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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-10-14 - Orange Coast PilotJ n ' . . , • .tlrafJs Threaten Death To AJrliner Hostages ' FRIDAY, AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 14, 19n ' VOL. 7', NO. Kl, 4 SCCTIC*S, .. PAO•S 2 anta Ana en Panama ~stion 'Resolved' BULLE11N. -WASIDNGTON CAP) -Presl- deat Carter saJd today he ud Panamanian leader-Omar •ri· jos ban "successlully resolved" dlUerences of interpretation la the wordlng of the new Panama Caaal treaty. ---WASHINGTON CAP) -Presi- dent Carter and Panama's leader. Gen. Omar Torrijos, met Cor more than 90 minutes today In an effort to put to rest some of the controversy swirling around the proposed Panama Canal treaty. The two leaders adjourned thtir White House working' session, originally scheduled to last about an hour, without issu- ing a joint statement. One was e xpected later, however . Carter had told a news con- ference Thursday that a "clarify- ing statement" m ight be needed on the major point in dispute - coitrucUng interpretations of the provjsion for joint U .S.· Pa.naman ian defen se of the canal's neutrality afler the year 2000 .• Meeting first in the OvaJ Office and then joining advisers in the· Cabinet Room. Carter and Torri- jos concentrated on trying to clarity the meaning of the disput- ed language. The hastily arranged session was requested by Carter. Torri- jos is stopping off as he heads home from a trip to Israel and Western Europe, where he pro- : moted the treaty with several heads of state. I (See CANAL, PageA2) '·Senate Pa:nkl . . , Approves New ! Energy Bill ~ W AS1ilNGTON CAP J -The • Senate Finance Committee ap· ' proved an energy bill today that contains bilUons of dollars worth ' or tax breaks but none or the tax incr eases recommen<\ed by President Carter. Staff technicians estimated the bill would save 2.2 million bar- • rels or oil per day by 1985. at a cost to the government of $32 billion. CRelaled story, A 7.) The House version of the tax bill, which included watered- down versions of Carter's three proposed taxes, would save 1.7 million to 2.5 million barrels per day. Current consumption is a bout 18 million barr~ls daily. The bill was approved by an l 1·6 vole. Two Republicans, Carl ' Curtis of Nebras ka and John C. Danlorth oC Missouri, voted for lhe bill. Democrat Floyd Haskell of Colorado and independent Harry F. Byrd of Vi rginia joined Jour Re~llcans In opposing It. -'• < • . .. Jury Indicts_ Hanna · Mail Fraud Tops 40-count Charge WASHINGTON (AP) - Former Rep. Richard T. Hanna was indicted today on federal charges al. bribery, ft'aud and con.Spiracy stemming from al· leged South Korean efforts to buy influence among members of Congress. Hanna. a California Democrat . from Orange County who served in the House from 1963 through 1974. was the first ex- congressman to be indkted in the J ustice Department probe or al- leged attempts by South Koreans to ply members of Congress with cash and other favors in ex- change for actions favorable lo the South Korean government. A federal grand jury in U.S. District Court in Washington re- turned the indictment charging Hanna with one count of con- spiracy, three counts of bribery, one count of faJling to register u a foreign agent, and 3S counts of mail fraud. An indictment is a formal chargemadea.gainst a person by a grand jury. It does nol establish guilt or innocence. T he indictm e nt named Tongsun Park, the one-lime Washington businessman who has returned to Seoul, as an Wlin· dieted co-conspirator. Perk already bas been indicted on similar charges and has so far Delly ...... .., ...... FACES INDICTMENT Ex..COngressman Henna refused to return to the United Stales to race trial. Also named as unindicted. co- conspirators were two-former directon; or the Korean Central Intelligence Agency, Kim Myung Wook and Lee Hu Rak. The indictment. charged that Hanna used his position as a con- gressman "to encourage a1en- c:ies of the governmcnl or the Republic or Korea to promol~the designation" of Park as the Jn. lermediary for rice s ales to Korea from U.S. companies. Par~ received a substantial amount or mo ney as com- missions from the U.S. com- panies and passed along much or that money to Hanna "and various other congressmen and senators with intent to influence the decisions and actions or said congressmen and senators on questions and m atters relating to the Republic of KorJ?a, ·• the in· dictment charged. "'· Specifically, Hanna and Park wanted to influence members or Congress t o increase U.S. military aid to Korea, defeat pro- posals to reduce U.S. military lorces there1 increase rice sales .to Korea ana win more ravorable terms for the financing or those sales. and make speeches and write statements prais ing the South Korean regime. the .indlct- menlsaid. As part oC the alleged scheme. Park gave cash and other gills to }louse and Senate members be and Hanna believed "to be in- nuential in matters affecting'' South Korea, the indictment. <See HANNA., Page Al) Arabs Hijack Airliner -· Beauty Queem Among Peril,ed Hostages DUBAI, Unite(! Arab Emirates <A P> -Arab-speaking terrorists holding a hijacked West German jetliner threatened today to kill their hostages, including 11 West German beauty queens, unless ··comrades" imprisoned in West Germany and Turkey are r e- leased and a $15 million ransom is paid, orricials said. Ninety-two people, including crew members a nd the hi- jackers, were reported aboard the plane. The beauty queens were returning to' Frankfurt from a gift trip to the Spanish island of Mallorca when the plane was hijacked Thursday. The hijackers also threatened that kidnaped West German in- dus trialis t Hanns Martin Schleyer, abducted by terrorists in West Germany nearly six weeks ago, would be killed if the demands are not met by 1 a.m. PDT Sunday. A text of the ultimatum was de· li vered to the French press agen· cy AFP in Paris after the plane landed in this Persian Gulf emirate. The ultimatum named 11 West German terrorJsts and two Palestinians held in Turkey who a re demanded to be released and flown to Vietnam. Somalia or ~arxisl South Yemen. Each ot -'· the released prisoners was to be supplied with $43,860 in German marks. The ulUmatum. addressed to the West German government. declared, "We shall not contact you again • • • Any trial on your pert to delay or deceive us will meim immediate . ending of the ultimatum and. execution or Mr. Hanns Martin Schleyer and all the passengers and the crew of : the plane.·· (~ WJA.CK, Page A%) Father Held in Sex Abuse of Children . AUGUSTA, Maine CAP ) -A father has been indicted on 61 charges stemming from the sex- ual abuse of h!s five children. Authorities say the abuse may hav~ begun seven years ago. John Starks Sr., 40, was indict- ed by a Kennebec County Grand Jury for acts alleged to have gone on trom Christmas Day 1976 through last week, Dist. Atty. . Joseph Jabar aMounced Thurs. day, adding that evidence in· dicated the abuse may date beck much longer. "It's a traglc thing;• Jabar said ut a news conference called lo announce the indictment. "These children have gone throu~ a Jot and they will go through a lot more ln the next six months ... I've tried to impress upon them that they've done nothing wrong. that they're not to blame.·• He said the children, three girls aged 13, 15 end 17, and two boys aged 11 ond 14, would prob- ably testify at the trial of their father, who was held In lieu or $75,000 bond after pleading inno- cent to all charges after his ar· ralgnment. J abar saJd he bas asked state we lfare otrlclals t o provide counseling for the children, now in the custody ot their 1'other and grandmother . The s tate Human Services (See ABUSE,J-a~~('!~ d >•• .............. REPOMEO-SAF£ Comella Dellenbaugh 3Americam .On Yacht Safe After Attack VERO BEACH. Fla. (AP> - Three Americans who radioed their yacht was about to be rammed off the coast of Vaetnam were reported s afe today and be· ing towed to Saigon, the father of the vessel's owner said. Frederick Dellenbaugta said a ham radio operator who knew his daughter, Cornelia .. Cricket." Dellenbaugh, telephoned him from Bangkok, Thailand. at about6a.m. PDT today. "He said he talked with Cricket by radio and she stated that they were under tow by a Vietnamese government. vessel to arrive in Saigon at 6 p.11\. PDT tonight;' Dellenbaugh said. "He said they were all weu:• • Dellenbaugh said the caller was Robert Stevens, a boat yard operator who built the selted vessel, the 39-foot Brillig. "l know the man and recognized his voice and consider him reliable," Dellenbaugh s aid ... Stevens rec· o.gnized the voice of my daughter.'' The yacht issued tts distrea call Thursday, re~rting 1t wu : being chased and fired on by vessels, The lasi message said the yacht was "about to be rammed." Miss DellenbaQgh, owner ot the vessel, was idenUftecl as a former Peace Corps worker. The two oth er Americans aboard were ldentirted as Leeland Dickerman of Flagstaff~ Ariz., a nd Char l es Affel of (See SA.FET, Page A!) Ex-wife Booked · t In Killin·g . Two Santa Ana m. were shot • to death Tb~ Dicht. one as be talked with friendl outside.- home and tbe otber an.,,.~ bis estranced wtte. police npirt. ed today. Ernesto Cervantes_ a JS.~ old Mexicu national. was aa1ldt in the Mek by one d se,wal s hob 11.red from a PM••nc ar, poUcesald. Cervantes was oatslcle Ids home, 1908 S. Oat st.. ~ with friends when tbe UoaltN toot place_ police olftcera ~ ed. Police said they •ere uad to obtain ad esaipUon dtlleeV:. J erry MuaJe. 31, died at9Jt:f of SW-bot wOWlda in tbe and side. Pollee said be was deld' at the aceoe. Mrs. Adallae Masale, ZS. WB!l' booked into Oraqe County .wt on suspicioo ol murder. ollla.w said. 1::-: ' omcers .nel(ed the •--= · had been arpiq Nrlier ~ day at t.belr home at i.-s_: Mohawk Drlve., Masale ff• portecUy returned Tbun da)' night, broke throUp Uae from door and WU abot. Swindler Charged ... PHOENIX CAP) -Kemfeth· Wayne Walls, M, of Sacramento. a convicted swiDdlv, bu been · arraigned on new charcea 0( falset.v declarlnc lnditency to have the government pay bis letal expenses ill a fraad trial tbisyear. ·. Wea tlaer Nllht tbroulh mid mom- Inr low cloucls aad local dense tog. Otberwtle buy sunshine tbrou1h Satur. day. Lows tonight ~ to 63. Hl1b Saturday 10. s ad IDs \bro~ . ~T· • : JICllDl • • • ""A drowning victim whose :corpse washed ashore at Bolsa Chica State Beach Thursday has b~ on id e n l if i e d a s Pelc r Topoleski, 32, a Seal Beach man .reported missing last Sunday. lnv~tigators said today be .normally went on a long distance ,i;wiai off Sea.I Buch with his father every day, using the bud· dy •ystem because tbe victim was epileptic. . · However, Sylvester Topoleskl, -a Long Beach resident, was una· ble to meet his son at bis Ocean A venue apartment last Saturday -and the victim apparently risked the swim alone. .. They normally swam from the pier to the First Street jetty every day," explained a Seal .Beac" Police D_eparlment ~pokesman. The victim's father came to the ~tation Sunday to lile the miss- beachfront residence. His father had been unable to reach him by telephone. Finding his watch. wallet and othet' persona! elfects there and his beach towel and swim trunks gone, the elder Topoleski sur· mised what must h;ive happened. State Beach Ranger Ashford Wood estimated after the body washed ashore Thursday morn· ing a half-mile north of Golden West Street that it had been in the sea nearly a week. Investigators s aid the blue bathing suit and jewelry on the body, along with an eight-inch scar on the back matched Topoleski's missing persons re· ])Ort. Funeral services were pendin«i t oday at Pierce Brothe rs Smith's Mortuary in Huntington Beach.· I',.._ Page Al mJACK ••• The ultimatum was signed •·struggle Against World Im· periaJism Organization" and ended with an auaclt on alleged neo-Nul.sm in West Germany and Zionism. With the ultimatum was a com· ~unique addressed "To All ftevolullonaries in the World, To All Free Arabs, To Our Palestin· ianMasses." The 400-word declaration re- JP()rted the hijacking and its con- riecUCft with the Scbleyer opera~ tion. lq one p a rt it s tated , "Revolutionaries and J reedom fighters all over the world are confronted with the monster of wprld imperialis m -t he 6arbarous war unde r the fi~gemony of the USA against the ~ple or the world.·· ·Among the hijacked plane's .Pjl.Ssengers were eight members cJl a Spanish air crew. Most of the ot'bers were believed to be West German vacationers returning from MaJlorca. It was not known if au.y or the passengers were ~erican. ~ Tbe gunmen, believed to iumber al least two, comman- red the Lufthansa Boeing 737 rsday after It left the Spanish and of MaJlorca. They forced it and at Rome, Cyprus and then brain, and finally ordered il to bai. ,1The plane, originally bound for Jrankfurt, carried five cr ew 9 embers and 87 passengers, in· t f u 0 d.ing the hijackers. Electrocuted STILLWATER, Okla. (AP> - ree fraternity brothers bulld· flg a display ror the Oklahoma te University homecoming ebratlon were electrocuted to- when their scaffolding came contact with a high voltage e, fire officials said. Two other embers of the Alpha Gamma ho fraternity were treated for jurles. OMN09 COUT s DAILY PILOT =r.:i:.~~~·.~, '!':i.'::::: &: ~:=":!':~":~: ... "7".:tl'~"i:.: ,,.. ... --.............. _ ... ~,-l .. " V•ll•Y. lf•t"1•. S.H...._k V.ttl•y •M .._ ...... ,-~~ . ...,... __ llOfl It -•-d 5.C-rt --1'\o TIM !"IMID.tl OVl\lf\IOI"' ot .... ., 11 ut -IN• Strttl. ~·• ~~. 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A Santa Ana man faces a pre-alleged s he had b6en with Jlowe was at a Joss to explain Ii mi nary heurina Oct. 24 in Schueler in. his truck at the limo the incident, noting that Schueler Corona on charges that he shot a oftheshootmg. has no history or violence and no Riverside County woman to death· . Stephanie Christiansen told of· criminal record. because of a trafficincldentonthe " ricers the suspect was :iletpirig in T h e detec tt ve did say, RiversldeFreeway. his camper at a Co,..a raocb however, that Schueler told The suspect, Larry Schueler, where hiS horse wi" ~'"1ea. poUce he had ~ Injured In a J l , an assembler at a Tustin of· Howe said 10 otfl~rs were similar treeway incident three or· flee furnitu re m aouCacturlng dispatched to the •~he and {our years ago and had vowed to firm, is in Riverside County Jail Schueler s urrendered wltb.out ''get even" lf it ever happenea in lieu of$250,000bond. incident. BesJde1 a ~. <>I· again. He is suspected of slaying 38· year -old Nancy Os borne of • Corona in the early morning 'Nixon Dance' The statue of F ather Junipero Serra near Hillsborough looked lik e this after pranksters adorned the statue with a red and yellow beanie. complete with propeller: They also tied some string on the padre·s outstretched finger. Carter Resigned To Water Project? WASHINGTON <AP > -Presi- dent Carter is backing away from another fight with Congress over the water projects he tried to kill earlier this year, a House member said today. Thomas P. O'Neill. Carter signed a $10·billion public works bill including the 10 projects during an August vaca· tlon in his home town or Plains. Ga. But he SCAid at Lhe time: "I remain very concerned about these projects." Suspect NaflfJed hours of Oct. 8. Lt. Bill Lowe, a Corona police detective investigating the murder, said today the case "is very bizarre . "I've seen some weird aoes lo my day and this one ranks right ,up there with them," Howe said. Investigators believe the chain of events leading up to the ~laymg began when a car driven by Mrs. Osborne's son, Walter, 21, merged onto the Riverside Freeway about one mile west o! Corona and nearly collided with a pickup truck driven by Schueler. 1 lowe said Schueler apparently stopped his truck on the freeway shoulder after the incident, went back into the camper shell and grabbed his .41 caliber magnum pistol. He got back in the cab and continued driving down the freeway. Schueler allegedly exited the freeway at the next off rump and spotted the Osborne car. which had also turned off the freeway at the same exit. · . . . . GOP Studenu Slate Event • STI LLW N'f"ER. Okla . t AP >. -Stud ent Republicans will hold a "First Annual Nixon Memorial Trick or Treat Dance'( her e Nov. 1 and give away a tape deck and 60 minutes of erased tape as a door prize. · • Local merchants say s ales of Richard Nixon masks have been brisk in anticipat ion of the fund - r a is ing e v ent, spon sored by the Coll egiate Republicans at Oklahoma St.ate University. To promote the event, club member David Rumph, made up to r esemble former President Nix· on, will ride in the school homecoming parade Satur· day. I . "We've got a long black car and are going to have s ix guys dressed in dark suits and sunglasses walking along s1de, .. said Matt Seward, president of the Oklahoma State Republican club. Police allege Schueler cul ·orr the O'sborne car,1eaped from th~ cabof histruck,waJkedtowilhin HANNA INDICTED two feet of the passenger side and • • • fired one shot from his high· powered pistol at point-blank range. The large slug shattered the window and hit Mrs . Osborne between the eyes . killing her instantly. Her son was hit by fl ying gtass but not seriously injured, Howe said. About three hours after the said. '"The payments would be J[iven for pohtical campaigns. for the personal u se of s aid con- gressmen and senators and on occasion for the office petty cash or s lus h f unds o f said leglslators ," the tr and jury charged . The department has m ade re· pealed errorts to persuade lbe South Korean government to re- turn Park to lhls country but South Korean officials have said that decision was up lo Park. There is no extradition treaty between the two countries. Rep. Dan Marriott CR-Utah>. who met with Carter along with otber•members or Congress from western states, said the Pt'esi· dent indicated he would consider pushing the projects lo comple· lion. One is the Auburn dam project in California, which hingesonasafety analysis. "The President sajd he did not intend to continue fighting with Congress over water _projects,·· Marriott told reporters after the While House meeting. "He in· dicat.ed be would cons ider ex· pediting them to avoid inflation and other costs." Yo~th Frees S~H, Escapes Kidnaper Like the earlier indictment of Park, the Hanna indictment cit- ed several instances when Hanna wrote &euen to various e~utive branch officials promoting South Korean interests and urged some . of his colleagues to take similar action. For example, Hanna and Park a rranged for a congressman to s ign a docu)"llenl promotin1 • private organizatlon designed to bring U.S. and South Korean I egislators together for dis· cusslons, the indictment said1 This allegedly took place in Marchl970. The nrst sign of a break in that impasse came when assistant Atty. Gen. Benjamin CivUeUi and Paul Michel, the lawyer \n char ge of the South Korean probe. arranged to travel toSeoul lo discuss some possible arran1e- ment for obtainJng Park's swom statement. Hanna has aclsnowledged malt· ing '60.000 lo $70,000 as a partner with Park ln rice deals but be has • denied any wrongdoing. If convicted, he would face m axlmum penalties ol five years in priscn and $10,000 OD the eort• splracy count a'hd lhe charge ol failing lo register as a foreign agent. Each of the mail fraud counts carries a maximum of five years and $1,000. Two ol the bribery charges carry a max· imum ol 15 years and $20,000 each. The third bribery charge, under a slightly different statute, carries a maximum of two years and $10,000. The decisiol) marks Carter's final move in what has been a • running batlle with Congress since early spring over some members' pet projects -includ- ing dams, canals and lrrlgaUon systems in their home stales. At one point, Carter cited fund· ing for the projects as a can- didate for his first veto. But 10 of the projects were saved in a com· promise with House Speaker FremPageAJ CANAL ••• Before Torrijos a rrived . Carter lletd a breakfast meeting with Secretary or State Cyrus Vance and Zbigniew Br~ezinski, his national security adviser. Meanwhile, former secretaries or stale Dean Rusk and Henry A .. Kissinger agreed in Sen ate testimony tod ay th al the language ot U.e treaty protects the canal's security and a U.S. right to defend and use it after the year 2000. Appearing as witnesses as the Senate Foreign Relations Com· mlttee closed out a s~ full week of treaty hearings, they said il was unfortunate that the word "intervention"' -wilb its special connotations for Latin America -had been injected in· to the debate. Kissinger said the Senate, however, should "explicitly and formally" e ndorse the ad· ministration's interpretation or the treaty -"that the new treaty confers upon the United Slates the r ight ad obligation uni· laterally to defend neutrality of access to the canal, and to defend the canal itself should that ever become necessary." In a ny event, he said. the Senate should not adopt any res· er vaUon implying that It and the White House disagree on the treaty's meaning. p,..,. Page A J SAFE? •.• Philadelphia. The vessel was en route from Thailand's Pattaya beach resort area to Brunel and Singapore, source.'\ here said. Tbe dlalre~s call reported a position about 35 m lies off Vietnan 's Ca Mau peninsula. Vietnatn's offi cial news m~ia, Vietnam News Agency and Voice of Vietnam. made no mention of the l n ciden~ In toda y 's tran~mission~. SIDNEY. Ohio CAP ) -Nine· year-old Jeffrey Sargeant is back in school, 24 hours after an ab- duction so badly bungled that by the lime the kidnaper m•ade his $25,000 ransom demand, the boy had freed himself and was sare. Police arrested a 22-year-old former University of Toledo stu- dent who was an acquaintance of J effrey's older brother. Jay. Shelby County Sheriff Deputy J ohn Lenhart said Douglas Miller of Toledo would be ar· raigned on a charge of kidnaping today in Sidney Municipal Court. He was being held Thursday in the Shelby County J ail ln lieu of $50,000 bond. As authorities related JefCrey's account, a man approached Jef· frey al the school playground Wednesd ay end told him he wanted Jeffrey to accompany him to meet Jay as a surprise. After Jeffrey got in the car, the man put a plastic trash bag over his head so he could not see. The youngster was driven to the northeast section or Shelby County and tied to a tree. His ab· ductor left and the bo.r worked himself free. He then walked about half a mile to a gas station where he telephoned his rather. W11yne Watercutter , the service station opera tor, s aid Jeffrey, "was tryining to hold back the te ars. but he j usl couldn't hardly do it. He was talking to his dad, but through the tears. He just couldn't make himself understood."' It was only alter J effrey was ~afe, authorities said, that Je(. frey's father, Jotln W. Sargeant, received rive ransom calls. The money was to be delivered to a r ..... r,,.AJ ABUSE ••• Department was asked to in· vcstigate whether the mother, whom Jabar said was sometimes at work wl\en some of the acts took place, should r etain custody or the children. Starks wH indicted on 2S counts of gross sexual mlscon- du ct, 20 counts or incest, 11 counts of sexual abuse of a minor and five counts or endancering the welfare of a chlld Wider 16 years of age, acc:ordlng to J.,_r. Jaba.r sold Starks was J)so charged with e-ndan1ertni the health and mental welfare of his c!Uldrcn by allegedly compellJng them to toll.I• ln sex act.I wtlh him ·and wi£h each other. He said .Starks alleiec:Uy took pictures ot the !lex a.t.s and comptlled the children to take pictures as well. women's dormitory al Bowling Green Slate UnJversity, about 80 m Hes northeast of Sidney. Sidney. Police said Milter was an-est ed when be tried to pick up a bundle o f s hre dde d n e ws papers authorities had substituted for money. Sargeant said his son Jay is a University or Toledo student and was acquainted with MUler. "l feel great because we do have a suspect in custody, but. l 'm going to l e t them ca uthoritles > handle it now."· Sargean t said. "I'm ve r y gr atified. I can't say enough about the sherifC's department. Jt's class A-1." Church to Pay SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -The Seventh-day Adventist Church has agreed to pay SGS0,000 in back wages for more than 600 teachers and administrative employes in 146 church-operated schools In California. In June 1971, Hanna furnished Rep. Melvin Price (0-IU.) with a letter to be sent lo South Koren President Chung Hee Park prais· ing Tongun Park. and Price sent the letter, the indictment said. The next month, Hanna and Parle arranged for another con· gressman to send a similar letter to President Park, &be indict- ment continued. The indictment repeated many of the allegations made in the Park indictment conc~ing l>•Y· ments purported.lo ~camp&Jen contributions to several mem· bers oCCongress. Hanna illegally demanded more than $100,000 Crom Park for the lhen-<:0ngressman's efforts to influence his legislative col· leagues, the indiotm~nt said. The grand jury issued the in· dictment as two top Justice Department olficials arrived in Seoul to talk with South Korean officials about arrangements for questionJng Tongsun Park. Evans-Black Carpets at Blue Ribbon Savings. -Now·s· the time to get fantastic savings on beautlf ul Evans-Black Carpets. It's our best selection of today's newest styles, colo~s and textures. So don't delay ••• hurry in today! .SALE EHDs~ ... MOV. 1st Garment.8 Labeled -WASHINGTON (APf -J Penney Co. Inc., says it will con- tinue to seJl ch11dren 's sleepwear contaimng the controversial fire retardant Fyrol F -2 although two consumer groups urged its withdrawal from the market, saying it is a possible cancer causing agent. A spokesman for JC Penney said lhe compa_oy would label each 1arment. treat- ed with the chemical and post signs describing the controversy about its use. DEN'S m11rat:iiisiailatiaii·:·1:astom drapsries ,_ linoleum • wood floor 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA. CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 646-4838 -64~·235.5 • , Orange ~oast EDI TION VOL. 70, NO. 287, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRI DAY, OCTOBER t4, 1977 c TEN CENT~ Heart Attack Fatal ______ ros ea at 73-! Hanna· Indicted Jury Charges Fraud, Conspiracy WASHINGTON lAPl - Former Rep. Richard T. Hanna was indicted today on rederc:l charges of bribery, fraud and conspiracy stemming from al· leged South Korean efforts to buy influence among members of Congress. Hruu\a, a California Democrat from Orange County who served in the House from 1963 through 1974, was the fir s t ex- congressman to be indicted in the Justice Department probe of al- leged attempts by South Koreans to ply members of Congress with cash and ot.hei:.. Javors in ex- change for actions favorable to· the South Korean government. * * * 'Scapegoat' Fear Told By Hanna By PWl.IP ROSMARIN OI ... O.;ty Pli.t St•ff 1 Jovial. cherubic 63-year·old Richard Hanna once told former congressional stafC members be w•s afraid of being made a scapegoat In the Korea bribery bl vestigation. He may have refiecled on that today ln his Fayetteville, Arlt., heme wbere he moved into a self· imposed exile in July from Ne"ttport Beach. Once Hanna was Orange Coun· \y's most popular Democratic tilected official. servin g six t~rms in Congress until his re- tirement in 1974. After months of Investigations and publicity over alleged in- fluence buying from 1967 through 1975 to win congressional support on issues affe<:ting South Korean business lnlerests, Hanna stole quietly and unannounced from Orange County. _ .He moved into the Ozark Mountains town in near-tota] anonymity. None of his neighbors reportedly knew who he was, until news reporters and photographers descended upon his home when he was named an unindicU!d co-conspirator. With today's federal indict- ment alleging bribe ry. mail fraud and failure to register as a foTeign agent, Fayetteville again became a target of news re- porters. • Apparently Hanna was still hiding out. An Arkans as telephone operator said that although Hanna's telephone number was listed in her book, the former politician had made a special request that it no longer be given out. He was never so reticent on Capitol Hill, where he was known as a gregarious and energetic politician who danced soft-shoe at partJes, 10 Hann~ m"'1e ex.tensive trips, <SeeTA.ET, Page A2) A federal grand jury in U.S. District Court in Wa shington re· turned the indictment charging Hanna with one count of con-~pitacy, thiee counts of bribery. one count of failing to register as a foreign agent, and 35 counts of mail fraud. An indictment is a formal charge made against a person by a grand jury. ll does not establish guilt or innocence. The indic tm e nt n amed 'l'ongsun Park. the one-time Washington businessman who has returned to Seoul, as an unin· dieted co-conspirator. Park already has been I ndicted on similar charges and has so far • refused to return lo the United Swte; lo face trial. Also named as unindictcd co- conspirators were two former directors of the Korean Central Intelligence A~ency, Kam Hyung Wook and Lee flu Rak. The indictment charged that Hanna used his position as a con- gressman '"to encoura~c agen· cies or the government of the Republic or Korea to promote the designation" of Park as the in- termediary ror rice sales lo Korea from U.S. companies. Park received a substantial amount or money a s com· misSlons rrom' the U.S. ~m­ fSee HANNA, Page A2> $50,000Fee D•lly r1 ... Sult r11e11 FACES INOLCTMENT Ex.Congressman Hanna Diedrich Denies Getting Retainer O•lly Pllet ii.ff ....... DENIES PAYOFF Supervisor Diedrich By GARY GRANVILLE Ol 1.M Oa1ly Pli.t ~tall The Orange County Grand Jury is investigatin~ a con- troversial 1973 county land use decision al which Supervisor Ralph Dicdrich's personal at· torney and co-indictee Michael Remington received a $:50.000 re- ta in e r fro m a developer befriended by Diedrich. Both Diedrich -and Remington, howeve r . den y t he county s upervisor received any portion Beauty queens Held Arabs Grab Plane, Threaten Hostag~s DUBAI, United Arab Emirates <AP> -Arabic·speaking ter· rorists holding a hijacked West German jetliner threatened to- day to kill their hostages, includ- ing 11 beauty queens. unless "comrades" imprisoned in West Germany and Turkey are re- leased and a S15 million ransom is paid, officials said. Ninety-two persons, including crew members and the hi- jackers, were reported aboard the plane. The beauty queens were re- turning to Frankfurt after a gift trip lo the Spanish island of Ma- jorca when the plane was hi· Jacked Thursday. In Frankfurt. the news paper Frankfurter Rundsehau quoted the daughter of one of the contes- tants as saying her mother won the trip to Mallorca after compel· ing in a contest on the island dur- ing a visitlast summer. A text of the uJtimatum was de· livered to the French press agen· cy AFP in Paris after the plane la nded in this Persian Gulf emirate. The ultimatum named 11 West German terroris ts and two Palestinians held in Turkey who are demanded to be released and flown to Vietnam. Somalia or Marxist South Yemen. Each of the released prisoners was lo be s upplied with $43,860 In German marks. The ultimatum, addressed to the West German government. declared ... We shall not contact you a~ain ... Any trial on your part to delay or deceive us will m ean Immediate ending of the ultimatum a nd execution of Mr. Hanns Martin Schleyer and all the passengers and the crew of thel'lane ... The ultimatum was s igned .,."Struggle Against World Im· perialism Organization" and ended with an attack on alleged neo·Nazis m in West Germany and Zionism. of what Remington estimates was '"probably $40,000 .. that he uclually was paid by Robcllt H. Grant Corp. 1l was Monday lhat Diedrich admitted taking a leadership role in a 3 to 2 Board of Supervisors decision to free Anaheim Hills In· corporated. a Grant subsidiary, from development restricUons imposed on hill property of what is known as the Nohl Ranch by"an agricultural preserve agreement with the county. At the ~amc time. Diedrich de- nied profiting "in any way, in ~my form whatsoever·· either by the Board of Supervisors con· troversial decision to lirt the pre- serve restrictions or the fees paid Remington. When he s poke in his office Monday. Diedrich said he knew two Grant officials, Robert H. Grant and Richard L. Owen. had a lready lestiCied before the grandjury. Remington m ade the s ame acknowledgment Oct. 6 and said today his former secretary had been called before the jury Thursday. ft was last week that Rem- ington said. "as I understand it they're <district attorney in- vestigators> ~rying to link the money that was paid m e to Ralph." Remington admitted Diedrich "probably had something to do" with him being retained by the development company in iLc; ef- forts to induce the Board of Supervisors to lift the preserve agreement. "I could be wrong but 1 think l got. oh. maybe $40,000 before my troubles began and the case was handed over to the <lawyer) Marshall Morgan," Remington said. The "troubles" Remington re. ferred to was his arrest in mid-1973 on suspicion of solicitng murder and conspiracy to com· mil murder charges. Six months after his arrest a <See FEES, Page A2> ' { Singer Stricke~.1 . . .. . . : On Golf CoUrse1 MADRID, S pain l AP> - Sin~er and actor liing Crosby died today whHe playing golf al a course outside Madrid. He was "'I'S. A s pokesman for the Red Cross hospital to which he was taken said Crosby was dead on arrival. The spokes man said the cause of death was a heart attack. The singer, an avid gol!er, col· lapsed at the 17th hole or the La l\t oraleja golf c lub on the t'apital's outskirts. Crosby recently completed a tour of Britain -including a sell· out performance at Lon<ton·s Palladium -which he said was a test of his recovery from a back injury suffered in a fall from a theater stage in Pasadena. Calif. That show marked his SOth year' i!l show business. Crosby was playing golf with Spanis h c.-hampions Manuel Pinero. Valentin Barrios and Cesar de Zulueta when he col· lapsed. The t'rooner had come to Spain primarily for relaxation and golf. and was t0-have joined in a partridge hunt Saturday. He also had planned to play golf on the Spam!;h island of M allorca. Crosby's s mooth baritone voice made him one of ~ m06l popular singers in the world and several times u millionaire. He was known, among other th in gs, for his rel axed, breezy manner, his loud sport shirts, his race horses, his golfing. his needling friendship with come· dian Bob Hope, his pipes. his four sons by his first marriage. There also were his movie Oscar won playing a priest in '"Going J\ly Way" in 1944 and his rccordin~s. including a score of million-plus disks. The No. 1 record w:is •'Silent Night." with "White Christmas" second. The American Broadcasting Co. announced in 1958 the signing of Crosby to a five.year radio and television contract. The crooner previously had shied away from regular television, although he made occasion a l s pol ap- pearances. He once was a regular on the Columbia Broadcasting System radio networks, but his lengthy shows gave way to short taped r adio features. His success was perhaps as great as any in the history of en· tcrtaintnent. It was often said that at any time somewhere in the world - on radio, phonograph or juke·bo>e -his rich, mellow voice was be- ing heard. His radio theme song, 0 When the Blue of the Night Meets the Gold or the Day," was known everywhere. So was his bub-hub- bub-booing and his whistling with which he varied choruses in his earlier days. Crosby deprecatingly called himself "The Groaner" -and the lag stuck -after Hope thus corrupted the word "crooner." Crosby gave lhe impression or being lazy. lie once told an in- terviewer: "I've always said that my . <See CROSBY DEAD, PageA2) 3Americam On Yachl Safe After Attack VERO BEACH, Fla. C~ Three Americans who r their yacht was a~"to be rammed oU the ooast ~ieblam were reported sale today andlle- ing towed to Saigon, the rathlf at the vessel's owner aaid. Frederick Dellenbaugh said a ham radio operator who knew Ilia daughter, Cornelia .. Cricket•• Dellenbaugh. telephoned him from Banekok, Thailand. at about6a.m. Pl>Ttoday. "He said he talked with Crieket by radio and she stated that UM!y were under tow by a Vietnaanese government vessel to arrive in Saigen at 6 p.m. PDT t.onigbt, •• Dellenbaugh said. . "He said they were all well:·~: Dellenbaugh said the caller was Robert Stevens, a boat yard operator who buill ~e seile4 vessel, the 39·foot BrtlU1: 'l know the man and recopiaiclQ. voice and con.sider him reU~· Dellenbaugh said. "Stevens ~ ognized the voice of nf,y daughter." ~: The yacht issued ita dbCre!le call Thursday, reporting it WM being chased and fired on ~ vessels. The last message saiet the yacht was "•bout to ~ rammed." ~ Miss Dellenbaugh, owner or the vessel, was identified as a former Peace Corps worker. n. two other Americans aboar.d were identified as Leela~ Dickerman of Flagstaff, Arlt;; and Charles Affel (rJ Philadelphia. ;..; :=. ·:! Conferees OK Pay Policy WASJUNGTON (AP) -House and Senate conferees agreed to raise the nation's minimum wage lo $3.35 an hour by 19&1 from the current $2.30. The girl. 16·year-old Cornelia Brod, said her mother. Jutta Brod, 36, was one of eight West German winners in the conte$\,'> s ponsored by Mallorca disco· theques. She was quoted as saying the other three winners were foreigners. The hijackers also threatened that kidnaped West German in· dus trialis l Hanns Martin Schfeyer, abducted by terrorists in West Germany nearly six weeks ago, would be killed If the demands are not met by 1 a.m. PDT Sunday. Wor1ns Trickle Away Night through mid morn· ing low clouds and loc:al dense tog. Otherwise haiy sunshine through Satur- day. Lows tonight 58 to 83. High Saturday 70. The current minimum would gotoS2.6S an hour Jan. l, 1978. Labor Department officials said three million workers now earn the minimum wage. This number woutd increase lo nearly live milUon workers once the wage noor rea<!bes $3.35 an hour, they said . The wage would increase a total of $1.05 over the next four years going to $2.65 an hour in January, $3.10 in 1980 and $3.35 in 1981. . . The House.Senate negotiators ended up only a nickel below the Carter administration's goal of a $3.40 hourly minimum In 1981. The compromii;e reached by House·&?nate negotiators goes back to both the House and the Senate f<rr final approval. •.J ; Mother of Actor Rock Hudson Dies Me morial s ervices fo r Katherine M. Olsen, mother of actor Rock Hudson, will be held at 3 p.m. Mooday in the chapel of Bel\·Broadway Mortuary in Costa Mesa. Mrs. Olsen, 77, died Wednes- day at htr home in Newport Beach alter a brief Illness. A native of Chicago. Mrs. Olsen had lived in Newport Beach for 20 years. She is sur- vived by her son. Mesa Water Improves With Cw in Tests By JACKIE HYMAN Ol Ille O.Wy ~''-' 61.tff The end of a reservoir testing program next week should cut down on the number of wormlike creatures in Costa Mesa water. a s poke s woman f(}r the Metropolitan Water District said Thursday. However, some trace of the midge ny larvae will continue until temperatures drop, accord- ing to MWD spokeswoman Janis VanKeuren. The wormllke insects began turning up in Costa Mesa water )Vhen the &;ln Joaquin Reservoir in Irvine wa!i being drained to tes t its emergency cnpabilitie!I. The testinf( is continuing. but at a slower rate. The larvae so Car have not been reported in any other coast cities. Mrs. Van Keuren s aid. Newport Beach and Huntington Beach also draw water from the res- ervoir. although Irvine uses it only in case of emergencies. The s t at e Department of Health says lhe insects do not pose a health hazard. The flies breed annuaJ ly and each year there is some trace of the larvae until cold weather set~ in and stops the breeding, Mrs. Van Keurensaid . However, the M etropolllan WaLet District. which manages the San Joaquin Reservoir and others thar. provide water lo Orange County, is looklng into a program to get rid or the adult mes that cause the problem, fthe said. The wormllke creatures, stirred up by currents trom rapid draining of the reservoir in the hills above Corona del Mar, caused concern umong Co$ta Mesa resident!\. Mrs. Susan Healey or 665 Ross St. said sh~ first consulted her doctor and treated her family against what she thought were plnworms. She reported Thursday that the number of "worms" in the water had dwtndled to a mere trickle. Midges, which are related to the housdly. produce larvae known as "blood worms," which form a large ourt of the diet o( some fish species ~oten by man. However, there are no fish in lha San Joaquitt Reservoir. • INSIDE TOD-' Y Saturday Jrighl " #nal'* • will compdt.al tM ~ • Covnt.11 Fal~ Jtrr tlw- Notionol Motorcycle Cha• pfonfhfp, SUP• C.l. llHlex ..... DAILY PILOT C E...,.PapAl : I FEES ••. Supttior Court Jury QC(luitted the Fullerton attorney or the charges. Trouble came Remington's )Vay again lai;t July 1 when he y.iat one of five people, including D~edrich and SupervisorJbilip 't\athony, who was charg in a· grand jury indictment with felony orfoni>es related to alleged ~legal political campaign prac· (ices. . Aa far as county records a re concerned, whatever fee Rem· ington received from the <1rant Co~aUoo Is covered by a two· pagt memorandum written to the county planning commission 11rging it to approve the ag pre- :sene withdrawal. But Remington 1ns1sted that be had done much more than pre. pure the two-page memo t.o the planners. Morgan backed Remingtoo·s statement today when he said. ''I was called by the Grant people and told their attorney was ig trouble and was asked to"pick up the company files." "I remember going to Mike·s office and picking up a carton filled wjth material includin1:: Mike's analy s i s of th e Williamson Act (creating agricultural preserves> as well as some other work his firm h1.1d done," Morgan said. Tbe attorney went on to say that while most of the public rec- ords shows other attorneys, in· eluding himself, had done the bulk of the work. "Mike obvious- ly bad done a great deal. .. · As things turned out. it was Morgan who successfully de· /ended Remington in 1973 against the murder solicitation and con- ipiracy charges. : Now, Morgan is Diedrich's de· lender against charges carried in the erandjury indictment of July 1. Remington conceded that in bis testimony before the grand jury be told of holding Diedrich ·s power of attorney and or close business transactions between them. ff<,wever, be pointed out that at Ute time of the Grant Corp. deal- tngs in 1973 hls and Diedrich 's business r elaUonship was not lhat close and that he did not tarry Diedrich's power or al· torney. . ! "It wasn ·i, until about :i year J:iter , maybe early 1975, that llalph was so involved wSth being !county supervisor that he found necessary to give me bis power f attorney," Remington said. • In the Nohl Ranch preserve ~ontroversy, the county planning «ommission voted against the county allowing the land re· moved from lO·year preserve status. Willi Diedrich leading the way, the Board of Supervisors over- ruled the commission's decision ...,'ith then supervisor Ronald easpers ·and s upervisor Ralph Clark casting the dissenting voles. Mesa Thief Gets $1,850 ~A thief police believe knew his tf cUm made oft with a suitcase ~ntaining $1 ,850 in cash from a ~sta Mesa hom e Thursday. •:f>otice said the burglar broke ~to the home or Richard John llarrington through a rear win· cfpw between noon and 1 p.m. Spthing was taken but the suit·· d'ase, which was hidden. 1t con· dined" mostly SlOO bills. Police ¢id not know why the vict t1in was keeping the cash in his ~me. .. . ... ~tiqoes Stolen :.Antiques valued by the victim It $600 have been stolen from the f a rage of a Santa Ana Heights $ome, Orange County sheriff's dfficers said. Deputies said the ttitlt from the unlocked garage 11t:is reported bf antique r e· u;iirman Donald Edward Valdez. 1>. of 2384 Redlands St. He was in \!s home at the time. .. • OAANOECOAIT c DAILY PILOT t~~.~f.~~.·r.:::,:::-::.:6.::::;: OM fit "'*'1iNftt eom.~ -..w eo1•~ """' -11\M<I OM""•• 111•°"41> '°"""• ,.. ""'" Ml"W, Hf'_...,t fk•ft. H\111\(1 .. 8tec•V~qyl' tfl" V-t .. f . tt'"wl"•· SMM•te>4C• Vefl•v .•M l-9tO<ll/$outll(;OHl,4,.llOl•~•-f'OI• llon ts ~'"'.al S11turday\ lfftO 'SuTWJ~v,, Th'1' •1Mto411 041bll\lllnq Dlfllt 1, •I llO Wnt tltv si ..... '°'la ..... c;..111 ..... fl~ ., . ..., ... -"'"'""ftt•NIMI....., JK,lt.C-lt\' "'" "'"'""~' ..... Go-•' M.t-,_ ... _ Edliet ~ ... ~ M<l~lf>o Edllcw CM,,._ N. UM IU<Mff 1>. IUll M llV_.I Ma,...i,,.tOiton ONE OF SHOW' BUSINESS· MOST FAMOUS TEAMS Bob Hope Shown With Bing Crosby on TV Special Front P age A I CROSBY DEAD ••• favorite kind or picture would be Onl' that opened with u shot of mC! :.1ttang in a rockio~ chair on a front porch. The rest of the pit lure would be what I !>aw." But the posC! was dec~ptive lh: " a:. actually a h.ird v. ork er In 1948 -for the fifth con secutive time --Crosby was vot- ed the lop money-making star of the movies in the annual poll of theater owners and operator-. e<>odue~ed by The Motion Picturo Herald, tradl· publication. Thal made him the all -time champion 111 that field llis bu:.inc!.), enterprises 1n eluded oil wells, dis tribution righL'i for u frozen orange juice. the far-nung Bing Crosby En terprises, which m a rketc d everythint{ from television film!> to toy dogs. and a luxurious trailer village at Palm Springs, Calif. His 25.000-acre cattle ranch near Elko, Nev., operated ' profitably. In more than a quarter ·century of movie-making, among the the most popular or his pictures were lhe ··Road" comedit!S --.. The Road to Singapore," "The Road to 7.an7.ibar. ·· elC. -with Hope and Doroth}· Lamour. tn an equally Ion& radio career he had the same sponsor for a dceade. starting in 1935. on the weekly Kraft Music Hall His first wife was the former Wilma Wyatt, a native of Har· riman, Thnn .. whose professional numc was Dixie Lee When they m et she was a star or Broadway musical comedies and the screen and Crosby a little known singer '~1th Gus Arnheim 's band at the Cocoanut Grove in Los Angele!>· Ambassador Hotel. They were married Sept. 29, 1930, and ufler a few more mo\'· ies, she retired from show busi: ness. . Crosby's sons are Gary Evan Crosby, named after actor Gary Cooper ; twins Phillip Lang Crosby and Dennis Michael Crosby . .ind Lindsuy Harry Crosby. Thc lust wcis named for Linds ay Howard. Cros by ·~ partner in racing. Gary quit Stanford University to follow his falht>r into show business, with lime out for Army service. Mrs. Crosby died Nov. I. 1952, of cancer, three days before her 4lst birthday. On Oct. 24, 1957, In Las VC'Jl d~. Nev .• Crosby married actrtss Kathryn Granl. a brown-eyed beauty from Texas. He was 53 • she 23 -five monlhll younger than his son Gary. A son, Harry Lillis Cr~by, was born August 8, 19~ . Rorn Olive Kathryn Grandstaff in Houston. Miss Grant had won numerous beauty lilies and ac- quired a degree in fine arts from the Univer~ity of Texas. She went to Hollywood in 1952 and signed a contract with the Para- m ount s tudio, where she mcl Crosby. Ten days after their m arriage . s h e acco mpanied him to Spokane, Was h., where Crosby. in academic robe and mortarboard helped dedicate the $700,000 library he gave his old school, G<>nzaga University. The Jesuit university, which he al· tended for three veurs. had .tiiven him un honorary doctor or music d<'grec in 1937. Crosby was born flA9f 2. 1904 . in Tacoma. Wash .. the fourth of seven children of Harry Lowe Crosby, a brewery bookkeeper, and Kate Harrigan Crosby. The children arrived In this order: Larry, Everett, Ted , Bing, Catherine, Mary Rose and Bob. Bob became a bandleader- s ingcr. Bing's given name was Harry Lillis Crosby. One legend as to the origin or his nickname was th:at as a youngster he wowd point a t.oy gun or his finger and cry "Bing! Bing!" Rut Crosby himself said he got It, at 7 or fl, because he liked a comic strip which had u charucter named Bingo. Th · "o '' later w as dropped. A piano and n Un-horn phono graph in the Crosby home en· couraged his musci ul leanin.tis. As n college freshman, he joined five other youths in a group called the Musicaluders. None l'ould road mus ic. The.v im· proviscd their own versions or record hiLo;; and played for dances and parties. Crosby bought a set of drums. After the band broke up, he and another member, Al Rinker., sang songs in a theater pit. lie qtJ1t ~tudying law in hi-. third year at (ionzaga und with Rinker headed for Los Angele~ and a try al ~how business. The' auditioned f o r a \ audc\:rlll· I.looker and got a lhl·atl·r JOb. Roth \uog lo Hinkl·r·s piano accompaniment. i''or variation. lhev ~ot trombont.• and J~llZ band eirecll;, vocall)'. The :1~1 t oured Coast and Northwc~l theaters. Hancllcade r Paul \\.'h1teman :-1f'nl'<f Crosby and Rinktlr in Los ,\n~t.'lt>~. Jn New York he teamed them with pianist Harry Barris a-. Paul Whiteman ·~ Rhythm Boys. Rinkl'r and B11rris played miniature pu.mos. Crosby, stand· in~ between them. beat a sm1.1ll cy mbal. Thcir r ecording or Barris· ··Mississippi Mud .. won wide popularity. Later the trio left Whiteman and appeared with Gus Arnheim's band at the Cocoanut Grove in Los Angeles . Barris composed some of Crosby·s big· gest record hits, including "I Surrender. Dear," .. Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams .. and "It M usl Be True.·· Crosby then beg;in singing and acting in a series of 20-minute. slap:.hck movie shorts ror pro- ducer Mack Sennett. Each paid him $00. He proposed to Dixie Lee across a chicken dinner al the Cocoanut Grove. He began singing on the CBS radio network' and performed for 29 weeks at New York·s Para· mount Theat<'r. Singing long hours -five or six shows a day, even ing broadcasts, benefit performances and recording - he developed nodes on his vocal cords. Two weeks· rest cured his ras py hoarseness. but his voice thereafter was a tone or so lower. Crosby·s long association with Paramount Pictures began in 1932 with .. The Big Broadcast." Among his other early films: "College Humor, .... Too Much Harmony, .. "Going Hollywood, .. with Marion Davies: ··she Loves Me Not." "We're Not Dressing,·· with Carole Lombard. and "Mis· sissippi, ··with W. C. Fields. His brother Everett, already in Los Angeles selling trucks when Bini? first arrived, oocame his manager. Larry handled his public relations. Their father, .. Pop" Cr osby. supervised Crosb,"s ran m ail and handled checking accounts until his death in 1950. The first Cros by-Hope-Lamour "Road" pictur<', "The Road to Singapore." was made In 1939. Other "Roads" took them on hair-raising comedy adventures to Morocco, Utopia, Rio and Bali . Succeeding Crosby films in· eluded "The Dirth of the Blues." with Mary Martin; "Holiday Inn," with Fred Astaire, and "Just for You," with Ethel Bar- rymore. A rtcr 1954 's "Tbe Country Girl,·• in which Grace Kelly won an Oscar, Crosby left Paramount to free-lance. Al M·G·M he made "High Society," with Miss Kelly and Frank Sinatra, arid "Man on Fire.·· Two of his best known roles were as priests. quite in contrast to his usual character izations. These were in "Going My Way," a nd "Bells of St. Mary's." Starting In 1937, he sponsored u pro-amatoor golf tournarnent an- rawlly at Del Mar and later at P ebble B6ach. paying all ex- penses. including prir.e money. Proceeds went Into youth recrea· liont centers and other loeal chorilies. The total up to 1958 wa~ alm01Sthaf( a million doll~. He owned 15 percent of the Pittsburgh f>t rate! baseball te•m and :\bout 512 ptlrcenl or the Detroit Tigers. ' WASHINGTON (AP> -Presi· d~nt Carter ~aid today that he and Panamanian leader Omar Torrijos have "successfullf re· solved" differences o in· terprctal1on in the wording of the new Panama CanaJ treaty. C<rrler said the differences, which have been raised prin· cipally in Congress. involve tht' right of American ships to hav6 .. expeditious passage" lhrou&h. the canal in limes of war or other ernergcqdes and U.S. rights lo def e n~ the waterway 's neutndily. "We have s uccessfully re· solved the remaining differences of inttirpretation that have been raised about our right to defend lhc canal as well as the right of our ships to have expedil.ious passage," Carter told a group ol .. newspaper editors from around the country. However, Carter nld, the United States h•s-made clear It has ·-no intention to ln~rveoe ln Panama.'' The President said a sta~ment outlining th& clarification has been prepal'ed but·would not 'be released until later. Carter and Torriios m~ for more Ulan 9Ctml:nute.s ea.tlle.t..1.Q:.. da,y, and a 'Wbtte House spokesman said afterwards that other offlci4ls of the United States and Panama "are continu- ing lo discuss the clarillcatlon" to dispel questions rais ed in both countries ,abo~l the proposed t.realy. Carter had told a news con· ference Thursday that a "clarify· ing statement" mlgbt be needed on thf major polnt In dl.apute - conflicilng int.erpretations of the provl:Jlon for Joint U.S.· Panama nian d efense of the canll.1 '11 neuttru!t.y after the year 2000.# While· Hou$e Deputy Press Secretary Re,c Qranum said to· day that the White House expect· ed SIJCh a statement would be ls· s ued ln advance of a plebiscite in b~,.Jline days away, on whtither to al)prove the treaty or not. Tbe White House spokesman said Carter and Torrijos, wbo originally had been scheduled to confer for about an hour. had a "very amicabJe meeting." He said Carter felt It wa.s marked by "a great deal of friends hip, mutuality o'C interest and equal!t.y." • • F ro• Page B J HANNA INDICTED. • • TONIGHT REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT SERIES -Co· s pon bo red by Newport fl arbor /Costa Mesa Board of Realtors and the Daily Pilot, OCC Science Hall. Oct. 14, 21, 28 and Nov. 4 , 7:30 p.m. KIWANIS TRAVEL & ADVENTURE -"Yosemite and the High S ierra.·· OCC Auditorium, 8 p.m. FOOTBAl~L. -Estancia vs. Santa Ana, Santa Ana aowl. 7 :30 p .m . Ne,,port Harbor vs. W c~tmm!>ter, Davidson Field. 8 p.m. OCC PLANETARIUM. - ''Relativity and Cosmology," 7:30 and 9 p.m. Saturday, 7:30 p.m. FRIDAY NlGHT FfLMS -- "Citizen Kane," OCC Forum, 7:15p m. "PRIVATE LIVES" -South Coast Repe rtory Theater . Tuesduy-Sunday through Oct. 30. 8p m. SATURDAY, OCf. IS C HILDR EN'S FILMS "Wonderful World of Brothers Grimm,·· OCC Forum, 1 p.m. 50 ~nts. BACK BAY TOUR -Friends of Newport Bay walking tour, Eastbluff and Back Bay Drives, 9 to 10:30a.m. 1-~00TBALL -Costa Mesa vs. San Cleme nte. OCC Field. 8 p.m . SATURDAY NIGHT FILMS - .. The Gre:it Carus o.·· OCC Forum. 8 p m. SI. Cras h Hurts Mesa Driver P olice said engine trouble was believed to be the cause of a col· lision Thursday in Costa Mesa that injured a 27-year-old woman. Candye Lee Howard. 27, or Santa Ana. was treated at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital follow- ing the 11 :40 a.m. accident., but w asn •t hospitalized. Police said she was driving in the 2300 bloc k of Harbor Boulevard when her engine ap- parently died, causing her to stop suddenly. A car drive n by Timothy Robert Sanz. 26, of 2251 Fountain Way, Costa Mesa, cot· lided with the rear of her car. Neither driver was cited. panics and passed along much of that money to Hanna "and various other congressmen and senators with intent lo influence the decisions and actions of said congressmen and senators on questions and matters relating to the Republic of Korea," the in· diclment charged. Specifically. Hanna and Park wanted to influence members of Congr ess to increase U.S. military aid lo Korea..,Sefeatpro· posals to reduce U.S. military forces there, increase rice sales to Korea and wln morelavorable terms for the financing of those sales, and make s_peeches and write statements pralsin& the South Korean regime, the lnd.ict- menl s aid. As part of the alleged scheme, Park gave ca.sh and other gilts to House and Senate members be a nd Hanna believed "to be in- fluential in matters affecting'• South Korea, the indictment said. "The payme\t.s would be ICiv~ for poltttcal campaigns, for \be persona~ use of s aid con· gressmen and senators and on occasion for the office pe~ e,•b o r s lus h funds of ••hl l egislators, .. the c r and j ury charged. Like the earlier indictment of Park, the Hanna indictmmt tit· ed several insta.Mff when H.aama wrote letten to various execuUve branch officials promotln1 South Korean interest.I and ur&ed some of his colleagues to take almilv action. For ~ample, Hanna and Parle arranged for a concressman lo sign a document promoting a private organization designed to bring U.S. and South Korean legislators t ogether ror dls· cussions, the indictment said. This allegedly took place In March 1970. In June 1971, Hanna Cumishe4 Rep. Melvin Price <D·Ill.> with a letter to be sent to South KoreJD President Chung ,Hee Park prais· lng Tongun Park, and Price sent the letter, the lndlctment said. -The next month, Hanna and Park arranged for aoot.her con· gressman to send a similar Jett.tr to President Park, the indict- ment continued. The indictment repeated many of the allegations m ade in the Park indictment concerning pay- ments purported to be campaign contributions to several mem- bers of Congress. Hanna illegally demanded more than $100.000 from Park for the then-congressman's efforts to influence his legislative coJ- Evans-mack Carpets at Blue Ribbon Savings. Now's the time to get fantastic savings on beautiful Evans-Black Carpets. It's our best selection of today's newest styles, colors and textures. So don't delay •• : hurry in todayf ·sALE ENDS'-.... NOV. I at • DEN'S lea~ues, the indictment suid. The granc~ jury issued the i.n- d ic tment as two top Jus tice Department officials arrived in Seoul to talk with South Korean orricials about arrangements for question.In g Tongsun Park. The department has made te· pealed efforts to persuade the South Korean government lo re- turn Park to this country but South K9,rean officials have said that deeision was up to Park. There is no extradition treaty between the two countries. The first sign or a break in that impasse came wben assistant Alty. Geq. Benjamin Clviletti and Paul MlChel, the riwyer m charge of the !outb Korean probe. arranged to travel to Seoul to discuss some possible arrange- ment for obtaining Park's sworn s tatement. , Hanna bas acknowledged mak- ing $00,000 to $70,000 as a partneT with Park in rice deals but be has denied any wrongdoing. Il con'Jfcted, he would face m aximulb penalties or five years in prison and Sl0,000 on the con· s piracy count and the char~ or failin& to register as a foreign agent. Each of the mail fraud coun~ carries 'a maximum of five years and $1,000. Two of tbe bribery cbarg~ carry a max- imum ol. 15 years and $20,000 each. Tbe third bribery charge. qnder a slightly d.Jtrerent stalute, carries a max1mum of lwo years • and $1.0,00Q. '* * '* Froa Page Al TARGET ••• by bla own admission, since 1968, to Seoul, whep surplus U.S. rice was beii)g sold to Korea. He became known lo the American embassy there as the "California rice salesman,·• so f~Uy did he appear when rtee tran,sactlons · were belng made. It was during that time that Hanna.became the silent par:tner of Tong'un Park, indicted South Korean businessman at the key lo the bribery scandal. ln three years, Jiao.na made $60,000 to $70,000 ln an lmport- export venture with Park, which he reported to the House Ethics Committee on Standards or of- ficial conduct. But his business connection went generally unnoticed by his colleagues. Hanna told the New Yo1'k Times he entered tbe business venture lo help Park. ., : iiisialiatioii: ·custom draperies linoleum •·wood floor . 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CALIF. 926'27 • PHONE 6"'6·4838 -6"'~·t3 5~ • \ • --. -... --~ ·-_:____ ------- • O•lly l'llot $1MI Pllolo PROSECUTOR JAMES BftOWNING (CENTER) MEETS ORANGE COUNTY LEGAL FIGURES Judge H. Warren Knight (left), Trial Lawyers' President Ronald Schwartz Facts Lost Hearst Case Insanity Better Tactic-Prosecutor By TOM BARLEY Of IM O.ity Pilot Staff The man who successfullv prosecuted newspaper heires's Patricia llears t told Orange County lawyers Thursday night that mistaken defense tactics m ay ha\'C contributed to her con- viction. Former Deputy U.S. Attorney James L. Browning-told mem· hers of the Orange County Trial Lawyers Association that d e· fense allornc.r f . Lee Bailey's decision to try the case on the facts was exactly what the prosecution wanted Browni~ said he would have had a ~h m ore difficult task if * * * the defense hatl pleaded ,\1"' I lcarst's in~an1ty during the du~, ''hen she became a n actl\ l' member of the SymbioncM' Liberation Army and particip<it ed in a bank robbcrv and :1 holdup. · "\\'e w ould have had t<1 neutraliz e the psychiat ric evidence and that isn't. ~WD\1> easy." Browning s aid. "But l:i<iill•y. for rc:.isons unknown to me. decided nor to tukc thut route ... Hrowning said anotht.'r defenl>c open to Bailey would ha\'e bt:1·n what the prosecutor called "lhl' Robin Hood defense.. a plea * * * Supervisors, Court that ~Ill>., llearst admitted\\ rong doing but argued that l>he had no\\ conw to hl'r senses and re alized that what s h<.• did wa-, wrong "Rut Balley decided against that.·· Browning !>aid. "And. from thl· prosecution point of view, wc'r<: glad that he did." Browning ~aid Miss Hear st'-. comictlon on robbery chnTRcs-is t·urrcnlly being <1ppcalcd . She is frt•e on bwl pending the hearing uf the appeal "If the Patty Hearst trial did nothing elSl' it brought o ur . \mcr1ca n <:riminul j us tice :.ystem to the attention of the '' orld." Browning said ·'Our !>Yl>tl'm of law is the best the \\Orld h~" c\'er !>t:en." the JJl'OM·cutur 'aid · Thl• llcarst t n .tl \\a:-. am pk proof of th.it · Jackie Resigns In Huff 1'\ 1-:W YORK <AP> Jae 1111eline Onui.sb hus quit Vlklnf! l're:-.s, wherl' she worked as 1.n editor tor two years. over its publication of a no\'el depicUng ~in imagined us~ussination plot against her brothcr·in·law. Sen. Edward Kennedy. The former !1rsl lady, widow of r•rei;idenl Kenned y, submitted 11 letter of rcs1gnatlon Thursday to Thomas Guinzburg. Viking publisher, according to Nancy Tuckerman. a s pokeswoman for Mrs. Onassis. Miss Tuckerman quoted Mrs Onassis as teWng her . ''Last spring. when told of the book. I \ried to separate my Jives <is a Viking e mploye and a Ken· nt'dY relative. "But this full. when iL was sug. gt•l>t<.'<I that I hud had something to do with acquiring the book and that I was not distressed by it~ l'\1blication. I fell 1 had to re· -.1i,:n ." A Kennedy s pokt!s mirn in Wushington suid the senator hud no comment on Mrs. Onas~1::. · resignation. Guinzburg was not immedjate· ly available for comment. However, he s aid Thursduy thut J\1rs. Onassis had expressed no "distress or anger" about the book when she \\'US told about it \c\•cral months ago. He said ~he had "a feeling of rcsignntion that µeople will go on using this bleak material." Mrs. Tuckerman said Thurs · day that Mrs. Onassis wus ne\'er consulted about the book and s aid !)he was "extrem ely upset " over 1t i:. publication. The novel, "Shall We Tell tht! Pr'esidcnt :'" was published Inst Monday. Writt en by Brltish <JUlhor Jeffrey Archer, it tells of u plot to kill Edward Kennedv after he is elected president in 1980. J ohn F. Ke nnedy was as ~nssi natcd in 1963. A third brother. Sen. Robert F . Kenned,·. ''a!. assassinated in 1968 ~ h1iv <.·ampuigning for the Democrutu: nomination for president Relationship Better County ] ail Fire Orange County's Superior Court and the county Board of Supervisors have developed a new and much happier rela· tionsttip. presiding Judge ByTon K. McMUlan told local lawyers Thursday night Describihg s upt.'r \'1Sor s · Chairman Tom Riley as "a super guy:· McMillan told members of th e Or a n ge Counl y Trial Lawyers Association that Riley I is .. a pleasant ch ange" from other unidentified members of the county board. "It often seems that our only conla<'I with county s upervisors 1s 1n arraigning them or scntl'm 1ng them ... Judge Mc :\lillan commented to a roar of lau~htcr from lawyers at the dinner meet 1n~ "But Tom Raley 1~ something l'ls t'," Judge !\kM1llan added while the super\'lsors chafrman stood at his side "Ile has done '' lot for us in the courts and l know he Intends to do a lot more ·· Judges McMill an and H War ren Knight' received plaques of appreciation from Riley for their work in launching the Superior Court's new cras h -;cttleml:'nt program. Sovi.ets Try to Jam Air Defe.me Radar WASHINGTON IAP> Soviet reconnaissance bombers operat· Ing off the East Coast have tried for the first time to confuse the Bare Ftrets For Jruors NEW YORK (AP> A 27-year·old dancer arrest· ed in a raid on a topless· bottoml<'ss bar pe rformed her act befor e a jury and con vinced it or her in nocence of obscenity and public le wdness chaq(_es Georgina Christ. wear ing a leotard, danced for 10 minutes Wednesday bcfor~ the three m en and three women of the jury. She earlier had convin ced her lawyer ~ind Criminal Court Judge Morton Tolleris lo allow the dance to tape recorded mus ic "I decided to fi ght It.· she s aid "l'vc' been danr- in1'( since I was five years old and I don't think m y body is c1bscene." IJ .S. atr defense radar watching their moveme nt11 . P e ntagon sources report. The Russian effort to interfen· with the radar apparently failed. tht' sources said today In the incident four day:. a~o. two Russian Tu-950 bombers fl y ing out or Cuba inspected and ap parently photogr aphed one or tht· latest U.S. destroyers as 1t wa' sailing in international wat£>rs off Boston. The Soviet planes reportedly dropped chaff metallic s trips that can interfere with radur beams <ind thuo; foil detection Alerted. American ;.11r defcn,l· of ficials sent up four F\06 fighler·interccptors from Allan tic City, N.J .. and Olis Air Force Rase, Mass .. ab a precaution. The Tu·95D Bears were in tcrceptcd and 'kept under :-.ur \'e1llance by a :"/avy P3 anti~ub marine patrol plane out of Bermuda. "The Bears returned tu llavana after making three passes within ahout 1.000 feel of th<' des troyer Spruance ... th<.· 'iOUrccs said The Russians obvious ly are 10 teresled in getting a s much tn formation as possible on lhC' ne\\ Spruance class of destroyer!'> ' 'Deliberately Set' Sant:.a Ana Fire Department in \ t>sl1~ator-. reported today that a fire \\h1eh cause1I the temporary cvacuullon of 140 female inmates from thl· Orangl' County Jail late Thursd;iy ''as dt'libt.·rntely set They :.aid the fire ''as started by mmatl'' in the women·s jail ''ho i.t.icked up an e:-.lim ated 35 m attrt>s:-.e:. in a second floor hold · in~ area and then :-.cl them on fire An c!>llmatcd 25 10mates and Jail deputt<:s were rushed to t;CI ~tedical Center ''hale the blaze was being fought an<J treated for 'mo'kc inhalation. Ho:.pital of- ficials said they all r ecovered after trl•atmcnt Starve Death Brings Prison SJ\:\' FRANCrsco (A p ' A woman convicted of slarvm~ her 11-year·old s on to death has been 'icntcnced to s tale prison . Shirl<.'y Ellenburg. 35. who 1i. :-.1x months pregnant. "as sen- tenced lo a fl\'c-year to hfe term Thursday b~ Supe rior Court .Judge Donald C1mstinl· She w~s convicted '1n S11pt I on st'cond dcgrcr murde r charge!-. Fraud Charged LOS ANGELES fAP > Slate and federal officials :.a y the In· come Equ1t1es Corp. \'iolnted an- t1fraud provisions by selling na· tionwidc ~ million worth of limikd partnership interests in r•1al estate. The stall' Corporations Depart· ment l>a1d the company. without t•onc<.'din~ any wronsidoing, has agrec'd to an inJunct1on pr ohibit· mg v1olat1on of federal and st.ate securities n•,gistration and fraud laws. <md imposin ,g othe r rcstric· lion., fo'our ftrc engme~ Yt ert.' d•~· patched to the !>CCne by the Santa i\na f ire Dt•p<ir1.ment which had the blaze under control within 30 minutes of th<.'1r arrival. 1\rmcd guarrls kept watch ut "-l'\'cral Jail entry points while I ircmen carried hoses into the ... m okmg building. Deputies s aid none of the affected inmates at- te mpted toescupc. J ail officers said there wai. nc) ~tructural damage to the build 101.: The affected area is being washed down today and will be ready for occupancy by this evening. they said BOUGAINVILLEA All our single·nowering varictie!i ~re on sale to close out the fall p lanlln~ .-.cabon . Hurry while • :-.clccuon l::isb' , .......... N9-S2.tt Sale $1.49 FlOWERING HlllSCUS Our entire inventory 1s on s::ile. both dbl. &. sln~lc nowcrlni;: varielll's 111 rl'c.l. yellow, orun11c. pink white or hicolon;. ~· 1IH . rel. St.tt Shoplifting Seen Sonday Sale $5.99 PAX Super Gold Shoplifting and stopping it I has become a multi-billion-dollar business thc~e days. The crime will be exposed Crom sever al an~lcs 10 Sunday's Daily Pilot GRAB H1\ G l\1 ore and more Orange Cu11ntians arc taking m erchanili.;t• \\ llhm.1 p·1y1ng for it. Denni~ \t1·Lcll:m of Fcatunng Section take!-a look ;,it the up· 11urgc 10 tcon thefts. A nuUonal survey finds that few obser vers report shoplifters because they a"e unsure o(what 11ctlon to take. • cct '-!Y l 'NCHUHCllEO" (SUNDAY'S BEST J Ti me mag u z1 n e quoted a Lutheran minister from l'enn Sylvunia s a ying not enoOith Orunge Countians go to church Why does he call us irreh~1ous and what do tocul clergymen respond'! Staff Writer Jackie Hy man tells in li s pecial feuturc ACTORS BEAT F'EAH lll'r'lchl'l Ot•rnurrll :1nrl M1kl· ·- Farrell reveal in separate stories bv Associated Press writers \Villiam Glon~r and Jerrv Buck that their conquest O\'Cr fear led to s uccc:-.s nn .,la gl' and in tt'lt~vision T IP Of ICEBERG What has Global Marine Development. Inc. been doing since it-. salvage -;hip Glomar Explort:r made headlines trying to reco\'er a Russian suhmarine'! Stuff Writer William Schreiber looks at the Newport Beuch firm 's latest arctic c>:ploration.-. on the Busi nt'" PARC I . . ............. WHAT HAPPENED TO THAT MISSING $1 MILLION 8eok Offlclel Homer Holland Would Like to Know •• WhO Goofed? Missing Million Mulled CHICAGO c AP> Was it an t:mbezilement. a burglary or Just an accounting error'! Apparently no one knows for sure how exactly $1 million in cash disappeared Crom the under ground vault of the country's ninth largest bank. But a spokesman for the First National Bank of Chicago said not one customer ··is going to lose a penny.·· 1 lomer J . Holland. senior vice president m charge of ad- ministration, baid the apparent loss has been charged against the bank's third-quarter earnings. which s till are expected to exceed '• last year's third·quartcr earnings. 1 : TUE APPA~ENT LOSS IS THE biggest in the history of the _ ~an~. Holl~d said. He added that the bank. second largest in ll-. hno1s. has insurance for such losses, but the deductible is g reater-· than the amount missing. When the bank closed Friday for the three-day Columbus • Day weekend, the Sl million was in a locked cart inside a vault. off'kials said, But at the day·s·t:nd accounting o! ush on Tues- day, the bank's head teller found that the money was gone. Holland said. The 1-'BI thtnh the m oney was stolen by a bank employe, e~thcr through embezzlement or a burglary. said George Man· d1ch, spokes m;in for the FBI ·s Chicago office . ~l!T BANK OFFICIALS SAID theY, ha\'e not ruled out the poss1b1hty of an accounting error, although a study by internal audit.ors on Wednesday found no such mistake . In a tour of l~e.vault area for reporters Thursd ay, bank of· f1c1als noted the d1fhculty of escaping with such a large amount or ca::;h A would-be robber would ha\'C h<Jd to gl:!t the s tacked c urren· cy about the s in· of a large suitcase past three guards. four telcv1s1on monstors and a pair of "mun·trap" electric se<:urity doors onto downtO\\ n Clark Street "IT WAS SOT A BANK ROBBER\' whert: l>Omebody camei.n , with Ii j?un and took a million bucks." MaodlCh s aid. Bank of. fi cials adeded that there was no sign of forced entry to the vault or elsewhere in the bank '~ • Employes who could have been involved have ngreed to take lie detector tests.· s aid Holland. and all 'employe absences have been accounted for s ince the m oney apparenUy vabished.. Search Suspended The Coast Guard suspended its search today for a Gardena man who fell overboard from a 25·foot cabin cruiser eight miles north or after a fishing ,·essel reported the mishap. The c ruiser from which Gilman fell overbofl.l'd baa· no radio. . !- '/\ valon Wednesday. A Coast Guard helicopter with sea rch lights and a patrol boat began the search for Clarence Gilman. 50. Wednesday night William Atkins of Gardena. · owner of the vessel said Gilman was emerging from the ca~ when a large swell hit the bdft and caused him to fall over· board. STRAWIERRY GUAVA The frwtio are just stnrttng lo 5Ct on lhb trop1cnl shrub. Great for jclhe:. or cal 'em right off the bush. 1...-..m.,....sut Sale $1.19 GOOD COAST JUNIPER Gold·nt.'Ckl'd foliage highhghl.t. this hardy conifer. Excellent for lo" mninlcnoncc planU11"s ~...._,..._su' . · Sale $4. 99 I s..-.-,....S12.tt Sale $6.99 ~Featuring : . WEEPIHG CHIHESE IAHYAH G ruceful arching branches '' llh glossy deep-green &otiose h1ghlii,:ht this most prized troplco\. PIRIWIHILE tVlnca l'06ea> ~ l"'ully·bl06somed plant8 add mstant color for fall· & winter season. Choose from pink. \\hlte. (Blanche) or white W/red (Brighi Eyes). • ....... ,....1 .. Sale 39·c EVHGIHH ASH Planl this tree \tow tor fui;t growth & dtinse s h ade. Supe r ·large specimens overs· lull. s.,.l tl'w, ,.._ SI O. tt Sale $3.99 Prevent crabgrass. annual · bluegrass, oxalls & many other weeds this winter & spring while fertilizing. Just PAX and relax with 4-month weed protection. 2000 sq. ft. size, reg $12.99 Limit 3 Per Custom•r Sale $9.99 Sile Prleet Qoocl Thf\1101117'7 ..................... 0,..1 o.,.. w;..1 ..... ~,......,,., 2123 HIWPOIJ ILVD .. COSTA MISA t.._Mff 64~1'21 • ,..._ .. '41-4101 .. : DAILY PILOT Who D rink s To That? DRINK UP, DE PT. You may have fretted from time to time about 3 ny in the soup but Costa Mesa residents in recent days have been more worried about worms in the water. 1 This vexation surfaced most recently when Costa Mesa resi- dent Mrs. Susan Healey found some worm-like creatures float- ing about In her family toilet ' ' bowl. Shocked, she had the whole ramily treated for worms. Later. sbe discovered the little wigglers elsewhere and it was determined these beasties were creeping into her house via the water pipes. Alas, it develops that even the ateneral manager of the Costa Mesa County Water District, Ed $(hnabel, had a couple of the lit· .tl~ devils squirt out into his tub ~eother night as he was drawing irbath. -:.SCHNABE L EXPLAI NED J\ow tbe small beasts cot Into the JNater in the first place. Water officials were doing some tests al San Joaquin res- e r voir a nd disturbed the ~reatures, who normally live <tuietly on the bottom. Thus they drifted up into the water and got .f!luekedoutintot~pipes. He identified the beasties as fly larvae. You might translate that lnto maggots. But don't do that. 1t makes it sound a lot worse than 1t is. ~ Actually, the story of little worm·like creatures in Costa Mesa's water supply is nothing new. Some decades back in the 1950s. when our Editor Tom Keevil was covering the Costa Mesa City Council, a huge nap Uevelopecl over worms in the \\·ater . AS THE TALKING about worms droned on, Keevil doodled a t the ]>ress table. drawing car- {oons of what mi&bl be the vari<MJ forms and shapes of the small water creatures. He later .gave his scratchings to the late .Arlie Swarn, then Costa Mesa public works director and later - ctty manager. Ar lie had K~evi l ·s worm ~tching framed. It hung on hjs l>edroom wall for years. Later in the 1960s, when pres- ent Assistant Managing Editor Dick Nan joined the stare ol this alerting journal. one or the first IJig stor ies he covered was worms in Costa Mesa's water . : In the current case, you might Chink that the larvae, once inject· ed into the water system, would &et killed by all the filtering and chlorination processes. : Apparently not so. When our intrepid photographer Gary Am- l>rose returned with three of the tittle devils in a jar , they seemed (o be wiggling all over the place and having an enormously good time. Anyway, who knows if it's bet· ter to drink a dead worm than a Uveone., THROUGH IT ALL, however. t.wo things seem lo have been proven over the years about al- l~ed wor ms in Costa Mesa water : · l. They don't drink much 2. Nobody has been known to die from it. You just have to guess that the pr oblem gives you something new to fret over besides your taxes. Drink up. Friday, October 14, 1977 Tra1Uplant Man, 60, Gets ' Chimp's Heart CAPE TOWN, South Africa tA P > -A South African man who re· ceived the heart of u chimpaniee In a "piggyback .. lransplantoperatipn performed by Dr. Chrisliaan Barnard was reported in good condition today at Groote Schuur Hospital. "The patient is conscious, ho is tnlking to the nursing s taff. He is do- ing just fine," a hos pital spokesman said. In the four-hour operation. Barnard and his surgery team placed the monkey's heart next to the patient's failing heart lo help it pump blood through hil> circulatory system. THE PATIENT has not bt•en identified, bul he is believed to lx- uboul 60 years old The hospital iupcnntt•ndcnt s uid the operation was thl· world 's first piggyba ck transplant of a chimpanzee's heart. An operation by Barnard last June using the heart of a b.i- boon failed, the woman put1er1t dying withill several hours BARNARD WON world faml' wben he performed the world's fi rst s uccessfu l human heart transplant in 1967. In 1974. he ac- compli5hed another medical first when he implanted a second human heart 1nto a 58·year-old man, the fi rst use of the pig· ~yback technique. Steel Chief Lauds Carte r Import Vow WASlllNGTON IAP> The chairman of U.S. Steel says President Carter's vow to keep foreign producers from dumping sleet illegally on the American mark et means a good future for this country's troubled steel in· dustry. "I'm very optimistic." Edgar Speer told reporters after meet· ing foe more than three hours Thursday at the White House with the President, his top trade advisers. congressme n , union leaders and r epresentatives or en vironmental and consumer groups. r Carter called the session because of sagging profits and · plant~losings that have recenUy resul~ in about 19,000 layotrs. Lloyd McBride, president of the United Steelworkers union. said he wanted Carter to take more dras tic action Tho donor animal for Thursday's operation was a 10· year.old chimpanzee. one of two s upplied lo Groote Shuur by a primate center in Rijswijck. The Netherlands. last August. Proposals Disclose d By Dayan . JERUSALEM (AP> -Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan, derend- in~ the i.;overnment 's acceptance of u U.S. plan for reconvening the Geneva peace conference. ha~ disclosed the contents or the six- poinl proposal~ for the firs t time. Dayan also indicuted in parliamentary debate Thursday that a separate protocol with the United States assures Israel that thou~h Palestinians would be represented at the peace talks, no member of tht• Palestine Liberation Organization <PLO I would be seated. OPPOSITION critics an the Israeli parliament bitterly at· tacked the acceptance of the ''working p lfpl'r" by Prime Minister Menahem Begin's gov- ernment. saying It abandoned Israel"s policy against negotiat· ing wilh a Palestinian delega- tion. The proposal was drafted in negotiations between Dayan and President Carter and Secretary of Slate Cyrus R. Vance las t week. The cabinet approved the plan Tuesday and the Arab coun- tries are considering it now. Dayan. responding to opposi· tion criticism, said that by ac· cepting the wor king paper lsrael has not retreated from any of its basic principles: that it will not return to the territorial borders it bad in 1967 before it "iud Arab la nds, that it would not avee to th e creation of a PalesUnlnn state, and th al it would not -permit the PLO to attend the con-. ference Father Charged Massive Beatings Kill Infant Girl OKLAHOMA CITY CAP> "Oh God, oh God . she was so small She was so beautiful. She was so pretty ... Detective Ken Smith's disconsolate words were spoken at the Oklahoma City pollce station Thursday night after the death of 4- week-old Michelle Friesen. Her 23-year-old father was charged with murder. MICHELLE DI ED minutes before reaching a hospit al emergency room. Her injuries: two massive skull fractures. three broken ribs a nd a half dozen bruises. Police said that. based on a statement from the father, David Bennie Friesen, his wife was cleared of any wrongdoing SMITH QUOTED Friesen as saying . "I squee-zed her unm l heard her ribs crack. She just wouldn't stop crying. I didn 't like her crying:· The detective said the skull fractures may have come from several incidents they were told about, in which the baby was swung by her feet, her head smashing againsl a knee. "TIIEY'RE J UST normal people. people who do these things. They just c un 't bundle the sudden enormous pressure ... said another detective, Bill Trays. "Thank God she's not ulive any longer. H s he had ll\'ed any longer s he would have just had to endure more of that." said Smith. Cold Front Moves East Record Low Te mperatures Hit Gulf Cities "'"' "-~itftl• ,. «) slon 54 51 erow .. •111~ ,. 51 g:ff•IO ., JO ICllOll ~' 31 Cln<IM&ll SI JI Cl&vel&"ll 50 ~ g:ll•t-FI. W0<tr. II "° nwr 11 ,. 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Illa wtlllhtr will I» Ill' l•v~llf <001, Dul NI looco<>I II mlQllt oven oot ABC's Howard Cos•lf 10 "'Y \Of'l\•111•"9 nlc@ •boul L.O\ l'ft9"1t~ tor ft'"•"""· A oleflan11ooevr_ 1, ••· PKl.cl •I Qatnfl 11,,,., 41CCO<Of1MJ to llW N•Uonal WMlhtr Servl<P oe,,w IOQ...., -<'-• .,...,11 ""' ~O•~• wlll bl«k out lhe momlno wn '""" <OtN llMH loo ft•lflfkll"Q lnfn ~':.~~:.' ~~1'"!1"~~~vt0v°"~n':l ~~ doUOl will nave <l••r.O •nO Skies wlll be•UMV"'1fl'Wlty In I,_ -•I"' ar\Cf dltMtrtS. 'klU Wlil i. !.U'Wly llVOUQI\ $4'1Uto.y, hm ""'"''""' '" Soutlltm C.fllorn1• ar• nol UpetleG IOCl'Wlnte mwc:r .. Hloh\ ·~ thP b .. <,..t win 114' in llwl low lo Ul>IHJ' ~.while the l a• Ano-res CM< UMer wlll prO!Mbty iump to nor M. Tnt lnho~ vellnv• ......... ~ hlQll• II' I/It low to\ to UPP"' 'O\ wNlt IM -ttl"t Wiii ... 1tW1 m pruwycllmOlo I/It 70t lh• _,Otten~ MM Moro" w111 Mve hlOM In IN ICX w"1l• ow t rlfl\•r1\Wlll OUll fn IN'°'. Hllfltl!IO'on e-11: Wav.1 two to '"'" NI«"''"'~"'-" .... u. Con· dlll-ltlt, ~ h.tell; WhH ,.,, .. to lour IMt will\ Mulll.,•\I twttl.Condlll-ltlr rcoa4tat weather in· formation will be found on Page B JO todoJI J ~ WEATHER I NATION I WORL;O . Skylab Practice AP '&llllrw-. .. .\stromwl l'uul \\'t•1t1 floats u1,sacll' dO\\ n in a neutral huoyan('y l•rnk al thl' ~Iarshall Space Flight Center in llunts\'lllc. Alabama. Thur~da,· afternoon The tests arc hcing run an preparation for t'he Skylab missions of the future. Nobel Prize Won By Briton, Swede ·STOCKHOLM, Sweden <AP.1 The 1977 Nobel Economics Prize was awarded to a Briton and a Swede today for their studies on in- ternational trade and finance. James Meade. a Bntish professor. and Berti! Ohlin. a former Swedish commerce minister , won equal shares of the last of thia year's six Nobel prizes. FIVE AMERICANS earlier won prizes in t·wo cate~ories Three U.S. citizens divided the medicine award and two others shared the physics priie with a Hraton. Meade, 70, a professor at Cam- bridge University, is a pioneer in the study of trade development, welfare and other a rea!J. He laid the t..hecll'etical basis for customs unions and wrote such fun- damental works as "The Theory of Inte rnation a l Econ o m ic Policy." OHLIN WAS a Swedish com- merce minister in the 1940s and I!> a member of lbe Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences, which selected the joint Nobel winners. The relatively new economics prize has been dominated by A m ericans si n ce it was establish e d in 1969. Predicted HOT SPRINGS. Va. <AP) - Leading busiaeumen, predlctlq a slowdown In economic powth next year, accused President Carter today of causing bulinesa pci;aimlsm by tailing id develop .. a lon1·term econom1c 1a.me plan." The Business Council, com· posed ot more than 100 corporate chief executives, s aid the economy should e.xpud at a rate of 4.3 percent next year, just bare,ly enough to keep unemploy- ment from worsening. They predicted a s percent growth for this year. lAql AJtJtN.,_. MONROEVILLE, Ohio <AP> -By a better than 3·1 margin, Monroeville resldenli have ap- ( I NSHORT J proved a special levy that sends the district's 900 students back t.o cl asses today. Thursday's 1,116-326 approval of the levy, which will aenerat.e an additional' SUS,000 for the dis- trict over the next three years, ended a one-week closure doe to budget problems. Girlllei.....- GENEVA, Swiuetland <Al» - Graz.iella Ortiz Patino, f'lve-year. old grandniece of Bolivian tin magnate Antenor Patino who was kldnap~ ~ere 10 days ago, was relea.seCl (or a ransom ol $2 million, Geneva police reported tod ay, s ayln& ahe waa "•P-parenUy in good he-1Lb." A police spokesman aaid the ransom was arr anged and pai<l by the family ln Swlu erland, but declined t.o glve any further de. tails. c. .. .,. 11ei-..ec1 MENTOR , O h io <AP ) Walter Browne, 28, ol Berkeley, Cal.it., captured bis t.blnlatrm,bt U.S. chess cbaDJpiooshlp when his opponent conceded less 1ban 12 moYeS into the game. Going into Tb11rsday'1 flllal round Browne wu'Jocked la a tie .. for lint place witb N.W Yoric Times chess eol\amnlst Robert Byrne ol 0.inlq, N.Y. BJTDe. 49, won the cbamplombip In 1972. Real lstate.lnvestment , JOH THE CONSUMER--- CO-SPONSORED BY THE DAILY PILOT ANO THE NEWPORT HARBOR/COSTA MESA BOARD OF REALTORS OCTOBER 14 OCTOBER 21 OCTOBE~ 28 NOVEMBER 4 .. .. l6i ... .. "' > ~ ! c .. :lit Ill "' ~ ... a c 4 CL 0 .. a. " ~ ,, .., COORDINATOR: Dick Poucher, Loomis Properties SELECTING ANO BUYING A N INV ESTMENT Lecturer: Don Eymann, S.E.C. How 1nves1rnentc. differ. What bene11ts are available in real estate? How real estate mvesting matches or mismatches your individual needs c1nd de~1rns. How you can make real estate investing suit you. ANALYZING THE INVESTMENT Lecturer: Bob McCaff rey, Preiident Orange County Apartment Realtor1, Inc:. How t..an produce~ return!'-' you determine what profit o r loss an income property w ill Reriding the broker'.; statement. How do you get the best FINANCING THE INVESTMENT Lecturer : James F. Nantais, Vice President Capital Resources Incorporated How m11ch you get for how lmle. What to do about a down payment. Who do you see for the long-term loan> INCOME TAX ASPECTS OF REA L ESTATE INVESTING Lecturer: James R. Biram, Attorney Internal Revenue Service Code applied to real estate investing. How best to buy. M.Jximizang the tax benefits while owning en investment propertv. Whdl 11appens w hen you $ell ii'' u No Tuition Reglater At the = Lecture Fridays 7:30-1:30 pm· ..... ' u L-.cture Location c I Science Hall i At Orange Coaat II ..., College. 2701 I Fairview Road, .... -i· Coate M••• Co-1pon1ored By The DAILY PILO't AND THE NEWPORT HARBOR· COSTA MESA BOARD OF REALTORS DAILY PILOT .. , STATE I SO(JTHERN CALIFORNIA Frldlf1, OctoOer 14, 11n DAILY PILOT M • Permit Sought for LNG Termiµal ,[ SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -A uUllty group sought permission today to build California's tlrsl liquefied natural gas terminal, a $832 ml\Uon project on the Santa Barbara County coast al Polnt Conception. "'32 Millwn Project First in State tracts, and they coald be jeopardi~ by further delays in s itini and cQl'.l- •trucUoo o,r the plant.·· : Western LNG Terminal Associates is asking the !.late Public Utilities Comm1ssion to let it build a 4,600·foot trestle to dock ships carrying the supercooled gas from Indonesia and southern Alaska. starting in April 1982. Without th<' imported LNG, utilities contend, California will run out of clean·burning natural· gas by 1982. causing power blackouts and an economic disaster Thal claim is questioned by environmentalists. THE GROUP IS A partnenhip of Pacific Gas & Electric Co. and Pacific Lighting Corp .• the parent company of Southern California Gas Co. The commission has until next July 31 to decide on a permit for an LNG terminal. A bill signed last month by Gov. Ed· m und Brown Jr .. by ruling out populous areas. virtually assures that Point Conception, at the northwest en. tran·ce to the Santa Barbara Channel. will be the site of any on·shore terminal Wring, Promotion Court Ban on Prison Practices: Precedent The issue in the prison suit was the department preferential hiring and promotio n policy s t a rted for HOWEVER, BROWN said last week that potential new natural fas supplies from Mexico and Canada may enable California to get along without Imported LNG for some years beyond 1982. In that case, he said, utilities would have enough time to build the terminal offshore. Environmental groups·object to tbe Point Conception site, saying wind and weather patterns and already- hcavy tanker traffic would make a new terminal there a menace to the scenic shoreline. The Sierra Club says it will ch~lenge selection of that site in court. But Western NG says it has selected a protected harbor site just east or Co- jo Bay where sea conditions a re good. The site is 40 miles west of Santa Barbara. COMPANY PRESIDENT Keith McKinney said natural gas from Canada a nd Mexico wouldn't eliminate the need for LNG. "None or those potential sources is yet under contract and the volumes involved a re indefinite, .. he said. "Wf: do have long.term, 20·to·25·year con. . THE COMPANY SAYS it plans-lo import 500 m illion cubic feet o! LNE: a dily lrom Indonesia and 400 ~iµlon cubic feet from Alaska under uu'OIJ contracts. Eventually it plans to blf'· die t.3 billion cubic reet a day. • The g~s will be stored on a 100-aqe site In three 550,000·barrel lanks \!Olh double walls, constructe d in ·an earthen basin. A 112-mlle, $117 million pipeline wm tra n s mit the gas to existin g . t ransmission pipelines southwest of Bakersfield, the company sa.id. UNDER THE NEW LAW, the pt;rp has the authority to select an ~~ terminal site, after the state Coas~ Comm1sslon submits a list of rec<>Ql· mended sites. Local governments can make recommendations but have no veto power. ., The PUC could also dectai:~. however, that no on-shor e s ite w;as suitable, if it decided the re w~s enough time to b~ild an. offsb.Qfe terminal. Its decision, can be appealed only to the state Supreme Court. P'UC Chairll)an Robert Batinovicli, a Brown appointee. says be is keepi.qs an open mind on the issue. Redressed SACRAMENTO CAP> -The stale prisons have been slapped with a potentially precedent-setting court ban against the use of sex or rac~ as a basis or hiring or promotion. officials say. minorities in the late 1960s, and for ------------------------------- An unidentified bather at San D1ego·s Black's Beach pulls on swimming trunks after first sign goes up banning nudily for th e first time since 1974. City workers pos t ed s i g ns aflcr the city council rescinded ordinance· under which Black's was only municipa l ··swimsuit optional'· beach in the nation. Negotiations l Resuming By Tbe AssocJated Press Striking machinists are back at the bargaining table with Boeing Co. oCficiaJs, while strikers at Lockheed Corp. have agreed to resume contract negotiations next week. Negotiators for 24,000 machinists and Boeing sa( down together Thursday for the first time since the strike began 11 days ago, in what one union spokesman te rmed a. "chit·chat" session. In Los· Angeles. a union spokesman said ( J bar gainin g over a STATE Lockheed contract was ---------scheduled to resume for South ern California workers on Tuesday and for Northern California workers on Wednesday. A San Francisco Superior Court judge issued the permanent injunc· tion Monday. A similar race issue in· volving the University of California was argued in the U.S. Supreme Court. Wednesday T HE DEPARTMENT OF Corrcc· lions, which O\•crsces 12 prisons hous· ing 20.000 inmates. said it would ap· peal the ruling. It also said it would seek a stay in a San Francisco state ~ appeals court next week. The prison s uit-is t he first major challenge to sta\e·sponsored minority and female hiring programs. It will likely be watched closely by other states. ··we·11 probably end up in the U.S. Supreme Court right along with Bakke," said Ken Brown, spokesman for the California Correctional Of- -ricers Association, which filed the suit in late 1975 challenging the depart· ment's affirmative action program. BROWN'S Rf;FERENCE was to Allan Bakke, the "hite !.tudent whose suit is pending against the UC Davis m edical school minority admissions program. His application was reject· ed in 1973 and 197·' women in the early I970s. The depart· ment says it did not set a quota for eitt>er group but took race and sex Into consideration. THE CCOA CONTENDED the pro· gram constituted discrimination against white males. "You should cer - tainly not give preference to a white either," Arownsaid. The hiring program raised the number of minorities on the s ta!C from 6 to 26 percent in a few years, said prison ~okesman Phil Guthrie. About haJf the prison population is made up of minorities . The ruling "still give!> us consldera· ble latitude .. to increase the propor- tion of women and minorities on the payroll by r,.ruitmcnt and special training, Guthrie said. B~r-rUW A rralflle•ent Set OAKLAND tAP> --"Symbionese Uberation Army members William and Emily Harns will bE arr aigned Nov . 4 on c harges of kidnaping . newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst LoW ~ees Asked Suit Filed to Retain Steamer In a court appearance Thursday. the couple·~ Cirst in 1l month~. Judge llugb Koford of Alameda County SuJ)(!n or Court also appointed Los Angeles attorney Leonard We1nglass to represent Harris and~Susan Jordan of Berkeley as Mrs. Harris' at torney LOS ANGELES <AP > The charged the Sanger:. more thun 517.000 in dock age fees lledlCOOd Park •o Groll''! "1fe of land developer Hym ie Singer is suing the I.Ml Angeles Harbor Commission fo r Sl million in an ercort to retain ownership and gel lower rental dockage fees for the S .S . Catalina. But the Harbor Comm1ssion took control or the berths alter the firm was d issolved and charged the Singers $13,000 In back rent and upped the rent from S132 a day to th'e current $158, the suit adds. WASHJ NGTON <APl -The effort lo nearly double the size or the Redwood National Park· in ~orthem Callfornla ha~ moved one step closer to getting congressional approvaJ. · The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee on Thurs day gave the $359 million ex- pansion program its approval. The 15-2 vote paved the way for full Senate action on the bill. President Carter has supported the expansion which would in- crease the size of the park from 56,535 acres to 104,535 acres . Mrs. Ruth Singer claims that the city gave her little.chance to move the S70.000 vessel from its mooring in Los Angeles Harbor before charl{ing tardy dockage fees for the JOO.foot ·'Great White Steamer ... The suit claims lhe city's ac· ··uon was "fr a udule nt and malicious" and asked that lt be found liable for SI milllon In punitive darn ages. The suit also asked the city be enjoined from attempting to sell the ship and that It be required to /tlore Paaaettgera Ride A•trak SACRAMENTO CAP J The first state.funded expansion of rail service. on Amtrak's .. San Diegan" between Los Angeles and San Dieg'o. has increased ridership. says a stale official. The civil suit, riled Thursday in S uperior Cour t . claims the Singers had a rentLll agreement with Long Beach Boat Works to dock the ship :it two harbor berths through Dec. W lower its current fees. ... The Singers. who nearly lost the ship in a city auction la.st spring. had lofty pl arts for the ship as <i worldwide amusement at· traction -all of which have fallen through. The expansion was undertaken in September of 1976. During the year before. 406.000 passengers rode trains. In the 12 months since then. 691,000 passengers rode them. The suit says the firm. which later went out or business. Slaying Result of 'Vote' j .. ,..,...,..... SAN FRANCISCO (A P ) A 24·year-old man. found fatally shot in the trunk of his father'.s cur. was slain after his klllers look a life·or-death vote and de· clded "to blow him away,·· cr iminal complaint..'> say. The complaints. released Thursday by San Jose police. descr ibed the death of Peter Catelli of suburban Concord Catelli. who had been shot through the head, was dis covered Tuesday night. Also in th<' trunk of the car parked here was his father. Orlando, 49. who also had been shot in the head. Orlando was in stable condition today at San Francisco GeneraJ Hospital. H E REFUSED TO·conflrm or deny u report in the San Fran· cisco Examiner that a $100,000 extortion plot was involved in the attack. The newspaper. quoting unidentified law enforcement sources. said young Calelll was de manding money from the cider Marino Herc is what happened, ac cording to the criminal com· plaint: Peter Catclll was "escorted" hy Napolitano to the San Jose of- fices of the Marinos' California Cheese Company. He was con· fronted by the other three men. who were armed, and was taken to a trailer office on t he premises CATE(,Lf WAS "physically as- saulted" by Sa l~alore and Angelo Marino. after which Angelo "did request the vote of all" to decide Cate Iii ·a fate. Salvatore Marino and Nupolltano cast ballots "to blow him away." It was not clear if or how Piazza and Angelo Marino voted. Salvatore Marlno subsequenUy "did shoot and kill .. Catelll. There were no dctuils on how the elder Catelll got involved in the incident. but the complaint said both victims were put ln the auto's trunk and the car was driven lo San Francisco. where it was p:irked a nd left. POUC F. SAID TWO of the men named on warrants stemming from the attack were in custody today. one was being sought and a fourth was hos pitalized with a bad heart. Highway Cited Under arrest were Salvatore Marino. 29. and Thomas Napolitano. Charles .Jose Piazza was being sought and Salvatore's father, Angelo Marino, 53, was In o San .Jose hospital, adm itted with a heart ailment after hlR 11on's arrest on Wednesday. By The As~l•ted Press Western vice offi cers have list· ed Rock Springs, Wyo., as a m e mber of a vice circuit including major cities in the Southwest and on the West Coast, the Desert News reported. drawn prostitution. gambling and narcotics traffic from much lar~er cities nearby. The vice circuit. Raitt the newspaper . ru n s from Anchorage to Seattle, Portllmd, San Franclsro, Los Angeles. San Diego, Las Vegas, Phoenix, Salt Lake City and Rock Sprlpgs. Police sa.y prostlttttes and drug dealers are shutUed back and *********** .. . Jt 50 GALS Jt OF~AS ! FREE • • • I Heritage Sketchbook on Sale thru Oct. 31at ~n exceptional coUection now at reduced prices. Make your holiday really special. One very good reason is that advice from our professionals aoes not cos! eXlra! In fact. you may very well save money. • I since 1he1r knowledge of color, paltern and design can help you avoid costly mistakes! Whether you're planning to spruce up a spare bedroom or re·do an entire home. rhey're delighted to assist you in your furniture selections Telephone today for an appointment -and let them show you our incredible weallh of Drexe1-r and Herita.ge• styles! F111 DtltflfJ 1111 Dafp Stmca AvaH1bl1 1.1 •• ~~ FJw p.,..;,.,.. 11rul I,....,. Dmllf TOAAANCE 231M9~8Nd (213) 378·1210 ~fllACH 1721W...OI (114)~2050 Na.lnated Herman Sillas. 43. w ho drew prals~· a nd .criticism as director of the slate . Depart ·. m('nt o f Molor Vehicles. has been nomlnntc<I by Prcsi· ~cnt Carter to bcromt' lht' U .s : oV I 0 r II (\ \' f 0 r C:11i!or:lia ·s· eustcrn d lslr1c:t. Carter's choice mrnsl be OP· p r oved b)' thd U.S. Senate, but such · ac· tion usua ll y is routine. • San Jose Police Sgt. Bob Bur· roughs said lhe men were wanted ln connection with investi${ation of murder. alt.empted murder a nd conspiracy. In a copyright story Wednes· day, the newspaper said vice In the Wyoming boom town is so lucraU\·e and law enforcement so Ineffective, the town of 33,000 has forth along the circuit. When .._ __ ...., ___ • ________ __,~-~-'!'-"~~---....,lllilllil they become too well known fn ~STOA£& OPEH ~y ~ M~Y -t NA n> S.30 PM one town, they ir.ove on . .. .. I ·- 1&u . Friday, October 14, 1'71 Rol>t!rt N. Weed/Publisher Thomas KeeviVEdltor eart>at'a Krtlblch/Edltorlal P* Editor orangeeoas1 oa.1vP1101 Editorial Page ................................................................. _ Lofty Philosophy Ignores Real N e ed A rocent Earl W Hters column on this page told how an unthinking veto by Gov. Brown put a small northern Californiu county into a financial bind t'or the mu grtificcnt suvlng to the state or S22.000. It explained how Trinity County. pursuunt to stall· urging lo set up job-training programs. and assured of slate aid. contracted with a neighboring county for u $22,000 Regional Occupation Progra m for 43 persons. . Then the Legislature voted to limit state aid to such programs on the basis of the previous year's enrollment nut since Trinity had no previous enrollment. 1t didn't qualify ror any s tate a id. Tht: Legislature then pas~ed a :timple bit! to pro\'lde Tr inity County with one.time financial assistance to correct the inequity. Governor Brown vetoed the biU with a brief message U1at indicated that either he or his starf hadn't understood thl! problem or hadn't ta ken the time to read it. · This typepf performance .supports the uncomfortablt: ~~eling that for all of the lofty philosophies, po~turing and intellectual arrogance that wafts down from the governor a nd his key a ppointees. the re seem s to be litlll! understanding and concern op Lhe practical problem::. f ac;ed by the counties and cities and other lower levels of government and for th~ practic<.il needs of the citizens they s erve. Tax reform was lost in a mish·m ash of tnconk redistribution and social engineer ing theories. , CalTrans bureaucrats look the other ,,·ay or lJOntificate on the virtues of m ass transit while cilie!> Jhroughout the state (like Costa Mesa in this area 1 ftruggle with CaJTrans-created messes. Big talk about the need for creating jobs for youth and orities is accompanied by state regulations m aking it and less possible to employ unskilled or marginal kcrs . · ~ And local taxpayer s watch lht:ir wallet::. get thinner <t:t ble stale s urplus grows . ~ Philosophy U; fine as a starting point. But what 1s •eeded now is for Governor Brown to get his department 1fltiefs together and tell them to get off their fat philos- ~es and get out and take a look at the way their actions and inactions are affecting the governments and the ieople's real situ<itions. f. The grand plans and theories need to be seasoned with little more dirt. sweat and humanity gathered on the ·ene. #. The go,·ernor ~hould sho'' tht1 way !- Jwhber Stamp Voting i.: Incumbency in s ome Orange County elected offi ces is J. • enerally considered a sure rqute to re-election. That's particularly true in county adminis trative of· tees s uch as clerk. public guardian, tax collector· treasurer. a uditor-controller and recorder. t. Events of the past few months indicate. however. that ounty voters might do well to do more than merely stamp eir endorsem ent across from an incumbent 's name whefl oting. For example. for reasons not yet clear Count) ~ecorder Wiley Carlyle's office a few months ago was ehind in some or its work. Consequently. seekers or ecorder's information wer e som etimes misled b~ ssuming information gather ed in the recorder's office as up to date. f Mo r e rec e ntly. S uperior Court jud ges have e o.mplained of ser\'ices given them by County Clerk t.v'illi3lll St J ohn. Simultaneously. St John ·s own clerks who iend to court needs have been openly critical of what they )~e as starring, training and other adm inistrative Jhortcomings that have led to the judges· dissatisfaction. ~ Carlyle's office h<.is cleared up its work backlog. And St John insists the judges and cle rks are wron~ in the lo" Jankin~ gi\'en lo his sen ·ices. ; Diif ering views aside. both instances point out thl' j,ecd for voters to think l\-.ice before rubber stamping c .dminhitrative officials in the assumption the m<tn in job i~ -ihc best man possible for the job ~ . J:)pin1ons expressed m the s~ above are those of the Daily Pilot. flDther views expressed on this page are those of t"8ir authors and rtists. Reader comment is Invited. Address The Dally Piiot. .0 . Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71•) 642·4321. Boyd/Elephant :: By L.M. BOYD :, ·: Please do not think of an !tiephanl as you read the rest <J>f this column. Do not let the rJ"Ord elephant occur to you. :))o not picture an elephant in :0-our mind. You can prove ;;your mental str ength by :f ollo"ing these j ns tructions ;~xactly. Others may weaken. !llnd think elephant, el ephant. :~lephant. But not you. Resist ""= ~ Out of t he Am e ric an • ;;college of Allergists once ;tame the sad r eport that 40 even out of ev ery 10 ;,st h~ati c c h i ldre n 8top pheeilng within one week ~rter they've been moved -;)iway from their parents into ;:'cw surroundings Dear Gloo1ny Gu~ enoug h that • .Howard Cos e ll h as ruined Monday night ' foothall with his "holler than thou" comments . Now he's working at s poilin g th e Worl d Series for all of th~ baseball Cans. /\ M. \ ' You've read thnt the word "lord" comes rrom the Anglo- Saxon for "loaf keeper:· but were you, aware that the word ·'lady" out or the sam e language once meant "dough kneader?" ln France. wh1sthng a tune on the s treet is ill ·mannererl but hummjng isn"t. Under 'Massachusetts law, if you 're caught winning more than $.5 in any gambling game. you 're supposed to pay th<' court there double your take Another littlo known fuel nbout the t'heor y genius Albert Einstein is that he was an unsuccessful inventor. In Berlin during, the 1920s, he patented a quiet refrigerator with no moving parts. Better refrigeration tcchnlq ucs sank that one. Years later at Princeton. he devised an electric eye lo control a ca mera lens opening. But the camera makers ignored 1t. then. The legs of each mammul that has legs. even the pachyderm . a re vertical ubovc the knee The legs of each reptile that tras legs are horh;ontul above the knee Got that" rt you ask 12 guests al u pnrty to write down a specific playing card , you can bl' rcusonably certain that two of them will list the same card D id vou think o r :in 1•lt>r>hant ·• You did" Nick Thimmesch There's a Lilnit to 'Bad Calls' WASHINGTON ln baseball. even in thl' mujors. if an umpire calls :1 strike when the pitch was i.ix inches wide of the plate, it's likely he'll even it up later in the game. and wink at the catchc. That':. human nature. Moi.L people really w1111t to be fair. But when a whole people have been de nied their rights for a l ong time, have h ec n di s c riminatcd ag ains l and suffort..'tl from s uch prc - j ud1n-. they ca n 't alwa y::. count on fairness. So in our society. their recourse is to get l~1 ws passed. tell their story to the pre~s and try to persuade other people to ~ decenttotht'm. Blacks hav~ :.u rfcrcd thu~ through much of our bistory <1nd. lo some .extent. so have other m inorities. Eve ntua lly, the injustice to blacks was so keenl) fell that we passed the 1964 Civil Right:. Act. There followed many compensatory actions in the private and public sector, &nd many were effected in the same spirit as t.tie umpire trying to Earl Wa ters balance otl u bud call earlier m tho game. But now 1t seems that there b growing sentiment that the Great Umpire 1::. making too many bud calls m the numc of balance. The idea or "reverse d1scriminatio11 .. is taking root. and is dramatized in the cast' of Allan Bakke. a· while denied udmission lo a Califomi:.i medical school so that blacks with lower entrance ... cores could be admitted. This past week in Washington . "t:' learned of & situation where u ~lud ent Is sore because t he umpire won't make 11 bad coll In order to balance off an earlier injustice THE BLACK sludent, Cll rl Evonzz (his Is lamic name>. flunk e d out of American University's Jaw school. and now charges the school with racial. s ex ual ;ind re l i gip u s discrimination Evanzz riled his suit in a District of Columbia superior court. He was ctdm1llcd to the law school as part or a :.pec ial minority program. though be didn •t meet the normal udmittancc standards. Evanzz received $5,700 an scholarships ror two years, but was on probation for three straight semesters due to low Brown's Tampering Ruffles Lawmakers "Executive privilege", a term which became synonymous with abuse of power during the Nixon years in the White House. is com- ing dangerously cl~e to rearing its ugly head in Sacramento. In an overwhelming action of both houses of the Legislature. a move to force a showdown with Gov. ernor Jerry Brown in the con- stitutional question of executive power has been take n. Simply stnttld. the action aJm~ to test the authority of the govenor t o remov e lan guage f r o m :i legi s lati ve appropriation· und thereby deny the right 0 r t h e Legislature to ex er cis e control over how money it appropnales sh al I be s pent. Under California's cons titution the Jtove rnor is given. in addition to the outright veto of enact· ments, the authority to reduce or eliminate dollar amounts in any appropriation measure. Normally. in appropriating funds, the Legislature un· dertalc~ to spell out the manner in which those funds shall be used, often in lengthy and ex· plicit detail. However, the budget bill, which itself is an appropriation measure, generally only lists lhe Charles McCa be various stale ag~ncies and pro· grams and the a mounts for each. This because the committees have held lengthy hearings and reached verbal understandings as to the purposes of the funds. In certain instances though, control language is ins erted in the budget biJI restricting the spend· ing of speeiric appropriations. THE LOOMING ballle between the governor and the Legislature involves one such in· .sertion. This was in connection with mooey tor the audits oC cam- paign funds as required by the Fair Political Practices Act. Concerned that too much was be mg spent on unproductive de· tailed audiUng, the Legislature placed in the restriction that the audits could only be conducted according to n ational pro· fesslonal audit standards. Claiming the language was an .. encroachment upon the duties and responsibilities of the ex· ecutive branch". Brown s truck 29 lines of control lang uage from the bill, leaving the appropria- tion intact hut without the legislative limitations . Senator Al Alquist and other lawmakers charged this to be a us urpation or power by lhe gov· ernor and obtained a legislative counsel's opinion backing their contention that the governor was without authority to blue pencil control language. Their re medy wui. to cull grados. He could have been dismissed aflcr this record, but the law school ollowcd him to s tay on . However . by last Augu..,t. hit. grade point average: hung at 1.8. so be wus dismissed from school. dercnd.lnll lts&lf. The point seems to be that t;vunu cx1>ccttid 1>pecial treatment b~c:>U!lt: of his minority status -a notion that hus ~me quite common since the c:lvll r\ghts revolullon. 1-;vanz-i t·h a r ged t hat a professor in an evidence course gave him an "f"' because of bis r ace (black >. sex <male) and rcl 1 ~i o n I Js l amlc). T h e professor . 1n un a ffidavit admitted in court, states that Evanzz' grade was based on " test administered in a "blind" testing system. and 1>0inted out that Evanzz' name was not even put on the test. 8ut if lt was one standard of Juistice which finully prfjvujJed in the way the luw wus wrilten -- • through tne new clvll rights law:t should not one s tandard CJf meas urernl!nl also apply to all students, all aspirants ror jobs. ull wt\<> want a fair chance at anything in our society? Sincl! law schools are places where the concepts.' or justice, • cq uali.t y and f airness are bandied about rather freely. there is faculty resenlme~t wi\.~ Evanzz' charges .. 1 am not aware of any stu(h•nt. otbcr than M •. Evanzz. who hm; completed two full years a:. a full·timt' student wbo ha:. never attained a cumulative g ra de average above the m inimum 2.0 required to be in good standing.·· declared Asst. Law Dean Bert Lockwood, in typically academical prose. So Evanzz is out of school. and Ameriean University is in court TfllS WHOLE BtJSIN£~ of evening up the score to make the game closer has its limits. One limit, of course is when t he phiyers who started behind get th~ iden that they automatically deserve special treatment, and .that this bomJs is built inlo the game. Jn a word , when compensatory fairness be~omes institutionalized lth:it ~oundi; academic, too). thep we ha ve two wrongs not making a' right. Moreover. it takes away from :my person's dignity to forever r eceive s pecial Lre atm ent. Everybody resents a teacher's pet. The day always comes when people who have been given a little extra help must make it on their own . , ' ·Hurry up! We don't w~t to be /ae.e fort.be vot.e to incnue &OCial 1ecurity tuH!' upon the Slate Controller lo withhold payme nt of any mooey .. In a manner contrary to the con· trot language" as passed by the Legislature. Such was the re· quest ol a resolution authored by Alquist and Senator Dennis Carpenter. chairman of the Joint Budget Committee. and joined by all other committee mem· bers. It whistled through both houses by votes or 32·0 and 75-0. thus demonstrating the unanimi- ty of the solons when an outsider challenges their pawers. What happens next depends on the actions of State Controller Ken Cory. If he fails to honor the resolution Carpenter said the Legislative Counsel will be in· structed to institute a court ac- tion to enforce the deleted control language. HOWEVER. tl appears the monkey will be on Brown's back. Inside information is that Cory intends to act in aeeordance with the resolution thus leavint the Brown administration on the limb for any money spent con· trary to the control language. Man in the White House Lives in Unreal World • • My old friend and colleaguo, George E. Reedy. former special assistant to President Johnson. has written a book called "The Twilight of the Presidency." In it. Reedy argues that the man in the White House. whoever he might be, lives in an unreal world. He calls it "a universe in which every tantrum is met by instant gratification.·· The unalogy to a squalhng child is not frivolous. Nor ill R ee d y'~ in s is tence that the man who can push t h e button that cnn dest- roy the world is treated by those around him with an "a lmo st m ysti c d e ference.•· The presidency is "out of control," argues Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. In another book ."'fhe Jmperia l Presidency." Using the White House as GHQ for espionage nnd sabotage o perations agains t political opposition. Schles inger argues. ·'signified the extension of the imperial pres idenc y fro m foreign to domestic affairs " BROTHER RICHARD Nixon. who is among us again with his wi nning r evel atio n that Watergate might have never OC· curred had it not been for the emoUonal problems of Martha Mitchell, ts living proof or the J><>Wer of the presidency. More speclrtcally. the presence or Mitc h e ll . H o lde man and E hrlichman 1n various Jlllls. while their boss is scot·free In San Clemente -that is really proof of the power Nixon enjoyed and squandered. Let us never forget that earlier Nixon inter ch ange with his toady. David Frost. in which he revealed what he really thought being President allowed him to cl o. Othe r presidents h ave doubtless felt, wny down in their power ·lustful hearts. as Nixon did; but nobody came right out and said It. "Well," he told Frost. "when the President does it. that means it is not illegal." "By definition," said Prost. "Exactly Exactly " Ntxon P1u1cll replied. To nail the point to the m ast . h e added : "If the President, if for example, the President approves something. approves an action because of the natlonaJ security. or because of a threnl to internal peace and order of. of significant magnitude. then the President·, decision in that instance is onl' thal enables those who carry 1t out to carry it out withou t violating a law," NIXON CONTINUED t u almost. but not quite, claim the p o w er t o order a murde r . Queried on this point he said, "There are degrees. there are nuances which are difficult to "Try the~t 11upcrb recordlng1 In the comfort of yo\U home." ... · ~xplain," he finally said "The dividing line is the President's judgment?" pressed Frost. Nixon agreed. This exchange, said the Los Angeles Times at the time "put us on notice once agaJn that in r ecent years our democratic institutions huve been placed in more danger from the intoxication or power in the White House than from internal ctissent. There ls nothing in the record or the past decade to suggest that the government lacked adequate legal means to. deal with any lnternal l>eril, •· T H E QUES TI ON o f, presidential power. and its limits, is still decidedlt before the house. Watergate was .peanuts compare<! with some of the abuses of power of the Nixort nd ministration -the monkey b u s hless wtth t h e m ilk producers, the carrying OC'I or a' war in Cambodia without publlc or congressional sanction, the lT FBI wiretaps Of\ federaJ ofCicials an d pro mine nt n e w s m en following publi.cation o r a reporte r 's dispatch disclosing the secret U.S. B·52 bombings in' Cambodlo. Nixon and the end uf the Viet t;1am war will end up In history ~ n:; the r ottenest de· cade in our h\story. In my view. l hnvc said, long before Jlmm§ Carter became president. that he di s tu r bi n g l y r C!I e m b I e$ a Democratic Nixon. Eac ~ day the evidence mounts on thiit scor-e. ta his heart, r feel, Jimmy airtea with everything Dick told Dave. on the Umlt.s. or lack of same. ot. presidenllal power. . I • ~· ' AMERICA I POLITICS Frldl!y, Ootober 14, 1971 Congress Has Tall Joh Energy Bill May Delay October Adjoumnwm ' DAILY PILOT ~ • ;- I WA S HINGTON (AP> Congressional leaders want to end their first year or dealing wltb President Carter and leave town by the end of the month. has put his prestige behind an October adjournment. On the Senate side, Carter 's proposals have been shredded. ,. ....... Peter Re.illy s miles aftet being told a judge had rejected a request by Connecticut Slate Police for his re.arrest in lhe 19'13 death or h.is mother, Bar b ara Gibbons. Hut. st.ill hoping to pass an energy bill acceptabl e to the Pres ident , they 've se t them.set ves a tall order . SOME MEMBERS s ay the session ma y last until Thanksgiv ing. a few say it may end by Christmas. One group of representatives has even sugges· tedtoSpeakerThomas P.O'Nelll that the House forget about adjourning and work through December. And the neX,t session. which begins sometime in Jan~y. isn'tfarorr. ~, In the Senate, Majority L'eader Robert C. Byrd, ·who has a reputulion for making · the legislative tinir s run on time. FIRST HE MENTIONED the initial week of the month and then Oct. 15. Now It's Oct. 29.1'he adjournment date, he has said, is •'secondary to the work that has to be done." O'Neill has gone alon1t with Byrd's target dates, but bas not always appeared convl!lced. . Asked this week whether an Oct. 29 adjournment was realistic, he said, "We hope so ... The rcalist!c date is when lhe conferees come in with an energy bill.'' But the energy legislation is in disarray. THE H O\JSE·PASSED omnibus bill departs sharply in some r espects from Carter's blueprint, but is s till apparenUy acceptable to the White HouSe. Adding to the difficulties, the Senate is handling the legislation as a series of separate bills. A key one on energy taxes is sUU before the finance committee, which has shown little inclination to accept Carter's basic' .- approaches. -*......---..*---*~*-*_*_* __ * __ *_*.,._*....-*.....-*-' * THIS' IS .A ·. ~ AFTER Tiit; Senate finally acts, conferees from the two chambers will have to reconcile differences. No one expects the process to be short or easy. Backed up behind the energy bi II --be ca use the same committees handle It -is legislation to rescue the Social Security system. threatened with running out of funds for some programs as early as late 1978. The onJy major bill left beside e nergy with any apparent prospect or passing, it has only a fair chance. :nsTAD!, * 1n · CSrder to te"' this n.wspaper nttdla *' * we are· offerinO ~·mod~. lf ! *SINGER SEWING· MACHINES,.: * '·· Co(nplete with.Zig-Zag. Stretch,~· '*'· * FOR $50· each. Limit one. No dealers * · F0r Deale'; N•efeet You * i •:~•1ir::.~i~;1.zo* * * *. -~-·" ....... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__;.~.;..:.:;..:..:_;~..;____:...:..:...;.~~_;_.;....;.._;__.;...;_;;..;_...;...;._ LONG DISTANCE COMMUTER Charles O'Keefe Begins Drive Driving Beats Ridi~a Yak By J ULES LOH ·~ s,eci.1 c.,_ .... MIDLOTHIAN, Va. -One day Charles O'Ke· elfe needed to see a man in Afghanistan He got aboard a jet airplane and rode it as far as it could go. Th'en be got in a little, s ingle-engine plane and rOC1e it as far as it could go. Then he rode a jeep tor eight days, for as far as the jeep could go. Then he took a camel, then a yak. He found his man. IF IT'S IMPOltTANT, Charles O'Keeffe is willing to take a litUe trouble getting there. Tbat is wby every morning, six days a week. sometimes seven, he gets in bis car and drives 110 miles to work. Al the end of a long day be drives 110 miles back home. He bas to be the world champion commuter. Charles O'Keeffe is a ~ug abuse s pecialist lie ·works in the White House, for President C"7't1.:r. clearly an important job. '"DIE DRIVE ISN'T REALLY as bad as it seems. It's private time. a chance to think things out, things I'm going to have to decide the next day," O'Keeffe said. "l also get all of my dictating done. fl lakes about two hours, but it isn't wasted time.·· No, but it's still quite a grind. Ile lives in this quiet little town outside Richmond and usually leaves about six or seven in the morning alter a good breakfast and a visit with lhe four kids. He takes a cup of cof· ( ) fee along wilh him. stops AMERICA al the 7-Eleven for ....._ _______ another cup and goes across the street for gas. "In the beginning, I paid Sl2 a day for gas. 1 nen one <1ay l took my wife's station wagon and it got me there and back for $8, so I swapped cars with her. Now I have this little Honda and it only costs S. a day.·· Gassed up, he pulls onto 1·95, flips on his CB radio and heads north. At Thornburg, and again at Dumphties, two YJrginia towns on the interstate, he stops Cor more coffee. •<The CB tells me where the cops are and where the construction is. I don't talk on it, l Just listen. I leave lbe microphone in the glove compartment. From thefiSOrt of conversation that goes on that thing, I wouldn't contribute much . ., WHAT CHARLES O'KEEFFE contributes to the Carter administration is significant. He is on the staff ol Peter Bourne, the President's assist.ant for health issues, and bis specially ls south Asia. "There is nothing political about health." he said.. ''It's a subject that can bring countries together. Even countries that don·t have diplomatic relations can freely discuss health problems. So what we're doing, I thlnk, is doubly important." Charles O'Keeffe is 37. He was in the pharmaceutical business in Richmond when he became interested in drug abuse problems. That led him to Peter Bourne, who was running a narcotics treatment program in Georgia and was a close friend and adviser of President Carter. BOURNE AND O'K EEFFE WENT Into • business together in Washington, working as consultants on international aspects of drug det· ecUon an d treat ment. Investigating the international drug traffic can lead to interesting places, such as remote areas or Afghanistan where only a yak can go. Both men lert that business to work fulllime in the Carter election campaign. When O'KeeCfe was asked to join the adminlstraUon he did not refuse, but he wasn't inclined to ~ove to Washington. "My wife, AM, has a halr do~en horses and is involved in horse shows and that sort of thing. The kids like their schools. We just like the area. We both grew up here. It would be hard to match what we have in the Wasbioaton area. "BESIDES. WHEN I WORKED in Washington before I tried living in an apartment and coming home Of) weekends. That's no way lo live. l was a stranger to my family.·· So the solution has been to hit the road. 220 miles a day. At that, il beats riding a yak. ·credit Eased SACRAMENTO (AP> -A bill easing s requir ement Japant!se· .American state workers must meet before getting retirement credit for time in World War JI internment camps has been signed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. Moonlite Sale Sale of Sales tonlte 7 to 10 pm. at Huntington Center 9-6 SATUROA Y 10-5 SUNDAY OCT. 15 & 16 . . . NEWPORT BEACH,GARDEN .. CENT-ER TRtlC-KtOA·D C\tEN -T- AzALEA & CAMELLIA SALE EN JOY "INSTANT COLOR" IN YOUR ·GARDEN BY PLANTING AZALEAS '& CAMELLIAS "N l GAL. 2 GAL: 5 GAL. $166 $399 $599 .... WE HA V E O VER 2,000AZALEAS& 'CAMELLIAS IN BUD ANOBLOOM RIGHT NOWI PLANT THESE. IN YOUR SU N O R SHADE GARDEN WHERE THEY 'LL CREATE BEAUTY, IMMEDIATELY! OTHERS ARE LADEN WITH BU DS W HICH Will UNFOLD THEIR BEAUTY IN ·THE COMING WEEKS. COME MAKE YOUR SELECTION TODAY -WHltE THE COLOR CHOICES ARE OUTSTANDING! ~HECK THESE COLOR CHOICES . AZALEAS * AZALEA & CAMELLIA POTTING MIX " CAMELLIAS • REDS , WHITES, VARIEGATED FORMAL~ SEMf:l>OUBLE REDS, WHITES , MANY VARIETIES OF PINK, LAVENDER , PURPLE , VARIEGATED & MORE. SALE Afo. 2 CU . FT. s2•9 & MUCH MORE. . 2 GAL. AZALEAS ONLY Y2 CU . fT . '1° ·Nor AVAILABLE IN 2 GAL. SIZE' AN All-TIME COLOR · UARTS & N-Y PA KS A CH~!Ylfilr~HAT FAVORITE. A FINE ' CHOOSE FROM CALENDULA·, BEGONIAS, Al YSSUM ,LOBELIA VINCA, SNAPDRAGONS, PANSY, YIOlA & MUCH 'MORE. EMPTY SPOT OR BRING SOME LIFE TO A BARE PATIO. CHOOSE FROM THESE FAVORITES ... PLANT FOR A COOL ROOM O R O N THE PA T.10 REG. 79' ~,1.,,$.'J NOW 3 ~ ~-~· :f TAM JUNIPERS MARGUERITES PHILODENDRON GARDENIAS BEGONIAS REG . 5 1999 8 " SIZE POT -(. '• •, .. ~,-" /.Af \·~­,,..../~ [ . )f~ l~ ,~ 4t ', .. ... r' · 7eA .~ HOUSEPLANT SALE HERE IS AN EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY TO BRING SOME GREENERY INDOORS. CHOOSE FROM AN ASSORTMENT OF ~ PROVEN , EASY-TO-GROW, FIRST QUALITY HOUSEPLANTS. 6" POTS s5~~~7,, NOWs3 4 ~EA . 8" POTS '15~~~·9 99 NOW s99\A. r:~l O" POTS ~3e9c:9 NOw$299tA. ~' . CHOOSE FROM ... ·~ SCHEFFLERAS NEPHTHYTIS DIEFFENBACHIAS PALMS WANDERING JEWS BOSTON FERNS BIRDS NEST FERN DRACAENAS COLEUS POTH OS PHILODENDRONS QUANTITIES LIMITED TO THE STOCK ON HAND JCPenney · NEWPO~T 0 CE~TER '• FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY• NE~PORT BEACH• 844·2313 ' ' I • ) ' ,M DAILY PILOT Friday, October 14, 19n Count v E~eri•ent Bus Ad Sheltei-s Eyed Ralph Diedrich the county also will invite any private rlrms willing to put up one shelter each in the county•s unincorporated area for a test period as well. Paul Cramer of the Laguna Niguel Community Assoc:iaUon urged supervisors to ban bus shelters in the unincoi:porated area. ,. ORANGE COUNTY I OBITUARIES Sheriff and Deputies At OdJ.s .'Over Charity ~ A news release issued by Oranee County Sheriff Brad Gates has revived a lone·standlna dispute between th e s heriff and tbe Association of Orange County Deputy SherifCs. SBERIFP'S SGT. Joe lftatre. spealdni for Sberilf Gate1, ltnued that the abertff't acUoa wu aot aq attempt to embatraaa tbe ~tioo or lnterter. with Jts fubdralalni activitles. Orange County supervisors want to experiment for the '>9xt few months before deeldlng whether private firms should be allowed to put bus shelters bearing advertising i n '1nincorporated areas. · Supervisor Ralph Clark proposed the experimental program suggesting the county w•tnh a six·monlb test of two bus shelters in Anaheim. CLARK SAID the need for· shelters at bus stops hasn't been demonstrated as yet. and the roofed structures could end up causing traffic proble m s. blocking vision at intersections or attractin1! graltitti. He contended shelters would simply provide a place for muggers, booki~s and prosUtules to congregate. CRAMER SAID residents or his area already are unhappy with the appearance of benches at bus stops that hav e advertising across them. Members of the associaUOb aald they intend to question Gatesi on the sheriff's decision to advise the publlc that the association's fundraislnc activities are not sanctioned by his Of· fice. Mestre &ald Gates WU act.lDt in response to complalats from COWlb' • residents wbo had been .oUcited by • associatlon members and who queatloned the ethics of lawmen who At the suggesti~n of Supervisor ·Bay Toiµ-Pl~ed ''These are being called mini billboards by many people.·· Cramer said. ''They feel their supervisors are not proteding them from visual pollution." . In Newport :Peach Daniel FrankHn, licensing director for the Bench Ad Co., which hu installed those benches. also urged supervisors to prohibit the shelters. two hours. The season 's first Uppet Newport Bay wildlif~ tour will be held Saturday morning. Members of the Friends of Newport Bay who are experts in the bay and its inhabitants will .give walking lectures beeinning at 9 a.m. The tours depart between 9 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. as groups of 2S form. Anyone interested in learning more about the bay. especially the migratory birds that winter there. is invited to attend. FRANKLIN contended the firms offering to install shelters havo not installed any before and have no record of performance. Franklin 's comments prompted Clark to warn. "There are an awful lot of corners in the county that still need benches. There arc people sitting there on the curbs. Participants should wear comfortable walking shoes and may bring along cameras or binoculars. All tpurs will depart from the intersection of Back Bay and . Eastbluff Drives. They last about 'Saturday's tour is the first or six which will be offered through the migratory bird season. The next tour will be in November . "l would rather see you direct your efforts there r ather than criticizing these other companies that have not even made a proposal to us,'· Clark continued. Jewish Unit Moves HE SAID Bench Ad Co. had recently been doing a good job id installing benches. but only afte.r directors of the Orange County Tran~iti. District had told company officials lo stop "dragging your feet." J ewish Family Service or Orange County has moved its of- fices to 8100 Garden Ctove Blvd .• SuHe2, Garden Grove. child, and marriage counseling. and immigrant r esettlement and i;eni~itizen-ser\•ices.. Supec_visor_Tbomas Riler_ said the board would not be permitting any "fly -by·night" firm lo install shelters. Jewish Family Service pro- vides inividual, family, ~rouo. The agency will have a n open house and dedication Sunday at 2 p.m. ........ Mr. •I'd Mrt .. Jeni.s LI Ille, S.tn c1 ..... n1e.glfl. - s.,1-:IA,lffl Mr, • ..., Mn. J-OWMll4t, lrvlM, lloy. 11 ... 1MMrM,1'77 Mr, e"4 Mrs. ROCln~'I' Rudolph, ..,..._N,....,lloy. ~aim Mr, -Mn.~~ E1 Toro. .... ,......,,,,.,, Mr ..... Mn. GMy ~II«, ~ Hiiis.Do¥. Mr. -Mn.~ ... Slefford, So..U. a...-.~. on.w1,1m -·Ml Mn.~ lklcllflelm, 0-Po!At. hWw. bor-01n. Deatlu Elsewhere ARLINGTON, Va. CAP> -Retired Army Gen . Cbar l ea H . Bonesteel Ill, former commander in chief of the United Nations Com· mand in Korea, died Wednesday at the age of 68. MEXICO CITY <AP> -B ea&r tz Allende. ~augbter of the late Chilean President Salvador Allende, com· milted suicide Tuesday in Havana, the official LOS ANGELES <AP) -Bob Hope's mother-in- 1 aw, Theresa DeFlna, died Wednesday at the ageof87. LOS ANGELES <AP> -Mln newa S . Bell. mother of former Republican Congressman Alphonzo Bell. is dead at the age of 100 following a brief ill· ness. De ath Notice• Cuban news agency re-Muuu ported. She was about40. JO..+fJ.MURRAY.rHldentotC~ Mne, --ew•y Qc:IC)blr ll, 1'17. P R A G U E ' S..n.l _lly_IW_Jowe>/IF Mur· rey Of~~. two sis~.,._. Czechoslovakia <AP> · -K•M °' So<M o.i.ota, -Row E. Jab Z .... •yy, the dean Of Dunn ot C.... ~. nine l>te<H and • -_,--. llownr w• recttecl on Tltw• Czechoslovak painters, d.lr et 1 PM e.c1 Bt-•' CM11e•. ..a:ed at "ge 8'7, it was re· 11Muoi111eow1.c1 .. euriat Frlcl•vOc· UJ .. t-i4, t AM SI. Joe<Nm ulhollc ported Thursday. Cllurm. en-..-t"' Perur, Scc11n ----------O.OCL lletl B.-ey Monv..y IOUI Olt'K1orl. • OUEN ' ---------... KATHERINE M.Ol.SEN.rH~tot P'AC lftC YllW N-ciort Beac:lt, pgwd -•Y oc._r MIMO•IAL rARK IJ, '9n. Shelswrvlveoby-'°"•Roy Ce-t/IW'V Mortuary F111oere1d of HewPOrt Bt•(ll • ..... v• • Mem«lai JotnliUs on-., Oct-Chapel 11, a PM e..11 er-o Cl\epel. Tf!ow 3500 Pac/tic View Ori\/9 wlshl"9 m•v cont rlt>ut• to their In Mos t S tat es Veterans Day Heading Back By the Associated Press When ls Veterans Day? For several years there's been confusion in the land over when to honor the nation's 30 million ex· servi~men. But this will be the last yellJ' in which the date o{ the holiday depends on where you live and whom you work for. In Utah, Hawaii and Washington. D.C .• Veterans Day will be observed on Oct. 24 this year. Jn Rhode Island it will be Nov. 7. Elsewhere. it will beNov.11. HOWEVER. EVEN IN the 47 states using Nov. 11. federal employes will be ofr and federal offices will be closed Oct. 24 . The confusion began in 1968, when Congress. motivated by economy and the popularity of three· day weekends, changed a number of holidays from fixed traditional dates to Mondays. Veterans Day. which had been observed on Nov. u, the anniversary of World War I's arml· slice, was switche" to the fourth Monday In October THE MOVE WAS IOGIR..V unpopular with veterans' organizations, which felt that the armist- ice anniversary was a solemn ot1e lt\at s hould be observed each year. Some groups never acknowledged the change. A spokesman for the Veterans Day National Committee. a rederal organization, remembers the leader or an Oklahoma service organization, "an independent cuss." who returned the committee's letters each year to point out the "error" in the date for Veterans Day. The Veterans of Foreign Wars. the American Legion. and the Disabled American Veterans lob· bied in Congress and in state legislatures lo bring Veterans Day back to November. Most states beat Congress to it, but In 1975 the federal government went along. HOWEVER. FOR REASONS ranging from budget appropriations to the early printing or calendars. the federal changeover doesn't go Into effect until 1978. The states now using the October date are expected to change over at the same time. canvuaed for funds. . Oollly~Met....--.. DISPUTE RE\•VED Shertff Brad Gatea N e wsp a p er Clinics THEY POINTED OVT that the action by Gates could have ap adverse effect on a varlety show organized by the association and scheduled for Jan. 18 at the Anaheim Convention Center. Mestre descrlbed Gates' news relflase u "•public aervlce." He said. no oae receMn1 the communicaUon should Jcqr an lt as evidence ol an adversary reJatlonsblp between Gates and the uaoclaUon. The show 's organizers said about half or the $40,000 they expect to realize from the Jan. 18 event and a show held last month will be devoted to charity. -:::i-:. 0 ~--The balance or the funds will go into At GWC the a~sQciatioifs . treasur1, they Writer s an . • ~lairied.• . photo gr a p be r s m B h ;;;;:=;:;;;t8iiiiii;:;;;;;;;;~ ALLERGY? 0 r a n g e c 0 n t y rot e r s newspapers will lead five clinics for high sc ho ol journalis m To Spe ak students at Golden West College. The sessions begin Thurs day and will continue through Dec. l. Speakers include Linda Labelson, advertising, advertising manager of the college newspaper. Branding Iron ; Bill Hodge, reporting. of the Daily Pilot; Steve Rice, photography, Los Angeles T i mes ; Sherlean Duke, feature wrltlng, Los Angeles- Times; Pete Donovan, sports writing, Los Angeles Times. Dr. J oyce Brothers. psychologist, columnist and radio personality, will speak at 8 p.m. Oct. 24 at Orange Coast College's Auditorium. Her talk is part or a lecture series that also includes Dr. Laurence Peter. author of ''The Peter Principle," on Nov. 16 and satirist Richard Armour on Dec. 14. Navy's 'Dropouts' Hurting Program NATIONAL CITY CAP> -The quality of Navy recruits is dropping because more of the new personnel aren't compleUng their hitches. says the commandant or the 11th Naval District here. Rear Adm. Haley Roeers said the problem ol retention is hurting even ----------second·aod third-term Navy personnel. Poorer quality recruJts means more drop outs, be said, adding that new * * * Volunteer Army Said Successful FT ORD (AP> - Army ~retary Clifford Alexander Jr. says the United States' volunteer army ls working. "The volunteer Army is the fin es( its commanders have seen in over 30 years of service," Alexander told civilian and military m e mber s of the AssoclaUoo of the UnHed States Army. He warned that a return to the draft would be a mistake. lf the draft Is resumed. Alexander s aid, it is likely that women would be inducted along with men because society wouldn't tolerate the exemptions granted In the past. Call 642-5671. Put • fe)lll worda lo work for ou. personnel unable to complete their three and Cour years of service make up the drop out.s. As a · res ult. more people must be r ecruited . and that means wholesale revi· sion o{ recruting goals and the drop in quality that has resulted during this pasl fi scal year, Rogers said. The solution lies in retalntng more trained personnel and relieving strain on recruiting commands, thereby allowing recruiters to be more selective, Rogers said. . (714) 543-9624 Recorded Message ALL EI H CONTIO L FOlllATION In 1513, Or11tt ca 928&1 Write ._ ffte W....tio9 3-WA Y GUARANTEF. Do you.have fire aad Ulen laauruce on yo11r personal t.eloD1t•1s? Our 20th Year Phone 541~5554· I~ Taek & Pet~ Rahbiu ~-1914 Bart.or Blvd • .'. Coat& Mei AUTHOI& IWNO~ . ROY MASTERS IMP9SOM C....T•n. a.dlfllf ...... W...' .. L...-..... JOOU...,..c_,.. ........ , ...... , ... , ... r. 494-0490 IMAOHIDAYS8 .. AI SATUllDAY.OCTOllllS , ...... 11--..,,. ....... fllf Ute-2,.... p.a: ....• 1 ....... hw •• .... """""""' . s.. actual audience demont111•1Cw1, Ullng ~ proving the hypnotic apell under which people liV9 • •. HNr Roy Masters teach ~ how to be free of the lmpri90nment of anxiety. reeentment. r ... e\c. . .....,. the simple anawer to ure·a most perplexing problems. ........,ut,__ ......... .. .....,. __ ...... .... Newport. t•vorlle <h.,lly. Bell Broedwey C81ifornia Mort....-,01r.._~~OwN -------------------------------6.C4·2700 KATE BROWN, •Qe <IO, resldeftt Of WE EPING FIG Ficus benjllllina McCOIMICIC MOITVA•llS Laguna Beach 494-9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Cepistrano 495-1776 I IAl rz.tH•llOM N8AL HOMI Corona del Mar 973-9450 Cost• ~esa 84&-2424 _,,,ROADWAY MOITUAU 110 Br~way Costa Mesa 842·9150 5Mrnt tvnAI. u .. COSJ• ... IACHAP& 4'27 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa• MM888 Santa Ana Chapel 518 N. Broadway Santa Ana• 547,..131 NICI llOTHIU IMITHS MOITVAU 827MalnSt. Huntington Beach ~9 Huntington BH<h, u . Pllld on Thun.. d•Y Oclobtr u, 1977 •I P11clllc• 110'1)1!.tl. Surv1-by ci.a...;.te.-Jemie Bro-OI Huntl"OIO<I BHch, C• .. ~ 0-., 8r-n 01 H ..... lngton 8"'"· c:.. -llroU!eu Bob W•IHr •nd ,,.., .. Holland wlll d Chic-. lllff10lt, •'"° Mk~ -G.at><Jele John$lon Of Hunt· 1"9tllfl llea<h, c.. Vlllt.ttlon •I Pieru llrDtllel'S Smlllls' Morfll••'I' from t :OO A,.M. to •:OO PM. on Sullday wlllt fvMr•fMNicH •14:00 PM on Sull<My. lnlff,,,...t private. Pierce Brothers Sml h ' Mort_.,, OlrK\OrS. WAit REN CHAHCELLAR EOWARO WAR· REN, resl«Mnt OI S.nta A11e, Ce. Pllf--•Yon()(-IJ, 1977 .i IN _,. of lO. Beloved llllsbancl OI IN!mer wer,.., ...O felllltr of o.t11war1 W¥rtn ol S.lltll Ant, C.,, Funeral M<'ollcn wlll llt ,.,.Id Motw»y OctObtr 11, 1'11 at tl:OOA.M. at Smllll Tvllllll l..fmos.tit• ~ "'-"4 wflfl the Rn. W. A. Ale•· -01 .. OKKcn of God S.11t• Nie 01tlcl•ll1>9. lnterm•nl •Ill b• •I Falrllevtn Memorl•I Part. Smith Tlltf\111 Limo Sant• ""• Mortuery .Clt~lol7-4131. Ha1lislns R.OllST " Retired Plumbing, Hardware, Electrical and Paint Salespeople, Ward & Harrington Needs You. We w.~mt your knowledge to provide customers with the expert ser- vice that has made us one of America's leading home care centers. This means your experience can be an asset, in full or part-time sales positions which have been created by our growth and expansion. You wlll work with professionals like yourself In the plumbing, hard- ware, electrical or paint department of our stores located In Orange County. If you're Interested, so are we.1 Send us a letter with de- tails of your working experience. P. 0. Box 54017, Terminal Annex, Los Angeles' 90054 Attn: Personnel -Mr. Matthews Small graceful tiff. 5 Gal.Sise Rec. t•.95 lllgl HAVE A NEW LAWN THIS WEEKEND f We lbow you bow with iJd.l'lttl SOD lpec1all Umbtd tD ...., OI llillld w : ~ st1tm WI ... , .... , ~O&OMIAL MTl.il MOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave. 546-5528 2640 ............. c..t• Met..0,..-TO.yt Ward & Harr~ngton 2640 Harbor Blvd.• Cotta Met1a DAILY . 9.(, !UN. 9.5, 0 Weatmln1ter 89~525 0 Home Improvement Centers ' • -' j • MISCELLANY Fri-. October 14, 197'7 DAILY PILOT A .... No Bitterness~ ' Widow R eca/Js Sad Me11Wri es By The A soclated Preu Her officer husband Wa5 the lint ol his West Point class lo die in Vietnam, and she was lert alone to bring up their four childre n, but Harriet Linnell says she bears no bitterness toward the communist soldiers who killed him. "George wanted to be a military man, he was trained for it, and we have always been proud of what he did," she said In a telephone interview from her home in Beaufort, S.C. MRS. UNNELL HAS remarried, but memories or the death in battle or her late husband, Lt. Colonel George Eyster, returned with the Associated Press interview. Colonel Eyster was fatally wounded in January 1966 by sniper fire from a hidden tunnel complex northwest of Saigoo. He was commander of the 2nd · Battalion, 28th Regiment, 1st Infantry Division. complete collapse or the Saigon government in 1975. ••J DON'T PRETEND to know the political subUeties, but we could not help asking ourselves what was all that loss of life for. Yet I hate to say Before lie died, Col••~• Epter ..,aated t o •ee t the •a11 IJelahtd the t11aael• of \'l e tna•. T Ito• e t 11 • • e I • a r e t;t.t~~'-':;'t~' eqlored 011 Page B 10. George's lite was wasted," she said. The military tradition of the Eyster family is being m aintained by hls two sons, both it) uniform .. The eldest, George Eyst~r 4lh, is a helicopter pilot in the Army, his younger brother is in the Air Force and both his sisters have married Army officers. Decision A.ppeal(!d SACRAMENTO CAP> -A state de· cis1on that a m an fired for sleepinf on the Job should recelve unemployment benefits is being appealed. Charles Young, a $10.03·an·hour plpefitter for the Wismer & Becker construction company, was fired Aug. 17 at a Humboldt Bay power plant project. The company said he violated job • work rules against sleeping on the job, rules that call for imm~late dismissal, and that the man was fired after being found asleep for the third time. I • ni.i.i .,. ....... RIUU.Cf• -- OWN SOMETHING SPECIAL! Excellent bulldlllCJ sffes overlooking a good hcrbor and proposed mcrina. Low price and good terms. -EXCELLENT POTENTIAL - · 30 saludea to S• "'-dlco • ' Eyster's wire said sbe held no bitterness toward the communist soldiers ''because they were doing . their'duty, too, as they saw it." But : she remains unhappy about the Their gr,andfather. George Eyster 2nd, was chief of information in the European theater in World War II. SLAIN COLONEL'S WIDOW HARRIET LINNELL Was First of West Point ClaH to Die In Vietna m :On 2nd Try, ·Plea Entered LOS ANGELES <A P > -ll took two tries. but ·motorcycle daredevil Evel Knievel successfully has entered a guilty plea lo charges of using a baseball bat to atlack a man who wrote a book abouthlm. In the process. he fired and then rehired his eUorney. Paul Caruso, Thursday. At a hearing Wednesday, Knievel tried to plead guilty to assauJting television executive Sheldon Saltman wiUl-a deadly weawn. BJll. Caruso refused toagreetolheplea. - SO MUNICIPAL COU RT Judge Frances -Rothschild of West Lo5 Angeles said she wanted to :"do research on whether a defendant may plead guilty without the consent of his attorney. She asked :Knievel andiearuso to return to court Thursday. : At the start of Thursday's court proceedings, :Caruso was removed as Knievel's attorney. But after the judge returned from a recess to accept ;Knievel's plea and set a sentencing hearing, :Knievel announced th at he wished to retain Caruso. according to Edward Welbourn, court marshal. : Just after· leaving court Wednesday, Knievel :waved to onlookers. tooted the horn of his expensive :Stub Bearcat and told reporters, "If you did ;somelhlng, you should say you did it.·· • ~~~~~~~---i Bii 2 D,AVS ON'V ISALEENDSSATURDAY,OCTOBER15TH ... r' l • ~I· 1..1 HURRY,SOMEQUANTITIESARELIMITED! & -~ ·EEP! 2 BIG DAYS OF SAVINGS AND SPECIAL BUYS. THESE ARE JUST A FEW- HUNDREDS GF-Y-NADVERTISED SPECIALS AT SAVINGS ~ROM lO"o TO 5~ Save $33 to $43. BARBECUES! Save $43 to '74. Radial tire sale. 2ndtire $5* now only Power lawn mowers. 3 1/2-~p rotary. • 20" STEEL DECK • HEIGHTS ADJ UST • AUTOMATIC CHOKE ggss REC. 142.99 • 1 STEEL BELT FOR STRENGTH • TOUGH RUNABOUT RADIALS 23% to 32% off. Deluxe wagon grill. 2988 • MOTOR AND SPIT • S IDE SHELF, OVEN REG. 43.99 ~· . ~ K NIEVEL I S ac · cused of batterine Saltman. with a baseball bat Sept. 21 at the 20th Century Fox Studios wblle another man held the victim. Saltman, 46, suffered a broken arm andwri.sL • OUT-OF-DOORS FUN • STRONG BELTS, RADIAL PLIES . The s tuntman re· port.edly was offended by a boot Saltman wrote about Knievel's unsuc- cessful try to ju mp ldaho's Snake Rlver Ca· nyon in a rocket-powered motorcycle. Judge RoPlschlld set Khlevel's probation and s~ntencing heartoc for Nbv.14. Moonlit• Sole Huntington Center's Fantastic 11-hour sale Fri. nlte 7 to 10 p.m. and continue. on Set. Subject to stock oo hand. Beach Blvd. & Edinger at the San Diego Fwy. 2 DINNERS FOR, LOW Spjres Is towering the cost of dinner! PRICE I I ••••••••••• FISH I CHIPS I •• 3-hp rear-bag. 139ss • 2(1' STEEL DECK REG. 172.99 • ROTARY MOWER • P ULL-GO START . Save $}0 to $40. Gas-powered chain saws. 89.95, 10" gas chain saw .. ·. 79.88 179.95, 14" gas chain saw, 139.88 199.95, 16" gas chain saw, 159.88 12'' electric chain saw •..• 44.88 Folding brazier. 1·1ss • FAMILY-SIZE BBQ • TAKE IT ON PICNICS REG. 15.49 • RED\JCED TO CLEAR 12-in. picnic grill. • EASY TO ASSEMBLE }66 • CARRY IT ANYWHERE • LOOK AT T$ PRICES 2()o/0 to SOo/0 off.* All in-stock BBQ's and accessories. •REGULAR LOW PRICE 23-channel CB's. 'Save 2lo/0 to 26%. • BIG CLEARANCE •IN-STOCK UNITS AS LOWAS 39ss 40-channel CB'• u low u 69.88 Ornamental iron gate~. 37.99, 56"x32" gate ••••• 27.88 42.99, 56"x38" gate •.••• 82.88 47.99, 56"x44" gate ....• 37.88 9.49, 7-foot posts •••... 7.88 ea. Aftllable in aizea: Blt18.J3, £R78-l4, CR7&-M, HR78-14, BR78-lS, GR'78-lS, 115R-l2 ..... ,....., ... tire .......... price~ $41-$79 ... 2.01 to uo .. tin. Special .. Monotherm insulation. . . • BLOWER AVAILABLE FOR BOMB USE · • REFUNDABLE DEPOSIT REQUIRED • PROFESSIONAL INSTALLATION, TOO In-stock ladders. · • STEP AND EXTENSION • LARGE ASSORTMENT 2()o/o off REC.PRICE 2 Dl~~~R~ 2.99 I . I D*llutice1a•CM.• .. ,,, ....... ,.,sa1a41.tnnct11n.•. I 30-ga,l. water heater, 74.88 Padomatic®paint kit ... 5.88 Smoke detector ....•• 22.88 ~ 1 1~~~~~~~~~~~--~~-t-~~~~~~~~~~~~~-r~~~~~~~~~~~---~-- rel, kfttf IH llftar llCICI. • I Bring this coupon with you and .. I REG. 9.99 • BY SMOKE AL~ enjoy2dlnner\al special . ~~. I ---------------'----1~---------------"t--------------.;;.--- • prices. Thlsotterisgoodconrv :-. •• I Water softener salt ..• 99c 5-gallon Econokote® •.• 2.88 14-oz. propane tank •.••• •t at Spires Restaurants In osta 1 Mesa/Irvine/Westminster/ • S..BAG LIMIT • DRIVEWAY COAT REG. 3.99 REG. l .59 Santa Ana. and ends Nov. 30.1977. • DP 1 -----------------t---------:-__....._ ______ +:-__.--:--------------( I Coupon specials must be consumed on the premJses and are h G d · 159 88 C b 32 9·5 39 95 • I se~ed Imm 2p.m.to10 p.m. Both dinners must be ttlefSame. I Car battery c arger ... 24.88 . arage oor opener, . ar attery • • • . • • ~ •••••••••••• ' REC. 36.99 • WITH CONTROL • GET AWAY 54 • REG. 42.95-52.95 ; • •1 TOP SIRllDld STEAR I Auto air filters ... 1. 77 EA. Fluorescent shop light, 10.88 Light fixtures, 10%-50% off 2 DINNERS 3 9 9 I • FIT MOST CARS REG. 2.6& REG. 14.81 • BIG SELECTION REG. PRICE. I FOR • I . I . ock b . • 1111 s1rltlfts ............. ..,., .... c11e1eeo1""t1. 1 Our 10W40 motor oil, 49c:QT. Dril, saw or sander, 19.88 In-st icycles ••• 15~ off ~ I , .. "'41 llutter. REG. 64c •YOUR CHOICE REG. 34.99 _ • SINGLE, 3-, JO.SPEED Brlngthiscouponwrthyouand 1 1----------------"t----------------;--------------~-------~ I 811loy2d1nnersa1spec1a1 lb ) • b 16 97 S 9 prlcea. rb1souer 1sgoo0on1y I Interior latex paint, 1.97 GAL. 4-. s eep1ng ag. • . . tereo component .•. 6 .88 I at Spires Restaurants In Costa • POLYESTER REC. 29.99 REG. •.95 Mesa/Irvine/Westminster I . I I SlntaAoa,andetldsNov.30.19(7. OP !-------------------------------------------------- • ~=,~~a~~:.ut~:::.:~=d~~:~sp~:::t~~~~. I USE YOUR WARDS CHARG-ALL CREDIT ACCOUNT FOR CONVENIENT SHOPPING COSTA MESA 3125 Hlfbor B~d. SANTAANA 702 W. 17111 Snet IAVINE MacArthut B~d. It s.o. Fwy. WU TM IN STER Golden WISt 1t G.G. Fwy. BtookhCHSt at Mcftdden Wards has it all! WARDS ADVERTISING POI.ICY: If your Wanlt1 11ton t1hould run out or nny advertlM!d 1tem11 during the aale period. or should an Item nol arrive due to production or lranaport.tttlon problem11 Wanl1 will olTer the 1uim w you at the ule price when IL i1 rettwckcd Thia doc1 not apply to "'Cleora nee" and .. Closrout" 1&lea or .. Speciol Buys .. where ava1loble quonlltiu are ne<:· ell!llrily limittd to aiock ova II able on hand WARDS PRICING POLICY: If DI\ it.em is not de11eribed as a reduction or M 11 "RP«ial Buy~ it 11 at 11.1 nogular prit-e A "~pt'Ci.111 Ruy". thoutih not roil~ le on out.at.anding value. In this ad Mme relllJl11r pr1tt11 m11y v11ry hy gCOftT11phic area. Ir you have a question concernlnR ony Word• advert1!1Clment pll'l'lllC call the manager o( your nearut Warde et.ore d . . COSTA MESA ~ND HUNTINGTON BEACH ONt; 3088 Bristol Ave. 71<4-149-9400 7777 Edlnpr St. 714-892 ... ll SHOP DAILY 10:00 AM·t:OO PM ••• SAJUltDAY t :lO AM..-.00 PM ••• SUNbAY tO:OO AM .. 100 PM • t I ' \, • AJ8DAILVPILOT 'rlday. October 14, 1t77 FOIMULA•09 U R.. OZ. W/SPIAYll Te The ""' 1'0 ~ ,.,s .... 47c 7100 P.M. ·sTAIDAn llD PILLOWS 97c fUUDTOll IWIDAlf llOIT1Ut1DI£ SAIUllAY,OCT. 15, 1977 12iOOP.M. DGISTUTIOI WILL llGll 1-HOUI PllOI TO DUWllGS UCH DUWllG llQUllES UGISTU- TIOI II SPECIFIED DIPAITMEllTS. EMPLOYEES OF THE IMAlt COIPOR- ATIOI AID ITS SUISIDIAllES AID ... as OF THEii FAMIUIS An . UCLUDID FIOM ALL DUWllGS • FIOllTlll PAPll EVEIGllll TOWILS TAMS 1-GAUOI ,.n.. ...... 790~ ,., ..... l•The ...... 75~ . ,.., s .... 1.ac. 43c IYIU TOITILU CHIPS ·22c · • 00 ; Whle 240 ,., .. s ... St-~· 2 Pl. PIG. llD HI'S . 10~ PIG. Of $1 FOAM CUPS 1GO-CT. IOllD UT1ll SIU llVBOPIS ,., ......... 100~ ,_ Siwe 12c :00 wt.le 100,., S P .M. s.-w.o IOI OF SO.fllllAL LI. K-4 TIRE GAUGE 47c 9100 P.M. 8 PIG. TOILET TISSUE 5.7c lfAMll cm ..,. ~ IUCM WIJlff .... llUM ~ llAlll IO. lOl AmaEI _.. Tl9'l.E CITT • -I . r MEI'S OIDUIOY SLIPPll 2!0 UllCAITH LA V£ME •VllWOl IA9tTA AU TOMAllCf VALHC1A ~ Hl-POWll .22'1 lO• IOCM llHMVIA IAJI ...... 0 WCUMllTt YEllTVIA WUTcmlU •• ' 1NSIDE: •Sports •Business •Te1evision •Ann Lande'rs . 'Class of '~2 Then there was the time Little Dynamite let the chickens loose in the Lido Theatre. Dy MARCIA FORSBERG Ol IM Dally Pli.t $1.WI Gone are bobby sox, saddle shoes and poodle haircuts. The Paulo Drive.Jn -known to the class of '52 as Passion Pit Number One -has been tom down, and clunky old DeSotos have , been replaced by mopeds in the parking lot at Newport Harbor Hi&b School. But some things are still the same. At Pink· s Drugs on Newport Boulevard, a favorite hangout for school kids since it opened in 1933, you can still get a cherry phosphate. And the bell tower at the high school remains as a landmark of days gone by. 'Though the school's graduates have grown older and their lives have changed, they still get together to rehash and remember the years they wore blue and gray at the corner of 15th and 1 Irvine. In fact. the NHHS class of '52 will be looking through old yearbooks and scrapbooks tonight at the ~ta Mesa Country Club. It's the 25-year reunion. ln organizing the dinner-dance, Evelyn Williams Dahlgren has discovered that .. about 70 percent of the c I ass is still in Orange County." -_ _.,,_ ---.. ~ . -~ - • OF THE 150 in the graduating class, she expects about 100 at tonight's nostalgic get· together. She and a committee of 11 have worked steadily for two months to contact the .. kids:· she said. (Last minute arrangements to attend can be made with her at 548-9447.) oe11w,.... ...... iw•llrk•O ....... The class of '52 returns : Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Pinkley, behind counter, serve, from left, Nadine MathewsSteelsmith, Da"ell and Honored guests at the reunion wilJ be Alvin and Lucy Pinkley, the couple responsible for providing a home away from home for local teens for the past 44 years. Patricia Wall, Helen Keating Naismith, Ruth Frenkel Allen. "We were only 23 when Mr. Pinkley came down and bought the store. The high school kids , al that time weren"t much younger than we were," Mrs. Pinkley recalled. The soda fountain was a regular haven for comic book readers and socializers. "It was also • the original home or 25-cent lunches." said Evelyn. ··vou could get a frosted mug or root beer, a s andwich and peppermints for two bits." Mrs. Pinkley added that many times concerned parents "would come in and talk to us about their kids. Mr. Pinkley would say, 'We've been watchlng your kids grow up and we've found out that in the end, everybody turns out good.··· Allll, BUT THE class of '52 w as mischievous. Committee members admitted it ,f al a meeting al Pink's this week. Rex Bell, known to rus cohorts as "Little Dynamite," confessed to stealing watermelons and chickens. He added that the chickens were <See CLASS, Page BZ > High school sweethearts Darrell Wall and Patricia Brooks Wall have been marned for 25 years. From tetr, Da Muntz, Jack Tsylot'. Rex Bell who is in his o1cl?(lfrer s wester. Baek in the .'30s 'For a dollar you could take a girl to the show and have a malt.' .. By MARCIA FOBSBERG Ol .. D.MlyPli.t..., Newport Harbor High School first opened its doors in 1930. Since then. thousands or students have graduated and scattered all over the world. Betty DeWolfe Beecher has been ,busy for months rounding up alumni from 1932 through '39 for tomorrow night's reunion at the Balboa Pavilion. Or the 615 names OP her list, she's .Sound m ore tha n 400 Tars. Mrs. Beecher, a 1939 graduate, has worked Uls "background promoter" for NHHS :reunions since her 25th in 1964. She and her hus band, Charles, dated during her senior year. "He had a 1934 gray Plyltlouth coupe. We used to drive clear to Scotty's on Main .Street in Santa Ana for a malt," she recalled. Another favorite pastime was going to the Rendezvous Ballroom, "the dance hall down at the beach," she said. Graduates from the '30s, now In their late 50s and 60s. remem,~r that the now-thriving Costa Mesa area was once wide, open spaces. "A lot or people bad small farms,·· said Al Ogden, class of '34. ··My job was to come home from school and take care of the cbjckens and milk the cow." What were the fads back then., .. We didn't have enough money to have fads in those days, but for a dollar you could lake a girl to the show and have a malt. We got into the show for a quarter. For SO cents you could s1L in the loges." His wife, Eleanor Hillyard Ogden . (SffBACK. Page l\?) Beverlee Dean, a graphologis t clairrlTng psychic powers, will give readings at MS Garden Party. ' .. .,,_ , Eleanor, class of '35, and Al Ogden, class of "34. Beverlee Dean believes she has powers ·given by God which she had to~worl< awfully hard on to polish. . . By J\JDITH OLSON Ot IM Dally Pl ... Staef '· If you can beUeve it, Beverlee Dean is a Catholic graphologis t who claims to ba'Ve psychic powers and. If you pteue, hates her work. Ms. Dean, who will 1l•e re.tdtnis next Sunday, Oct. 16, (or the Garden Party spo~ed by the Orange County Chapter of the National • Multiple ~l~rosis Society at Roger's Gardens, claims shed rather not analyze handwriting but can't seem lo escape it. Her "readings" are a combination of grapholo~y tect\niques and psychic powers. ' Arter she applies all t.he rules pf huctwriting analysis, her "gut feelings" take over. Ms. Dean dislikes it when someone accuses ner of predictlnit the future because she believes • what she has is a gift or God. I • A devout Catholic and crusader aaainsldr\11 • use. Ms. Dean said she pr~s before each reading for divine guidance. • She turns much of her profit over to her first love in life, the St. Anthony FoundaUon for the Youth of America, which she hopes to build as. a place tor the creative expression or young people. TIIE CENTER will have outlets for all kln~ of artistic endeavors, from televlsion to novel writing and palntlng, so youths can get more direction for their Jives, Ms: Dean aplained. 1'1 call it Hope Without Dope. They can't stay if they usedrup. "I want to replace drugs. I caon 't want to • b\lilctadrug foundation.'' Ms. Dean, now a Los Angeles resident, also plans to use most of the profits from sales of her new game, "A Psychic Experience," to belp underwrite the foundation. She laqba when she talks about her game, which she feels should be i;>layed on Tuesdays, to getdirection for the following week. · "I wrote it in church, in St. Anthony's Church in Milwaukee," she grinned in disbelief. "It"t.ook me two years. to figure out what to do with it." The game, introdGCed al a recent gift show, • consists of 48 cards which .ue played on 48 s quares. The player makes a wish for the week coming up beforeplaylft& il. IT ilAS BEEN 93 percent. accurate, she said, shrugging her shoulders as ii teytnt to fiJure out how it all happened. "I never wanted to caJI it• game/' she said. "But. it's my only "hope fOt" buildlna my foundation." · Ms. Dean emphasised that she dots not predict the future and that alMs is not a spiritualist or medlwn. She simply belle\'es !!he baa pbwers ai'HD by God, which she had to work awfully hard on to polish. I .. , frl 0.\IL Y PILOT Friday, October 1• 1971 ANN LANDERS I HOROSCOPE ~Letter to a Favorite •••. Baek in '30s ... DEAR ANN LANDERS: lt ha been lbree years since you have had the article o n -.n essay thol put each child in his place. It was ~enl lo you by a reader who round It in the A•• Laaders Qbrary stuck between .~o books. I have had It '91\ '11)( refrigerator door (1955 Feet ) and th e ,_nd l~'s pretty tattQred 7·inch TV we paid on for by this time. 36 months. Will you please give 1t You were new and had ~u rerun~. The oate wa!i unused JJrandparent~ Sept. 26, 197A. und enough clothes for a ' Many thanks. MRS. !let or lripl.ets. You were ·tt . lNHIALEAH. FL~. the original model for a DEAR FRIE~O : mom and a dad who Thanks for asking. The were trying to work the author or that lovely bugs out. You got the essay Is my good rriend strained lamb. the open -that talented lady. safety pins a nd three. E rma Bombeck. Jsn '\ hournaps . s he the greatest? You we r e t h e Here is it is with beginning. pleasure: DE A R M l 0 D L E DEAR FlRS1' BORN· CHILD: I 've a lways I've always loved you loved you best because best because you were you drew a t~ugh spot in our first miracle. You 1he family and it made were the ~nesas or ·a • you s tronger for ll ma rriage and t he You c.-ried less. hud fulfillment of young love more patience. wore You s u s tained us faded hand-me-downs through the hamburger and n~ver .in your l~fe did y e a r s , t h e r i r s t anything first. But 1t only apartment (furnished in made you more special Early Poverty), our first You were th~ one we mode of transportation r e I ax c d w 1 t h a n d re~llzed a dog could kiss you and you wouldn't get sick. You could cross u street by yourself long b~Cor o you wcrtl o ld enough to get married And you h e lped u s understand the world wouldn't collaµse 1f yoµ went. to bed with dirty feet. You were the child of our busy, ambitious years. Without you we nev e r could huvc survived the Job changes .ind the tedium and routine that 1s marriage TO THE BABY · l'vt• always loved you bei.t because whtl • ending~ arc generully S;id. )OU arc s uch a joy You readily accepled lht· milk stained b1bi., tht• lower bunk. tht.' cruckfd baseball bat . thl' baby book that had noth1n~ written In It f'XCCPI a recipe for g ruham lr..acl..1;r IHCCru::;l You are lhe one we held onto tiO tightly. You ure the link wllh our pas t , a reason for l<?morrow. You quicker\ our :iteps, squurt.' our shoulders. res tore our vi11ion a nd give us u scnsl' of humor t hat security. 'ITIUturit.y and durability can't provide . Wh,en your hairline takes on the shape or Lake Erie and your own children tower over you, you wi ll s till be our baby. A MOTHER U E A H A N N LANDERS: Help! l 've been invited to a double wedding. The brides ar e cousins. I know one of the girls very well. The other is no more than a passing acquaintance Am l expected to bu~· both brides a wedding ~1ft '' Please answer. I've JSked sevcrul people and hu \•t• ~ottc.'11 a lot 11( t·onfhctinJ{ advict• DOUBLE OR WHAT" DEAR DOR W: Both brldt>S should receivl' » girt, but for the one you know s lightly a much mort> modest present will do. graduated in 1935 and recalled that NJUlS sl~ents drcned ln unlform.s. ·'The women more middles and loeg ~klrts. The mlddles had mwy bU.1e coll a.rs wllb while stripes. "0 11r biggest problem was lrylng to disguise them," she said with• lau_ih. "We wore dltterent types or scarves uround our neck, or s weaters. but we still had to have that collar showine.·· One summer Al aod Eleanor were al a baseball game· "where lhe StarUte traUer court Is now. I asked her to go on a dale,•· be said. ..We probably went Cor a r1de down to the beach." Mrs . Osden recalled. They were married in 1936. More information on tomorrow's reunion is nvailabl4' from Mrs. Beecher, 548·7229, or the Oadens, 548-6502. . RUFFELL'S [ Horoscope ] U,.HOLSTERY WINllY•W• ...... 11-hr. Sale forWortd Series Widows There·a nothing '°exciting es the Oodgets in the World Serles -EXCEPT C*NPI Huntlngtpn tenter'• super-'nnUll tale. For fabulous blrgalnt cometonlte from 7 to 10 pm or Sat. staqlng at 10 am. Limited Quanlltiee. Beach & Edinger, H.8. SATURDAY.OCl'. lS By SYDNEY OMARR lfll ....... lhcl. c.., • ...__,..,.02., SCOR PI 0 ( 0 cl. ~~======~~~~~~==::" 23-Nov. 21): Emphasis ARIE S (Mar ch 21-April 19): Plan ahead prepare outline , concept. Lo ng-dista nce ca ll aicb in seUlng pace, openq1g 110(.' o f l'OmmttnicatiQn . Spiritual Insights are more signif1c;,int than in rcc.-ent past. on coUections. dividing expenses and profits. knowing whe re lo draw the line where budget is c -0nccrned . Some pre8sures are relieved. GlOUrTOUl$ AYAUIU 1714: '7MHJ DIU-.muL DI,_.. 't()UaS l!NCl 'IN' LUf4CH IOAT._ ~SN& SAGl1TARJVS CNov 22-Dec. 21 >: Moon in your s ig n activa tes personality, initiative, v i t a l ity Hi g hli g ht intuitive intellect. You get pulse of public. You know f'low to be al right pll.icc al right time. Be -7~~;;~;;~~~;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~~ t'onfident. direct. ELEGANCE OM E. 17th STREET • • • Class of '52 TAUR US !April 20·M•tY 20 1 Mak e ..idj ustment which enables you lo upprove o f famil y membe r . Plan s. poten ti al . t' x p c.· n d 1 t u r c s . remodeling . luxur y items. url objects all l'Ould be part or scenurio. GEMJNI I.Ma) 4!1 June :w 1 · Accl'nt un dcler mininl? wt}ul 1.s real. what 1s comprised of fluff. delusion , wishful lhinJung. Partnership or mar r iage n eeds attention -pronto! Take nothing for granted. Use c.-ha llenge as stepping Mone. CAPRICORN I Dec 4!2 -J a n . 19); Aura o( glamor is in evidence Si~n if i ca n l l'O mmuni cation i s recei ved . Member ·or opposite sex 1s involved Gemini. Virgo and Sagittarius could be pan of l>cenano, UN 'BEL 'Di I)~ LN IAONU AY • !.AT\JAOAY 10·6 ) disposed of by turning them loose in the Lido Theatre. "They walked all over the-sl~ge. We .got chased out o ( that theater so many times.·· he said. shaking his head Darrell Wall once rode his motorcycle nght through the drug store. "I used lo fold m y newspapers in the back room. This was where my route started." he said, changing the subject. He met his bride, Patricia Brooks Wall. in grammar school. and the two went together s ince seventh gra<le. They were married 25 years ago. just after graduation. PATRICIA SAID, "We used to cut our hair in a Vin back, then peroxide the sides." Her friend. Dawn Pierson Muniz, remembered that "we had . lo wear unilorms -navy skirts, just below the knee, and white blouses or sweaters with a dicky underneath.'' Helen Keating Naismith drove bet own car a 1938 DeSoto -on dates. Ruth Frenkel Allen remembt•rt:d '' ht•rt.' l'\'Cn body went when thev "crcn 't at Pink ~ or at !>Chool · The Long Beach Pike.·· s he said N.adlnc. Ma.t.lle-'A !> £.ccl:.m1lh produced a "orn but loved blue-and ~ray sweater from G1rl"s Athletic Assoc1<1twn "My kids have been wearing 1t and it has moth holes i~itnow." The area has grown. they all agreed. Places that onct• were bcun field-. now are thriving businesses "We u!>cd to !>1l on a bale of hay :.ic.-ross the street at the feed store." Darrell said. The growth was a '\urpnsc to Jack Taylor. who went overseas an 1952 and returned in 'S4. "It was 2:30 in the morning and I got a cab. While I'd been gone they built this stupid freeway.•· he s aid, reCcrring to the two-way thoroughfare on Newport Boulevard. "I'd lived here all my life and didn't know where I was," he said, laughing . As the Newport H arbor Hig h School Jtraduates, now ln their 40s, reminisced. Evelyn sipped a phosphate and mused. "It was just like ·~appy Days.' It wa!i the same " CANCER <Jun e 2 1-July 22 1··Past obligation rears its heud Delay r esults. Basic steps are required before •1 graceful leap occurs. M essage will be clarified. LEO <July 23-Aug. 22>: AC}UARIUS I Jan 20-Fcb. 18). Friendship co uld blosso m into romance. Taurus. Libra persons are featured. Accen t o n desire fulfilled. e nd t o loneliness. gain as result or getting to heart of matters. NEWPORT BEACH · COSTA MESA'S CHIC LEATHER EMPORIUM IMPORTED oncl DOMESTIC LEATHER ancJ CA NVAS HANDBAGS LUGGAGE · WALLETS -· ACCESSORIES 369" c. 17''1 ST., CO-ST A MESA IN WESTPORT SOUARE 141-5533 --~ --·---PI SCES <Feb . 19-March 20): Accent on power pl-.y, government. politics and your role. ------::--------------- S trive for family approval. Don't give up something of value for m e re promises , temptations. . • ~. PsYelde Experienee Good moon as pee t corr~spond~ now to romance, pursuit or creative e ndeavors, relationships with off. s pring, sp cculati o ni ridin& ele m e nts o timing and luck. Stick with number "9." Aries. Libra persons could play key roles. If Oct. 15 ls your btnfa. day you are creative. ~rtlstic, have unusual voice, sense of drama. appreciation for the "'finer things 1n life." Taurus . Sco rp io Individuals pray key roles in your pel'sonal s cenario. April was memorable -in It was an uphill struale, she said, because she didn't want lo use her powers ln the first place and was never convinced she really had them. But people kept asxing her to give readings aod it. seemed that it was the only way she could make a living. "I just started chare~g lut December." s he noted. "1 had to earn some money." SHE HAS HAD a varied career which would Corm the makines ror a good novel. Her intuitive powers were predicted b.y a woman in a London airport, .-ho literally fell at her feet and told her she wouJd be a psychic. "I came home laughlnt from London," Ms . ~.,.., Dean recalled. "When I fll'St tired I was always HER INTUITIVE powers, she says, are 22 >: You compl e t e November you make more difficult to deal with. "I can't explain transaction. Home and serious c hange or them," she says. "J just write what comes into security are affected. a d j u s t m e n t i n my mind." Y 0 u m a k e v 81 u 8 b 1 e e o n n e c l i on w i t h "Most of m y cli ents are businessmen in ~.~~~~~l.l.~ading to a res idence, domestic radio and TV. l tell them if a new show will be situation. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. successful or not. I've never been wrong with a LIBRA (Sept. 23-Qct radloorTVshow." 22 ): Highlight getting At one time, Ms. Dean said she would never m es s a g e a c r o s s . _do_ readings again but her deciaion only lasted a e s p e c i a 11 y w h e r e week. Too many people were clamoring for her relatives are concerned. advice. You're being pulled in . ' ~-~ "tof.N~r-::-.~ . Brunch should not lift .,, ....... Original cr,pe bronches Saturday and Sunday .•. and for dedicated egg Jover., our special Eggs Sausalito. Wl-.•C..ktalla The reason s he swore off was that she felt a two directions -at the . ~nlite Sale problem in the Ufe of a client and changed her same Ume. Key Is to s um Sale of S.... tooite Costa M"•: South Coast Pl•1•, 556--t225 mind abouttelllng him. up, take inventory. Do 7 to 10 at 01*! un11112:00 midnight frid•v·Selurday Her vibes b ad to do with cars and Paris, but you want happiness -or Huntingtonl:ter. 10-00 PM Sunday and 11.00 PM Monday·Thurid•y -_.. wrong aboullhlngs." "" The old woman 'bad told her that a new field would open up lo her on a Tuesday, so she spent the next nine months waiting for something to happen on Tuesday. the cUenCs agent reasl!ured h.er that he w9u1d be intrigue? M1Jot ,cred11 CMd• t«WOHld in M~~e~.n~Paris. Jtt~edo~.however, -~~~~~-~~~~~~~~--~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ that one of his good rtien<ls was racing in Paris One day her wait was over . An announcement ol a rraphology course came in the mail on a Tuesday, but Ms. Dean didn't know • what graphology was and had to ask. She since bas found that handwriting is a good way for her lo meet youth.'! and get them to talk about drugs. Since they are eager to bear what she says about their lives, they listen as she encourages them to do something about their future. W eddrng and engagr merit announcements run on Sunday an the Daily Pilot. Form3 are available (It all Dmly Pilot nfl1cf'! or by calling the f 'ea1ur£'11 1 Department. 642-4321 and was killed. ''They blamed me," Ms. Dean lamented. Ms. Dean doesn't always know the resuJts of her readings, however, since she never hears when she's wrong, only when she's right. "I'm really off in m y timing, sometimes," i,be admitted, "so J've stopped giving specific dates." Ms. Dean will be available beginning at S p m. on Oct. 16. Tickets are available from the MS office. 636·2171 , Roger's Gardens. and Richard P. Haus man, vice-chairman of the event, 975--0J13. ENTIRE STOCK To avotd di1appoant · ment. proapective brides are reminded to have their wedding stones. with a black-and·whlle glouy of the bride or of the couple. 10 the Feature1 Depart · ment one Wf'ek bPfore the u>eddmg SELLING OUT TO BARE WALLS • I Moon lite Sale Huntington Center s Fantastic 11~nou< sel• Ftr nlte 7 to 10 pm and conhnues on Sat Sub1ec1 to stock on nand Beach Blvd & Edinger at the San 01900 Fwy"' WOMEN'S FASHIONS • SPORTSWEAR • TENNISWE.AR 3 DAYS ONLY FRIDAY, SATURDAY. SUNDAY OCTOIH 14. 15. 16 ••• Color Your Garden SPRING1DIE The mild winters and delightfully warm springtime clim(\te in our coastal area are perfect for growing a spectacular early spring garden, when you do It wnte Roger's Wa~ Your home.can become a real springtime showplace ... the pride of the neighborhood! Roger•s Gardens ls ready to help and you11 ftnd it's really easy to achieve glorious results. Roger's· professionals a re eager to show you how to do·it '"The Roger's Way" ... which means you'll learn many of our exclustve secrets! SIX SIMPLE STEPS TO A COLORftlL SPRING GARDEN v(s., ". • • MAKE A SKETCH of your garden...... rf • COME TO ROOD'S IWIOOIS tor expert ad¥tce and top qualty pl8nta. ti' • We wltt show you the PROPER SOIL CONDITIONERS to ensure your 9'1CC811. / • Wt Wil shOw you exectly HOW TO Pl.ANT U cft type ot bulb. • • We WIN •how YCMI nowet1ftg .,.,.,. that wilt"'" your garden INSTANT COLOR. • FEED YOUR GARDEN with Roger's Ftower food and enjoy a glorious Spring Ganlen. - I I • ................................................... Frl.~.¥.·.Oc.1~ .. '.'.'·.1.9n ............. o.~.l.V·P·ILO•T ....... ~ ..... ~~~~ Egad! Yankees Battling Again NEW YORK <AP > The New York Y a nkees h ave found something else to fight about with owne r George Steinbrenner -World Series tickets. . Aboard their Thursday night from New York to Los Angeles. some Yank~s players reported· ly were upset with ticket loca· tions for the third game or the Ser ies. The New York Daily News. m today~s edttions, r~portcd tha1 the feud came to a boil when Yankees catche r Thur man Munson confronted traveling sccr~tary Jerry Murphy and de· manded : ··where are the box scats? The crew has received only one box seat l'ach. lhc rest re Sl'r ved. · · Murphy, an a M ncihator y tone, ans wered: ··we received ver y few box scat locations from the Dodgers. The reser\'ed scat-; we gave you are better than the box· cs we have." Munson. however . refused to buy the explanauon. .. 11ow many box seats doeS' George have?" Munson asked. rcrerring to Steinbrcllfler. who has had a variety of disagree- . ments with many of the Yankees pluycrs throughout t he season. "I dcm 't know ... ans wered Murphy "Well. I kno w." snt1pped Munson "I know in Ne w York he had O\'t'r 3.000 and all we got was four box sl•uts each. and the rest resen L'S. Now . we gel one box scat for Los Angeles. and you try lo tell us the reserves a re better ? What arc we, dumb? I'll tell you lhis. unless we gel mor e boxes. l 'm not playing th~ Fest of the Series. No y. ny ~ .. Then.• was affi rmafr:e grum· bhng from the rest of the team. ac· AP-o CHARLES WHITE (CENTER) ANO USC FACE OREGON SATURDAY AFTERNOON. Henderson Leads Ducks Will Oregon Be Vp or Down Against SC? LOS A NG E L ES I AP > Southern California coach John Robinson says Oregon may be an unpredictable football learn, but he knows what the Ducks are go. ing to be thinking Saturday when they face the s ixth·ranked,..:tro-jans Saturday. "They're going to come in here with some vengeance in their hearts because of last Satur· day," said Robinson. who played football at Oregon then was an ~assistant coac h the re fo r 12 years. The Ducks had lost three rel· atively close games and whipped TCU going in against Washingtoo last weekend, but they suffered a 54·0 humbling at the hands of the Huskies. "I know I 'm duty bound to say J e x p ect a tough ga m e ,·· Robinson rem arked. "But the w ay Oregon has played this year. it could be just that. "They played good against Wisconsin, Georgia and Stan· ford. then they had that bad g ame againBt Wash ington, .. Robinson continued. "Oregon this season has been like the young golf pro who shoots a 65, then a 68. then a 79 on the final day. "Can Oregon come back a nd shoot a 65 again? They may. a nd they may jwrt come out and die." Oregon coach Rich Brooks. who came from an assistant's post at UCLA lasl year. said he expects the Trojans lo be eyeing a move up the naUonal rankings. ''When we looked at USC's schedule at the start of the year. ....... I we thought we might have been an a good position , comin g between their games against Ala ba m a a nd Notr e Dame ... Brooks said. "But not now. The Trojans will be lookin g to gain national recognition again in the polls." Robinson said the Ducks are a lways a threat because of <iua rterback J ack Henderson. who has thrown for 3,824 yards in his career . T h is season. the junior signal caller is 57 of 113 for 750 yards and two scor es. ·'Hende rson is a ve ter an quarterback who's capable of an outstanding game anytime." Robinson s aid . "ff hr"i. hot. Oregon can be ver y dangerous." USC is 4·1 overall and 2·0 in conference play, with a 21-20 loss to Alabama las t Saturd ay knock· ing the Trojans out of the No. I s pot. "We must improve our of- Angry LOS ANGELES <AP> -Seven clich a rd but ticketless Los Angeles Dodgers baseball fans remained camped Thursqay af. ternoon at Dodger Stadium, up. set that World Series ti ckets were never s old lhere. "Where are the Dodgers· fans' tickets?" questioned one sign borne by a protei.ter. "No tickets were sold in advance at Dodger Stadium." said another. The final 15,000 tickets for the three Series games t his weekend fensave execution from here on," Robinson said, "and that means for a full game. We've got to take the ball and J{ri nd it out." Although t ail backs Charles White and Dwight Ford and fullbacks Mosi Tatupu and Lynn Cain may be call ed on more this g a m e . the thro w i n g o f quarterback Rob Hertel to re- ceivers Randy Simmrin and Calvin Sweeney will keep the de· fensc from zeroing in on the run. use is such an overwhelming favorite that no odds have been listed for the contest. Oregon also got bad news this week when de· rensive end Mel Cook and of- fensive tack IE> F red Quill an were hurt in practice. Neither of them. two of lh<' best pl eyers the Ducks have. will suit up Saturday. The Tro1ans have just one pl aye r , corn erb a c k Carte r II artwig. expected to miss the gam<.' Dodgers were sold within two hours Mon· da y m orning at about 90 Tickelron outlets throughout the city. Some fans began camping at the outlets early Sunday morn· ing LO get the tickets. But olhers began their vigils Saturday at the Dodger Stadium box office. only to learn Saturday night after the team won the Na· tional League p l ayoffs lhal tick<'L" would bo sold only al the outlets Some disgr untled people r e- cording to the News. and out- fi elder Rcgi:ic jachon added his voice lo Munson's. Ill' stated that hl', too. would not play in tonight's third game uguinst the Dodgers unless the seats were mpr c satisfactory "Others may s ay they won t play, but I mean it!" shout ed Jackson a t Yankees gener al ma nager Gabe Paul. "These tickets are a disgrace. 1 won't put on my uniform until I get better -S.eatsudl'.m not kiddin{L.. "I'll sit in the clubhouse until baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn brings me t ickets ... R4MS' PHILUPS DIES OF CANCER I NGLEWOOD · -Willia m Philhps, a full-lime member of the Los Angeles Ram~· scouting :-.taff since 1970. died of cancer Thursdar at Oanicl Free man Hospital: the Hums said. Philh p:-. \\ as58. Phillips joined the National Football Leu1:uc team ·s scoutmg !-ttaff as a pa rl·limcr an 1957. Fu n e r a l s erv i ce~ a re scheduled Saturday afternoon an Hollywood Halls Football Field Banishment Ends in Death NEW BUFFALO, Mich. lAP> Fearing another banishment frorp th<! football fields he loved. a 14·year·o ld eighth g r a d e athlete CataJly shot himself. "I guess everybody's grasping fo r reasons .... He'd be the last kid you 'd think would do that ... T om Mnter. acti11g ptlnctpal Ill New Buffalo Middle School. said after learning about the death of Wesley Piper Jr. "There were a lot of tears in the hallway this morning. I'll lell you ... it was a hard day here all day,·· MiJle r added. Police Chief Dale Sicbenmark. who doubles as a coach. said at was fear of ineligibility that caused the boy t o shoot himself. But the chief said he. too. is un- certain why Piper feared loss of eli gibility. "I can tell you pos itively. he was not off the football team through anything pertaining to the school." the chief Insisted. Miller agreed. Both men reported the boy was pulled off the football team about three weeks ago by his par ents . Sae bcnmark said that was for "home discipline" rather than anything Involving the school. But Piper was back on the learn before he killed himself. t~ey said. A sister found Piper 's body Wednesday night at his home. He had been s hot once in the chest and a small .22-caliber pistol was found beside his body. Dr. John Va la ntiej us. dep uty Berrien County medical examiner. ruled the boy's death suicide. Neither Miller nor Siebenmark could explain the liming of the boy's suicide. They s aid he had conferred with Miller about noon Wednesday. The chief said that session involved a minor dis· c1plinary problem but there was no action excepl discussion. Fans mained al the Chavez Ravine box offi ce all week, somehow hoping that Dodgers management would relent, and complnlnlng thot so few tickets out of 56,000 seats were sold to the general public. Dodgers oUiclals, unavailable for comment Thursday. s aid earlier this week that 17,000 season ticket holders got the chance to buy two tick! per game each. The rest wen fan clubs. the 24 other major eague teams and news med ia. Dodgers, NY Duel To LOS ANGELES CAP> --Tom· my John, the pitcher with tho re. built throwing arm. has every· thing going for hi m ton ight before the home folks in Dodger Stadium as Los Angeles goes after its second victory over the New York Y ankees in Game 3 of the World Series. The Yankees will go with right· hander Mike Torr ez. a 17-game 011 T\I To11iglat Cha11~b 7 All at 5 w inoer d uring the r egula r season, while the Dodger5 trot out medical e~hibit No. 1. John. whose rebuilt left arm brought Los Ange les 20 victories this year. · "If I've got a good s inker. everything will be all right.·· said Torrez. who is playing out his OP· lion and could be making his finaJ appearance as a Yankee. John is r ested and admits oilly to a little ner vousness going into the game "but not like the playorrs." Ca lm . s mil i n g a nd cooperative. the 34-year-old left· hander declared. "Sure. I'm ex- cited, but in the playoffs, I didn't know what to expect. .. Tommy suffered through four unearned runs as the sta rting pitcher in the National League C"h ampioMhl~l'tes-opener against Philadelphia but wasn't lhe loser as the Phillies won 7-5. Then J ohn came back in the fi n ale to go all the way in a 4-l victory that put Los Angeles into the World Series. "l was a little too anxious in that first game and overstrid· ing ." he said. Three )"Car s ago when the Dodgers lost to Oakland in the world champions hip set, John s uited up before the game but his left arm was in a cast. He had been 13·3 in that 1974 season when he ruptured a ligame nt in hi$ left' elbow on July 17. A tendon from bis right arm was used in reconstruction and last season Tommy John came back to baseball. That was when he was really nervous because, "I didn't know if I could do it or not.'" I lie was 10-10 in 197~ and this year led the s taff at 20·'1. John pitched for the-Chicaso While Sox from 100s-f971 4nd s ays he throws today much like he did in those younger years. A sinker ball specialist. he compares his deli very to that of Whitey Ford, the Hall of Farner who starred with the Yankees. "He looked like he was just flipping the ball until you went up to the plare," the Dodgers hurler said of Ford. "You .know, in his very last major league game, he beat me. • "We have similar pitching pat- terns. Yes. I'm pitching just the same as when l was with the White Sox. only winning more ... The 31-year ·old Torrez, who had played for St. Louis, Mon· treal. Baltimore and Oakland before being traded by the A's to New YorlLJast Amil.J ID.d tb.~t~-... whatever happens regarding bis future, he expects to enjoy pitching in the Series, providing the Dodger hitter s c90perate. The prospec t of facin~ the Dodgers, who have four hitters with 30 or more homers in Reggie Smith. Ron Cey, Steve Garvey a nd Dusty Baker, didn't appear to particularly bother Torrez:. TOMMY JOHN CHECKS TONIGHT'S STARTING LINEUP. Texas Midway Sells Chance· on Chance DALLAS <AP) Cy Young Award-winner Dean Chance Is ~till pitching. Bul as a barker on lhe midway at the State Fair of T exas, his pitch is: '\Just 50 cents to toss the rings and win a poster ... Chance. who tossed a no-hitter, st arted two All·slar games and hurled two 20-victory seasons. is on the Stale Fair midway from 8 a.m. ~til midnight each day, at·. temptmg to lure custom ers to his ring toss game. "Once you've been part of a big cheering crowd . .you never get over it," said Chance. 36. "It's like no other reeling in the world. That's one reason I'm here. J love the crowds. I just can 'l get a way from it. ''I've got a farm back in Ohio," he added. ''Someone in my hometown had a big pos ter com· p any. He wanted me to help him sell some of his posters al fairs around the country. I got into this whole thing that way." Chance now cheerfully dis· tributes posters to fairgoers who can toss a ring around the right colored pole. The kids all want posters of Sean Cassidy, Farratt Fawcett·Majors o r Elvis Presley. But there are some people who re member Dean Chance -as a pitcher and as the roommate or fellow pitche~Bo Belinskyr- "I guess I still get about a do~en ba ·eball cards ii\ the mail ~ach week a t home ftom kids · who want m e to autograph QlY card and send It back to them 1 .. said Chance, who won 20 games and the Cy Young Award in 1964 for the Los Angeles Angels. "They remember. Sometimes people recognize me on the midway ... In 1964. he led the American League with a 20-9 mark and a 1.65 e1rned run average. He went 20·14 in 1967 for the Minnesota Twlns and posted a career mark ofl28-115, wltha 2.9'le.r.a. "I retired from baseball in 1972." he recalled. "I hurt my back and 1 wasn't playing at my best any more. When I couldn't do my best, I didn't want it any more." Chance then became a boxing manager a nd once managed EarnieShavers, who recenUy lost· a title nght to world heavyweight champlon Muhammad All. "l wanled lo have a fi1bter that ' would get to a championship fight bul I had put too much money Into Shavers, I had to get out. I sUll get a percentage of his fights, however,''. Chance said as he h a nded out. poster.s to teenagers oblivious lo bis major Jeague achievements. · • A few minutes later, a middle·· aged man resisted the ha.re of the rlng toss. but. turned and stared at Dean Chance for a lone time. "Naw; ll couldn't be," he said to his wife. "But for a while there. that. fellow in the booth looked Jw•l Uke thla baseball player I used lo follow." fl4 DAILY PILOT Edison, Marilla Collide Edison High School's Chargers and the Marina Vikings, both of Huntington Beach. open the Sunset League football campaign tonight <8) at Orange Coast College. The Chargers have been instaJled as 13-point ·ravorites over a Marina team that has had difficulty with its defe nse the past two games. Injuries have taken their toll of the Vikings de· fenders. Coach Bill Workma n of Edison IS wary or the Vikings. ··Marina has a pretty doggone good football team." he says. "It has 106t three games but at the same lime. has picked up a lot or yardage, especially against ~1agnolia." "That big k"'id Greg Karman is strong and has good speed. He runs over the first two guys and then nobody seem s to be able to catch h.im. Karman has been one of the few bright spots in the Vikings a rsenal this sea son. He has pi~ked up 423 yards In four games, an average gain or 11.4 per carry. He also has scored four touchdow'ns. Coach Mike Henigan of Marina is still without the services or four lo six defensive starters and ~ays all arc on the doubtful Ii!.! tonight. . "One thing J!. certain. they did not get in a lot of practice llme even if they are able to play," l lenigan says. • f'rtday. Octot>er 1•. 1977 FOOTBALL Tars, Lions Battle in Sunset Loop Opene~ Newport Hatlbor High's host 'Sailors and t he Westminster Lions battJe tonight <8> in the premier Sunset League football opener. It's billed as a duel betw<.-en two hi,gbly-respected defensive units. although each team has ~hown potential to break a game open. Westminster leads in the 12· year series with eight wins anti has lost only once in the last six s tarts. Despite the one·sidedness of the won -l o ss co lumn . Westminster High coach 8111 Boswell agrees this is always one or the hardest hitting games . of the year. Tonight should be no excepl1on in that department with the de- renslve gems of Newport Harbor (Don Barker, Jeff Bitetij., Bob Drown. Jim Corum. Wayne Kasparek af'\d others> butting • heads with a l'llrger Westminster tileven. Newport Harbor is a one-point favorite and couch Bill Piulca or the Sailors says 10 Points will win the game. orrensi vely the threat for Newport Harbor is the arm ot quarterback Cruig Lyons and the potential of receivers Kasparek. Larry Higby and possibly Frank Ve nclik, if the )alter has ~ecovered from an 1early season IOJUry. While Newport's running game has not surfuced against mujor opposition, Westminster's of· Sea Kings, DH Tangle In Crucial • ft will bC' a must win sltuallon for both teams tonight (8) when th'C' Dana Hills Dol phins and Corona del Mar Seu Kings tangle rn a South Coast LCiiAl.lC football gJml' al San Cll'ml'lllc lf1 gh Thl• Sea l\1ngs huve been <.''>l abli:.hed as <1 o n e-point fo vontc by the Daily Pilot. Both teams camp back from n1wning South Coa!.t Lca~uc de· teat:. with a \'1ctorv la~t week. ''T hi s week WC arc l'onccnlrat1ng on mental <1lt1lt1cll'." e0<1ch Don DcGrootc 11f Duna lltl(:., M•)~ ··we know we ha\'c 10 :-top l'd~t ·~ oul!.tdc game lo\\ an "The~ ahn h~H~c :J \cry good 11uarll'rback 1n Kurt Brockman lie h:.t.'>n 't thrown a lot but when he d()('s pass. he docs it well. But th\! big thing 1s to stop their runmn~ game." ~ays DeGroote. fensive plight has been with the passing garne. Runnen Eddie Remele and Dan Abbott have had to s hare the bulk of the offense, which gives rJewport an edge ii tl)e SaHors tJon 't have to worry about an above-average aerial game. Since it is such a supPoSed de· t ensive battle JoomJng, NewPort 's kicking game could be a major fact.or. Mark Hales has kicked field goals of 42, 27 and 28 yards -and two or those were the wiMlng polnta aaa.lnst Lone Beach MlUlkan (3~) and Corona del Mar U0-7). Weatmim~r'a only loa wa1 to Millikan, 21.'1. ......,.....,......._u.._ 0.... °"'-l fl 8119111 -lllO Atlltll RT ~ tolO 200. IWrfll• AG A"'1 lOO 11j \IOllOrll C 8UtM 1•S 1'0 ~mt'(et lG Broclrnlfl"f" l'IO 1to T"°""'°" I. T Adamo ltO 200 llM!otf WA HIOll't 1U llO Corum 08 l.t'Oftt !IS 1.0 HIUllC Fil Wtl'ldrllC.k4 115 US ... ltrkll re W•td 110 1ss a- 1'1.. "•Jl)Mwl< 110 110 1<1~ Ill RT u u: L8 MU LB c-e Cl Moll J Oilers Take ·on Powerful FV Fountain Valley Hlgh's heavily favored and undefeated, Batons. , Orange County's No. 1 prep football team featuring touch· down whiz Willie Gittens. invades Sunset League rival 1 luntington Beach tonight <8>. The Barons of Fountain Valley coach Bruce Pickford are solid 23-point favorites to r ack up their fifth straight triumph behind the explosive running of Gittens. a 175-pound senior who was an All· Cl F choice in 1976, and the passing or quarterback Doug' Thompson. Gittens has averaged 9.9 yards a carry and has scored 11 touch· downs in four games. A threat to go the distance every time be touches the ball . he's scored on runs of 45. 42 and 32 yards, In ad· dition to a 19-yard pass from Thompson. Jiunlington Beach e leven ~ounters with quarterback Marco Pagoa nelU, and receiver Scott Brum17lelt, a combination that has cli c ked for fi ve touchdowns . The offens ive·minded Oile rs have scored rnore points in the first four games since the 1966 Irvine League c hampionship team, but the defense bas given up a bundle, too. Defense is Fountain Valley's basic strength. The Barons have bl anked their last three victims behind a total team effort, with Larry Budgen. Bryan Caldwell. cornerbacks Ron Padilla and Stan Sh.ibata. Wood. Freeman and a solid corps or defensive ends paving the way. "Edison will present a problem with its swarming defense and -we have <idQcd problem£ since our d e fense il> riddled by injuries.·· 111::. tounlcrpart at CdM. Dick .llurr~ !eels lh.e ~ame will be "on through mcnwl preparation Alternating al fullback have .be.en.Br.ad.WQQd. Tim Hen1B.!!lan <ind Jim Freeman -a nd they have averaged 6.3 yards per c:rack. Van Hoorebeke says the Oilers• only chance is to outscore Fountain Valley. Fountain Valley has averaged over five touchdowns per victory. -----· 0 If it comes down to a passing game. Marina's Joe Sartain has completed 23 of 44 for a .523 average and 294 yards. Edison's F r ank Seurer has thrown more. 28 of 74 complete, but his average is onlY .378. Marina would appear· to have the edge in the passing department. MMiNU,. .... ()19-M °"""" TE UIJ., llO Ito A.Ptllllor-M lE IH ,,,,...,., JOO tt• G,..... lT RO ._.,,, l'O .. o K-• NG c A,Ptkllorne llO JQS T<Kw AT Lv c;,... "' 170 M.Pt_,,.,.ne AE LT T•ur JOS llS Kl119 LB SE Tr\lllllo us l'O ._.,. l8 08 s..ulft Ill llO c.w-ca TB Aoot llO 1.0 ~ c a 1'8 K.rl'TIM l&s 165 T!wrp SS Fl SCln"9tf' IU us o.,_ FS ·--u.... on-DoMftw T£ __.. JOI HS B.,,. 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A loss tonight would make Laguna Beach 0.3 in league, cutting out any re~c hope of finishing among the top three teams in the final standings -a necessity to earn a playoffs bid. Both tea ms have offensive guns with Laguna Beach perhap:. given an edge on defense. A major st:'tback 1s the continued loss of 200-pound fullback John :\1 iller. now apparently nut for the ~e<ir ufter re-injuring hrs knee in pra<:l1ct.• Tut.>'>da~ Abo m1sJ>1ng from the Lagum.1 Beach attack is starting tackle and dcfe nsl\·e C'nd Kurt Ford <broken nb:.1 What IS left or the Laguna Beach attack 1-; all pur pose s tandout Hill Gompf. speedster Mall McCullough etnd receivers J a mie Plummer and Norman Anderson. Gompf has completed 26 of 53 passes for 424 yards and run for 188 yards in 57 <'arries und a touchdown. McCullough has TD runs of 6.1. 46 and one yards Irvine Foe-Potent Mission V1eJo has had its share <l f injuries, t oo. however. Quarterback Scott Spear Cankle1 and runner Ala n Parker <th.igh J a re not c x pcctcd to see ac lion. Still , the D1ablos have a tough running 11ame with Mike Ochou paving the way with a 5.3 yards per carry a\eragc. including two TD run)o. BOULDER CITY. Nevada -If frvine High expects to notch its second victory of the young football season. it will have to fi nd some way lo stop the potent offensive combination of Boulder City <Nevada > High's Kirk Hasen and Jay Booth. I lasen was statistically the No. 1 prep quarterback in Nevada last season as a junior , and Booth is a slotback who ca.n do just a bout anything, according to Irvine coach Chuck Sorcabal, who has been seen Boulder City's game films lrvin'e m akes the long journey to Boulder City Saturday for an 8 p.m. game. Irvine players will spend the night in the homes of their opposing player s and return Sunday. Behind the passing of 6·3. 185-pound Hasen. Boulder Ci ty rolled to a 50-14 victory over M Army-Navy of Carls bad last week. Coach Evan Wilson has '>O much confidence in Hasen that he lets him call his own plar.- The Eagles run a pro-set ofren:-.c. with Booth as the p r imary receiver and one of the principal ballcarriers. Lasl season Boulder Caty qualified for its state playorrs with a 7-3record and advanced to the championship game before losing. So far this season the Eagles are 3·1. Boulder City has had two routs this season, 36·0 over Page Hi gh of Arizona and the drubbing of Army-Navy. The loss was a squeaker. 18-14, to Mohave Hlg" of Arizona, and the Eagles won a .. close game in their opener. 7-6. over Basic High of Henderson, Nevada. Others m the balanced running gum<.• includes Mitch !loop «5.1 uvcrag<.'! and Bob Casper 18 3 Jvera~c 1 ""'" .... Vl•I• Sl•r11119 LI ....... Ot-Oeteft• ~l h, • .,,.. ... ou t•O 01t"'" IH .-.~"'"\ ....... no 110 Htinnf'\\4"'Y RG M"t Oon••<J lllO "' o •• ,.,.,.,. (. f1.1t ,.) 1qo Nf'l\iOO l.Ci W.,•h llO llO O<ho.l LT s. ..... ,,,,,,..,O! •10 It) C"'°rnlfu<o tr ':lotrdwlh•r '" l•S-ao th0<.•f11,w1 lllO US L•t<>•• F 11 HO()f> I•\ •SS a-. I 8 Cl(hM llO 10 R<>ot•~ WR l,ioW'lo,., Ill 18S l:lr•w" y Lo,...,. euo SIArlt,..1.tNut>• Oll•n•t ~\ J•turtul\t'r L f Coor LV Oow l (,,Ot>I• Rv Pit."' RT W•lll rt (t"'" 08 Crome~ r o MtC.vllOUQn re ... , . .,.. 1-L A.-non l ''° ,., '"' l'I') I~) ,.,, I&, 1~ 100 16(1 1a O.t•n" t•l Wa1t1 1\1\1 CrhUff• 1'$ f'1lu l'IO 8tt•lfty J~) C.0.•• "e Gompl 16'1 M,f (..1,ttOUQf\ !SS ""''"°'' llO PlumffWr IU C•ark 110 Rou-.~oson ..... ~ ... :~it . .. "' . .... . .. -~ I I LI N(, RI Rl lt< Lil R tit Ct< ~ l E l T r.c:. RI "l Lil lll Ck (.II s~. ~ ~ It • / The intelli9ent alternative. NOW TAKING ORDERS FOR 1978 320i's and 530i's IN NEWPOR'I lJEACH Roy Carver BMW I S40 JAMBOREE RO., NEWPORT CENTER NEWPORT BEACH, CA. 92660 714-640-6444 LEASE or BUY FROM DICK MILLER MOTORS a a so 120 W. WARMEI, SANTA AMA 714/557-2132 "l>unu ll tll s hos a well balanced teum with the defense ;cs ~""d a~ thl· off1•n'>c They will be lr) rng extra hard to win th•~ one because rt 's a lso t heir homecoming.·· When the Barons go lo the air Thompson has a wealth of receivers although flanker Tim Holmes will be missing from the game with a fractured collar bone. Coach Dave Van Hoorebeke's llO 1•) ltf 200 190 190 20S t10 110 IU MO The Sea Kings have had some problems w\th the flu. Court Bradford will not start at tackle for CdM beeause of the bug and several other changes. have been made by Morris in the s tarting lineups. John Duvis replaces Bradford while Eric Raff will go both ways. He will be at r ight guard on offense and middle guard on defense. • Eagles Duel Saints Bratten Wary of Santa Ana If the Dolphins are forced to revert to a passing game. 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Christian and Huntington Beach's Liberty Christian arc on the road. HVC 10 1 I tangles with llNitagc ll\nahe1m ) Jligh at Chapman ColleJi(c in an 8 o'clock 11ff. while Liberty Chrlnian. which has demolished ils last two foes by a combined score of 107-8, is at Ontario's Galvin Park 17·30> to duel Calvary Baptist I La Verne) in Christian League <1ction Despite the fact that Santa Ana H1gb's football team has been 1 shut out twice and carries a 1-3 record, Estancia High <Costa Mesa > coach• Jim Br atten is wary. Tonight Bratte n leads Estancia against the Saints in a 7:30 Century League game in the Santa Ana Bowl. "They have a potentiaJJy explosive offense." Bratten in s ists. "T h ey 've moved the ball well against som e bigg~r teams, but t.urnovers have hurt them." Santa Ana was 1·7·1 last season and Its only victory this year was a 20-14 game against Vista Wgb of San Diego. The. Saints Jost to Buena Park, 14·0, Villa Park, 19.0.. and Foothill o! Santa Ana. ~~ -l Estancia, 19ea.nwh1le, has gone J undefeated in four games. but the Eagles' combined marg\n of victory in the last two is just four points. "We've got to stop their outside running game. They run a lot or sweeps and options." Bratten says. "They may be as good as El Modena <O range) on of- fense." Estancia had a tough time with El ModerT'a, needing a touchdown in the final two minutes to pull out a 21·19 victory. . Santa Ana e mploys dual q·u art er backs i n Jerr y Wallbridge and Ken Cast, who alternate each series or downs. The Saints use ~ veer offense but 8eve moner when in four games they've crossed the goaJ line onl,y three times. Estancia quarterback Dave • Jeranko has equalled the eotire Santa Ana scorinc output bhnselt with three touchdown runs this season, and he's pused for three more scores. Halfback Andy Domingua is th e Eagles• mos t potent ballcarrier wU.h a. 4 . .f yards-per- carry average. i-.~ has 233 yards• on 53carries. ••8111CWI IW'lllieU-.. CMtlilM 0..- TE T. C1wnP 11l l'IO l.Aflfl1ef OT 8«lllOr 221 :!Of 00\llNl<o OG °"'"""'o JO) ,(I SI'*' c cr-.11 1u Its w1111-oo Pl.wnlol 1'1S 1• Yocum OT Wlll!Mns l&S • 1t0 M. C- SE M. camo ltl 1"5 Oinlff 08 J .. IMo 00 00 Pint ...... HI H991ft 10 1•1 H ..... 1 •H 8 Oolfl!llOUtt 1.$ US Mof>lllftl Fl H~I 11S 11t ..... Area Calendar ~rlOdUI 01! or OG OG g~ LB 1..8 CB -ca _.$ 1'00111911-Sero Ci.l'ltnl• "' Cott. MeM et 0.eftQe Cont Coll ... ltl. ,,,,..,. ., ~ Clly, Nev-tel,~ Wffl Collf'llt v• LA Soul- •I S.rn Hith 17 JOI, s..i.tl9N<• •I lt .... •SIO. 11 JOI. W•l•r ~Oll• ~... N-Pctrl H¥1M>r. UniY .. \llV-£1 TOf'O•l St.ntw<l t_,..,, E.J-<i•, o. ... Hllll, GOlla MU I end £d1>011 IL Newport H-JV,_,., P~ .. Goldt<I We\I Got-Ill a.rn..I, UC,,..,,. •t UQA tit e.m.I. Sou ... -s.n.1 Moftl<• •I Goldttt Wesl Olll- 111 1,m.1. Soullterro CAl•IOfTll• Cellf9' Ill~­ Pe<lllC llp m.I Cron Countr,.-orenee CO<IMI' p,._ c...,.,_ PlctnWP& M UC l"'lfle IC.I• Mew, ~, H••bor. H11<1llnqton BffOI. Edl1on, Fountalft v.11.,,, Sert c~m•. un1ve...iw. Mlllf' °"'· COf'ClfMI Clel Mor, El Toto-(lphtr-'Velleyl t • m. ~ Wwtl COi••· OrM!te CN• C.011..-•nd SecldletliK-Coll191 .ft COll1!91 of Ille canyons ln•ll1ti-1. ~cut With• j ltlcCullocli ••After going to thrM dNltrshlpt to purch1N my n.w Lfncofn, I got the bMt t,..tm9nt at John10n & Son." HAROLD E. CLIFF Anaheim •Orange County •s oldest Ltncoln·Mercury Dealerahlp .JOHNSON A SON Mf '11 UIH ( \I''" 2626 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Mesa • l540·5630 MAC11Q • FOOTBALL I MISCELLANY . -Friday, October 14, 1977 DAILY PILOT •4 ft Worst B e's Seen T a ngleatMV .. San Diego Officials Rapped by Tucker Swordsmen Tabbed O ve r MD Tonight El Toro, Uni Bid To Stay in Race . .. Orange County football of. flclals have taken a lot of abuse over the yeurs for b e ing "homers", but San Diego refs may have grabbed the No. l spot after last Saturday's Orange Coast game. OCC WllS assessed 186 yards inA penalties in a 20·20 tie with Grossmont while the Griffins were nailed for 90 yards. And OCC coach Dick Tucker wasn 't exactly happy with the situation. "It was the worst officiating I've ever seen. r all my years of I.. coaching l've never had a team of m in e with 186 yards in penalties. I thought at the time the of(iciaUng was bad. but I wanted lo see the lil ms. And after watching them, we really got jobbed three or four limes," says Tucker. "They even kicked one or our guys out fo r fighting and he didn't touch the Grossmont kid.·· It's not the first time San Diego omcials have be<in criticized. And the basketball refs are just as bad as the football oflidaJs. So wbat is to be done? because we have good guards. R<1y Orgill is a bl·ltcr overall player, but he's not the shooter Vogelsang is.·· <Vogelsang says he's tired of playing baskctbull a nd wants to sit out a year.> From Saddlcback basketb11ll coach Bill Mulllf{an: "We have -g reat potential thi:. coming scuson. mainly because wt!'re so quick and we have much better board strength." Fro m Santa Ana College football coach Howard Black: "There's not a weak team in U1e South Coast Confer ence. l think it's the toughest m the stale." (The Metropolitan Conference schools should be ~etting a good laugh over that one. The Metro record a~a1nst South Coast teams 1s6·l this year. 1 SKIPPIN' AROl..iND Aflt.'r five football games. OCC's lop rus her is Faye Weathers with 164 yards. That's right! 164 yards ... former Huntington Beach Hi gh long dis t a nce runne r Robert Angel will compete for Golden West next track season. He's a truns fer from Indiana University ... Dennis Ferrell is lhe new s ports information director at Saddleback College. Bob Newman finally has come out of his s hell. The lJC lrv1nt• crew coach got married recenll) TOM FRENCH Cost a Mesa Own Ene1ny -F r e n ch Dt>sp1tc running and passing 1p and down the field. Costa "es a High's Mus tangs are 1truggling as they prepare for -iaturday night 's (8) South Coast ... eague football conflict with San ..:1cm cntc ut Or a n ge Coast .:ollege. '"We ha\'C s imply been our own .vor!'.>t enemy," sa ys coach Tom ~'r cn ch '"Wc "n• not making ·xcu.ses a nd none or us like what \as been happening But if we ire to do anythmg this year we ire going to h ave l o s to p SANTA FE SPRINGS A porous defense thal has given up 91 points in the last two siam es 1s of concern for Maler Dci High Although this is onJy the third El Toro is l-1 and rated a slight tSanta Ana > foot ball coach gume of the South Coast League favorile todefcat University. W aync Cochrun a s the Monat'chs football campaign, coa ches at El Injuries have played a factor in tangle with No. l·rated St. Paul Toro and Un ive r s ity High the fortunes of each team. tonight (8) in opening Angelus (Irvine) cons ide r tonigh t 's Univers ity is playing without No. Lcagucuction,herc. meeUng(8>atMissionViejo Kigh J quurlerbac k John Davis, St. Paul ls a l4·polnt favoritc u must-win situation. sidelined with a broke n thumb. alter posting four imnressive "Whoever wins the Utle will Davis has been replaced by victories including u 27-0 shutout Io s e two games.·· s u y s converted running back David ofllueneme las twcek. University coach Dick Roche. Langmade, who hims e lf is "We're down u little b1l 1:1nd "Anyone can beat anyone in this recovering from a sprained you can't be down to play a team league." ankle. The ankle s prain b as thecaliberof St. Paul,"Cochrun Universityhasalreadylosttwo hampered his placekickin g caays. "They don't look real fancy games. By Roche's reasoning. chores but he cont.inues to fill i.n but all of u sudden. they have University must win the rest to ably al quarterback . Roche says three t ouchdowns befor e keepitslitle hopesalive. his avrulabllity as a kicker for ha lftime and it's all over." "This is a i:eal critical game tonight's game is questionable. Marijon Ancich, coach or the ror us," echoes El Toro coach El Toro is goin g wit hout• St. Paul Swordsmen. s ays Mater Phil Brown. "We need to win to injured linebacker Rory Smith,. Dei has had some bad breaks in s tay in content.ion... Tailback lleetor Avella h as a hip its last two outings to account for bruise bul should be able to pJay, the hig h scores or its opponents. accordlng to Brown. ' "Mater Dci is a traditional V JI b U v..1 .. "'ivswnu•Li-. rival for US," he Says. "1 'm Sure 0 ey a Rl Tlll~..,M 1~) 9'S Enot1W> they will be rl!ady for the ~ame." Hr Enq,..,, 19.I its HUOfth On paper, it would appear that G111Ls~~~;~:.;•4LL RG PoHo•ro 100 ,.., c.u.,,.n St. Paul will blast the Monarchs Et 10.00.1 o ..... Hill\ 1).3.1.111 ~G ~~(M(io• :~ ~ ~~:.,, out o f th e s tadium . The cor-oe1 M.1roe1M1H1011V1<t10 1s..1~11 LT H~\ 19> 11.1 e.1ev d h d r t d St L~unalle...,,ae1untvt™ty 1s.1, 1s.10. LE H•r1 ••l 1u SC"'oedff Swor smen ave e e1:1 e s.nc1eo-1•0o1.~1.,,,.•w 11-1s,1i...,1~1> 08 L<or19nwc111 , .. '"° l••Olv•r Louis High (Ha waii >. 15·7, N-P0r1H•rbOrdrlMar1,,.1s.1.1w. FB RodQtn 11.1 , .. ~ Pioneer, 26-6, LB Poly, 53·14 and Hunllnvton IMKh .,., Founteln V•U•v MS. H8 ZalOiver l'O 11S "~· 1.l·w'0.·,!~~.1~.._.. Eois-i''· 1, •. FL 8"'119f' " Ho 1ss crw Hueneme, 2'7·0. u''"'• ~ -· -· ,.. TJ EITef'tSCM11t19u ....... OE Ill QC L.C; LT 0£ , LB CB CB • SS S I M.-... o.i u... f$UlnC.i•Clel. Tustin IS.9, IS.12. OI-~ OfleftM -M OCNnsldedtfC<lptJlr-V•ll•v ts.I, ls.I. 'TE DI'~· t10 tU Bel'ff OE SE llne. ,.., ?IS TllO<l'~>•ir11 LT JUNIOR VAIHITY RT ~s I~ 2lS Hallldily OT LT l Gr..ty IU ?OS GI ... '°" Lv EtToroo.10.,,.Hill•IS.ll,IH. RG MCC.rthy i.s ''°Pint• NG LG •no•.,,, no tlS --1 RG Coron.tttelM.lrO.IMlnlotlvi.101s-..1~· c HlqglnllOlll<lm 110 1'0 H ... 5 OT c l>ChHPtr t'IO 1•S Toe>! Rf t.ll9Ul\ll.-<11ClelUhtY•rtl1y»-0, IH lG PINI~ llO 115 Semel-OE RG DonMnouer '"° .11s S.v-LB Gost ... Ms•oe•.s.r>Ct;>tnetltt l).13,•·•S. ·~/ LT MllC .... 11 110 110 Oo<-LB RT c Gr.Oy I'S la.\ 11.tquerflo LR "'-"°" Harto«lc!I Merll\a tW, IS J WR Gourdlrw 1111 110 A ~·· L8 ~E WOOd tllO 190 ()t'IOn LO HunUrwaton IH.t<na.t Fount••" V•ltey IS.I IS-. OU C,I~ tlO HS Sr_., CB ' Qll 0 ...,.,. tlO •O S<,_rt LU E01'4n0tl Wntmll\) ... 154. IS.tl ~8 Ori"" tlO 1.0 W•r-CB Rb 0 Gonte•ft I•) t.O M<Go...... (ti f.s~··--111>1111IS.12,11.u re ·~·· l)S 1.0 p ~·· FS RU OO!ltt~r •IO 110 Sll•tl<b ce \I t).11. 1$ 1).1 FL ~&._ 1-i.s J4k-SS Fl Oretbll 1.0 tM> AQulr"'_; ___ !>.;__ __ <><_•-__ o.i_c.po_~_''-""°-•-"-'Y __ • _· _. _____ .... _____ -______ _ "I realJy don't know." says Tucker. "Everyone agrees that -~·-_:.,..e-offiCiaU-ng <town there tsn"t- in the backyard of OCC crew menlor Dave Grant. .. Golden West .baseball coach Fred H oo v e r has 22 pitching candidates. . . Tea ms competing m--Qee's ~ttnrll tourney in early December include: Santa Rosa. Saddleback. Fullerton. Imperial Valley. Phoeni-<. Lo!> A n g e I e s C: C a n d L 1\ Sou thwest. fo r mer OCC baskelball !-.landoul Phil Bolde n "ill play for UC" Irvine this season .... uc r 's hom e cage games will start at 7: 30. u m b I i n g a n d b e i n g Gauchos ntercepled." The Mustangs have lost a .\<ho pping 1 L fwnb!e.s_ ~ ...12_ Sink Foe ntl'rcept1ons in four games. Baghn11r do E si Av by • a . be was woul "1 that new,. IOMI she I took.I ever: Tl abolJ £clc-s for tl the MJU4 bad Viiol ainJd two aettl« !!cl tbe b ta tu very good, but 1 don 'l know what the solution is." QUOTABLE QUOTES from OCC basketball coach Tandy Glll1s: "The loss of Bob t •ogelsang will take a lot of of fense out of our lineup. but it d oesn ·t bother me loo much Cougars Struggle GWC Foe Winless LOS ANGELES LA 'You can't have 23 turnovers in our ~a mes and expect to win.·· .ay<1 French ·Even when "l' !'.>Cored on \11ss1on V1e10. 1l was on a play m Nh1ch we fumbled , but picked the Ja il up This 1s m y firs t !X pcr1 e n cc w ith s uc h a u tuation... . Saturday the Mustangs must wercome their mistakes and do 1t aga ins t an unbeaten eleven. :ian Clemente is 4·0 for the year and with a one.gam e bulge ever Cost u Mesa in the s tandings. French says· "This 1s a crucial 1?amc for us. We re alize that.·· Jeff Wilson scored four goals and handed off two a ssists l o ll!ad S ad· dlcbaak Collegl' to a crudul 12·8 Mission Con ference water polo vlc- tor y over Ch aCCey ul home Thursday. The Gauchos were up 9 .5 enterin g the final .frame before the visitors !'.>Cored a pair of quick goals to cut t he deficit in h alf. But Dixon Hin · derockcr came up with onl• or his two steals und passt.'<i orf to Jeff M yer~ Fabulous 40' Bodega· Now on Display Newport Pacific · 2200 West Coast Highway Newport Beach 645-3880. Southwest College has won only two of 34 Southern California Conference football umes m the last five plus seasons -and the record doesn't figure to Improve Saturday night. 500 yards already, but also ha.-. quite a few interceptions. "fl e'.s thrown the ball well at times. but interceptions have hurt him and that's the s i gn of a young quarterback," says Mims French sa ys San Clem ente poses a special problem in that the SC backs ure more skilled than 10 '76 when Mes a ek~ out a for a ~o;.al that put the ----------------------------------gamcaw:iy 14· 13 victory f Scott Whitloek added three goals a nd two as- sists. That's when the Cougars host Golden West College at Serra High in Gardena. Southwest, which has never b ad a winning season, is 0-S thus far -but has fallen to three teams that are s lill undefeated. Mims, in his second season at Southwest a fter four years as an assistant at Washington Stale. says his defense has played well. but the offense has lacked consistency. "San Clemente's quickness 1s better this year and with Nate Rowsey gettm~ healthy, it bas a back of all-league caliber . "Our goal is to stop their running game. They can throw the ball, but it's the running game thot you must contain. llead coach Flip Darr !')aid it was Saddleback 's be!')t performance in con· rerence play this season. The Gauchos are now 3·2 in Mission action and 11·9 overall. "Yes. we've played a hell or a schedule."• s ays Cougars coach Ron Mims. "But our big problem has been maturity. We have some talent. but we've very, very young." "Our o ffense h as been s poradic. We ha\·c a young of· fensive line and we haven't been a ble to run l h e ball with consistency. And we haven't been able to throw the ball like we should." says Mims. "San Clementc·s quickness on defense concerns us. but we feel we m a t c h u p fairl y w e ll physically with San Clemente." With a dozen interceptions a lready. will the Mus tangs change unythmg? "No," says French. ··we'll s till play our game lind put the ball in the air 25 S addle back has a crucial gume next Thur s day again s t R iverside. second ln the conference at 4· l behind unbeaten Palo mar. ,,_.."~ C.Nfl•V I t J J-I Leading that lis t of talent is freshman quarterback Sam King' (6·2. 185). He's thrown for over Southwest's leading rusher is Andrell Cirtley, 1.1 5·9, 170-pound S«ldl-k J 4 7 J-IJ !>t100l~ll•<k ~orlnq-Wthon •. Wh1tlo<k l, Sc.of,,_ 1, Hl..-odt.tr l. tail badt. CM R11nners Tabbed The county's top 10 cross country teams are entered in the Orange County Invitational this Saturday at UC Irvine with Costa Mesa High once again favored to c apture team honors. The Mustangs, defending CIF 3·A champions and ranked No. 1 this year In both t.he Cl F 4-A and Orange County polls, have already notched team titles at two major invitationals on successive weekends. A total or 43 schools are entered in Saturday's event which also features eight of the top 10 girls teams. Missing will be Edison <Huntington Beach> High. the No. l ranked team in the girls division. Freshman races begin at 8:30 in the Central Quad at UCI with vanity races scheduled to start at 10 :30 and the first girls race at 1. rn all. nine boys races and three girls rac~ will be conducted. Costa Mesa. which is in the A heat, will be running against s ix other area schools in the 14·team race -Lag!.lna Beach, Huntington Beach. University <Irvine), Newport Harbor. Estancia I Costa Mesa ) and Capistrano Valley. SAVE NOW ALL 1971 MOIBS ARE HEIE AND RIADY FOi IMMIDIA Tl D VERY 'L••H & Commerc/4 S•I•• .. Calf ua ·We'll ComeTo You ... ..._"W"._..,.. Cal Iota ll(ely 6125 MANCHESTIR . s.ta .... Pwy ... Art.sic ... bf. .... IUEHA PAb 5'22-2881 El TOltO 768-0593 times." 4 Pl Y ~OL YESTER WllhW ... A78-l 3 •••••• 520.95 878-13 ••.•.••. 521 .95 C7S.l 3 •.••.. 522.95 E78-14 •••••••• $24.95 F28·14 ••••.••• 525.95 G78-14 •...•• 526.95 H78-14 ....•• 528.95 G78-15 ••.•.• 527.95 H7S.l 5 •..••• S28.95 L78-15 •••••••• 529.95 Pl14F( r 1 l•to:IOI LUBE & OIL SPECIAL Includes $'199 Car Lube 011 Filler UoTo i.oc.c. .. 50ts 01 ~ 4 °""* C¥• MOit • c,t.. C.. $.2US MOit. c,c. c ... J )4.tl FRONT END SPECIAL I n c I u des C Of" p I e t e A"llgnment and Frtnt Wheel Balancing. SJQ99 STEEL IEL TED RADIAL WHITIWAU.S BR7S.l 3 •••••• 531 .95 ER7S.l 4 •••••• 535.95 FR7S.14 •••••• 537.95 GR78-l 4 •.•••• 539.95 HR78-l 4 ••••.• 541 .95 GR78-l 5 •.•..• 539.95 HR78-15 •....• $42.95 JR78-l 5 •••••• 544.95 LR78-l 5 •••••• 5 46.95 VINYL ROOF SPECIAL • Full Roof • Choice of Colors • Oomoatlc and Foreign Cars Al&..w .A• ~4CJ95 u-•.-....1 4WI&. .... l&IHI ~: S2695 1~•1111-~-"-""" bllllflnoa, "'"' -~ --'""'"' '""' ~. ~ -cyf. -· "°"""" ..., ""-11..s --(Oonolitlanl -ltl"9J YOUMSAV-..11 ....,.._,., ... IXHAUIT IYSTIMS ~llme A JIOUleN IAMI DAT !MST.ALLA . w. oc:c.,,t 2860 Modtt Chenr lfTWUN 5 4 Q o I 7 Q HAalOa ILVO lenlt of A~co ADA.MC. & IAllEll • COSTA Ml~ U11t001 1' Cardo . ... Ada• CuahJonaitt j1 a Potyeater. bf:as pl)! Litt that'• built 10 be cool-running mile after mile. And it'• on sak at parti- dpetiog Chevron. Stations now throu.gb O ctober 31st. Budget temu available on your Che\'r'On National Travel Card. BLACK.SIDEWALLS Siu S.i.Pmtt Ftd.Rx. lU .... 11 2US Ul Me.IS UM l.U A111·1S , .... 1.12 811-11 u.• I.a C711°IJ 2U$ l.t7 871°14 %7.U l.M c;n.)4 28.U 2.11 B71·H it.ts us P71·1t 3l.t0 2.37 078·14 31.15 2.51 aa..u 2U5 1.77 ...... ., 28.00 1.81 071-15 SUS I.II WHITE SIDEWALLS Siu s.i. Ptfnt Fell.Ea.TU. .... 11 :n.u l.U .... ii u.u l.U A1t·ll n.J5 1.72 1111·13 .... l.U C7l0 IS •M U7 1'71·•• •. u l.M C'lt·" 11."9 Z.11 1i7l.14 22.?t ua m-1• SS.N U7 G'1·14 -ua H7'·14 ,, ... UJ Hf.IJ UM 1.17 M0-151. JIM 1.81 f'l'S·ll ».IS JM r.78·11 ..... UI 1171·1& JU5 L'lt na.1s ..... UI l 78·U 4Ue ... ChiVfon Stations - •· \ • .. DAIL. Y PILOT Fflday. October 14, 1977 CROSS COUNTRY I W~TER POLO I MISCt!l.t.;.AN.f MissiOn .. , Wallops Appel Nips Anderson; Hot 63 1. Barons Outrun Marina Scored . Laguna The number of un- beaten teams in the South Coas t Le ague water polo s tandings is now three. Laguna Beach High, one of four teams to win their opening pair of l e a g.u e e n c o u n le r s . dropped by the wayside ·Thursday as Mission Viejo s cored an 11-4 vie tory over the Artists. The Diablos of coach Ken Bonaly were prob- ably the best last place league team around but have had trouble scoring goals. They seemed to solve that Thursday as Gary Bush tallied four times and Jon Peterson thrice. Mission Viejo had scored a total of seven goals in its firs t two games. Brian Appel and Foun- tain Valley High seem destined to be No. 1 on the Sunset League cross country scene this year. Appel put on a blazing finishin~ kick to over - take Marina <Huntington Beach> lhgh's Carl An· derson 1n the last 200. yards to lead the Barons to a com mcing 24-31 vic- tory over the Vikings in a ballle between two or the top 10 Oran~c County prep harrier squads i'' o u n t a i n V a 11 e y . ranked second in the county, went 1·4·5-6-8 to defeat the eighth-ranked Vikings. Appel, third i n the league finals a year ugo, led most of the race until .o\n<lerson overtook him at thczl~mark: ' • C-•IMM tn> 1>)1 oa .. Hillt I. lil.lllsat.et (Cl IS l), 2. c;.erk•n ICI 1S.•I; l. Meuv11t11 tOlil H SJ • C~MI tCI IS 59. S. R•yno14> tOh I 16;02; 6 Jtottt'10n IOHI 16 17, 1 S<OCl9 ICI t• 27, I . Gell•Ql\•r IC I 16 JI; • GarOM lOlil 16 SI. 10 JOlln-tOHI 1' Sf. JUNIOR V.AllSIT'I' Unlvenoly llS) tOJ El Toro I Ii-< IUI II Oli, 2 Crumley IUI ,, 16, J. Steroc:n IU) 11 ''· • Bov•• ti.JI II Jl corene .. I ~· IUI t•J I 0•1\,J Hiii• t P•r'°M ICI 11 .. ~ K••n t(j 11 01. l z.1.-.•1 lCI 1• 11; 4. Fulle< •Cl II.IS WHlml1ttter IJll IH I H1inll1ttlt1t llncft t (;rllhll IWI I• 11 ) Pofrt4' IWI lb JS J KnoQlll (li!sl ti• JV,~. tJo)n.1• 1H&l1' 0 l'lft V•llev 11111•11 M4toftt t Tlllb<._,11 11' I 16 Jil, 7 St1'10w rF) )b •1. 3 Hcr"""'cla' tF I f6· ..... (oM..cl IFI t• i.. Edi-ltSI (fOl Nt•port "°'"°r 1 "'"°' IEl II 56, I Al><lv 1E l l& lO J Korrie> 1EJ 11 ~. ~. Smvt/WI 1El II "6 ~ha<llWMll>yl-lt ~PHOMOME Unlv•n••Y IUI ,.,, El Toro I !Mlltff IVI 10 lO 2 J .. k\On IUI 10 41 l 0..1,.,11 1\J) 10 H. • Oowo IUI 11 Got, S. !>llwarl IUI II O~. b Smotf\ tVI II' 11. CoroMdellllWr IUI t .. 10¥•"'°' I w,. lCI II 10, 1 \.•Qhl IC I II IS J. Moon ICI II 11 • B•l•lle IC I II 18, ~ McGill tCI II 4J 6 Moller tCI ttd M1u1onv .. 10 (UI (Ml l•t. llH<ll , !Molls IMI I) to"°· I \/trt llil 1o·;s, 3 Hays IMI ti 01. 4 l.Mder IM) 11 11, S Mot,.11411 IM) ll.2f, •· J.Ofle IMI 11 33 ~e t.8) l»I flA. Vallay 1 Ptl<A lf'l 1':•1; t. Jorgenntn !M l 11,2;; 3. Corr IMI 11:JJ, • O•verc>Ort IMi 11 .O; s Zl•lrolno IMI t1 O : •. Wllltf I Ml 17: ... 'W9'1m1Mltt' (111111) HWlllfttl°" 9ee<" I Clf'lel tWl It .;J, 2 l'lU,,....cMl IH81 II OS; 3. Mllflwer (WI t7 ~ ... G1be noon IHBI I/, b , ). Brcckl~y CMBI 17 29;6 Hubbell IW) 17•JS 1.41-Ct•I (4'1 HewPorlHlW'llor t s.nderl IE 118.0.; 7. Btrnfrd IE' 18 .07. 3. Tomnlc ti;) Ii l t : • H cu°""llerQ tE l 11 0 , ). Fr•"'-'"' tl'IH) II 5', a. D<Aolq IE 119 O'I FRl.SHMAH Huftllll!llOll a. .. " WOii bY I Oriti I. EIT .... ICltieile<llOUftivt~tw CoroN Ciel Mer lUI (311De"e14111' t rccnr IOtil 11 2'1; 1. COlte \Cl 11 3'1; l . llndell ICI tt ... 4. ll•uollan tOHl 11 S4 S. Mar911lltt tCI 11 21, •. lrolor CC> u.11. AlllnioftVlejo tl11 UI) u._ k.K" I M•o .. y ™' II II 1 &•MflOrd IL I It 1•. 3. Eg ... 1\.1 II "°· • w1111., !Ml It.AS. $. M~l"ll \LI I? 1S o ~oreo tMJ 12•11. MatlM 121) (3') Hft. Valloy ' Pl•ll IMI 12 O'I. 1 \.op on IMI t1 lS l L-.111t tl"I 12 ti • Sll•Pma 1rt ll " s. Beonwn IMI 11 ,q •• 8K" IF l 11 14. EdlWI 1241133) Newpor1 Harller t 8utl~• •El II 38 1 Wol .. •lO" •E l It 49 1 8<'rty tNMI II~ • Vo1>S•<"'e INH) 11 °'· S. lumor INHI u O'I, 6 1/1911 tlol12 10. ByCood SAN ANTONIO, Tex. <AP> -A rested and re- laxed Charles Coody took a OM-stroke lead in· to today's second round of the SlS0.000 T exas Open golf tournamenl after lcisurelv fashion· ing a near course-r(!cord f.:1 over the openang llf hQ1es. •·1 didn'lexpect to play very well at :.ill," said the lanky Coody, a former Masters chumpion "I ha ve n't pl.;i ycd in a tourname nt in about three weeks and l tend to b e e rrati c a ft e r a layoff." Coody, playing on the :>ame cours<.• where he won the Texas Amateur Champ1ons h1p 18 years ugo, s ank two 40-foot putts for birdies en route to his s parkling seven· under-par round Thuri.· day. Once again the defe nse was outstand ing . Andy Kontrimas had 10 sa ves in the goal for the Diablos, who held high- s cor ing University to just five goals two weeks ago and had Costa Mes a down 6-4 in overtime lai,t week before losing 7·6 After falling 15 yards behind , Appel m ade his move wi th a quarte r mile to J:O, catching An· dcrson JUSt before they made lhe final turn on the plateau al Huntington Central Park and putting on a burst of speed to win in 15.04. Anderson was clocked in 15:08. "I d1dn"t know ho\~ close he was," Appe l s aid. "I didn't feel like looking." Girls' Tennis, Cross Country "Naturally I putted pretty well . but other than the two long putts, 1 had the ball pretty close to the hole a ll day ... he said. Coody's 63 was one .... hot s hy of the course· record 62 set a year ago hy Jim Barker , now .! rookie on the pro tour Corona del Mar ran its league record to 3-0 by beating Dana Hills 9·6 \\'ith nine player$ scor- ing. The Sea Kings had a _tou~ dcf~se, allowing no goals m the i.econd half. VARSITY S<Of'•llwOIN.U.t \.a Quonl;I 1 0 I I ( M4'nlonQlon 8uc:n 1 • 1 • 11 Huflt ln9ton Betel! scorono Moor-I, T~nner. Mc:N•'""' l. 0 Afte»ttn JUNIO" VA"SIT'f S<-llyO...r1~ L.eo .. ont• o o o o-o Huntl"91on ISffc:ll • 1 I J 11 Hunt1nt,1ton &e.ic1t S<onnq J..,,.,, Pep1>9• s. WOHIWtll s. So .. 1 •• H•n ,, PIM'11SS, HUQl>esl "ROSH·toPH SU....., 0.0..u.t UQvlnl• l 4 1 J ll Hunllf1Qtot1 Be"'" I O l 1-s Huntln9101t 8••crf\ HOr ln9 - 011tnonu, fledl..on, R AnOfllln, ' ~Ylll••t. VARSITY O•MH'lls J J 0 O-• CllM 1 J 2 1-• Oen• Hiii' scor 1n9-B••mtf\, Wolli.tnl, Miloscl\ Tw-y 1, Vemev COM ICDr'l"O Ptoer, N.Uet. Jenkoni. W•lker. Kr-I. Sliva. Turknette Hewbro. J. Piper. JUHIOtl VA91SIT'f C-... --~lorte1t. P910614-SOPH Sat'e.., 0Mr1ert O•nt M•llS 0 I 0 0-t CoM 2 I • J-11 O•nt Hills SC-CM'lnQ-S.U.-r~ Com $COrl1>9-Cl•I•• Knowlton. Beron, Br~. Ceol"'9, Perelsteon, 8110 1 Cop91-. MCGC>wm, Fo,..11. VAllSITY "-..,0...W-. Eol-. 2 o 2 S • Mtrlnt 0 1 2 0-J Mtrlna sc:orln9-Rownbe r9 2. Hu..... Edlion S<Of'•"9 -5-111 l Poc:kt-•.-a r1.HoffrnM1. Seer•..,~ L.eo11na&e«11 o 1 2 o-• MIUlonV•IO 0 ' 2 S-11 M S'iOf\ V,. IO t<ot1119 -lll&h f , P.ianon J, Sllvtl", S<Olrnen, Okuekl, Woodt. Le9une 8eaclt 1corln9 Cr lndlO. Kr\19V. JUNl091 VARSITY Sc-...,°"'"""' \.~UM 8 .. <11 0 I ; l I Mission Vie.lo ; • t •-1s Miu-V•llO tc:orlno,-ue.11 s, Eby,;, Leo 2, RooiMofl 2, JiKObt, Miies. Leoun• Buell scorln9- l•ll•MTW' l. si-t l , c.i..wo, K._, Cart_.. · l'R05H•WrM S<Mob'IO.--. l~ 8*«11 I I I 0 -J MlnlonVl•JO 0 , 1 ,_ s Le9UfW &11 .. 1>-Shoaf J. MiHIOn V1t1o-Wei0Mwnl,Se'(l•r1 In other Sunset meets. Westm111.s t er. r <in ked sc\'t'nth in the county. ran its Jca~ue mark to 2-0 by trouncing v isitin g Huntington Beac h 23-32 w hile Edison t Hunt- ington l:ic:a ch > ha nded Ne wpo rt Harbo r Its second 15-50 loss. l n the South Coast League. it was Cnivcrs 1· ty I ligh or lrvine O\'er El Toro 15-50. l\h ss1on V1CJ<> defeating Laguna Beac h 18·43 and Corona del :\J ar sto pping Dana llills 22-32. VARSITY WestmoMtff IUI IU I Hwnllntlo" ...... I OUlt 1M8) U O'I 1 8 ... ~tr IWI 1S 11, J Ht-n09 IWI II .o; • Goltord IMBI IS ... S. \f.)r9'1$ tWI U:SI; •· Oal•Y IWJ ,. 01. ' llr .. ~•11 IWI 16 OJ. I S McA_,S IH81 t• tS ' R M<AOC»rts IHBI t• lll, 10 OjW11•1\ -IH81t•·t:! I Edi-(tSl 1•1 hnt-t ""'"°r t ~'" IEI 1•.41, 2 l.Amoon IE J 1• •7, > • .Slobom tEI 16 '7 • tonder'°" tE) t• •7 S C11p1n 1E l 11 OI •• Smyt~ IE l ti ' " 10 1 w-!El " 1', I Hoffmen INH• II SS ~. l'I.,.. tN11 I 18 )I 10 T •~10. 1Nl11 II 4J -y .. ,.., l:M) ,,,, Mario>• I 4-11 (Fl IS:Ool; 1 ~''°" IMI IS.De; ). 81<1f~ IMI U .U ; ; 8ulll<I• tFl IS:JO; S. ~ IF ) U .0; '- B.own IFI 15 • ..0, l.C..oc:le (Ml tS 0 , I. O.-y IF ) 1S 4', '· 0.HerH lM) U .U. 10. l otooYI< IMI 1•:1'2. MlulooftVleje 1111 IUl ~ IHCJI t . La8onte IM I H S•; 1 Vaf\dertoem) IMI tS:ot; J. ChllOrne IMI ls.16,; e>em.trl-Ill U:U S. ~r W I tS:lll. '· JoMs Ill IS:.0; 1. MMWI I~ 1).4 ; t MafCa OO CM) U;SI; 9. M<AI• !M l 1•:U ; 10. Shew ILi 1' S4 Unlwr11ty OSI U.1 El THe I Wellf1'9 IU) 1$: ... 2 . .Andr_, I U I l•:CI; J. S<:hlohout 1U I It 11: ;, Powell IUI lt.12; S Bettmer tUl 1•:st; '-l•YIO<" IUI It U; 7. Meyer IUJ ":SJ; L Pllhll\tmmar IE I t7·0l, 9. Hl9V111S IEl t7:0S; IO. Frad<lc~SOtl lUl 17.1'. Pro Scores NSAIExlll-..~ N.-.,.,.,. "· N-Jer1ey •1 Pllll-4pflle 100, W6\lllngton .. Colden !>!al•"· S.altle 7 s LIH Angtlff IOJ, Por 11"'<1 101 -120, Clti<eoc>" "".Q~~.:!~ All-•2, 80St.., 7 ltie) Bullelo 3, l'l'f' lslanderl? • Pl"l-phlaS,C.lllc-t TOf'Oltlol,OeltoilJ lllel ALL MAKES & MODELS Z.::': =·~~ -~~~~. _s9 1 Js plus tax per mooth tor 36 mos • open end lease based on 15.000 miles oer year. Cap Cost $4154.00, -Residual Value $1910.84 Initial Investment $95.00 refundable secunty deposit. S96.86 1st mo. pmt. and 1st years License Fees $81 00 on approved credit. Cdl 714-546-7070 Ext. 56 . IHVrTES V.OU TO OUR lrd AMNUAL SKI SWAP & SALE OCT. 15 and 16 • 9:30 to 6 • 81111 AU YOUI USED CLOTHES & SllS GlllLS' f EH"IS V .. RSITY S•n Clement• t'I "' Co•t• Mu• CoR• Melt"'"" Oii 94ma>, ~· su.ti.• Lu"° 1\1 lo\l lo 8d•tn0ft 7 •. IO\t IO Goe1tw;I\ ? o, ~· Ro•o•" •·•. ,,.~,II 1Sl 10\I 0-6, won r S. lost 16• !>trrl•nQ tS>IO>I f>.t • ...,,, t-4 lo\I) • 0...91~ torw1~-..... ~1,U-1~ -Of'I ,....,.....,_ G'<H'fHMr ... •. oet LundwhAt, AtQU•t"• • '· Ott Mi.tut V ttn4U4 • 1 llO\t •mP.. T •VIOf 1S' *On I\ )O\t 1 6 l·• (•1n-. unoe t~l won•l,lo<tO•.wono 1 N--1 H•,_ (ltl UI M•ttn• s .... ,.. .... 81ro 1M • •01tt to M4 M'rf'r~ l • IO\t ,osmuh• .. H.in'.!l1n'-' cM1 tCKl , •• l • St«te""n Mt to<t IO 0.:Mtoer 0 • l~I to Gont.tl~ 0-.. MOrr ~ to~1 I •· O--• K,,..lltr tM I IO\I •o o.•~· S·I lo\I 10 <;h;1poro ~ \/.,_,, ... IMI IO\I 1 ... 1 .. )ut>Q M l IO\l 10 V•UQM It I.XI IO'.>•.onl•. IH«I\ 'Ml IO\ll 0 • • Devitt .. MIMro·Me"'"-IMI test to Me M,tr\ W~f'Wf l·• IOtl to l\f'tt· Contal~ .. 7 .....,,1.c;orn.1 IMI '°"t I 6. •·•. WO tO,,·M•Y•I• IM I O•I S• •<k 01""° f·S. toil 10 R•DD•ll· P•\•ot 44, ~rer T•'tkW 01U fltOft •·l. ·~t , ... -v·KOtn IMI lo•I to ScllMla,..Oavl\ I•. IO\I lo PirU•· JOM• I .. ; Jelfrlff-H•-h IM I !<XI I .. , t ... ~··Wlll••M\ IMI !01.I to Mill ff·-'"-· t.,.110 ~.xner-OH •·6. f ujtte·K•toAU IMI to.10.., l. ~-II 1101111 Ulli•enh~ Stll'IM~ Ma.....,, I\.) Otl Br•no• ~. IO>I to 8uf't0i' ... ,. ~t 10 Otawn l..O teoftlf't \.Ho.I >-*. -.. J .... Elv 1\.1 IO\I o •. won .. t.•-f Doot91at Pe-Hin-t\.I oe1 (;rev• Sotteu n • l . d•f K•monu•• Aucllmoc>dY 7.j, ._, Cull«<>-SclMtnnum .. ?; Wtlllk·Rf'lhtef.-(\.I lost? .... .. '*°" .. t. C• .. ttv Eollng 1\.1 lo\t 1 .. . .... -~ c-"4Merlt11 11l Mfu...,Vlelo Sl"91et -IM) IO\l 10 Koltl .. r 4-4, lo\l IO ForoH.lo!!ot to Mt0•>4; IVM V •M l l~I 0-., °'4, , .. , W•"l<ln lllo\) IOlt 0.•, 1 ... 1 ... ~ l •nslc-·ROlll 1¥l '°''to 8e•U IW 8•10wln u , IOSI to Kr•ler-PO<-l•ril•IO 1 .•• IO\I to ~-y-LIPtoOn •. , 0.Vr_T......,.. IAlll lo!!ol ..... 1 ... .. on .. J; ~1t•Redfem IMI lo•t t ... ~7.1-6. EIT-,.1 ltlO-Hlllt EIT--•..-aa.1• 51"9~ C•rt•r tETllO\llO JflderS.7 lo•llo I( tOQ1U\ 1•. Ol'4. Cov• t.-1; Ov•U• IE Tl '°"11-4.1 ... wan .. 1; Slttd II: Tl lo•I H, »,won 7-s. Owllln B ry~on-8urae I E T I IO\l to AIOtrman-Mc:Oon•ld 2·•· Otl. Atd•rmafl-Wlnlern•ll•r •·l, d•I . J onu ·O"C011nor 7-6 l~un 0•<' IETI-.. ,. •l . ..0 Pro<e·Smilft IETllG51 l .. ,won4-2,IMl•-7 .. -. ~II t:IOI 1111 Fl&. Valley st,.. ... Mc.Alllller IM)'°'' •• Mc8t1~ .... Otl Bl-7·~. Mc(;uor~ IHI IO\t '·• 1·•; Nft5 IHI clfl B1u1n 1·•· di'I Roller ..... H-Hl won6-0.6·1. P•lmoero IHI dllf Miiis Ho, IQ\\ lO M.tOCIO• •·•· C•rpenle< IHI won •· I, •-1; R..:nmoncl IM I cs.t J'......Cll •·1, °"' ~ksltom .. ); Wrlllflt IHI lo\I ; ... won._.J Prep Football HIGH SCHOOl. FOOTa&Ll ,,_.,u_ Sav•M lllf.AM!lelm• M~lla 21,Wattorn t Ge ...... 0..WLt ...... 801u1Grendt 7, Lo~"lm190u Cll'S<ef'H BlsftoP ArMl1S, Cn~ol II C~on2:2,l8Poty0 Waln.II n. $le"• VI"• 0 ~SWAP • HUT f\ACE TO IUY AMII SW KIDS EllUIPBT .... • TAil.ES, TAGS, H£lP£as.tND REf1£SlffilNTS PIOY1DED SALEsuNR SAVINGS/ SKIS -SAVI ur TO 40% HDCIL tcz. THI s1u ./ BOOTS -~~:.~' TO 40~·. Ot4 t40lDICA. l.AICHLI & OT>41l .... CLOTHING -SA VI UP TO 10•1. lOffH. Dl~U & SICYl Klt'tl, -222'• a ken ,..., .. llon ._..., ,,_ PACKA8£ SKIS -SAVE UP TO 175 ::=:..-=:::.' ken ,..,..,, ....,, •. -'°"" REMEamER: ou• ..,.. .. DUWIMGS POI DICK IAHYMOll'S MIW Sill l'ftD MOVll OCT. 27·2t IA.LIO.A CIHIMA $ 1111• c..-wortll "A NH HOT WAX" with ..y$10 ~hate OtM ,.,. ~ • V ... 4 Oct. 15 & 16 .ty 2831 E. COAST HWY. • CORONA DEL MAR 1_..N.,ert Th.aln•P_...lt ... ofWldMc) 675-9700 l>OotblH R~an...v· ~obrfir\Of'\ HI dff 01.1nn- V_.1'1tt10,, 't a.t (~.P.umQU•'lot 6 • DuPont Mo41n..) U·H wOf\ •·• 'o\t .1 • M;\ti\Of\ M<AHt\l•r tt4t Oet M yl\--.11t• w'ut•k.t-r 1 S, •~I to M•r04f'rum~C,,,mn1 l •• Oollf1n.A•ICl'lll•OI 011won6-1. IO\I 1 •· a..1.,. ... Roui IHI lo•• lO M1llet- Q~u1no , .. ~ Off H•tflt'iO Kykll• o •. H11191n .. Wrb0 IHI 10>1 4 b, won 1.s. l.A~n Oil ~ H•U· W•llO~ IS Oel bt•\tft ll\l•r 6 ), M•le'( P.Wlmtn IMHosl1•,2 .. c-tly (ISi IJI M41et De• 51,..i... B•r-roW\ tMD> h)\\ lo MOtht•r l • to .. r to CM-one S.-1 def (u\n1no • '. (1'f"ltU\ 1M 01 IOil I'•• •I 0-0, Rutt •MOllO\ll b ~. ?• ~ .. Full., lktl\ IMOI '""' 10 Gvoo• HawfttY ()..6, 10\t to 8rv•n·Eno••nd ~ 1 IQ\t Ot•'f'IU~·f;tltn1clil. 0 •, G•lhtiMt MOUl\WY tMOl ·~· ". "'°" .. J fOjl H Otayfu>-tcu1mo11 IMO I IOSI 2 ... ·-•. won•-O w .. -.r 1211 1111 •c•"" ,.,,.,9' SI roller IW) <!ft Jam~s 6 0, Oft Cole •.C. HlllGong IW)-4-3 •·l. ~lom,•1 IW I Cle' McMllltn T·•. Clef Bt~ .... , • 1 Fr,.ncl CWI 10\IA ... I .. McC•~• IW I .,.. Beck., •l. OH Ju, s. M•n<n tWl\O\t ..... won ..o Co• 1w 1 ~t "°" \.Utl-• ). Ciel 8 11\l'mM'I ...... Hollle tWl won .. 2,7-~ ~ .. M•<err•·Wllllim• IWl lo•I 10 BellO·MetO W , •o•t to lon•••••· W•ll•U4-;;S.-.. T•-IWI "'°" ' '· llHI ~7. ColrO<><t••lor<I IW I IO\I lo S•O<low,k• \.ee •·'· d•I \.enl· H•vorMn ..... -·•y.VOIQ<tt1no \WI _.. .... -1 .. 1 P•tf1-C.r111hy tWI IO•l to Wllliem .. ~r ~' a.r \Ian KOtl·Ve~W JUNIOR VARSITY DaNHllh (UI 0 1 llTere """' .. M--. t~I Cit! Fatul•lle .. , .,.1. p .. , .. 6-t, otl er-n .. ? fot'\ler tOHl won o-• •·I 4-4. Weinert 10111 IOSI t4. H , """""'° ~ Oo rstro l l'romm tOH I O•I 8l•n<• 0•1in\ • 1. •ot,t 'o Mord\· OOnato ._. ....i to C"""'·'"'OVO 2·•. T rlDO,... C..rc•• •OH'"°"• 1. 1~11 •. won M , -eoln ·l-l•U t OHI won •. ,. •·1,• 1 l't11. v.11.,. m 111 "-· .. ec" Sl"tlft e,...1. IHI 10'1 lO 899-~·• M<ClflftClon IHI lo\llo F rledelS.1. ~ ~---IHI lo\I lo ,.,,,,,... Mo'"' •·•. Ce blr·Horlon IHI oet S..t•-••tt-Vllletto .. 1 CetU IMY l'l (ti $M1 Oe"'*"'• Sl .... ft ~MIO IC.l °"'OJ• .. ,. oel St•~•n• .. 1, C1.i Y06t .. 2. Fo"'9t CCI IO>t .... WO<I 6-.J, .. l ; Cro<ller tC.l IOSt 4 .. , .. 1, _ .... ~ l'loro41·Wl911t tCl «Mt Sltc:•·l lnele .. ,, def -Ooneld-F•r-l 6-2. oef M•O• -· .. t; Erwl11-Harrls tel 19'1 ........... Hlll·Mor11L CCI !Olt °''· ~7.1 .. . Ol•LSCROSSCOUNT91Y VARSITY 14111111 .. ,1 ...... , .. 1101 (Jt) Wetl ...... '1er , W•IMlfl IWI 1110. 1 K•trer IH81 U 3t, l J'Offtll !MB) 11 f ), ; 811teMl<I IHBI 17· .. ; S. Stew•rt IHBI ta.t i, •· lr•lnor 1118) 13 17, 7. D<1nla<10n IWI fl S7 I S.ylOf IWI 1' JI, '· Klp~r IHBI lf.•O, 10. ll•rQt• (H Bl 14 .... f1r\t rouno ~Of\\ lnu,\c1.tty tn 1h•• '11(1 000 h '"' ()pt n O" II><! P<H 10, • SJ>-Y•lfO 0.'5 t-••ll• (01.1nsr" Cluti COV'\e l) 10 .JJJI ... .... jJ or ,. )) ., Cn•,te~ COOdv 6-CJl'.Ar<""' lttti(•ltl"f' M•rkt1•'f'f'l''\ O•w Nrwquosr C.ol M0r9"'n l •rrv Z1~ler t•rl1onwn11,• O•• .. OouQl•u Tomk.tl• tJ";.-.1 •• JJ ., l·l4 ., LAKERS' Gt ANTS BLOCK ·D"A vETWARDZf K"S PATH-:- lJ }.t "' J> JJ ... Rt' Md')\N\Qc\I .. kt'• '''tff lffr-l•Y 0 #10htNf'.,1I .u j.l .. 11 JI .., UJS .. 1•JA ... :µ)A .. J\ lJ .. J;.J,4 tA J• µ .. Jl-" ... JS-)) .,. ll>J/ .. Jl JS ... Jl lo> .. JS-"·"" :µJI "' .. )] .. &ccer Violence eon e .... ., Ru>IY c;u.,,,.,. v M OH1' H4t•i\"f M 1her 8.,bt, Cur11\5ArMtQJP O•letrw1n Pl'lt SrOOln 80DCoa•by Plagites Tourney W•bfo .,_.,~e• Ri<n•rd tr•wford 1omm~Aa•on 8.nCr~w P•I Fotno,,_• 8111 ... r .. (Jt(t O•Ck ~I M••e A:MtiOI Vo<IO< Rl!Qtl- JOl\n Scllltt JoKk Sclt""1•n Al C...tler<Je< JrM 0.,,t B•rr•JMC."el Oovg1~-· s .... ~ny~ Bt.odyMJllrt JOl\n J<Kk- BUCICIV .Afhn Sl•n AllQltt Home.ob•....:•• KtotllFffQV• BOD Colder Jo.l<une• ~lllR-• ~uuy ZOIPlf<or P•ter Ooste<""t\ 8111 fet....,.,, J•ck S.--r M 1kf Rt•O B•llG.r,...lf .M lS .... J4 J) 6q Jl ]7 ... Jl>.JJ .~ JJ lo>-•• J).Je .. q J.4.lS •q )).lo> ... JS.J.o ... JS-34 •• JS.IA ... l<>-ll .. j4.Jl '° JS-U 10 lJ.ll 70 J/.3)-70 )f.,,. 10 J>.n 10 l .. Jo> to >.-lA-10 ls-Ji 10 lb .M 10 JHl 10 nu 10 JHS 70 JS» 10 JS-JS lo) Waltrip Injured In Crash Ll::E\lROURG <AP1 SUI shaken by the \' 1 o I m t' l' u n I c o.i i. h e d Wt:dn-l>da~' night by ap· parenly drunken British ra11-.. luxembourgsoccer ofhci:ls announced to· day bl'y would default r atheithan face a Brillsh i.oct'e t1.•am agam. Here van den Bulcke, c halI'nan of the Luxem- bourg Football Federa- tion :nd speaker or the llo uS;> of Reprcs en- ta(fra in the national parllmwnt, stud today : "Th' i.:rand duchy will futurcy refuse to play any mglish team in an i nte riational m atch. We'd oonerdefault." "Wu ire drafting a re- port 01 the match for the 1 nterrat1onal Football 1''ede11ltion," van den Buick• added. ''E1er y thing was perfec from a s porting point cf view but bottles were brown on the pitch . a nd :rtB or vandaltsm took place in th e RIVERSIDE -Grand s tadilltl." National stock car driver Lunmbourg papers Darrell Waltrip was in -front111ged the incidents jured and his race car that tJoubled the quiet was destroyed Thursday city: at Riverside I nterna-"It vas not our team. tional Raceway lo prac-but th1 capital that was t1ce for Saturday's In· w rec kc d b y t h e ternational Race or E n g i s h , •• the Champions. "Tage>latt" bannered. city.· ·• The Tageblatt called the English sup- porter s "the island's complete idiots.·· It was reported that the British fans went on a rampage before and afte r W edn esday 's World Cup qualification m a t c b. wt>rr z-.o -b Y: England. Fans smashed windows and auto windscreens with bot· tles, intimidated people i n the str eet, g ot themsel ves involved in pub brawls and disrupt- ed traffic by playing soc· cer in the middle ot'"lbe roads. The stadium's recently installed metal fencing was torn down. Benches wer e ripped o ff t h e s tands. Th e total damage was estimated in excess of rzs.soo. Fortunately injuries were ljgbt. Six persons we r e treated io a hospital for c uts and bruises and allowed to go home immediately. T h e Lu xe mbourg ponce initially reported it had mnde no arrests because it didn't have the available m anpower. An officer said Thurs- day. however, that three British fans were arrest- ed ln the city center after the match and held in custody until Thursday morning, w hen they were r e leased . l,akers On Top. I ' \ ' IN GLEWOO D -i K a reem Abdul-J abbart sank two free throws, with five seconds to playi Thursday night, givingl the Los Angeles Lalcers a 103-102 victoTy over lh~ Portland Trail Blazers i the second game of a Na tional Basketball As sodatien p-t'eseas o doubleheader_ Gu a rd Phil S mit scored 20 poinu to lea the Golden St.ate War· riors to an easy 98-75 vie tory over the SeattJ S upersonics in th opener ol the NBA twin~ bill, played before crowd oC 10,771 at th Forum. Abdul-J abbar lea uni Lakers, who are 4·2 ·1n the preseasoo, with 18 points and seven re· ' bounds. Lou Hudson also had 16 'points for Los Angeles. Football GIRLS'CllOSSCOUNTRY MltMoo!Vleie Cltl IMI u,. •H <ll t , O..rr lMI 13 00; 1 S""rr tMI u 1;, J. Quinn IMI ll lf; • McCuroy IL I tl 17, S. llemtll ILi 1' 11 6. Wailz IMI I• J7; 1 8ull\ Cl) IS 11, I 01"1eflll0 IMI IS 31; •. Murplly ILi 16 U. tO Ruuell IMI 1•·1S Waltrip was released The piper s aid "the from Rivers ide Com· 5,000. mostly drunken munity Hospital Thurs-·supparters ' stormed the d a Y night with dee P -~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;!'! shoulder bruises. X rays Ulli......ity (IU 10 ) El To .. l. 5'>f"t111C IUI 17 01. 2 POlhamt11. IUI 11:23: l. S.auclWlmp IU I 11 31, 4. S<11u111 IU) 12 .,, s Goocno 1u1 U 00. • Ctw o .. IE I 1J 16, I. Murplly lU) tJ:U; I. P>tU IEl lJ 29. ' l~ GIRLS' CROSS COUNTRY Flft. Velley 11'1 C .. l All•rlota I. ,,._ffon IFI 1':U. 2. Gobi>\ tM I 11:2•; l. Vlff•MUY4 <Fl u 00, .. C.Hrnelllol IF) IJ ll; 5. HOdCJU IF) u 26 •• Slo.tf\ IF) fl. 2•. 1. Taylor (M) ll::Jlt, •. 21mme,,. .. n IMI IJ ;•?. •· e,..,.,,, tFI i.·01 ; 10. Glllln9t\am (Ml 1' 11. C.,.... ... _(lfl C411 0•aHlllt t. HblWIMkl ICI 11:1S; 2. Boman IOHl 1J·SO. i . 0 Jorie\ tel 13·06. 4 M . J-• IC) IJ OI. S. Uux !Cl IJ 10; 6. \.lldOYlse ICI IJ: II, 1. N. Jeuen (OHi 13 lS; •. K8•melll (OHi lJ: .. ; '· S10119hton IC) \3 S.. 10. BrHltl (Cl 1;:01 Edi-OSI 14'1 N-polt Httliler of his shoulder revealed no br o k en bones . however. Waltrip is ex· pected to drive in both I ROC races scheduled al Riverside this weekend. The 30-year-o ld Waltrip lost control of his Camaro. whipped the real end oC the car around and smashed into a re- taining wa l l at an estimated speed of 90 miles per h our. a spokesman said. Waltrip climbed out of' the car and s at down on the ground before rescue crews reached him, the s pokesman s aid . The driver did not lose con- st'iousness. For the serious boater .... • PHILLIPS ·MARIN is the largest and most complete marine hardware store ·in Newp6rt Beach . . m1·Mt.,.t...._ .M.,,,art a..li '673 40IO 1. HUIW IEI IJ•OO; 2. Ferr" lEI IJ-C>o. J. lll"CJfr IE l 1J 00; ; JonM tE I IJ.01, S Klrkom IE l 13 01, a. St••-INHI .. OJ; 1 0 Holsinger fNlil 14·27; I. Ma MorMn tE I i.·~. t . 8 trQdotlll IE) t~:07; 10. Jo"'1s.on INHIU ti. Fastest lap of the day -------------------+-----------~ Field Hockey was turned In by Richard Petty at 107.36 m.p.h .. followed b y J o hnny Rutherford o f Fort Worth, Tex., 107.0l m .p .b ., and Gordon Johncock 106.99 m .p.b. Ml. SAC 141111 or ..... , .... OCC\COf'l"'J-Ve.quu. Helftlme-<>CC 1.0 CORT FOX LEASING IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! ·1971 CADl.LAC SIVIW 1971 CMaYSUa 1971 POllD "ISTA. "MTO, MUITA ... S .AMD PAllMOHT I t71 CMIYROUT lMf'A&.A. CANICI A f'tCllUH I t71 POMT\AC ...... A •t.Me Piil CAUMOWFOI LOW LIASI UTIS '41-3661 894-252 I HH......,....M..&.,C-t•.,._ • HOBIE & 0 . Bathing SuJta Re • $12. ~ MEN'S SHIRTS HObl•. Reg. S18.SO Sala S10.00 O.P. Cdttons & Cords Shortt 15% OFF 11cAPrAIN~ ... Hour9 t •·"'· to t P~"'- ENTERTAINMENT I TELEVISION Friday,Oclobtr14, 1977 DAILY PILOT 87 COA.STWATCB: TOnight's Tl' Fare. ·1. Ing the biller alege or Stalin-' grad. (2 ttrs.) 1 I· t< 11> ·\ \ EWNINO 5:00. 8 (I) NEWS l ~LD8ERIE8 Uwe OOYer8Qll or the third game from the ball park Of the National l..AMlgue champion. (II rained out, regu&wiy acheduled ~ogrammlng will resume.) D THEAV£NGER8 The murder Of • COiieague leadt Steed and Emma to a huge cMpartment store. • HECKLE AND JECKLE • SE.SAME STREET I VIUA Al.EGRE 5:30 TOM AND JERRY WAITT1U. YOUR FATHER OET'8HOME • HOOGEPOOGE LODGE 4:00 8 CBS NEWS I NEWS EMEMENCY ONEI "The Parede" D MOVfE ** "Fury On Wheels" (1971) Tom Ligon, Logan Ramsey. A mountain-raised boy· breaks Into the racing world. ((2 hrs.) • THE PARTA&DGE FAMILY Keith dlsoov.s that young love oan often be contusing. • THE ROOKIES A woman, whOM son has been kidnapped, denlea the vent Sdt~ ever happened •. Eddie Albert iorns Robert Wagner in investigating strange accidents involving a movi e star on CBS' "Switch:· tonight at 10 on Channel 2. ----I ZOOM F0008 FOR TiiE MOOEAH FAMILY ''Cheez99'' tao 8 WILD, WILD WORLD OF ANIMALS ''The WoNenM'' • THE 000 COUPlE Felix and Otc# are feced with • new type Of problem. · • ASWE8E£1T "Anatomy ot Riots" Origins or raa.lly-lnsplred ftghtl. ID FAMILY PORTRAIT "Contracepltve1 And Birth Control Methods" (I) CBS NEWS 7:!0 8 THE MUPPET& Guest: Dom Deluise. G NBCNEW8 8 UAASCLUB • I LOVE LUCY "Off To Florida" • LET'S MAKE A DEAL • MACNESL I LaiRER REPORT C!) CALIFORNIA TONIGHT (I) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7::18 AU,STAR ANYTHING GOE8 "Logan's Aun" vs. "The Jeffer- 90fW'' 8 FAMILY FEUD • NEWl. YWED GAME • THE BAADY BUNCH Mlac• tries to cure a -phone prob&em by Installing a second phone kl the hou.se. e ADAM-12 Offlc:efa Malloy and Reed arrest. a revolutionary au~ed of storing munitions. • 21TONtGHT 8!> VOTER'S PIPELINE "Sacramento Dateline" ()) THE MUPPETS 8:00 I (I) WONDER WOMAN SANFORD ARMS "Phil's Past" Phil applles for a liquor license and is brought face-to-face with the policeman he was arrested tor st~lklng during a 1957 protest demon- stration. 11 MOVIE ***lh "Dead End" (1937) Sylvia Sidney, Joel McCrea. Youngsters In an East River alum fight to ov.,come their enYironment. (2 hrs.) • 8 JOKER'S WILD G» CAROL BURNETT ANO. FRIENDS . Guest: Jotin Byner. m MARCUS WEL8V. M.O. A young nurse, :suffering from a rare genetic disease that can cause delusions, names Or. Kiiey In a·palemlty suit. (Part 1) •Ii> WASHINGTON WEEK INREVIEW 9 NEWS 8:15 8 MOVIE * * * "The Blue Max" ( 1966) George Peppard, James Mason. A young Ge<man com- petes with more experienced Ratit19s Gul d e IMooolt.s ... r.itd ae<Cl'cllftt lo lllo• offk e 111~• MO~IH I<>< TV ere lllCl9" bot Ur11l< I .. • * • -Excell ant • * * -Very Good • • -Good .. , * ·-Fair -Poor flyers for the prestigious Blue Mex award. (2 hrs., 45 min.) 1 1:30 D CHICO AND THE MAN "Th• Bed" Raul thinks he's getting a bargain when he trades In Ed's old mattress for two new ones, but he la una- ware that his distrustful stepfa- ther has been using the bedd- ing as a piggy bank. 8 CONCENTRATION m CROSS.WITS fD '1i) WALL STREET WEEK "The Ben Graham Legacy" Guest: James B. Rea, Pres .• James B. Aeo & Associates . 9:00 tJ (I) CBS MOVIE * * * "Smile" (1975) Bruce Dern, Barbara Feldon. A take- olt on that great American •ris.tltutlon, the small-town beauty pageant with bevies of determined young hopefuls hoofing, singing, posing and smllfng. • • D ROCKFORD FILES "The Second Chance" Rock- ford helps his friend Gandy Fitch (Isaac Hayes) protect Fitch's glrltrlend (Dionne Warwlcke) from her brutal •><- husband and finds hlmsetf con- fronting a dangerous gang of counterfeiters. 8 IRONSIDE Oetec11ve Brown rinds difficulty Jn thanking the passing strang- er whose medical aid saved his life when the man proves to be an AWOL servle4tman wanted for murder. CD MERV GRIFFIN Cl) MARCUS WELBY, M.O. Or. Welby uks Owen Marshall to defend Or. Kiiey In a pate<nl- tt_ suit. (Part 2) SJ VISIONS "Freeman'' A black family wor- ries about one of thei r members. a men who can't find ~lace iJUQclety. fl!) FIRING LINE ®)MOVIE **'h "The Movie Murderer" ( 1970) Arthur Kennedy, Robert Webber. A inauranoe investiga- tor and a young detective join forces In a search for an llraon- lat that apeclallzes In sabotag- ing planes in flight. (2 hrs I 10:00 D QUINCY "A Question Of Time" Quincy begins an invesllgatlon Into the mysterious death of a health spa patron, and tocks horns with a allcil lawyer and phony doctor an•loua to prevent adverse publicity. Peter Mark Richman, Brenda Scott, Rudy Solari gueat star. ea NEWS m A SPECIAL KIND OF BOOK A unique explOt'"atlon of the his- tory or the English translation or the Bible and Wiiiiam Tyndale's Important role G MOVIE ***'h "Hobaon's Choice" ( 195-4) Charles Laughton, John Miiia A tyrannical Lancashire bootmaker tries to keep his three daughters from marrying. 10:30 CD Q) NEWS fD LATINO CONSORTIUM "MV Cousins On Sunday" 11:00 D 8 (I) aJ NEWS 9 HOLLYWOOD CONNECTION 8 MOVIE ** "Fury On Wheels" (1971) Tom Ligon, Logan Ramsey. A mountain-raised boy breaks Into the racing world. (2 hrs.) m FOREVER FERNWOOO Tom hu a palnful cure for Charlie'• deafness; Eleanor lor- turea Penny; Merle and Wanda decide on a lottery; Loretta knows the show muat go on. ti) PERRY MASON "The Cue 01 The Singular Double" Mason la hired by a girl wtto aasumed the Identify or a cousin to report her own dls- ~pearance aa sulclde.(R) flD DICK CAVETT Guests: Carly Simon, .James Taylor. e MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT 11:181) (I) NEWS '· 1t:301J TONIGHT Hott: Jobnny Carson. Guests: Barbara Piowar. Robert Blake, Susan Sarandon. G LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE ''love And Th• Sex Survey I Love And The Particular Girl" 8 9 BARETIA "Street Edition" Barella tries to uncover the connection between police commissioner Simon Abbott and mob ctllef Oom Linsky, but a determined female reporter keeps getting In hla way. (R) m NEWS • CAPTIONED ABC NEWS 11:4e fJ (I) M'A•s •H tfawkeye, hoplng to free a young Korean girl from her bondage to an American sergeant, wins custody of her In a poker game. (R) MOANING 12:008 TWILIGHT ZONE Arch Hammer la a man with only one talent -he can change his faoe to make it look Ilk• anyone else's. m NFL GAME OF THE WEEK 41) MOVIE * * * "Crime And Punishment, U.S.A." (1959) George Hamil- ton, Mary Murphy. Believing he Is a burden to his famUy, a young man commits a robbery. ( 1 hr , 30 min.) 12: 18 8 ()) KOJAK "The Frame" Kojak receives inlormstlon Indicating thlf a thief he had previously arrested with Insufficient evidence, Is at>out to pull another heist . However, Ko)ak II ordered by hla superiors to stay off the caee.(R) 12:30 G MOVIE **'~ "Lydia Balley" (1952) Dale Robertson, Anne Frencll. While taking care of legal matters, a lawyer becOmeS lnvoled In lntematlonal affairs. (1 hr., 25 min.) m MOVIE ** "Spy In Your Eye" (1959) T UBE TOPPERS l\LTA 0 8:00 -"Dead .Et((r.-A classic movie from 1937 with Humphrey Bogart, Joel McCrea, Sylvia Sidney and the Dead End Kids in their first movie appearance. ABC CD 8:15 -"The Blue ,Max .'' George Peppard stars as a German flying ace in this 1966 war movie with James Mason rlght after the Dodgers and Yankees are through. C~ 8 9:00 -''Smile." This 1975 movie comedy focuses on a beauty pageant and stars Bruce Dern and Barbara Feldon. . ' Dana Andrews, Pier Angell. American and Soviet aecret agents manage to eonruse one another In their search for the formula of a laser death ray. (2 hrs.) 12:37 8 STARTIME "Guilty Or Not Guilty" Robert Ryan, Richard Seymer. After a series of elevator muggings, a group of cll!Zcen1 organtzee a ~llante petrol. 12:40 (I) MOVIE *** "Nightmare In Chicago" (1967) Rober1 Ridgely, Batbara Turner. Chicago authorities purwe a homicidal maniac ter- rorlzlng the town In a spree of murders. (1hr.,20 min.) 1 :00 II MIDNIGHT SPECIAL Hosts: Marilyn McCoo and Biiiy OaVI• Jr .. Gueata: Rod Stewart, Et~ Catmen. Randy Newman, Johnny Rivers, l<fp Adooffa. 8 ISPY Robinson and Scott seek a double agent, the only pe(ton the Communists wlll trade for a captured American pilot. 1:30 G) MOVIE **'n "The Strange Death Of Adolph Hiiier" ( 1943) Ludwig Donath, George Oolenz. A man resembling Hitler I• forced by the Gestapo to uaume hla Identity. (1 hr., 30 min.) 1:3HD TALKABOUT Host Truman Jacques and his guests aJr the pros and cons of mandatory retirement at 65. 1:35 8 NEWS 1:55 G NEWS 2:00. MOVIES * ~ "lnvuion Of The Star Creatures" (19&8) Bob Ball, Marla Leuret. Aller! cr .. tur• thrMten Earth. (1 hr .. 25 min.) *** "NeYer Too Late" (1951) Tod Sqhter, Jack L.Neey. A VIiiao' 9QUlre goea mad and begin• a rampage of c:rirne and murder. (2 hrs.) 8 MOVIES ••'A "The PrornlM" (19") John Cutle, Ian McKellan. Two soldlet'I and a young girt •tat>- Ulh a strange 1oYe triangle dur- * * "The Deltructora" c1een Richard Egan. Patrlela Ownes. A U.S. lntelllgene• agent uncover9 a plot to dlarupt the 1 development of a new weapon. {2 hrs.) 2:308 NEWS • MOVIES * * "OHlh CurM Of Tartu" (1986) Fred Pinero, Doug Hobart. A group of young tOUf'J llt• fnadv.rtantly ftumble on the butlal area or a ~MY Aztec god figure that hU the po-.r to aaaume either animal "'human fonn at wfft (2 hra.) *** "TM Enforcw" (1950) Humphrey Bogart, Zeto Moatet. A MnMtlonal story expoeea Murder, Inc., a racket which hu sprMd terror· wherever It hit. (1hr.,30 min-:) 3:00 . HEWS 3:01 8 NEWS 3;208 MOVIE **"' "Wichita" (1955) Joel Mtqrea, Vtra Mllea. )Vyatt Earp bends to the prueure of town IMdar• and accepts' a dangerous Job u law enforc.- menl officer In the tetllemenl of Wichita. (1 hr., 25 min.) '4:45 8 NOONTIME i., \ 11 RD.\\' MORNING 7:00 8 MARLO ANO THE MAOIO MACHINE 8 C.8 .8EAR8 8 l!§) LAFF-A·L YMPIOS 8 HOTFUOGE "Taking Care Of Youraetr' • ELEMEHTARV NEWS I SAMYORTY YOGA FOR HEALTH (I) DAUOUSE 7:30 8 PACESETTERS D PTLCWB G» MOVIE **~ "Four Fae.a w .. 1" (1948) Joel M~rea, Franc:ee Dee. An outlaw and his glr1 •truggte to begin a new lire despite overwhelming obata .. cles. (2 hrs.) e EARTH, SEA ANO SKY (I) HERITAGE 8:00 II Cl) MISTER MAGOO D YOUNG SENTINELS G MOVIE * '* * "Escape From 2.ahatln'' (1962) Sal Mineo, YUi Brynoer • A nationalist leader In an Ara.b oil state is saved from execu- tion by his fellow rebels. ( 1 hr .. 30 min.) m ROMPER ROOM • e EARTH, SEA ANO SKY 8:30 8 (I) BUGS BUNNY IJ AACHIES I SABRINA G MOVIE * * * ~ "The l:att Commend" ( 1955) 8tetflng H~, AM& Merta AlberghetU. A .,,,.., group Of T...,_ ~ ._ Alemo egalnlt the O\lelwMtll .. Ing forcee Of Santa Ana. (1 ht., 30m1n.) e SPECIAL "ThrM Artis .. In The ~ ..... Feeturtng .,..,,.., Guy Anderaon, aculptor George Tautakawe and poet TheodON Roethke. Now, a Love Story About the Oldest Profession ~JERRYBVCK LOS A~GELES <AP > -How do you make a television film in which the central figure is a prostitute' Carefully, says George Eckstein, who produced the six·hour, \bree-parl "79 Park Avenue" f<r NBC from lbe book by Harold flobblts. "J don't tllink ~eople expecting a titillating stcry wlll f\nd it here." says Ectstein. ..1''s an honest and D'lO\ing love ttory, more of a lo•e itory than about ptostltution. We thlnk we're honest in tern cf the sexual side ol it; but I thjnk a Jot of people ,ribo may lune ln for the sexual titillation . may be pleasantly ~rprised to find ttemselvea e com i n g em o ti on a 11 y volved." THE MI Nl.ERUS will be een on NlC fer three nseculive nights bejnnlna at 9 .m. Sunday onCbannll 4. Lesley Ann Warren aars as the ~01tltute, Marianne Morgan. arc Singer plays Ros Savitch, r love interest and later her usband. Michael ContanUne la en Savitch, the ~owerful 1ambllng figure and ather of ,OP. Eckstein, who said blfirat saw Illas Warren In "U Jn the Sbade" in New York, ald there was never uy questio that she wouldn'tgettherole. "There's always tl9 feeling that we should get 1omebO<fy new," he said. "It would be somehow more exploable. But sbe had the talent. Sii had the Jooks, the figure. t\l talent, 'everything we needed. THERE WAS andler flap about the casting, lowever. Eckstein had signed /tC. Vtaoda (or the role of Ben Stitch. But the producers of 'Barney )llller" and "Fish~' sid Vlgoda )lad a conflicting lc hedule. Vlcoda was forced ~lthdraw, alllid threats of bo)ottin1 hla two series. An~mlabl e $tttlement was later ached. Eckatein said the ructure of tbe book was drasUdly aJtel'ed Ja turning It lnlo arnlnlaertes. .~ ........ PLAYS PROSTITUTE LH ley Ann Warren "The first two hours of the six hours slick relatively close to the book," he said ... But the last four hours take off on their own.·· ''The girl in the book , to me at l eas t , w as not a v e r y sympathetic or inter esting character. She sort of reveled in what she did. Whal we did was have her forced into prostitution. We gave her more vulnerability, more audience sympathy. We also made it into more of a love story." RE SAID, "SEX is organic to the plece and lt would be hard to do a story about prostitution without sex. She herself ls acUve ln the story as a prostitute for maybe only one hour of the six. But there's a lot of candor without being exploitive. It's handled well. It is certainly more candid than usual. "She is a gir l who is d isadvantaged in the sense of money, but is very beautiful, very sensuous and men keep hilting on her. She gels forced into this life." Robbins· "79 Park Avenue" covers a 12-year span. "When she is young, sbe is involved with two fellows who follow her through most of her life," Eckstein said. "ONE OF THEM Is the son or a mob-connected figure. And when 1he gets into prostitution, the prostitution is controlled by the mob. And the one fellow becomes a Bugsy Siegel-type operator. Eckstein said he believes Rob· bins a ctually wrote a dual TO man·a·clcf. basing the story both on Bugsy Siegal. a mobster killed in Los Angeles in the early 1940s, and Mickey Jelke, thf'e playboy who l>ecamc involved in prostitution m the 1950s. He said, "1t doesn't follow a distinct enough story line to parallel one exclusively." He was asked If he thought television might turn to sex for exploitation now that violence has been virtually driven from the air. I "I SUPPOSE THERE might be a tendency to do that," he r eplied. "I thjnk there'& a danger. looking for a substitute for exploitable subject matter.·· He said he thought tevwision usually evaded the issue. "For obvious reasons, lt'i; never been able to be presented with any honesty or explictness. And never will · be. But l think there are boundaries which can be pushed a little bit to include more honesty. J think tbe minJserles may play a role. "Certainly with 'Captains and the Kings· there was a Jot of 11cxuality," he said. "But I think because or the flak il produced the pendulum has swung the other way. Comedy certainly seems to have more license than the dramatic shows." ECKSTEIN SAID he had more trouble with the network over vk>lence than with sex. "We have a rape In the first episode that is very frightening," he said. ··And in the last episode there is a fight in which Lesley participates that is very terrifying.·· Eckstein Is also producing a t wo-hour ''Sunshln(' for a Christmastime airing on NBC. It 'brings back the-dtaracten-from the movie and aertes. K-BIG FM 1.04 ·ju st bea utiful music -• DAii. Y PILOT Friday. Octobef 1•, 1977 Business J,800 Solar Mirrors An artist's conception shows 1.800 mirrors -each m ore than 400 square feet in area -in a proposed experimental solar power p lant designed by McDonnell-Douglas Corp. McDonnell-Douglas is one of sever al compainies bidding for the proposed solar ... - plant eonstru<.'11011 'l'hl• plant 1s expected to tx• built 111 Har~tow by 1981. Mirrors rclfcct the Miil's l'H\'S on a boiler mounted on a 283-foot tcm;er. The plant would produce about 10 1rn.•gawutls. enough pm\'t•r for a ~m ~ll <.·1ty. County Firms Report rraeel A flft'Cfl Open• JJlY and Doreen Burchett have opened a retail :ravel agency al 4630 Campus \)rive. Newport Se a ch. The agency, Newport Area Travel. is a member of a Travel Network USC. a franchise pro- t ram t hat has ocrices throughout Southern ::aUfomia. Stall members include Fr ank Grupp, lSSistant manager, and Sue Hagmann. travel :ounselor. Lansdale and Carr, owners of 4·day Tire Stores, 1ave purchased a 32,000-sq..rt. building in the Irvine Industrial Complex and will locate executive of- iices there. Dght Cnater Lea.e• ReportM Eight lease agreements for new or expanded >pace at the Irvine Company's Newport Center l ave been negotiated through Coldwell Banker Commercial Brokerage Company. The Los Angeles-based law firm of Sheppard, Vullin, Richter and Hampton plans an Orange :ounty office al 500 Newport Center Drive. Bank or \merica, American Slate Bank and Smith and f'..inden CPAs have executed leases for addit ional ;pace a t the same address. Borden Foods, a division of Borden Inc., has re- ocated its western r egional office to 550 Newport :enter Drive from Anaheim. Also opening new >range County offices al the same address was the tational brokerage firm of Wedbush Noble Cook lnc .. as well as attorneys Peter C. Bradford and \6erald G. Williams. LEASE A 1978 FIREBIRD ASLOWAS5 I 05'0 ~~ Equipped with automatic transmission, p0wer steering, power disc brakes. factory air oondit1on1ng and more •. OlOU YOUH HOW Cll:llultzed CO.I WS700 ,_...., .... •ol"" S;>Sll 00 St0580 pet montn 114"" M-33 U.. T ..... Meo-...... Ill ... -Oii --cnicm tor 3'1- BOB LONGPRE PONTIAC l~O""'J' R.-t~ Iii ~ or YaMrl• •°"9"•892-6651 CW 63~2500 11600 hc><h lhd.-Wn .... atw , .......... c.. ..... ......., • ...,, Does America need more pernment regulition? Or Jess? ',', r «n wo 1t1tr·rv~rN• l . r ~I f\I' · • 111: r,.,.,.ntlv. ove:- •i'J";, r 11d th>•r> •haul.I l"J rn ,. ,.. ..•. r ri' r<quvlliC:n \', 111.u .!~'"' tr•lt lh11 Ii''"' 'NI Ill I ·h Y •lm\Ydr.l•"''"rd •H• ·111'lh1i.11•t! 11 Y"'J t. w" ••n <>p1ni 111 vi ; Ar. :nt .. nnc...-J OJ•tr.•' ~ 'oU ~.fh,, rrcr~v11 .. l!h1 , .,ix, 11 this :y )r m t'.lnd hew 1l worl. , the iv !IN W<' r lit decide W~•>l I • i;.rr:•.rvc wt,, to l..inqe 1n U y• r.dD.ld 1 i.11 why Wt rt c.i! .. ru11) d fro•• la:,. i..1 1!-1t• xri, r. 1h .. An-.,rtc.Jn~m. Sr":im It '1 y lo l't"ld. ••"1 vr rv ui'«-re.t:rn !::very An.l'n· C·.lll o.J'Ji"il lo know wh.\l 11 wy. TM AmariOan Sconom1c &ystem. If a one ol your basic trt'l'ldoms "Economl~•" Puttiit> Ct>ll'r.\Clo 91009 ft J 1: ~ I , Real estate brokerc; William Haze. Russell Werdin and J effrey Parker have occupied offices at 240 :'liewport Center Drive a nd M cCulloch -Architects have complcied a relocation te 260 Newport Center Dnve from the Orani.te County Airport area Dim.Ion lleaUpftd t\ realignment of the sales and marketing lunctJons ha s beer announced by the indus trial products division o Computer Au lotnation. Irvine. Domestic s a les. under t t)e cont inuing leadership of T(•rry Beers. has been separated from the marketing organization, and a m arketing and business development group has been formed under the dir ection of D<>ug Cutsforth. former sales and marketing manager. Three people ha \'e bcl·n brought into the marketing and bullincs:.; development. group: Dick Stein. former Midwest regional sales m anager: Jack Ft!rguson. form er mMager of the technical support group. and Edward Erny. fo rmer senior '\.)'Stems analy~t Stein and Erny urc rcs1>0n~ible for planning. dc\·clopmenl .md marketing or new products. while Ferguson 1::. m;inoger of inl~rnat1onaJ marketing. Dat.atro• Sal~• Drop Datatron. Inc., lrvme. ha.o;; reported year.end sale" of S6. 779.056. compared with S7.117.9';"3 for the 12 monlh:.off1scal 1976. A loss of $436.101 was registered for the 12-month period. com pared '4 1th incom e of S26.586 for the same period last year. Per share loss for fis- cal 1977, based on I .8S9,039sharcs, was 23 cents. com- pared with 1 cent based on 1,813.039 shares for the prior 12 month::. Sales for the fourth quarter were Sl .768.344. compared with Sl ,628,l I l for the sa me period in 1976. A loss for the fourth quarter of 542.390 was compared to income of S21.441 ror the sam e period last year. Per shar e loss for the fourth quarter was 2 cents compared with earnin~s of I cent fo r the last quarter of 1976. 1tHJard Win• Grant The Will ard Cnmpan~. ;i boat m anufacturing (irm with plunts 1n Col>ta ;\tcsa a nd Founta in Valley. has been a" ar'1e<l a $63,753 federal grant to build two prMOI) pc rc,(;llC boat' The protot.\ pc·:. will ho 18-foot. d1esel·powered f1ber~lass boats to ht· ca rnNl aboard merchant marim• .,hips Th c co mp a n ~ . ~ h 1 c h m an u (act u r.c s government and pll'<'"lirt• bo<ih. also 1~ developing a 30-foot s urf rescue ho:it £or the US. Coa~t Guard. The most rcct'nt J!rant wa:-. ;iwarded by thc· l" .S Department of Com ml'rCl' U11e of Credit A rra11ged Computer Automation. I nc .. lrnnc. ha:. arran~cd a SlO million revolving line of credit The company said it executed a S4 million credit hn1• with Morgan Guarant~· Tru ... t Company of New York and a S6 million hne with Securih Pacific National Bank of Loi; Angeles. · Peter M. Kopkowski , vie<' president of finance and treasurer, s aid interest will be at the prime rail' lhl'ouAh Dec. 3t , 1978, and at 0.25 percent over primtdrom Jan. l. 1979, until 1>1·c. :l l , 1979. when thl' agreement expires. Gro .. laeorporated Carson Alexiou Corp. will cnnsoh datc its infrared mosaic de\'clopm<"nt group al its Costa Mesn laboratory, 3001R<.'d 11111 Avenue T he facility abo wall hnuse the company headquarters until m1d·l!l7H, when the entire company moves to n l•W headquar ters· and laboratory fri<'1hty at 2300 Michelson Ori vc, Irvine. In the interim . "hile the company is completinJt projects al it:-Cosla Mesa facility, t he new bu1ld1ng will he occupied by Sperry Univac Si•lllator r .. rcltased /\ir California, Newport Oeach. has purchased a Link simulutor for the L-188 Lockheed Electra ~1ircrafl from Eastern Airlines. The-simulator is on<' of_ I wo in lhl' Unit.eel Stutes for this aircraft type u 11<1 wall be U!'\Cd for flight crew training purposes. Llpon inslallnt1on in a new Air California 1'.l·urnin~ C<.'nlc•r on Sky Park Circle m (rvine, the simulator will hi' usf.'d for the initial and recurrent training rt'q11in•r1 hy Air Cahfornle fo r Electro cn.•wo;. Ac-fort• t 111• p11rl•ht1sc, errws were sent to M1 Hm1 for simulator tra1nin1ot. C•1rporote S pUt Okayed · Consent or the California Public Ul\lltics <.:omml~!-i1on h<ls hecn ohtainl•d for lht• rtistrihulio~ of con~mon s tock of l.aJiuna Ifill:-. lJtility Com pan). a :-.11bl>uh11ry 11f H<>s.,moor Corp , "flus wall cnJhlt.· Ht>"\rnoor to complete the spin o_rr of rominon 'toe·!-. of both t.u~una ll1lls Utilit~ CnmpLHI\ :incl ((11...,moor ('11n'>t r11rt 1on Corp , unothl'r lto\smnor <iuh,rd1ary. ti>rm~ or which h~ivt• been appro\'l'd by ithurcholdcr" Mo-peels .Pedal to Top Looser Law~ Help Turn Popularity Tide By The Associated Press No Hell's Angel wo rth his grime would touch one. but economy-minded motorists are making mo·peds the n ewest crnze. American mentality before that Americans are used to big cars." vehicle bas the a bility to go IOQI distances, providing the driver la willing. Mo·peds are a c ross between motorcycles and bicycles, with the name coming from the dual sou recs of power. motor and pedal. Vesp a, an Ital ia n firm proba bly better kn own for scooters. has a large chunk of the U.S. mo-ped· m arket. a lthough F renc h , D ut ch , Aus tria n , Be lgian a nd Czechoslovakian manufacturers a rc also selling Vesp a 's pa id pflot took U dl)'I to cover 2,300 miles and J>QrraU. rt:c alls s p e aking lo·•bim ; afterward~. "I asked him if he would do k · again and he said, 'No way, , espe cia lly tha t part aoro.u Texas.'" her e. ~ ALTHOUGH THERE are an l'S l imated 15 milli on o n F.u ropean roads , m o-peds are JW.l starting to catch on here. The advan tages o f t h e :-.ouped-up t wo .wheele rs are obvious. They gel 150 miles or more to a gallon or regular gas. cost a.., little as $400 and require no purticuJar skill or license to hanClle. SINCE REGIS~ATJONS aren't required in mos t states, no one knows exactly how many mo-pcds have been purchased in t he U.S.. but nationwide saJes last year were about 60,000 and t h e M o t o ri zed Bicycle Association, pe r haps opllm· 1stically, pre<licts sales or four to five million by 1980. PORRATJ SAYS Vespa"• buyers range Crom 20 to 50 ye., of age, usually have low -. medium in c omes a nd • predominanUy male. • American Oil , Jr that's not enough, imagine pulling into a gas s tation a nd filling your tank ror SO cents. There's no question that ~ale:. are growing fast. Vespa's 1976 volume was up 63 percent over 1975 and som e 30 models are on the market. Finns' Title& Listed in S.,/ .... ...- MO-PEDS WE RE introduced in the United Slates late in 1970, but most states required owners to get motorcycle licenses and initial sales were disappointing. But by 1974, the industry had won revisions in laws covering mo-peds and now most states require only a regular driver's licenfie. Mo-peds ha ve a tiny single- cylinder engine that is started by pedaJing the vehicle. The clutch is au~matic. so no s hifting is requir ed, and the engine can be disengaged by pushing a button or s topped by turning off its gas. WASHI NGTON <A P> American oil companies WI percent or the nation's reserves of uranium ore percent of its uranium m capacity and hold 12 perc known t!.S. coal reserves, cording to a congressional st. IF \'OU RUN OUT of gas, you simply pedal to the nearest gas station. The study was done b Library of Congress a request of Sen. Frank Cbur Idaho), chairman of the E liminating the motorcyc!E license requirement was a major victory for the mo-ped industry a nd it came just as the Arab oil e mbargo was causing t raffic jams around service s tations. Mo-peds have a top speed of 25 to 30 miles an hour, making them ide aJ for errands or short trips but ill-suited for d i s tance s u b commitlee on en research and development. driving. -Church said be believes ii important for CObgteas to...., the extent of oil comflDr , owne rship ol non-pell'al*a .Jesources_as Jt QD.lliters V' "EVERYTHING STARTEC a fter {he gas shorta~ 1n 1974, • says Bruno P orrati, president ol Vespa of America Corp. ol Soult San Francisco. "The mo-ped is something for the s hort• haul." says Por raU. ·'When you go 20 or 30 miles an hour. iHApto-tb~permark.et is perfect. but going 30 to 40' mi !es is not practical.·· energy legislation. The 38S-page re port sb<wed • w idespread holdings by tlae nation's largest bi.I compaMtl • ; uranium, coal, oil 1bale aad "The timing was right be<:aus• or world energy problems. Tb( id e a was difCicult for tht DESPITE THAT. Vespa de- cided to sponsor a cross-country mo-ped ride 'to show that the geothermal resources. r Over The Counter NASO UstilMJS NEW YORK tAPI i7 ~he ~~ni!'t' ICWl•I S.CurllfM Ou t-AUii., _, IM'<-a.nit, ln~ur.,..• • lno..tl· •I SIO<h AE l Ind AFAProl AID lllC AVMCp AOOtVIW AdwAon AID9f1S ....... , ... AltcOIJ'lC. Ally118 "FtnCo AF"<nll AG•-"M K•O!l ATv<.om AW.'°"9 Ami tr,. • •1· 1', I'• ll>t 14\o 11-. l "· ,, .. ''• 1"· l 111 • 11·. ..,, .. , 12 • u•. , ....... II II • l I 7 '• 11' I U''t ,,,. ,, .... 1l•. tt•~ IO\• 11\"J ..... _ O«llNcl IJntMllQIO Tola! lu-s , N•w h>QM • -~ .. Total Wit!\ MUTUAL FUNDS NEW YORK IAPI C..lvln 8ullock1 l'klelty ~: ""' tottowlnQ q-Bullo 1104 la.,. e eoc1 1 !• NL t•hO<I!, "-4111d by C•ndn 7. It 1.13 Cttlf 1.•I 8.6A lhll Nll~I A>'O<I Olwtd ?.II ?... Ctt!ld •.6A Nl •!1011 ol SKurtll•t Month 14.71 16.0I 0.itly I 1.00 NL Oulen. lllC., •t• Ntm • • .o 10.11 o • ..., 7 I• ..... ,,,. price\ 31 wlll<h N\'Vn 10.M 11.87 Eo Inc u "' NL lheH ~1irille~ COFulld '·" .... 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M11111 IOJ7 I'» Ptnn Nt.11"'"•11 ,-.JIO't 17,. v~ a....; us Gow • 10 o.60 P1>111 1 os 1 70 I"'°"' Jll " £11111r tt.u· a; ~-ia<-11 Co P~ Caci ,.,,, e l4 n11tt1 It~ H td• 1i11 -~ Frffd 1'1 IM FllOe" Fd H.J I0.4' Sltr•aG Nl Vtrll:I .,,. I"' lncleP I II 1 ., Pllottm G•11 Mwrm D I NL Wti~ 0 s .. ~l• lO '2 II 11 Pil Ft 11 0. n 6' l>IOMt f Wttft Eq 1t ! M l \\ FUWl<I Pnq fo • 'Cl • JI c.tPO '» W.ttf ,,_ ' • Mil •» I0.9' M.-V C >1• l ll lllW\I • 101,J 11¥1W 1jk' t MIG I I~ llO M"9. Ill • l' t• Tr"" t Ml NI., MIO 14 ti \).J4 P .... ll l&.U ~ V-1;L11 <wl• ~r-•' \ .. stocKs• SYLVIA PORTER • • CBS CCI CCI"' Cl lttf Friday' Clo8ing Price8 NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS ... Ffidoy. October 14, t&n 1.'N .. ON(. Y PILOT .. For1111040 We'll See Red With New Blue' By SYLVIA POR1'Ek As a result of the Tax Reform law of 1976, last year's Form 1040 -used by two-thirds of U.S. t»xpayers, was com· plex, befucldUt)g and lengthy enough that lt lnvited errors. lt created such misunderstanding and caused so many mistakes in aritlunetlc alone thut it was a tax preparer's dream come true. Millions who had never before sought. out· side help did so last year. THE 1977 TAX SIM PLICATION ACI' HAS changed the 1977 Form 1040 to reach closer to the goals of simplillcal.fon and reform. The colors are pastel blue and white instead of 1976's red. w hlte and blue. The IRS obviOWllY thinks .this will help soothe you. J think you '11 turn red as you tackle this form. Form 1040 will be m ailed in December. Here is a pre· view ot t.he important alleratlons: (1) The urn Form 1()40 has been rearranged to make il easier to read. But IRS officials admll tbey expect more er· rors than b e for e , because errors locrease when lasl year's ret.um . can't be used as a pal· te rn for this year's. (2) Those barred from U'Sing the l a x tables, because income Money's Worth is too high <more lhan $20,000 if you are single, more than $40,000 if you are m arried), or because there are too many exemptions, will have to cQmpute lheir own tax. A new tax computation schedule will be enclosed with Form 1040. (3) DESPITE THE TAX SIMPUCATION Act and a more logical r earrangem ent of lines, the 1977 Form 1040 still "looks formidable," says the Research Institute ot America, and it introduces several new complicat.ions that slem from thesimplificaUon act. (4 ) Schedules A and B. it.em ized deductions and interest a nd djvidend income, are basically the same as the 1976 version. except that you reduce the total of itemized dedut · lions by lhe n at standard deduction. U this reduct.ion l'esulls in a minus figure, it could be confusing. (S J Schedule C is generally the same. except that on the 1977 form. deductions for wes and repairs need not be ex- plaiJled . . Cl) THE 1t17 SCUEDtJLE D PROVIDES for the longer olding-period-f&r-lon•Lerm capital gains and_lbo h.=i...,b.:.z.::..r __ _ ($2.000) amount or net capital losses deductible against Qr· dinary income. It contains a new Part V lformerly Part V on Form 47981 for computing short· and Iona-term capital loss carryovers from 1977to1978. <7) Completely new is Schedule TC, t he tax computation schedule. for those prohibited from using tax tables. (8) As o( today. line 45 on page two of the tentative Form 1040 is left blank. It ls set aside for possible use to claim an "energy" tax credit. should a credit of this sort bt?come Jaw in lime to apply lo 197'7. If not, it will remaln blank. Slight Rebound Brings Dow Up NEW YORK <AP> -Blue chip lssues st•&ed a modest upswing in an otherwise mixed stock market session today. The Dow Jones average of 30 Industrials, which had fallen more than 22 points in th~ lHt three trading dl)'S showed a 3.47 gain to 821.64 today. ' But losers held a 7-6 edge on gainers in the over-all tally of New York Stock Exchanse·listed Issues. Al the close on Thursday the Federal Reserve reported a big jump in the basic measure or the money supply. The news was taken as a strong signal that the Fed was likely to tighten credit further ln Its effort to combat innu- tion by restraining monetary growth. lip• and Uo.cna M'leat .fitork• Did HEW YOAIC IAPI Pl<tY. TOCS.y dtY • tfl l 31 •if fl7! 49'1 00 IUS 1112 . . .. .., 111 141.u NiW Y0Alt IAPI ·NY ~ ..... Afff'Oio. tiNf • • . .. • • • " 1*.•it,000 Prevl-O.y • • U,.l1Q;,IOll wm •.................... "~ ~"'• .... " .. • .. ••ooo ., .. , "99 ••• • ......... .. '16,110,QOC ,. ... -, ......... IJ,6JO,~ t:,i ~o'~. ·· :.: .. :.: !:=m lt1S lo -• • ..... ... • J,1,.._~ WMAt AMaJI Oii> NtW YOAIC. IAPJ AMIEll SALES Aporo• IN I IOtM ......... , • l,•lif,000 MCKll .. , .. ~· "'° .. . . 1,n a.ooo ~ro~ flNf 1IOnCI MlllK • • • '1·*000 Oond ... _.. WA' OQO , • \ ,QJll,000 Storlu In 'l'lee !tiporllglet NEW voq11 IAPI· S•IK, • o.m. P<lce """ Ml._~"-• ol ,.,. ffflffn "'°'' 41tlfw Ntw ~or• Stoo £a<1>t• ,,_, tr•Ol!iMtloMlly o0t mol't tillft SI. ' NCR p ,, ,, , to -2 .. 0 111•\4! 'h . . .. . mm '3 -2·. Al~Clft I.Ml • ... 37J.~ ""' +1-. Coll<~.. ., JU,200 U~1 .-~ Bell\ .. .. .. • m JOO 11~ -V• ~-• • .. • • • • ltl,11)9 "'" -~ "" MllOIM .. • • 110,«IO ""' -~ Brit "'91... . .. • 1471 !Wt + \;, Gon a1te. . , . 1 ... , JOI• ~ \') bxor..:_.. , . 141., .it.•1 + 10 G<tnTf..41"..... Ut, •••1t .., -. :~lllff'il\j ' ISJ,000 tol• ,., , ~c.o . ::u: J ~-t· Cast Ked.M.. 1•,100 Jlh - l 8J0 DAil Y PILOT Cbmnpions To Vie at Annapolis Over so da!IR champions haH~ been invited to upply for this year's Championship of Cham pions sponsored by the United States Yacht Racing Union and to be sailed at the U.S. Naval A<.·ademy Nov. 17-20. Twenty entrants will be :-.elecl· cd from thuSO applicants. T IUS WILL BE third year or the C of C and will be a six·racc :>eries sailed over Olympil' oourse. Each competitor will be as- ~igned a boat which he will use throughout the regatta. Subject to the requirement to keep the boat in good condition for its future owner. he can tune it and race it as if it were his own boat. U.S. sailors who are current national, conlrnental and world <:hampfons in their class are en· titled to apply. Also. any non-U.S sailor who has won the currenl U.S. nationals may apply. THE P ERSON being invited is the skipper. Ile or she can hring any crew. Skipper and c rew must remain the same throughout the rcgutta. In tht-event that CO· skippers were the winners in their class championship. they arc entitled to apply for similar partil'ipation in the C of C The regallu will be sailed ill C hrys ler Ou ccanccrs fully equipped al no cost lo US YRU or the competitors. A SSO deposit will be rPquired lo insure that the boat is returned in good condi lion. Friday, October 1t, 1977 • ' MERLIN SEEKS NEW TIME RECORD IN LA PAZ RACE Speedster Salls Under Golden Gate En Route To Newport Five Local Yachts In La Paz Regatta rng lhl• !\lowest boats Cit nonn. Ol'l 21 and the fai.ter . highi:r retlcd boatc; :?I hour-; later on Saturday, Oct 2£.. VC Irvine Activities· Listed Tht· follow111g uc · t1v1l1es at UC lrvmc huvc been announced. They urc open to the public. SATU•OAY, Oct.1' Mother• & 0AUQnltr$," Vlvl•ll Clec•k, M S.W., llrH coorOl~tor, Soutll Or.,. Co~inty ll~IOl\111 Menl•I H.allll Se<vlcH, PtYCl!Ol ... r•pl1t " UC Irvine E•loln1ion on•·d•y wora"1IOP, • 1t.m. u noon •!Id t j p rn • R»l. 114, P11yslcal ~itncH lllOQ ' UCI (empljS Fte 11\dlVIOll•I.· 'H ; Mel,..., •('Cl D•Ullhler, t.40 (e monlmum -of 13 I• '~""" tor cl41VQlll•OI ''tnttrn.C1UOf\4t 8 uitn•s,," Fetfk1•1 Pa1ubi~1. Pll D . cllrK1...-QI Ir,. tffnellCNI 8u\IM>t C.nl•r and pro-''''°' o1 Mil•ll.•llnv. C•lllornl• Slate UnowrillY. llln9 Be.ch A UC '"''"" E>l..,pon ......O.y MfTOIMf, t JO <I"' 4 lO pm. Rm no, Soclet S<l•nc• Tower, UCI <•mou\. Fu U~. '"° cluelf\ cl•s\ ma11rl••' luncn •nd ,,.,k.nq. ·· Ell«ll,.. c.op.nq 'l'llh om1cu11 Pto Pit," R-rt M Bram.on, Ph 0 ,.nlor t)llr1_Nr. Br•m\on. "•"''"" H•"''°" _,., A•-lales A UC ln1IM E•lon•ion one..i.v .. m1r11r, • JO• m ' )0 p m , Gold R_..,, M<Pw Coun Common\, uc1 c•mou• ~" uo. 111 tJU<I•• cl•n m•terl•I• IUllCll •no ~r<l119 E""'41mtnl lif"llM IOIO MOWl:>AY. Oct, 11 K•ICl'ltlll •nd B•lhroom"' Sut Reeve. A S I D . protoHlonel cl• •l91>er PIVI 01 •UC tn1ine E•l""''°" lecture urlH, "Rtno••llno Your Home," 1 10 p.m , Rm 100, So<let !Kl.,no H•ll, uc1 umpu\. 5,lnol•.., m1u1 ... at IM clOor II _,,..,mitt, "!O ·uncle l>em eno Ollltr l'rlend"" Norton IC.•rno .• t11ort1er, CPA P•rl of •UC Irvine E•len•lon I« lure •trl••· AjMlrt"""'I HOUSH, 19/1," 1 • f )0 p m '. Rm. lOt, PhYl•C•I Sc i•nUt\ 9109., uc1 c•mou• SJno•• .om1u10 .. ....... clOor•l~ll•. ~,. TU«S AY, I. II ),~::~.~:!:.'~ '"'.,..~ ... ~~"a~~;: Pert ol •UC 1.,,1,.., Elttm•IOn ltclurt ...,,, ... ••TIM! Aoe ot Con•Pi•«'t Tne lloQlll to I("°"'•• 1 • 10 pm, Am IOI Pny>IUll St•en<•• 810Q • UCI <•ml>IA '>•1><1•• «lmtUIOll •I '"" door II '9<k• Derm\U U WIDNISOAY,OCI. It N•w llOlf'l Mid Ntw Conltl<I\ tor Adoll'S(en1 Fern.I•, .. '' trw WtiUm•n p,, D , ltMl .... ••eHr<lleelltor. Part OI a UC IN IN £•ttn\lol\ t.clu•• .. ,..,., .. The Ohlrt\MCI aOd Tr-loci aoo1...c ... 1 &..re ,,_, Jn Eouu , BOATING I MISCELLANY 'WE DUG FOR 30 YEARS, USUAL&.. Y IN THE DARK' Typical Cross Section; Tunnel Stretched About 150 Miies Tunnel Warfare Cong Undergrowul: Literal 1-:DITOR'S NOTE -AssOCJCted Press Pulttzer Pnze w111n111g photographer- wrrter l/orst Fa.as. who couered the Vietnam war for 12 years, recently mode o return visit to that country. Here is his report of a tnp to Cl former Vietnam battlefield. By HORST FAAS AU•Ki•lfll Pren Wrflff CU ClU, Vietnam (AP> -As Lt. Col. George A. Eyster lay dying from Viet Cong sniper bullet wounds on a Jungle trail. he said to me. "Before I go I'd like to talk to the guy who controls those incredible men in the tunnels." at the briefing, Col. Duong Long Saug. .. Al the end we had a three-tier tunnel system and eve rything was underground -the toilets, the hospitals. all our soldiers, many civilians and even water buffalo." The colone l continued: "We literally dug fpr 30 years, usually in the dark, squatting down. We carved out about a meter every eight hours, and women distributed the earth on the surface. hiding it under Callen leaves." The tunnels crept under some U.S . positions. ''Several times we knew that American field commanders would sit like this on their metal chairs directly above us ... said Linh with a grin. Applicants should write a note to Bill Bentsen. One-Design Of. fl~ t,;nited St.at.es Y acb.l Rae.me Union 820 Davi~ St . F.\'anston, Ill . 60201 Five local yacht:. "ill be among the 25 entries an th1' year's Long Beach to La Pat r ttee-sl:arting-Get. ~l..el Orange County s kipper:. art· '.\terlin. the 67-fool r ecord selll'1 under charter to Ai Cassel of lht· Balboa Yacht Club: High Roler recent handicap winner of tht• California Coastal Race. sailed by Bill Power of the Newport Harbor Yacht Club: Audacious. Michael Kennedy's Yankce-38. Dana Point Yacht Club: Cotton- tail, John Arens· CF-37. Balboa Yacht Club; nod Sasquatch. Stephen M. Pauley 's Westsail l2. Balboa Yacht Club. ~~r.-o"* Mf'"t~t "••tth at1d P\r<l>Ol,.,..tc>y. 1 10 p I'll lltn 114 Coml>Ule< S<i.nce 8IOQ UCI um ""' Sll'Qfr -..•ut<ln •I 1119 -fl TllF. l::~TR\'-UST for the race •~ the l:Jrj?cst :-.mcc• 1971 when 34 ho ah .ins v. l'rl'd the s tartrni: Eleven years later I met that man and he showed me the inside of the fantastic tunnel octopus that took 30 years to dig and stretched 150 miles, with tentacles sometimes winding right under e c airs or "tJ .S. comma nders as they sat in their headquarters THE.VIETNAMESE took our group for a visit and as ooisY. swarms of roosquitoes buzzed aroun our ea we pushed ourselves through the narrow corridors. obviously built by and for slender Vietnamese. "We always moved in the dark. saving our Finn Races Postponed ..... __ PAI.AMOS. Spain CAP> The third regatta or the World Cham- pionship Finn Class Sailing Championships was postponed Thursday because of a lack of wind. officials said. They said the race would be run Saturday, previous ly scheduled as a day of rest. The jury delayed the start of the regatta for one hour Thurs- day in the hope winds might rise :.o that the 133 competitors from more than 20 nations could con- tinue but fihally had to call ore the day's sailing. Joaquin Blanco. winner of the Cirsl regatta and third-place fani~er Wednesday. continued to lead the overall classification fQllowed by· Claudio Biekarck or Brazil and Magnus OJI in of Sweden. CASSEL WILL be out to kct:p alive Merlin's unbroken string of elapsed time records which she started in her maid en long-distance race, the Los Angeles to Honolulu. She recent ly set another first to finish rec ord in the California Coastal race from San Francisco to Newport Beach. In the Honolulu race Merlin was s.k:ippered by her designer and builder Bill Lee. Santa Cruz Cassel skippered the swift ultra- light displacement sloop in the California Coastal r ace Under a new format. the Long Beach Yacht Club will be start Mg naJ Given :m.} ktnd or breeze. the ex1stm~ dap~cd time record of six days. four hours, 10 minutes :ind 30 .seconds· s hould not be a great challenge to McrHn. The record \\as sN in 1973 bv th<' hl'i.l\'Y d1.spl:H'cment ;loop Hobon. a fil ·footer sailed bv Bob C:rant. Nl'wport Harbor Yacht Club 1\nothf'r fir.st 1n thi.. )'<'ar ·s race " the u dmittan ce of Performnnce Handicap Racing fleet yal'hts. rat'ing separately from the lqlt:rnat1onal OCCshore Rule ralnJ:S The Occt t'Orn.ists of 17 IOR and eight PllRF y:ichts. Another new angle will be the pro,·islon that the yachts take their elapsed time al the Cabo Falso liJ:ht, near Cabo San Lucas. mark mg the end of a race that doc:. not stop The fleet will continue up the Gulr of California to La Paz for a second finish The t" o rac:e.s "111 com prise " hell will be kno\\ n ai. th<' Sea of Cor1e1 s~rie!- Boat Inspection Needed Planning to lake a short cruise on a party boat. excursion boat. si~htseeing boat. or even a fis hing buat? If the boat Is over 65 feet in length but under 100 gross tons that carries passengers, or under 65 feet that carries more than s ix people for hire, the Coast (;uard suggests that you check the expiration date of the \'eRsel's certificate of inspection The proposed re~ulation would require the :.ticker s howinu expiralion date of the certificate of inspection to be posted on the vessel where rt <·an readily be seen by boarding passenJ?ers. THE COAST GUARD HAS made it easy. A pro· posed new regulation would require these types of commercial passenger \'Csscls to display the ex· pi ration date on a prominent decal or s ticker. TllE PROPOSED REGULATION is an out· growth of an atcident that occurred when a prty or 25 Peoolc hired a small vessel for a Clay of fishing Unknown to the passengers, the vessel's certificate of ini.pcoct1on had expired and the \'CSscl had several safety ddic1cnc1cs The boat sank with the fishing party and lwo crew mt'mbcr!> Only 11 P<'rsons sur- vived The type of commercial vessels includes many party fishing boats. excursion boats and sightseeing boats. These vessels are required by law to be in· s pecled periodically by the Coast Guard. Adetermined that the vessel meets all applicable regulations Thl' Coasl Guard bcl1e\•cs that similar ac<'i dents could be prevented 1f prospt:Cli\'e passengers understood the requirements for Coast Guard ln- !>pection~ •md v. ere informed by !>licker or the l'ert1ficate's t•xpiratron date It wo uld also deter npl•rator.., from u llo\\-mg their ct•rt1f1cate~ to ex pirc Weekend Calendar Gold Cup Races St8.rt By ALMON LOCKABEY Dally Pllol IHll"9 Wr.1•• The Newport Harbor Yacht Club will dominale the com petitive' yachting scene this weekend with its Fall Gold Cup Regatta, one of three "gold cup" events throughout the year. The others a.re the sprmg and sum mer Gold Cups The evenL'l originally were so named blcause all trophies for the regatta were gold plated. The fall and spring Gold Cups ()(ten have been hampered by fog or other inclement weather. The long-ra nge forecast indicates this weekend's event may en counter fog and light winds AS USUAL. RACES will be sailed on lns•dc and outside courses. Small boots will sail five races three on Saturday and two on Sunday Inside the bay The larger classes will sail two f"oces on Saturday and one on Sunday in the ocean starting off -•Balboa Pier. A new fall event this year will be Capistrano Bay Yacht Club'5 Mission Scrfos on Sunday Involv- ing Performance Handicap Rae inl( F1eetyachts. Rlg~est auractsons oul'l1dc the Orange Coast area will Ix! th~ SC.COnd race of the Los Angele-; Y;tchl Club's Harbor Series on Sunday. The event features In lernationalOffshorc Rule. PllR P and Midget Ocean Racing Ai. sociation ratings. Al Marina del Rey, the California Yachl Club will stage the fourth event or lht· I larris Series on Saturday SOlITllERN California Yacht mg Association calendar Los Angeles-Long Beach NAVY YACHT CLUB Navy Day Regatta Saturday. LONG BEACH Y J\CllT CLUB Indian Summer Regatta t La!ler , Sabol I Saturday LOS ANGELES YACHT CLU B fl arbor Series No. 2, Sunday Santa Monica Ray CALIFORNIA YACHT CLUB Harris Series No. 4. Saturday KING HARBOR YACHT CLUR Trans-Pcninsulu race. Saturday, Sunday MALIBU YACHT CLUB Fall Series No. 2 lmultihull >Sun- <luy. WEST COAST YACHT CTXfJ Singlehand<'d r<il'C IPllRF> Sunday. S;an Diego CO HONADO YACllT CLUB Kelly Lo.-. Coronados race <ha n-dicap l Saturday, Sunday MALI BlJ Y 1\CHT CLl.i B l.1do-l4 I nv11 at1on:1l , Saturdci y Sundav SAN. Dll-:G<J NAVY SAILING ('LUO Navy Cup Regatta <Cal-20. Cal-251 Saturday, Sun-d ay SAN DfEGO YACHT CLUB Navy Birthday Regal-ta /han- dicap> Sunday. SILVER GATE Y J\CllT CLU O Mlln o· War S!'ries. Sund:w North ancl Inland SANTA BAHUARJ\ S/\ILIN(; CLUB Tom .r uck~on 10nc Oci;ign Series, Saturcl uy, Sun <luv. I WESTLAKE y J\CIJT CLUB r.:1dy Sailor of the Year Regattu. Saturday, Sunday. PIERPOI NT BAY YAC HT CLJJ D Pierpoint Trophy Scrles...Sundoy. POMONA VALLEY SAILJNG J\SSOCrATfON Class racing. Sunday VENTURA YACHT CLUB Anacapa to Port ra.cc. Sunday. ,. -·--"""·~ ·~1t,111-w•I .• VlrQlnt• 8ov•c' Pfl O • direct°' o1 Pr••~.,.t-nl •"" lfl• Pl•nn•nq Educ.11on """'"' Gtront'*'9• Cent ... U!>C P•rt 01 • UC lrvlne Eortffl>oon IKIU,.. M>rlt'< "l!vlr>g .,, EnrlctWd -HHlthlul Lii• " 1 10 p rn . Sc,..,.. le< tu,. Hall, UCI cem1K.t• Slr>QI• edml\\>On •lllle doorll l(»Cf !'('"'"" ~ ~ TMU•SDAY,Ocl 1t .. M••ln9 II•• franoillon Into S.-rvl~ " HoWll•O W1tton, IJl'ttl· dent, Aclml"l'4'a11Y• RtttHrch A\ -••t ... Ill( •UC '"''"" E•I""''°" ono·cwv _,.,,.,.,, 4·30 • m • • lO p m . ~l~y Inn, JUI 8rlslol, ~I• Mew Ftt l lO. '"'"""'~ IUN' ... !>a'' 1n9, Md cl•n maltrl•I' Llmltocl Entoll.....,1. l'IUOAY,Oct,11 "llec~nt 0."'tl-h In R•ltOMI Ell\04~ P\yci.ol-apy· 01.cun-.,.o Otmor1'1r•llon wtl!I D< Allltn Ellh."' "" O , •••cldlve 11trector '""llutr for Adllen<.td $1\lll't In ... tton•I P'""°'""'"'' •nd of ll>e 111\l•lllte hw llellONll llvl"t N<ow Vor~ OIY, .,.., .ulNr A UC ln11- Eirttn.\O\ _., _,,,,l'llO, t em U ,_ .,., I • 1 I> m . c;.lf lllMm, M•w Court eiwnn-. UCI cam-~ .. P l •l'C,.,.,_.,.1"0•..0celtw ..-.10AY, UTUllOAY - SUNOA'f.Ort n.n-u "Wrol1119 fQr Y-Mll A Wertl>'- Wll't MJv Sc-" Mlv SCIM<lf, I A wrll••. L.o. ,.,,._, .. Ti.,..\ a UC lrvl"" Eat---l.•ftd wort.\llOP. ir1 1 IOom..~ •l'dSun 10•"' 11--t·Sp rn,llrn 141.Soc .. I \c len<• l.•b, VCI cemput . FH W \Cl, •ncluctt• rHdlllQ rnat•ri•l•-°"'"l"'il l.HllllN Enro11....,.1 lnc!IVl-1111"9 IOt [erly c:r.11- E Cl Ut e I i on K.J." M•u•et"' MIO<Gow<ln, 8 A lta~ ..... RMtclto (Anffjj El-lll•y Sch004. A UC: lrvuw Eat.,.tlon wMund courw. Fri • 7 • 10 p.tn ; S.I. •ncl $\Jn., e 311 • rn S P m • llm. SS. 8-.. P••lo: HIQI\ Sc.ho(M, IMQnotle •I A.c-my O• • a-P•rll Fu UJ. SA.TU-DAY, Oct. U S!Mtlr>g YOUf' Own BullCllllQ Ind O~v•topme111 Como11t1v, •• John 1Conw1wr M 8 A .• Pre•ldent, TM ><onwl~r Cor-•llcw\, A UC lrvl,,. E•ltn•lon_,....,,,,...,, JO•m 4 )0 pm , Am 101, Pllrttc•I ~htl'C~ llldQ • UCI <.,,,PUS Ft• UO. lnchqs clns m.tt•rltl1, 1.-11 -0¥\•"9 "Cllan91n11 ltPt11vlor." Now••<I Wll\on, presl .. nl , Alltnlnhlrall.,. EYSTER, A TALL West Pointer from Cocoa Beach, Fla .• died in a field hospital while his battalion, the 2nd of the 28th Regimt:nt, Finl Infantry Division, was trying to fight its way out or the vast underground com plex0> miles northwestofSaigoo. The n~ peaceful tuMels were on the itinerary of a German tourist group I CJ-aveled with on a rare two- week trip to Vietnam. One of the briefing officers at district headquarters was Capt. Nguyen Thanh Linh. Dressed in an olive drab North Vietnamese unitorrA u.nd Ho Chi Minh rubber tire sandals, he said in answer to a question tha& he had commanded ttie Cu Chi Liberation Ba ttaJiofuuring 1966. T HA WAS T H E UNI the Americ colonel's "Black bon" b1ttalion had opposed. The slighUy- buill. 4S-ear -old Capt. Llnh looked quiuic•lly es I pursued m y questionlbg. Yes, he said, intelligence reports bad informed him at the time that th~posing Anlerican battalion comm r had been killed. As he ailed those days tor our tourist g~p the horror of a war I had witnessed' from only one side became vividly~. Capt. Wnh spoke in French with grudgiog respect and almost without hatred about his rormer enemies, the AmericaM. The death of Eyster and many other Americans in lho.se early war years shocked the American public, ~l as the captain talked it was evidEiiit the battles had not been one-sided. • llnu•<" Auo<•etn, '"'· " uc OF TQ-to .,.,,.. MEN 1·n the Cu Ch1" lrY1t"te Eatt@nilon one-Uv Mn'l•fH~r. s,, VV'¥" • JC) • m 'JD p "'·· Golct Roon! ballaJioo that fought Eyster's Black Meu °""" °"""*" UCI camllU\ L · · 1 J 1 o..tu' ] f Ftt uo '"''.,.., t1<11• "'•'•"•'• ions >n anuary .....,, on y our •ur><11"""°"'-•"9 survived the war. two offi cers a.nd two common ~!~;.~2~1o rs non-commissioned officers, said Linh. l.a .. r...ce . .,.."'*"'· .._, ... , ,.P-" The battalion itself "was wiped out mtnlHouMOwN~A•-lallon P•rl aJ t'....., " h 'd "E h •l 0, • uc 1,,,1,. E•i .... 1on 1ociu•• sever hues, e Sal . ac ume ..... H . ··"'*"-"' Houw•. ma," 1 we reconstructed it. In the whole • 10 om 11m 101, P11n1e .. S<~ce• sector we lost 12,000 men in lhe course Otdq • vc1 ·-· 51"91• .om"''°" of lh" war ... altM-11soett-mllt.ll4 " LIYlllQ<'-... encl Btd,_,.., .. o... The former battlefields looked lush Sl••ri A s I O • prottnlon•I o.. ''<IM' P•rt °' e uc ,,..,,,.. £01""''°" and sleepy as our group drove from 1..,,.,,. '•""'· "R•no••llno Your Sai~on northwest along the river .. 0,,,. •• 1 10 pm. Rm 100. So<••• · So d '>r o•nr• Hall. UCI camf)U\ Sor>Qlt eel bearing the City •s name. me ~p "'"'•on••'"" c1oc>< 11 •PA<• l)C!rmu, 852 bomb craters were still visible. "10 Tu1SoAY,0ct, u •retained as fish pon~s or wallowing ·w,.,., s~ ,.,. 0,....,,,.,1:· 00 .... 10 holes for animals . Fr~. o••Y"'' IQrll Mid •llll!Or PMI ot •UC Irvine e •t9fl•lon lecturr Mtrl•\. "Tnr ~ ot Co11<0lr11<y Tl•• .RIQlll 10 Kno.__," I 100 m . Rm 101. Ptly\1C.tl ~len<"' Rldq , UCI <•mou•. SlnQlt &Omhs1on 'tt thf ttoor 1t 'P•cr P"•mll\, Wt F•r•nQ Seuctr\ 61\1j Ul'01\. ' Or JMou"' V•I'"'· auttior First of• uc f rvtne E•t•n,1on •ec1ur1 ttrlt\, "F •<I• .,.., MVI~ In , ... Nam• of Scoence." 7 • 10 pm. Am 100. So<I•• Sc••nc .. H•ll. UCI umpu\ '•• ''"hi, Ul Non<rectlt, 14' W£0Nl!SOAY,OC1. H "Rolaullon lloll•llt•tlon ot Ml"° -llody:' "•" Oyclltweld, Ph 0 <l><llrec:tor. !>AGE (Stnl...-•ctU<OllH t•on ~"d Gro••" E•o•or•Uoft I O••••l"V P8rt ot a UC 1,.lne I:• t•n\lon ff(h,1rp wrft\. ''ll¥'"0 •n Enr•c~ •ncl Hullhlul Lii•,' 1 • 10 "m • Sc....Cf! l.Ktvre Hell. UCI um INS Slr>Ole ..i1•llHIOn el Ille -II •~t porm>I\. "4 !O ' T ..... 8lk~ lrtel QlltaftO Adol9H"'I (rO\i tuUur•f Contlt<t,"' M lth••I c°"""'·"" O., H~••t• orofto1or of l>~y, CAii 54"'* I.-8-ACll, end <ltr~I°'• C/1110 1111rtnl Tr•1n1ng 'Pr09ram, 1(-.n CommUf\llV ~r\lal Hu Ith c.n1 .... lCK AllQelf\ Part.,. • UC lrvh"' Eatf"\\loll ltclurt terlu, "T"" OIJlrf\\ecl encl lroublf<l Aoolo- .. nl 841•1< luue• In Ectu<atlOn, Men· IAI lieitllll M1<I P\YCllOIMl•llPY," 1 • 10 11 m , RM 17~. CoMpuler \<le11c• ll•OQ , uc1 <•mpu1 Slnci•• otc1m1n1on •t '""door II •P9C'• -mll\. '6 TMUll.SOAY-l'IUOAY, OCl,t7M141t Th~ Envlronmenlitt Ouotlllw eel •CEQAJ MeMl1t9 the EIR Work for 111e O•cltion Mtker," oroorem tOOrdlNI°''• NON Dtnnl\, ectuotlon cll•lrP!'r'on. "'noclellon 01 Environ· montal Pro1 .. ,1ontlt. orlntlDal, M•orolW As~l•I"', Chelr119r\on, Miii Vallrt Pl.t1111lno eon.mlnkwl •"" Peul l•om ...... l>f'•,loent, AEP. vice or-.1-, N•lloMI AUoclallon 'of E11vlronrri...1a1 P10f•U'°'"'91t; prt \ldtnl, Envl~'al •S<l•llCt At YOUTH LABOR GANGS were widening a road, and occasionally a reminder of the war would appear. A ru11ting armored personnel carrier with First Infantry Division marklhgs and "LitUe Rose" painted on its &de loomed out of a bamboo thicket. The wreck ~of a U.S. helicopter was overgrown with elephant grass. The battleground we were being tak(j!l to-lay'bcneath our Ceet' at one. two UJul three levels underground. It was a £.wisting octopus or tunnels and caverns stretching from Cu Chi toward Saigon and the surrounding provincial capitals. The tunnels were marked in black lines on a 12 by 12· foot map hanging from a briefing room wall. and my ftrst reaction was that it looked like a map of lhe New York or London subway system. with dots not for s tations but for fighting positions and secret entrances and exits. The slippery, humid cor ridors, abolJl two feet wide and two feet high, blocke<l with wooden trapdoors at underground intersections, spanned the history of the whole Vietnam war. starling from the days when Communist agents hid from the French pollcl!: But it was durlne the American phase ohhe war, Linh said, th1:1t the system was truly tested. _,., ... .,.., °""'' ·-•.,. • uc "AS MORE A.ND 'more American ~~,..f~":;:;n:o~.,:.:.: soJd.l.ers arrived to oc~upy the surface o•-"' '"" 1-.0 En• "'"' Mnie• above. the more we extended our ~':..AN '" •101 1"'''*' two system below," said a senior o!rlcer " • ----.. ............ ~~ 'A• •ore ••d ••re A•erl~•n ••ldfer• arrf .,ed Co oeeMpfl t~ ...-1~ _...,e, tlte ... r.e Kie eztettfled o•r •pte. IMfom. Ac t~ end tee •ad a tltree•tler taanel ••em. .. ' eandles and torches for emer g- encies," said Linh. "Our amputees lay in the dark, sometimes for • months." But eventually the Americans figured out the counterattack. First they used hunting dogs "and we batUed them underground with rine butts. mines and knives," said Linh. Then somebody had the idea to use American toilet soap and the Vietnamese started smelling the same as tbe Ols. "That stopped the dogs, .. Ll.nh said. NEXT CAME THE "tunn~ rats - small, tough Americans. like us." Linh safd. ..They crawled into the tunnels with tneploslves and gas to blast t.&S out. We installed more escape routes, more tiers, but sometimes we were cornered and we tried to kill them with bayonets so as not to give our positions awey. ''Muny Americans died in the tunnels. They wasted much time pulling their dead back. That gave us time to regroup. The more we killed the fewer problems we had," said Linh. The Americans tried flooding the tunnels "and we lost many men until we constructed upper tier es.cape levels." Col. Sane said . \ FINAILY, UNH SAID, came the "scorched earth" palicy that from 1968 on saw regular Bs.2 bombing of the tunnel complexes. Only direct hits killed. Unh claimed, but he described the awesome experience of a near miss: "Fire would be everywhere, the body would be thrown back and forth in the tunnel. shirt and pants would be ripped apart by the suction of the air blast. .. Sang staled: "The Americans used to say that as long as there were soldiers of the Liberation Front in the Cu Chi tunnels, Saigon would be in danRer. They were right. "We planned the 1968 Tet attack against the U.S. Embassy in Saigon from here. Ann it was also from here that detaj)s for the final, successful liberation or Saigon on April 30, 1975, were drawn up. \ ·'The greatest pleasure Ul \hose nays wos to stick one's head out to the surface and just breathe air," uid Linh as we climbed into our vehicles for the ride back to Saigon. l watched him ta.Ice a gulp of the heavy, humid and undisturbed air that bangs over peaceful C\l Chi today. Coutal Weather ,.,,19111 ""°"'" m1<1 mornl~ low <lovO.teno loul oen•e IOQ. Olhfrwl\e ltetr lVlltltlnt tr11ovon S..urdfly Co•!ol•I 1""'"'r••11rt1 wlll rantt alloUt /O. l111anc1 •~M· oeraltW•• wlll he_,_,, T,.. Wttlr ,..,,...,.,,.,.. .. 111 IN ~~ Sun, /ffeoft, Tide• JIUOAY 4 50• m II OU.II' • Ot•.m I) ....... , .. I • ' '· Inside: Restaur.ants Music Reviews Intermission , •• , I /9 d Movies Fridey,Ooto .. ,1'.1011 DAIL;:,~OT "ee.-..;en er ,,.. ~ .................................. ~ .................................................................................. x.r r I , Have Tickets for the Music Center? 'Chapter TUXJ' Reveals Emotion Beyond Laughs By DENNIS McLELLAN Of IN O.OIJ l'ile(S!Alf George is a 42-year-old novelist who is grief-stricken over the death of his wire of 12 years. He's tired of the barrage of phone calls from widows and divorcees inviting him to dinner. Jennie. 32, has divorced after six years of marriage. She's tired of being greeted at the aoor by men with their shirts open to their tan navels, revealing carefully-combed chest hair and JCWelry. THE STAGE lS THUS set for Neal Simon·s new romantic comedy, "Chapter Two." at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles now through Nov. 26. The master o( contemporary comedy orice again ha:; a laugh- falled hit on his hands. But there is more at. work here in this. Simon's most autobiographical play' to date. He's tapped the deeply-felt pain of losing a spouse after years of the k.i.od of marriage in which the couple still holds hands m restaurants. IT IS IN TUE SENSITIVE hands of Simon -and through the excellent acting or the rour players, under the direction or I rerbert Ross -that the story switches from drama to just the ragbt wiUy word or phrase to break the heaviness of a scene. The play begins with George <Judd Hirsch> returning from Europe where he visited his and bis late wife's favorite haunts. It's time lo begin chapter two or his life but grief keeps gelling in the way. Brother Leo <Cliff Gorman). however. has the remedy: He'll rax up old George with some women. They're all losers <one is named Bambi>. until George calls a wrong number and is introduced to the recently divorce<l Jennie tAnita Gillette). THEY ARRANGE A MEETING at her place. It's love at first sight and their off to the altar within weeks. <That's about how long it took Simon to marry his second wife, Marsha Mason. I -One..oU.he.. major CJawS:.irLt.he...playJs • .in. the.Jj rSl scene 01..th second act. It. is arter the honeymoon and George has an emotional blow-out with Jennie. He's apparently racked with guilt in loving another woman so soon after the death of his first wife. But the audience just hasn't been prepared for s uch a dramatk .. change in George's behavior. As if to counterbalance the we_iehl of these heavy JOHN ALEXANDER PREPARES FOR NEW SEASON Irvine Master Chorale Starts 10th Year Oct. 22 Bach's Scores Quiet: Ma.sters Working By JUDITH O~N Of I ... O.Uy l'li.4 , .. , A blend of Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Bach. Boito and BerUoz is planned for the 1977-78 lOth anniversary season or the Irvine Master Chorale. The season of masterworks begins Oct. 22 with a performance of "Elijah" by Mendelssohn. a German composer bom in 1809. WIUTl'EN TO CAPTtJRE moment.is in the life or the prophet Elijah, the oratorio is considered to be the work which "set the cap" on Mendelssohn's fame. "Elijah" was first performed on. the composer's ninth trip to England in 1846. It was important to him because it made up to some extent his failure ever to write an opera. It also was a big step In h.l.s career because it of(ered him a large scope for vocal dramatic writing and musical chatacterization, whlla remaining In the religiouR framework, which his father had always regarded as the higbesl musical form to which a composer could aspire. THE STORY TAKES place during the time of King Ahab and Queen Jezebel. The Queen introduces the worship of Baal to Israel and has the priests or Jehovah kllled. Out of fear, many people tum to the worship or Baal and Elijah prophesies' disaster and drought. While eluding his enemies, Elijah is fed by ravens and helped by other miracles. Eventually 'hete b • duel between the pri~sts of Baal und Elijah. who wins when Jehovah sends tire o consume (See CHORALE, Page CS) WRONG NUMBER MAKES RIG :'CONNECTION Anita Giiiette, Judd Hirsch In' 'Chapter Two' scenes. Simon turns to the other two characters an the play: Faye.' Jennie's soap opera actress fnend who is contemplating adultery. and the married butsUll swinging brother Leo. The scenes with Faye and Leo provide some of the play's funruest moments. But it is George and Jennie the audience cares for. Noel Taylor 1s the costume designer. Tharon Musser __ as the JlKhtin director. The two-a artment set, whJ.ch_f_leverly switches the action from one apartment to the other by rotating the couches. was des igned by William Ritman Simon fans who last year saw his hilarious ·'California Suite·· • the playwright's view of life in the Big Orange -can. an "Chapter Two," expect something more from him than the easy laugh. 'Springs' Overflows With Li/ e'~ Ironies By JERRY HERTENSTEIN Of II• o.ily Pllelt SuH It has been said that the audience needs a sense of adventure to attend a New Theatre for Now production at the Music tenter's Mark Taper Forum Jn Los Angeles. Apparently many at a recent performance of the group's ··Gethsemane Springs" didn't like to risk sitting through the overly long play. Nearly half the house left at the end of the second act or a production that runs three hours. I IT'S UNDERSTANDABLE. For the theater goer who wants hght entertainment, the Harvey Perr written play is dilficult. But for those who mull the philosophical side of lire. there is something or value. It asks the larger queslion, what is reality, whal is fantasy? '. Then each of the characters dissect their Jives. The dissertations are long and some lag. Most or the characters are complicated. For example. the bis exual Hopkins. who is "not a writer, but dying.'' finds a life "shaped by the movies," has him on the edge of a breakdown. JAMES SLOY AN Pl.A VS the role. His analysis of Cole Porter'!> "When They Begin t.be Beguine,·· is humorous and serious. "How can the palms be swaying now to music they were playing then?·· There are chuckles from the audlence but most of 1· what is said as too contemplative to be funny. John Anderson is Claude whose m ore simplistic lifestyle consists or a love for hors es and bunting ... It's up at dawn aQCl,get ::.ome birds... \ .. Gethesemane Springs·• brings together people, of contrasting lives , explores them and then goes deeper wb~ the c haracters become entwined. There are overtone$ of homosexuality and some x-rated language. . ' THERE IS U'M'LE TO CRITICltlE about the acting. But unlike some plays, written as a vehicle for the.players, "Getbes· emane Springs" exists more to expound Perr"s thoughts. 11 -~act\ acCOr al'\<t'a?tr~tras-credits in theater, movies an television. John Sullivan directs. The Hghting, supervisedf by 'Dawn Chiang and choreography by Robert Talmage, are to be commended. <See SPRINGS, Page C4) ... MIKE BAST (LEFT) ANO BRUCE PENHALL LEAD THE FIELD FOR THE U.S. MOTORCYCLE CHAMPIONSHIP SATURDA"I 16. Finalists R-r-ready to Wµi Roaring engines. Shifting gears. Bouncing tires. One or the above mechanical conditions may determine lhe winner o( the ninth annual National Motor cycle Championshlpto Saturday at the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. MOST OF THE human drama at the R p.m . event will come between defending champion Mike Bast bf Canyon Country and Bruce Penh all of Newport Beach. They were automatically seeded into the nationals because ' of their rides in European finals in London. The other 14 contenders earned their rankings in four qualifyintt rounds conducte!d in Costa Mesa. Irwindale. Ventura and San Bernardino by International Speedway, Inc. or San Clemente. • Top point-getters In this circuit of races held every Friday night from April through September are Alan Christian. 4,350; Mark Cherry, 4,250 ; Steve Bast, 2,900; Bobby Schwarti, 2,5.50; Mike Faria, 2,100 and Ron Preston. 2.000. Christian picked up 1,600 points .. Top Motorcyclists Vying In National Champiommp cushion,~ can use the extra traction expera'y and could pull an upset. • ,~ Race organizers also e,xpectµ the choice or tires to be a ~Ucat \ factor on the fairground'• cllrt oval. for his win in the last prelim· inary. THE MACHINES are all lightweight, 500 cc, fueled by alcohol. They can accelerate from z~ro to 60 miles per hour in three seconds. Mike Bast, 24, will be going after his fifth national title. He is described a s "the cool calculating kind or competitor who must have every edge - mechanical~ and psychologically." ~ Winding up the best. year or his career, Penhall. 20, is considered Bast's chief r ival. Penhall gave this assessment of his chances: ''I feel really good about this year's national and I know that l could win it ir everything goes right. I think my four·valve Jawa has the extra horsepower I will need." That anticipated advantage will depend on the track 's condiUon. tr there is a cushion ' tor outside line ). Penhall's new machine could be the answer. Or. the bike could just spin the tires ir the track is a low groove. WHEN THE track is sbck, Christian, 21. the leading scorer from the qualifying rounds. . "rides the low groove as-..wellas onyone." When a track has a Tickets, priced at $8 for adoUs ' and ~ for 11 years and under. are ·, avail~ble through Ti~tetron 1 agencies or at the gate. · Four top trials riclen wUl t ,perform balancing atvau 8Dd 1 there also will be a skateboard oxhil»Uon-duFing the 1»re-t•me show. • . .More Motoring' . ' . Bumping, grindinl( action will highlight Orange ShQw Speedway's 1977 Grand Finale Saturday night will\ destruction derby t~e feature attraction. ,, , Open compeUtaon super stock car racin1 will share tile program with a starting time or ~30 p.m. at the S. Bernardino raceway. At least 20 older model cars with daredevil drive~ behind their wheels will start in this event of automot.lv'e ' mayhem. Running nat out the drivers crash, bump and ari~ pushing each other until the last car running wins the SllC)Q prize. Excitement runs high with three and four crMhM common and roll-overs possible in this rough and t\lmble 5'port. ..... • .. _f;l DAILY PILOT Friday, OCtober 14, 19n :·~-Campus Events Off er Chalknges Five add1tional pel'formances or "Joan Baby," have been scheduled in the community theater of Golden West College, HunUngton Beach. The musical about a modern-day Joan of Arc ~ill play at 8:30 p.m. today, Saturday and S'-\.ndQ)'. Matinees are set for 2:30 p.rn. Saturday 1.und Sunday. Ernestine Goldstein plays Joan, who instead or leading France lo victory on the battlefield, takes the New ~rleans Saints to a win in the Super Bowl. Tickets at t.be college bookstore are S3 general, $?.stu<Mnls and senior citizens. . ·~ SaiJdleback College Many students in the Saddleback Valley and along the south coast will dance their way through class the latter part or next week. The Gus Giordano Jazz Dance Company or Chicago is scheduled at Saddleback Colle&e Thursday, Oct. 20 through 22 and will appear at two high schools. The three-day program opens at 11 a.m. Thursday with a Disco Workshop in the Library Quad at Sadd1eback College. Two master classes will follow, one in the dance room, the other in the gymnasium. There is no cost. The company will appear at Laguna Beach High School Oct. 21. Dance students from Laguna Beach, Dana Hills, San Clemente and Capistrano Valley hlgh schools wlll attend.· A miniconcert. "From Ragtime to R~~ ... will follow the instructional workshop. Students from Mission Viejo, El Toro, Tustin, Foothill and Irvine hJgh schools will get the same treatment in an afternoon session slated at Irvine's University High School. The company will appear in a dance concert at 8 p.m. Saturday in the gymnasium or Sad· dleback College. Tickets al the college box office are$1. ••Jazz dance Is freer than modern dance. It is King Hent-y Would Approve Members of the Society of Creative knachronism demonstrate the proper method for the common practice of hand kissing during the time of King Heney VIII. A hand-kissing contest will be part of Sal· J urday·s JGng Henry VIII European Festival day al South Coast Village, Sunflower at Bear Street, Santa Ana. Festivities begin · at 11 a.m. with the closing court and awarding of the day's prizes at 4:30 p.m. ~-Jazz, Films B~ckoning ~ . ~IGMT,OCTOH• U THe I-A.• l•u Qu.Mel .,.n .. ,.,, •• • p.m . •I Cel S•••• Fullerton's Pl""'~ Avdllorlum. TIOets iol, , eu•pl SJ lor C.I St•I• FYll•rton Times/Places nuclent~,ltKYllY-Sl•ll .l AME lllCAN11NOIAN A WHler" JUiie ~ IN°"9h ()cl. 16 •t GrHt Wnt..-n ExhlOlt Center, los A-les.. SATU•DAY, OCTOlll• 11 "•1.u•o•ASI .MAltVaST ~••T'lvAl w .,.,...wide ~•rv "'"''' ctleDrellon et Meolc M•ulll•ln, V•lefl<IL llnitll Ar&or l•uHltlMs In $~ T'l!falrt tl 1 MIO t tun~ S.lvnllly,Suncley-Ocl, 21 •llcl u I lltm terlH starts •1111 1n9me r "THUllaElt.''Mle<WCl •nctol•vHW lhrome n'• "Scenes l'rom • Wllli•m Windom, l :M p.m., l• M.errt-:• et 1 p.m. In FOf'\lm J. Mlr.O.OvkTloHIAlr. Actmlulon It $1.1$ ...,_,.1. '1 Mftltr <lllH ns. "Alr1c:.9n Oueen" w111 -. GOlO&N WEST Colle .. 's IHl""e SllOwnOct. 211. . . ·.:Pianist Due TUSTIN D.t.'U C•l.881tATION, J~ .. Hol9uln •"4 hit C.ftJunla Verecr1&Uno CoN!elM •Ill ct•nu from I to 5 p.111. Ed l.e«ll •llcl H15 ll•nctlram ltollp.m, .. ·At Laguna ANNA llUU.l.L, _.....comic,. 01 P.'l'I. al ChrrlM>n Tll••l•r. Tiie Ctare,_,,C.olt ... ~ "CAIAllET," ll"OUOll J •n. I at S.b .. tl..,•s Oll'IMr Pl•YllOuM, Or•nct Hotel, An•,,.lm, C•ll 772·7710 tor ......... UoM. . Pianist Virginia Eskin o'Pena t.be 1971·78 Laguna ; Beach Community Concert series at 8 p.m. Satur· -~ay, Oct. 22 al the Laguna Beach High School ~tldit.orium. -.. Miss Eskin is known as a "musician's musician," for ber mastery of not ---------only the piano, bul the oboe, clarinet. French horn and tuba. She is knowledgeable ln 19th cent ur y invites you to _view an exquisit~ collection of over 80 piece•· of Fine ·Brass including tables, lamps, planters and a variety of remonably priced gifts. TUIUOAY,OCTOalll ti "WINfllt HOLIDAYS In Ille ......... k."" ... '"" Of ....... t, .... , lllmt kl • ~ _.., Dy I ... Aot•rv CluD of I>•" Cl•m•"I• Sc,,_,,9'1-' J.JO -Ip m, •I the Community Cl-.a. Actmlu!Oft, $1.SOmtl"-. SJ.to1wn1119 MONllOAY,OCTOalll" "IT'S MAGIC.~ ltW'Ollllfl Oct. >o et V.,lety Nb~ •• Ml I. l'ltyefM !>I .• lot Af\9elu. Perlormen<n n1ori11v. TueU.y ""°"'" S..no.y, O<t. i""'°""' '° .,. ·• P "'· surwi..,. Ocl. U -)Cl '1 l:IO 1,m. -~ ~turcr.y -St.indey, J pm Prk H S..~. USO -M.SO Frld.oy •llCI S.tur6ty ..-"9\. V-'O, .._)II -SU O. TMU•IOAY,OCTO•IA JI WOllLO PJllMlflt ol "St. J<t<t .,,,, IM ~,,.,.., .. l :JO p.m. llwOUQll Oct. ll •t Tit• M•lfl• Tneatr•, 7'J1 Meir-........ i..-.t.,...1~ Account of.,.. ,,_ __ ts Wf'~inq llW lte.....OV 410mlftl11r•llort. "TMI ltlAl Inspector Hound," lllrougll Oct. 1l .t e p.m. al W•ltm¥ ThH lre, CMpman Coll~. Palm Ave,,.. -GrAnd StrHt, OrM199. Mati-, 1·l0p,m S.t-y. Tl<k•ll, '1.S099f'erel-..l1r.ion, 'I sos1.-n1t -....iorcttl1-. solld brass snails American composers. pla.,ting works by Amy Cheney Beach. Edward MacDowell. Arthur Foote and Ch a r l es Loeffler. Join us for champagne on T h e pi anist h as appeared with major orc hestras In Rome, Lo ndon, Bos to n , Washington, D.C., San. Francisco and Lo~ Angeles. . A recent recording by Ms. Esk:Jn, "The Plano Music or Mrs. H .H .A. r SATURDAY,.OCTOBER 15, 10-6 and SUNDAY, OCTOBER 16, 12-5 I 19% DISCOUNT 1"1TH THIS AD I 148 E. 6arry A~•., Sa•ta A•a • ltl 1188 (oft S. Main, betwffn Alton & Oyer) less restricted. less classical and academic than ballet," Glrodano says. "Our jau ·is mo,,t letlt· imate in style. It is a hi&h level concert forrn. We do Bach things played by jau groups.'• CSUF -Chapman Co/leg~ A New Games Workshop is scheduled from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at Cal State Fullerton. The event is for professionals and students in physical educaUon, recreation, health and related fields. Woody and Betty Woodaman, San Diego's games' specialists, will lead a discussion of theory of games and leadership techniques. The event is sponsored by the Orange County Unit of the California Association for Health, Physical Education and RecreaUon <CAMPER ). The new games' concept ls an alternative to specialized sports participation, the Woodamans said. They claim that in new games everybody plays, wins and knows the joy of movement. Registration is $2 for non-CAHPER professionals, :SO cents tor student nonmembers and Cree to members. Further information is available by telephoning the Cbapmap• College Physic1tl Education Department, 991·6757. C0nnel/y School Qlarlton Hest.on, Roy Emerson, Dennis Rals\4)11, Chris Connelly, Tim Peralta and Martin Shaler will team up for a series of doubles matches in the third aMual Cornelia Connelly Pro-CeJebrity Tennia Tournament Sunday. Matches get started at 1: 30 p.m. at the Connelly campus, 2323 W. Broadway St., Anahelm. The round-robin tournament finals and a "fast serve" contest with 1971 Forest Hills Fast Serve Champion, Scott Carnahan wlll be featured Saturday. All proceeds from the tournament will benefit the Connelly School 'a development fund. Tickets can be purchased at the gate. Fair Forecast A uditlons Announ~ed AudlUorus for the Orange County Fall Fair are scheduled for 5 p.m. next Thursday and Friday, Oct. 20 and 21. They will also take place at 1 p.m. Oct. 22 a nd 29 at the Orute Coua&.r Fairgrounds, 88 Fajr Drive, Costa Meta. Categories open to cont•tants are music, (bands and soloists), vocal <choirs, choral groups and singles), dancers <cr<>upa and singles> and novelty (any variety act by croups or singles)'. Those who qualify will compete at the Fall Fair, scheduled Nov. a Ulrouah 21 at Los Alamilol Race Courie, Cypress. AU auditions will be atlbe fairgrounds iDCo&ta Mesa. Entry blanks are available in Caeta Mesa or t he Los Ala mitos Race Cour se Further Information is available by telephontnt 75l·FAJR. I I · I I ·I I I I I ·OPIM7 DAYS A WHK ,._ .. 1..- I TIMES I PLACES I COLLEGE EVENTS Music At St. Andrew's rAL~~~~!~nd9~· . Robert Rogers. at-director Mualc by Sc:huetz, khubert, Molaft, .,.hm• Requl•"'\br ~ '•ur• · Populer .. INdont end'°* aonee Sunday October 11 7:30 p.m. St. Andrew'• Pr•1bytetlan Churcte 6bo St. Andrew• Rq.cf, NewpOrt Beech Donation *2. ~ C .. ,,_lil'ldld ORDER YOUR 1978 CAR FOR LEASE FROM .'i' h . )' J J' t )' /, L t . ...,'/ \ ( ,· t <J • FALS 17tll AACH•YD.. HUNTMTON MACH --~-847.0017 or 142-6611 -GRAND OPENING- Friday & Satwday, ~-14. 15 · OUTSTANDING FUll«IUU AND DBJGHTFUL DISCOYlllES FIOMAIOUMD . , RESTAURANT REVIEW Frlday,oCtober 14, 1t77 DA.IL Y PILOT Tahiti's Sunday Best Served Daily 'Tough' Music By(;AltOL MOORE ..... o.11, ~ ........ Names are the same but results arc de· lightfally different al the Barbary C6h:1t In ,Newport Beach. Francis and l obin TemaJana took over the restaurant rive months ago, speclallzing In Tahi· Uan cooking with the accent on freshness. The ra re is so authentic that the daughter or the island·s governor entertained 10 friends there this week. &EMEMBElJNG THE st eaming pit cookery or his youth on Huanine Island, Francis pretues native d,isbes now served only on Suncays to tourists in the more commercialized Pa~te. ffis specialty. l 'aota <pronounced ee- YOftuh>. is Cresb fish in lemon juice an<J coconut cr e am with to m ato, onion and cuc•mber. While the description and technique res<tnble ceviche, this chilled entree is more subltantial and less.soupy. The generous mound. sen~ in a sh~ll. for $6.50, Is u refreshing. chnqe-of·pace evening meal. A NEV DINING ADVENTURE m A~DAn1n CHINESE G.,rmet cu1s1NE PEKJNG •SHANGHAI SZECHWAN •HUNAN Daily Lunch And Dinner y_. ..... _.H ...... -...__..._C...., (FOfmer Chef ol the Twin Oragon~naheim) AMS A YI. IAt ....... lt..u COSTA MIS. S40.ltl7· 'Highest Qua If. Nati\•e ~texi~ foods jfi4t1 · All~MNTS GIANT 7 FOOT lV SCREEN ·Mon.·ihur. 00 o.m. to 10 p.m. Fri. & Sot. ~o.m. to 11 p.m. CCCKTAILS Sundoy p.m. to 10 p.m. 9093 E. MMS. HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-7911 Francis has an islander's re:.pcct for the ltl· icacy of seafood. The l 'aota is only servedon weekends. ln between, there's a daily speci<iof sole or snapper, even at lunch. For its size. the South Pacific island mist rival Calirorniu for growing fruit THAT'S ONE REASON why Tahitian poi~ a fruit and yam cus tard. not Ill all like he Hawaiian goo of the s ame name. ''Al fltrnily reusts poi is always on the to le and people nibble at It even after they say hey arc through eating," Robin explained. The Temaianas offer the new taste as anoc· casional side dish. but it might catch on faste as a dessert with a dollop of whipped cream. Typicall y, Francis garnishes every i:ate with wedges of cantaloupe, watermelon, barana or mango. EACH DINNER also includes soup du,our <notably purees of carrot or broccoH > plus l<llad <with tangy Tahitian vinaigrette or crumy white French dressing> and rice pila.f. Choices range from poul et ala Tai1tian 1gamc hen baked in tomato sauce>· at SS -t o Australian lobsttr for Sl2.50. Other Fiench• ../ THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS GfUUED BHF LIVER SeNed Wllh soup °' salad. and oor $ ft95 -'!..~~!!!2~ic_~..!~--A-­ weeKoAv LUNCHEON SPECIA:.. $1 .95 -... ------------~-... ----STEAK & SHRIMP DINNER Served with soup or salad. choice $495 of Potatoes or nee pilaf and our famous Hot B<ead Slicks 5930 W. Coost Hwy., Newpor18eoch Beer & Win• ~202 Now Appearing JENNIE JONES ANDCOMPAMY For Dancing and Entertai•ment It's All Happening Nighiy at The Lldv Lcunae C?JQ/Y~ 1107 JAMBOREE ROAD, NEWPOAT BEACH (714) 644-1700 Plus Specials Served Monday thru Thursday (Friday, Saturday & Sunday 'til 6 P.M.) -Excluding Holidays specials include soup or salad, choice of baked potato or rice RED SNAPPE R ......... 3.45 MAHI MAHI ........... 3.95 GRILLED SEA BASS .. ~~3.95 TOP SIRLOIN STEAK ... 4.25 NEW YORK STEAK ..... 4.95 LOBSTER TAIL ... : ... I 6.96 STEAK AND LOBSTE R .• 6.95 luncheon strwd daily 'til 4 P.M. Pri\lltt Party Facilities to JOO Polynci.1an offer ings include ma hi-m abl, :.camp1. lcrayaki broehette, crab crepes and met mignon. Villagu atmosphere is evident in the Barbary Coast decor: primitive p8"llings, cowry shell chandelier and green and while wedding quill dil>playcd in the lounge. Or you can dine under the palm trees on the patio. THE LUNCHEON MENU lists several ome· lettes, crepes and hearty sandwiches. Two stand -outs are salad Nlcolse, $2.50, and quiche alu Lorraine, $3 -ham, onion antl mushrooms in a perfect custard. Another noontime nicely -"for people wbo want to relax but have to nibble In a hurry" -is the Worker 's Special, soup, fruit, cl\eese, bread and wine for $2. 75. It's a great idea but the choice or cheese could be more imaginative. "' It takes u bll or doing to find Barbary Coast a l 2400 W. Coast Highway across fro m Cano's, but another reason to do so is the house punch; Aloha Viking is cool ai. a Scandinavian breeze and golden as a Pacific sunset. Lunch is served 11 :30 to 2:30 p.m. daily; •djnncr ni ghtly except Mondays. Reservations accepted at 645-8977. COmp8DyDue Fanaily Past D.,nced New York's Cliff Keuter Dance Company <shown al left) will visit UC Irvlne for a ha\£· week residency Monday through Wednesday, Oct 17-19, under sponsorship of tbe UCI Committee for Arts. A lecture-demonstration is scheduled for Monday and two different perrbrm'ances on Tuesday and Wednesday. All three wUI begin at 8 p. m. in the Fine Arts VUlage Threat.re. Cliff Ke uler, a modern d ancer who or ganized the company of lOdencers in 1969, bas choreographed dances for the Netherlands Dance Company and other m,Yor International com pa.nles..- AMONG THE PIECES in the repertoire is "The Murder of George Keuter,'1 based oo the sniper slaying o! the choreographer's cousin. Another. "Field. ' depicts family rituals and is dedicated to the memory of Keuler's own father. • Tickets for the Oct. 17 lecture·demon· stration are $2 for general admission and St for UCI students. Tickets for Oct. 18 and 19 performances are $4 for gener"al admission, $2 for UCl students and $3 for other students and UCI faculty and staff. They are available at the Associated Students Ticket Office in Gateway Commons. TRADITIONAL JAPANESE FARE LUNCHEON 11:30-2:00 Monday thru Friday DINNER 5:00-10:00 310 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA 642·01 .. 1 OPEN 7 DAYS FOOD TO GO -..x1CA11 aarA•A11F ,,_ ...... -.a..,_. .. °'9p C..ty HAVI A FREE APPBIZER oN us WITNTHISM DININCi • DANCINCi EMTHTAIHMEMT Businessmen's Lunch Spec111s SLUOOD • COCICTAll.S • flOOO TO .a IAMQUITS •"'YA ft ,Almll CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH SUNDAYS HAPPY HOURS 4-e 1750 W Lincoln • Anaheim 991.0540 647 W. 191h SI.• Costa Mesa 642-9784 PWJk Rock '70s Cra~? By JAMES SIMON NEW YORK (AP> -Punk rock has arrived in America, buJ nobody's sure whether punk's rebellious, high energy music and outlandish dress will become the musical standard of the late 1970s or join glitter rock, disco and reesae as a musical footnote of the decade. Punk is 11 main topic of conversation In ~e music industry and most recocd com~anles have descended on punk clubs like CBGB here, the Rat in Boston or the Whisky in LQs Angeles the way they did in England to cash ln on the British rock groups of the mid·1960s. . ROCK MUSIC MAGAZINES -including the bibleoftherock world, RoUlngStone-dev· ote increasing attention to punk groups. even· though members of most punk bands give the impression they can't or won't read anything more complicated than u comic book. • But the big question ls whether rock music fans who seem increasingly to prefer middle : of the road sounds like FlMwood Mac, Steve Miller and Peter Frampton will embrace groups that g~nerally reject m~lody and inslrUmental finesse in favor of•th~ toush.- rebellio\18 posture of Patt1 Smith, tbe Ramones and the Dead Boys. Punk isn't new. It'll an equal mixture or •• the everlasting rebellious attitude of yout.h · • a nd the s imple, three.ch ord m11 s ic popularhed in the mid·l960s by British groups • like Who and the Rolling Stones. . THE PUNK PHILOSOPHY holds ·•any kid can pick up a guitar and become a rock ·n ·roll star. despite or because o( a lack or abilltJ. talent, inteUigence ... and ·or potential. And Ule.-.. punk rocker usually does so out or frustratioo, # : hostility, a lot of nerve and a need for 4 fulfillment," writes John Holmstrom, edllot • NewYork'sPunkmagazine. • ·~ Despite the sentiments, punk stars U rl~; Patti Smith and the Ramones look down on • new bands arriving almost daily in New Y , : to play at the city's numerous punk palacec--:: Guitarist Tom Verlai.ne of Televisloa has~:· blunt assessment of his peers: "What mosllfrr: theCBGB bands need Is alotorpracUce." a.·! HIS BA!lr ANlf'MimY otlleTI>l'tgtlral ~ performers now shun the punk l a b - pr~erdng no label at 311 or _t_!l~__c~~slgna "new wave" in tbe hope that it downplays-=-~-• punk attitude and stresses music. Because of that s t ress on image style over musical proficiency, punk. b compete for the mos t s uggestive outrageous names they can find: t Dictators, Weirdos, Zeroes, Void-Oids. Batocs of the Dead Boys proudly shows wounds received from fans throwing bottl~ and those that were self·infilcted. Al ............ ... ,... .. -....... ... • UVI ••• ON STAGI . IEIL_.S Comedr ~ • ''BAREFOOT IN 'IRE P ABK'' You aot It at Ml Casa. One thing you must bring to our two mtauranp ~Ides your bl& family, is your big appetite? The lfortJons are~lgand the cost is Uttle. T hat's a aood comblntlllon ••• and we've got lots or them too. Our chef makes big, steaming hot enchiladas, tuff ed wUh delklo..S taste-tempters and smothered with auce and cheese. Then It ls snuagled next to moist and tender Spanish So if you wanna lotta eMhllada, or taco. or tamak, or tostada, or margarita ••• take a lotta friends and f amlJy to either one of our locations •. The big reason is the food, and the Uttle reason is your chttk. Reason enoaabf 3901 E. COAST HWY., CORONA OEL M~A RESERVATIONS 17141 675-0900 16278 PACIFIC COAST HWV., HUNTINGTON BEACH AUEAVATIONS 121315'2·1321 Ml CllSll rice and smooth and ustf ul refried beans. The enchilada, like all our meals, is a "trip to Med~." Come to Ml Casa (the wanna-lotta plact). . II t COST A MESA •296 E. 17th St. HILLGREN SQUARE-64S-·7626 #2 BALBOA•IOS MAIN St. BALBOA PIER 9675·9600 8ANl<AMERICARO, MASTERCHARGE ond AMERICAN EXPRESS . I • £.I DAILY PILOT Friday, October 14. 1977 Soleri Srtdpture Visionary architect Paolo Soleri will exhibit paintings and sculptures. such as the bronze woman above, at Muirhead Galleries in Costa Mesa this month. Films or his futuristic city, Arcosanti in Arizona. also will be available for viewing. I· Galleries I Exhibits Ink, Pastels Capture Ideas PEN, INK and, pastel drawings by Billie Nugent through Oct. 31 at Imperial Savings and Loan, 3381 Via Lido, Newport Beach. AN EXHIBITION or paintings by Marion Siciliano through Nov. 20 at Bird's Eye View Gallery, la> Via Oporto, Lido VUlaae, Newport Beach.Hours Tuesday through Sunday, U a.m. to $p.m. WESTEaN LANDSCAPE. an exhibition or photographs by Gre1 McGregor, on dlaplay through Oct. 21 in the Orange Coast College Photo Gallery. The Photo Gallery is ln the Fine Arts Building on the campus, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays throuah Fridays. "EXPR~IONS," Is the title for an exhibit oC 20 works by members ol the Orange <;oast College art department. The show opellJ Wednes· day and nms through Nov. 7 ln the campu.s a rt gallery, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Kesa. A reception will take place Wednesday from 7 to 9 p.m. Gallery""lloun att10-a.m. to"3i>.m. Mondays through Fridays and 7 to 9 p.m. Mondays and Tuesdays. Free. LOS WTUOS ••• WHERE YOU FIND IT ALL . . . IXCWIMT MIXICAM POOD ~ CHIHPUL SRYICI -ll4UTWUI. 'DICOI -MAJllACtaS -LOWPllCIS. ISOll ...... w .. 1 i 1l11--lt2 .. 347 Filians Retucw In '40 Carats' ' The team of Ron and Carol Filian. once one or the most active entities in local community theater, hasn't been heard Crom in a couple. years, chiefly because Carol 'a work commitments have precluded her more artistic endeavors. · They'll be remembered ln the leading roles of "Everything in the Garden" at Irvine four years ago. They were last teamed in 1975 when Carol directed Ron in Irvine's "Here Lies 1 JeremyTroy." NOW CAROL HAS ended her hiatus. from theater and will play the leading role in the Westminster Community Theater production of "Forty Carats" -under Ron's direction. The shQtV opens Nov. 4 for a rive-weekend run. Olhet major roles in the Jay Allen comedy will be taken by Richard Morrill as the young attracted to the older woman; J ack Intermission Tom .Titus • Willenbacher as her ex·husband; Joanne Wolcott as her feisty mother, and Natelle Vone Carlino as her swinging daughter. Completing the Westminster cast are Patti Ihle. P a tty Lovelady, S tan Pritchard . Charlotte Willenbacber, J(ennelb Mick and J im J Chapman. Performances will be given Fridays and Saturdays at the theater. 7272 Maple St .. Westminster. with reservations available by calling 893·8626. *** THE SECOND PRODUCTION of, Peter Shaffer's powerful drama "Equus" by a local theater group will be staged Nov. 2·5 at Orange Coast College. John Ferzacca is directing the show, which will be OCC's entry in the American College Theater Festival. Heading the college cast will be David Newlin as the young stable boy obsessed with horses Ml~ Walt Dou~s as the psych!atrist who tries to discover Wfiy lleDUnde<f six,9f them. Veteran actor Stan Throneberrf,will appear as the boy's father. Others in the OCC production are Carter Innskeep, Charyl Neimeyer, Alexandr ia Mandarino. Charlotte Kreutz. LyM Schoonover, Scott Utley. Bill Corwin. J ohn Janicke and Patti SamP6()Cl. Backstage, James Berth6lf will handle sets and lighting; Stan Tudor is costume designer , and Jere Robinson will be the movement co·ordlnator for actors playing the roles of the horses. ,, *. * BACKSTAGE -UDO Isle Players are in the market for a director for their spring production, yet to be announced ... applicants should phone George Harris at 634-4300 days or 67S.38S7 evenings ... * •• Jean Koba's production of "No Sex. Please, We're British" opens next Friday for four week· ends by the Garden Grove Community Theater .. ·.a mong the familiar names in the cut are Renata Florin, Hank Sorkln and Bunny Goodmansen .. .curtain is 8:30 at Lake School, 1<8>1 Orangewood Ave., with reservations taken at 839-3944 ... Real Cantonese Food .. , ti.re., take home STA'-. CHINESE CASINO 111 21st Pl., Newport leKh ORlola S.95'0 ..._ te ~ hllr-Wwa•n• U. l:ot.,,. o .. u-••-- 494-8011/t • • INTERMISSION I GALLERIES Dixi< Crosby and Pete Wilsori are the lead s intcts of Awakening, featured on the weelly KOCE-TV nig htc luQ s how,•' "Stat>oard," lo be aired Wednesday, Oct. 19 at 7:30 p.m . "Starboard" ls taped by Ch~l 50 at the Cannery Restaurant in Ne~ Beach at 9 p.m . Monday nights. ' Th er is no charge and the public-is • invl to join host, Arline Radillo and hear heal entertainment. 'SPRINGS' <Ftcl't Page Cl) -. CROWN HOUSE RESTAURANT S2I02 COAST KW't. LAGUNA NIGUEL (At c.-v..., ,...,) Tonight,,Saturday and Sunday nl.lht the play Is at 8 . Mttinees a r e scheduled 1t 2 p.m. Satu- rday andS\flday. Sunday night ls the c losing curtain. M1lriaJU1tannou~at­ the openir& "I ( only life were u I toped it would be instead:>! as ltls." 499-2626 49&-5773 So .. 11a Coa••'• Fine•• Cuilin• Indeed. J)) these words Uve1 or arl they mere · strixeson~r? 1 alCOHCRNll HIVINY Wll&»m .... FOR A REAL IVY HOUSE RESTAURANT 3" '°"8T AYE. LAGUNA 8EACff 0-TM' I t•411 TASTE TREAT r:rJ ~ 1 CJ11fl-c.10<e. Z11irPorter • OOUAMETOINING -11.1EOITERAANEAN RM. • tHAMPA,NE BRUNCH SUNDAYS 10.J PM 18700 MAC ARTHUR BLVD. IRVINE, CALIFORN1A l~1he 0'8n9t CountvA"°POril • OANCIN3 NIGHTL V -CABARET LOUNGE • CAPTAN'S TABLE COFFEE SHOP -24 HAS. (714> 933.2no ~ 'Ceri)'lll{i Steal{ Dinnen_Jbr !7.9.1 _ Twdof our regular Teriyaki steak dinners with your choir.8 of soup or salad and potato or rice. served with v.irm bread. Specially priced at $7.95 for both. 'l ~·9 ·floseITAVRANTS CHARLEY BROWN'S TWILIGH\f PRIME RIB DINNER AT AN EYE-OPENING $5.951 NOW!! BOB \fHITE PUS LISTI & coM'~N:Y Start with a m rvelous soup du jour or a magnificent tossed green salad. Ttten our normal portion of Prime Rib, the King of Beef, plus a piping hot baked potato wt all the trimmings. Served with sourdough bread and butter. Then complete your meal wl coffee cir tea and1 believe It or not, a slice. of '1Mother's" cheese cake. Everychlng for o $5.95. Mooday·Saturday from 5 to 7:00 PM-Sunday from 4 to 6:00 PM. Charley Browtis 16160 Beach Blvd.~ Huntington Beach .. ,. (714) 842-6602 I ' I CHILDREN'S THEATER Friday, October 14, 1m ' ~ Deily "'-IUN ..-... Pied Pipe1 Due in. Costa Mesa Tony Anderson, inthe Jead role, attracts some rather adorable r~ts. in the "Magtl Pied Piper," playing Oct. 21 and 22 at 8 p.m. Oct. 23 at 2: p.m. at the-Community Recreation Center, Costa Mesa. The r are front, from left, Holly O'Malley, Missy Booth, Hugh Marshll and Sharon Fraisier. Dwight Everhart, top rung, and Pat Mat~ws, are on the ladder. The recreation center is at the west end >f the Orange County Fairgrounds, 88 Fair. Drive, Costa Mesa. · CHORALE • • • <Prom Pa• en his offering. At the conclusian, Elljah is carried to heaven in a chariot of lire. The Dec. 9-10 concert Includes Bach's Komm, Jesu Komm <Co~. Jesus, Come> and traditional Christmas musl~. Bach's motets are written in eight parts and :scored for chorales in two equal choruses. Bach, born in Germany to a musical family, married twice and fathered 21 children. During his career he strove Cor ~ individual vision of God. On April 8, the cbor•e wlU perform two works by Beethoven, C M.tor Mass op. 88 and Ode to Joy. The mass. written in 1807, waa composed on commission from Prince Nikolaus Esterhazy II to commemorate the name day ol his wile, Marie. ODE TO JOY, written In 1'185. ls scored for a solo quartet chorus and orchestra, As a hymn to brotherhood, it has a tbrilltnc martial section. Ironically, Beethoven WM totally deaf when it waa first performed. Beethoven. born in 1T1'0 in Bonn, Germany. was the son or an alcoholic father. He •Uu1ed publishing works at the age of 11 but became ·reclusive as his deafness"Progreued. Concluding th,e season will be a June 3 • 'perrorm"1Ce or the Prologue in the Heavens Crom MellstoCele by Arrigo Bolto and Te Deum by Hector Berlioz. · · The prologue opens in the nebulous regions of space, in which float invisible legions of angels, cherubs and seraphs, who rabe their voices in a hymn of praise to the Supreme Ruler of the universe. OF INTEREST MUSICALLY becaU!e it includes five ~riods or music, the prologue Is part of an o~ra which was not. a success. It premiered in Milan and was thought to fall because of Its presentation of confilct between good and evil. Bojto was born in 1842 in Padua Italy and entered the Milan conservatory in at the aie of 14. ~ also was a librettist and hJs texta for Verdi s last two operas, Olello and FalsWf are considered two of the finest llberttas in Italian opera. Te Deum was wn{ten over a period of five years by Berlioz, who was considered ahead of his time musically. -------- . BERUOZ WAS BORN in 1803 at La· Cote., Saint.Andre, France, and studied music at home under his father. He was an emotional, . puslonate man and bad a romantJc, idealistic nature, which shows in his music. , All concerts will take place at Santa Ana · High School except the June performance. which is scheduled for Garden Grove Community Church. , Ticket information is availeble rrom Rita Ma1or, 542·1790. Tickets also may be purchased· f.rom Coast MIL9k, Costa Mesa, or Blu Note Snnla Ana. ' Sing UrhlJ; Blues I Golden West Colle1e'~1ba1 will present a rare west coast perfor~~ by legendary bluu performer Dave Van R~ 8 o'clock tonight in the community center. Adm~· ls st. Van Ronk, proba the leading white \perfonner ol the late ' arly 'SOs urban blues "ALLEGRO N~ TROPP0"1s "ot one of t:hose .. fore1sn ·art• f 1lmt. :..._ a ·. an anlmetedf•ature-/1 A hilarious parody of .,ANTA51A".' ( 5ome ~ople So ~of ar a~ to sa~ i~ nu the be•t animation in __ t h...,e la!>t bQ ~ear~!) An epk faptasy of peace ancl mapc. revival. was a major infl~ on such performers as Bob Dylan, Pat Sky, Rhard Farina, and Geort and Maria Muldaur. Van Ronk, who of lalelso has become known as a major interpreter of=gs or Joni Mitchell, la a world renowned co performer and bu reeorded more than 20 al . ict:Ligfit Opelll featuring the famo LONG BEACH JU R CONCERT BAND FfU (1:30 Pf91)1M., !USO, •.60, 3.00 . SAT (1:30 pm) 17 , 6.50, 5.50, 4.00 SUN MAT (2:00 H.&O, 4.50, 3.ld, 2.00 l*f~ 9t JORO l!ATRE 6800 Au.ti. A.,., wnti: L.B. Ci.tc Lllfwt ,,0, ·-202l0, L.l. ICIS01 --· ' f • :unt O.NTUll.Y.rnx PllESl-.NTS .._ A RALPH BAKSHI FILM Allegro Non Troppo (don"tletthenonwjool~} § NOW TOGETHER FOR THE FIRST ti ME It edwards CINEMA CENTER HAR80RATA0AM'> CO',TA ... E!.A MESA VERDE CENTER 97•/-4 14 1 If He could do Hts num•r. on the Red Sea ••• and bring the champ•onshlp to the '69 Mets ••• why should It be so hard to believe He's back again! A JERRY WEINTRAUB PRODUCTION GEORGE BURNS ·JOHN DENVER ·"OH, GODt" ·TERI GARR • DONALD PLEASENCE Based on lhe Novel by AVERY CORMAN • Screenplay by LARRY GELBART ~.!=.~.!.~ Produced by JERRY WEINTRAUB • Directed by CARL~~ G~ ,.,,__,....... ...... ·-------...... 0 Senta Ant rrwy. -ChitJINll OfMte•5A·7022 r •'I:( " .. . 1 • ·1 ~ • 1 I I ~ DAILY PILOT Friday, October 14, 1977 Jazz: 'Tot8lly Liquid By RA 'Y MOND ESTRADA JR. CH .. Delfr ~ilaH "When we're performing, the whole thine ts totally spontaneous -our coal ls to make something magical happen," said tenor saxoph· onist John Klemmer who breezed through six shows in Huntington Beach last weekend. Departing from the mellowness of the rever· ed "Touch" LP, Klemmer's Friday lliibl opening set was a display of a more spicy. raw and just plain hot jazz. PANTING FROM }lls first three rapid fire numbers, .Klemmer commented to the sold out crowd about "good vibes" he fell at Huntington Beach's Golden Bear. He then moved Into a solo from his "Waterfalls" Jive album called "Prelude U : Waterfalls." With the sensuous or an echoplex, Klemmer immersed the audience in gentle cascades. · Friday's first set was Indeed spontaneous and did not show any musical glimpses of Klemmer's latest LP "Lifestyles" (AB-1007>. THE 31· YEAR·OLD Klemmer was brouiht back by a delighted crowd for the ":fouch" UUe track~ an encore. The lhree·night date probably made amends for KJemmer·s somewhat less than spectacular gig a few months back at lbe Greek Theater. BVT THE MVSICIAN JS well-suited for a small club and exudes the type or warmth that could make even the coolest crowd comfortably moist. Sparkling keyboaTdist Ted Saunders • • • thrille d Klemmer rans wHb Unglinc riffs as the saxophonist took a breather. They were joined by Carl Burnell on drums, Abe Laboiet, bai;s, and Ju ma Santos on ~ongas. If one can tell from Klem mer's Friday show, the musician seems to be entering another stage. But this ii; only to be expected from creative gen1us. "I've changed many times and I will continue to change," says Klemmer. "I play music, it doesn't play me, so when I change, the n:iusic changes." Drama Workshop To Open ,, •• ~ot j •O\t __ ,,.,.., ---•••....,. .... '"SPIN llAUTllS'"· . "SWW'Y 1.w*%r' ....... T he School Of f'ine .._,,.._ ... Arts al UC Irvine will open its 1977·78 Drama Workshop seasdh with ~~Iii Jean-Paul Sartre's 1944 c I ass i c, "No Exit. .. l.JUUli!ll:tm..£ie~~!!:l~ Performances are scheduled for Friday and Saturday, Oct. 21 and 22 ._ ________ ,. at 8 p.m. in the Fine Arts Little Theatre, HH 161. ------------~ Admission is 75 cents. '"THIMOOYITUlr l~I For ticket information ~v,:• ca II (714 > 833·6617 or ,_ _______ ...,. 6614. .. No Exit .. deals with ople consigned to hell, o gradually re· veal the true charac· tcrs und p ucUons as they realize t----------1 MUSIC REVIEW I MOVIE ON JA'ZZ, KJemmer commenta: "The beauty of Jau ls tbat it's a totally liquid thin&, always in a stale of molhn, yet always so beautitul." Open.ing tor J<lemmer ast we~kend was Emmett Chapman, the desiper of a most unus- ual 10.string instru1Qenl called'~e Stick." Chapman is tr'\aly a plcneer in strin1ed instrument innovation. But itmay be 20 years before his fusion of piano and fn&ted Instr uments ls completely realized for its quU!Uu. Secrets kept hlclden for 100 yeua e re now revaled. Limited EngaJement ENDS SOON must eternally judge each other and the msel,·es. They find t--=~~~="=1'11'11~1 111-,._ .. -.. their hell not to be the ""--. _. - physical confines or a a-...-.--. ..................... -.. FDM• VAWY, Fmt• Yillr locked room wlth no exit, A "THI WMTI ..... LO.. L..t._,_ ... m.-· rather they find. '"Hell 'V ~ THUHOB• tlJ C£IYllY fl.,._ ~~~-~~~~~_..:.i~:::.:::~~~~pee~p~l~~.·-·~~,...--iiiiiiii ________ --tl-IUllE-Mlll,lralp A "'IMTa 1H1 Dli.otr -------Nl- SO( .Tit co \S.. I f H \ 0 ~ I • .. ~ • •• ' •• 1 • 6;41PM ......._.i.t..-S...1:4S THEATU 1----1 ''THE P'IOOVCllS" ..... 111. fll>U .. l'AlrfV .. l l .-v I ''' " ~ .. .. .. ,. ... .... '-J:::.,.Ufe II' ....... ••••"'"" 'hJMIJt Saxophonist John Klammer perfonned at Golden Bear. For openers, Emmett Chapman, left, played his invention, 'The Stick. ' .. ALL£6RO NClf T20PPO" i~ not one of ~hos.e"foretgn ·art 'fil m ~·..:_A lt'~ an ani mat~d featu re-*' A h il a rious parody of "fANTASfA':' (SofT\e ~ople go so far·a~ ~o ~a\J it has ~he be•t animation in the ta~t !.2 ~cars!) ---- LA MllAOA • • UlfWOOO • W&Ul•N UllO&llt PtltC( 11 to -O••,,_SATUllOA'~-h-.-J UMle'- U llllltAOA 4 OllL'f "'"°""' • ~OAYI •i-• .. HO &i.W sG I alA J -·-----..... , .. ,_.,. , . ._.., ........ '""' '"' ..... Ill ... . ...,.. Of ,.., flO CM WASHtNt NII ......... AU ITAll..-.. ~,~~;~~~ .. ..¥;:;I ':=iiift: ~ ........ '"" "'""' MfM01'91 ""' ,,., WNO &0¥9 Ml <NI etOlel~·-..... OM eODltNt '"" OUMUl.L UUT CNl ~"' ...... .... OMfl:ICNI 9UN'lL IAU y "°" ¥-rHa LAST HAID ...... 11 sama IMll, e Tn CJMUM ll'ST, Westllilstlr 511 • • ...... SU OIMC'fOlllll '°" SMO'flMU AMO 21D fUTUflll e-dward-s HAR-BOR TWIN HAllBO llATWIL\l'-< ·:C'>TA ,..f\.o b4 b·OS13 ~H> 32 b - "'SPLENDtbLY ACTEDAND f, BEAUTIFULLY , MADE." --.lllC-'IY ' •tfbe 9"tl19 CHt - l&Mpefb." -u.....-r- .. IEAUTIFULL Y · ACTED..-. :::.-==. .. --.....o-____ r1 .. ''. \ . ,11, ,·. . ,..,.,,__ - Anehtlm • llf.110t ·i I l . . MOVIE REVIEWS I RECORDS ·Rivel'S Flowing Again '(J()s Rock 'n' Roll Star's Comeback Hit By PETER J. BOYER LOS ANGELES <AP> -Il's often kind of sad lo see a big name rock 'n' roll singer cut a com eback record. Too often the effort la either an embarrassing novelty number or a weak· kneed nostalgia grab. But ther e are exceptions. In pop, for example, Nell Sedaka has returned s tronger tbap ever alter his mld·1960s vanishing act. And now, after these many years. who shoWd pop up at the top of the charts bul a f eUow last seen playihg the Vapors Club in Biloxi, Miss.? . / JOffNNV lt.IVERS, THAT'S WHO. And he . bu a hit rec!fd. Mil 17th. · Uke ~a. Rivets woke up a few years ago : to find the market for hls music had evaporated; • Uke Sedaka. Rivers tried tp ease back into the • · pop malnStreannritb som~ redoings of old hit.a; likeSedaka, Rivera al first r~ nothing doin1. • ms man)' bits had made him a mllllonaire, so Rivers wasn't worried about finances. ''l've had so .many hit records 1n tba ~bt that even if I didn't have any more I ~4Probably work unW I'm an old man on that." BVTTBB•AN WHO SWAYED and rocked through U.. '608 with blts like, "Poor Slde of Town," "MerQllbis," "MayWUine," "MountaJn of LQve~· and ''ll'racks of My Tears" wasn't quite rsiac!y to hit the road ¥jith a nostalgia tour. He ., figured lf he •alted f\Jlllf enouch, pop music would come back to Johnny Rivers. He waa right. His "Swayin' to the Music," a typically mellow Rivers song, didn't waste muctr time climbing ttie charts. # ( A Quick L;ok . at the Movies) . He says he dldn 'l look up from his hit drought" and try lo imitate any of the stuff that was selling. "Swayin '." he says, "ls just naturally me. It's just what J ohnny Rivers has evolved Into." Rivers at 35 says he reels as confident now as he did when he was priming America's orialnal disco craze at Hollywood's Whiskey A Go•Go in the early '60s. But his hit came not a week too soon, he says, jus t at u Ume when he was be1lnnln1 lo doubt. "After my contr act expired Cwith United ArtJsts), I went to Nashville, did an album there, which was not very successful,'' he says . "Then I did an album that included 'Help..Me Rhonda' 1975 -with Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys -but the album wasn't very successful. Tbe only good thing out of It was that it got Brian into a studio for the first time ln seven years." Faihare was a new gig for Rivers. It wasrf t easy to get used to it. "THAT'S WHEN I WENT through my period of doubt." Rivers remembers . "I 'd as.le myself, 'Am I still turning out commercal material? Am J still in the running? Am J still cutting it?· 'But I knew deep down that I could record commercial songs, that I could have s uccess with records. I knew I could still do stuff as good as wbatl heard on radio." . That's when ~ivers decided to take matters into his own hands. He reactivated his Soul City Records and went to work on "Swayin ·." "It's great to have a hit again." he s ays. "especially the way we did it, putting it out ourselves, putting up our own money for it and p11ov1ng it was a blt.' · -t--'/-'Ok;-God!':Jrhat a_ Surpris'! By BOB THOMAS Burns is perfection in the '""""'._~..,.. title role. The rating is "OH GOD!•• is the PG, but the mm contains happiest s urprise of the little that would prevent fall movie season, a a G. whimsical comedy that "A .... c. OP TH• ACTION" refreshes the soul. The ....tWMSiewY,..,ti.r_,.,,,c.w Aremise sounds forbid• '" new rotn, H muter <rOOILll d . G d l ~1 .. _._...,_,.,..ire.1c..,~ • n g : 0 • 00 a ll I ••riJ-t., ..... ~ .... en~· ' curiously like a Jewiefr c1tt ~ < ........ TIW '""" '' .- comic, appears to the ~~:~~ ~~1.;·::.:.~ '::-!~ &SSiStanl manager 0( a Wlllltl•UClion~H.-lefall, C li# • k t lie knows -to f'lk" 11'9 ,,.art. M4 a 1orrua supermar e . "'' sc-.. ,"' • .. ...,..., 9,... oe His message: Spread the you119sters recoll Ill• louchl"V rd arthl. th t QWllllH of .. .,. Sir""'" Low.·• TIW WO lo e lngs a result Is ... 1ertall•m•"' ot o they're making a mess oC <Oft\e>el•mv .._. ObMn•'""'' ~ ... , .... ., Fortunately this •"" ,....,_ "'•Y cnMJMls -siut ~· · ""' """'-.i11a111rom.,,. -le MCI fragile theme WaS 011\er non-equal OllPOrlu"lty written by Larry Gelbart em'*"'°"" Are.,,., -..11, _m..,. (1'V's "MASH .. ) and· :: .. ':"~1o..-ii1ollNfy1i1ws? directed by Carl Reiner,.· "LA HMO .ou1toeo11a" '' • two sure hands with .,....,..,«*·""'1"'''fl'IO'°llr..,._ ---4·· J-.. -...,.__ . ..~ ... ~ --In ~..,-~. ~ '-"=UVer IS 18'7 In 11aty. Olre<tor Mauro a revelation. He could M•IOVl'llli cap!Yf'ff .... ~~· 1lve up slnglnt and 1::'!':,::·.=::,.~i:.1: remake all the Gary 1411*'<'-' """"-n.. ..... ,...,. .t1e<1 Cooper and James 'Is ~ -,._,,... ~u.n ... 0.MINe at ... ~ wife SW-• Stewart movies. George .-wb mer•._•_.ln.G1- SHUBBRT J"t:An1e:.caMfUIU' CllY """'·~<:.- • l .. FROM Fashion Island Newport Beach <••lo G•an"l"I as lier awftgtng tuot.,_r -•••IH ne un P'•Y M>fl'WICN"9 ~ • --· Tiie fllm ,,., "°' -rat.cl, 11<11 It '"°"'a -• mou '°""IJ•ltrs. '" 11•11•" wltll Envl1J11-1t1"- "YOU LIGHT V" MY LIPE" Is•" UllNl4 ef e. R..oy keeler m..s>«I• •••ut • Mtlnntt'> stru1111e to st ........ In WT! ll"S Didi C:-trylnt le ........ lft .. -IG ot TV ""'° ,,_cllb end -muM<. Will ~ lf\ffe 11.dKPltellff Plfil>Y , .... , CJoe Stt,.r), dull l!once ISltPIMft Ha.,..,,l, .,.. an -tM·ma-• lltm alrecto.. \Mlct\aet z.i-11 JGMPll Brooks -· IO -dOt'9 II att llJmMll -acrt•. Oireclloft ana mvsl(,, MIO ne M$ -., "'"''' .... -hmu touc""'9 film. IC~ "61 l•rrlDly n<••· Int, tu ll"s a good ..,_ s SIOf'V. • ,.,1tye1111>e"'"". PG . ...... -....... _, .... , l\apoy ._,,.. -.r••· .,. unprlf.,.tkMI• illm llfl"""l"O wltll l\Urt •"O lwtf*r • .-.., .... '°" Is • ., un· der1lred llaslet .. 11 llotsftol wi.o ...,,.. ............ .,. ll!Melk lk · torr • ..._ .,.. "" tatw • .i.rrv Se91l, ........ _..w 111t. _... U· -· ......... f l..cted ""''" ... .,,,. _....,.ofttw~sc-.Rllt· a4 PO. 1116' U.t'I llt11• to 9ulde ,llf ..... .-vt. 0. "I NaVW• PltOMIMO YOU A t"OSa MllMM" Miis.,,. MrTOWlf'Q ...., "'· •-....r• ~ •• '°"" q,.... ....... at lllftoss Her rMowry Is h•mPerect bf ttie otNr ,.,..., .. ....S • ..cflsc1c ardefiv. bu1 ""° -.wa11en •• 111e ~.-ciw, senslftwlr played _., 81111 ~. TM lllm Is ... hen(W w • ·-1 ... "'1orJMn<.e 11r ICetf\1-Oulnlen, • Mwr"l"9 "°m'-fer Acedemy Clfltlclwetlon. Rated PG. "SMOteay AHO THa UlllOIT" .......... ~-lt'r lbdl,.C1W, Het N...,...,,,, M " ...... f\lft ---llel-• -d of It Should Jtt • "'''""·...., ,...,_ ,, ,,..,,. ...... for .Jerry RMCl.-ts rKl"telNCkload of _, ac:ro" -·•• stMH. Jac:klp Gteuo" !Hn'I 11'9 •-Ck d\erltt. Tiie Ktlon II so lei!. t"9 ,,_, '° Gown.-. llW tt""IS 10 oult~• ~I Of\IY •""""-HOUIO llMl lelle .,.. 11rtatrwd. ""'eol>G. "A aRtOOa TOO PAR" rellf"OdUCel WOfl4 We< II -retlOft lft a l•Vltll lt"fle 11\at ttwJ war11rne AlllH could sc•cetv eltonl. TM \P«l«•• I• lmll"ff., .... ""' llw '"""-''°''" «• lntell ..... ty cliNCHd. i.111eo PG, tlW 111m~,__l\M« ... leldtoff. "STA!t WAltS., b a......,,.,.. flllTI. • -k .. t<dl _,,.. 1...., ......... ,.,., ti w\11 ,.. .. ....,.,. fer .,..,. to lo ...... The ~I. iw.-by Ale< Gui· neu, Merit Hamlll ~ CMri. l'lsN•. I' UP\llWmlY good. -l"9 real tl41" ••• '"'~tel ettetts wlurcts. i.eted PG. "YOU LIGHT UP MY LIFE" COHIT-"FUNNY LADY" CPG' "SMOKEY ANO THE BANDIT" "THE STING" (f)(.l) "NEW YORK. NEW YORK" (PG), "A STAR IS BORN" (R) t "THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" "THE DEEP" (PG) "THX1138" "A BRIDGE TOO FAR" (PG) 'HERBIE GOES TO MONTE CARLO" SPEGIAL "BENJI" CG) 0:~ "THE HILLS HAVE EYES" ''RABID" '!HAPPY HOOKE'3" (A) Fndly, October 14, 1en DAILY PllOT tJ JOHNNY RIVERS \ ------------=1 • sPOITS1iaa I OCT.13-16 1 ~., .... , fHMt/••~ta/.._.,, .......... , aid .... ' I thow lnfo; 212 831·7522 J ' -'~ ia¥i&0•0fF • 1 CP ' ' ............. ~ r L _ _.1'1111.. 6-11 PM: ftl. 412 PM Ill. Ml PM 11111. 1-7 PW J --------------- e fougbtwus uwl won tbem. He clefted Preliclenls - and might have bun one. .. S ... OWHG THUMOIR" Cit ' Cf:'.!' "THE LAST HAID.....-..... ·- ... ''The Year's Best Movie •star Wars' has brought fun back to the movies and glowingly demonstrated they stlll can make •em Ilk• they used to. A grand and glorious film." 1.,l.,.~ "A hell of o lot of fun ... bf1ms with adventure. charm and marvels. I loved It." AIC• ~19f.NllwS~1!:1""" fi c-.s . IM-3911 'll't:'f ... , • ·:-...wm ... ..... • (a OAIL Y PILOT Frtday, October 14, 1971 • • I all 41 stores join in celebrating the opening of Mervyn's new store in Stockton, California These are only a few of the over one hundred items now on sale in our stores. Prices effective through Sunday, October 16th. save •3 and 3.60! Haggar-- polyester slacks for in en 20%off Check•· 14 40 REG. t18 • Solid•. •12 REG. $15 Full-cut doubleknit 100% polyester alacks by Hagga~ ... our best-selling slacks because of Haggar·sa fa- mous tailored fit, qualitywor1unanship and value. Belt loop, western top pocket styles with slightly flared legs. Solids In navy, brown, tan, green and black. Checks in navy, brown, green and black. Waist sizes 32 to 42. !l save 2.01 on eas}'i·care cardigans arid pullovers . 9 • 99 REG. :12 • Choole from our gl"Nt lelection of hooded, CtflW neck or coi- lar stYle pullovef'I. Plus button-front cwdigllw ecc:en18d With tie bett, cable stitch end pocket trtrns. Al a,t WI colors of machine waeheble 100% acrytic. Sizes S.U..L~ ................. 0c- tober ~wilh. r/1:#1-fnl apel ffng, ... II OI .,.. __ In 14K gold. Some with diln¥>ndl. Levi's• de~mjeans for men 1st quality, Movin' On T.M. REG. 20&22.&0 jeans from our regular 16 99 stock. Cotton or potyes. ter/cotton. Sizes 29-36. • ''Merv's Mates" in boys' sizes 4 to 7 Short and long sleeve knits in bright cotor combine· tions; boys can match the hang-tag to the tag on our jeans for a matched outfit. All of polyester/cotton. boys' and men's M.P. Proa• blue nylon jogger Nylon uppers, suede leather 1rflTt -ana Joggtng eoles. BOYi' aave2.01 on gauze shirts Teiknd,lhort Meeve lt)'le; full I pCecket front. 2 chest pockets end front end bide yok11. Cotton gauze In plelds orseripel. all •a vinyl & fabric bags on sale REG.$8 Roomy styles in vinyt totes, travel and shoul- der bags, clutches and canvas body bags. 6.99 20% off entire stock patterns This sale-priced group REG. 85C-$2 Includes Butteric~ • Mc-68¢ 1 60 Call'~ and Slmplicnye - for family sewing. • 20% off girls' Eiderlon• panties Polyester/cotton Eider-REG. 2.49 Ion. • panties with elastic 1 99 waist. White, pastels, prints. Sizes 4 to 14. • PKG.OF3 large size bean bag ~hairs Heavy-duty, w ipe-clean REG. 28.99 vfnyt, filled with poly-16 97 styrene pellets. Choice of decorative cob's. • c JUST SAY "CHARGE ITI" ~-~~ 15% off Knit., "'11· '3-5. 50 . . • . • 2.lllM.17 JMM. reg. M-7.50 ..... &.1CMl.37 print front knits and tocker shirts REG. 2.99 EA. 2FOR•5 2.89EA •. Short sleeve styles in cotton or polynter I cotton blend. Sizes S·M-L-XL and 8to 18. sale! a variety of loungewear Choice of styles with dlf- fere}lt collars and sleeve lengths. Polyester, ace· tate/nylon or polyester/ cotton. Sizes S-M-L. REG. •12 '9.99 FuN fl9'1!'~ afzes, .reg. •13 •• 10.99 Shop Monday-Friday 9:30-9:30 •.. Saturday 9:30-8 .•• Sunday 10-6 siz:es 11~; men's tfzes8~-11 . Shoe Dept. RE0.12.89-13.11 10.97 REO.M 3.99 .. glrls' washable sweaters ANAHEIM CYPRESS FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH TU8tlN Anehetm Ptau. &00 N. Euclld Street-991.aG 10201 Velley View StrHt-IKt003 Orouroedt Center, 3204 Eaat Yorba Unde 99t 8IOO 1111 Adlme Aw--.m 1"'1 wtne etwd.--.a . PLUS 38 MORE STORES TO SERVE YOU THROUGHOUT CALIFORNIA ANO NEVADA • ' . .. . , . . .. ' , BRANDN~W '77 MAVERICK 4 DOOR SEDAN BRAND .MEW •77 FORD . ~peed. rack and pinion steering. bucket seats. carpeting mink:onsole. Powe< front disc brakes, wheel covers. AM radio: etec:tric rear window defroster. tinted glass., 2.3 hire 2V engine. Stk. f042 Ser. #8A10Yt 01'437 Fe<.1ory air cond1t1oning. vinyl roof. 302 CID V-8 engine, automatic transmission. wsw radial tires, pcwer steering. p0wer front disc brakes. front and rear bumper guards. AM radio. inteflor decor group, tinted glass-oomplete. Stk. #'4058 Ser. f7K92F104083 COUMTIY S9UIU WA&OM FactOtY air conditioning, a110,.11c b'ansmi.aion. power front diec brakes. oower steering, steel-belted radial ply tires. 3-way msglc doorgate, Power rear window, IOckable underflOor ltorage. front bl.I~ guards, wheel cowra. electric dodc. pawer ventllatlon system. 400 CIO V-8 engine. deluxe luggage rack. deluxe bumper group, AM radk>. 1 tiwted gteH-complete. Stk. •5660 Ser. f7J74S223462 DUMTON'S PRICE ~3199 BRAND NEW 'nGRANADA 4 DOOll GHIA SED4H Ftldory air conditioning, steel-belted radial tires. woodtone Interior accents. vinyl root. 302 CID V-8 engine, autorret1c transmission. fl'Onl c:orne<1ng lamps. d1g1tal Clock. !lit steenng wheel. oower steering, fingertip speed control • .-.Way Power seat. oower lront dtSC btakes. AM/FM stereo radio. ltnted QI~. Sttl. #4553 Ser .. '7W83F200343 m' All. PRICE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $7316 $.ALI Pl.ICE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $6116 DUMTON•s DISCOUNT 5 1200 BRAND NEW '77 FORD F-240 CUSTOM STYLESIDE PICKUP DUNTON'S PRICE 54599 RETAIL PRICE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $7jOJ SALil Pl.ICE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $5103 :=g:~ s1500 '4 speed, power front disc br-.. 1400 iiound Qlpdy W1W tires. Stk. f 5252 Ser. f6GTATRa6053 DUNTON'S PRICE BRAND NEW FIESTA 300 CID engine. chrome tront ~me>er. full bam seat. folding seat beet(. dome lamp. headliner. 8800 GVW package. emissions ~rol p6(g., power steering. dual bright 9Wlfli3 loet( m1rrora tinted windshield. extra cooling .radiator. rear step bumper, amp i. oil gauges. Slk. 1'&476 Set. tF25BRZ08020 400 CID 2V 8-cyhl'lder. Cahlorn1a emission 9QU1Ptnent. 5 H78Xt• B wsw tinted gla!s-<:amplete. 90 amp alternator Stk. t542<> Ser it7A47S164286 ' AM rw:tlo. tinted g&aa, 1.8 lltre tn1nWet8e W'lted enotne, ._...... ~nized IT'llnu.I trana., ffont Wheet dl'tv8, M~ sirUt llOM suapel\tlon. rectc & pinb\ lteerinrg, frof1t di.c tnta., Mlcheltn at......it radlaif tirec. bright lluminum ~ budllf ee.ts.. fokktown rew seat. pass. ~. c.peting. decor group lndudes recllning bucket seats. decor '"' & doer trim. woodlOI• in_*ument panel, cigar lighter. bnght moldings I "*rot, elect rew wirldOw defrost, paint strioes. lntemit windlhilld wiPfS a el8Ct Mlhef. Stk. 12008 Ser. tGCFBT8"373 DUMTOM'S PRICE '75 B. CMIMO CLASSIC • • • • $3111 v-e. auto .• •Ir. P.S .. P.B .. vinyl roof. Slue in color. (108045244411) '75 Fl• P.O ••••••••••••••• $3177 V-8. P.~. (1871958 '75 CHEY Gl-YAN •••••••••• $4877 V-8. auto .. -'Ir, radio. mags. new AWL tires. (1A08581) '74 CHEY C-21 P.U. • ••••••• $3277 V-8. auto .• air. P.S., P.B .• shell. 8200 WUW. t"'one. (97961T) '71 RID CLUB WAGON •••••• $2277 V-8, auto.. air. Fix \'P and save$$$ (599CFW) '741A1SilN P.U ••••••••••••• $2977 4 cyl., 4 speed. custom shell, paint & mags. (46164Y) '15 F100 P.U: ••••••.••••••• $4177 v-e, auto .. air. mags. (86572W) '75 FlOG P.O .••.••••••.•••• $3777 8cyl. (f108NV21'455} '74 RAllCHEIO GT ••• ; •••••• $3977 V-8. 'auto., air. P.S., tilt, speed control, vinyl roof. Super sharp. (1C41160) '75 CHEY. SHORTY P.U ••••••• $4277 V-8, floor stick sMt, mags. It. blue. (9&4982) FIRST l• .. YICI • FIRST .. IAUI • .. DUHTOH'S PRICE 77PLYMOUTH YOLARE' WAG •• $4677 V-8. auto .. lug. rack, radio Less than 6000 ml . (345RKL) 75 MERC COUGAR XR7 $3877 v-e. auto .• air. P S . PB .. radio. vinyl roof. Hurry. (357LVU) · 76 MAVERICK 4 DOOR ...•.. S3377 6 cyl., auto , air, PS P.B .. AM/FM tape radio. vinyl root, bucket seats. Sharp! (559POO) 75 LTD LANDAU 4 DOOR ••.• $3111 v-e. auto .. air, P.S. P.B .• P.W .. P.S .. AM/FM radio, tilt whl .. vinyl root. Luxury. (384MKJI 76 MONTE CARLO .•••••••.• $3911 v-e. auto .. air, P S .. P.B .. AM/FM tape radio, tilt. Landau top Even a CB (408NLO) 74 CHEY .IMP WAGON $2111 V-8. auto .. air. P.S .• P.B .• radio, tug rack. (265KEF) 76 MERC MARQUIS WAGON •• $4277 V-8, auto .• air. P S .. P.B .. radio. lug. ra.ok. (858NPK) '74 MONTE CARLO .•..•••••• $3877 V-8. auto., air, P.S., P.B., AM/FM radio, tilt. vinyl roof. (571RL Y) 72 LTD 4 DOOR •••••••••••• $1111 'f-8. Auto .. air. P.S .. P.B. Lot of room. (892FZL, . . 75 MERC MONARCH 4 DOOR $3877 6 cyl., auto .. air. P.S .. radio. vinyl interior, sllyer. Less 1han 16,000 mi. (930MVK) 5 4599 71 TOYOTA ClllCA •••••••• $1977 4 cyl .. 4 speed. air. mags. Special. (9450UX) 73 PONTIAC VENT H. BACK •• $1877 V·'8, auto .. radio little Hauler . (2X17M3L 103198) 75 CAMARO •...•.•••••••• $4177 V:.S. auto .• air. P.S .• P.B .. radio. Sporty: (158MOV} 74 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME $3377 V-8, auto .. air, P.S .. P.B .• radio. Landau top. (809JPW) 75 MERC MNRCH 201 GHIA •• $4377 v-e. auto .• air. P.S .. P.a .. P.W., radio, vinyl roof. Blaek Beauty. (993lXF) 76 BUICK SKYLARK . $3977, vs. auto .• air, P.S .• P.B. Clean (389POJ) 75 DATSUN 8210 .......... $2111 4 cyl ... 4 speed, radio. Saves on gas. (24tNKL) DUNTON'S s3•- PRICE 1~'7-'7 '65 GAl.AXIE 2 DOOR • • • • • • • • $977' V-8, auto .• air. P.S .. P.B .• radio, vlnyt roof. Cleef\. (331GVK) 71 PLYMOUTH FURY •••••••• $1277 v-e. auto •• air. P.S .• ~.B. Save (485CTS) '&8 DllSUN 510 WAGON •••• $1011 4 cyt .• 4 speed. fNYF779) '68 CHEY CAMARO •••••••••• $15n "'8, auto .• air, P.S., P.B. Brite yettow. (VSA478) 11 PlYM SPORT FURY •••••• $1777 v-a, auto .• air, P.S., P.B., Vinyl roof. See to believe. One owner. (ZMS071) 74 PINTO •••••••••••••• :. $2171 4 cyl., auto. Hurry & Sa~ f660LGU) 73 PINTO WAGON •••••••••• $2211 4 cyl.. auto .• air, new paint. (034JFI) I 75 MAVERICK ••••••••.••• $1877 . '75 VW BUG ••••••••• \ .. .. $3277' 4 ·Cyl.. 4 speed, radio. Vanishing species. (495MXO) 6C)'I .. air. (5K91L112109) 76 PINTO WAGON •••••••••• $2977 4 cyl. 4 speed. mags. Super clean. fQ35NIN) '74 MUST II 2 + 2 •••••••••• $2977 4 cyl .. 4 speed, air. P.S. Sporty gas ml$er. (775MCL) FORD .. '74 OPEL MANTA LUXUS •••• $1777 4 cyl., auto. (823MXU) '&& MUST •••••••••••••••• V./J, floor shift. Clean. (616ZZU) . " I j • t • I ' ·~ ~ f • DAILY PILOT Friday, October 14, 1977 MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson BOOMER by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson .. There's a gopher heade o and real trouble!" ·"YNKYWINKERBEAN . 00 HUMAN510R~ C.OLDR .~E~ lfiEc,l DIE ~ .:ASEY : \OOH MULLINS ~ AV.f, YOU hlo JAN6. Gf.111NG AL~. A~OLt7 -r 1 F\>1 MY AIZM? A~OVNO MBfl ANO ~1Ae£C1 IN1D Hee e.vt& rn~G 'rblJ 10LP M£ 1~ ••• , MISS PEACH NO I I'M AFRAID 1J.IE.<( 00-l'T! by Tom Batiuk l'F 1HEc,> DID 1HERE.'D~BE AN AOJFUl LOT OF 5URPRl5ED KU KLUX KlANNER5 I ..... r----·-:::;:;;-'-::.1 by Charles Rodrigues Y'S WO~LD -SO iHIS FREEZING ESKIMO UT A FIRE. IN HIS ~T-MJO rf SANK •.. DR.SMOCK we AL-L-tNHE:R1-r QUIRKS FROM OUR PAREHJ1'"S, c>oc ... by Mell COMICS I CROSSWORD PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz WELL, IF IT WILL ~ELP l{()U TO MAKE I UP '{OOR MINO .. , by R.oger Bradfield S<»tE OW WuLL WWI' 1b l.AlJ(;iU AND YoUtl. HAVE ~19' J40W! by George Lemoftt GERIATRIX GORDO byGusArrioaa TODAY'S CllSSRID PUllLI . ., DENNIS THE MENACE -- JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS Ft,ASH1 WH'( ro YOU Kt:f:P WRKING- 1li1S Oi.'71 F'J,.A'(f:O·OUI MINE? l'OCAL.15£: OF ITS PRAMA11C MOMENTS DIMWIT"TJ<D f Ot~. SOMet..ltJG ~Tos>.US<V~: AND~ il:R!C:OR ~Tl-16 ei..oc.K, oc 'N~NtJOSAu by Harold Le Doux 'IOtJ 6ETTER NOT. WTWAMSOH ! YOO MIGHT FINO YOOR5af Wmi AA O&STIWCTIOH OF JUSTICE CHAAGE! MAY~E YOU'D EVEN WINO UP SAARIHG A MUFI.Dal CKARGEWITHE~C!~--- ... ,.by Tom K. Ryan I t.DVe10 SCRfAM 11oot.D!11-'THEN I SEE f1'S M'{ FIL.L.IN6 I ANC'A t..rm..E SO~ESCAPES M'Y'Tl'J:M&Lr~ - SR1tnetfap 9~oved1t toc>•PMCI 14"Tl\lnks , .. -·. 15 Exhort t6 Elicit 17 Spac_. travel 1gey, l 8 College org. l9Vll 49SheU fragment• S3Slaunch 54 Zod11c sign 55 0Yern1ng .56 Break up• aeni.nc. 57-Boleyn 58AevOlva 20 eoiw., 69 Horse from one to 60 Salad another Ingredient 22l .. at 61 Recitalol adulterated events 23 Ttlltlg DOWN 1cco111plished 1 Oashtution 22 Pi.c. CO CcNMlend lo 24 Machine 2 Aa•lt•ry 24 Sound har-1 hors. 1>1rls J Singer--·· mon10usly 42 Stir uo 25 ·--fiddle Ponsene 25 tcetandic 43 Instrument 28 ------4 Supe"°' narratives •S Sullix With klnd: Poker pe1son 26 German mbo and hand S Bre1tlled cwesidenC '"99• 32 Almost 11eav1ty 27 Graol'llteoo 46 tior 33 TOf1es· 6 M1scalcutaled clay drayon • ned opoosiljoo 7 Seaweed .28 Buy at• 47 5;~i: .... 34 Female: 8 Ceress given store "'' Informal 9 Takes up 29 St111s at Abbr, 35 F"lllow: &ga1n 30 lalasez -•8 Pulled apart Informal 10 0PPOsed 31 Make 1'9 Matti.Quan• 36 Metric units 11 ShOrellne d1fleren! Illy 37 C1Jt recess 33 Reduce 'o 50 Callfonaia lengthwlse n --· out: sti1ede city 38 Trickery Supplements 36 Move 51 Mofallybed 39 Sole of a 13 Fender ellortlesaly 52 Unaaoerited otow blemish 37 Most acute COnaoftlUll 40 RePo11er'1 21 Fotced to 39 H1nd~ed hi 154 8clenllst's question depart growll'l1 "IOf'ICthop .. l l 4 ' 17 NANCY by Ernie lushmiller ~1 MOW DARE YOU JUGGLE THOSE EGGS '? I vUST WANTED TO SEE 11= t COULD DO IT JS •• )) .. • AT YOUR SERVICE I LEGALS PUBUC NOTICE ll'ICTITIOUI eU51NH5 NAMa STAHM .. l'T T"" MllOl#lnt l*IOll I• Goin. llv\1- MO•\' F18eitOl.ASS l'AltTS, SH e. lltlblle 11\ld • a.lt»a, CA QMI • ,,__, M. llkll..._ ~ E. lalbM atVil., a.i-.. CA,,.., _;~ IJutln•o It ""'4Uele4 by tft lft• ~Rk11119 'flll• JIMl...-M wU llltcl Wltll U.0 Co\lnlY Ci.<11 f/f Oftll9t ~l>IY Clf\ ~ t1mt1or '' 1t11 ... ti .. ,114141"'°" 0r4llftOlt CM" O•ll'f Pllol Stot 23,)0. Oct. 1, , .. ltn PUBlJC NOTICE f'ICTITtOUI eUSINIEU NAMI •TATaMeNT TlllP fOllOWl119 p.,_ I• dolllQ l>u"· ""' ... fAlPAS WRITING CONSUi.TANT'$, * ~I C.nl.w OtlYt, s..i .. 220, Newport 8HCll, CA 924>.o 1<411111 .. n T 1lpo • .,003 \11•141 C.UClll, ,.._UOf I S.a<n, (A 91w4 l nl• ~111\'M ll cconou<ltO lly •n ,,.. dl111C14* K•ll-4~ T tlPll\ Tiii• ft•''""'"' w•• 111.-1 wlln ,,,. COU1>1y CJ.fk « 0.M!Qe c.ou..1v on O<t. .. 1;11 l't)l46 PWlll\Ncl Or-C:.0.H CUiiy Pllol ------------·I O<t.7,1~21,211,ltn PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTIT10U5 IUllNUS iuMa $TAT&MeNT n.. tollowlf>t "'""' Is CIOfnQ ~· MU•J: (MERSOl't ASSOCIATES, 17641 S.n R-Ln. ... lll'lf!IV1on 8H<I\, CA 91441 AIM R. Senn, 0 .. 1 S4lf\ Ro<lue Ln~ HOMll•nQtan S-Cll, CA ~1 Tll•• _.,,..,. b <~led by ., l1t- Olw'°"'11. Al ... R.s.M llltS Ital-I W.l llled "'1111 Iha QMll\1y Cie<t< Of Or .... County on Oct. •• tt11. FICTITIOU5eU51NISS NAMIESTATllMaNT , ... ""~ pe<$0ft ,, 00.119 llolsl- "'"''" WESTERN IAR A ND RE\T AU RANT SUPPL V CO., 2044 Plt<untl .. Unit A·I, Costa ~u. CA. '1'11 Fr..,.ls """"' 1$Mlrl\, W Cul"9• 81¥11, Plr,aellll Al"f. CA.~' Tht) buol~~ ll <ondu<lecl bv •n .,,_ OIY'-1. l'rW1<lsA. K•btls Tllil >I-•H loltcl •1111 -eo..n1r Cle<l<"' 0r-. c-1~ on Oct. •. ttll • • Ftil .. P110llShld Oraf'Ot CMll 0.Hy Piiot. ()(t.1, 1•. 21. a . 1t11 PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSfWllS NAMIESTATIEMINT ,,.. 1o1~ ""'°"••Oline toufit. ne•>as: ALMOST APITIOUES.. t» E. ITitl sc,.t. Suites. eosta Maw, CA. ma Rita -ru Mcf'M1-, «l'J IHI Plkt, C:O.taMotw, CA .,,27 1111• bulil>tu •~ tonou<tod by an 1n- dlv1""61. RltaMcF.arl..,,O Tlll.t S\itl_.,I -~ !IMO wltll IN C-ty °"""'Or-c-.ty Oii Oct •.l'ln l'QWS ,,_,_Or-(Md O.tly Piiot. O<t.1, M, 21,Jl 1'71 PUBl.JC NOTICE 1'4~1TIOU.SIVSIHll$ NAM« ITATl-N"f , ... ~...._ .... tllilf"9~ Mt4M: SEA llllE, "1 ~. CIPtW Mff41. C4 '*> lloss $tuarl Ktltn. ••7 WMl""-W,c.MI MeM,. CA~ c..,., ~ l..wwJ\ '"*' """ Fount.il\V.all9y. CA '11tt Tiiis 1>u,iritts la condUci.d lly a .,..,.,ar-111en111p RouKelm Thl9 "11tanwflt WU lllecl wltll IN C-IY Otf'll OI Or-. ()Dvflly on~ •-111r~1tn .. ..,, Pl>bll!hl!d Or-Coe.JI Otlly PlloC. ~pt.JD,OC1.1, 14,ll, 1'17 PUBLIC NOTICE '1c:TIT1~ eUMM&U ltAMa STATaM&itt- Tlw falio.tng --Is dolnt WsJ. MnlK:'- l(IALYN PROOUCT$, 2151 Et- l~rnen. Caelitllllft4 CA-lit COfttlY Eclltll 9.oer, tlS1 1£1· -.... Cal&t Mesa. CA..._ Tiiis IMllnHs Is C'GNU(1 .. ..,. 411\ ..,.. Cllvlclu.ol. C-.,Btc»r TfllS s-.....t -fllecl wttll tM • C-.IY Otf11ef0... CoUlllly Ofl S.pt. 20, ""· ~ Puells/Wd Or.,. c:..A o.lly l'llat. Sell\. U,JO,Ocl. 7, 14, 19n PUBUC NOTICE FICT1T10US9USIN•U NAMI STATUMINll TN fol-no.,.,..,,...,,., deing bull· ........ , A.R.1'., ART llESEARCH TECHHOt.OGY, 1713.S Sky Ptrl< Clrclt, ,,..,,,.,CA. 9Vt4 Aklltrd G. GlinSI A Giii Ct~. 8'1l W. 16411 St., N-t S.e<ll, CA. t1'63 Giii Cffeclos, 1713S s11, P•'" Clrfce, lrvlfle, CA.t171A l 111~ _..., Is COtldluC'llCI lly 111 ,.,. ln<Otl>O' .i«t -latlorl ot"9r I /Ian • rur llMrSlllP. AktlarOGuMI Tiiis st•-' was flied wllll Ille COUlllY C"'11 of Ortnlll C-.Jy Oii ~L •. 1'11 'U1Q Pub4""9d Or ... CO.I 0.11' Pilot. OU. 7, 14,21,ll, lt17 1 p{fauc NOTICE ·~~~-~-~~-~~-,.ICTITIOUS IUllNESI MAM« ST ATIMC#'T' ,..,. fOllowlng penon I• dolno llUll· NH ft~ AHTl·O ANTIQU&S, 24402 Atymond W•r, $ultt H, El Toro, CA. ~ MkhMI Wiiiiam Pl;Oti.tl, lUO $ .• OIMIOl'd. Stftlol AM, CA. '1104 Tiiis blalnfts Is conCllKWd Irv .., i... Olvlell*. MiCllMI w. ""9116' Tllll SUternttlt wH 1111111 •1111 0.. c-t-t Oet'll of o. .. eou111y.,. 5e91. ,7, itn f':m•U PllllllJ!otd Or.-. Co.Ht Otll'f Piiot. Ott.7, U,21,21, "" PUBl.JC NOTICE PICTI n°"' eutlNUJ NAMll STAT•M•NT Tiit rolloWl119 ,,.,_ •• CIOl"9 ..., .... -·••: NATIONAi. 01\IEMlf'll!O PUN· OINO CO., 1'01 Ma<Arthut 9 1 ... , 5'111e n1 P,__.i1uc11,CAnMO H¥-811ttn • ..,~ Vie MMIM. ttllr.~Del """·CA_,., Tim~• Is c..-tllll ll'f 1t1 lfo,. d'viell>tl Nerlftllft!Mtft Tiii' stat-•ff 111«1 wltll Ille ~IY Oe'1t 111 Or.,,.. c:Mlntr.., Se• .. ,.,..., ... ,,,, l'UMI l'\l!Jllllllcl Or'Mtl C.0.tl O.lly Pllllt, S.pl "· '°· oct. '· ... ''" PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE 'ICTIT'IOUJ IUS11teU ttAMe STA TIM« NT TlwfOl-"'9--•r• OOlno butl• -sat: THE CRYSTAL IHH, n Mqftat(lt a.., Pl.,,., U9uf>e N191191. CA mn llu•t Mtyer11. Wnt Inc., • C.llfOrnl• <_,.•llon. \2t3 SkYllM Orlw, ~ llea<ll, CAm11 This ...,_. Is COfldwct..i 11y • ctr· poretlon. IUAT MEYERS, WdT INC. e..rt~.Pns .... t Tiiis Mt1--llltd wllll '"" c.o-1, a.11 Of 0rlf>09 eo....tv on s..t. '"""· "CTITlOUS IVSINISS N-'#a JTATIMaNT n. fOllowlnQ """""' ..... CIOl119 Wll• ,...,.,: A100 VON l(AltMAH. 000 VOii K•nn... Ntw-1 &H<ll, °'"""° J1try L. !>chulltt, 114' P~I 0..f!M Pl., H-1 8HCll, C<\ '26'0 R*<t A. H«ltoff, n'IO W.sttrty Pl .. Nr#port llH<h, CA '1660 ltlclltnl O. hccllltl, '°' Dover Dr. ti 16, H_,.,,i 8Hcll, CA""° Tllh buJlflH' Is COflclll<leCI by a 99MUl~!tllp. .-rt Scflu•lef' Tiiis at...,,..,. WM llltd wllll ttie C-y Oe'1I of Of..., CoufllyOft Sept "· "11. PVBlJC NOTICE ,.ICTIT'IOUS IUSINISS ~fTAtUaaNT TM ion-fnt pertoM are 001119 ~· MHM' S C S~MS. •• £1 Tamw, F-IMll Vtllty, CA t71GI lefNt'cl M. ~Y. ,_ ll T- l)Ot, FOUlllAlnV.i...,,CA'17ot Otollr•y A. O•vfu, '°' S. Prl,,,,,_, Nu1t,.1m, CA.,..,. Slelllt'f f . f(ulCll, IUO I!. Qlevy CNte, II• ... CA 'N1t Tiii' &u'lhtu It c-<leCI ~ • 9fMtl>I Dt~ID lt.-CIM.Htf'WY Tiiis tltCemtnt •M flied wllll IN ~ .. Or-""""'°'_.., It,,,,, ,.ttt14 l'Whlwd Or ..... QN\I OtllY lt!r.t, S.11(.U,I0,0<1 1. u. ,.,, P lJBlJC NOTICE PUBlJC NOTICE PUBlJC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE \ DM.YPtLOT "Got a problem? Then wrttl' to P.at Dunn. Pal wUI cut red topl'. getting tht, answtta. and. action you Mid to soJv. mtquiliea in gouerriment.cwl bus.iness. Mall 11our quellwn.s to P.cd Dunn, At Your Service , Orang1 Coast Dady Pilot, P.O. Bo« 1560, Cotta M~sa, C.A 92626. Aa many ~Uers.aa pouible will be a~, but phon«l mqulries or letters not including the reader'• f1IU nomt, addr~u. and bu.sim:ss hour1' phone numberccnnot beconsUlered. ThUcolumnappearadCJi. ly e%ceptSaturdaya." ~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~-- DEAR llEADEltS: Acttnt oa lnrormalloe, lae., has otrered a rree seardl ol It.ti comp.terfsed lDformaUoo system to belP AYS uswer qttettloel a boat devlces to belp pbyelully dlaab1ed Individuals to Uve more t'lfecUve Uvet. AOJ II nonprolU and its IAcooit eornes rrom nomtDal service cbar1es ror makln1 computer .earcllet aad for getUag iA(ormallOL.loletber for otben. The basic charge ror a privately aabmltteel seatth II •• whleb lntJudes up to 25 of Ute most .recemt references dlreclly related to die qoesdoe. AOI says It la.as auwered maay qMStlons as a public aenlce for aclloe llne edltora. Ree• tequetlts Inc laded a Hat of manfacturen of eleebtc . wbeelcbaln, an addreH ol aa edd abow ucbu1e for amputees, lnformatloe oa de\'lces to proteeti walls and doorways from damage by wbeelebalr footrests and tbe names of firms wbJcb sell claa~ with rtstng seats for penau wbo need aaslal~ geUIDJ out of cbalrs. lnqalries can be bandied by A YS, or penoaal y submJUed to AOI for tJle ti charge. Tbe address ls Gllllam Road and Hiiia Drive, Box ,. •• Bloomington. DI. 61701, I .. ~ I DEAS lll&\DE&8: A\'SU.nceinit a........_ from &M Qalrol BM Liiie daat Its t.ell-the ...... •••W II rttdJ ud Waidq le Mcepl tllldtW 1Dq111.rtes cllredl7 • all ••Uers related to laalr. A lltaff ol lt tra-.s CIUnl ct ,., .... 11 aw~ Moeday .._,. l'ddaJ fNm ta..•. tea P.•· C"'-1°) by ea111n1-.m IM ......... wllo~er ao •ft&e •laoald ...... tWr ...... to die Qalrtl c.... .. c ............ Pufl An., New Ye, N.Y. Hiii. Preeeetly &lie naakutl badJe _.. .-0 IM. ... laq...._ per ,ear re1aJ'Cb& Uir aler, can _. styllq. PVBUC NOTICE STARllN"ANEW. - BUSINESS? - send ForOur Fr-. lntormatlve Booklet ' Qty P\dcottonl P.O.b1452 .CA92668 PUBLIC NOTICE l . ' ,. •• .. '· .. J' -- 1 bAIL. Y PILOT • Friday, Oelobtr 14. 1977 ·~~ . ~--· -~----------------------........................... . If your hon1e town is in the South Coast Area, We're. your hon1e town real estate con1panyl 12 UNITS lto\emeid 10 •GR & ~ ure • Jlld•ble. US0,000. Submit. (714) 963-5671 CITY LIGHTS VIEW ~-.2bdtm..2.1Nth \Uj>ef twr " V•,900. Al\llious. (n4)96l~\ 31DRM ·llA Near beach fr 1olf ·country kitchen. With flr~e, le1u1iful thru·out. Try VA. S69,'JOO, (n•t 96J.S6n IOUC:HT NEW Musi Hll elea1n1 J bdrm, l l»th, frplc, brkkw0tk. l les1n1 • mult .ee. VS,900. Hu1ryl (ml 96J.S67~ OPEN HOJ,JSE 1·4 PM. s bd<m, l b4th, noo lq. fl., (orn\41 don, l•rse loL Call for Info. Beautiful. (714) 96)..5671 "NEEDS DECOtt!ArtNG''- s bdrm, J bath & pool. Cul-de-,<lC. An•iOU\ • Ylc<lnt. (7141 963-5671 CALLING All Gl'S QUIET CUl·DC·SAC. VA ;ippui~I ume In $2000 low but mo1iv11ed s,eller hu adlusted 10 appralsal. Grt•I l•mlly rm, th.lfp J bdrm home In good i re•. Walk to schools. Near So. C~I Plau. Rt'duced S2000 to '62.SOO. Wiii have a ,,_ roof. (7141 S4S·'H91 "WE WORK HARD TO SELL HOMES RIGHT!" S&S -$71,950 Owner hli ~n uansft'rred Hou\t' prlct'd f0t quick salt'. Hurry & you c •n be the proud ownl'r of 1hi1 bt'aulf(ul J bdrm, 2 ba1h qu•l•IY homco P HI 897-0lll flfGANT I\ 1he only way 10 dt'1<11b11 this 1paaout H.8. residence. rrom thP manlcurt'd grou'1d110 rhe l'nrty c1>urr & on cu 1he e•qu111tely decorared rntcroor, Tins homl' refht,co lht UIMO\I In llile & pride. C•ll for deli•llo 1714) 897-0311 PATIO HOME Only S97 ,SOO buy• 1hi• .. 1 .. g•nl 2 •lmy home In Oecrlitld. Aspen model. I large bdrm>, 3 baths. hug" frpk. ovenlied l•mlly rm. Shows lrkc • model. (7141~S9·1S01 TURTLEROCK RANCHER Slngle srory rambling ~•u1v. Loc.1ed 1n choice quier area with hill~ In b•ck 4 la13l' bdrm!, J ba1tis, form.JI din rm Beautiful .. ,,um. rn~IH 10 qu1e1 l1t1ll' par~ & bog pool. Only 6 yrs. old (7 HJ 1S9-1501 $47,950 s-47.9.50 full price, lovl'ly townhou•c. former model, rNny nocr fNturll\. · lnclost!d 11arage. Quoe1 cornmunhv. (714) S46-17S4 DEERFIELD PRICE SLASHED Spacoou• 4 bdrm, l ba1h lr.,nc horn•• Sunkt•n hv rm & t•rnoly rm 1(4.,l.'d tormal don rm. corcul.Jr brot k cnrr1 . C arheJ1JI tt>ll1'1j11 Amr•n1111" plu• Owner lc••ong •r"" • h" lo"• 1our i;.u.U FRONT ROW OCEAN VIEW from rho< brllly deco•Jl<'\l I bdrn• I b.ill, re"dl'nce worh fOl<MAl d1n1111( room W~lk 10 tht'bfo.iohor IOf'OllJm l•11h1rr~ ol 2 1.-no" <•ltJll\, ptK~ & l~CUU• BEAUTIFUL IRVINE $76,000 lo• riv f•m•I~ home loc•l•'<l •n ~hooet· 111 mt', J b111bdr1'l\,2 ba1h• tll'An "4 ,.hr\tlr all fre•h p•1n1 """Iv u rpetcd. loads QI 1h.,m t/141 7S9-1SU I BARGAIN SHOPPERS $53,000 VA bu~rr\, re•I be4uty no:" un thl' 1n4r~e1. J l"gt' bdtm), 2 b.11h• PAio. \ t'rdrs sro,, .. lrpk 1fia1 co'e" onr ... 11 00\Jbt.. ur 8Jl:'8e Call 1odav f71 4J 7S9· 1SO t $65,500 -VA ~poll~\ l bdrm~th Crntral au, co• 'd parro, lo~e •w c.rp<'r\, cu\lom dr.ip, ... II won 1 I Hu11r' 1114) 1191..()Jll BACK BAY CONDO I Jt)Cl'\1 4 bdrm unrt ollc11'(J JI thr 111 .... ,1 puce on bNul1l11I Nt'" ~'°" 1(1virr J, l h,1111', foin1dl din rm, •IJ•I •fr•k. ,,,.,.)\ • l11lthuuw.11l1rnpic "'''" ~wul, l111h1,•J 1rnrll\ ll>Ull> 1714r 759· l'>OI WCICY GI lo•t'ly J bdrm 2 b11h townliome, l ur s1t•8l', f0tmer model, occupied 2 Y" by orl1ln•I owner· C1u1 loo11on. VA. • 111•> 968· tm MOVE UP ELEGANT 2 STORY Writ guaran1ee sale of your pretent lu>m" co purchue 1hi1 be1u1y. 4 bdrm J b~1h. Dr•m.ioc vaullt'd cellln~. O pen w1ough1 iron it•lrway & b.llcony rorrNI din rm, large f•mlly rm. J ar garage. Gre•I aru. t71•> 968·JJn GREAT ST ARTER VA TERMS lu11 h'tcd 1>111 townhouse in A· 1 1N1d111vn. end un11 P.i110, 1 ''' ~"'~"'" tomm. pool • only ~Sl.000 (7 Hl ~17S4 3/4 ACRE ESTATE 111 limtde · B~ck 8ay •r'•· Currenrly h.n l•rge 3 bdrrn home wirh sc~p•r•I•· gu~I house & br11l~.;r11•r•g•. County '"Y' you c•n 1ubd1vrde lnro J R· 1 par«hll (7141 646-nl I PARK PLACE MODEL HOME 4 bJrm 11,,gle 11ory, ~II "Koodll.'•" bu1ld1:r ;,,,lalli, dccorf!Or wallpa~r. v. ood panl'lt'd walls. mirrored v. •rdrobes. book\hl'l•l~. ce••moc •·nrry, Cl'ntr•I ,Ir, ~o•d p.itio, much more. Ouupit'd by aduh\ lest than a ~L~.ll. (714)96i.JJTf NEW CUSTOM HOME lOO II. 104 "'/add11io,,~I olderrc·nied hnn1t' on rN1 150 lect. Real qu•hly. 4 h1l1 m, 3 lull b.11h~. formal don, l41gc l11chen, abund,n1 "'ood oblnch, • UIJ)!'dd<'d R & C. d1~hwnher,JrA1h oomp•<1or. t•mlly r rn, wet bar, M111. hrJrm, reue:ii.~V•l~·ln close1s. Block "'" rn4r, /'tu11 •t'e 10 ev•lu•ce porcn11al . (714) 96&-))11 VACANT Company ownt'd, lowe:M ptlee In area • Near new, btfl CX>rldiclon, uperaded thruout. Tiie enlry, ~arlum kicchen, ml110ted wardrobes, plush cpl$, see & comp.,e. Nl'ar So. CO<lSt rl1u. $79.990. (714) 546-, 754 BOAT SLIP . 11 •vall1blt with 1hl, l bdrm 3 bath be•c:h betuty only S yeaB new. S1>4cious rm tlzes. formal din rm & superb profeuional dtcorulnJ. Br.ch lovlne •• its ~11 cn•1 646-rn1 VETERANS SPECIAL TfU£-llNEO STREET. Sf111p 3 bdrm home. H1rdwood floon, large bide yud. Wilk to St. Ct'rtrude Par\, schools & shopping. VA appr1i,.1 & lt'fling priCC' are SSS,000. Subftllt your oiler nowl (714l S4S-!N9l MESA VERDE CHARMEll mma ~dP-etJfJf-oow,..~mtiitt----­ e verywhere In this b!!aurilul 3 bdrm home. 6 yn young. Don't ml11 thl' one. Dra~tic atrium off the enr1ance & mltr bdrm. Parquet floor entry. • o~n r1nch l<lrchen. Vegetable a fn"' uees M>ound In back yard. Only $88.500. (7141 5"45-9491 FOR YOUR QUEEN OR PRINCtss Pl.Joe her on thk gorgeous 4 bdrm Mesa Verde ~I You'I wine & d ine her by candlelight In rhe ~rge for-I din"''-She'll lcwe you f~ tor placing ~ in thll m1elully upsr•dl'd casrlel lteceocly rt'duced U ,000 to $119,SOO. PHI S4S-9491 LARGEST "CLASSIC" MODEL 8CAUTIFUll Ve<y tharp, hlshly upgraded two story home near So. Coast Plan & schools. Brldt courty11d entrr. Onlr 11 mo5. MW. C.1hedtal ceillnts. Abund.m1 1toni1e. 4 bdnm, f0<~I <hn rm & large lam rm. Wafll-ln b4r. New low price i5 $93,995. (1'14).s.4~ Walker & lee Sold..13,889 hom_es in 1976 ••• and that's a record! List your home for ---;T sale with the hard-working record setters! state la. COSTAM~A OfFIC(1 2790 Harbor Blvd. FOUNTAIN VAlUY OFFICE: 17213 Brookhurst Street Fountain Valley, CA 92708 (714) 546-1754 or (7H) 968-3371 HUNTINGTON BEACH MAGNOLIA ADAMS OFFICE: 9032 Adams Avenue Huntington Beach, CA 92646 (714) 963-5671 or (714) 556-7035 HUNTINGTON BEACH SPRINGDA LE BOLSA OFFICE: 6042 Bolsa Avenue Huntington Beach, CA 92647 (714) 697-0321 NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE: 2043 Westcliff Drive NEWPORT/IRVINE G) Off ICE: :;::., 2640 San Miguel Drive Newport Beach, CA 92660 (n4) 759-1501 Costa Mesa, CA 92626 (714) 545-9491 or (n4) S45-G465 PUBUC NOTICE ;1 PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUlaUllMHI MAM• ITAT•M•ln The lollowl"O --er• dol"O ""~ ftHSft: $WEETUH~RCHARD, • 11 ..... 1110 Conl•ectOt. , ...... 0r.,... $l .. CosUM9M.CAtrlJl2'1 E...U fl. 0.0.."' Jr.• tlmolllY M ~-. , ...... °'-$1., Coste llMM,CA'21lt7 Tiiis bln~u IS COftc!W<l•d bY • ----tl\lp. D>wtlO.c,..nl ,,.,..,v ~ s-11-Thh ,...._, w-. llled wl111 ,,_ ~Oettl•Or-C-yons..,\ ••.tm. "'"" ~"'-' Or-c:onr Dally Pllo4, ~.Ji, •• Ort. 1, "· 1'71 Glon PUBUC NOTICE s... IUN•IOA C:OUltTOf'TMI STAnOf'CAllf'OflNl4 f'Oll T"•COUNTYOf'OllANOtE -MD~ NOTICtr 0 .. HIAltt MO OP l'ITITION TO Dt:TEltMINE SIMUlTAM•OUSDIATH E-ol REGIH ... LD BURROW$, Oect...S. NOTICI rs HEREBY GIVEN ,,,., BETTYE. IURROWS 119, lllecl lle•••n • Pttllkln "' Olttrmlne SltTlurteMou• DHlll. ret-.nce to whlcll Is m-'°" lu'1htt pw1kula,., •ncl lllal U. llnw -plea ol ....,l"O !IW wm• ll•s -Mt toroct(Jbtr 21, 1'17,11 •:00 •.m .. '" U.. c_.room of ~t No. l of Mid ~ M 100 O•k Ctnler Ori"* Wt\t, I" ti.. City ol S•lll• Ane, C:.lllorni.. DMeqO<:loWr II, lt77 WIU.IAMI. SUOtlN, County Cl•r~ ltRAGIKll"O A-pe(yw l'.0 .... 4J1 Mt I."'"* Mfwt AIMIMr-,CA•llN 0-.WO.lt ... Alt~fW' htllltllel' "'1bllsl\td Or-.oe CO.•I D•lly P ilol, Ooobor 14, U, tr. tt71 4•~ IT PUBUC NOTICE FICTITIOUSaUSIHIEU NAMISTATEMIMT l IM fol10W1119 ....--•re clot119 IKrn· Mssn: SUNDIAL APART ME HTS, JllM W •• Ball R-. ""-•m. C.lltorf'le •DOI CHAPMAN ASSOCl,.TES. •HO Cempua Drive, Newport Bt•ch, C.llforlll.t 91660 . Allbotl A\toei.tff, 4).IO C41mjlOIJ Drive, Nt-1 lle6'1\, C.lilO<"lllt •JIWO Pltil/lp l. Abl)otl •S40 C.mput Ort.._, "--1 llekll, C.lilMlllUtMO l Iii~ -lft9M ls lltl119 Conclutlt4 bf• Limited P~Jl)lp. PNlllPl....A-11 Thi• st•t-1 111'4 ... 11~ ,,,. county Cler~ OI O.enot Counly on S.pltm!Mr 19, 1971. ,.t1(1 Publlll'tel CltenQI Coe't 0.Uy Pltot, Stp<,JO.ndOd.7,14,lt, 1t1.1 0,._11 PUBUCNOTICE ..oTtc• TOc••o11oas SUl'la10A COU•T o~ THI ITAftCWCAl.IPOR .. IA'°" TitaCOVMTY~ORANOI .... ""°'. t!si.te of HOa.r.AT o . llllOWN, DK•ned. NOTICE IS H8111!!8Y GIVEN 10 the Credi~ f/I the_,.. llllmecl CIKeclt11l tMt .,, Ptttont havlno <l•lm• .,..,,.,. U. Mid -ecltfll ... e required to Ille '"""'· wlfl I/It llKffY,Y -Mtt, In IN OlllCI OI Ille cl-11 el Ille ebo .... ,,. titled~ or to prfM<lt hm, wltll Ille M<9-Y "llUt!Wn, tOtht IM>Off'N...., .. Ole dtlc .. t DOAA It. HYMAN, l>10 S.11 _..,. SC1'W4t, lot ~let, CAr wtli(lll It .. --.. "''"'"of.,,. ..... dtf"""9d In ell mettws 11trtelnl119 lo IM ertlt•ef ~ ~. wllftl11 four f'llOlllM lift# lllt llrtt llUflllullon of tllls Mtl<e. De\eCISr!Jll " tm. -lorkM<Ka1 Brow11 E~utnoH,.. Wiii of --llllmedOt<-1 OOllAa,NyMAM ,,,. .......... """ ~."nl::~ .... Attenlef.., •-lllri• P\Alllthtd O'Mtt Co.st Delly Pitel, $tpt. zt Jll,Oct.1, "· 1977 __________ • .;.;.,....,., __ , ____________ ._1•1.,, f ,, c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • ·s 6 7 8 The Bluest Mltbtpl.tce on the ar.,... Coast DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS Yoo Can Sell It.And It, ( 642•5678} One' Call Service Trade It With a Want Ad . . Fast Ctedit Approwl l -'ltl ... e 1--._..,_,., ·~~Men ............ ...... -v• • • • • • • • • .,.,,.........,,,. Loil & f~ ..•.•. 5050->Srl' "'1t I ,_.... ltentol• . . . .....• ~ S.,Vktt • llepaltt 6000-6099 ( ................ '°°°''°" "1tl!Mn. ,,_.,..,.... I fmi*YNnt I ~' & e"'9f r-ial · ·. · ·. · · .. ~-SCMt 'reporollon • . . . • 7000.7199 ltofl.-to ... 9100-"'9 ~!.~~.~ ........ ~4!'!:~:.~~ ........ 1~~!.~.~ ...... . General I 00 2 GeMnlll I 002 GNeral I OOJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Liquldatln1t lnvestor11 holdings. 4 Homes. Cully recond .. market price or less. All vacant. Agent 96.'MS67. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ II .i.,tl Jn\11' ' '' I ' ' ' ~ • 7)1~ f CH,I Hw1 C111n1dt.11111 The fastest draw In the ---------Have gomcthlnit to sell'! West .•• a Dally Pllol SELL Idle Items wlth a Clas!lif1cd ad~ clo 1l well Clos~lned Ad. 642-5678. Daily Pilot Classified Ad. , Newport Beach, CA 92660 (714) 540:.69« or (714) 646-n11 ~.~~ ....... ~."::'.~ ..... ~.,~~~ ...... . GeMr.. 1002 GeMNI 1002 .... ,.. 1002 ..................................................................... .. T4HOMIRUM PIUCIUDUCID MIS4VaDE A marble entry way t.hru 1a beautiful landscaped yard leads you Into this super clean 4 bdrm home. Crest oJd fashion type spaclout· niess. You Wlll love it! CaU now! 5*2313 oPfN r11 9 ••I$ NN ION MCI• l•lllM •VETERANS• Jf-~ want. a home in Orange Co., don't let this year pass you by! We know bow to help VETS get homes! Call now: 5'2-3676, a«HRS. Bkr. Real Estate Salesperaon I 000/• COMMISSION We furnhh deak- teleehonc-eecrelary .t helpl LA CASA JlL TY 495-1870 eve: 831-0737 ~COATS & WALLACE ~REAL ESTATE. INC. ,, LO l ~llY OWNlD COMf'MH '.1!P.1N1. I Ht '.->OlllH COl\SJ ARf.i '>INCE 1·11, ·. S1t ,950 -Good price on today's market. North Costa Mesa. Hardwood floors, fireplace, park area just out your back gate. A 2 bednn convertible to a 3 bedrm. Hurry on this one! C .. l 54&-41•1 MR. EXECUTIVE -why not enjoy this executive neighborhood, near park, business, churches and shop- ping? We know that this is a Cine neigbJ;torhood since one of our V.P."s lives here-as weU as a number of other executives. Call for appointment and price quotation. 84CM181 Officl'-. located in Co~to Me'a Hwtttnqton 8t"och -Ht"wport 8.t'oc h ~~~-- I O~CST f OLSON SllK&llNlt TfiEVISlOH EIOCCOSNOORSCCIOMPE P V C S T A S 0 A C Y B N R A I R C E 0 A R N R A N T E N 0 N A L T X I E OAKWOWORCIRMTEUEEAO L 0 N B 0 0 N J S T Y R C N V L L R L RYENCRKCCKATAOTEBIA E E S Ill E A C E E N R H T H R V A A I CR A IR TL IS 0 l S H P 0 IC P.X C T 1 C Q E-N I M K l N 0 0 T S L T A N l E R H V S A Y Q A S 0 R 2 J A 0 I TS VODTGRPRAl ECW 'tEC OIPWONOlTHT S RlONXSA RNAREWNSCOMYAMR~AKM SG8TZNt~XtWTYREYO DA CIWORR VKtPOC SOM OClL I _ _.., WWd, ~ • .,_.Of d~. flftd MClh lllCI ""'·,. Antenna Tran•1stor Microphone " Electl"On M1crowavt • Eltc~pt 2Wor.11tln Advtrt1Jf"9 Coaxtal C.blt C~k•• Jconoscope Clthodt ~ TOlllOrrow: Hodgt Podge + ~~!!:.~~~••••••••I~!~!~~~•••••••• ~~:.~~ ...... ~j ~!!!.~~~-••••• ~:!:!·~·••••••l~c:-!:!:.~~~c:': ...... :. -'~~·October H , t971 DAILY Ptt.O~ N ·G•Mrtll I002Ge•rtll 1002 GIMrol 1002G1 .. ~ 1002 ·o, .. ,., 1002G......., · 1002 Hou1e1ForSaa. jHouM1PorS. .._MhrS. ················-······ ·········:s,-··········· ....................... ......................• . ........•............ , ······················· ....................... ··········•············ ···········~· ......... . ~ Gftef.. I002G.....,.a 1002........ 1001 llST IWffS ,. PLAt4 This exceptional floor plan has been the mo6t desired and also scarcest in the beautiful Blurrs. 3 Bdrms. 2 1.c"l baths. lg family rm. 2 fireplaces and all in tip·top condition with ~onsiderable upgrading. Priced thousands below competition by motivated seller. YOUU UkE OUI ISP •. experienced sales personnel 759-0811 4&-0 NEWPORT CENTER DRI VE 759-0811 SOUTH SIDE Of UOO On Lido's lower south side sits a simply super 3 bedroom with a lovely brick patio, Spanish Hle r oof, and plans for expanding to a second floor and larger mast er bedroom suite. Room for your jmagination! Present- ed at $100,000. U~lf)UI: ti()Mt:S REAL TORS': 676-6000 21143 East Coast Hiqhwa'r', Corona del Md• also rn Mesa Verdo. Jt 54G 5990 I Gwral 100 GeMt-al 1002 ~~~~~ ..... -... ~~~~ ~~~~~ .......... ~?~~ ................................................ ~ ----------------- THEILUFFS You must see 'lo ap- preciate thas S uper Sharp executive type home-. It's tri·lovel with 3 bdrms, 2h baths and a vaew or upper bay & lights oo Wtde greenbelt. sunny country kitchen with new dishwasher & double s elf ·cleaQlng ovens. Eajoy the private jacuzzi before entertain· OHLY $64,500 Great Costa Mesa home. 3 Large bdrms. over· sized lot· wilh bearing Cnut trec~. Good condi· lion Inside & out. Price includes near new ref rig. washer & dryer. J usl move·in. Htirry call ~5SSC> ·~4'c-> HERITAGE ing around your1 llrepit,._ _______ ..., on tbe custom1 wrap1•_• ________ _. • • REALTORS around putio. You can see ::111 this by entering1--C-... ---c·o-D--i the custom quarry tile l'V""ll9 LIOO ISLE attnclive 4 bdrm. 2 ba\h, single s tory, used brick frplc. Beamed ceilings. hardwood floors . Lge pallo. 48 ft. lot. $225,000 LIDO JSLE newly remodeled 4 bdrm, den, 4 bath, living rm w /cathedrel ce111ngs. Lge master bdrm swte. $224,950. LUXURY waterfront condo. 2 BdJ'm, 2.., bath. Pool, jacuui. 24 hr. security. Brand new: comp. (um. $220,000. PENINSULA 4 bdr-m . 2 ba home. All amenities. Lovely area, few steps to beach $l9S,OOO. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 34 1 Boy \1de Or111l" N B 675 6161 . •··•··•··•·•·•·••·····················••·•·••• ...................... . llG CANYON Rambling l'anch s tyle executive home. 4 bdrms, family room & conver_sation pit. Antiqued wood. plantation shutters. Shows like model ~ $320,000 * •• llG CANYON TOWNHOME Dramatic architecture! Dynamite Master bedroo.m + 2 others! Pool, jacuzzi & tennis cou rt. $179,000 * • SEAVIEW P?noramic YIEW.:_3 bdrm, super k i tchen wit h b ay windows & Microwave oven-vaulted ceilinss. Pool, jacuzzi & tennis court.-;. $239,500 WOOD I RIDGE Warmington "C" plan with 3 bdrms &. atrium. Vaulted ceilings & more .irl a park like setting. Only ... $99.500 ••• WOODBRIDGE REALTORS 675-SSll DONT LAUGH -IT'S SERIOUS o~ hen .. ••c ..... tw, • ..,. few .,...°°"' ltw,. fir.CIC. M Mv"'9 rOOft\, .fonttclll dl•lftv ro-.. cOMfort..._ fmNfy rOOM with atOfte fir.,toc• -.I rtbed h..., Gp"*'g fo cOYered patio •" for ..twtmllf*J •• -•• a happy h.....-..... ..... o ...w fmly to CSTJ • tw.a fethg. s I 29, 900.00 CP.S. -I" ow adH IMeting w. ltad • '"IMkle le*•" ._. oW'lllllg two ....._ - to lt'a 1erl0111; qtlick aaie •"4ed to COllMCtdt percllclQ of~ hwf. OPEN SAT Ir SUN -1 to 5 PM 2036 PHALAROH. COST A MES.A 2.03Go PMAl.ARoPE ~ AP ""'8JIVAU . SH.HO 2 Story Arltat'a Chalet + ~ pgol. Fiim. alic llv. rm .. ; courmet klt~en with breakfast bar, step n conversaUoo area fireplace. Unique s:ar home. Buill·in loft, obltruct.ed vtew Harbor from maul llv. rm. Jlurry l C:a 963-6101 Of'!N 1119 •II S llJN TO ff N'(f SIU.ERP A YS SSOO CLOSIMG COSTS To u VA buyer w/f price oiler. Mesa Ve.r home w /3 generous sl bdrms. Fresb paint new wallpapers. Priva back yrd. Tree lined s Walk to Market Basket schools. Priced a $79,900. 545-9491 VILLAGE San Juan SJC br, 1 ba Country Co home. Wood paLi 64().-0BJ.ll OC' -49S-52lb a 9PM 2 Master s uites; sunken living room ... ••••••••••••••••••• bre.akfast room, separate dining room _.. __ -s,v"tJ __ ...__ _ _._ _ _. 3br, l~ba. Xtra Jrg lo 100 & Just steps from the lake, pool & buy view. By Own e jacuzzi. Reduced to . . . _ $1.fll,000.673-:W. $115,000 COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS EXCLUSIVE Cstm hom 2515 E. Coa1t Hwy .. Car.Qdel w.-2 sty,• br, 1 blk fro 230 Newport c......-Dr., Hpt. lch bcb, 3 yrs old. Price r entry'& walking through DUPLEX !>D the Karistan carpel· ing lhru-out. All this for only $165.500. and this is the best buy in The 759·1515 759·0017 675-551 I duccd, $265,000. Ag CORONA DEL MAR-2 __... ~ ~ _____..___._._...~____., ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1-548~·-78~!3~~~~~-41 bedrm, rireplace, front • -------I ---_.... -~--.. M• Bhlfs!! .AESOPRHlty Dono.rHelen Bryan 731-491\ unit, enclosed yard. Up-Gefterd I 002 GeMf"OI I 002 6"erat I 002 GeMrd I 002 G °"r unit· beamed ceil· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••-••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• eMt'GI I 002 GeMrail I 002 CDM 111!."'CH r -1 '-A Walk l -••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ mgs. uoourm. o DESf'EllATEOWHER shopping and beach. COSTAMlS.A $63 OOOPOOL ILUFFS"W" · COTTAfil · 8 up gar co pa way N Bedf d Mod. l 4 bd 3 b th 1 Jl ~l C starter o r rellreme~t 10 this 3 bdrm steal. ew . or ~ , r~. a , 4 . Bdrms. hug1: C0';1Dtf'Y ft a s s • P home. Try ~.000! _Will Fingertip kitchen. Living 3483 sq. ft . home with expansive ocean kitchen. Formal dan!ng KEDUCEDt.oSl.37,500. ---HARD.WOOD FLOORS EASTSIDE VA TIAMS A.siting $154,50&. 644-7270. Eastside charmer 2 Br W lk • d th 5"GLASS HIU/FOR LEASE SAYE PUN Lots ol wood and st..ln trad~ for San Daei;o room overlooks spurkl· view. Nicely upgraded. Vacant & rm.-Put your decoratmg R.C. TAYLOR CO. Count)'. uuclr.. bo..a.t. ing pool Hi du.way ad f . edi t . s kills to WOf k here. 955-0150 auto, or what-have-you master t~! Only :i hltle re y or imm . a e.movtHO.. S~rb location neari-----------..:;;;;:iii::iii::iii::iii::iii:=:I aspartoldownpaymeot. n,c to have your dream $ s hoppin c & school•. IYOWMa- lalaooloyProp. home. Don"t hesitate. 673-4400 $120.000.673-8550 Ouroew3WO"'"'.ft.hmi 2STORY Realton Call7S2·1700 ()Pft1111 t•n H~'°•""'' Corona H~ is 2 lr w~~!~~roomc::~ter •61s.1060• [e011•···0;\':";"::·r·i HARBOR ~~:~su~a.:i!~~ .:~ [~_ ltiall\tl ~~~~~/!t suite. New plush carpets ESTATE Sl,500,000 ~lfll\ilt~ sell this 3 bedroom 1-~~-~~"""~-~-~-1!1!!•'•~1•~-~I ;~~wn bar,4 Bila, lhruout. ~alk to beach ..soe>Sq.ft. house on6 acs, _ --·=· ·-·-~ College Park bomel Ask. nilly ~ ~dI xtra: fro m this de c~rator maid qlrs, stables, pool, REALTY ing $80,500. Come see il ard Sho cp ;.i: ma garden home. Pnced at beaut .landscaped.Appt. PRICEOTO and maJ<e us ao offer! •VETERANS• ~ Will~der :O ooJy714:848·U88 SEU. $59,950 C a 11 now ! RED " condo or income CROSS COUNTRY ch arming ram i ly DivisiOft of Harbor"'"""'-"' Co. CARPET. 7!>4·1.202 Wac's & Wave's Bk..r co-oc:r at.ion invi P~OPERTl~i1NC. neighborhood. Cheery .!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ ·--------•I Invest your money in 3 $195,000 oe. Ph: 64(). ovestment v fa mily kitchen + har. 3 $6 I ,900 home today & watch it 1_or_64()..4 __ JS3_. ___ _ Spacious bdrms. Lush G----...1 I FANTASTIC tropica l ):\round~ Call ~ 1002 GNffal 1002 Freshly painted in and make money for you! 1.MMIDIATE DUPLEX now752 1700 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• out J Bedroom:.. l:\~ Our ore speciaU:ies in POSSISSIOM l ,,..,,111.,·1•si1•.r·•11"" MARVELOUS SIXIEDROOMS baths, .fplc, hardwood hclpingVE1'S!Callnow· Just redecorated, ready r OVER 6000 SQFT ~~ I nrs. trailer access. Sub· 542-3676. 24HRS. Bkr. . . 6 BR's, 6 BA ·s, 2 dens, 2 li~~·11·t1 MONACO ll's not the neatest & be t mrt your terms. to move m. 2 Spaeiou11 dining rms. 2 Crplc's, 811 ' • Call lL'l about this im dccornll'<.I house m lown !l:ll·S800.cves.5S4-2J48 bedrooms, j>lua_ larg" ... bl 1 ,,.~~· i maculale one owner. 2 hut what a bar.::110. 2 l-''1 Rr. .... tw-...a.. lam·nn. Des~foren u•e tns, sep. aun_..,. -==·-·••••-. Stor' w ith 3 bath!', "' K;ne ~ CJ\L.VETfNTS.6% lert•i ai"'f. O p en m S & 0 v e r s 7 0 d lil'd room. con vt·rll bl t· ., I~~~~~~~~~ 6 d .. r 1.. ---------den home an Ha r bor f1rcpiJCl'. :.hake roof & I· 3 r, SS,650 own Sat /Sun. Creative Jn· A CiONvfNIEHT ~HG ANCl.4';;• S(WfNC ClUIDE 'Ott THE gar-ages. Wood & bnck bel.t of all u low. low•-.-------· 554·5337 Agent wttment.a.144-9513 -~ ext w/sbake roof adds lo • ILUFFS IEST V 1 e w H o m es. Th e 1• - Its massiveness. Buy as IUY owner'! meticulous care ~~~19~~ S&l,900. CA.LL COR~HA DEL MAR G.,.eral 1002 •••ral •• eat.ONTlif.~. Cozy Coating a duplex for $299,500 or Thal rare x Plan Condo to every maanlenance .SELECT . Ocean s ide or hwy; de· ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••-•••••••-.. ·-~ ea. unit can be sold with wrap-around patio, need will impress you. llghtlully charmtng 2 BR separately {like a condo> formal din. rm. f'am. And th<> hrgbly C'Om · PROPERT IES boose +near new 4 Br ea.for$149,500. rm.offrountrykltC'ht>n 3 pelltivepnceofS136.500 apt + 4 car gar age. JACOIS RE.ALTY Bdrms. Wide itreenbclt . fee wall please your $18S.OOO! LAND fNCLUDED! On· pocketbook. ...,_low p__,. ___ ..-,_. ___ 1 ___ 6_7_5-6_6_7_0 __ 1 ly $135.000. Best value on Cail 644-7211 BEST .~· ....,.. HUNTINGTON manet. *675-7060• 11Act4 C.F. Coleswarthl -~:6~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS MEARIEACH REALTORS 640-00 01======= 4 Gig~l~~~!~s. in· -----WHY NOJ BUY? BUY eluding h uge mas ter Newly Decorated · IN DOVER suite. This large scaled Sunny and b right, 4 sH-&Ar "'RE"'? Would you believe u , home is de.signed for a bcdrm. 2 bath, Me11a dcl ~"' "' bedroom b om c ; n ramily that.enjoys beln~ Mar beauty. Many ex· Newport Beach ? Call together. Just 1 mile lo tras + assumable loan. ~2 The Pr1·c·e REDCARPE1', 754-1202 sandy beach. Owner may Hurry, call 546-5880. help finance. Call for ap• Want Ada Call 6@567 pointment. 962-7"188. Qi. KE:Y '*'51RE:ALTOl\Sli ................ .-.. 1900 Dover Dr. 4 Bdrm, 2 Bath, Frptc NEWPORT IEACH ~UNITS One ·2 Bdrm, three 1 Bdrm, .t garages, located at the far end or the Pen· nlnsula. Clean as a pin. Offered at $189,~. First time offered. THE GLOCKNER CO. El>tab. 1926 .644--0070 Eves. 646-5708 macnab I Irvine raalty FIMll MOMIS MOM $46.000 TO $ l,ll0.000 rlUYACY PIASOt ... New Bedford Plan -4 Brs + f amily rm & 2>h baths. Single story on Jg. lot. Wood entry -night light & canyon view. Only $229,SOO fee. Sandie Fix ~. (U·ll) i•-------•ICARLSBAD R-3 81g Lot. $129,500. UDO lUIMI• IASIM Spacious , beautifully: decorated t o wn home w /30' living rm w /fireplace. Master suite overlooks patio & fountain w/separate maid's qua rters. Pier & s lip. $395,000. Lynne Valentine 644-6200. (U-12) I i ·": 9252 ,_ 6-8 S-10-12 M-14'-16 l-18-20 "'r 1lf t...i-1Tf (N,-r._ Put emybody 1n 1 happy hoh· day mood wrth thrs Santa! He's fun to cul out or tm· broider-use lelt IOI' 1ndoon, fablrc paint muslin fOf front door °' window. let children help-they'll lwe It! Pattern 7198: transfet about 20" h11h. cncom~ you COllly from Sl.25 IOf each pattern. Add · face-framine hood to dry "' 35C each pattern fOf f1rst<las.s Mnll\C·lencth hem. Make rt a111m1I and handhng. S.d to: with fash!Ollable froes Of Ahce Brooks stPa~t1ne llptitr and SAVE' Needlecralt Dept 10~ Pnnted Pattein 9252: Misses Siles Petite (6-8). Sm1ll (10. Daily Pilot 12) Med um (14-16)· urae (IS. Box 163 Old Chelsea Sta 20)° ~II 4 yds 60..rn New York NY 10011. Pnni · · Name. Address, Zip Stftd Sl.25 t« eacll ~ Paltem Numt>er. Ud 354 lot. Ntlt "'"'"'.tor MORE than ever before! 200 tint-dais alfftllll, lllH!ifta. designs plus 3 free printed In· Stfl4 II: side NEW 1976 NE.EDlECRAfT Marian Mart•n CATALOG' His mrythinc. 75c. Paltflfn Dept. 442 Crocltet wltll $~111ns ,.11.00 Daily Pilot Crtelltt I Wardrollt • --1.00 232 We'\t 18th St .• N Nifty fifty Quilts --1.00 ' York. NY 10011 . P11n Rlpplt Crochet St .00 Sew -'-llnlt look SI .25 NAME. ADDRESS. ZIP Needltpolnt l ook Sl.00 SI Z E a n d S T Y L Flower Crocllet l ook .St.00 NUMBER ltalrpln Crochet l oolc Sl.00 · Oo JO• how how to a•t a Instant Crochet l ook . _ $1.00 pattern free r Stnd now f11 Instant Macr1m1 look _ $1,00 our lllW Fall·Wlnltr Pattern l}lltant Money l ook • $1.00 C1tal•1-cllp coupon lnaldt for Co11111l1t1 Gift l ook • $1.00 frH fllttrll of yew chlu. Complete Affllans .:''4 .$1.00 St11~ 75-now! 12 "111 Af1h1ns :12 , 50c Sew + llnlt ltok •. '1.25 l ook of 18 Qullts :1 _ 50c lnttfft Mo111 C"flt $1.00 Musau111 Quilt l ook 112 • 50c lnstallt f'1satt1 look Sl.00 15 Quttts for Today !3 50c' 111stnt S.wlftC loo\ S 1.00 l ook ti II llftr R111s . . SO c ' TURN KEY HOME Elegant 3 br, 2 ba home + jacuzzi in prestigioU3 neigbborbood in highly desirable sch\. dist. Huge lol! J of a It.Ind at $79.~. BAfWestd• Rlty, IK. 141·2321 EXICCOMDO ON THEW.ATER SIJS.000 Commanding view or all the boating acllon , Catalina I s land ond night lights. Adult 2 bdrm. 2 bath w/boat slip available. Conve nient location with security. - WATERFRONT tiOMES REAL ESTATE 631-1400 SUPER SHARP! Sunshine 3 Br home I Price reduced to $67,900! Great Cost a Mesa Schools! Call now! Red carpet, 754.1.202 Eastside R-2 With charming 2 bdrm home bringing Income whil e you deve lo p another unlL. Close to s hoppin g & lraosportatlon. Beller take a look. 646-7711. .. 70xl.25. 4 blks from bch w 2 br. older. Rent $32S. $75,000. Hurry! 831 9334 Agt, 645-5044/673-4444 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• file~!~~ COIOMA. DIL MAR DUPLEX F ront unit is extra clean, new gas & water plumbing. Fireplace in L.R., new kitchen floor . Rear unit new, never lived in. Sun deck of! L. R.. m ini ocean view. Natural wood theme. Both units 2 bedroom. 1 bath. Priced at $165,000. , A COLDWB.L IANKH CO. 644-1766 2161 SAN JOAQVINHll l $1tO. .~'--------•-N_NEWPO _____ Rr_c_r_N_r_rR ______ _,~ 1 1 1 •1 11 1. Cal Mr. er..., i. ._..(I) I I I I• I I I I· J. S... IC.-Hy-. Ill.I ......... It) I I 1 I • I I I I I .. ~----~{J) [ 111 1•11 11 S. Or. Wtaf\ ..... -We (J) I I I I I I• I I I I " TroooMt..iitt -... _. (1) 11 1 11 1•111 1. Sl-c« -.. -An-di) (1) 11111 11• 11 1· I I I 1002 GtMral 0 . I I l , 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CE IBDBIB BLllRS CD. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE OPEN DAILY 2-4:30 IM THE HEWER IWFFSI Spectacular 2 Stor y End Unit Townhouse, Overlooking Sparkling Pool And Ram ad a. 2 Sep ar at e Suites. 3 Baths, Huge Family Room Easily Convertible To Another Suite. Highly Upgraded . Many. Custom Features. $157,500 2444 VISTA MOU RA HI DOVIR DIUVI 631-1800 ~MOMIAYIBllY University Park -lg. 4 BR., dining r m, f amily rm .. La Salle" w/closeta gal<re & fireplace in the master s uite! $119,9001 Bill Hutchi ngs 752-1414. <U-13) WATB. CATAUMA & SUMSIT V11WS Outstanding buy i n the heart of Newport! Own your own beautiful 2 BR, 2 bath apt. w /2 balconies on the 7th floor in Newpor t Towers. Security Bldg. w/attractive lobby, pool & patio. $110,000. Marjorie. Mahon 644·6200. (U·l4) 1.AYCUST Spacious, I van Wells built bome in prestigious setting w /4 BRs, fainUY rm, 2 full & 2 half baths + cab.ineted 2-car garage. Beautifully I a ndsc a p ed! P ri vacy! Mint condition! Ideal location! $229,000. Tom Allinson 642·8235. CU·lS) MIWPOIT HACH TOWt•IO .. U nbelievable value under $75,000! f 3 BR. 2 bath w /patio & 3·car gar. Close to beach & shopping. Great starter home -hurry! Lynne Valentine 644-6200. (U-16) OLD COIOMA Da MAI Charming single famUy 3 BR. 2 b ath homo So. of Hwy & close to beach. Flexible financing. $159,500. Gisela Han.en 644·6200. CY·l7) 641·1235 M4-620I 'IOI Oo~r Orlw Harbot' V'-* c.n.... trvlne et C.'!'PUS Valley Qnett 1J2·1414 . • ,, f ' '. lJ6 DAil Y Pit Ol Hou\(!\ f or ~· I HOU\C'\ For SciM HOUSH For Sal~ HOUH I For s• Houa.• For Sde ~ ···•··•·······•····•·•· ........•.•......•..•.. •····••···•···•··•····· ··•···················• •••............•...•... Ht1t1n1 For SW. i-.°",.. For SciN Houut for Sak I Houits for Sal• HMntlncjton 14!och I 040 ~Oft hoch I 040 l"IM I 044 lrYIM I 044 .,.._. I 044 Friday. October 14, 1971 ,..................... ···•····•·•··••·•·•·••• ....•.•••••....••............•.....•......•...•...................... ···········•····•····•• ......•....•.•.•••.•...............•.......•....••..•.••••••••.•.••.. C... .. M• I 022 Cotw .. Mer I OU Costa Mesa I 024 Cotta MeM I 024 .............................................. ······················· ······················· .. EXECUTIVE DESIGN . Corona J.Jig/if atuh 460 De Sola Terrace fl ' 2768 ol..orenzo 4 A..-d w--.. ••"'-""" .... r'ClllNd a...t Md NW. tWt 1-. It lovtly. S Ill -. k reedy for 90._ f..-y. L.,. tr ........ Mft .............. T1ttre 11 pe'f J fw 2 ... 1.vJ1 ,... l ccn. sa.., crpt'4Jo 2 ..,.r ........ ...._., ..... ,. ... ......, 111141' ,..., C ... coolttop. wtr HST OF LA CUlST A IN HUMTIMGTOM HACH Lge 2 Story Spanish homes. 1·2 yrs new. 4 & 5 Bdrm homes, 3 car garages. Formal dining & family rooms. Boat & trlr access -many extras. 2300 to 2800 sq. ft. 8S3l Topside Cr. 8681 Brookside Dr. (Jacuzzi) 10091 Yacht Lane REAL ESTATE BY LUCIA $118,500. $127,000 $128.~ 963·82'78 JUST REDltED to $129,500 OWMB DES,OATI HOUCIO SI0.000 This .a bdrm, 2000 sq.n. model homo woo't la1t. Tbls beautiful Oeetf1ch.l Only S99,950 Coll now Park Home reaturc:s ID 752.1700 • elude : 4 bedrooms. Cami Ol'fN11111·•rS1uNroai .. ,.,. tyroom, din mg room und f '~ I ~!!;l~t~f/ ~p~~Pd~tl :~ ·11v11t• throug hou l n nd pro· ~,::f;;;;~.-~=~·~-~·~·~·i~-l ressionally l1.1ndscape.d front and rear. This UNJVERSITV PARK super homo is over 1500 DEANEllOME sq. ft. and only 2 years Byowncr,2sty,4 Dr, old. 2 ~ Bu , F am ~ m , Formol Din Rm, otrium, l'aooramJc view oC Blue flaclt1c. New custom home in estab. nci&hborhood. 4 Bdrnu, ma.td's quarters, fam·rm, Jae Jlv.rm w/!rplc, formal din-nn. muter aui\o w/frpl & wal.lc-in cloeets. Open llal.rway leadl to a third 1evel crows •• Ubrary, vlewtng tho world. Many decks & patloe. Here's an xlnt opportunity (Of' you to participate with the builder in the selecUoo ol finish muterinls best suited to your tastes & de- ...._., ....... all ...... ftw of .... m 1 I .... SI I0,000. Cw'" Ii comp_..~ POq..HOMi Mow$9',SOO ulr cond. Sparkling pool•---------- ~ocaUn& ideas! '"l"ot info. & ap-pt. pleuse call : <714) 551-4245 1 • ., (714) 639-5487 P.S .-TROPHI ES-EXCLUDED SOUTH COAST INVESTMENTS 645-t 103 or 646-6710· 1024 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Costa MHG •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• I 024 Costa Mesa eor... .. M• t 022 Costa Mesa I 024 •• ... •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lovely 3 BR, fam-rn1 .1---------~ .&C.&...-LOT quiet cul-de-sue, lrg OPEN SAT /SUN ... -An. FIXER VA yard. 2038 Abso, off 20th 1-5 CDM • & Irvine. Dnve by & call. I 134 Missfon Dr. 8 Toro I 032 twiecjton •act. I 040 ...•................... ····················~·· FAMILY Custom home just blck!l to DELIGHT bt-uch. J~gc lot, 3 br, :l ba, Beautiful °' bdrm home t.lctuched game rm w /JO' on qwet cul·dc !lac. Plcn-ouk wet bar· unique CWI\. ty or extras: Family pool, .88Q pll, boat gate, nlOru, l'overcd pullo &. muny exlrns. Sl43,000. larai.' fenced yard. Wulk Prine. o nly . Owner/ to the h1.:b school. A:.k· .,.A.e_.;;;..e_n_t 7_i_4_:960-_338_9_. __ mg $84.000. & jacunl. Protlntbcpd a. decor. '149,500. 551-<>484 Located in the prc·t•-------- stiglous Racquet Club of lrvlne. This tf,leloourne not onl)' lnclueles pool, but othcl' reatu.rcs such as central air condition- ing, microwa-ve oven, washer, dryer and uven 21 DOG HOUSE with door intothe bo~ . NEWIM LA•UNA HILLS 3 BR. 2 8.\ •n<l never Or.• cupted. Good location and. ready to move into. red hill ~· 552-7500 RAC9UITCWI ;w/rnagniflcent ocean & you do the rest! Small or Owner leavmg area & ·~ ~~rft!lilf"> ~., 565•000 ?tare Spyelass JIJll lot Brandnewcpts&paint-A.gt64ti-1044or61S·l~. Mt:SAOEL M/\K m·. . HARDWOOD LOOl( .. ]llt Thls home la Im· rrulOula~e. Boaut. 4 BR. 3 BA, + bonus room, formal dWnJ & family room. Wimbletoo model ln preaUiiows No. Irvine. Elrten1lve ~ ol wOod & glasa w/in-<ilred U1htJJJg tbru•out. IUDL cond, w/s hutterai mirrors, wood 1lllelv&DC. cedar paneling, tinted windows & elegant wallpapers. •---------• Ful17 air condhiClD.ed. Amedcan Home Shield l lr. protection plan . .Pri~e d t o se ll TODAY-ilZf,SOO. ()pea Sun J-S •l •131 salacia Orin. 'Fashion Island views. no down pymt. 00 tbis IY OWNER must :.t•ll llus prh.lc or ~ '->~ w. IR DG .Pmect !or your custo home. Popular So. Coast 3 Bdrm house. 940 ownership :i IJdrm, lam. 499·2800 FLOORS WOOD I E home. • Plaza area. 4 br, family Congress St. South~est r m .. home. Move-in n.... It ..,,., P'l-S llA RP ! SH ARP ! CRlll(SfDE JlC TAYLORCO rm, pleasant rur yd. CM. <•Qnd.S83.000 ..,~~ ouse~ol·5 a . J Bedrm +den wilh a SHARP ! Pl a n 8 in Beautiful 4 bedrm, 3 ·95S.0350 • $72¥5:.J=~A!lty' __ D_U_P_L_£X-.Ea-s-kide HEWPORTBUCH . ~f.i~~£~lf· bla1~~~~ma1d.il~1kh1wtcabesbne,rg.aAs ~~ ~~et!d:O~ bath, 2 story home with 540.46 .. 6 Warmington bwlt, 3~~ "~ v • Ownec mowng Sotlth & 70' wide lot with room on townhome includes cen· dition. Custodl drape.a, -A 'TY '-75 '642 . Wto.> .,. Camily nn. Move ill COO· a 7 yrs old. B ach l~e :J ~~~~~~~~~I clooecl e~crowon another both s rdes with R.Y. ac· tr~l air conditioning. eleo (a.rage opener, le 675•7390 Bdrms w/gas Crplcs . home . Deluxe corner cess. $74,950. community pool, cable back t ard w/cov pallo. WANTED 2or3 BR hm w/view In, ________ _ CdM. Any price, al terms, trade. Prine only. VETS NO DOWN NO CLOSING COSTS Beautiful cond1t1on & C:olll'Al' Park. 4 bdrm 2 ba. townhm, Jbr, 212ba, ccn-Ed Riddle, Realtor 'IV and the building and Sycamore model. Va·. ---·-------location. Lurge purk1nA dbl frplr. New ly painted tral air. 9 mo oh.l. 646-88.n area m aintenance a nd cont. Make orrer. Call ·- area in rear for motor fo/out. new carpets. Ex--~A~eso~p~H~l~ty:.:_,!.!73~1~-49~11~.I~~~~~~~~~ insura~e. 546-5880 0 0 D B RIDGE home or trlr $134,00o. tr.as. A~ents welcome. CREEKSIDE Lg 4Br. 536-*9. '12 I• to Oce• Three homes to choose Co.mpletely remodeled Crom : 3 BR • 3 BA. on an oversized lot A w/guest quarters & pool. Qllashing 4 BR plus den Prime North Costa plus format dining plus Mesa. Reduced St0,000. huge Camlly room with • , ..... u oc.1 .,.," $80.900. ~SS.IWTI Condo, Jbr. Never been llouseless? Buy ours. •br, I 2V.Ba, fam rm, formal, l <>W((~41;()N lived .in. Ideal location. xtru ti: ram rm. Nr echls, Jtlnt family area w /lake "l\eal(S)( BYOWNER Av111l1mmed.640--6828alt Wes tminster Mall. ~ orlnvestmentlowprice. (1 4 752 3 n d rm , l hut h . 6· Agt . Unde r $82,000. Ownr. 1~~~~~~~~~l $110,000. Pidc cpt /drps. ·--·'·~!'!!.. n emodl'lcd kitcht.•n . FountainVaUey• 10341_888-_1_00_1 ______ 4 1-M()..3187,545-.20'79 MES"VERDtr. SSS.000.9940ukl\vc.CM. •••••••••••••••••••••••r--------I ,.· WOODBRIDGE BROAD· ~ ~ --------·I MOOR, 3 br, 2 ba patio • o pen beams, natural 3 BR. 2 BA co~ocr lot. wood textures and ocean Sharp dream home . and jetty view from North Costa M~a. $1500 master suite & sundeck. UDder VA appraisal. IARGAIH! * * 2 OM I RAHcHREAl.TY home. $109,900. Ownr. •-•--L s BR . formal din1nn Don't Ml.SS Th1'5I RemodeJers paradise in 551 %000 . 551...ros _,......~ 1048 room, 2 Crplc 's. All ow 1i • downtown H . B • 2 -----· ----•---------••••••••••••••••••••••• Just steps to Ocean Blvd. ~·'itlf .000. incoun•..., k1trhen, 2500 SHARP Sparush style 3 br, l~ ba Separate homes on la.rge Walnut Square CoQdo, 3 CO"'S ... IOY"'" ot ~r w,ramily rm. & patio. I t R d d Br2Ba $63000 "' '' Aa.s sq. ft. Only $132,950. This homo sparkles"' ith Lg yard on quiet Cul·de· ~rner o . e uce JUMP,M • ssi 3384 2 Story, 2 fU'eplaces, 2 Call 644·72 I I 3 BR, sharp Eastside Costa Mesa home. Large lot, close to Back Bay. Xlnt. fwancUlg. new paint, beaut cpts, sac. Move in on nt-1hl 6i~~.~'.~772S JEHOSOPHA T! . livin1 areas. Total view. kill'hcn has been newly approval. ~.500 lnt1 RE Ndwork You'll be jumping up and BV OWNER, Turtlerock 4 4 Br, ram. rm. A probate AJn NIGEL OAILEY & l\SSUCf/\TES VA $69,000 remodeled An xlnt buy ,._ ________ ,down with joy when you Br 2~ Ba, Formal Din saleat~6S.,OOO Call DOW roe best sele<:· 3 BR. dining room, fo m-ut $1W,lli5(). C:i.11 now n CAI.I-.. ,. CAUF. CLASSIC see this uceptional plan Rm. ideal to s~boola, EAGUSNIST lJoo rm, new built-In kitcbcn, p ific C t \ \. 3 Cb 11 b parks, pooJs, tenn.tS, UCI. VIEW 5~A 3666 b a th .. o o m s & OC OGI PRO~EXCHAJUil.lllC. 3 Bdrm, 1~ ba. Ne' bcb. u ;n 1a nce or ome. Priced to move. Youowo bl "'ltV"'" -~~•rlllon't lasl ! P~s --$74,950owner962·3712 ._,b Y upgr~ded, c<!v· land. 83.l-1019 Duplex, with dou e gar • WIJOlc-i11 ...,.-~ • _,.... ·-ered paUo, auy family •---------• & storage rm. Only 2 blks JlMWEL.LSR1'-:ALTOlt 631-0400 Anytime 96J.6739 55'1·1&20 JBR, l ba, btkefubch. rm.Excetlentlocationon to bcb Oil ~IPi-.l!ri~ate ;: ·-SPECTACULAR SS7-6264 or SiS·26Jl Super loc. VA terms. 6 green bell. near s hop-BT O"WNER road. $189,500. IHAl HTATI 9uality.,.._a •--~"-------:'ttESA VER DI:: POOL * * co:-;oosPECIALlST yn;. new.· Stli,900. Slre ping and schools. Comm. Deaoe""'bome-Univ. ()penSu.odayl-S An . 1 HOME to fall in love HOME wa nt ed for fU .. g Brh,CM,Ft\fly R.E.963-7080 pools,t.enniscourts,golC Park "Keaslngtoo"mdl. 2SlHigblandRd. bqilt.e~:!1~~ ~:SJ~: wit.bl Pvt. lake, pool, serious qualtfit!d out of DcMoPoint 1026 TouchstoneReaJty. c ourse and o t her w/pool, jacu.izi &: air. •494-7551• wood beam reillng, jacuzzi. Vaulted ceillDg.s state buyer. 3 to 4 Br + ••••••••••••••••••••••• ____ 963-_~------------•I iamemaod'Ues. ~ lotly1· celnll· C6tm.fpoo1Mdieckinl bg.l' 2250d ~eautilul s olid oak & farn. rm. 3 br +++. Fam Rm, up t..o SlS0,000. • HUMTIMGTON DIS spjlc1ous 1v g sq. t . n · 111 a lSttimeoomkt,so hurry Long escrow possible. oc1r.• .... v1EW7 POPULAR Greenbrook I ....._ .. h: area add that special thruout, Corning Cook· , ;)' ((,'"JM') t' A l.'f< r c abinet s thru·o ut, &caJl!S40-4646Agt. Broker. Unda. 847-0100 5An • Granada 5 br, 3 ba, 2100 Y~ OC • t.ouc:h of elegance. Truly top at.ove, lush atrium, fittplaces in living room or960-S038 You bet! Thi.-; one year sq. fl. Hi#!h.ly upgraded. Beaut~ brick frplc In a magnificent home, auto. sprinklers & Uta. i======;;;....-- and master bedroom, C'fl Condo5, 2 Br, 21h Ba.•---------new duplex has \lcws eu~y rare )cl. comm. l~e den. f•amlly sz 3 hUlT)'to~.Call Ownr/AJt. SS2·0110 or INYISTMIHT ~ lekded glass windows 2 rrplc's. ceramic tile WORLD SHIES fr om both units + pool. WaUl.toscbls, park, lidrm home. Full size Centu.ry21SurfBealty 540-4646 OPPORTUNITY •vnd a ceramic tile Jtitcbeos & bath. Poo! & SPlCIA.L fireplaces . ba lronit>s, tcnn . lc rt ~. s hvpl>. block wall, fncd yrd -559-6100 ~uui io the master spa. 67s-4912 Broker Mod low m•iot. laodscap-Sl28.SOO. PP. 963-58'77 w/a n impressive BBQ, _________ .. _________ Excelleat Motel ln-lhe ba\h· 1---------BROADWAY SALE lnJ:. SJ ~.ooo. • area. 16xl6' family rooin ---------heart of Lagu:oa. Xlnt PLUS PRJCED under nny other Super 3 8 r 2 U a, WKJgenhom Rltn ~on Beach I 040 views the green area PERFECT ~ou. Large pool " a cbarm.ing 2 bedroom mod.el like it in So. Cst. workshop, rec room, 67s-6lll0 6134147 ••••••••••••••••••••••• with no traffic from recreation area. Short Rental with Cireplare Plaza area. ~Y thousands Family Rm & Dining 5&S Resale SP\:ciallSts. 3. ot11<'r rooms. Lge kitchen FOR walk to beach. For •ht- aod a separate patio olSS$.4brtri-Jevelhome Rm, hardwood floors .• -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; <1 orS bdrmmoddsava1I, wi'l111.ns & dbl slnlt. AlJ · fclrmaUOQeall: deck. w I s u n It en fa m rm Call us, to see today. On· some w. popl.t, 96lH002 eabJnets are bard wood small fan1U:y, young or II•..,._ letlltJ Call 644-7211 w/frpt. Hurry & call: ly $86.500. WHITEWA TH VU l'enningtoo Properties ash, no wax solarium Dbl ao young. 2 Bdrm, 2 4t4-567a 4tt-zl00 - 544}4646agt. · 34041~1 Calle de la On. W/W cpl, dbl gar.' ba. San Maleo Model in Primavera. Whitewater Beat price <175,500 by Rancho San J oaquin. BR. 2 Ba, Crple, O/W. view! 3 & 4 br, frml din· own.a-. Open bo"8e Oct l:li,&hlyupiraded. Deluxe Mesa del Mar. Owner tnl!. ramtJy rm, wet bar. WON1 LAST! 15-16. 11 to Spm. or call master bdrm. Easy care Avail. now. ss2.ooo. ~ Deluxe custom bwlL! 1"-~ul'1fully up"raded 557·7700 davc, 962-11773 patlo. All for only ",·.~." ~VCLUSIYE 96:>~ 11'&30>-.C..C.-&X"u .. ~u -c:nn s;.A ~..... t'rom SliS,500. Townhouse. 2 hr end un. cv. 905l !\tedilerranean llw,-. IRYIHETIRRACE MESA VERDE, 1850 645-9161 -LA CASA RLTY it. w1lovely rrcek oo 2 Dr. CMagnoUa /Adams). V1ew home. CU3tom built ~.ft., 3,.. Br, no qual~!y-NORTH4i BR. 2 ba, lrg 496-1870 eve: 831-0737 Sides. $'1'1,950. fpr owner. Large liv. rm. ing, 15,. down. Q,lDck hpl, mature frwl trees. ---------n GAME ROOM din. rm., 4 bdrms., 3'h e s e r 0 • • q u 1 c k + xtr-u. S7S,000. By 3 br 2• .. ba home w 'vault· \ \. ~-"'" 20l.33 to and rt ti.., storage rm ., & ore. possession. ss9•95o. appt.Call54&-1026 cd ' •·-A 2100 PROP~DCIWICE.• ly cr-~ ~ame rexmpew1'tb. Xlnl ram. home "-Owner 771-238S · l'$uug,s. pprox. ..,..,.. ., . planoed for entertaining. CAHYOH VIUAGE sq. n. Co~pl. w /deror. --open beams and mam· Sle r eo & inter com MES.ADELMAR New 2 story s bdrm r.rptg •p?Uo.slab.D!Nct 9Q"739 557.7Q,J moth brick fireplace. .-tem ... ruout. "-cunty ~ D"'ILY h -. ..,9 000 from bwlder. SJ.20,000. Owner's priz.e pool table •1~ ui ox-_....,.. "' omes. r1om •• • · (114 1752 ssu Md bar lock!. Cardeo O,..D*U,.. aystem & many other 27SlC~a lmmed. occupancy. -- -· -----SAVIOYaSSOOO lutcheo,4br'switbpriv. 14805l>val .1'i celies. Complete S br, 3 ba, new crpt & WilsonatCaoyooDr. W. AIOVETHE Was $14,950. ls now mastu. Used P!rick m · 'JS2'3~Jll:lltV»fE <NrWalnuUsKaian) ~v:f ~~s~~· p;unt. $95.000. ,_M_ors_._A.;;..gent. __ ~_· .....;:...ss __ , H.AalOA sm.ooo. Beaut. 4 BR, on try, paUo and BBQ. No 3 Bdrm condo. Master pc ratty· MESA DB. MAJ Fslutcly home oo the tge comer lot In best H.B. wax lloon and carpel VA W'B.COMI w1th w.Jk..lo elotel 3rd l~DOWM! Hew I bedrm, 3 ~. lplc, 2decb, dynamic cJe&iln. + Older uparaded 2 bedrm rentaJ to ~p wjth pymnts. Both with super ocean view. Priced to sell at $232,000. WorJd Wide Brokers, 873-fMS, Jean· nle . ~suaF Hw-the poundiif surf" from tki1 195'1 10JCS2 Paramount moblle hnp>e; completeb' tum .• tor $1B,OOO fl>lt SALE lo be relocal· 77<H80•or644-3S4S Cliffs 3 Br, den. 2 bu. loc. Added patio room, near o.ew l Immediate One oC the blost. corn· ·Bdrm can be rormai din· ed sec hse at 423-425 Iris Lowest price. $1$,900. DR. FP, JOOOsq.f\. with a pool size backyard. Open .possesalon -flexlble fortable floorplansln the Ing rm. opening to prei. .__._. Ave. Submit bid In wril·l-•-...-•-.......--11!.--~-·--• rp~~. u0r.1~~~::.1°0p3 :~ view on a roomy lot. A House this wtnd. 6541 terms. Submit you.r of· arillu; h lgb cathe dral ty,SECLlJDED, covered ' -~~~ ~b! to 716 Man gold Ave. -,..., run-w-, Sat/$un or call. bargain a t $184.500. l.Pnox Dr. By owner. fer! BkrS36-93l1. • ce ngs in Hving rm & patio. 2 Baths, Jndry lge ~ul?' .cd~1. 92625. Hard to fin4 Me11~Verde-1140 Mission Dl'. •494-7551 • IWli 1m A IAIGAIN! dinin~ area enhance the enougb ror aewlng or 499•2800 ---------1 Country Club location. ~ s~r '-~75 spac1ousoe-ss. Family hobby. Central air. Pool JASMINECREEfC Large 4 bednn, Cami1y 1_~-----'"'----'"'-SU'MMERFIELDUOMF. Owne.rreducedpricefor roorn.too....witll&<!9<H~w & park nearby. AL L COUNTRY Unobs truct ed ocean rm &. dining rm. Creal Highly upgraded 4hr, fast sale. 4 BR Preatl&e. ror: lf!door/outdoorenter· THIS IN kOVE-IN CON-C view. new 2Dr, den. Plan view. from l00xt2S lot. MESA YBDE t •.uu. Expensive panel-2 sty. P.V. frplc, Jrg. t a101ng. 3 Bdrms, 2 DITION IN IRVl.NE HARM ~By owner $202,000. Offer ed al und e r 2 Story, 4 bed.room re· inJ:, cprt'd gar. Slab/· yard,hurryoothiaonel bat.ha; village of FORONLYM200 Fabulous ocHn \'lews. ~1'7M $200,000.CA11540-US\. sldence at 2006 IAmnos l.A CJ\SACRAl'mf: be am patio. 2 s ty Oper>Sat&Sunl-S California Homes. P.S.•Waaber.clcyertn-3br,3bllbotne.Nestlesin -.-,..---------• Drive. Costa Mesa, Relax lh redwood sauna, playhse. Close to bch. 2 16162 Robert Lane 112 500 eluded. the quiet North •fde. See 0 C E A N V I F. w California. approximate· aner entertaining In the blks to ldnt schl system. PA'ITI WALKER ' ~ AttNdl Ca.do Catalina sunsets from CJIARM.ER old CdM ly 2.100 square feet, elec-"l-'1uta Room" which S88,SOO by owner. SJ6.1Sl4 REALTY 55z 70 Thit ft your co1y dlnlng rm. Vf /room l o build . tnc·«1tcheo, seperale ccrrt.:unsubrassrailbar, rcs.536-5683ofe 842-lW • SUDDYeod~ Hrdwd tin tbruout. 2 Sll8.S00.67S..1G66 ~~;~g ~mR ~~:rre:1 ~~r &grill Tluscustom4 Br, CONOOSPECJALIST Byowner. beaut. Preatige THE =• °'u, ~hii rom. 2 ~~·~::S1~ ~~ ~YGLASS HILL CO!llOOSPECIALIST S topher, Rece1 Hr ~::"co:u~b~!e:; Htg Bcb,CM, Fl Vly h~. •Br 11J4 Ba, many VIU · Bdrma II. ~led ram. SUIU'OOmootouaedbrick New Cape Hom "Lusk" HtgBcb,CM, FtVly Telephone {714) ~7 75.11 l>q.Ct. or s uch luxury ToucbstooeRee.lly X1rU.$83,000.84f-8S58 REALTORS i-m . ope.::n:.;:::, ~ terrace where you can bdme. 4 BR, 2~ Ba, nice To~hsloae Realty Crom specific inrorma· features as imported I.lie, ~08$7 ~Central air Beat see the waves bnaking 4q'h' light view. Xlnt 1 ____ 96J.Ql67 ______ tion fo rm Rob~rl H handcraft ed Galt HELP! 111•-• ,__,_·T-..t-t..,~',_ 00 Maio Beach. Quality ,v,.tlue for a serious ,._ ________ Stopher CJr L ar r y ca binets & doors, . • • ........_. 1042 YO.CHOICE .,..,w ..... ,,ea _..,_,,, &perfection, byOtme.l'\ buyer. Appt. o nly•.'" Gieseke k h Own e r b as boug ht •••••••••••••••••••••• y ·11 b EYB.YMC0'8.AHD Askin,11gS21S000-49'.-0 UST5'DECM gourmt>t ilr en, 2 aootherandisanxious to ·-uc-~"•OOO. ou a l t ave )'O\lr REALTOR 552-0434 , . -6'4-4684 R.O~ ST fplc's, Romon tub, etc. sell this 3 brlrm Glenmar ~ ..., -... choice 0( cpes, colors, It INSPlltlMQ VllW "-• clc. Open House Daily home. Hurry 00 W s ex· 3 br, J ba, doclt tor '5' ti le. This ia lbe u d d C bid us~:\~l~rc~ ~~t:~~c~~ 476 2UnitfiHrUpper 10.SPM. 33R51 Street of cellent value, priced boat. Catm decor. Deep WlU.OWSMODELB in ~ ~ i rm J ~e OFOCEAM/HILLS fplc's, \?lee kitchen, $. Cute & clean Cape Cod o n R -2 lo t. G real Blue Lanter n Dana belowmarkelalS64,900. water Ownr.840-S432 Irvine's newe.st W~d-q&.letculdtvia~ ~Br~i W .... feri.f••es Hwy. Owner rinonced. type wtbricks. shingles, East.side location. Our Point. For informallon l'«EWPORTllEACH .,..,.. 1044 bfridgaJe.d~IJ 4 ~R(, 3 BA, den . $81,900. Ownr. UPSTAIRS: 2 BRi 2 BA., inc. Only. SlS5,000. shutters & gingerbread. exclusive al only $61,500. caU Sheila Spencer Agt. REAi.TY 675-1642 ••••••••••••••••••••••• orm uung. am·rm, SSl.oeot living room w/trp c, clln· 19 rorappt. 3 br, 1 ba, J'h car gar. & i..:..:.Ag:::e:.:.n:.:.t.:..:l\3:.:.l...::·20~2fi~·----ll-116-l·_Ul8"_1 ______ ---------located on f cia.nn>oo1-;n-g room. lt ttchen workshop. RV pad. Alley LOCATION TURT\ElOCK sized lot. Access to u OPENHOUSE•• w/bullt-lna. acceas. Huge yd. Forced Cotto Me.a I 024 Costa Mna I 024 ·~arks, lake, boa ting, l·SSAT/SUN. D o w N s T A l Rs : rur. Autosprnklrs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOCATION ~eous 4 BR. family clubb.011se. Ev~t.hlng UNIVERSITY PK. Complete 2 Bit ipt. OPEN SUN. I t .5 The park for your yard. 4 room, ronnal dintne. 3 Woodbridge bas to oner. 4581 GREENTREE. Priced a\ $23S,000tenns. 541•4019 ' Bdrm, newer home, near car garage. P rtvate lrg. Priced to sell NOW. Spae 3Br, 2~ba. Ste~ to AMalCAH HOMI ffiBCOBb / lrVlne all & 2 miles to beech. ttar yard. Necda tast $11"500. Callfor appt. awimmlrlg, volleyba ll, REALTORS , I ~~~~1s1!n!r;lissoo. and ya~~-rsi296~ ... ttoo .A .. , , ~-~ ~~=~52.~es D 494-1001 4t-C.7513 rea tg U.S.A. REALTY -Ulirl~ $15,000 DOWN 646-0507 511 -5986 ~ ... ~.. 1 J:!'!=~~e~~yre =,!!!'::!':th t.akes over payments on ono ot '"~· ,. __ •--l house + approved plans THIS IS TH! l'LACE Lndmark condo ad ll PATIO HOMI #2 Plan. 4 Br, din rm, menU:....,,... ·~ .... _ • for duplex. Owner will H you are looking tor a 3 BR home comm redocll, dlx 2 Brz OMLT $97,!IOO. f~ur:· 0~~':.°!i ~uf!le~ 2Unti. *189,500 EAtrr 4 BR 2 BA . carry financing & sub-in mint condit ion -i n good ::_7~wnr. S64,9SO. HUGE 5BR+w/3balh1. E l e1ant bome in saest.reet0nly$1$000 3Unl:la $190,()()().sa27,l500 ~ del Mar'. No dow~~ ~~~~ale. Call: Ric k neighborhood -on lg. pool-sized lot Supe r Sharp HVPt. lmsnac, by owner, Save ~~~.~C1'u:.'~~l~ WOOD. II. ID•I' . ~~~: =:= • VA terms. $79.900. Best 556-7777 -within walking distance o( So. .._ Bd 8 comm' SI24 900 Wknds r 1 ._ ..... r •buy in Co!lta Mc.,a. Call Coast Plaza ... TH.IS IS THE twn .... e. 3 · 21' a, vu, orattswkdyi s&.~ rp c.ove.rst6':\ol mJyrm. wurelwood "E" Plan. S49-8062 World Red Estot• Prin. only. 957-8000 Shows I ike a model. Largest Broadmoor 4 Br, Qt, • PLACE! $95,000. Kaye Evans IEACHWALK RANCHO San Joaquin, 2 759-UOl famrm,formaldlnrm,3 . SPUSH-SPLASH 3Br . 2Ba Condo, 2 car 642·8235. <U·22) ~r1 den. ,view of areeD· full ba\hl " 3 car aa.r. ,Brand n ew poo l & garage, lots()( 11torage, TOWHHOME oeJt& Wm. Mason Park Uo«raded.OnlySit9900 ja~uui. covered patio decor or earthto nes YI.AR 'ROUND ltESOIT ·~~\~~s f,1~~ ~ ~·8::rlte. Sl1 06•500· RealEat.te ~l~';.wm· f;'d::O~~ ~~~~: !6.S.IXXl10fr.979-4026 tmagine 2 pdvate tennis courts, COURT YARD. tbh WOOO•IDGI 1--------· 2 balh family home with tt5 000 O lympic-s ized pool, separate private 2 bedroom, 2 Deer fie ld Vlll•J•• PRESCOTT nJ417R.. MOMAICHIAT cocoa brown carpctin~ . .JU , jacuzzi, sauna, bHliards, hobby bath end unil 1 bas lush ~~!,uJe.,rba~·c; i!'noi!!i LitstWoodbridRehome.s ''!*f'l9!};.'!eit11-.11t" TaliCI cus tom drapes, re· New listing rms, recreation rm ... all of this landscaptng&golden 1n · ram rm wtwet bar, 2 BR, or 4' BR+ d•n. #60HRWOOOIAST 3 Bedrooms, 3v.& baths, modeled kitchen arc• j ust steps from your 4 BR, 3 bath terlor & panel eel cvr'd patios, go1' BBQ. Oversized lot. Cully NcarfiuorCorp.Exec • formal dining, family PL\JSanencloscdCront Orabilquick.Popular3 townhome in Newport Riviera! Clrc•plne"! OWNER Clorh! to schlB, pork 41 hu1dsc.Jdealforpool.All BR hi hi roorn wet bar, lots ot cOurtyardl Only $85.900. bedroom Townhome. ANXIOUS·-llUJtll Yl uprded. Mexican pavers • g y uparadert. bullt.i~ Security aate ~n UI S:JO pm, Mon· D1ning area, forc.ed air Highly upgraded end unit w/wet Oiw'n ti l 8:3opm, Mon· pool. Lll8t wknd by tile A C U di Only 10 mOI old, formal e .. rs hc~Ung, deluxe kitchen. bar. Jeanne Barnett 644·6200. (U·23) Th111't. . Owner before Bkr llal· e. I . v, n, nns. 3 dining rm, aep ram-rm e.ntg , Prlvatt & large '· A r u 11 11n1.1 o f rec log. '9'.SOO. 8 Badger BA. 3 Car aar. Nr.a,a.rk. w/frplc. Xtrast fte<tuccd froht ... uo. '195,000 Pass. flSe-4279 Walle to take. St'f9,500 •• ...,_.,... C 11 CiJ Coldwt.'11 Ronkrr ti . faclllUes, llKR.540-1720. 642·823S '44·6200 Brkr/Ownr 553·4121, ...., .. -• .-. ' Quall ~ . I S. 9QPlua.c.ail ~ IRVINE cnovEs.J 835·" .. "" PAmWALKER TAIBI 901 Dover Drive Harbor \/1ew Cenlcr ..._. Rf:ALTY Plac• I I 1 1 1 c l..aurtl, 4 BR, rum.rm, Don't 11ve up the shlpt 8'2-1418 Prop ti• .... rv ne a ampus Valley <Anter Prap.,-l:lea wet·bor, prof. lndscpd & "List" it Jn classified :ff-it20• "*It C_....___1 ,. 7S2·1414 152-1920 dceoor'd, greenbelt loc. Ship to shore resullsi Find whu you wanl ln ~14,.;00:.QCJ,\fl-==H.::H='-"'-""'-=-'-'-.''"....:(J..:.·L:="'==·== ... =.--nt===o==.L--------...1..-=======:.L-'4=IO=®=A=ll:S:J.:Nl:W:l"Ol=1=11=·AC>f=i=S1=04=·000=.=0wn==e.r=.=55=1=--4=~=1 6'2~ll. 0.11.VPUotCluslfieda. 3Mc>narcb Baty Plaza t.osuna Niguel 496-7222 131·013' -- DAILYPILDT ~.':!'..~ ........ 1~~!!!.~.~~••••h• ~!!.":!".~~ ........ ~:!!.~~ ...... . LaJ--le.a. I 041 ...,_. leoch I 041 lA*e Forfft I 055 Mtwport leach I 069 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Mtwport leadt I OH Mtwport leoch I 06' Houst1 For S• Ohr Rut llhlM ~ Rfff ilt.te ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ....•..••......•....... •..••.•......•......... ..•.....•....•.....•... SAVE S.ly OWMr Beautiful l.nkt• front home. 2 :ilory. 4 bdrm~. 3 bat.Ju, frpk, walk 111 l}ur lmrned p osH'~~•on l,ow{'St pncc on ttw lakl· s 121,ooo. 1oukc o t r 581·5720 EASTBLUFF PRICE SLASHED THE BLUFFS N1-;w1ao1rr m ;u;H1'S ..... I 090 ...... Deatrt. ~. OeMti, ()pcnSunduy l ~. OHAMA'l'IC L>ESlGN ••••••••••••••••••••••• Resort Z400 ....... 2400 2423V1~l~llogar f>~AR Ul.OUS VISTAS l(EI UP ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nl•w o(((•ring. :J Bdrm. J.'JH~l'IT SNlJOG~HY PUC COMMERCIAL IUILDIMG --0.. ...... •• aWo "a1u.e, CJ"Ht com.ft'clal locatlo1t Ofl S•th Coaat Hl9lt••J· tdeol for gift or a1ttlque llHlp. ••• szn.ooq. 491-2489 ... srop ... Su\c Thoui.o nds. t:ull now on l111s 'ul·aul, re· ;11ly lo t(O, twu :.lory beauty I Ur; 2ho. 879 .!HJO . P rln univ <7141581 ·07!H S Rlt (ii.er JW.t n .'tluccd ~.•1541 111 rni: your paanl & T I. ( · S\'ll(•r wunts uc llun Makt• urfcr R.C. TAYLOR CO. 955°0350 2412 HOLIDAY RD 5 trn. 3 BA. f'um dmc rm, sparkl1oi; pool home. emplll'y u1>i:rll 'd & lx!t· lcr then new. $1Yij,500 condo nearpool&11hops 212 TUSTI N AV I-~ & kt!l!I your Jonrllord Low lease-hold. S»l.5UO. PRIC"; ~:is.ooo 642·5001 .:OOll bye. & mow in tu OPEN SAT/SUH Tos..: .. : ltu:. 3 BR, 112 UA, rumu~ humt! w1comm pool 11t 1·4 HVH PALERMO the tx1rMuln pril·c: or l)J)Jy tl21 l.11Jo Park Dr ~ ..... ••"' Cull no· .. , 4Ur . :!' :lkl, (·•r"' 11n. di1l ...,., .. l\N. .. • Unit 1-1\ Bayfronl condo. u " 54"3666 .Spat·m1e1 l bdrm, 2 ha. rm, Z lrpk::.. Wtl h.ir, v- Alnutn. !>l'CUn ty bulltl JiH'U/11 ~17:1 ,UOO ll)i\S 111~. bont dock uv,111 Purl llrt!>IOI Ctrcttl Cull $?19,500. hi~Hl.221 toruppl. __ Wllela11 IEACH DUPLEX Allll l!>IAll Westmlnater 1098 SACRIFICE BYOWMER ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ui\" FltON1' Cornfortabh: 4br. rum rm IY OWMH COlldo A.t , ... D...+, C.,. P•D....tT9111itCWt 4M501s ... L... Furrw,lwd --SI 10.000. 8 Court.'! 3 fl<'C:lrooms 1,750 s<1. ft. Only 100 condo mut.s. 6 Pools & Jacuzzi!>, \\t'lbar. etc elc. Shown bv owner C.R. Reller from tuduy 'til se>ld or to· 19177. Call 11 1 714 1346··1727 <Reller 1· & tor l 11 7141346·5683 · <tennis club Of<'I. 'ur Pnrll11ml Ortigon ti 1 ."iO;J /2'!6· ll5J SOUTll LAGUNA DANA L.ak\' lt'ront LAGUNA NIGUEL POIN1' Jlrit'e fic.,>t.ludhm Coast Properties Co 675·54' 0 2 Story, 3 bdrm. 2 bath & 2 hdrm. I bnlh. Dbl i.:ur. within block ol oct!1.111 Y o u o w n t h \' I a 11tl £175,000. L\JX VON 00 und pool. jacuzzi. ~2.500. J••••••••••••l!!B!!l!!!!mllill urc: RA v &. OCEAN vu ~1-8283 4~J.4SS1 49S·l728 493-il812 Kuduccd to $119,\1'~ thi11 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I 1s nd1culous for u l>raml 1 new, lakcfronl. super HOT ONE!! FOR LUSE Lxury Unyfronl contlo, 2 bdrm, den. 3 baths, 2 decks, security hwlding. ~5.rno. S11a1• 2hr. 2bu, 2 car en<·I --------. i.:ur. Poul. bout shp. Adil other Real Estot• htcomt Properf'f 2000 Income Property 2000 sce hldg. Sl75,UOO. Wiii ••• ••• •• ••••• •• ••• •• •• • ••••••••••••••••••••~• L.,..,. leach I 048 L.oguuto leach '1048 view 3 betlrm. family ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm, formal dining rtn OPEN HSI>; Nurlh Jo:ni.l home. I 'm excited ubout Chormer, Sun 10·2 (;all this bargain. you will lw 494-1253 an 3 PM. Prin too. when you see 1t. Cull Dover Shoc:es ana d f ••••••••••••••••••••••• I ru e or scason1•d Mobli. Homt · MUST T . D.'i.. 213·661-0361 tor For ScH 1 ff 00 appl or 714·673·1327 <fur )) NORINS REALTY I '1BR.2 f.i,1, F'rpk HIOO Dover Or. N. U GIB WALKER RE.ALTY 675·5200 ing Opn Jlse hours only, ••• ••••• ••••• ••••••••• • Sat Sun 10.5 Ltderly woman WANTS 310 Fenmn<lo. 11408 mobile home m pet park. PEf€·'8ARREl.'T $ 29 00 £ADlas1a-,. ~l.!r. ?J~b:i . Uni Pen Mr. Curey pn!C. O.C. 64S-8084. David __ _ , 1 5 2s t y Twnh se I n -REALTY-l'resligt.>ous Ne wport _______ ..,_1A:qee19t-fw-s• 4240 PRIME only 3Br, 2Ba. lg Jot , M11x. $174.SOO.. 1050 642•5200 ' • Terrace. Lg mstr s uilc NEWPORT ••••••••••••••••••••••• EASTSIDE condo. 3Br. I 'iha, lio:.c ~ _nmker,673 44"4,645·50·U with open beamed cc1l· HARIOR HIGH pulio. 2 car i:ar. ,\ t;, _ ---_ ing. plush w w crpl, COSTAMESA ~1,•e fr11lc r Jrk Pool. Mission Viejo I 06 7 cust&TI drps. frplc, mod Jusl u few blocks away DUPLEX ......,STCUFF kt hn t t'I from lhis quality built 3 ~.SOQ :'\u .1g1s 830-11 IH ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ c w pun ry u 1 rm. 3 Bedroom upper un~t --IEAUTIFULLY ap· P vt co mm inc . 15 bt.'tlrmhome.lartielumi· w1lh sundeck, lower 2 SUNSET Pl.ACE. new :i ·.~·,;. ;. • • • t d ,. a.-d z landscaped acres and ly room. 2 balh, dblt!fplc. bedroom w1'th en"'loscd BR P U h E h , :-="' po1n e .. ~ rm, I r r r II lurne corner lot. Owner " . a o omc. art .. _.._ .. __ .,_ di i ots o rec. ac. or a " ""llO & ytird. Km" size·' I uum nuns. -'P• n nq u 0 anxious and will help ,... ... " tones, new ot, <-'IOSl' to ages. S'00.000 . .,y wner. f'"once. C•ill u().llSl. bedrooms 1nd1,·1'duul L""· !Us Mall . .,.,8, .. "". IJ7·9lOO sa1-1000 rm, formal II• rm, 1-:J\·es. ""'·""""' "' • .... • ..... ... JVV_ """' ....,..,., laundry areas, IJui ll·rn AFFORDABLE!!! Owner. 551-472.5 Let our profcs.,1onal us-brl ck fplc , 2 car N lh' 1 , Tl V 1 b ---------1 range, oven, gurbagc Possibly the most af· · l I · I d d & 0 mg ower. · ·' r 8 "CRe.R" .... CH ,..;~ I •-1 h h •· fordable property i'n LOCJIMCI NiC)Ul'I I 052 socia es prov1c e you m garaqc, an Ip Montego. Ideally lot•at· "' .. "'" u "'l'V"ti '"' c I!> wus er"" d1v1dual alleot1on 111 sprintdettd. lest bU'f ed. Lsehld . 5139,500. Fixer upper house. 3 car llrepluc-es. J ust 5 yeurb Laguna loday. Bright & ••••••••••••••••••••••• securing the home of in this excluah•e 675·5979; (213)433·2854, ________ _, garage. bunk house, out old. Owner desires ex· alry2 Bdrm.&2balhO·Have You Missed TM yo ur dreams I n kd 3 . b ldgs, w e ll water , changcfornddil1onal un· Y-O just one blocktolhc Train l'f Waltiftq For America's most sue· n ei qhborhood . w ys(21 >593•3207 fcncng,lolsoftrees.Be· it~ in San Cle mente. beach. New~y redccoral· Ho... Prices To COtM cessful new community. $146,500. OWMr will HEW SEAVIEW WELCOME S.AMTA i ng s plit lnto-2's , $146,500. edm. kOwnthe~ rinancihng con Down? The Time To Escape to an aura of .,.., flnanc.e. S"'""tacul"r ct'ly & orc~n & Terms. BKR. COLE OF NEWPORT a e is pure use n casual. 4u1l'l li\'lllg WoridWidelrolcers ,..,, .. .. THEMEW YEAR (714)676-5717 675-5511 breeze. $85,500. IU'f Is How. Don't Let awaiting you in thc S:.id· views. 4 BR, fum-rm . '2 OR "''"'·'""'" TM Train Lean You dlebal·k Valle~ (.'all u~ 673-4545 fprlc's, upgraded crplg. with tl11 s Ol'Can view. -... ""'"" * SPEHDAILE * GREAT At TM Station. Homes today completion approx. Nov. custom bwlt 4 Br+dc11 7 ACRES ,ossl.ILITIES 71 • o .... 9.,... 15. See .• tennis, pool. etc. home under construe· T h 2 houses on l lol. Sbr & · hie.cl Ft-om $73,950. 114 ;;~:1;;; A real bt1y. by owner. uon. Stups to ocean or urn of t e century, 2 2br. Nicely renovated 11 ~~~~·r~ T~1m Spnnt:s -.$23,500 gr. inc Sl80.000 9 units Bl.a Bear S15.000 gr. inc '135..000.Lo,.rcnl.s !AKE 0 F P I': R ! ! ! 0 W n.c ~ 640..2344 COSTA MESA 2. 3 Bdrm hom es· on 60X195 R·2 lot. Owner wilt ca.rry. $107,500. 6464..IUl Munners Cove Rlty 170 Room Hotel Slralei:lc location 011 main rctUte in SO. Calif. S2,250,000. G r eat possibilities. Call Mr. Frey for more lnfonni-· lion. Ben Hinkle R.E. 542.~ Cottage on Ba I bou YEATS COMI' AMY --------STEAL JHISI S239.SOO. S40-0009 bay & close to shopping. story Victorian mansion. property w/73 spenda· Pcninsµla; one block to RE ALT 0 RS • Uarcelona 3 br, greul • Never a wa it w /3 &rn. many oudl·bldgds, blepermo.$71,500. ••••••••••••••••••••••• the beach. 2 Bdrm.. 1 A c r c d ya d Opeft Sat/Sul. I 0.6 bathrooms. Enjoy the water. on pave roa · Me___. Real Estat• CRES d bath with guest studio. _4_9_9_·_2_2_3_7_. -----• ;~e:'."ooo. 'Be; !wn:r Rxer Upper Near 618TUSTtM AVE. wet bar & dream kitchen Acres of trees. BKR. ~~~lates 20 A ·No own, f79 Present R·2 zoning to be EA T E R R Ac E 1714>756-3629 leoutlful 3 Id,... 2 w,atl blllns+lrash com· (714)677-'sen 645-6625 mo. 7% unW t atd. fl.600 chanud 10 C·l. Use your pactor. con O""'ner, dis· . OR522·0530 F. P ., on f'Ny Ba ...... imagination ror remodel Gorgeous 3 bF, 2 £rplcs, _.,ff VI DOVER battt how. on -.r h ,... Also 5 acres in V1t· or enjoy ils tnlrrnsic ocean vu. pool. lenms. M'"'jl"" cent ew lot. l.Ow taxH, maw b~a~her, coun ter~ top Cc:c .. u•rdaf . i---------•I torvllle $130 mo.=·&· charm as is. Buy now. etc. $126.500.494·3320 of Mission Viejo c {;, .. , en er mixer. mtrcro Property 1600 s·~hore Duplex lnwetment~ .. , __ _ k d f ---------• from this ramblinR 1 SHORES extras. WOft't last lolMJ, wave oven. 3 car prk'g ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ta, e,a \'a ntage 0 J UST REDUCED t o story Spunish 3300sqfl,3 HURRY ! Ant . w,2 car gar & !!lee •P"'LMe-1~5 uwner s rush. Sl l0.000 $121.000. Best buy on h.111. yr old, tile roofL'<i home. 646-9561 ., opener. Pick your rolors bclulive Uatinq $177 500 "' ~" ~ ~5'l2 Los Serranos. 4br Spectacular Mstr Suile. 2 & carpeting. Drive by Prime comm. loc. on cor· ' • THUHOIRllaD PEA.Cl Ir 9UIET or Corona del Mar will be enjoyed by you & your te· nants in this colla&:e and 2 guest units. Walk to beach & shops. Tennis & recreation center close by. SJ75,000. 2ba. shake roof, Paceset· add i li o n a I bdrm s 1yOO Dover Dr Newport Shores Waterft. and see them be ing ner 2 major sts or Dis· Yearly income SlS.600. C.C. YIU.AS ler home. Hig' h grade Separate living, family & I BR,2 Ba, frplr 2 sly, 3 Br•· den. ovar created nl 607 & 609 W, neylnnd. Bldg has been Big • bdrm. upper " 2 BY OWNER. Decorator new cocoa crpt. de· din rm, den. Superbly "' "' Balboa Blvd. Balboa. beaut. converted. 10 4 bdrm. lower. Fanuitic rurnlshed. Dix Condo. corator drps wisheers, equipped countr y $129 500. ~ ssit.1\;!:;·:1,.s'!,~ Bes t Peninsula price suite omce + lobby. beach investment. Just Vlew.2Bdrms,den.2ba. slalned ~l:iss. dining.'h\" kitchen. 31i baths &I· 3 Own 'A J 64• """" 1-5. around Sl99.500. CoBouJnusd beblcdognveartlsoedit'!caldd.,_lis•l•ed-! A.gt._ .• 64.6-9898 ____ 1 $140,000. (714)324·U62 in!( rm divider, perfectly frpks. Dual A C un ls er1 gen\. .,..,.,..4 Mel Fuchs v • ---------• lndscp'd , many xlras. w electronic air filters . 3 dilional 4 stes. Total EXCLUSIVE Or~S,a.lty'f llOO View of grazing callle & car paneled ~ar w door IACK BAY COHDO HARBOR ViEW PavlliOft Rffffor pack age offere d al ,.,.,_,._ni S d.al k · r· · h OuLY $16,500 c~c "-75 • f 20 Sl49,500. World Wide F 0 U R PL EX w l th ••••••••••••••••••••••• a 11 ebac lo 1n 1mly. opener. $252.500. l' one " K..._.OLL U11 1111 • I ' · · ' .. bd · r n Brokers. 673-454:>. e egant owner s unit 1n --------• ---------• Complete privacy. Opn owner!S3l ·!H87 , ...:.rgest 4 rm unit u -------• ----------1 park like s urroundln"s. DKonrfor'1 Deli_..t Jlse Sat,'Sun 12·4. Prin. ------ft.red at lhr lowest price Chatham model Condo 3 c:-•1 Of 1•...1 XJ I l ., $71 500 CRV * 494-8057 * ...,. 3 BR Upgrade<I condo · bln N n · """'roo 2'"-bat"-din llurborV1'ewllom.... •-. c ""' .. * nt renta ncome area. 2-Sly. Englb h country _o_n...:ly_._499-_292_1.;..• _Ow_n_er__ .. u .. plan w a·1r & "'Cl. in ewport iv1era. '""' m. .,.~ '"'· . "'" ., $175 000 A c:.c aA''" u ~ 3baths.frmldinrm,lvly ing&familyroom.Love· 2 b e droom +d en E.CM,$187,500 • · gent..,..,..,...,. Sha 1' b style w/upper liv. rm .. c:--T-.. T~a.m b"'r.Open Ho .. ~cS .. t.Sun I · l · I d ped "-t Ph 2 bo' C I I f b' h I 673-77:r7 rp 3 br wU cefttraJ { 1 bd d & b _.. ,., , _,.. wlUI ... -u -clubhou.'!e, olympic sil<.'<.I y 111 enor; an sea ; .. onaco. ase c ire ump ete y re ur is ec •----·------i ulr. l.ocated In the Coull· G~t'rm~°l'ba~nwise~: 3br. 2h ba. $99,900. Call 11-6.23062 \'ia Cereza.By pool. llRhted tennis withaccesstopoc1l &den pool site l'orner foe lot. inside & out. P rof. ly.LargeloLNodownto en~r on lo.wer level. 714-840.2916uft6 ownr.1\lust sell!770.0771 t·ourts, ~1g ~und~t:k . ruscourt.Owner64t·7364 M any upgraded h1ndscuped. 100% or· IR.AHDMEW any Veterao. N work' ... 49•500 11ft6P:!.1 wkdys. 759-1501 Open Sunday l·S features. $150.ooO. Hy c-t1picd Owner will carry 55.1._n 77 .,,. o·-r "" 7367 so• .. I •-l ' quality building for -Mission Realty •94-0731 ..... '"""' ,.. oan "' con tnue W--LI •-...a It.: NIGUB. SHORES UJVORCE GOOOIYE management if desired. quality buyer. 4 Super - --hlll.· WAUCTOllEACH Easy-to-rent units close to beach and town. Lar~e R-2 lot. Price just re· duced lo S1'S,OOO! Reduced for fa.st sale. Need q111 ck sale. 4 Bdrm. Is what lbe owner wants San C&.tMtlh I 076 p r i l'I . 0 n I y. ca 11 upgraded units. All with I~~~~~~~~~~ Immaculate 3 BR. fami· 2~2 ba. Open House Fri-to s.ay to this 3 bdrm, ....................... Own er' A gent• Lii lireplaces, e ncl?sed o.tofeo..t, !\"" ly. room & dining room. Sus n 1Z.75S" 22951 L8ucl6a.!'7a.; ---------fam. rm. Nwpt HglS BEST DUY IN SAN Evans,547·2533. sgpan'!naklge~s. 'Topwanlh10~•~.: ,.,.,.,.., 2550 Located 00 quiet cul-de· 30-3 4 or 5 l · " 4 Large Custom Home. home. Only $109,500. CLEM ENT~. Full ocean ... .....~ sac w/expansive tot. Owner Lido Isle. Pool size lot. 6464463 view, from this prof C 0 M M E R C I A L style. Cl> 3 bedrm. 2 bath ••••••••••••••••••••••• REGENT REAL TY t7'41496-9501 Compare &. hurry.! Only Mltwport leach I 06' $?94,000 offers. Flexiblli· MARINERS COVE dccrt'd 3 BR. 2 BA hm in PROPER~ WANTED: and (3) 2 bdrm. 2 bath. BRAND NEW.Z,SSI Sq fl. Sl29.000. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ty on mlenor features. Rl.TY Harbor Estates. All elec Private in vesto r bas $239,500. •Br, 1 acre, view IOt.. CATAUMA (8·5> 540-3383 Broker kitchen. qwet st,.,only cash com ing out of loyMcC_. horsepropettyJnUpJud SUH SETS BELOW MARK ET! rooperatlon. TOWNHOUSE I' ARK $119,500. Try 15% down. escrow & needs prime re.· 1110 tit.wport lh,d H~sarea 675-3143 Back Bay 4Br. ram. l~ --'--------LIDO & hurry. Prine. only. tail;orrice or approx. CotteMnaS4'·7719 LAHDAMYIOOTI are yours to view from ba. frplc. $82,900. Prm HEWPORTCOHDO 3 Bdrm. 2..., balb, faces (714 ) 496-8033 or <213 ) $500,000. io Laguoa .~~~~~~~~~~J this charming 3 BR only. 751·0724 Shows like a model, this pool. Many xtras. Owner 373-5109. Newpo rt are a .1. Beaut. 1.2 ac. Have your home. in guarded gate --'--------My 2 bdrm. 2 bath end '--~-" 1 ho (213 l620·0560 ofc, SANCLEMENTE own orchard, garden . comm u nity. Duilt-inl _________ unit. O n e bloc k to pure"'"""" arger me. RIVIEllA Dist. Unde r (213)39'2·2868hm. corral.-,.ounameit +an step-down bar & exposed WATERFRONT Weslcllff Plaza . newly Appt.!°1LOy$8SD.,;,,.,,000F .. v coosL Dix. 2 br. (am. rm. TRld·PL~-3-Z~~·ln0l01P irnmac. 3 br, 2 ba w.d beam ceilin gs. VACATION HOM E ON orfere d a t SU,500! ., _.. "'' 2 ba. Unobstructed vu! Ooeclo•l-:~Tow1t• con .. '" yrs o,,.. n Y roof cstm. home. Oaly Profes si onally WATER. Beoutirul 1 7!i0-1501 REALTOR 642-5333 492"81«1&830-0940 ..... for 1700 $127B~THAllENllY Sl00,900.BringlnyoUl'o/. landscaped. A great buy Bdrm Mobile home, 14111.-""'""""'"""'"_,..._....__,......_ .. 1••••••••••••••••••••••• REALTORS fers,owneranxlous. atS13'7 .500. completely furnished. TURNER -"UT. oc•H..a 215 Del Mar 4.92-4121 WOOOAR.,E~TYl • Vifla REAL ESTATE BILUtD SPAMklMG Al,l amenities for adult •"""' -no IY OWHEI ""_,., NEW I/ting. CommWtity pool,1________ HILL&CITYVU. Yorktotin Villa Condo. 2 FOUR-PLEX INC.M. Rffllatale JUSTUSTED 2 BR, 2 BA Lake Park jacuzzi & recreation QNNER Lovely 3 br, 2~ b1, full yearsold.3bdr,2ba.dis· 2-3 BR. 2·2 'S . Only heh.gt 2110 Best whitewater & home ln super location facilities. Possible boat dinrm,2fri>ls.quiet Cul· hwasber, laundry rm, 2 SJ29.500. Owneri Agt, •••••••••••••••••••-•• roastal views in Laguna affording privacy & a slip available. S64.000. Get "turned on" with de·uc st. Xlnt. cond. car ,.,..,._ patio. Afustt-c.a_u_~ ___ . ____ Why J>ll.Y t•xes! •• J:x· Beach! Cedar & glass plea sa nt w alk to SALISBURY REALTY this beautiful Upper $124.500. sell Ul escrow, assuma-i.4 ." I Fr_._..,_,;:..;::,..~ plus dr amatic stained beauUful Niguel Park. Call67U900 Newport Bay home. 5 AA ble FHA 7~'Jll> loan. $31$ ~~'t:! ... ~~-Y glass by Ron Wood. Highly upgrade d &i--------loN PENIN., huF(c 5 br, 4 Bedrm's, formal dining REALTORS mo w/taxes or $12,800 $15,000 DOWN Ultimate privacy. un· prlcedatonJy$96.500. ba. cver ythlnic new! room,2 fireplaces,18x22 down on a ew loan. obslnictable l80 degree OCIEAHVIEW Private Party, wishes to Call: Bruceat968-4768or family room . 4 c ar 3(1JN. ElCamlnoReal 164,000 firm. Bushard & takes over paymenta on PROBLEMS7 view & last house on a pro re s s ion a I 1 Y trade 5 Br home on Rlck S.at963·5678 earage. $116.000. Sound S.Ct.tu. 492·210 Adams . Drive by 1'1683 house+ approved plans quiet c ul-de ·sac. 3 landscaped 2 BR primepartofCosta Mesa good?CalJMS-7221. Bickley,HB. for duplex. Owner will They are OW' apec.lal\¥. Creatively handled by traine d counulors. Phone lOt' appointmem. o .. __ •-2 b ... _ n... G o I f C o u r s e r o r I "Y Vle.W .....,1323 963 87 carry fmanclnf & sub· "''1111"'·"' au .... v .. •ner townhome in iuarded waterfront home w1p1er " .. CENTUJIY 21 ...,.._..~.: ... _ ... __ 111_..,_!... .. r~..,--.. ·~..,111111-_...,_,.1 ordinate. Ca I: Rick transferred F.ast. priced gate a r e a with & slip. Linda, Lido, etc. l\1Ql>ile Home. located in W .. _n.&.1:1........_ S-,,_ By~ tosellfasl alS175.000. clubhouse. tennis. & ac· exclus Bayside Villal(e, 2 "~ .__,, Caplttr.G cess to wh.lt.e sand beach. 546-8757 Br 2 Ba, Din Rm, Oen. -------..:.--' •••••••••••••••••••••• .,_..••~l-556-7777 1104So. Coast Hwy. Afinevatueat $94,SOO. wclbar, lndry. bltns. elc. Ou.its-1100 Wortdlffl latoh 67M"I THI CAWSOM CO. REALTORS LAGUNA BEACH f' Pri o 1 OCIEAHflOHT 'h MILE FttOM ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1~~~~~~~~~~1 LOC)IMCI ~ Rfflty •Y ownt!r. nc n ~. 1_ -__ 4_9_7·_2_4_5_7 __ 1 130-5050 49.1. ,.0 ,.0 VIEW HOME ~.500. 67s-7903 HOME THE llEACH MUST SELL By bwner 2819 Newport BJvd, N..B. ._ ~ Outstandin g offertng, • BR. 2~ BA, custom Don't disturb tenants .._.,...,...., 2000._Pr.,.rty ~000 View from hilltop (Arch By Owner. Very highly IY OWNER pres tigious locatio n. drapes & carpet& lhru New duplex 512 Bolsa, •••-•••••••••••••••••• •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• Sch Hts) 3 hr, 2'11 ba. ~~~~~~~~~ upgrnded. in Bluffs. 3br, UPPER BAY 4Br. 3ba. 3 Beam ceil'g.s, paneling, out. Pro less Io n a Nwpt Hgts. 3Br, 2Ba ea. $142,500Bkr673-0508 2i,,ba. ram rm. $191.500. rar itar. Fam rm, frplc. children'slof\.NrTenois la ndscaping w f auto. 64S-2Ulto1ee.prinonly. ---------18y owner, a warm 3 br. Includes land. Opn Ilse din rm. 2200 sq fl. J courts. ~.000. sprinklers. Offered b MIWOH SS VIEW P• ba high in Niguel Sat.Sun l·S or by appt Story 556-6876 PEG BROMS Rltr owncrfagt. 8t.D1d r our dream -orrthis Uills, many up.&rades, Prio oolY~~7 Qvedatla CaU 645-1531 l714)66\·1S.b S Yr old Duplex on lg lot 32!.Y1 Broad. Nwpt U.its. 645·2111 days. 646·6303 s ite 10 Arch Beac h lge Cncd yd. Anxious to 640-6385 MewpottHefqfrts ~~~~~~~~~ SJC 49J.6287 Heighl.'I &,enjoy glorious sell. $86,000. 25176 V\a ---------1 Charming 3 bedrm on -------eves. s unsets Crom Laguna Piedra Blanca. 495·1400 tree lined street. Corner SPYGLASS Best Price in 1'own! Beach P a lo1 Verdes. fple & bookshelves in liv with view of mts. & city 4br. 2~"ba . Upgrade 1''0ESALE BY OWNER New construction 7 units, 13912 C h e rry S t. Westminster. This spectacular view is OCEAM VIEW Would you believe rm w/plclure w indow liles. PVT. PTY. will home. $79,900/negotla· orreredatonly $75,000. SEA THRACE $92,500 for overlookln1C 40' patio. make it easy. Financing ble. owe. 492-4337 LOOt<IMGr FOR... Guarded private com· a Duplex I block from Spnc family kit., has nex. New 4 br, 3 ba, dln a weekender? We have munlty. Pool. tennis, the beach? Well we ha\·e many custom features. 4 rm. tam rm , court yd .. INVESTORS 6 UNITS & REC HALL. one. Walk to beach & jacuzzi & sauna . P vt one. Car gar + R.V. parking! "lndscpd. OpenSat/Sun 32 matkets. An immaculate beach parking. Ms tr Call Priced lo scll al $115,000. Drakes Bay. Courtesy lMILETOBEACH new construction 17091 3 BR. l \.'A BA, twnhouse. Elm St. Huntington Comm.paol.owneranx· Benc h 848·2665 or lous. hua boughl new. _89-t__:.·_36_19_as_k_fo_r_Bo_b.. __ charmer wtth expansion Bdrm Suite w/frplc + 2 673-3663 833·0523 Eves Don't wait! Call &rs. 645-0758 poulbilltles. A aood bdrms & s tudy. 2Vt Roral PropertlH priceal$115,000. baths, Ai r rond, many 64%-1830 BEACH SHACK w/plans, ARCH BUCH HGTS upgrades. $139.950. Ph permits for 3 sly re· Agt 661-1535 HEWPOltT IUCH Attractive Dplx 4J}r & nus3 bdrmhomeorrers 496·8005 or 493·3'786 CUTE 2 Bdrm BEACH model,$97.500.675-1666 beautiCul coaatllne views,_Own_e_r..;../_A~gt_.____ CO'ITAGE. Close to all Ule.STCUFF 38r . 1 '~Ba , Cas1tns 28r, try $45,000 dwn. 'l'Nnhse, fully upitraded Prln only (213) SU-5444 from 2 dec ks. Very ,.....,.., shopping. Steps to Bay & na; tastefully decorated. M'-'"ARCH SUMMIT Ocean. Cpt 'd, xlnt cond. le1t luy! ly OWMr & remodeled. FHA As· _A...;m_. ------- s uma ble. By owne hteomt Property ZOOO E v e n I n c I u des 11 C.Ptan 2 Br ocean View, IEST Priced lo sell at $129,000. I st~- darkroom $ll2.500. ad u It com mun it'/. ~I EL f'UCllS -• •••....., SIJ),990. 496-0084 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~· 110$ N.Covst Hwy.,.1.oglMO 494-1117 31601 Coost Hwy.,S.logvoio 499-4591 OCEAN VIEW South Laguna •• Ocean view11 from every roorn. 2 bdrm+lge Ion w/()(can view. Lgc coun· try kitchen. Sandblasted wood Interior. beamed ceUlna, frplc. Brick patio 4' dctk. Walk to beach. Open house Sat.Sun l ·S al3tG322nd Ave. ll~.000 OWNtK <tffJ-4409 $94,000. Owner/Broker. Condition, Price PAVILION REALTOR DECORATOR ..,. a "'RI fl.._.D 675-t562, PalermoModrl Call675~120 CONDITION "' -" FOUIPUX Harbor View Home Extra lar ge country Five unit apt. house In $100.750 Oc•anfnlt Triplex kitchen, :r Bdrm. 2 bu. Snn Juan Capistrano. Costa Mesa $132,000 2S% down. ATTlt4TlOM ADULTS!! Beamed ceilings grace the spacious living room or this warm & cozy 2 bt.-droom planned unit. Truly Immaculate & nicely 111 ndsca ped. ~·--r l>-\,5'». .,....., Ko/an · Location p, ·" I ,,,,,,. ,, " 1' f,11111 11 • I //,,,; l'l.1,' 1 1,i.1 llhl /\31 Jl!B8 1055 JlAOOW RUN 4 br. 2 b:i , lo(l home. Xlnt. tor. F11m. comm'ty, S!>5.000. 830-7023 Owner Jn de mand Newport lteighti; hom e . 2 bedrooms .. eating areo. rock fireplace, hul(e II V· Ing room. Corner Int. Boat llCC<.'88, $95,000, mrn. ~I(). mo TARBEU. "# I ht C~fomla" Near Balboa Pier. Xlnt new wood Ors. carpcl'g, f.11ch unit hos 2 BR, 1 location. New copper wall paper, appliances, DA. $245,000. U.S.A. IEALTY 646-0507 plumbing & fixtures Including microwave. ~ AHCHOIA&I thru-out. New cpl'~ and $149.500. Call for appt.. ~amt. BF.sT Occ11ntront 642-0053 wknds. 546-5243 .. VISTMINYS DRIVE BY price around. wkdys. 171,.) ,.f L77 I 1 MEL f>'UCllS -------• ~ ..-998 El c • PavUlon Rooltor DUPW 3 IXlrm. 1 1~ bo, VillaAc antln0 C81167S.8120 STEPS TO llACH Sun Juan Condo. 2 story. Ill Cotta Me10 HWPT HEIGHTS 3 Bdrm. tum. rrt>., on Cliff Dr. corner. $149,500. 646·4463 Mariners Cove Rily ONLY $19,500 WaJk to ocean. Modern 2 br +den In Newport Rc-nch. CAYWOOD RLTY JNC. S41J.l290 $l7S,OOO 1 c11r g11r11gc. r n nc. on Quallt.y 4·Plex w/lge Spacious 2 bdrm units ly. $63,000. MIHIOOS owners unit plus 6 with balcony & P8lil) for CO .... DO carports. Perfect cond. I d I d JI I " Motivated OWf\er hn n ()Qr out oor v nA. 2 Bit studio type w, l'orn purchased other pro · Ac~ from beach & ao mun It y pool , n e 11 r l)M\y, close you can hear the s l a b I "I' . I rn m '-' d . SOUTH COAST surf and see the sond and sea. Established win· posseaslon SSO,VOO INV~TMENT terfsummer rental u ca. term.s. 645-1103 SALISBURY R.E. AMEllCAN HOMI Claasl/led Ada sell bli Call 67~ 4t<t. I ~:~1:r~9~ 7113 ltemi, small Jtemt or • all)' ltrm. 642·5678. mac~ab / lrvtne raaltg ATTIMTIOH IHVISTOISI This may be your 114st chance to find a property like ~hls ! Cute 2 BR home w /brick hearth, hrdwd lloors + income unit in rear. $74.~. Fol', d etails -Lois Miller 642·8235. <U·l8) IAUOA PIMMSUl.4 TllPLIX Near bay & beach! l BR, 2 BR ac 3 BR fully furn, low·malnt1 eaty• care units. Great opportunity ,for investors! $159,SQO. Lynne Valentine· 644·Z!>o. (U·l9) G000 INVHTi-en ~ Eight 1 BR fully furnished units hi Newport Beach -1 blk from beac h! Alt rented on winte.r schedule. Manager on property. Gisela Hanen 644·6200. <U·20) DUPUX . Two side-by·side units (3BR.s each) : in Costa Metu& each w !Private yard & ·. sep. dbl. attached garage.· Upgraded! Close to schools ·& shopping. $1751000. Lynne Valentine 644-6200. (U-21) '42-t23S 444-6200 «11 Oowr Drive H4"'1Mlr View Center 1 lrvlnt at C.tnput V111e., C."t•r 7 -'414 i ( l 1 1 l lL. ...._.s UnfwahMd ..._., Unfwwiahed Houses Unfumllhtd ApcwtmNtt Fwwlthed ~ta u..fwn. .,.,.._..,~ u.twa. ...... , ........•...................•..•....... ···~··················· ................•...•• . ..........•...................•.••..••....... Ohr Real &tote Houses UttfwNshH Hcwt Uttt.n .... d "*'"9• a.ecll 3240 LogiNN..... 1252 ~~~.~~ ... ??.~! ~~~ ..... ??.~! ~.~!~!'!' ... ?~!.~ ~~ ....... ~.~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Ge.rol 320~ ,._....._ •• DR •· fri 3 'J'w illl ~ ty 1;ond ., Hr F.FFJClF.NCY Apl. SlGO. S?'JS/mo. t.eaae, 2 br, 1'11 ltH' &tote 4 _,. MHo 3224 • w11tove .,. "' i · TOWNHOUSE 3 br. :! ., 1 Ne, ~ u. ·i. • mo. Wulk to bch. Call -ba duplox. '!net 1ar • DI DAILY PILOT Friday. Oetober 14, 197'7· ..\- t I ' W..ted 2900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• blk11 from muin beh Crplcll, occun vu. paol, ~~.:\ l·"1i ~: ... !)W, :1 er: 4~1712Gbl~nT&IJPM re ... v P'&tln. Avail l1115/77 3117 ....................... Mei.a Verde lux. exec w,dbl a11r Adib $4~ tenmi.. etc $W5. 4~ 3320 .' ~. I ~u1. '~\..· 'Tl., /! ,..,.,._"",_ u Coral. NeH Verde. ·• OWN Property i n •l•A.REHTA.LS home 4Udrm 3bo ~ mo Cull Ceor11e blwn -~omplr. ~oor opnr M.wportleoch 3769 "' ... '\"'__ ARrol97~ lnalewood. HuwlhorntJ Why pay ~·$3()" h ·n ~t & l t ,i97.2(»2 !M..S, tl4~·l~~~o ~ Hr, :: b;i. on i,11lf t·uu1 i.e. ~pt .. ,1lq1Co1, m·~ :S.'50 11\u •••••••••••••••••••• ••• -----" '" mo. WI · --xlnl cond S350. Dill 1>75-~7 Ai:cnt "'·• nf 3 en ., n t-'u•t~··• "P'"'iO"" .. bf orSo.&yurt'u? your11ngcltht·bc11trqr Adil 3 bdrm condo nan> Po ()IL<197•1751 - -""cu ronl · ~ :\, CORONA l..>t·;L.MAH -.... -v " .... -fl • WILL PAY CA.SHU l~~i.. $1S. fcc.1 Da)t1 • HIWPORT HEIGHTS ·ctras. lo m111nle~ance, w ' S. Clenwnt• 3276 frpk .. ~pt: ·June. or yr :! llr Townhou:;c. rrplc. ~ ... 1r.ba$S:~h~·1i~~: Ph. Tom D' llc3nndro SUSfuml.'\hed unil Brand new 31:Sr. 2i.2 Ba. 2 $63,000, shop'ng cli.e, SEA TERRACE·3Br, deQ, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ly ~~'56_____ llool. l\·nru:. Son'l\l 1.X'e&n ~ •or&U-Clt6 T.D.PROPEltTIES $190duplex sty hse. JoYplc , bltm1, 2 ll.H.By0wner962·6900. pool & bch acce s:i. :lltlAH•111da Sltlrro.J f\r ,::1----------11\. <.::atuhoo \11·~:>. Close ---------- (213)674 6907 or t7l<1 ) $195 Dach. utJI pd w yd car garage quiel st, cto:;l' i:uarded. oen view, lse ba New t•rpl11lrpi.. Lr.: OCEA ... FRONT to :;hopplng &i fmc l.H:ach. cw cpl!!{ sp~~· 2 Br, encl 546•6201 anytime or fll6l brplex,uUlpd toschls,$585 mo.00·708U 3 8r. 2 Ba w/frplc. Cov· $600.(1 )756·36211 dc1·k.N1ccyd.2Clt1 gor WlNTt-;RRli:NTALS 10-142\lll gar, x nl 'fOC. $2&0. ft 6 $2252brhowie lf. o ,·h ered piatio. 7062 f'ord Or. >100 mo. Open 01·1 15, 1U ~~~~~~~~~~l~~bi~5-:_!1M9~~-:_ __ _ d7t4)846-~la •pm S2S02brhoUlie w/yard 3 Bdrm,28a,cpt.",2 cur (213)439·0281. ev~s3 Hr2 Ha,new,\•1ew,Oin &17.(7M)81\68778. 21JR,tbu. ~O r: Rttt.....,Sffea S2753brWlitkidsok gnr.clean.Quiet st.2mi <714)63Hl234 Hm.fph:,$415.673·6832& 1_.1c 38R.2 bu S.'\.50 IRIATHTAIUHG CUTISTUDIOA" h . '275 2br 2 istury condo lo beach, $390 mo. 549~ New 2 nn. 2 Ha Condo, :?RR.2 ba. $400 JETTY VIEW Gre~t Eastslde location. Nnt'I. l'Clltaurunl c am w/pool, kidsok. 751-1473, SS6·272S Sh.arp 3 bedrm, 2 bath. . • . rrµk, pool & tennis. Yrly STEPS TO BEA.CH needs Org. Cty. !11le:1 . Ul.:!G NewPort DI C M (1111hwasher, cpt.s, drp:., TUE SllOHl!:.-; l:il' S!IVS 400.41111 Z liR. den. 2 bu 8575 Up.:r11dccl 3 OR upper, UUJ pd., 1225 per mo. 120' min. rrontlll!c Min SlS foe 6.J5.s9oo l Br duplex, SIU5. 280 nwc orea, kids/pct OK. Lovely 3 Ur. 2 bu th. -MJR .. ycarl,y S400 i>tCJlS to China <:ovc. $750. Avail now. 640-2981 25,000 11q . ft C11·011 · Avocado"U".lst,last+ $395. 003-4567 Agent. no 8550/mo. Ph 493·635U'l'Woh)tl'JHr2Ru,drp:..2 2.nJl,den,unrurn $.515 l\to . Call Nq;c l, at DetaehedZBRunit,new w1ugt.s. 213·28!M20l · re we cost more. but sec. 642-5722 fee. cves. car 11ur. uuto dr, cov'll 644·72.ll /\gt. ___ cpta & drps, J.ar, encl L we'ro worth it!! L ~~ 3 55 put1n, adj comm 1>001, nntlo ve 'I q et ncn WHY IST? fUDS/PETSOK 4 BR, 2 llA, drps, crpwi. Clk~nrnrst 2 occun vu s.io o mo. ~pacious upper duplex, ..-· • r •• ..,_. We buy homes for full HOMEFIMDERS E,'Sidc a Dr, j?ar. $3.25 corne r lot, ~i d s/pet ••••••••••••••••••••••• ti3(>.461!6evsiwknds. wilh 4 Jevel.8. a Bedrm. 2 mo. 3tf1 E. l8th, Apt. c. m11rketpricc.lmmed ttc· S13S.buchulil.pd. 64641148or675-32.58 welco m e . $~1i5 /mo. New t:icec.. Condo. 2Ud , -------ba. fplt", 2 blcks to Blg1_67 __ 5-67 __ 98 ___ __, __ _ • uon:_Ai.tllnl963·4567 Sl451 brfurn. urut 963-4567 Agent. no fee. cul-de-sac; rnel. Lake Shorecl1Cfs 4 Ur. Fam nm. Co.ron a . $600 1 mo· EllSl.lllde Apt. Tl:iplex. 2 S2402br,utilpd11lex East s ide 2br. S250. . 1 Clb & tennb . S395mo. on i:olf crse, club & bch SahsburyRealty673·6900 bdrm 1~ ba. 2 atory. $2502br, fncd ! Gar secluded crpt.s wtr pd. Charmmi: 2.Dr 2 Ba i>tud o ~7898 pnv $475. 213-794 3453 1 " $275 Remak S?75Jbr 2bakids T.li Avai10ct23rd, ist&last. rondo. Servico urea, ls;e -., 1 wt d . Move.in immediately. enc · eara.e. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• S3005br3ba kids·pelb'! 642.8674 ~tio, ~I. gar. No pelS. On the ~:aLer. 2 u.r 2 Ua ~wly 3 Dr. l_~i Im Condo. ·!f.~~uf~.n!, ~ts~~~~ Deluxe 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, _MG-_84_17 ____ _ Ho.N1Fvmi .... d A!>k ror your rrce $:.150. Call aft 6PM. fplc , dan rm . l s ty , t:h1hlren OK. $4001mo+ t ~a ·h SJOO biS·S949 or s undeck. en~I gur. 28r&boauarm,garage, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jlomefmders movinR kil SHARP 3 Br 2 Bu, Mesn ~t).1924 w boat. ~ISO. ll13·tl832 &. ISi l.1~1. deµ 4!13 0381 ~;5 ~l . SSOOimo. No children or kid ok. DO pets. $300. 378 lolaoo Island 3106 w. rec al c.~1. ore only Verde, cpts. drps. fplc. 549·9803 wkdyi., 496·7389 eve:.. pet.s. 673-72211 ___ E 16tbSt. 646-799' •••,••••••••••••••••••• 557-0122 walk to school!! &s hops. Deluxe twnhi.c. ~br. • • Agt Oc<.•Onfronl Renta-l trr: r= -------N BAY FRONT-Nov. & __ $42Smo. 545-1882 21 ,.h.i, N r evt:rylbtnA MfulOft Vieio 3267 -l'ompl (um (for f~milyl Cotto M•so 3124 Hui;:e2b(. 388 E20th. Olb Dec. 4 Br 2 & S650 mo. a lsa.d 3206 :! Ucaut vu. Closl' to bch. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SCln Juan o children under 12 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pd. Fncd yd. S29S. 642· 1670 days, 548-8647 Ni!aet.>th. & F~~nyd~ ~~~r He.uu\lrull~ d~co. Pool. Lovely 3 bcdrm. 2 ~a. Cpl~· Capistrano 3278 M ux 5 in Ca mily. Avail $410 E/Slde triplex. 3br. 645.-S eves; IM2.o282 • h J~euai. Cle: ~per rno. ow. A. c. drps, cµts, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wltit J une 1978. S600 per. 2ba rrplc yd encl cur. EW RUD PTS 8AY1'RONTBEAUTY br,2ba. Eogl11, collage. Alley ~l\l. SSOO incl. l..'t-O.PP.842·353.1 ~real urea. $395. mo 2 Ur Condo. f:llragc. no mo. S300 refundable de· TSLMgnit • 642-1 iNBr-f bacb ~/Jofl . . 2er2 &,-pier.SJ95. New kit. buthrms. Gar. gardener.Agt~0.1031 003-4567.Agcnt.notee_ P\fL'>. Aero:.:. lrom pont. PoS. 21110A w. Ocean·----~:...._ _____ _ \\mter,avlnow.613-6204 Yrly.~.515-6239 PCUSH NEw.2 :.ty. 2Ur , Avail No\ 1 s:ioo. Ph front. ContuctTenant in M'ESA VERDE urea. ~~l~~\1· 393 2br. $3'15. triplex w, huge £rplc. ~~ 3242 ~~~~~~ ... ?~~! 532·2711 Apt B or call 7141712·3560 l'ome atmosphere 2 & 3 _ _._ ______ _ CLOSE1'0BAY Gura11e.appliances. g ar Drivr by Jll5 --tor:ippt bydeluxeapts.546·1034 Triplex convenle.nt 2Br1 I ·iwer 3 "''rm. 2 b"lh ~5059, 84&8575 Hamilton. 549·1446 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oceanfront :J BR. 2 HI\, Santa Ana 3280 --. - -Ba bJtns patio nice de· ~ .uu " ------'------f ----------1•---------•I frplc, gar usc. winter ....................... Churmmgcouage1nqwet New(;ONDO~br,2~ba. 's-Z7s'64.2-~ duplex llpl. Patio. aPeftlltsula 3207 MESA. VERD!EXIC. '*'*N~W tluntln~ton fui-n S61Hl 1mo. Call Lovely •I bedrm. 2 bath nhrhd, 3 Br 1 Ba, gar, 2 frplcs. blUns, pool & _co-'--r • ...;... __ • --~......._ __ _ l:lcautifulty rurnh.hed. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br 2 Ba home w/added Harbour urt•a. 2 l4l,)', 3 b7S.6bl0or67J,7848. homi• wilh cpt-.. drps. 1 :.unroof. walk Lo Lido spa. S37S mo. 675·•912 ~OFF DEP w/AD $.)5(> mo yrly · OCEAN FRONT room. ~'195 per mo. Avail HK den J R/\ frptc dbl B be -Nice area. $395. 963·4567 shops & beuch. no pets. Bkr STUNNING lge 2 Br 2 Ba ;? • • • • 4 r ., Ila snuc aul ""'00 "1'' n•u3 uf pu W.81'HST 10/25.640-2981 ourn"e :\purious UJl· w ·t -t·rr • ,. ·, 1 1 · Al!cnt,nutl'e. .,. mo.ti~·.,.,... l5 "' M"""'"PLNES gardenapt,pooJ,recrm . ON WATER " '" · Cl> c 1 arua. P c, ~ ------~ Sl75 7 OW 18th St •• <..:hlirmlng2story 4Bdrm .i BR. + den . 3 BA, Newport H gt s 3 Br i:r.aded. en~l~i.cd µut~o: kit & din rm, 2 t·ar ~ar. SUPER Lux. 2 hr. 2 bu Sleps to beach. !lbr. 2ha. BRAND NEW. Studio/l . 1 . . . home on best nayCront ~~~~~.ia~~6~3.J1~.ly duplex. I''.? Ba. fplc. pvt S52Simo. 01 t-;N HOUSE ST50 molseiopt.673·-1545. cofldo . F r pl. pool. S4H5 wntr. Students OK. & 2 bdrms. 1230. $28S & Lg-e modem 3 Br 2 Ba, loca ti o n . Yrl y lse putio,gar.SI00.552-7350 DAILYlG I (Pl d JU<'Ul.l.1 S375. tl40·4462 bl:.1·3987 $300.lmmed.occupancy. (pie gar,bltns.nopet.s. lil400mo. BeuuUful2 BR.yrly,$00. 16&>2Ali;onqwn nur s au3BK.en Un· l'\'e~ Pool. jacuzzi. frplc & sss'o mo. 675·1094 ; 4 1 n-IJ L 0 2 sty. 2 Br 2 ea. den. sun· A~cnt tMli 1311 l'VC:.. •t. l'~resh pa mt. plush · --2 Br yrly, lrg sundeck. dshwhr. Adults. no pelf!. 673.1023 SAf,JSBURY REALTY 1 °" evue u. pen S ti th t' '"'-·...._ L 3216 I th" C It ---------. CallS7J-61!00 !louse Sat/Sun l ·5. deck. bltns. drps. cpts, 1!39-8447 n irp. po ess ruou • .-rn CICJIMG l"ose to every mg. a Open dally. 2650 Harle • _________ 1~559~~-7~499~------l gar. lndry. lsl & last. n Walk to mkts. pool. schls ••••••••••••••••••••••• tl73-0236. ____ St. C.M. (Mesa Verde 2 Bdrm. Married couple pets. Adlts, S:JtiO. --&park.$.5001\fonth !l l R•t 2 J ewel , 2 Br. Dr.orrHarborBlvd.) with children under 2 \alaoo P.mftsula 3107 1 BR & Den, frpl, lg. lot on ~: 557·43-i7 nfl 4 Lease ~aterlront. 4 Br 3 Agent 640·5560 $495/mo. Close to beuch. 1~:~\~~~~ a Opt~.~~::.r~~~·. 1 MONTH FREE yrs. Newly decorated. Penin Pt Part rurn'd &. 30 sliµ. S800 mo. or C· II an 6pm 494 6125 or .,.. 549-2447 $2'l5. 646-28216 ·•••••••••••••••••••••• Q · · ~.65 ·67376l5. 2 BR Mesa Verde c·ondo. S750 w1outshp Pool.Jae. Lovely unfurn. bca<'h 497u.1,92 • · 2ba.nopels,o\'er30. ·PACIOUS oceanfront 4 wet area. -1· · ' ho b d .. M •-d h 2153 E Oc B Yard, garage, pool, kid teM1s, 2 car ~ur. llunt· use on ay w1san Y 2 .,. 3 B rms, mature 2 Br, 1 Ba, 1 story, 5 ag, br. 2 ba compl. rurn. •· ean · & pets OK. $325 mo. ington Harbour IUty lkv front. Pvt communil)"· WeshlliMter 3298 ON THE BEACH udults, gas pd. 778 Scott drapoa, patio, frplc . hme. Fplc. wi.hr,dryr.p0Ult.•1 blocktooceanor 546--0Ul3evs,675·6610dys. Tesl a. 213 -592·~816; &lboaCovcs.Plenty of ••••••••••••••••••••••• \d~m~;c~apl. St4o. Pl.642·5073 beam ceil, dshwashe.r, d!>hwshr. 2 car gar. no bay. 3 br + 2•. ba. frple.. 714-846·~1 parking. 3 hr. 2 ba, bar. Verv met> 4 br 2 ba homc 1 ts. 1 garage. Adults. $290. 2650 pets. Y rly rental. No J>elS SSSO. mo. yrl . HOUSE -8 rooms·l'. ~/:'~:.!}12:1y lse. Mrs with UW , druJ,es, cpts, 2 Winter or yrl~n.utaJ. \<!I NEW OWNERS EJdenUnit B.538-8406 -SU-"9511:? Owner (213 >889·0590 or lhS. unlUmTSlR!d.t\S Delightful 3 br-. 2 bn. a..uu.,, .,........, ood u1 $38S lk lie Ch Charm S300, mo. s.Ml-0811 rm. qwet area S&IO mo. ' · car gar · i:: urn.. · b to 3 · mg 2 NEW MA.NAGEMIEHT Large 3 Br Townhouse ,_m_.s_158 _______ , ...;..;._..;._ _______ , ~ As:t. HVHms 4 Br. els to schl'I, 9634567 M:ent. no fee br. p~t10, frplc, newly SUMFlOWU with patio, garage + .GCJllftal.ach 3141 orona•IMar 3222 ~IESA Verde E xec. park, pool. .S651l/mo . Nicc3 bedrm,lbath,DW. furn.(2l3)790-80lJ pool. Quiet complex. ....................... ....................... wipool btWJl. 2 goU crses lncls grdnr ti mo mm drps & Cpti.. ~ood area SCln Clemeftte 3776 I bdnll md •• Adults, no pets. $3SO. Arch Bay. 2 Br. frptc. 'ew Dplx 3 br. 2 ba. (pie, 4 br, 3 ba. 3 car gar. 27 lnoW-. 3244 lse. ll33·186l. ~S mu. 963-4567 Agent, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2..t 3 bdrWll 64S-33Uor61S..SIM9 oen \'U, pvt bch. $475. nxt to park. Wlk to bch. sq. rt. Pror. decor ·d . $7~ ....................... no fee Studio. ocean vu. Full 3 lwtow•o•es .,._,_t-A 38"1.L ••• ••18or I 499 2066 SS75 428 Begonia &l4 1732 Grdnr. &c pool serv. met R,....y•Ls --k" h II pd , .......... fl I ) - -~ ......-... · · · · · 54J.633l 557 8717 m'"" OCEANF'RONT 3 Bdrm eo..dolniftfwws 1tc en. SZ25 mo. Ut . wnnri ep acn ...................... . 1NY 2 Br, rum or unC, BEAUTJFUL3 br, 2 ba + wa lk lo beach &. town. den 2 fplc's. Mex tile, Patio. nice k1tch. $375. Romun tub. Sundk. 194-5792 64(). 78-19 ' · own1:r. 2BR.2ba ······ $425.52:1 with ht.tlcony for cnJOY· fumiahed 3 400 .i!JS-3747.IHOAM 3 POOLS Panaroma view. aew Z • Nice 2 BR. l Ba. house 2 + Dor3br.2ba ·· $52S in~ th1• !land. 11ca & !lurl ••••••••••••••••••••••• J•CUlll BR " Den •·Plex. No encl gar. new paint. fc 3BR.2Ba ....... sszs,70o . d vn:w lmpre!ISIV{' ·-· ients -...... M ........ 1087 Yrd. 1 child ok. 202 4BR.2~ .. Ba ..... $5S0170S an •. Condo. very clean. 3br. ~ w S•U ... • 1..:,.~_ .... _g:;.r_. _ _.... ____ _ COSTA MESA wood sy e.xterlor . 2ba. 2 car gur. 2 pools, Uitfurftistt.d -"-Wallace. $260. mo Privacy $800, mo. clubhouse. Subm1l o n ••••••••••••••••••••••• Close lo S.A. frwy & So. 2 Br1 Ba, gar, bltns, ~pt&. 3169 Lge d':l'ilex home ln CdM. S48-2TI8 3 BR, 2 baths .....•.. $150 BAY f''RO!'lo'T 3 Bdrm. of kids. lllt & last mos rent. GeMrd 1102 Cst shop 'g. Tiny Tots <I rps. adltal DO :U· $1116. ~~~.~~•••••••• ~a:uio'"usm ~a~e; a!~: Monticello Condo. Clean !'ice. ram rm. I.lining rm Avail. Im med. $385. Agts • ••• ••••••••••••••••••• welcome. 3 playgrounds 833~1 ! M0-07 OHTHISA.HD Sm pvt yd. $600/mo. 3 Bdrms, 2 ba, gar d & boat dock Prl vutc Joan&Chuck,540·1720 •lbr $165. Long Beach. FROMSZISUP s:uo.Oeeanview.Zbdn.. ill I b b d I 752r0017Agt . opener, pool. nr o.c.c $1100. n....a. IL-.&.-3 ... 00 Cpts. drps, stv. rer. 2511 W .s-flower partly furn,. Near 3eau u 3 r, 2 a, P x, $375. S4S..a3S4 BE.ST LIDO NORD ~HI~ "' Ad It s. no Pet s . 557 ... 00 ir. a beaches " )'aebt harbor ·niUo. new crpts, drps. mod )•.. BR L O c A T I O N . •••••••••••••••••• • •• • • TI4i833-8974 ._ -. ......... : \vaH immediately 'tit ~~.R~lc. ~:. l lh Dc..aPoillt 3226 LUXURIOUS and com· 3806 7days,10.S.NopelS ~=:::::: • .-· i/78. $600. 752-7410 dys, blks to B~ .. Corona. No ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 1 d l d 2 ••NEW duplex across • , JM-48Slevs/wknds • VL b b V Ne Y re ecora e from llarbour. 2 •ty. 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mesa Verde. 3129 Cln· l'fl'•..._--L _..._. pets. $47Simo. G75-4392. A lli l, 3 r, 1.,.. a, bdrm 2 bath •· d1n1'nn " · L 2b 2b __,,, -----;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.{f~:;;~~:::;,:=::~:-1 f th Cls ' "' .. spec BR. 2~ BA. frplc, yrly. Cute 2 br hotllle nunon. g r. a, nu ••• .. ••••-•••• .. -••-• Br 2'"" Ba. Sbo....,.liffs. rpl, cpt. ruout. . to room and two outdoor ,_...... I + kg A all pnt&drps,encl06ed aar. -3Br •Ba,_.~ -ho bch v~ ·~~ schls, marina. $350 per d k VI f; W C dbl itar., enc.....,.. pal O, gar. P · V DOW. ..:.. ,. .. _ - leaut4 Br me. out lgebeautfncdyd,grdnr. mo.714-828-9777 't513('AM,.,,Da•lllVttfE e c "· ' 0. OPEN JIOUSk DAILY 675·3063eves. AdlLs. no pets. 1275• yard,'wsb:c/drie; root. Fabulous vu, com· 2 car gar. 1600 mo. "Bayfront. $1001mo This 751-8462Corappt. hookup. SQO. K.lda•pe1a • { >J rum $850 mo, winter f>W.-OUl4 &Toro 3232 IRV. Groves Nu 2 br. 2 l.HeallyelegaotltvinJ:!! Hi BR. deo. frplc. t'-':.I ba, ,...DAISY ok.675-66'100C'IM5llti se. ••••••••••••••••••••••• bo.den,frpl.Pool.tennis. ALSO. large 2 br. 2 l66S2Algonqwn carp()rt.utilpd.Yrlylse. •>a water, 3 Br w,boal BR. St.o\'e, refng, ulil's. Extra sharp, exec home.' $f7S. 640-0097 aft 5PM bath+den. dining rm. & Agent twG-J311 or eves $395. 126 Ag1tte. 003·3038 FOR KIDS A.MD •ALL NEW APTS 2 ,Jipa'Vailable,$790/mo. gardener, frplc & patio. BR, 2 BA. fplc, cpts. pnvate patio. SIOOO 'mo lm-8447 or67~2797 THEtlPA.lEMTS! bdrau encl. 1ar. un Lido. Elegantly $500. <a pply rea r drps,·2~n.LovetyLovel.ytoWl)hse3Br,2ba. lse . All Lido benefits ugeLivRm.DinRm.2 •Pool fireplaces. blt·I•• urnished 2 Br incl'g downstairs apt.) 520~ neighbo . $42:1/mo. A/~. lrg en.cl pat. newly with these l~es. Call Br quiet. $339.SO. ~hilt lo •2 ~ <7l4) .. 01a7 ..... uano, color TV. mini On:hid.&44·1922 ~Agent,no fee. painted & immac. $375. abou t the speci a l Apcal11wnhfownish.d bcb.67J.9547.205Pearl "ew p·'" bch. $800 'mo 998-6168or95S-2-199 benefits you may have ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Tot lot • • ... ' · JU"IDingduplex. Walk to &..lalw Yaley 32l -4 .lh h bo ..-.oa Island 3706 :.,.,_ f Bal 1 1 Patios, renced yards. keanfront 2 Br Doll beach. 2 br. 1 ba. (rplc, ••••••••••••••••••••••• THE RAMCH wU1dol t ese. two a \'C • oay ronl s apt, 1780 Plaft•nla'a louse. S hort term r Child k MSG eases ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3br,2ba. Million SS view. "" 350/wk. Zv~1f."Nov. l~ ~5172. 1t"'ei~ bc',h2ba exe~Jve :C.~~~1::'fa~~Ym:,'.n~ WATEr\FRONTHOMES Huge Liv Rm. DLn Rm, 2 tMxury. Adults, 2 limit. Calle42·3'790 Nr. bdl. Zbr, 2ba ...,...: NATER FRONT HOMES a !1' Y ome · e r y SSZS/mo. ur•~ue Homes, 631·1.00 Br, qulel. S:Wt.98. ~ blk Yrly lse.1750. 615-3878 En 4. · 1 a r. It 11 J 6.11-1400 Newly r edecorated 3 private W/10' wa.11 . ...... tobch.673-9547 205Pearl ~U Bndchunt-.tl>GllW bdrm. 2 bath cottage. Family rm, rormal dlll 6'15-6000. ' p......,. 3807 Bachelor $225 ~~.;...;;;..;....;;;.;~~~--~~~~~~~~~I Fr11lc, lots or storage. rm, upgraded crptg, 11JRTI..EROCK WrNNER EASTILUFF lolbooPenllttula 3707 ....................... Adult.s,nopet.s. Spacious 3 BA. 2 •• WPT CREST CONDO Encl. atrium off master drps, Jae~. $S50 mo: 312 bdrm. 2 ba, great 3 BR. 3 Ba w/fam·rm & ••••••••••••••••••.••••• ..ux bayfroot living In this 131 E. l8thSlreet Tripl ex, near new, . Br 2 Ba pool tennis suite. SS75imo. No pets. 968·4737. 540·0511 . vus. 1850 sq.ft. Nu highly den. rormfl din·nn, lge ~yfront triplex urut. 301 plush 2 Br. 2 ba. w/hUge 6*68l6 w/bl&M, lrpk, lndrJ I.e. ·ru1 · '0-l • 613-7229 962·0862 uperaded tennis /Jae. kitct\. Frplc. view. S675 Edgewater. apt. C. 3 br. rms & overlooks glisten· gar. Water• .. r.td A h4 .Jeauu . $700. 64 751 Just renovated in/out. l ... IMgt• a.ace. 3240 $6SO or lease/option. mo. Incl gardener & i:i. ba, garage. Wint.et lng bay. Full sec bl~g, Townhouse 2 br. 1~ ba, nfoe, ramll)'. w/e ldm I• e wport Beach . "B lb b e.So ••••••••••••••••••••••• 714·644·350lor673·1433 water Avail Ocl 17 S325 /m o . Yearly s ubterranean prkg. frplc,gara11e,patio.S3'1'S. welcome.Old'l'owaH.8. V t rf t .. 1 "'II"' h ...... nice" "-a om ~ · · ' $42Simo. Robinson, Dkr. Bout s lip avail $650. Call,,... appl. betwn llMI, SB). mo. Avail. Od. Ii. vi~l~r~~t;l~fu~.~·'b~: hwy. All n ew kilch 1 Bedroom condominium L.5E$410.4Brl~Ba.FP. S48·S647or675..S764 675-0175. · --646-20l0 ... 2TJ& . ba, adults only. $480 widshwshr & S/S refrlg. near pool and tennia. 4502 Wyngate The 4 br. 3 ba. fam rm. 3200 ....:.... __ ......._ ______ _ no. Unique Homes Wood celJ's, used brick $290/rnonth.6464417. Wiiiows. 551 .'2000 : sq.n .1444Santiago,N.li. IA.UOA.INM Newer 2 Br 2 Ba yrly. New2Br,fi>k: .......... , 75-6000 Crplc, quality cpts, gar. Good locat•--4 Br 3 ba 894·3484 $12SOmo.Agent,51l·S032 $125·$275.AMonlh Adlls. no pels. Nr pvt patio Is PT· no ..... $450imo. llSS-3649 eves. "'"· • • Includes util. t:qulpped I I b r • r Y . E v e s . SIZS. Zit Ada.ma.as.Im eps to beach, 3 br 2 ba . fr P 1 c • fa m ii Y rm: Oran1etree 2 bdrm condo Tastefully decorated 3 kitcherui. 105 Main st. 213.257.9792 ~. heated pool, winter $325. I BR w/patto ~ yrd. gardener. $580. 848·1371, w /prl v. patio. 1"ull bedrm, 3 bath, den. Con· Bnlhoa.675-8740. ---------lm6o2. bdtmt174•1 -Apt~··A~~ 450 S45-SOOl 3Blkstobch. 421 Poansel· 846-m66. recreation facilities. do. Walk to beach. Poot. Spectacular bay view, v . t..aa.673-8256 B ba bl a Adults only. SJ.45 mo. tennls.S6SO/mo.Ava1ll8 CostaMeto 3724 lbr.MOOyrly.lncld.sutU. Dalr7vlew. H.B. 127 Orlgln11l w ·f ull 3 r, 2r 'd tnsd. 2 c Ir lease Nov l 551·1900 afl mos. lease. ask for Ja)•. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nopets.S56-l6lO .... 9110. 0 , 2 Bdrm new carpets re· gar ., ence Y • Po<> , • • A l .,AA 7270 ....:....::.....;._.; _____ ....;,,..;....._ nodern kitch. cean mod led' k' h d ' $$40. 1443L Chateau La. 4:00 gen • .,..... $50 WEit( & UP $190 Nice bach apl. Resp BJock to Be•• .. Jlr, IBa. lew, 1 blk bch. 3 Br 2 Ba. e . itc • gar ener • ...,.. ~""" Studio, l bedroom -.v ID lge pvt deck am· gar. ~1mo. 833-1709 vi.--. NEW S&S 4 Br, Fam Rm. UDO SANOS 3 Br. 2 ba, Maid sen•lce pool 11dult. No pets. Util lncld. dbl garap, ~· - ile Pkg. M75. pref adlt 3 Br+den w,frplc. Close 3 Ba, nr pool. tennis. SSS0 beach & pool. D/W. $600. zm; Newport Bl. C.M. AHul lOi2S. lOO E. &y 1->0fOrangt~ mo. ~aftlP -pl. no pets. 714-673·0S2S to shopping center, bus lse,oropt.$$2,.9529 lst,Jast . clog dep. no 548·975Sor64~3967 St,ap<9. moatbec:dMGpC111'Mttf qumyaCOOL ansserv)714-481·7597 seryice . S•50/mo. LogiNleocll 3 248 pets.&42,:JSOO STUDIO CoroaadttM• COf1TIUlleS.Arelamg 2 Br, 1 a.. pr . ....,,. :eanfront Sparkling 3 ~S8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IEASTBLUFF WEEKLY RA TES .ing wit\ thOml,, racll, DO pet.I. AlltaR&. Ir, frplc, compt rurn. 3BrwixtralgeFamRm, ABHgts3Br28a,corner Nt!EIRanch<>Mkt.lSty, FullKllchen&TV walllfoll.andmate* 1235.GSA.utaian.L \vall 3·8 mo's . $680. IMMACULATE near the beach & Hntg lot. Great view.~ mo. 3Br. 2ba. S660 lse. Dys Unenic &UllliUe11 PRIME CdM trees.~pooll. 1 BR w/atDYe • nfdi. ;'15-18-19. BAVFRONT Harbour. $425 per mo. Mo.loMo.orlsc. 752·2393.eves644·0648 CLOSETOOCEAN Jocuzzl.IOUnO.bllards.. gar. I bib fnm lsala 111 the Bay. lovely 3br. Wa tc h bo-ats in the Availimmed.IW()..4247 R~~li:f~ Seaview.new4brw/view. RoyalSultesMotel LOCATIONS ondeicclngCUlhoule-bch. S2'15Jdlla pd..C.U o/.ba. Outside s hwr, harbor from this3 BR+ $750 Great house on cul· · 2121 Yacht Yankee. S8SO 2080NewportRlvd.CM 3-2 br, 1 ba •pt&. tor. wltuoclOl*"9nll..T.m:s, ?.!ors& btwa 165• vshr/dryr. Wntrrental. den,:J,'~bath~me.Ne~-de·sac.4br,21~ba.scp. Victoria Beach. 1 Br. permo.Comm.poolilen· 642·2611 gym,ond~of ...;,_,:..;..:..-OOID...:..;..:;...:.... _____ _ 1.3·749-4445. 213·007-6087 ly pa1ht:ed • m move-in pool &play yd. Pool serv. charm1ir, s tone fplc, nis. 640·8551; 833-3622 __ ••GARUEN 1 Br •. Dach ~~.S350-~S·2311days TlleVlo M d condition . Av ail. to Fine area. Nr parks. sch I brick patio. walk bch. .,. ge. ore ceunfronl 2 Br. patio. 6/15/78. s1soo:mo. incl. & library. 539.2109 499·21Rleves IESTORIGINAL Apt.i;, l'ool. furn & unf. ~ ~gy°'.frt~ :ar. ~ii pd. Winter. S3SO water & weekly maid 962·9351 (Jim). BlufCs area. Family ~VlctoriuSt.64G·~~4_ SA.YETIME ror.R.mllurtllCMJlablt .. 00 __ ._646-_2S_io _____ , service. ~e~'o2J:~~:X,. sized 4 bdrm, 3. ba SUS CA.SITA.S H4ve n rental specialist OneoncnwoBtdtoom .. ca.ww11te 3176 JeanneBameU644·6200 i::e.s~~l; :;g~xde~ 493-5710or644·9806 townhome; vacant since Nicely turn. lnrge & rui!llst you ln finding a Adutl..IWlg. •••••••••••••••••••••• du-uoul, 2400 sq.fl., 2~ 3 B ho . ~:!· 1 r~err· nMeo~e I: smull l br. Adults, only, CdM apt oCr hoUliCC. No fee Olflcelopen 9:00to8:00. anora.mic ocean vu. Nu ba, formal din rm. lge r use, ocean view. · , f'/25/ AOT no pets. 2110 Newporl to you. all arol at Now ~ !br w/nu !um & appls. ram rm, bright country S5SO mo. gorgeous . mo. Blvd. Boyd Rltrs 67$-5930 :i()()mo.498·3747,8·10AM ,. _ _..aM•·-3224 kite .. -aardener furn 642-~. 494·3474 ask for _640-__ 5.560 _______ ..::.:..:..::~------~--=-------- WV>• -"""• " • Gre0 • 1,L blks to bch 2br lb'"' BUNGALOW. luxurious J Br+ den, lower. uUt pd,, •••••••••••••••••••• ••• S600/mo 848 9427 " ~ . o ~ · · r I c d. I ' d • e m p Id pc rs on • n o 2 blks to ocean . .,,_,, mo. 3 Br, 21,\ BA. gorgeous .._.EW HOME 2 BR, l~ Ba, frplc, lge gvar. rp. e, hoc • aunA r'Y11· smokers, & maid serv. 403 Jasmine, avl Nov. 1. •••••••••••••••••••••• brlU\d new condo. w/2 " deck. 2 car gar. nice ery nice ome. "11 • 5411.7197 213·776·4292 : .. eva, ~ 3202 lrg. pallos. 2 car garage, Bloc ks lo bench. 3 ocean view. Walk to Vic· Nov. 1. $1l0. mo. yrly 71Hl70-839S pool, jacuu.i, tennis. sub-Bedroom, fireplace, only tori a Bch.. $435. 640-7633 61J.~ aft Spm. _ HlallW... _..;._ _______ _ •••••••••••••••••••••• GETIEADY Be p~pated to move laat when y0u .-our haxury itdult " famlty Sarden apts. Swlrn ia our 2 swimming pooa., mu"" our 2 Jaouy!t. S.unat too! 1&JIOtr..SHO IAMIUIYCIOSS J8'781ViewpolntLane Ne•r8eacba.Wamer. acJ'OU lrom Mcl'>onaldll 142-6604 mll on kids &r. pets. $460. $550/mo. Hurry. call 2B "B h N F. d 2 br 1 ba yard izarntte Harbour 3742 SPotle~~· Walk to bch. Call 549·3710or'S36-1956. 962·1787 Ask for Mack. r. ~ a ouse. · .n • • · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Hr 3 ou Fam rm 2100' Vllla Pacific 2 BR~ O..n, 1ave Ume. gas & money •----------• close to heh, bus & shop· S3SO lease. N f St d Yrly, 509 Acocia &4$-7~ .. ,,_r sh•""! p ... pall•• • ., LOW! LOW! RIMT! Ne spec1ahte m those Condo, new 3 Br 2~ Ba, Slry. Home w/lg mstr ping. 494.7079 645-858.'i ew um. h u io. ~cr~~s .,_~ I" "'n p • ,J .. uard to (and rentals to flt A/C, gar. reCrig. wshr suite lg yrd· frptc· new Crom Be ·Dock av;ut. Charming 1 Br south of car enc ga.r, a .ec. your budget-iill prices dryr, pool, tenms.yrly crpts/drps·. waik lo t..J-o~ 3252 Nwpt Crest Condo 2 ~r 2 Water pd. Jacuui, ~1· hwy . just...re'<lon.c in· $30(),..~ br, l ba Eaatalde Fae. 1 MUe to bcb. JA()O_. __ _ .di areas. lse.$480mo.642·3443 b c h i schl s/shop s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ba.adlts only. Pool, Jae:, crp\4, <llll6. frplc. view. $idc/out. Slooplng wood triplex encl . gar -.niJ.9G'llllW498-1005 $180doll house. nr bch. S495/mo. 962·0256 a m Beaut. pvt. area twnhme sauna. $395. G42·1J05 $245. mo. 11522 8831 cell 'gs. all bltn kitch balcony. Near new. ' 3 Br deluxe beach unit S'ZOOutilpdnolastmo. Mesa Verde 3 Br1~.Ba. 962·096lpm Ocean view. 3 Br. 2 4Udolsle/Choice LoguMleoch 3748 w/newdishwuher&S/S TSLMgmt 842·1603 D/W, FP, pallo, aar: S22S2 Br kids ~ ok. paUo, front & back. S450 (rplc:a, pvt heh, tennis. Gorgeous No Bayfmt, 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• refrig. aar. $32S}mo. AvaJI 981).2S58 Sl3Snice2 Br kids pets per mo. G rdnr inc . br. No pets. Kids ok. lsl pool. !550/mo. 834·3333or br, 3 bn, dock 51700mo. LAO UNA BEACH MTR. 9SS-364Ut'ves. 2 Br. crpl$. dprs, klda ok. ---·------- S260 2 Br kids pets nk 549·3581 & last. Vac11nt. S47S. mo. 494.3320 "' d , 1 1 t l 3 b 2 1 NN .,1, k .,,7 .. 1 no pelts. 1235. 3 Br. dshwhr, dl1poeat, $260utl pd 2Rr kids gur F'Award.i;/Slater . 847·380:1 .,,n o sees a e r, ' . · '" " w · "" " mo. 2 Br. frplc. erpt.s. stove. $Sl·S071 util hOOk•UP dbl ror '' SEE lo behl'vc new rondo 3 Rr, 2 Ra. niCl' home. as· hn. 0/R St200mo. 3 br, 2 l\111111 i;crv rotor TV, &kony \'iew. Xlot cond. pooi ....,"/mo' Wate pd' &?65 2 Dr kids pets ok 2...., nu . 2 nr. a fptr·~. tie ll(>autirul 2 Br Condo. 2 !IOC. pool. new cpt11. S4ll,, bn. den. 3 gar's Stl75mo lic· n tc d p1~0 I t 7 l ·I l Mulls. no j)(.'ls. S.150. 322 '1'wnh11r. ll Rr \l".1 "'-· no Ev~/;"'°'lu1dsMt.-t1 · S'l753Brkidspool cor wallpupcr, pool & llr,1'1hu.Tenni11.pools. l!ie.~16·6Z74 ;75l·:Slll Aptw;vu,2 hr!S.~mo. 4!M·5294 . Ull~, N Coal$I JlrholropcAve.675·6024 l'hlldrcn, ~ml pet. 610 _,, S'l8S2BrFPmust scc jacuzzi. a min to hd\. $310 /mo. 645·5971 &. Rni.:1•r Urown H .t-:. Hwy_ OCEANVIEW 2B ·t· Joann,Apt.D.541M638 3br Moblloltome.J.withor l<kfs 1~·s & l<IO's more 5450. 897·62Q.1 !J68.7fi.'l-I art 6 pm. HA.UTIFUL IJ73·1020 r. pa 10. without furn. u n .Och. nvl. l. i & 3 Br. Cnll thc ___ __ --1 Mllr pvt heh, ll•nnil!I. -Studio & 1 hr 11pt~. com pt. fplc. S32S per mo. New lovely 2 br, 2 bl\, S300 845-l003 experu ut Con11umeri1 Halecrn"'t 3 BR. 2 Ba. PROF. DJ-:CORATF.D 1 I 3 l' ·• Vcry nice 3 br, 2 ba. redecorated & rurn 759-0715 bltns, yd, oar. 2370 --·-------ould d S I , ~" k •. I k 3'· poo . NCC j.?UDr<. • >r, ' .. can 11ave. m cc rlO!-e too c.c. & Frwy. Near par °' u e ur. ha hno:.cor~lllloi. SM/I. llnrbor View Home. Adull11. no pC'ls . Pvt Orange.$31.5.673-tlSS life. IUS.4!100 ~~1>5 "-~~l~~t & clc:.m's: ~~;·. ~~~~sl~:ft~.~tq· ALSO Open Sat/Sun. 644·2682 parking. Monthly & yrly ll~~a:l~~~!j: ~~t!~i Large 2 Br, bltns. nur llw~•• 1142 I Br 3 Ba. 2 sty hme. 3 \ r~ ---SPECT A.CULAR ll un. 2 Ba Occan·BaY rentals uvnil. ''97·3493 6 640·9900 dys. Linda, shops, no pet•. Qulc' ...................... . old. Good nbrhd close lo Nirc hnrne. Eastsldc. nr,w Ikaot .. spac. 3 br condo Ocean vlcw11 from 3 Ur. 2 view home in rront or Lwcurv p('nthousc. 2 br. 2 N:t <no romm.J adll.s. $225. 645·2610 New• our new 3 br con• schools, p.1rk. shoppinJ:. ,.1111~. , rry clcan. a Bil. 2 Pool. dshwhr & cxtrn5 bit family roo~. 3 rnr park on Cllfr Or. Non htt, din rm. rrplc. b11t doe It apu. Somo w/pool, $47$ mo. Wblte House l>A. ndulL<1. or <'h1ldn·n Kids ok. $375. s.16·3225. 11nr new home in Oona smokers. SS50. Some v i c w U 1 0 c k to lbr. lba duple.x, corner Nice & clean t & 2 bdrm lennla, aar•g~ lrplcs. Rc:altor1J, 893·0S73: evi1, ok . .-No pets 645·flS86 oft 9694 Peltiswood , nr. Pt. $49S Ownr A.:t furn. + pool Tbl incld. downtown . $475 mo. loca. Xtra nice. $295. apt.s. Walktoevcrythina. $'2$. Joan, 8"·1371 or S54·I<m 6pm Adams&Bushard. 403-7278 842~ 494·2379cves. ~7 0282 644·T220ot~..t755 ~~O-\oo.t 846-2597 f 1 Add it ... B uild IL.Diaper IL .Hammer It... Carpet it. .. Cement it ... Wlre IL.Hoe it. .. Clea n it...Move I ... Press it...Palnt IL.Nail lt ... Plaster it ... Fix It... SERVICE '•• ~.ceR.,W C tllnp ,Acoeatk <Mr••t ._., P ..... /P..,.nitt P~/PaperfttcJ oolServlce,R.,.,,.. ·-•·' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• C&J Ap_pUanceServ. ~y AcoustJcs: Qunl W1!;£1>1NC·CLEANUPS CHEAPEST l\4uhng 111 JlOUSJ!:(;l.t;ANlNG is our Brickwork Smull Job~. PROFF.SSIONAl. P11inl· Pointing & Repalr1 35 Be a utify your pool . / TRJP CHARGE $10 s prayed celhnu. re Weekly Mainlcnance town. Fr esls. <;UBAP! Dusi ness. R e II ab le Newport. Costa Mesa & 11\lf. Inter/ 1';xtcr. Reas, y r i.. c x pc r I enc e. Repair & repJucemcnl of ~S.Mllin,S.A pal". Guar. Lie 1132969$. Freeest ·· 642-9907 &U-2995or645·1300 s1·rvi<"e. J nn1cc'!I Rag· lrvine.ti75·3175evcrc workguar~20386 Workm1u 'lsblp auor. old Ule or coping. Free 549-~22 957.0169 Free es.t. 536· lllOO 1 g1.-dy Anns nl 675-65$3 --S36 7056. est, (iuur. 536· 7UG2 &i • •----------Gardening Service: clean OCC Student. Ulg :1. T --l''ircplaccli. plontt1rs, Fair prices. State lie &1n· 879.0743 CcrpelWhr C Oftlntctor up & hauhng, weekly truck. 1'rai.h. trct: lr1m, THESUNSlllNt:GIRLS bnck 1:oncrclc-patio. blk ud. Exterior ~µeclaJjst. WAL.l.Pl\PF.lt llANOfNG •----; I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• maintenance. Reusona· etc. R undy IS42·ll703, Wunl the clcuncsl house walls. UDQ pits. Rer11, Try me-Calleo 836·555S Expr'd 20 yrs. Work R.,,.... Ir ReptMr Carpent.ry, any type. R.J. llurrmun & Son. Gen hie rates. Cree estimates. S49.J600 in town ? Re Ii u b I e csts 646-()164 • l'Uaranteed. 75!M830 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • , Panel, doors. etc. Also Cootr. Cuatom Alt& Add, Alter 4:30 ask for Ron. Co-J -----servke. r"'usonahle ratei. ------WORKGUAHANTEE.O Add.on. f)Olio. llkYllHhts. , Comm'I. Uc/est. Aft s. p ¥ l i 0 •. cab Inc t s. 6"5-0Sllor 5'&8·498'7 I ege student. llauhni:. &. professwnul cl~antng. Mo•htcJ lmcnor/ Extr. fo're~ est. Plaster /Repair reprs. Rc~ld/comm'I. Jo'r 548·2719 form1ca. New eoQ:!t. Ru11 lgt mov•nl':. 752-01 17 t'all the Sunshine Cir!~.••••••••••••••••••••••• ~yn.exp.Ml·0295 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ei.t 962·4217 Lukay ;; , • & comm . 645·4644 / Reliable E"pr Japanese wkdys art 5pm. free u:1t. ~I0·9525 & 552·0245. 2'1 hr (,0('111 & Long D111t1rnce YOUNG l\tnn. 5 yrs t•xpr VERY NI?i;'T PA'fCl,I 2!lti23:l \ ' Custom roof fro ming : 548-4541 Lie. Bonded Gardener. Reasonable. Health & scrv Mov1nf!. L.011o·est rultis. In wallcoverin~. 1''ree J OBS & 1 t:~URJ!. R ~ -- Room nd<b O.K. Alter free est. M5·S230 Mike. ~atth Clubs rust. efficienl service. ~L' 645.8576 Andy f'rooest. 893-1439 oo ... ..,, S:00.551-41120 MAR.KSILERCONST. llouseclcunmg Wmdow:i Free est. MnJes ll c · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• New const. Res/comm'I. CLEAN-UPS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ood rules.Good refs. Modern Mover:. 639·8552 Patch Plasterin&' all ncxws inlltlllled factory C.,.tS..-Ylc e llm11Jd,romodcl.Palio 673.J9lOevt's lleglste red Maua~e Mr Lynn • -----Wh en you're talklni: types,freeestlmatci;. dln.:ct; estab'I 35 yr~. •••••••••••••••!••••••• Uc ronlr. Call 979-4411 Therapist. Nal'I Brd Ml>r 960-5844, 636-7711 Smull Mov111i: & Hnull ni:. about Isl, you have lo be 540·6825 CuU llarold Gunn , Carpet Man will 111y yours a.-£-l al Amen can .Massal{e & -Free Estimutes. Isl, & we are 1st. For lsl ... ....::w+t-549-2961 or m ine . Rep&lrs & ~•nC Genet-al Servlce 1 Therapy Assoc, Nat'J ~Int housecleaning IJy 642·0386 ..-.....-.,, cleaning tool Guar ..,ork ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Drd :'l!!Jr U.S. Physical duy Own lransportuliun. class ~ork .and top line ••••••••••••••••••••••• ROOFS FOR LESS at bigger savings. Free ELECTRICAL SERVICE HANDYMAN Therapy ru111c>e. avalla· 8.'lt>-0648 Paintll'M)/Poperin9 mulerial. mt~,& cxlr. llOMESAYEJlS. Plumb· All types, finun avail. est. 64.5-3646 CALLS Sl5 hr. & SMALL NO JOB TOO Std ALL blc f!'r house calls. WiJI \viii cl~J l , our home x-••••••••••••••••••••••• Stat~ contr he d. Bon· i'!g & Heating & air con-Froo est, lic/bond'd, in· JOBS842 8233 S48·~ b r 1 n g t a b I e , . 1 J' • ~ Pl':TERS PAJNTING <led 1nsr. Please conuict dltlorung. Pree est, $10 "" Senior citizens discot. Sbumpoo & steam clean. hydrocollator. Spcc1Jhz· pc~ly. O\\n tram •. Call Jo:xpr 'd . Rc3s Httles. Blue Diamond PaintlnJ . hr. Honest & \'ellable &94-0421anyl.Jme Color brighteners: wht Hubbard Electric nt YOUR HANDYMAN ing: 8 different types &16-6523 t"ree Esl. Cull Gene 548·0352 service. BorA, M/C OK. • • 1 cpts 10 min bleach. Clean Uc 327136 6-15-6974 Resid 'Comml. Fr~ est. message. Ludies or '!'en LandscopincJ 553.0458 751-3150 Repairs. Llc'd & lnsr<J. .. IJV, dln rm, ball $15. Avg Guaranteed. Dallas w med1c31 pn.•scnption. ••••••••••••••••••••••• All types. Free est. Call '·• nn $7.50, couch SlO. ctv UECTRIClAN-Priccd 646-5888 ( 7 14 1 6 .• 2 0 7 ., 5 0 r 1, l 1 Pl p-1.J. Your Cattle Puinl & Papenng, 24 yrs DRAINS Cl.EARED anytime 541-5930 Wall • ·'• SS C right~free ei;timu.te on . ., · " •0 0 soi prep. ants, '""' FROM $3.50 • CPt r~:~:lrrs ~ :~~ largeorsmalljobs. llANDYMAN: Carpentry, (2l!tllrl!i·tl948 _ shrub!>, lawn!>. lt ~os /wornge Extr1Slry$395 tl~:~~.a:c~~s::.~.St Call75H~4:! Tiie - Do work myself. Refs Licensed 673-0359 elt!ctricnl. plumbing & HouffcleM l"4J rates. Bud 645-8149 2Slory $545. lntr S45tm ••••••••••••••••••••••• 531·0101. , ' noors S.U).tj8,5l, 847·271J7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .._._ Pnccs Incl matr'l·labor Prof. Paper Hanging, he. Any pl um bing. waler Ceratil1c Tile, 25 yr& ex- ----------~•"CJ -Wunt a REALLY CLEAN t<NICINY Guar, lnsrd, Freoe8l. (279514 > & insured. serv, le~ks, bathrm encl. per, specia lty enlr} WecareCarpetCleaners ....................... Gtodiftc.I ' HOUSE? Call Gini;haql ........ ,.............. T1..'<16JG.'708S S81·5294or 979·4743 ~!..' .. ~m681c tile. Reas. wny11.Cri:eesJ.962·1883. Steam clean or shampoo Dtg It Landscape Main· ••••••••••••••••••• •••• Gir~ Free est 645·5l23 Urick , Block Slumpi.loni: _,.,.. also upholstery·all work tenance: Mow & E~ge. SkJpl~~der1 Dump Truck. ~ Planter:. & Walls. Ex· P~IN'flNG . fntr/Ex.tr. •Painling/Pa~nng• llUar. Truck mount unit. Full malnt, hauling, Haulin g, tree work. IMMACULATE CLEAN-1JCrtly .mslal11..'<l. special· E"pr tl .. h?nest. neat. .. Interior-Exterior .. Fr est. reas rates clean·ups. rototilllng, grad ini;. d e m <.> etc ING.YouDESERV Ethc ly priced. Call Bob. Reas. Lied. 96•1·10<tS Llc225398 lnsrd/Guur. 645-371G Free 'EISl. 67S·S.S16 831-1257 B~T. 7~0377 b'73·0164; 536·9906 Dave Call Harris 642·4558 -Don't give up the ship! Trade )"()Ur Old sluf( (Or "List" it in classified. • new goodies with a Ship to shore results!• • - Classified ad. 642·5678 64.2·5678. ApwftnHts............ Ap. l .. ttts u.tw.. Rooms 4000 llldmtrial R...tal 4500 .... trial l...tal 4500 ltentok Wanted 4600 Lost& Found 5300 Ptr'SOftals 5350 Help W ... ecl 7100' • .....................•. ..................•.... ....................... ...••.•................ ....................... ....................... ....•.....•.••.......•. ......••...•.........•. •••......•............. 1"._ 3144 Newport leech 31" Room w / kitchenette WANTED TO REHT l.OsT: AKC Shellie. maJc, Drinking problem? ACCOUNTING CLBK ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• p,u·me. 4 Hrs d"y. M""t SSO week & up. Pn\'ate porty wants lO tri-color. nu me tag has C811 Alcohol Helpline .. ..., New28rlu.xuriouslyap·Ocean!ront.Veryplushl 548-9755 MEDICAL IUILDtHG rl'nt a garage. Call "H ondo" on it , 24hrs-aday835-38aG know 10 key addini,: pointed Turtlerock Glen bdrm. Upper, frplc, gar. ~6.4578 after 6 p.m. & wi893-4087, new pbone it1 mach. Will assist in ru-, twnhse. View comer . all Yrly. 673-6210 Debbie ROO~tS. Sea Lark Motel, askfurStc,·e 840.2201 contact Gary. PREGNANT'! cord keeping & joumaJ • facilities. Owner unable 673,6210 2274 Newport Blvd. Costa in Santa Ana medical office suites H.B. area. Reward. Ca r1 n g conriden ti u I entry posting. Integrated taoccupy. Very reason&· • Mesa. Some rerrig. .1 bl 500 Sq f l 2500 ft counseling & r ererral. D ata Corp ., 2283 ble rale for reliable le· 2.Br. 188· IJS 45th St. up a\·au .• color TV. A:\t, FM avai 8 e. · t. o sq. · BuslneH /lnnst/ 1.ost·Calico eat-small J yr Abortion, adoplion & Fa i rv le w Rd. C M •••• - nant. S645. mo. A,·ail. J_>cr. S350 mo. <7H) radJoa\'all.Weeklyren-Pharmacy . laborator y, X -ray, Ftnanee oldfemvic.HarborV1ew keeping. ~\6-6080. Nov. 1. Dys 645-2233; 6 75 ·837~ eve . <213> lals$60&up.&i6-7""5 outpatient surgery, all specialties in ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hills. Broadmoor. Left APCARE $47·2563•----------•!• Evs,833·8282 937.0321 Ext32Sdays. b 'ldi For leas FURNISHED or luMnffl front leg orange, rt ACCTG. Clerk needed for ••. Ambassador Inn ln Costa w n~. e OpportwMty SOOS black, neck whit~. or & LIHDA & VICKI Newport Co. Exp'd iq L.,,... leach 31 41 GOl'l:eous new condo. 3 br. Mesa. 2Z77 Harbor. Cen· unfurnished. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• block face. Wmn who Outcall M•aoge payabl~. Post.iJig, ac· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2~ ba. pool. IS acre P''l trally located, 235 rooms. JANITORIAL BUSINESS found. cat & called Fri-For .u..... £..-of it! ~uratc. lypist. Dynamic OCEANFRONT l Br, ~ark. Coast al breezes. MANY with kitc hen. day PM please call . ._ ,,_ • corp. w /gd. benefits, balcon.y.newdecor,cpts. ~JS/mo. Newport Ter· pt)one & TV. Swimming C714) 973-tlOI Sa~~~~~~:,~:a again.64-i-450B ServmgaUOrangeCo. 642·7Sllask!orBelty ~-:gar.~.~ race.496-'11ll-poo • :tC'U'Zrl;-._nd tte; W.7313 2 br steps from beach room. Dally & weekly Outstanding money ma . LOST:1\tlle tr1S'b Setter, ICHm!~S All ' latndiwe Al l BR. l blk to bch. Adults. Patio. Monthly s375:, r11tes starting from $-18 a Ing ideas & inventions for B o I s a C h I c a . •M a.Id: • * 4 HrsiDay. To prepare ~&i;~~4:~ioo~n.'r 645-4166or645-3858 , week. OfflceRtwtel 4400 OfflctRttttal 4400 sule. All fields 833..so60, Wes tminster Area. OutcallMassage monthlydistrictnewslet-,. ~ MS-4840 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lcu\•e message for Mr. Reward! 898~956 10AM-2AM 731·4462 ter. bi-monthly s taff'. ... • "·ud· fuJJ k ' h lk Ocean front l lof\ bdrm. Seeley newsletter; Coordinate ~ tow/ llc en wa Inglenook frplc, crpts, HWll. IJ:eacb area furn. LosL Reward. Choe bm SplrihMll Reader district volunteer pro- beach/town. $240. Qwet drps.$300.675-1536 room in exec. home. Dlstributonhipt poodle. Answers to 181!iSo. ElCaminoReaJ gram. Re q 's college area. 497·3l09 Avail. for quiet bachelor EXECUTIVE ROW 1 Inc.. M o N E y M AKER . Cocoa. Vic Adam~ & San Clemente. Fully Uc. training, typing & desire lBd. S3lO. Walk Beach. Westclirr 2br. P2 ba gentleman . Share Restockpackagedcandy F'ain•iew.979-8548 Forappt.492·7296 o xpe rt e n ce ln town. Heisler, adulu, no lwnhous. e. Adults, ~o kitchen. Walk lO beach & Prft= offlc• ·~• I• Hew..,-f. in retall locations. Na-publisbio" /editing & pets $300 mo 1728 Bed sho Men./ Cl I II 11/ T-...........,. rece_.._ a..w... Lost gold rope bracelet L 0 0 K I N G F O R .. pets. 497-3109 . . . . ps . ..,..,.., mo. eun ng c ....._ _.......~ -r· t1unal company wilh Sat. Mt Casa Restaurant AMERICAN SPOUSE! working w/communily B 81 k b h ford Ln. s.&8·7533 ~ ~~ in!,1; ~~ pell>. ·telepluH .,...... Mnice, C411lf"'ttte• thousands or established Ba I P e nn . 654 ·4417, 27 Yr old female, folk g:roups. Send le~r" re-2 r. oc to eac . . .........,,,,or.....,,vu, 1-........._,,,,_ ...__, 111/_.ca•i --rct:11l accounls. From .,..,.,,_,,,. sume to: Personnel Of. V. d 1 2 Br l & apart patio •---. -_,,_.--.--_ • -v,.,........., elussical dancer. ocver 1ew A u ls no pets · ·• · $4500 in vestm ent f1 ee, Laguna Beach $&251 ~0. PhOOJ·JGSJ . ~~ :,~~4~0 beach. $300 ~~ao~!~e·2~.ui;:00v.;~~~ =-=.:..~.=::r.~•ctyt',.~:=g~ secured by inventory. FOUND: Male Airedale ~~~· 0~:;~~W~~=~ Unified School Dislrict,• '•' N L 2 8 t Share b &kit 6753613 Written repurc hui.e type dog.vlc W.18th St . Miss KimMiRa,Kwang SSO BlumontSt,Laauna · agliuna · rfa p • 8 A Y V I E W i n 8 · • Ct ..... Mrlkn ......... • .:uarontec. Gtl•al for C.M.645·8817 H M po Bo Beach,Ca926SL coast ne view r om . f . ., wa oon. . . x ------------Bdrm kltcb & Liv Rm EASTBLUFF. Stunning S27.50 PER WEEK Rn•d. ,.._ $190 per-. am1hcs loo ... out es 132.9,Seoul, Korea .,,. L H p cathedraJ clg,s. wood & 2 br. 2 ba. frplc. Lrg 181..KFROMBCll .• llB. C .. 17141752•7170 available thoroughout Found6mooldM cutorg,_________ Ar.IMA OS . "''ass fplc lge deck. 1 pal10. Pool. :\fature 536-4728,LVE~ISG t he \Vl!stern United & wht Ing h air. vie DIAL-A·SERVICE Clean -bathe-assist. Full 11'1o' ' • aduJts only No pets ~lJles. (;all collect. Gothard & Be ach . ESCORTS.MODELS orP/T.NplBch. bJk to bch & shops. $4.50. ..._ '"" "'u9' · Room with or without t :-.• 842-994.5 ,.. ""'SAGE &W-5460 494•7256• 494.7929 ........ .....,.....,.. • , pcrsun o person .•• r . --------.-•n.no> • . . . meals. Xlnl food . Mesa .. 300 Offiu R.,... 4400 Corbell (714} 547-9858 L" d G h d 8 54().8393 •-•·n-~i 3152 Westclirr area. Lovely 2 Verde area. C.~l . Renhils toSh.re .. ....................... ..oun : rey oun us AMweritM)SerYlce ~.':::.::......... br, adults. no pets, pool. S4S-209S ••••••••••••••••••••••• P ll I l.'d er· SEAFOOD F..A TERY TNiwckp?t.BINvwd.ptDBesc~rlobne ___ iu_k_f_o_r _ex_t_._is __ -1 Graveyard: !i'/Umc & re- 1601 15th St ~-4922 or SHR 2 br ho ..... on e ··I r~' g ou!I 1 0 o ice Tu ke out a nd t able ~ " 11·er ,.,..,:,. .,_ ''--•fl1a DeluxeUt2Br,Sl6S&up, &W-5543 · M. No smoke. refs. Ten· 11~ 1 7'"m 19.2,.· s pace: $150 . mo. up. sen ·ice. Good lease. ticket & other.Jost artl· *KARINS* EOE &:;.8000• ~-· pool & rec room, quiet nls. pool. k itch , nr 5 ;.t: e. e$ · · 67.5-4030 Pnme locatton. Newport clc.673-0101. OUTCALLM~SlGE · · urea.831·7766 S.Cle,..ete 3176 Adams, Brkst. 19861 non-d ~ er. 175 mo. -llchiBalboa. 11AM-2Pllof 9S6·2A43 Apartment Handyman, •• rt le 11.. 3169 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Claremont Ln. HB S7s-890S ev6 Dl't oles w !<et-r !ICrvlre, MEL FUCllS J .. OUND: longbajr a rey general malnt. FUil Ume. r wpoF oc" N 2 b b d •wrox. Nr. O.C. Airport Tiger Cat. Vic. Jtale1gh b ••••••••••••••••••••••• ew ,r. 2 a con o. ""-•. bo d t From S250 752.SG:..'6 Pavilion Realtor675.fll20 Ave & Victoria, C.~t. HOISIDRA WM t3.2S r +. AJ\5,84M347 ocean view, near Stale .-.ee room .,. ~r o an G s · PARK NEWPORT Park. washer/dryer in-!'thlellcally Inclined ~ody t,_°T...t 4lSO EXECUTIVE SUITES HAUTY SALOH 1_64Z-8 __ 1_34______ HAYRIDES A/Pf#Y Cwtritdlott , Bll ch e Io r s • l o r 2 cl. $390. mo. 581·2124 in exchai;ige fo r h ght ••••••••••••••••••• •••• u ea u t i r u I b I d ,, . EMERGENCY SALE! Found: German Shep/· for groups Cost Ii budget control. Bedrooms & Townhous~ housekeeping ln a luxury o ., evenings Need sharp, motivated~ From ~-SO Soutft LCICJll'MI 3116 Oceanside, ca. home. 3ll Ed&ewDler, Balbou Personah.ted phone CO\'· Owner moving, xlnl 3 Bulldog Mix. Gd jumper. 7 days a week -reha~aelt Aart.er. O.C. Spectacular spa. total ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call Ken \n Irvine, Pen111sula.11mgle. ~o. erage,secyi.erv1cc,con/. stullonCostaMesa loca-GoldenWe11t. JIB. Hi 10 minutes from AirPort area. $7SO + recreation progr am. 2l70'l0cean Vista Dr .. apt 553.1222 mo.559•7499 room, xerox & more. lion. Sur rounded by wkaago.847-8165847-8135 i I 8 ls 8 E.. d -.a .... 00 Easy frwy access. Near apartments. Bring offer. Newport-Riv erside bued on exper. Call soc a program. poo . ·· . 180 eg. ocean VJTICe R..tal .... So Coast Pina 666 TIME. 751-1400 LOST.: Blk cockapoo freeway. Minimum of 20 968-746SEves&Wknds. tennl.s courts. At Fashion view, 2 Br l Ba, upper, •~to.,..._ 4300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · C :,.... w,'wbite chest & p&Yo'S. per group. For details, Island, Jamboree & San ref rig, dshwsbr. s ngl ~ .._.... 65• PRA S'°' FT Baker St, · M. ci om lftveltftwftt Ans to "Tippy" Vic. or contact. Kris, 637-8990. APT Managers, mature ... , Joaquin Hills Road gar comm pool & lndry ....................... ._ ""' S22S. 546-2982 Opport.ffy SO Is Majnolia & Adams. Llc.1----------1 eouple. 20 unit chlldnm 17141644-1900 Wt~ & traah pd. Adlts n~ Sem1·invalid lady wlll 1617 WESTCLlf'F'-NB lusiften Rttttal 4450 ••••••••••••••••••••••• #806834 Reward I 963-2276 MASSAGE complex in o ·r a nge •• \' ---------r pets. S<t25 yrly lse. share her s ma ll NB AGT.541·5032 ~/mo Incl. rent. Ex: ho Ith . u ••••••••••••••••••••••• rr you're no\ getting . FIGURE MODILS New duplexes 2·3 br $350 581-0085 mew acttv~ re red I SO I Weitclff Dr. 4 DB.UXE OFC'S 13 S%• return on your in· FOUND: Chihuahua, _It pertence.d only. 752-2881 up )•rly Family & pets lady. Home pnv. Pvt · d brwn. abt 7 to 8 lbs. v1c 1$COITS ok. 67~12 Nice 1 Br', $275. Private room w/bath & meals in Newport Financial Ctr Con/. rm .. seat 25. ull vestment, call San Y Beach & Garfield, kB. OUTC •LL ...... LY Architectural rirm seeks beaeh. Village type at· exch-ang e-Cor Jilt> u.incJOfficeSpoce paneJed.sm,whaeinr~· Ross.Ajax~.837-3744 536-7491 ,. "" receptlonllt/typist. Duplex 11pts. Shores area. mosphere. 499-4644 housekeeping cbore.s & Call on Site Manager ar. 1 or 2 yr. lease. Lake •Average Yield on pay----------6l l•lt 11 Salary commensurate 4bd,2ba; 2bd. lba . Yr Oc f t condo 2 b companionship. P.O. (7l4)642·3lllext 246 Fores t a r ea. Kent offs to Ajax Investors, FOUND: Dove Sund1y ---------1 with exper. 631-1700 lse.(714)956-S87l 3,~nTronable RockD'r._,.!·. Box724,CdM,9262S Ha rk.ins. Jan. thru July, 1977. evening vie Garfield & EXO'TICGIRLS Yvonne ...., _.,., DB.UXE OFFtCES 714-581-9393 State law permits a pre· Magnolia ll. B. 968·4281 Maasage & Modelln11 ----------2 Br. dishwhr. new carpet mo. 499-2781; 646-8635 Shr beaut. fum 2 Br 2 Ba Comm! & lndstl spaces. payment penaJty charge at\ 6PM OutA:allS4Z-J1891$43•3250 , ________ _ $335 yrly; no pet/child .&-I WMl ,,.,,.IMci c:oado In Nwpt. Close to 200 to 2000 sq. ft. As low MISSION VIEJO equivalent to 809' or MSEllBLY 31136St.644-4340frplc -;;:=U:.twltisMd 3900 bch.213·7Q3.-038ldys as35rsq.ft.LagNlguel& ShoppingCenter1800 sq. months unearned in· LOST: Ork Brwn/Blk, RELAXINGMASSAGE I Vi . ft. for lease. Lge lighted terest on the balance. w,'ome calico. Log. balr Bob James-Lie Masseur OoyouUkelhebeach? •••••••••••••••••••••••Share H.B. home w1pool, Miu on eJo areas. sign. 3 way visibility. Mortcage Brokers. or fem cat. Vic. CdM, Outcall9-9,494-5111 ProCe$sional decor, 1 br. THE EXCTTlNO wash,'dry. $:150 mo + 1'1 andy to S.D. Frwy. Spectrum Properties. rerect to California real Cat ama r an St. 10/6. _____ ..;__ ___ -! A rare chance at S310. PALM MESA APTS. uti.I. 962-6120. Call: 831-l<WO 495-47il dents only. SS!l-1703 NEWS RE L EASE HllOS 1510W. 8alboa675-7101 MlNUTF.sTONPT Maleaharelux Condo Npt .. I= Offfce1 ---------WRITING. lmprovo club BCH ,,,_ • •Gu ... • MOftty to I.om 502 LOST: Lnd Hair Doxje & b"•in•"'" publl"''tY or IN"HSTRW. Spacious J br. crplll. drps , · Bch w,aame. Own bdrm 1 ONTH FREE -",. " -._. "" • uu bltns, frplc. Gar. No Aach, 1&2 BR. & ba. Jacuzzi, sauna, FUU service. No lease re-DOWNTOWN SHOP •••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~~ 85:~~'::.~el~t:n~ job potential. Learn pets. AduJts only. Near fromS220.&up. pool&gar.Oceanview.2 q'd.2Q0.600sq.ft. Plenty 470 sq.rt .. next lo city ht,21tdlr3rdT.D.'1 Harbor, C M . 10/11. news IC.YI• in 2 lessons WOllEIS Hoag Hospital. S375 . Adults. No rets blks tobch. $225. 645-2094 .. parking. $450/mo. CaJI LOANSAVAJLABLE UC -cA r r 0 m p r 0 • 1561 Mesa Dr. or parking. 208" S .E . Realonomlcs 675-6700 Credit not important. "'~~ WOKDPOWER, 3400 •St.tWOftcTo*r• 548·85 (5 Blk~ East of Newport Fem. nds rmmttoshr 2br,. Bris t ol S t . ~cwport lroker, 493.3 102 Lost.miniature bile ~le, Jrvine Ave, 1048, N.B. *'ockig1ri 3 Br 2 Ba, beam clgs, Blvd.) 2ba apt~; mi to bch. $145 BeDch. S.S7-7010 I trial Rttttal 4500 ---------1 l rang, vie 16th & Irv. ans SSG·7028. •T..-.. AtM•l•rs wood panelin g, fplc , MG-9860 mo.646-5942evea ••••••••••••••••••••••• Money Available, muny d ----------1 ,_ "'-h ~so Ai I I I l l J to Tony. Rewar . DANCEOFFUN •SMtilPh.~ja.alwiftt bltns, c ..... e lO""' • .,. Cutdowa rp a ne overa . n· sources, al pro eels 6<16-S894,675--0326 Bt.n nude girls dance & LCMicilr.c:i yrly. 1173-7684 Uv'--s..--.11 dusllial Park on Orange $50K mio. 752~ rap session. lOAM t •-hllHll•t • ....,_,....._..... County Airport, 3200 sq. FOUND: Cockapoo & •ln..toryClerb :\Br 2 Ba w/buy view. 50' u~~ e ~Share[-~'."rueo,:~~~-~~ ft. ()(flee-warehouse fo r ~~·· Tnnt 5035 Pekapoo male dogs. Vic. 2AM Mon-Sat 625 N. ·---·d A.tM:lllllllF• . I from beach. Out side \...l..CJ\ UN.U'\l•tu ;; lease. $750. (714 )642-9542 ~ Npt. Island. At pound! EucUdAnoh S59·6150 _,....APPLY llhow~r.W/D.673-8218 ./_~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• S75-32A5 FREESESSIO?ilW/AD UU '-i« ~ O.)l.C«h~" ./'=:.., •COST A MESA It Retired couple has money 3141 c...-Drin • $395.3br.2 ba,blockto cudt1A11.tt ~o•..q /M--..-Bu.•.&ind.parksw/or-to loan onlst&2ndTD's.Found ; Sliver Cbaln AQUA RI AN AGE 546-4741 beach. Encl. gar. Yard. BIG' Forover"syrs.832-4134 ~::;:.=...... flee. 1300 to 1980 sq. rt. Agcnl.496-<MIOO w/ornament. Laguna ~::!'~~~~:Cor~i':~~~ (Across From ~~g:lpet.s. 642_1603 al to share My 2 br Pk ., Imm. occupancy. From lkb. Please call to Iden· Analysis. 631_2853 Orange Co. Airport) Npt apt. Spa, gym. pools 19" ~· rt. Leasing ore 9 to WE BUY FIRST & Uly. 768-50'73 Equal OpPor Employer L d be h • ni 5 daily. 711 W. 17th St, SE_ C 0 N D T RU S . • J:: l! we. con o near ac . et.c. Call A ta 644-9040 #C-4. 1835 Wh ittler Ave. D EED s. Ao ENT. Found: Male Collie. Hunt-' ~ :S ~~~~l5l.eves l. There's Slmllllon In daysor&U-729Seves. SAM CLIMEHTE llB·l2 or coll 642.4463; 714-496-0800 lniito n Be ach are a . •••••~•••••••••••• ---------•recreation : Tennis. LIOOfemtoshrhm. MeclcalMll&.a-. 642-7604 962-8497or~ _,.W..t.d. VOLT 't • ""'• "'"'' _. '' ·,. I 7075 ~SEMI.EIS •. ' I I . . I•, . ' .... •• I Steps to ocean 2 br 1 ba swimming, billiards, 2 $200. plu,., ulll. -.. LOWEST Lost·. De•f Dalma'lan Parking. $325 .. Winter. . health clubs, tree Sunday G'7S.ll066or 759.1501 Ideal Medical or Dental •800SQ. IT.• " • ••••••••••••••••••••••• &73·2-$93 brunch, parties and suites. Plush carpets & 1437 N. Manzanita. lnhre1tRah1 puppy. Nwpt Heights Challfeur position want· ---------1 MUCH MORE! •BESELECTlVE• central air. 55< per rt. Orange. Marty, S48·030t 1st T.D.'a, alM area. 642•5141 ed. Corporate & privute " BR. 2','.I bath, one block Plus beaulirul singles. Call 645-7465; 640-3468 Call YEATS COMPANY 5 4550 lnd T.D. i.o-.. LOST: 2 Fem. dogs, Tan refuenccs avail. Cull for fi'om pceon.5495. Winter 1&2 bedrooms furnished SHAREAHOME-APT 498-0660 499·2237 tonlcJe L'alro.•tTermssi·ncel949 Germ . Shorthair a ppt. or resume . For prectslon electr~ mechanical auembly ot •.,• small components. Ex-• • per. pref'd. Days 0 01¥. .~, rent al, ask for Les. or unfurnished. Sorry, ••••••••••••••••••••••• " ,, "Utica'•. Blk Cocker J .W.Stephen 1-870.1639 S.10-1151 aduJlS only. no pets. The •Hon. Shmi-Serv. Executive office s pace, Approx. llO'X70' fncd S.....,. Mtg. Co. S ' Eb .. VI --..-------- STACOSWITCH IHC • • J 139 Boker Cotta Mseau ~ • 1 _ --------• ••7 1nclud1'ng recept1"onisl rd 11 .. _ CM pan. ' OllY .• c Sl .. A"'Pdedlca'""' female finest in country club liv· Perfectlonal Screening ya . sma ware • .,.e, • 64~217 1 545-0611 t u & y kt "'"' ""' Yearly 3 hr, 2 ba, 1 2 blk Ing at 0 price you can af-No Fee Until Placed Crom $150 mo. lo $385 mo. area. 673-SSSG l\ agno 0 or own, youth .worker desires Job 549·3041 F.quaJ Oppor Employer ba)'.& bch~e_ncl. gar. No 1 d. B t I lOAM-8PM ~2494 Prestige location. Call l1B.963-8163Reward! beJplng local teenagers. ior . oommu e scrv ce 762-8321 T 0 RA <.i .!!: SP ACE. ~etllefth/ (213)276-5587 •--------- ..:.pc_·_ts_. S400 __ ._544_·1-103---1 avtuloblc. Reepon nnmate for de· downtown Cost.a Mesn. PersorM111/ $50 REWARD ASSIMILBS • IA.YfltOHTA." luxe NB ocnrrnt apt. Ofnce s~ace HOO.sq ft. Appx. 1000 sq. n. S'lSO. LestlrFMd ror lost Brief Case.~ HlfpW~ 7100 XJnt beneflta. Small co. 1 WlthfantasUcview.2 br, Oakwood Sl 7S. M/F. M ike or dlvided 1nto ~omces on mo.S48·3402 •••••••••••••••••••••••for contents. Brown ••••••••••••••••••••••• Smallcomponeni..G~, 2 ba, Terraces. Pool. Garden A partments Steve 673-6801 M~a Verde Crpts, drps, .+.wc11"""' 5100 l~other . left In O.Cl•--------•I m unoal d exterity &. " Boat dock 0 voll Sub 1 ' • A/C. 50< sq. rt. Call STORAGE SPACE. Cosln ••••••••••••••••••••••• Airport Terminal. Call Acctng Bkkpn,g eyesight. J vr mln OXJI. te r r . parking. 1''ull He..,..,.lffcll/.._.... Nice 2 bdrm 2 ba Hodley,963-8933 ~4ij5442:i~Ct.R.V,etc. A.TTOIHIYATLA.W &16-0718aft.Spm. TIM..OIARY Cn11Carol58Hl30.U.V., .security. S700 mo. 880 l rvinc (at 1'7thl townhome on Eastslde U>VELY Fashion 18land DIMKRUPTCJ $95 L.osT: Slamesemalocat. Register Today to work1_n_re_a_. ______ -' 646-8316 _ ___ R4~05.'i0 C~I. Close to OCC & shop-offices Comp. furn 'd & RtMall W..tecl 4600 DM Blue Pt. Sept 30th. vie on various accountln( & ~ • ping. sn50 + '•· 00·3239 derorol'd. S225 per nrc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• DIVORCE ~S Spyglass Hill. CdM. bookke4Wini aulan· AsslBookkeopcr toaoo OCEANVl EW yrly 2 Br I Ba, duplex. "so per cno. 644-6780; 642·3639 •M•--lnch/S..... oft6PM Mr . A nthon y Female seekJng 1 nr Afit "Sirakit". Rewerd. menu. ork doso lo Jr.ProjCnlrlr $14K -,...-· "•""" ho 1 your home. 1''l11 ure oh ... 1700 16th St. 714·64v-tVOtO or use yr y rental n 64"250 640.0855 Cl k S ..xCl'elanca to $990 ' <Dover at 16th1 f~emale lo s hore apt Nwpt Och. Around 3.Sth -er s to r. Accoun· Reception111t. $875 ON BAY 2 Br 2 Ba. view, 842.8170 w/same. Near beach. *COSTA MESA• to 42od tit area. Will pay Lost Ir FcMMd Sl OO Loet Blurr1 maJe cat. wht tont1 needed t hr uout Irvine Perl'IOnnel AJrenc:y • • ar. $650 mo. yrly lie. R 4000 Call art 5, 673-6704. Delwce otnce, 711 W.17th up to $2.50/mo lncl'g ulil. ••••••••••••••-••••••• ~t!!~.~~22 & tail . Orang:~rt llalf'5 '488E17th Costa MtH 833-G442evea. •=••••••••••••••••• rrofosslonal or Busl· Sl, Unit C-4. 830 sq. rt. 675·66S4af\6 pm. Lo8t orFoWldapet?C;tll AccountcmJ)ll Suite22l 642·l41o 38r, 28a, oven & range, Sleeplna nns $7~1105 mo ncasman ahare exclusive S291.&t2·4463 l Br Apt. with fireploce Animal Assl1Hance Loet1m111l wht fe m poodle :SOOS. Maln.Stc50\ ~ , : dshwshr . refrlg , All SSQ. wk. Shore kit/ hme in Emenald D~y .. MISSJONVIEJO clean for newly married LeagueS3'7·2273no fec. vie Ilg\ Bch. Rc:ward. No.Towtr.Union&nk AUTOLUBF.MAN , " Wllhr/dryr. patio, :J blk11 bath. Shown· Mon·Sat Ocean Vu. many xtras. Great view, 200 11q. n. & coup le. In La gun a . 536-SMO,S36"6SSS In TheCltyoCOrangc Xlnt opp0rtunlly. llrly to bch. $43S mo. Yrly Jse •·only". Call a ft lpm. Howard Mango 645·2521 up. Utll. pd. S~clrum Please coll 493·6222 Som F\nd what you want tn Flnd what you want in 714/83$-4103 wages+ porc:cntuae 875-9582 Refs req'd. 556-0058 (DnS serv> Propertlel!. 495-4771 to5pm Dally Pilot Classilh:da. Daily Pilot Classlrleda. fn3-3320 ,. .W,Woated 7100 HefpW•t.d 7100 HltpW-'•d 7100 HlfpW..ted 7100 ~W..t.d 7100 ....,W_... JIM ••••••••••••••••••••••• , ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• J ..................................................... . DJ8 DAIL V PILOT Frlday, Oetober 14, 19n .... w..w 7100 Help W..t.d 1 roo Ktlp WClftfed 7100 fwNtwe RepofrMClft JAMrtORIAL ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• t-;xru.r'tJ A•• Iv 17022 MUlll be ablt' lb run rlt>or NURSIS AJDlS Prl.ntlnn , RESTAURANT SALIS A ~ mou , ~ · ,.p "· " 1' /'J' or P /T, ovtr 18, no Part Umo, f.lpm. Moq ~ o 0 \e.1 Sh d IOYS WANTED COUNTU GIRL Von Kurm.tn, lr\'uw machines. Day work. & OllDULIES phone calls apply lo Fri per<ect for CoUe • ew et~elp. op nee li AGES I 0.15 Santlwu:ht·i . Mon t-'ri. GENEHAI. 01-'i"lC£. for P>in or J<'/hme. 546·0766 ~~~ ~~fit 8u~v1~~ IM,.EOIA.TE pen.on. bctwcrn 1,0.ll11m Stu'd•nt, no prtHJI:! Top wag~ pi.id . .t-:ni:me Ce>t1ta Mesa area. 1-:arn llam·2vm. SS6 07110, Uie pcr:.on ~ho want:. JEWEUlY SALES c.·M G4~-~ 205S u OPENINGS only SWENSEN_S ICE s1tlet or quotas to IQffl. Steamers enJl pnanters C!0-$30. per week. Get lrvlne v11r1ety 1n u contem J . Jll!:ltB£UT CREAM. 2l7 Broadway, 531-08ll buflen & polishers, up: ~ng. m·w customrrs for ---vorary !>U1re. he wall HALLJt:WELLl.;ttS NURSES AIDES l..ui; Deb. •--------- bohitory ~hDmpoOl'l"I>, 1Hl!: DAILY rn.OT No h11n1l11· phon{', ty11c. Now lnterVll'Wlnll for ux () nl II bf f PRESSMEN check out. pick· up & de· delJvci:tni or collectuu:. _DATA PROCESSOR m~d i. rec & llcet's puyu· pcr'd c orc('r m1nc1od N~s~~~~su f::~~~d ~~ SALES Uvery. Apply at C...11 this number to up ply K4.'ypunch w, tJutu entry hie. &lo-&lS4 aft. 6 sales persons. fllemcanl trulnt't!S. Full or p lime M /f 20.SS Harbor 01 CM '45-4254 ~Lal.Jon~. system 3 or 32 working cond&. All <'O Apply l'ork Lido ~onv 645-1030 ' or any icmall t•omputer benefits. Apply in {'Rnlcr. 41;6 f111gsh1p Rd, RETAIL CLERKS' SLAP A SMILE ON YOUR FACE & A BULGE exper, prcf'd. Opµor. to GEH 'l LABOR person. 32 Fui.hlon IUSDRIVYS learn proi.:rumm1ni;. Squurc,S!lnLaAnJ N.O.G42 l!O-"' Need (2) Im med. 4 1~ F.time •11111tts. Also need URGENTLY HEEDED Hurses Alct.1 MUST ni:: Al:lt.t; i·o Sl'.:T ·LI P AND OPl~RATE OLl> C.P . 12 AYON Hrs/day. Start $1.656, ht. temporary help, nex1hll' Mu!il havt• phone & relia J. Hcrl>\-rt Hull J eweller:. EAper'd 7 J 30. Country Lngunu &uch UnHied hours l•ku11c contucl Ille lrunsi)Orlutlon. LM" ~>l!J 13711 18 Ll!:T1'1-:Rl'ltt:SS. UTOTEM Con•.Mnct Mritta Pos1lions open bl, 2nd & 3rd sh ifts In Son Clemente•. La.:una 8'!11ch & Dana Pt. Other urca11 havo QJl()lllO!l:S ulsu. Nu cxµer. req'd. Apply •l IN YOUR WALLET ChrlthM• hntin9t leglltMow ForAVOM School l)lstrl Cl . Cull .,..rliQnncl ofrlcc, " CASI 111-:tt Crc<l11 t'lcrl. C 111 b C' 1' n v Hom c • "'-& shorl t1•rm ass1on. •1•1 '""'I 494-8013 or 494-8546. South Coaat rnent:.1. I lohdoy & "a~· a N<,-.•dtd F, 11mc pos .~ · '""1 A U D I '11 I 0 N A L I.': X P E It I ~~ N G !'.: 0 N MUI.Tl, l)AVll)SON, OH Al'Ot.LO WOULD ui-; l ll·:t.PFUI,, TIME/LIFF. LlBRArtn.:s 11011 botb (ulJ & pa.r~ lime posltitm.5 uvoill. CommunltyHospltal 11(111 pa). lf(lsp1t:ilizat1on F.'l'lM!':Slol·kClrrl. --------• lcterla Industrial. c.M 3tsn<.:ousl Hwy pl:in uvall. c:Eo'n 1•lean1111( ISt NURSING RENISENTATIVES Be=il time to establish customer11. Interested 1 Call 540.7041 or Zenith 7-1359 ar"11 . Grill "'ork, Soullll.o..iuna,9~tl77 •WAREHOUSEMEN " " ,, l,!lfl Wl'UPl)ln).: t•ashicr, gtmcral. Mon· <lll',,·\3l I •STOCK CLERKS Apply In )\('r~011 l of our stores. 4 l''un lovln; artlculat-0 Individuals who are cagcrtoJearn how to make top $$$$$$ Fri. 6:30pm-midniJ:hl.1-----•SHIP/RECEJVING SouthCoai.L Plata ATTENDANTS Sal llam·Spm. 870-6373· DELIVERY MAH •FORKLIFT OPRS :mJ Urc:.tol St. C'M lfNDERY. EXPHIEHCED A.ND TRAINEES 258H Newport Blvd ID Mesa 640!·7702 Cil WA.SH HELP '.\I us l IJ e h u:. k y ro r I nterv1cws R :1 Mun l•'ri K-c,-m-cl h-cl-p, w<•ckeml 11 H · f1111..tlme liabysltter'wanted.prerer Ovt?r lll.Full-T1mc furnituredchvcr)'.•'lcun Al'l'LY in w ,i.oml· wnkcl.1y AUShlfts WJ::OfFER · Reta1ISales We Offer: Hourly s.aary Gucrn. CGINNulqn lnctfttl•tloMtse• adull woman 1 or 2 niles ME1'ROCAH Wr\Sll UJ>. :inll ndd Juhs P:irt !>r Wt1rk. Own trun~. Call f1>1 Will Train •EXCELl.t-:NT Chest & Gomes Unlimil k S I CdM ~Harbor Bl .C~! l ull lame. Apply In uppt.540-4234 FRINGf;1n :NEflTS 1:'(!. 2700 W. Coast llwy w · a ary open. 1---------1 pcr:wn 1931 Nc1q1ort &Certify •DAYSHWT NU. A specially game ~~-Cal l 8·lO p m r wash help. over 18. Blvd.C :\t. LAI TECH •0\'1-;RTIMI:; store is !lcck1ng one CALL US TODAY AND-STAIJ--u SMIUN ---------·Ask (or G"e<irge at PCn D r r.: f <.:ahr he. w I yr mm CX· lnt.•rvw":. hl'lcJ dall> perm. full tlmeemployc:c BABYSITTER needed. and Balboa Bh·d or call c werymcn •M earl) Jf48 Campus Drive ~er rnr p ~llmc Wlend lilic1· 1 Ufll Contact Nun. PJ..EASE.Af.PL \' ~ also one part time p Lime my home. S. E. 642·146lafl7PM • A:'tl Nc"spuper Jdn·ery 541>-474 1 work. Will be own lni:Pt•rsomwl. IN PERSON TO e mployee ro -r thu Huntlnglon Bch. Mon '" C.M. S500 per mo. 1 \cross f''rom supervisor A' 1ul 1"11. Chnstmas seuson only. Fri,2·SPM.Call"'ftSP'*. CA.SIUER&HOSTESS +bonw; 5'1S·l7IO. .. .. & · BEVERLY Pleo.seapply anpcrson. .. ... Exper'd nt.'ed. Apply in --- -Or:in.:e Co. Airport I .... t :SUtl 2 :J()pm-11 pm MARTEc· 968-7071 persop l\litla Mexican DENTAL n,•r pt. Bu<;y !::<iWJIOpporEmplb)•cr l:>'nl llpm-7ain. 171•11 MANOR ------• Babysitter. mature, fo Restaurunt !">47 W. 19lh Pedo o<c. J-:iqi'd Gc1 8J8·9600ext JOl Com•ale:.eenL llo:.p1lal Retail Sales 8l:H095 infant. Day &ior eve hrs. St. C.M. 642-97&4 salary benefits. S-&11·5SHH C111~harn Girl housecln~ Lei:al Secy Ret·cpl. Ex· 21-152 V10 ~tradu REPR Q OU CTI QNS IF YOU CAH lrv.Call 752·1301 CA.sHllRCLERK DENTAL ASSIST. :.cn·1t·c n<I'> \\omen p I, per. prcf'd. Xlnt 1yp1nA. L~~~4n1:~~~A APPLY YOURSELF TIMl/UFI UIR~lllES, IMC~ Equol Opp Emplyr m /f BABYSI ER. 11 mo old F/time Days. Good sal. Penoctonll:.t needs rull lop S. cur n~c l>l5·S_l_23 __ , ~~-b~8 fo~ ~n~t,.~.:; ~~~:.' Equal Oppty i!:mployer INC YOU CAN WORK •--------- Thur's & Ft i. 8am-5pm. CaJI 4pm-10pm 646·6676 time assist. Exper'd t:x. Girl J<'r1da\ for Arch1Lcc· ----3311 W. MorArthur 81 ln ourhome.840·3l27 pand1.'<i duu~s oppor X· tur11lhrm~Nel'd\h1ttyp· LEGAL SEC"Y For busy - -SANTAANA, CA AT THE SALES&STOCK .---------1 CASHllEJl r ay ecr_;. r_cq cl. Sal open •ni: & bookkeeping skills. two man ll.B. office. job ()(fie~ Deh ve~y Boy, neut STOREKEEPER Comlemporary r~t,ail Banki F.'time, s harp. growth ll.B.84~·~1. &IOSOOOdys requires xlnl skills . Valid Calaf D river ~ An Equal a quality men's & bov's store needs talertted ng co. 5 Loe. Over 20, we DENTAL ASSIST. ------• Salary depends upon ex· License. f1time, apvlY In Opp<>rtunity store in Newport Beach. SliJeslady. Full or tN-rt OPERATIONS train. OrthodonllC orrll"t', GIRLS NEEDED perience perso~SeeMr. Fuentes, J:;mployerl\I F Emphash1 on leisure time. Must be exper. SUPERVISOR METRO CAR WASH chmrside. £xr1e_r. prct Sandwich deli very, 5 847-6041 ut Ro •rt Hein, Wilha m U.S. Cith~enship Rcq'd. we 8 r a nd ac t iv c Salary plus commh1slo._ 2950 Harbor Bl c M <lu)'!> wk. 4 hrs duy. ()w11 l·'rosl & Assoc. 1401 Quail . Please call 644·265l OT Oynamlc bank has lm·1 _______ , _. __ ._1 Non.smoker. I Duy wk. transp Earn ovr $:j.50 Liquor Store Clerk SL. Newport Heh sporuswear. Wre ~el sir.e an upply ln person. med.operungfor exper 'd ·vu Engineering Desiun 979-141.10 hr Cull 8am ·l"m . Mature.cxpr'd.Appl} in -ener getic u lime .1.--1 Operatl·ons Superv1· ·or at " " OFFICE n.-t:ty ....... ~. salesman w/mrn's retail ...,...~ ourTuslln ofc. s Dr.arts man, f u II or DENTAL ASSIST;.\NT ~IO ~Xl!I person. 895 W 19th St. ,._, "" ....... _...~ expcr, who would like 29 Fashlon tslnnd, N,.8. Apply personnel dept. p,llme. Sal open depend· Pt•ridonLbH .:1rl olCICt• G CM. r osit ion a\•a1ia l>ie 111 lnspedorfTec:h res ponsibility & the opp· SALES $,....,..."GO I "uK 1 n g ~po n ex p er. & in Qn.ta Mesa. part lime ronny, . Newport l:Jch firm in Xlnt oppor 111 sm111l t•o ly 10 learn more about """""" """ qualihcauons. Apply. t»S-7682 WM.-e Are You? Liquor SI ore employee vull 1ng a vunely uf ac for quahf1t'd man. Mu:.t h • 11 b . Telephone Sales person 535 E. lsl Sl. Rm 201 South Coasl Engineering · '--VC't.'<lccJ rt•llrt·d mother 10 O\'cr 21. Apply in pcrs!>n, L 1v1t1 es. Pr cf er ex have 2 yrs min ex per m t c men s rel a usa· needed for fast growlng Tustin. E.O. E. Service • .t92·3241, San DENTAL ASSISTANT help raise bcuullful bllby !lam-noon, 30832 S. Coast pcncnce w1Lh Rai.h: IV electronics. Age open. no:,.._... ---',........t company. Best training -... -------ICJemente. Receptionist. full 1lmt• i:irlforworkingmothcr. Hwy.So.Laguna_. __ computer <.:all646S076 Ha r d work er. Xlnl ..... ,.w,_ program in So. C8#i£ • . ---------~---... -----! for dentist ore m Costa s l>ays week, ref's rcq'tJ. Ute Bookkeeping & Lile E~ Ball, ~nc. benefits Mission Viejo is to apply yOW'HH Guaranteed salary + Mesa, 645-7508 r..11 ,..5......... ( area. Call Carol 581·3830 Se nd r es um e l o : bonus while in trainine. Banking CIVIL "" '" 0""" - ---Mac hinery work 0 OffSET PRINTER Classified Ad 1!986. Daily For personal interview NOTIS-lr-COUiC. -a..GIMEH-ING--.... Dµ''ff AL ORTllO Grecnhow.e, full t1m1'. nu locks~ilh C:ill &42 4762 l.250 ~I ullllith. ·IO hr 4 dJ' Quafity Assuranu PJIO(, PO Box 1560. Cost a conllct Mr. Rice639-4620 TIONTS.Lfft Design Draftsman. Ex· Cha1rs1dl.', exper. & cAper nccc's ~fukprCT. -MACHllUST wlr ~'trncf11-s . t.'-Mil lft~4n ,Ca,.9-2,626. Dynamic bank has im· p"d. in w:iter & sewer ROA. -1 '~ Da)\ or PT, Jackwn & Perkins 6757 Mm 7 yrs exp. Lari:t• fl79·7fi(i(J M F Good visual & ------• -S•MDERS med opening for Bank fac's. Subdh'lsion des1~n N.B. Call &i2 2b26 _ Irvine. :'\r Sand (;anyon vanety or work. Tup p:i) manual dextenty Elcc-Molding & Belt. Apply, exper'd Notes & Collec· knowlcdgetJ~1rable. AP· Denlal Assistant, µru-Hl\c1 ~--IJJ.a w 2 wks vucullon Will Order Processor tron1cs backgrounci 6 RH'S & LVH'S 17622 Von Karmao, t&onTeller. P}Y in person to: Mr. gressl\"e 11 B. ofc nl.'l.'d:. considc•r hiri n g Sr. Custofftef'Stt•ice Yrs min ex per. Call All s hirts . Appl y ,1_1rv_in_e_. _____ _ Apply Al: t uentes. Robt Bein. exper'd asM lo start im GUARDS Ci ll ~ c n . any age or youn.: blo medical Carol 5!11 ·3830. Xlnt Garfield Conv. Hosp, SA.UCIH/ZNDCOOIC SANTIAGO IAHIC Wm. Frost~ Associates med. Sal open. 962 5545 L'mvtrsal is expanding 5"18·7711-1 rorp. Self :itarter w1 good benefits. M. V a rea. 7781 Garfield Ave, 11.8. 1 b ,..,_11 535 E. l.slSt, Rm 201 at 1-101 Quail St .• Nwpt -its operation~ in Or.mi:c phone manners. rrer t yr .~~~-;.-;.-;.~-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-: __ 84_7_·967_1_._E_O_E_. ____ , Exper'd, n. g ta. '-ill Tustin E 0 E Bch. DENTAL CROUP Prat'· County & nl't.'<ls •10 1mrl & MACHINE OPER. Hard· , Xlnl th t 6 7 5 • 13 74 bet Wee D . . . . . cxpr.' J:row Po en •RE.&.L EST•TE* no.a c..-i 9am·<"'m. ~========~========~I lll.'e in Newµt . Bch. m•1xb full t1ml' i.ecurttv of mge ChlK'ker opera Lor ( llul & bcnchl~. Newport ~ ~ "",,_,.....,..SCH" , __ _,"11"=--------front omce help for ut·cL:. flcers 1mml'd. t-;xpcr. rwt yrs. exp. pref'd, but no &>ach 631·18$7 New or experienced. Top 7-~::lO. smull conv. hosp. Seanntr'tss, ~'f ---------i1Cle3 ningpersoo control & denllll m~ur nee. Top WllAl'S for ex. nec L W ages l'Om ----tnnning a vail. Private Cost a M esa nreu. Banking LIKE TO CLEAN? Must have recent cxr~r rtt.>r. IJl'rsonncl. Car & mensuratc to .:ibd1lY' P « r l t i m" c> II i t· <' ot!1ce's. Large udvertls· ~·3001. Ca nva s Pro 11 c: t.a • LOANSlRV.CLK The University Athletic &iQ.lll2. phone req, 21 & over. C~111 ·714·63HM73\ dt'rk mcsst?ni:,·r. ~t·n'I ingbudgel.Call now! ,_642_·_7238 __ . ___ __...___ Mariners Savings is Club, Newport &!ach, Veteran:. & retiree:. dcricaldutie!>.549·2988 PACIFIC COAST RH 11·7 seeking an exper'd loan ~s responsible, cons-Dental chairs1dc 2nd a:.· welcome. Uniforms £urn. •MAIDS• Supervisor . 80 Bed service clerk. Must be cientous.highly motival· sistanl. Exp'd . Mon· Time &IJ forovcrM hrs The lnn alLa~una PART-TIMESCHOOL PROPERTIES E.C.l-'.Goodsal&fringe •Secretaries, BklC1u:a (f'/Chg), A/Rec Clits, Gen. ore. Legal ~JS, Receptionists w /typin&- Employers Pay AU Feu capnble ot handling In· ed. mature person to Thurs. hrly. 962·3319 Apply !112 und l 5 Mon· 211 N. Cst Hwy, LaRuna IUS DRIVERS •631-0400• bene. Mesa Verde Conv. surance & gen 'I loan clean kitchen. lounge & DISHWASHER F"r1. • MAlDS WANTEO 84.47 to s.1.93 hr A!l1>IY ---------Jlosp.G61CenterSt,C.M. servke work lnclud. racquetball courts. Hrs Apply in person, Mui Univ.,-sal Protection Don Quixote Motel I m m e d I 41 l e I y , ---------MB·S585 bcnes &demands. Type 3PM·l0PM o r 6PM -doon·s Iris h Pub. 202 1226W 5th St SA 2100NewportBl,C~1 Cap1s t r an'l Lug unu REALESTATESALF.S •----------' 5C>-60 wpm. Xlnt salary, 12AM. Call Jan bwtn Newport Ctr Or. N.B • • • • Real.'h Re1:ioru11 Occupa· EARN MORE SALES working coads & benema 8:30AM & nooo for appt. 1---------HA.HOYMAN MaintetMMC• MGR l1onal Program, 2fa900 SUrrLEMIHT U& Reioden Agency 4020 Birch St. Ste 104 . inc:Jud.dental.ApplyAt, ,7_52_?._7905 _______ 1 DOITYOURSELF E 'd fo r w ood w o rk1·n .. AcJ·achcma. SJC 92675 At least S3SO on each y~ .. l ... COME u-...: Sa . -xper m carpt'nlry & " ..... 31 8 p 1 transaClion. Strong locaJ VVft "" 15,"'c .... y'~" Dv1ngN.s 8 LERJ C AL-Brighl Wo uld yo u e njoy a electn cal work i\pplyin machinery & rclnlcd ........ l f~ll:. •• <><;ltnn!I open farmwilboperungsiare SSSSSSSS Newport Beach 833-&190 Call for Appt/Eatab 'SS .., annera r. · · person.whose duties will challenge w,xlnl earn· person. Gu l liver's electrical requirements UllU ' ...... KOK sidential & investment p RTTI E F.qualOppEmplyrm/f inch.Kie, general ofc. Iii· ings? I( you have 6 hrs Hcs l :iur(lnl . 18 t82 Apply, 17622 Vo PASTlUPARTIST d1v151on.CALLS56-2660. A M SiCRET.AIY ing .,watchboard lighl per wk. call for mtervw \lacArtbur Hlvd. Irvine Karman. Irvine. TELEPHONEWORIC • ---------• ' " ' Mon-Thurs betwn 9:im-Inking & dr:inmg cxpcr .• -SELECT OUS W1VIS Position In NewP6'rt BEAUTYSALON typing. and some de-a ppt. M rs. S will , MaintettG1tCeMCW1 !17'J71.tl0 H E Bucb ... froat offlc• HAIRCUTI'ERS, "·sis· live r y work. Xlnt,7_5_1·_56_1_3. ______ IOum only P 0 0PERTIES COUIGESTUDEHTS k ood '"ill ,~ bcnefilS. Contact Person··-__ _...;. ______ , Student for lite clennup & •l wor -g •• a re· ~:~:~u~i~~_m~:::!d: nel,JackG. RaubCo. l2S DONUT MAKER, All Housekeeper. Refined. m uint. 20.40 ll rs wk. PAYROLL S800Up Real Estate Sales People G uaranteed Hourly quired. Sec:reYrial elt• Milch &Co. Haircuu ers. Baker St .• Costa Mes a, night shifts. 25·15 Yrs noQ·smok1nic lady t o Tire's Rentals. 193 1-'r cc Large co bas wanted. Up to 90/lO% Wage Plus Bonus. 5:30 perlenee preferred. Call Nw ... ~h.~·1l9'7 92626714_751_2510 old.Apply,DK'sOonuts, ~hareourlovely homeln r-.:ewport81vd,CM cipe,nang fo r lndw w 6 comm. split. Nwpl Bch pm to 8:30 pm. Call Ann. LlNC:O REAL ... 135 E. 111h Costa Mesa. xchg for sharing her mos expcr 5 SlJlr ro. 631.oooo 64&-4223 or come to 250 E . ESTATE • BEAUTY Ct...MJ.... Pr housekeeping & cooking MALE 06-25) to work full Xlnt ~ Good 11rowth --------_1_7tb_. _St_ . .:_• Cos_ta_M_es_a_. --t 499-4551 '' _,,,_,, e sMr Drapery Workroom Gari talent. S mall salary. time doingmainl onpar Jl1>lent. & g ru~ ro· HECEPTI ON I ST & $"'111.SCO',..S&OIS STYLIST FULL TIME needed. exper. necess. "·'" ""67 t re tal t M 1 k Al t' J b _.. v"' y Wltb2yrsexper. +clicn· Fine clot.hlng s t ore. Good working cond". ~· Y n eqwpm · us wor er!\. so ee 0 8' SALESGIRL. part-lime Men and women witb SICaET.U •• d .. be neat & rehable. App Call R ita. 540·fi05S tostart.21·25. Please call ..... ~ ... s-"...,I Lele needed. Xlnl Locat e 10 Newpor t CaU642·1435. Housekeeper : Couple lo ly:2025Newport 81.CM Coastal Personnel AJ;t!ll· rrom8:00to4:30Mon-Fri outgolng personallUesto ~ •-"" benents & growth polen-Center. Great working tnke full charge of large <'Y'. 2790 Harbor, CM 645-395l work with youth. Part Public ateaC!y lft."6ft· tial. Please c all Mias conditions wilh the best DRAP ERY Wo r krm . home inNeWJ)OrtBcach. 1..4A...aAGEME111.1 ---------t i m e eve nings . crowded Soul~"°D Ma.rtinez957-8770. people. Call 644-5070 & needs exp'd. hemmer or English speaking. Top ~f"'lll f"'lll PIX AnsWH' ~" RECEPT /SEC'Y Guarantee $3.50 per Orange County ls eeek· ask for the Tailor Shop over loc ker, r u II o r wages. References will Help us dig a gold mine Wantlo work days, after· ANIMAL HOSP. hour. Call In person Dal· Ing a high quall&;y ad· Beauty SHAMPOO GIRL Good wages. Also, <2> Asslstanls, will train. 200 NewportClr Dr, N.B. manager. p1time. Pd. hohday8 & Ile verifie d . Pho n e in your unproduc11vt• noons&eveninRs inN.B. Jy Piiot Office, 17875 mfnstrative secreury. vacations. Apply: 1R35 (7l4)559-lS66 time. Cnll 645·5921 CO 6 w t-'uUor P:T . Npt Ben. Beach Blvd,. Huntin"'on Must be ernclent •• weU COCKTAIL WA.ITllESS Learn in 40 hrs the most Whitt. A U It 1:17 ------& ' l\• ur eas? ork .,AA "'60 •· organ!--' •·ableto • .:...o-a.. 1er ve.. n . --------• r 1 .,....... Beach. Monday, October """'"' .... •JI!' CMorcall 642·1843 HOUSEKEEPER MClftOC)er w'tkmel or p /taXm c . ---------17. 1977, between 1: underde.adlinesand1'uU exciting, glamourous. DRIVERS Live-In. Youn )l N .B. We need people whl) like P :CY e~c: / ~~~·e /r~ C *tRECErTlrONlllST l and S:OOpm. work loads. Fast, '•ffi· family. Must spc11k people who ure heallh (' I on emPora Y eau Y Equal Opportunity clenl in typio&-;and E:n"hsh. Refs ren'd. i\pn. minded who could use oEpcrnlon; 111 ~IO K073 salon has F . T PoSilion Employer shorthand skills eueia· •BlKESTORE• highly paid profess. Day Early AM. J.6, deli\'ery Assistant Manager for or eve sessions. Place· LA TtMt:s. C.M. $315 Schwinn Dealer. Salary ment assisl. Good job OP· _mo_+_. 54_S._07_7_0_Bo_b __ ly. "2633 W. Co~~t llwy, xtra money. IC you meet • 0 .1-:. avail. Ore,ss & looks a -----------llal. Legal, tn&ineerinl. N . .(3 . Call fnr a ppt these qualificatmns coll PIXAn1SvcOprs must.Precrexp. Salesgirl s n eeded · or Statistical typing '10.400. Must have prior por. bilte mechanic ex per. in Call 714 /7 5 1-9194 El°<jEH~H TECH + 64284750r 644 66HO. 549-8517or 751 79~ lmmt'<I oJ)t'ntnJ(s . Awh CallThornas forappt sandwich delivery, 1 kill a would 4> 8 714·752·954 l Days wk, 4 hrs day, E '---"clil. ""-}•rv t"••e _st.o_re_.544_·_5987 __ . ____ , So. Callr. Cocktail Housekeeper P time for req's competent pel'!lon working couple. Flex IOAT B.ECTalCIAMS Waitresses, Inc.· 17922 quallfied lo ser vice video hrs Nice Irvine area We nttd exper'd boal Sky Park Bl, Sle C, monilors & "1deo a c-home 833 0929 a fl electricians. Xlnl com-Irvine. Ca 927l4. cessories. oritonize parts 5:JOpm pany benefits, lncludinit COLLEGIE dept, eslab. rental ---pd medical (Employee & se r vic e s assis t 1n llOL'SEKF:El'l~G Lite 2 dependent) Pd Life Ins. STUDENTS, markeling' ,., lechn1cal nr 3 hr~. I 1l<l)' "k. 1'" pl Pacifica By Kipper HOUSEWIVES expertise 714 54S-ll4K ll<'h. nr hu~ S:I hr Ref:. Yachlll, 928 W. 17th St. Supple m ent your in· --------n.-q. 752 2393dys, 614 0018 C.M. c ome . W ork on EXC.SEC'Y cv Boat Manufacture r has telephone. Guaranteed openings for: Exper'd .hourlr wage plus ~nu11. trim & tooling carpen· 250 ~· 17th St. Suite 0 , ters. Apply, Alajuela Costa Mesa. &46-4100 Chairman of the Board HYGEHIST rcqwrcs t:xc. Sec'y with :'llwpl Bch area Wl•d · outslanding quallf1ca· nc~clays. X Ray 1·xpr. lions. Starting salary 641·2485 Yacht Corp, 947 W. 18th COOK $1200 per mo: w/fully ----paid medical plun & op· INSURANCE Secretary, Sl,C.M. Expcr. at both breakfast portunity for rapid ad-fire & cn!lualty. Personul BOOKKEEPER full &dinncr.Fulllimedays. vanceme nl in t-'ashlon lines. f';xpe r . req'd. charge for medlu.m size Apply blwn 2·4pm . Island, Npt Och. Semi 673-3850 . R o be rlson Orange Co. Company. JOLLY RESTAURANT, fully descriptive resume Insurance, CdM Xlnt frin ge bene fits, 1727 E. Dyer Rd., Irvine to Chnlrm a n of lhe friendly environment. Board, P.O. l}ox 18797, Submit resume & salary COOK & HSKKPR, 12 Irvine. CA. 927\3 history to ad 46, The Dai· Noon to 4 PM. Mon·rri. --------- ly Pilot., P.O.Box 1560, $60. p /wk. E n g lis h lr.VECUTIVEsir.cy CostaMesa,Ca .92626 speaking o nly. Own '"" 11:; ---------• transp. Exper. & Refs. Conglomerate Company BOOKKEEPER/RECPT 5411-9771 has opening in corpornle PARTTIME ---------o l c. f or a person Needed for young, rapid COOK w,outslanding orgnnlza growing company. Ex· p-a-..soutee Lional abi li ty. ud per. pref. $4. p/tir. Mon _ ... 1 T ministrative & com Fri, 8-12. 631·0723 or Co untry Club. op murucalive skills. Salar~ IMSURA.HCE Newport Ucoch F'ire & Disually insurance ore needs qualirled un- ri erwrite r with ex- pcnence in proccss1n1t. servicing & mnrkcting of commere1al al.'counts. Salary open Excellrnt brnefits Mrs . Buke r 8.l.1-!1550. JANITORS 673-4356 wages. 4~2271 btwn 3 & commensurate w exper ---------•_1_o_P_M_._As_k_ro_r_C_h_e_r. __ 1 P h: 894~478:1 for 1n BOOKKEEPER ASST. P lime J anitors & cpls. Cou..aSELORS terview. Of I experienced " c. <' camni: evemnits. 970-7550 UVE-IH FA.CTORYTRAIHEE Cntrl Org. Co. Must have BOOKKEEPER Married, no children. Assembly & general fac. ~ ~~i;i::P~~~· ~~: P/u·me. 12•5,"' Duvs. No supervise 6 teenage tory work, makinit loose 011 0 J J girls. Ex"0 nses & sal. ve rg financial slmts or tax. ..-lt'af binders. Growth OP· __ ._.::;:_' ----- Elltab local bldr. 646·9523 Also, p1tirne single lady pty for bright in div. belSor an. 5. ok. Oak Tree Homes, Group ins. va callomi, & _________ , 54s.5593. prl holidays. Arply Boy Approx. 16·18 yrs. COUNTER Help. days & fro~~mR~s:C,~~ir~f~ Ute factory work. Morns mornings. Mc Donalds Unit K. ll. B. or ('all only8-l.64S·2702· Rcstour:in.t. 3141 Harbor. a,12.7717 IOYS. GIRLS CM. 556·9943 ask for Sue. U,Jp years of age. Eve· CO-::U:-:N:-:--::T:-:E::-=R.:-:G:-.1;--R:;:-:-1,--l--------- ning work. Obtain new Mature adult. do;ytime FOOD SlRVICE 11ubscriptlon11 for the Dal· shift. Winchell's Donut WORICER ly Pilot workin.t with an Hou.<1e847·92S3 Rotating s hlh'I 1 l:irn 11dull supervisor. Earn ----1 7:3-0pm. Xlnt b<'nef1111. S20 to $3U (><'r Wl'Ck or Apply m rwnmn, Cuntucl m o rt". Call 646·4100 People wh<lnred People Mr~.Dunlav.Co-itaMc~.1 between 5:30 and 11·30 Thul'!! whsllhe Mt-monal lloicp1L11l, 301 p.m. OAILV PILOT V1r1 on~ Ave , Cclt.t a SERVICE onu~CTOR y :'t1e:<u ls all about' 1---------1 ~II idle lterm &42 56711 JANITORS F/tlme exp'd. floor man. 6PM to 2A M. Must have cur & homo phone. Apply at 12.1 N. Olive, Org. Mon. thru 1-'rl. JANITORS/ FlOORMA.H M /F, c plll , cxper. p;tlmc. Eves lrvlnc 11rra. 752 7292 Cndillae~ to Go Carts Whatever lhe Fad tfoll 'cm off the m11rkcl Wu h 11 Classified Ad C'u II 'low 1 642·5678 MAT U R E W 0 M AN in ~rsnn betwn !lam & k Ea. ·--· ~ _, •·-' 'I L' 15 RL~CL~PTJONIST wor . m ovr $3.50 per '""""'. to SU08. wWl x.lftt p li tn e lo w e IC' o m .. fl m ·' " n . r r I r~ r. hr 54()..8339 _,,, newcomers & contact Hocht>:.Ler Sl. <.:oiota · b e ne fits. Apply i merchan~. F1eJC1blc hrs Mei.a $600 SA L ES : H n m & person. ~~~~ar, lite typing PHOTOGRAPHIC + Sandwiches. Mature 'tv~~T~~~YJ:' ,,. JV'],, person n ee de d fo 2'7~L&PaaRd., . . LAI TECHHICIA.H Must be ncot, attractive. permanent part lim Laguna Nigllel, Ca. M~cal office ass ist. Will Black & white film pro-work in Newport Beach position. Apply at Honey An equal opportu"llf train. Must be able lo cesslng 645 3840 area. Baked Ha ms, 3700 E. pf r ~""rk ev~s & or wknds _ c l H Cd.. f em oyer " " Type: 40+ w-Ha. oas wy. "'• rom --'--'--·-----l.1lelypmg.!">48·777 1 ct.I. ~--2pm -5pm. Or Call SECRETARY ;PcrJn. ~lissmn Viejo Ptaysicaf Therapiat avy .,. .......... 1. 673-9000 P /time, Ins. co. Call ~IOTOR ROUTE Acuh· cnrt: hosp1t11I In Stnrt immed~11lely. ('114) SA t. ES· ll 1. FI C 0 M. btwn Us4PM. 752-lTSO l>cach community Ideal 759· 1'107. ask for Mr. . The Daily P1 lol has a Uvma & workm" conds. _!?n_v_is_. ------PONENTS Solary-iclnt SECR.,..,.RY hn11c route in Mission " ., future. Call Chl.M:k blwn s•~ Vwjo . approx earnings Good P8 Y & benefits. 12p M & itl'M 1 Shorthand, typing $300 per month. Mon thru Prefer rc~latry or r<>· ll~SALES o n Y · necessary. Ple•Jfnt F'rl aft e rnoo ns and gistry eligible. Will <'Ill\ LUSK REALTY 9'19·546S worklbl co.ndltio..._. Sal&Sun morninl-(s. Cur !lidH lic'd ph ys ic1tl ht o~ning a new res:ile Saleslady. C:trt Shop. Benefi&a. ('114>.U.lut.> and good drivin" rccorc1 Jherapy asslslnnt ((' t th fl 1 Mature Oonolapplyun " Phrnsc contact norsonnel 0 ice 11 e unt ngton ' · ... .r-•-OfCIS• required. Call 642-4321 ,... Beach area. Needs both less you have exper ... _. • Leaving name and phone orriret -. ...a.. Coo•t manager , salary+ com-Buggs Intern ational, Eslab'I HtUrity firm number. ~ • mission and salespeople. ~ Weslclllf Dr, NB . needs reliable me.a • ---------• Coe:••i... Hos..Uol Better tha n a er age women for uniformed Need woman to work P1T 31872 Q;~st uw';' commission + invceotlve SALES/Management, security poalUont in to help clean homes. 4 S South Laguna. 9'l6n plateaus. This office will Cav reer Oppty. 2 Yr de· Calta Meaa. l'ull or'p tt. days wk. 540.9593 eves 4119.1311 be approx 1800 sq.n.. with e lopment program. schedules avail. Retirees • .. EEO XTR $ $ n lotorcompanysupport. commission/bonus com· welcome. Phone collect .. A S Call PauJ, 7w 67s-34u . pensollon. Call Jack Pin· main ofc;, for appt. tN> You can e:arn more thun PLASTIC ________ 1 to 774-7$> or send re· 2SS-0156. SlSO extra monthly m ---------• s u me \u : 1380 So.---------· come for jusl 3 11ulcs o INJECTION RESEARCH A.IDIE Anaheim Blvd. Sto 105, Sec'y lo coordinate .1 month. Be a World Fili me In molecular Anaheim.Ca. 92805 person ofc. T y phaa. Book/Child croft snle<1 MOLDl..._.G biolooy lab. 67s-2159. shthnd, .Mimeo skll.1* re.-rep. Call Jane al 8J9·21i'1 I f"'lll " SALES Q 'd. People exp. ph forlunher mro. FOREMAN Now recrultlng sharp persona lily. For appt ------12..d & lrcf Shlftsl Reapratory Therapist ambitious men to sell call 494-8061 ask for SET UP MEN f /llme nil(hts. Exper. In hardware, tool!! & shop John . · NURSE.5 LICENSED PERSONNEL Fan &P/Tlme PM & Lah Shift can shlftst drawloa & runni n g equip. to indust'I ac-Service Sta. Night Attend I Rapidly C;1CJlnndinJ: C¥>1'n arterial blood gases. counls. Avg lo $280 per 2 Ot 5 olLel a wk. Apply, pnny with lmmedlotr Please cont.Act personnel wk. No exper. nee. Call Shell 17t.h&lrvine NP opcrllni:s. top pay & com !>fflce. Mr. Brown, 7M·9134. • • .... f' II L' South c-t ervlce Station AtlAlo· pany • ..:no 1lic ava . c.X· -· SALES·Needed 10 qual d t full rt u per. nccessury. Apply nt Cot111...tfy Hospital distributors for n ew ,!~' .2.!:..PAF I ,~· Orange Co1111l Plasllr!I, 31872CoasUtwy multl-lcvcl u les co. """vron, ...,_ • rv~. ll50W.18thSt. C.M. SouthLagunn,92677 Ground floor oppor. _c_._M_. ______ _ r 1u:sc11om:n:ACH£R 499·l3ll 830-5483 rvlco Sta. Attendant. Interviews held dally i<;xper. or c<irtlflcutc. --------• P it.Imo. Neat appur.. It uftor 4 pm. Contact Nun;: 12·5. St.60 pihr. 6'10-882() Rcstaurnnt SALISPllSON hAndwriUng only need ' Ing Pcr~onnel. PRESS OPERATOR. ex Dlshwawr • Wo men's ready tb wear ~f!cJ1.YcM2590 Newport .EVERLY per. on AR Dick 360. 33:1 6'N11thltl a nd !l porlllwc sl' ex·•-~;_;... _ _.. ___ _ Thlrcl Sl. Lntt. Och. Host.II pcn cncc preferred. rvJce Sta. Att.enda.a&, MANOR -----Full & P /time Apply to M~blc A vs Un expfir'd. Ft1ll or p/UOie. Convalescent llospitr1I Production Tralntt Kltcltett Help or:l;1:r5. "'&ly Arco Station, 17th 24452 Vi11 F.str11do Rubber hose products IYMiltgt P /tlllW & rvlno, C.M. L1111una lltlls. <.:A Mu~l pas~ co. physl<-nl lftcPre St.ft Hoocle New Laguna llllls Store Serv. St.A llclp needed lrn· <71411137-tl<IOO Ind uc1 h11 rk x ra yis 2 I~ Rl•tf"Slde Dr, NI 23621 Moulton Pertcway med. :t\lll or p;t. Appfy, F..qu{llOpplyl::mploycr tr dn« url'l1 t'11ll for 5417418 Cdl76M622 99o E. Cat Hwy. NwJ>', Aflf)t MO ihl!I r-: 0 K Call • Bc:h. HefpW .. ttd 710~HtlpW .. t.O 710~9'cyc!H 1020 ......... , IOSO ~ ... s. loss Mflcelwa.t 1010 Fn •• Oceobef14,19'77 • • DNLYPILOT•11. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• ••••••••. ••••••• .. •••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••.•••• IOI l · 'WW•vay••tHU Bicycle• 2•" mans 10. DOV•SH0•1s Mllctllmt.. O a--.;. Po 9040 C .. , ·111tS./ ' &uvlce StaUo.o AUoo ·--•--' w. 2o .. bo 5 Cuat cotrtbl. 4• oiled wal ~ " w· A ... TED ••••••••••••••••••••••• -Wft'f •.-:.& ···-•ant. exper'd. t>a le NowpoM. Bc•ch "I'ravel ..-.. ya • W/lmk glaas Colt S3SO, 30 famll)'. Great atuffl "'" ~. d hwr $30, ftolary N••• .. ••••••••••••H•• -•• ~(-l:vea. FuU & p/Um. )'Ap Aaency. Non-Smoker. apeed $3.5. &ood cond. eell for $75. Wk .-.,cllner F\lm, decorator 1toma, TOP CASH DOLLAR mower f15, Harm9n1 MUST Sell 31' Btttrim~ ·~ •••••• .. -....... •pt.y Shell St.at.ion lilh& Very aood typist. Xlnt lllt1·3S23 chr, xlnt cood. $50. clothln1.1t53GalaxyDr, PAID FOR YOUR guitar ns stereo F/B Spottllaher Comp' 'T.IVWCamrrVan.JJu trvlne,NB. • bene. Call &40.8111 or MlclntM•n•sl025 Klnaslse hdbrd. deco' NB,SaU·Z.Noprevlews. JEWELRY, WATCHES, w/record chgr '60. ntw thl'uout.' tulfy t.W,,.u:fa ~·~t. 955-2'l'l2anyUme. ••••••••••••••••••••••• yell. $1.5. SpanJsh wall October 16 For aale rm ART O!JJECfS, GOLD, 640-7062 eQ"l>•d. Xlnt cond. Day: ... !'!! • .'• .. -5001v1r • • , ,• UARNWOODPANEL' haoalnRti $S Grn deco b Sll.VJ!;R SERVICE, 67 .... -.-3~ .........._. ••· SEW MACH/Oper TRUCK DIUVER·TOW · lC chr S30 AU. x.lnt cood s}t.e .tug, !cycles, chrs. FINE FURN. & AN· F,lc,:g. so(a & Jove seat ..._,.,,evo. v• • ., Wm tuln. Starnlcu and service. salary RR Ues·Tel ~le:s·beams 963-4090. • rechoer, rnlsc. 17812 TIQUES.6'5-2200 t:art.h t.ontll $400, yeUow 20' Ql)'Ver. 120m). OMC1 ~land .-mpr sbt\1 tor- Med.lcal Prod. 30'lS So. +commls. Over 21. 2x4/2JC8-loca1Qo;Jl·2460 Mann, lrvlne vclv t cha.tr S'lS, walnut 1/0, wftrlr. $2900 or bU ~. lon Pll. Xlnt cond,. Kilson. SA Ph 54().1142 permanent uau.nu Bcb c .. tot & Rik & white~ P_C sectlonul Moving Sule: Laguna ca. LUGG AG~ TAGS double du'l8er UD. cstm olr. 837-2l71J. '300/blrtdr. EvUll·~l\4 .... area. HW\t Auto ~nter. ~........ 1030 Sl50. 2 Swivel rockers. nyon lots or good stuff troin yourbu:unesicord W/lron ~ab w/alau Cabove.r empr ror Pt! ... 'SHIP/REC CLERK 1&!:51.a&unaCanyon Rd.••••••••••••••••••••••• S1S cHch. Xlnt cood. ~ •dt:Sk odds 4' ends Send ono card ror each shelves SllO. 4mall cb.lna Pvt· party wlahos to Fila a• bed Very apac· & IJtu Janilonal duties. LagWla IMt. 4!J.l·3000 __ Yashlca MAT 124 camera 546-9329 • 494:53<14 'art. 12 noon: tag pl~ one 1>puro. We cnblnet $7~. Star's dbl purchase d101cl po.~~r XJntcond. *12.s. '759-1154 • flays M·F. Apply. J . TYPIST CLERK w/strobe. xtru. s95. Love$eot & chair hi·rl Sat/Sun. mt urn pt>rmunently :miti tent $7~ pool lllblc boat. Minimum :i~ . • • ltcrbc-rt. Hall Jeweller$. l'10-7'7:W 842-:!982 full l , & tX, • --scaled 1tllrart1ve tn.i & w xtm:s $125, 120 boss uc Under $30,000.1·724·9965 8 Ger.nwp Cam~r Shell !ta Fa11hlonSquuie,Sauta P /tame. Hrs flexible -· 11~s ~~;~ x :.pr· Si\T1SUN 10 AM . 6511 Ab strJp, mc,•trn.: airline cordhm $75, 10 bass ac· ·n 30• Se R flybridi for ~ too pickup. Good Ana. 673-52S2 Mrs . .Nlckels. Cats 8035 .-!.. · _ hot t Dr, No. HR , 1.0. rcttuli enwnts. Pre· l't>rdlan $45, '73 Explorer S rtfisha ay B . t j cond. =c>.1M7-3579eves. • WAITRl!:SS ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1. a '" y b 0 y cu. a i r Children's toys, games. w nt lo~ & thcfi! fo'or a 4!4 motor home. Xl11t, 11uc .pod ~rirn. ns. 0 MOtortltd IHetil 9140 SHOE SALES, Exper . F\tlJtime&Part·Umeut PERSIAN killcns, top yellow/brown & V.hate, rurn,ctc. lltkc, vacuum. pcr:wnalm.'<I tag enclose S8500.673-078'7 $g;500 ~v~/!~~d~· •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ,P.irti!ull tinw. Newport Anto111x:r1Pizza541M863 quality, reg1ster.:d. likenewSJ25.644·47Sl u1>sortcd new leather wullpaper, fabric or Mis~ll...cMIS 493-9225' • '11 M n-SOVL al'ea. Call Mark, 644-4411 -638-930!\ pun;c.s. Moce. 842·5656 "Duy Glo" paper & we Oto .vvc:aoe ..... ____ _;,_ ___ IWOMAN 50 r Twin bed nearly new. -will buck & Lrirn your Want.ct 1081 '77 T hJ 121' d -·• . Moped. JUlll 800 mJ. Fae over . or "--8040 Su dltl ""'5 Co.II t:ome visit our mammoth o ••••••••••••••••••••••• ll t ay c .... ser, wnVu llustseJI 831·2438 SILK SCREr..... tht.'a lrti C'oncess1on. __,.. per coo on.,,.. · lags, r try two cards . ~40 jet, perfect cond Y • • m Wkmls only. Call Mr ........................ 833-9649. 3 l''amily Yard Sale: back lo back. Wanted. !Junk bed.a SSSOO.MZ-5704 t ~/ AR'!'IST Leslrc,e73-983T. DOGTRAlNING . . We're sclUoJ( clothes, PRICES: chcststylo W-.1::---flSO 1'nst coiuc1enuou1> ex·---YourplaceorMlllc Ktn1,'lltm-walet'bed -the trinkets. coHeclabloti. $:.!eaorSfS& 964·2005 :16' PAOEMAKER Sc per.'. for custom ' i.sl k WOOD WORKEH. cxpt"r John Martin 548.:oo69 works .. Solid wood • nntique dressers, wa~h 4 swp$1.l)()ca. Music«-' Spor\J"isher dlese~, full iw;;•;;o•v:::h~•MX- screen shop. Must be finished ca rpe n · --pduddcd side rails & 1>lnnds,hulltrees&tuble 6,9ta(tSSl.~ca. 1 tn t 1083 e lectronics & f1sh'g. Tenykttfrontfork Bo • able to prepare screens, ter/cabinet maker. Xhtt Ol.O English S¥ep dog, 8 b hnJ w/storage, <1ulltl'<I & c•halrs. 1''or assistance 1001' mort' $1 .40 ea. --~IFS t.'Ctuipmt. P/P . 675·L915 shocb etc HIU\ 'can mixcolors&screenclos· pay, bencrit.s & workinc mo:.. fem. Playr~. used sprd & pillow s hams. ai.k for Oea, De nise, SlllcsTnitlnl'luded ••••••••••••••••••••••• • · · _.,, Jy registered .fine detail cond. Immediate open· lo children. traJJled-S600 for $200. 842·2974 Joun. or Peac h t!l;t NOCA IW ? 100 wutt ~lsson guitar 1'' V-llull, trlr, 35HP 963--alter7 p.m. - wock.MS-993'7 Ina'. Lido Wood' Works, papers.49'M126btwn'7& morn/evs l"ri /Snt/S un. 197!1 l>ruw your own or send amp, 2 10 1pkrs, trem. motor.Cioodcond.$450. 74 BSA 500 Victor, flew ,.:,~ 631 0290 8PM G 1 t r 8i,;, Orange, CM. name addre1>s phone & reverb. nr pew, perr 549·2Sla tires, xlnt cond. fl'OO'or O>J1k5creen prrnter for -recn ve ve so. a. • 'II ' k ' rd cond. $175. 546.8614 bstolr 645-53'12 ~mall mrg plant. Exp'd. y ARD MAN, rent u I Blk Lab pups, 8wks. AKC, very good condJt1on. Cul·de·sac Sale Hoston ~e ma.. e one ca ~r 19'1424' cabln cruiser. Sips · · - &!\._...SSSl t·enterneedsf/timeman. l)erfect w/klds & great $95. 548·6388 Way <Fairview & ~g.dAd:~t-ach. Ludwig d~ums, clear, 5 5, twn axle trlr. fully '61 Harley, Pan Bottom, Wkd orr.-Handwrtttng buntea SJ?S 8.1Q.1898 c .i. d 1. S h l'aularino) Sat & ~un on· d n c ec or money or· piece w/f1berglass cases equip'd. Mint cood. Sac. shovel top. S.U. Carb. Soua.bLag1ma rn us l ·b e' n eat . "'"8~ 1a 1.crs~ punis ly, llooda.. 200 CB like er to: & hardware. $700 . $9800. 831.17707 Wi de glide & chrm • .MOTOR ROUTE mechanical ability Cocker Sparuel fem .. buff slyli!, 3201 f,ast Coas( new, 1895 Knabe piano. PfLOTPRIMl&Mw .49J....1W2... $2800. Ul-0286 or The DaJly Pilot has n helpful /\pplv 1930 colvred. $150 Ctrm. Hwy,CdM.675·'7575 etched ivory. xlnt!. Van P.O.BoxlS60 W~EO.. hr~n•r to~~. __._ large route in South Newport Blvd CM. 492·7389 an. 7PM ~fa I Lo ge I oode couch & ahocks. new beer Co.sla Mesa Cu. 92626 Lowery Theater Organ share50% of eqwty & ex· -· ... ". -Lagunn • oppr~x-enrn· · Pc uo r w w 0 bar, comm. buffer, Chat· ' w/rhythm section, Leslie penses ln24' Searay. FIY· '73 12S ATMX Y.amaha, ...... 5 StOOper naonth Moo ....,~1.'l-..at ~C Cocker Spaniel PUP· arms & bock. StOO. tunooga Choo Choo, nu PUBLIC AUCTIOM speaker, bench & music. lngbrtdge.1977 Mdl. Ful· used very UlUe. Jmmac. "16 • • .........,__.,. pu:s. 8 wks old. Call after Brand new 20 gal hot $800 c rd' 1 " ....d 673-6067 conc1 $425 548-0796 t.bru l''r1 afternoons uud ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3.00 5487264 , water h eater $50 8·trk tape. ladies ski MANYITEMSOFFll'JE · rown acco 1an, yeq p..,.... · • _ Sal&Sun mo~ogs. Car ..... s 1005 · · · 9684430. • boots. Endless list•of ESTATE JEWELHY, 120ba.se,$150.67S.5439 · 28• Sklpjack, has been •76 125YAMAlIA ~good dnvang record ••••••••••••••••••••••• Weimaraoer AKC reg. c~g & dee items & ART OBJECTS. AN· TlUMPETw/cOM kept In prime condition. MSO reqwred. Call 642·4321. Wonder·land Cha.mp Jines, finest Pecan Dining Table, 8 rmsc. , TIQUES, FINE FUHN.. • Asking $25 000 MM'7'2 54B-8467 C.• J,.eaving name and phont' wail Shots wormed chrs 2 Mudit. couches, ETC. PHONE FOR IN $75. 751.(>066 ft.5 • · ·number. • ~tale~ $225.' 1''emale~ lrg octagon cofCee tbl 3,FAM lLY GARAGJ!; 1-'0 . & BROCHURE. Offlcef;.utlt•eA a pm 500cc .Suxuld -like oew St~tionery Store in Of Antiques! $200.751·3'l91 ~1 slate t?P· Piano. S AL.E·Anlaques.' ti4>2200 ~....... IOls loah.W 9060 cond1tlon • reduc~ to , Hu GE ware house hideu· bed dinette ot"er wctswls, bucket seals, ••••••••••••••••••••••• $200. See to appreciate. '"'--nadelMaroeedsev. ' ' " hshld ... 2 2dS 9' At' B 'k••••••••••••••••••••••• """u " crammed with over 500 MIN l·DOXIES·AKC chrs tbls garden tools · .. ems. ll 4 n t. 0 ique runswa e WAMTRESULTS7 .Prlcefirm.631·3474 . per'dsalesladyrull·llme mwnc boxes, nackelo· '7wks,lsl shots,papers.2 etc Callaft6 832·2"192 N B.SatS.? <.'lassie Pool Table, WOOD EXECUTI VE lOOcc Yamaha 1970 com· ' 5 days, xlnt working con· d"" · ·1 ... blk tan M, l red fem. · · · 673-56.14 or8J6.1583 DESKS & CREDENZA.5, Sell your boat t.bru els · 11 f' ""'" pianos, c re .... or· SAT & SUN 8·5. 0 ·•r slls. . Chrs. all styles, oak this, SOUTHWISTIRH pletelv rebuilt engine, .• espeq1a Y me clien· gan s. wall c locks, IWS.8837 .,. Fi h t I & r tele.675-1010 t:randfathcr clocks, GarogeSaff 8055 von seals, wetswls, bike ne c· 1nu, crys a mcdic.alrumiturc. YACHTSA&.aS new ures, elec. starter. fascmatinn antiques. LAB PUPS. AKC. lllack. ••••••••••••••••••••••• parts, boy's, ladies. sterling. Appl. only. C.E. SURPLUS FUJI 1a.1i·~aT luggage rack only ~.800 STENO ... Xlntpechgree men's clothing. Ski 645-0063 FURNITURE ,., ..... ..-v miles, dirt and street Over$1,000,000Worth · . PUBLIC AUCTION clothes, hiking boots, . . ooo W.l9lhSt.C.M. DEALEllS legal. $300. See to ap-~~ pcha,:0t':~'!:~fs jro!. American lotemaUooal 963·9107 MANY FINE ITEMS OF m 010 r c y c 1 e 0 th er All wood dmmg set, Mtid1t 631.2777 631.2570 (71<0 673-92U preciate. Price !frm. GaJJeries; 1802·T Ketter· Black Afghan urgenlly ESTATE JEWELRY, oodi , 2338 'a t cabntforstereoor ?, bar, ·631•3474 gular p/lime e mploy· ing St., Irvine. Tel. needs lovmg home, xlnt ART OBJECTS. AN· ~M es. u gers, nite tbl, queen s11 hdbrd. Pets . 1017 32' aft cabiD. dJe&el aux,1--------- , ment. Flex working hrs . 754·177'7. Open Wed lhru pedlgree.836.Sl2'1 TIQUES, FINE FURN .. -wood buffe t, 2 gas ••••••••••••••••••••••• kelc:b rigged, Asking '75 2$0Cc Malco radial 20-24 hrs per wk. Need Sat. 9AM l04 PM. Visit! ~HONE FOR IN· OLD· Chns Craft, Sabot mowers & edger. art RedY..tCockatoo $17,500. 835·9317 or $475. '68 Roadrunnctr, rns .. :~r:. nE~~~~i~~ste~~ PUBLIC AUCTIOM ~u!::.1 /~.o::~~~~.~~ FO BROCHUH E . VW bus. motorcycle & Spm.645·785'1. Tame S48-647'7 6'15-9509 gdS3'15.5(().9508eves . . Call C " ,..,,. 64S-2200 clothes & misc. Sat/Sun. N ht 1 h , C . . bo · or appl. M.,.7,..,.,, MANY ITEMS OF FINE protectors. MS.5305 1978 'v!a Meyer Pl C'M. ew wroug · ron ouse GUINEA Pig w/cage & 26 lipper sail at, Ure '76 Honda XL3SO, like: t:.O.E. • ESTATE JEWELRY, Gara~e Sale. 1224 Nol· ' bar cart·S'10; two high . $10 lloes, compass, nearly oew, 2800 mi. Clll ----------•ART -OBJECTS. AN· GOLDEN RETRIEVER ting h am Rd. N. R . Allsortsorwetsuits,$2.00 back chairs·S8CJ; 6n .• 6 act.-ess. ss6,.1747 new trlr. Ask.Ing $4200. 67~$700. St.Qekperson want-ed foe TIQtJES, PINE FURN .. Pu.es~ A.KC ... G Weeks DesJin.eu (abfic rem· to $50. Antique coca cola 10. s urfboard·$35 , s:J5.9317ot67t~ Fashion lslond l>ranch or 1-:rc. PHONE FOR IN· old. Sl25, CA.LL646·226S nants. Draperies. Furn, ice chest & metal Ice box, lcesklltes, ~size SN) w~t..h Pianot.ir o.-,.. 1090 _ '71 Ronda CL-350 .• Ma tthe ws Women's FO & BROCHU RE Washer/Drye r . IBM S2S & $115. Sat 8·12, 211 bag&skal1ngdress <size ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2$~rgon Out tltt•nd. SC:tambltr,onlrer>Om~ clothing store. Mw.t be 645 22oo · Sheltaes, 5 wks. AK C. typewriter, Paintings. "2nd St. Nwpt Bch. lO >·a II for $4S. Call K. KAWAI Baby Grand. Atomle '· genoa, dingy, xlot coo4., blue, hln$ willing to clean. CHll males $100 : t-'emales garden tools slidin~ 642·0138. EbonY Blk Xlnt cond all new equipment. pe:rfectly. Make ofter. Mgr, 7SS.1201 VICTOR Talking much, $125. 963-2366 louver door ;hullers. Garage Sale. many quali· $2800 SS2G · · S~ 6 adults, ata.nd up 547-3182 Va c t rol a reco rds S Ir.Al y u-"~r$100.Sat/Sun.10.5 ty items. 512 Orchid, SIDEWALKS .a.LE · bead. Mast steps. Like--------•• ~witchbocrd/Recpt Caruso. Calli ·Curci: I ~AH HUSK • ...., · CdM (alley)Sat/Sun9·4 Sat Ort lS. 10 A; to 1 Upright Grand Plano. new co.1ulition. A last Lambretta 125cc, less B1lsy phones, must have Alma Gluck, Ponselle, Pups AKCiOFA. 751-1333 Sat. Lotza new, unlquE PM. Tacktocker Thrift Herrington, New York, cruising boat wilb more than 400 ml, oew •pare, gOod Me. 'oil't! & !root Schum 11 no · H c ink . CORGI-WR SH 20UA Laurie Lane, oft li9 4 Fam Garager Shop. 540 w. 19th S L. circa 1907. Just tuned. room than man.v 30'ers. Wheel tire trunk tandem urc appear w,t!xle~n·e Chalaap1n. & many BayandOrange.CM lluttan egi c hr . CostaMcsa Roscwoodmahog. Hand Ownerlsa2boaterand aeat.s.·120 mi•per gal. switchboard cxper. Call others. Some over so yrs. $41-4Sll walerbed. Grundag short ("arved. Sound great. very amdous. 675-1'°3 or $250. Full price. 54&-at7 -lu,dy, 833·2900. old, fascinating coll. ror f'or Salt'. West lUl(hland WES TC LIFF AREA wave coosole, Ktmwood Elo<'tr1c car, Kenmore Would look great in Cam· 6'13-9211, btre. 74 Elsinore125 foa'-' • T le....__ ale Opera buffs. $500. or o!r. Whlte Tcrner. papers, 8 Multi family. Sat & Sun· rcvr, twn bed: patio furn. wshr. twin holly wood rm, play room, etc. Mov· , manyx.tras. e ,..._ ... s s 114-821-8'72-t wkmalc.644~ day, 9 lo 4pm 1620 plJnt:.. f1sh1ng poles. bd(ramc. 428·10th St .• mg, must sell! $800/ol· 771dCA_!~AVHF30. 3 m2s Ea• ~.CC'1G Want lo make monl'y? -----Warwick Lane, Nwpt cloUung, toys & much H.B. fer S3l·25Slaft 6 O • ~· • 165,.,, v._.,,_,_,.,,. ,~n you sell on the Hepple-Whltc ma~og tbl. frffto Y0ta 8045 Beh. m1:1c. 2021 Irvine, CM. · · 110%, Spin, raft, shwr. Motor~ Sde/ - -phone? Top $tn our bu-.1· .a c~rs. buffet. van pads ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------SatiSun9.30to4. (Two) walnut h vang room SporllncJGoods 8094 Nwpt. allp. $29,000. a...t/St fl60 l\ess. 646·3030, ask for mcld.$300.847·573S GD Home w no"hildren 4 FA~t GARAGE SALE -chairs $100. Bell & ....................... 494-7403 ._._. 'Ray. .. . . · ', · Furn. TV. s m appl , Antiques. small appls, Howell slide prOJCctor • , . ••••••••••••••••••••••• -----------1:W. solid oak table. 100 2 blk dachshunds, 6 )rs clothes, jewelry. misc. furn , bikes, movie S75 110 gaui:c elcrtrac S ~l s . kK Z 25.~ soft 8 Salling Dinghy, xlnt Rent a 1971 Excutive Telephone Tool Room years old. Restored. old.833·7579 Items. Sat.Sun 10-5, 472 camera, Ai C unit & trains .$150. Teo small ~Ma{i:~ ~i~d ~~ch'~;~ cood., w /car rack. Motorbome Ol" Jllnl· Sales·Eam to $20.000+. M~-.t sacnfice. ~5. or ~t A L I:: Lab m 1 'C ~Ul MesaSt.C.M. m uch more. Sat only. ivory animals $50. 67s.·5265 · Unsinkable, $495. mototbome I~~ H.erb U Locations. Orange ~·o. best offer. 752·2085 ·Neutered. Hsbrkn. Very , , 6541 Montoya, Hirt Bch 548-8372 644-7512 . ·Friedlander. Call any of & LA. Great benefits. d t hd M2 0740 STEREO, Couch, puant· ------vw camper t t l'ke tbesenumbetl ~unty & rapid advan· Ant1qs Circa 1750·1840, t: · wa c og. · ings, artist's brushes & GARAGE SALE: Two 21" Zcruth Color TV, $75. , eo • 1 SOL CAT W/trlr, itlnt ('ement. Call Republic c~~4posterV1ctooan Rolly Polly Puppies . "A" frames, +odds & Families Kodak I~· Elec cement m~xer 1\2 ~:~ow. Selling cood. Black aood.. Xtra 19~777 ~tributors, Inc. Mr. ch3.llle, oiodem P~~ P'.P . Shep Ru.sky mix. Adora ends. This wknd. 16•i door /outdoor rnov 1e Cu ft. '4 HP. bke new 18.lls. 970.Haa (7U) 537.7777 R<!.y,7141834.9088. Sat/Sun0ctl5,16.3189D blcmarklngs.494.0565. Roch.esterSt,CM. camern. projector, $150. Honda Generator Wel Sult Yard Sale, 211 a.a.•YDUI 1-.elll_,, _..._ _______ , Airway Ave. CM <Up --re(rig din rm set hc:."Cls J)Ortublc. EM·400, oever 4.2nd st. Newport Bch. "'9 Redhill to Paularino, LOVELY KITTENS ,Moving Sale·Sat & Sun, & m~h more. 20l8 }'on USt.'Ci. ~. 53fH980 Saturday S.12. See Sal. Must sacrillce San· Motortto.tllllll nght to Airway Ave) By See lo 11pprec111te 10·5. '713~2 Poinsettia, <.:hclscu, Nli. Sul. only . Dime a hnes tao./21. tut. $1500, Pb Ul'/J' to U' . appt Thurs/ Fri. 645-0470 979.8918 CdM. lm alley l 1o.5 G<_>rgeous diamond & ruby · M1-t16S. ~·" __ ,., __...1~ MONEY --. nng, 2 diamonds sur-TY, Radio. l''vt-1)''""' --, F.r\R. oak armo1re, $275. FREE Super loveable Patio Sale· Baby •terns, Hones 8060 rounded by 12 rubies set HIA Steno 8098 216' Clipper, 3 sails, slps 5, Reserve now for Tetephooe Sales {&PRIDE Antq. Scottish: Armo1re white & blk neutered macrame, tent, 3 Whl ••••••••••••••••••••••• m gold, very btO. Sac. ••••••;•••••••••••••••• Cull eear, 0 /B, w/trlr-. ~~~:=R ) S!tl-5, wa sh slnd$l80,drsr male caL l Yr. N lbs iH;~J:'~~.cllit~~~e~ REG'd ~Arab filly 4 yrs SSOO. 96i-1713 8' STEREO Couole, xJnt. Stppv~~·.l~· -300: HOJIERBNTALS Time-Life Libraries, ~~:~~lrvwjhE':it;:;:l~ 9G0-3S63art5.30pm et.shard, 19841 old . Very flashy !ASSO RTED IVORY cond.Tumtbl,AM/FM, .. ,__ 92SN.RarborBJvd.s.A. Inc. has both full & dropleaJdesk$ll.50.Xlo.t .. Providence Ln HB. S650/bestofr.6'6-8128 F IGURES. many r1oe $1.50/beStoCr.892-0931 22'C.etalioa,fL1tedlteel,6' ••.531·2503•• parMlme w•'--for cond. 548·2153 funtituN 8050 'Frl1SafiO... Cas'&·~·n\y.' HollM'hoiCfGOOdi. 806'5 ·jew•lr:Y .pcs, .L~li!lu~ ...... _._ ....... ........_-. bead rm. a..ua. Loaded. ....,_ .... _._-..-;_~lo· 1 car v 1 n g s & J ad c . ..,u.. -··· ·· ''Slip·1vm -.i·'D•na··Pnt. . ... .llQ'l'QFOR.ftR.~lt.~ .nl.._.., nm ""9Appll~es 1010••••••••••••••••••••••• Moving Sale, Sat/Sun •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• R e asonable. Call l&f',...t 642-4599 1!.4'11.l indiwlduals who w.t ••••••••••••••••••••••• STOREWIDESALE , 10.S. Eurelca Vac dnr, OakQueenAoneTblS250. ~7·3000,ext221 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------• From$100.w1'.771M>SU toworil for a llwlng. FR G HT DAM AGED N~w & used r1;1m. appl 5• recond. Singer sewing 4 Oak chrs $100. Tappan loeh. M.iH 21'Sloop, 4tal.1s, trlt'lllp2, , HOTPOINT SALE. 3308 ~t :~1s4 :irf~n mach. Knick knacks. dbl oven stove. cop· Holubar sleeping bag S60. ~...... 9030 xtraa. 2 yn okl, $14116. ~ AFJ:/~~ ~C. ~:. WE OFFER W. Warner nr Harbor, 00 • • clothing. Some antiques. pcrtoneS200.SS6-7233 Son~ ~pc deck $40. Bar ••••••••••••••••••••••• P /P641-nal . SaotaAna.979-2921 CM.642·7930&548·3262 books. Comer Cassia & Oakgametable&chrs.8' stools$10ea.~62 *ZODIAC ---------• stereo,alpa8MS-ZZ83 I ·~~.Hrty.Salory CASHPAJD **I BUY** ~~rC~ay,31ll·CC.asia Black Leather coucb.1977 ENCYLOPED14 ~~·u2!~~~~a~:J: '77 '?-tabllshment mint ]II'~ Pakt Wffldy For Wshr/Dryrs/Refrig Good used Furniture & ' · . Pecan end tbl, Rosewood BritannJca Won on 'JV t~°Zt:b:~:~ Sll,000 hiveated, uc. 23~, Dodge 440, 2700 ml. '*Greot lofMd Plan working or not957.Sl33 Appliances-OR 1 will Super SaJe: Little Balboa Buffet or Bureau. Ti!· show. 644·2369eves. 292SColle CM $llOOO· P IP 67~ 5 yr warr./trusferi"le. •Pcl.TraiftiacJPIO.. GARAGESALEPriceson sellorSELLforYou. Island. 1604 S. Bay ranystylehangil\glamp •F'IREWOOD • (714~~0 . 17'V~tun:1989. Moored ~:kJt.t. ·~~;:;: :~: . MASTIRS AUCTIOM Front. Sat & Sun, lO.S. 8J6.8l27 Delivered &Stacked Red.shank · 11t 2Sth St. Marina. Call FM at.er, spare. Like CALL TODAY ~e~r~g~r~t~r~,t ~~h~se: 646-8616 & l:U-9625 ~I::Cr'.;, t;~~~'. ~~~~oory hwelry 1070 642·2995 &45-1990 Avoo raft with atUPlll,64$.3447 nnr. PP. SH.250. -lOS G & d I ••••••••••••••••••••••• r I o orb oar d s • & Valley v7ew, Cyptess. ~TIDJ TOMORROW dry rs. upa·rs. e . c•"'H PAID tab I e • n ew t win 4' &8' slcel work benches. motorhltch$'700. 54$-6462 32' Sloop, lNO, wood/· 7--... ~IM DUN LA l 0 9 6 O n.3 patchwork bedspreads. WA..,.TED $40& S60 loah., Powft'f ftbe I .. c p ----~ .... _____ ....; 'l'aJbert(At Euclid) F v For "d used furn, anll· c t I b d 3 " 9040 ~r1 au, -.500 P • .. ........._~ 9170 ''• 71.to3.,0095 . . "' rys a ca n ·· TOP CASH DOLLAR M'7-6140 ,, "t-o .J"O !163-0721 ques &clrTV's, 957.9133 aquariums, Schwinn 2· p A ID F 0 R y 0 UR ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••·•~•·• .. •••••••• HEW spd SUogray, 8mm mov· SIJk screen machine car ·~1 • · . TIME-LIFE ~lu~ry~;,Lii~ ~:f:~ ie camera & proj., patio i~~J-:,~J!t,~~: rouse! 6 color. Bst orr: SEA RAY'S SOL CATf' \Isl Sell:' 17' Ko~rt ,.._. Spcmbhor furn , microscope, SILVER SERVICE, 541H894 Catamaran JI' Cl.Usie Xlnt cood, used 4 mea, LIBRARIES INC Model, perfect running CCMlt uti 1 't & h All 1971 ....,_...._, wbt wbt aalli bllt slf eont.ained. Includes cond.1.akenew$250 bolb.1 i.po.-ary na ca iems muc FINE FURN & AN·40 Yanh off wht nylon ....._s ., ' tlusbtolJetw/trg boltlina E 0 E M fTl' 2 lioor f f refn" $250. 6pc. Bedroom set more. TIQUES 64$-2200 h · 2 Yd 19•.30• traD>t>, cat box, trapeae, "lank, 6 gal hot ..Jr•ler .. . . . ,,. ., MUSTSACRIFICE . s aR. cpl g. 0 s t.rlx comp. Xlnt. cood. be~:..r, ranae a. ovao Some misc. rum MS-5748 s 169 00 YARD SALE·Fum, wr· . scupltured red nylon cpt. H .a.111so .... ·s SZ.150 1'7a.11'5 •.e .. ~ ---------• • Inger washer , misc. Gor1teousdaamond&ruby 20 Yds deep plnk shag ~ " • W/(an exhaust. dbl •Jilk. 1ELEPHONESALES Frigidaire Washer & Cris Funtlhrt garaae & household ring. 2 diamonds sur· (short) 231 Cabrillo, (te· SEA RAY •HOBIE 14, •/trlr. eood shower. •IP• 8, lrg 'Lbcal company has open· Dryer <elec). minl cood. 186511 bor Bl d c~t rounded by 12 rubles set c ........ n.. ... of cloeet.t lrg ck ele.c lrigs in reorder dept Jor Harvest gold . $300. a~5-615lv · · ~~ds~~~~Y~~~~ua~ In ~old, very blrl. ar> .M 2327;::.~s·5·A· .....,..,_,.,.;..I:ePP. refria.' preJ::e water cxper 'd sales personnel. 551-6896 or 4!13-2453 OcL l3, 14 & 15. 9 10 dark. Sac !ice $50(). 962·1713 Estate Sale. 9-2 PM, Sal 5 sy&tcm w /30 go l of high comm ission & , Medite rra nean Dining E.Sade 2l320rangeAve. U••s.__k 8075 only./\llLik.eNew!Pale 3101C6'o3as1t2H5wy,N.8. loah.Sltp./ water,batteryllU.Olls. bonus. xlnt company Kenm~re Gas _Dryer & Room set, w,8 ch1urs. "'·""' gm tufted SI • r • 47 Doclra 9070 ..,_,.. 837-4'<.<! 'benefits. Contact Mr. Washing Mac~ane. Both $l22S.S59·4643 C.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cos t Sll50, o;~~~.50Lag ••••••••••••••••••••••• -· ..-. · · Webster639-4620 perfect workang cood. APPLIANCES. other Reg. Morgan mare. broke llerculon beige sofa & 73 LA PAZ. 33 Ft, Dsl O M •ai KIT, &elf·coot. Travel $200.894·5208 Leavln~ Slate, mst sell items Sat/Sun I0-4 1411 to ride & drive. blk love seat. cost $850, 1240. Trawler. 1000 ml range, MO RI GS Trailer. Sl8SO. or be$t of· ---------~ hse full of furn. 620 Utica K' 'Rd NB ' ru.rade Mor0 an °eldlng, I top cond ReaA0 f FuU '·la J --•· , r-.,.__.,..,,,,. Lady Kenmore Deluxe set St H B · 1ngs .. , 5'8·2375 ,... .. " 2 gr. ve vet chairs $60 ea. . · 'Y • ve aevera ........ 1or .... -Eng, We stern (7 14 ) Lg 1 l . rr tbl $75 electrorucs, all conven. I ... /Npt B b ---------elect wshr $60, dryr $15. " · · . wa nu co ee · pp 714/544·'1335' 88 e .. e moor-l!r7U9' Cavalier. Sel( eon· Xlntcond. 673-7~ New sectional sofa, won't GIANT Gar. sale. Sat & l31l·l011 Wal~ul desk $00. Singer . ' logs. Call Tony al t alned. Vory cle;ln. : -; TELEPHONE SALES fit new Me qullt'd soft Sun, Oct. 15 & 16· Car· MochiMry 8078 &eW?Jlg machine $50. Lg Chns Craft Sea Skiff. 28' 875-l393orMM979. Bkr screen house lnc:l •d ~ TOP.CASH pd for gd grn floral'. best ofr. TV , sewing ma c h , ••••••••••••••••••••••• Zerutth$700co~eTwnTV,6mo $16,000.Belterthaonew.fteserved Newport Ex· $249S.968-s&K • WorkPart-t1me1n oncor re(ngs, furn, stoves & Stereo Med. cab $150. dlnettcset&clolbes.etc. AIR COMPRESSORS cos ·-""' sprgs fully equipped. Call . pUr circulation sales dyrs.839·9l23,898·0132 · 64().5954 4631 Havenhunt, Willow MUS o · & matt bdrm st, much Rlck.Daya&42·4352Nites ecuuve req ... res sUp 1~ 16'Aristocrat,slpsS.stv, .T,doms & al~ll ha ve • 10 Tract. lrv,9AM·5PM AesoZtrr'::iis5cob~T! more, lots or small 6'13-4938 Ne•port for new 29 refrlg, as is. $700. p.I c 11 s ure t 1 me Co r AuctiOft 15 Duncan Phyfe 7 pc solid ' Items. 2972 Jacaranda Erickson Please leave 646-2JS4l alt s " ;,_hlf y . k ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mahogany dlnsel Buffet GAR A. GE SALE 2 UP TO 50% OFF LIST. Ave CM 44' T . C bl messageat&t0-4411 •-----·-----.,o ........ · ou can wor · Families Furn trunks Al L SIZES CALL (714) • · rl· 8 o, c ustom1---='--------1 near home & still pursue &lg mirror $800. 646-9771 a ntq 5 ·& gd • junk' 646.5282 • C d 1 built 1900. Steel hull, all ssoo FlNDER'S l''ee ot· Tear Drop Trailer, (l'6ocl outside activities We PUBLIC FURNITURE Sa Su . c· IS . u sto m m n e og new interior & galley 2 r ecU Npt U conclSIS-2 $100. tlflY wages+ cornm. PM *AUCTION* lOO's or single wood bed N ~ "< 5n :1an t& Colchester Lathe 13"x36" waterbcd hdrm set, heads. shower 5 KW tu OC' per'fa· is p t09'73t '1f'!l avail. Call for de-T--u.,7.30•.M . ~h~mosees. S7o::i~ylpel~i~o Prosi>ect) $1000.MllwaukeeMillln~ twraatesr~co mchpad~stpolr . gen. /\sklng $18,500. S:1~~~om. • oop. MlolerYlce Pwt1 U11ls. -• ..-• · , · $2<Xl0. Punch press 10 ton. ':"' cou • 1 ay !>44-9035 • ~ " LosAngelcsTimcs , IDealersWekoneJ some fancy, some oak. CARPORT SALE: Sat & 11200 <213>961.3434 cab!nct. golf .clubs , loets.SpMd& liAcceuorie1 9 .. 00 540.0001 CONSIGNMENTS No mattresses. From Sun 9·5. Everything ~ocs, . lady 8 clothes, Jewelry' 31 BERTRAM S.F. s.i 9010 ~··•:••• .. •••••••••-•• STOCK LIQUIDATION S20-S3S ea. 28822 El Can· leavlng Ca. Furn, bicy· MlscellClfttOUS 8080 stereo e~ulp., par~ot Wel1equip'd. $24,900. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 64· 11 Used ,)lus\ang Love I y bdrm set s, lo, Lag. Niguel. 49s-5935 cle, exercycle, men's c!t ••••••••••••••••••••••• c~ge, anUq'c'c guns 71 675·0255 eves. 19'1S • 19" TahlU Jtt boat, Parts. 990 No. Perkct, .,. THEATRE armoire. chest, des k, I ad I es c Io thing, D HAP ES f' R 0 M f'iatcoovertible. 49801912 . .. ~ custom built, muat aea. Oran1ee. Ca11997·2000 • Ua he r s . Even Ing bookcases, dinette tbls & HERCULOll..I household lte ms• CERMANY·Brnnd new, TOOL BOX. 2 Side mount 13 3tt/.?5~0N ?AL~: 548-Utl For sale misc. V.'W. employment. Apply an chrs, LR this, lamps, pie· ...,. vacu um c I ea n er s, already sewn on tape & service units for any fit .0 son. >'"'· 0 • lt to · Pe.rson 7·0pm. Warner turcs, sofas, occasional l 'Sofa&Lo•eseat Charmglow gas DBQ, ready lo be hung. One icku , StOO both la e new: Many cxtrus. loeh.S .... .,. 9090 ealll, mo ra, C~Ht-. Drtve ln, 7361 Warner chrs. rockers, sm. pool IOTHPIECIS Sl99• plants. etc. Big selection open wcavo beige with :96-0S(latt5 m · $2000. 642·3434, 540·9100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~··98~lloJ flYW~•· ·Ave. RB. Must be 18. tbl, pool side furniture. r«twoodblU'lclocks.1845 browntocoveranywhere p · <Rkk> Ooat&RVStorairespaces•---1-... ____ _._ n>E _ apt size refrlg. PLUS SPCP' "'Y~ Monrovia, Sp. 56. CM. rmm l0to20feetdepend· $acrlflce. Ork Oran.ie Bayllner 20• 1973 8 cyl avaU. '30, mo. Nowport ._.__..__~.;..a..;. : Tow TrllCk D-'v"r!' "" LOTS Of' MISC. -..-....... Please park outside. Ing on fullnes11. ~lso. Noug Lovesent. Xlnt. Volvo w /lrlr '$4250 Dunes, 1131 Beckbay Dr._.._...._. " .. " "' SSS SAVE SSS S711. Rec).$ I t 50 white· beautifully em· $45/bst. 5J6·608G 544•1550 675.5525 ' Nwpt Bell. 8"-0510 -··••••••••••••0 •M•• pef'cl. 'fop pay. Apply. 3 U '--R Tbls Good Stuff Garage Sale, bro1dert.'<1 lacy curtain, • ~/ • G&WTowing. lOOOJ rvme We honor BofA, MC, •....., "' Sat 10·5. Furn, oppl.. noor to ceiling. Come & Comer tbl. $15. ROOSeneck 14' FIBERGLASS&wood CliMICs tl20 , .. Ave,NB642·12S:t g~~~erJ Checks & $99. dril\wood & bric·a ·brac. seetoapprcclate &makc desk lamp$10, nlte sland 4011P 0 /8 & trlr Must Tr .. pwf•tloft ...................... . 1'rainee Sales-J<':ut .. A ks. PL~i&'k",s~.noodal Curtis Funtlt8" 183C>'FuUerton Ave, CM offer. 22935 Galaxy Lane, $20. Kitch ladder~. rm. selJ. 673-mOaft 4:3oPM C .. ••••••••s"···,••••••••• 19S4LfNCOLNCAP:fc I c .. "c . . 1865 Harbor Blvd. C.M. t:I Toro 58l·OOS8 divider $25, bnr stools, •~f'lt J -..A bl 0 Growing Distr1but on available. llems subject MS-6l51 Patio Sale: Bargains! --· · like new 120. wood dbl •76 suray,2l'SUncbascr, RNt 9120 n ....... re3tora •W I· Q>:rp. now hJring to hon· topresale baby equipmenl, ladies Dl cyl'le. mirror lamp. hdbonrd. $25 r oler Cuddy Mere %33 f/0 •H•••••••••••••••••••• t.ion. ~~lo\.e aad wlll a,e comm'I &. lndust'I MASTEJtS AUCTION clothing sl:ie 8 • 12, dis· World books, Slim & broiler $25 W/SL~nd, fire fully equ1ppbd ~nver' '12 El ~o •••• alps 5, ~t uc:Jflwortt ~ t .:.,l:n'!rft~~Mt!a~::m'!iaz: 2075 Newport Blvd. CM King si M>ra bed, $225. hes, furn., lamps, misc. trim, vncuum, movie extinguishers. S gal $25, trlr. 1118()(). Lo hrs, 1m'. J acka le camper dam-(JUtlTT) d~ Stev";';t • 833 9625 G«-8686 Earth tones, Jlerculon. good lea. 216 J aam lne screen. fl replace screen, 1V st1nd $15, elec bo11ter mac. (114 )831·.3399 aft g po rs. Xlnt c:ood. Ph 60_ 4sr8 even lai a . • ~ea~.~Jl~M~r~.~Hor~~r1~11~,!:8!18~·4~48~6'.:..1 I--... -.... -~-Call968-1482. COM. lSat9AM ) toaster&ml11c. 640·748'7 no 545.1291 pm. S31-f9ZS _ MO-GM4da,.. • .. -'. . . f . ¥12 DAILY PILOT Friday, ?°lober 14, 19'171 ~!·.'.":~ ....... ·~~·.~!·.~":~:.'!::t. ....... ~~·.~~·.~~~~ ....... ~~~~·.~":~~r:t~ ....... ~~~·.'!~ ....... ~!•.'.":~ ....... ~1/ Trvckl 9560 s W .... d 9590 AHa RCNIWO 9705 IMW 9712 DatMm 9720 Joguar 9730 Mere••• ltu 9740 •• •• 974t~ Clcis1lc1 9520 •••••••••• •• •••••••• ••. -·••• •••••••• ••• ••• ••• ••••••••••• •• • • ••• • • • •• •••••• •••• •• • • • • • • • • •• • •••••• • •• •• •• • • • •• • •• • • •••• • •• •••• ••• • • • • •• •• • ••••• ••••••••• ••• ••• ••• ••••••••••••• ••• • •• ••• • t ••,.•••••••••••••••••••• lt7'FC>aD WIWIUIUY 75 Atta Romeo WANTED TO IUY 1977 DATSUN '7ttXKEJa.-iuarH2uuto. lt72MIZUOD 'fik~ ~~';,~ '~t!"·· o:t Olc.1.$ 88 Convertlbl@, lAMCHlllO YOUR DATSUN Hun· 1:1.000 m1h·i1 lm quality used UMW11. £. 10 COUPE l111&d d. aod ~hurp. +cur Automatic: & air c:ond. truiu AC iromac' cond PB P1S P111cat A'C ROYCARVaslMW r-co\1•r. $4950. work F th I r ' ' '•' • • «Vic ,,;6 221n' Fully 6qu1pped inctu<ltng '\'AlO FOR Oil NOT il'laculall' <75!11. l P\ 5 i.µi:cd. AM 1-"~U. ra1llul IJ.M 9311 cw\ ... 1.,.,..,.. .,,or ·ed e ··utxhur~r"' o. o ~250. 840·8895, (213) • ""iOIUKlr . ..,..,_ ...... ____ m & c:ruiso c.-oatro1. TOP DOLLAR $6799 l540JamburccKoad tuc~ <l!!Y~llLl l • ..., v-... • .. en: es• e 1: :•c1cn· 487-48$0 ·: ~1 ford Pickup, not run· UC3846H. [FOR TOP CARS Copeland Mfrs NEWPORT BEACH SADDLHACK trl Jag XKE Rondstcr, ol di I 8.14~ umj! ~I Sale Priced-$4890 21.101 i-; 1 .. 1 SA MIMIOOo 6.C0-6444 VAUEY IMPORTS w~rc whcclis. hardtop, 768 ti3!>6 MIR.AClE A46di 9707 83 I ·2040 49 5.49 49 M2·0005 nft 7PM1wl<nds MIHIU,_ l/ll JO 1MPUNJ~ '71 2.&0SL. Uop!I. auto, AC....,~ sttrw tape, blue·blk W.. • 113.000. 1175-3959 .. ' . 61 IENnlY SJ MAZl>A/REHAULT ••••••••••••••••••••••• 55 Jog XIC 140 _ llluck. Thls car IS out· ~lSOilarbor Blvd., C.M. --'70 Audi \OOLS, new paint 221tl7., mu.9t ~t>ll b.> Suo M 1 n l Con d 1 lion Bil . ... ·- &J I 114U 4Y) 110~ 'tfl 250SL 4 spd, AM/FM, -,twndme. (781)7) C•ll Ron 645-5700 UY uphol , llrci., AM, Fl'tt Sharp, loadt>ll. 10 mi <Nl"H789) lormformallon. WEB cn~ellc. <'In $1800/BsL $1 ST" HOAOWAY SSl!OO.bstofr fi73 2SUt $7489 llb>t.~. • 644-4579 •. MOTOR CAR CLUM CARS ofr. 5Sll 7233 SAHfA AHA 1972 DATSUN MOTOR CARS D'ELEGAMCE & TRUCKS IMW 9712 s 35·3 I 7 I 510 2 DOOR D'ElEGAHCE '63 1900 Mercedes Benz...• $!250/btt olr. lHC Ul.flt.IATC DAIVIHO MACHIN( tJ.:l6 W.17thSl\S47 U2.'>0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• i\ulomotic, u1r C'Ond., ~iW 17lhSA54?·9250 •USED BMW's* CONNELL CHEVROLET CaU 642o9601, 675--0144 72TITAH I of 5 buill Pur.-wh1tt• 125 coats of ua~ h\' 1,11' quer> Vinyl tup llur1o:a11· 1ly mlenor i.:ntu·c ~ur ,.,ounJ proof1•tJ ft1r lamous "itn.icr. C<•ll llon lor information 1.ll5NYX> MOTORCAR O'ELEGAMCE tM!6 W 17lh SA 54 7 ·9'.!50 6 7 Gorclotl l<eeble Silver. One or a kind l'ome &i;cc t.h1i. one. Iser W1t1t 111X>kc whec.li.·runs 1:rt•u1. (~lllti6Z l SoM Priced-$2340 MIRACLE MAZDA/REM.AULT <!LSO Harbor B lvd., C.M. 645-5700 9570 •••••••••••••••••• 1 ton ·oo Chev step-van w, '73 6 cyl. eng., 14 mpg, e\'erything good cond. t~'x6' ~. wmdo.ws, ex- ~Harbor Blvd. COSTAMF..SA 546-1200 WE PAY TOP DOLL.A It FOR TOP USED CA ltS FOREIGN, DOM ES'I'lt: or CLASSICS H your car iJ oitlra cleun see u.s rinMJ IA\,IER IUICIC :m5'Harbor Ulvd Costa Mesa 97!1·2500 MOTORCAR D'EUGAMCE t>ai W t7tbSA 547·!1:!50 tTn . S1il1>6+ofto-:'.~t----TOP ~321m: &46·'1008 R otiottal ~cles 9530 ....••...•......•..•.•. ·n Dodge Van B·tOO, l'USI • inl ext. AM. FM stereo. cassette w,4 spkrs. sun roor. mac:.. l\tu:>l sell Cas t . usk1n.: for loan I) U N I!: B U 'G G Y balartce only. Low c O R \' A J R • s 5 O O . mileage, 50,000 mile war· i':\CS1wkndscal1962·1746 ranty. ~5861 nrt. 6 & 4 Whff--1 Dri•;s -9550 _w_knd.<_s_. -- ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77 Dodge customized AMC-JEEP #I in Calif. WE OUTSELL ALL w wet bar, ice box. be<!. Must sell. Will sue. 754·065S JEEP DEALERS '76 GMC VanDura. 16.000 INTHESTATE m1. G cyl slandarct. HUGE INVENTORY AM1 F'M cassette stereo. . \II Models New & U:1ed xlnt c:ond, ~500. 496-4847 Leasin~ Avuilublt• ,59 Matro$ I OO Costa Mesa "' DOLLAR PAID 1''0RCLEAN IMPORT CARS ALL MODELS WE HEED CLE.AH USEOCARS NOW SADDLE BACK BMW COMEIN&SEE TtiE630CSI HOW OH DISPLAY OUR COMPLETE IODYSHOP tSMOWOPEH BMW RESALES '77 c"'" "p•vl ·>"""Ell \'Jn~J top & in cxccllcnl J-·--9732 """" "",., """"' 1· l111111 n g c o n d ll I on . ... ..... '72MBCIDtS 2204DOOI '773:t0ia S 'll l77RSK MlUOTX ). /\ rcnl huy ul ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·w2002.1six1s n-1otPor ONLY 51595 74J.nsenHem•r ''"'"""n1.1.o~w.""' .. '763.0sl4spS,H572PQM only J9.000 mi es. o.11,,..,11MM1 ·74 Uuvarua auto AM11"M i.leroo, Mugs., ''5999 .. ·780MVC Like new. (481KZR) Closed On Sundays U.000 mile I yr-Warranty 2845 HAHBOR Rt.VO. il b' ORAHGE COUNTY'S _J40.64 ~ $40-021 l uvu u ,eS4599 OLDEST 811 Copelmd Mtrs KanNINI Ghia 9735 Bill MAXEY T OYOTA 1 I I• • I #•, a. I•"' I 4 ' I\\' l41JNJ MC..l\•Mlt4(._. $ 2001 E 1st SA 558-8000 ························---------Sales·Service-Leai.1ng Ro Ccrver,lnc. ~ ...... ...-qt:c_ BMW 197 I ICOI , .... Ghia I 972 Ml% 250 Jn eitceltent condition! c OU p E. Lo" u r y '73 450 SE. Wht w/bl1,1 le.at.her int, sunr'f, ifl)-· mae., AM /F~ atere(i., Cal1613-IU7. • ' ·~-~~-~-~-· '71 2-IUD. 4 dr. 1 owner, llke rtew. Loaded. · •• • 675-1285 ''13 280SE 4.:>. Silver. btk Int, AM·l-~M, alr, $6700. 2l3·592-3189 '74MIIJJO COUPE. Silver bl":-met.aUlc exterior, stereo. • pwr. windows & low miles. Jn f:tntaaue coodi- • • • 1974 3 OCs l~IOJam rec • • A Newport Bench 640-6444 73Datsun c;_.. Not many left! (30«7). equipped with low miles S-f..611U -4' ia:.JA...exceUcol coodl.· M"\ION \Ill JO rMPOQT~ MIRACLE hon. New Michelin tires CUUPl-~. Aotomut1c. -- electnl' ~unroof & win· '70 B~1W 2002, air. s un- <lows. le11ther intcnor & roof. xlnt cond Konis. I u x u r y w h c c I s . ~-firm. 586-8579 S1lvcr1black (488LNTl. OMLY $12,995 iS MET. Blue 3 OSI. full pwr, 4 spd .. s unrf. tape 197 6 l.OSIA ~l~~~s1t· 4 5 '1 4 7 2 9 • ·---·-O... ot •ltlftd l:r»+i~HI BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 1111 1 lf'e<•l1•4 It' I \\\ HUMTIMC.TON It t.C H Automatic, u1r cond., ------ sten..'O, electric windows, '72 JlAVARlA. Vt!TY t'ln. leather Interior & only S439S. Days: ti<l4· 7283, 16.000 miles. Like New' eves: 49-1-5907 1975DATSUN 8-ZIOCOUPE Capri 971 S 2 Door 4 speed truni.. & (046RXU). ONLY $12,895 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IO\V 1111les. Jn cxccJJ~nt 1976 53014 Aulomutic. air cond .. !>lcn.'<>. bei~c exterior & low miles. <HANS 21 76Capri11 cond111on! (233NDN>. V6, Sunroof, AM.FM. PRICEDTOSELL F:H.1ory mags, vinyl lop. <~NQM) 2 year, 24.()()(J mile warranty avaifa!Jlc, MISSION VIEJO IM PORTS "'•ti• I '••••• I .,._' • •• "-""'"' MAZDA/RENAULT & w i r e w h e e I s . 1689GWG ). Good selec· 21'° Harbor Blvd., C.M. tlon or other MBZs an -·-•~•_s_..s_7_oo_· __ 1 &toek.• . . . :!JI IJ4j 4v~ I 'v' 9742 ·····················~· '&I Convt. Custom top, nu '731Ai. Midge~ 3S,OOO au. Ml\~ION l/lfJO lf>IPQllFS paint. nu mt. nu eng. Xlnt rood. Remov h/t. Kon1s. Porsche rims. S2~/ofr. Alt 6/wknds Completely restored. 67$-7914 Ask for Ri~hard. 645-5702 '60 ConverUble, 220 SE, , __ M_G_J\_fi-dg_e_t_, -xl_n_t-co_n_d_, ofc:,675-5l65hm. xlnl cond, $10,SOQ.· inside&out.Runsgreat, '68 CONVERTlBLE Runs 673-40!Mor 64().8200 must sell $1,500. Dave. . ... . .. 8311 74tl •?~1104 Gd. Needs pamt. . t 972 MIZ 250 i-640-4639 __ __,,, ____ _ S36-00t7 4 DOOR SEDAN. Low I 9744 'll~ convrt. wht,'wht. miles, AM/FM radio, oir ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·, Ciherry cond. New rads, cond. & luxury equipped. '67 MOB. New eng, tire'Sj : clean. $2400. 645·0785 G 8 muffler, wiring. Ndl( I Ma•da 9738 minor body work. ~, • Call 496-0t32 . :' Ml~)ION I/II JO IMPOAIS . . . CALL PAPPY 540-5630/ ONLY $11 ,495 1974 3.0SA AMC J Call 548-8-167 eep -----. .!524 11AHBOR BLVD 7 t Ford VB, c.1 rn pr L•ISta Me:>a ~9-8023 eqwp'd, fort air. AT. PS, • JEEPS u77u -~.S2600. 5-lS--1~26 1011 \SO\ & SO\ Jo'ull power. sunroof. . $3299 Copeland Mtrs 200l E lsl SA 558-8000 831 1748 495 170'1 '73 240%. ••••••••••••••••••••••• . ... .. 8 J I I 7 4 6 4 9 S I 104 miracle mazda 1970 Ml% 210SE Pwr. sunroof & windows. leather interior & air 2150 H..._, tt.d. cond. Immaculate! 74MGI j A little jewel! (606MXX) $4189 .~.· • LINCOLN· MERCURY leather 1nlc~ior & air 'i t V-6, Ai\t·l-'~1. Decor cond. <388KLI' ). Group. XJnt cond. 2iJ.500 Fiot 9725 MOTORCARS ·• c J 5 • s . c J _ i • s • Ford Va~ 1975 E350. PS, Cherokees. Wagonccrs. PB. radio new brakes, 2626 HARIOR ILVO. OMLYS8995 mi $2950.64~9111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,._......._ u-·-645-5700 l70CBFA>. • O'EUGANCE 626 W 17th SA 547 ·9250 ~clc.-ups. up to 1.200dii.-. lntrond. S4500::!_93-0926 COSTA MESA t:OWlls. S yr 50.000 mile 76 Ford ElSO. Full con-WE IUY ~ ..__ SAOD&.UACIC MUSTSB.LT \f AU.EY IMPORTS --------75 FIAT SPIDER 1973 l.AVAJl.IA Ci~ 9716 CONVERTJBLE t\utomuuc with air con· •••••••......-.•••• •~••• .. I 9744 ••••••••••••••••••••• \o\llJTanlys a\ aJlable. 'ers1on. all xtras tncl'd. USED CARS! Copeland Mtrs Inc Clean. \lu:.l sell. Bst orr. We're the new Che\'rolct '72 :\lalda RX2 4-dr _8_3_1·_2_0_4_0_4_9_M_9_4_9_ 73 Ca SM Uni\' 18,500 mill:., :> d1t1on1Qg. :.tcrt'O l'a:o.~elt1.· .. ~ ~pc~d . win• \\ h(·cl~. &i.unroor. tOOJ~AZl Fu 11 ~ Ell u 1 p ~I l• 11 ,\)I t'.\I ~lcioo & ~upcr -..... 1971 OPEL ~1 E lst. SA 558-8000 _898-_s_m ______ _, dealen.hip in the Ir' ine '67 CJS AMtos W..te-ci 9590 ,\uto Center \1fr ne('d OMLY $6795 13J7MJC I \harp' ll:?:t'IJN>. Pric·(•d $7989 lu~cllth1.,"'cckl'n<l 1 s~dan. 4 s pd. radials. •74 Ml% 450SEL 195()/bst. 968-8359 • " AM ·f')I. Runs great. s 1200 , bs l nfr. Dys Leather intenor. pwr. '72. Xlnt. Gd tires, bat\. ~--t9ll0, e\'s 960-4l35 windows. cruise control. trlr hlh. bike rack. Make Be;st ofr. 640·08-19 eve •••••••••••••••••• •••• • your used cur, JOE 19n 2002tu -.,..-..---WE'UIUY 9560 your foreign or compact ••.,.••••••••••••••••••• car. paid ror or not! Cull 1970 Ford F-250 pickup w/ladder rack & tool box. 673·5M6 Sales Mgr. llLL YATES VW-PORSCHE FORD F2SO. 1!171 Camper StmJuanCapistrano MACPHERSON CHEVROLET 2l Auto Center Dnvc IRVINE 76S.7222 •l :.peed, A~f FM radio. u1r cond. & magi.. 1173001'~1 ONLY $5995 1972 2002tii 4 speed, u1r cond .. stereo -cassette & mai:i wheels, wheels . <627FGX 1. S l)ecial. it Int cond. 137-4800 493-451 1 t>'l0-6828 aft 6PM. 640-9900 Autos, lmf)orted Days, Linda · Will take over your pay. ••••••••••••••••••••••• OHLY SS29S men ts on '76 or '77 GeMraf 970 I •73• ~ ton Chevy PU. Cadillac <Cd V or ••••••••••••••••••••••• C ostom 20. R /H . 350 Brougham>. Must be ful· •72 Audi. 4 spd. a cond A•LO. 70,000 ml. Good ly loaded. No leases. Mr. Stereo rad stl rudial work truc k. S2000. Detwiler, 586·2911 or tires. Jmmac S2600. Call 197l 2002 4 !.peed, Be~:ker AM. FM &sunroof. U77REV>. ONLY $4495 58f-45n S3H375 114/495-1.327. 1972 2002 ~. UMCI AMtol. UMCI •74 tOOLS. 4 Spd, 31r. Automatic: with air cood. ••!••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• stereo. new radials. Xlnt A o n c owner ea r . .MliRQDIS MOTORS VOLVO~ TOYOTA SPECIAL TY CARS- . lf1l Of'IL MAMTAZDOOI Automatic. sunroof, air tonditlooing and low miles. (993JFCI. lf7JIMC« ltMA.LCOUN Au1o., rrwr. steer. & brakee. pwr. windows& seats. Bir cond .. radio & vinyl 10(). Low miles. (266HIV} 52695 s1195 ln4~PIMTO ~w·~ lf71TOTOT4 caac:A6T 5 speed. air cond .. .a speed & radio. stereo with tape player (8'9KBPJ. & rreos. Low miles. (207MXUl s2595 s4295 • H70 YOUCSWAMN lf74 f'lTMOUTH """ SCAMr court tompletely rebuilt 6 cyl . economy. engine-guaranteed automatic, vinyl top & for 12 IT'Onths, 20,000 radio. One owner !fliles. (435BLN) c a r -1·1 I< e n e w I , (686KMB) .s1995 s2795 . lt74FOAD PIKl'O IWHAIOUTS (2 to choose from) Both cars have low )rules. (068KEG) & f876LOZ). Your choice at tt71HOHD4 CIVIC 4 speed, special paint & radio. Super gas saver! (690NJP). = 5 2395 s2995 . 1975AUDI POX M arool'I exterior. Automatic trans • radio :. 'd tow miles. p24MXI) 1t11.- ~ Like NEW! Low miles & AM/FM stereo. (5651). ~ :~3695. s3295 MllRQDIS · · ·MDTD RS I VOLVO & TOYOT4 ZHOZ Mwpinte f'llwy. • Mission Vieio 831-2880 495·1210 cond. $2950. ~-1249. !1.21FTQ> OHLY$44'5 Alfa ROflWo 9705 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ''" 2002 • ALfA ROMEO '* ORANGE COUNTY'S Automatic. air cond. & AM/f 'M radio. A one owner car. (ZRV44ll). •lDEALERI Big discount& on nil models now In stock I ! ! OMLYS.24'5 BEACH IMPORTS These pnces are good 848 DOVE STREET thru 10/15i77. <Near MacArthur Blvd. SADDWACK &Jamboree Road) NEWPORT BEACH VAU.EYIMPORTS 752-0900 ll 1·2040 49S-.949 Autos, UM4 Autos, UHd .............................................. '78 .· n.y-re •..,.., N• tit ..... ., YW Over 25 Bugs ~ .... c.,.._ .. ~__......._7 . kcrmann Ghias '7J C..-4 speed, stereo. #9010 '72 C...,. 4 sPeed. radio. #7010 '11 C-.. Auto .. s tereo with tape. #9022 '72 c ... Forest green 119053 VW Convertibles '77 • •o• ~o. •7 3 • •c .. o ~= :~ --. t Oo;i.) '6 9 outoma1oc •90&11 MAHY OTHER IMPORTS •14 rw_..-.#ftoz '74fWwp.#tOO.C '7t.MM••#IOIS ·1 t M6I 4 .. #60'2 '71 .... MWpt.#7010 •• , Mei c-.. 4 .. #1057 '0 Teyefll S& .C .,. #IOIJ 'O T~e4 ... #1002 loclv M.'1 Speclat '71 v ... 4 .. #1 6ot S44H ""' UHi $Jlf5. $4ZH '"" "'" SllH Hcrbour Volkswagen 842-4435 117111Mdaa..L.t• ............ 5* th: ... '" 9.f. w 9.7, S.,l0.7 All~ l'l\llt r_,, 4 (IC 6fi« ~ te>-1•n MOTORCARS D'EUGAMCE ti26 W 17th SA S-17·9250 MJSSION VIE JO I MPORTS ... #.. . I:' ........ 11 I -• • -~••t ---------• sunroof &metaJUc paint. olr.493-8831 BRAND MEW Jo g reat condition I i--_......------9-7 ...... 4 ..... 7 83 1 1748 49S 1704 '76 MAZDA RX4 Cl9SLOVl. Dohun 9720 •••••••••••••••••••••• ...•...•.....•••....... E'tamplc: Automatic, AM . t'M radio. s teel r11d1als & center console. <Ser. 2llll. List Price is M ISSION llllJO IMPORrS . . ' ·-. I .. • • .r •• BJ I J 14 8 49 S I 704 1972Pmtera :··~ Yellow au orig., n r.• pecfcct,loml. <Ser.<C.234),.. *DRIVE~* * LITILE ••. * SAVE A LOT 1.900 Spider. nc•w putnt & lop, AM, fo'~I ti track in th1i.h. ~uod cond 556-U..~7 uflcr I pm wkdayi. & wknds SS574 . '60 Mercedes, s acrifice, Sal~ Priud At no reas. offer refused. All Sl2,Jl9 K~• MOTOR CARS .1.: SHOP&COMPAnt: nn:J 12.1 Spydcr AM·FM i.lcr 8-trk. 10,000 m1 fl:id un-s. nu !>P:tl'\.' Gd cund -'la kc ufr. 675 R34 I $4082 new interior. reblt 280 eog. As king $2000. O'B.EGAMCE ·•·. 626W 11th SA 547-9250., ~ BARWICK DATSUH Th1::.0Cfer lsgood 645-2117 ot 9741 " """·'! 111.1111 1p1·.tr .111•• thru Oct. 17.1977 1------- 8)1.137; 493.3375 NEWPORT DATSUN FORTHEIEST FLEET PRICES CClllllruce Low TODAY! 1188 DOVESTREF:T Near ~tacArthur &Jamboree Road:. 833-1300 llATTHE PRICE IMCRlASEI!! 28NEWCARS ATTHEOLDPRICES All models now avu1la· ble. Call or see us before you buy!!! COSTA MESA DATSUN ·;:1 frnt 128. 2 dr 'l\.'<lan Xlnl \.'Ond. $1650, b:sl of I er 673-0929 'iO Fiat 12l ~pydcr SS 000 mi Xlntcond 673-~l 68 Fiat 850 coupe Spyder t>n~ml'. ratl1ab i:al $50 l!li 3161 9727 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lrGltd Hew •77 HONDA Cars MANY To Choose FT-om! UNIVERSITY OldsMObil• Hotida Can • GMC Trucks 2850 Harbor Blvd. C6slU Mt'sa 5.10·9640 ---------~HARBOR BLVD. HONDA ACCORD. New. 540.6410540.0213 Only 1600 ml. Sliver ·74 260Z 2+2. ;.\,C, aolo, w, b~k l~ler1or . A.uto A~·FM tape, wire whls. tr::in:; & air cond. S6295. XJnt cond. PP. :HG-Ot<W Ph Wkd}~ 9 to 5. 6 IS·L822. wkdys. Asking $4950 673·8969 wkncb & eves '68 2000 R DST R ~~; ·75•'!& CIVIC ltatchbk, · 5 pd t . K · ~pd. 23000 m1. New rad pa.ml, s rans. orus. & pit. $3000. 552.8834 3t.ops,$2000.833·168-t ---------t 1914 D at s u n B 2 1 o ..,..., Hew 91 MIRACLE Mcada/RettGaft 21.50 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 645-5700 9740 •••••eeeeeeewe••••eeee4 LeGH Hew-UHCI OVER 100 MERCEDES ON.Of Sft.A Y Home of.....,,.,. AUTIIORIZJ:o .. MER CEDES DEALER 6862 Manchester, Buena Park 523-7250 On the Sant.a Ana Fwy. '74 MIZ 450SE Less than 34,000 miles! Complete with cruise control, slct"W, pwr. win· dows, radial tires-in superb showroom coodl· tion. (142UW). MUST SH!!! M ISHON ~llJOIMPOIHS . . . . -.. - 8 J I I 14 8 4 9 S I 7 04 9100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hatchback. good condi· •••••••••••••••••••••• lion, new tires. AM F'M, .. --!Jim--------.. ~~7!1995,bs l nfr . ~--~~'77s,YA't_ '76 280 Z leaving for ~ "'~ Europe. Sl200 & toke over payments '\94-6006, 40.HioOI 'n 280Z, 5 spd. copper, s50 loaded, 5600 mi. $7600. 830-3665 or 581'1>082 l973 240Z, air, AM FM t.apedeck, S4500. OVER INVOICE EXA~U. UI«. ~& '2DI) 673-6832 & 549-91«)3 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY · Is a ,good day to advertise in the Daily Pilot ClaSS4fied Section. ' OVER I 00 CARS AND TRUCKS TO CHOOSE FROM GHAT USID CA.ls-LOW PalCIS . _,,,. ... .._ ............ ,.... ..... _ .. , .. 11 NEWPORT DATSUN MHrMecA...,.J_.er .. IH DOVI ST. 833 1300' MIW~ . • ... ""' . . ' •75 MII 45051 Sunroof, cruise control, l~tber & metallic paint. (o:mtl). SIJ,495 MISSION VII JO IMll()llf~ . . 8JlrT48 49',170.J l.98S Z)QSL. both &ope. .. speed. 1967 2SOSL, leather & ruU back seat. Auto. Both mint cond. Bntolfer. 6'15-7903 SFASTCASHS fOR. YOUlt USED MERCEDES Call our used ca r manager foe a quote to- dav. Ml\SION 1/1()0 IMPOi!TS . . 8JI 1748 49~ '704 744SOSa Gold. Bas everything. (787LIZ) Sil.tat MOTOlCAlt D•ELEGAMCE 626 W 17th SA S47·02S0 •PEUGEOT• Big dl1coonta on •U . ..: models DOW in Stock! ! ! • IEACH IMPORT$'• MSDOVESI'REET ' ' <Nur MacArUlur Blvd, .. &JamboreeRoadl •• NEW.,~t:.~FfCH· 1 orsct. 97so I ···,·;~;;.;;;~~i··· 1 ""C .. COUPE • In e:xcelleot condition wllh 1adory chro°'e wheels. (1958). , SADDUIACJC s VA.WY INPOnS' ! ll 1-2040 4tMt49 f .,7-912 Mtw~P-.. .... a.p. Cl••· S• 00. C•ll 14'41141-"'PM. "70 914-4, good cood. .;.x-1· cept allgbt dr damase. rcblt appearance group,: mags. stereo $3500.: 1974 MIZ 675·1061 eves 675-37121 450 SLC days · ; Only 32,000 miJcs. A local '77 Porsche 92&, less than' Rolls ttoyce trade-in. 4,ooo rni. air cond,f (0281B). AM/FM cassette, sun t 1,76 M.z roof, ~oss Burg~ar alarm, Jet bllc on blJc int. 450 SEL serious inquiries onl1. OnlY 10.000 miles. H as 635-3742 sunroof & wire wheels. A --1-9-7-~-Bft-R_S_C_H_E __ .J local Rolls Royce trndo· • ..-v ln. <MORYR). 914 ROYCARVat llOUSROYCE 154-0Jamboree Roud NEWPORT BEACli 640-6444 With mag wheels & ap-i pcaranco group. Ex·, cellent! ('68.5). SADDLHACK VAUEY IMPORTS 131-2040 495.4949 ..+os.U14HI• abtot.Ut-4 • ··············································-: .................................. , . WEST GERMAN i IMPORTS . ' .... llllliillim __ ..._ .............. t Off• ... °"" Tiie ,.... • • • I -----r---• 1974 1967 MllC 18« POISCHI ! 450 SLC 912 COuP9 ; Sunroof (15592) (16592) j 514,995· 55499 lt7J . JAGUAR XJ 12 Sedan Low MllMI (131TLV) s5995 1976 coavma T·Top {MA9780) s9599· I ~ • • ' • , .! ) I • ' 9760 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •SAAi• ORANGE COUNTY'S ;;1SAAB DE~\LER ' Btg discou n~ on ull models-Don 't miss lh1s sale !!! Come in now~ Bill MAXEY TOYOTA •••• l t<.J llil 1101 ,,. ·~ \ HUN f•H _.f(J ... It•'-f1 ! IS VW. sunroor. rcblt 72 e:ng. AM/FM stereo tape . new paint. $1650 or bst olr. Marty, 548--0301 BEACH IMPORTS &4800VESTREET <Near MacArthur Blvd. &Jamboree Road > NEWPORT Bl::ACI I 752-0900 72 Corolla Deluxe, xlnt '68 Bus, 9 puss. Orig. cond. $1200 Pvt pty. owner. Lo mi. Xlnt cond. 5Sl·210. $1750. 768-0629 . ' 8s . . ~. "GOLDEN TOUCH" IMMEDIATE DBJVERY ··.-SPECIALS I WXUIY USED CAl-;--i 1974 ~~LUC CPI omw V·8.' auto. trans.. factory air conditioning. power steering, power disc brakes. power · windows, pcywet" seats. rac:ho. heater, whitewall. tires. vinyl roof. tinted glass. wheel 0011ers. Landao top. (.C24NXNI SUH 1977 TOROHADO V-8. auto. trans • factory air conditioning, power steering, power disc brakes. power windows. power seats. radio. heater. whitewall tires. tinted gloss, wheel covers. landau top. vinyl interior, 16,000 miles. Ser. #701315 S71tt 1975 THUMDEllllRD V·8, auto. trans.. factory air condlt1onlng, power steering, power disc brakes. power windows. power seats. radio, }'leater. wMewall, tires. vinyl roof. tinted glass. wheel covers. low miles. (706NP0) SHH • I t75 UNC.OLH 4 DOOi SIDAH • V-8. auto. trans.. factory air oonditlonlng, • power ateering, power ditc brakes, power : windows. iiower seats. radio, heater. whitewall ! tires, vinyl roof. tinted glass. wheel 0011ers. :·(309NXN) • SUtJ :--------~-------: 1973 UNCOLH COUPE : V-8. auto. trans., raotory air condllion1ng, power steering, power disc brakes, power wrndowS. power sealS. radio, heater. whitewall • tires. vinyl roof. tinted glass. wheel covers, : Vinyl interior. sunroof. (999JOV) • S4'tl • 1974 UHCOLH 4 DOOi SIDAH • V-8. auto. trans., facrory air conditioning, power steering, power disc brakes, ; · powerwindows. power seats, radio. heater. · ~ whitewall tires. vinyl root. llnted gl.a5$, wheel • cover.. vinyl lntenor (666KJCI : H4'6 , .Johnson & Son • .. :...dbl._ MllWC·" --qr;-Hi!UlfQI 1•9811"1!5 (APHI 2626 H arbor Bou1011ard Costa Moaa • (714) ~40-5630 I •A" Mola""-lCl llld l-0.. ~Credit• All,._ llloodM 72 HDutt ''°"' "'--• All C.S 'lllAljed To "'b .... 1975 OLDS 69Codiloc u ...... Classic Beauty' <WVMS40> $3419 MOTORCARS D'B.lGANCE 626 W17th SA 547-9250 CUTLASS '74 Coupe DeVllle. ne.1 Supreme Coupe. Like radials. loaded "300. new con<.liuon ; 1:old with PP. 64s.8063 Volvo 9772 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IEfOREYOU 58.L YOUR VOLVO. See us for a top dollar estimate! MAll(f)UIS VOLVO MISSION VIEJO 131·2110 495-1210 otlAHGI COUHTY m atching Landau top. --------- F\111 power, fattory air •--..... .------. cond. & a local I owner car with 37 .oou males. <Cll0014J. $3999 • 1975 ,ONTIAC FtRllJRD Yellow exterior w/black Interior. Full power. rec- tory air cood., low miles & in outstanding condl· lion. (708LMV>. $4399 • VOL YO 1970 DODGE EXCLUSlVELYVOLVO CHAUIHGER Largesl Vol voDealcr Wh ite exterior with inOrangeCounty! black Landau roof le BUYorLEASE matchJng intenor. Full DIRECT power. factory air cond. ft"lnr.1r.w.11r.. .. n111Wtt..'1 I & low mlles. <21.SBHS). ttfmj Sl?99 2025 s. Manchester $200,000 Anaheim 750-2011 INVENTORY 73 Model 164E. 6 cyl, air, A·T. PS. PB, leath seat.s, AMi FM, new paint. xlnt tires. book price $4780. W sell 53900. 644·7572 197' VOLVO 244DL Automatic, air cond .. stereo & low miles. This car shows excellent care. (1'4174) w 't I t I 11 I MISSION \/ff 10 I MPOllT\ "·· ' . . "' . ·- 8JI 1748 49S 170• TO CHOOSI FROM • NABERS AUTO CENTER 1425 BAKER ACROSS F ROM FEDCO COSTA MESA SELL Idle items with a 540·91 09 Daily Pilot Classified Ad. __ _ Alltot, Hew 9100 Autos, New HOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2600 H.11 hrn Blv1I <..m1.1 Ml'~.• '\ Ill 'II 1 MI r.•1SSIO N VII 10 11'11 0 1HS . . .. ..,_ . ... •. SJI 114c C~~ 17(J ft.EETWOOD '71 " '7S Nice ! SltOOI S&tOO . l8U377 4'&7653 lt13CHIVY CAMA.10 Wltb automatic trans. Bum ;re.ti (1J7HXN). w. Pricff.$2115' MllAQ.I • MAZDA/UMAULT Z150Harbor Blvd., C.11. . 645-5700 '72 Klnaswood E alate Wgn. Full pwr, A/C, AM/FM. Xlnl running cond. $2300 /bsl ofr. 8'S-4399 art &pm. HOIDAS SPECIAL SALE .THIS wa&tl> ONl Y HUGE STOCK IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 55195- ... •Moll ICK MILLER MOTOR Nabers Cadillac '.?hi" I lf.11 ll• II Bl\ll (_,,,,,, Mn.1 "1 10 911111 5 1899 SHlteSIY•Fufll ••• 53299 HAL <iR~ENE " lt7'flOU "• II RI 1'11111 -· lodooy M ~, Mol ... M .....,-.~tG!>.c•.-... 111t• "9tll114119~ LawMln 5~399 Al Mc..,,_ Ta. Uc..., A Deca 11....,_ Pee-Sii.to; ............... "" ,Olt.11• \ , . . , .. .. l ) DJ.J OAILY PILOr rm1•v (>I I I 14 l'J',/ Awfo,.Uu .d Awto1,Uted 411101.UHd A.uto1.Cs.t'd A-.... i..: .. .:J J .,L'.i .:l ••.••.•................ ······················· •••·•·•···•············ .•••.•.••....•.•••.•....••••.•.••..•........•••....•..•.............. Allto1, Htw 98001Autos. Hew 980 Autos, Hew 9800 Ford 9940 Mere 9950 Oldiunobll• 9955 iatymouth 9960 PonHac 9965 v 99i'4 ...................... ., •••••••• •••••••••••••• •••••••• ••••••••••••••• wy 990 ---------------------------. ........ .. .. . . ... . .. .. ..................... .. . . ............ "'. .. . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .............................................. t .1978 0 E s '64 f.'ord Sqwrc 9 pass '77 Monarch Sprt Cpe. 197601cb CuffaH l~lymf\l~\~llOrt .l'~ry 'tl8 Cat.ullna Venluru Cull VEGA 76 . 83.000 m1, run!> well. ~15 Pvt ply. S31·392l. F\rll power, 8 track C. 8 . car clean & carelullr. good cond. S36·0507 ~Speed trans., rad o, etc. P L . wagon, PS. PB, Rill Loaded.Slill\IJ\derwarr. ~T·Top .A o:i~a~l~,~~:c~~~:~ power, blk vinyl top, HATCHIACK •• <ofCer). ~-6809 Mustc.g 9952 stereoe-0mbo, cruise con· maiqtalned Air cond . Thi d rt»lrd 9970 Only cl oven m iles f ' · '"" Ford Falrl .. oc, ve"" ....................... troJ. tilt wheel, deluxe In· Uon1hi po~or steerin11 •aer (OCWROG) ';ood COQd., cle~. ." '66 MUST A NG 289. l erior & e>oly 15,000 po er• tallcate, Uot~a ~··•••••••••••••••••••• ON&. Y $3295 $7~. 551-16'4 AM/FM 8 trk, sacrifice. miles. (6'7640). gl;ts, remote control 77 T-Blrd, loaded, lull Dove &QuailSta. urnCou.ntrvSqwrewgn. saoo.sco-4206 Mowo..lv$5495 rnirrora, rear s eat ~j· moonu!'toof~u•f NEWPORTBEACJt • ., S4DDLH4CK speaker 4' lureaie rack. ooope, uxPbiW')'l ... ,. • ... ..,. Exm t' LU-0116 Xlnt cond. Stereo. AC, '86 Muslanc v.s, auto, S Priced to seU 1t $2,195. $7 • ~ PW, 6-way seat, 9 pass, p/a, Mint cond. $1500 VALLEY IMPORT See ln Dally Pilot park· 217 daya. or 6'13·2067 '7' Chev Veea Wgn. A/C, Mich, tires. 1 ownr. Casb.Call646-~15. 831·2040495.4949 lnglot,330WeslBaySt., eves. auto, lo'W ml. new llrff, $11751ofr. 644·~ Costa Mua, or call ,67 T·Blrd. Sharp, loaded. xlnt c:ond. $1150. MO-ue • '---L. 9945 '6S Mustang Convertible. 74 Olds 98 Regency,' dr, 6'2-432.1 and ask Rick or See to appr•clat'"' '7,H ... G"-/'"'-.~ _.._ •Xlnl cond. Nds minor au pwr, lo ml, AM/FM Os th n t " "' • .., '"' n.a..- ••••••••••••••••••••••• work.646-6851 stereo, air, V-top, exc forc:;;O:,:..J0r,:tfoi:::aae $1.200/olr.8'6-09SS . $ll00orbltofr:'lfoo"., '00 MARK JU, xJnt. cond. cond, $3750. 759-9333 or ....._Mew t C.UM8-MIT Open for rees. offer. '67 MW!laJll convertible, 642-8235, Larey '76 PIYmouth Fury Salon, .................. .. 561~ xlnl cond, V8, auto, PS, ,67"" R 1 vinyl top, air cond, xtras, MaYetick 9947 PB.$1995.644-4359 -. ~~great company car $2500. Here NOW!· IMMEDIATE DELIVERY This Weekend Only! FREE SUNROOF ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1966 Fastback, AM/FM 646-'1184 ,_768_~------- Mftft Ral•ll y-•ue' '70 Maverick, 6 oyl, good ·cnss, new tires. good . '71 CUDA: Xlnt cond. ori«i -l.tlll ... m w nd. Cheap on IJlali. $700. eng, auto, $1275. 546-1630 72 Torunado, f~ll pwr, ownr. 340 cu In. Air, auto. with purchase of any 1~77 Opel.· Pb 675-892l '66 Mustang 289, cust. AC, cruise, split seal\, $2350/bsl oller. 963·0638. llhr int, AM/I"Ai stereo, ---------• Mercury 9950 whls, quick, sharp! Al.k· till tele whJ, xlnt conll. '75 Vollant, P /S, P /B, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ing $1490. 963~ 754--0:272or 546-4290 A/C, AM/FM stereo, :dot ORANGE COUNTY'S OC.mobile 9955 .67 Toronado, 79,000 ml, cond. 6'2·2159 Eves. NEWEST ••••••••••••••••••••••• all original. Has all con· Pontloc 9965 LARGE S'r[rltl'lltll UNCOLN·MERCURY Must sell this week, '75 ceivable options. $1300. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l;i 1;'1 I H/11 Dealerslup ls now OPEN Slarfire. Besl offer. All 963-5966 1977 POHTIAC RA y FLADEIOE Xlras, run pwr. 55z.tsi4 Firebird Trans Am 6.6 BIAUER BUICK UNCOLN·MERCURY or S.57·5916,8·5,Mory. Pinto 9957 litre.rurcond.,pwr.win· . -2925CoHstalfttorllU~v4. t6-18AutoGentet'-G _ • ., ••••••••••••••••••• dows & door locks, tilt . SD Fwy-Lake Forest exit Try a Do 1 l y Pilot •74 Pinto Squir;\vgn, -wtteel~~ &-con IHVINE 'ClassiliedAdlob\.IY,sell AC /Auto, AM/FM 8 sole,stereorad10,Trans ~ 979.2500 830-7000 or rent something. track (2 000 mi E"Xcell Am decals & s port • • · cond. • • · · wheels. Super sharp! '. ·A Div'ision of Bauer Motors · Window Sticker Pf1c. , •• $7 ,5 7 420 8.J. Sportac:ar's Discount .2,37920 =~ ........ $5, 1·95°0 , . AMtos. Hew 9100 Autos, M•w 9100 $2200 MS-l202 9,240 miles. (430SNEl . ._ _______________________ _.t••••••ll•••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• · For sale at $6495. Cort '72 Pinto Runabbut. Very Fox t.easlng. Call New 1978&w. ·~llvu 10.1.7-77 . . · .· • ·: .. ·: "'!· .. ... :: THE ALL NEW 1978· ZEPHYR Now'a >Qlf chenCle to own an au new ZEPHYR at a very affordable price. Chedc tti. features $ 3846 on this Zephyr 2 Door. front dilo brak ... deluxe ..,.,.. covers. rac:k t. pillion "9eftng, solid state ignition. 2.3 litre engine, 1nd . bume>s Ptotect,lon group. (Ser. 8K314603907) Clo~ AU flllc1s HOl¥ ON ·-=·-.,,, ~os1 QUALITY USED CARS PRICED RIGHT! ,.. ____________ ~ ~------------wl' 1974 FOID lt76 1977 lt74 ...__, ... FOID POU MAMIY c.. -WOW! lall. llur:WI --. ~-..-r _. ,.,. ._...,., -· fill ....... ~ AM/Flll1--~l--...... , .... -•• Cy! -,.~.--.. ............ --~--~-"" al< _.,,,, -le: ,,.... Incl""•• 1r1n16 racllO. heeler. FIUE FORO COftd.. -. -· M-IC I<--.. AM(fM '-""" -...,_ l'tl FRU FOflD WOT°" CO. I YR.-12,000 MOl R GO I YR.·12 000 MILE fRU: l'OAO MOTOR 00 I YR ·12 000 ,._.... FAU Foi.o MOTOR CO. I MILE EXTEHDE.0 WARRAHTI'. (Uc EXTENDED WARRANTY, (Ser. MILE EXUHOl.D wARRANlY. (Lie. Yll.·U .000 MILi! llllfNOEO 7tO+MJ) SIC If 11 20ll09I IOll'W.11 Wl\AAAHTY. (9-. 4YWllQl)li:Jt s2192 '2986 s4372 '6586 1972 If 71 .,,, 1971 ~MATADOR &MCOLM4DL DOOGI DOD•I ~c-"·-·-A.--_ "" oond.. -~ ,.,_, _ _......_ ....... ....... e cyl .. ...-;c, •'• cone!. _., pO .. , lw•llft. -••"•· _ .. --~M·-~ ~ ................... ~ ,,_ ....... rldlo. -(lJCo ---.~roo4 (\JC. IOOC. .................. ""'~ -· .-. -· .......... (Lio. 121"1Al 1MAEZI (UC.~ 45IMOVI $1092 5 1256 5 1898 52186 1975 lt75 MAia IY If 7' 197' DOD&E Nr OOl'll. ~ clOlll ..........,, -MAlllY CMlftOUT IMYCOWW 911..W. Po.r-· ---Alf ocnt.. -Int~ ""'*"' IOCllre. CMl'WftC..-A~ • -· -....,.,., wl--AMI™ -. clNIM MdlMr-. IW(FM I -1!11 -· ............. bMoify. ·= ~io. crulM _.tflll CN>lrol. ''" -· ~ root ""*" -. UftOlll~lllUt old ..... .,.... FRU ,.. oond. •• .-. NdlQ. ClvlM ~. • IUo. l FORD MOTOR 00 I Y ·11.000 MIU FOflO 00 I Y'l·lt,000 MILE ._.llJc>~) EXTENOEO WARRANTY Cl••. EllTlND(O WARRANl'I'. lhr. 6Y-~7) ~~ clean. SllSO. Call eves all 645-3661 645.0602 5,645-8477 --------l9lm Bonneville. excellent '72 Runabout. A/C, R&.H, condition. $1200. Must low ml. s ha rp cond. sell. 646·4~ $1495. Call aft 6pm, ,67 p . GTO pd 962-3566. ontiac . 3 s ---------• hydro. 400 eng. Nds some '74 SQUIRE Wgn. Stick, body work & carb. Make air, rack. Below lo B/B. oCr. 892·0931 Sl 895 /best ofr. PP.--------556--0030 77 Firebird Formula, 4 --------• mos old. Only 4,400 mi, •74 Pinto Runabout. gd loaded w/xtns. $6000. cood. ~:bst orr. Call al\ SPM. 586·~ 4&.&.1675 --------'73 Grandville 4 dr, full /of HATCHBACK brown, pwr, AMWM stereo. xlnt xtnt. cond. Gd. gas mi. rond. $2095. 496·7635 or $1900. 673-4718, 675·9363 bfr 2PM 494·6707 A.Wos, Mew 9100 Autos, Hew A bemdlful selection of Lancia Coupes and Sedans wllt•cn•oatag.~ ........... ~ ............... ,.. ............... •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ $2588 WA60M . (907M0Hl 1971 4 2888 °l~·- 1976 CAPlll COWi (139NOF) 53688 $3988 ltH Nit PICKUP (11820U) 1974 .OMCO 4X4 (624SFU) lt70 T.-COWI (13288) 1972 Lft COUfl (73eGHC) tt1J TOllM> .1+2 (5e8GVJ) ttn IUIQl coun (031KEO) ALL CAIS IUIJICT TO ratOI SALi PlllCll Ntl TAl a UCIMll Wiii ... I .. I t.n *~************~***************~********** San ~lego Fwy. to Lake Fore1t exit North to Rockfleld, Weit to Oldfield, Left to Auto Centet Drive ·~ . . ' Friday. October 14, 1977 DAILY PfL01' •Jf :.• ' l... lo .. e e e e ct e e e e --e e e e_ . . SALES And SERVICE . LEADS AIAI oRA•E COINTY Oldsmolllle •aler FOR THE 1977 OLDSMOBILE .MODEL YEAR • •• I • • ~ AllD PROMISE TO CONTINUE TO OFFER THE FINEST SALES. & SERVICE IN ORANGE COUNTY! ALWAYS THE FINEST SELEtnoll Of: -l~ NEW AND USED ·CARS AND TRUCKS TO CHOOSE FROM. -f: .. ~ . . . -.:_:_-. SALES DEPARTMeas OPEN I__DA YS A WEEK • SERVICE & PARTS DEPARTMENTS OPEN ON SATURDAYS • . I - ' . . '. . ::: OLDSMOBILE :. H•DA • IMC .TRICKS ·=· ~·· . BRAND NEW 1978 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS SUPREME Automatic, power steering. power brakes $ l Plu• ax & License . CAN WE BUILD ONE FOR YOU? OIDB YOUIS TODAY FlllAL 1977 CLOSE.OUT '70 QLDS '72 OLDS . CUSTOM SUPUMI tlCOUPI I air cond., vinyl top, tJucket teats. With pwr. wlndowS. steering l brakes. io. heater. pWr. steering & brakes. AM/FM stereo. air cond.. vinyt tOP. AOOJ~ • heater & tilt wheel. (61 '5FWA). . . ----.. '71 FORD LTD court Mth air cond1tion1ng. radio. heater. ~!'YI top, pwr. steering & brakes. ~3GVZ) . .. 1o•. ~r . 172 PONTIAC ... ; SAFARI WAGON .. . .. ;:Wat Wi,.th air cond .• pwr. steering I .._. rlirt0. heater & luggage rack. ~8FTF). . ·••. , ... ,.~1377 . , 51677 . 5 1977 173 DATSUN . 610WACJON With air cond .• AM/FM stereo + tape decic. pwr. brakes, heater. radial tires. rear def<>Ooer & low milff. (716HNWl. -5 1977 Select Ion Is Why We An lhe ~1 HONDA • DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY! TAKE YOUR. GIOICE '73 HONDA COUPE 4 speed transmission. radio & heater. (349JNL) .. $ DOWN $ 98 MOlllH $99.00 delivers on approved credit. 36 months at $69.91 ~r rmnlh. Cash price la S19n.oo plus tax & lic.nN; deterred prfc. Is 12138.00; APR Is 14.56. . IRAND NEW 1.978 GMC t/2 TON PICKUP . OIDB YOUIS TODAY $ 1 Pfus Tu&Uoense • . ·~ .. FIHL ltn IMC G.OSE-111 •74 GMC SPRINTH Sl9ltA CUSTOM : ~ 174 OLDS tlLSCOUPE . . With air cond .. vlnyt loP. pwr. windows & With ~ ehetl, air cond., VinYI • • seat, radio. heater. cruise CQntrol & low automatic. radio. Mater. pwr • ..,..ng & • miles. (030NOY). custom Int.text. (500<4S2). ' 53377 174 FORD F-100 . ltAMMAPICKU, .. • '77 Pi. YMOUTH ~ YOLAUWAGON ; XL T model. Automatic. pwr. steering &' With air cond., AM/FM ndo. CNlte tsrakes. new mags + tires & AM/FM control, f'!Ogage rack. custom lnt./e>Ct" .. atereo. (98948T). pwr. steet1ng & bra.kes. (82243t) . . . 53777 . 5197/J;) . ' 1 e e ~-_ .. ···e · ----· .. -· · · -----· · e· e e e e e e e · . . , • COSTA MESA [ e . -~--r·. e e ----·-------.~ ------... -·e e e e 9 • . ' ' . ,• . . - -. - pJfl DAILY PILOT Friday. October 14, t9n SEE THE SPARKLING NIW '78. • CORDOBAS! • LE BARONS! • VOLARES! • FURIES! • TRAIL DUSTERS! •ARROWS • CHRYSLERS AND THE INCREDIBLE11SAPPAR011! 1-DIAR • -DllilYIRYI . Show ··Down Time on all remaining C hryslers and Plymoulh-s in stock! Fine seledon! Fabulous savings! I PLUSI ALL '77 DEMONSTRATORS ON SALE THIS WEEKEND! '75 FORD ELITE V-8, automatic. air conditioning, PoWef' st.earing, Power bMkes. radio. vinyl roof. (498SLRI '3291 174 FORD WAGON V-8. automarlc, air conditioning, power steering power brakes, radio. heater, whitewall tires' (674NZEl • '2091 ,, '72 PONTIAC GRAMD YIU.I V-8, automatic. alr oonditloning. JX1W8r steering. Power brakes. Power windows. AM/FM stereo radio. heater, whitewall tires, vln• .. roof tilt wh--' l968RXOJ 7' ' _,, '1291 · .'70 CHEVY MOHTICAILO V-8. automatic. lir conditioning, powet' steering, PoWer brakea. '8dlo, heater, whitewall tires. vinyt roof, ~ .. ats. tilt wheel, raflye wheels. (200810) '1291 OVER FACTORY INVOICE ON ALL REMAINING:* 177 VOLARE 2 DOORS 1 77 VOLARE 4 DOORS •77 PLYMOUTH FURIES tt HO ..UESSWOIK. ALL MYOICIS • ill IKHT ON 1HE ~WSJ . •74 PORSCHE -914 CPI. 5 speed, air. AM/FM 8 tl'lld< radio. ti..aer ~group, m189-(613KMM) ' 177 PLYMOUTH VOi.Aii V-8, automlltic, air oondlttoning. Power ateering,' power bnMe. r-*>. heeler, vin)jl rool C810RSV) •' 174 PONTIAC RIBllD V-8, automlltlc. • conditioning. power steeftno. PoW9' bnMe. MA/FM atereo with tlP9 radio. heater, vtnyt roof, (337LWO) '2991 ) I 174 CHEVY IMPALA Huntington Beaeh Fountain Valley EDITION , t'VOL. 70, NO. 287, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Bribe ry, Fraud, Conspiracy anna J11ry· Probes F.ees Diedrich Denies Receiving Funds By GARY GRANVILLE Ol Ille 0.111' .. , .. , ,.." The Orange County Grand Jury is investigating a con- troversial 1973 county land use decision at which Supervisor Ralph Diedrich's personal at- torney and co-indictee Michael Remington received a $50,000 re- taine r from a developer befriended by Diedrich. Both Diedrich and Remington. however , deny the county supervisor received any portion of what Remington estimates waa "probably ...M0.000" that he actually was paid by Robert H. Grant Corp. It was Monday that Diedrich admitted taking a leadership role in a 3 to 2 Board of Supervisors decision to free Anahelm Hills ln- corporated. a Grant subsidiary. from development restrictions imposed on hill property or what is known as the Nohl Ranch by an agricultural preserve agreement with the county. At the same time, Diedrich de· nied profiting "in any way, in any form whatsoever .. either by the Board or Supervisors con- troversial decisicm to lift the pre· serve restrictions or the fees paid Remington. When be apoke in bis otfice MoodaJ'. Diedrich said he knew two Grant otlleials. Robert H. Grant. and Richard L. Owen, bad already testirled before the grand jury. Remington tnade the same acknowledgment Oct. 6 and said today his former secretary had been called before the jury Thursday. It was last week that Rem- D.ity~~ ....... DENIES PAYOFF Supervisor Diedrich ington said, "as l understand it they're <district at~orney in· vestigators) trying to link the money that was paid me to Ralph." Remington admitted Diedrich "probably had.some thing to do" with blm beiol retalned by the development company in its ef· forts to induce the Board or Supervison to lift the preserve qreemeet. . ~ "I could be Wl'onf but I think I got, oh, maybe $40,000 before my troubles began and the case was handed over lo the <lawyer > Marshall Morgan," Remington said. The "troubles" Remington re- Beauty Queens Held Arabs Grab Plane, Threaten Hostages DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -Arabic-S1)eaking ter- rorists holding a hijacked West German jetliner threatened to- day to kill their hostages, includ· ing 11 beauty queens, unless "comrades" imprisoned in West Germany and Turkey are re· leased and a $15 million ransom is paid, officials said. Ninety-two persons, including crew m embers and the hl· jackers, were reported aboard the plane. Tt\e beauty queens were re· turning to Frankfurt after a gift trip to the Spanish isla nd of Ma- jorca when the plane was hi- jacked Thursday. In Franklurt, the newspaper Frankfurter Rundschau quoted the dauehter of one or the contes- tants as saying her mother won the trip to Majorca after compel· Coast ing in a contest on the island dur· Ing a visitla.stsummer. The girl. 16-year·old Cornelia Brod. said her mother, Jutta Brod. 36. was one of eight West German winners in the cont~\s sponsored by Majorca disco· theques. Sbe was quoted assaying the other three winners were foreigners. The hijackers also threatened that kidnaped West German in- d u st ri ali st Hanns Martin Schleyer, abducted by terrorists in West Germany nearly six weeks ago, would be killed if the demands are not met by 1 a.m. PDT Sunday. A textorthe ultimatum was de- liver~ to the F rench press agen- cy AFP in Paris after the plane Janded in this Persian 'Gu lf emirate. The ultimatum named 11 West German terrorists and two Palestinians held in Turkey who are demanded to be released and <See UIJACK, Page AZ> ferred to was his arrest in mld·l973 on suspicion of solicitng murder and conspiracy to com· mil murder charges. Six months after his arrest a Superior Court jury acquitted the F ulle rton attorney of the charges. Trouble came Remington's way again last July 1 when he was one of five people. including Diedrich and Supervisor Philip Anthony, who was charged in a grand Jur y indictment with felony offenses related to alleged illegal political campaign prac- tices. As far as county records are concerned, whatever fee Rem- ington received from the Grant Corporation is covered by a two- page memorandum written lo the county planning commission urging ll to approve the ag pre- serve withdrawal. But Remington insisted Uiat he had done much more than pre· pare the two·page memo to the planners. Morgan backed Remington·s statement today when he said. "I was called by the Grant people and told their attorney was in trouble and was asked to pick up the COO'\PaDY files.·· "I remember going to Mike's office and picking up a carton filled with material including Mike 's a n a l ys is of the Wllllamsoo Act <c r eating agricultural preserves) as well as some other work h1~ firm had done." Morgan said. The attorney went on to say that while most of the public rec· ords shows other attorneys, in· eluding himself, had done lhe bulk or the work, "Mike obvious- ly had done a great deal.·· As t.hings turned out. it was Morgan who successfully de- fe nded Remington in 1973 against the murder solicitation and con- Splracy charges. Now, Morgan is Diedrich's de· fender against charges carried in the grand jury indictment or July 1. Remington conceded that in his testimony before the grand jury he told of holding Diedrich·s power or attorney and or close business transactions between them. However. he pointed out that at the lime of the Grant Corp. deal- ings in 1973 his and Diedrich 's business relationship was not that close and that he did not carry Diedrich's power of at· lomey. "It wasn't until about a year later, maybe early 1975, that Ralph was so involved with being a county supervisor that he found it necessary to give me hi.s power of attorney,'' Remington said. In the Nohl Ranch preserve controversy, the county planning commission voted against the county allowing the land re- moved from 10-year preserve status. With Diedrich leading the way. the Board of Supervisors over· ruled the commission's decision with then supervisor Ronald Caspers and supervisor Ralph ' CSee FEES, Page A2) /tlisuse of Endorseneent D.tlly l'li.1 Sl.tH lllo91e ,..,_pldn Patrher Westminster Hig h School sophomore Marianne Fero stacks pumpkins from the s c hool farm . The pumpkins will go on sale Oct. 22 in front of the school just In time f or Jl al J o w ecn. Proceeds benefit the farm at the school. 14325 Golden West St. Seal Beach Man's Body Identified A drowning victim whose corpse washed ashore at Bolsa Chica State Beach Thursday has been identifie d as P e t e r Topoleski. 32, a Seal Beach man reported missing last Sund~. Investigators said today he normally went on a long distance swim olC Seal Bdch with his father every day, using the bud- dy system because the vicUm was epileptic. However, Sylvester Topoleski, a Long Beach resident, was una- ble to meet his son at his Ocean A venue apartment last Saturday and the victim apparently risked the swim alone. "They normally swam from lhe pier to the First Street jelly every day, .. explained a Seal Beach Police Department spokesman. The victim's rather came to the station Sunday to file the miss- beachfront residence. Hls father had been unable lo reach him by· telephone. Finding his watch. wallet and other personal effects there and his beach towel and swim trunks <See BODY. Page A2 ) Weat her Night through mid morn- ing low clouds and local dense fog. Otherwise huy sunshine through. Satur· day. Lows tonight 58 to 63. Jligh Saturday 70. Campaigners Face Suit INSIDE T ODAY Saturday night J& ftnalilti wiU compet4. at the Orange County Fair~ncb for the National Motorcycle Cham·· piomhip. See Page Cl. I ndex ByTOMBARLEY OI .. o.ity Pllet $4.tf Political campaign organizers William Butcher and Arnold Forde of Newport Beach were sued for $800,000 in damages Thursday by a former Orange County dep~ district attorney who claims the parnters mis- used his endorsement or a con· troversial gam bllng measure. J ohn F. Anderson, who now practices law in Santa Ana, clalms in bis Superior lawsuit that Butcher and Fotde were guilty of deception and breach or contract by the manner in which they handled his endorsement of a gaJn!ng measure defeated by JnglewOod voters. Anderson claims a letter bear· ing his signature was circulated to Inglewood voters aner those who handled the mailings made certain alleged additions to the document. · He claims that the title "Honorable" was added to the letter. which was also given an official seal depicting scales of justice and the legend "OfCice of the District Attorney.•· Anderson points out that he has since been Investigated by several law enforcement agen· cles but has not been prosecuted for what could have been charges of m1srepresentation. · Anderson slates he authorized the letter but only as a favor to Butcher and Forde. He claims that he never at any time agreed to allow the partners to doctor the letter in s uch a way that it might appear that the Inglewood gambling measure was supported by the Orange County Disl.rict Attorney. Anderson, who worked in the district attorney's special opera- tions division at the time the let· ter was mailed, attached a copy oC the document to his lawsuit. The Jetter states that, as a former deputy district attorney and "head of the Organized Crime Unit, l <Anderson) want you to know l strongly support and endorse Proposition Q on the Inglewood ballot." The letter states that the city needs more police and that lhe ballot measure would provide in· creased tax revenues to met!\ those casts. <Sec surr, Pase AZ> FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 19n Tied to Korea. .· '," Influence Buys: WA SHINGTON (AP> -Former Rep. Richard T. }lanna was indicted today on federd charges ol. bribery, fraud and conspiracy stemming from ·aJ. leged South Korean efforts to buy influence a mong members or Congress. Hanna. a California Democrat from Orange Coonty who served in the House from 1963 throu_gh 1974, was the first ex· congressman to be indicted in the Justice Department probe or al- leged attempts by South Koreans to ply ~mbers of Con_gress wllh cash and other favors 1n ex· change for actions favorable to the South Korean government. A federal grand jury in U.S. DLstrict Court in Washington re- turned the indictment cbarfinl Hanna with one count of coo· spiracy, three counts of bribery. one count of failing to register as a foreign agent, and 35 counts of m all fraud. ' . ~ .............. FACES INDICTMENT ..,. ' Ex-Congreaamen Hann• "'.! An indictment is a formal charge made against a person by a ,::rand jury. ll does not establish guilt or innocence. that money to Hanna ••and . T h e indictment named variOWI other congressmen ,..S . Tongsun Park, the one-time senators witb intent. to infl~ • Washington businessman wtao the 48CP.aa. ~ ac\iom ol Mk\: has retuilled to Seoul, as aa llnkl· coqreaa.n• aD4 ... ._. • di cted co-conspirator. Park queadona and mau.a relatlnc to a lready bas ~n inclicted Ob tb• Repubtic ol Kana," tM ID·' simUar charges and bas so rar <Uctmenlcbar&ed. • "'""' refused to return to tbe Uniied Spedftcally, Haau ,... P~. States to lace trial. · w ...... ·to...,....,. .--. Also named as unindicted co--Coaareu to iacr..,.• ·U. • conspirators were two former military Aid to Karea. ~pro. directors or the Korean Central posals t.o reduce U.S. ma-, Intelligence Agency, Kim Hyung forces there., lncre .. rlce Mlea Wook and Lee Hu Rak. to Korea ana wi.a more 1•¥81'.a.le The indictment charted that ter.,,.s JOI' tbe lin.aDCine ot dloM Hanna used his position as a con· sal~ and make apeecbes and gressman "to encourage aeen-writfl statements praiaing tbe cies or the government ot the South KOl'eUl recime, l.be iadict- Republic ot Korea to promote the meotseid. designation" of Park as the in· As~ of the alleced ~ termedlary for rice sales to Park gave ca.sh and other &1fts to Korea from U.S. companies. House and Senate .nemben lae Park received a su~tanUal and ~ believed ••to be ln- a mount of money as com· nuential in matters afhdlna• missions lrom the U.S. com-South Kor••· tbe Indictment pa.nies and passed along much of <SeeRANN4, P~18A!) ·* * * * '* * 'Scapegoat' Eears • II Voiced by Hanna By PIDUP JlOSMAIUN oe•~ ...... SUll Jovial, cberubic 63-year-old Richard Hdna once toJd former congressional staff members he was afraid or being made a scapegoat in the Koc-ea bribery invesUgation. He may have refiected on that today in hls Fayetteville, Ark .• home where. he moved into a self· imposed exile in July from Newport Beach. Onco Hanna was Orange Coun· t y's most popular DemocraUc elected official, serving three terms In Congress unlit his re· tlrement in 1974. After months of investigations and publicity over alleged in· Ouence buying from 196'7 lhrouah 1975 to win congresslonaJ sui>port on issues affecting South Korean business interests, Hanna stole quieUy and unannounced horn Orange Count)'. He moved into tile Qurk Mountains town In near-total a nonymity. None of his neighbors reportedly knew who he was, until n~ws reporters and photographers descended upon his home when he was named an unindicted co-conspirator. With today's federal lndict· ment alleging bribery, mall fraud and failure to register as a foreign a.gent, Fayet.tevUle 11aln became a target of news re· porters. . Apparently Hanna was still hiding out. An Arkanaas telephone operator said \bat although Hanna's telephone number was 111\ed ln her book, the former poUUclan had made a spedal ~uest that lt no toncer be given out. ffJt was never so retJcent on Capitol Hill, where he was known as a greaarious and enercetlc poUUclan who danced aoft.ahoe at parties. I I Hanna made extensive trtpi, by bis own admbaiOD, NC. 1968, to Seoul. wben aurph• U.S. rice waa bein.I sold to ICqrea. : He became known to Uae American embassy tbere u U)e .. California rice salesman.·• '° frequently did be appear ..... rice ti'aasactlons were belni made. · lt was during t.bat Ume tbat Hanna became tbe 1Uent partner ot Toogsun Park. Indicted South Korean buslnesaman at tbe ~ to the bribery scandal. ' In three yean, Hanna mMe $60,000 to $70,000 ln an impart.. e xport yenture with P~, wblcb he reported to \he House Etbkl Committee on Standards ot Cl(; ficiaJ conduct. But bis business eomaeet:lon went generally wmoUced by ~ colleagues. Hanna told the New Yorlc Ti mes be entered the blaiDell venture to help Parlt. He P'll ap $90,000 in stock he owned In u Anaheim company u cdUat41t.S for a $25,000 loan to PJl'k. ' - Hanna reportedly told tlae Times that when he later·blpn to receive money from Park, he asked no qQesUons about lt. He eventually ended the rela,.. Uonahlp, he aatd, af\er beeolDbt& "unc:omfonable" with lt. . Followtna h1a nUrement froQl Congress. Hanna Ht up bullal 11 offices ln Newport Beaeb and · Irvine, serving aa a letal ~l­ tant ln • variety of quul-omdll capaclUes. · ff~ waa a board member a( the coub\y.funded ltconomtc Development Corp. and tbe fled1Unc Jnlerntliol\al Tracle League. • He realped from \he 'EDC la July. acabt wit.bout. .......... ment, Just before "e q1dellr a Upped to.-•ood out ot lbe c:omtY.. - \A.z DAILY PILOT H /F r rid.ty, Oc1ot>er 14, 19n ·~Worms Go~g? . '-~Test Cut Slwuld €1ear f'ater · a, JACllR llT1IAN there w aona• 11'_,Cf .t.Jhe larv~c ·-...., 0t .. DMi• ,......._.. untU oo&d we~ _.. ta and The end of a reservoir teetJn• stops U.. bffed'll. Jin. Yan Projects. 'Pushed~·. By-Garter trogram next week should cut KeUNntlld. - - ~owo on the number ot wormlike However. tlie MetroPolltan ~r~ in Cost.r Mesa waler. a Waler Dlltl"lct, whkb maruaaes \19 IE e s w'o m a n f o r t b o the Su Joaquift l\•etvolr and tropoOtan Water DistrtctsaJd others that provide water to ursday. Otbge County, is lookinl lnto a ; However, some trace of the program t.o gel r id of the a~ull midge Qy larvae will conUnue flies that cause the problem, she \lnlil temperawres drop, aceOl'd· said. in8 toMWI> spoku woman Janis The wormlike c r e alures , Van D.aren. aUrred up by currents from rapid The wormlllce insects began draln1nl of the reservoir ln the turldnf up lo Cosla Mesa water b1Us above Corona deJ Mar, wb• the San Joaqaln ReMr'VOlr caused c:oncern amon1 Colla in lrftQe was beinl dr&IDed to · lleaa residents. Mrs. Susan test its emergency capabUlUes. Healey ol 665 Roes St. Hid she Tb.eteatiqts contiJiutna. J>utat'a firat eanaulted ber doctor and slower rale. treated her family against whal The larvae so far have not been sbe \bought were pinworms. reported in any other coast dtie.s, She reported Thursday that the Mrs.. v.an KeUUD said.. Newport-number-ef-"wonn!t'.1.in-Ute-water Be.ach and Huntington Beach had dwindled lo a mere trickle. also draw water from the res· Midges, whJch are related to ervoir, alUiougb Irvine uses it the housefl y, prodiJCe farvae only in case or emergencies. known as "bloodworins," which The s t ate De partment of form a large plirt of the diet of .Health says the insects do not some fish species eaten by man. WASHINGTON <AP> -Presi· dent Carter Is baclting away from another fight with Congress over the water projects be tried t6 kill earlier this year, a House member s aid today. Rep. Dan Morrlott <R·Utah>, who met with Carter along with other members· of Congress from western stales, said the Presi· dent indicated he would CO{lSlder pushing the projects to comple· tion. One is the Auburn dam project ln California. which hinges on a safely analysis. "The Presidenl said he did not intend..io .eontinue fi&.hl!ng with Congress over water projects," Marriott told reporters alter the While House meeting. "}{e in- dicated he would corus ider ex- pedlUng them to avoid inflation and other costs.". · I pose a health hazard. The mes Howevert there are no fish in the breed annually and each year San Joaquin Reservoir . The decision marks Carter's final move in what bas been a running battle with Congress since early spring over some rnemben' pet projecla -tnclud· inl dams, canala and lrrt1aUon ·system• in thelr home states. Father Held in Sex I Abuse of Children At one polnt, carter cited fund· in1 tor the projects aa a can· dldate for his first veto. But 10 or the project.I were uved in a com· promise with House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill. AUGUSTA, Maine (AP> -A father baa been indicted on 81 cbar1es atemmlng from the sex- ual abuse of his five children. Authorities say the abuse may bave begun seven years aao. John Starks Sr., .0, was indict· ed by a Kennebec County Grand Jur.y 10'_ ~ti.-alle"e4 to have e lrom Chrlltmu Day 1976 last week, Dial. Alty. Jabar announced Thurs· clay, a4cllnc that evidence ln· dicat.ed the abuse may date back mucblonier. , "lt'a a tra1lc thins, .. Jabar said at a news conference called 'o announce the lndlctment. "These children have 1one through a lot and they will go through a lot mo.e In the next slx months .•. I've t.tied lO impress •pon them that they've done · ttotbing wrong. that they're nol to ~lame.•• · . ~ He said the childr~n. three tlrls aged 13, 15 and 17, and two boJI aaed 11 ud 14. would prob- ablJ teltlfy at the trial ~ their father, Who WU beld lo Jlel& of $7S,000 bond af\ef pleadln1 fnn6.. cent to all charges after bis ar· r ~pment. , law 1alcl be has a*ed state. lt'elfare otftchtls to provide eoumelln• for the cblldren, now in the eustody of their mother and trandmot.taer. Th~ 1tat.e Human Se~')s D~_pattment was asked to ih-Y.~tlgate whether tbe mother, \Vjlom Jabat said WU sometimes a\ 'work when some of the acts too'k place, should retain custody o{ the children. School .Ari Show Slated i _ ~dison . High School Choral c.~ Club memben wW bold ~art show and auction Oct.12 at 1 ~ Seacliff Country Club in Hun· tilgtoo Beach. I.. review abowina oC oriJinal n gs, Utbo1rapb1 and pbics will begin at. 7:~l>.m. w,ed by an auction at 9 ock. event ls presented by the SUt. GaUeries. Ticket& Ptoc:eeda will beneftt the Hi&h School choral group. ~ 4Jolor TV Stolen if:.,. burglar broke into a Foun· a Valley home Thursday, ~ a S.00 color televtalon 4t-Police said Michele M. Cook, ~ 17312 San Lula St.. arrived h~ in the late afternoon to find ~ trcxrt door ajar and the knob ~tedoft. t DAILY PILOT Starks was indicted on 25 counts of gross sexual mlscon· d uct. 20 counts of incest. 11 counts of se1tual abuse of a minor and live counts or endangerini the welfare or a child under 16 years oC age, according lo J a bar. Jabar said Starks W83 also charged with endan~rlng the health and mental welfare oC his children by allegedly compelling them to engage In sex acts with him and with each other. He said Starks allegedly. took pictures oC the sex act& and eompetled the children to take pictu~ u well. Carter signed a SlO·blllion public works blll lncludln& ttie 10 projects during an August vaca· tlon in his home town of Plains. Ga. But he said at the time: "I remain very concerned about these projects." Ehrlichman I Term Cut WASHINGTON <AP> The second prison s en· tence of former Whlte .RQvse aide Joha D . Ebrlldunan was reduced today, 1Da.k.iftg him el11ible for parole after' Oct. 28. U ,s. District Court l ut11e Gerhard A, Geeell .reduced Ebrllcbman'a sen· tence in the ~al led White House plumbers' caae to 42 monlhs from 20 months lO ftve years, and said "the court speclfiet that the prisoner may be released on parole at such Ume as the parole commission de· termines." Jr the commbslon acts quickly l!!hrUchman could be out of prison at Safford, Arb.. by Christmas. f',....PageAJ BODY ••• gone, the elder Topolet1d aur· mlsedwhatmusthavebappened. State Beach Ran,er Aah!ord Wood estimated after the body washed ashore Thursday mom· ing a half·mlle north of Golden West Slreet that it had been ln the sea nearly a week. Investigators said the blue bathing suit and jewelry on the body, alone with an e;1bt·bich s car on the J>ack-matched Topoleski ·s mhiin1 persons re. port. Funeral aer vic:et were nendin~ today at Pierce Brotbers Smith's M~aey ln Hu~ Beach. · 3 El8Ctrocuted STILLWATER, Okla. <AP> - Three ftatemity brothers build· ing a display ror the Oklahoma State University homecomin1 celebration wete electrocuted to- day when their scaffolding came in\Q contact. with a hiah voltaae line, fire otnclait said. Two other memben or the Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity were treaM!d for injuries. r ..... •,,..•1 HANNA INDICTED. • • 1a.ld. ''The payments would be Jtiven (or political campaigr)I, lot th• personal uae of uld con· gressmen and aenat.on and on occasion for the office petty casl\ or a lu•h fund• of a aid legislatora," the 1rand Jury charted. Like the earlier lndlctment of Park, the Hanna badictmebt ell· ed several J:nttan~ wben Hanna wroteletteretovartou.l txecuUve branch officials promoting South Korean interest.I and ur1ed aome of hiA colleaaues to take almUar action. FOi' example, Hamta and Park arranged for a con1r ... m• to si1n a document promQtlnl a private or1anisaUon desitned to brin1 ~u.s. and Soutb Korean- le1ialaton to1eth•r for dl•· cussions, the indictment 1aid. Tbl• 1Ue1edly tool place tn Marohl910. Jn June 1'11, Hanna fumllhed Rep. Melvin Price <D·Ill. >with a letter to be sent to South Korean Prt1ld.nt ChUDI Ree Pan prait· int Tongun Park, and Price 1ent the letter, the indictinent said. The next month, Jlanna and Park arranged for another con- 1reasman lO send a similar leU.e-r to President Park, the indict.· ment continued. The indictment repeated many of the alle1aUou made in the Park indictment concernln• pay. menu purported to be camPaJgn cont.ributlCIDI to aeveral mem· bel'I tlCoqrt18. Hann• tuually demanded moH than sioo,ooo from Park for the then-congressman's efforta to influeace hla legl1lativ• ool· 1 .. isu-. the indictment said. that dec:wOn waa up to Part. There b no extradition treaty between Ule two countries. Thdlt'lt slsn ol a break In that im~aae caO'le when aasiatant Atty. Gen . ben]amln ClVUetU and Paul MicMI the lawyer ln charge or the SOuth Korean probe, arran1ed to travel to Seoul to discuss some possible arranco- ment for obtainine Park's sworn statement. Hanna bas acknowledged male· inJ $00,000 to S70,000 as a partner wlth Park in rice deals but he b as denJed any wrongdoing. If convicted, he would face maximum penalties or five years lq priloo and $10,000 on the con· sl)lracy totml and the ctiar1e of falling to reclster ~s • forefjo agent. Each or the mall fraud count.I carries a maximum of five yean and $1,000. Two of the bribery chargn carry a max· lmum ct 15 years abd ~.ooo each. The third bribery charge, under a sUgbUy different statute, carries a maximum of two ~ars and $10,000. F,....P..,AI FEES ••• Clark castln& the dlasenUna votes. An agreement coverlnC the land withdrawal forced Grant to pay more than $300,000 In proper· ty taxes which rfl,S)reaent.cl lts tax savtncs on land 111~ed for agricultural purposes nlber than for hllhetl and belt uae. ,.,,WI,.,.... REPORTED SAFE Cornella Dellenbaugh 3Americam On Yacht Safe A./t,er Attack VERO BE ACH. Fla. CAP> - T hree Americans who radioed their yacht was about lo be rammed off the coast of Vietnam were reported safe today and be- ing towed to Saigon, the father or the vessel's owner-said. Frederick Dellenbaugh said a ham rad.lo operator who knew his daughter, Cornella "Cricket" Dellenbaugh, telephoned him from Bangkok. Thailand, at about6a.m. PDT today. "He said he t alked with Cricket by rad.lo and she stated that they were under tow by a Vietnamese govemmenl vessel to arrive In Saigon at 6 p.m. PDT tonight." Dellenbaugh said. "Heaa.id they were ell well." · Dellenbaugh said the caller · wu Robert Stevens, a boa yard operator who batlt the 1eized vessel. the 39·foot BrilUg. •·1 know the man and recocnlzed h1a voice and comtder blm reliable,•• Dellenbaugh said. "Stevens rec· • ogtllzed the votce of my daughter." The yacht luued Ill dlltreaa · call Thursday, reporting It was being chased and fl.red en by vessels. The Ju t meaH1e said the yacht was "about lo be r ammed." Miss Dellenbaugh, owner of ·the vessel. waa Identified u a former Peace Corps worker. The two other Americana aboard were identified aa Leeland Dickerman or Flagstaff, Ariz .• and Charl e s Affel of Philadelphia. Tbe veaael WU eft route from Thailand's Pattaya beach resort area to Brunei and Singapore. sources here said-. Tbft dlatreas call reported a position about 35 miles off Vletnan's Ca Mau peninsula. McDowell Elementary School Parent-Teacher Or1ant1atJoG members will bold a famlly camJval from 2 to I p.m. Friday· on the school crounds at imo Oak~ Fountain Valley. F,....P.,,eAJ HU:.\CK ••• nown to Vietnam. Somalia or Jhrxili South 'Y.,..._, ER~ Of the releued prisoners .Vas tCI be supplied wllb "3,860 ln German marlul. The ultimatum, addreMed to the West Germal) covo~t, declared, "We shalt not tact you agaJn • • • AM trlal n your part to delay or ~1,il Us wUl mean immediate aclil)I et the ultimatum and execuUOo ol Mr. ltanns Martin Sohleyer and all the passengers and ta.e c~, ot {he plane." The ultimatuoi . f(as.. $i~ed ••s truggle Agatns\ World Im· periallsm Orcan!Utton .. and ended with an at~ o.a a1i.,.a neo·Nazism ID ~ GetmMy and Zionism. • · With the ultimatum was a com· m unique addressed 1'To All Revolutionaries In the World. To All ~ Arab!~ To Our Pale5tin· ian Masses." The 4\'IO·Word "dec1aratton n. ported the hijacking an4 1ts coo. nectton wtth tM Sclhl•Y•J' O{*'•~ ti.on. ~.. ' · · ,. In o ne p .a r t it s t ated . "Revolutionar ies and freedom righters all over the world are confronted with the monster of world i mperialis m -the harb a r o us w a r u nder the hegemony of the USA aeainst the people of the world:· Among the hijacked plane•a passensers were eight members or a Spanlah air crew. MOit of the others were believed to be West German vacationers retumlng from Mallorca. It was nol known if any of the passenaers were American. The gunmen , believed to number at least two, comman- deered the Lufthansa Boeing 7:rT Thursday alter it left the Spanish island of Mallorca. They forced lt to land at Rome, Cyprus and then Bahrain, and finally ordered lt to Dub The plane, orilinaUY bound for Frankfurt, carried flve crew members and S7 puaeaien. ID· cludlnc th~ hijackers. F,.....PageAJ SUIT ••• "Proposition Q will allow afew recreational c ard clubs for adult& in selected non·residenUal areas away from . churches and s chools," the Anderson letter states. : ••we have found tb•t the beautlful clubs attract very de. sirable, honest people wbo come and topeacefull.)'." The Jetter tbeQ draws the vote11's attention to a ·PBI report on crime wbich purportedly shows that four ciUes similar to Inglewood have had lower crime rates despite the insUtuUoa of card parlor gambling. Bash Thrown For Georgiana WASHINGTON (AP) -Prel· dent carter th~ a barbeeoe party oo the Wblte House lawn Tbw'ld4Y Dl&bt for 500 Gearatans whoua be ca1Je4 "my cU..t ertenm to an the world.·· The occi&lon wu ·a l'etlblon ror the "Peanut Brtpde1 •• Uae volun· teen Who fanned oGt throuibout the primary at.ates Jut year to get tbetr man elected to the pre&idency. "I always knew we'd be here on the South Lawn of the White House eatlq bolled peanuts and barbecued chicken " said Max· ine Reese of Plains, Ga., as Oliver Wilson of Sandersville. Ga., sboqtecl. "Georcla bu taken overl" Evans-Black r~~~ atBlueRi~~~ Savings. ·Now·s· the time to get fantastic savings on beautiful Evan•Black Carpets. It's our best selection of today's newest styles, colo~s and texture&. So don't delay ••• hurry In todayl .SALE. EHDS:...-nHOV. I st . DEN'S T~ Santa Ana men ..vere Abo& lO death TbU?'sday n!abt. OM u he talked with rrtends outalde Ilia home and I.he other allegedly by his estranied wile, police Nport.o ed today. Ernesto Cervantes, !l 2S·)'1!ar· old Mexican national, ~u IJU'Uck in the back 'by one of several shots,n.red from a passiq car, poUcesald. Cervantes was outslde his home, JJM>8 s. Oak St., t&lklnt with Mends wbeo the ahootlng took place, police ollicers report- ed . Police said they were unable to oblaln a description of the.car. J erry Massie, 31, died al9p.m. of gunshot wounds in the chest uni'tSfcte:-Pottcei;atctmrwasdea at the scene. ~ Mra. Adaline Ma1Sle, is. was hooked inlO Orange County J ail on s uspicion of murder, officials said. Officers alleged the Massles had been arguing earlier Thurs- day at their home at 1205 S. Mohawk Drive., Massie r e· portedly returned Thursday night. broke through the front door and waa shot. Huntington Burglars Get $3,400 GeD18 Burglars stole about $3,400 ilL jewelry io three app_arenUy un· related Huntington Beach home brea!dna Thursda¥~ police re- ported. Two bur&lariel wen reported on s;..on brtve 1A south Hun.ti. ingtall Beach. . Gree Gritfit.bs ol lOGl Samoa Drive told police be ma,y blve £rightened the bttr&lars u be came bome from work at C:lS p.m. The burglars ransacked Grit· fi ths' home after entering through a kitchen wiodow. About $2,l35 in Jewelry was taken, pollcenid. Police a150 reported udbel" break·in at 1°'31 SiltOD Drhte. No clet4llls of lbe burpUJ...,. available. Police •aid lt mar mt be related to the o&ber' ......, case. Meanwhile. ,nm~ ol 1171 Sluml~ve,~~-unU....,_ • Beach. told police W.W. .. terecl q unlocked wiDdow IDCI took about $1.,215 ln wet.ct. ud otb• jewelly. Harper said the break.bl' oc- curred betweena a.m. and ip.m. Garments Labeled WASHING TON <AP) -JC Penney Co. Jne., saya lt wl1l eon- Unue to sell children '1 aleepwear containing the coatroversial ftre retardmt Fyrol P·2 altboqb two consumer 1roup1 ar1e4 lts wltbdrawal from the market, saying it is a poaiblf C&Qfff' cauame agaa&. A ,,....,... for JC Peane1 aatd tbe company would label each 1arment treat~ ed with the chemical aod paat signs deleribtDI th• cootroveru about lt.e use. Ediaon Meet Set Edbon H11h Scbool Parent Teacher-Student AasoclaUon members will meet the aecoacl Tbunday of· •veJ'J momla WI year, belinnin• Oet. 20, la the faculty cUninl room. All paftlda andstudeota arelnvtted. .. --. The srand Jury laaufd tM lft· dlcUnent &1 two top Justlc• D.,.tment offlclala arriwd lo SeciUl to ll&llt with South Konm oCfieiall ·~ arran1ements for queslionlnt Tongsun Park. -The department has made re- peated-efforts to perauade 1th• South Korean governm,nt lo re· tum Park to this countri but South Korean officials bave 1ald To lhla time, tbe moae,y hu not filtered Into A:OUbty tnMurles bec.IWle· atato conttolltt' Ken C~O' clalm44 ti rl,blf\lllY • belOl\leid to th•IC&le. The county ill prot.etUnc ~at act.ion bf the cont.fol\Of and ls also negoUatili1 wlth Aoahllm am1 oa land nomlled to be turn~ ~r to tbe CDUDtJ u open space dtdlcatfoa, • dedlcallon that h•• only fartlall1 been :iiisiiilit1oa:·custom draperies linoleum • wood floor fulfilled. • ' u • Ir.vine EO)TION VOL. 70, NO. 287, 4 SECTIONS, .... PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI PORN IA Bribery, Fraud, Conspiracy ich anna Diedrich ' 'PayofF . Probed By GARY GRANVILLE Of, .. o.ally ,., .. , sutt The Orange Count y Gra nd Jury is investig ating a con- troversial 1973 county land use decision at which Super visor Ralph Oiedrich's personal at- torney and co-indictee Michael Remington received a SS0.000 re- tainer from .a deve loper befriended by Diedric h. Both Diedrich and Remington. howeve r , de n y the county supervisor reeeived any portion of what Remington estimates was "probably S40,000" that he actually was paid by Robert H. Grant Corp. It was Monday that Diedrich admitted taking a leadership role in a 3 to 2 Board of Supervisors decision to free Anaheim Hills In· corporated, a Grant subsidiary. Crom development restrictions imposed on hill properly or what is known as the Noh! Ran~h by an agricultural preserve agr~ment withthecounty. Al the same time . Diedrich de- nied profiting "in any way, in any form whatsoever " either by the Board of Supervisors con- troversial decision to lift the pre- serve restrictions or the fees paid Remington. When he spoke in his office • Monday, Diedrich si141 he knew two Grant or!icials, Robert H. Grant and Richard L Owen, had already testified before the grand jury. nemirigton made the same acknowledgment Oct. 6 and s aid today his former secretary had been called ·before the jury Thursday. It was last week that Re m- ington said, "as I understand it they're <district attorney in· vestigators > trying to link the money that was paid me to Ralph.'. .· Remington admitted Diedrich "probably had something to do" with him being retained by the , development company in i(c; er. forts to induce the Board of Supervisors to lift the preser ve agreement. "I could be wrong but I think I got. oh. maybe $40.000 before my troubles began and the case was handed over to the <lawyer > Marshan Morgan,.. Remington said. The·"lroubles" Remington re- ferred to was his arrest ln mid-1973 on sus picion of solicltng murder and conspiracy to com- mit murder charges. Six months after his arrest a Superior Court j ury acquitted the Fulle rton atto rne y of t he charges. Trouble came Rem ington's way again last July 1 when he was one or fi ve people, including Diedrich and Supervisor Philip Anthony, who was charged in a grand jury indictment with felony offenses related to alleged <See FEES, Page A2 > Co ast Weath e r Night through mid morn- ing low clouds and. local dense tog. Otherwise hazy s unshine through Satur- day. Lows tonight 58 to 63. High Saturday 70. INSIDE TODAY Sat11rdoy night 16 /inali3t$ will compete at the Orange Co11rtty 1''afrground8 /or tM National Motorcycle Chnm· piomhip. See Page CI. Index Ot Allll~ l lO IM•le .. _,...,....., -· Nali-..... t AJ ~MftC-7 OMt S1Ma ,_,., Ot 5"nl 01 SI•<'~ At Ttle•ltle11 A• Tllt•lt" CM Wut• 11·1 WortctH-.., 1 1 WM-fMH' (,4 11 , .. , II A4 ,.. It IM ..... 17 c .. , A4 A4 Cl·7 Daily Piloll SYtf l'MI• GREG OJALA (IN WHEELCHAIR) PLAYS MERRILY WITH NON-HANDICAPPED STUDENTS At Dana Point Elementary School, Happiness Is Being P art of the Class Dana Project Special Education 'Success' By ANNE COOPER Of .. Oali"r..._-... " Placing handicapped children a mong non-handicapped school children opens doors ror both groups, say teachers who arc "mainstreaming " ha ndicapped c hildren al a Dana Point Ele mentary School. "So-called ·normal· children learn to take as much pleasure in a handicapped child's success in the classroom as he does in being a part of the class," said Celia Vanderpool, mainstreaming coordinator at R. H. Dan a Elementary School. 24242 La Cresta. When the special education facility opened ne xt to the elementary school in 1975 to serve handicapped children in the Capistrano, Laguna, Sad· dle back Va lley and Irvine Unified School Districts. rumors r an rampant umong the non- handicapped cMldren that terri- ble things were going on next door . ''They thought we wer e performing oper ations on the kids in the s pecial education fac iltty and that they wer e monsters or something,· said Mrs. Vanderpool. "During that first year. we in· vited the elementary school stu- dents next door ror a concert. and they were surprised to see that the special education studenL'> could talk and sing -and very well, som.e of them .·· During the 1!176-77 school year . Mrs. Vanderpool began introduc· mg those s tudents she thought would benefit from wider ex- pos ure to reg ular class ex- perience at R.H. Dana. Th e e xp e ri me n t i n m ains treaming was so suc- cessful that this year 18 or the 68 students :m ending the special ed ucation facil ity spend some of their school hours in regular classes. In addition to participating in R.H. Dana classes, one student a ttends Ma rco Forster J unior High in San Juan Capistrano and two a ttend Dana H ills Hi gh School . nearby in Dana Point. Students at the special educa- tion-facility r ange 1n age from 2 to 18. "We don't put a child in a reg- ular class unless success is as· sured," Mrs. Vanderpool sajd. "It would be bad for the child. it would be bad for the class and it would be bad for the progr am." The mainstreaming hos helped handicapped children get used to funct ioning among othe r children their age and in a more normal setting than the special education facility provides. Jt also helps non-handicapped children and their leachers un- derstand the dimensions of what il means to be human. said Mrs. Vanderpool. "We talk candidly about what is different about these kids.·· s he said. "We tell the chi ldren that the handicapped child in their class has a body that doesn't work just right, but that he is a human being, loo." As the children get to know him ISee PROJECT, Pagt> /\2) lroirw Accident Flips Boy From Car A 5·year-old boy was jolted from his sleep in his parents' car and thrown out the car's hatchback door a nd unde r another car in a rear-end col- lision at an Irvine intersection Thursday. Calvin G. Mas on, 28, of Westminster , bolted Crom his car after being hit from behind and scooped up his injured son, Hank. from under the front end of the car that rammed his. The boy escaped serious injury and was treated at Tustin Com· munlty Hospital for a bruised left knee. Police said the auto ap· pa rently was at a full s top afler smacking the Mason car, when the child fell under it. Police arrested the driver of the car, Detlef A. Franck, 3S, of 16211 Parkside Lane, Huntington Beach. on sus picion or felony drunken driving. T h"c co I I i s i on w a s a t MacArthur Boulevard and the southbound onramp of the San Diego Freew ay, acr oss from Orange County Airport. Police said Mason had stopped for a red light. His son had been sleeping on the rear deck or the car. The hatchback door popped open on impact. Other passengers In Mason's car -his wife Glenda. 22. and daughter Jackie, 6 -weren't hurt. poli ce s aid. 1 Bing Cro8by Dies BULLETIN MADRID, Spain <AP > - American singer Bing Crosby died today while playl.,g golf in ~I adlid, the news agency Clfra reported. lie was 73. • Hijackers Threaten Pa.ssengers DUBAI. Uni ted Arab Emirates <A P I -Ara bic-speaking ter- rorlsts holding a hijacked West German jetliner threatened to- day to kill their hostages, includ- ing 11 beauty queens. unless "comrades" imprisoned in West Germany and Turkey are re- leased and a ~15 million ransom is paid. oCficials s aid. Ninety-two persons. including cr e w · members a nd the hi· jackers, were re ported aboard t he plane. • The beauty queens were re- turning to Frankfurt after a gift t rir> to the Spanis h island of Ma- jorca when the plane was hi· jacked Thursday. In Frankfurt. the newspaper Frankfurter Rundschau quoted t he daughter of one of the contes- tants as saying her mother won the trip to Mallorca after compet- ing in a contest on the island dur- ing a visit last summer. The girl. 16·ycar-old Com'eJia Brod, said her mother. Jutta Rrod. 36. was one of eight West Gl•rman winners in the conte$ts sponsored by Ma llorfa disco- theques. She was quoted as saying the other three winners were fort'igncrs. · _ The hijackers also threatened CSee lDJACK, PageA.2) Coast Woman Appointed to ' Court Post Deputy Counly Counsel Iryne Codon Black of Newport Beach was appointed to the Santa Ana Municipal Court today by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. Mrs. Black, 49, ta kes over one of the vacancies created when two members or the Santa Ana bench were recently elevated to· the Superior Court by Governor nrown. A gr aduate of Stanford Law School. Mrs . Black joined the county counsel's offi ce in 1970 after wor king on the legal staff or the Depart ment of Labor in WashJngton, D.C., and as an as- sistant general counsel for the Smithsonian Institute in " that city. She has also served as a deputy attorney general and as a state department aide on assignments t hat took her to West Germnny and South Korea. Mrs. Black. her hus band and two c hildren I a n . 15, and Timothy, l :l-livc in Newport J\cach. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1977 -.. Tied ·to Ko~ . . Influence Bu ~ WASHI NGTO N <AP > .._ Former Rep. Richard T. Hanna was indicted today on feder~I charges of bribery, fraud and conspiracy stemming from aJ. legedSouth Korean efforts to buy influence a mong me m bers ot Congress. Hanna, a California Democrat from Or ange County who served in the House from 1963 through 1974, w as the f i r s t e x - congr essman to be indicted in the Justice Department probe or al- leged attempts by South Koreans to pty members-of-Congress with cash and other favors in ex- ct\ange for actions favorable to the South Korean government. A fed~! grand jury in U.S. District Court in Washington re- turned the indictment charging Hanna with one count of con- spiracy, three counts of bribery, one count of failing to register as a foreign agent, and 35 counlS of mail fraud. An indictment is a .formal charge made against a person by a grand jury. It does not esta blish guilt or innocence. Th e in dictm e n t n a med T ongsun Park, the one·titne Washington businessma n who has returned to Scot.JI, as an unin· dicte.d co-conspirator. Park a lready has been indicttld on similar charges and bas so far refused to return to the United Sta tes to face trial. Also named as unindicted co- conspirators were two former directors of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency. Kim Hyung Wook and Lee Hu Rak. The indictment charged that Hanna used his position as a~on­ gressman "lo encourage agen- cies or the government of the Republic of Korea to promote the designation" of Park as the in· termediar y for rice sales to Korea from U.S. companies. Park received a s ubstantial a o10unt of m on ey as com- missions from the U.S. com- e.~nies and passed along mu~h or * * * o.lty ............. FACES INDICTMENT Ex-cfongresaman Hanna tha t m oney to Hanna .. and various other congressmen ancr senators with intent to influence the decisions and actions of said congressmen and senators on quesUons and matters relatJn1 to the Republic of Korea,·• the ta.: dictment charged, Specifically. Hanna and Part wanted to influence members ol Congress to increase U,S. m llitary aid to Korea, defeat pro. posals to reduce U.S. m ilitary forces there, increase rice sales to Korea and win more favorable terms for the financing o( those sales, and make sl)eeches and write statements praising the South Korean regime, the indict· ment-said. As part or the alleged scheme. Park gave cash and other gifts to House and Senate m embers he and Hanna believed "to be in· nuential in matters affectina" South Korea , the indictment ~8!,e HANNA, Pace A2) * * * 'Scapegoat' F. ears Voiced by Hanna By PIULIP ROSMARIN , Ofllle o.ally PllOl"alt J ovial, che rubic 63.year-old Richard Hanna once told former congr essional staff members he wa s afraid of being m ade a sca pegoat in the Korea bribery investigation. He may have reflected on that today in his Fayetteville, Ark., home where he moved into a self- im pose·d exile in July from Newport Beach. Once Hanna was Orange Coun- ty's most popular Democratic el~led oUicial, ser ving s ix terms in Congress until his re· tirementin 1974. Alter months of investigations and publicity over alleged in- nuence buying from 1967 through 1975 to win congressional support on issues affecUng South Korean business interests, Hanna stole quieUy and unannounced from Orange County. . He moved into the Ozark Mountains town In near-total a n on y mi\.y . Non e of his neighbors reportedly. knew who he was, iinUI news reporters and photographers descended upon his home when he was named an unlnclicted co-conspirator. With today's federal indict· me nt alleging bribery, m ail fraud and raiJuTe to register as a foreign agent. Fayette ville again became a target or news re· porters. , . Apparently Hanna was still hiding o u t. An Arkansas telephone operator said that although Hanna 's telephone number was listed in her book. the former politician had made a special request that it no longer be given out. He was never so reticent on Capitol Hill. where he was kriown as a gregarious ond energetic polltlcinn who danced soft.·sboc al.parties • Hanna made extensive trip~. by .his own admission, since 1968, to Seoul, when surphas U.S. rice was being sold to Korea. He became known to the American embassy there as tKe "California rice salesman,·• io frequently did he appear when rice trans actions were beirfl made. It was during that time that Ha nna became the sil~nt partner of Tongsun Park, indicted ~lb Korean businessman at the key to the bribery scandal. In three years, Hanna made ~.000 to $70,000 in an import: export venture with Park, which he reported to the House Et.hi~ Committee on Standards ol of· flcial ccmduct. But hls business connectlol\ went generally unnoticed by hil colleagues. Hanna told the New York Times he entered the businets venture to help Park. He put up 590.000 in stock he owned in an Anaheim company as collaledt for a $25,000 loan to Park. Hanna reportedly told t he Times that when he l ater be11n to r eceive money from Park, he asked no questions about It. He e ventually e nded t he re1 a~ Uons hip, he said, after becomlnf "uncomfortable'' with it. Following his retlrement f't'oro Congress, Hanna s et up business offices in Newport Beach ..-id Irvine, servlng as a legal consul· tant in a variety of quasi-otnclel capacities. • 1 le was a board member or lhe count y -funded Economic Development Corp. and &he flodghng lnternalional Trade League. Ile resigned from the EDC in July, .again without annouace-· m ent. j ust ~fore he qui.UT sUppeclf or good out oh.he eountJ. ,.,. w ............ REPORTED SA FE Cornella Dellenbaugh 3Americans On Yacht Safe After A ttack VERO BEACH, Fla. <AP> Three Americans who radioed riheir yacht was about to be oammed off the coast of Vietnam were reported safe today and be· ing towed to Saigon, the father of the wssel-'s owner said. Frederick Dellenbaugh said a barn radio operator who knew his daughter, Cornelia "Cricket•· Dellenbaugh, telephoned him from Bangkok, Thailand, at about6a.m. PDT today. "He said he talked with Cricket by radio and she stated that they were under tow by a Vietnamese government vessel to arrive in $aigon at 6 p.m. PDT toriight, .. '->ellenbaugh said. "He said they were all well.·· · Dellenbaugh said the caller was Robert Stevens. a boat yard operator who built the seized vessel. the 39-foot Brillig. "[ know the man and recognized his ~oice and consider him reliable ... Dellenbaugh said. "Stevens rec· qgniied the voice of m y daughter.'' J The yacht issued its distress qall Thursday, reporting tt was ~ing cbased and fired on by \'essels. The last message said the yacht was "about to be rammed." Miss Dellenbaugh, ow~r of the vessel, was identiried as a former Peace Corps worker. The t wo other Americans aboard w.ere identified as Leeland Dickerman of Flagstaff. Ariz .• a nd C harl es Aff el of Philadelphia. Girl's Death ~ow Murder? ::LONDON (AP> -Doctors ~itched off the life-support rciachine for a young woman '!f linically dead" after a brutal s<xual attack, and the action has, rj iscd a complicated legal issue <"\whether her assailant can be ti,ed for murder. ~:in a decisioo reminiscent of the }faren Ann Quinlan case, the vie· tjln 's anguished parents and fttnce ga~e their permission for <{6ctors to turn off a respirator ~d allow her to die, the local cOroner in the northern English Olly of Bradford reported Thurs· dpy. :~some legal authorities said tJtat. if and when apprehended. her assailant could charge that t~e physicians who disconnected ~r life support were responsible fbr her death. •' ·: ~~~~~~~~~~-- 0..ANOE COAST DAILY PILOT • rriday October 1• 1971 Two Santa Ant& men were.shot to denth Thursday night. one as he talked with friends outside hls home and the other allegedly by hi& estranged wife, police report· ed today. Ernesto Cervantes, a 2S·year- old Mexiclin national, was.struck in the back by one of several shots fll'ed from a passing car, poUcesaid. Cer\'antes was outside his home, 1908 S. Oak St., talking wllh friends when the shooting took place, police offi<;ers report· ed. Poli ce said they were unable to obtain u description of the car . Jerry-Massie. ll. died al9 p..m. of gunshot wounds in the chest and side. Police said he was dead at the scene. Mrs. Adaline Massie, 25. was booked into Orange Coun(y Jail on suspicion of murder, offi cials said. Officers alleged the Massies bad been arguing earlier Thurs- day at their home at 1205 S. Mohawk Drive .. Massie r e- portedly returned Thursday night, broke through the front door and was shot. Fro• Page A J PROJECT ••• better. they come to understand what that means, she said. Mrs. Vanderpool was drawn to working with handicapped children by wbat she saw happen to a handicapped sister-in-law who grew up without the adv an· luge of special education. she s aid. The contrast betw~n tradi· tional segregation of ~he han· dicapped and mainstreaming as it is done al R.H. Dana is never more apparent than when the children mix at recess. said Den· nis Gibbs, assistant principal. "I watched about SO sixth graders cheer on two teams of ha ndicapped children during lunch recess the other day,·· he s aid. "and both groups or children related happily and s pontaneous ly, with n o acknowledgment of the dif· ferences between them. "We may be the only school in the world that offers a driver·s training course for elementary school students. Those who com· pletc it satisfactorily m ay push wheelchairs o( the handicapped children who are confined to them." "Tbe teachers and students • here have made tremendous ad· juslments over lhe past year, .. s a id Mr s. Vanderpool. "Sometimes this required re· assessment of what it means to be a human being. "They have handlcapP.Cd stu· dents in their classes reguJarly. It's one thing to be gracious and generous -a superstar -one day, and quite another matter to grow day by day, making adju$t· ments which can sometimes be uncom~ortable, to say the least.·· Kirst Named Board Chief SACRAMENTO (AP) -One of Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s top education advisers, Stanford pro- fessor Michael Kirst, ls the new chairman of the state Board of Education. Kirst, .37, was elected Thurs- day to replace Marion Drinker,· who was the board's first female president when elected in.June 1976. Her term has expired, but s he is staying until Brown ap- points a successor. Rele a ed Graziella Ortiz Patino. the 5-ycar ·old gran dniece of Bolivian tin magnate An- tenor Pation who was kid· naped 10 days ago, was re- leased for a ransom of ~ million. Se_e story. Page f..4. E'ro•Page AJ FEES ••. illegal political campaign prac- ti'1es. As far as county records are concerned. whatever fee Rem· ington received from the Grant Corporation is covered by a two. page memorandum written to the county planning commission urging it to approve the ag pre- ser ve withdrawal. But Remington insisted that he had done much more than pre- pare the two-page memo to the planners. ~Morgan b_acked Remington's statement today when he said. "I was called by the Grant ~pie and told their attorney was in trouble and was asked to pick up the company files." "I remember goin g to Mike's otrice and picking up a carton filled with m aterial including Mik e's analy s i s o r the W illlams on Act (cr eatin g agricultural preserves> as well as some other work his firm had done,·· Morgan said . The attorney went on to ~ay that while most of the pubhc rec- ords shows other attorneys, in· eluding himself, had done the bulk of the work. "'Mike obvious- ly had done a greataeal. .. • • · As things turned out. it was Morgan who successfully de· fended Remington fn 1973 against the murder solicitation and con- spiracy charges. Now, Morgan is Oiedrich's de- fender against charges carried m the grand jury indictment oC July 1. . Remington conceded that in his testimony before the grand jury he told of holding Diedrich 's power of attorney and of close business transactions between them. However , he pointed out that at the time of the Grant Corp. deal· ings in 1973 his and Diedrich 's business relationship was not that close and that he did not carry Diedrich's power. of at· torney. ' "11 wasn't until about a year later, maybe early 1975, that Ralph was so tnolved with being a county sus>ervisor that he found ilnecessary to glve me his power . orattorney," Remington said. Jn the NohJ Ranch preserve controversy, the county planning commission voted against the county allowing the land re- moved from 10-year preserve status. With Diedrich leading the way, the Board of Supervisors over- ruled the commission's decision with then supervisor Ronald Caspers and supervisor Ralph Worms Going? Test Cut ShoUld Clear Water By JACKIE HYMAN OI ... o.lty ~11.t Suff The er1d of a reservoir testing program next week should cul down on the number of wormlike creatures in Costa Mesa water. a s pok es woman for th e Metropolitan Water District said Thursday. However, some trace of lhe midge fly larvae will continue until temperatures drop, accord· Ing to MWD spokeswom an Janis Van Keucen. The wormUke insects began turning up in Costa Mesa water when the San J oaquin Reservoir in Irvine was being drained to test its emergency capabilities. The testing is continuing, but at a slower rate. The larvae so far have not been reported in any other coast cities, Mrs. Van Keuren said. Ntwport Deach and Huntington Beach also draw water from the res- ervoir. although Irvine uses it only an cuse of emergencies. The state Department of Health says the insects do not pose a health hazard. The mes breed annunlly and cnch year there is some trace o·r 1he larvae until cold weal.her sets in and slops the breeding, Mrs. Van Keuren said, · However,' the Metropolitan Water District. which manages the San Joaquin Reservoir and others that provide water to Orange County. is looklng into a program to get rid of the adult flies that cause the problem. she said. The wormllkc c reatures, stirred up by current!: from rapid draining of the reservoir In the "'I hills above Corona del Mar, caused concerQ a mong Costa Mesa residents. Mrs. Susan Healey of 665 Ross St. saJd she first. consulted her doctor an('.l treated het family aga\nst what she thought were plbworms. She reported Thursday that the number or ",Wortna0 ln the water had dwin~led to a mere trickle. Midges, wh\ch are related". to the hou~e'fly, prodtttc larvae· known as ._.bloodworms,'' whlch form a larae J!lrt of the diet or some flsb·spedts eaten by man. However. there arc no fish Ui tho Sun J ottquin Reservoir . • ·Irvine s ·ecures Big Loan The Irvine Company ein- nounccd today it has .iecured a $100 million loan from the Prudential Insurance Company o( America toward r epayment of a reported $237 million ln loans secured to buy the company last July. The Prudential deal reportedly ls one of the largest loans ever made in the United States. Details of interest and term:s of repayme.nt were not disclosed. Irvine Company President Peter C. Kremer s'ald the loan l.s "the first major step in placing fi rs r.mortg"a ~~ nn :rn ctng-o11 sever al of the previously un- financed assets of the company, in keeping with our financial str ategy for long.term deveJop- nient of the Irvine Ranch." The loan is ·secured by a first mortgage on a group of the com· pany's leases on residential, commercial and industrial properties. Company officials refused to disclose either the number of leases put up as collateral on lhe huge loan, or where the prop- erties are. It claimed the action would have no impact on the lessees. "The Irvine Company will con- tinue to own the fee interest in the land." Kremer said. The $237 million in loans, ob- tained through a group of nine banks, reportedly is to be repaid over five years. Irvine Company investors ap· parently raised the adaed $100 million used to purchase the company Open House Set at Irvine Fire Station A month· long drive for fire pre· ,·cntion climaxes Saturday with an open house by the Orange County Fire Department in the City o( Irvine. ' r ' 'Nixon Dance' GOP~ Slate E11ent STiLLWATE~. OkJu . <A P> --Student Republicans._ will hold n "First Annuul Nixon Ml'morlal Tdok or Treat Dancc .. bci·e Nov. 1 and glvo away u tape <leek and 60 minute$ Qf erased tu~ ats a door pr-.izc. Local merchants say sales of Rtchurd Nixon masks have ~en brisk in antjciptttion of the fund· rais ing event, 3pansored by the Collegiate I • RcpubUcans at.Oklahoma State University. To promote the -event, club member David Rumph, m11de up to resemble former President Nix- on, will ride tn the school homecoming purade Satur· d ay. "We've got n lona black car and ure going to have six guys dtes.ed In dark suits and sunglasses walking al ong side," s uid 'Matt Seward, president of the Oklahoma State Republican club. \ - F als.e-?lp-est Suit . Filed on 3 Citi~s A Newport Beach real estate salesman arrested last June on sus picion of raping an Irvine womlUl bas tiled claims totaling $1 .S million against the cities of Irvine, Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. William E. Manrow III, 27. alleges false arr~st, search and seizure and imprisonment. A claim is the first step toward Ciling o( a l4wsuit. The Irvine and Newport Beach City Councils already have denied Manrow's claim and referred it to their attorneys. T he Costa Men council has yet to consider it. Manrow was arrested June'l6 a fter a 31-year·old Irvine housewife claimed a real estate s alesman raped her in her FreatPflfleAJ HANNA ••• said. "The D•Yments would be riven for political campai&ns, roe the home. but the district attorney's office never filed charges agaJnst him. He was booked in Costa Mesa Jail after turning himself in to Irvine police when he learned he was soueht by them. Costa Mesa police held him brletly for questioning about other cases. Manrow's attorney, Per H. Trebler, said Newport Beach is. named fn the claim because a warrant to search Manrow's apartment was obtained in that cily. Dorothy Danielle Johnson joined M8JU'Ow in the complaint against the police departments. She was alone in bis apartment when police searched it. Manrow claims bis arrest c a used him b1nni Ii aticm, emotional distress and damage to his reputation. Trebler said M anrow's business bas suffered since tbe arrest. p,....pogeAJ personal u se or said con• HIJACK gressmen and senators and on • •. • occasion for the office petty cash that kidna....A. . West German In· o r s l u s h fu n ds o f sa id .,,. ... legislators," the g rand jury dustrialis t Hanns Mar.tin h ed Schleye{, abducted by terrorists c arg . ... G Like the earlier indictment of in Wes ermarty nearly six Pntk, the Hanna indictment cit· weeks ago, would be killed tr the ed several instances when Hanna demands are not met by 1 a.m. wrote letters to various executive PDTSUnday. Firefighting techniques, dem· onstratlons· and displays are s <.'heduled from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the University Fire Station, 19002 Zee St., and the Valencia Fire Station. 4691 Walnut Ave. branch offi cials promoting South A text of tbe ulftmatum was de· Korean interests and urged some· livered to the French press agen· .. of his colleagues to take similar cy AFP in Paris after the plane For the kids. Smokey the Bear. or a reasonable facsimile. is scheduled lo appear --at 9:30 a.m .. 12:30 p.m. and 3 p.m. at the University station. and at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m . at the Valencia sta· tion. Baseball fans needn't miss the festivities: Both stations will have television sets tuned to the World Series game. action. landed in this Peralan Gulf For eumple4fanna and Park emirate. arranged for a congre5Sman to The ultimatum named 11 West sign a document promoting a German terroris ts and two private organization designed to Palestinians beld in :rurkey who bring U.S. and South Korean are demanded to be released and legislators together for dis· flown to Vietnam, Somalia or cussions, the indictment said. Marxist South Yemen. Each ol This alleged ly took place in the released prisoners was to be l\t arch 1970. supplied with $43,860 ln German In JW\e 1971, Hanna Curnlshed marks. Rep. Melvin Price <D·Jll.) with a .The uJUmatum, addressed to letter to be sent to South Korean the West German government. President Chung Hee Park prais· declared, "We shall not contact ing Tongun Park, and Price sent you again ••• Any trial on your the letter, tbe indictment said. part to dela:r or deceive us will The next month, Hanna and mean immediate ending ol tbe Mother of Actor Rock Hodson Dies. Memor ia l s ervices for Katherine M. Olsen, mother of actor Rock Hudson, will be held at 3 p.m. Monday in the chapel of Bell-Broadway Mortuary in Costa Mesa. Park arranged for another con· 'ultimatum and execution of Mr. gressman to send a similar Jetter Hanns .Martin Schleyer and all to President Park, the indict:-Jhe paneniers and the erew o1 - mentconUnued. lbeplane." The indictment repeated many The ultimatum was siped of the allegations made in the •'Struggle Against WCJl'ld Im - Park indictment concerning P ... ,....,~pec-lallsm Organfaatloa" and ment.s purported to be campaign ended wttb an attack on al~ed contributions to several mem· neo·Nazism in West Oennany be rs o( Congress. and Zionism. I 'Mrs. Olsen, 77, died Wednes· day al her home in Newport Beach after a brtef illness. A native of Chicago, Mrs. Hanna illegally demanded With lbe ultimatum was a com· more than $100,000 from Paik for munlque ad dr essed ••To All the then-congressman's efforts to RevolutioltarJes in the World, To influence his legisl au ve col-All Free Arabs, To Our Palestm- Olsen had lived in Newport Beach for 20 years. She is sur- vived by her son. leagues, the indictment said. ian Masses." Evans-Black Carpets at Bille Ribbon Savings. .Now·s· the time to get fantastic ·savings on beautiful Evans-Black Carpets. It's our best selection of today's newest styles, colors and textures. So don't delay •• ; hurry in today! SALE ENDs~ .... NOV. I st l663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 646·-4838 -6-46·23.5.5 "' • I .. CllS CCI CCt• Ct Aly Fr id ay' Clo8 ing Pric~M NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Ouo1 .. 1on, ll>tl..U.1•-· on IM ...... "·'"~ Mldw••I PACIPI( PllW lkl"O". Or11011 •11<1 Cllltflln•lf •tock ••c.h•l\Qllf\ ,.nd '"OOr\td Dy tf\• N•llon•I A'~tlA\IOr\ 4>• ~~nt1.-, l'Wi•let\ end trutinM Friday. ~to2Mr 14, 1977 Form1040 :~ ''N .. DA!LV PILOT •• We'li' See Red With New Blue By SYLVIA PORTER As a result or the Tux Reform law or 1976, last year's Form lCMO -used by two·lhirds of U.S. wxpayers, was com· plex. befuddJing nnd lengthy enough that it invited errors. lt created such misunderslWlding and caused so many mistakes in nrithmet;,nlone that tt was a tax preparer'& dream come true. MUI ns who had never before sou&hlO\ll· 11ide Mlp dld so last yea . THE 19TT TAX SI LICATION,A.CT HAS changed the 1977 Form 1040 to reac closer to the goals or simplllicatioo andrerorm. The colors are pJl.Stel blue and white instead or 1976's red, white and blue. TbelRSobviousl)' thinks lbis will heJpaoot.he you. I think you'll turn red as y9ut.ac~lelhis form. Form 1040 wlll be malled in December. Here Is a pre· view of the important alterations: (1) %e 1977 Form 1040 has been rearranged to make it. easier~ read. lJufTRS offtctal~ admit they expeclm.ore Qr· rors lhan bef ore, -.------·----...-----..... because errors increase when last year's return can't be used as a pat· tern for this.y~ar's. (2} Those barred from using ll\.e tax tables, because income Money's. Worth is loo high <more.than $20,000 if you are single, more than $40.000 if you are married>. or because there are too many exemptions, will have to compute their own tax. A new taJC computation schedule will be enclosed with Form 1040. f3) DESPITE THE TAX SIMPUCATION Act and ·~ more logical rearrangement of lines, the 1977 Form 104-0 !>till "looks formidable," says the Research Institute ot America. and it Introduces several new complications that stem from the simplification act. (4) Schedules A and B. itembed deductions and Interest and dividend income. are basically the same as the 1978 version, except that you reduce the total or Itemized deduc· lions by the flat standard deduction. lf this reduction result.$ in a minus figure. It could be confusing. (5) Schedule C is generally the same. except that on the 1977 form. deductions for taxes and repairs need not be ex· plained. (6) THE 1J77 SCHEDULE D PROVIDES rot the Jonaer holding period.for Jong-term capital gains and tlle biifie ($2,000> amount of net ca.,ital losses deductible against or· dinary income. It contains a new Part V <formerly Part V on Form 4798 > for computing short· and long-term capital loss carryovers from 1977 to 1978. (7 > Completely new is Schedule TC, the tu computation scheduJe. for .those prohibited from using tax tables. (8) As or today. line 45 on page two o( the tentative Form 1040 is left blank. It is set aside for possible use lo claim an "energy" tax credit, should,a credit or this sort become law in ti me to apply to 1977. If not, it will remain blank. Slight Rebound Brings Dow Up NEW YORK <A P > --Blue chip tssu~ staRed a modest upswing in an otherwise mixed stock market session today. The Dow Jones average ot 30 induslriaJs. which had fallen more than 22 points in the last three trading days, showed a 3.47 gain to 821.64 today. But losers held a 7 ·6 edge on gainers in the over· all tally or New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. At the close on Thursday the Federal Reserve reported a big jump in the basic measure of the money supply. The news was taken as a strong signal that the Fed wu likely to tighten credit furtheT in its effort to combat Snfla. lion by restraining monetary growth. · Do.elonnA t•~ra~• N#W YOf'• IA.Pl f'lt\111 Oow•JO"ft •wrtQtt 'l'OCKS Open Hlo" I.OW CIOM CllG JO 1no si.. 1• ai•.'6 ai..~ &11.~ + i .i> 10 t rn 70'1.S3 211.M 109 07 110.•1• I.~ •s vu 111.11 111.16 11141 1n.11-o.10 •S Stt< 282.18 2:U 1' 190.tJ 2tl.~ + 0,'I lmdu~ 2.060.!00 f I 411 lt7 ,AIOO ~"~1.. ,.m:: A...erfr•11L~aders lips aHd Doten• M'hat .fitorla Did NEW YORK CAPI p,.,.,, TOdny o.y , •W ~I ... 1121 49" .,., lllSS 1an 8 • • 11 111 SAt.l!S NEW YOAIC IAPI ·HY li>IKll. ..iet I A~•H l>NI ••• , 2t,4I0,00t Previ-O.y • • • 2UJO.GQ9 Wfflt ~ ..... • .. • .. •.,... .. 16,ltO,ODll """""' .go ..... -· • ... .. • • , .. ~-""' ..................... ,.;i~ TWo ...,., ,t00 • • • .. .. ... , U-''°"''° Jan 1 to dele • . .. .. • . '· 11Q.S10.000 1~7• 10 Obi• ... 4,105,N,"1 19H 10 elate • ., J.15' ....... J» WMAT AMlfl( 010 NEW YORK IAP> . Pn!v. AMIEll SAi-iS ~~~~-··:: A.POrO• fiMI bOllCI WIK ~ Ylft year 4'90 • Tooay oty I* IH JI• 0 2'1 --1'2 • • ,. . 1.U0.000 1,110.-,, •• ,000 Sl,OJO,OGO !t/forka ltt Tia~ Npot 1111111 \, -1 I . t. I l , .. I Laguna/~outh ~oast VOL 70, NO. 287, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Diedrich ' 'Payoff' Probed By GARY GRANVILLE Olt•0.111 NIM$taff The OranJe County Grand Jury is in·vestigating a con· troversial 1973 county land use decision at which Supervisor Ralph Diedrich 's personal al· torney and co-indictee Michael Remington received a SS0.000 re· tainer from a developer befriended by Diedrich. Both Diedrich and Remington. h owever, deny the county -supervisor -received any portion of what Remington estimates was "probably $40,000" that he actually was paid by Robert H. Grant Corp. It was Monday that Diedrich admitted taking a leadership role in a 3 to 2 Board of Supervisors decision to free Anaheim Hills Jn. corporated, a Grant subsidiary, rrom development restrictions imposed on hill property of what is known as the Nohl Ranch by an af!ricullural preserve agreement with the county. 1 At the s ame time, Diedrich de· nied profiting "in any way, in any form whatsoever·· either by 17 the Board of Supervisors con· trovenial decision lo lift the pre· serve retrlctioos «the rees paid Remington. When he spoke in his office Monday, Diedr,icb said he kne,.w two Grant offteia1s, Robert H. Grant and Richard L. Owen, had already testified before the grandjury. Remington made the same acknowledgment Oct. 6 and said today his former secrelar:i had been called ·before the jury Thursday. It was last week that Rem· ington said, •·as I understand it they're (district attorney in· vestigators > trying lo link the money, that was pald me to Ralph." Remington admitted Diedrich "probably had something to do" with him being retained by the development company in its ef· forts to induce the Board of Supervisors to lift the preserve agreement. "I could be wrong but I think I got, oh. maybe $40,000 before my troubles began and the case was h anded over lo the llawyer > Marshall Morgan," Remington said. The·"troubles" Remington re· !erred to was his arrest in mid-1973 on suspicion of sollcitng murder and conspiracy to com· mil murder charges. Six months after his arrest a Superior Court jury acquitted the Fullerton attorney or the charges. Trouble came Remington's way again last July l when he was one oC five people, including Diedrich and Supervisor Philip Anthony, who was charged in a g rand jury indictment with felony orrenses related to alleged <See FEES, Page A2) Coast k,_ Weather Night through mid morn· ing low clouds and local dense fog. Otherwise hazy sunshine through Satur· day. Lows tonight 58 to 63. High Saturday 70. INSIDE TODA 't' Saturday night 16 /ittclbta will compete at the Orange County ~·airground& for t~ National Motorcycle Cham· plonshrp. See Page CI. AtY-Sen-k• ........ l..M ... 'r'll ·""-' c.nt .. ~ , ........... c.n-1<1 ,,...,_.. !. :=~ ...... 1a1_. ,...,,,.,,... .. -~ l11t•rmh..., ladex 02 ,, . •• .. , AJ OM• 01 OJ .... .... C.1-1 11-J It CA AM~ Mo•le Mwt".C~ .... . " .............. , 0r • ..,.,_., 5ylvl•""* :c:·-Teln1.i. 't-.... WH- W0<lol"'-t w .. -. ..... ., ,,,., .. .... "' ., .... ... ., ~' A4 .... c1.1 anna· . ~ii' l'I ... $UH l' ... 10 GREG OJALA (IN WHEELCHAIR) PLAYS MERRILY WITH NON-HANDICAPPED STUDENTS At Dana Point Elementary School, Happiness is Being Part of the Class Dana Projeet Special Education "SucCess' By ANNE COOPER Of 1M o.lly l'llet St.ff Placing handicapped children among non·handicapped school children opens door:; ·for both groups. say teachers who are "mainstreaming" handicapped children at a Dana P oi nt Elementary School. "So-called ·normal" children team lo tak~ as much pleasure in a handicapped child's success in the classroom as he does in being a part of lbe class." sajd Celia Vanderpool. mainstr eaming coordinator at R. H . Dana Elementary School, 24242 La Cresta. When the s pecial education facility opened next to the elementary school in 197S to serve handicapped children in the Capistrano. Laguna. Sad· dleback Valley and Irvine Unified School Districts, rumors ran rampant among the non· handicapped children that terri· ble things were going on next door. ·'They thought we were performing operations on the kids in the s pecial education facility and that they were monsters or something,' said Mrs. Vanderpool. "During that first year, we in· vited the elementary school stu· dents next door for a concert. and they were surprised to see that ttie special education students could talk and sing --and very well, some of them ... During the 1976· 77 school year. Mrs. Vanderpool began introduc· ing those students she thought would benefit from wider ex· pos ure to regular class ex· perience at R.11. Dana. Th e ex 1>erimcnt in mainstreaming was so sue· cessful that this year 18 of the 68 :,tudenl!. attending the special eduC'ation facility :,pend !>ome of their Sl'hool hours m regular classe.. Jn addition to participating in R.H. Dana classes. one student attends Marco Forster Junior High in San Juan Capistrano and two attend Dana Hills High School . nearby in Dana Point. Students al the special educa· tion Cacil1ty•range in age from 2 to 18. "We don't put a child in a reg· ular class unless success is as· sured." Mrs. Vanderpool said. "Jt would be bad for the child. it would 'be bad for lhe class and it would be bad for.the program.·· The mainstreaming has helped handicapped children get used to functioning among other children t.tielr age and in a more normal selling than lhe special education facility provides. Jt also helps non·handicapped children and their teachers un· derstand the dimensions or what it means to be human, said Mrs. Vanderpool. "We talk candidly about what is dif(erent about these kids ... she said. "We tell the children that the handicapped child in their class has a body that doesn't work ju~t right. but that he is a human being, too." As the children get to know him <St'e PROJECT, Page A2> Fire Threat Told On Laguna Hillsides By STEVE MITCHELL OI .. Di lly Pilot Staff Fire Chief Charley Kuhn told members oC the Laguna Beach Exchange Club Thursday he would be wary of sending fire righters up several of the hillside roads in case of a large lire. The fire chief m entioned Bluebird Canyon Drive and C restview Pla ce as two roadways that have the potential of "burning up my men and equipment if they got !!luck up there In a real blaze." Citing the recent hillside fires In Santa Barbara. Kuhn said he has s lides showing areas in Laguna Beach that look exactly like that area. which was con· sumcd by names last summer "I've been fo our county fire department meetings, and other agencies calf us Lillie Bel Air." Kunn told Exchange Club mcm· bcrs. "It's not if we'll have a lire here," he said . "It's when." Kuhn said there ls only one way in and one way out of the two h ills ide communities near Bluebird and Crestview. "And if there's a brush fire and we send truck:. up those narrow roads. we're going to be meeting people trying to get out. rt 's going to be one big mess." he said. ·'We'd all be locked in there." Kuhn said a fire road al the top of Bluebird would allow trucks to get to the fire and get out on the other side. "Engin ee r s l ooked at switchbacks on ntucbitrl lo Alla Laguna, bul 1t would be a heck or a problem,.. he said In an ;n. · terv1ew followins: the meeting. "But as it stands now, we'd <See FIRES, Page A2> · •• Hijackers Threaten Passengers DUBAI. United Arab Emirates <AP> ·Arub1c·speaking ter· rorists holding a hijacked West German Jetliner threatened to- day to kill their hostages, incJud· ing ll beauty queens. unless "comrades" imprisoned in West Germany and Turkey are re· !used and a $15 million ransom is paid. officials said. Ninety.two persons, including c r ew members and the hi· jackers. were reported abonrd the plane. The beauty queens were re· turning to Frankfurt after a gift trip to the Spanis h island of Ma· jorca whep the plane was bi· jacked Thu'rsday. Jn Frankfurt, the newspaper Frankfurter Rundschau quoted the daughter of one of the contes· tants as saying her mother won the trip to Majorca after compel· ing in a contes.t on the Sstand dur· ing a visit last summer. The girl, l6·year-old Cornelia Brod, said her mother, Jutta Brod, 36. was one of eight West German winners in the contes\s sponsored by Majorca disco· theques. She was quoted as saying the other three winners were foreigners. The hjjackcrs also threatened <See ltlJACK, Pa&e A2) Coast Woman Appointed to Court Post Deputy County Counsel lryne Codon Hl ack of Newport Beach was appointed to the Santa Ana Municipal Court today by Gov. Edmund 0 . Brown Jr. Mrs. Black, 49, takes over one of the vacancies created when two mcm~rs of the Santa Ana bench were recently elevated to the Superior Court by Governor Brown. A graduate of Stanford Law School, Mrs. Black joined the county counsel's office in 1970 after working on the legal staff of the Department or Labor in Washington. D.C., and as an as· sistnnt general counsel for the Smithsonian Institute in that city. She hns also served as a deputy attorney general and as a state department aide on assignments that took her to West Germany and South Korea. ~1 rs. Black. her husband and two children-Ian. lS, and Timothy, 13 -live in Newport Heach. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1977 • cte ....... Influence BuYs · WASHINGTON (AP) - Former Rep. Richard T. Hanna was indicted today on feder·c:1 charges or bribery, fraud and conspiracy stemming from al· leged South Korean efforts to buy influence among members of Congress. Hanna, a California Democrat from Orange County who served in lhe J-louse from 1963 through 1974 , was th e first ex· congressman to be indicted in the Justice Department probe of al· leged attempts by South Kore~ns lo ply member.s....or C_ongress with cash and other favors in ex· change for actions favorable to the South Korean government. A federal grand jury in U.S. District Court in Washington re· turned the indictment charging Hanna with one count or con· spiracy, three counts of bribery. one count of failing to register as a foreign agent. and 35 counts of mail fraud. An indictment is a fOrmal charge made against a person by a grand jury. It does not establish guilt or innocence. The indictment named Tongsun Park, the one·tlme Washington businessman who has returned to Se<>ul. as an unin· dieted co·conspiralor. Park already has been indicted on similar charges and has so far refu.~ to return to the United States to face trial. Also named as unindicted co. conspirators were two former directors of the Korean Central lntelllgence Agency, Kim Hyung Wook and Lee Hu Rak. The indictment charged that Hanna used his position as a con· gressman "to encourage agen· cies of the government of the Hepublic of Korea to promote the designation" of Park as the in· termediary for rice sales to Korea from U.S. companies. Park received a substantial amount or money as com- miss ions from the U.S. com· panies and passed along much of * * * Daily .. ..._ Slefl ...... FACES INDICTMENT Ex.Congressmen Hanna · that money to Hanna "and various other congressmen and senators with intent to lnflueace the decislons and actlons ol 1at4.. congressmen and senators - questions and mallet's relating to the Republic or Korea.·· tbe in- dictment charged. ~ Specifically, Haqa and Parle wanted to innueuce members of Congress to lnc11e•1e U.S. military aid to Korea defeat pto.. posals to reduce U.S . .military forces tbere, Increase rice sales to Korea and win more favor•e terms for the financina ol those sales, and make speeches Md write statements pralsin1 the South Korean regime, the indict- ment said. As part of the alleged scheme, Partc g•ve cash and other Cills to House and Senate members he and Hanoa believed "to be .in- fluential in matters affectin1 .. South Korea, the lndlctmeat (~ llANNA, Paget\J) * * * 'Scapegoat' Fears ~ Voice<!, by Hanna I By PJUIJP ROSMARIN Ol IM O.ily ,., ... Sii" Jovial, cherubic 63-year·old Richard Hanna once told former congressionaJ staff members he was afraid of being made a scapegoat in the Korea bribery investigation. Jle may have reflected on that today in his Fayetteville, Ark., home where he moved into a self· imposed exile in July from ·Newport Beach. Once Hanna was Orange Coun· ty's most popular Democratic e lected official, serving six terms In Congress until hls re· tirement in 1974. After months or investigations and publicity over alleged In· nuence buying from 1967 through 1975 to win congresslonaJ support cm issues affecting South Korean business interests. Hanna stole quietly and unannounced from Orange County. He moved into the Ozark Mountains town in near·total anonymity. None of his neighbors reportedly knew who he was, until news reporters and photographers descended upOn his home when he was named an unindicted CO·consplrator. With today's federal indict- ment alleging bribery. mail fraud and failure to register as a foreign agent. Fayetteville again became a target of news re· porters. Apparently Hpnna was still hiding out. An Arkansas telephone operator said that although Hanna's telephone number was listed in her book, the former politician had made a special requesL that. it no longer be given out. He was never so reUcent on Capitol Hill . where he was known ns o gregarious and energetJc politician who danced soft·shoo al parties • Hanna made extensive trips. by his own admission, slD9-e 1968, to Seoul, wben surplus U.S. rice was being sold lo Korea. : He became known to lbe American embassy there as lt)e "California rice salesman, .. to frequenUy did he appear ,,_ rice transactions were beiftC made. · It was during that time that Hanna became lbe silent partnef or Tongsun Park, indicted SouQt Koreah bdslnessman at Ole lrq t.o the bribery scandal. ! , In three years, Hanna 111~i $60,000 lo $70,000 In an lmPot(7. export venture with Park, w-.~, he reported to the House Ethht .. Committee on standards ol ol· ficial conduct. : But his business coanedt09 went generally unnoticed bJ Ids colleagues. Hanna told the New 'Vork Times be entered the bus1nell venture to help Park. »e put .,P ~.000 in stock he owned In .a Anaheim company as collater.a for a $25,000 loan to Park. .. Hanna reportedly told tti; Times that when he later bep'o to receive money rrom Park, he asked no quesllol'ls about It. Hf eventually ended the rela· tionship, ht said, after~ ''uncomfortable'' with lt. Following his retJrement troiO Congress, Hanna set up-~ offices in Newport Beach and Irvlne, servln1 as a Je1aJ ~~ tant in a variety of quasl~l,I capaciU.~. He was a boud member ol U.. c ounty.funded Economl~ Development Corp. and ttl• fledallng International Trach League. He resigned rrom the &DC kl July, again without eonouncie- ment, Just before he qul•tl' ~Upped lot good out ot t.he coua;aty. • A% DAIL y PILOT L/SC . '• BfTOMBA.llLEY Ol .. ~..ie.tswr Political campaign organizers WilUam Butcher and Arnold Forde. of Newport Beach were sued for $800,000 in damages Thu~a,y by a former Orange CoUDb' deputy district attorney wbo dahn.s the parnters mis· used bis .,clorsemeot ol • coo- trov.-.lal gamblln8 measure. Jolm F. Anderson. who now pracUees law in Santa Ana, claims in bis Superior lawsuit that Butcher and Forde were guilty of deception and breach or centract by the ma~ner in which they handJed his endorsement of a gaming measure defeated by loglewood voters. Anderson claim~ a letter bear· ing his signature was cir.culated tQ Inglewood voters after those who handled the mailings made certain alleged additions to the document. ·He claims that lbe titJe "Honorable" was added to the letter, which was also given an official seal depicting scales of jusUce and the legend "Office of tbe Dlstrict Attorney." Anderson polnts out that he has since been lnvestieated by Ehrlichman Term Cut WASIDNGTON (AP> The second prison sen- tence-or former White House aide John 0. Ebrllchman waa redu&d · today, making him eligible ror paroleafterOct. 28. U.S. District Court Judge Gerhard A. Gesell reduced Ehrlichman's sen· tence in the so-called While House plumbers' case to 42 months trom 20 months to five years. and said "the court specifies that the prisoner may be released on parole al such time as the parole commission de· termines.·· lC the commission acts quickly Ehrlichman could be out ol prison at Salford, : Ariz., by Christm~. ,.,....rage AJ FIRES ... have to take our equ•pmc:;nt all the way to tht top in order to tum around.and if that's where the fire is, we'd have to back down. And that's a real bugger ... :He said cooperation of hillside homeowners is the best beL for nre.pr~vention. ~'The brush is so close to the houses there," Kuhn said, shak· ing1his head . "Boy, it's right up against. them." He said homeowners should clear brush al least 30 feet from their bomes -even if it is on ad- j a"t property. re retarda nt roofs and a w ·kept greenbelt are also iood pr~entive measures, he a said. ~e can have firemen lined up el•w to elbow up there. but if yoldon'thave the cooperaUon or th• people. a hot, fire will burn d~n their homes," Kuhn said. ~ lt>m e Looted ,.. cf 8550 in Jewels -~~welry valued by the victim ai$SSO was taken from her L una Niguel home while she w out for the evening. Orange C~ty sheriff's officers said the thi(t of a gold watcl\ and neck cttSn ·was reported by Martha Ja~ Clark.son, 29, of 24361 Bar· r,Court. The method of entry to;; home has not yet been de· t lned. ~ OftANOI COMT DAILY PILOT • Friday, October 14. 1977 several law enforcement agen· cies but has not been prosecuted for what could have been charges. ot misrepresentation. Anderson states he authorized the letter but only as a Cavor to Butcher.and Forde. He claims that he never at an)' time agreed to a.How the partners lo doctor the letter in such a way tbat 1t mJght appear that the Inglewood gambllna measure was su~ed by the Orange County OtsfrlCTmt.orney. Anderson, who worked in the district attorney's special opera· tion& division al the. time the let. ter was mailed. attached u copy of the document to his lawsuit. The letter states that. as a former deputy district a ttorne}' and "head of the Organized Crime Unit. I <Anderson> want you to know l strongly support and endorse Proposition Q on the Inglewood ballot.'' The letter states that the city needs more police and that the ballot measure would provide in· · creased tax revenues to meet those cost.9. "Proposition Q wilJ allow a few recr eational card clubs for adults in selected non-residel)tial areas away from churches and schools ,·· the Anderson letter stat~. "We have fo u nt! that the beautiful clubs attract very de- sirable. honest people who come and go peacefully." The letter then draws the voter's attention to a FBI report on crime which purportedly shows that rour ciUes similar to Inglewood have had lower crime rates despite the Institution or card parlor gambling. Lawyers Sue Ove r Trees In Dana Point Two Dana Point lawyers have gone to court in a bid to force their neighbors to remove more Utan 20 tcees whJcb alt.egedly .pbstnact the view from lbeir home. • The Orange County Superior Court lawsuit filed by Willlam W. and Robert R. Green further a lleges that defendants Anthony and Maureen Stevens plan constructioo of a swimming pool and fence in the front yard of their home at 24342 Cortes Drive. The Greens, of 14341 De Leon. Drive, claim that both tree planting lll)d pool construction represent violations or architectural regulations that apply to all homes in the recently completed tract. They claim that the Stevens couple have refused to alter their plans and have asserted that they can build and alter as they wish on their property. A hearing at which the Greens will seek a writ against the de- fendants had not been scheduled late Tuesday in Superior Court. ,,..... P'age A J IDJACK_ ••• thal kidnaped West German in- d u stria list Hanns Mart in Schleyer, abducted by terrorists io West Germany nearly six weeks ago, would be killed if the demands are not met by 1 a .m. POT Sunday. A text of the ultimatum was de· Ii vered to the French press agen· cy AFP in Paris after the plane landed in this Persian GulC emirate. The ultimatum named 11 West German terrorists a nd two Palestinians held in Turkey who are demanded to J>e released and flown to Vietnam, Somalia or Marxist South Yemen. Each of the released prisoners was to be s upplied with $43,860 in German marks. The ultimatum, addressed to the West German government, declared. "We shall not contact you again . . . Any trial on your part to delay or decelve us will mean immediate ending or the ultimatum and execution oC Mr. Hanns Martin Schleyer and all the passengers and the crew or the plane." The ultimatum was signed ''Struggle Against World Im· perialism Organiiation" and ended with an attack on alleged neo-Naiisrn ln West Germany and Zionism. With the ultimatum was a com· munlque addressed "To All Revolutionaries In the Wbrld, To All Free Arabs, To Our Palestln· ianMassea.'' The 400-word decJaraUon te· ported the hijacking and its con· nection with the Schleyer opera- tion. In one part It stated, "R evolutionaries and freedom fighters aJ I over the world are confronted with the monstu of world imperialism -lhe barbarous war under th• hegemony of the USA. a11lnat the J>e9ple of the world." ' ' Dana FantGS'fl "Fantasia" is the theme. for Dana Hills High School's homecoming tonight. as the football team meets Corona del Mar. The game will _be followed by a dance at the school. Appearing as characters from the Disney movie. "Fantasia,.. are <left to right> Craig Stevens. rabbit, Donna Kuhljuergen, cat: Mark Churchill. lion. and Brooks Corbin, bear. F,....Pa.,8J • HANNA INDICTED. suid. • •·~rcymtnta would be RiVl'8 for cal cacn1>alP1. for t.M personal u ao of said con· gressmen and senators and on occasion for the omce petty cash or slus h funds ol sald legislators." the pabd Jury charged. Like the earUer lndlctm•nt of Purk, the HaMa ind~tment cit· ed several instances wlten Henna wrote letlen tovaraouf ex~ive oranch officials PfOmC)tin' South Korean interests and uried soute or his colleagues to take similar action. For example, Hanoa &nd Park arranged for a coolfeubat.D &o sl~n a document )>romt a private organlsatJoo deal to bring U.S. and South ean legislators together for dls· cussions, the indictment said. This alle&edly took place in March 1970. ln June 1971 , Hannrtarnlshed Rep. Melvin Prjc:e tD·UI.> wtua a letter to be sent to South Korean President ChuncHee Part prall.· ing Tongun Park, and Prieti sent lhe letter. the indiclment said. The next month, Hanna and Park arranged for another con· gressman to send a similar letter to Presldent Park, the ind.let.. ment cmtlnued. The indictment repealed maJU' of the alletatloos made in the Parle: indictment concernin1 pay- ments purported'to be campaign contributions to several mem· bers d Congress. Hanna illegally demanded more than $100,000 from Park for the then-congressman's efforts to influence his legislative col- leagues, the indictment said. ~ The department bas m• .~ peated littOIU &o ,...... - South Kar'ep fOHnl•• .... turn Park to Wa oountry but South Korean orfidala ha~ tald that decision was UJ) to Park. There is no extradition treaty between the two countries. The fint 1.,-n of a break in that impasse came when &Qllt.abt Atty. Gen. Benjamin CtvUettt and Paul Mlcl\el, t.b• la"}W ID charge ot the Soutb Konn probe, arrlUlged to travel to Seoul to discuss aiomc possible arran1e• ment for obta.1nlng Parlf1 •worn statement. · Hanna has acknow\edced mak· Inc •.ooo to '70,000 u • __.. wlth Park la rtce deal• but be bas· denied any wrongdolh1. 1f COGvkted, he would fate maximum penalties o! five years in prison and $10,000 on the con· splracy count and the cbarae o! failin'" to register as a forei&n agent. Each ot the mail frpud counts carrief a JJlaxlmum of five years and $1,000. Two ol the bribery charges carry a max· imum or 15 years . and $20,000 each. The third bribery charge, under a slightly different statute, carries a maximum of two years and $10,000. 3Americam On Yacht Safe 11 After Attack VERO BEACH, Fla. <AP> Three Americans wbo radioed their yacht was about to be rammed orr J,he coast of Vietnam were reported sate today and be-, ing towed to Saigon, the lather ot the vessel'• owner aaid. I , The grand jury issued the in· dictment as two top Justlce Department officials arrived J.q Seoul to talk with South Korea officials about arrangements W questioning Tongsuo Park. Frederick DellenbaullLsafctT __ ham radio operator wbo knew bis dauthter, Cornelia "Cricket" Dellenbaugh, telephoned him Fro•PageAl F ,....P,,.eAl FEES PROBED •.. PROJECT ••• from Bangkok, Tballand, at about6a.m . PDTtod•Y· illegal political campajgn prac· tices. As far as county records are concerned. whatever ree Rem. ington received from the Grant Corporation is covered by a two. page memorandum written to the county planning commission urging it to approve the ag pre· serve withdrawal. But Remington insisted that he. had done much more than pre- pare Lhe two-page memo to the planners. Morgan backed Remington's statement todity wh~n he said, "I was called by the Grant people and told their attorney was in trouble and was asked to pick up the company files ... "I remember going to Mike's office and picking up a carton filled with material including Mike 's ana l ys i s o f the Williamson Act !creating agricultural preserves l as well us some other work his firm had done,·· Morgan said. The attorney went on to say that while most of the public rec· ords shows other' attorneys, in· eluding himself, had done the bulk of Lhe work. "Mike obvious· ly had done a great deal.·· As things turned out. it was Morgan who successfully de· fended Remington in 1973 against the murder solicitation and con- spiracy charges. Now, Morgan is Diedrich's de· fender against ch<1rges carried in the grand jury indictment or July 1. Remington conceded that in his. W!stlmony before the grand Fire Station, Park Okayed For Cle m ent e A proposed park and a new tire s tation were unanimously a pproved Tuesday by San Clemente's parks and recreation . commi11ston tor recommendation to City Council. •. Commissioners gave their support to the Forster Ranch master plan, which lnch.ides a 29-acre park In the middle or propos ed in northwest de- velopment in northwest San elemente. The park would )>e located between an elementary and a junior high school site. A new fire station In San Gorgonlo Park, scheduled for de· velopment in 1978, also won commission support. The 20-acre park will b e located in the Shoreellffs area or north San Clemente. · Both tbe Forster Ran~h master plan and the fire station hav~ yet to go before tbe city's traffic and planning commissions, said Arlie Waterman, parks an4 recreation director. • GelD8, Cash Stolen jury he told of holding Diedrich's power or attorney and ol close busin e!>s transactions between them. However. he pointed out that at the time of the Grant Corp. deal· ings in 1973 his and Diedrich's business relations hip was not that close and that he did not carry Diedrich's power of at· toroey. .. lt wasn'( until about a year later, maybe earlY 1975, that Ralph was so"anvolved with being a county supervisor that he found it necessary to give me his 1>9wer of attorney." Remington said. In the Noh! Ranch preser\'e contro\'ersy. the county planning commission voted against the county allowing the l ~nd re· moved from lO·year preserve St 3lUS. With Diedrich leading the way. the Board of Supervisors over· ruled the commission's decision with then supervisor Ronald Caspers and supervisor Ralph Cla rk casting the dissenting \'Otes. An agreement covering the land withdrawal forced Grant lo pay more than 5300,000 in proper· ly taxes which represented its tax savings on land asses.'ed ror a gricultural purposes rather than for highest and best use. To this time. the money has not filtered into county treas uries because stale controller Ken Cory claimed it rightfully belonged to the state. The county ls protesting that action by the controller and is also negotiating with Anaheim Hills on land promised to be turned over to lhe county as open space dedication, a dedication that has only partially been fulfilled. I' better. they come to understand ' what that means, she said. Mrs. Vanderpool was drawn to workine with handicapped children by what she saw happen to a handicapped s ister·ln·law who grew up without the advan. tage ol special educ.ation, she said. The contrast between tradi· tional segregation of the . han- dicapped and tnainttreammg as it is done at R.R. Dana lS never more apparent than when the children mi.it at recess. said Den· nis Gibbs. assistant principal. "I v.•atched about 50 sixth graders cheer Ob two teams Of handicnpped children during lu nch recess the other day," he s aid: .. and both 1roups of t hildreo related happily and s pontaneously, with no acknowledgment of the dif· ferences between them. ··we may be the only school in the world that orrers a driver's training course for elementary school students. Those who com- plete it sat.ist.actorily may pu_,b wheelchairs oC the handicapped children who are conlined to them." "The teachers and students here have made tremendous ad- justments over Uie past year:· s aid Mrs . Vander1>ool. "Sometimes this required re- assessment of what it means to be a human being. "They have handicapped stu· dents ln their classes regularly. It's one thing to be gracious and generous -a superstar -one day, and quite another matter to grow day by day. malting adjust. ments which can sometimes be uncomfortable, to say the leut. •· Evans-Black Carpets at Blue Ribbon Savings. Now's the time to get fantastic savings on beautiful Evans-Black Carpets. It's our best selection of today's newest styles. colors and textures. So don't delay .. ; hurry in today! SALE ENDS..-. .... NOV. I st I I . DEN'S "He said he Calked with Criclcet by radio and she stated that they were under tow by a Vietnamese goNernment vessel to arrive ln Saigon al 6 p.m. PDT tortighl, •· Dellen)>augh said. ·•tte said they were all well." Dellenbaugh said the caller was Robert Stevens, a boat yard opera~ who built tbe sei&ed vessel, the •toot .BrilUf. "l know the man and rec:otm-1 bls voice and consider him reliable,·• Dellenbeqb saJd. "St.evem rec· ognhed the voice of mr daughter.'' • • The yacht issued it.a dlstNls - call Thuraday, report.in& it w11 being chased and fired cm bJ vessels. The last message said the yacht was "about to be rammed." Mi3s Dellenbaugh, owner ot the vessel, was ident.ifled aa a former Peace Corps worker. The two other Americans aboard were identified as Leeland Dickerman ol F lagstaff. Aris., and Charles Affel of Philadelphia. · The vessel was en route f'l'oa\. Thaila.'1d's Pattaya beach resort area 1o Brunei and Sln&apore. sources here said. Tb~ dlltrets call reported a posfUon about~ miles olf Vietnan's. Ca Mau peninsula. Finances Studied WASHINGTON <AP> -Presi· dent Carter says the appointment or Robert Mendelsohn to a key Jn- terlor Department post depends· on the outcome of an invesUga. lion into the former San Fran· cisco suS>ervlsor's ca1npatrn finances. Caner admitted be wasn't upon the case. : iiisialiatiaii: ·custom dFapsriss . ·uc. NO. nom linoleum • wood floor 3ewei'ty and cash wtt'h a total uh.a.e of $1,145 was taken frOJ1l a Cayslattano Baach hotnt by a buralal\ who l>rled ·open lh• louvered window and' then UR· loQked the door, Oran(e Coun(y sheriff1s offtcers nld lite theft WJIS report'Cl bJ (01ltTactor CQrdette. C. Cevely, 65. of 26016 D,fna...81\Jtf Qrtve. lie "CU away. ·' : from home nt the lime. •: --------------------.... --... ~-.--... --------..- 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE COSTA MESA, ,CALIP'. 92627 • PHON! 646·4838 -6'~·U5~ & ' . Orange Coast EDITION VOL. 70, NO. 287, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA Bribery, Fraud, Conspiracy Bing Crf!sby Dies at 73 In Madrid MADRID, Spain (AP> American singer Bing Crosby died Friday while playing golf in Madrid. the news agency Cilra r eported. He was 73. Crosby fell to the ground at the 17th ho1e ol the La MoraJeja golf club on ~adrid's outskirts and "as nasliOO to a hospital where he was pronounced dead of a heart attack. lhe Spanish agency said. Crosby recently completed a tour of Britain -including a sell· 1 l out performance at London's Palladium -which he said was a te~ his reco>1ery from a back injufy suffered in a fall rrom a theater stage in Pasadena, Calif. That show marked his SOth year in show business. Crosby was playing golf with Spanis h champions Manuel Pinero. Valentin B:-~'"ios and Cesar de Zulueta when he col- lapsed. The crooner had come to Spain primarily for relaxation and golf, ond was to have joined in a partridge bunt Saturday. He also had planned to play golf on the Spanish island of MaUorca. Cros by's smooth baritone volce made him one of the most popular singers in the world and several times a millionaire. He was known, among other things, for his relaxed, breezy manner, his loud sport shirts, his race horses, his golfing, his needling friendship with come· <See CROSBY DEAD, Page A2) Joint Meet Set Newport Beach's city council a nd planning commission will get together for a special meet- ing Monday night to discuss the city's general plan. The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. in city council chambers. , C o ast Weather Night through mid morn· ing low clouds and local dense fog. Otherwise hazy sunshine thraugh Satur- day. Lows tonight 58 to 63. High Saturday 70. INSIDE TODAY SaJurda11 night 16 /ma&t1 Wtll compete at the Ora"fl'! County Fairground.! /or t~ National Motorcycle Cham-· plon3hip. See Page CJ, Jadex \ ., ci..1 '" .. "' •• .... .... ., CH A4 A4 (I 1 ' anna Diedrich Denial Jury Probing Retainer Fees By GARY GRANVILLE Oft• 0.lty ~~ The Orange County Grand Jury is investigating a con· troversial 1973 county land use d ecision at which Supervisor Ralph Diedrich's personal at- torney and co-indictee Michael Remington received a $50,000 re· laln e r rrom a developer befriended by Diedrich. Bolh Diedrich and Re mington. howe.ver-.-de.ny the county supervisor received any portion of what Remington estimates was "probabJy $40,000" that he actually was pald by Robert H. Grant Corp. ll was Monday that Diedrich admitted taking a leadership role In a 3 to 2 Board of Supervisors decision to free Anaheim Hills In· corporated, a Grant subsidiary. from development restrictions imposed on hill property of what is known as the Nohl Ranch by an agricultural preserve agreement with the county. At the same time. Diedrich de· nied profiting "in any way, In any form whatsoever" either by the Board of Supervisors con· trov~ial decision to lift the pre· serve restrict.ions or the fees paid Remington. When be spob in his office Monday, Diedrich said be knew lWO Grmt olf\clals, Robert H. Grant and Richard L. Owen, had a lready tes tified befqre the grand jury. Remington m ade the same lrgne BIGC!k acknowledgment Oct. 6 and said today his former secretary had been called before the jury Thursday. · It was last week that Rem- ington said, "as I understand it they're <district attorney in- vestigators) trying to link the money that was paid me to , Ralph." Remington admitted Diedrich "probably had something to do" wifh him bemg r etained by the development· company in its ef. forts to induce the Board of Supervisors lo lift lhe preserve agreement. "I could be wrong but I think I got. oh. maybe $40,000 before my troubles began and the case was handed over lo the (lawyer ) Marshall Morgan," Remington said. The "troubles·· Remington re· ferred to was hts arrest in mid-1973 on s usr>icion of solicitng murder and conspiracy to com· mit murder char~es. Six months aftl'r his arrest a Superior Court JUry acquitted the Fullerton at to rney of the charges. Trouble came ReminRton 's way again la'lt July 1 when he was one or five people, including Diedrich and Supervisor Philip Anthony, who wa!> charged in a gr a nd j ury indictment with felony offenses related to alleged <See FF.ES, Page A2> Newport Counsel Named to Bench Deputy County Counsel tryne Codon Black of Newport Beach was appointed to the Santa Ana Municipal Court today by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. Mrs. Black. 49, takes over one of lhe vacancies created when two members or the Santa Ana bench were recently elevated to the Superior Court by Governor Brown. A graduate or Stanford Law School, Mrs. Black joined lhe county counsel's office in 1970 after working on the legal staff of the Department of Labor in Washington. D.C .• and as an as- sistant general counsel ror the Smithsonian Institute in that city. She has also served as a deputy nttomey general and as a state department aide on assignments that look her to West Germany and South Koren. Mrs. Black. her husband and t wo childre n -Ia n, 15, and Timothy, 13-live in Newport Beach. Dally .,, ... s .. tt "- APPOl NTED TO BENCH Newport Beach's Black ............... REPORTED SAFE Cornelia Dellenbaugh 3Americans On Ytkht Safe After Attack VERO BEACR. Fla. CAP ) Three Americans who radioed their yacht was about to be rammed of( the coast of Vietnam were reported safe today and be· ang towed to Saigon, the father of the vessel's owner said. Frederick Dellenbaugh said a ham radio operator who knew his daughter, Corneli a "Cricket" Dellenbaugh, telephoned him from Ba ngkok. Thailand, at ubout6a.m . PDTloday. "He said he talked with Cricket by radio and she s tated that they were under tow by a Vietnamese government vessel to arrive in Saigon at 6 p.ll). POT loralght," Dellenbaugh said. "He said they we~e all well.·· Dellenbaugh said th~ caller was Robert Stevens, a boat yard operator who built the sel:zed vessel. the 39-foot Brillig. "I know the man and recognized hls voice and consider him reliable." Dellenbaugh said. "Stevens rec- og nized the voice oC m y daughter." The yacht issued it.<1 distress call Thursday, reporting It was being chased and fired on by vessels. The last message said the yacht was "about to be rammed." Paving Contract The Vernon Paving Company has lx'en awarded the $32,512 contrac t f rom the City of Newport Reach to resurface Jamboree Road from San Joa- quin Hms Road to Ford Road. The project is slated for comple· tion by Nov. 23. Arabs Threaten Deaths • Ransom, Release of Comrades Demanded DUBAI, United Arab Emirates CAP) -Arablc·s peaking ter· rorists holding a hijacked West German jetliner threatened to- day to kill their hostages, includ- ing 11 beauty queens, unless "comrades" imprisoned in West Germany and Turkey are re- leased and a $15 million ransom is paid, oCficials saJd. Ninety-two persons, Including cr e w m e mbe rs and the hi- jackers, were reported aboard the plane. The beauty queens were re- turning to Frankfurt after a girl trip lo lhe Spanish island or Ma- jorca when the plane was hi- jacked Thursday. In Frankfurt, the newspaper Frankfurter Rundschau quoted the daughter of one of the contes- tanLc; as saying her mother won the trip to Mallorca afler compet- ing in a contest on the island dur- . ing a \'isitlasl summc•r The girl, 16-ycar-old Cornelia Rrod, s3id her molhl'r, Jutta Brod. 36, was one of eight West German winner!> in the contes~s s ponsored by Mallorca disco- theques. She was quoted as sayinf( the other three winners were foreigners. The hijackers also threatened that kldnaped West German in- d u s tr i a I is t H anns Martin Schleyer. abducted by terrorists in West Germany nearly s ix weeks ago. would be killed if the demands are not met by l a .m. PDT Sunday. A text of the ultimatum was de- li vered to the French p ress agen· ----1. cy AFP in Paris after the plane landed in this Persian Gulf emirate. The ultimatum named 11 West Ger man t error ists and two Palei;linlans held ln Turkey who are demanded to be released and fl own to Vietnam, Somalia or Marxist South Yemen. Each of the released prisone rs was to be s upplied with $43,860 in German murks. The ultimatum, addressed to the West Germon government. declare(f, "We io1hall not contact you again . . . Any trial on your part to delay or deceive us will . mean immediate ending of the ultimatum and execution of Mr. ll"nM Martin Schleyer and all the passengers and the crew of theplunc." . Totlay' Clo Ing N.Y.Stoeb FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1977 N TEN CENTS ·1 I '· • cte l Tied to KOrea Influence Buys . WAS HI NGTON <AP > - Former Rep. Richard T. Hanna was indicted today on federcl charges of bribery. fraud and conspiracy stemming from al- leged South Korean efforts to buy influence a mong members of Congress. Hanna, a CaJifornia Democrat from Orange County who served in the House from 1963 through 1974. was th e fir s t ex · l'Ongressman to be indicted in the Justice Department probe or al· lcged auempts by South Koreans to ply r.nembers.Jlt Q>ngr~ss with cash and other favors In ex: change for actions favorable to the Sooth Korean government. A fede.t_al grand jury in U.S. District Gburt in Washington re. turned the indictment charging Hanna with one count or con· spiracy. three counts or bribery, one count of failing to register as a foreign agent, and 35 count.& of mail fraud. An indictment is a formal charge made against a person by a grand jury. ll does not establish guilt or innocence. T h e indictm e nt n a m ed Tongsun Park, the one-time Washington businessman who has returned to Seoul, as an unin-d icte.d co~conspirator. P•r~ already hu be~n indic~ _,.. similar charges and has so r,r refused to return to tbe United States to race trial. Also named as unindicted co. conspirators were two former directors of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency, Kim Hyung Wook and Lee Hu Rak. The indictment charged that Hanna used his position as a con- ~ressman "to encourage agen· cies of lhe govenvnen\ of the Republic of Korea to promote the designation" of Park as the in· termediary tor rice sales to Korea from l}_ .S. companies. Park receive<l a substantial a mount of money as com - m issions Crom the U.S. com· pa nics and 'passed along much of * * * ~yPltetMol""- fACES INDICTMENT E>t.Congres1man Hann• that money to Hanna "and various other congressmen and senators with int-enl to infhaeKe tbe decisions and actions of Nld congr(!Ssmen and senators °"- questioms and maUen relaliQa_.. the Republic of Korea." U. n. dictment chartecf. Specifically, Hanna and Park'"· wanted to influence members ol Congress to increase U,S, military aid to Korea, defeat pro- posals to reduce U.S. milltlley forces there, increase rice sales· to Korea and win mo:re favorable terms for the financing ot those sales, and make speeches nd write ·statements praising the South Korean regime, the indict· mentsaid. As part of the alleged scheme, Park gave cash and other iifts to House and Senate members he and Hanna believed "~o be in· nuential in matters arrecUng .. South Korea, the indictment ·<See HANNA. Page AZ) *· * * 'Scapegoat' _Fears Voiced by llanp,a By PWUP ROSMl\RIN OI-o.lty ...... , .. " Jovial, cMrubic 63·year·old Richard Hanna once told former congressional staff members he was afraid of being made a scapegoat in the Korea bribery investigation. He may have tellected on that today in his Fayetteville, Ark .• home where he moved into a sclf- i mposed exile in July Crom Newport Beach. Once Hanna was Orange Coun- ty's most popular Democratic elected official, servinJ1 s ix terms in Congress until his re- ti rcment in 1974. Aft~r months of investigations and publicity over alleged in· nuence buying from 1967 through 1975 to win congressional·support on issues affecting South Korean, business interests. Hanna stole quietl y and unannounced from Orange County. He moved into the Ozark Moun tains town in n ear·tolal anonymity . None o r h ls neighbors reportedly knew who he was. until news reporters and photographers descended u_pon his home when he was named an unindieted co-conspirator. With today's federal indi~ mcnt a lleging bribe ry, m ail fraud and failure to regis ter as a foreign agent., Fayetteville again became a target. of news re· porters. • Apparently Hanna was sti11 h ldln g out. An Arkansas telephone operator said that although Hanna's telephone number was listed in her book, the former politician had made a special request thul It no longer be given out. Jle wa~ never s o reticent on Capitol HUI, where he was known os a gregarious and eneraeuc poliUclan who danced soft.shoe utpartlcs. Hanna made extensive trips, by his own admiS!lion, since 1968, to Seoul, when surplus 0 .S. rice was being sold to Xorea. He beca me kno)Nn tQ the American embassy there as \be "California rice salesman." so frequentJy did he appear when rice transactions were being made. It was durinK that time that 11 anna became the silent partner of Tongsun Park, indicted South Korean businessman at the key to the bribery scandal. , In three years, Hanna made $60,000 to $70,000 in an tmpote- export venture with Park, whlcb he reported to lhe House Ethles , Committee oo Standards ot ~ ficial conduct. But bis business connecOon went generally unnoticed by )µa colleagues. . Hanna told the New York Times he entered the business venture to help Park. He pu\ up $90,000 in stock he owned tn an Anaheim company as collater11l for a $25,000 loan to Park. Hanna r eportedly told the Times that when he later beean to r~eive money from Park, he asked no queslions about it. He e ve l\tually ended the rela· tionship. he said, aner becoalit\f "uncornfortable" with St. Following his retirement from Congress, Hanna set up buslneM omces in Newport Beach and I rvlne, serving as a tea al conslal· tant in a variety or quasl-ofncial capacities. He was a board memberoCthe c ounty.funded Econom•c Development Corp. and t!\l fledgling International Tra~ League. He resigned from the EDC ln July, agaln wlthoul announce.. menl, just. before he quietly slipped for good out of the county. • ti A~ DAIL y PILOT N Friday, Octooor 14. 19TT \f:anal Piact 'Finn' I ' ' ' I • 1 .. I '(Etin e r, Panama Res'olve Diff erenees ' I :WASlflNGTON <AP) -Presi· dtmt Cart.er said today that he af\4 Panaman1an leader Omar Torrijos have "successfully re· s 9lved" diffe rences of In· t~rpretallon in the wording of the new Panama Canal treaty. ;carter said the differences. whleh have been raised prin dpaUy in Congress, involve tht right ol' American ships to havf: "expeditious passage" through. the canal In times ot war or other coiercencies l!'ld U.S . rl&hts ~ derend the waterway s nfut.rality. "We h~ve s uccessfully re· ·olved the t.tmlaining difiere.nces oC interpretation thal have been raised about our right lo defend the canal as well as the right of oµr ships to have expeditious p.-ssage," Catter told a group of news paper editors from around the country. .However , Carter said, the United States has made clear it Ehrlichnum Tenn Cut WASHINGTON <AP J ' The second prison sen- . tence or former White House alde John D. Ehrlichman wu reduced today, ma.king hlm eligible for parole after Oct. 28. U.S. District Court Judge Gerhard A. Gesell reduced Ehrlich man's sen· tence in the so.called White House plumben;' case to 42 montha--from 20 months 10 five yea.rs. and said "the court specifies that the prisoner may be releued on parole at such time as the parole comml.aaion de· t.ermines~" lf the commlHlon acts quickly Ehrlichman could be out of prison 1t Salford. Arlt., byChrlst~as. Bids Sought On NB Park ..A aiew Mt of bidt are being • s~ught by Newport Beach tib' ol- f ij: iala for conat ruetton of SpygJau Hill Park alter only one contractor b1d on the project. That bid of $78,698 from Good· IJ\AD Peloquin. Inc. ,WN 28.5 _per- c.t more than the coat ol the project estimated by city stall members. .. The ~ark, to be bullt at the in- terffdioft o( El C•pit1n Drive and sPYalaas Hill Road, will in,· dud e landscaped areas. patbwaya and a tot JoL New bids aredueby2:30p.m .Nov.l •. Bal,loon Teat . - Ends Quickly cmco <AP> -A U.S. Air• Fo;-ce b alloon tes t from M; • ·cipal Airport went up OK b came down sooner than ex- p ted, orticlals report. . h ey said an automatic p ' achule ejection device didn't w' k correctly arter takeoff T day. · he test was to ev1h,at.e th of balloons as a platform ror ared sensor expeflments .. ·l I}>ver Shor es Sues Fhr 3 Stop Signs fhree new stop signs are slated to:l>e lnstallecl in Dover Shores f0,owfng action by Newport B~cb city councilmen. he new stops wlll be placed on P arls Drive at the intersection wi Galaxy Drive; on Galaxy Drive at the southerly interaec· ti~ with Santiago Drive. and on A~igua Way at the southerly in· tc¥ectlon wilh Santiago Drive. DAILY PILOT T-••lt-Edll., "fMMHA.1111 ........ M.1 .... 1 ... •ii• --. ... ~ .. ._,. ..... AUltl•frt Mll""91"914'1tft ... has ''no Intention lo intervene in Punuma.•· The President said a statement. outlining the <:larlflcalion hal> been prepared but would not be released until later Carter and Torrijos met for more than 00 minutes earlier to· day. and a Whi t e Hou se ~pokesman said ufterwcirds that other ortlC'i als of the United Stales and Punuma "are continu· ing to discuss the clarification .. to dispel questioQS raised in both countries about the proposed treaty. • Carter had told a news con· ferencGTbursday thata "clari£y. ing statement" might be needed on the major point in dispute -- conflicting interpretations of·the pro\'is ion for joint U.S.· Panamani an deCe nse of the tanal's neutrality after the year 2000. White House Deputy Press Secr'!lury Rex Granum said to- day that the While House expect· ed such a statement would be is· sued in advance or a plebiscite 1n Panama. nine days away, on whctht'r to approve the treaty or not The White llous(• spokesman said Carter and Torrijos, who ori~inally had been scheduled to <'(lll(cr for about an hour, had a "\•cry amicable m eeting ... He said Carter felt it was marked by ''a great deal or friendsh.ip, mutuality of lnte rest and equality ... Granum said he did not know who was involved in continuing discussions ,about the possible drafting of a clar ifying state· mcnt. I lie reported that Carter "feels that he and Gen. Torrijos have never had a misunderstanding" a bout the meaning or the treaty. I le said the same could be said for the American and Panaman· iun negotiators ... l'ro•P ageAJ CROSBY DEAD ••• dian Bob Hope, his pipes, his four sons by his first marriage. There also were his movie Oscar won playing a priest in "Going My Way" in 1944 and his recordin1ts. includln~ a score o( million·plus disks. The No. 1 record was "Silent Night." with "Wh.iteChrlstmas'' second. The American Broadcasting Co. announced in 1958 the signing of Crosby to a fi ve.year radio and television contract. The crooner _previously had shied away from regular television. although he m adc occasional spot ap· pearances. · He once was a regular on the Columbia Broadcasting System radio networks. but his lengthy shows gave way to abort taped r adio features. Hia success was perhaps as great as any in the history of en· tertainment. It was often said that at any time somewhere in the world - on radio, phonograph OT juke-box -his rich, mellow voice was be- ing heard. His radio theme song, "When the Blue or the Night ,Meets the Gold of the Day," waa known everywhere. So was his bub-bub- bub-booinc and hls whtstllng 'With whlch he varied C?boruses in h.Js earlier days. Crosby deprecatingly called himself "The Groaner.. -and the tag stuck -after Hope thus corrupted the word "crooner." Crosby gave the lmpressloo oC belng lazy. He once told .n in· • terviewer: . · ''I've always said that my favorite kind or picture would be one that opened with a shot of me sitting in a rocltlng chair on a front porch. The rest of ~lc­ ture would be what J saw." But the pose was deceptive. He was actually a hard worket": In 1948 -tor lhe ril\h con· secuUve time -Crosby was vot- ed the top money-ma.king star ot the movies in the annual poll or theater owners and operators copducted by The Motion Picture Herald. trade pubUcaUoo. Tbat made him the all·tlme champion tn that field. His business enlerprises in· eluded oil wells. distribution rlgh~ for a frosen orance juice, the far.nung B\ng Crosby En· terpris es. which markete d everythln1 from televl1ion films to toy dogs, and a luxurious trailer village at Palm Springs, C alit. liJs 25,000·•cre cattle ranch neae Elko, Nev .• operated profitably. In more than a quarter.century of movie-making, amonc tbe the most popular of his pictures were the "Rc)ad" comedies -"The Road to Slneapore," "The Road to Zanzibar," etc, -with Hope and Dorothy Lamour. Jn an equally long radio career he had the same sponsor for a decade. starting In 1935, on the weekly Kraft Muslc Hall. His first wife was the former Wilma Wyatt, a native of Har- riman, Ttnn., whose professional name was Dixie Lee. When they met she wa.s a star or Broadway musical comedies and the acrttn and Crosby a litUe known singer with Gus Amhelm's'band at the Cocoanut Grove in Los Angeles' Ambassador Hotel. They were married Sept. ~. 1930, and after a rew more mov· ,ies, she reUred from show busl· ness. Crosby's sons are Gary Evan Crosby, named after act.or Gary Cooper ; twins Phillip Lang Crosby and Dennis Michael Crosby. and .Lindsay Harry Crosby. The la!lt was nJimed for Lindsay Howard, Crosby·s partner In racing. Gary quit Stanford University to follow his father into show bus iness, with time out for Army service. Mrs. Crosby dfed Nov. 1, 1952, of c~r, three dayR be(ore her 4lst birthday. On Oct. 24, 1957, In Las Vegas, Nev .. Cro!lby married actress Kathryn Grant, a brown.eyed beauty from Texas. He was :18, ~he 23 -five months younger than his son Gary. A so.a, Harry LUl~Crosby, was born Aurust 8, )95$. Born Olive Kathryn Grandst.afr in Houston, Mlss Grant had won numerous beauty titles and ac· quired a degree in fine arts from the University of Texas. She went to Hollywood in 1952 and signed a contraet-w\th the Para. __ mount studio, where she met Crosby. Ten days after their marriage, she accompanied him to Spokane. Wash., where Crosby, in academic rob e and mortarboard helped dedicate the $700,000 library be gave his-old school, Gonzaga University. The Jesuit university, which be at, tended for three years. bad ,riven him an honorary doctor of muslc degree in 1937. · ~ Crosby wu born May 2, 19CM. in Tacoma, Wash., the fourth oC seven ch.Jldren of Han-y Lowe Crosby, a brewery bookkeeper. and Kate Harrigan Crosby.-The children arrived in this order: Larry. Everett, Ted, Bing. Catherine. Mary Rose and Bob. Bob b ecame a bandleader~ singer .. Bing's given name )\'as .Harry · Lillis Crosby. 0 11e tegenct'as to the origin of his nickname was that as a youngsler he would point a toy aun w bW flneer Md cry "Bing! Bing!" But Crosby himself said fie got it. at 1 or 8, because he liked a comic strip which had a character named Bingo. The ••o" later was dropped. A piano and a Un·hom phono- graph In the Crosby home en· couraged his musclal leanings. As a college freshman, he joined five other youths In a croup called the MusicaJ1ders. None could read music. They im-provised thelr own versions of record hits and played for dances and parties. Crosby bought a set ·ot drums • Aft.er the band broke up, he and another member. Al Rinker. sang songs In a theater pit. He quit studying law ln his third .)'ear ~ Goozap and wiUa Rinker headed for·i.o. Angeles and a try aUbow buliAelS. They aOdl!loned for a vaudeville booker and got a theater job. Both sang to Rinker's pl&nQ accompanlmenL f'or variation, they gol trombone and juz band effects, vocally. The act toured Coast and Northwest theaters. Bandleader Paul Whiteman signed Crosby and Rinker in Loi Angeles. Jn New York-be teamed them with pianist Harry Barris a s Paul Whiteman 's Rhythm Boys. Rinker and Barris played mtnlature pianos. Crosby, stand- ing between them, beat a small cymbal. Their recording of Barris' "Milsiseippi Mud" won wide popularity. Later the trio left Whiteman a nd appeared witf:l Gua Amhe\m's bind at the ~anut Grove tn Los Anceles. Barris compoMd some of Crosby's blg- geat. record hits, lnctudlng "I Surrender, Dear,•• "Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams" an<l "It Must Be True." Crosby then began singin& and acting ln a aeri4s or 20-mlnute. slaP1tick mom shorts tor pro- ducer Mack Sennett. tech paid him $600. He proposed to Dixie Lee across a chicken dinner at the Cocoanut Grove. He began singing on the CBS r adio network and performed for .29 weeks at New York's Para- mount Thealer. Singing long hours -fi\te or six shows a day, e vening broadcasts. be1Jtllt performances and recordinC' - ho developed nodes on ht.a vocal cords. Two week.I' reat cured his raspy hoarseness, but bls voice thereafter wu at.one or IO lower. Croeby's lonf usooiation wlth Paramount Pictures be&an in 1932 with '1'he alg Broadcpt." Arnone bis other early fihna:· ''Collece HufJ\or.'' "Too Much Harmony," "Ootna Hollywood,·; with Marion Davies; "She Lc>ves Mc Not,·• ''We're Not Dressing," w1t.b Carole Lombard and "M1'- slsslppl, ··with W. C .. iielcb. His brother 'Evere\t, alr~adY In Los Angetell 1el1lng lrucks when Bing Orst arrived, became his ~manager. -' D eception' • Attorney 7 Sues -. For $800,000 o.fly ........... ,.....· DENIES PAYOFF S&.lpervlaor Diedrich f'ro• P age A J FEES ... illegal politlcul campaign prac· tices. As Car as county records are concerned, whatever fee Rem· ington received from the Grant Corporation is covered by a two· page memorand.um writl!!n . lo the county planning commission urging it to approve the ag pre· serve withdrawal. But Remington insisted that be had done much more than pre· pare the two.page memo to the plaMers. Morgan backed Remington's statement today when he said, "I was called by the Grant people and told their attorney was in trouble and was asked to pick up the company files." By TOM ~ARL£Y OI ... o.ii' Pu.t IUH· Political cam~aign org&nners William 1\.utcher and Arnold · Forde of Newport 8~c,h were sued for $800,000 in <iom"g_es Thursday by a form~r Orange County deputy district attorney wh o claims the parnten rn.1s. used his end~~o: .a c:OI\• b"overaial gambling w-e. J ohn F. Anderson. ··who' now practices law In Santa Ana, claims tn his Superior lawsuit that Butcher and Forde were guilty ot deception and br~ach of contract by the manner in which they handled his endor41ement o( a gaming mea5ure <t~(eat.ed by Inglewood voters. Anderson claims a letter bear ing h.is signature was circulated to Inglewood voters after those who handled the mailings made certai n alleged additions to the document. He claims that the title "Honorable'' was added to the letter, wh.ich was also glverl an official seal depicting scales of justice and the legend "Office of the District Attorney.·· Anderson points out that he has since been investigated by several law enforcement agen. cies but has not been prosecuted for what could h.ave been charges of misrepresentation. _ Anderson stales be authorized the letter but only as a favor lO Butcher and Forde. He claims that he never at an)' time agreed to allow the part.Mrs t.o doctor iht lelter in tuch a way that it might appear thai the Inglewood gamblinf measure w a~ .'!upported by the Oranae CO\lnty District Altomey. Andtnion, who worked 1n the district attorney's special Opera· tiOnll division at the tJ~e the let· ter wos malled, attached a copy of the document to bla lawsult. The letter states that, as a former deputy district attorney and ''head of the Organiied Crime Unil, I <Anderson> want you to know 1 stronJIY support and endorse Proposition Q oo the Inglewood ballot." The letter states that the city needs more police and that the ballot measure wouJd provide in· creased tax revenues to meet those costs. "Proposition Q~ill alJow a rew recreational card clubs for adults in selected non·resJdenUal areas away from churches and schools,·· the Anderson letter states. "We have found that the beautiful clubs attract very de· siratile, bollest people who come and go peacefully.•· The letter then draws the voter's attention to a FBI report on erime which purportedly shows that four cities similar to Inglewood have had lower crime rates despite the institution of card parlor gambling. , "I remember going to Mike's office and p icking up a carton filled wilh material including Mike 's a nalys i s o f th e Williams on Act \Cr eating agricultural preserves> as well as some--other work his firm had dooe;· Morgan said. ,.,....pageaJ The attorney went on to say that while most of the public rec· ords shows other attorneys. in· eluding hlmsel(, bad done the bulk of lhe work, "Mike obvious· Jy bad done a great deal. .. HANNA INDICTED. • • As thin~ turned out. it was Morgan who successfully de· fended Remington in 1973 against the murder solicitation and con· spiracy charges. Now. Morgan b Diedrich's de· {ender against charges carried in the grand jury indictment of July 1. Remingt.oo conceded that in his testimony before the grand jury he told otholdipg Diedrleb's • power ot attorney and ol close business tranaactlons between them. However, he pointed out that at the time ol the Granl Corp. deal-- ings in 1973 his and Diedrich ·s business relations.Up was nol that close .and thal he did not C'.'arry Dledrich's power or at· torney. "It wasn't until about a year later maybe early 1975. that RaJph was so Involved with being a counly supervisor that he found it necessa.rY to eive m e his power or attorney," Remington said. In the Nohl Ranch preserve controversy, the county planning commission voted against the county allowlnt the land ro. moved from lO·year preserve status. With Diedrich leading the way. the Board of Supervisors over- ruled the commllllon's decl&ioo wltb then aupervlaor Ronald Cupen and supervisor Ralph Clark casting the diasenUn' votes. To this time, the money hu not nlt.ered tnto county treasuries beca_uae state controUer Ken Cary clalmed it righ tfully betonced to tbe 1tate. s aid. "1be payments would be ,nven (or political campaigns. for the personal use or said con- gressmen and senators and on occasion for the ofOce pelly cash o r s lu s h funds or sai d legislators 1" the grand jury charged. Like the earlier indictment oC Park. the Hanna indictment cit· cd several instances when Hanna wrote letters to v arioos executive hrancb oflictals promoting South Korean interests apd ursed some of his colleagues to take similar act.Ion. Fot example, Hanna and Park a rranged for a cooiressman to sign a document promoting a private organiiation designed to bring U.S. and South Korean 1 egisl a tors together for dis- cussions, the indictment said. This allegedly took place in March 1970. In June 1971, Hanna furnished Rep. Melvin Price <D·ltl.) wttb a letter to be sent to South Korean President Chung Hee Park prais- ing Tongun Park, and Price sent the letter, the lndh:t.ment said. The next month, HaMa and P ark arranged for another con- gressman to s~nd a similar let.ter to Presidellt Park. the Indict· ment ccnUnued. • The indictment repeated many of the allegations made 1n lhe Park indlctmebt concerniilg pay· ments purpotted to be campaign contributions to several mem- bers ol Congress. Hanna illegally demanded more than $100,000 from Park for the t.hen-eongressman 's eff orta to influence his legislative col· leagues, Lbe indictment said. The grand jury issued the ln· dictment as two top Justice Department officials amved in Evans-Black Carpets at Blue Ribbon Savings. ·Now's the time to get fantastic savings on beautiful Evans-Black Carpe1s. It's our best selection of today'• newest styles. colors and textures. So don't delay •• : hurry in today! ·sALE ENDS3"1-nMOV. I st DEN'S ••••••••••••••••• Seoul to talk with South Kanan officials about arrangement.I for questioning Tongaun Par k. The department has made re- peated efforts to persuade the South Korean government to re· turn Park to this country but South Korean otficials have said that decision was up t-o Park. Th.ere is no e"tradition treaty between the two countries. The first sign ol a break in that impasse came when assiltant Atty. Gen. Benjamin ctvUeul a nd Paw Michel, the lawyer in charge of t be South Korean probe, arranged to trawel toSeoUl to discuss some possible arnnse- ment IOC' obtalnine Pak·••wom - s tatement. Hanna has acknowledged mak- ing te0.000 to $70,000 as a partner wilh Part ln rice deals but be bu denied any wrongdoing. II convicted. he would race maxlmunt peaaltlea otftve years in prilon and Sl0,000 on the con. spiracy count and the ebm'1e ol failing to register as a forettn agent. Each ol the mall fraud counts carries • mU:lmum ol five years and $1,000. ~ofActor Rock Hudson Dies. Memorial 1erv1ces for Katberine M. Olaeo, motber ot actor Rode Hudaon. wUl be Mld at 3 p.m. Monday ln the chapel of Bell-Broadway Mortuary in Costa Mesa. Mn. Olsen, .,.,, ctled Wednes-• day at her home ln Newport Beach arter a brleftllneu. A native-of C.bicqo, •rs. Olsen ba~ lived ln Newport Beach for 20 years. Sbe Is nr-- vived by ber son. • ·installation· custom drl}JJsries linoleUm • wood floor •1663 PlAC6NTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 646·4838 -~4~·2.3,S' ·-' ' '/ ' Saddleback VOL. 70, NO. 287, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAp FORNI A Bribery, Fraud, Conspiracy .. ·R ichW anna ·Diedrich 'Payoff' . Probed By GARY GR ANVILLE Ol U• O•llY l'llol Stall The Orange County Grand Jury is investigating a con- troversial l973 county land use decision at which Super visor Ralph Diedrich's personal al· torney and co-indictee Michael Remington received a $50,000 re· tainer from a developer befriended by Diedrich. Both Diedrich and Remington, however, deny the county t---s-upervisor receive<! any portion of what Remington estimates was "probably $40,000" that 1\e actually was paid by Robert H. Grant Corp. It was Monday that Diedrich admitted taking a leadership role , in a 3 lo 2 Board or Supervisors decision lo free Anaheim Hills Jn. corporated, a Grant subsidiary, from development restrictions imposed on hill properly or what is known as the Nohl Ranch by an agricultural preserve agreement with the county. At the same time, Diedrich de· • nied profiling "in any way, in any form whatsoever" either by the Board of Supervisors con- troversial decision lo lift the pre- serve restrictions or the fees paid Remington. When he spoke in his ol!ice Monday, Diedrich said he knew two Grant officials. Robert H. Grant and Richard L. Owen, had already testified before the grandjury. Remington made the same acknowledgment Oct. 6 and said today his former secretary had b een called before the jury Thursday. ll was last week that Rem- ington said, "as I understand it they're (district attorney in- vestigators) trying to link the money that was paid me to Ralph." ' Remington admitted Diedrich "probably had something to do" with him being retained by the development company li\ its ef. forts to induce the Board of Supervisors to Urt th,t preserve agreement. "I could be wrong but r think I got, oh, maybe S40,000 before my troubles' began and the case was handed over to the <lawyer> Marshall Morgan," Remington said. The·"troubles" Remington re· ferred to was his arrest in mid-1973 on suspicion of solicitng 1murder and conspiracy to com- mit murder charges. Six months after his arrest a Superior Court jury acquitted the FulJerton attorney of the charges. Trouble came Remington's way again last July 1 when he was one of five people, Including Diedrich and Supervisor Philip Anthony, who was charged in a gr a nd jU'ry Indictment with felony ortenses related to alleged lSee FEES, Page AZ> Coast 7 'W eathe r · Night through mid morn· ing low cloods and local dense fog. Otherwise hazy sunshine through Satur- day. Lows tonight 58 to 63. High Saturday 70. I NSIDE TODAY Saturday night 16 /inolbts will compete at the Orange County Fairground! for the National Motorcycle Cham· plonship. See Page CI. Index •• v-s.rv1ce 01 A'"'L~ IJ ... u,,. 110 MovlH CS-7 L.M.lo¥d A6 Mlllutl~ .... , .. ,,,.,_, .... H•ll.,alH..-1 A• c..111.....i. AS ~ ..... c-, Al ClattlllM OMt Syl•l• l'wltr " C..,.k, Ot 5-ef'O l.M cr.t•-Ot S1 •ct ,,,_.u ... , t~~i:::. Al hl•••tl .. 11 Al T" .. ien a-1 •11•9"11-CM w .. 1-A4 FNIWlflt IM W•rMIHew\ A• -~ " w .. ~._, CH . .-....-(4 o.lly .._Sia" ....._ GREG OJALA (IN WHEELCHAIR) PLAYS MERRILY WITH NON·HANOICAPPED STUDENTS At Dana Point Elementary School, Ha~plness Is Being Part of the Clas• Dana Project Special Education 'Success ' By ANNE COOPER Ol IM Dally .... '~" Placing handicapped children among non-handicapped school children opens doors for both groups, Seay teachers who are ··mainstreaming" bandic~ped c hildren al a Dana Point Elementary School. "So·called 'normal' children learn to take as much pleasure in a handicapped child's success in the classroom as he does in being a part of the class," said Celia Vanderpool. mainstreaming c oordinator at R. H. Dana Elementary School, 24242 La Cresta. When the special education facility opened next to the elementary school in 1975 to serve handicapped children in the Capistrano. Laguna. Sad· dleback Valley and Irvine Unified School Districts. rumors ran rampant among the non. handicapped children that terri· ble things were going on next door. "They thought we were performing operations on the kids in the special education facility and that they were monsters or something,· said Mrs. Vanderpool. "During that first year, we in· vited the elementary school stu· dents next door for a concert, and they were s urprised to see that the special education students could talk and sing -and very well, some of them.·· During the 1976-77 school year, Mrs. Vanderpool began introduc· ing those students she thought would benefit from wider ex- pos ure to regular class ex· perience at R II. Dana. Th e expe rim e nt in mainstreaming was so suc· cessful that this year 18 or the 68 students attendin1: the special education facility spend some of their school hours m regular cl:.isses. In addition to participating in R .H. Dana classes. one student attends Marco Forster Junior High in San Juan Capistrano and two attend Dana Hills High School. nearby in Dana Point. Students at the s pecial educa- tion facility range in age from 2 to 18. "We don't put a child In a reg. ular class unless success is as· sured.·· Mrs. Vanderpool said. "It would be bad for the child, it would be bad for the class and it would be bad for the program.·· The mainstreaming has helped handicapped children gel used to fun ctioning among other children their age and in a more normal setting than the special education focility provides. It also helps non·handicapped children and their teachers un- derstand the dimensions of what it means to be human. said Mrs. Vanderpool. "We talk candidly about what is different about these kids.·· she said. "We tell the children that the handicapped child in their class has a body that doesn't work just right. hut that he is a human being, too." As the children get to know him !See PROJJ-~CT. Page A2> 3 Americans Safe, Towed to Saigon VERO BEACH. Fla. <AP> - Three Americans who radioed their yacht was about to be rammed off the coast of Vietnam were reported safe today and be- ing towed to Saigon. the father of the vessel's owner said. Frederick Dellenbaugh said a ham radio operator who knew his daughter, Cornelia "Cricket" Dellenbaugh, telephoned him from Bangkok, Thail and, at about-Sa.m. PDTtoday. "He said he talked with Cricket by radio and she staled that they were under tow by a Vietnamese government vessel to arrive in Saigon at 6 p.m. PDT tonight," Dellenbaugh said. "He said they were all well." Dellenbaugh said the caller was Robert Stevens. a boat yard operator who built the seized veasel, tbe 39·foot Brilllg. "I 9 . know lhe man and recognized his voice and consider him reliable,·· Dellenbaugh said. "Stevens rec· og ni 7.e d the voice of my daughtci;:.·· The yacht issued its distress call Thursday, reporting it was being chuscd and fired on by vessels. The last message said the yacht was "ubout to be rammed." Miss Dcllcnbauf?h, owner of the vessel, was identified as a former Peace Corps worker. The two other Americans aboard were identiflf.'d as Leeland Dickerman of Flagstaff. Ariz .. a nd C h ar le s Aff e l of Philadelphia. The vessel was en route from 'Thailand's Patlayu bench resort area to Brunei and Singapore, sources here said. Hijackers Threaten PllS~engers DUBAI. United Arab Emirates CA P > -Arabic-speaking ter· rorists holding a hij~tked West German JeUiner threatened to- day to kill their hostages, lnclud· ing 11 beauty qu~ens. unless "comrades .. Imprisoned in West Germany and Turkey are re- leased and a $15 million ransom is paid. officials said. Ninety-two persons, including c rew m e mbers and the hi · jackers, were reported aboard the plane. The beauty queens were re· turning to Frankfurt after a gift trip to the Spanish island or Ma· jorca when the plane was hi· jacked Thursday. Jn Frankfurt. the newspaper Frankfurter Rundschau quoted the daughter or one of the contes· tants as saying her mother won the trip to M allorca after compet- ing in a contest on the island dur· ing a visitlastsummer. The girl. 16-year·old Cornelia Rrod, said her mother. Jutta Brod. 36. was one of eight West German winners in the conle$1,s sponsored by M allorca disco- theques. She was quoted as saying the other three winners were foreigners. __ The hijackers also threatened <See HIJACK, Page A2) Coast Woman Appointed to Court Post Deputy County Counsel lryne Codon ·n1ack of Newport Beach was appointed to the Santa Ana Municipal Court today by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. Mrs. Black, 49. takes over one of the vacancies created when two members of the Santa Ana bench were recently elevated to the Superior Court by Governor Brown. A graduate of Stanford Law School . Mrs. Black joined the county counsel's office In 1970 after working on the l.egal staff of the Department of Labor ln Washington. D.C., and as an as· sistant general coullsel for the Smithsonian Institute in that , city. She has also served as a deputy attorney general and all a state department aide on assignments that took her to West Germany f and South Korea. Mf"S. Black. her husband and two c hildren -Ian. JS, and Timothy, 13-llve In Newport Beach. ., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1977 r TENCEN~ Tied to Kor ea •. Influen ce Buys ~ WASHINGTON (AP> - Former Rep. Richard T . Hanna was indicted today on federcl charges of bribery, fraud and conspiracy stemming from al- leged South Korean efforts to buy influence among members of Congress. Hanna, a California Democrat from Orange County who served in the House from 1963 through '1974, was the first ex- congressman to be indicted tn the Justice DepartmeJll probe or al- leged attempts by South Koreans o-ply"l'nem bers-of-Congl'es&-witb cash and other favors in ex- change tor actions favorable to the South Korean governmenL A federal grand jury in U.S. District Court in Washington re- turned the indictment charcing Hanna with one count of con· spiracy, three counts of bribery, one count or failing to register as a foreign agent, and 35 counts of ma,.ilfraud. An indictment is a formal charge made against a person by a grand jury. It does not establish guilt or innocence. Tbe i ndictment n amed Tongsun Park, the one·time Washington businessman who has returned to Seoul, as an unin- d i c led co-conspirator. Park a lready has been indicted on similar charges and has so far refused to return to the 'United States to race trial. Also named as unindicttd co- conspirators were two former directors of the Korean Central Intelligence Ageot'y, Kim Hyung Wook and Lee Hu Rak. The indictment charged that Hanna used his position as a con· gressman "lo encourage agen· cies o( the government or the Republic of Korea to promote the designation" of Park as the in- t ermcdiary for ,rice sales to Korea from U.S. companies. Park received a substantial a mount of money as com· missions from the U.S. com· paoles and passed along much of * * * Oollly ,.....1.-.. FACES INDICTMENT Ex-congreHm•n Hann• , ,, t hat money to H anna "and various other con.gressmen and senators with intent to infi~ the decisions and actions ol said· congressmen and senators on quesUoos and matters relating to the Republic ot Korea,·· u.e iD- dictment charaed. Specific•lly, Hanna and Part waoted to inlJuence members~ Congress to increase U.S. military aid to Korea, defeat pro. posala to reduce U.S. mW~ forces there, increue rice sales lb Korea and win more favorable terms ror the financing ol those sales, and make speeches Md wr ite statements praisinf the South korean regime. t he indict· mentsaid. As part of the alleged scheme. Park g~we cash and other gifts to House and Senate members he and Hanna beUeved "to be ln· fl uential in matters atrecting .. South Korea, the indictment <See HANNA, Pase A2> * * * 'Scap egoat' Fe a rs Vo iced by Hanna By PIDU P ltOSMABIN OI ... 04lllr l"llet $UH Jovial, cherubic 63.year·old Richard Hanna once told former congressional staff members he was afraid or being made a scapegoat tn the Korea bribery investigation. He may have reflected on that today in his FayetteviUe. Ark., home where he moved into a selt· imposed exile in July from Newport Beach. Once Hanna was Orange Coon· ly's most popular Democratic elected official, serving s ix terms in Congress until his re- tirement in 1974. After months of investigallons and publicity over alleged in- fluence buying from 1967 lhrough 1975 to win congressional support on issues affecting South Korean business interests, Hanna stole quietly and unannounced from Orange Cot&nty. He moved into the Ozark Mountains town in near-total anonymity. None of his neighbors reportedly knew who he was, until news reporters and photographers descended upon his home when he was named an unindicted co-conspirator. With today's federal indict- ment alle~lng bribery, mail fraud and failure to register as a foreign agent, Fayetteville again became a target of news re- porters. Apparently Hanna was stlll hiding out. An Arkansas telephone oper~tor said that allhough Hanna's telephone number was listed in her book, the former politician had made a special request that it no longer be given out. He was never so reticent on Capitol Hill, where he was known as ·a gregarious aod energetic politician who danced soft·aboe atparUes. Hanna m ade extensive trips. by his own adm ission, si--.ce 1968, to Sec}ul. when surplus V.S. rice was belng sold to Korea. •• He became· known to the American embassy there as (be "California rice salesman,·• so frequenUy did he appear wtien rice t ransactions were beil!I made. . It was during that time tbat Hanna became the sile11t parbfet or Ton.pun Park, Indicted So.J1b Korean businessman at the ktr. to the bribery scandal. Jn three years. Hanna mad9 S60,000 to $70,000 ln an im~ export venture wi\b Park, whicl he reported to the House Et.hhi Committee on Standards ol ol· ficial conduct. But his business connec:Ulll went generally uM oticed b)' hla colleagues. Hanna told the New York ·Times be entered the business venture to help Park. He put a, $'90,000 in stock he owned in u Anaheim company as collatel'al for a $25,000 loan lo Park.-· ~ Hanna reportedly told the Times that when he later began to rtceive money rrom Park, he • asked no questions about it. He eventually e nded the rela,. lionshlp, he said, after becOmlng "uncomfortable" with it . Following hl!I retirement ft-Oft\ Congress, Hanna set up buslnf!I$ offices in Newport Beach '°d Irvine, servin1 as a legal ~Ut­ tant in a variety or quasi-olftc:.-..i capacities. • • lie was a board momber o( the coun ty -r un ded Econom1c Development Corp. a nd .tbe fledgling International Traile League. He reslened from the EPC in July, ~ain without •MOllnC. men\, Just. befor e be quietly .allpped for &oocl out~ \he CGUDly. • ' ... • Serrano Students ltlarching On - Tiro M en Slain in &intaA.na Two Santa Ana men were ~hot to death Thursday night, one as he talked with friends outside his home and the other allegedly by his estranged wife, police report,. ed today. • Ernesto Cervantes, a 2s.yeat· old Mexican national, was struck in the back by bne of sevetal shots fired from a passing car, police said. Cervantes was outside his home, 1908 S. Oak St., talking with friends when the shooting look place, police officers report· ed. Police said they were unable to obtain a description of the car. J erry Massie. 31, died at 9 p.m. or gunshot wounds in the chest and side. Police s aid be was dead at the scene. o.11, fll6ei , .. *' ....... DENIES PAYOFF Supervlaor Died rich From Page Al FEES .• ; Garbed in bright conquis tador uniforms purchased through a major fundraising ef · fort of the Music Boosters Club. 107 Ser- rano Intermediate School students march with the band in competitive parades . The two-year-old school's band is the only in· terrnediate school in the S::iddle back Valley which marches in competitions. Although they haven"t yet placed first. they've always placed and have brought numerous tro phies back to the Lake Forest s chool. Mrs. Adaline Massie, 25, was booked into Orange County J ail on suspicion of murder ' officials said. Officers alleged the M assies had been arguing earlier Thurs- day at their home at 1205 S. Mohawk Drive., Massie re: portedly returned Thursday night, broke through the front door and was shot. illegal political campaign prac- tices. As far as county records are concerned, whatever fee Rem- ington received from the Grant Corporation is covered by a two- page memorandum written lo . the county planning ~ommlssion urging it to approve the ag pre. s erve withdrawal. Father Held in Sex Abuse of Children AUGUSTA, Maine <AP> -A father has been indicted 9n 61 charges stemming from the sex- ual abuse of his five children. Authorities say the abuse may ·.have begun seven years ago. -John-Starks Sr., 40, was indict- ed by a Kennebec County Grand Jury for acts alleged to have gone on from Christmas Day 1976 through last week, Dist. Atty. Joseph Jabar announc~ Thurs- day, adding that evidence in- dicated the abuse may date back much longer. "It's a tragic thing," Jabar said at a news conference called to announce the indictment. :·These children ha•ve gone ihrough a lot and they will go through a lot more in the next six ~uctedBoy frees Self, ' llome Safe SfDNEY, Ohio (AP> -Nine· year-old Jeffrey Sareeaot is back in school. 24 hours arter an ab- duction so badJy bungled that by the time lbe kidnaper made bis $1!5,000 ransom demand, the boy had freed himself and was safe. Police arrested a 22-year-old foTmer University of .Toledo stu- dent who was an acquaintance of Jeffrey's older brother. Jay. months ... I've tried to impress upon them that they've done nothing wrong, lhat they 're not to blame." - He said the children. three girls aged 13, 15 and 17, and two boys aged 11 '1.fld.l.4.. would prob· ably testify at lhe trial of their father, who was held in li eu or S75,000 bond after pleading inno· cent lo all charges after his ar· raignment. J,abar said he hki asked" state welfare officials to provide counseling for the children, now In the custody of their mother and grandmother. The state Human Services Department was asked to in- vestigate whether the mother, whom Jabar said was sometimes at work when some or the acts took place, should retain custody of the children. Starks .was indicted on 25 counts or gross sexual miscon- duct, 20 counts or incest. 11 counts of sexual abuse of a minor and five counts of endangering the w~lfare of a child under 16 years or age, according to Jabar. Jabar said Starks was also charged with endangerir1g lhe htmllb and mental welfare or bis children by allegedly compelling them to engage in sex acts with him and with each other. He said Starks allegedly took pictures or the sex acts and compelled the children to take pictures as well. F ro• Page Al SHelby County Sheriff Deputy J'obn Lenhart said Douglas HANNA Miller of Toledo would be ar-• • • raigned on a charge of kldnaping said. totlay in Sidney Municipal Court. "The payments would be "iven JJe was being heJd Thursday in for political campaigns, for th<: Q)e Shelby County Jail in Heu of personal use of said con- tJ0,000 bond. gressmen and senators and on :: As authorities related Jeffrey's occasion for the orflce petty cash kcount;a man approached Je(-or slush fund s of said tiey at .lhe school playground legislators ," the grand Jury -ednesday a nd told him he. charged. ' ianted Jeffrey to accompany tiim to meet Jay as a surprise. Like the earlier indictment or 6fter Terfrey got 1n the cm, t..._-..,m.,-U\e...Hanna iodlctmenLclh d>an put a plastic trash bag over ed several instances when Hanna leis bead so be could not see. wrote letters to various executive :: The youngster was driven to branch officials promoting South lfle northeast section of Shelby Korean interests and urged some County and tied lo a tree. His ab-of hls colleagues lo take similar &uct.or left and the boy worked action. li'imselffree. ;;. He then walked abollt half a For example, Hanna and Park . arranged for a congressman to tnile lo a gas station where he sign a document promoting a r,felephoned his father. ~Wayn e Watercutter, the private organization designed to ... bring U.S. and South Korean ~rvice station operator, said legislators together for dis· Jt!lffrey, "was tryining to hold cussions, the indictment sald. ~ck the tears, but he just T his allegedly took place in (Puldn't hardly do it. He was M h £piking to his dad, but through arc 1970· lhe tears. He just couldn"t make In June 1971, Hanna furnished llimsell understood... Rep. Melvin Price <D-Ill.) with u ~ O letter to be sent to South Korean President Chung Hee Park prais· ing Tongun Park. and Price sent the letter, the indictment said. DAILY PILOT TllO~C..•tD•llY~lol .... lll~b<­-lhtlot,..•Pr .. ,.h WOl-""l""Or-. • C..-\IP\ltlll\l\ktQC-..•.--.... , ....... .. _.,....., _,,,, •• ,,., ..... l'rkl<lt ... ""'• • lllleY, -....... HwMlnot°" laKt.IF....,. 1••0 V•ll•v. ,,.,,,.. SHd•--Y•ll•• • .., ~-"ISooifll CNtl A~ ........ - ,..,. It -·-S.lutd1n -~ TIIO P"iM'"' ...... ,111"'1 ••••I I• 11 UO wt.I .. , ittMf, c:.tlA Me w. C.1ttot'7f•"'26. ··~ .. -,... .......... ...,_,_ Jecu1.c..n.y Vitt Pr~Ot,,, _ °"-"' ~ T-tK ...... l dllOt T,..,,.., A . .,....,...._ M<IN11l"9 U110t a.............. • .............. " "°''''•Ill ~ .... lno Ed',.._ leddtebectl Vellev omc. Jl'l'OI IA ,., ROM •I Sell Of_,, .. ...., Otllc•• GMl.IMt .. • JJOWol ll.t,~rtti Wurt1•"91111S.K"· IN118Mtft-,.w•nl u-....... : ll .. o..._.," 11r .. 1 The next month, Hanna and Park arranged for another con. gressman to send a similar letter to President Park, the indict· m ent continued. The indictment repeated many of lhe allegations made in the Park indictment concerning pay- ments purported to be campaign contributions lo several mem~ bers oC Congress. Hanna illegally demanded more than $100,000 from Park for the then·congressman's efforts to influence his legis lative col- leagues, the indictment s aid. F~•PageAJ PROJE.CT ••• better, they come to understand · what that means, she said. Campaigners Sued/or Deception Mrs. Vanderpool was drawn to working with handicapped children.by whalshe saw happen to n handicapped sister.in-law who grew up without the advan- tage of special education. she said.~ The contrast between· tradi-By TOM BARLEY tional segregation of the han-oe .. rw1,'"*'s~H dicapped and mainstreaming' as Polili~al campai1n organlters it is done at R.H. Dana is never William Butcher and Arnold Forde of Newport Beach were more apparent than when the sued ror $800,000 in damages children mix at recess. said Den· Thursday by a former Orange nis Gibbs, assistant principal. County deputy district attorney ·~1 watched about so s ixth who claims the parnters mis· graders cheer on two teams of used his endorsement of a con· handicapped children during troversial gambling measure. lunch recess the other day," he John F Anderson, who now s aid. "and both groups of practices law in Santa Ana, children related happily and claims in his Superior lawsuit s Pont an e o u s I Y • with no that Butcher and Forde were a cknowledg mC'nl o~ the dif· guilty of deception and breach of fc~~nces ?et ween them. . contract by the manner In which We may be the only school in they handled his endorsement of the_ ~orld that offers a driver's ' a gaming measure defeated by training course ~or elementary lnglewood voters. school. stud~nts. 1 h~sc who com· Anderson claims a letter bear- plcte tl s~hsfactonly m~y push ing his signature was circulated wh_eelcha1rs of lhe hand!capped to Inglewood voters after those ch1ldr.~n who are confined to who handled the mailings made th~.mTh. h d certain alleged additions to the c teac ers an students document. ~ert' have made tremendous ad· He claims that the title JUS~ments over the past year,.. ··Honorable·· was added to the ~.a 1 d Mrs . ~and e ! Po o I . letter. which was also given an Sometimes this r~quared re· ofrioial seal depicting scales of assessment of what 1t means to justice and the legend "Office of be.~ human bemg. . the District Allorney. ·· Th~y haye handicapped stu· Anderson points out that he has dents m their classes r egularly. since been investigated by lt"s one thing lo be gracious and several law enforcement agen· generous -a superstar -one cies but has not been proseeu¥<t day. and quite anolhe~ i:natt~r to for what could have been charges grow day ~Y day, makmJ; ~dJust-or misrepresentation. ments which can sometrmes be Anderson states he authorized uncomf~rtable, to say the leasL" the letter but only as a favor to Toxic Fumes Forces Plant Evacuatinn ST. MARYS, Kan. <AP> -Tox- ic fumes possibly released by sabotage forced the evacu.ation DLGOO construction workers from a giant electrical generating plant today. Authorities said more than 120 workers were taken to hospitals and six were admitted as pa· tients. none in serious condition. Butcher and Forde. He claims that he never at any time agreed to allow the partners to doctor the letter in such a way that it might appear thal the Inglewood gambling m easure was supported by the Orange County District Attorney. Anderson, who worked in the district allorney's special opera- tions division at lbe Ume the let- ter was mailed, attached a copy or the document to his lawsuit. The letter states that the city needs more police and that the ballot measure would provide in- creased tax revenues lo meet those costs. But Remington insisted that he had done much more than pre· 'p{lre the two-page memo to the planners. Morgan backed Remington's statement today when be said, •·1 was called by the Grant people and told their attorney was in trouble and was asked to pick up the company files ... "I remember going lo Mike's office and picking up a carton filled with material including l\fike·s analysis of the Willi amson Ac\ (creating agricultural preserves> as w_ell 1tS M>me-other-work his fll'm had done." Morga.ft said. The attorney went Of\ to say that while most of the public rec- ords shows other attorneys, in- cluding himself, had done lhe bulk of the work, .. ft(j)te obvious· ly had done a great deal." As things turned out. it was Morgan who successfully de· fended Remington in 1973 asainst the murder solicitation and con· splracycharges. Now, Morgan is Diedric:h's de- fender against charges carri~ in the grandju.ry indjctment of July 1. Remington conceded that in his testimony b:efore the grand jury he told of holding Diedrich's power, or attorney and or close business transactions · between them. However, he p0inted out that at the time of the Grant Corp. deal- ings in 1913 His and Diedrich's business relationship was not that close and that he did not carry ~iedrich's power or at- torney. "Jt wasn't until about a year later, maybe early 1975, that Ralph was so involved with being a county supel'Visor that be found it necessary to give me hls power of attorney," Remington said. In the Nohl Ranch p~el'Ve controversy, the county planning commission voted agaill.$t the county allowing the land r e- moved from lO·year preserve status. With Diedrich leading the way, the Board of Supervisors over-• ruled the commission's decision with then ·s upervisor Ronald Caspers and supervisor Ralph Clark casting the dissenting votes. An agreement coverlnc the land withdrawal forced Grant to pay more than $300,000 in proper· ty taxes which represented its tax savfngs on land assessed for agricultural purposes rather than for highest and best use. The source of the fumes was not known, but a spokes man for Kansas Power & Light Company s aid there was "a strong suspi· cion" of sabotage at lbe com· pany·s J eCCrey Eneray Center localed between Manhattan apd Topeka, in east-central Kansas. Other KP&L spokesmen said it was too early to know if sabotage was involved, but Dave Schaffer, a public affairs assistant, said: Evans-Black Carpets at Blue Ribbon Savings. "At this point, we believe the substance was something that was brought into the plant, not something in the pl ant." Two Topeka hospitals reported treating 114 workers from the Jeffrey Energy Center for "in- halation of gas fumes" and "nox· ious fumes inhalation." A Wamego hospital said it bad treated nine workers. "They should all be okay," said a spokesman at Stormont- Vail Hospital. Hospital officials said the workers complained of burning ey~s and throats and dizziness. Micro wave Ovem Taken by Thieves • Now·s· t he time to get fantastic savings on beautiful Evans-Black Carpets. It's our best se lection of today's newest styles, colors and textures. So don't delay •• ~ hurry in today·! SALE ENDS'-.... NOV. 1st. 3 Fire Stations opened Fl.re stations Jn L•eun• HU~~ Mission Viejo and El Toro ww have an open house from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday 1n observance oC National Fire PrevenUoa Weck. ~. The open house is destined to acquaint the-publlc with the 1Jpecialized services provided by the Orange Oountr. Fire Dept.rt- . ment and the Callf ornJa Depart.. ment of Forestry. Demonstrations by the pai:amedics and aerial flrell&ht~ ing and rescue operaUoo.s on the 100-foot ladder truck wm be. features. There also will be simulated fire responses, Cite prevention movies, moulb·to. mouth resuscil•Uon and live fire demonstrations. Smokey the Be;ir will appear at each of the stations during the day .. The Rancho Viejo Junior Women's Club will present aw ~i:ds to ~c;t\OQl children wbo won their fire prevention "p(;stef contest at 2 p.m. in the Laguna Hills station, 24001 Paseo de Valencia. Other stations whlcb wUJ open are at23022 El Toro Rd., El Toro; 25862 Marguerite Pkwy., Mission Viejo, and 23100 Alicia Pkwy., Mis.sion Viejo. Fire Prevention Week was first proclaimed in the Udited States • and Canada in 1922 in recopitlon of the Chicago Fire of 187L That fire burned more than ao bours, took the lives of more than 2()0 people, le(t 11,000 residents homeless, and destroyed 17,000 buildings. Fire de}>artment officials say the weather conditions of that Oc- tober day in Chicago should be very familiar to residents of Southern California -hot. dey winds of gale force, low humidity and long periods without rain. , The slogan o( this year's ob-• servance ls Fire Has No Conscience. F,.. Pfllle AJ . IDJACK ••• \ that kidnaped West German S. du&trlallst Hanns Marti-. Schleyer, abducted by tel'rorists in West Germany nearly six • weeks ago, would be killed if the demands are not met. by 1 a.m. PDT Swaday. A text of the ultJmatum wu cte. livered to the French press ~en-. cy AFP in Paris after tbe plane landed in this Persian Gulf emirate. The ultimatum named 11 West German terrorists and tlfO P:llestinlans held in Turkey who . are demanded to be released and flown to Vietnam, Somalia or Marxist ~th Yemen. Each ot . the released prisoners was to be ~upplied with $43,860 in Germ an marks. The ultimatum, addressed to the West German government. declared, "We shall not C<llllact you agaln ••• Any trial on your part to delay or deceive us will mean immediate endinl of ~ ultimatum 1tnd execution ot Mr. Hanm Martin SchJeyer and all the passengers and tM crew ol. the plane." The ultimatum was alp" l .. Struggle Against Worhl Im· : perialism Organization .. and ended with an attack on allepd neo-Nazlsm in West. Germany and Zionism. & Ttlepllon• (714)'°'4121 Cl .. eltled ~d¥ert1.int 142>-M7' • -lt!Nc-Y1ll*'-Ofllt• 5'1 .. 310 The grand jury issued the in- dictment as two top Justice Deoartment officials arrived In Se0ul_to talk with South Korean officials about arrangements for questioning Tongsun Park. Orange County s heriff's of- Clccrs ar e investigating the theJ\ · of brand new appliances valued at more than $10,000 from a Mis- . slon Viejo construction site. ·nEN'S . ~-$611( .......... 4Kotl00 :='~ ::.!.~~~.c~! .. ':.-:.:'l:i~'r.:i m•U•~ or •G•ttt•B•'"'"'' M;•h' m1v .,.. • tfOfOthtced Wl\f\e\lit ... (l•l pfUWln•M Of .... ..,,.,. ....... : iiisiiJlatiiin: ·custom draperies linoleum • wood flo0r ~-Cit\> "'1\ ... M i. °' Cetl.I Mott C..tlferril• Svtnc tJ•O•n M <Mtl•,. U '0 "'°"'"'•· •• 11111• t• JO IM'\llllr. mlllt••• -..... -u.,._.. .... ,. The department has made re- peated efforts to persuade the South Korean government to re- turn Park to this country but South Korean officials have said that decision was up to Park. There is no extradition treaty between lha two countries. D e puties said seven microwave ovens and 47 boxes oC assorted hardwat'e were taken from the site at Turf Avenue and Live Oak Drive. The theft was re· ported by officials or South Coast Community Development Corp., 2527:5Turf Ave. •\663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, .CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 6 .. 6.4838 -646·i3.5~ • , • f ,