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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-10-07 - Orange Coast PilotFflday, October 7. 1977 Wipes (!Jut. Captor rOte In bis repOrt released underslped qU!(kly Jumped up undtrsiehed's face undenicned struck the wall with Thursday. "At tbJs lime, the ont.o tho bathroom sink cabine\ "Then, ln ao attempt to escape both bls elbow• and bis head, roden was observed and the the pouibiHt?' of the rat then thus receivinC bruises to both the undersigned proceeded to leapin(I on this officer's face or elbows and u areaultofthe blow attempttode.stroyit. shoulders, the undersi ned ~'.~to·t·h~he3J~Wth;iln~de~r~~r~~'t'~~~~==::~~1::i 'iilllfW!l~ll!!~~~~~~!ltf~~~~'ll'~i'!PA~~~~~f'qnt=a~ ...... ,~~~~~~~~,~~-.~Qalit!lJ:,ri4Mned thel(i animal, white at thf'. nme me~~il~~U~~~~=r;=~ Wj,sFiiia $17,200 .. . lnLwiagna ''At that po1nt, tbe rodent made a spectacular leap across the ba'throom and landed on the mirror, which was attached to the wall directly next to the So tar, however. no c:baree:. !ban been filed despite the o.Jlt-ratiou made to convince a mUftidpa) court judge to si&n a search warrant permitting the records raid. camano called police July 8 from the Swlu Vaulta attlee, l~ N. Grand Ave. He claimed he WU held it.nd ltien Ued up by an artned man wh~ ac:comyuces cleaned out three ton.a o stored p~ious metall. • Santa Ana police reported they ca11ld ftod no evidence that a rob- be r y occurred, other than Carrano's statements. On Aug. 24 t.ll'Y surprased Carrano and his l>artners with the search warrant and seized 42 grocery bagsful of business records in a general sweep of papers that included the contents of wastebaskets. Tburaday, Currano':. attorneys, Theodore C. Horton and Brian J . Campbell of Los Angeles, filed affidavits in municipal court allealng the search warrant was attempUna to strike it with hat~ ~t~~~~1Ccl!ifid1Jl•Uti"! remained Ol the nighstlck. " : "Unfortunately, this ot lost his balaneil and fell of cabinet and landed aeaio.s oppoiite wall of the bathroo a result of tile fall , -~PIO°"llllal~-~!~t.itu ··.vc:~~~'.~'"'~~h~~~~~ tn a companion motion. the attorneys asked that a heartna on the motion to suppress evtdence be beld in Los Angeles Oiunty. inste~d or in the Orance Coun~ Court. They claimed that ••overwh· elming and w•de•pread publicity" would pr Y t tbe motlon from a•ttlng a fair he.arfna. As well, tM attorney lmpued a hoaWit..Y by the court'• PNSidins Judte. l\Ober1.E. Law. They 4lld Law rel used to alto. them to mw search warrant documenti filN ~pt; 2 f Ol' publlc inapection. 'Ibe papera were ftltd near clo&lnf f ot the wbor Day holiday; La\\' contendid the attorne)'I wou.lda't have time to look at them. Because of the holiday. Campbell and Horton didn't see tbe cloCwnenta untJI the next Tue· Jday. Ciarrano'• counsel maintained that the search warrant vlo1ated bis first, fourth and 14th amendment riebu: were la.sued w'tbout probable c.use, and on r alff tellt.i mony. P,..;.,PflfleAJ LSD ••• Accordlns to an Army •ummary. "The Thornwell esperlment proved tbe uaefalneA of employln1 aa a dure11 factor tht devlce of lnvtttni the 1ubjeet'i attenUon to bia 1.SD Influenced 1tate and tbreateb.lill to extend this stat. · mdeftnitely, even to a permanent teaflnsanity.'' • reached the port of M easlna for' repairs. Last January tbe stb Fleet came Franklin D. ROciltvelt and the Oretk ttetahter ~anua collided 1.11 the strait bi atonny seas. There was no serious Jr\jury. '• WASHJNGTON <AP> -The •leel indu.atry. which has ra.Lsed tteel prices 79 percent tn the last five years, Is a "source of serious Inflationary pretaures, •• tbt White House prlce·monlt.ortna afencysald today. The ai.-icy aald lri a report th t the 79 percent lncro wu 2' ' percentmorethootherdOm Seven Vybig For 2 Seats Surf ·Soaring ~...,._._.-rSouth COOJ1t Waves High through lbe weetend. LB~llSD ~~~L~Cf 10 HunUnrton BUcll said more -' may be on the way because weathe r r e ports i ndicated another storm was brewing in the Pac1ftc south of B a1a Cahfom1a. All of the Oranee Coast's south facinl( beaches including the TresUes near San Clemente and Brooks Street in Laguna bad surf runnlna •ix .\0 ei&bt feet deep with extellent shape toCl1y. Ltfe1uards in Huntington Beach said aurf there was hUUftg ~~!:rJn~~at:~t!!~~i::! ove1 the weekend as ~J as only •tr on 1 s w l'm mer s and exaerien~ surfers are the only ona. who CC> pear tbe wat~. ground leues. She declined lo nametbe mvCitOr. "You have to judce for yoursell bow much weieht lo 1ive to a 1tatement that h unsubstantiated," He.yl countered today. He aald Mobil is not in need of a west coast oU terminal or stora.ie area. Mrs. Smith sa!d she could not dl:icloae her documented evidente now. but belteved it would be made public eventually. .. KER . or•Oeff't',...s..H Ile as U-0 resTcteott. Those objecting to the unemployment oftJce said it would bdn( chaotic traffic conditions lo their residential area at Terry A venue near Beach BOulevard. They also c:\aimed that the unemplO)'meotoffice would bave attracted lolt•rers and undesirable types from other communW-. The office was lo " . .. . brown packets. Believe it or not, he actually wu Jookin1 for ttie money there. RUQlero and two detectbes were inveattgatine the di1appearance of $5 mllllon from a lOQ&·.unclalmed trunk at an Eaat Sid., wanbouae. Tbe tnmrs qwner. repotttd to be • deceased Hunaarlan doctor, has never~Cllftci8lly named. On Tuesday, they 1ot P wan-ant to search the bome and iarden of Richard P . Lynch. ~ and hi.s wife, Alice, of Holbrook, N.Y. That done, they searched every closet, drawer aod cabimt, but found nothing. They due up the backyard nower beds -butstillnoJuck. , Finally, in the 1ara1e. Ruaiero discovered tbe luqna in a freaer, prodded It and found tbe1oot. Each packet contained 88 *5C> bills -364 bills for a total ot '17 .200. Moat were prin~ ln 1950, as wu most ot the $380,000 in blJls preylously recovered during the probe. Lynch was not anested. But the ricotta-flavoNd cub was held. p,... Pafl'! A I SWISS.· •• have ldrVcd uo mploytd l*'.'i.OftS rrom Hunttneton Beach . Fountain Valley, Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. Spokesmen, who said tbey represented about 500 residents. rt!1:ei ved supqort in their fight this week from the Hwit1n1ton Beach City Council. Council members •treed to draft • resolution to tbe state oppoalnatbefaclllty. Goed sald today that the state wu droppine its~ because of tbe dt1zen uproar . .. We don't wtah to ftlove the facllltywberelt'snot want.ed, .. he said. Goerl earlier said that be was unce.rtaln aboutlease conditions . lfe said today, however, that the property chu1ed bands after a lease was slped and that the lease la no lone er blbclinl. He said projections abowed that up to 300 l*IODS would have used t the facUltf each day for emllloYJneDt ~elinc and to colftciu:aeiDpJoymeAt cbecb. It would have had a staff ol to to '70 penol\S. Plans caJJed for the unomployment office to be Jocated}n arormerc8">dstore. · · The matter tli'st came ui) ln February and went thn>ulb of· Uclal city procedures, but residents said they weren't aware of lt unW almost two weeks ago. A representative said the group planned 1eP1 action lf the state carr1edoutlts plans. Claes Searched AUBUJlN CAP> -An "inch· by-inchh aearch for clues is under way In the murders of two 15-year-ald <>reson airls whose bodies were found on a lonely Northern California m0\Ultai11 road.: TJie victims, round Wed.Delday by deer hunters, were lrom email towns southwest ol Salem. . 8 Mesa Students WID Landacape Exhibiu 'Beat Di.play' at 'Fmr By JACKIE HYMAN OIU. OellY PIMllteff Winning rirst place awards for laocbc.ape exhibits in the Los Anceles County Fair was excttlna for elibt Costa Mes. Hi&b ~ students. But the tHinc they were proudest or wasn't reflected in the official resultl. It was a note jotted on their ratinc sheet by fair judae Paul Brecht. ••Best display in s how." it read. "It is a pleuure to Judie a piece ol art so well put tocether. · · The praise capped a aeries of wm. for tbe ac:bool in landscape exhibits. Lut ye&f, the school'• team came in second in. tbe landStape gafden display ~•tecoey. Thia year, the studen'* entered in patio dlsplu f aturinl wood. Their exhibit came in ftnt in July in the Oranae County Fair and ftnt a&ain at the Los An1e!ea AF Cadets Nabbed· FatriDPomopa. • "lt really aparb some interest in the airicu.ltural area.'' said Future Farmers or America <fFA> advtser Ro1 <Mltor who, In Marijuana ·~aia ltb fellow a&tvlaer Darwin HelmUth. ~the project. "wt. :we CODtimJ• to win, lt mu• it ealli to•« ktdS tnter-est~" lleUld. AIR FORCE ACADSMY. Oolo. C AP>-Several Air Foue A <:a d e m y c adets weFe "ln\pl.lcated " uad an undetermined amount of marijuana •as sei&ed today •beo speClal invest11ators pulled a ·~ early mornlnc dru1 raid on two dormttorte1 here, an •ca<lemY dftdal reported. Spoltttman WUl Kettanan iald nine male eadeti • 'bave been bnJ)).lcatM and the invettlfaUon isoniolna." Ketter'IOo •aid be did not bow imrnedtatel1 Whether the cadeta . . wbo were nOt idUUfled. have been chuied In connection \fith theraid. • lt alao wu not ltnoJNn immediately iI the cadets were under any type of house arrest following the raid. A eource who asked lo nmain unidentiRed 1ald there was a poatbiUty Uaat tbe 1nvesU,.Uon could be expanded olt academy lrwnds· " ' Infant Dies In Costa Mesa t , tntere1ted wo,ld,_ '*' (lln ~erstatemeat for-1th.Ila ·~·s win_.., wh9 eacerly d crtbed PUBLIC ••• >l~ A two-month-old Costa Mesa baby died ot unknown caules ,. appareitly only an hour aft.er bis mother had fed him early i Tbunday. uked Ms. Maloney if tbere had been UJ' JieCatlve imp•ct OD juvenile proceedlnl• 1D 0.. two yean since U. media bas been allowed Un:dted covera1e. fib. MalcDeY aald there bad been no tnchl•nh to ber knowledae ~ah• contended the . prep rarely att~od.a anyway ualeM~c la.MQHUoUl. ~Ult!ce WPeY Muuel med Ha. ~Uthe public thould have a rl;lat to bow wbft the juvenile cou.rU are dmn1. ·~Yea, bUt it doesn't bave to b. accompanied by publlcatton ol individual oaes, •· she said . .. There are better ways to educate the publlo.' • The ease against barrlna the press w.,_ made by John Farrell, a};!eputy countycouoael. Farrell arcued tbat It wu oot a matter ol whether or not the pr~ ahou)cl be allowed coverace opportunltles alnce that was · alrpdy the statua quo. He said there b lelithnate public inter11t ln judlclal proceedinp and tbe P1'611 abiould be permitted to 1lv• close scrutiny to~ proceecllno at all ?evell. With respect to main~ contidenUalUY. of o yo,uth'• Mme, arrell aald t b "not unreasonable to preaume the preaa wlll confot'm to its voluntary code or ethics." "'lb'.at ibOuld be aufficient to proteet tM state's lnteteet la the confidentiality or Juvenlle ptOCMdlnp." Ju1Uce FraDk Newman que1ttoned Farrell about tbe ''chiJltnl" flllect on teadlDCll\Y by paftnta and reJa"v• tr the press i• allowid to cover Juvenile p~. Farrell said he didn't ~eve that wOU!d occ~r in most cases. Aftn th• court bearlna. F&rrell aal~ Ile feeli tho dffialon ''will be v~ eios.•4 l>C:Cause of th rmopoUIUotlawlovolV*I. -. Police said RoyeUen Ann bur. field and her husband, James, found their infant, James Gre1ory Duffield, dead in bis crib at 10 a.m. Thursday at thelr home at 2285 Rutgers Drive. Tbe Orenie County Coroner ' es~bed the tJme of death at ab6ut 4 a.m .• only an hour after tbe baby's early mornine feeding. The deatb was tentaUvely attributed to sudden infant death syndrome. , The agent asks for the bOttlea and while the couple watch ln fury, the a1ent empties tt.. contests onto the pavement. For 40 years, Californians have been denied a privil•C• extended to all other U.S. citizens -we cannot bring booie lnto our own state. The law, the product of lhe \_ - Economy Gets pj,gh Ma~ks ror tomorrow. County~ Thom Riley told about 1,000 business and civic leaden at Thursday's Economic O\ltlook Conferentle. Riley, who ~acked up bis economic picture with numbers. said tbe county's dominant feature at.ill is growth. Jt ts fed in part by a so.called "sun belt mlgratlon" trend or the move by people and business into. areas with favorable climates. Riley also Hid erowth cans for careful plannln~·J!'i~e use ol util· mes and water resources as as Uie need to rehabWtate older county urban areas. Tbe 15th annual Oran1e Count.Y Chamber of Comme.rc• eeoaomic COhf erence drew 11 speakers in both covemmeot and industry. . Rlley's nwnbera showed.;. -Orange County population has 1rown . by 50,000 persons a year since 1970 or 23 percent. The pat.year's 1ain of 2.8 percent is • double the rate 1n Callfomt• and • four Umea that of the U.S. as a whole. -Last year more than 17,000 new single.family homes were buflt in the county, the high among CaJlforn1a 's 58 counties -Retail sales In 1976 were nearly $4 billion. a 20 percent gai.n over the previous year and the ~h gain in Califorrua. ~.lik~im ( nilly income bl the county has· more than 3,100 industrial firms, and manufa~turing accounts tor more than percent Of the aallries paid in Oranae CoUnty. 111 addttJon, the Newport Beach supervisor said, production workers Proc.tuce '3.94 worth ol g004s fat" every $1 they ~eive ln sa.Jary, a figure n percent bighet than the nationa.J averate and among the hlgbeat ln Callfomla. On the Other band, RU~ aald, county ~ crtates wbat he calledtlMh interact.lve Uvin&'. "One man's profit may be anotbu man's penalty," heaald. .. Hence there is need for balanced gr'oWth management a.s a neceesary course of acUoD. and public Policies sboWd proitde ~ klnds ol incentiwis that max.a. miu the gain and mlninitM tbe ~Alty." llileY .noted that, beCiUMe or current energ)' atid water constriints, public policles also 1.nust 51.ras conservaUon . Riley called, in addltloa, for a program of rehablUtaUon and rede\leklpmeQt in the county·s older urban areas. "We can learn much about this from the eXJ>erJe.vce of older. urban areas Ulat have shown us • what the isst.tes are and what short-sighted actions can cause ... he said. 14 Arrested Qn~Raps ,. • t • ounty LS *1,000 abOve state averages and is expect~ to • reach $19,500 thb year. -Unemployment. which hjt a five-year low or 4.3 percent in August Ls below both federal and st.ate avera1es. SAN D1£GO <AP> -Ollrteert people, including members of the Hells Angels motorcycle club, were an-ested today in a crack· down on the Illegal metharrtpbetamine business in the San Diego area. . ' • • . • • • • • • Riley also reported a 20 perctnt gain last year in new commercial devel(>pment and a doubling over 1975 ln new industrial development. Today, be continued, the A spokesman for 11 federal and state agencies said officers armed with warr.anta bated on grand Jury tnaictm:ents went to23 tocatiOnS, s nt 31 l*>&'le. lesendary lobbyist Artie Samlsb. was ~ tnt.o effect t.o protect the state s liquor industries in spite of a federal law which allows every clli1en the right to bring one bottle or liquor into the country duty free. Technically, residents of the Gol~ State violated the law eveey tlme they brought a bottle AutUlllnal ldgll \ -.. - a c r oss the stale hne from Oreaon. Nevada or Ar1ion1. All that will end Jan. 1. A blU written by and iulded tbrouah the Legislature by State S en . D e nnis Carpenter <R·Newport. Beach>. &ives Californians the riaht to brinJ a botUe of liquor into the state. And because of it, visitors from B-.)a A solitary !armer tills Irvine Company farm land at Sand Canyon Avenue and Irvine Center Drive in Irvine, under an October sky. harrowing the earth tor fall planting. But tor the power poles breaking CalUornia will have the l'eVi e privilege. The Republican lealSlator says be doubta bis legislation "Will change the outcome of the world." He aald bl' effort was inspb·ed by a liquor-dumping ritual he witnessed at the border. "In early January I was coming back from visitinc close Chili Champs FordRoaat . Boosu GOP DETROIT CAP > - Gerald...Ford earned away a child's bicycle with training wheels and the state Republic an party took in SI00.000 ac; mor<' than 2.000 GOP fil1 thful turned out to pok1• ~oo<l natured fun ut lht~ former pr <•<,1dent On hand .It T hursdav s "roa~t" of the Grand Rapids native were Forff's runnlnt mate in his unsuc- ceaaful 1976 presidential campaign, Sen Robert Dole of Kans as, forml.'r press sec reta ry Ron Nessen and Sen Rober l Griffin o( Machagan. Among the nig ht "s hl&hlights were film clips oC com~an Chevy Chase in NBC's .. Saturday Night Live" televi&Aon smes de. 1Hcdn1 F'ord bumbling about tbe White House Oval Office and signing his wrist. Nixon Emerges From Exile ' For Dinner • M a guest at a Corona del Mar pollt1cal fund-raflling dinner this week, former President Richard M. NiXon 1ave a brief speech. believed to be his first since bis 197.C resignation. Nlxon was one of about 100 1uest.s attending a party Wednes- day aponsoTed by the Orange County Republican Finance Committee at the Cameo Shores home or Athalie Clarke. mother or one of the lrvtne Co(npany's new owners, Joan !rvlne Smith. The former pre1tdent. who attended the party without Mra. Nixon, told the GOP C()Dlribut.ors. that a candidate's "fighting 1plrtt'' I& mor.o important than ~. TexanJJ Vie in 'cook/eat TERLlNGUA. Tex (Alf>1 • For thousands of Texans. the rainbow ends here. and this weekend they will be searching for that mystical perfect pot of <•hth Chill fans will trek to th£• clt·..,<'rt h1•a ut v or t his We..,t Tcxa-. ll•rrtlorv or ghost town ... nt'sllt•rl Ill t he• Big Hl'nrl or the H10 Grande. and inhabited by burros. eoats and armadillos. ·The t tth AnnuaJ World Championship Chill CoOltolf ls being held on • 200,000-a cre ranch. and contenders will try to wrest the crown from Albert Ag nor of M ar shall, whose F arkJeberry Ch1h,.. took top honors laslyear. There ls no prize money; no trophy' -just the dlstmcUon oC being known by your peers u the best. . Ninety lonely mites ltom the nearest real town, Alpine. with the ChJsos Mountains as a back· drop, ts eXl>eeted to be overrun by cofttestanu and kl bl tiers; revelers and Texas Rangers. Declared tbe ornctat state dish of Texas by thl1 year's legislature, cb'ill ls taken seriously in these parts. Begun in, November. 1967 as a • The .. pep tillt" WedneM•y night was otc tht cUff and lasted only 10 minuta, accord.ins to 1uests wbO attended the $500-per- couple buffet, They said tbe lpeech concerned only tbe Republican party and made no mention of national or tnternatlonai tasuu. ..,. S2.49 Nixon also emphasized tbe 1-.:..;;...:.~~;;;.:;_,;...~~~~::~~~~~~==:::~=:=~--t:i~F;~j;:::ii::i:~~ .. need for Orange County Rep.abllcan1 to find young, ttr~ve candidates. Mn. Clarke. lone active In Jocat JUpubUcan clrclea, will be bo1tln1 another fund·raisiof -,ar1y net Week for Attorney General Evello Younger, a P~V-GOP. aubernatorial clodi®te JOH~NNESBURG , South AlrJca (AP> -Black leader Steve Blko, wbtlea prison death la.ct month touched off an· lntermtJorial outcry, apparenUy autrered brain damage and btuJaea before be died, the Rand DaJly MaU newspaper said today, The JOhanneabuf's paper'• report waa based oo lDtervtewa with aJx doeuqJiboexamlned Blkolnthe " bdOHblldeath~ J • IO on Jan. 1, 1979, to SS.ts an bour on Jan. 1. 1980 and to SS.40 • aa houronJan. l, 1981. •.r. A key supporter of the p)an 31ald • worker aupporttna a non-tann family of four tbr0la8h a f\llltlmlt mlnlmum waae Job in MJ81 WOl.ald fall 5 percent under ... the federal poverty level. ·.~den C..t II.re Friday, October 7, 1977 TV Defense Fi ils • Teen Convicted; 'Insanity' Rejected • Vasily V. Kuznetsov, !lrst deputy to Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A . Gromyko, was elected today by the SoViet parliament to the post of first deputy to President Leonid 1. Brezhnev. MIAMI CAPJ -The foreman ot the jury that convlct..ed a 15· year-old boy in the murder oC an elderly woman said today the de- fense's claim that the youth was driven insane by seeine too much violence on television was ridiculous. The convicted boy, Ronny Zamora, faces at leaat2Syears in prison. His attorney still contends llla defense strateB.Y which focused on "television insanity" blazed a legal frontier. AFTER TWO HOURS of de .. liberation, the jury of nine men and three women returned to the courtroom and to the alare or television H1bts late Thursday, Just before midn.lcbt, to pronounce Zamora fuilty of first-degree murder. Today, jurors said they couldn't accept the theory that Zamora's addlcUen to violent TV programs drove him insane. "This TV thina -that's ridiculous," said foreman John Kaleb. "There were a lot. or tbinas that made jurors sympathetic -his childhood upbrinetng and all of that. I wu brought up wit.bout a father. l waan't led. down the wrong path." '4TBE FACl'S JUST "1Jd not prove he wu lnto>dcfted by televblon. We were pretty much in consensus," aald another juror, Irvin WU-er. "It's very W\fortunate that tbe jury ts send1DI uus nry youn1 bor to a at.ate penitentiary "here he wlll become a tar1et of horrible offenses," aald defense attorney Ellis Rubin. ''The appelJate court should bear and conalder this case because J think the ltaue present· ed will foree a new frontl~ in American Jl.l.rfspi'Udence," Rubin said in a&UlOUnclna that be will appeal UM venttct. , Mandel Gets 4 ¥eai-s Governor Suspended; Judge Cites Sympathy BALTIMORE <AP> Maryland Gov. Marvin l\fandel was sentenced to four years m prison (oday for his part m a mail fraud-racketeering scheme that broke his once powerful grip oo state politics. Federal Court Judge Robert L. Taylor told the governor "I have a great sympathy for you. You have many, many good qualities. I think you made some serious mistakes." MANDEL, 51, COULD have received a maximum penalty of 105 years ln prison and a "2,000 fine. Sentencing was still under way for fl~e codt!eodants -W. DaJe Hess, Irv Kovens. Ernest M. Co~ Jr., and b~en William A. 8ndffan'YW. flodaera m. Under state law, Mandel was suspend~ ftoom carrytna out any functions as aovernor immediately upon sentencing, but hes Lill retains the title. BLAIR LEE, NAMED acting governor earlier Uus year when Mandel became ill, will continue m that position. Mandel would regain the Job only if his conviction were overturned before the end of bis term of office in January 1979. Mandel was the first sitting governor convtcted of a federal crimeinmorethan40years. Iowa Gov. Warren McCray was convicted of mail fraud in 1928. The Jurors found that Mandel received an estimated $350,000 wottb of &lfls and business interests In excbante for his influence on 1972 letlslatlon benefiUng· Marlboro Race Track, which bis friends aecretly purchased in December 1971. BEFORE PASSING sentence, Taylor dismissed a pair of mail WASHINGTON CAP> -The nation's unemployment rate ed&ed down to 8.t percent tn Septembet' from the Ausuat level of 1.1 percent. 1bo.tng little change for the fifth cooaecuUft month, the 1o•ernment re~today. Tbe Jobless rate hu hovered stubbornly around the 1 percent level since April, ~ lndlcauon ot the slowdown in the economy about 8.5 percent by year's end, foUowtn& the period of rapid but large layoffs In st.eel and growtbeatlytntheyear. other industries um fall could Most ol the Improvement in offset eome of the effect& ol the unemplayment last month was job programs. enjoyed by black workers following a sharp tncreue In U N E M P L 0 Y M E N T · tbeiJ' Joblesu>eN the imwlous declined by 110.000 to s.a. month. • mlllioa durfnl Sepe.ember, tbe VNBMPLOYlllENT AMONG blacubadt1Mtl to u .s percemtn J\Ugult IM,Jt fell to 13.1 percent Wt monib. However, analysts said there was some indication the A\ll\llt increase was caught morebja"~·tnthe•tat.lsUcs tbaa an actual rise in unemploytnent. Newrtheless, the at.apat.ion in tbe overall jobleu rate ta ex~ to lllcreaae pressure on the Carter admlnlatration to enact a tax cut neJCt year to ttlmulate t.be economy. The administration waa coundna on newly enacted Jot>- creatlng proerams to brin1 the un'11Jployment rate down to Labor I>es*tment laid. At the same time. tbe total number « Amertcam wttb Jobi roM D>,000 durlnC tbe month to. total ol 91.l million •• Emplo)'ment bas erown by 3.8 million over the past 12 months, and the percentage of the papulatlon with jobs bas risen rrom 56.1~tto57.3 percent. just abort 'ol ~all·Ume blah last reached lD llarCb 1974 Presl'dent Carter. who came under heavy crlUcllm from civil rtehtl leaden when the Aueust Joblas rate wu aonou.aced, bu ind.teated a compromlae la likely wttbfn a few days on th• controversial Humphrey. Hawkins "full employment" blll. ·s.,,,...... HllM~ lil9c:ll1 ·-OW. .. *'' ...... 111 ..... 11 ""'911. c.n.i ..... .... Wl .... Mllllle. ~8MClll WI"" t/11 ...... fM wCtfl tOIO ..... -..... . fraud coovictions against all the defendants aqd also threw out a racketeering conviction against Hess and the Rodgers brothers Taylor s aid the mailings of Mand el news conference t.ranscript5 involved in the mall fraud counts were incidental to the pOlit:ical corn.tpUon scheme since the information bad a4"e•dy been di&semlnated by the media. Tboee counts also Involved Hess, the Rodgers brothers, Kovens and Cory. The judge said the racteteen_..g law was unclear a.s l t applled to the COl"l'QpUon cue. DBFENSE A1TORNEYS bad asked for dlsmt.ssat ol ebarces or for retrlals, clalmlnc evidence at t.be2~·montb·lona trtal had.been inadequat• to support the con vtctic>M. With no apparent IOUfte of income. Mandel bad re.Isled either ~tgning or applylq ror a state pension. Lee receoUy said Mani!W did not have "two nickels t.o rubb)cedtPr." But llllldd mcMid bll ramUy out of the governor·a milnsiof\ Tb\lrld.ty and Into a mlnl~te nortb ol AnnaPolls, which hid I llsted rent Of tt7S a month. • A TRIBUTE TO l"HE ~ .ORANG!· CO~STi'o SUCCESSFUt WOMEN BUSINESS PROFESSIONALS ZAMORA, A. SLENDER junior hl1h school student, appeared pale and shaken as he heard an aselstant ~tart clerk read the jury's decisions. He was also found gullty of bur1lar!', armed robbery and possession of a firearm during commission of a felony. Circuit Judge Paul Baker set sentencing forNov. 7. "She's lost her child," aald Rubin as he led Yolanda Zamora, the boy's mother, rrom t~e courtroom. "It's lime to co home." THE 52-YEAR·OLD attomey attracted national alten\ioa b)' pleading Zamora \nnocent bJ reason of "involuntary telriiston intoxication." At one point, Rubin subpoenaed actor Telly S.valas of the televislcm aeries "K'.ojak" to t.estlf y on Uie effects ot TV violence. HOwever. tbe ~ubpoeaa waa wtttid.rawn • Rubin said Zamora had been condiUoned by telension to shoot his next-door neighbor, Ellaor H•aeart, when the elderly woman caught hlm and another penon ransa<!k1q her Miaini Beach home~ THE TRIAL OF Darrell Agrella, 14, the other person ac- cused in the case, belins today. 'Son of Sam' Tapes Hoax Hit by Juc;l,ge STATE I SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Court Rules on Rights Moonies' Religious Freedom Violated hopu of havln• the Moonlt cbildHn deproarammed were waaing a court battle on laws ''too vague." FIVE YOUNG FOLLOWERS or Rev. Moon appetled • San Francisco Superior Court order appohtUns their parents as arter Jacqueline Kah, Leslie Brown and Barbara Underwood withdrew from lbe action. i'heir parenw had claimed the younptera were ''brainwashed" by Moon,,_ UnlflcaUon Church. IF TllE YOUNGSTERS were brainwashed and needed treatment, the court said. proper steps spelled out In the Welt~ and lnsUtutions Code must be foUowed by the parents. "To do Je11 l• to license kldnepln1 for the purpose of thouabt control;' the decision said. Tbe appeal court said the lower court failed to jusUfy the orders el vinl the patents temporary coMerVatorshlps 1n view ol the younesten' claims that there was no e\lldence to show they were unable to care for lhemsel ves. ''IF AN ADtJLT PB&SON is leas U,an aravt-1.v diJabled we find no warrant for depr\ving bhn (If her ot liberty and freedom of actlon under either *"e fonner provisions of tbe Problte Code or the Welfare and lnaUtuUons Code," the appeal court aakl. Turning to the First Amendment. the court •aid reli1- Jo~~-• vlew1 eapoused by the Mooraes '"21J1ht1eem intredibJe, if not preposterou1, lo most people. ' "llut i( those doctrines are subject to trial before a jury chuted with flndlo• their -truth or falsity, cthen the same can be done witb the relllious belief of any sect. .. The First AmendrMnt does not select any one group or any one type ot • religion for preferted treatment. It putatbetnall tn that position ... The appeal court also dlamt11ed contempt charges aeainat the parents in "the interests ot jmtice. · · Publisher Talking Pictures' Challenges C l . b • Golde. Node Ban e e ration n SAN DIEGO (API ~ Neon Seville got his attorney, calle<f police to let them know what he was gOUlg to do, then stood naked ()Q lbe beacb tor ~ aunutes to protest an antl·nudllJ law. ' LOS ANGELES (AP> -Fifi) ears ago, Al Jolson muttered ~ bone. "Y 't -~,, .. ,,...,-ti~· ye\!,.. and started a :mcwte revotuUon. So !be haJr. entury Uinivenary or taUnn& mo•iea seemed Ilk• a CoOd reuon to revlve some old-Ume Hollywood hoopla Vint.age stars paraded down Sunset Boulevard in 1820 ears. The poctm.Mter aeneral issued a eommemoraUve st.mp. And the b rthplace ot "talkies.. -now Gene Aµtty' television &tatl~ -was named Cultural Laodl]lark No. 18'7 by the tol Ang4les Cultural Herltaee Board. Miss McAvoy, who s tarted film acting ln 1921 and starred ln tht> I .. Ben-Hur," recall ~at as '°pioneer . 'It was au done 00 • enormous platters mad Of wax. The cameras wet"e noisy li\ tbOse days so the studio had to bUild soundproof booths with glass w: ndows !Imported rrom Germany for tbetr clarity. WTJIE BIGGF.81' PROBLEM w a$ where to put t be rolcropboon. They••• placed under pillows aDd lD ~ pots and we actors had to ata.y clo.e to them so our dlalo&ue could be heard. State ) SeYlUe WU eball~ tbeSan Dleeo Qty CoWlclJ a l>an on nude bathlna at Black'• Beach. ft was the nation's only swimsuit optional munJclpal beach until r~ident.s voted two weeks ago to prohibit nudity on all public beaches. PETALUMA <AP> • Police believe they're about to crack a myataiDul eampalp of terror whleb bu been wased since mid· AUl\ISt acainst clvlc leaden of this·~ town of 30,000. ..We tbink we know who is in•olwd tn this and we lhlnk w6 know what thJ5 is all about," Petaluma Police Chief Robert MUIJ>b.y aaid Tbu.raday. MURPHY D£CLINED further comment, saying it could Jeopardlte the S<>lld groundwork his investigators are putting together ln the bizarre case. No arrests had been made by early today, policesald. More detectives were assigned to the case Wednesday after the terror spree's most violent attack so far left one room of tht• Two Rock Unron School west of here gutted by a f1n•bomb "Hi, honey, your school s on fire;· a \.$phone caller taunted school principal Helen Putnam. who is Petalwna 's mayor. Her auto was ftrebombed Saturday while parked at her home. OTHEll CITY COUNCILMEN and awr officials have had their Friday, Octot>er 7. 1977 tires slashed and bullets thrown -not fired -°'rou1h their window$. The ci~ 01ana1er bad a awestika an4 q&ae$tion ~ark painted an his 1araee doOr. Several attacka were fOUOYi~ by menacln& ~epbooe calli. The anonymous me11sen1er once called council01an James Harben10n and wunecl: "HJ, hooey, you're1otng to die." BEJ'OU TllU&SDAY, Police • had said they were comi>letely bafned by the weird attacks. City officials tried whit little luck to remember any outstanding civic controvers ies wblcb could. triager such an outburt. "It's been very frustrating," said Murphy. "I'v e never encountered anything quite hke ll .. Weapons Ordered TOKYO (AP> -Cb.lriese \'lee Premier Teng Hsiao-pin& ca.id today China plans to fmport new weapoo:S and technology to modernize the Chinese military. Japan·s Kyodo news $ervice re Ported. A bill signed by Gov. Brown last week will relieve senior citizens living on fi¥ed incomes of th ir very real fear of being taxed out of their homes. The measure ~rmits homeowners aged at least 62 and llY.ith a h~ebotd Income of not more than $20,000 to defer tli it property taxes, starting this year, '1Jltil they mov~ out or sell their homes. · Uridet the SS million tax. reliqf plan, the state wµ1 pay • the propert~ tax to the counties and collect the money after the property is vacated or sold. which could be after the death of the homeowners if they Wished. The final payment Will tnclUde mterest at the rate of 7 ~rcent a year for the i~urationo!thestateloan. · While this type of tax relief could be of great benefit to many homeowners, it should be understood that the state loan will constitute a lien on the property and must be paid 'BS soon as the claimants no longer OCC\lPY the home. 'lb.is means that heirs will be obliged to liquidate the ~tate loan, whether or not they wish to sell the property. ,AJ\d participants no longer able to occupy their homes (Would be required to put them on the market if necessary it.i> pay off the tax advance. Claimants should be aware of these aspects Qf tbe ta relief program. :. Senior clti~os w=is · 1g to particip~t in the program must file their qual tions. Instru ns may be ob· tained from the Franc e Tax Board, Civic Center Plaia, Room 148. Santa Ana, CA, 92701. Ph eSSS-4540. AU in au. th~ program is laudable. It offers an Op· port unity !or dignified finaucial relief for older citizens boxed in by fixed incomes and spiraling taxes and living ~es . our CIA Conneetion A CIA connection bas been about the only element of intrjgue missing from the tales of misfired political maChiiiations that have flashed acro.ss the Orange County scene in recent years. ·Supervisor Ralph Diedric:h corrected that oversight recently when he added former CIA aient John Lynch to 'jtis SWairtch insisted that Lyncb wasn't hired at $20,000 a year because of his talents in cloak·and-dagger exercises. Instead, the F\dlertoo supervisor said, Lynch was put on bis county payroll beCause of hJs natural inclination to probeintotheunknown. In this case. the unknown was said to be regional gov· ernment -the Southern Callf ornia Association of Govern- ments <SCAG) and other equally mystifying regional agencies and associations in which Diedrich is involved as a representative of the BOai'd of SupervisOrs. Well, Diedrich may be right. He may have found the right man in an ex-CIA agent to unravel the mysteries that surtowtd SCAG. TlP, SCRAQ;, MAC and the mwtitude of other acronyms that governments surround themselves with. -_,, Somehow. though. the thought of a former CIA agent w ndering footloose and fancy free through the halls of county government-these~ smaclts of more than just a babysiUing a~ment for SCAG. SCRACS and whatever J>(.her cornbirialions ot letters mue up that Jeglon of , ;;;:~1~vi thatcllilgsot HtlytoeJectei.lgoverrunenl ~ The readilY visible )>rQl.if'erBtlon o! churches might make it hard to believe, bUt we are advised Orange County is oneofthenaUon·s sbt .. most irreligious" counties. The information is contained in a report on church at· tendance which notes 125 million J\mericans are on church :.i membership rolls. but some M million have nothing to do ~itb organized religion. . ')" The other five counties on.the list are Boone County, W. Va.; Waldo County, Me.; Polk County, Ore.; Marion County, Ala.; and Sarasota County, Fla. The non·churcbgoers are categorized as : Thos~ who found church rules too strict; those who found church· work ·too burdensome; those who felt "put down·· by other ·churchgoers; those who move around too often to make a • cburch connection; and thOse put 'off by church politics. -: Since <>range Count~ WoU!d qualify as a gathering ·place for. the .. moving around" category, this might ac· • count for its inclusion on the ·~rreligious·· list. ~ And perhaps constitute a challenge to churches to open their doors a litUe wider. • Oplnk>nl exprMMd In the ap.ce ecwe .,.. thole of the Deity Pllot. Other "'9W9 expc 1111 d on this pege .,.1hoeli of their authora and attlsta.. Ander comment I• Invited. Addtees The Deity Piiot. P.O. Box 15e0. CO.ta ....... CA ~{714) 642-4321. ... • reoontmg machine inside a case Of .JQ)Gpkeys to prove hls elalm. '*arty. haca(ecl. )'ck Andenon Asbestos Firms Seek Shelter WASHINGTON -The asbestos manU!acturers, hit by a barraie of milllon·dollar lawsuits, hope to win them cheaply on Capitol Hill. A bill to aave the iod\lStry from costly lltJption has been offered by Rep. Millicent Fenwick, R·N.J . Thia involved UtUe effort for ber; the industry cheerfully helped draft ltfor her . Tbe lawsult.s are being filed by workers who contracted cancer or lung dls· ease from breathin& asbestos fi bers_._1A t least •w.ooo work~ra 1.re expected to die from such eXposUl"'f'. 'nte • nation's lal'&est asbeGtos firm, Johns·Manville, is fi1htlni nearly 400 lawsuits. Tbb b the •&me COIPPaDY. in· cldentally, that persuaded the congresswoman to sponsor the timely bill. lta attorney helpfully prepared the right legislative language, with some help from her staff and the asbestos workers union. The legislation would prevent workers from suing their employers or their unions. It would provide modest federal payments instead for some dis· abled asbestos woJ'kers. "This bUl should more properly be called the Asbest°' Industry Release from Liability Act," fumedoneunion member. FENWICK is a dianlfled, 61· year·old congresswoman who belies her srandmQtherl1 imaae by puffmc on a pipe. Her charity toward Johns·Manville may be influenced by the presence of its largest plant ln ~er district in a town named Manville, N.J Fenwlck·s office acknowledged that the company president, John McKJnoey, "was actively involved ip initiating this bill." The conaresswoman believes, nevertheless, that workers "who can't afford to sue or who might lose in court .. woukl be better off with govern· ment benefits. A Johna·Manville spokesman insisted it waa a joint effort and said the bill would benefit a greater numt>er of workers. PORK BARREL: Public works projects are supposed to help depressed areas revitalize their indwitries and create Jobs for the unemployed. But the Economic Development Ad· ministration. which doles out the Rowland Evans/Robert Novak Carter I .ands in Racial ,Minefield W ASfUNGTON -Obscured in W asbiogton by the Lance aft air and Republican reticenc.. Presi· dent Carter's course in the Bakke case was depleted in the Hin· terlands by a huge banner headline Sept. 30, across the bont page of the North Las Vegas (Nev.) Valley TilJ)es: .. Carter Uraes S~ial Treatment for Blac:u.·· Tliat deisCriptlon conftnns t.be opmion of worrlM' DetnocTatic pollticlans that the Pftsl dent. pleldrig hla way throufh a r a c a l nUne:fltld. bas 1tepped oo a mine. He overruled the Justice Department and ended up with a posttklO t.bat flatly ilndor'leS taclal c:ounter- dlacriminatkln n u:Diftl"9ity ad· mislhio policies~ thus GPOSeS hlin to extreme poUtlCal dpcer. Al~ the d(~t of !tel>Pina -on that mine bas been detlyed by ~b}Jcan si,lftlee at hilh levebl, that cannot 1-counted on to continue indefm.ltely. In taJdng a IU!Uon stronJJy opposed by his own conatltuency of blue- collar whites, M1. carur bas opened bimsell to damagina •· pJoltJWt.lon by hla political enetn.ies. . ,. ACl'UALLY, tl:W PftSldent bad a safe-conduct pau tbrou&b CM racial m.inefleld with Ute firit Justice Departtnent brtef. 0. tending that the Ulllvei'slty of Cali!om!a bad acted uncomtitu- tionally in rejecting medical school applicant Allan Bakke because it had resen'ed spaces for less qualified blacks, it nevertheless supported ••af. firmative action" programs to lncreue minority enrollment. That flt Mr. Carter's long.time Raw Harvey If )'OU were an Alulran you'd be \ffd off, too. You campaigned ahd voted for 1tateho0cl, convinced that ..-u the beat way to denlop your area and ill resources. Now Wuhington want.a to build a protective "fence" aro\lbd vast are• ol your state, pre- veotlna the development of those re-aou.rcee. . You are asked to f orf elt one of the major beneflt1 of statehood. Alaska Is big, one-flftb the 1iie of the entire continental Ub.iled States. It covers 38S mtlUon acree. But only about l mUU°" Of th<>1e acres are privately owned. Where Alaska b 1tgantJc - lar1 than several 1tatea ~ tlie lower 0 combined -If~ count on1Y tbe ana which ls oWMcl by nMnatl aiid .. dovelopable," Al aka h .smaller than ~la support for aftirmaU,.re action and opposition to quotas. But hith·level Wbite House aides say the PresideAt was UD· happy with the brief. He felt it undermined affirmative action .along wt1b quotas <"thtowll:il out the baby' with the bathwater,·· said one senior aide>. and or· dered the ba1et rewritteu. He bad plenty of support. HeaJlb, Education and Welfare Secntar)' Joseph Calif~ a hilh~ ~ 1*1er. •t.t&UM er .. • -. "' sbodcb' lcip1 acbalanbJp. Chief domestic aide Stuart Elllllltat 1114 Wbite House tOu1'ael Raber\ Llpab11tt wabed for major •• eb~ • BEYOND THAT, the pre· mature leak ,or the Jutlce ~t·a bftet t:enerat.ed ln· teise JlftllUutO from bll!$ and c:ivil riabt.s le~. Bellevlha the Presida>t to be suscepubha tO pubUc loWttnl. tbey CODdemned t.be brief a a wbllc betra,ytl. The brief was rewrit~ at the Justice ~Darlment. but. under the tutorial band Of the White House. Not only were the PIUI· dent's 1e11Uaienta convey'4 to • Juatloe on paper. ~ut ElieQst.at and IJpslluta cqnferred with their fellow Georllan, Atty. Ge. Griffin Bell. The ftd product, while oppoalJl' quotas, endoraed mlm«ical aoali for minority lfOUJlS -a aerqanttcal dfltJnc. tion dl.fftC\llt to pel'Celve. The lltltl·Bute oreea ..-ere ubUant= V.ter&Jl civil rltbta lawyer Jo1epb Rauh, ..-ltb cbaraetertsUe canctor, Uulted that outllde ~~ had killed the oriCfnal Justice' D.ePU"ttnat brief.~. black 1 acten·w~ eonftrmed in upr belief &bat tbe Presld t can m~ by hanh words • money for these porlt bar~\ pro- j e c ts. has demon1trated a political preference to help the unemployed in the rlaht con· gresslonal diatricts. Minnesota. for elCampte, has 68 counties elitible for development money. Only 10 of them are loeat· ed ln the coonesslonal dlatrlct tb•t ex·Jlep. John Blat.illk, D-Mtpn., used to represent. Yet he wound up with more tban half Of tbe $73 milllOG distributed to the state. The forttinate Blatnik. you see. waa chairman of the House Econcxnic Developinent aubcOm· rnlttee. Now Blat.nllc is retired and bi.a ~hm bu been taken over Tb1i compar with less tl\an by MP. ltbWt 'aoe, D·N . .J. Sud· on -ent ot all oritin•..., tu· dety, his dJ!trtct was bl ed ....,..... .,.., wltb ~k barrel projects. us payers who are being probed by shm o1 New Jersey' develop-the lRS. The financ18.l docuwents ment ~ abot up from io pe.r· if\ the ntes Of the.so ~zoo corpora ilons and their 60,000 aubsldlartes cent to:ie percent. aruo hnmense, say our SOW'C!S. THE ECONOMIC Develop· that the IRS a,gent.s CM OJily ment A4minJJtratJon: ap1*'Cfl1" audit samples of their' tax ly. II m<n. •killed by pleuinf. tum.. Uticians than k~~1n1 books • And corporate tu exi>eJ:ts, f:undrecb OI nillli~ of dOUm who eam twice 'GS much :as• are unaccounted for, lncludlnt govemment counterparts. ol.at· sss mlUiotl in New Jersey, $22 • •'umber the IRS a1e'Qta by 10 to million in Loqi1lana and $1( .,ne The conelomerat•s. million tn Mtn.Qesot.a. therefore, are far more tlkeio This doesn't mean embezzlers aet away with tax fraud d ha~ raade f)lf wtth tbe loot; it's slush funda than the aver e more Uketf,t the boob merely citizen. Fl'fday, October 7, ftn' By Phil lnterlandi Dr. Jane Gray at Colorado General Hospital helped identify certain clues to potenUal child abusers. "PICKING UP THE SIGNALS isi not all that difficult, .. said Dr. Gray. From prenatal interviews and questionnaires, she said, "'lou can tell a lot. One of the big things ~forehand ls the parents' own upbringing -was it secureotweretbey, themselves. abu.sed?" In the delivery room, sbe ·ufd, mothers and fathers who refuse to ask about their newborn offspriJli may be potential child abusers AND A MOTHER'S BEHAVIOR in the mat.emity ward ls important in indicating her "parent.-preparedness," Dr. Gray said. "Is she happy? Is she smllin1? Does she want the baby wilh her? When she does bold the baby, does she want to look Into Its eyes and aet to know berchild?" Beginning in 1971, doctors and nurses at ( J Colorado General began MEDICINE identifying parents who , . "needed extra help," Kempe said. One hundred parents were placed in this category and were divlded into two sroups !>' 50 each, he aaid. ONE GROUP WAS CONSIDERED the "risk" group and received only normal Pediatric and maternity care. The other. ree•lved special attention from pediatricians and specially trained nonmediul workers who visited the families and helped care for the new bablea. A thJrd group of 50 parents was identified as needing "no extra help" and was used as a control croup for comparison, Kempe said. Plea Explained SACRAMENTO <AP) A noci-citlzen who Is about to plead guilty or no-contest to a crime wlll have to be told flrat that the plea could mean de· portation under a blll aiened by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. The bill iJI SB 278 by Sen. Alex Garcia (D·I..cls Anceles). II CONCIRNID PllVINT WILDLAND FIRIS l·WA Y GUARANTEE ~ WHEN 00ES ETERNITY ST ART? C.Ome to this Free Christian Science Lecture "ETERNITY MOW" by Patricia Anns, C.S.B. A Cbriatian Science Practitioner 41 Teacher · f 1:00 A.M. • S•TURDA Y • OCTOta I NIGUEL THIATU ......-CllhJPf--~~ Researchers monUored the groups for signs of ·•abnormal parenting practices," sucb as physical or emotional abuse or failure o( the children to ---------~-----"-"-------thrive . =Not for Fatties TULSA,1 Okla. CAP> -At Oral Roberts ni vr.rsity you shape up, or sbJp out. As part of ita curriculum almied at development ot the "whole person," the Untvenlty, f'<>Unded by ~van1elist Oral Roberts, pressures students to trtm excess fat. Failure to do so could mean probation or. possibly, suspension, said Paul Brynteson, chairman of the health, physical education and recreation department. THE AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES Union has nled 11 75 pa&e complaint with the federal government ~ecking review of the university's Uci 'rl y Barry, ACL'U ex¢W.lve d in kWioma ctty, said : "We think It's C!iicrim .ating &inst individuals with min« health problems. liabilities and imperfeeti~" Upon entering the school, each student is given complete physical examination, includinJ{ a test to determine the amount of lat m the body. If tests show that fat makes up more than 35 percent or a female's weiabt, and 2S percent of a male's weight. the student ls considered obese, and is placed on a "Pound.sOff"program. WHILE ON THAT PllOOJtAM. tbe student ntta(ts ~th the school phy lcJa.n to Jose a pound a eetc. The $lUCient 'bas several d)()tces of how to ao bOUl hi.a wetcht losl, B~ntesoo said. -The atUdent mar take an exercise and weight control class, tu.mine in weekly menus to the lnJtnactor; jou1 a dormitory counsellnt Session in whlcb weight loss la discussed in a group, or try to e wel&bt 1nde~ndenlf9'. .AFJ'EB NEARLY 31~ YEARS. they found no ,.bused children in the control group, bul there were cases ol cbHd abuse in the other two groups -Ule most serious amoo1 the "risk" famllles who had not received sped al attention, Kempe said. As a result, Colorado General now employs four persons who pay at least one home visit to the parents of each child born at the hospital. Extra visits are paid to those who seem to oeed help. Dr. Gray said there Is no "magic 'formula" that allows positive identification or parents who eventually will be child abusers. "A tar OF IT COMES out to be n sort of gut-levcl reaction.·· But Kempe said pediatricians should pa\• attention to the clue's that may surface and 'ihould quest.Jon parents lo brrni! out more clues "You should a~k . 'An· you ha \ mi.: fun w ath the hahy? Arc lht•rc any 1>rohll'ms at horn<'"'' .. he ... aid Gown Raid Collegiates Classier RENO, Nev IA P > wte rught panty raids by fraternities arc getting classier at the University of Nevada-Reno. Instead of arabbang pantie& and bras from sororities during a raid, members of Slstna Alpha EpsUon took formal evenint gowns. The sisters of Trl·Delt were not atnused. They caUed police aft~r lhc raid and the aowns -by then rumpled and soiled, -were returned. The sorority sllters, Ured Of the continual raids, look the matter to a Greek Hartna Board session. The fraternity brothers were ordered to pay for dry·cleanilut of tho gowns and repaJrinc window screens , whlcb they damaaed maktng tbetr late-night. entry. Their president was ordered tO make an otficlal apology to~ Trl·Delts. li:a 10" Pot ")() <)~ -. -.~ Wl'U MORI THAN JUST 4 CAMBA STOQl We .. Soutt'*n Clllfornla'a flrat PhOtograf)hlc Centtt, and thet•'• a. difference. We c•ry mott major brtw1d• ~ ptiotogttph!o eq\llpment like other large dee!••· but, we lllO have nine rtntel odarkrooma on the preen ... With free Instruction. We •• '" the prQC ... ol 1net1UinO • gallery tection tOI' ellhlbllton• Ind for dln>••ng wOi'Jc from Photo conteete that we will t>-holding o well ~ spect.i selection• from our p1troha when urne "'" spac. alloWt ' ·~ . WI MAVI A $lllOUS INTIR•ST PHOTOGIAPMY All oC the atlllf •t Photography Unlimited haa b"!' Involved In ptiotograohy tor a nvmb« of >'""•· W• •• all Vflr/ excited with th• Idea that w. c#'I work at • l•O• photo equipment ur .. cerit• ri not hwe th• dell)' operation come down to futt ~Ing cam•• ~ IN counter to con1utM1"• ~1th ""'' tnt., .. t In Ch~lr • outoom&. 8'lte we're In bulln• to mlM monfV, but we betfeye It la P<>tlibl• to h.V• GREAT PAICl!S *'d lh9W aomo ba91Q reepect for the medium end our cuatomn at the NrM time. ~ SRT 201 fl.7 Rokttor let" 85·210 ZOOM ltnt cadcet bac supw pro CM'Mfl strap photography *" of your chok• up to $6.00 fNe:;rt ! Q ·:...!I !onuors Fnday, October7. 11n Welcome Aboard · t~~~nlor S saUin1 skippers ore back By ALMON LOCKABEY The trend to trailer·boating in recent years - especially among larger power·boat owners and medium slzed sailbo ts has CN!ated some problems which m.lght well bear some careful conalderatlpn and review for traller·boaters J. ln Newport Beach after pla.clng second lo the Bemis Cup finals at Dallas. Tlle Bemip Cup is symbolic: or the national Mercury Marine, a firm that manufactures various slJ:es of trailer boats from small outboards to medium stern-drives, bas made a survey of some of the problems which result from owners takine their trailers for granted two -man salllne ~hampionshlp . The compet.IUon was in 17- foot Rebel Class Sloop:. sailed without spiMakers. The runners-up were Steve Ot.lo and Dwayne Bora ot Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. The winner was a team from M assacbu.setts. , All SO states were represented in tbe finals wbicb consisted of the win~ra of eight or the United States Yacht Racan, Union areas. The BCYC pair represented Area G. havinc won the Remember. in trailer-boat.in& one has to be aware ol highway safety rule5 as well as nautical Rules of the Road. TAKE THE ROLLERS THAT support the boat. How olten have you given yours any ~al attention? lf your trailer bas been in u e for some Ume, the rollers could be Oattened from keel presaure. or corroded on their pins :oo they won't tum. Next time your bo~t is off the trailer. la.ke the time to check all rollers Tor condition and free rotation. A few minutes with a can of shackle lubricant from a marine or automotive store. plus pliers, hammer and extra colter pms can get things rolllne again making.Aaunctung and haulin& out much easier. .-ch amp ions hi p a t : Richmond Yacht Club In • Lldo-14s. SOME TRAILERS USE rollers under the keel and bunks on each side to steady the huU. lf thlngs are adjusted so much or the weight rests on the bunks, the boat wlll roll off with some resistance. Readjust things so more of the weiaht rests on the keel rollers. Thls reduces friction between hull and bunks. Eti son Vachb or Sant• Ana has announced producUon or it ne HilbOat. the El'iscoo /34T racer- Sometimes the p1te-fabric padding on bunks setUes under the boat's weiaht. This pub more weilht oo th. rollers.. Too m\lC.b can tend to flatten them. "' JI yours is a new trailer. let the boat roll off slowly. usinc the winch brake to control it. Watch how the bOat rolls oft, noting any tendency for the keel atta to eome close to sharp metal edaes that couldscarthe bOtton). • • e.ru1 er: desl1ned by Bruce K1nB of Newport YOU CAN nLE Oil &rind down h11h, sbarp points on rOller supports. Marine dealers can 1et you cone-stiaped rollers that fit on the outer ends of lhe roller pins to cover them agaU\St contacUni the hull bottom. The kind of U·shaped plastic edtinC used to trim cockpit edges can be lnstaJled on ed&es or u . sbuped f.tame cross members to cover them and u oid thdr scraplne some of the eel coat off the • . • . • • • • • • . f " • ,.Beach. the new yacht lS an extension of the features round in the Ericson-34, a. proven raciJli ,craft in the Southem California fibereliss. · Manzanillo Race Set for Fiebruaq, The s~ biennial San Ole o to nian llo <MexiCQl.IntemaUonaJ Yadlt nee Ottd by he Di go Yacht Club has' 'bffn c:hcduled to start olf Point Loma. Feb. 4. 1978 rrbe 1,140-mile race will be !>ailed undtr the International Offshore Rule llOR> Mark I Ila handicap rule without modification. according to Ben 1cKesson. chairman ':nt.is s to preser.ve the integnty of the IOR:· aid cKessoo THE RACE. wmcH finishes at th~ plush La~ ff aaJ 11ol.el t llorth of the city of Mantanillo. repl the D e10 to Acapulco nc~whlch was oraanb.ed and nm by SOYC for~ years. EnU1es in the um1 ract will be out to beat the elapSed Ume record or ~ven d~s. 10 hours. 31 minutes Set by the 6S·f()(>t sloop Ragtime out or Long Beach in the inaugural race John Scripps of the host club ha• fl1ed the lint entry for his 89-foot ketch Miramar~ S<:npps' "first entry" is traditional ll$ he alwa)'$ wag flnt ro tue en SACRAMENTO tAP> entry in every Acapulco race. -Toxic cbemic&ls that STRONG INTEREST IS already beine are not blodefradabJe evidenced in the 1978 race by such v•teran offshore can't be sold tor "' chemical toilets in racers as Whistle W\ng. Merlin. Ragtime. Tinsley ·--• hi 1 Licht, Shamrock, Fantasia. Cadenza and Vector. recreatt..._ ve c es or •in addition to the basic reasons (or interest in boats after January 1979 tn California the ManzaniUo race -good competition. unusually Gov. FAn'iund Brown 1 falr winds, balmy temperatures and the Jr said Monday be has opportunlty for excellent return cruising - signed AB 1593 by McKeSson said the fact that the Las Hadas Hotel A 11 em b I y m an e 1 11 bas ~~ lts rates ~Y 50 percent under 1976 is Lockyer, a San Leandro provm& an added lncentive. Democrat, which bans IN ADDmON TO McKesson. Lbe committee the aales of such includes Jack MacAlliter, C?~halnnan; Kelth cbemlcali. McKinnon. starting race comnutlee: Bill Vollmer. 1'~ bUl provides civil finishing race committee; Norm Neeley. escort and criminal penalties v~ls. and Alberto Morphy Jr .• Mexlcan ltalpon. for persons who dump Additional race informaUon may be obtained haurdous waste at by writing Ben McKesison at the San Diego Yacht unautborhed 1ites. Club,lOllAncbora1eLane.SAnl>l 1ot2t08. A BOATING I CAREERS I PEOP.LE Presky Still on Takes Number One Spot on Fr om AP Dlspatche~ El"1s Prei.ley, who dh:d Aug. 16, took over the No. 1 spot In the British pop records ch•rts with "Way Down:· which wai. second last.. week Three Presley albums stayed in the Top Thirty albums ct)arts. where Diana Ross and the Supremes remained on top with "20 Golden Greats." THE FAMILY CIRCUS. By Bil Keane r "Mommy, wlll you tell P J to stop following me around?'' V aloes Govern Switch in Joh By .JOYCE L. KENNEDY Dear Joy<!e: I ba ve a de1ree la eJemffltary educa&Jea With two years ol tead1Ja1 experleece. I am ln&eresied la kno•inl what Jobs mltlt& be open to meodler tban teacblnJ. T.J ., Columbus, Ohio Your values -how you feel about thlnil - should be a key fact.or in considerina oc:cupatlona. whether one is a beginner or a swltch9r. Thla advice sounds simple -"Ob, I knew that.·' you say -but you'd be amazed at the wllo take the Ume to fully CAREERS small number of people(---------] thlnlt through the lifestyle 1mplicollon-; of :i givt.'n ..._ _______ __. ot•c upulion A few concrete example~ will Illustrate "alue!'I matching and mismatching, th~c are adapted from a chart hy Elwood N Chapman an rus book, "Career Search.·· The first occupation noted after ~ach value is.-match. lhe S«Ond a mismatch. OPPOllTUNITY TO HELP OTHERS in dlrttt services -nurse, f11rmer. Outdoor work forester. librarian. 'ob security -poCtaJ ~rker. ac:tor. Need Jor reco1nltlon -trial lawyer, proofreader. Financial reward --stockbroker. SalvaUon Army O(tleer. Creative opportunity writer. cypist. Need for power -polltlclan, tile setter. Maxlmurn letSure time -commercial pilpt, small bu1ineu owner. On-the-job freedom outside salesperson, telephone operator. Humanitarian opportunities -minister, machine operator. Social contact --receptionist, medical researcher. High moral standards -youth worker, gangster. Working and living In a small town - small store owner, computer programmer. Sur . ficlent variety to job -public relations worker • custodian. Opportunity for advancement -junior executive, house painter . DRAW \'OU8 OWN VALUES inventory. check each occupational posstbillty and JOb offer a1atnst it. Whtie &irned at the oJJege nudeot, Cbaprnan·s ..Carett Search" Is a gOod aJl.around look atth• de- ci Joo;nuddn• process. .. fBy mill It's avatJable for SS.45 from 5elence Researth A.Wociates, 259 £. 'Erit St .. 'etaiea10. JU. 60611.) If you decide to ftnd alternate ways to use 1uch teaching tltllll as communicat\nl, or1anllin1 time. and gatherin1 and usina Cacts, you may want to look into becoming a traioer in lndust.ry, or teubln1 adults In continuing education, or working for a youth organlzatlon. THESE SAME SKJLU CAN be applied to such fields as public lnformaUon, ad\'ertls\na. educational safes, personnel, and aovernm nL work.. EX·t.eachera do all kinda of thlnp, frOni aelllnt insurance to opening 'boutique • tr your exit from teachina ls voluntarJ, it'a particularly lml)Ortant to 1ort out your values this tbn, around. READER SERVICE: A Jlmlted tupply or Labor Department••\ popular U·P•ee cbatl, "Toward Matchtna Peraoaal and Job Character1Jtks, •' Is avaUable. To obtain a free copy, enclo$e a 1umh\ed, lt·addreaHd maUU:ta label wlth your request t<> JoyC?e Lain Kennedy at this newspaper. Presley meanwhile reatured in the smites charts lh.rouih the Dutch singer. 1on1writer -11d record producer EdclJe On ~r who won the 1975 Eurovisloo song contest with "utDl·a·Oong " Ouwen.5, under the name ot Danny Mirror. crashed inlo Ioth place in the singles charts wlth the song, "l Remember Elvis Presley," which Ouwens wrote u a tribute to the Kinat o! Rock 'n' Roll, It .was 20th a week aso Puerto Rican nationalist Andrea . . ( Fl«ueroa Cordero was .... ..;._.._._...;=..;....;;...;;..;...~~ released Crom prison in Springfield. Mo., shortly after Presldeot Carter cut his sentence to. the 23 years he bas serv~ for his part in an armed attack on Coocress. ~ "He had a big smile and shook hands with me when I gave him the news ... said Dr. P. J. Ciccone, director of the federal medical facility where the terminally Ill Cordero spent the last few years. Cordero has cancer and a White HoUle spokesman said Carter commuted his 25-to 75- year sentence beC?ause or his physical coodltion. The three other Puerto Rican nationalists with whom he was convicted after the 1954 attack are still in prison. • About 40 mioutes remained to tioth performances when blackout-eaused datkncu engulfed Boston audiences esUmated at aboUt 1~ persons in each theater. After the lights went ow.. Barbara B•lll. •tar Of "Same Time, Next Year", tOok Ume oul rrom bet perlormance to deacrl~ the coming action and costumes to the audiences. After bis performance. "Dracula" star Fruit Laa'dla jokingly told the audience, "Obviously there is a power greater than mine." • Prince Charles wlU bC given a "crash course oa the Soutb'' "'" when he ls guest ol honor -at the Fox Theater Oct. 22 for a presentation entiUtd .. Allanla Arts Salute the Prince at the Fox.·· The 22-year-old ,_.mce of Wales, be\r to the lhrone ol Great Britain, will visit Georg1a Oct. UC' and, amon1 other lhines. see a . Vnlvenlty of Geotlla football game. After the game he wm au.end \hia •bow. d velopedatthe~uestoft.he8rit1ah ovem ent.:. The show wlll Include Southern vaudevllllan aonp sqcb as '.'Basin Skeet" and •'Sweet Georgia Brown," a multi.screen alide -show on the siibts and :Jounds of Atlanta. and instruction on how to speoalc and dress a Southerners do. AT YOUR SERVICE I ORANGE COUNTY I OBITUARIES ·~fl Yf@M[( ®®rr\YJD©® ':GOt o ? Then ""It to Pat °'4ma. Pat \Oill ctd rid ICQ>f, tta~ the o~ and oct10n uou need lo i'oltll!! f~1e1 bl QOlltm"'"' and businea~. Merit '°"' qvcdlQnl to ~Ct OUnn, At Yow ~ce. Orange CO<Slf DaUv RniJt. P.O, Boz 1500. Cosio Meco, CA IUU. Al ~ 1111~• OJ pom~ wall be onawer~. bait phOud ~UJr'U1 or kiters not Including the r•adn-11 f1lll uam1.oddr•!.t ond ~u hot.Ira• phone iwm&rcamiol ~coil.ridnfll TIU3tolumnap~cmtkri· lu f.rc• Satin'doll• :· • DEABPA.T: Willi be in utroUbte\fldonot •.rfUe a fictitious ume statement. fOI' my new small business? I have obt.alned a ~~ UCtme,. but rm tryir\atokeep expenses down as muctiaa poss1· ble. Santa Ana Old Courthouse Tours Set Oranie County's venerable old courthouse buildlnl 1n Santa Ana will be open to the public for toun Oct. 25-29 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Admission to the .annual open tlouse ts Cree. The modlfled·Gothlc style structure at lhe comer of Santa Ana A venue and Sycamore Sveet contains a restoration of an early Superior Court. complete with the courtroom, judae'a chambers. jury room and court reporter's office. THE COUNTY Historical Commission is planmn, other exhibits depicting the county's past. and tour auldes wlll ~ able to speak on the history- of the courthouse, built Jn 1900 with hand.quarrie~ bloc: ks of M Arizona .1andstone. Plea Change Gets Pair Prison Terln Two men beine tried in Oranee County Supenor Court for tho murder of the man shot •l a Garden Grove party chanced their pleas and have been sentenced to state prison terms. Judge Richard were wounded during Beacom accepted the gunfire that erup\ecl as a guilty pleas and Gar«s.n Grove party sentenced Marlo LoJ>'a broke up. Hernandez, 23, Garden lt was alleged that thf Grove, to 10 years to life occwsedJalr were OC· on bis conviction of cupants a car that was aecond•dtgree murder driven slowly past a and attempted murder. eroup of people leaving The old courthouse looks eaaentially lhe same today as it dld wh~n it was constn.acted by J , Wlllls Bite and Christopher McNeil for a total cost of ab0utl92,000. The only difference ls that an ornate oup()la on the roof w~ removed aft~ belnar badly dtma1ed ln the 1933 Long Beach earthquake. Court acllvlty w•• phased out In the old building upon completion of the new county courthowse in 1968. During its years of acUve court use, the courthouse 1lood mute wttn~ to more than 2SO~OOO cases u tbt county arew in population from 19,'IOO at Ute turn of the century~ 1.ainllUon anlya ~are ~ater. THE COUNTY'S court aMa1s Uat numberoas landmark cues and spectacular tnaJa. The Bathaate declalon, wlllcb prevented lhe Irvine Company from dalDJit.ni SaDUaao Creek for UTigatioa water, wu a key water rt1ht1 declalon reached in the old courthouse. THE WIDPSTOCK old drillin1 case aimed at protecting property owners •cainsl slant drilling was also decided there. Heireu Beulah OvereU and her boyfdend, Bud Gollum, were acquitted of a Chara• ot dynamltblc Miss Overell's parent.S to death on their yacht to Newport Harbor ln one of the more sensational trials held ln the old court. I Newport Demist To Plead Re ordered a prison the party. Anthony term of one to lS years Balandran, 24, Garden tor John Martinez. 20, Grove, was killed and flso of Garden Grove. three others were who pleaded 1u11ty to w o u n d e d w h e n A Newpof1 Beach voluntarymansJa~bter. Hemandezopenedfire. dentist ccused of beine ';!~~~5;~~!iil~ Both men were arrest-It was testified that the in poaHISlon Of Hlecal-"'. ed Sept. 25, 1976, shortly haJI of ballets missed weapons and eicploslves Attet one man waa kllled their real ta.rret. a man has been OrdiNcl to offer aqd three other people whohad*°lnvolvedln bis plea to felony LBMan Receives Probation ~Laguna Beach man hos been sentenced to \.hree years summary probation ln Harbor Judicial District Court arter pleading no contest to charges of receiving stolen property Michael Anthon} Ayers, 32, of 266 V1eJo St.. was arrt>:>ted Aui:. 24 in his Newport Beach shop bu undercover d~· tecllves who elalmed Ayen bought ltema Crom them after he WH told the items were stolen. Pohcc contended that Ayers· shop at 348j V1u Oporto served a!I a market place for youngsters who were stealing coins and sll ver pieces from their parenta and nelahbors. a fight with Hern&Ddn. cbarses Oct. o jn Balandran was des· Orange OOunb' ~ crlbed as an innocent c~ byatandu. Judge H. Warren Knl&ht set the plea date •for Dr. Anthony ~~,;um Frederick Wolcott, •t, of ":' J ''"r' ., 1918 Irvine Ave. The de· fendaat js free on hJa Sched:lJled, proml~ to appear. WOLCOTT WAS~=====:;:::;=:;:::~J ' ' T h c C r i s i s o r booked hast February by E u r o communism · Newport nench police Western Euro(X'an Polit· who said they seli~d a l<'S, 197i" will be tht' cache of Illegal wtiuponi; topk of a l'ympo5ium at Including maehtnu guns, l'CJrvmt-Mondny. 2:; c:1scs or 1llcg1tl Tl11.• ~c:-;s11>n, open to fireworks, supplies of th~· public without' M80 mshtuy prart1C.-l' charj.!t'. will be held m .:rcnadc!'; an•I ,,..,·c•r11I tht• Wr1t1111? Center, pounc:l1 or block 11owder Hoom J:?6 of Humanities and explosive chcm1c:al' OfCscc Uutldin&: al 2 p.m. Police SQh.l lhc:lr under Apon.<;Ot'Shlp ot the Jn formant• were sax UCI Committecon~t•l youne bur&tl•n who ThnuJ:ht wen! apprd>endcd uftcr Spt•akcr:. are Dr. Dr. Wolcott rep.->rted tht: Stnnlc' Aronowitz. t;CI theft of n i:un. J> r I) r (' s s 0 r 0 r com11aratwc culture. Dr. --------- Jonathan Wiener. UCJ a ssocrntc professor or history, and Dr. Andrew Fecnbcrn, pror~r of phllosopb}' .at San Diego Slale t 1 nlventty. "'--_,__..____.;;_.__,_--.,-1_ • DAl\.V PILOT WASlUNGTON fAP> -Tho Thun>day to instruct its staff to and luggage carriers. Consume~ Product Safety work with industry in developina The carts have cauaed injury to Commlsslon has adopted ia the voluntary label procram. children left unattended in them. 'Voluntary i>rogrrun to p\ace or who hang on to the s¥Jes or warning labels OR roc:eey carts THE COM l~ION said there play around them. to caution parent• about the were an estimated 12,500 injuries The co m mission s t a CC Clangers the carts po6e to last year associated-with a estamated there are several children. category o! devices that includes million arocery carts in use six HOMEOWNERS! Do you have fire & thott insurance on your personal belongings? ,Our 20ftt Year ' ,, ·~ ~=I: Phone 548-5554 ~ •RABBITT. INSURANCE• 1914 Baibor Blfd. COit& 11 .. The Pll!'el voted unanimously grocery ca,rts, shopptna tarts or St\ven days a week. --~--~~.....-~~~-:....;....;...~~~~~,;_.-.-~~~-""!'~~~-:....~-:---~...:;:...--..__ ___ ~__,~--....;...;..;,.-~-:-~~-.::~:-:---,........1~~:_...~~~~:...,_;:...,..:,...~~~;..;..,. :By WIU.JAM GLOV~a • NEW YORK <AP> - "Hair," the musical that made a lot OC headlines a few years aso~ is a1aln on Broadway. mosUy a quaint though very nolSy dated curio, "I wanted to see it Bf ain" ls prod•cer :Micha.el ButJ~r I explanalkln 61 w~ be brought the hippie-er,a, properly back to tb • BUtm<JnTbeater. where it cJosed five years ago alter n hn tve run ol l, 750 performaneea. DURING ns pei'iOd or prima:J bloom, ·•Hair" r•• iJtt.o n ort of.-..,. .. ~ .... ._._..,, ceriilorShip problem• as duplicate veraion1 t o u r e d t b e l.Ja n d displayine such heady novelties as dlm·Ut frontal nudity, l)C)litical profanities and the possible delights of pot. Such matters by now scarcely twitch an -eyebrow, and that ls a basic problem for the producUon that opened w ednesday ma ht after protracted preview weeks of •ery feeble boxotfice ktlon. ) of the focal points of thf Uvfnc is the real ScotUsb bqplpe, Dr. Doan plays. ··or u'Jed, to __,._,___ " ..... no.A aakl. "He't ICl9t H • U::t ff the treasures are tbl.QCI tbe d 'f'patienta have made tor blm gifts. such n wire sculptures, quilts d otfler worJa of art. "These mean great deal to him," his wife com-en~. ···e _have never bad a decorator," be said of the house. ''We do It ether. We pickup a thlnc here and re;thinp we want to live With. "We IOYe our home," abe added -l daO-. I {. ,. .. Ill ONLY PM.OT ' r: 1 ~ get kids in- terested in something.· --------~~ -- a Tic [ break up the ~ion of top seeds int.o the final elgbt. In other Thursday matches, Chris Evert eased put Kathy Ku}'keodall. 8-3, 6-1; Vireinla Wade took Janet Newberry, 8-3. 6-4; BW1e Jean King defeated Francoise Durr, 6-2, M , and Ksry Reid beat Vlrllnla ltulid • w. s.-3. Tb97 are joined In the ~ by earlier wtmiers DlaJIOe Frombolt&, Matttna NamitilOva and BettY Stove. ,,.,...r .. ..,... JtAANAPALI, Hawaii Sarad)r Ya~er defeated TelT7 Moor, f-3; U; 1-1.10 the ~oo.ooo JslaDd Holidays pro tennla clame '1bUricla1. J4Qtr Will face Raul Ramlrel todaJ. AbO In u,e qaarterflJiaJa will be Brim Gottlrt~ Harold Solomoa ud Johb Uofd, B1DAVBCVNNING1LUI ... ...., ........ w M lajured t.allbact 1'bo wasn't SappOMd co •tart. WUUe Glu.a ...... oa guJte • 1bow Tb~--. Tbe PoUDtaia Valley Rltb aemor ~ three toucbdowm aQd rulbed tW 158 )'Arda .. ti» Barons recorded tbetr tblrd •tral.Ost football lhiitout.' 11.0. over Kennedy Waii 011ta !'alma at Weatem Hilb In Anataetm. Gitteaa aufteted a pulled let muscle In wt .TbUradav•a· 60 vie~ oter, Katella: (Anaheim> and~ the Wilek eoacb Btu~ Pickford Mid Gltteili OUJG no( start,: and WOUld ~ 1149!t UIDltect 1lCt1'Jri lf tbe "'Batons n.iod lllm. But USO fieet tallblek told bis coach be wu rUd>-10 pit)', and Pickford ~cited him lnto the startln1 ~I>· Gftteis sot both of rauni.m ValleJ't tou'cbdow iJi tbe ant bait. Fi r the lll"lt be merely capped a typical FV drive by ~ OYel' from the one-yard .. Southern Cal ls supposed to ban tbe areatat runner tbeY've had 1lnce O.J. Simpson ln a younpter named Charles White, they've rot • couple or other rut flo e runners, the best quarterback they've had in years and one pass receiver who bas caught puses in something like A kef play dW"i118 the drf ye was quarterback Doui Tbompsori'• 21.yard pus to Bob Stantcm, at.mi Fountaln Valley a nm don at Kennedy's 20-yatd line. It was the Barons' lint play oftbeiame. . • After Glttenl plunsect !Ito the end zone the enUre Fountain Valley equad naabed Oilto \b6 field to celebrate. It re.uttect bi flve.;yant penalty on tbe c kJckotr ror delay of the 1ame. Gltt.01' M~ond toucbdown camt wJt11 Just uoder Uir~e mlnutal temalDi.DI Jn tbe hlf. On a 1lmple draw play, he slipped out of ttie handa ot \wo woUld·be tacklers and faked out two others, 1prliltln1 '2 yards for theacore. Dave Lenon drilled bolbe PAT ~lckt .tter each touchdown and Fouataln Valley led lC·O at the bait. • GJtten1 hH now acored 1 t· touchdowns in four 1amet, e&!lly tbe beltm Oran1• County. He ba.. 35 careertquc:bdowns. .. I o.llJ "ile.t ,..,... bw Let Pat• CAPO VALLEY'S BRAD PARKER PASSES AS FERNANDO SALAS (17) WAITS TO BlOCK. Cougars Top Foe, 23-6 Chari.es Sparb Win With 2 TDs By llOGER CARLSON Of--~~U.ff Robin Charles shook loose for a pair of second half toucbdOMlS and the Capistrano Valley Hlih Cougars rolled lo a 23-6 non. league football victory before 2,.200 at San Clemente mp. The victim was Aquinas <San Bernardino) High as Charles, • who canied only three times in the secood half, ran f Ot a 33-yard touchdown the first time he carried the ball, then capped it with a 39-yard acorinJ run ln the fourth quarter. Luke Jobnson, a 22S·pound seolor, Ignited what had been a lethargic Coulars offense with a .O·yard field aoat with 3:11 spent ln the third quartet after Bendy eowm bed.recover«l afu.lbbl~ SaddeDlJ the A'luin• c«ense, wtllc:b bid dominated a IC'Cftleu ftrit balf. was bottled up by the CovPrl. and tbi WhlMn toOk P051eA1Ga at theAqall)U 0 after &Dll-Y..-dwnt. Two pla,Js later Charles bounced off a Would·be tackler and need 31 yanis f« the TD. A1aln Aquinas could not auat.ln ita drive, 1ave the ball uP , at tbe Capo Valley 32 and Charles. quartuback Brad Pi.i'ter and Fernando Sa111 weal to~ . Five plays later aia?Jes bnala:e looae f« Ida •yard aeamper aDd with Jotinson'• ftrat of two PATs, itw•lfS.O. The °::Jan dl coach ,itlll Cunerty ed some lclna later wtlb a ftv•yard TD nm by Sean Jeriktns. Tbe heralded passin1 coinbbWJon ol Mark Knowlton to John Steinmann of Aquinas didn't really mat.erialite. Knowlton completed silt of 18 passes for 60 yards. his last completion a 13-yard scoring strike to Steinmann. While Charles' run.9 won it in the second half, it was a Randy Collins' interceRtion, Dean Geoter's fumble recovery and the deep punUng or Salas \bat kept Capistrano Valley aflolt In the rocky flnt half. Tbe win ls Capo· third In lour 1tan.. ift Its big:;~ fOf' a CIF ~aJO«• free. Jane\ entry, Cll#MI .. I. ., l'MUr .. ,,..,..,,. JI Co• ' Tealft 0 Te1•1 "•nter " • • , • • '° 1t CV • t 0 1 ' HI • u ~ W1 .. ..... l.0 .... au . , i.1 •> JO •IOO u "''· .a» Vikings, Loara Vie SiX Marina &arten OUi • Wltb a defeme cris>Dled bJ ~ ' Jurl•, Marina HlJh\ of, Hunt· inst.On BMCh faces Loai'a Blab of • Aal.Wm toalMbt lD • ~:30 llCICl• lea1ue football · tame at Westmmsttt Hi&h. • Silt ol the 11 starters on last week'• delenH are •ldeUned for artna. One of them, Raddy Bra.Delon, wu a by two-w~ at1rter atc:enter and Unebaclter. "Mariila bad some aood thiqa "om& for ll untll lt got I01Qe key injuries lb1s past week," saya L9ara coach Herb Hilt. "But they at111 have an outatandtnl running back we're a little worrled about in Ore« Karman.'· A1afn.tt Los Alamitos Saturday Kannan gained 111 yardJ In ll carrlei, and the previous week he amasaed 22$ yard.I on just is cam• for an aver are of u yards per crack. · Fortunately for Karman and Marine. the offenalve llDe re- mains Intact. with the exception ot BrandoD. wbo will be replaced by Rieb Polkinihome. On defense. however. the Vlk· lnp have bed to find ,.place. con~ wblle Workman 1115 his team'• coacem ls ln executing with precltlon, cuttina away fumbles, !ntercepUone and penalties. · Seurer ta better than his stats (20 compl Uons In 59 attempts tor 286 yarde). Man1 of his pa11e1 ba\'e betn dropped, althouah Edlloft rtcet\iitl are typt~af of Chuaen ac•· Amona Seurer'• tu••t• · tonltht ts Jeff lbd • who alio ooe ~ the 1tand0ut1 in a aeeon· dary 'Whteh h abown ability and 1 lveneaa. I .. lD..U for both tackloa, the DClle •uiicl, die left end, a linebacker andaaafetJ. ~ boWever, doeu't bave tbe of offense that Instills tear in tM hearts ot oPJ>08lng coacbM. The Saxons have 8COl"ed Juat oae touchdown in each ol three games. l01ln1 to Lakewood 32·1, Western Hilb of Arilhelm 7-f, andN~Harbor~T. Marina comes Into toruaht's ••me Wl\h a 1-2 record, bavlna beaten Maanolla Hlah of Anaheim 27·7 In between loues to Cclrona del Mar.11•14, and IA>& AlamltOI', SS.7. Loara 's main problem, •ccord· tng to Hill, ls tta inabllity to ade- quately defense Jona passes. MlrlM ........ u...,. ~ w.-. T ~ LUI"' ,. ttl ,_, ,..,k/ft9JWll'lleL RT~ Mllt~ LT RO ........,.. HO , .. K.-191 NG C ,..._,.....,. ltO 110S Tiil• ltT LG tfWll Ill '10 ~.....-llUl LT Tlltbt JOS 11S Kln9 LI H ...._ 11' ns Klftll LI 09 Sent• 17S 1'1 ....... \.I Ta ..., * ''° CNllrtlf~ c:a ... KtnlWt 1U ,.. ... <• ~L. ..,..,,_.., UJ ltJ T1'lrf SS tU LA«ftl , S Jim Cr1u 1tts the 1tlU'tln1 nod ' at tailback aaa1n. althouah Rob Mtlucky llJO niures in that area for the Charier•. Mat,r l>el , meanwhtJe, f~aturea quarterback Tim Met.r Otl .......... u....,. . ~ ......... .. ,.._ HO 215 ,,_.,... lT Lf f,GtM'f ltS •s GI-l.G t.• """"' HO 'U' Mftllllltt ft() c ~, ... 1 T RT ltO °:"' ,. 17S S...,.. t.• "T ' , .. 1U :r· \.. .. --,.. ,.. 1.8 o• O'"""• ,. ,. MNtf •• lta l> 0-ltl ,.. uo ao... <• R. o.tt.,.., "' " H . Of'.--. "° , .. .......,,. $ : ·.~F_o_o_r_e_A_L_L __ 1_c_R_o_s_s_.c_o_u __ Nr_H_v __ 1_w_A_T_E_R~P-O_L_o ____________ ~~------------~----------------------~-day-._0c_t_obe_,_,_.,_en ________________ :__:__~ I' G ~· ... • " . .. .. . Huntin8lon Beach Hi1h coach Dave Van ~btke expecta hla vanity rootball team will 1et I liJU8~l test 10 far this sea.son as the Oilen host Alan\H.os Hilb tonl1ht at 8. lt'I •battle or the undefeated. For HunUnston Beach. It's the fll\al tun"-'p before the Sunset Co iue campalp betln• next Friday. "IAI Al mitoe bu a really outstandJnt de· lenH," Van lloorebeke says. "TMy p.-obably have t belt seccodary we'veaeea up to tb1J DOlnt." That could apell ttoubte for tbe Oilers alnce lhey've relied heavily on their passtu attack. Despite the hlgbly touted aefenae. Van Hoorebtke1ay1 he plana to stick with the 1ame plan wb h bu made bi& team unbeaten. "We pass about 18 times • &amt and we ·11 do th•t aiiin tCJlllgbt. moat ~y." tbe toach sa~ "I antlc~e •pretty &ood came." . Loa Alarnltol has 1lven up an nera1e of 4.3 points per came while HunUngton Beach ls scoring at acllpot28per1ame. LOI Alamllol coacb m Rodarte aays hla main concern ls Hantlngton Beach quarterback Marco Painanelll. • "He's the ke, to ttieir whole attack,•• Rodarte saya. '1He'Ja~1tpasnrllldhenansw4U,too.·And their oflenal linemen aren•t any alouches, either.'' Rodarte says hit team la Ju.st atartint to Jell . Jt bea\ Hundneton Beacb•a cro.utown rival, Marina ffilh, by a 38· 7 score Saturday. "We've only aot two retumlng atarters on or. ren5e bvt we've tot aeven on defense... Rodarte says. "Defense ls thestren;th of our team." -~'·';.\' '\ • j On• of the most common • • ' J ' . errors In golrina is the ten· , dency \osw1y the upper body \ • ,,..· ... f \ 'l ' 1: 1 '~ durlna the twin&. Thit lateral y,..~90.: J ' l ., · sway Ina must be avoided •t ':'~, \ ' 1.\ l au coats if you want lo act \" ~ 1tra1Pt, poworru1 shots. This , 1s why IO m1ny &olf expert• ' will tell you to keep your \ bead ltHdy as you swin&. • '·t'\•.• .• ' Don•t overdo it. You don't want your body to be tcnte. Natllr.lly, there will be 10me 1h1ht movement of the !lead, even wben you keep your eyes steadily oo the ball. One Uttle trick that I have recommended ls to point your nose at the ball. This sound~ a hit atranae, but it helps you remember to keep lhe head steady and your eyes on the ball. Better shots will result. ll . -((\ .. , •••. u ...... ,,,.., ....... Girls Tennis, Cross Country '0----1 l I ·---..r • SAN BERNARDINO -l'ony C:impora hopes the years of losint·toot· ball 1,llt San Bernardino Valley College art ov~- and it's quite possible thd1are. , Carppora, a fotmer head coach at the University of Pa~lfl~ took over the Indiana sliding football program laat year and eutded San Bernardino to a 5-~ record (4·3 in Misaion Conrer~ce >. And the Indians have picked up where they left off in '76, winnlna two or three. They play Std· dleback Saturda)' rilatit <7 :30> at the Orann Show Bowl, here. "We thlnk we've made some proaress,.. sa Cam))Ol'a, "'*t it bu to be relative to tile rest or theteasue." Tbe lndlans e>pened the aeuoo with a 1'.0 loss to hi&blY·rate11 Santa Monica, then defeated Los Angeles CC 10.6 and LA Southwest 14·10. "We've played pretty well and we're improv..;r 1n1. The defense particularly hH done a ~ood job for us,.. says Campora. But he admits the defense will get ~ solid test Saturday nlCht ·'Off the pre-season games. Saddleback would have. to be .uted the t.eam to beat in the conference,•• ho 1ay1. W1WA• JENNINGS BRYAN H£LD FORTH FROM AN UPSTAIRS WINDOW Eart 8-bd, 'Cuatodlaft Of Tradition' •t Country'• OldHt Inn THE HOUSE COMMERCE Committee had been acheduled to vate on a resolution to overrule Adam:s Thunday, but the com· miUee did not have a quorum and could not act. The coromit[ee ls not scheduled to mte a&aln until WedDesday. Even Ir It votes out a resolution then, it would have to go to the Ho~e Rules Committee to get clearance for fl~ action "It's virtually impossible" tor the resoluUoo to corne to a House vote before the deadline, a con· gressional $ourCe said. MEANWBILE, THE Senate Ghosts Grace Old Inn .'lt.cJP..L,!.~ ~.~ 1 RHINEBECK, N.Y . ·America'~ oldnt inn is just where it deserves to be, in the l_mMapd.tbeHudson Valley. Anyone who hu seen the HudsocJ Valley !fp~~ it was de- li&Deid b,Y poeta;~taln slopes easma • bardea of toUaee down to the wet Ups of the river. Anyooe wbo has seen the valley bi October mows it ls what God bad in miDd wbeia be-decided \Q>- on autumn. 'It Isn't Comfortable,' But It's Friendly AMERICA. ) least seven weeks' notice." Sacb is tbe appeal of tbe Beekman Arms, est. 1700. .. 'There's aometbing about this place, a warmth, a benevolence, that bas nothing to do with us," Bebo said. You're standing where somebody named Charles back ln 1894 signed the guest register on behalf of himself "and eight Indians .. YOU'RE STANDING where William Jennings Bryan used to hold (orth from an upstairs win- dow, where Horace Greely put up on weekends in the country. where Franklin D. Roosevelt wound up every political cam· palgn with an election eve blast. Thoee kind 0£ Chosts don't fre- quent the Marriott. that an inn in Sudbury, Mass .. makes the same claim. But he says the rival claim is naw4id by the fact that the inn once burned down and was rebuilt "WHAT YOU SEE here, en-compassed by those four fireplaces -the lobby, dining room, tap room -that structure was here from the be1iAnln1. rrom 1700. l hope it always stays justlike 1t is." All those 1bosts hope so too . .. Our bartenders and waitresses and chambermaids are not polished pro£essloftals. Service isn't always the best. But in our din.lng room and Jap room .... ...._.~"-tbere ls an atmosphere of ;trtendlinesa you just don't find in O&hers. I can·~explaln it." Earl Bebo knows that. He was a Marriott executive in Boston before he decided, last February, thal tnovinl from a 433-room hotel to an 18-room inn was a step up. I CAN. JTS ALL thou ghosts. • When you ltand under thole low ceilings ln the Beekman Arms you're standlni where Q~ W8$blncton atood. and Aaron Burr and Lafayette and Benedict Arnold and Alexander HamiltoD, and where, even before those old heroes and de:Yils were born, post riders bet een New York and .AJ~y ~ t6 dl1'0 thelr bones and rinse tbe1I' throats wtth eoncoc· llo~ heh as Whistle Belly Vengeance. a mixture ol bitter beer. molasses and bread crumbs heated with a fireplace poker. .. THB SYSTEMS ARB tbe same, bow to oroer efnc:ielltl.y, deal with auppllers. But I have a special obllgatJon to this place. and not justi to its areblt.edu.re. SO thete are dll!ereoca nm· nlng lt. .. For instance, a corporate hotelman would find our c:tinb>g room twnover appalllog. ~e tend to Una• over dinner tieA. two boun, three, four. Well. that'• wha.t IDUes thls place tbb place. I'm not just the c:uJtod.lAUi of an Inn, but Of a ttaditloo." Claiming to be the n•don'a oldest inn la euler than provirig it. and Barl BebO adm011tledJei. Ex-Irvine Co. Execs Unite DAILY PtLOT ITS MAXIMUM capacity will be 2.5 megawatta, barely enough to supply power to one or two large office buildings. But ol· fie~ hope the test wlll make laraer·scale battery storaae 'Ol electricity feasible by 1985 by US· ing enough battery cells to cover: halt a clcy block. Tbe goal is to develop a battery sy&tem that can atore enough energy and be di$charged and recharged thou.aanda of times durinC lts 20-year lite to help utilities supply power durin1 - STOCKS I MOSKOWITZ Friday, Octoti.r 7, 1977 llN COMPOSffE TRANSACT.IONS World Profit• ......... ~ .... QK"-\1 ....... ...i1111tltllt. • , r ~} r Cl) THE MUPP&TS l:<JO 8 Cl) WONDER WOMAN A ..n. of ttrang• oocurrenc:.e In tM mysterloul e.tmuda T* angr. thrMtena a nYCleet teat• Ing 1tatlon, and Wandel Wom- an 11 pitted agaln1t an unacruplous weapon• dealef (Charles Ciotti) Who Melt• to control the area. Q FAMILY FEUD 8 MOVIE ** ''Proud And Damned" (1972) Chuck Connors, JON Gr•co. Five Amerlo•n• COC\Mnt, out of fear, to f1Qh1 for • • Latin Amwlcan dletator. (2 hrs.) 8 tll DONNY ~MARJE Gu.ta; Robert Young, Pw.11 Lynde, Nell 8edaka, MIN America -Susan Pettctns. a JOKER'S wn.o CD CAROL BURNETT ANO FR.IENOS • MARCUS WELBY, M,O. Dr. Welby's daUOhtet ,.,,.ms from South America wanting an abortion t>ecaute ahe haa been expoaed to rubella. • ID WASHINGTON WEEK INREVIEW a~u MOvtE IMred "*"Orlell and aeparate llYel of eec:h member. FlRINGUNE tO:OO •NM A Sitl5CIAL KIND OF FATHER A caretU1 •xamlnatlon of the probltm ol a tethe<leaa hoine. lnckldlhg the •tOtY of a young man Who waa tor* to klll hi• own father. I!) MOVIE ***Yt "Brief Enoounter" (19<16) c.ita Johnaon, Trevor Howard. A mature. mll'l1et1 woman auddenly find• th9 beginnings of an anllr with a chance m.tlng. 10'.30 8 MARY 1YLER MOOR6 Rhoda tafta In IOve wtth • a&JO. ceeaM man wM l\aa ftltlQMd l\i. IUCtatl\'9 po9tltlon to •tudy to become a for.et ranger. ••NEWS • MOYie "~ Of The World" "TheBond" 11:0088.(1)0 NlWS ~D DMOW! **li "Valde% 11 Comtn~· (1971) Burt LancMttt, Suu.n. Clark. The murdetw of an In~ cent bled< man runa Into trdu- ble when he attempt• to ~ the man•• widow by taking \f> • ootllcltoft. (2 hra.) D ABCNEW8 • ILOVELUCY :'ILuc:y Goes To Mont• Catlo" *** "Fate Is The Hunter" (19&4) Glenn Ford, Nancy Kwan. An all'llne'• man tne. to clear • pilot'• Mme by ,... en~ng a tatel crutt. (2 hrs.) D CONCENTRATION I CROSS-WITS • FOMVEA FERNWOOO Wend'/ mak• a daaperate effort; Lor.tta l\aa • secret ,that Charlie doeen't llke; 9eano<t almoet klll• Penny. / ti) PEARY MASON I LET'S MAI<~ DEAL MACNEIL I CEHRER REPORT ID WALL ST~ WEEK "Th• Man From Dreyfua" Guest: Monte J. Gordon, Direc- tor of Research, The Dreyfus Corporation. "The Cue Of The Start'9d Stalllon" A prize race hor• I• taken .. payment for a 1110rt· gage, and Muon II called.Jn to help. a!) NEWPORT HARBOR ART MUSEUM 9:00 8 Cl) CBS MOVIE Cl) TO TELL THE TRUTH "Escape From Bogen County" (Premiere) Jaclyn Smith, Mltch- eU Ry1n. Abe Rand, Investiga- tor tor the attorney general's office. ii Ullgned to build a C8M against Ambler Bowman, • powerful polltlcal CZllr. Bow. mM laughs at elf attempts to unM9t tum unUI Rand ~ hts wife hoping ahe'I testify against him. 7:30 8 AlJ....STAR ANYTHING GOES 11:308 Cll M•A•S•H "EJectta Wom1111 I Dyna Girt v•. Ark1t I c.ptaln Marwl" "Chief Surgeon Who?'-when Hftkeye i. appolnu.d chW aurgeon, FfW'k ~ and I NEWLYWED GAME 0 HOLLYWOOD SQUAAE8 ' • general (Sotrell Brook•) cOm., &t.-• the P-=-• nut farm and Hawkwy9 a gaella. (R) • THE BRADY BUNCH Carol. beleWlg her daughtet ...., .... cold. keeps her home from echoOI. D TOtaGHT • A.DAM-12 80 ABCMOVIE TM offtcln hendle a burglary at a rfdlng IOhoo4 owned by a fotmtr Western movie •taT. "Black M.tet Baby" (~ !ere) Unda Purl, o.ai AmU Jr. A shy, unaophlstlcatl'ld girt from a 11rtet Italian famlty find• her· Mlt pregnant and dr8Wn Into a vicious adoption racket. Host Jd:'t!Wrf car.on. ~ Phylll• Newman, Oo~thy Fuldhelm. e LOVE. AMERICAN 81YU! "GUiity Conaclenc:. ., Big Surptlee .. fB 2JTOHIGHT eO BARETTA / GD VOTER'S PIPELINE "()renge OOW!ty In Wahing-D lRONSIOE "Nothln' For Nothln. •• A •treet- wlM ntn.)'Mr-okf, who'• been outamerttng cope and ctooka alJk• to help feed hts brottier. and ...... lock• horns with ton'' Ed Brown'• reunion with hla '°"'* ~ durlng .,, .,...ult lnv.atlgatlon sours wMn her In~ wet~ BINttL(R)~ liblent .. ,.,.....,... \ MSWGRIFAN NeW8 MACNEIL: I LEHAl!R • MAACtJ8 WEl.llV, MA The IM9 of Dr. Wfllbl• Mii' Cfl"idtoo\ Ind «Mugh1• .. ~ t.,,...ied ---of her eirpoei.n to rut.IL e VISIOHS ''Iowa" A brtef f8"IUy reunion of three geMtatloN r811'981a 1M WEEK S.by" (1981) 81 JBBRY BUCK LOS ANGELES (AP -Edward J;errmann 1oes from tbe oval ofllce in W asblngt.Qo to tbe diamond in Yankee st.adiwn on bis latest television film. Herrmann, who was Presldent Roosevelt in t.be splendid "Eleanor and Frank.lin" }'>resentatlons, etches a fine portrayal of baseball's Lou Gehrig in "A Love Affair: The Eleanor and Lou Gehrig Story ... "I do less of an l.nperaonaUon here because there's not as much material," said Herrmann. "I'm not as physically close to Gehrig u I wu to FDR." He said be met with .Mrs. ~hril for guidance. "I WAS TRYING to 1et hold ol the quality, trying to get her to tell me tho 'things abe wanted brouttit ouL Hls honesty and simplicity are cllfflcull to define. There were no quirks, no ciRaret.te holder, no hat ... Hernnann, ~. said he also eonsult- ed one of bis baseball idols, Hank Greenberg. "His recollection was almost as a feelln1," be said. "I tried to jog his memory of Gehri1 at t.be plate. He said be had a serenity at the plate. He never moved when the ball whlzud by. Willie Mays µsed to jump back. Gehrig would Just un bis chin. "Babe Ruth used to bit those blgh flying home runs. Gehrig would hit it off like a shot." As the Utle suggests, ll ls more ot a love ~ than a itport.s story.· It traces their love from bls days of glory with Babe Ruth to hi! lo.Ing batUe with an Incurable disease. GEHR.JG'S CAREER with the New York Yaokees was cut abort while he was aUll in his 30i. He died in li41 '4 amyotrophic lateral sclel'Ollis, a rare affliction now known 11 "Lou Gehrli'• Disease." The tw~hOUr movte will be seen at 9 p.m. SUnday on NBC, Channel 4. Blythe Danner 11 Eleanor Gehrig, the young flapper who b~aks down ttie ballplayer's reserve Ud remains by hl• side to the end. She also appean as an older Eleanor in lbe vast new Yankee Stadium recaWna thelr Umo tocether. Patrlcla Neal plays hh domlneertn1 mother, a woman ot Germanic efflctency who resents Eleanor -and uys ao at every opportunity. Ramon Bieri plays t.be nambc>yant Babe Ruth to .a T and Geor&la Ensel ta the Babe's wife, Claire. • BLANCHE DAN.AUS wrote the screenplay from the book 11.Ny Luke and I" by Eleanor Gebn1 and Joseph Durso. Fielder Cook dlr.ctcd. The film lt nol an attempt to ~ .. rem• the 19'2 lbovie, "Prlde al~ Yankees,•• In which GU'J'. CooPe!' was ~brig ud Teresa Wrtabt W&I Mi's. Gehrti. • "That was probably the ireateal baseball mov\e of all time." sald Herrmann. "I remembered seelna lt as a kid and I got a copy of ll and looked at it. But lt takes 1 wbolly dit-f erent approach. It'• about bis life and -----...-:....;.....;--... ........ ..._ _________ ~~--""!-~~~~~· Eleanor just enters into lt. Thh concentrates on the two of them.•• ,:::.r Herrmann noted wlth 1 amUe this was the second time he bad pl-.yed a public fiiu,re who wu marrted to a. woman Qamed Eleanor and tru W. , BE llEA&D ABOVT the Roolewlt !'Ole through the srapevlne-4 aewed it up early. H1s aaent tboUlht the Gehrig role would be Sood and. weot atterlt. \ ''I'm a devotee of tfle great American pastime," be •aid. "I was glad to get the part." Hemnann ls Just flnlahlna a role ln •'The Betsy," from Harold Robbins• novel about the automObUe l.ndustry. He said, .. I .,lay a baddle; the bead of fmance for Bethlehem Motors. J try to find out what the opPOSlt1oo ls up to and gloat wickedly when we triumph." NEXT BE PIA Y8 a mln!ater In the lead tole in Walt Disney's 0 Norih Avenue lrre,Wara.'' "-aald, 11J'm anxious to do a film for children." He said when he 1tudled actlnt In England be was envious 0( 'Enallah actors who were able to move edlly between movies, televlaion ~d the theater without the barrten placed between the arts found here. "l want to do au ot it," he aatd. "The oaly thing with tele\iblon is that it doe:sn 'l give you the time. They'll eive Yo'l silly thins• llke a bit trailer lnjurelf, St• Back f,O Work LOS ANGEL~ (AP) -After one month of a ~UPtratlon abe called ''borinc." chUd actress Danielle Spencer tept>rted back to work on the set of ABC'a ·"What's Happenlnc." Danlelle, l2, waa injured Sept. 6 1n a traffic accident °" the Paclflc Coaat Hltbway. Her f•thtf, actor Timothy Pell: 31, w•sldlled ln the crash. The cast and· tr~ of tbe comedy aerles welc.pmW back the Mries' cynical UlUe allte.r Thursday with 1 small party. • •' Fnday, Ootobef 7, 1977 DAILY PILOT / lloping for a Snoip 1ob By JERRY RERTEN~'Tt.:IN Ot•EMllY~M.tff What do a college counselor. salesman, pharmacist, kin· dergarten teacher and bookkeeper have In common• They think snow. Unfortunately, all they have been able to do the paJt few years· is just that. They haven't been able to silt much. , BUI' SKIERS. ETERNAL OPTIMISTS. see a chanae coming. Arlene Bllscbke claims the spiders tell her there is 1oin1 to be more soow this season. "Spiders are very busy. When they st.art splnnln1 thetf webs high off the ground and go indoors as they have been, U means a wet, cold winter," Arlene, the bookkeeper, sai<J. Be that as it may, there will be plenty or skl Lalk today, Saturday and Sunday at the Orange County Fairgrounds The Balboa Ski ciub is staging it's seventh Oran1e County SJu Show. There will be displays, exhibiU, fashion shows, demonstra- tions, and a ski swap meet beginning at 8 p.m. today. Saturday's Other members Balboa Sid Club are more sclentific about their hope for QTHERS NOTE THAT THE EAllLY fall rains ln'the ea.st and snow already falling in the Colorado Rockies are encouragloa siins. 1 Little snow is not only frustratin1 to the ski buff, ll&bt coverln1 is hard on skis. Dick. Stenerson, one of the Balboa Ski Club's competitive racers, doesn't let dry land or the lack of complete equipment stop f>im from practicing balancing. states will demonstrate aen al jumps and aki ballet techniques on two ramps. The exhlbi· lions are slated 20 minutes after each fas hion ~how A ski swap will take place thr~ughout the s how m buiJdjng 16 New and used ski cloUun« 11nd equipment wlll be offertd. Slri mnvies and a t'ro~~ ·t'OUntry ski exhibit • .ire plcll\ncd Signatures wall be solic1ted for the ''longest letter ever written in support or area develop· ment. ·· The signatures will demonstrate sup· port for the development or the Mjneral King area as a ski resort IN ADDmON, DISPLAYS by many sport· i.Dg goodS firms, ski resorts, hotels and airlines. ore scheduled. Admission is S2 adults, and Sl.SO for children under 12. Proceeds from the 1how support area ski developments, ski pro1rams andtheU.S.Skileam Parking for the Friday show will be m the main lot at 88 Fair Drive. Parking for the Saturday and Sunday shows Will be in the Carriival Lot off Arlington Drive at the rear entrance to the falrirounds. . A variety of cultural ente 8inment from Shak4'Speare to ~irnental music is offered for the first h'lilf'o! the Jt911·78 ·uc rvine arts season. Tickets, priced from SS to $1 for the various events, are available at the J\ssociated Students UC Irvine box office on the first floor of Gateway Commons on the campus. Hours are 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday: Tickets may also be ordered by mail with checks made payable to The Regents, Unlversity of California. Send to Committee for Arts, 415 Administration, University of California,lrvine92717. · Group discounts for 20 or more are available by advanced arrangement. turther information may be obtained b~ telephoning 833-6378. Parkiilg for all but theater events is a-nllable in Lots No. 1 or 2 or the visitor p8l'king lot Theater parking is in Lots No. 6, 7'ot9. A lineup for the first half of _!he season . Lella Blake in " eiiiinine Plural" Friday, October 14 Femiriine Plural, a sensitive portrait of the women of Shakespeare and Wilde at their most dramatic and vulnerable moments. • Blake, a ctr and director. has had a distinguished career: in the Unltea Kiftldom. and Australia and has been the recipient of the Australian Actress of the Year award three times Chamber Music Rutkowski /Nelton Friday, October 21 Professors Geoffrey Rutkowski, cellist, and Wendell Nelson, pianlst/accompani t and diairman of the Music Department of t:JC S8nta Barbar • present The Beetho_ycn Sonata Cycle. ,. • Alison Strauss tries out her snow plow technique on a practice ramp at a Lake Forest sporting goods outlet. . . , DAILY PILOT • i Dazzler for Dancers .Harlequin Playlwuae Adds Lounge "Olctoberfest" usually signals partying German-style. But there's a s6ulhern twist, too. Weetend travelers may enjoy polka and pnbds with tbelr potiona at the low:th ao- • nual Qlrtoberfest at Griswold's Old School lfousein Cl~oot. Oct. 7.9 and H-16. • Up for a 21-aun salute this week are Al and Barbara Hampton, operators ot the Harlequin ~ Playhouse ln Stnta Ana. A.s it a fine din- Mt .-.iiow tan 't enoueb, the lm&1inative cou- ple hU added another bright jewel to their alreadf atellar showplace. Their newly opened Celebrity Lounce teaturet llv_, music for ducin8 and after lhow . ent.ertalnment nl9bUy. Tuesday tbroulh Satur· day. t.ocated adjacent to the m'1n lobby, the to. Uh.I• bas eaa7 a~eeH from the din· ta1/lbowfoom for those guests wisbin1 to dance follNftl the main 'how. Admittance, however, la by no means restricted to playhouse patrons; the 1eneral pubtlc b welcome at all tJmes, too. Further, we predlct that this daullnJ room will become one of the area 'a most PoPular nl&bt a pots. AL AND BABBABA also announced ·an ex· tension -throl(Jb Sunday, Oct. 18 -for their curre.nt "B•ckstaJ• Musical" producUon. Thei show, wblcb is havinl its premier eti&aaern«lt in Oran1e County, has won plaudlta from both the preu and publlc. Cheerful and breezy ~ment, tt is a sood humored spoof of the Hollywood QWSJcals produced during tbe early'._. · "Barefoot in the Park" bu been Mt as the next *bow at the Harlequin. Tbe comedy wW pre- . Out. 'N About Norman Stanley view Tuesday, Oct. 18, and play Tuesday through Sundays until Nov. 20. Harlequin Dinner Playhouse features a com- plete buffet dinner and Broadway show for a speclat ~cbge price. The facility Is located a half mile north of the San Die&o Freeway at 3503 S. Harbor Blvd .• Santa Ana. Reservations are accepted by telephone: 97~11. • ••• BrAltT MVJNG YOUR pleces-<>C·eight for a trip to the Hawaiian Islands early next year. Blac:tbeard's, Orance County's pirate-theme res'taurant.. wiJl welcome a sister operation in Ha....UcomeJanuary. V~urlng similar buccaneer decor and Caribbean dlnlng apeelalties, the new faclUty -- owner John Skoby tells us -wUI be located in Lahalu Oil the lsJand ol Maul, in an -.rea over- le>Okfria the harbor. ste>by Hid the restaurant, altuated in a Ufree.level abopptn1 center called "Tate Wharf, .. will e111pl01 a stall of ao. And plans ue afoot to transfer several key man11ement and culinary emp&oyea lrofn Newport &each to the new spot, tar1~ fOf' completion Jan. lS . • JN AN INT£aBSTJNG aldeUcbt to the problems attendant to the construction or a twin operatioli. Skoby tiled one or tbe moet unusual I ot the preseDt nstauraat in Newport Bri:cb -the 100-year-old itcil')' that is 1uspended frorn U:i8cellln1. "W• want to pe~ate tha\ Sl)eme in Hawatl," 1:'8 aaldt .. and a.re presaUy 1ciokins fM another ~ue aory 1n LoGC Beach and hope to ablp lttoffaWall in Umef or the ,.,-"'fi" Blaekbe&rd'~ restaurant. 4250 a.rtin&ale Way (at llacAithur Boulevard), our Ora.nee Cowity ~ opened under the akull and Cl~ 0 .. in 1973. Telepbo0e833-0080 • ••• GEUANY NO LONGE& bas exclusive rtehts to ~lebratlna the autumn revelry known u Oktoberf•t. The same carnival-like splrtt can be woiited up almost anywhere. A iOocl case In point ls the o)d·fasbioned Oktoberfest merriment being stqed tbls entire moqth at Jonathan 'a restaurant. at Main Beach Park. in Laguna Beach. Hiahllahta Include en· tertalnment on the paUo and such featured apeclall u imported German beer and frosty w!De coolen. CJtaftd M1rdt of au tM PCIP'lt.c. of C:.ld Ke;atd prod ms 1• festl~ie. of ye day Bat chal~ to flOht contest. Flaming brOadsword COMM Unftnlsnfd embrok\er/ com.st Mtdlftal hlndo-to-hand .comtm by armoured flght.9ri an t"9 VIiiage Qf'Mn. Med~ to Renaltslnce dlnclng bf IOrdl and ladles In ftdit of ROM a Crown Reltlurapt • Glllint l\andkllslng cont.at. period pcMt1)' com.at Wedding of Lady Crlstobll dtgtl Glktne Che Mangia Uom• to'Lord Edmond du BattJemonton tM VIiiage a,...n RldlaJlous Insult com.t. PrwocatlV. ankle turning contift; ~pun contett · •:OO Man.to-man combet on tM Vlll• CiNtn by com~ •130 aos1ng court Md swarding ot the d.,., pr1ua. For Mona Information Call 7St·lllS As part of the celebi;alioh, too. there's a com· pllmentary buffet weekdays from 4 to S p.m. And that In ltaelf ts enouah lo set off a round of German beer drinking songs punctuated by con· siderable 11tcin-bangio1 on tables. Located at 199 N. Coast Highway, IAIU11• Beach, Jonathan's is open dally ror breaklut, lunch and dinner; Sunday champagne btuncti, 10 a .m. to3 p.m. Telephone: 494·6363. -Taking to the bandstand this Sunday, Oct. 9, is the "Society For the Preservation of Big Bands", with a repeat outin1 set for two weeks followinr. Sunday, Oct. 18. There•s plenty ot l"OOm on tho special 900-squ.,..foot dance floor. The Anaheim Hyatt House is located directly oppoalte the main entrance to Dl.sneyland, at 1700 • S. Harbor Blvd. Telephone: m.ssoo. ••• WE'RE SIGNING OFF here for three week.I. During that Interim we hope to pick up at least a few souvenlrs of Queen Elizabeth's Stiver Jubilee. And who knows? With a bit of jolly good luck we mi&hl even pick up a few dlnin1 Ups beyond the realqi of rish 'n' chips. Meanwhile, bon apeUthereathome OPIM7 HYIA W8C ___ .. , ....... .,,... Join Ill for .,. CetiW °'*9 At11ddoft ....... ... ,, ......... ... New York cafi ©f~ NUUI MIDIL. 0119eW Nov.16-Dec.11 I f s I i 1'GALLERIES I BACK BAY TOUR W estem Artistry Tops Exhibits AllTISF PAOLO SOLERI wlll attend the Saturday o.,en· inc ~ an exhibition of his drawtnaa and sculpturee at MuirheAd Galleries in South Coast Plua. CO.,ta Mesa. This first ever pllery abow by Soleri will continue tbroqb Oc· tobef• wal'WN LANDSCAPE. an exhibition of Dhotoarap)\S by Gret McGregor. on display throup Oct. 21 ln U\f Or~.Coast College Photo GalleTY. Tbe Photo Gallery ts an the Fine Arts Building on the campus. 2701 Fafrvt«w Road, Costa Mesa. Hours are 8 a.m. to s p.m . .Mondays throuab Fridays. "EXPRESSIONS,'' is the title for an exhibit of 20 works by membeta of the Orange Coast Colleae art del)iartment. The show opens Wednesday and nms tbrouah Nov. 7 ln the campus art gallery, 2701 Fairview Road., Cotta llesa. A~ ( ~leries I EXh~bits J ceptian will tab place WednesdQ from 1to9 p.m.. Galls7 ltours are 10 a.in. to 3 p.m. Mondays tbr'oQP FridQs Ud 7 to 9p.m. ¥md1Y$ud T\leada,ys. Free. EXPRESSIONISTIC AaTm David J>llUenoD wm q. hibit his work tbJwab Oct. 28 in the Willlam T. Boyce Library, Fullerton College. The e¥hibit, featurina 20 pain~ ings in acrylic ooplutic sheets, ia open from 7:30 a.m. tolO p.m. Monday through Tborsday, 7:30 a.m. to' p.iu. Friday and8:30a.m. t.ol2:30p.m.Saturday. Free. i ~AL SCENES AND SOMETDIE D&EAMS' -A tht.e abow by artists w..ldn& in varied media today throueh Oct. Z1 at Huntress Gallery. 2811 Villa Way. Newpol't»ed. n-day ~Sunday, U a.m.. to4 p.m. P~.GRAPlllCS, aAFl'S BDllBITION - Tmma ~s ab!Mt et MiUI lbaM Vllllla ~ 12'112 llain ~ Gllrclen Gren. tJUWib Noy. 1~ GallaY, llomsaoaato•p.a tb~&b?ouahMcind~ · PAIN'l'J!:D JN9'J'AU.\TION ~ Worb by PM&deaa arti1!t BlcUrd Jacboo at UC lrville Fine ~ Vlllac• Gallery, IMGl to s p.m. 'J'Q8Sdays threuP Satill'days, thtouah Oct. 29. Worb by artist Gm17 llartia alsofeahlrei ~rouah Oct.15. OOLOaED Lrl'BOGMPllS -Lithoeraphl from the l9l'la Century from David Roberts sketches in Egypt, Nubia. and ~ Holy Land. circa 1MO at Challis Galleriet. 1390 S. Coast ffiabwa,y. Laguna Beach, through Oct. acJ, Wednea.. days throuah~ays, 11 a.m. through s p.m. • .. AJllDICA PAST'' -One man show ot dry brusb wat.e.._s bf Larry D. Jones Saturday through Nov. 5 at H-.ggenmeka-Galleries, 371 N. Pacific Coast Highway. ~ Beacla. Artist will be pnisent Saturday frocn' to 7 p.m.G.neriESopeodaily lOa.m. toSp.m. n.&fintot mpub)$c Back~ tours Is aeheduled Saturda.J, OcL 1S by the FrieDda of NftpOZ't B.:Jt.,i.~~grou.pa depart frOm the idter'lectloo ~ Eastbluff Ud Back Bar 4ri•• from 8 tO 10:30 a.m. as enoup peo,ple amva eo formalfOuf· The wa king tour alone semipaved r-oads takes nearly two t.oan. Gtaid• discuss tho history of the b.,-. fossils, marsh plants, fiMes, tidal m~ or- g anis111s, sboreblrds and wateJtwT at !'Slop& alone tho rocrte. . PERSONALITY Elvis' Friend Inherits Popularity NASHVILLE, Tenn. Sumner, wb,ose astocl•· "Elvis was one-half <AP> -J .D. Sumner, Uon with Presley lasted of our income. Really, EIYl.s Presley's lead about20years. I'm making more now backup •lnaet and profr "It'• been becUc; you than when he was llv ablY bll 'clocsest friend can't believe bow busy tng." ts ln greater demand I 've been since his SUMNER st, said no:e:d ~~:Spel ~~':t; :!~!u ':fn~ to•J0 Presl~ywould approve. quartet are living test.a· now?' Actually, we ba· "I know what ElvlA ment to the Presley ven't 1*m able to accept would want me to do," he 1e1acy. '11 t.tt"dates . ;rbed•1J1ud sJld. "He would say, .. He left UI a portion of la 100 to l what l\ uaed t.q •you atupld IO·and-10, hi• popularity," said be. · feltbemoney.'" ,fli~!;:::::;:;::..~~~~h#-.;:;:.=:r::::;+~~-~~--_;_~-:--:.-...-=:--:--:--:------:-~ Sumner ia w.:lUnt a book about Presley and will appear on an "American Bend.st.and" tribute to Presley Oct. 22. HE ALSO has re - corded a 11.njle, "Elvis Has Left The Bulldin•," with tbe UUe taken from the atU>clard public ad· ress announcement at the cloae of Presley's oonc:eru. But he still c•n't believe Presley b dead. "I don't tb.lnk lt't blt up by Col. Tom Parker, Presley's lon1·Ume manager. "I llEMEM1$ER HY· ina that the colonel Haa oae too far,·• Sumner ald. ••J hlred<10meone to drive me to Memphis. I didn't fully re llie he w 1 dead untll I eaw him ln the coffin.·· "Some people have sai d lhlna.s they didn't know wbat they were talkin1 abo11t. Peo- ple who say he wu Iott~ ly didn't have a comiep-tion of the lNt years ot __ _._ ...... ____ .__ _ _....., ______ .. hla life. He wu not, 'fn prison.' He did what be wanted, and ~bekl he wanted, more than: :you and l. He could attord to.' For instance, he rode bit motorcycle and ate iQ reatauranta. "I DON'T see how be could have used drurs - been a malnllner - without me knowing tt. I have stayed ~ith him 12 to 15 hours at a Ume and he didn 'l take drugs. Arid I've seen his anna and legs and there were no marks." Sumner learned of Presley's death co the radio while In Nashville~ He thought it was a publicity stunt dreanied me yet, .. be sald ln an ln· --------ervlew a month after ,,. ...... Mnk• ....... ONilft ~ OUESADILLA "AVILA" A 1-oct Pour au.s.d'illa sturf41d wtth • cotnbtna11on of taste tanttllzJng goodies Ground beef. a blend or Monteray ~ and Cheddar Oleeee. Soec•al Avila S.uce, Green P9PP9rl and tocic>ed with Guacemofe Presley's death Aue. 16 MelQPhll. "I'll be alt· I around and wonder· g when we 10 on the ext tour. and Jn a few econds I'll realize be 's ead." He &els upaet al portrayals of Presley aa lonely and • hard-drug user. CROWN HOUSE R~STAURANT azmCOUT"*'·. \.ACMIMAMICIUll. CM.._Nlllr....., NOW!! BOB WHl'JE PLUS LIST%& COMP~NY ...... FREE~PPETIZERo..us WmtTMISAD DINING • DANCING ENTERTAINMENT Bus1nenme1fs Lunch Soeclals SU.'000 •COCKTAILS• flOOO TO~ IAHQUtTS • ,.IYATI PAn.S CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH SUNO~YS HAPPY HOURS 4-e POP MUSIC/MOVIES More Work With Elton y BINRAJ • Rof.litn Raj Of ff . Ott Beach V Cl ]OUmaUsm nudfnt ot GOldl:n W•• c ~-''It'• a bale different thi°' playing Ucks behind EltOn John .-nd puttiftl younself on tbe line,·• aald cvitarlst Dav y 1bustone good·natur~. relax~ •bawte1e after the- !tntoltwoi>er:formances JastS.t.udaynlsbt. "I was a bit nervous at first but I re~ enjoy this. This la the band I've always ..waptecl to ba••·" 'l1IE BASO la Cblna, a rock music UQup known moetJ.J by another name -Tbe Elton John Band. Members ot China have supported the wperatar tn hla live performances u well as bis recorded work. NoW Ollna is 1lrikin1 out on its own and bit WeekeGd made its world concert debut at the Golden Bear nl1btclub in Hun~ Beach. Ke1boardiat/arran1er James Newton· Ho w exp18Ined why the small downtown cJ~b wucboaenovcrth tare rcoaeertar nas. "I literally threw the .,.aniement out of $OmeWindow in Germany," be laul}>ed. The music or China deftes specific cateeorizaUon. The band incorporates rnany form. of music to arrive at a disUnctive bl,nd that ts. in a word, stylish. IORNSl'ONE, WHO IS largely self-taught, began pJayine violin at the age of seven. He now playa virtually every stringed instrument. Johnstone is fascinat~ by the ancient, tradi· tional music of d.ffter'ent cultures ... I don't see any reason," he said, "why those types of mu.sic 'l bQ co bin«l with~ and roll." • . ' ..UinBrlel Strings Due At College James Newton-Howard befAA hts musical 9Clucatloo at aae four, studying classical piano. He later attended various musical academies and USC bef4re turnln1 hls lnteresta toward rock. and roll. Wlll China limit the members from their in- volvement with Elton ln the Mure? Both Johnstone and Newton·ltoward denied that this will be the case. Jobnatone pointed out tl\at Elton is fully upportive and co-produced tb r e\ll'l"eftt album, . Guitarist Davey Johnstone of China thinks 811Cient music can be combined with rock n IOI/. The group will perform in England with Elton John. . 'Piece of the A.c~ion' C~er Reaches Heart ~ .. \'OttlC, MP YOlllC" M · ,_ .. Ulll ..... "'* ~ '"' ... ... _... .... _..INNere ... ._... ~~11. ltfllllla~ -.... ~,,,,~--. LIMMlrftitli.lft~~Md ,,...~ ... petleftt..W.. 11•rt Ottllro _,.._ -. -· ,....,. ....._ el "'Tnl Oriw.r:• ,_ .... ~. *'Ollf Off ONI" It .... Iller ...... ~ .......... .,. llllPl'---flll!'I WJ"""'ltt Wlllt Mert Alld I~ • ._..., •nMn II IHI Ull· dtrtiltd bfll1t•all llolPMt Wiie ... ...,,. h tmaUt Of an ~IC fk· tery. 8MM11 Ind 1111 fft ..... , Jerry S19tl, ........... _.....~-U· _, Jol'NM cncted Wltll an -_.....,.,..f/lti.c.-n--. ._... td N. bur ~·s lltUe .. 9UI• chi 11111t. .. .._, fe,.. _ .. ti.in. J«•• G~ .. .,_ l'M •-• \herltf. TM •<ttOn ~t. '0 '•'-' tM .,vn'liOr .. .., ... ...._. ,._ •lunl\ .o ""''-.,., .... .,. __ ,_,.,,, . .,._ tertelNCI It.CH PG "A ••IDOi TOO fla••• ,.~~World W•• II -•M IWI If\ A lavt;I ~ INll IN Wer'I-AlllM <OWMIUn»IValftrel TM-\ll<lell ............................ ,., ... _ 1ni.1~ •t"Kt• " .... PO ... lltm~rnMOIMl\Hfoetd ..... edwa1 ds LIDO CIN EMA NtWPOIH Bl VO AT VI .. llOO NEWPORT BEACH 67 l·Bl~O ' - Remember Diane Ball? If you've been around this area for a while. perhaps you remember ::.ee1na "The Sound of Mu.sit" or "Bye Bye, Birdie" at Oranae Coast College back in the mld-·ros. If ao, perhaps you recall the leading lady of both productions. Her name was Diane Hall and sbe was gel- ling her basic trainln1 for the Big Time in those two shO\Js. Shortly afterward she headed for New York to atudy actln1 at the Nelthborbood · Pla1 e and landed her first profeaslonal role •• Ul• replacement for Lynn Killo11, the star of Ui'e Broadway abow "Hair." Jn an Interview with thJa coll.Ut>O after finlshine the "Halr" enaqement. Di&de dis- Intermission Tom Titus cussed her next Broadwu project. Seems she'd bee.n sianed for the leading role opposite playwrilbt·act.or Woody Allen {n bis new vebi,~le, "Play ll Again, Sam." The rest, as they say, 1s 'hiswry. -By now you undoubtedly realize that Diane Hall, the Oranae Coast Clrl who mwle &ood. is in fact Diane Kqwn. whose picture wu on the cov- er or Time maculne two weeb ago and who's hoverio« on the brink o{ superat.artfom. Sb• may .well achieve il when her la1'st movie ... LOokin• for Mr. Goodbar.ri. is released. followlne on the beela of h'r critical triumph Jn Woody Allen's "Annie Hall.'' The sky, lt seems, is the limit for this multltalented singer-actress. whose parents·llve in Corona del Mar. Diane Keaton Is a living re- minder t.o local acting students that success in Before Ceorp Lucas explored the outer regions of STAR WARS he explored the inner regions of CO-HITAT • ctHEDOMI • "A IDGE ~00 f.AR" (R) I show bus~ is indeed attainable t.o those w1tb enough drive.and talent. ••• Just in time for Halloweef\ will~ the Foun· tain Vtlley Commun.tty Theater's pfOSluctlQIJ or "Dracula," opening Oct. 1' for three weekends at Los Amigos Hl&h School. Don Shelton takea the tiUe role ar tbe va • pire count with Nadine Buchner u h aO· versll')' Prof~sor Vu Helatna, Otliers IJ\ \he cast include Trfaba Burson. Mara Hellitr. Jo~o Osterkamp, Mary Jo Jucklty 'M tf SelU1 Monetta Ray, Jlm Kllp1trlck and Sttp • Greeno. Directed by Jay Conklin, "Dracula" will be presented Oct. H· 15, 21, 28 and 29 at 7: 30, Oct. 11: 23 and 30 at 4 p.m. at Los AmllOS llJth and in .. special performance on Halloween nlaht at 7:30 in the 17th Street School auditorium Jn Westminster. ReservatJon' and information on "Dracula .. may be obtained by calllna 962·2S51or531·$732. "SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT." "THE STING" (PG) "NEW YORK. NEWYORK"(PG) "A STAR IS BORN" (R) "~ANTASIA" (G) "THX1138" "A BRIDGE TOO FAR" (R) "REUNION" "ONE ON ONE'' (_PG) ~~ .. ll!"ll!'Pl..-.P ~ ........ ,.... ..... """'!9~ .. • • Till' la not to knock rock. lt'• okay. But 1bo"'1d it come while one ii 1till aavorinl the endJni of a Bach plffe? . Lest there be cries pf Protest aod labels of arropnce, tbe Womea•a Comm1ttffl of the Oranee County J'bllbarmonic. Society, • spoMDl'S of the event. are to be com.Jllended for the talent the::v broulht to tbe lfO\Dlda. NEXT TIME they mtabt put more 1t1ldy on timing Gd admittance procedures. atleut for the bowl. The Matrix Jan Ensemble, which followed the chamber by aome eo mtnuwa in the bowl, was an ae.Uent cbolcofar tbe card. 1-BJwe•er, it was annoylq, even tor one wno ea.ia1S a arQOke, to amen and aiee people liel:dinlupdurln& the performance. . *** APPABENl'l..Y. CACOPHONY ls not un· common. AJ. the lnine Harvest Featlva.l last ~. tbeplq «l'utMi_... Wllt staled in ·a siDaJ1 fillt near t.be ~ C8Dftil Ybere ca:rmm l>r91on ucl the fAia 8lllClk Sym; pbcayperf«med. ~<JDe of the quitee.r. tntim*sceDeS the ma,,.. abDat to p.t Ids arm -"'1ad bis led7 en their ftnt date. BOth were cenoas. Suddmtr, BOOM-thefUllotcUatr&llftekUp '-ruitw:rill tbeStrllW ••• *** TREBE WAS THE time last winter wben the reading of poetry durinl tbe Laplta Beach Winter Arts Festival required aome at- tentlri Ustenln1. Difficult when there wu tbe pop, piop of a door aaainst a prop used to keep it ajar as latecomers drUtecl in and out of the Irvine Bowl. • ~What diner basn'l ~ disturbed l#y • tbe ~of easy batenlna.m c mixed with th084'~ttlalowler po)> or 1'Ckfrom ttaDlistOr r aditiJ cif the tetiea staff? ) GalJlrY hours: Wedli.1hru suns. 1NPM ~ - Frlday.Oc:tober7, 1t77 Eun on 10MIGMT,OC1QUll r SICI PU..ICIN lttOW, f .. twll'G Wle ,_, '" <l4llllint elld -4om ... t \Oft~ ........ ~ ., 0tllftl9 (Gunty '~· • ,.,, 0.1 ... C-aMllN.6to ti P."'-... y, lO•-"'· tolOp.m.~end-lo•p.m, ~y. POUND•llS' DA 'f celeb,etlon , Times/Places IUNOAY, OCTGaall t lhrovgh Sunday In WHIMl1ttler ..... MIDSUMM•• NI.MT'S ~ ..... •~-"'-., ........ awic: par .... 10a.m,s.tilrdaw. o••AM." 7: """"" --. • TMettt. "SUMM91l AMO 1M01Ca;• l/lrt1"111 Oct. 14 In .. L1ttla TMa..,, C.1$tatt, Fullerton. Curtal" llmu I P-"'-.,, .......,....,~.,...s"""'·.._. ,..,.. l co-HITAT CINEMA WEST AND UDO CINEMA "ONE · ON ONE" :· Dy IJS llOBINSON Be~ause she'a o hot now , the rumor ls that ~nda 'nonsladt • who finished up a record- breaklng 12 nichts at L A. 's Univers al Amphitheater this week w•n. after a three.week v.aution, MO back out on the Toadagain. ~ J Linda'• att1tude •bout Ume \ t>ff~ "I WAS HOME recently with 1ix months olf," ahe told me, ''and l wa just golns to Jtay home. But lristead, I went to New York City and Just huna out and had a great time. "I can atop workin1 9/henever I want to atop. But when I was in New York playing: l really • worked harder at ~ P.l•Ylnl and bavin1 run than J did when I was WOtkiJla." NOW TOGETHER 'rld1y, October 7, 19n One of the thin11 Ltnda bad been planning to do with her time oft last year was to &el her new Mall bu house together.' ••1 STILL <ton't have any d~orknobs upstairs," she ad- mft.ted. "and I haven't tlgured out how to arranae my fµmiture downstairs. I do have silverware now -and a Cuisinart. r shred my apples in the mon»n1 tQ put them on my 1ranola." One or the things th~t seems to go with the territory \..... lb adfti· lion to platinum selling albums. sellout concert tours and the in· evitable TV s pecial -Js a Broadway show, and the word is that Linda Is currently in "con- ve rsatio'ns" with producer Joseph Papp about her stafrlng In a limited Broadway nm ol Kun. Weill's play. "Allf6RO N«f TifPP0"1s ~ on~ of ~hose"fore1gn ·art'film~'.:.­ tt·• en an lmated.f~acure-JI A hilarious pu•odyo/~FANTASIA~' <Some p«ople go &o /•r a~ co say i~ ., .. the be•'t animation in t..,e last !2 ~ears.') ---.. • As for her current popularity and ever-growing fame, Linda dismisses it with. ··1 don't really relate to that, and when l do think about lt, it just makes me more nervous." . ••• FRANK DIMINO: Felix Robinson, Punky Meadows, Barry Brandt, and Greg Guffria were caUed Angel from "Day One," they recalled recently at L .A. 's Record Plant where they're recordjng their fourth album. "At the be&innJng, everything we did was scaled down," said Greg. "We were in a tiny cub in Washington, D.C .. called Bogey's, and we spent all the mQney we made each week to get lighting a nd a giant sound syitem.•· While 'playing' In New York, Unda Ronstadt worked hard on new album. She'd rather perform than vacation. by Br1d Anderson ...... _ .... _ --- by Wm. F. Brown and ~ Clsson .t6" ~AID No AtOIU Gt'T A~~ lf'0Nk'tNG ~P etO OOC.1'0fl ! ev ~. ·A TT EN Tl ON· ~ ~RD PWSU80TTOM SHOOTS HOLE·IN-ONE ~ - H1t111''• tl11•111t \41.t c lttllt Ci11H11I• ""'" .,,.,.,,,,,,,,. 'tl ///11IftA\f1 l/1lltf l I/ t Iii.,, /111111 ,,,. l I • '",,,I 'I 'I ' '11 t ,, , TEST DRIVE YOURS TODAY! IMMEDIATE DBJVERY Something else: you'll drive the car you lease for two. three or even four ~ars. Most cars look out of date all too quickly~ But wh~n you rease a Mercedes·Benz, you drive a . car with classic lines and timeless· ness that is never out of date. We have several leasitl& plans to offer you. One is certalri to make it more convenient for you to drive a Mercedes-Benz than you @ might have thought p:>ssi· ble. Call us today _for the surprising facts. '- Ask about our many convenient leasing plans. . ! • lt74DATSUN Hft J+J With air conditton1ng. mags &_ much more! (428l.N/l PRICED TO SELL 1976 DATSUN 7IOCOUPI loaded with 9Qu1pment a only 12.000 miles. (3S9NXM). 53495 1974 DATSUN IZlOCOUPI 1978 Slab 3 dr. 9Poits eppearance. Fully factory eQUlppeo + megs & IPCMl-1 O A.C. 3e rno. gpen end ie-. (Ser. 027128) cash ~ $8200. Reeklual 13200 s39733 D&IVRS • &'MB J 13 IRMe NEW 177. PINTOS : <i~ ·~ .. FINE FAMILY USED CARS 43 29 . BRAND MEW *77 COUii ECONOMY PICK UP. .. Ftofl'I As Lew Aa I 53499 .. Slk. llMl7 Set. IMTAT'Pt1129 COMPACT &A~SAVEIS DAILY PILOT 4U1·n PUBUC NOTICE PtcTITICIUI IMIStlll•ll _.. 51'ATUISNT Tiie 1<11~ --••dol,. bodl-_ .. , SMSTl.AHOOftCHAllO, e .....,_ i.,. Cofltrect~. 241~ Or•llil• Slw o.t• MMa. CA ft621 E'""1 It. OnMrd "· • Tlmethy M. "'9111-. 24)1'°' a.-..,.. SC .• C.• .-..,CAm%7 Tiiis boniness la c.MIKIH e.y • ..... ...,..., ..... ,,...,OrcM .. ~-......a .. Tiiis tW-C w• flied wttll U. c::.c..rty Oetll • OrMQa c-ity'"' ~ ~1m. ""'"" ~hNd ~ ~ o.ily l"lleC. s.11t."-aoa.1. 14,"" '1CT1TMMll•US1•• .. llMl&ITA'f11M8MT Ti.~ .......... -... ...... , WWOIALAPAIUMENTS,f'IOfW. F~day,October7, 1917 PUBLJC NOTICE .. CTITIOUS a1151~US NAMll iTATCM&,.T T"9 IOll_,,_ "'t911 II CkllnQ IMdl ." ... TALPAS WltlTING CON~Ul.T.uffi, Ml -.... I C...•W Orlw, SliiUI nt, ,._Wi*, ht<ll, CA m.t 1<•1111 .. 11 TelP•l.1. 2001 \1111• ~·""-''"""~"'2* ri..i. _._ h-M.., M.,.. •1¥idllef l(alhl-.n T•IPft r1111 1i.i...--rn.-"'"" uw C.-.110-11 ti Qr .. <:N!IY 1111 ()(t •, ttn PVIWCNOnCE P'ICTl'l10US auSIHCl.J NAMCSTATIMUn , ... ~ ,._ It ~""" -•: l..M.H. ~. l!ICD ~i. Aw.,N/LtS.w.lf'lll/lll~.CAt2flG •rl•n MllCMll Hlckl, U 200 =Ito.,._ •"-Wtttmlntl.,, CA Till!I ......... -.cted by .. ·~ ~ ._,.M.Hlckl This •IA""'*'I w.u 111ec1 w1tll 1111 CAWllY Clwtc d 0r....-a..n1v on S.1> lllm-3'1f71 ,,_ PublbNd 0retlQll CO.st Delly Pilot. S.pt, JO,Ocl. 1, 14.21 ... ,, PUBLIC NOTICE P'l<TITIOUS 9USINIS$ NA.Ml ITATt:~ENT Tll<t IOllowl119 per son •• OOlnQ bWl • --· G~Y GRUBI. fOO W. ~ H•h-111 .. cl\.CA. 97~ ~le Rimer. 29U. West,._l ClDWI. s...-CeptMr-. CA. m 1s Thll laalnK$ II conduC\Atd by .., !ft. ei.~ ~Al,,_ Tf\11 .a-t WM fllfd .. 1 ..... c.un1y Qer1l d Or-Couf>ty ""Oct. 4,lt17 lllUlCI "'*111119d OrMIQll Cont Delly Pl .... 0ct.1, 14 ai.-...,, PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE P'ICTITIOUS allSINIHI HAMalTATClllCllT T"9 kM-•"9 pa<_,.,...__.. MH•S UNIFl.ITE YACHTS-NEWl"ORT BEACH, IOOI W.SI CoMI H'911w•Y. N9W-1 l!Ndl, CA ft~ Ne...-1 PKlhC ""°""'· IM , &. Olllfoml• c~.UOll, 1001 West Cout Hl911••v. N._.t .. Kii. CA.~ ,.,., bull ....... ~-b\' • COi'• ••llClfl NEWPORT PAQP'IC IMIUl'IE. INC. Fr-*•· c:owwt. Jr.• Pfffldonl This st.tt-.,.., ni.cs with the Ceu<lty °""' °' Or .-gt Colfflly Oft Sepe. "·''"· ,,.,,. PubUtNcl 0r"'91 Cbfll o.jly Piiot, s.11t.u.111.0e1.1 .... 1m . r eU>n PUBLIC NOTICE P'ICTtnous IUSIN£SS MAM• IT ATaM•NT Tiie loflowo119 _.,,,.ere .,.,_nQ buJI· ,,..in· WEAR 'N SHAltE, llU \I~ SV..t,SulteJ, Co51<1Mtta,CA Robert 0. Jong, 227 61U 5t_ Hew-1 8Nct1. CA fMl .-...,,..,, L Oe Jone. 2l1 615' a.. ....__, 8Mcl\, CA fMl Thi• --la~ DY en ln-dM<lual. ~0.Jofte Tiii• Utt-Wd flied ...... IN c-11 ci.n of Or-c-.c., on s.p. lltm-tt.ltn Ntnt PuOtlll\lld o.enoe C.O.tt Dell¥ Piiot. 5e111 t• n.10. 0c1 1. "11 e1.n PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE OllO!tlA.NQ N0.1Mf AN CMlOINAMC11 OP' TM8 CfTY cou NCI~ Oft nt • can or: con,. Me5'1., CAU...,.NIA, atu•..-o TH a lOlllNO Of' l'OllTIOllll 011 LOTS II. A, a, C. 11, ANO U. Ofl 'fllACT H. PllOM Ct ANO U TO It). Cl'. THE CATY COUNCii. CW l'HI CITY 0,. COSTA #UA OO«S Hl\l .. aY OtllOAIN AS l'OU.OWS HCTIOlll t. There It~ pteted eno lnclud9d Int .. Rl<I' -. ell Chet re•I ..-1Y IOceled In tr. ~el •rH of l'lur1ler 5'rM I llld Mlllelm ·-· ,._. "'"'" Hlll'llllere 11 .... t-M. " .... , ... ,, ., .... 1-40, u• ... t•tt. " .... ''"• u .... ,.,., , ........... ~ LM11,LllA.Uta.l.lltC......_ WIUll .. ""'9-t• fll LCll 1' _. .,. ......... .,I.II ti. etlaf Trect .... ,4 ............ ._... .. hllll n • ._. tt • M...,•-• M•pt, records o4 01.,.oe COilitty, (;ellfwnle. EXCll"TING THIREl'ROM 1M ...... WOMl.CofLOIC,11• IXC:l!!PTIN<; THEREl"ROM U.. llOr1ll tis.OOl•of l.ot •••• ,. •xcl!PTINO TH•R&P•OM , ... .-tll IAO.OQ , .. "' Ille ... ,-" flt l.olA;el111 EXCEPTING THER&P'AOM , ... NIMh IJO to l•t of lhe wett -hell of LOIA. SICT10H I. 11\nueRt tie ~ -vlllMIOI s.ec1 .. 1>.n• h ~clpel Cede .... C:ltt .. CfttA Mesa. Oldrk1 Mep 8-Z Of llW City of ()lfi. Mes.I, CCIII\' of '#llldl II on Ille In fie Offk.e of \IW l'l•nnl"9 D•1M1r1m1n1, 11 hereby emtllllleO bV Ille eddllloll !Nnlo of Ult Rl<P .,... m<rlbed II\ Secuon t ~ ... Tiii• ~ Mlell .... -~ w • "' fUll force thirty 1111> devs from end en. ti.,......, llftd prier to llw explr•t11111 ol ftfl- llJI cYYi 1'9ftl ttw --. lllffwol, Shall lie ...... ltlled -· ... ow 0rMge C:of't O.lly l"I~ • ntWIPIP9f ol t•llV•I clrcul•li.n. prlllted o•ll lloVOlltMd II\ llw CllJ' f/f Coolie M9M, ... t ..... ""''" Ille ........ Of ,,. .......... ... "'llW Clly c:o..nc11 \Oe!lfll fW w ... IMtt/11...,... PASSllD ANO AOOl'T60 11111 lrll deyOIOttober. 1m. f'lonnl H .. ILot INl'/flf ol Int (lty of COiie MtH ATTEST. lllten P. Plllmev City C11rUflhf CllVof~~ STATl!OF~tF~NIA > COUl'IT'rOFORAHO J 51 CITYOl"COSTAMl!SA ) 1, l!IUlEN ff. "*llfllN•V, CllYCltnl an41Htfkk1Gltf11 ol Ille CllY C-11;11 -,,_. CllY ef c-.. MMJI, --~ -----~ Orlll-.*-"•-r..tnxllKed .... PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE l'lc:TITIOUS IUSINESS NA.ME STATIMENT Tiie IOOOWlnQ pettons tr•dol1191111• ,,.., ... AMf:RICAN CRliOIT PROTE~ TION AGENCY, 1'9$2 El Tir-..., M1.si..v,.1o.ea111om1et?47s NlcllolMI ~ OllCIR, 24ts2 l!I Tira-., Mlnlllft \lltlo. Calllor"4t taUS Jarnet Wllllam NOOfl It, !IOI A .. ,...""'-· •lJB, C:O.te -., CA m• This lluslnen " conou"" D~ • 1retpertnenhlp Nldlohn M 04""' J..-w . .._. ~s \I.II-I .,..,. 11111<1 w•lh Ille County Ct-"4 or .,ge County Dfl >ept. 2'.1'17, ... ,.,. Pul>ltVWc:I Or-CcMl•t °"'• PllOI, 5">1, JO Oct '· 1', 11, 1'17 ...... n PUBLIC NOTICE ,ICTITIOUS aUSINl!SS MAM«STATCMIENT Tllo fol'°"*'l! -10N ere OOlllQ .,.,._ IWU1H. HUNTINGT0'4 CENTE" C"" Wt.511. 1.0.1 llMCll 11.0., Hwttt~ --.Clt,CAm47 Alllence 1nw1tm.110 Man•-"*''· • Qill"'""• c...._atlofl, 1HS2 hach 81..s., Suite 111, HUf\llltQt., tlfftll.CA-.0 J-F O'-lord, 11' II. Ville Rite, I.A Hebr .. CA -JI Thi\ lluslnes. I• con<lu<t•d by • oenerel Olirlnenltlp Alllan<• ln.,.strnent• __ ,,,..,, S..lclOn Gr-P,16/0tflt Tiii• •tel-t wet llled wllll !tie County a...11 of 0.-County 4HI ,..._ 20. ttn. ...,.. l'vbl•llll!CI 0-..... Cont Deily P11et. ~. Q.• Od. r. IA. 1m PUBUCNOTICE PU8UC NOTICE .. in. • l'Ubllihed Or~ C.0.tll OailY l'llOt ~ 1•.11.~ou '·"'' 402•11 PUBLIC NdfICE l'ICTITIOUS avsi••U NAMC STAT•MaHT l ~ lollow1ng persom •r• 001119 bual• MUH PEPPERTAEE APARTMENT~ •091 S Holder Sl,.et, CvD•U•, Cal1lomletOUO Cy-1 11, 4540 c-._ 0.1 .. , 1'4"1IOl'l ONcTI, c..lltonll•nMt PllOhp L Abbott. •540 C-~ Ori,.., Newport llMch, C.llkM'n1•t:1Mq Tllli~llllt\nectnclUct .. by• 11n111oe__.,., PhlllloL-1 'th1• llM-... , llled WI .. U. c_.., O.rk of O.-.ge Count r Oii ~~ temC.rlt,lf1l P'IU41 Pullli"*' Or#\99 C.0.tl Dally Piiot S.ol Je.0<1 1. l~.11, lt/1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBl.JC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE The llUnt Mtri...tp!Ke on the e>rqe Cout DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Cen Sell H, Find tt, ( 642 •5678 } One Call Setvlce ''* It With • want Ad . . Fast Ctedlt Appmval =·-,_ -Ti:" ':"""--::.'•-Mere._._ ...... IOOl).tclt9 AMI •• eeeoeeee •• ••••• LUXURY "attrfront condo. 2 Edrm. t'k bB{b. FOR S~LE BY OWNER r::!: ~~. M hr. •etwity. 8raod AtW; eomp • ............ ••• -""""' Lett f ~ IMih I M1rine .......... IQ00.46tt S.•il•• iPtiii . tOQO..eott f....,.. ........ fOOO.tOtt ...... ......... a (,...., .. ,.. & t,:tu1blt\ & etlw ~ .......... soot-.. .._ ...... ~7\9' l'WI atton •••• 9100-9999 NO CREDIT NEEDED $139,900. NIWPORT BEACH $58,750 Huge family room with used bric:k wall and fireplace 3 Bedrm, 2 bath, dble Cl&r &arace, new 18' l>oui:hboy pool & filter. All this on a secluded street. Hurry. call 546-5880. ~.:o. HERITAGE "'. REALTORS STEAL this big 4 br, 2 ba beauty! Many pluses Included family rm, patio, frw.t trees etc, etc. Priced Sl,OOO's below mrkt. at 164.950. Convt. or VA loan OK. 6'6-9898 Agt. associated BROKERS REAL Tl)ll'S lUl~ Yt1 flo&b..,•1 ••1 J•AI •FOR SA.LI• 2 Br /den, East.side • •• 950 2 Br Bait.side $72,000 2Br'Dup~ -~ 3BrHawaliKal Manna $125.000 3 Br. Pool/Can10n Vle" S149.9SO 4 bdrm, 2 bath home with pool, jacuui. family rm, etc, etc. J us\ spen 122,000. on remodeling. . Nr. 1011 course. I will *RENTALS* carry contract. For sale 2 Bdrm UnJt. $250/mo by owner. 646-8080 1 Bd East.side '2751 mo --------.i 2 Br, Nwpt Hgbt.s $3'75 3Br0ceanview $400 Golfers Dream 2 Br Eas~de house ttoo Mesa Verde's most KajKwct.ckReatty SPECTACULAR home. 5~~CaU~~6~3~1~·3~1~1~2~•i BR, 4 ba, FR. DR. LR.f- Sparush 2 story, ~ acre r--------1 ~~~!'!~~~~I The golC couri.e 1s your .;;,; back ynrd. Open llouse MES.A.DELM.A.R SPECIAL $82,tOO! REALTY llG CAHYOH Rambling ranch style exec. home. 4 br, family rm & conversation pit. An\iqued wood, plantation shutters. Shows like a mdl. .... $320,000. • * * llG CAHYOH TOWNHOME Dramatic architecture! Dynamite Master bdrm + 2 others! Pool, jacuzzi & tennis courts $179,000. * * * SIAVl!W Panoramic VlEW-3 br, super kitch. w /bay windows & Microwave oven -vaulted ·ceilings $239,500. *** WOODIRIDGE Warmington ''C" plan w/3 br and atrium. Vaulted ceilings & more 1n a park like setting. Only $99,500. * * * W ODIRIDGE 2 Master suites. sunken living rm. breakfast rm. sep. dining rm & just steps from the lake, pool & j~cuzzi. ·Reduced to . • • . . $115.000. 719·1&11 71'-0011 IA YNOHT MAMSIOM W1'1'H PlD At last! Prime So. Bayfroot location! 5 bedrooms and 4 baths upstairs, ' downstairs is a 6th bedroom plus bath plus &lttiog room plus the entire Newport. Harbor! It's fantastic! Close to the stor~. on a super beach. yet st\ll quiet! A family home of distinction. now vacant. Presented at $58.5.000. U~l()UI: li()Mt:§ REAL TORS', 675·6000 2-143 (<1~t Coc1st Hoqhway. Corona del Mar also 111 Ml'~.1 V 1•rdt'. at 546 5990 ~~~~~~~~I Wed. thru Sun. 1-5. 1790 = Panny Circle A tL ~ Clo6e to parks, schools, -tennis club. Big• br on Ga•r• 1002 GaMHll 1002 HOW IS THE TIME for Job Sl.'l:kl·r ''' clwck the Dally PtlOl Help Wanted clas51hcat1on. If hugelot ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2750 Portola. Costa Mesa 75~0161 the )ob .)IOU want 1s not ~----....... ---ihere you might consider olftrinc your se1""'1ces wiUa an ad In the Job Wanted category. Phon 642-5178 f•tf) "'"" ....... , ..... , ... -~ Clll• I A IC ,\l •-' llnl ltr 111Ctt II t\, ... ..._, ""'""'th lftttr ....... ""' -MflWtlie ..... _.)W .... -~ '1lh1Mftt.e~,. ... T•••SI .. ..,..,_~ .. ,.. ... ,.... .................... ,. .... ~y .._ .. .,.....nJet\J ........ 1 0 ~ I i l « - ~ali !'l11tr!1 -. ' . - HAWAIIAN CONDOS 0.KGMeo.t Fee 1lmple. On .eun with pool, vollev ball crt.I. FurnJahod. $39,tso. SPYGLASS I PENINSULA 4 bdrm 2 ba home. All •m~\J • • Lovely area, ftw 1\eps to beach !195 000. Spacious 6 bdrm, 2 story Cape Cod. LIDO ISLE 1uracuve 4 t.drm. 2 bath. atncl• Beautiful parquet floors add richness story. uaed bnck frptc. Beamed cellln••· to living area. Brand new carpeting hardwood noon. LI• patio. 48 f\. lot. am.ooo. LIDO ISLE newly remodeled 4 bdrm, den. 4 bath. IMnr rm wl c•thedral celllnl•· LI• muter bdrm aulte. S224,9SO. BI L l CR U N D V, REA.LT 0 R 34 1 Boy,1111' 0 11v•• N rl h 7<, td6 I t.hruout! Professional decorator just completed $15,000 in actual improvements. Enjoy the cozy charm of 2 fireplaces. Family room oak beams and beautiful oak cabinets overlooks the whole valley and airport. Gracious living rm area allows easy furniture arrangements. You can probably entertain the f amlly and guests in the elegant dining rm. How G...toa · about a kitchen where the whole family can sit down and eat together wbile overlooking the professionally planned pool areas. You can relax and enjoy your favorite games in the enormous gam~ room, extensively paneled with real oak and spacious oak cabinets to house the largest of record collections or a.11 the music equipment you desire. Custom wood shutters & "Old Time" fan lights enhance this super room. At night. admire the incredible view from your spacious master bdrm. Concerned about shopping? schools? · within 1 mile you have Newport Center, 2 public and 2 private schools. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! We have a new home being completed out of the area. Bank bas appraised at $330,000 before we added $15,000 in decorations. We want to sell! Take off the commission and the decorations -Make us an offer. 644-6709 34 ...u&an 1111 cO..-O dil ~· · .. , ••............ LEASE WITH . OPTION • TO BUY , In the Beautiful Bluffs. close to schools, pools, and Fashion Island. Sharp,· 1 level, 3 bdrm, 2 bath home. Lease now, purchase later at today's low price of $1241900 YOUU UICE OUR &S, . . experienced sales personnel 759-0811 fiut~ Glut Wute\K 'BUg. Eashicle R·2 With channlnl 2 bdrm home bnn1m1 income whit• you develop uother unit. Close to ..abopplDI • Ot&Y $64.500 Gttat ec.t.a Mesa home. 3 Lare• bdrins. over· &lt:ed lot wltll bta.nn1 fruit IJ'ee8. Good COl)dl· UCd l.Dside • oat. Pnce tocludea near new refrlJ. washer • dr1er: Jual move-ln. Hurry eall 5t8-5880 IAYFllON1' Spacious, prof. decorated s BR Camily home w/bonus poOl rm, formal dining, separate family rm, brltfst rm. Frencti·countty atmosphere -pegged floors. 3 fireplaces + pier & slip for lg. boat. Appl. only. Beverly Morphy 642·8235. (T·ll) VIEW IH THE IWffS! Professionally decorated 3 BR, 2'h bath front row "Trina,. Plan w I e.aU.ng area in Jdt.c • Po6l across street. $142,500. Barnett 6".QOO. (T-12). DAILY Ptl~OT • Fr1da , October 7, 1971 HoutH For Salt H0taHI For S• HoutH For Scff fMous•1 For S• ouse1 Fir S• ........ •••••••••• ..... ~ For ScM HOtlstt For S-. HouHI For S• G.-..rol I 002 C.... dtl Mw I OZZ Co1ta .... I 024 ta M.M I 024 r I 026 tklll.ti"' ..,. s.e ~ I ••• • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . • • . • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••.••••••••• • ••• • ••••••••• • ••••••••••• • Ci .. • •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• :'!:! ............. !o. ~:'::~~ .......... !~~ GtMrat 1002 G.....-ol , 1002 COM lliCH QUALITY! $59,900 PJUNCIPALSIN -.......... _ ............. ······················· MAKE COTI'AGE PRICll DOUHOUSI DI AGREEM&N'T L.ots ot wood and i.tain1·d LOCATION! IA5TSIDI Jjquit1aliu1 pertnenh!P· p · A I n COMMAMDIMG view or Pacific Ocean I I a s I p R I (..' i-; Here., a bar1.un! Was Cute 2 Br, complelely re z Xln\ rent.al un1tai>"iU1t l_..o{e 0 ewporl and night lights of Laguna from Rt:DUC:fo:O to sm \(Ill Sl~.000. now $132.950. de<' u r li le cJ • new cnond. N 10~/r$UO. pr c~ · · R c TAYLOR co Ovmcr will allow Si!.~ lndlicpoa, ahlllalealdlnla rm. o u. en. rl01:. 1 Mysti.c Hills aerie. 3 Bedrm, fam rm. us · ·955 0350 · lort·arpelor your choict!. llURRY! HURllY! C>l\ly.494-4420 ~ubnut on terms. $175.000. • Thi~ newly painted 5 V Bdrm. 3 bath BEAUTY 8 Tero IOlZ REAL TORS EM.JOY quatntness of Bal Isle wtth AC.ANT LOT with formal dm1111 rm le ••••••••••••••••••••••• luxury or nearly new, modern 4 an offer! 3 UcdrO<•m COM lhe1mindoleshadetreei; t:-:•111~111um FAMILY 675-551 r bedrm, tam rm home. Open Sat/Sun S1.1mmerf1el<.I hume m:ar Rare Spyjllit~ Hill lot I~ localed Ill 21172 ~ 11N0<•'!41tCo.i..... oatGHT 12 .5·, 209 Pearl. South Coast Pia a ! w,mu1tnlf1cent ocean & S"TROMBOLI RD In love· ~ 645 9161 Be•ut•tul' bdrm home Sl!0.000 V,A. appru1lial 1 1''8!1h1on l1tland view:. 1Y. '1esa Venk. See ll • onqulel cul-de· ac. Pl n· FRONT ROW CENTH In the IDu!fs, front row center with an unobstructed view of the Back Bay, the Cliffs of Dover and a twinkling light line in the distance. This is a rare R plan with all-electric kitchen, large master suite downstairs and two add'l bdrms upstairs. A Unique Plan in a Unique location. $179,500. U~l()UI: tiVM~S REAL TORS , 675·6000 2443 E1St Coast Highway Corona del Mar also 1n Mesa Verde. at 546 • 5990 \'..' F :--; I.I: y !'\ TAYLOR CO. HJ<A LTOH~ s inc.:c 1H46 116 CANYON TOWHH0 ...... 145,000 ~ You'll love liv ng in UD NEW 2-story wUh-'1 bdrm &: bath do ahd master uite with slttlng rm u~. Lge dining rm, fireplace With logs, large patios (front & rear). Cptd & draPed. 21tfSeitJoa'111,..._. MIWPOU CBCTH. N.L 644-4tl 0 IEXECUTIV! Home near Cherry Lake, 4 bedrm, Cam rm, pool, privacy. Open Sat/Sun 12·5, 2242 Heather La. lltA.DFORD Place Condo, S. Santa Ana. So much for so little, only $54,500 for this 2 bedrm beauty. Low down rur Vt· ts ' Perfcl'l for your custom With 2 marble fireplaces, ty or e1ttraa: Family Trader acccsi; ! Red home. 11 t'Ounlry ki~~hen, laree King room, covered patio Ao Curpot. 754-1202 R.C. TAYLOR CO. cover,ed pnllo & much Jarse ftn~ yard Walk 955-0350 ~i:fus~~j.~\~i~ii;~ Sized 4 Bdrm to the bl1h school. A•k· •MANAGER• ,.------"'-------RLTH 557 -6264 or Deairable nelshborhood. 11\19'.000. I have a high percentage .LA.LUWVKVZ..W.UUWWIJA 9'19-2631 Bif4 bedroorn, b~ak!aat agency and am now re 'h Ille to Ocean bar, eatln& area, PV ~: : ~~Mt?'~ will be held 1n con-on an oversiied lot A microwave oven, super! 09•2800 ady lo expand. All calls Completely remodeled )) •ton c r Ire p J 11 ~ c. "'i¥ )ll®&0017 fldence. SSI-4741 smll!htn& 4 I.Ht plus den 8.500. BKR. M0.1720. LARGEST Turtlerock Broadmoor. plus rormal dining plus GUJLIDEO huae family room with TAIDllL "" owner anxious but not desperate. Real Estate Salesperson open beami1. nalurul ·---. COMMUNITY MARTEN Reel E•t•t• 840-5357 I 000/o COMMISSION wood tutures and ocl•an PRIME Res1denl11l f()()O sq. rt. Jot We furnish desk and Jetty \H•w frum S S ~1 fnCO&fontlo" rn Cota De C11 • telephone ~ecretary & master ~wte&~undcck . EAT IOI Amenltlet Include help. Jua\ steps to Ocean Blvd COSTA MESA CONTRACTORS Cl.OSE clubhouse, tennis cot• LA CASA RLTY $221.000. OUPLIX Ol7T SALE! New 3 BR. leae. equestrian com· 495-1870 eve: 831·0737 Call 644-7211 3 Bedroom upper unit 2YI Ba, 2 Story home. In plex. t11..mtin1 ficllltits. w1lb sundeck, lower 2 1reat location. near $4%,500 -bedroom with enclosed beach Ai ahoppm1. Act. I G_.NI I 002 G"'"'°' I 002 lc6oo l.s.d I 006 /Jn NIGll llAIL[Y & ASSllCIAl ES ,,,0o & yard. Klns sized 9!J8.l461 AMCHOIAGI bedrooms, indi~ldual IMVUTMIMTI laundry areas, tftailt·in MESA VERDE l7t .. ) .. ,L ·779 I ....................... ···•···••··•••··••····· ··········~············ BURIED TREASURE In the form of valuable amenities. Cameo Shores means a 3 bdrm home in a top neighborhood. Key to private beach. Ocean & canyon view. Asking $200,000. So do your f arnily a favor and call, 67)-4400 1002 ¢ .. ., .. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• PRICE R!DUCED Decorator's cballenae. This beautiful Buccola built home wilh a hUJe family room added on has been reduced to $91,900. Features: 4 bedrma, 2 bat.ha, fruit trees, and • 1reat Eastslde location. Can now. S4Ml41 ~ COATSi WALLACE REAL ESTATE .INC. 5-et"la•"'-"t <lilf 11.vn~ Uruta EXCLUSIVE Cstm hom• ;r.-:rmrXT7zr -· ra re ove • b .... ,... 2 sty, ' br. 1 blk fro~ .:w:.. ___________ UJY n • n .• ar are A ..-.t home with hu11e ===:::::;::;::~=~ d.lspo6a1, " dishwasher. m1•·-• F bc:h, 3 yrs old. $275,000. SPl!CTACUL.Al Just :s yeara old. Owner Ca ly room w/wet b"r, 1&1t•Vo1ty 1034 May lse. w /opt. A&t. '-"-...&1~ D...t..x desires exchange ror ad· Swedish Indoor bar·b·?· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-2332 ...--~, .,....... d beautiful POOL, 3·BR111--------An exceplaonal custom 1tional un\ts in San and country kitchen. ..._. Pe•..to I 007 bulll home with vaulted Clemente. Slff.500. Mesa Verde's nicest ••••••••••••••••••••••• wood beam &ellln~. COLEOFMEWPORT lookinastreet A.bargain beautiful :;o11d oak 675·551 t at SlO.S,000 dbslly worth OCEA.HFROMT c 11 b In et s th r u • 0 \It • 10% more arier Jan. 11l. firepl&ccs m hvin11 room --------socalltod•yandi;avc• TRIPLEX and master bedroom. leaded gins~ window. and a t·era nric tll jacuu.1 1n the mu~te Near Balboa Pier. Xlnl locallon. New copper plumbmg & fixtures lhru-0ut. New carpeting & painL BEST Ocean· front pnce around. CUTE21DRM COTI'AGE Close lo all shopplna. XJnt coodrt1on. Carpeted. Pnced right al Sl.29,000. bath PLUS a charming 2 bedroom Rental with fircplac and a aeparale pat1 deck CORONA HIGHLANDS SPECTACULAR VIEW *** VETS ATTENTION VA appraised value JACK HOWELL $110,000. Offered at ~"'' ~tOC1.-ns flS..500. Quality bl.Ult a 644-1156 bedrm, 2 bath. Shake -----·--- r o o f • b r i c It f Pl c , 3 Bedroom House CONDO SPECIALIST hardwood firs. Near 940ConereaaSt. · achools & park. Vacant, Southwest aru 1¥:~~~J~ ~11:1oyta me. Call MESA DaMAR BQ.OIST .+~·~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS FIXER· VA Brand new cpts & painl->ou do the rest! Small or no down pymt. on this home. Popu.Jar So. Coast Plaza area. 4 br, C mily rm, pleasant rear yd. $72,!00. Hurry 6 call! Ytf'ft Jo•'°" RJty S4M646 OPEN DAILY HuntWJt• leKtl I 040 2753 Cibola ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 br. 3 ba. new crpl & paint.185,000. pc Nalty 770-1.804 or 844·354S !c~!!lrtable bo~. near: 1hopa and comm. collese& s bedrm•. forl"l\al dinlna. brick flrepl•ce. hand)' liltdlen, 176,:JOO. BKR, lf.2·2561 Jul\ 11$led, custom built, attblted. d i&ned Hd very uc1lin1 home or cedar, beams, and 1tus. Phu 1ar1e rock l\replace. 2 Bedrma. dln· bia nn, aod bas a new 2 bednn unit on t.be back or tbe ptOperty. Each bOme bas • C0%1 patio. The 1--------•l loeatloo ls eic.dllent for schools " ahappinl and FORESTE OLSON •.,-. n• • •• •• OPEHOAILY 34041-51 Calle de bi Primavera, Dana Pl. Whitewater view! 3 & 4 br, frml dlnin&. family rm, w•t bar. Deluxe cu1tom built! From S11S,.500. LACASA RI.TY a 18'10 tve: A1·013T happy Newport ltvlns. Offered at $190,000. PETE BARRETT -R~TY­ '42·5200 - . A dandY 4 bedroom eJUI unit In the NOrth lSluffs. Nifty aecor. Bri&ht and cheery wtlh view of the hills .. Try to match this tor only $139.000 .. • cOUMlu. ...... co. 644-1766 WANTED 2 Or a ea home in CdM. Any price. All terin1, trade. Prtnc. Onty. Call 538-9&49. PR£Sll~E AR£l Beautiful, modern, Penindula Point home with cOYered paUo, dlning room, fireplace, 3 Bdrms, 2 Baths, on quiet, 1ecluded 1µ-eet, just steps from ·bay & ocean beaches. $162,000 429 "M'' Street 675-4305 BYS. OPEN SUNDAY 1~ • red hill .:..:_:.: 552-7500 ' 1 r;)t (<-r')M·') t (I.I. I 111" LAGUNA CHARM -lewtlM ...,_. tllhtahd Cit • deslr.W. C_.... lat, haNwooft ftocn. MW ....... a11I •l•ctrlc•I, Z b•droom, 3 bath...$176,750. 497 .. 2419 LAGUNA NIGUEL ·~·1728 DANA POINT 49:Mll.2 NOR INS REALTY AffOllDAILIJU Poealbl7 the moet af· fordable property io IA&Wla today. Brlaht Ii: alr7 2 Bdrm. & 2 bath (). Y-0 Jmt one block lo tM beach. Newly redecorat. ed. OwDer financlnJ can make this purchase a breea. ~.aoo. PUCE & QUflT oCOoronadel lfarwfll be enjoyed by you & your te· nant.s In thl.I ccttace and 2 1uest unit.a. Walk lo beach & ahops. Tennit & recreaUon center close by. Sl75,000. * 494-1057 * JUSTUSTED But whitewater Ii: coutal vle1n lo Laauna Beach! Cedar Ii 1las1 plus dramatic 1tailtfld WANTED LEASE OPTION MADRID OE LAGO . Must have 4 Br & view of lake. Reasonable option money & positive cash flow for monthly t'ent. Call 768-1274 JJ.tu'Lor v~"' Jl.ome "CARMEL MODa" VIEW HOME VILLAGE San /11&n 3 br, By Owner. Very blghly l ba Countr7 Co~rt upgraded, in BJulra. 3br , home. Wood paUCll\ 2~ba. ram rm. $191,500. 640--0818 or .-S-521& afl Includes land. Opn H~c 9PM Sat/Sun l·S or by uppt.1-------- Prin ool)'. 2157 Quedada. s.faAM 64().-638:5 Friday, October 7, 1971 'W~AY INCOME HOMES TRIPLEXES . COSTA MllA- MEA.l SOU'nt COAST PUIA $159,000 to $164,500 Fe•tures comJ>Jete carpet. drapes, landscaPlflg. Fireplaces (3 Bdrm). Private patios & decks. garages. CoQstruction complete approx. Nov.15th. C.M.M. ....... ...- C7141M~J"°4 . IYOW..a CCIMo At P• .,_.., C411f. ,. 0...-t T..U CW. 4MSOloe~a.­ FWnished -$110,000. a eourta .... 1,750 sq n. Only 100 c:ondo wslta. 6 Poob &JacUUUI, wetbar. etc de:. Will be shown by owner -C.R. Reiter from today 'til sold or 10/19/77. Call O> 114/34M721 <Reiter) fl.for (1) 714/346-5683 (lennl.S club ofc), or ~ortland, Oregon (1) ~1226-USl. 7 UNITS Costa Mesa. $17,500. in· come. Huie Jot. $189,950. 6 UNITS ••••••••••••••••••••••• BIG BEAR LAKEFRONT $119,000. 5 Cabins Agt4fM·9'12T 4"·9704 ---------·--------+-- C&rdiff By The Sea older home io aood cond. Beaut. ocean vu. 3br, 2ba. $'.19,900. Opo Swi 1-5. 21CY1Glasgow.1...us.522& lteGIEshft Eu• !JI. 2IOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• •I le 4 RDfT IJ.S Why pay SZS.$30wheo you can get the best ror less. $l.S. fee. 7 Days sm rurniabed unit • $1.90 duplex SUl5 Bach. util pd w /yd szu l br plex, util pd $?252br bowe u.. Bell SZS02br bouse w /1aN S2'7S 3br wut kids ok ms 2br 2 1tory ccmdo w /pool. kld.s ok. 1828 N...-port Bl, C.M. sis. fee l45-Slll90 Beaut 3br Condo. Nt-wly redeco. Preauge loca Pool. $375. 9694 Pet· Uawood. Nr Adarns & Bushard. 536 3'l25 associated llROl<:FR-. ALALlC1P'., 'tJJ'..,,. 1,11 .... t.'' ;6•' =.=~ ~ .................... 170016th SL <Oovtt•t 16th) Nz.8170 WESTCLIFF BLOC. NEWPORT BEl\CH 1 .,,,.,..,.., ... Ce••"""'° ••,,_.At• Call Mr. How ard 6 45· 6101 .. Fnday.Ocl0ber7, 1977 Add it ... Build 1t ... OiaperJt...Hammer 1t •.. Carpet SERVICE it .•• Cement it, •• Wire it. .. Hoe it...Clean it .. Move lt...Press it ... Pa1nt 1t ... Nail it ... Plaster lt. .. F1x it ... • .,l•e•I ... ...................... C " •• ~ ~.... Ge111aal~lcn ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• DIRECTORY DfrJ Ap(lllanceSei'v. TIUP CHARGE SlO Economy Acoustics: Qual Sewin• • DelJcn at 1t'.!1 HANDYMAN Want 8 REALLY CLEAN •prayed ceihn11s. re· belt. Yourbomeor m111e NOJ08TOOSMALL HOUSE"1 Call G1n1ham Z02S S. Main. S. A ~1'22 ~'701 ~ •••••••••••••••••••••• DPRl!t'CED ,ART· TIME T8J.8l UNITED CAIJFORNIA IAMK 4617 MacArthur Blvd N"port :Buch C7 I 41 55'0 5922 An F..qual Opportunit.y Eatploycr &nfcing MEW ACCOUNTS ' COUHSB.01 rar OW'. ca.ta Mesa Q( c. f!xperlence ·prefefred. 1'Yl>e to:SO WPM. Call Iii. !:Oat 5'8-ZJ()O c ·-=-, .. s..-..aLoali 2700 Hcner llYd CM E.O.E.M/F ptlll"I. Guar. Uc 0296$5. Al10 a ltH1H1on1 l-'ree•t.$3$-1800 c1&Stom drapenes. Cdl\f. ----- J - PRISS OPEl\ATOR, ex· per. «1 AB D1ct llO. m 'J'blr4 SL LI~ Beh. RETAIL CLERKS UTOTEM Apply In Persoo THE VILLAGE INN 127 Ma:me A••· ••a•lllmd ·-· ' - YORKSIDRE TE.BRJ.ERS Poodle Sbeltle Mix, DachibuDd m11c Pit Bull Ttrrier Mix PAMR"SPETS NEWPORT BEACH Mo--0090 . TO OUR WOMEN 1N BUSINESS COMING Sunday, October ~6, 1977 A TRIBUTE · TO THE In the Dally Piiot ·ORANGE COAST'S SUCCESSFUL WOMEN ...-.......;;...::.--.__ BUSINESS ~ PROFESSIONALS 0J0 DAILY PILOT Neiabborhood Gara1e Sale; 10800 El Ceotro lGreen Valley Homea, FV) Unique Items. SaL Ollly Frid!)', Octobe< 7. 19n ARAllAH C:OLT Grey yearling. Vety c:1usJc, Vert Correct. Hu al.ready woo Class A ---------'76 750 Suauld, has ever· 14'F1)tingJr.w/trlr. ythln«. cus. aeat. $2450. IOH ••••••••••••••••••••••• • TV RCA, 19" Color, 4ood --------- cond. $95. -Cart lncld. Super Luer f195. ExceU. 84'7-6100, ulcfor Pete cood. 494·S840, (213) 23" Ernenon Color TV, _335-_9!r1_4 _____ _ w /stand, 185. · 111' Daysailer w /trailer ___ 642-'2845 $600. Ca ll !JU-9861 •ZODIAC Port·A·Marine Inflatable Boata ~Colle1e. C.M. (714)~0.2070 MCYI'OR HOMES FORR£NT From $100. Yt'k. 77o.-0644 RENT Fireball 23' Self l'Olll. Auto/air CC, CB, stereo, slpa 6 645-2283 RENT-BRAND NEW 27' Pace Arrow motor home. lo wtnter rat.et 556-0149 . •7'HARYIST ~ fllWfOfll W.ICH ~-·· consign nowll · Tnlcb 197'FOID RAMC:HlllO Pully equipped lndild1n m • Ii crl.li.H tolf\l'Ol. (1 1). we rnced-suto MIUC:U MAXDA~IHAULT 2~HarbOrBMI., C,14. 645-1700 20' Mini Motorhome, Dod1e v~. auto trans, P,S, P /B, atenio, alps •• fully ICU'·COft\. OlllJ 7000 ..,...,...------~ mi. Like aetr.-(a78RLD> Sal• priced $85815. SEA RAY'S Al 1971 Mockb 18'-30' HAIRISOM'S SEAIAY 2327 So. Maln, S.A 54MSS5 loati. s,..ct & 3101 Coaat Hwy, N.B. Sid • ' ?lHAIYEST 24' Notorbome. auto ltal\5, P /S, P /B, atereo. cnase control, dub air cond. root air. 4KW geo, CB radio, loaded. OaJy 27.000 miles. (754GSO> ---'-'--- Sale prtc'ed l1l995 \. 1 Aaitoi W..tH 9190 Aufot l•ported Autos, lmporhd Autoa, Import.cf Autos, lmporffd Friday. October 7. 1977 ······················· ..... : •..••......•••••••..•.............••.....................................•............ YoUW:i:~:.. ~~••••••••••••!!.'.~ ~••••••••••••!?.~~ ~~!':'.~~~~ •.•• !?.~~ ~~ ... ~~ .... !?.~~ ~':*.~~·.~:."! ....... !!~~ ~.°.~·.~:.--: ....... !!.~ ~"!:_~·.~:."! ••••••• !!~~1~~·.~:.V: ........ ~ CONNW CHEVROLET HarbOr Blvd. COSTA MESA S46+t200 ....................... COMI fN & S '73 Ghia cou~. excep · THIAUMIW uorull,must ~tt! HOCSINOWl!I 88800VESTREET --~"42.Hl 1'72Ml%220D -Near MacArthur Maida 9738 Automatic & air cond. COMPLITE &Jamboree Roa<b ••••••••••••••••••••••• For the luxury of u IOOYSHOP llJ.1300 Mercedes & the eff1cien NOWOPEH 19760ATSUN I di I <8.'MEl"E> miracle mazda SAODUIACIC VAWYIMPORT$ t31·2MO 4tM949 CREVIER BARWICK DATSUN °' t, I ,.1111 ,q>1· Ir 11111 83 1· I )75 49 3.337 5 1210 MISSION VlfJO f.MPOltrS ...... .. '"' .. ___ , , .... -----........ , 4 spt.ed1 rod10, heater & side n'ioldlf?1'S. In e x· 2150 H..t.or It.cl cellent condition CodaMese 645-5700 (9~RS). You MUST 831 114d ..195 · I 70.C Lease Mew·UHcl OVER 100 SEEthis1asi;aver! -'73 RX2. 4 m door, 30,000 COSTA MESA DATSUN 284SHARBOR BLVD. 540.64 IO 540.0213 1978 Datsun 280Z·A1r 9723 MISSION VIEJO IMPOllTS ....... ' ll •••••• , •• J ..... -..... ·-~· llJ 1·1148 ,c95.110• '71Flat124 Spyder, &ood cood. $UIOO. 873-9585 mi. Xlnt cond. $1800/bst olr. 6'5·11929 9740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MERCEDES OH DISPLAY Ho ... of Imports '74 Ml% 450SE AUTHORIZtD Less than 3',000 miles, KER CEDES DEALER Complete with cruise 8862 ld~nchester, control, stereo, pwr. win Buena Park dows. radial tues·tn 523-7250 superb showroom cond1· On I.be Sant.a Ana Fwy. tion. 0'2.LJW>. ~---Ft-C MUST SEE'!' SACRI E SALE .MISSION VIEJO IMPOITS ....... .. '" .. _ ... 11 •0• .. _ •••• "'-·--· 831-11 .. 8 ~9S 170 4 MISSION VlfJO IMPOllTS .. •••••• I \ ') ""-··· ... ,., ..... -........... . 1131 ·1141 •9.S-1 704 1966 230 SL, both tops, C speed. 1967 250 SL, . leather " Cull back seat. Auto, Both mint cond. Best offer by 1017177 '15-'1803 '72~U ll04000R ' ......... Lo .... '---Y• •• .._, (\llQM) . 55999 Call our used car manaaer for a quote to- day • Fiat 75, Xl9, AM/FM 7S~lte..o '75280Z.supersbarp, air, stereo, removable top, 74 Ml% 450SEL Rare. J.!,000 miles. Im· map, AM/FM casnlte, runseood. $2800.496-9428 Leather interior. pwr. MISSION VlfJO IMPOQ1S ••• ~. •• • \Cl ••••••• , .. ~ ........ ····-· maculate (?S98) 4 spd, lo mi, Bruce wmdowi;, crwsc control, J $67t9 956-7900 days or 673-2591 '7~ X119 cherry cood. bm sl.UlJ"OOC & m etalhc paint. BJI 1148 495·110.C ----=-------- C e..dMtn eves. air, FM stereo, maas, In great condition ! MG 9742 -~.SA .. _ -•• Datsun Was. Good :M,000 mi, $UOO. 846-2389 U99LOV ). • •••••••••••••••••••••• !' -llflh ,..........,., "16 Blue MG Mlget, 9100 ,.__ 9707 condition. Best. offer. '68 _Fial 850 Spyder. low m 1 x Int <' 0 n d It I 0 n • -Call540-1093 mileage, SllOO. Pnvate ~ :......, 971 2179 ............................ ---party. MS-2110 _ ....... _-~_. ----- 1974 AuDI FOX 11'74 Datsun 8210, Htchbk, ---MGa 9744 4 speed ak conditioninl good cood., new tires, '73124 Spyder. clean car, L l k e New • 7 4 s E ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4rlow ailles. (SWU\H). AM/FM, PP. $2200or bst nu paint runs great. Mercedes. 4 Brand new 74 MGI GT $Jiff dr. mM1'I $2975. rarm. 564-00&3 lllcbelen X tllw. Color: 30 ooo miles AM /Fiii •Sprite "Cluslc'. NaVJ blue w7raclnf atrtpe. Runa great $149$. 731-GMZ.MWtel. Mark. BMW t71Z ....................... tm MOZ. 58,000 aµ, '4000 .._. 9727 Drk 1rn/bamboo intr. Like new. 1 year, 12,ooci orbestolfer. •••••••-••• .. ••••••••• Sll,900. Anne Koen, milewun.nt.Javallable. Wl'NJ.91 1146-81161,a.211138 $37t9 .5 1599 - BI LL MAXEY TOYOTA ' I. • • °' l ' t • • • • I II ' ... • ... I I .... RAY FLAD£BOE LINCOLN·MERCURY ' 75 M1% 45051 Cop1l•d Mfrs Sunr6ol, c:nUe control, 2001£litSA558-8000 leather I& metallic palQL l'oncM ,750 (0305U). SIJ,4t5 ••••·-••••••••••-••• SPORTS CARS .... lrSold MISSION VIE JO 1.MPOR1S ' . . . . . . .. . .. 8 l l 17411 49 S 110• .__ WESTGBMAM IMPORTS 714/541-1116 ..,. DllllirW~~·•·•••4•••••••••••••·P411 aurw.d.-.i.-;io--. ... .,,, •• • w._ •..•.................... a .. ............ ?I YW 1:1• 11• .................... 11111 Avto..tlllct. • ?O~ a11ll .................... 11611 ........ '61 YW};;J/42 t'llll .. ; ................. SIOll ·--· KcnlCllln Ghias ..,. Cli;e4 .......... MOIO "7J c:..e 4 .... ,..., tJOIO ":'/JC:.,.,,..,,...,_ Miii ._, HOii '1Z~,....,_,..a YW Convertibles .,, .......... l.OOOfltla.Qmlo ,...,,...., Here's How You Can Use Our Famous Dime-A-Lines At Hill Long Ford at the all new Irvine Auto Qnter lake Forest exit/San ll.ego Freeway.~ •• THE '78 FORDS ARE NOW HERE! ANr.fHING. GOES! ·~**************•**** AID SEE US NOW Al GENTER* 1'74 fOllD MAMT09IO to,Ot ., l lf .......... ., ......... , • , •• ,.~. 111111111 , ..... ····"'•"• It_ .• .,.._. II.lo. ,...,..., '2192 WE HAVE 'EM! THE '18's c.Al'IU•IOICAT•MOMAllCH • COUGAI • MARQUIS • COMTIHIHT AL • MAIKV lt7' fOID NftO "UNAIOUT. Here·a reel •OO"NY· I cyt , ... 10111100 trena , ,...,,...,,eo.... ....... It ••••• •• tYlll*ltf •2916 ,,,. fOllD .......... Tht• Cit lite• Att CIOCICMlo•• CICM90' 11eer1n1. ••d•o . tt•••••· •lld l•IOMlltC tra••· !Lie. 242't00 lt17 fOllD -· "" co...,,llo,.lftt . ..... , ''•k••· PO•er llHffAf, au•o,.1t1c tfltH • ·--·-· ~..: M'W~I San Juan Capaatrano 137-4100 4tl-4S 11 I '76 Porsche t I Z CbocoJate brown ex terlor, sunroof && low mllca. (903NXN). llLL YATES YW.PORSCHE San Juon Capiatrano 137-4100 4tl-45 I I , '679912 M•w bl•ck paint, 1Conl1, otloys. Sharp, c--. $6300, aft 6 pm call4Wl41 ,, COSTA MESA DATSUN 28&5HARBOR BLVD. 54M410 540.02 I J • r I RAY FLADEBOE LINCOLN MERCURY '18Sky1ark. 2 dr, runs gd, n& some work. $350 6U-S686 eves. CodllH 9915 r-------------···••••••••••••••••••••• ..,, SLIJ*' Bettle SUclbl.ll, lt73C.OILLAC 1.Ltd Ed.. IOkl •/brown .cord Int. ao.ooo miles, SIDAH OEVIW .lllnlcood. S299S. a.t().1'139 Fully loaded ·ex tr a V.,._ 977Z =~~~~~c!sr:~e ••-••••••• .. •••••••• OHLY $3195 llLL YATES VW.PORSCHI Su Juan Capistrano 137'!'4900 493-4511 '71 El Dorado. Must sell. $7SOOorbeStolfer. Lo m1. AU xlru. 5 yr wrnty. 6'4""555 JM MEDIATE DELIVERY!!! lt11 CADH.&.;AC smw cau for lease rate. CORT FOX LEASING 2:s81New»ort Blvd, COSTA.MESA '4~3661 $4488 • 1973 CADILLAC COUPE DEVIUES t3ToCboose From> AU lhe dtlwie extras (<rlli027). Priced as low as $3788 • OVER150 QUALITY CARS TO Sr:LECT FROM • Nabers Cadillac 21>0(1 H ort 11r B ' ( '"11 ~k, I"\ )11 111110 1976 CADILLAC SfYfLLE Spht leather pwr '\ejls. cru1,c control. stereo tapt• & low mil<'~ Showroom 'ond1t1on' Pri ce d t o sell! C37~RYY». MISSION VIEJO IMPOllrS ·-.. \ . ··~. ,.,., .. I •• o ·-·-•• 8Jl.l/·l8 495-1104 - RAY FlAD£BOf LINCOLN MERCURY 1978 OLDSMOBllE •...; .. • .. ~.· MISSION VIEJO IMPOlllS .... '•'' \C. ... ••·• ,., ........ _ ........ . 3ll-17J4 J9.S-1704 I HERE NOW .4 l]. Only the Dally Piiot really tells YoU what'• new In your local community ••• every day QUALITY USED CARS DOMESTIC CARS-IMPORTS-TRUCKS-VANS-RV's SPECIAL SPECIAL '11 PONTIAC '75 PONTIAC FIREBIRD GRAND PRIX U s.1-«Jrltr'IOI' ._. Landall :t red ~elour 1n19'1~. "9tnov Blu• exterior ""''" matclllng T·IOO. lull PoWtr, ltc:IO()< 11r lttlerlor, l'ufl Pf11111W, flCIOfJ air COnd•llOnl~, A ... FM ..... tilt cond1t1on1119. P-•r 'll'tndowa; wllell. ralfya ""'*" ~ GClf'llrcll. At.ff~. ~· ..,......_ 14.IOO ""'' tNIS CldloPo lrllllriar, &.ow m•la Y2) "'''-(1~i4i2) '7 4 Buick Century l __ .....,,....,,. ..... COUf'( w..i.. ..,... -$ 31 FuH Pow•r, fac.toty ait cond•HOPUflll '-"• ,..,., n 111.Ml Or..: .... , ... Wlolle IOP.s3999 ...,_...,__.""' ,. -"~·-....... >1 ,000 ........ Li•• ... . ~141111141') • '76 Mercury Monarth ~~~=:;s4·999. --°"'' -.... ve. Al4fM ClwlO ~ C-11. u 000 ..... ... """ ••• ~ I SPECIAL I '75 DODGE CORONET CUSTOM flREBIRO f:· ''•~k .. ,.,,OI' 1t1ieli\ -.. Oltck lf'lltriut, F\111 poww. bc*Y llf ~ Only t0.000 1111IH, Mvat .... (174'1CU) ... - Mt\\H)"'I \o '' ll) 1 MJ1•JA1f~ HJ 1 I "J .o( -19 J r !{J. RAY FLADEBOE LINCO LN-MfRCURY JRVINE- 130.7000 ..... , ........ ,.ai~•· .... ·-., .. __ c_ ,........ ••••••••••••••••••••••• I 973 FORD '73 Lincoln Mark IV 1 PfMTO WAGON owner, Bl\lt Boot ss.ooo Automatlc transmission. +. &storrer837 2245 Realsharp! <058HSX> -$I 196 '75 MARK IV Whl .. lxry .ILLY "-"TIS Upstlck editi~. Loaded "" w;atcess. $7600. 644-4642 VW.p()RSCHE Manriclc --9t47 ------• San Juan Caplltrano 137-4800 49];451 ' P/B. lt runs, but needs "1r'Ork. Bst ofr. 546-4.933 all ___ ___. ___ .,.1 ----------------- -------WantAds Call642·5678 _s_wk_dy..;..s_. ____ _ s. Htw 9800 Autos. Htw WHAT DOES IT TAKE TO BE · ORANGE COUNTY'S # 1 BUICK DEALER? Real honest bargains like these! BRAND NEW I 9J8 BUICK LeSAIRES 1 ''Family size cars af FamilYi Prices'' . ~~Lid P'362.9S '963.95 DISCOUNT rs-. 102000) ' J ' . RAY FLAOEBOl LINCOLH -MERCUR1 PREMIERE SHOWING!!! STAR WARS CELICA GT SH0WCAR 1971 TO~OTA PICKUP 1971 FIAT IZI STATIOM WAeoM Autofnlltic.. air eond .. AM/FM atereo c:asaette & low mu-. (2730JPJ. s2195 1971 ~UDI FOX 4Dl.;SIDAM ~lorliatle, radio, tjdlat ur.. and In ....i1ent lhlpel (324MXF} ·s3295 by TOYOTA -.· CORDOBAS! • LEB~ttpNS! •VOL.ARES! .; FURIE.5! • • TRAIL/DUSTERS! • AARR~S • CH~Y'SLERS AND THE INCREDIBLE '-SAPPARO"! IMMEDIATE DILIYIRYI RUSI' '\ • '72 PONTIAC GRANDYIW v-e, automatic. air eooditlonlng, power steering, power brakes. Pow9f' windows, AM/FM ster.eo radio. heater, whlt~ll tlree, vlnyt roof, tilt wheel. (968RXOJ '1291 '74 FORD _ WAGON ~. artometl«. .,, condlttonlng, siow9r llt-11\o, power brakn, Ndlo, Heter. whhewall tit ... (785648) • • OVER f;ACTORY INVOICE ON ~ll REMAINING:• . 1 77 VOURE 2 DOORS '77 VOL.ARE .4 DOORS 177 PLYMOUTH FURIES NO GUESSWORK. AU INVOICES ARE RIGHT OM THE WINDOWS! By ROBERT BARKER Of ... o.ty.......... 4 HUl\tm&ton Beach residents h~e won their ftaht to prevent the tate lrom opeain1 an uaemployment office in their neigbborbOOd. it was learned today. Phil Goerl. administrator of tbe Employment DeYelop~ent Department for Orange County, said the sta~ wm look tor a new ··EviiWnce .... #,,i# ult!. 'N E W Y 0 R K < ~ P > - • art.ment of Army docwrwnll ... -how I.hat an American aol~r .~.,was given LSD by an Army .. : telligence team in 1961 wit.bout Jcoowledp in an tff Pit to de· . \ermine the whereabouts of .)'!.Classified documenta; .he was ;,;,suspected of teaUn&. the New • 'S'orkTimesnported tod&)'. ,.,." Tbe Times sald thlt the same • '4:eclauifled documents show ., ~hat seven Asians and nine ,~. °EUJ"Opeans alao wer~ Riven the .. ·~lluclnogenic drug w1th0ut llH!U"> '.>.~~onsent for interroaation r.Jr p.urposes ~._,And more thao 1,000 J'-1-mericans volunteer•d to • ~·Q•rticlpate in experiments Fountain Valley ftnm and paramedics who beard 1b0\Jt Dan Choroser and th• mC)ne1 . bis ' ntl1bbors are tryln1 to ralle to help pay for a serles of OJ)e.raU~ :th~ teenqcr must under o, t!e· dded the~ could h Ji> out, . Mcm from the· d•part mebt dorWed Sl.000 to th I~ w Ith wlll flnance'tbe sura~ needed ror tbe 13-)'ear-old tC> combat Q rare Cfl,ea,se , dYstonla muscu.la.Hum d~formans. '&Ojan Bordng Arouad , A group of Fountain Valley seventh and eighth grade girls put the ,finishing touche6 on a papier mache Trojan bOrse masco f~ their school carnival to be held this Saturday, The girls are <L·R> Kirn McLaughlin, Tracy Donovan, Kim York and Kelly Brown. Sherris York is on top The carnival will be held at Fountain Valley Elementary School. 17911 Bushard St .• from noop until 6 p.m . Detective Finds $17,200 in Pasta NEW YORK <AP> llahan restaurants would be mobbed by treuure bunters if every dish or Banks H i ke Prime &de NEW YORK <AP> - Several major commerc'fl banks raised "tbeir prime interest rates tOday from 1• ~ percent to 7rn percent in the second general increase in Uie economic barometer within two weeks. Citibank or New York, the nation's &tCf.>!'d·largest bank, announced the in ere au and witbin minute s . other commercial banks made the saa.e announcement. Tbe closely; w•tched prime liltetest rate is the tate a tiaiik char1es its 1 laraest and· most credit· wor hy customers. Changes In the prime rate often innuen.ce ai.milar chan~ in other 111terest rltes. Poliee R e port lasagna contained what de· tective Victor Ruggiero found when be probed a platter of the stuff With a fork. What Ruggiero found, hidden between lay~rs of the pasta dish, WllS $17,200 in $:iC) bills 1n four brown packets. Believe 1t or not, he actuaUy was looking for the money there. Rugvero and two detectives were lnvestlfatlng the disappearance of~ mllllon rrom a long-unclaimed trunk at an East Side warehouse. The trunk's owner, rePQrted to be a deceased Hungarian doctor has never bietnofficiaJly named. On Tuesday. they &ot a warrant to search the ho{Pt-and aarden., atchard P. tYnch, 4S Gnd bb wife, Alice, of HolbrookJ N.Y That done. the1 surched every closet. drawer and cabinet. but fouo4 ~\lit. 'nley dus up the tiaCkyard1 lh~er l>eds "!'l but st.ill no !tick. • Finally, in tbe • •rage. Ruggiero ~erfid tbf tasaana Jn a freezer, prodded it and found the loot. ,, Each packet ~Atain"' 8S $50 bills -344 bills for a total of $17,200. I 'Rodent Obseroed, • fl Tried to Destrpy' 1663 PLACENTIA AVINUE Valley Plan8 Hearings OD Two Issues throu&h the weekend. L1fe1uards in Huntington Beach said more may. be on the way because we~&her reports iod1caled another storm was brewift& in the Pacific aoulh of Baja California All of lhe Orange Coasfs south faclnll beaches Including the Trestles near San Clemente and Brooks~ in Laguoa bad surf runmna I.ix to ti&hl feet deep with excellent shape today. Lifeguards Jn Huntington Beach said surf there was hittinti six feet with strong riptides, bul they anticipated few problems over the weekend as long as only stront •wlmmers and eic~enced surfers are the only oneswhO 10 near the water. termhfJltion tbat the landowntr· doJnlnatecl water board violates the constitutional principle of "one man. one vote." The IRWD board currently consists of five members elected by major landholders In the district. which encompasses the City of Irvine. Elec:tor votes are weiahled by a aesaed prQPierl1 nlues -the more property 'I landowner bll!, the more his vote ls worth. Under provisions or existing ·state law. the IRWD board recently voted to expand it.s men>btrsbip to aeven member•. wltb the two new directors elected by simple popular vote by all eligible residents. • Tbe lRWD plan is tq eventually 1 wing control of the board tc residenla through a gradual increase ln the number ol poj)ularly elect~ directors. lRWD proJectS that this wm be accomPll.sbed by 1983. The Jrvtne City Councll wants popular control much sooner. Vnder the resolution approved unaDimoualy Thursday, the statE at tom~ general 'a office will bE peUtloned to determine wbethei th• landowner-controUed boarc la constitutional. Councilmen also ordered attorneys to draft and advocate legislation lO &lve reaiatered voters the rlabt to vote for all IRWDboard members MIDLAND, Mich. <AP> - Toxic chlorine 18s billowed from a sectioo of the Dow Chemical Co111pany plant today. forcing evacuaU~l\ of thousands or persona froin 11chools, bomes and buslneues. They w.-e able tO begin returning after about 2\-; boun. At least six chemical worlten were treated 81\d relea$ed at MidlSbd Hospital in this east· central Michigan city~ a company spokesman said. The spokesman said a valve on a Uqu.id chlorine tank opened allowing the liquid to escape and vaporize. It was not known bow the valve opened or 11 human err-0r was Involved, tbe spotesmc aa.id. •. . / Mobil Says Sale Plaru Tale False Mobil Corporation officials safd today there b "a~utely nothing" to suggestions Joan ltvlne Smith made Tbura'day that Mobil planned to sell o« much ol the Irvine C0mP8QY boldinp had It' purchased~-.. ,-,_. firm. ·• "We bad no such plans," said Lawrence Heyl 'Jr., m~er: ot investor relations of Mobil. "We don't Uke to Bee; people attrlbutlni motives to us that we didn't have." Mobil recently lost to a consortium which included. the Irvine heiress ln a bidding baWe to buy the Irvine Company. Mrs. Smith, lo an address to the Orange County Economic Outlook Conferene l'fhuraday, said ahe bad e-tidence Mobil . planned to sell off the company'• ground leases and be1ln breaking up the remainder ol the rancb over the next few years, In eddltioo, ahe tmplied that Mobil would retain only coastal property, bopinl to build an oll termiDaJ and 1torace facility. "I only submit that durina the years Mobil was attemptin1 to purchase the Irvine pl"Qperly. every oil company in the United States was eyeing tbe entire California coast !or loeati~ wben oil could be brouJbt ID nd storoo," she aald. But Heyl contended today Mobil waa interested in the Irvine Ranch u a real estate invatmeiL ... t ...... involving LSD between 1955 and 1962 , accord\n g to the documents, the newspaper said. Tbe ·TJmes said James R. ThomWeU, an American soldier staUonea in France. was gtven LSD in an effort by an Army intelligence team lo determine the whereabouts of cl~lfied documents he wai. suspectod of ---........ , __ ---- , ste4}ltjJ. Al a result, Thornwell s aid ln .n interview with the newspaper, he was subjected to isolation and 1'at inUrro~ated, given iojectlons or sodlum pentothal. ;~~~lit • By PIDUP aos A.B.IN .~,,. OUlleDMl)'l'llllUtllff :• ~ Owners of a Santa Ana gold and silver bulUpn storage firm • 0 J)lundered of $1.l million in reciou' metals flied legal ·~•motions piursday seeki~. t.o 1 -~-uppress e\.idenct 1•1h~ by 1~!'J)olice in an Aueust sel&Ure of business records. •::• Police believe Swiss • aults •,.-~nc. ownersVlocent Cart&DOand 1-··.i ack Fulton systematically .:-embeuled their clients' stored ' gold and silver over a 15-month .·:·period. ! .. • So far, hi>wever, no charges "'·; ·h•ve been Cited despite the allegations made to convince a •"•municipal Court jud1e t.o lip a -:'•• 4searcb warrant permlttiai the :· .. 'records raid. . Carrano called polfce July 9 ·from the Swiss Vaults office, 1404 ,.., • Grand.Ave. • •• He claimed he was beld and •" •1ben tied up by an arnied man • ; • wbOle accompli«S cle.aDed out ,., tbree tons or stored pr.clous "' metals. , Santa ,\Ila pol tce reported they 1 · : ~ould find no evidence that a rob- , ,; bery occurred, other than ,,, •• earnmio's statementa. ' • Oo Aua. 24 tbey surprised Ca.rrano and his partnen with the search warraQt and seized 42 • :grocery bagsful o! business r • hconfs in a genel'al sweep or • i))apers that included the CUltenu .. i>f wastebaskets . "'" Thursday, Carrano's ~attorneys, Theodore C. Horton ~· and Brian J Camptiell of LCl5 • 'Anteles. filed aff!dults in ..,;, municipal court allegins the search warrant was • ~ocoostituti~alb~ obtained. !"-"· In a con\j)anion motion, the • •tt.omeys asked that a hearing on the inotloo to suppress e\ftdence .. be held in lJos Angel.el CoUnty, nstead of in the Orange Co&mty Court. • • I hypnoti%ed, abused 'Verbally ah~ finally was admlnLstered LSD Without his knowledee durine a thr~month period. Army documents show that TbomweU, a private flrst class, f U given LSD on June 12, 1961, to determine whether he had taken classillcd documents for purposes of esl>ioriage, the Times said:· Accotdlug to th~ Army report&, Tllornwen prevJously confessed tb ta~ln1 the <foeum~. the n~paper said. However, tu! now c$enles dOinl so. Neae Soriet Constitution Soviet President L~onid Brezhnev <second row, nght> and Premier Alexei Kosygin ., second row, second from right) stand amid other members of \he Russian parliament during an ovation which followed the adoption of the new Soviet constitution. 1'he new document replaces the 1933 Stalin constitution and is the . Soviet Union· s fourth political charter. Currj!Dl\)' unemployed and l1VU11 In Berkeler, Thornwell, 40. said be stil suffers an "unbearable pain 10 my head whcnl iry w taueh or when I'm drt.aklng a beer -I 1et nl11btma.res of being back in France and wake up screaming and crying, feeling like l want lo di• .. Detective FilUJS $17,200 in Pasta p,...poge;tl ~TOXIC ••• A detective in the Midland County sheriff's office said. "We are usinc every means possible to evacuate tbe studenta -buses, vans. squad cars. anything we can «ietour hands on." The documents show that the Army decided not to court· martial Thornwell because of "unfavorable publicity result.mg from Thornwell'• recollection or the 'bizarre method' employed" by the intelligence team NEW YORK <AP> -ltallllll restaurants would be mobbed by lreaslU'e hunters if every dish or lasagna contained what de· teclive Victor Ruaglero found when be probed a platter of the stuff with a fork. What Rugeiero found, hidden between layers of the pasta dish, Wanted: Crew Women R.eaporid to A.d SAN DIEGO CAP> -A former college economics teacher is interviewing women who answer his newspaper advertisement for crewmates on a cruise to the Caribbean. "I'm really surprised,·· Richard Frye said ., Thursday of the half dozep responses. He expects others before picking two or three to accompany him and Steve Foley. 29, his partner. Frye, 3lr-is a 1967 graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy who taught recently at Western Washington Siate College. He said be earned a doctorate at the University of Rhode Island and is slngle. The 36-foot sailboat has been ln Sitn Diego tor a monlle and last weekend Frye advertised for young women who know sailing and are interested in a one- year cruise. His bOat is complete with stereo. Poliee Report 'Rodent Observed, 'I'ried to Destroy' was $17,200 in $50 bills in four brown packeta. Believe it or not, he actually was looking Cor the money there. Ruggiero and two detectives were investigating tt>e disappearance of~ milllon from a lone-unclalmed trunk al an East Side warehouse. The trunk's owner. reported to be a deceased Hungarian doctor, bas never been officially named. On Tuesday. they tot a waJ'l'ant to search the home and garden of Richard P. Lynch, 43, and his Wife, Alice, of Holbrook, N.Y That done, tbty aearched . every cloaet, drawer and•. cabinet, but found nothln1. They Residents of parts ot Midland but mostly in the suburban commw»ties of Hower. Mount Halley. Ingersoll and M1d.land Township were being told to aet out of the area dug up the backyard flower beds R b~· l{,,Jla -butstlllnoluck. 0 ~r. ~ Finally. tn tbe gara1e. auuiero discovered lh~ Jasa1Da , w:-:.mploye, \n a1reeier, prodded it and found ~- the loot. Each packet contained 86 $5() bilb 364 bills for a total of $17,200. FromP.ageAJ SENIORS ••. needs of a special poup was necessarily• poUi,ical acUoo. She saJd older people face WounuTwo • .f' ..... Pflfle AJ PUBLIC ••• ; 1 r STOCKS I MOSKOWITZ NYSE COMPOSITE Friday, October 7, 1877 l/N TRANSACTIONS lt'~ld J!roflts • Death Trial .Press B~ Decision Due By WILLIAM SCHREIBER • Ofl .. o.ll'f ...... ~ The Callromla Sµpreme Court 1s to decide Ir the press wlll be barred from juvenile court proceedings agalnsl a Pasadena boy suspected of &laying south Orange County housewife Rachel Sparlin& last March The seven-judge court heard attorn~ys' arguments In Los Aneelu Thursday for and against a writ of mandate cliallen&ing a Los An1etes Superior COUrt rullnJ openin1 such proceedinas to new1men. The hip 1;01,1rt is expected to rule within two months. Ann Malone)'., the doputy public defender representine lhe youn1 murder suspect. ·~ to bar the press and pre$ep1*1 her case to the Supreme Court ThtlrSdJy. "Openness or adult trials may well improve the justice system in the public interest.-" she tqld the ~rt. "But contidenliality and anonymity are necessary to the goll or juvenile law. which is rehabJlltittion." ' Ma.. Maloney cont~nds no good purpose would be served by allowing the press to cover her client's fitness bearing -the pre-trlal MNton tbat. 4Mtcrmines 1f the youth will be tried aS" an adult or a juvenile. "The press would have access to hilhly prfJudici1l evidence prior to his c•rt.Jfication as an adult ~d towd publish this information simultaneous with the trial as an adult," she sald. .. This would affect his ability to obtain an Impartial jury and iet aCait'trial " In adGition to this specif c argument, Ms. Maloney sald admi.<sslon of lhe media to any 'See PUBUC, Paie AZ> It waa a discussion of problems along Laguna Canyon Road that sparked Harry Moon, a member of the city's Parkine. Trans port a lion and Circulation committee to express his woes in tnvelin& the two-lane roadway. ''Nothing s more fru&tratlna than beln& behllid four ltUle old ladles 1h a car c::teeP1nl down that roa~," Uie exasperated cW~en told Laguna Beach coun~U mem""· Whereupon Councilwoman Phyllla Sw ey sn pt>e<J, "It's the rour Jillie old men that both r me, ff af ry." MIDLAND, Mlich <AP> Toxic chlorine gas billowed from a section of the Dow Chemical Company plant today, f orcsng evacuation of tbouonds of persons from schools, homes and busl{lesses. They were abte to begin returning after about 2\.2 hours. At least si~ chemical workers were treated and released at Midland Hospital in this east· centrllJ Michigan city. a company spokesman sa\d. The spokesman said a valve on a hquld chlorine tank opened allowing the liquid to escape and vaporiie. It was not known bow the valve opened or 1f buman error was lnvol ved, the spoJ<esman said. Fifty workers went to the plant'$ infirmary. but only six we~ taken to the hospital, the spokesman added. Most or those evacuated were in Midland and Homer townships south of lhe city. Center Plan Laguna Beach counclhnen have decide() to scratch plans for a commwllty center at Heisler Park, and are now conslderinc a site abov~ the Glenneyre Street parkin& lot. They received the support or many senior citaens in the council chambers. Including the board of the Council on Aaing who told councilmen the group wollld 10 along with any s\te chosen by city officials City pJanners pre ented council members with prelim· inary CQSt eatlmatett Of constnidin& a 8,000 square foot facility on the bluUs al Healer Park near the old croquet courts saying it woulq cost $381,500. As an alternative, tbe pla.nnlng slatr threw in cost estimates for a similar structure ir constructed on the southel'n end of the Glenneyre Street parking lol between Laguna Avenue and Legion Street. , Tbat Ocure coincides with the Heisler Park estirnalH, planners sald. Mayor Jon Brand uld, 'Tm stilt enthusiastic about the Heisler: Park site, but rm not paranciid aboUt iL" " He said parkin1 restrau1~ are , tSffCENTER, Page AJ> It. 11 wt tb t could halt de· velopment or a proposed recrea~lon complex Just north of San Juan Capistrano on county Janti was unanimously approved WednW!aybycouncilmen. Clty Attorney Jarnes Okaiakl was •uthOriied to me a lawsuit contestint the county Environmental ltnpact Report <EIR> ror the project al ·Via. Eacolar and Marguerite Park91ay. The recreataon development was approved at a July 13 county SuperviiJor meeting. Supervisorial approval came on the beeJs or the project's rejection by the county plannina comn'lisslon and planning staff. Several area resident.a and the San Juan Cily Coundl also opposed the project, which is locatid Within t¥ mission clty's spbere of inOuencc and zoned residential on city planning m@P.li. The city·sponsored lawsuit wlll contest the sufficiency of tho Ellt fUed for tb recreation comple" project. DAILY PILOT use NEW YO.RK <AP> - several m~r commercial banks raised thelt prime interest rates today Crom 1~ percent to 7~ percent an the second geheral increase in the economic barometer within two weeb. Citibank of New York. the nation's second-largest bank, an~ounted the increase and wif.brn minut es, other commercial banks made the same announcement. The closely watched prime interest rate is the rate a bank charges its largest WK! most credit· ••orthy customers . Chang in the prime rate oft.en influence similar c.bon in other interest rates J\cademy ... Pot Seizure .. consortium which included the Irvine heiress m a bidding battle to buy the ltvme Company Mrs. Smith, in an address to the Orange County Economic Outlook Conrerence Thursday, said she bad evidence Mobil planned lo sell off the company's ground leases and begin break.Ing up the remainder of the ranchoverthenextfew years. ln addition. she implied that Mobil would retain only coastal property, hoping to build an oil terminal and storage facility "I only submit that during the years Mobil was attemptin1 to purchase the Irvine property, every oil company m the United Stales was eyeing the enllre California coast for locations where oil could be brought in and stored," she said. But Heyl contended today Mobil was interested in the Irvine Ranch as a real ~late investment. During a noontime press copference , Ms . Smith elaborated on her speech, saying tbere ls evidence AfobU made an agree10ent with an institutional investor to purchase Irvine's ground lea8es. She declined to name the investor ·'You have to judge for yourself bow much weight t.o give to a statement that i!> unsubstantiated ,·· HeyJ countered today He said Mobil is not in need of a west coast oil terminal or storage area. J.lrs. Smith said she could not disclose her documented evidence now, but believed it would be made public eventually. Messina's Pott Authority said tbe vessels collided ln good • weather on a nearly Oat sea 1~ miles west o/ Reggio CaJabrfa on the op~ite side ol the strait. The Austrian ship was beading south from. Marseilles wit~ut Despite critici m from do..-ntmm business communily members, San Juan Capistrano councilmen have voted unanimously to authorize cootract negottaUobs for a downtown mall project . ~l>hsultant firm. Several members or the downtown business area -slte of • t.he proposed matJ pro; :• told councilmen there wu no:. •'' -t for the project among tne buaineu people. Downtown merchants crlticiied the City Council for attempting lo proceed with a .re 1billt.y study alter recelvtn1 petltiooa from buslDeasmen citlliri~ for a baJt to thf) project. Councilmen, hovrever, T.vsets Stolen -ti 2$ -- On the fJp alld l/p Dana HUis High ScbOOI pep leaders are giving their all to Jet school alumni, especially former song and cheer leaders. know that the school's homecoming wm take place OcL 14. Cheer leader Maureen Casey <left), song leader Allegra Pa'e <center> and mascot Miki Morgan WJll help spur the team on. Detective Finds $17,200 in Pasta F ..... PflfleAJ CENTER ••. real at both locations, and \hat seniors might have to seWe for a smaller butJdlng to ac- commodate parfdne. NEW YORK (APJ -Italian restaurants would be mobbed by treasure hunters If every dish or lasagna contained what de· techve Victor Ruulero found when he probed a platter of the stuff with a fork. What Ruigiero found, bidden between Jay~rs of the pasta dish, was $17,200. in ~ bills in four brown packets. Believe lt or not, he actually was looking for the money there. Ruutero and two detectives were investigatinc the .. disappearance of $S million from a long·unclalmed trunk at an East Side warehou:se. The trunk's owner. r.ePOrled to be a South Coaat For Ho_liday Blllaness as usoiJ is t.he word for city halls. schools and banks for the Columbus Day holiday next Monday. Officials in San Juan Capistrano, Laguna Beach and San Clemente say clty halls wiU be open aJI day Monday, and several Joc&l banks contacted ~aid their doors will remain open obo. State and rederat ofnces will be closed Monday as well a.s courts, but county offices wlll be open. Spokesmen for the Lasuna Beach and Capi~trano Unlfied School Districts say classes will be held. despite Christopher Columbus' birthday, and trash collection In the three cities will be on a normal schedule. autborlze.t neBotlat.ion of a $21,000 consultant proPoJal from CHNMB/Halprtn and A1Soclates. a San Francisco Bay· area ptannlns nrrn. Tbe council orteln.iJy set Sl0,000 ulde tor a conaultant, but bids exceeded tbatfJelU'e 'l'be council'• action WedJles. day"SlgnaJs a go-ahead tor Phase I of tho downto• maU study .. ''Phase I Is rnerely a fact· Ralhedng proc:eu," city Plnnninl .Director Thomas Merrell told coW\cUmen. "The study wlll leave us better educated about wbat the posslblllUes of the area are." CouncU discussion or the cOC'lsul&ant wu marked by mild disa~menta over whether tbe downtown mall aleerlng committee should dec:td to p~ with the project. .Councilmen Kel)neth Friess and John Sweeney i.Qdlcated they wanted to Hear U\o committee's opinion on the pl'Qject. But Mayor Yvon Hecksc:ber - 1 . Jons·Ume proponent· or tbe dece~ Hungarian doct.or, bas never been officially named. On Tuesday, they 1ot a warrant to search the home and garden of Richard P. Lynch, 43, and his wife, Allee, of Holbrook. N.Y. That done. they searched every closet, drawer and cablnet. but found nothin1. They dug up the bacrlyard flower beds -but still no luck. Finally, in Lhe earaae. ~uggtero discovered the lasagna in a freeier, prixtded it and found the loot. Each packet con~tned 86 SSO bills -344 buts for a total of Sl 7 ,200. Most were printed in 1950. as was tnost ot the m>,000 in bil'5 previously recovered durilli the probe. "This town is cbokln' because of a lack of parklne. • be said. ·•And the larger the facility, the rnore SJ>aces-you have-to provide." · While the site overlookin& the bluffs at Heisler Park received enthusiastic support of 'some councilmen and mauy aentors last moatb. the idea fluled when probJems were presented by both groups. In fact. by &he time seniors and councilmen finished outllnlfur\be minus factors, the only·. thing goiJli for the site was it.s ocean view. Those P!'obJems included: -Parking problems along Cliff Dtive that. cannot be resolved. -Takes away from the park's green open areas an~ picnic tables. • -Not centrally located fOl' the maJoritY of the seniors who would use~ center. BRO,QKS. • • : , "rt Would be o'ppoae~ by • WQllOwnit'n OD aut. Drive Who begtnnlne at # a.m., Allen said, . do net want to look down on a and the cohtes{ should run bulldinR throughout· the mornine and · afternoon. -Tb Council ordered t.be city The third day of the on·a1ain. plaanine staff to explore tbe off.agalil SUtherland Surfwear P.,OSSlbilitJes 'ot constn&ct.ln1 a California Pro surflna contest center at tbe Glenne1"' and was being held today, according to into rm p I an n l n I to state parb officials. commi5'l0t\en to concentrate That contest, plttint 100 toe> thJ1lr.sWdlea oa tbat site. name surfers against 4!acb other. bas been plagued by poor surfln1 conditions for more than a month. But contest spokesmen said tht' final day ot heat.a ts going off smoothly, \tith 18 half-hour heatA scheduled to I~ until well Into the afternoon. That contest is beans held at Lower Trestles in San Onoftoe and the purse for the winner la SS,000. Relea&e,Studied -NEW DEUll, Ind.la (AP> The Qelh1 Hilh Court ap-eed today to hear a government peti· lion challen1ln1 the unconditional release of Indira Gandhi aft.er a niaht in JaH. TwO color leleVtJlon sets wllh a total value Of $898 were stolen from a san Juan Capistrano home by bUritai's who fore~ open the front door. Orange County sheriff's officers aaid the theft was reported by tiouaewife·Dfana IA!e Gates, 35, ol 2682' 'Paseo AtreVlda. · project disagreed witb Frieu Seniors to Meet The Senior Citliena CJub of wguna Beach will h01d • board or dltectors meeting Oet. 20 ln the. clty council chambers be;inning at lO a.m .. The ezecuUve board will meet a halt· hour prior to the hoard meeUng, accordlna lo John P. Laine, actlna prealdMt of the <>_rganization . andSw er, "1b1 commltt ulted to c:leclde f9r ua, • • Hecucher aaid. "'They were ted '9 MJttt the bidden they t.hOUIJhi 8Uld do the bcit Job. "<>Me havtt 'Pt!'Opocal then I think It would bO tbe proper. tJme to d Id •tlethtr or not to continue the pnijtt " The Phaae I t\UdY IS deslped to locUcatJ the (e ll1blllty ol• d · ~elopiln1 a mall GI lO'im fCluare format for th olCf btUlness community toeatea n er the famous mlsalon, • .. • reported today they were seeing sets ol 15-foot w.aves at their beadquarters at the Newport Pier. • .. They're horrendous.·· said lifeguard LL Logan Lockabey. He sald a boat 150 hardy surfers anC:l body surfers bad 'Ytfttured into the water, bUt no rescues had been called for since the only ~Pie in Uie water seemed to be veteran aurfen who knew what t.hev were doinJ{. MIDLAND, Mich. <AP> - Toxic chlorine eas billowed from a section of the Dow Chemical Company plant today. forcin& ev acuatlon of thous ands of persons from schools, homes and businesses. They were able to begin returnln1 after about 2~ hours. At least six chemical workers were treated and released at Midland H06plta1 in this east-c en tr a I Mlchtean city, a company spokesman said. The spokesman said a valve on a 11quid chlorine tank opened alloWing the Uquld to eac•Qe and vaporize. It was not known bow the valve opened or it human error was involved, the spokesman said. High Court Decides on Cover~e By WILLIAM SCRREIBEJl OIU.De!tTl'llMI._,. The Cali!ornla Supreme Court ls to decide it the pres• will be barred from Juvenile court proeeediri~ against a Pasadena boy suspected of slaying south Orange County housewife Rachel Sparling last March. Tbe seven-jud&e court heard attorneys' arguments in Los Angeles Thursday for and against a writ of mandate challenging a Los Angeles Superior Court rulin1 opening such proceedings to he11tamen The high court is expected to rule within two months Ann. Maloney, the deputy public defender repre1entla1 tM YOUD.C murder uspect, Beeb to bar the press and presented her . case to the Supreme Court Thursday. "Openness or adult trials may well improve the justice ayat.em in the public interest," abe told lhe court. "But confideatiality and anonymity are necessary to the goal ol juvenile law, whlcb is rehabllltaUon.' • Ma. Maloney contends no cood purpose wouJd be• servea by altowma the press to covef her client's fitness hearing -the pre•ttlal session that determines if the youth wlJl l>e tried as an adult or a juvenUo. "The press would have access <See PUBUC, Paie At) Fifty workers went to lb plant's infirmary. but onl.,y six were taken to the boapltal, the sp0kesman added. Most ol th06e evacuated were in Midland and Homer towmhips south of the city •• • Company safety investigators were on the scene. The Dow complex is on the southwest side of the city of 35,178. The cblortne appeared to be blowing to the southwest - away from the city, witn said. Kevin Wint~. an attendant in a gasoline station about a mu away. described the chlorine eruption: "There's a big cloud or smoke all over. It's eoine across the ro d tn ust a alight breete. "Vans nd stat.Ion Wflgons b ve been gotng by taldng the Dow g~ out. l can see them evacua homes. The smokeu a real U&bt gray.·' Chlonnc 1S gas at ordinaey t.emperatutt.s, usually appe~ greenls'h·sray. lt Js a 6asic chemical bwlding block for a wiile variety or produ~ts. The city's cbool system said It 'bad men· 1,900 pupils from th Bullock District to anothet school out of the danger zone, but' dld not intend to aend. them home. "Thelr homes are ln th~ danacr zone, too," said a 11>9kesman for the schools. <See TOXIC, Page A2) ... Jl2 DAILY PILOT N !l'Jio• obJ c Un to the n•mploymont omee aald 1t would brine chaotic tramc conditions to their residential area at Terry Avenue near Beach Boulevard They also claimed that the unemployment office would have attracted loiterers and unde:sJrable types from other ~ommunities. The offtee wu to • have aerved unemployed persons- fro rn Huntrngt.on leach. Fouot&ln Valley, Costa Meeaand Newport ~acb1 Spokesmen. who s aid tbey represented about 500 residents, rece1 ved support in their fiibt this week from the Huntington Beach City Council Council members agreed to draft a resolution to the stale opposing the f aclllt.y Ooerl said today that the .state accident is under investigation. No other can wet"e involved. Civilian cranes helped right the 7Y.i-ton vehicle. . commiuion's primary concerns is rnaintaJn.ing the chara~r of the area wtiile illowing property ownen to r~eve1op their land. The parkhu! study was ordered by city coU:ncilmen last month. Tiley ere paylftg Wilbur Sblilh and Associates aaa,ooo to lnalyu Cannery Vl11aae·Md'adden Square parking needs and sug1est solutions to parkinf problem5. J p,.._pllfleAI PUBUC •.. to bltbly prejudicial evidence prior to his certification as an adult and could publish this information simultaneous with the trial as an adult," she said. "Tb.is would affect his ability to obtain an impartial jury and get a fair trial." .. In addition to this specific argument. Ms. Maloney said admwlon or the media to any juvenile court proceedings prevents the eourt officers from iuaranteeing confidentiality to the youth or his family. • "It would affect the very W4'rkln•• and 'JlbiUty of the jQ\tenJle C9W't to rebabllltate cblldren brought before it." she said. "It woUld affect a child's ability to make pro(ress in hi:c ·future life." Justice Frank Richardson asked Ms. Maloney lf there bad been any neaatlve impact on Juvenile proc~s in the two year8 s1nae the media has been allowed limited cover11e. Ma. Maloney said there had been no incidents to her knowled&e but abe contended the press rarely attends anyway unless the case is aensatlonal. . Justice Wiley Manuel asked Ms. Maloney jl the public should have a tipt to know wbat the Juvenile courts are dolnc. "Yes. but it doesn't have to bt accompanied by publicaUon 01 individual casea," she Hid. "There are better ways t o educate the public." The cue against ba1'1'itie the press was made by John Farrell, a deputy county counsel. FarTell argued that It was not a matter of whether or .oot the press sbOuld be allowed coverage opportunltles s ince that was ·already the status quo. He saJd there Js le1ltimate public interest in Judicial proceedinp and the press should be permitted to give close scrutiny to the proc~rUng's at au levels. With reepect to maintalnioi confidentiality of a youth's name. Farrell said it it .. not unreasonable to presume the preu wUl conform to its voluntary code of ethics," !l'.t'h&t should be sulfi~t to protect the state'a lnterat in tho confidentiality of j uvenUe proc8ed1np," Justice Frank Newman questioned Farrell about tbe ••cbiJUnc" effect on testimotlJ' by parent.a abd rtJaUves lftM press 11 allowed to cover juventle proceed.lnp. Farrell said he dlcln 't believe that would occut' in moat cas•. After the court bearln1. Farrell aald he teela the decllion . "will be very close" bec:aUM ot the fiM points of law Involved. • I Tbe youth Involved in the elaborate court proce11 Js suspected of murderln• Mn. Sparllnrf ~ the Lalct Foreat d• veJopmerit in EJ Toro, Shol'Uy after sh waited her Pasadena p1ychlatrtat. Polle• allege the youth wu caught drivlne the woman'• diatlncUve auto and bad ~ ot her poueasiona at hla bouae. Mn. Sparling's body was (OUDCS four day s arter her dlsappenance ln a rualed moUntain ravine. She had beeu 1hot in lhO head . . - was droppln theCitnM ••w dOn b to move the i'acllitywbere It's not wanted,'' he said Goerl earlier ~aid that he was uncertain aboutlease conditions. He said today, however. that the property changed ba9da after a lease was signed and that the lease1Jnolon1erbindJn1. He said proJoct.lona •bowed that up to 300 persona would have used the facility each day fol' employment counseling and to· collectunemployment"cbecb. ltwouldhavehad uuffofeoto • 70penons. Plans called for tbe unemployment office to be locatedlnaformercarpetatoH. The matter first came up in February and went tbtou&b of· tlclal city procedures, bot' residents said they weren't aware of it unUl almost two w.Us aio. A repTeSentaUve said the &n>UP . planned le1al act1on if the ltate . cnrriedoutitsplans. SandCaatla ToBe]~ed By'Expeiu' Sand castle construction ctews who will be particlpattn1 Jn Sunday's annual contest s ponsored by the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce are 1oing to have their efforts Judied by a team or experts. I A spokesman for the chamber said the panel of Jud&es includes Bob Ensign. a staff meaiber from tbe ardPtect·plannlng fl.rm of William Pereira and Associates ; Tom Garver, e xecutive director of tbe Newport Harbor Art Museum; Ra,y Watson. former prealderit ot The Irvine Company and an archltect; Fred Rash Sr., portuit photo1rapher, Jnd George Lymburn, publlsher or c hildren's literature and art books. • r The panel Of jud1es also includes A11emblyman Ron Cordove <D·El Toro), a .former depucy District Attorney wbole ex~ tends to nm to law and politics more than art ind;.i architectur>e. ' • T~ contest 1et.s UJJder WIQ' at noon, at Corona Ciel Mar b1aln · bea~. Entrants wUI be accepted • until starting time. ~ruValley Water Lirr#ted LOS ANGELES <AP> -The ·impact or a Supreme Court • ruling that upheld restrtetJons on Owens Valley water pumping won't be felt unlll sprina. city or· ficlills say. . The court Thursday reJected two city requestt to o~um lower court dee la ions de~ the city fon&·term perml11lon to pump the maxJmum amount. of water from the Inyo County valley~ miles to the northeast. But tho Department of Water and Power 1ay1 Jt b alrwidy pumPtni itl Owens Valley wells t.o their limit -300 cubic feet of water per aecond ~ and can continue to do so uatll April 1 under an interim order Luuect by II state appeal court lbtS lllmmer becauaeotthedrouchL --------.....- agalost a writ of mandate challencing a Los Aneeles Superior COurt ruling opening such proceedings to newsmen. The high court is expe_cted to rule wit.bin two m'bnlh.S. Ann .Pchloney, thtt deputy pubUc defend~ representin& the youni. murder sua~t. seeks to bar the 1>ress and present6d ber case~ to the Supnme Court Ttfuisi'tay. ORANGE COUNTY, CALtFORNIA ··openness of adult trial• may we JI improve lhe Justice system. in the publJc ioterest." she told the court. "But confidentiality and anonymity are neeessary to the goal of Juvenile law, which is rehabilitation." Ms. Maloney contends no good purpose would be ~erved by allowing the pre:.s to cover her client's fitness bearing -the pre-tnaJ session that deterrniaes 1r the youth wiJI be tried as an adult or .a juvenile. "The press would have access to hiathly prejudicial evidence prior to his certification as an adult and could publish this information simultaneous with the trial as an adult," she said. "This would affect hls ability to obtain an imparUal J~.and get a fair trial." In addition to this spec1fic .... ... - . Y NEWSMAN'S NOSS be1an to twatcb uneont.rollably when I heard the "eye in the sky"' traffic reporter for a Los Anielea radio staUoo descri~ in horror the scene of a plane cruh ln a Compton residential area this week , 1 was on my way home In the Lake Forest Cuncomf'ottably close lo a bil Narine air baae) when my interest was 1rabbed by tb11 dramatic on·the-spot coverage. The helic:opter·borne reporter had ap~tJy spied a eolurnn ol smoke. flown to the scene and viewed the abat. tered wreckaJe of a bil airliner that bad apparently crash!<f and b\lmed amidst thehouseS. "Some of the butldrn1s are on fire ... 1 can see them frorn here .•• I don't know bow many are jnvollfed bUt we have a reporter on the. wa~ to the scene," the aerial ne man .~. . "~ plane is tn several ptee -, • pieces and there as some wriUna ()n wreckage is everywht're " rrerrific, I lhouabt, as a Marine Jet scteamed overhead, s~mlngly all t.oo tlose to my liWe hOusing tract. Stran1ely, tiowever, tHerewas nothm1 in tbene"tday s newspapel'S and, in the CNSb of other~. the crash slipped totbe back of my mind until Thursday mornfor. l'here ;t was. It. huge photo of a bu.mini plane wreck amidst little ~uses in Compton glared out from pa1e ooe or a cOWrty p,a~r. Ttien J read tile caption. It iv as a setup a moct crasb scene amidst bOuses slate<I for demolition for the benefit of the teleYislon camer~. ft E. t.aw. . w refa ed to allow " s tth watunt ~um fileO: t. 2Jor.pi.i1'1lc ."' ...... __,-... pecuon. filed near cl in; fQt e Labor Day holiday: Law contended the utlorneys wouldn't have time lo took at them. Because of tbe holiday . Campbell and Horton didn't stt the documents until tbe next Tue- sday. Carruno's courtsel maantlined that the search warrant violated hi& first, fourth and 14th amendment rights; were issued without probable cause, and on false testimony The affklavits seek to discredit both the teaUmon~ of purported assayist l>C)nald S. Elvrum and of S~ni. Ana Police Investigator Brian Collins, riven in support of the wunnt. tlvnun testified that $3 million in lead bullion <a compound or dross lead and ptecloll$ metals> had been entrusted to bJm b,y a Presbyterian hospital association for assay. He said he stored 1t with SWiss Vaults and that tho firm owners Carrano and Fulton shipped it to Swtuerland withoUt his permls. sion, then clalmed the bullion was worthless. Carrano and Fulton claimed that Elvrum was an "alchelnUt" who duped them into suppl)'inr , tihn room -"d board, laboratory focUitJea and $18,000 expense • mon~y for ttie Swlss assays, in a plan to swindle $50,000 from tbem · Filed with their declarations were those of three people in the mJninc business who claimed Elvrum was an unqualified chemist. And. the a.Uidavits nllege, the Santa Ana police knew their witness' credibility was in question and failed to inform Judge Satnuel Taylor Jr. of aUegalions against him Taylor, who Issued the search warrant, said in coqrt he was unpressed with Elvrum's credcnUall. Amone tbose credentials Carrano's attort'leys sougbt to quesUon were Elvrum 's claims that he was a graduate of UCLA 9nd the University ot New Zea- Jand. where he claimed he earned a master's dffrff in analytiul chemistry. PUBLIC ... unless the case Is sensaUonat. Justice Wiley Manuel asked Mi. Maloney 1f the publJc shouJd have a rilhl to know what the Juvenileco..arts are doing. "Yes, but it doesn't have to be accompanied by publication of Individual cases," she said. "There are better ways to educate the public." The case against barrir>g tbe pre.ss was made by John Farrell. a deputy county counsel. FarieU argued that it was not a matter or whet.bet' or not the · pres.a should be allowed coverage opportunltles since that was already lbe status quo. He tald there is Jeglt.lmate public interest In judicial proceedlnp and the press should be permitted to give close scruUny to the proceedlnea at all levels. With ~pect t.o malntaininf cootidentlallty oC • youth's name, Farrell saJd it is ''not unreasonable to presume the pro11 will conform to Its votuntary cOde o( ethics.·· '"l'bat should be sufficient to p~ tile state's interest in the conflderttiality or juvenile proceedinis." 'Justle!e Frank Newman questioned farreU about lbe "chlllli>c" effect on ~tlmony by parents and relatives tr the presa as allowed to ~over Juvenile prQCeedJncs. Farrell said he didn "\ be.lien that would occur II\ most cases. After the. court hearlna. Fatten said tie feels tho decision "wld be very close" because of the ~e point.a of law Involved . • The' YQQth tnvolved in the elaborate court proceu ia suspected of murderlnc Mrs. Sparllbf, of. f,be Late Forest de-. velopment to El Toro, abort1y after she YbJted hel" Pasadena paychlatrm. Police all~&e the youth wu caught driving the woman's distinctive auto and had some oC her PQaseaslons at bis boule. Mra. Si>arUng'1 body was found four days after her dlsappearan~e in a ru1ced mountair raVit'ie. Sbe had been shot in the head. Mobil Corponlaon officials saad today there all "absotutely nothing" to suegestlons Joan Irvine Smith made Thursday that Mobil planhed to sell orr much of the Irvine Company holdJngs had it purchas~ the firm. "We had no such plans." i.aid Lawrence Heyl Jr . man•aer of investor relation~ of Mobil "We don't II kt to see people ottribUUng motives to us that we didn't have." Mobil recently lost lo a Employe, Wounds Two ALTADENA <Ai>> -One supermarket employe was kUled early today and two others seriously wounded by a robber wbo foe* them lo Ue down and then shot them one by one. a'1th0r1Ue11ald. ~ The assailaa:at fied on.root with ss.ooo. they said liector Guerrero. 23. assistant manager of the store. died instantly, sheriffs deputies said. Oriel C. Martinez. 22. a clerk. was In critical condition at Huntineton Memorial H<>11pital. Rene Romero. 19, a boxboy, wu in serious condiboo 11t the same • hospital. All three were shot in the head shortl~ alter mldnaabt when • masked man forced them to open the market's safe. then Ue on tbe 'noor ln a rear storaae area, ac· cordintt to Sgt Merlyn Poppleton. Poppleton said the gunman approached the victims ln the store's parking lot shortly alter closing time. robbed them and forced them back into the store. Romero told lnvestigators the gunman rorced them to lie face down then walke<l behind them. Romero said he heard one shot befon1 feeling a paln In his head and then said he heard several more shots Viejo Home Rifled Buralars ho ranlicked a Misaion Viejo home after .they twlst.ed off the front doot knob to gain entry carried ort ptopef'\Y valued at fl,325. Oranee County shertrrs Officers 'aid a television set, stereo equipment. a camera and a clock were amon.r the item ·stolen from th• home ot Paul Wayne Clark, 52, or ~lBa Perica Drive. --