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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-05 - Orange Coast PilotPOUC£ SKETCH!S SHOW STANTON ~ORSE THIEVES ttypnotlat UHd to ~ Stable Hands' Memorf•• Soeial Security Bite to Double? Both bills would raise it lo $GOS in 1978. Under the Senate bill the payroll tax on this worker would total $6,612 from 1978 through 1987, or $357 more than without the bill. The House version would result in a total of $6;S80, or $325 more ttlan current law. HIGH-PAID WORKER Currently, no worker pays an annual Social Security tax o! more than $965. That maximum is paid only by those eat'DUlg ~16,500 or more. Under the Senate bill, by 1987 the maximum <SeeTAX Pase AZ> Crash Kills Little Girl f)n !f itlt the Slaoae South Coast Repertory, breaks growid for !batting the various areas which ~ll be its new 500-seat theater in South Coast ~rt of the theater next fall. The picture Town Center, Costa Mesa. Ceremoni~ was taken ftom the 15th floor of !Jl.e South were .c9nducted at the site, with flags~~ Q>ast Pl~z~ Hotel. FronaP·e~I TAX •.. Rites Slated ForW. Grace Neena Chawla, 17, an art majo'* at Marina High School in Hwlting\on Belch, was name<! 'homecoming queen in halftime ceremonies Friday Jligbt. Her 60hool .. wen.t, on o beat, Hunti#&.tQ# 8.eacli High .School 27 to 20. RANSOM ... ~ ..... ..,... VtSJTING AOYAL1'.Y AT MARRIAGE CEREMONY King Ooodwlll Zwelethlnl, Queen Mantfombe The lci)'lg and queen or the Zulu Matton will visit Orange County this weekend as part of their honeymoon tour of the United States. • King Goodwill Xwelethlni. 28, his new wife Queen Mahtfombe. 21, a prtnc~5s of Swaziland. will arrive in Los J\ngeles Saturday. 'they will be host.td al a reception\ , (n Los Angele and will visit Universal Sl'1d1os there. The royal couple, who are aking an uno(ficial goodw11l tour, will come to OranJ,'e County t9night as guests of businessman c ·eorge Romero of San Juan Capistrano. Orange County acllvltaes w1ll include <.'hurc1\ service!'! Sunday morning, an oftemoon tour of Disneyland and dinner at La Provencale restaurant in South Laguna. The couple plan to spend Sun· day night in Orange County before returning to Los Angeles 1'he royal pair's visit be~an Oct 15 in New York, to which the\ will return on Nov 17 after visiting a number of <'ilies includ· ing Washington DC . Atlanta. Chicago, San Francisco and Phoenix The Zulus are an estabhshed ethnic group inhabiting the Natal Provoince. a homeland within South Africa It is not an independent state. The Zulu )ting. a con:.l1tut1onal monarch. usually remains aloof from politie$. The Zulu's political leader is Chief 'tinistcr G. Bulhclez1 reservoirs. He saict that amount was I ypical for 50 of the last 57 years. It compares to 3 2 million acre· feet in the driest water year on record, 1977. Runbff 1n a normal year, October-to·O~tober for water purposes. amQWlls to 9.S mil hon. Coleman took the commission through various scenurtos, rang· U.oed; 16, Gang Leader? 'Gifted' Stiuhnt Cited in Crime Wave Ml.\l\11 <AP> A 16 year-old bigh S<'hool girl described as a gifted stucknl has been accused of leadmg a band of teen-agers on a crime wave and terrorizing • elderly residents with guns. Kimberly Power:;, who C'omes from a well-to do Coral Gables family, was indicted this week on charges including armed rob· bery. kidnapping, bur1lary, •J?· gravatcd battery and ass1tult US· ing a gun. Kimberly and three other teen· agers named in the Dade County grand jury indictment, -her boyfriend, Danny Morrero, 16: Juan Carlos Quinero, 17, and Jorge Zayas. 16 -will be tried as adults and face life sentences 1f eonvictcd. A filth teen-ager is be ing tried as a juvenile in c'< change for her testimony and a auilty plea. Police say Kimberly l<>d the tang of teen-agers who ter rorbed elderly residents last September. using a shotgun, Ml !ine and handcun and weann.g skl masks to hide their faces. r,fhe young robbers knocked on 40<>rs asking for help -direc· tant prmclpal at Ponce de Leon Juaior High where Kimberly studied in the 1icted student pro- gram. "She 't.'a:;n't ordinary type hldcnt, she was somewhat of a maver1ct, btit a good studeat. an-- outgoing ~id. well-liked by her ~rs,~ Jl:Llant o~ a Clas$ kiJ>~!i on ~ ~10n, but nothini of n serious nalur . " • Kimberly's younger sister, Christine. said their parent& are divorced. She said she didn't believe allegations against her !\ister. ,"I don't believe my sister held a gun on anybody,·· said Christine, 15. "Kim didn't need any money. Neither did Danny. My mom doesn't have any answer•, either. Sho's upset and scared.'' Shmring Ber Stuff ita 1....,ine ten 10 curr nt Jrc dy, forces. A STAPF MEMBEa, Lt. Cot Michael O'Connell. sald that means the full etfeets Of any cbanee would not bO f eU for 20 lo 30 yean afterenactmeat. ComtnlNion m•rnbers •l•o listened WltbQut dlss~nt aa O'Connell told them: 0 Based on cost alone, we find no compew.n, areument. !or c~ the r tirement system.•• O'Connell said the commission might wisb to change the system for other ttaM>J\S, possibly re. dist.rib~ the same amount ot Seven-year-old Tammy Taylor of Irvine practlces her baton routine at a class in the city's Harvard Park. The baton class is conducted by the Irvine Community Services Commission for youngsters in the 4 to 9 age group. The class instructor is Jo Ann Casola. money in a different packaae or bcmeClts. HE SAID 1'llE total ·cost of pensions under the present system, now runnJ.ni at more than $9 blUlon a year, would oon- tinue to grow at about 1.5 percent per year throUgh the end·of the century. Secrecy Law Unneeded~ PublisMrs' CIUef Cites l:egm lssUR.S By JACKIE HYMAN Of 1M Oe<lr ~ltec 5utt The president of the California Newspaper Publi&hers Associa- tion said Friday in Newport Beach he doesn 'l believe a law protecting the secrecy or re- porters' news sources would be in the best Interest of freedom of the press. He said such a law would raise the 1s!>ue or who Is legally a news reporter "THAT CAN EASILY lead to, some government agency having to issue a permit," aaid Carlyle Reed, publisher emeritus o( the Sa~amento Union. "'So if that agency d~sn't like you, they withdraw the license. We don't like being licensed, .. he said. lnstea,d, Rted said. "Many of us feel that reasonable protection or our sources is Inherent in our constitutional guarantee to gather and publish news." RE£D, WHO TOOK time out from a <:NPA board or directors meeting at the Marriott Hotel to discuss issues or concern to publish<'rs, said he would prefer to see attempts to infringe on re- porters' confidential sources challenged one by one in the courts. ·'IC you give up your sources to the courts and the police, your sources disappear,·• he noted Reed said another issue is gov- ernmental meetings beina closed to the public. LEGAUY, GROUPS such as city councils may hold · ex- Break in Strike? LOS ANGELES CAP> -A ma- jor breakthrough was reached Friday in the 4'h-week strike by aerospace workers against Lo<'kheed Corp. faclUtles in five states. Under proddina from a federal mediator, Lockheed and the In- ternational Auoclation of Machinists a~reed to return .to corporate-wide bargaining for the flrat time since Oct s. SPEAKS IN NEWPORT PubUthers' Chief Reed ecutive sessions" for sensitive personnel matters. .. That's been badly abused." Reed said , • Another major issue is keeping courtrooms o~n to the press. "Some organizations which claim to be fighting for the riehts of the individual are frequently saying they must have closed courts to protect their client," Reed said. However, he said such secrecy is counterproductive because, In the absence of public scrutiny, ~ "wboeYeT is ln power can literal- ly eet away with murder ... REED ALSO aAJSED some Issues wilhlo newspapers themselvet> lhal he believes need to be faced. •somellmes we get carried aw:iy with our freedom." he said, cltina lnvestieative reporting as an example. "As lime goes on and in· veat.laaUve reporters run out or real abuses, somethlne tht:Y become nitpickers, want to tear down everythin&. I think this destroys the credibility of newspa~" Reed said. RE SAID HE &elleves publishers must take personal responsibility for what goes on in their newsrooms and use their experience lo work toward pre- senllng balanced new . "Publisheri tnust ot merely be con~med with 1be means to the end -semn1, circulaUne. printing, rmanc1n1." Reed said. He said the toal ls "to create an informed populace. That is all· important in a nation that is >till experimenting with the idea that the public, educated and non-educated, even those who don't underst~d the litnauage of the land. can govern themselves successfully without trading their freedom for passin& fancies or personal advantage. "This is still an experiment. It hasn't worked anywhere else iri the world over the long haul. "If It fails here, the press can· not. escape its share of the blame." DETROIT <AP> -A mother wbo areued with her 23-year-old son because she didn't want him to use the family car was arrested after he was shotlo death, police say. Magida Buck wu held on an open murder charge ln the slaying oC William Buck, 23, who was found dead in a vacant lot across from his home Thursday night. authonfiea said. Mrs. Buck had not wanted hlm to use the car, and the two quar- reled, said police S1t. Heinz Schweiger of the homicide section. Moore Quits Transit Post , Michael Moore resigned Fri· day as the Orange County Tran5it District's <OCTD> auditor and finance director after 10 months on the job. OCTD General Manager Ed Loritz said Moore was leavlne his $32,000..a-year post to accept another ~ition starting Dec. 12. However. Loritz said be was not yet at liberty to disclose the name of Moore's future employer. Moore, formerly employed by the City or Anaheim, replaced Robert Soulerin last January. His projection, however. as- sumed there woUlct.be no infla- tion and no military pay In- creases. Both of these f ac:tors tend to push up costs. None of the eornmbsion mem· bers spoke in favor 'of reclucinJ the cost of pensions. ONE OF TUE ne rnembers, retired Lt. Gen. Benjamin 0. Davis, saJd bs opposed any "'' due lion in pensions after 20 )'.ti.ti of service. Congressional critics of the military pension system, chien1 Rep. Les ASpin, I>·WJ1., and seb. • Thomas Eagleton, D·Mo .. have I t I : : : : : : : : : :: :::: :: :: ::;; := :;: : : : . : :: ;: : : : :::::;;:::;: :: : : : : : : : : :: : : : :: : :;:::: ::::;: :; :; :; ::: :::::: ::;:::: :::::::::::;: ::::: :: :::::::::::~::::::::::: ::::::: :::: ::::: :: ::::: ::::::i: · .............. · · • • • · · ••· • · • ·: • · • ~ • · · · .:...;.:~:..:1; • • · • • · · · • • • • • -..,-.;i .. ·: • • ·.,,;.,,~· • • • • • • • • • • • ~ ;•~m~· ·-:·:·:·:~: J ','.'.'.',• I • .,._ • ..,..,, • ..., .. -1'?) •t-.. ~~-~· •.',•,~ :;:::::: ::::::: }{ ~it :;:;:::: ::~:-: :·:·:·: :·:.-:~ .. :·:·:·· ·=·=·=; :;~:::: :·:·:·: :-:·:·:· :=:=:=: • ·:·:·:·: ·=·=·:· :·:·:·:· =·=·~·: ::::;:;: .;.; ... :::::::: ~:~~~· .. : . . . . . ...... ·:·:·:·: .;.:·· ~ w ~ ·:·:·:·: .• .. • ••• ••••• •!-!-.•. ' :···:·:· :-....... . ...... ' ...... ~ ~=·=·=· ·····-=· :·::::~ ·: .,. ···~ :· l. 87 JOYCB L. K NNEDY A •Wdy ol lJO occ p <Juel bY Jhi atk>inal tit for Occupatlorw 1 s._tety • Heaf&b ,.... !Jnay be tho'ftm tor k oeeupations .that may erodu~o tho mo mental ~!f>rden. In detcendlnt frequency. :.• ~ top 30 streu-producens appear to : I Health technician, waller-waitress, ', .Ptictlcll nune, inspector, musician, , p14blic .relations worker, clinical lab 1 ~ t¥.bntclan, dlahw w, ~""···-­ .w§rker, nursesy Aide, lab6rer, dental •I 'af,sistant, teacher alde, research 1 -wqrker, computer pr91rammer. 1 '!<,Photographer, telephoo~ oper•tor, •ti I . .: g .. ~Michigan Man ;:.Faus to Death " i: YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK CAP> - A Michigan man fell GOO feet ito his death while descending the , sheer cliff face below Glacier Point ., here. j A park spok~man said Burt J. Mlller, 20, of Dearborn, Mich . was •c rapelllng down the cliff face to the Yosemite Valley noor when he ran out of rope and fell to his death Thursday • •evening. • ,, Miller is the Sixth rock climbing h fatality this ycal'in the national park. ;occ Offering 'Recipe· Book 1 Want a recipe tfiat's been to colleee? ' , Orm1e Coast College ·s Cook· fog School bas published a booklet of more than 600 recipes, called "The Best of 30 Years." Priced at S3, it contains recipes originally presented at the cook- jng school or in OCC gourmet tooking classes. Copies can be purchased lletween IO a.m. and noon to· day and Nov. 12 in lhl' Orange Coast College .Auditorium. or. after that. at the OCC Ticket Of f1cc 111 the administration build· lllj.! The book was compiled by home economics instructors Patricia Mogan and Millie Powell. • AN INTERESTING stress theory emerged: people wbo work in jobs that put them in contact with the public in situations .over which they have limited control may run an un· usually high 'risk ot mental problems. Think of the guff waiters and waitresses must takf!. Public rela- tions workers often are caught in the middle between employers and the public And of the highesl·slress jobs re· ported, six are related to direct health care; physicians, who rank a low 106, also deal with pain and grief, but may be better able to handle it because they 'rein charge. AUTUOllS OF THE study on worker break-downs .. _ Michael J. Colligan. Michael J. Smith, and Joseph J. Hurrell -emphasize that their research is not a definitive analysis, but a beginning effort to probe the mysteries of the relationship between job stress and worker health. Still. if you 're interested in a job at the tail end of the st'ress list, consider becoming a ticket station agent-126, chemical technician-127, tailor-128, huckster <auctioneering and salcsJ-129, or <fabric> dyer-130. READER SERVICE: To obtain a cow oj '"Stress and Your Htalth," U pages, send your po!tcard requ.at to J()JICe Lain Kennedy at this newpaper Thil olfn- enda Feb.1, 1978 . uth Coast Plaza BrratOI Street Coate Mesa A Speclal ln.Uallon to all~ WoWcl·if· yow.-c:oUI Woodworbn Thru Sun: Nov. 6 ~ .. Mrs. Salvatore salnato of COrona del Mar, standing, and Debra Allen of "Flowers by Debra" in COsta Mesa, pre- pare for a special program of Decorath.1R for tlle J{ollda)fs to be hosted by Mrs. Sainato, Wednesday at 9:30 a.m., at 10 Point Loma Drive. Debra Will display her ac:hievements to me~t>ers of Spyglass lilll Garden Club. -·· . This Is a photograph of an actual painting bOught on October 22, 1977 at a major California art gallery. It was represented as an investment. and it cost $650 plus tax. . RltAl.l • -- • • t 'Brown; ........ . . vavis: An Odd Political Pairing Bl1T THE reduction of crime ln ta Ana by itaell prob~bly woUld not ~ve foraed the unlikely alliance between e Democratic. governor and Jle Republican poltce chief. Tl\• link between them is based as much on \he word "coinmunity .. as it ls on success. ·'Community Oriented Policing,'• Mt· ter known as COP, is the core ol DaYb'& approach to reducing Santa Ana's crime. And the cornerstone ot Brown's approach to California poUUcs ii the de· velopment of (:Ommunity solutions to public problems -through the use of volunteers, for example. • Thus, the DemocraUc governor al· tended a Newport Beach luncheon so he could praise Davis at the gatherina of police community-relations officers. While Davis beamed, Brown declared that Santa Ana's COP should becom.e a modelforother police departments. · What the Governor did not mention LNG a · National ISsue? By THOMAS D. ELIAS California politicians often act as if theirs were a separate na· tion-state, entirely self· governing and needful only of protecting its own interests. Now and then. however, they receive a forceful reminder that thi5 ~n 'l really the case, that their ~late must function in the wider national interest THE POLITICIANS who spent months conducting hearlncs and passing a new law demandlni a remote location for any liquefied natural gas receiving termlnal in California seem about to get such a reminder. The new state law on LNG leaves to the state Public SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FOCUS the lack or LNG in California pro- duced demand for more natural gas from domesllc sources. wouldn't it also be interfering with federal regulation of inter- state commerce? l 8 a rd in bas no definite answers, but within two weeks he must issue a decision on an ap. plication from the utility com-1 panies' partnership, Western LNG Terminal Associates, for an• LNG terminal at Oxnard. Utilities Commisslon the ul· THE CALIFOaNIA law timate power of deciding 'forbidB building one in such a whether any site al all in heavily populated nea and was California 1s suitable for import-expressly written to exclude Ox· ing LNG nard. But there are no federal "What 1f the stale decides no laws on the subject. State site 1s &u1tablc?" asks David lawyers have argued that • Bardin, acting chief of the new without a specific federal law, federal Department of Energy·s the state's new rules must govern Economic Regulatory Ad· the situation. ministration. Bardin, with the air of a law professor, reminds state But Bardm askS wtiat~•mmoeM \ officiaJs the Conatitution"""~~~u this pToduces a federal-state mand$ lhat the federal 10.ern·" col\frohtation. "It seems to me, .. • metlt..: ft)ulate l!lleratate ... and• he said, "that we'd have a Eor'fign eomm~tce. beautjful piece of litigation that might not be decided unUl it IF Cl\LIFORNlA cldes that reached the Supreme Court, but no place in the stl;lte is $0.itable to that wouldn't do the project receive LNG, it would quash a de-much good.·· al between two utUltiea .-MoststatelegislatorsandGov. ~-.cific Gas & Electric Co. &Jld Brotm, too, are lawyers and the Southern CaJlfornia Gas Co shouldn't have been unaware of , ..... ~nd Pertamin•, the In· the potential conflicts fu the law doncsian government oil and gq they so hastily prOduced. exporting firm. . Similarly, the PUC is actuaJly U that happened, Bardin asks. a party in the case Bardln's wouldn't the state be interfering agency irUieated •from the old with foreign commerce? And U Federal PowerCOmmission. I I I I Baeli. to.Basies I By FRED W. KUNE t c.,IWHewlle"k• I SACRAMENTO -It's back to I basics for the Brown administra- tion ln preparing a new property tax relief plan that the state Legislature will wrestle wit,_ t soon, probably in January. .. t Gov. Edmund G. Browll r~ I tOld reporiers receatly that the .. new package" wm be a lot like the old legislaUon which the ad- m1nistration helped guide last J J•nuary. , ' Senate Republicans, diem 't aeree with t,Jiatkindof "tax relief.'· So Brown blamed the Legislature tor messing up a bill he called "crystal clear and eminently simple." ApJ:>arently U was not that aim· pie, bowev~, because the iiov- eroor rem~ ~ommltted to tho stumbling block that the Lelislature. Hello again, boys and girls The honor of becoming the first SS winner in Uncle Len ·s art contest g~to Jenny Weinb<:rger of Corona del :\far, who submitted the real ··fur out" ilrawlng of her hl\'arlte TV show -the e\·er-popula.r "Star Trek ... Congrn\ulntions. Jenny. The imaAlnntive drawing of the Road Runner and his pursuer, Wily Coyote, was worth S2 for runner ... up Marilyn Hansen of Costa Mesa. And special mention goes to another young Co~la Mesa artist, Janet Gilmer, who sent in a very fine drawing of "Welcome Hack, Kotter.·· I• !'VOW FOR THE SECOND contest in Uncle Len's .. bii money .. (!ompelition. Most or you probably have seen the movie "Star Wars" (some of you probably rnore than once l Your assignment for next week is to draw your Ca vorite ~huructer from that film and there urc quite u Don't Use a Gun . :r l. • few to choose from: 'Pbe best dr~wtttg WlR iiarl\ ttte'•rtist a ~prize, while the runper-up wiJl r~celve S't. ·l :_'J Remember, nu y,tSur dra~il'lgs mtt&t 1;W,4Jt>*lt!,9.!\ white paper ·l12 inches wlde by four lnrJ>.es deep. ~me~(iou 1till uren 't gettin~ the message and some gQod entries are being disqualified. . .., And don "t forget the special Thanksgiving essay contest that Uncle Len announced last week. Chlldren 9 ~·ears old.and ):o~e,i-are invited U. t&U. in.U words or, l<:ss, just what Thanksgiving means to you. .. ' r-ranquilizing a .. Dear Ellie, Ctn you tranqllillze' a snake? JanB. Dear Ian. Snake:. are never tranquilized ·"A)Ytlh a dart cuo for capture as some animals are because lhe ri shape and thlc!kness or their body hrwould almost euarantee that vital ...,organ• would be pierced. ;.However, sev~ral forms of tran- quilbation are 1tven If sur1ery ts needed. . lu For ma."ly 1ur1lcal processes. ,.Jlocal anesthesia i..& administered itln the area needing trea.lmenl, :,,and it i& adequate pro'lldJna that 11.ttutficient &entle reslratnl can 1,,Jceep the atl•mal still. In many in· stance~. g~enl an11thula is , 1iven to ~.snake c· r ln ~e tform of u ~.s or WJ •n Weotlon. Often just the lowering of body 1• temperature ili suCficienOy tran: 1,quillzing t,o petmit ursery on a ta variety oC the reptiles. . ,,. Because of \he 1cales on the [)~}?odies ol aU reptiles, irea{ care ·m ust be taken In ·cleaning areas .,/or surgery. several scrubbings 11 with a rather.stroq1 anqseptk ls a standard pr,,.cUoe. .. "• So, in a ,way, 1n•k cen kanqf.liliM!d. but not. from ~ Clls· b·'1'~nce With a tribqu,lh: 'aun, Ell terine in the tropics or as far north as Britain or New- foundland. -rtiey nest in large col· onies on blands free from mam· mal pr~tot's'. The ftJmale lays one very large egg that both p~ incubate for 42 de)"'S . The' )arge infant has long down that ls shed end rephtced before the true (eal)l.ers nre grown. A reserve of fat makd it possible '°' storm petrel! chicks to go for periods without food. Ellie Dear~~' I• a tppol• a youat trQI ot a YOU.bl toaClt · DavklT. • B olfdag Happiness' I Mrs. Edmund Loeffler. seated, and Mrs. Thomas McKlb· I bon, president of Newport Hills Garden Club display a few , ~ of the items they will have for a "Holiday Happiness Sale'' • Thursday from 9:30 to 11:30 a:m. at Harbor View Homes ' Phase II Clubhouse. Port Carlow. Handmade items, as- ~ sembled by club members, flants and baked goods will be f ea tu red. Refreshments wil be served and there is no ad- mission charge. The publlc is invited to attend. ' . ·rriille 1-0-comm-ence· • Spraying, Clean-up ' "PO·llAT0;£8" or "To· Patoes" allo lure mail order customers from thne to time. -promising tomatoes and potatoes on the aame vlne. The Idea ·s not new. Luther Burbank ex· perimented 'with It;: wt the plant he developed never became a commercial success. letter. Don't spray on a spring when plants make- windy day or if it looks their biHeat burst of like impending rains will growth. rinse the spray material off before it has a chance to do the job. Be thoroueh when you spray. Hit the entire tree F o u n t a i n \' a I l ~ ~ .Mayor Roger Stan· ton has l>ccn promo\ ed to full prof~ssor at Cul State Long Beach. A Fnuntasn V a l I c \' l' o u n t· 1 I member -~;incc 191-l. Stanton tt.·uc·hes management courM·~ ·at the unhersit~ Effective parentrng· will be discussed during • a' workshop from 9 a .m . to noon Wt>dncsday ln the Women's Studies Centerp · at SaJdleback <Allege . .Spealters include ~~n· dale Kelly, direcior of the preschool at 'h4J..;he.td .. 'lf-..Lhe..liills._. U nit ed Methodist Church. and Or. Kevine Kelly , a cl 1n'i-ral psychologist in pnvate. practice in Newport Bea cl~. Also on the a~<'nda are Linda Gordon. 11 licensed parent cffec:t1,·C'pess trainkn~ instruhor1 And ViHan <'.!let'ak. a n'lar na~c. famtl) and child counselor Admission i s Cree but reservations. arc re· quested because of hm1t· cd seating . Reserv ations and further mfornrntaon may be obtained ~Y calling the women's• center at 831·9700 or 495·4950. ext. 227. 9 ""\ Wor~lwp To Teach " Crafts l SUNDAY NOVEMBER 6tb 10 AM 10 5·PM o.!ty NII Si.tff .._ STUDENTS AT NIGUEL HILLS JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL LEARNING OF DRUG ABUSES 'Expoaure to Druga ComH Amazingly Early,' 81y1 Soclal Studlea Teacher . Ki~s Learn About Drugs Ni~l Eighth Graders Gf t . W aming_ Early B) ANNE COOVER Of 1"9 04illy ,.llet Staff more into value assessment in teaching students about drugs. "It's scary when y.u .think ':My hope is that my students 10\Jr mom could get lune cancer will leave th.is ooursc with an 1·rom smoking,'' s aid Dana enhancedself·opinion,aswellas Blakemore, 13, of LaguDa withabetterknowledgeo(thecf· 'figue l. "I'm never coin& to feels and dangers of druJ(s," he 1moke or use drues because .. s aid. ''Students 'N~o feel good they're bad for you." • about themselves are less likely Dana is an eighth grader at to use drugs." 'Jituel llill.a Junior High School, NIGUEL HILLS s tudents, ~nrolled in the-required "Issues while not naive about drugs, are and Concerns" social studies often shocked to learn what an im· course taught by Jerrold pact clragettes, alcohol and hard Hagstrom. drugs can have. Hagstrom said. "WE HOPE THIS course isn'l "We have a minamaldrllg prob· to. late for these kids," H1agstrom lem hert-as far as I kno'f'." he might not wantto use them.·· Karen Jcn~cn of ~aguna ~1i.:ud said :-;he found tHe cQurse.. '!>cary" al times, especially when the studenb were studyiflg the ef!ects or dtuss llke PCP. which can ma'(e users very violent. Mark Scudellel', or Laguna Niguel aa.1d, ··rip afraid to try 1t -because I know it affects peo- ple differently." MARK SAID A lot or his friends s moke c1gareltc1, and some smoke marijuana. Hls friends have oflered hiM marijuana he suid ' .>eid. "Their exposure to drugs said. "but I don't know-about ' -4Grnes amm:ln~ly early. They will alcohol abuse.·· have to make decl!ilons next year Kevin Alsobrook. 13. who re · "I hav~n'l decided whether I'll smoke or drink," he said. "but I don't think 1 'll smoke pot --I've heard it makc.s you not want to do Jnything." '• -rhen they get to high school if cently movt.'<I lo Mi ssion Viejo l'blt)' haven't already ~whether from Michigan, said he hasn't tousedrugs." made up his mind yet whether he • .Hagstrom said that because will smoke, drlnk alcohol or use providing information' on drugs drugs. bu ~.fou,nd not to curb drug "IT'S GOOD TO learn the bad 1"'8se. t'eachers are~ving stuff though," he said. ''Then you PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NO'ri'CE Tiie following pertoM .,. doing l>UM· neu•\ OPENM t HO. 2$01 '-•Croce, 0.N .... nt.~• .. 2' ~1v1n Chlltlfn1 UOI• ~rest., DeN """"'• C.111-•~2' Sll•rt•y ~11111, 21(111 L•CrHi., O•n• l'olnt, C..lllO<IW• '1'19 • Tllll Dulln••H ll <-UO:I~ bye llmtl •Cl P•rtner\llop Mo!Mn Chllllln Tnli )lal•menl wn tlled will\ Ille Couftly ci.r" ul °'"'~ C:.O..nty on Oc· loller 11, 1~11 1"1)477 Pub!._ 0r"'91' Coe•I D•llY Pilot. 0<1 u.21. 2'.~Nov.s. m1 •.f6J.77 Drinking is different fro'm s moking or using drugs, Mark said, because it is "a part of socllt· ty. •· Hesaidhemaydrinkinortler to!itin. , ,...,, l"vllhalled Ortntt C..tl Delly PIMI, O<t. 22.1' Mid Mov. J, 12, 19'7 easy-care, ~16rful canvas and varn1'shed hardwood. • 01•11 Uihfof-$28.00 s19ts ··srUDENr ex· preuion contained in coflere newspapers la subject to First Alnend· m ent protectioh. ·'This means that m ateriali prepared by students !or pubUcalioh · may not be arbitrarily ce1:1sored merely due to adminUt.ratlve or facul- ty adviser dlsa1reement with tbeir contents. .. JUDICIAL rullnss have limlt.,d ad · minilltratlve power to censor student ex· pression to that which creates a clear and pre- sent danger to tho sub staotial disruption or the orderly operation of the colleee." Garfi eld,; S14ild , however. "the J ct that materials pr reef. by s~ent journa ts IP.)•Y not be !reely: censor~ by tbe faculty adviser of collese admlnistratlon does not nesate the journalism lrustt'uctor's responsibility to main· lain professional stan- dards or Journalism ln the content and prCMluc· tion or the student newspaper." The opinion was usked by trusteu of the San Dleao Community· College District. SAILBQAT CBARTE~ auclli at th~ Iona Ma,. II., Eaca W • nd -" SAILING COlJBSES Sallla& School at aped.II raw. "Cnwln& Counts" fOt &lie famJJi. WEEK~ND CBtJISES SllU la tier ltol., a1 partofa work.bat~· I SOCIAL AC.TIVITIES lndudln g tennis tournaments, back&ammon, poag, \'ldeu blackJack, giant I ' TV ~rMt>. dlsco parties, TGIF parties. Sunday btunchei. and many mott. · ~ This Sunday, we•re having a "share the ride" day on some of our boats. Call for details and information. IJmtted Number of Charter Membenhlps Available ' ' .· ·· . CALL NOW FOR DETAILS I ' Ask abOut our corport.1' plan. \ I l b • '~. .... C CJ IODQ . 631-1900 3333 Pacific Coast Hwy., Newport Beach • Coast lhV). al NPpon Bl~d., abo\'e Jot111toeer Opening Soon in San Diego Marina 'del Rey, Long Beach & Anacapa You'll love thlM atyllah rockers. Rattan with t>lush cush~s. l WASJfJNGTON P> -Hi~r · inf mllltary and eivillan O(ft.clal syatematically ml UH mllituy aircraft aind have kgt tfOmo Air Force pUca eo bu y fereylnf cenerab they bad no Ume foe required combat traloing, Pentaion auditors say. 1be. Def ens Audit Service made the flnAi•• "' • ""i\nlt tUt. aaJA the auu•-•S .uiu,.;n•6"4M.•" .... .....,.v ...... _ uae mtutary planes tor J>i'rsonal trips or for low priority mls1ions at an an· nu al cost ot at least $52.$ million. THE REPORT WAS made public by Sen. William Proxmire (J).Wis.). who cited it u an example of nairant waste. . The secretary of defense last year ordered that the mllitary'a "special air mission" airer.it ~e wied ooly for ·official business and only when tom- mer cfal transportation was not available: But Clement E. Roy, depu- Newport Jazz ly d\pectar of th "a-..dit aervlco, 1.td mWtary &lrcraf\ continued to be im· pr~perl,Vmed. THE AVDIT EXAMINED the im· • proper UH of aircraft b tM Air . Force, AnnY, Navy and Marine~ at mWta,ry installations arourid the 1111P"1"....iJi fnutt.I __ ., tn he'\h& ,__. •- .,..... ...... ..-..\:Wl' au • uuwmm1 a r milltary fUpt, not the relative lm- Portanct of the mission involved. "The atature of the travder ithould not be a factor uni~ s~lneally authorii~ •• 1to71aJd. Tbe rePort said tbe Air Force's 10. T·39 jettrainel'I primarily were at the call of senior military and civilian of- ficials and were used extensively for other non-training missions. It said the Air Force pro- grammed 111,000 flight hours for its T-395 in fiscal 1977, far more than the 33,000 hours required for trainlne. Book Grasps I • • Festival Nub NEW YORK <AP) -"Newport Jazz Festivtil," a receQt.ly released, illustrated history of the m- ternationally known festival. has much of the flavor of a famtly photograph album. Interspersed with chatty recollections about in· dividual peJ'f mances are 300 never-before published phot fthe annual musical celebration. THE BOOK COVERS, IN year-by-year sec· lions, the period from the festival's premiere in Ju. • ly 1954 to the July 1976festival in New York City. Among the many candid pictures, for example, are ones of tenor sax player Zoot Sims pitching to trumpeter Clark Terry outside Freebody Park in Newport, R.I., Billie Holiday preparing to .io on stage and Langston Hughes waiting to read his poetry. Photoerapher Burt --------Goldblatt has captured in his pictur~ aiid accom-panying text the feeling of the festival lb.at even- tually outgrew the small New England resort city where it was born. The death knell for the festival in Newport itself was •ounded in 1971 when hordes of wi ne drinking youths stormed the lestival's fence ·and swarmed over the field and stage. AT THE END OF THIS year·s festival. pro- moter George Wein, citing staging costs in New York City, said he would move the festival upstate to Saratoga Springs. Last week, however, Wein an· nounced the festival wm stay in New Yorkiftl"'8. He said a "'Milwaukee-based btewery which is the festival ·s biggest financial backer threat~w withdraw ks subsidy if the festival left the Btf Ap-ple. No matter where the Newport Jazz Festiv.al has been staged, rt has created 1ls own atmosphere. As Goldblatt says in his foreword, ". .the Festlval has ror more than 20 years provided a unique forum for Jaiz musicians ... THE OUTDOOR SETTING OF the festivals ln Newport by-tht sea in the 1950s and '60is brought Jazz out t>f lhe nightclub and into the mainstream of American culture By l~al festival attendance had passed the one million mark. Broadcasts and recordines ot the performances reached a far wider audience. Alth ah triUcS11llld·audiences ha\te differed with festi\'41 producer George Wein's commercial emphasis on booking performers and g'J'oups, Goldblatt sums it up well: "George Wein and the . Newport azz F«1tlv~ are Indivisible -the am- • bience or the 'Festival ~ a ren~Uon pf ii is taste and judgment as the.?' .have developed .... " Step Archbishop Fulton J . Sheen, 82; says he's ready te resqme a busy life after re- covering from open heart surgery July 15 in a New York Hospital. I ' BE BAD JtJ8T appeaftd ·on n• UOnal television for the .eeond Urne in -ltlff dlt)'9. 1'Ms ~ ... It ... <llJifRnW--..... TOday Show, which teleaaat> a set· nient from Nashville. Juat ts hours earlier, Rogers performed on tbe ~ntry Muaic Association awanta p am and wq honored for ~rd· barifi.D~ ray GO • 1iteet' With qtteatlona about what film wOUld be ehown. W~aa.td .. e single Of the yeU'\ "L\ICilte ... Q be&an felledlnC on hi& ureer. to be interrupted by a ftrtn& or ne calls. One came from the g~v· e o( Loulslana, lnvitlng hlm to visit his mansion FOR LUNCH. RE llas only a claeesebur"-erbecause there's no time fOr more. He had only one hour of s*3p the ptevious night and recently performed in 23 cities in 26 days. •His next album, ''Ten Years 0( Oold," isn't out yet but he's already received 600,000 orders. "'Lucille' was the catalyst to it all," he sold. "But 'Daytime Friends' was No. 1, too. I've always doll4t a Jot of ( NASIWILLE J SOlJND _ television, but all this is coming together at a concentrated time. It's more impressive than if it was spread oi.t It's momentum · I T JWORE THAN MOST entertalnera • ... gers knows the insecurities of show ~siness. He has had two previous ptaks. both separated by valleys. In the late 1950s he had a mllllon- dollar rock song, "Crazy Feeling.·· Tben came the first valley, followed bll the second peak when he formed a soft rock group, The First Edition, sC)me _ 10 years later. The gToup had hiis hke "Just Dropped In To See What Condition My Condition Was Ii" "Ruby, Don't.Take Your Love To 1' "n." "Reuben James·· and •· methin's Burnm'." !l'HE GROUP DISBANDED in ear· lv.1976 after a couple of hitless years Sd Rogers turned to more of a country ~ollnd and, with "Lucille ... hit his thf.:d peak. 1 'You have lo itccept the fact that thia is a roller coaster business .. he •nu.d. "If you enjoy the hiibs and pre- p.e for the lows. the highs will come b~k. If you are professional. you can lllllke it work. ·. ''A big factor in any career is know •t.whentomove. When the First 514· ti bro Up, I wanted to get back to ni strengtru. -a country story song li e 'Ruby~r ~O HE RECORDED four major c nlry singles, "Love Lifted Me .. .. omemade Love," "Laura" ~d · While T~e Feehng's Good." and then ha~ "Lucille." 'It •s a happy·sad song,·· said Rtg<>rs, whose mother 1s named Llc•lle. "People relate to It. And odically, it's like 'On Top Of Old S ky'. ltrollsouteasy ... tA S PERSONAL UFE even took on a f:ll\Jntry touch Oct. 2 when he mar· ATOP ANOTHER PEAK Singer Kenny Rogera OFFICIA18 s~ Y con· tribuUons.J.o the council, whleb is trying to raise $206,oeo fol" a multipurpote center io this northern Mlnneaota community of a'ltobt 11,500, increased after tbe first be}letit. which featured the X-rated "Erotic Ativentures of Zorro." Woodard kept the au· dience guesliing through one cartoon, then another, then a 20· rted Marianne Gordon oC "Hee Haw." minute wildlife feature On the show, she's the sophisticate ln F 1 N A L L-Y TH t; the cbauf.Ceurred:~ar. that P,ulls UI>. at feature"&Uractio~: "Sad· George Goober Lindsey s sel'Vlce. dies aftd ~." star- station. rin" WUUatn Boyd as Rogers, 39, regards him.elf .. as an•. Hopalone Cassidy. The t!X·POP art1st who got a lot Of country film W¥ made m the ai_r play, who's now a cQUntry ~lst 1940s, before movies with a lot of pop air play. I can &mg were rated lot:; of types of music, but I like coun-· . try ballads the beat. Give me a Jittle But, WOO«tard said, :·n successandl'llmakeitwork ·· would definitely be G· rated."' Saddleback Collect~ Awards For F()rensics Saddleback College's forensics squad colle<.'ted more trophies than any of the other 30 colleges and uni· vers1lies participating in a speech competition at Cal State Los Angeles "We're off lo a fantastic start." said Carolann Messner, forensics coach Second place winners in the novice tompelll.Jon were Pnscilla Sanford and Traci Baranov Mike Hickson and Janene Lovullo won third plac~ trophies Other winners were Daryl Cowl and David Pauls<* and team partners Dana Inloes and Kelly tole. Certificates of merit were won by Mark Wilson. Robb Nimmo and William Tell. • Tht speech team will partici~te an a competition thi& weekend at Pasadena City College. Car to College Dot Datson of Huntington Beach, in conjunction with Nissan Motor Corp., has presented a new car to the automotive technology program at Golden West College. The car will be used in Instructing students in foreign car operation, maintenance and re· pair :. ~~ AMI Cola AllGaSU Baird.flt Ba119HE Bl<M'tllt a_.l,As &utetiF BarlM\.\ e .. 11no • ieltLeb • B111bto lllrts.on Ecnr • HlllP •nu Btlnh· 8 Brw -1irwn1119 811<kbft buckeye BurnupS CalWl)v Ca111pt>Ch CanraOH CaoS...Cp "9PlnAlr Of>IKll cuec. Ce.!\llP5 ChtnLH CIWl\Ull Clrtl•" i~ ;at Cll>w.T .. t~~r1 DAILY PILOT .. ! CHIFFON "VERA"1i : f AC1Al TISSUES I ___.....;;~ I I . I I ' I it I'. i BOX Of 115 ~ ;.;:·· -- Gluml "FOAMY" SHAVE CREAM lllYISIBLE HAIR MET Guaranteed to hold hair three limes longer Ass't scents I 8Z. MlXl-PADS Beltless feminine 1 napluns. l'Ol Of 30 UflTRfl lCD-IRM UQUIDCIYSTAl CALCULATOR Tall Ships ~ •u°" aaouv All the beautl and' splendor o the memorable Op-Sall will ~~nd in these new 149 14111 El. • OSMOll> ~y MATIR Rock 'n Roll Sin1ers t9lll t17U Archbishop Now Serves OC Diocese Catholic people of Orange County received their own bishop in 1976 with the appointment of Pope Paul VI of lhe Most Reverend Wilham R. Johnson. D 0 , us the llrst Bii.hop of the new Diocese of Orange More recently, however, b)• in· vitation of H1shop Johnson, an archbishop of the church has come to live in Orange County. He 1s Archbisho1> Tomas Clave! Mendez. a man who has captured the hearts of man:v Spanish· s peaking Catholics 1r1 the infant diocese. Twenty years ago he was appointt'<I lo be the first native Bishop of Panama by Pope Pius XII. SEATED IN THE corner of hi s small office at the rectory, he speaks warmly of his many in· vol\ emt!nls with people all over the world, On his wall is a banner with the words "The glory of God is men fully ali ve " Following the military takeover of the Panamanian gov· crnmt•nt 1n late 1968, Archbishop Clavcl admits he resigned "for the good of the Church" s ince he felt he couJd not work with the new gove rnment He l eft Panama and worked for the In· ternat1onal Institute of Colonial .\rt, preser\'in~ outstanding ex· am pies of relis:ious art. WORKING 'ow ru11 .time in Or;.in~e County with Bishop .John::.on. ~Ir Clave! is active with tht• Curs1llo Movem ent whilt• l'ontmui11~ his ~pec1al ef· forts as liaison between the S1>an1sh and English speaking eom m un1l1t·~ Women in the Jewish communities of Newport Deacb, Corona del Mar, Irvine and nearby areas are invited to a meeting of the Coa1&Une Clta~ of B'aal B'rtU. Womea, Nov. 14 at State utual Savings and Lo n, HU MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach. Follow- ing the meeting, a Chanuka BouUque will be held feahirin1 gift items. Th'e first children's bouUque, part of the annual Lutheran Church Women's Christmas BouUque,.will be tieta Nov. 12. om 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Oor Redeemer LatberH Clnue•. 1"01 'Magnolia Ave., Garden Grove. ChalrmaQ Carla Lanen •nnouncei h t no adults will be alloWed in the children 'a area so that the{ rnay l)e free of the pressures and demands of pnrents. The Parish Center of St. Mlcltael aM All MC Ii CMrcla i.il Corona del Mar will be the setting for the anQual kitchen boutique and children's boutique. Toys, baked goods, books, needlecraft, and Christmudecorat.ions wlll be featured from 10 a.m. to4 p.m. Lunch will be ~erved from 11:3() a.m. to 1:30 p.m. co.chairmen ot the Gypsy BkZaar are Peen• Linton and Blanche Bonell. Catholic Services Auxiliary Tea and Holiday Boutique wtll be held WedneS1lay at De Anza Bayaide Villaae, South Clubhouse. ~ East Coast Hi,&hway, Newport Be.eh, frQm l to4 p.m. Funds raised will augment the general fund 0£ the organisation, reports Mrs. Mary Muth, president. t ' Original mini· musicals will de presented TUesda~ and Wednes·' day at 7:30 p.m . by teen.age and colteae a1e youth in \he Cburcb of Jeaus Christ of Latter·day Sahib <Mormon). The Tuesday shows can be :oeen at the church l>uildine at 16th Street and Dover Drive, Newport Beach. and the one at Adams·and Estancia in Costa &tesa. The Wednesday s how may be&een at the Newport location only. The Rev. Dr. Henry Gerhard, minister of the Churcb ol Religlom Sc:ience of Laguna Beacb, 20062 Laguna Canyon Road, will present a message Sunday entitled "The Outer and Inner Mind," at 10 a .m. Church school and nursery care provided. Jewish worl'len in the community are invited lo attena_the new B'nal B'rtth Women's Chapter·in·Formation meelitlg Nov. lS at 1 p.m. at Fountain Valley Community Center. 10200 Slater Ave., fo'ountain Valley. This will be the first daytime chapter in Orange County for B'nai B'r1th Women. Sunday at 9: :l() a. m .• Mass will be celebrated by Bishop Walliam .Johnson, Msgr John Sammon and Father Joseph Karp for the de· ceased members of the Catholic Dauahter11. The Past Grand Regents' C1ub of the Diocese otOranae are sponsors. Mass will be at Holy Family Cathedral. 566 Glassel St .. Orange The Rev. Albert Burke of the First Church of Religious Selence of Newport Beach will present a new dimension in personal growth procedures through "Guided Imagery Experience" today from 10 a m . until noon The series of two hour lectures and dialogue will continue Ulrough Dec. 10, six Saturdays in all. • Temple Beth David of Orange County wi.U observe J~wish Boole ~1onth at services Nov. 11, when Rabbi Henn E. Front will speak on "Why Jews Read, and What." Services are held at the temple "' facilities, 6100 Hefley St., Westminster, commencing al 8; 15 p.rn. Women Aglow Fellowsltip will be(lln bible study Thursdays at 9 a m. to noon and every Thursday thereafter at 322 East A venue Cordoba San Clemente. Call Pat Pica at 492-182$ for further in· form ati~. An evening study will be held in Dana Point on Tuesd~y e\ enings at 7 on "Ministries or Women .. Call 496·1918 for further IO· formation. 'Fitpnottth C otwttm1tionnl Church l (I (I • ll62 llOAD ST .. MIWPOlrf' UACH 642·2740 SUMDA Y SHY'ICIS-t:OO 6 I 0:20 A.M. ... IAMIWO..WU'4 Dl. JOHN UMOYAU. PASTO. Cheplaln -Cotonef John Undvatl1 Ret • • J THE DIVINE ._._~~~·EPtSCOPALC ... CH~~~~-• 2041 OliHCH AVf.. COSTA MISA.-541°2231 THI RIV. COHUD A. HOllDqOIST, VICAl I Mrs. Mildred CampbeQ. former personal seer. ary to M,.,, Herbert Hoover, will describe her life ln the White House for the Women's Fellowship meeUng Tuesday at 1:30 p.m., following the 1 p. m . business meeting at Ne~bOrbooid Congreiatloeal Cb•reb, St. Ann·s ahd Glenneycre, Laguna Beacli . The Rev. ~a~ Bas ett, minister of the CbaJ'ch of tteUgliua Science, 609 11th St .. lluntinaton Beach, will begin a new series of lectures Sunday at 9.30 and 11 ~.m. services on the theme 'Th Season for Gh·in~." 'l IN AMERICA I . ' .. . non-victim crl,;,es dtug ot- f enses, gambllng, and p'rostltu· tion · t>ften do have victims: l,he participants themselves, their families, and Mten the whole society. It would be mor' accwate to call the~e crim~s • consensual, 1o to emphasize that those participating in them do ~ will· ingly. · ' The consensual crimes that trouble us most are those in which human weakness. economic Incentives toward criminality, ahd often a basic ambivalence toward tbe activity among ,. ~laat,1~,flan\btr or peO· pie all lnteraet. · SINCE tHOSE involved tlte· ly, if ever, complain to th~ poflce, attempts to suppress these a<:· tivities. have been notoriously In,. effective and expensive, causing a 1ubstarttaal drain on tht criminal justice system and In· creasing the sociJ} cost of the prohibited actk'ities. The strong · ADOral and emo- tional ov-:rtones or these law• perhaps account for ttae great r• luctance of our legislatures to withdraw the sanctlona of the crimmal law in lbese areas. Y~t there -l'e reason1 to be hopeful that decriminallution will OO· cur. ' FIFTY YE,\J\8 AGO, the most important non-v1ct1m crime was the violation of Prohibition. While alcoholism and drunten- ness are still with us, the corrup- tion and strains on our trimlnal justice system cpused by this crime'~Hl>pearetl'after tepeal. Ten years ago. on'e1of the lead· ing non-Victittt crimes Wli! abbr lion. Now, although abortion is still a subject of great Political and moral concem1 the diverai9n of resources to .,erosecule "abor· tion rtrfis"-bas '°d~ and Uie number or pregnant women killed in aboftions has drop~ sharply. · • : Drug offenses, primarily against the marijuana and heroin laws, m;iy ~ retarded u the prototyl>es of no~>-v1ctim crimes today. '. 1 • V'. ' . THE PIUYATE-'NATURE ol the sale and use of these drugs has led'-the pollc!t to reS6rt to 1' • i methods of detection and sur- vefl\ahce that intrude \.IPQn our privacy, tncludlbl illtglll search, etive~dropplna. and erttrapment. Indeed, the successful prosecu· tlon of auch cases oft.&l requires polJce Infringement of the con· atltutional protections that sategqard the privacy of ln· divicJuals. The major charie acainst marijuana laws is that ~ir ~­ forcement a<!compli.fbes little, and at considerable coat. First, though ri~ dru1 lJ com· pletely sate, marijuana ls simply 1lot very dangerous, at least com- pared with alcohol. SECOND, THE LACK of 1jgnlficant increase in rnari- * . * . Coastline College Offers Examination ,.. . . . ,,. ... ' Mid-term examinations for students in the course by newspapq. "Cri.o. and Jusuce in America;" will be 1iven ia two sessions from 6:30 to•:ao p.m. Nov. 18 aod from 9:30 te>ill :30 a.m. Nov. 18 at the F-Ouatat .. Vatley Hich ~hool caf~.· , Tbc:.courso is oUorcd by CoasUine Comnumity Colltle and the Daily Pilot. More than 800 students take the colleae credi• cl¥s. The-mid.term E!'Xiam will include material covered in the first half of the semester. Students should brin& an electro1rapbic pencil with which t.o mark the answer sheet. They may attend eitberof the exam sessl6n.s. r t. Further information about the mid-term exam ta available by calling Charlanne T. Jelen at Coastline Comm\dlty College, 963-0811, ext. 231. SINCE DRUG SELLERS already are"ttiteatened with severe penaJUe• tf they •re caught sellin• marij\lana, they have little to lose, and more pro- fit to gain, by convertJn1 theil' . IN AU. OF nlESE crimes. a. sizable percentage of tlie s>Ublic " believes that the activily io ques~ fiJ .. tion is immoral and •tshes it :l'Jr. • stopped. ln many cues/l{h' however, the next step -mlklna 11, 1 the activity a criminal act -bu ~:11 been taken without thought a w "' ' the practical consequences 0(-l , such laws· should th~Y. be ~t 1 violated.' H 1 t 1'I t ' , , ~1 '" I I .. "No, that'• a wolf call. A yodel la different." I -~ ,, Yo Bo~oseope .. Leo, Romance ' . Fiiids · Outlet SUNDAY, NOV. I By SYDNEY OMARR 1 ARJES <March 2l·AprU 19): Key word today , .. •Should be "mild." Don't force issues, avoid ex- ,,: t:remcs, maintain steady pace, eschew sensa· tionalism. , TAURUS (April 20·May 20): Study Aries , 1 •mess31e; avoid ruabing to conclu.$ions. Element of 1 •' deception may be present. Emotional responses · tend to buy logic. Pisces, Vireo fiaure in scenlrio. ,, GEMINI <May 2l·June 20>: Past obliJations •• come to forefront. You're remloded of promises. "·favors. Accept responsibility. Do what must be done. · CANCER (June 2l·Joly"22>: Ideas require pe.' finement. Add finishinc touches. Aries,Libra figure prominently. Accent on rurtation, sharing in- terests. LEO (July 23-Aug. ~): Romance tn your soul finds outlet. Creative urges are fulfi1led. Spotlight potential for increasing stature. Be confident, direct. independent. . VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22): Cycle high -hunch pays dividends. You get reassurance from one who has much to do with your security. LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Hlghllght humor, versatility. Accent on hidden sources -and re- sources. Someone may be. tellini tales -be alert. aware, inquisitive. You aremar1',edasa 0 winDer:· SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Be direct, dramatic; illustrate beliefs. Accept an wishes that are fulfilled, acqaaintaoc~ that ~elop Into mem- tnefut relationships. SAGl'ITARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 2U: Perception is emphasized, sipifleant ~b~ oeeur; • Gemllli aids io search. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22·Jan.19): Lunar aspects point. to philosophy, religion, a sense Of needinl to know why you are here. Taurus, Llbr• persons figure prominently. · • AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18>~ Some-of what you see exists in an entirely dirterent way. Element • of <lecQS>tion, wishful thinking la present. Pisces, .ti "Virgo1Ddividuals-play key roles. PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20).; Obtain valid hint ~o~quarius 1J1essa1e. Be alert to subtle hints. i t m is oo blndlni a1reemeDts. partnership, ar fie. , If Nov. 6 Is yoar bh1114ay. you have ear for mus~, an u,nuaual voice and a .. cweet tooth.•• _;l'aur ~ra an<,t Scorpio persons p.., lmpe>rtant "role lb~ life. December could tie your ~ost memorable month of 1971, a year-wtdeb alas • featured aigl'llficant changes, a varlet)' .of ex· , ' periences', travel,intenalfiedrelationsbips. '· ;:'~~,· Due on A Ccess J111,1~ • J ~ f .. Sports' in Brief NEW YORK The California Angels, Texas Ranger!" and San Diego Padres were scheduled to- day to begin negotiations for out· fielder Lyman Bostock, the bot- .test property ln bueball's free agent draft. Bostock, whose .330 baWng avera,e was third higb~t in the major leagues last seasoq, was the first plarer chosen in Friday's aT4ft and was picked eight Umes ln ~ fir1t toWld. Bostock and Larry Hisle, teammates last seuon 11fith the Minnesota Twins, and pitcher Mike .Torrei of the New Yortc Yankees w,,;~ .dacxu;n by the' maximum l!teafu'l, w~tb eight.of Bostock'$ · sclecUon.s coming in the first tound. UL,Je and Tprrez were each chosen-fovr times in the opening round. Two other players, outfielder Oscar Gamble and. pitcher Terry FDr.uot • ..WO,wei:e d.raftad by the r maximum.U.ctubs. Form4!t · Rlliitlngton Beach High stalndollt ·Jack Brohamer 'now With the Chicago White Sox, was selec:teci four times -1)y r Boston catxth round), Milwalukee (ninth), Nevr York Y)tntteea ·<12th> and the Angela U9th}. Mission Viejo's BUI elton, who pla~d last Yttar at Cleveland, Q picked onlr once r" by the WhiUt ~ on ttie 41.!t Jround. And ex·W tlrililster Hi&h pitcbet Ed B~ • .Pl'O~i.11 of the !Jdinnelata 'l'Wfn!,' wu aeteeted :Dy the Whlte tbe una ound ' fer. th AD ana ' favorite to win the contetence crown when the season began, but the Trojans have lost three or their last foor games and· dr9J)ped from first to 16th in ttte. n .Uonal poll with a s:a record. Stanford. meanwhile, hasrwon five of its last six games and is 6·2 overall. .. Sea B~aONEVANS °' ............... IJ'b~ accurate ri1bt arm of j \$J.'or quar&erback Kurt Br~"'lttnan led Corona del Mar High 's Sea Kings to a S4·11 South co,st Lea1ue f ootbflll win over Uttaversity Hilh (Irvine) Friday ni,kht before a crowd of 2,000 at Irvine High. )lrockman teamed with wide rece1 ver Clark Hayes six times in the contest. The six bullseyes were good for 130 yards. ttalfback Arata Jlamawaki led the Corona dcl Mar ground at- t<\Ck. The speedy 5·5, 130-pound Jlamawaki picked up 93 yards on 13 carri(.'5 and scored twice oo runs of 9 and 49 yards. Corona del Mar scored on its first possession of the game, tollo\\ ing a Univeralty field 1oal. Brockman hit Hayes with a bomb that covered 58 yards for the score Brockman added the PAT and Cotqna del Mar led 7·3. The Sea Kings were on the board again late in the period, driving 74 yards for the score. The key play of the drive was a nifty 28·yard aerial from Brockman to tight end Mark Waltzc that gave the Sea Kings a first down on the University 12 llamawaki then scored on second down from the nine and e rockman's PAT made 1t 14·3. Corona del Mar defensive lineman ~ike Bakt!r picked oft a l'ni\'ersity pass in the end zone for the Sea Kings' third score of t he evening. University quarterback John Davis at- telbpted to pass from deep In hts ow11 end zone, but Baker grabbed the i>ass out of the air inside the <'nd .zone and Cell to the ground fo dheTD Blocked Punt Helps SG Outlast Diablos, 17-15 Corona del Mar made it 27-3 m 1he1third period on Hamawakl's b rilliant 49 .yard run, but l'n1,·crs1ty 's Gil Zaldivar re· 1urned the t•nsuing kickorr 86 'ards for a touchdown and Davis hit John Rodgers with a pa~s for the extra point, making 11 :.!7·11 Martv Gre1•11 scored Corona del )\tar's ftnal touchdown or the evf1f)ln~ on a two yard blast, cap pine .a 73 yard drive. • I llUSHIH<; (O<OfWIMIM•r tell I I IJ I , 7 l2 llNvtralty 10 10 I l 1 JI ""SS1HO c .. Oft• clel Mar ,. P< t• • Uftlwnlty 40 I yt ~ " ~· lJ 0 II 1/) •l •I " It ., 114 "'l 0 ,. ,. 0 ) 0 u • J 0 II II• " 72 1i. j,.JOQ lu Ill 0-0 ••• I 0 30 11 ll 0 o 'uo u -) u so 1• 29 H J 1 u IJ) (I D · 0 ., 22 so YI "''· 191 .Sil I• .)50 Byl>AVECUNNINGHAM OfV. Dally ...... St•lf A blocked punt with. 8: 50 left in the game meant the difference as San Clemente High outlasted Mission Viejo 17-15 Friday night ln a crucial South Coast League hatlle at San Clemente Tight end Dave Byrd batt<.'<i down the Mission VieJO punt and when it rolled out of the end zone eight yards away for a safety, the 15·15 deadlock was broken Mission Viejo, now with a 4·2 record. drops from first place m the South Coast race and because El Toro lost to Dana Hills Friday night, San Clemente ls alone in first with a 5-1 slate. Three costly Mission V1e10 mistakes-two fumbles and an interception-gave San Clemente the opening it needed to dominate the first 15 minutes of the game. The Tritons took the opening kickoff and marched 67 yards on a 13-play scoring drive, culminated by quarterback Mark McElroy's two.yard keeper for the touchdown. John Schaff lined up for a PAT kick but two consecutlve en· croachment penalties aeainst Mission Viejo moved the ball in side the one·yard line, so coach Allie Schaff took out his placekicking son and elected to go ror a two-point conversion. He got It on McElroy's keeper Then Misslon Viejo got the ball for the first \lme and the Diablos fumbled the first snap. Mike Murphy recovered for the Tritons. On the Diablos' second series Scott Spear was intercepted by !\like Wade, who returned it to the 17 yard line. On the next play Mike Echiverri ran in San Clemente's second touchdown, and Scharr's PAT kick made it 15·0. Mission Viejo finally settled down with a 77.yard drive in 12 plays, Mike Ochoa capping it on a one yard TD plunge. Spear passed to John Bingham for the two· point conversion. The Oiablos evened it up less than two minutes Into the second half. when Ochoa broke loose on a 59·yard touchdown gallop. Stu Stebenne·s kick knotted the game at 15. After Byrd's blocked puatgave San Clemente a two-polot lead, Mission Viejo launched two more desperation drives, but the first was stalled on downs at the San Clemente 39 and the second ended w1th McElroy's intercep· ti on of a pass Crom Spear. OAllll• IT ATllTICS M Fltlldownaru.111"9 • ff"tdowns-w119 4 rir\IOOWllS~ll~ •a lolltllrll-I Y1rdHU\l'f"41 I .. Yardspu"ro .. Y1rdt1ost 2 Ntl Y11"dJ .. 1fl9d IN Punu -1v9. olatanca 3-1•.i Yerdt l*\lliHd 4'%2 ~umbln·lumlll.,lost 4-2 M1u1011 VltlO :Wn c.1amanta kM••vOUanara Belts Rio Rondo, WHITTIER-Golden West College, behind the passing of Bill Holst and the running of <\teve. Fogel, rolled to a 21·7 Soqthern Californla Conference football victory at Whittier C<lltege Friday nigbt. T'h e victory moved the Ru.ilers into a flrst place tle with Santa Monica CC. settin&. up a showdown with the Corsairs in twQ~eeks atSaJ')ta Monica. Holst had on• or hi.I beat out· in~ of the seaSQD. completing 11 of ·14 passes for IM yards. And Fogel. who scored live touchdowns a week ago in a 50·33 win over LA Harbol', had two more TDs, gaining 120 net yards In 24 carries. Golden West jumped to a 14·0 halftime lead behind a four-yard run by Ric Martin in the opening quarter and Foeel's one-yard plunge in the second period. The first score--was set up by a 2S- yard pass from Holst to Steve Beeuwsaert. Rio Hondo <l-5-1 > cut the margin to 14-7 in the third . :_s~rts on TV, Radio quarter on a 21-yard pass play but the RusUen wrapped it up minutes later when Poaet scored from the one, endlne a 40-yard drive. Arter that, the Golden West dt· tense did not allow Rio Hoodo past its own 43. And the RuaUers drove to the Rio HondO H and 18" in the final quarter, but could not score. Golden West recelved out· standing detenslve play from middle guard KevJn Patterson. CMM• ITATll'tlC:S fl"IOHll'ltrUllllllt flnldo.n111Mllll9 flrlldW.11SP1MIU" Tot•lflr1tdo- V1rd1 Nlllll'lf var11•...-a1nv Y•tdl 1011 N~yO•llttaltlM """' .... .,... ottllflCt P..,.itlat·Y•ft.,....hl .. f'utn.IH·lumlll• Iott $(-...,~ owe tO I • •• #M tU 14 175 :5-139 • •• l.0 ••r P1r11ar CH-O.vb O<l\OI Toi"' Mc Elroy Immel • V.•dl Row•o Lewi. Etnlvtrrl rot•I• ~·· O<noa Total• Mc Elroy 0111 Tot•I• "UIMINO MIM•Yltlt kt. 1 10 • I 1 1• ,...a-;:-.. l l 10 s ., "USING MIUltllVie~ ,. " ll • 1 0 u 4 Siii ClltfMtM • J 1 0 ' J " yt ~ ... 1 1 o.o J.t I u ' 0 u 11 0 2'.0 7l 0 10.4 1~ 1 u 7t • u ,. 1 •.1 IS 0 s.o 10 t 40 l4 u l.4 " 0 u 1• 11 ll '"'' •• "'· ~ .. ""' 0 0 _qoo 2 -.as • • B1 llOWABD ~ llA Y I • OtU.~,,__. • Edison Htab <Huntln1to11 Beach) &~red .. a touchdowu in tbe flrat.,quartu qd a 1tout d f enslve cf!'orl made 1t hold up for a 7·0 vlc\ot)' over Westminster Hlgb '• Liqns Friday ni&bt ia S~aet Le~e fQOtball act.loo at lluntill~ Be8Ch 8l1h. Quart~rback Frank Seurer raced 40 yards a.round left end on a perrecUy executed booUeg play for the Jone score of the 8•me with 4: 01 left in the first period. A capacity crowd of :i&,500 at lD on the action. It was a def nslve strug from ~ to ctr wltb '\ ception Ot SeUrer's TDJ'Omp and Mike Haney's converalon. Neither t.eam was able to mount a sustained drive ntU the wan· ing moments when the winnen moved from their own 37 to the Llons 13 only to have W eatmlnster recover a tumble. Seurer did more runnln1 against the Lions than he has ln any came this season, and with more success. He plcked up 71 yards in 10 carries. When he needed short yardaae ·ror a first down on third, ht threw to Jeff Hyder aucceufully. Hyder grabbed five aedala for a total of Myards. The FAiion defense was out- standin&, limiting WuUhlnster to a net Jain of 15 yards rushlnc and only 72 from both pustna and rus.hin1. M lddle linebacker John ·Bogdan wu outatandinc for the Char Jers. He bllt&ed several times, 8ttllng to the ball carrier almost as soon as the quarterback wu there to hand off. He had at. least five unualat· ed tackles in the open field. Rick Baria recovered a palr ot Westmlnater fumbles and Randy Ponder intercepted a pass for another turnover by the Lions. Larry Patkinen had a pair of ear· ly quarterback sacks for substan· tial losses and Greg Codde and Jef( Hyder played well on de· fense. While there were atandouta on defense, the entire Ediaon team played well. Westminster had tbe ball in Edison territory only one FOOTBAbL tfm• dwilllthe a.w~ c>11 a fumble recovery at the J:dt1on., 11 . Foiar _plan later, With the lld ~ ttaQdout def enslve pla11 by Bo1dan Ind Parklntn1_ It was fourtbdownatthoLlonsw. "·~·· C,_11 ~' ...... WlllltmlM TtCllt CM.Ml &TATllTICI aUUCtNO ....... -IO 7 • • 7 11 WltMll llrr " ' s 2 t 27 .......... ..... r: ': ........., ' a ' 4 I• I • • $ • • , .. ,, ( 11 "' 7..:12.4 ~ ~ ' 871.AU ENEUYS oe .. °""' ,._,..., ,.. Tho El Toro HJ.ah Chersen took tt on the chin Frlda1inllbt u the underdof Dana Rma Dolpblnt aeored ttir•• touchdOWQI tn tho fourth quarter for a 129-21 SoUth Coast Leaaue football win at Mtaalon VieJo High. '" The lou knockl tbe Charcera out of flnt place lhto a three-w~ deadlock tor secotld Witll Corona del Mar and Miulcm Viejo With 4·2 leape reeOrdl. Tralllnl 21-'I 1obic into the final quarter, Dana Wlls nar· rowed. tbe aap to 21·1C oa. a u-• yard nm 6y Kitch llcGrecor. Mike Noyes booMd the PAT. Tbe inlplred Dolphins defease torced El 1'oro to pupt and with 4:03 left to play, Dana Hills wa on the move acain. Th ls Ume lt wa1 Jell Olsen who did the dam,1e, rolllnt up 74 yards In thl'ff carriea. Olsen acored on a 20-yard run. Dana Hllls quarterback Tom Tbom-ton threw to Steve Gramlich for the two·point COhverslon and the Dolphins went ahead 22-21 with 2:29rtmalnlna. Adding Jnsult to Injury, the Dolphins' McGre1or picked off an El Toro paaa and scampered 40 yarda to score with 1:39 to play. The PATwu good. Tho only other Dana. HUis scoro came on a five-yard nm by Gram Ueh In the second quarter. El Toro came out thr~wlD1. On the tlrst play of the came, Char1ere quarterback Jeff Gibbs com blned wt th Rick Brown on a , 52·yard pus play to score. The PAT WU not lood and with only 14 1econda used, the score was 6-0. Glbbs scored both of El ToN's other touchdowns . He scampered down the sldeUna 33 yards to score late In the lint q,ua\11.er. And be ailded a two-polnt conversion on a run, making the score 14-0. Glbbi scored •saln In the ullrd quarter on a three·yat'd run. llee· tor Avellaklckedtheextrap()lnt. OAMa ITATHflU l'lntMwn11'Vlftlno "'"' dawilu'•"'"' ,.,,., ... ,,.~.tit& Tot1l llralcl0-y arcts niaNne v •1111 PIAI ... YardllO&I Nll'fll"dl9'11M Pllfli.·•V9· flat. y., .. Mllllh• l'llfftlM••·~-~ OfflHHlt lit Two Gr1111llC11 01-... .,.. 1Ml'fltllll McO"O« (~fllll! T1111 .. w......,.....,. l •1 GLSNN WlllTE Ottllt o.llY""' IWf ~II ERIAL-Hllht)'· to ted Jm~la1 HJlh · raced to a 3H> lead, then held off a determined comeback by Capistrano Valley Hlch'• Cougars in non.league football ac· tion Friday fil1ht at the_ winner•s fteld. Capo Valley battled back to trail 20-13 wlth 10:50 left lri the game. But the tough Tiatra bagged a 26-yard field goal with 5:42 remaining to wrap up a 23-13 vic- tory. The Cougars gave a splendid accounting of themselves against their once-beaten foe with· quarterback Brad Parker putting on a dazzling show of ofC.ense and defense. ~e ran the ball 17 ti es for 167 yards net, i ludlng an 8-yard to chdown scamper with 6:34 left in the third period to break the scor- ing ice for the invaders. Luke Johnson's PAT cut the gapto20-7 Then with 10:50 left in the game. Sean Jenkins scored from seven yards out to cap a 64-yard bhtz in which Parker played a major part a$ he passed for lS yards and ran for 32. 34-IOWin JC, Prep Teregis LeaJ.s FoothaD. His fine moves. pre· c1sion cutting and ex- cellent change of speea made his nmning a sight to behold as he knived• between ~d around de- fenders for huge chunks of yardage throu1hout the evening. • He also passed for 83 yards to give him 250 yards total offense. Defensively he was a standout, too, coming up with tackle after tackle. ~esa's Romp By ERNIE CASTILLO drive with a six-yard run 01 uw oao•r Ptlol Sutt Mike Teregis made in the fourth quarter. Costa Mesa High 's Moments later. he was horn ecoming dreams dancing in the end zone come true Fnday night. again after zig-zagging s c 0 r 1 n g t b r ~ e ·his way for a 48-yard TD touchdowns and gaining run that was set up by 211 yards on 21 carries, Mike Scarlett's intercep· Teregis led the Mustangs llon. to a convincing 34 -10 Cribbs, a slick right· South Coast League foot· hander, directed t.be• ball victory over Laguna Mustangs offense to near Beach before a crowd of perfection. giving his 3.000 at Newport Harbor team a 14-10 halfllme High. lead on runs of two and ·'The whole team one yards. wanted to wm this one Defensive standouts real bad," said Teregis were Steve Manahan, as he walked off the field who had a pair of in- ch atting with Laguna tercepUons and several Beach quarterback Bill key quarterback sacks, Gompf Thad Tropea who bad an "We had a little fun for interception, Dale Am· once." tie added. "We bu rgey and Marlon f 11 · h Blodgett. ina Y gotittoget er... Following Cribbs' f1'rsl Dreams was the theme Standings C.OldtnWHt i..nt•~• C.ypuu LA H•rllOr LOl Allilf!HCC AIOH~ Fulltrton Ml. ~n Antonio S.nOl4t90~ CerrtlOS Oren~Coll•l C.roumOftt i..nteAM ,,_teln Velley Ne .. port HMbof lld- V.etlmln•l• Marin• The Cougars produced 341 yards total offense. never punting and mov ing with uncanny ease Al least they did until they got within sniffing distance or paydirt. They drove to the Imperial 20. 8, 15, 25 and 25 without producing a point. A1td they missed rour 1 field goals which surely de- termined the fmaJ out· r o r c 0 st a M e s a • 5 TD. Gompf directed the homecomi~ festivit.es Artists 6.5 yards for e. ___ ~,~-··· a n d n ,.. e i ~ ' tyi1Tg ~uchdown, cap· perform lil!ll>.e4 the J>}Di' Ute drive w\th a Mustang • follolters hve·ytifd run. Le~ic forget whal hes been a Weldon s 34-yard . held nightmarisbseason. goal g~ve the Artists a come. It did, that is, along with a defiected pass late in the half ... a fluke play that Imperial in- tercepted to set up its second TD when the theft was returned six yard!'I to the Capo Valley 16. Losers o!fourprevious. sh.orthved 10·7 lead outings, the team has minuteslater. GAM• STATISTICS CV ~•••I C10wnsrus111no 1J F1ruoownsiwu1no o Ftr\I oown•lle"•lllfl O Tol•l llrlt_, 11 V•rdHU\lllrtQ n1 been pi a g u e.d by turnover«. But witb Jerry Cribbs returninJ to the helm, the 1~ Mustangs made just two 1 major mistakU and o more than made up for ~~: those with an outstand· 10 ing defense that corn-31~ pletoly contained 'Urd' PHtlng 13 V•rOllMt 23 Nely•rft~ ~I l"\lnt ... 1111 01U•nite 0.0 >llo Gompf Pen·ydS~ HS Fum.fumlost ~1 ,,,~ T h e m a 1 u m a n • however. WIS Teregis. On the fit8t play of the second halt. he tOOk a pitch from Cribbs on a perfectly enculed op· lion pla)' and rambled 69 yards for a tqucbdown that put Costa Mesa ahead,21·10. • s.c-wourwra C•poVelley II 0 1 • 11 '"'~,., • 1 1 ,a-u S.IH P•rUr ,HnlUM Cll.,IH Toi•" •USMING ~-v.,tey tell .,. yl .. , , JJ l ., 11 181 " ,. II ~ I • • • 14 4 JO :it •• u •• PASStNG -~-Veltey ,. ,c .... .,. P•rker 22 t 2 13 c;llerlH I 0 0 0 .ct. ·"°' 000 To\11$ 2l t 2 U .ail Behind a good block .y Dave Font.es, Teregis capped a ~,y.ard scar e. ",.,t_rwhil'll F Ir\& oo-tnUWf51.!lll flrtl down' ~Ill" Tot•I llritod'MI& Vardsru•N,. 'f •ros P••~•llG Varci.1o11 Net~· tO\ o•I~ f"Uilli•llV9-d.,IMI<. 1'anlSl'('Mll11• (iOmpl M((UllO<IQI\ l\Mll~r lt1cllard10n Tol•ll CrtDl>S fontn Ter~Q•\ Tot•I\ yl l ...... t ~s 0 so 0 3.l • • ... •.t 1.5 • 1 100 ••• .. '· TOM BARLEY Want Mosie? ••••-m ==-•u 1 ~ "STA.I WAIS" C~I "SMOUT & lMI IAHD"" . ""ntl ~-.,., - "TH• .-OOVI TVll" 111 "KIMTUCllY RIED MOVll" &al . "THE MACK". "NAKED RIDER"(R) "OHi OM OMI'" AAUCI DOISM'T UYI Hal V AKY (PG) !ipecial ,,ice 12:30 to 2:00 p.m.; ....,.-..~st..11 ~ lAT CITY CIM'rl.I CIMIMASI Incept S... a H~ S t.21 1MU.1'11S--OUM411 co SENIOR Ol1ZENS Sl .50 · S COAST PLAZA 1411.,. SI. ~Ill 1111-- ~ SPY WHO . lOYIO Mr CNt Mt1A1/lllM , .... ,Miit "NOM MOON 1'IL 1Mltr 1JM.l-t/9'N .... Jin.I l:IM SO. COAST PLAZA l411 llnlltl St. S.1111 llU NllM '"IN 1Hi 111.t.LM OF 1MI SIMSIS" 00 .... ttlAMU&U" (XI ~,..,.., .. ,_,., ... 144 ,.,,.... "OH GOD• IPGI wo.\,_....,.., .. ,. SAT/11114 ·~ ................. .. CINEMALANO "'TMI M&Oll WNO ..... MOWMAQ wrnt1M111ot.·• ,.....,.,~ ....... .,. ......... . ~,,.... ...... .. •AUJD .. TOOPArNt WKOAY•-1:00 IAT/IUN -l:IM:1M:2S "'IMI ..... , ......... 1111"-T~......,_ • .,... A WU PONY" <11t•SAT~l¥*1 I DAILY PILOT A few years back, Nell Slaion tried io ~ humor out of pl1aeey ln .. Tb• Prisoner of Second A venue." It • dldn~work. He 'a done thtl same thtng on a tranderseale wi~ ~1God'1 Favorite," wbleh opened at the Laguna Moul~n Playhoule this week, and t.bia time be.'s right on tarcet. "God's Favorite,·• despite some )'awn-producing dJalogue In the first' "900 $ 'AVoi.ITI" A com~y "'1 Nell ~imon, cllf4'<1H l>y -""' lo.N•fl, WI.,.. \IOMt Ooul'• WUllAmt.On, ltQl\llllO by C..rl C..ll•••Y ,,,. J•lln Noro•k09, Pf•Mnl•cl tu .. Ofyt lllreotll S.IWIMY• Alf 30 .. .a 11'1•• ~., •t 2.JO At ll!t lAQ\11\A Moultott Pl~, 606 Ul{IU'>A C*'\'Oft A-. UliiUN IMJ•Cll, IVOUllll lllov. " A_,,.•t1911t •~"'1 THI/. CA5T Joe a ... ,-... • .. , .................. ..Mell Qvrllll ~OMY Lipton ...... ,. ••• ........ .,. ''"-0.!Mvl Oh ld Otn1.,,..n . • • •• • • .. .. $\AllMN'•~ A-ll•t11.,....n • • • • •••• ,Macy~ ltM BwlJ.,,-"" ............. , , J•met0.Hannon S.r•ll &llClj_,, ................ , .... Tany• '1all0 ,.,..,,, ••• .. ..... • ...... .. .. •• ~ Qut91ey scene, is a zinger or a play and a welcome one after such earlier Simon setbacks as "Prisoner" and "The Good Poctor." lts comic success ts even more surprising when you con- sider the source material for Simoo's laughter -the book of Job. IT'S THE ONE ABOUT the fellow who W8$ warned to turn hls badt on God or terrible things would happen. . He didn't, and terrible things bap. pened, Archibald MacLeish rewrote it without the laughs m his Pulltier • Prize winner. "J.B .. " two decades ago. The tragedy 1s very nearly as effec- tive ln the Simonized version, except that for every dark deed. you know there's going to be a chuckle of equal blind. wt:Uch is. on TefiecUon, quite a piece of playwriting. ~he basic reason the play succeeds deepite Its subject matter ls that God's intermediary (a m senger who takes home $137 a week for bis trouble> is so bloody funQy. He's a klutzy .character with a New York e· cent ana a big "G' · on bis sweatshirt. and be 's endowed with some of the funniest dialogue Simon e\'er created. AT LAGUNA, WHERE director Jo.o Arvan bas fashioned a splendid pro- duction which conve~ the comedy without sacrificing the dramatic ef- fect, Steve De Naut revels in the plum role of the heavenly messenger. His timing is crisp, his characterization hilarious and his entrance ln the final scene is a work o! technical art. J aek Byron, one of the area's finest dramatic actors. b a perleet choice as the beleaguered box factory owner with the unshakable faith. His dogged determination and stern stage pre· sence contrast effectively wlth De Naut's fanciful fights, and he plays the tragic hero with a true aenae of ln· ner strength. As his reprobate son, Stan Abrahamsen fires the cynical barbS that 11ndermine his father's dhoUon witb gleeful accuracy. Mary Sherwood does what she can with the underwritten role of the wife, who ac- cept. the circumstances with curious calmness. :,Danny Thomas plants a kiss on Frank Sinatra's forehead during a $500-a·plate memorial dinner in Las Vegas saluting .Binatra's late niother. ~atalie 'Dolly" S\nalra, who wus killed in a plane crash. dimension. E\:en when the stubborn TANYA SZABO AND James hero's house ha:; burned down. he's in O'Hannon play~ the thinly sketched mortal pain und his son bas gone " Bobbsey Twins-type son and dau&hter Russians Rap Spy Movies MOSCOW <AP> -Pravda's movie critic laments Lhe lack or good Soviet spy movies tiven though there are "exciting real life mo<leb · "A strange calm has descended on this theme the theme of the invisible struggle of the bold undercover agent." V.· Demin . wrote m the Communisl party newspaper ",\'> a lover of intrigue, I scan the movie h~tm~s m vam." Demm said histories, novels and stoner. about sp1~ are being published all the time. but the imagination of filmmakers seems to have run dry, even though there are exciting real-life models for them to imitate. ''HA VE THE ARTISTS really e><hausted the details of the glorious biography of Abel?" hea!ked. Rudolph Abel was the Soviet master spy whose impeccable English and knowledge of W estem ways allowed him to melt tnto American llfe for almost nine years. He was exposed and arrested in 1~7. and five years later was exchanged for the late U-2 spy plane pilot Francis Gary Powers. "It may sound paradoxic~l." Demln said, "but spy fllms, with all their fantasy. often present the real world much better than other kinds of movies ... · "You know, Denftr's a aood actor. · But then it's not ~body who aets a dwlce to co·star with God in his first picture." as primarily background figures. But Annabelle Quigley, in the briefer role of t.be family maid, is exceedingly funny as she offers her prayers, "even on her day off.'' · The real star of the Ltlguna ahow, however, is Douglas Williamson's magnificently adaptable set. As the curtain rises, it's the living room of a plush suburban home; ln the next scene, it's completely devoid of furni&bings; in the fmale. the place has burned down with only the fireplace st.anding. • .. God's Favorite" may just possibly be yours insofar as Neil Simon's plays are concerned. It continues for two more weeks with performances Tuesdays through Saturdays and a single matinee Sunday at the Moulton. 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. ~1 .. (197t) RobiWt • .~18n41ltt0 COmer. A 1~·· • lfOOVS•d of urd ' • d ftvoMld wtth Nata. (2 tn.) e tt:I HOM FOOTMU. Florida va. Ge!orgll, from ttte Gatot Bowl In J.cl(aon~~ F1orlde. • MOVIE **IA ••T«e Harlem Globetrott.,." (1951) Thomaa Gomez. Dorothy Dandr1dge. A ,. member of the timed buk•t· bel tam dilf'eg•ct. dladpelne and elopM. (2 tn.) I WOMAN: REAL TO REEL '-~ ZOOM (CAPTIONED) w•e ntUNDER ; D WANTEO: DEAD OR ALIVE "Competition" • MOVIE *'* "Playgirl" (1954) S~ Wlntera, Ba(ry Sullivan. A pre\· t)' country gh1 loob for love I exl1ement In the big city. :. V1810HOH 10:30 (I) SPACE ACAODrf ; YOUNG SENTINELS -· MOVtE t ;' **tn "The War Of The :. Worlds" (1953) ~ Barry, • Ann Roblneon. Earth It threat· ened tw Marti., lnvMkln, • ONCE UPON A Cl.AISIC "RObln Hood" Robin, WIU and I• Ralph, whlle ruMlng from the Sheriffs men, encountlw ffrlar • • Tuci<. who off•• them ·~ • In the ror .. t. (Part 5 of 12) 101'1 II (1 HR., 30 MIN.) 11•fJCIJ BATMAN/TARZAN ·. D SEARCtt AND A!SCUE ID LA. PATTERNS fD SPECIAL "The TrHaurea Of Tutan- khamun" Musk:, literature. technology and paintings of anolent Egypt accompany hlght6gtlta of object.I found In the tomb of Tutanllt)amun. 11!30 I THE RED HANO GANG : ROC~ AHO HIS FRtEN08 e WORLD OF SURVIVAL "Seerc:ti For The Aye Aye" BOlDONES A woman. unable to e«ry a WWld tutl term b9cauae ot a tieart aliment, h• the embryo tranaplanted to her slater • • • SPECIAL • • "Country Corner'' The roots, music and function of Contra Dance as a aoclal ritual . • ~ AFTERNOON '~I()) SECRETS Of 1818 • THAT'S CAT • "Krlapy Kat Konea" • SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON --:--"The Weak.at Link" D MOVIE ** "F.Jylng wdd" (1'41) Leo Gon~ey. Bobby .Jordan. TN Bowery boye elq>C)M sabot91n ~ In "1 aircraft ~-(1 ty., 30 "*'·~ • OUTER UMfTS • "o .e .t.T." • a FAENCH CHEF ! •'S•Mte NlcolM., (~J 1aao. <I> FAT Al.BERT ARt8HOW MOVIE • "Rodan" (1957) KenJI • Sawara, Yuml Shirakawa. • ~(tlttletorto ~Ing creatur" are arOUMd from the dfl)tha of the , eerttt. (1 hr., 30 nm.) f M0080UM> • ' Pete and the squad try to clear ' ' •,Young lndlan ta!Mft accused ot n#'dertncr • man In ' desen" '°"""· . a , PAlfllt WITH NANCY 1:008 RAZZMATAZZ I Protnel ot: The Slpott Bl'vthetl c~ 1s. 14 and 9) wno .;.. prof.....,nal auto datedeYlls; BrdadWay star Staph.anle Miiis; ·&ht Sig~ Ctrcua per1orm-..._ 9 AORJCULTUAI U.8.A:. "4:-H COIWMUhtty Pride" • 0 NCAA FOOTMU. Alabwna va. LSU I 80UL:TMIN DOCUMENTARY SHOWCASe "Wortr, W~. WOrit" T'9Cee work h•blta from the anetent 41mplr• to the birth li'id groo.th ~labor. I WOUl.t>N'T SAYT~AT 1Ak~ OUR D1Nl'4ift FoR TONl<SMT, ~ INST.ANC~. , "rtt110US aUSIN«SI NMMITAT .... OT Tiie IOI__,..,._ IS dolflv Ml--------....-..--~! MU~\~ T IONAl EXE CUT I V E PUBLIC NO'l1CE' SEARCH OF ORANGE C<>YtfTY, t60 ______ .._...,;.. ___ ! N•wport '*'* Dr •• !>I.ii• 200• ....... _t ST. T •M•NT 01' AMMOONM .. n 8Htll, CA. nMo0 Of' uta (W Ste•• c. 6Uf'91t, * 9111 St.,........ l'ICTITIOUS•USl•aJSNAMa l1191on 6eetll, CA. 9244 11 Hit> bu>oneu •• condw<tH by.,.,,,. Tiie lollowln9 P•H•n• •vo ebendoned Ille llM OI tlw ltcllliWS 01¥10,..t b<t•lneun...,,.. ~te,,_C Bur9f' Cl.AN INDUSTRIES, Ul lh" •l•t..,,.nt w•• ltllkl wllll the PrOclutllonn Plet•, Newport IN.ell, Countv C.1.rk ot Ot..,O-Cou,,ay CHI No• C.lllornl•~ '·I~// , ... 704 Tll• Flclltlous Buslntn N•m• Publls,..o 0..*'0t to.•I O•llv Pilot, rtrerred to ttbo.,. w•s 1111<1 In Orene- Nov. J, 11, lt,U, IU7. PVBUC NOTICE l'ICfl"OUI autt ... 5S MAMaSTATaMaNT Tiie lollillMI penM II Mii ti..11• -·~M&ltlCAN E.UROP.EAH PVBIJC NOTICE IUl'alUC*COUltT~THa ST A Tl! Of' CAU l'Oll NI A ll'Olt TNaCOCHfTYOl'ottA ... a """'*. AMllNDMlttr TO NTITIO-l'Olt l'ltOaAT• Ot'WIU. .,,.0 l'Otl LaT· ITATaM&NTOl'A~P9NMaN~ Of' USEOI' l'l~lltOUJSUSlNHIHAMa l ht IOllO'"n• 1>4'SOllS ll•Yo •bendOMCI llM -ol U.. ll<til-• IMI """' N'l'W' SAFETY C°"TROl SYSTEMS . .. , Procuct•Cllll Pl~ ~t IHKll, (.ehlornl•.,.., CU.SSlfillD UGUUTIOMS ERRORS; AdverUnrs ahouid d1ecil their 1d~ dl1IY 6 ~rt t'rror!I lmmt>d1ately, THE DAILY f'ILOT 11a11mH IJ1bibty for lht Or•l In· nJl'TICl lnsenion only. CANCELLATIONS: When kllhnJI an ad bl! a~ to make a rl't'Ord of the Kll.L NUMtUo:R IUl.WI )IOU by vour ad taktt aa r~e1pl of your ran<'rllatlon. Tl'us kill numbt-r mu~t b<• pre•l'n tl"d by the advt>rtlser In rllle or• dl:1pute. CANCELLATION OR con 10'.CTI ON 0 ... Nt:w AD 1n: .. ·01t1-: RUNNING • Evl'ry effort 11 made to kill Of' corrttl a nl'w ad that hafi bttn ordert'd, but ~ cannot 111uar1rn ltt to do i.o unul the 1d h1, appt'drt'd In the peper. OIME A·LINF.AOS: TIM.~ a<h are Mnrtlv c~h in iidvaorl' b" mail or al any one of our of. (1~ NO l)Mne ordt'rs. Oe1dhnl': 3 p.m. f''ndav. CM111 Me~• nf· ll<'t fr IZ noon 1t 111 trJnrh olhrt:~. Tm: r>All.Y Pll.OT fl'Wl'Vl'~ lht• rllChl lo d""'r.v. t'<hl. rt•n,nr ur ri• t u "' n n v u d v ~ r 11 .... ·,.11 nt • .1nd to rh.in11t· 11~ n1k~ & n·11ul.1t1u11' v.1thout prior nolt<'t' CLASSIFIED MAii.iNG ADDRESS p 0 Roll 1500. Costa Mesa 92626 PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUll UJIH&U HAMlnATIMlHT ,,,. lot ........ '*'°" ,, OOifll ~·· .. ,,.,: _ 1 IC l.M. 711 Wot 111h Sl, UIO, !:, -~lld 2, ~y Me<w. CA t7t2f> K•ren Urwtle M"'roen,. )920 N•P'e• 'l•l•, NAl'ifS. CA. 90IGl Tnt' tit.~,,.., u lonclll<lecl l>Y ... in- hv1ou•I. lo. •rtn I.. Muroen lh1• .... _I .... flftd Wtlh lhe ou~lv Clttk .. Ot~ C.OVf'lv on Nov '•I'll/ 1'1012 Publl\ht-0 Or ... C.0.>I 0.oly P\101 •ov ), fl,""•• UI/ HU II P UBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUUUSIHISI HAM& STATIMINT Tl1eloll-jnvper-1>00l119bu>lnen .,: J .. I. wooo PAOOuca ... F•lr Orlve. Co•l• lllowo. CA '7626 John RK"-rd LO.brl<h, 1~1 (•II• Ptq..,.no, Ell oro, CA 926.JO 01J1~•:","'lneu b <ond<Klecl by en In J°"f' R. L..o<t«><tch Thh s\etemtM we• lllf'<I with ,.._ Counly Clerk Ill Or~ County Oft Oc· t-rH,1977 ,114* Publl•hecl O<elltr Cout O.lly Pllol 0 O<t.2',Nov.>,12,tt,1'1/ PUBLIC. NOTICE l'ICTITIOU• IUIOl~U HAM91T4Taf"!IHT The foll..,1"9 per-Is ...... ~. t ,,.,, ••• G.J.'I SPORH ¥ir0ftl.0, U1• • Ftot!MClf(,19;C:.. .. MeM.CA.'2•» • G¥'t J. Gt-. SI» P'te'_. Ctrde, c.t•~.CA.ma . l .. I IMN-IUGMllcltd l>y •n In· dtvlciu.tl, <Nf'yJ.Oloo Tllll ,.......,. •H 1119111 wttll tlle C-tW' ,..,...Of.,. CcM>tllr .. Hrt. l, ,.,, ,. .. ,., Pul>llWIM Of'"" OMJt Otlly Pltet. Nov. i, u. 1',», 1t71 •UH1 . PVBUC N&nCE D A I L y p I L 0 T c .J. A s s I F I E D . ..................... . G11111.. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OltAMGICOUMliY~ ~.~~~~_;,;..;~~ 11ST KB'T secan But word's outl ! BR. ! Ba, U yr old houae, on lge lot. 551,000. ~eterans' offers eocouraaect. J.C ....... Rltr. 540-5101 SHOP & COM, AR! Best buy, 3 bedrm, 2 ba + ram rm Well main· tained w many up· graded features. Only $71,950. Call now, S»Q30/IU-76H A1ent. Smart Oaytimers YOUR OWN HOME ON THE WATER Own or rent your own condomimum on the water. We have rentals availa· ble from $285 to $350 month, and units for s~le (~om $46,000 to $65,000. A menit~es include: Tennis courts, pools, Jacuzzis & gymnasium. It's , absolutely fabulous! ! Call us. i RANCH RIAi.TY 551-2000 • -' • ·r I 0 1l i1 b kl -t N te n p1 ta - B Tl ()( SU i>r b8 lat le :~f ,let J . I ~-macnab I lrvtna ~ realty FINl!R HOMES FROM $46.000 TO SI00,000 UDO TURMIMG IASIM Spacious, beautifully decorated townhome on the Bay, 30' living rm w/fireplace & views of Lido Bay. Master suite overlooks patio & foun· tain. Maids qtrs. Pier w/slip. $395,000. OPEN SAT l·S PM. 3322 VIA LIDO. <X-29) rRIME LOCATION Ride your bicycle to the beach from this very lovely 3 BR, 2 bath home. Lush gardens & beautiful street. $86,500. See for yourself! SAT 1-S PM. 21142 LOCKHAVEM, HUMTINGTOM IEACH. <X·30) IAYCUST Tastefully dee, 4 BR, 21h bath w/lg, f a.,mily rm. Great pool & entertain· iQ);t area. $169,500. OP SAT & SUN f.S PM. 1924 LHWARD. (X-31) MAKE YOUISEl.F AT HOME In this warm & inviting 3 Br, famUy rm charmer in Harbor View Hills. 1st time offered. Lg. sparkling pool set off by many stately trees & 2 covered patios for privacy & enter· taining. $18.5,000 incl. land. Belle Cha~e Lee 644-6200. <X-32) CAMEO HIGHLANDS Spectacular ocean view from this lovely 4 BR. 2 bath home w/vaulted ceilings in living rm. Secluded An· thony pool in low maintenance yard . $225,000. Donna Godshall 644-6200. <X ·33 > ELEGANT BA YFIOMT Relocating to Newport Beach ? Ac· customed to the best? Beautifully decorated 2 BR + den, 2 bath townhome w/spectacular water view & European flair. Pier & slip. $475,000. Lynne Valentine 644·6200. <X-34) NATURAL CANYON SEnlMG Very private New Bedford plan on lg. lot in Seaview w/canyon & night light view. Brand new -4 BRs, r amily rm, 2'h battls. $229,500 fee. Sandie Fix 644·6200. (X-35) llST Of THE IWFfS! Newport Neighborhood + value + privacy ... enjoy them all in this end· unit "V" plan. 3 BRs, 3 baths - newly painted -lg. patio w/BBQ - extra in$ulation -gar. door opener. ONL'Y $105,000! Joyce Edlund 6'2·8235. CX-36) OOVER SHOW IAYFttONI' Never again this much cu11tom • home on the bay in Npt. Bch ! 6 BRs; 2-story formal dining rm; magnificent French doors; brick garden entry & terrflce to the oay. Pjer & slip. $550,000 leasehold. Barbara Aune 642·823S. <X·38) SUP£R EASTIWFf ttQ._. Easy walk to schools. shopping, parks & tennis + short drive to beach , & frf:eways. Lovely 4 Br, formal dining & family rm home w/lg. patio & yard. Owner will make allow. for new C?pt. $154,500, Larry DY,er 642·8235. <X·39) • Serving CoslLJ Mesa -Ir vin~ H untmgton Ocac h·f~cwport B e;-ich UDO SOUD ' 3 Bedroom, 4 bath home on. an extra wide lot. Large entry courtyai:d w /beautiful fountain. Perfect guest, maid or in-law quarters over tlie garage (refrigerator & stove in· eluded) . .., . - JACOBS REALTY 67>.6670 1919 Newport llvd. corntr 30tll SPECTACULAR VllW HOME Endless harbor & ocean view plus twinkling hight lights. Elegant wood Roors complement the high ceilings. Marvelous entertaining or family home with landscaped patio pool. $4~~000 Fee. OPEN l·S I IAYCRIST Call to view this 4 bedroom, 2th bath, single story home in dis· tinctive area. Large yard w/fruit trees. Priced for its potential at $175,500. OPEN l·S 1719 SKYLAtllC PANORAMIC VIEWS ROM SPYGLASS Oeean. Channel Islands and night lites will be your ouUook from this sprawling single story with a future on Spyglass Hill. 4 Bdrms, Jacuzzi. $325,000. D4Vf DSON R£ALTl ~801 W (01HI Hwy NB 645·7575 3116 N1.."Wi,:ort Bl~d Nil 673·9060 I toS PM . $425,000 $215,000 $261,000 $163.'IOO $115,000 $175,tOO SH,910 BEST IN BLUFFS A YRONr P•MOAA .. C VIEW End un- l. 3 BR, 2~, ba., 1~ sq. ft.; top de- --eorator's home. Wrap-around patio, _..fourl,Yd entry. $205,000 w/land. 111 9PlH 1-5 2975 OUIDADA loff V di& Orol "')LUFFS IARGAIHS 1. Popular "X'. Plan. Wide greenbelts. 1850 Sq. ft .. 3 bdrm., Cam. rm .• form. din .. 212 baths, wrap arotind patio. $127,500. ~. Sharp 2 bdrm. 2 bath w/ A C. Split level, large deck. I.;ow lease, taxes. -$92,500. Both fabulous buys!! OPEM 1·5 428 VISTA ROMA Pl.1':.\.~!o; Lt-;T TllE ~XPERTh SHO"'-YOU THE \WAHi> \\-1:\Nl!\'U BLUFf''S HELEN B. DOWD REALTOR. IHC. ._,S 644-41'34. 1973 Tap Uster A Tap Sal- • "74 & '975 lunlMMlp ' HtwpGr+-W... l..rd of RMlton .• I MOW OR WMn Tb.Ua is the qu~tio that le'fating the potential •new•• b ~nt..-r. We a bu) now and get th~ best selec- ti(l at he bt~t prtf:c \\ e ha~Qi ~ ~at •Pt~f of tw . d one of Ulem can be y°%'r,s,. 1 )~ t. 111 -.1 • TURTLEIOCIC 3 BR. Jacuzzi. 1',ee l:lnd MIWPORT HACH 4 BR,FR,DR,P,J-DQver Shores · 3 , 2''.2BA. View-The Blufrs . 4 2• 2 BA, View. Newport Crest IRVIHI TIRIACI -CDM 4 B'R, 21'2 BA, FR; Pool · UHtVliSITY PAIK -llYIHI 2 BR. 2 BA Bradley TownhoUSe 2 BR, 2 BA Chancellor Plan #1 3 Bl\, ~ BA Princ4'ton Townhouse 3 BR, 2~ BA Ediilburgti Townhouse 3 BR, 21h BA'. ~fOf.o Townhouse • 4 BR, 21h BA Oxro.ta Townhouse 3 'h BA Cha ellor Plan #4 -I • ,, ) \ • WOOD11111111CH Warmington .. C ... p n ith 3 bedrooms & atrium. Vaalted ceilings & more in a park like seUlng. Only... . . $9',500. a • .. -....... o 44 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR t.: 1 ''q) ..... U• . r,. f1 ' .,.) / 1:>1 2 II & FAM RM or DEH 11M7 Santa Ana St .. L~una Sch , 494·8.551, 4m.1684 Sal/Sun 1·4 # 15 Sanderling (Deerfield) Irv. 552-JSal $88.000 Sat/Sun 1·5 4846 Winvalc (Calif llms) Irv. I 546 8640 $ii7,500 Sat/Sun 1·5 · •723Sunlana l>r .. Curonadcl Mar G44·!l>l3 $lli7 .soo Sal/Sun \1·5 •723Santana, lrv. Tt.•1T., <.:dM 644 -!{)13 $11J7.500 Sat/Sun 1-5 tH:H "()''Iowa St (Mesa Vl'rde)CM um ffi60 $61.500 Sal/Sun 1-5 • 12 Ara<.~ Court. N~·wport Beach 645-3474 $112.500 Sat1Sun 1·5 4!H5 Bruce Cn•secmt,L1doSnds,NB 645 W75 $135,000 Sun J-5 525 llazel Or .. Coronil dcl Mar 675'-~3 Sat/Sun 1:s 36Arboks (R<tnchoSan Jo..q) lrv 1s2-1414 " s"i 11-s •1963 Pl Dunlci~h.llVHomes, NB 641-fi'lOO Sat/Sun 1-5 ~137 E. Oc<.'•.in Bl. Bal Pcnuu;ula 631-1400 Sl63,500 Sat Sun 1·5 l HI 8 Port Abbt.•y. New port Beach fi4.t-n111 $1.J6,500 Sat Sun 1-4 2 IR+ GUEST 251 V1rg1ma. Eastsidt'. C.:M 546·41-ll ~11,900 Sat 1·5 ~HERITAGE REALTORS 1 ~(XdNTW.• <JMQ\11 L ~Hl\TI;; 2S(S ST6LUFF OR. NE~T BEACH, CA. M0-0020 IA YSHOIES EST IUY Held open today 12 to 4. 27te Cirele Drive. Completely r ecor .• 8 bdrma •• 2 baths, contempOtary design. Quiet inside location. R;duced for im- mediate sale. $155,SSO. Call for details, or stop by. P V CY Yo~ll enjoy the serenity o! ~ Blufts townhorne. Best dollar value in this prestige neighborhood. 3 Bdrms., 21h , baths. on wide greenbelt. Move.in c.:ond. Owner transferred.. Not leased land. $135,000 S250D rlo'A-n i:t•ts you into this Ian;•· :1 BR ranch home v.1th low interest. low paymC'nts. CALL "IOW' 898-7855 Wltela11 ll(AI ESTAH I ' I • /.Jn NlGEL QAll.EY 0. l\551:JCIAT[S ,500 lldnnRanch Vacant Readv to Sliow Mesa D'ef Jtlar b()me, ex· cellenl schools. Sprinkle,.. ftMt and re- a r, beaUliflll drapee, car~eta. • bedrooms. ---------------- ------~--- -----,...,, .......... ~~ .. ao1 ......, .. t.adl 1oco1l;;;;;;~;;;;;;~--~~~--'~~~~~~~1~~~~~=1 !!==~!!!!!!i!i!me!!!!e=~~~t _ ............ ~••N••••M•••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMIRlitl $4&00. --hr OMWAID PriTennisCt s;~bt another, & UPWAIU> 4 .._ + Pool need abort escrow. Up· Owner llquldaUon 3 hlprice-$9~,000 ~-~.~ Duple"'· $108,500 to • BdnD eatate wilb buae fiah poad, pr••t.l1e ~·-1•1 PM $145,000. All Al c:ond. •UDD1 cmtom tamUy rm. lborbood. flt 900. - Twow/oceao viewa. Call Spacious livin& rm., IW •• I fot more info, Brkr. w/"".hi\e brlek frplc & 1,Lrr!{ll: lfilA D• 759-0S58 slidins glass doora to ..n :;m PA.It( NOMI ---'------1 lush private garden11.·~~~~~~~~ 3BR 2 ............ *' /d' D "' ... DY DUPLEX! enhanced by sparlr.lln&I; ' .,._ uvwe w ln· ~ •-di · 1111 rm., c:ot.uftt1 kitchen, Jdeal owner's uoit. 3Br, custom pool "' ving -all in 1matt. 1tn1le· I 2ba &: ma. 2ba. Nearly board. Lob of ~ed brick S'"'8 IUYU sloc7 floor plan. La. lot 1 new. Receotly reduced to & wrought iron. Your Beaut 4 br, 3 ba Beacb w/doc nm. Acrou from $145,000 own private tennis court. house. New pool & spa. future ,..-tr. SlOt,000 • or Htwrl&jPoWRJty. l Mile to ocean. Only Quiet neighborhood. Im· lease furolahed at Call 496-5600 $00,000, unbelievable but mac landscps $119 500 ~50/llo. a FOXHILL --------•true. Call to see tor Bk.r.'B62·3'82orM3m7 · (X.e7) 1032 yourself. kurry! Won't NOAS$0Cl4TIOM last. CENTURY 21 ·····T·:·"··E··y··o··u··a····· WALK·lN848-8080 OPENHOUSESUNDAY OUH "' RU$TIC SIX BP!DRll-4 BATH lrviM I• ~It C:..l 4 CHOICE SAN MIGUB. t~Sant.a Veronica llb. ....., Ii ..... We have two 4 BR con· Sunda11PM·5PM. nM +hMIOor ...... dos-super location, Ocean atmosphere. Don't mias th~a huge, '----''Room for Met NesUed between mature huge home an prof ....--. BTcwo OPEii HOUSES On the wit.et Wltb tlUs neat 1 bedrcJom condo in beautiful Ora.ogetree. 47121...., •DHIAILD• Beautiflll 2 br + den paUo home. fully llP· 9raded. '-"u•b prof. landscaping & cu1tom pallol. Seduded cul·de· sac at. tBl,.900. 1S San· dertine. Opea Sat A Sua. .,,... beaut. decorated, assoc trees and high brick and neighborhood. Home or trell•r acceH • pool & clubhouse. lJnder wrought iron fencing also has bonws rm, din· pclfio covw • _._. 1 C:olut6 ... $70,000. Formal chandeber dine, ing rm, fam rm. library ia•dacepl•9· 41 O I *TOLLE* huge fam)ly w ~~rick & more. Call agt. ILACIFtMIX-611 inbeautirull>eetfield.A *REALTORS* fplc. Soaring ceilings 1_636-806~=:1:;..-:-;-;"~:-:-::-:~r-~~~~~~~~I 2 bedroom townbome Sep. billiard rm. Putio1 that has been blJhly UP· 0 kltchenservespoollaced Ope•s.t/S...11 AM UN IVERSITY Park &racled. *586-850 * in brick walh brick deck-2000 sq ft .s ,Br. lge fam Villa1e III Prioceton HEDUCEO $4,500. 2 Sty, 4 DR, 534~ assumable 23101 El Caballo 837-4839. Fomtain Valley I 034 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CONDO SPECIALIST mg Bch, CM, Ft Vly Touchstooe Realty 963·0867 Tiburon. Rar<' M11hbu. 2 hr, lorm11I dining, fam rm. pal10. Xlnl loc . !.56·6791 ing. Bold staircase to up-rm, lge fl.JlJJlhed bonus Townhouse. 1 aty, 3 br, 2 per bedrm. Easy to see. mt, lnnl dln'g, 'l\;rTaz~ ba, cathedral ceUin1s. BKRS36-9311. entry· C:!ilb ceil 11 •. in step down liv rm. Eat-in step dn liv rm, dressing kitch abuu.ets 2 patios PRICE REDUCED area .in .mstr ~drm. cntrl' air, li&bt. airy & 4 BR, H• Ba, cathedral ceramic Ule in k1tch & quiet Askin& $107 500 ceil liv-rm .w/cozr brick baths. Prof Inds cpd, including land. 552-7183" frplc. Spacious kitch W/ patio designed bY1---=------ oceanbreeze. Cust dee. Roger's nursery. Across BY OWNER-Calif. New crpts. Lovely from school & park. Homes. 3 Br, 2 ba, tam bckyrd. Super toe. Va· 186,900. 8221 Deauville rm w/frplc, din w/wet· cant, move in now & en· Or. Ph962·7539 bar. pool, gas bbq. joy holiday s~asoo. By '94,490. Open Sat & ~un owner. Nothing com -#I OFFICE noon-Spm. 4962 Lori.Ann. ~r5~~le at 572,900. IN ORANGE _SSZ_·llnl __ . ----- COUMTY $44.000 Hwnfintton leach 1040 LA CUESTA Century 21 All Walk-In Orangetrec Condo, I Br. ••••••••••••••••••••••• V.A. assumable ·under Realty, the leading C·21 Streams, lake, pool. tl!n --------.ij s20.ooo lo assume. Company in Orange nis. Owner/Bkr. 752-8870 NT Corner lot. $89,900 full County has just made WAJERfRO price. Call 848·1Sll, ask available a limited LONELY? for Dottie or Vicki R. number of openings for You won't be in this PROPERTY Agt. new or experienced &a· planned adult comm unl· -.:::.---------• sociates: ty, call us for further In· $151000 S--rfield Home No.1 in exceptionally ad formation on this l BR, OWNER D~~PERATE'. Highly upgraded 4br. vanced training pro· lakeside condominium. E5 1:14ba. Expensive panel· gram, (ln.addJtlon to the Tennls. jacuzzi, sauna, 'bNnd new. never lived ing. crpt'd gar, slab/· normal C·U tralnin&). comm. pool. Call today. in 1'WNHSE. Huge beam patio, 2 sty Excluaively avall•ble at MEWPORT·IRVIME bdrms. mast.er suite is a playhse. Close to bch, 2 A L.L W A L K · I N REALTORS knockout! l''ormal dUling blks to xlnt schl system. REALTY +step-down I Iv· rm · $87,000 by ownr. 536·1514 No.l in ~atio of brand 831-8586 Next to rlubhouse, pool & res, SJ6..S683ofc new "successful " as· _, tennis courts. cannot be -sociates in the shortest SMOKE. TREE·Ternfic replaced for otrercd Villa Paclfic, 3 br, 2\2 ba leogth oftime. end urut. on Greenbelt. pn~e cau now for de· Townhouse end unit. Nr No.l office location·right 2Br, 2Ba. many UP · t.;.uls 963-8961 beach. stores & schools. next door to H.B. main COLONIAL R.E. Tennis, pools, Jacuzzi. post office. Lou of walk· __:::....;_....;...__--'"-----------1 RV storage. $78,900. in&call·lnbusioess. ROMANTIC! BEACHWALK TOWNHOME ! With OCEAN VlEW & large sunny courtyard, this jmvate 2 bedroom. 2 bath end unit haa lush landsc•plng, golden ln- t er i o r " paneled ·fireplace. 0 W N E R . ANXIOUS-Submit of· ,fer! Asking $94,500. 968-54'30al\5orwknds. Discover wh)' we have ALLCOPrER the highest ratio ol 11uc· PLUMllMG ~~~::..brand new as· in thia newly decorated Joinawinnerl 38R "Blue Haven" pool SucceH breeds success. home. No.wax kitchen Century 21. All Walk-Jn floor-garage complete· Realty a most sougt.t ly Insulated. Thia b a after company. GOOD BUY. Owner anx· Call Mr. Merage or Mr . ....:__...;.:_.....,: _____ , ious, make oCr. Call now. Grant at 848-8080, for l.R.E.N., COURTSEV rurtbttlnforrnation . REAL ESTATE 962-7751. Condo. 3 BR. 1.9874 Ver· · 1--------1 mont. $55,500. FHA II .Quall ~ frSAUH8El flnaQc:in1 avail. Open Plaett No need to look further. Sat. 12·4. Curtis R.!:. p ttrllea _ DeUcioua pool + Jacunl. ....,962---·24_56 ___ ~--i rap7S2-1tio This home ia pure luxury '4oo OUltlUt Nt~ llACH with the look orsprlng ! 4 S76,500-4 Br. 2 ba. 7 yrs br, 2~ ba, famlly rm + old. Cul·de-sa.c. Boat ac· · BR•CH CO ... DO more• Sl27 950 cesa. Lra pat10. Xtra trg ~ " woleclis WANTED yard •. Nr all school~ & $2500 DOWM shopping,. Indlanapoha Coot Gee" .. bre-s & the You bring the elbow Bushard. IMS2 Harcourt _. -e .. groue. you aave $$. • br. c H 8 0 ...,., 7 ...... smell o! clean air eoes 1~ ba, great potential. r., . . wner .,.., .... "'-'· with this super sharp 2 Convenient Joe. $67,500 .. BR coodo, W/~.J>lay· CALIFORNIA groiulds & caretree )1fe PROPERTY Bean Weekender style. Offered at $53,900. EXCHANGE s40.:3''' 963-6739 557·7620 Steps ta Surf ;;w , a1Rl~~cE.r.:A1:3;,m' CUST~tl.!9TA G E1...::.;.;;;..:.:.;;.;_ _____ I _L .. _ D Plan Condo. 3 Br, 2YI Nestled on tree-lined ba, lam rm., din tl'll., street. Loaded wilh old bonus rm option, &IP· world ru•Ue charm! ' CONOOSPECIALIST Ht1Bch, Clll'-Ft Vly · Toucbitorte ueally 1raded. Open Sal/Sun. 1"66 Surfbreaker Ln. ....--------1 $1'18,800. Ph~ 538-UM Prestigious dowi\town11...:..~;;.;...:..;..;;...._..;.;._....__-i ~ ,Lake Park area. 3 BB, 1~ Ba, ~an kJtc:hen, lge dta; mqalve frplc:, oversl1td l.Ot. By owner. 1193,500, $38>1736 . 14961 Crystal Circle A Brookfield 4 bedroom home in auper Green· tree. Near private ..-;wim club&pool. Highly upgnded 2 bedroom condo indesl.rn· ble Orangetree. Owner will consider 103 second RAMCH l&ALTY Ht•2000 Owwtt-Sen Sell!! Price reducea $2000 + the tellers will pay buyers c:losin,g cost& up to~. Lovely 4 bedrm, 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• macnab I lrvlne 1981tg 0 ti .H H 0 U S ES SAt. 1·5 r .M. l IR + DEH Ir VIEW Squeaky clean townhome in Rancho San Joaquin. Incl. tennis mern· bership in Racquet Club of Irvine. 36 AUOU.S. <X..U> IMTHE UNCH $11,500 I .~· AxawPR OWNER WtLL FINANCE !or you: easy .. .. ~ .,J, I 110SN.C-Hwy.,tog.,._ 494-1177 :>1601 Co cast ttwy.,S.t.ogvna 499-4591 OPEN SUH. I ·5 3051 IBM. Dll Top oC W6rld 3 bdrm .. family rm. home; view- in& deck; larce fenced yard wtth decorative • pooUdountain. $112.~. MAURY STAUFFER SEA IJON REALTY ~N. Coast, Laauna 497.3)11 644-2212 H!WL Y LISTED 4 bedroom family home tn a qwet neaghborbood & close to schools. Pnced I ' ' n&ht at $138.000. • I ' . ,, I) PIUCE SL.ASHED below market for im· media le sale! Owner leav1ng area. Charmma 3 Bdrm., 2''> bath family home. Well located with many extras. $139,500. HORSES I.ii acre m Laauna Beach 2 Bdrm. & 2 bath ranch house. Enjoy the rustic serenflf PLUS room for your ,animals PLUS ex panslon. $117,500 EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR THE VILLAGE FAIRE MALL 11()( So. Coast Hwy. LA GUN A BEACH 497-2457 SepHomew/f llest colt $174,500. 2 Br. 3 Ba ... $183,000 Dplx, mpper ... $250,000. ,,,, DPtZbrCondo .. 8.500. r • V ALIHTIHE CO. '94.aSIS PLACEltLTY ~l\~~~·-9'--97---~~~~t For Sale AB Hgts 3 Br 2 Ba, end of quill street. Fantaslfc view1 . Red"ced Sl21,t5o t o $115,000. Ebb Tide .Real-ty. 6'-9'56 ATTENTION ADULTS!! Beamed cetling graces the spacious laving room ol Ulis warm & coiy 2 bedroom planned unit Truly immaculate & nicely landscaped . ... 500 '22> • fJ ···' t .. 1.1:t• ''" JM·•'•''• ti 13.ir P1.u.1 Cit.>\ llbt UJt J LJ88 SEE AMERICA'S MOST SUCCESSFUL NEW COMMUNITY SMASHING ·'· .. .... .:s ... '" ... ... ,, .. ... •• ,, ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• BEACH AREA-2 br, 2 ba, 1W11 Coa~b. lovely cond. 121,500. Acent ~- WALK TO BEACH AC?ro11 St I rom T.UNAN Chabho~ Ir pool, iwJlle COMIJH widex~· Jone. 5• Park. Priced to 1 el I. C•ll . .. tdY"can beat him to 960-5844 the cl» ll 1ou bW'I')' on Mes• del Mar G•HMLIAF row-l>!eus. C11le of Coat.a !5Star AdwtCommunlty ~·· bt9t iAveatment 1750 WhltUer Ave, C M. propert7 in prim• area. bu available two 20x4' Moblle Homes 540-9666 In Mauurw coQdil1on. Mu!lt see to •Ppreclate. Call btwn 9am·6prn 646-7'65 BAYSIDE VILLAGE Mobile Home 1 BR+ ~ OHBlel new kitchen, lie patio. ~ u -r COST A.. MISA N·~~~b~:~r;ol $172,500. TtfPLIX ---' -Yearly income $15,600. was tiaWd with broker at Acnocp for..&. 1200 Bil 4 bdrm. upper & 139K but they couldn 'l ••••••••••••••••••••••• bdrm. lower. Fal'ltasti fmd buyer wltb cash to 14. TTIN'nOH beach lnvNtment. Ju.s loen. I wiU Mil my1eU DIVllOPEIS lilted! Al\. 646-9891 direct for $129.900. Takea Rivenide County an Sun·i---------1 S26,400 down. Income nymead, approx 00 MEWPOllT HTS can excted $9SO per acres. Perfttt for mini· month. ranches. 5 Id Iles from I UMITS 317 UtUterslty Lake Perns. Costa M~a l.C. T/4.YLOlt CO. I SO/o DOWH 5'0-0ZW 955-0350 ~Jb~be~~ i::i:~~ EASTSIDI C.M • ---------1 Uke·l\N condttton. hi 2~ ACRES pnce $239,900. Will carry U~ down Owner wal trade. BEST UNIT BUY Darling hou.se on minl· IN AREA. C.ll !162·7788. ranch. SurTOunded by 60 beaut. trees. Fanta1>uc ~ K€Y view 3 Horse litalls, 2 VP.€ALTOP.Sft tack lockers. fenced, rro11s renced. won't laat TIUPLIX, C.M. AGT. Great Eastside loc, !7HJ 876-571'1 newer 3br, 2ba, frplc, yd . 522·2080 b ,. (2) 2 r. Iba, patios, enet. ,,. LANO 10 Acres & up gar. Sl65,000. ---------1---------1 : .. Level, underaround _!om Lee. Rllr,642-1603 'l)UICIC SAUll Lotlfors.M 2200 water, several parcels · 18 Units CQsta Mesa. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Priced right' 531 7366 DUPLEX Owner de•P4Snte for • .,.,. lOam-Bpm, SJo:RIOUS 2Bedroomunlt <onewith q'-ckaaie.LM60.000. Wil BUYERS ONLY! Owner entirely remodeled in-C81T)'2nd.&31·1340Bkr. ill,mustcaahout. tenor) with private , •-•W'f patios on desirable cor-_......_ · FINISHED LOTS OldTimbl,!CtOO ntr In EASTSIDE Sl~q!_s~, • .22S3 -~ ,; Site of Gol6 Rusb city COSTA MESA! Bo'b Pom"i>ua Ave, Cit. Six tots relJJ7 to'buiJd. ,",) • justoUYuba River. 29 A. have completely re· 546-3SS0,1C. Plans peril:Ut, w-.et ls timbered. Water, elec· modeled exterior, , in.ODeloloralL$4S,800 tnc1ty &c phone. Nr Grass landacaped, sprinklered. UNITS UNITS tose9.000.1>hooe Valley & Maryav1lle. MUSTSEE! 4·Plexes, lhl·pleit, seven· p•Cll!I~ CO•Sf Suitable for Camper ren· (>lex alt ia ceo\n ~ ~ A lal or homes. Reinecke · OraJ\le Co. Xbrt proper· • PROflllTJIS Realty, Placerv11le. fl IQyajf ~ ty. 1,10,12,33 unlta l 631-"400 .a..:...rtf 19UJ) 622·SSIO or Bunster Place general Pboenhc ana, al ~ AWJ ... Crfl!ly, <714) 646·~ Prapertl.. with spendable. C.ll avst' R3-13 unit Jot. Costa 63MOS1 M·F, s-5• or 1 1 M .... Prioclpala only. Large land parcels from ••oo ou..~sst~~' HACH with anawvtne service. 1600 Ac. to 3200 Ac. _"-"T'" _______ _ Finance avail. Mr. Lee NEW TRIPLEX, b 1~-1307 "PB11 .. RV 9111llt1', HB. bike t 514.CltlS Loaeed w /o.tk trees in ·.' the Cl~land National .. Forest. So. or Orange Co. Municipal water, gentle .~ rolline knolls for view :• sites. Owner will carry. ·, AGT. ••• ("114) 617·5691 oa~ •~ r-..oA •• ,an. a Br .. ~ Ba Close to beach and shop· ~n • Jlf 2 Ba ptn(l. 2 Yeart old. Newly s.nu:oeo. JU-28'7-7633 SI·~,,·-------­developed area of Hunt· '714-~ an 6 lngton Beacb. Pnce --------""1 NOWS£LL1NGI W".....,Tri .... Xff COSTAlltsA SO. COAST PLAZ.\. Sl.59,000to SIM,500 3 BdrM, 2 ba\b ''Ownera'' untt. flus twoJ Bdrm renta unite. Features co1npltte ---------1 carpet. drapes , Jaocf.scaQll\I. Fireplace <3 Bdrm). PaU01, deca &garaaes CompleUon Dec:.~. Open wlmd1 10 to 5 83SPaulannoAve ( 1 blk W. of Bristol). M.M. LaBorde, 'M;1t.or 511..,orMB.-. ,.1 .. lililiWl•iiil!!• .. red hilt __ ~52-1500 1 { ( .. associated BAOl<EP<;-Rfllt ~·)Q$ l0l\ VIit IJoltJLI• O,• I '•cd ,.__ Jjtn • yoa-ng career woman w /I little boy & risinc rent-looking for . aams ty;e 1al to share · house In NB. S40 ·8715 p.m. EXECUTIVE ROW, Inc. Preatlgtous office apace In tMwpott 8ch/Alrport er••· TeatWuf r~puon lob- by, telephone meuage aervfee, con· ference rooms, kltchen, beVer8f8, In· outgoJng min aervtce, dlotatlng a copy machlnlH, trevef conautt•nt•, com- p u t ertzed typesetting. Complete se•retartal service• evelfabl• as need•d. From 1290 per mo. c• C1141752· 7170 Lady or mature coapte lo ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!! sruu-.·borne in C:M. No - drinking. 642· 7154 ce letdal NEtro A ROOMMt\IJ'P.:'? CaltThe"Ptbf~sk>Jtats • 65 .. PER $9 FT you'veaeatAheardo~ 1617 WESTCLIFF·NB • ~adao.TV. AGT. 5'-H032 Time Mac.Press ----__ __... ~1-{J)An.s ~ 150 I Wntclff Dr • .....;..;..__._.......;.jl...._..,;o_..:.;..;;...-1 . • Newport Financial Ctr Su~enrwly Since 11rt1 Le 11h g Office Space 832-4134 Callon Site Manager (714) 642 3111 eitt 246 3 Br hse. CdM, $150 mo.1---------1 incl "'11. l\lalur~, ref'1$. 675-9197 aft 5P.M. San Clenuint.t. L&e 3Br hro hae. Utll pd. --Call Mr. How:inl 6'15·6101 S200/mo. 'Call AM ':11--~-------...1 4S8-ST4'7 ·- I " Ii t'• ,, I'll ' •I I • (> . ' I ,I l. I,.,. I I) . ··'' IJ Ill t I r: •••• .. . '·, COOK ,,,; 2·10PM Shift, . t , ' ' I " I •I J ,.,,' ' • 1: t l i "',,, . ''"'• •• , t t.y, ~ °'1'1'1i ''"")· • 1 nil> -+,..........,,..... __ --r:,-+,,-,:--~ I 10 •In' /, .• •t,." ,rli lt l· .ci;l ~ •) ''"'"" • t ~· " 11 <I ' ' J~,. • lit, • 'I(• ~'I·; '""''fl. ff.., '11 l \C.ti,, " ' '·~· ' • • • Data.~~ ·COMP "*O MIR Cb~le1t1iftC oppor. m an ex"nd1ng 1ys~m1 S h1 staJlaUon Cor a.n RPG II Hmrdware Salespe"°" Sdays incl'& Sunday. N evm. Crown Hardware. 3107 E. Coast Hwy, CdM. BefotelOAl'd. .. "\ l.. .. .. Kenmore washer & dryer -mo ror both. 759·90216 ELECTRIC RANGE Have a well trained Brit For sale, like nu. bar with Sac r l ric e : 4 piece lany Rec AKC Male 4 hl&hback stools. Call bedroom set. Perrect ---------~30 Would like to ma le .. s~k 963-8141 condition.~. 548-8762 h-119' SC. IOSS . ~-~P from litter Bedroom set: maple ~ Beine Transferred. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl11nless. Steel extra lone. bookcas rooms beautlfulEveryt~ng must lo!. ran1e/oven/s1nk, new U\W Apso, black1white head.board, dreu e furniture. Nrly new. Lv'a ror Hawaii, lak.inJ D11hma11lcr IV & AKC,shot.J. w/m1rror, ches t o Heritage, Thomasville. nothin&.LotlofoqanU· Dsbwshr, $2.SO. 644 7084 962·6S92 drawers. S27S 642·9384 RCA Best reasonable on qua · new furn applt. Macie Chef rerngerntor. 21.ia cu Ct, 110v & propane. $100. 673-2006 PUPPIES AKC Golden Retrievers 9'79·17l0 Small Hotpomt Refr111. Pit Bull Pugs UKC ADB While $85. Old fai.htonc.'<i Gd blood ltnes 7 Wks Bookcase Desk, nds Sl2S 3.S-60lbs 839.3043 work 1185 Top of the . -· ----1 Line Qn s1 Serta mat LllASAAPSO. t box 1prgs & frame t Female, 2 yrs, no papers. mos old $250. 67S 3357 $12S, SS9·5084 Redecoratin&: Cd dining rm & lh1na rm fuf111tur brid&e) lrvlM. 599-S26l must go Expanduble Speed Queen gru like new $100 640-8436 .......:.--------! dryer, DOBIE puppies. Cham·------ pion liired. All shots, ear Blue sectional sofa 14 ft cropped. 836-4664 down filled cushions Was~r & Dry~r Ultra deluxe md1. Almoet new, Free to You 1045 works perfect, every CY· ••••••••••••••••••••••• cle S2SO both. lo'JF refriJ Purebreed maJ~Shih Tzu, $2SO. Upright freezer 9 mos. Needs good home. Sl25. 751'"'488 162..SUS aft SP M Fr1g\da•r• Frostproof Rectinercha« $200. (2) 31 "xJJ " ot tomans on casters S90 ea Rerrig freeter, 17 cw.fl. Needs Upholattty Avocado, with wa1Tanty. 842~ 1---------Dt*uer with 2 ni1bt ROG 499-2000 Doublt bed w/Mtboard stands, sturdy but nef'd · llMos.oldMnleRl\rM\x Boi. 1pnn1s. mattres:.. refurn1sh1n1 . S30. COLD WesUnl(hou~ Dbl Doe. Good with children. Gd cond. $(S. 963 61.33 644-8581 ev~. oven eleC' .. alo\·e . $150. 54&-3456 1p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:=;:=;;;;;;;:;;;:;:,..=========:.;::::;:::;:::;::;:=~=:.:.;~=;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;:;;;::;I Cu dryer s:JS. 38" Blk. & .,..... ___ ........ ____ ,,.,. Brass fire a.creen $l0. Beaut. grey wht cat. 586-9505 ' female. Nds lovmg hm. 646-2378, 64l· 7665 Must sell 17 ru ft reln1. S LO VA 8 LE p--- mos old, 10 yrli warr C Id R t .~ PTP Y • S3SO 646-3.Sl.5 o en e v. "' trr, · finn Lo\·es kids &: spuce. Two Hotpoint bltn D W's, 548 JIMS xlnt cond. $l0 each "S -... -k--.-.--d--ll 673-9499orl·982·4214 n .. a ers n~e a a ----home. Smos. Blk & wh Frigidaire, near new fem. 81M·7842 _____ 11 refrig, 17 cu.fl. frostrree, Part P't -8 11 1 2 reverae doors $250 1 u · approx. · S48-484Z ' yrs old. Very gentle. sis 8165 aner J lam . GE Refrigerntor freezer, -white runi. good SlS. Grey striped male kitten, 548-'128s 6 wks, free to good home --SS4·5883afl6;30pm Washer, Kenmore. good ----•· m Traverse Dr. CM Female Germ. Shep., 6 • IS C.t P1aza> 540-3066 mos All shots, lo\•es · chUdren. 833-8148 aft S:OO .,., Shorthair pt Calico kit· ten. Healthy, lovin1, ,. • • :! _ .. _----.. • -... -·-• look • • see • • • l>ESK sw Three 1lrcss··~ '>10 :>:?O, will !!Cl! wporall'l~. 751 ~>52!J ---------.\LUM J;'l.U~l l'hnstrnJs lll'l'. I." S2 Gl'ntle lien--------- !"ass ,\crc,,,s s:a m1·-. .ind • • puplrs :!!'ir S:I S\.. .1tr'>, ll F: S T A U R A N T s1tt! h, ~· El• dnc i..1111.. n:fniicralor ~. Thtel' ... ha1 pl'111·1 ''.! :-.t 111f._,_I r omp11r1ment 'lta.inles~ .111i111.ils ;,.. ·~~ Ila!-. antl ... tt·• I stnk $25. Sw1n1llns;? s f1C11·s Jiit· ::.I p.1nh f.1un•I Sl5. Wall ~heel SI SI :.o l'(O\l"':O. '.:i5<' SI metal Siii. Bath thS· o11;. l)<il p~or $JO. J>4S-12fl6 8-1 C_Y_C_L_E_._m_n_n-'11_2_6_" u H \ 1 •LS lnosi· "l'a \l" 'iNOW ch•ins. large Stl cruiser. good coll(ijtion, . nhq tl' \\lute l!tiW. 7GL: Old bo4.lle<i 25c 7Sc, S-gt> need!> pedals SlO. Hlih I '.!J · .\IJli"'. Otlwr 1~Les bottles S2l'ach Books 50c chair, child"s folding $5 ,1111! ( o I 0 r!' s:i s 1 o. eacl\. Unit dryer, Sun· Blllb>' clotbeio, bl•nket r.11; :;1m beam ~ MllCer, Sun-25c·Sl. Buby'a bedsheeu -~am S2. RReading lamp SOc each Di per holder 1;,\RAt;E door op1·ner, rnm11lctc sis. B;irtx>lls • t'um1>kle SlO. Heavy du- Iv .cx1'rc1st.• slat1C houad ::.:!<!. Satu1cl<.1v after 6 l'm.\l. alt 1lav Sunclav <'ushunf\·;M7 1llo!ll -_ _,.4__....,.. __ •r l'lllL!il> l'Olnr T\" .SIS lllC'\ d1• 1 .1cl\ ~, Fin\ C'<' l 'n1.u11 111 'Pt'r1l l11t•\ cit!' S'.!5 l\S \\ itlt•rhMI I om plt'to• ':!5 t .. ir;Jl.ll Sl >lf'al I II•~ 11 l;i, I( 1• l S .') s11h•n1 ar. SS :o.t.•t. C B 1 .11$to S2$i 'l?ll-lhthfliruc her< S\& .. ?iff)r board SJ rertm~ rncktot S4 K tt:ick \ :\l r:id10 Sl5. Mookt.•asc s lL Wat11 pipe Sl O. \f11H1rlum ·53. ~lulflt.•r5 S'I Waring t•an opcnPr Ill ~nn<:lu1wd1J :)S. "1l<'h.:n <li.,hf'!I s1. Satin he<'t"I S5 4 m1rr11rs S5 1;.,,:39n $.5. Serti 'lun lamp S2<l. and lamp Sl each. Pel Hood and mot.or for aquarium ror small pets, range S5 Tapplht elec· 30" Iona u" high wooden tr1c ran.rt! $25, ~r·s with window, new StO creeper S7 National Geo· Fish aquarium 10 eat. graphi~. t962, es,n, 74 good condiHon S4. lbir S2.5-0 year Aluminum ice l'hc·'I J.l x22·· ~-Car- \ <i ,. ·S2 Old ~c'' 1 n·a marhin(• 11 .. ad S7 7 blade dulrh fan (nr GM ca11> -;.,-, 1; \l \\ 1pcr m1>tor SS 1'1c1 ure ft Jm1"> 50t' Goll club.., 7x· l.'ach c;1>lf halls lOc 2'\r 'ie\\ llerkt'le\ !'pm frL".'ih v.atl.'r pole S7 H anel &:J\\ H Rug rake Sl Cfta1~ Sl S.\. Bab\ bed s:; Singll' !it'd frumf. SJ S1ou"< '" .. drill !)20 Box or pipe f1tll11g oncl pill~" S5 Box of cement rin1~h tools GS i'cw men 'i. s1w 8 i;:olf !'ihQCs, v. hilt' S8 2 x:!' floures <'f!nt light ftxtnre S7 2524 Wettminster Ave, C\l, ror ~l Othet-s cht>aper :!l!l Po1rise1t1a. Cl>:.1. 675-099'~ _________ ,CHEVY pickup heal'y du ty rt-ar bumper SU, Briggs & Straton 3 h p en eint Sl2 , Chevy radiator Sl5; Dodge ollernator and regulator Sl5, parts to H~da 50 and S1*1.ukl 00, S\.120, f3.5 Ex· $25 FOtJ R dJnelte chairs SJ ea~h.548·6560·-~---~~• l'JNG PONO table l\25 names St. !JaOiks !Sc Oouble bed hoadboard s10. Dressen, e'\trJ lar_ge S25. loot J:imau:a ___ ....._ ____ _. parts to Ford·o-matlc ---------• ltd, CM. 546-7620 nrsc brake get up for Ford 525 pa(I' NunMroua 1>ic kup truck parts t~f0·186G Chevrolet & G~C15-~. Jt701''ord 8 ptckup truck bed S2.5 1!}G6 Chevrolet~· pickup b~ S2S.. <.."tlevrolet 8 hole t Chev right rro11t • speaker SS Hull wood fencing 2t · high SS Roll naul:ahyde, ClX.'03 color 56 .. wide. 2 yds long ~ Barbie Doll Town House S2. Grolier En cydopedias. Book or Knowled&:e 2Sc each. Medical examinalion lamp S25. Man·s cov· eralll. extra !urge S2. !tlen·s shirts 17 A·l Sl each. C.oteman 2 bumer campin8 i.tove SS. Rej velvet douulc heajboard s10 N~ ''Tee or Life" wall banalng S5 No Mar top end table So\, 2524 NC\\flOrt Blve J2'1, CM. Baldwin()reu, frultwood 11~· Glasspar, deep·V flnlah:Xlnt~nd. hull w/Merc. Cruiser uu1---:;--------1 '899. 644-8066 HP IJO drive, cur " f'tAMOS frOftl $650 trailer ~cld. 833-8906 RENTALSAVAJLABLE 32'0FFSHORERACER 1---.......,.,..-----1 TUNING A REPAIRING 2 new euardlan Chevy CAL 3f CltUISY ,_,., Pf.-o Shoppe 4058, reblt. velvet drives, Customised, latt, atlfr, 721W.19tb,CMS48·7272 new upper outdrlvea, dsl, whl, Onan, furl jib, props "ready to 10000! elec. wind, pilot, retrig., WurUtzer Spinet or1an. Notbln1 under SS0,000 dodger, 3 pages xtras. Maple fW&h. Or110 type can PILU ll ! Needs only pp, 875-05S8 U\>'8 auto. tone cooLrol, minor interior coruple-1---------1 aesiei-at.e pedal base & lion. Sell for $25,000 cash, CA'I'.ALINA 30, 4 moe ._,,. __ ....,.~......, ........ -.-... volume control. aenuine trade or whatever. 0 old. Diesel, 4 sails, must organ tone, full enaem· would llke working sell,$26.ll00.'94·7403 ble. Mutaacat$300. PP. _partnerw/allp. 548-UM LA.PW.ORTH Dui1n °'11557-3801 TIDIIJIDIIDIT TU' lbrgls SLOOP, M'. Race New Brllftd Name pianos 11'\l. 1la1.lli rigced, slPll 4, O/B & ex· 10·'7.ovcrcost. Y"C~s tras. R~t~uled. Beach Mu.sic Center "" "' v•---1740' Beach Blvd. ll.8 21 SptCruz '7S Tr·lrt----------1 IM7-8536 211 Pace SF eqpt SUM loafs. Sli,./ --------1 28SedCruz MustSell Docb f070 For Sale, Antique upright 38 Chns Trl·cab $82ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• pi.ano •/bench . good 2loc2servU cood. ~. can 646·5368 Dana Pt ~,.._.. NewportBcb Good Cond. 644·5862 loah. Sall ~~ .•...•.............••. YAMAHA ORGAN. Spinet. Will sa crifice. 840-7974 WAMT lESULTS7 Sell your boal Ulru SOUTHWESTHH Oalt Wurlitzer console YACHT SAUS piano. 1 yr old. Xlnt FUJl/HIWPOltT cond. $1,050. 640 &JS7 DEAL.as Plano. 1920'1 Chickering (714) 613·9211 player/1rand. 5'7".1---------1 '64()0. 1201 Somerset Ln, LET'S TR.ADI N.B. 642·4033, 28' Morion 01 loaded ....................... ~sh ReeWer, bar type. Elec. or manual. $350. • 6'2-262'7 TV ..... NR, StWeo 1091 ••••••••••••••••••••••• STEREO Sanaui Ir Sony. New in excess of $2,000. Mut aac. 511-4577 aft 6PM Zenith CJr console TV, RCA stereo console. SZSO/bstoCr. sse.1174 ... , ........ ....... WE WILL BUY . V olkswqgens rorSChes Mereecleslenz BMW's Autos,UMd Weekly Specials 1N Quafity Used Mercedes Benz Diesel Sale! ·ee 220 D (Ser.am ~Ellline $'1 '13 220 D <Set.431\ > '74 240 ~r.6370) '7s300C~r;'IS$4) $12,900 n'Sa&O D (Ser.6386 $10,800 '762400 <Ser.6359> $12,750 House of Imports .... , ........ ,•fl\' I• flrlH• •••• ,p1 ,,1l\•I •tUl'~\I ....__,~ger Miller Chevrolet '74 rLYMOUTH DUSTH·2 DOOl Automatic, radio heatet & dark brown exterior (210JSGI 5 199 '74 PONTIAC LE MANS WI.GOH Autom,t1c trans , power steering & au cond (960KHT) 52995 '74 FIAT 124 SrtDH ~ speed trans , radio, heater & dark Qlue ex- tenor (448LJV) 5 3295 '76 CHEVY 4•4 rtacur Cheyenne Loaded' Includes camper shell & I ow m1 t es(1B00833) s7495 '74FORD TOllHO WAC.OM Automatic p steering & windows. radio. heater. air cond rack(588KMC) s 1995 '77 CHEVY 'h TOH ricrur V8, power steering, standard trans, & tow miles (1f44841) 54495 s200,000 INVENT0RY TO CHOOSE FR()M • ALL MAKES and MODEbS • ...-~~~~~~~~-----~~~~~~~---"'-- stereo. A /C, $2500 ~dys tlOO lurtos, H•w '63Corva1r 110 High perf. '72 Cour. Sbell/bQet, eQJ. Compl. rebll. Nu AM /FM /cu1 .stereo, t.INS, nu brks, nu cptng new tlrea/brakee/bat- S72:5or best847·7041 ! tery I carpt t. suso. '78 Chev Van, Blue Boo~ S7s-Gl4 whal plus opllona "400 '73 LTD Wacon. lo milts, ~---------<n4>982·2808. full pwr,. MuataeU. '8S CHEVELLE Brown *1'715 548·2373 :rn w/auto, $900 or best'76 Granada1 allver, 2 dr, otr."4--0391 xlnt cona. Low ml. '75 ~L CAMINO, air, p /SJ Steno. SIJOO, 144-'1170 P/B, auto trana, 30,000U..CO.. tt45 ml, xlnt cond. $4595.••••••••••••••••••••••• 752-5337 '64 LlncoJn· new eng. & '77 Caprice St. Wgn. 3'lran1. Fud pwr. Soon a seat, ALL Pwr Red. classic. $595. 844·48411 rack, Sbarp! Se&95. Ph 76 MAii( IV 962-073l Fully loaded. Bronze ·10 Impala. Loaded. sisoo with uddle interior. Nancy dVll 54<>-lOl!e eve ·(8849). Very low mllea. 644-ml ,_ . $12tl '157 Chevelle. Auto. ;alr J ~~:c PS. Gd body, nd5 work $275. 9&2.a2AO 2000 E S..tSA s:i8·1000 '68 EL CAMINO l..o m1 . gd '77 Wark V Low" mi . Sell or cond. 11550 '76 SR consider low bOok trade. Manx Sports car $2500. _960-_me..,.....__,_ _____ ,. 648-3192 Met-cury 9950 '74 Malibu Classic 2·dr. ••••••••••••••••• •••••• V-tn top. Xlnt cond ORANGE COUNTY'S mi Ona ownr 846-2482 NEWIST C..__-.. 9 S LlNCOLN·MERCURY ... ,..... 92 DeaterahiplanowOPEN •••••••••••••••••••••• l977 Cordova. Fully RAY R.ADEIOI loaded. Take over lie LINCOLN·MERCURY 67S-324aaft 6PM 16-18 Auto Center Dr. --SD Fwy-Lake Forest exit '73 lmperlol LeBaron IRVINE mint com! Fully loaded U0.7000 prlced below book.•-----'----~• 552·7'38 ·ee Col. Pk. Stn Wan. C:O..t H.27 Loaded. P /S. P i B, •••••••••••••••••••••• :lir~i' A /C, P !Win. '74 Comet 4 dr 1tdan.•--------·1• IUdf, air coQdiUonill1. 72 COL rt< WGN cau 541.sw. eeM, F/pwr siaso c.r..th 993 844·9877. •••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Mereury Monterey. 1975 COIY!TT! XlnL c:ond. All xtras. T·TOP. F\Jlly eqwpped SUIOO. CalL...6i5·32IO, J.llcluding 1tereo, pwr i& Monarch •-dr air Jo windows 41 air cond. Low ml SUper c'.ond ~ or ~lea & In 1uperb condl 00· Mi-3!195 · Uool (408030) --· -------·· M.UIOFNlt Ml\SION 1111 hJ IMl'Ollis' ··-· t . ' ' .• ..... ~ 9912 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . ,,I. -. ,.,., -• H Mustan1 HO G . T . 831 11 48 4'i5·1704 ~ coupe, H.T .. P /S. P iB. '7l'Vette. T-top. 350. Auto, F1air, lo rt\I, must see! extru. xlnt cond. Mus Xlnt, 64611851 ~ 492 68M _ '67 VS Muatang. air cond, iS Corvette Maroon w wht aide walls, cherry beice lthr. 350, aut.o, to _CGM 11&-00. 644 7_084 __ 11• cond. Orta. ownr. f7.a5Q. '86 M1.11tan1. V8. auto, PS, Call (714) 168·0448 x Int cond $1500 C aah 1966 Corvett;-R';.dtte~ _CMG-_ia_is __ • _____ ,. new tires, new paint '74 Mach I, 41,000 mi. A/C, reblt 327, $5100/ofr P1S, atlck 1hin $2500 9'3-3414 t213> 875-S881or7S2 7272 c:o.g.. 9933 '68 Mustan~.' good cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• New llres, auto. AM / FM, '74 XR7, blue beauty & makeolfer. 960 14.92 flawless. t'ully eqwp'd, 84M947, 213-874-2928 .... ICJ '71 302 Eng. Air. PS/PB, to mi. $2200. !71 Cousar XR7. very SuPerb! 875-664-4 • cleait; stereo. air, auto. -'--------•• P1W, P seat, P/S. $4675. '65 Mu1tan1 FHtback. 544-S732 upd, Ht Pf 289. Rea. bp. Many xlras. $800. '68. Orig ownr. Nu pwr 640-0309 brk1. R /H. air. llUtO, _..;;;..._ ....... '-------11• P /S, v1n top . S898. '61Mut~S2450 67W208 Call 144-1654 Dodge 9931 a.... 9955 ...•••..........•.••... ········••j•••········· K"at Hll lt7t Dod10 •a O* .. poavertlbl•. Oiaraer S.E. Like now. ow'C\er, xlnt cond $2300, bltotr. 6"-2700 $1JOO/Offer. s.-aas --- - NANO NEW 1. -What carries 6 p~p~e comfortably? 2. What carr.ies 2 sets of golf clut>s & 3 suitcases? s:-What gtve-sgreat ec-onomy?~ 4. What Luxury car costs the same as a Chevy or Ford? Foctoty Sug .. 1ted Litt $1431.95 s1038.95 DISCOUNT (Stk 80491(S.r. 1029671 (;arpeting, lockable glove box. bright wheellip moldings. 302 CID V-8 engine, vinyl seat tnm. select-shift curise-o-matlc, wsw radial tires. power steering, power front disc brakes. front and rear bumper guards. AM radio, tinted glass-complete. dual sport mirrors. Ser. #167216,Stk. ;f1301 54499 incl. tax. lie. and all carrying charges, on approved credit. Annual percentage rate 18.33% s200 DOWN· S4 7. I 5 '"' MCMltll 106.9" Wheelbaa~. pow~r front disc brakes. bright front bUl'1'¥)er. 4 spe~ transmission. 1400 POJJnd capacity. wsw tires. Ser. JTR32502 Stk.1H168t