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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-09-15 - Orange Coast Pilot... - • ~ . I ,B" . ' • • • • I • I t • • Coast Students • • ' • • I • • ·Patrieia Hearst -~Mo.urn Death ' t • ' . • , Afraid of SLA Of WJD.g-walk.er ' MON't>AY AFJ'.ERNOON, $.EPT~~ER ,lS, 1975. :-·~ ~ aw.1 1 tEcn.-,..ar.t""MM• , , .J!Q,tty~: ' AfrQid.- Tabfuid LANTA!'fA, Fla. (UPI) - Analysis of fapes made by mJss.. Ing heiress Patty Hearst sbows she (1) Joined the Simbiooese Liberation Mmr &gainSt her will and (2) is afraid the SI.A will harm her if she comesJorward -if she is.still alive ~accordincto the National Enquirer. The weekly tabloid, in its Sept. 23 edition, said former in- telligence officer Charles McQuiston reached the con- clusion Miss Hearst is an inno- cent victim of the SLA after he ·analyzed tapes with a ••psychological stress evaluator." The evaluator, which decides on truth by chartin& stress pat- terns in the •olce and transl a Uh& the patterna intQ_ graphs, was used to analyze five tapes made by Miss Heant aft.er her abduc- tion in February, li74. In ·the tapes, .Miss Hearst called her parents "'Pigs" aud said she bad lolned the SLA, but the Enquirer repcu1. quoted llcQuiston as sayli>l ''her sup- posed coovanion -place un-' der extreme duress.•• . · "The· PSE tells me that Patty 'ltaa Wider' ex1racil'ailiU7 pns- sure and she was apPalled at the statements 1he was coerced into making,'' .he iaid. "~ F!IJ· . claims Patty bas changed into a fiery revolutionary, but that's bunk. She was merely reading from· a prepared script under command. -The tests of the tall<"' show that lllilS Hearst (1) Is terrified and fears abe will be ldlled. (2) sUIJ loves her )'arenls and (3) :was forced to participate ·in a bank robbeey .McQuiston.said. SJtUcer Marilou Meairs, 19, wbilcks volleyball during Saturday's Village 1'art>1 iii Laguna Beach. '.Che Main Beach.ac-tivi~ began 'l"ith a 7, a.Ill pancake breakfast and closed with 'fireworks at 8:30 p.m. ' • l I • ' ~ • Coon~~Jqr--G~rgoo Ini8Sunday :R~pes ' ~.. . : . •l ; ~ . NBW .YOll&.·(AP) -A. aplnllewould b;0011"8'7Sua· ~ c-fer ~ clay •111Cii11ins like .-...n. ". boo beeD arrested and clUrted 'liaid dete~tlve Lawrence with beiq a .s.mci.y..-,,. DoJ'..iJa. ''lfe Hid be WU glad rapiat who allqedly -keel 18 we bad fln'1!1 caught up with Bronx women since 1.t Nov· bim." ~Dlher,policeuy. • llaU of 01be {opes bail~..,· • looeph Scot!, *'. .-ernated , ~Ce'it the aame proJect, 'Moot SUIHlay alter 'Hll<e uid M '0£0.. ""•cU.Jollowed a.a pot. lona.ed a •omao 1-::~ teno abd ~ere betw-'1 and 11 h<o ,.., ""Jen. Th• bad a.m. on :;wldoYt. . been ataked out tollowlnc u. a1· Seotl .... hlrecl this ,.. ...... llCI< "1!1al' ni.hl. leoiOC' COW!Nlor at St. A11tha'1 ''We ........ tllll_llll_ .......,_.IDNanuet,N.Y. • • • • • OISO¥. • • • ose. _.ijack· • • Suspect ' . Killed SAN JOSE (UPH -A pojlce sbarpsbooter today sl¥>t to death a 24-year-old CllDlllAD who tried to hijack an empty Contlllental Airlines 727 j~t with four bo6tages. His death ended a f<M!r· hour rampage during which be stabbed a woman be tried torape in her home. The gunman, identi~ied by police as Fred Salomon of San Jose, began the houn ,of terror when be entered the apartment where the woman lived with her children late Sunday night and stabbed her in tbe heart. :rtae drama ended severtl hours later lrith a single shot in the head by the sharpshooter at San JOH Municipal Airport. With two of his hostages escaped and another wounded, SaJomon was cut down al be tried to use his re- maining prisoner 8S"" a shield to escape from the plane and about 25 surrounding p<ilice. •. r .: ; ~ ,; •' as es • reewa. Truck Spills Chemical I LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A truck spilled 150 gallons of two chemicals that combine to form a poisonous ga1 on the Hollywood Freeway durin1 the ru.VI hour to. day, tying up traffic for nearly an hour. Five fire company unit• washed down the chemiCals, muriatic acid and chlorine, and California Highway Patrolmen closed all lanes of traffic in both directiona and nearby surface streets. . Rush hour traffic came to a haJt in the bmy downtown sec- tion and cars backed up for more than a mile along the freeway. ~ The two chemicals, being de- livered for a swimming pool sup· ply company, combine to form phosgene, a gas used during World War I. It attacks the lungs and can cause death. , ''He had agreed to come out of the plane himself without bis weapon and with bis bands up,•• said police Lt. Gary l«'Dard. ''Then he emerged from the plane with the gun in his band and a hostage -an airport main· tenance man -in front ol him, using him as a shield at gunpaint. "One of our officers, about 50 feet away, shouted three times, Drop 7our weapon.' .Salomon Humington Teacher Mourned at Sclwol The spill occurred when the re- ar doors or a semi-t11Jck and trailer rig popped dpen and the liquid spilled onto the road· way. The driver, not immediate- ly identified, suffered chemical burM in attempting to close the truck doors to prevent more spillage. He was rushed lo a nearby <See POISON, Pa1e A.2) didn't answer. He began to l)Oil!t ~Y &OBE&T BAllKEJI the gun at the officer who was Ot•o.ttr'""-~ ., sbbuting to him. 'Mle officer Teacber·s aild students at begantorunaway. Butoneofour f Edison High School today sbar]llhooten with a teles«>pe mourned the death of Gonion sniper weapon fired the single McCollom, a. popular English shot from behind another .teacher •and &1mnMti.cs coach airline<, andSalomoncln>pped. • """!was killed in a wing.walking LedUard 1aid1bat )It one PoiJit · 8<Cld\"1.tin Reno Friday. two officer• of • group clooing in j The llCbool, which caned for a on the aircraft wtillesalomonwas· period Of silence tod87 in tribute <still in•ide ac'\ually climbed .to llt. llcCollom, ii planning IA> aboanfbutKrambleddown-cre1te a memorial scbolarsblp in the-anforeedthetwomala. hisname. _ l!':'~~thl'!"'l'l )loot~ to start ye=al -~~ ~~..:.; ,-::; 'P ane. . _.. . ~ Of cer1 ,said that after ,. ...--11111, -iitabbed tlie .oman be McColloiD was tmed Pl'lday ~ to san •-.HO.pital k14. Diaht when hil airplane dlliPed D&ped Dr. Franll Weifela1.i gwi-suddenly ~· 'C!rvahed him bead point, and ~ to Reicl-!Wlview finl Into the irow>d. • Airport, where lie ODCOlfDtered a JU.was 1uapended upolde clown <See WIACll. Pac~ Al) . from the top wine of the biPI-' a downdraft c&UMd tbe ~ pl-to oink and hit ~ '"""'1. Rocllyin London a~~·}':.~~·c~~~~ •. a· WNDON CAP) -Vice Prell· 1ecretar1 who bu tnown dent Nellon A. llocWeller at· )!eQollom 1inc1 h• and ber ri~ ID London toda1 for a IS. ' dau1hi1r attended pre1cllool hour sitto•t~tllewenlngof iot.U.. la Newport ~,'lllld ·a U.S. blcent....,ial eidllbllloo at t,o.lq"Eveeybocb liked Gardy." the British,._,._ · l "lie WU very """1 willUW· . . dents and teachers. His gym-nastics team loved him," she said. · "'At least he died doing something be loved,'' she added. Mrs. Edwards said that McCullom, a gymnastic expert.at Looi Beach State College, had been wing-walking for about two yeaks and he had performed the Hunt that was to cause his death several times without lncident. · ••ffe said it was safe although it had an element of danaer," Mrs. · 1Cllt7 Richardson, secretary in the En&lish Department said. •-n.at's what I like to do," Mrs . Ricbardlon said he told her . Mn. Richardson said she saw <See TEACHER, Pa1e AZ) Letter Bomb Told U>NDON CAP) -Tbe Coun· teu of Ona low. a central figure in an alleled spying operation .,alMt tbe lrilh Republican Arm~ two years aeo, was· -.ncted todq when a lotter bomb the waa oPenina exploded . Ip.lier l1an4a, 8cotiaod Yard said. Coast Weather Mostly cloudy skies Tuesda)' on the beach and clouds breaking by mid- day to hazy sunshine in- land. according to the weather service. Highs· 68 at the beaches to the upper 70s inland areas. INSIDE TODAY Orange CountJ1'• Sea : . Stouts, ba1ed in NftDJ)Ort • Beach,. are lftU going atrono M.,,Ue tMir lack of n«oriet~. S.• P.ail< 87. l ... x .. •• •• •r-11 .. .. .. .. ... • • •• _.._.. ---=-----=- .. ·.u .. ,,_, •• .... . .. .,, .. •• ' .. r • --• ---~------- ol. ti% DAILY PtLOT s • r I I I ' GueITillas_ Seize Egypti~ E assy l I I MADRID CUPll -Paltltlnlan· 1uerrillu aelted tbe EoJ>llan • •mbauf today and -ened to- <ill the ambessador and two E&ypliao diplomats uni••• Egypt renounces 'the interim i peace acreement with Israel by I tonight. i A &Pokes man for the guerrlllas 1 lold UPI by telephone that llve ! Palestine raiders barricaded t themselves ins ide the embassy and mined the bui I ding. ( "The moment someone opens i the door or a window, the whole I place will blow up,'' be said. • I I I I ! I j • • I 1 • Egyptian President Anwar ·l.nvolvementlntheattack. Sadat beld the Paleotine Ubera-Tbo cuerrillu ..Ued tbolr tion Orpalzatloa -it. leader, eommando ""11 ''Tbl GntUp tJl Ya11er Arafat, personally the Fallen Abdel Jader1 8l respooalble for tbe comequenceo · ~·" :! a hleotlalan ol tbe embaa11 raid, an E~ le8iler killed a &ob wllll. a official announced lo Cairo. i JOwiohcroupln 9'1. 1be f"'iclal '8idltbe Egyptian Tbe,y dema~ tbal !be Eal>'. leader warned be would take . tian peace delegaticm to Gmev& "declalve meuures" If the PLO lpve ~J!•lla.dtf bl' mi.d!>l&ht· and Anfal failed to ensure the wllhout 1IJPililg ~ ol tbe t~ed1ate release of the Egyp. interiu;i Sinai agree..ment tian ambassador and his aides. negotiated by secretary ~ Stste In Beirut a 1poke1mj.nl HenryA.KWinger. !or the PLO nd OUter mOJOr. Simultaneously wltb tbe raid Palestinian o ganlutlons denied oo tbe embassy, another band ol I 1 Put on a Happg Face I • The five contestants in the Miss Costa Mesa beauty queen competition put their best face forward in preparation for the judging Sunday at Fiesta de Costa Mesa. sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce. Left to right are Shertie Cloutier, 18, Cin- dy Bamberger. 18, Debbie Bamberger. 2Q, Cindy Gunn. 2Q, and Pamela Johnson, 19." I ' Fr..PageAJ ~POISON .•• hospital far treatment. A llre official 1ald the gas cl· ing1 to tbe ground and does not 3pread easily. -; City Police offi.cera at first • stopped can and pedestrians oa overpasses near the freeway but later: ·decided they were not in danger. • The sputbbound loes .d the freeway were o~ne<I at 8 :45 a.m. more than half an hour after '-•the spill, but the northbound ~ lanes remained clOled.. Firemen began evacuating buildings In the area, but the evacuation was determined not ·: necessary shortly afterwards, ·"and peraom were allowed to re- "" tunL " . " ~ ·F.--PapAJ 'iTEACHER. • ' 111 JlcCollom a few hours before lliadeatb. \· "I WU kiddin& him about his "'hunt-and-peck typing," she said ""I told bbn lie WAI getting belle; _,at it, .. &he recalls. He replied, she said, "Don'i teue me; I'll maaterilyet.'' :McCollom was graduated from ·Corona del Mar ln 1888.and bad a -de1ree from Cal State Long .. Beach. He wu married last year ., and beaan ~acbinc at Edison in )lep!A!mber of 1973. ·Loder Takes Over BUENOS AIRES, Argentina ; (UPI) -Senate leader ltalo •Luder baa taken over as • eanUker president of troubled • Arlentina, replacing an exba115t-a ed babel Peron for a month - e ondmaybelOD11er. • ORANGE COAST • DAILY PILOT Trucker Survives Mesa C·ar Cr sh • A Westminster man is in fair condition today with injuries suf- fered in Irvine Sunday when bis truck flipped 23 feet throuih the air and landed on the driver's side, pinning him in the wreck. . '" Vendor Killed Santa Ana police are huntinc today foi a ;unman who shot and killed a 82-year-old tee cream vendor during a holdup Sunday evening on a residential street. A police spokesman said GeorJe H. Denholm of Santa Ana was found draped over the steer- ing wheel of bis ice cream truck at about 9.p.m. near the intersec- tion of Shelton and Pine streeb. · A resident told inv.estigaton be heard a shot and ran out of bis home in time to see a young man wi"tb long dark hair and a mustache running from the scene. The witness told officen the man, who appeared to be carry-I ing 1l pistol, jumped into a late- model green sedan and drove away at high speed. / Stereo Gear Stolen A burglar broke into a Costa Mesa apartment shared by two roommates who were away at a party Saturdaf night and stole stereo sound equipment with a $500value. Richard F. Brown and Curt.is N. Johnson, of 799 W. Wilson St., told police Ibey lost sound com- panents in addltion to record albums and a clock radio. Yelling KUU . Health Hazard CIDCAGO CAP) -Screaming kids are more than a bother - Ibey may be a health hazard to themselves. Dr. Robert J. Toohill of the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, says children who shout, talk loudly and Incessantly or scream may develop nodules on the voe a~ cords. Ip a report in the October iaue of the Archives of Ototaryngology, published by the American Medical Association, Toohill says about 1 percent of all children develop vocal nodules, w~ch result in a hoarse, raspy voice. Day to Atone Jews ukbmte Yom Kippur Jews filled temples. and synagogues the world over today to mark Yom Klppur, the Day of Atone- ment. with fastina, self-evaluation and repent.ancie. The holiday, the moet ucred on the Hebrew calendar, began at sundown Sunday as cantors chant· eel the Kol Nldre, a traditional prayer beseeching God'• forgiveness for man's f alliblllty. . One Iona blast ot the sbolar, or ram's hom, ends theday·loal wonhiptblsevenlng. Many rabbla stressed In their sermons that the ,saered holiday was one or hope with the obligation to .ilQprove the hwnan condition. Rabbi Ronald B. Sobel, at Temple Emanu-El on Fifth Avenue, New York, stressed that the faith, re- lillion and heritage ot the Jewish people ''were blillt , neither oa the 'bswnption that life is "banal and absurd or human nature fallen and tragic," Al rpecial service& at Mount Sinai ~pita!, Rab- bi Joeepb ZelUJn said that the holiday w• a "re> minder to put oneeelf In tlle position ot the deprived, theblmgry and thoae'!'bosufferedln the world." • ._-to Arab stadema oec1IPie4 oll llekll and the lltotlonl•f:' 21111 tbe Jhdrl4 orn-"' l1't Arab Amerlcu tecbnlclw tbe i.eac-,·but tbeJ' lf:t-. SIMI 14 .. acemOlliun: i,. ~&Del-"' two ne -meat i.. eome - -.... Ibo a"1'9 -atra dor -k "-rlldleal• ID ille Mid. • • . Al'ab ...-Id, -....... -It 'J:a»t and Juul hdU•ed..tbe -~cnored tbe latorlflf of tbe, lnteritil peace accald Se!Jt.1, but PalestlnlfM and tbe cll..r -tbek c!All"adodl In -a are .tries -'1ordaa and Syria - -neao11at1nctermoe1nrapof• whoee tetltory larael allo oc-- puWnctbe occQn! lnloeft'ecL cupledllltbedl1 ••· It widens the 'buffer....., In tbe Tbe Kuwaiti, Iraqi, Jordanian Sinai Desert aepantlng the two and Algerian amb,.1adon en- armle1 and eall1 for Isr•eli tered t,be i ECJPtlu embauY wltbdrawalrl"rom tbe MiUa ad la!1Llln1 to necotlu -Ibo Gi<ll pas,,.. ud lb~ Abu lludeb !llidorL Ir Polleo with llelmell llld bUll«- proaf v-and • -pollce velllcles'tlaied tbe blllldinf and ~ tra!lic, entllblt liluce tr.me jam• la tbe ~ . 81t. lbree bootasel iDCJuded Jr.aplj.vl,Ambulador ..,.._ AW G!Wfar, ConlUI Mmamed 1!2-stWrel Meild. tlDd, -at--lache lfoltamed~.aJrllL , A spokesman for the "'""'1las told UPI by phone tbe PaJ..U- nllU!' freed sis Splllleb embuay employe1, amo.u1, them four ............ ' ,,.._ Pllfle .4J Co•gl egatlo• Slleiat HIJACK ••• security guard and demanded a 1mall plane and oilot. Police said that when Salomon. discovered oo plane was avalla .. ble. he took tbe guard hostage u well and drove shortly after mid- night to San Jose Municipal Airport, where he found two maintenance men preparing tbe _In for an early morrung fbght. Brandishing a .38 caliber re- volver, he took them hostage also and , ordered them to eet him a flight crew, a gun and ammuni.- tlon. Negoliations between Solomon and the airport control tower began, with a maintenance man relaying the hijacker's demand by radio, said assistant San Jose Police Chief Jay P.._t. Control tower workers immediately . notified police, who arrived at the scene within several minutes with sharpshooters -members of tbe Special Weapons and Tac- tical Team known as SWAT. During the ne1otiatioos, the . security auard and one of the maintenance men escaped while Solomon was diitracted, Propst said. 11te doctor was shot in the , leg when he tried to escape from the plane, police added. Officers said the negotiations were in pl"")Cess !Of' half an hour. They shot out the tires as the aircraft started to taxi down the runway "There waa no pouibility that the plane could have been fiown," said police U. Don Tru- jillo. Tbe·stabbing victim underwent iurgeey and her condition was described as critical. 'lb.e doctor, who also was unidentified, was in serious condition after surgeey. Police said names would be re- leased after relatives were ooWied.. Cranston T.Wbed? WASHINGTON (Ul'I) - Democratic National Chairman Robert S. Strauss 'has recom· mended that Sen. Alan Cranston <D-Calif.) head tbe key com- mittee that resolves party dis· pules at the 1976 Democratic Na- tional Convention. j Gay Pastor Ho~ • • 'CQriUng O.ut' T~tk ' ORANGE, Mass. CUPll - Some people aaid it took a lot of guU for the Rev. Ed.ward T. Hoq:en to unveil hi.a homoses.-' uality in a sermon ~ore parishioners. Others expresied tbeir protest simply and silently by staying away. The minister of Central Congregational Church, who an- nounced his resipatioo In June ·'to pursue new 'form• of ministry," said be bad been en- couraged by some to leave the parish quietly . Unlver1lty and Union Theological Seminary, prepared the congregation for bia "con:Ung out" sermon in a letter to all 250 parishioners. · · Last week, Houam, married and tbe father of tM> children, told church members be was a candidate for ·pastor of Metropolitan Community Chucrch in Boston, a gay affiliate of the Universal Fellowship of .Metropolitan Community Churches. · · Althouah the subject of · homosexuality is ·~·+e and difficult" for some, said lo an interview, ''It is issue more ahd more comm nlttes ud groups are begianingtoface. But Hougen, 38, thought ''it would be a real discount not to deal wltb them on this Issue" before leaving Oct. 1. Hougen, a graduate ol Harvard Nude Mat.ch In bis sermon Sunda.y, Haugen told tbe concreaatioo be felt "a ., .particular calllna to,._,. Jesus CIJrilt will\ and tbroueb·tbe fay conimunlty because I am gay_ . r ''Thia is inlorm·at100 about , myself that1n tbe past l have felt free to share oply witb my family { 'Forfeited' CHICAGO CAiiJ~­ Gorgeous George woWd have blushed and .Dick tbe Bruiser wou\,.d h8ve sneered had tb<11c!-. the wreallinc card. ..i'l·1 • . . N"ma Hall, 21, who lips •• the scales at US pounds, was to wrestle Roderick Height, six feet -Ziil pounds. To liven up ,the match a bit, the feature was going to be conducted in the nude. , . , Tbe bout was canceled, however, when~t an- nounced tbat he was a vice detective and arrested Miss Hall on a charge of prostitution. Police said the Adam and Eve musa1e parlor, where the bout waa .to take place, or- fers clients ''no-bolds barred'' wrestling with the nude woman of their ce, for·$50. and close friends .'' HO\lgent ordained in 1967 as a ·united Churc.11 of Cbrlst minister, said,. "Tbe only way a b~1tiJe environment can be t cbangediaifpeopleialeadenhlp rOlescomeout. •• The minister 1ald lie believes God ia working through the gay . community, ''gathering this re-- jected, 1cattered and friihlened group to help people discover God's love is all inclusive, not limited to those confonnlng to tbe 'American way oiUfe' Ideal.'' '' H:ou8ebo8tTragedy ' LAKE KAWEAH CAP) -The body of a Reedley woman who fell lnto Lake Kaweah while on a houseboat outing hlll been re- covered bt ihe Tulare County Sheriff 's divine team . Authorities said Marie Mise, 45 fell ~~a_!"d early SaturdaY mormag. • • Manners gives you ! up to a s1,soo tax deducii~n this year. •• ••. AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA" -TfiE INDIVIDUAL RE- TIREMENT ACCOUNT. Mariners Individual Retirement Account Is a personal tax-sheltered retlremen~ plan. "IRA" was devel· ope<!, bl!/ Congress to give you an effettflia_wiy to bu"d your own retire- ment fund. ·· You cao save aa much as $1500 or 15% of your wag<!$, whichever is less d ' ' an your savings will be a tax 1dedue>- tlo!' during your working year&. II your spOuse works, your combined" tax-sheltered savings can be as much as S30!lO per year. · Come In to Marlnent and start Your own Individual Retirement Acco~nt. You'll be saving tax dolfars now •nd bulldlng a mu~rlgMer future. For more lnf6rmatlon, come In or call any ane of our'convenlent locations • • I ' HERE'S HOW fAST YOUR MONEY GROWS fN A MARINERS "IRA •• ACCOUNT. lf'ld111ldua1 R•llrem•nl Accountl .,. Pr9HIHl'I um/rtf 7~1',pw JIN' wh.n ptl!ICed in•!.,...., C91tltica,. Your •nnu•l,y'-'d f• i°Mif'HHd to I big, I .Oii.,. whtn /nr.twst 11 ~ ro ,,,. "!"*''" 1N/1nee •11d eompovnd«J da lly. With a m••imun11 lndlWd~.' C011t1fb{Jtfo!I ol ''500 ~ Y"r; hw-e'• lto'lt ,,,.,, '"_,. "'''' ~: WITH TAX Wl™OUT EXTRA . SHELTERED TAX MONEY . ••• SHELTERED F"OM TAX AFml •LAN ....... DEFERRAt. . . ' c 5yrs. s 9,510 $ 8,730 $ 2,780 10yrs. 23,540 1s,m 7,790 • 21}'r9. 74,&IO 44,080 30,580 30yrs. 166,550 95,030 90,520 •A.bovit f!QV,. .. bned on 25'11. Income btldlll1 F9defal !"98\llMklni NQ\llN tutllil#'lt;ai ptnll!IM tor Nt'ty wlil'ldrew•I• troinoertltle.telilDCIOUnt1, 1 I • ,. l • ( • , . • J 1 l < I ' 1 l •. . Muscle Flexeni ~Comp8te NEW YOR!t (AP> -Body builders from acrma the nation plbered here over tbe WMlr tOma!Chm111clnforthe;cov;:;otec1::l- MF1 America •nd .llro World tiU.. 'lbe mlChty Utans will} gleam- ln1, buJ1ln1 blc-. •'"111DI cbeotl, blirly lbl11>1 and l>Oftrful onu moonted Iba Jlliltorm of fllllb!nl Ufbta touecute-of ~hand cr•ce tlUll drove lbe chetttns crowd ton..,.frfti!y. The ninth a,nnual ev•nt. •-e.t" by lbe World Bocly Buildln1 Guild. whlcll claims 20,000 members. drew about 2;000 spectators. some~ u much u $IJ a ... 1. Tbe crowd, moot1y male and young, roared ill approval of tbe spectacular torsos and booed those con· sidered Jen lban perfect heck to I : the barbeu.. There were more than 50 brawny contestants for the ! various events which also in- cluded lllr. Teen·Ase America ' and Mr. America Over40. • • • Destined for Ma.-. '· ''.l'lle Mara Land'!, seen for the flrst'ti.;,e m. the M~ lanamg configuration, Is the scientists working model and an exact ~eplica ot those aboard Vildng I and Vik-mg ll, both of which are en route to Mano , - ' • and s hollld land In 1976. Teain leader Leonard Clark txambies the. surface sampler designed to gather and. analyze soil samples. '"There's a pride in knowing that not every ma·n can have a body like thl1. But I bad to work my butt off to get it," said Don Ross, 28, a gym instructor at a beallb club In Il<otroit. Andy Marks· Milestone Like most of the Mr. America bopefuls, Ross alreldy bad a atrtnr of t!Ues, lnclud!Dg Mr. World and Mr. North America in tribute to his 50· lnch chest, J.9. 50 f ean in Moviei for Newport'• Devine -.' • Inch arms, :rr ·inch thighs and •· 31-lnch waist on a 5-ll, 211-pound frame. · Ioterviews with a number of these herculean types backstage before the contest revealed that 1 ego, vanity and a desire to be big- ger and better than any other ·i man were among the motives for 1 such dedicated body transforma- tioo. "It's a healthful endeavor. It's nice to sculpt your body in an artistic manner,'' said Reg Lewis of Van Nuys, Calif., a con- tender for Mr. World and star of such films like ''Son of Hercules.,. While other men sit • around and watch bad 1V shows, I'm doing something worthwhile.•• : As for body building's still mini~al acceptance as a. spec- J tator sport. Boyer €oe of • Lafayette, La., who captured the Mr. World t!Ue, explained-: "Peo- ple can't identify with it as they, can with .basketball or b~au, <: TheY just see lbe end product up ' on stage. They don't know the , years I spent in training ... · Police Chief . :, SmokesPot GAINESVILLE, F1a. (AP)- T he head of a police academy in North Florida says he smokes marij uana 8nd would like it legalized for home use. But be admits his stand may cost him his job. ''It's just a pleasurable ex- perience that l and everybody else ought to be ·able to enjoy if they want to,'' said Bob Phillips, .coordinator of Santa Fe Com- : munity College 's Police f Academy. Phillips, 39, has participated in i training many policeofficen; in a i 14-county area the past three ~ years and bas been in law en· forcement for 1S years. .c · Phillips calls himself a re- 't formed alcoholic. I, B~!~~ ."I never Won an Oscar, but I've lent mooey 19 a l'ot ol guys who did . • . I 11ever ·starred in pie· tw'es; 1 was always the second man lhrou1h the door. -"I never got the credit when a picture was a hit. But 1 never got blamed for all the crap I 'was in, either." Andy Devine was reminiscing about his movie career, which never brought him star .billing, but provided two geoei-aUons with a vast amount of wholesome enterta.i.Qment . The career still goes ob. This montJi 'be fayed a cameo role in the wild new c .omedy , ··won Ton Ton, The Doc Who Saved Hollywood!·· · A n d y l\9J:~••Y• a priest who ad- .ministers last rites before DSVINE the capine 8C· loris sent to the gas.chamber. The :reol&qD for Andy's reflec- t.ton was twofo}4: he is marking his 5Qth year in.films, more or less, and be is approachinJ his 7!Jlb birthday. Both events will be observed Oct. 7 at a Disneyland Hotel gala sponsored by the Orange County Press Club. (Tickets at $25 per couple are available through Joseph E Irvine, 17332 Irvine Blvd.., Suit~ c, Tustin.) ."GEi;, N0,0.DY:. ever gave n;ie ,_party before·:• said Andy, wbq· Jias lived for ye.a·rs in Newport Beach. "Bae~ in tl)e •old days Corole Lombard aod I used , to five ourselv,es a party, because her birthday .was Oct. 6· and mine was Oct. 7. We had.a real wingd- ing that lasted three days_•• Andy had come up lo town to see-sqme (riends, dff" at the airport. With him was his lovely wife, Dorothy, known to ever- yone as Dogie. They were married 42 years ago when be was 28 and she was ; "Aid to Ethiopia' • 18, prompting his pal, the late Slim Summerville, to label Andy "a dirty old man.'' Andy doeso 't show his 70 years. The sagebrush eyebrows are white, but his face· is pink and cherubic, and the eyes are clear and full of mischief. His belly still resembles St. Nick's, but it is not as round as it once was. "WHEN I WAS working with Roy Ro&ers and Dale Evans at Republic, I hit a high ol 358," he recalled. "Then inJ.957 when I found out I bad diabetes, I took off JOO pounds in 10 montM. Now I'm 238. And I haven't had any booze for 30 years. Lately I like a litUe beer now and then, maybe a glass of wine. That's all." Andy had a jolt a couple or years ago when tests proved that be had leukemia. ''.Bui it'a not: the bad kind," he added. "I can keep it under con- trol by watching my white blood count. My doctor says I might die of two or .. three other things before;Memia ie!S ine." He maintains a busy schedule. In recent years be has played all over tbe country in dinner theaters, appearing in such shows as "Never Too Late" and "Where Did We Go WronR?" TIDS YEAR HE did six weeks apiece in Seattle and El Paso, and he often schedules the dates to coincide with the hunting season where he appears. Born in Flagstaff, Ariz., Devine was a pro footballer, teJepbone lineman, lifeguard and news photographer before com- i.ag to Los Angeles in 1925 for his Anti-busing Rally LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPJ)-An antibusing group called indepen- dent taxpayers and parents, car- rying a coffin· draped with an American flag, held an orderly rally outside the federal building today to protest court-Ordered racial busing. l • . • ; Lag11nan Lauds Selassie jl By FREDERICK SCllOEMEllL °' ................. t · Haile Selassie ls remembered f )y many as the tyrannical . 111011arcb who stifled Ethiopia tor ,! more than half a century. .' Albert Floyd Tarr ol Laguna ~ Beach. a retired Seventh Day Ad· ,, venUst .missionary, bolds a dif-., rereot view. · :f Looting back on a 12-year .· triendship with the ·African ·j :nonarch, Tarr maintains that . i ielasale performed as much .1 IOOd as be could liven the con· Ethiopia to help educate its heckward people. "I remember one of my last visits to the palace in 1960. They were ioing to dedicate a hospital the next day. They. wanted to call it Haile Selassie Hospital. He said to rile, 'I want it called Mahatma Gandhi Hospilal. He is a man much greater than me.'' father's funeral. !4 '1 was walking down Hollywood Boufevard one day in 1925 or 1926, I forget which," he said. · "A young guy stopped his car and asked me if played fOOtbaU or basketbaJJ. ·Both,' I said. He said I might be able to get a job in pictures at Universal. I got in his car and went right out there." Andy started working in "The Collegians'' series, and he went from one movie to another until sound arrived in 1928. The studios sought acton with pear- shaped tones, and Andy's voice. which can resemble a longhorn cow in labor, didn •t qualify. NOT UNTIL .,The Spirit or Notre Dame" in 1931 were the comic possibilities or the Devine voice reallied. 'lbereafter he was one of he busiest actors in Hollywood, playing everything from Shakespeare -''Roni~ and Juliet" -to sex-and-sanc:t - "Sudan.'" "I've done some things l'm proud or. things like tbe original 'A Star Is Born' and 'Stagecoach,· "he said. ''I 've also done a lot of clinkers. I guess the worst was 'Yellowstone.· In that one a bunch or crooks were planning a bank.robbery in a cave under Old Faithful. The ammonia seeped in and when the sheriff arrived, the crooks were frozen stiff, with a coat or frost all over them.·· Andy appeared rrOm 1935 to 1940 on Jack Benny's radio show as Buck BennY's cheerful sidekick. Andy and Guy Madi5on starred in "Wild Bill Hickok" on television. Devine went solo with ''Andy's Gang," a children's show. "When I play dinner theaters, most of the crowd are what I call the 'young oldtimers,' " he said. ''They"re the ones from 25 to 40 who were brought up on Jingles and 'Andy's Gang.'·· Looking back on his 70 years, Andy reflected, "It has been a helluva life. I can't think o( anything I would want to change. Well, maybe I should have passed up 'Yellowstone.' •· • Sunday's ) Sermon 1 llepori•d ~ ·- ' • BJTOlll B•rl•J ~ ' , Eif e With God Beyond Potlu~ks -. • • • • • . (E:tlil<W'• Nol : TIU ii ... -Mondag /oalur• .. "1/llch Doilr PU« .-.porllT Tom Barl<JI Qjv<1 .a -·-or\" I •tnlOft /f'Offla church or~ ~Not rOlldorn tn the Doi.-J ,,, PU« cln:vlatfon.-. n. ~h.af» V1Ul lie It.. IUbl«t o/.4 • JeoturconSohudow'•chun:llp>g<.J I Manr ~Uans are oootent to tallow lbeir conaclencu. I In the ~en belief that they blve achieved a complete • relallQDahlp wllb God, lay speaker Gleon MJUer warned the _.1otlon SUnday at Plymouth Congregational Church, a N81'POrtBeach. · ~TaklnJ Ille pulpit as preacb~r for lbe day In lbe cilurc1';a 1 "La,-mep's SUnday," Miller told worshipers at lbe JRoicl 5tllel aancluary U..t "conscience ls sometbillg lbat .U be , shaped by other than good forces." · .< • Miller, a NewJ>Ort Beach \DS'!'ance executive, s~d ll' IOOK him ?:1 years from baptism to dlscove, lbal a true rP.•· tionahlp with God involved more than "poUuck suppen:, the special strvlces of Christmas and Easter and the mission oC acquiring wealth and materiaJ possessions." · Miller told tbe ~a:ation in a sermon that was not w\thoUt lts humor that his realiution of a true Christian~ lattolahip ovtllved "wheo I came olf my throne and put Jesus'Cbriat U\ere in my pla~- ''J bad been striving by deeds to &et God to accept me,•• he said. "But jt wasn't nece5$ary, God doesn't need money andddeds from us, hejuat wants to know that we accept him andtbatheloves ws. '' 0,fering a moving bibute to bis wife and family !Or their support in bis personal Christian crisis, MUler Ul'led the congregation to "keep God tuned in -far too many peo. pie are w.iltching him via a dirty television tube. · "God made the world but many Christians today don't beUeye that he has lbe power to help them with their persoeal problems, 1' tbe speaker said. • 1t.ay it on God,'' the Jay •peaker urged. ''Fellowship with God Is like a pot bellied stove-keep putting the coal in and you'll get all the warmth and comfort you need. ••1 was what I now call a stillborn €hristian but I became a newborn Christian because I learned that people, not things, are impartant ln God's economy,'' Miller said. "Put God first and he'll aiye you a joyful, excltina world," Miller said. "Make YQurself a human living sacrifice and remember while you do it the sacrifice made by his son." ' "~s .• Nursing Dome' This Beauty Queen Aged Gracefully • QUINCY, lll. (UPI) -"Bring on those girls, girls, girls," the chorus sang, and on came the beauty queens for inspection. A short time later, the judges made their decision and the new and nervous queen was crowned. "'I'm so happy, I'm so happy," a shaky · but smiling Elizabeth Barrett of Silvis, Ill., said as she was named "Ms. Nursing Home'' of Illinois. Mrs. Barrett is 90 years old. She received a diamond wristwatch ror her victory over seven contestants, all of whom won district contests before pro- ceeding to the state rmats. She will represent the state in a na- tional ''Ms . Nursing Home·· pageant in November. RtlllDers-up were Ethel Gatres. 87, Franklin G..rove, and Mary Love, 82, Quine)".· The pageant was Sp()nSOred by the Illinois Health Care Associa- tion, whiCh repres~nts some 300 nursing homes. Judging was based on chats the contestanls bad with five judges Friday night and Saturday. "It's hard to picture, but it was really a cool pageint, '' said David Gerig, director of educa- tion for the association. ''One purpose of the pageant is to project an elderly person in a very positive light," he said. "Here is something where an older person -and I mean really · old -has a chance to participate in something generally con- sidered for younger people." Gerig said a number of other ·states are holding similar con · 1 tests and a national ':Ms. Nursing Home'' will be picked by the Na- tional Health Care Association during its convention in Houston . The contestants will not rravet to the convention but will be judged on the basis of promo-- tional materials each state sends in on its winner, he said. ··1 think the Illinois candidates did a better job than Mlss America candidates,'' he said. "There was nothing phony about them . Sometimes wh en you watch these contests that dea f with the younger set you ge t the idea it's a put-on smile, a put-on comment. ''These pe opJ~ a re j ust themselves.·· (w1lh !his coupon) • ltrlinta of a backward ~ ! itbere opportunity ran low imd I ack of educaUon bll)I. I 5eluale, the oo-c.Ued Liem of 'l. Judall, was emperor ol Etblopla ·1 'rom 1918 to 1174, whEn he was > leposed from the throne by < '°""' army officers. He died ) \Uf. ZI after a year UDdet' llouse ) UTelt~ "The first time we met, I went to the palace •11!1 thanked him for the help be gave our mission work. Haile Selassie tw'ned to me and said, 'I should have gone 1to you and thanked you f ... what )'OU hive done for my people'," tarrsald. . Tarr•s frtendsbip with the monarch spanned the years from 1950 to 19S2 when Tarr was presi· dent of 111e· Seventh Day Adven- dst'i Northern European Con· ferente, wbtcb included Ethiopia on the African continenL ALL 'FABRICS ' Selassie always was a friend to < .he ml.ulooarles wlio operated ' 10Spltal1 and acboolsin Ethiopia, ) rarrrecaUed In an Interview. l In 1981, Selassie attended the :• ledlcatloo of a Seventh Day Ad· I 1entlst church lfl Addis Aheba. 1 !:thlopia'a coplta1'. lie aat oo his :--. l)feelally tudlported to ~Ile church from bis palace. He 10d dolla!<ld lbe land fot the 1 :b=b· , •'No one w11 .more int«ested. ,, ' l a the sermon than Halle Sel~I•," said Tarr. Thjltoplc of the-.rmon was brotbertiood. Tar:r aald that aa em~r, Selassie maintained. the utte of m\l114ter of educatkm, end did much to brlnc teacbeu to ~ Prior to his work in the North.em European Conference, Tarr served ln Poona, India, dlrecUna: Dlissionary wprk in lbat country. He was a frleod of bru and Gandhi. The South. African native con- cluded hla ministry as associate secretary of the qeneral Con· ference In Waehlniton, D.C. from 1962 to 11166. He retired to Lquna Beaclo In 1961. r . 1· <Except Sale 11ema1 Monday and Tueiday Only -Sept. I 5-16 J I ' - ' • • ' • . . -N DAILYPILOT Monday.September 15, 1975 • 'Seent ? •.Well,· I'~ Eve' Break Out Adjective~ SANDS OF TIME: You will be pleased to note as we approach the bicentennial that Santa Ana's Waffle House is now part of hi s· 1ory. The Waffle House has been -Placed on the National Register of Historical Places. If you are unfamiliar with the structure in question, you should be inCormed t hat the Waffle I-louse up there in the County Seat i:i not one of those spots where you can go order a quickie breakfast. It is one of those old· fashion residences with a lot of roo .foo hanging off the eaves. The name came from the firat owner, 01 ce rtain Dr . .,lowe Waffle. BEYOND THAT, you don 't re· \i1y need to know too much about the place since it is no~fficially h1:.torical. You may now refer to lit as the Hi storic Waffle }louse. Jn fac t. the odds are great that t'\'t>ry newspaper writer from now on will refer to it as the llis· :toric Waffle House. Historic is one of those words newspaper writers love. Oh, we have other favorite · words too. Take the sports writers, for example. In football, running backs are always swivel· hipped people with blazing speed. There has n ever been a run· niog back who was stiJf-hipped and s low as molasses in January. When a ponderous dcCensive lineman finall y catches the :;wivel·hipped running back with blazing speed, he dispatches the poor chap with a bone-crunching tack.le . He never just trips him. falls on him or knocks him down . He bone crunches the hapless I victim. Victims, too, are oft.en ~hapless. I AND SPEAKING of blazing,· 1news writers seldom write about ffires. They do cover lots or tblazes. Blazes often attack iparcbed brushlands. Never is the brushland just plain. It is always ~parched. When tbe blue gets through roaring across the !parched brushland, it has always blackened il. Horrors, it cou1d .never just simply destroy it or maybe burn it up. It blackens. -Wet highways, you will notice, are always raio·slicked, aod <flvorcees shapely. There has rr,ver been a lumpy divorcee. When some poor soul gets pped at by a foamy-mouthed g .. he fears rabies and must bmit himself to Lbe PainCul. asteur Treatment. Nobody in news bas ever gooe through Pasteur Treatment without ain. Louis Pasteur invented a of a lot of sufCering. ' Anyway, as the bicentennial 1Poves forward, you are going to ••d about a lot of historic Waces. Santa Ana bas its historic Waffle House and we along the ooasUine must catch up. I I WE'D BETl'ER START writ· ihg about our important geo- {rapby like the historic Balboa fUn 7.ooe, historic Laguna Beach wage treatment plant. historic an Clemente pedestrian un- erpass at the pier. historic. osta Mesa billboards, historic tington Beach Edison steam enerator add historic Mission iejo adobe -if we can find an ~~in Misalon Viejo. You can'just bei before it's all .!.;'.'we're golllg to bsve a lot of 4mri.onlcsonourbistory: I . ""'-' WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tiie -deKrlbed la • -and . •bowu lDto a morie bl"OU.lht CJtben fame and ~ mt for 23 yun It brou&ht lln. Cbl1s Sizemore only misuJ. In a W~oblloctcm Poat 111· tervlew, the 48-yeaN>ld.Faldax City, Va., hclwewife~for the Ont Ume tllat lhe -tile subject of tbe rum '"11>1 naree Faces ol Eve.'" Mll8.SIZEMOaEautrenfnm multiple personality. a rare farm of mental Ulneu wblcb Ille evm cont"ealed from her 46-year~ son uoUJ three yean 8'0-Mn. SJzemore •. who wu m. tel'Ylewed wltb ber poydiialrlst's blessln1. uld her _.iity is now back in control., but at various time• in her life sbe has menlfested 21 different personalities. · "I ask my friends if the)' ever saw the movie "The Three Faces of Eve.•" abe aald ... It they have. then I say, 'Well; I'm Eve."•• Actress Joanne Woodward won an academy award portraylag "Eve" in the movie, hued on a book by . Mn. Sizemore'• first psychiatrist. Her current psychlatrlat, Dr .. · Ull'1T.._.... MULTl-PBllSONALITY REVEALS 23-YEAR SECRET Hou•ewife Chria S.zemore Describes Her Illness Tony Taitos. said Mn. Sivmore felt strong enough to reveal her identity and ••it made a great de- al of difference to her to get rid or that deceit. You know, it made her feel very guilty bec111se of Painstaking Chore Repai:n to T~ 4 Months on SltuhedArt AMSTERDAM, The Netherlands (AP) -The director o( the Rijksmuseum says the damage that an apparently deranged man did to Rembrandt's "The Night Watch" can be repaired, but the restoration will take four months or longer. "The canvas is badly damaged," said Dr. P . J . Van Thiel after a burly, 38--year·old man repeatedly slashed the priceless 17th century canvas, one of the most famous paintings in the world . OFFICIALS SAID WILHEMUS de Rijk, a former teacher from a village 30 miles west of Amsterdam, entered the museum shortly after it opened Sunday afternoon. went directly to the spacious chamber where the ''The Night Watch" hangs and began slashing: at the lower center sec· tion o( the huge painting with a serrated bread knife. A guard grabbed his arm, but Rijk fought him of( and moved across the painting to the right, slashing a center section about.1seven feet wide more than a dozen times. Knife marks were more than two feet long, and a piece of canvas about 12 in- c bes by 2lh inches was ripped off. · Two bystanders and guards who rushed f n from other rooms helped t.6 overpower the man. Accord- ing to a guard, Rijk said he had been sent by the Lord to attack the painting. ''I was ordered to do it,'' he was quoted as say- ing.'' I had to do it." POLICE SAID HE had a historv of mental ill- ness and had taken tbe knlf• from 8n A....ierctam· restaurant where be bad~- He was held on a charge of wilful destruct.ion. It was the second knife attack in this century on. the p~inting. A jobless shoemaker protesUng his in· ability to find work slashed the painting belore World War I . . · . After the attack museum visitors poured through the chamber for more than an hour before the painting was screened and a notice posted: ''We regret that Rembrandt's Night Walch is noto.a ~ playduetowiJfuJdamage." _ _ · "The Night Watch" was completed 1111642 and shows ci vie guards twning out for duty with their captain and a lieutenant. The painting was first called "The Shooting Company d capt. Frans Ban· ning Cocq " but came to be known as '"The Night Watch'' after accumulated. layers of smote and grime darkened the orlglllal dayllglrt -lni. U was· cleaned in 1946-47, but the old name stuck. TWO OTHER ARTISTIC masterpieces - Michelan1elo's ''Pleta'' and Pablo Picasso's ''Guernica'' -have been attacked in recent years while on public display. In 1947 the Picasso painting wall sprayed with paint which was easily rel'Jl()Vecl But it took 10 months to restore Michelangelo's famous seulpture in St. Peter's Basilica after a man yelling ''I am Jesus Christ" attacked it witb abammerllllS72. NOW Plans 2nd Strike Proxmire's 'Award' To Navy,-Air force WASJUNGTON (UPI) - The National Organization for Women has asked all women to go on strike Oct. 29 to show the nattion how much it depends on them. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. ether required miUkm." The N•vy spokesman also said the Cblef of Naval Operations has ordered government aircraft not be used to provide· transportation to this year's Tailhook A .. oclatlon cmventlon. D.avlyn Jones, NOW coordinator of the National strike, said women across the nation are being asked not to work or spend any money on that day, and in· stead to participate in rallies. demonstra~ions, marches and other mass events in most major cities. . She predicted thousands of women would participate. A slµtllar .strike w .. held 1111971. William Proxmire, <D·Wis.). said today both the Navy and tbe Air Force squandered tax money to fly thousands of officers to private social gatherings at Las Vegas, Nev., this year and last. The Wisconsin Democrat gave his monthly ''Golden F1eece'' award to the Navy "for using 64 aircraft to fly 1,334 officers to the Hilton Hotel in Las Vegas· .• - during the height of the energy crisis" in 1974. A NAVY SPOKESMAN con- firmed that ••government airlift -was used" to fly officers to a con- vention but said the transport.a. tlon was provided through . normal training flights or otber ' flighta tbat "did not Interfere with the accomplishment of The group is a private or· ganization of active duty, re- serve and retired naval aviators and civilians interested in naval aviation. "The fligbto cost more than $191,000 in tax funds and sqwm- dered 347 ,000 gallons d fuel in tbe midst of the most severe energy crisis the nation bas ever faced,'' Proxmire said. HE SAID THE Air Force was runner-up for bis monthly ''awafd'' to the govenunent or- . ganization "offerine the -a:· [Frost Visits East Coast ample of *astillll or sqU8llderinl: tax funds.'" The Air Force got int.Othe com· petition, Proxmire said, because it~e~';;ght~i:i;r.::. ~.:.:! . I also known as the ""River Rats,'' used government aircraft to ffy · to a similar social gathering Ill Las Veges early this year. The senator aaid the General Accounting Office, an in· vestlgative arm ofCcx'tgress, was W1able to learn much about the Ait Force social gathering because the '"River Rats'' re. fUsed to give detalla for'W17 reasons.'' The Air Fotte ltoelf, PTcmnlre said, refused to provide Inform. tlon because the ''Riftr Bala" . are. private orconlsatkm. wbal it did to bor f amllJ." uyou DON'T ----detful It i. to 10 to bed at at.ht and know tblll lt will be -t&ot wUel up tbe· 11e:rt day, i' Jin. Siaemorw aald. ••I hllve IO mucb to be Ut•nkful for.•• The tint bom of m !idCefteld, s.c.. colltliy emplo111'• tbfte ~, !:emS::: = ponon.alil7 •ball••· '11 wu two ye.rs old. 11.1' motlier bad cut her mm bed17. U WU really bl.,..illlC· I U-Cbt she wu &Dini to die. She Nid 'Go aet· daddJ, • but I ran 09el' to the bed and stuck m:r bead unda a pillow. '1ben it .seemed a If I re- ceded lllto spa""' aod 1 could Saint ,,.lch thia llWe &lrl Co md *l my father. It wasn't me I wu watching.·• . Mrs. Sizemore t.hioJa( abe, d~ veloped the separate peraonalltlea as a saCet7 mecbanlom. . "I WAS EXPOSED to dellh very early,''. she said. ••1 re. member aeelnl( a man who had w-ned in a ditcll. and annlbor man who was cut in half by a MW at a lumber mill. And then •tlen 1 saw my mother's erm cut. I tboolht l>be was going to die, and 1rouldn'thandlell." . Dr. Tsitos, who bas treated Mn. Si.iemore for &everal yean. said some of Mrs. Siumore's per50naJities "bated my auta. beth Lauded by Pope VAnCAN'ClTY (AP) -Pope Paul VI said today he expects a ••second spring in the We of the Church in the land of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton'' as thousands of American Roman Catholics continued a week.Jong celebration of the canonization of tbefint U.S.-bornsaint. . Meetlag with some 90 U.S. cardinals, archbishops and bi!bops llDIOllg the nearly 20,000 Americans wbo came to Rome for Sund•y's ceremony Ill St. Peter's Square, the pontiff also urged ''untl.rlna: efforts'' ~anl tbe survival of1tbe U.S. parocblal school system begun by Mother Seton. The Pope later met with three American Episcopalian prelates. Rebels Nab also here to honor the new !aint: Elizabeth Ann seton was born in~ to an Episcopalian family in New York in 1774 but converted to" Catholicism as a youngwid6w. Speaking to the Catholic churchmen in English in the Apostolic Palace's Consistory Hall, the Pope said be shared and hope for the future with American churchmen. He added: "indeed, our hope for America Is ao great that we look forward in prayerful expectation, If God so wills, to a second spring in the life of the Church Ill tbe land of Saint Elizabeth Allll Seton. For we are convinced that the action of the Holy Spirit is ever intense in the midst of your people, stir- ring up new fruits of holiness and justice. and leading many to dis- cover that the message of the cross is truly the power of God.'' He also called on the bishops to do all they can to keep the fman- cially troubled U.S. Catholic 4 A .-schools going. JDencans· "We 1cnow the. difficulties 1n-w1ved Ill preset'Vlllg tbe catholic ADDIS ABABA, Ethklpla CAP> -Eritrean rebels tbreatmed to- day to kill four Americans tateli prisoner Ill northern Ethiopia 1J11o less tbe United Slalel atiopo sup. pl)'il!g arms to tbe Etbklplon gov· emment. Two of the Americans were lddnaped Saturday along with. sb: EtbiopillDB when raiders at- tacked the U.S. Kagnew com· municattons facility near Asmara, the capital of Eritrea province. The Pentagon said the Americans were Navy Elec .. ( INSHORt:) . tronlc Tech. 3.C. Thomas C. llowldowlcz of Jersey City, N.J., and Army Spec. 5 David Strickland of Orlando, F1a. Two other Americans, Steve Campbell of San Leandro, Calif., and Jim Harrell of Milwaukee. Wit., were kldnaped from Kagnew In July. Both were civiliad techlllclS11S and were re- ported seen by a Syrian photo- grapher last month Ill tbe bands of the rebels. 6ettt1 n...eat? ROME CAP) -The Rome apartment of J. Paul Getty ill was set ablaze today in what newspapers here said might be a M.afia·style warning to keep silent about bis July 1973 kidnap. ing. -Oetty, grandson of tbe American oil billionaire, bas been living la California since be was released in exchange for $2.8 million ransom on Dec. is. 1973. His Rome apartment has been emi>17 for months. Tripe& ........ BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) -Lebanese army troops killed a dorm lloslem mllitlomen t<lday Ill a flareup of religious warfare Jlear the embattled northern coastal city of Tripoli. ID Beirut, armored. cars and 8"CID'lt7 troopo cordoned off rival Mo1lem and Christian neiibbarboods to prevent a .,.. smnptlon of clubes that kl1Ied sb: per-. and wounded -otbon Sunday • P.•••,.JfeJten•aiw . . . PORTllOltESBY, ~Nrir Guin•• (AP) -Trumpets sounded Tbe Last Post •nd drums beat Retre•t •s the A-alian nae was 1011ered at dllll< t<lday for the last time Ill Papua New Gllille., ending 92 years of coloalaJ rule. Prince Charles, the heir to the · British throne; Australia's rov- emor 1enera1,_ Sir John Ke1'1'; Auatralhn Yrlme Mllllater Gcu&b Whluam and about e,ooo- ctber AustrallllDa and Papuans ,.... It tbe .....,mOllY la the foot· ball otadiun1 on the abcn of Pod )loreoby bubor. I schools and the uncertainties of the future,•• tbe Pope said. ''And yet we rely Oil the tielp or God and on your own i.ealous col· laboraliOll and untiring efforta 110 that the Catholic schools can con- tinue, despite grave obstacles, to fulfill their providential role at. the service of genuine Catholic education, and at the service of YOW' country.·• First-class Mail Pushes Airmail' Out ' ' ~ WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pl:lotal Service says that starting next month it will give at least as good service for a 10-cent stamp as it now 'does for a 13-cent airmail stamp. Under _tbe program that takes effect Oct. ll, first class mail will receive service ''equal to or bet· ter than airmail,'' the Postal Service said SUnday. ''For the mailing public, the practical eCCect o( the first-class improvement program is that domestic first-class pastage will purchase the level or service that previously only airmail could buy," a Postal Service aJ?DOUDCe4 mentsaid. J:.. Postal Service spokesman srud much of the Cirst-class mail destined, for distant addresses now is transported by air. After Oct. 11. the Postal Service will guar~tee that it will go by air, hesa11L This means that there no ~er Will be an advantage in paymg tbe extra three C10nts !Or an airmail stamp. The Postal Service ·bas dis- cussed upgrading first-class mail &ince February but pc>Stponed the change until after new postal rates were decided upon. • ·c i.:~~l QS • ._-tS n ·OnGennany lllUNICH, Germany CUPl)-About 2,700 fans burst into rotinds of frenzied applause to greet a stage perforniance by country singer John.Dy Cub. Cash and bis wife, June Carter, must have felt Ibey were singing back home in .Memphis, Tenn.,,so warm and apontaneoua wes the applause they received from the roarine crowd Ill the Congress Ball or lllunlcb'• G'eraian llluseum. Included OD bis Pl'OtP'UD were ''Cry Cry Cl)' '' i..11..i. ,rro.;, "Rldlnc' U.: Tollal,l.:'._ and ••Give My Lowe .nwe.'' ' . ' / r Malpractice Insurance Plan~ixM SAN PllANCISOO CAP) -The Calitorala liledlclll Aaotiallon • bu deoldec1 •1a1mt rorm1n1 • eomp11117 · to corry n>oli>r•cllce 1-ronCe (Ol' lla momben, but la ~the door open IOI' on lo· llll'OllCO bualoes1 •ellllnloter. The CJIA '• House al Delorota vated 12$, lo 108 Sund•:!' •colmt l~ an huuraoce Corilpany, ( . State J despite leodenhlp rocommenda- ticma that the meuure be •P- 11roved. Tho deloeotos did, bowe•er, •tree to lann. a· com- mittee to study the q-Uan. V-rttSehed • ' -. A1ll Boggle Benefit. .... llTI .. ' ''"9""'' SAN DIEGO (AP)-'lbe Coast Guard Bayt: It bas aebed a.74-foot yacht lo San Diego Harbor for carrying passengers without a license. Forty-one passengers were aboard the Sans Souci, a two- masted vessel owned by the Robert Overtree Corp. of Los Angeles, when it was seized Sun- day. Actress Doris Day and Hugh Hefner hold '.'Jane Doe" at a party in Holly....00 benefiting a group called Actors and Othe..,.. for Animals. The wine-tasting gathering was held at Playboy Mansion West. The pup was scheduled to go to the dog pound but was presented. to ·one of ·the p~ygoers. •-•• Aualdted DAVIS (AP) -A 21·year-old Woman who works as a book4 keeper in a Davis motel was criminally assaulted during a robbery in which about $100 was taken, officials rePort. Brown Vetoes Tax Hike on Alcohol Davis police officers declined to identify the victim. They said her assailant forced her to go with him when leaving the Voyager Inn in Davis early Sun- day. She was released in Vallejo about an hour later. ~ Pledk!ted OROVILLE CAP)._ The Oroville area, shaken last month ,-1\y an earthquake that measured ' 6~ on the Richter scale, has sunk about six inches in relation to the Sierras, says a federal study. The U.S. Geological Survey adds that there is a "rea'sooable probability'' or another earth- quake in the range of 4.5 to 5 on the Richter scale. Oltker l~eired LOS ANGELES (AP) -Los -Angeles Poiice Officer Vincent Leusch was reported near death today alter his patrol car was rammed at a roadblock by an al- legedly stOlen auto driven by · two youths. SACRAMENTO CAP) -A $35.5 million alcoholism treat· ment plan, to be financed by a tax increase on alcoholic beverages, has been vetoed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. In his veto message SUnday, Brqwn said the legislation looks like a general tax increase, and he has made a pledge to veto general tax \ncreases during his first year in office. Brown also said he disap- proves of the funds going into a single program. He added that there is little evidence the $27 million a year already being spent in the fight against alcoholism is doing any good. BUT HE PROMISED to scrutinize existing alcoholism programs next year, and expand them where warranted. The bill was the financial l'O" tion of an anti·alcohol1sm package by state Sen.· Arlen Gregorio, (D..Sao Mateo). . Both houses of the legis1ature . passed it despite heavy lobbying by the liquor industry. Brown's legislative lieutenant.S also op· posed it. S11vings & Love. Love~ A word with many meanings. And i among them Is sell..cfenfal ... puttfng .. those we lo\le ahead of ourselves. • Uke the parent who forgoes his own Immediate desires and Jnstead setS aside rrioney for his children's education. Or the person ·who saves money now to avoid the bitter wony that . his fa:mlly may experience when times are not ao goOd. In today's alRuent society, the simple act of saving can be really difficult. After all, there are so many attractive: things to buy. The attitude ·of "if It feels good, do It" becomes quite a temptation. That'• why the type of love that lnvolws sell-denial Is all the more meanlr)gful today .. In fact, we have: been thinking of.~hanging our name. How does this sound to you? -·"first federal Savings & Love." ' • Flhl Federal Savings of Santa MonlC(I ~MesaOffice Bakei & Harbor •1 \ Gregorio figured the tax in· crease at $34 million. He said it would work to about two cents on a six-pack of beer, seven cents on a quart or distilled spirits, and one-tilth cent on aliflhofwi~. The alcoholism research and rehabilitation program would have required detoxification cen-. ters in every county starting in 1979. The centers instead of the jails would receive the public drunks. They would also be open· to persons seeking help on a voluntary basis. · · As for the tax, Greaorio argued that it would be more like a shill or the burden or alcoholism from the general taxpayers to the heavy drinkers. He said the heavy drinkers, who are IS percent or the popula· tion, would pay 75 percent of the tax. BEFORE FINAL passage, the Wine lobby succeeded in amend· ing the bill to trim out $6 million in taxes to wine. But a similar ef- fort by the beer lobby failed. That would have cut another $15 million out or it. • ' • I ) ---. -Monc!!y.S!p!emo.r 15, ,.,,. OAILY"l..OT ,tf , Chavez Crying 'Foul' • • • SACRAMENTO (AP) -Cesar Cbave1• Ullited Farm Wol'k:en unlcmlsnat•IMinl~anD election victories lo a at the rate ill leade eel, and Ibey aro crylo1 i . Before the electlOlll began Sept. 5 under a new state law some Chavez 1upporten aald Ibey would win most ol the ele .. tiona. Chavez himself said hit un- ion would win the bulk of the elec- llons. . BUT CHAVEZ hu loot several bead-t~head election contests against the rival Teamsttts VD· ' ion ln lhe lirst full week of baJW. in1. In the latest AP tally, the Ul'W had won 24 elections oovertnc •bout 4,500 worken, while the Teamat.era bad 1cored 14 wins af. fectlnl some 4,000 worlcen • 'lbe Teamsters scorod a inajor .vlctOl'y,l"riday at the <ountry'a second lar1e1t lettuce ranch. Workers cut 880 . votes for the Teamsters at Bud Antle lo the Sallnu Valley. The UFW get 265 vol:ea, ( NEWSANAoLYSIS) Inc at Giumarra Vineyards in Delano, the nation'• larce~t vineyard, was undetermlned, although the Teamsi.n gathered the largest number ~votes and fa.IJed by 17 votes to &ain the at.olute majority required for an undisputed victory. • They got 747 votM to SOS fM the UFW, with "no union reprHenta· lkm'' gettin2 .CO. But there were 238 cballenced votes, il\Cludlni 180 from workers who struck when the UFW lost the G!umarra contract to the Teamsters in 1973. Another contested ballot which will carry much prestige for the winner 1s the election at E&J Gallo. the world's largest winery. · JN 1917, Gallo was one of the first big agriculture firms to sign with Chavez, but it switched to a Teamster contraet in 1173. Since then, the UFW has pushed a na - tionwide boycott against wines. ' In the Gallo ballollol, tlli Teamsters led by 22 votea lD Uii fint count, but there were • challen1ed ballots, Including cballen1es or ballots cast by 130 persons who walked out t"11P )'ears a.go in a Chavez.led atrilt and 3S security auards oppoMa . by I.be UFW.' • Barry Benneit. the state boal-\1 regional director in Fresno .. was asked hoW the GaJlo election would turn out and be answered : "U the Gallo security (Uard 'votes were allowed and all go ror the UFW, the total would be 261 for the U FW to :U9. for th' Teamsters.'' · BEFORE THE election• began. the UFW 's sl:ttngth had .slipped to 12 contracts: coverin• about 7 ,000 workers. The Teamsters had 375 eontract:I which they said covered about S0,000 workeri;. • UFW had earlier won by a wide margin at InterHarvest, the 1 large•t lettuce grower and only UFW lettuce contract before the •otlne. 'Quiet Weekend' Death Takes No Holidµy THE RESULT.of Fridly's YO(. Slaying Ends 'Sex' Ha111k OAKLAND (AP) -A 79-year-old man who believed his common-law wife was feeding him a sexual repressant bas been booked for investigation of murder in her death, police said today. ()(ficer1 said Deservee Sutton and Mable Horton · quarreJed over sex pro-• blems and Sutton accused· her or mixing saltpeter in his food for the lut lour years. Saltpeter was at one: time reputed to reduce sex~ uaJ drive. The woman then stormed out of the house in the company of an uniden· ti.fied neighbor, officers. said. They said she got to the porch when Sutton. partially crippled, alleged- Jy took aim from a chair in the bedroom and Cll'ecl a 20-gauge shotgun. Miss Horton was dead on arrival at Merrit Hospital. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -It WU jult another •llllllY. quiet weekend in the Los Angeles area, except that: 1. Francisco Martinez and Eugenio Quiroz, Mexican immf· grants and roommates, were found dead in the street two bloc,ks t apart, linked by a trail of blood. No motive. · 2. A nude girl between the age of 14 and 11 was dumped trom a speeding auto. She struck her face on a cui:bstone. She wa.s dead when Compton police arrived. 3. A 10-YEAR·OLD boy named David Polite was found dead in his bed by his mother, apparenUy strangled by a burglar. Tim • Scott, 11, was beaten with a two-by-four by the same intruder and given little chance to live. I 4. Larry Willis, 3>, was shot to death aft.er he aimed a rifie at police.officers who were trying to question his brother. 5. Jeffrey Clark, 20, was beaten to death by five youths e.ft,er •• he got into an argument over a fender-bender automobile accj .... 1 dent. . 1 1 6. Richard Gazelle, zr. was shot to death in a service station j on bia way to Las Vega aft.er he made insulting remarks to • ' group in another car. • 7. THE BODY or an unidenlilied man WU found •bot lo death out.side the Silver Dollar bar after an argument with • drinking partner. . 8. Ellen Shipley, 9', was found dead in her North Hollywood ., home, and authorities said an autopsy ·could show she waa .... 1 strangled. • 9.BillY Williams, 19 •. a department store clerk, was found • stabbed to death in his apartment. 1 1 10. Robert Sanchez, 36, apparenUy jumped to his death out of , t the Cyclone Racer roller couter ride at Oceanfront Amusement 1, Park while unaware thrill seeki:rs screamed in laughter and .• fright. . • SALE: Christian Dior ·pantyhose. ~ow thro:ugh October 4th 3/$7 Reg .. $3 pair Prepare for the Fall sea,son of fashion looks, coliect your favorite styles in -' Christian Dio~ parity hose at a savings. 4443 Diorissimo, ultra sheer sandalfoot* 4440 High-Rise, sandalfoot 4419 Control Top, sandalfoot *Style 4443 3;1so available in fashion : colors. Please state height and weight for correct fit. Order by mail or telephone. Hosiery SOlJTH COAST PLAZA • • • Bullock's South Coasc Plaza, San Diego freeway ac Bristol, Cosca.Mesa, 556-06.t ! . . . . ,. .. . • 1 --· .. 1 I ' -" ... \ • • " I Al : I .-Q:.~IL Y PILOT EDITORl.~L .l».~GE .. -· ·-··· -..,. ...... I ' ·- ~· ·· Facing Fuel Facts • j : A trip on any freeway makes It pl.ui; that Califor· I . nians are a long way from limiting their driving to lrlllY essential tripo. This, unfortun~tely, was one of the thtngs Presl· dent Ford had in nund tn vetoing a bill to extend price controls on domestic oll for six months . • . · Under the controls, which expired Sept. 1, some tiO percent of U.S.-produced oil could be sold at not niore than $5.25 a barrel. Compared with the current $13 price on imported oil, this does seem unrealistic. The administration argues strongly that freetng dqmes tic oil to seek a normal, market.established • price will speed up freeing us from our rapidly tn- c11easing, dangerous dependence on foreign oil. • • He>Wever, the original law stlJ.t called for Installa- tion of the device upon change of ownership of a vehl· _ cle. So Sen. John ft>JIDdale (D:Castro Valley) In· : troduced a bill, 511886, to make things fair and square by removing that requirement too. The bW was ap. proved by the Senate as an urgency measure on June 25, and sent to the Assembly. · There It landed tn the Transportation Commit-tee. Two hearings scheduled for August were delayed. The latest word Is that there'll be no further commit- tee action on the bill until Jan.uary, 1976. . Meanwhile everyone who sells ·a 1966-70 car has to tnstall the doubtful deV!ce before the Department of Motor Vehicles will process the traJlsfer. So move the wondroll!I wheels of government! Performance Rewards ! It seems clear that if we do continue our runaway oll_ consumption and don't increase domestic produc- ti,on, more and more of our oil for gasoline and heat- ijig inevitably will be high price foreign oil. So prices *'up anyway and we've done nothing to insure future supplies. _ · -· .... OranJl!!..Coun.\Y. supervisors have handed out pay ' Obviously, anything that hits us in the-\vaU.it,s: -rai,es If oi;i 10 ~ coWify 'II ~:r1:0p ad.' 11ard to accept. But the President's comp~e p4;,/ /jminis~o Ill i ~ Jlosal of a 39-month phase-out for oil pricj{ co9,1rol ' ~ '.An t ratif t e did increase lflakessense. -~ <~1 -;. ·their.Q. s '· tba fCo~tyAd.._ · ../) . \t. ~trativ NOx: Still.With u~··' ,:i-->i;re~•: o tn 1dua1 c · ·, ; ·· panty with ottier co\!Dtielt;-el\ to •e.waJ<i..""'"'1~~¥9- • Remember ~be grea(llap ovet:the.NOx (\ll\<1g de-• Derior,Panc~ r · • vice·earliefthis year? That) the $35 gadget oWilers of ' l·~!But it a ars t te w 1966-70 cars were sdppo$ecl to \'attach wlplin a ,' be~dallb . a few of eiJ!c5eas r specified ti'die lirp.it. ~ • !' · •• .; su.rvi · rs ed was tJiF sh~ of Thousanj)s ol.\))llners lll>illlieuliY i;ht!~.i,.1.11eir ·, · 111 'P . · ·'il v onths'.4Jlo.JljJho flS and had the thing "fimlll'\eif. B'ut ttll.r~was " a ona.sc.rii5l'l'tilii!>' . considerable question as to its effectiveness and its It was no comc1dence that most o t ose w o got -Dossibledamagingeffectoncarengines. raises also ranked highest in the ratings. Assuming l . Storms of protest finally persuaded the the ratin.g system is sound and fairly administered, t"gislature to lift the mandate. this seems a good way to· go. Strings Pulled for' Civil Service Jobs · Relating :Love and La"'s Work Against Pub&c Interest I I 1 WASHINGTON -Several pro-( J minent Members of Congress ' have brought pressure on theJACK ANDERSO~ Genera) Services Administration • • to violate the law and give pre-. . ferential treatment to their federal protection officer.'sjob in · friends for civil service.jobs. Wilkes·Barre, Pa. 'Neither Smith I The confidential investigative nor Kitchen, as it hapPened, files of the Ci vii Service Com· could pass the qualifications. But . hiission contain reports on 36 GSA produced a typical I Senators and 3~ ~ .btitr••11craUc solution;'both men ~Who alle&edly ·-;. "'1 ~ ~ ... ...:. ~w.et.e.offeredbetterjobs. wbedGSAto • , .:. , . · ind jobs for A., '· • •,, ;~ .~.1Q' ts:.u.fi explained.in a ~une eirfriends. _.. ' $, 1 '23.~~,,Dll9UIO which speili of Federal law!, )_ ·:_, 6ft!i ~ ~1tchen as "the· two . trictly pro-. mus 1 referials from Senator -ibits pre-· ,SC.OU'solflce.'' ere n t i a I Confides the memo: "We were reatmeht · in not able to qualify Mr. Smith for ivil service this 'position. We. therefore · · g. There established another position." s enough flex, _ _ Tb.us, be'was given a tailor-made Sexuality Tboqliu at Laree: ' .. Wh;t.t pro,niscuity never re- COllllzes, until it is too late, is th~ truth in Roaeostock-Huessy's saying, ''Sexuality lhrows no light upon love, but ooly through love can we learn to lDlderstand sexuality.'' Inlafuation is simply a state d. living beyond one's emotional in· coine. . . .N~g in art is more embar- raasing than the fullness of sin- cerity coupled with tbeacanUness or talent. · More men are welded togeth& ·by sharing a common error than by partaking In a common truth; · bility in the law to permit Mem-job, in blatant violation of the J>ers of Congress to endorse jot> law; at a recommended salary of pplicants. But the selection1 are $16,404. / .. : _._1 \· · ~, '"' . • • • uppo_,ed to be made whoil)< on In the case of KildWJ tile ',_, S .1 uNE i,.BAJtiilS erit, without political con· helpful folks Ill· GSA "qu;;ni,ed h ·1 , · ·•· , •. , ; ·· iderJltion. '· hi.mJlfldar.erea_dY.toolferbim,a ~ ..... '. ''' .. 1 ·" • GS· 9 as a i s.t :' n t bui Id in gs ~t IJ?oa.y be truth t~a~1'.it>erales the YET THE confidential files manager pos1t1on . . . (which) indiV1dual, but tt is myth that how that more than 300 people pays $10,470 i>er annum as com-coosolidates the mass. ot their jobs at GSA through pared to the $6,938 that the - litical favoritism . In fact, GSA federal protection job would No one is so self-critical as to eated a special unit to handle have paid.'' regard himself as ''ill-bred;'' ask e illegal patronage referrals: Former Rep. Louis Wyman (R· the biggest boor to describe his Although these violations ·are N.H..) now running for the Senate manners and he will reply, at arefully documented, it took .in New Hampshire, was also ac-most. "Earthy." ears for the Civil Service Com-tive in seeking GSA jobs for his ·ssion to get around to bringing politjcal pals. A s~ial job' w,as . barges against eight GSA of. iJJegally "created" for one of his tcials. But no actim bas been frien&,,John O'Malley, and GSA akeo against the members of aSsfined ''top pridrity" to the job ongress, whom the GSA application of Frank Schi8.ppa, liticalunitserved. ·th~ fa\her of Wyman's ad- The investigative rues finger ministrative assistant. ate Republican leader Hugh . To the oft-repeated statement these days, "You can't legislate people's feelings," one can only submit Samuel Johnson's retort: "It is not within our power to be· fond, but it is within our power to be kind.'' (And very much within our power to be just.) tronage seeker with more than· ed. the elder Schiappa from ob-Genuine thinking requires an· jobs secured. An investigative · taining eainful employment at internal dialog -one person ~ott air the most energetic. fU,. REALTH. finally prevent· port states that GSA main-GSA, but four other Wyman re-within us questioning, and ained ''a Senator ScQtl file" ferrals received . prefereDtial . 4D0ther answering; and if these _ eparate from other political re-·treatment. · are not clearly separated, then ferral files. Applicant after applicant, with what passes for tbinkiq ls mere- His recommendations· ap· .the right political connections,.· ly .a kind of mental solitaire. arently carried great weight. got priority over those who h8d Which one 8.lways wins by cheat- e friend ot Scott was awarded no pull .. A Job seeker recom-tne. top job, according to the report, mended by Sen. John Towtr (R· ven though "there were 14 peo-Tex.), for example, landed a le ahead of him on (the Civil · cushy, .$25,000-a-year post ''over 'ce ) register.'' a stronger candidate," accordinl: . tothe.files. , . · ANOTHER TIME, Sc<>tt wrote .Gl;A a)s.O' "l'(,ent to llreat· "Dear Bob" letter to then GSA lensths'' to arrange an $18,000..a- dministrator Robert Kunzig year.job for Barney Sanden, who ging that he "favorably con· hadthebacklngofH<KJSeSpeaker ider"' J . Ronald Smith for a job Carl Albert· (D-Okla.), Rep. Tom 1 a building manager in Steed (D·Okla.) and former Sen "ttaburgh. · · FredHarrls (D-Okla.).· &ck came a "Dear Hugb'' let-BefOre Gerald Ford moved from Kunzig. "You may be from Capitol Hill to the White ured, ''he wrote, ••that we will House, be teamed iu-with ex- everything possible to ex· Rep. Les Arends (R-W.) to seek a' le processing ~,41111!' ... ~~~S.\iO. b .. wl ent.'' I I'""~ L.~C. About the same ~1 • ~~~ pushed Harold '. • Dear . Glooiny Gus One of the most disconcerting aspects of parenthood is one morning bearing your own voice •<!dress your child precisely as ~parent odclressed YoU -and 1n a: tone you swore you would never us~ when you were young. No obsolete ritual retains treater force in the modem world than that of fwterals and burials, which are barbarous re- lics resented by most people who nevertheless trud1e dutiiully to lhae obsequies. IJ'h'e ·i:,11.et paper com· merclala ue 1etttn1 out of. When the amateur ra11a. It is because the iubtle bu eluded him; when the expert faila, It is because the obvlollll bas escaped • bla attenUon. (I saw a world dau bridle player io -.. re- cmtb' In 1 contract that 1111 tyro • '°'8ld" ba .. e m1de:, by 0 thinklng lllmoeU" Into need! ... complex- FOOTNOTll:: We IOUllht com· IQ>.) meot1 from all memben of· "' Ooftll'ea named In our itory, Moot bad not rellirnt!d from their .,...UCU, but aides ~ tbe Job .referr"11 were 1oetther I.II>· ..-l'Or llle1al. lri ~case. U.. aldoo 4-rlbed tbe lotten aa bond! . • Rl.B. ~-----"'.. • ''rout.lM. '' n.. diler dlHerence between. pbyalcot and mtilltal lllneu la lbal In the former cue lbe pa· llent (qet for treatment, but In 9'!a latt.., be (or she) lllUAlly -to~oomaotll«-• oflbel • • . .I Advertising and Ethics Legislation permitting price advertiting of eyeglasses bas been SUCCP.Ssfully bottled up, at least for this year. The measure, AB 1477, authored by. As- semblyman Terry Goggin, had gained approval in the lower house but went aground in the Senate Busi-· -1 · ness and Professions Committee. It sought to repeal pro- visions which specifically prohibit opti· ;I clans andf'>P-r· ' . tometrists from ad· vertising prices of-lenses and frames to remoYe the sanction which makes such advertising "unprofessional conduct'' and grounds for license revocation of the violator. ( EARL WATERS ) ' by those in their ranks. The medics make it unethical to ad· vertise by even so restrained a notice of one's availability as a ·'professional card" ad. ·The legal profession goes a step further and makes it against the law. But they make an excep- tion. in the case of a returning war veteran and permit him to ad· verti&e the openiilg of qn office. .. Such a relaxatlon .Pl'9Votces the question or why, tbeii:'slf6uld not a young lawyer emerging from school, or one mOving bis office or changing his affilj.ation, be granted the same right? THERE JS some validity tO the contention .that indiscreet ad- vertising of the huckstering type THE BILL was another in a ~as a deme~ning effect on the en· continuingonoJ¥,P.C~' -~v . . ~r~_profess1on . ~ut that hardly ing bans on hf~ 99 6 · , ,. ~·the outnght ban on all services. In tbe'v,Jy:· • C;:Op&UJ\lei;' .""'. :. , . -. mg. advocates, such 1.t'9! _ .'fJ'.!!~'.it:.~ oi .-:~~ is also probably some and serve only to work agam.sl ment iD. the view that advertis- the public and protect those en. ing of fees is downgrading to .tJie tren~hed . in the professions. professions. But the banning of Earlier _this re.ar they were sue-such advertising bas led to the cessf.ul. ~ g3:1n1og repe_al of laws cl.andestine scheduling of fees proh1b~t1.ng pharm~1st.s from Within the professions, a viola- advert1s1ng prescnpt,\ve drug tion of federal anti-trust laws as prices. -· · · ~ · · the legal profession recently The professiani have worked learned from a Supreme.Court loog and hard over the ye~ to ru1Jn1. bar the heralding or their wares While experience bas shown that one usually gels just about' what-one pays for, those who want to place their trust in a cut . . raie doctor or lawyer needn't t;M:_ deprived of .the opportunity· Of knowing the rees charged merely to protect the image ol the pro- fessions. Those who do 1boddy work l)iould be sW1pended or re- voked :for that reason and not because ~ey advertised. - JN ANY EVENT the Gogeln bill was aimed ·at tangible goods and not services. To paraphrase Gertrude Stein, a lens is a lens is a lens .... SQ, toll, a,r:e the eyeglass ' rram~ While op!omettists J>!o-. vide pirofessional semces for. 1!<hi•h they are entiUed to set fee1, tb.e price of lenses is another matter. Apparen.tly there is a great variance in prices charged· for eyegluses and the Goggin bill sought to· permit the consumer tQ "shop" by comparing adv'rtised prices. As for opticians, they merely do the technical 1Work of ftlling prescriptions as written by t&e doctors. Some have been knc:Mn to make rebates to the doctors for steeri'1C f.he business. Price ad· vertising might eliminate that kind of abuse. Having struck down California fair trade laws, the Legislature is on'the road to eliminate artificial Price support laws. It seems now a question of whether the Lelislature beats the courts to it, rather than a doubt as to such laws Jcitg continuing. ·He D<:ires ti:> Def end 'Profit' Wfttft•' UNeMf'loYM&ol Off'1Ca .. .... - • ( PAUL HARVE~ J cession, we would only be driving ourselves furtbec.intoit.'.' ...... ·-· About government coo.trots, he says, ''Government controls have been tried ever since 'Roman Emperior Diocletian - and not once did they work. Con- trojs, within a ip alter ol moDtbs, create shortages, distortions and inequities. Instead ol eliminating infiation they bottle it up so that pric!es ultimately explode. We are slill living with the ill effects c:A our last fling at controls.•• SIMON SAYS, "The free .~ar.ket is iniperfect, it has flaws j but I have seen the alternative and it is infinitely worse.'' On "government regulation of tndomq .r• Simon says: "The major American industries which are mOst regulated by gov- ernment -railroads, airlines and utiliUes -are In the W<nt trouble." Federol aid for failing busi- nesaes? Simon says, ''The right to &uc· c<ed presupposes a parallel rilht lo l...U . A failing COmJ?anY bu no claim to public support un1 ... that failure la due to government ~hualness bu outlived Ila usefulness Ill• public 1hould not he neeced of taxes to keep It "alive." . Or '1We have been burning the candle at both ends -consfuntng: more without producing more, using up our inheritance." . Sl!CRETAJtY SIMON says ··much of today's inflation "can be traced to the patterns of large government spending and tb.e ever-larger deficits accumulated during the past decade ... He says, .. The ethics of thrift and savings has been replaced by the ethics of instant pleasure, and we have turned to the modem state to satisfy not just our needs but our wants •• Simo.n says: ''Basically, I feel that all of us have a special responsibility to protect and pre- serve our system and turn over to our children a nation at least as stniog as lbe one we inherited." ·. OR.ANGE COAST DAILY PILOT o!JmN.Wnd,""""'1wl' Tlwmat Kfft1U, Edit« Barbera Krtfbtch, EdUorio:I Page Editor The editorial pa1e of the Dally Piiot seeks to Inform end lllmulate readers by presenting on tblt page diverse commentary on topics of interest by syndicat- ed ~umniatl and c1rt.oontsta, by pn>vidln,s • forum ror readen• views and by preamttng this newspaper's oplnlon1 ud Wus on current topic•. The edh«l1I .oplnloe\><>I the Dally l'llo\·_... only lfi tlie editorial colwnn If the top or the P•ae. Oplni0111 n· ........., by lh• c:oI•innbu and eirtoon:lsts'tftdlttter ~ are their own and no endOl'Hm:ent ol .lbelr Yiew• by tile l>aily P!IGl 'lllOllldbelnfernd. • liloada,y, ~1s. ms · . . . Sec.ret.ary Simon, in an in- tentew with such a SOl>histlcated publlcaUOn u Saturday !Uvtew will Jet himself say such un'. aopblatlcaled thln1s as .. Neither I ·men nor covern1;11ents c.an ao on ~~ beyond their means ln-drutely. '' ~ ~- • • -• . . J .................... MAYOR GIBBS (RIQHTl LEADS INTERNS M•rln• High Studenla.LAi9!11 •I Clly Hall City Interns . . . Leaniillg First Hand ' . Twl!illy Marina !figh· added City Ad. SchodJ seniors are learn-minis(rator Dave in1--about city 1ovem-. Rowlands and bis assis- ment ftom the inside this tant Bud Belsito have en-f~ 1d a new City Intern couraged the program. ProaT.yn. • , . . "l·ve been dr~amin• Th~ _f~ungsters spend about this kind of a clJW aboµtlinboureac'hmom-for 12 y'ears," Womer ing as unpaj.d employes added. "I am trying to in varlou• city hall de-show them (the stu- partmt:hts and attend a dents) there are special city government beailtiful opportunities seminar at Marif'lf once· working in city govern- every two weeks.· ment. · Social studies te;acber ' ' I c a n ' t b r i n g Art Wolner first·lried. the Con g re s s t o the class last spring, with classroom,·· he con- a bout 40 s.eniors tinued, '.'but I can take enrolled. It worked sue-the kids to city ball .• , cessfpl9'~ he .aiia, and The youngstePs re- students Wue tnvited ceive both social studies. back a;ain thla fal). and work experience . The senloo 1 r~ently credit for ,their in·· :re¢el~'\I. 'their Job 41· . ternship1 Womer,{laid. • si1nments,.··and,1 .Jere· ... rn edditfoD~lasl!ii>rinl _greeted' by Mayor•twoof<the seniors1..were Norm~ Glbba .wf\o .offer,O!l ~~maJ)ent,cit~" guided them on a tour of ball Jobs. The youngsters city fac!liUea. . · Will be. wotking in city Wolber said he is libraries, the fire de· i>artjc:ijlarly grate(ul for partm.ent ,. and. the . the helP of city depart· finAbc.e. parks and ment beads, who have recreation, 4dministra- taken. a special interest· tion and public works de- in the new class, and be partments. LU.Boyd Sauerkraut ' W .th G. ? I · lll. A chef of some r~wn says he wouldn't thµlk of serving sauerkraut that b&d not first beep,.slugged with.a jigger of,ain just!~ the ~."'the Juniper. He alao tosses m caraway · Sweet onion and apple sli~. as you ~t expect. Why be neglects to pour in half a cup of ci~er be£ore bringing it up to a full head of steam I do not know. ·SOME PHYSICAL CuLTUIOSTS of lenjtby experience insist that the playing of -"et billiards is .. ·-an exen:ise as bowling. THE PREMIER DRIDI COMPANY of Lon· don makes a Udy profit by exporting tom-toms to Nigeria .. It also sells birclwhistles to the canary Islands. EUZABETRS . •. , , • . Q .: ''Your J'i,ame qa.111 111an once 1ai4 lir1" ca1101l Elizabeth t""4 lq be pa~lcularlytalented. Iii wliat!" • A. In the. art> of polite double talk, 1-'• a gift. Like abs'!1ute pitch to a musician. NO MOTION PlcnJU: made in Japan. before World War II was permitted by censors there lo have any kissing scenes. ABE YOU AWAllE that you're entitied to a full refund if Uie tel-.ram you send is not de-liv~ed within five bOUrl? • . :nus WEElt'S orelerred classified ad ~:_''Help wanted-route salesman. 0µr rOUtee ·are easy to sell because they're tbi! -route• on th• market. Apply Ralph's RoUtes, Inc.'' LOVE AND WAil It'• reported, l>y the matrimonial experbl th. 80 IJ!!r«Dt J>f ~ marriages in which the women ba•e do.M lbe propoolng have been 1uceeuru1. Interestlng, if true. OUr Love and 'IV• !nan 1111 tM• Ill lUst..,. more verification ot the claim \!!at women, when given the op· P!Jl:lunlly. uH ...iter Judgment than do men in jijcklng out marriage partnen. , ; . •• . ,• • , . . .... ·' . . • '" .. "' "' ) ',. :<y-. ; . .. ... \ll • • ..... ,, " ' • " • ' ' , ; " . t ' ::. • . . ' J \.1' .. "· " f~ .. ;,, .~ ... .,, t • • • ~· • Rememtier. available io all Wor!Cl:·· Sav.ers. a·re ·ttree· direct de'posit of SoPAI i .. $8curitr. ~~·cl<~, I!•~ Che~~:~·l'!l:on\~ • plaris, free postfge·paid S~ve-hy·Mail ~t: eilyeloMs. ,extended ·offiCe houri, free !., ret,~lu!i~IS,~ii'~PIJ\ li'!"iirJatki'1g. '°1' . 1 Aiid ask.how YoU ,can 'qu~ for " • ·CAt.l'entai\diseount.,too~· "· tL'I,... 1 ' . . ,' . . . 1\~ ,I ' "t. 'I . ! .. ~~ .. 1,, ' ~' , I ... ·•'·" ~ . ' • ' ., ,• • .. I " ' • ~ ce\~-0. Guaranteed on ~79 $1 .000minimum · . ~ ~~ • ·lla~e .. Te=' . ·-~r!!},)'79 : .att·4 years: . . • . . . ' ' . • •• ' .. j. ' • •• , . ;.,. • •• ,,,_ .... . ' • • -._,. • . .. ~ ,. •• • " . ........ .. For instance we will show you how you can deposit up to $1500 a year , in a World Individual Retirem·ent Account (IRA). Ever.y deposit will be deducted ·frdm your gross income on your Federal Income Tax return so you won't pay a .Penity of Federal tax on the principal or i~tereflt earnings until you take distribu- tion of the funds (between the ages of ~~Gt · G..,.ao1icd on : 59y; and 7Q y;), ~~-"'Jf:} • $5tX>'minimum If you are in the 25% tax bracket, · ballnce.. Term! ~u could save over $400 in taxes the ' 90 u,... . . t year a1cne, while in just 30 years . . ~ . . ' . . ~ your retirement fund builds to an incred· ~ ~O CDrttint ~ual \ . ible SI7J,750! Based on an earning rate . ~:'J.Wl ==tpS';'~ .. • .. ,'\ · ,,• ~o(.7~% compounded continuously. {~... ~ ~'l ·mihiib'u~ b.ianoi. i,, • .' : · It you are self-employed, we'll ;· ~Q l-·.~ · .··, .·l·:' ""tfe\pyoustartatax-shelteredKeogh ', .io .,_:, ·",,, . , . . "".' ptaninwhichyoucandepositupto ; · ,&Ji~• ~µAl >?eld ~~8n 'pr,ineiptl e\d' -.." : "~. ~1.500 a year. We'll also fill you in on .in\'r.~lre leh in ttir accotmt and~~ .,. · little known facts like how to make , :tontmu,,...ly. NOT!!. Pedo•t!J~ulatib<w~J' 1975 K h d · I A 'I 15 """&lu.bl~Mal1i'1ftit•1tpen&J17.fQr'earlJ:wt~ r.,. eQ0 8posllS as o\te as pr1 lrom' cetupeates,.' 1 i ~ ~ t • ·of 1976. ..., . -"'-·, A . • I ; . ~ ' • :.. ·' Come·in to World Saving• today .. '·· •• .~ i .., • • f' . : ., and ••• th• many ••J• y,ou can get "'· . ,. r \. •,' , more out of thi•·World. ' • I . ' ''NGS • World Saniigs and Loan Association $erring California lioce 1927. 32'01fices with -aver $570,000,000.00. c>tfices open Mon. through Thurs., 9 to 4. l"riday, 9 IQ 6. Saturday, 9 to I. • . ... " ' ; -. •, ( . .. •• l • I' 0 • ,; 0 .. u •• .. • " ,, .. 0 " •• ' . " \ j ' !· ' .' •' .. r 'ill DAILY PILOT Mondey, S!ptemMr 1&, 197& rl•pro1:1enaents Needed • Counsel Rep~rt Given • ' By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of .. .,..,., ........... SANTA AN A -A special management Budit otthe Orange County Couoael's office bas con· eluded tbat the county's legal arm is providint good service to its clients but needs ad· ministrative improvements in 11 areas. The report, which will be con- sidered by the county Board or -Supervisors Tuesday, was pre- pared by the County Ad· ministrative Office. Supervisors requested the pro- be in light of recurring problems in the counsel's office in handling case loads tor the various gov- ernment units it serves. ''AS A SERVICE or support de- partment, county counsel has been providing good legal service," the audit report states. I '"County departments, districts r. and school districts are very aatisfied with the quality of service.'' Though the report is not critical of the administrative capabilities of County CounaeJ Adrian Kuyper, it suggest.a Im· mediate hiring of an ad· ministrative services officer to relieve county lawyers of basic housekeeping chores. Jt notes that ''the large number ot requests for legal advice have hindered the department's abili- ty to provide fast responses to all requests.'' A SURVEY OF departments and agencies that rely on county counsel rulings indicated the on- ly negative feeling was toward the time needed to obtain an opi- nion. The audit study's primary re- commendations are aimed al im- proving efficiency in the depart- ment's operation. accordi.n& to County Administrative Officer Robert Tbomu., Beaidea the hiring al 11n ad- ministrative aide, audit team auggestiona included: -A STUDY OF """5tb1e use of legal aides and other para-le&al employes to aasist the attorneys. -Continued study ol P<>Uible o(fice reorganization to gear at- torney time to the new agency concept of county government rather than individual depart- ments. -Centralized control over fil - ing systems. -Creation of a formal records . retention and destruction pro- gram. Thomas has asked supervisors to order Kuyper to begin work immediately on implementing the audit recommendatiom. . County Plan Deaths Elsewhere a SALINAS (U PI '.~ Ch~nges OK'd· r WASHINGTON (AP) • ..-Jack Bell, 71, former ~chief Political writer for lThe Associated Press tand more recently a col- ~umnist for the Gannett )Jews Service, died at 'Georgetown University ~ospital today. SANT A AN A -Orange County Supervisors have approved two dozen changes, to the county's general plan land use element ranging from a name. change to redeslgnatiooof vastopen space areas. • _..,..,.........,..,--_:..· ............ .-----~!"T'l""'""I ··New Chief Watch Those Fires Ed Day (left) of Pacific Telephone and county fire warden Carl Downs break out the red flags for the Im· pending Red Flag Alert days in county forests w.hen Sall· ta Ana winds increase the danger of fires. HelPU!i tl).em · 0ut is Smokey the Bear, an old band at stomping out foI;"est fires. Named by • 1 . Co1111ty U~f!. SANTA ANA~ eoUn· . ty'a Community DevelopmO!'.t, Council 11 Ulembe boarda1·•· ~· dlrecton bu eleeted a --,..: newolllcenfortheecmlns1em'." The new CDC board cllllrman; ii Smedley Barber, aocla , Hrvl ... admlnlttral«tortbe d·: I)< ot La Habra. Ha wu vice:; chairman or the ~-y lu • year. . ... The CDC i. a non-pnillt ...,_ · aortium ot community orpnl1a,; 11 .... and goverom...t _.,iea that administer• ~ama such. as Head Start. Nelgbborboocl )· Youth Corps, Community Alcolloli•m Services, Home Start: and the Paclftc Asian American, ~;. CDC o!flcen for the comlnC year include Rev. Tom·", · mle Anden911, vice chairman'• Karen Peters. treasurer. U"i; Sherrie Fielder. seetetary. : • .-------===~--......---------,·· Save an exlra ZSO by opening your tax-deferred account in September Now -two Silloosl reasons t'o op•n you Tax-Deterred Retirement Account early: 1. Open your accoun•"~ S.ptember and Fldellty Federal will absorb your entire $7.50 trustee fee for 1975 2. The soo~r yoU do. th~ more lnlerest you'll earn free from 1975 Income Tax. I R A (lndlvldual Retirement Account) -FOR ANY EMPLOYED PERSON. ' ' • If not covered by a quahfled _retirement plan, ser aside up to $1,600 !'•rned Income_ each yaar •x;11t from current lederat income lax. No tax on current lntarest e~d. either. E1tample. $1,500 de~: in an I.A.A. witl reduce your ~75 Income tall by a minimum of $330 if you are In a 22'% bfac •. Keogh Rellrement Accounta for the sell-employed also available-1975 trustee fee ftff In September. Do H nowt 1 VISALIA <UPI) • neral services were to held today for Claude . Uing, 45, public in- ormation officer and alism instructor at liege Or the Sequoias, On what would have been is 19th wedding an- ·versary. Snelling was i.fatalJy shot by a ski- Alphonse J. Madden, 68, Monterey mayor from 1969. to 1973, suffered a faiaJ heart attack Friday at the Salinas Credit Bureau. Madden, who served on the Moneterey City Council a number of years, owned a business machine sales firm. ............. Oflll•rrklfle Mosi of the changes suggested by county plan· ners and endorsed by the planning commission were general improvements or tecbnical refine- ments, though there were several land use altera· Uons. The amendment hearing last Thursday was the fint of two scheduled this year. Under the state law that required .aeneral plan preparation, three amendment sessions can take place ~acb year. -,. F FID•l.ITY COSTAM.ESA-NEWPORTBEACH:1855HarborBlvd . 47ed.uae:SAVl-9 19 offices to serve you atatew!de, ~' ~~o=··=···=···=·"·=··"·=··==================:=::======~~ t'rnfSked man who tried to abduct his teenaged aught er Thursday. E11ttl"ftl Mltwtt 11 81nt1on, El111nor No, Ind H.rold Mltl'IMI er...:11, Wllll•m A. •nd Judlll'I M. 8.lwnan, Altltrt •nd WI 111,,... J . 8-ICl'lop, iltotll" Ann •l'MI 0.Yld.Jotln Bratt.in, O.n"r ~Non. lmootne Laelbetl91', Lind• Lou 1nd 0.nny Mllx. _., Mitton, 0.wn C.11111 Mk~I L Mursif'IY, DorothN M. ~ P1ul t. Jr. Polrt.t",. Josesil'I LOUIS •nd Cl•lr• ...... MC:cunt'J'. Brftll"' -a John JoMpt Chi~ • ..,,.,, Slilt•nd JI""""' "-r b LAl'de•,,.trkl.fH,9nc18*mardM. alter Her ert~· 73, WycoH,.>onnR.MC1S1~11a. or of the San Diego . ._111,JM,._anc11t~.a.. d f I ~"'lllt,t.folMCIEUQeN pera an ormer Y c. e«nneMarle•rict&obtlJ• · .ector of opera com· ... 1cSF . .ne1Noe1 anies in Houston GM i:.11•M.~s.na,.s_ , ' $ • ..io.r-Mll!JohnG.• ONE OF THE MOST sweeping changes iD tt.e land use elt!ment involves designations of open space preserves and planning reserves, which com- prise large sections of land near the Santa Ana Mountains and in the south county. One of the recommended changes lumped both categories into a single designation -reserve - which would'be subject to nine specific criteria for development. Under the old form of the land use element, a • preserve contained land facing no development planning for the next decade. A planning .reserve was defined as a section of open land that is under active planning for development. enver and N,ew. I d . d S d ~Alttftt" UNDER THE NEW ''RESERVE'' category ap-r eans, ie un ay Lllftd~E. d will b t olJc>Wi·ing a month-long ... J •• 11.t.rtNhlr' proved by supervisors, all such Ian ave o pitallzatiop. ~· . , ...,.. . . MOMot e1111 Anltt satisfy the nine requirements prior to develoPment • ~ -~ ""' approval. .. ,,, • ·-· Ill Beath Ni S:..1oo; e» ttno, '· •M (.efldlltt The criteria incl~: -· ' • c:OoP•" 1 • 91111tand,:rwd-O.flfld.Jtet1M. -Adequate public services, facilities and Of'lillt .,ltrl A. tnd 0.11nll 8ut1on f ed ul ti Vt:flGIL J: COOPIElt, ~., ._11,e.,, 01,111 Pl•rr• 1 nc1 1rm1 utilities or propos new pop a on. s.':': :,-;:;;,~~1!:c."' .,..m.:; ~':. P~uv "--.s H•nry .._ -Provision for adequate traffic and/or transit· : -~~.:.~~·:,": W.111..n~ s.11, eo111 ...a t>out1u without exceeding the capability of_ existing street 11nt1nl2.: •••th, C•.; ••vr ~'• u """"''' .wi Jull• systems . • Stnlk•t wtll bt Mid .--....... -... • • f I d , 11 1·00 PM P.c:1t1c ..,. ... ,.,,.,, , -Broadened housing opportunities or ow an 11191. '"'';.,,,.,.,,' P•c1r1c vi.w Stbo, ~ltMrd Aftlfr-•nd DoMt 'moderate income families. p,,._ ~ 9Hdl,. CL ,._. "'""•'~•"'v11wMonvwye11r.c1on. .J--.~r9nMn•nc11Ho1NrLH -Integrated planning of housing and employ-.t.•MsT"o111a Mtc.rtr,Cr•liQL.MM:ICOl'nl•ll1C. ' -~f • ....., •• WILLIAM J, AltMSTRONG DOS.,. ....-n.. v ........ E. Ind 8rlldll'J L ment to minimize the~ or \A ... .,. ....... of...,.._ Hiii .. ca. o.t. 11-. ~tt.DoftEctw•rdand L...,.SUI '-""".., 11,1t7s.s.-1we111yin =---~io:c.";!!:!'na -ASSURANCE THAT NAnJ&AL1bazards, 111 M•rl•m ; d•u9t1t1,t, An• Mart9NI Mlldr•d C •nd RomtO SUCh as flooding, are minimal. WnKllff of S.cr1!nl'fttt, C.. .rid JoMpti • • _,:::-:_.~a::,.~ ~-. "-""'' Ann •l'ICI ,..,,kt -Preservation of natural resources if they ex- 11111 JIM A"""'°"" of ~ ~ ca ·t.norMlkfllklr'tln 5tn4cet 1Myitr,Normt11A.1ndetllyCMollM isl. 11 • fliM T\lesdlT, StP4.,;• ,. • E"'w.~~~M~o.ri.s-.. -Maintenance of air and water quality stan- • PM, ....... rly HUii Cflurcfl of ,,-. ,·..! .... ~jton 01 ... 1s d••ds. . I ..... 5cllftw. lnl9f'mitnt. ~lfk W, .... -ed Metnori.1 Piarti;, Ntwc-t 8Nch. e.1~. Aotl9f'tand Jantt c. · Supervisors also agreed with several suggest ~ Ji'.KNkvi.w,:;::-,e11f'edorL ~t'9~y-:_~11~~ edtNrd changes in land use designations on spe~~:ific proper- JAMESJtOY MANN, ... 1s,rtlldlftl w.iw ty including 26 acres in Rossmoore Leisure World, c-1.1 Mnt ca oaw of_...,~ .... ...,, T•rryL.andFrt11ciso. the' 81-acre El Toro A...,..cultural Preserve (retain in 11, i•is. ~rvl._. .,., Mt .tf9. --•1':'!:.~"r E11um111 •ncl Kin-&& • ed. --· agricultural use), and redesignati~. as m. ium· M. "'-; ltlrM ..... ,,_ H. U611 s.uunnt llftd Jam•s 0 I C Ir ot: .. 1C1H,ca .• .11r,.w.M1M• e-" Alat11t...SW1C1M..,1~,c.g1., density residential a small parce m ap1s ano 111.1, ca. Mii •111 •· ~-• Uigurw Qrr 'o.i.r.s EllU1t11tn 1nc1 c11nnct Beach. fl, Ca.; It!,.. c&augM~ Vwtlll'llll ;:-=·========·::·======::====::=========; ~Y of Meflrovta, Cl.,.Judy .,,_ n1W of Oltlal'aof'N; end LllMM _.. fll \II MIM, ca.; -sll..,, ""'"' L .....m of "900ftOO 19«1'1, 0.; ,, tndcll+ldr911. Stl"rieff wlll bt twld UlldllY I: 00 PM, ... WlllMt MtM OW'ls- lan Ctfllff .. It! Dr. 090f9' '#ltold offl-·11nt. l'f"lttrlflant, jaOOd stwpMrd • 1911 9f'oMwl'f MorUttry .. ..-.. MlllNaltMAlll " MONA IE. 9ANN!RMAN, ..... ,. .,. Sllftt1 AM, ca. a.."~ Stli'"'*'-" It, t'7S. ~ntl\19d ~ ..... • L.Mlf'• Meo.Mid of s.nta //Illa; lalsttr, Mrs. Cieri Elton If c:.n.cs.; twl "'9tlllrt. Hlf'94d al\d ~ .._. ~. lllttl Df"c:-act.. Of'_,_ ~ _.II Ill Mid ti PKNk V19w t~ Patll,~ Bt«h,,c;a.en '"""'" 11:tt AM, "'"'· """""Ufldnll ,.,kltftt ... II areffw•w Mortuery ~ort. . IAL.TZ..lllCillOM FUMlltAL HOMI Corona del Mar 673·9450 ' CostaMesa '· 648-2424 a&J.HOADWAY MOITUAIY 110 Broadway, Cosla Mesa 642·9150 McCOIMICI MOlTUAIY Laguna Beach 494-9415 san Juan Qapistrano 4Qr>-1776 I PAClllC ¥11W ...OUALPAll CemllefY . Mortuary Chapel .3eOOPoclflcVl .... D~ve Htw119'1 S.ICl1. Cloll(Omla ...... 2100 • SNmfl'MornlAIY 827Maln8t, HUl!llnoton Beac~ 1 030-4530 Two Teriyaki · Steak Dinners for Only.$6.95. OurTeriyaki Sleak 001er is tlJT'lliYJ enrujl, rut wflen you and a friend can enjoy lwo glllat sleak dinners for only $6.95 for both, we know you'll make plans now 10 come aboard soon. Our olfer inchJdes two hearty 1eriyakl steaks marinated in our special ori19al saoce and served wrth a grlned plneawle r111Q. Dinner also lrcllXleS soup oo Jru' or fresh ganBI salad IJepared With cu:unbelS llld marilated nixed. beans, rice pilaf and a piping hot loaf of freshly baked bread. Clip out the coupon below and Dive in to temptation. Come aboard !he Jolly Roger tonight and enjoy !his hea~y feast at a lruly pleasinD priee. ·~--~ -•••••••• .IS....w.M ~ 203 Matlne Ave. • 873-8720 • Coeta-2300 HI'"°' BM!. • ...,..... . --33 fathl..,n S<iuar& • &42-3307 An.ttelm • 2250 E. LlnQOln • ......... 9'*'1 ,... c.nt• • 8376 L.a Pa!ITll Ave. •. ....,.11 •-is Coupon GOOd For ' °""" """' H-• • ' " ,...,. 2st00 Der "''"° .• r-Teiijakl Steak Dinners 1727 •. ~·Ad •96-00•• •Specially Priced at $8.95 for BolJl r=.:~ ~~'"' Hotell ~=..,. • •eoupon Good Any Evening ..... "'° .... mo • ..... ______________ ........... __,~---.:: COSTA MESA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE .. '-" Co~ presents/ FIFTl1 ANNUAL (~ ~I. -F IESTA de COSTA MESA ~.~· ' Friday • Saturday • Sunday SEPTEMBER19,20,21 Liou Costa Mesa Park --West 18tll Street md Park At- GIANT (A RNIV Al Including 6 Kiddle Rides "}/tiJJ CcJt4 }/teJ4 Queett CcttteJt'' MEXICAN DINNERS • MOTORCYCLE DISPLAY • GAMES • REFRESHMENTS .f;NTERTAl~ENT • FOOD • EXHIBITS • BICYCLE MOTOCROSS *************************• : GRAND PRIZE : 1975 FORD PINTO • • • • • • • • • • 2 DOOR SEDAN $3,046.00 :VALUE • • • • • • • !DAILY MAJOR PRIZE : *************************• SCHEDULE OF EVENTS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 I to 10:30 P,11\. ••• Ml•icln Oiftnlrl,. Aidlt, Gt'""' Food, E•hibit& 7;00 P·""' ••••. , ••••••••• Esttnc:• H.S. E• Blftlf • Df'ill Tum 1:00 p.m., o.-iftt for~ Prin (wifwlolng tidl11 must 111t pr._.11. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 10 Liit. to 10:311 ~ •• ,,_, Ml•iaft OinMrs, Rides. G..,.., Food hhibit& 12 Hoen ••• -· ••••••• •,• •••••••.••••• ' •• 0P9"1ntl c.r.mon• 12: 10 """' ••••••••••••••••••• °' ... COlllC Col ........ , Bind 1:30 p.m. ••••.•••••••••• ·-. ·-•••.•••• 'Dorothy Jo 0..--. S:OO p.M. , •••• , , , , , , • , , • , • Royal Court· IUddit Klint a 0- 1:00 p.m. • •• , •• ,, ••,.,.,.,,, ••• , ••••• Arlel Hlgbtt C>ttlclrs 7:00 P."'-• , , , •• •,, •••• ,,., •••••• Cost.I Miia H.S. Staot Bind 1:00 P·"" •••••••••••••••••••••••• • Dl'lwiftt fOI' MIJOI' Prln tW'inninl tldllt Mutt .. ..-11 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 12 Noon · 10:30 P·"'·•·,,. Ml•icM Dinnen. Rides, G-., Food Elrl'liltttt 2:00 p.M,., YOl.lftl Lift Siflllrl ~by Co.ti ..... J.-,-.J 4:00 ....,_..,. • • • , , • , , .•• , • , Mia~ MN OUMn Cotltllt l:lfO •·"'-·, \. • ,., • , •••••• Htib>ptw R idn !children • I ~ llfOp.lft.. , ,.(\' S..~11m9ntlColtl .... RtHtlftl 7:io p.lft. ••• t•t '"'. '••• ~ Kw1te Fldlntion Ellhib4tion ........... ',~I i•• •• J.,;., • • • • • · •, 0..twint fOf'Ml>ot' !"rill · M ...._._i..,,...11 Follow.d ~: Drtwiftt for'°"' Pinto (Win,,., M9d "°1 bl pfOMl\t) --------------- IEllCAN FOOD Di11ers & Ala Carte NEW"°'T HARBOR Y's MEN 'S ClUB ------------- BOOTHS BY: Co11t1lr11 V•t•r111s of Forelt11 Wan Ko. >I>• Kfl .. 1111 of Coh1111•11s c .. 1.1 ..... O•Ulftlus Clu• Cest1 M111 J1ycees Soni ol llllr A. fl. Gll1111l11I Lodtt No, 2:tt4 N9WPOrl H1r•or Y'I M911't C1u• ClltSU M111 M-No, 11S1 Biia 51t1N1 f'ttl, XI Rl'lo l'f Cl'l1pl# Am1rt1;111 P'lllll Service (tstaltdi Hltfl Scllo9Q Jo ... Dl"tl'lt"' No. J IJ Jo•·· DIUtl'lllfl No. 1S7 Co111 M111 Or111t1 Co11t Uo11'1 Clull Co1t1 MIM Cl'llmll•f of Co1t1m1rC1 ind m111)1 oll'l•n BICYCLE MOTOCROSS 11to Flnt ._ llcydo Mol-ou smi, ..i ~ lllgf'rogr•-loglrlsmdboys. Slo !Syn.•-· AWARDS -including drawings for nine Jet Keli· coptBr rides and bicyckt acceaories prizes. For details call the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commot' .. , 646-0536 or califomia Fedenl Savings and loon ·Association, 546-2300. -· STINGRAY TYPE BICYCLESONL V ·ENTRY FEE 12.DO MISS COSTA MESA QUEEN CONTEST ROYAL COURT CONTEST .............. ~1. .. ,,... ..... -~ tr--. ......................... .. DRAWING 9 WINNERS IN MOTOCROSS COMPETITION FOR JET HILICOPTIR RIDll Sunday, Sept. 21, 5:00 p.m. c.a...,,,,Cill,..,...,...... r····------····-••; I I DISCOUNT CARNIVAL RIDES I Pl•STA de COSTA ••u I I SEPTEMSER 11. 20, 21, 1975 I I L1ot11s cosTA Mu.A ~ARK ..._wcr: 11TH ST.• •A"" AV«. I "'" DISCOUNT ""'"'" Ridl '""-' rn#tn I hofdH to purrN.# •r CARNIVAL ticker boolhs I I FOUR CARNIVAL RIOE TICKETS FOR S1.00 °"' tk ... -'"' ... "'50c. KIDDY OR MAJOR RIDE I I Two ticbtl toOd for.,,., 60c • SPECTACULA" RID£ I I $g0111omt bf Cocr1 Mfu Ot1mbtrof Comtnlffe -·Coupon -SAVE .I I 20 conb .. eo '""" "' 11.00 'I I .:ur OUT AND GIVE TO TJCKn SEua . I L~-------------~ • ................ , c••,..,........,•1..-cm.-·tr •c...1a c..c ...... •c.t.P ~t sk __ .. c.._ ~MMalillll1r.rc :w ........ _ T ............ ....... , ........ 11 Nllll ... l .... '1......,1 ...... .. .... _, ...... . --o.p_..,_ --• -°"""c:.. _,,_ I I••••••• toller Expire• October 30, 19751••••••1 a.----,r'-"--' '1 t . -· -I ' • ' I . , \ .. ·~ ,, .. ~ • ~· •I ~·· .,. ,~""' . .. " • • 1 • 1 . ' . • .. ' .. '• , . . . ' •. f • • • • ---~-·-........... ···- ,, : , .. ~ ~ •• i .·if::, '. ' ~;..; • ? ........ ... t • "· • ...,).' ... • 6' 3't-. ~· i • • . ... -. '"" ~;. 1·"' ,,_ . ~· r"· .,, . • - ( • . .. :io,J.-'{ ·.:. . .-~ J.. . , .. -'·' . ' ' '"' J ' ·, . . ' • . I • • • " .. tr . . .. • ... -· . . • • • 1 . • . ' J ~ • . ) • •• . . ,. • ·~· • ·' ,, i~ ,. ' ft • • • •• l • • ' t t • Al• DAILY PILOT Monday, S!pttmb« 1!1, 1179 I Tonight's TV Highlights KTLA (5) 8:00 -"Elmer Gantry." Shirley Jones won an Oscar for playing a role quite different from Mama Partridge in this 1960 drama with Burt Lancaster and Jean Simmons. NBC (4) 9:00 -"The April Fools." Jack Lemmon plays a businessman who tries to start a new life with a beautiful wonl~n (Catherine Deneuve) in this 1969 movje comedy with Peter Lawford, Sally Kellerman and Myrna Loy. ABC (7 ) 9 :00 -Johnny Rutherford. This KABC special profil es the race driver who won the 1974 Indianapolis 500 after fa iling in his first 20 outings - because his father was dying of cancer. CBS (2) 10:00 -Medical Center. The concluding seg ment of a two-part drama about a doctor (Robert Reed) who wants a sex·change operation opposed by Dr. Gannon 's fiancee. Salome Jens, Dennis Cole and Gary Frank are featured. u .. TV DAILY LOG Monday Evening SEPTEMBER 15 • ''"' t ' , I Git"""""'" ....... Proof in Writing GmphoanaJ,yst Has New SI.ant .• B11111AaY&AYE determined,'' Mrs. volves personality °' .. o.MJ,......_ Dellilan 1tru1es. ••What anaJ.,YffS of students for I can detttt simply sue several teacbera ln the llary Denlcan of • · Ne~ort·MU• scbool Newport Be8cb II pro-Cestl 8 penoo a poten. b--•-in bllb.lr Ille most active tlal. not bis ~ctual habits en. ct and sc ..,.... =analystinOranie or~!':l:rreuon Mn. ~1~:!':1"my way,J'd ' b Dmilaii. con.Unued her go into each clusroom Grapboanalyais , t e ...avaneeitudia is sim"-00 tbefirst day of sdx>Ol study of anaJyiln1 ~ r h t would h•ndwritlDI to de· ly th•~ abe enjoys the ·and pick out w • term.lne peraonality work. happen with each child," traits, l.J currently prac· • '04ee J J>e1ln a she says. ti~ b)! about 30,000 peo-C••P.hoanalyals, I Just pie worldwide, acconl· Cllll t put It down," she FOR EU!IJPLE, Mn. Ing t ~ D nlg•n ---~ --..-. --Denigan says she could 0 """'n. e · ~~ pick out students who But she estimates 'fl I ••II •If need creative outlets. there are only about a ,_.,, l'fl •• hat• wbo might be maneuver· d oz e n c e rt i ( i ~ d • ... ing and devious, who COAST GRAPHOANALYST WITH CHARTS 1rapboanaly1ts ID e9e' C! •r ... m.igbtneedtobenearthe OranieCounty. -C~ #Int .... teachen' desk to avoid It'• Nol Occull,.5-ys Newpon'a Mary Denlgan MKS. DENIGAN ., •••• L• ....L dlstr.•ctlon or those ,Aerosol Inf la tors Recalled WASHINGTON <AP) -the National Highway Traffic Safety Ad · ministration has an· nounced the recall of 35 ,000 defe ctive and potentially dangerous aerosol ·'tire inflator cans. The recall originally was announced last year by the manufacturer, Taylor Made Products Inc., of Akfon, Ohio. However, NHTSA said j.t was reissuing the recall notice because the com· pany's action. in May of 1974, produced only limited results . The agency said it feared many defective cans still may be in consumer hands. The cans, sold under the brand name of "Ins- tant Spare,·· are in- tended for use as a porta- ble sOurce of com pressed air for emergency tire Saddle back claims that through her ~---nee~1ng physical bex· Work, she can tell if two admita, adding that ea~ er c ls e . ~ o c o m at people are suited for one takes man.y houn ol byperactivkiledy. bout•~ each other, which work. When as a uca children will have ~ Mn. Denigan ts an ac· acc~racy r.ate, Mrs. blema 1·n achool and tlv• lecturer, who de-Denie~n replies that her wbicb occupations peo-livers three to four talks work 1s JWlt as accurate plearebeatcutoutfor. a week to men •s, as_ any oftbe ~havioral ~Offers Variety The ll)Olher of 10 women's, civi~ and SC!ences-w~1chshead· ch11dren, Mrs. Deniean ·c:h,~.h grou~. • rmt!I are l~ss accurate squeezed in two 18· 1 Without fail there sat th!'f pure.sciences. ,, A wide r a n g e of courses-from landscap- ing to sailing-are being offered this fall by the adult education depart- ment of the Saddleback Valley Unified School District . The classes, which be- ing this week, are open to all persons 16 and older. Registration will be he ld at the firs t .scheduled meeting of the. class. Additional in- formation. can be ob- tained !Sy calling Asst. Principal Keith Sims, 837-6720. Here are some of theof- ferin~s : Cultural A"tl'l•OPOIOllY-H4:ld from t p.m. 10 <1:.a p.m. Thur!>d•Y nlonu '" ~oom }2l •I Mh\IOn Vl•Jo Hl9h S<IWIOI. SQl<lal tmplwl1i1 will be gl....., 10 tl'lt Al"!Mrlc•" '"Cll•"'' rol• '"the -lullof'lol IOCl•tY. Selllno4 t\lde"ts wM~'"'-ve ...,..... bMn tallll'IO ~tort •Ill .,_ t'-1 the rape el 7 p.m. T.....O.~ nlglti In Room ~ •I M lslilOfl VLtjo Hlgtl S<-l be91IVllPlll M •I TIM'Sday. Prat· tlcal l"1tructio n iii otl•red on 5..tuni.,,. 11.m. r11ur•, 11191111 '" R_. '°'et month extension courses least one person who . Th.ere s seldom any ~:..!:': ~':,.~!'°:~"° E~ ~P~ from Chicago's Jnterna· comes up to ~e be~ore lightning bolts ~r WOO· AllliOlil"t•rmec11e1•5c.11001. tional Grapboanalyals the lecture begins. sticks drous. expressions on .. s111,,.,.r, en0 H•edi.cre11" 11t-Soci'ety, g·iVlD· g her both his palm in my face and peoples faces wh~n l t~ 1tNC!lon 11 e¥1\lebl• et l p.m. ~ th b t I th llftdeyel111r-1nRoomsa1.iM1 .. a basic and a masters expects me to 'read it'." t:":' w .. a see in . e1r 11onv1eto Ml9"1 Sc:11oo1. degree. shesays. wnting, Mrs. Demgan Tll••l •r-•••lc l•Cll"ICIHli !or i.v1..,,1ngec1or1 wOl l)e tauQMlrom 1 She complains that sa.~. 11 m. 10 ta p.m. r~., mvt>Uetu. many ~ote still believe BESIDES HER lectur-In fact, peo' pie often Ml111or1 v 1e10 High ScMo• uni.. _.., does sa to me You know TtiHt••· A tMet•r _.._lihop -..11 t.. handwritinl analysis is ing, Mrs. Denigan Y, th • 1. t • Po111otor.o..111UC1 ••udtfH• f"lw.ndly part 0 f the 0 c _ analyses for ~private. you re e 1rs person "'r::C~:t.i.'~••11111--cult ..• something companies, school who's p~t it into words «K-o'-n4,....4tyttw.r·*"' mysticalorpsycbic teachers and in· for me, when they re. n1am1 '"""'' p.m. • •.i•J P."'-lft ''I' h 'f cllvlduals. alize what I've dis· A-'1 211 11 Ml1tlot1; 'll•Jo Hillfl m enoug o a d 1 t " h S<11oo1"-'.. fighter to want to prove Her work for private covere a rue, s e c•=.crltkr,;~::;,::._~nii: it'snotsillyot'bizarre,'' firms .is mca'tly in the adds. 1 p.m. to 10 •·'"· r"'"°"' rWgtiu "' she says In partial ez. area of person.a.el. . ·-;;;;::;:;;:=::~~rn~==i RoMi10tate1roroH1gr.Sc1-1. p1anatloft' of why she ••sy analyzing their .. THE iec":i'1~1::-=:,-:,11~15,;:':~::!= completed the advanced writing, I can tell which EARL'S 1nim1p.m. io1011.m. rtiurM1ev1>1gM$ course. people are best to travel, ~,..,..,. 81 El Toro MIOf'I sci-• •nd ""•'-Graphoanalys1·s ls a which should sit behind a Mme 11 ..... TueW•Y 11101111 .ti ~ -COMll. A11-•m•rmeo1e1•sctioo1. methodical prOcess that desk and which are good ~.,:.:,.aim Wloodworklnv-&et1n111nv stwems uses exact instruments at meeting the public," ... ,__.._..,, CM1learntt1e crattMonc1ay"1gtUet to measure charac· Mrs.Deniganexplains. 1tt1ac-.~ El Toro High ~hOOI el'ld TundlY S-OioQD~.-~f'I,_,.. nlQhu at Mlnlorl ..,, • ._ Hliit> Sc.hool. teristics of th'~ writing, Her work with the ANO. [4fEMlll Ad11ancec1 w 1110"' •••·•cl'ltetlllltd such as slant, depth and schools pr1· m ar1· 1y in· trom WtdnesdaV nlghl1 et Mlulon r IUa...,._......_c..oe._ Vleta and Th~y nl9hl1 •I El Tero spacing of the 1etters. "'l.< I MJ..i71J I Alt<i.JMSIMttfr"Ofn 7p."l: to IOp.m. •711W . - dloral work Ii iii belr>Q olt.recll lrom 1 m e a S U r e m e n t 5 , a ~. \ · ••--...._.. p.m. 10 10 p.m. TwMI•~ nlWQ I" -·- ~I • . ' inflation. ,. The company said in its initial recall order that the containers con- tained a defect and could explode if subjected to the beat or direct sunlight for an extended period of time. uftlkceoe Gardeflltlg-CO..trector lAl"l"l' .,..,,.._, t•eclM'l homlo.......n ,_.to Olant ana melntel" e bNullfOI lenctKape.from 1 p.m . to !Dp.m. ~ Olly nlgtits In Int aQ'"ICUl!Urt P0<1ebl• IHllldl"g •• Mllisio" Vl•lo High • c 11or•l•-ln1lr...c:llon In lor•lg" BY READING these ~ RABBm Allern C.I et ~ AllM1 Inter-..... trained grapboanalyst INSURANCE khool. can gain insight into a · Plut LofW-lndool" •rict • ._. person ·s personality ~ '"' ...._ ••15•=• (Ann Lander11 OJ ADVISES In tile t. '' • t I 1 • I I I I I J:)O Q Mlwil: "£"'1 Clrf SfttwW .. MtNW" {eoM) '46 -tary Grant, BttsJ Dr•••. rr.llCllOt Ton.. The cans have a mark- ing or JI03 on the bottom and were originally sold for $1 .25 each. """"· HofoW""lde Clollllng-F I.,.. CIOtt>lng ciM.soH 8rt belft9 Otfllt'"ltd. ''TtcfWtl• ~of Flttlnt" ,,._t, et 1 11.m. T,,__ Olly ftigrits el'ld ·•s.wtn; w1111 !VIJii" et 1 p.m. T""r'Sde'f nights, Cdll In R-'I !i(OI •I MIJllOfl Vl•to Hlth S<l'lool . "S.Wfng Wltll K"lls" ~ i. being offer«! •t tM wme tllYW ~ Olly nights In Room MIB.t El T°"'Hlalf' "'-'· "BeglnnlllQ Se.wing" 11 ollered el 7 Nig4t Classes . Cal .State. LB Extends Hours Service hours at California State University, Long Beach have been extended to accommodate those stu- dents who attend classes . at night. Counseling , Career Planning and Place- ment. Testing, Veterans, Cashiering, Admissions, Records and the Finan· cial Aid offices will be open Monday through Thursday until 7 p.m. These offices will be open only until S p.m . on Fridays. THE STUDENT Af. fairs administrative of- fices and the Health Services office will be I ment Center will be operating a pilot evening program this semester. Its hours will be 7 a.m. ~· 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 7 a .m. t"o 4 :30 p.m . on Friday. It will take children through age 8 after 4· p.m. The Graduate Center will be open until 8 p. m. Monday through Thurs-1 day. THE ACADEMIC In- formation Center, where students· will be able to get special advising on their academic pro- grams, is in the process of development. openuntil8p.m. Monday Bill Vetoed through Thursday. Although the Housing SACRAME TO Office closes at 5 p.m.; N (UPI) -Gov. Edmund G~ students may then direct B'rown Jr. vetoed ,a bill questions to the re·· that would h,ave allowed sidencehaJ1sifneeded. the Legislature to The Learning As· bo · b sistance Center in the aut nze t e payment by the state of up to 25 . Library will be open percent of the costs ol from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. recreation , fish and Monday through Thurs-wildlife enhancement day. It is also open from features of local flood l to5p.m. op Saturday. pontrol projects. Brown < .THE LIBRARY h said, "In view of !be CGntalner 99rWt1ing wHI .,. •~ COSTA MW A 1n 11111 c-• .--in. w...._.,, potential. 541-5554 ' n1ontt DetwH" 111.m . end 10 p.m."" ''It's the potential, not ~ " :::::. '°' •t M••,•-"'•lo Hi9h actual traits, tJiat can be DAILY PILOT COLtEG~·CREDIT VIA YOUR TV This fall, go to college and don't leave home doing It. Orange Coast College and Golden West College are offering seven Qlltstandlng and diverse broadcast courses for college credit, all feahred over Orange County's own TV station • KOCE-TV, CHAN~EL 50. The Courses ~POIAIT CALIFOIMA. tssws. SO YoU think you know yaur state. This two-unit course at OOth OCC and GWC wHI enlighten you furtha'. H ls an in-depth look·et the atate of the state, a 20-i>art series discuss6ng nine ma,ior issues: aging, poUution, drug abuse, racism. Crime and criminaJ justk:e. resources and energy, poverty • sexism and. educatton. Tune In to .. Contemporary Calltomia lssueaH and stay in tune to today. Starts September 15, 9 p.m., OV9t' KOEC. TV, OWv'8I 50. Oon1 detay; register ncNt. CLASSIC lHIATIA-1MI ~ If DUMA II drln'e at tts finest, presented by the premiere actors of~ don theatre. "Classic Theatre-The hunW.nltles in Drama" felturea 18th. 1nh and 18th century dramatizations or international literature b'.I such authors as Shakeapeare, Mm1owe, Voltaire, Ibsen, Chekhov and more. "'Q:assic Theatre Preview" is a 30-rninute Introduction to elCh ~. ProYldlng you with more insight to the cfrarra. tts aJthor. th& piece ot Its origin and the ChW'8dw of the times. This ts a course of true enrichment. offered at CXX: under Humantties 101 for two units and Endtlsh 149 for three.(please indicate on the r~lstratton form after the OOC box your class preference by ptacil)g a 2 Ot 3), and at GWC. Humanities 132 for three' units. Enroll today. THI ASCINT .o• MAN. It's back. one of the highest MX:laimed broadcUt courses ever offered. Or. Jacob Bronow8kY tiosta thl11:kiart oroductlon whtCh COYer9 a two-m11Uon year-span of man's culturat evotutlon lrt"re-- rnari<ab4e detail. OCC o(ters ~Alolnt of Man" for two units In Physical Science 101 and Bi°'oOY 101. Gotden West College g_ives three units under Humanities 175. CHILD UOWTH AND ~ is a three-unit course spread over 45 half hours which covers a oreat amrv of tapics within six br..:I aedk>f'll: Prenat91, Infancy. Toddler. Prn::nool. Middle Years and Adoleacenoe.. The aeries is a must for bOth eetablished and expanding farnities, "ChUd Growth and Development"' Is a tf'w9e. • ' unit course at both Orange O:>ast CoUege (Human Devetopment 180) and Golden West College (Psychok)gy 155). wamNClo ~ A UASOM. If YoU have the thought• tA.rt have trouble placing them on paper, this is the coune for YoU. In 30 segments. YoU will be ta.Qht logical thinking. bale wrtttng tkillt and more. It is a prOYBn tact that the more succentut members of our IOCietY .. thoee Dpt at IPC)ken anc1 written Engllst'I. AN tNnODUCTIOM TO ...wl'1'9S lstAICM: THI 9UIST ~ PllSOMAL .. •tMtll considers the great worb of ert through the ages es they relate to the problems of nn. The oourw examines how. at Mdely eeparated points In lime. artists and writ81"8 have viewed MQnificent 81P8ds of rNn and his world. "Introduction to Humanities" is a thtfHHJnil: CXMJrM Offered as HJmanitiet 070 at Golden West College and HumanlUes 105 at 0"8nge Coast CollttGe• ~ . ,,. CONSUMll DPMBICI is a 30i*t CX>Utte on peraonal "finance nnagement. It covers five key topk:a: COl"f'o 9U{R8" behaVlor. COl')sumtr's guide to buying strategy, consumer finance, a constructive approach to con-- sumerism. and con1umet life atyte anti bUdgetlng. 1"he Consumer Experience," is a two-unit courwe: Susinea 023 at Goeden West Cdtege and Eoonomk:l 111 at Orange Coast couege. Jola ... •a•1 ft ...... tlscow•ed .......... • tlle ...... MldlHM of ecllCaffoa. Atipro•ed far HIM R I Solp ... -fMI ............ -lo: . ., open fi'om 8 a.m. to 9:30 mounting pressure for ....... Oj(C)-i'n.il...,llf'<-l Tbwiday, a a.m. to 5 projects such as these COASTCOMMUMITTCCJ!.I WI DISRICT 1U¥ISIOM COUUIMelsnATIOM 2701 FAIRY•W IOAD , COSTA I llSA. CA&.9'0lbU. 92626 I T"~day ,.fl"'.":: ~.,.) . ......., p.m. Mon·day tbrOU1b st•te funds, support for , . .._.., --- p.m. F\"idays and 9:30 must be left t.o local l!<N· I DAYTIME MOVIES J:llO(Q"fllil.....,Ftditt'._, a.m. tt> 5 :30 p.m. on erDJDent except In ex· -----·---~---~---.7;,;.n;_;.;;-=-----'·-...,,..-~-----------'-..,.I -------'51 -~..,....., c.rt Jlll-i Setu:rd&~ tr a o r1d in&/ y cl r • .*....,..._.,_. ..... ....,..TY.___._.._.,.......,.. . ........ .,..~ l &Jt n--<"'l.,. -'!"' J:GOQ;':"._"':'.,....,<"11.,._,. The Ctilld ,Develop-cum.stances.'" -· .. -,.....,.._,,......,.....,-..,..._,,......., .... --' iHc.a-.~.,.•115 RWs.tn.a...,...... p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;; ...... ;;;;;r---------·I' ........ .., ..... ......,... 1.· I I I I I 1·1 ·on."-' --·-... m ...... _...,.<_, _ _, · a-1-~._..,.....,,! • .,. ,, __ ..._,,,,,_ CLASSIC LO o.__..._ o--· , -.--. "'"' SE WEIGHT 0 --""""' l 1 "'" ' ,11:11 • ..,,.c.~a.-1••»" DCQ"ltlo--(.., GUITAR •----------~..,....,,_-----,,..,...---'· ..,,,==---o---"'-• _._ .._ ·-.,.., ·11 ---·-·-01 IOllEY IACI , "" ---0 _ .... _ ---. ,. _ INSlRUCTIO""' ... _ ""' _ .. "" ·------... -.-.. -,,-..,-..,_,....,. 4 -----------''""-----., =-~"~........ -• O~•rv 'llllK4 ...... ~ -·--~---·~ Johh K. Bent Huntlng\on Beach 960.1245 0 IJIPIMwlll '°'"" I I -' __. ...• '11.· . ....,.. ________ ,,,, .. -.-~-------.... ---· ---,,.-.. -----' o-- ~-llU coMIJm Ill •u:J111 .......... ....._ ...... ...,.,.. _,_ ... _. , .. appitlt\, i.w ,..,. ... """' • ., .. a. °"' '"OOfll)llX lallltt .. ..,. ,.. ....... -..... '"""'· """r: ::!':s ::....~..:J: ..... ,..__ . .... ....,, ,.. llettlf ., ~ •llJ1 =--wl<hODIUND. ....... *! • .., .. THRIFTY ... .' , : "' . att-'f•d,...~re •.•or•-....,...llfllt111Ma10tafa ,..,.... • t.an. to. W1tc•1t ... ., .. , .,. .... , ,,., '" Cllllo'..;_fltli M151lt MolUl--~·IJ y.., _____ ...., 11,UlllM ...... c:.-? 1QTee t.ONPltno.i...,.-11\i.e.,_. ________ ..,.._______ ._ .... _ , 11.C.Jlll:. d { TMtillol...,,ll'INlJJli ;lit..... <f' .,!'--------' ,l. ...... --... ---------.-,~ ... --,'--------~~:":·;--: .. : ... :: ... ::~::::::::::::::; ... ::::::::J -- I • • -~Tops In ·Pops Omar: u.s.G Gals Worst Q: lluO.araartl,bauaM ... "peatlawer ., lk jet Ml," •••• --... -all>Mt ~~., vuiou .,. .... """'_..... r .• a~· .,. ..... :.......... . ..... 'Glad You Asked That' Ti.f~-lllllboord'abot.-dllltafor A: \>ia.u.:r; n<aell7 lie "nhd" --u e:..,~~~==r-1n-~.:J.eub·ail~~= ...,. .. ,.....C1Ht•1•11 ..., .......... ., llO'l'llNGLBS • o4 Lilt. 1lllarlf -: "Sea. .W.J'. S1n1b. llJ' s «•· W•S b ~ ., .. & ......... & •• 1. PAll•-D .... llowlaJICA dlna-riaa llrll are11't -"-Ill ...,... a .... ,._ .... •-I Jld .. i. - I. IUf,llfl:STONJ:QOWBOY-GlenCamplioll theJ'recracltad up tob..-:"'.Tllit nlaT-1117•....,n" I ~II'· . cap11o1 • a.rm.... .,.. ..,lh1111ut1c but A: v-. 1a UM. u. -zr. ~ -a. l.ATSBVBNTDN-Janla.IanColumbl• too 111echanlcal ~-"U -.tadwlllllhelfHJOD411.nae0orvsllledalr... 4.J'MSOIUlY-Jolllll)eo-RCA • bllbly-or ·:...:.::::~ ... ~ "ntnm•_c_"'~ID~two-, 5.. PJGH'l'THJ: l'OWDPt.1-bley~. T, J:nclalld th!'..:..;.;;;;;.., ";i;: j; bin cibla crnr wbmaJ--•odea&oJ«allcod Noclt ,_ __ the world. But they've iot "" .Ida PT bo.t la half. • ·s. OOULD IT BE MAGIC-Bony JI-aljrle, no &ease, no IOIJhiltlca-Cl: 1-M aap .... ai.c1111,1111tna,_ Artilta ' • ' •. lion. _,.. ...... -· -all ... - -t.lle7 ... -Ille 1.RUN JOEYRUN -DmdGeddeaBlaTtee "Dutd>.alrll," 11e...-, "-tbe-111 lhe ,.... ..... .," ___ ,, ___ _ a. FAWN• IN LOVE-Hamlltoo, Joe 1"nnlc _.Id .• .AustraUao cirls are -IOOd -• ...,. '1'1111 all ... - -*1 ., • ~in -••• &ReJD(llda Ploboy alhlolic you know. And the HullOrtw are rather lnm ltltle l-1.a llr' '"Clee•-·••1e -9. WASTl!il> DAYSANDWAST!l>NIGBTS-tpeclal too ... Preocll womeo,"beuHd oe, "are' O.IC.C.,....,_..._ Frcdd)'PenderABC-Dot , • totally!emlDlne,totallydedlcatelito}!ieulnilhelr A: We'll-let riDt lo-_..bllltlhll, 10. lll!;l!IL Lill .llAKIN' LOVJit,...; Bad Co• 'mao. And lhe7 wOrt hard ot matlai the mqat o1 G.l!l.C. And If "°" 4ia't _. -• ....., mt. J»D7 Swan S...., · lhemaelva." What a11out American -11100! 'Omar write 111 aaala. TOPI.P'S rain tbem at the bottom of bla acorecard Q: Did •er. Go-'•....,. --llulT ~.JANISIAN-Bot•...,TbeU-Columbla ·"Amttlcanwomen,"be..,,,.luded, "are the wont A..s dlda'I M - -a TV --tallod 2. ISLEY BROS. -1'be Heat la On Featwlnl · 111 lhe world. I have come to dlalilte them 1nw.a. "Pl11 Y--f"--ftereaaD.,llerMlq, ~i'g"Hf°8~v=~HoaeyMettury ~t'"• we must preaum.e, the feellaa II Coil.A: Ya, back ID ... ...,,"'-'lhilllU11Chanci '· lJ!lFPl:RSON 8rAltSllIP -11..t O.topuo , Q: I wu a ... ll:ed -I nec1 .. ,... ...... -"" to become a l!"'ilkma•re with bis own Grunt · " . • • Illa& Clable bad faloe leeCIL Aq e,e ... ,, ... 8'ltt vuiel1.ulll 1bow. AllO f4nDlnl a produc1D1 com• 5. ELTON JOHN-Caplaln Fantaatl Tiie Wlile>"aawlheat-llln. M.1111.-,DeaHr. -to~aad.,.ut-well·-1ame Brown Dir( Cowboy MCA ' , , 1 ; 11bowJ ID whkh hll oD17 ...,Uclpation la 1IWq at a I. THE EAGLES -One Jr These Nl,r,f. A: Several. Notably the famous author· clllk ellDDllll.~Y&llia, And yea, the di.orce mu, Asylum · · . · J>la>owrfabt1 Anita Lbol. '•Gable," sbe rec.all1, ••waa jjnl both-Grttnaa ttee acen.t.a ooce •Cain was 7.CATSTEVENSGREATESTIUTSA&M l ' «!Mlp~ !!Jth a premature set off~ teeth for llllallNd, · 8. BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN -Born To Rua wlllcll.he, ltlt oo embarrassment. One dai-.I h~, · -,-y~c-teHyaa....-,"GladY .. Columbia • Pllned on him at an oUldoi>i: faucet whe,..hed _,,,..,. ·-~=-.:c'"r,P.O.lloal ... , 9. :EARTH WIND & FIRE -Tbat'1 The Way ~J>Od t0 wash hll denture. Clark il:lnned, pointed c.ta ..... ~ · Hy .G.er will Of Tbe WOrld e91umbia ·• to lilio caved-ID moolh and said, With ao uaacerateCf .-er U -11'1181 po RIMI 1111 lile>" eaa la !Mir CG!· lO. SPINNERS -Pick Of Tbe Litter Atl ... tlc . &p, 'Look, Alllerlca'tb lhweetlleart' ! " ama, llai""' ····"'1'i"' ··--al Nplleo ' ---. t . ;gJ(~=-t;;r. . • • """COCll I W' cm ...... .., •.... , .... ... , ,, .... ,.. • ,,... A-' .. u..--.... __ ..._ ._,;.--c.t. a r __ ....,.. ~ DAILYPILOT 4JI "llOll'T IOOl llOW' ..................... .. fOlll TllE DOOi" ............... Mll9 CINEMALAND ""It.. ......... ~., l•t- "MlllllOOI GRAffTTr ............... ....,,. _ --· ' ........ a...atw.IMI .... s. . ... _ -..cmm:IMClf ,,._...,. ,...... ....... ...,~ .. "l'HE lllOllT PAIZ' ................... r,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;9-;T;::~ IRrrilging mollon pkture from IM ILrri/ging No.1 llest ot.Utr. EASYUSTENING Q: l •aw Utat ••n lit" movie• TV Ule au.er lmpoulble-r. • ~ l. l'M SORRY-JobnDenverRCA ~~-,..'IJ 2. THE PROUDONE-OsmondKolob MWS 3. SOLITAIRE-CarpentenA&M t. DAISY JANE-America Warner Brno .. 5. AIN'T NO WAY 1'0 TREAT A LADY -Helen Reddy Capitol · 8. I BELIEVE I'M GONNA LOVE YOU -Frank Sinatra Reprise 1. I BELIEVE THERE'S NOTHING STRONGER THAN OUR LOV'E -Paul Anita & Odle Coata United Artlata &.DANCE WITHME-Orleaos Asylum 9 .. 1 ONLY HAVE EYES FOR YOU -Art Garfllnkel Columbia 10. LIKE THEY SAY IN L.A. -East L.A. Car PoolGRC COUNTRY SINGLES 1. DAYDREAMS ABOUT NIGIIT THINGS - Ronnie Milsap RCA 2. THE FIRST TIME-Freddie Hart C.pltol 3. BLUE EYES CRYING IN THE RAIN - Willie Nelson Columbia 4. J'LL GO TO MY GRAVE LOVING YOU - Staller Brothers Mercury . ~-RHINESTONE COWBOY -Glen Campbell Capitol . 6. JP I COULD ONLY WIN YOUR LOVE - Emmylou Hjlrru Reprise · 1. FEELlNS' -Loretta Lynn & Conway Twit- ty lllCA 8. HOPE YOU'RE PEEUN' lllE Like I'm FeeliD' You -Charley Pride RCA · 9. YOU NEVER EVEN CALLED ME BY MY NAME -David Alleo Coe Colum~l~ " 10. BANDY THE RODEO CLOWN Moo r ' • .BandyGRC Carlin Gets Show ' . LOS ANGELES (AP) -Com.adian George Carlin will be the host when NBC premieres itS new late-night variety show, "SaturdaY,. Nig)\t Uve," 0ct.n. The new series Wil occupy the Johnny Carsop Ume ' slot on Saturdayllights, offering comedy and music ; from the network's New York studios. Various hoet! willbeemployed. Reiular1 on the show include Jim Henson and the Mllppeti and Albert Brooks, ,.ho '\'ill ~reaeot shortcomicfilms. fc'll ll NEfS SA TURDAY~ SUNDAY "NASHVIUE" w ................. "'RIMMY LAOr IPCM -owl...., PUSSYCAT' INI -ntl fOITUMF '"MONTI PYTHON . & ttoL T 5lil. .. IPQI "TOMMY" ............. .,,....1H WISH" Ill ··....uou _ _. SWISS FAMILY IOlllHSOM"" 16) "SEXY-EYED ANETIE HA VEN IN A STEAMY SEXPIONAGE 'N' SINTRIGUE SAGA ·" • • ................ -.......................... ............ ~""'-"·..,... ........ -c=·------ .. ......... ....... -. fARTHOUAKf . ·Ale· --'11D~L WAVE" • LA M"'M>A WALK·IN' SAlllGAIN P~ICI 11.M MONDAY llw11 IAfWIDAY (l•c,,1 HOl-.,.t) tl:J0.5.00 , cNlll • • ,. "' ••O • '"' • : ~LA MIRADA • w WALi' IN • • cMJll • • ·=-) :.:::.. )'. ...... ·=I a1t;1 N~=· I -10011 --· -· -~·· --·-· .......... ISi.i ... ,.1 ·i::::::. ... _ .... .... ------------_ .... -- _ _,,,, __ ... -.. -· fOI MTl'S SUI"' ....... ............... LOVI & OU.TM"' -· 1111"' .. ClflH TJ:» .... _... ...... _ PAii ii WAlllllll TAUl9 WILD McCllUOCll'I ,. .,... 12'.JO ICIOll -----YOUNG rUHQNSnlN _,_ .. , .. ,~Ui'"'" .__, __ wu-.. ·-·· MACON c:ouNn UNI• ........... _ _, .. .__ ..... ,, .. . JAWS.- C»fAIN NIMO ·• ... ~-UNDll COVIii HOOPII poiNGAH,. ............. ,. WMm LU• rlYll ... --lllAIOllT .. -.......... UCI W1T'H THI OIYllflllll ... ----·--•m ti WAUUHG TAU. "' -1 ~-COOHSKtH• --u•UHUA111 --IMJu .. --TIOAl WAVI,.. --lfYOND TMI DOOi 111 -· INTll 00 DIVll. 111 '· _.._ ......... Wll.D Md:ULlOCHt,.. --f'IDA&. WAYI"' r I ---·-~ fl\ :::..!_---~ .......... - ~w1nd-~11on llWtU IEM HUii 'LOOI< LA\E ... """ frl iii I ER TIJAM . '1IUZlllCIUOOUl""Clll ·-FIWllWllTEllt' -- t TOLC .. IM -""6(.-...~,- ·540-7444 ,,., 'THE N9'T . OTHER SIDE . ~ OFTHE SllFL MOUNTAIN' A TRUE ITOAY OF • <' , • .,., ~I ••t ~ f t L FRAMED -I ----~ =.:. ..... W .. JIH , ·TOGETHER .... <POI l9TIM ? WIOITWIN )I ...., ....... _ J4'-0lll 141·llll Pett< S.llora Aa the Hilarious Inspector Clouuau • ' I ' :~ ' ' ' f i ; b , ' t l M 1 1175 ) . • • .. ''· " I ' ' ' • • :' ~ ' .. ~ ;'·. ' r .. W~g, The Surg'eon General Has Oet~mlned 'tut (igareue Smoking Is Dangerous tQ Your Health. · • ' .. I . •• ~ • I " ·!ft Marl . oro LIGHTS • LOWERED TAR f, NICOTINE • 20 CLASS A CIGA~ETTES • ~· ' •. \ ' ·'\ ' J • r ( • \ I • t J l • • New ' • • BEA ANOEllSON, Ecjltor -.y, September 15, 1975 . , '" ,, ,• • • • • • J . -, ' .,. • • •• .. r '97UCllilDSAL'nJS i.Os ANGELES (Al') -Tiie UllwerlltJolllolltMnl~ II trmnlna -ti t.o M<cme oodal worken •P«l""dna In lbe problems of a rapldl.J crowlnl ~of Americana: tbeelderly. 1be field la ao -tJiat ••· -~Ibo lint d-of Ibo 1-rd D•Tia Sebool of ~ ot UllC llU Call will bo lllllDI tr"ains for Jolie tbot dool't tldlt Jet. ''TlleJ' !DAl' be lettlnl ....... ,. eel .i.eod of wbere lbe ...id la," 'u.lid the acbool'1 u#llllt dean, Jlarpret E. Hartfml. But Jll.ss JWtford, 57, expecta tbe ,.....14 t.o catdlQI>. "I bave a bunch thot -.111ey Dow we're ht btael'•· all kinds ~~~ wW be w~ our 'Tl;; current U.S. -1lltioll ol . •bout 210 million IDdudes al .million penooa 1111.andover. Tbe school H)'S tllat Ille ased are Ille f11test·1rowin&"'1efment .of ood~y Md th•I b1 Ille ,..,z,ooo, there-will be•me-30.millinn·llll and older. OONTMaYTO BELIEF AIM!, contrary to whot m0117 "~~.MiasHartrordaakl; ~ 95 percent of tbe eldei'l,v • n .. In normal ~ not nursm, homes. 1 Tl!• special .Pro"'ama ,of Ille. aced touch an areia: bousln&, tei.liue, retirement. numna. set .. uallty, lee al. cons!deratlon1, poycbdlogy, financial mana~ mellt and politiCI. • The cllrriculum calls for the gel'Olllology students t.oJldve in-. to poycbolo1Y. social work and i!'Ki!'-~ administration. acquire· se11S1t1V1»' and emerce ready to help ··~adults.•• -students ·will wear blindfolds act ear plucs to experience Ille decreased capacities oftbeagecL • • ! . -. ' 'Ibey wW . Yillt HDlor <IU-' center• and nur•lJ'll homes. Some of the tralninl II abnllar t.o • - ' wb•I pbyalclaoa uderp to bteome ll*laliltl. At tbe l.oonard Da'fla -. begun wit.II a 12 million -m tb<>mDavll,aN-Ycrtio- .auraaff eucuUve. lt•tdmtl can eara a bacbelora or mMten ~or a certtfl .. te. 'Only 25 percent of old people's disability is medical. The • • Tbe laU. II a PfOll'UD taldaC about a year to CICIU1lliete for remainder is social, political -alread,y W<ll'ldnS ln-reloted field IUCb U aurslDI wbo and cultural.' -Dr. Alex Con1fort Wll¢ -Ille tralnlnl la -toioo. • APPUCATIONS Opened toda7. the ocbool bad acceptecl about i50 aoolicanta -.,ec1 :Ill to 50-lor tlie masters JlfOtl?am and ~ doMD for the eertificale course. About 80 UJ>. "Tbe expectation that old peo. dergraduates bad alpied up for pie llbould 10 .cra1y makes tllem tome 1erontolo1y cluaes. or cruy. They bave had the aame , wbldl about 15 planned to m~ trip put on tbem tllal blacks and in tbe field. women did.•• Tbe full·tlme faculty of the The openlnS of,tbe ocbool waa 1eronto101Y school Includes, In _ _. wit.II entllt11ium by ...,b . aactition to Mils Harliord, Dr. :;.;;;. In Ille field •Jin. B.J. Wllllam Albart, 34, ualstanl pro. Spiliel'; Soutbem califomla re- feasor of 1erontolo1y-social clonal manaaer for the work ; Dr. Robert Wbwell, a californla Office on Aclnc- former Atlanta Braves .basel>all player, au11tant pnleaacr of aEAJ>Y'IO HDE 1..-loc·aoclal .....t. and Dr. , Would her offica be !"'-led Stephen -Zar!t, asststant -bl blrins ferontololY graduates? fe~aor of aerontology• 111Ddeect we ~ are," said Mn. paydloton. SpltJer. "We see tbls scbqol as Wiswell 1peclall1es ill ualnc G• belnl very worthwhile. Havinl erdae to help tbe elderl,v be ac• . &OOd feellnp' about oldh adults live and alert. · IO ona tbllll, butlt won't be of any Alex Comfort. who ia...a natect uae Ja~le11, you have the 1eronto10111t but ia -lmown .,_"ll!C•bUetoapplythem." as tbe autllor of '"1114 Joy of The SCl\001 Is housed in the Sex,'' said that the scbOol.'a em-same near-new build.lne: that con- phasis on tlle aoclaj.apedaof ag· ta1na tbe Etllel Percy Andrus inc is approprjate.. Gerontolo17 Center, where ''Only 25 percent ol the cJia-. r scimtltU: and doeton in a. varie- abllity of old people II mecllcal. w ty of fields cl social Cen>ntolOIY Comfort said In an lnter(iew. ~OrrJ' on tbelr'Atudies. USC bas "The remaiDiDC 75 pereent Is -. involved In ceronloloo re-sdcla~ p01itlcal andClllWral. .....et&!or Oout lOyeara. • A 26-•~•r-old USC em~ wbo ia conalderlns ~ in the school ••1• tba\ 'she ta .. .. especially attracted becaue. ''tbe -pie are so poslUW ..,. enlbuslaatlc. Tbere are peopl• ot all ares worklnl tosetb<r, '*'-' vinltbat'oldll beaullllll.' • ••Anet the newneu oltbe &Id uclttnc. too. It'• like ptlinS In on the ground floor of llOlllfJtblnS tbat'scoinltokeeplel'lalmm9 ~ · Important all Ille tina. '" t Tbe scbool'a admi'"'--11 ·gram bu a poster abowlnl i ~ bearded )'OU)IC student fivlnl a ' white-haired lady a ride cm Ilia .motorcycle. "It'• a rareoppartunltyfor..,i.., ting Into a brand-new field," aaicl Mill Hartford. t 1()nce pe<rple are Nlll1 ex- ~ to aging adults -for •· ample, I Ii ved in a 1eDlor citizens' home for several months when one of my -ti viu dylnc -they ·realtse 'Wtiot a challenge the work can be.•• ) • Road to Recovery Is Rough . ---.. Accident Vidin1s Hopeful ' • . . . ~ • • • • ' 'Mike's case· isn't isolated .. Last year, in Orange County; there were some 50 young ' •·people, from 16 to 30, who suffered from brain stem injuries in auto accidents. ' . -Lee Merryman • By ALLISON DEEaB Ol .. DMly ........ In the ppst three years, ''hope" has become Let Merryman's IAJuclllt • ,,...,. When ber,.Ili-..Y-'!!81;-oid. son MUte- was in a ma<t<*'cJCle accident which lefJ him l in a coma for three monthl, lollowed by a stroke, Sb& was offered little bOpe. ". , She refused to accept that •"there was nothing to be done.'' Mike has since graduated from Corona del Mar Higb Scllool and is enrolled at Orange Coast College. He II still on the road to recovery, but bas come a long way •ince the accident. '¥ears of searching for help, contacting sympathetic pro- fessionals and dealing with dis- couragement introduced Mrs. M""'}'1Uan to other pareDts fac- • in& Simll:arproblems. "Mike's c8se isn't isolated. Last year, there were some 50 young people, in Orange Coonty, from 16 to 30, who suffered brain stem injuries in auto accidents. "A few years ago, I'm told, they probably couldn't have been saved." SUPPORT GROUP The need for more information and a way to share successes and failures led to Ille formation of · Hope, a suppo.rt group for brain il:rjuries due to accidents iDvolv- . ing teens to age.30. 4 And, it fed to organizatioD of tbe Comeback Club, for tho young people themselves. ''The problems of these ,.,..... people are complex." Mrs. Mei-· ryman explained. "hliuries to the brabt stem affect ernctlms, Juclcmenl; CQ.Ordinatioo, 1peiech and language, the whole body.'' For example, the pa'IOD must be retrained to drus, to Identify colors, to relearn vocabulary, to develop social skills. "It is a different problem than for one who has had f physical proble~ or speech itifficulty since birth. "Most of th~ Comebacks bad been active teens or workinc or married young adults. 'Ibey want what they once bad, but at lint aren't Able to communicate tt." . Since June. Ille Newport Beach woman and a corps ol others have been setting goals. Tbe Comebacks have set their own priorities, she said. • PRIOIUTIES LISTED Social activities and employ· "'F-bead Ille llsL 'Eventually, they -.Id like to have; an activity center of their own, one wbere tlley could do Ille repair ond fix·•P wen, do office -· and be Involved ln a bus!· ...... "It 'lfOuld also be the setting for social events and rap .... ions." Currently, Comebacks meet .. 'J'burtd.&1 evenines for rap seu~ona at memben' homes. "At first, many ot our young people reacted to their situation , with anaer and bol5tility. It is bard to accept such a different lifestyle, to readjust your goals," )frs. Merryman said • ,. • ..,.,,. rap oesa· 0111 cfcve lbenl.c"':>,,... ,_ cb8i.?e to au: 11> i*l>!e 'WI"' REALLY understand lb;e , frustrations involved. And. they can share succe1&e1. 1bere are definite stages each one goes through that give !lope for pro. gress. •• "Hope" and ••support" are key words for the parent group, she said. "The biggest thing bas been being able to sl19w otllers that tlley are not alone OU!. there. There ii something that tan be clooe, sometbln1 tllat bas worked for others. Not all of the members are parents. Not all have been as positive about the chances as Mn. Merryman . But then have been 90IDe nr- prising changes because of the group. POSTER MOM She tella of a nurse in a con~ yalescent hospital where a young accident victim had been placed by his parents. ''He bad had little or no therapy and his parents had given up. This woman ~d take him bome with her several even- ings each week, work with him on therapy and was looking for mor-e todowbensbefound us ." . Now, the nurse bu positive re- inforcement from other Hope memben and is beginning to aee changes in her adopted IOD. ''We have Hen parents do a.. complete about face, not only ·having hope for their own children, but working with others whose problems were more severe.' · Support is vital, she said. "Working with these kids 'is a 24-hour-a-day job. It usually falls upon the shoulders of just one person. With others to help, bet- ter progress is made. .. It's like a mother trying to teach her child something. After bearing one voice all day, the child tends to tune it out. But, be may tuna on for a fresh.face." MEDICAL COSTS Another problem the group bopel to come to grips with ts medical costs. "Tbeae children don't Jm have c:ne problem, one disease to treat. They have occupational, physical. speech and tancuase- tberapy. Tbey have emotional and social problems. · ••And, most fiDd tbemselves at bome after the hospital ala)', not quite ready for the traditional re- habilitation center. . . "But tllere ia lltUe financial aid available to help Ille family care for Ille brain-Injured person, wbo cannot care for himtell." . Petite Lee Merryman citecl the problem 1be had lifting bar 16-. .~"""In and.out ol bed as Hope has become motto of new support group of parents. They find better progress is made by sharing. an example, . I Now, Ille group is planning to offer separate programs fOl' the very young, and a career club • concept for tbose In their l!Os. ••Many have skills they can share wit.II Ille JOUD&er ones, but they also have different emoticmal problems todeal 1'ilb- "Fnr eaample, bow doas a-. • . i 7 l . i· I ~. )i 1~ I I ' : ' : \ .. ' ' . , • • ---··· ......... I I I I I ' I t • .ii UAJ:.. Y PILOT Monday. S!pl-15. 1975 Avo.id High Hopes . DEAR ANN LANDEllS: I am wrot crazy. EYery word ol this is ·true. Please help me. ~ I am an older woman with a 1 aick husband. I babysit for a Liv· l ng. Often, divorced ladies leave 'their smalJ chjldren at our home lovemight or for a weekend. Mrs. X brought her three-week-old in· fant here for one night. She gave me $3 and l e ft (he bab y 's formuln. ber the best of everythlnc. Lut week, Mn. X returned out or a clear blua 11t1 and threatened to call the law if we refused lo let her take ber child • 1'bome. '' She satd 1be bid had a nervous breakdown but ls com- pletely recovered now. The little girl cried when her mother took her away. DEAR ANN LANDERS: lly lirllriend and I are both ts. We are very interested in 1uys (especlally two) but they don't seem to know we are alive. ( Ann anders .. ,.. )(1ay ll·7ear..,ld "'11 (OH• I .. -17•) ... Mt eftll ewaretba&~lt:a•r1 1 .... 117 odYlce i. lo cool II, CH< I 111 Do Mme a .... lepolilL Got la- tere1ted la Y•l••teer work. HelptOU" mom,,.......,.,. .. ,, W.... Ibo ,.,, are re• ...,'ll lei )'Oii-... Vatll--lea•e 'em&19.u. mU:• 'f'HZll feel tbeJ must do Iba 1ame. Who's rltht? -0 CITY BATTLERS DEAit BATS: We-,- -Imai o &JI!. Ba& ll'a Mt MCIMUJ' te ktal .-.eClllMS · nert time 1• an llrYIW ,.. -•JutteYlall.O..i.a while a &J.ft -Dowen. cud.J, • aa aa111•al memui&e -la de-ft.allelJ la order. .IEWELllY TALKS ILutY .Jlswolfl'B I 1ti11 _, pt loo -ad -IN ill•"""i:..:r; IN ~-1---'·1:: Wa, ---........ cGll • lot " --JUlldoaot-.. uarlNa .. •appl. unm )'Oil bav• two ar tbrw ..-t'eces Olk• DID.ab !ltcn) wll1l tarse dlamoa4 d._. ..... Ille chalo thOJ' pt loot. A real UarowawaJ. Three w eeks later she showed ..-UP and said s he was sorry she We know where she lives but we don't know what to do. Please advise us. We are heartbroken. -MORE THAN FLESH AND BLOOD Can you five us some ad'1ce on the best way to a1k a felk>w for a date! And please print tblll letter because It's a problem a lot of teenage girls are faced with these days. Mos t gl.l)'S we know are more interested in sp«ta and things like that. It's jmt rotten the way we sit home all the Ume. Thanks for whatever ideu you ean come up with. -DATELESS AND EAGER TO BE FRIENDLY DEAR ANN LANDERS: Illy wife and I need a referee. You're it. Every time we are Invited to the home of a friend far dinner or just to visit, Martha feels she mun brinl a presenL II we go for a weekend it must be a rather e.x .. pensive lift. The 11817 &111wortb •bop came o wttb ''dlamoadl bS' the inch.'' We UM a wkk. nil m.in'Or cllala. beael Ml. ll'N Are mu,. OJI: If you team ._ ao ... dlamolldl a1oo1 a 1"' er to cmtrol tbemf Can Ibey be ct · ur.-cbala. Tll.ls ouu ,,_ belpf .The •taa•era are ln Ami -diamonds by tbe Ioctl at l•nden' new bootlet. "Slralgbt IN llol1ow <If tbe nedl er at ! had left the baby so long but she , had to 10 out of town unexpected- ly. She gave me anot.ber $3 and said, "1'11 be back tomonow." Dope' on Drua1. '' For each tbeitmom wbere they cu be j · Ann, that was four years ago. , \ty husband and I have bttome , so attached to this little girl she is I .like our verJ own. We have • bought all he.r clothes and given DEAR FRIEND: My heart •cbet for you both, bot you need • l•wyer. If you c••'t afford one. ront•ct legal aid. But doa't 1et YOlll' bopes too high, dear. In cues such as youn, the nahlral mother usually w1D1. DEAR D. AND E .: 'l1lere Is ao ••best way" lo ask a guy fw a date. In fart, the best way to tum a IUY off Is to be too a~Jve. Girls mature 11.1ore rapldl,J &laab. I say this is nonsense. People invite ua because they want us aod .Ill) lift ill Decess&rJ'-Also it booklet ordered,' 1end • dollar ;;:-Item.ii IUD~ to b& bill, plus a .long, self-addreased -·I r-" dwec:an-• stamped envelope (20 . cents --or ""811 r- j)Olt .. e) to Al\Jl Landers, P.O. :.:':!:' !O:m::, um': Box 1400, Elgin, Ill. 601.3!>. old brood> or rinl you .,. ' ' t ' -f!:-ibra ~: Change It I By SYDNEY OMARR TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 ARJES (March 21 -April 19): Accent on romance, friendship, fulfillment or hopes and wishes. Social activities accelerate. Yo\' are a!ked to do something for someone who seems a "scatterbrain." TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Get down to I business. Be frank, specific, count cbana:e and ,,l-perceive potential. You'll be in direct contact with professional superiors. • GEMINI <May 21-June 20): Good lunar aspect coincides now with improved com· munications, travel, a better understanding of those who speak a ''different language.'' CANCER (June 21-July 22): Costs, lime-and- motion studies could be featured. You get 'dividend from past effort, investment. You are ·-able to make purchase which beautifies surroun- dings. , LEO (July 23-Aug . 22): Emphasis on bow you relate to ''legal types." Means you may be ._l)lSked to back what you state with documents, · · , verifications. rights and permissions. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Develop contacts, · d bridges which enhance security. Stick to basics. Review rudiments. ~ LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Accent on change due to the finishing' of a phase, a cycle. You cut \ through red tape, obtain necessary documents. l'I SCORPIO (Oct. Z!-Nov. 21)> Build on solid loundation. Overcome temptation to skip essen- 1 tialsor to accept what is flimsy, superficial. A bit • of extra effort now will pay dividends. SAGITJ'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Accent on \,brothers, sisters, short journeys and .. flash" lf.deu. What was hallway forgotten could come /1back. · II ' CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19.); Spotlight on ,, \possessions, what you give and lake, what you 1iJcan earn and invest. Be flexible, venatile. In- ,11\dividual with grandiose plans may have eye on ' urfunds. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Lunar cycle is such that you should take initiative. Make con-. tacts, be a self-starter. Highlight originality, in- dependence of thought, action. Wear bright col- ors, be conspicuous. PISCES (Feb. 19.Marcll 20): Talk with one- wbo la connected with hospital; club, specialized ·organization. Dialogue now ii important ii you are~ all~y g~o~~d.les_! _fe~. H Today Is Your llirUadA7 you are introspec- tive, spiritual, somewhat ol a perfectionist Snd your own worst critic. June was lmpoitant -in October, you , break looae ·from~ emotional shackles, can travel, gain weight and socialize. Dr; RICHARD $. JAFFE PODIATRIST Announces the opening of a new of- fice devoted exclusively, to the prac- tice of Podiatric Medicine and foot surgery. 31 542 Coast Hwy.; S.IM 4 South Lagi11C1, Calif. ., ... I 0 • ..,, ....... ..,. Betrothed Bonnie Whiddon and Kapp Johnson will ex- change vows Dec. 20 in Melodyland Chris- tian Center , Anaheim. Their parents art> the Ron Whiddons, Costa Mesa, and Dale Johnsons, Helena, Mont. Miss Whiddon graduated from E stancia High SChool and ger fiance from the University of Wyoming. He attends MelodylandSchool of Theology. Volunteers ·Plea Made ·oates Set Karver-Christensen Mr. aod Mn. Bernard Karver of Dana Point have announced the engagement of their daughter, Elyse Sondra Karver, a San Clemente High Sc.hoof graduate, and Del Pratt Christenson. The bride·to·be at- t e nds Westminster Colle1e in Salt Lake aty where her fiance's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Christ~nson re- side. A wedding date will be School gradua~ef, Deborah Ruth Mci,atn and Philip Alan Lewis will marry Nov. 22 in Bethany Baptist Church, · Long Beach. Mias McLain, daughter of Mr. and lllrs. Paul E. McLain of Foun- tain Valley , also at- tended Orange Coast College. Her fiance is serving in the Army at Fort Riley, Kan. His parents are Mr. · and Mrs. Herb Lewb, Santa Ana. EL VSE KARYER chosen a fl er he .-------------------, graduates from Utah Slate University at _!.ogan_ * * * Moore-Scudder Orange Coast College students Jana Moore and William Scudder are. planning to marry Jan. 24 in Cameo Wedding Chapel, Anaheim. Pareats Of , the af-. fianced couple ai-e Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Akieol Fountain Valley and Mrs. Mary Louise Scud- der, Costa Mesa. The bride-to-be is a graduate of Fountain Valley High School and her liance, Corona del Mar>liJgb School. * * • MeLain-L.ewis Fountain Valle~ ·lllllh . . . . -... Weddings~. and Engagements To avoid disappointment. prospective ·brides are re minded to have their \1.'edding stories v.;ith black and "'hite glossy photographs to the Da ily Pilot P eople Department one ~·eek before the wedding.,' Pictures received after that lime \\'ill not be used . For engagement announcements it is · imperative that the story. also a ccom- panied by a black and "'bite glossy pic- ture. be s ubmitted six weeks or more berore the weddiDJ date ; other,.ise it will ·-not be published. · ' To heip fill requirements on bnth Wed- dintf -and engafement litoriea form• are · 'atmlabte in al 'Daily •Pilot 6mces. Fur· ther""°questlons Will be answered by People DepaM.ment staff members at 642-4.321. DGtwearinJ. '!be -dlamoa4 attacbod to a JS'' er 11'1 a.111 '9 ailo' ..,. "rtabt'' no•. A.aiolbs' ••peat'' _. for a -dlamood, pM' ... ably a 50 painter or up, I• to .. box. it." 1'tl.ls ls an exclmive • sipwilb us. ,' '!be diamond ls moot effec- tive Ht nusb in • hl&h11 palbbed 14 carol yeUow &Old, 12mm box. The diamond de- term t n ea the box ap- pearance. For imtance the marquise will take a rec- brllUlar look while the round di•mond retains the "box," box look. The apttlal rideed fiWlll Jives it a very .smart look, and on a thin neckwire it cm lots of attention and you'll wear it every day. Many ol the jewelry items found in the Mary Ell.swortb Jewelry Store are deai&ned and manufactured by us and for us exdu.sivdy in our own shop. I findi it very difficult to buy fromia saleman'a line. Even though it. is much more em.· venienl for me, less traveling around. But lbey don't always have the ''special look" items I want to show. When the price or gold began to soar and labor costs began lo climb l strongly con- sidered phasing out my cu,,tom works, but J never will, I'm .s\lre. Gold baa stayed in the Sl.SO's for some monUla now IO we feel it.I stabllh.ed a bit. I want to help you update or redesign some of your jewelry items. Don't be afraid of it. l can listen to what you have in mind, maybe .suggest some! slmple pxxlifiratioa, even give )'OU ., <If Ibo top <If m1 head --11· ... lo ,.. -lmolved r:-"'-:r::.y l!Lliworm " JJ07Jambonellood Dd Welll>'a lfewpecW lllD When high school and college stUd.ent.s return • to school, Fairviiw State Hospital finds it is in ·need of other community volunteers to assist with the 1700 mentally retarded and physically handicapped clients. Types of volunteer work available include: -Teachers' aides in classrooms for one.to-one work; assistants to teach basic skills of daily liv· ing, and volunteers to take clients for walks and activities. A ,, -l\BRIC SA..-...... --someone to organize and manage the "thrift shop" which is operated like a store except all items are free. -Receptionist in the administration building. Anyone wlth talents in arts, crafts, music and clerical work also is needed. SPORTSWEAR "CALCUTT A LOOK" Krinkle Solids HEAVY WEIGHT Volµnteers may call 545-9331 aJtd apply. Great for sportswear, playwear and leisure ---------------------------~-•wear. Wide color selection including natural. Like To Hear More About the TRAllSCEllDEllTAL MEDITA 11011 '~ PROGRAM? As Taught By MAHARISHI MAH ESH YOGI Free Introductory Lecture NEWPORT BEACH ...,._,..!."!' ~...!! .!.C.a ...... a. J!lV~~.E ...... 1 141p-~ua._~a~ SANTAANA We&sept.1712- tt•i ................ luttt. ...... ., • 1 ... ' - • Permanently wrinkled · Never needs ironing. 42"/43" wide· 100% cotton Machine wash • Tumble dry FANTASTIC SAVINGS I Corduroy Beautiful 7 wale corduroy in lhe latest fall colors. Great for jackets & pants. Machine wash· Tumble dry -44"/45" wide. !~'Cotton TREMENDOUS VALUE! .- Double Knits PONTE ROMA STITCH • OREPE STITCH All new fall colors to select from. 60"/64" wide. Machine washable, Hl0% texturized polyester. SUPER SAVINGS! 1~ -~-.__ -··~-l.t~11.-.. ~ ~ ...... C....~45-ISl6 _,.., ' . w ... : ··~ -~ WMI ' 6 I JIJI ' 1 llwJt cc... .................... ", ..... ,..,.....-· / ~ I r MC CALL 'S • 4560 _.,.... ~ ,,.._..,... $llhl "'" 14J..ll"ll .. ---u .... 11.._ .... ,.. UMU~ ' • ~ ' ·. ~ ' RIMKY Wll«ERIEAM ' .FIGMEMTS MAM CY OH, DEAR·- SOME POOR BIRD LOST ·HER NEST ' . • ---..-'I: . . llrWaF.••••MllC:.111 ' lloll! '*"""' ..., NMRTeu. 11¥1lanll! rM All\Al.EO IT CIJAe. ABLE 'Rl IU>RK OUT ALL 1IE LUNCI\ $)IE.DOU:&/ l HATE iO SEE IT GOTO WASTE .. ,, ' I ! . j • r I l lllfll:~,. ) bf DaletWt ' TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLB . t- I ' I ' • DICK TRACY I• • I -.... r, WNAI 00 , = 00 CN WINCV -~, .J . ~ • ,.,, ANIMAL CRACKERS :t 114it.»C. "le'.' P1AA · 10~116'RIR ~t:> H()f(e, ,, ,,, ' .. ~ ... ·~ -.. -1, • ~ -• - LFl's JUST WAIT' AND WATCH.'' • ' , ____ _ --- ( bf Rodger ••••• I -sllf M'T llll.'lllP L tf T AF1 (Ii: ,;,a. WUif l~ltitl ;.1U;;.C""--JI HWGE! • so ,:'(.I;. KICK IN ; .,..,. .. POO"! } bf hnt .W.11111 THE GIRLS ~ • " ~ - • - 'WnM AU TllE ~~AA~ llf11£ Ofl ••• 'QI T~IMK WE MIT!. SIT TAAT CLosE ~~· . I . " -·· I < .. DAILY PILOT 1 TD :Tony ·,Traded By Ram~ SAN DIEGO (AP) -Tony Baker, who got the" nickname 'Touchdown Tony" bulling for touchdowns and first downs for t,pe Los Angeles Rams, has been ~ed to the San Diego Chargers l\sr an undisclosed future draft choice. ,.Baker, an eight.year veteran from Iowa State, had been with t.ae Rams since 1973 when he was acquired from Philadelphia in the Roman Gabriel trade. In his first season with the Ra.ms he m ade good on 28 or 41 rushing tries for first downs and led Los Angeles runners with ::;even touchdowns . In 1974 Baker, S·fool:-11 and 21S. pc>unds , carried 53 times for 135 yards and five touchdowns as a short yardage specialist. .. ,, .... ·-4 •• ,. BOSTON -Fred Lynn, the rookie outfield er who has become the toast of Boston Red Sox fans, did it again Sunday. He had four hits in four at bats against Miiwaukee. including a ~ome run. and drove in two more es Boston downed the Milwaukee .arcWers 8-6 at Fenway Park before 28,187 fan s. Lynn raised his batting kverage to .336. ' • S•....,ort '"'" • LOS ANGELES Torben .Ulrich and Frank Sedgman scored semi(inal victori es Sun - day in the $15,000 Grandmasters tennis tournament. Ulrich stopped Hugh Stewart o( ~P,_~port Beach, 2-6, S.2, 6-2 and ~gman beat Pancho Segura S.4r6-I. ln doubles Segura and Stewart teamed to defeat Tom Brown and Frank Parker 6-2, 6-1 and Ulrich and Sven Davidson defeated Sedgman and Vic SeixasS.3, 7-6. Jlritaf11-rop 'CLEVELAND -Glynis Coles ga\'e Britain ·a second yea.r 's fe1[ on the Wightman CUp Sun-~ with a victory over Mona ~ allau, after Chris Evert had kept the American hopes alive ·µi a hard-( ought 6-3, 7-6 victory r'British ace Virginia Wade. les downed Schallau 6-3, 7-6. victory gave the British men an unbeatable 4-2 edge in .lhe best-of-seven series, "and the En&:lish doubles team of Coles abd Sue Barker beat Evert and Sdlallau 7-5, 6-4 to fmish off the Americans. -l'WetVfe""'9 RLOTTE, N.C. -Vijay traj or India used strong d strokes in the last two sets Sunday to beat ,Ille Nastase o.{ Romania 3-6, 7-$, 6-4 in the ~~·s singles championship or ~e Carolinas International ten-n.1.1. tournament. _ ~artier, Martina Navratilova held o!f a thiTd set rally by t;vonne Goolagong to capture the . Wl)Ulen's title 4·6, 6-2, 1·6. TV Settled GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) -· The European Broadcasting Union (EBU> formally an- n6unced today a final agreement with Montreal organizers on . television coverage of the 1976 Summer Olympics out.side North Jlmerica. · The EBU said five regional TV Jroups from East and West 'iurope, Asia, Latin America and the Middle East will together pay the Montreal organizing commit- tee $9.4 million for television t4hts. I U .. IT ........ JACK NICKLAUS BITES LIP ON WAY Ta OPEN TITLE- World Open Golf Nicklaus Subdues Casper in Playoff PINEHURST, N.C. CA P) - Jack Nicklaus swept past falter-· ing Tom Weiskopf, tied Billy Casper !or the lead and then sub- dued the portly veteran in a sud- den-death playoff for the title in the World Open golf tournament Sunday. Nicklaus acquired his ruth tiUe o( the year, and the 59th of his un- matched career, when Casper missed the green on the first ex- tra hole, chipped to about seven feet and missed the putt. It wa.s a bogey. Nicklaus started the !inal ro\Dld five strokes back, made it up with a two-under-par 69.-the best score ol the day in the tricky winds that swirled through the piny woods at this old resort - and tied Casper with a2Mtotal. Casper also was four under par on the 7,007-yard No. 2 course at the Pinehurst Country· Club. He came Crom lour strokes back with a creditable 70 but couldn't match Nicklaus in the playoff. It was another in a series o( bit- ter disappointments for the moody Weiskopf, who hasn't yet fully recovered from his loss to Nicklaus in the Masters. He started the final round with the lead, then lost it with a scrambl- ing, !our-over-par 39 on the !root nine. He missed a couple of six-foot birdie putts on the last nine, re- gained a share o( the lead with a two-putt birdie four on the 16th, parred the 17th and, with Nicklaus and Casper already completed, needed only a par on the !in al hole to get i.n theJ>la;xoff. But his tee shot drifted into the tall, stately pines that line the right side of the final (airway. He threaded his second shot through them into a bunker, blasted out to .seven feet then sa'! that putt - for par ind a playoff spot -hit the hole and spin out. He finished with a (our-over-par 75 and mis- sed the playo(( by one at281. Jacll Midi.I-, "'°.000 6111YC.$Cler,UJ.«IO Tomw.llllopt,11•,toO P•I Flll:slrnoru., 5•,..00 EOSllMd,M,21lO ._.!l"f' Net-. M,US AOO f-"1, $6.tsS JotwilM"'-"-y,M.tsl ..1otw1Sc...i ...... 2ss 1ki6~r,'4,NO lltermll larl•y, $4,2• wany Nrnstrono, $4,2.0 How.I rd Twitty, '4.240 8ruc:9 LMlzll•, $4,240 LHEl.S.r,SJ.JOD ~W.0111"5,U,)OO Rlti;Mli~l•,52,,11 J .C. SN.0, U ,•11 ChlorlH COOdy, $2,,11 CN Oil Rodrlouez.l?,•11 LouGr.n.m, 12.•11 LH Tr•'flr>O, $2,•11 ._.,..,,.,w.0111ns.st•11 Dan Bl•s, $1,160 Tom Kit•, $1,'80 Mk McUnOOn, ll,'80 DennyEaw..-os. s1.4IO T ... ry Oi.111.11.• Cbn J•nworv. Sl,40 .M,INMn,11 .... MllW a.r._,.. $1.40 Mtrt. H•Yff.11.0'2 8"K• CT•IY!Olon, Sl,Olll a.n 0-.nstMw, $ 1,0IJ .Mock Ewlno, 11.on DMSlll•s, 11,0ll Lyn Lott, 51,0l:I .Jahnny Mlllw, 11.0ll 10-11·JO..ff.llD 10-1'2-*-10-2IO •7-11*-11-211 ., .... 11-11-292 ... 10-10..1J.2U 11).11.ff.1 .. llol 61·J'O..l .. 1).2M l'l).11·10-l:t-2M M-n-1>-11-at n .71 .11-11-m 71.ff.7 .. 71-lti .._n.11-1>-m ..... D-71-21:5 n-n-11-10-m "", .. ,,., .. ,.. 10-10..1J.1).211o 11.1 .. 10-11-m 1l-+f.11·7 .. 2'7 7>-11·71-72-287 1..._n.n -211 .._n., .. , .. 211 .,_,,., .. ,1.ze1 1\·10-1!-1l-211 1+.ff.10-IS-8 10--M-7J.7S-2'9 71.f'l-7.._7 .. ?tt •7·12·7S-7J.2" 1l-11·10-1 .... 2" n:.12.1i-1:t-m ~1-11-n-2tl'I ,,.,,., .. 70-,,. 11-11-73-7•2'0 70-7l-71·1S-2'0 7W7-7S-7J.1"IO 7•7Wl-71-2'10 71-1:t-1S-Jl-2'0 n ·11·1S-12·2'0 n-71·7 ... ~2'0 I I , • Next 48 Hours Will Tell By CllAIG AllMEIUIAN .. _ .... Pr91 SymPathy abounds among Na· tional Football Leacue players for the New England Patriot&' lonely 1trike 1tance. Whether it can be turned Into real support in the next 48 hours will likely de- termine the outcome of the players' latest rebellion. The Patriots, in a show or solidarity, voted to strike and forced the cancellation of their Sunday exhibition against the New York Jets in the belief that others would follow their demand that NFL owners and tbe playen' union reach agreement on a new labor contract. The followers did not materialize over the weekend and now the Patriots lace a lockout by management if they attempt to resume practice Tues- day !or this weekend's NFL opener against Houston. Team after team announced Sunday they supported the Patriots. The St. Louis Cardinals even voted 30-16 to strike, but de- cided that vote was not strong enough and went ahead with Uleir exhibition game against Denver, which the Broncos won 21-17 . "We do not enjoy this task which we have taken upon ourselves." said Randy Vataha, player representative for the Patriots, who voted 39-2 to strike. Vataha, holding a news con- ference in a restaurant parking lot in Foxboro, Mass., Sunday, called on the other 2S NF1.. clubs to join tnePatriots on the strike line. · But with one week remaining before the NFL season opens - when the players begin drawing regular checks -there were no immediate takers. Player representatives (or four teams -Buffalo, Denver, Cincinnati and Dallas -said their teams would not vote to strike, and others said they had no im- mediate intentions or taking strike votes. Hovering over the Patriots and any other team which strikes is this m:anagement statement: any team which strikes will not be paid and may not practice or play a game until a contract is ·signed or until the players union delivers a no-strike pledge . w._.hingtoo quarterback Billy Kilmer said players across the league were concerned. that the Patriots not be punished !or their actions. He noted that tbe Redskins would meet today to· discuss what action they should take, and be said be would vote to strike. · In Washington, Ed Garvey, ex- ecutive director ol the players' uniOn, huddled with aides throughout the day Sunday. Sargent Karch, executive d.irec· tor of the NFL Management Council, did the same in New York. Both said they were willin2 to negotiate; both said no new sessions were scheduled. All of which only escalates the RANDY VATAHA bard feelints which have de- veloped since Jan. 31, 1974 when the last contract betweeen the union and tbe league expired. A strike let summer dissolved in !allure without bringing a new agreeme,t. · "This a: art outraa~'' said Cleveland owner Arthur Model.I, and others in management had similar comments about the latest str!te. The Impasse wblch started the prolil"""' remalm: the union In· 8lsts -leasue rul• Wlllch bind a pl.,_. to one team ""' lll<eal 8Dcl ahould be 1ettlecl In Ute .eourili; lhe leacue 'mi"• they' must be necotlat.ecL Fl;om - a1anc ... !he t-ald!ls ba"'nenr buds ed. Tiie pl«Jeny)MIJ'lloa W. to .. w!llcb tbe leaSUe and Ill elul» have not ~bated alnce the lat -tract expired, <OUld IO irolto tbla year if then la not a aew aareement. AddiUooallY. t11o union bas Ioat members alnce clubo quit deducting dues from cheek• and Garve~ Ila• a-ledged It la _.,, the · unicm ''will be busted.'' Vataba said, "We uttlloother• 25 clubs to commit fbemM!ves to the effort to preelpllate mean-lnlful negotlatloos. Wltbcut such a united commitment, the NFLPA (the union) can no I-er be coosidered a viable bare:ainlng agent for the players.'' . Karch said the league bad no intention of backing down from its statemeot barring •trlklnc teams from practicing°" playing aod &aid it WU pos•ible the NFL would opeo this week with 12 games instead o( 13, meaning the" New York-Houston game would be cODA:eied. • "We doo't believe that football faM abould bave to be on pins and needles every weekend wm ... dering wbether there Is goiog to be a game,•• be said. 11,123 See Had~n •• Bow Out in Def eat It was billed as ''USC Day'' as former University of Southern California quarterback Pat Haden played his last home game !or the Southern California Sun of the World Football League. The Charlotte Hornets kissed him a line goodbye. With only a minute remaining in the game Sunday Haden drove the Sun Crom its own 34-(ard line to the Hornets' goa where Charlotte defenders clobbered him on a rollout. Haden was taken !tom the game and the Hornets kept the Sun from scoring on two smashes from the one-yard line and won their (ourtb straight game with a 30-22 victory over Southern California. "I had some trouble seeing," a groggy Haden said afterwards. "I couldn't see too well after they hit me. It was only two plays from the end; and if I'd been able to play I think we would have won ." . It was Haden 's fmal game at Anaheim this season. After a game on the road for the Sun he leaves for England as a RhOdes Scbolar. A paid crowd was announced at 11,123 as the Sun held the day to honor Haden and other former Trojans now with the WFL team -Anthony Davis, John McKay and Jimmy Sims. -.... SC-Dll.t.Urwnpnsf.S'- 0 I 7 ts-» 0 1 • ~ 0. -·HIQMmltft'""' Young .-ss rram -. Olll-catltl 1••• trom """'*' pm.s f.n.:11 SC-0.wtllnMLlnd...,,_.ff-.n~ sc-c.....n..-,,_~,...,....., .. CN-Kfflt"1 '' ,.u ,,_ 5tllm'*I Hltfllrnlttt ,..'"'",__ . Olll-~U.1 NI pnsf.tlifd Halos Meet Minnesota MINNEAPOLIS (AP) 'Harmon Killebrew and Frank White slugged home nms and Steve Busby pitched a three- hitter, leading the Kaosas City Royals to a lo-4 victory over the· California Angels Sunday_ Tonight the Angels tangle with the Minnesota Twins and Bert Blyleven. The game will be beard on KMPC (710) at 6. Killebrew's two-run blast, his 13th ol the season and S72nd. or his career, capped a four-nm CU'st inning and came off Frank Tanana. White hit his flfth homer of the year of( Tanana, 15-8, in the second.· The game ended the season series !or the two clubs. The Royals bad a 14-4 edge. -n Lacy's Rifle Arm iuelps LA Victory CAUl'OllMIA ...... ., , • 1 1 sooo 1 1 0 0 ' t 1 t 3000 1 0 •• ... , 0 ... 0 0 3110 ' •• 0 1010 ' 1 1 1 ooeo 0000 0000 . """'"' ...... 0.~1b .. ..._ ... ValenlNdh ,_,. ...... CITY ....... '1 • 1 S110 Sl•t SllS i 1 1 1 ' 1 1 ' '0 ' 1 ' 1 1 • i' 2 • 0000 ~ci. 0 0 -· ""'" ..-. .. NII.,.,,,, 1'1 -.. .. .. ._ ... ...... B.Mtrtllm:c F.Wllltea. I 'LOS ANGELES CAP) -Lee Lacy doesn't know where he 'll be" in 1976 -in the Los Angeles Dode: era' outfield or infield or with some other club -but he acknowledges that he is now at ~tum.in& point or his career. Lacy, an infielder-turned-. Dodgn-s Slat" -· I AlttlM'" KAIC 00.1 ' ..•.• fJ:IMOlotttat L.olAngMH 7:2Sp.m. .. ._oi.tee4L05A'*lei I' Ji,.m. 1r...,°"'911atL~lt9lln I .1)P.m-. o&ltflolde1', continued Sunday to i!erfonn br!WanUy In lelll!eld for Dodaen In a 3-2 victory over .Atlanta Braves, as well u 44111<tve ltlJ batUn1 averqe to , ad now the 'Ulelt.ion is wb.a.t to happen next year. threw out a runner at third e -the fifth runner he'• !Id thla season, in only 30 • In the outlleld, that he's OOlt -and he doesn't imat 1111 future mljht hold. ~J dad'I kn.,.._ " qys the 27- ld 1.-q;;ibut the Dodaen -r•:-:-:zallon ll whe"l' I started. llutl'I "Where I want to f"4 11¥11.. ¥ llllded+ ''JW cloo't ;.t 'l!'Jlal 7CJU wuUnllle. ffJ'lll .-, to Ille J)omlnlcm> Republic this winter, play second base and the outfield, work with Davey (Lopes will play short· stop) and see what happens.·· He has been offered as trade material numerous times by the Dodgers but each time the deal was rebuffed. Now. however , because ol his performances in the outfield a$ well as at the plate, his value bas soared. "I'd have to 1ay ,''he said wtth a smile, "thi• la a tuming point in my career.'' ATLANTA LOSANO•LIS .. ,..... .., . ., .so 1 o U,.ID 3 1 0 o •OtO Lky" . •Ott lo Io W.Crlilrtwatf I 0 1 o I 2 2 O 11.,.._C"f 0 I 0 0 1000 GllPWYt• •100 1021.,::.ya •111 1ooom1t11 3010 '0 2 1 . .,.....,., '0 1 0 3000 ftwwll• 3000 1 0 1 0 lllMill 3 0 1 0 aoo o Houltl• 0000 1 0 1 0 ~000 ' 1 0 0 0 IKE THOMAS RETURNS A KICKOFF TO AID CHARLOTIE OVER SUN, :J0.22. -·-· ...... .._. .. .,.....,,., AltlttUC T•'*"P ...... Htss!wp -· -. .. Totlls 3l 4 6 4 Tot•l5 '7 10 13 10 C.llloml• 001 GOO II»-• KanMS CllV •12 000 21•-10 E--0\lolk. G. 8r.lt, O. 8rlgos.. OP--Cllllfoml•), ICAinsM Cily I. L08-C.tltornl• S, Kansu Oty 6, 2&-G. &ntt t. Mt)'tl9rr, o..a.. HR-tell~ (11), I'. Wl'lll8 CSl,Alo.H• 01, 0. eriw-111. .,. " It ••••to T----(L_ lS.0) '"' 8 1 1 1 ' UflDit ..a..-..s1322 Hlmlitf' 1 ••••• .,..,. f'lt, 11-ttl """' .s 4 ' :a ·.' ~ , t\to1000G ...-.~ T_,:IL'-1.a:a. . N~t1ae Da•ne, Boston CeDege Clash FOXBORO, Mass. <AP) - Notre Dame begins a new ,chapter In co.!leae root.bail's all- ti me best seller tonight .when the Fighting Irish kick off their 87th season, this one with Dan Devine at the belm'for the first time. , The era of Ara Parseahian bas ended and the 50-year .. ld Devine makes bis debut '•• Notre Da.me'a 23rd head co.ch in a na- tlonally televised cam• agaln9t tlll&ed Boston Collece, qpected to be oaeof top teamsiJltbe Eut. Notre Dame'• defense is a mauivo froo1 four r-..nna 27o-. , . I pound Steve Nlebatis and 255- pound Jerr Weston at the tackles with 235-pound Ros• Browner 'JlraDe:r, l8<!0lid·teain !Wlback' -Al Hunter and reserve nmnlDC back Dan Knott. Hbwever, lhe offeose loot 10 Ott TV T-fPt starters, locludlna quartttbacl:: Clr•ll-l 7 •t 8 Torn Clements al)d the top four { l'llllllOfS -Wayoe Bullock, Al ·and 226-pbund Willie ~ at the Samuel, Clomonts and'Art Bert. ends. The return or Browner and Beat, who would have been a 1"y from a poe-year suapet111IOD sei~or. wasexpelledll'omthoun- enabled Devine to"'°"" Nieballs lvel'llty this fall for un4iaclosed bail:I:: from. end to tackle, where ~cll'llnal'Y reasons. hi' starred as 11 eopbomore, while That !~av~~ ~evloe with swltehlna stilidollL. end Jim bolclover 1uar4 Al 'Wlllc!U. ~to !hleb~er. aiternale tlabt ood Kell ihbU.., Alto b9ek from iurpenslon""' and. • baclcflold compooeil\ot atartill <1oiwbaclt. J.uthor quarterback Rici:: Sla1or, \ - 'halfbacks Mark JlcLane and Terry Eurick alld fullback Steve Orsini. Slqer threw all or elsht -last fall while JlcLane carried 42 times fOO' 'JJ1I yarda1 • E\lrlck 19. for llL Orllni carrieo · 11 tim~ foc 72 )'arils lnlt74forthe jllhiorvanlty. B. C.'s olllJ offensive problem Is Notre Dame's def..,..,, Mil\e Kruczek completed a atwml• 81.11. 'jlercent ol ltlJ J>I•-last fall, fullback Keilh =· was the aatlon'• IHdlnc tmaur ml spilt end Dne badt Ill on the· verae of ..Wnc e.,.., ICbool rec:elviJll .-.1.. -. Ex-Baron To Play In Europe .. • .. SeasonNean I • .·Checking Area Polo Prospects The Orance Coast •re• 11 acknowted1ed .u oae ot the 'toushut -If not the but . ~-lnblc~acJIOl>lwaler A.ltd · tho Nowporl·M•• DI.I· ! tnct, wblch lncluclea msCJF4-A. champloa .<:oroiia de! llar, nm- nerup N!Jort Harbor 1nd Elllancla Coata M-fCN"m the con of the power llruc:ture. Tbe MUOD belina with the 3i· tam lloore Lea~tournament Thunday and Newport Harbor and Corona dol llar loom u aolld CODt.enden. . . Here'• a capsulo lootateacbol tbetour lleH·N•wport-en: unit. that llaO. teatur. returnlnc llUltta 5114 De.m'-lr:I, -~and Sbaun Gallagber . Others . who tlpre to help <Ollcb Terry Bowen'a outllt are Imler Gleon Lyatne and JU!liat Mark Whltmor4!. · A. question mark la at -11• lbutU la i>oe of the happier ones for llowell. He's 1ot two (OOd ones to wick from . Sophomore Mark tClarlt (6-3) and junior Ron n.., ·(M) provide Mesa with more ltban-b at that pool•lon. Sophomores John Olien and Bob Dolan, •onion Lou Schull<, 5c<Jtt Uncoln and Jeff Neale and JW!lor Kurt Lysine round out tho U.t ot potential starten. · . . \ • • I .. Former Fountain Valley Hlgb basketball star Scott Reider bas joined the ranks of the pro- fessionals after a two-year stint at the University of Santa Clara. . C.re••,,.,lf•r ()qroaa del Mar Hip's 1974 CIF f.A water polo champioos ·bout three returning starters in seniors Frank Browne, Mike Palmer and D1ve·Smith. Monroe missed the school scor-inc record or n goals by Ron Mis- iolek by six in 1874, and figures to make another run at that mark. In Action l'll•nda"· .. '•1 The 6-11 Reider hu left the • country and will play for FOl"S8a of Finland in the European League. Cliff Hooper, the coach who bas led the Sea Kings to put glories, however, baa left to coach at El Toro Higb, leaving a "We'll pick oft the hole a litUe more than we used to," aa.Ys Bowen in assessing his team's of. fen5e. Costa Mesa High quarterback Tim Rosauer will lead the Mustangs against La Quinta High Thursday· night at Boise Grande High (7 :30) in the 1975 prep foot· ball opener. , ··~ • Forss a is aboitt an hour's.drive from Helsinki and the season began Sept. 1. "! figure to be the lallest and youngest (20) player on the team," says Reider. Only one American is allowed per team and competition figures a step below that of major college basketball, according to Reider. · "As a freshman at Santa Clara· I sat on the bench and got only a few minutes of playing time in,'• says Reider, who quit the team priort~ his sophomore season. "Basketball was cutting Into too much of my time and school meant too much lo me," says Reider. ''I just .wasn't interested in playing university ball." Reider is to receive $650 per month, plus room and board and traveling expenses. · The European season runs through February and ·rmishes with playoffs. unique situation. · Bruce Bartholomew, Who was announced aa head coacbearller, then refuted by CdM principal Dennis Evans, is in charge of the Corona del Mar program, ac· cording to athletic director Ron Davia. Others In the Corona del Mar . outfit are goalie Alan ·Launer (&-0, 165 Jr.), aenior Jeff Wherry, juniors Dean Heck and. Steve Wright, seniors Mike Sayer, Rob · ·weber and Mike Yracebum and junior Paul Semonsen. ''We expect to follow along the . sa"me lines offensively," says Bartholomew. Wherry will pro- b ab 1 y ·man the bole and sometimes Palmer will set the hole. We have less experience : but perhaps more talent than last ·year." ·· C.st• lffa• Second team All·CIF 4-A selec- tion· Joel Monroe spearheads a Costa Mesa Mustangs water polo f Seniors Winners E•l•lld. The Eagles or Estancia lli&h lost Steve Wyatt and Bill Lee to graduation and have a new coach in Barry Fry. Fry, who coached Estancia for seven years, returns after a three-year layoff and will try to mold an Irvine League title con· Football Standings F()r Pros tender from five returning ......,.... ................ starters. ...... • ......_,......._ Back are seniors Keller ........ •c.t.rw• .._ ... _ Penrod (5·11 goalie). Eric . w 1. T ~t. "',.,. JOitmer, Clay Stevens, Bill May N.vo.m. • 1 o ·"' tn MD and Erin Sloan. ...,,.,...., • S 0 .S71 lll ltl ti. LMlta J I e ·"'° • ti Senior Jeff Brokei' figures to ""' .... ~ 1 1 o .JOO ., no work into the starting: lineup and o..i. ca.!.t4r11:..-t: .,. 1• seniors Don Mayfield and Erle Mlol"••" 2 1 ' .•11 ., ,., Strohmeier give depth to a squad &".:'°.., : ! : := !: 1~ that also includes junior Marc Dttt011 , • o .m ts •• L<>wry, Ty Schmidt, Howie Hull t.M~~Dlo~ fl.ii s1 and sophomores Phil Ohle and s.i l'f"entltc:o 1 1 ' ·* ~ • Jerry Wyatt. Ats.it• 1 1 o ·* n u .... 0r.._ i • o .m ., '°' Lowry figures to be the only AM•••CAMCOMl'•••MCS junior starter. ~ O:~t. ~ '"' "We 've ·got a lot of fast sprln· MIMtl s 1 o .w '°' 10 ters and we 'll use a fast break of-N.V.JtU • 1 o .• »S ti ..... ~ , t " ·'°" 111 "IOll fense.'' says Fry. 9uff.io 1 , 11 .JOO 1n ,. ..... ,,_.. J 4 0 .UJ 1S ID rwe.,...re ...... r , OncinMtl~·IJIH~I 13' lOlo Newport Harbor High coach HllMlnlll , , o .soo 111 MD Bill Barnett has a bundle of re-= ~ ! : :: :: ~ turning talent from varsity, · · w ....... Okol9olM junior varsity and frosb-sopb out· ~o" ~ ~ : :: 1:: ~: Bob Duesler or ·Huntington doubles over Ed Kauder and fits that each swept to &Inset :::=,.. ~ ! ~ := ';! : .Beach and Hank LeichUried of Dick Meteer, 3-6, 7 ·6, 64. Le~ue cbam1 piondshipscedin J.97to4.th -· -Newport Beach tott to top· .. In the featured men's .35 .,,e varsi y a van e 1tu.ita11,Pftl1Me1oM•1• seeded Howard Lee and Jim singles, Gordon Davis, a one· CIF ~•·A finals before falling to ~'.~::W..:::-"'' Nelson in 'the men's 35 doubles time use star. defeated John ·rival Corona del Mar and among ¥1.nis1,H-v0f"11G1•llt.ltt competition .in a crowd· Norgauer,4·6,6·2,7·Stowinhis theretumingstartersrromthat :-;1~;.~:,0:.::., pleasing match or the Pacific second Pacific Southwest crown. standout unit are Frank An· S-.l"renttsceJ•,Gt-""a.yJ Southwest seniors tennis tourna· He captured the title in 1972 for derson, Kevin Robertson, George ""---~=··01·''- ment Sunday at the Newport the firs~ time. · Newland, John Dobrott.and Greg r::;~w11. ""''' .1 ,...... ~. Beach Tennis Club before 1,200 CMAMPiONsMi .. ,,,....u 1!uJ~or Ra'ndy Parole 18. st3.· o.nwr21.stLDu1111 fans. M•M'SSIMGt.U ,A aft WCHILDl'OOTU.LLLaAOUll Duesler and Leichtfried, both 3S-De11l•dltf . ...,......,. ....... i.1.s. tioned at the ne(,.l) er compel· h•""'D'"'"" former high s.chool coaches in =;..~--~"~.':;..... ingonthejuniorvarsitylevel. · ,,.._11 '1 ~ ~ ~ the Huntington Beach area, fell J~"'· Lau ..... ..,,. others who will play a big Troedle Bl""•ftllhM\ s 1 0 •714 · t h Iba · ed · ~~ro-1.F~• ... 2."""-in Newport's success are a-'°"9 4 1 o ... 1 6-2, 7·6 tn a ma c t gam m u-f!MN1cirf.0wor1""1"',1"" McG1"nley. Mitch White. Jeff .1«11..,,u,. , a o .soo competitiveness as the action MaM-sDOUaLU Pr!!..,.~ 1 s o ·* .. ,. ..... 11'1 106 '" 114 '" "' 121 1ll 112 1'9 ed · 35-Ue---,..1_.,_~.L9ktltfrled'"t,1-6. De.Mott, Mitch Gray, and Mike -.-.01wKi. progress . . ~·MllWI*'· Kwllw-MHMrM,7..._ y 11 k · S..Amcwllo s s " .•2s 20 1n In the second set, the area duo '"'-e e amp. Soutl'ltnlc..r. 4 1 o .SJ1 2a:1 21t. I t t · · · t 1· 50-M9<.e&IJ.H1ppet11ti.1 *'· ~°"".,. Also Bob Iverson and Gordon .ww.11 , 1 o .soo 111 1s1 os ou 1n a nine pain •e· 1_.,1...., Do ( th · · Stw•'""'°'t' J s o .n. 111 1!D breaker after coming back to tie ss-ch••••bro.o•llow•Y d•'· Huth•s· • Mc ugal are up rom e JUIUOr Portl*'ll J s o .1" 1n 113 tbecountat6-6. H1ppM1st1o1s.1 .... s.M. varsity, in addition lo Jeff · ...-...,..k.,.. ~r-1.0.•StrM&M .... 1. Stevens:. · Pwtl&r.dU,.PMIMI=" George MacCall or Laguna ~M<.F.,._ .... Nmllllwy·W-"Our biggest problem .is too Bl~Jl.WI +ou Beach teamed with Clyde Hip-w. .. :t.. WOM•M-st11tOLu many seniors," says Barnett. M9mp!MiS:.--st.'~:n penstiel to capture two tie ......,._1dlof.wtn.n1M ... 1.w. Anderson and FuJ•n will man ow1o1:w•.SoutNn1c.1KonNn breakers and win the men's so WOM•M'SDOUaLU ..., H1o-i1n,JKks.iv111o1s d bl till Ch I H ... .......,...l'd-MlltthlftWl'I dtf. E-WINN: the bole in a single rotating .._..., .,..,. ou es e over ar es ui.r ... N 1. PM1Mlllptil• .1 JK11.-1111i., 1:» bardandGilDuran,7·6,7-6. '"°s'ct!uc11etw111t .. 1.m1111gcr.t.Sm1~v-system . .n.mong ewpor s p.m. King L8mbert. of the Neunvt.rt &-J .... t. schedule are Downey, Mira •·."""»n~ c.11for'11• ,, Stw-9.wport, Cl b ed-wi~th MIXEDDOUILU .Costa,,Sunny Hills and ~··~ Beach Tennis u , team 1.oktltfrlff.Mc;Kor:o. dtlt. ,...~ 1-6, Lak ood s-nr,s.,t. 11 Sam Maleh to win the men's 45 ,..._..... ew · cn1r101to •' e1rm1110111m, 3 -'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~.p.m. . H-•ll-'S...A11tonlo,6p.m. Mo,.,.,..11•! Porll•nd, lp.m. The Plep Beat • New High Sclwol Opens in lrvi~ . The Orange Coast area hu a 16th high school with the addition or Irvine High now a reality. 'lbe green, light blue and white Va· queros will compete In ·freshman sports this year and rootball coach Bob Pestolesi has a rune·game slate lined up. The· athletic director is Bi'ian Quinn, who was Uni,·c rsity Hlgb's . volleyball coach last year. The Va· :ROGER CARLSON. . . queros will operate out or Rancho San 'Joaquin Junior Hieb this year, then move to the new campus near CUiver and the Santa Ana Freeway. Pestolesi, formerly a Huntington Beach High and Cal State (Long Beach) fullback·linebacker, says his team will use an· l·fonnaUon offense and okie defense. Also competing in freshman activi· ty will be water polo and cross colln- try, plus girls volleyball. · . Ir "With lesa and 1 .. ..._ '"""hi( , lo tile atbletlc progrUDI ~b tu • es It'• becomtn1 more and, more a , situation wbere the parents mut , beeome involved and belp,'' n1• • Smith. Other notes : · • • Thousand Oaks Hleh bas a d""'1t 13-year football record ol 72 wlm, u · looses and 4 ties. Butdon'ttrjtosell it to Simi Valley. As far as Simi Vallo folks are concerned, the Lancers qr Thousand Oaks have beeo invincible, . ln 12 meetings Simi Valley hu ;~l to win." Would you believe Tboua , Oaks bas scheduled its Homecomlnt• for the Simi yalley game this year! · . The CIF will agalti rutare the Top 10 football uam1 tbla fall, and there baa been an addllloo lo Ibo propam wltll Top lh In ..... ~ u.i,. water polo planned for tbe fall. . ;.. Newport Harbor is shooting for ~"' third consecutive Sunset League f~ ball championship and the Sailors, have to be one of the favorites.. • The last <and only) Orange Colllf. area team to win three straight varsi- ty football titles was Mater Dei under, Steve Musseau in 1955 and 1956 and Dick Coury in 1857. .. . . Tlie recent retirement declatoO by Former Edlton m,ii football lllat'' Newport Harbor High baseball roach Steve Hines Is workiai with tti81 Andy Smith closes out a JS -year second nnit on the varsity level •• ·~ career as varsity ~oacb for the Sallon freshman at San Joee State, despltM" -one of tile longest tenures ever. l.n. sUIJ bel.n.g hampered by his knee ln-1 Orange Coast area biltor)'. jury. '' · Amoa1 the achievements itacked· And e1:·Edlson 1t1adoat1 Stev'ei up by Smith are the improved COD· 11mmerman and Bob Graves loom a'i · · ditlou at Newport Harbor IDgb's big Items ID the attacb at Wuhl.ngton diamond. State and W asbington tlllJ year. But Smith refa ... credit. laacllng the parents who ovei' tbe yean have Mission Viejo High football coach made the · major coatrlbatlon -John Murio reports that quarterbac~.-· money and time. placekicker Doug Reeves has boot.eel r •"The parents came through with a57-yard field goal in practice. · 1 the batting cage, the new dugouts, the The Rams' Tom Dempsey startled, red dirt for the Infield, the outfleld the nation with his 63+yarder a feW .~ fences and the uniforms for the past seasons ago when playing for New .1 twoyears.. · . Orleans. r:~~==~~~~~~==~ VOLVO SALE Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEA.GUE EutDivlaJoo NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division • Rare taste. Either have it. Or you don't. Baseball's Top 10 I Al uni._ ..... priced .t ••lew 1 .. a••• of •1 J d 251L 66 TO CHOOSE FROM ------------TOYOTA SALE COMPLETE INVENTORY MUST GO • aJROl1AS •m!CAS • IANO CRUISERS •aJRONAS •MXs • 11.WX's El<alnple: '75COROLU 2 Door Sedan. 4 opHd, ,,, fldery-toe8307 52876 • :·BUY .. LEASE c-i. ....... • I W L Pct. GB 88 61 .591 84 65 .564 4 77 72 .517 11 71 74 ;490 15 Boston Baltimore New York Clveland Milwaukee Detroit 63 87 .42XI 25'h :;s !N .369. 33 . WestDiruJoo 90 58 .008 Oaldaod Kansas City Texas Chicago Minnesota Angels 83 65 .561 7 74 76 .493 17 69. 78 .469 20'h 68 77 .469 20'h 67 82 .450 23'h ......., .. ~· a."1,....t, Dlltr .. tJ Bostoftl. Mll••ullN• ..... Yortr.6, c .. ,,.1-"d I Ml,,,.•t•to,0.kl~· "'""'' City ''· C.ltfonll• 4 T•Q1t,Ch1u9Dl.1JIMllllJI • T .... 'f''IO.- MU-11• ICctlllorn 1G-t1) .,t. Boslori {MDftot l).J) OllCfflO fOltlotl 7•,41 •t k-Oty (SplltlDfff ... GMlfonll• (~ IMll .._ MINWICM fBtri.- 1 .. l . ~ ce1u.1 .. 111 •tT•U111~"'-16J 0ro1y..,.,..1KhMlllH .,......,. ...... e.tli-~ Bost• ~.to.1r.it • . OlktlllO• U"61t1 Otr ..... YoftetMttwew .. Qllfonll• ... M'-1• ~~Tous " W L Pct. GB Pittsburgh 84 63 .5"11 Philadelphia 79. 69. .534 sin St. Louis 77 71 .53)1 7'h New York · 75 74 .503 10 Chicago 71 78 :477 14 Montreal 65 83 .439. 19'h West Di vision X·Cincinnati 98 52 .653 Dodgers 81 69. .540 17 San Francisco 72 78 .480 26 San Diego 68. 81 .456 29 \h Atlanta 65 · 85 .433 33 Houston 59 91 .393 39. x·clinched division title S ... •Y'•k- Pitt1bur"Qh '· Mqntre•I 3 Pl'iHllClolllf!UI 13,0.lt"OO 1 SI. l.ools6. M•• York 1 S.. l'r•flCIK04--3, Clf1Cln~U2.t Helu!lon~. S.n oi..ao2 L.05.......,.los ), AU•nl• 2 , .... ., .• a.- Plthbur"gh CRorw~ 1 ... H Mid Rooi.or 11.tl at Ot1£tOO C~m l).l)•rt0Pt-.i10-1J • • M1M1trN1 IR(!Qlllrl t•ltl •I N9wVoflt (~ 11-13) . ....,la*tllltl• l0trts1-'°'" • st. Laub ,..__ ... , ' S.O 0-.. (filllo:ff\ M l at L.09 AllgolH (Hootaft ..... AllMtli 1&11'9fly 1.tl at S... Fr9"thco lw.lld;I .. .,, °"" O-S ldi9dulod T_...Y'•O.- ... ~etOll~ """-"" 9'lClnc:lnNU Mllf!trMll .t Now Yorllc "'1..,_.0fll••I SI. l.oMll 5-1 Dl990 ... L.ot ""'" ... AttMtll., s... FrMdMo I Prep Grid Schedule "'11pa you a- yourown In lh• DAILY PILOT you . 1'2GALLON $ SAVE .. !150 ~-- I • '. ~I ~I f i • j ~ , ! " I < • • • °""'-Y l'tLOT Ptl11UC NcntcE M PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE lllCTITICK.IS aUSI N l!IS fllAMISTATaMlllT Tiw f'ol'"""' ,.,_ .... ..,. ""*' -·: COf\ITIHEHTAL $E"\11ces. ,.,,,., South M1lt1, Sent• A111, CM~t9t107 Bllt larger, ...,_ S. ~In.,..... AN,Cell~tl701 JtrNl o. st-clpNr, 1101 w. MtcArln1,1r 81vd., S•t1I• An•, (Mtffrtll• 11107 Thi• ~""''' 11 conduc:l-cl b., • ..,.,.1 ""'""''""'"· &111 .. rver Tilll &lat•m.nt w11 IU9CI ... th IN Clunty Ci.rl of Ortn9'1 c-.ty on .......... ,,,,. ....,, P\lblllhM Qr..,.. (HSI Qlily f'llloe, Aue. U , tnctS.pt. 1, I, IS, 1975 321•15 PUBLIC NOTICE •• I ·BOATING Annapolis • Student From .OC· Midshipman fint class James F. Rubloo, son ol U . Col. (USAF Retired) and Mrs. Frank J . Rubino of Huntington Beach, has been named one of 36 cqmpany com-11~C::,,'~~~!:~:,::::• manders at the U.S . llll 1or1ow1119 PIL'M>n 1s clolna 111a1-Nava I Ac ad em y in l'lllSS•s: An 1· Md MARSH I.EASING COMPAN Y, . apo 18, • 1J1111 tto11 A ..... s.n11 Al'll. c.11torN1 As one of the top rank· tuo~rvlnv 1,.. M•••h•ck . 1:1111 Hou irig midshipmen in the ...... 1s.nt1.-.n11ce1uorn11921os 4,400-man Brigade of Balboa Yacht Top of Fleet . Mome K.irk'• 40-loot twe>looner, Hurricane Oeck, from Balboa Yacht Club topped a field of 17 entries SaturdaY and Sunday to Win the Southern c.JJlornla Ocean Racinl fleet cbamplOMllip aoini away. The a.Mual re1atta wu held on Santa Monica Bay under the spomonhip ot Calllornia Yacbl Club. The event is limited to the top winners in the various ocean racing series beld in Southern. California throuihout the year. The series include California Yacht Club's Overton, Los Angelea Yacht Club's Whitney, 'Newport Harbor Yacbl Club's·Ahmanson, Bllboa Yacht Club'• 66,.the Yacht Racing Unioo's Pacific Ocean Racing Conference, San Diego Yacht Club's Rumsey, Long Beach Yacht Club's Catalina, Cabrilio Beach Yacht Club'• C.bJillo, and Wind- jammer Yacht Club's Mac Cameron Jones. OVERALL -1, Hurricane Deck; 2, Mamie, Milt Smith, CYC; 3, Zeus. Bill Gilbert, PMYC; 4, Jano, Bob Kalin, CYC; 5, La Diana, Fred Hultman, BWCC. CLASS A -1, Jlurricane Deck. CLASSB -1, Mamie;2,7A:us: 3,Jano. . CLASS C -I, Whhnsey Tres, Hugh Rogers, • OM!'"" ... ~.,__ ..... ,,, NOTICS!TOCREDITORS Thl1 bvslrw11 is c°"a~tMJ 11'1' .,.1n. Midshipmen, he will dlwlcai.tl. 1rv111Qt..M1nnecl command about 120 This st1t1men1 w11 lltMI wllh 1'-men Coilnly Cl•rll ol Or1t1ge CD\ltlly on 1-'==.· -------- LAYC; 2, Andiamo, Bob Sodaro, BYC ; 3, Concep· tion, Larry Bradley, CYC. CLASSD-1, La Diana. HURRICANE DECK.SHINES IN LIGHT AIRS Morrie Kirk'• T~Tonner Win• ORF Tiiiie ,ICTITIOUI aUSINl!ll NAMl! ITAT•Mt:HT T oOowlng per-11 dOlng but!· .... RTRiEIC INTERNATIONAL. )100 volt St., NIWPOr1 S.1c:h, ""-""' q,1 o\. Thoml1, ICMJ ~·• ~ .. ec:ll, C.lllornl• He.A ...... SU,,EIUOa C.OURTOl"THE ST.-.TIE Of' CALll"OltNIA POlt THE COUNTY 01' 011.-.NG• Augvst l0, l9''· F•7I PUBUCNoncE Pvblllhed Orange Co11t'OlllY Piiot. Aug. U,tnd Sip!. I, I. IS. 1915 m1·1$ In U. malter Df thl Est1t1 DI U.OVD PllUEGOLOIE,0.t••Wd. PUBLIC NOTICE Nolk• 1, i....tiy given ID crHll-, -~~======,,.--l'w'tlng , .. 1_ ee-lt1$1 the Slld dtet-,. •111 t9 11• ukl cltlml In lhe Diffee Df FICTITIOUS BUSI NIESS ... cl«ll Df ti. ••or•stld court DI' \0 NAME STATEMENT COSTA Ml .. SANITAllY OISTalCT OltANOe COUNTY, CALll"OANIA NOTICl INVITIHG llOS Exhaust Dangers Studied • !.fl!\ IMll'lffl II c:ondiM;tff by en In. dl._,-1. C...t A, Tllofnlll , TN1 1teU"°"n1 w11 llled wlttl ow ~l'I' Clerk of Orlnge C°"'"Y on pr"-"' them \0 the utldlrslgned at t'-The followlng PIE'~ Is dOlng bull· offk• llf RICH.-,RO T. MUDGE. 23521 MSllS: Ptl-deVelencll,Sulte!ll,lnU..Oty CONCORD AVIATION , 1016 « ~ Mflls, In 0t-en91 County, Paloml Or., Cott• ,,,._ .. , Callfofnla wN~ i.ttw oflla I• tM p.iec. or bl.di· '21:1 MU DI' t1W uncterslgrold lt1111 rftltttn Kint S. Scllll .. r, !01• P•lomli Dr., ........,,."'ID .. Id Ht••· Sudl c111m. CMt.l,,,..st,C.llfort11•91621 .... With It. IWC:S'SJ.ary .,~ ... •• n'IU$! be This b<AlllftS I• CD!'lducted by an ln- nlld or pr1tMt1t9CI •• •lor•stld vr1in1n dlwldull. NOTICIE IS HEREBV GIVEN tllM ....., """°"''•wlll ti. r«ltl..Ob'J' .. Oty Olrl!, Dfl bellllf of !I'll co.ta Mum S&l\lltry Dltlrkl, et her gfflce 111 lhl P. 1., H•U, n F•lr Otlvti, COtta Mist, C.lltornll, 1#1111 tl'lt hour of II:• Lin, on the 1'th 11ey of Odotiow, 1915 • .tlllflkfl !JON the~ Wiii IJli °""'" publkly Ind rMCI llOud lt1 u. COUncll Chemllen for f\ff'lll..,lftQI tU l•bor ""4 met ........ IDf ttw coniltn,ic11on of I Slnltlry S.-Mlltl In 2111 SlrMI end N.-oori Blwl. bet_., 21 s1 s1,...1 ""4 Vlct«l• StrMI. Probe Grew From Boat Death of Boy· ~llCl, 197$, -· Pybillfled Or11191 CMst 0.lly POOi, Ayt. U,aNI Sq4, I, I, IS, lt7S ml·7S .· PUBUCNOTICE . ..,,, ..,TICI! TOCllll!DITOltl SUPElllOll COURTOl'T"• STAT• 0" CALlllOlllNIA l'Oll lMI. C.OUNTY O .. OllANGI! ,.. ....... ~ E1l1l1 ol ARTHUR R08ERT SAL.STRANO, 0."IM6. , K•t1I S. SChl1l•r '°"' '"'°"'hs tfhlr the lltsl pl.ltllkallDn This llll9mltll ,.,s lllfll wllft lhe ofttd•t1Dtlc•. 0.1MA1.191nl2t,ltl5 ~nty Cllrll Df Or1nv-c:-rty on A wt Df pltn,, 1PKlfk1tlon lndothtf contact c1Dcum1t111 m1y ti. obt•lned 11 !he ottk• of ltlll Director el Putllic l"<M91l ServkM, Room •11, Clty Mell, n Felf . Publ1""411 Ot-entt (HSI D1fly P!lol, °'"'"'· Costa ,.. .. upon PILY"W'!l DI .-,ug. 25, •nd Slpl. I, I, 15, 1915 1220-1) U.00. All addll"-1 Clllrlil' of $1.00Wlll Thornas I.. Lord ""9Usl 20, 1975. EllltCulorof IM Wiii ol~OtceOent ltlCMAaOT.MUOOE ........... ,.t ...... mt'l"•-•V11tnd1 ...... ,1, WfWll Hill1, C..IUornl• 926U Publllhed Or1nge Cots! Dtlly PllDI, PUBLIC NOTICE SUPll 11 IOlt COU ltT 0 F CA LI l"OltNIA COUNJYOFOltANOE m made 11 lllndl.0 by mell. By ALMON LOCKABEY Of .. DtltJ'Pl ... 119'1 In investigating a boating . fatality that resulted In the phyxiation of a 9·year-old boy, the Coast Guard has determined that the death was caused by ex- haust fumes which re-entered the boat through ~ sink draiq, near lhe .aeneratos.: exhaust port. All manufacturers of cabin' cruisers equipped with auxili;,,.ry generators exhausting throua:h the hull are cooperating with the Coast Guard to determine to what extent this same danger may exist on other boats of NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN totnt c:..ol'°" Oil thl lboW ftMNI ~I ttwt all P9f'IOM M•l"f·c:l1lptS ~lnlt tM Mid Otc:edent ,,.. rtqulrtd !Cl Ille tMfY\. """' 'he ntC:llMlf'f •OWC:htfl, "' tllt otflu of the c"rlt of the....,.. eh.. wt!MI c:owt;w to PAW'!I thwm, wtttl tlw ~ller1,totr.~ k• ot MAKIC A, WITii, At- t Law, JllDOI Crown Vall•• H, UI0\1111 N~, CA '"'11 hi' plKI of tlull,_ .. ~t1er1,1, 11,tt, 1t~5 Xln-15 PUBLIC NOTICE """ NOTICE TO CllEOITOllS ........ SU"lRtOll COUllT 0,. THE STATI OPCAl.I l'OltflllA f'OR THI COUNTY Ol'OltAfllGE In the M•tl•r DI lhe EJl•t• DI QA.NIELJ: 8UCKLEY, O.ce1111C1.. ·hllltk• b Mr.by 9!ven to crealtors NYlnt cMolrm ... Inst the uld OK.e- dtl'lt lD flit Mid cl•lms In the offk• Df 11'11 c-. Df llW ltfonstld CCllW'I DI' ID "'""'them to UM ""9rsignld el the Gffla .Df VOORHEES, KNABLE ll'ICI VOOltMEES; ttno MtwthDnw 81wd., $IJtttl-. lfl UM Otyol Torrtnce, 11) Los An(lllies County, Wfllch l•thlr office Is ttll place ef llUSIMSS Df thl undenl~ In 111-nan ,...tt1n1119 kl ~attt1. Such cltlms with 111e ntctuary -.Mrs"""" be flied Dr prnented ., WCINlelcl within ~ month$ lf\fl' ti. tint publlutlon Df this notice, CASI: NO. A-1411J OltOlllTOSHOWC.-,USE CCC"KllH1111) I minor, by Cl-IERYt. LORRAINE KRAUSE, htr P1r1nl, for Ci11nC11 Df .. ~. Wl-IERE.-,S CHERYi. t.ORR,.-!NE KR.-.USE, pellllofltr, 11 mot'-' DI ;iop. pUCM!I, KIM8ERl.Y OAWN MILTON. •J)lrlDf'I under 11 Y••ri Df f91, t>M Ill«! 1 pet II Ion with the c11r-. ol the Cow'l lor 111'1 Dn:llr chlnglng IPPllC:tnt'I ntnw ffVm KIMBERLY DAWN MILTON to KIMBE"l.V DAWN KRAUSE; Etch bid shill b9 m•cte on trw pro. pow I form •nd In lh• m1t1Mr provld9d In tht cont reel docurMnlt. Ind sn.11 bl! 1 tc:CDmP1t1l&ct by• cerllllecl or ~I check or• blod bDncl tor tlOl leu it..... • .., perunt (lO'M.) Df !I'll emount DI ttw bid, m-cl• P•Y•ble ID th• Co••• MIPH S.....lt1ry Dlstrlcl. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIV'l!:N TH.-.T the flolrd of DlrKtors DI the Co1t1 M•1• Senl11ry Ol11rlc:I Ml IMlr•tDtore 1st•bll11'11d • pr.v•lllng ret• lfld Kiii Df "'9"'' in ecconr.nce wilt! l•w. to ti. paid on lht conslnlctlon Df the ttlDve etilltlllCI lmpr-nb. The! said File~ Kiii WU ldaplledby the Botrd Df OlfKlor1 by RffDkltlon ND. 7~219 on lllltlhdlyof Jen_,-1'915 ltlCil Is on tit• In IM off kt Df tlW ~ tent Secr.tlry, 11 F1lr OrlWI, COit.i MIPsa.. Tlltot .. ld rel• end Kll•llflerl6n .....,r.cl lll#CI tdopt9CI In thlsNll:ktM D'IDu9"I f\lly #ftd compltftly wt fDrttl i.r.Jt1, end ltllll stld K• .. , H ~ by Mid rHDlullDn Is meci. • ~ flll th11 nolke bf rt .... MC •. Bill Buckingham Takes Laser Honor .. In 111 m1twrs perqli.- ""~•llM II Mid •(ec:lffit. vrfttlln ,_,,. tN afW tN first publlwtiorl ef lkl. 0ttfd MIOlnt tr. 1trs OOROTHY\J,MALO!'<!E E~vtr111ofttw:WULof · 'tM .O.W Mll'ltCI cteud9nt IMll A.IMITM ~.,11\LAW .-tO...V10t""""• Siii... . ~~:,1;~~A"671 , .....,..,..,,.lllKW'tfC Niii)"*' Qr..,91 C.0.Sl Diiiy Piiot, ~1,l,1S.U..197S '17 ... 75 PUBI,IC NOTICE ~-~-~~~~~ • PUBIJC NOTICE Delff AllQUll :ta, 1975 eANKOF AMERIC.-.HT&SA t111Kuter Dfthe Will VOOJtH~f.~ttC:l-.~: -'VOOll.Hl.IS :-'.."""'.,, llDI ................ ,.__.,C.1~"501 11Ub419ftecl Orat\911 Cast D1!1y Piiot, SHUmbllr 1,1, IS, U, 1915 :DJ0.75 IT ISOllOERED lh•l tU ptl"ICIM I~ taresl-cl In lilt •tlD.,.....,,tlll9CI mttlH "'°""r bttor• this Collt't II 10:00 A.M., on Ock>ber 1, lt15, In lhe courtroom Df 0.Nrlmenl No. J, el 700 CIVIC CENTER DA:IVE WEST, S.-.NT.-,.-,N.-,, C#.1.IFORNIA, end show CIUM, ii'"~· """Y trw petition tor chenge DI "'"" SllDl.tlcl not bll 9r1ntH. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED lhel • eopy or ltlls order ID ll!Dw ,...,. b9 publlllwd In THI! o.-.1LY PILOT ... -P!llMI' Df "'"'''' tlrcultllDn print· "lt10t'•• Co1,1nty, Cllllornl .. one•. ""'"" tor '°"' l•I •ucc11slve -"' prior ID llMI dltl wt tor h••rlng on the peUUDtl, Ott•; ... llQUll 21, 1975 Slm1.11I DrtlHt1 Judgl DI lhe SuoerlorCDUfl PAUl.C. Sl...AYIACK Anorlility It Llw 1..U MKAnMr .. ul•••nl ..... 1 .. '"""'· Collfllnll• 92101 T•I: (7Ml7U-llSS an.nityfer"""1U- The c:ot1lr1ctor shill be In c-formMKt ot It. -rll tnd I~ !Nftb conlorrn ID ltlll Llbor COO.DI.,_ Sllle of C.lltomlt tnd other •-flll stld Stile, •PPlk•bl• t.,...eto, wltft 11'11 •xcll)llDn only ot 111<:11 v1rl.tlons ft may b9 requlr.O under ti. ..-c~I statuln purtutnt ID which orDCMdl t. .. undlr ... lek"' Ind wl!kh l'lllw nol been SUP'~ by llMI or.i'tl.tofts Df lt. Labor COde. Prlft'rtl'IC• ID labor I.hall bl! glWln only In ll'lt ma-pro. vk!'4byl1w. . The contrtctor 1htlt UM only IJ'\oo menulKturK mehlrl•I• prOduC9d In the U...lffd Stiles •nd only manultc-lu...:I met1rl1l1 menvltctur-cl In uw U...lled Sttlff. sutnttntl•lty 111 from -11rl1t1 prDduced h1 the Unli.c! Slllea, In the peirformtnce of this~ pUBLIC NOTICE ""'-Publli.Md Ot'tnV-Cail Diiiy Piiot, ND bid shill bl! COfl'.!Lldertd ...... H Is ""9. U, •l'ICI 5e91. I, I, 15, 1915 l212-fjl n\ldt on• bltnll torm f1,1rn lll'IMI Dy u. ...... NOnC•TOCltEOITORS .......... ,., SUHRIO• COUll:TOl'THE STATl!OflCAUl"OlllUAf'IOll • PUBLIC NOTICE THl.COUNTYOl'OllANG£ • ...,,. In the •tter of tht Ettllt of NOTICl!TOClll!DfTORS 1'1.0llENCtt. MARY MUELLER, N•.AMIU Dtclaeleod, • • SUl'IR.Olt COU llTOF THE ,Notkl Is ""'"'Y gl .... n to c:r«Slton STATEDl'CALll'ORNl.-.l"OR •¥Int c~l111t '•fllllst the Mid OtU-THl!COUNTYOl'OltANGI! c19!'11 to flit stkl c:l•lm1 lfl tl'le offk• of In the Mttttr DI Ill• Estele ot COlUI Mew S-IU.ry Olstrkt end If rr\lde lt1 accordlnce with It. pnMliGN oltrwprOpOUI requirements. E.lcl'I bldctef trlUSI b9 UcenMd and tho ~111114 11 rtqulred by 1-. The eo.n:1 Df o•r•clDrs DI trw costt. MHe Sllnltllry f;tl•trlcl ,."""" the r1911lto,.~1....,.or 111 blctl.. · ByOrc1troftr1e eo.rdof Olrector1Dt tl'lotCosUI MIPSI Stnlltry Dlslrlcl Publlshed Orlft9' Cotsl OIHy Piiot, ~r IS, '13, 1'7S U.1S PUBLIC NOTICE .. ci.rti. of U. tfoffflld C-1 w to MELVIN JOMN 8AOE 1k1 MEL VI NJ. ...-.ni U.M to 1111 Ulldlrsi9Nd et u. 8°RoE, o.c .. 5ed. llf11ceol'8ANIC0FAMEllUCA·NTa.s.t., Nollet Is hlrtb'I' 9IY•n ID the I01 NDrtl\ Mtln SI., S.nl• ""'· Clllf. crtdltors ti.YlnQ cl1lm1 •0tlnst the tnO'l, lnONflfltCtounly, whlchtetterof· Miid dKIOMlt to Ille s•ld cl1lrn1 In tlW fl<• 11 ti. r,i.c. ot buslntSS Df the Ull· ol'tktDf 1'-c:ltrk of th• 1torn11dcDU'1 ~ n •II l'f'lltttrs pertelnlng ID « toprfflnt them ID 11'1• underslQr!ed 11 I-----------stl4 tsltt•. SucJI cl1lm1 wllfl It. thtofficeolllARRYJ.JACOBS,l'lON. ~I l)KISNrf\I01,Khtr11T1uSlbefll9dDI'~· Pllrton St., In th• City of S.nl• An1, In NOTICE 01' TIMI! ANO PL.ACI! ilnttd ft lforft.iilcl .,.I thin lour monthl CW"'91 county, which l•ll•r Dflic• Is 01" PUii.iC s.-.&.E 01' COLLATl!JlAL "'"'V.flrltpubllc1tlDt1Dlthl1noUce. the pttc:• of buslntSt DI th• Under..iontd (S.Cs.. 9504, Su!Ml.J, u.C.C.l 0.1+d.t.,uoust 21, 1915 In 1U mtll•r' perl•lnlng lo S&ld.stll•. Nolle• Is hereby Ql""1 by ti. un-. 8.-.NKOFAMERIC.-. Such (ltlmi wlln lh• n•cess1ry dersl<JM(I llltt • public nl• Df 1111 ~~~Df 11141 Wiii wut'-'' mvst be IU9CI or pr1!enl9CI as 1o11ow1119 lks,rlbed coll•l••ll "'411 bl! .. ... ... "' etorewld within tour months •tt•r U. '"'' ,, ,_ .,. .. , ot 11 :00 o·c1-11 A.M. S1'AJIMINTOPA N ofMldOt«<ltlnl 1, ~1 , .... ~ ., '' •• • -, OPUllO' C.Mll&.al!MKOP rstpu ... ct "'1"'00 ce, DfliN23'rddlyofSitolMl'lber,1'7S.tt PICTITIOUI IUll,.ISINAM9 S.-D-1 o.i.ci ... 1.19Utl n. 191S 119 w. 19111 St., C:OSI• Mesa, c-ity DI •TM to1klw4nf pttlON Ill .... -. •"'-Geor9l1N .8rott CW119,S\IWDICllllDl'fllt. ...... ttll USI Of-tM fktltlow liuUNU ~~ .. C.llfMttltntSt E11Kutrh:Dflhe Wlll B•k..-Y Equlprn"'t ~ ,..,...: . l'll.IMllJl.o Orantt c.o.st 0.1"' Piiot, Mllll:Y 0}.S::'C:::O.nl Thi• stlt Is being 111111 to .ntoru · 1.aAJtNING AIDS, 1541 "°""" s,.11 ,..,t,I. 1S~tt, 19,S J»t-75 the rl{lh1$ Df 81onll Df .-.rnerk.I undef' "' .,_aMIM catlfrwftt.,.. Anlil'MY•ILlw security 1grffm•nl wllh J-C.: ,..,...,_ • -----------laoN.Pt,,.,..St. .......... o8A -no•s P••l"' on fl .. In 11W l'kllUou' 8l.IM""' H-.. ....R... "" .. ..,.., "' ..,._ .. fl ... lfil °'*'II PUB UC NOTICE '*""AM, C.llf9nll• tf7ll SKrtrntfllo, C.lllOl"nl•. PUtllllhM Drt.,gt Co.lit DlllY Piiot, WHITE"SP.-.STRY ~:.~-"":9~~~ ,ICTITIOUSIUSINIESS Septemtllrl,l,15,22, 1915 »M-75 Tlltgooclswlll b9 tvtl!Hlefl:W'I~ :EV':"'""'"'°'"",_ NAMSllTAUM .. T -----------1 SOKtlDn on TUHdly, SeptM'ltlw 23. a. TurMr, 174 ,.,....,., Tiii •io.tn1,..._11 dDlng Ml· PUBLIC NOTICE 1'7S9:00.-..M.llllstlttlmeo C.llfroml•fK2' -•: Tiits notkt Is 111wn In •~ ....... -'""°"""' tya "'OSElll MALlttcETIMG AS· --===-,.,,,.,,--:---IWfttlti.PfO'llilonJDIS.CtlDn'*-~ ... tl .... lp. SOCt•T•I. 5UPEftl0R 1!1.EC· l'ICTITIOUS•USINeSS division 131, DI llte Uniform Com- •-•,. ·-NAM• S•AT•M<N• ... rtl•I CodeDftheSl1teDfC11ffDm11. _..., -.. TRQHICIUJ"f11.Y0 t"lll!:,l11"-W..M TMi. """"*" .... flNcl ....... -"""~'Qlll'-'111'2101 Tlwfollowlng~er•llDl"!lbusl-OSTJl:IMf.OSTalH C....ofOrlflO'ce-.tr•• WlftCJWWd · MUn· neEfftT'Wlttlil5'"'1 :ti,Tt1S. . . 0... "' 'J«MI ' MciNoPOLY LTD, II , 6110 "8" L.M ........ C.llf.MOfl n9 .~:=..~!.::::=~-in. OC•tnlrDnl. Newport IHKh, C.Hfornle Publlsht-d 0!'111191 Call 0.lly Piiot, .... :144 Or1ftt1 CNtt Deeff ""'-t2MJ ~.IS, 1975 U11·7S ...... __ .,u.n.tt,ms auws ~'O.,.H.MtMf" . o.v+d Thom•• !.mfth, 6110 "8 .. "TNs sttt.rneM .,, .. 111• w1t11~~~ 0tffl'lfront, N.•port a.1eh, ee11tom11 PUBLIC NOTICE Bill Buckingham of Newport Harbor Yacht Club was the win4 ner of the Laser fleet cbam4 pionship in a series sailed in con4 junction with South Shore Yacht Club's One Design Regatta Saturday and Sunday. There were 26 entries in the Laser fleet. ,Trophy winners: LASER -1. Bill Buckingham, NHYC; 2. Mike di Donato. NHYC ; 3. Ty Beach, BYC; 4. Nick Madigan. NllYC. ETCHELLS·22 -' 1. Bob Searles, BYC. TlllSTLE -I. Will Templeton, BYC; 2. Robert Van 'T Riet, BYC ; 3. Jim Drury,SSYC. RHODES ·l9. -I. Bob .WeiRand, SSYC. Ullman Wins King Barbo~ . Lido-14 Race Dave Ullman of Balboa Yacht Club won the Hugh Dougherty Perpetual Trophy, symbolij: of the Southern Calilomia District I Lido-14 F1eet championship in a regatta sailed out of King Harbor Yacht Club Saturday and SUn· day. Forty.nine boats showed up on the starting line Saturday for the. elimination race from which the top 17 wer-e selected for the cbam- pionshipDlibt. • CHAMPIONSHIP FLIGIIT - 1, Dave Ullman, BYC; 2, Jeff Lenhart, M.BYC; 3, J-'Ibcln\e, BYC; 4, Pete Jefferson, MBYC; 5, Jon Blldwln, KHYC. . CONSOLATION FLIGIIT-1, Don Krebs, MBYC; 2, Max Croes, ABYC; 3, ·Bill Miller, ABYC; •• Larry Brook, MBYC; 5, Bill Frisch, KHYC. '• t.VBUCNO'nCE ClluntYCWrttofOrlnV'COUMYon-ttM.3 1-----------1 , ""*'II lt7J. . ' DlllldMlnoollltn,6'IOQOcunlront, rtCTITIOUSIUS<N<SS ' 11'4H11 Nwwp0rt8e.ch,Cllltornl1'2'6l L ll •ICTlf'IOVl.UllfllllS "'*llhtd Ortllgt Co.it D•llY Piiot. l.rlc Morro• Stlfl•I, 6110 "8" NAMl!STATl!Ml!NT .; y n_ --- t •Afll•nATaMaNT Slpl.IS.12,tt,•ndOct.•. 1975 ,,.~75 ~:ntrvnl, N•wport Beech, c:eu1om11 Thi to1iow1r19 person 11. dolno b!IM· 111 ~R n.-fWI~ ........ It ddftt llull· y-MUIS: ,....; s1 .... n Sllll•I, 4110 "8" Duin. l!XTRA SE NSORY PROOUC· t'9'ALl~BllltCA v.-.CHT tM> PUBLIC. NOTICE 1nieit, '"-1 a.1et1, c1ntom11~ TIONS. E.S. PROOUCTtONS. E.S.P.. c POR't$,""' Wtjl.i.~!lll H.,....f, DewldT .Smflll •SO 8tfll Street, L191,1nt 9t•ch, . ai,pt•• .... O --..c:a1~1anMO -~=======,--•I Tiii• '''"'"'"' ... s tuMJ wttt1 lt. c.111on11atHs1 ..., is;;a l'llfflM, lftll:., 4d 8. CNll lllCTIT10US8UllNEll • eounty 0.rll DI 0r&ll9' Coufltyon Sip. NICHOlAS JOHN ESPOSTO. 451:1 -1Mcf1. CtltlMU flAMllTATt:MINT tiMTOtr11, 191S. Bent st'"'-l.egvnt ~tch, <Al~ SANTANA-22 -1. Rod Rodbeim, VYC: 2.·Phil Morgan, ,NHYC; 3. FredPaulus,BCYC. • GHOST-13 -1. Ron Van Heel, CYC. Society Schedules Regat,tas The London Bridge Sailing Society is heading into an am· bilious schedule of regattas on Lake Havasu this fall, beginning with a Southern California· Arizona Laser regatta Oct. 4·5. The regatta will mark the opening weekend of Bicentennial London Bridge Days 1975 celebrating the fourth an4 niversary of the opening of the historic bridge at Ute Colorado River resort. The fourth annual Hobie Cat Regatta is scheduled for Oct. 25-26, according to Robert M;anD, fleet captain, with more than 50 boats expected from western states. The Sol Cats will invade the lake Nov. 5-9. followed by the Arizona Cup.race Nov. 22-23, and an Arizona Invitational on Dec: G. Between SO .and 60 entries are expected for the Laser Regatta. The Laser is a 14·foat singlehanded sailboat and Is ooe ot the fastest growing classes In the U.S • The .Sol Cat regatta will draw regional winners from all sec· tioos ot the United States, includ- ing factory entries from Orange County. About 40 of the IS.footers are expected to compete. The Arizona Cup race will be run in much the same manner as the America 's Cup, with challenge match ra,ces and eliminations and the two finalist skippers duelina for lbe cup. ,.. .,,-~-· .,.......,..,..._11 .. ,,..._. l'Ottf 'Q!t Sc·L --'-lj h ........ '0t'"ll¥t!i• •: PW!ltMclOr...,..(;otslOelt'll"llDt. ThllllUSIMSSl•~Wenln. 'IUKl't ..,..n '.V . ACTION ·tltOIC .. ltS, !"21 QMt llflt.11,ft.29,•nd0cl.~1'7S »G-75 dlvl .. I. • ~ "r· .,,, 27 eo· Sh • f Olkaiw....,ln<. =~Y-· H11ntln9ttlt le•t~, ' Nlc:hDlesJ.ESPKtt ats .... ,,..... ...,Gwy,Mltc.1--.~ PUBUCNOTJCE c.!:t~~~=~;:;: Lilly ·Deacolt or the host ow PM1t1s;• ... ·,1..,"""' ... lllledl,c:anM'lll•""" llfPIW4o.t•1s. · ·Voyagers Yacht Club was tbe OtBtfcw.,...Cllwll,"' .!:......._n.uM111CtiH111r•in.. ,c::~;."g;:CT" ,.....,11,...,.°'"*CMl\OeA..,'::,:winner of the Jane Schock »..tWL .....,_ · ""'°" .~ nn••"*A-$eslt.l.U.tt.tt.tt1s MSJ.1s :Memorial Trophy for women ·r nu 1 ,.._o.to.uy~ '* ••:neM: ••RIMI wit11""' M•.,...1Nc•,CAtaw -~ ~ sailors in a lbre•nce series ........... 1 ... IS. t'7I ~ ~~..:Or-.. c-ty., Sep. ~::t .. \,";~~~·llDS PUB UC NOTICE sailed OD Newport Harbor Satur· ' NtM NOt•CE IS Ht:1t••Y OIVEN ttwt JflWI day. ft1m.IC NOTICE ,......._. °'*"'* CMtit Dtll'/ ll'lltt. .. ......., o1 Trustff1 Df ti. ~ l'trnnou1aus11111s -..,__ tr! turned · , ••r;;ssiiMiifiJ'iffiii;iJ;ilil::'." ~tS,lt,.,,a.MOC. ... MJS 1511-,S \IWkMol Dtatrktllf0r•ft91CllUM,, NAMt:ITATIMIWT s1u·~ eD el out 1or• , ~Olii'hilill'IWiC . l """"'::.::.:;:<:::;;~;;..;;.;.;;.:;~=.::.1 ~ IHc.ft, CIU!ot'nl•. "4» re. n. folto<Jwlnt "'"°" 11 .,_ ...-. Olla year's bid for tbe coveted I ....,.. ....... ' PVBUCNOTICE """' ................. ..., •• .,IN -••; Schock Tro • -· . "....... ~V....,Sc'-!0111rk1's.....,,.. 1 u RN s M "" 1" I! p,,y. &1K1 senes was .... nous............ i-..,.....,,===~,.,.,,,,,,,.---11 ..... imJflt'fflTltfll•. bwlldlt19. Int EHTl!ltf'JttSES, llMGrlflYll .. om., aailedin1Jdo.14S .. ......._,...._._,...,,. ....... · '1mnou1auso•u1 -.la.ilftt~.wuret.11c11w1ube...i.....i .,..""°"' .. ""·c.•~n1419"'° · Jn .. --".. Ull tt f .. e •I ¢4!rlfllt ,,_.,. lflil ~ ICAMalTATaM•Mf •10l':OOp.m.t11Wo0tr 1, 1975,attftt Jamet A, lurM. •1M Gt#MI.. tlUVUJef ano tega a Of a ... ..,.,. ....,. •""' ,....~,..,.., 11 ••RM1· "*"'"''""IPn Oft1c• ot .. 1c1 kMDI Df'lvw;MwPortltff<ft,C.ltf.tlMO perpetua.• tro~by, Ben ,..... fit TM•,, .. , ""'": 01ttnc1, nn w,,,., A,,.n ... HuiWI~ Tttls _ .. ,." i. COl'IM't.d.,.. .n 111o Jln:>madka flving •··-• f COM .. jl.MY", e4 I) • MOULD ,Rll C'HIMICA.l CO.. """ a.1tt1, ttlHOrllle ""47, at wttlcil dlvlocMt. ' ' ., IN.I ee8 0 &....-......._ ., • .._.. ,,.,.., .. w .. *hit••· .....,. wkf 01t& •lll °'..,.~Ind,..., J•rnn •·•"""'· • Lahain.a Y aebt Club, was the wfb-·*•••1 ~c.1ttoNM•""'° Tllltct111111 .. tflt:.'b.•1..i 11-011•11e • ni1s .~ .,., n1td w11ri 1r. ner of the Allen Campbell tro~•--== ..., ...... ZM111Mr)orll: w..-rc 1sn c.. ... ..,........ •• "' --,_ ,. ~ •··-,,..,. ·-~-.. -· ~-... '· .._,.y_..,,. -1 ---"~111 'orLuden-1~.Th·---10en·· ... .. ..... ltlftw.y,..._ ""'• ., "-INrt o1 Tr~I re-s "-"""""'-1l.1'1t.. I' -""'• -.~~ -·•••c..tt"~ ™-M1.-uCOM11C..,...,•1"' rilhl 111N)Kt-Y ..a .11...._ .... .., · lf'ttiM• bi,_. TroPhy winners; t. Klldee, .,,.....,, ... ~ ~i.r.M,W-.nlf .. ..,.~=:i'~~tM,.111· '=~~.~:=~~~~1.•so. ·Ben Hromadka, LYC; 2. • =Tflll ~' .. ' .. ' _ .... ~............. SCHOOLDISTflltCT Jiik..._........ Lol=W • Buel McNalr. BYC; 3. ........ ...,._,.., •vlllllrlllflftla.... WllDttl t'ut n--i u~ ~c ''·""'" °'""'.... ~A ....... Clttf.•t • .... •• ~· • ....... , i.,Ql ; . "'*" 1cA~c.t1ttto.ity":'~ ,....,:n'O::.ij!'1tDe11Yfll1ot, Ttl==::..·ea. .. ~~ ...... 41 Oer~fllum, Ruth H11kell, • ... 11,~1t,.-OU.t."11, IWW• lut , .. , U+,11. JSa..fl s.o..,\l.f1..lt.t~'-., .MSl-J'I :anc. , l • 4 At H10Jtington Regatta Sundity similar configuration. To date, the Coast Guard has -ed three other boat models and dangerous amounts of carbon monoxide were detected in all three • Since carbon monoxide poison-·· ing can be lethal, all owners of boats equipped with auxiliary generators that exhaust through the hull forward of the sink drains are urged to make the following test: With the boat under way and the auxiliary generator running, place squares of toilet tisstle over the drain boles of the dry galley and head sinks. If the tissue squares are sucked downward or simply lie flat on the drain hole. the problem is not present in the boat. lf the tissue squares puff or lift slightly from the drain, the pro- blem may exist. If you see this. lean down and sniff close to the• drain. If you smell exhaust fw:nes dp not stay in the cabin. Go on deck quickly, turn off the generator, return to the dock and contact the manufacturer of the boat • These tests are relatively con4 elusive. but boat owners not satisfied with the results of their own testing, or would prefer .to have someone better equipped test the boat for carbon monoxide, the Coast Guard will have test teams at several location,, on Aug.16-17 and Aug. 23-24. Orange County locations of the test ·teams will be Newport Harbor Harbor Department dock and the Dana Point Harbor Patrol Dock. Fog Pl.agues · Corini/Uan Channel Race Ught airs and occasional fog made a ~ slow drag out Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club's third an- nual Santa Barbara ChaMel race which got under way Friday at 7 p.m. off the Balboa Jetty. Weather conditions were so Duky and soupy tbatfourof the 13 starters dropped out after falling to sight Catalina Island after 15 hours of sailing • First yacht to finish was Firebird, a Columbia-43, sailed by Bob Longpre, South Shore Yacht Club, at2p.m. SUnday. He was the winner of the Alan McKay Trophy for the first IOR boat to finish. Handicap trophy winnen: !OR -I, Antares (Ranger-33) Alan Andrews, BY<l. PHRF -1, Stellare <Yankee-30) Ed Gr91ory, LSF; 2, Lumarao (Cll·36) Bill Rohrs, VYC; 3, Sequoyah (San Clemente-27) Jim Moore,SSYC • . Canada Beats U.S. In Port ffiJn)~ Cup PORT HURON,Jlicb.. (AP) - The Canadian challenger Marauder defeated Golden Duy, the American entry, by S minutes, '2 seconds Jn the ta.. • mile Canada's Oup yacht race Friday . Natauder'1 victory., on Lake liuron forces at leut one more 'race in the series on lakes Sl. Clalr and Huron. Witb the victory, worth two .Poln ... Marauder pujlecl to within ooe point of Golden Dny, 3·2. Four points are 11.-to wrap uptbOHries. Olftoials al.Id two more l\1111 an scbedulecl. , I I .. ; ; ' ' ·- ' , .; • , r· .. I eveGre .. • A.nut Warhol lntoCo~dy . . I;a!WYOJUC (APl-.\ndyWatliol m-bed cS. licately OGIOGI• c:olfoebew that had been l!Aotia in hla &lua ol clear liqueur wllllo • cana of hi~ COD1Umed lllowidaol ~~ 'J'be settin& WU Of C!OUne, Ej8iDe'I 'Where celebdUa go to look Ill ~otbor. • . SUDDENLY, WAUOL'S ALE&T BYES glistened U IJ .. ll.blelli Walked into the room. She busied him on the cbeek and llrode aw,.y. · "'11,.ybe Lotna L&ft will be here,,_, • WOrbol saidbopefulty, .. Wejuotlnterviowedber.": "'Wusllelnl.erellln«?"'Worllol ' '"Siie ·-out wltb B"uzt~~aaked. ''llbe~!'' ''Be's Bu.rt Re)'DOlda. •• ANDY wuaoi. AWll'IST FILM mater and newl.Y publhbed eutboi: loves cdebritiea. Bianca Jag1er bu been eoeor!lag him to frequent d.innen while Wamol flnllbes up j a PCll1r~l or bet-buaband, rock WA•~OL ~ . star ¥1i.:k. . · Wadlol and Paulette God· °""' ..... lutt ..... PART OF ALL·GIRLS!;IPAT NEWPORT.SEA SCOllT BASE WITH KITES THEY.SAIL dard were inseparable ror months. ~ Racblwill. Truman Capote. Berry andTOllY .Perkins slide up to his side at ~ose parUea Ibey all al1eiid. From Lett, Lott• Hojllund, Jennifer Hlnahaw, K•thl Jao-t, Juli Howe, O.bl Ahn-1 and u .. Hlnahaw. Warhol S. a celebrity himself !Tom the clays be discombobulated the art scene In the early 'llOli with ru. paintings of Campbell tomato soup cans scour- ' ingpadboxeaanddollarbills.. ' • From Pop Art be moved to undergroiind rums oC intense monotony. One six·bour film showed a man oleepine. Anothet reatured four hours of a man nibbling on a muabroom. The.Empire State Build· ing was the subject ol on II-hour atudy_ TllEllE DAYS ANDY IS ABOVE ground with feature films of more manageable length such as ''Dracula'' and 1•Frankenstein."' Heis also working on a movie entitled ••Bad'' about ••a normal family in Brooklyn"" and is writing a comedy. · Eveey month, Warhol pUtsoutbls magazine ""In· terview'' with gossipy tidbits and transcribed taped ., interviews with the glamorous 1 .andbizarre. • · Asked whom ht> would like to Interview most or all. Warhol replied quickly : "'Walt Disney. But he"s dead.'" After a 3\o!a~m.inute pause, he sighed: "Ob, anybody who's in· te<esting. I like Diane Vreeland because she bas so many~funny .. .,. stories." 00DDAlt0. WARHOL STILL PAINTS BUT MOSTLY Portraits for which be charges $250000. Some ol bis subjects include President Gerald Ford (com· missioned by a maguine). Greek shipping tycoon Philip Nlarcbos. dancer Rudolf Nureyev and de- signer Halston. In October. Warhol goes to IWy for a showing of. his series on bl8ck..transvestites. , . Bui tint there is the promotional tour for bis -,new book, ""The Pbll~ol Andy.Warhol from A to B & Back Again'' with his incisive observations about everything froni pimples lo Picasso. Chapters on Beauty. Death and Success have such provocative subtitles as Romance Is Hard, But Sex is Harder; The Psychiatrist Never Called Back; Why I Try To I.Dok So Bad. and Whal I Do On Saturday When My Pbllosophy Runs Out (which is to go and buy Jockey shorts at Macy's). ''Ob, the book is a comedy. It's meant to be fun· ny,'' Warhol explained, leaning on the table in bis second-hand navy jacket. Brooks Brothers striped shirt and tie. His face was its usual shade of pastry douah white and\biS gray-blood hair was in wind.·hlown disarray revealing dark roots at the back of the neck. WARHOL DESCRIBES IN IDS BOOK bis de- cision to go gray in his early 20s. He says be figured everyone would be impressed by how young be always looked (be is now 47), and be would be able to lapse into eccentric or senile behavior when be felt like it. Warhol reports on hiS' eminenlly sensible and charitable New York Qty diet which involves or4 dering those things on the menu one doesn't like. Then, one asks for a doggy bag and leaves the food on the streets for those people who live out of shop-- ping bag~ in lonely New York doorways. - Warhol wrote about his incredible friends such as Taxi who never took a bath and boarded brassieres and B, a compulsive vacuumer wbo put the boee to everything sbe owned Ctom the inside of a radio to the Polaroidpict.uresofhernaked self. .Wiorbol "s friends are crazy about him. "BE IS 7EBBlnc. A VISIONARY and a very charming man," aaicl Sylvia Miles, the star of Warhol's movie "HeaL ''He's sweet, warm and tind. Brilliant and talented," said Ethel Scull, top pop art collector of the '809 whose potrait Warhol made from 36 silk· screened passport photos. """lbe boot is completely him. He is an artiractolblsown time."" Kenneth Lane. the jewelry designer. whose home was the setting ol some of Andy's Warhol's films said: "He is a Jacque Cocteau·character. A Renaissance man.~· • . Friends· agree that the shock of being gunned down in 1968 by an enraged actress-writer pro. lounl!ly frightened Warhol. · I ·."( TH.OUGHT PEOPLE WERE imaginative. I guess I didn't realize· they were· nutty. loo."" fald Warllol;bls !lolt voice barely audi- ble abov~ the kissy smacks and chortles aro1111d the room. So bill conatant traveling eotourage is as much for his sense of 1eeurlt.Y as for amusement. When it"atlmetogo home. everyone leaves together. Loma Luft ~ad DOt yet arrived but ii was too late to wait. After admiring lhxlmecle la Faiaile'• ._ plailorm aalldals. noting tbeJ were loo larce for her, and cbattlnl btlelly with Kenneth Lane. Wadlol and friends ~....i .ia tui inlO the nicl>t· ' Coast Man Selected Dr. John F. Dean of. Newparl Beach hu been. named to a aubcomm1t· tee dealing with mem· benhlp of the lntema- tionai Rudlnf AalOC!a· tJon. Dean, 111111 Hlchland Drive. II chairman of the EducaUon Department at Whittler Coll•&• and hu aenred 11 president ! I of both the California Reading Association and the Orange Count~ Council or the In!.ma· tioaal Reading Associa- tion. In his work with the U.S. lol'emberabip and Or•anizaUon Subcom·,, mittee. Dean will help ~le the ulOCia· lion'• ~.ooo memben. • . 'Sea ·Scouts Surviving' N.rt Base Needil New Me.;,,i,ers By HILARY KAYE· Ol' .. Olllly Plllllltlllfl Ralph Whitford. whojoinedthe Orange County Sea Scoutl'in 1942 and is still an active leader, says he's convinced the Sea Scout Base in Newport Beach will sur· vive despi~e the small number of scouts using it. Jt''s got a mystique and a cer· tain charisma all its own :_ despite the fact it's relatively un- known,'' says Whitford, a teache,r at Newport Elementary School. BUILT IN 19310 the base is a highly visible landmark along Coast H'ighway in Newport Beach. Yet few people know what goes on inside the cement walls that face the highway and that's pro- bably the base's biggest pro- blem, says Wbitlord. Sea. Scouts, part of the overall Boy Scout program, are geared to youths between the ages of 1S and21. IN COMPARISON TO the many thousands of Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts scattered throughout the county, there are only about 450 Sea Scouts at ttle base. The program has tried to keep pace with the times and has re· cently undergone changes in its format -including admission of girls into the program several years ago. There are now two all-girl ships (called troops elsewhere in scouting) and three coed ships at the base. The scouts have also been plan· ning a.massive refurbishing pro- gram at the base, but have been delayed pending approval of numerous permits at county and state levels. "WE'RE TRYING TO attract . ltal..aguna more youngstero. expand our or- f erings and reach out to other a'encies who might want to use our base,•• says Whitford. Already, Marinero (senior girl scouts), Brownies, CUbs, Boy and Girl Scouts use the base at times, Particularly in the sum· mer months as a vacation facility. Although the base is used by many other groups, only a small percentage of funds (rom the Boy Scout Council filters down to the Sea Scout program. Whitford said the scouts are divided into two groups -power and sail. EACll. ''SHIP'' ~ its own seagoing craft, alt.houa'b several ships sometimes share boats. Power "ships"' primarily use surplus Navy boats or donations of small power crart. '"The craft are usually an utter horror, but the-kids fall madly in Jove with them and spend all their weekends at the base put· ting in dedcs 8J1d cabins and get4 ting the bclats In working ordlir,'" said Andy Fitzgerald, the com4 mOOore of the base. THE SAIUNG ''SIDPS'' use donations, too, mainly smaJl sail· ing boats in the range of 15 to 25 feet. Besides the huge "Argus·· sailing vessel shared by all the scouts, the largest sail boat owned by a ship ls a J2.foot · Islander. There are abotit 25 yOtD'lgsten in a ship and.about 2S ships at the base. Besides spending weekends fixing up the crafts, they usuaJJy take several cruise. each year to places such as the Channel Islands or Catalina Island. Both Fitzgerald and Whltford s 'ay the program need s youn~sters and adults to keep the • Sleeping on ~each: Nice But IDegal By FREDElilCK SCHOEMEBL Of_OllM,, .......... ''Good morning. You are under arrest.'' · E•actly '°'persons who decided that Laguna Beach"s sandy strands, its parks or its streets were comfortable spots to bed down on a summer night received this reveille from Laguna Beach police. Municipal ordinance 18.04 .020 prohibits overnight sleeping on city beaches and par~ and in vehicles. THE FINE PER VIOIATION IS $10, roughly equivalent to what a motel room would cost. Sgt. David Avers, commander of the midnight to 8 a.m. ( ] , wa_tch, in an interview,: estimated that another .WO to TllE LAW 600 penons d.iscc,.ered sleep· ing on the beach in parks or in . vehicles w~e issued courtesy notices, which serve as a warning. • The majority or the arrests were made between 3 and 5 a.m. while officers were on routine patrol. The ftgures are for June 1 through Sept. 1. . Avers said the standard procedure is to awaken the sleeper, a4vise the individual of the ordinance.. run a .. record check" on the individual. then write a dtjltioo or courtesy notice. depending oo circumstances. .• ' A PERSON WHO PULLED OFF the road to &el some rest to avoid falling asleep at the wheel might receive a courtesy notice rather than JI citation, Avers said. "But we had some guys wbo we"d warn, then they'd go down the beach away and crash a.gain. Then we'd cite them," Avera program going, but said they are confident. membership will pick up soon . "THERE ARE .. LENTY of ' youngsters in the coun.ty who wouJd like to get involved in a boating program like ours. But, they'we never been asked to join and· most don't even know it ex .. ists.'' Whitford said. Sea Scouts conduct a low pro- file recruitment program, re· lying mainly on wordoCmouth. '"That·s our attitude so far, but it really hasn't helped us,'' says Whitfor"d. He said as soon as the , base undergoes the refurbishing planned, he expects a bigger ef· fort at attracting new scouts and scout leaders. Riley Picks Reporter As As8istant • Orang'e County Supervisor Thomas Riley has appointed a •year..old newspaper repc>rter to the executive aide's slot to be vacated thiS month by Robert Nelson. Peter Herman, currently working for the San Clemente Sun Post, will join Riley's staff Sept. 22. Herman holds a masters degree in comparative cultures from UC Irvine and worked on • several publications at the UD· ~versity. He is also a former rme arts re· pwt.er for the Rochester Patriot in New York. Riley's new aide recentIY served as a public member of the special, task force that examined problems at the San Juan Hot Springs in the hills above San Juan Capistrano . It was that report to supervisors that prompted closure and tough enforcement of trespassing laws at the old spa, once a haven for youngsters who ~thed nude in hot water pools. Newport Bay Hiking Torus Scheduled The Friends of Newport Bay will guide six walking tours or Upper NewpOrt Bay, California's newest ecological reserve, start· ingon Saturday, Oct. 4 at9a.m .. Tours will also be conducted on Nov. 1. Dec. 6, Jan. 17, Feb. 14 and March 13 . Tour groups wiJI start the two. hour treks at the intersection of East Bluff and Back Baydrtves. GUIDES WILL discuss the his- tory of the bay, f06Sils, marsh plants, fish, tidal organisms, shorebirds and water fowl at various stops along the route. State Department ol Fish and ·Game officials say the migratory bird activity will be at its peak during the late (all and Winter months. said. " A.-ers said officers· contact with some sleepers led to arrests tor possession of marijual'la, minors in po11es1ion of alcohol and the like'. nGUllES SHOW1'HAT DU111NG the three-month period or- ficers on the~hllt made 8Z m~unQr arr"'ts and 50 relony ar· rests that required physical booltlngor suspects Into City Jall. THE WALKING TOURS were utilized by backers or the Upper Bay to win permanent preserva· ' lion of the estuary earlier this year. The bay is thought by ex- perts to be one of the m05t impor-tant waterways south or the San Francisco Bay area. Additional information about the tours can be obtained from ftances Robinson, al~. or the fish and game agency at (213) G-1741. The two arrest categorieo Include 19 men arrested on sex perversion charaes on the beach the last two weekends In Auaust. 1· I =-·--I • -., ...................... ~ DAILY .PH.Or Cl.ASSIFllD ADS =::-:::-=:.lea·ifiil ,_o;::..,.. er ... =.: t:=--:.- 1"' .............. •jlHl•1•1tM"~ .... Solt ....................... .. 015: ....... -.. ., .. ,.. IOOJ ••lld cMdl ...,. .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...., ~ ._. -MIMI VllW . ron Ip ......... 'fte ol MW t~ lake DAILY PILOT• 1 u4 U.. u,i.uy 'WOOded •••ty too-... _.,.. rolll•I hlll1 of Milo correctla11'"-_... lquareP.d.IBldtoocn, -r• -lor ~ Ulo ..,_ • ................. ltryway, Woodbu.rnlnt 1• fireplace and prlvale ,........,.,, Moffcr. covertd paUo .• ta,.IOO~ ••J I ....... _:.1._.. full price. ODIY 10_,. ru re• a ... e.u:v":"~ dowa. CA.LLIS2-T111 lD Ulla newspaper \S au~ K~ Joct 1o tho Fodera! hlr1 ,,,Q.:l•l:'::,f,"'~ '::::-:111" Houaloa Act of 19611'1'JI' 1'€.AlTOP.SR which makes it illegal to1--------- advertl1e "any pre· PR.ICE ferenct1 , limitation. or UD'___, dlacrimlaaUoa baaed oo ...,_,""'" race, color, religioo, MX, .Just reduced '5,000. For Oil' n•tlooal origin, or an quick tale. OeUshtful I Intention to make any bedroom. family room aucb p~fermce, l.imJt.a-ho.me IA the private com· Uon, or dlscriminatJon." mu.nity of Bay1horet. Two 1Jnplae., paUo en~ 'nllt new1paper will oot tertalnla1. Vacant and knowlnf ly accept any ready for occupaa~J. advert 1Inr for real fn,500. C1UtQ..lllO :c!:!;,~~\i':." in viola· r~1<if 1l111· ~.~~ ........ P~1 f:J f iitfter.. IOOZ ·• )) ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~tJulh!!& 3lr1 MARIGOLD AVE .• 4 Br,4 Ba&Gallery Cocoa• del Mar Jiiat one bk>ck to the ocean beach.. 2 firepl•C!eS. wet.bar "'"""'nch doott open to Delu1:ekltchen .. '" Pier for yadlt to80' huie Cblnae el.ma llhad· You may •elect the ina the brtclc paitJo &nd. flniJ;bin& touches. lawn. w~ paaellna, ln-8120 ~am celltal. pe1cea · llonn-1< picture -J!!!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!!Jacld charm to this three GOME FISHING- bedroom , two bath home; three car aarace plu1 paneled hobby room. TWO LEGAL ... or sailing, or 1wim· LOTS make Oda a best ming, or just plain relax· buy al $119,.500. ln& by the side ol )'OUf own.private lake. Roomy .f.Tlf. CORTLAND DR., and private, Covington Cameo Hia:blanda: Brother• 2 bedroom at a FretEl painted, freshly price of $50,900, Call dra , freshly carpeted W -2660. It (e1b fruit t.reea • SELEcT · <apricot. appje1 almond &plj.1mb). Spacious patio PROPERTIES & yard areu; lour I -;;~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 bedroom bome or three le. I• convened deDt private HlWUSTIHG OCIEAMROHT Deluxe duplex + guest room + e1:tra parlriog. 1159..500! CALL 67~7060 beach. Priced belt ln area at $85,iOO. · Cole of Mo ..,...t ••••• 2515 E. Coast Hwy. •• GOYTOWHID 1-;;;;;~~;7~;5;5;1 ;1 ;;;;;;;; Hunt. Bcb 3 Br, 2 ba I• home. $34,!IOO Lodn p)'t. . HlW CUSTOM CALL 556-1100 HOMES-2 beautiful I a. a-..a-. new qu.aUty tdlt castom a • -r • • ~ homei nearing eomple-l~~~~·~·~all~w~•~~~ J tion. Custom qualJty I· everywhere you look. Buy now and ~your favorite carpet color: EASTSIDE $30,500 Perf eel starter home, needs a little flxin'. F-.n- tastic lnvestmenL Ciµl 645-0303. FOREST OL50H IMC. HOME ON C-1 Located on 19th Street is thlJI older 2 bedroom home & garage. Lot is 48xl40 deep. Call now .. .it's a real fmd. $39,950 ··~ Pool 1ize lot.a with off street trailer parking. Prestigious Newport ad· dreu. Call 540-1151 for m"ore information. ..-,..$._ HERITAGE • • REALTORS JOGTOllACH OR PLAY TB4HIS Boat & trailer QJace at this Jovely Villa Pacific townboU5e. Recreational .• faciliUes galore.. Don't miss this charmer. Only $38.000. -Walker & Lee Real !state rARllUDO --------•loetuxe aduJt commun1 4 COSTA MESA CHARMER 3 bedroom home in quiet Eastside locat ion. Secluded court.yard en- try with many trees. New carpets in family room and Jiving room. Excellent location for family living. $52.500. 640-6161 ty ; 2 bd.rms., den. 21f.t bath condo unit. Sparkl· ing thruout ! Close to the ocean. A very solid in· vestment or home in Newport Beach for $49,750. By app'L c. F. ColesworthY Roaffon 64CMIOfo FRESH&MEWI Upgraded Jbr, 2ba home. Built.ins, 2-car gara1e w f enclosed back yard. One mile from beach. Low upkeep yard. Walk: lo downtown park. $45.000. Our best value. ...... -~ .... ~· •I ' , t,' .. - ,.., '"" "" . ,., .,. •• ... ~ ..... ... , .. , ... - "'' ~ , .. t' •• -· -.. ' ... ·-~ .... ., ' ·-~ .. ..... . ... ... .... ',,. ... .. ••• " ' . " .. " !I 0: ··~ 1•v~ '""' f~:: ,· "' '""' i:~ ... . ... ~ \ ' ,,., ... 11 ..... ..... ••• •1111 ,_ ,..,..,. . .... •'fl-•• .1.,..,,. . ' .. •• .4 ..... II ;~ " ,. ''"" " .. TEHMIS AMYOME7 !:.:. .,.. Call to see. j '~·· 536-8836 I SI ::·~ In Mesa Verde • your own court · paddle tennis that is! A real LOVE MATCfl awaits you from gracious entry-la\.·ish liv· i n g area to BIG bedrooms. This beautiful tri -level home is TOP SEATED at S7S,SOO. Don "t be ace'd out. CaU 646·7171. O"fN r<t Q • 11 s 'V"' ro ~· NO('f • [@ *lfi!itd °"" .. o.tw l"lllt-..ly .... ,_ ............ ,..., .. e:naibWlltJ-·..-Ydty ~ ~.u Two Story A- 3 Bedroom .z Bath Pitched ceilinp. Root garden. Walle to beach Boat storage. $165,500 ~ HC*ES aDWC-.._,_., --, t7141 t31 l400 WE'RE LOOl<IM' .. for 1 tr1de,ort.raC'tes on a 4 month ok1 conlpleteb' · cu1tomi1ed Spy1la1s home. $95,000. Eqlity. JACOISUALTY 87...., 2 &¥. 4 BR. a ea. ~le, Club-Pool. 'hnnb. 1 blk ocean: 17.f.,500. Prine. on· ly."2.U.2 • • •• •-•I • l ...... ··""!< ,. ., ... " ~· -c;<:lt, NO -·· -L_ "' ' .. ••• ·-4 '·' , !0• j ·•> •""" M ... -·•JO •• ~ .... •• --· .._ ' I \ • ' ' • • 1 f u DAILYPlLOT Mon0ty,SeptM1bW16,1975 Ho.SoHForS. jHoetnllorS. ............ ,. t'rrs11 .... ~ ~~~ .......... .. ---- . ••• • ••• •• • •• ••.••••• ••• • •• • • • • • • • • • • •• ••••••••• •• ..... •• • ••••"f•·•••• • • • • • ••••• •• • •••••• ... • • • ••• I 04+ MDllMIForS. IH111nForS. H1•11ForS. tta•n'!rS. laser.a 1002 .,.,.. .IOU C .... Mnll 10241' tk __ .._.._1040_ ~••••••••••••• .. ,.,. ._ ....................... ....................... •••••• ••••••••••••••••• • ................................... -.. .--............ ___ -·-·····............. .............. 1'LEIU)(J( ........ 1ooze....... 1ooz ••••" 1ooz •-·• 1001 Walk To leach . WWNUOUSs •••••••••••••"••••••••-•••••••••,, ...... ,,,,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUISTANTI.Ai.' LOOK! llDUICmW 4 +.-..+0llilllit 2br. • du. Former Pride of owuenhlpwUI beyoun when ~!~. 2 ~~~:.·~ =.:.1r~ I • ~ ..... ' &!c,,· ·····"'-· ~ !· ~ •• " ·! .,• .. .. ... r ..., .. f Fi: ~:r. 'fi l I _,,. '• r'°'""" ... •11 l t '(' ,, fl~ -·lsa!·--,· you own one or bcltb ol these twin, ballll;-lnal•le .,....dlM.r.,....o1ir-. lllblln1. A MIJSTS.&E. duplexes in Corona del Har. 3 Bdrms., .....,. a patloo. Will< 10 -•tlve ..urior. Ell-IM,!llO. family rm. & 2 hatbll each unit. Handy all ..hOolo. ...-Call try to parlour ,.1th 9;~E;ii!~iOW} to beach , atot ea & trans. Corner. tor1'pp'L crftkltn1 ttreelace. :.. $124,500. Inside lot $122,500. Xlht Cooitlttllella · =~·~~.~= values!! .. ._. '4+76 '2 10 ror dlnntr. Wood cablnel1, dream built· lo.I. Topped by a b<a¥)'1-'-'------'-' \.I." I-."-I. I. y -.; TAYLOR CO. it t .. 1\I "f'()({~ '>1 111 I l !l·l(j ASSUME7°/o l>•I'~ <'l /\II • JUSTAllOUMDTHICOllHM This home does that! It just winds around a corner in fashionab le Westcliff. And the result is an .ex· panded 3 bedroom with dining room, fabllious entertaining patio, a huge tree. cute decor and next to no main- tenance worries. You· should see it!- UHOA ISU IUGAHCl -SH5,000 Superior quality & design in this beaut. NEW French Traditiona l. 5 Lge bdrms. fam rm, play-room, formal DR & 51'> baths. Pool. sauna, pier /slip. J. cargar.on mostprestlglousbayfront. 76 LINDA ISLE DR. OPEN DAILY l ·S 2111 S.J ....... llloRoacl NEWPORT CIMTH. tu. -644-4910 BAY AND BEACH 6 7 5-30 00 ... Hl'I 111r .. ,1 11 v.~ lLJli!"•l"•lHLNltoro 911,090 Bu)'I 2 sty. 1parlllinJ -lovely yd., po ol. 8H·48'*, 556-ml lbake root . ...,,500, btr, won •t. J a•t. ~all t TnRBElL- 1926.1976 IMMEO. rossus. Thl• v•c•nt 3 bd.rm., - famlJy rm., 2~ ba. , toWnbome, le: 'ftltlnc for ' iU new owner• ii pitted • l;;;;::::;;;:;:;:;;j below market at P'1900. BY OWNER C,JHorddalls. Go111ntl I 002 1o1boa ,....., I 006 Unique 4br M,.. Verdo •••••••••••••••-•••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• home, many s tra1. SEE THIS Gnray ESTATE XLNTINVESTMENT "3,500.5'1-0<T2 Mii WE BA VE RENT.US 552-7000 ~.ooo. • GIM't'al 1002 ....... 1002 SACRll'ICE Ruldenllal .. Com· co~ .. ••• BIKllU merclal Income. Good -$5,000DOWN asaumabl• loan. By BEAUTY ... lmmaculate Pritt:d at onb' $17.950. :J UlililfJU I: t-IVM i S REALTORS•, 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar ••••••••••••••••••••••• MINI RANCH AIANDOHBI 3 IR SACRIRCE ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 $33,900 -Completely redecorated 1002co ..... o1 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXECUTIVE OWMERflMAHCID owner. Prine. only. 3bednnhome.1parklln1 Bedroom, 1'4 baths, kits Prestige area. Tree $'2,000.87~ pool, with cover. ofoxt.r•a.Nk:eatta.Call HOME "udded •tu<t. Huge llv· Sprinklers ,_ 6 nar. "°" . n · 1-vi11L' 11.:-mfs. l.:<Uf t,,r:; This stunning and ing area. Mammoth .-O•P•M•• 1007 New carpel• thruout. 1l!1.ltfu'!\.ll; • · · FIESTA ROOM with ••••••••••••••••••••••• Highly ur,1raded. If yJcirj~ 1=====-"'=~-apacious executives C A T ll E D R A L LARGE4BDRM Beautiful'"' andscaped. • -1o-L 1048 home is located on a v W Id ~;~-4471;~~~;;;;,;;;;~1~~"9'~~~~•~• -d t et CEILINGS. Wann COUD· $120.000 appraisal, ut-All terms. Call or ••••••••••••••••••••••• quiet cul· e-sac s re . Ir Y k Itch en w Ith in& •116,000. 673-4234 Real Eatate556-T7Tl • I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• like a model. Prime re- sidential neighborhood in prest1glou11 communlty. Large family siud tivlng room . Country styled kitch e n. llambling grounds with fruit or- chard. Secluded mMter retreat anti gentirou& sized childrens suites. flurry . Priced to sell fa st! Call 963-7881. Stunning pool, rock • c..-s ..... p.. OldLOCJlllOC•am I Walerfu.11 and secluded &randma's pantry . MESA VERDE P I .,.--Nr Beach &: town. ' Separateaewitlgroom& Deluxen-Jax ... 00 • "By Ayru", massive country living at only utilityroom -l8'veranda Near Bay~Ocean . 3br,2b•.Ownermustaell cJ•v llle roof, flesta rm T r ip l ex-3-2Br. 2 $87,000. in an exclusive '"' quickly. A steal al -tbedral w/(rplc. 3 car gar, by Newport Beach location. overviews immaculate Completely redecorated $46,900. Makereuonable w/Ooor to ca · cell· owner. 3S2, lS8 le. 362 Being remodeled: custom 5 BR. 5 Ba. 6500sq. ft. home on point, pool, dock. manicured grounds. &: la ndscaped wtauto 11 v DIM lnat Ina: fir e place, custom Tb ali'a. (55 rt Jot). . Once in a lire time •r.rktn. Newcpt,drapes, 0 er. aca · ove window aeat, 4 spacious •119•500• s75 . .e2:24 &:: -or escrow. Call anytime kl h 642-3099. Place . $49.950! llurry.Callnow. 'f in anci n g . 1826 W. ror details. MB-nu; aft. Olass &UlepaUo tc en•1.::=.::::::...------ South View. 3 BR, 3'/,ba,large rooms. Boat slip. $224,500. · Custom ·s BR. 4 ba. View, lagoon. Boat slip. $295,000 80 ft. on I J .Quail ~· bargain . F.P. only tle.~,soo.Excepti'onal once.Payrent unlll close BR'1(or3+extraden). • "- p ti.. 546-2313 Balboa Blvd.· Open 6 ... -2 w/b1r 1'1'Yes ~BBQ, Whlle W~Ylow rap-Ol'fNr119 •ill 1 "'1IO~f ,.,~f' S Su 125 IJonG l ' "VV I 1 9f'CI""" 752-1v20 ., at / n . . a is, [ -~ tee play rm wJ at.or Xlnl Jocation enhances .. .. :;:·::: .. "· t~11~&ll\d ~~~~~~~~~~d.'. '(i) ~ ~~·~:=.·~ r~k~~~:~~&~~~~ =-1•111 ~ 2 IRfOR stairway give it a very CA.LIFORHIA. security 213-394-4293 Mesa Verde by Owner 4 spacious out.door feeling. 1 CLASSIC Br, 2 Ba, new crpt.s" $28,950 Seeit.todayat$l00,000 Bill GRUNDY, REALTOR GOVERNMENT OWNED $34,900. $175(1. Down . !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! \ Nice sect ion of l I un t· ington Beach. 3 Bedrm, 2 baths. Gov't rinc. 646-3928. eves 646-0650 341 Boy!>1d" 011v1· N B b7 S 6161 1oozco....,.1 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lachenmyer Realtor HOUSE OF GLASS VALLEY REAL.TY in a coUn~~E~mosphere PRESENTS or swaying fields and COMMERCIAL I~~~~~~~~~ farmhouses, this cos-2 houses on 2 lots zonool · mopolltan estate or C-5. Liveinoneandwor'k SHORECREST cathedra l ceilings and in the other. Lots or traf· TWO STORY SOARING WALLS OF fie. $90,000. •BAYVIEW cONt>O• drps, or schools, assume Existing Jow mo. rent !n- on huge cul-de-sac lolon •2Bedroom,ZBalh• 8lA% loan. 3280 Dakota. cl. Uixes &: insurance. 2 qu.iet tree·lined st. in con-•Pool, SUndeck• .:54c.:9:.·=325<=------I Story, built-ins include rorming prestige b dishwas her, carpets, neighborhood. 138 Ft. •SlipAvaila le• Westside 3 Bd,l Ba, drapes. Good coodition. across the rear with ac-•ZCarParking• Oversized 2 car gar. Owner anxious. Be the cess for boat, trailer. •AdultBldg-$88,000• l2Xl$ paUo &: carport. early bird & get the 4Sale8y0wlter' motor home or'!' Walking Olive Wiggenhorn, Rltr Carp & d rap. Lot worm, NOW! Bll7-032l: 2 Houses on l Lot. 2 distance to schools in· 675-6160 65'X120'. Fruit trees. Oversized garages, sun- cluding parochial. BrandJ~~~~~~~~~~J_.!JB'!!K~R!;548~::J,1~55~7~-----deck ovrlk'g ocean • new on market place. Extra nice, 2 BR, 2 BA. on Dcma 'olnt I 026 $65,000. 494-8170 Better see today. over wide Jot. $80,500. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-7711. 540_1571, eves/wknds ••oll-~~~ ·--'======-IForsalebyowner.Sweep- - A ~ -ing ocean views, 673-6311 In Dana Knolb-3Br-2Ba-By Owner. LoveJy 3 BR, cathedral beam ceilings, Corona del Mer 1022 Lrg yard w/paved boat walk. to beach. Lg. mstr. 4 br + ramily nn, 2200sq , · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ortrlrstorage.496-0685. BR, 2 Ba, family rm., ft, tasterully decorated. BY OWNER Jg. 3 Br, 2 Ba DELUXE DUPLEX F-· kitch ~/bit-I ns: rrpl. $95,000. 645-3374 or .,. Carp, d rape1. Assume 4wi 1564 GLASS & overlook• the HARBOR VIEW FAMILY ROOM coastal valley! Enter Unique entry to spacious l;;~~;;~;ii~~~I ABA.MDONED thru rare tUeentry ·sink \ HILLS rormal h\'ing and ban-COLONIAL into pillow-like carpel-Largest lot in Harbor q ue t rooms. Sunny 5 IDR-2 STORY + den. North of Hwy. sale by owner, ocean-e xist VA loan.$41,SOO 1..:-"--·=-=------- $19,750 644-2877. view. Open House Sat. & 960-2643 960-3743eves · EMERALD TERR. LEASE LEA SE Ol'TION Sun. 24651 LaCr esta, Charming &: spacious, 496-7269 panoramic view home; 2 ing! Lavish 4inlng room View Hills-Pool and gourmet kitchen. Rambl-BAYCREST MEA.RIEA.CH entertainmtnt ! Com-jacuzzi. Great6 bedroom ing game room with 5 Bedrooms or 4 & den-Winding tree lined rortable &: cozy living in bomerorS148,000. crackling fireplace . b ea utiful pool with street . Raised hearth. Scandinavianfamroom! CALL 675-7225 Gracious guest bath and jacuzzi and sauna . Enormous FORMAL Sweepin~ master bdrm Jarae laundry room. Elegant large li\•i ng DINING ROOM . Bright suite wit separate sun· Sweeping stairs to king room. big family country kitchen. 40. :shine breakfast patio! 3 size master and separate kitchen, all this on Fee C 0 VERE D DANCE Childrens retreats! And h · 1d L h I d • $99 500 c 1 rens suites. us an · · · PAVILION overv•'ew• much, much more Coron-I d · V PETE BARRETI luy wllll Terms i nd jts really a neat home, only 1 blk to Ocean Blvd., with 3 BR, 3 Ba, ram -r m . luxuriou s master suite and much more. Only $95,000. Call Fow!talnVahy 1034 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FHA REPO bdrms. +den+ privacy & in prlstine e<>ndilion! $135.000 Only $34,900. TURNERASSOC. Best buy in Hunt. 8ch. 4 1105 N. CstHwy,Laguna BR, 2 Ba. New carpets, __ ___:4.:.9.:.4·..:1.:.1::..77,_~-· will be installed. ca111- now. ly $5600 total down! an scaping. e ry sunken terrace separate Won't Jasl the wkndl private grounds. Call for -REALTY-"hot house", Enjoy cums appt. today! $58,500. Call ocean views from multi· Jiurry, <•llS11.0010. · 963-6767. 642-5200 675·4060 ,_ REAL ESTATE 644-7211 •SUl'Ell* Transferred Exec.,-t BR, FR, lrg rec. rm., 2 wet bars, 3 car gar. Prem. cor lot won't last al $69,150. Call 962-4495, An 5 PM 839-9458 Agt. ask for Ed Barber .A61an REAL ESTATE onN u,q.11'! n.1N roBE Ntct • ''OL 1 SPA.MISH Dl'f"' 111 ,,.. ,1\1u,, ,0 "" "'"''' I~~...,~~~!!'!"~~'!! level grounds. 5 Jumbo QOO Gl1·nn1'y" St IQ4 ?41 J ~41< ('Jl() r~----1:11 ..... JJ courtyard entry. 4 King-_.,.,~: ---··-"_JJ 3 IR-:Z STY 2 Cozy I Br houses on cor-* IY OWNER* story condo. 3br, l'hba, On one of finest beaches, • Jt;~•fBl.2'~ ... ~ .. ·,:~ .. ··~·~f~2~~~·~·i~li~1~.t~I~!/ s P , .E,~Tf "f!;': " • d [.~. -·,· •• ··:.• li&H\llJ SP AMISH RXER ~~~f.~:: :::,~:~\~I =========-1~!'!J!!".~.!~!! ev o!:~:.4::wt 2-Oce&1fl ont FHA REPO sized bedroom s. 2\.\ POOL BEACH ['·ta!,iiJi'l!'lJI~ ne r lot. Part. fu r n . Beautiful Deane Bros. washer /d ryer, refri g, units are secure invest· $34,900 eaa~si t !"J'lk~~ if:':~~-. JUST LISTS> $28,500 1"ti i\ti',.~a~·:~~~~ 1 _.::i'.'.:~'·~·;~,°'C/~~~~o=~::~r'.:3~.,~g~-k=w~~-·1 e:~ep~~!t: a~~!;t;::; $28,900. st6-M72. F':1~!. 1dei~~r g~u~~: ~ Rare o pportu nity In Massiv e fa mily room Gorgeous hidden 2 story, Large entertaining sized ----~= -with elegant landscape, come. $225,000 prime beach city! Priced with crackling fireplace. 4 bedroom. Sharp &spot· living room. Kitchen LARGE FAM HOME BY OWNER patios, & entry. Features l"ine 1044Jll .... ~~l>ll>l~~~~~ .... l ho us and a be Io w Large gourmet kitchen. less-shows loving touch large enough to prepare l arge m aster s ui te, ••••••••••••••••••••••~! market! Walk lo beach Laundry center. Party in home, patio & banquet and large VA.TEAMS Duplex 2-2 br units. Roman bath & atrium. from this s pacious 3 patio enhanced by garden ... enjoy outdoo1 enough dining .room .to Belter hurry on this un-Choice loc, So. of Hwy. By owner, Prin. Only. bd rm h o me '· Need s trop•"cal landscapi·ng. l•'v lng too•_ C•n you serve it Sweep1ngsta1rs believable 4 bdrm, 2lh _S7;:'-9".500:-;----548:-=--:5306--:-:-:;::--=---:-l~~~~~~~Bli"!~i6.~B---. to bedr~m suites. Huge bath home. Near shop-,, . ' · · This new rree standing minor fixing and paint 3-Car garage. Tile roor. believeonly$67,950? P•'ng • schools. Cali lhe Charming 2Br.oottageon home In Univ. Park bas 1 HOME LEFT! OCEAN VIEW 2 Bd. Char m .:"r, Northe n d. $59, ;oo. Norins Realty494-80.1. b l WHAT A BUY ' M-' N lb be h. M hideaway master. Take 0< HO IUG SS Swlth mlnorrepair! loappreciate.E-Zterms. UPEllB $4S·9491 _ tra unit. Open daily. ~ ~ ;JI ing space. It includes 3 New3br den Jba ocean-u ..... e ear e ac ustsee ~ over 7 ~% FHA. NO residential specialists at lovely ~t. w/rm. ror _ex-JU•Tf•CTr approx.2500sq.rt.of liv· don't w1it -callforquick oPfNl11Q·•'S'uN10.11rN>er• $196 mo. pays a · us show you why. Free 3•L B ••· I I Offeredfor ,limitedtime -Calltoday.842-2535. OMES NEW/ LOAN COST1 5 1· •. $74.500.Agt.64S-2f2S Wesell a lotofhouses,let Jrg BR's, finished bonus /canyo~ vie~. 8y ownr appt. 847-6010. . ·11~ *' C•mpu• Ne 549·1655 HURRY F 1 RST TO , Costa M•lCI I 024 market evaluations. Call ~:ing~m :ur~b,'~r:. _S_l_32~·-ooo_. _494 _- 5729 ___ _ l .oPtN1tt 9:sitJ7j:f7lr;! . • •X ~~J-GLAl~-~fooJ71U1~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• now.540·5140. .. The p r ice is $64 ,500 LogunaHiguel 1052 .• ,filil 'i!'JJI · ··' .. :.~ COR'"'ERLOT OP1Nru9 1rs,uN10.11••'•' · IMSTA.MTCASH leasehold&lhebuilderis ••••••••••••••••••••••• w ti(i.111~ 1-... ~',,"·E,;'·;;w·,;,·,,,:.,p';:!O=R=T===!'j HEAR IEACH =11· ·-·~~. ~ ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;/ F\lll'::p~a~ ~pd. anx~a_:a:i~~MES 9Je~W:1~d!n.~I ~i~~j " One block f rom BIG ~ ~ What's It Worth? Call now for freeevalua-552-1800 Country Club Condoo•• ' ..,COME CORONA BEACH. In . The conservator invites lion . Ask for Jiml _ _.:~~~ ...... ~~--1·---==:...:..:.:._:_ __ , Stove, re r r i .g •> [VIEW OF " charmingOLDCORONAl ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 your bid on this lovely Nichols. LIVEINOHE: ASSUME70/oLOAM washer /dryer, & dis-· PR FOUR-~LEX, pride.or DEL rt1AR. A prlmel• viewhomeinlrvineTer-Century21,546-9521 $229MO. hwasher. Carpels & rW ownership. Deluxe units-building site. ()(fered at RUSTIC race. The Udo to jelty & REMTOHE!! drapes like new. $53,SOO • . Ntft HOMES Fireplace, bltns., 2 baths $69,500. Call ror more de-EASTSIDE harbor view is visible COSTA MESA ECONOMIZE!! Cozy 3 ADULT HOME Open house Sat. & Son., each. Only 8 yrs. old. tails. Call673-8550 Costa Mesa ... cute 2 from the huge Ii ving 4 BEDROOM bedrm owners home with Spotless adult occupied 31261 East Nine Dr. (2l3J 71/. 2 3 + PMI $alc34ea'"'°. . Fee land. Prime OPtN 1119•11s1uN ro~t NICf' bedroom & den, shake room, dining room & A sharp TWO STORY country kitchen & dine, home! Plan 7 California 447-2896or (714) 49J..1657. r; r b. r· 1 1 master BR . suite. <It has w /m•sler bdrm upstairs warm wood floors &: home. C ul-de-sac Joca- lh. L.le'l in ""lar heal· PRESTIGE HOMEr roo ' ig irep ace. argc ca-t, 2 van1'tv baths, ,-F ' I C r ~ ~ lot with a detached dou-4 BR. 3 Ba . l. 1-lerc is how or down. Pool sized yard, • ,.... "-I ion. 1rep ace. om )I ing. Cluster desBiBQgn with Realtors 645--6646 ble garage in rear. One· to bid . Fi rst inspect th e built-in kitchen, ramily PLUS a 1 BR, I BA rental kitch e n . Queen size Like Mew View! 3Br, 2ba, upgrd'd cpts, drapes, patio, Jndscpd. putting green, areal ---"-'-----'--'---t==~~~~~~;;\ of-a-kind, brand new list· homl.', if you like it, make room and SIOOO. carpel brings in $200. per mo. bedroo m s. Lawn & handball court.2 ~~r BIG BEDROOMS ingl Asking $40,950. Call an ofrer. 1r your oCfer is allowance. Only $47,SOO. Beach area.962-5511 Bkr spri n klers . An xious comfortable living, cx3 IMMEWPORT 540.1151 satisfactory to the con· Callquick.644-7211 TENN I S ·ANYONE'!' owner wants fast sale. bedr m Condominiums. HEIG~S * f18 500* servator, it will be Assume 7'7o VA loan $49,500. 495-4995. \. Reser ve yours now. "' _,., 1 rorwarded to the court Adult Condo, 2 yrs. old. $23,000 remai n ing Open 10 AM to 6 PM dai-Large -spacious. 2 bath. ALL TERMS for approval (no pro· Lg. 2 br, 2 ba, new cpls, ba1ance-wilh payments Jy. 2$80 Santa Ana Ave. Double garage -separate bate). That's all there is cust drps, frnll. din rm, al $229 mo. No qualiCy- orr Unlvenity. For in-rec. room. Alley access 4 BR Townhouse to it. Truly a rare op-lg. patio, tennis, pools1 ing! Owner may help * WEKHOW • LAGUNA NIGUEL ' •• formation call for boat, etc. $M,950. Call portunity. Come see it! l ~~~~~~~~~~l~ja~c["'~"!··~Full=~sec=-~$37=·:'°°:::::· finance or try $4250 + · ma••• 646-7171 . 111 673-4729 costs to new Joan. See to ~l17". '""~ ""'"'"'.·""""'~"~"' ATTEHTION believe-<:all752-1700. * IEST • CLOSE TO OCEAN-.4-Br de l uxe Broa dmoor home, 2 frplcs, highly up - graded. RecrealionaJ facilities, security area. $95,500. - d'M~ [@1IHl1H:I ~.~~i~~~l ~~!"'h~~~'. COMPANY ~.~~~~~&~~~ 0~f!:~uz~~~£i~~'. ,""""'."""'"OMN<•' Large family room, de-REALTOHS build your units on the Shop'g. Ctr. By owner. S l.a<juno Ni9t<1 Redly 830-5050 496-4040 G....... 10021i~ IOOZ lightful kitche n. sun SINCEl914 R-4lot.Room forpoolta-$51,000. All terms .1£!;f~"'"!:·~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• washed patio. block ble in large converted 963-3165,9052PioneerDr. J~~~~~~~~~~I walled for privacy. Aslr.-::::::':7:3:·4:4:0:0:::I family room. Walk-in COZV Ml11ion Viejo 1067 macnab I Irvine realtg d LINDA ISLE LAGOON Country English w /family charm. Large 4 bedroom 51'. bath home. Bonus r oom pl us 3 fir epl aces & space for 3 boats. Owner will con· sid e r t rade. Dona Chichester &C-8234 (V68) URE LOT IY THI SEA View of surf, jetty; catalina, 60x330 feet. Exclusive shorecliffs. Corona de! )(ar. Private Beach. Ken Bartley642-8235. (Vtll) "IASY IJYl«i" Beautiful BiglCanyoo 2 bedroom -2 bath -Formal dining room -View home. Wet bar -Large k1tch w /breakfast area. Top quality lhruout -owner anxious -Vacant -QUlek possession. $132,500 Mary Loll Marion 642·8235. (V'/0) ··-.. .., __ ingonly$49.995. do•elS. paneling, gas *BY OWNER* 2 BR 2 BA ****JUMP**** 546-4141 bllns & covered palio Luxurious La Cuest a •• • al the chance to buy one DUPLEX enhance this property. walk to beach, 2800 sq. Sgl. ram . home on quiet or the few remalninf' 3 Bdrms .. 2 baths each Don'lde\ayonthis ... only n .. 5 BR+ den, on cul· street on park location. completel,y reCurbished 2 unit ; frplcs ., bit-ins. $401500. Call 546-5880 de-sac, 3 BA, 3 car gar, Short walk lo pools, len- bedroom, 2 bath single· Ideal location ror sum-Agent beaut _ eond. Prine. oniy. nls, s hopping. Extr a story Townhouses In San-mer /winter rentul s. l~~~~~~~~~~j.!$7~6~,500~.~963~·~12~1~6=~=-J sharp! Everything has ta Ana . Still only $21 ,950. i·~~~~~~~~~ $85,000. I· been done bolh inside Ask for Frank. 839-8321 673-3663 642-2253 Eves $50,000 2 BR house & 1 Br and out. A steal at $49,500 Agent ig1u ~:~s::a or 548-9'41 LE RAISOR ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Mo•• Rf9'+ In'" Pride or owne~hip in Mission Viejo's E l Dorado neighborhood. A model 3 Br., family room home with central air conditionJng is yours for ~z.soo. MISSION VIEJO REALTY 581-1000 GeMrol IOOZGtMrOI 1002 By0wner,lge48R,2 Ba, -REALTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mesa Verde. Askins VA.&FHAauy.,.. • $48,900. S57-5176 Rea.I £.state .fSrZ3 Campus Dr., lr\llne Call today ror ou.r large "11411# s..rii'~···ra ". '(le ~·· ... Rt:Alll'OKS ·. 644·7270 ..... CO.ONA DEL Mil DUl'LEX U Greatlocatlonl Froothousehas a bedrooms, fireplace, 3 baths . Spacious 2nd unit bas 2 bedrooms .. Call us to see this prime property. $98,500. 2821 f . Coo~t Hi , Coron0 del Mor MOMa fOlt llVJMG Mbwon --·· .. , '" '"i.110, ",...,. , •-.to "' rw .,.,,.. d 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• :>1 i TARBEL~. CH 1926·1976 MESA VERDE: Fruit trees, garden, dance veranda. 3 bedrooms + den or 4 bedrooms. Wood CJlbinets, built· ins, Just $47,500! · TIIE BLUFFS: Reduced $5900. 2· story villa, parquet noon, conversa- tion pit, banquet dining, 3 bdrms, 3 ba.ths, must sacrifice! ; . , 540-1720 ZtllH-llYd. hal•i '-""~....,... c....-. I . I by aa...a...v Campus ValleySbopCtr. selectio n or 3 &: ' ,..,,-wu C:ALL 133-8600 bedroom homes. No r-....:.:.::;;;..::.;..:.c:_.;.:.,;__I down VA &: lo down FHA. 1 WHATS AN MISSIOH'llEJO A.fltA,)IE7 UNlqul SRIULI IOTYOO Only the matt unlql.le MA.STER SURE • airy ope.a feelln& Inside; Not only does the master BY OWNER Spac. 3 br z with the mo1t prlv•le suite b ave ~a walk-in ba "El Dorado" A/C~· , aecludtd surroundings closet a~d dbl. basins, it der SSO's. 830-8298 out1lde. There 's a h11~pnv1testuclywil.h 1&rden paUo of( every an ilrlum view. 2 Addi- room. LR has hl&h A· tlonal bdrrns., 1paclous shaped ceiling ror a llvio1 room, formal din- tabfn·llke effect. Call In• and a huge kitchen- 988-«56 raml l y room area. SEPTEMIER'S '86,ooo "SV(lllltiRT" ......... Innocence A tender lov· ~ iDI c~e 1bow In this VIS .... e111ly ollordable ,col· -N ua:e. close to be1c~! 3 DALTT bdrm, 2 balh. Far>ov.,. SS2·~pa """" roe onl¥ ~1 A Red mu .,. 111 6'st ' LClnJo & l'riYGff IPOOU A maRnlrlcent <C Br. home with formal dlnln( room, wet bar. Indoor , laundry room. 3 bathrooms & a private rear yard with a custom pool, 2 fireplaces • 1etf cleaning ovens. See lo . believe. $81,500. MISSION VIEJO RULTY 511-1000 • • I • • 1 .. .. .. • .. •. --~ . . . -·.. I ......... : ·~·. , ... -.. . ... . ... , . •.. .. ··-·····~' .._._ ... • ....... •c:t" 'C':" ......................... ............ .;........ -"11:~~-.. , • ..... :::.:::; . ..:r .... ..o..e:.. • ~c .: .... :;.;...~ .• ~J .;; • .:i--v ---·· , '"' ............ _....... I*'•" rt............... • ~.-................ -....... -·········-···-··· ....................... I' fib' I. • • '*•• .. .. .._ • . .._ I t>A: ,. :-• fl ...,.... .....,. ··~~ 106f •"••••••••••--••••• M ....... •t6fColN..... JD.4 If 3111'• ... 1240 "•lllllv.GAI, .1-WWW•-• ... & I HNI ···········"'···· ...... ··-······· .... -...... • • -• • ., 0 u t .... .. ············-····-··· ······-·····-······-··--···-............... . * * PIES11GE * * Unique eontempcrwy clalsic. Finest use or Ou wood. A warm, adaptable· familY home. :S Bdmw. + ~rm. · .iarge sundeclt with.Jacuzzi. Star otu.6 Lido Island Home Tour. M,500 . · LIDO llEALTY . lJ77'fleU..tU. . 67Jo7JOO -------- °"'a • ......... IH•lll•l•lllllllll•••I I vs..&... , •• , ..... J7J4... ...... -.. I( PLEXas •••• ,. t • c..o••.-....... ellbkM.A'1 Mitt .... ReaD-tate tt11 ••• _..... ~ ••• ~ :a. eau ... w ..... ,c•s•r.u;y.. ion.. Q.1.i OFll.-...c. "N::....re. --···············--··s;;:;;·Ml:;W.-t;,"~-;·~·;·; , ' bMroom I both, fJlo r-. ...i,.-........ •M!AprJMapolla aro01~t.:-:-.._a::;i •-•taR-I Baell.. Color TV -• • , -1ar., ....., _,,, lit' 111o ..,.,_....., •BJt.llllo\...sllil uw1a•M ··-· ..rv•111al4sw.A..n -. pool. TIII iliSA, • pool • --.t • nfrt1'. A.,.11 'toJU •Sdloaw,._CMc:a •l'lloGollorv,Wpool '15 k. Nnp>rt Bl. NB s..tlS.Aal .. 1• PM ssc.• ' CBR.lllA .. -a-ad,_IBaOoodo. •QIJdroaSOrtloo •.;;til=c•=t ____ _ . •111-/BUdl crpla, 41\W. -.... •810PPw ... un •· llllALTYINC. • LIDO ISLE WXVlu.OUS -• • CBll,211A--poolllri•l1-.'25L-•lad ~Ad'Zi"" ... ~" ••• » • .!Qo.-'' 1., 714/146.1371' I Wa!S Ibo -.. 1'11 ..... Dupla, a 1!!'. •.... ·~/llOll -5191 lllltNnpaltlll..i,Cll 2Br,11>a.-.- .. •• ,. p&?f 2IN W111&r.-J br, a ba fnnJ. dlD rm, cm&., 1ar, 18.Jl,1.....__.. t BR .l:tdorada. tf'Ptli.l-....:!-~lll:!!»::cr~l<S-=:MT=:_.f:"7'~=""=::'-:--:-'1 ••• .,, ....... ,_,,,.,. .... Be1tf'ODt..,,_.. t:U.:•Uo. $i2I so. •U1Acer/8Dla0Mea 4rti1.bltnl ,.UO.kd:td-2.0JSP lur1aa.CM l BR apt. l~ ~ "5, ... 811Al.L trailer SBR,ZBA.-SSIS Qoooc.o~.......... ........eolQOl.lllra.lode- -do--IAY-OMT s.su>B ""-'"•IBr •WamerllldwardO --lBRPurn,Zlrldoaell. '<oratad Yrlf rental. lioti!orh°' 10 C~ 1~ Ba ·b;;;';,;;,..,..( SBR,211 .... .$151> .mo. 3=•: ... ~t~ '190. mo'. Awall O<L Jst. 2 &railua ..... •F! £letantfttwab'Omt.MI Coua.ll')' atmotPhtrei. •BrookbW'lt/Oatfkdd !:'!7!'!~ ... ?~!! room•. encl. aar. Call IT3·0171 or o,.,..r•a apt. dowa. 2 br, a ba decantor de. A•ail.. now. hOi 0al7. 2 BR, lBA.-'211$ tow N il:OUSE 2Br, wtatora1e. Ad.u1ta aab', <W>W--6acolled:. ~ul0ttYltlo I067Mow art.._. 106' ~ba1-. 0ww, sJiMdapt;.All ·lll'O/mo. lit+ lad.+ llMOCTor-l78l 2v.Ba, pool, bit"•· aopeta. BEACHJ'RONTabr,2 ... •••••••••••••·-........... :.::, ....... -.... -'-"-'='-------!fur o 1 s ••d la el . ~p.tu.tua. wub/dey, pr, No pea. ....,..2 .. bltu, 1ar IJ ladry fac'a.. Z be ob nl 16 UNITS Wuber/11.,.... lloat sU CllAlllilINO Sb<, l ba °" ProsU1a, -+ aq.ft. '75-9UI Bllna w/9r drj>I p>ol $3$0 mo. Yrty, m-1111 • ••••• • 0 • ___ 10.!,. •. "a.~ J?!lot.·SOO.GG<lln· a ... au. Can bllea:eed tret-li.Qed CUJ"'"-c Sl. famll)' bome.tBR.3.BA. ·~oo • Adl't • 't 55MZ21 .,.Mo9.1'f~ n1vFort~~~. rl&r. :!'~':!~=•:.:t: fur~Prt5:.1.1A:i~ t;u8:ll!•~· 200t !~~~,'i~·~~ LIDOISLE &d.aiao '·no pea'l-'-B-r,"1-..,, .. n-aparL--t-bllc--to OYel" ~low 'Ai 1o1nt: lnl::-815-::-7""'"=·----~ Pricedatsm,ooo. Oct. u&. ssm. UDIUm., . • ~-per mo. Caill for LoveJ.t •hr, 2 bl bomt. , ............. 3740 beach. Comp redecor. J bssion Viejo. El Toro• HEALTH llEASONS $5915. fw1l. Fa•• y...., 3234 appt. llG-U'llAleot. Fn>1. patio. aU elec. kit., ••••••••••••••••••••-• Yrly. #70 CaU Collect. s.i nJuanCapiatrano.zto Must Mll' -· •-·t 511• Prtadpalloal)'.._. n~orm.z;tM ••••••••••••••••••••••• db[ &a.r. $4509/l·Sllor WIEIEKLY••.-.e: 2.13-3n-$608 .s&Rhomos.Ca.U I · -......,. P A.11otbr,2baUnftimup. SHAR.P:SBR,2Ba,doM: $$$0 Yrly. 9'13·1134; ....-1~ 131..0UI w lb elet:aot upcraded ataln d!H>lex av-all. Ocl I Br. 2 ba, din rm, crpt, &o the be•cb, tenni1 673-4789 Exealfl .. Sahs 2A:3 BR.9, ~bUt. to beach. EC R•· .a9v Coodo. 3 Br, 2'-\.Ba, OWD lltOG3SU. SL SUS. yrlJ drpl, blt.na. fenced yd 6 court pool jaeua.al 727 y ., W'¥d Wotr · or poql.ble YrJ.y. A'ITJ..1 1 land Ir boat. slip, '83.SOO. · paLas5 . ..._l parklite al~ospbere'. OCEANFROHt'2br, yrt.J, CM40•• 6'1~ /213 "' tSIO ~J.ea1e $600. mo. POD Moe.t.11-3Br. MUI St. Sharp 3 Br 2Y.ii ba s:ns. mo. FREE REN· blt.ns, 1uue. Sl'lO. No Beacbl831v~~~Ylont-.I OC FRONTAPI'.1br ~portleah IA'' ••~•43 Naar P>or. W/W epta, townh _.,_ TALLIST peta.14>-J655 ~ '""-.-~ -4U"'~~ •rp1, dsbwsbr, 3 car ouse .. .,__ cmms STUDIOS&llRI '200 r mo. u-tnc. ••••••••••••••••-••••• I••+ I Hcmse "11 ~" 1Parkln•. •ent:ed heat. ~1'08l00rtllo918'1,Art. REAL F..STATE 'l:t;'0e ~ur.~r·,t~.~~. =: •F\allKltcbeo Wnt · 548-lll30«1'13-1'1M H-YltwHo•1 FllOMTHEOCE»! $64,fSO Winle< raloWIJuao ?1BR,IRa,_..,...,cul· --·-t:n lllo •HuledPool NR.OCEANnewDplx.Z • 41R•llGLOT 2BR4t18Jtl>upiexon Fourbread•bulteru.n· sn.nzsor(2].3-.1'88S. de0 1ac. $400. mo. BR W 15 P~ .. t~' •Lau.nd.ryFMClli.Uea br. 1 ba. Garb. dlsp. On1yonebJock1orettea· 1/\.\ lots. Tremendou.I Ital Fine Colla Alea• (.21.J)J3S.ll07:J.1ftOIS 3 • arner Pr· "6en •FreeUtWties DJW. iar. Yrb'. '11<t. ~0b:.':U~ ~e ~~ ~t=~~·~c!:'!t:'i~~~~ ~Jl!::: ~l ~~ =~ "--n Ultflnl9'ecl tBr! 2ba, new cpU, drJJI, ~~·::S :~· Bf:~~ ~':.1:m~~ :~8:~:rdserv.avail am:,.~/6C2.(1588 .,. it ti family room, duplex w /4 car &al'. $145 mo .. Grau .ZO per •••••••••••••••••••••• pa.int. Pool/club facll. 3b 2b b muter br cp'y. $450. Agt.&M-UJI •Bar-JI.Que formal dlning & over· Value in lot. $61,500, mo. total. Over teoo GtMral · 3202 $1:25mo.830-3U3. sf4sle~· ~~dren pet.$ •PbonttSenrJee ,,_,.._, 3710 11ied well landscaped A&enl S.9--0812 1_peqdable oo 15% do~! ••••••••••••••••••••••• La.r&e 2 br twse rumpus OK Ba;bara. gu.Q39 or 3 8:~· 2 BA open beam •t Nlle tooeean ••••••••••••••••••••••• Yard. On\y 183.b>. f~ 1;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 Can add 8 men unilal FREE 1"1\EE 2 b •2 -·•744 A""' ce1hng1, pools, tenn.l••l=:::====-:--:--:--i--------• 6'4 721 I' Mu1t •••·c•ll rtow •Pro · rm. a, ear carace. u•..-J • ••· crta. Cloee to Bch. Yrty. BEAUTIFUL l br tum tte4S . L 752-1100. 1 ... 1ooa1Sorri .... blln1. comm. swim pool. 1rti.. 3244 $450. 645-1S3lorll3l·l<Cl0 apla $185 4$175. Spaoi•h AMIA.SS..-C5J C oldwell Bo nker ~N I G EL ~AILEY ~ ASSOC I AT [5 OfltN1119•11-s,tw1011NK;t• •LANDLORDS• ~!' ~fee.$285. mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ll)'le bide, pvt enc:l 1ar, T~OF~~ Ho•ef1•ders * ••· 1 Redecorated 3 BR. 2 BA ~AT~RE~br~:°" pool,sau.na,lQdry,adlta. YOU'UUllEIT ·642-9900 3+d•nor<br.2ba,lrplc, hom• NulandsJ>C. !350. :.... ~o. ail! ,a:=; ~30!rK::'!:Jf's~~ W..Mt."i~:¢i1:i: Outstanding channel and Callfontla's Largest lge walled yard, paUo mo. Ast for Bev or Joe Co. 84Z·I012 ..z.7MI a · 2217 Harbor,C.K. =========-1 bay views from one ol •RentaJService!• front courtyard, boat 913-4567or963-1'116 ' ' · 290IBristol.5.A. BA YFRONT Newport 'a finest ad· • JtJSTLISl'ED • gate. Water paid. $4.25. J~oo~~1s~L~E~.~Be~a:ot.~s-~e~r~,1:STUffi~o~1~o~a~p1.~n~·t~e~ne!w~l~;~~~~·~-~~2300~~ 2 c ... •-mffomea dresses. 1bere are two ~ ~M · 1st&: last+ $100 dep. UNIV. PrkTerr.Twnhse. 4·ba,nearclub.$15G.mo.. frplc,ja~,__. iblk -"' bedrooms, two baths, 19 UNITS, Newpo.rt ..... ~-1 2 br 2 ba Beaut .. 11 -· ... -.,._. BALBOAPENIN••• • Be b 10 Y ........ •••L ....,..u.o ' • • ,.. ·•·--.-tobeach.915B-S'100 ,_,.i...n. large living .....,..m and , ac · ra ........... e GreenblL Comm. tac'• ..,, Excellent loc.aUon on lbe ...... :S.vage RJlr SU.llOJ 1i.1._. -3Z40 .:.ca. area dininc room. You • ·iMJIOA $110. 5$2·'7389 eve • 36' Boat Slip+ Eleaant 3 SKALLBEAalllOI'EL ••••••••••••-••-Ba y & onb' 'r'> block to the can relax in the jacuui , •••••••• ••••••••••••••• 213· 122:-GltO days Mr. BR, 2~ Ba CoDdo. W /W RoolD.I $12.SO trteeL · Ocean. Each home bas 4 along with enjoying Ute A UURM>I '"' FallSBVICE •Sprin1dale&:Heil,3BR, ShJpp crpla, clrpl. llJOO. mo. Yt· Apb$100mo.sm.'705' 1111 .... MI • .._ ll04 bd rms, 4 baths & pool. Won 't last at Two..,..XH TOLAMDLORDS 2 BA home. Fireplace. lyleue.Adaha.67S-2U3 -•••••••e.•••-••••- Ga ll ery, 2 fireplaces, $105,000 All 3 BR , 2 Ba, Member of Board 0 good conc:Uttcn, children IENT.ALS 1 Br A:dull Gardea Apt. YearlY.Cbarmln.lt2Br,1 wetbar, u1tra modern 644-l766 w /sprintlera Ir blln.1. ReaJtora, Better Busl· OK, no fee. PIS. Ca11 Bev 2 BR , 2 e a ......... · .. $360 BLUFFS Z Plan; 4 BR d+ w/pool. Across from ha. Terrace. Comp cptd. kitchen & private pier. Near Frwys. Good ·in· neuSw-eau.,Ownber or Joe 963-456 9 o r 3BR.28.a ....... $ot00 /'25 bonu,.=.,.;:;>m; l~riss LakePark,$152.permo. *2'7S.S75-2733Alt~. Fee land. See at 1200 come. Xlnt potential. Commerce. 863-1786. 4BR,2Ba .......... $4.50 occ.-o.Att Afl. 5 &: weekea41 l .. DDP• 1 ,0 3107 ;:if~1:.=~~ Bl~~ d~~ San CS.mtnte 107 :8&.o::n1:«enL 54&-08l2 S.3N505 Hunt. Hbr Twnh.!e. Never 4 BR, 2y, ba, wntr ·. $800 New OCEAN VIEW "9-'1'47• ••••••••••••••••••••••• tails. •••••••••••••••••••••• occupied, 48r, Jba , JO' LE RAISOR Townhouae. 4.Br, 21Aba, 1 I ..... J741 Adu.Ila z br 2 ba DeWfll': l .~'.".:..-------ILovely panoramic ocean 21 NEWUNrTS HEYLOOKUSOVER! boat slip, tennis, pool , dla, lc:e ~am, 3 decb, ••••••••••••• .... •••••• bltns, yrfy. N'o pets: EASTILUFF view home. 3 bedrooms Wehavefurnisbedorun· jacuui. $6501se. S4'7·99'7S Rr11yy pool, temm. Leue $$75. BACH. uUl pd. $185. mo.. 67).3986; W3)2S7·WllZ fully redecorated. Boat. & to close in '76. 8 X Grou. furnished l,2&3bdnns. or673·9415. UU. 67.5-3122. up/$90. wk Creseem.Bay.1-"=====::.:..=::-- <I Br, den, 3ba, fnnl din trailer. accetl3. S'l2,950. best area in Hunt. Bch. All areaa~ All prices. 4S23 Campus Dr .• tmne 1485 N. Cit u.-4M-ZKll WALK to bay/beach 2 br, rm, Storage Galore! Prineipal1 only. Agent. Seeya500n! CampusVaUaySbopCtr. S.JllCM ..... J llh: ba, earage, 1.aundt)', Poolsizeyard.$85,SOOby ./ ANCHOl.AGE Call Roy, 968·9332 or · .. SPARIUNC'iNEW CALLIJJ.8600 Capl1trc.o 3271 Oceanfront 4 Br. apt. ~o. $250to S275 YTIY. ~::~;;~:2 Bd •' V.;;,~~':.~~ Diann;~";'~ ~i!~~;IMN ~;,::1~~;,~~ ~i • ;N~~~E ~E;~r~~~:~~ ~~~-~:~:: s::~;:7~57;,. ·g!!.':-'.~i~ $125,000 SanJ-~!~~r'!bto:•:·."t.,~ ~: \\s;Uf!,_ .... ' uso. per mon<b . • ~BR.~v-P'AiiK"S<ZS ~·a::r•;~j,~' .,:, A'r:o year round s..o1e!f.~"':No;::: C pl ~-1078 ground. All adults. _, Bedroom, l~bath, $265. • AduJ't1, no peia . ..,.., .. : bomch.539-0321 · $&50.yrly.*-1795 5 Br+den, pool size lot a In-univ 1 Ctoee to schoob & park. 2 BR., 1 ba ••••••••• SZ25 ...,., overlooking new golr ••••••••••••••••••••••• $550,000. Principals only. Nwpt Bch 2 bl', •PP s, Bi c y c I e to be a ch. 3 BR.\ 2 Ba .•••••••• $tOO 493-3U9 Lux. 2Br, den. 3Ba, Pvt. c_._0 del Mer 312.2 course. $84 ,995. M&-6395 ***APPROX. Y.r ACRE Agent. Call Dianna, child, pet Children OK. TURTLERCXX n-s. ........ 1m pool. ---638-4109 or Roy, 96Pr9332 CdM 1 br, appb, utll pd. •-C..clOMlniw ~. _........ nUlu;&'. ••••••••••••••••••••••• RANCH STYLE HOME 2ll2Springfield,HB 4 BR.ZV. Ba ......... ~, U.lw;ol-3425 leua $450. ffi<l-21D6 NEW 3 bdrm, 2 tia, MEWPORTSHORES ••• 4·Br, huge lam. _rm. , ~for,... :UOO Cd""'M· 3 hr. 2 ba. a-•-. W.olBeacb,eblkson .fl BR.2 Ba .•••••••••• $5 or (213)190-480L a··ace ~p~---3 BR /\ Ira + I b I I .,_,_ _,. """' Ad N tAlaba GREENTREEHOMES ••••••••••••••••••••••• ., ' ~ , -me ge. wet ar, onna u.uuug, ••••••••••••••••••••••• child ams, . a ma Be utiful lit 2 br 2 tia Cdll Days. fam. rm. Top cood. slump-stone en.close VIEW lot, panoramic kids SpringfieklF..lt.lltes 3BR.,2Ba .•••••••• $37 a • enewPoot.' Oceanfront. Spac1oua. ' · $62,500 gr 0 u D d s. q u 1 et &: white water • coaaUine El Toro 4 br, 2 ba, I K...t ·~Realty 3 BR .• 3 Ba. •••••••. ba, D.R .• frpl, rt an 2 Wlnter $325.-sus. lneL 1 BR + aep. guest rm.. 3 BR, 2-sty. Huge pea~ful. $119,000.CALL v•·ews, San Clemente. pet. 96" 1:•-COLLEGEPARK patios. Westcli area, utll.orYear1.y.'87-lilB2. atb. $275. Avl. 9/15, d t Pt. ' Hunt.Beh3+famrm,3 ---3BR 2 ea +D 1214 Rutland Rd, .,...,..u••oveo gar en-ype a to . 831·9"ll For sale by owner, aome ba, appl.s, kids, pet, 1414300 · l~cludt:s~Mr Newport Beach, MZ-m.78 Rooms $38. week. $125 .. 1..:-==~='-"'"----- $63,750 REALTY BOND REALTYlNC. terms $AS 000 492.3397 •lngJes DEERFIELD HOM~ after& mobth. Apartmeotl, $50. 2 Br, 1'6ba, upstairs, CA!~:.~290 * ?!'!'!'.~~ ........ !~!~ °':!. of-·s~,· . 2600 ~1~C~lboaabr,2 ba. BRAND new Yorktown 3B~~:San·iooQUm 3525 ·;:e:ie'r°Po~ ~e':r ~~:~ri~.:w a'.: :.r:.:. ~ D 'I ~alt .-.-......, FURN. Balboa cottage "1J.u condo, 3 Ix", 2 ba .• 2 2 BR 2 Ba Beach. LagWla Motor Le••e, sz15 ioo. UCB. JLgbdr,aba. FeeJand. l *** on "' *** ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1$$ utll pd singles. car garage. deck.. patio, • ·····•••••• ••••••••••••••• .... ••••.Inn, 1575 N.. C&t. Hwy. (213)614..s2&7.~yw. blk ocean. 5309 River Forpricesandinteresl_to 5 AC. Of Hilltop acreage, Fee.'Agt. ' pool, clu.bbouM. $375. ~ custom 2Bit,21111, ceno 4M-35S7. 6'S-02800wnr/Agt . · come down. Both will Rogue Riv. Valley, nr. HOMEFIMDEIS mo.Call96U781 tral air. Mission Vlejol---------1Nr.beaeh2br,2ba,dect, probably keep going up .. · Medford, Ore. $3,000. *64•9_0 • AD'" 'Tr-~ 2 _old. area. $295.5"-liN.l Oceanfront Small Cove. frpl, blt.nl!I, gar. No pets. lrancn~-Diipln .. not down! 2 Bedrm, 2 M/W/F646-9288 -"' uu ~ ,._ VISleN Spacloua2or3Sd,2ba, 13SO.mo.C11lMl11211 1¥1 Blk from ocean. b a a in g le story Lg. 2 br, 2:ba, new cpta, -··-Owners apt. Winter. Quality construction. Townhouses still at only R•al1 2 BR Costa Kesa $1'75. 2 C\WL drp&, frml. din rm, •w• • · Aptalaa11ts,_,.lhld Frple, gar .• sun deck, NICE Marguerit.eDup1ex. Sll7 ,000. Owner will take $21,950. New carpels, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Br $205. Newport Beach, lg. patio, tennis, pools, 552-7500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• JJe. kit., T,V. No pets. $375. S-Br, 21hba • frplc. 10% down and carry 2nd new drapes, etc. Ask I HMses h.Wlhecl singles ok. 2 Br, 2 ba jacuzt:i, F\J.U sec. $330 A RedHlllCompany -.Ool..... 3706 49'-5792. Call Unique Home9 T.D. This-olfer will go Frank, 839-8321Agent. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Huntingtoil Beach. Irids, mo. 673-4729 Ri bl on SanJ .0 GoU ··~··•••••••••••••••••• 1Utn.11'S«D> fast.Loc.atan -:nhSt. (ienerol 3102 pets.Horseranch.catUe BR H L Con"----1 c' 2B doaqw . gle3 BR avail for yrly. 1 $165. furn. LoveJy bach. S C d MobileHomn ok. $200. Agt. Fee. 4 un uuan.a rae. r, e:n. aln blocklobay.Bar&patio. nr. bcb. UUI. pd. 1-resp PA .• Ix. 2-Br, 2-ba, SACRIRCE For Sole 1100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 979-8430 Condo. pool, clbhae, level,centralair.$550yr· 213.795-6400&.Spm empl.adlt . .f94-42ll0 llhblks&oocean. Pffkat OWNER ANXJOUS Big••••••••••••••••••••••• lm!:.i:c::.:i;a1.:.~ kids /pet OK . $295. ly.615-4059. thewater.$365.lse.Pave Canyon. Price reduced YlkinqDeluu Br Laguna Beach S2'0 .. (Ii fjl 97!}.7888 BEAUT NewRandloSan Baylrontlbryrly.Palio, Hewporthcoch 3769 S.644·1211A&t. ~~:.": : ~~~/~:~ ~:~~.;n~~~ed;,.~~de: ;'.~~tp~a!'i:'S:"~°'Ba'i:; ~'\1~Ja&Jg,, ~E1;~~1~:t~~~: ::i:i~~l~r~ ~~:".,~~·:s"'..., So. ~:2~~~~~:;~~~:;~ ~~~.-.. ~!.~ garage. $120,000. many otheraddedex.tras $140. Newport Beach s&nta Ana $125., l br~· 963-3612or847·1860. golf course&: lake. $>75. Bach. Apt. $11'5 mo. Winter $300 Adults Off leahltPaftl PAUL W. BRUMFIELD & ASSOC. 549 -8505 $10,500. $J45.Agt.Fee.m.so> 547·1'°'4 /~ Furnished. util pd. 548-f,Ul' • t. 2 & 3 Br. Aduhl 00 R ~ tage BEACH·3 & 4 Bra. 925 67J..8'700 ask f oy lalbo11 ldmad 3106 Costa Mesa $165. 1 br Children/pets OK. Mdl Univenity Park. TheTer· SM-4 I or pet&, dshwbra,abag cptJ,, R~or 1810 ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/1ara1e will go fast! like homes. $35().$375 mo. race. 3br, 2ba, din. rm. Judy. WINTER. on the sand at clo1ed garage, frplc, CostaMesa54fl. LIKE new 3 br, 2 ba, all Hunt. Beach $130. 1 br Call Ann or Carol !,~I. cstm cp&s/drpa, lcAoaPtniu .. a 3707 :~. ~~~~';!rU~ 1m~~ :B<f· Gu & water pd. Acreogeforsale 1200 elec. kitchen w/dahwhr, w /garage. 963-7881 .-...mo.83.1-8203. ••••••••••••••••••••••• UtilJpd.963-4888 L~M•-u• ·~ NEWPORT ••••••••••••••••••••••• frpk. patio, bbq. 9 mo ~sµn ~·Jr::· stove, per mo 1ST&Last3 LC19W"Gleadl 3241 l.ALIOAIMN llKM ( m~~~;a AVOCADO LAND. $2,080 lse,$385. mo.5J9.8831 re ng,cp , b l~ b .......... A-••••••••••••••••••••••• Uniquewinterrental.105 . .AC, o f ocean , HTS. pe r /AC. Rancho Cal. 4BR,3Ba,allbllna,f600. Westminster$1S5.Neatl bflns. '714~S..2~8263/2IJ: OCEANVIEWDECKS MainSt.875-8140 •/view. Beaut. w~od 642-6073 80% Sell Fi 8•L?< Int br w /yard. . . . N 1 R. /9r sundeck, all bltns, inc. IT $47,500 er n. r,,. 0 · • W i n t e l" on I y . Costa Mesa $200. 2 br 886-0908 eat & e ean2.B , w 2 BR, 1 door to beach, dshwshC". 3 br upper, MED ERRAMEAN Charming 2 bcdrm col· 6~gn~~ 7~4.,!;;~~;~ sale. (213)332-8401 w /yanl, family welcome BRAND New 2 sty 4 br, can>ets. bltn. kitcb., ft1)1, abort term rental Week· LOWER 3 br 2 ba $275 VILLAGE t a g e on l a r ge tree 3br. 2ba. bit-ins, flpce. Hunt. B_each 2 br, 2 ba, 2'12 ba. 3 car gar. Up. ibl. ·fa~. K La.;,~eMyard. ly or monthly.~ ea. All bltns.' Pvt. Court 1 Br, 1 Br & Den, 2 Br, 2 s tudded e state. Can't 13+ GROSS Winte r . 675-7673. Open $210. Ch1ldrenok. grMded. $4$0mo. 968·5612 xm1 ~OcEANvro w yd, gar. 112 34th St.. Bl' Townhouse. Carpets, htst ! Call today. 645-7221 Orange $230. 3 bl', homey LN E On The Beach, new dlx 3 Open Sat.&: ~n. 645-3109 drapes, rireplace , J ·a ACRES Sun. lZOTopaz. atmosphere, nice for 3 BR, 21h ~· cust. bit. BR, 2 Ba, D/W, Frptc. eves,642-4088wkdys pools, 4 tennis court&. ~ R-3 Zoned property, San Winter or yrly 3 bdr, I ba famiJy YOUR LASI' Sl'OP when home._ Lge. liv. rm., frpl, $400. winter . 675-6267 .gym. sauna's, "1rl UllJ' · Own Garden Grove SUS. 3 br th" h 3 sep. din. rm., bltn. kitch. OCEANFRONT, Jge de-.,,.,00 Harbor Blvd !IJGI '''21 Juan Capistrano el' c harming collage . w /yard.Seenow! you s ee is I arp 2 Car g ar. Immae. SPACIOUS1Br$215.Ulil corated,clcan3br,2ba eosl;Mesa(714)557..&am m.ay c arry paper. Pat10/garage.644-588'1 Stanton$285..f.br,2 ba, bdrm,almos&newhome. tbruout!$475Mo. incl. Near everything. &lge lbr.67~ Broker,213-423-6478 •-M..-aP--~•-3107 Ve r y c lose to ocean. MJSSIONREALTY No .... '-.00-3Sl9 d 1 bedroo --.,..._.. nice area Great flOOt' plan ror en· ... -~ TRY IT A u l 2 huge ms -W t llff R_..., llnine15 PrCIPf'tr 1400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SJ0-1505 Feelt.tl tertainment. 968-4456 or * * 494-0731 * * BAYFRONT Yrly. 1 br, YOU'LLUKEIT! $17() no pets. Inquire apt •• c .,_,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• WinterrenLaJ,2Bcfum,3 963·5191 pd GS68W. Wilaoo DOYIERSHORES PRIME.•-ILDG. carports. ~month,··. lalM>cr?llcmd 3206 EMERALD Bay Wntr. patio, Gar, utils . NC". Live on the sand this ,_._ -~ Rental. 2 bl', whitewater stores.$300mo.m-6790 wintel". Luxwious 3 br. ·NEWLY DECORATED . Great Ne rt locaUon. 714 871·9517 •••••••••••••••~••••••• GORGEOUS La Cuesta 3 Just introduced to the $170000 i° $1a50000 Bl"avaiJroryrly.lbloclt bdrm; 2 bath. includes view.$475.558-3mdays CoronadelW. 3722 :'J!1~~~b~~·4~;~ ~:r~:"~f·2e:.rs-~~ market. Popular ~er T d' Hu re~ &: 'As~oc: Spac •. 2 Stry 3br, 2ba, lo bay. Bar & patio. washer, dryer, electric View. Emerald Bay Ter-••••••••••••••••••••••• 629-2.547 PlacenUa. 63S-020 l-.S. Shores area with 4 Re It 675-8500 Bayview House. $325 or 213-795-6400&.Spm garage door opener & race. 4 Bd, 2 belt $450. Beachfront W/Vu, Pvt.1----------1·--------- spacious bdrms, 3 big ea on. · deluxe 2bl" apt. $250, gaC"d e ne r! Available· After6,623-5678. Patio,1Br,$275inC.utiL teps to beb, vie w. 2Br,tbaupper,shag('pt. batbs,hugefamrmwith Offi"ceB~· carports . Winter. clelMcr 3222 Call91l8"~or962.-w· t z··-··" w· t 4 B ~ 2 1195 i~AM. b. • ·~all 1.. • ...._ ~· La-"''"' H..._. 325 2 ID er . ...,.~..._... B 1n er. r......,.., mo. garage, , vv'I as-1g rot ... •Waw::11 • "6c 871..ot67. • •••••••••••••••••••••• REAL ESTATE by -·-·-"f""'C" $225 ~ . rts 552-4576 INOOORswimmi.ngpool FORSALEORL E RMING 2 br house, M v y •••••••••••••••••••••••Costa Mesa 3724 r mo. • . sion,a • &: terrific VIEW. You 6,000Sq.Fl.Delme RbEM0$320DELED in~·~ rp, fncd. yd , 52l 'iit c A LOVELY 4 br home••••••••••••••••••••••• Ba yfront 2 Br,2BaPat10. NEWBREEDAPTS ml!'y purchase su~ed. lo PRICEDTOSELL Ma~ntero ~5991 · Acacia, $295mo. 644-2405 Brand new 3 sty 4 BT, 2-n w /view. $42S mo. lst/Jaat SUS C •Slf •S $325 mo. Yrly, 544-2013 Ba ch/loft $?15. UtiJ, pd, existing loan with NO MullerReGll01s& · . Ba 3 car gar upgraded +$50 clean'g. fee . "" "" aft6PM . appln s , gar , p ool , loa n fees ! You own the M--Co.lnc. C delMar 3122 BEAU'l'. Lg. 0ceanVJew3 $45" 968.5612 • · 495-0M2or496-1957 Large nicely fwn. bach. jacuzzi. 393 Jlamilton, J and ' 646· 77 ll. Open ----.,-Ol"Oftll br, 2 ba duplex. Bllns, · & 1 brs. Adults only , no Br, 2 Ba house $260 util 645-44l1 '. · I 17141 846-4493 ••••••••••••••••••••••• washer/dryer. 2 car gar . N rt Bl · I A d 0 -h rt 1----------.. ., $££'"' & "'IN'*' ..,.on 2110 ewpo • inc. n -. ..,..c . apa . -· · China Cove for 1..t;ase 2 $425. Adults . No pets. ft. ri &I NatioaalMonurnen.t• ... -Id. $130 util incl. Sept thru p IR\OFTOHLY I ' . • . Story, 4br, great v~!w oh! 675-4062 B.ACJI ApMt. Fu~. $1125 ls.~ June. t212"th St. 675·3137 Pvt pati o. rrpl. l yr lsc -Walker & lee Real !stale Wl:lter & YOW' own uo:a c . D E A T II •: 0 <: I H R r. " R u T A N n GI'. last. ust UC c can CIC A ·1 c.... 1 h $11..sO mo. lse. Costa MelG 3224 sober & over so. 2191OCEANFRONT 2 br $325. vai · ~--5t W.wlerfront.Homcs ••••••••••••••••••••••• N C AP N O T NI I. c• •:I.Ts Ac· I I Hal"bor Blvd. (Across Frpl, Winter r e nt a l HAYLOFTAPTS --"-='-'-C.----1, __________ 1 __ :---:63=·-l·-:H:--00-:---IEASTSIDE, 2 br. crpt.s, At' N 1 l' u A c N NM y A.cs 1 s R K from K-Martl w/gar.642·4500 283 Avocado, CM The Bluffs; early area I · drps, stove, yd. encl gar. 645-0143 l-Story 3BR, ?Ba. CowdolFllRlmns/fown-Ow Tiie leach No kids or pets. $i!SO mo. TA A No Y:.; A._. t: L n R AM C U RT LOWWEEKLYRATES l Br. 1 Blk to Ocean $175 1 ___ .:_:.:_::..;..:.:.. __ _ $57,000Af\.640-$560 hoa1e1for .. 1700 2Br, 2Ba. Dplx, frplc. Agt.646-1456 ll p T ~ T ·~ 0 t>: AT II v AN AM I I A Exec:uti•eS..itH 2ia~ park In g . 3 Br. 2 ba , crpt. patio. nr --"'==-=-=---1·•••••••••••••••••••••• $100mo,winter.m.5432. . lOION•wporfllYd l.:0::'::-=:=:::.:=:,c=~--:--1 OCC. $225. 1009 A Mis--~~~:yRD~."i?e~~~d NORTH LAGUNA Lei; •IHdl 3141 ~R~=f~'::i~ge : ~ ~ ~ ~: ~: ~:: ~ ~: ~:: ~ ~ CostaMKa EANF1lONT2br,2ba, sion,55z.451sanG $15,000&o$169,500. Beaut. CONDOS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pool, 4 br, 3 bll, kids, pet, 642-2611 wsb/dry, gar. $lSO mo tU •2 Br upper. Mesa Verde. 3200 sq. ft. Vaew home.. 4 -·,•-at-Vi .... z le 3 LEASE $160,000 Beech focd.gUage. LT N D EA T-'L Y L N 6 0 A A L N NW Shtclfotlr f 1r•a June or $450 mo, yrly. Adul&1 . $185. Gara go b •-f pool ""~• -Condo I -mo..m llesaVerde3br 2ba B G/\S S Yrs 110 FREEL. 3711 Seashore Dr, avail.,no-'".833-8974 r, ucu, am. nn, · bdrm unitsfrom.$54,000. • OI' • •. • O AD o RAU • P • 1nens ~S1~3-8578!:_!!~------l-r:;;-;;;;;~~;;;;-~;;::;R-;-!'~er~~infor 420 C1pre11, North ~a"nr:{a::'~Obaf-.0 re:·A:i. fncd. garage •R Lt AB v B EC L LN LT B 0 DS u -~r~f~ties Lg.1&2Bedroom,2Ba av-Cl : Llguna . ft etbar' ~1 '•-H. o.'..--• p ER OT,., • c en tbr, 2202 W. Ottanfront. WalktoShopping&.Bus C .. 67''7225 IQ •.• w ••• ,,,.,.,,.;:. Ill~ I RB I AS C O E L AC •Heated.Pool Winter rental. $175 Nopets.Mgr.'31-3847 )Br, 2Ba, l'R. Harbor :r guard. Addtts.5"-1671 •642..9900* 0' E 0 D n F. C H N D :i.1 A R B I. II N U 1'' •Laundry Facilities j.':m~on~lh!!:_I. '7~5"""'~~----·!;-;;;~~~~-:;:;;:;:: View Carmel. $75,500. •TV&Maldserv,incl. 2 BR. util pd, c:bildren Fee. Owner-. 6"-t844. White water view-Condo. B d ba, •• c f. r. o F. A T H v A 1. 1. E Y R A ii R o •Phone Service Beaut. Igo 2. _3 &: 4 br. welcome. No ~-. ~ .. $400 mo. rum. 2 BR. 2 BA 3 r con .o. 3 c:p ... , ---------i ~--~ 8e•ch dream cottage, SYm .wntr rents and pays its own w11y or you can live in it . 2 Bd, 2 patlos, 2 car garaRe. Only $58,000. AGT 6'15-J972 or675-4073. Beath hie. btw bay &: ocean 2 Bd, 14Xl6 POOi or use plant olt"d by ¢oalta1 Cornm. • bl.did on th.ft 2SX9o lot. onJy ........ AGT. 675·10872 or m.<all I \ \I.I .I·:) lll .\1.1, .. Ql !<r.; ! fol ! O f'PJ>i~l ~ [ •I Ar:entM•·'lZlO drpt, patio, gar., bltn.s, F. O II A II C 11. t: R 1• I. A t i AB C 8 s M Oe eanfrontMew, frplc. drps. patio. fi.fgr. 1960, lbr hou1e & palio for ~7~ater pd. 5&8-~; ~ c A c T R r. T A H c T f; s N u s o R i:ZS:~1~,~~u~t.s, ~.'6c::~r=~d~ Wallace, Apt6,&l2·7364 . •• larl.d .ld.r ~rson . ..,...,. , no pets. 177 E. 22nd St. 646-3114 $220. Lg 3 br, 2 ba, upJ>eT': ~ I ............ :,,..111.MH!M-tlio ••,...r -.-.. . 494-8170.SJBS 3 Br. 2 ba, g~rage. pato, '-li••N,u,,•-.... •l••-11,.1.11w.,.w..r1u •• t11 645-3732;642-3645. 1 No pe t s . 751·7420 ;. $ stove, r efng, dshwhr. w... .. ..,,, '"" *"'-11 1. •• .,,_., Oceanfront apts 8\'ai , 644-4847 or640-0980 $$$$STEAL$ SS $350. Super 2 BR 2 Ba, ar $395 . Incl . w at er & R1M:AYNr. Of.Ant VAL1.r.v ~AT\IRAL tlRIDC"" •Troplcal Pod• lrom $145 to $190. lJtll in· it legal! Prlces&.interest Town &: .Bead~ AdulLS, 1ardene r . 548·1995; ~~~t~~ g:~:~~rNTol'lf ~~~':~clt/i1hrc ;: 1 Bl', cpts, drps. bltM, el. 675-4873; 67W205 or LRG 1 Bl', pool, nr. shops, teep golnc uo,up. up.! We no ptµ. 4a9·Z'll2 or (213)'7 ·:.:.:5-..:7.:854::.------1 WUPAl'Kl nfAO l(",\f"IYO:" MAR8U:CAN"YOH : paUo. Utllitlts paid. $180 811-8471 ad Its/no peL ... UUJ pd.. 1till .have a few amgle 7-. .w..... -TONORROW11t1 .. 11111M1a."' ; mo 5'8·1168 1884 Monrovia S4IJ.0336 ator)r, 2 bednn. 2 balh1-'-~'""-"'"'------13br, 2ba, tam rm,% fplces '----------~-----~ · OUpJex. Z & 3 8(, 'A blk to ' Townhouse.a at. c:;taly LOVELY oce•nalde 3 covtted _patio. West.ell Enio1 m .. ch Jar,., •·Sffi.. • Find·· p1111I~• •ith ovtr "° C1a1sirled 1dl sell bit Beath. oar1 new paint It 2 Br, cpta, drps, iar,laua---. .. ~ tor JY•n'" bdrm, deil, Emerald Pl a s a a roa, "'48 ~. d~;,,"' P1""11" •n •11·-_... f1f :l'4·P91* bonlllee11. items, small ftem!I tr 8IO' crptl. $215 a $26S Wlnter. dry, Bay St. Sl80 mo ..... -JU& .. .. Toc.dM-tdu1M11l.H•ndDl.W!nd llhHCh. .. lriaccbKb l all6GS8'19 tr7 t40t n. 8. 8394321.ACeat. BaJ. tszs. 11S-4W .Ml-0950. panblt to .. S... A Find" In rtn ot1hi!I r1 ...... ptr. tem.Justc · I-a · Ul-9218. I I • I • - • l • • I • JtlfOAlt.VPILOT Olonc!ay.Soptombot15, 1915' • . . "' • • •• .. • • . -' . • •• ,. .. . . • • • Od lt ... Blllld it ... Dlaper It... Hammer It ... Carpet lt ... Cemen~ it ... Wire it. .. Hoe it ... Clean it .. Move it .Press lt ... Paintit ... Flail it... Plaster it ... Flx It ... SERVICE Dl·RECIORY • ~ C-lllor C_/C_,... ........ , · S...... L••oc.... r•llllfJP•... P.tiN .............•........• ·•····•·••····•······•· ..................................................................... ········•••··•·•··••··· ........................ ·•••···••······•·····•• ...................... . Lovin& care. 11 yd .MASTER Craftsman• BRICKl:BLOac:WORJC Qu1llly Mai.nt/Land.Kpt"THl"N'GS" by Kpote. Bl lodfGr Custom palotln•I CUSTOl(WOODPA'J"IOS plumbl.qw-'llfaerv Hr/day/Wk. Pltes/wknds Specialty. Remodelln1. P•tJ01., Walls, Pldten. tod, aprlrll'J, toil eond, Gen woodwortt. ...,,..in, ue1rau ft $Ale. Sil' waU~perln ... Paint lnt Dtaltn!Buitd aU Wpa I•• k I , m • r.o 11 t • OK . Rel1/Uc. 556-0341 fioia:h work, refs. Free Local reta.MS-8512 cleanup&U-S331 ....... pJumblnl,ttc.IOJllJ t•r '\' ·1 :3'·5031. 120 rm ut.., ••& ' 511..S.lJe'd--.S-tDclo111 re_~ r•••i Jeannie. est. Guar work.W..3106 • Clers.t541-6l4z old•• e ••SI. 19111 •1.si ' ...,._1".Clll•rad _ Bec.tric.. H , • G tawNl HB. • ~·~~~~~==j ChildCaremyhome.Lov·Cstm kitchen & bath.••••••••••••••••••••••• Complmelnt. Ceorce I M PETERSPA001NG ,.....,..,.. .P • ing. ·exper'd mother. Remodeling, alter&1tio1U1 EL£CTRICIAN Sml ••••••,••••••••••••••~ •••Y I t/E · Real nttM •••••••••• .. ••••••-••• •••••••••••••••••••-Wkdya. OanaPt.496·3410 & repair. Unique & un· j b 1 t/Te in 22 Cleioupa, t!'et3l:."k, Hau.linl Aoylbl..01. ••••••••••••••••••••••• a •t.· · REPAIRS-Ai.LTYPIS laiHaJ Serwice ~ibura~B wB~~:~~rr;;· 1~.~~x&;1:. ~~: ~~~n•:;e::'2'83-cp, ~f.(::,,~ai:~ 11~~==. • ,,;:~==-· p~~fil~A"!'0 w~~-~-~ ••••••••••••••••••••.r •• Stooe.Call581·'18Zt nu. In&/_.. free at, -.. ·--OfflceMoc:hlneS•s Carpe ntry·P a nelln g, Floors 1&.ti;a~~~e:~~.~';!! -. .. , .:.•• Typcewrlter:s, udding shelving, sml remodeJ, ••••••••••••••••••••••• lccultlvate.ta-3408 •HAULING• Muonry•~ Rel•.M ·27StJIO.llJI VERY NEAT PU'CB mbchines, culculalors, NoJobtoosmJ.900-»&9 Waterproof Decorative YA.RDC..EANUP Work.Ad: otJUe_ WALLCOVERINCS JOBS 41. 8.£$1UCCO. e lectronic culculators. Custom Carpentry Coatines for sllndecks &: GMtt"ol Sft"'Yfces •• 556-03f7 •• $6$-1.MS lnttaUed/ Freee:tt. 893-1'38. L o a n . m <t c h 1 n e s Framing or r1 n i 5 h. balconies. free est, St. ••••••••••••••••••••••• HMtecle.... F'ireplaces-Ptante:n Removed ' . ...................... E&AlllC TIL& New " Remodel ............ &al jobl: welcomLm.ata furn1shed! Remodel /add ition Lic.•'°5152.962-4657 IDO"AU.! ••••••••••••••••••••••• ek.coocret.Petio J .E.SWENSON 918.o<>Ft t9cJ • JJaveSec"'LL'•"'usoblcm::.? S49-4159 G-~--1-Electrical Plumbing, HOUSECLEANING la our 8 WalJ&.llBQPitl ••••••••••••••••••••••• opSoH , , • A . • ~ .. ., ' Bualnesa. C&ll Janice'1 Ret: ·&IS MM PAPERHANClNG •••••••••••-••••••••-Office Eqwpmenl <,;o. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• etc. Reas rates, ~957 · Ra,gedy Anni. 675-6S53 Pl ' Ilg J82S5 Ml. Bald y Circle Carpet Service JAPANESE GARDENER HANDYMAN Homes Paisltlllg,H..,t ~role11lral Reuon.ftble • 5ww..&. ·i:u.~~.::: Fnt. Valley . 91i2·ti655 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 10 yrs ex per, all ptiases Apts . Conscleat iou . W•nt •REAL CLEAN ••••••••••••••••••••••• ee,Ea iq$.11..J081 5 WaterP'bW.;;~ d i•·' ___ c~A:!l.l:!:_:·•!!!:!-~-- Cob" t Makin9 CARPETXPRTS-16yrs Reasonable/&l1mates Craftsman.645-6558af\4. HOUSEtCallGln&ham EXTERIORS SAVE .ta Prole11ional European poaala:, drains, favceu,J.. •"• Get 1t Really Clean C11117S1·193'1. Girl. Free..U. 84.5-5123 R . L. SI nor Sl * t e Wallp'9tr IRat.aUer. Ex· coppe• •epi'""· c--e _ r.-.-1-• ··········~············ WILLIAMSS49-81 15 &.... Licensed lnsured Call clwort.5•'495. • • -M _.... . .... --·-Calm cabinets, boatli. Sales.Repair-Install M 0 S T L A W N S Th H d .. •-' i1 La9dtcap-, 179-3335 prices day• night. We-••••••••••••••• •••• patiocor,kitchrmdl,lat-. MOWED /EDGED, $5 e an Y .ll'.13 • ••••••••••••••••••••••••1...:.:.:..==-------l15AV,£S. Belt.prices. £x. take Mslr 01.arle. Lie Removal#. BmbiM:. tqp. ticework64&5219 Curpe t ·I nstallation, wk. CM /NB ONLY. Can Ford'a ~ape Prot. paintiug, dean-writ" ter •later. Any fix-it aoota. pins. prualnc. + C Repa irs, Free estimates George S49·201S H R ~ Sod lawnsJSprinklen • re•s. Int. le Ext. free Jobi. lf•D.1'Nfa.w.o838, JUST.PLUMllHG FITeJtoOd. lic/IQar arpent•r Gua r. labor 645-3274 ome ep.a r ' _ _:D::e::•,,,l&.:•:;S:.•:.:•c.·::.""'=-711=17'-+.:es=t • ..:1:;51:.·:;0&84=::."::962-=.:5425=-·l-'J:.:••:.:<:::k:..· _______ 1 _ _:•:.:C'.!A~LL=::64Mlllo::::::::'.:*;__1 . .::"42-=:2'2=::.•-----'-••••••••••••••••••••••• Exp. J apanese Gardener. lmprovementa · repair, udd-on. in:>ut nte •STEAM CLEAN • Complete yd maint. Dennis Expt!rienced JapaneaeHOUSEPAINTJNG .. Pnf "'ITXf:S llARV'SPLlJMBING Ford'sTree~~ 1 D esig n s . J<~r e e c: s t . Carpet & Uphol:>tery Shrub., trees, Ftce est. St. Clair Gardeninl 6' land.scap. lntkle/Q&lt. Hl qi.Wiiow •A •M&-9807* EsprCrewtlic, DOOQCIG p.5.3439 Insured Quality 646-1811 546-0517 Pb: 646-.4831 Ing. Freeea:t.645--3988. i'ates. BhlceM5-S'371. •h'. Eat. Jim 35:ie NO.JOB TOO SMALL 4c ln1W«L IG-1.$17 . r OfflceRentd 4400,0fflcoRIW!d 4400 ... 1.111 .... W-7100 HelpWanhcl 7100 .... W-.I 7100 •••• •••••.•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oppo; IWlt 5005 ••••••••••••••••····•••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••-• .. •••••• ApGrflffnlau..t.n.. ...-•nla u..t.n.. ...-... tollnfwft. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa M~sa 3824 Huntin«Jfo" leach 3840 Hew rt leach 3869 I 50 I W..tcllff Dr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ····················~·· ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1:4: •••••••••••••••• CASi\ V/L1'0RIA Large 2 BR. Iba. $150 /mo PARK NEWPORT WESTCLIFF BLDG NE.WPORT BEACH ' '' ""'' '' ' ' ' " • .. r anc1e1 cu ICUISERY SCHOOL Newport Fin Pre-School, nr. downtn. • ••anstNli Lnlhtg Office Spoc• Costa Mesa. Care for 24 NII 1,2&3 br, Deluxe Unfur Closed gar, stove/ref, APARTMENTS 0 , Fu'"· "•'/wt' pd. near stores. Chi ld OK. Call on Site Manaa:er at $100 mo. Room to ex· · (714)6'2-Jlll ext3'6 d I I •• I I ' R Bachelor I or 2 Adult.s -No pelS Sec. gate No pets ltr675-6700 BedroolTUI and pan . nc .• e. ot, nr y. Pool, rec rm, elevators NEW L b Townhouses new bide., comp. equip. lutlH11 R-4450 $85,000. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Graham Rlty 646-2414 525 VI t ri 642-89'10 g. 3 r. dshwshr., t c 0 a, enc. ga r. 2 ba SZ7_5 mo. f'r. $229.500pen9-6 CLOSE to Shopping. 1 & 2 New lg. 2 br, p1:1t10, If.!. Daily Call Mr Howard 645. 6101 BR , pool Ad.Its , no pets. closets, enc. gar. $225 Spa-Pool.s-Tennis ............ Cpt., drps, slv, ref. $16S mo. Gd. Joe. 847-2541 or Across from Fashion1.::========:..i THE W..ted 5020 & up . 1887 Monrovia,_84_2_·1_1_7_2 ______ 1 Island al Jamboree on •••••••••••••--548·9743 /644-9419 1 San Joaquin Hills Road. 55'EPSTCUER 59FT COLONY INVEST. TAX CR~~;;• ----------12br, Iba condo. Washer/ 1714)644-1900 1617WGT FF-NB 30RETAILSHOPS Need$25,000+l'n::: NEWLY Deco r 'd} dryer . Refril!,. Pool. A .54.1·5032 Prime,.reasonableapace PJuaDDBDepreciation Eastside 2 br, pvt. y~, Patio. 968·5097 wknds & Bayfront 2. Bd, 2 Ba, Pvt. $140 up store-offices cpts av•ilable large & amall. Frank Metro7l4.J546.8303 enc. gar. Pool. aduJts. aft6. Bch & pier. SMO yrly. drps ai r bath. 17301 Old world charm w1tbl-''-"-'---.:..C.-'--'-'=..:.:.~ $225 . 546-8739 ATTHE BEACH 979-193S &644-4510 Beach Bl, H.B. 842-2834 French windows. gables MoMyW..ted 5030 Sl90 2 Br. R/R, C/D, NEW tLGEJBDRS315 $330. Yrly 2 br, 2 ba, 2 SSL & trees. Adjacent to••••••••••••••••••••••• . 8 Huntin gton Harbour story, 2 car encl gar., PROFE 'CL.ASSA Festival ot ArlstoYearreaident.Newport carport, pvtpat10.73t . 1 Bldg , 3 story . 2790 Grounds. exec. looklngforS'l0.000 W. lBthSt.673·1787 Adults are<i. 846•4150 ba cony.S42-1600 1-larbor Blvd, C.M. Air 580BROADWAY secured by 2nd T.D. on 2 Br, erpls. drp6 , util's. No 1 BR CONDO 40 Son Clement. 3876 d~~~~:.le~~~~l :;~~~: LAGUNA BEACH ~:.~.me le duplex. pets, $19~~-~~:0· Was he r /Drye~~erpvt : ••••••••••••••••••••••• mu.sic, janitor, parking. 494-7915 -----------1 patio, clubhouse, pool , Beac.h, com. center. M.R . Stever, Mgr . MC!ff9•s. Trwt STUNNING lg. 2 br, 2 ba Bingo, Walk shop Cntr. 1,100 · 2br. l 'hba. 4·plcx.jiss~7~·0~136~~o~,-~~8396~~.::...-1~~~~~~~~~~1 Dffd1 5035 dwnstrs . Garden apt. 642-8768. Mature adults. Lease, ••••••••••••••••..-••••• $195 492 3'799 EXECUTlVE suites on $80. Mo. Ideal Newport ;tool, etc. $215. 710 18th LllCJUCla Beach 3848 . -. Newport Harbor. 400 to . shop avail In the mall al LOANS up to 80% · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BR, walk to beach . Ne 2200 sq rt . 642-4644 ; The Factory for : Coun· 2 Bd 28 2 Pvt 1 l. Drop a pebble into the pets. $195. yrly. 492·5765 &l5·4405 · try st.ore, book store, de· · I st TD Ln ..... ¥4°/o • We are seeking a person to augment our Classified Advertising department for Inside. telephone sales. Classified experience necesSjll'Y-. Excellent com· pany benefits. Salary commensurate with experience. nqulllMIMTS INCLUDE: •Must type 45 WPM (electric) •Dependable -Good speaking voice •Pleasant personality ·u you are ambitious & want to be paid for your efforts & have opportunity for advancement please apply in person le>: ~ ;-ORAllliE COAST DAILY PILOT JJO W • .., St.. c:-.Mo.. An F.qual Opportunity Employer W/w• cpats, d';r.:' pballnsios. Ocean from your Apt.1-'oc.rc.7c.76'-·'-46SS=-----li,etc.673-9606or673-9393 2ndTD~ , , , Prime Hunt. Bch. Joe . Lo t Or Co laund, freshly ecorated. Lease. Luxury, security, Son Juan from 112.S. mo. incld. util. 3200 Sq Ft C-2 stoC'e front was rat.es ange ' Adlts-$210. 417 Ford Rd . Mature adults. 31755 Cst. Copistrano 3878 507 5 w a rne• Ave. witb 6 drive-in bay5, Sattler Mtg. Co. ...ao,..::-:'tc! Help W..ted JIO 560 Hwy 499 2835 ' ..... 2171 ., .. ., ._.. PF'ej ••••••••••••••••••••••• llAUTYSAlQH Needs exp•rle.ncect Man a1 in14 Sty1t,,t1. Bee1.1ty Oper•tora •. Guaranteed Salary .. C.Omm. Paid vac.uom. Free lite ln1urilnce. Store dl1couot1. Hmpitalii:ation avail. Apply p.......,.iorr .... Ma.fgna11yW.,. lOlllriolclst e--spec1a1 c~tkm For those w JfoUowiltl: Boys&Glrts 10 to lf yean cL are. Dai· ly Pilot delivery routes may be avallablein')'our area. Earn profit for ~­ liveries & cash. trips or merchandise lor' Miiling riew subscript.ions. F,or information please call 642-4321. From San Clemente-San Juan Capistrano area, eall 495-0630 and Mission Vie- jo-El Toro area, caU 581-6310. Equal Opper. Employer· 540· 1or631-o782. · . · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 846 •249 Jdeal tor auto or boat .,_. ..-.rvu.u. ATTE"TIDN GARDE" ., Se . JI bor 24 ··············-······ !~ !~ LG . 2 BR . l Y.t ba Studio, Recentlybuilt2story2br, 2 BR Condo, cp\3, drps, service. S8S W. l9tb St, rv10g ar area JolnW..tecl, 707 CTR PROFESSIONALS. loatAJW 'Mrs quiet 4-plex new paint 2 b a I u x u ry con . wash /dry, enc. gar. $225 IROOKl«.llST f:.(168· Drys 540-5710, evu,_,Y-'•-""-"--------1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S. California's largest Apply In penoo. Muat • tpts, drP s, bltns '. dominiums. Xlnt views, mo., adults only. Aft . ~MAHCIAL 1-'"'-=-'--------1 2adTDl.09SW..tecl Babyatt.ter, lie home, in Nunery chain has op-have oWn tools. 1919 E. Carport-lndry. Walk from$325.yrly.494-179S 5PM .~t-lS37 PLAZA SEP.bldgw/gar.lOOOsq WEHAVECASHl tanta thru 1, nr F.V. portunities for ex-OccidentalSt.SA. shops&schls.lchildOK.Ocean View. 1 Bd, Sl8S. SouthLagwta 3816 Now leasing -NEW, ft.. 213 w. Wilson. CM . Buy2DdT.D.'s Elem Sehl, Mag. & periencednurserymenin1---------- • no pets. $290.540-6338 per mo. incl util. No pets. ••••••••••••••••••••••• custom executive office 645·2020 &642--6560. Loan on2DdT.D.'• Talbert 963..J823 the Oradnge, Los Angeles, BJ>ATS • · b suites. Large and small NewLoam-2ndT.D.'s -=-===::..:c=---1 Riveni e Co. areas or SclllaoafMf.-• i' $190 Freshly decor'd. lg. 494.·1986. Quaif\i mod, lgell l r users accommodated. 15.1:60 STORE Bldg. Shop-Equity lnvsmt. Div. student Help A'f'ailable.11 those with retail sales ex· Seets assistant 'b~er ... bhr, 1 qule 1 t. P1ool5• n MeWporfleach 3869 ~e:'~ceea~m~~ ~tll ~ Le a se Includes all ping Ctr. 17849 Beach BARNE',ITMTG.CO, you desire the help cl pber1•1 who w1 ant ~be .Knowledge ol pure u.. c .1.dren pe s . en.••••••••••••••••••••••• $265 <199-2Sl2"S47_5257 am e nities. Leasing Blvd.,HB.213-4.54-89'11 645-2134 fine CbriatJan people, c .a enee.o growmg Jngforsailboatpartsre-~1t1zena Welcom e.LIDO, GREAT vu . · ' agent, Donna, 00 pre-call office, Southern w1th.•l.eadin1Company q'd.HelpaasistPAbead. 646-2738 Tnhse, 2 BR, 2 &, uni · Apartments Furnished mises. 20902 Brookhurst. In Cannery Village shop Aw .. c1~wh/ California College at in this field. Weoffertop Top wages to right SIERRAVILLAGE que features. $500. mo. orUnfumished 3900 Huntington Beach. nr lorlse,700sq.ft..421S3lst Penortf/As/ 545·1118, ask for Mrs industry wages & person M-P. Call ~br,2 ba,$2'15.lbr$19S. 875-6359 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Atlanta.963-8961. St,NB,5S7-3276 Lnt&Fasisnd _E,,,:•::•""'''-'·------I benefits. Plus ~tial 835·7107~9-8. , ~ll bltns incl rerrig., THE EXCITI-NG SINGLE to 6 rm suites. lndntri~ • ..,. 4500 ••••••••i~••••••••••••• Conatruclion Bkkpr-Girl ::pi;,:~~~ bal®ny, gas&waterpd. oe··~FRO..-PALM MESAAPTS. Avail. in plush office ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost&FOtind 5300 Friday, mature, desires Wed. 9AM to ePM. IOOKIC.EIPER 114 E . 20th, 548-0131 or lBR ,ZB~a.$350" u"•"ni'er MINUTF.STONPT bldgnr.OCAirport.F\JU2000 SQ FT, 3 oles, 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• F .T.positlooinconstruc-Nuraeryland Garden Newport Beach firm 646--4095 "' BCH service incl· Recep-baths, immed. across st LOST/FOUND Uonorc. Refs.968--5931 Center. 15851 Gothard .aeeds qualified book- STEPSTOIEACH Bach , 1&2 BR . from tlonisl, confe~ce rm, lromOCAirport963·7878 APET~ -, Ave .. (al F..dinger Ave.) keeper. Send outline of Lge I br1 very clean. stv. 3 BR. 2 Ba. $325 Winter $l72.50 xerox, automated typ-960·2900 Adoption, Low Chauftering, oo'mpanion, Calif work exper. including ref, ~wet adults, $100. IA YFROHT Adults, No Pets ini, etc. Call833-3640 NEW M·l Newport, Calta Coat.Spay /Neut.el" Info. bach apt, maint, bonded. ~:t: tBac:'t M ~ ~~ salary hllrtor7N to· P .. 0. 1933 aflace!JGG.3633 3Br,2ba,unf,$47Syr. 1561 Mesa Dr. Mesa, 1000, 1200, 14'0sq. LOST Li ht al l~H~e~l~•n;;;s<ll::;·7~197::;'.--:;:;o;;;l!'~IJ':!ess~e'!r::.. ______ I Boxbl7Cl5, ewpport (5 Blks East of Newport Ground floor with or w/o ft. 543·3145or6f6.29'l8 : g orange m e ~ac , a ID663. ( art- •S•ady Blnl-Poal* Blvd.) slorage panel shwr tabby cat. Looks like HelpWa.ted 7100 ~e applicant to WCJl'k 11:2 Br $175. Up. Adults, S4S.98ti0 frig , 5 ink, air, cM 1200 Sq . Ft ~-1 ~pace. Morris. Vic ol Golden ••••••••••••••••••••••• A.tOlllOliva Sain min 3 days per week will no pets. 177 E. 22nd St. 548_9766 trontoll1c,,drive-mrear Wut&Wamer.8'2-3064. •Acat $600.StOO Need young, aggressive beconsidered). , 64.$-3732; 642·364.s Rooms 4000 door, $185. mo. 629 l00% Fee Paid men to sell fast moving <,;;;ij;;;;-ill;;-'cl~;28iij~;;;;;;;;;i ••••••••••••••••••••••• OFFICE or store avail Terminal Way, CM . Lost: Shellie, Sable & Payroll/Computer/A/P vehicles. Top com-ExcePtionally clean 2 BR, ROOMS $25. week up with 100~ sq f~. New~ort Daya 540·5110, eves white, lQ mo's. Injured Conatr/Gea'l toT.B. missions &:: benefits. Ap- 1 Ba, new paint, crpts, Yearly·Beacb-2 Br, 2ba. kitchen. 548.9755 or Penm. Cbo1ce location. 646--0681 need.a medical aid left plications now being drps, bltns, no. pets, $110. 5404 Se~shore·Lower . 639-6100 f r o n t P a w • •Secy's $550-$12(1(l taken at: • mo. 786 Shalimar, Apt. 3. s3351mo, gar, frplc . &t5·3961 NEW Free-standing bldg. •-ramo'sbanter or Tam-Lii: Reinders Agency Copeland Motors, Inc. CASNa ' l.eadi-. N.IL Hdl<l.p. per'd ln restaurant wcirk. Call BarbU1111 6M-1'10t. ext52S. E.O.E. 642·8907 548-0l53 aft 6 pm. . Room for rent Kitchen NEWPORT garden office Fre1h sea air location m y o r T a m 21 e n • • 4020 Birch St, Ste 104 2001 E . lst St.·5.A. ----------1c:.:::.=:::..:::.:.=::::..---I privi\eges priv en· suites from 0: incl. util. '1200a:q.ft. l2x14 O/dra 779 Reward! 542-4019 or NewportBeach833-8190 SSa.8000 Child Care for 8 yr old Wanted Couple w/baby t Newport Hgts 1 Br, gar, trance. $l40'. first & last. Some warehouse aVaU.J;~W~·~·•~th==, C~M!:.·!6'15-5300~~~ ... J~m~eu~a~g~e:_:ll10-3877~='!".~· -;::--J,;;;;C~a;lll~loo~rr;a~ppoi~~n~tm~eo~t~jA;;;;;;;;~:;-"'°"'°---1 boy. Reaponsible Lady rent our clean E. Side I rd $175 ~" •0 19 c.r:.7 """'l "' •-ti aft " sm ya · . ,,_.,.., Call499·1457an.6. .-""""" S'--4550 .-OUND: German a..-p, n.u"""mo ve emoon.a aomeeven-Br. Apart. $115 .mo . aft.7:30 L ·--.· -Ad , A IE Sec to$12K W fed ings. Mon.·Fri. in N-N -~494~·4~53C~.'------1---:;;;~;;;;:---;---i Vacati Rental 4250 SING E & Double Of.••••••••••••••••••••••• male. Black and brown. m s x Clft"' .. _ f'or Lease, $315 mo. inc. Gardnr, a Br. 2 Ba. N. Costa Mesa. Refs req'd 'Families only. Sml pe OK . Av-ail 10 /1 /7 Ownr /Ag l . Ch u c Everetl. 546--4141 Days o 642·5n9 Eves. •DELUXE-•••••• :>.." ••••••• ! ....... fices, located in modem Vehicle or Trailer Vic ol PaulariooScbool. Order Desk to$685 I-rt Hgts.646-1Sl4att.7:30 Eastbluff 3 br, 2 ba, CAllH center. Util. furnished. Storage, $18perQuarter. 5'6·'280. • GFro~ltOfOll<: Med ~ S l:::;:cWrf CLEAN UP Boy for meat townhouse. ls e. Incl. By the month. 251= sq. fl. W.17thCM.5tB-0358 en ice _,.,. e" ce fer mlct. Exp'd. 462 "A" E. spac master swLe, din •••llGIEAR••• 540-5206 Rltllal w~ 4600Fsohundh: Bdm/FBlkGelrman IR.VINEPERSONNEL Also-17thSl.,CM.SeeMgr.No rm & dbl garage. Auto 3 large bedrooms. Sleeps 1 mmru ep er . ema e. l lh SE°'nrcS .Arr:h..V-V phone.calls. ... 12. Separate game room Rustic Small Shop for••••••••••••••••••••••• yrs approx, Talbert & "-.V"-L •/""t...11:.L""-.f Import door opener avail. Pool & R L -Ed recreation area. Adults with color 1V and pool en . ~;?\I mo. Newport Store-shOpC-2/M·l wards. HB. 847-&t12. 488 E.17th5treet Line Mecllallfc: CLERK TYPIST (or Fire onl y, no pets. table. Huge sundeck. By area. 548-0044 200-300Sq. Ft. FOUND·, Womens Read· (at Irvine) c.osta Mesa See Mr Severson • iSc Casualty Dept. week or week-end. 642.()(111 SliiteZ.24 642·1470 fl. L • · Insurance A1enc1. •$332• 49'1-86tl, Laguna Beach Fashion Island. View o · ing Glasses. hornrim t~~~~~~~~~ • llllal Aini&. Newport ~•ch. Ex-Sparkling dlx 2 Br, in 865AmigosWay,NB Bay. S e cret.arYGARAGE WANTED, lrames.Vic.Qay6:Snu,g '9ft. UU\O perienced.6'5-8J177 duplex.E.Side,lndscp' Managed.by RHtal1tolhare 4300 furnished. Plenty o near 36th St. N.B. Harbor,N.B.GtG-2626 AreY T y ~ pvt.yd.1ardnr,enclgar. William WaltersCo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• parking . For inf 613-1195 ll.VER .__:.s.~ missing "·::.:-'? ~ TOYOTA CLERK Typist. Must be $250. 675-1849 I----------I Lady w 13 children wishes 644·4153. Ask tor Mary i;ku...-v For A · l accurate. 3S br wt. 8:30 o .. Pohtt 3826 NC~~~~a ~::::or:an~~: straight8lemhomeale toColsh1are Rose. --=-~rfftf/ ~:~t ci:'61~~1'1t;:,~ ~S:sg~o~~~c;!b ~ 1966 lbbor; C.M. 6'6:9'303 ~r!:::·=JL°"~oc ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Ba . upper. Frplc. beam beaut S r · ege MINI-SUITES (1·2·3 + ••••••~•••••••••••••• Eve's Cup. and over. Free travel to VERYlge2br,2bawJter· ceilings,2patios,lgeliv· Park, Irvine. '$125 mo. rooms). Xerox & sec ledM Hawaii, Alaall:a,alicago AVnu •COOlt• race, upstairs, no pets. rm, tile kitchen & bath. 552·1883. service avai_I . 0 O~ 5005 caL ~-~p=~ &:: New York; guarantee UO Dinner boua:e ez:• $225. ALSO 3 br, 2 ha, No pets. Submit on REFINED Lady seeks r.ew'rtrt H8ar~ m81Cend ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wht.Oeacollar.Reward. r e turn at random perience.3-llPK.Closecl. very lge w/small yard. children. $360. mo. similar to shr. lovel,y lg. ~~~ ..... 4a an.. I · Walk in .. take o 'l!er Dana PL area. 496-2466 itinerary. No exper. HalpYow'°"7ilJ Mondays. Dana Point $275. 675-5205 675-3370 NB apt. for nominal ree. ....,.. Hairstyling Shop. Must aft& . necessary. Two wks ex-Aght lw'1atioll ReatauranL Send n · Sl65MOHTH Br {$190), 2 Bl', l$250). 640.8491 CHOICE Executive suite, sac I 0pt.191's open. pense paid training pro-sometoN.L.Bwt.330ZS l ·Bdrm. apt., 1 block Nr. Hoag, Ocean, FP, TIDY Mor F over 30 to 3 lge of£ices & storage, Prime location. San ,,5350 !!:O~,~~;!.;,~U~ Sell world famous pro-Christina. D.P., Ca. above CoasL Hwy.-, walk bltns, pool ,646-Slll :. xlat I Newport Beach loc. Clemente. 129 Avenida •••••"••••••••••••••••• . ducts I.be mtire family 92629. shr lg. cozy CdM home. $400 . mo. 1101 Dove, DeJ Mar. 498-1520. Drinking problem! l\lrnished. For interview can use, enjoy. Excellentl---------- to beach & wharf. WtW EP. lbr, rrpt. enc gar . No Kook~ or drug types. SUite 130_ 7sz.0971 · Call Alcohol Helpline call Mrs. Franks at earnings. Call 54Q.704l or Cook forho1pltot _ ~arp, blt..-ln r a nge & stv /r_ef blk to bch. s.-:1. $175 + uttls. 644-0!MS 24 hrs a day835-3830 557.3097 btwn 10-GPM Zenith 7.1359 Days. Apply at 1501 E. l.8lb St. oven,reCrig. nl 'fis5 v ·1 6735760 NEWLY Decorated, B tTL-Sour 1-~'.t!~~~~~~·1;Tu;;•;·;•;w;e<1;;·;0n1;;y;;.;;;;;;;;;;;l~~~¥~~~~~:uN~e~w;po~rt~Be~ac~h,~bet:w:n MISSION REALTY o y. . r y. . MAN 35 to 60 shr. 2 br. 2 carpeted 2 room offices. ea IS SPIRITUAL READER 8:30am &3:30PM.. **494..Q731•• BRupper.g.arage.block ba apt . $165 mo . Easy to find. ample ECO .... OMY OpenlOAMtolOPM BABYSITTER en· · tobeach.Adullll,nopets, Oakwood So., NB . k' lnl l Uon " Adviceonallmatters. Attft'llbltt~ thU1la1tlc A reliable for COOKS ...... 1Agto11ltoch3840 $250 642-3666 645·3'761 parwtng, hxSt . oc.a · 312N .&ICamiooReel G--~_. -ou.rdaughteragel.3to6 2nd&>3rd.5Dayweek. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·mo. 779 · 19t ·• $75" $85. A few st.oree are still .......-U1 Lo•eAt ldU. WESTCLIFF2 br. l 'r.i ba Beaut. BayfronL2br,2b:a 548·1945or5t8·1954 available at Shoppe~ SanClemeo.t.e,Forappt. TemTpoE~ryPOllelp ~~::_1~.2~~~· d~;.~ Phonef94""58. 2 BJ, 2 Ba from $215. lJni-townhouse Adults only. tum. home •Jdoc.k.. Male •l MO FREE RENT• VUlage,. a high volwue 492·9034 .f92.._Dl36 l180JSky Park, 1.-..ine 815-<C7Z3 eves •CORIE~ que adult a ... •. No leue. no pets. 1128 Bedford Ln. will a bare w iremale. 1·2·3 Rm~ dfices from 1hopper1 mall. U Y. ou Abracia tt•••!!I• "!"'' -__,,.,. ~ ~· ~·7533 $225 . tst. last +sec. s N b lh h··••· l'~~~C~•~ll~-~~~~~Babyoltle• 0 ·'ppr 'lo ••-· •.l'll"U&• Sorry, 00 children or _ .... mo._. 7526283 135 per mo. ear ave e men: ......-e, Photo~dllA~ .._.~ r PR.N~Beach. peta. · Airport. No lease req ·we'll put the (ocK traffic .. 1 teachers home, 2 to 6pm, Buay architectural nrm.. ApnL,.,. .. ~ Oceanlrontnewl Br. up-a6•32239~·-·· in front of_.., If vni• 1113Fu.ilt!rton,C .. SSEM••--t..1..1t. Monlhnlhi.531t"22 ROL "' n.-.-~~ eer. Ctpt.s, dills, gar Yr· M or Fm to thare Apt. _. •u don't have u\e~ba'; lOA.M-12 PM,&al'.·UM "" ~ 1..-..:;: CONT CAREER( 6700 ~=~H.B. lf lse. $.175642-3"3 • ~ s~::!· ~f~':' :;.1c DELUXE Ofiicespate fot dise, we'll help YoU ~ Fox1 Grtl'• out Call ~~~.~~t:,~~ .. ~:: ~I:~~~ ~==l. ONTHEBAY $l31.50mo-~-· 1*•1~· ~rpL. panellnc. lain lt. Joi.a lOO other Mass1ge. U Call. We dude solderinJ, dlectt eoa1tnw1,t.ag.Bcb. · Nwptkb 'IM/5518* llllTOIEACH Duplex yrJy r ental mv.a1c,v1ew.Sffaqft.835 merchants, who are Come Specl•ll&e iQ&otpart1,N1e1Dbb'ot , ,....._. SHOf'PIMG Out.stai\din(I: 3 'br 2 ba· Woman wnyroldtODwW sq_lt. Pleasetall»sBll. beat In I the Sour PatlJ)le°pcs.5U-31SJ alternators, Mu.at speak BARMAID~ exper'd. CaBI• Mllp U~8rapta,b1lnl,dis· frpl, 1800 sq. f\., ·upper'. share nice N.B. home ext.243,or837..CS11 • l:~onom1 at Shoppers some Enclllb.. .sz.10 hr. F/t.lme night.a. Mr. z •s, Needed. Full or p/Ume.. hw .. hen:aome.,/trplca Boat dock avail. Newly w /reap. woman, l ·son Prestlge bldg Jiewport Village, 273t N. Main St., RIMD IAISIHG7 AaklOf' l'rank,'42-9l.6S. IOZ3 Hubor 81,Cll4 .r. 11-3 or 114' shift, Mon 6: a c•r car-ttef. From decor'd. Sundeck. $t65. OK. Marlnm tehl area. BC!lacb. Luxury pVloUlce •taAne,.83t-Wl Xlnt project w/good re-tbru Fri. Apply, Pel uoo \ Lion• Estates; '7$-42'00 Re••. Call Nancy , in suite. 645-3700 turn for your club or or-ASST. Manager. Gardea· Bartender, Experieaeed. Taco, 2SZSZ La Paa Rd.. 535-25'7t 541·Z537 1 to 8am, or .,14.;.:.::=:.::c.::.:;=----i tanbaUon IN1UI6 beMfll-tng, maln~ It up-P•rt Urn•~~· Apply in t.atuoa Hilb:. .,.. ... --,-------tB'EACh Yrly. 1 bl', 1 ha O:aopm wkda>'I, a.oytlme SQ. ET. ore. spa<e. Ceody • c:i-.tl11 fnlf\he City ofllo!!e. Thill keep or 05 unlla In Costa peraon. 1'M So. -Cot. WAI.I. TO II.A.CH oce•n duplex apt. $115 wkenda 000 rno. I.ff. Lag. Niglltl 5..ev..... cnonth only. '752-71T1 Mesa in exch•n&e tor H•)'. L:ai.Bcb. DeUvel'J 6: lnltallaUC.. ol ~ 1", epa. dritl. blllll, mo. + $20util1. 645-1596 a...,.s ........ 4350 area. 831·9=, '93-2118 M~o.se~~~~~J .,1..:.=.o.P-R"'E"G:.;Nc.ANT:.;;."1"1'--I m:)~~:· $07 3 or llAUTICIANS ~~~~!.• ~:::.~u~d~a. 1araae. 20ISli:21ZUthSt. S BR, 2 HA, bJtns, DW, ••••••••••••••••••••t•• 5 OFcfS, Conf., reception collect money from coin Caring eonll:de,atiat StfuSTS h1.nd tooll req,d. Davia :=;:::: ot 1:JM2S9 or cloaed gar •• nr tloag Snal oar $30; Sngl Oar &1tor.area-uel>tq.f\. opera\ed dllpenMn In couo1ellb1 & rt-terral. ASSTMGllftMI F'Gl'(2)H.B.uloal.wtor BnnrnCo.Ml-llM. -"''-"'"'-------I HOIP· Adulta. $285. mo. 1tor. only, motor cycle at 40'. Easy Pf'kg., rmd. and around the Oran1e Abor&lon, adopUoa It Needed at Del Taco, w/oot lolL C&ll ...._I 0 .ENTAL ·--. JerMOlll 842·-. OK. $ZO 731 W. 18tll St. !Ir. C . .E. !ltliie llltr-. co. ar<1a, woo cllll.,... kffpln . w1una Hilla. Will ll'ala orMMSIO ~·ANr .·-· 2 br, • ba beoc!> Com·'.-•-~ •. ~ -, Cll.11>77111 540-7313 qulrod. llllll'detalilcall A ARE5n·Z563 ... resalvepenCX1iofut Froat dNk • <IWnlllo. .... -r I"' ~....,.,.. "'"'" ._..1ft'l. • food m•mt. GoodoPPQI'. BEAUTICTA?t'Ji:/Ume experlteced~ afn !f!, lrap•tlo.1 blktobeb. No DOUBLE Gar. tor ren~ PWSH O!lke. ""11.lncld. '"" , you're not totUng lor rl•hl -· APP11, Aulalant fp~· bubef omolter. N.IL-.U Cill lor .W••el Wo, ol"!I•• pu yrJy, f<Spermo.CM.An!a. Prime Afrllort Loe...., l'IDIRALSIRYICI older,yov'noaetllnli.,t• 2SZl2 La l>aa Rd, i.aa, otyUot "l'li<tilUonllL -Nll'30'12. • NW!M· Sq.11 .'Wl·mo 121Jl77Z.7t47 IAlt.Lo .. ,COnnle. • mu..111-<7JD SlllllOorfil.llAS. . Sellklleltuia • ._ • , I ~ ' ' firm k- e of ding .. o. port Part- wc.-k will • ' . J:x· Fire ept. ocy. Ex- ex· -obit .... 3302> Ca . eek. ' • • ,• ., • GORDAUZ .IUSIOYS& Ho.- Days & HhJhls Apply In Penon Mon thru Fri 3-SPM " 900 loJsl*Dr, NI ~ Equal Oppor Employer • 8ou1elleeper, m•lure penon for IUllll home. • .llpm-Tam shift. Sf6.67l6 - • I . . I . r , • . Ruffled Flattery Tri·Tone Shading 7104 l,yAea~ Llytr !hit 111:1 "'t mr shirt' Ind skirts .nd pants. HEW! Cre<111• in tlepnt. !<mt effect witfl 3 shlde' of 1 totor. kcent lflY on1 of tlle colors in 1 print thlrt Crochet ot wonted. P1tt1m 71G4: S1ies 1-18 ll'ICluded. $1.00 for 61th 111tttn1. Md 25t Md'I Pftlem for lirst<lass mill Mel handllna. Slff tt: --" I .......... .... -... o.owa....·w.. .... 1' .... WY IMl I .,.,.., ..... ...-.11p. ..... -- ~--·------ • I I 1 • Awtoi, lmporftd .... 1. ln1p0:...., 1. l.,.,W Allloa. UNd ......_ UMd ~.~~••••••••••• . ................. ..._ ........................ _.. ..•.........•.•..•....• ,, .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• ·-97•••• .,_ ~_..--t770 ;-,,1 ir Dadt• ttas1Mr.i•9 - •JJOA!LYPILOT • Monday, Septemt>tr 15. 197& ao•S•H · 906 re1Htn.T""t1 t11 a ...,osW..+ed tsto D-... 9720 Mtrc1dtt.._ 40 w... . • ............. -... ·-·· --······----·-• ••• •••-• •••••••••••• • • •••• ••• • •••••••••••• •• ••• ••• ••• •••••••••••••• ••••• ••••• ••••••••••••• ••••••• •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••-·---•••• ••••••••••••••••••·•••• .. Dart. fld nmporta. .Ul Sall "72 Mllltan& I U' Mlnla11il, fut, flt1 i 31' MOBILE Sc;Qut, fully WEPAYTOPOOLLAR WlLLBuYYOUR 1912 IOOSEL 4.5 Ulte. 1 .. BU'A. radlal &lrel, -~pe ~ VIile. FUlb' tloo. Power 1teeria1 cyl. Am/Pm r.dlo. P/I, back of Pinto or on ca .elf.cont'd , Mah.vexttu. FORTOPUSEDCARS DATSUN.'l'OVOTA 1rey, 1 owner. Pleue oew be1 6 dut.clli .. eq CQDd..flriced -.2111. P/b &4 coad. JZllJO /olr. top.$200.548-0W. See to appreciate . POREIONOOMESTIC QDVOLflSWAG£ff c111Mr.Selbt13'14Uor 1embty, maQJ extru. to l.IMlll16. O -.ia.s . ..:.:=====::...--1 MS 7198 6'.5-:N7s CLAsslcs '" · · ·attu• 581-Dll Xlnt cood. ...,_ •a.& ,_... tt4 ~~~~;-----;itiis 20· Sailboat, 2 !111ils ' or lf or I.I I PAIDFOR 9742 otrer.MS-tulbt~ '72 Sedaa De Ville. ••••••••••••••••••••,••10..•cllJle ffSS chrome hardware. cov-Trollen, Utflty tllO your,.car ea:tric ean ORNOI'. Ma.' •1•f••t blk leaLb r 'Tl FORD GalJX.i 2doot ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. L ol( .,~.. aeeua 1r1t. TOPDOl..LAR •••••'!••••• ..... ••••••• '1.CSuperlleetle. w/y•nvl•-wbltobod.1 1 ,_• S 1 ~~·-en;-•·~ ·er. _.,lS6J ••••••••••••••••••••••• IAUH IUICK CALL •ee MG Nid1et.Cocnplet.e-XJnt cond.tzlOO. futt-:Po ;e~. •l.r, PM Auto., a r, power,•-· a esa .... .-:a-•K"ll Col. 28 MKJJ. Ful MOTORCYCLE /Utll 29'l5Harbor8lvd. SALBERNADENE Jv ra.t.ored. M111t1eoto 151"'1'2 i:.tereo--eaasetle, $1800. lne6:bralct11,lowmils. OLDSMOllLE Trlr. llomemade Oatbed ~ ~ $1IM <.c».OSY> GMC TaUCI.$ race/cruise. 19,500. Pvt Ford truck trlr. 5xa'. COltaldeta 9?$·2500 apprt~late.1188-0Zl.5. 81 VW,xlntn.mni.ag,rebtt PP.87S-7AS T'Modwwa ll fl I party. 64 8-6106. Re•dy for the road. New TOf' 1:'()11 Al '7• 260Z. Auto air, MGI t744 ens .. tape,• 1plln. $500. C••• · ttl7 f'OIUI HOMDACJ.U FLIPPER 602, Gd. Cond, tireds11& bp1a~5. Vf,'ery ,. .. ,0 AM /FM radio' fo mt .••••••••••••-••••••••• 536.wtafi.5 ••••••••'••• .. •••••••••• 20IOHarborBlvd. UalY~Bl~d. $17Sorb.sloffer.67 .. 3284 ilur Y "-· <rm. ,.. Xlnl con4 $5900/b•I. ,67 MG• "-T ~ 9772 70 Camaro • .,,ci VI, l CooUM .. • -10 21SO~ v att..a. 751 ·DM9 IMMEDIATB.Y 645·3298. .-v -·o ownr Cd. cand. tz,150 a.ta1111a: ~ · Tape deck, rad.lalt, nuu ••••••••••••••••••••••\ ~ or14641aPM. '75 FOID •72 Hobie 18 w /t.rn.iJcr,Auto S•r Yice• FORAU. 19712AOZ, am/fm.tereo. d $1300 M711141 OIAMGICOUN1'Y RAMADA ?3 Xlnt Con~ •• ~.°.'!: ••••••••••• ?~.~! FOREIGHCAIS £1~H~S:8.~~~n 1 ' ··n~T · VOLVO ,· . '~:'e!n?J4ttc!°=~ Load~! Only 12,7aa OLDSMOllLE AH 3000 Purts eng trans. CAU.OICOMEIN 5S8·1500 Aak for Tom Xlnt eood. AM/FM. EXCLUSJ'VELYVOLVO orda~a,N4SU mile1, like new. $4954 91SB>AM For Sale 30' Satlbout Rear end, all parts. Prt TOSHUS Hoover S23·0300ut.221&992·2'10 Lar1e1tVolvoDealer (•P2098A) Sierra tan wltb wood mooring, 5.5 meter Nw1 pty. Call 847·591:19. OZ AM/FM eves. 1n OrangeC.ounty! '70 Camara SS 388, • apd, TMocloN ltoWns ~~~:h'in; I i~f~ri!:,Pfu.ti Harbor. SGOOO . Bo '73 24 •mags, • 9 BUYor~E A/C, P/S, P/8, clean. FORD condi Meyer. 714·644·24"2 ore. Avto1 for Sale air, 4 spd. Gd. cond. 0,.. 746 DIRECT. $1950. fU.5DIUCbome) or 2060 Harbor Blvd. power, fact.Of)' air · 714·546·3170 !homeJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-3659 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · ~ 644-1.MO(Office) 0010 tloni':/. tllt wheel, ~~R g."!i"~ ~,,1i •,;~~",~ ~ .. ~~~~:~~ ...... !~.~~ ;.' .. ~.~~,o if.~:,>•!'':;..~ S~~~~~ [ffg ~~:=.!.-.... .' .. !!! .;,;~~~~: fMJk•J,~~ ~\~:;,•; 547.1329 aft667S-~JO llOO W.Couthy.N.8. ofrer. Must sell! 833-2253. Mint! '225' ___ ~ $IOO 830-:UU. Onl S3lll95 CATALINA 211ess •h •n · * * Rent** 642.9405 . ·12 2 4 oz-Auto. A tc. n...:r::-. Anaheim 2025 ~. 750_2011 · CONNRL 1;,.~.,~~~n1~eo.n=~"'iJSq~ .. ~·; .. ;l~r~··~~·~r~i~c~ .. ; .. i1~11~1,~ yn. old, like new cund. 29' Ove rland l'oftr. Hm. Mags. xlnt. eood. $4.,500. FORD Wa&on, loaded, 26,500 •-Iii l /B Atomic 4. Tull n~ Loaded, lo rates. 538.()547 644·1125 CHEVROLET U II Mii iP I .... mast, Genoa & Sp1 n··'.:P.:'.:'.:Pc:le<Y.:.·------I FREE •-n•15•1 2060H11rborBlvd. VOLVO m.lle.1, 1 owner,fwiolsde C... ..._ ..... •· "'..-'"""' ~ '73 240Z. Red, 27M. Tapes, Costa Mesa 642-0010 or trade equity or er naker r1gg1ng. VI-It'-4 Whe~I Drives 9550 We buy used cars & s .. '.'c'.k~ .. ~g. ~;.,,.~.l, cood.. SALE 2SALl21ESH~'2:~ 67fi~~.·.o::;,3008vw. Bu1. r1oto tt57 FM, etc. }\illy loaded••••••••••••••••••••••• trucks. Call GROTll cro;r.,v ~ Porsche> 9750 _••a. .. ~ v•.,. w /extras. SACRJJo,ICE CHEVROLET ror a free I.'.::.::.:.:.:::::..=..:.::::; __ ~••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA u~• ••••••••••••••••••••••• $13 800 C ll """'-4222 'JJ BRONCO /.11 cars In ·our stock •~ '7 G d V8 air ~-.1 · • · a : ""' or appraisal. '71 240Z, am/fm, mags, '71 Porsche 914. Sell or priced at below increue 546• I lOO 5 rana a cpe $37. u:. i3 R1rnabout. Xlnt "' .......... 646-7866 GROTH CHEVROLET radials, xlnt cond. trade. Best offer. . """''.. kJ11ded, like new. "" Lo mi. 4-spd. N1,1 tires.. Chrys le r l'tfut1nc er 15' w /trailer. Xlnt cond , w /spinnakc r. $2000. 644-7491 $4,500 18211 Beach Blvd. $36SO. /offer. 556-7072 S44-l244. ol Au.tu.st~ •94·7801 $2.o:iO. 87ll.ZSt4 Stroppc-eqwpped. lJursl Hunl•'nmonBeuch 1 -'=:::..:..:::.:.::.:.==..:.=--L~~=::__ _____ J ' 66 '73 CHEVY NOVA, vinyl n~ '69 510 Sta. Wgn. new '67 912 Porsche in zlnt . '62 Falcon Ranchero, new •7z PIMTO<l"'lll•IRE 3·speed floor shin, dual 847·6087 549.;i,131 b k • ,. 1 l cond TO CHOOSE top, a utomatic, power motor, radiator & fuel OtlW~ ... CiOH Shocks (air shocks rear, ra es"" ires, x n · cond. Like new. Reblt steerin• & brakes, alr. sT•TI • M l II $87; "'19134 • pu mp. Runs pe•!ecl, A A air bags in rront). Two SELLIMG YOUR CAR? 1 .:::::"::'::..:'•=·==·.:.~=.:·='--1 ~•n:;g~.~S4~,000~-..::492:::::·::39::1:;'-:.__J FROM $2554(P2008A) a uto trans, R & H, gd Low mi1es, 4 speed, air. steering stabilizers, skid TOP PRICES P.AID '74 260Z. A/C, AM /FM. 67 912exceptionallyclea.n. JUST ,..,.,,VED neCHlorwRobiM tires, 19 mpg, Asking 'Pe c 1· a I w h ee I.a. J-36. 4 sales. VllF fatho RDF aulo pilot . Sea Wind. 64 2 66(Y1 /675-9137. pl ale, heavy duty trailer For Imports ma.gs, lo mi. 1750CC, near perf. Best ,.,uu FORD $825. 968-4971 aft6pm. 4F hit c h , front bumpl'r Paid for or Not •15 21 PM F .. CTORY 2060Harbor81vd. •uard, roll bar, roof · 45eve. offer. 673·5971aft10 . ,.. Full llobie lti . No. 2b7 w1trlr & .sailbox , cle an, $1·150. 644·2S24 . Dean Lewi1 lrnports Costa Mesa 612-0010 '71 LTD Brougham. searchlight, Stewart· .C.M. Fiat 9725 '71 911 T. 5spd, 11m/fm, DEMOS power AM /FM ster'°. Warnertack,opt1ona lre· 1966 ~~ .M. •••••••••••••••••••••••air, si l ver, $699S . Example •JJCHEVELLE .tillwhl.99,000mi.$1,000 . miracle mazda loots, Siii"/ Doc ks ar seat. Less than 30,ooo --------714·968·7462. 175 244 Sect. STATIONWAGON' l .!646=::·23~38::·------1 mi & indoor-outdoor c arpetin g throughout. llloll1Royce 9756 Automatic, AM/FM Pow4:'r.steering,air.xlnt SACRIFICE $200 under 645--5700 Cn ll 544.1742 & ask ror WE .PAY ••••••••••••••••••••••• stereo ra]tio, power cond1t1on.JUM(•P2l25) book, by own .• 71 Clry CotlaW.... 9070 John. CA$H #lOEAURINU.S.A. steering,p6Werantenna. TheodOlellobias Sq.9p1t1ss.Wag.A /C~rull '72 Runabout. N e w SLIPS W 1\r-'TED·SA1L low miles. #2019. FORD pwr, 95% lires, lrlr hit.ch, brakes, radials. below 25 '-4 5' l\1ARINER "69 J e ep Commando FORUSEOCARS Im ROY $5999 2060Harbor8lvd. airsbks,alwaysma1nt, book . 833·4870 da)'s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• YACHTS 675·1393 Pickup. Auto, air, P IS, PHILLIPS CARVER Co&taMesa 642-0010 mint cond, $15~0 . 673·1690eves. Want sleep or side tie. For ~~B~k 't,.~t;~g.r~~tt~~~~: BUlCK·PONTIAC·OPEL ROUS· ROYCE '. · -&llll LemiA, 1970 Bel Aire, a/c, p/s, 831·9956· '74 Run-about Exlnl cond. -!C~a~) ~2S~s~•=i~l =bo="='-"~".:..:·4=290::.:·: ~$2~,000;;;;-~6;7~5~·~~l5!~9~. l(:;:;;;;;;I 24888 Alicia Parkway ~;A'=:i dUll' p/b, $1200, lo ml good l ........ ol 9942 Dis: int text. Sunroof 642·8064 . Lag.ma Hills 837-2400 s.u-•4'4 ~ cond. 548·19C7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Vinyl top, 4-spd. Eves. T rlation 1 Toyota Land Crui•«I--------S ~ VOLVO '67 Chl'l'sler Crown Im·, :'.'64().<64=='-----ranspo w /winch. 2 sets of tires, A UT 0 s w ANTED, Cl.OSID WNDAY 74 Monte Carlo Land~u perial. Original owner.·~ ••1••••tt••••••••••;j'jc) xlnt cond. Mus t sell. anything running or not! 9761 1966 Horbor. CM. 6~ 9303~ Black, fully equip t . 42 000 mi Like new . 72 Runabout 2000, 4 spd, A rcr a $317S. Bestorr.645-6803 w. sso. SlOO. Fast serv. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 17,000 mi. $4500 or best C~o d . l~maculat.e. air, radio, '167S. Pri pty. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ··-u--..1 ff r 536-4635 alt 6 846 7235 Hot air balloon seminar '72 BLAZER 350. 4 sp. ~-~~~ Cash! 892·5017 & EXCLUSIVE :=~· .. := ............. 'I:;:•::,::•:::;· ::';-';':;;~~·-::-:-::-1 _!_$1~300~~·832~~·02~19~.'----I :::'-'-·_.:.-:;;:-----;;;;:;;; introduee to the s port.' P.8, P.S., air_, whls, roll· #!_ ral 9901 '74 I MPALA Wgn. 6 pass. M rick 9947 Plymouth 9960 Se o.< 6120 bar cust lnm 2 to...., ~--,,-:m..-;a fOI .,...,. Air PIS P/8 P/W. FM aye ••••••••••••••••••••••• pt2A· 25 · 27 ........ im~ac.s4S·3766: ,,..,, TOP ..,. .. ,41., Orange County••••••••••••••••••••••• stefeo. ivooo' m i. Like ~···••••••••••••••••••• Campers, Sale/ T L <M '64 MERCEDES Benz. new. S48·8798 73 MA0VERICKA wl L,~x-ATLAS Rent 9120 ruc1111 9560 $ HEADQUAITllS I90C, 4 d r, auto. nds ury ec~r! utoma 1c, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• IH SANl'A AMA ~ work. $750. '64 Chevy, 4 73 Caprice w /xlras, $2,600 factory air, power steer· Chryller 1Plvmouth 10' El Dorado Camper. '73 E~ CAMIN~. Fad.Ol')'Authorized dr 283 a uto. nds work. orbstofc.Clean,lomi. i ng, vinyl roof, low J) &sUn.'til 1:1ny orrer over $1275. a~tomat1c, factory air, Paid SaJes . Service $150. 642-6935 all. ~ & 963-1990 m iles! $2854 (Pl995A) ~~n aily & n. 'til 10 549-ISSS vinyl roof, power stC(>r· . FOR •Parts• Leui.ng ~!.Oil wknds. '74 Impala 4 Or. Sedan. neodorefORDRobins 2929 Harbor Blvd., -'-"--'="--------! ing & brakes, low miles, W' 9910 CostaMesa ·12 Tropicanu s·. Qn bed. $3154 (03621R) Used V S AUTHOlll'ZIO Wck Auto, rac air. PS, Vinyl 2060HarborBlvd. rl ll Plakool · '' Th d R-1..: s...a S.W.ke ••••••••••••••••••••••• roof, lo mi. Xlnt.. clean 00 0 546·1934 ~nda:~o~nce-awa:s. eo ~D ""'"n 5 Paid for or Hot FI AT DA VE ROSS '68 G.S. 350, air, gd cond. cond. $3100.963-3966.a!t6 ~Coo~~la'..:M~ .. '.'.a'..__6<2~_,-::1'.:'.1--------- boot & j;:icks. Xlnt cond. 2060 Harbor Blvd. POMTIAC-STUn $850./bst ofr. 963-1196 aft. pm. "71 MAVERICK '71 Cricket. Nu trans, wtr $llOO Ph 54S·af69. C M 6420010 . 2410Hartaorl1Ycl 5 p.m. '73 CHEVROLET IM · Gas sa\•er standard pump & battery , Amer;go ,II'. Self con-osta esa U . ljtm•:U•Ie'A;t'fl 120atWSo .. WMarnam· er '73 Estate Wagon, new PALA WAGON. Power t(•Pan,sm)ission! $195411 ..:28=M:::P~G;::..$9::::;:50.:;.:.MS-:.:;:_:l287=..:· __ tained. Jacks, bounce •74 Toyota P Tim1 llea"c"ti""ll:I. Santa An cr-o __ 1-----------1 radials, loaded, top cond. steering, factory air con-• l 11 '63 Valiant. ticyl, stick, awa)'s , tie downs. $2,200. Short bed. mags & wide Hunt. Bch . 842·«35 a , ...,,.~Toyota 9765 S3200./be.st. T r i. ply. ditioning, a 1 n excfeUeilnt Theodot-eRobins runsgreal,$345. 675.5359. Li res, radio, 4 sp, 16M mi. 9730 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67S.1371 /67S.2001 wagon for al your am y FORD 645-0262. Mint! 752·1S97 Wanted VW Bug , fixer up· CKJUGr needs! Carries our "Gold 2060 Harbor Blvd. •ont' Mobile Homes 9140 per, will trade equity in••••••••••••••••••••••• 'JSY2 '10 BUICK. RIVIER A. Crest Warranty". $287S. Costa Mesa 6420010 ..-tac 9965 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 73 DATSUMP.U. 73 Ford Country Squire 72 XJ6. Dark Brn. Xlnt Low miles, gold with (110665) Johnson & Son • ••••••••••••••••••••••• -JNitb Cabana. furnished. 4Speed,$2454 (9325) Wagon. Loaded 26.500 cond. Orig own. Lo mi. JOyOtas . black vinyl top. Black Lincoln·Mercury, 2626 "71 )69Le Mans St.a. Wgn. Ba)'shore Park. $150 mo. Theodore Robins miles. I owner. 67$-6200 $6,950. S46·0791/642-2003. leather interior, power . Harb or B lvd .• C.M. MAVERICK Jmmac. $950. Call aft. 966-.5429, (213). FORD or675·3008 1973 JAGUAR Roadster, Here windows & extra clean! 540-5630.· c~-e Sp.m.631·2754 Bl d 200 f. $2175. (709AQ E>. ~• Motorcycles/ 2060 Harbor v · Auto1, Imported signal red. $1 · irm. .lohnson & Son Lincoln· '68 Sta. Wgn, Afr. air , Only 31,000 miles on this '73 Grand Prix, a.ir, pwr. Scooten 9150 Costa Mesa 642·0010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 640·0315 · NOW Mercury 2628: Harbor p /S. P/B, xlnt mech economical 6 cylinder, 3 new rad. tires. Topcond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 FORD Courier Lo mi, Audi 9707 CLASSIC COUPE Come in Blvd., O.M:. 54().5630. cond. Mu.st sell $575. 11 p e e d sta nd a r d Stereo. $3.~. 673-4618. '71 Maico 400. $350 or best xlnt. cond. $2,800 or best ••••••••••••••••••••••• XKEVL2 541·9134 transm ission: Cadillac offer. ofr. 496·3469 '73 AUDI 4 dr, sunroof, 673-1933 Test Drive CacllNac 991 S '72 Chev. V8 Sta Wag. Air, tra~e·in. ~dio. beater, Grand Prix 72. triple blk, Call MB·8006 an. Gpm stick, gd. cond. $2,450. ••••••••••••••••••••••• wh itewall tires & SJ>?,!· deluxe cloth int. Loaded, '74 Curier: 11,500 mi. Wknd : 557·5441, wkdy: a1da 9738 1oday '73 CPE deVUle. amlfm a u to, p/s, lug rack. less. (983DW}. , ·.• : all power. AM / FM, Ult, BULTACO '73 Pursang Radio, htr. 40spd, short 213·926·5547 •••••••••••••••••••••• radio p /a air lo mi Xtras. New tire&, batt, 0 I $1895 · 1· & 3SO. xlnt cond , xtras. bed. Im mac. $2900. RX Buy Xlnt' co~d. $5,000 : brks, tuneup. $2495. XJnt ft . ·· · cruise, new ires $700. firm. 558-1343 492-8317. '74 Audi 1001..S, 2 dr. auto, '74 MAZDA •4 S8l·l3Sl. cond. Orig owner. Pvt ·· brakes. $2725. 581·7156. . AC, AM JFM ste<eo, l8M STATOHWAGOH OI' parly.640-1947. •'+.s C41C'Wlt: Yoga 9974 '74 Harley Davidson ~ VClfts 9570 remain on warr. Mint. Yellow/black interior Lease ·74 CADILLAC, take over , 1 .......... CPE A ~ 116._ ...._ • •••••••.t••••••••••••••• SL Spr i n t . Low mt.••••••••••••••••••••••• $5100.645-1679. (551KBS) leaseorbuyatlowBook. 70 lmpa 11 · '-'..,,.. · _, $700 /bestorr.6.11-1~94 ·~~t·~o:::~1~n~e!~~~· Au1tl .... Healey 9709 M~hO_!i~~~!°{~ly 11· a1u1 l·,.,~·~· !~~).752·0971 or 644·57&1 ~~~6.$fl00. 968-1805 or C....,... MOfllO STAj.~~':!GoM '41 Harley Davidson Sl tOO 675·4059· '••••••••••••••••••••••• ~L UUIO Cont' nlal 9930 Mu1tClltC) . · 9952 Automatic tnmsmission1 Knucklehead. Good ' · '67 3,000MK. Lo mi. l\1int '66 Cad Conv $350. Runs ine ••••••••••••••••••••••• lowm· es! 483GIRl cond. $2000. 646-7104. '65 FORD Window van, cond. Must sell. Bsl ofr. good. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• •74 ,73 Suzuki 400_ Not broken new paint. 6 cyl, auto. 675·8617 1644..S"IZ?. TOY QT A 75l·Sl43 19'73 Mark IV, xlnt cond. MUSTANG II . 1 2000 . Be tor Gd.cond.$800.675-5810 Orig. Owner. $S995 , 1n ye · , rm. s · '60 Austin Healey "Bug · 1966 Horbor, CM 646 9303 '66 CADILLAC SEDAN 776-4810or833-2000 GMA fer· Call Bob, 494-989'l. '71 DODGE Van. many eyed" sprite. Xlnt. cond., 2150 He bw lm:L De VILLE. Powder blue, . Vinyl roof, vinyl interior. YAMAHA 125 MX . Lo extras, xlnt. running gd .runner,gd .. body,in· C:O..Mna64S.5700 avery well keptcarwith 72 LINCOLN CON· bucketseat.s.factoryair ZISOH.taorll•cL mileage dirt bike. $250. cond. $2,800. &12-6153 tenor: A classic & hard MH"Cedes Btom 9740 all the extras such as T I N ENT AL, 4 door conditioning, automatic 5700 ·Ph:S48-0869. 1912 Ch ~-TV to find . Gd MPG .••••••••••••••••••••••• power windows, cruise sedan .. Elegant yellow t r ansmission. power CodaM.sa64S. evy.,. l:l"· Removable bardtop and cont r o I, etc . A Bc_>ld with dark brown steering, radial tires. '71 GT. A/C, PIS, radial "71 HONDA 175cc, great ga.s saver, dependable transportation. dirt bike, runs xlnt. $225 firm. iS1·9549 auto, pwr, lo mi. xlnt ragtop. Side curtains. Lease SACRIFICE AT ONLY VID)'I ~op .& sad d le Xlnt. Cadillac trade·i.n . tires. Gd cond . Pvte par. cond. 493·5757. $1,200 CASH. Call before New .. UHd $99S. <RSK676). Johnson le~her. in~~~" !:5F~ (498JNX>. ty. 581·8164,581-2700. '72 DODGE 6'30PM.892·2910. OYER 100 & Son Lincoln·Mel'<u<y, ex as'°' ul ' ,· I Only $3795 2626 Harbor Blvd., C.M. stereo, er se con ro , IF YOU MAXI-VAN IMW 9712 MERCEDES 540.5630 etc. Only $3675. (886039). ---;-..:.... ___ ~I have a service to offer or 12Passenger ••••••••••••••••••••••• OM DISPLAY 21SGH.-borll•cL . Johnson & Son Lincoln·.....,. C~ goodstosell,placeanoad HONDA XR75. Many ex· Roral CothMeM64S..5700 Cadillac 9915 Mer cury, 2fi26 Harbor J410llia1Nrlil¥4. in the Daily Pilot tras. $350. Suzuki 90· Grt. v . s . a u om at i c House of lmaorts Vo .. SWCKJH 9770 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Blvd .. C.M. 541J.56XI. Classirled Section ••• trail bike. Make offer transmission, factory air AUTHORIZkD ••••••••••••••••••••••• COM'ette 99321..,,c..===-,,.,,==-====-===:1 cP~h~o~n~e~64~2~-S6~1~8~---:-:-::: =E~,~·~•~S4~6~·~SS~l::9~·------l c onditioning, power MERCEDES DEALER '73VW •. . •••••••••••••••••••••••'· ·~ n.. ood steering, power brakes, 6862 Manchester, •TOP CASH•. Autos. New · 910 Auto1. New 9800 '71 Suzuki .......,, nuns g B Park Low miles, fully racto..., •••••• ••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• & tight. Very dependa-heavy duty tires, radio, EXCLUSIVELY uena 'J For Corvettes and other •••• ••• etc. Less than 28 ,000 523·7250 equipped· $ 2 15 4 used cara • trucks! ..::.bl::•::.·:::!350:::::·545-=~391=3::.· __ ~ miles.onthishardtofind & OntheSantaAnaFwy. (#NT2659A> n-L1 ...... M ~e HOWARD Chevrolet, 72Maico400,comp. Cadillac trade ·in . Theodore-M l"'Rm:J,. Dove &: Quail Sta. Near reblt.xtras.$650 (643EIE). 73 Mercedes FORD Jamboree, Bristol, & Perlect.536-1648 SALE 2060HarborBlvd. (ad•111ac MacArthur, Newport Motor Homes. Y . . ,, .,. •• ...SLC osta Mesa 642-0010 Beach.~ Sole/Roni "'o PRICED ~"'-I•*....,. Coupe WAHT'ID Selc-'tiol'I PROF. BUJLTALL'72 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11rr.1...1.. Ca_._ 1· ....._ "+t •. .1a Fully equipped in ikon used '70 VW'! or older. .,.. Custom Vette. one of a See the U.S.A. the RV fiNANWl&&llC as . .ae. " ft..:..t.ff gold with run mahogany· Call 631·227ldeaJer. OTB 100 kind stylin g, full pwr inc .. way. B&D Motor Home .2'40HaM -...L .,..,...,,.,~.,.. leather interior, & lessl-=========:I .. ~..._ A/C+windows, new red Rentals.646·9611 ,,. __ --t 0,.1 Ftt• th 14 000 ·1 ,L exl/blt in• 350 cu in/4 :.:.:::;:::;:::;~~:;;;:;-;--1~-;;;,;;;::;,,,;;-;;;,;,;;;,,/.I an · mi es . '71 VW Sqbck. Rblt eng, C I•••,...... ... l•PM8397) ,_,__ spd. Must. see to app. Ready For Baja?' Auto. AC, radio. $1795. --Winnebago '72 Chieftain Auto1 Wanted 9590 ORANGE COUNTY'S Pvt. ply. 552-1938. Nabe $4000. Eves5J6.0078 Ji ke new, cust. 1nL all ••••••••••••••••••••••• OLDEST rs Dodgto 9935 xtr ••.• trk stereo. Vat•, O r _ __,,,,. & 1910 Ha<bor c M '74 Su.per VW. Convert. fo r ced air heal, a /c , range-.. ,s 631 12,76. . AMfFM stereo. New 1',...a111ac 1 1,000 mi. Pvt .Ply . H i9hestSBuyw • tires, lo ml, Xlnt cond. ~ 531 337. ' 6 •• 1«• 0< on IWlftft1 S 1 Se · -Le · • 8 SL S'I Moving must sell. $1500. '"' ,.., ... ~ a1¥d · o · oN"O .. -r-· a es-rvice as1ng 73 M. : 454? . 1 ver 548 _4197 pp. costa MH7'S4o.•io0 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• '65 Coronet. V-8. gd cond. $350. Call btwn8-8pm. 1 $48-7564. wUltradefor boat. 1111 MneyTovota Roy Ccrvft' Inc. w /blk 1ntenor, stereo, Executive 1970 25' Xlnt Call Roger or bill Rolls lloyce 1 BMW cruise control .. elec. win-'73 VW Bu.s, xlnt cond. Mew · 9100 Allfol. Mew 9100 cond, many extras. Pvt 847-8S55 234 E. l7th St. dows, local & like nu. See 25,000 ml. $4000. or best ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••-•••••••• p t.y.642-2150. Don't gi~e up the ship! C011taMe1a 546-4444 &makeofCer.557·9349. offer.842·4118 , Sale·E•ec. '73-25'. Only "L_ist" "It in classified. STAR GA:,...,E,.,,~"" 112 ooo ml X1nt. cond. Pvt Ship to shore resulLs ! 'Oi...,.,·...:.., __ ""'.-=,,'1'"'-1 .... ~.963-7367 642·5678. Q.AYL,. CREVIER ·~ " , ____ .. Y A-41• "' 1k S..... V -. Mew 9100 ....... H•w tlOO .............................................. . MissionViejolmports • ,. ..... ,,...., .. .,.,., ,.,.. .. ,, td ht 1 Yll;llJl·114ter4f ... t7M I & I l'f Ii lllOlOWAY I AN lA AHA . . 835·3171 .'M!.~ftDlllWtCI~, apri 9715 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 73 2000, d~lm.41, A/C, xlnt cond., new radials, s:;mo.;orrer. SU.7481 or S31·Z738 '73 2600 Capri. A/C. R/H. Very clean. $2,750. 552·720?. Colt .~ f To ....... -~ for TIModey, ..._.. .... ..,. .... tolU'l'blrl of 'fOUI Z.cdloc..,,, .... ' °""~ J1 .... 21-Wo "-a~ »_..._ ,..,..., M ...... $0-,, ......... ·-,._, 1 ,._ » c...-.i •Good ·°""'" '""°""" !lf'n.t 1D'r.-, ..Olio H C--•I 0t 12 °"' .q., uv..,. '-lTe "" "t§" l,T.... ., ,. ,....., "' \7C---•1 ••c.. .......... ,,,_ , .. .....,. 10fo .W'- 21 °"""' 51 A..., fit. I::=.. 2.,,,.., ... _ :no... .,_ lit.... e-· ll t"" . It t:=.. '° """' ..,....,.. . ®°"'®- ' what, "loulease: 1976 MONl\RCH ~ cl-. 250 V-6. radial fires. p.. -.irq. priiiw. fronr ch:: bol., """"<Jm>. ""·()odor T°'*"' $108.89mo. (Cq) $45"'0. lease 8'1d vokJe $225(1. Dep, fll\i, $0561. $CX> red. 6 mo. OE.U 1976 CAPRI 11 .. tpd.. 2.'] lirr.. .. cyl ~ i~J!lqJ) , $108.71 mo. f(ql. $4SSD. lecne end "°"8 $2050. D11p. res $6589. SD) red 6 IT'O. OElJ 1976 BOBCU' RUNABOUT . 2.] ..... qi.. • ¢. . ...,. body ..... "" °""' Now! $102.26 mo. (G:ip. $4061 ....... ~ ~ $1WS. Daf)nis $58.78 mo. CB.j what.yon. get, rree: • ., .J • I Toda)"eCI ..... N.Y~ St.eke ' . ' VOL. 681 NO. 258, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE C~~·~LIFORN,IA ( , MONDAY, SEPTEMBER is, 1975 TEN CENTS Sewage I Spews Ollto ,Cleniente . . B1.IACK CHAPPELL ... !"""......... . • A mile of San Clemente Beach north of the pierwu<>looedtoday and over the week~ whee raw sew•re gushed fn>m clt,1'aewen: stttamed across the sand and .. IOl!led tbeoeean Satarda,. Lilecuud Capt. Sheridan Byerly ordered tbe beach clooed in Ille vicinity of Ille pier -Ille LIDda Lano JUecuanl tower wbon Ibo foul·1J11'1ll•1 fluid ncjW9d from a atcnn drain nnrtbel'e. Later, Ille beacb between tbe and Avealda !:at.den, about mile nortb,·wu cl.,.ed wh<n raw ...-ace ahi;ced from • -er ouUet lb ere. Byerly alild aew.,. vl.ible in lbe lurf Sunday disappeared by tbia momlng. TIKI OrangeCounQ< ' Heallb Department bu been ---~ to cletermi!"' ii a bealth buanl la preoen1 are pendin1. Capt. B:yed)' Hl4 be impeded lbeaplll'at the J:1tad4>n tower. "It waa flowing badly at that time, very rapidly. ~ _ Cuard 11\ere uld It bad been guohlns - lbal tbia waa only • trickle com· pued to wbat It bad been -prior I • to my arrival," Capt. 8yerl7 lald. Tiie incident la Ille lblrd time UO summer ra-.r MW8'e bu fouled the beach in San Clemente. · The waters off the are• between 1116 pier alld llfeauard beadquarter:a were eloaeia tor about a week durtn1 Aquat bee•-of'l«wace pollutlcn. ·· / Cit)' otficlala includinc City Manacer Kelillelb carr and of· lldala <if the 1aal~ depart-ment were not av•ilable for com· mentlodar. AA uncOmtlrined nc:Ution in a police reporl about tbe Incident lncllcated • faulty aewaae pump ln the Linda Lane 1ewace lift sta· tMmc wu to lllame for the spill. Pw:Q fallllres two tlmeo before San&, accounted for the previous ~ Uon. Capt. Byerly aald suads ~ little trouble keepinc bead!CoMI from the water. but only a eparqe ~rowd was on h•od over tbe weekend. "People compUed r•ther I> adily when we told thf!l'D the pro. blem. There were a few surfers that were • Utile lrate at the eiQ' tbouch." be said. Hijack Suspect Killed Egypt E assy Seized SAN JOSE ("Pl) -A police sharpshooter todaiy shot to death a 24·year·old eunman who tried to hijack an empty Continental Airlines 727 jet with four hostages. His deatb ended a -foor. hour rampage during which he stabbed. a woman he tried to rape inber home •• The eunman, identified by Police as Fred Salomon of San Jose, beg&l) 'Ille hours of terror when be entered the apartment where the woman lived with her children late SUnday night and stabbed her in the heart. The drama ended several hours later with a single shot in the bead by the sharpshooter at San Jose Municipal Airport. With two of his hostages escaped and another wound~, Salomon was cut down as be tried to use bis re- maining prisoner as a shield to escape-from the plane and. about 25 surrounding Police. "Hp had agreed to come out of the plane himself wjllMM ~ weapon an'd wit'b--bis hands~" said Pplice Lt. Gary ~­''Then ,he ·.emerged Jrom the plane wilb Jb• ,gun in bis 6and -and a hostage -!llD airport iqain· tenanctt man -in front of him, using hJm as a shield at ~poirit. . ' "One of our officers, about 50 feet away, shouted uU-ee times, Drop your weapon.' Salomon didn't answer. He began to point the gun at the officer who was shouting to him. '1ie officer. began to run away. But one of our sharpshooters' with a telescnpe sniper weapon fired the single shot from behind another airliner. and Salomon dropped.'' CSee HIJACK, Page AZl Marilou Meairs, 19, whacks volleyball during Saturday's Village Party in Laguna Beach. The Main Beach ac- tivities began with a 7 a.m. pancake br eakfast and closed with fireworks at 8:30 p.m. In Sinai Pact Truck Spills Chemical ' . LOS ANGELE$ CUPll -A truck spilled 150 gallons of two chemicab Ul•t· COOlbine to form a poisonous gas oa the Hollywood Fr-eeway duriqa Ute rush hour to- day, tying \IP traffic for nearly an hour. Five fire company units washed down the chemicals, muriatic acid and chloribe, and California Highway Patrolmen closed all lanes ortraffic in both directions and nearby surface a\rel!ls. ' ~ hour trattii; ·--to a bait in Ille bUaJ. dOwiltown'!lio- tion and cars backed up for more than a mile along the freeway. Tiie two chemic~ 'being de- liveredi for a 1wimmini pool sup. ply company, combine to form pbosgene, a gas used during World War I. It attacks the lungs and can cause delth. The spill occurred when the rear doors of a semi-truck and trailer rig popped open and the li- quid spilled onto the road-way. The driver, Michael Hastert, about 25, suffered chemical burns in attempting to close the truck doors to prevent more spillage. Were Sex Movies- .Pomo or Spoof? He was rushed to a nearby hospital for treatment. A fire offic.ial said the gas cl· ings to the ground and ~ not spread easily. City police officers at first stopped cars and pedestrians on overpasses near the freeway but later decided they were not in danger. COLEMAN DISPLAYS 1850 FRENCH FIRE HELMET Out of the Pall, en Underotandlng of the Present ADotDohhy By JOHN VALTEllZA Of .. D•lty """"""" Was the farg off ered ,,.at Balboa's PussYcat Theater "pornography-pure and sim· pie" or a sexy spoof combined with a morality play? These were the characteriza· tions offered today tO the jury on two sex movies, ''Deep Throat" and ·'The Devil in Miss Jones~· which are the sUbject of an ob- scenity trial in ~arbor M~ Court. . ' Opening aijuments from both the prosecution and defense played to very few s~tors even though th~ films qrigin'ally were scheduled to be shown to · the jury in court todaf .1 • 1 • ' In his opening statemeni to the jury of six men and six women, Pussycat defense lawyer Robert i Trustees Eye New Par~ing .: · For Fesiival • The prolfbsed use ol El·Morro Elementary School north of , Laguna Beach •• a · perimeter parking lot during tbe ~978 sum· mer art festivals will be con· sidered Tuesday nicbt by Laguna Beach school trustees. The city has proposed that ·festival goers be permlU... to park free al the school. anc1 ride .trams into town. The plan is aimed at reducin& congestion in downtown Laguna Beach durina the busy summer months. !I approved, the lot would work similarly to a p~meter "park and ride" facility established last..aummer in Laguna Cad)'On. City officials s aid it was veo succesafuJ. The school board will meet at i :30 p.m. ln the Education Center, ·151iO Biumont St': l I McDaniel said ''Deep Throat'' is a sexy spaof and ''The Devil in Miss Jones" a morality -play. The southbound lanes of the freeway were opened al 8:"5 a.m. more than half an hour after the spill .. bbt the northbound lanes remained closed. Chief Saves Fire Antiques • The jury iS now schedUled to travel, to Balboa today to view one film before ndon, break for lunch and then see the other racy movie. • Deputy Distri'ct Attorney Tony Rackauok•s spared no enmity for the films and alleged flatly that what the jury would see are two 'filtD;,s, with asserted nimsy plots "wmch,string together one graphic sex 41.ct after another.'' "What you will see will be absol~ely unlimited closeups anct..&r8phic ·depictions of se• or· gans' and acts that oft.en don't even see:m. w be connected," th'e prosecutor wained.' · "It's nothing more Ulan hard· core pornography! That's it. It's nothing but sex for money and straight commercial exploita- ti .. on. McDaniel's statement to a jury· that took copious notes toot· a dif- ferent approach. He urged the jurors to view the films in a total contlxt and to understand the ~PORNO, Page AZ) Firemen began evacuating buildings in the area, but the evacuaUon was determined not necessary shortly afterwards, and ~ns were allowed to re- turn. Thief Hits Gift Shop Laguna Beacti Police to- day are investigating the theft of ceramic and crystal figurines vaJued at $2,238 from Country House Gift•.· 149.2 S . Coast llilltway. · The Jgift shop was entered by an intruder who pried a dead bolt IOck . The loss was dbcovered Friday by an employe. lln11eiled in Ser••on By LAURIE KASPER or .. a.uw .._._....,. "My hobby is my job and my job is my hobby," says San Clemente Fire Department Chief Ron Coleman. The difference is that his job involves protecting the present while his bobby has him dredging up the past. He collects old and foreign fire equipment and, along with seven others who have formed the Phoenix Institute, hopes to open a museum. "We're looking for a home for it, but we haven't been very suc- cessful yet,'' he said. Now, they have a building full of "the good stuff" behind the director's home in Corooa. Other items are sto_red in members' garages. Tb~ entire collection has never been together in one spot. Coleman, who is assistant director of the museum, said they have "walls flln " (close to 400) of helmets. Pastor · Says He's Gay ORANGE, Jiau. (UPIJ -But Hougen. 38, thought "it of Ille .Un\veraal FeU.,....hip of ·Some people said It took a lot of would ~a real discowit not to Me.tropoli t11n Community iuta for the Rev. Edward T. delll w!tli lbem on thl~ issue" Cburc6es. Hougen to unveil hiS bomosex.' beforele•vingOct. l. Although .the subject of uallty_Jn a 11ermon Sunday before Hougen,·• graduate of Harvard '. homosex'ualit;y.. is .. explosive and parfshioners. Univ e rs i t y a n d lT n ion difficult" .for eome~ be said in an ~en es.pressed their protest Theological Seminary, prepared intervieW ''I\_ i1 u issue more simply and silently by sta,ylng the conaregaUon ror his ''coming and mo/~ c:.cynmt11nittes and away. • • out" sermon in a letter to all 250 grou~ are belllll!t"A;''ce. . The minister of Central partshloners. Jn~ -, Houcen Confregatlonal Church, who an· Last week, Hougen. married told tho 1ltkin · e felt "a nounced hta resignation in June md the fath.er of two children.. particular ca tin& lo serve Jesus ''to pursue Dew forms of told church members he was • Christ with and th.rough the gay minlstry1" said be bad been en· candidate for pastor ot eommunitybecau1elamgay. OOU!;aceo by .. 1ome to leave the Metropolitan Community "This ls information about p""'b quietly. 0.ucrcb in Boston, a gay afllllate <See GAYS, Pafe A%) . I One, from Japan, is made of woven straw. There's another from East P aki stan, a country which doesn't exist anymore, as ·well as Greece, which hasn·t been changed in style in 2000 years. Others are · from the Vatican, European countries, Russia and, of course, the U.S. In addition to numerous badges, uniforms, models, toy fire trucks, alarms and even a leather bucket, they have about 150 fire extinguishers. "Some of them are really, for lack of a bet· ter word, flakey, ''Coleman said. Then, showing a picture of an 1850 Austrian pump which is in the collection, he said, "You just wonder how they didn't burn the town down.·· Coleman, who was formerly with the Costa Mesa Fire Depart· ment, started collecting when he just happened to see an old helmet in a junk store. He bought the helmet for $10 and has collected ever si nce. He merged his collection with that of Ray Russell , who was then a captain at the Laguna Hills fire station, and is now working in Corona, to exhibit in ru-e4hows. They formed the institute later "because people were giving us things wonh a lot of money,·' Coleman explained. Coleman said it is difficult for him to explain why he collects and hopes to open a museum so others can see the collection. The fire service, he said, has one o( the most colorful, dramatic hi1lories of any institu· lion. But it is not just an interest in the past which keeps his interest. "The beat way to come up with a modem approach is by un · derstand.ing the historical de- velopment of lt,'' he explained. Some of the ideas which are <SeeFDUilMAN, Pa10A2) ' I I · I Guerrillas Threaten, . Diplomat~ MADRID CUP)) -Palestinian guerrillas seized the Egyptian. embassy today and threatened to kill the ambassador and two Egyptian diplomats unless Egypt renounces the interim peace agreement with Israel by tonight. A spokesman for the guerrillas told UPI by telephone that five · Palestine raiders barricaded themselves inside the embassy and mined the building. "'The moment someone opens the dOO'I' or a window, the whole. place will blow up,'· he said. .l!lgyptian President Anwar· Sad.at held the Palestine Libera· lion Organization and Its leader, Ya&ser Arafat, pe rsonally responsible for the consequences of the embassy raid. an Egyptian official announced in Cairo. The official said the Egyptian leader warned he would lake "decisive measures" if the PLO and Arafat failed to ensure the immediate release ol the Egyp· tian ambassador and his aides. Jn Beirut a s pokes mant for . the PLO and other maJor, Palestinian organizations denied ·involvement in the attack. The guerrillas called their commando unit "The Group of the Falle n Abdel Kader al Houseni. ·• after a Palestinian leader killed in a clash with a Jewish group in 1947. • They demanded that the Egyp- tian peace delegation to Geneva leave the Swiss city by midnight without signing documents of the interim Sinai agreement negotiated by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger. SimU,ltaneously with the raid on the embassy, another band or about 50 Arab students occupied the Madrid offi ces of the Arab League, but they !alt. -...oluntari·' ly surrendered and reiecr.;ed two hostages, the news agency Cifra said. Egypt and Israel initiated the interim peace accord Sept. I, but their delegations in Geneva are now negotiating terms on ways of• putting the accord into effect. It widens the buffer zone in the Sinai Desert separating the two armies and calls for Israeli (See EGYPT, PageA2l Coast Weather Mos tly c loud y s kies Tuesday on the beach and 1 clouds breaking by mid- day to hazy sunshine in-1 land . according to the weather service. Highs 68 at the beaches to the upper 70s inland areas. INSIDE TODA l' Orange Co unty '.s Sea Scout.s, ba.sed in Newport Bea.ch , are .still going strong de$pite !heir lack of noloriety. See Page 87 l•dex ....... .. -~ ..... r' •• '-':;!:r. " ... ... ... "" . •• -.,.,, """"' " C'11i:.-kn " .. •-.n.1J1 ... •• --... -.. , ... _.,.. " ..... .... , ... _ o.-.,.,. c-w -Sytn. ,.,._,. ._. T•lttl•6----N- , •• .. .... •• •4·1 :ri .. •• I \ ' I l I I f l ! I I ~ t I I L/SC ! I t-Village Singers , I j I , r I Members of the Laguna Concert Chorale were among entertainers who performed Saturday during the Village Parly at iVJ<Jin Beach Park in Laguna Be.ch. The chorale ::;ang a variety or patriotic songs as a tribute to America's bicentennial. The day's events included family games, athletic events, fireworks and a beach dance . .Several thousand persons turned out . ' ' I I Fr-POfl(! ,,_, l 1 FIREMAN ••• I just now becoming accepted I were advanced back in the early 1000s. he said . Even technology hasn't given 1 the fire service that many new & advancements. An 1890 steam ~ powered engine could pump 1,000 • gallons a minute, the same as the 1 department's newest truck, he 1 explained. I An understanding of the his-~ torical and traditional aspects of I the job also helps one have a sense of respect for the pro- feuion, he added. He can even explain why a ' eplug is called a fireplug. It is because years ago, when hollow logs were used as water pipes, firemen would chop a bole in the log to get the needed water. Then, they'd plug the bole with a fence post. ..,_ "When they said fire plug, ,, that's literally what it was," Coleman explained. While fire science students can · learn from the collection, people generally seem to etrjoy brows- ing throPJh ''a hundred years of change"''"evident in the Corona 1., building, ~e said. , .,,. This might be; he suggested, becauae "every child that I know -.. ot wants to be a fireman at one . time or another when they grow I up," ·" .. ~ ,., .:: GAYS ••• ~··,myself that in the past I have felt ~free to share only with my family , nJand close friends.'' 1 Hougen, ordained in 1967 as a j .. ,united Church of Christ fminister, said, "'The only way a "Jiostile environment can be ;~changed is if people in leadership rol~ come out.'' °'"" The minister said he believes .. ~God is working through the gay h.community, "gathering this re- 1,,jected, scattered and frightened • ,.,,gt'OUP to ·help people discover ~".God's love is all inclusive, not ,..limited to those conforming to : ..... the 'American way of life' ideal." ' Luder Takes Over ~ BUENOS AIRES, Argentina -~(UPI) -Senate leader Italo uder has taken over as er president of troubled ~gentina, replacing an exhaust--ed Isabel Peron for a month - ... nd maybe lontter. = ORANGE COAST LJSC e = i ~ \II = • :a :a • • .. DAILY PILOT Marines Arrested In Clemente Hpldup San Clemente police held two Camp Pendleton Marines todaS' in connection with an armed rob- bery at a south end motel in . which two men were robbed, gagged and left bound in a .• bathroom. HIJACK ••• Leonard said that at one point two officers of a group closing in on the aircraft while Salomon was still inside actually climbed aboard but scram bled down when the gunman forced the two main- tenance men hostages to start taxiing the plane. Officers said that after Salomon stabbed the woman, he drove to San Jose.Jlospital, kid- naped Dr. Frank Weifels at gun- point, and sped to Reid·Hillview Airport, where he encountered a security guard and demanded a small plane and vilot. Police said that when Salomoni discovered no plane was availa- ble, he took the guard hostage as well and drove shortly after Jllid·. night to San Jose Municipal Airport, where he found two maintenance men preparing the TZ7 for an early morrung 111ght. Brandishing a .38 caliber re- volver, be took them hostage also and ordered them to get him a. flight crew, a gun and ammuni- tion. Negotiations between Salomon and the airport control tower began, with a maintenance man relaying the hijacker's demand by radio, said assistant San Jose Police Chief Jay Propst. Control tower workers immediately .notified police, who arrived at the scene within several minutes with sharpshooters -members of the Special Weapons and Tac- tical Team known as SWAT. During the negotiations, the security guard and one of the maintenance men escaped while Salomon was distracted, Propst said. The doctor was shot in the leg when he tried to escape from the plane, police added. Officers said the negotiations were in process for half an hour. They shot out the tires as the aircraft started to taxi down the runway "There was no possibility that the plane could have been flown," said police.Lt.. Don Tru- jillo. The stabbing victim lUlderwent surgery and her condition was described as critical. The doctor, ·who also was unidentified", was in serious condition after surgery. · Police said names would be re· leased after relatives were notified. Two Divers Burglarized A weekend diving trip to Shaw's Cove in Laguna Beach proved to be an expensive one for two Orange Coast College stu- dents. While the two men were diving, an intruder entered their car and collected $518 in cash ltom the victims' wallet.. 1lte lntruder 1ained entry to the car with a key that the men had ll«reled on top ola rear wheel, police said. Police identified the victims as Joanis D. Pretrlck, 1917 Church St., Co1ta Mesa and Daniel /\. Klmoa, 2112 Strathmoor Lane, Hunt1n11on· . Beach. Protrlck !oat $1• and Kimn~ $20, police 1&14. Galvin C. Dennis, 20, and An· dre Bailey, 19, were arrested by officers shortly after the robbery Friday a short clistance from the El Rancho Motel where the ban· dlts had struck. Both were booked for suspition of armed robbery and burglary. Police said the two victims in the crime lost $120 worth of pro- perty including $53 in cash and $50 in travelers checks. The names of the victims were not available from police this morn· ing. Police said it appeared the bandits had entered the motel un· it via a rear bathroom winclow and lay in wait for the victims to return. The arrests were· made after one of the victims slipped his bonds and telephoned officers. A general radio broadcast civ· ing a description or the bandits was put out and patrolling of· ficers observed Dennis and Bailey walking quickly along South El CarD.ino Real away from the motel. During a patrol stop of the men, an officer observed evidence which led him to arrest the men. Police declined ~ re· -veal what the evidence was. W el«Ung Class At Dana .High A welding workshop begins tonight through Saddleback College's1all quarter off-campus program. The introductory course, Weld· ing 100, will meet from 6 to 9 p.m. .Mondays and Wednesdays in Room 304 at Dana Hills High School. Registration for the course may be completed at the college or in the classroom through Wed- nesday. Instructor of the course is Ron Dull , an industrial welder and Dana Hills instructor. He will emphasize braze weldinR. cut· ting theory and the practical application to ferrous metals in. welding. fi'romPageAJ · EGYPT ••• withdrawal from the Mitla and Gidi passes and the Abu ~deis oil fields and the stationing bf 200 American technicians in the Sinai as peace monitors. The agreement has come un· der attack· from radicals in the Arab world, who charge that it ignored the interests of the Palestiniaos and the other coun- tries -Jordan and Syria - whose teritory Israel also oc- cupied in the 1967 war. · The Kuwaiti, Iraqi, Jordanian. and Algerian ambassadors en· tered the Egyptian embassy building to negotiate with the raider&. Police with helmets and bullet· proof vests and a dozen police vehicles ringed the building and blocked traffic, creating huge traffic\ jams in the downtown area. . Th~ thre• hostageo Included ECYPUao AmbauaclorMahmoucl Abdtl Ghaf!ar, Consul Mohamed El·ahaf!el Mtkkl, and Pl'ftl al· tache Mohamed El·aff'tli. The 55-year-old ambaHador told Britain'• Independent Radio News 1.n an interVlew, "We are J•thered In a room, 1ittlng tocether, <battlnJ nicely. They are not ol'fndln• 111 .• • ,:i'b•Y h.ayio expbhu In ..,.,.,,, oor· ner.•l ' P(J ty's . ' Afraid,.-. T ahloid ' LANTANA, Fla. (UPI) - Analysis or tapes made by miss- ing helr•s Patty Hearst shows 1be (l)' Jointd the Symbiooese Uberatjon Army against her will and (2) Is afraid the SL/\ Will ' harm her ii she comes rorward - if she i• still alive -according lo the National Enquirer. The weekly tabloid. in Its Sept. 23 edltion, sald former in· tellt1ence officer Charles McQuiston reached the con· clusion Miss. Hearst is an inno- . cent vlctlrp o( the SLA after be analyzed tapes with a ''psyc holo gical stress evaluator.'' The evaluator, which decidefi on truth by charting stress pat· terns in the voice and translating the patterns into graphs, was used to analyze five tapes made by Miss Hearst after her abduc- tion in February, 1974. In the tapes, Mi ss Hearst called her parents "Pigs" aud 1aid she had joined the SLA, but the Enquirer report quoted McQuiston as saying ·'her sup· posed conversion took place un - der extreme duress." "The PSE tells me that Patty was under extraordinary pres· sure 8nd she was appalled at the statements she was coerced into making," he said. "The FBI claims Patty has changed into a fiery revolutionary, but that's bunk. She was merely reading from a prepared script under command. The tests of the tapes show that Miss Hearst ( 1) is terrified and fears she will be killed. (2) still loves her parents and (~) ~as forced to participate in a bank robbery, McQuiston said. "1( Patty is still alive, she is either a prisoner or loo fh@:htened of the consequences to. come forward.·• PORNO ••• fine points of California's com- plex obscenity statutes. "You'll see a theater and films that have been shown inside of it. They are movies exhibited to adults who paid money to see them. No one was dragged off the street. No one showed them to kids, nor did the defendants pro- ject the films outside," he said. McDaniel gave a brief synopsis of each film, characterizing "Deep Throat'' as a humorous approach "to a subject that often could be considered very heavy.'' . Mc Daniel ~o.,ceded that the sex acts in the filrns are graphic indeed, but urged the jury to use comtemporary standards and strict legal int~rpretations in passing judgment. • J)ay to Atone Jews <:.ewbmte Yom Kippia-· s-,,ws ftlled te~ 8lld ~ Ille ~ · over today to mark Yorn Klw\lr, thi Day of Atone- ment, with fasting, self-e911lua!lon and repenUnce. The holiday, the mast sacred .on the Hebrew calendar, be&an at sundown Sunday u cantors chant· ed the Kol Nldre, a 1raditional prayer beseechlni God 's forgiveness for man's fallibility. One long blast of the sbofar, or ram's horn, endi the day-long worship thl5 evening. . Many rabbis st.reseed ID their sermons that the sacred holiday was one ot hope with the obligation to Improve the. hum an condition. Rabbi Ronald B. Sobel, at Tei;nple Emanu·El on Fl!tb /\venue, New York, stressed that the faith, re- ligion and heritage or the Jewish people "were bullt neither on the assumption that life la banal and absurd or human nature fallen and tragic." · At special services at Mount Sinai HospiW, Rtib- bi Joseph Zeillin said that the holiday was a "re- minder to put oneself in the position ot the deprived, the hungry and thosewhosufferedlntbeworld." Sun Breaks Throuifh; . . Good WeatherA.he'ad September, which has been a drudge up to now, turned normal today with sunshine along the Orange Coast. A spokesman for the National Weather Service in Los Angeles assured also that the weather wiU behave itself at least for the next few days .. "We are now getting into a ridge situation (high pressure) which should be with us ror the next four or five days,'' he said. Why were the first two weeks of the month so yucky, more like cloudy June than sunny Sep· tember? "We have had low pre- ssure which brought a lot or moisture !Tom the south and southeast,•· he said. Last we:ek's high daytimetem· peratures in NeWport Beach were around 67 degrees and low night temperatures around 60 to 62 degrees with the mercury Dana Driver Hurt in Crash A Dana Point man was . hospitalized with back and leg in· juries sustained early today in a traffic collision at t}\e intersec· tion of Diamond Street aDd South Coast Highway in Laguna Beach. Police said Douglu ~Miller, 26, of 33635 Halyard, Dana Point. was . injured when his small foreign.made sedan collided broadside with a vehicle driven by Vicki Eleanor Scott, 29, of Santa Ana. · ~iiller was taken to South Coast Community Hospital will: a broken leg and possible frac· tured spine. The woman was treated.for minor injuries and~ leased. droppingtoMdegreeo..,.nllht. "We have had an awful lot oC cloudiness.,'' the Weather man admitted, ••but now it lookl like we are going to get some 1un- shine." That means it will be in the 80s inland, and In the '108 aloag the beachell. Vendor Killed I At Santa Ana Ice Cream Cart , ' Santa Ana police are hunting today for a gunman who shot.and. killed a 62·yeai'-old ice cream vendor during a holdup Sunday evening on a residential street. A police spokesman said GeorgeH. DenholmofSantaAna was found draped over the st~r· ing wheel of bis ice cream tnick at about 9 p.m. n~ar theintenec· tion of Shelton and Pine streets. A re;sident told investigators he heard a shot and rBD'·out of his home in time to see a youn,g man with long dark hair and a mustache funning from the scene. . J• The witness told o(f\cers the man, who appeared to be carry-· Ing a pistol, Jumped into a Iate- model green sedan and drove away at high speed. ·"' Marine Assaulted A young Camp Pendleton Marine was beaten and robbed of $75 Friday on the beach near the San Clemente City Pier. David W. Moffett, 19, said be was struck from behind by three men and his money taken at about 9.p.m. • • • • Mariners gives. you up to a s1,soo tax de.duction this year..~ 1 •• AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA" -THE INDIVIDUAL RE- TIREMENT ACCOUNT. ' Mariners Individual Retirement Account is a personal tax~sheltered retirement plan. ''I RA·· was devel- oped by Congress to give you an effective way to build your own retire- ment fund. You can save as much aS $1500 or 15°/o of your wages, whichever is less, and your savings will be a tax deduc- tion during your working years. If your spouse works, your combined tax·shellered savings can be as much as $3000 per year, · Come In tp Mariners and start your own Individual Retirement Account. You ' II be saving tax dollars now and building a much brighter future. For more information, come in or call any one o.f our convenient locatlons. HERE"S HOW FAST YOUR MONt:YGROWS IN A MARINERS ''IRA '' ACCOUNT. ,ndtvtdual R••irtmMI Ac:cowtlS .,.. ,,,..,,,,,. ••rning 7~ per )'Hr wllfln plalced irr • 6-yHr~rtlt)N,.. Your 1nnuil )'/fl Is incr-e11.a ro 1 big. 8.o0"4 ""/!ff" fnl•rnr f1 addH to r/lff aeco11n1 011~ arid campoorided dally. Wlfh • m•11.lmum lndlvklu•I COll/tlbu/iofl ol s1soo each .,...r. ,,.,_,s how '/OU' fllOll•)' WIH grow: . . ' J WITH TAX WITHOUT """'. SHEL TEAED , .. MONEY . ••• SHEL TEAED FllOMTil AREA PLAN ..... OEFl!ARAL Syrs. $ 9,510 $ 6,730 $ 2,780 10yro. 23,5"0 15,750 7,790 ' 20yrs. 7•,&40 44,080 30,560 30yro. 185,550 95,030 90,520 'Ab0¥e 11our11 ere buctd on :ZS'!\ income bf"adlet. FeOeral f'99"let1on1 ,.qulr• a1t111entl•I l*'laltla for •rl)' wllhdraweta lrom cerlfllaite Kc:Ounla. . . • Mariners 9avings iii' and Loan AssociatlOn N....,.rt lnc.h (Main Qtllce) IS1SW•atcUff0r. (714) '42-«IOO New,.tta..dl (loy1IC.e C•n1et) 10241oy11d•Oc. (714)6'2·o6000 lo91i1n•h11<h 310Gl.nneyt•SL (714) 494·7506 (Ol'lHJNG SOON) .......... (l•l•ur• World) I 3820 hol l.oc:h llvd. (213) Sff.7626 • hffrlyHllfa 380 So. l~rly Dr. (213) $53-3000 ' I' I ' • •• More Sourees I .. Of School.A.id ll1SYLVJA POllTZt . "(L<ylil\asm..J Although scattered colle&Of have belUD to aiH l'Qt ,._ ticemep.t*~ or •~no-need'• scbolanhipe to attract top stu ... dent.a. few naUonal llrivate procrams award mooey for adllevtftlent alone. lliloot aeelt a camb!DaUoo of excellmce andDffd. • -AnllluslrallootslhePrelimln0!"7ScboluUcAJllltude Teat!Nattonal Merit Scholaubtp Quailr11111 Teat <PSAT{NM.SQTJ coopGmo<ed bJlbe'Collece Board ...SN•· ti Olla! Merit Scbolanblp alloo ...a ""ta Junlon ID about 18,odo blah • school• each October. SCbolanhlps can ranae from SlOO to Sl,500 a year for four years. See your counselor abo\lt partldpallna. -BJackstudentswbo I Money's Worth Wte the test a~ can compete for scholanblps of the N•· l.ional Achievement Scholarship Pro.ram for <>Ulstanclinl Negro Students, in addJUoo to the regular competition. WHEN YOU TAU THE PSAT/NM.SQT and eomiiteie a short questionnaire, you eet a bonus; on your re;trtraUon Corm, you can ask the CoUege'Board to include your nam.eln the Studc.nt Se.arch Service files. This service ii used by col· legea to send facts about new or special pi:ograms (includ- ing aid) to students with certain characteristics. -The N aliona!Aasociation of Secondary School Prln· cipals and the National Honor Society award tt.ooo scholanhips to qualified higb school seniors who beloof lo the Honor Society. Chttk at your school for eligibility~ · quirements. . Make a list of your qualifications, interests, objed.lves and talents. Then check directories and reference guides~ achievement scholarships that fit your needs. FOR PRECISE INFORMATION about special and career-related scholarships, get ''The Official Colle1e En- trance Examination Board Guide to Financial Aid tor Stu- dents and Parents'' (Simon & Schuster, $4.95). Your school library or financiaJ aid o(ficer may have a copy. Do not overlook these other private sources of aid: -National Organi:tations o{ which you already are a member. Many groups -4-H Clubs; Boys' Clubs, Jaycees, Junior Achievement-have small, specialized programs. -Professional career organizations-such as those re-- lated to health and nursing, law enforceme.Dt, enctneering, special education -offer aid to stimulate young students to enter their fields. Some even sponsor scholarship "eon. tests'' in which you can demonstrate your need. Get a copy Of the superb ''Nepd A Lift?" from th~ -'"mericap, Legion,. Box 1055, lnd.ianapolis, Ind. 4ll206 (~ J. . -Athletic scholarships are a well·known source of financial aid and so are grants to winners of beauty or talent contests sponsored by local, state or national organizations. Beware, though, of private promoters who, for a fee. pro- mise you a ••scholarship." : -LABOR UNIONS AWARD larae numbers or. scholarships to members or their children and many cor- porations offer scholarships to children of em.ployes as well J&.S to students '*ith no COJlK)ration connection. Check with .... your union and corporation. · -Civic. and fraternaJ organizations that sponsor icbolarships range from the American Legion posts or aux· .. iliary units to the Elks, Lions, Masons, Parent~Teacher As- .8ociations and DauRhlers of the American Revolution. While in most cases, themoneyisforchildrenofmembenor ibose living in the community, check each source. -MinoritiesoftengetheJpfromnationalorganiz&tions that offer scholarsh.i~ and/Or special counseling and refer- i'al services. 1 A few: ASPIRA Educational Opportunity Center, 216 W. 14th St., New York, N.Y. 10011 (Puerto Rican); Burea\l. d Indian Affairs, Higher Education Program, Box 8327, Albuquerque, N .M. 87108; League of United Latin American Citizens, National Education Service Centers, 400 First St .• N. W., Washington, D .C. 20001; National Assn. for Advance· ment of Colored People, 1790 Broadway, New York. N.Y. 10019; National Scholarship Service and Fund for Negrostu. dents, 1776 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10019; National Urban League, SSEast52ndSt., New York,N.Y.10022. . . . . -FAMILY ANCESTRY can be your key. Check ethnic organizations that would be appropriate to YI?~· ' Erotic Art Museum Flops Financially· SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Directors of .the International .Museum of Erotic Art say financial woes are forcing them . to close one of the ~rtd•s largest displays or sex through the ages. guess we were too· sedate to interest the people we thought would help us.•• "It"s a real shame. 1·m just sick about it," museum direc- t.Or Ted Mcllvenna said of the decision to shut down at the end of Septem her. MCILVENNA SAID that despite rising attendance, the museum had lost ••several Hundred thousand dollai;s·• because of high city property ~es and the failure of ex." peeled priYate donations to The museum, housed in a five-story downtown building, opened in March 1973 with a collection of 2,000 paintings, sculptures and art objects from Asia, Africa. Europe and the Americas graphically depicting · 2 ,000 years of human sexual expression. Mcllvenna said the art was lent from the private collec· tion of psychologists Drs. Phyllis and Eberhard Kronhausen. which be said was the largest of its kind in the world. materialize. HE SAID THE museum Is ! "We might have done bet-one of several projects t,,er if we'd compromised our sponsored by the Genesis ~nciples and tumed it into a Church and Ecumenical bfg sex show.'' Mcllvenna Center, a nonprofit religious Said, "bulwerefusedtomake organization which also ,Sl the kind of place that writes sex education pam· Otillated our spectators. I. phlets for medicalscboola. · Janice Epp, a manager of mµseum operations, said more than lS0,000 people had I Jrvin. e Fi'r_.. visited the museum and •t· . ......... tendance was "better than • · ever•• this summer. Doors :," cqw'red are Opell six days 8 week .lo a persons 16 years and older , and visitors ·are asked to •In a joint statement makea''donaUon''of$LSO. an! s. Cass, president of· He said the mu...,m had on Jndustrle,s, Joe .• o! paid nearly as much in city ertown. Mast.1 and property taxes as it took in rt~· Jasse, presiaent ol :from donations. leaving no mencs, Inc., of Woburn. fUnds for employe salaries, lfa.J\S., announced that fhe up)5:eep or renovation. Q~om erl cs J 9 b·ReadY. nufacturlng facility in 11e, has been acquired by con Industries. Jnc., or ~fomia . ~ All of tbe Job-Ready \mployees are remaining J,ilb the operation located at '!8731Hale Avenue In Irvine. •.I . . • Ll':O MURPHY, director or city assessment services, 'tald the· Erotic · Museum· dicln 't qualify for the tax-fnoe status given to many museums becauae ••rt·s -a com,metclal venture and not ope11 tree to the oubUc.'' ----· ------·- Monday' a Cloeing PricM · • --·----- ' 1115 NEW YORK. STOCK EXCHANGE ' • ,;.. &"iiMit SMf.. Xtr• ltK!GI • 11 • .,.,. \iii v ..... ,... 20 J ••• Yllf$l0r M • t7 ... ••• Z..lltCilrJ' .. • 1 ,,.. • •• z..o.ta •• .. 61: ,,..._ -=~• 1H .:..-:: ~ ..... .IZ lO d1 lfll+ "" • Gas Price Dip NEW YORK CAP) -Contlru!ntal Oil Co. said over the weekend that it is reducing the price of its gasoline by • penny a gallon because of ''com .. petitive conditions in the marketplace.'' Conoco thus becomes the first ma. jor to adjust retail prices since the end of federaJ price controls Sept. 1. • • • • • • ENTERTAINMENT • • • . . " J ., r I , • DAILYPILCT t Tonight~s TV Highlights KTLA (5) 8:00 -"Elmer Gantry." Shirley Jones won an Oscar for playing a role quite diffe r e nt from Map1a • Partridge in this 1960 drama with Burt Lancaste r and J ean Simmons. ' NBC (4 ) 9:00 -"The April Fools." • Jack Le mmon plays a businessman who tries to start a new life with a beautiful 1 woman (Catherine Deneuve ) in this 1969 movie comedy with Peter Lawford, Sally • Kellerman and Myrna Loy. ABC (7 ) 9:00 -Johnny Rutherford. This KABC s pecial profiles the r a ce driver who won the 1974 Indianapolis 500 after failing in his first 20 outings - because his father was dying of cancer . CBS (2) 10:00 -Medical Center. The I - ottty ""'Mitt ,..... Proof .. in Writing • Grallfwantdyst Has New Slant BylDLA.aY.KAYE determined ,•• Mr1. volv,e1 Personality °' .. ._," ... ...,. Deni.am stresses. ''What anaJ1,1e1 of atudents for Mary Denlian of I can detect 1imp\y 1111· 1e11eral teachers ID lbit NeWPQrt Beacb is pro-ceat.a a person'• POt.tn· Newport-Mesa 1chool bably the most sct!ve tlal. not bis actual habits cli1trict and schools ID pbo ,_ In o or attitudes." Loo Aoielea. g:.,,ty'.'f"""" r-e The other reuoo Mrs. "If I had my way, I'd G b I I th Denl1an continued '1« eo into eacb clauroom rap oana YI 1• e advance studlea ta limp-on the first day of'scbool study of analyzing l• that sbe enJo~ lbe and"'ckoutwhat··-"d handwriting to de· " ,,.,, .,, wvw termlne personality work. happen with eacb child.'' tr ··-· u ''Once I be1ln a lhe1aya. ti::d°i.~8 a::-:i•:i.~i:: er~phoanalysls, I just pie worldwide, acconl· can't put It down," 8"" FOR EliMPLt:, Mn. lngtoMn.Denlg•n. ~ Den.ican ••YI &be eould i concluding segment of a two-part drama about a doctor (Robert Reed ) who wants a sex-change operation opposed by Dr. _ G3.nnon 's fi ancee. Salome J ens, Dennis ' Cole and Gary Frank are feature<!. COAST GRAPHOANALYST WITH CHARTS II'• Not.Occult, Says Newport's Mary Denlgan But she estimates 'If I ••II •• pick out studeota wbo there are only about a 1,,. · •-• need creative ouUets, dozen cert 1 f I e'd ' ..,.., • 9• ..... who'!'1ght be maneuv.,... grapboaoa·lysts In eae• el-•r-I"' and devious, who Orange County. -au tint .. _ tliigbt need to be near lbe --teacben' desk to avoid MRS. DENIGAN else•-L' .. distraction or those , .. TV DAILY LOG Aerosol Inflators Recalled Saddle back Offers Vanety clalins that through her .......,...._~,needing physical ex· work. she can tell if two admits, adding that each ercise j ~o combat people are suited for one takes many hours of bypUactiVjty. each other. which work. -When asked about her children will have pro. M.rs. p.enigan is anac--acc~racy r.ate, Mrs. blems in acbool an..d live lecturer, whp de· Dema~.replies that her which occupations peo-livers three to fo'ur talkl-work is JUSt as accurate plearebestcutoutfor. a week to ~en 's, asanyottheJ:>ebavic:ral T·he mother of 10 women's , civic and SC!ences -wb1chshead· clilldreq, Mrs. Denigan ch.'ft'c,hgrou~. , nuts are l«:ss accurate Monday Evening SEPTEMBER 1$ uo O CIJ@ I]) ill,_ O l!1J CIJ ~@ ­ O til 1turu1 0 19 ([))(I} m JtW foetbaQ Notrt Dime vs. Botlon Coli.te. 0 lftuidt m Partrldtt F1111~1 Q)M111·IZ fE Malia TtrtMI r1f Star Trek m Eltdric Ce11pu1y m Little Rasa11 Ko111 Mofte; (Cl (2111) '1111 AprN FDtls" (com) '69 -lack lemmon, C.tll· 111ne Ot11e1M1, Ptler l1wlord, S.l!y Kelle1m1n, Myrna Lor. Ch11les Beyer. A s11CCesslul bu11ne"m1n dt· cldes lo chuck 11 111 ind be1m I new lite wnll 1 bt1u11lul woman. (6) The U11!owclltblet O WC s,eci•I "Johnny Ruther· laid" A prohle on !he man who .. on lhe 1914 Indianapolis 500, alter 10 pre'llllUS !1iJures, IJ.ecause he .. anted it tor h15 t1!htr •ho "'" 011nt of Cintef. CD Titt lol4 OMS ~J Mofle: (C) (Ztu) ·A11 ii A Jil11ftt't WM .. (mys) '61 -Dean M1r1in, Shirley Mad.line, Clil1 Ila· benson. IQ!l (j)) a> SarlMIJ to.st 'J:lO 6 111l (!) 00 lllallde When Maude decwl11 to run 10f !lit Sta1e Senate, Watter decides to run ror the neu - ttt swi111in1·1in1le1 bacflelo1 pad and it looks likt Maudt mtJ l'iln ~tr!Jdi out for the fourth ti1nt In tht marital sweepsl1ktt. ONen ffi f'~• f11tw11 "Oitd Yount" !R) ED Pt1111 ca.11 10:00 II (lll tfJ ()) Mtdlal Ctlller "Tht fourth Sel'' Cond. Or. Ganno11 has to dloose btl•Mn !ht wbhes of the woman he wants to marry and the desires ol 1 c;olle1111t. l!Oblft Reed, Salome Jens, Dtnni1 Co11 and Gary fl'lln~ 11:11tt1. @ Perry limn D w'illiam Shatner, * Doug McClure star in '"'0 "'""° """" BARBARY COAST 0 SEE MARLIN PERKINS 0 llrNrr c..1 "Clazy C.ts" Jo· * "MutuafofOmaha's, anna Miies ruts1s as 1 1mu1eeful WILD: kl NG DOM fl'Om1n who bfcdmu lnl'Olveil in 1 f · · c1!·1nll-mouse c1m1 wi!ll undw· WASHINGTON CAP> -The National Highway Traffi c S a f e ty Ad - ministration has an- nounced the recall of 35,000 defective and potentiallY da ngerous a erosol ''tire inflalor cans." The recall originally was announced last year by the manufacturer, T aylor Made Products Inc., of Akron, Ohio. However, NHTSA said it was reissuing the recall notice because the com- pany's action, in May of 1974, produced only limited results . Th e agency said it feared many defective cans still may be in consumer hands. The cans, sold tulder the brand name of "Ins- tant Spare,·· are in- tended for use as a porta- ble source of com pressed air for emergency tirE' inflation. The company said in its initial recall order that the containers con - tained a Gefcct a nd could explode if subjected to the heat or direct sunlight for an extended period of time. The cans have a mark- ing of Jl03 on the bottom and were originally sold for $1 .25 each. A w id e ra n ge o f courses-from landscap- ing to sailing-ar e being offered this fall by the adult education depart- m ent of the Saddleback Valley Unifie d School District. The classes, which be- ing this week, are open to all persons 16 and older. Registration will be he ld at the first scheduled meeting of the. class. Additional in- formation can be ob- tained by calling Asst. Principal Keith Sims. 837·6720. Here are some oftheof- ferings: Cultural AnthrOPOlogy-Htkl from 1 p.m. to t :..O p.m. TflurSdAy 11'9f115 In Room 523 •I Mission Vl•)O Hl(lh Scl\001. 5'>Kl•l tmpllaSI' wlll t119lwn to tflll Amerlcen lnd1en'S roll in !he evolullon<?f society. s.u1ng...;..s1u<1ent1 who h•vt """*• been .-111119 btlore will be~~ the r<IPI$ at 1 p.m. Tuesday niQhtS In Room )()(> I I Mh slon v 1,10 HIQll Scl'li:iol beQfhnlng ne•I Tues(l1y, Prac:· llc•I lnsl rucllon 1$ o llere(I on s.iurqy.._ Ulnclsc•Ot G•r<lenln9-Conlr.1tt« Urry Peterson teoacl>es homeowne" hOW to p!enl I ncl rnalnl&ln • blN!utlful lendsc•pt rrom 1 p.m. lo 1ap.m. ~· Oii¥ nl~ts In tha 1grlcult1.1rt PQr1 Ablof bulldlng t i Miss ion Vle lo High Sc-•· Homem~ Clothing-Five c lothing CllS"1 ,,, llelnQ Of!l!rtlll . "TKMI· q..s o1 Fltll,.g" meeu •• 1 p ,m. Tuts- <1111¥ nrams '"" "Sewing w1111 Knits" •I 1 p.m. Tnursd•y n lgh!J, tioth In Room Joe •t Mission Vle/o Hl9h Scl\001. "Sewl"g Wlln Knlt1" 11150 Is being ofl..-eci "' the ume time,,_.... dAynl911ts In Room '°8•1 El ToroHIQff' S<-. "BeglM lno S..wlng" Is otlenKI a11 ' ~ m Wld ~111 t<Wtr 111:9nt Jtff Clble (William IMt ~ ~ SllltnH) ind his par1ntr, casino T..-ffllnt owntf CUii ColwN11 (Dou1 Mt· Q MIOM $ llftlt: tc) (2!11) Clure). •• lltey ¥It !or pauwion ~.r. (wes) 'S3 -Cllartton ot • priceless 700·Ytlf·old Jeweled Night Classes I IHest~ ~l111Ct, Kai)' Ju11do. ~!n~~olen lrom the Chinese toftfn· lttl " '1111cllt Ctt SinMt ...., '"" iliHrtt hllll111 Rt""1: I (I) WIW WerW If Altl11al1 f.B Nth Cal State LB Mitri •!!'• Siio. • llJ Utdt lltrJ:I& ( l!}) Hit HIW ~ :«111 /H) Cl) (J) Rw. Rhor!1 is Fil• Ftllllrt i finally eo1ft1 It 11M 11111 lon1 10:30 0 C.-•itr fltdblc' awlited rneetJnl With Jol'I U•wift, IJil m .... Extends Hours ' f Marian (Joan Yin An:). blll 1fttr Ui) El liritt ! ~,:i:~~·~~~nS: tt:oolrn omm111m 11¥14 with Hhn. • 00 ~ ID (j) ""' B 0. IJ) llG llH " I "'' I · .... ,,. ..... iii liiin "1lii r111t Art ol Dlplo-6 stt. liftlt mw:(' The 111tlon'1 securitJ Is • Thi lDcJ Show j tllrul•llld by tbt lhttt of Jrictlal T)t as. .... Fii• • pa11111np from the 'CIP1tol 8uUdi111 M0111 Sqlllf I and 01R Westin (Dhicl McClllu m) (JJ) fJ) Ptter C111n must !ind out "1lo did it and how. ll"il ColllMI I Co-ittr1•art Crai1 Stmns IS W1l· fill.Tllt Killers : 1 ttr C.rlson, ueculiYt dirtctor of the tQ! ([)) Lfft All1ricln strf• f K11t ~~for wtllcll Westin JIOIU. 11• 5 -and Mtlilldf fet IS Westin's wile, .1 w Cill•l!I J4 I Kati. Ross Martin 1uem. Jl:JO 0 ~ (l) (J) C1S Utt Mme: f 0 ""Jt: (C) ll•'1 "Olltr la1try" (Cl '1ii(lif i'fltmr" (susp) '1(- (dra) '60 -Burt l.lncuttr, .ltan Martin 81lttm C.theri111 Burns, I I SilM!OM. Slliriey .loflts. Clluct Co!inors,' Donna Mills. I I I=.:: W~'J; ill~ •• ., '""' I ltfll llrbM Sllw DaviT'erenne' is 1uest host. · s.u..tr.11aic. on. MfneyaMMn: • I '-"-* 00 Mowle: "OptrlU.1 ems h· t TTmlArl Mlollt ~rla l\ltl cits" (drl) '69 -RIH'J' Ollhoun, f . A orD'iiii"'Oi'" 1ht Amttrtin son1· Rkh1rd Cotitt. t writer. O MysllfJ Thttb1 "Nilbtlall" I M" ~NlcWt 0 M!Wlt: {C) "Seerll tf tire r.. ~ l.Hp111 PrtlflMl pit RHr' (adv) '60 -J1l1 l!ich11ds, t l:.JO \11_1 (}:)~ Phyllis Und· P11« Falk, Martil 0t1n. , strom s "motllemood" Is 1tfid IO m,_ Mia.loll: h11poniblt lht lltlrt Whtn she kliMs 11111 htf (Qt;([)) lrwtti "CM"'11trices 0111htel"• (Uu G1nits111) s•iin& , \, outint has rautted ill II« bcomlnt IZ:OO 1-1 "f1Hen lllOll'l.ln! Tllisbl lo111 I Diii MIMI' ScrNll Tat Mlflt; "lillrt ' Hii S1Nt11 Pil- Mln Crllfll Sllew ltl" fwa) '66 -M11k Dimon. ~al SllUM Sllow lZ:lO 0 lfYl'O @ (JJ {))Al ii t11e f1_,, m M• ffM UNCLE II looks like Mikt aM Glor11 "' t ·OO D r..i. m TilH!Tow desti11ed to 5'*111 ttleir lilst ni1ht · ~ ' ... .., ffOlll Ille 811nkm In I ~se 1:(5 I) Mwlt: (C) "'ft KIH'tfll &try withod,I hut, lldlts, Of fllllttion1111 S,.-1•(" (COfll) '49 -l1r MilltRd, s:i= (t) (2'r) "'ltlld Mt 1111 Jean Ptters, Ptul Ooaalas. n..r.." (f.Ol'llJ '64 -Doris 0.,, 3:30 f) MIN: "t:ftl'Y Cid Shl!W It ROCk ltUdlol. Malllet' (com) '46 -C.ry Gnnt. Service hours at California State University, Long Beach have been extended to accommodate those stu- dents who attend classes . at night. Counseling , Career Planning and Place· ment, Testing, Veterans, Cashiering, Admissions, Recprds and tbe Finan- cial Aid offices will be open Monday through Thursday until 7 p.m. These offices will be open only until 5 p.m. on Fridays. THE STUDENT Af- fairs administrative of- fices and the Health Services office will be open until 6 p.m.. Monday through Thursday. Although the Housing Office closes at 5 p.m.,· students may then direct questions to the re- sidence halls if needed. The Learning As- sistance Center in the Library will be open from 8 a .m . to 9 p.m . Monday through Thurs· day. It is also open from l to5p.m. on Saturday. OQl(l)Q.'iit)•IC 11••••1 BebJDra11t,f11ncholTone. THE LIBRARY Is open from a a.m. to 9:30 l:OOO"flllt lalf" (111)'1) ·~MHJ' p .m. Monday through Tuesday Ellis, W.itet Pld1to11. Thursday 8 to S O.-mME MOVIES ~~!."!..,~,:.~.= p.m. Fridays8~~d 9 :30 I:JOQ(C)"1'llH*Pllffttllllf"(to111) a .. m. to 5 :30 p .m. on ·~ -.o.bie RIYIOlda. Cf.In Ml· Saturdays. ment Center will be operating a pilot evening program this semester. Its hop.rs will be 7 a.m. le 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 7 a.m. to 4:30 p .m . on Friday. It will take children through age 8 after 4 p.m. The Graduate Center will be open until 8 p.m. Monday through Tburs-1 day. THE ACADEMIC In- formation Center, Where students will be able to g~t special advising on their acade mic pro- grams, is in the process of development. Bill Vetoed SACRAME NTO (UPI ) -Gov . E dmund G . Brown Jr. vetoed a bill that would have allowed the Legi s lature to authorize the payment by the state of up to 2S percent of the cosL<i of r ecreation , fish and wildlife e nhanceme nt features of local flood control project s. Brown said, "In view of the mounting pressure for state funds, s upport for projects such as these must be left to Jocal gov- ernment except in ex· traord i n a r y cir· cumstances. ·· .,.,.......,. (**I 1'-•ii· i:oo;tC:=::-t11tc.r(fra)'&t-. Tbe Child Develop- •.,.._ "lllll; INrl' (CCIII) "5 MidlMI Sarrwlft, Eltlllof P1rMr. j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;r-------------.urn .,.,...,..__1-> llJ"""" llf ....,.-. <*I) '.ti '•1 -lbtlfl Collllltt, PttfY C#nt· -""' -!>'-r>'•· -................. , .. ,... 01<)""'1_1.,.im) -MldlNI O'-WillM (1fM,. '71 -Otlinb Wtmt, AMI F11ndl, Jw. ..... I ' # lois JllttlltlOl. ' CLASSIC GUITAR INSTRUCTION I LOSE WEIGHT OR MONEY BACK Ntw clinlcal tuts compltltd •I 1' n )or 11nl~t1sfl~ llospi!ll ,,Mthlt Ult ODRINEX "'" will llelp ~ lost """ .. ,.~, ''""" ODRtNtX cortlllns 1t1 •l'llUlna: f'lclrlflt' WJttr 11111 lllPPltua tilt 1PPftltt. [ntot' I~~ tood l'llMls 1 day n ll1t tlnJ 00..IHEX tlblll helps ,.. ....... ,,_....,_. Wit" fMet C61orlts.,. w.iJtll 11111 dowtt. &ft fl•"' H ft"' • ril flOt mOt ro6 lllfYtM.. • "'' -, '"' -·~,.. ... -~-MttiODRtNQ. -~·--THRlf Ty "" ' "' l•l ' .... •Ill p.rn. ThurM1•1 nights in Room 609 al El Toro HfQh S.CtlODI end Al 1 o.m. TllttClilly nighl5 In Room E·S Al L.115 All-lnltrrnedllll S.Cl>OOI. "$11tchary and Ntedl•(rl ll" in· s1n.oct1on IS •v•ll•ble et 3 p,m. W«J. 11Hd9¥ 1ftlf~ In Room SOl.tMi~ J1on Vit jo Hlgn s.cnoo1. Tht•l•r-8 1s1c ttchnlques !or beQll'lfllnQ 1Klon w111 IM' tAl.>9ftt from 1 p.m. 10 10 o.m. Tuesd•t nlQhts•t Ille M l1slon VltJo Hl9h School Llttle Tnt•t•r. A thHtt r worll$h0p wlllt bl ,,.Id for Mlv•nced 5tudeflts ~'I' nlQhtsbeQlnnlngStpt.11. Gr-tat 8oolls--Mesl•,_r111 '1111111 be Oiscvt.Wd HlftFMr-stv•• WedflftlMY nlQl'lll trom 1 p.m . to t :45 p.m. In Room 211 •I Ml1,lon \fl•Jo High SCl'IOOI. Movl•s--1..t•rn bow lo bleornt 1 clnem. critic In a cl•ls mHllng from 1 p.m. 10 10 p.m. Tue1d•Y nights In Room 10(•1 El Toro High School. wrtldlnQ t-nd Mtttls-Machh•VOOP ltctln!ques 1nd weldlfllil will be lAUQht from 1 p,m, lo 10 p.m. Th11rs.c1AynlQtlts •I El Toro High SClloOI Afld al Ille Stmill t1nwl T•sdey nlgl'ltl M LOI Al I'°' lnterrr-.dlei. School. ~king-BeglMlflQ Studttlb (tn l••rn the cren MOnday 11i9h1s ill! El Toro HIQll !>clloOl ll'ICI T1Jl50rt nl(ltlts et Mission Vlt}o Hl(ltl Sd'lool. Adv•nced •••slons •rt scl'loeduled lr'OITI Wtdl'll!S<lill¥ nlghtl •I MISllon Vlt}o ...., ThurMSilly t11Qltls •I El TGn;I All Cl•SMS mHl from 1 p.m. to IOp.m. Chor1te-ln$tr1,1ct1on In foreign Chor•I -•llS Is belflO offtrilld from 1 p,m. to TO p.m. Tue'14ay nights 111 ~ C-1 •I Los All$0$ lntermecllete "'-" Pl•nt Lor•-lnOOOr end GUldOor c;ontt>l,,.r (IAfdenlnQ will tie eapklf'td In '"'' C-M mNllnQ WectMIOey nlQhts bt'-fll 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. In ~oom 20, •l MlsSIOfl Viejo HIQh Scnoo•. · squeei'ed in two 18· Without fail there sat than pure sciences. month e'xtenslon courses least one person who ''Th.ere's seldom any from Cbicaao's Interna· comes up to ~e be~ore lightning bolts or won· tional Grapboan-alysis the lecture begins, sticks drous expressions on Society, giving ~er both bis palm in m>; face -~ people's faces wb~n I tell a basic and a masters~ expects me to read it , tbe_m w~:it I see m their degree. shesays. wntin&, Mrs. D~nigan She complains that says. many people sW1 believe . BESIDES HER lectur· "In fact, ~pie often handwriting analysis is mg, Mrs. Derugan does say to me, You know, part 0 f the 0 c -analyses for private you're tbe _ ~t person cult ... something compif'nies, scb?ol whos P!'11l 1nto wonb mystical or psychic. teachers and 1 n · fo~ me, when, they ~ ''I 'm enough of a dividuals. al1ze what Ive dis· fighter to want to prove Her ~ork for }:!rivate covered is true,'' she it's not silly or bizarre, .. firms is mcsUy in the adds. she says, in partial ex-ar~sofpersonn_e~. . r:.:;;;;~=~=iir::iii==, planation of wby she Bf analyzing their THE completed the advanced writing, I can tell wl)icb "'"'RL'S course. people are best to travel, m;A Graphoanalysis is a which should: sit behind a ~·O::.""" methodical process that desk an4 which are~~ ~..=.:c,.....n uses exact instmiments at meeting the public, ... T.....,...., ,.,. to measure charac-Mrs. Deniganexpl&µis. inaac.m..c.,w.-\. s-o;.q,, -,. --., """· teristics <>f tbe writing, Her work with the AND l4fAail such as slant, depth and scliools primarily in-1w.....,., ...... ee.t.,,._ spacing of the letters. .~;~ I 64Z-l7U I BY READING these measurements, a trained graphoanalyst can gain insight into a person's persona'lity potential. "It's the potential. oot actual traits, that can be 1-----------l (Ann Landers OJ ADVISES In the DAILY PILOT COLLEGE CREDIT VIA YOUR TV I . This fall, g0 to ,:ollege and don't leave home doing it. Orange Coast College and Golden West Ca11., are offering seven outstanding and 4iverse broadcast counes for callege credit, all feahred over Orange County's o-TV station, KOCE-TV, CHANMEL SO. . The Courses ~POIAl.T CAUFOltHIA. ISSUES. So YoU think YoU know YoUr state. This two-unit cOurse at both OCC and GWC will enlighten YoU further. It is an in-depth look at the state of the state, a 2~art series discussing nine maJor issues: aging, pollution, d~ abuse, racism, crJme and crimtnal justice. resoUrces and energy, poverty, sexism and education. Tune in to 'Contemporary C.llfQmia Issues" and stay in tune tO today. Starts September 15, 9 p.m., over KOEC-TV. Channel 50. Don't delay; register now. CLASSIC THL\'nl-THI ~IM DU.MA Is drama at its finest, presented by the premiere actors or Lon- don theatre. "C1assic Theatre-The hurrenitlea'ln Orama" features 18th. 17th and 18th century dremalizattons of international literature by such authors as Sh&kespeare, Martowe, Voltaire. lblen, Chekhov and more. "Quale Theatre Preview" is a 3()...njnute lntroductton to each PlllY, Providing you with more insight to the drana, its a<.rthor. the place of Its origin and the character of the times, Thi$ is a Course of true enrichment. offered at occ under Humanities 101 for two units and English 149 for three {please indicate on the registratiOn form after the CX::C box: your class preference by placing a 2 or 3). and at GWC. t=lumanttiM 132 for three units. Enroll tOday. 1ME ASCl!MI' .OF MAM. It's back. one of 'he highest acclaimed broadcast courses ever offered. Dr. Jacob 8ronow8ky hosts this 13-oert pnxfuctk>n which covers e two-million yaer span Of man's cultural evolution h'rr&- markable detail. OCC offers "Ascent of Man" for two units in Physlcal ·SClence 101 and Biology 101. Golden West College gives three units under Humanities 175. CHILD ROWTH At:ID DEYB.anen' Is a three-uhtt course soread over 45 half hours which covers a areat arrav of topics within six: broad eedions: Prenatal, lnfal"IC)', T~er. ~~-Middle Years and Adolescence. • The series is a must for both established and expending f~ll9f "Child Growth and Development'" Is a thre.· unit course at bOth Orange Coast COiiege (Human Oevetop,..nt 180) arid Golden West C.Oll&ge (Psyc:hoipgy 155). -' • ' WllTIM& FOa A llASON. II YoU have the thoughts but hlY8 trouble placing them on paper, this lsJhe coul"98 for yoo. In 30 segments, you will be taught loQJcal thinking, bale Writipg ekiUs and more. It is a proven fact that the · more successful members of our society are~ edept at ~en ahd written English. AM IMTIODUCTIOM TO l«IMAM11IS CSIAICH: THI 9UIST fOI t.aS0MAL .....,...., oonsidera the great works of ar;t through the ages aa they relate to the' prot)le!N ol ·man. The courte examines how, .at wkiely separated points in time. artists and writera ~ vi~ sig1;1lflcant aspects of man and his world. "Introduction· to Humanities" Is a three-unit oourse 'offered aa· Humanltkts 070 et 'Golden West 'College and Humanities 105 at Orange Coast Coll99e. · • ) ' 1HI CONSUMll DPH•tCI is a 30i*f course on penone1 ·nnance manegement. It COV8f'S five key topics: con-- sumer behavior, consumer's guide to buying strategy, consum&r finance. a conetructive aoproach to con- sumerism, and consumer life styte 8nd budgeting. "The Consumer Experience:· Is a two-tJnit course: Busil'l8$8 023 at Golden West College and Economk:o Ill at ~e CoaSt College. .,. ... ..... I ..... -""""""' hltohlaa -............ 111 •• of ... atlGa. Appi0Yodfor•ol11 •• 5"" ...... 1111 ...... ---"" • COAST coMMUMITY ('(!! i NIDISTllCT (:'of"..:"V:::~llGIS1DTIOM COSTA MISA, CAIJllOINIA, t26Z6 ~ ------------------------·--------------·---------TQll'OIM --· ~:.':.'°'~OltWllWlTY,-..wciMlllfftllllldNfllli!'lorl/I ' · IUASl..OU, a=~:=~· I 1 · I I I I 1 · I ~!.":..,,.... .... oc:ir....OoM110Dlltot • • _ QCNldO......a •-l------·t· ------o:::=O:.:.w,...... -----------"-... ~---·' l'lr!ll -...... Wflll ........... ·------,....-,,--::--'.'.'""': ·-·--------'-----a-..~ ... ._ ~ 0. y-Q1:Y ... Q~C.:.-,. I fMIOt C"""( ;ao•wCllltoMlia ·---------------' /. ______ _, .-.,._ ------"'"';:i,,....----1'~~;;... __ .. _-_. __ ..;;.11 ............. wtlile.,....... I I ' ' ' • Saddlebaek EDITION • I • Today'sCl .. liq N.Y. Steeb VOL 68, NO.. 2511, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAl..IFORNIA MONDAY, SEP'l'EMBER 15, 1975 TEN CENTS. San Jose ~nnlllan ,. Dies • Ill Hijack Bid SAN JOSB (UPI) -A pol/~~~ .....,,._*today &hot to deaur a II-year-old &WllDU wbo triad to bijact an empty Qriibent&I A!rllne1 127 Jet 1'ilh four hootaaes. His ~th ended a fCIOll"- bcur fampqe dui;lna Vlbidi be stabbed a woman he tried to rape ID*Jiome. Tbe ••nmu. lde.otifled b:r police u Fad s.1.._, ot :;.,. J-be1o.n the 1'o!n ol \11""« whea he entered Ibo _..onent ""'°" the Woman lived with her •hildren late &ulda:r nlChl and ftabbed ber In the been. , Tile dr~IDa nded several bcurl later with " 1in111e &hot ID tlw beod by th• •b@rps-at &liio Jooe MW!lelpal Aig>ort. With ~ al his boltal., oecaped and anothei woiiindea. Salomcm ...... <Ill, dawn ufle tried to 111e his rec ,m-'Din&1pri100.er ..u a ableld to "'IC8Po from tha plane and about 25surrouncl!nt police. "He had •areed to come OUt ol the plane blm1eU without bis --and with his hands up, .. said police Lt. Gary 1-ard. ''The11 ho emeried from tho plane with the cun In his band and a i...ta1e -an olrport main- tenance man -in front 9' bim, min& him aa a shield at .wipoinL "9n• of our offlcen, about 50 root aw01, shouted throe U-ontl!eaircraftwhlleSalomonwu Drop 7our weapon.' Salomon aUll ln1lde. actually ellmhed dlcln'tanawer. He blpn topoiat aboardhuttorambled-wh<!n tho IUd at the ofn .... wbo wes the1WJin&D£oreedtbetwolDaln-•bOatin1 to him. TIMI olflcer tmence men bootaaes to start bellanto ruaawa1. Bul-Clfour laxllnltbeplane. *-hbolen with a W...,.... Orrleer1 1ald that after •-weapon fl.red tho slncl•' Salomco stabbed the-. be shot from behind .. nother •• drove to San J-JfoQltal, llid- alrUner,andS.lomonchoppecL" Daped Dr. l"ranlt Welrela at IUD- i:.-ard said that at -point Point. and sped to Reid-HiUvi- t-con of a'"°"' clGlblt ID Airport, where he encoun-a ' , 1eewity 1uard, and demanded a 1mall olane and ollot. l'l>Uce Hid that wbeft Salomof" discovered no plane was avail .. ble, be took th• 1uard -.Ce u well and dzove shortly alter 11114- nlcht to San Joae Munl<lpal Airport, where be found two. malnteaance men ~ tl!e m tor an earlY marmna ru.-. Brandl1hln1 a • .aa caliber re- <See ID.JACJ[, Pace .UJ Eg assy Seized _ q..,..,m 1'f,rit British Premier Harolci-Wilson (left) greet.I Vice Presi- dent Nelson Rockefeller at door of Number IO, Downing street when Rockefeller arrived for lunch. Rocky is on a I one-day goodwill 'Visit. --~------ \ - 1 Were Sex ·Movies .Porrw or Spoof? By JORN VALTEllZA that what the jury would see are Of .. ~,,........ • two r11ms witb asserted flimsy Was the fare offered at :,, plots "which string together one Balboa's Pussycat Theater gr8pbicsex act after another." ••pornography-pure and sim· ",Wliat you wi~ see will be pie" or a sexy spoof combined absolqtely unllm>ted closeups with a morality play? .. and graphic depictions ol sex or· These were the characteri:ta-gans and ads that often don't lions offered today to the iury on ' even seem to be-c<S~efled. '' the two seX inovies, ''Deep Throat'' proeecutorwarned. and ''The Devil in Miss Jones" "[l's nothinc more than hard· which are the subject of an ob-core pornography! That's it. It's scenity trial in Harbor Municipal nothine: but sex for money and Court. sti:aight commercial exploita- Opening arguments from both lion." the ·prosecution and defense McDaniel'g statement to a jury played to very few spectators (See PORNO, Page AZ) even though the films originally ~ , wer~ scheduled to J>e •liowni'to . , the jury in court today. • -'.l ! Dir l In his opening stlternent to the air ec Or . jury of six men and six women. • 1 • Pussycat defense lawy-er Robert Talk SACC McDaniel said "Deep"TbrOat'"ls · -8 'lo · a sexy spoof jlD.d "1'be ..Devil in Miss Jones•• a morality play. The jury is now scheduled to travel to Ba1t>08. ·today lo view one film before noon, break for lunch and then see the other, racy movie. Deputy District Attorney Tony Rackauckas spared no enmity for the films and alleged flatly Robert J . Bresnahan, Orange Count~ avi;ition dir~r. will be the guest speaker Wednesday at the ceneral meeting "Of the Sad- dleback Area Coordinatin& Coun· cil. Bresnahan will discuss details of the proposal for joidt civilian-- military use of the El Toro Marine Q)rps Air Station. -1be meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the community room a\ People .. s Federal Savings and Loan. 23688 El Toro Road. El Toro, Lagun~ Hills and Mis- sioh Vie}o residents are invited to attend the sessidn. In Siriai -Pact Lethal Chemical Spilled LOS ANGELES !UPI) -A truck spilled 150 gallons of two chemicals that combine to form a poisonous gas on the Hollywood Fr-eeway during the rush hoqr,to- day, tying up traffic foe nearly an bcur. Five fire company units washed down the chemicals, muriatic acid and chlorine, and California Highway Patrolmen clGsed all lanes of traffic ID both directions ·and nearby surface •lreeta- lb!ab hour tntflc ...... to a IUllt in the bW-~ .... Uonand cars backed up'formore than a mile along I.he &eeway. The two chemicals, being de-_ livered for a swimming pool sup- ply company, combine to form phosgene, a gas used during World War I. It attac)Qs the lunas and can cause death. . The spill occurred when tbe rear doors of a semi·truck and trailer rig popped open and the li- quid spilled onto the road-way. The driver, Michael Hastert, about ZS, suffered chemical bums in attempting to close the tnack doors to prevent more spillage. _He was rushed to a nearby ho6pital for treatment. A fire official said the gas cl· ings to the ground and does not (See POISON, Page AZ) Drunk Charge H its Sen.at.or SACRAMENTO !UPI> -Sen . John Stull (R- Leucadia), was arrested on a drunken driving charge after his car struck a freew•y guard rail on his way home from the fmal session of the 1975 Legislature, the California Highway Patrol reported today .. A spokesman said Stull was arrested Friday about 11 :30 p.m., ·following a re- port his car struck the center divider on Jn . terstate 80 east of NewcaS· tie, a Sierra foothill com- munity about 25 miles east Of here. ·oay to Atone Jews Cel.ebrq,te ¥om Kippur . . . . Jews filled temples and synagogues the world over today to mark Yom Klppur, the Day of Alone· ment, with fasting;self.evaluation and repentance. The holiday, the .most sacred on the Hebrew calendar, began at sundown Sunday as ·canton chant- ed !lie Kol Nidre, a traditional prayer beseeching GOd's forgiveness for man's fallibility . One long blast of the shofar, or ram's horn, ends the day-long worship this evening. Many rabbis stressed iii their sermoM that the sacred holiday was one of hope with the obligation to improve the human condition.. Rabbi Ro11ald B. Sobel, at Temple Emanu-El on Fifth Avenue, New York, stressed that the faith , re- ligion and heritage or the Jewish people "were built neither on the assumption that life is banal and absurd or human nature fallen and tragic." · At special servi°"" at Mount Sinai Hospital, Rab- bi Joseph Zeitlin said· that the holiday was a "re- n'UIMr ~ Pld'Clllaoelf la thiYpoeltlon of the deprived. thebuniryandthoeewh9slltferedlntheworld." Laguna Bills Bigla Trustees Scan EIR . -. For Valley School Trustees of the Saddleback Valley Unified School District will meet at 8 o'clock toolllht to review an environmental inspect study for the district's newest hi&h school. Board, members will discuss the study by architects Porter J . Jensen and Partners in the multipurpose room of Los Ali.sos lli&h School, 25171 Moor Ave., Mission Viejo. The study recommends that a negative declaration be filed in lieu of an environmental impact report for the South Laguna Hills campus. To be completed by 19'n the school will house a total of 2,200 studenta on a 4&-acre site in 'the future Aliso Hills Planned Com- munity near Alicia Parkway and Paseode Valencia. Although it will be bounded by Leisure World on the west side, the architectural consultants say a greenbelt between the campus and the retirement community will prevent any detrimental im- pact. Members of the governing board also will be asked tonight to approve schematic designs and drawings for the school's first phase of construction. The cost of Phase I has been estimat- ed at $5.9 million. (See SCHOOL, Pac• AZ) Mission Viejo Days Kickoff Wednesday Residents of MiSsicm Viejo are gearing up for Mission Viejo Days, a five·day annual com· munity festival climaxed by a community celebratioo Sunday at the golf course. present its annual "Town and Country" dance, featuring con~ temporary and square dancing at the Montanoso Recreation Center. He was released on $375 .jail, authorities said. -Stull was the sixth legislator, and the second senator, to be arrested on a drunken driving charge this year. The events begin Wednesday night with volleyball, ping pong, ,, softball and bridge competition, the f"mals of which will be held on The dance will ~d from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. ~ ~n music of ''Flax'' and the Rambling Rogues '' with caller Ernie Watson. Tickets, priced at $5 per couple, are available at all Mis· sion Viejo recreation centers. · SUnday. On Saturday night the Mission Viejo Activities Committee will Ve ndor Killed At Santa Ana IceCreamC~ · Santa Ana police ar'e' bunting toda9 ror a cun"IDan who sbotand killed a 62--year--old iCe.-cre8m vendor during a holdup.Sunday evening on ·a residential street. l!n1'ei~ Ser•en Pastor Says He's Gay Sunday's activities at the golf course be&in at noon and include log.awing, tug-of-war. hole·in · one, watermelon.eating, horse shoes and foot racing competi- tions. A police spokeam•n said George H. Denholm ol Santa Ana was founcf draped over the steer· ing wheel of his Ice cream tnick at about 9 p.m . near the intenec- t.lon of Shelton and Pine streets. A re,ident to)d jnvesUgi.ton be • heard a shot and ran out of his home in lime to see a young man with long dark hair and a mustache running from the scene. The witness told offtcers the _ man, who appeared to be carry-· Ing a pistol, jumped Into a late- model 1reon sedan and drove away at bJCl11peed. ORANGE, Mass. (UPI) Some people said it took a lot ol eut.s for the Rev. Edward T. Hougen to unveil his homosex- uality In a sermon Sunday before parishioners. Others e:11preg,ed their protest simply and silently by staying &W8)'. • The tniniater of Central Confregational Church, who a.n- OOUDC.ed bis .reai&n•tion ln...June ''to pur1ue new forms of ministry," ,said he bad been en- COW'a&ed ~y some to 1ea\.e the pluiah quietly. - But Hougen, 38, thought "It would be a reaJ d.lscowlt not to deal with them on this i.sst>e" before leaving Oct. 1. Hougen, a graduate of Harvard University and Union Theological Seminary. pr-epared the concre1ation for his ''coming out'' sermon in a letter to all 250 pariJhione.r1. Last week, Hougen, married and the-father of two children.. told church m embers he wu a candidate' for paalor o( Metropolitan Commuo._it.J Chucrch in Boston, • lty afflllate I " of the Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan Community Churches . AlttiO~llt the subject of -.kuallty u "eirphiolvo and ai.Mcult'' fOr some, he said in an interview, ••1t ls an lslue mc.we and more coMmunittea and IJ'OUPf are beg1.ru!Jng to face .. In his sermon Sunday, Houc:en told the coaar•1•tion be foll "a partlo:ular ~allig to serve Jesua ChJUt 1"IUI -aod throu&h the IBY . community becauae I am l&:r- j 'Tbi• la infQJ'maUon about (Se.GAYS. PaP All ,\ Alto scheduled are jams and Jelli .. and baked-goods judging, volleyball and badminton com· petition, and a beard and must.ache contest. · several booths will be set up at the loll course displaying arts and crafla and olfering refresh· ments including bot dogs, beer, ice cream, snow cones, watermelons . pickles a nd balloons. For the kids the Rancho Viejo Junior Womans Club in coopera- tion wltb the Mission Viejo Wom~a Club will offer a series ol'£.hl\dren'sactivlties. Tbey include sack raca, bu~ (See FESTIVAL. Paio Al) otest • • Guerrillas Threaten; Diplomats ' MADRID <UPI) -PalesUni~ guerrillas seized the E&YPUaJ>· embassy today and threatened to kill the ambassador and two E1yptian diplomats unless Egypt renounces the interlrp. peace agreement with Israel by tool&ht. A spokesman for the guerrillas told UPI by telephooe that five Palestine raiders barricaded themaelvea i~ide the embassy and mined the bulldlng. "The moment aomeooe opens the door or a window, the whole place will blow up,'' hesa14-, ~gyptian President Anwar Sadat held the Palestine Ubera· tion Organjzation and its leader Vasser Ararat , personaJJ/ resporu1ible for the consequences of the embassy raid. an Egyptian official announced in Cairo. The official said the Ee:yplian leader warned he wouJd take "decisive measures" if the PW and Arafat failed to ensure the immediate release of the Egyp- tian•mbassador and bis aides. In Beirut a spokesmad for the PLO and other m&Jof'. Palestinian organizatioo.s denied ·involvement in the attack. The guerrillas called their commando unit ''The Group of the Fallen Abdel Kader al Houseni," after a PaJestiniaft leader killed in a clash with a Jewish group in 1947. · They demanded that the Egyp- tian peace delegation to Geneva leave the Swiss city by midnight without signing documents of the interim Sinai agreement negotiated by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger. Simultaneously with the raid on the embassy, another band of about 50 Arab students occupied the Madrid offices of the Arab League, but they later voluntari· ly surrendered and released two hostages, the news agency Cifra said. Egypt and Israel initiated the interim peace accord Sept. 1, but their delegations in Geneva are now negotiating terms on ways o(· putting the accord into effect. It widens the buffer zone in the Sinai Desert separating the two armies and calls for Israeli (See EGYPT, Page AZ) Coast Weather Mos tl y cloudy skies Tuesday on the beach and clouds breaking by mid· day to hazy suns hine in· land, according to the weather service. Highs 68 at the beaches to the upper 70s inland areas. INSIDE T ODAV Orange County'.s Sl!a ScOt.1ts , baaf!d in Nf!WpOrl. Beach,. ore still going atrong Mapile their lack of notoriety. S..Poge87. -.. t.':'M!:r. -...... a-w• latlex .. •• .. •1•11 .. •• . .. .. M ••• --·--........ _., •• •• .. ... . ... a:: J -•• .. At1 1 A< I ... ..,__ ____ __,,I I I I • ...... ' SB I _,.. DAILY PILOT f --Mond!)', S-et•mb9f 1&, 191& " ·F•r4*rd 'l'f•e Alcohol 1 Sewage .Fouls Troubl,es t ' I I l ) I • l • • • . • . • . • . t . • • i ·aementeBeach· Treated • Pickers Pirkin' Don Durham of Long Beach, who has been playing bluegrass guitar since 1928. tunes up with Stuart Duncan, 11, Vista, a relative newcomer, who already has been By JACK CHAPPELL Of~oetl'"""...,, A mile of San Clemente Beach north of the pier wu clooed toda1 and over the weekend when. raw sewage ~bed from citY aewera. streamed> across the sand and fouled the ocean,Saturday . · Ltte1uard Ca11t. Sheridan Byerly ordered the beach ~looed In the vicinity of the pier lin<I tbe Unda Lane Weauard tower when the foul·smelllna 'fiuid fiowed froDl a storm drain near there. · Later, the beach between tbe pier and Avenlda Eatacloa, about HIJACK ••• IMllY"""' '""""" ..... ,.,,,. votVer, be ioc>k them hostage also piCkin ' three years. They compared notes during the weekend at big bluegrass music bash in Costa Mesa. aJ1d ordered them to jet h1Jn a . flight crew, a 1un and ammuni- tion. . Nesotiations between Salomon and the airport control tower began. with a maintenance man relayina the hijacker's demand by radio, said assiatamt San Jose . Pallce Chief Jay Propst. Control S " · B ks Thri h; tower workers immediately Un P~Q 'Oii~ • .notified police, who arrived at • c;;. , --O ' the sc~ne within several minutes with sharpshooters -members a mile north, ,.., .eloNd·....., • Alcobollct ean find -belp more.raw 1ewage alul.ced.from a fortbelrproblemt b)tfoc*ln1lato sewer outlet there. a different glau: the -_. Byerly said sewaae v!sible In of the Saddlebaclt Oomanudi7 the surf Sun~ay ~-by ~Health CliDlc. lhll momln1. The Oraap Ccuaty The clinic, located In a 111111-of Health D?:artment ba1 beeD' · Nlialon Community Hoepltal ~tu."~.~ I:~ II 2708 Puerta. Real, bu been otter'. pendins P are ins counselinf and tnllmmt for capt. Jiyerly said he lntpedecl ' aleobolle1 for about three the1pill'attheE1taclenloW<lr. llljlDtba. • • "It wu fiowlnf bedly at tb.t !bcethatUmelthaoPIV'fldtd Ume, very rapi'1!y. The guUd eerv!cea to apprmdmNIJ 90 there said It bad been aushlns-ellmts each J1f -~ ..,. that th1I Wll only a trickle oom· cordlaitohllftnandel~ pll'lldtowbatlthadbeen-~ • to my arrival," Capt. B1*<b' Treatmf,Jlt eonalata of ...., • aald. . bulatqry 4etoxlfleatlon ,.itteh The Incident la the third Um• Jll81D8 eulnf withdrawal polns this summer raw aeweio baa with 'mild fraot'J,'!llaen ancl fouled tho beach In Sao ~p804!amily IW• . Clemente. J -· The waten off 'tbe area ' Tbe fam'll1 a~b b between the pier lllcl ut.""•"' lltrtlHd bee'luae " m af· headquarters were c1oa.d7f.; r~ evuy member of the fami· about a week durlnf AQ1111t . ly," accorcllDf to Carole becauseofaewaiepollution. < ; Neustadt, vea coordinator for City offlcial1 lncludlnC City tbe Saddle~clt Clinic. Manaa:er Kenneth Carr and of-ficials of the sanitation depart-"Oftell mtmbers of the family mentwerenotavailableforcom-support the diaeue,'~ 1.,.S Kra. menttoday. Neu1tadt, pointl.nf out that An uncoml!rmed notation In a persona frequently turn to tbe pollfe report -bout the Incident = u a IOl~on to fllllill;pro- lnd!Cated a faulty sewaa• pump • • In the Linda Lane,sewaae llft ala· "R'a one of Ute'• mare Hrioos Uon wu to blame for the 1P111. en.es and It euta acnes all IOC!o. Pump failures two tlmet bolore ecoD1miclevela,"lbesald. l I ~ School authoriti 1 to build the yet unn ed. campus ' in two phases, each o which will Good W.l'eatherAhe-J :c:~~=~0~:~.:r. T•c_-"' t · (U,l, During the negotiations, the tlon•ccoun. led for th~ prm-pollu-StaUltlcallY onlt one -t Capt. Byerly said llUll'dl bad of all alcoho1le1 are on lldcl row. little trouble J<eeplnl beachcoen The re1t of them wear aulbf and from the water, butonlyaaparce ties and.could be anywbore, in- crowd was on band over the cludlnll the affiuent Saddiaback · security guard aod one of the • house an estimated , stu-September, which has been a ' dents. . . _!trudge up to now, turned normal ~the~ actions sc~ed!-lled for t~ sunshine along the torught s bo~r.d meet1nginclu~e : OrarigeCoast.-- --: An additi~n and r~~ode~ng A spokesman fo the National 1 proJect at ltfission V1eJO High Weather Service in Los Angeles School and interior panel addi-assured also that e weather tions at El Toro Higk School. will behave itself at 1 ast for the -A construction contract next few days. award ~or the Ro!1ald W. Caspers "We are now getting into a : Memo~al Aquatics Center at El ridge situation (high pressure) • Toro High School. Trustees may which should be with us for the -not award the bi~ tonight nextfourorfivedays,"hesaid. because the low b1d~er .w~s Why were the first two weeks $170,000 above the d1stnct s of the month sO yucky more like estimate. cloudy June than s~y Sep. - A reque1~ by Supt. Ri.~b~ tember? ''We have had low pre- Welte for a 11gnatur~ facsimile. ssure which brought a lot of i-at.amptoproceaarouti.nepapers. moisture from the south and 11. -A request by teachers that southeast '' he said. tb':Y be.given the o~ion of being Last week's high daytime tem· paid twice monthly mstead of on-peratures in Newport Beach ly once a month. were around 67 degrea. and low " , night temperatures around 60 to 82 d_e.,rees .with .. ~ mercury dropping to 54 degrees one night. 0 ,\V elrung Class . ,!\t Dana High 1: A welding workshop begins llf.onigbt through Saddleback rneonege's fall quarter off-campus '~uam. ' The Introductory course, Weld· ring100, will meet from6to9p.m. .Mondays and Wednesdays in ··Room 30( at Dana Hills High ""School. Registration for the course may be completed at the college ·or in the classrooJD through Wed- . nesday. Instructor of the course is Ron Dull, an industrial welder and · Dana Hills instructor. He will emphasize. braze-v.·elding, cut- ting theory and the practicaL application to ferrous metals in,. welding. ' . 'Meditation Taught An introductot'y lecture on transcedental meditation will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the community room of tht" Home Savini• building, 23861 El Toro Road in El Toro. Additional in· 1 formation on the meeting or on ; meditation technique is availablt" by calling the International , Meditation Society at499.2738 .. ORANGE COAST • •• DAILY PILOT "We have had an awful lot of cloudiness," the weather man admitted, "but now it looks like l.ag11na Hills Resident, 72, Rites Slated Funeral services will be held Tuesday in Beverly Hills for Laguna Hills resident William Armstrong, who died Saturday at Saddleback Hospital. He was 72. Dr. Armstrong had worked 45 years as a dentist in downtown Los Angeles. Born in Toronto, Ont., he came to California 54 years ago. He lived two years in Laguna Hil.J.s . Dr. Armstrong was past presi- dent of two Los Angeles service clubs, the Twenty-Thirty Club and Sertoma, as well, as the· Los ·An~ele!t Dental Society. He was a mem~r of the American As- sociation of Orthodontists, the American College of Dentistry and the International College of Dentistry. He was also a Shriner and a Mason. He is survived by his wife, Miriam, of the family home, 5243 • ·Duenai:t; by two daughters, Ann Tumacliff of Sacramento and Susan Armstrong of Northridge; by two sons ... Tames Armstrong of Chatsworth and John Armstrong of Thousand Oaks; and by ten grandchildren. Tuesday's servtt'~ will be held at the Beverly Hill~ Church of Religious ScienCe, William Hart and Clifford Tweter presiding. The family requests that memorial donations be made the Memorial Fund of the University of Southern California College of Dentistry. Funeral arragemellls are be" Ing made by Pacific View· Mortuary in Newport Beach. Fl'ftlP11geAI we are going to get some sun- shine." That means it will be in the 80s inland, and in the 705 along the beaches. EGYPT ••• withdrawal from the MiUa and Gidi passes and the Abu Rudeis oil fields and the statiooini of 200 American technicians in the Sinai as peace monitors.· The agreement has come un- der attack from radicals in the Arab world, who charge that it ignored the interests of the Palestinians and the other coun- tri~s -Jordan and Syria - whose teritory Israel also oc- cupied in the 1967 war. The Kuwaiti, Iraqi, Jorda.Dian and Algerian ambassadors en- tered the Egyptian embassy building to negotiate with the raiders. Police with helmets and bullet- proof vests and, a dozen police vehicles ringed the building and blocked traffic, creating huge traffic jams in the downtown area. The three host!llles Included Egyptian Ambass8dor Mahmoud Abdel Ghaffar, Consul Mohamed El·shaffei Mekki, and press at· tache Mohamed El·affifi. The 55-year-old ambassador told Britain's Independent Radio News in an interview, ''We are gathered in a room, sitting together,, chatting nicely. They are not offending us · •.. They have explosives in every cor- ner.'' FroMPageAI GAYS ••• mysell that in the past I have fett· free to share only with my family and close friends.•• Hougen, ordained in 1967 as a Unit~d Church of Christ minister, said, 1'Tbe ooly way a hostile environment can be changed is if people in leadership rolescomeou,t.'' The minister said he believes God is working through the gay community, "gathering this re- jected, scattered and frightened group to help people discover God's love is all inclusive, not limited to those conforming to the 'American way of life' ideal.'' Jlf'09PageAI PORNO ••• that toot copious notes took a dif. ferent appro,acb. He urged the jurors to view the films in a total cootext and to understal)d the fine points of California's com- plex obscenity statutes. "You'Usee atheateranam.,,. that have been 1hown inside of it. ¥ES1'IVAL. • They are movies exhibited Ao adults who paid money to . see them. No one wu cit aped oft the street,, No one showed them to kids, nor did the defendants pro- ject tbe!ilms outaide," he said. ble gum blowing contests, balloon popplnc and various re- lay events. maintenance men escaped while Salomon was distracted, ProPSt said. The doctor was shot in the leg when he tried to escape from the plane, Police added. Officers said the negotiations were irl process for half an bou.r. They shot out the tires as the aircraft started to taxi down the runway "There was no possibility that the plane could have been flown,'' said police U. Don Tru~ jillo. · The stabbing victim underwent surgery and her condition was described as critical. The doctor, who also was unidentified, was in serious condition after surgery. Police said names would be re-- leased after relatives were notified. Stereo Gear Stolen A burglar broke into a Costa Mesa apartment shared by two roommates who were away at a party Saturday night and stole stereo sound equipment with a $500value. Richard F . Brown and Curtis N. Johnson, of 799 w. W'tlson St .. told police they lost sound com-· ponents in addition to record albums and a clock radio. weekend. . Valley. , "People complied rather re-Their aveiafe aae In Orange adlly when we told them tbe pro-County la 32 for meo and ·:19, tor blem. There were a few 1urfen womesa, P9iliilD& to the fact.that that were a little Irate at tbe city alcoholism fa reach{nf the though," be said. youncer siratum of society: • POISON ••• spread eully. City police officers at first stopped cars and pedestrl1111 an' overpasses near the treeway but later decided they were not IQ daD1er. The southboun.d lanes of the freeway were opened at 8:45 a .m. more than half an hour.after the spill, but the northbound lanet1 remained el-· Fi~emen began evacuating buildings in the area, but the evacuation was determined not necessary shortly afterwards, and persons were allowed to re- turn. The spill occurred .near the Civic Center where thousands of persons were trying to reach ci- ty, state, federal and county of- fices to begin the workday. Parental a\tltujle aomeUwes encourages alcobQllam among yOUJ11er people. •·we bbe had eome .1berW'1 de_partmeat re- 1IOl'll of alcobol·relateclJuvenlle prolllema and the p"""'11a often uy. 'Thank Gocl,it'anotdrvp','' Mn. Neuatadt aays. . A!C!)bol, of course Is a draf, end Its Jong.term effecta Oii!. be just as debWtatlng as ot11er drup. ••we've seen very few hrd eore . alcObollam caae. here,'' Mrs. Neus1'dt admits-"What we oeeberds ~.-Jewbo are. &i:tting' into trouble abuaing1 , a1-•·L" . ~'""""' ""#·#,, i•. .-", ••. , Treatment Is offered ,by the Saddleback Clinic on a voluntar; basis and those who ch6os6 to a9· · c~pt it are allowed to negotiat.e their discharge with tb;e therapist. . , Alcoholics -or those Who may tJtink they are -can call t)le clinic for an appointment after 9, a.m • .M·ondayil through Fridays. The number is831·9860. • • Mart~ers .gwes you up t~ .a s1,sop tax deduction this year ... ••. AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA" -THE INDIVIDUAL RE- TIREMENT ACCOUNT. Mariners Individual Retirement Account is a personal tax-sheltered retirement plan. ''IRA'' was devel- oped by Congress to give you an effective way to build your own retire- ment fund. · You can save as much as $1500 or 15% of your wages, whichever is less, and your savings will be a tax deduo- t.fon during your working years. If your spouse works, your combined tax-sheltered savings can be as much as $3000 per year. • Come In to Mariners and start your own Individual Retirement Account. You'll be saving tax dollars now and building a much brighter future. For - more Information, come In or call any one oJ our convenient locations. HERE'$ HOW FAST YOUR MONEV GROWS IN A MARINERS "IRA" ACCOUNT, lndlvidu•I IMtl,.menl Acooufltt .,.·prdefltly Nmlng 1"4~.',,.,. '/Hf whM Ptac9<1 In• tf-)'Hr tMtlflcate. YOfJr •nn1$1 tl.td IS inCIHf«I to• big. 8.06% when lnternt igMfd~ 111 '"-M:COUfll bela,,oe and oompounded daily. With • m111tlmum utolllidu•t eon"tribUtion at $1500 mdl per, ,,.,..,. hO• roar money w I gro•: WfTHTAX WITHOUT """'" . SHEL TEAED TAX MONEY IRA SHEL T'l!REO "'OMTAJC AFTD ....... PU.N DEFERRAL 5Yrs, $ 9,510 $ 8,730 $ 2,780 10yrs. 23,540 15,7!i0 • 7J'JIJ . 20yrs. 74,640 «.oeo 30,seo 3Qyrw. 11!5,550 95,030 ll0,520 •Alla¥• llgum .. .,.,_, on 25~ ifleome bl'kktt. Ftdertl NOulMlont ,..quire tubtl•nUel pen11ti. for Mrly withdraw.it. from Mill~• tce0Unt1. · • . ' ,j ' I Competition for 4-6-year olds will be held hourly from noon to 4 p.m. and contests for 7LIO..year olds on tbe ball hour from 1%:30 McDaniel eave•• briafaynopsts of each film, charaeterblnc p.m. to a:ao p.m. ' ''Deep Throat'' as a humorous • • approach ''to•~u.b,l••U~~ m· Mari Q~.,I ~...,..,,. ·• • could be co.naldered ver:r · Jler8 cca• a~S , ; S~nglic.g CUe-~7r>:Ue1 eoneeci.t that -tbe and Loan · .~~ 1 tlERKELEY <UPI) -Police -1<:ta ln1be ••--.,. ..... ,c ..... -· · " l(fl; trJriDI to IAaMtfW" ll:oWn. .....,.... -u ...... ... .. ,.,, . M4f•1M"IHrh · •l ...... e..dt INllMrh ...._..,.... &M:Aatllftl • ·~ Y"' _,.,.,a . l..,.1d,but111'C9d~~ r....,,,.Offk•J'.~ (...,•!doCen1..,.··310G1 ..... , •• s. (\ol•u .. WO<id) . '*!5o.""'""YO. ,.,... ......... ......rs ......_ r.:a"r,'J'O:mr~!-__.~ •..,trt"'!-"'i .. ""'a1~ .. ~Pl'll"'~•~ 1s11 .. 1d1Ho 1.,....,. .. 0.-· 17"1-"""' 1>n05eoll-~ 1211 sswooo '1'71"'"'1YIM. ~"'?" -•~ -_,.._,_ -(.714)6'2'4000 (.71')642-4000 IOPlNINGSOOHI (213) .... 7626 (213)"'7 .. 141 """er a f)e 1htc1r. • -pau"rjud(ment. " ..... -~-------...,...;.-.,--....;...;.. _____ _,,... ___ ...;....;. ____ _. • \ • To~'•CI I~ N.'l'. Stoeks VOL. 68, NO. 258, 2 SECTIONS, IC P'AGe5 ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1975 TEN CENTS. l1·vine Oouricil Finalizes Charter Bid 87DCMJGIMl'&llW** ... ...,. ..... ... 1rv1ne ....... um ....... w out tlledelalboftllear...-fa-- lftl a city charter ,Satui'day. VotenwUlcleeldtMr·'•belber IrvlnebtolMcomead>arterdty or retain its preseat -al law --The ar~ment will IM -to voe.en next month akml with op- pooing ar1ument.a If aey. • Tbejft'O-C--= ... --by Ila,.... ~ and Coomcllmea U..., QoltdeY. Gabrielle Pr1<>r aed /otin Burton. Cou_ncllm•11 Jlob4irt Wat, followlnt up GD c--eala ot coa...,. a I.be clwUr, did ~ sip t.be ....... -· "' Wool wltlldrew Illa -from tile charter ar1111noat, ~ tUt IM w ... ld have to live Ibo • matter mare u....pt. Ila llid be ,_ a-ot -bJ t.be -u Wlder a clwter that would t.." 1-restrictive than ltate •-ral ..... The ballot ~ment desctibol tbe proposed charter u the "fraJDework or foundation of what *Ill evOllt~ally be a more comp-lvoclocummt.'" A <117 attor;aey's analysb cl Ille dlarter aa~ that ti does nqt • ~Ille basic,_.,,.._ -· nor -It depart In -rw,pect.a trom atate aeoeral laws. City Attorney~ • ..,.. D'lcbcln eddl, '"l'be charter mates no cbanp In Ille baalc limltotlons portalnlnf to Proi>e<t1 taxea. ". The clty Pf'9Pel'V ta nte ii lhnlted to $1 per $100 ...... ed valM under pre8!IDt state law. The lljnll -not lndOO. -or overridea' approved b)'-wten. aSsyS~ized In :Sin6i Pact Hijack Suspect Killed SAN JOSF; CUPJ) -A police sharpshooter tod•y shot to death a 24·year-old gunman wbo tried to hijack an empty Cootinental Airlines 727 jet with four hostaa:es. His death.~ a four. hour rampa11e during which he stabbed a \"Oman he tried to.rape inberbom~. The gunman, identified by police as Fred Salomoo of San Jooe, ~gan Ille hours cl terror when be enterea the apartment where the woman lived with her children late Sunday bight and ~ayto Atone Jews Cel.ebmte Yom Kippur ~ . r . • J'eWll filled temples and synagoJUes the world over today to marlc Yom Kippur, the Day of Atone- ment, with fasting, self-evaluation and repentance. The holiday, the mo.st sacred oil the Hebrew calendar, began at sundown Sunday as cantors chant· ed the Kol Nil!re, a traditional prayer beseeehing God's fqrgiveriess for man's fallibility. One long blast of the sbofar, or ram's horn, ends the day-long worship this evening. Many rabbis stressed in their sermons that the sacred holiday was one of hope with the obligation to improve the human condition. Rabbi Ronald B. Sobel, at Temple Emanu-El on Fifth Avenue, New York, stressed that the faith, re- ligion and herita1e of the Jewish people "were built neither bn the assumption that life is banal and a\Jsurd or Jiu man nature fallen and tragic." Guerrillas Threaten Diplomats MADRID CUPI) -Paleatinlan fUerrllJa.s seized the Egypt.Ian eJ\'lbuay today and threatened to kitl the ambassador and two E·gyptian diplomats unless Egypt renounces the interim peace agreement with Israel by tonlpt. A spokesman for the guerrilla& told UPI by telephone that five Palestine raiders barricaded themselves in.side the embassy and mined the building. Irvine's tu rate b SI cmta for Ille ceneral fllnd and 28 cenll for1 parkandblketral) bood&. Tho blc pl~ of a charlar, Ille council vcuu. b more Oexlblli- lY In m-i.nc Ille city's srowtll than la allowed Wlder ,....,.11 lawa- "Wa need llnanclal =lY In acqulrln1 tbe dollars to bulld public f•cilities. IQCh u parb, roads, brld1ea and public buildinp 10 th8l t>l'GI et t)' tau.1 lion ii not Ille only-"' fund! inl avail•ble, ., the council 1U.1 jority ...... . ··weaeed Ibo nexibWtytoi.ake innovaUve approaches to toed •overament In w•JI wb,leh Califonlia'a older dties, -91- ·lns under tbe 1eneral '"-baVf ooneedordestret.o"o," itsiiyf. A para1raph alludlna to prq. <See CHAil TEil, Pall• .U) • DIMiy ...... ,.._..., ftldlWf ~ • -stabbed her in the heart. -A( Bpejli~ services at ~ount l!iJlai ,Hospital, Rab- . bi JOl!,epb 1..<litlin said that ~ l>oll~ 'was a "re- 0 millder-to:1M1t _oneself in the o8IWon oL.*be-clei>rlv'ed. the wlioSUffert!a ill-the world'..-. "'lbe moment someone opens tbe door or •window, the .wbole ~will b1ow OJ>," bl&•ald• Ir.Miao Pres{dent. Anwar Sadat l\el<I UM Palestine Liber• tlm Or1anizati°" and its leader, Vasser Arafat, personaUy responsible for the eoosequeoces of the embauy raid, an Egyptian official announced in Cairo. FIREMEN LIFT INJURED DRIVER TO .GURNEY Wntmlnlter Man Trapp9<1 In ·Truck •In Irvine Cruh • ' -- " The drama ended sev.ral hours later with a single -In , the bead by the •h8lll!lt,oole:r at San Jose Municipal Aiipo'rt. With two of his hostages eseaped and another wounded, Salomon was cut down as he tried to use his re-: maining prisoner as a shield to escape from the plane and about '2.5 surrounding police. 3 Co11ncihllen OK ' - The official said the Egyptian leader warned he would take "decisive measures" if the PW and Arafat failed to ensure the immediate release of the Egyp. tian ambassador and his aiCles. Trucker Survives Irvine Car Crash "He had agreed to come out of the plane himseH wit.bout his weapon and with his hands up," said police J,.t. Gary Leonard. City-Zoning Plan In Beirut a spokesma01 for the PLO and otber ma.JOT. Palestinian organizations denied involvement in the attack. A Westminster man is in ~air condition today with injuries suf· fered in Irvine Sunday when bJ s truck flipped 23 feet through lhe air and landed on the driver's side, pinning him in the wreck. ''Then he emerged from the 11aree kvine councilmen have plane with the gun ~ bis ha?d, ~roved an argumert f•voring and a hostage -an a,irport m&lnl-the city'• position iD the Nov. 4 tenance man -in front of him, ( Northwood zoilJ.Qg referendum. using him as a shield al aunpoint. • Mayor ·Art Anthony and Coun· "One of our officers, about 50 cilmen ·John Burton and feet away, shouted three times, Gabrielle Pryor approved tbe Drop your weapon.' Salomon artUJnent urging a ~·xes" vote in (See mJACK-, P•te AZ> the referendum. A ''yee" vote ap- proves tbe council plan that sent protesters to gather petition signatw-e1 for the referendum. lo.u..Marine Car Smashed Councilmen Robert West and Henry Quigley did not approve the ar1ument. Tbey both voted ~ agalnat the Northwood zpnlhg or- dinanceJ•st May. Irvine's Trabuco Road vapdal hurled rocks at a loth Marine· owned auto Saturdaj, causing S200damage. Cecil F . Wheatly of Santa Ana left his disabled car parked beside Trabuco near Culver Drive. On his return be found the windshield sha·ttered and numerous dents in the auto body, he told police. A number of rocks were found on the ground )lear the ear. Police noted that all lOoftlle can similarly vandalized. in recent weeks have belonged to Marines. ( Coast Weather Mostly cloudy skies Tuead•y on the beach and clouds breaking by mid· day to buy sunshine in- land. according to the weather service. lfigbs 68 at t.be..beacbes to tbe upper 70s inland areas. INSIDE TeD~ 1i · Ora~1• Couai11•1 S£a Scout1, ba.Jed ift. Newporl Btoch,. ore •till going ttrono delPll• their lock of noton<tu. See l?og< 81. -~= 0 , .... ...... o-••• --.. --.... , .... -, .. fl l••es .. --.. -.. --.,~=:a-. .. --.. _.. 'M..T ....... &tt,....... ··-.. -- •• ... .. M ••·t •• .... ... ... .. .. The city argument claims that lli'ortb.-ood. i1 zoned to have the same proportion of apartments as Ille l'OS$ of the city. 1be argu. ment says protesters'want less than their staare. ~ut the prOtesters contend that Vendor Killed At Santa Ana Ice Cream Cart Santa Ana Police are hunting today for a gunman who.shot and ·killed a 62-year-old ice cream. vendor during a holdup Sunday evenlna on a residential street. A police 1poke1man said George R. Denholm of Santa Ana was fWnd drape4 over the steer- ing wh&l of bis i<e cream trock at about 9 p.m. near tlw!: lntenec- tion of Shelton and Pine streets. A resident told lnv..Ugaton he heard a shot ad~ ran out of bis home in ttine to-see a young man wttb long: dark hair and a must•cbe running from the scene. 1be witness tOld officers Ille. man, wbo appeared to be carry-· lng a pistbl, jumped into a late- model areen• sedan and drOve aw01 at hilh •Peed· 'Fuh ~olee Stolen Tb• 1rura18r ci.ulan't -~ Ibo bait. Ire waited Into Ill• un- loclted .-..... of .,...... Sei~. $192 Sierra Rojo, !rVlne, and slole three fl4blnl polea val~ 91 ~~ccordinl to Police~ l I ~ a large wedge of land between Trabuco Road and the Santa Ana Freeway may be deve.loped into apartments, giving Northwood more than its share. The council also contends a dis· puted central shoppinf center location means converuence for everyone in the village. The protesters claim the Yale and Bryan Avenues location mearis traffic problems when the apartments and park planned for the intersection's other three cor· ners are considered. Northwood is 1.426 acres bounded rO\lgbly by the Santa Ana Freeway, Culver Drive, Irvine Boulevard and Jeffrey SeeZONING, PogeA2) Picken Picld•' The guerrillas called their commando unit "The Group or the Fallen Abdel Kader al Houseni, '' after a Palestinian leader killed in a clash with a Jewish group in 1947. They demanded that the Egyp- tian peace delegation to Geneva leave the Swiss city by midnight without signing documents ol the interim Sinai agreement negotiated by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger. Simultaneously with the raid on the embassy, another band of about 50 Arab students occupied the Madrid offices of the Arab CSee EGYPT, Page A2) Frank Garcia, 8044 Worthy, Westminster, was reported in fair but stable condition at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. The one·car accident occurred on a private Irvine Company- owned service road near the in- tersection of Michelson and Culver Drives at about 3:JO p.m. Sunday. James Gonzalez, 10352 Cinco de Mayo, Fountain 1VaJley, a passenger in the truck, was in · jured, but was not hospitalized, police said. At the crash scene at Rancho San Joaquin Golf Course , Don Durham of \Long Beach, who has been playing blu<!,Jrass i1,!it~ since 1~._ tunes up with Stli8rt I>upcan, 11 , Vista, a relative newcom.et; w~ already ho been plckin' three years. They compared notes during the weekend al big bluegrass music bash In Costa Mesa. -I ' .J •, .. firemen used hydraulic jaws to spread open the rear window of the pick-up truck to get to Garcia. The light truck skidded 177 fer.t along the drive before going over the edge or a small bluff and becoming airborne, police said. The truck smasbeCi to the ground on the driver's side. Firemen s hored up the· pre· cariously balanced truck to keep it from toppling over. Truck Spilh Deadl,y Fumes On L.4Freeway LOS ANGELES CUPI ) -A truck spilled 150 gallons of two chemicals that combine to forth. a poisonous gas on the Hollywood Freeway during the rush hour tO- day, tying up tra£fic £or nearly an hour. Five fire company units washed down the chemi cals, muriatic acid and chlorine, and California Highway Patrolmen closed all lanes of traffic in bolh directions and nearby surface streets. Ru sh hour traffic came to a halt in the busy downtown S4!tC· tion and cars backed up for more than a mile along the freeway. The two chemicals, being de- livered for a swimming pool sup- ply company, combine to form phosgene. a gas used during World War l . It attacks the lungs and can cause death. The spill occurred when the rear doors of a semi-truck and trailer Jig popped open and the Ii· quid spilled onto the road.way. The driver , Michael Hastert, about 25, suffered chemical bums in attempting to close the truck doors to prevent more spillage. He was rushed to a nearby hospital for treatment. A fire official said the gas cl· ings to the ground and does not spread easily. City police officers at first stopped cars and pedestriaJ;lJ on overpasses near the freewa:)'1but later decided they were ndt in danger. The southbound lanes of the freeway were opened at 8:45 a.m. moretban half an hour C8ee POISON, Pace,\%) - ; • I 1AJ DAILY PILOT . !Theater J F·~ . - •. IJDJS l 'Sp~f?' 117 JOHN VALTEJIZA Of .. 0.11, ...... ...,,. I ! I Wa1 the f•re offered at 1 Balboa's Pussycat· Theal'er i ''pornoaraphy-pure and stm~ pie" or a 1exy spoof combined with a morality play? ~ ~ These were the cbaracteriza· ' tioos of!ered today to the Jury on two sex movies, "Deep Throat" and "The Devil in Miss Jones" which are the subject ol an ob- scenity trial in Harbor Municipal I Court. Opening arguments from both the prosecution and defense played to very few spectators ~ even thouc:h the films originally 1 .were scheduled to be shown to t the jury in court today. ~ In his opening statement to the jury of six men and six women, Pussycat defense lawyer Robert McDahiel saia "Deep Throat" is a sexy spoof and •'The Devil in 1 Miss Jopes" a morality plJ.y:. 1be 1ury is now scheduled to l travel to Balboa today to view one film before noon, break for lunch and then see the other racy movie. Deputy District Attorney Tony Rackauckas spared no enmity l for the films and aUeged OaUy l that what the jury would see are 1 two ftlms with asserted flimsy plola "which string together one i graphic sex act after another." , "What you will see will be 1 absolutely unlimited closeups f and lf'l;pbic depicticms ol sex or- f gans and acts that oft.en don't 1 even seem to be connected.. .. the 1 prooecutor warned. : "It's nothing more than bani· ; core pornography! That's il It's nothing but sex ror mooey and , straight commercial exploita· lion." McDaniel's statement to a jury : that took copious notes took a dif- ferent approach. He urged the ' jw-on to view the ru~ in a total I context and to understand. the ! fine points of California's com· j plex obscenity statutes. "You'll see a theater and ftlms that have been shown inside of it. They are movies exhibited to adults who paid money to see them. No one was dragged off the street. No one showed them to kids, nor did the de!endants pro-;Ject the films out.aide," he said. .. McDaniel gave a brief synopsis of each film, characterizing "Deep Throat•• as a humorous ·approach "to a 1ubJect that oft~ could be conside~ed very heavy.'' c McDaniel conceded that the 1sex acts in the films are graphic indeed, but urged the jury to use .-;comtemporary standards and 1:strict leaal interpretations in· !passing Jud1menL " ":Pastor Tells .Congr~ation That He's Gay ' ORANGE, Mass. (UPI) - Some people aaid it took a lot of .. te:uts for the . Rev. Edward T. Hougen to unveil his homosex- "uality in a sermon Sunday before taruhioners. . Others expressed their protest ~Simply and silently by staying 'away • 1" Th~ minister of Central Congregational Church who an- 'ne>unced his resignati~ in June ''to pursue new forms of ministry," said he had been en- .£0W'81ed by some to leave the llflriah quietly. • • • But Hou1en, 38, thought "it Ed be a real discount not to with them on this issue'' oreleavin& Oct. 1. • • ii ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Jack R. Curley ... ~-0.-.,..._ Thomas Keevll ...... TholftMA.M ..... I,. ---··' .. .. OlllttlH.'"-RlcllanlP.Noll WIN lllPI ...... Goodwill Visit -Ul"'ITI~ British Premier Harold Wilson Cleft) greets Vice Presi- dent Nelson Rockefeller at door of Number 10. Downing Street when Rockefeller arrived for lunch. Rocky is on a one·day goodwill visit. SunBreaks Through; ' Good Weather A.head September, which has been a drudge up to now, turned normal today with sunshine along the Orange Coast. A spokesman for the National Weather Service in Los Angeles assured also that the weather will behave itself at least for the next few days. "We are now getting into a ridge situation (high pressure> which should be with us for the next four or five days," he said. Why were the fint two weeks r:I. the month so yucky, more like cloudy June than sunny Sep- tember? "We have had low pre· ssure which brought a lot of nioisture from the south and southeast," he said. Last week's high daytime tem- peratures in Newport Beach were around 67 degrees and low night temperatures around 60 to 62 degrees wit~ the mercury dropping to S4 degFees one night .. "We have had an awful lot of cloudiness," the weather man admitted, "but now it looks like we are going to get some sun· ::;hine. ·· That means it will be in the~ inland, and in the 70s along the beaches. EGYPT ••• League, but they later voluntari- ly surrendered and released two hostages, the news agency Cifra said .. Et,ypt and Israel initiated the interim peace accord Sept. 1, but· their delegations in Geneva are now negotiating terms on ways or putting the accord into effect. It widens the buffer zone in the Sinai Desert separating the two armies and calls for Israeli withdrawal from the Milla and Gidi passes and the Abu Rudeis oil fields and the stationing of 200 American technicians in the Sinai as peace monitors. The agreement has come un- • der attack from radicals in the posed two tier city government Arab world, who charge that it was changed in discussion Satur-ignored the interests of the day to make it less specific. Palestinians and the other coun- "We need flexibility in creat-tries -Jordan and Syria - ing village-level units of our gov-whose teritory Israel also oc - emment" was changed to "We cupied in the 1967 war. CHARTER. need flexibility in creating more The Kuwaiti, Iraqi, Jordanian responsiveness to village·level and Algerian ambassadors en· ·concernsinthecity." tered the Egyptian embassy However, it also mentions that building to negotiate with the village-level governments and raiders. new means or raising money Police with helmets and bullel- could be put to voters. proof vests and a dozen police The charter, the councilmen vehicles ringed the building and argue, ''means greater blocked traffic, creating huge responsibility for and power to t,l:affic jams in the downtown the voters of Irvine." Srea. · The council over months or-' The three hostages included charter talks,' has brought up Egyptian Ambassador Mahmoud new sources of city money as a Abdel Ghaffar, Consul Mohamed main impetus for charter gov-El-sha!fei Mekki, and press at· emment. tache Mohamed El-affifL General law city revenues are . The SS-year-old ambassador limited by state law. Charter told Britain's Independent Radio governments may come up with News in an interview, "We are their own tax sources. Coun-gathered in a room, sitting cilman Henry Quigley has ad-together, chatting nicely. They vacated a tax on the square· are .not offending us ... They footage of signs, for example. have explosives in every cor- Edison High Mourns Death Of McCollom By ROBERT BARKER Of .. Delly"41e41MMI Teachers and students a( Edison High School today mourned the death of Gordon McCollom, a popular English teacher and 11mnutics coach Who wu killed In a wing-walking accident in Reno Friday. . The school, which called for a . period of allence today In tribute to Mr. McCollom, la plannlug to create a memorial ldlolanhip in ... hi.I name. Funeral services for the 25- 19ar-old realdent of Colla Mesa llJ>mdlnc. McCollom was klUed Friday night when his airplane dipped suddenly and crushed him head lint Into the 1round. He wu auapended upside down ttOm the -top wln1 ot the biplane 'When a do,.ndraft caused the I plane to alnk and hit the ground accordin1 to a race official. ' . 6 ner.'' A spokesman for the guelTillas told UPI by phone the Palesti- nians freed six Spanish embassy employes, among. them four women: He said they were in- terested only in holding representatives of the Egyptian government. not Spanish civilians. Welding Class At Dana High A weldln1 workshop beglna tonl1b! tbrou1h Saddlebact Colle1e'1 !all quarter o!!-campus prosram. Tbe lntroduclory coune, Weld- In1100, will meet !rom8to9p.m. Monday• and Wednesdays ln Room 304 at Dana Hills 111111 School. Re1i1tration for the courte may he completed at the call"«• or in the classroo.m through Wed- nesday. Instructor or the coune Is Ron Dull, an Industrial welder and Dana. Hills lnatrvct<Jtr. lk-~U emphasize bra1e weldlna. cut- tln1 theory and the practical appllcaUon to f•rroua metall tn.. w•ldin1. • • • ' -' (J I ' .......... .11 Pollution Unit HIJACK. •• • didn't answer. Ito beCu to paint ,the 1ua Ill the oflleor -wu .lbouthll to hllll. Tiie oalcei: I bocall tonaaW11J. llUt_ol_. Given New al>arpa-en wltll a te!-Lif anlper •••(>OD rind the linll• e abot from bob'.lpd another alrllller. and Salomoo dnJi>pooJ." · Leonard aald that • -paint State Senate rejection of a mandated re1lonal air pollutloo control dl.a:trict has given a new lease on life to a voluntary four- ,rounty agency formed in JuJy, according to Orange County Supervisor Robert Battin. Battin wa1 a founding director o( the voluntary pollution control unit, which la comprised of Orange, Riverside. San Bernardino and Los Angeles counti~. The ex.I.sting agency had been endan1ered by Assembly Bill 250, authored bt Assema~ man Jerry Lewis (R-Hllhl J. The measure was turned down last. Friday on an 18-20 Senate vote. ZONING .•• Road. It is held by a number of small landowners, rather than by the Irvine Company which owns the remaining 85 percent of the city. The council argument says, "One of the . significant features of Irvine is that it is being master planned. ''Other places in Southern California have grown in crazy· quilt, sprawling patterns because growth has taken place without a rational guide for plan· ning decisions," the argument says. It says that $20,000 in city money and ''hundreds of hours of citizen and professional effort" have gone into Northwood plans. "The end result of this com· prehensive planning work was an ordinance approved by the city council on a 4-1 vote May 'Zl. •• the argumet.t notes . Quigley changed his position after that vote. The referendum will mean the area remains zoned for agriculture if the majority of voters cast "nays.'' If the majority cast "ayes" the village will be zoned for develop- ment. As many as 20,000 people may live in Northwood. lf the vote goes against the council, a second plan is in the wings, ready to be bustled through for approval early next year. 1 The so-called ••compromise plan•• was rejected by the ma- jority of the council, which forced the matter to a referen~ dum. Quigley and West favored the-compromise . The council majority iS trying to get the matter approved as quickly as possible. Landowners have been waiting almost (our years for the planning and zoning process to be completed. Lewis' blll would llaye created two officers of •croup cblnl In a pollution unit with broad onthealrcraftwhlJeS&lamanwu power, over loeal plannlni and •till lnalde actually climbed devel~menl. It would have aJao aboardbutocrambled-.i- pormltted cl ti ea to he memhen Ille IWUDllD !Offed the t"" main· ol the board, a reature -yet "tenan.. men boatqeo to lllart. pm of the volunlary apncy tuiln1theplane. Tho bill •pparently loot ;0 the OUleor• aald that arter Senate becoute a conference Salomoo tt.ab-.lhe WD1D&11, be committ .. ci.o.e to remove a drove to 81111 JOH Hoapilal, tld- Senatc am ndment that would napod Dr. Frank weir.ii. at -have required a vote ot the peo-pofnt, and aped to Reld.HIUriew pie before the a1ency wu of. Airport. wbere. be encauatered a ficlall)< created. · security IUUd and domlllllod a In an interview today, Battin atnaq Pl~ and ollot. said the Senate action "is a wise Police sud that when su.nc... rejection of an Ill-conceived and diKOYered oo plane wu avalla· WlD.ecessary new sovernmental ble, he took the guard bostace u behemoth.•• w.ell and drove shortly an. mid-. The Santa Ana supervisor said n1_ght lo San Jose MunJclpal the new voluntary agency has ex· Air_port, where he found two isted only two months but ls mamtenance men preparin1 the ''already a:tronaly attacking re-m foi: ~·early monlln.I flllht. gional problems and has com-Brand1sb1n1 a .38 caliber re- bined a tough approach with a voJver,hetookthembosta.iealso sense of fiscal responsibility.'' ~ ordered them to pt hi.II) a. Battin was angered when he f!igbt crew, a 1un ud amDMIGi· learned Lewis is planning to re-tton. . . introduce his bill sometime next Negoli;ations between Salomon year but he said he is confident it and the . airport _control tower will aj>pear ''even more began, with a ~a1nt~anceman superfluous than Lt was this relaying th~ h1Jacker • demand time .. by radio, s&d assistaot San Jose · Police Chier Jay l'roPIL Control E',._P~Al . POISON ••. the spill, but the northpound · lanes remained closed. Firemen began evacuating buildings in the area, but the evacuation was determined not necessary shortly afterwards, and persona were allowed to re- turn. The spill occurred near the Civic Center where thousands of persons were trying to reach ci· ty, state, federal and county of· fices to begin the work day. Clemency Bid Ending Today WASHINGTON (UPI) -Alter one year, the clemency program for Vietnam war resisters ends today. The man who ran it says he is pleased with the program, but many of those it most affect- ed are not satisfied. President Ford scheduled for 'l\aes:day a farewell 11;leeting with the 18-member clemency board, which was to present its final 1b4tch of recommendations. Both sides concede the pro- gram failed to reach vast num- bers of young men who found themselves in legal jeopardy because of the war. tower workers immediately notified Police, who arrived at the scene within several minutes with sharpshooters -members of the Special Weapons and Tac- tical Team known as SWAT. Durina the ne1otiatlona, the security guard and one of the maintenance men escaped while Salomon was distracted, Propst said. The doctor was lhot 1n the leg wb~n he tried to escape from the plane, police added. Officers said the negotiations were in process for half an hour. They shot out the tires u the aircraft started to taxi down the runway ''There was no possibility that the plane could have been flown,'' said police Lt. Don Tru- jillo. The stabbing victim underwent ·surgery and her condition was described as critical. 'The doctor. who also wa&. unidentified, was in seriO\\S condition after surgery. • Police said names would be re- leased after relatives were notified. Houseboat Tragedy LAKE KAWEAH (AP) -The body of a Reedley woman who fell into Lake Kaweah while on a houseboat outing has been re· covered by the Tulare County Sheriff's diving team. Authorities said Marie Mise, 45, fell overboard early Saturday morning. • • Manners gives you up to a s1,soo tax deduction this year. •• .AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA" -THE INDIVIDUAL RE- TIREMENT ACCOUNT. Mariners Individual Retirement Account Is a personal tax-sheltered retirement plan. ••1RA'' was devel- oped by Congress to give you an effective way to build your own retire- ment fund. . You can save as much as S 1500 or 15°/o of your wages, whichever Is less, and your savings will be a tax deduo- tlon during your working years. If. your· spouse worka, your combined tax-sheltered savings can be as much as S3000 per year. . · Come In to Mariners and start yotir own Individual. Retirement Account • You'll be saving tax dollars now and bullding a niuch brighter future. For more lnfor111atlon, come In or call any· one Qf our convenient locations. HERE'S HOW FAST YOUR M ONE Y GROWS IN A MARINERS ''IRA•• ACCOUNT. lndiv1d11sl Ret1r1!ment Accounts •re presently e11mlr1' 1*% per )'H' when pl•ctld 1n a 8-)'Mr oerrlllat•. Your ennu• Y'-ld /J ll'lerusftd IO• b19. 8.06~ wNtt MtefHt It add«I IO tit• M:ICOtJnt Nlaflee and compoundH dally. With a ma•lmum inOll(ldual contribution ot 11500 Melt ;..,., here'• how Y9Uf mon•1 will grow: WITH TAX WITHOUT EXTII• SHELTERED ... MONE\' ••• SHELTERED FAOMTAX A"El't PLAN PLAN DEFERRAL 5yra. ·s 9.510 s 6,730 $ 2,780 10 yrs. 23,540 15,750 7,790 20 yrs. 74,640 "4,080 30,5e0 30 yrs. 185,550 95,030 90,520 'Abo'r't llQl.I,.. •• btMd on 2$% Income tlflttlet. FederM t9QUl.ilonl ,.qult9 tubltantlal peneltla for '""1y wlll'ldtl!Wtll• trom cttllllcalt accoun11. ltftC'-Mariners Savi~s. ~I and LoanAssoclatiOn ....,.,..,._. ..... ,_,..._h l..,_.._.; IMllHdl ....,.,1,HlllS "\.oi.M11l1-. (MolnOfOce) (loy11d9Centet) 310Gt..,,..,.,.st (L•l•~WOfld) l80So. ,_.,tyOit (Opp.Mt. 51no1Holpllol) ISISW••tclltfOll t0241oy1tct.Dr; 111.fl)49'·7506 13120Seol•eothl1Yd, (211)553-3000 1747h .... rfyllwd. (114) M2·4000 (714) M2·.t000 (OPENING SOON) (213}S9t·7676 (21J)6S7-4l.'I ' . • . • ' Bilntin~n Beach •ountaln Valley • EDITION VOL. 68, NO. m, 2 SECTIONS,2A PAGES ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA • • SWAT Sha shooter t Hijack Suspect· 111 Madrid Embassy Taken By Guerri11as . BULLETIN MADRm CAP) -'111e Spubli 1ovenuneat aaaoa.need UU. af- ternoon tllt;at fi..-p PalNtlaiaaa District D~ciswn Mull.ed By TOM BARLEY °' .. ~ltyP'I ........ Lawyers for both aides in the legal action aimed at haltin.g school redistricting elections N9v. 4 in Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach delivered final arguments today in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Claude M. Owens denied a motion by tbe state fqr sum- mary judgment in the ls1ue before advisina the five lawyers in his courtroom that be will rule later today on the lawsuit. . Judge Qwens also struck down a series of objections filed by the sta(e, the county counsel's office and the Oran&<> County Commit· tee on School District Organiza- tion before leaving !or his cham- bers to mull the three lawsuits. · His decision will release or freeze the ballots tbat must go to the printers Tuesday if they are to become 'available far the Nov. 4elections. Lawyers for the Huntington Beach Union High Sc-I Dis- trict and the Garden Grove· Unified School District want the elections stopped. They contend that the defe& dants called the elections without calling for an adequate environ· mental impact report. They further contend that every voter in the 52-squ~mile Huntington Beach Uni.Oil High School District should be given 7the opportunity to vote on the un· ification issue involving two elementary districts within the high school district. Both districts claim the state Board of Education failed to pro- perly notify all districts involved before approvin_g elections on plans to form new unified school systems along Fountain Valley municipal boundaries and in the old Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District. It is also argued that creation of the proposed new Clislrict. in Fountain Valliy will create racial imbalances and provoke lawsuits qver prop -ty and liability distribution. Lawyers for the suing districts also contend that the new district would not meet state require· ments for assessed valuation per student. Coast W'ea'tlier Mostly cloudy skies Tu<>sday on the beach and cloods breakinl by mid· da.y to buy sunshine in· land, accordin1 to the weather eervice. Highs 68 at the beaches to the upper 10s inland areas. -· .. LM.= C.MI ="' O••• :C*~ l ... le .. ;:IM -1•: JI ..... .. _._. ,,_ ............... ''-: '="c:w-tf .. ..... ...., .. -• M ,.....,..... "'' ,......,,. "' ...... . . , .... .... .. .,, :: •14 •• ... ... ... .. .. . , •creed lo evacaale Ille Eppllaa em .. uy ud n1 lo Alci-..w. lbelr tllrtt lloota1es, bldadiag the EllJPIJu amba-. MADRID (UPI) -Palestinian guerrillas seized the E1yptian embassy today and threatened to kill the ambUsador and two Egyptian diplomats unless Egyp renounces the interim peace agreement 'f(ith Israel by toni1ht. . A spokesman for the guerrillas told UPI by telephone that five Palestine raiders barricaded tflemselves inside the embassy and mined the building. "The moment someone opens · the door or a window, the whole place will blow up," be said. l!:gyptian President Anwar Sadat1held the Palestine Libera· tion Organization and its leader, Vasser Arafat, personally respo~ible for the' consequences ofti)e eDibassy r.ald, an Eeyptian official announced in Cairo. ,,,. -clal •aid the ll:gJptlan leado !![!led he would take "decisive ~easures~' if the PLO and Arafat failed to ensure the i.m.mediate release of the Egyp- tian ambassador and his aides. In Be'irut a spokesman! for the PLO and other ma.JOr . Palestinian organizations denied ·involvement in the attack. The guerrillas called their commando unit ''The Group of the Fallen Abdel Kader al Houseni," after a Palestinian leader killed in a clash with a Jewish group in 1947. They demanded that lhe Egyp- tian peace delegation to Geneva leave the Swiss city by midnight without signing documents ol the interim, Sinai -agreement negotiated by Secretary of state Henry A. Kissinger. New Agency Assisted by Senate Action State Senate rejection of a mandated regional air pollution control ·district has given a new lease on lite to a voluntary four· county agency formed in July, according to Orange County Supervisor Robert Battin. Battin was a rounding director of the voluntary pollutiori control unit, which is comprised of Orange. Riverside, San Bernardino and Los Angeles counties. The existing agency had been endangered by Assembly Bill 250, authored by Assembly man Jerry Lewis <R·Highland). 'The measure was turned down last Friday on an 18-20 Senate vote. Lewis' ttill would have created a pollution unit with broad powers over local planning and · development. It would have also permitted cities to be members of the board, a feature not yet part of the voluntary agency. The bill apparently IMt in the Senate because a conference commiltee chose to remove a Senate amendment that would have required a vote of the peo- ple before the agency was of· ficially created. In an interview today, Battin said the Senate action "ls a wiae rejection of an ill-conceived and unnecessary new governmental behemoth.'' The Sa·nta Ana supervilor said the new voluntary agency has ex· isted only two months but is ''already atrongly attackin1 re- (ion&l problems and has com· bined a touch app~ch with a aense of fiscal resPonsibillty. •• Battin was angered wben he learne<I Lewis ii pllllllib& to r~ -introduce bis bill sometime next year but be saJd be II coollclent It will appear ••even more tuperfluous tban it wu this Ume." TEACHER MOURNED Deredevll McCollom McColl om Mourned At School BJ ROBERT BAKKER ot ... 0.11,...-.,.... Teacher1 aA4 sbldents 't Edison Higb School today mourned the deat.ll of ~n McCollom, a popular En1U1b _teacher and gymnasti~ coach who was killed in a wina'·walking accident in Reno Friday. The school, which called for a ,.period of silence today in tribute lo Mr. McCollom, is planning to create a memorial scbalanbip in his name. Funeral services for the 25· year-old resident of Costa Mesa is pending. McCollom was killed Friday night when his airplane dipped suddenly and crushed him head first into the ground. He was suspended upside down Crom the top wing of the biplane when a downdraft caused the plane to sink and hit the ground, according to a race olficial. Mrs . June Edwards , a secretary who has known McCollom since he and her daughter attended preschool together in Newport Beach. said today ''Everybody liked Gordy.'' ''He was very popular with stu· dents and teachers. His gym- nastics team loved him," she said. ••Al least he died doing something he loved,·· she added. Mrs. Edward s s aid that McCollom, a gymnastic expert at Long Beach State ColJege, had been wing.walking lor about two years and he had performed the stunt that was to cause his death several times without incident. "He said it was safe although it had an element of danger." Mrs. Kitty Richardson, secretary . in the English Department said. "That's what I like to do." Mrs. Richardson said he told her. Mrs. Richardson said she saw McCollom a few hours before his death. (See TEACHER, PageA2) :San Jose Drama Finished SAN JOSE (UPI) -A police sharps-er today -to death a 24-year-old 1unman who tried to hijack ap empty Oootine'!tal Airlines 127 jet witb four hoet .. es. His death ended a four· hour rampage during which be stabbed a woman he tried to rape inberbome. Tbe aunman. identified by police as Fred Salomon ct San Jo••" began the hours of lel![O< · when be entered. the apartment where the woman lived with her children late Sunday nlgbt and stabbed her in the heart. The drama ended several houri later with a sin&le ahot in the bead by the sbarpebooter at San Jose Municipal Airport. Wrth two of his bostaces escaped and another wounded, Salomon was cut down as be tried to use bis re. maininc prtaoner as a abield to escape from the plane and about 25 surroundin1 police. "He b8d agreed to come out of the plane bimseU without bis weapon and with bis bands up,'' said police Lt. Guy Leonard. ,''Theo he emeried from the plane with the 1un in his hand and a bosU.se -an alrpirt maJn- tenaac• man -in front o£ bim, uoinC him u a shield at aunpoint. "One pf our offl~. abOGt SO feet away. shouted tliree limes, Drop y_our weapon.' Salomon didn't answer. He began to point the gun at the officer who was shouting to him. The officer be1an to run away. But one of our sharpshooters with a telescope sniper weapon fired the single shot from behind another airliner, andSalomondropped. '' Leoltard said that at one point two officers of a group cl0&ing in on the aircraft while Salomon was still inside actually climbed aboard but scram bled down when the gunman forced. the t\fO main- tenance men hosiages to start taxiing: the plane. Officers said that after Salomon stabbed the woman, he drove to San Jose Hospital, kid- naped Dr. Frank Weifels at gun. point, and sped to Reid-lilllview Airport, where he encountered a security guard and demanded a small plane and Pilot. Police said that when Salomon (See HJ JACK, Pace A2) Ocean View Board Sets Meet Tonight Trustees or the Ocean View School District will meet at 7 :30 tonight at Vista View School, 16250 Hickory St:, Fountain Valley. District officials explained the school board will meet several times this year at various elementary schools. The meet· ings will allow for easier access for interested parents, they not- ed, and trustees will tour the school facilities before their meetings. Day to Atone Jews Celebrate Yom Kippur Jews filled temples and synagogues the world over today lo mark Yorn Kippur, the Day of Atone- ment, with fasting, self.evaluation and repentance. The holiday, the most sacred on the Hebrew caler,.iar, began at sundown Sunday as cantors chant· ed the Kol Nidre, a traditional prayer beseeching God's forgiveness for man's fallibility. One long blast of the shofar, or ram's horn. ends the day·long worship this evening. Many rabbis stressed in their sermons that the sacred holiday was one of hope with the obligation to improve the human condition.> · ~ Rabbi Ronald B. Sobel, at Temple Emanu·El on Fifth Avenue, New York, stressed that the faith. re· ligion and he ritage of the Jewish people "were built neitner on the assumption that life Is banal and absurd or human nature fallen and lr~fc." At speclal services at Moun Sin ospital, Rab- bi Joseph ZelUln said tha\ the ho · ay wu a "r&-• minder to put oneself in the e deprived. the hungry and thooewhosul In world." I . \ • Toda)"• C::l .. iaC · N.Y. Steelk8 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1975 TEN CENTS 1 I ' 0.HYPllet ...... llf ........ ~ FIREMEN LIFT INJURED DRIVER TO STRETCHER We1tmln11er Men Trapped In Truck In Irvine Cralh Trucker Survives Irvine Car Crash A Westminster man is in fair condition today with injuries suf- fered ill Irvine Sunday whe n his tru<k Dipped 23 feet through the air and landed on lhe driver's side, pinning him in the wreck. Frank Garcia, 8044 ,worthy, Westmln&ter, was reported in fair but stable condition·at 'Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. The one-car accident occurred on a private Irvine Company- owned service road near the in· tersection of Michelsen and Culver Drives at about 3:30 p.m. Sunday. James Gonzalez. 10352 Cinco de Mayo, Fountain Valley, a passenger in the truck, was in. jured, but was· not hol!lpitaliz.ed, police said. At the crash scene at Rancho ' San Joaquin Golf Course, firemen used hydraulic jaws to spread open the rear wmaow ol 1 the pickup truck to get to Garcia. . . . The light truck skidded 177 feet• along the drive befon! ~l.ng over the edge of a small bluff and becoming airborne, police said. The truck smashed to the ground on the driver's side. Firemen shored up the pre· cariously balanced truck to keep it from toppling over. Were Sex Mooies Ponw or Spoof? By JOHN VALTERZA Of "'9 Dellr Pi ... Kati Was the fare offered al Balboa's Pus sycat The ate r "pornography-pure and sim- ple·· or a sexy spoof combined with a morality play? These were the characteriza· lions offered today to the jury on two sex movies, "Deep Throat" and "The Devil in Miss Jones" which are the s ubject of an ob- scenity trial in Harbor Municipal Court. Opening arguments from both the prosecution and defense played to very few spectators even though the films originally were scheduled lo be shown to the jury in court today. In his opening statement to the jury of six men and six women. Pussycat defense lawyer Robert Mc Daniel said ''Deep Throat'' is a sexy spoof and "The Devil in Miss Jones" a morality plav. The jury is now scheduled to travel to Balboa today to view one film before noon, break £or Meeting Set For Edison High Parents Parents of students at Edison High ichool in Huntington Beach have been invited to a special in· formation meeting about over· crowd.ing at 7 o'clock Tuesday 'night in the school cafeteria. Principal Phil Gross caJled the meeting to discuss the over · crowding problem al Edison this year. School officials said today Edison ha!-4 ,069. students enrolled lhis fall in facilities built to house 3,000 . Tbe school is now operating un- der a nine-pe riod day, with classes in session from 7::1> a.m. to •:20 p.m . Juniors and seniors attend classes early in the 'rorn· tn1 with fr e shmen and sophomores reporting later in the day . • lunch and then see the other racy movie. Deputy District Attorney Tony Rackauckas spared no enmity for the films and alleged nauy that what the jury would see are two films with asserted fiimsy plots "which string together one graphic sex act a fl er another.'' "What you will see will be a bsolutely unlimited closeups and graphic depictions of sex or· gans and acts that often don 't even seem to be connected," the prosecutor warned. .. 11·s nothing more than hard· core pornography ! That ·s it. It's nothing but sex for money and straight commerc ial exploita· lion:· McDaniel ·s statement to a jury that look copious notes took a di{. ferent approach. I-le urged the jurors to view the films in a tat.al context and to understand the fine points or California·s com· plex obscenity statutes. "You'll see a theater and films that have been shown inside of it. They are movies exhibited to adults who paid money to see them . No one was dragged off the street. No one s howed them to kids. nor did the defendants Pr<>-- ject the film s outside.·· he said. McDaniel gave a brief synopsis of each film . c h a r act eriztng "Deep Throat'" as a humor9us approach "to a subject that often c ould b e co n si d e r ed very heavy." He gave a lengthier description (See PORNO. Page A2) Huntington Firm Robbed ' Two gunmen fled wtth an undetermined amount ~ cash jmt before noon today from Be neficial Finance Company , 16121 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach. 1 Officers were searchiflll the area for the men but other details of the holdup were unavailable. t :., , ' , ' f Animal ! Hearing f Tuesday I I I I I ' I ' j Residents of tluntington Beach will get a l'hance to have their say on this city's contract with California Animal Control (CAC) but they may be required lo take an oath first. Detalls and the groundwork for the Animal Control Commission scheduled for 1 p .m . Tuesda,y will be discussed tt\is evening in the commission s's joint study session with the Huntington Beach City Council. J The central issue at Tuesday 1 night's hearing, according to 1 Deputy City Attorney William 1 Ams bury, will be the actual performance of CAC. 1 "The question of being sworn f in has been sugges ted in order to ~ hold witnesses accOWJtable for I abnytbing they shay and, to reduce I earsay," Ams ury S8.ld. 1 "We want to keep things within l reasonable bounds," Amsbury said. ''We want to keep CAC from being slandered by misrepresen· tations. · · One member of the Animal Control Commission who didn't wish to be identified disagreed. "Witnesses will feel intimidat· ! ed -and will be afraid to speak J openly," the commissioner said. t Robert Baker, chairman of the j ACC, said today he had no way of ! knowing what will be major is· sues raised tonight, and if the J question of an oath will even ! comeup. S "It's an informal meeting with 1 the city council to improve direct communication,'' Baker said. 1 · Amsbury says while the taking 1 of oaths may be unusual, the pro. ' vision for them is found in the ci· , ty charter and it has been im· , plemented before. ' l • : HIJACK ••• ~ discovered no plane was availa· ··-ble, he took the guard hostage as well and drove shortly after mid·. night to San Jose Municipal Airport, where he found two maintenance men preparing the m for an early monuna fbght. Brandishing a .38 caliber re- tfvOlver, he took them hostage also ~ ordered them to get him a fught crew, a gun and ammuni· t!on. · NegotJaUons between Salomon and the airpoft i;polit!I Jower be1an. Whh a mltnlertanCe man rel.awing tlie hijacker's demand : .. by ra41io, said assistant Sall Jose .,Police 'Chief Jay Propst. Control tower workers immediately ,.,notified Police, who arrived at 1; the scene within several minutes owith sharpshooters -members nLof the Special Weapons and Tac· , rtical Team known as SWAT. <tJ During the negotiations,· the reecurity guard and one of the maintenance men escaped while rSalomon was distracted, Propst iiiaid. The doctor was shot in the !leg when he tried to escape from ·the plane, police added. ... Officers said the negotiations were in process for half an hour. · They shot out the tires as the aircraft started to taxi down the nmway · "There was no possibility that the plane could have been flown," said police Lt. Don Tru· jillo. · The stabbing victim underwent , jlUrgery and her condition was . described as critical. The doctor, • .:t\'hO also was unidentified, was in ,$erious condition after surgery. . Police said names would be re· leased after relatives were notified. iiitrangling Case =BERKELEY (UPI) -Police -e trying to identify a brown. ~red young woman in her 20s • •ose body was found Sunday t 1cr a freight car. '· ORANGE COAST ""' DAILY PILOT 'tlw 0rwtw CN'1 O.llf Piiat. '"""' '"""'" 11 c~ lM ,.._ • ..,. .. ,, 11 11ut•U-1>y lhl Or ...... c:-t "11Mllfllll{I c-np.ny, ""-'* IMMI ....... ""°'hfi.d Mo......, ""1luOh Frldr( ... '""'9 MitM, ""•port Bt..:11. H1111ti..pi.. .. .C."/"-1•111 V•ti.y, lrwl.,., ~len..;t V•J19Y ... ~ a.k!ll'Sovl" (Oat, A al"OIP .....,.., ....... 11 ...... _ '-'-t• -,.,.,_ '*YI. Ttw Pt111clpel putlllsl\lno p111t11 11 ec .J3ll Wiii .. , MrMt, OMlll M6w, tallton>M nia. Robert N. Weed .... ~-Publltlw Jack R. Cur~v ""'*~ .... c;.....,..,. M.,.... Thomas Keevll . llclllor • • t,I,.,,....._. GORDON McCOLLOM IN STUNT THAT COST HIS LIFE Daredevil Huntington Beach Stunt Man Kiiied In Reno TEACHER. • "I was kidding him about his hunt-and-peck typing," she said. "I told him he was getting better at it," she recalls. He replied, she said, "Don't tease me; I'll master it yet.'' McCollom was graduated from Corona del Mar in 1969 and had a degree from Cal State Long Beach. He was married last year and began teaching at Edison in September of 1973. Drunk Charge Hits Senator SACRAMENTO (UPI ) -Sen. John Stull {R· Leucadia), was arrested on a drunkeD driving charge after his car struck a freeway guard rail oo his way home from the final . session of the 1975 Legislature, the California Highway Patrol reported today. . A spokesman said .Stull was arrested Friday about 11:30 pan., following a re- port his car struck the center divider on In- terstate 80 east of Newcas· Ue, a Sierra foothill com- munitY about 25 miles east of here. He was released on $375 bail, authorities said. Stull was the sixth legislator, and the second senator, to be arrested on a drunken driving charge this year., Mesan Faces Arraignmenl In Forgeries A preliminary hearing has been scheduled. Sept. 22 for a Costa Mesa lithographer arrest· ed Friday by federal agents on charges of forging and printing FBI, Secret Service and U.S. Justice Department credentials for sale. William J. Hollan&worth, 39, of 2103 Federal Ave., was arrest· ed. when be allegedly delivered the documents in a restaurant rendezvous arranged by an FBI agent posing as a buyer. He was arraigned before U.S. Magistrate Arthur Bradley in Santa Ana and remained in custody at Orange County Jail to- day on the federal charges in lieu of SZ0,000 bail at Orange County Jail. Judge Bradley said today the case is being presented. to a federal grand jury and that Hollandsworth will probably be indicted this week, prior to his hearing scheduled in Los Angeles. The defendant was booked initially on charges of both coun· terleifing the G·Man credentials ·and also accused oC thereafter manufacturing them, a secon· dary charge. If convicted, Hollandsworth, who operates a printing shop at 1740 Placentia Ave., Costa Mesa, faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $5,000 fine for the counterfeiting charge. He could also be sentenced to six months and fined $250 for the secondary charge of manufac- turing or printing the false gov- ernment identification docu· men ts. 'No1·1nal' • Wea1her Returns SePtembOr, ~hlch hllJ been a drudle up to now. turned normal loday with sunshine along the Or Ange Coast. A spotesman for the National WeaUter. Service in Loe An&eles Nsured a.bo that tbe weather will behave itself at least for tho next few days. "We are now getting into a ridge 1ituation (hi1h pressure) which sbou.Jd be with us for the next four or five days,'' he1aid. Why ,.,..., the fir.rt two weeks of the month so yucky, moce like cloudy June than sunny Sep-- tember? "We have had low pre- ssure which brought a lot of moisture from the south and southeast," he said. Last week·s high daytime tem· peratures in Newport Beach were around 67 degrees and low night temperature• around 60 to 62 dearees with the mercury , .dropping to 54 degrees one night. "We have had an awful lot of cloudiness," the weather man admitted, ''but now it looks like we are going to get some sun- shine." . That means it will be in the 80s inland, and in the 70s al.mg the beaches . F.--PageAJ PORNO ••• of the plot in the companion feature at issue and stressed the asserted social importance about a story dealing with an un· fulf'Llled spinster who commits suicide and before her fmal judg· ment deals with the Devil and ex- periences lust in all its forms. McDaniel conceded that the sex acts in the films are graphic indeed, but urged the jury to use comtemporary standards and strict legal interpretations in passing j~dgment. "The simple fact of graphic sex is not the end ol. the ball game,''he said. Homemakers Meet Slated CHICAGO (A I -Gor-Geor would baW blllllled ti< .. Bruiser wou Id h•ve aneered had Ibey ·-the wrfltllnf car<!. Nina Hall, 21, ..,.., tfJ>I the 1cales at 115 puuods. wa1 to wrestle Roclerick Heicht. 1ls feet and :zao PoUlldl. To liven up the mate~ a bit. the feature wu tol., to be conductA!CI - inthenude. The boul wa1 canceled, however, when Helet>t an- nounced tbat be wa1 a vice detective and arrested Mia Ball on • cbarce ol frost.itutlon. Police 1aJd be Adam and Eve a:aasuce parlor, where the bout WU to t&ke'l>I-of. fera ~llents ''no-bolds barred'' wrestling with the nude woman of their choice, for $50. Truck Spills Chemicals OnUF~eway LOS ANGELES t'UPJ) -A. truck 1pillecl <ISO galloaa of t'o chemicals that combine to form a poisonous gas on the Hollywood Freeway during the rush hour to-- day, tying up traffic for nearly an hour. . Five fire company units washed down the chemicals, muriatic acid and chlorine, and California Highway Patrolmen closed all lanes of traffic in both directions and nearby .surface streets. . Rush · hour traffic came to a halt in the busy dowDtciwa sec· Uon and cars backed up form.ore than a mile along the freeWay. The two chemicals, being de- livered for a swimm.inJ( POOi sub-ply company, can combine lo· form pbosgene, a gas used durtng World War I. It attacks the lungs and can cause death. However, chemical experts said no· phosgenewas given off. Th"e spill occurrect when the rear doors of a semi-truck and l trailer rll pc>pped open and the Ii· quid spilled onto the roadway . The driver, Michael Hastert, about 25, suffered chemical burns in attempting to close the truck · doorstopreven\morespillage. He was rushed to a nearby hospital for treatment. Fountain Valley and Hunt-A f'll'e official said the gas cl· ington Beach residents are invit-ings to the ground aDd does not ed to the Sept. 26 meeting of the spread easily. Happy Homemakers, which City police officers at first meets at 10 a .m. in the Fountain stopped cars and pedestrians on Valley Community Center, 10200 overpasses near the freeway but Slater Ave. · later decided they were not in The program fee is 50 cents and d those attending are asked to br-8:f;1" Southbound lanes of Ute ing a sack lunch. Reservations freeway were opened at 8:45 ahould be made by Sept. 19. by a.m. more than hall an hour after calling 962·1414, 968 -2135 or __ the spill, but the northbound 842-3455. lanes remained. closed. • • J Suspect In ~ape ~ry Held • Hluitlutoa lleacb police .-.. rupted What tlley allege wao aa alt•mpted ·ral'• late SUnday ru,bt -Milbbon ~~ ht-Ca woman~ In an-field. W!lu.m Dudle N-. 29, ol 44'1 Folr Drift, .Colla Iii-WU booked Into clty jail .... cbari• o( usault with Intent lo commit rape, pO!lce saitL HI.I ball wu IOI atSI0,000. Officer .. rt Adtiaa wao called lo the IWd at Bolaa <lilca Street Ind Hell Avenue, at 11:45 p.m. otter reatdeau or a nearby apart- ment complei NPOrted 1-rtnc a woman ealliac for help. He all .. ed Nanniewu1rappl· inl with with the 24'year-old woman on the ground ln a field behind• dairy there. Police 1ald the W0111an; who lived ntarby, suffered blows on her face. throat. arms and abouldera in the scume. She later told police •he had met Nannie earlier in the even- ing at a bar, then she and a woman companion had gone to a restaurant for dinner. She told officert •he wu walk- lftg home alone at'the time of the attack. ' New Number Tells Facts Fountain Valley residents can find out wha.t their city council ts doing by dialing 5'9·2929. any time of the day. · · The new Tel-Facts service enables mayors in Orange Coun. 1y to make such telephone re- :cordings to Jet resident's know of cowicll decisions and pending is- ·Sues, city officlalse"i>lalned. So far mayors of ·Tustin and Costa Mes11 also have taken ad-·. vantage of the service. offered by the .Telep·hone Answering Bureau, they noted. Residents s1)ould ask the answering operator for their mayor's recording, The message · nms about five minutes, officials said. Officers Hurt At Rook Fest 'SAN DIEGO CAP) ..:_ Six- police Officers were injured In quelling a series of disturbances at a concert of the rock group, Chicago. A few minutes after the concert got under way Sunday, fans ruohed the fence around Balboa Stadiqm. Eighteen persons were arrested and booked for disturb- ing tb'e peace .. None of the policemen was in· jured seriously. Pastor Tells Congregation That He's Gay John Morrisson, FBI agent in Los Angeles, refused Friday to speculate whether the forged and reproduced FBI, Secret Service and Justice Department iden· tific~tion cards might have . a _ specific purpose. ...-------~ ORANGE, Mass. !UPI) Some people said it took a Jot of guts for the Rev. FA.ward T. Hougen to unveil his homosex-· uality in a sermon Sunday before parishioners. Others expressed their protest simply and silently by staying away. The minister of Central Congregational Church, who an- nounced his resignation in June ••to pursue new forms of ministry." said he had been en- couraged by some to leave the parisbquieUy. But Hougen , 38, thought ·11 would be a real discount not to deal with them on this issue'• before leaving Oct. 1. Hougen, a graduate of Harvard University and Union Theological Seminary, prepared the congregation for his "coming out" sermon in a letter to all 250 parishioners. Last week, Hougen, married. and the father of two cblldren, toJd cbbrch members be was a candidate for pastor of Metropoljtan Community Chucrcb in Boston, a gay affiliate of the Universal Fellowship oC Metropolitan Community Churches. Although the subtoct of homosexuality is ''explol!ve and difficult" for some, he 111d in an interview, "It is an 1uue more and more commua.ltie1 •nd groups are beelnninc lo fa<e. Itt hla oermon Sunday, Hou&•• told the concr•c•tloo he felt "a particular calllq lo serve JesUJ Chrlat with and throuch Ille gay comm\1Dit7~becau1e I am llG'· "This Is tntormatlo11 about °""ell that In the Put I have felt tm lo share only with my f amUy ....i clo1e frlentls." Houcen, ordained In .Jll8'1 u a UllJted Cburch of Chrht llllabter, •aid, ''The .onl7 way o ho1UJe envJronme.nt can be cbllllled la If people In l~p. rolelec.ieouL '' • He said Hollandsworth ls being prosecuted as an ordinary al- leged counterfeiter, despite the fact the ID material could con- ceivably be used to get within close proximity of President Gerald Ford. The arrest came a week to the day after the alleged attempt to assassinate Ford in Sacramento. The announcement "of Hollandsworth's arrest.also con- tained a typographical error in his address in FBI material dis· tri.buted to the news media Fri· day, • The original address listed for the defendant bad the numerals 1 and 3 transposed, resulting in publication of an address of another party living on Federal Avenue in Costa Mesa. Cut-rat,e Lunch : Fee Offered BySchoou Children in the Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District may be elilible this faU for a free or reduced price lunch eacbday. Partilta may pick up applica- tions for the program and return themto•choolprlnclpala: · The general scale fOr free meals la a family of four with an Income 1 ... than .$522 • mouth, and for reduced prl ... (30 cenla off the 60 to 55-CWJ\ COit) the ••ale It an Income IJt leu than f/31 n;ioathly for a f aillllY of tour. In addition, famlllea wl\h 1 1peclal or-exeeuive--npmM:e may be elllllble. , ci-lona about tloo Pl'Cllrem abould be 1'9(erred lo llldlvldllll - • • • Manners gwes ·you up to a s1,soo tax ·deduciion this year. •• .•. AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA" -THE INDIVIDUAL RE- TIREMENT ACCOUNT. Mariners Individual Retirement Account .is a personal tax-sh.altered retirement plan. ''IRA'' was devef ... oped by Congress to give you an effective way to build your own retire- ment fund. · You can save as much as $1500 or 15o/o of your wages, whichever Is less, and your savings will be a tax deduc- tion during your working years. If your spouse works, your combined tax-sheltered savings can be as much as $3000 per year. Come In to Mariners and start your own Individual Retirement Account. You'll be.saving tax dollars now and building a much brighter future. For more Information, come In or call any one oJ our convenlenl locations. ....,.,.IM<h lhy•id•C.,t•r) 102A loy•ideDr. (71•)6',·4000 ' HERE'S HOW FAST YOUR MONEY GROWS IN A MAit/NEAS ''IRA ·· ACCOUNT. lnt11vidu•I Retirem_,,t Aocountt.,. P""fmfly ••ming 1-% per Y"'' when placed In• 6-yMrotflilkafe. Your ennu•l ylfid 1* fflCt'HHd to• big. !.Ol5 % whM intwnl ii •dded fo th• account be/enc. and compound«/ daily. Wlffl • m••lmum lttrllvithlel conlrlbution of JISOO NC.h yeM, II.,•'• hoW your money WI/I JlfOW: - WITH TAX WITHOUT E""'A SHELTEftED TAX MONEY IRA SHtlTERED FPtOMTAX -·· PLAN ...... CEFEftAAl 5y,._ $ 9,510 s 6,730 s 2 ,780 10yrw. 23,540 15,750 7,790 . 2.0 yn. 74,640 44,080 30,5611 30yn. 165,!SeO 95,030 90,520 0 MID\oe t19ur• are bllMd on 25,. Income brldlet. ftdtfel reg.,11a1\ont rtqulft .Ubli.tillal .,.,..Ulea tot ..,,., wlll'ldr•w•la lrom CIM'tlllOlte..unll. ' • ' .VOL. 61, NO. HI, 2-sECTIONS, U PAGES · Egypti.ara Hostages .fu Spain . !14.DRID CUPl)-PoJOIUnlan suerrWu ile(zed u.\ £1ypilan embuay today and lhre.l«lecl to kill the amba11ador and two Erypllan aiploa:iata unlesa Eaypt renounces the lnterfm peace acreement with Ianel by toa:ieht. A 1potesmln for the suenillu told UPI by t,Jepbooe !hit five Polestine raiders barricaded theniselYfl Inside the embassy and mine(\ the buUdlng. ' '"The moment someone oPel1S the door or a window, tbe wbole place will blow up," be said. ii:gyptian Pre1ident Anwar Sadat held the Polestine Libera- tion Organlzatlon·and 114 leader, YJ1ser Arafat, personally responsible for the consequences of the embassy taid, an J!'4yptl..,_ officio! announced In cauo. The olficlal said the Eeyptlan leader w•rned be would take "'decisiv~ measures" lf the. PLO and Arafat failed to ensure the immediate telease ol. the Egyp- tian 8:mbuaador and hi.a aides. ·In Be.Jrut a spokesmani fer the PLO and other major. Palestinian organizations denied ·involvement in the attack. The guetrillas called their commando unit "The Group of tbe Fallen Abdel Kader al !See EGYPT, Pa .. AZ) Marilou Meairs, 19, whacks volleyball during Salurday's Village Party in Laguna Beach. The Main Beach ac· tivities began with a 7 a.m. pancake breakfast and ·closed with firewor~s at 8.;30 .p.m, _ Sunshi;ne~~prise For OC Resiaents . September, which has been a drudge up to now, turned normal • today with sunshine along the Orange Coast. A spokesman for the Natidllal Weather Service in Los Angeles assured also that the weather will behave itself at least for the next few days. "We are now getting into a ridge situation (hlgh pressun) which should be with us for the next four or five days,'' be said. Why were the first two weeks of the month so yucky, more like cloudy June than sunny Sep- tember? "We have had low pre-- ' ssure which brought a Jot of moisture from the south and southeast,'' he 1aid. Last week's high daytime tem· peraturea in Newport Beach were aroun.d 67 degret"S and low night temperatures around 60 to 62 degrees with the mercury dropping to 54 degrees one nilbt. ''We have had an awful IOt of cloudiness,'' the weather man admitted, "but now It looks like •e-are goinc• to get ·aome sun-.. :-~ It 1 ~~-. . That means it will be in the 80s i11l!'ftd,~d in the 70s o)ong the beaches. - Mesa Litlwgrapher Faces Forgery -Rap A preliminary bearing iias been scheduled Sept. 22 for a Costa Mesa lithographer arrest- ed Friday by federal agents on charges of fora:inc and printing FBI, Secret Service and U.S. Justice Department cnidentials for sale. William J . HoUandsworth, 39, of2103 Federal Ave., was an-est- ed. when he allegedly delivered the d~umeots in a restaurant rendezvous arranged by an FBI agent posing as a buyer. He was arraigned before U.S. Drunk Charge Hits Senat.or SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Sen. John Stull (R· LeucadJa), was arrested · on a drunken drivJng eb.ar&e after his car struck a freeway l\lard rail on b.ls 'way bome from the IInal .1es1ion of the "1.915 (.eiialature, the Colif<imia tnjbway fatiol repcrted today. A spokesman said SM! wu orrested Fridq about ll:IO p.m., followin& a re- port bis ear struck the center dl videc on In· tt'l'ltate..O eut of Newc&s· Ue, a Sierra footblll com· munlty abe>ut 2S miles east of here. He WU reaeased on ens ·bail, autholl ., uld. Stull wa1 the alxth lqlslator, and the......, ._.tor, to be arrested• a drunl<en dri•lna Clhqe tbla: rear. • . I_, • Magi&trate Arthur Bradley in Santa Ana apd remained in custody at Orange County Jail to- day on the-federal charges in 11eu of $20,j)OO ball-at Oranae County Jail, ) Judie Bradley said today the cue is being presented lo a federal 1r.and jury: and that Hollandsworth wlll pnibably be indicted this Week. prior to his hearipa se.be.ctuled in Los Angeles.· · • Tbe defendant was booked initially on charges of both coun- terfeiting the G-Man credentials and also accused of thereafter manufacturing them, a secon- dary charge. If· convicted, Hollandsworth, who operates a printiq shop at 1740 Placentia Ave., Costa Mesa, faceS a mu.:i01um penalty of five years in prison -and a $5,000 rme for.I~ counterfeiting charge. He could olso be sentenced to WC. mC!Dtlle and fi~ed '2SO for the ~ char1e of monufac-turlna or printing the folse gov- erlirnent td"entification docu- ~-.... lobn lllorrUSOD, FBI arent in Loo Anreles, Tefused Friday to speculate wbether tbe·fcr«d and 'reprodlieod 'FBI, secret SeTvice in<t"3u1Uce Departmflbt lden- lific1\lod carda might have a specif'tt j)llrpOle. He 1atd Hollandsworth is being lll'OMCllted. aa an ordinary. oJ. 1ec-coOntel:feiler: deBJ>lte 'the fact tbe ID 'tnalertal could con· • 11 ... bly ,.. lded to ret wlthhl cloo•' proainlitJ of Pre1ident Gerald f'ocd. " ~ lll'l'est 'tame a wee'Y!o ~ dat ltlter the alle'ecl attempt to MSuainate Pord _ln1 Sacramento. \ ' l fllllOlllMY, M"9Mllalt ti, tm .. SWAT Sha Hijack· Suspect; San Jose Drama Finished SAN JOSE CUP!) -A jlOlice sharpshooter today -to death a 2'-year-old 1unman who tried to hljack an empty Continental Airlines 727 jet with four hostages. His death ended a four- bour rampage during which he stabbed a woman he tri~ to rape inberbome. The gunman, identified by police as Fred Salomon of San Jose, J>egan the hours ol terror wben be entered tbe apartment where the woman lived with her children late Sunday night and stabbed her in the heart. The drama ended several hours later with a sm,Je shot in the head by the sharpshooter at San Jose Municipal Airport. With two of his hostages escaped and another wounded, Salomon was cut down aa be tried to use his re· qiaining prilooer u a ihield to escape from the plane and about 2Ssurrounding police. ''He h'd agreed to come out of the plane himself without his weapon and with his hands up," said police Lt. Gary Leonard. ''Then he emerged from the plane with the gun in his baud and a hostage -an airport main· tenance man -in front or him, ualnc him as a~ltc!llUlPoiat.. ''One ot our ,pffi~ a.bPut ~ feet away, shout~ Ultee"times, Drop Y.OUr weapon.• Salomon dido 't ans·wer. He began to point the gun at the officer who was sho~ting to him . The officer began to run away. But one of our sharpshooters with a telescope sniper weapon fired the sincle shot from behind another airliner, and Salomon dropped.·· Leonard said that at one point two officers of'& group closing in ontbe aircraft while Salomon was still inside actually climbed aboard but scrambled.down when the gunman forced the two main- tenance men hostages to start taxiing the plane. Officers . said that after Salomon stabbed the woman, he drove to San Jose Hospital , kid· naped Dr. Frank Wei!els at gun- point, and sped to Reid-Hillview Airport, where be encountered a !See HIJACK, Page A2) SLUMPING DOW NEARING 000 NEW YORK IUPI) -The stock m.wket closed lower today in one of the slowest trading days of the year on the New York Stock Exchange. The Dow Jones indus trial average, a 3.37-Point larer Fri- day, was oU 6.10 points to 803.19. Declines led advances by about an eigbt·to·three margin. (Tables A9). Turnover am ounted to 8,000,000 shares, down from the 12,230,000 traded Friday. Many inves\ors were observing the Yom KippuJI reli.ious holiday. Prices were lower in slow trad- ing on the American Stock Ex· change. -·-HIJACKER SLAIN Freddie S•I- 4-county Pollution Unit 'A.Ukd' State Senate rejection of a mandated re1ional air pollution COlllroi district has ~veo a new leaae on life to a voluntary four· county agency formed iD July. according to Orange County Supervisor Robert BaWn. kit!n l'l'U.a fourullng directar of the vollln~llutloll C<lDIJ1ll unit. which Is comprised or Orange, Riverside, Sao Bernardino and Los Angeles counties. The existing agency had been endangered by Assembly Bill 250, authored by Assembly man Jerry Lewis !R-Higbland). The measure was turned down last Friday on an lS..20 Senate VQf.e. Lewis" 'bill would have created a pollution unit with broad powers over local planni.a.g and development. It would have also permitted cities to be members of the board, a feature not yet part of the voluntary agency. The bill apparently lost in the Senate because a conference committee chose to remove a Senate amendment that would have required a vote of the peo- ple be(ore tbe agency was of. ficially created. In an interview today, Battin ::iaid the Senate action "is a wise rejection of an ill-conceived and unnecessary new governmental behemoth.·· The Santa Ana supervisor said the new voluntary agency tias ex- ;sted onlf two months but is ''already strongly attacking re· gional problems and has com· bined a tough approach with a sense of fiscal resPOnsibility. ·· Battin was ani:ered when he learned. Lewis is planning to re- introduce his bill sometime next year but he said he is confident it will appear ''even more superfluous than it was this lime.·· · Day to Atone Jews ·Celebrate Yom Kippur Jews filled temples and synagogues the world ·over today to mar~ Yorn Kippur, the Day of Atone- ment, with fasting, self-evaluation and repentance. The holiday, the most sacred on the Hebrew calendar, began at sundown SUnday as cantors chant· ed the Kol Nidre, a traditional prayer beseeching God's forgiveness for man's fallibility. . One long blast of the sbofar, or ram's born .ends the day-long worship this everllng. ' Many rabbis stressed In their sermons that the sacred holiday was one of hope with the obligation to improve the human condition. Rabbi Ronald B. Sobel, at Temple jmaiiu-EI on Fifth Avenue, New York, .itessed tbai 'It faith, ~ Uglon and heritage of 1111,.Jewlah ~I "ere bllllt lleilher on the assum~oo that life Lt banal .and • absurdorbuman.natw.lfalleii andtr&.lic," · At speelpl services at Mollnt Slna1 Hospital, RaJi, bl J06eph Zeltlio said that· the li'Olid_, was a ._.,. mloder !O put ollesel(b) th~ J)Clsltioo otlhe det>d...i, thebuogry andthooe~au(f~la the world." . .. ,, ' ) People's LObby Stripped SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Peoples• Lobby, Jne., a self· styled. poliUc:•l reform croup, baa been •tripped of Ila title bec:auoe of failure to comply fully with state Jaws, it wu learned~ day. . 'Ibo lecoJ rlJ~tl to the UUe '"Peoples •· Lobby'' were purchued from lbe secretary cl atate'• office by GU~ RA>lales, •Capitol area bartemer.Hepald afeeolS8. Peoplea' Lobby, which bOlped to qualify the 19'74 California ~Ucal reform lnlUatlve for the ballot, ls a dedicated watCbdotlol the filin1 of required aovern· ment r-rta. especially by lob- byists an4 office 1eeken. Wben s\ICh repdrta ue not flled or are llled Incompletely, the organiza- tion frequently issues news re-- leases and calls news con- ferences to publicize the fact. Michael Ga1a1:11, deputy to Secttta'ry of State Mareb Fong Eu, said today that the name Peoples' Lobby Inc. was placed on her e()l'l)Orationa-suapended list after the state Francllbe.'I'ax Board ruled that Peoples' Lobby failed to Ille a required annual re-flllt • · o.;,.. 'H14 under -ate law whe,n a name la sUllpended ''anyone caln walk into the secretary of state's office and pay SS and claim It for IJ!O days." EdwJh Koupal, founder of Peoples' Lobby and ita executive di.rector, called the legal loss of the name ''political harassment. "We are goh1g to continue to use it," said Koupal. "Let them suem. Wewon'tdropthename." Gagan said under the law Rosales, a quiet.spoken non- political type, owns the name and Koupal could face a suit from new owner if he uses Peoples" Lobby. Inc. on news releases or stationery. Tbe or1anilation is a tax.exempt corporation. Rosales told UPI he did not know how he would use the name. Koupal said be ihought llie two agencies moved against Peoples' J...ot>by because of the suit,. But Gagan said his office was merely foUOwing the law. MCColloin Mourned .. At School 11y ao11Ea'I' 111\JtKEll o. .. Ody"'"" ..... Teachers and s(uden\1 at Edison Hlall School tod•J' ·mourned the death of GOrdon lllcCollo111 , a popular Enallsb teacbe( and gymnuUcs coacb ·who waa tilled In a ~-wall<inl accident In Reno FriClay. Tbe school, which called ror a period of silence today in tribute to Mr. Mccollom, is planning l~ create a memorial scholanhlpfh his name. FuneraJ services for the 2> year-old resident of Costa Mesa is pending. McColJom was killed Friday night when his airplane dipped suddenly and crushed him heaa. first into the ground. He wu suspended upside doWb from the top wing of the biplane when a do'Al'ndraft c:.iused th& plane.to sink and hit the ground, according to a race official. Mrs. June Edwards. se'cretary who has know'n Mccollom since he and he'r daughter attended preschool together in Newport Beach, safd (SeeTEACHER, PageA2l Were Sex Movies Porno or Spoof? By lOBN VALTERZA Of .. 0.lty .. u .. !MMt Was the fare offered al Balboa's Pussycat Theater "pornography-pure and sim· pie" or a sexy spool combined with a morality play? These were the characteriza· tions offered today to the jury on two sex movies, "Deep Throat'' and "The Devil in Miss Jones" whic.b are the subject of an ob- scenity trial in Harbor Municipal Court. Openin1 arguments from both the prosecution and defense played to ver'f few .spectators even though llie films origlnaJly were scheduled to be shown to the.Jury In court today. In bis opening statement to the· jury of six men and six women Pussycat defense lawyer Robert McDaniel said "Deep Throat" is a sexy spoof and "lbe Devil in llliss Jooes" a morallt~ o!Av The jury is now sChedul~ to travel to Balboa today to view one film before noon, break fer lunch and then see tbe other racy movie. · Deputy District Attorney Tony Rackauc.kas spared no enmity for the films and alleged Dally that what the Jury wootd see are ~-films )"ith asserted Dlmsy ~ ''which 9'rin1 totether one O"apb.lc aes act a.Rer another." ''What you will see will be absolutely unlimited clooeul" • and cnphlc depictlCXll "'sex or- .... and acts that Clften don't even seem to be connected,., the ~warned . ••J1•1 000.lna more tlw) bara--• . c6re pornography! That's it. It's nothing but sex for money and straight commercial exploit&· tion . ·· McDaniel 's statement to a j~ that took copious notes look a dif. ferent approach. He urged the jurors to view the rilms In a total context and to understand the fine point.s of California's corn· plexobscenity statutes. Orange Coast Weather Mostly cloud y ski es Tuesday on the beach and clouds breaking by mid .. day to hazy sunshine in4 land. according to the weather service. Highs 61 at the beaches to the uppeit 70s inland areas. ' • INSIDE TODA l': Or:anoe Cownty'• Se• Scout•, baaed in Nt1Dp0r1 B«ds,. are atiU going dronf Mlpile thdr lock of rwtorif!t-. Sft Fog< 87. I ~::,.. == -=·-==---7 ......... -... --· llltlex ... ,,. ........... .,_ .. , ,........,.._ .,~ =c-ty ......,._ ...... ... -.., .,......,. ··-. ............ I •• ... ... ,,M: I A• ·~ ... :: I t ' ' l I I I I I I . I I I • . ! I ' i I I I I ' I ! LOii L tUPH -A lnH'k pitied 110 , .. .._ ul two ttwm ala lb•l e mblne to form •poi-.. IN on llM llolly- l"rftw11 dvrlq U.1.,.,, ballr to- day. 11'111 up lralfl< '" -iy .. hour. Five fire eo mp•n1 untl1 •••hed down the chrmlt'al•1 murielic acid and ('hkwine, ana CaJlfornia Hlahway Pat.l'Wmt!n tlosed all lanrs of lr.tnc •n both directions .. nd nearby 1w1ace -· llu1h hour traffic came to • bait lo the busy downi.own sec- tion and cars backt>d up for mort! than a mile along the freeway. The two chem1cals. being de- livered for a sw1mm1n~ DOOi sup-ply company, can combine to formJ'hoarene, a 11i1s used during Worl War I. It attacks the lungs and can cawie death. However. chemical ex p e rts said n o phosgene was given off. The s pill occurred when tt'oe rear doors of a :semi-truck a .• d trailer rig popped open and the li- quid spilled onto the roadway_ The driver, Michael Haslett, about25, suffer ed chemical bums in attempting to cl06e the truck doors to prevent more spillage. : He was rushed lo a nearby I hospital for treatment. A fire official said the gas cl- [ ings to the ground and does not i I spread easily. f Dostal Heads I I I • New Airport t Land Group I I :"l"ewport Beach Mayor Pro- Tem Milan Dostal has won elec· I tion as chairman of a new state committee which proposes to suggest new legislation to re- gulate airport land use. -Dostal, who sits on the county's Airport Land Use Commission. won election to the key post at an inaua:ural session of a legislative projects committee set up by the California Department of Transpartation, in Sacrarriento. ~ "Nine members have been ~ selected to the group, wh ich hopes to complete a tolal review 1 of current airport land-use codes ---ands~ga:estnew lawatoimprove the statutes. "I view it as an important job which could he>p the entire state ~:.cope Wllff ibe conflict. of,loirports ... and the Jand uses Surlumding them,•· Dostal said today. ~.... The group's fi~st, real shirt- ~ ,flJeeves session is set for Oct. 4 in rP1NewPort Beach, Dostal said. . fi& Dostal is the only Orange Coun--<u ty resident selected for the -tflservice on the CalTrans advisory 11c&r'OUP- ~~chool I .and ::.0. . . ";Sale Stalled n • "; .i Newport•Mesa Unified School .;,iDislrict trustees still have not .'o.egreed to sell 10,()()()...square feet ho( land at Jamboree Road and Bristol Street to the state and will ;,1conside r it again at the next , .board meeting. •,,, The proposed sale to the 11·.California Division of Highways, : , for $1 ,400, has come before '1 .. trustees three times. Each time, . ' -'• board majority (ailed to agree · to the sale. • Several trustees said they tJelieve the propased sale price is not fair. .. -The la nd is to be used to supple-· ent a 4()..foot easement long-ago anted by th e old Newport rbor Union Hi gh School Dis- . ct, for use as part of the ona del Mar Freeway ex-. ion . ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed ............ •11111 P<bllollel' Jack R. Curley ""9 Pl'WOMI •1111 c..n.. .. Mi'Wll'"'" Thomas Keevll l!0/1or Thomas A. Murphfpe ~ .... "'91EOllw • OWlrJes H. Loos Richard P. Nall loMldW!t ,,.....,.. ldlton. { . u~•,......,...• GORDON McCOLLOM IN STUNT THAT COST HIS LIFE Daredevil HvnHnglon Beach Stunt Min Kiiied In Reno Lions Plan F T-b TEACHER .. or iA.I ster today "EverybodylikedGordy." ''He was very popular withstu- B k V dents and teachers. His ,ym-a e .. ete nasties team loved him,' she said. Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce officials are prepar· ing for the annual Lion's Club Lobster Bake Sept. 26, 27 and 28 and say the town will be decked out in red, white and blue pen- nants and banners in honor of the bicentennial year . The big charity-raising weekend will include a lobster bake each day at the old Z.00 site, corner of Jamboree Road and Pacific Coast Highway, plus a parade through the center of Corona del Mar that Saturday. Chamber officials have invited merchants to purchase special $10 kits, which include 100 feet of colored pennants to string across windows and a red felt banner with a· white-on-blue "Crown of the Sea'' insignia. Merchants also are lnvited to attend a 6 p.m. Thursday meet- ing at Sam's Seafood to discuss plans for that weekend. · In addition to sponsoring the storefront decorating, the chamber is entering a float in the parade and has invited all resi- dents to attend a workshop to put ··At least he died doing something he loved,'' she added. Mrs. Edwards said that McCollom, a gymnastic expert at Long Beach State College, bad been wing.walking for about two years and he had petformed the stunt that was to cau.se his death several times without incident. ''He said i( was safe although it had an element of danger," Mrs. Kitty Richardson, secretary in the English Department said. "That's what I like to do," Mrs. Richardson said be told her. Mrs. Richardson said she saw McCoUom a few hours before his death. "I was kidding him about his hunt-and-peck typing," she said. ··I told him he was getting better at it," she recalls. He replied, she said, "Don't tease me; I'll master it yet." McCollom was graduated from Corona del Mar in 1969 and had a degree from Cal State Long Beach. He was married last year and began teaching at Edison in September of 1973. finishing touches on the float. Attendance Rismg" The workshop will begin at6;30 p.m. on Sept. 26. Cider and BOSTON (AP) -School of· doughnuts will be served and ficials said attendance by both persons are asked to bring their blac;k and white pupils was up to- families. _ day as public schools began the Also, for persons wanting to second week of citywide de· either buy or sell them, drawing segregation. tickets are available at the · ,,-----------, chamber office, 2855 E. Coast Highway, or by phoning 673-4050 or 673-7065. The grand prize is a new Cadillac. Badham Bike Bill Bounced SACRAMENTO (U PI ) -A bill establishing s tatewide bicycle rules, including a ban against leaving a bike on its side on a public sidewalk , has been defeat- ed by the Assembly. The measure (SB939) b y Senate Presid ent Pro Tern James R. Mills <D·San Diego), a veteran bicyclist, was rejected on a 24 ·41 vole Friday. .But it s floor sponsor, Assemblyman Robert Badh a m (R-Newport Beach) kept the meas ure barely alive by asking that it be re- considered next January. The bill also would prohibit two people from riding on a bike un- less it was a two-seater and im- pose strict guidelines for install- ing bike patbs in cities and towns . NiideMatch 'Forfeit.ed' CHICAGO (AP>°.:.... Gorgeous George would have blushed and Dick the B r ui se r would have sneered had they seen the wrestling card. Nina Hall, 21, who tiP5 the scales at 115 pounds, was to wrestle Roderick Height, six feet and 220 pounds. To liven up the match a bit, the feature was going to be conducted in the nude . The bout was canceled, however, when Height an- nounced that he was a vice detective and arrested Miss Hall on a charge of prostitution. Police said the Ad a m and Eve massage parlor, where the bout was to take place, of- fers clients ''no-holds barred" wrestling with the nude woman of their ·choice, for $50. Congregation Silent Gay Pastor Holds 'Coming Out' Talk ORANGE, Mass. (U PI) - Some people said it took a lot of guts for the Rev. Edward T. Hougen to unveil his homosex-' uality in a sermon SUnday before parishioners. Others expressed their protest .simply and silently by .staying away. The mini s ter or Central Concncalional ChUtth, who ao- DOWJ<od bl1 retl1P>atlon In June ••to pursue new1 form1 of mlnlltry." lald be had been en- couraged by some to leave the pai:lab quietly. . But flouien, ~. !bought "It -.Id be a real di.....,,! not to deal wllb them on UU. lllue" 11o1.,...1nv1n1 Oct. I. .llouien, a 1raduate of Jtarvan1 Unlver1t11 'Ind Union TheokJsical Seminary, prepared • ~I the congregation for bil'1ccimlnc out" sermon in a letter to all 2$0 parishioners. · Last week, Hougen, married and the lather of two children, told church memben he wu a candidate for pastor o'f Metropolitan Community Chuerch in Boston, a gay affll.late of the Unlvenal Fel.lowsblp of. Metropolitan. Communit7 Churches. .. ... Allhouah the 1ubject of homooexuallly Is "exploolye and dilficutt•• for some, he said tn an inlt!~ew, "It Is an li8ue more and more communltlu and IJ'OUPI an be11on1na lo lace. In blo eermon SUlldq, Houc""' told the CODfrtCalloo be felt "a particular calllng fo -J•m Chrlot with and lbrcNlb the 181' oammunl\J bee_l ,.,.Pl'· I --,_ .......... Lll•1u1rd C1pl. erld1n Byerly......., Ille -•-In the Ylclftll 7 ot UM plor llDd U.. UndJI IAae 111 ... enl--lhe IOll1·1melliD1 lhH flowed fnllll 111\Grm drain neartben. Liia' UM -II ~ Ille pl• Md Anald1 E"lrim. about a mile north, wu c'-ed wbeo more raw 1ewace 1luiced from • eewer ouUet there. Byerly 1aid .aewae:e visible in the s urf Sund1y dis pp.,red by this mornln1. The Or-eCounty Health Department has been notified and tests to determine if a health hazard is present are pending, Capt. Byerly said he inspected the spill at the Est8cion tower. .. It ?t'as flowing badly at that time, very rapidly. The guard there said It bad been gushing - that this was only a trickle ~m­ pared to what it had been -prior to my arrival." Capt. Byerly said. The incident ls the third time this summer raw sewage has fouled the beach in San aemente. The waters off the area between the pier and lifeguard headquarters were closed for about a week during August because of sewage pallution. · City officials including City· Manager Kenneth Carr and of- ficials of the sanitation depart- --Ml ,._ .... " E(;YPT •• .' Hous.e.ni , '' after a PaJatin.ian leader ltUled In a clull with a Jewish croup in 1947. They demanded lhat lhe EIYP- tian peace delegation to Geneva leave the Swiaa city by midnight without sianlng documeata of the interim Sinai a1reement " negotiated by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinser. Simultaneously with the re.id on the embassy-,. ·another band of about so Arab •ludents occupied the Madrid offices of the Arab . League, but they later voluntari- ly surrendered and released two hostages, the news agqav:y Cifra so.id. "t' u.. NI ........... , .... ~ ........ .. ral""l.Yiftl hUHkr1 +f TI I Mt bJ radio, l&ld ., ..... .., Pollee Clllef lar " I L !loll .... tower workers l•-...i1 natilled poll... Wbo llrthwi It the -wllbla""""' m1 .... with ~-­ "' UM sped11I Wu-ud TIC> tlcal'feam lmowa ullWAT. llurlq the ll•l"llltlcm, Ille l«Urity 111an1 an4 -of the m1'nteuance men escaped wtdle Salomon WU cllstrlded, ~I so.id. The ~r wu lbat In ihe leg when be tried to --flom lhe plane, polio. added. Officers 1a.ld-the ouoU.Uons were ln proeeq for hall an hour. They shot out the tlres u lhe aircraft started to taxi clowG the runway "There was po pooalblllty that the plane could have b~en flown," said polio. U. Don Tru- jillo. . The stabbinl vicllm llllC!erwenl surgery and her c:cmdition. was described as critical .. Tbe&ctor, who also was unidentified, wu in serious condition after IW'ler'Y. ·Vendor Killed At Santa .Ana Ice Cream Cart Egypt and Israel initiated the interim peace accord Sept. I , but . their delegations in Geneva are now negOt.iaUng terms on ways of putting the accord into effect. It widens the buffer zone in the Sinai Desert separattni the two armies and calls for Israeli withdrawal from the Mitla ~d Gid.i pas~es and the Abu Rude1s oil fields and the stationing of 200 American technicians in the Sinai as peace monitors: City Ckanup Big Success ForNeU7port Newport Beach residents and merchants scooped up about 110 tons of garbage and other un- wanted items during last week's special cleanup campaign, ac- cording to Jake Mynderae, general services director. I Santa Ana polic!e are hunting today for a gunman who shot and killed a 62-year-old ice cream vendor during a holdup Sunday evening on a residential street. A police spokesman said George H. Denholm of Santa Ana was found draped over the steer- ing wheel of his ice cream truck at about 9 p.m. near the intersec- tion of Shelton and Pine streets. A resident told investigators be heard a shot and ran out of his home in time to see a young man with long dark hair and a mustache running from the scene. The witness told officers the man, who appeared to be carry- ing a pistol, jumped into a late- model green sedan and drove away at high speed. Bay Pollution Program Set A talk and slide show on ''Newport Bay : Beauty and Pollutioo" will be lhe.blgbllgbt of the 10 a .m . Tues.day meeting of the Women's Civic League of Newport Harbor. The talk, in the mul\l·IJUlllOlle .room of Mariner's Ubtary, 2005 Dover Drive, Newport Beach, will be given by Sue F\cker, pre- sident of Stop Polluting Our Newport (SPON). Anyone interested may attend . and is asked to bring a sack lunch. -O:>okies and coffee will be " provided. That figure includes general trash, tree cuttings, old furniture and old appliances -items not normally picked up in the city's regular trash pickups. Fifteen dumpsters were scat- tered around the .cj\y dwinf the week-long anti-Utter campaJin, which culminated in the ••world's Largest Litterless Par· ty" at the Balboa PierSatunlay. The dumpsters were provided as a public service by Dewey's Rubbish Service, Myndersesaid. The campaign was considered successful, according to Myn- derse, who added that dumpsters near Newport Elementary School, Mariner's Park and 32nd Street and Balboa Boulevard had to be emptied several times. • • Mar1~ers 1ves you up to a s1, 00 tax deduction this year. •• ... AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA" -THE INDIVIDUAL RE- TIREMENT ACCOUNT. Mariners Individual Retirement Account is a personal ta x-sheltered retirement plan. "I RA" was devel- oped by Congress to give you an effective way to build your own retire- ment fund . . . You can save as much as $1500 or 15°k of your wages, whichever Is less, and your savings wi ll be a tax deduc- tion during your working years. If your spouse worl<s, your combined tax-sheltered savings can be as much as $3000 wr year. · Come In to Mariners and start your own lndlvldlial Retirement Account.·· You'll be saving tax dollars now and bulldlng a much brighter future. For more Information, come in or 1:all any one Qj our fOnven ient locations. HERE'S HOW FAST YOU R MONEY GROWS IN A MARINERS ""IRA ., ACCOUN r. lfldivldual Retirement ACCOUfl tS a,. pr-.setltly &1Jr,,1ng 1.\11% ,,., yHr wh•" pl~ed ;,, a 6·y&ar cwrilica'•· Your eflrUJll yi • lncrllUM! /o •big. 8.06% when Inter.sf I• ..ided to rtt. nt b•lancw 11nd compoundlld dally. With a ma11lmun1 d IJlt/ «Hitribution ot $1500 each year, he,.'& how your wlllgrow: 5yTs. 10 yrs. 20yrs. 30yrs. WITH TAX SHELTERED , .. PLAN $ 9 ,510 Z3,540 WITHOUT TAX SHEt.TERED PLAN $ 6,730 15,7!50 EXTRA MONEY FROM TAX DEFERRAL $ 2,780 7,71JO 30,!illO 90,520 .. •. Martne..S Savings. and. LoanAsSo<:iatiOn ~~ ...Ii,.,, IMcll ~~~" l•tv,....... -,... ..... ...."'"'"• lO'I .......... (Molft Of'fke) llott\d• Centwr) 310 Oi.r.nevr• 51. ;r.;;o,. WOfld) 390 Soi l.....,ty Ok (Opp.Ml. Slnol.,..,Uol) lllSWMr<llff~ 102•...,,lfh:Dr. (7l<1)<1fA·7506 I S.0-ltoChl~d. (2J3)~acKIO 1747a-.tfvlhf!L (1'4) ... 2....000 (714)6<1'2·.iboo (OP(Nlf\KiSOON) 13).fft·7616 • (213)'51 ... 14' ' -• • • J I •• \ Money's Worth WllENYOUTAllB'llll:PSAT/NJISQTand~ a -questl<nnaln, ,... cot a bonus: cm your rqlslrlllon form, you.can uk lbeOollece Board to in<lude yourume la Ille Student Search Service flla.'Tbls service Is uud by C<ll· Jes• to MDCI facta ·-new or special pro-ms (lncll>d· inc al<l) to-nta with eertatn cbaracterutlcs. -TbeNallonalAssodaU...olSecondaryScboolPrin· clpals and the Natlonol Honor Society award Sl,000 11<boiarahips to q11alitled blgh school SOlliort wbo beloaa to the Hmor Soclely. Check al your scbool for ellllbllily ,. qulrements. . lllake a list of :roar dnalillcatloas, interests, objectives and talents. Then check directories and reference 1uldes for rchievement scbolanbips that fit your needs. FOK PRECISE INPORlllA110N about speolal aod career-related scholarships, get ''Tbe Official ~liege En- µance EuminaUon Board Guide to Financial Aid for Stu- dents and Parents'' (Simon & Schuster, $C.95). Your school library or fmaoclal aid officer may have a copy. 1Do not overlook these other private sources of aid: , -National Organizations of which you already are a )ltember. Many groupg-4-H Clubs, Boys' Clubs, Jaycees, Juru.or Achievement-have small, specialized programs. -Professional career organizations -such as thosere-•ted to bealth and nUrsing, law enforcement. engineering, epectal educ.ation -offer aid to stimulate young students to •ter their fields. Some even sponsor scholarship "con· ~ts" in which you can demonstrate your need. Get a copy ·if the..uperb ''Need A Lift?" from~ ~erican Legion. ~lOSS,lndianapolis,lnd.46206 (li()t). I -Athletic scholarships are a well-known source of ancial aid and so are grants to winners of beauty or tafent ntests spoosor~d by local, state or national organizations. ware, though, of private promoters who, for a fee, pro-- ise you a ''scholarship.'' -LABOR UNIONS AWARD large numbers of. cholarsbips to members or their children aqd many cor- rations offer scholarships to children of employes as well to students with no corporation connection. Check with our union and Mrporation. -Civic and fraternal organiJ:aUons that sponsor bolarships rapge from the American Legion posts or aux- ~ a.cy upits to tlle ~lks, U,pps, ¥~. Parent-~eacber As- eoclafions 8.nd Daullhfhs of tlie American Revolution. ~e in most cases, the money ls for children of members or p.nose living in the commwlity., check each source. . -. Minorities often get help from national organizations !hat offer scbolarsbipS andtofo special counseling and refer- ~I services. A few: ASPIRA Edncatfonal Opportunity Center, 216 . 14th St., New York, N.Y. lOOU (Puerto Rican); B11reau_ Of Indian Affairs, Higher Education Program, Box 8327, ~buquerque, N.M. mos; League of United Latin American tizens, National Education Service Centers, 400 First St., W., Washington, D.C. 3Kl01; National Assn. for Advance· tnent of Colored People, 1790 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10019; National Scholarship Service and Fund for Negro Stu- dents, 1776 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10019; National rrban Lea~e, SS E~52ndSt., New York, N. Y.-10022: " -FAMILY ANCESTRY can be your key. Check ethnic ~rganizations that would be appropriate to you. MARKET NYSE Index ASE Index Dow-Jones Ind S&P 500 Stocks INDEXES 44.01 82.87 803.19. 82:88 off off off off 0.25 0.61 6.10 0.42 • i 1 . :· ·~· " "·i l I . ~ r= { .J .. :'l.o l: it= , {. . ... -: ,: ." i · 1 ~I J .-::: __; :-··--" I l -+ • Wt-'" ,· " =-: ~'•iii " ,,_. ~ ., a: ~:~ ~'t!; .. _,_ .!.. ...... = :. J '"5 s::.; '! 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MolyCpf 20'I 2 lOVr+ "' ~ ,·~ • 1 1S\/o ';;\ BIHi' Ill .Ja J !ti 19\\>-1'16 DltEdl 1'..J 'i •t 1Z'h Hobtf'I C IO 11 31 1' -\Ii MIMM#I I 10 •,; 9 1a'l6 . >2 -6ekoP1 .•5b2 Y 16*-\lo. o.tEJ7.4S .• i100 u +'\4 .._._ .'n • 2 13\lo-.,_ MOl'lop.in J 1 ..,,:·; =~~·k 11 1:~-.Vl! kl~~ 10 J '""' •·· Dt1 E of1:\lo .• "2 2 ...... + V. Hett f:l«ln ·· 6 ~ ••· morOIA .10 1S x14 1"" •.• Aockwt11.i I 1 1~ nYo-% •• WASlllNGTON (AP)-M'erclwds and manufacturers toot advantage of .a July saJes surge to furtherbim. the .huge inventories which were a key iJ>.. '.gredient in the recession. tbe Com· merce Department said today. · The department reported total busi· ness sales rose $.1.69. billion. er 2.2 _per• cent, in July to $169.4 blWcm. It waa the strongest monthly advance since April for sales and marted the fourth sales increase in a row. • Gas Price Dip . 8'11 I. 1 I' ""' ... Dtxtr ~ .» a » 1 lw2q Hot Inns .JS t • 10Vr · · Mons-2.60 a ,. ~ .... Roe• OI '"' 6 s~ ..:. =·.g»p1f : :J ~ + !It di• l'ln .60 S • •Vt+ \lo Holl\'Suo ,_I I~ ii! ~ ~ MofltDk 2.09 • 1 UV:. •.. t;oc.k DI I.JS:• 2 19~-·~ , r• I n11d •011Pr• ... ,_ .. ~ 1't1rk J .'i c t1 ~ •.. Ol-"'1111'111., 1 .. 22""-"" Hon'iti.i• Morly ~b t ,, 6Vr ... Lltdw" Ind «I • 1S ,.,.._ .... :••R llt•rs IL • 19"0t""• ~&t~·~ • .J ~YI•·· Ol-tSlwnl.60 1 111 ... ,._"'° ~11 ,4010 '° ~: MoMM1«1, S2 ""'1-1\lr Relllnsin'.30 'i1 1 11,._Yo NEW YORK (AP) -Conllftentlll Oil Co. said overtheweekeodthatitis reducing the price of its gaaoline by a penny a gallon because of ••com .. petitive conditions in the marketplace.•• , n.1o1'°"" 11st Mo11tA('tl•,._ &enStdMt .. n 1"' .. :~ OlaStlpfi.JO .• 11 23 -\'t ~ 1·» 1 t 12.,.. ..MorTSKn .• •JI 204'o+ <;l. Rorer.A ·'°, 2s 11:i.r.-v, .. = .. ·--·"."' ..... -.-..... "'-~~ :::• 11:·s '31 1 Dk.lABA. ,. '" •.. Hori-Cpn, ', .. ~_·;.: -.n..E• Pr .• s 2 ... llk:>-lo.40t16 11• 35 .... -'"' .--'""" ' •··-Ok~pl'll'I 60 • ti 7'<I>--.... 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I.Jo 6 4 IJ -~ .N ..... 1.1.J 9 .n S'l'llll-"' 1,..itwte119 ,.._ 1};i1f~ of~ u.t'f ~•··~nl.otrl~fd by Olll P\-t,ft I " 11'i-"" ,.,..ream ... ,, ,,. .U'A . ,~1 • • .,._., El .JOlO 1'1 ~ -'Ill lNl(Tl4tM 9 '' J0'4o :.., ~...... lclfflO IM 1-'"' 11 In NtftlllO' ~a!l.211 1S 11.,.._ 16 f<.t~lftd.30 1 It •"'-'" I lM ,. 11 a.\>'t-116 1 .0,. J ,..._, .. 5'"-<Jl!.M11 n 2tV.t 'A toon ll\t. , ........ "' •• gw ::t l. 1t lit= t ,..llnftl,. ... 1 I ,.,_ ••• IJHll lft \Ja ••• """"'"·.... .>t .. 10 ,, ...... o,lo ' I Conoco thus becomes the lint ma .. jor to adjust retail prices since the end of federal price controls Sept. I. -.-to:; ........ ,,. ····~ ,,...-..;.;.~..,;;,--.,:! SPORTS ' ' ENTERTAINMENT ,_. .. , .... , ... • l11!1lijQj(1)'· -~ . ' ' l ! ·, TV DAILY LOG Monday Evening ....i.: (C) ~ -... •1 r..it' (*') '69 -.lie* lMlllOll. C.Ui- eriflt OtlltM. Ptttr lntord, Sa"1 Kllirlfllllft.' Myrlll lof, Ch11ln &o,tr. A sucr:asflll liluSinessnlf• dt· ddn IO dnlcl It Ill lld betin I new lift with I llulllihll woma11. (j) 1'e Uats ........ 0 llAIC ~ ~Joflnny Ruther· llmf' A prolilt Oft tfll IMn who won the 1974 Jwtil111P01is 500. 1tler IO ptewious laMurn, bltlust be Wlll!ed 11 for bis l1tMr wllo was dyi111 ol """'· GI TM llW OllS Qjlllwtt: ~ (Zlw) "All flt A NICM'• ..,... (inp;) '61 -Oetn Mutin. ShidtJ MICLllM, CMff Ro· ...... IQi(i))Ql"""'"°" '"" u llll w (i)---decides to n.111 tor the s1111 Se111lt, W1lltf decides to t11n IOf 1he Mtf· tst swinaina·'11111n blChe\or !"d and it kloks like Malldt llllY !me slrllCll out for IN fourth time in Ille llllfilll .swttpstlkes. o-m Fi• hltwft "Died You111." fR) m,..a.. 10:00 B tttJ (}) CIJ Mldlcll Cellar "Ttir fourth Sa" Cold. OJ. GlnllOll Ills lo dloose betJrttft the 1rishll of the W0111111 ht wants to IMffJ alld tfll dtsifn of 1 CllllMpe. Robert Ried, S.lonlt Jtt1., Dlmiis Cole tnd Gtry , ... _ (j)Ptny ...... 0 William Shatner, ' --·-COASTORAPHOANALYSTWITIICHARTS . lt'a Nol Occult, Saye Nllwpoo1'• Mary Denlgan Aerosol Inf la tors Recalled WASHINGTON (AP ) -The National Highway Traffic Safety Ad· ministration has an· nounced the recall of 35,000 defective and potentially dangerous aerosol ''tire inflator cans." . The recall originally was announced last year by the manufacturer. Taylor Made Products Inc., of Akron, Ohio. However, NHTSA said it was reissuing the recall notice because the com- pany's action, in May of 1974, produced only limited results . The agency said it feared many defective cans still may be in consumer hands. The cans, sold under the brand name of "Ins· tant Spare,'' are in· tended for use as a parta· ble source of compressed air for emergency tire inflation. Saddleback Offers Variety A wide range of courses-from landscap- ing to sailing-are being offered this fall by the adult education depart· meot of the Saddleback Valley Unified School District. The classes, which be- ing this week, are open to all persons 1'6 'and older. Registration will be held a t the first scheduled meeting of the. 'class. Additional in- formation. c~n be ob- tained bY calling Asst. Principal Keith Sims, 837-6720. · Herearesomeoftbeof. ferings: Cllltw.i An11Vopol09y-+11d from 7 p.m. Wf:.Op.m . Thurscl•Y nlghtsln A:ootn !23 11 Ml1•lon V1tjo HIOh Stnool. Sl>Kl•I empMsl1 vrlll lMlgl""" to thl Amtrictn lndl•n't role In the ...oiutlon of s.Klety. s.lllng-Students wt>o "'"' never betn Mlllf19 befon Jlllll Ill I~ the ropn et 1 p.m . TUff<Uiy n19t'O In Room J06 •1 MltsiOfl Viejo Hlfh StllOOI btQlnnlllQ ,,...111 TUH41'1'. Prtc· Uttl ln1trucUon Is oll1recf on ...,...,.. lAlll:IK.,. Gtrdtnlng-contractor Llrr'f' Plterson lllC.,.I Ito-• hCM' to Pl•I a.nd m.ll'lttlrt I tiqutlt1.tl ~from7p.m. to lOp.m.Mon- dlly nlgflt1 In uw t0rlt11lt11re portabl• bulldlno •I Ml11lon Vl•io Hloh """°'· Homtmtdl ctothing-F '"" clothing p.m. Tl'M.tr•v nlgflb In R-tOI • El Toro HIQfl ~ •fld et 1 p.1'11. T""61;y lllgms In Room 11!-S at L06 .tJl-lntitnnffl•t• ScMol. "SCltcllery ll'ld Nff'd .. Ctafl" 1,.. stnlttlon Is n1111~ ~ I st.l'l'I. Wtd- l'lffdty .-.noons In RO«ll 50IMMI'" "°"VleJoHlgh Sclmol. Tl'ltltltf'-ll•slc t1chnlqun ffK t1191M'"9 kllOrs ... , blf t-.M ff'Olt'l 7 p.m: 10 Mp.m. Twtday 11lghtt.t1tle MltllOl'I VltJO Hiott Scttoot Uttle TIIHttr. A tllHttr _._.._ wUI Ot hfld fw ~ •Ndtfth TIMrtdll' nl9MtbtOl,...11'19Stslt· 11. Gre.t l90oks--1Mlterworh •11 .. dltc:--_,...,. .. 1., ............ ,.,, ..._.ti rrom 1 p.m. 10 f :.S p.m. It! A:_,. 21t •I MllSIOfl Vl•lo Hlvti """'· Movlet.-l.••rn hOW lt ~ • d...-critic 111 • cl.ss meeting fn:im 1 p.m. to 10 p.m. Tuttcl•'I' n"'1Q In Rooft'l1CW•t El Toro Hlgtlktlool. Willdi119 #Id Mtt•I-Mtcflin. lll'IOCI t«ltnl(luM end -ldll'IG wlll lMI ~ ff'Om7p.m . to 10 p.m. Thuridt"tnlOMS .C El Toni High Scttoot •nd It ttw Mmt ti-TUHCUly "'gl'lts M ..._ AlllOs lmnn.clltW Scl'loOI. ~kJno---kolnnlftO 1tudfflt5 <Wt IMtfl tt. er.rt Mond•'I' Nola .e. El T°"' Hlglt ~Mol •I'll T....0.W ~ •I Miiiion Vltfo Hlttl Sdlool. Adv•11c1d .. 1tl0flt •r• scheduled from WllCIM5dl'I' nlvtitt tt Mlalon Viejo tnd Thur5dt'I' nlglltt tl El Toro AHtlt1511ti~from7p.m.i,10p.m. Cnortlt-lnstructlon In fOf'tlon cnoraJ works II belllQ offer.cl fnlm 1 p,m. to 10 p.m . Tuncl•Y nights In A:oom Cl ti l..os Al/sos lnternwdltte """°'· P11nt Lore-ln.Ooof' •no Ol.ltdoor conttll'llt 91rdenlng wtlt ... •lqllored In ttllt ~M '""11119 W....,.., nl'Olh1t Dttw9tn 1 p.m. •nd 10 p.m. in A:oorn :tOf al M ission Vl•lo High """°'· • ., ... .. ••I••• ,.,. •lilt D <12 If. et .. • D f J---I ..... w.,.,•.r;iJ t• 1aa t .... • ,.to•'t rl• ti• • .-Ne•~.................. -Mt Ill .. :!!l ..... ... " ••• 121:• t...Ar1rl•. l!".iilii(~Ma&,ltl8 Onooilt fte-nll• 11r1. "It I W 191 -. I'd Ora;... ael19l1 llM D i.• o..U.1od .,_ ,. --. I .. , I '1 ·-... _ •llMftnllda)r<lliolllllll •• '1 0 aaa ,, •• 11 tlllt .... -.JOJI 1111 ... ,..,.. .. •llet-ll••dwrltla1 L-o d•· wt&: herf•wtul c1111111.:• t•rmla1 per1oeaJlt~ ••Oaee 1 be,ln. a .... ,.. ir.lla, i. .,..,.,...i, -11HPMaaa1,.1., Jmt llNdby.-IO,OOO-cm't put It dawn '' "1w ,_UAJ!p•• Jin. worldwide, ae.....i-• --loll-~·----------°""'P" .. ,. .... ••• ....,..~. ~SfUUV.-V pidc out lllld..U ... U..:I .::~l!::J•! 'II I ••ti .. 11eed craatl•• ....u.t.. doze a certified••• .. N .. ll;d• wbomlititbam-· 1rapboanalyit1 In ••di ~ .... r•••1 !::f. and deYloet, wbo OraapCoullty. -tile tine ... -~~:!".!: 11as. DllNIGAN el••••L' diotractloa or tboce ctatma that throu&b her ~ iseedioa pb1stcal u .. work she un tell If two admit., adclillClbal-11 ere-he to com.bat people are sailed for mo takes maay bours al ~YiklJed--~ •- eacb other. wbich -tt. "-81 ~~ ehUd:ren will have iJl'O" Kra.. Denlaan is an ac. accur&CT rate, Mr1. blem1 la achool and tlve lecturer, wbo de-DenJtan.repliea lbalber whicb occupati?"' _. liven tbHe to four talks 1i'01'11: ii Jlllt u accurate pleare beat cutout fer. a week to men ·s . as. 8DJ' of tbe ~havioral The mother of 10 women's. civic and saences-wllicbabead· children; Mn. Denig81l ch.~ch grou~. • mla are leu accurate squee1ed in two 11· Witboutfultberesat ~Punt1aciences. month exwnatoo counes least one pera.on who 11 '1bere s seldom any from Chicaeo'a Intema-comes up lo me before ghtnlng bola or wm· tional Grapboanalyals tbe lecture begins, sticks drous, expressions oo Society giving her OOth hla palm in my face and people sfaces wbenltell a basiC and a masters expects me to 'read it~,•• ~ w~~t I 1ee in f:beir' degree. · lhe saya. writing, Mrs. Denigan Sbe complains that says. 11W1Y people stlll believe BESIDES HEB lectur-"In fact, people often bandwrltlne analyslil ts Inc. Jira. Derugan does say, lo me, ''You llnow, part of t .b..e o c. anatyaes for private you re the first peraon cult ..• something companies, scb~ol who's P~ it into words mystical or psychic. tea c he r s a n d in · f~ me, when , they r&- '' 1 'm enough of a divlduals. alize what I ve dis· fighter to want f.o prove Her ~ork for ~rivate covered is true,•• she it's not silly or bizarre," firms lS mcstly in the adds. she says, in parti.al ex-~a of personnel. . ;::;;~::;;;;;;~iv,iT,~;;;; planalion of why she By analyzing their THE completed the advanced writing, I can tell wblcb EARL'S course. . people·are best to travel, "* 1 ,,...,.,... Grapboanalyais is a whicbsbouldsitbebinda M1COM9. rpethodical process that desk an~ which are~~ -.:;c-.=.:_.m uses. exact instruments at ~eeting the public, ~:,__....._ ... to measure Cbarac-Mrs. Denigan explains. -.a..eieooC::::. teristics of the writing, Her work with the AND 14tQ411 such as slant, depth. aq_d schools primarily in· 1116 ....,...~c...._ spacing of the letters·. . .';;~ I 60-IJU) BY READING these l. R_.&881n . measurements, a , ~ A~PI OJ traine<! g.raphoa';'alyst INSURANCE , (Ann Landers:; can gam insight into '-.. person's personality . 1ft4 .....,,, lr;a4 ADVISES lfttlte pcit.Ontial. . COSTA lllSA ·'"* "It's the potential, not 541-US4 ~ actual tmts, tjial can be 1-----------< DAILY PILOT : HllJ--* Doug McClure star in BAllllARY COAST The company said in its initial recall order that the containers con- tained a defect and could explode if subjected to tbeheatordirectsunligbt for an extended period of time. The cans h8ve a mark- ing of J103 on the bottom and were originally sold for $1.25 each. ci.-ore e.1no ott.,.ed. "TIKhnl· Cll*af Flttlng" rnMlS tt 7 p,m. TUIS- cllY lllOhll Ind "S.Wlng With t<nlb" at 'J p.fft. Tfllll'SdlY lllghtl, botl'I In Room 5°' •I Mls110n Viejo HIOh Sdlool. "S.WlllQ Witt! Knits" 11w 11 being otrwltd •I t!W Wmt ti"",_.. IN"tnlghttln A:oom'41•t El ToniH!-1' ....... COLLEGE CREDIT VIA YOUR TV r • 0 SEE MARLIN PERKINS * "MU!llalj)f Omaha'• WILDl<INGDOfll "8eglnnl!>CI s..ino" b offered ti 1 f Night Classes Cat· State LB Extends Hours Tuesday MYTlllE MOVIES Service hours at California State University, Long Beach have been extended to accommodate those stu- dents who attend classes . atnight. Counseling , Career Planning and Place- ment, Testing, Veter~. Cashiering, Admissions, Records and the Finan· cial Aid offices will be open Monday through Thursday until 7 p.m. These offices will be open only until 5 p.m. on Fridays. THE STUDENT Al· fairs administrative of. fices and the Health Services office will be openuntil6p.m . Monday tbrough'.l'hursday. , Although ti\• Housing Office closes at 5 p.m.; students may then direct questions to the re- sidence balls if needed. The Learning As- sistance Center in the Library will be open from 8 a.m . to 9. p.m. Monday through Thurs·. day. It is also open from 1 to5p.m. ,on Saturday. TOE LIBBAllY Is open from 8 a.m. to 9:30 .., • ., .. """" 1...i 10-*"> p.m. Monday lbrougb ........ _. Tb··-· 8 ·-s 1ft(C)"'l,..11tklW"tc:ot1> w.IM,6ay, a.m . "'1 .,._,_ ..._ --. p.m. l'rldays and '9:8<> l:JIOCQ"'TMl...,ftllllt'(co.) a.Ill. to 5:30 p .m . on ment Center will be operating a pilot evening program this semester. Its hours :will be 7 a .m. t;; 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday and""7 a .m. to 4:30 p.m. on Friday. It will take children through age 8 after 4 p.m. The Graduate Center will be open until 8 p.m. Monday through Thurs· ~y. THE ACADEMIC In- formation Center, where students will be able to get special advising on their academic pro· grams, is in the process of development. Bill Vetoed SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Edmund G . Brown Jr. vetoed a bill that would have allowed the Legislatu.re to- authorize the payment by the state of up to 25 percent of the costs of recreation, fish and wildlife enhancement features or local flood control projects. Brown said, ''In view ot the mounting pressure for state funds, support tor projects such as 1.hese must be left to local gov· el"ftment except in ex· traordin ary cir· cumstances. ·· "';::,..-""' ,,... saturda:rs. •--(I*)..,_ ... ...,;tcl'llo• .. ..,.<lnl'll-. Tbe Child De:ve.lop· .... "'-" """' ... (COii) Mdlli Stmtil, 0.W P•rkr. jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;ii-iiii-01----------, ---~(J} .... Lllt--(..., Cil-~~;;,:;I' ("'l • . ·U---. ,_ C.O· .:fml """'" • ,.... -I .......... -.-1.i•44 81Ci""'-"""l*•l _...,. O'llllt. .... ~ 71 -............ ffllldt. ........ . Uis~ 'o.;~ T~le:vi8ion (50) CI.ASSIC GUITAR INS1RUCTION ' John K. Bent HunU119ton Beach 960-1245 LOSE WEIGHT OR MONEY ilACI .... d"*'I tetra ~ ••• -................ """ll<Ot ... -·EX Pio< o111 ""' "' loot _....,,, ... "'. . OONMEX Wiit.iHi Ill 'mNinll .._., ...., t11tt auPiNttset lfle ....... _, ........ -. "" •"' tic¥0DRINEX -i11io1 ,.. .............. _. Wllll--.,... ...... _ dOWft. .... ilfcte.i ' will IDt. -i.J"--:C-u "'·-....... _""'""'ODllllKX. ................. ...,. .... lHRlfll ',' •. I This fall, go to COiiege and don'.t leave home doing It. Orange Coast College and Golclel\ West C~ a'-' offering seYen oiltstancling and, diYerse broadcast counes for college credit, all fealurecl over Orange· County's own TV station, KOCE-TV, CH.AHHEL SO. The Courses COlfl'IMPOltAllY CALIFODl.A ISSUB. So YoU think ycu know your state. Thia two-unit course at both OCC and GWC wtll enllghten YoU further. It la an In-depth look .1t tbe state of the state, a 2().part series diSCUlling nine maJor Issues: )IQlng, pollution, drug ...... racisrri, crime end Ct'lmlnal Justice. resources and energY, POV9f1Y. sexism and education. Tune In to "'Cont~r. California fasuea" and stay In tune to today. Starts S8ptember 15. 9 p.rp .. over KOEC-TV, °'8l1nel 5d. Don't de av: r9Qlster now. CLASSIC 1HIATU-'ft9: IW&MnlS IM DI.AMA ladran. at lts-ftnMt. P,e1ented by•the premiere ICtors of Lon-- don theatre. "C1assic Theatre-The humanities In Drama" features 18th. 17th and 18th century drarretimk>nl of intemafional literature by such 'authen,a ~are. Mm'towe, Voltaire, Ibsen, Chekhov and more. '"Classic Theatre Preview" is a 30-minute intrOi::lucttOn to each play, Providing yau with ·more lntight to the drama, Its author. the place of Its origin and the charader of the times. Thia is a·course of true enrichment, offered at OCX: under Humanities 101 for two units and Engll'h 1~9 for ... three (please ir1dlcate on the registration form after'the ace box yoor ciaas preference by placing a 2 ~ 3), and at GWC. Humantties 132 for three units. Enl'Olt todlly. ' 1HI ASCINf .OF MAM. It's ~ one of thefhlghest acclaimed ~ courses ever offered. Or. J.:ob Sronowlk9 hoata this 13-pmt productk>n which coveh: I two-t'mllion yW 1P1n Of nwn's cultural evolution lfl"re- ma1<able detail. OCC offers "Ascent of.Man" for two unit1 In Physical Science 101 encl Biology 10-1. Golden west College glvea three units under tiJmfrllties 175. ' . aaD AOwnt AMD DIY&Ol'M8n' Is a th1'98-1Jnlt couru spread over 45 half houra which covers a ore.t.,.., of top1ca within abt broad 99Ctlbnc Prenatel. Infancy, Toddfer, Presc:hOOI. Middle Yeara and Adoleacence.. The series ia a must tor both estabtiahed and,.upandlng families. "Chikl Growth and Developmenr ls•~· ' unit """""' at both °""""' Coast Col'-(Human llevelOomo~ 180) Ind Golden .Well con~· ~ 155). -, } wmn... PO& A•-If )'OU haw the thoughts but haw trouble plactng tl>em on-· thisi8 the """'9 !Or yoo. In 30 segments, you wtll be.taught togk:ll thinking, buk: writing lkUl1 and more. It is a proven feet that the more auccesaful members of our aociety at tijoee adlipt at IPOken and written English. , . ' ' . AM IMlltODUCTlOM TO -·---1111 9UIST,.,. __ l conllida..the great-, of art through the ages as they relate to the probleme of nn. :The oourH examinea how, at widely 18f)11'9ted i:><Mnts In time, 8/flats and wrttara MYe YieWed significant aapeda~of rren and his wortd ... lntroduct1on to Humanities" Is a thf88"4Jn;t COUl'M off.W •• Humanitle1 070 at Gokfen WHt COiiege 1nd Humanities 105 at Orange Coast Coll«1e. / . 7NI COMSUMll IXPIR&K:I is• 30-l*t courae on person11·nnance nw.naoement. It covers five key tooicc. con- sumer behavior, coflSUfT'e('a guide to buying strat~. consumer finance, 'a conatn.icUve approach to con- sumerism, and consumer Ille style end budgeting. "The O>nsurrer Exs>enenc:e. •• is a two-unit course: SUlinea 023 at GOiden West College and Economk:t Ill at Orange co.at Q>llege. ....... 1.-1.1112 ,Mo ........................................ .. J+psovoclfwYfho II ......................... . COASTC0MMYMIT'ICO' 1 NIDISTllCT naaYISIONCOUllSl...mtATIOM Z701 FAIR'fllW llOAD c;osTAMIS+...CAl~9Z6Z6. • ---------~---------..-.----------------..;... ~-----..,,.. llllSftA'llOMllOIM .-~~~ ..... ~ ... .,,__. • .....,.,....,..__."""TV.~•..,,..,.,........,,.. · · ftMSIMOLL _ .... OOKitge. \ .---.-.,..-.. ~· ...... 1--.--..--., .... =!.=~-· 1. 1 ·I ,,.1 · I 1 · ·~=~. C°""'91ei..tea..,. D1u 11; a •"""-----~-----~---·l--~-.....c·I-----'--a...,.q..ttw...,.. ..... ,.... .......... ...... ·------------.·-----------'---'-0 .......... ....... MOfllrl 0.,-y .. • ca., .... 0 .... CO..WI I 11111:14 ·--I I C:.:. •••>Clllllnlla ......... , _______ .....,, ____ -~----~ ____ ...... ......; -\ ...... Qr ... ' ... _Qc:a..la""""" ,.....,_ ............ ....,.. -._ ______ ....... .....,_. ~---:--:::::==:;;;;:::--,-----J---·'-----=--~-~1--.,.--~--=--~ . ............... . ,,...... °" -... ,_. ?. I CMM '·-<:'-" .. ...,..~-..,..... • .....,. .,._.,_othigitl.:itlOClll··· .................. _.._. •••.• , ...... 1.Q\W 10. Wlftl'I 41 yi11' 1r•••nt ''llY 1n e.111ofral• 111 .. 1~• 11 ......... a.....~ 1ov..1.QNottN:t..,._.....,.,....., __ _.. ____ __, ___ _, __ • .,._ ... ..., 11t.cairn1 •1'C ""''""':'•NdlW•,.._..... .. .,... i ·, . . -------.. 1 .~r1Tr11r....,.... -• I IWU.nllt JIADUD <Al'• ----.... Ill ....... la I -ftftPI :!I ..................... ..,.,,,? e••s•JJ'..,.., • tW .... .._... lilllee •1aa1 , I ' A C tlle£c:ndaa•M11 ' • MADlllD (UPI) -1'-• ,.;enw.. telnd tbe lEIYPCla embuoytoday-lhroolmedto kill lbe amba'*ador and 1- E1ntlan diplomata uale11 Eaypt renounces the. interim peaee asreement with llnel by tonllht. A spolcesman for tbe _.mu told UPI by \elOI>-!bat live Palestine raidets barricaded IKemselves imlde tbe -buay lllld mined the bu:!ding. '""Ibe moment .iomeane opens the door or a window, the wbole place will blow Up," be said. • l!'!ayptian P.realdeat Anwar Sadat held the Paleolilio Ubora- lion Organisation end-Its leader, Vasser Arafat, personalU responaible for thelconseq- "' the embaasy raid, an £apllan official IUUIOWleed IJI cairo. The official said the EaPUan leader wamed ~e Would take "decisive nleasures" if the PLO. and Arafat failed to ensure the · immediate relebe ol tbe Kc>'P' ti an ambassador •nd his aides. In 'Be"irut a spokesmani lo.-the PLO and olber major. Palestinian organizations denied ·involvement-in the at<ack. The guerrillas called their commando unit 1 'Tbe Group of the Fallen Abdel Kader al !SeeEGYfT,PageAJ} • .. • • • . s,,.._ Marilou Meairs, 19, whacks volleyball during Saturday's VUlage Party irl Laguna Beach. The Main Be'ach ac- tivities began with a 7 a.m. pancake breakfast and ·closed wiih fireworks at 8:30 p.m. "·~~~~~~~~~~ Sunshine· Su.rprise , or· OC Residents September, which bas been a drudge up to now, turned normal today with sunshine alone 'Ibo Orange Coast. A spe>kesman for.the National Weather Service in Los Angeles assured abo that the weather will behave itself at least for the next few days. "We are now getting irito a ridge situation (high ~~I which should be with us for the next four or five days." he'said. Why were the first two weeks of the mopth so yucky., more like cloudy June than sunny Sep. tember? "We have had low pre:- -a1ure which broutht a lot of moiature from the south and sout1aeast. ••ti.ea aid. La&t week's high daytimetem- perJ.turea in Newport }$each wei:e around 67 degrees and low night temperatures around 60 to · 62 decrees wjtb ~ mercury dropplog to 54 degrees oile ni~t. "Wfl have had an awful lot of cloudiness.'' the weather man admitted, "but 'Dow it 1-. like ~ :Jre goinc to aet some sun-shine.•• ' That means It will be in the 80s in18"d, and in the 'lOI along the beaches. -- ' . Mesa Litlwgraplier Fat~·Forgery Rap A preliminary beariDJ bas been scbeduled Sept.' 22 for a Costa Mesa lithographer arrest- ed Friday by federal ag.,,ts oo charges of. torein& and prii\ting FBI, Secret Service .and U.S. Justice Departmeot credentials for sale. Wslliam J . Hollandsworth, 39, of 2103 Federal Av~ .• was .....,..t- ed when he allegedly deU..- the documenti ln a restaurant . rendezvous arranged by an FBI agentposing as a buyer. He was arraigned before U.S. DTunkC~ge HitaSenmor ,SACRAMENTO !UPI) -Sen. John-Stull (R- Leucadia). •was arrelted · on , drunken drlvln,- cbar1e after bis car struck a.freeway pard rail.., bis way ,bomd from the llnal .session of the 1975 Lelill•\111'•· the Calilomia Highway Patrol ,._ted 'today. , A 1pokesman said Stull was anftted Friday about 11:30 p.m •• following a r&- por1 !tis car struck the center divider on ln- tentate BD ea1t of NewcM- Ue, a Si.erra foothill ci>ln- munity about 25 miJee east olbb-o. He waa rel .. Md • $375 ball, aullloriU..oaid. Stull wao Iba alath leclll)lor, and the Mcmd • Mllllor, to be .... -.... drunken drivlng ebarae thityear. Mpat.strate Arthur Bradley in Santa Ana and remained in custody at Orange County Jail to- day on the federal charges in lieu ol $20,000 bail at Orange r~••ty Jail.' ' -r-- J114&e Bradley said today the case is being presented to a fei;leral grand jury and that HollSndsworlh will probably be incllcte!li thu week, prior to bis bearip1 · s~beduled in Los Angeles, The defendant was booked initialIY on charges of both COUP· terfeitina: the G-Man credentials and also accused of thereafter manufacturtag them, a secon- dary charge. : If conv\cted, HoUandsworth, who oPerates a P,rinting shop at 1740 Placentia A-.ie., Costa Mesa, 1 faces a maxi.JnWD penalt1 ol five yean in priaon and a $5,000 rme for the eolllllerleltlng charge. He could also be senteoced to six months and f"llied '250 for the secondaiy · ebarge ol inanufac- tulinil' or brinling UM! false gov- ernmenf·Zl dentificatloo docu- ments. • John Monissoh, FBI aeent in LoO Angele.'1 refused Friday to speculate whether the forged and reproduced FBI, Secret Ser.vice and Justice Department iden- tlfication car~ might have a spectfic purpose. Re aaid. Hollandsworth is.being PrcJMCuted as an ordinary al- ltsed COUD\erfeller, despite ~ I.ct the ID material could con--.lvablY be wied to get within cloo" pro1dmily of Prmdent GeraldFo~d-• The arrest came a week to the da:Y aflet lh• alleged attempt to -alt Ford~ Sacralllento. • • • • T a•-psh Hijack Suspect; l San Jose Drama Finished SAN JOSE !UPI) -A police sbarpebooter today sbol to death a wounded gunman who tried to hijack a Continental Airlines 72"1 jet with four hostages. Ilia death, as he tried to escape with a aun at the bead of a captive, ended a four-hour rampaae in which he stabbed a woman be attempted to rape. . -... • ~.,, _;. .l .,. • • • .7 The gunman, identified as Fred Salomon, 24, ol San Jose, began the hours of terror when be entered the home where the woman lived with her children late Sonday night and stabbed her in the heart. He then stole three vehicles, threatened to kill eight persona and shot a kneeling doctor hostaae from behind while oo the plane, police said. MISS CO$TA MESA CANDIDATU FACE CONT£ST WITH .SMILES The drama.ended with a single shot by a sharpshoot.er member of San Jose's Special Weapons and Tactical Team known as SWAT. Police said Salomon. standing on the plane's boarding ladder with a .38 caliber revolver at the bead of airline main- tenance man Ali:len Undekugle, 40, was picked off by the SWAT officer. He died instanUy. From Lett: Shenle Clouller, ClndJ and Debbie 1111~, Clncl1 Gunn, Pamela Johnaon Huntington Teacher Mesa CofC· Mourned at Sclwol Fiesta Fun 11lls Week ~ ''He bad agreed to come out of UMt plane himself without his weapon and with bis bands up," saMI poliee Un-Gary LeClllanl '"lben be emerged with the gun in his band an~ a liootoge il>front ofbim, usina' him i• a sbieJd. ''One of our officers, about SO feet away, shouted three times, 'Drop your we9pon.' Salomon didn't answer. lfe began to point the cun at the officer who was $houting to him. The officer began to run away. But one of our sharpshooters with a telescope sniper weap<>n fired the single shot from behind another airliner, and Salomon dropped.'' Police said Salomon was wounded by another shot earlier when he appeared in the plane's cockpit window -either by the bullet itself or the shattered glass. At one point, two officers climlled on the plane but scrambled down when the gun- man"'forced a maintenance man tosUrt laxiing the craft. Police shot out the tires as it !See IUJACK, Page AZ> SLUMPING DOW 'NEARING 000 NEW YORK <UPI) -The stock market closed lower today in one of the slowest trading days of the year on the New York Stock Exchange. The Dow Jones industrial average, a 3.37-point I06er Fri· day, was off 6.10 points to(l)3.19. Declines led advances by about an eight-to -three margin. !Tabi .. A9). Turnover amounted to 8,000,000 shares, down from the 12,230,000 traded Friday. Many • investors were observing the Yorn Kippur religious holiday. Prices were lower in slow trad· ing on the American Stock Ex- change. lly llOSEllT llAllXEll Of ... ..,,. ... Teach r1 aa4 1tudent.1 at SdlR>11 Jll gh Sehool today mourned the deatb pl Gordon ll<Collom, a popular J:nillioh 1 teacher ond f)"mnastics coach who was killed in a winc·waJJd.ng accident in Reno Friday. The school, which called for a period of 1ilence today in tribute to Mr. McCollom, is planniQI to create a memorial scholarship in his name. Funeral services for the 25· year~d resident of c.osta Mesa is pending. McCollom was killed Fnday night when bis airplane dipped suddenly and crushed him head rU"StJnto the ground. He was suspended upside down from the top wing of the biplane when a downdraft caused the plane to sink and 'hit the.ground, according lo a race official. Mr1 .· June Edwards. a secretary who has known McCollom since he and her daughter attended preschool together in Newport Beach, said toclay ''Everybody liked Gordy." "He was ver:;y popular with stu· dents and teachers. His gym- nastics team loved him," she said. · ··At least he died doing something he loved," she added. Mrs . Edwards said that McCotldm, a gymnastic expert at Long Beach State CoUegc, had been wing-walking for about two years and he had performed the stunt that was to cause his death several times without incident. "He said it was safe' although it had an element of danger," Mrs. Kitty Richardson, secretary in the English Department said. ''That·s what I like to do," Mrs . Richardson said hetoldber. Mrs. Richardson said she saw McCoUom a few hours before !See TEACHER., Page AZ> Day to Atone Jews Cel.ebrate Yom Kippur Jews filled temples and synagogues lhe world over today to mark Yom Kippur, the Day of Atone- ment, with fasting, self-evaluafion and repentance. The holiday, the most sacred on the Hebrew calendar, began at sWldown Sunday as cantors chant- ed the Kol Nidre, a traditional prayer beseeching God's forgiveness for man's fallibility. One long blast of the shofar, or ram's horn, ends the day-long worship this evening. Many rabbis stressed in their aermoos tHat the sacred holiday was one of .,.,iviU.·the obligation to improve the human conditiCll. . • , . ' ' Rabbi Ronald B. Sobel, at f.' mple Einanu-El on Fif\h Av·enue, New York, st~essed °"t the faith, re- ligion and heritace of the Jewisl\ ~le "were built neither on the assumptiOn thai lit• is ·banal and absurd or human naturef&llen..,..i t~ c. ' At special services at Mdwlt Sinli it~. Rab- bi Joseph Zeitlin said-that ¥ti,d~ wq a "re- minder to put oneM!J(_ili the ~of the deprived, the hungry and thClllewhosufferedm the world." • \ ,. • . TEACHER MOURNED Daredev:! McCo:!om Pussycat's Fare Porno -Or Spoof? By JOHN VALTERZA 0t111eo.11,~ ... , .... Was the fare offered at Balboa's Pussycat Theater "pornography-pure and sim· pie" or a sexy spoof combined with a morality play~ These were the characteriza- tions offered today to the jury on two 1ex movies, "Deep Throat·• and "The Devil in Miss Jones" which are the subject of an ob· scenity trial in Harbor Municipal Court. Opening arguments from both the prosecution and defense played to very few spectators eyen though the films originally Were scheduled to be shown to the Jury in court today. Jn his opeping statement to the jury of six men and six women, Pussycat\defense lawyer Robert McDaniel said ''Deep Throat" is a sexy spoof and "The Devil in Miss Jones" a morality play. The jury is now scheduled to travel to Balboa today to view oae film before noon, break for IWlch and then see the other racy movie. · Deputy District Attorney Tony Rackauckas spared no enmity for the films and alleged flatly ttl.at what the jury would see are two films wlth auerted fiimay plots •twbich airing together ooe araphic sex act after another." ''What you will see will be absolut'ely unlimited closeups and graphic deplclloaa of sex or- . sana and acll lbal oft .. donlt jyen aeem to be connected." the proeecutorwarnea. "It's nothinl more than han:I· lllee POllNO, Pap.\%) All lhe fun of a carnival will eome lo Costa Mesa acaln tbla' weel< with the staciac ol the Mh mnual Fiesta da Coilta Mesa sponsored by the ehsmber ;;I commerce. Aa with the Fish Fry, which opened the summer seuon, the fiesta will be held in Lions Park downtown , Friday through Sun· day. c · There won't be flab dinners an<1 a parade -the blehligbts ol tll!I Fish Fry staged by the Lions Club-but there will lie Mexlcaa;t. dinners, and the other trappings of a carnival -band music am dancing displaya, children'• rides, booth5, games, and a bea-. ty contest. -· A new wrinkle this year will·ba a bicycle motocross competitiOB1• This will take place on a s~&J;. ly constructed course on a C:lirt Uk on 19th Street next""lo tbl Automobile Club of Southe~ Callfornta. The fiesta will begin Friday al 5 p.m . with the selling of Me~c dinners and the carnival : ing. The Estancia High Sc Band and drill team will perfo ' at7p.m . r On Saturday Mexican dinners will be served from 10 a .m . ~ Orange Coast College jazz b~.) will play at 12 : 10 p.m ., t6~ Dorothy Jo dancers wiU perfo~ at 1:30 p.m ., the "Kiddie King and Queen" will be picked at;}.. p.m., the Arlee Higbee Dane~ are scheduled for 5 p.m. and t..¥- Costa Mesa High School Stap Bandfor7p.m . Sunday's program, which opens with Mexican dinnen 1t noon, includes : 2 p.m., the Youn& Life Singers; 4 p .m . Miss Cos~ !SeeFIESTA, PageAZl Coast Weather - Mostly cloudy skies ' Tuesday on the beach and • clouds breaking by mid- day to haiy sunshine in- land, according to the weather service. Highs 68 at the beaches to the upper 70s inland areas. : INSIDIE TODA 'l' ' Otonge County·• Seo 1 Scouts, lxlsed in Nnoporf "' Beach. are still going strong ' M$pite their lack of no(orifty. See Page 81. .... . • J e -Ocw•• .. ~·~ .. ..e!»l";"°·-'-II ' "':=-.! u ........ .. --" --• U:I :A -........ .:m .... ~ ... ,· a1t ~ K :: =---.. ~ .~ ... L:":. . .. •• \"I •I I I I ' IACllAM 11!,_Tn !lo Pl • t'"Plft' l..obby, IM • •tilt ,.JiH pollll~•I reform. arnwp. h•• been 1trl ppl!'d of ll• litJt bee• ol lalluro lo pit lully with ft.U ••••· ll w•'11F'4d to- i dati... l•J •I r1flll• lo tlN llllo f • P eo pl f'1 ' L o bby '' we r r pur<'hued from lhf' 1«nt.ary of ~talf''1 otnC"e by Gilbert RmaJn . 11 Capitol il rra barte nder He paid .. teeolN. P-'••. Lobby. which helped to qu•hfy thr 11'741 C.lifomi.a polltjcal reform in1l1a&.1ve for the ballot. ii a dedicated wolcbdo1 ol the fi ling of r equired go..,em - , ment reports. espec1ally by lob-J byista and orfil'e seekers. When '1 :such reports are not filed or are filed incompletely. the organiza- ' tion frequently issues news re- ' leases and calls news con- t ferences to publicize the fact. Michael Gagan, deputy to Secretary of State March Fong , Eu, SJ.id today that the name f Peoples' Lobby Inc. was placed on her corporations-suspended list after the state Franchise Tax ~ Board ruled that Peoples' Lobby failed to file a required annual re- port. Gagan said unr!er corporate Jaw wh en a name is suspended ; • "anyone can walk into the • secretary of state's office and f pay $6 and claim it for 120days." ~ Edwin Koupal, founder of , Peoples· Lobby and its executive : director, called the legal loss of ' • the name ''political harassment. ~ "We are going to continue to ~ use it," said Koupal. "Let them · sueus. Wewon'tdropthename." Gagan said under the law ! Rosales, a quiet-spoken non- political type, owns the name and Koupal could face a suit from new owner if he uses Peoples' • Lobby, Inc. on news releases or 1 stationery. The organization is a 1 tax-exempt corporation. J Rosales told UPI he did not :_jmowhow he would use the name. Koupal said he thought the two ,agencies moved against Peoples' Lobby because of the suit. But Gq:an said bis office was merely following the law. !Eight Chosen . -For Mesa's . C·ofC Board hr -. ·r. Members of the Costa Mesa . Chamber of Commerce have "elected eliht direc!onl from a ., field of 15 candidates. h Six of the eight were re-elected ~ 1othree-year terms and. two were ·:Iiewly elected. • The new directors are Kim '-Chappell, a hotel general man•ger, and Lewis G. Kidder. ·..owner of a music store. .. Re-elected were Vaughn Red· .,.dina:. director of cooi>erative -education institutes at Orange ·-Coast College, Clifford· Wesdorf, a s&vings and loan as- 1.::asociation manager. Kenneth "<fowler, a banker, Werner <a Escher, a public relations direc· ~.llor; Thomas Baume, owner of a printing service, and Leslie ;I Miller, a real tor. .. ... '·P ORN O ••• Core pornography! That's it. It's nothing but sex for money and Straight commercial exploita- li .. -00. • McDaniel"s statement to a jury ook copious notes took a dif. approach. He urged the to view the films in a total ext and to understand the points of California's com- .riexobscenity statutes. • ORANGE COAST c DAILY PILOT • TI-. Or ... CM!Jt D•llY Pllot, wllll ""'kt! I) umbiMd IM .... _...f'rRH, i\ 111*1"""' by IN Or-. eo.11 "'*U""lnt C-v S.,parate Hlti.w ••• putilllol'letl M_, 1!1•°"91' frld.ly tor c.i. ""-U, Hewj)IM1 lle.o<ll, """'!~ a.ar.11~6Unl•ln V•ll•y, lr•lnR. !>Ml<:IJ~fl•<k ....... ., .... i..9UM kiJtll/Sollll!CM\1. A .. f'Vle ~I -!kill I• P<>bfl•fle<I !41.., ... yi -Sun-4-f'-n. ,..w1..-1 puflllW.•"11 p1...t !) •I l30 w...i .. r M...t. eoti. ~M. c.1r1wt11ain~. Rober1 N .W~ Pl'ttldtfll '"° ....,.l1'1eo J•ck R. Cu'rtev \IU ~1..-.. 0. ....... M."""' ThOm•S keevll ·-Thomas A. MUfl)hlne WfM>flflltl ""'"" O..rkts H. Loos "-Rk:Nlrd P. Nall ---cesu M ... Offke m w..i .. ., llr.e Mtllll'lt ......... ; ... o. 9ojo 1M, "'1' . .. _ GORDON MCCOLLOM IN STUNT THAT COST HIS LIFE Daredevil Huntington BellCh Stunt Man Kiiled In Reno 4-coumy Pollution Unit 'Aided' State Senate rejection of a mandated regional air pollution control district has given a new lease on life to a voluntary four- county agency formed in July, according to Orange County Supervisor Robert Battin. Battin was a founding director of the voluntary pollution control unit, which is comprised of Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Los Angeles counties. The existing agency had been endangered by Assembly Bill 250, authored bv Assembly man Jerry Lewis <k-High.land). The measure was turned down last Friday on an 18-20Senatevote. LewiS' bill would have created a pollution unit with broaa powers over local planning and development. It would have also permitted cities to be members of the board, a feature not yet part of the voluntary agency. Tbe bill apparenUy lost in the Senate because a conference committee chose to remove a Senate amendment that would have required a vote of the peo- ple before the agency was of· ficially created. In an interview today, Battin said the Senate action "is a wise rejection of an ill-conceived and unnecessary new governmental behemoth.'' The Santa Ana supervisor said the new voluntary agency has ex- isted only two months but is "already strongly attacking re- gional problems and has com- bined a tough approach with a sense of fiscal responsibility.·· Battin was an£ered when be learned Lewis is planning to re- introduce his bill sometime next yeal"bul he said he is confident it will appear ·•even more superfluous than it was this time." Stereo Gear Stolen A burglar broke into a Costa ?t1esa apartment shared by two roommates who were away at a party Saturday night and stole stereo sound equipment with a SSOOvalue. Richard F . Brown and Curtis N. Johnson, of 799 W. Wilson St., told police they lost sound com- ponents in addition to record albums and a clock radio. l',,_P.,.eAl TEACHER. • his death. "I was kidding him about bis hunt-and-peck typing," she said. "I told him be was getting better at it," she recalls. He replied, she said, ''Don't tease me; I 'll master it yet.'' McCollom was graduated from Corona del Mar in 1969 and had a degree from Cal State Long Beach. He was married last year and began teaching at Edison in September of 1973. EGYPT ••• Houseni ,'' after a Palestinian leader killed in a clash with a Jewish group in 1947. They demanded that the Egyp- tian peace delegation to Geneva leave the Swiss city by midnight without signing documents of the interim Sinai agreement· negotiated by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger. Simultaneously with the raid on the embassy, another band of about 50 Arab students occupied the Madrid offices of the Arab . League, but they later voluntari- ly surrendered and released two host•ges, the news agency Cifra said. Egypt and Israel initiated the interim peace accord Sept. 1, but their delegations in Geneva are now negotiating terms on ways of putting the accord into effect. It widens the buffer zone in the Sinai Desert separating tbe two armies and calls for Israeli withdrawal from the Milla and Gidi passes and the Abu Rudeis oil fields and the stationing of 200 American technicians in the Sinai as peace monitors. The agreement bas come un- der attack from radicals in the Arab world. who charge that it ignored the interests of the Palestinians and the other coun- tries -Jordan and Syria - whose teritory Israel also oc- cupied in the 1967 war. The Kuwaiti. Iraqi, Jordanian and Algerian ambassadors en- tered the Egyptian embassy building to negotiate with the raiders. Police with helmets and bullet- proof vests and a dozen police vehicles ringed the building and blocked traffic, creating huge traffic jams in the downtown area. The three hostages included. Egyptian Ambassador Mahmoud Abdel Ghaffar, Consul Mohamed EI-shaffei Mekki, and press at- tach• Mohamed El-affifi. Congregatio n Silent G ay Pastor Holds 'Coming Out' Talk ORANGE, Ma!s. (UPI) - Some people said it took a lot of guts for the Rev. F.dward T- Houaen to unveil his bomose.x-· uality in a 1ermon Sunday before parishioners. Others expressed their protest simply and silently by sUying away. The minister or Central CcJn&regational Church, who an- . nounced his resignation. in June ''to pursue new forms of ministry,'' said he had been en- couraged by some t.o lu\le the parlohqUietly. Bui Houaen, 38, lhoueht "II would be a real discount not ·1o deal wilh them on tllll 1 ...... befcn leovin1 Oct. L Houten. a ar•du•le of Harvanl Unl"?er•lty ln4 Union Tbeoloeical Semln1.17, pnpared Ibo COllcnt•tlon foe Ills "C10mln1 out," -.non ID ll.leUAr to .iJ 250 pamhloners. j Last week, Hougen, married and the lather of two children, told church members be was a candidate for pastor of Metropolitan Commu9ity Cbucrch Jn Boston, a gay affiliate of lbe Unlven1al Fellowship of Metropolitan Community· Churches. • Althqugh the subject of homosexuality is ''explosive and difficult" for some. be said Jn ao interview, ''lt is an issue more and more com munlties and poupe ore begiDDlnl tOface. In his sermon Sunday, Hougen !old lhe coagre1at1oo·be felt "• particular callin1 lo ...-ve J .. us Chris! wilh and Utrougb the say commun!IY because.J.fllll 1*1• "Thi• Is Information about myself !hot Ii> the ~I ha.,. felt free to share Oli11'Wllh IDl' famllt ondcloselrlend ." i I A--6-Cll'•MI• ..... _,.., u.. ........ "'*' --Ille• -··· ...... Mil from eil)'A•W"I. --OCNNU..-Md lauledlheoce•n 1urc1a1. Llf•IY•rd C1pt. Sberid•D ByorlJ w-!be budl daMd In Ille Yklalt1 et the ...... and !ht Linda Laoelllepanl-- lhe loul-1mellln1 Ould !lowed frarD 1 llOrm draln nearlMre. LM«, the be•c:h betWftft tbe pier and Aveoid• Estacion. about a mile north, wa s ck»Hd when more raw sewage •luiced from a sewer outlet there. Byerly said sewage visible in the aurf Sunday diaappeared by thia morning. Tbe Orange County Health Department has been notified and tests to determine if a health hazard is present are pending. Capt. Byerly s aid he inspected the spill at the Estacion tower. "It was flowing badly at that time, very rapidly. The guard there s aid it had been gushing - that this was only a trick.le com- pared to what it had been -prior to my arrival," Capt. Byerly said. The incident is the third time this summer raw sewage has fouled the beach in San Clemente. The waters off the area between the pier and lifeguard headquarters were closed for l'r-PageAl FIESTA ••• Mesa Queen Contest; 5 p.m .• helicopter rides ; 6 p. m., the Costa Mesa Rec-ettes, and 7:30 p.m., a J?.pan Karate Federation exhibition. The drawing for the new car will conclude the fiesta at 9 p.m . Tickets for the drawing have been sold by the Estancia High School Band to raise money to support their trip to Washington, D.C. in May 1976 to participate in bicentennial celebrations. The Mexican dinners will be sold by the Newport Harbor Y's Men's Club. Booths will be operated by various service clubs1 and non-profit organi%a- tions. The proceeds from the fiesta go to Ute chamber of commerce and the organizations that rent the booths from the chamber. Chamber manager Nick Ziener said that last year the chamber netted between $4,500 and $5,000 while the club that ran the booths lotalled about $6,000 lo $7,000. The money the chamber receives goes into industrial development, Ziener said. Triick Spills Chemical.s On LA. Freeway LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A truck spilled lSO gallons of two chemicals that combine to form a poisonous gas on the Hollywood Freeway during the rush hour to- day, tying up traffic for nearly an hour. Five fire company units washed down .the chemicals, muriatic acid and chlorine, and California Highway Patrolmen closed all lanes of traffic in both directions and nearby surface streets. Rush hour traffic came to a ball in the busy downtown sec- tion and cars backed up for more than a mile along the freeway. . The two chemicals, being de- livered for a swimminR DOOi sup-ply company, can combine to form phosgene, a gas used during World War I. It attacks the lungs and can cause death. However, chemical experts said no pboogene was given off. The Spill occurred when Ute rear doors of a semi-truck a .• d trailer rig popped open and the li- quid spilled onto the roadwa The driver, Michael Hasteg: about 25, sufferf!(f chemical burns in attempting to close the truck doors to prevent more spillage. He was rushed to a nearby hospital for treatment. A fire official said the gas cl- ings to the ground and does not spread easily. · .. Bay Pollution P r ogram Set · -A talk and slide show on "'Newport Bay: Beauty and Pollution" will be !he highlight of the 10 a.m. Tuesday meet.inc ot the Women's Civic League of Newport Harbor. The talk, in the multi-purpose room of Mariner's Library, 2005 Dover Drive, Newport Beach, will be given by Sue Ficker, pre- sident of Stop Polluting Our Newport (SPONl. Anyone interested m83' attend and is asked to bring a sack lunch. Cookies and c<Jtfee will be provided. Tehachapi Blaze CASTAIC (UPI) -Two firemen were injured SU.Oday fighting a brush fire in the Tehachapi Mountains that threatened for a short time to destroy three homes in the small community of Val Verde. • • Mariners gives you up to a s1,soo tax deduciion this year .... . •. AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA" -THE INDIVIDUAL RE- TIREMENT ACCOUNT. . Mariners lndivldu·ar Retirement Account is a personal tax-sheltered retirement plan. ''IRA'' was devel- oped by Congress to give you an effective way to build your own retire- ment fund. You can save as much aS $1500 or 15°/o of your wages. whichever is less, and your savings will be a tax deduc- tion during your working years. If your spouse works, your combined tax-sheltered savings can be as much as S3000 per year. · Come in to Mariners and start your own Individual Retirement Account. You'll be saving lax dollars now and building a much brighter future. 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Fecs.tM f9QUl1t!on1 ftQUlrt l11bltanli•I pe~lllet !Of ~·)' wit~Wall fl'dl'fl c.rllllcata 8DCOUnt1. . .... _h ........... (lel1ure World) 1'820S.Ol leodtll\'d. (213)590-) ... I (°""M•. Slnol-pttoq 11417 ...,...ly ltwd.. I c213l m..-141