e k ts a 9arage. landspd Ii DIV&OPRS phone •at 893-47'13 or $1751 br, ut.lJ pd unt bdrm.view $22.S,OOO. rea moneDy ma7500er . THEllSTIM 881-78SS. S2102br.Westmln.wit O.W.C. btT •. Sl7 • · sprinldtnd. lest buy Rlvenlde County ln Swa· Si!LSpetaweleomeant
Causey&COfl!PClllY in this exclul•• IUCHUYIMG nymud, approx. t90 Bia Bear Week end S21.5utllpdpleit
110.So.Coast Hwy. I h b .. d Unlque., CUilom cedar" acne. Perfect ror mlnl· Hideaway OD level lot, $250Sbr,untkldsok
LAGUNABEACH ne 9 or 00 • redwood en•ironment, ranches. 5 Mil• from Iota or trees. x lnt $!003br,2babome! 497-2457 $146,500. Owner wltl overlooking the San Lake Perria. Moonridge Joe. Close to S3003br,lddaotplex help fiftance. CI e m e o t e coast. 4 ll.C. TAYLOR CO. gold mine, skllng & aolr 1375t br, Condo. pool i..--------1 WortdWldelroken Bedroom•, 4 baths, tSS.0350 course. Furolahed. OpenTdays Fee 67~ ,.545 swimming pool, easy 673-7'137 557 A12• OUTSTANDING
OCIEAHVU
rrom this 2 br. 2 ba & den
Rick Arlen designed
,..... walk lo popular beaches. 8 ACRI RAMCH ~ -v 6
Built for family Jivlng. Flxer upper house. 3 car ~ o..ty 2500
$l60,000. iJU'&&e, bunk bouae, out ••••••••••••••••••••••• a.oa Island 3206 bldp, well water, lenc· ••••••••••••••••••••••• i---------i hillside home. lncl'di. Luxury 2 BR Arborlake AMENITIES decks, Crpl & open beam
townhome. Pvt entry. GALORE ce1l'gs. $149.500
Owner/agt. 4Br, 3Ba,
many upgds. Open
Sat/Sun l ·S. 428 VISTA
SUERTE, days 751·:>962
t'VS 548-8033. Financing
avail 1120,000
l 1 ..... ol •-ee· By Owner. 3br, ram rm, UtU 1 1 be h ...... _.. .. ng, ...... ..ees. mg rorm din nr ahop'a ~ e s ac ...,.. .. .,.e ... split Into~'•· Term1. schl. Garden Grove. Br 2 Ba, MOO mo. Call
~I lnCallfontla.. s unken living room. Roman tub In master Don't miss seeiDg one of --=':!.: ----------1 BA, huge lot. An out· the most lovely homes in --~~~~~--• •McwfftCI Magic standing home. Culverdale. Custom1ied ~
U unch your boat m leo VAWY 640-9900 thru-out. Custom drapes, 1990So est Hwy 49•·8SM
mlbutes from lh1s beau· :ii shutters, gorgeous plush .
ty. lmmac. 3 bedrm. •~• ~-ZZ: carpel.Ulg, oak hardwood ----ba w.1Jaundry rm, huge -=:, Estate r~ floors, paneled den. mir· Real estate SAL ES
cov;-patio. new i.tora&e ~ rored wardrobe doors. PERSON & Rt.:NTAL
&Md, block walled cor· P!US much more. A stun· AGENT openmgs Selr
llttlot. $79,900. With VA UMIVUSITYPilK ll;•Dg 3 bdrm. home de· starter for a progressive
td'd\s $94 950 signed for complete bv· & innovatfve orrtce.
•Haoo.eves.8478823 Excltin & ·Edinburg ing.J;,r1ced to sell. Only CGUHy&Company
·'W1 RE Hetwortc model town home w /3 $90, · 497-2457 ... 1111-------1 bdrrns, lam1ly rm. 2 1,2 ---red hill ~"·
552-lSOO CUESTA
o st a lra idea
en can bl;! used 11s
in·law qtrs., billi11rd rm.
haths. Huge backyard
w bnclt patio & firepit.
Waterfront Homes
631-1400
DEERFIELD lil>rary or ... ? Elegant
formal living rm
w cathedral 1·cilings.
{ Dining rm. Patio kitchen
wlU! ~ark wood cabinets. thru & VI CW of me wood bumll'ig
ly rm fireplace
Sweeping muter &
• chil<lr~n·s rooms on 2nd
le11ff;''-Jncommon 3 rar
tP(J'for D11d and the boat !
aKJl 536-9311.
Super 4barp Park Home,
rlan 5. 4 bedroum11.
formal dln111g room. step
down to beautlrul family
room with fireplace.
large kitchen, breakfast
nook & 3 full biilhs. Sit· ling room ofr master
bedroom. Prqfessionnlly
landscaped. great loca· llOll lo new park. Priced
to see.
• s.aMd lid Sale
3·1k' P• Ba. ceramic tile,
fotimal d1n1ng rm ,
•akCaat rm. 1400 sq rt. 1 Q\l•ltty home. Xlnl
neighborhood Av11I to
mqve m on Sepl. 30. Ap·
pritsed $80,500. min bid
Pt.000. 81ds close 6P M.
Sept. 24, 1977~ OPEN
WOUSF. £-'ri, Sat, 1·5 o'r
~ll 846·9154 . 5922
Nordma Dr. JIB. Pnnc ~·
~~MARK Adult Hv· mg. 2 Br 2 Ba, immac. •
lfll_st see lo apprec. Meed for quick sale.
.... 500. Call 1213)
collect
6 Fox.hilt
RANCHIULTY
561·2010
PRIVACY
Cool water spills softly
into a ko1 -rtlled pond as
you e n ter the very
pn vale gardens or this
restored South La~u.na
home Sl75,000
3 Moapcb Bay Jtjau
Laauna Nl1uel 496-7222 IJl.0136
BKR. 213.5Jl -CMOl BUI, at 67~
(114) m-54111 OR 522-0530 o.t of Co.ty a.oa , .... , ... 3207 Pro r+i 2550 ...................... .
THEILUFFS BEST BUY IN SAN LOADEDW/0AIC5 .. ~ ............ LUXURY 2 BR. Condo.
Better th.a~ new! Lge_. 3 CLEMEl'l'l'E. Full ocean 5 Acres loaded with oak WHl&adHome OceanVlew. Security
bdrm. spht·l.evel with vi·ew, from lbls pror trees ln the Cleveland &at.es, etc. ~/mo. 1 Yr b & II b T 1 National Forat. So. of 2 BR, on 2 ac,., 1050 sq . be. or $350./mo UU June ay g_ ts v!ew. ota · decrt'd 3 BR, 2 BA hm in Or•n•e Co. ~unicipal ft., frplc, horse area, 90 15. 600 E. Oceanfront. ly new mtenor . decor. Harbor .Eatates. All elec -.... m1n fro Orang Co Truly outstand1n& at kitchen, quiet al, only water. gentle rolllilg • m e uni 997-3382or838-30fN
$139,500 $119,500. Try is-. down, knolls for vlew tiles. ~y~Be~.H~:i'!' ife~I C.-.cWMw 3222 .
AC ENT 64(}.5560 & hurry. Prine. only. Owner wUI carry· AGT. Estate 542 3456 •••••••••••••••••••-•• (114) 676·5717 ---'-' -·-----· PRICEDTOSELL! t714> 496-8033 or (213) oam.2(MIO RedEstate , Oiumlngaecluded2Br,
2 + Den + formal frplc. 3'73-5l09. &dMMcJe 2800 (pie, wood beam c:lgs •
+bit-ins + 2 car i:11r. S.J.._ Col~ 1600 ....................... gar.~.6'4-5687
+ocean + pools + ten· C.,Utr-I 071 •••••n••u• .. ••o••ou Wby pay taxes?. Trade Cottage, 2 Br 1 Ba, paUo.
ms. $89.500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Frank Zelarney Realtor new decor. carpoft. S. of Lge. 2·Sl). A-Frame. 3 ' BR 1 ba home Wood Prime Comm cmr lot. 494.SS02 Hwy 955-3547 eves
BR .. 2 ba., A·l cond ·deck' •· e ncl ·vard 70xll7 Nwpt Blvd. Sm · •
+ocean. SI 10,000 · 8 OIO. '29.tu E<ti'ewood bldg. Gd, vlaibJlily. Agt Real Estat. Beautiful 3 br, 2 ba +den
CAYWOOD a iSJC.495-5216 646-n71 . Wanted 2900 CUit. bm. Mn tile.
REALTY, INC Dlehtns/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Roman t ub. Sundt. * 548·1290 • OHEOFTHE OnittsCH 1100 Local buJlde r wants _M0-_7_849 _____ _
BEST IUYS ••••••••••••••••••••••• bu1 Id able property ~5/mo. 3 Br, 2 Ba, fplc. PltlME Newport Beach 3
BR, 2 ba .. ram. rm
Sl00,500. Agt. 646-4463
m Pre5identlal HeiHi.ts. 2 4 PLEX-$243,000 Newport, Costa Mesa Nxt to park. Wlt to bch.
BR. 2 PA coo~~ in Blktobeach area. Tea!·downs. add· 4288e&onla644·1'132
9ecluded location. Ask· 1~ down 91)8.5700 oospert'y.mFul!~e ~nl~ROprow·. n.> • ~ One blk from Big Corona.
mg $81,500 IMVEST MOW Call~ anytime. Spadous 4 BR, 3 BA bse. ~
4 AHCHOll .. 1 DUPLEX. Costa MeH .. __.._._ 1-l'pl, 1ar. guest rm & ba. ~ CaU67J.5648. IMYISTMBCTS 3Bdnn,1 ba: 2 Br. 1 ba. Income $5lO;monthly. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br 2 Ba, picturesque,
17141 496-7711 184.600. Hamn Fumisfted clapboard cottage, steps
1080 Pacifac Coast Realty ••••••••••••••••••••••• to big Corona. $67S per
(213) 433-4968 lcAoa 1119"1 3106 mo. 644-0109 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... -------________ ,htcofM l'roperty 2000 N. BAYFRONT winter 4 FOR LEASE Large 6
•••••••••••••••••••-•• Br 28a S600 mo. 642·1i70 bdrm home. New! 2 STORY /POOL .
OHLY $19,900.
This ' bedrm, 2 bath Ceo·
tW')' Home ii on a large
lot at end of quiet cul·de·
sac. Many uparadcs.
Low maintenance yard
with RV ncceas. Good
schools. Cl09e t.o South
Coast Plain. Seller hos
bought new home. Call
for additlonal details.
546-4141
~
COATS&WALLACE
REAL ESTATE. INC
SAM CLEMEHTE days, 548-8647 S1000imo. TRI·PLEX~xtra nice 3 6'14·1481
BR, 2 BA owner's unit
w/Crplc. Walle lo beach &
park. SlS2,500.
STEPSTOBAY,3BR
2 ba, din rm, frpl, gar.
2 patios &i g~rden $42.S
DUPLEX-sharp 2 & 1 ' 328Sapph.lre, 644-0GS4
Lgc duplex home in CdM.
3 Bdrms & 3 Ba .
Fabulous muter swte.
Sm pvt yd. $600/mo.
752·0617 A&l. near beacb & park. WIMTRREMTAL ln.~RTHAHENRY Char;ming2Br2Ba,Cplc, CotteMtM 3224
REALTORS garage. 675.uJlM ••••••••••••••••••••••
216 Del Mar 492.4121 a.oa hniesula 3 I 07 Ma• Verde 3 + family,
•---------i•••••••••••••• •• • • •• •• • lM~ baN ., '!~ paint. $400 o. ope .... SPACIOUS oceanfront 4 Agents:J3.1768
Be 2 Ba completely furn.1----=~----
hme. Fplc, wshr;dryr , $400. New £-side 3 br, 2
dshwshr. 2 car gar. no b1, yard, encL 1a.ra1e.
pets. Yrly rental avail. laund. No peta.
Sept.15th. 644·9S82 1_TSL __ M-'1"'"m_l ___ 64Z-_1_603_
,
Fountoi11 Valley 3234
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Great 3 bedrm, 2 bath,
huge bonWI room-fplc,
OW, cpts, drps, super .
neighborhood, $415.
963-4567 Agent, no fee.
Very private executiv
bQme with 10' wall, 3 br.
2 ba, famrm, built-ins,
wash/dryer, air cond.,
extras. $500.mp. 968-4737,
~n. 962-0862
Peoplewhoneed People
That's what the
DAILY PILOT
SERVICE DIRECTORY
is all about!
KetlMttl Joynes
3808 Topside Ln
Corona del Mar
You are the winner of
4 Tickets to tM
l"iMH.-vest
fetfiYal
Family Entert{tinment
Oct. l and2
Woodbridge in lrvine
(Culver Dr. at
Barranca )
Please call 642·5b'78. Ext.
333, to claim your
tickets.
***
---------SEA TERRACE-38r, den,
3Br,2ba,cpts,dtps,2car pool & bch ~ccess ,
gar, fenced. frplc. $400, guarded, ocn view, lse.
675-S810, 642-0393 5650.1·756-3629
l Bedroom condominium Lease Sea Terr, 3 Br 2'h
·near pool and tennis. Ba, T/H-tennis, pool, bch
$290 i mootb . Cal l access, view. $475.
6t&-4477. 831-1678
~--------
Neat. 2 br. t ba home, Niguel Shores-3lir + den, l•--------1 relrig, stove, dues incl'd
1'
SPACIOUS New dlx. 2 bf", t I>• on
Bht(a. mt.Paclne Ave., CM. $2M. No pet&. eos.•
tact : W.S. Peterson,
847·3541 daYJ, 536·3638
eves.
65•PIAS9FT ' •
1611 WESTCLIFf'.!'l.8°"
AGT. 541·503ll -
WEST CLIFF BU. C'
NEWPOHl BEACH
•l"''"'\\t° f L•'' ''•• 1r"<I '•'
Call Mr Howard
64 5. 6 101
' , .... ,, , ,, .
I
A~~ .... !-!;!;::DAIL~~V=fllft..o;!:~'::::::::::::;::""~~ ......... !!=!;!!-!!~~~-~'!!;~~'!!RL~l~l7=7~ ...... ..:~-·._~ .. ..;;.~·~,;;,.~:.:,.~;;J;,;.;;~~,;;_...;,.;;.~~~~~~~~:.;,.~~~~~_.;:-=i....,.'.,;;;.;.:,,~~·~'--~~-~--'~--.,....~~-~'~1~~:;.;·~~=·-:-;-~~~~P'P"~~~~~~l'Pll~~ ,:;: -·~ > " -.-,--"-1~ •• "---~~ ·-· .. ~--""" .-"4-J ~· • -' • • ... ·---, -'_ ... 11 .--~
-.. ~it au··11d It 011 ,_,,, H mmerlt c-..-t-~. -ERVIC, -D"'l-RECTDRY. ,Plumb 1t. •• P•tch lt .•• Plpe lt .•• Remoae•,lt... ,. ""'N ••• ••• '' ""' ··• '" -
1
-• Roof lt .•• L a.ndscilpe lt •.• Tlle lt •.• Trlm at-..Se~ll: •• , lt... m nt n ... WJr ll..,J.tQO lt,, .. Clun lt ••• Move .h. . ..Press it ... Pnlnt 1t. •• N1>ll lt ••• Plast&r lt ... Flx It ••• _ _ _ _ Haul it ... Add 1lt ••• Plant lt ... Alt~r It... Learn It. .• __..
•• -. 'I > .. ·-•c•I.,. c:.,etlilwlM c:Wwc .. c ~ -• ._ .. 1-1'n1 Ch z .tsenlcff th11tde_.. ,.._./P.,.... ,_......,,.. .. ,.... ... .... , ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................
1oJA. an l5iia•poo • macn cJ .. 11. C*D CA.II WEt:DINO·CL ANVPS Doyouhiat.otosboporu-e ~ma.rie'11 Houteclerui· PETER.SPAINTING When you'Nt lalklQll llOMESAVERS. Plumb-
TIUPCKARC.iEllO Colar brifJiH: .. -.;••: -Ill UHOOO •IP 11. w b' Jdalllte.nance you unable lo? U so call Ina. Xlnt work. refs, ad Expr'd. Reas Ratea. bout ha be ~atusa" all' ton·
'Maui. A C"pUJOmtnbl ah Cl an Wiekda:v. _ Frtont M.2·lt0'7 Paula.~'1'94 r-ates,ownlr&M.M.2·1403 !:~~ .. ~at. Ca.ll Gene ~ •• !:!'::'11t.~;;:llt dbr. u,l.-__Frt ~ ~ut·abAI~
MD •l Oltll h, d ,,., h•U Ill. Ava All hOort Oii wMktfldl ..,........... _.. "-""-"'• • •• " ------f7 OO b llO hi ~ Gvdenl.nt rvlcc: clea.n l'M YOUR HANDYMAN HOUSECLEANING u our daa Mlll'k auu top line Mt'Vfte. BolA. 11/C OK. MpAtlat nu •:UC :Jar an)' •ae. Call Ron, up• hauUa1, weekly R•ldeiitial/Coft\merciaJ Business. Reliable r-..Yom-Castle material, hltr Ii utr. m.JWO ••••••••••••••••••••••• g. u,:: r.: ~ apr: CMl·Ml n:aalDuoance. Heuon1t· Dallas 848-5888 service, J anice's Ra1· Averaae!xt.rlStry$'JM St.ate ~t:r Uc'd. Bon·•----------
1111&.S.JA Do work m,.111. Refa ltlltJKf• '!l~~.Jrco .. oa;;!~:i:· Gt-a••i cedyArul.latt7MSS3 2Story$:WS,lnlr"5rm ded/tnsr. Pleue cootad D~~:.so™
Uab111lU•I 10 )'our '1l OLOl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""....-•. .., u.a? • •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• Housecleaning by reliable Prtcealnclmat.r'l·labor Blue Dlamaoll Pa.ln&.tq. Call
lloll\t Ot"~ulonal C • A~ ll.J. lll.lfcoaa •Boft. On M$-0Sllors.I ·~ ploader dump truck couple References. Guar/lmrd,Freeat. 54t-03St '1M..-.Z __ -
da1* .. ,u J.4' UNI _ •• ~ ••• !:'••••••••••••••• Coatrt 1· CtaMoln Alb•U'A,dd. Pro( Japa_IMIM Landacap· hauUn1. t.feo wort, 1rad'. 983-SSUOrl·GM128 Ted631-'108S .......
I b .. " P • oa • c • D •~a• 1-.... " 1anSeM'n1 Malnt lt1I demo trtc '751-3930 -.. .... _._ m. ---'-·· • ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• \lf~n w1I auyal\ • ~y Aro111tlc1·Q~t forauca New conat Rea ....-. '*' n1' ml • • Bri&hten your home or PROFESSIONAL Patnl· ..--....-.... ra_._..,, M )'ft ROOFS Install f
{j luh ld,.n 11erM apnyH rellln11. re· " co~m. 4JU·•t44/ Incl ~w'!.~1.nm ~:~.._.'"ii bueineu. Call The lnc. lnter/Exter. Reu,i sen'1 Harbor aru. St dlnict· e.tatlt Jct~
i:.Ur..uaftG ~ pat,. Ou.er U r ta:allllll. Ml-4&41Lil'. Bonded :r,•~fm a.. ••••••••••••••••••n••• SunshtneGlrl.9.552-0245 worJtguarM2-0388 . ticllml.ret-.ec.use. Ca&l 'uaro(d Gu~n:
t:la1ld c re >' l1um" ""-•t.5>8·\IOO I OCC Student. Bii ~ T • WORKGUARANTEED FOSTER'S PAJNTJNG. stNl81
u lb Tl c • h • DryWllll And Acou1t c Reliable Expr Japanese tr""k Trub tree trim .M._. /Exlr .... _ _. Com 'l ·-n -1.1--U-I ---------... na • • 0 • ~ Sl U c 6J6.1'131or R b -• ' • Housekeeper exp u...,.,OI' · .... ee ....... ~ • n_....... BOOFSFORLF.SS lunc l'lu. ln<'d Yrd C-..t/C..Cret. '"IJ)·~ .... ;....9· Gardener. easona le, elc. Randy 6'2·5'103, Moo Fri afternoo~ ?.5yraexp.e@.0285 No Job too bil or~ AU f'---IJ --~· "' .,._.,,,.., · free est 8'5·5230Mlke. C-'9.....,.. • · • l ,. ...... lypea wau ava . "'~------••••••••••••••••••••••• • · "' '"""" 64&-'1336 YOUNG Man 5 es· ~a. · ... yrs expl'. "'u Free est. llc/laood'd, in~ c..,..... ON&MANC"!_w .. ~yrahJex· ~~-Ur!! ~~irtfd G1MrtllSenlcn CHEAPEST hauling in Housecleantni exp de· ln wallcoverlo~Fr:! ~;:.)le. l3'·et9s sr.Sen.lorcllheosdiscnl. • ._ .. ••••••••••••••••••• pr pounnt • ,.,.i. n.. ..__ · ••••••••••••••••••••••• town Fr ests ·CHEAP• d 'b • b esta 64S-8576 ,...,.., IN-OGlan)'Um.e Setyourownforms save Jac.._.,sca.1192. .u,.,..,.."'6 ...... Ca"""n'~ .,,.,...;...,0r64Si.a9o · pen able, t orou1 . · ·~ P-M-c._rpentry. llDY l ype, ' llAl~Ulml\.I~• •r-,..,, -~ • Refs 731•0352 -D-al.rs 1J 'd Ii l d Panel doors ~c Also money iel 2423 Sedrlcal electrical. plumbing & LA · PAINTING. lntr/Extr. ••••••··---•••••• • ..._ · c nsr · Com~I lie ~t Aft 5, CEMENT WORK All ....................... floors646-6851,847·2787 HAULING~ DOR Mala15r Expr'd, h'?neat, neat. Exper. dealeQer / Allt.ypes. rr.cst. Call
S4ll 2'1W ._,_... ., bl ·""" EI..EC'l'RJCAL SERVICE Ftee Eatimalel ••••••••••••••••••••••• Reas. Lie d. 984·1045 ---will help _,.,. &n1lime541-Sl30 Wall .... ...., n~UOI\¥ 4'. rree HANDYMAN 559--1581 Dave ..___ 1--
C-t S..-...ic. ~u Call7SCMJ62S CA.LLSS15hr,&Sr.tALL NOJOBTOOSMALL Brickwork. Small jobs.1---------b uild ybur p roject.•
•• ;'.'::••••••••••••••••• JOBS842~ 6?S-244o House<leaniftcj N~ Co.ta Mesa & ~r.mtt.g Ovetbe!_dl!1 cleclta. etc.-·-•-•••••••••••••• • U &c D Conerete. All ••••••••••••••••••••••• lrvtne.67S-3175eves. LOwestPrt Save$$\;&11~23SS irPD.AVICTILE. New or
ur-pet Man will lay youn phasel> concrete, block & ... b.-d Electric HANDYMAN-Homes & IMMACULATE CLEAN· Mo i.... : Houses/A ... ~ •-"--/9--&. remodel. Free est, sml or mine Repairs &-bnck work. Free ests. Uc327).J6 645-6974 Apts Conscientious ING y DESERVE lh v....., .,.., .---......-,-....-jobs I .536-2426 d~11rung too' Guur w_ork Llc'd & bonded 675·9120 Craft~mon. Ph 645-0302 . ou .Wt e ••••••••••••••••••••••• lntr/Exlr. -••••••••••••••••••••• aA we come. Jt b1i:i:er su v1ng:. tree ELECTRICIAN-priced -BEST. 759 Local & Long D1stonce •Work Guar. -Rera. VERY NEAT PATCH , __ s _______ _ ~•.MS 3&16 nght·free est.Im ate OD Odd Jobs. paanllng. in· HOUSECLEANING Svs. Moving. Lowest rotes, *Free Esls. 552-0575 JOBS&TEXTURE KttcbeQ, Bath. Entry.
-WOULDN'TYOU ':~r~:1la~~w~e~u~~~ ~georsma11Jo~730359 Ir 'extr . window nds women 10 work fast, emc1ent s~rvlc~. PAPER . PAINT. 20 yrs Fr-eeest. 893-1439 Patio. pools. Tile. rather ~sa1hng·• pluce an ad lo the Da•I>· washlna.Jerry64S-8197 P ume.TuesthruFri8-3. Free est. MaJes t1 c expr. Satisfaction guar. Patch Plaatertoa. all Quarry, Brick.~
::,ee class1flcauon 0060 Pi lot W1tnl Ads! CaJI now Find what you wanl an HAMDYM.AH 675-&SJ_ Modem Movers 639-8552 Save$. nowait838-3875 types. free eatJmat.es. ,_eves. _______ _
It c1m be a reality! 642-5678. Daily Pilot Classifleds. 6'5-23.13 Sell idle items 642-5678 Want Ad Help? 842·5678 Want Ads Call 642·5'78 540--6825 Want Ad Results M.2..s678
~!!.~~~ .... !~.~~ ~s. Tnist 5035 ~!.~.~ ...... !?~~ ~~! ......... !~.~~ ~~~~·::! ..... !!~~ ~~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~!1!'~ ..... ?!!~ ~!!~~ ..... ?!.~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~
4DELUXEOFC'S ••••••••••••••••••••••• E Spiritu.IReoder .AfPAY.A.ILECLERK D ll D l &
Oonf. rm .. seat 25. all LOANS 9% MJ~~~~ZER , found. 1815So. El Camino Real Must be exper'd In detail AS IER ~:c"Jc! w:rk:r~ ~to paneled. s m. whse In re 586--131!1 San Cleme.nle. Fully Ile. work. Typing a must. lite C ff llaJt. CallM.2-22.56.
dr. I or 2 yr. lease. Lake AJ50 2nd TD Loans l"or appt. 492-7296 phones. 833-3544 Call BOYS & GIRLS F/tlme for Retail Store .
1-'ores t area Kt•nl FOUND: Female Scottie, ---Jenny in Fashion Island. 9AM· Dehveryman for L.A. 1''a1re!>l Terms since 1949 S · d 1 SI --~ ,,._ M~ ..... Cost llarkm.... Sattter Mtn. Co. pnng a e1 aler area. Persoftol ServlcH 5360 .ARCHITECTURAL 6PM Moaday thru Fri· .. ....,. ro ....... .-u1 a
7t4·S8l 9393 7' HB. 842-8404 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .ARTIST After school and evt:ning work day Mesa area. No collect·
7()() r (. ? 642·2171 545-0611 O h I 1uy"'-.rTIG "TIOMS D 111 t t Earn ~$30 P""r w~k or mor"' . Apply ln Person i.na. Musl have depeoda· Approx ~q t ---f" UNO: W 1Le <'al. t " -"' eslgn, us ra or -v-.. .... .. blecar.546-4481.
\ C. al 130 K 17th St Rcllred couple has money brown spots. Eastblutrs Alllypes-Missing w111rchitectural back· Al Ease -~l01__!!1o Doyle 548 1168 to loan o~ 1~ 2nd TD's. ~8_:_ 644·5410or1>44-1166 persons. 826·9648. U hr:. ~:~?~n ~~~~~~~~· u:.~e~ Apply now by calling 646-2443 44 Fuhlon laland D~~ R~~Fr-'7-.ue'!~i
UJ-.:SK Spl.tte uva11. 17301 i\l!ent 4 F 0 UN D . Mal u r e Look years youoJ:er. reel markers. Sales offices. Newport Beach 1bias.9/2Zonly.96&-1461 ~eal'h Bhd 11 U WJ.o; H U Y t•IRST & chocolate Burmese, yearsyounger.Newnon· infonnattoncenters,dis-betwt:tn5:00and9:00p.m .
S75 mo Modern !>h11rp SJ::COND TRUST S1amese l3lbmale.Vu.' surgical C:tce hfL For pla ys. int eriors & MondaythrougbFriday. ~~
ufl1le IWll-0236 DEEDS. Harbor & Mernmuc appt cal1Ken,SS7·0198 slgnaae. Must be exper CHEF p t ti DesEacr/Elec toSlSOO -W CM C 11 S II " • er. me, ~~1M-bT-bto~•'JN\ B h AGENT 714-496·0800 ay. .. . a le a lal Cl·...._· 5400 556-3937 Newport n-a"h area ~ ~--""" ......., l1Jyv1cw ofc:.. Npl < 834-4946, 979.2529 Soc mn »'ID ... • todust1 Enar SlSOO
ups ta 1r:. udJotn 1n g P\rf PTY will pay more -••••••••••••••••••••••• .ASSEMBLERS Callfl30..31119aA6PM Office Mgr $1.SM+
Design showroom. Sl7S & for your 2nd T.D FoWld Blk k1l~e!1 w wht Sin.:te Adult.ll, 35·60 yrs. w .11 1 A 1 Help W..t.d 7100 Helip W•htd 7100 CHEFS f: to li Irvine PersonnelA&ency S2-l 0. 642 2210, eve:. 642-lS73 paws, chest. Fa1rv1ew & r•~rded messa"e e w1 rain. PP Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ty luncohrneawnd pdiqnuna ... r· 488E17thCostaMeaa 67S ~ p I . '1 3S48 ''"·"' " 7AM. MacGre~or Yachl BABYSITTER. for l "r .... -----CAS ll !-'OR MORT · auannoarea. Sl 636~ A.TH.Club Corp, 1631 Placentia old. my home, Co11ld •llKESTORE* bouee.Seafood&atealts. Suile~ 642-1470
1-ltdus..----tri-.-ol Rftttol 4500 GAGl::S & !ST T.D.'S. Last: ''Timmy" Lge Gold -Av ... C.M. Mesa. Tue & f'r1. 8·6PM, Assist. Manager for Send RMume: MKT4800 ~~~
•'••••••••••••••••••••• Call C7141962-6292. & white Tiger cat. Ila:. ATOUCHOFCLJ\SS! some eves & 'wknds. Schwinn d'ealer. Sal Campy• Dr . #1 N.8. DISHWASHER --
lrtd. Units W /ofc name lag fro m Pen Meet allructive & ID· .ASSEMBLERS 646-76M $10.400. Must have prior 92660. Apply in person. Mui·
l.S(M}4000sq.rt from l!f Announcements/ nsylvun1a on. B~loveU lt!llag~nt people. qwl·kl.) t\t F. -I ''rs min. cxper --blke mechanic exper .. in doon's Irish Pub. 202
fMMED OCCUPANCY Penonafs/ pet. Plea1ecallSS9·8383. &diM·reell~ at Mdnual de)(tcrity. Good llaby:.aller. 8 yr . old . ustorc.544·598'-CIVILEHGIMEIR NewportCtrDr,N.B.
1.-c&:slng ore open 9.5 dai Lost & foWtd _ . .-INTROVIEW752 S4ll \'1.:.1on mandatory. Good hou~eclean1ni: l,.cmalc Des igner-Calculator. ---------
', s · t 9 711 w •••••••••••••••••••••••Lost. L~e male lnsh Scl· benefib. Call Carul. stud t:nt to lh e 1n . IO.ATREP.AIRMEM Donald E. Slevens. Inc, DISHWASHERS t~th·s:11c.;;::?11 . Amoultcentettb SIOQ ter .. 9,17. Mesadel Mar ~ ment& 581·3830~.V.area 640-0291 --Must have waterfront 1828FullertonAve,C.M. Apply in per son .
642•4463 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _Re\\ard. 546-0836 _L...1_ ·---------•I 646-8915 "'~vro'" 1tn30 s Coast ... ,... ........ , ,. liAUYSITTEH. East boat exper. on wood · .,.... "' ""' •
Lost blk altered male cut. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ASSEMBLERS llluff area, 3 children 7·11 yachts to 8()'. Must be Clert&·ExMr'd _H_w_y;..._N_._e_. ____ _
IMO Sq .. ,l. S250 Mo. ::'Int * * * whl flea cir, vie Eslrl'lla Schools& For precision electro yrs old. 2:1S·S:15PM neat worker wtclear re-P i time. 4 Hrs/day. Dog Groomine Asst
loc. 782 W. 2~th St, C M & Camino Capistrano. lmtruction 7005 mechanical assembly of wkda)'s only. 640-4704 or cord. Blackle's Boat Personnel. o.,.,•s typing Trainee. FtUme, perm. Cell Jack Saunc.hirson. c-o1 T ....... -C.8. '196-1608 all L ' 845 ""IS y rd 673 ca•u ._.. Days 642.021 2. eve:. -........ ••••••••-••••••••••••• sm components c.X· __ ._,,.,._ a · • ........... 45 wpm. Start $3.917/hr. Jordan'• Pet Shop, 2724
S46-2Z77 709 Emerald Bay Found: Keys. Opal Ave. WANTED per. pref'd. Will train. B a k e r y . M 11 t u re IO.AT STOCK Apply, Laeuna Beach E. Coast Hwy, Cdll
--Laguna Beach Balboa Island. Call Days only. Saleslady, r,time. (;. M Unified School Dlstnct, 644-4000.
Oeluxe Office Sp.n·e on Youarethewmnerof 675-8362 Boys &glrlsages3·19for STACOSWITCHIMC bakery. Exper pref'd. ROOMMAH SSO Blumont, Laguna ---------
West 17th St.. Co~tu 4Tlck.+stothe -TVCommerclals FREI-: 1139BakerCostaMesa s.i8·30JL Weneedamature,relia-Bcacb.Be.foreSept.27th. DRAFTSPERSON \fesa USO sq fl or 700 :.q lnrlne HOIYHt Penonoh 5350 SEMINAR by famous at• 549.3041 ble man, ramillar w/boal ----------•Several required. Varied
tl ofc only kitf•ol ••••••••••••••• • •• • ••• • tor chre1.1or call 636-2870 Equal Oppor Employer Bakery :.ales clerk. I'' 1T hardware, who is looking COCKTAIL arcbitectural·cablnelry
IUGllT RF.Al.TY 1 E Dnnking problem" or 772-~l02 __ Pete's BJkery. 2S260 Lu for a perm. position. Xlnl WAITRISS e3~0_r._:..,,h~E.fu.I. Irvine 97!18533 l"ami Y ntertommeol Call Alcohol Helphne Pa:t Rd Laguna Hills t•o. l>ener.ts including Learn in 40 hrs lhc mosl ,,. OAIO-J<N•
Ocl.land2 2-lhrs ada)•835-~30 . FLUTELESSONS t\TTENDENT wanted. 58l7060 paid medical <employee t' I . ---------
Li....,t Mf1t°L-o Woodbndge m lr\'me l'ormer faculty membc..>r full time. form>· molh~r •· .d l"f exc1 iog. g amourous. D••vRaS T' -~-- ------0 b I C I I " --& dependents).,. pa1 t e lughly paid profe5". Day "' ~ 350-665 sq. t SJ.10 S250 <Cuher Or. al PREGNANT., er 1 n ° 1: It e 96"2 9Sl3 insur or eve sessions. Place.. Early AM, 3-6, delivery
Barranca l c -r de t 1 a I Consen·atory. relocated B 4 "'K p f B LA TIMES · c u $300 mo. Uul pd 6463357 anng con I n Npt Bch. Susan Fries ;\UTOMOTl"E "', • ac1 icya by ment assist. Good job op-• Bo.lub. ---------Please call 642-5678. Ext. counseling & referral " Kipper ac IJ. por. mo+. S45-0T10 _
tentats Wonted 4600 333. lo da1m your Abortion. udopl 1on & 640-5686 Key Auto lXPERIEHCED 928W.17thSl, C.M. Cal 714/751 9194
·•••••••••••••••••••••• ticket!. keepm11. -~hfTechnlclons CONSUMER LOAH • DRTVERS-3 routes open. I>· Oct 1. Permanent. APCARE 547 2563 DESI ION WORKSHOPS. ror new car prep' B~) IOOl<KUPER So. Cali · Cocktail AM & Pit, p/time. MusL
n:\lddle aged cpl. Xlnl • • • "I ow to survl\·c enJOY Che,·y service dept m 'ROCESSOR/ Full charae. part·tJme, 3 Wailresses, Inc .• 1'1922 have clean driving re·
refs. Smdll pct Nd l or LIMO.A& VICKI s e 1 ~ch\ in!:, h 0 mkl! rai;t.~rowing Oranl(c SECRET.ARY mornings wk to start, Sk~ Park Bl, Ste C, cord, neat appearance.
2tir . lower rlr apt or --OutcallMcns~ rurn s ngs' 8 pw · County airport complex mustbeaccurate&fast. lrvine,Ca!12'7lot. 19yrs&over.S48-0470 ll I S200 !163 1775 ATIORHEY AT LAW ..___....,_ £...-f It' M.~ss1on.s Instructor eg· UMlno I ~I' >.to _ rvr-rmr""' o · 11ie Collins. Author Put· to add expentinced 1ww Some typmg, ong term College or Sr. high, (2) Electron.le ASsembler
.OCAL Lady, consden· BANKRUPTCY $95 Serving all Orange Co. ting ll All Together. Call car prep leehnlciun:.. C.ALIFORHl.A IAHK oppty wiadvancements. persons for manual work 6 Months or more exper.
llllU!-> M.'l'kS 1 br house 835·7313 ror schedule 6-ID-67l4 SS.SO, hr. Excellent work· 831-1000 Fri & Sat this wk In CM. In soldering PC boards .
d I S2SO m cl DIVORCE $95 ---· in g con d It 1 on s in 630 A Newport Ctr Dr BOOKKEEPER $4.SO hr. Call Thurs only Musl know color code. nl:1:.':w3-3SGI ux. •n • •MICHELLE'S* Learn to ploy banjo! Blue pleasant surroundings Newi>ort Beach p It i me . Ca le ulat.or aft 3pm, '152·1830. and read schemaUcs.
---640..2507 Outcali Massa~e grass to jazz. Call Greg Opp. for advancement. touch. Restaurant exper. COMPETITIVE SWIM CLJMATRONINC.
luslness/lnvest / 10AM-2AM 731·4462 642·9006or~·4987 See s ervice Mg r. (7141644-6464 prtif'd. Qill 542-1488 for TEAM needs coach for l310CLoaanAve.C.M .
. Finance Lost & Fouftd 5300 F 0-R Jobi W.t.d, 7075 IDJOovWeA~DQCuhae1· 1vrS'!tl~. l. ·. appt. -age group swimmers. Ca!,~!o~~pt. .'~j;;;••••••••••••••• ;;;;;~·~:•y••;;~·e•r:•n•i:~~ 1A~~R~CIA~ ~POUSE ! ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ncwport"'Bcach. ,, An Equal ERaER Write SCAT, P . 0. Boie ____ .....,.._.,.. _____ _
,,. 27 Yr old female. folk Pruct1cel Nurse. P 1T. . Opportunity Employer IOOKIC IOr 2033. Capistrano Beach. Experienced main · Opporfuftttr 500~ fem. \'le. Ward & Ellis clasa.i'cal danner. never f!ers. Call 494·!Hl9 to Automotive. Par t-lime, A/P. hrs 9'.!624 or call (1)•92·'1356 tenan-man for large "-•••••••••••••••••••••• FV 962·8687 R~WARD! ·' " 9 30PM N 0 t I Sh d 9 30AM 2 OOPM N t ""' married, wants LO mecf : ew e ai op nee s : · : • 0 YP-eves. apt complex.. Xlnt salary
FOUND: lrtsh Setter pup· widower over 30. Write. u " 1 1. d , e k , help: Banking mg. Call Patti .a0 ,_ & benefits. 2511 W. Opport lo have a busl py. fem . Vic. Mesa M" K' Ml R K r .. en . a .> s e ing Top wages paid. Engme TELLER Mtttkere.kShop ~ """ Sunfi Sa taAna,
negs or your own 1n the Verde C . .M. S45-06l2 iss im 1 pa. wang perm. Wa1tre!lll job. Yrs Steamers eng painters 644--8860 Di c k Cb u r c h • 11 ower, n
fast growing we11lht con ' ~a ~fnKore·a0 Box e.x P; at Hilton Hotel. bufrers &0 poushers. up: Mar~rer:s Savin1g~i 1d~ Restaurant, 26 9 8 F.ACTOllY
trol lndustry Cont11cl FOUND. female Poodle ' ' C Cluh. Top Resh. holstery s hampooer:.. see ng a . qua 1 e BUSBOYS. for private Newport Blvd, Costa Trainees
licverly Weier . VITA l\J mix, grey w1wbt paws. EXOTIC GIRLS 5411392Sby10:30am check out. pick-up & de J Teller ror tts La&un.E Country Club, full or Mesa,548-4501 Work in an air condt·
LABORATORIES.INC Vic. Excels1orSchl.G.G. ~ Flit your graphic needs. livery.Apply at Beach ore. Min. 6 mo·~ P111me. xlnt benefits in uoned & carpel..ed area
l'RVlNE 751·917~ ~ 1388 Massage & ~odehng 20s9 Harbor Bl. CM Savings & Loan exper beautiful working gur· Coolts--lnollfost Wllh FM music. Making
---------•Fowld. Killen Tort shell. OutcaliM2-8169 ,S4J.3250 ~1~~~h. ~o~iu~~I~~· 645--1030 ~~im~:p~c;~~k !::,'.'::~ roundings.496-578'7 Exper'd. Apply In small parts under a
0 I' 11 S RELAXING MASSAGE LO "UTO •TRUCK Sa•~. Xlnt •alary, work•] person, Ma Barker's. 212 m1crosrope. 1st or 2Dd '~1' wanted 011 p•...._ · c ea n -. I • • an "' • ~ a IUSIOY E.17lh St ,.._,* M••A duel, lndU1lry & rel~ii Clemente. 496·4286 Bob James.Uc ~a;;seur TUNE-UP MECHAHIC mg conds & benelils. m~ '"""'... ~... lhifl.. Top pay + com· OutcaU 9-9, ot91-5111 Housecleaning. weekly. clud. dental. Mi Casa, 1~ Ma.in St. COOKS BARTENDERS pany beneifila. =\~a.!:r~. ~e~~~~-FOUND·. Aust. Shep:· Good work. Good recs. Night work. Smog lie re-Please Call &lboa. Apply daily, 11 DRTVERS. P/time. Over Gal.au Co.
768 , .. n. male. Vic. Edward s •SHARON'S• Exper 642-2556 q'd. Paid bol & vacs Personnelatmamofc. ttl5PM.67S-9600 21vrc.Jmmed ...... nJn ... 1701 E. Cameale Ave . .,....,... S.'16-3706 Betwn 9-5. 1 • ~ -...-.... S A Cinema. Harbor & OU'n:Al..LMASSAGE Eltdronlcassemblywork t'114)642·4000 CAllMETMAIEtl Apply in penon, Me 'n • •
.tore !women's clolhmti> Adams. C~1. 548-661' 838-6838 being tallen now in .AUTO & TRUCK For appoinlmtnt Several required. Must Eda Pina, 410 E. l'1tb St, 540-4080 ~Balboa lalend m.a10 FOUND : MalclriahSet·BEAUTlFUL NUDE bomeshop . Some MECH.AMIC Equal<>ppEmployer beexper.16781Mllllken C.M. FACTORYWOUHS ~t Wif 0~ ~houtln,en ler. Mesa del ~ar, CM . GIRLS. 625 N Euclid. ipeclallzed tooU.ng avail. 5 Yrs exper, own hand Ave. Irvine. SS6-893'I Manufacturing plant 10.2'·-~7-274 -979-7799 lo identify Anaheim 1 Quick & dependable. lnq tools. Day & night open-CAFETERIA. HELP c Os M g TO LOG Y needs factory help. Call
'l\VHt....t 559-6150/535-5363 962·1759· inga. betwn9·5.~·3'706 Bankln& ln:structor needed for forlnlo.646-824.f. Opportunay 5015 FOUND: Young Boxer. Typl.01-my home-20 yrs TIUIR 8AM·4:30PM. 6 Days. new schl. in Dana Pl.
••••••••••••••••••••••• vie Beach & Ellis. H.B. Dl.A.L-.A.·SIRVICE exper. Pref. larae mall· Auto & Truck P /time. Branch otflce Good benefits. Call Ray. Also needed, teacher FACTORY ltEP.
r you're not geltln• ldenUCy968-S5l6,84i·6M3 ESCORTS. MODELS Ing. 'letter dubbing, ad· Uotbe54trYiceMan seeks bondable teller t• ~1..c7oo. exl 2448 for ap· •-•--c 11 11~ M Sharp, attractive ::lrl to " MASS .. GE ' " potntment. ......_...,.,. a co "'"~: r. t t c 13.8%•retumonyourln· FOUND: 3 mo. old male ~16 dreaslng> Labels. etc. Nlf'hts. $3.75 per hr to workp1Ume.Ex~r.~re Scavo213-Sl87·7~or l\fr. represen au o sunroo
vestment, call Sandy dog, Salt & pepper cir Aakfor exl.25 67~ start.556·3706.9·5. f'd. Coat.act Hi da ..ir~r· CASHIER ldeneroZla.443-l~ ~mu!:i~yn.yCa~1:,.~-~·
Ross, Ajax Co. 83'1·37ot4 Ma1nolla Adams H.B. . ......._ W--"--~ 7 l 00 "UTO W"SH H•• • . ranove at ('114) 644.7_., Women's Wear, exper'd. 1--------.. ...,.. ""Y »Averaac yield oo poy· 1168-""l• u . bl R~.... 1 f .-_.,,. --"' "' ...__ Wffht'll for appt. btf'I to l\Jax lnveators -,..,. .. C· ... -...v past 10 ••••••••••••••••••••••• F/tlme.Over18 ll!.....1....-.-150.,&..-Fltlme.Lanz,&4444lL OOSMETICCltk forH.B.1------------th • analyaeJ W/counHllna SLocaUons ...._....._ -r ..._ __ P/Tl IX" FLOOR WAXJ!:R, f/Ume. Ju. r u July, 197'1, F 0 UN D · F • m • • by met.aph)'tlcalBev w/ .._. .... OC"RW"SH 2'144E.CoastHwy Cashiers. mornings =:::::..-,.:; ..... '!'1e~ ... r eicpreq'd. 5'0.7811,1'1182
•• ~~~~ :;~l~sc~f::= ;:~:~.':J. Vi!~Efil! PhD.8Sl.-., • • Acct'i'aeroRAl~kPftl 78'00eea;bs1.ff.s. °'£0't1~11~ar :e!t~;a1!~';~~;~ ·=~:;~~~::P' ArmstrooiAve,lrv.
:oqulvalent to IJO'!rt o~ e & Brookbunt, FV. •KAI.INS* Rtallttr Today to wo:rll Shoes. call Rlclr or Jim 17, capt. Mlke't Fiab,_ ______ _
.moplhs unearned 10 -.SOlO. OUTCA.LLM.ASSAGE oovar1ousaccounUncfi AYON ~11 -.•JSW.J.IUl&,CM GeneralOffice ttttat on the balanco. p 'bookkeepln1 aulan• Barber 1lyll1t, Hunt· ~·1 HOUSIWIYU
MO(l1a1e Brokers. Ot LOST: f'eDlate • m o. 8PM·2 M 913.oeN ment1, Work eloa• to In 1 ton B c b , I u 11 CASHIER OOUNTER Help. ~ 4'
ftted to CllllComJa real Oocbr8panlel:,b"1t,C'-!: 'Entinott 4.1, S'tO". no. your home. Fl1ure HllODTRACASH? time/part tJme, male or F/t.lme, sharp, ar:owtb moroinf. MeDooa&da FaUuSt!!l~~l)lit
&alaoo.ly. !~aWweRrsD.to u!..ul y lneft alJacert 1al 30-40. Clerkl tn Sr. ACCOUft· .,.~-'-p ah ......__. .. _ .. _ femaJe.536-9131. co. S Loe. Over 20, we R.taurant. 3141 Harbot be 1., tt' ,_
U:.:...... to• --50-.5 ....... A 897-·. P.O.Box 11"8. G.G. WotO tanl& needed thruoul ._nun <-.a• train. Blvd. ru. W.""""• aak ~1 ear., a luue lO ·-r -.-• ------:=----~-! .n...•-eo are neidble •hen you're BAROIRL Over 21. no C 1 W SH ..,.,. -start ~101 ec>IM utra ... -••••••••••••••O•• LOST: German Shortbatr -··----ru . Half' an AVON' rc1>1'ctcn· exv nee. M~low tavern METRO A 'A for Sue .cub for CHRISTMAS. 1'j .. 2*11tWT.D~ ' Poioter> F' malo, btn lbert ' lflU\>e. Call 54().'1041 or bylbebcb.Ul-3300Rlclt 2950Harbor 81.c.M. Coun&.erbelp.itc0ou.Dai 1\me/WeUtnri•bH
t ,:_ ·• 1 w t wbtu on chut. • * * ~ AcCOW>lempa ~h'1·1"9. -Ola fbaett •_.of the
""ANS AVAILABLE l "Brown" Call 141•t20S ~S Nalft,St.SOl BART.EN.DER, part Ume • ...__ .. ,..:.,. ... amn. OQJy. TGood ~!"o rDOI& prci(itabM p/tioic CteditDOtllD~ftt. ,_b e t1"Uft I Ii fpm. c:.ot........ , No Tower,UGk>nBanlt . Sonii expar. Apply an ~...._.~, " App7 Del aco, lr• Joba Hall. W• ot(tt 3 .......... 4tJ.llOJ ,,Reert! . 2''13at:oidova C JnTMCtty ot<>ran1 8ab~1a.te.r 6 da11 wk. l e _e_ r a o a . I> er b 1 f..&.:A ,....._ ~Ave.CK. 'ablft.t per (fl)' to flt lnto
·-· ·--T;tlet ·· i , _._.t Ab .-..M. ., DU• Nat. ~1 ' ' z.14~1°l , Oii , fli'J. u moa. N.B. Rataur.m.. 1282 s. E. Glll9n ~ l1~ ~' lll·l&it ' .,., ~aelitdlll•. a bue ·•t"'lf: ... ~. IOJ· ...... : )' ... JUatl awn Youu.U.~iDMJ'ot area.~. Brtatol.~Mett _, m 'l . ~-:...,~I wap .... COJn•
;11 'eolorwl auetere4 mat. .. ~......... aa..:.;. '~ ~...._ -... _ ........ c"•&Ma ~"t 1 7ft-•••••••••••••··~ ca&. "an.Jl" oo name ~ • ,_ -~,, '' 1 ACCOUNTINO "' BabyalUer. ebUep itrl. .,. _.,_,,.. •.--,.._ • -~ -' • ~ • u xlJl1 boo.ua
c.11. propert7. •10,eoo taf.; T»lHT or 14WOOO, , ...,.... .... _ ;;d ~ ,'1 ... =9:,~~!.!!}!! ot1 Overnl(hl " some IAIT84DMS 30 "° 40 Hn pe~ week• ti"; (!IA!lam$ ::.J.'.,•'· P/\I~• 1•
ft : J 1ear halloo11. eu71S , Pii9htll :i n:;-'iw'Ci':n;;~ ..... wknd.•. Good salary. Eirpr'd. p1llme. Apply ;'~Dtwa:~~:i::.: ~ 1'JRGO~THlt
..... ~1_.,-, J ' • r~ -~ ,;f'~~l•mtnt ·~t Mutlhavertts.~2 WWtOary. MIUlon Vt.Jo I &wlent ...-.... 'Pait u.... •'NDiDP and ROr........-u' __ },,.-LOST:.L1. rlaa. 1old !"-".Oc:t.hnd2 -,. Ah'JOn At9a Med* X•n C.C.831·1llO ,< -· Ap~(;:~~~· 1Sat.,..t1' ll\au1lu THlSJOBlS7oR YOU! -__.,., l~Ya.D w11m.;MoQe~nc;,JMt -'Woodt>nde9•nt"lot •tMtlcal t1ptat Can &.le 8A8"'1'1".1'J:R a children _"'.rn • • ....... "'..,, JWdtr .. •l*'M.Maell· . ,a 2*l T,D, Mhlnc! t /l./77. VI~. Holldar,-~Dr •l 1'~1 tora_. pa_, ,1_11 ~ aft 9thl. 2~30 to8:JOP~, 8!AC!l'Y·Rt1Cept. fM El ii IYAM ~llilbMriPll*~to-CAU.USNOWAT
11-0,000. nn &outll H •a Ith 8 P Ill, C • ~ ~•) A it M 1 DI a\,., t 1 v • Man thru ~· Wutc~1« Tcwualon. MWit be ov,er P-~MS ... d_OQr ..... ,... Hn °" IJNOtl
i una Ot"Hn'llew I'~~ Jt.-al'Cll 14'f.m1 t) PlillMe Cl&)MNISJI. ltxt.1:·s.c~· Sia t. \)'.,.Ill ~ 1l:: :i·p~eq d . 2l Salon txpet. prcrd. 41 Ftzltlutw.d-l_a rte tlallon wafon. n:i..:tJ
11ce, In ••crow tu Loal~ liW• bJH-~. 133, lo claim 10"!' ;• r, q • d .' r 1 L'"' e . .. a ._: ~ .:' -·-137-C74S. " .-~~ i: <AcroulromTbO , eontacs ao&ucl Pnm.y .... ualOpp~mptyt .. ,,_
or •t ..-r.ooo. AU Cock•poo "lll•vr-•e ·• lickGU 1 1' OIOO·ll0,400 Yr. 8ab~lltln1. m1 bome, , Broadway~ •t Ult Dell1 "'0!1 • W. -. "':s~· DtHoat.a \'lo, ltlla • Wlaltller. 11 Oa"-tr-LNuuROP •• JOtoS:IO,Mca·P'c'l.NP4 BEAUTY OPERATOR d
1
' Op.iaM06day.Tb\tnd.a11.8aJ sa;~ ·--~~~.~~~-~-~~---m.an .1:.fi/s••v.m, c.M. IQ.al ~ °" • • • 1 .w Mi• ,,,...-.-..c tiilPI\' tJV, Aft tpm. call S\AU. for nnt.. 11 -_, • f\"lday ~veal•P .• .Pboot ~1 ror •'!:' a... ~ to Mil ?
--Of . I-~. r ua.tm~~ t I ''t .... ,, ~' ........ ~ • ....,._, ,,.--' IWr'l1Mr••>'·~lT1 -pOiotllM!M. '' • Qa9W••lln&I.
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• .w.w.-. '" HifpW-'"I 7100 ...-w..... 11001..._.w .... d 1•00 ....,W .... tl 7100, ... W•hd 7100 ThU!!day,S!pte(Tlber22.1tn, DAILY PILOT D7 .kr .......................................... ·•••··················· ....................... ·········~····· .. •••••• ·••i................... . , .--._, ·. ~i ~~~MefltW..W 11:: ........ I IOOS 0Adf. I ... , •--..i OlflCI l.4'1•1 , \try. ali.ry 1~ ••••••••••••-••••-• -··••••••••••••••••••••••-••••••••••--·•~
ll , ua,., 1 l IMt nimm rwur•l• w lh e11p PRODUCTION , 'i2i1.·i'(1 c.-...~ TO.'OUI CUSTou-~"·*~-... ~-.,,,.~. ..-... ~. , , • ' l!illl7. Jo;1111>h1)tr pal~ aeel _. ... , •S.erttarlea. Clorkt, ~ l~tt. W~ ,. -Typt.t•, iwlt.ebboard ~ " ~· m Oirt w,.,~eo~Jl~ ,.,,!;!'l.~~~~t.~t:RX TYPISJ fOQD PREP PERSON =:o:•· ln>modlat~ ou:·~~~= :' ._ ... ,.,., IM(GQOW ,...,. u.:...... Tlmes1versTe.mpor11ry
Nl11bu ~.mr . IBM Sll£CTRIC n G:c. s::.~ = Service W.1'165 Oriental Planters CJ I, YJUD,\ a.n.w • c n:1;•• uoa ~-.11.. Ml ror
4&jllll. Mesa UJlhlillllJ
Gii.LS MllDaD s·-·m.t'Wlfti del r. o., • .-.,
• ht ChlT Ow a tr&Ot.
oqr P"' hr-. CaJl a.un-~. p 5-tl}~
GOLF RA C R·Part·
lime, vtf b<t1u:J1t11 •n
ctudedJGl ~
WMCH c:~ Exs><;rlencoo MCCuratu Typist n*'~~d orL TACO EcJg Pots. Etc r.4rr1,........ lmmoolaU!ly, 70 wpm Cmwtt> ' 51!CYS &G/O OVB 3600 POTS AYAIA AILE
l'mlOll •111...i to w<>l'k Part t.ime or full limo JWZ &.. NI ltd. ...,.. ... * to $13,000 S... hlow C..t
•l luuch tounltr pttp•r· Ex«:Ut:nt Worklna Condltloog ~----~All F-s •.A. .... aa~ ~ .._.._ ~. u.u.lwlthn • 11l•d• .., ....... • '"'# ""' _.,_ill rt"c -•'"" •...-Som• itrUI work 10 Apply in P~rson ~~~ RclnderaA1ency JIJ4Mewpcwt •Yd.. c:..te Mne
cludN Uniform 1111'11 OrClllae Coast Dally Piiot ~--4020BltchSt.ste10& Pll: 6·4Z·U0l ~ ti=r~~~~'riito~. -lJO fv..t lay St., Coat• Mno ~~~ ..... ~!~1~~~ ..... !!~~ •• ~.c.•l_fOC'_:e.f>:.•ch•'elta-833-8•b•'•~•90•t~!!!!~!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
btt•n lb~ Carrouael ., A~k !or Paul Ward I n •• , • ' HefpW..t.d 7100 Appl-.cet 1010
Hullotk.f, ~er level tn An Equal Opportunity Employ~r RETAIL SALES Secy w/bookeep1n1 exp. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sn Coalll Pina Rboppma& P tr, a dya wk, 8-5. Irvine
\X>OD PAV lord'epcttd•· Cent~r. CM. Apply a1 Raneb Farmer's Mkt, T~R&lM• WA.SHEl.JORYIR .
Mt hM'd wortu.n1 )'oung V1turnanCountu Sales positions in yard. paint, 838-2851 Mu1t have exper and SUPER DELUXE Mdl.
ma1u.1dltnx-k "'6-!16H7 __ ------~....,W_,ecl 7IOOHelpW..tecl ' 7100 own toois. xlnt workulg Multi cycle, like new •
..._·-aYCL.;., U::!.1-l•tl' ....... -> •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• hardware, plumbing' & electrtcal. ServiceSta.NlghtAtt.end conditions. Pay & perr cond. s125 ea. -""'--" --· ...,... garden & pan~ling dept's. Expanding 2 Or 5 nltes aw~. Apply, benefits. 549.zs31 or SU-5748 l·U Store. upm.7am 3 Waotedlmmt!d.2Yncic OFFtCECLERK ,..ocfucffonAubt. C k F /T I ' l F/C Sbell,17th&Irvute,NB S.S.2288 --------. "''r Owo ....... •~ J\ I z lo ""'·II I XI E 'd . d i o. see s sa espeop ti, 0 • . DISHWASHER Nearl" . Nl1h~ wknd 12 »~ 15 ""' · .. ,.,.. • •· · r., t me. nt typing xper an pro uct on b fl Xl t d t s J pihr 675 Paulu1no, duat.rlea, Day11 979-0233, 11k1ll11 +do ttllng & ap~clng '(mark·UP) ol en e ts. D a vancemen OP· Service tat!on AU.en· TRAVEL TRAINEE for new. Wasteking. h
T51-4652 Ewa. 67~ __ . ----1 telephone 11na. Nr O.C. manuscripts for typeset portwliti(:S. Apply at dant, ex per d. Day & Tr ave I Ai e nc Y in price. SH5. El.EC. Oven,
M •CHl .... IST Airport 751-4760 ling & page layout. Xlnt Eves. Full & P/tlme. Ap-Fashion Island, NB. Non Tappan btto. 'i:t price GUARDS A " -proofreadiog ablllly re· 19 l 22 Brookhurst Sfrfft. H.I. filY: Shell Station, 11th & smoker, typlng req'd. We $140. 640-7317
Uruversal is expandlll(( Job shop exper. Mill ORDER q'd. $750 to start. Educa· rvme, NB. will train in travel. Full
its operations w Orange machinist. short run, PROCESSIMG CLERK llonal Publishing C?· in NATIONAL LUMBER & SUPPLY Service Sta. Attendant, benefits. 640·61ll or WA.SHER DIYER C'ounty &needs 40 part & commercial work, 5 day, Bu.sy ofc & phones. Use C.M . Call Caroh oe, exper'd. Full or p/llme. 955-2222anytime. Finest all cycle delUK&
full time i.ecurlty of· SO br wk. Paid varat1ons calculator, type, follow· 751-2113. _ Apply Arco Slatton. 17th TRUCK DllVER ~~c~e~~~iOC\ ~:.rs~:;,m.;:g~s~~·~~~ ~ur~~~:.ays, group In· ~~~.F~~~i~~b~~~rf;~v~r~; P1l1meh1el~wanted,over HefpW•hcl 7100 H.lpW-.hd 7100 .&l~e,C.M. Ute truck driving, gd.•---------
""' personnel. Car & CAPl'fALMACHINES, ' I 1 18. App y m person, 693 •••••••••••••• ......... •••••••••••••••••••••••Service Sta. Attendant. opp.foryng.,aggressiveWhlrlpool uprl&ht ,,.. 164.2 E. Edinger, S.A. <Jomp eic area. App Y in S. Coast Hwy, Laguna Eves & wlcuds. Neat ap· man w /knowledge of Freezer, 15 cu ft, whJl~. phone req 21 & over. person, 1.M .S .. 2913 Be h xlnt cood. ~"" c.to -Veterans & rctlrce11 __ 541·2652 ___ DalmlerSt,SantaAna. _ac ·-__ I RETA.IL SAW pear.&h&Jldwritingonly Org. & L.A. Counties. ..,._......, . .....,..
welcome. Urulorm!I furn. MACHINIST --Q..alltyAaswonce Part. Ume, S·9pm, Mon· needapply.2500Newport Must~ neat. ref's nee. Refrigerator, for sale Tlm~&Yiforovcr8hrs PART·TIMEHELP CLERKS Fri, perfect for College Blvd,CM apply 111 person btwn veryclean S50
Apply lpm-Spm Mon-Fn. Min. 7 yrs exp, large Days & Nighl openings. Inspectors " Student, no pressure SERVICE Stat1·on needs 8AM & HAM, USA Cast· ~ Uftinrsal ProtecHon vanety of work. Top pay Apply In Person aft 2pm M1 I". Good visual & al ta t t ing Corp 965 W 18th•---------w12 wks vacation. M·F. McOonalds, :Jinos. manual dexterity. Elec-UTOTEM s· es or quo s 0 mee · manfrom4tol0ea day CM.642-7812 · ' FREEZERCHEST
_1_2_2_6_W_._s_"'_S_t._S_._A_.-1 S48·7784 Bristol St, S.A. In front or tronics background. 6 Convenience Markets 531.alll & 9 to s on Sun: 383 E. 20" 34W' ins"d •
HOSPITAL
CUSTODIAN
lmmed. open1J1g for lead
pos1l1on 3·11:30 shift.
Prior supervisory Ile
acute care Cacihly exper.
nee. Apply In person &
ask for Mrs. Coco, San
Clemente Gen'I Hoi.p. 654
Camino de los Mares.
Treasury. Yr s min. exper. Call 17thSt.,CM TYPESETTER , ex· x 1 e. 1--------• u c.u -------Carol, 581-3830. Xlnt Positions open lsl, 2nd Ile SA.LES-RETA.IL . . . perienced IBM system gis. 64S-S484-.
MACHINE ---------1 benefits. M.V. area. Jrd sh i {ts in San Office supplies & print· Servi~station, a~dant composer /CompSe t AMctiOft 1015
OPERATOR PAYROLLCLERK Clemente & Laguna Ing. !''/time pos. avail. F/t1me or P /.t1':11 e, 500/504. 8 to s. SS. hr.•••••••••••••••••• ... •••
Small precision switch Estab'I Orange Co. l:leach. Other areas have Phone for ai.ppt. SS'7·9212 Chevron, 3000 Fairv1ew,l~642-~1S52~~f~or~a~p~p~l:..· ___ t ...... ----... 111111119
components. Operate manu!. seeks e><pe r'd Real Estate Salesperson ope~gs alt°. No experf. ask for Mr. West . _c_M_. --------sT PUBl.JC t\JRNlTURE
variety of machines in· EDP system payroll 1000/oCOMMISSION :-:stor~.PY at any o Newportstatloners,lnc. Serv.StaHelpneededim· ',...,
clud . turret lathe, verti· clerk for work force of We fu r n ish desk-ed Full /t A pJ P/time. Must be ra:.-t & *A1111'TION* I ·11 h ~ & oo 1 K b telephone-secretary & 2588Newport Blvd •SALES• m · or P · P -~ accutate. Exper'd on "" ~~ll~r~~/~~rt~~~'\1~0. ~lK'e;1l1~(c~p!~r!~·/ help. Costa Mesa 642-7702 Re tail sales person. :h. E. Cat Hwy, Nw ... Xerox 800 or will train. C Ft-ldcry7:30PM
duct1on, small shop, days STACOSWITCH IMC LA CASA RLTY jewelry & gift wear. App· ---------Diversified work. Flex Dealers Welco.el
only. 1139 Baker CostaMesa -195-1870 eve:831·0737 R.N. ALCOHOL, Med & ly al R.M. ABRAHMS, S.WillgModtOpn hrs. Reply to Classified Repo.Consignment.s
-ST AC OS WITCH INC. 549.3041 Psych evals., triage. re· 1819 Newport Blvd, C.M. Can make up to $6/hr. ad no. 61, c/o Daily Pilot , NCR Cash Register
HOSTESS/Recpt. t1398akerCostaMesa EqualOpporEmployer RE/\LESTATE fer for RX. admin an·1--------•I Exper'd. Piece work. PO Box lSSO, Costa $$$SA.VE$$$
San Clem.
f'ull time. Apply with 549·3041 tabuse, malnt. records. SALES 1580 Monrovia. NB _M_es_a_._c_a_9'£!:6 _____ 1 We honor BofA, MC.
Nancy, Mission V1e10 Equal Oppor Employer *SA.LES* Mui;t participate 1n ' _642_·_34_72 _______ ,TY PIST M ; 1-·, non Cashier's Checks & c.c. Ph831-15SO PBX Ans Sn Oprs Real Estate salespeople therapy. Split shfls, SLAP A SMILE sua-.... ~ s moker, 55 wpm, good CASH. No person~•
I ..• · g A 1 varying loc. $7.00 hr. 3 .......-..-'"-ad A e t op chec .. ~ PL""""'EI HOSTESS, morning shirt. mrnl>u. ope.nm s. pp y open your future. Let us Q pay. van~em n · """ """"" RI Doi h' • MAIDS " in person betwn 9am & help you into the busl-yrs RN exp req'd. • prior QN Y UR FACE Days. Some expel'. pre-portun1Ues. New AUantis MASTERS AUCTIOM .,.,cc V ueLd pNm Thelnn atLaguna 4pm Mon ·Fri. 155 ness-join a company alcoh<>lexp.pref'd.App· f'd.Rcsan,Jnc.,2901W. 697 Randolph, CM. 2075NewportBl.CM ,.....,., la 10, ewporl 2UN.Cst Hwy,Laguna Rochester St, Costa ly E.D.D. 558·4544 for &A BULGE CoaatHwy,NB.E.O.E. M(MJ791 c-1714'13'2 ·9625 Oeach. name 16 years m Orange directions. Ad paid for by ----------• ..-. -----------M A 1 N T E N A N c E Mes~_ _ _ County. Call Claire or cmplr. Shoe salesmen, full ti~e, VET nite attn. free studio or 1714t 646-8616
HOUSEKEEPER FOREMAN for residen PIX S Wu r r c n at RE AL _..:________ IN YOUR WALLET manager/traln.ee . .E_x· apt uti"I pd Must be ... ______ _.
u T r 5 · · · Answer er• L ...... l'1'TE by McVAY, peri ed 11 · ... uture. o care or yr tlal gardening. Must . . ~ ' SAIL MAKER enc or w1 traUl. ' Cd .. t 673 1050 ..._ .. old & newborn. Cleaning, have 2 yrs exp. Must be Want to work.days, after· (7 I 4) 842-937 I ~xper. req. Apply at 501 TIME/LJFE Standard Shoes call res~ " • · _.lclingMoteriah 8025
c•ooking. Clir req. Salary quality minded and able noons & eveninl(~ in N.B. ---------LIBRARIES Rick or Jim 540-56U 9-6P .. •••••••••••••••••••.••.
open. 4 duys week. no to lead men S675-S800. & COM area!>~ Work Real Estate Sales People 29lhSl. N.B.575·lS23 llasbothfull&part Waiters & bu.s boys want. BARNWOODPANEL'g
"knds. So. L1u1un11. l'h m o Ca 11 f or a p pl. f / time 0 r V ',lime · wanted. Up to 90'10'< SALES lime positions avail. Sitter needed to watch two ed. Private Club. Apply Large local selection.
l!IJ ll03evei;. 646.7411 Weekends a must. Xt_ro comm. split. Nwpt Bch SUPPLEMENT 4Funlovingarticulate c~lldren ages six and in person 4.sPM, see Beams,decking631·2460
--- --- -p a y f o r c x v c r d 5'&8·1!6l-l indi viduals who are eight ~fter school (2·5 Larry. The ConfeUi Fae· . .
HOUSEKEEPER.
Live 1n out. Spanish,
Polli.h. German speak
Ing OK. Care oC elderly
lady. Ne"porl Bch.
759-9588 -----
Housekeeper 1Cook, II ve·
in or ouL • .Engush speak·
ing. CdM . ti44·8772
• ~ves/w knds, 646 .. 163!:1
wkdys.
MHinlcnanc;e mechunic. operators. Call 6-IO·X:..:!ll ------------YOUR INCOME eager to learn how to PM I ID their home. tory 2.386lE1ToroRd ~Pieces 2x6 T&G V·JoinL
exper restaurant relat· KO.E SSS$ SSS$ Make Top$$$$$$$ Prefer high school girl ' · dear Douglas fir deck·
c d c quip Ba s 1 l' ------REAL ESTATE PA.RT TIME We Offw: living in vicinity of 22nd WAITRESS. part time. ing, no. 1 select. 16"
knowledge of t•led. P.B.X HUNTINGTON HONE HowtySdcry street and Newport Some exper . Apply in lengths. AH or part.
plumbing, & carpentry, 1''ascmating, not boring TELEP WORK Gusn. ConaluionJ Blvd., CM. $20.00 per p e r s o n • D e r b y Below cost. 548-4984
Apply in pert.on. 2601 work . Res ponsible, BEA.CH HOUSEWIVES lnc.tiftlows week. Please phone Restaurant. 1262 S. E.C-
1
Ir
Daimler.S/\546-0348 mature person. ~ves. Office manager in Hunt· COUEGESTUDEHTS 631·3149afterSPM. Bristol. Costa Mesa. s-1!'!... 1030 early afternoon & morn-Guaranteed Hour ly CALL US JOOAY ....,......_ ... Ml\NAGERS mgs. P1llme. Name your ington Beach i~ looking Wage Plus Bonus. 5:30 SOUS-CHEF WAITRESSES _18 yrs. or ••••••••••••••••••••••• &~SISTANTS own shift. 892.1212 for exper'd. salcspeovle pm to 8 :JO pm. Call over. Apply Ul person lPolaroldSX·70,chrome&
Now hmng, CONTEM · E.O.E. lhatwanttoearns:>0.000 64ti4Z2.3orcometo~E. ANDSTARJ with extensive btwn llAM & lPM lealherbodyw/case. • PO CASUALS tJr. -----ayearormore.ll'anof. knowledgeinallphases Stubenvillc We:.t, 2900 Sl50. 557-8658
Women's r eta il). Must PBX OPERATOR ler you 24 other So. Cahf. _l_?th St..£o_s_la_M_esa_. _ SMIUN • of French continental Newport Bl., NB. Housetc • .,.r Wanted be enthusiastic & have Exper only, moture, de· locations, nationwide re-cuisine essential. Am· Beseler 2SC enlaraer
556-2982orSS7·31!70 some retail exp. Call for pendablc, able to follow fcrral coverage, xlnt. ad· SA.LESCLERK BlJ DQSS brosia, Rm 211, SOS 30th WRDER w/1.4 tense & filters.
appl, 714.754.9105 instructions. Various ,·ertising program . l''ull·lime. Days -u st,N.B. MacGregor Yacht Corp. Hardly used. $125. Eves
HOUSEKEEPER hours. Wknd~ & holidays bonus pay program to ENGRAVER TIMr/UFE 1631 Placentia c M 673-3385 ·Npt Sch. MATURE W 0 MAN J ~··t,. Expanding ro with Experience Preferred 5 Sp RAY PA INTER ' . . .
L1ve·m, must h11ve car. p 1t1me to welcome incld. Please aoply '" management opportuni· WillTram. UIRARIES,INC. Helper, 18 yrs or older, Weneed25peoplewho are~ati IOJS
room, board, :.alary. newcomers & contact person, btwn SAM..CPM. ty. Managerpaidonopcn Applyweekdays 9·5:30, EqualOppEmplyrm/f musthavccar. 768-8749 at least 10 lbs over-•••••••••••••••••••••••
751-7125 days, li45·<1628 merchanl&. f1exiblehrs. l\lon-l''ri. 657 W. t9th St. escrows lmmed. open· NoackTroph y& wei g hl. Newport &Himalayan Kittens,
l!!VCs iwknds. Need car. lite typinti. CM.Stell. _ ingll. Jo'orconfidential in· Engraving, 102 E. 16th. SfainedGlass. Irvine areas. Call Mrs. CS.A. Ricadoro llne.
-547-309.'i. 1---------terview call KEN atSuperior,C.M. SECRETARY Person familiar w/all Weir, 751-9175. We can Studservice540·1760 HOUSEKEEPER -------p HACKWORTH Jmmed opening avail. ~. Hrly or pc work. tell you bow to lose . .
Nl?<'dcd immt'd. li!·S::io. •MEDICAL IX ~-9832 968-3301 ---------1 for dept secy in lntem·1 675-3175eves pounds & earn money at Adora~le luttens, nice
non-smkr. S200 pt'r mo. RECWTIOHIST RECEnlOHIST --------· SALES hdqtrs, Joe in Tustin. Znd . the same time. selection. Good breed· __ 646-8_65!____ busy Dr·s need resPon. language pref'd, but not Stationery Store l n ing, Angora background.
llOUSEK EEP~R. prefer energetic. person Immediate opening for a For fiM Jewtflry req'd. Type 70wpm, SH eor::•.«f:! r.~ ~~~· ' O{'~ / ~. 979-8978
h\'e·in . Workrng cpl & w1frontofcexper.40H~ R eceptionist PBX RECEPTIONIST Commission Sales. Part· 80. min 3 yni exp. Gd per 5 -., • • e ~ PERSIAN kittens, top bChl.boy.S daywk,own wk , benefits. Call Operator.Mustha\'etyp time. Outstanding co. startsal.ContadMurlne Sdays,xlntworki.ngcon· quality, registered.
& TV N k w 646 3903 lng skills or 50 wpm and 6 GEN'L QfACE benefits. Denis at832-211L ds, e$peclally rme cllen· 638-rm. . on sm r. . ~-· __ .:_ __ ---months r ecent work ex· JC PENNEY CO. A.Ml International tele. 675--1010 WESTERN PAC1FIC __ 9308 _____ _
l!_B. 5~~1 --~ --Medical sec'y. Must have perience preferably as a Why be tied in knots to a 24 Fashion Island E.O.E. M/F. STUDENTS, Will train to PERSOINEL SERVICES 1 Sensational kitten I Free.
If 0 USE KE £ f' ER . ~ns. exp. Wilting to work receptionist. Will add permanent job. Tctn· work ln ptua restaurant.. 20902 Brookburst 8 wks, M, box trained.
Mature. night shill 11·7 1 n . a . h. u s Y 0 r c clerical support to poraryworkoffersvarie· Newport leach 1---------1 Apply, Original Pizza, Ste207,Huntingt.onBcb AfterSPM.495-S7'90 " 1n i;ucst home, CM w;~ivensf.iedri~tles.Hrs personnel.We canoffer ly&spice.opportunity& EqualOpPol'Employer Secretary. Newport 2121BalboaBlvd,N.B. (714),..."'ft•A~ "--1,..0 ~--07_1_6__ __ ~~~fon·Fri , Call an excellent starting exper.CallToday" Beach consulting firm betwnMpzn. ~ :::?: .............. :-4.
saJarywith liberalfrln11e S-.L!St.AffS-~ee~s S~tetary/ _ · .......i--•-Wom_ea as trne's for _ .DOGTRAINlNG , .. : Hd~~SS~~~-R:;.?t?~~-sp2 MMaElDt1~cCALwo~~.lSbTaAckNToC· ~~:~~~-Please apply in ~o~ Office • Full time and part time, .Re~t;.arcn assTsfilnt. ~Man wantedM;;-·h·a~ ltieUU'raDncitlon w~ YourplaceorMlne Rl'fs MY hom • NB ........ 0 overload needed for our South ~os1tton requires excep· """k''"' ._ .... ,: Will t I lite asaembly & packmg. John .. artin ""5-3140 · c · flee Urology. Typing, c 0 as t p 1 a z a & tional statlstlcal typlng f!-. _. "'""•· ran. No exper necessary.1 ___ ... ____ v_•_ .. 673·4826 _ _ steti Ii zing, insurance· ex · TR EH DAT A Westminster Mall toe a· skills and ability with Call att8pm. 89'7-4540. $2.:;c> hr. 714-847-~4 App· Wire ha.ired Fox Terrier.
llskpr to live in, mature, per. rcq. S48·2247 CORP. 557-0061 tions. Exp'd only need figures. ft:ecent college Swttchboatd Opr. Will ly in_ person 18092 Redon· female, 7 mos. All shots.
exp'd, non·smkr. Refs. MEOJCAL TRANS· STANDARD 3723BirchSt,NB apply. prefered. Advancemen1 train. SuJ)erior Aoawer· doCircle.H.B. lie, AKC reg. $100.
NptBcharea.640-7314 CRlBER Daytime hrs., MEMORIES PO<JeloyMatentlty potential.640-0755 ing ServiQe. 250 E. 17th YAIU>MAH ,_SS2-__ 7724 _____ _
INSURANCE exp. needed for immed. DIVISION RECEPTIONIST _ 557.5734 St,St.el,Upstalrs,CM Rental center needs AKC West UigbJan'd
Newport Beach Fire & openinR. Apply i n AnAppliedMagneticsCo M/F. Xlnt typing req'd. SECRETARY/TYPIST Tall Girls wanted to lake F/Ume man. Weekday White Terrier fem pup.
Casually inaurance ore ~rn~ol "11osSpllll., s~~ICemarnenlntoe 3400 W. Segerstrom & good phone ex per. N SA~lEIS h Needed for Yacht sales part in sociology experi· off. Handwriting must he Champ bkgrnd. 962-SSU
needs qualified un-d~elosM .. ares,S .... anClem. Sunta/\na,CA92704 Small co. Good benefits. owb_ ~ecru1 ng " a rlpl firm. S Full days a wk. ment for college term neat. Mechanical ability ALASKAN Malamute derwrller with ex--. Mission Viejo area. Call am 1t1ous men to ae Knowledge of boating paper. Upto$20pereve. hetprul. Apply, 1930 · '
perieoce in processing, Medical Growing Medical An Equal Opportunity Carol, 581·3830. hard~are, tools & shop nomenclature nee. sz.sc 968·1308aftS'30 Newport Blvd Costa fem. 7 mos. old, spa~. servici I Ir ket' .. c E 1 "' F equip. to lodu11t'I ac· per hr. CaU 548,9373 A• , · Mesa. papers. shot s $11.,. n . mar in. o Supply Mfg, needs neut mp oyer ,,./ Recept beauty salon. At· counts. Avg to $280 per •uc ~. ..,. TtlePhw Sales 646-1154 afl5PM
commercial accounts. person for paaition m tractive w/pleasant wk N Call ....,..,...,., r AntMps 1005 Salary Open Excellent d . N al b . o eitper. nee. Wan\ to make money? German Short ha,. r · pro uct1on. o eitper PIZZA CHEF person 1ty twn 20·30. M B 75 9"'A ICRET RY benefit• ·~rs Ba .. er . r. rown, l· .,,,... S A Can you sell oo the ·-•••••••••••••••••••• Pointer Pups, AKC. •• m • •necessary, 751-4920, &BARMAN Tues·Sat,lrv.752-6141 833-9SSO 8·5PM. ask for Stephanie Salesperson needed Wed. P/time. Flex hrs. Ex· phone'? Top Sin our busl· Wonderland Champ. blood lineil. will train. apply Back Al· RECEPTIONIST Thurs. Fri lOam>6pm for per' d on Se I e ctr i c ness. 646·3030. ask for Wormed, ~hots. S48·8673 .. JANl~RIAL OPENING MID RECEPTIO...,IST ley Pina, 4253 Mart· typewriter Must have Ray Of .A.-.&• I sa-3249
12 midnight to 4AM . Sh ....... PRpe...,_::1gen'I ingale Way.N.8 .752-7880 ~00 retail storeinN.B.Must carforerra'Ods.613·2420. · Alll'lques. ---·------F'ountaln Valley area. f 0-t ... fc 'k""'.1"15-•-. 9AM-2:30PM,Mon·Fr1 + beintereatedinenergy& -----.----iTelephone Tool Room HUGE wareh o use AKCPeklnese,4mo'sold.
Apply btwn •PM & r n o rs • .,. in· water con servation. SECRETARY SaJes·Earn to $20,000+. crammed with over 500 Collie 3 mo's o ld~.
5 : 3 op M al 1718 2 surance knowhow. Xlnl Plastic Medical lubing. 675-6730 11 Locations. Orange Co. music boxes, nickelo· 646-0142 645·2801 af\5.
Armstrooi Ave., Irv sal&fullbeneftt.s. Nd inspector-packer. No us be nea~. attractive, Sal PIT h 1 Fabric COronstrCouctblo.~d Dept .. & LA. Great beoeflls, deon pianos. circus or·•----'------$40-781l DR.PERSONNEL exp. needed. Best au.ited work in Newport Beach . es.. e p. ange · I.II er.Good security & rapid advan· gaoa. wall clocks, 0 . E.Sheepdogs, 1 M, l F.
AgcncyofOrangeCo. for women, but all may area. expenencenecessary. typlnareq'd.833·9831. ct:ment. Call Republic &randlather clock•, 6 wks. AKC. S2U.
J. llerbertHallJewellers 1201W.LaVeta,Sto209 apply. lat, 2nd & 3rd 1Yf-:40 +wpm.Han-: ___ c_a_l_l_64_~----1Secretary, legal. Salary Distributors, Inc. Mr. fascinaUn1..anitques. G4-8940eves.
carreel' minded jewelry Orange ~-9740 shifts. Smooth · Bor •heavy phones. commensurate with exp. Roy, 714/1134--9088. Over $1,000.000Worth .
sales peraon needed. Free&Fee Plastics1f33220e1Largo Start Immediately. SAWPERSOM &abWty, Employer paid American lntemational AKC cocker sparuel pup· Leadini to mgmt posi. MEN, • ,. ,.,. h Dr, Lag Hills. 581·9530 .,.,... · "-""fill a:J.3332 Telephone Sales Galleries; 1802-T Ketwr· Dies, 6 wb old. PhOQ{! Uoa. Apply JD person. at •Ot' .., • ._roes ome .~ 114.,_.1407, ask for Mr. Women'• ready to weat 'I"''""' • NeedMoney$$f$SS$$$ Ing St., Irvine. Tel. 1548"1264aft3:30
33.'13Bmt.OJSL,S.Coaat delivery in C .M . Pressmen" Bindery Davis and sporu~r U• ·SECRETARY WorkonPhonen.ewliet· '15W1T1 o,enWeclthru 'Shi T .._ •
Plara,£14,e87. 1 SSOO /SS50 pe r mo. Trainees. Newport Bch· ~~~~ri:':bleAwtln logs 9:30 A.M. to 12:30 Sat.9AMto•PM. Vlaitt h •· ..,.pi•s, 54-1140. C. M. 'J)r i nting co. RESALES M:;e;r Pt. time. Call: Pat at A.M., 5:30 P .M. to 1:30 AKCreg 675·9fl!G 1CorP;Yn_e_<lA~!1!_.LAb\'iy Ra uo.,.,.•• INSTRUCTOR 642--0621. LUSK le.AL TY HeaUb Care Develop· .P.M. Phone 6'6-4223 or 0 A It P ED EST A L G l ....... u.-. v-11-1111 w•u DR.A 'S ment.833-3985 come to 250 E. 17th St, TABLE. IW" md, 8 beaut real Daae·Har eq"'" ~ iinlef', ADl>lv ~In oeed41tMO talte charge of is open1Qg a new resnle Ntw Lal{wta Ill& Store Sui to 'O, Costa Mesa earw bacle etv.. :; leavea female pup, 5 weeks oht.
eenc>n· 219 GcildelU'Od St pro1Jr&m. New achool. Product1·on office In the HunUogton 23621 Moulton Par'kwa1 SECRIT A.RY ' •• Old Oak Roeker, Beautiful $30. 897-8903. OdlLAJJtforMlke.. · legitlm•~ Send resume Beach area. Needs both ,._ 76• .ii.622 Thea\eJ" Ulhets •attack ~1 •M I •· ~ .. _._ 'o Bo• 51. ,. .... mana1er, •"la""+ "Pm· ~--Glrl Friday• Accts P•Ya· b E. 1 ""•tovn •tY e, turn ot English Sheep Dog male
... ._., " ,. .. ,., .. •J ' ~~~~~~~~~! b'-A~ • R I bl ar. . ve emp o,yment. cont""" vtn''"''• $12' Pb 0 ld Be • ....,... 1.andacape F'C>foeman, e•· J>a tY l'llot, P.O. Box mission and.sale~ple. ::. ·· ..,. ""''· ec:e va •· App 1 y l n person, -.iirio -· l mo. o · at ~u.,r
per,saJ1ryataoUable. 1560,330W.etyst.Coet.• Jypl•St Better than average Sale& payroll, involc ... aom• 7:SO-t:30PM. Warner 5»6298 •
99'f.21629 MeaaCai,93126 · · «>rnmllalbo +Incentive ChtitttMtM .... y ~:d~;''!!\:r:.° t!r Drlve•ln, 73'1 Warner 1920'• Wlnd·~P Pb.oi:so-,,... .. Yw 8CM5 LlOOALS~ .. ft-"RY plateat.t.a.Tbi&otflee wttl liOUMwlvcs&aaltover :!rton...M2·561S . Ave, H.B. Nua\ be 18. &r•Ph. Xlnt COCld. P.P·••-•••••••••••••••••••
,...,. .-.rn , NoonSupuvlsora needcd Co,.., .... fyflst for beawrox1800sQ.ft.wltJl 30, •MO hr'll l)tr w:-...!=.. &CU!. CaU979--or649-0806 FriendlYmalectoineid& ~=~~~:£~ t"~.~ab~ ~:n~~~ ,......,_ fi""-°" ~j1p'~~ft~::~rt. Earn ''P to $2000 b~ SF.Cl:lEtARY, 1 •lrl ok, TO'# Tr\IClk J>rtvera .-..... -.en 1010 fam. Sm Germ Sbotp. m~t: r ,'i" ... ~" ,~, N 4$mltl af\erachool Mon· ~·..,_.be_.. • • ; Chrl1tmu. $lmple eJCPff. Aect• payabl4 A per'd Top pay Apply -...................... ahrtba1r.4f1Ml•aft$ .,, ' to ijpt • llM WfC·f;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;·;;; enrollment p11n. Call l'eeclvable,lnvotclng•lt. a&W.Towtna.loOolrvlnci FROBT DAMAGED ._ .... ~ ti1r1'Ullntl'~~l :kN'!~~h.r. Ctll tne.t ..... 70'WPM. Ull..,HI ..r· Paula&34-1.M2otTTN402 , Ntwpart &th. W.~ '·Avt,NB.U.1.252 HO'l'll()Uft SALE. 3308 Adorable btaca 4' I~ ~ ! ,_,.,, .... ••·v Pl'-...T -··' • ....._ W4D , _j~' Vf • .,...., nr Harbor ":a~·-= NPY * '.'I ---::: .... 1!"' MUISll~IDIS APP{.VAT DAILY PILOT ~r~ ',,'• .. ..tr ·"-" . . .• ~ TD~~~'i~: ... ~~:J~f !-!-Aaa.m.mt .rr.', G ' l • ; } -·~r~':... ,, ~-~IU.o--J~.ooc1 ... Cbeon"!·. lOftotLwY.':!..°sT• "FAST ·~ DOYOUt'-1'-.x.~. ~~1°\.1'SICllTAl"d 1 Ct.ll:'Mi.eau~~ .. ~ Ii CASlfPAID3•~' ii Y£~Gi ~ .. ·~~~ ' ••• ·. ·1 I'......., .... "' ' • -r llSULr.' OFn;R.AUttVJC!!? 1 aap.r()ppOr. &o lUCl~ Uv-uFrl l·~" J.."\\ For W•'°'7n1Rffrt& _ ... nu-....,..·---
1 111 ...... 1 ,., .-.nnGarfleldA\t :· ,........_.............. y~ ................................ o( tb• LO)) ••• ,. • ' ··~\ -----...·--~. WIY..-d SboU.113-7* ~ ,1tt~ u-. 1 Jte; en.am E.&:!: :!~ " Wa'°:i : SBYICI ~ .'dift''ii:' o.u; Pti:t ......,. •• r::iuo.. '• Trea ... •••"'if r11t --7 ,_.-·--:e..-,.._ ..._. Lab .,.. io f.~~rttt i~DFl~R!!lt·~}y~ om~ u-L.:.. FIU,m• .._....,, 11. ~lJKft\PIO)'U .... 1~.;·DlalCTOIY s.vtce D~. It a-.n ~ .. In' 1111 f!O. YCHI. i Growl••~ Dltt lluUo• ~c ~· 61..,;.;:. ..... GoOd a.om. oel1, I ', y UI" ...... Ji:· 1;":.-r d • .!"~. I.,... F R lt ~r"i ('(lit you M IUUe u SJ..'-' r.w\U ~ • beaUUfuf of~ ~ llillw Mitlil to .. ~,. like ftt•: 1'Htq•re QaJJ 111411ti :;::; ' 1 .. ~servi-can ll ..,., r~~-or esu I r dly •'« mOf'e I•· xlM ....... .....,~ ... ille1 • ledlllil I ....... a:~ "1-·~ ·-· :,.. · 1~~~: '""' ~a.r.· UH oc 10 ~whOneed peO'ple 1' 111 SGnice Call I :.mauo& Ud (Om~-:tr Cell aua l40·t;tz -.-,. .... , ..... ,~ ...... lfSto~ JIHH to ~· 1 ~A71 I 1~-maCbilllpor. abowihlw1.111ch9Cktbe 1:-6,..~1671 :~ ..:nw .... -i:;eoeiltal ~1:4 Ad't!!lil......_1~......,·1lfll -..,_,. ..._,.. • ., .na.;a
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_,.,.. ""-1977 Ronda Sxpte" "72 .JEEP J~ UW:il. *UNUSUAL COWCTIOM * MOYIM•SAU P!)1n1 brtd1• cruiser, Moped. Y•ll. Jo ml, nn.•rima.eslmcab• ~ Dllb, al·f1$., car. all "" 4. l'lal 225 HP, .. ~ ltldom UHd. iJH. emprtbell ITJ.lllt ,_.,. 5 .. A..& IO 000 ••-• •l>'les $5·13:1.•draf\lns MPC, full eledronle1, 87J.a.llafU •----·-----'• r'ft .,I 4 vww • r.-IW5H tbls $TS, letter• te1u 11 ft1hJ•1 eat· up. full1 'TT &Oii&. 4 w~ drt••· c ..... , ,..,., mes S30·SIO, receptloo tq\llp'd. OnJy 100 hit. •tr Moped Honda B•· IOU!ofextras! Low mild,
.._., room furniture. •ork Thil boat Is better now p ........ 800 miles. Xlnt Eseellent condition.
• 00111 " ... _.. IOIS tbls. than when new. 15!Ml100 ·eoed.LOck.G'TS.~7351 ao.w;m.1110
.. ,r ,·,,c"ROOIFICI: ..... ,.................. C.E.SURPLUS' or'1J.3222tYes. MiiMrcr::-/
• 810 n..o.n ..... •"uov•.,o FURNlTUR"· eep '74 CJs, litre Cwtlt ..... w. ~W8f:.o ~ OOOWesU9lhSt~l'l1 B.ICTllC Seu YeUow W/Whlte vln: •
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1~upp1ie~. z 631-2777 • 831-2570 IAYIOAT ;;•;;;,;:~·;;;;•:;;;; :fO~ves .a.u.o or
14.Ulll thlldun• awlmmtnc f BM ELECT RI c 16' Dutfleld dlOn, eom· ml, w/apeelal paint i---------TWIMI• i;loo&a,mi.t.Sat/&unt.4. TYPEWRITEl\$250. plete w/llfe jacket1, ban.oUcooler,etc.Paid
IW' 11 Uled 1u.i bed, =;r.::.At; C.K . a -21165 auto.bat.terycharcer,all s.e.:100 O.D .• aell tor co. · m1 fir 11 u cushions, 1uny top. wtn· s,1,370. RMl 8a1TU4'.al M O V I N O T O "-tAer..., 1090 dows, I toll eovers, etc.1--------1 lt76FOU "'-call MJ.1171. ~ liaU>'wood be.t. mu .. tn-RETIRD&Hl' J:IOME. 2134 .... ,.... ··~ CeM ...... ....................... All in brand rtew cood.. s. ..... ~
lU. to rla1m you to twin bed• with tn· mwt.MJlefttltecootenll "='41-UOJ 44"StudloUpri&bt lllOQO.m-3862or~ ~c In top eoodltlon. a.toaa.,.JDUslftterior.
u eu Ml'Yllrins maltra.e1 + at home. AnUcaun tiled. 67pl~!!_. w /bench $500. "JUI' Chrysler wJtandem = ~mC:Uori:ik~ 4 apeed, air cood. •tow 2 bolltari. Uted very lit-ln4l»n Rup ' Baskett .,......... s ....... miles. (1Dw.st). Priced • • • U.. f15.15Hl40 UI05-80), Fan Collection, trlr. SI '0/F bait-· 63t..!M7• after 5 or wk totelllutl
--------•China, Glau, Llnen1, HM1WllGoochlOH MlsulmM011t I OIO Cutdownsw,1htplano ~~~~l~~·~~!i:;:~t•-eods-·-------1 llLL YATIS
---------1BUNKBICDS Lfft t"-o Fiim., Old 6; not to old.••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 751"'570aft.6 orr. 67S-d0'1, 87S-2183 aft "M Vespa Scooter, 12$CC, ~..... one )'Ur old, browo Much mile. Fri., Sat, Movlna: Everythln& Free estimates on up· 5 BestOfrer. , VW-POISCHI
•••••••••••••••••••••• w/wlute, elrtra farm mat-Sun. 10-4 firm. N coea. Everyday except hobtering. sora hide·a· PIANO, contemporary · C.Jl552-186'~eninp. San Juan Capistrano :-::!°t!:?u~~~!t•i ~~ct~:' .. ~~-::. ~~~EW. 428 Serra n:· 338 Bluebird Cyn. bedspeclal. 788-8494 ~n2~~~~td;lnt. 31• BAY BOAT~-Cout, '74 Yamaha TXSOO, lood 137-4800 4fMStl
rmsc .. Walaon'• Barcaa Askin& SlBS. 581-0058 · Oms en1, cabin, cov,. cond. Low ml, 1 own"°. "Tl LlN PictQp, AJf/P'ir. Nook.~fll14W 19th &MOS.OLD YardSale: MuJU-ramily.Coot.emporarysofa&lov-*** Sohmer Baby Grand BuyatS750.615-48$7 S\00.640-~7 map,lomLszooo.Cl1i
CM.6421930,.548·32162 • Sat on&y. 9973 Sage Cr., eseat velvet chra glas~ Piano refinished • 9'2-0IM "'
8• V IQUtALlrTY •b.d F . V. Brookhurat and & woOd coffee tbls: floral Alfred Lawl"eftce walnut. '$1000. Best offer'. 26v'HTFOL9~ YdCl R1iFT b 7?l• '7ol Yamaha 500 DOHC, I eve so a, t e.·a-Warner f & 1 t lbl A"""J ft•-'n'" 497-42lO • n& Y. 81 valve, C700 ml. Mint '73 Ford Courier, cwstom bed, 5 pc dlnttte. bkcses. . so a ovesea ~ game """' .... m. "' tank. 70 Hn. 213~ cond. $8.50. lWB-3144 aft palnl w I scenes, cua\9m
Good used Furniture cbest,drpleahblw/31vs, Movina Sale: antiques, & chn, matching corf~e CotonadelMar SportilMJGoods 1094 5::K> lnt.erior, Vector ma11,
Apphanees--OR I w1l rclnr~ Imps. mirror, pme desk, chairs, paint-~~et1'e.':1~~rlo~ac~W:e Youarethewtnnerof ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ji"lrestooe Ures, molded
seUorSELLforYou. WOW.dre11er mirror, 1ngs, frames, lamps, lbl 11 units king or 4Tldtehtothe 3 Winc hesters. Model 8bf~~7~~!~~~'. flares. spoiler, AM/Fill MASTSSAUCTIOH pacturea,pamt.inp,desk. tools, loads more qu·e:~ bdr~ sets. lrv-.HClr'Yfff 1200,20gaugepumpshot lsYourProression David.,._,.,._ cassette, sun root, auto. 64'-1616 & 133-9625 nusc. 57C17 Seashore Dr. 831-9259 e:J9.S868 Ffttfval g1.m $115. Model 290, semi HOME REPAIRS? _...._ Runa ~ $3000 or best -----------1 N.B. 64S-3161 Glona G S I f' . S t Family Entertainment auto, 22 cal. rifle S80. Did Y°" know. you. c~o '77 Vespa motoncooter offer. Ask for Geor1e. CASH PAID araae a e, rt. a · Queen bed matt/spnng Oc d 30-30 rubber action $65. place a classified ad ln 200cc Super econ 80 6.18-7993
f• d used f t' MOVING MUST SELL by Sun, 9·3PM, Turtlerock Na ugh s'ect n 'I work t . 1 an 2 All till b '"~ Dat'ly Pilot Servi..... . " •---------or g urn, nn 1 9-26. 22 cu ft upright rrzr, Glen, Wondering Rill St. b h h rd wd' C 811 Woodbrid"e lnlrvine n~w ·d s962 4~ ox, Dfrect ( hot" MPG, all extras. barely >a R~cherq e cyl atlck
ques &clrTV's, 957-11133 21" Admiral B1W TV. Antiques. furn. china. ~~· • · • CCuJver Dr. at never re · · monlh 0~r :~ ~it;e a: uaed.495-1028 new brkatilres, 1ood
LOVELY misc tbls, sm items. crystal, linens & misc._ · Barranca) ,Rodio, $1.B2 per day? For more .72 Yamaha 250 Enduro. condSlSO.m.o.168
LakeNew7' Sofa ~8559.646·lOll6 From l•to$200. LE VO LOR l" s I el ~~~~t~81~f~5!78).~~t~ HiFi, St.No 8098 information, call Mlntcood.. HOO miles. '6S FALCON Ranchero, 6 SlOO. 963· Tnple dresser S'2S ches Super Bag Yard Sale all bhndi./gree~. $50. 40" tickets. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-5678 $400 751·$611 ""'•auto, ma"•· $750. or S 0 & $3 fldb . d SS N K • long x 70" wade. 963·9204 ExceJlent system as well ~. _.,..._ -J drawer Frenth l'rovm I . r . must go. ew mg sz evenings as beautiful furninture "12 CB 450 Honda. 8000 i_.,....._. _ _... __ •------
c 1 a I dresser. Oar 546-6299•557·6848 quilted ~eadboard * * * piece. Magnovox stereo -~ .,...ti 9060 mi's. Sharp. Modified '76 Oaev. El Cemlno, all
•••
95'0
~~~mu.h. $65. lrvane 56" Ro~d dropleaf lbl. 4 :.~~:.tc~us~. ~~[i~:;!: h wetry 1070 console with 8 track. An· ..._ -forks & aeat. $800. Eves. xt.ras. X1Jrt cond. Beato(·
• · Captums chrs w/pad~. jewelry. oi l paints, •••:o••••••••••••••••••• lloUywood bed. makes in· tique reproduction "Dry ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-3385. fer.661-0434
Dre"el game table se Grnchr&ottoman.Ant1· much.too muchtomen· WA..._.TED lo twin beds with in· Sink" cabinet. S5S0'77 Westsall 32. Fully ' S kl MX I que gm twin beds 2 1"'1111 new-2~ years old-..,"" equipped. Sacrifice 74 uiu 400 • x nt Datsun shell, xlnt ~-w,credenza $500. 1714 • lion. Tburs-Sat, 9-5. 21701 nerspring mattresses + or offer. Irvine. 552_1700 ~.soo or trade tor O.C. condition. Must tell. 493-&29'1 Ask for St.eve 768-snT dresser;i. 2 nale stands. Impala Ln . H .B. TOP CASH DOLLAR 2bolsters.Usedveryht-Real '"'-late. Pvt pty. Makeoffer.646-1161 aft.7PM
HERCULON
8' Sof a & Love.eat
IOTH PIECES S 199.
Curtis f\lrnitur•
1865 Harbor Blvd. Cl\1
64S·6151
INSTANTCASll •
For apple's, furn, tools
antqs. Anytime 963·5206
DIVORCE Neres!o1late
:.ale of quality (pro
fessjonally decorated
furn1sh1ngs & ac
rl!ssories. 2 d1tlclren'.
Bdrms·green while
vellow. etc TV, 1·hri;, etc·
673-8883
Full s ale bed frame. <Bushard & Hamilton) PAID FOR YOU,R tie $75.751440 co
EH6·1"61 follows1gns JE.'WELRY. WATCHES. • AdGoodmiracol lnd9",lco1olno,r::,V5.· 673-4220 Motortt-s. S-.'/i .OMC ~Too w/camper . ART OBJECTS. GOLD, llytek water cond1t1oner •• ......... JU_ 160 Dinette sel $120. s. tereo Garage Sale: Sat & St.In & S 1 L v ER SER v 1 CE. umt. ltke new.~ 002·4990 JOTE 12'. New saiJ. hwy . -, ;wwop ~. V6 305, runs xlpt.
l'OllSOle Sl30. Small or· until sold. 14Hi Monte FINE FURN & AN (714)627-1618 trlr. $525 . Nice!••••••••••••••••••••••• 53&-6795askforJlm
gan, 2 oncnlal rul(S SlOO. Vista rear c M TlQUES 64S-2200 23'' Zenith, color TV. xlot C.Newman 675-9781 or MCYI'OR HOMES ChrSJO 96J.6876167J.5489 ' ' . . · •IMMACULATE l'OOd. $17S. 893·7S5l FOR RENT 'S8 Qwwy shortbed, 327
·-. . ----Sliver, china, glassware. Gold! 14k charms, car· CARPET• 493·5-172 Front $150. wit. 77o--0644 Corvette eng, Muncie 4 8 Pc Solid M·1hon11ny DR II l'bl RV i Fiberglass Boat mold for apd, mags. $1800. or best · • ., co ec 1 es, equ P· nogs neck chains nngs. 4 bdrms gold, i.hag UPER BUY. inclds zs• sailboat. Best orrer RENT Fireball 23• SeU alfer.5C8..Q08 ·• set: buffct.4 side chairs ment, misc. goodies, Whlsi & parties. 968.5427 enormous plush cham· b A · CC CB
+ host and hostess many 10< & 25< items. pagnl!. Muslsell645·3167. tmuurlnt1.tpalexl.e ,twAnMsp/kFrMs, 548-6611,673-5929 ~,.:_.autol ... '68!.~·~-'.. • -9510 chairs, 4 leaves and .tbl. 1717 lrva·ne Ave. N.B. MAN'S 18K solid 0 old Glona . :JI' "'"'""""" .... '""'"'°" It I " stereo headphones •· Student must sell 22' Tem· •••••••• .... • .. ••••••• pads -$695. a aan (8twn 20th St. & Holiday wnstwatch.. $975 or bei.t • .,. ...., DODGE Pride • J Prov. sofJ S225. Ihde-a Rd l Fri &Sat 10-3. offer. -WON CONTEST. Zag Zag stereo 8 trk tape re· pest for twtioo. All new '" n oy, 1-t~ 'e8 Chev ~'Van
bed lo dbl .. ~ .. $200 Lg . corder. player, Sold for gear. 64S-4981 eves 20' mtr. home, immac &c w/"n6 cyl. eng., 1' mtg. .,.,,. . · , , ~6-4540 Sewang Mach. worth loaded 35500 · $8 250 hln ood black naug. chair, $7S LAST CHANCE. s:n>. 19 Pc Cookware Set. $S&5. sac .• $400 or best of· .,.,0 S .1 bo l 2 .. 0a lls -mt, • • everyt C & coad.
Knee holl! dei.k. of "Before the j\fove"-Furn Uvestock , 8075 worth .,.,70. Each s175. fer.96J.9577eves. "' aa a• 1""" sa • 548-t896or615·2000 1''ll&' bed. 'W'indows, ex-
di S ..-)(Int cond, gd race rec. tr at. Call 6C5-a••a •• u•h1te, ""5. Olympia .x. +++.CALLU 751·4822 ........................... ·43S8an.s '77 "'-t bll h i I 4iV• " ""' """' Must sell 24" color on Sell or trd. 673·5646. ""' a s ment. m n &46-'1998 port. typewnter. scnpt Reg. Morgan mare, broke ---------1 6 Id $200 c Ph 23~· Dodge 440. 2500 mi.i---------
type, S70.~5038.afterFrl iSat/Sun, furn..drps. to ride & drive. blkF'ur Coat, good qual. soe. yrso · · WAHTRESULTS7 5Y!'wnrr,cab/roofair,73vwcamper,Pop.Top,
6P!\1or64249SI clothes & misc items. parade Morgan geldmt:. Kcrlc:ale miok1beuver. 673·S27l__ Sellyourboatthru cruase. spare, rack/lad. pewono,xlnlcond.
E RI Y 0 I d 67Ve ~.,Y'S r '~Sa Ses o nlJa b IBe 1· l':n g, Western C 714J Bestofr 7-9pm, 548 2375. 25" Color TV nds tubes AM/FM cass, color TV. -.. .,.... oo>oaa A , l'IO ., :.o 1 5-....,... • .,.. v1 e, a 338•1011 ------· • SOUTHWESTEftM v•~ f.t.1\dy 'like nl'" 1 pi Mahol? prtnr s de:.k Penm Pt O'KEEFE & Merntt i:as SSOorbesloffcr YACHT SALES PP. $15,000. 9105 Valley
s .p a n1 :.h '>l'l'l 1onJI Sl50 Oak Parq ror. tbl. --ModtMery 80?8 blln slove top. oven. 673-4P.Jaft 6orwknds View, Cypress. 750-3651 '72 Chevy Van,~ lon, 6
"oocJcn fountain. "'.ood :;llS, Anlq. lypwrtr.~: Horws 8060 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rotisserie, copperlone. loah & Merl FUJl,IHEWPORT (714) 673-cyl~/17uas xlnt, $2000.
ml'tal ''all dc1.:or Super J.Spd b1k' $35 '65 I" Cal ••••••••••••••••••••••• L d . b I SIOO 17" port B&W TV s-.a--.. ne DEA.URS '76 H""RvEST "" -!162·2509 c . II ~· di g. pro uct1on e t • .. .,..,......... (714)673-9211 ~ " ___ S2Hl0.&1611·19Saft6PM .e~!fl~S 16'.2 sa e sander,6"x78".220voll3 plays gd. S3S. Pwr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 20, Mini Motorhome, '7S Ford Van. V-8,,auto.
Ong rm sl't with~ <.'hrs ,---wdallangs. Braod new, phase.5 HPw1dustpick· lawnmower. Reel type, General 9010 28'MORGO ..... OI Dodue v -a aulo •ra"'• air, P /S, P/B, mags, 'f R. Prov. china cab. never used. $7 bo •-f"lte $1200 fair shape S'2S Kin" si1,e " " ..., • '""• 595 like new ~s. 3 pc crne Cle ood Xlntcond · up " "' 1 r. · · ,., ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Load<.'<i with new equip-P/S, P/B, stereo, slpe 6, stereo,crpt.$4 · · Grp. near new SJ 50 I rry wt4o i1so . 549· .963-455.S bedspread yellow & wht ment. Sleeps 6 aduJls an ruJly self-conU only 1000 546-~af't6PM
&W·72'10 · 3 lli k Ki 2 h · quailed. perl. shape $35 f Lo t' · '·'" (C176RLD) -. 7 c ory DI orse AIR COMPRESSORS 6732595 * * • com ort. w ime on ~;-'..e new. '73 DODGE BlOO, 6 cyl .•
,\lvg To Sweden ;\bt sell M~' mg Sale Maple kale~ lrlr. dual axle. xlnt_. cond. M us T B E so L o , · A\.omac 4. Genoa. dingy, .., .. ..,;73 H"' •VEST aa~ trans.._ f!i~ lo sell qn s1. bd rnmp sso . labl. & chn.. L37y Bo) Gl·9898days,.i94-7 184an Absolutely discount. 50'1 Gas Stove. self cleunmg, E.C.Allllp VHF. 6'3" head room. -• ....-.........., ....
&i6·5932 reclinder, en~ tables, & 6PM off list. AlJ sizes. Call melds hood. 2 yrs old. 502D. Ave. Sevilla More room than many 24 • Molorhome, auto 4
---·-------many. more. 32093 Pasco 714 1146·5282. Sl25. Crystal chandaher. 32s. Owner anxious. trans, P / S, P / B, Jm E200 Ford Van. must
"'!\fOVlNG! Anlq range. Caro!ma, SJC. <Casa de HORSE for sale or lease. S!S. misc. incld dresser, You~~:'3::!i11~~erof 675·1403or673·92llbkra. 1tereo,'cruise control, see. $2495, ask for Ed.
perf. l'ond s· Ulue velvet Capistrano Condos l Appaloo~a <Reg 184·<!69> & Chinese hooked rugs. 4 Tl-k-'a to--dash air cond, roof air, Dys; 640·6444; Evs. Sola. 5364150 . 493-6850 6yr gelding. X.lnt w/k1ds. Mii cetlCllMOUS 8080 67s l33l .. ..., ''"' CATALINA 22, loaded, 6' 4KW Gen, CB radio, 642-0804
__ _ Stabled at lrvtne <Stable ••••••••••••••••••••••• -l"IM HarYest head rm .. sips 5, 3 sails, 1 ded Only 27 000 mi ---------llal. Prov. Coud1. ~ood Heritage Commode lbl. also avail>. 1714l52'2·.f320 250 Red house bncks. 13' ~itl•al VHF, ROF, kool met.er, oa · ' · J.mFOC'dEcoaollneVanl
cond. S12S. 2 F1re:.1d Sl25. Rnd corfec tbl. S50. wkdays WANTED ca. 1-'rzr $30. Old TV :.et Family Entertainment log, compass, slip avail. (7~;~~ ton b id. A/C, r adio.
l(rccn chrs ~35 ea. ;\faple triple dresser ........... _ ........... uG--.1.-1065 TOP CASH DOLLAR $10. Garden swwg $30. Oct.land2 642-4599 Si!850961-2:M4 ~ ;r; 8 Sl50 Call %7 0139 .._ uvu. s b 5 M 23' Mini Motorbome. ·
·1 11 •••••••••••••••••••••••PAID FOR YOUR mall ca metSl · isc Woodbndgemlrvane 16'10MIARDIER Dodge V.S. auto, P/S,'72 Ford Van , )9w
Si':LL idle 1tt-ms w1lh a KING S IZE BED &cARPET30sq.ft .quallty JEWELRY. WATCHES. &l2·8220246 E.22ndSt <Culver Dr.at l9'T7,lookslikeLaser,on-P/8, stereo, cruise con· mileage, w/many"'fx·
l>a1ly P1lolClu:.:.1r1ed Ad HEADBOA~O. Gd ~ond. bluecpt. Sl50. ~r~ VOE8£:E~R ~~d'~· Tl SR·52. PCtOO. Basic Barranca> ly more sail area. and trol. dash air, roor air, traa. Please call Neal at ~2-5678. S25 or offer. 642·6217 963-9204 e\'es. , • Plus Math. Finance & Please call 642·5678, Ext. much raster. Special col· awning, low miles. Fully 645-3078 -;::;:;;:;:==;;:T=r:~~~:;:;:~~~~::=~~~l!:!ijm~~~fr-11 FINE FURN. & AN· Games libraries Best ofr 333, to c laim your ored sails & hull. Like aelf·cont. beautiful!·---------
... '
.. . . .. ... .
1 TIQUES. 64S·2200 6734478 daily tickets. Cos 600 Sell .. "'" <~PKP) Sale si3.995. '77 Dodge Van B·lOO. cust. new. t$1 . ~· REGENCYMOTOR int/ext, AM /FM stereo,
FUN FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY
Toddlers, teens and senior citizen's! Games, exhibits,
dancing, music, tempting taste treats, refreshments
':>
~I(
FREE OUTDOOR STAGE ENTERTAINMENT DAILY
• Don't Ml11 BOBBI AND CL YOE
and the S.1weitd Cowboys
t ~net 10 p.m. 8aNtday
.. fllelllgTopT..t . ,
A five·hour benefit concert with top county musicians,
noon to 5 p.m. Saturday; rook darn:e for teens 'til
midnight. DEAN JONES and a morning of Christian
entertainment Sunday from 9 a.m. to noon.
CARMEN DRAGON conducts • pops concert 8 p.m.
SundaY in the Big Top Tent -the first of • four-concert
lrvine._'Symphony series c;onctudlng Jan. 29 with VAH
CLIBURN ll•Mll;T• .
World premiere of a new pt•v by Jackre Hyman,
"Fant•'"" 8 p.m. Sept. 30 .nd Oct. 2; Un~ P...W ~30 a.m. Stturd•y: M•xfcan Flnta din""~~ nfgtit.
'""'18inment alt day Sunday.
•
LUGGAGE TAGS
'
***
SU RAY?S
A.111971.-.as
18'·30'
HAUISOM'S
SIAltAY
232'1So. Maln,S.A.
140-6115
3101CoutH"y,N B. Ul-2147
675·3662 or 645-2200 HOME RENTALS cassette w /4 a pk.rs, sun
WANTED: 24' slip in 92.SN.HarborBIVd,S.A. roof, ma~s. Must sell
Newport Bch by Nov l, ••531·2503•• fa.t, aslttnC for loan
'77 Please call T .C. , balance onl.Y. Low Wakely days 640·2900 '73 SPorlll Coach, 30 . All mileage, 50,000 mile war-
Eves. 673·3597 Boat sbar· extras. 32,000 mi. XJnt ranty. 559-5861 al\. 6 & ingpossible. cond. Pb61S"4St _w_knd.s __ • _____ _
u14' Hobie, xlnt cond. Trallers.. Tra•tl 9170 Autoa W..t.d '590 With trailer. Best offer .• ~; •• -.~.-,••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
581·7919 16~' Nomad. Self cont'd, WEPAYTOPDOLLAR ---------1 retri1, toilet, &love, sips FORTOPUSEDCARS
14' Laser sailboat, blue 6. Xlnt cood. $1000. FOREIGN, DOMEStlC
hull, gd cond. $700 S86-2383 orCLASSICS
494-3840 Trailers. Utilty 9 I IO If your car is extra clean
24 • Wind rose Ret~actab.le ••••••••••••••••••••••• aee i~Eit IUICK
Keel. Newport slip avail. Utility trlr, shocu, nu 2925 Harbor Blvd
Xtras. Xlnt cond. Must tires, unloading tllttna Costa M a 979:2500 • Sell. 7141761-0871 devlce$200.960-l627. , ____ es _____ _
9070 •••••••••••••••••••••••
TOP
DOI.Lil
rAID
tSJO FORCLEAN ' ' .......................
545-3712 al'ler !IPM. · '52 Studebaker, n1,nnh11, ~-:·:i . 40• MOORING bu~ needa work. $350 •
AVAILABLE 1-557~-LSOl--~--~-1 11>\/"\1 t~fA(t~!·1 ~·· •' , .. , ,. , ~. c, r, 1,... r•' ,, . ••
~ : •• ·1... • ' 1 \. 675·2234 640-5849 IKrt.af rd v ...... 9530 WANTED boalalip for
CAL34.
642-3187
• .,.. Cab-over, aas/elec
rerrt a, a bur n e r
.Wve/oven, SIJ)I 6, amt
coad. tBOO. 541-21 'll
Cllbover Camper w /xtru
for LB Import truck
$1100. (714) a'1·1618
....................... IMPORT CARS
'74 GMC Suburbu Sierra ..,11 MODa.~ Grande. 45' VB. dual aJr ~ -.... cood, olf road lirea, r btt•---------
en1. AM/PM cas, xlnt WE
cond. Ph m.8593 MEED ..
AMC.Jiii' . t ••c.at,
WE Otrl'SELLALL
J EEP l)EALERS
INntESTAT E
HUM IMYIMTOIY
AU Kodel1 New Al UMd
Leumi Available c-.w...
mt ~":?LVD.
Oliita .... S4IM023
CLEAN
USIDCAAS
HOW
CALL PAl"IT
540-5630 ;.
.. ,o ...... ,.w ................ •••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••• • WIWIUltilY IMW t1tl .._...._
-YOUI IATSUM I' ID roa Oil NOT
I '°''°'ft! 'I I • • l.. . ~
. "Ir. ..... ~ . • •4
,• '> 1 "I I I J I',
WEIUY
R • a.IAM CAii ... , anuc•s
m 1r.1c le
rn.1.l'dil C.,t t1 I I '61 Pone lie
I ,,._ • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oreen. ('111ASEl
"71 , UTOO. Od. C"ORd • $6989 Id."'°'· C:.-NIM 641-IJOO MOTOll CAllS m.rrat..,.MMf. 0-.-. • .....,.l 1------..:;....-1"11 llud• l\X•Z. Good --~ at... t79' eo.,, U,000 ml'•· 547CSO .... .._ ................. AMfl'M Cu-..«e AU·
C ...... .._.._ ... , ........ c 11 ••• • Ponlche '78 T•ria. ireen -• utC-· • -·1712• w /blk inl.. alloya, Browtl tUUtJC). Mera .. lea '740 cassette, air. 788·5731
$7tlt ·····-· .. ······-····· ··-MOTOllCAIS •---. c••s '70914. Nu.o work. body lo
D., -. • ~1 _........,"' • -&ood shape. $3000 or bst -~ --~ & Sold ofr. 675-192'7 Dave )41-~ __,.,.. ---
.......................
190RE10U
SEU YOUR
........ d ,..-.--t7 I 7 '73 914 2.0. appearance
I ................. -WIST GERMAN nro•... ood d k g ------------------t ... t& 970 I -••••••• .. ••••••••••• lua-RTS " "'"' g con 'os Ul 62 Rambler 4 dr sedan, n Coit d ... 000 I ,..r"V M$00. S4IM417 att aPM " ... Ambassador, ... en. or --··•••••••••••• '1 mpg,-. m ' 714/541·118' YO -• "56 llMTLEY s I auto, $700. Oood cond. '74 Porsche, 914, 1.8. Xlnt
'TYl'lmac. 968 8lU ~'JS 75 Ml'Z 450SL cood. Must sell. 531-7800,
t720 ••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11•
b room%4. Wit melalllc paint, ---------• 1tereo & is luxury •• '71 9UE Targa, best equipped. In abowroom oiler. Good cond .
condftlon ! (447M XN). 581·7919
ttlO
* * '*
tlUShw..t
S30 Emerald Bay
Laguna Beach
You are the winner ol
......................
• Au&o 211. ~ one ml. Jo.1.)1"1. ~.
$l800. 831·1MI
'M Mustanc. V.a. xlnt
mech cood, nMda some
body wk. Make octer.
~2U3
"71 llUSTANG llAClll
Auto, P /8, PIS. P /'W.
4 T1deh to ftw , T • Con _.'bl '68 llu.stanc. LoMed. 1n lnlM HwYnt 70 onno. n." e. xJnt. cond. 111""81. Aft.er -..H .. al Engine perf, nda minor S.5.S&-ll28
.• Roy Donnoie:r
"' 33302Seabrtghl
*DRIVE A*
*LITTLE. •• *
SAVE A LOT
Pnc:ed to sell or leaae. m .. body work. $1600,•-'---------
'73 Porsche 914, blk on Family Entertnlnment 494-03llT Mustang, all oril iD &
•72 MIZ 250 blk, appear . .irp. alloys, Ocl. land 2 out. Ori& owor. Xlnt
C 0 U p E L 111r, 5-spd. Europ. lites. Woodbridge tn Irvine I 97l FORD C(IOd. Air, wire wbls, vtn · u x u r >' $7900. 979·9721or998-1705 (Culver Dr. at PINTO WAGOH bucket seats. $2000. Call
Dana Point
, • You are the winner of
n 4 Ticket$ to the
l"IMHarYest
hstlval
SllOP&COMPARE eqwpped with low miles aJL 6 Barranca) Aut.otnatlc transmlaslon. M. E. 644-4113 ot'JS.4108
& 11 m e>.cellent cond1· · ·67 Bwck Wildcat. 2 dr, Please caJI 642-6678, Ext. Realabarp! (058.HSX)
ti.on. (689GWG). Porsche '75 914 1.8. Xlnt , P /S. P /B, A/C, .Auto 333; to claim your . $1995 wnobile 9t55
cond, AM ;FM stereo w /8 70 Volvo, below ret~tl. trans, Gd transport a lion tickets. ••••••••••••-•••••••••
BARW ICK DATSUN
"' 1 I! j,, 1I1 ( q H Ii HI• I
, .Pamily Entertainment
Oct. 1 and2
8 .3 1·1375 493.3375 '74 MIZ 450SEL track. Rad11tls, mags, Best offer over Slt;05. car. Shows xlnt care. Gd BILL YATES '73DELTACoavt.Cl'eam·
Leather 1nter1or, pwr. 33M mi. Reccnlly tuned A/C, Auto. 838·2044 paint., Gd upbol. Must * * * VW-PORSCHE JQJ. Reduced to ~. · Woodbrid&:c in lrvme
I!, (Culver Dr. at NEWPORT DATSUN Wllldows, crwse control. & reg lhru 7178. $6350, 1970 145 Sta Wgn. Xlnt sell $500/firm. 675-1331 San Juan Ca"'•bano l>P646-8608
SWltOOC & metallic pamt. 540-5082 cond. AM·FM, rada.aJs. • 817 ..o•oo 49~5 I I •-.-....,.-0-.-.... -,..-.. ,---d-ir Parranca I
Please call 642·5618, Ext. m. to claim your
"ilftets.
Fo.R THE IEST Great con di t 1 o n ! $1900/ofr. S36-J629 69 CUSTOM Skylark, '75 Monte Carlo, $3900 or .._ .-,,,_, . ,.... ..,_. .... 2· r. Cl.991..0Y>. rebtt ene & trans. A/C. bestolfer • Radio, AJC. deao. $0:50. c:.'i~~~:"' Good selection of other ~~~~-~?~~ ....... !?.~~ ·~a~~~:l:~;~~~k·L:~~ .SB5().~993S afUPM CaU536-8224 ':,l,a:r:=:e..~;;. ~· _IM--_11Z7 ______ _
TOD"'Y.• fine MBZS in stock lo #}OEALERINU.S.A. new.$000.646-0158 68 1811.nbck E9lect2.ra, muat73Mallbu.2drsportcpe, '300.86-2333 ~ -9957 ""' ---------1 se 1 · v. 1595. V8 48 500 mi AC PS ·-•-•••• •••••
888 DOVE STREET ehocee rrom. fffi ROY •• -. U--~ 646"'559, 646-1086 PB, A•M radio, si.sso'. ,5 Ford LTD, 2-dr Bmm. '72 Pin to Runabout •
,,,...,...
***
Near MacArthur CARVER ---Well ared r 1 Xlnt cond. Be&t oICu. 3JOOcc. AIM. new tires &JamboreeRoads ROLLS·ROYCE ••••••••••••••••••••••• l96S Buick LaSabre 4-dr. 642°"~ or, ownr, 640-556Sor754'°341 Sac.$109S.-.J.S •
••
9707
••••••••••••••••••••••• 13).1300 GftWt"Clll 990 I Ctn 2nd car. $495. For i.a· __ ........, ______ _
· :r:J Audi Owner must seU.1---------1 ::'~~::,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• fo642-9903 Clwy... t92S '65 FALCON Sta. W1n, '12 Pinto 2000CC. 4 spd.
Xlnt cond. Radials . llEATTHIPRICE Ml).W4 "Where The . •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• maf•• wide reara. mags. All/Fii tape Gd
··aioo.675·2.571 INCREASE!!! Lease cLouosuNoAvs Dealer Makes ~/~~~~~u~~~. 2.?~: '74 N.Y. 2-dr Brouabam ~~~~ :a';!or~ar~~ caodS1300.8'13-&'583 • •
IMW 9712 Hew•UHd TheDitrerence" AM /FM. V·top. 18· Wht/WhL Pvt prty. Lo 6*2179 72PintoWapia.reblteng :°)f.Ah·•················ 44NEWCARS OVEll 100 COHCAHHOH'S NABERS 20mpg. 24000 mi $4700 cnl.Loaded.84%-6233 $1500 XlDtcoad.M0-831iG
., ~T~~L.!:,~R~~:ff.. MERCEDES HORSB.ESS Sfl·T141 . Quoysler Newport, um. ·r:,f:Alf8~ n':!:°.::~ _att_eP_.11 _____ _
ble. Call or see us before OM DISPLAY ST AILES AUTO '7'1 Personal crisis em 27,000ml, alntcond. trau. ~ 6"-MU " n,.wt.. 9960 CREVIER o& youbuy!!! HauseoflntDorb Brokers or Cine contem-CENTER rare $10.680 Buick's '2900. 536-2209 'lSl-07'0 ••••••••·-·--• .. ••
1 1 ST • HOADWAY AUTHORlZkD porary A Division of finest. 7500 mi. Electra c.t•atal Y9l0 1962 FalcoD Sta W '10 Duster Ru1t1 brp
., SAMIA A"A MERCEDES.DEALER ROLLS ROYCE Naben CadlUoc Ltd Park Ave. $8,200, ......... •••••••-••••• good fair In le g't r-w /bile interior. Godd
· 835·3171 6862 Manchester, BENTLEY cruz/C, fact mag wbls, 73 Malibu. 2 dr sport cpe. ~6"15-9'13l ou cood. Aatlne $900.
-nt1uuw11&n0111v111G'4ACH1NE Buena Park automobiles. • W/W, plush velour. R/S VB 411500 l AC PS Stephanie 6'&-a818 or
,,. *USED IMW's * ?.845 HARBOR BLVD. 52).7250 2711 E. Coast Hwy SPECIALTY tape. 673-54544 PB, A.M S:dio. #,650'. '71 Galaxie 500. 64,000 ml, _$1_~-------'n s:.>i 4spd 28&SEU 540.6410540.0213 OnlheSantaAnaF"Y· (7141675-09_30__ CARCEHTER Codlloc 9915 Well cared for, 1 ownr, air, vinyl top, $1000. PORtioc 9965
, '77320laS K177 HSK '67 PL-411 Datsun Sta .59 Limousin e, orlg .BenUeyS2'6181~.nucng. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 842.8359 • 67~,675-86118 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'T6 2002 ~pd S R IOI PDP Wag. New mtr & many Sl3 500 or 1 494.8620 Good cond. $2J,OOO. b:.t • CPE DE VILLE/71. Good 1.1165 Continental. '1'1,0oo M9'csy 9950 '67 Grand Prix Ccav. Full
'''.'163 Osi 4 s1>S H 572PQ.\1 xtras Good cond. $1500. 494-TisS or 494-41155 ' of!er. 64<M782 '71 Datsun S3699 cond, steel radials, mi, (original). lmmac. ••••••••••-••••••••••• Power, oeeda work.
7-l Ba varu;.1 auto 6461934 24oz .... IJ46DMK I Sl99S.Call642·"°1. Bestolfer.55&-6119 ORANGECOUNTY'S 5.fG.1787 it• 780~1\'G ·n 24_o_z-. s-1-lv-e-r .-b-lc_k_v_t_n_yl '75.450 SEL. SIS.500. Low Toyota 9765 4 spd AM1FM. radial ·73 Sedan de Ville, 'orig. CclirYeth t932 HEW'EST 1nu.det----,..-lrd---,-,-7-0
'CloMd On S11ndays rf I d •· 8 k nules. Slllltlr. 1162·4762 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• tires & air cond. owner below wh Jes I T nrcoLN MERCURY -. a r con . "' tr . 842.9371 , o a e. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~· · •• .. •••••••••••••-••••
OflANGE COUNTY'S 55.000 mi. $3800. Lisa --------• IEFORE YOU '72 otds $1999 S3400. 494-0708 '7S Corvetlet T·top, 350 Dealeflhipis now OPEN '12 T·Bird. P\lll pwr. ori~
OLDEST 5'19·2441aft.6 _ 1966 Mercedes Benz 190, • SELL YOUR Toronado .... <968FUO> 74 a DORADO auto. Joadeo. n,ooo Mi, RAY FLADEIOE owner. Very Sood colML
& 4-dr sedan. Gd shape. ln· TOYOTA ~t!r~~~:~~~~!r: till COHVE.RTllLE immac. $'1500. or offer. LINCOLN-MERCURY $2500. Pb 642-3917
1976 28,_ tact. $12S0.847·3778 c~ us for a top 'dollar '72 CL-,. $2499 lta-1739 16-lSAutoCenwDr. v.. ~ ...... White on white. Londed. SD Fwy-Lake For•Oxlt 67 Thunderbird, full pwr.
Air, stack, stereo tape. •ee 280 SL auto, ps/pb, 2 estimate! Monte Carlo (Ser55179) 101339) '72 CORVETTE Convt. IRVINE auto trans, tapededt, till
Sales-Ser . L . xlnlcond. $6400/Bstorr. tops, new eng. xlnt MARQUISTOYOTA Auto trans, air cond.. $7219 Gd.cond.l»mi.l5600or 110.7000 whl,leathl.nt.Newpala.t.
' . II •.
,... vice· castng 6402428 days. 675·9626 Sll.500.536-7256 MISSIONVJEJO p/stccr ., brakes, tilt MOTORCAR bcsto!r.492-6340 trans & brka. recent «oyCarnr.lnc. eves. -831·2880495-1210 wh<.>cl. D'ELEG•....,cE '71 Mere Colony Park valvejob.S87S.60-682Q. Rolls koyce BMW 75 450 SEL, silver: blk int, ---------72 lui k $2699 ~ 73 Vette, fully loaded, M · AU N 1540Jamborec -. ---sw:iroof. etc. Mml. 40M 1972 Toyota Cor o na c 626Wl7thSA,547-92.'SO fact. COl}d. LO mi. arqws. power. ew VeCJG 9974
1 ~port Beach 6"().6444 70 Datsun 510. Auto, AJC, m 1, pp s i .5. ooo. Deluxe •·dr, A/C, •·spd. RiVlera .... (6251tTF>. 528-4645or9S3-48S4 ('114) wuler pump, new ••••••••••••••••••••••• \liiiiii'9ii9iili9iiiiiiiliii~-I Good cond. Low m l. 714-638 -7 512. Mrs . economi·cal. nu rada'al Full power. fact air 1973CADILLAC brakes. new ball. new '76 V H •.J.h.~1. 3-cpd .. ..,,,. E Tuck cond , tilt wheel. low sm•uDEVILLE ,.__ 9933 tune-up. Good tires. eg.a a_..._....., ~ ves 6·9 673-5305 er. tires, Good cond. 968-6630 mile:. "'" •n ~ Good clean 2nd family ~/I'M at«eo. 15,000 . z Fully Joaded·eatra h••••••••••••••••••••• car or surfer. SUIOO. Ph mt, rec:ent tune-up,
17280. ~tr, mags, brown 1973 Mercedes Benz 280 4 '76 Toyota Corolla. Low '76Cordoba $5199 sharp! (T14SER). Price "72COQgar XR7.Fullpwr. 646-t!S90or&75-2160 minor ant. damage.
w;brn int, 13,UOO mi, cir sedan, Estat.eSale. Lo mileage xlnt cond F\111 pwr., fact air & tilt basnowbeenreducedto NJJ i,lres, air,~ A.M·FM. · Great cood. $2000.
COMEIHlrSEE
THE630CSi
HOW OH
DISPLAY
~l(i:.s1~~ereo, must ~~·_.;'.eM36clean, $8350. _S2_t:i0 __ .c_a1_1'499_._i1_<TT __ ._· wheel. (682REM>. OHLYSl395 S2800orbest.842-11Ml 1970 Mere Marquls. Lo 6'2·3190
.
770
F -'76 Toyota wat:on. air, fo,?4~~s!~:). 4 llLL YAT!S Dodp 9935 ~~banicalcond. ___ V_EG_A_*7_6 __ _
atsun ·10, xlnt cond, •66 230SL. 4 _spd, bOth auto .. xlnt cond. $3750 Or vw· •oRSCHE ••••••••••••••••••••••• . L1•-H1•,,.., lS,OOOml, $3499. tops, lo mi, mtnt. SS.950. ~tofCer 552-3.156 speed trans .• AM /FM .....-""''~ "'-67$-9223 6'75-'1903 -'----·-----6tereo. factory sunrooI, SanJuanCapiatrano 1964 Dart1 depeocl b"ansp, '7Z Mere Colony Parlt :5Speedtram,.radio.ek.
J I
11
. A""' um Mark 11 Wagon. 4. loaded. 817-4800 493.45 I I 75,000 mt, new clut.<:h, gd wgn. Xlnt running cond. Only eleven miles!
TJ D ··~UN 1800 4 dr, '75 Mercedes 450-SL. All speed, good cond. Must llres,$350.846-5337 AaklnglowBJueBook. (05'RO<J).J
radio, air, xlnt. shape. e~as.mintcond.13,000 sell.S1200.!l62·9841 • '68eCld{ll;C •70 CHAtL'""NGER S.·1052 after8c.36 • • Aua 5•495
I• •
11 t~
•1.,n•
"r OUR COMPLETE
II , IODY SHOP
ISHOWOP!H
$1650 or besl oHer. nu. $1.S.900 firm. 644·6411 ---------ECONOMY l!J Vl"'I., • 640-3'21 d8,1S,aJ\6,644-7829. '76 SR5. loog bed, xlnt CAlCENTH UMOUSINE CONY. VS. full pow.r, 'U Colonr,P•rk Sta1 DovefJQuallSts. cond A" ood sid CWVM50). auto. Wen., al xtraa, lo• NEWPORT BEACH '
'68 510 Wagon, runs xlnt. '64 M.8 . 300SESaloon, im-low ~ile~' ;'300 or t>!si • $1419 11'75 540-1'167 mil•. SZ495.64&-1023 m-Ol.11
0'''1MWRES"'LES FM/Quad. SU belt. rads. mac cond. RHO, beaut. olfer.67J.jl81 . s '74Che $1699 MOTORCilS &..&-..... -9100 6'...&-. .,._W -"'~ ~ 91~0 "' New pn. t. $8SO. 675·2159 leath. & wood, a real vy a~ iuc -"~ -~ ,._ --.~ ·•·• --ai\6PM classic. SS.950. 499-1590 Tri.... 9767 Vega .... (137056) D' ~A" I ••••••••••• .. • .. ••••••• ••••••••• .. •--••• .. •••••••••••••~••• •
li/1 1969 2002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AM/FM radio, heater, 547-9250' 1
:.\&,:. . . 73 Datsun Wagon 1800, '71MB280SE, very clean, /81. ,~mauc, air cond., mags FM stereo body & radio, air. bur gundy. 1976 Triumph Spitfire P '7lWCICJOft $1999
AM /FM ratho. A one eng xlnt. 12000.. &6e.3534 $.'!950 497·2.595 Xlnt cond. $3900 . $400 un· ""ord Pinto . C714GOV). 4
11gwnercar. (ZRV449). · derbluebook.847-0638 c
' • --'73 240Z. Lo mi's. Xlnt '68 Mercedes 250S w i'73 Volkswagtft 9770 speed trans. radio
l972 IMW 200.Ztll cond. Best offer. ~m1 ell1cs, all f_actdory1op ••••••••••••••••••••••• hea~7r4. ~~ _299 4 speed air cond., ster Call 637...ue9 alt 7pm me . e ec. win s. ow , rvni ..-~A•~"'te 0 "d mft" wheel mil .. , new Ivory paint HUGESELECTlON Ford Maverick LDO ''° .........,,F,GX... "" 8 '74 260Z , l owner, -USEDCARS
. > A"•t FM, a uto, ma••. w/perfect red lnt. 54900. Model. Auto trans., air
"A .... Must sell. 979-9721. cond., AM/FM stereo,
1972 2002 xlnt cond. llust sell 1198-1705 at'l. 6 Top cash SS for your VW. p/steering & brakes &
. SJB75. 963-6897 ---------• Paid for or not. Call much more (789KMZ>. Automaticwathalrcond. MGI . 9744 Ke1thorJerry. '72Che $1099
0 n e o w n e r c a r . '71 Pickup. Nu carb ft ••••••••••••••••••••••• 808 WITHAM vw "Y <121FTQ). altern. + 4 nu tires. 74MGI 7600WestminsterAve. Veea WiJ.l, 4 spd, radto,
• --SJ.150. 642-1939 or 644-4811 893. 7551or6311· 7880 heater. (SSSDWM) • IMW IAVARIA Rat 9725 Grey5<360688~9llX> '74 Dahm $1299
Uc wllb air con '74 Bug Sunroof, AM/FM, Sedan (705LIY) , 8 track ster~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• MOTOR CARS Nu tires. Xlnt cond. 4 speed trans, v1.nyl top,
(003N8Z) '75 Spyder 124. Air. AM· D'ELIGAHCE S2al0/firm. 675.ftl78 special wheels & much __ · FM, xlnt cond. $4500. 547 9250 more.
19712002 ;' 634·1441dys645-6763eves · '66 VW •. xlnt condition. '76 Honda $349' New tires & brakes. ••peed, sunroof & '75 Flat 128 Sport L. Xlnt PClllitero 9747 palnL Call 963--9045. CVCC ···· (llOPPN) ll..i ck er AM /FM cond. Lo mi's. $2195. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Stlck shHt, radio &
<mREV). 646-3162, 545--2'751. •PAHTER.A• '70 VW Fastback, must heater, lo miles.
72 p t Sl2 ...... see lo appreciate. SJ.JOO. • 1973 l OCSA '72 124 Hard top Sport an e:ra · · · · · · ,....., 645-8641 • . Coupe. s spd, mags All original. Perfect.---------• TRAHSPORT.ATIOM
AutOtUd ticl, sunrooif, aar AM/FM yellow w/blk Low mlleaae. Yellow. '67 VWCam,_r Xlnt intr . C R con • , ow m les . • (Ser 4234) nd.s tra --;.~ bes. A CENTER (3S1JPS). We also have interior. Xlnt cond. TestDr1veToda 1 ns, .,.,., !>r t •
000' speed ln Ulls model. $1650. Tammy 648-.3818 MOTOll CAR~ _oC_r_. _63_1_·233_1 ___ _
HoM. 9727 D'ELIGAHC& Mvg to Sweden: Mst sell 1974 IMW 2002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -'67 VW cmpr, ms gd, nds 4 speed, Allf/l'K Ii oab' ..... Hew '11 woW17\bSA547-9250 body ~t Sl,200/bstoCr.
23,000 ortlhW miles. A HO P1111ot '741 _MS-5832. ___ __. ____ 1 ~.-per )1barp car, NDA Cars •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• ''12 vw 8 Xlnt coad. ~~ ~ MAHY '59 a.ASSIC 400. Imrnac. AM/FM ~ereo. $22SO .
. o·, lt741.0Slo T0Cha11•"'°'8t =~~~ .. ~tsee& 545-72439-$/996--0maflS
=d~:"1::::'·,:t UNIVERSITY ,.,.. 971 '72 vw. blue convert. aKLP Older dlll ....................... AM/Fii. Good cond.
< >. .._.. c_.. • GMC SHUSFIRSTI tMOO.Call~L
1•,10· 9'7' JOOJ Trwdll tr ~ou a.re conaldenna 19'10 VW Bua. 1ood .n.,~pted, a ir cond. & 2850Uarbor8lvd. buY1na or leQ\og YQW' mecha.Nctlly cdn4. $1000 boat.ereo cassette. J{n. Cotta Mesa 540-9640 neit~he. u-offet'.tal·2082daym or
maculate! (788RJT..). 9710 IUYATIS ~1 ""· YW..pc)RSCHI '71 VW CAMPO 82$00. su1-.~ Beblt. mtr. Under Wilr-IJ7 ...... 4'Mll I nmty. NeW radii .. tape , _ __......_ .......... _.........._ __ , dk.~cS&Yt.
SPOll'ICAIS im ~. one owmr Ollly, ~. Wd needi bod1 weft. Eng 'WOl'b One, lo ml, 14,532. tm ... S38'1
'70 Cad Sedan. Full
power, nu Utts &: brks.
$1095 548..()285
74CADILLAC
ELDORADO
Black on black. AU the
extras. Ser. (11338)
$4989
MOTORCARS
D'ELIGAMC£
6218W17t.hSAS47·92150
1976 Cadillac Eldora.do wt
ll•tro sunroof. Fully
loaded, original own.r.
18700. &»1710, ~
7'CADILLAC
LIMOUSINE
Has Everytbtne. Just
like new .. (3430>
$SAVI$
MOTORCAR
D'ELEGAMCE
828 W 17\b SA 547'9250
alaa rnOGaon . poa-crac
presents
.Tran~·Am ... fm '~ONTIAC
;
Need me sag •ore?!
33 MPG Hl•HWAY
23 MPG cm
hNd•Mllt,.....eftethc1 11 tMI
• criflM ~ Miit U.S. ••Ir 1 t
Protect!• A .. .cy tlie t"lc.. ..,
......,. ef ttn nlllde h ,.,........ tea..
U .... city. J> MPG WIJll-r· Y-_,_,....,. _, ,,wy.
.
Ser. t2C11 B7U534332
'EQuipped With:
4Cylinder140 cu. in. Engine
and Standard Transmission
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
•EW 1977 su•BllD
$
IMMEDIATE ~ DELIVERY
33 MPG Hl•HWAY
23 MPG cm
Based on the results of tests
conducted or certified by the U.S.
EnvlroninenLerot.action Agencv ..me
typica~ gas mileage of this vehicle Is
estimated to be 23 MPG city. 33
MPG highway. Your actual mileage
may vary.
NOW AVAltABLE
J MODELS .
SJ MODELS
$
Sft.95 PerMaftth
Total Down Only . s395
CASH or TRADE
•• .. .
••
$395. total down payment. 48 monthly payments of $89.95 includes tax
and license. Deferred price $4712.60. APR 14.23% on approved credit.
.
•EW 1977 POllllAC vmnmA
.·AS .LOW AS
$
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY.
~::TCl .. 0
$
EXAMPLtE: .
EQuipped With:
• Factory Air Conditioning
• Power Oise Brakes
•Automatic Transmission•
• Power Steering
• Example Equipped With
·• Tilt Wheel
: Factory Air Conditioning
• Rallye Gauges
• Automatic Transmission
• Tinted Glass
• Power Steering
• 350 VS Engine
• Power Oise Brakes
• Body Side Mldgs.
• Rallye II Wheels
• Sport Mirrors
• Sport Mirrors
• 350 cu. in. V-8 Engine
• Accent Stripes
• Body Side Mouldings
-----------· -... .~ •
~ (t?.14'4 'I JIAU
2 DAIL V PILOT
n •n .~); 't9C'11t:~1~ \~~ff
Thursday, September 22, 1977 -
Computer Age Com•s to Diamond Industry
By TERRY COVILLE ...... ~ .....
The computer age ls about to ir•
'rive in the diamond industry and tbe
first example of 1t Is now in .. at
Professional Jewelers in Huutln&toa
Beach.
A computer Ptoltam bu been de-
veloped which can accuntely ap.
pralse, rqlster and type out tbe ap.
praiaaJ fonn fflf a diamond in Jaa
than 15 minutes.
An operaUoo like that UMd to take
more than an bout -at best -and even then tbe ottlclal appralaaJ
..
Fall
Fashions
DAILY PILOT
Sept. 21 & 22, 1m
Robert N. Weed ~ ..........
Georae A. Leidal -~t.c.... ...
Tenv Coville .....,leciMI....,
Barbara N. carey ..... s.c-... ....... .
Cover Photo: Terry Covlli.
--. __..... .
.... $ ··-,,,,..
Huntington Beach Company First Test
forms would have to be malled to the
custcmer at a later date. .. I think U '• the bta•t1t
breattbroqh in Diamonds llnee deo
nlopneat ol the cut dlamCIDd." HYI Bob Brownfield, man••er of
Profe11lonal JeweJer1, JOt03
Brookbunt St., S\llte 20L
Tbe speed ot the eomputer II 1 de-
flnlte plua for jewelen, 11y1
Brownfield, but I.I 0D11 oae ot
several bonusea !or euatomn.
Aceuraq and eooa1ltuC1 ol ap.
pralsals ii t.be btneat advantate for
diamond owners and bu yen.
Tbe computer bank la atoekec! COD•
tinuously with lnformatloo Oil wbat
dfaJDODds, and other iems, are tell•
tna for on the nattonal mark"-l'be Inf ormatloa la collected from
numeroaa wholesalers and CU11nmd
eatten acroas the countrJ. •well 11 tn~aJ diamoad SQllllH ...
"'Tbe itudard methOil b" •P-1>1'81N11 la for tbe Jeweler to matt
his estimate ol the Cliama'a quaU. t.J, tbm phone 1 few other Jewelers
to 1et an Idea of what 111c!a a
cU•mmd la aeWDC tor ... aap Dand
TruemanL.. •Ice prHlclent of
Umwnal Ulamcind, a ~ Beadl company whtela bu de·
nloped the eomputer aystem.
"But for tnaurance PQ1'DOM1 t1lat
apJlftlaal in., not be full7 eceurate. Wttllpiee Inputs, dallJ, OU1'I hat the b1ibeilt poalble acearaq ••
Tbe eoatput.er banka alio pmtc1e
a recaatr•UoD l)'ltem u aecurltJ
eonscloua as bavlng .your
ftnlerprintl CJD file wttb tile FBI.
Certaba chuactvistles of each
diammd are permanenlJ1, and COO• Jld~, reciatered on eomputen tor poldUve Jdeatitlcatloo tn case ot
theft or Jou.
Another aeniee )l'Ovlded by the computer l7ldem ii a •'menu" or
sboppjn& II.It wbleh lodleates where cerialn ·fypea ot cliamoodl can be
found.
.. U a customer wantl a $1,$00 41~ ol a certaln quality we Just
tJpe out the tnfonn1tlon and the
computer tells-. from our own ln·
vent.o17 and from naUonal lllta, where we cua ftnd lt," explains
Brownfteld.
tn additklll to tbe ~computer
•ervice. Proleslklnal 1ewi .. cftert
whit Brownfield eonslden di•· ttnctmt. ~ qualltJ 1entee tn th• aelectlall ol ftDe coma.
Tbe retail outlet Is one ol only four
diamond eutten ID Orance County
and cleaJI e1sentt.U1 ID loole stones
and custom-made Mfflnp.
"We•re not Just a Jewelry at.ore. We dcm't Mil w1tcbee., locket.I or
cha.nm. We belp apeclal people wttb
special needl." 1&11 Brownfteld.
Whlle th• computer appraisal
service empha1laH apeed.
Brownfield 1119 the rest of the
e>perltkm la geared to a slaw«' pace. ••11 It tatee • .ure dQ w\th a
customer to telect what bt wanta,
I'll ao It. An4 we only work on a cine. to-me balla. Many of our customers mau lllP'*ltments tint." 'l'bl QIPDW to phone for appcUl.
mea1111-.5625. The store~ in. • a.m. to f · p.m., ~-l'itday, and 10 a.m. to
p.m .. ~. In McMtton w selllnc and aettlq
diamonds and other iem1,
Prdeatmal Jewelers will allo c1o apprallala for lnsurance pmpoees.
reeut dl1mnnda. and repair broken or cblpped diamonds.
lt'mhllad tlme for a hewltne el f ... oaa. The experta U7
.etf.rta md dreuea are in order
for tbl Idea this year while tbe •• wm pnerally sport a~ ~ tone to their owa
t.lcJtldQf BaDOct.. model Loll FlJma
(Oil tbe C09'a') shows off tbe type
ol lt1'-women are expectecl to wear tldl year. Her outfit II
•••liable ID the Youn1
D=n•ra department at B '1,SouthCout Plue. Tbl model'• outfit "'WU d• alped b7 Lb Claiborne ud m.
cJudm a lbol't tweed Jacket. a cllrndl plaid aklrt. a white turtle
pec:Jlr a eattCJD plaid sblrt, a cot.. t. llaawl. and a bat designed b7 Wrank Ollver.
SUe Splnelll model• one of ...
fin• lntlrut• negllg••• t.8tured
at Vet•'• In Newport
Beach. ·
Veta Offers
Femininity
In Apparel
That feminine feel ls what a
woman wants in fine, intimate wear-
ing apparel, and Veta'a in Westcllff
Plaza is the place to find it.
Veta's, in the center at 17th Street
and Irvine Avenue, Newport Beach,
is a completely Intimate shop, carry-
ing all the major brands, according
to owner Veta Behr. n doesn't ma"er whether the woman la a bride-to-be, a career
womu or a mother, Veta 'a Intimate
Apparel provides personal. compe-
'tent attention for each valued cutomer. .
"Our ato.re ls very loving and there
Ls a close, intimate feellq. It's our
trademark," says Veta.
Her &bop carries the best of the
major lines in apparel, bridal
,,, handkerchiefs and iarters, blklnia,
and dainty slippers.
In the fittin1 cateeory, Veta'• sells
service u well as fine quality.
Tbe shop ls open from 10 p.m. to 8
p.m., llooda)' lhrouah Saturday,
. andlOp.m. to8p.m ., TuesdQI.
,....,,. •"'*---
Guidance
·Classes
Scheduled
· A serf ff of 1hr two.hour aelf
eiteem cluae1 will be oftered twice 'in October at Gary Compton and
Company Create, 191'1 Weatcllff
Drive, Newport Beach.
Tbe classes wm be eonducted by
Muriel Kaylln Mabry, author, lee· turer and President of Woman's
World International, a career
SUidance company for women.
Points covered ln tbe class lD· elude:_
-'lbe quiet world of meditation
and what can be done with it for in·
ner beauty.
-The new creative beauty within.
-How to overcome unlovely
thinking (anger, hatred, a poor self
image).
-Learn to love yourself and all
those with whom you come ln con-
tact.
-Techniques to overcome fear,
procrastination, and excuses for
lack ol self fulfillment.
-How to communicate effectively
for self expression.
For more detailed lnlonnaUon on
the self esteem classes phone Gary
Compton and Company Create at
642-6164.
The first series begins Oct. 2, from_
10 a.m. to noon, and will be held on successive Fridays. The second set
begins Oct. 7. from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.,
and will be held on successive Wed· nesdays.
Gary Compton and Company·
specialhes in creat1n1 a total beauty
image for women which includes
hair styling, fublon tips, •boutique,
makeup care, galvonlc facial.I, and
an exclusive Un• of beauty care pro-
ducts.
"We try to create a look that's
good for the client.ta person.ality,
lifestyle and faclal st.ructpre," says
Compton.
''We completely 10 over them from bead to toe. ClotbJnl, balr styl-
ing, makeup, etc. They don't bave to
go anywhere else."
Town and Country Center
Fills Variety of Needs
Variety lS the aplce of life and in loan. a travel qeney and several
~· Bristol Town and Country medical facilities. . Center, with 47 shops to serve JOU, a For the active lndlvlduals, a
shopper can find all the lplce in mountaineering shop and a soccer
shopping needs. shop are ottered in addition to a ftne
Located on South Bristol, between private tennis club and a public ten·
:MacArthur and Sunflower, the Dis abop which carries tamls ac·
center off en a unique selection of cessories and equipment.
· apedalty abops, restauraata and To add to the spice of abopplna in
services. the Town and Ccuntry Center, there
Included ln this dlTerslffed center are fine jewelry 1toce1 and &I.ft shops
are lilt dltterent ratauranta wtul to aerve JOU aloq with complete
mmm ranainl from ice cream de-beauty cue facWti• wblch include
lllbtl to oriental dishes. cosmetic and beavt7 suppl)' abopa u
"lJ'bere are also seven dlff erent well as hair st;;Ulta for men and
clotblnl stores ineludinl a klnl-womei.
l1led abop for men, a tWcedo end And for entertainment, there's weddin& IOWll rental aod a tailor . •lwaya the Edwards ClDema IV
lbOp. whlch i:ODta\D• four Hperate Tb8 center al.lo olten a •ariet7 of clnemas under one root 8Dd a •ame
tpedal ..-vices wblcb lndUd9 a re.i • room wb6cb fe..,_ both .tectroDtc
eatate ecbool, a bank, a n~ • aad plnball 1am11. .. . . .
~· Seel!mb!r 22. 1971
es ,
DAil v P!lO! '.
B&e's Fashions
The store with the f ash~ble labels
m•ftotfi
(/-:::::: ~
I '
4 bAILV PILOT ThUt!dlY, !aplefnber 22, 1 m
Scb~ol can Open D~ors
For Modeling . Careers
Commercials are uaaally the ftnt
big stepping stone for cblldren Into
television or movie act.ma and to
Newport Beach, there ii a seboal
that can teach your chlld all Utt
techniques for becomtn1 I pro-
fessional model.
Dorothy Shreve'• Model1nt an4
Charm School is, u tho tiUe lmDliet,
more than just a charm school. lt'a
Boutique:
'Fun Place'
For Shoppers
The Intrigue Boutique ls con•
sldered a "fun place'• to shop, for the
men as well as women, according to
owner Betty Blakslee.
One reason is lbe locatioa. Her
two-stcry shop, at 2817 Latayette to
Newport Beach, ls in the Mart of the
Cannery Vlllaee and features a love•
ly secood-Ooor view of the bay. ••we redeeorated the second Door
to make a garden of lt. We serve
wine and have puules for the men to
work wblle their women shop," •QI. Blakslee. "Men are very happy at
our store. especially upstairs."
The women are happy because the
Intrigue Boutique carries quality
sportswear, tops and bottoms,
(Cont. on P .11)
the only one JJa 0tan1e County wltb a
Screen Actors Guild license and la
also approved by the Callf ornta Board of Education.
After opea-atfnl 1D Loi Ancel• for 18 years, tbe school moved to o.ra.._e
Countr two years •10. Proltal<JDal moile& do all the lnltructioQ iD tbe
ltbools.
M!lllf ~the.local atore cataJoeues
1leed 8irla of all .,. to model tbelr
fMhloaa and they look for a school of WI type for betp.
•'There is a huge demand for older
women in fashion ahowa," says
Dorothy Shreve, Director of the
school and California Director of the
Little Miss Pagent.
''I Just bad a request to find a COU•
pie .. years old to model and I had
a terrible time tlndiq tomtone.
Maybe this could be a eood Ume to
let these people know U they don't
have anything el.le to do we are available".
The sehool presents lta own Little
Kial Pqeant with two are IJ'OUPS
comDeUD2. The ages ranee from 7-12
In t6e ttnt group with rules com·
pared to those used ln all the other
beauty pageantl. Tbe ucood IJ'OUP
ran.-from 3-6 1e~ old. but the
contestaatl are Judled by beaut1
alone. Talent la not used to de· termine the winner.
The school ls located at S40t Vla
Udo, Suite B.
For more lntormaUon call '75~.
__ .. ..,. ..
Cameo Shoe• In South Coaat ptaza c•ntff a wider range of ahff
aJzn for the l9die1 then nearty any other a tore In th• area.
·Hard-to-fit Feet Greeted
With Ease at Cameo Shoes
Cameo Shoes in South Coast Plaza
carries ladies' shoes ln sizes you
can'tfind In most other stores -4, 4 ~. andll. .
"We just looked around and found
most stores~1 bother with those
sizes. But it took me four to five
yean to build a cUentele;"' says the
own~. Mr: Fields. · ·
Cabieo Shoea also carries the
usual sizes of five through 10. AB for
widths, the store has all types, from
triple "A" to "C" and sometimes
wider.
The store is located on the lower
level of the plaza, near the waterfall.
Cameo Shoes has been a part of South Coast Plaza for eight years.
Cobbles and Red Cross are the ma·
jor brands carried al Cameo Shoes.
Mr. Fields says the store also
features boot.I, a popular fashion
item, in ai:&es 4·11 and narrow.
medium and wide sizes.
A recent redecorating job has
added a softer touch to the store with
bamboo chairs and bamboo display
cases.
'fiied dieting Anti
it didn't Work?
eall ~JJ@MU no'!!
You 1'4ve a friend who ca.rt• at
GwtiQ.Marshall'~I Call Toda11l.
TC 1vor1"4f«'J.-..Jlfit_. ...
llROll A llD 1110 A 7 IN a WUKll
"Wordt e.n•t ~ the lhfllt o1 DOlna trom • tin
13 IO t lln 7-llnd fn onlf I weMsl 'fhatllt.t IO Ille
l'l«pluf Qlllldlnot "' ,,,. -.It llnd the lndill/dtJaJ/Zed program., I lost 23 ptJ(Jnt/I f/fld 24 lttcMt, Mid '-· ~· 1119, .... llO/tdfrlt/l 1'*' ... oJ ~J"
' CALL ... GET fTARTED . ~
YOUR RESULTS BEGIN THE MOMENT YOU DOI
--io-. -
How the world sees you can ln·
fluence your whole oplnlon of
yourself. Ed Rose realized Just bow
much at lhe San Dleto Naval
Hospital when he worked' with the
first boys back from Gutdak,.nal
who had suffered eye damage In the
war ..
An experienced optician for 38
years, Rose has a personal CC>P~
reflected in the services be tders at
The Rose Optical Company -lt'a
Rot jwil a boutique sellin1 frames.
He understands and can fit
catarac lenses, prosthetic eyea, bard
or soft contact lenses, and even
scopes and binoculars."
A complete selection of designer
eyewear, including Christian Dior,
Elizabeth Arden, Ralph Lauren,
Geoffrey Beene, Oscar de la Renta
and Bailsch and Lomb.
Janelle Jobson hu been with Rose
Optical, 3416 Via Lido, Newport
Beach, for Ove years helplnt people ,
select and fit lenses.
Sbe feels it's important to do more
than just lake facial meuUttments
and frt contac\ leD;Ses. Janelle works
to coor:dinate the fashionable de·
s{gneI' frame$ apd tints to suit each
face,.coosideril'.ig personality, make· up style and coloring.
"We do our own 1rindln& and tin\·
ing of the lenaes. Brina ln a piece of
material and we can mattb it," says
Rose, with a process like silk acreen·
ing.
The Rose Optical Company
opened in Richard's Market in 1965
then moved to its present location ln
Lido Village. There ii also an olflce
ln the Town Center Build.int at UCI,
4201 Campus Drive, Irvine.
Handlers'
Efforts Keep ..
Them on· Top
· Steve and Suzanne Handler are
The Hair Handlers, and with two
shops operattni under that name,
they feel they have to stay on top of
their profession.
"Education is the most important
fact« in staying current ln any pro·
fession," says Steve. "We keep our
people sharp with monthly and bl·
monthly classes OD balr cuttln1
styles."
The Handlen themselves recently
completed a trip throQ&b Europe
and the Mid· Bast wbere they stud.led
all types of popular new trends.
They made a special atop in Israel
to study the rWnc popularity ln the
use of henna as a natural hair color·
ing.
•·we went rieht to the source or it
in Israel to observe lts use and ap-
plication," explalns Sten.
He SI.YI' henna ta now available ln
nine colon, from neutral to black, with 1ucb 4hades as brown and
strawberry blonde.
Henna is a vegetabl6 dle wblcb
coats the hair and £Ives lt a areater
luster and sbibe. The uae (/(Henna
does not replace other tlntlq Jtyles
since it esaentl.ally matches the in·
dividual's natural color.
The Hair Kandlen 1~op1 are located at the Westcllff Plua, l'ftb
Street and Inine A•enue. Newport
Beach; and ln FC>untaln Valley at
8908 Warner Ave.
I
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J,.
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71~ 'Ill\' 'l•'f •
THE TIMELY
CENTER
49 Specialty
Shops &
. Services
RESTAURANTS Ham•a Country Cooket')'
The Barday Inn s-nMn'& Ice Cream Gin Una Restaurant Our Favorite Het-oM
Jasper'• Restaurfnt
SERVICES
Anthonl.:NI Esta .. &hod ur~Palfic~ Ju H)'deTra~ M.i.tta Shoe Service
Or. Wea KoMz. Optafnetrlst
MariM F.-~smnp Ora,.. Coa1t Medlcaf ~Inc. Heatth on
Medlcal/Oenta4
APPAREL
Hewport FatNons/~ j(On= l ~s. ~ Jaclyn•• Wldc!lna
Rent·A·Tux
'f'9drldl'• of~ Ruby's F
JEWELRY & GIFTS
Kl•A·Th Jeweters Doftna'& Unique Gift Ii Weddln~
Arneflcan= Arc.apell Je'l1le •
HOME FURNISHINGS Tl~·1 TV6 ~la~ Bred tempo
The Brunet Ganery
1SIMper l.ounp
Elesant. b~Cenfel' Hiid na•1 nterlors
Arllraft Inc.
'BEAUTY CARE
Mette Norman Cosmetocs Alonu & Co. (Men'• Heir Stytinf,>
(' Halr·H•r Winter's Oeauty Supply
ENTERTAINMENT
Edward's Cinema IV Play Palace
SPORTS&
RECREATION Holubar~~
r_,,•~ntz~~
.. OlHER
FINE SHOPS
Souttiw.at ,..., • ~ ..... Pf_ •la~.:"~o:l
TheTr .. IW'Y
Ofari M,,_ Pho~8'>hJ loolii Vau
~·, M.llit c-.. ~~~
! DAil Y ,.LOT
Rae Mariana Has E~perlence
At Ladies' Fashion AClvlce
Rae's Fathions, formerlJ ot tbe
Santa Monica bay area, ls now open
in Costa Mesa with a abop at 18M
Newport Blvd. ·
Owner Rae Morlana has helped
select fashions for some of the better
dressed women in Pacific Palisades,
Beverly Hllll and Marina del Rey.
Now, she hopes lo do the same for
women along the Orange Coast. "We
feature comfortable clothes for
anybody," she says. "the kind of
clothes you can shop in, or lounge
in."
Some ol the Une1 I •~turtd in Rae'1 downtown c.oeta Meta store lnetUlt.: AnJack' Fuhlons <dreu•>, Butte Knits, Colleflan (1port1wear>,
Elissa of Calllomla (eventni wear), Miss EllJette, Freel Jtotbachild,
Loubella (sportswear), LeRoy
Knitwear, Melissa Lant (dresaea>,
Vera FaahJons, Riviera (faablons
and casual wear>, and IntJme (lingerie).
Store hou.ra run fr~m 9:30 a.m. to
5:30 p.m., daily, except Sunday.
Rae's ls open evenings by appoint· meat. .
New Exer~iser Uses Gravity
To Tone Muscles at Salon·
A · gravitf exerciae machine, de·
veloped from Information 1athered
in aerospace tests, ls the newest
muscle toning aide now available at
Gloria Marshall Figure Salons.
The new device is available at the
Gloria Marshall salon In Newport
Beach at 1801 Westcliff Drive. It is
b.ased on ~e J>rlnclple that gravit)
helps keep body musclea In tone.
When NASA officials studied the
results of manned space nights, they
discovered that without the pull of
gravity astronauts suffered a Joss in
their muscle tone and slower blood
circulation.
' Machines were developed to use
the pull ol travity to ke~f. them in
shape and Gloria Marshall a GravUy
Exerciser wor~s on this basic p~i·
pleL 0
A client simply stands on the plat·
form and graspe U>t handrails, Aa
the machine rotates, the must keesi her balance on the e.nter of the plat·
form.
For more informailon on the
Gravity Exerciser 'and the rest ol
Gloria Marshall's fine fitness equip·
ment call 642·3630.
If youre not yet~
to be k;lentified
with the bifocal set, see~~
No tell-tale ffnes to give you awav.
No head gymnatk:s 11 With brfocalt.
v.irux 2 is the 'lens with Comc>t• oPtlcal modulation. Which means a gradual focus change from tOP to bottom and 9ldt to tide. With normll head mcwement. vou H4t Cfearfy et any distance. From the IMll*'t on your d~ to lht Ghlf\I aero.a Che room. Our Varilux·tralned speclallstt can thow you new coinbt ftt ~*'cl Ir\ ·~risses, made to vour blfoctl preecriptlC>f', Fuhlonablt frlmt1 *"tlllblt II\ .
c:111anc:t1ve styles. Bl'fng thlt,ed elk/ aave 120
Cltt )'OUf plHOllplion ~
Owner lltN Mor1en&: (left) 111t1tt Rozella Morlan• with • c11u1I
1we1ter from Rae'• FHhlona In Costa MtH. "
Sundance Matches Casual Atmosphere
With Quality.Men's Casual Clothing
Servtni the Bal~a Community
for 10 yeara, Sundance features a
casual aima.pftere .an4Jlne aemce
as it brings yo.r ~n 'leli~ellent selee·
\ionofmen'seas~l.fportswe~ ....
In addWGd 'to Che Balboa laland
store at ... llarlne Ave., two new
beach locatlClftl ll1\' *been built ta N~ Beach at).12 McFadden Pl.
and 110 ~aln St., near the Balboa Pier, . , .
Set tn a western style motif, Sun·
dance earrlesJeana by L.A.P.D. and
Sticky Fin1era and a variety of
,wimwear fro~ such famous
makers as Ocean Pacific, Off Shor~
Quick Silver, and Bolt.
Unlike some stores, swimwear is
carried year round to accommodate
those wtlo like to use the Southern California beaches all year.
Top alders and shirts from Mad
Man and .David Winter are also
avaUa&le. For fall, Sundance
featuree a ll&ht, washable Polyeater
and Cottm eord pan\ that doean 't
shrink ud can be worn right out ol
lbewuber.
Sweat.en can also be found and Utla mcatll. all sweaters will be 20
percentoffrqular prices.
PROFESSIONAL
SCHOOlOf
~MOPE~ING
& SELF-IMPROVEMENT
ONI Of ntl NATION'S lEADtNG
FASHION SHOW & llAUlY
PAOIAHT COOIDINATOH
A PIOflSSIONAL STAFf
UNDU IHI NISONAl
SUPllYISION Of
DOIOl\4l SHllVE
PROFl$SIONAl. TRAIH1NG IN
• FASHION MODELING
• PHOTOGRAPHY • ACTING
• Y.V. COMMlRCI~
• DANCIN<j . • a..n ... T8P. Jan
Sen" Actoa-1 Guild At••cf
.
~
-· ...
. } .,. -
Improved Eyewear · ·-~
Opticai Market Provides . .
Exciting Fashion Frames
We have all heard the renowned
Amy Vanderbilt phrase "Guys don't
make passes at girls wbo wear
glasses." That was back in 19"
when most consumer products em·
phaSized function without proper at·
tention to fashion.
Today, there are many ways to
enhance your appearance with
either fashion frames w contact
lenses -the "invisible glasses" that
proVide excellent vision and comfort
for all activities.
If you have ever experienced the
frustration of selecting new frames
while not being able to see without
your prescription lenses, the Optical
Market in Newport Beach has the
answer.
design and clothes, then ask yourself
"is my eyewear compatible with my
overall ap~ance'l '' The myths and changes in contact
lenses parallel the eyeglass story.
Recent improvements in contact
lenses are more extensive than ex· ~rienced in the previous 25 years.
Better manufacturing and fitting
technlque.s and greater product
selection provide new opportunities
to wear contacts with comfort and ease at a reasonable price.
The best or both contacts and
frames are available at the Optical
Mark~ 2646 S-an Miguel (Neyport
Hilla Center), Newport Beac.1£, and
at a second location in the Sad·
dleback Valley Plaza, El Toro.
Unusual Imports, Ilk• this
leather coat, are the trademark
at Uaette of Franc• In the Udo
VIiiage, Newport Beach. . You can try on the new frames
while being recorded on a video
tape. Then, put on your regular
glasses and watch yourself on the
television screen ln the other
frames.
No one could have envisioned the
dramatic impact of fashion and fun
in ~ay's glasses. The sources for
thia new excitement are leacling
clothing designers who are creatma
frames lo make people as appeallng
ln contemporary glasses as In ~·
temporary clothing.
Lisette of France Imports
Unusual Cloth~ng and Jewelry
A vast variety of color and style fl
now available. Consider the lime
and money spent on cosmetics, bail'
Looking for imported "mi&ses .. clot'hlng and rm• jewelry but don't
quite know where to go? Well,
there's a shop on Lido Isle thal la Just
right («yotJ.
Lisette of France, locaeed at 3408
Via Oporto carrles unusual Imports
that won't be found anywhere else,
according lo Mrs. Llsette Beyerlein,
Slip into Fall· .
"-. '! ..
with a slip from
co·owner of the store wftb her
daughter, Danielle.
The boutique, which opened lut
spring, offers such names u Nicole,
Fiore and Florance W alsb as well as
Pierre Cardin. Lisette also features
fine jewelry from the Feature Rina
Co. and the Gotham Ring Co., one of
the largest in the country.
DM.VPLOTJ
The Page Bo_y maternJty shops
have li\ten birth to two new siores
this summer -both stocked with fine fasblo-._ for the expectant mother.
A Page Boy boUlique opened
Laltor Day .in· Robinson's at tbe·
• Westminster Mall,..._W~tminster. It Joins aimilJr Pace JSOY boutiques in
Robinson stores at Fashion
fsJand and the Cerritos Mall.
Meanwblle. the blcgest.cbange in
the chaltl Is taking place at South
Coast Plaza where a second store,
called Page Boy, Too. will open ln
October next lo the current Page
Boy maternity shop.
The two Page Boys will operate·
side-by-side at South Coast Plaza,
with Page Boy, Too, offering a more
uelualve line ol matemlty fabions,
ac~ to Sue McCal>' manager
o( the,S\ores. • ••The Page Boy, Too, is more of a
boutiq"e with an elegant decore, a
more e:xclus.ive look, and better ac·
commodations for customers_." ex·
plains lrfts. 'McCabe.
She says \heaew ('II catalogue.fw
all Page &ya featur~ a nice line oC
suede cJoth: dfess~. pantsuits, apd
tops.
"We try to crea~ a look at Pqe
Boy to help expectant motben stay
ln fashion wi\b sweaters,
turtlenecks. lln1erie and other / thinp. We bave everything," &a)'S Mrs. McCabe.
.
·~ polo by~ph lauren .. ._ ..
·' '
'
...
# r 'I t I ' .. ;•• r'
T•k• Your pick, men. At Ease In FHhlon l•l•nd hH the beat cholcH
In men'awe•r.
Customers Feel At Ease In
Store~With The Same Name
"We believe that there should be a
c lose one to one relationship
between the salesperson and the
customer. We don't feel that the
customer st.Quid be treated u an
outsider , says Earl Boquette,
manager of At Ease in Fashion
Island.
A variety of clothes can be found
for the whole family lncludine
fashions from Glanz Roe and Polo
for Men and Women. "A bit part of
o ur business is done In boys.
clothln"", says Boquette. At Ease
Wear the lool<
of feminine
sophistication
with the CLASSICS/
J H. COLLECTIBLES
brings you a sub11e
plaid blazer, fully
lined, 1~ wool,
then softens It with
the elegance of a
100% polyester,
detachable, stock
tie blouse.
offers a full line of boyswear by
Calvin, Gant and Holbrook.
Shoes by Alden, lntercueroe, Bass
and Cole-Hano are features as well
as ties by Robert Talbott and silk scarves by Uberty of London.
Says Boquelte, "We also carry
Levi's for men and boys ln shirts,
pants and jackets, although most of
our clothes come from the East".
The atmosphere Is very cuual
with Early American wooden
furniture and picturesque oriental rugs.
SOUTH COAST PLAZA-COSTA MESA
(Lower Level·Ne11t.\ay CoI 546-5210
. '
It took the
simplicity of a
clnsic to tum
mywdrobe
into something
unutional!
lsn t >t rn.~? Thi Stun
""'<! shoe ,..Lil lta smooth un
comploca!M •ne• ..., golderl
~Ill ... the ngllt plecu•
Smart looltlng Jutl wl\el I
,,.e<Nd "' _.. up ,.,., -cj.
robe "" .. ••&ot"i $ 34.
BLACK • BROWN• CA~EL • NAVY
See
the latest
Page Boy
maternity
fashions. comes to life in the new
FalVHolidaycatalogue for '77.
Come in soon for your free copy.
..... rq ••
w
PAGE BOY MATERNITY SHOP
BOUTH COAST PLAZA ,.,., ..... ~eo.tt
• 5$1-~
L
Owner• of the Sunshine Co., Brynn Garner (left) and Carole Cook, wlll
carry a fine line of gtft1, antJquH and junior sportl)IWHr.
Sunshine Company Mixes
Gift.s, Clothing, Antiques ·
When the Sunshine Company
>pens a oew store this October in
'lewport Beach, shoppers will find
m unusual combination of items for
:ale.
Part of the store features casual
unlor clothing for the girls, while
nother part carries nostalgic and
·ontemporary gifts, Including a fine
ine of American Oak antique
umiture.
"We always wanted a dress shop
and a gift shop, so we did both,'' says
Carole Cook, who along with Brynn
Gamer owns Sunshine Company.
Mrs. Cook sugeests browsers
shopping for clothes will be Sut·
prised when they find a lot of run
things for the house as well.
The new store o~ns in early Oc·
tober at 2630 Avon St., behind
Mariner's Mile. Cook and Garner
already have one Sunshine Com·
pany, located in· Westminster at
15256 Golden West St.
• Chrtstlan Dior
• Fiore of Italy
•Nicole
• eierre Cardin
•~le of Florence
~·September 22. 1977 DAILY PU.OT I
I
''A Day of ~eautf:.~
Begin your personal
pampering with:
f
The Galvanic Facial
Manicure & Pedicure
Hair Style
Make-Up Application
Color Key Determination :.
All for only '75.00
We at Gory Compton and Company ·
feel you deserve itl
· sixteen seveilt~n Westcliff Drive
Newport Beach
642-6164 -642-6165
I
-
jo DAILY PILOT ThU!!day. Sept!mb!r 22, 1m
Carole Mullinax dlaplaya •
classy Jumpault from UUlan'a,
now In It'• 11th year In South
CoaatPlau.
Lllllan's Offers
Smart Clothing
Llllian's is now in it'• titb year in
South Coast Plua featuring smart
wearable clothes from designers
such as Mannina Silver, Sebastion,
and um Ann.
One ol the largest selectioos of im·
ported knits, pants suits, dresses and
formals are also a part of a fantastic
a election of women's fashions.
Owned by Richard Guy, Lillian's
has a reputation of being one ol the
· last ol the personal service stores as
well as a fine alteration department beaded by Manager Lucy Bruno.
Marchand's
Dresses Up
For Season
A IOfter, more feminine line wU1
be the fall fuhion feature this year
at llarchaud't In South Coast
VWaie.
"Skirts and dresses are aolng to be bl& this year-," 1 ays Barbara
Marchand, owner of the ahop.
"We're actually bringtq dresses ID
for tbe first time because our
customers have been asltlq for
them."
Mrs. Marchand even desl&ntd
some of the aklrta and dresses
herself to &et Just the riabt look for berpatrom.
Tbe skirt line ls called Jacqueline,
for her daughter, while the dresses
carry the label of Jacques, ber
husband.
"I couldn't ftnd exacUy what I
wanted in other lines, so I went back
to the classic lblrt-dr~. but with
slitbUY more feminlne Qpeal," U•
plains Mrs. Marchand.
Marcband'a does carry two major
labels -Jones New Yort and J .H.
Collectables -which have been
quite popular ln pants and other
styles.
•'The fit la outstanding,'' says Mrs.
Marchand. "These clothes are
styled around a woman who takes
care of herself."
Her store adds an extra touch with
advice on bow to coordinate clothes
with the shopper 's desired image, or
with the wardrobe the customer already has.
All New Fall
Sweaters
20% Off
In Septemtier
We carry,O.P.,.
Quicksilver, BOit, Offrdtore
"year round"
K • .
•ij BEACH LOCATIONS"
P-.-.. -•·---
·THE NEW FALL YOU
IS WAITING AT
~ .............
• Hair Design
· • Facials-Skin Care /
• Mankure/Pedic·ure
1120 Irvine Boulevard
Newport Beech
(714) 642-8484
Yule Jewels Sparkle
Already at SimpJy Us
It may sound a bit early, but if you
want fme, custom-designed jewelry
for Christmas gifts, start thinking
about it now, according to Floyd
Eckman. owner of Simply Us ln the
Lldo Village.
Custom designs are the specialty
·of the house at Eckman's shop, 3416
#1 Via Oporto, Newport Beach.
"We do most of our work in gold
and precious gem stones. We design
everything from soup to nuts," says
. Eckman, who, along with Marge
Lindahl, does the design work.
In addition to rings and other stan-
dard jewelry pieces, Simply Us does
custom belt buckles, pendants, ear
rings, ankle bracelets and almost
anything you can imagine.
"But it does take an average of
four weeks to do most pieces,"
warns Eckman, "so for Christmas
Items start planning at least by early
November."
While custom jewelry is the
spedal trademark of Simply Us, the
store also carries many fine gift
items such as laser engraved walnut
book ends, calendar holders and
other desk accessories.
Air brush artisl Scott Thom also
bas several works on display at
Simply ·Us which bring a '20s and
'30s flavor to space-age designs.
"You can't describe bis work, you
have U. see it," says Eckman. The
store ls open from 10 a.m. to 5:30
p.m., dally, and from 7 p.m. to 10
p.m., Friday and Saturday.
'Fun Place'
For Shoppers
CCoat. From P • .f)
sweaters and blouses, and ac·
cessories -at moderate prices.
"We're what the mlddle·aged
woman likes, the kind.a of clothes
that are worn in Newport Beach,"
·says Blakslee. Some of the lines she
carries are King James blouses,
LeRoy sweaters, and Sissies panta.
She considers her help top quality
from Chris Hendricuon, who
dresses the wlndow and does much
of the buying, to Ailish McGraw, a
confidentsales clerk.
Fine Things
(Division of American Imports, Inc.)
featuring
THE BARBARA ESOUINO ·COLLECTION~
ORIGINAL BRASS PIECES .•.
Tables. l.a(nos. Planters. Deoorator Acx:enoriea
THE HELEN CERDA COLLECTION
OF
FINE HAND EMBROIDERY .•.
Shirts. Skirts, Totebaga
Nature's beauty captured In bran ... End table, t325. Brass at Its beat: Macaw. S 100. "Fraternizing Frogs." pair $25.
· Marvelous ooion and designs
from Helen Cerda of
Guadalajara. Mexico. Her
collection of fine
han<Hmbtoldered shirts. skirts
and tote bags from $30 to $90.
Eapenstve, ail Exquisite. sl. sll
ORDER NOW FOR CHRISTMAS DELIVERY
DESIGNEAS & DECORATORS WELCOME
,., .
The store also bu the popular ·line
of hand sculptured stone animals
from Uruguay done by the twin
brothers Jesus and Javier Carva·
jales.
Clothes from the Intrigue Bou·
Uque are modeled on a regUlar basis
at three top restaurants, ~ Can·
nery, Gorda Us and Irvine Coast
Country Club by models Jean
Mildtka, Ricki Irwin and Barbara
Clark.
Display Showroom 148 E. Garry Ave., S•ta Ana
Intrigue Boutique ls open from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m., daUy, except Sunday.
546 ''" ()pen 1 <>-4 Monday thru S.lurday
CASUAL JUMOI CLO.,.._* fMFfS FOR NIM AND ... * LAl..e SBICTIOM OF TOPS* AMBICAM OAIC ANnqulS
PANTS Me SllllTS • HOMI AMt ~ ITIMS * JUMPSUITS* HAMDMADI DOLLS
I .
-
-'
•
.. -
•
12 DAILY PILOT Thursday. S!ptembtr 22, 1977
BIG BECAUSE •••
We"n .... tint md _,,., ............ leweltrot Im Hie Ulllhd
Stahl oHtriltg • co ' t11lud ...,...... 11nlce. Al di~ appral•-'• ... nglsttrecl wltlt • ab1ohlt• ......... re&ctt.g cwrat _.... .... .
nl• ca ; l•lnd Mnlce Is • ., .... le.,,... yw llM1Wt . ...., ............................. -.
co•bl1., bolls. n. c1 , ... , ._... .ho pro.W. •
,..., .. ._ .,.._ • MCalty c-c•-• '"""" ywr fl~=.:: -fll• .... ... Fii, ......... ,. ...... Id---.. c .. of ..... ...
We rec•~ tw II tlwH .. c .... of c.f, ct.fty ...t color
.. ........, MC....-y to •ter::•21 .....,. Y• C..W
........... ·--... c..w ... poor .. ..., If It wtn peorfJ mt w •color tW w• .ot ,.. • .., to tt. eye •
w ...... ,.pose1y located ................... .....
.... to ........ to,.... ... °" .............. "' ••••
.... c .................. -· •• , ..... 1tn• ,_ befhfo
-4,.. "°"' ........... yo.. ... ~= .
htry ........ pnhaHd ............... fewtltrt of¥•
ct w hrcjlr Im wltla It• ca .. llh two l2t,.. wrftt.
nport ....... fM...., .. Cll .ut1fl ...... ef,... ,.clm<t e...ct" • sptcHlc ..W _.. aceplH If• ••r ..
v .. c• rtfy °" profff..._. fewlhri for • ywr clllil-'
Heck. W~re _. of Or.gt C...ty"1 flMst, t-tnt .
dap•fatll1 clcmo.d specWsh!
KN' l':" t ~ r)( , r
I N T f (; f) I T 'i' DIAMOND CUTTERS· JEWELERS -GEMOLOGISTS · DESIGNERS
20902 Brookhurst Street, Suite 201,
(Near Atlanta Ave.,)
~untington Beach, California
VOL 70, NO. 265, S SECTIONS, 56 PAGES
Delly l'li.t -..., -•• V""9I
FIREMEN CLEAN UP AFTER DOUSING BLAZE
Arson Blamed In Delaware Street Fire In Huntington
$37,000 HB Fire
'
Blamed on Arson
Arsonists caused $37,000 in
damage to a vacant two-story
building and an adjacent apart-
cneot complU· in Hunttn1toJ1
Beach Wednesday afternoon,
firemen reported.
The fire was touched off in an
abandoAed structure at. 2306
Delaware St. at 5:24 p.m., said fire Capt. Roger Hosmer.
Tbe fire spread to the eight-
unit apartment complex at 2300
Delaware St. No one was injured
but the blue c.auecl HUnlive
smoke damace. broke .ev....i
windows and scorched. the apart-
ment complex roof, said HOimer.
Firemen doused tbe blaze
within 10 minutes. 'fbe fire
originated in the downstairs area
of the vacant building which was
destroyed by the blaze, Hosmer
said.
~anker Spills Oil
Off Santa Monica
SANTA MONICA (AP) -
Workers toiled through the night
scooping up spilled Alaskan
crude oil in the surf and sand on a
popular surfing beach in Santa
,Monica.
The cleanup was expected to
be finished today, with no serious
damage to the beach or wildlife,
officials said.
The oil was spilled from a
tanker moored off the coast of El
Segundo on Tuesday. About half
the 400 galloni. that spilled were
quickly cleaned up in the area
around the tanker, but another zoo gallons were carried by
winds and ti~ to the Ocean
Park area or Santa Monica
Beach.
The oil, thinner and less gooey
tban the heavy fuel oil that
clogged Santa Barbara's
beaches in 1969, spilled ashore
late • Wednesday. The oil was
·shipped Crom Alaska on the
tanker Manhattan and was
bound for Chevron's El Serundo
refinery.
"It's a bad ispill," said Lt. Dick
Weaver, county \UeguaTd.
·"Maybe not a really massive one
but a rooey mess, Just the
aame!'
The Manhattan was chartered
by Exxon Corp.
A Coast Guard report blamed
the spill on a "faulty valve" or a
"partially closed" valve, but an
investigation was continuing.
Investigators said ballast
water -used to · maintain
balance on the tanker -was
somehow pumped up into a full
or nearly Cull tank containing
crude oil, forcing the oil out of the
lop of the tank and over the ship's side.
Chevron workmen using skim-
mers and huge oil-catching nets
were able to scoop up much of the
oil near the ship and more along
the surf line before it went
ashore, said N.R. LeRoy,
Chevron spokesman.
The oil dumped on shore by
tides was being raked up and car-
ried away by beach graders,
LeRoy said.
"We expect to have the beach
totally clear by Friday," be said,
adding that the splll caused
"absolutely no dam.ace" to f1sh
and birds ln the area.
Third Shuttle
Flighl Friday
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 19"
3 Hurt as USS Ray ·scrapes Sea Floor .. ...
NAPLES, Italy (AP) -The
nuclear·powered submarine USS
Ray struck the sea bottom off
Sard.lo.ia, 1nJurln& three crew
members but suffering no
damage to Its nuclear equip-
ment, a U.S. Navy spokesman
said today.
The submarine was undergo-
ing ln$pect.lon at a navy base
lollo~ the accident Tuesday,
the spokesman said.
The Navy aaid three crew
State Joins .
Seal Beach l
Vote Suit
The state bas joined legal ac-
tion designed to set aside the
eledion held last March 8 in Seal
Beach.
A lawsuit filed by st.ate lawyers
in Orange County Superior Court
is the second such action which
argues that the Seal Beach City
Council acted illegally when it
scheduled the election.
Both lawsuits claim that the ci-
ty failed to properly notify
employe organizations that it in-
tended to modify city charter
provisions dealing with dis-
cipJinary action against city .
employes and the banning of
strikes by city workers.
The amendments were ap-
proved March 8 by Seal Beach
voters.
Action by the slate means that
the city election is beina
cbau..-by fov fl'OUPI -Ute state and IUllOCiaUona repl"esenl-
Ing pOIJ.ce. fire and 1eneral city employea.
Both lawsUlta claim that the ci-
ty ccuncll violated two sections
of the California 1ovemment
code when it. 1et the election
without consulting the defen-
dants.
Coast Guard
Search Ended
EUREKA (AP) -The U.S.
Coast Guard has called off its
search for a Washlneton st.ate
man missing three days after an
abandoned, fully provisioned
sailboat was spotted of( the
Northern California coast.
The body of Jeffrey Shields, of
Coos Bay, Ore., was found in the
. water about four miles west of
here Wednesday by a passing
lishing boat. There was no sign of
Ray DeLeon, otEverett, Wash.
Shields and Del.eon had lelt
San Diego last week en route to
Seattle. Their 26-Coot boat, the
Vagabond, was found drifting 20
miles northwest of here on Tues· day.
Yard Sale Set
By Amigos
The Amigos de Bolsa Chica
will hold a yard sale Saturday to
raise funds to be used in efforts
for the preservaUon or the BoJsa
Cb,ica marshlands.
The sale wtU be held from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. at the home of
Vlrgl.nia Whipple, 16691 Courtney
Lane, HunUngton Harbour. Amigoa de Bolsa Chica is a
&rouP wbJch advQCales the pres.
ervatlon and restoration of the
Bolsa Chica marshlands
members suffered ml.Dor injuries
when the submarine 1truck the
bottom of the Mediterranean
durl.Da a rouUne mlulon south ol
SardinlL A Sturseon class attack
subm~e. the Ray normally
carries a crew of 12 officers and
108 enlistecl mea.
•''J'be sblp's nuclear reactor
was \Dlaffected and there was no
nuclear propulllon plant
damage,'' the Navy st.at.ement
said.
'
The tt.y proceeded to La Mad-
dalena, Sardinia, u:oder her own
power and arrived there late
Wedl>esday, the NavY reported.
The incident brou&ht a protest
from theSardlnlangovemmmt's
minister for the environment.
OfUfo Erdas, a Socialist., said
the base poses "a permanent
danger to all the people in the
area" because of possible
radioactive leakage.
Tbe submarine base on La
· Fight· Goes On ·
HB, Re8ident Tmik ~pa
Art Wa7boume Ila• been fifbt· ing HWlUDitQD Beach city hall
for five years in a no-bolds-
barred battle to build a home on his lot.
Re's not winning but neither is
he weakening.
"U it weren't a matter of prin-
ciple, I'd forget it. But I'm too
stubborn to let it go," he said
Wednesday.
Wayboume has taken a few
bumps and bruises but has ln-·
flided some lumps of his own. He
also has formed some opinions or .
people in city government -
none otwhich are too favorable.
He said be had one verbal a par-
ring match with Planning Com-
missioner Roger Slat.es.
''Mr. Slates told me that I
didn't want to build a house on
the small lot because of narrow
.streets and so on," Wayboume
recounted.
"I said maybe I do and maybe
I don't but Jt wasn't for him to
say.
"One thin& lf:d to another-and I got. hOt and Mr. Slat.es aald. 'I
don'uUavetotakethls'.'' "I said no, you don't, there's a
bus leavtng town eYery day and
you can get on it," W aybourne
recounted.
Wayboume says there Is at
least one person in clty govern·
menthelikes.
•'Ed Selich (planning director)
is one heckuva nice guy and
seems to be honest and sincere.
"I predict that he wUI be fired
within six months."
Wayboume said be thinks the
city favors large developers and
is operating under a brand or
"social Darwinism in which the
big guys eat the little ones."
He also sees a steady erosion of
individual freedo01s, ~-1 see where about 14 clt.v of-
ficials are going to attend the
League of Cities meeting in San
Francisco where they'll learn
how to drcumvent our freedoms
even more,•' he asterted.
"'lbe worst thin& about this is·
that -they all have· round·trip
tickets," he observed.
Wayboume said numerous ob-
stacles have been raised to build·
ing his home, chiefly that no de-
v elopm en t could occur on
parcels or less than one acre. His
lot is 25 feet by 117 feet.
"The last straw was when a
guy in the plannin& department
told me I could water ski on my
property, have fish. ponds and
grow orchards. How could J?
There'lnowaterthere." "
"I was lnsulted. I told him the
next time he talked to me be
should sock me ~ the jaw. It woul~ be less ot anm..utt. ..
Planntng Director Selicl\ said
that Wayboume's lot ls included
in ~t 40 acres of small Iota
,outh qf Central Park between
Ed,urds and Golden Weat
avenlfe9. ;i.._ • Hesaidtbec&Q bu plQS tore-
(SH FIGBT. Pace At)
o.llyPtlllll ...........
FIGHTING CITY HALL
Huntlngtoft'• Wayboume
118 Church
Withdraws
Permit Bid
The Central Baptist Temple in
Huntington Beach ba s
withdrawn a request for a condi-
tional use permit which would
have· allowed construction
or a church and school in an in-
dustrial zone.
Robert Zinngrabe, president of
the board -of trustees, said the
church would look into other
locations for its complex.
The permit request bad raised
commw'lity interest. Proponents
of maintaining all industrial zon-
ing possible opposed the church's
request. ·
City council members had
heard arguments on both sides
but bad nol. made a decision
while the church reconsidered its
request.
Blaek's Beach .
Nude Bathers
Won't Cover
Maddalena. a tlA.f tslu.cl ott
nortbenl Sardinia. bu beta •
subject of ~tion by Wlista
for a nl.lmber OI years.
The Na-.y aaJ.d tbe aub waJct
underao a tborOQdl lmpection at
La M.cldalena. and that details
of the lrouncl.iAt ltMlf wwe an.
der investigation..
The Ray, cunently deployed
with the U.S. 6th Fleet. baa Us
home port at Charlestoa., S.C.
FVDenies
$500,000 '
Damages
The Fountain Valley City
Council bas denied a $500,000
claim against the city's police de.
partmenl by the parents ol a 14-
year-old Garden Grove youth
who died from injuries sustained
in a June 29 accident
Greg S. Beavers died JulY 2 in 1'•ountain Valley Community
Hsopital from massive bead and
chest injuries be suffered in a
cour-car smashup on Brookhurst
Street south of Garfield~ venue in
Huntington Beach.
The parents claim Fountain
Valley police were negligent in
their high-speed pursuit or an
auto in which their son was a passenger.
Beavers and' a friend were
hitchhiking when Merle Dooald
Tally, 18, Costa Mesa, picked the
two boys upon BrookburstStreet
in Fountain Valley.
Fountain Valley Police Sgt.
Rod Gillman twice belted Tally
on Brookburst for reckless dric· ing.
One of the bltcbhlters left tbe
auto when Glllman ordered Tall,y
to stop.
But before Beavers could
leave. Tally alle&edly sped away
at 70 miles per hour south on
Brook.hunt, California lllgbway
patrol investigators reported.
Tt\e speedine vehicle struck
one compact car, jumped a
center divider and collided with
twootherautos.
Three ot.ber motorists suffered
injuries.
Tally also was injured. He
faces arraignment in· W.eat
Orange County Judicial District
on a felony m'1U1Slaughter charge.
ConEscap~
Doring Visit
TRACY (AP) -A woman
hailed a guard ln a tower at the
state prison here and told him
her son bad escaped.
A search confirmed that Artie
Ray Baker, 23, convicted ot a
double murder in Fresno County
in urra, fled over a 12-foot chain
link fence topped with three
strands or barbed wire.
Robert Walraven, ad•
minlstralive assistant to the
superintendent of the Deqel
Vocational Institution, sald
Baker had been granted a f arnlly
visit from bis stepfather and
mother, Fr~ and Betty Sharp
of Sonora.
I
OT H /F
,.,,.........,.
• POSSIBLE SUCCESSOR
Qeor~·· Mcintyre
Nuke Test
To Use CB
Channel6
The Huntington Beach Office
or Civil Defense has scheduled a
training program Sept. 29 to test
procedures to be used in the
event of a nuclear auack.
Civil Defense Coordinator
George Thyden said I.he FCC has
4'J>proved use of CB Channel 6 for
broadcast of simulated emergen-
cy messages during the exercise.
Thyden is asking ciliien band
operators to lis ten but to
cooperate by not broadcasting on
the channel until after noon.
The civil defense exercise in-
volves heads of city departments
who will meet in the emergency
operations center in city hall and
will confront problems attending
a nuclear blast near the city.
County Joins
JA in Rail
Service Push
Orange County s upervisors de-
cided Wednesday to join Los
Angla County supervisors ln ef· torts to obtain commuter raH
service between San Diego and
Los Angeles.
They will be asking the Public
. Utilities Commission to force the
,Santa Fe Railroad to allow I.he
·Amtrak.operated service on
•tracks owned by Santa Fe
' ' Supervisor Ralph Clark said
. the tram line would be of benefit
: to Orange County commuters
: and could reduce traffic on I.he
;Santa Ana and San Diego
•Freeways.
Under existing plans, he noted, ~the Los Angeles commuter train
would pick up passengers in San
·Clemente, Sa nta Ana and
·Fullerton.
Los Angeles supervisors
. already ha ye purchased ei&bt
cars for I.he commuter train, but
:-S.anta Fe has balked at permil-
lt n g Amtrak to provide the service
leaders to Meet
NAIROBI, Kenya <AP) -
President ldl Amln has agreed to
meet with leaders of three or the
religious groups he banned In
. U~anc1a for allegedly working
wtlh the CIA to overthrow him .
• Radio Uganda said Wednesday
•\he president would tell orrlcials
of the Salvation Army, Seventh
'.Day Adventists and Uganda Bap-
,tJst mission about a document he
:received from members who
gave "bad" reports on the or-
. -nizations.
°"ANOa COMT MW •
DAILY PILOT
W HJNGTON CAP>~ f'retl· -.t CarW II tr)'lnl to r.plac:o a
mu he ••YI 1-lrr.placuble. '1&h0nc IOM'OW al the restina·
tlon of l_on1tlm• friend lJert
Lance at budtet dlreclol'. Carter
.,., ... the M&rCh tOday for. IUC·
~. one Of hia firtt vl1lt.on Of ttie
dlY Wat &en. Jennln&s llandolp}I, <D·W. V1.), wbo told reporters
be found Carter calm, relaxed
to lnmtuo f\IDd • ..9queats for
economic development pro-
crams.
•'There wlll be an orderly
transition," tbe President told a
news conference Wedneaday
Man Held
In Rape of
HB Girl
A »reaM>ld Bellflower man
hu been arrested on cbarees of
raptna an Jl.year--old Huottniton
Beach etrl eatb" today at the
Huntmaton dty beach. pol.lee re-ported. •
~Ue Allen Peck WU booted
on kidnap and rape cbarfes lnto
Hunt:iqton Beach Jail. accord-
ing to police Sit. Luis Ochoa.
The victim told police she was
walking home et 3 a.m. along
Pacific Coast Highway when a
man drove up to her and forced be~ at lmlfepoint to enter Illa car.
The woman •aid she wu taken
to the beach parkinc lot and
raped, Ochoa said.
The attacker then released bis
victim. She ran tq two police of.
ficera who were issuing a citation
to a motorist on Coast Highway.
The woman described her at·
tacker's car to-POiice wbo1asued
a radio bulletin on the suapect's vehicle.
APWI ......
BERT LANCE BIDS GOODBYE TO WASHINGTON PRESS CORPS AFTER RESIGNATION
After the Storm, Prealdent Carter Promlaea an Orderly Transition
Peck was arrested while driv·
ing near Golden West Street and
Warner Avenue Jn Huntington Beach, police said.
Lances to Return Home Extemion Won
OAKLAND CAP) -Pleading
lack of time, the Pacific Gas &
Electric Co. bas won an e.x-
tension for installing water pollu·
lion control equipment at six
power plants on the San Fran-
cisco Bay. The board charged
with maintaining the bay's waler
quality voted 3-2 Tuesday to ex-
tend PG&E's deadline.
Future to Be Lived 'One Day at a Time'
ATLANTA (AP) -Berl
Lance, former budget director,
said today he plans to return to
Georgia "and get a little rest."
·'Tell the folks in Georgia we
are doing just fine," he said in an
interview with radio station
WSB. "We appreciate their sup-
port, love, trust and faith more
than they can ever possibly
know.
"That's been one of the t.hlngs
that sustained u.a throuahout this whole thing."
Asked about bis future, he
said: "No decision yet. We'll
take that as we've been taking
things ... one day at a time."
As for his wife. LaBelle, he
said, "She's doing just fine. She's
been a source of real strength .
The American people. . saw
her ... for what she is, one who
has a great faith in God and
believes things work in His
purpose. That's the way she is."
Asked if he would return to
Georgia, Lance replied:
"You know I've got to come
back to Georgia. I said lbat in my
statement. That's where our
home is."
Asked lf he would take a public
job, be said, "No. We jusl want to
get back to our friends in Georgia
and get a little rest.·'
Lance, resigned his federal
post Wednesday.
The Lances still have their
50-room Butterfly Manna
mansion, one of the biggest and
most elaborate estates in the ex-
c lus lve Buckhead section of
Atlanta.
The Lances put the mansion up
for sale for $2 million last month,
but it bas not been sold. It was not
clear whether they would live
there. They also own a $100,000
house in Calhoun. Ga., and a
vacation home on Sea Is land, Ga.
Now that he is le aving,
Washington, Lance will no longer
have to pay the $18,000-a-year
renr for his house in Georgetown,
and will not have lo sell his stock
in the National Banlt of Georgia
at a I06s.
He owned about $2.9 million in
DID CARTER 'FORCE'
LANCE TO QUIT?-A10
National Banlt of Georgia stock
when he took office, but it bas
declined in value from $17 a
share to about $12. He could lose
$1 million if be sells it.
Alt.hough he owns 17 percent of
the bank stock, it was not clear
whether he would have a job with
the bank if he returned
Robert Guyton, who replaced
Lance as president of the Atlanta
bank, said Wednesday night,
"Obviously, we don't know Mr.
Lance's plans for the future."
One of ~ce's biggest prob·
terns ts a $3.4 million loan from
the First National Bank of
Chicago. Lance bas to pay
$225,000 per year in interest on
that loan and had been counting
on stock dividends to help pay for
it. However, his b1tnlc's financial
troubles forced suspension of
dividends ®that st.ocl< in the last
quarter
The Chicago baftk has de-
manded more collateral because
of the decllne In the value or lhe-
Georgla bank stock and as a re-
Former CIA Ageat
Private Eye A.tlded .
To Diedrich Staff
Orange County Supervisor
Ralph Diedrich added a licensed
prlva~ investi1ator to his sun of
administrative aides thb week.
,.,,... P.,.e AJ
FIGHT.' •. ·
Diedrich said that loh_n v.
Lyncb, who reportedly was a CIA
aaent for 22 rears, WU n()\ hired
for hJs investigative talents.
~·we have a lot ot staff work
here that nqul,res raearch and
dig&inl as well as mature judg-
ment. I think John has the
qualities for that ls.lnd of work.
That's why be •as hired."
Diedrich sald.
suit of studies of Lance's finances
by banking regulators. Lance
has put most of his real estate up
as loan collateral.
Beoo:me a stereo nut
for practically peanuts.
!n a nutshell, fiere·s all you ne<'ld
It kn, 'w about ~lf'reo
Tumtdhlf>!; FM/AM !'t~reo
r 1 J1r1s, td r-I"-":Order.;, and
sp<:_,t ... rs Ma tr heel up for you by
rv~ple who ~now acouc:IJC'!l and
•-!!'i\:1r n1c:s in Ide out
\",'. r•! talY.in9 .1L10ut Sonv
compact stereo.
And you don't h4ve to spend a
mint to appreciate 1L
Come tn today.
Let us give you a demonstra·
1100 And a deal you've got to hear
lo believe
HMK-419
"IT'S A SONY"
lt'saD.bere
in b1&Ck and "White.
When It comes to black 4nd
white telaVISion. Sony has it all.
A crisp, dear picture thet gives
you striking oontrast and deto.il.
Fine features 411d controls for
extra value.
Plus the kind of outstanding
design tilllts made Sony famous.
liWTY in. Son~ got If all.
And we've got all tba SonyS.
when be announced Lance's res-
l(aaUoD. .. , will decide belin-
ninf after today oD who • SUC•
c:essor might be ... -
Amoq ~-that.quickly IW-. tacedwere:
-James T. Mdatyre Jr .•
director of Georala's budeet of-
fice In 1913 while Carter was 1ov-
ernor and now deputy director of
the oatce ol Manaeement and
Budaet. wbicb Lance had
beaded.
-llobert S&nau, a former
ehalnnan ol the Democratic Na-
tlooal Committee and now tho
U.S. ambassador for trade neaotlatioos.
-Allee Bl•llD. director ol the Con~ Bud&etome~
-Bale Cbmploa, fonner
cautornla finance director and
now an offlclal at tbe Depart-
ment of Health. Education and
WeUare.
Carter said the tut of flndini a
budget director won't be easy.
"I don't thh:lk there la any way
that I could find anyone to
replace Bert Lance that would
be, In my jucfament, as. compe.
tent, u strong, as decent and as
close to me u a friend and ad-
viser as be bas been," the Prest·
dent1ald.
"Obviously, the aovemment
will continue, ° Carter declared,
"and I bopo to do a good job as
president. and I am sure a suc-
cessor will be adequate.
"But there bas been a special
relationship between me and
Bert Lance that transcended of·
ficial ~nsibllities or duties or
even governmental service ot the
last six or seven years.
''So he has occupied a special
place in my eovernmental
career, in my political career,
and in my personal life. I don't
think there is any way anyone
could replace him now."
Workers Return
RICHMOND <AP> -Some280
cit.y employes will be back on the
job today for the first time m 66
day ~ •. endi.ng the longest
muruc1pal strike in state history.
•
VOL. 70, NO. 265, S SECTIONS, 5' PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1977 TENCENTSI
Student ol tlae Sam
L'C Irvine student ~lolly Goodman o f
Corona dcl Mar catches up on her reading
while catching the last rays of summer.
Autumn was "1th us officially today. with
the autumnal equinox. but the arrival of
the fall sc•ason doesn't thange much on
the Orange Coast. ~ot many leayes
change color, but the crowds of lounsts
have departed and now the girls on l~e
beach are doing their school work while
working on their tans.
Viejo Man Indicted Changes
In Land Fraud Case Get First
By WILi.JAM SCHREiBER Singer was confessed land fraud Eye Todn,y
Of•Oell'f PIMCMlff figure Ned Warren Sr., who is
A !Sa-year-old land comP-"1 ex· factni 36 c:c>Wlta of Ira~ 1n two ~ve federal aaents believe other Arizona ~ties.
lives in Mission Viejo ":as ~diet-Michad Hawkins. U.S. At-
ed Wednesday by 'an Anzona tomey iD Phoenix. today Md no
11tand jury on 23 counts of fraud explanation for the lfstinf of Mis·
connected with an alleged $18 slon Viejo as Singer's home town. ailllion land fraud scheme. . He said no street address was
Emanuel Singer, execullve available and there is no listing
Yice president for land sales of for Singer in telephone direc-
Consolldated Mortgage Co~.. tories.
was one or six people named rn Hawkins noted that in·
the federal mail fraud indict-vestigators also determined
ment leveled against the now-Sintter may have maintained a
defunct mortgage sales hrm. . residence m San Mateo, near
One of those named with SanFrancisco.
Short Causes
Blackout in
A 12,000-volt unde rground
Southern California Edison
transformer ,<>v•,ilch shorted out
•t about 1manight Wednesday,
l)lacking out about 150 Irvine
businesses for an hour, the elec-
tric utility reported.
A !ipokesman said the malfunc·
tlon might have been due to
normal runoff water seeping into
the ~Nlte electrical bunker.
According to Hawkins, in-
vestigators are uncertain or
Singer's current whereabouts.
Hlls arrest will be made by either
the U.S. Marshal's office or the
Postal Service, according to an
FBI spokesman in Santa Ana.
"He <Singer) is not in custody
at this time to my knowledge, but
it is my guess that when he is ar-
rested fjlirly low bond will be
set.'' Hawkins said.
"The people involved in things
like this are generally not escape
risks." he said. "They usually
come lo court and contest the
charges and sometimes they
win."
Singer and the others connect-
CSee SCHEME, Page A2)
TM Xnfne City Council will 1t!t
its fil'lt look tonight at a~•
of ameadmfJlda to UHi ~
element of the 1enenl plan.
which outllnea housint needs and
poUcies teared to rneetibi ~
needs.
Chief at wue is how to proYide
housing affordable to low and
moderate income families.
The Orange County Fair Hous-
ing Council is involved in a pend-
ing lawsuit that charges the city
general plan has made no ade-
quate provision for the lower-
priced housing.
A city housing advisory com-
mittee bas recommended that the
houslng plan require that at least
15 percent of existing and new
housing units be affordable lo the
lower brackets.
The committee also recom-
mended that the city set a goal of
30 percent low and moderate in-
come housing by policy.
The 7:30 council session wlU
serve as an introduction by city
planning staff or the amended
housing element. No action is ex-pected.
A special council meeting to
begin public hearings on the
housing plan is scheduled to be
self or Oct. 13.
The power failure affected a
triangular area bordered by
MacArthur Boulevard, Campus
l>rlve and Von Karman Avenue.
At least five traffic signals were
darkened, causing minor prob-
lems for motorists and police.
Di dri h Bir Non Expelled
e C eS SALISBURY, Rhodesia CAP)
-Sisler Janice McLaughlin, an Ex-CIA Agent Am e~ican nu!' arrested for
Edison rep~r c r ews su11 ~orked today to rlx the switch. A
bypass we rigged to another
f acWty to restore power.
Co ast
secunty laws violations, was or-
dered expelled from Rhodesia to-As Staff Aide day and was flown from the coun-try. As the South African Boeing
720 took off a group of ouns and
priests who t hronged the ob-
servation platform sang "God
Bless Africa, Listen to Our
Prayers" in the local Shona
language.
Ftill FiuhiOn
Previswin
rf oday'• Riwt
Nuke Sub llits 1
Bottom; 3 Hu1·t
NAPL~, Italy (AP) -The
nuclear-powered submarine u~
Ray struck the sea bottom off
Sardinia, injuring three crew
members but s urrering no
damage to its nuclear equip-
ment, a U S. Navy spokesman
said today.
The submarine was undergo-
ing inspecUon at a navy base
following the accident Tuesday,
the spokesman said.
The Navy said three crew
members suffered minor injuries
when the submarine struck the
bottom of the Mediterranean
durin~ a routine mission south of
Sardbrla. A Sturgeon class attack
s ubmarine, the Ray normally
carries a crew of 12 officetll and
108 enlisted men.
"The ship's nuclear reactor
was unaffected and there was no
nuclear p r opulsion plant
damage,'' the Navy statement
said.
The Ray proceeded to La Mad·
dalena, Sardinia, under her own
power and arrived there late
Wednesday, the Navy reported.
The incident brought a protest
from theSardinian government's
minister for the environment.
Orazio Erdas, a Socialist, said
To Replace Lance
'
the base poses "a permanent
danger to all the people in the
area" becau se of possible
radioactive leakage.
The submarine base on La
Maddalena, a tiny island olf
northern Sardinia, has been a
subject of contention by lefllsts
for a number of years.
The Navy said the sub would
undergo a thorough inspection at
La Maddalena, and that details
of the grounding itself were un·
der investigation.
The Ray, currently deployed
with the U.S. 6th Fleet, has its
home port al Charleston, S.C.
.D'irector Sought
WASHINGTON <AP> -Presi·
dent Carter is trying to replace a
man be says is irreplaceable.
Fighting sorrow at the resigna-
tion or longtime. friend Bert
Lance as budget director , Carter
began the search today for a suc-
cessor.
One of his first visitors of the
day was Sen. Jennings Randolph,
(0 -W. Ya.), who told reporters
he found Carter calm, relaxed
and even in what the senator
called a happy mood .
ning after today on who a suc·
cessor might be.''
Among names that quickly sur-
faced were:
-James T. Mcintyre Jr.,
director or Georgia's budget of.
ri ce in 1972 while Carter was gov-
ernor and now deputy director or
the Office of Management and
Budget, whic h Lance had
headed.
-Robert Strauss, a former
chairman of the Democratic Na-
tional Committee and now the
SI Million
U.S. ambassador for trade
negotiations.
-Allee Rivlin, director oC the
Congressional Budget Office.
-Hale Champion, ·former
California finance director and
now an official at the Depart-
ment of Health, Education and
Welfare.
Carter said the task or finding a
budget diredor won't be easy.
"I don't think there is any way
that I could find anyone to
CSee SEARCH, Page A2)
I
"In a sense, he feels he's had a
problem lifted from him," said
Randolph, whose visit to the
White House was to urge Carter
to increase tund requests for
economic developme nt pro-arams. '"'There will be aa. 4CCMrly
transition," the President told a
news conference Wednesday when be announced Lance's res-
igi:tation. "I wiJI decide begln-
Mesa Victim Plans ·
Sui,t; Over Shooting ·
Chase Ne ts
Alien Youth
A teenager from Mexico sped
through the San Onofre border
patrol checkpoint early today
and led pursuing officers on a
high speed chase through San
Clemente before he was stopped
and arrested for smuggling
aliens.
A border patrol agent said the
youth had three Mexican na-
tionals in the car with hlm.
San Clemente police joined
border patrol officers Ln the 80
mile-per-hour chase on the north-
bound San Diego Freeway just
before 2 a.m. The young driver
tried to run officers off the road,
a border patrol spokesman said,
but his car was finally halted
north oC Avenida Pico in San
Clemente.
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH °'-°"'" _,...,
A Costa Mesa auto shop owner.
shot twice in the chest during a
Saturday altercation with an off.
duty Hawthorne police officer,
may be permanently paralyzed
from the waist down, his at·
torney alleged today.
Anaheim attorney Robert
Weaver, representing 34-year-
old shooting victim Jon Allan
McClure, said ,_ $1 million
personal injury suit will ~ filed
against OfCicer Michael Moran.
No criminal charges have been
filed against Moran who is re-
portedly oo vacation from his
duties with the Hawthorne Police
Department.
McClure remains in critical
condition today at Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital, having un-
dergone surgery for the second
time since the Saturday incident
in front of the A&A Garage, 2037
Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
Casta Mesa police believe the
shooting followed an areument
between t.he two men.
Officer Moran apparently
drove his car over a still-damp
floor or the eara1e shop, anger-
ing McClure and sparking the
dispute between the two men.
During the ensuing argument,
Costa Mesa police assert
McClure brandished a three-foot
metal bar and c}Jarged at the of·
fleer while he was standing out-
side the shop. .
Officer Moran allegedly pulled
a pistol from his parked car and
shot McClure twice with the
German automatic after he ig·
nored the officer's commands to
halt.
Attorney Weaver, however,
said he hopes to disprove the of·
ficer's claims that the shooting
wasinselfdefense.
''I'm not convinced it was sell
d efense," Weaver said. ".Mr.
(See VICTIM. Page..\%)
Ret111n Home
ATLANTA (APJ -8ert La~ rormer bud a et director.
said toda)' h plam to r um to
GC'Of'lia ··und &•t •little .... t."
.. Tell th folkl in Georlla
are dOln& JUSl tlnt." be 1aJd ln u
tntervaew wilb radio Uatlon
WSB. ··we appreciate their aup-
port, love, trust and falLb more
than they can ever poaelbly
know
· '1bat 's bffn one ol the tblngs
Uaat sustained m throuibout this •hole t.biQg .••
Asked about lus future. he
said: "No declalon yel. We'll
take th.al as we've been taking
things. one day at a tame."
As foe b.ts ware, LaBelle, he
saad, "She's doing just fine. She's
been a source or real strength.
The American people ... saw
her .. for what she is, one who
has a great raith in God and
believes things work in Has
purpose. That's the way she ls."
Asked if he would return lo
Georgia, Lance replied:
"You know I've got to come
back to Georgia. I said that in my
statement. That's where our
home is."
Asked if he would take a public
job, he said, "No. We just wantlo
get back to our friends in Georgia
and get a little rest."
Lance. resigned his federal
post Wednesday.
The Lances still have their
50-room Butterfly Manna
mansion. one of the biggest and
mos t elaborate estates in the ex-
c I us i ve Buckhead section of
Atlanta.
The Lances put the mans ion up
for sale for $2 million last month
but 1t has not been sold. It was no~
clear whether they would live
there. They also own a $100,000
house in Calhoun, Ga., and a
vacation home on Sea Island, Ga.
Now that he is leaving
Wastungton. Lance will no longer
have to pay the $18,000-a-year
rent for has house In Georgetown.
and wall not have to sell has stock
an the National Bank of Georgia
at a loss.
Ile owned about $2.9 million in
National Bank of Georgia stock
when he took office. but it has
declined in value from $17 a
share to about $12. Ile could lose
$1 million if he sells it.
Although he owns 17 percent of
the bank stock, it was not clear
whether he would have a job with
• the bank if he returned.
Robert Guyton, who replaced
Lance as president of the Atlanta
bank. said Wednesday night.
"Obviously, we don't know Mr.
Lance's plans for the future."
One of Lance's biggest prob·
!ems as a $3.4 million loan from
the First National Bank of
ChicaAo Lance has to pay
$225,000 per year in interest on
that loan and had been counting
on stock dividends to help pay for
College Eyes
6 Can~dates .
To Fill Slot
Saddleback College trustee;
may choose a successor today to boa~ member Frank Greinke of T~stin from a list of six can·
dadates seeking the appointment
-three men and three women.
The six names before trustees
for consideration today are
Gerald Phillips, Bruce
Moorehead, Donald Beck, Ann ~avert, Shirley Gaffey and Har-
net Walthers.
They were due to undergo in-
terviews during a closed-door
session of the board starting at I
p .m. today and Lrustees indicat·
ed they mi1ht convene in open
session later today lo choose the
top. candidate.
Greinke has resigned effective no later than Nov. 15 to move out
of the county. Trusteea must ap-
point a successor prior to Sept. ao
or call a special eleaUon that
could coet $100,000 to conduct.
ORANGI COQT
DAILY PILOT
ll. flon¥ r, bla bank'• tlnandal
troublu fotc!td tu1pen1lon of
dlvidendl on lbat 1tock In the last
quartu.
The CblC•IO bank bas do-
mabded mor9 collateral because
of tbe decline l_n the value of the
G4'0ril• bank alo(k a,nd as a re-
ault ol aludlet of Lance·~ finances
by ba.nldne reaulatora. Lance
bu put m<>1t ol hls real estate up u loan collateral.
At his confirmation hearings, Lance listed a net worth of fl.S
million. with aueta of $7.9
million and UablUUea of $5.3
million, but the picture may not
be as good now.
For one thing, Lance has
personally bad to pay for a lot of
the work done to defend himself
at Senate bearings and for re·
ports by the comptroller of the
currency.
Lance also faces continued in-
vestigation and possibly legal
costs from a variety of govern-
ment agencies looking into his af-
fairs.
The Justice Department, Jn.
temal Revenue Service and the
Federal Election Commission
are investigating his use of bank
aircraft. and the Securities and
Exchange Commission is trying
to find out ir he and his bank
made enough disclosures to
stockholders.
* * * From Page A J
SEARCH •••
replace Bert Lance that would
be, in my judgment, as compe-
tent, as strong, as decent and as
close to me as a friend and ad·
viser as he has been." the Presi·
dent said.
"Obviously, the government
will continue," Carter declared,
"and I hope to do a good job as
president, and I am sure a suc-
-:essor will be adequate.
"But there has been a 'special
relationship between me and
Bert Lance that transcended of·
ficial responsibilities or duties or
even governmental service of the
last six or seven years.
"So he has occupied a special
place in my governmental
career, in my political career,
and in my personal life. I don't
think there is any way anyone
could replace him now."
F ro• Page A J
VICTIM ••.
McClure carried the metal bar at
all times and at no time did he
raise it i.'1 a threatening gesture
at officer Moran." he claimed.
Weaver asserted ht! will pre·
sent witnesses who will tc<itiry
that Officer Moran shot McClure
for the second time after he was
already down and lying injured
from the first gunshot.
Moran, who was graduated
from Newport Harbor High
School and Orange Coast
College, apparently was on vaca-
tion in the area when he stopped
off at the garage Saturday afteF·
noon at about 1: 30 p. m.
Immediately after the shoot·
ing, Costa Mesa police contacted
the Orange County District Al·
toroey's Office. Local police filed
a report with the DA 's office.
which has assigned a special in·
vesUgation ,team to interview
·witnesses in the case.
The investigation is stlll under
way. A spokesman at the DA'sof·
flee could not estimate when ll
will be completed or if criminal
charges are forthcoming against
Moran.
McClure underwent surgery
Saturday night for removal of
two slugs in his chest.
Attorney Weaver said ll ap-
pears McClure will lose the use of
his lower extremities as a result
ol the shooting.
He remains listed in critical
b u t st a ble condition in the
hospital's intenalve can unit.
Weaver said he underwent 1ur-
gery for a second time Wednes·
day but hospital officials would
not confltm the report.
Many witneuea to the sbootin&
have come forward and are be-
ing interviewed ,by Weaver and
tbe DA 's investiaaUon team.
110,000 in Tool8
I
•
CONFESSED LAND FRAUD FIGURE NED WARREN SR. ASSISTED TO COURT IN JUNr--'
Faclng Additional Chargea of SecurltlH Fraud In Grand Jury Indictment
F f"091Poge A1
SCHEME ••.
ed with the fraud scheme bad
been under investigation for 18
months by a unique team of
federal agents operating out of '
the U.S. Attorney's office in
Phoenix.
Hawkins said the team of FBI.
Postal Service and U.$. Attorney
agents was created two years
ago to crack down on rampant
white collar crime in Arizona.
"Until the last few years, the
s tate was trying to attract new
business and development so
regulations on such things as land
sales were almost non-existent."
Hawkins said. "A lot of good peo.
pie came in, but so did the bad peo·
pie."
The investigation that resulted
in Wednesday's grand jury in·
dictments contended that the
firm Singer and others operated
involved a fraudulent scheme to
induce investofS lo buy lots in
several land developments.
The indictment alleges fraud
occurred when the defendants
used the mail s ystem to sell
fraudulent mortgage contracts to
other investors.
Besides Singer and · Warren,
others under indictment includ~
Robert Gunnison and Alvin
M cCollum of Scottsdale
Arizona; Donna Stevens of
Columbus, Ohio, and William
Nathan or New York City.
If convicted of the charges, the
defendants face a maximum
penalty of five years in prison
and a $1,000 hne on each mail
fraud count
Charges of interstate
tran~portallon of stolen property
have also been leveled against all
the defendants except Nathan.
That carries a penalty of 10 years
in prison plus a $10,000 fine.
County Joins
LA in Rail
Service Push
Orange County supervisors de-
cided Wednesday to join Los
Angles County supervisors in ef-
forts to obtain commuter rail
service between San Diego and
Los Angeles.
They will be asking the Public
Utilities Commission to force the
Santa Fe Railroad to allow the
Amtrak-operated service on
tracks owned by Santa Fe.
Supervisor Ralph Clark said
the train line would be of benefit
to Orange County commuters
and could reduce traffic on the
Santa Ana and San Diego
Freeways.
Under exlaling plans, he noted,
the Los Angeles commuter train
would pick up passengers tn San
Clemente, Santa Ana a nd· Fullerton.
._os An1ele1 supervisors
already have purchased etaht can for the commuter train, but
Santa Fe has balked at permit..
tln& Amtrak to p rovide the service.
•
Knievel Arrested
On Assault Charge
LOS ANGELES <AP) -
Motorcycle stuntman Evel
Knievel, who apparently was en
route to surrender to police, was
arrested for investigation of as-
sault with a deadly weapon In an
alleged attack on a 20th Century
Fox executive, authorities said.
Kruevel was released Wednes-
day night after posting Sl,000
bond. He was scheduled to be ar·
raigned next Wednesday in West
Los Angeles Municipal Court.
Police said Knievel knew he
was being sought and it appeared
he planned to turn himself in
when he was arrested by a patrol
officer who spotted him on a
freeway in North llollywood.
Sheldon Saltman, 46, was treat·
ed for compound fractures of the
lert arm and a broken right wrist
after the incident earlier
Wednesday, authorities said.
The vice president of the
telecommunications division of
Fox Studios told police that
Knievel and an·unidentified man
confronted him outside the studio
commissary. He said Knievel hit
him with a baseball bat, accord·
ing to police.
Mark Erickson, an aide to
Saltman, said Saltman used to be Knievel's publicity agent and
wrote the book ''Evel Knievel on
Tour." The book told the story of
the much-publicized but ill-fated
Snake River Canyon stunt wbkh
Knievel failed to accomplish.
Beco:me a stereo nut
for p~~tioally peanuts.
lr1 o nut. hf-II. hert''s nil you ntJUC1
lo !-.now about <;l<'rtn
lurntdl :1 . r M/ AM SIFlrP.O
r ,, ho~. Id!'."" recordPr-;. ond
'1 ~r:r 1 Mat• boo up fr r you l·v
J'.""'Plrj who know ooou:·ucs c1nd
ti• ~a.,. ·nit;'> m•1de out w .. ·IY' t~!hnrr obout ;.,any
comP<iCI stereo.
· And you don't have to spend a
mint to opprec1.,1c 1t
<:ome m rodov.
LP.t us qwe you a de-non .. tro· •
tic.in And a dedl you've got t..1 }it.;dr
l<i l:>E'hew·
"IT'S A SONY"
Its all here
in black and -white.
When It oomes to black and
white television, Sony has it all.
A crisp, clear picture that gives
you striking oontrast and deUial.
Ftne features and controls for
extra volue.
Plus the kind of outstl!nding
design that~ mode Sony famOU&
Hurry in. Sonys got It all.
And we've got all' the Sony&
"IT'S A SOD"
SANTA MONICA <AP) -
WorkttS toiled Utrouah the night
•cooping up 1pllled Alaskan
. crude oU ln the surf and sand on a
popular 1urfin1 beach ln Santa
Monica.
The cleanup waa expected to
be flnlshed today, with no serious
damage to the beach or wildlife.
officials said.
The oll was spilled from a
tanker moored off the coast ol El
Segundo on Tuesday. About half
the 400 gallons that apUled were
quickly cleaned up in the area
around the tanker. but another
200 &allons were carried by
winds and tides to the Ocean
Park area of Santa Monica
Beach.
The oil, thinner and less gooey
than tbe heavy fuel oil that
clo1ged Santa Barbara's
beaches in 1969, spilled ashore
late Wednesday.
Thai Royalty
Escapes Bomb
BANGKOK, Thailand
(AP> -King Bhumipol
Adulyadej and Queen
Sirikit narrowly escaped
death today when a home-
made bomb exploded a few
yards away while the king
was presenting rewards to
Moslem teachers in
southern Thailand, a
palace spokesman said.
It was the first such at·
tack on the kine. 49, who is
regarded by Thais as seml-
davme. The king bas been
on the throne since 1950
and enjoys great populari-
ty, spending a great deal of
time visiting villagers,
s oldiers and the un -
derprivileged in the coun-
tryside with Queen Sirikit.
The spokesman said a
few people receaved minor
wounds.
NYSE COMPOSD'E
•
81 JOHN C\JNNU'F -~---~ ~ the treadmill turns. members or the eeoMmlc tai
and tile are asldn• where it leads or whether, Uke a merr;
10.round, we have merelY palnted uP tho inachinery and ".\
trodqced a few ups and downs.
We have introduced indexlna into our wa1e-prlc
neaottatJQns, and Social Security benellta too, tht bcU..
that workers and retirees can m~t tho rt1tn1 coait of livlQi
Thi.II when prJces rise, so do incomes.
WHILE ADMIRING THJs. WE also wonder why It l
that tnl\atlon per&ists. wherrlt is all but obvious lhet to so~
de,Ne we are perpetuating the catchup sequence, in whif
higher incomes contribute to higher pri~s and ...
An attempt ls made to improve lbe lot of tbe worb
lowest qn tbe scale of skllls by raJslnt the minlmurn •aa rrom '2.30 to $2.65 an hour, wilh further increases t~ come.
ll lt bound to reduce the difficulties of &Qme work en. •
But for bow long? Personnel execuUves already ,.
saying lbey will have to raise the waies of more 1
workers in order to maintain the relaUoosblp. Thal leads
in!Jatlon, which is deva5laUnl for those on the bottom
At the samf: time as we are consider· _ ..............
ing increases in the minimum waae. we
also are attempting to cut down on tho
jobless rate. which remains stuck in tbe
area of 7 percent of the civilian labor
force.
IT IS ALMOST UNNECESSARY TO
point out that unemployment ls worat
among those who ha~ the least skilJs,
and who are thus in the minimum wage
category. Does a higher minimum wage
improve their chances for being hired? cuN••••
Again, as we moralize over the unemployment probl
we support a school system that is demonstrably deficl
in preparing youngsters for the labor market. and wbi
continues to turn out teachers who can never hope to teaching jobs.
In the stock market we have indexing too. althourb •
another sort. It's the current cult. Instead or trying to beat:
the popular averages and indexes, an institutional portfofi
manager seeks only lo keep pace with them. This is Oolf
considered success, and a fee is charged for It •
DOES INDEXING EXPLAIN WHY THE stock market.
at least as indicated by the popular market averages, has
been 4oing nowhere? It would seem so. In the past, at any
rate, the stock market rose or fell on taking rather than
avoiding risk.
No basic industry has been on a more persistent trea4:.
mill than steel. unless 1t is railroads. In fact, as steelmen!
tell it, they have had their feet planted on different tread·:
mtlls going in opposite directions. •,
They are being forced to expend hundreds of millions or:.
dollars on pollution control. They have been asked to cona.:•
pete with steel imports subsiruzed by foreign governments;i : .. • SIMULTANEOUSLY THEY HAVE been pressured by'.
the federal government to limit price increases they say are:.
needed lo modernize and make their plants more com-:•
t>etitive. Unable to do SO, they lay orr workers. StigmaUzed.:
Lhey are less able to raise money in the stock market in Ot'•:
der to update their plants. •• :
The examples are endless, t hough admittedly not all:
are clearcut. Some critics or steel. for example, maintains
the industry has management deficiencies. And it bas nevet",·
been declared by the highest authority that all proble~:'
could or should be met in ways that satisfy all parties. · :
BJJt sometimes you can't blame Americans tor wonder-•
mg where it leads and why we can't seem to do much about
it You can't help but lament that patchwork solutions muat
suffice Instead or weaving new pieces or cloth.
that the windmills of Washington only seem to I
blo\\ brief breezes across the sweaty treadmill. but seldom • produce a real cool wave. :
, :·
Stock Market Off,
But Selloff Eases
..
!·
:·
NEW YORK CAP> -The stock market showed a smalt
loss today. drifting through a slow sessi9n. •
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was down 1.8?.
pointsto839.14. •.
Losers held a 7.5 lead over gajners among New York ::
Stock Exchange.listed issues. •
Big Board volume came to just 16.6 mUUon shares. :•
Trading activity was reduced by the observance of Yom
Kippur. the Jewi!h holy day or atonement.
The Dow tumbled 10.82 points Wednesday to a 21·montb :
low, bringing the-average's Joss Crom its bull-market high -*
on Sept. 2loflast year to more than 170 points. -.·.
Dow.I ones A t•erage• MJaai Sio~ll• Did · ~
N ... YorttlAP) l'llllll ~ •-"91o• ST~KS Opo11 Hlafl Low 0-0..
lO Incl D • Ml lS 133 16 U..14-I 12 10 Trt1 211.ft 114 U 111.'1 211. It+ 0 U IS Utl Ill 4' 111.53 111 II 111.14 t It t~ lt6 tJ ,.. ,. 11H7 117.~~;.?,M
,,... 111700
Ulll1 JOO 600 u ,.. . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . J lOl.lOO
NEW VOttK 14Pl· ~I~. 4 p.m. ork:• llM "" cllal!Qe ftl .,. 1..i mOlf ach .. Al!Mrleall Stoel< E"'~ luws. tredlftca nate-11., al mor• .,,.., i i. •:.::s.• 011.. ••. • , ... a. -, .. ~~die.::·: ~;: tt .... -:-.~
(;ti. °""'·...... 31, 100 ~ .. Imp 0..... .. . . . . 1J,oot 71.. --. .. _., 011......... l•.IOO t• .....
Ool'M "9M..... lt,700 ... ·-.. ,_.,.1>1 .. ,.. "······ . "·* """ -1~ Che'"' Ho....... u..oo 1 ••• ·-1111.1,.,,.... U,400 1h ..••
.. l[W V()lllC '"'°'
Due to late transmission · today's llstlng wlll .not
aOPear Jn the Oallv Pilot.
MoW• ....... Due to late transmlalon
today's lfstlng will not
appe.ar In the Daitr Piiot.
St.ee6"1• Tlw s,..,,,.,.,
'
I
LagUnil /SOuth £0ast
VOL 70. NO. 26S. S SECTIONS, 54 PAGES THURSDAY, SEP:T£MBER 22, 1977 TEN CENTS
331-nnit South Lagun·a Tract Okayed
BJ KATHY CLANCY
Ol .. DllMt ...........
A proposed 331·arut hous101
tract oa %13 hillside acres over·
looking South Laguna won the
unanimous approval of Oranee
CountysuperVtSOrs Wednesday
Supervisors sided with county
planning commissioners, who
approved the Baldwin Company
proposal on a 4·1 vote in July.
The commission's decision was
appealed to 1upervlaors by mem·
hen of the South Lacuna Civic
AsJ()C1abon who contended the.
denlopment would fly in the
face of general plana and zoning
earlier adopted for the area.
But. Supervisors Chairman
Thomas Riley said he was
ut.iafled the final plan did com·
ply with earlier supervlson' ac·
lions.
Riley said he recognized lhe
area was among the most
sensitive between the Santa
Monica Mountains and Camp
Pendleton but added It also was
the target of the most complex
set of development guidelines in
the county.
The proposed project now
would require coastal com-
mission approval before building
could proceed.
Baldwin's original plan, sub-
mitled about Cour years aao.
caUed for building 980 homes and
condominiums on 110 of the
area's213 acres.
The final version limits de·
velopment to 331 houses to be
contained within a walled com·
munity covering 69 acres.
Another 143 acres stretching
seaward wUl be donated to the
county as natural open space,
and a 1.65-acre public park will
be pro','.lded in the area of Niguel
Peak.
Civic Association spokesman
Anthony Grasso said' hia group
had been involved in plannlng for
the area since 1911.
"Frankly we are very dis·
heartened to be here before you
again," he continued.
But Grasso argued the plan
permits building on some slopes
which were to be left in their
natural state, allows excessive
grading and will cttale drainaae
problems.
"U an area is to be kept in its
natural state how can you put a
house on it?" he asked.
Developer Jam es Baldwin ad·
mittcd some homes would be
built on slopes that are to be kept
in their natural form, but said the
s lopes themselves will not be
<See TllACf, Page AZ>
Suspects Seized
.€op Watches LO,guna Holdup
An off-duty Laguna Beach
police officer who walked into an
armed robbery at a convenience
market Wednesday night, was
credited with chasing and cap·
turing two suspects.
Officer J erry Linenkugel, a
foµr·yeat veteran of the police
d epartment, was walking into
the Tic Toe Market al 885 Glenn-
eyre St. at about 9:30 p.m. He
said that a man simula ting a gun
in his pocket. took $66 from the
till and ran out of the store to a
waiting car.
Linenkugel gave chase an hlS
own car, following the careening
getaway car through city str~ts
for about 10 minutes before forc-
ing it to stop on Ocean A venue.
The officer jumped from hls
car and held the two suspects at
gunpoint until uniformed olficers
arrived. ·
Police arrested William
Walton Canada, 25 and Steven Al·
No Damage Told
Nuclear Sub Hits
Bottom Off Italy
NAJ>US. I taly <AP> -·'n>e
nuclear-powered submarine u~ Jtay struck the sea bottom off
S~rdinla, injuring three crew ~embers but. sufferlnt-no
ctamaae to its nuclear ·""lp-
ment, a U.S. Navy spokesman
said today.·
The submarine was undergo-
ing inspection at a navy base
following the accident Tuesday.
the spokesman said.
The Navy said three crew
nrembers suffered minor injuries
when the submarine struck the
~ottom of the Mediterranean
during a routine mission south of
~,rdinla. A Sturgeon class •ttack
submarine, th~ Ray normally
earlies a crew o( 12 omcen and
108 enlisted men.
"The ship's nuclear reactor
was unaffected and there was no
)lµclear propulsion plant
damage," the Navy statement
.aaid.
.• The Ray proceeded to La Mad-
dalena, Sardinia, under her own
power and arrived there late
Wednesday, the Navy reported.
The incident brought a protest
from the Sardlnlan government's
inlnister for the environment.
Orazio Erdas, a Socialist, said
the base poses "a permanent
.danger to ~ tM people in the
area" because of possible
t'adloactive leakage.
The submarine base on La
Maddalena, a liny island off
northern Sardinia, has been a
allbject of contention by leftists
tor a number of years.
' The Na'<l:y said the sub would
undergo a thorough inspection at La Maddalena, and that details ot the ground.in& it.self were UD·
4ler investigation.
Coas t
Weather
Nlaht and early momint
low clouds with fol will
burn ott to au.nay after-
noons lhroug b Friday.
t'ernperatur ea a llUle
tooler. Low tonl1ht so.
Hi•bs Friday 61to18.
•
Tbe !Jt.ly. currentt1 deployed
with die U.S. 6tb Fleet. bas Us
home PoJt at Charleston, S.C.
Mesa Victim
Plans Suit
Over Shooting . .
By MICHAEL PASKEVICB
Ola. o.ity f'ileC Staff
A Cana Mesa auto shop owner,
shot twice in the chest during a
Saturday altercaUon with an off.
duty Hawthorne police otncer,
may be permanently paralyzed
from the waist down. bia at-
torney alleged today. ·
Anaheim attorney Robert
Weaver, fepresenting 34·year·
old shooting victim Jon Allan
McClure, said a Sl million
personal injury suit will be filed
against Officer Michael Moran.
No criminal charges have been
filed against Moran who is re-
portedly on vacation from his
duties with the Hawthorne Police
Department.
' McClure remains in critical
condition today at Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital. having un··
dergooe surgery for the second
time since the Saturday incident
in front of the A&A Garage, 2037
·Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
Costa Mesa police believe the
s hooting followed an argument
between the two men. 1 Officer Moran apparently
drove bi.9 car over a sUU-damp
floor ol the garate shop, anger-
ing McClure and aparkina the
dlsp~ between the two men. Owina the e.nsulng ataument.
Coata Meu police assert
McCIU?e brandished a t.bree-fqot
metal bar and cbar1ed at the of·
fleer while be wa standing •·
(Sff VICl'DI, Page Al)
Ian Ross, ~. both or 419 Ocean
Ave.
They were trans ported lo
Orange County Jail with bail set
at $25,000.
Wednesday night 's robbery
was the second this week al the
convenience market located al
the corner of Glenneyre and
Thalia Street.
Sheriff's deputies arrested
three suspects they believe took
$60 and a case of beer from the
store early Monday morning.
Wts Vote
Falls Short
In Laguna
-~~ Lacuna Beach eouocUmen
could not muster the tour votes
nee'ded to enact an uraency or·
d.loance Wednesday nitht that
wollld have forced more than 50
property owners to combine their
own lots in an area above Wood's
Cove.
The urgency ordinance was
prompted by concerns of the
city's planning commission that
owner-majntained roadways in
the tract could not support de·
velopment of up to 346 lots In the
area.
The area is located below Arch
Beach Heigbts. ll comprises lots
along Gain&borogugh, Crestview
and Dlam<*l Streets and a por·
Uon ol Summit Way.
Those roadways, built and
maintained by the l2S owners of
completed homes in the area, are
nearly Impassable, wllh cliff
slippage, potholes and erosion
narrowing some sections of the
asphalt to less tllan six feet.
Commissioners suggested an
urgency ordinance to combine
adjacent lots under the same
ownership to meet a minimum
standard or 6,000 square feet for a
building site.
By lot combinations, fewer
homes could be constructed in
the area, and traffic problems
would be less chaotic. said Plan·
ning Directors Doug Schmitz.
But Councilman John
McDowell was less than pleased with the sur'Prise urgency or·
dinance recommendation.
"It's not fair to come before us
With an emergency ordinance
•lthout gJving us any background on the situation," he said anerilv. "We need a solution that is fair o the people Who own property in
that area.:·
McDowell sajd be sensed. a de.
sire on the part of some com·
mt.sstooers "to stop growth in
. tbi.a area and I don't like it.
(SeeLOTS, P age AZ)
Dlllty ...... S9ft .._
FAMILIES IN CAPISTRANO BEACH SUBSTANDARD HOUSING MAY BE RELOCATED .
Cat1nty Viewing Government-subsidized Homes In Dana Point as Alternative
Dana Housing Mulled
Substandard Capo Beach H~~ ~Be Banned
By ANNE COOPER
OI t .. Dlflay ~II« Stllff
Families living in substandard
housing in Capistrano Beach
may be relocated in new, gov·
ernment-subsidized homes in
Dana Point, a county official said
Wednesday.
day.
Robert Trevino, manager of
the county Housing and Com·
munity Development program,
told members attending a
Capistrano Beach Chamber of
Commerce meeting that homes
in the Doheny Park Road and
Las Vegas Avenue vicinity
violate county health laws and
must be vacated.
He said the county is obligated
to find suitable alternative hous·
ing for the three dozen families
who live in the subslandard
dwellings.
One possible s ite for
alternative low and moderate in·
come housing is located across
San Juan Creek from the run·
Niguel School Site
Rezoned for Houses
A 13.2·acre site in Laguna
Niguel planned by Capistrano
Unified School District officials
for an eventual elementary
school was rezoned for houses by
Orange County supervisors
Wednesday.
'fhe board ordered, however.
that no development take place
for about two years to give school
officials time to seek voter ap-
proval of new school building
funds.
Board Chairm an Thomas
Riley said a tax override election
aimed at financing school con·
struction is planned for next
March. · Deputy Superintendent
.Truman Benedict argued that
the site should not be rezoned !or
· homes but should be left in its
"community facility" category.
The site would &erve residents
of the new Kite Hill Planned
Community, now under construc-
tion in the area of Niguel Road
and Aliso Creek Road.
Benedict said the develop-
ment's roughly 800 homes would
generate about 600 new elenten·
tary school children.
Benedict told supervisors he
bad never heard of a develop.
ment that laree being approved
without providing for a school
site.
Supervisors also ordered lhe
developer to make the 13.2 acres
av.UabJe to the 1e'h<>0l district if
a tax ove:rride or bond Issue is ap.
proved or to arrange a land swap
with school officials.
Benedict said without counting
new students from t.be Kite Hill
com,munity, district officials are
expecUng TS> new homes will be
built in the district each year I or
at least the next two years.
down Capistrano Beach housing.
in Dana Point.
The developer or the Marlboro
property along Del Obispo Street
has been approached with the
idea of including lower priced
units, either !or rent or for sale
in bis development Trevino said.'
The county bas hired Com·
munltas Associates of Dana
P.oint as consultants to make a
housing needs assessment of the
area, to recommend a site for
low and moderate income hous·
ing and to master plan the
project. •
Trevino said that is expected to
take about 1S months.
"Why does the county have to
get involved at all?" James El·
liott, a telephone company
engineer, asked Trevino. "If that
is substandard housing. all the
landlord has to do is give the
tenants an e\licUon notice."
Dinah Fischbach, an assistant
to county supervisor Thomas
Riley, called the Capistrano
Beach boU.sina "a blight on the
neighborhood," but said suitable
alternative bousinf must be
found in the area for its resi-
dents.
"They still have Santa Ana,"
ca lied out a n unidentified
member of the audience.
Realtor' Fred Sanden said it
may be unrealistic to plan-1ow or
moderately priced bousibg In
high-priced south Orance
County.
"I "Ve told my eldest son he will
have to buy his· first IKlu.Se Irr Ri~erslde ertd build equ.ity in It.
(See llOll'U. Pqe Al)
Teaeberlaterveaes
Stullent
statement to Oranie County
Munltlpal Court, ln which he
char•cterized Hactett•.s ~Uon
as a "mist•" that. a young
~makes."• .
•
)
,
I OAlL., PILOT L
Coastal
~ader
Succumbs
0 ch civic leader
CJurlH nl11laltotbam, •
fOW>dtt of t.be Doheny volunteer
fiN dep.atttn&nt. died Tu.eeday al
• Clemente Geoeral HOl'pilal.
Kr. Highlbolbam, a retlffd
Manne CGl'pl llS .. Or. WU one ol
the ftnt two prwidentt ol the
Dohe:Qy r1re departaient. The
other s:n:sldent, Nolle Famularo,
died twoW-. qo.
Kr. Hiainbotbam alJo wu
l'eSpCIDSihle for bavln1 lbe county
convert a dump &Jie oo Del
Obispo street into a recreaUoo area. wblcb la •till uaed u a Lit-
tle Leque ball park, b1a wile
said today.
He retired from t.be Marine
Corps in u:s6 and wu employed
by a Newport Beach mortuary
unW he retired eiabt years ago.
He was a past president ol lhe
Lions Club and was a member of
the Veterana of Forei&n Wars,
the American Le1lon and the
MilltaryOrdenofWorld Wan.
Funeral services will be beld at
10 a.m. Saturday at Pacillc View
Memorial Chapel in Newport
Beach. Rev. Joe Walburn will of·
ficiate.
Burial will follow at Pacific
VlewMemorlal Park.
Mr. HiHinbotham ls survived by his 'widow, Carolyn, of the
couple's home, 345C8 Camino El
Molino, by a dau1hter, SuzaMe,
of Santa Monica, and by a alater.
He waa bom in West Vlr&inia
and moved to Capistrano Beach
22yeana10.
The family au1,est.a memQrial
donations to the American Heart
Association.
SC Council
Split on Ban
Of Parking
A move to outlaw overni1ht on·
s treet parking in San Clemente
was derailed Wednesday, at least
temporarily, as city council split.
2·2 on a motion to hold a public
hearing on the issue.
Councilmen Thomas O'Kecfe
and Patrick Lane wanted the
public hearing. Mayor Donna
Wilklnaon and Councilman
William Walker opposed It. Coun·
cilman Tony DiGiovanni was
absent.
Police Chief Gary Brown bad
presented to councilmen a report.
on how a ban on overnight park-
ing on city streets would affect
po lice and s treet·sweeping
operahons.
Initially, councilmen voted 2·0
lo receive and file Brown's re-
port. sidestepping a staff recom-
mendation to schedule a public
hearine. Mrs. Wilkinson and
Walker supported this first mo-
tion. Lane said, "I don't care,''
which was interpreted as an
abstention. O'Keefe had not yet
arrived.
When he arrived, he tried to
convince fellow councilmen to
follow the staff's recommenda-
tion.
.. Thia is obviously a matter of
some dispute," he said, "and
therefore worthy of a public
heartni."
Lane changed his "don't care"
voteto5l1Pport.O'Keefe's motion,
but Mrs. WUJcinson and Walker
remalhed opposed.
Meeting Unsettled
SEOUL. South Korea AP> -
Ton1sun Park's American
lawyer lei\ for the United States
today sayln1 he bad no reply to
his proposal for Park to meet in a
third country with U.S. olflclals
inveaticating b1a lobbyin1 ac-
tivitiet in Wuhlniton. Wllllam
Hundley said be was ••auu
hopeful" the South Korean IOV•
emmeot Y1ould respond to bis propo1aJ. aubmltted 'J'uesdQ to
ille J..Uce lliDlltry.
()yelist Inj u red
Geoffrey Jay Schaal, 18, of Dana Point receives medical
help from firemen and paramedics after he collided
with a car on South Coast Highway in Laguna Beach
Wednesday afternoon. Police s aid Laura Doughty, 51, of
Laguna Beach, pulled out from a parking place and into
the path of Schaal 's motorcycle. He was treated at a
hospital and released.
Lance Plans Return
For 'Georgi,a Rest'
ATLANTA (AP) -Bert
Lance, former budget director,
said today he plans to return to
Georgia "and get a•Uttle rest."
"Tell the folks in Georgia we
are doing just fine," he said in an
i nterview with r adio station
WSB. "We appreciate their sup-
. port, love, trust and faith more
than tbey can ever possibly
know.
''That's been one of the things
that sustained us throuehout thts whole thing."
Asked about his future. he
said: "No decision yet. We'll
take that as we've been taking
things ... one day at a time."
As for his wife, LaBelle, he
said. "She's doing just fine. She's
been a source of real strength
The American people ... saw
her ... for what she is, one who
has a great faith in God and
be lieves things work in His
purpose. That's the way she is."
Asked if he would return to
Georgia, Lance replied:
"You know I've got to come
back to Georgia. J said that in my
s ta tement. That's where our
home ls."
Asked if he would take a public
job, he said, "No. We just want to
get back to our friends in Georgia
and get a Utile rest."
Lance, resigned bis federal
post Wednesday.
The Lances still have their
50 -r oom Butterfly Manna
m ansiorl, one of the binest and
most elaborate estates in the ex-
c 1 ust ve Buckhead section of
Atlanta.
Former CIA. A.gent
P rivate Eye Added
To Die drich Staff
Orange County Supervisor
Ralph Diedrich added a licensed
private investigator to his staff or
administrative aides this week.
From Page AJ
LOTS •••
"There are more than 100 in-
dividuals affected by this or-
dinance who have not been
notified," he said.
Council worn an Phyllis
Sweeney shook her head and
said, "In an urgency ordinance,
you obviously don't notify the
people."
Schmitz said the intent ol the
ureency o,Fdl1!ance was to pre-
vent owners of acijacent lots hom
going out and 1etting a erand
deed placiDI lots in the name or
thetr brotbers·in·law, or other re-latives. uu they recorded adjacent lots
In someooe else's name, .. he ex-
plained. '1ben the lots could not
be combined under state law.''
But McDowell said he did not
envision property owners
rushing out to switch lot titles.
"There haven 'l been enw1h
building permits in that area to
sneeze at ln the last. few years,"
he said.
"I can't be concerned wl~ the
lot combination in an area where
they can't develop 8DY'!'81,0 he
Ald. Cq\Ulcllman Carl J'obmon.
Jin. heeaJ and Councllwolnan
Sally BeUerue 1upported the
ur1ency ordinance. 1.,m, the ea'Qncll 11'ould try to bold QP ff.
veloPD*Jt unUl soluUons Could
be aevelo'" to relieve the
buardoUI road 1ltuaUon \n the
area.
' But Jfayor Joo Bond 1od
'McDowell OpllOHd the or-
~uce. And alftce four volet are
nteettd to enad 1ucb an or-
dlnlftee, the utatncy meuurt
f.UtocWe~ ·c~tlMllliiAecltbat =-=-== lllllllill•-•lilllll,.1'1m • •
Diedrich ,said that John V.
Lynch, who reportedly was a CIA
agent for 22 yeArs, was not hired
for his investieative talents.
"We have a lot of staff work
here that requires research and digging as well as mature judg·
ment. I think John bas the
qualities for that k\nd or work.
That's why be was hired,"
Diedrich said.
Diedrich 's rem arks were
aimed at dlspelllne any notion
that Lynch might have been
· added to his county staff to help
tn his defense against Grand
Jury charges accusing him of
conspiring to violate state
political campalln reeuJations.
· Along with four co·lndictees,
Diedrich is scheduled to appear
in court Nov. 'I to answer to the
felony cbarees whloh, if fbey re-sult ln a conviction, would result
ln hia removal ftonl office.
Lynch was a Republican can·
· dldate for state Assembly in 19'14
and ln 19'18 sought the state
Senate seat being abandoned by
the Republican incumbent
James Wbetmore.
Both Lynch bids for elective of·
fice ended with hi.a defeat ln
Republican primary elecUom.
,......P-AJ
111A.CT •••.
•
Short two councilmen dot to
summer's end vacations, San
Juan Capistrano's City CouncU
tabled a cltlaen petition ealllng
for a special elec:Uon Wednesday.
Tbe elecUoo would deelde ti
San .Juan'a voters want HYeo
council members elected by dis·
trict, a substantial ehanle from
the preeent five.member council
elected at·lar1e.
Seventeen percent .of the mil·
slon clt1'• re1t1tered votera
slped the petltloo calllnl for •
special election on the laaue.
Wednesday's council acUon
means the spe<:lal election could
not be held before Dec.. M. II
councilmen decide Oct. 5 (their
next meet.in&) to bold a special
electioo.
They also have the option of
placing the issue on the reeutar
March 7 city elections ballot.
Bernie Matthey, spokesman
for the group that circulated the
petition. cautioned the council
Wednesday a1alnst "tbwartlnl
the will of the voten."
"U we are to keep the faith or
the voters, you only have two op.
tions," Matthey told the council,
referring to the council'• opUoo
or paasln1 the petition as a clty
ordinance immediately, without
a vote on the issue.
Matthey aaid placlne the lsaue
on the regular March ballot "will
thwart the will of 1,400 voters
who wantlt done rilbt away.••
Matthey's group, the San Juan
Capistrano Concerned Citizens
for Responsive Government,
hoped a special election would be
approved Wednesday.
· They believe the date ot such
an election would be critical
since nomlnaUona for next year's
eloee Dec. 29, They. contend the
seven.member dlatrict system ti
approved by tho voters sboold be·
in force durtna the March elec·
Uoqs.
Oounoltmen unantmoutly
agreed to table the la1ue until a
full council could dJscuaa the
matter. Mayor Yvon Heckseber
and Councilman Dou1lu Nub were ablent.from the meetln&.
77rai Royalty
&cape.Bomb
BANGKOK, Thailand
(AP> -King Bbumlpol
Adulyadej and Queen
Sirikit narrowly escaped
death tod~ when a home.
made bomb exploded a few
yards away wblle the klng
was presentlnl rewards to
Moslem teachers in
southern Thailand. a
palace spokesman said.
It was the CU'St such at-
tack oo the king, 49, who is
retarded by Thais aa semi·
divine. The king has been
on the throne since 1950
and enjoys great. populari·
ty, spending a great deal ot
time visiting villaeers.
soldiers and the un-
derprivileged In the coun-
tryside with Queen Slrikit.
The spokesman said a
few people received minor
wounds.
• council eleetiODS open Dec. 8 and
F,.... Page Al
Workers R eturn
RICHMOND CAP> -Some:m
city employes will be back on the
job today for the first time in 66
days, ending the longest
municipal strike in state hi.story.
HOMES •••
so someday he'll be able to afford
to live here.
"Not everybody has to live
down here on the beach," he
said.
Beoo111e a stereo nut
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In a nutaheU, heref oU yOO need
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radios. tope recorders. and
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people who know acoustJcs and
electronics in,ide out
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And you don't have to spend a
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Come in toda~
Lot us give you a demonstra·
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lo belleve.
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"IT'S A SON¥"
1tsa1111ere
jn black aD.d White.
When It oomes to black and
white television. Sony hes It all.
A crisp, dear picture that gives
you striking contrast and det&ll. Fine features and oontrols for
extra value.
Plus the kind ofoutstand!ng
design thats made Sony famous.
Hurry In. Sonys got It all.
And we'wgotall theSonyS.
F,...P ... Al .
VICTIM •••
side the shop. omcer Mor n all ttdly pulled
a piltol from bis parked UI' and
1hot McCluro twlce with the
German automatic aner be ii·
nored tho officer'• commands to
bait.
Attomey Weaver, however,
tald be bopea to dl.lprove the of· fleer'• claims th.at tho abooting wasinaelfdefeose.
"I'm not convinced It was aelf
dofeoae," Weaver said. "Mr.
McClure carried the metal bar at au Um• and at no Umt did be
raise It in o threatentna gesture
at otncer Moran,•' be cl al med.
Weaver asserted be wW pre··
sent wttnmaes who will tesU(y
that omcer Moran lhot McClure
ror the leCCIOd Umo after he wu
alJ'ead)' down and lylnc ~
from the f1nt IUDSboL
Moran, who wu 1raduated
from Newport Harbor Blab
Sc.bool aod Oran1e CoaJt
Co1Je1e. apparently was on vaca-
tion in the area when he stopped
off at the 1arage Saturday aft.er.
noon at about 1:30 p.m.
Immediately after the shoot-
ing, Co6ta Mesa police contacted
the Orange County District At·
torney's Office. ~al police filed
a report with the DA.'s office
which hu assttned a spedal in·
vesU1aUon team to interview
witnesses in the case.
The lnve1tigation is still under
way. A spokesman at the DA 's of-
fice could not estimate when it
will be completed or it criminal
charges are forthcoming against
Moran.
McCh1re underwent surgery
Saturday night for removal ot
two slUIB In bis chest.
Attorney Weaver said it ap-'
pears McClure will lose the use of
bis lower extremities as a result
of thesbnotiag.
He remains listed in critical
but stable condition lo the
hospital's intensive care unit.
Weaver aald be underwent sur-
gery for a second tlme Wednes·
day bot hospital officials would
not cooflnn the report.
Many witnesses to the shooting
have come forward and are be-
ing interviewed by Weaver and
the DA 's investigation team.
j
• DAILY PILOT L C TllUtlda
Bmlenna Forms Tr.o upe
BJ "1LLIAM HO -
\ ..... ,.. ...
Prat baU a and danc:t Ln
stru<"t« Caroll •ta nc-y kOOW'I the
rtton al bvm1 out of a trunk. ~ petite Laauna Beach ...WS t
toiled U\roulh the ru11 •tac• life ror years. petformJ.n& clustcal ballg
befor<1 1albenogs of country folk ln
<>mall towns
AND mE U-ffOU& days and one-
n11ht st4nds have left their mlU'.k on
the attractlH! redhead'aouUook
··Every staae 1s different,·• the en
thus1ast.tc veteran explains. ..Some
were so smaU you could hardly move
around. We'd have lo change our
presentation every rught '
Miss Stasoey's experiences on tht
road came dunng a six-year stint with
lhe Ou.k.btomsJcy Ballet Cla.ssjque's
Amencan company.
"THE BASIC PURPOSE was to
bring culture to small towns," she re-
coocert. ''•
•'Tlf'B NEXT MOaNING 'We'd be
up earty and drlvlri1 off to the next
town."
AJkte from Ulo almost eliht yean
Miat Stasney apent &ourtnc -lnclud·
ln1 a 1Unt. with Dlaney on Parade -
the bubbUna dancer h•• 11vod the bulk
ol her Ute along tbe Oran1e Coast.
studYtne, at· afle 13, under Laguna
Beach ballerina Ula Zall.
She performed in many Laauna
Beach ballet and dance producl.ion8.
Her most recent professional ap-
pearanee was this month with the
Ballet Pacifica at Irvine Bowl.
BUT IT WAS HER stint a.s a culture
missionary touring lbe United States
and Canada that brou1bt her to San
Juan Capistrano aix years a10 to open
a dance school.
. ~E1'ft"fl stage b dlllereat.
Her desire to bring cultural events
to the Capistrano aqd Saddleback
Valleys prompted an appearance
befQre the San Juan City Council
where sbe argued to keep the old
Ca~trano High Scbool aymnasium. S~1Cere•• ....u..-
«!Otdd ltardlfl -~
· arOIDld.'
"We just don't have the facilities to
show things off here," she says. "The
city doesn't even have a recreation
center or an auditorium where we can
perform."
lates. ··we went to a great deal or
trouble and there were a few pro-
blems."
Many resulted from culture-shock
s uffered by the stunned small-town
audiences during their first ex -
perience with classical dance.
IRONICALLY, AL THOVGH the old
high school gymnasium was de-
molished, the gym floor was sold as
salvage and wound up back in San
Juan as the floor of Caroll's dance
studio.
"My father found the floorin1 in
Arcadia," she explains.
"We ran into hostilities at some
places," she recalls with a sheepish
grin ... A lot of the people have never i seen men in lights before
f ~
In addition to conducting classes,
Miss Stasney has formed the
C~pistrano Valley Dance Company, a
group of professlonala performln1 in
the area. ,,
E
"THEY'D NEVER SEEN dance
like this -they just didn't know what
to do Wlth al, how to respond."
And the transportation between
whistle stops had it~ drawbacks too l :. ,. ..
"We lraH•led around in two cars,"
Caroll explains "We'd hit a town at
about 3 in the afternoon, be at the t theater at 5 o'clock, perform from 8 to f 11 and attend a reception after the
THE TROUPE'S PREMIERE was
last April at San Clemente High
School, but the turnout was less than
she had hoped.
Undaunted, the tenacious dancer
plans another offerin1 for valley resi-
dents next year.
~·
'-: • • •
Celebrates
'Bubble Boy' Home_
llOUSTON <AP) David, the "Bubble
Boy,·· observed has sixth birthday at home in
his plastic isolator, with a special germ-free
ca kt'. but without the miniature spacesuit that
ts designed to expand his world.
Doctors had hoped David would have been
able to try out the suit before his birthday, but
a minor hitch pos tponed any trials of the gar-
ment which would permit him lo explore out-
door areas such as woods and beaches.
DAVID IS A VICTIM of severe combined
immune deficiency, which robs the body of Its
germ f1ghUn1 abilities. He was delivered in a
germ-free area s ix years ago and placed im-
mediately in a sterile "bubble unit." He has
never been touched by ungloved hands.
Last December, phys1c1ans reported on
1m munolog1cal changes that eventually may
mean David is outgrowing the defect
ON WEDNESDAY, A SPOKESMAN at
naylor College of Medicine and Texas
Children's Hospital said, "We have nothing
new to report at this time. We had hoped
David would have tried out the spacesuit
before thts birthday, but there were minor
problems and it was returned to the Johnson
Space Center for reworking."
Birthday plans included, as they have in
the past, a quiet family get-together, includ-
Jng a cake specially prepared, as is all David's
foods, to be germ free
Despite his handicap, the boy reads el:-
tremely well, has a fantastic vocabulary and
is curious and inquisitive about the world
around him
Assault
C~ge
Dismissed
MILWAUKEE (AP)-
A judge bas dismissed a
sexual assault charge
against a man arrested
b y an undercover
policewoman, s aying o(.
ricers "want to go out
there and pos e a s
bookers."
·'If you want lo go out
there and pose as a lady
of the evenlni -that you
are available for money,
it is co n se nt ,"
Milwaukee County
Judge Ralph Gorenslein
rulP I.
DI ST. ATTY . E .
Michael Mccann 1aid he
would appeal, calling
Oorenstein's reaaonong
"a b solutel y ou t -
rageous.''
Gorenstein dismissed
a fourth-degree sexual
auault char1e filed
Jlainst Phillip C. Minor, 23. who was accused of
Indecently touching an
u n d e r c o v e r
policewoman
POLICEWOMAN
Christine Leonard was
standing at a street cor·
ner early Saturday, pos-
ing as a prostitute when
she "observed the def en·
Delly "'9t Slaff -
PROFESSIONAL DANCER EXECUTES B ALLET STEP
Caroll Stasney Works for Saddleback Performance
Enrollme n t IJp
Review Lauds
LB Experiment
Laguna Beach Unified School District oflcials
see many benefits and few drawbacks ln the one-
campus summer school proaram reviewed by prin·
cl pal Lawrence A. Fisher.
More than 1,800 children., from k~1artners to seniors in high school, attended sum school
•his year on the Laauna Beach Hilb School pus.
THAT'S no MORE THAN attended sumaner
school at two locaUons last summer, Fisher said in
a report lo the board of t.ru,,tees.
. Summer 1976 saw children up to eighth grade at
Thurston Intermediate School and the older
youngsters at the hilh school. .
Other than the usual first-day confusion. and a
lot of furniture re-arranging, Fisher said the sum-
mer program went well.
He recommended the oo~ampus concept for
next summer.
''THE IUGH SCHOOL HAS THE facilities for
all summer school acli vi ties." Fisher said, ciUn!
the track, woodsbops, kilns and classrooms.
He said parents seemed to like the idea of all of
the youngsters in one school, especially if they bad
more than one youngster enrolled.
"They could drop off their children at one SJ>Ot.
a central location, on their way to work.'' Fisher
s aid.
THE mGH SCHOOL'S LOCATION near the
downtown. the beaches1 Boys Club and swim
lessons was another plus, ne said.
THE HOSPITAL SPOKESMAN said it
was hoped that David can start making short
tests with the ch1ld·s11ed astronaut suit in Oc-
tober. The first of three suits was delivered
some weeks ago, but doctors found il unaccep-
table because of a defect in the container used
in moving it from the space center to the
hospital.
dant reach around herL.:~~=~;;==~-----~ shoulder and grab her Ill
Ve>1.1r
Ohe>lc;e: After the spacesuit is tested at the
hospital, doctors believe David will be able to
s pend up to four hours at a time in the rub·
berized garment which has a soft transparent
plastic helmet. A 10.foot hose connects the suit
to a ventilator mounted on a pushcart.
DAVID ALTERNATELY SPENDS six
weeb at the hospital and six weeks with his
pareutl and 9-year-old sister , Katherine, in
their rancb·able home about 45 minutes from
the boal>ll&L He is scheduled lo 1'9tutn to the
hospital next month.
H1a parents have asked that their last
name and address not be reported. Hia mother
aald 0 anonymlty ls our best hope for leadin1 reuanably notmal lives."
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The lwo-
Jear-old Hilb School Proficiency ~·
amination, which yields the l•gal
• equivalent of a hllh school diple>ma.
has saved at least tu m1Won1 ol·
riciala say.
The Sacramento Bee story Wectna
day aaJd about 60,000 persons have tattn the four-hour eicaminatJon, and
• about 18,000 of tho younpten who
PUied ban left hl1h a.cbooJ earl1.
:1'ht nam, a test ot basic skills, II aimed at dberidlanted students or tlMee ~ pr.I• •tertnc tbt Job mmet.
left breast, kissing her at
the same time," the
,police complaint said.
She "never gave the
defendant consent to
touch her," t.he com-
plaint said.
"THOSE WOMEN
want to go out there and
pose as hookers,'•
Gorenstein said. "That's
the type of thing they're
going to ·have to do. A
battery is something
elle. ~ a toucb1n1 of
this type b lmplled con-sent."
·2·SPEED,
MULTl·CYCLE
FILTER·FLOe
WASHER
WWA 7050V
$ 95 21nl
WASHER with
GE'S EXCLUSIVE
MINl·IASKEr TUI
WWA&IOOV
•eomperld to 1m1ll wettr ltY• Mttln11"''""11me hot or wtrm wesn/rllMI t91nPtr1ture, on umtt GE W91her.
NEW MATCHING
AUTOMATIG ' DRYER
chool' Ordered
f'on:o All tlm 8uUtUn mu.,.
inl editor Marvin R. OlMn tw been
ordtnd to par\klpate tn • ''drul
cbool " procram wltb 1 view toenn·
tuu mW.al ot cbar1t1 fUtd June ...
An• Municipal Court J\Mta•
John H. Smlth Jr. ordered Ollen1 43,
to tN'Ol1 ln Oranae Count>"• G"'I •dlvenk>n pro1ram. Olltn wa. or·
dered to ttlum to court March I, 1'71,
for evaluation ofbls proareu
OLSEN 18 WOallING ln New York
for lbo .n-eedom Newapapen 1roup
th1t controls the ·Anaheim BwleUn
and the Santa Ant Re1lster.
The newsman was arretted by
•cents of the Stat e Bureau of
Narcotics Enforcement who said they
found mariJuana plants 1rowtn1 ln
the t>.ck yard ol bis Santa Ana home.
Arts and Crafts
OU•N WM JA.ILID on ebara• or
culllvallna marijuana and poase11ln1
marijuana for aale. The cultlvatJon
oh1r11 WIS dl1mls1ed by Judi•
Smltb.
6t.at. hwest11ators 11ld they were
directed to Olsen'• home on a tip from
poUUcal tlnancter Gene Conrad
CQNUD, WHO PACES trial In
Orana• County Superior and Los
Aneeles federal courta on multiple
fraud count.a, readily admllled sup·
plying slate omcen with the Informa-
tion.
He t.old newamen that hls action
was prompted by bis resentment of
the way ln which newspapers con·
trolled by the Freedom group handled
rePQrtlng of his alleged criminal ac·
Uvities.
SJC Offers
Child Classes
Patrick
Pleads
Innocent
BEVERLY lllLl.S
!AP> Ted Patrick.
hired by parents. to
"deprogram " childre n
who h ave joined re-
1 i g ious sccb., has
pleaded innocent to mis·
demeanor char~es that
he held a young man and
Children's classes ranging from Polynesian
d ance instruction l9 more traditional arts and
crafts courses will be offered this fall through San
Juan Capistrano's Recr eation Department.
4-YEAR BATTLE
John Lennon
BEAT THE SYSTEM
Charlie Chaplin
'Thl.lttday. September 22. 1977 LISC DAIL V P1LOT A J'
Celebrities Beat System:
PolaiUICi May Join Select Star Aliens
LOS ANGELES (AP) When
movie director Roman Polanski
pleaded guilty to havJnc unlawful
sex with a l3-ye1J .. old etrl, he
said he knew he risked deporta-
tion.
But Polans U, like other
celebrity alleJ\S, must also know
that. in practice, few or the
famous are forced to leave the
United States forever.
THE 44-YEAR·OLD Polanski,
director or s uch films as
"Chinatown" and ''Rosemary's
Baby," faces sentencing on the
sex offense.
As a FTench citizen of Pollsh
descent , he Is subject to lmmi·
gration laws which provide de·
portaUon of an alien convicted o(
a ~rtrne of'moral turpitude and
sentenced to prison. Polan.ski's
crime carries a possible sentence
of one to 50 years in prison.
"1 can't r emember any
celebrity or stature who has been
deported," says Robert Seltz.
spokesman for the U.S. Imml·
g ration and Naturalization
Service here.
RICHARD FRAADE, 1t Bever·
ly H ills immigration
lawyer with numerous star
clients, notes. ··once an alien is
in this country, he has a broad
panoply of constitutional rights.
mornls and political assoc1a. tlona.
ChapJln 'a sexual dalliances
had m ade l)eadllnes In a lurid
paternity trial, and he was ruled
to be the father of a child born out
or wedlock -a scandal at the
time. Also, the American Legion
had denounced him ror espousing
leftist causes.
ChapJln aYolded deportation
proceedings by choos in1 not to
return. He took up residence in
Switzerland and has returned
only once, in 1972, to accept an
honorary Academy Award in
Hollywood and a tribute to his
movies at New York's Lincoln
Center.
OTHERS HAVE CHOSEN. to
battle the INS won-notably J ohn
Lennon ot Beatles fame who was
ordered deported -in 1972
because of a m arijuana convic·
tion in England.
Lennon won permanent
residency status after four years
of court fights and hefty legal
fees.
"Most people could not afford
to do what Lennon did." says
Fraade.
He notes that immigration
laws generally favor artists who
seek admission to the country on
temporary work visas.
s mall seament" of aliens,
lawyers say many or those hard
blt by the INS rules are artists
unknown to the majority of Americans .
"IF SOt!EONE IS very &ood.
really has world renown, c.hey
have few problems," say~ Ruth
Popkin, an attorney with one of
the largest Immigration prac·
tices in Los Angeles
"But you have to be Isaac
Stern or John Lennon. We deal
with artists that don't have such
big world names .. For in·
atance, we represent a few very
good painters But they are not
Chagall ·•
The llllle-known artist must
obtain Labor Department
certification showing that his
talent can't be duplicated by
available American talent.
SHE RECALLED representing
two lion tamers from Poland who
were offered permanent jobs
here.
''We had lo put wanl·ads in the
paper to prove that 1t would be
very hard lo find other lion
tamers In America."' s ayd Ms.
Popkin.
"Some people can prolong
their stay here indefinitely,"
sayi; Seitz. "One of our gangster
types went to court for 33 years
and died here."
Two sessions of Polynesian dance will be held
Saturdays from 9: 15 a.m. to 10 a .m. and 10 a.m. to
10:45 a.m. at Nita Robertson's Dance Studio, 32951
A venue Descanso in San Juan. The early class is for
beginners, the later class is for advanced begin·
ners.
woman against their ----------
"Anybody who gets himself an
attorney who knows what's going
on will gel years to slay In
America," says Fraade.
The closest a celebrity came to
deportation was the 1952 Charlle
Chaplin case
THEY ENTER AS "third
preference." a category citing
"members of professions and
persons of exceptional ability in
the sciences and arts,·· a category
preceded only by some relatives
or U.S. citizens and residents.
ALTHOUGH POLANSKI'S
case may be unique. his possible
l egal paths are well -
established.
I.· THE EIGHT-WEEK classes for stx lo 12-year-
olds will offer instruction in Hul a. Tahitian, New
:Zealand, Oriental, Samoan and FiJian dances.
•. Two classes in drawing and paintmg also are
)!planned for six to nine-year.olds and 10 to 13·year-
i;-0lds. The younger group will meet Saturdays from
:!~:30 p.m. lo 1:30 p.m. while the older kids gather
.•lrom 1: 30 p. m lo 2 · 30 p m ·!= Both sessions will be conducted at the San Juan
fElementary School Multi-Purpose Room. 31642 El
·:=camino Real. ~:. it. OTHER CLASSES offered this Call through the
;!7ecreation program will include arts and crafts,
.,. ballet, creative dramatics, puppetry workshop and ~:folk guitar. ~!!.. Registration for these cl8SSC$ continues Mon·
ays through Frlday from 8 a .m. to s p.m. at San
uan city offices, 32400 Paseo Adelanto.
For more information, phone 493-1171.
IShe Would Give ~.'\
f&n to Wido~, 71
I·:: ST PEn:RSBCRG. Fla CAP 1 The mother
•or a 4 1 ~-year-old boy hai. told a court she would
rather have hc•r son cared Cor by a 11.year-old
.·~ 1dow than by the ho} ·s rather. I The mother. 1dent1fled only as a hotel maid
. told Pinellas .c1rcu1t Court Judge Jackl' Page in ~
•custody hearing. "I want Mrs. Lucille Williams to
keep him. He·lt been in good hands and he stayed
.:with her too many years ... she lo~es him ...
, THE BOY 'S PARENTS SEPARATED when he
,was born. The chitd's mother gave the infant to
•;Mrs. Williams· sister, Dorothy Jackson. But Mrs.
.·Jackson became iii' and Mrs . Williams look the in· ~.rant lo her home.
•; . Last month, the child's father went to Mrs.
!•W1lllams home, and de manded she surrender his .:~on_. but she refused. An urgumenl followed and
.:police were culled. . ·
THE BOY WAS PLACED IN slate custody
pending a court decision.
After last week's bearing, P(lge delayed in·
• definitely a decision or where the child would live
pending the outcome of psycholo~ical tests of th~
child und a determination or Mrs. Williams· health.
'
Page said the child could be allowed lo stay
with the Mrs. Williams, become a ward of the-slate
or be given lo his rather
will.
The San Diego resident
was released on his own
recognizance Wednes·
day after arraignment in
Municipal Court on three
counts or false imprison·
ment and one of con·
sp1racy A pretrial hear·
mg was scheduled Oct.
Robber Runs
FRESNO <AP'> -A
holdup \ ictim was so
scared that the would-be
robber fled without gel·
ling any loot and in fact
left $5 of his own behind.
police report.
• THE FAMED COMIC actor, a
British subject who had lived
here for 40 years. was on a trip to
his native England when the INS
barred his re-entry unless he un·
derweot an inquiry mlo his
"Rock 'n' roll stars come in un-
der third preference," says
Fraade. "Anyone who would sub-
stantially benefit the culture of
the United States would come in
that way."
Although Seitz n otes that
artists are ''the smallest or a
Ile can ask the sentencing
judge lo recommend against de·
portation . If h e complies .
Polanslu 's status would remain
unchanged.
Failing that, he can submit lo
deportation he arings and launch
a series of appeals if ordered de
ported.
28. ----~~~--~~~--~------~--------~--~~-~~----------~~
llE AND fi ve perl>ons.
including thC' young
man's parents. were ac·
cused or holding Pam
Shannon Wells. 17. and
Dennis Hausw1rth, 26.
against their wills They
are members of a Santa
Barbara sect known as
the Brotherhood of the·
Sun.
Fred and K a t e'
Hauswirth pleaded no
contest in August to two
counts of false imprison·
menl and were each
given $125 nnes and a
year's probation
A PATRICK associate.
Shern Dietrich. pleaded
no contest to one count
and was fined SIOO and
placed on a year's proba
lion. 1'wo other dcfcn
dants. Cliff Daniels and
Rodney Casey. have not
been located
Patrick was released
from Jail this sum mer
after serving lhree
months for a conv1ct1on
relating to a deprogram.
ming attempt.
Grant Won
LOS ANGELES CAP)
-USC has received a $5
million grant from the
Seeley G. Mudd Fund .
lhe largest gift ever to
USC by a California
fo undation . A USC
s pokesman said the
money will be used
toward a $12 million
classroom -1 abora tory
building for lhe college
o ( letters , arts and
sciences.
II
Bowling is More Beautiful
Than Ever at Beautiful
LA HACIENBA B LQS BULER.OS
You 'll love our warm.
Authentic Early California
Decor!
-Our Lanes have just been refinished and are in
mint condition.
-Sparkling, clean bathrooms.
-Our Deli serves the thickest sandwiches. best
homemade soups in Orange County
-More lush green plants than ever to give your
spirits a lift regardless of your score.
-And. friendliest. most professional staff anywhere.
40 Lanes -Roomy and Comfortable
To Join a League -
~•t oome in Of call (586-"SOWL"}.
-Ask tot Carol, Tom. Al or Barbara -You'll be given a spot In )ust the
right League fOf you fOf maximum fun.
Beginner?
-To get started 1n our"Learn·To Bowl ·
Program luet come In any Wednesday
or Friday at 2:30 and as1< f0<
Paul Grace -our super friendly,
super competent •nttr\lctOf' -or call us
And. INSTRUCTIONS ARE FREE'
Our Boleros Saloon -Full of Authentic Ofd Western
ANIQues, top rated live mustc, Tuelday through
Saturday at 8:~. Dancing, darts. I free popcorn.
Re.,...abty priced drinks. Plank flOOf'I. tiuge stone
Hr9Plmce. bar brought in from old 1890 Orego
S.loon. Relaxed Atmosphere.
>.
1
7
--.Orange Coast
·OITION
~OL. 70, NO. 2651 .5 SECTIONS, 54 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALI FORN f A THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1971. . N TEN CENTS1
Where Are All ·ThOse Mi.Ssing Kids?·
a1M1CRAELP &EVICH ... ..., ..........
• Nft1JOrt·lleaa School Di.strict oll1d* may want to file a few .ni""DI 6ludent reports -1,620
to be exact.
·Tbat.'s bow far enroUmenl has
ClrOpped since last year, leaving
tlae-district with a total enroll-
lllenl ol 22.478 students, Deputy
District Superintendent Nocman ~ats said today.
The ctrop was almost twice the anllclpated enrollment kiss and
leaves the district with between
~ and 30 teachers more than· it
needs. Since the Instruct.ors are under contract for the full school
year, Loats estimates the district
will be spending S400,000 to pay ·
teachers It doesn't really need.
The decUne in enroJlment is ex-
pected to further fuel district ef-
/orts to shut down more schools
to cut expenses. The bluest decline occurred
at the eJ~mentary school level.
About 400 elementary students
projected through census bureau
f\gures simply disappeared dur-
ing summer vacation. Loats
believes the students either
moved out or enrolled in private or parochial schools.
Loats doesn't expect a
turnaround in enrollment.
Sewer Nixed
Upper Bay Line Denied Permit
By J OANNE REYNOLDS
OI tM 0.lly Pllel ll1tt
Caught in what one sanitation
district official described as a
.. Catch-22," the controversial
Upper Bay sewer line was denied a permit during a hearing
Wednesday before the slate
Coastal Com mission.
The four-mile line, which
would serve homes in Newport
Beach north of San Joaquin Hills
Road, first ran into trouble about
a year ago with the South Coast
Regional Zone Conservation
Commission.
'I Million
At th:.al lime, officials from
Sanitation District 5. which is
trying to build the line. withdrew
the plans lo wait for reorganiza.
tion of the commission.
That reorganization included
the appointment of the regional
commission chairman, Judy
Rosener of Lido Isle, to the stale
commission.
Mrs. Rosener, ~ho opposed the
plans, charged that expansion or
sewer facilities would facilitate
further construction in the area
by the Irvine Company, con-
struction which she said would
only damage the coastal zone
which the commission was creat·
ed to protect.
Earlier this year, the re-
organized regional commission
approved plans for the line
planned from Big Canyon at
Jamboree Road down to Back
Bay Drive and along the
roadway to the Dunes Aquatic
Park where it would JOin an ex-
isting line.
Sanitation officials said the ad·
vantage of the proposed line was
lhal 1t would operate on gravity
<See SEWER, Page A2l
Diedrich
Mesa Victim Plam Adds Agent
Suit Over Shooting ~~,~~~~ ... ,.;,.,
A ea.ta .Mesa auto ehop owner.
abot twice in the cheat during a
Saturday altercation with an off·
duty Hawthorne police officer,
m ay be permanenUy P•ralyzed
from. the walst down, bis at-torney alleged today. ·
Anaheim attorney Robert
Weaver, representing 34·year-
old shooting victim Jon Allan
McClure. said a $1 million
personal injury suit will be flied
against Officer Michael Moran.
··No criminal charges have been
fUed against Moran who is re-
"Portedly on vacation from his
~uUes with the Hawthorne Police
Department.
McClure remains in critical ~ndition today at Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital, having un·
dergone surgery for the second
time since the Saturday incident
in front of the A&A Garage, 2037
Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa.
Costa Mesa police believe the
shooting followed an argument
between the two men.
Officer Moran apparently
drove his car over a still-damp
floor of the garage shop, anger-
ing McClure and sparking the
dispute between the two men. During the ensuing argument,
Costa Mesa police assert
McClure brandished a three-fool
lllelal bar and charged at the of-
ficer while he was standing out·
aide the shop.
Officer Moran allegedly pulled
a pistol from his parked car and
~hot McClure twice with the
German automatic after he i&·
Jiored the officer's commands lo
·~L ,
Attorney Weaver, however.
said be hopes to disprove the of.
ficer's claims that the shoolin1
wasinselldelense.
"I'm not convinced it was self
defense," Weaver said. "Mr.
McClure carried the metal bar at all times and at no time did he
raise it ;!1 a threatening gesture
at officer Moran,"heclalmed.
Weaver asserted he will pre-
sent witnesses who will testify
that Officer Moran shot McClure
for the second time after he was
already down and lyin& injured
from the first gunshot.
Moran, who was graduated
from Newport Harbor High
School and Orange Coast
College, apparently was on vaca·
lion in the area when he stopped
off at the garage Saturday after
noon at about 1:30 p. m.
<See VICTIM, Page A2)
Mesa Thieves
Ralph Diedrich added a licensed
private investigator to his staff Ol
administrative aides this week.
Diedrich said tbat. John V.
Lyocb, who reportedly was a CIA.
agent for J2 )'Hrs, was not hired
for bis lnves\laaUve talents.
"We have a lot or stair work
here that requires research and
digging as well as mature judg-
ment. I think John has the
qualities for that kind of work.
That's why he was hired,·•
Diedrich said.
D1edrich's remarks were
aimed at dispelling any notion
that Lynch might have been
added to his county staff to help
in his defense against Grand
Jury charges accusing bim of
conspiring to violate state
political campaign regulations
Along with four co·ind1ctees.
Diedrich is scheduled to appear
in court Nov. 7 lo answer to the
felony charges which, 1r they re·
suit in a conviction, would result
in his removal from office.
Lynch was a Republican can-'Wide Awake' didate for s tate Assembly in 1974 and in 1976 sought the state
Senate seat being abandoned by
the Republican incumbent
James Wbetmore.
Costa Mesa police are seeking
burglars who pried their way into
Dick Church's Restaurant, 2698
.Newport Boulevard, and made
off with 50 pounds of coffee valued at $190.
Police said no other items were
taken in the burglary which was
reported early Wednesday by an
employe.
The selective burglars took two
cases of grounds, each contain·
ing 25 pounds of Chase & Sanborn
"Famous Yen" cofr.e which cost
the restaurant $3.80 a pound.
Both Lynch bids for elective of-
fice ended with his defeat in
Republican primary elections.
Wor ker Killed
JAKARTA, Indonesia IAP>
An Ametican oil rig overturned
off the coast of East Kalimantan,
Borneo, killing a Filipino worker
and injuring three other men, the
government oil corporation
Pertamina announced today.
For example, there are 1,117
students in kindergarten com-
pared to 2,396 in 11th grade, "so
you can see what's ahead of us,··
he said.
District officials say lhere is no
area pattern for the enrollment
drop. Elementary schools in
Newport Deach as well as
several in Costa Mesa suffered
declines.
A sampling shows Andersen
School in Newport Beach down 81
students and Paularino m Costa
Mesa down 50 students from pro-
jections.
Enrollment also is down at
three Costa Mesa elementary
schools now being considered as
potenUal.sites for the relocation
of McNally High School. Wilson
School ls down 15.students to 300,
Monte Vista is down 13 to 251 and
Student of the Sun
Whittier enrollment fell " s~ dentsto324 •
At the hi&h school level, Estan·
tia and Costa Mesa both reported.
losses ol more than UO studcts.
Only Newport Harbor Hi1h,
the district's largest. scboo1.
showed an increase. Twelve
more students registered. this
year, bringin& enrollment thete
upto2,650.
UC Irvine student Molly Goodman ot
Corona del Mar catches up on her reading
while catching the last rays of summer.
Autumn was with us officially today, with
the autumnal equinox. but the arrival or
the fall season doesn't change much on
the Orange Coast. Not many leaves
change color. but the crowds of tourists
have departed and now the girls on t~e beach are doing their school work while
working on their tans.
Density Issue Defeated.
Cowicilman Claima System Unretdisti.c
' Newport Beach city coun-
cilman Paul Ryckoff wants to
change the way building density
1n single family-home
neighborhoods is calculated.
The Balboa Island resident
contends the existing system is
unrealistic because it is based on
the gross amount of acreage in a
development, rather than a net
figure after land for streets and
parks has been deducted.
Ryckoff sponsored an amend·
ment to the city's general plan
which would have changed from
the gross acreage system lo a net
system, but the measure was de·
feated Monday.
One of the reasons it failed was
opposition from councilmen who
said such a system would wipe
out existing low density designa-
tions and change neighborhoods
t-0 medium and high density.
"The"''s just no way I'd con-
sider my neighborhood to be
medium density," (leclared
Mayor Milan Dostal. ··1 cannot
2 Men With Knives
Roh Liquor Store
Two men, one armed with a
lcnife, took $80 from the Arches
Liquor Store in a holdup early to-
day, Newport Beach police re-
ported.
Store clerk Thomas Froehle,
43, told police the two men, who
appeared to be high on
F al,l F <JAl,ion
Today's Pil.ot
consider five dwelling units pe~
acre as medium density."
The issue of reclassifying ex-
isting neighborhoods was the
stumbling block for Ryckoff'~
measure. Councilmen who op-
posed It -Dostal, Lucille Kuehn
and Don Mdnnis -all said they
favor \he idea of changing from a
gross acreage calculation to a net
acreage calculation. but they
didn't like the classification
change that would come along
withiL
The measure failed to pass on a
3--3 vote with Mayor Pro Tem
Pete Barrett abstaining.
AccoTding to city staff mem·
hers, Ryckoff's measure would
change the followinc
neighborhoods from a low densi-
ty class to a medium der1.Slty:
Armiversary tract, Mesa Drive
and Santa Ana Heights~
Eastbluff, Irvine Terrace, all of
the developments east ot
M acArtbur Boulev ard., ShorecllHs, Corona Hlghlfnds,.
and Cameo Sb.ores· and Cameo
IUgblanc&.
(See DENSITY, Page.\!)
Wea titer
Night and early IJ'lOnilila'
low clouds with fo( will
'bum otr to sunny after-
noons through Friday.
Temperatur es a Httle
cooler. Lo~ tonight ~Ct
Hi&mFrldQ•toa ,i;
I OAIL.Y PILOT N embtor 2t. 117?
Lance io Geov~a
Returns Horne Faci~ Earge Debt&:
W~ lONGTON <AP> B rt
Laace retwned lo Geor1la u •
priv d today, aUU facial
lara• debla. 1tovernment In·
~ l.ia&UOn.t. and Mn UM•rtaln
tutu.re.
The formcJ" bud1et dlrf'ctor and
f\is wife Oew from Wutuniton'a
Natianal Aif'1)0f1 totus hometown
of Calhoun, Ga., on • private
plane that be rented hJ maelf · ·vou know I've &ot to come
* * *
ba ll to Oeortt•. •• 111 told AUanta
radio 1t.at1oo WSB by tdeohc>M wrore bl.I departwre. "'tb.t'•
wht'reourhomtb "
Lane•. who real1ned W odnet·
day 111\.cr eiiht month• and one
day • Prealdent Carter'• bud1et
dlreetot, 11Jd be plua to "get a
little ft!llt" but.baa made no de-
cl1lon yet about any other Job.
''We11 take that aa we have
been taJd.aa tb.lnp -ooe du at a
* * *
Carter Searching
For New Director
W ASHlNGTON (A P> -Presi-
dent Carter is trying to replace a
man he says is irreplaceable.
Fighting sorrow at the resigna-
tion of longtime friend Bert
Lance as budget director, Carter
began the search today for a suc4
cessor.
and even in what the senator
called a happy mood.
"In a sense, be feels he's bad a
problem lifted from him," said
Randolph, whose visit to the
White House was to urge Carter
to increase fund requests for
economic development pro·
grams.
UD\e, "Laric-uatd.
lo Atlanta, John Stembler,
chairman of tb• board of the Na·
tlonaJ Bank of Georala wbJch
Lance ran until last January,
aald, "Bert can bave the job of
chairman if be want.a It. tomor-
row."
Lance met with his attorney,
Clark Clifford, before leaving
W ashlnat.on. He did not go to the
Office of Management and
DID CARTER 'FORCE'
LANCE TO QUIT?-A10
Bud&et's offices, but an OMB aide
said Lance would return to the
capital Monday to host a recep-
tion for the budget and White
House staffs.
Four federal aeencies are still
investigating Lance's banking
and personal financial affairs
prior to his appointment to bead
OMB
The head of Georgia's Banking
Department, Jack Dunn. said several questions about Lance's
banking practices would have to
·be resolved before Lance could
take on another bank job.
"It's not a clear yes or no on
Bert," Dunn said.
,..,h IUse Bousiag
Chris Alvarez of Burling ame dem-
onstrates his car top tent. the latest
thing in housing on the road. lie currently
is tra~eling ~long the Orange Coast and
says his tent is great for outdoorsmen who
don't like to sleep on the ground. It also
.
Delly ...... -.., .... hy ...
can serve as an elevated viewing point for
such things as auto races. rock concerts
and other outdoor events, he notes.
However, it could off er a rude awakening
to restless s leepers who toss and turn a
Jot.
One of his first visitors of the
flay was Sen. Jennings Randolph,
<D-W. Va.), who told reporters
he found Carter caJm, relaxed
Newport's
Hawkeye Wins
Second Race
''There will be an orderly
transition," the President told a
news conference Wednesday
when he announced Lance's res-
ignation. ''I will decide begin-
ning after today on who a s uc-
cessor might be." Nuclear Sub Hits Sea Bottom
SAN FRANCISCO (AP>
Whistle Wing V, a 52-foot sloop
from the Santa Barbara Yacht
Club skippered by Hastings
Harcourt, held the lead in the St.
Francis Perpetual Trophy
Regatta after Wednesday's
second race in the four-race
series.
Hawkeye, a 48-fool sloop from
Newport Beac h , won
Wednesday's second race and
was third In the standing of the six
entries, behind Lightning, a 57·
foot sloop from the St. Francis
YachtClubofSan Francisco.
The fin al two races are
scheduled for 1-'riday anfl Sat11r-
.iay in San Francisco Bay.
lo a competition or two-t.onners
for the Keefe-Kilborn Perpetual
'Trophy, Imp, skippered by Dave
AJlen of San Francisco, won Mon-
d ay and again Wednesday.
Pachena or the Royal Vancouver
Yacht Club, skippered by John
Newton, was second in the stand-
ings of seven entries.
Willia m F . Power's H igh
1 Roler of Newport Beach added a
victory Wednesday lo one Mon -
day to lead in the City of San
Francisco Perpetual Trophy
series. Saudade, last year's win-
ner, and Scandalous, sloops from
Lhe host St. Francis Yacht Club,
were lied for second in the stand-
ing after the first two or four
races.
F,....PageAI
VICTIM •• ·•
Immediately after the shoot-
ing, Costa Mesa police contacted
lhe Orange County District At·
torney's Office. Local police filed
a report with the DA 's office
which has assigned a special in-
vestigation team to interview
witnesses in the case
The mvestigation is still under
way. A spokesman at the DA'sof·
lice could not estimate when it
will be completed or if criminal
cbartes are forthcomina qainst.
Moran.
McClure underwent SUJ'leJ'1
Saturcfay night for removal of
twoalugslnhla cbesL
Attorney Weaver said it ap-
pears McClure will loae the use or
bis lower extremities as a result
, of the shooting.
OftANOI C:OAST " ·
DAILY PILOT
-...... ~-.... -.. ~· ......... , ... o.••R I --:-.. ..... ".... ..:.-=-
;
Among names that quickly sur-
faced were:
-James T. Mcintyre Jr.,
director of Georgia's budget of-
fice in 1972 while Carter was gov-
ernor and now deputy director of
the Office or Management and
Budget. which Lance had
headed.
-Robert Straus. a former
chairman or the Democratic Na·
tional Committee and now the
U.S. ambassador for trade
negotiations.
-Alice Rivlin. direct.or of the
Congressional Budget Ortlce.
-Hale q•amplon, former
California finance director and
now an official at the Depart-
ment or Health, Education and
Welfare.
Carter said the task of finding a
budget director won't be easy.
"I don't think there is any way
that I could find anyone to
replace Bert Lance that would
be, in my judgment, as compe.
tent, as strong, as decent and as
close to me as a friend and ad-
viser as he bas been," the Presi·
dent said.
Bank Alarm
NabsSJ.apect
In Forgery
When the silent robbery alarm
from the MacArthur Boulevard
branch of United California Bank
sounded in the Newport Beach
police station Wednesday. of.
ficers were sent. speeding to the
scene.
They were met by bank of·
flcials who said they didn't have
a robbery going, they just wanted
to alert ,police that a man who
cashed stolen money orders two
weeks earlier was ln the bank
again.
Police arrested Kelsey Van
Jones, 28, of Los Angeles, on
charges of forgery stemming
from his aJle&ed attempt to ca.sh
a stolen money order
Inves tigators said Jones
cashed $700 of the stolen money
orders two weeks earlier. They
are trying lo find out where be
got them.
F,....PflfleAJ
DENSITY~ ••
Going from medium density to
high density would be the slng)e-r amily or R·l zones in L1do
Sanda, Newport Sbores, Balboa
Coves, Li~o lale, Central
Newport. Peninsula Poinl,
Corona del Mar south of East
Coast Highway, Bayahores and
the Bluffs.
Ryckotr says his proposed
chance would not result ln any
cbaqes in tbe numbers of homes
than can be built on undeveloped
parcell already llated for am,1•
famib' bomes ln the 1uer'1
plan. But the elaulftelaton of w&Mmboodl ACJa .. u.. .. DI_. fOr the CMtawa,. ud Ute ~ N011b woWd rile llom mectlQID to~ ct.nalt.Y, I
1"'1beN are llO 1h1unlc:b or Id~" Ryetoft Hid, tr1lftl \0 eon~ councllinea to ~ve hl1 meMt.are ... It ts wttbout im-
pact on •bat~ can do. It'•
Ol\l)' a aotnenelature chance and
one 1 feel we n-1 to rifleel tM
rtalltJ or.-11.tflau.'' , . •.aw __..... ,,.. ciQIJ ...
lOWMto oaiild• ,meadlDtDtl'to
tll• dtJ~ ....... ti· tbrei tlm• a year. lbt:ldr Hiii be11 ~ .............. ... tdteld 'wla~:--=• ............
th:=.tmattllllii'tl ..... ..... .
NAPLES, Italy CAP> -The
nuclear-powered submarine USS
Ray struck the sea bottom off
Sardinia, injuring three crew
m e mbers but s uffe ring no
damage to its nuclear equip-
ment. a U.S. Navy spokesman
said today.
p,....rageAl
SEWER ••.
instead of using an electrically-
powered pump.
One sanitatJon district direc-
tor, Newport Beach City Coun-
cilman Don Mcinnis. estimated
that over JO years. use of iravity
would save district taxpayers
about $30 million.
The regional commission. wor·
ried about the effect of construe·
lion on the Upper Bay wildlife
preserve, imposed 34 conditions ·
on the project, to which sanita-
tion officials agreed.
However, the approval was ap-
pealed to the state commission
by the Environmental Coalition
of Orange County and the Orange
County Foundation for Preserva-·
tion of Public Property. Those
groups contended the lack of
knowledge about the impact of
construction on a nearby nesting
area or an endangered species of
water bird was grounds for de-
nial.
Comm1ss1oners agreed and
voted unanimously to uphold the
appeal and deny the permit.
Dennis Reid, chief engineer of
the project, said the com-
missioners noted the 34 condi-
tions and said the high number of
conditions was proof of the
severity of environmental im-
pact of the projecL
"'Ibey bad us in a Catch-22."
hesald. Reid and sanitation officials,
who warned last fall that a heavy
rainfall could cause an existing
sewer line pump station to over-
flow down Big Canyon and into
the Upper Bay, say they are hop-
ing for another dry winter while
they try to figure out what to do
next.
Sanitation directors are slated
to meet Oct. 12. Mcinnis said
they will try to decide whether to
pursue the gravity line permit
through the courts or try another
construction project., such as ex-
pansion or an existing pump sta-
t.ion. · ••But a new pump station ls go-
ing to take us risht back to the
coastal commlsaion. Th.ere alll '1
no way to win."
J.;ght Plane
~ot Killed
CARLSBAD <AP > A light
plane crashed and burned after
laltina otr from Palorbr Airport
today. 'lbe pllot, believed the on-.
ly person aboard, was killed.
The plaaa erubed abortly
before dawn 14 a rocky area
three Dlll• iaortheut ot the
a13ort whleb 11 loca&ecl
8°' nt ot CarlaW ODe mile from Squlrel !)am.
Po1lee nJd they were an.able to hnllMcHatelJ Jdenuty UM male 'Ytctlm.
ea,.. Fire Girla
Meet in Newp()rt
The C&mp Fire Oltla will bold
ao or1Qftlaatlon1J mffllnl at 1
p.m. T\ae1d1y in the multl~
purpoH room _._at 111rlneu
School, 1100 Jllarmtr• Dn ve,
Newpon BeulL
Tbe ll'OUP tn1n1 mn--.. u.. lild Jl'Olklill ~ ~ --7:~---1:;
The submarine was undergo-
ing inspection at a navy base
following the accident Tuesday,
lhe spokesman said.
The Navy said three crew
members suffered minor injuries
when the submarine struck the
bottom of the Mediterranean
during a routine mission south of
Sardinia . A Sturgeon class attack
submarine. the Ray normally
carries a crew of 12 officers and
108 enlisted men. "The ship's nuclear reactor
was unaffected and there was no
nuclear propulsion pl ant
damage," the Navy statement
said.
The Ray proceeded to La Mad-
dalena, Sardinia, under her own
power and arrived there late
Wednesday, the Navy reported.
The incident brought a protest
from the Sardinlan government's
minister for the environmenL
Orazio Erdas, a Socialist. said
the base poses "a permanent
danger to all the people ln the
a r ea" because of possible
radioactive leakage.
The submarine base on La
Maddalena, a tiny island off
norlhern Sardinia, has been a
subject or contention by leftists
Become a stereo nut
forp~otically peanuts.
In d nut::.hell. heres all you need
to know dboul stereo.
Tumtdble , FM/AM .tPn-o
r idl•h, '"IX' I'! rorder,, dlld
s~ .. .,, .... ~ :-V'11tcheJ upforvou b.;
compact stereo.
And you don't have lo spend 4
'Tlmt to appreciate 1l
"rornP m todciv.
• Let u!> give you a demon:.IM·
non. 1'.r.d , dl"dl vou ve 001 rc hP-<1r
!f rRJJ'3Y' •
HMK-419
"IT'S A SONY"
It's all here
in black and W'hite.
When it cx:>mes to blaclc 11nd
white television. Sony has it 1111.
A crisp, dear plcture th11t gives
you strtking oontrast and detoU.
Fine feotures and CX>ntrols fol'
extra value.
Plus the kind of out!Jtandmg
dasign that's made Sony famous.
Hurry In. Sonys got it all.
And we've got 1111 the Sonyk
for a number or years.
The Navy said the s ub would
undergo a thorough inspection at
La Maddalena, and that details
or the grounding itself were un-
der investigation.
The Ray, cWTently deployed
with the U.S. 6th Fleet, bas its
home port at Charleston, S.C..
Workers Return
RICHMOND (AP) -Some 280
city employes will be back on the
job today for the first time in 66
d ays, e nding the longest
muni~ipal strike in state history.
7
.
Saddlebaek
EDITION
'
Afteraooa
N.Y.Stoek8
VOL 70, NO. 265, S SECTIONS, Sf PAOES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 19n TEN CENT!!
Dally ..... ,,... " "-• ... .,...
Trai'ler Court?
Basketball players at El Toro High School
face a new test of their maneuverability
-temporary classrooms awaiting re·
moval to a nearb>' site at the high school.
The trailers were ropposcd to be in place
for the start of school but arrived late.
They're scheduled to be in use until the
new Laguna Hills High School opens next
September.
Viejo Man Indicted
In Land Fraud Case
Thai Royalty
Escapes Bomb
BANGKOK, Tballand
<AP> -King Bhumipol
Adulyadej and Queen
S1rikit narrowly escaped
death today when a home-
made bomb exploded a few
yards away while the king
was presenting rewards to
Moslem teachers in
southern Thailand, a
palace spokesman said.
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Ol Ille o.lty ...... "'" A 52-year-old land company ex-
ecutive federal agents believe
lives in Mission Viejo was indict·
ed Wednesday by an Arizona
grand jury on 23 counts of fraud
connected with an alleged $18
million land fraud scheme. Emanuel Singer, executive
vice president for land sales of
CoMolidated Mortgage Corp.,
was one of six people named In
\be federal mail fraud indict·
ment leveled against the now.
defunct mortgage sales firm.
One of those named with
Singer wu cootessed l~d fraud
fieure Ned Warren Sr., wbo is fact.ni 16 counts or fraud in two
other Ar1..a countle.s.
Michael Hawkins, U.S. Al·
tomey 1n Phoenix, today bad no
•xplanatlcln for the llstinl of II~ afon Viejo as Sinller'1 home town.
Jle said no street addf1!15 )Vas
pailable and there is oo listing
for Singer in telephone ditec·
tori es. . Hawkins noted that ln·
\testigators also determined
Slnf'er may have maintained a residence in San Mateo, near
Black' 8 Beach . .
NuJeBathen
Won't Cover
SAN DIEGO CAPI -"We'll stlll go nude -they won't stop
us," a disappointed backer or
America's only municipal nude
beach said after voters backed a
halt to "swimsuit optional"
bathing in San Dieeo.
San Diego's first referendum
on the nude beach summoned a
near·record turnout Tuesday,
and the messaee to the City
Council was clear: Rescind the
1974 ordinance designating the
900-toot swath of beach as .. swimsuit optional."
Paul Omundson, 28, who iden-
Ufied himself as an occasional
bather at Black's 'Beach, said
••There are Jlttle pockets of
beach all alone the coast where
_PeOple will alw~s 10 Qude."
Coast
San Francisco.
According to ltawkins, in·
vestigators are uncer~ain of
Singer's current whereabouts.
His arrest will be made by either
the U.S. Marshal's office or the
Postal Service, according to an
FBI spokesman in Santa Ana.
"He (Singer) is not in custody
at Utls time to my knowledge, but
it is my guess that when he Is ar-
rested fairly Jow bond will be
set," Hawkins said.
"The people involved in things
like this are generally not escape
risks," be said. "They WJUalJy
come to courtr and coot.est the
chanes and sometimes they wln.;7
Singer and the others connect·
<See SCHEME, Page AU
ll was the first such al·
tack on the king, 49, who is
regarded by Thais as semi·
divine. The king has been
on the throne since 1950
and enjoys great populari·
ty, spending a great deal of
lime visiting villagers,
soldiers and the un·
derprivlleged in the coun·
try side with Queen Slri~t. The spOkesman said a
few people .received lJl~ wounds.
Kitchen Bid Vote
Delayed at SVUSD
Saddleback Valley Unified
School District's unfinished cen-
tral kitchen may turn into
something else before its stoves
are ever turned on.
District trustees this week
postponed action aulborir.ing ad·
mlnistrators to seek bids on the
remodeling of the two existing
kitch~ at La Paz and Los Allsos
Intermediate schools.
These facilities were expected
to be replaced by the central
kitchen in November and recon·
verted into needed classroom
space at a cost of about $75,000.
But the issue was tabled after
Trustee Carole Neustadt, who
has never supported the central
kitchen, questioned whether the
building couldn't be used for
something other than continuing
the lunch program.
While the district's financial
problems increase, she said, the
lunch program has not been self·
supporting.
"It blows my mind. It's just
absolutely irresponsible," ob·
jectedTrusteeLoa Young.
''l 'm beside myself to un·
derstand your reasoning,"
argued Trustee William Kohler.
He contended that a previous
school board planned the facility
and that it is needed to fulfill tbe
expectations of the community.
But Mrs. Neustadt countered
that fhe school finance picture
has changed since the facility
was planned. She asked, "Do we
continue to throw good money
after bad?"
Speculation Fades
OC. Assessor Say,;s
Real estate speculation -one
cause of surging home prices in
south Orange County -Js decllni
int gradually, County Assessor
Bradley Jaeobs s~d WednesdlU'.
"Speculative fever is dyine
down," Jacobs said. "The last
three years are very abnormal
and tlae market ls cban1ln1
graduallJnow.''
Sueral South county real
estate people contacted tbls week
tended to ~ wttb JacObl' as·
aesame.t.:
.. The builder is sit.tine there
with unsold homes and Qlat can
have drastic effects on both him
and the lending institution."
' The Rossmoor spolcesman said
the company, which handles only
new home sales in the Leisure
World development, bas a policy ·
of makint buyers sign a state-
ment that they will live in the
bometbey parcllaae. ·
Nuke Suh fits
Bottoin; 3 Hurt
' NAP~. Italy <AP) -The
nuclear-powered submarine USS
Ray struck the sea bottom off
Sardinia, injuring three crew
members but suffering no
damage to its nuclear equip-
ment. a U.S. Navy spokesman
said today.
The submarine was undereo-
ing inspection at a navy base
·following the accident Tuesday.
the spokesman said.
The Navy said three crew
members suffered minor injuries
when the submarine -Struck the
bottom of the Mediterranean
during a routine mls&ion south of
Sardl.D.ia. A sturgeon class attack
submarine, the Ray normally
carrie:S a crew of 12 officers and
108 enlisted men.
"The ship's nuclear reactor
was unaffected and there wu no
nuclear propulsion plant
damage," the Navy statement
said.
The Ray proceeded to La Mad·
dalena, Sardinia, under her own
power and arrived there late
Wednesday, the Navy reported.
The incident brought a protest
from the Sardinian government's
m inister for the environment.
Orazio Erdas, a Socialist, said
the base poses "a permanent
dan&er to all the people ln the
area" because or possible
radioactive leakaee.
The submarine base on La
Maddalena, a tiny isll,Dd oU
northern Sardinia, has been • subject ol contention by leftists
for a number of years.
The Navy said the sub would
undergo a thorough inspecUon at
La Maddalena, and that details ot the grounding itself were un.
der investigation.
The Ray, currently deployed
with the U .S, 6lb Fleet. bas its
home port at Charleston, S.C.
To Replace Lance
Director Sought
WASHINGTON (AP> -Presi·
dent Carter is trying to replace a
man he says is irreplaceable.
Fighting sorrow at the resign&·
tion of longtime friend Bert
Lance as budget director, Carter
began the search today for a suc-
cessor.
One or his first visitors of the
day was Sen. Jennings Randolph,
(D-W. Va.), who told reporters
be found Carter calm, relaxed
and even in what the senator
called a happy mood.
"In a sense, be reels he's had a
problem lifted from him," said
Randolph, whose visit to the
White House was to urge Carter
to increase fund requests for
economic development. pro,. grams.
~·There wlll be an orderly
transition." the President told a
news conference Wednesday
when be announced Lance'• res.
ignation. .. I will declde begin-
ning after today on who a suc-
cessor might be."
Among names t.bat quickly aur·
faced were:
-James T. Mcintyre Jr.,
director of Georgia's budget of·
flee in 1972 while Carter was gov-
ernor and now deputy director of
lb~ Office pf Management and
Budget, which Lance had
beaded.
-Robert Strauss, a former
chalnnan of the Democratic Na·
tional Committee and now the
Chase Nets
Alien Youth
A teenager from Mexico sped
through the Sao Onofre border
patrol checkpoint early today
and led pursuing officers on a
high speed chase through San
Clemente before be was stopped
and arrested for smuggling
aliens.
A border patrol agent said the
youth bad three Mexican na-
tionals in the car with him.
San Clemente police joined
border patrol officers ln the 80
mile-per-hour chue on the north-
bound San Diego Freeway Just
before 2 a.m. The youn1 driver
tried to run officers off the.road,
a border patrol spokesman aald,
but bis car was finally halted
north of Avenlda Pico ln San Clemente.
U.S . ambassador for trade
negotiations.
-Allee Rlvlla, director of the
Congressional Budget Office.
-Hale Champion, former
California fmaoce director and
now an official at the Depart·
ment of Health, Education and
Welfare.
Carters aid the task of fmding a
budget director won't be easy,
.. I don't think there is any wag
that I could find anyone to
replace Bert Lance that woo.Id
be, in my judgment. as compe.,
tent, as strong, as decent and as
close to me as a friend and ad· <SeeSEARCH, Page AZ>
PI Joins Staff
Diedrich Hires· E~agenl
Orange County Supervisor
RaJpi Diedrich added a licensed
private lnvestieator to his atalfot
adminiatrative aides \Ills week.
Diedrich said that John V. Lynch. who reportedly was a CIA
acent tor 2Z .~ wu .tHJt blral
for bis iD'feSUgaUve talents.
"We have a lot of staff wort here that requires research and
digging as well a:s mature jUdg.
ment. I tbil\k John bas th&
qualities for that kind of work.
That's why be was hired,''
Diedrich said.
Diedrich's remarks were
aimed at dispelling any notion
that Lyncb might have been
added to his county staff to help
tn his defense against Grand
Jury charees accusing him or
conapirlnc to violate state
political campai&n replatlons.
Along w1th four co-lndictees.
Diedrich is scheduled to ~ar
in eourt New.-., to .........
feloay ctaargw wblcb, lf tbe1 re-
sult in a convictJon. woald ftAJt
in bis removal from office.
Lynch was a Republican ean·
didate for state Assembly in m4
and in 1976 sought the state
Senate seat being abandoned by
the Republican incumbent
James Wbetmore.
Both Lynch bids for elective of· nee ended with his defeat iD
Republican primary electiom.
Mesa Victim Plans
Suit Over Slwoting
B:r MICHAEL p ASKEVICH all times and at DO time did Ile oe•.,...,.u.tSUlf raise it in a threatening gesture
at officer Moran," be claimed.
Weaver asserted. be will pre-
sent witnesses who will testily
that Officer llOl'aD shot McQure
for the secand time after he was
already down and lyi.ng iDjured
from the first gunshot.
Moran. who was enduatecl
from Newport Harbor High
(SeeVlC'lUI, P &&eA%)
.Teacher Nixes
Student Trial
ForBaneey
..... ,..,
Lance Plans
Return Home
ATLANTA (AP> -8tft
LaDN. former budcet dlnctcr.
... d toda, ht pl to nturD to
~a "and gd a lltU. rest."
''Tell the to.lb la Georsta we
are doiaa Ju.st ftDe. •• be aald ID an
interview with radio 1t.a&IOD
WSB. "We appreciate Lbeir aup.
port. Jove. t.ru.n and faith mare
lhao they can ever pouibly
know.
"That's been one of &.be tblnp
that sustained us tbrouaboul this whole thing ...
Asked about hJs future, he
said: "No decision yet. We'll
take that as we've been takinl
things ... one day at a time.••
Nadooal Bank of Oeor1la 1toek
when be took omce, but it hu
decllud ln value from Jl1 a
ahan $0 about '12· He could loee '1 mUUan If be aeUa it.
Alt.bough be owna 17 percent ol
the baa 1toek, lt wu not clear
whether be would have a job with
the bank if he returned.
Robert Guyton, who replaced
Lance as president of the AUant.a ·
bank, said Wedneada7 Dlfht,
.. Obviously, we don't know Mr.
Lance'• plans for the future."
""~
As for his wife, LaBelle, be
said, ''She's doing just fine. She's
been a source or real strength.
The American people ... saw
her .•• for what she is, one who
has a grettt faith in God and
believes things work in His
purpose. That's the way she is."
One ol Lance's biggest prob-
lems is a $3.4 million loan from
the First National Bank of
Cbicaeo. Lance bas to pay
$225,000 per year in interest on
that loan and bad been countine
on stock dividends to help pay for
it. However, bis bank's financial
troubles forced suspension of
dividends~ that stock In the last
quarter.
CONFESSED LAND FRAUD FIGURE NED WARREN SA. ASSISTED TO COURT IN JUNE
Asked if he would return to
Georgia. Lance replied:
"You know I've got to come
back to Georgia. I said that in my
statement. That's where our
home is."
Asked if he would take a public
job, he said, "No. We just want to
get back to our friends in Georgia
and get a little rest."
Lance, resigned his federal
post Wednesday.
The Lances still have their
SO·room Butterfly Manna
mansion, one of the biggest and
most elaborate estates In the ex·
elusive Buckhead section of Allan la
The Lances put the mansion up
for sale for $2 miJlion last month,
but it has not been sold. It was not
clear whether they would live
there. They also own a $100,000
house in Calhoun, Ga., and a
vacation home on Sea Island, Ga.
Now that he is leaving
Washington, Lance will no longer
have to pay the $18,000-a-year
rent for his house in Georgetown,
and will not have to sell his stock
in the National Bank of Georgia at a loss.
He owned about $2.9 million in
Police Arrest
Evel Knievel
For 'Assault'
LOS ANGELES (AP>
Motorcycle stuntman Evel
Knievel, who apparently was en
route to surrender to police. was
arrested for investigation ot as-
sault with a deadly weapon in an
alleged attack on a 20th Century
Fox executive, authorities said.
Knievel was released Wednes,
day night after posting $1,000
bond. He was scheduled to be ar·
ralgned next Wednesday In West
Los Angeles Municipal Court.
Police said Knievel knew be
was being sought and it appeared
he planned to turn himself in
when he was arr~ted by, a patrol
officer who spotted him on a
freeway in North Hollywood. :Sheldon ~attman, 46, was treat·
ed for compound fractures or the
left arm and a broken right wrist
after the incident earlier
Wednesday, authorities said.
The vice president of lhe
telecommunications division of Fox Studios told police that
Knievel and an unidentified man
confrooted him out.side the studio
.commissary. He said Knievel hit
him with a baseball bat, ac~
ing to police.
Mark Erickson, an aide to
Saltman, said Saltman u,,ed to be KoJevel's publicity agent and
wrote the book "Evel Knievel on
Tour." The book told the st.orJ of
tbe much·publlclled t;>ut IU·fated
Snake River Canyon stunt which
Knievel failed to accomplish.
Erickson said Knievel ap-
parently was upset with some
partsofthebook. _
DAILY PILOT
Facing Addltlonal Charges of SecurtU•• Fraud In Grand Jury Indictment
The Chicago bank bas de·
manded more collateral because
of the decline in the value or the
Georgia bank stock: and as a re-
sult of studies of Lance's finances
by banking regulators. Lance
bas put most of bis real estate up as loan collateral.
* * * F,....Page AJ
SEARCH •••
viser as be has been," ·tbe Presi-
dentsaid ..
"Obviously. the government
will continue," Carter declared,
"and I hope to do a good job as
president, and I am s ure a suc·
cessor will be adequate.
"But there has been a special
relationship between me and
Bert Lance that transcended of·
ficial responsibilities or duties or
even governmental service of the
last six or seven years.
"So he bas occupied 'a special
place in my governmental
career, in my political career,
and in my personal life. I don't
think there is any way anyone
could replace him now.••
Con Escapes
During Visit
TJlACY (AP) -A woman
hailed a luard iD a tower at the stale prison here and told him
her son bad escaped.
A search confirmed that Artie
Ray Baker, 23, convicted of a
double murder in Fresno County
in 1972, fled over a 12-foot chain
link fence topped with three
strands of barbed wire.
Robert Walraven. ad ·
ministrative assistant to the
superintendent of the Deuel
Vocational Institution, said
Balcer bad been granted a family
visit from his stepfather and
mother, Frank and Betty Sharp
of Sonora.
F,....P~A l
SCHEME •••
ed with the fraud scheme had
been under investigation for 18
months by a unique team or
federal agents operating out of
the U.S. Attorney's office in
Phoenix.
Hawkins said the team of FBI,
Postal Service and U.S. Attorney
agents was created two years
ago to crack dow11 on rampant
white collar crime in Arizona.
"Until the last few years, the
state was trying to attract new
business and development so
regulallons on such things as land
sales were almost non·existent, ..
Hawkins said. "A lot of good peo-
ple came in, but so did the bad peo.
pie."
The investigation that resulted
in Wednesday's grand jury in-
dictments contended that the
firm Sin&er and others operated
Involved a fraudulent scheme to
induce investors to buy lots in
several land developments.
The indictment alleges fraud
occurred when the defendants
used the mail system to sell
fraudulent mortgage contracts to
other investors.
Besides Singer and Warren,
others under Indictment include
Robert Gunnison and Alvin MeCollum of Scott.dale,
Arizona; Donna Stevens or
Columbus, Ohio, and William
Nathan ol New York City.
If convicted of the charges, the
defendants face a maximum
penally of five years in prison
and a Sl.000 fine on each mail
fraud count.
Charges of interstate
transportation of stolen property
have also been leveled against all
the defendants except Nathan.
That carries a penalty of 10 years
in prison plus a ~o.ooo fine.
Mo·peds Eye~
HB Launches Crackdown
Mo-ped riders, beware.
The Huntington Beach City CouncU . hu directed its
police deparlment to keep a close eye on Lbe motorized
bicycles for safety violations.
COUNCILMAN RICHARD Siebert. who asked for
tighter controls, saic1 mo-ped riders "are horsing around on
city streets and causing traffic huards with unsafe turns
and other violations."
Siebert said be also.was concerned with what be called
a growing number of underage riders.
MO.PED OPERATORS are required to be al least 1.5~
years old and must carry a st.ate driver's license or
Jeamer•s permit.
Mo-peels are prohibited from bi~le. bikini or .recrea·
tional paths, fr~ways, sidewalks, crosawal.lts and on roads
at the beach.
COiiege Eyes p,...pllfl8AJ
.STUDENT~ •• "' 6 Candidates
To Fill Slot
County Joins
LA in Rail
Service Push
Orange County supervisors de·
cided Wednesday to join Los
Angles County supervisors In ef·
forts to obtain commuter rail
service between San Diego and
Los Angeles.
They will be asking the Public
Utilities Commission to force the
Santa Fe Railroad to allow the
Amtrak-operated service on
tracks owned by Santa Fe.
Supervisor Ralph Clark sai!1
the train line would be of benefit
to Orange County commuters
and could reduce tramc on the
Santa Ana and San Di ego
Freeways.
F roaaPage AI
VICTIM •••
School and Orange Coast
College, apparently was on vaca·
lion in the area when he stopped
off at the garage Saturday after·
noon at about l :SO p.m.
Immediately after the shoot·
iog, Costa Mesa police contacted
the Orange County District At-
torney's Office. Local police filed
a report with the DA's office
which has assigned a special in·
vestigation team to interview
witnesses in the case.
The investigation is still under
way. A spokesman al the DA ·s of·
!ice could not estimate when It
will be completed or if criminal
charges are forthcoming against
Moran.
McClure underwent surgery
Saturday nighf for removal or
two slugs in his chest.
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.,anker's
Oil Spill
Beached
SANTA MONICA (AP) -
Worken toiled throu1h ~ ni&ht
•cooping up apllled Alaskan
crude oil In the surf and sand on a
popular awfinl beach ln Santa
Monica. The cleanup was expected to
be flnlsbed today, with no serious
damaie to the beach or wildllle.
officials aald.
The oil was spilled from a
tanker moored olf the coast of El
Segundo on Tuesday. About half
the 400 1alloos that spilled were
quickly cleaned up in the area
around the tanker, but another
200 gallons were carried by
winds and tides to the Ocean
Park area of Santa Monica
Beach.
The oil, thinner and less gooey
than th' heavy fuel oil that
clo11ed Santa Barbara's
beaches in 1969, spilled ashore
late Wednesday. The o1l was
shipped from Alaska on the
tanker Manhattan and was
bound for Chevron's El Seaundo
refinery.
"It's a bad spill," said U. Dick
Weaver, county 1Ue1uard.
"Maybe not a really ma.saiveone
but a gooey meas, just. the
same.".
The Manhattan was chartered
by Exxon Corp.
A Coast Guard report blamed
the spill on a "faulty valve" or a
"partially closed" valve, but an inves~atioo was continu.tng.
Investigators said baUast
water -;.a sed to maintain
balance on the lanker -was
somehow pumped up into a full
or nearly full tank containing
crude oil, forcing the oil out ol the
top of the tank and over the ship's
side. ' •
Chevron workmen using skim-
mers and huie oil~atching nets
were able to scoop up much or the
oil near the ship and more along
the surf line before it went
ashore, said N .R. LeRoy,
Chevron spokesman.