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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-05-10 - Orange Coast Pilot• • •· • • -'
.Dog Sav~ To~ Fro1n Bu1ning Car
0C Ca1111011
Three Survive
Plane Crash . .
A downed pilot hiked five mlles
tllrough the ruued SanUa10
O"ountalns Saturday nlcht and
hitchhiked to Fullerton Airport
before sounding an alarm that
sent an 11-man Oranie County
Sheriff's rescue squad ln search
of two teenagers trapped in
wreckage of n light plane.
Fair Officials
Blamed for
msturbance
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of .. O•llr,.. ... lt."
The promoters of Saturday's
rock concert at the Orange Coun·
ty Fairgrounds are blaming ra1r
otficials for a disturbance broken
up by Costa Mesa pohce.
Allen Ornstein, president of
Penny Lane Productions, of
Oran1e County, said a lack of
tlcktl takers tor the event pro·
mpted the dlaturba.nce. which
wubrotenupat 12:30a.m. bylhe
a.member Costa &1esa PoUce
tactical unit.
"We told thOIO oftlclalt that we
were 10101 to have a sellout
crowd, and they 1114, 'Yeah,
yeah, That'• what they all 1ay,' "
Ornsteinsald. , Th~ 2().year·old promoter said
Only two Uc:ket takert were pro-
vided bv fair officials Instead or
the six ·the promoters sold they
'8kedfor. .
··we had nt least 3.000 to 4.oOo
people who couldn't ll•l ln
because they only provided ua
wt th two ticket takers." heaald.
·'Thal'• what started tho whole
t.bina. there were too many people
walUn1 In line."
Falrarounds offlclaJ1 disputed
Omateln's com.meats. saylna the
promotera did not 10 ovtt Uckot
, aales c•paclty for the S2 event
whkh featured three unknown
bands.
• Falt otnclal Jeannie F.dwards
llld the fair board ls now con·
aideriJll puttin1 an end to ~k
• concerti planned by aome pro·
moters.
"We'll still approve concerts tor hilh schools and private
iroups." she said. adding that
(SeeMELEE. Pa&eAI)
It wasp't until 2 a.m. Sunday
that the rescue squad found the
plane and the painfully 1r not
seriously injured youngsters in
the east fork of Fremont Canyon.
rou1hly five miles east of Irvine
Park.
At dawn, an El Toro Marine
Air Statioll rtttue helicopter lift·
ed J an llfJlfUe White. 16. or
Buena Plfl.1 and Timothy
Undsay. 11, or Santa Ana. from
the canyon noor.
The youngstets were taken to
Mission Community Hospital In
Mission Vi ejo for lreatment of
their injuries. Lindsay reported·
ly was released from the h0$pltal
Sunday ,nernoon.
Mi ss White. however, re.
mained in the hospital ov,rolchl
and reportedly was listed in good
condiUon today.
Her father, Gene Wayne White.
44 , of 5591 Rockledge Drive.
Buena Park. was at the controls
of the rented Cessna 172 that
plun1ed into the canyon shortly
after Sp. m. Saturday.
Accordln1 to a sheriff's report,
White and the two younpters
were merely taking a pleasure
ntaht from Fullerton Airport
over the Anaheim mus area
when the craft apparently lost
power.
Wh ite hiked rive miles throu&h
the ru11ed mountain country
beton hJtching a ride back to the
airport and calling Fullerton
police at about mldnlcht.
shtriff'a tnvesli&atonaa.id.
Two hours I ater, in response to
bullhorn messaats sent echol.ng
throuah the inounlalns. sheriff's
searchers beard calls for help.
According to one rescuer, it
took a four·man team three hours
to descend the canyon walls In
the predawn darkness to react\
the crash victims.
It was then that a call was sent
to the Marine air base for a
rescue helicopter that could Uf\
the two youn11ters from the ca·
nyoo at dawn's first liaht.
Accordine to a rescue report.
(Sff,U.OT, PaieAJ>
a'IJZEN 8.4ND
'FASI' SEUER'
.. I sold my cltiJens band radio
as a result o( the Daily Pilot ad.•·
That's the advertisinl success
story told by the Laauna Hills
1'0man wbo placed this ad:
CB Radio. Realistic. mdl TRC41. SSB w /car anten·
na. XXlM(JUCX
'U you bave electronic gear
you want to convert to cash, call
6'2·!5678. We )Date it easy for
you to communicate with t.lyen
all alone the Orange Cc>aSt, in
the D~ i>ttot.
.
Ineen~ary Infe .. n~? ·
c.lly ..... $tall "'919
FIRE INSPECTOR JIM MERRILL, DETECTIVI! 808 RUSSELL PROBE RUINS
Printing Plant Wiped Out In $250,000 HuntJngton Beach Fire
Fire Destroys Plant
Of Cella Witness
By AllTHUR R. VINSEL
OllH Ollly 11'1 ... WI"
A $250,000 pre-dawn explosion
and flre today destroyed a Hunt·
lngton Beach printing plant
owned by a potential witness in
the trtal of polltlcal financier Dr.
Louis J . Cella. Fire officials sald
the .,laie was intentionally set.
The blast and blaze that gutted
Graphlct Communications Com·
pany, 1271 M)Jrdy Circle.
awakened firemen sleeph\g in
the Murdy Fire Station only
about SO yards away.
Flames wer~ already roaring
throuah its roof by the time they
ran to a ~•r wlndow to locale the
cooflaaratlon, according to Fire
Inspector James Merrill.
lnvestf 1atora were careful to
DOte the inferno ln the north Hun·
tln«ton Beach industrial park ts
listed as beint of lncendiary
ori&in.
Police Department Arson
Detail Detective Robert Russell
coofmned, however, the blue
was obviously intentional, but
noted any specific motive 1s un-
known.·
AutboriUes HY prlntiq firm
owner RJcbard Tbompsoo told
them he is to be a witness hi the
upeomlnc tri•t of Dr. c.ella, who
is accused with three colleaiues
ol dlvertin1 $2 million from
Cella·cootrolled hospitals for
political purpose•.
Prlntin1 of camp1i1n
literature so far bas been men-
tioned lD testlmony rel~ to
J).
the 44·counl lndlctmmt laaued by
• federal arabd jury in Lo•
Angeles naml111 Cella and co-
detendanta.
So rar, Thompson's name ha11
not emeried and he is known to
have not been among former
buslr~eu associates who testified
before the arand jury.
Thompton. who waa n« tm•
mediately available for an in·
. tervtew at the fire scene, re·
portedly told inve101atbra he
had done some work rot cell• but
not more recently than about tlve
yeana•o. · Another printer once employed
by a Costa .Mesa firm controlled
(See ti.BE. Pace AJ)
Boats Craah '
A 3l·foot sailboat named
"Panic" suffered an ..Umated
St,000 worth of damaae Sunday
afternoon when Jt collided wtth
thePavWoaQueen tour boat.
A spokesman for the Harbor
Patrol aaid the aail boat. ~ed by
Robert Price, 304 DlamOnd Ave.,
Balboa llland, was tack:ln1 near
the Balboa ls land Ferey when the
collision with the Ja.rpr vessel
took place. .
No injuries were reported to the
Harbor Patrol in conned.ion with ~4 •. m. mbb•P·
~~~~~~~~~~~
·Transient
Charged in
NB Burglary
A burglary suspect. wearina
clothes police allege he had Just
stolen, was spotted by his vlctim
Sunday and arrested by Newport
Beach police.
The suspect, Gary Damon
Alpln, 211 Is a transient, police
111ld, who has been living In a hut
made of e\,lcalyptua branches in a fucatyptua grove near the in·
tft'lettlon of Sanllaaoand Polaris
dri"iet.
Accordin1 to police, Aspin
walktd to a nearby apartment
complex at 1700 16th St. and al·
te1edly broke Into 6oe ol the
apartment.a, taking IOITle food, •
Jaclcetaodaring.
Police alle1e that be lOok the
food-bread, cheese. salami and
SOll)e cans ol aoup-to hit hut and
was we.arlnt the ring and jacket
when the victim of the theft SlfoUed im loun11n1 at the apart·
ment'spool area.
Aspin ls bein1 held in lieu of
$10,000blll.
Communist Third
• TOURS, France (AP> -
Despite t~e Frencb Communist
party'• new poUcy Of openness
and independence from Moscow,
the plf\y's candidate ran third in
a field ot nine Sunday in an elec·
UOn billed u a preview of tbe
1978 election o( a new National
Auembly.
Adopted
Pooch
A Hero
BRIDGETON, Mo. (AP> -
Two-year-otd -Margaret Morris
owes htt life tQ a decision by her
family to take In a dirty. hunfry
dog they found roaming ln their
neiehborhood.
Red, an Irish setter adopted by
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce R. Morris or
Harvester. Mo .. three weeks ago.
pulled the pa nicked girl by her
coat collar from their parked car
minutes before it was gutted by
names.
"All I can say ls thank God we
got the dog, I wouldn't have been
able to get to the car in Ume."
said Morris. who witnessed the
incident from a car dealer's
showroom where he and his wife
were shopping for a new car.
Red was adopted by the Mor·
rises after they found him run-
ning loose. The dog's owner was
located but hP agreed to let the
family keep the animal.
"My wife, Betsy, and
Margaret had really become at
tached to the dog,•· Morris said
Sunday.
Saturday afternoon, the couple
left Margaret asleep in the car
with Red standing guard. The
car's front windows were rolled
down about three.quarters of
the way, Morris said
Morris s:ud he frequently
looked out to check on tho girl,
but after 15 minutes had puled.
a salesman noticed smoke pour·
ing from the car windows.
"I he.rd him yell. 'My Cod.
there'• a girl In that ear',"
Morris recalled.
Morris 111ld that u he wu run·
ntns acrou tho s howroom
toward o door, he H w the smoke
and then saw Red Jump out o
<See HERO DOG, Page AZ>
Coast
Weather
A coolln& orr period, wtth
low clouds In the morning
and partly cloudy ln the af.
ttmoon, is In store for the
Oranae Coast Tuesday.
'ilgbs will run from 65 on
the aeashort to 15 further
inf and.
IN 18E TODA 't'
Some chUdrnt Gt on 11.bnou
tchool actuaUr untntll!IXi o
"4tlfng IO/rile walkblQ home
from lunch. School o/fidoU
ttU of lloto the~ baaad-
orrNlJI .ol/tcttd thdr aoa.
A7. ••••
I•
WASHING TON lAP> -The
PBI haa coaducled bwxlted.s ol
brtak·IDI-. .. ddplte the qUH•
tlonable le1al ty of~ tecbn qua
and ita deep intruaiqn ltlto the
privacy of lareeted lndividuall,"
a Senate lntellleenco commlttee &laffreport U)'I.
The break-Ina. offidaUJ known u "surreptltlou1 entri•." were
conducted for the purpose of
photoenphlnt or seiling doce.a·
menta and lnstalllni. bup. ac· eordina to ttie report released to-
day
The report Is one of a enes
frepared by the 1ntelll1ence
panel's staff to back up r<!C.Om·
mendaUont to lhe committee'•
ftnaJ report.
Love tO Live
Sex Called GOodfor Women
LONDON CAP) -British psychiatrist Jane
Gomez says too much sleep can shorten your life but
sex can make a woman live loo1er.
Lovemaking offers that much exercise value and
is tranqui_Hzing as well, Mrs. G<>mez says in a new
book published here. For men, sex has no value for its exercise, she says.
Sex also stimulates the glands that keep women
youthful, but male glands just don't respond to the
treatment, the book says.
Seven hours sleep a night is enough for any
woman, Mrs. Gomez claims. She says men need 10
· minutes more but doesn't explain why.
''Men in their 50s who sleep nine hours a night suf.
fer double the death rate from stroke, heart attack or
aneurysms (blood clots) than those sleeping seven
hours or less," says the book, entitled "'How Not To Die Young."
"Those who sleep 10 hours run four times the
tislt/' thej)®k SUSA --• ~ -----
.9,9-year Term
I New Trial Denied
Dr. King's Killer
' CINCINNATI (AP> -James
Earl Ray's appeal from his plea
or guilty in the shooting death of
civil rights leader Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. was denied today
by the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals.
Ttle unanimous decision con·
eluded that the U.S. District
Court for the Western District of
Tennessee was corrttt in refus-
ing Ray's motion for a new tnal.
The district court said Ray
failed to prove that his defense
attorneys, Arthur Hanes or
Percy Foreman, provided Ray
with ineffective assistance, Im·
proper Investigation or that Ray
was Induced to plead guilty
Manh 10, 1969.
The appellate court srud Ray's
testimony at his guilty-plea hear-
ing made 1t plain he understood
his actions before receiving a
~year sentence.
Tenn .. on April 4, 1968. Ray was
arrested in London, England,
June 8. 1968. He is now m the state prison at Nashville. Tenn
While still in England. Ray
hired Hanes, of Birmingham,
AJa., ..... to defend him. Ray said
thlt before their first interview,
Hanes made an agreement with
William Bradford Huie to write a
book and artlc:les about his case befor~ the trial. The funds were
to go for legal fees and for R-.y's
defense.
Ray said be fired Hanes two
days before his March 10, 1969
trial because he believed Hanes
was more concern~ about book
royalties than protJding a de·
fense.
Ray then hired Texas attorney
Percy Foreman, who made a
similar agreement with the
author, and Foreman advised
Ray to plead gw!ty. Ray argued that the attorneys
were more Interested in prontmg
from books about the cue than m Bab B k defending him. Ttie Judges said OOllS ac
they disapproved or the fee ar·
rangement between Ray and the
lawyers. but said It Clid not prove
tie did not receive a good defense.
Kina was shot to death on a
motel balcony In Memphis,
f'ro•P~AI
PILOT •..
the rented plane did not appear to
be seriously damaged m lhe
forced landing Whlte made short·
ly ofter taking orr.
Other than White's explanation
that the c:raCt was losing power
when be downed it In the ruued
eanyon no reason was given ror
e forced lnndlnf.
Nor co\lld orrlchtls say tod.,
.._,hy the pilot hitchhiked back to
e alt1>0rt before contacUnc of·
c:tal1 to send them ln search or
e two teen•1en.
ORANGB COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. w.d ""_ ... __ _
Jack R. CUJMY "•n~ -c;.-.t~
Thomas ICMYll r-niom.s A. Mu111tt!ne __....r_
'
OWlrtes H. Loos Akhlrd P, Nall
In Cap~ivity
KIN~ MILL. Ohio CAP> -or.
fldals at Kings Island amuse.-
ment park say they have finished
rounding up 50 escaped baboons
and ere going lo post a sign over
the cage:
"Here Are A Few Of The Ba·
boons That Made Monlteys Out
Of Us·•
The mass escape came April
14 Animal handlers recaptured
the final two Olive baboons by us
1ng drugged Crull to fell them
Only two baboons will be kept
here and the re~t will be returned
to an a nimal de.aler in Michi gan.
omc1als said
The Ju.stace Departnmit still
permitt the bureau to coaduc:t
bttak·inl to lnttaU bu&s and re-fuses to rule out the possibility ot
usina unauthorized Mltries or
"black bac" Jobs to obtain docu·
ments from forei1n iotellieence
tareeu. lhe l7·pa1e report noted.
"Althou1b several attorne)'&
ieneral were awart ol lht FBI
practice -of break4n.s to in.stall
electronic listening devices.
there 1s no lndieation that the
FBI informed any attorney
general about its use or black ba•
jobs." the report said. -
The F8l wu unable to provide
the commit~ with a complete
ac:countln1 of t.&e total number of
bttak·iftl because tnost ~
were destroyed soon after an en·
try was accomplished, the report
sald.
Figures provided by the FBI
showed there were at least 242
break-Ins aeainst suspected
domestic subversives between
1942 and 1968 and that since 1960
the FBI conducted more than 500
break-ms to install bup. ·
"Almost as many surreptitious
entries were conducted in the
same period aaainst targets ol
criminal investigations," the re·
port said.
The report named the Ku Klux
Klan and the Socialist Workers
party as two targets of FBI black
bag jobs.
·As described by the report,
agents who performed break-ins
would som etimes re.quest the
cooperation ot a ·1a00Jo@ in en·
tering the premises. In other
cases. the agents simply would
enter through unlocked doors or
pick the lock. lire report said.
One break-in specialist said
"only ma small proportion of the
cases to which he was assigned
was it necessary to pick a lock."
""The number of documents
photographed during a single
operation reached as h.lgb as 220
and regularly was above 100,"
the report said .
FBI Direc.-tor J . Edgar Hoover
banned black bag jobs in 1966,
although the Justice Department
has not ruled out their future use
m foreign intelligence cases, the
report added. ·
The c:om.millee has recom·
mended that the FBI be required
to obtain a judicial warrant
before conducting future break·
ms.
f'ro• PageAJ
HERO DOG.
front windo\\'.
Once 01,1tside the car, the 75-
po und dog turned back for
Margaret, who by that time had
been awakened by the smoke and
was standing up in the back seat,
swinging her arms in fright.
"As soon as Red hit the ground,
he jumped up, put his paws on the
side of the car and reached bis
head through the smoke coming
out the window," M9f'rla said.
Red grabbed Maraer~·s coat
collar with his teeth and draeced
the little girl out the window.
then pushed her away from the
car.
A Bridgeton patrolman said
names from the car were shoot·
Ing 20 to 2S feet into the air by lhe
time he arrived. The fire, ap-
parently caused by faulty wiring,
gutted the interior.
M ar~a rel was taken lo a
hospllal where she was treated
for mm9r burns and released.
Red suffered signed hair and a
slight cut on his nose.
"I eave Red a steak when we
got home after the fire," Morris
said "He may get steak every
night after this "
.., .........
• MARGARET MORRIS, 2, HUGS HERO DOG 'RIED' •
lrtah Sett• Re1eued Glrt From Bumlng Car
The Bigger They Are •••
The harder they fall Members of a UCLA
sc:ulpture class entered this 25-foot kite )n
the UC Irvine Kite Flying Festival SUnday
tJ. Scotchman •s Cove. Unfortunately, the
glant erashed on ii, first attempted fll1ht.
So. it's back.to the drawing boards. ./
8 Injured Aboard
Cripple~ Sorcery
The crippled 61 -root sloop
Sorcery. owned by Jacob Wood of
Marina del Rey. was undertow in
mid-Pacific today with eight or
her ll·man crew injured.
Sorcery, a well-known CC-61.
was presumably returning from
the South Seas by way of Honolulu
when she lost her mast and had
her rudder carried away by 20-30
·foot waves and winds of more
than 35 knots about 1,200 mUes
from the mainland.
f'rana Pa114t A J
MELEE •••
professional promolets wltb well
known rock stars would also be
cons•dered.
Police Captain R. E. Moody
said there were only~ arrests
followfnt the disturbance, lnclud·
ing one teenaeer arrested for
anon ind assaulting officers. a
burglary arrest and the arrest of a
young girl ror being under the in·
Ouence ofalcobol.
"There were no if\Juries on
either side Saturday night," sald
Moody. "It wasn't the kind of
thing I'd want to bust up a dance
over. but it might have been If we
hadn't sent over the tactical
unit."
Fairerounds security police
called for aulstance at 'about
10:30 p.m. wben an overflow
crowd began tossing botUes and
setijrig amall fires outaidt the
~ew Products Pavillon where the
concert was being held.
''Several of the fires came close
to buildings," Moody said.
Fired Shots
Kill Youth
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Oneol
three ahots fired by youths from a
car struck and kllled a 17-year-old
boy as he walked alonf Rlvenldt
Drive near the Golden Staate
Freeway, police said.
. The victim wasn't idenUfied
immediately, pendlna notlfica·
tJonofrelatlves.
According to an Associated
Press dis pirtcb. the crippled
vessel was taken in tow late Sun·
day by the Coa1t Guard cutter
Mellon and wu beinC taken to
Kodiak, Alaska. Theeighlhtjured
crewmen were taken aboard the
cutter in a dlfflc:ult rescue opera·
lionln heavy seas.
The Coast Guard said the
crewmen were in fair condition.
One had a broken leg, two were in
shock and the others had lesser in·
Juries.
All of the erewm en were said to
be from Southern Callfornia but·
none was identified.
The Coast Guard said hllge seas
dismasted Sorcery. broke her
rudder and fiooded the engine
room. All life rafts were carried
away by the heavy aeas.
The Mellon ud a freighter
ltood by the stricken yacht for a
full day before the crewmen could
be rescued and the yacht taken in
tow.
Sorcery is one of lhe best known
racing yachts in Southern
California. She was the overall
winner of the Transpacific Los
Angeles to Tahiti race in 1974 and
sailed in the Honolulu race In 1975.
She also has competed in several
races ln Mexican waters.
In 1974 she was also the winner
of California Yacht Club's Cal
Cup against her sister ship, Joli.
~Elephams
Kill Tiro
SALISBURY, R.bodesia
(AP> -Killer elephants
have battered two person~
to death in lhe remote
Kartba region of northern
Rhodesia, Police report.
They announced Sunday
that. the mutilated body oC
Charles Perry, a tsetse ny
control worker mlninc
aince Friday, had been
found in dense busb, and
tracks around the body
showed be had been at.-
tacked br elepbanta. A loca tribal leader wu
a1JO kUled by an elephant
that picked hlm up with hit
ttunJc and hurled him.JO the
'
"" aound. '°Ile• said. ~
f'ro•P~AI
FIRE .••
byeena was a prominent witness
in his Los Angeles hearing on
Thursday and testified to ent~r
lng the shop on occasion.
Donald Albert Ray, 36, alle&ed-
ly stole d~um en ts from the Costo
Mesa pririt.shop for the Internal
Revenue Service that alleied.ly
could be incimlnaUngtoCella.
Today items recovered from
the debris of Thompson's nrm in·
eluded three soot-1mud1ed
cbecu that lay on a table ln the
adiacent West Orange County
Teachers' Aasoclatlon suite. ·
"I don't even know where they
came from." said Detective
Russell.
He and Fire Capt. Ro4er
Hosmer said later this mc~nung
that no one bas been questioned
as a posalble sus~ but th~t
routine questioning is under way.
Cause of the explosive blaze
that oti1inated in a product.ion
and repair area of the11hop wu a
l~ge quanUty of nammable Ii·
qwd.
No one waa lnJured ln batUing
the two-alarm blaze, which re-
quired 26 flrefiahters 15 minutes
to control, according to Capt.
Hosmer.
Tbe fir e immediately
destroyed a trunk telephone ca·
ble serving 900 residential and in-
dustrial customers in the sur·
rounding area, Including one en·
tire housing subdivision.
Inspector Mar~all said
Th o-m p so n ' s a pp a re n ti y
nourishing business lost $80,000
worth of equipment alone in the
raging names.
He said It Included printing
presses, duplicating machines
and spare parts. The company
occupies three suites in the com-
mercial building and Includes a
copy machine repair service In
addition to its own printing
facilities.
Investigators said the fire is
not listed as an arson because
that term applies only to reslden·
lial homes.
The •lructure that housed
Graphic CommunicaUona Co. Is
owned by Murdy " Brockman
Inc., flremen•ald.
Thom pa on Jives at 19282
Worceater Lane, Huntlniton
Beach.
Jumper Killed
LOS ANGELES (API -A 21·
)'tlr·old woman has died al'ler
leapln1 from th,o fifth naor or a
downtow.n hotel.
Fat's Not So Jolly
Plump People Prefer Food to Sex-Study
MIAMI BEACH, f1a. <AP> -
The popular lmaae of lhe jolly
fat man is wronc. •IYI a rePort
of the Amerlcab Academy of
P1ychoanaly1t.a. Tbe overwelaht
penon. it says, ls more Uktly to
bt depressed. anxious and fllled
wlth self-loathin1. The report•
alto said that &>eople may tum
to food to avoid sex.
And while psychoanalysis can
help obese peraons be happier,
in most cases It will not result
in dramatic weifht reduction,
the report said:
Tbe report, the result of a
three-year study ol fat people
and psychoanalyals, wu _pre·
sented here at a medin& oC the
Academy of P1ychoanal)'ata.
Dr. Albert Stunkard. pro· teuor of p1ychlatry at Stanford
University. sald 147 people were
included ln the stud)' -IC or
them obese and the rest 1Um.
The obese subJecta ran1ed ln
qe from 30 to 50 and averqed
11'1 pounds fol' women and J&T
pound.a for men.
Althou.'1t about 64 percent oC
the fat patients lost 1mall
amounts of weieht durin& the
two or three years or
P1Ychoanalysi1, Stunkard said.
welfht reduction wu "not u
good u the hotshot pl"Ograms
focuainf on wtl&ht loss" such
aa Wel1bt Watchers and
Overeaten Anonymoua.
He said the study showed
psycboanalyals effectlvell lm·
proved tha obese patients bod1
lmaaes.
Stunkard'• auociate. Colleen
Rand, aald 70 percent of tht
obete patients c.oasl"ered
themselves unattractive com·
pared to 18 percent· ol the sUm
subject&.
"In our sample, 41 percent
avoided lookln1 at tbem.selves
in mirrors." said Miss Rand.
"Some did not even have any
mirrors in their homes."
Althoulh mo.t did not aslc fOt'
help Ila reducln&, "We round
that obeH puaons thOUgbt they
wt.re UJ17 and abowed creat
•
evidence of body lma•e. dls·
paraiement '' she aald.
She aald they described
lhemselvea as "fat slobs" or
lookln1 like • "tub o( lard."
"T reatment by
paychoaJlalysla ertectlvely re·
duced the lnlen1ity of thls dis·
pa ... 1ement, •' Miu Rand
added.
Fat people turned to food
more often to counter stness
and cruia, and many UHd it to
avoid aex, accordlnl to the re·
port.
• • Forty-1even percent ot the
obese compared to seven per·
cenl of ndrmal-wei&hl r•tlenta
ate l9 avoid aexua rel•·
tionshlps," tald Mlu Rand.
She tald aome patlenta used
food to reduce aexual urges or
to aet l at and keep the opposite
.ex at a distance. One maq
mtnUoned in tho atudy 11Lid that
when ht ate he wu too full to
want aex, and another sat 'up
eaUn1 late uc:la -·alt for h1a wlro to fall
" ~ May 10, t978 DAIL y PILOT A\.
Buleskinners Happily Leave Cities
8 1 STBVE •lttll'll.L Of .. lilWffPI ...... Tl'anllri& thNMafh tM wll&r·
MU t.'IOlnf to be a dndl after ~. problem• two mule r1Mn
l aced duri,ns lbe fiM 41 ct.ya ot
tlMlr bJctQtennlal trip.
Ore1 Sapp and Doui Tweedy,
who leCt Pboenlx, Aria., March IO on UM first lef Ol a l,IQD.mlle trek
to Vancouver, Wun., arrived ill Costa Mesa last week, dusty and
dla111Sted.
The two 20-year-old coytboya
raced two week• under the desert
sun alter leavlna their Pbcwnlx
homes. That was before they re·
ached San Dleao. There they
faced heat or a difrerenl nature--
the San Diego County Humane
Society.
Society oHlclala impounded
Jwo of the travelers' rive mules.
claiming one was underfleshed
and the other had harness sores.
'Tweedy aa1d the head of the
humane society recommended
the two young men take the mule
with the harness sores to a
veterinarian.
That vet found a cancerous
cyst near the eye of the mule,
"which the humane ~ociety
hadn't even noticed," Tweedy
said.
He said he asked if they could
keep the mule and were told no
by th~ humane officer.
''Hell, even the vet said that
mule had another year or lire In
NO SERMON
The Dally Pilot's Sermon or the
Week column, regularly on lhis
page, will not appear while Staff
Writer Tom Barley tues an ex·
tended vacation.
hlm," Tweedy said. kltlJnC a
bmeh with his-boot.
• 'We. tOu14 ft av finilbecr "'6
trip with him. He wasn't feeUnc
p1h1, and lbe vet said It would be
• loa& time before palo aet in." Botb claim to be expert animal
bandlen.
The pair said they were
warned that the)' would be
watched "•s lon1 as we're in
California," by the Humane
Society.
They have bad to cul back on
sup;>Un because of the lncldent,
l06tne about 50 pounds or coods"'
lhe process.
Sapp said the po1r will be hap-
p I er once they get past
Bakersfield and j.nto lhe Sierra
foothllls . The modern-day
muleskinners are following trails
taken by the early gold miners
durln& the 18405, stickine m0&Uy
to the west side of the mounlam
ranges through the Mother Lode
country. They average 12 lo lS
mlles a day.
"Everything we are doing is
Crom the 1840s.'' said Sapp, who
was born in Newport Beach.
"Ninety percent of the time we
are sleeping out under the
stars," adding that, even in the
Fake Bills N~bed
NEW YORK (AP> -Secret
Service agents say they have
cracked a major counterfeiting
operation by seizing more than
S20 million in Cake $100 bills and
arresting six men at a printing
plant. Agents arrested the men
early Sunday i.Q a raid that re·
suited in one of the largest
seizures of phony money ever
made in the metropolitan area.
11*.. Lile.re wue boLe1a.
"I've ape.nl one .ni&hlln a boW
&Jnc• we ten Phoenix:' be ad·
mJUed.
The l wo Scottsdale Community
CoUqe 1tudent1 •pent two yurs
preparin1 fOf' the blc~nlennial
tnp. They have slashed aw1y 70
pounda of bfft jerky which they
prepared in Phoenlx._aloog with
dried rnut.s and null. •
"We also made Lo&an bttad."
laid Tweedy. "which aeu harder
the longer you keep il around .• ,..
He said lhe bread. much like
hardtack, ii a mixture of corn
meal, honey and other in&re·
dienll.
The palr also cook lndian fry
bread, compr1sed ol nour. sall
an<t baking powder. "You jusl
•oss it m bot arease," Tweedy ex·
plained.
The only canned goods carried
by the two mule riders are
tomatoes.
"Th~re weren't a lot ol canned
goods in the old West." Sapp ex·
plained. "because they had to be
shipped around the Horn. But
ihey did have lots or canned
tomatoes. so that's what we're
carrying."
They plan to do a hWe hunting
along the way, .mostly for
smaller animals. They have air
rifles and bows and arrows pro-
vided by a firm sponsoring the
"city portions" oflheir trip.
Sapp and Tweedy left the
Orange County Fairgrounds Fri-
day, stopping by to drop off a rl·
fie with Newport Beach actor An·
dy Cevine al a Costa Mesa sport·
mg goods store.
Then it's off to Los Angeles,
Bakersfield. and finally, the
peace and quiet of the wilder·
ness.
Hom.e' to Save Foe•
Viejo Houses Designed as Energy Tests
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Ot U.. O•llY l'ilee S..lt
When they are completed in
August. two small houses an Mis-
sion Vie~o will be unlike any
other new tract dwellings in
Orange County and perhaps
anywhere in the nation.
They are part or one or the
joinl·effort energy conservation
experiments undertaken by the
U.S. Energy Research and
Development Administration
<ERDA> In partnership with a
public utility and a private de·
veloper.
• From the ground up. the
houses will incorporal.e "virtual·
ly every known method or con·
serving fuel-produced energy
and preventing energy losses,"
accordmg to Donald Schulz, vice
president or product develop
ment at the M 1ss1on VleJO Com·
pany.
"We are doing thln1ots to these
houses that would never be re·
quired in a climate hke we ha"e
here," Schulz said. "But for the
experiment to be vahd for other
parts or the country whert> it 1s
colder. we h ad to test e\'er-
ything."
The company orrtc1al estimat-
ed that the energy conservation
"packages" on each house will
cost at least SlS .000 over and
above the retail cost.
The houses are ba.slcaJly the
standard l, lSO·sQuare-fool
Cordova models that sell ror
$41,000 to $46,000, Schulz said.
"If this experiment proves suc-
cessful after a year or so. we wall
incorporate the msot affordable
energy.saving methods into our
regular production housing -
such as more insulation and Joint
caulking," the company ex·
eculive said.
The project is being un-
dertaken in tandem with the
Southern California Gas Com-
pany, which received a $230,000
grant from ERDA lo be used on
experimental prototype houses.
Schulz said the gas company
originally asked Mission Viejo to
build homes designed by a Pit·
tsburgh architect.
''But the designs were too far
out and we told them ·no way' un-
less we could use one or our re·
gular models." Schulz said.
"They agreed and we made the
modifications as per their
specifications ... he sa1d.
The gas company and ERDA
expect that the homes will save
!!() percent or more or the energy
normally consumed by an
average household.
Besides a rooftop bank or solar
panels ror water heating, home
space healing and air cond1l1on·
ing, the houses will have special
double·pane windows with
louvers, heavy Insulation, double
thick walls, Insulated foundation
slabs. double entry doors and the
latest an power-sa\·ing ap-
plicances
Schulz likened the firushed pro·
duct to "a giant thermos bottle".
"There are still a lot of pro·
blems with solar power because
there Is no good way to store the
energy produced and on a cloudy
day, you're sunk," Schulz said.
"The houses will have small
backup units in case of pro·
blems."
The houses will also be a prov·
intt ground for new solar-
powered appliances. such as the
air conditioners. Schul~ said the
first two production m~els in ex·
lstence wUl be used.
One of the houses will be oc-
cup1ed by an "average" ,family
on a low·rental basis. The tam1ly
will include a young. non·
working mother, a workrng
father and two children. Schulz
said
"We already have somebody in
mind lo Ii ve in il," ht> srud.
The other house will remain
vacant for additional data-
gathering purposes.
ERDA expects a report on the
project by the end or next year,
Schulz said. Depending on the
success or the effort, the two little
Mission VieJo homes may be
dubbed "houses of the future,"
Schulz said.
°""' ~ ... , .. 11 -· NEW ENERGY CONSERVATION HOUSE GOING UP AS PART OF MISSION VIEJO PROJECT
Vlrtu•lly Every Known Method of ConHrvlng Fuel·produced Energy Employed
wn1cal ribs
Ooubl•paned .Mndows with
lhuttlfs between pants
Other energy-ll!ving feetur11:
• hOuse finished with livf\t·
~ eolor paint
• optimum use of landwtping
for shade
Solar oollectors for solar·
asistod domestic water
heating end space heating
and Cooling
Tile roof for
Extni thick exterior walls
to 1llow for heavier well
insulation
OIAORAM POINTS OUT MAJOR FEATURES OF ENEROY~NS!RVINO MISSION VIEJO HOUSE
'htnl' \WI T11ek M L .. 1t S15.~ Onto the RetaU Coat of the DwetHng
•
o.r, '"'" _... GREG SAPP (LEFT) AND DOUG TWEEDY BRUSH DOWN 'DAISY' AND 'BEAR' AT FAIRGROUNDS.
Two Phoenix MulHk~nners Off Again on 1 ,600..mlle Trtp to Waahlngton State
Bodies of 2
County Me n
· Uncovere d .
The bodies or two Orange
County men m1ss1ng since they
apparently became lost in a Feb.
29 snowstorm near Big Bear
have been reco\·ered from the
San Bernardino MountaJns
The San Bernardino County
coront>r said autopsies are
P.lanned on the bodies or Roger
Serrano. 27. or Anaheim. and
Paul Bustos, 21, a Manne cor·
poral stationed at El Toro
Manne Corps Air Station.
The two men disappeared in
the Siberia Creek area while on
an outing. Their four· wheel drive
vehicle was found about two
miles from where a fisherman
discovt>red the bodies this
weekend, sheriff's deputies said
Motorcycli,st
Killed A/ ter
Hitting Truck
A 19-year·old Rowland Heights
motorcyclist was killed in San
Juan Capistrano Saturday night
when he ran head·on mto a pickup
truck, was knocked from his cy-
1 cle, lhen was run over by a pass·
ingcar.
Sheriff's deputies said Kenneth
Boesl was dead al the scene of the
crash on the Ortega Highway, a
half mile east of Interstates.
Officers said Boes! had
passed several cars near a curve,
went into the curve on the wrong
side of the road and crashed into a
pickup driven by David i\lan
Gardner, 23, of 29482 Vista Plaza
Drive, Laguna Niguel..
He was knocked from the cycle,
deputies said. and was run ovt>r
by a car drivt>n by Claudia Jean
Parrish, 25, of Orangl' Both
Gardner and a passengt>r.
Rich ard Kinur. 21. of 24105
Windward Drive. Laguna Niguel,
suffered minor injunes
MaeDonald Ca s~
F ather-i~law Stil·l
Pushes for Trial
By The Associated Press
The falher·tn·law of Dr. Jeffrey
MacDonald of Huntington Bearh
has taken another step aimed at
having the former Army Green
Bet-et captoin face trial in the
slay1ngs or his wife and t·"o
daughters.
The killings occurred six years
ago at Ft. Bragg, N.C.
Dr. MacDonald. now a Hunt·
ington Beach resident and direc
tor of emergency services at St.
Mary's Medical Center m Long
Beach. claimed the slayings oc
curred when a band of hippies
broke into his North Carolina
home.
A federal appeals court in
Virginia last week turned down a
government request for a re·
hearing into the dls misst>d
murder charges against the 32·
year-old physician.
Now his former father-in-law.
Alfred Kassab of Long Island
N. Y .. said he is taking a half·pagc
ad Sunday in the Fayetteville
NC Obst>n ·er . He said 1t urgt's
people of North Carolina to wntc
the U.S. solicitor general asking
that the government appeal the
MacDonald case to the U.S.
Supreme Court.
"I want to be positive as much
as possible that this case be ap·
pealed to the Supreme Court."
Kassab told the Associated Press.
It is up to Solicitor General
Robert Bork to decide whether
the government will appeal a
recent decision of the 4lh U S.
Circuit Court of Appeals.
Jn that decision, handed down
last January, lhe court ordered
murder charges against MaC'·
Donald dismissed because he hafl
not received a speedy trial. ln
March the court refused to re
consider that decis ion.
MacDonald was accusedork1ll-
ing his family Feb.17.1970inlhe1r
Ft. Bragg apartment. His wire.
Collette. 26. and daughters. Klm·
berly. 6. and Kristel Jean, 2, were
s tabbed repeatedly un •
bludgeoned. In the master
bedroom or the MacDonalds'
ransackl'<I apartment, the word
"pig" was smeared In blood on
the headboard of the bed. •
MacDonald, himself stabbed 17
times. contended that a group of
h1pp1e·l~ pe intruders killed his
family and lert him for dead.
In May of 1970. the Army ac·
cused MacDonald of murder. The
charges were dis missed later in
the yt>ar by MacDonald's com-
manding officer at Ft. Bragg
after a lengthy hearmg.
The case lay dormattl until
August of 1974 when, partly at the
urging of Kassab, a federal grand
jury began an investigation. In
January 1975 the grand jury In·
dieted MacDonald.
Call Ignored;
Woman Dies
DETROIT (AP) -Police Chief
· Philip Tannian says an ~.year·
old woman beaten by thugs died
on the floor of her home after two
days because a pohcc emcrgeney
operator ignored her husband's
pleas for help.
The husband, also beaten, lay
semiconscious beside her for
four days until a neighbor grew
worried about not seeing the cou·
pie and mvest 1gulcd, Tannian
told a news conference.
The chief said the operator in·
volved in the incident show~d
"mattent1vene~s· and uho was
negligent 1n fa1hne to 1nvest1gate
the call latN lie said the
operator, whom he refused to
idt>nl1fy. has been suspended
without pay pendine a de·
partmental 1nvesl1gatlon.
a pendant
for her thoughts
Brett Walker hos the most unique pendant necklaces 1n
town. All 18 k yellow gold with a single. sparkling diamond
Guitar . . . . . . . . 5299. Question Marl< . . . S255.
Sprol ..•........ 5390. Dolphin . . . . . . 5250.
\BJ1ll </Ua/h1J .<J/11ufipJ/
35 Fashion Island, Newport Beoch. Calif. 92660 (714) 644-2494
•
,44 DAILY P1LOT
&ICKY TICKY POLlnX: Our
California Gov. Edmund G
Brown Jr • ln quest or the pre-
1ldcmcy of tbe entire United
Statea. took to the television
alrwavoa yesterday. fl wa1 na-
Uonwlde and presumably c<>1t
• him nothini but has time.
Brown was the lone guest on a
1bow Cllled ··Face the Nation"
and if you wanted this kind o! ex·
posure, 1t couldn 't have been
limed better
rt came on right an.tt the b11 ~nix-Golden State basJcetbaU
playoff. which went mto a double-
nvertime and left Cans transfixed
to the tube. And abruptly, there
was Jerry Brown.
.. Oh, oh." you s:ud to yourself,
.. Now he races those three
panelists with the penenlraUnc
questions. They•JI tear our Ind
governor apart ··
BROWN WAS ON the show as a
.. serious" candidate for the
Democratic prd 1denlJaJ nomma·
lion. From this corner, 1t 1s sug.
gested that he pulled it ort vastly.
There he was on the screen.
graying at the temples and
Jookin g serious. He talked
seriously He wus even attired
jer10usly. He wore his vest.
The Cirst question fired at ham
from the panel. however . once again left you. as a Cahforman.
quaking in lear and dismay IL
was this:
"Governor Brown. before you
declared as a serious candidate
for the presadenc). you were quot
~as saying, 'I don't even want to
think about the presidency JU.St
being governor 1s a pam an the
ass.' How do you square that with
your present cam paagn.,"
How 's that ror a shirt'> You re
on TV ror about 104 seconds and
already they have labeled you as
• guy seeking higher office who
has already declared tus current
chores as an ache in the postenor portionorthe body
UNRUFFLED, JERRY Brown
•hrugged it off He attributed lh<'
comment to fatigue, noting he
Cl')ade the offhand remark just
ener emerging from a marathon
meeting with the Hegcnts or tht.>
Un1vers1ty or California
California Jerry made 1t clear
that in his view. grappling with
the regents would g1\IC an} bodv
agony In that lower portion or lht•
anatomy.
From lhl'n on. 1t was all Gov
emor Broy. n Unlike many panel
1nterv1ew shows. Brown didn't al
low the panelists to do all lhl' tau..
ang. He dad most of 1t. ranging
from gun control to Jobs for all
Americans to his a ssertedly tight
grip upon the fiscal purseslrlngs
in our Golden State. I And our 38-year·old governor
' kept insisting he can wrest the
Democratic nomination from the
I gripofJ1mmyCarter.
BROWN DIDN'T SAY much
about Carter except to suggest his
campaign tact 1rs raisc.'C.1 ques
Uons or cred1b1lity. Then, in his
typical Ask·the·Qucsllon :.tyle.
Brown su~gested, "Where's th<>
real Jimmy Carter., There's th<'
smllt>. but whcre'R the person behind that., ..
Questtons. question~. always
thosequest1oni.
It should bt• noted that during
tht' ent1rt' show . Gov Brown
didn't smile. unle:.s you count JUSI
sort of a faint ahm mer that came
'right at tht' end
Clellrly, Jl'rry Brown isn't go-
1n1 to get Into a smiles contei.l
with Jimmy Carter
Chances
LAS VEGAS, Nev. <AP> -
Cahfom1a Cov. Edmund Brown
Jr. told •n enJbuaiutk crowd of
upport~rs Sunday he can wm Lb
Democratic pr~aidcnUaJ nomlna-
Uon detplle bis late start In the
campalan.
Brown said whtn ht> st~rted
campaigning in Marylll.ftd two
weeks a10 be w11 told that he
was in llltb plact' and Jimmy
Carter wu ludin& the p ck .
"Just two days aco. when Jim·
my CartM's caravan came in to
Maryland. he said now I wu the frontrunn~r," Brown 11Ud.
"I DON'T KNOW Whether he's
nght or not. but ii he is and I can
become the frontrunner in two
weeks in Maryland, then J can
become the frontrunner tn this
country an two months.
..Some people a re saying the
nomanataons are all over,"
Brown added. "Well, I think
we 're big enough, mature
enough, and strong enough to
have a very vigorous debate and
discussion between now and
July.
"If lU aryland goes right and ar
I do well in Nevada al'ld
California and other states that
I'm going into. we've gol a
chance."
BROWN S.UD he had a good
reeling about the campai~.
"ll 's the kmd of lhing that the
expc.>rts and pundlts say. 'how
can you make it'!" Brown said
· I remember them telhng me
that when I ran for governor "
Broy.n stopped m Las Vegas en
route from New York to
Ca lifornia lo address a
Democratic party fund·raasing event
111'•
Fort .. .-•• Cllarlffl
J . Paul Getty, reputed to be
the world's rachest man,
rsays he plans to leave most
of his fortune lo charity.
Gell)'. 83, an American oil
tycoon. has r esided in Lon-
don for tbe past 20 years.
Africa ~as
Nuke Power
NEW YORK (AP) -
South Africa is capable of
produ ci n g nu<.'lear
weapons for its own de-
1 ens e. Prime Minister
John Vorster says in an in·
lerview in this week ·s issue
or Newsweek Magazine.
"We are only interested
in the peaceful application
or nuclear-power. But we
can enrich uranium and we
have the capability. And
we'd1d not sign the nuclear·
nonprohfer a lion treaty."
Newsweek quoted V.orster
as saying m an interview
from Pretona
Study Criticizes
Anti-crime Unit
WASHINGTON (AP>-An independent study of the federal
Law Enforcement Assistance Administration (LEAA> concludes
that the agency has performed poorly in its S4 4·billion effort to com·
bat cnme and should be abolished.
"LEAA is unclear as to its mission, and what it has attempted it
has done poorly." the study concluded. It urged Congrt'SS to shut
down the LEAA and shtf\ part or its funds to general revenue shar-mg.
The study was most criucal o( a $160-mil}jon "hig h impact anti·
<.'nme" program launched by the Nixon admmistralJon in 1972.
Jru-s to Mo.,~ Fro• 1t1~•• Bank
JERUSALEM tAPl -Prime Mm1stt>r Y1tzhak Rabin's cabinet
says at 1s going to move an 11legal settlement of lSO Jews out of the
heart of the West Bank. It srud it will allow no Jewish colonies to be
established m the main part of the terntory taken from Jordan m
the 1967 war. ( J It said Jewish settle-
'N SHORT ments could be set up only in
border areas that Israel plans
-to retain. meaning the
western perimeter facing the rest or Israel and the eastern side
along the Jordan river. Although the government has never defined
the exact limits of what 1t would and would not return to Jordan, it
has indicated that 1t considers retention of the perimeters essential
to Israel's security.
A narrhbl Dea•h Rul~d S u l<>lde
STUTTGART, West Germany <AP> -Investigators ruled Mon-
day that the death of anarchist Ulrike Meinhof in her prison ceU was a suir1de
The death touched ort bombings in Paris and Rome, paint
smears on the home or t ht> West German ambassador in
Copc.>nhagen and a demonstrat.Jon by 300 people in West Berlln.
O.r b dans Launr h Ollen•iee
BEIRUT. Lebanon <AP> Christian m1htiamen have launched
an offensive aga1nst Moslem positions following the election or a
new Chnstlan president for Lebanon. The Palestine Liberation
Army said 1t would intervene to stop the Christians
Pohce reported 165 killed and 231 wounded 1n n1hting since
Elias Sarkis. the Syrian-backed governor or the central bank, was
chosen president·elert Saturday.
Stor~ Rip Oklahomll
Marble-si ze Hail Pelts Tmm of Freedom
Temper9C•rn
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5 New Tremors
Sliake Up Italy
UDIN£. ltat1 <AP> -New earth tf'tmon rolled throu,h nort~ Italy early toct~ as the rovemQltnt came under aharp
p eriUct5m for alJe&ed faiJW"eS in rescu• worll and emersency aid.
At least five 1"mon •hook Frlulu province borderlnt the
Yu1oslav and Auatrtan botderw. No new casualties w~ reported,
but an official said tM ~mors caused heavy da01ase to lbe 'Na.
Uonal Archeolottical Museum In the hlstortc town of Cividale del
FrluU, aboul 10 miles from lht provlnclal capital.
ABOUT st A FTE&SHOCKS have been reported In the area
since Thursday·, kUler quake. Officials said the death toll was at
115. Rain added to the misery or many thousands of homeless
persons and contributed to the problems or rescue workers d.igiina through debns.
The museum official said Roman remains and urly Medieval
art treasures would be transferred to safer locations outside lbe quake area.
Rome's lefttst newspaper II Messaggero accused the govern-
ment or for&ettmg some villaces for three days alter the quake
Slr\.lck, and said inadequate supplies bad been sent to hard·h.it areas.
Turin'a La Stampa said the quake bad revealed "n•Uonal
failures ... and sud "The state ne1Ugence, the scarcity of emergen-
cy a.id are undeniable."
THE RULING Christian Democrats have already come under
fire in the campaign ror national elections scheduled June 20-21 for
failure to deal with extremist violence and Italy's severe economic problems.
Hundreds of tents were arriving in the quake-stricken area, but
about 150,000 persons still homeless from the massive eartbquaJce
Thursday night had to spend their fourth night in temporary shelters.
Officials talked about moving some of the homeless.into ne~by
hotels and discussed using the retired ocean liners RJrlfaello and
Michelangelo for temporary Living space. One ofliciaI siid the liners could hold 3,000 persons each. ·
"Most or the homeless will be staying in temP<>rary housing at
least until the end of the summer.·· said one official ln Osoppo. But
thousands made homeless by an earthquake in western Sicily in 1968 are still living in "temporary" shacks.
MANY OF THOSE with homes slilJ standing spend nights m
thetr cars or in tt:nts because of the tremors that continue to sbaJce
the area ,
At least five tremors shook the area today and two strong
quakes were fe lt Sunday m northeastern Italy and weMern
Yugoslavia. In Udine, the city's htStonc center was roped off for
fear that ancient palaces and churches would collapse.
Rescue operations continue 10 lhe vlllaees. Three women were
found alive early Sunday. more than SO hours after the quake. Police
officers expressed the beUef that at least 400 more persons were
buried in the debris, and there was uLUe hope of finding any of them
alive. -
THE FIRST MMS bunal was held Sunday in Maiano, where 89
coffins were lowered mto the earth.
Health Minister Luciano dcl Falco said inoculations against
typhoid fever were proceeding satisfactorily. and adequate supplies ot serum were arriving. .
Orlicials estimated that 30,000 persons. or 70 percent or the work
force in the region. have been made jobless by damaae to indnalrial plants.
Businesses affected include five prosciutto ham factories. a
kitchen furniture factory employing 1,000 workers, two iron fac-
tories, a cotton mill, a spare parts firm and a plastics firm.
"ln Italy's present economic situation, it is difficult to get
money from banks," said Giacomo Maotto. co-owner of a big pro.
sciutto company. •·If the government does not help us. it will be the
economic death for large areas or the Fr1uli region.••
Got a problem?
.-.... .. , .......
Din •I 1..-9 C••~r
Otto Kerner. former gov-
ernor of Illinois, died Sun-
day at lllinols Ma onic
Medical C~nler in Chic o.
The r etired U.S . Army
lieutenant colonel was 67.
Suspect Dies
In Shootout
In Color.ado
NEW RAYMER,CQlo. <AP>-•
"I really U1lnk if he wanted to
stay allve1 be would have done tt
a lot dlfrerently." said. Unda
Gayle Richardson from btr
hospital bed.
MrsA Richardson, 24, from
Shreveport. Le., suffertd neck
and shoulder lacerations from
flying «ilass early Sunday when
FBI bullet.a shattered the window
of a car In which she was alleged·
ly abdu~ted three days before.
Steve Harmon Coleman, s1ttlna
beside her, was kWed by• bulleL
that tore through his neck.
Colemon. 31, and Ricky L.
Everhart, 20, 'both of Bossler Ci-
ty, La .. had been named in
federal warrants accusing them
of robbing the First National
Bank of Mansfield il\,_StonewaJI.
La., on Thursday. Officials said
about $10.000 was taken.
Mrs Richardson, who said she
had dated ·Coleman. allegedly
was abducted fr91n in front of her
home late Wednesday night, and
was forced at gunpoint to
participate In the bank robbery
lh~next day.
The trio then begah a four-state
odyssey In a s tolen car that ran
afoul only after one of Mrs.
Richardson '11 notes asking for
help was taken seriously.
authonlit's said.
Then write to Pat Dunn
-Is an overzealou1 bllllng computer bugging you?
-Hi ve you waited too long for • mi ll order Item you paid
for month• ago?
-Are you getting the runaround at city hall?
For help you can count on. turn to Pat Dunn.
Pat will cut red tape, getting the 1n1wer1 and the action you
need to aolve your problem• w~th government agenclea a•d
bu1lne11e1.
Mall your queltlona to Pat Dunn At Your Service, Orange
Coast Dally Piiot, P. 0 . Box 1560, Cotta Me11, CA 92626. Be
1ure to include your telephone number •
Even If you don't have 1 problem, the At Your Service column
Is Interesting reading.dally except Saturdays anct-Mondaya
In the
DAILY PILOT
642-4321
World War II
Camp, €enter
Name Debated
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Should a camp where
J1p1DHe-Ammcans wete held durtnc World War
II be called a "concentration camlf' or • "reloca· Uon cenlerT"
1,'he 1tate Hiltorlcal Advllory Commission says
a road•lde plaque marking the site ot the Tulelake
camp lbould aay "relocaUon center."
Pinal decl•lon ts up to state Parks Director
Herbert Rhodes, who
(
•
I 1 says be will rule after State 1Ludyin1 the co n -troversy. The board vot-· _________ .,, ed 4-1 ror the relocation
designation at a meeting. no. OIJWr~ Dt~
VISALIA <AP> -Two children were found suf-
focated ln an abandoned refngerator more than
four boura alter their parents had become alarmed
by their absence, a Police lieutenant says.
Lt. George Fry said James Garsee, 7, and
Jamie Huddleston, 6. were found by a neighbor ,
shortly after a neighborhood search was begun.
Mldaef.,~• Lo•~ Appeal
I
I
•
Cross Bt1rnin9s
Incidents Yield
No 'Hate' Link
• LOS ANGELES (AP ) --An FBI 1peelal .,e(c HY• no c
evidence ol an oreanized hat~ campaJin hu becin u.ncovered in a cent
sertr5 of cross burnin,s. The FBI and local Police said SUnday lh y hive lntenslfied their ·
vesUgallon of possible Ku Klux Klan Lnvolvemenl In lhe cross bumin&s.
Three more occurred thu1
~ wttkend. bringing the totaJ to 10
since February.
FBI SPECIAL Agent Elmer
Llndberg said the bureau was
"acthely Investigating" aJI 10
cases for possible civil ri&hts
"iolat1ons and acllvilles by ··white hate groups.''
But Lindberg, \\ho had pre-
vious expenence with KKK ac-
tivities during seven years in M1s-
s1s~1pp1, s aid the investigation
hasn't uncovered evtdence of a
systematic campa1gn
· So Car, t.ney have been unrelat-
ed incidents,'' be said.
Crime lab experts were ex-
aminln1 the remnants of n
wooden cross found burrun1t about
mldnl1ht Saturday an a vacant
field on Ventura Boulevard in
Reseda to see If it could be linked
to the Hoffberg burning.
The latest burnh1gs fotlowt."d a
clvll rights rally Saturday 10
Redondo Beach, where similar
activity has forced one black
family lo move.
POLICE SGT. EMME1T Oren·
nan said he could not recall any
previous series of rac1aJ actions an
the west San Fernando VaJley
area.
Starts Sept. 7
KINDERGARTEN THROUGH EIGHTH GRADE
IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY: _
1~:15 Brooi-l'lu< ~ :.1 1N or W4...,.1) 71 l ~ 3312
• THCh.ng the ., Rs ••11th phonl('.I • Door-to Do<>I
811$ Set'vice • &lor1 4flO Alt r SCIK>OI CM•
• .-U Fa•ths WtlCome • Ro•son•Olt lll•li01'
---.... I .. No household should be without '
*SAVER 'S COUPON*
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The stale Court of
Appeal ruled that three Santa Cruz women can be
prosecuted for allegedly offering midwtfery • • t, •
"WE'RE INTERESTED from
a c1v1I rights standpoint and we
are 10\'esligatmg to see al there is
anv extremist or terrorist group
behind these burnings."
The latest incidents occurred in
Rest."da and included the first m-
\ Ol \'1ng a white homeowner,
··Every once in a wtule )Ou'll
get a cross burning or paint
sprayed on a wall but I can't re-
member a rash or 1nc1dents h.ke lhu,'' the officer s a 1d.
I this'book ... superb ..... -Th~N-Vorl. nmr. I
I FREEat I services without a valid cert1f1cate.
Alice Elizabeth Bowland, Landa Gail Bennett
and Donna J ean Walker had asked that the Santa
Cruz Municipal Court be restrained from proceed-Beearded Seymour J Hofrberg.
A resident or the Woodland 1 tills
neighborhood since 1960. Hof-
fberg. 56, said he had "no idea or
why this occurred. All I am is a r e-
The recent racial incidents
have provoked demands for ac-
tion from civil rights groups, and
300 persons attended lhe R1.'<iondo
Beach rally. Although the KKK
had denied any involvemt'nl an the
burnings, the white supremacist
group was angrily denounced at
the gathering.
I AMERICAN I
I SAVINGS I ing in a misdemeanor criminal action charging Danny Suhre worker ut .:in
violation of the Business and Professions Code. apiary plant southwest of
Raper-robber S~n'en~ed Chico. put a queen bee into his
TORRANCE CAP > -Superior Court J~dge natural beard to demonstrate
Burch Donahue sentenced an unemployed shipyard how worker bees naturallv
worker to seven consecutive prison terms in a swarm lo h er . He was stung
series of rapes and robbenes. several times but says he's i)O
1 Court officials said Raymond I. Maldonado, 36, used lo il he h ardly pays al-
was charged with five felony counts of armed rob-tenrio n anymore. ~
}>ery and two counts of rape stemmufg from attacks -------------f>n women in the South Bay area
I James Beards I gistered Democrat."
LINDBERG SAID although
previous victims have been
black, the Klan also clii:ects its
wrath a~a1nst J ews and
Catholics HoCfbcrgisJew1sh
"WE'RE f'JGllTING a tyranny
which hides behind "White sheets,''
sc~ool board membe r Diane
Watson told the predominantly
white crowd
I "Menus For I
I ~~~;: Entertaining" 1
1
--1 W11h .ldmn &,uJ > t.>CXI •«.lf>t "Mu1us 101 ln1<!n.11nln9·· .u a
/11 .. kn Man C•arged B c • s •k E d ·. LOSANGELES <API -A 23·year-0ldman was ay ity tri e n • s arraigned on charges that he robbed a bank after
donning a Groucho Marx mask and spraying black ·
9,.oJ,'. v<>1.'!1 t.,. P"~".J lu ..,.~, 1111 ,\ m4'mu1.;hl" m.-& lor I I <Jn\/ 'I'\" l<Jl <lo;("'' ll Bf' our 9Ul'•I• j.~11~ tlll!, uiUpon lo ~OU! llt°J!lhh• tl~•xl 1\m,·ri. "'...._,,, ' , 1,f th.• IT .. 1...-Mlk Hum;,
I -..;;plv •~ l.111.1._J (Jn, rer f41 1JIY .mtl "d" t· on:~. r1,.,~. I
I do do not J heve .in J~<"oont ..it An • .:rk:,in ~.lVings
paint on surveillance cameras.
Robert T. Burns was arrested after the robbery
at a Crocker National Bank branch .
Real Gordo
Cartoonist Tells Why
SAN DIEGO CAP> -The creator or the com1r
strip "Gordo" says his character was a stereotyped
.Mexican -fat, dumb and lazy -unlll Mexican-
American criticism forrcd him to change Gordo's
image.
CARTOONIST GUS Arriola, who began draw·
inc Gordo in 1941, said that his concept of the
character was Influenced by stereotyped portrayals
of Mexicans by actor Leo Carrillo an western mov·
Jes of the 1930's. But hostile feedback from Mexican-Americans
ln Los Angeles where he worked and in his home
state of Arizona forced him to throw out the
stereotypes, he said.
Said Arriola: "I suddenly became aware that I
was repres•nting a real people "
A3 a result, he said, Gordo 1s now smarter
and more sophisticated Ills broken English 1s gonr
His nephew. Pepito, has grown up and gone to col-
lege.
Murder,
Suicide
Suspected
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP> -Police s ay they
discovered two bodies m
an apparent murde r
suicide after rlnng tear
eas and shotguns at an
Ellsworth Street hosue
Afterward. Jnglesicte
station Capt. Jeremiah
Taylor said, "We didn 't
know who was m there.
dHdorallve "
THE FAMILY CIRCUS
I ~4UE I Board Rift Deepens as ~ecovery Starts I STRm ______ _
SAN FRANCISCO (AP > -The ballot measures would More than 200 water leaks must I ,
Crafts workers who packeted for have authorized the d1sm1ssal of be r epaired. Ten thousand I crrv z11> 11
38davs while San Franci~coslow· striking city employes and set shri\'ehng tn•es need watenng Th S · S i 1· _.~ ~a~~~~~=~h;~[~t~Yt~~~~~~~~~ salariesfortwoyears. th~dw~k~~~~~cvd~cd~~:~~ dunng II •. ·,;!"i:l. , As:~~vmwgi-IFNeiiGCSAN II ! or an angry split on the Uoard of "THE PUBLIC Wi\S suffenni:
Super visors a greal deal of inconv<'nicncl","
The discord apparently stems said Super\'1sor Terry Francois 6""'? · ld
from the board'!! decision to re ··we s imply did not gave up very I -year-O I
move two antilabor measures much The two measures can be· I
from the June 8 ballot as part of restored to the ballot any lime " An import.int 1>o1rt of life in Anwrlcc1 i.1111:e 1885
the dra matic Saturday morning Kopp and Barbagelata say the Rel'MlrlS Rane I I '
settlement. board has left Itself open to possi· 'Z'"' 'r I UCNA NH HUllllNOTOH ICltH
bl I I bl I tl7Jll•P~lm1N• /HUldGf"'"'' •ltlunl•"&lon <' ega pro ems. LOS ANGELES CAP)-Police •tll~•·•"-·~c.n1.1111~1· • 1.111, c"''*' 111•1 ~1nn• I A MAJORITY OF TIIE board The city t•harter prohibits re-said a 67-year old womnn was
reportedly agreed to remove the moving signatures from ballot in· rapecl and robbed by a man who I cos1& MESA cuocN uovr
issues. with opposition comm_g 1lilltl\'C after they have been filed attacked her a:. she entert."d her i; , 'u•t ,.,, 1,. at ~ou·~ co~ 1 1 111 c,,. ,, "c ·vt 1u,j I
from board president Quentin and LhLs may apply to supervisors West llolly\\ood apartment 1•1.u fll•>91~ •eoo ~I tt••tww e••J Ja e•,'lll
Kopp a nd Supervisor J ohn \\ho have voted to put the Investigators said the assailant \ I
Barbagelata measureontheballot forced his way into th e apart-......._ , 0 .,0.,
Kopp and Barbagelata said re· m ent, placed a· to"Wel around the ~ -A1J94;~-1'1•11J:Z•l:EI -'I# mo\'lng the meusur~ may be 11 SECOl"DLY. ABSENTEE woman'sneck,rapedhcrandtied
legal Board member'> ~aid tht•v ballots for the June 8 pnmary her to a bt'd lie ec;caped wi th
acted partly 1n rear lhJt 1r the ma) be u:.ed bC'ginmng toda~ about Sl2S 111 cash and a color
stnke "ere not settled, the cit~ Both men sav that e'en 1f lc~al. tele\ ISIOn set
would face n seriouc; \\Utl•r thcboard"s act1oncametoolate. Th<' \\Om an was treated at a
shortage and the collapse of other Mean" h1le. t\\ o thousand al·res local hoc;patal Saturday and r~
services or shaggy grass need mowing. leased No arresb "ere reported.
By Bil Keane They Sure Don't Build Them
Like They Used To~
The victims discovered
early Sunday were
Lvoera Satava, SS, who
had been dend two days,
shot through the n•ck. · /J
and her husband, mar"1n ,;,"l\IL
Satava, 47. dead with a <li> \'\~/
bullet wound m his tcm-
1 "Don't let Barfy ovtl He'll nat blamed for Pe. • •· A handwritten letter , upsetting everybody's trash cons!''
dated Thursdny. which ----=----"----------------
Satava sent his daughter, (,__111 .. 2•5171~
Linda Satava, said, "I l-,. ~
killed her. I'm sorry to hr-Put a few words ing this grief to you Sh<'
went craiy. I couldn't to work tor you
talk to her. She wouldn't In the
listen."
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT FLOOR COVERING inc
CA llf"E"l'ING. •MPERIU ••• u .U"APEll. f'LOO" nu:.
TOURNEAU
(Limited Col~)
regularly '1595 yd.
now at 3500 E. CO AST HWY.
CORONA DEL MAR -675-1636
Times change and so do shapes And today's shape has to look great In everything you wear
we ctn help you get the k1ml ot shape that looks goad on 1ny beach • and in anything How?
w 11h e•erc1se programs and body Shaping equipment that help trim down and firm up your hQu•e. W11h 'Ul"J'l"Sl•ons
for dial control and we19ht loss And moat locations ofter 1nv1gorot1ng steam, uuna, and sun-rooms eve,, fl')9g1n~
machines. Many have heated indoor swimming pools Or, gals. try Jaztnastlct-lun group exercises set 10
uptempo mustcl
So, shape up to the limes. Start yoot 1tre all ovor again. Call us today
HOLIDAY SPA Health Clubs for Men and Women .,.,....,..
~!050.i•h Bue" Bnul,w.t<d
So<ilh o4 l.n<:r>ln ,. .......
1:u111i'fi 0'.\81
C..lll ..... '100 H••l>o• llOv'• ... d
H.t<DO< c..--1 ... f1U)~)3.)ll
....._
I 70Jt ~IUf• llo1114111anl West OI aa4boa, (2!3t9"'Ul0
~-hKll 19,gs Ma> .. ,, ....
M••I\ St 11 a. .. n a...,
(1l•llooll 1•51
a.-. .. -1\ • '0 t 11 llA""C 1l<>ui.w1ttrl
Con•' o• Clf\On 111!1 •"1' 917'
°" ..... 612 h~l lll'llllA A""""* We&t ol T w tin A~
111•1639-:I ....
-.t ... lfttlff
17\7 W.Stm•'""'' ~~"" Wftc11,.t1n•t"' C•ntt>f' 111•1 lllA 3l87
_,~
IOIJ)...,.....,.,1-..S °""'-' L• 8t•• Ai.,. •~ta.•.1 ~ C.f"•• 1i1l -"*
Holld•J apae hev•
different member•
ahlp program•
•Vllllabl•
caa about ow
Wroductory 2 wffk
Membenhlp prOCJr!""
'
,Al
~DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE '
I Unfair to Tax:payers
It la, purely and simply in 011e of this country's
oldest phruea, taxation wtt.boUt representation..
The retcrenco ls to tho atubbom refuu1 of Rep.
Andrew J . Hinshaw to remain u Ora.nae CoW'lly's
poHtieal eunuch·in·rcsldence In the House of
Rep~entaUves.
Convicted and aentenced to 1·14 years l.n Jail for bribery, Hinshaw bliexenly takes advantage of a
quirk In House rules wblcb perm.Ill him to st.yin of·
flee and draw $44,600 annual salary-although he can
neither vote nor participate 1n committee bualness.
If Hinshaw's record u congressman and former
Oranae County assessor were strong enough to pro-
duce substaoUal support from bis constituents,
puhaps h1s rlde·lt-out attitude would be t4Jerable.
But a poll of Daily Pilot readers published Sunday
disclosed that by a 202-10 ratio those constituents
want him to resign immediately.
Not only that, but bis resignation has been c~lled
for by, among others, tbe League of Women Voters,
State GOP Central Committee Chairman Paul
Haerle, Republican Rep. Charles Wiggins of
Fullerton, the Los Angeles Times and the Daily Pilot.
Whether he does or doesn't resign, his political
career clearly is over. His last chance al a graceful
exit would be by resignation.
Meanwhile. the House rule permitting
Congressmen convicted of felonies to remain in office
and to draw salaries is in obvious need of change.
Animal Laws
After a year of effort, Orange County bas come up
with new animal control regulations designed to
balance the needs and complaints of both friends and
• enemies of domestic pets.
The new law will be operative only in unin·
corporated .county territory, m c~unty parks and on
county beaches, but supervisors expressed the hope
that cities contracting for county animal services will
adopt similar regulations.
The revised ordlnance pro\•ldes ·
-That anyon keeplng more than !our does or tour cats mu&t obtain a permit.
-That leash laws be slungthened to make
owners res~nsable for restraint of their pets on
private as well as public property-by fences, walls,
chains or control ot a responsible person.
-Thal' owners be held responsible for animal
oolsethatdtaturbsneJghborbOOdpeace.
-Tbnt doa1 be banned from county beaches ex· cept where leash areas may be approved.
-That kennel permits mUBt be renewed annually
and will not be automatically tra.nslerable it property •
is sold.
On the surf are, the new animal control law seems
n rea~onable, workable approach to coping with the
growmg pet population. Next on the list: Rules for
horses and cows.
Computer Trick
Complalnts about informatron stored in com-
puters are ordinary these days. The Associated Press
has come up with a computer storage program that
should win plaudits from the voters-if not from the
candidates-in this election year.
The news service computers contain a complete
record of candidates' statements on significant is·
sues, their speeches and voling records.
Summaries of this data are regularly transmitted
to bureaus across the land so reporters can quickly
check contradictions or discrepancies in the views ex·
pressed by candidates on the campaign trail.
If doubts arise, a quick consultation with the com·
puter will reveal exactly what the candi,date has said
on the issue in question on earlier occasions.
Like the bank statement that puts the figures and
facts down so coldly, it'll make it difficult to lean on
vagaries when the contradictions show up.
The Uns1ing Doctors
i Still Serve Quietly
But Not a Leftist Yet '
A recent televisiqn show visited
II free clinic operated in t.be
mldwest by a successful physi·
dao who retired after many
)liean of practice. What made t.be try unique la that the doctor is
rating his clinic without aov-
ment subsjdy. He is donating
t11s personal fortune as well as
his professional 1ervices. To the
community he is something near ~saint.
At a time when the mecUcal
professions' image hos sunk to
an all ·tlme
low, brought on by the in·
competence or some and
the avarice o(
too many or
Its praeti-
t1oners . al
brings a J..
r,tfreshing ,,
~ofhope.
The militant doctor strikes and
demonstrations, including a
q'larcb on the State Capitol by the
ll~mpered and well.red wives of
cpagrunlled medics. have not on·
ty caused a public reaction of dis·
tuat but brought strong condem-
itaUon from professional leaders.
No less a person than Dr. Max
•arrott. president of the
American MedJcal Association,
'8s declared 11uch actions "un-
~rofesslonal and anli·social."
SINCE IT is well known that
doctors enjoy Incomes far above
the ordinary citizens and con·
~derably higher than mo11t
ers an the so·called upper mid·
e class. their m i1guided efforts tp enbst public sympathy have
IJ'let with outstanding failure.
, Ont1 wonders why, then, their
~adershlp hasn ·t led in a positive
epproach by doing more lo
fUbliclze the best sldt! ol lhe pro·
~slon. The mad west doctor isn't
ene of a kind. Many doctors. in·
(. E'.utL 'WATERS )
eluding large numbers in
California, have been regularly
donating their services all their
lives to worthy causes.
It may not be well known but
one of the greatest charities is
the Shriners Hospitals which re-
habilitate crippled chiJdren and
bum victims without regard lo
race or creed. These hospitals,
financed with Shriners dues and
unsolicited donations. depend
heavily upon the free pro·
fessional services or thousands or
specialists ..
UNFORTUNATELY. the in·
competent few and the grttd or
some have overshadowed the
superior health services provided
Californians and the good deeds of
thousands. It also has eclipsed
the fact that there are many de·
dicated doctors laboring long and
hard in poor neighborhoods Cor
minimal fees.
For example, take the case of
Dr. Marco R. Rago. Born in the
slums of Los Angeles he, like
many other Californians then
and now. because of too few
medical trainin~ facilities in this
state, was forced to seek his
medical education elsewhere.
Upan graduation from Creighton
Univenity he entered the Air
Corps 1erving throughout WW 11.
Since that time he hu served
eight years on the State Board of
Health and a term on the State
Board or Medical Examiners.
Active in civic aCCalrs as
chairman of United Crusade and
on advisory committees for the
Mayor of Los Angeles. he also
hH made time to serve as
American Leglon commander
and en11ge in fraternal and
service club functions.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
President Ford's new cam-
paign strategy with pic-
tures or pretty girls is a
pleasant change from pie·
lures or swimming pools.
golf courses and ski slopes.
L.J .S.
But what makes Dr. Rago
notable as has medicaJ practice.
Unlike many who gave their first
productive years to military
service, Dr. Rago disdained a
lucrative specialist practice in
some plush distract like Beverly
Hills and opted for generaJ prac·
uce in the neighborhood ~here
he was born.
"THESE ARE my people," he ...
rervently declares. ··and Jam go-
ing to take care of them." He in·
vented a form of "medi·care"
berore it was ever heard of and
established fees wtuch were to
prove lower than those eventual·
ly approved for med1-care. And,
no bill collectors! "If they can't
pay my fees." he said. "they
really need m y help ... He never
turns a patient away. His gigan·
tic office waiting room looks
every bit a free clinic as he treats
well over a hundred patients
eacb afternoon. His mornings
are spent in French Hospital
where he has served as chief or
staff and as director.
The madwest doctor with his
Cree clinic may have been all but
canonized by TV but he is not the
only physician dedicated to help-
lng has fellow men. Dr. Rago has
bet>n doing at all of his life but
there are many others 1n
California 1160 dedicated. The
CM A should let the hght shme up-
on them.
A Mellowing Goldwater
WASHINGTON -Sen. Barry
Goldwater isn't inclined to urge
Uncle Sam to roll up hls sleeves
for a fight anymore, particularly.
over the Panama Canal. Thls ex·
pression or m ellownes11 suits
President Ford just fine· as h&
fights off a pack of conservative
Republicans eager to nominate
R-0nald Reagan. '
Equanimity characterhed
Sen. Goldwater's performance
on Meet the
Press last
week. Not on·
ly dad he chide
Reagan on the
canal ques-
tion, but he
gave strong
support lo the
foreign
policies or
President
Ford and that special target of
the GOP right. Secretary or State
Henry Kissinger.
Goldwater, while saying he
was opposed to giving away the
canal. said that unless the United
Slates "begins to bend a little
bit" on the issue, "We are going
to be faced with the problem or
guerrilla warfare, whether we
like it or not."
Therefore, reasoned the
senator, a man who heretofore
argued it's better to fight than
run, "The question I ask anyone
who comes to me on the subject
<is>: 'Are you wllllng to go to war
over Panama?'
"Now. I would say 10, IS years
ago the answer would have been
yes, but l can tell you that thls
Congreirs is not going to allow the
President to use arms to defend
our position in Panama."
DOESN'T SOUND llkethe man
who always derided Unhom die·
tators, the kind who taunted Un·
cle Sam. Goldwater once
claimed the "sellout" crowd run·
( THI~cn)
ning our government refused lo
answer back. No "Why Not Vic·
tory ?" imploralions from ~oldwaler these days.
Instead. he noted on the pro·
gram that ·'for the first time
since World War 11. this country
is not at war. We are not killing
American men, and l think on
that point alone 1 can give him
<Kissanger> a good score."
Goldwater says he tells Kiss-
inger's critics to name one
secretary of stale they liked in
their entire life, as though
popularity was the index or
failure. Ignoring the logic of this
(for Kissinger remains fairly
popular >. it's clear that
Goldwater backs Kissinger and
most conservative Republicans
don't, and that puts Goldwater at
odds with his legion or rans.
Said legion is giving him holy
hell these days, some even accus·
ing him of having become a "lef·
tist. •. Socialist. .. " and,
heaven forbid, Barry Goldwater
a "Communist."
"A lot or the same people who
were back Ins me," Goldwater
said Sunday, "are just as •kiO\ll·
ly and stronaly backing Reagan. •
Now. J like Repgan and If )'ou
want to back him, buck him, but 1
don't Uke people wrltlna me and
calling me a Communist because
1 haven 'l openly supported
Reagan."
GOLDWATER wUI no doubt
get more mail like Ws because
he gave roundabout support for
Kissinger's statement on
Rhodesia. and added that the
younger blacks in Rhodesia want
participation in government
"and I can't blame them."
Indeed. President Ford passed
word to Goldwater that he was
grateful for his remarks on Meet
the Press, though he wasn't
ecstatic over Goldwater's ob·
servation that Mr. Ford didn't
have much or an organlaatlon.
Actually, Goldwater has not been
in close to1.LCh with either Mr.
Ford or Reagan, though he gei.
reports from old campaign
friends about the relative
strengths or their organizations.
Goldwater sees more mean
fighting between the Ford and
Reagan people in the upcoming
primaries and believes the
California campaign will be
particularly divisive.
Reagan's supporters In
Arizona denied Sen. Paul Fannin
a delegate slot at the GOP na·
Uonal convention, and Goldwater,
told me, "J doubt whether J could
have gotten one either from that
bunch."
FOR YEARS. liberals, lef'Ustt
and some misguided newsmen
branded Goldwater as something
short or a madman. Consequent•
ly, he got reams or hate mail ac·
cusing him or beinc at least a
Fascist and perhaps • JUllerito
<his Jewish relallve1 were ex-
Don't Ridicule a Symbol of Honor
' ecuted by the Nazis ln World War
JI).
Now Goldwater gett hale ma.ii
from the rhrht. but quotes Harry
Truman, It you can't stand the
heat, get out of the kitchen, and
says, "l don't care what I am
called as Jong aa my kids like mo
and my wife likes mo."
to the Editor:
"Take Thnt Uncle Som" is the
ftame or the article written lor
the May 2 Issue of tho Dni\y Pilot.
Take what? And for what
reason?
As a veteran of World War II, J
was amazed u well as disgusted
to think nny true, l't'd·blooded
American would depict Uncle
Sam in such a disrespectlul Uaht.
to se.e a picture of two youn1
boyi, aaes three years and nine
E!an. one of whom was standtn1
u Uncle Sam and the yoUflltr
shown and described ln the
article as "takina aim'' at t.he
l>lder boy who is obviously posina
symbolically as Uncle Sam for
the Americen Festival '76 at Un· coln Middle School ln Newport
beach is. in my opinion. a total
~respect for our country.
I I WOULD like to know what ls
•·American " about auch a
~ortrayal. fl bas been un·
fortunate enough that tome of
9'lJ' tormer leeders hive fallen.
tNt to alt.eek Uncle Sam ln this
insidious manner 1s to show dis-resP«t for his image and ls a
•·victory" Cor those countrlea
who do not believe I.a fl'ftdom tor
Lbcir own suppressed people.
To me, "Uncle Sam" lho\lld
not be made an object ol rlc:Ucule
and tick bomor . He bas always bteo a symbol of atreniU> and I •
honor. In effect. be is every one
ol ut. And If the people divide,
can you 1ueH who the con·
querors wil\be eventually?
They have taken the prayers
from the classrooms-now are
they at work destroying the Im·
a1e of Uncle Sam ln the eyes of
OW' children? What's next? Our
nag?
DOROTHY GORMAN
~•O•I
To the Editor:
It comes to me that we should
think of our epithet. land or the
free home of the brave. A ruce
tbouJbt.
What I'd Uke to think is that
we're w1rm. out-going or caring
people. Unselfish and qwck to
underst1nd. Not bound lo by
st.tteOlypes or our rears amd In·
securities. As a Christian woman
l llcnow it isn't easy to love. J ol'.\ly
love through Christ Jesus.
But I would like you to thlnk
about lt the next time you 're
around others. Do you smile at
1 her or about him. Because
they're attractive, you like the1r
looks. the way they come on?
. You like that dress, the way
he's dressed. He carries himself
•·ell. He's like me. Or you don't
like ... Or nen up!
YES, I think l am or could be
bound end slt"apped an by my
( MAILBOX ]
~ .,_ ....... ,. ... ~. ,,.. rltiM .. c-. .. .e.n lefK-owoll.,.._..._.IJ,...
--'"""r.r' .. -=·i:::: .er= ~!·'=-·-'" ... ,... -'if~M--lt...,..._ . ......., ... 11 ...........
fean;, insccurillt',, stereotypes
garnered lrom TV and other
pla«s. The way J'm brought up.
So called cultural backaround. or
thci contacts, social or otherwise
I've clung to
But I feel at 's so important we
learn again the mearung of love.
Or caring·com pus 1on. Un-
derstanding.helpfulness We are
to become a Jesuit priest. I am
lold that a Jeswt priest doesn't
wear priestly robes or accept the
honors or the priesthood.
Jt ls lntereslinl( to note the
three vows they take. One is
celibacy. Brown Is not morned.
Another is the vow of poverty
Brown shunned th(' governor's
mansion for a small apartment.
The only thin& thnt troubles me is
that it seems he has vowed his
state to povertyl: well.
For the t rd vow. see
"JesuJL~" 1n yo r encyclopedia.
JAMES W. BOLDING
ElfttU el \llol..-n!
all human beings-created by Tot.he Editor
God Each as different. as broucht· A University of PeMJylvanla
up cUCCerent. Each has different Professor has been reyorted to
goals 11nd thoughts about bave round that personal in·
tumselr. But Inside each of us dulgence of TV violence tcnd.3 to
wants love. In public contact!! imprint upon the viewer a acnae
this means. consideration. kind· of ''vlctlmlaation."
ness compassion and empathy. ..__, udl It con't be done as long as we ~r. George Geruuc:• .• lit es
stay in our ·rooms.· we mu&t lndica~e that heavy Vlewers ~
reach out, learn agaln to care for• TV. violence not only ove ·
others simply on the basis of ..,estimate th~ir chancn of belnl
human need or fellows hip bom of ~ctims or vaolo~ce but~ percent. of these ''heavies" believe one, thefactofourequalCrealOr. "can't~ too careful" in extend·
PENNY ALEXANDER lng ont's trust of human n.tture.
P•Nrl• fer All1
To tht Editor·
Oonmor Browo went toscbool
Does voter favor of coolinuina
the maulve arms budJet. th
gun lobby, t.be trqedY, of re-
establishing the barbarian death
pcnulty. more police and harass-
ment of permi1111lve lifestyles
reflect a saturation In TV and
newspapers or photo~raphs and
writing reporting l!lmulated and
actual, human violtncc?
RATINGS AND circulation n1·
ure substantially In attracting
the big spenders In advertising.
Their bankers and broken. by
ntension, 111 have a consldera·
ble stake in the admlnlatration or
the U.S. Presidency which
formulates policy that eventually
determines the cou~ or action
the United States of America
takes in lorel&n policy. Invest·
menu 1bro1d and prolection or
those lnvestmtnts are all con·
trolled by multl·n•llonal cor·
poratlons whose financial and
political strtnith outw igbs most
nations ot the world.
A fascist Chile, Greece and
Korea, which all bave huce U.S.
lnveat01ents. are considerably
more dependable than the un~r·
tatnty of leftist governments re-
cardltH of their benevolence
and humanllarianhm. An
American clthenry weaned on
violence will sooo have 1bdicated
ti. Conltltullon and Bill ol Rl&hts
for the "atcurlty" or Bl&
Brolher
BRUCES. HOPPING
He's 65 now, haa somo aUmcntt
<ha faces • aeriou11 hip operation
thlA summer) and, while critlciz-
1 n~ Conaresa for uppln1
American military parity,
·doesn't let his blood boll.
"I auess I'm moro mellow,'' ht
told me. "I Just don't aet aa upset
a.a I used to."
OlltANOE COAIT
DAILY PILOT
Robm N Wt4'd. Ptiblllhn'
T~• K'rtnl, f:dttor
lJorbaro Krnbttlt.
tdUorlcl Pogt £dUar
The l'd1torial p1~.-of tho Dally Piiot auks lo lnform end
1thnul•l• ruders by praenUna
on this pqt diverse commmt1ry
on topl~ of Interest by 1yndlcot.
elf columnlsu end c1rtoonltt.1, by
provldl111 a forum for l"Clllkn'
views 1nd by preaenUna thl•
newspaper's oi>lnlons and ldeu
on current loplc1. Th~ edllorial opinions of the Dilly Piiot 1ppe1r
only In the tdltor111 column •l the
top or lh• .,.... Opinion• tX· l .,,.,Md by the column11tt and ,
cartoonists and letter wrilen '" thrir own and no tndonement ot I
their vlcwa by the Daily PUd. l thould "Inferred. •
Monday, Moy 10, 1978 j
. -~
· Yioknce Leaves Mark
Sight of Murde r Victim Causes Nightmares
~LMffURST, JU. (APJ -
'"nJI• psycholo1lst1 diJ"ll'" on IMlw vlolent TV sho aUeet
• d Udren, tome parent• have
• found that amn1 the ttal thing
• cauud nlghtmaru. vomltln&
· ud real fear In their yovnte1ttn.
· About SO children from kin·
: d•rcarten 'hrouJh the 11lxth
. 111de were w 1lkrn, home for
lunch when they saw the slaying
• ol John Hamby,~. saJd A.E. Ho-
lle, principal at Hawthorne
· Elementary School.
• HAMBY WAS STABBED re-
. ~at.sly with a butcher knife in · rtont of hi.a home in EJmbunl, a
: neat, tree-lined suburb or
Chicago. Hia son David, 23, was
charged with murder.
Another lS to 20 children later
walked past the partly covered
body on their way back to school
after lunch and lbe experience
also has touched other children in
. the school's enrollment of 4SO
wbo did not witness the slaying
but b eard about it from
c~assmates, Holle srud.
. "Parents have told me of their
children's nightmares. or their
children becoming physically ill,
or tbt temper t.antrum.s, of th
fear of pualnc by tbe attne, of
tht leelln11 ot su.11t. •·Hot.le said.
ONf! CHIL D ASKED bls
pareit~ ''Could I do WI when l
1et anUY, too?''
Several have told their
«-•chers, "Jf t close my eyes I
can atlll see It.'·
Holle aaid a tirst·arader
asked: "How could some kid kill
bJsdad? ..
One child, be said, began to act
out the 1Jayin1 in class.
IN •ESPONSE, ELllllUJlST
school ofnclala began a cowuel·
Ing program ror parents and
children lo deal wilb tbe after·
effects.
Parents are being advised to
keep their children away rrom
TV. to play games with them, lo
go to a park or zao or have a
family picnic.
Fathers were advised to return
home from business trips to re·
assure children wbo saw Lbe slay·
mg. ·•Parents must provide
children with a sense or inner
security obtained from doing
Air Pollution
thlnJs u a family," HotJe said..
DAN DALLA8, DlaEcroa ol
1ocl1I aervicu al Elmhurst
Memorial Hoapltal, warotd
parents 1l a mteUna to watch Cor
20 eymp&oms lo their children, In·
cludlnlJ niChtmares, vomlt1n1, Ir·
rttablllty, anger. omdely and hy~rla . · Of the possible res ponses
Dallas named, w1lhlo 30 hours, J
h11d confronted every one ol them
in aludenls, •' Hotle said.
"ln time," Dallas said, "I ex·
pert tbat throuah the sharing
achieved by the knowledge that
no one is alone ln bis or her terror
and by expressing their Cttlings
about it, the flashbacks lo the
scene will lessen."
NEVERT HELESS, DALLAS
said, it may be some time and he
cautioned parents against send·
1ne their children lo summer
camp. even an overnight camp.
"The flashbacks won't be al·
levlated in a week or two," he
said. "Families should develop
closer cohesiveness through the
summer. There will be a residual
effect for some time to come.··
10 Nose No's
Bring Out Ax
Dogtown
Decree
Debated
DOGTOWN <AP)
That's right, Dogtown.
Pop. 63 -33 humans, l3
dogs . 16 h o r ses.· a
peacock and unlallied
cats -Cali fo rnia's
Monday• May 10. 19'18 OAllYPILOT AI
'Not Perverted'
Parlor ~atrona PiOfiled
GedSaltlR-
Dol\ Yarbrough •
Houston lawyer who
is not a judge and
who is being s ued for
$700,000, s urv ived
primary in his bid for
election to San An·
tonio Court of Civil
Appeals. H e says
God told him to run.
'Outlaw'
Gets 'G'
CHICAGO <AP> -Men who 10 lo
musaae parlon atttln& more tban a
reauJar rubdown attn't. nttWlrily
perverted or undesJrablt>, say two II·
Unola peycholoflat.a. In fact, the)' tt>nd to be well acljusted and aomewbat.
averace.
The psychologists, sraduate stu-
dent fary Simpson ond Or. Thomas
&bill, a profes!or at Southttn Illinois
University. obtained Information
1b<>ut 187 men who visited a massage
porlor in an unidentified UUnols city
of 20.000 population durlnc five
months.
THEIR STUDY FOUND more than
half the customers were married and
almost half had been drinking.
They enlisted the help or a woman
massage parlor empJoye who con-
ducted informal Interviews while giv-
ing massages and administered ques-
tionnaires and personality tests to
patrons arterward.
Based on their study, they ten·
tatively conclude lbat "massage
parlors may not be as serious a threat
nor as therapeutic as many people
now seem to believe, .. they told the
Midwestern Psychological Associa·
ta on.
"RESULTS APPEAR TO refute the
allegations of those who have warned
that the parlors attract the young, the
LOS ANGELES <A P) perverted and the undesirable,"' the
-When it was released researchers reported.
in 1943, Howard Hughes' "They also fail to support the
western "The Outlaw" claims of those who say the parlors
aroused a storm or con· are therapeutic because they are
trov ers y over Jane lariely frequented by sexually inade·
Russell's low.cut blouse. quate"andividuals ." lhey said.
. .. This is the profile of the massage Tames change. The parlor chent that emerged from their Outlaw," apparently study :
destined for re·release, -He is a 3S·year-0ld while ma'.le
h'om out. of town, but h-om \ht Im·
modJ1t 1re1. Ht attended coUt1e but.
la employed ln a lower-or middle·
dass job. aucb aa coal mine employo oraateama.o.
-HE GOES TO aroaat on SUn·
da)'lt. taktt 0\e lnlUaUve ln.aexual ac-
tivity, baa bid a variety of sexual ex-
periences, and went to th mosaago
parlor because of a lack of a sexual
partner at lhe lime or out ot curlotlt.y .
-He achieved oraasm and f®nd
the 1enltal masaoge sexually saUafy-
lng.
-He ls likely lo have a blab self·
esteem, to be personally and sel(ually
actjusted, consider his value system
liberal and be somewhat sympathetic
to the goals of t.be women's rlahts
movement.
MISS SIMPSON SAID in an In-
terview that the massqe parlor ·
employe was ln her mid-20s but would'
not &ive more information about her·
or the parlor. She said the woman
found the men to be very cooperative
in the project. Only four customers
asked lo take P•rt refused.
Miss Simpson and Schlll aaid other
researche rs have interviewed
employes al nine parlors around the
country and obtained a similar pie·
lure or the massage parlor client.
While the average age of men sur·
veyed in the Illinois slud)"'\\'as SS, they ,
rariged in age Crom 18 to 67. Their,
education ranged from seventh grade
to Ph.D. Fifly·one percent were mar·
ried, 13 percent divorced.
Forty· two · percent of those who ;
came· to the parlor had been drinking 1
alcohdl, and 6 percent had been smok·
1ng marijuana. Eiahty·six percent
said they had been to a massage
parlor previously, and 68 percent had
been to a house or prostitution. has been i)assed by Ule .----------film industry's Code and :======================
Rating Admanislral1on
with a G·rating, suitable
for all audiences.
Call 60-5678.
Put a tew words
to work tor ou.
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -On the theory that
the nose knows, the ch.ief smog watchdog agency
for nine counties has adopted wbal il calls the coun·
lry's toughest bad·smell regulation.
Reinforced by staff members who have been
certified to possess "average noses," the Bay Area
Air PoJlulion Control District will act on complaints
or bustnesses producing bad odors and fine offen-
ders up to $500 a day.
newestplacename. · -------------------I. ye1t~u~0~y~~e1~!cr':: TERRIBLE WATER? . aor
$10,080
only $167.51
a 1nonth.
Dft1all!
Din ah Shore's daily
variety s how has
been renewed for a
third season. Miss
Shore also will ap·
pear in a repla"Ce ·
ment show for Carol
Burnett this summer.
League
To Keep
Its Name
NEW YORK (AP> -
The League or Women
Voters aays Its name as
more valuable than sex·
isl and w lll not be
chang.c!.
More than a dozen pro·
ponls to change the
name of the S6·ycar-0ld
organhatlc.n came
before the league nl Its
annual convention.
THE LEAGUE has ac·
cepted male members
for two years and the
name chanaes were pro-
Poted to rertect this.
One delegate as!lcrted,
"1l is without quest.Jon a
sexist name.'•
But only about SO of the
1.400 delegates !IUpport
ed the name change
movement.
THE DISTRICT WILL TABULATE complaints
of obJectionable odors from such places as tac·
tortes, refineries, sewer plants, big restaurants and
apartment bu1ldings. If a place gets 10 citizen com·
plaints. the ax will begin to fall .
An investigator will be dis patched to collect
plastic sacks or the offending air and return to head-
quarters. Three staff members with the apprdVed
schnozzolas will sniCf at the samples with the aid of
a SJ.000 machine -a
··dynamic olfaclomeler ,"
a robot nose. as at were. ( ECOLOGY ) The suspect samples, _
along with unmarked '---------
sa mple s or non ·
odoriferous air samples as control, will be subject-
-ed to heroic sniffing by humans and their machine.
IF TWO OF THE nlREE staffers correctly
identify eight out or 10 of both the suspect samples
and the odor·free air. a violaUon citation wall be
written up. In addition lo the fine. offenders can be
ordered lo cease producing the offending odor.
Last year, l ,6SO complaints or bad smells ""ere
received by the district, sa1d Millon Feldstein. de·
puty pollution control officer. Odor samples were
subjected to chemical analyses to determine if cer·
lain agents were present, but there was little or no
bad-smell enforcement. he said.
Qo>terS t,. o yresenle>
agroo~new
rl"'Or'e6J ooving
cxrcept,.
tbe Mann County Board of Supervisors, that post· You don't HAVE to drink polluted water or
ing is inevitable. expensive bottled water.
Our PCP MARK II system will give you
SHO RTLY, Dogtown guaranteed CLEAN -O..EAR -DELICIOUS
just north of Bohnas • HEAL THY WATER FOR YOUR HOME or
along lllghway 1, some boat or office at less than 5c a gallon.
20 mile11 north or San CALL NOW FOR FREE TEST
Francisco -will sport ANO DEMONSTRATION f~:dt~~n~r~o::1:~d :~~~ FINANCING AVAILABLE
what he's passing. Some, Fully tested & approved by government
hereabout . think it's agencies. EPA accepted. Made by
hardly worth it. Electrolux Corporation.
"If you 're in a car and
you blink. you 'II pass WATER CONSULT ANTS INT'L.
nght through Dogtown, 26944 c..-o • &..._..
Whether you need SS.000 or $10.000 get it from ,
the people who lend millions. Commercial Credit. .•
Monthly payment based on a $10,000 HomeO..vner
loan. for 120 months, at an annual percentage
rate of 16%. Tot.;I payment $20.101.20. A loan
of $5.000 and over must be secured by a
combination of real and personal property.
We flnd ways to help.
COMME9'ClAL CR.EDIT CORJ>QR(\TIO N
Homeo\A.ner U>atls
said Cela p ·connor. ··u a 370 E. 17th Street • Phone: 6•5-8700
doesn·t re~lly matter,'' Capls"'-t.ach • 4t6.zo4o er.dlt I.i re ,,_,..c. ""•llabk 1o £Uan1i. 11o.,.._,. at Crwp Jlatee
she added, "because C• A..,.. 0., W HICJht 1 we 'r e not known for ~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:...::===========================-:·1 anything anyway." 1
NOT ALL OF
Dogtown ·s residents
""ould agree with that
opinion. Some believe
the new town as sure to go
down as the home or the
largest operating water
pump windmill in
California.
Every morning, daily interest is add ed to
every Los Angeles Fed.eral Savings Account.
Pass book Savings -Certifi cates of Deposit .:..._
Investment Certifi cates
All at highest rates
EXAMPLES OF ANNUAL INTEREST RATES
ON INSURED SAVINGS:
I I
TH E MA J ORI TY
•rsu~ thut the name of
the organliallon was
well·known , that the
name and the f(roup en·
joyed a certain preftll&c.
and that lbe organaiahon
would have no control
ovel' the use of the namt> ti the 1roup nbandont'd
It. They also pointed out
thal a change would
tre Rogerb Garden Oub* 5.25% 6.50% 7.75%
Pnst>oo's C.rt1f1utts of OeOM1I lnveslmtnl Cfr11ltcetu
ylfld Sl ,000. I yu1 ylfld ll,000, 6-10 yem y1tld
· brln1 new expenses In
thlng1 i.uch as stationery
cmd contracts.
One delegate said the
league had a number or
problems. ·'the least of
which was 'whether men wm be ofrended by Join·
Ing an organlzollon thnl
includes women· in lt.s h
tie."
Slayer Jailed
MERCED (AP) -A
Merced youth· has been
sentenced lo state pnson
on a fint-degt'ee murder
~viction in the sboot·
inc death ol a clerk dur·
Ing a grocery store rob-
bery. Superior Court
Judie Geof'ge Murry im·
voud the prison sen·
Lenee on Ray Ant.bony
Jonea, 19.
A now gorden club designed to ptovlde members wHh
these moneV-50VlflQ discounts ond MJIVlces;
1 10~ d1scourit Mondav thru Fridoy on Rogof's
flower Food. Potttno Mix. MoiS and Rogefs
custom bOskels, Your membership con P<1'f for
ltsolt many times owr each veo<
2 Montl'llv club meeti11Qs at the new
club oreo 1n Roger's Gordens
'-Adllonce nottce ond shop()lnQ
\.}for all Roger"s speci01 SOies.
4 Renownadguest
lecl\Jre series.
5 Rogersonnoot
hometovr.
6 Rogers QVOrtel1V
planting guide.
7 Entrance to Rogefs Gardens for
yourself and up to four guests.
(Effective Mav 15th. non-membefs wilt
be chofged S1.00 fqr cxtmmion. which
may be aedlted toword putdlose.)
'tbl.I ore rrMted to be o chartet membef of
Roge(s Gadeh Cl\lb. Chortef membenhlp
dUM fOf 1976 ore now just S10.
1'.pplicotlons ore oval10ble at Rogef's
Gardens. N8wpQ't Center.
....... 0-........,...~ .. -·
-
2301 Sa"l .JoocPl His Rood Newport tentef
5.39% 6.72% 8.06%
All 1ft1t10ll co"'°"""°t4 d••lr Y911 u11 w•lftOuw '"' '"'°"ft' afty t1111t fro"' t 111noooll •ttowftl •M ,,. lvll '"'"'"' G•f '" to O'J out You Uft w1lft011 .. ••Y tl!touftl ••Y t•ll'lt ''°"'I t•t11h~Alt etCOVflf, lftd U lft I\ "'VCft lftlllUI I\ Oft I OU\llOO~ "t<111~t ltU 90 • O~rt lftltlt\I
LOS ANGELES
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
Savings insured to
$40.000
Sate deposit boxes
and the most wanted
savings services
Newport Beach Office
3201 Newport Blvd. • 675-4500 (Across from City Hall)
Head Office· Los Angeles Federal Savings and Loan Association
One Wilshire. Los Angeles 90017 Other offices throughout the area
.,
... DAILY PILOT M~r. May 10. 1976
ly Phil lnterlandi
L /fl. Bo11d
Iowa Meant
'Sleepy One'
That party who pJaya bard to &et teodi to
inspire more paaaion ln the penon who la tryinf
to do the setttn1. And the romantic puahover in·
spirea leas amorous lntettst. Thia matter of
common knowledge hu been conftnned by our
Love and War man after extensive study. He la
In aareement on It wilbaUt'h greatlove and war
el'perts as Socrates, Ovid, Terence and
Kamasutra.
Am advlsed the name or Iowa came from
the Indian word "Ayubwa" meaning "sleepy
onea.'' GEORGEK..ENNEOY
Q. "HowdidactorGeorCt:_Kennedygetlnto a bow business?•'
A. Wben he was an army orncer, the Pen·
tagon assigned him as a
t~bnical advisor to Phil
Silvers' oJdTV Bilkoseries.
And producer Nat Hiken
put bim into a few episodes
for laughs. Tbatdidit.
Used to be an awful lot
of stray cat.s and doss in
England. And no flood con-
trol whatsoever. After
heavy rains, townsfolk saw
the bodies or the poor little beasts floating in the
runoff. The unlearneddidn l know where all the
dead animals came from. They just assumed
they fell out of the sky. Our Language man says
that's thought by some word experts to be the
origin of the phrase· 'raining cats and dogs.''
Addreu moil to L.M. Boyd, P.O. 1560, Costa
Meaa92626 ·
f)eaths Elsewlwre
QUEENIE
Toa GOP Hopefuls DUe
One of Many Local Political Gatherings
87 O.C. HtJSTINGS Of ... o-1.., ...........
Newport Harbor Republican
Women are aaldn1 tho GOP
failhtul to tum out May 17 for a
cockhll·bour 1tatberln1 of
Bepubllcan primary caodidates
for Prealdent, U.S. 5en1t6, the
40th Conaresaiohal Dist.rkt seat
and the 74Lb Aaumbly 01Jtrlct
seat.
Marilyn Berle of the GOP
lacijea says Maureen Rfqao will
stand in for her father and one or
the Ford children will represent
the Presjdent at the soiree.
Mrs. Berle said all of the
Republican senate candidates -
Alpbonzo Bell, Robert Finch,
John Harmer and Sam
Hayakawa -can be counted on
· to be there in person.
The gathering gets under way
at 6 p.m. al the Balboa Yacht
Club, 1801 Bayside Drive, Corona
delMar.
The price ls SS per person and
the bar will be no-host. Ticket or·
ders can be mailed to Newport
Harbor Republican Women,
425~ Carnation Ave., Corona del
Mar. .. .. ..
DEMOCRATIC candidate Tom
Hayden will be in Newport Beach
today for a speech to the Br&n·
deis National Women's Commit·
tee at the Marriott Hotel. He'll
speak at 1 p.m . in the Pacific
Balll't>om.
after 17 months ae polltlcal
prlaoner In A r1entloa, is
seb.eduJed to speak Tuesday at
Cal Slate Fullerton. Jter ta.lit ls
tel for 12:30 p.m. In the campus
UtUe theater. Jt is open to to the
public. · • • •
ACl'Oa BUDDY Ebsen and his
wile, Nancy, plan a reception
May 23 at their Balboa Island
bome for Marian Bergeson, a
can"ldate for the Republican
nomination in the 74th Assembly
District. •
Tickets for the event are priced
at $U pef person. Anyone in·
terested in attending should call
the Ebsen Reception Committee
at 646-1535, or Bergeson cam·
palgn headquarters at 540-8636. • * •
A DISCUSSION on why the
Sierra Club backs Proposition 15.
the so-called nuclear safeguard
initiative, will be held at
Tuesday's meeting of the club's
Orange County group.
The public is invited to the
meeting, set for 7 : 30 p.m. at Sad·
$92Stolen
From Sleeper
A South Laguna physician has
reported to Orange County
sheriff's officers that an intruder
entere<i bis home while he was
asleep and took S92 in cash from
his pants pocket.
dleback Hieb School ln S.nta
Ano. Group Chairman Cbarloy
Owen emphasizes that you don't
have tot>. a Si4!rra Club member
to attend. • • •
HARRY JEFFREY, a can·
didata for the Republican
nomlnstion in the 40th
Congressional District, has been
endorsed by the San Diego
League or Conservation Voters.
• * *
ORANGE COUNTY CiUiens tor Reaiian have announced that
Westminster City CouncUwoman
J oy Neugebauer bas joined their
steering committee.
* * ..
SENATOR ALAN Cranston (D·
Calif.> is trying to gel the U.S.
"I'm late because or fallback. J have a tendencl to fall
back to steep ••• " '
OCC Awards Aid
Senate to go on record in support More than $25,000 wUl and academic awards
of Radio Free Europe <RFE> be awarded to Orange will be presented. The
coverage of the Olympic Games. Coast College students program begins at 6:30
His action, Cranston said. is in May 20 at OCC's 18th an· p.m. at The Tale of the
reaction to the Soviet Union's· nual Honors Night Whale Restaurant in the
success in getting RFE creden· awardsbanquet. Balboa Pavilion at
lials revoked at the winter games I n a d d i t i o n to Newport Beach.
in Innsbruck, Austria, and to re-scholarships, service For further lnforma·
ports that the Soviet Union is now and leadership awards U , phone SS6·572S .
trying to get R FE reporters .-------------'..--------
banned from this summer's s~ jooo games at Montreal. 'Jl9
for only $88.12
a n1onth •.
Dr. McNelly
To Lecture
...
OAKLAND <AP > -
M.8. Skaggs, 88, who
founded Safeway Stores
Inc., the nation's largest
chain or supermarkets.
died Saturday at Merrill
Hospital after a long ill·
oess. Skaggs began the
chain in 1915 when be
spent his entire savings,
Sl.088, to purchase a
small grocery store in
American Falls. Idaho
from his Cather.
an of humanities at
Massachusetts lnslitute
of Technology and
onetime U.S. minister to
Colombia and Portugal,
died at Vassar Brothers
Hospital here Saturday.
. Hayden will make his last ap·
pearance in Orange County prior
to the primary when he speaks
May 13 at. the Huntington
Harbour home of Dr. Andrew
Chandler.
The 8 p.m . event will be a wine
tasting party. Admission will be
$3, with a special rate of $2 for
senior citizens. Those interested
in attending should contact
Ht}yden's Orange County head·
quarters, 1523 E . First St., Santa
Ana, phone 835-7766.
Deputies said the then was re-
ported by Dr. Rush Q. Hunter, 40,
of 31553 West St .. South Laguna.
They said the burglar entered the
home through an unlocked door.
Or. W·illis E . McNelly, an
authority on science fiction. will
present the first lectJlre in the
Outstanding Professor Series
We dne sday at Cal Stute
Fullerton.
Whether you need $5,000 or $10,000 get lt from
the people who lend millions. Commercial C.redtt.
Monthly payment ba~ed on a $3,000 loan, for 48
months. at an annual percentllge r&te of 18~. ... "'
Total payment $4,229.76.
4
Allerton Named
McNelly's talk begins at-4 p.m.
in Recital Hall. Admission is
free. His topic is "Science Fie·
tJon and Creativity."
We ftnd wavs to help.
COMME~IAL C~IT PLAN, INC
BLACK MOUNTAIN.
N.C. (AP> -Mrs. Billie
Hanks Miiier, 96, who
hand·built the first
airplane in which she
ever flew. died Sunday.
The airplane she built m
Circleville, Ohio, is on
display in the Smithso·
nian Institution in
Washington.
.. * ..
OLGA TALAMANTE, a
Chicana released last month
Dr. Samuel E. Allerton of Hun·
tington Beach has been appoint·
ed chairman of the Department
of Bioc~emislry at the Universi-
ty of Southern California School
of Dentistry.
McNelly, a professor of
English. was chosen as Cal
State's outstanding professor of
1975. His lecture marks the first
in what is to be an annual presen-
tation.
(A California Cotpcxallon)
370 E.17th Street • Phone: 145-8700
Cndlt We IMUrance Avallable to Slls!We 8.n-owen at Crw• Ital.-
PO UG II KEE PSIE.
N.Y. CAP I -Robert G.
Caldwell, 93, former de·
D~ath Not•~~•
JellMY \TllAIOHT
Willi AM A JEAMY "~°"'' Of M-'AY \TAAl(iHT ,._,.,..., of~
~9"'"• 8•~" C• O•lf' 0 , dMt" Mir An9fte\. C• O•t• o• o••'" ~18, 1v1tt.
•, "'• Su,.v1vra ov "" .,__,lt-r, Ah<• Suf'••"l'd Dt' one 50n, C•r• C1W<O'I o• Ao\it ot South L•q"'n•. fJt'c>ttwf'. A.Ured C0tt• ~u. on,. ,1,ttr. A fie.a Andrewt
L Jtrmv of lnQltwood Prt••'• ot Minton Vltqo, two ruttf'\. ~n·e
t.torwt<M ...,,.. ,,,.,0 SMtttr L•OUf\11 Jorde:>" oi C~t• Mtt'\.a •nO Afl<.e leMrd
U.•< h Mort11•r y ditfl< 101, of Lot A.n9f'lf\ tr.r•f n•o""".n, ""'ht.I' PllE:Hl S.nt•(f'UfOI C.o41• M•\a, O•l'\1#1 S.nt•
Of TO PIE•H .. rtt\ld•nl of 4 S1 Crutof Arti•n~'•nOOan•rl ltnitroot S.'~••rd Ro.a, Corona Otl /1111,,fr-, (A Pico f:t•vtr•. ano othtr n•P<.f'\ •ncl
OAt• o' °'''"AA.av 1, 1'16 !.urviw-d ov MOMw\ M•n o• (nri\ll•n 6ur1•I
tu\ Wft•. Jul•d Pl*'nl, \On\, WHhdm, Wtdnt)O .. t t 00 •M $1 JOtlC~tm
J•tn•\ •nO Aotwrf p1~n1 orothu C..tnohc (.hurctoi w1trt 1nttrmtnt Holy
lf•rmond P'"'"' m o thtr fl.O\P ~OUl<n.tr C•mett'ry Or•~ C.. S.U
Korora., J C'l'•"tJCl\•ldr.-n In Hni of 8fo.ctw1w MorhJ•rydir•ctoo
Seminar Slated
The firs t Southern
California Transactional
Analysis Conference will
be held June 18·20 at the
Disneyland Hotel in
Anaheim.
The cost is $20 for those Wt\O register prior to
June 1 and $30 for those
who register after that.
Participants can re-
gister at the conference.
The conference is
sponsored by the Orange
County Institute for
Transactional Analysis,
a non·profit or ganiza-
tion.
For further informa·
tion, call 547·8871.
Polka Dance
The Orange County
Polka Club is h91ding a
Pajama Dance from 9
a.m. to 1 a.m. May 15 at
the Moose Lodge, 7175
Lyon St., Santa Ana.
The public is invited to
attend. A $2.50 donation
will be asked.
flo..,..r\ r otttr1but1on\ rn .. ., ~ l1"\.ldfo to --------..-----------------------
ltw He•fl Ah.O<l•l•Of\ ot 0r4nQP Coun rirr;~~==::=~~~~~~;;~~~=~==========lm ly S.rv1(4'\ tod•Y ~'I tO, 1 JO PM
QfdY•\IOP P•c1t1c V1•1#11 Miwmort1t
P•rtt., firrifl!"WC>Of't o..-1ch, C• 8•1tt ·
ller99ron Coron• d•I Mar M0'1uffy o;roc.•or ..
MA II LOW
MARV f MAIHOW r•••O.ftl Of
Sc:,,.utt. T•nn Dal• ot d••"' /!Nt'f I.
lt1& S.Uh•v•d '>f Ntr ""'.,_l"KI, P11ut ~rtow Of \01-ol~ two '1.tllC)f'UtH\,
., ..... (htno M 0 of LAClU~ t.f•l)Uft
•f'd (ArO'V" ~MIO• M 0 S.r'l•Cfl\
M\O l"if',rnitfU •I'\ \1f"11'\QIOWf\ f..n" t\.tll
Or<Mtd...,,.-y Mor•u•"f 10<11• O•f'H tor\
CARL\ON
PETER A r ARLSO"I, r•\•donl OI
k~:""Su~~:~~tJC"ov0~~: 0!~:·'6..=v~·
IO\ltr '0'1, Oon•td Mc tCtnnA ot LO\
Anqipl•\ dl VQhl•r 11\-l•w. H"lfn M\l"t
Of G•rd'" Gr no, \ q;randtl'Hfdr•n
S.rw1tf\ #Ill bo Nold l 00 PM '~'-Off',
P•t ltH V•~w (Pi10,.1 lnttrmwnt,
P41Clf•< V1t w Memot;Al Ptttk "'MtwP')rt
S.ACI\ (411 01t•ct•C1 t)y Pet•••< Vte-w
Mo<tU.'Y
HUDltOLMI
El.AltlfF ~fUOMOL ,_.E (For-nw•ly
E141>1n• No.-1 •"a1 r,i\OJ""' o• H~t
&fOOlll'lynt Hun1•f'IQton tl"IC"-C•
CMtt of o.1ttr\ MA1 & '"' Sut'i't.._O b,
,_.,, C!iet,.f\h Mr & Mr\ T L O\t!iot"M
d•uorttf'ir Andr•• D•• N onAnCI
\ltt'#tf-'P'lwAlf' UAll' A•r~f'Of\C<nltt
,....,. Mortu.Ml' <11rPCfUf \
SAL TZ·BERGERON
FUNUAL tiOME
Corona del Mai 673·9450
Costa Mos,1 646·2424
BELL BROADWAY
MOfHUARY
110 Broadway
Cof'ta Mesa
642 9150
LAGUNA HILLS
MORTUARY
25301 A1tc1a
Parkway
Laguna Hills. Ca.
581·4300
McCORMICK
MORTUARY
Laguna Beach
494·9415
San Juan Capistrano
495·1776
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Pac1l1c View Drive
Newport .
Cal1forma
644·2700
P££1( FAMILY
COl.ONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7801 Bolsa Ave.
\
Teamwork
Linda Blue and Doug Sulley, working as a team and. with
the assistance of their staff. arranged nearly $1 ,000,000
In loans on residential properties during the first quarter
of 1976!
From Seal Beach to San Clemente and from Saddleback
Valley to the shoreline, property owners appreciate th e
friendly attention and efficiency of the Newport Equity
FundS'loan Department.
If you're a property owner and need capital, call Linda
Blue or Doug Bulley for Information. The number Is
644-8824 . They work together to help you .
%OFF
OUR GALAXY CARPET SELECTION
Select from level loop, cut & loop shags, shags, shag
plushes, teicture11tweeds all at 20% off. Padd1na and
installation are extra, but can be arranged.
WIN A 9'x12' CARPET!
THOSE ATIENDING OUR
FREE CLINIC ARE ELGIBLE
HOSTING OUR CLINIC WILL BE· •••
MR. JAY L. KOBRIN
V.P. OF GALAXY CARPET MILLS
OUR CLINIC WILL BE HELD
WED., MAY 12th 7:30 P.M.
SHERWIN WILLIAMS DECORATING
CENTER
A practical guide to CARPET BUYING and decorating.
You w.111 learn about type, style textures, fibers, durability
and cleanability.
Our Decorating Consultant can provide you with expert advice
at no extra expense.
If you wish to attend, register at our store listed
below or please call.
.._,_.,.,,......,,..._,.___...., __ ...... Phone 557-8788
Westminster AVCO F1NANCIAL TOWER ..,:~::UY ~:w~~i:~1:~~~~~=11 :.:·:::::::~:~:'-·3 t 61 HARBOR BLV
1,41844-882. :::::~c.. COSTA MESA 627 Matn St.
Huntington Beach
L._ __ ~536-653~~9~--J~===================================:!J
..
,
NYSE COMPOSITE
..
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ftppf Prke# Rf1't1
WASHINGTON <AP>
Preliminary figures h y the'
Agr1<'1o1lt11re D1•rartment conhrm
C'arlter pred1r.t1ons that consumer
beef prict>s are rising but lhal pork al
supcrm3rket counters has heN'l hold-
ing fatrly Stable In rec<'nt ~<'Ck!.
s OAILYPILOT .49
·1nftuenee
Wlw Really Runs U.S.? '
By !\UL TON l\IOSKOWITZ
1'ot m11n» pf'ople. confronted with the ronow~ng names.
C'Ould hknttfy tht-m · John P Austin . Frunk Cary, Reginald
Jont·s. Donald 1\1.tl'Naughtnn and Arthur Wood.
1'he .ut• tht• <'h:11r1ncn. rc:ipecllvcly, or Coco-Colo, IBM,
Gl•ner.il Eh·ctr•c.
l'r udenttal ln11ur.1nre
und St>an1, Roel.wck.
'fhc >111u11y m ity of
b us1nes:, kudcrs Is a
~trt kinl( face t or
1\mcril'u11 life. These
ft\c compnn1c~ urt> prc-
Money
Tree
('mtnrnt in tht .. 1r fll•lds. Th<>y sell products ond services used
by nulhons of Anwm:ons \'ct outside the business world,
the ml•n ''ho run thl'nl arc virtually unknown.
TIU~IR IN\'ISIBIUT'\' \\AS p0inted up in a "Who Runs
/\mt>r1c.1" poll tak••n b~ US News & WorlJ Report. Results
111 tht• poll '' l'n' puhhi.hed lao;t month. und they show that no
one apparcnl l) bt•l1r' es that busmessmen count for much.
not <·H'n the 1.400 'key Amt>rlcuns" who were surveyed by
lht.' magai1nl'
P1·es1dl·11t Ford headed the hsl or 15 leader s who were
deem l:!CI to be most mflut'nllal m our lives. Secretary of
State Ht:nry K1ssrngl·r placed second ar;id he was followed
hy Arthur Burns. <'hau-man of the Federal Rscscrve Board.
\\.alter Cronl.1l<!, tht: CDS ncw:.rasler, placed sixth in
thb C\ alual1on and con::>umer aclins t Ralph Nader ranked
tenth.
Not a single busmes:; executive made the top-15 ti.st. ' '
IT W.\Sl\ 'T UNTIL THE second tier -the 15th through
30th h~tm~s that bul>tnl'ssmen were mentioned and even
here they Y. l're not 'erv prominent.
Oa\o1ci Hockefeller. the chairman of New York's Chase
i\lanhatt.rn Runk. came in 16th, and lhts was probably more
~· rcflect rnn of the magic of his family name than his posi·
lion as a banker. Tymg the Rc\o. Billy Graham for 20th place
"U5 Wilham Paley. th<> thairman of CBS and the employer
of Waller Cro11k1ll' And then one had to move all the way
dmH1 to 28th plaC't.' lwfore findin,:: tht• only other business
lead<'r l>l'hl'\'t:'rl 10 han• major influence. Thomas Murphy,
the cha1rm ;rn of General Motors .
l 'nmt•nt1onctl \\t'rt' the five bu5mess chiefs cited at the
~tart ul this column Also votelcss \\ert• the chairmen of Ex·
\On. ITT. t" S SlN•I. Ou Pont .me.I Amt:'ril'un Telephone and
'I degraph If tlw l't:'sults of l111s survl!y are accpeted, then
th{'se men h..1' t' ll'ss 111llul·ncc in American life than Ronald
I<eag:rn. John t:..1rdmr, F..1rl But1. 'Henry Jackson, Daniel
:\l11ynihan and t:ov. Edmund Brown Jr.
l\T FIRST (;l..\~CE. TllF.SF. findings, that busi·
nl•i.:-.mt·n h.I\ ~llll mflul'ncc "hen compared with other ll'.tdt·r~. do not'~···m to Jlbt:' \\.llb p,ubhc opinion surveys in·
<hl'.Jlin"' \\ 1dt• .. pn•a<I dt!>lrust of U.S. business and a feeµDg
lhut I he b11i.me:,s :-.t'l'lor 1•.xcrts an undue influence.
On a second look. U1ou,1.?h, they may.be qu1te consistent.
Thl· bu.,ines" 111flul•nl'l' that m;iny people fear goes by such
name's ;i,. (;l\I, CE. 1\T&T. I S Stl•l'l. Exxon. Th~e ore
t.1m111..1r 11.Jnh·s Tlw m<.·11 \\ho managl' them t'emaln face·
hss
Mo1~ Milk E yed,
More Cost, Too
WASllJX C:To~ tt\P1 --/\ffrr rocking alon~ with little
<'hanJ.:I.' llw Pil'" th1'<'1.' ~·1.·:irs. milk produ<·t1on in 1976 could
llhTl'.IS<' sl1).:.hl I:. ;is d;.11r~ .i L1rmu 'i lakl· ;idvanta,l.!e of plen·
I 1iul gr.1111 suppli"s and rcdut•ed fet'd costs. the Agriculture
Department says. ·
n ut off in al!' sn1d llw larg"r supply will not mean lower
<'Onsuml'I" pnn•s for milk and olht•r duiry products. The de·
partmem s Outlook and S1tu<1t1on Board said retail prices or
those items"" a J,!roup an• t'XPl'Clf>d to average 6 lo 8 percent
hil!hl•f' than tht) did m l!fi3, a prl'd1clion also mudc earlier
this.\ !'ar
THE REPORT SAID milk prices nt the form will
<l1>chnt <JS th1· srmng "flush" SPason of peak production de-
\ Plops but tha t pnt•cs still will average 10 to 15 percent
ahm t• "h,1t th<.~ did a H'ar <lJ.(o. Jn the sl'cond hair of 1976,
pri<'cs · could posl a fd1rh slronl! seuson.:11 rise" but are not
t''\pu·t <'cl tom al ch I h<' lul! gain!. 1n Uw second hu lf of last year,
off1c1ab s;ud
Much ot th" ant1c1pal<1il r; to f! pcrct'nt rise in retail
prir t•s hiois aln•;id:. oc·e111Tl'd and 1t 1s poss1hle that store
pnrt•i. ot d:11ry produc h m.1:.-Ill' fair!) stahle in com mg
months, <lt·p~nclm!! on lilt• l'Xlrnt of the milk production in-
creas1•, a rll'J)Jrlm1 nt SJl<1!..l',_m,111 sa1d
Although not olf1ewlll.' puhlished yet, retail food prices
O\ er all "r rr rreef.1·1ed la'>l "eek hy Agriculture Secretary
Earl L B1111 to i:o up ~J to~ p1·n·1·nt this year from lh<'1r 1975
:J\l'r.1gt•. Thal\\ oulll ht• the smalle:;t inc reuse 1n five years.
Avco Builds at Niguel
,\\('I) C"Pll\rl1Un1t\ lkv<'IOJIC'f'\ lnC' !ACD> has suc-
1·esi.l11lh 1·11mpl1 lt•d ll•p11datwn ol ''" m·pragt•d inventory
.11HI 1:> l'llJ.::J~l·d 111 au ad1'c l;uddioi.: proi.:ram al its major
prnp<'rt11· .... tlw ni·w rnmmunit1es of H;incho Bernardo in
~Ult 1>11·110 .111d I ,;ihun;i :'l.1gucl in I >ranr.:1• County.
.l.1111•:-. ll 1\1 rr, d1:11rm11n of the boc.ird. and R. Barry
!\kl'onw·. pl l'!<1dt•111 and dud oru•rutmg officer. told the
<·0111p;111\ s shart'11olckr;; that ~alt!" of homes have b<'en goocf
a t holh fll'\\ 111m11111r11t1<•:; <111d that n1•w construction is under
\\UV
\\'hill' '\CD <·onti11Ut''-to <'Xperif'nC'<' 1frluys in dc•velop-
nwnt 111 Plt .111fr·or11prop1•1ty11l La~unn N1gut'I, s<·vcral new
J>T tl(h•< '' inland ,ll't· hc•1n~ 1111 roduct•d lhc•re In the coming
month". Mc l'om11· 1.;111!
Vor 11:. 1'17!l tlS('lll .\ll'tir, A<'O hatl o t•onsnlidatcd net loss
of St:! 1 m1ll1on on tP\t'llllC'" nl Sfl2 r>8 million. During the
)t•.1r 1111' 1·0111pJnv C'los<'cl !1;11 h1111sing units <'n mpurcd with
1.1111111 l!li I ~al<'s of ho11' 1111' units in th1• llr!>.I quarter of 1976
1:-.;,,,,,mlwr l!li!'i to hlt111.11y, l!J71l 1 numbered 178 com·
ptir1•d \\II It J lili Ill I ht• ltk1 JWl'llHI of l!J7!'i.
Rossmoor Income
Jlossmoor Corp. L aguna lldl)I, trntl nel Income of
s.1.~2·•.1x111 or $L l:l a "h<lrt', 10<'l11ding a lolis from oper ations
nf S!l:t'\,000 or :JI C't•nt:;, on 1 l'vt•nues of S.10,912,000 for the six
mnnth~ i•nd1•cl M 11rc h :H, 1!17fi, acrordln~ lo Rohert E.
l!os<•n\\ :lld. Prc!lidcnl.
~al1•<; and C'armng<; com1rnric;ons were affected by
~C\'t'ral Prt>\ 1ously :mnoun<·cd tram;act 1ons related lo the
<•ompum 's prop<'rty dispos1t1on anl'I debt reduction pro·
grams. Hosenwald i.a1d. These transal'l1ons rontributl'<I ap·
proximately Sl:l,235.000 to total rt•vcnucs and $4,447,000 lo
net int•ome i'lunn~ the first half.
OpPratinJ.? results for the st><'ond quarter showed a net
loss of S589.000 or l!l l'ents u shun'. on r evenues of $8,5.'i2,000,
comparNl \\.II h a net lno.:c, ,,f ~l'l'i.000 or 10 cents on revenues
of$7,119,000inthcl1!.1f1 ll 1• tJd
H ere'·
Many of ltl•J. \
the rear or tht· c r •1
)oUr"-cller's ni~htmar.· I .J
• nt
l •1• ... t11buLor placed at
m.JAtng repair a do·lt·
On1> ~ ay lo rn 11ke 11 comuderahly easier ts to remove the
air <'leaner and la) u panel of '~Hnch plywood across the
tnmp.'.lrtmt'nl, leaving a simple and solid base from which
ll• "or k.
•
• • .4 J 8 DAil Y PtLOT
Lftguna's Bushy KOs Qpposition
ONTARIO, Cahf -Laguna
Beach'a Jim Busby won ttlc ln·
t ernatlonal Motor Sports A~·
aoc1ation IOO·m1ler for CT cars,
but he wasn 't as happy about the
victory as he m ight have ~·n 1
Busby ran Into hi~ clot" rr1cn4
and car sponsor, Peter Grega, en
route to the triumph Sunday at
Ontario Motor Speedway.
Bobby Riggs, a Newport Buch
resident, won the balllcoftht• sex·
es competition al Ontario Motor
Speedway Sunduy over Shirley
(;ha Cha Muldowney
Pro driver Muldowney W!l!
clearly faster on the race track an
a sllllom event but Rigp won by
sinkan& fh c of his 10 pulls while
she was O·for·lO tn the &ollln&
competition.
Gregg "as leading eight laps
from the finish of \be Camel·
)ponsored race when Bt111 by
plowed into him an a slow corner
and spun him out. Gre~& protest
ed Busby'3 driving tacllcs but
later withdrew his omc1al com
plaint.
"lam v1try sorry at happened."
!laid Busby after winning in a
Porsche Carrera sponsored by
th1t Florida dealersluJ' in "hach
Three-hits Tribe
TananaPutsEnd
To Losing Ways
Angels pitcher Frank Taoana
did not like the looks or things
He had not "on a ~amt.' Mnre
April 19 and during th<• interim
·had permitted only four rarned
runs in 29 and one·thard innan):!s
,
' • All Oam ..... tt"ll'C 111tl
Ma1 10 t.a11forn1e -tf Ottkl~nd
May U Tt-••'\•I C •lrtOft'\Ht
1 SSe> m
1 no "'
1 lSP m Mot' 1) lf"Cd\ 4111 (.AlffO•~IO
But he had not '~nn. instead suf
fering agonlllng losst·s Ilk<' l o to
Milwaukee and 2· I lo New York
Tanana was fearani: the wori.t
again Sunday agains t the
Cleveland lndu1ns as th<' Anitels
came to bat an \he e1i;:hth inning.
trailing 2-0 as t'ratt Pctl'ri.on
\\Orked on a three tutter
But the Angels got off the deck
and scored three tames to enable
Tanana to post his second var
tory. a 3-2 triumph over the Ill
d1ans which gave California a
sweep of the i.hree game sen es
The Ar.gels ·"ill tn to kc(•p 1t
going 1,.,n1ghl when they begin a
two·iame scrae., an Oukland
against the A ·s with Nolan H~ :m
~3·2> srhcdult•d to oppOSl' Paul
Mitr hcll o 1
··1 said to my1>l'lf 11 hM>ks ltk1• 1t
mav be anolht•r fint· l'I fort <Im' n
the· dram." Tanana adm11t1·d
"But around t ht' t nurlh inn ml! nr
so l told m~ c,llf to kl't't> 11 l'I"'''
and ma) IH• somt•tlung \\Ill hap
pen. I'm gl.11! 1111111 '
Tanana wounct up'' Ith .J thn'l'
hiller, embro1lll•rt•rl IH t'll!ht
strikeout:., lo 1mproH' has n •cord
to 2·3.
The key blow 1n the CJl1fnrn1a
rally "II'> dell\ ert'd b) outlwl<IN
Ruslv TorrC's "ho rammt·il J
t\\o out. IY.O run triple
··w e \c \\On thr<•t• an a nm th1·
hare! "a\." Torn·s pomtt·d out
"I thint... our .illlludt•.., gt'IOll and
we should he ahll• lo rda\ a hlllc
* * * ClCllCl.ANO
·-, " bl M.tn,,+n-1rf 4 0 t 0 t<u•o.·, n 1 o o
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t t...n-111 Iii It 1 l 0 0
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t hlll't •rtlO 1 ''" • u • l !"t ()
O t1•t¥'-'n ()
'" 1 , -.n f\ o n " l
t 1P l\o. r' '' n ll I)
CAll~O•NtA
R f ,,,,. I
llo>ol I
,,,,,, 111-.t'\•M\
fto• ., .. If>
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R"m'r•I\ :' l) I)"
(l.t<J'I O" I 1 I I
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T 1'°1Al'MU U U 1
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t t I ' t •"1 (W~ th I
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11' H JI EJI aa '>O
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t ,.,. ._ , 1 n n "I
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now We'r e getting the big hilt. at
the right time."
The Angels. who had lost 13
straight to Cleveland. capturl'd
all three games with lale-annani:
heroics. On Friday, home runs
bv Bobbv Bonds and Bill Melton
enabled .them to scon· four runs
an the e1Ahlh for a 5·4 wan and
the\ scrambled from behind
twice to beat the Tratx· 4·:1an13 an
nings Saturday night
Slap Shot
• Nips Flyers
MONTREAL <AP>
Defenseman Guy Lapointe netted
a 25·foot slap shot "1th JUSl I 32
remaining Sunday night. giving
the ~ontreal Canad1ens a c·om
t•back ~-3 triumph O\'er lhe
Ph1ladelph1a Flyers m the opener
of their National Hock<') Leagul•
final playoff s en es
Laµoantc· took a pass rrom ldt
\\ 1ng.Stt•\ c Shutt and broke• arross
\ht• Philadl'lpl,1a blul' hne with
Guy Leneur a).!amst F1yers· de·
rcnseman .Jim \\'at son. lll'fak<.•d n
pass to Lafll'ur, then hlazcd ha...
shot past Ph1ladl•lph1a goalie
\\ aynt' Sll'phenson to wan a gam<.•
111 which the Canadacns had
Lra1lecl 2 0
<:oahe Ken Oryden sa\'ed the
'iclor~ ..\\1th a lungin)! l0t• stop on
a Jim Walson shot in the frcnlll'd
rmal seconds
J arque'> Lem a are had brouAht
the Canad1l'ns ('\'en for lhl' scrund
time an lhf! contest "hen has 30
foot bark hander" 1th!) SR left tied
lhl' score 3·3 J usl undl'r f1v('
mmutci. l'arhcr. Philadelphia de
fcnse Larrv Goodenough had
broken a 2-:i t 1e by :.ending a 35·
foot po.,..er play wnst shot past
Dryden's latc-k1rkang right leg.
The Flyers, on goals by the red·
hot R{'ggac L t•arh and Ross
Lonsberrv. had taken a 2·0 first
pt•raod 11.'.ad before Montrcnl
frustrated by a disor~aniwd and
ortt•n sloppy opC'nmg session -
storm<'d back on ta I hes 2. 26 apnrt
h~ .l1m Roberts and Larry
ltohanson in the middle p<>nod.
l.t'.ir h 's llilh goaloflheplaynffs
had lo(otkn Philadelphia start~1
111<tt 21 st•rnn<b after th(' openm~
I .ict•orr ll w a" I he IOt h ron
serut1H• playoff gam" an which
L<'<tl'h had !'>rorcd. t•xtendang the
plJyoff mark
A Ga1111Jle Pays Off
Greig hu a substantial tnteTe-st
Busby a\ erased 96 6S'7 miles ~r
hour to" 1n by 2 319 sttOndJ over
Gren 1n "f11ctory·backed 8 tW.
··1 hbd been trying to p"ss b1m
in the &low corner:.." Busby con·
tlnucd, "and he WJS ublt> to OUl·
nccclerat£• me on the
straightaway 1 m1&ht huve-be~
a little over·zealoua \\hen J hit
him I don't know."
Seven I ups from the end a two-
cur c ru s h on the front
:.tra1.:htuwa y sent Bob
Mutkovirh to a hospital 10
t;pland "1th a posMblc ron·
l'Ul>MOn and ner)< m1uncs .
The race between Gn11 and
Busby developed lit the leader
for 16 laps. Michael Keyser,
dropped out with transmission
failure
Ke)ser and Greag became em·
broiled in a battle last wttk at.
Laguna StC'a, Cirsl on the track
where their cara colhded at leHt
thr e Um~s dunng the race and
later in the pits where the>·
argued with euch other ulter the
race and Greu ntt'd a prolesl
against Keyser for un ·
sportsmanlike driving taclks.
The protest "as affirmed by
IJ,JSA and Keyser was Cin\.-d.
In the companion sedan 100-
maler, Gene Felton took over on
the second lap and led all the~ ay
to win In a Gremhn at an average
speed ot '79.997 m .p.h .. second
"as Carson Baird. the series
point leader In a Colt. lt seeoru.ls
back, and third was Don De,·en·
dorl In a Datsun.
Canadian national champion
Gilles Valleneuve won the On·
tano Grand Prix for Formula
Allunlic cars in a March. overug·
ing 106.675 m .Jl.h. Second was El·
hott Forbes· Robinson in a Tui 15
seconds behind. and third wus
Bill Brack in a Chevron.
AP Wi<opMlO
MARK HAYES BLASTS OUT OF TRAP ON WAY TO BYRON NELSON GOLF WIN.
Dodgers Tackle
Cardinals Tonight
ST LOl'IS IAPl -The Lo~
Angeles Dodger!I. thl'ar 12-game
"annani: strenk r eplared by a
l\\O -game loss string in
Ph1ladelph1n over the weekend,
011 TV ·f'ntligltf
Cha1uwl 7 uf .;::JO
take on thc St. Louis Cardinals
hl•re lona~ht
Sunday, the Dodgers lost their
second stra1~ht to Philadelphia,
10·3. aftc•r the• Philli<•s had ended
the Los 1\n,::clc•s \'ICtory stnng
the dav bl'fon•
Sunday :.:.iw the end of another
streak. 'as the Dodi:ers' Douj.!
Rau. \\ho took a 4 0 record and a
10 j.!ame w1nn1nj.! streak into the
i;:amc'. lost for the first tame sinre
/\ui: 23
In Sunday's game. the Dodgers
were baffled by Ph1lhcs p1tcht'r
Jam Lonborg, "hose career was
being written off JUSt sax months
ago.
At the beginning of the season ,
the only guy an Florida who
thought Lonborg had a chancr
was Lonborg. Now his record as
4-0. topped by Sunday's near-
pe rf ec t game against the
Dodgers.
The :JJ.year-old hurler missed
half of last season art<•r injuring
his shoulder. Not only could ht'
not throw through a pane of
glass, he couldn't throw at all.
The Phillies were so sure Lon·
borg was done, they went out an
the winter market and arqu1rcd
pitchers Ron Recd and Jam Kant
in trades. Even Lonborg, the one·
time Cy Young Award wanner
with the Boston Red Sox, got the
message
In his latest victory, he rame
danj!erously close to o J>('rfect
game -for 61J innings lie
strurk out seven of the I 1rst l!l
batters.
LOSAHGllES PMIU.O[ll'HIA .. , " .. ab," Ill
LO<W' 71> • 0 0 0 0 (A\lolf) • , 1 I
Bu lluvrll • 0 I 0 H.f'""""''O I 0 0 0 a .... .,,,, 4 I I 0 Bow•'' ' 0 ) J G--.trv,., 1f) • 0 l I ~M,.dl11> I 0 0 0
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Slower Swing,
Nelson's Tip
Key for Hayes
DALLAS <AP> -A tip, de·
livered by rlose friend and fellow
pro Larry Nelson on the practice
green before the final round.
may have been the key to Mark
Jlayes' victory Sunday in the
Byron Nelson Golf Classic
"J was desperate." Hayes said
after has scrambling, two.under·
par 69 had secured his first tour
title by a two-stroke margin.
"I wa s sea rching for
something. anything. Because I
r eally wasn 't hilling it all that
good.
"Larrv and I worked together
a lot. ile knows me and my
i:ame. lie told me I was getting
too fast, to try to slow down my
swing. I really thintc that was the
key to 1l ull.
"l slowed it down. l even tried
to walk do\\ n the fairway as slow
as Don January," a 46-year-old
veteran famed as probabaly the
most slow-moving. easy gomg
man on the tour. "Thal was the
key. Arter the rirst hole I was re·
I axed and easy."
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JIM BUSBY
Emo, Durr
Top Field;
Borg Rolls
CARLSBAD Ne\\port
Beach's Rov Emersun teame<t
with Francoise Durr lo defeat
Tonv Trabert and Baille Jean
Kang, 6·4, 6 ·I. Sundny to captun·
the S60.000 maxed doubles t~rna
ment at the La Costa Racquet
Club.
Emerson and Durr split the
S20.000 firi•t prize
EmNson do minated play in
the second •set as the winners
rallied from a 1 4 deficit to post
thl' victory before 3.500 fans.
Borg Trf,.111pllJI
DALLAS BJorn Hors over·
cumc three veurs frustrut1on an a
Jittery. sta.rl SunclJy to outduel
dosc friend G u1 llermo \'ilas. l·fi.
6 I. 7 :;, f1 and capture the World
t'h.1mp1onsh1p of Tl·nna:. S50.000
lirst-pla<.'t• pn7l'.
.l:•~--# tth1
TORRA~CF. Los Angeles'
G1:orgc Best lied the i:ame with u
goal in the final three minutes or
regulation plav. lht•n booted
home the J,!.amt• '' inn1:r in the lit'·
hr1•:1kcr ~l'rlt'' Js tht• The Aztecs
do"ncd the·SC'attlc Sounders 4 3
1n :"\orth AnHriran Sorccr
Lt•aJ1t1t' pl .1'
Tlw vit•tory. playl'<i before a
rnm d ot 7 .165. wa' the Altrci.
third ~lrnighl ul homl'
Mund lnjHrf.•d
ClllC /\GO Ch1cugo White
Sox p1tcht•r Wilbur Wood was
scheduled for i;;urgery today ortl'r
suCfennJ: a broken ll'f\ knee cap in
Sunday's itame against the
Detroit Tigers
Wood was 1n1url'd when he was
hit with a c;harp line dnve off the
bat or Ron L(• 1''1 ore I k was nown
to Ch1caAo and l'Xamaned Sunday
mght by thrc•c team doctors. ''ho
d<.•termaned that surscry would be
nere•,...an'
Doctors r-.11mall' he\\ 111 be inn
cast about eight week~.
So.r Lf1#e .\ i" d1
The Boston Red Sox. defending
American League champions,
lost their ninth straight derision
Sunduy. bowing to the Tcxos
Rangers, 6·5.
Celtics Rally
To Whip Cavs
BOSTON c J\ P > -The Boston
Celt1cc;, kept in the game by Jo Jo
White's torrid third )>C'riod shoot·
ing, rallied an the fourth quarter
Sunduy for a 9i·8!l victory over
the Cleveland Cavaliers and a 2·0
lead 1n the> N alionnl Basketball
Assocaallon 's semifinal playoffs.
White scored 14 points as the
Celtics pulled to within three
points, 7 l-G8. in the third period.
Then the m1J(hty Bo:.ton :.coring
marhine took l'harge for a com·
mandang lead an the eastern Con·
fcrc•nce hl'lll or seven serlel' .
J ohn llovllrl'k put the Celtics
in front 74-73 for the firi.l limo
Mn<'c 1tarly in the scrond period. ·
Clt•velond center Nnl{'
Thurmond rouled out with 7::UJ,
remaining and the Celtics went
to work. scoring 11even r;traighl.
points for nn 81 ·7:1 advuntuge.
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Suns Put on Beat, 133·129
""""' ........
PHOENIX <AP> -"It seemed
like il was going to go on
forever," said Golden Stale
guard Phil Smith~ who led all
players with 30 points only to
have the Phoenix Suns take a
133-129 double overtime decision
ov'er the Warriors and draw even
in their National Basketball As·
sociaUon playoff series 2·2.
The series shifts lo Ookland
Wednesday night and back to
Phoenix Friday night.
to trigger the fi~t overtime.
"Rick Barry had been
sloughing off me all day. and I
hod a feeling I 'd be able to get the
ball," said Erickson. ··Tue ball
was to go to anybody open, and
with eight seconds remaining we
knew we could gel oer a shot of
some sort."
Ricky Sobers rescued the Suns
with a pair or&ressure foul shots
in overtime. ne with :02 to go
and Erickson sank eight points In
the nnal extra period.
time but goals by Erickson a~
Dick Va n Arsdale tit'<! It, and
Erickson made a shot from th4
comer for a permanent Pboenbe
lend at 2: 38.
GOU>IM ITATI Cl"I -S...., 1'. Wll'" 7', llay H, c JoM-'·Smit" JO. WtlH•"" •• DI<•• It. G Jolin.on). 0 ... 1, 1. Oudley 1 TO!•lt M 21·7t..
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OUI Bl"Y• Wll~H. lley, Seer•\, W.tlph•I• Tt<"'11tel~ Oavl\, llwl,.V A ll ... .., ........ ,,w,12
Osenr Gamble of the New York Yankees
shdcs safely into third base, avoidmg the
Lag. by Sal Bando. Umpire is Bill Kunkel.
Host Oakland won. 4·3, in 12 innings Sun·
day.
Golden Stale was on top 112·110
with eight seconds t.o play when
Keith Erickson took a pus and
drilled a 2S·Coot shot with :03 Jett ·
G·Slate used goals by George
Johnson and Barry for a 123·119
advantage early In the final over·
~ ... , OOl<IM St•I• ...... ,.-,"
llMIO<I .i Cle#t•lld
•
•
. .
c;.i-.si... .. -··
I
..
·~ED BtJaCAltT "" .. ....,,....._. ' ~·rt only In thelt
thitd ytar or volleyt».11
and b.avt four Jun on and
one IOJ)botnore oa lbllr
tquad.
Y.t. th~ San Clemente
Htsh Ttttons have been
virtually unbeatable in $outh Coat Lea1ue ac·
lion.. Wltb Ont IHgue
match ttmainln& 1\tet·
day nl1ht, the Tntons c 1%·2> are tied with de·
fendinl CIF champion
La1una Beach fOI' the
lea,u.lead.
y peopl• tor some
es u the baaketball teamdld <around700l ..
Possibly the Trltons·
bluest lnceolh o wn
eamlna a tr1p to Poland
In Aquat when they wUI coro~te lnte.rnaUooally
tor three weeks.
curnntly recoverln&
from a alress fracture ln
Ill root
"Ht' Jump. h11herthan onybody else Qn the team
and h11 top quality i1 com·
pet HI venea1, · • U)'$
lveraon about bis No. 1
m1ddlt blocker.
The other m lddle
blocker Is 5·11 senior &b
Redfie ld who Iverson
11ays 1s the tum 's best
passer.
S•n Clemente also
flared well In the tu';':,-:.-~&: ""'u lngl~ 'rournament,
advanclac to the
semlfinall be Core losini.
.. Before the season
began, we applied ror 1&
trip to Poland.'' suys
Iverson. "And we found
out we were accepted
about a month ago. I
think that motivated them to achieve as Nah a
level or performance u tbeycan."
Of course, the blnest
reason for Sao
Clemente's success is
talent. Two starters were
all county lut season and seven lettermen return-
ed,fourofwbom start.
The starting outside
blockers are 5·11 junior
Bob Hoover and 6·0
senjor Andy W1mams.
Top su.bS art 8·3 Nick
Schaar-he's Olllng In (or
Eissman-and 5·11 Ste'-e.
Knights, a Junior out.side
blocker who I veraon says
has the best serve. Head coach Jack
Iverson hu not bffn sur~
,., 2 211 prised attbeteam 's rapid
HO ~= improvement. Two years
aeo. the Tritons Ued for
third in Ieaiue and last
year, they deadlocked for
second with a 10.S record.
The all·county players
are senior setter Stan
Mathis and juruor setter
Tom Beard.
As fo r lvt'rson, he seems well qualified. The
Un.lverslty or Redl~
graduate wu selected as
the top coach at the
lnglewood tourney and
coached a~ Buena Park
Hi gh for one yur before
that school pba,ed out
volley bull.
"The key bu been the
motivation of the
players.'' says tbe 33.
year.old coach. ..They
uo uo uo started out in Novembet
~~T:::, •·• !:. by lifting weights and
Tl-_, aws · running on their own.
.. Both are gooo all·
round players." says
Iverson ... and they carry
through Orf every skill.
Mathis--does everything
well-be hits . blocks.
spike.sand digs.·•
Like many young
coaches, Iverson is op·
lamis tic
"''° ... -••"'"o' GOid. T v They highly motivated SuPtf'\1¥.0leco~<K ... <M. Tiil""" themselves. Mft.5ayc:Mr .. r
Mathis was on the all·
tournament team at
ln&lewood while Beard
\lllashonorable'menlion.
··our first goal was to
be league champion .. he
says "Then, we'd like to
go as fa r as we can in
CIF'
No1eutc11n. • ·The y a Is o Ii k e
volleyball. l think they
have bttn motivated by
the crowds we !lave been l'tPTMRACa -·~ J-
..._ C.lh & .. ~ ··-· "'"9'12.tao gettJng. We've had u
HO 1e
~Gr.UIT-1 ... The captain is 6·0
senior Carl Eisaman, a
6-8 high jumper who ls
Baseball's
ToplO
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Title _ to Newport
Coa_ch Bill Barnett's
Newport Aquatics Clu.b
water polo teams cap.
tured first and ttl.ird
place in the National
AAU tournament held at
Newport Harbor High
over the weekend for
players 18 a.nd under.
The Newport A team
won the championship
with an 11·6 victory over
Santa Barbara A, while
the 8 team was the third
place winner with an 8-1
triumph over University A. .
Jerr Hassett, a student
at Unive rsity High
School, was high goal
player for the A squad
with three while l<evin
Robertson or Newport
Harbor High tallied four
for the B team
Closest eame or the
tournament for the A
squad came in the fioal
round of competition
against the 8 squad. The
A team won. 7 ·6, to gain
the finals.
Newport B didn't play
Santa Barbara A dunng
the early ro.und -robin
competition. ·
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NATION4L Ll!AGUI
"'""' Cl,,_ 0 Ae It H ~t. llo~ C n 1S •01 11 IS 111 4 ()!,..,., Ptll f7 •1 • 1l )II
•v\\tll LA •• iA • 1'l ..f10
10 .. • .. v 10 51 e •• :i.s
M<8"0-\I L 11 "' IJ J\ l&S Motw:I•., C"• 1t tq Jt AO JSt
G-ot• "'" u "" ~ 7' no
Mo•ci.on ''" JI •l U 1" ~ C. ~o•lfr C•lt 11 'l •• Jl Jll
G••tto C•n 11 •> 1 • Jl Jll ... ,.,. ... ,.,
IC"'O""""· Nt'W YO••. 11 , S<M,.dt, P,,1•·•dt•ott••, n Moncsev, Ch·c.~ 1;
C•""no "°"''°"· •. "'11111>t..._ ~ P:r•n<.•\(0 •
..... , ealltd '"
ICl"Q,,..n. N•w Yo•~. 30: ~·~· Ch•C"'<!O, i.. \thmldl, PlllledolOll•I,
'' (i.r1f ... W', (tl\(lnn•H. 1A Mtd'OClt.,
("11<.•90. 72, D flt•r,tr, P1thburgt"t0 11
"llclll.,. 2Declal•"~
lonborg Phllt.,..lpftlt ; 4.0. I 000;
M.ollf•h•\. "'" YO•O, 3 0, I 000; J . ••<lla•d 'i°""°"• S·I, UJ S..ever,
N•• Vo•• •• '· •~o. "•"· LOI ... .,.._.,,, , .. ,, IOO; MontefuKo, S..n
Pr~<•\.CO, • 1. IOO Koo~m..-. N•w Vo••. J.t, .ISO, l!oo-•r. Pllllllllrqh,
J ' 7SO NO'"'""· Clft( '""•ti. , '· l!O Sl•orn. Su Ott90, J· 1. PIO
'76 'MAZDA Major League Standings
COSMOS
WM ., ................. ,$6015
......... -...... $ 500
CAMllACll ............. s 500
NOW
25.~a5~
_.,......, """'-.. No 1001u1 .--..er.-. ........... -................... ,
•
'75
C~OSE-OUT
....................... SS l27
_ .................... $ 350
.................... $ 400
Al'IERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
New York
Milwaukee
Detroit
Cleveland
Baltimore
Boston
W L Pd. GB
15 g .71..f
10 7 .• 3
10 9 .sze 4
10 12 ·iM s•~
9 13 .'°9 61 '
6 14 ,*>!> SY.a
\Vest Division
15 6 .714
11 8 ,5'79 3
10 10 .500 41,.A.z
12 13 .480 s
7 11 .389 6 12
10 16 .385 71'.t
Te us
Kansas City
Minnesota
Oakland
Chicago
~gels ...... , .• o.-.
(hlU~ I Dtl•tltl
"Tt•~\. 8o\IOft S
lttll\a\ C•ly 7. ••11•"'0'•.
M4NWtriOfA 6, Mllw•u'"' •
C•ll•ONI•• J , .......... l
Ott•••.,.,•,N•wYor,J, 121~ T ......... _
Ml-tott 1e1,1 .. e11 2·11 al IC-City IScll•I· ttrll l JI
OW< ... IOeu ... t 21 •I Teut lllfllel) I I
c1111er..ia • •Yf,.111 •t Ot••-ltw1t,..11•11 Ol••..-•K-"'t<I '" ... .,.~. llM•-·• Ct-•-Ott ........... ., .. 11
S.11..,...tt li411w...-te
M1-\0l•at lt• .... t C11, Cll<c: ... 11T.-u
~ ......... aatooi....
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Philadelphia
New York
Ptttsbur1h
St. Louis
Chlc:itto
Montreal
Clnclnnotl
Dodgt-ra
Hou11ton
San Dleeo
East
\\' L
IS 7
18 10
15 9
12 14
11 16
9 lS
Wt1t
15 10
15 11
14 14
San Francisco
Atlanta
13 13
9 17
8 lB ........ , .• o.-.
.... 11 .... IOllle tO 1.H Ana.le•)
P•lllblKOll S ""lanlio 1
Sal\D-•.N•'"""'"'
S... ''""'''co• o ""'°"'"•' t I (•"(I""•" II C"lctto 1
HOll\tan tO SI LO"'I S Te<lo'•O•-LO\ A"9"t .. 1 .... ton 1 11 ti St
"' Olly ...... K ... CIUted
T ... i4•Y'l0a-
S... ''""" >CO at C"1Ca09 S... D-at P""tfll,...••
,. ... .,-•1•1un1t
Pflt\ll<lrtll •I One 11\Mll
LO\..,...ll"t•t\I L..,,,
_. ...... Hotlll-
CB Pd.
.682
.643
.625 1
.462 5
.407
.375
6'~
7
.000
.577
.500
.500
.346
.308
TtoeMI~ 4MO II)
·-••11-'-lll I A l!lOOlft lltrtl ~,.._._., ..._... ... i1 .. 1s •• "'
"•"""'' ""'"'' ....... c ....... .. ~ 11Mh al s.o.ta A,..141(111. am -~lltYlttl 1t•lell•Mitli 1.611 • M2 ,.,, , ov-nlo C1l't0--'1>NIL
v.llOIMll-.. T.,. et OeN.Hlll11.
/llltta•*' y._,. at ~•-9"<11. * '*-" .. •• w1 ... "11.,. M.ttH 0.1 .. Cir-... IHr. , ... .,... ., .,,_,..
u 0111111a at c ... a IMY.. tfllMl~ ..
.. Pell el IOI-(tll •111.
O<rt\ MflNll Woto" V .. IO "' Cl T-, hll Cle-flto ti o.M Mllll,
---· 0.1 •l Mary-to ..... ., .•• Olri. 1MM1M1t110t1 Mar111a el ~ 11191.., •Hell, NtwftO;t Ho1i..r ti
, • ., .. u 111 Valley. wu1m111tl•• el
••t-le, lclbM •I b lt MIM lall a\ '
l UI 041'1• swlll'lml11t -Twtll" al crer-dlft Mar, Merln••I Ht"lllll(ll# .. tc:ll,
...,,._. Harw 111 ,..,..,.," v.11.,, .,,,..,,,., .. , •• l!tttncle. ltll.., fl
CO.ta IMU lall •1 J IS>
Girl\ ,, ...... 1110-Cll' 4. llll•d
""""' ..... .. ,,.,..,..,
VOllOHll l'OVlllall\ Vallo ., *''"''"''., IJ 1\1 '~-· Emo1r• LHOW "NI• "' ICtt.lt.I H .... , s-... Lt ..... llNlt ti
Hewpert ..... (belll •11 ,.,
Girts treco-0..,.. •1 Ma• el SA Y•lley IJ ISi ••acll CIU.1pr•ll-11 .._"'91.., ••ac" eo .. ,.,,.,. ..,......,,.,
~ltbaO M•91\ l llol"•I JI.
C,1tl1 lt•dnUnloft SA \l•Uey et C#ont tNl ,,.., fl 151
G<rll ..ollMll c.r ...... , Mar •I
Tint"'U ISi.
,._...., IMa' UI
htw1l1 late JC •I Saft D•-Oorl\ s.11 .. 11 •oaary •I M<tl.,
Cit•. CMt• AM,..•• lsltncla, roi-
•t ~-•.in va11..,. Wt\l'Tl•~i.r .t H~nl•ftQIOft 8••<11, Marlftt ., ..,_. Harbor, El Toro at o,,,..
Mill\. M•Ultlft YltlO ., UnlverMtv 1•11
ti l Jtl, Junior Collroe Soulllff'I C•lllornla c11Ample11s11lps •\ I.A ValltyC01._
MESA VERDE CHAMPION -Phyllis~ Smith Clert) won the women's
club championship at Mesa Verde Country Club recently. Stella
Scelsa was the runnerup iri the championship competit:ion.
0lrl1 IMC1mlnlon-Newoo'1 ... ,00,
•t W.ttmlflll••. Morin• at Ecll....,,
Coll• Mtu •I 'ounldlft Vtllt y, 1
l!~ltn<•• ti HU1111"91on euc/\ Ctll •I
) I))
Gl•lt 1Wlmml"11-•0w00<1 Htl'tlOI
at Wetlfl\lftller. Metlne at 1 c11...,,,,
COUa Me,a •I Founltlft Vallt1.
t!llMl<la ti H""ll"lllllll •acll lt ll •' , ISi.
Coast Area Golf Olrll trmneall<t-Cll' •·A wm111na11
01r11 •-s-JC 1te9IONIS el .._ a.at II
WOMEN'S •IUUL TS
l\.NIGU•\.CC
W(M'rw-f'\"\ CfUO Cft•"10•0ft"f\•P l(ri'
P•PI! tflllOf\ tM '•Ue w1lh M..tctne N"'"'"
d\ r"'"""'rup J•n• ttooert'°" •"° ,..,
""' ""'.,.,., U"t tM t h•mot04h"•Otlltft4 A F1,.,.1 W1nner-8 obo•• DtPI--.,..,,.,,.,"°_ Charit.,. Cr-r LowNel-OorqjllyHewar6'
8 FllQlll. Wl--Mllftl Wl"'"9¥.
Ru-r~atlCY DoU9f\arly LAI,.
Nt\-Pat s.<199.
C 11'1'9111. WiM.,-S ... Fot•Y; "-
.. ,_.,, .. ., W"91•11; \.-Nel-
a.14f Wtlhatn\or\
D Flight W )ftller -E ll••"
...,.._,, R..-r-l!Ulh CofW<I
L-Net-Jan Gr•I
E Flltht: Wh•"•r-Mero•r•t
~. -.u"'W'\IP G•nf\1e l•e<•f"r
L-Nel-Ltno,. E•n•lll•I MUAYl•DI CC
wome"·' Ctwb Ch•mo1on1htQ
IGro.sl WlnMr-Phyltl• 'm•ll\, JIO
11....,,.r~ttllt Seti.a, JSI Thlro-
0.r• W.111, JloO. CNell -1 luPe Sul· Ion,""· t Vero. Slllrlev, 1'4. J ,,..,.,
Ann BucklM, >o?.
S•<onf ""'"' (Gronl-1 Cl••• Gotll"" m ; t. 8ar1Mlr• M•llO, ,.., J
Loulw lloOlnton, tt7. 1"•11-t PAI
llonMll. Uf. t. Pit Gtll, US; J
Y1rtlnla ~ n•.
Till rd Fll911t tGrou 1-•. Jal\
lowers_ )01; 1. 0.111• Fr..,.IW.enl,
lU; l. Errne 8•"491. Jll (Netl-1.
t(•lly A,.ms, tu, 2 Dot Jont•, 11'; 1
MnGtrcla,UC
Fo11rt11 Fllflll IOroul-1. Jllllt
"""'· Jll; 1. letty Goftya, m. J Syhi. Pr.,.a11uc. u 1 -.N.11-1.
H@ ..... Doody, UC, 2 Mty 81bM, ti. S MtryCon...,r.m
MrSSJOIC Yll!JOCC
&.tier Sall OI Tll'".,_ r....,.,,.
-nl I. ffiel Jan H-r\, Efllfl
C..penl.,., 8•,..,.,• Er•CllWf\ Doi
Man.•. Jen Sc.rti..0.-1. Ct•r• H•~,
S&. l C.,.oro1a H itt, l!dtO\ Knlf ... ""'"'' .... ,, ~· 0.IH IOI lllt Cl ... <llamt>-'1>1P-
Ma y 11 , IJ tl\O 19 101towtn9
n...nc11y'sooe-n1nq r ... no.
MILIUOU•••oc
L-Ntl T°"•nament · A Flltfll-1.
v.,.,,. ... Ma IQ. u . l C••olyn W..t, .. ;
l. H•l•n Oil.Hr, ••; • lllel S.jle Car...,_,.., llam a& Whftt, 70
8 Fli9fll-I Ctren t<•r~r ... : 1.
11-.1 l.ol1C.1plo, llutllJoy, It, C ltlel
.
11-.ltllr.,t. C¥ol Utt ... ,._
Ma<!\. II
C l'l>Qllt I C..rol k l-r-1, "·
1 Hitt •••-11. l ... ,,. L.a ~ • 7J • ltay ICr.OOI 1$
D """'' I .. ,..r1V 0.1_,, ... t. Ito~ Soltr11tr!J.10, J ZOr.11...., 74.
........ u.or .. IKll ... MOClrt.U e10 CANYOll CC
Gue" Dur...,...,,, ... , IJ-Mlts ... ...._,_,et•··"·-· --VaN.e. •111MalW1•anc• .. ,_.
CCI, DonN 5"'1111, lllN Slli. (S....a
Ana CCI, US, 1 Mute,et l•ar1••n•ll•o. 1.011 I~ IS.,... ...,..
CCI ... QC,...nl"91wtm. 0 ... 11 De1111M
tlr¥1,..Co<Ul CCI, 1•7
('"11 I ""'''" 0..lolt. """w .. o 1-.."t• "'""CCI, "•ten ft'"'-' Do<t\ McCoy C!>anl1 Afta CCI, !JO t AM
~hftln "'' H•IM'9 (l,.vlne COHJ CC• .,.,.,,,., Aftd•r\on, Mt'\ii hr ..
Marijn 111•1,.. Coe" CCI. tJI. 3 "-1 .... ,. Ja<l\lt Watt.On tEI HIQUOI CCI.
Mor'" Ev•"'· Grtl<ll•n ftlll.., CEI
NI-I CCI. llt
8 FllQllt IGronl-1. Ctltl IM•i ...
f111YH. V•,..ll• Oort llrvl,.. Co.Kl
CCI. Cell S11lllvall, M.,11.,.. Cl••ll
l"Mera CCI. LovlH NII , JllM Corle
CS.nt• A111 CCI, Lu H119 ... s, L.ee
.....,,v .. rcll IS•n•• "'"•CCI, 111.
CNet1..,.1 Mar9"••t Grace, l.Mllrw M c"9r ~lrvlne C..11 CCI, Ja<kle
Mc:Ctov. Yvon,.. Dan•'•' !Irvine
C.out CCI, IJt, 2. L.ae Sc.-•.
...,,., J-Par .. , l"l•le•• CCI. P•I
•••lln911am, '1t•, Gl•ln Clllvler• CCI, Ul, J l"llyllls Newb'I'. Ewtyn
.... Ill 1&1 N19Wf CCI, O.iw ..__,
J11helC"C!IHlfWICCI. llt.
1•YtNI COAST CC
Twe I.A• 11111 Of l'o .. .--· 1. llOH Ce'llCO, Jeyee He""an,
Grete..., 0.1-.rq, Marcelle s..4
Ill. 1 Marv eurll•. Corl-l'r-1111.
llell'f He .... l'"lon, Htleft Lar1lln, 14';
, M¥Y• .... •······ f ... l ..... Gtrforrl. Ml•1"9 HV"d .. y. Oo,.h ICeye\, Nwtcy
,.,,..._ Mar1orle Slocll••. Mllrci.a
$\oru, E•l\fflll\a V•l<IH, IU
T -F To..,,..,.,.,.,. A Fl19M-I. eo-Smith, JS. 2 8tlty Cetll(-1,
n .., J Ja .. 1ce Wllllesltle, J I; • •
OltrlMt HOl'°"'•Y. lTVI.
8 Fll(llll-1 11 .. 1 Yonell• Dor1, a.I· ly ....,.,.,..,,., JS; J ltlel .. _,.,
Corewtll, Ju~• "ullllortll, 16: s.
Hllcl .. W.lllfll, 21VI; 6. Mlldrtcl ~
Ilion.•.
Area Net Scores
.,. ......
8u•llMWl·flle141• IN I Clef a.da1°"
C.am,IMll •·t. •·•· lltd ftewt,..
0..My 1 1, -•·•; Miiier Ht•l-CHllotU ... I ... H . I 6,
$7,000
for only $139.03
a month.
WhQther you Med $5,()00 or $10,000 get It
from the ~ople who lend millions. Commerclel
Credit Monthly payment based on a $7,000
HomeOwner loan, for 84 months, at en annual
percentage nite of 16%. Total payment $11,678.52.
A loan of $5,000 and over must be secured by a
combination of real and personal property.
We ftnd WDyl to heJp.
COMMER_CIAL CRl-DJT C.ORfOP(\TlON
C FllQlll -1 Gr•I<"•" O"bt"' ,.,.., , 1 Olrl...,.. Ff"•fttl:U"• 3-1' a
M<i••ne H_.e,.11. • Ptt Cleruon • D Fl•9flt-I Cl••I Err•l\tlnt Vall»'.
IC•v Wl"IQlll n J E ...... , -If"· 31,
• Rv•ll PaY"f. lT''· S Mar_..,
-Cl.JI .. Frtncos11c·u.,,a •
SANTAAllA CC
SI""'• Pl•y T..,rntmeftl• A Fl~t lt;,11ul-I Lolt Efff, ti !Nell -1
L.•hl• ""'"°"••· ft. 2 . .Mar941re1 c,,..,o, 11; J e11N SlllM, 2J. '9 F ll91\\ IOroul-t (01111
ROl>ln..,,., " (Ntll-I. tllel Mary
_...,, 1Ct¥• v ... -... n ; J. llMI
,_Corle, •o..tff Hart. I• c '"Olrt IG•on1-1 (Itel I!....., r,..,_.., Ja<,•t Wll•I•. IOS 1"-11 I
Gloria OlllCI 7• 1 ECla Miller II
D FllQl\I C~o .. 1-1, 10.lle F...on,
11) IN•ll-1 He .. n l\btll. 1S. 1 111411
P•ull"" Wl\lle, Jo "-ell. 16
M ... ·s•uu1-n
1•\/tHI COAIT CC
A'1 0.11\lMrly WOii Ille m9ft'\.<illb
cllt,,,..lon\l\lp at Irv Int Coast Covnlrv
Cl4'D Wiii\ a 34.ftolt score ol lff 10"""
tt•I ClelenCllft(I <llalftplol\ e eb
Hoveo-n.
• '"'"'"" lie ,...,,..., ,., --at ISJ with WOiie ~rrl<O, Tom C.....·
"lintt -Dan l lbO llKI~ Ptl•
IC•-••a• ... ·• 411 IU.
l!LNIOUE\.CC
Pro Soccer
Standings ·1
Nert~ a....,1on Sec:u, LNew .... ,.,.rA Dlvltlea ..........
21l •lt lloc:~ter ,.,.,,,,,0
...,ttord
llM!on (l•«a90
~ ~ L~ :~·
1 I • I t• 1 I I I I ..
lulttA Dlwhlf'I ,_
N9WYO'' Pnol\/j,•ll).1\1.
Wl\hittqlO't
~''"'
J I • f7
• 1 1 • ••
I 1 S • ti
2)S311
0 s 0 ' 0 w .. 1.,,.Di.1,1 ...
Y~n•ouvu J 1 t S ti
'>o Altl• J 1 6 ~ 71
~t Lou•• 1 I I It 1t
•»rt11\nfJ 'I 1: & '> "' M•.,...wl-I 1 1 I ~
S.vlllerA Dlvtal••
0..110. 4 I 1 ] JI
'\<!ft Jot~ J ) ti II 11
...... A >lon•O J t I 6 1'
L<K A~le' ) 7 10 8 10
S.n OleQO 1 • f • '• , ...... ,.,Sc_,
T....,..10 I WtllllftQ10n 0 M,._,,.\Ole I . 5""' JO\e I
LO\ 411Qtk'\ • ,_.tllle ) &ener 1a11 F°"'"""• 1 lllel Jen
W•hon, Cr alt Wl111am1on, 1t099r ;::==========::::;, Mel ... T .. M&llafley,a; -$levy,
lloO v....-. 8111 t•o-, Erwin ic....
"· J. ll>el o.,. Ht-rrla, Fotl•r Morrill.
Clair Mo•••. ICtllll Htgbero Al
Hff".-.r .... r,, "•"''· Keft WIOd. R•td
-·· Oaff <;rat, "o" Mm.r. ""ii "-••.Pl!<! Allt>avm. II•<'°""'"· Al Simm• .... ,,.,. L-, Norm DtPI.,.. -·'° Mi.e<t llelt.r 1•11 Four-1 Mr
-Mo Dietl Spn,111, Mr ana Ml'\
John McNerntv. S.. 1 Cllel Mr -Mrs. J«-SIO l•r. Mr. ancl M"--m OePt•"qu•; M t •"d Mr\ 89n
Sc:.""'•'1r. Mr. •no Mrs. ••eCI -· Ml. ancl Mrs. 8111 Howard, Ml. ana Mrs..FreCIGl-,S1.
T eam T ennis
Standings
WortCI Ttalfl Te11!111
Eul Dlvl1lo11 ., \. Pct. 08
J I 7!0
save on
VOivo '"W \'Ori< C1e,,.l•nd
lndltna P.ttsDurgll
Boston
1 I ""' IOO l()Q
t
J
I J
S''I 1 ,We're an authorized Volvo
Wtsl Djv11i."
1 0
J t
1 1 1 ,
Phottn11
~O·~
Got..., Coate
LO> A'l .. tel
H•w•u ' \ ........ ,., o .....
lnd••na?t. S.n Olfqo 1l C•••et~Jl'. H•.,.~1111
M-ty'10•Me1
flloOA""'l«"'O"'tO
110
I 000 ..a>
IOO
IOO
1 11 dealer. We spcciJlilC 1n 7 lcjlsing Volvo for ICS). Call
-us today for a lea~c quulc.
l1JO I '
Marquis
VOi VOf I OYU I A
~Jll 01ci:11 I wy,Avc1 v c.t.11.
M1\)lt1n V1c111(714l 831·2.BHO
If Voll think vou aot the best deaf when you booaht
your Meteedet, Ctlll U\ and mftke surr vou did
HOuse Of ••1POrts
FKl<>ry A111110r11~ Mercedes 0•"' Ouln•
2131921·8588 714/~23-1250
NOW
s4377 i HonaMncr l.oenl •
370 E. 170. btntt • Phone t ua..l100
' t.
NBC 8 8:00 -·~Gemini Ma..n.••,.
Ben Murphy stan lii thii new TV movie. become a tall series, as a special aaent
ho hu powers ortnvi.SlbWty after an tX·
ploslon. AJ10 featured are Katherine
trawrord, Richard Dysart and Dana
Elcar.
KTLA e ~:00 -"Play Dirty.••
Another version ot the "Dirty Dozen"
plot, this time in North Africa as an ex·
convict force sets out to destroy Rom·
mel's supplies, with Michael Caine, Nigel
Davenport and Ni&el Bruce.
KHJ CJ 8:00 -''A Hard Day's
Night." One tor the early Bealle buffs -
the first movie with John, Paul, George
and Ringo in 1964. Songs include "And I
Love Her," .. Ringo's Theme•• and tbe ti·
Uetune.
TV DAILY / LOG ,
KOCE Television (50)
LOS ANGELES (AP> --"U's J1&1l ll~e tM Old
da.ys of radio," aald comedian Bob Rope u he re-
corded a bicentennial comedy album ror Capitol Recot'dl .
•11MA.1zha .. ...._ "
The follOWlnC ant BlllbOIH'• bOl reeord lik.l lor
tbe week «ndin1 Mat ll a. &My aJ>i>ear aa n'11t ..-·1wue of Blllboard maauw:
. ROI' SINGLES
1. BOOGIE FEVER·4Sylver1Cap tol
i . WELCOME BACK· Jobn SebuUan Warner·
.. America ls 200 Ye n Old .•. and Th re's Still
Hope.':.:...wu.pmentt'd bdore • tUdio oclieDct ln
HoJ)ywood thy 4 and will be releued 1n June. It •a. a Ml·tcale pl'Od1.1etion with full orchestra and a
(Qt that ·lndud~ PhyUil OUiu u &Uy Ros ,
Karl Maldn aa Georto Wuhlntton. Louis Nye as
Paul Revere, Don Rlckl as a Tory heckler ud
Jim Backus •John Hancock.
~rtJe N M . 3..SJLLYLOVESONGS·Win11Capttot ew OVJe
· •· FOOLED AROUND AND FELL JN LOVE. F.nr Altman EJvio Bishop Caprkom 1 .,
5. LOVE HANGOVER· Diana Ross Motown LOS ANGELES (AP>
-Robert Allmon, clirec· TOPLPa tor of "MASH " and 1. ROLLING STON~ ·Black And Blue RolUn1 "Nashville," has found
Stones his next film -2. WJNGSATTHESPEEOOFSOUNDCapitol .. Vicepoxy ..
. 3. PETER FRAMPTON • Frampton Come• Warner Brotheres will
Alive Aat M r e I e a s e t b e r ll m 4. LEO ZEPPELIN· Presence Swan Song described 11 "the story oi s. MARVIN GAYE· J Want You Tamla the military·lnduatrlal
complex ao4 lbe insanity EASYUSTENINO found within its ranb " 1: WELCOME BACK · John Sebastian Warner-1t ls based on the Robttt
Repnse Gossbach novel ''Easy 2 ANYTIME l 'U Be There · Paul Anka United and Hard Ways o'ut." ArtlSt.s
3. DON'T PULL YOUR LOVE . THEN 'you
CAN TELL ME GOODBYE • Glen Campbell Capitol
4. SILLY LOVE SONGS . Wines Capitol
S. RIGHT BACK WHERE WE STARTED
FROM· M axlne Nlehtiqale United Artists
"'tATMTDUS'r
tieM•Mlitl ....
f -"-"Cl ... , ...... M I _ HHefLtM .
"Sll'f llDUV INI
.. WWANOTHI
DIXIE DANCI kMS ..
CINCMALAN'l
11 U \t M.,IMI ao.-~ •n 1'11
UH r•h lilt
"TUI DllYEI" !al
CONTIMUOUS DAILY
t IM IM•U t It .,..,_.,.,,_ '"'o
It ..
CINE MALAND
_,..,..__...,..WM
'THIOUCt41SS AMO
DlaTWATH l'OI" ··1.u .,., DUHM ,,.,
"IANOSTC>tW' IXJ
"HAHAD llPlllMtMr'
nu1
WOOOYltllLN Ollt.NI lllATO..
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BDI ... ~-.:...
THE BUllll cJ:_Mi:,
ITltlllJIMlllUY
li't.UllllUCILll ...
"ENTl!R THE
DRAGON"
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l}~tob,~1oi~
·-.. . ·-.. -·-....... .
. __ , __ __
WM•IU.,_. ..... ._ ..............
MWI COMPAN'f IHI
..... ~.
-AOT POTATO 1Ht etllClut nm• '* DUOON ltl
·-•
8YIOOL80N • Ol .. DMet .........
OWiotte JaeofJlcn b M .,.,_
Ulnllt tn a d17 when mlllJ are
peulmi•tk. SM believes 1b«9
wUl ble peaee lD Iarael clUl'\AI \be
111 .. ol Ul1t ,eMf'lltion.
It will com• partially tbroUlb medicine. 1be 11ld durini an _fn.
tervlew at tbe Marriott Hotel lo
Newport Bead.
Mrs. Jacob9on ~ neUooal
preatdeit of Ha~ .. ih. was a
. 11)ffker for the Of'Pnl11doa'1 •
8outiem Padfic Cout ReCJoaal
conference.
A New Yorker by birth. abe
maket tour trip• annually to
Israel to oversee the current
Hadauab projects in that coun·
t.ry, which lnclude the buUd.inl
and runnlnt of lhree maJor
medlcal build1n1s.
"We are ln the process ot re-
buildin1 ou.r oritlnal bospttal lo
Jtruaalem and compleUDI an
elPt·ltOI')' cancer institute," she
u.id.
Mrs. Jacobetm u optlJnlstlc
~ peace bec•uae ·~ are ~ wbO are tirild d wUfare Uii wlaO want bnprgyemeet iQ
Utetr liYlns. 'Ibe ex.tremlsts
wcm't bave t.beti •l>'·. •
UAB•OTBE&S
''Wben you see Arab motllen
comlnt Oo the Hada•sah
medical ~enttrl) wltb their
bablet, you know it cm move tarWard.~'
Wltb medicine as a bridft,
t1wre wlll be "more meet.lop of
peoples" ud ''Arab and Jewiah
doctors •W be work.lne aide by aide." Mrs. Jacobsoo, who bas ·
traveled around the world speak-
inl for Haduaab and the nation
of hrael, jolned Jewtsh youth
movements as a YOWll girl "My
parents and crandpattnta, all ·
New Yorkers, wero deeply in·
tere:lted lo Palestine," she said.
Afttt her marriqe she chose
Hadauatl and began wortlns 0,p
the ladder to the office ot national
president, which i.s a four-ve...-term. "·.,...
to send two nunea to cure the tbehbtoryoftbepeOple. ''Weare
chUd:ren ln the alrfftl ol disease. more closely tnlt. We nnct we
The word Hadasaab aa lbe e•'talt by and be illmt."
Hebrew •ord tor ~. l!rs. __,.....,.,.._AsaWOridleaderlfttheZlonlit
Jacobson explained. Tho or· move'°eat, 1\e 11 privUeced to
cantuUon was named aller tho be mvl~ to ~riOd biiellnei by
Biblical n1ure becaUM It WN SttNtat7 of State Heney ~
founded on the Purtro bollday. lnaer. Tbeae a~ atven tor ap..
YOVTB CAMPS pcox.lmately 1$ leaders ol tho
Hadatuh a.l•o ls actlve 00 the J e w I a b c o m m u n l t y l n
American 1cen.e with s veo · Wuhlntton, D. C.
youth cami>e and an American EXTENSIVE aBADINO
•ffaJrs proiram. It teaches To l:oep abreast otwhat la hap-. J)eft1n1 tbrou1hout tbe world ln Jewish women that they have a · coojuction with ZJonlsm, Mn.
•· .. r1n responsibility beyond the Jaco~on reads tb• Britlab and home," Mrs. Jacobaoosaid. There are ctiapters in every Amer can preH, newspaper•
state, Waahlniton. o.c. and from llrael, current maeulnes
Puerto Rico and lt exist.s in even and book a on related toplcs. She said she enjo)'S travellnt
tht •'2ltlleat of American com-~cauae It elves bor an op· munitle.t. "It 1ives a sense ot · ""-... 1 ... identity witb a national cause... porturuty to 1et to In=&. re--...
The croup also ls acceplin& material i men u associates and now has As she •oe• to various COUD· 8,000. "ll l• Just takinC otf ••• the tries she la uked to talk about
former pruldenhaid. "The men Zionism, medicine, Sovl~t
believe to our achievements." Jewry and what la bappenlnC ln
Now in lt.s fourth generation of lheA~· S~ natl on al fl•ure ln
members, the group offers Hadassah, stt,e wa_s privil.,. e•.-A to "room for au ... ?ttrs. Jacobson a.:U added. "We make room for °J: meet the late Israeli prime
and comlne talent and the eld minister David Ben· Gurion and Golda Meir, both ot whom she
. .
/
Charlotte
Jacobson predicts
peace in Israel
in our lifetime.
lbdusah. a Jewish women'•
group, also ls working with the
"social absorption" problem in
Israel, wherein Jewish people
from various paru ot the earth are mercinl ln Israel and learn·
ing to live and work together,
''Hadassah is prbbably Uae 1>1\·
ly voluntary organi1aUon in the
world responsible for bullding
three larJe medical centers and
maintaining them,•· she added.
The organiution is a viable
irc>winl one, Mrs. Jacobson u :
serted. It was founded by a
woman from BaJUmore who was
shocked at the deplorable
medltal conditions she found
during a 1912 visit to Palt!$t.ine.
Hadusah's first accomplish-
ment after Its birth that year was
statesmen both. found exclUn1 and cballen&ln&.
"Women are comin g in Ben·Gurion bad an .. electric''
younaer and better educated. personality, she said. "He had a
They want to use their minds." · i f f Mrs. Jaco bson said the vts on o the uture. He knew
strength or Hadassah and other Israel had to develop Its desert,·
Jewllh oraanizaUons is due to which is the larcest part, ao be
(SeeOPTIMISM, Paie 82)
\
.
An.d That's · Jazz
By DENNIS McLEUAN
0t•o.11rl'l1ttllMf
The "silence Is golden" rule
that applies to all libraries was
broken recently in Huntington
Beach.
But that's to be expected when
a 14-plece dance band. six
singers and some 300 mu.sic lov·
ers 1et toe ether.
The place was the Pacific
Room In the Huntineton Beach
Library, Information and
Cultural Resources Center.
The cause of the precedent set·
line occasion was "Juz at lhe
Library," the first or what ls
planned to be a aeries or Sunday
afternoon and evening concerts
featurtn1 classical, folk, pbpular
and other musical styles.
While tbe pr e mi ere
performance was bUlcd u a con·
cert. lt was more like a casual
1et-to1ether or veteran musi·
clana who love to play and a.n au-
dience that la obviously enchant·
ed with the J au'° SWtn1 and Bil
Bandaound.
WELL-RECEIVED
Vocals and lnatrumentals were
Interrupted repeatedly by ap--
preclatl vo applause, provlne
band leader Bass Hutchinson'•
contention that there definitely is
an. audience for thJs type of
music.
"But you really have to search
for lt," commented one listener.
That's true. But when it la
found. it Is always a sell-out.
More than 400 swing band rans
turned out for a recent Balboa
Bay Club dinner-dance fealurtn1
the music or the Society for the
Preservation of Big Banda (100
were turned away).
Other Coast clubs. responding
to members' requests, have had
or are planning similar events.
"It seems to be what people
are looking for," said Rita Myer.
general manaeer of lhe Mesa
Verde Country Club, who felt It
may be because most members
are in their late 30s or earl)' 40&.
YOUNG LISTENERS
But that ls not the only aie
group that is enjoyln1 the
nostal1ic sound. The audience at
the library. hke those at the
dances. bad a larae number pf
youna people.
"I found some old records my
parenll had stored away." 11ld
one U1tener in his 20a. '·I Juat like
1be ~und or that eta ...
One woman, grateful the
youn1er generation is showing
an interest, summed up what
must have been on lhe minds or
lhoseatthellbrary: "lt's toogood
todle."
Vocalist Helen Hutchinson.
perched on a tall stool, opened
the concert with "You Can
Depend On Me," an upbeat '30s
Jazz tune. that set t.he mood for
the enthusiastic audience.
She was followed by her four
daughters-Sally. April, Tina
and Connie-who sang a number,'
a nd J erry Lehnertz. whose
smooth way with a ballad left
many j)eople wishing there was
room to dance.
In ract. when the musicians
broke lnto smaller 1roups on the
upper and lower decks or the
library, several couples did juat
that.
Tenor sax player Artie F1em·
int. who was a Hollywood musi·
clan for 40 years. was pleased
wlth the audience which he
described as belnt "warm and
enthusiastic ...
As.ked why the sound ls malting
a comeback, he replied, "A lot of
It la nostalgia. They haven't
heard anytblna like that for years ...
•
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Monday, May10, 1976
Breaking the
traditional silence
at Huntington Beach Library
were some 300 jazz-lovers.
More than 400 swing band fans turned out
for a nostalgic night of music
for li~teners and dancers. Serenading the
group is vocalist Harry Babbitt.
91
t .
'
Tra·mpS Carve Niche • 1n Art World
.... &MM.._
' Ci&ft' 'boxes alwa11 have bffn
fttyc1ed into other boxes for
/,ftJry, bW., HWln&•Wbatnots, ~ even into ahadow boxes. but
dne recyclln1 bobby that .eauabt
OD In the United Slates belon the t:Um of the centurJ was tramp ut. wblcb lW'Ded boxes into an
~form.
Helaine Fendelmao, wbo eol-
lttets the folk art, explained.
'tTramp art was made out. ol
p6eces of ~ood from ciaar, fruit
•d vecetatrle boxes and pieces
cf pine.
"Tbtse were chipped and
dlr'Ved or notched on the edaes.
mually wlth a pocket k:J\ife. Glue
and Dalla often were used to hold
I.be pieces &o1ether. There are
•
early uamples ln maoy areas or
the world of the art, which
Lrneled to tbe United States in
the middle of the 19th century.
"Layerin1 of the notched wood ovea a cuniuJative etreet to the
piece. so that they loot beavy.
M1n7 cltar boxes were very soft
wood, which was easily chiPOed. OthelJ were Bl'alillan mabo11n1
and Spanish cedar."
IMAGINATION
Her exblblt of the "htfped
wood pieces included a smal pin-
cushion on a pedestal, a piece
with litUe diamonds and hearts
that showed gre-at lmqination
••ud_ eowd not have been done by
a common hobo or bum." Mrs.
Faad.elman uplalned. "lt had to
be someone with skill anc! in·
teW1ence."
A very interesUnt mirror had
three carved ea1les, one larger ln tbe top center
A planter on lep bad been
made r~m a dynamle crate.
She also abo•td a beautiful
chaise lounae wilb the chipped
frame mac!e enUrelY out of ciJar
boxes. Tbe aprinp had come
from an olc! tractor.
DJTU84>0K Alt~1h ah6 had begun her
own collection when she received ~ sift of a piece, she became so
interested sbe now bas morel.ban
100 plues, she aaya. She planned
to •rite an article on the art, but
became so lnlrilued wi\h t.he
.subject that sbe wrote a. ~
"Tramp Art," which was recent·
ly published.
The book bas more than 100 11·
lo1tratl o n 1 incl ud ing
lfandrather clocks, a miniature
rolltop desk, a fireplace over·
mantle. a 1-foot-tall armoire in·
tricately ca~ved, headboards,
picture frames, sideboards and
the like.
Styles 'lfere often inf1uen~ by ~ country of origin. A maple
leaf design on one small ch t
mi.-& indicate that the piece Is of
Caii.aian origin. Some with hunt·
tn1 symbols misht have been
crafted at rusUc camps.
The art bas often been called
hobo art, but u was too well done
for hobos to b•ve be.en the only
80Utce, abe Hl)lalned. A tramp
of the 19th century was a pedd)e1' ·
or his own skills. The original
craftsmen were lhe Wan·
derburachen -wanderers or
trampers -who immigrated to
the United States for Jobs. WbittJ·
~ ~~ a favorite punuit as they
tramped the countryside lookln&
rorwork.
Flowers, animals, patriotic
and relia!ous symbols u well u
1eometrlc patterns are used u
mottro. Some cigar box 11Ml1
were worked into the overall de·
1ip1. Many well-carved pieces
have the notched cigar box
pieces decorating other kinds or
boxes which form a base. To be
authentic. tramp art must be
chip-carved and layered.
MatchatJck art, whlcb ti oflm
called tramp art. wu probably
done by priaonera, 1he says.
"In the early part ol the 20U1
century people were atven dG'it·
yourself tncts to do and I thlnk
1
that spawned interest because
there are so many tramp art
pieces that are almOlt ldenUcat.
The ltem1 that aurrived were too
1ood to be tbrowD away."
Ci&ar boxes were used because
they were available -all but a.
few &Ullet made them and they
could be bou.sbt for a few pen. rues. •
Mrs. Fendelman and her
husband, Burton, who also col•
lects the tramp art. are acti,e•I
with the American Museum of
FoltArt..
I·
Ann Landers
Del ive.r:y' s
So Special
~
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recently an 18·
year-old llrl wrote and uked U abe abould bave an
abortion. She aatd lt.., not u&inal her reU1ion
but wu afreid the autlt miehl haunt her forever.
Youaald, "Don'tclolt!" •
May 1 •aJ a rew 'WOr'da to I.bat youn1 woman
and to other• who may be •t.ruc1lln1 with the
aame decllloa f
My bUJt)and and I were told we would never•
be able to hne a family. We immediately put our
names lo at two adoption aaencles. We waited for
two yean and were becomtni vuy dlscoura1ed.
Theo we recelvecJ that wonderful phone call. A
)'OUDC aJrl wu about to deliver In three weeks. She
had decided to 1tve up Mr child for adopUon. You ~d have teen my buaband. We went Into orbit.
It wu unreal. I was on Clotld 9. We Immediately
called In the painters and &be paperbanaers. The
den wu turned into a nunery. Our families.
friends and nel1hbbrs brou&ht lif\a. Now all we hadtodowaswalt. .
Then the call came. The doctor ta.Id we bad a
beautiful, seven· pound baby lirl. After five days
of Indescribable excitement, we drove to lbe
hospital to pick up OW' an1el. We never saw lbe mother, which I'm aw-e was beat for all con·
cemed.
I would like to say a word to that roura1eous
iow\e woman. Thank you, dear little mother. for
havin1 the maturity and wisdom to 11ve up your
child. She bas brou1ht real meanin1 and joy to our
lives.
There will be times when you will wonder how
your little girl is get Ung along, and what life would
have been llke had you kept her. Let me assure
:you she is being cared for and loved by a grateful
family.
Hopefully you will one day marry and have
other children, but lbe memory of your first-born
will always be with you. Please know you will be
rememf>ered in our prayers as the most
courageous and most unselfish person in (be
world. -NO NAME, NOCITY. NO INITIALS
OBAR FRI ENDS: I woader bow many young
motben will wonder II th.ls letter waa meaat for
them. A good many, I bope. Thank you for wriUDg.
DE.AR ANN LANDERS: My "problem is no
big deal, but I hope you will print it because 1 ·11 bet
there are loads or teens llke myself who are
busged plenty by this. <I 'm a lS·year-old high
school sophomore.>
When someone phones me and I am not at
1 home. nobody ever bothers to tell me. The next
day at school, Mary or am or Joanie will say,
"Why didn't you call me back?" I have to tell
L them I dido 'l know they called. This is"'embarrass-
1 ing because it looks like nobody in my family
1 cares enou1h about me to give me a message,
1 which is humiliating 8fld irritating. It also makes
L me wonder how many good times I have missed
out because of my family's lack or consideration.
,. -MERIDEN.CONN.
DEAR CONN.: Read this column aloud at the
dinner &able tonight. Tell your family you wrote
1 the letter. Offer to fut a message pad by the phone
with a pen or pen cl attached. Ask lbem if lhey will
I ! please jot down &he name of .ayone who calls in
• your absence. Offer to do lhe same for them. If yo11 LI make tbJ1 reqaeat Uke a lady (no yelllnl or ac·
cusaUou> It 1ll011ld geeerate a (eellng of peace
and harmon1 -aed l'U bet vou'll ~et vnur
1 meaa1e1 la Ule fa&aft.
A no-nonsense approach lo how to deal with
life's most difficult and moil rewardiog arrange·
ment. Ann Lander's booklet, "Marriage-What
lo Expect," wiJI prepare you ror better or for
worse. Send your request to Ann Landers, P.O.
Box 1400, Elgin. JU. eouo. enclosing so cents in
coin and a long, stamped, self·add.ressed en·
velope.
From 81
... Optimism
''He set a personal example to gel the 1outh to
come lo the desert. He apent the lut 10 years 9f his Ufethere.''
Mrs. Meir Ja "lilted In 1omethin1 which
arouaea emotion in people," Mrs. Jacobson 1aid.
••When you're in a room with her you ~el up-Uf\ed."
Mrs. Jacobson has had much aauaractlon in
her years of work but 1he realizes there still are
·hard tJmea ahead for her adopted country ("I sort
orthlnk I'm Ii vine wlthonefootoneachalde").
"My birge1t 10Usfaction bu been to see
Jerusalem reunited, to see barriers removed and
people walking freely back and forth.
"Our bin est challenge will be to r11ht aralnst
Indifference of the world against being dominated
by the wealth of the Arabs. But 1 think that llDltl will pass.
"We have some of the most difficult years
ahead of us. Thnt we should have to juatlfy
Zionism again makes me very sad. But you cannot
be involved without having to be an opUmist.
"If people were discouraged they would
never fight. But It is a wute or time, which could
be spent on more construcU ve things.••
for
Whether you need $5.000 or $10,000 get it
from the people who lend millions. Commercial
Credit Monthly payment based on a SS,000
HomeCNmer loan. for 60 months, nt an annual
percentage rate of 16%. Total payment $7,295.40.
A loon of $5,000 and over must be secured by a
comblnatlon o( real and P8f'SOMI propetty.
W. ftnd way. to help.
CO~Cw. C~fTCQRJ'>Q~ON
ttmeo..-U..
1'70 E. HUI Slnd • PhoM: ~
• C11N111 Ute .._,._ A...a.Me ti ...... kuvwwa 8ll C..... a.**9 t
I .
Funding: Budding Enterprise ,
Among unusual items for sale at the annual
Irvine Terrace Philharmonic F1ea Market will
be tb's miniature green house, admired by
Carole Skoro. The sale will take place from 111
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 19, at the
Balboa Yacht Club. Tickets. at $1, may be
purchased at the door. Proceeds will supJ>Ort
the county Philharmonic Society programs.
·Meet, Grow, Uiiify
What does it mean to dec1de what to do about
be a s trong woman and It. "We will pull from
demand qu ality day every woman's ex-
care. a well·paying job perience."
and decent respect? The structure will be
Participants in Califia divided into exploring
Community -a one· prevailing theory. loo«-
week, all-woman ex· ing at sell and dealing
perience laking place Ju· with the new.
S2S each. Child care will
be J>rovided by pro·
f esSlOllala.
A $1-0 registration fee
payable to Califia ls re-
quired by May 15 and is
to be mailed to P . 0 . Box
39. Cardiff 92007. For
more information call
(213) 622·8818.
~Pisces
Tune In to ESP
TUSSDAY: MAY U
B,JIYDNEY QllA.Ra
AUD ()larcb Zl·APriJ lJ):
EmphNla Oft •bat people lb.lnk they mow u cont.ruled to actual
lad.I. You are able now to aupply
material. to put acrou point.a
and procram1.
TAualJS <Aprll »May 20>:
8• an h:neatlcator. Check
da.lma, ftlUNI. Look beyond the
auperflclal. Member ol oppoe.tte
Hl tuma on charm. Tber. could
be motlvttlon and uianlpulalloo
involved.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20>~ Bask em0Uon1 come Into pJay
but tbi• Is no time to play eames.
Mfans realise atakes are hllh
and "for keepa."
CANCE& (June 21·July 22):
Conclude transaction. Dr&Uiq
out ne1ot.1aUon1 would be error. You may at•rt aeetnc throuCh a haie ol wishful thlnltlng.
LEO <July 23·Au1. 22): You 1et
response to querJ. You find that
What wu aupposed to be a lark
ml1ht be an ea1te. Means you eet
more than 7ou bareained for.
VIRGO (Aue. 23-Sept. 22):
Emphasis on money, bow to ob-l4ln It, save it and invest it. Your
aecuri'Y -or lack or it -is
sPOt111hted. You become aware or needs, includinc emotional.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Cy-
cle hieh -take initlaUve. Trust
hunch, Judgment. Be confident.
Be direct, creative, independent.
Lcmr trt..,.,.much fn 11h:tU.... ICQaPIO (Oct. !S-Nov. 11):
Cbec:i betili\d lbe ~. Teko
bOtblna for 1r1n.ted • ..,_~ when valuablta.,. cone~.
Reeelpta, aafety dtpoelt boa kqa
nqu!,. attention.
&\GITrA&IUS <Nov. Ol>tc.
l1 > ; Accent on frlelidahlP-IOda1
acUvlty. romenlle amances.
Don't take other• -or yOunt1f
-too aerioualy. Reth tlnllou; chan1e or pace·l• neceuary.
CAPltlCORN <Doe. U.Jan.
19>: Some or your natural
abllitiea aurrace. Friends al10
become more evident. You're.
uked to "take over'' an aatsn·
ment. Preatl1e la on us-w\Qa.
AQVAIUUS (Jan. 20-P'eb. 18):
Lunar aspect colncldea now wi\h
journey, leachln1. learnln1,
aplritual inai1ht and ~mmunlc.· tfon. Correspondence la blCb oa
aienda.
PISCES <Feb. 19-Mardl JI)):
Concern with bidden matt.en, tbe
occult could be empbaalaecl.
Your extrasensory perception
comes i;to play. You want
freehand.
U May 1 llb ls your btrUIQf
you are lqtuitJve, a teacher. a
sensitive, moody, creati-ve
person who never seems to 10
along with the majority. Plainly.
you are lndividualt.stlc. con-
troversial, stubborn, senUmen-
tal, lonely, broodtn1. t&iented, •
generous apd a person with an
abundance or compa.sslon.
... .
Rites ·in Offing
Patrlcta Murphy
Patricia Murphy ol Gard~ Grove an4
Argis D. Hulsey, Huntington Beach plan to
marry in June.
Miu Murphy, principal of the Garden
"Grove Chri1tian Schoof, attended Golden
West Colle1e and California State Univenl·
ty at Lone Beach.
Worldnl t.owardl her master'• deiree bl
Christian 1chool admlniatraUon at Western
Graduate School. Loni Beach abe ll the
daushter of Elli! P. Murphy ;_;s Mn. Della
Wycltoff of Whittier. H~r fiance is the son of Otis Hulsey of
Fresno and Mrs. Jane Hulsey or Selma. He
graduated from Reedley High School and
the California Highway Patrol Academy,
SacrJlmento.
. \
ly 16-23 -will discuss M s. Brooks pointed out
this issue and develop that the major work will
political theory involvin1 be done with •·n~n ·
it. judgm~ntal, nonconfroo. -----------~---------------------------
Betty Willis Brooks, live, noninterruptive
Cal State Long Beach consclousness·raising
Woman's studies dire<:· techniques."
tor. said the nlne·woman The week w1U resem·
collecti~e organil-ing b I e o n e g I a n t
Califia wants the 150 brainstorming session,
participants to be from she said.
the full s pectrum or The fee IS S75 and in·
society. eludes all meals and
"We will share the sleeping arrangements
s kills and knowledge in four·person cabins.
needed t o grow stronger Children under 12 are
and more unified.·· welcome and their cost is
M s. Broo k s s aid
Califia will explore the "ft~~;=;:;;;~:;;;=~
"real problems" con·
fronting Ameri can
womanhood; that the
group will foc us on
where oppression Is and
--• I lhe lteasury
I ~ I t " • 'I.. I It i l
-I -I --1. ••• liiil liiill ilriiiii ii.1•1 I
Discover the remarkable
Gloria Marshall method!
INCLUDES
• A complete figure analysis, 'which tells you
exactly where and how to lose those unwanted
pounds and Inches.
• A unique scientific skin-fold test that deter-
mines the amount of excess fat In your body.
• A complete personalized session on exclusive
Gloria Marshall figure shaping equipment and
Individual nutritional guidance tips.
Let us atart you ·toward a slimmer tomorrow for
only $3.00 today.
Off er llmite<l to one visit per pJr1on.
Otorla Marahall flgu,.. aalona offer a dlgnltled atmoaphere for
women only •.• there'• no disrobing, atarvatlon dlett, muscle
buildlng exercl1et, pllla, or 1hot1. Take advantage of thl1 ape-
clal offer to convince youraell that the Gloria Marahall method
Is the "Good Sente" way to aolve your figure problem.
Cell Today for an appointment!
ht Our J Otl~ Year
10ith OVtr
100 Salont
fo 50 Citit1l
NEWPORT BEACH SANTA ANA/COSTA MESA -
1101 WEStCUff DI. • 642·3&30 ~51. BRISTOL SHOPPING CENTER • 55Ml
CACIOH fllON IOUTM COAST ft..UAJ
•
IOOMa
TUMBLEWEEDS I
, ()
FUNIY WINKERIEAN
RGMENTS
NANCY
ROU.O 15 LUCKY---HIS
DAD OWNS THIS
AMUSEMENT ~
...
.
' ~
TODAY'S CIDSSWDID PUZZLE
UNITEO Feature Syndicate
ACROSS
f.
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44 PrOfK1tnQ
qlet
48 14 pollllds lrt
Brrtain
47NOltrMltd
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Dodger ore11
!18Cltl1enol
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611 Actor ---
DAILY PtlOT p-
()I(;{. SJ(. I CM
~"b)~ f~ GM MY'
~s~.
by Tcim K. Ryan
by Tom BalM*
by Dal~ Hale
by Ernie Bushmiller
THAT'S THE FIRST
BUMPER CAR IVE SEEN
WITl-1 A CHAUFFEUR
DOOLEY'S WORLD
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
IF WtJ6E CARE
ABOUT tli\
~-eEING
Of'YERSWEET
WIFE~
$300010 C>A
C*"EROF
WtJMP'N'
MAlt-J Rietrr
AWAY!
ANIMAL CRACKERS
by Gus Arriola
by Ferd Johnson
by RodcJer Bollen
-(I'-'--._ ,111, --
PEANUTS
''I
I' I / I I
fl J
ll I !Ji I .,
Ii J
lff; -t~ -...
JUDGE PARK ER
l{AviHG 8EE1'4 G1vEH
T .. E ME!>SAGE TO
RETURN A PMOHE
CALL F~ A l.£A
CULVER SAIA ORMR
CONTEMPLATE!> WHAT
HE SHOulO 00.1
!f;;., ,,
MISS PEACH
~<:,,~/)/' ~-=-= ---------
by Charles M. Seidt THE GIRLS -------..,
MEV. LOOK!~ SROTHf~
IS Fl.MTIN6 M105EA
OH THE YlltHU'S l#:)JNO ! I '~ ~I ~ I
.. ~ I ~ i
~ ~I.A~ T).fA1'
ONE D' HI+ VIOLIN
Sf1'1Nfl~ WILL IJ~f.AI(
N TMf MIPOLE ~
A ~L.!CTION, ~.
by Harold ~ DOUX'
L.!T'~ JUST
SAY IT'~
A
CirlA'f.
F!!LING ....
by Mell
"Bdorc we &o to the second Oo(ll lo look .ti gin:llC\ let\ m:ikc up
our minch right here and now lhwl we're dcfin11cly amng lo rc\IM
the hat boollquc '
DENNIS THE MENACE
I
t
Uoftd!y.M!f 10. ,971
Bo .. eE.,eat
o.uy·,., .. tuill ~
NEWPORT HARBOR YACHT CLUB CELEBRATES 59th YEAR
Commodore Allen C•m~ll i•lutH St•ff ~·
Cottontail Score·s
In New PORC RaCe
Cottontail, a 37-foot sloop
owned and skippered by Dennis
Choate, Long Beach Yacht Club,
wns the overall and Clnss C win·
ner of the first race of the Pacific
Ocean Racing Conference for
yachts rated under the lntema·
Uonal Offshore Rule Mark llI(a).
Twenty-three yachts started
the race ofrSan Diego Saturday at
nobn Firs t lo finish al Long
Beach Sunday at 2:37 p.m. was
the 54 -foot sloop Aorangi, oWM'd
IY USC and skippered by Jim Ed·
dy Ill, Los Angeles. Yacht Club.
Laat boat to fmish was Wildfire at
8:10p.m .
THE RACE st:irted in a brisk
12·knot breeze off Point Loma but
Candice Cops
Bahia Club's
'Merry' Race
Brisk winds made an excellent
rncing day Sunday for yachts
sa iling in Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club's Merry·G<>-Round
race. the fourth feature of the
Aneelman Serles for yachts rat·
ed ,Performance Handicap Rae·
ing Fleet.
The Class A winner was Can·
cttce. an lslander-36 sailed by Art
Howard of the host club. Class B
went to Lumaran, Bill Rohrs,
Voyagers Yacht Club, and Class
C was won by Intrigue Ill. Roger
nltedorf, Navy Ye. Summary:
decrea~ed by the time the ne~t
had reached Dana Point where
most or them t acked across the
channel lo round the east end of
Catalina Island. The lightest part
of lhe race was on the back side
or tbe island where the nuky
brff%es had most of the fleet
uckin& offshore and onshore
without making any appreciable
progress.
Arter finally clearing the west
end of the island Sunday morning
most or the }achts had a brisk
spinnaker run to the fanish off the
Long Beach breakwater.
THE CLASS A winner was
Questar. a Swan-44 sloop s kip·
pered by 8111 Power, Newport
Harbor Yacht Club. Winner in
Cla ss B was Cadenza. a
P«:Jers1>n ·des\«1rn~dh two-\on[ler sa1 ed b}' Car Etc enlnb, Sao
Dleeo; Cottontail wastbeClassC
winner and Impact, a Peterson·
dni1I1ed 37-footer sailed by Tom
Tobin and Art DePever, San
Diego, wu the winnerlnClass D.
Here are the handicap resulta
computed late Sunday by the
sponsoring Yacht Racing Union
race officials: -
OVERALL -1, Cottontail; 2,
Impact; 3, Amb.ush, Ed Perry.
SDYC ; 3,Aorangi. ·
CLASS B -l , Cadema; 2, Hur·
ricane Deck, Morrie Kirk, BYC;
3, Vendetta, Hart Isaacs, CYC.
CLASS C -1, Cottontail; 2,
Cheetah. Dick Pennlncton,
KHYC; 3. Dakar, William
Goodley , DRYC.
CLASS D -1. Impact; 2, Am·
bush; 3, Tin Woodsman, Gordon
Fr1?9t. SDYC.
TIM &a"4)t UH1 d .. d.relsed
th ps" waa aald by 1everal
oldtlmers to be the l~1t tn the
h1ltor)I of the club, oldest In the Newport Harbor area. NtrYC
t.racUtlon.ally observes ill club
opentn1 on Mother's O:ay.
co•llODOtE ALLEN T
Campbell conducted the f1a1·
ra.Wna riles and m\rod\aCed na1
omcen1 and steff commodores.
Flag officers are Wllliam L.
Bents, vic<e commodore; Charles
P. Cotton. rear commodore;
Donald H. McKibbon, fleet Clip·
tain, and Robert A. Garrison,
port captain. •
ffilbllght of the day was the
presentation of awarcb for the
best rDaint.aioed yachts in the
dub's neet. Sweepstakes •inner
was Bandit. a Swan-44 ~Joop
owned by Steve Morton. Morton.
a recent member of the club from
ChJcago, uses the yacht pnmari·
ly for offshore racing ond oc·
caalonal cruising.
OTHER INSPECTION win·
nersi
Sail over 40 feet -Caprice
CCalkina-50) James a nd Diane
Myerson,
Sail under 40 feet -Savitar
<Co lumbia·34} Mrs. Charles
Be\•en.
Motor Sailer -Westerly
(custom Cal·C8) Tim, Tom and
JohnHpgan,
Power under 40 feet -Full
House CBertram-35) Harvey
Somers.
Power over 40 feet -Dorado
<Hatteras-.46) Rob Hixson. .
OFFSHOllE MOTOR Cruiser
-Refu1e (Garden> John EJUolt.
Bay boat -Honker <Sea
Cr&fl·20) Kirk Elliott
Junior Sweepstakes -Amen·
lia tS-0-S ) Mike di Oonata and
Les Beu.
Senior Non-Calm -Queen
Mary (Columbla·.8) Bruce Crary
Jr.
Junior Non-Calm -Odin
(Sabot> Brad Westcott.
Certificate of Mnil -Old
Glory <Sabol) John Benjamin
* * *
Dog Patch
Opening Day
Race Winner
Doc Patch, a new Peterson·
designed two-tanner owned by
Don Ayres Jr. and ...uect by his
sons Don and Doug was the win·
ner of the Internatlonal Offshore
Rule divhlon of Newport Harbor
Yacht Club's Openlna Day rac6
from Los Ancetea Harbor Satur·
day.
The race ls a traditional pre-
lude to NHYC's Opening Day.
Winner in the Performance
Handicap Racine Fie« division
was Kaao, sailed by Dick Elliott
Jr .• NHYC. The Mld&et Ocean
llactnc Fleet winner was Serena,
a Cal·29 sailed by Phil Doane.
· NHVC. Winner In the one-deslan
Elcbella·22 class wu Chaparral,
skippered by Pat Ayres, NHYC. CLASS A -l , Candice; 2, Puff,
Dave Stone, BCYC; 3, Fireblrd •
.Rob Lonspre, SSYC.
CLASS 8 -1, Lumaran; 2,
Enchantress, John Lee; BCYC;
3, Seduction, Eueene Williams,
RCYC.
North Star Takes
CLASS C -1, lntrl(Uf 111 , 2,
S<'nlt'h Mist . Don Andl'non,
BCYC : 3, Whlmsey, Jack
Lttr$On, OCYC.
Dana Point
Race Taken
By Audacious
Audacious, a Yanltee-38 sloop
sailed by Mike Kennedy, Dana
Point Yacht Club, was the Class
A winner of DPVC 's
Performance Handicap Raclng
. F1eet race Sunday.
Winner In Class B was Nuaget,
a CataUna-27 s kippered by .Bill
Murray, Capistrano S.y Veebt
aub, and Class c was won bJ
Beluga, a Coronado-25 sailed b;'
JUldine Johnson, DPYC. &lm·
m1ry:
CLASS A -1, AudadOUJ; a:
&.iodance, Jack Mayer, Capo
BYC: 3, Wildcat. Peter Scbooa·
maker, BCYC.
CLASS B -l, Nugget; 2,
Sunshine, Ron Malanoalty,
DPYC: 3., Avoca, Tim 1\Lllcr,
DPYC.
CLASS C-1, Belup; 3. PdtJ
LYnnt, Chuck Piette, DPYC; 3.
Company's Best, Otwp CUn·
nln&}lam, DPVC.
Firs.t in Wliitney
North Star. sailed by Roy Cun·
dirt and Tom Sbadden, Lons
Beach Yacht Club, won the final
race of Los An1eles Yacht Club'•
Lillie Whitney Series Saturday to
record a ~rfect score In tne beat
five of six races. Tht Little
Wh.itney Series I.a for boata 30 feet.
and under rated under the
Mtd1et Ocean Ract.nc Allocla·
Uonrule. ·
Warlock, tailed by BW Strohm,
LA YC. WU Ute overall aeries
winner In the Barris Serles for
Performance HancUcap Ract.na
Oeet, ulled over the aame
courses u Ute.Lltlle Whl.tney.
Sat•rda1'11late
MORA OV£kALL -l. North Star; 2, llerr1dowa, 8111 .
Lapworth, LA YC.
CLASS A -1. Ma~dowD; 2.
El Tlare tn, Blll retenon.
CBVC; 3. Aqel'a G*• Bay and
Tom Corbett, CBYC.
CLASS B -1. Nortb Slat; 2.
Olvera ~ Albert C&sWUoO
and Chris Seller, PVYC; I, &aD-
ber Duck II, Sebolleld and
At.kins. ABYC. PHRF·A -J, f1ambo1ut.
Barney Plam, LBVC; 2,
Warlock; 3, lla1Je, Stn•
Mulhollen and Alu Jouon,
ABVC.
CLASS B l, SbaWllitaa,
•
Cralt Norton and Bill
C&rmlchael, LAYC (under pro-
test>; 2. Mtra1e II, Howard
Hartry. LA YC; 3, Cherokee
Spirit, Branin and Morrl1on,
KHVC.
CLASS C -1, Vlxen, Mor1an Cox, LAYC; 2, Honey B~kct,
'&ob Anderson, Navy YC: 3. Tri·
dent, Phil Novodvonky, Navy
YC.
LIUleW11.._,
Flul Staadlaaa
OVERALL -l. North Star: 2. Aqel'aOate; 3, Merrydown.
CLASS A -1, Angel'1 Gate; 2,
Mf"1down; S, El Titre 11.
CLASS B -l, North Star; 2,
Tom Swift, Tom Coles, CYC; 3,
Olvera Street.
Dant. 8et1el
PblalStailetp
OVERALL -J, 'ffartoa: 2.
Speculation, Hoffman •nd
Aastla. LBYC; 3, Gbolt Wlnp,
David StdDer, LB YC. a.ASS A -1, Warlock; 2,
SpeculaUoo; S. Plambouytnt.
a.ASS B -1, Jchiban Kana,
1tattl Shindo, KHVC; 2, Unpr Laelet, R.lcbard Winn, CBYC; a,
Black &&ld Blue, Don Bleck,
LAYC.
CLASS C -1. Vlxea; l, J1oMJ
Bucket; a. Trident.
•
•
PUBLIC NO'l!CE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NO'IK&
•
..
Hob be~ Gets 10 Years
I Claims 'Mental Dlness' in 5 Bank Heists
ll'reaAP.._~._
A man who daJQMd be wu mentaUy tu when'-• ~11\uted ftorn CalJloml• to rob bHkl ln Lon1
lallDd ot tome St0.000 In l97f bu beeo tcntcaced to lO nan ln prtaon.
1be sentence was cJven to G.,lwd A.apla.11, 33,
o1 to& Oatos, In • Brooltlyn federal court. Aniwfh
'WU convict~ taat l'nOPU\ ln the sa.•oo robbery ot
Ute Bankers Tr\lll olad'folk ln Commacll on July 2, i.m.
Durlna hi• triaJ, An&wsh admltte4 to rour other
holdu1NJ In 1974 but ~ed Ulat bet was mentally Wal the time. • ..
MlllJonalie art colltttor ffantbaato• Hartford
IOtd bJ.a JQ.acre horse farm cat Brid1eharnpton,
• N.Y for "under Sl million."
The sale was dlsclosed at an
appeals board meeting.
The "under '1 mUlion"
Ogure came from Utepurcbaser,
Fnaceaco GalHI. wbo will
house a &room and rldingJna.ster
on t~ Long Island farm, where
he will continue to raiH cham·
pion jumpers. • ••HPOmo A Los Angeles radio statlon
manager clted for contempt for Wlt.hllOIClJnf a
purported Symbionese Liberation Army commuai-
que wW ask the state Supreme Court for relief his attorney says. '
Wlll Lew.la, general manager or KPFK. WU~·
nled u appeal or the contempt clt1Uon by the
Calllomia Court of Appeal, his
attorney. Mark Ro1eabaum sald.
Lewis was cited (or con-
tempt In Sul>J.!rior Court Feb. 20
when be refused to give the
county Grand Jury the com·
munlque allegedly sent by re-
Dlaining members ortheSLA .. • A San Francisco hout>e
Pfit!ter filed a federal court swt uwai
for $100 million damages against Parker Brothers,
alle11ing the company stole tus idea for the came
"PAYDAY."
Leureace J . Barter, 28. claimed that he
originated the pgpular game Feb. 9, 1973, and sub-
mitted lhe idea lo Parker Brothers. Barker said he
was turned down. Barker's wile, Shirley, is a com·
panion plaintiff In the
District Court suit.
Barker said he and ( J h is wHf! obtained PEOPLE Callfornh and Utah
trademarks for the eame. -------~ ..
In bis youth, the federal government im·
prisoned Robert M. Takasugl in a World War II in·
temment camp for Japanese-Americans. Now, the
government has m ade him u U.S. district court judge.
TaJcasugi, 45, was confirmed by the U.S. Senate
to sit on the Los Angeles federal bench, replacing
Judge E. Avery Crary, who at 70 is taking a part-time role.
The new judge, who spent three years al tbe
Tule Laite Internment camp, was named to the
Municipal Court bench in 1973 and was elevated to
Superior Court judge last year by Gov. Bdmwad G. Brown Jr. • A Fresno Municipal Court judge has been ac-
cused of breaching separation o'r church and state
by having a religious celebration when he was
sworn into office.
Huch Goodwin, a Baptist and Fresno's first
black junst, discarded the traditional solemn oath·
laking cerc mony in ra,·or of a religious service reaf.
firming his allegiance to God. Ourmg the t-'ebruary
event, he Indirectly deplored the constjtutionaJ
separation of church and stale.
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
• The Santa Clara County Human RtlaUonsCom· mm on wrote Cooclwtn cnUel&iQ& bla actlon aft~ rtadini an accounlot&M1enlce. • Presld nt Ford aooolrtted nve MW memben to tbo Board ot Fore p&boiartbJps.
'l'My are , ... B. Dellbeb. Oxfont. Ohlo, vlce
Pretldent or Mlaml Unlveretty ; ff•••&•• I. Pl..,_y, P•lo,a V•tdel Est•t•.
dean of the Center for Public At·
fa.Int. USC ; 1. ArdteHarcr.vea.
Ralet1h. N.C .• prealdtntolShaw
University: Mlc .. fl Radoel,
AnD Arbor. Mich., vi~ pral·
dent tor \lnJvenity reJaUona
Unl vtulty of M lchigan, and
G«'dGID D. Wlnapreu Jr., San
Antonio, Tu , prHldent. of
Trinity University. '
, L.OV • "°., •
When atelaard L. Baltlmore Ill firal con·
templated a U.S. t~in service aulgnment io
South Africa, hla Immediate re-
action was. "Not me." Then, he
thought, "Why not!"
When Joseph M. Secan first
mentioned such an assignment
to hU wife, "her first reaction
was one of sboclt and dlabellef,"
be said. But 1r•du ally, sbe came
around to accepting the Idea.
Baltimore, 28, and Seean,
31, are black. They were recettt·
ly named to State Department nous
posts in South Africa. where &overnment policies
segregate lbe races and place nonwhites in secon-dary roles.
Both sa.id in separate Interviews that they re.
quested tbe assignments and both said they hoped
to help break down the separatist system. • The latest edition of the Great Soviet En·
cyclopedia bas a new entry for dissident physicist
Andrei Sakh•ro• -but makes no mention or t.tre
Nobel Peace Prizebewonlastyear.
. After listing his credentials ln physics, includ·
Ull three &wards as a hero of Socialist labor. it
states simply: "In rettnt years
he has deviated from scienUlk rlll"'
activities." W
. After being active ln nuclear
research. Sakharov became the
leading tiuman rights
spokesman in tbe Soviet Union. ..
A Fresno evangelist filed a
complaint that he was beat.en
after highway patrolmen chased
him 8\ Speeds in excess of 100 SAK"AllOV
miles per hour on State Route 99 between
Bakersfield and Pixley.
The local CHP office reported that records.
show Lucien Wayne DeLaUe, 32, had to be subdued
when arrested near Pixley by Kern and Tulare CHP
units. .
l'll';TITIOUJ IUJINlfU
NAMI JTATlfMaNT
Thi lol-"'9 "''°" " 00of'9 -... ,.,
FUIME. 9 Woldllo,..r, Ir,.;,., CA .,, ..
-· J \l••t•I. t Wiloll-r, ,,,,.,,.. C4' '11U
Tllo\ lilu>IMU " <-led tty M !ft
d4'itdl.WI
H~,.J it~•rt
Tf\.•i '1•ttmcr\1 ••• t1t.S Wlftf?t , ....
C-IY Cltr' ol 0.~ COV"IY., April
"-'"" ,,,, ..
~·'1\t'~CI Or.., ... CoHt O.oly Pllel
........ llt, Jt.a"° Mey l. It. lt 7• IS»,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
•ttet Ofl AVA 11.AalUTY
Of'AMMVA •t"•T ~.* ... , .......... ... ---C-.-1<9 ......... ... __ !._.. ...... -, ..... .__ ....... ·-.... ,,. •• ._...,_ 1,_ ... .... ..._,--... -......... ...
·~·-. .., ...... , .. , ..... ~ .. .. _.,.. .... , .. , .. _.,_, , .. _ --·~ ... ~ ...... .,,, ................. "*OC•t·-Tillt ._..*' .• llllftc-1 ......... ........ , .. ,. ,...,_ ... ~
(tlllt• Orl•e. Now••rl .. .Clo
c.i .... -n.. 9'1ftc1MI _...,.. .. tlW...,..... .-1., 0 °'"" ..... KANfltA\. Wl\.1.1~ tie ... -..n Ce~te. oo ..
-...1e..c111Ce111-• "'*'-o. ..... C...t 0..1, .._ .... .,.., ..... ~ ,_l,
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOVI aUttNCU
NAMaOATbaNT n.. ... -...... ~ ....... , ......... -·ti JOLel aNTfllPlllSts. u .._ .... ,, .... , ...... ~....-....
ft714 CMN't'll I... C..W.rlOfl, 1' ...._
... ""-1 ........ C..lllonl•• '111• re..-. .. J • C.0-•r-. n -..,,,...
Ht t1A. 1~ .... C•lll-1• t1114 Tl\>t ~., ... u I• <..,ctv<l.0 Dy a
9M1r•l .. rTMr•lllp. 0.r'911L ~
""'' ,,_, •n ,,..., """' ,,,. ci...ni, O.r• ot Or-Oovtllr• ""'11 .. "'' l'WM
'°ldll•-<I °' ..... , .. ,, °"""' ....... Me•a. •0.11.u. tt1' ,.,, ''
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUI IUSIMHS llAMEITATCMIMT
, ... 1e11ow1,.. __., ... -. ~ -··· THVNOEll PllOOVCTS. "3 W IMll~ ..... ._. .. ec:ll,CA "*>
K l .. C.O,..r, Jr., 1'100 ~ S..S-
'lcl. Oo<ft!>40fl, CA. 9Clttl
C..I (. To1>l11. IMtt Bar-UM. -4Wl11"910fl 8".cll, c;.t.,,, ...
Jamtt A. Solum. ,.._.J O.r..,. 1.9"'· Hunt11>91on llucl\. CA.~
Tt>ls l)u"""' I~ (fl\CIUtl ... .,., • ;itftlrat-1,..,.,,,,,.
Kl119 COOl)er, Jr.
lllls nai.m ... 1 ••• Iliff iM 111 thl
County Cl•rll ol 0.Mge Coutlly Oii Ap<ll
1', 191~
'UIU ~I~ 0.Mqot Cotti O.lly PllOI. °'llril If. M. eftll Mar), 10. ttl4
' 7
P UBLIC NOTICE
6
4
2
•
5
~D
A
.1
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
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OAtl. Y PllOT
....1 .............. ....,,.. ~ ........... ~ ..... •. tew ,, "'-""········ ........
Houwl1of'S• ····•·········•··••·•·• ............................................. .
h•roall I 002 •-NI . .............................................. ·················~··· ..
HILlSll>I iST A. Tl
NIWPORT /VltW
Ownvr 11•c-rltlcl~ Utll.
low n price hallsldt.'
ho rnw In preslq~lou!I
l>ovt•r Shor\', ll11mblmg
lloor plan + acC'111o;-'11•" ul 1o·a11hlon 111hand pl~
much more. Ow11tr IJ,
dtt11Ctt'3h.•-u) ~ h\• inust
ell!!!! 'l'uk<' •d,·anlu¥~
~·ull 34G %3J!I
HOW IS Ut-UQUI OH
IALIOA ISL.A.HD
Sf'YGLASS STEAL
&"134.000. By o"ner. Bag,
bc•uttluJ l.USK olbr set en
lo• cl) \\ otlle-d·m gurdt'n
~l .
41EOROOM
PLUS POOL
Unique is 1-:X.cellent: Since opening in
March. U111quc Homes of Balboa
bland hos sold 14 homes tolaUng over
Sl.5 million. including soles on South
Bayfronl, East Buyfront. Apolcna <2 >.
Abalont• (2 > Onyx und Garnet.
Busine~s i.s b<!autirut for Unique on lh<?
lsland. Join us!
$52,500
Rare summertime OP·
porlunity: Pri vat e
parkway l eads t o
seclude d entrance
l..J\-l~h h11n~ room \\llh
Nnckltnt-f1 r('plarc•
I JNl()UI: liCMl:S
REALTORS• 675·7600
312 MJnne Avenue, 81lbo3 151and
~SCI M('SJ VH<N, 546·5990 .,,,., Ccr0tt1 drll Mir. 615·6000
Gourmet kitchen: Wall ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
of gluss k•ads to trop1eol ·--------i GI HO DOWM ba<'kyord wath shimmer·
ing summer tun pool: •OCEAN• HURRY
GeMt"ol IOOJGtMl'Cll 1002
Covert'<.! purty tune.polio 'z Blo('k to lx.-sl fish If\ & WON'T LA ST
for summer f11n BBQ ~w 1rnm1 n,.: beach . Super lrvlno locution.
Onlr S5250 total cfown Atodrm dupll'ic; ;i & :! U1.11ll on drumouc sini:lu
Seller must i,(.'41! llnn14 bdrms. Sdlcr will :evcl with :tbundant use
any offer: For quick <1p· (ln.ance. Sl~.WO .of wood & wullpaper for
poantment: 847·6010. lofboo loy Prop. tomotlon. Lar1tc CO\O~ °'"'"'1111• "''""'"~""'"'' RtoH~ pet10 ovorlook11 pool [~ ll~ftilfll1~~~·~1>~1!s~··~1~0~6~o~·~~~I ~;'!~~~~~o~~~~~~~~ -=o:::·-····-~· PRIME MESA VERDE 1-\ll tha) for only 3:"'8.IMlO
BEST .Uy llurl'\ JU$l hi.led ' <"all ·~ Jifll) .• BARGAIN ONLY S60.000!! ,.,.,, 9·••u ~·o,,,,,,.
PRICED 'free linell rul dt" '>II<' [® 1 · at SS3.000-sp:1c1ou!. l "trN•l unfold-; lhl!. lt;jJlilfi\!
t>edroom, 2 lMlh \\ollh l ~ r Q L1 I': Jo' A M I L V ~f:\ii•J;
rlc11unl formnl d inan)? 11c.nu-;. Louds of l"Xlra~ )
room. plus rounlr) 1nclud1ng -UUC I-~ -
kalchen/famalv r oom llIDt.:AWA Y BONUS
Cerpetcd thruout with HOOM: ! New hlock Willi.
Ol'W plu~h sh11g COfl)('l lo\ l'ly l'OV(.•rt•ll 1>al IO.
Complett.' bltns. ran•pla<·l' new pa1111 in aml out + +
nd all 011.• ntrus lluriy ·1 l>clll'r lcuv111R .ir\"1.1 hai.
lu1>l hi.l<'d: Won "t l.ii.l .".'"'lortunl' -) our t.:J111 '
on!( with a:o.:o.umuli lc VA I a~l", :11lv.1!'.':• . ..:1: -loJn':Call~IU 11r.1 I hura) l:all:.11>°"1.1
l ____ l[i'iMi ~HERITAGE
REALTORS
Superb Home
of the Week . .. Spanish Styl~
i'i<·ar :\tall' Sqirnrt• l'utk
1111 n 1l 1lc ,,1c s trl'd . l.o\
<'I' :i l1,•1J111om + lamll) "
110 & bonus rm. Thi~
home ls move0ln fresh
Upgrudcd thruout. Must
&eo to uppreriate. l\s· •
aumable l-'N)1/\ loan. Of·
"SI!! FOREVER" MOTHER ferett 11l 66l.ll50. <.::.ill for •
HILLSIDE EST "'TE appt. and be prcpurcd to
"" make an ofter on lbc OCEA.N IN·LAW '>llfll': Bn·athloik1ng 180 degree
'1ew of OC-1.'an nnd hxhts VA I~ I or Lagun:i and .Porta lino. OUMPEERSB l>Hor u tors dream Th1s -.upcrl.ily :ippoinll'd
Arta,trc sphl lc1t•I with home has a St>parJtr
dramat11· \\ood and ielu1:. Mother 1n-l:iw :ir"J 1555W.8ek.,,C.M..
con~lnu·taon. high vault Panehn~. 1.K'J m realm~~ ... •ttoMe111eta..ut
L"ll ltahni:,,, , 11,:w from shulll·r... rover('(! pat10.,_ ___ s.•.·li81i61i1SS._ __ _
c1cry room. i:ourmet fi~h pond, tom. of Palo~
k1tcht•n and danc. Enter· Verde stone •rnd Ill\ clv
latnt'N h\ 1n11 room with Lrl'CS too. J>nn•ll al only
BAYSHORE
huge i.LOr.e larcpluce plus 54:>,000.
Lt>rra<'e Secluded sun M £ jGua"il l deck with jacuzzi. ,
M<1i:nlflcen1master5u1ll' Place .
for a k inR or 'JUten Prapertin
II u r r y l>tl 5. ooo Jo'. P . 7.J2·1no .
9G3 illl!I 1400 OUAIUT NlWrol!T lfACH
BEAUTY
Ol1't 111 t "'' 'V'-' I'!) •I 1-i-<"I •
A [~IRMHI EXCLUSIVE
5 IH>ROOM·S IATH
Brand new k1trhen "'llh
tvcry "'re-saving <'onve
nienrr. 3,000 Square feel
nf 1bsolulc luxury.'
l\Jastrr I.lath has Jover·s
jaruul. llulle 3 car
i:arnrte. View the flay.
01A.ncr mui.t ~;,rrifire ONE STORY hdow market al Sl7!i.OOO.
NEWPORT RIVIERA t.:all fur details. (MG·7171. ~:~·,~t~~u"1~~ic·~l"c~~~1~ [~'~""IRUti1 s s
I
F
I
E
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
Eastside Charmer
Hordwood Ffoor5
A super s pcrlal famil>
room with r111sed hearth
brick (areplocc. Wood
shullcrs nn the w111dow~
+I ! .ir J?.ir.1gt·~. A 0 :'11 E
OF A KINU home fnr tlu
di'Cram1n:it1ni; buv1·r
1-''ull pnrn
ai~
.ANYTIME
J IR TRl·LEVEL
S4'.900
Uniqur trl·lcv<'I with
i.cc:luded rn.i~ler 1u11e. :' p•llo~! M ui.Ive w1,r11I
bt!am r<'lllnl!!I t•nh11nct·
)'our :.ccund lrvrl. <.:01)
11ourhlcl k 1td1a:n wllh
wood grain counter to"'
lh1rry-JUJ1l lasted~ Call
7S.2-li00
Ol'f~/ lft ••II S rlJtol J'OHt;l(JI
l~UNI
HEW LISTING!
COf"OM det Mor
3 Bdrm .• 2 bath home + Income from bachelor apt. over 2 c•r a•r•ae + extra parking; on H1 lots. 2-Slory home has 2
frplrs .• den & 1eparale
yard Sll9,500
673 0063 G422U3 Eves
associated
h' . r "·. tit ,. • l. '
• ,,., r ,
ovcrlookmi; 2 acre i:rccn-j J
hell ne<1r pool anrl knnas . -•=-= • ==•·-~ Sho\\ n hy ~1>1m111lmenl. -
CALLnow!l62·7788 RI-; S.il<•s ix-rson wanted KE:Y for ntw CM. ofr. Com
I m1ss1nn commensurate RE:ALTOP.~ ft w11·~p..·r. 6.'Jl.JWo.
SllK & ,INlt
O U M 0 U N T A I N 0 E N G X l D S R
H 0 L T B P A G 0 H A L R E B H U C
R B L D N D 8 0 I X E S H Y I R N 0
E E I I Y H I Y 0 X N K 0 L A l E R l
W R X L L V 0 A 0 I l 0 l X N A K I H
N I B 0 R 8 R J P P N A S J K N C S A
E C X 1 Y L L N T D B I H L E A U E R
• .,....,....,,_...,.., 0 [ W H N R T r C T A 0
L ~ L E N B M X ( H G A 0 0 D E N N T
L I N Y D Y I T J 0 II II ti U 0 I A D I
8 A II C I 0 R D G H
J O O 0 Y A ti K E ( D 0 0 D 0 E 0 A C
M O U N T A I N 0 ( W X I J l 0 l P S
8 L A G N 0 ~ E I G 0 0 l L C II D Y S
E Y O A E R B N I N C T R 0 H S l G T
.. 111uc1lon1 I l'I WO, I ow •PPtllf ww., . . ~
w11d, up. cSown or dl~elly. Fllld tedl tlld bo11 l1 In, J
Ot~le Billy Boy Mountain Dew ~
Oo9fe Song Hard Times Skip To My Lou~
[rle C•n•l Sunrise Stew 9411 •
Dinah John Henry Yankee Doodle
Tomorrow: Title$ or Leaders
llG CAMYON VWAILUS -$291,SOO t'abulo~ panoramic ocecin & bny
,. w! Be•utiruUy e tomiz4?d ! ~1 rblc
foyer. exp(•nslve cptnr & drnpe5,
crystal fixtur s .. ::ur-cond. Pool &
Jucuua & IO\'oly ti.lone polio
!)urroundlng home.
2111 S• Jo•• Hiils Rood
MIWrOIT ca.TU. ..... 644·4910
G••r.a eoozlG......i 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
WATERFRONT
Lido Nord 6 BR. or "1 BR. & 2 BR apl
On sandy b~ach. 5295.000
Bl LL GRUNDY, REALTOR
4 I I f' 'I y ',j' I;' '.. ~-fl f> l ') 0 ! 0 I
~~ .......... !?.~~1~~~~!'! .......... !~~
DMs.10.. of H.tlor lft•n"-ftt Co.
AIAMOOMID
1 llACH CHM.IT
l StOf). i bedroom, din·
tn1 room phas du.
P'lreplac·•· R111ard
b am In all room•.
~ of ll>a P1i\&lc and ..echadOd at.Jm~ell t.o bU& pcnlboulo malitt'r
retreat Sundeck. Z
Putiut. ~latlon pool •nd lcnnl1t c.:011rt11. ,.,
Stock to pr1v11tc bHt-h
11od w11tet -chann I.
Stt'P!\ to uct•un. Onl>
SU9.~00 <:oil lndo .
IO-~ (J"tNIN9•115'1#1!0 .,~ t•
[91111 1--------
-.. '27 . '' ..
LAST LARGE· ESTATE!
'n1b tremendou& home Co\'er 4.,000 sq. n .. on approx. ~ acre>. i the only
honest estate izcd honro ov.-1lablu m charmin~ Corona c.1c1 Mar. Al the very
crown ~r the urcn known as Corona
Highlands. with 5 bdrmi. .. 1 baths
Distress Sale
4......0....-G_.
Oi&ta i.a.. &ianl of • horoe~ C.bojce of ra~l
~o wrot1i.:c O\h
lo UMt ru,·h kite: a. &n
try to formal 11 v1n1
qu•ncrt, tanuly room
aA".a. 3 bedrooms. Just
U$,t00, 81'\ R • n 11
540-17:0
<yes. SEVEN>i beautiful POOi. wet ourux bar. \'l'r)', \'cry large dee I( o(f ers ~•utiful dupl('X with 5
punorumlc view of ocean. bay & ~'<irms per unll Thl11 IJ CUnyon, plUS U <-cp. patio lge. enouah 1nlllVC$tmcntopportun1 " " l) llli..e you nt•H•r !\nw
Tennis ~one?
. $42;110.
POOL
NORD BAYFRONTS
Two adjacent du.plexcs. 30 reet ench. eO
Glor OWl feet on sand.v beach.
$229,500 ANO ~o.ooo
LIDO REALTY
Jl77 Vie Lide, M.I. 67J·1IOO
----------
to park u half doten cars. in addition before. Hurry before It !>
lo the S curports & garage. This great toolate.Call445·0303 IYIUILDER CHICKTHISI
home must be seen to uppreciale the FOHST OLSON IMC 1--------111111 LAfll1t house-small lot. 3 lllYlll•
many line features 1l offers. Wul be hst1i• C...,,.,.... Br. 2 b1, laundry rm UCLUSIVIS POOL HOUSE t;hown by app·l. S2S:>,OOO CM-5 IDRM Quality built 3 bedroom. Spht levt!I. Near Lake FOi SOLID YALUl
only S47,f#5C> Sparkling SSl,000 Lur"c din1ni; room . Parle. 81keto~ach 1821 COMMERCJA~ 8ldf.
nl!W pool With lob or This U\l!rs1zed Unch H11rditt.ood lloon.. htth" Alabama. ssa.ooo. 4'700Sqf'l.onCoa ttf'#y.
deck 1 n g . 3 11 u & e BAY & BEACH REALTY t.l)'le may be meont ror plai>ter eonstructJon. BIC 847-3967 comer In lhe heart of
bedroom:.. 2 but h • OUI 27_ Y"' "'I • 67"' .. 000 your ltQ ranuly. s Lt& lot. "1trdeners puradi.se. Laguna. lrttplaceablt al ch arm 1 n e i. u n & b In e n1 ~ -· bds, bnck frplc &: the Sandy SOii. 13 Lurt;e fruit 1,..ine I 044 stN.m
kitchen Just lasted. charm ol IHy i,hukc. tree• + &r ecohou:.e. •••••••••••v •••••••••• WOOl>SV SETTI NG .
Woil°l IWit lhe w~k~! Won't la:.t, call today. llurry. ask1na S48,500 ZSTY·S74,990 New home, almul
Hurry.call 100.2 & ... r.. 1002 SU!N!IL Call~0-11~1 l ll +ct.. nnis~.2.stor)'38R,I!•,
ROllRTS REALTY ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• lmmaculute 2 s tory In ba. Lots or wood, 1l11u" 848-1688 ~-------1 ENGLISH COTIAGE lrvioe·s fabulous Colleae tile: Vaulted. beamed Buy Now For IEACH Park~ f\llly air condl· celhnas. lse. Ule frplc:.
S63,900 liQned. Step-up entry. ~~·.~~D· CIOM to
Ylf! "'RLY Rl<UT"'L A Be h s m Sh .. _.. d I ds t Formal dine. All lite ~ . ~ '"" • 3C Um 8f 8"""' roa way ea o lotchcn ho:.lS bulll·ln Dana Point Harbor. 2
NEWPORT IEACH manicured courtyard: DUPLEX $45 500 brcnkfast nook. F·ully Yeart new~ Iara• d~lcx
UST Spacious Cupprox 2 w Ind 1 n g colt u g e 1 • v oo comer 1oi atro Ina J REDUCED i.qft ) Don't miss th1:1 walkwav to hidden panelled ram1ly room •. l
5 400 4'a:.y upkcl'1>. con\erllblc ;itrium garden entry' $53 900 RAGSTONE with stone flreplace & Ir lots of PMVJ)cy. lkll In·
Lea!>c or le;&i.l' option. tor comµuny, i.tcp:. t Massi\'e .. Old Engh:.h.. ' • BAR:Wrouaht Iron eomoorhome& n~e
Mass i ve condo in bcuch home. Priced bnckfrontage!"Walls of Both 2 bedroom. 1 halh AREPLACE stairway to gigantic property. Price •t naht at S134.2SO 2 Qi ~ units. c lt.>cl bulltin:1. master suite-PLUS 2 576,000. !':ewport B1tach. llull<.' ... :rauc. 3 or Convert to gla~i. ., s urround lav1:.h separate yurd:s. l'ndo:.c flicw exclusive list.mg by more bedrooms & full GARDE!"' SPOT. Cloie
fireplact•, cntertainl·r· bt.>dr"nom t'orm al 0 hving room with hearth: garages. Good rental Ill· Diane T1,1ylor. Roomy 3 size DEN or office: Very In. 2·1\or)', 2 bdrm. home
delight. Double i,:ara11e Cabual dlnm.i. 1723 E . t'ormal dine: Gorgeous come. bl.'<lroom + family room EZ·care yard. Huge free & &ut!!ll apt. below. See Wllh opener. ~st pme gourmet kitchen: Call645 6646 whhlargeoP<'nbcaml!d r l H II todaynt$$7,~ '" lhe beuch area. Call Ocean. N. n. t: n g Ii s h pub room : • ceiling irnd hundsorne orm pal o. urry-co NORTll LAGUNA. Pride
1
now646·717l. 400Llr --ll1 Separate t e lepho1U?.~"· d toda)'7:'12-1700. oro~11ershlri· 2beautlful • ""' 'e€'TIG€ fil"eplace. Priced un er -··1M<1·11·r·~ ....... ,_,, .. • Of'fll•~9·"\1V"'11'1Ht1·t1• ~ ..... booth: Master bedroom · > ......... " • ""''"'"' ·~ ho CJl --· _,.. -HOM€ mkl. for quick sale. [ I mes on ar1• ClOrntr I ~ lflft;HWI f'. ·. :. ~~::~~~!~::~:ay~J~ _· :~r:~.coll ror nnancing ~ll1fJIJjf ~~~~a~~·~1~~:}.o:lli ., . -=·-·····~ ------s11ed bedrooms! A rare MESA VERDE Ph :S~0-3666 · -·~·-•-••-=--CON DO BUYS: 3 opportunity• For pnvate S59 500 Walnuts..-. l:ldrms .• 2 l)a .. xlot loca
SIDEWALK-Empty Hesters preYil'W call 847-0010. I bl • s I ·~ ~ '-*i~Ql ~ \'ERY h1.,blv upur11d.... Uon. close to shopplna " '-""''"9 .,1\~••0111. t mpcccu c p.ir1ou~. 'J. 19 ,. • '-"'· beach.~500 r Ir )OUr famll) ha:. I~; I bedrm. ? bath tw.iul)'-1 j~J'd' pr<>frss1onally dccorat· 2 Bd • 2 b . SUPERINT[NOENTS )trt>\\n, .md )Ou foci 1t'i. 111.la:l!ilJ V.:r) d ci.irubli.• urc.i. •• --• ·-· ed. 1mmac 2 :.lory on bcautlf~i°:r=denlielUan.:
Wutch our new home lime to make a mo\'c.JjtjlJi\ WJ.rm c.irth tonl' deror. We're here to help! Jl!'me lot close to pool clo1e to' every th int
I grov, in Ne" Chuml>l'ror ).ou 1ih,oulu ~oni.1dcr . . --·=-••'•=-fplcs. t·amily fun rm l'l>R. 2br. 2ba. brtck S52500
Ge..eral I 002 GeMt'al I 002 Commerce llulldrnit at South Coa:.t Shore<1. 11 So rt w al u . Don't D p · t I 0%6 pallo, xtrn thick shaa J 't 1 led 2 bd m ~
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jamboree Road and San.I planned unit develop 71R DUPLEX l\esJtate call 540-9922 •• ~ •• ~'.".••••••••••••• c1~. lullpy drpdnl4 ~.C,·Jl cJ: cl~e tO aho~plnJ i
•--------• ta Barbura (""'ntn" 101 mcnt w11h an abund11n O"l\el'-nno y . .,.. •"""· b h A 1 l IE:DROOM . . · '~ "', o( t'Ommumlv umcn111e:. Near beacb. 4BR upper DANA POl!'>IT. WOODY. Call art 4 ur wknd1. e1c • nx au.a owner
GLEN MAR + 20x20 JUJ'le :-.low rnleniewmg. Included L.,;) l.irgc pool ANO 3BR lower. 4h8u-. Fourplex St W.000 ~·3279 asklnSS49,950 Call 675-7225 with JBCU/2I .ind a C\er~th1n(! ~ln~s1ze.. WEBDREALTY493·0761 BEACH MOBILE
SSo 950 BOMSUlBS 5ROOOOM pnvute lake S.C S h.i'I Perfect. owner 5 unit plus WOULD YOU LIKE POOL + SPA '63 t.lAY~m~n IMO. ' • · l>l'Cn planned to retain an xlnt income. $133.500. l'omfortllbleJbcilrumn:!.Out,t.intl1n11 fllm1ly l th r '" .J'<I <llnt J"'COBSREALTY .. tn h11\e ~1..iBR home F.nJOY Summl.'r fun in 11m11ckontheoceanfrpnl. II I c P 1' u ·., 1• 1 1 • • h l · h rd V'1°w dlnina &llvln1 rms. uufh home lotall•t! m\ homr hl'aulrlu ' t t.. that m1,..t .... ~1,1 .. n•quin·1 675 6670 "•l 2 m !I, a ugc va · th•~ beautiful home. The .. '"""t nu1ol1l><•rh1""I ''c1n. 1·11r.ill'd ;!4, Balh'\ I 't I. 1'"'" .. I -Ot:l'<tn \IC"· nne mtl\! l o Awhuleorabuy!$13,9$0 . .. ~ .. ,. , "" , 11 l'r 1, n1: 111 ,10.i: t• ---. elegant ma!>te r :.ulle .,,. CA'tU"IDGE 20xr". 'l'nlt•nt to i.hopptn~ jml 1'11\,1\1• l'O(•luSt·cl 11u110 r I I l h .1 hou n , Modern F.·S1th~·2 HR h~<' harbor. und only :i yn. npens onto :1 lovers ""' " " OK ami v' c ac c.. "1 i; 2 BR. 2 bn. Deoutlrullv i.d1ools Pmt•dtoi.ell I ''1th i:.i:. ltr,• 11ni: llui:e Wt.> ~rc,cntly haH' '"o lolbool1lond 1006 R·2 ~onl•d w •ultut•h'd )-Oungfor:llilUOO" bulcony und overlooks
640·6161 1 l><111u:. r1w1m. 111".ll for oo· YOU CAM LIVE W ITH 1 nttenn1t~. Om• 1,.. ,1 lu" t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ar. & trwd l'rrn. only ZAG llOl>ZK Y Rt'ultnr the pool untl 1wrdens . lnc.bqxl. Looking down
I terla1111n.i Try Sl.\IOO YOUR urlou..' l"O·~tory with 31 119 •POLE .... A 00_3-114 --<1!).l liGtl 3-xlra bdrms + lutn rm on the pounding surf.
down Jui.l hslccJ Call MOTHER-IN·lAW! bl'<lrooml'. family room ._ " ----I 012 + d111 rm. Set on a larije with lar11e view deck. Sec
00.11111;7 11 d ''"h d d and 2 batlu •. i>rl'~t·ntly Traditional ~nglish C-Ollcge l'urk 3 br. 2 bu, Et Toro lot· in 3 fin<' nbrhood. WdayalS25.000! °'~"' • 1 '.,, \fv. '""' .. ,~ l ilo 1,~! I <A~~ 'i ~ Rt~as ~ owned by u µrurcss1onal Bricks. Beams & Charm. c"Ountry kit "/entertain ....................... 0oo·i buy until you st·e I~ I JQI, jJff;,lJI t':~·oadme aarrc,:nnlooutwol~'"'·c~unt :;:~~~~~ul~~~1;u~~·r~;~, ~?t~he;sa . Built In ~:1~l·r~rl~r.pll~~. ~~~c~~:,1::,:~l(~~n~:11~:.B;7J, ~.~~:m~~7'~1/~5'.~~o': 9·: ~~ '!~~ii~m!!!!:!I nr:u~ i; " ' ~ , v All Porb R.E. l'rllll' onl.> l::\ l'!> aft 11q ft . cathedral cc1hn.is <.: II Ott ~u., • L~::....!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!'~ n·1n>d 11uu rtcri. to hou>ot· l b!llll "•lh lnrm.11 chn tipm for ap11t i\11 <lu.> & rrµlc. din rm. fam rm. a t llY •••·2900
-----a mull! gcne1.1uo11 f.iml in.: Prn·t'l'> :•rl· s.;7.sou ~lH!>-SO:!~ s.it Sun.!HO!llil>J itrdn k1Lt•h, Ill'"'~ de·
llG CAM YOH j I ly wh1l·h cxtk'l'h 4uaht.> ond S72.000 f or r~rthl•r Corotto det Mor I 022 c·orutl.'cJ, ".ilk to :.chis.
R.imbltni: r.irH'h 'l\h'. TWO STORY to11:.truct1on. u1mto11 1nfurinutiun. l .\LL ••••••••••••••••••••••• MESADEt.MAR n v ow n er s 1,u.ooo.
tH l'I 3 OOI) "'I 11 11 FAMILY POOL .ind 11f"'"t'\ ,\n· 'uu s.i6·2\i00 121 I Br. l''Jm rm. tqilc. ~i ~h Sp.iciou~ bdrm' l.imth S26 950 I \hjl ~pcc1al .ilfl'rt1un.ilc • SELEC'f. RARE fl MD ! \\,.lk tu:.chb JU min lrom Open Sal&. Sttn 12·5
•LAGUNA !lilGUEL• ~lonarch Summit, active
adult comm. 38R 2BA.
574,500. rm . lorm.il ihruni: 'm ' rndep.-ntll·nl 111tl 'II.ii llarbor \'14w Hilb Sbr. OC ' I .... IS I' d II D I DONALD M. l lltP bn~ht. l'UUl\ll\ l.1hh1·I\ ;! ::.101~ b.t1~;11n' Jui.I fJm1h \\hll n'l'ld!> lhl!>I PROPE RTIES 2-Mory ho~e w rabulous Mlrport. llfll'l'I lor '->I ,l\en l' r. Auec1ele1 ... 11 ...
"11h brkl't JJe.1 1-:,11.1 ~h'l:>o lull µnn' l..111:c prtlll~·rt' ., C.dl no\\ oce.m & harbor view. 3 :~~~11:..ile. S~9.900 To f.cMlntoinVoll•y--1014;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-__
•ALISO BEACH
AREA•
3DR. frplc, dct gar. lrc
ocean view lot. S75.000. IJri;ic lot \\1th room Im 11' 111.: room \ i·r~ l.>r).;e li~J tl5;,t} ba, lrg bonu-1 rm. J><>OI & Hart Manor R.alty •••••••••••••••••••••••
PoOI Ill front or h.ic k l l.1m1I' ilimni: r11om <om ll"f'·. '9. '"~'• '"' • ' ATRIUM MODEL Qwl'I ltl\'Jl1t10 I ho' B11i.:ht 6. ~11.it iou" [~ I Jacuui )Jan~ xtra:;. l''ee 835-7045
TWO STORY
Et.EGAN CE •LAGUNA BEACH•
Panoramic coastal view
3BR. 3llA. rrom spacious
well constructed new
home. S95,000.
h hll>tl t..11dw11 1iki• in lllJ!ljl!ilJ Very popul.ir .ind hard to land 11) o"ner . ~19S.OOO. --. . . C. f. ColeSWOrt IY vant1\ •. w 111ui.:ht 1ron £jlj jJ rind 1,13n tfrautiful Open Sun .. 12-;,. 1531 FRt:i'iCHQTR ro~oo
REALTORS 640-00101 ~t.ur".J' t11 qun•n ,..11ed . --·-=··="·~' Mt: S ,\ WU 0 D S 4 SjndcasUe ~0·()459. 3BH 2'2ba. dbl ;tar
GREEN VALLY
CONDO
Dramatic entry takes
vou into this 4 bdrm .. 21':1
bat h h o me with
cathedral ce1hn1ts and
central 111r. You'll love
the sunken ramlly room
wrth fireplace and bar.
the kitchen eating space
and the formal dining
area. A real ~em for
-IH•d111om' !'tcl'lutled bedrooms. r.1m1ly room. CHARMING $39,SOO •••. rmr.979·6434
'"""'lt'r \\ bm lt rn \ anr 2 baths Ai.sumublc VA DUPLEX JAY W. YEATS RLTY.
31711CoastHwy. QUIET. 111e111ll\ Jdult .! I\ ll<'d"cx1d h•nn•d pat10 l A REPLACES 110.in al 7', mtere:.t Just
Br Condo \ l'I) t·k.111 •IH•rlt•lktnll "roui: ht iron + 2200 ,q rt or h ''Jnll listed al SG9.soo. Call . i\s cute as a bug this
l'onl. 'laun.1, \\t·1~ht f t•ndD,l'd swimmm pool i.µac:I! R.iml>hnl( :\le!iiu; 54._4141 quaint duplex hos
room 1-:IE'g.int' T11-t1n I Ent lo:.t.'(I i:.ir.i.:c plu~ e\ \'crcJI.' homt• with 3 bi,,: beamed ce11in~s. knolly
!ill 79111 ~:,1 ·Hl~I , 11,1 11urli.1n1t Tuk1: a1h an bcdrl){lm:., formal dm· 1 pine walls. wood burninR
1 t.Jl(t• 111 th1~ tnwnhnml' tn)?. laq,tl' ramily with fireplace and sunny Lease Option , \,lluc•! l'nll now7!i2·1700. wet bar,••uurmi•t kitchen patio. Near CarnaLion • '""· •· ; . • <' ., • "' •• r .. Park and beach. Bii: oct•;in \11•w . 11111 I andmuchmore''Ownerl ;~·~;: ~~;11 l~~j'.;i•\,l~~,~· 1 r !OJ ,t~,j1y.11 ~~tlns~~~~d s~'.~,~~n :r:~:~ With pn~~~;02!umable Ju~t ~.(~Ml + !1.1100 mu L~ -~~.!·!~ rq.(ht al S71l,!iUO. Cull ---------1 loan.Cull644·7211
IJkr, 1711 lll7~ 4.U I ' -~5880 j l IEDROOM
G ... rol IOOZ G..wf'ol 100 Sl7.750 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••i VA NO DOWH
Sl200 Total ca!>h nl•P<kd _ _ /JD.NIGEL
G/\ILEY E..
ASSCJCIATES
mecneb I Irvine
realty
liiiiiiiiilrlllllll•-----•l to hU\ lh1' beuullful 3
HUNTINGTON
HARIOUR
2 STORY.POOL
S6,l.900
CAMEO SHORES
Real Estate
by Md/IN
S. Laguna. .c99.2237
MEAR HACH
626 Virginia Park Dr.
_. .. _.._.._ ___ , S72.900
For sale by owner. For SO· and char·broller. Din ng
Take your MOTHER to j sec this gorgeou1 48R
3ho. lam rm w/rlrer.lo
meone wllh lots of kids. rm w/ lri deck. Easy
PAYOFFISDOUILE 2600 i.q . rt. home near stroll lo beoch and
red hill~
552·7500 Super equity builucr Miles Square Park. 5br.1~~~~~~~~~~I v1llogc. $144,500. priced below murkct lrg rl•creulion rm. 3ba. &1. OCEAN & CAMYO ...
Quullty COJ15trucuon. ha!> sewinH rm, SH-1,000. C..11 VIEW
5 bdrm~ .. J uath~. Lr!( wkdys, altrr 5 & wknds MEW OM Only 2,11 yrs. old. Wood.
Fam Hm. Spa1·1ous rloor all da,y, 531 ~$3. MARKET ~lui.s & class·dulaned plan. Plush i;recn area -
near all con~cnicncc!> Huittlnqton hach I 040 Ex()ui~ite Deane home. y famous architect.
968'4456 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bcaut1rully landscaped. Two-i.lory 11 vlng rm.
warmly decorated. This 2BR , lflnnt decks .
4 bedroom home 1lt in im skyh11ht.s too. L111te 10\
mal·ulal<' condition. Une and 11reat old trees. Very
or lho rinc l homes 1n lmprcu1ve s eltlna.
Eastside lncom•
Two duplexes 011 one lot
Xlnt. rond. hn hud loL'
of TLC. 1129.~.
559,000
I AYCREST!
Park like izround'
tnh(ln('t' t•ntry to 1111'
tlr11matlc e'C ccullH'
home Lurtic h' In& rnnm
"Ith crarkhni: r1replncl'
ldc11I lor 1•ntt•rtuin1n11
llu1tt' 1t.Hd1·n VICW
bedr;1om h o me Vt\
"1pcr mo,e-m rond1tum
New c.irpet11. lll'V. paint ~tar 1i hopp 1n1t and :.rhool~ t:\tNt ~ri;e rear
\art.I llurrv. It v.on 'l lllllt
ut this pncl' !163 lli67 <lll"f• t •• f ,\,,. f ,.,, "' ,,
OP&I SAT· WED 1·5
E'lcept1onal h·an Wellli
home with 3 BO & Cf\n·
vcrtJblc den. formal din
1111t. stveral sunny f>Sil!Os
and drumauc retracta-
hlc centr;il utrlum roor. Call 645-6646
4 Bcdrm home in nice
area. Bltns. carpets. V3·
cant corner. Walk lo
11hops, brko lo beach.
llltns. waler sortener.
spr1nklcr1i. Our best
buy:! Red Carpel
Jh•Jlton1. call 536-BRJG
Irvine. pnccd al 1100,500 Sl 15·~· ILOCKS
TO HACH
Older 2BR, rltn +a room
& both attached lo
aaruac. W,000.
Custom 3 ht'<lroom home Quality
l h r' u o u l " / " l cl r a g l' ~ :.i I o r c '.
B.1 .. t'mt'nt makes 1l Sl'J-:Cli\L'.
S121.500 l'uukt(' 1\ll1 .... on l;\2-8235
(1111:1)
[~li~lt\I 4511 CAMDEHDRIVI A pt€HIG€
CoU644·721 I '-i-~ HOM€~
/Jn Nl(1ll -------~gewater ') ~EAL ESTATE
k1t r h<'n D111t> Lush ._._...,....,.....,_....,....,...,_.
tr o pac·.11 w.illl•d
(llllll y &
llSSULlll Tl S
court\ urd ~"1•1•p1n1t
642•1235 644·6200 ~t111rl' io m;1u1H• ma~h·• '°' Dov•r Orlw H1rbor view Center suite and l(Ul•llt 11uurll·r~ Show~ hkc a model Cnll lrvlM •t C•mJIU' Valley Qnltr 96.'J.71181. 1 • 752•1414 Ql'INl•l'l•llj lUllllO~ Not'f' ?.:::~ .......... !~~i=-~ .......... !!~ J e 1111
SINGLE STORY
If )nu don~ drive this 2 Costa~.. I 024
l>C'droom l nndn u1 ju~t ••••••••••••••••••••••• rLJhl for Y•>U. JUST
STEPS to ult 11hopptnJ MESA VERDE
nnd publlr tron11><>rlo· 4BH, fum1ly rm, 2BA.
lion. ThL11 Nuw Orlcorut frplc, lu~h cpt. Very belll
home 1s v11c11nt and orea. Asklniz S67,9SO
OV.1!\l.t!!ili'. BARRETT Ttado OK. Pilot Ren I PETE Estate. 540.0SSS.
-REALTY-WA TERFROHT Dy Ownc:r. lg 3bd. 2ba. htd LUXURY ~"-_ ~ pool, xtras 16th & lrvlne, 'fie~~
PllY A Tl TBMS COUWT
Fully li~hled regulation slze tennis
court on 1.7 acre hilltop e state
w/'J20 dcttrec view from the ocean
to the mounltnns. Surrounded by
rolhng lawns. l'.?ardens. and tall
trees. 4 bedroom custom home
combines hand-made mission tile
floors. hand lt>xlurl.>d plaster waJls,
open beam ccilin~s. oak paneling,
llnd Italian and Mexican ceramic
tiles. Enclosed courlyard patio
encompasses 62' swimming pool
and jacuzzi. Adjocent 2 room guest
house. $475.000.
A COUIWILL lAMr• CO.
644-1766
f'or VIP ent ertoln1n11
with pier. noat & sandy ~nch for the cblldrtn'i.
dt-liaht. Custom de ~·~· thls maaomcent· ty appointed ram homo
has• bdrms. 4 ba. formal
din rm. & delightful patio
area • Appl. only •
GJG.1711 .
~
Walker C lee
Real fstate
TlMeForS..Mer!
Bal l~le dupln. wait to
the Bay. Both uni~ re·
mockled. F'ronl hoUSO 2
bedrrns. den, flrcpla«o +
one bedroom •PL wuoo. 644-7210
... w.n.w.c.w.-c._-sm.900. 642 2312 5-lpm.
S©~4llA-~£~s·
Tltal lnlri9uitt9 WortJ Gom• wilA o CA11cA/e -------"'QA' .. ~-----•......... '-"t"' .... ..... ~ ... ti.-.... ,.._._ ...... ...
HYSPEC I I I I I' I
l A c R y I •
..__..1 __ r ........ I .__I f r
PAHRY I r ......... -,-....-... _. • If yoll/rt reiecMd b'f -I' I I WOlfttf\, cbl'•1"' "° win -._..__.__.___._.,J oeher: Quit white >p/re -
fEKROD I ~ I I I r 1•0 ~.:-....~-=-
-------.... _ .......... No 2 .........
• 't•NI NlH&OfO ttnus IN I' r ·,i IH(l:f S()UAtfl • _ •
e l;NKlAMlll AIOvt. mun I I I TO GfT Alll"Wft • • •
SCl.AM--UTS Aaswen r. Clesslfk..._ IOIO
.. BUILDERS .•
R·2 LAND
+ 2 HOUSES
21,000 Sq. tt. R 2 lot
ftoom tor nine unlti.. fo:x
tellent l•H'1tll11n. Un·
believable \lrlC\J· Prln
cipal1Qnly1> e1111e cull
Ph11540-3888
W.'te ha,. to help!
•BUSJNESS OK·4 Br. 2
ba, tal'pel. ~ w. 19th
$45,000. 642-
Upclcrt.cl Fann Hous•
Vacant 3 Or. I bo ,
$44,000 SOG W Wll~l.
EASTSIDE
TRIPLEX
$50,000.
Extellent Iota •
Uon .•• Oond l neom'}-.
~ taxahelttr ... Please
call
v/Olan
REAL ESTAH
'100 <, .. '''" ,,, '>t
IUO S.Coo1t Hwy.
494-1536
I t'.il •1'' ••• , •• ,, _ '°201o.COMI •M-!§1t
DOLL Hous1 w~R~r:!~!'~1 . ., ~~~!!:! .... ~~.~~ I
As._.. SJ7 ,500 v A acre. w.•th 11weeplr11t vu of OHLY OHi
Tr:ec Aodded 120• deep city. Spiral slalrcue, FOUR BEDROOMS I
loc.w/l.Sd8 vinyl filtered ~~Y· 3 bdrms. with 80 mil• panoramrc!
pool. EXPANSIVE 13· ' ocean view In thl1 lovel1
famJl,y rm w/WET DAR.I private area al lh•
Formal dine. ntw n o-Oen vu'• charm. 23r h.,e UHllLllVAIL! '
Wl'C noor. l(U BUQ. M · dlnrm. h11rdwtl rtrA. rRICIOFSt4 IOO "Ume II' 1'.t f'Xl!'ling rrplc. + SC!p. Ir& J0r \U ' •
loan ~ mo pa)'s oil opt/3car1t1tr. N. LAI! 1 \? 499·4514
Mcfadden & R\!llch. Ukr blk bch. SIU.~ Assum HELEN M. BUSll
UC2·55ll loan. 0Wncr073 3731 & ASSOCIATES
~So. Coa&l Hwy.
SOLD YOUR HOME7 HANSEL & C RETEL -------
Goltome cath? You ~on QIARMER with ooo of Laguna Niguel• I
purchase this prntig the areot white-water ~L.-....a...-.t--~ hom~ w/ J>O?' subject views. Hidden amon1 ""'~ -···-·'",. e:t1sunc 7'1A: VA loan. maturttrt"e1· perf~ctror •••IUOH ON f. UILL
FuU payment ot M05 per artht'a att.ldlo or nx·up with a maanlllctnt vf9.w
month. 4 Pd, 2 story• UP· by uuUve bandy man. of lake a11d mlnt. 4 BR~ 3 graded tbruout. Nea $78 000 ba, m~mlied kitchen.
golf cou111e, shoppinc & NORtHS REALTY wood poncllng. /\ fin• ~hool1 ST4,9SO. 9'8·3371 romlly hom • m.600 fl
orMG-175-1 . 494-80 7 l.USURA Niguel Realty
ll0.5050 496-4040 ~
Walkm & ler.
R1t11I tst111e
TOP OF WORLD
4 BR.21\ bu • ram. rm.
Bltt 2-sty. f"ricuvny area
S76,SOO Ail '401$M -----
,,,,. .
...... ,_s. Ot1iet-a ... 1st• • I'*"'•"'",. u• , ••• ..._...,. • • d O.,hn1u.fwlt uoo Mondi M 10 1g1s 87 ••••M•• • • •• •• ••••••• • • • .-... • •••• • • •• •• •• • •••• • •••••• • • •• •• •• ..... •• • •• •••••a••••••••••••••• ••••• • •• ••• ............ •• • ..... ••••••• •, •• • • • • =~;;,Yi..:.·.;;.;.;:rf~.;.•:..;.;;;;...:;. ______ ~-------_..,..._ ...... =-:. ~.._... IHJ ....... ,..ap1rt, 2000-....,.,.,_tty 2000 Poa.t lll6L.agilieleKh J241 Cl>lllgo2br.aba,°"9• .. alzahu.fwa. i.,_1 11hlllhira. ···~·.;-•~r.;.......... ........................ ...................... . ............................................. va ... P'1 Mat~ Pri"'~l, ............................................... . •• BENECIA ENNJS. sv.irn ... ,,guted Oitct. fll>k. *"' etira. CoiteMIM Jl24 tMIMttoehoclt 314 ..................... ..
__... oomm11n ... 'It'"'· 2bd. :!b \\'lllTl!:WATER Vl~W. ltar1ar. $r-S • .,,_J!Q,.1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 'MIE EXCITU~C
UfVI ~~ DAILJ. Our of Hee or twer ~. {)l\V & WiUbct/ Walk to beach. Lux~~· C'ASA Vl CTOBlA •N£ARC()MPl.i.TION~ PALM MfSA APTS.
8Rt:.lltt'Utl\·•bomc. 19..000.000. to th flrstquatrt rur l97G. dr)Ct"~8l"16TB do, 3 br, %V. b~. New ~&-MS .... sM41 l,Wbr.O.lunUnhtr. 1::1tclttna:nl.'wo<tullaptt. UINU1'.ES"'rONl'l
•·-· ... ' l\t t f th t I I h .... . '°""'"" v• l2l4 ca.,,.t Cr drpa. Vnfum ..................... _ orhm CU/wtr1'>d lli885'Lvn1t/ltunt Bforh ucu. -.. _,. 50. OS o . n so ~i. \'O ume . :as ~~n ~·~ ,::;::: ..... !. ........ \'e<1r leHe sus mo ...... ,.,_.. 1106 Adults No~u~ a~te Adj:acertt 1run1.1iarbour' D.lrh, t&amt. jM-•514 pyramtdini: clients up mto tar1c1 ~ • . onrtooks AU•o Pier "••••••••••••••••••••••• Pool Acrm elev.tori $404l442 lf0·1U3 fromSlll\I. ~~1 . tnn~ lmcot properties. Wtlh sales lik<> ,~ •2,~-r Ja s;.~,::~ t.a'u.na z16210c:ean Vitt· Bachcl<>f. LltUo Island. ~ Vtctor111'.6U-81no N ..__ h ' 8 .siM Adults. No ieh ll~n\t.~w.h • =· ODr only morale problem is that OK -mo-~ ta Oml". Cull ~\fvt, Qukt •dult~ S200 irly ... B 1, .. o~ b d 'c~or1 -011eK ,.! i', • (•BJ~~E!a?.alteo~", .. ,'~ ... ,1l wAnoc1. ll . d -"th Ii u· d 't 6136314 Callb13-~l. ~ r • &.Ht, ran new ~1naos ..... e. ... IUI ., ,,v '32325So. Cout Hwy, e m~ wor u.& e & n g oesn oa IHce. 3240 --Tv.nhse tt)'le. Frpk. L1e Main Kentnh. 540-WO l)lnt.) -----mana~e lo let up the length O( the ·••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... P ... llilla l707 p\ll pallo. aar. 127~. 5469860
0\\'.'NER. hall. JC you hn\·~ income property. be Ftttpl•cc-i Rcdroom. 2er. walk to bch, fr'plc. •••••••••••••••••.,.•••• Adlta. no pets • .MAT Elden '"* 3144 • a.. · TR~SF~!tR000ED1 rt u•r-ental hou!ie or 200 unat11o or more txa + bonut room ow partially furn. Deam ~•ch pad, b c:~lot uol.t. "1·l658 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~DOA BAX c0iuti: nn :t't1C'er~~e'IA ••• . t:D· d . -d i d ( d "'""" 963 ~....,. ...,., .;... • eel \In I• &: a r lsc Sl50 uUJ pd t'ee y.-u R ._ uivwcater, 4 nl' .i u. Wk· tnac. 48R, 3ba. ex.c: an are mlereste n a lUl( e C~re ...,.. ._,.,.....,.1,..., 71'TG·7/17 • 1 R 'r. ,.C. t~ln Rfntll1$ ~o-~& New adult waterfron\ .-TI• oc" t__vormonlhly.f.7.,..1030
t-rllenl. )(tn vleW .. Vt'I') exchani.;e. n l ax r~e exchan~e. into :-;ew tv.nhse. 2 br. 1~. bu. ulred. ~lsi-u:;· . •Pta lo Mua Ve~do. ' Vida Aph -rm. Fut nrl'flw, Mo,·~· larger income properly or income rpt1. drps ranae q Coste Mao 3724 ~outlful ludi1eapint:. You u tlnjoy " nitaxt'd
11' lin<l llllrt ro live. propertv of another type ple:ise call d$ti'whr. dbl• att. tinr: l Hl.. 3250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t::icrepUonally rlt'b In· ureiityle ln the ~itc.lu~lve Sul'*· " . • h 1. t <I p u ~ "' s•7 "'O WI•"' & UP '-terion1. t&a bdrms lroM Vtllua:c or Turtle nck. UONO REALTV our ofhce. Hon~st lojuo -WC uve \\ Jluu 00('~rt•r. 11 0·•••••••••••••••••••••o ~ •" 5ft S2'75.M1.'Sl&Verd0Villull. Chok<:of1lo3Udrmsan· 131'°411 495-4773 buyers who have closed escrows with ~~~c. uc Sllomo 2Slol')•.4br,Jba.wlth 111t ·~~llo'ddDR Apts 1~ lleH V~rd• D1ivc cl. ll i.tory. 2 urun
.,.,...,----. .------1 us before who hnn~ Crom $5000 to tlw cxlrn11.$47$/mo. lst ..... ~ fel ~rvAvaU t:ut. Coata Men . townhomc11.$200tu ft.
Nt.,....ltac:h 106' SSOOOOO uvallnble We al:>~ havo l.SF.ncwtwnh1>e.5mlnt lost +SIOO. Bro"cr •ChPhon11.}~~~:H1tdpvol C114J54().88'7t . mo.Threcllockvicw.Or .. ••••• ••• •••• ••••• ••• • • • ' : · b c h . 2 l:J r 2 '• 8 u s.iG-0814 • .,reo ..... ct oo Irvine. 833-IMOO Jror 011 Canyon pro· ma!1Y che nls looking for the last leg of poolstde. suunu, Jacuu; •Low m?flthJy.rat\!1. Hoclende Dt MHG
pettleS. c:all e11 Canyon their exchange up. tr you urc oot rC<e rrn. blln.., me refrlg . .a.Br. 2b• l mmaculat«l. •SSOf"I' "·eek 11 rcul 160 w. WUtott. C.M. L09WH hach 3141 Br~r:'nd'!!~!~01~!~'d'1'~1<'
Real\l,644-U93 interested in exchanging but would qxs & drlJCi, dbl gar, aut 23382 Moraal~ No ~u. w/ud Clowd G~1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •
N ""WPORT SHOR L·s. like to sell under highly advantageous -dr opnr. no children. n S3TS. ~tr pd. Av~1l r.tay 2376NewPort Blvd. CM BEAUT GROUNDS Drop tt ~bble into the oct~·":~~iJ ~u~aou; ua.:}l ,.. .,. ""li s.1iJO ~36_ .... u 1-5. ISIOO depl, 838-ZA$l, Mll·91Mor64s.3967 ADUL...:._.-NO P"'TS Otcan from your Apt. b ,, xlnt ~ad. 4 Br 2~ s.. tux slrudunng. please call for a n ,... · ...,...,., 5111·39('1 •or .... Lease. Luxu1•y. i:ecurity, ch: 1 br; <'ornor l r ;""
upcraded. many xtriu1. uppointmcnl with one of our highly •POOL llOME• 3252 SUS CASITAS lO mmutl'tl to ocean. Lge Mature adults. 31155 Ci.t. br; ?br, 2bath.'( Uc;imt'd ClOSf! to beach. pool & k'll d ff 3 Br 3 Ba lg liv rm Ill LOIJUM NICJMI FliR:'.11 DACH~& l BR 1 bt'. 2 br upper. 2 br Hwy 499 ~ Uv rm$. dininM ;1Na.:: ..
t e nnis crl. Afl 4 P !\I 1\ 1 e sta · ram ~m. m~ny xtrai:. S.i ••••••••••••••••••••••• Excepttonolly Nice 1°""!'·h ~a l ite· AllS2re· · · · storage. potioi.. det'k!..
-wkdys. 1111 day wknds. Ii Q II ~II 1n.·-'I ~ mo 962 7095 · CONDO 3 br. 2 b:i. highly 2UONewpo.rt a111d .. C.M. Gurbu c · rom 1 00. Ocean vu:ow. l Br. SIKS. lllndsca1K'd ~roul)ds. M\. &48-8025 di •-11a_ , ..-upgraded. Louds of as ~ woater ncl. SlnglcsOK. Fee Jl11rk11. llithteu tcn111':1. IPlm:• Place Walk to beach. 3 Br. xtra.!\. &st end uml on Orapenei;, carpet.5. gas Ma.inRltntal:>.S-tO·~O vol lo• ball. ~ :;l )'
PANTASTICOCEANFRT Pr...._ t19 ...._..__ twnhou~e S295. Kid:. OK. goll t'ourse. A/C yrly ~fW'ft 2 Ir heal. gaa stove. ulr ron· Clubltou•<t'. h1 1l1J 1·di..
260%W. Oceanfront ~_;;oa ..--. -.,;;.;;;,-Fee lse. S475 mo. 640·6843 Bltns. w/w. drps, pool, dilioning. s wimming 28r ocnfrnl, near \'ictor i1 w1mminl( pool. ping
S250.0000wn 675·2445 1400oua11.nN1Wf'OllT.uc:H ...OOU4JUl.NIWPOllYIUCM Mainllentals.540·5370 s200. Adlt•/no pets pool. rtt. room, wiu.bers Hugo. Adulti; only . pong, hyllro s1m. g~m. -,
1
~ase a view home. 3 Br. 2 00·39'fl & <fryers. S.SOOrno. includes ut1I. 4 i.ccurlty p11trol JlARBOR VIEW HOMES lrteCMM Properly 200 ....... ~ Nr. Belt. 3Br. 2ba, din rm. Ba. Cum, dine. ,:ardnr. CHrf. 494·0023 Southwe:.t Ct1rtwr
Carmel.J Br. 586.900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••-•••••••••••••! clean. low muint, end wtr. "ar dr opener. $tSO. Duplex Furn. 11hed·l Br. 1&2 BR garden upts. 1 _..,. ..._.1 t 3852 Edlnger1 Newl~n1l PrinonJy.644·4157 ..._._ rt•-h 3169 vd.J>cts01\.no sln&h.'S.•495-W17. Adults O\•er 30. No Frplc,dshwhr,pvtpallo, --r-"""CJV• g.iooi-:dmger.11 u.
COSTA MESA .--wpo -ac 539s. Gi5·1501 • • dogs/cuts. S48·272U nr. Irvine Ind. Area. S190 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1714) 1117·9\iM UDO Isle cust ~Br 3Ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---Minion Vle10 3267 toS21.5. 557-2841 2 Br iipt, gu::. & wtr pd. Off -------$160&1. terms. own. Cuy Wat rfr nt H m BIG 4BR 38u. II&•' pool. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2Br Trh-. quiet. Adult . Crown Vly Parkwuy R
brkrs673·9007 /83.1·!178<1 * DUPLEX * SUMeMERORE ... TO"LeSs lndudes ~ar9eoer & IJO(JI Nl::W A~gean Hgt~ patio park. l'\o p.:ts. S13Smo + S33S. Near new 3 t>;. 2 ba. Call 1!31·0857 .~.'••••••••••••!?.~~ "~ lll'n. SS5\l1m o Cull hme3 Br" rec fucil. Ulll.548·6173 f!'Pl<'.8ar,yul'\l,11opcts. .. .. ~onlaslie buy in Npt. $52500 &YEARLYLEASES 556·2660 Select S39511lcdues.l>81 2818 . F •. C.M.642-IW M.wportleach 3869 525 \wk w1k1tChen & 11µ. lihrs. Canal front. 4BR. , • <t\tm.orl'nfurnishedl Propertie:. incJtonleoch 3740 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• AJ•l S3l.S~ '\k . ""· fam tm, play rm, frml 'nlese Jo\·ely 2 bedroom On Bt·h·2Br dt<o Sfl!.> , , M. .._,..I h 3269 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beautifully landscaped p "'RK ..._.EWPORT 548·9755 or Gb 3Ut.7 Wne over 3 000 sq ft l n t h 1 d · 1 Hunti-on w,..... · eac BE u · · garden l)'pe adult apts. ~ " ------bl . br ' . . u I s U\'t! enc ose Oceanfront~Br Sl200mo H ...,. 1242 ••••••••••••••••••••••• A TIFliL l br furn 1·2·3 Br Dibl'l washer APARTMENTS Guest Home 4150 k to h. $92,500. Call garages. t ree sht1ded Lido 3Br bout slip $1872 Cllf'bCM.ir Dt'lux Duplex JBr 283 apts Sl70 & SUI(). Spamsh 1 · BBQ · 0 h 1 ••••••••••••••• •••••••• 142-3850 Agt. yard. and has bt>en newly Wea.-3Br new $1500mo ••••••••••••••••• •••••• F p P. . . • b 1' i . st)'lc bldi pvt encl 11ur enc . gar.. . Gas & Ul' e or 1or2 decor t d 'th lhe ., · I · at10 . t n s. 1 · 1 d dlls. walerpd Pool l.k>droomsand Loving cure (or elderly yeur. ~ Qua~'p1~~e ex· <Xtoanlrt l Br Olay I SlOO Beaut; waterfnt Twnhse \\asher dryer . On Bay ~, li~una.' n ry, u . LA. MANCHA APTS Townhouses UU1le or rem . Ha l. dwls, wk w,30 dock, 4 Dr 3 Ba. B<:h w/playg_round adj l7J01 Kcel!IOn Ln. l blk Sc Fr S2~ 50 homey, patio :>4<l 3H3:l elusive. By appointment SummerJuncthruScpt I FP. 1mmac comJ SGSQ ~mo ti7S-ll().laftG · W.~BcachoHSluter. 778 •otlPluu.c.<.:!11 0 .~gs natl
DLUFFS"E PLAN" only S2200tos;JJOOmo. 1-~·125-1 ,. . ___ _s42·7fl.18 642-5073 Sp~Pooli.-Tcnri1::1 ~mmuRentol1 4200
f!Je&ant Upg~ded Front 1£. jllltall ~ -WATl:Rf'RONT lrviM 3244 .BLLs~!~i~0":t0s1~~scs Walk to watl.'r. bachelor Eashl~ 2 br Aerni.:. tro1n 1-'ushioo ••:•:••;:••••••••··~··:
k ow.Bay View. Newer P111C1f HOMES ....................... • \"1!-nt :tu 1133 • uni\ Sllll Ultl pd. f'ee Blln~\ wlw. (lrp:-. pool. lslund ut Jumborce on!01~EA1 NfdltOkNT\" l~.11111 ~
Blurrs 3 Br. Family ....__~-.. REALESTAfE lnane T .. rrut·c ni:w 2 br,:i--'-.,_ · -Murnltenlal~.~O..S370 patio Adulti.. no ~t:. SanJonquinllillsRonil ,r, ~c f'c •1'<'11 > m·
Room. Courtyard und; r--• -r;;J.i'HO-. 631·1400 ba townltou1-c " lufl & 4Br. 2Ba. 421 Tu~ltn. Clll~. , -~ --S200. 645.:1971 17I4160·1900 :\~~nthly $40 ::VIII, NB
l>utlo.S117.5001nclu<ling 1~0U4llst.N1W'°4IT1tA04 -1:.k> \\111do,1s. S1ngl<: drps. l>lt.ns. yd. wc.r .. \OULr i;:.irden 111>t •. I -------Lldobk rompk1clv1t11·11
Llind . -----, South La«J41na 31861 .. 1011 w "hake rnor. Xlnt i,t rd n r . S-4 7 S I 2 13 ) bdrm. pool & B HQ Nu •DELUXE• " Br 2 Ua hc,m w, • ~ ·blk 111 EU<JNSCo.,Reallors wptShorcs.step:o;t~bt•h.1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• loc: ,\vuilm1d~lay.Da~·. tilH-8~ c.h1ll~e'! .• "o pt'l11. 1035 GRAHDOPENING E .• astbluH 3 br. 2·~ ba l'ibh~e lt'nnii. <'!:.. ~
881 Dover Dr. 631·1800 nu c~st ?uplexes. t:ompl Luxunousiy furn , Ot'eunl 834 ·li2i. e\'t'S S51 61H7 Be· h h • Cl 12l t . SIG5 mo. S3G·7W7. THE DAISY Lca!ll' J11d. i.pac. mu:;ter •~uchs Jv.i1I June . .Juh
MAGNIFICENT 8176.200, 1Jcpr.lle1>c n ·e Frnt Adult Condo. 2Br. o~nr. ac. OUM ubpool& -al•ach 3748 FORKIDS"..._.D s uite, <hn rm & dbl &Aug u73-4798nflW~t · now.SllO.OOOPrmc.0111)'. 2, b t beach tennis crt 4l>r.3ba.frplr. -.,,.-· ~" i,:ur.ige. Auto Juor _ -• _
CARMEL Builder's Bkr. 8-tO 11.it ' u. see. IW l's. ·1u Pk 3 b I'' R 3 bn 3·car gar a vail imrncd ••••••••••••••••••••••• THEIR PARENTS! opt•ner n va 11 . Pool &! Nf•:WPOllT SllOfl ES ~ exteplional and very tennii.. poob ..\\ail Jun~· poo111\ & ten~is. ·L;e ~55· S583.501m~. 631-0383 · uts l11nd111g oceanfront •l'ool
autl,ul One Or a kl.nd "-aut 4-pl"X •lik" c0, .. 1!.t.'12131~~·1SIJ.53\','h I . 11 f 1 l't•neulion Jrca. Adults llBH,2ha .. uv111l.Jun<'l;i ""' -~ ' " A\'ail. May 15th. 6-44-7770 --, --- ---apt. 42 wa ·O ·&ass to •2 Bcdruom!I. I t th "'" S750 •1 homeonalargefeelotin ington>. Sims St. Hunt , Benut. t:xecullve 4Br. ocean. 2Ur ., deck, ony,nope i.. ru~pt.. ''0
desirable ll"rbor v·1·e~ Jlurb ar"a. •.·ol1tl 1·n,·0~t.f . 'S T t h 20 Fam Rm Din Rm on I t b b •Tot Lot &lSAmijloS Way. NB 3 Bil. Avuil Jun« 15 \hrl.I
"' p ~ ,, ~~ u-·· U f L-d I' pac err "n se r, . . . pr1 vate stu rs o e . l'11t1os. fenred yords "·' • 8061 fl 5 .,,. t .,.,00 W k You'IJ rind lots of trees. 01\ner OkrtWIJ-1 IH ,....,.,," "Untllnc-1 2Ba. frpl. tx>am ,·cil "~cul d·:rnl' Rt•gulatiun "''ail. June 19-Sept.11 by ....... · 11 er pm ~P ·... l'<' lihrubbery . llower:.. un ---:•••••••••••••••••• ••• •, J,>OOI SJ'i5 IJay .'>48 23!1: p<1ddle H·nn1s t·ou1 t SUC!.> week or m onth . B '' Pomona ut llllh Strt•t•t .. :-.,iun:ai:.ed ~.>'. I Caywood Heally ~18·1:!90
c:leclronle watcrin ~DuplH·LCICJUnaleach J8alboalslond 32061 l'\'e $S9-481!l mo 6451528 nwncr213 79U-092S . Call631-3515 --\\1 lltu.!_nWallc1 s~•1_JRentalsto share 4300
system. li ghted bul>bhng 2BR 2ba 2 garagl'S t•ach. •••••1
•••••••••••••••••11--.,-1-. -. ., . ---~._-h 3769 Lovuly 3 br townhst'. :! bu •LA PARISIEtO.fE• j'•••••••••••••••••••••1 • fount a in . PL us a ~orth end. n<•ar to" n 1 1br. _ba. fam rm. 11u "-~ .
1
:"!" port t rc'l ~ hrl, 2ba. Newport ... oc ·Patio. frplc. pot.ii S300 . , • w k' .1 d . .,, GUEST HOUSE r II Cl . • \\' th d • ·k I I BAYFRO~T I drps Turllt•rol'k. SJ:!;> •• :\Int lot'. l'ool. ll'llOI!> ••••••••••••••••• •••••• I . . . I&<! Br uni urn ~1·1·> & UI) or Ill$! l(ll,. l'Slrt S..tffif' •. or n .c<1ni1 I ... Cl~ ·~rl * " * 7.'>2·-nr675·91!11!l lcmseS-H5.ll44-1717 I 2 9 Ad It •u ~di:.!_st'45·3:!8_1__ -/\II clectrH· .f'11•t•place. If> sh;1rc lo"nhnm<'.:11 thCX\C'l &r>ecilll occu:Joni. tc.rri c ?n •111 'lt',W , Modt•rn h1i:h·bt•amNI -------. ----or r. . ~ 5 • no~~· _ . t-lcuted pool. Al.lull,,, 1111 Buywocxl or Hancho San
Com e and see ror 5125.000 r,,\~HWIJZK'r l ceilin ~. l'orner --IBr BR•~o~EW 'MEWPORTHEIGHTS Sl70tS190.)t~r!Y:242lt:.2Br 1.811. cpt.s, d1µ5, nr Pt'l!I 97912G8 .li-15·126001 .Joaquin in l rv11u•
ycmrself. Open houi:.e Sat ltealtor t91116ll I frplc. upper unit 5750 mo "'"' "' . , . WthSt. N. l~~tHU~ shops. Sl!l5. !ll!f.l31Sl D<•t11Sl'. 12131435 Sll!:I ur tend Sun t 4 ------Rancho San Joaquin; Hill Cl!lr Ume 642·7154 . . ..
Sol11' ·1• "'OAST 38 U.._.ITS j )Tly 8.'J3·M1 I T ·nh L 28 . ., Lg" 3 Ur 2 Bu w11i;r.1c S40 WK UP 1&2 Br & Aeross rrom golf cqurse 532-31!10. --.._. " ' ---w me. ~ r . .-.. , ~ . . C W\.. ,,_ I 204'>'>S l A A --------1 l~VEST~1ENTCO. Att . ·t w . t -d Corono del Mor 3222 ha wet bur snu111<:t•ry . bltns & comp. re ec. Bach. olor TV, mllld vows "' mature peop e. -· 3 n a na ve AVOID INCQMPAT IULF ·
549•08l2 co~t'-'a ~J .'~ea pl. t ~ ~,it••••••••••••••••••••••• Nr. pool jacu1.zi l(olf S17J 642·5'il9 Eves serv Pool T HE MESA, l.k>aut. t br apt m tr1vlcx. llOOM:\l ATI.-::;. • •
S6.7" 'oo~ ()7:.3 4u22 :lc1i\1tl\ll:-o;G •1>1· & 2br counc & knmi; ciub. 4 --.-. 415 N Ne wporl Bl, NB Pvt patio, complete STEPS TO BEACH . . . . ! By o•ner llbt \'u Hms. a· · · / • " • 1 . Su 1 s.>.;o SS'> 7500 I.HG 3 HR. 'I. BA. newer 64MlC81 secunty. Beaut & c1uM hr.. .• t.(l).ATU t:hluM!TtJ> Monle&o. 4 Br 2 81.1. Mex 67l Sll()O Bkr. h~use$. S>1lO·SJ".;i· Lca'l' .. 1f:11 < . ~ ---hm in Back Bay. f'lt. lri-- ----• around~. Water & g:i~ pd 3 Br. 2 ha. unt . SSOO )'l'IY --<.__,. • tll' klt fir. paneling. i'lio peh or t hildrcn Terra<'C . l"u 2 Br 2 Ba gar, all xtrus. Xlnt eond. Steps to bch ll!IC mod 2 Br S22.5.586·8963orM1·9-l!i6 Bat•h .. watcrtt. unr S250 U'.k"t«PNJU ~..ttJ~lt
w:brlck cnlry & patio. 4!1i·21l:JO Cardirr Townhome' SS50. 381 \'1sla Bayu. yrlyullbu1lt·ins.S335 28R.2Ba,unf.S3tl5 c.>~~t1n·-u · TAX SHELTERS . . .. · IH:!-S957. 642·3490 3 Br. 2 Ba. 2 cur gar. SEA WIND · I TJkc:; the G1wsi.work !\105 .IJOO . 1831i Port Sml(I\' o,r co.1.y ~pl 1 Br. frplc. pool: s:ur. a\a1I _ children welcome. Bltru., Co to <! b d ., b· 11utut11ndinl!th.11
Wntboume.544·Sl60 Costa :\ll!su rour11lt•x in S'l25.uulpuid.Fec. June.J. tiH·9ts5 0 Newporl Cre:-.Lhkenu,30CEANf'l\ONT AP1'. l dshwshr, lSOOsqft. SJiS Un~~r~Ye:rf"'~10o"m~1 'RIGHTROO~l:\IATE S.CS.lft.nte 1076 gooll fl'ntal ;irca fu1· MamRcnl.il::.:!~':_16i5-llll2 . Br.+rctrcal3Bu,frplc. Brwtnter rent.altoG/19, 213·924·3932Colle<'L · y. · 8:12·4131S1otl'l!-l;1
••••••••••••••••••••••• S9-l.OOO. Downtown bu;.i si:J J u:.minc New 3Br, 2' ~ bJ Deerfield wet bur. bit:<. cpt:i. drl)!I, S200 per mo. ulll inc. . F 1~1~l·30. work~u)t. rwal.
Prcsident1ul lfe1 I l 2 ness b111ltJing in llunt 2 llO l O,\ l'ondo. l.:.e "'ail uow. pool & tenm::.. uv<1ll 6115 673·78'14 or S.S·l930 2·3 BR m 4·plex. S200·S22S. s hare bl" h~t·. 1111 dru":.
"drm rondo ,/-1!> I mi,itonBeurhlorSW.!iW .,.,"" . 673·9'':M s-l'l.Smo11211-o:u211fl5 l('a~c.>S45063J·3837 DI lbd t • ... blk Cpts . drps. pat io, .. " .., • . 1ew o Cullrordetails 002Hil .....,., _ --__ _ ___ upex· . gar, _~ childrenok83l·21!14 S120 mo.ht,la,1.util1•d.
hills. Two blO<'ks trc)m . Cyn&<>t.·~"mVu ls:edcrk •L:NIVERSIT\'Pi\lll\• Shari> 4br. 2ba home. ocean, yrly. Nocluld~~ llohn.~1Jry .Jo !lli1152;1:L
Munlc:tf)-01 'olf course. -11 kevtoht'l~,:!Hr'i aa.de~ Df:AN1'~ w1i1wl mmlni: pool & pets. $300 mo Summ11rr Br2 Ba.lowt'r.2 patios. 9fill!JOl«I
S-13.000. I I , I• &2 rrpk's.bltns."'shr.I li!\RDENtlO~tE Jaruu1. S77S/mo . ~hen 7S22oo. 673·2787 or carports. udlts . S225.
· dr)r. freezer. ele~ drop. 2Br, 2ba. beaut. decor. 556·1818. .9'l-61 · 642-<YJ.35 ~~.~~I~e:t~f~.b.~~~elor ~c;;.a,i:xlc;~~~e2111P:~, ~~a11;~
AMCHOUGI a nr. Lse 5$50 Avail 5/27. pool 1lennls. tiex terms. llARBORVIEWJ!OMES Santa Ana 3780 2 BR. enclosed patio. M:unRentals,540·5370 6/l.SplilS22Srenl + utd.
IMYISTMIMTS 1673 9JJG j s.18 7-164 5 RD Somerset Plan ••••••••••••••••••••••• SmsU child ok. No pets. Sharlcne84fi-40HO ' ~ --' 522.5 221>'7 Pl t A t Bay front. hcad1. 2br. ----------17141496-7711 oh for sole 2200 Costa M.so 3224 4 Br. 3 Ba. frplc, covered with larl!e ramlly room, A MIHl483 uren ia. P 2bu. adlls. 227 19th St. F<•male wa nted. 21-311 lo !=:=======':"=! •••••••••••••••••• ••••• 1 patio rncd ycl ~so mo formal dtnmj(, tennis nnd AMIASSAOOR INNS · · 675.0236. S400/mo. share beach house Sl•i!i CONDO -New 2Br. 2Ba.:••L••A•G:•U•::,·N••l•G•U•:~L·••• D<'l1,.htful yd wtdeck1t1" 1· !J!i2-!l730aCt 6PM. lowi m dub. SuJ>er rol!Jng OF AMERICA LRG 2 BR """I h -----c 11 1 1 .. bl ' D l I ·'1 c. • " • .,, hill a nd nlght llghl view TWO LOCATIONS ',.~ 'nr · s ops. Yearly rental n<'ross from a tn ><'rt t;<t:;. J;!fi2
"' gar • .' t _uy ex) BUlLDA6LE'12 ACRE ":atcrfull,pond :lbd.2bu. Well mumt:uned 3 Br, 2 5725 Mo lease. Call ". adlts/no pets. Ulil pd. Uay, lka<'h & Park. Nr G f R 4350 $l5.SOO. Ph. 675·358• y1~w over lookm~ Crown Ht .. frpl • hit ins, Mesa Ba Call rorni .1 home ~ 7211 WEEKLY RATES 1884 Monrovia. 548·0336. new 2 hr. 2 ha di>lx. Ol"OC'JH or ent
1 \'alley,;ipprox•l mifrom ~e~e.~7s l.tt·l83«. I 539'0 mo. A,·~11 5/l S . FULLSERVICE UNNlNGLge l&28r2 Frplc, npl/drps, d 1w. ••••••••·~•••••••••••••
Olt.rR•olhtate he h. ine!udes house3 Br 2 8a dbl ,:ar f'P 835·2607orll73·657l 2Br+den.2 frplcs,2Ba. ~·~ar!rbo'j·~·~1. Ba.S185&S225.Pool,710 wa,,h tdry.pvtpat.Avai1Double (,arage, NwvL
••••••••••••••••••••••• pl11ni1, sur\ l'Y & complel· . v v · · · ---walk to bch. udlt pref. sto • · · w c•1 J N areu Storage onl•· 011 I~(' MobHeHolftH cd soil ~rt s:io.ooo :'\cw\\ crJlls.S350.tst/Tcrr.New 2 Br.2 Ba.S395 p\'t tennis & pool S425 645~840&S40·2300 .18thSt. ·.,. unel.,opcts.S400mo · ~ · ·
ForSal• 1100 17lotl •97·322\l ti\wn lj & 5 ~~lll01kp 5~700H_ l!.e. P ool. wet bar. 646·5003 Avail l mmed 3 Br 2 Ba. ti73·3391 ~5.mo.962-<17ti2 ___ _
••••••••••••••••••••••• wkd)'I! 4 Br 3 Ba. Nwpt Hiv1t>ra l>PJClous. xlnL loc. A\·a1I S kl' g 3 Dr 2 ba lrg Class Hied Ads sell big S300 mo. Fr pie. bltn11. Yrly rental lge 3 Br 2 Bn, l Office Rental 4400 • El TORO • T\1nhSl'. all hlln~. cpts. ~m-~2-3Ml:I a~ ll PM. P3;.0
1~ tr 1~ 2 blks to items. small Items or encl gar. 673-3009 blk to hr h. M25. OOQ.;i.313 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _ 8 • MountGJft, Desert. drp-;. 2 car 1:;11". formul po 1 · LS b • • l 642 5678 or Gi5 012\1 :\1edical Suit<'. i.ub lca~<' '" uywood. 2-1x60 2 b~. RHort 2400 din rm. & lrplt•. l'ool . •RENTALS• O<'can. Comm lc nn1ll & unyi em. · · Jbd upst airs, gara~e.--:-------Cd~1 Avuil. ;inyllmr.
V bo. romlly room I.I ••••••••••••••••••••••• tennii; ct~ s Juno etc 2 RR .. I Ua ..... . S32S pools. 645 3ll10 aft G fenced yd. no pets. refs. NEW 2 Br 1 Bn . bllns. SJ."IO mu 675 3r,511
Tnrol fint•sl ncl~lt .~nrk. Palm Oenrt Co do i\" a ti w'/w; '11 r 1d 0 r 2 RR . 2 lJ:J •.. S33.'ll43.5 wkdays. ~ tmentl Sl95. 1st, Last & security. carport. S275. HOl Cliff -----SIV.t~. li e-l\( 12.12:1 " rt'lrtl( Clslo ~chl-; "hop~ 2 UH,21~Au,denS4G01:>50 s Clemente 1276 Unfurnlthed 548·5823. Dr.642·5/Jl!I, 520 Sqfo't.S260.:l!liJ llirrlt, /\mcrtran Mobile lloml' L~~ l brdrm. rom11I furn ptnR Ch1.ldr •n OK .. St50 2 AH ~,, Hu ~;o an ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nl'wport Bc11d1 A.i:rnt S111et.M7·9300. l<C'Oll ln\t•slmt'nl for 962002-1 c . 3 BH.2 1lu .::.:sii!>1175 •••••••••••••••••••••••lalboaPtnin1ula 3807HwrtlllC)t0ttleach3840 APT·<H'C·ST<JH I·:. Vic 541·5032
h1de<1wuy & rental · J.BH:212 na ........ S4riO Shorechrfs 4Ur, 2Da on •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• C~nncry V1llai:c. :Jlst ---------COSTA MESA S2S.9SO. Call for uddi s.!00. 2 Br Allra1o1e. renrt'd 4 nn.2•,bu.furn .. sa25 KOtr cour!I~. club/ heh Villa Way, tHI $JOO Furn. offices uviuL J·:x. '10 Fl~twOOll. 12· wide t1nna l trllo. Ai:en l yard.KidsOK.1"·ec 48R,3 & .......... $\iSO pv lgs s.t75. ~2 1 3)2Br •. 2b:I. yrly, balcony, IRAHOHEW mtSOJO ccutivr. S(•ry SJlai·r
Adult purk. Wnlk to sho:i 642·~!16 Mam Rentals 510·5370 71).1.J4S3. polio, 2 cur enc. gar. No Near Lake Park. Deluxe -Nt'ur <>C ;,1rpurl. Call plnr Show~ llkc new LI<' --· . pets. 1395. 642·1603 3 & 4 Br. oll bit!\$, dbl att 1116 W. Balbo1U lllvd, upt 8.1l·'l434! ll<'tw ,1,0 IV
l:K\W. A1nerlr11n ~loblli' Outof Statt SlllCI 2 Br. garage. child ·~ blk from itolf course. C cl.I Mar 3822 1turage11. Nr. Beach. A s:m Apt C S~. Yrly _t_ __;> --
UomeSalcs $.'\7 9l!l0 Property 2600 OI\ F'ee Jhd, lb11 .. 111ce quiet orona N.W. l'Orner Alabama & lsc. Adult Hemdld , Don 't iiivc up the -;lui>'
------·---••••••••••••••••••••••• Main llenttill, ~0 5370 ne1ghhnrhood, 5325. mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adams. 847·3957 prkn'J.t, lndr·y I Blk lrom "List" 11 m l'h•>u,1ricd.
CCNNMrclat 111\\\'J\ll Kuil111"18 •:111 ___ -· .t91J·t'T91 ocn b 1111y No pc·l~. no Shl11 to 11h11rc l't'liul1~· ~ 1600 North Shorr 01:1hu. ionic RENTALS Saft J .. _,. Lite 2 BR. l DA. S245 mo. wntcrlk•dM. <:ull ll73·ll2H1 042·5671t
••••••••••••••••••••••• or lcos•-. 2 llr. 2 Ba. !>IJ>:< l.1t 2Ur. lhn. 1rpt d, r0nrd S I Jo' ll II c..!r'tr 3278 (61 v 1300 Walnut. Mgr. apt 4 -------
l-..t. .• t...!-• llctn 6. un aolr t·ou~t'. ~0·3071 ytl. aor <.:h ldren K. in11 I'. nm Y omt'll """"' °"° '[),. 1! ".'°''° _:~: ~ Ulk to heacb, closed l~b Furnished Af>«!menh Furni1htd _. "'" .. nrt). sa5mo.ICll·2UU llHl..2 Ru. ·· .... s:n~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• /..·:==·=",,, 113r 111(e. 060·22110 or orUrtfumlthed 3900 orUnfuml1hed 3900
Prlll\O b<>ll<'h loeutlon 3 Ult . 2 80 ••.•..••• S410 For lR11:1C' :1 nr. luxury !MG-90ll8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.00011q rt rt•11d)' to huild onchet Forms Com"r lot, 3llR, 21>11. dbl 3.lllt. 2 Ila ......•• S.135 Jtrdn homr. av11ll l\luy u. CORONA DEl MAR ..;_ __ ·------1 .... ••••••••••••••••
Set!Plnna 1131·11<'-1!1 CHo•;t • 2700 1wr.rrplr ,hltn11 li:llJ?ur 3RR .211a ......... ~75 8a9~mo.4003000 2 Br Townhou11~. Crplt . 3Dr.2ba.cptadrps,bltns. BRANO NEW
J .11.llt'dtirkComrany ••••••••••••••••••••••• rcll S375 t mn <.:<111 4BR .. 2Bo. , ....... S41.S P It l ll t I Children ok s:t50 Pref
IA<sl1nr1llldr ~inc(' 11147 "t.'"' r1··.n A"R .... Prt'sthie tlom\'~ for lnlo Townhom~!I I L 00 ' enn •• COi\ nen II ...,,,,. nra.31 .. ~ ,.,,·,, l\ADC . ALI,..... VILL ·GE Ans
""' " r 6'1.5·0041> 2DR,2llu. _ ........ Sil Houtfff:unttP•dor brcnkfoJll .Someoc:ean& "'I,...,.,.. ''"Or;nu; . .,. • .,.,. "'°A ~ ~Property· 2000 lmprcived 11>4oa. No. Cal UJR. 21, ua ........ · Unfurnl1Md 1300 Catalina views. Close to1---------1 SCENIC VllWS
••••••••••••••••••••••• A!t"<'nt <7M 11144· 1150 4Br. S<'~enC!ff pntlo. cpta. 3 an. 2• 1 L-lu •• s-t2S ••••••••••••••••••••••• shopping & fine beach. Wolk to hach I..aguh'u Hills newest deluxe adult
New ronstruetion...i pl<''<· tal Est• dra~. fcn~ed. Pr<.•i.tlit" 3 BR. 2 Ba .... ·.. .. SI REMT ALS &44·2611 t Bedroom unl4m. ~. apartment community -Hif.th on a
, . Hunt Och CMc Cntr Wont.cl 2900 ~.OOis~~so~w::.~~ mo. :i 1m.2 A:1 ····· .. S.lG.5 3 bedroom & den brand1---------11ncludes aa• & water. hilltop overlookin~ tranquil
I IU'CU. Cornpl 9/16. 200·, ··'··················· nl'W-J aamine Creek. Olk to bc:uch. 3 BR. 2 811, flreplnce. a11ra1c. Kldll. dept'. Rl'aerve no\\-lst vt Ply want~ vo~ant lolll llORSECOUNTRY yrly lease i&'IO. lnth.adlnt upper. Adult.a. no pe\s. pct.a & singles 01(. No countryside -Fantast C mountain
i-omc. l11t IUC'ky. Prine or tenrdwr1' R-2 Ra R..a, See lhls charm In$! 4 DR, a 11 rd, n e r & n I 1 Yrly '350. ma. 675.m9 fee!. A1:cmt. views -Minutes from freeways. &
· ~Y 'Bkr 1140.1441 CM 6'5·Sl26/67S.at>74 3 BA. a dcllRbUul tree fncilitics-PoOI, Jacuzzi Call 536-1202 regjonahhoppln ~centers.
:1tuddrd ..., a<'rc•. llidt• 4t uinnis courtt. 'weet & sunny. 1 Br, S18S.I~~~~~~~~~ I & 21maoOM Ans 4 BEACH UNITS! Pri'" part_v waots home or your horse to tho lx'ach Ulll Paid. Fee. I· i
I No.SonOiegoCo! lnc.propCM.N.8. or city. MeNuh Rlty. Summer rent a l Ju11l M111nRentals.540.S370 New28R +dcn,2ba in a beautiful wooded park setU <; B EAT OWN En S 979·49''4 642·l334 or642-6578 above Little Coron» twnh.se apt nr. ocean. Sep. featuring : UNIT! 1---------1..;.-_:__;__.....;.......;.. __ , 0c~eh br upper, lrg gar, 11ndck. dlnloa areas, 2 frplc's, pvt 1 h
"'1keover7't GI LOA!il! Wanted: Twtlerock PRIME LOCATION. 38R nu crpl/polnt. rcfrla. pntlot1. Both un1ta have ·./Patio k tc tn• ·
Unbelle,·oblutS84.000 Broadmoor Home Model HOUSE. LG YARD • ..S23C»t"'5~1RYDCt Carmel modl'I on Port slove. n<1kld.8/pet1. S250. view or ocea11. 83'16-$350. I Dlahwo1her1-A lrcondltlo11ln9
\I.£. llowa rd & Co. 3. 4 °" slmllar sill' C..11 CLOSE TO SCHOOLS. Wheeler. 3 bedroom , 213433-7770. Qlll 536-"'350l"536-880J .-'Dln"'9 oreos
Rc11ltot'<' ~tw.-en 8;.:JO & 5 PM s:ns1MO.S46·1753. •--leKh 324 family room. Yearly I Br. S. or flwy, mature ---------• /KlftCJtlwi,.droomtuit•• mo 729.71~; w k d II y I 0 n I y . :-r'"" I SS"~ HIW TRl,LEXIS ./""~··'--Ith it 1714)i52-8i2i Terrific Easls1de family ••••••••••• .. •••••••• eCa~. ~..,OF ... ~WPORT s67i~g!!1.4S200 Mo. No ptlll. ~"'"f rooms"' •an Y hom~ w /3 b111 b<b. lrg • R"".,"""'Al. • _., "• .,._ 2101 Huntington St. ./H-walk-l1t closeh l TO 9 UNITS f r..' • REAL TOlltS Dix 1. 2, 30r p:illo apl8 -r Builder Brokf'r 11cltin1 •--A--t-garage, & huge yard or 3 DORMS .. 2 BATHS. . or Hwy. Blll 3br. 2ba, Opn Sat &: S un l ·S ./Woodpon.ted walls ~ •· no11r n"w ln-m• """"un children & pels. Asking fireplace Lorn led in 675-5511 beams. frrpl. bltns. ••7• 842-3313 ./"'--IMam ceilJn-. • .._ -.v ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5295-r mo Free Rental N _.. d ti .,. o1 ----------1 ...,....... ~-t • perty Good t a .... · prime Orm en be<' on. monlhly,673·1197. ;r..·ml-.. _ _.. & Wtfunil1"9d l ~tcr&o.pp~iallon. "Ho.MtFtlnMIMd Servlc:e. ~40·8944 or Outstandlngoceanvlew. . IYTHESU •rv -
V'UOt4SISTATES ••••••••••••••••••••••• t.1$-7111. Walku & Lee CJosetobearh.s:,j)OMo. u..funl~ 3425 Cost.Mesa 3824 OeluJte b o nd n ew .'~ameroomclubhouse
S3f.mJ Cotto Me1a 3124 l«'al Elst~e. t.IJSSION REALTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• .. •••••••••••••••• TownhouS« atyle 3 br, dbl ~d• '°""9• with wet bar ---------.... •••••••••••••••••••••••MESA VERDE Exec 4 • *494·0'131 • • F.V. 2Br 2Ba Dix model, OAKRIDGEVILl..A cnracu. all bltns, frple1. l lilllcrd1, iocuul & pool ~ i41Sltlde C05tn Mesa 1 BR b<'c:h cottare .. .Priv.. BR. ram rm & din rm , patio, pool S330mo. avail. 3 Br. 2 ba. bllns. children 201. 207. 847·31>57 I SCMd •oUeybaU court
4SUNITS ('ftn" fum. Ulil incl home. One Yf IH&e.~ase;on3 'llaCrH.~ned 6(1968-2680 welcome.~. 858 w.•----------· ISpartclln9 clMnlaundriH 1.z BR. S·l BR. on 33.-00o Sing I". no pet-ls $21$. SSZ$/mo. A.gent 546-5990 for horses. Very sectuded T 1h Ccnlcr. IU3--9SOO. .-'CUu bus MWYIU !\Cl ft R f 5 548~~ . 2. BR 2 ba , lge. !Iv. rrn .. OW'tl HM .. , ·_ •* oom, or mor.. MESA VERDE. s harp atonefrpl. p:istoral vtew U..,....Jhe.d 3525 1 ll Sl75 l~ity ~ . ..m· 115·5800 Dkr t ... ll!MI• dean. 3 br. 2 ba. ram rm. Laicuna C:myon hilltop.,....................... 2110 8 " talrsftar !l,100ELS (JP EN 9A:\I TO OPM
• ~ 314% quiet st. nr s hopptng & S.15 Mo. or will lea&c Deh1u % Br, l ~~ Ba ·sf:1es1 · .,...,. 1 dl •• :rw 3 Bdrm flma Of\ C·l -·•••••••••••••••••••• ac:h ls . Now van1nt. w/optlon to pu~huae. Twnhiic. 118. close to c.A i l i.r. l bol. " 252-UStockport On\e, Lagunn Hills
fo W. Costa Meu, N~ furo atudio. l blk to 1375/mo Call Dave Nlf.494-1551 beAc:h. Poot lnclry, )'d. ESld t lge 2 Br 11.,U poolslde apt. nr bdl. 511-6130 Sll·61St
000. Dy Owner. J Qcuut pool. l rplr, liZ25 so ll5 t H crilu~e U80 mo '152 6282 or w/yords. $2.45. $255. ut.&I Adlt·n o pets S19S. ts) r.~~~~p~~SP~M~====d:=mo==+=u=U=l·=•=21J==•~=====L~R~e~~~~~========::::..Jc~~~us~ifi~1ed==A=ds====~==·56'7==8i.::936:.:·294A~==========~pd..~~p(!~~~o~~~.6"~2-0282======:1.:538-836Z=:=::::=:::::::::=:=::L~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l~~i!!lii!i!!i~!!!!!!l!ll!!!ll!!!lllll
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U DAii. Y PILOT Monday, M!X 10. 1'71
Add IL.Build it ... Diaper iL.Hammer ft ••. Carpet SER¥1CE it ••. Cement ft ••• Wire it...Hoe lt ... Clean lt...Move
it:.Press lt ... Palnt lt. .. Nall it ... Plaster it .•. Fhc It ... DIRECTORY '""•ce..,_. C.,..tet C..,.tS....k.e Of' Gwr .. 5.r,.lc.e• . L•·~ P~/P•ri9t .......... ~..... bfrlpfGta.. 6ll7 ..................... .......................... . ............................................ ····-··· .. ··· ....................................... ; ..... _. •..... , .. ._ ...................... ,, ....... , ....................... ,
APPUAHCl::REr AIR Carpentry, Adc1-<1ns ol "1eCal'*C.rpetCleanent Ct:RWICKfl'SON IDOfr'""lL' , LIQa. J>ddo-Falr Pricn. VERY N£AT PAT<:ll RIOiaenUoal\etleln 110-&ilrvlceCllll Commercial. Uc, rr Stto~c~anorfhumpoo Additl0t'ls411temod*llnc ~ • SU.ttUcdContr•nor Ucllns.CaliooPaintlnt. JOBS & TEXTURB. 8MSIG£NCYSVS ; mo,..icu .!.!!:..__~ AboUpbo1$ltryAJlwork Lic81J1'4.2 Elcctnul, Plumblna. SpedallalniJ In cul· XIA\refentoca~ J°l"C'Ce1l.8"'l·l4'9. m-uea m •nN I auar. Reft. FrM-P.lt's. $d.Jl16 6'7~l ttc. J\~as retM. tu-4t57 oracaJ>tnt, landlcaptna. •----.;.;.;;;...:.=..;.;..;;.;...11r.....,_.. ___ ...;.. ___ ll.....::..::.::.!.=.::....--..:::.:..:;:=
....,.., S...lu Cwltom booltlMlves, tbu neas. ratet. &U-3714 .........._ o~rtlan11. 1prtnkl«'t'lf " PET£RS PAINTING ,._.,... It~
••••••••••••••••••••"• rm dlvidt'rs. etc:. Oll ·--. tt.inodfl1.oJ. Al&~ c~tocn Int.r/En,....keu R.atAlt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• OOOJUCiH~PER · Full Vlnce!AnhoCf ••. ws Plamond Corpet Sva ........................... deslan nallable. J C C.11GeneatM1·°"8 HOMESAVE.RS R.EPAJttS.ALLTYPES
Char••· Reaaonable C!tan. ~pairs, aaJes fl •••'-••••••••••••••••• ••HAULING•• ElmtrLancbcoplnaCo, Phunbln&llHO' .. tl.ftf Reuonable,rreeett.Hc
Pl"k GP/ dell very t W..lct ln11tall. Oruie Co. ~EP1'1NC men YARD· PAINT 611•1964 645-HIJ l'llteti«Jbteftor FreeuUmales, honfft W•l\830-502.QaayUml) ~ ••••••••••••t•••••••••• •2020 ......_~lft,g \."'t>NClU .. 'T~ Uc:IJDll'd 49$·$01 reliable 111rvlce. llO. .-t-.... I &..,..... TREEWORK-MGOS4f hr. 8t1·UU BofA ti•-
C.W...Mol!MCJ I Ampuo" •b~m,. "on ,.____...;c---__._ lt1tc .. -Ca ...... "'r .... -t . --Mallll•·•-• P.-&-.&Y-co-a.11-Maste:rCha.-e ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• nJ11. COior nt leAerti, _, _......... ·-• .,.. r1 .. ..,.~. HouiKte.1""9W ---.... •• CU.tom c•blnctmakln"' w ht C'I rpt 1 1 O m In ••••••••••••••••••••••• 10-• off laoor with this ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Aver. ext. J.,t.y, 129S"' 1UST .,,UMll ... a C!_R .... t..M.J.:._Te~t. 8• mN1ewJo~
• blucb.<.:LeanUvrm,dlnCQNCltETE. bllt w.ill1. Ad.Ofr·dUIMiay15. HOUSECLEANI NG 1sSOll Rctard1tnl Carpet 2·s~m5.lnt.Wrm. .. r• nw now '"''v.o "' ""'" Sea~~~~ .. ;::~-AM rm It h•ll 115. Av~ rm paUocvrs.1ultt!r&dwn. &U-~ Oonor011v our lJuir.iriu:s. Cull shampoo101. IJO';l lcaa Priedlnelmlr'l/la.bor 642·411 t we lcolll• 5H·l4H &
or Eves. 548-LSH. i7.$il, couch $10, <'hill'"· Xlnt wr. llc. 541..t222 Ja.nict,•, Jb"!ll'CIY AnM. moti.ture. no shrb1k;il(~. O~r. lnsr. free est. R-1,. ~lal ...:~.:.;...,...1;;.;Sr3..:.;... _____ _ Ou.or cUm sx•t odor. Crpt . or~ tmGM:I (oioora t1trl1>Pt-'<I & wu«S. Ttd63G·7~or~·Ol34 .,.. --•-1 rt .. •"'ir. ll5 'I" t-X"r. l>o Free t-St·Patios & polio ••••••••••••••••••••••• w 1nduw11 & w ., I J,, Profeuiorual lumb•na ~ c•
.. -.,, , .. _ •. d-' .. .. Lo b'd r ln _... Dl:'•C!ONABLE n AT""" ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Fl.nd what. you wont In wor k m )':self. Refs <'Yrt,wa ~.,. .. veways. E~r. Gurtlener, mit1n· Wunt a REALLY Cl.l'~AN wuhc-d. no atrt1ok,. Wl'$t 1 . re ._ SU•vu, ·~ " ~ DailyPILotClas!ined.~. ~1-0101. FalrpncnMt-5754 t<tn:tnce. cteantJJ>. trim J~OUSE•Ca.llGtnahom Bondl.'d, Ile. insured. aouranteed. free est. eootr•s Licl300948 L&E'S NURSERY.~
mmg. 7:11.9207 ev{'Jj. Girl. 1''r~'t' tlSts, 645-5123 494·7326. 540·9003. BU(J ·s Dave 646-7991 eves. ~JI~ J~~\-:~\ !re'::
eo.trador eo.tractof'. ~~.:~••••••••••Most lawns mow~d/edged •HOUSECLEANING• Clellnwuy Service QUAL. EXTR PAINTING llc/hurd. 3601 & Cal llwy
.............................................. C.Wit Cards, American ~per week. Compl $7. By reliable couple. Good Mo'°"'}' 2 expr coUeae iilU(Jents ~..tlftt _6'_s.s_:r_so_. ------r------------l::)(press, Carte BlAnche, wk.George549-2015. _rererences.536·7111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• will paint houses thi• Pro::e:.hr~:~~ke. Removals. t rimmln1 •
I WANT JQ I Bankamencard, major eanup and lawn care. ENJOY your summer. F1replaces·Plant.in1 summer: Call for free 7141$57.2271J pruning, free est. Uc"d. d~pt. stores II others i call Port·A·M aids lo d Brick Concrete !'at.Jo wknd est. 536-1327 · f\dly insured. M2•262t
DEVELOP YOUR PROPERTY I hard tooblaln. Let us as· M ke 141-2049. your housedeqning. Block Walls ·BBQ Pits Plumbing emercency--~_..;--. -----
1
1 .1 11st you in obtaining OKYO TOM·An Hou tl42'7194or6'15·54Sl. R.er. Ests646·0464 Potios repipe, repair, low cost. Tree _Ser vice -Tra1h these cards by showin" w kty p 20 yrs. exper. He'd. Hauhnc. MV, So Lag lo ., ~ S27 er Month. R "'I :\IASONRY-TILE Bri k ••••••••••••••••••••••• SC Ph 496 93Ca. 7 7 7 I how many sompanies 642·1939, Costa Mesa. eGM»nOD e Ratel . Block. Concrete & Sto~e: PATIO Covers·Room !)36-2912 . : . I evaluale yot.tr . applica· Eves. CallSue-67!H7l5 "'nclo•ures. Q"aUty ..... RV'S-UMBING WMtdowCle-1-• • • I lion. Employment. an· Lic'd. 968-2504 "' " .. PM' ,..... -.....
I C Help T ~ --·k re•• pn·c .. • Lie •-1u11"""" • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• I • O. """ nu al income, c heck· JAPANESE £.:XPERT Windows, dean, polished Mo"M ~-• ..... ...... · • ..,...,.._,, · · kl" •·-'7 31506S 646-7721 NOJOBTOOSM.ALt.: Action Building Main·
I Financing -Coastal Commission I tog/savings are ex· Garden·g &Landscp'g and spar ing done on a ••••••••••••••••••••••• · • tenance Co. Need your "-s& Cwtwctioll tremely important In 548-5182 S48·4'64 monthJy basis, by an .ex· MOVltJG'> L t 2 Pool Service windows washed hi&b &
I -..L ttn......L--,. . ,.._ aa--I successfully Qualifying pert. Tracks, & sills · e Rex pr. Plosfft-/Repoir ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 1 d k e--~-~•uctor-v.Y....,.... you for the card of your General SffViCff cleaned & included. men move you. eas, ....................... . o w w n ow wor •
I choice. For further de· •••••••• ••••••••••••••• Please call Mike 968-41t3 ref'S. 833·3944 or 545~ PATCH PLASTERING lrv~ne P~l Sel'Vice. re·,_496-_3597__;;...,.· _____ _ I SIHCE 1941 tails, ~end name •. ad· HANDYMAN-Homes & l'dlike tobeorserviccto ••ALLTYPES•• pairs, ac:nd washes. work WINOOWSCLEA!'IED I dress,c1t.)'..Stale~1.1pto: Apts. Con!lcientiou you. Muffl..-s 6445 Fr~Est 540.6825 guar.FreeestSSl-6042. THESEE-THRUCO. I A /I. A I'• nan c i a I & craftsman 645-6558 ••••••••••••••••••••••• D. ANDERSON &CO. Estimates 6-40-4798
I 642-7003 or..._~~5:0768 I Management Consul-· · Have something you want MUFFLE.RS W.EST Homes-Additions· Swim Pool Maintenance
forAppt,yow11ot11e or... I ta.nts, Inc. Credit Card Jay·scustomRepair tosell?Classifiedadsdo Lowest prices, highe111 nestucco Freeacidwashooall Try 8 Dally Piiot
•------------Dlviiilon, Box 17299, PANELlNG·FORMICA il well -Call NOW, quabty.Llfeltmeguar. Over block walls. Free newmonlhlyaccounu. ClasslfiedAdtobuy,sell Irvine. 92713. & CARP t::NTR y 642-8809 &12·5678. 645·3507 est, low rates. 586-4892 Call 496-3597 or rent somcthinJ.
~~:.~~t~ ................. !.~~!~ ... !~.5.~ ~ SOOS .:!.~.~ ...... ?~.~~ ~;t! ~!.!~ ..... !!~! ~.!~ ..... !!~ ~.!~t~ ..... ?!.~~ ~!!~ ..... !!~~
hK.ti•e OfficeJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• OUND: Fem blk/wht ••••••••••••••••••••••• ASSISTANT lle~utician·llllppiness is
Broadway Ofc. Bldg. IDUL SHOPS COIN LAUNDRY shrthr Pnlt-. Lie. no. 317 Schools Ir MANAGERS bemg part of a no pre-
Santa Ana Selected shops & office TopOranaeCounly loca-Get from N.B. pound, fnstnlction 7005 0 21 5 0 I< s:.ure shop. J eaope
From Sl90per mo. Pl11Sh space avail. The Fae lion. 31 w-ashers, 12 673-1050. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ver · ay wee · 644·7103 · offices. receptionist & t.ory, 425 JN. 30th in the dryers all just ret.'Ondi IE A l"'RTE ... D~ Salary S600 +.Phone fori---------
parking provided. at noj heartor~nnery Village. tioned. Grossing In ex: $500.REWARD "' " "" appointment belwec Beautician wanlt:d lm· additional coi.t. Con-Forinfot'llil613·9393 cess of SlOOO and grow-For briefcase lost FullorParf0Time 9am & 5pm. Newpor mediately. Wives&Lov·
rcrcnc't room & steno· ing. Too busy owner ~ays . Newport· Laguna area Be ready to work as n V1Jlage AplS. 63S Baker. crs !lair Fashions 50.SO
grapher avail. sell. Sl3,000 Cull pncc. S!lt nilc May 1. '1'o quei.· proressional·bartender in C0nlosyt.a .Mesa. Cou"le~ Heil 11.8 . 84().9511 •
RLMASSOCIATES trial Rental 4500 Tcrms.Agt.837-4200. t 1ons asked. 1710 1 W(>ek. Frl.'C Joi> pluce· lie."'UTYOPRS 547-6157 986·6704 or 986·6661, menl assistance . 557-0075 """
SQ FT r ......,, /Ot-u A t' o J k C II t 714/834·1000. Uo.t E. lith w/Coll. Assistant & shnm· 2000 • ,.oc•n1• s """°"se . us in f ac . o ec. St, Santa Ana. Amerkan ATTE,NTION .HOUSE· poo girl for N.8 salon. 39'7SBlRCH.~.B. GROSSS25.000.MO ost : While Parakeet BartcndersSchool. Wl\'.ES P?rl lime posi· 644-066lor640.0023. AGENT 541-5032 Owner retiring after 30 w/blue tnm. Westclifr Uon s avail days. Apply•---------
sq Cl w/lOOO sq n A/C years. Price reduced to nr. Mariners Park. Jobs Wont•d, 7075 in ~rson !><'tween 2 & s Bldrs Hardware Co. In
office space. All healed. S83,000 with 29-N down to Reword. 646·0141. I ••••••••••••••••••••••• o!".Y· USS Baker St, nr. Nwpt Bch. seeking lull
150 I WHtcllff Dr.
CREW MANAGER
Crew manager to supervise boys &
girls ages 10to16. Must have dependa·
ble transportation. Good commission
plus gasoline allowanc~. Work 3:00 to
8:30 p.m. Opening itt Costa Mesa,
Newport Beach, El Toro. Mission Vie·
jo areas. Phone 646·8684 for appoint·
mcnt.
~ o,, .... ,,' ' •• ,.,. Newport Financial Ctr
Leasinc) Offiu Space
Call on Site Manager
1714 l 642·3111ext24.6 Randolph St, Costa qualified buyer. Seats Irish Lady w/ xlnt refs, FairviewCM. llme mun.548·3451
M 100, patks 50. Near the OST: Sml blk/wht cxpr. seeking s tl'ady --------• HtlpW..tect 7100HetpW-'t4 1100 1-' _es_a_._SG20 __ . _54_G_·l_653 ___ , waler. Agl. 837·<1200. ShihTzu. f'cm. Irvine hou~cwork, preferably in AUTO BODY ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••M• .. •••••
I
• • I
• ' 1
•
WESTCLIFF BLOG
NE.WPORf BEACH
' " .. tN•.. .. •• ' ' • .. .. ·~
T 67~ 6'"5 METAL MAN for lease. 5,000 sq.ft.•i"v.stment errace area. ,,. ·•o Turtlerock/ Irvine area & Gi I 1 avail., In an industrial o .. -... ltv 5015 Rew;ml'. lJrlVl'l>. ex pr W / Busy i.hop so-5o. xlnt Boys rs BOATS BUSINESSMANAGElt I
area in beaut. Laguna n--•¥11, ch11dcare.SJ771!1ti working c:ond. Larry lOtol4ycuri10C:i.geUni· 1' HI school grad W/lld·f ~=-...-Niguel. "'antastic op· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,osl: L1ote do.: Lnb/G Hunt Auto Clr. 11125 ly Pilot delivery l'OOtl's 3 FINISH vanced trulning In ac· I
portumlyforanewbus1· LocalTrvstDHds Rtvr. t'cm, nr ~1uplet Oay \\ork, excellent Laguna Canyon Hd maylJeavailnbloinyour CARPENTERS cntgand/or colleae level( ./.-./---./--./-.,-...-
ne:ss. Rent 1s 20c per ll1g.hestQualtty& Yldd pa.r_n~to~.rt!C~G ;~uf· c:lea ~·o~ r~r. Duy. _4_94_3000 __ '833_·8_900_·_· ___ , area. l!:nn profit ror de· 2 MILL MEN nccntg courses. Salar)' J'
sq.n. 831-1630 W. H. Clarke. Broker in . CIA a . 548-85ti3, l!:ve, S48·4818 Auto MechGftlcs hvenes & cash, tnps or Excellent car eer OP· Sll.l80·Sl3.572 yrly, com·
./ ...........
C.111 M r How.ttd
64~ 6101
2000 Sq. Ft. ore & ware· 963·7789 963-4567 1..osl Silvl'r Poodle, \le H I Wont .d 7I OO Clw.s A Smog. General ~~c~~~~rlp~f!n!~l~~ poduruty (o_pskilled men ~:~~ur:~ p r;a~l~i~n~ ·i
house space across from MoMy Wonted 5030 :~:A~O:· ~:811~. M .•• ~!. ..... ~•••••••••••• hne, front end & bruke information please call with ability to do top Unified Scbl District.~ OCAirport549·1480 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . DMINISTRA 'I" work. Top pay & 642·4321. From San quahtywork.Mlnimum3 Personne l Svc, 2941 ---------•------------•want SGO 000 2 lo 3 rs . A Tl E benefits. Apply Orange yrs exp. Excellent pay. Al 1 R SMO up store-0fliccs cpts entails Wa11ted 4600 secured t, T 0 Pa i0,: FOUND 516 sm tan & wht MEDICAL co. Automoti,·e Center. Clemente -San Juan benefits + working con· ton rv. eaume re-' drps air bath 11301 ....................... . /uc · dy " femaledog,,1clfarbor& DENTAL 2401 N. Tuslin, Suntu Capistrano ar~a. call dillons. quested. Equal Oppr \
lit>ach Bl. H.B. &12-2834 wo ~inancially mponsi· ~:~f::· 1 ru~7~·6 l6l Wilson ~ll S49'0SSS ~~~<J~~~~CS Ana. 1!5~111~~r~ 1!~~~~ ~~~i Pocific Trowler Corp '--E_m..:.p.....;ly:...r ______ _
•IMO FREE RENT• ble. pTr femjle col· M rt T t Fournl: Germ. Shep Pup· SUPPi y AUTO PARTS 540-12:20. 350Kalwnu1DJ-iv• ---------
t 2 ~ rtm. offices from lege i.tu onts are ookini: ~gcKJeS, nis llY • a 11 pr ox ll moi1 W \Rt•itOUSING E(1ual Oppor. Employer Costo M.so, BUYER
to rent a furn. house in Deed<l 5035 Female. Vic : NB. • •• ' l~~~~~~~~~t __ _!~~~~--' S l25 per mo . Adj. thcNwptBch.Cdmarea. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1;42-7203 COOKS <2>TOLEAH:'ll 1-54o.3935 Exper. in elertronlc
\1rporlcr llolcl. No leaitt• t'rom June 1. thru Sept. LOANS 91 1. % and.oth~rs. COUNTER SALES BOATS components, outside pro--~c11 ~~:lJTi~~~ 1 5 . Please c1tl l 14 O fOUND : Grey malt• Vet$ aq~ S<HS hr, Non PermGoodPayBl'nems BOATIUILDERS cessmg. raw matenals.
60• PER SQ FT 312·2M-8611lCollect. AJso2ftdTD Loans !ohaJo?i,!Y dog. Bcat·h & Vets start S3.0l hr & up, 3621 W. ISTST.S.A. llluld a product you can WILLARD blanket orders &exnodlt· . Parl ·t1mc local area .-~
1611Wf-'>TCLIFF·NB VantedlorentmNB.Ju. foa1restTermss1nc.-el949 i\Uantn,llB 536661\t. +PX & bnrts. No exp ---------1~~rpp.ro~~n~~c~~~~sa~} BOAT CO. 's¥ACOSWITCHltfC
AGT. s..tt-.)()32 • ly thru August & thru Satffer Mtq. Co. enonals 5350 net•. Mte 17·34. Join thc i---------1 d · ------Labor Day. 1 to 2 Bdrm. 642-2171 545.0o 11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Army Heserve. For more the world's rinesl cruis· Has mme openmgs 1139 Baker Costa 2500· nr ntrport at :w 12 f f 710 ,,27 3031 l2 3 AVON ing sailboats bas iiosi· for: $49·304 I room!!. w/15 phones. Ms Res. 645·6941 Dnnklng problem? mo < ;i . ' 1 I Uona ovaU. for : C-nters 2HD T D MO ... EY ~-0219 -· r-Equal Oppor Employer Oav1esSS6·4242 Businessman. 27 yrs. • • " Call Alcohol llelphne 1----·------1 Int C--nten Miii Work
quiet. non drinker nds Terms below market.1 -~:M~h~rs~·~a~d~a}~·~83S~-~·311~3~0_Jl--.. ------•I UkeFHlin9 er. -r-ers Choice Location
Of(1rr or store rent11L 285
-;q It. Nl'wport Pcnm.
C:ill wkd11ys 639-ti700
pvt runds, persona ti-I de de t Extet-Carpenters General Help •
hse or apt yrly by 6il. service in your h11mc or SPIRITUALREADEH AOMINISJRATIYE " pen "' Dec:lc&Hardwor• Boat exper.pref'd. ~~~
Nwpt from 25th St up or offil'C, 675·449" Bkr. 24 I Opt'n 10 AM -10 PM S.in9 Your Own ln1tallet'S 4 Day Work Week Buyer $000
Cd:\t 7:>2·6282 hrs. Advice on all matters. RECORDS CLERK Bou & Selling Min 1 yr exper. req·d. Good Benems. EscrowOf'ficer S12K
.4 Br, Home, 118 or Costn lO" First TO 90 days ;11.2!11. t:I Camino Real. Port· Time? Must have own tools & Paid Med & Holidays Escrow Sec'y S900
HEWPORTIEACH !\tcsa . w1ia r a1te . o; ' : . Sa.nCJemenle.Forappt P/llme,perm.posit1on. Fit AVON into your transportation. Apply lo ll200CondorAve Person Friday 5650
t,il,:J.s&G room i.tardcn of· t'orm<'r apl mngr will re· ly. Super secured. 492·0034 492·9136 Apply lo.noon or 2·4pm schedule. Have Cun, meet Security Guard, West.~ail Fountain Valley 979-0126 Irvine Personnel Agency
fi ce!I from Sl 7:>. :n 23 dt·corl\le 540 2()5;1 642 U6_50_l___ Monday through l"riday new people & make good Corp .• 275 McCormick <S.D. Frwy, Euclid exit> 488 E. 17th Costa M~a
Bi"'h Street. N.R. (Near PRIVATE PARTY will MASSAGE THE BROADWAY money too! Lets talk Ave. C.M .SUile224 642·1470 ' h r FIGURE MODELS NEWPORT BEACH ~oout it. Call 540-7041 or1--------1 BOOKKEEPER ~ llll'}IOrt ). 97!1-f.666 ··-i•H/lft•Ht/ pay lo 115•,,, cas or your .. G rr· k ·------------:_._~• se11soned 2nd TO. Carl ESCORTS EqualOpporEmployer Zenlth7·1359. lootRepaimwn eneral o ice wor .
"'""'"' 64566 -~~~~~~~~~r-~~~~~~~~~I Must be neat workers Irvine lndustriial OCC CAR WASH HELP ---------·'·•••••••••••••••••••••• __ ·_l80_. ------OutA"ll A pl o ly I Ai rt rea mus• type Hun . 8 h "' · P · n w/clear records. Need rvo a • ~ 20Yrs&Up hncfton eac Bn1Mt1 Hume·Office·Sludio AFFILIATE· You can Bakery Help, German mechanics & painters. 549.2400 METRO CAR WASH llr<111khur~l at Allantn Opportunity SOOS A.Mouncemenh/ 611-381 I munage a bus or your speaking woman betwn Blackie's Boal Yard ,1..;:..:.......:~-------1
-is• l't>r :1quar.-root ••••••••••••••••••••••• P8"onob/ own w/mcome potential 30·50. 5am-llam.
5
Also, 2414NewportBl.NB. BROILER MEH 2950 Harbor 81.CM
lh•lux1' tax.to J(round •/\l.UMlNllM Fl>RY Lost& FoUnd AIORTION of Stsoo mo ht yr. Saleslady llam· pm. ---------1 With exper. in Contlnen: CLERIC"'L
f1011r i.pal'l'. Good C''( SllO,OOOdowtl tQk"~ 0\'Af ••••••••••••••••••••••• t\39 6123 Call 10 noon S40·0281 BOATS t I rood A I Am ~ "' ~ Coun"eling & Referral · · · • a prep. PP y, · Conscientious indiv. to 1111~urr.11111111ni:,..purl.l111i •ORAPf'MF'GWKRM ~et'!Mflb 5100 Prea.test-uva1l.wknds 3FINISll brosia, Rm 2 11 , I h tud l t'11ll f<l Samu .. lf11n ·•t e11. OOOd • l k. ., A1'r brue. h artillt BANKING CARP ENTERS W""kday•, 505 30th, Bal serv ce ome I y s U· • • " .. o ,,, own D N• ovPr • ••••• • • •• • • • • • • • • •••• • 24 Hr H I I 547 9495 ·' ~... 0 d 9t>.1 15117. •1.UM8ER YO/SlOSM e P me · For T-shirts &dresses TELLER, P /time 2 MlLLMEN Penin, NB ents. Accurate typist. -----1 • FlSll & ~'ISll/CHI PS Sun Francisco buyer PREGNANT? 673·7569 Branch ofc seeks l bon· Xlnt career opportunltyi-..:._....;... _______ , Will consider person re·
EXEC SUITE
•BUILDJIOWSUPPLY "'ll•hel!Oritntalru1ts 1---------1dable & dependable ror 11 kllled m e n BUSBOYS·COOKS entering Job market.
• •UEER/STEAK llSE 400·5717 Carin g confidentiill AMWAYDISTRtBUTOR tellertoworkMon&Sat w/abillties t o do .t op No expcr r eq fo r t'/tlme, g ood co.
2 Roorn 11: c1Hpt'tll, N _ .. CP 1 s ... ---------•counseling & referral. offers opportunity for & f/llme for varotion re· quality work. Min 3 yrs Busboys. Limited ex""r benefits, Apply National _. . oiu10 a m,r1i1nw.t Girl s. unm11rrl("d , Ab6rllon. adoption & ... ~ s t Co ~""181 h nrr1pc~. ull 1111n·l<'c:l4 incl. H B s nrnOrangl', CM di vorN•<l. widows nr kf'('plni:. llood earning. We im;iat. lief. Ex per. pref'd. Con· exp. Xlnl pay., benefits & for c"OOks. Apply Grinder ys ems l'Jl,....., re
t-N'ty. uvall. Close to 645-4170 !>40·0008 olonr. Attc•nd my lcclur~ APCAHE 547.2563 1-·or appt. call 673·4768 tact Hlldo Terranova ot working conds. Rest. 21002 PaclCic Coaat _s_t._N_B_. _____ _ a11111w~.:.. 8.'li!_ »_1o_B_urb_!,lr11 on auto purchns«'ll. muln _ ____ 64 4 · 7 2 5 5. W cat er n PACIFIC TRAWLER Hwy Jl.13. lork/Caahler
Hayfront l room 11111tc, re
u~onJbh.• Cull M,r.
1-·Lut't• t'ohJ Laundry h'nuncc & prevrntivc •SONYA'S MASSAC .. ~· Federol Savings, 2744 E. CORPORATION H It I d d
+<.:lrantn11: Aary In mi•chanlC'al rip·orr. & f'or tht mu~saiw you\•e ASSEMBLY CoHt Hwy, CdM. EOE 3.50Kalmu1Dt f'ind what you want In * •a hM n • *
G7~ Rt41 Ln11una Beurh. Sll,000 68vc hun<irl'd 's ots·fl l)t>r lw<'n wuitlni.t !Clf, <'••II Mil" <Asta Mesa 540·3935 D;illy PilotClasl'ifieds. Non·11moker, cxpr·d In c11~h _. i11n\(•nlory. CDrivc ycor. <.:all 768.0 31:1. 11.'llH711o Outc:ullnnly. LEAD hundhnJ: monoy. Nntur11I
omr.-Space • Puhllc IH'
countant Au"l St'rvlc('s
lax llbrury. xeroit •~rv.
conference rm 64fl·4330
up por 1nfc on 01ut 1011 "pm ------Wmhd 11oou.a..w..tect 7IOOMaA..W.ted 7100 •·ood/Vitamin Store11. ll~y .... ~, 01' •7c.,,&K.., m" · !\(•""'· •G"~ •-T •--r • I I 100'0 ~ '""~ ,,_., -.-'"""'" r. f.xpt'rlo _.:c<i g r oup ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• nPP Y n peraon " :ind still l(rowlnl(. Owner Lost It FotlftCI 5300 13obJ:imt"' l.w :\111,._eur It• 3 dt! r ror e l t'cl ro ,_n_roo_k_h_ur11_t.;....1_1_n_. __ _
lc11vlng Al'tla. {•tine. On ••••••••••••••••••••••• Outcall!' DAM lll'M. m.-rhnnlcul a11~omblh of CLERIC TY,IST
ly. J oe Quinn. !1111 N. 494 -Slll 11 I I it ACTORS C.'oll1'l Hwy. Lnguno Brh t'ound: Blk Lub. "'emnlc ams prcr 11 on !IW c Cl\. Marketin g Dept. In
CENTRAL 494 7018 dn. 494·6310 on Bonitn CAnyon Rd. educe with 00Be11t> STACOSWITCH INC Newport Beach tn11. co.
COSTAMIESA l'Y~/wknds. , ~~~rvln.e/N wpt . Toblets & E-Vap .. walcr ll3983
5
lc4c9r •• 3c00114t1nMc1n needs p ereon .good
_........... pills .. llunt1n11ton li<-arh MUSICI A ~s wtr11o1urea & typlnr. Olrpc•b. drnpc11. air t'On· Or:111on say: .. More food. M e d I c u I G t o u p Equnl Oppor. Employc>r An S9lnry lo ISOO. Somo
· dilionlna. ample park· blager Oolden cal(." Found : Beaut. Old Phnrmnry buslncu exp. pref'd.
ln11 ll30Sq .fl . nml up. Trnn11l11lr: IOOM req. ex· E nglish S heepdog.a.----...:.------' WRITERS Good co bcneflla.
Roy Mt Cardle pnnllion :IOOM gr. ret t•emale. Downtown HB. A· PAHK Ml\SSAOF. 1---------833·8-450.
Realtor lllOMewport Pel<lnJZ objets d 'iirt. vie: Dwyer School. l.lMPlN·LEAPOUT ASSEMBLERS Co!\tnM«'sn~>4147129 Gov't heirlooms. rare _S3&-_ll062_. ----$S.OOOFfi'withAD DISC JOCKIES 0 C K T A I t~ j I All Pro .. en· Ex""r,AtlorlnaGirl11 p l .. lo I t r" w•tTR ESS"'S E" 6~t~7~· • · I.OST: f'em Lab & 2, 5 wk Mo:Sat 11 AM to4 AM. m~~~a~ica~ 8°w1~:hcii''. p:ricnc~·d. "te~nY~~
IU11Mts Retttol 4450 .... ~THWORM F"'RM ~d1~1~:Ut')t~1~:~~h Sunday 1 nP1~1htto l2 Mid· Exper. prc-r'd .. but wlll Each of you has plc9'ed a challengln1 & rewardlng HEauroperboraDnlvdc.uclaMlo.• •• 2043
••••••• •••• ••••••••• ••• ~ "' 548·2349 ' ' • trnin. f i •-bill Suiter. 130 E. 17th St. Allorpartor?maktoC·---·-----• 1885-BParkAve,CM STACOSWITCHINC proeason •your a ty to communicate with
Cost11 Mesa. Approx. 37s rer 496-0l43 LOST! Malt-Slamt-8-0 kit· ~ 646•9944 1139 Saker Costa Mesa people is an essential part of success. Time Lire·
sq .. rt. AtC, pvt bat~. Pla.ster Crafts Shop ror ten. Anita & Pac1f1c Cat. c weight with New 549-3041 Books has a telephone sales division that is very
put10. crpts. d.rps. Sll.>. sale. <Cd to advantage> C.11494·5139 Shape Ta bl e l s and Equal Oppor Employ4'r mu ch Ii k e Y 0 Ur prof eas ion-e ff ec ti ve ly
mo Water paid. Doyle. 64Z-62Sl &S4M.JlO FOUND: Boy's bike Hydrex Water Pills at communicating with people ls essential. Our good A1otent.~-1168 nrWamer& Euclid College Pharmacy & reps earn $4-·$6 per hour with a pay plan of a base
ANTIQUE ROW. Newport PLAHTS & FLOWUS 531-5236 Costa Mesa Pharmacy. ASSEMBLERS hourly wade + commlsalon + bonus. We need 81 I.I c NETS SS,000 MO lmmcd openlntl•. olectro 11:t ,. · c. M. At store. Remarkable shop ln af. FOUND: g.10 mo old rem E.ucuti••••try mechan\c:al usemblcr11. energetic, articulate people we can train to AdJ~lningtlf whrehouse Oucnt. huvy foot tramc Irish Set. Btwn On $2.SOpc'r hr + 25c-35cper introduce Time Ufe Books to customers in many ;;1334r.i~G4~M7:ealty, area. Only f l orist MinOrca & Men Verde "Massagt ror the Man hr bonus. Xlnt fnn11es. states. Our excellent training program will ass.ist
--....,.-------•around. S.1n Frandsc:o Dr,CM. 7l5Mll01. ';l;'bo wanta the Xtras in Orange CO. Airport loca· you ln your own profession; choose from 2 part-time
EAST l 7tt. ST. M.yle. On.ty 134•000 full : snns. Dlk at wht life." Home· Off. ·Hotel. tion. ~Pl¥ &am-4;.30pm. shifts wbicb allow )'OU plenty of time to pursue your
Successful retail o r price wtlh ucellent Spaniel. Male. Vici..:$&4040:.::...:..:...:.;:._-----t ~9~383.1~achu, C.At. own career. Call 833·8098 ror an Interview
service loc. lo Costa tenns.,\0.837-4200 Ntws><>rt Shorea. NB. ltitarriaa• at family1---------1 appolntment..
Mesa. AltlS Ii CAA.FTS $40.188$. ~~lin1. South Shores * GOOSq. ft.+ storege NBTS.,S OOOYR Cbrtsllan CO\ll\IClln1
• Doubl~doora ~ .Jct 'home aad T: I mo old Great Clinic. Allan Snider, MOTtCI!
•On-site parking movlnl North, musllell. Dano. Ma le. F awn . -400.:mo. bow Dally PIJot C1an· • OnlySlnpermo. Wt"ll located ahop tn T•pedu.n. Neb medica-1..;.;;..;.,_; _______ , lfled nds <Usplay their
Rulonomics, Corp. South Oranjle count.f. tion. ~·•rd. ss1.-... SecW Ce.abs 5400 meu•a• with lt-glbiUlY
__ •_•_6'7_W'l'00_• __ •_•_--1 M•cram~. decoopaae, FOUND: Fem boxet' mix.••••••••••••••••••-••• and import? Our •cl•. w
UOO Sqil olc 4c wa~ s\ained ~ d.c. WUJ •J>Pl'OX ii-70 Iba, Vic SPECIAL OFFER att proud !.~ say• really
space. top cond. Best tnln. Ol"inj ofref'. Alt. f'alrvl<ew tr Mac:Art.b.u, Meet fr OrHt Dalina cet ruutta. Phone
Loe, Cl\I. 673-1411 Eh·es. 13'7~ SA. Tl5l 21U. Clu.b.caU913oU)922' hr . Gea-$171.
PHONE 833-8098
TIME /1.IFE LIBRARIES, INC •..
COUEGI STUDENT
AND ALL OTHIR
H.$,GRADS
H YOU have been rcfu.$ed work bccauac you wqro
too )'oung, lnck~ expur.
or could only work a t-ew
montht le have 9elUed
for work Ula~ does not
pay weu ... ~slder this
nno Summu job OP·
portunlty. U you can
work C/ttme, we •lll
traln you. 4• no .,_r.
ricr. ,If over n. S.vcrol
perm. positions are allO
avail. w/oo problem of
strikes or layotra. Star'
lmmed. Call bctwn 9 • 3
Slf·l ltJ
..
I
MtfpW.... 7100 ...... W..... 7100 ,M 10.1l'11 OAILVPILOT
........ _...,.._•• ·-·--•••••• 1 -· ·----,-...---~ ....... -.............. ·--·-.. -· 1040 Mochlliie1 'f 1071 MIR...._, 1010
_,.,. to fM.111 oo ....._.. W~, ff NX Am-Ww. s.t-.. C'\c'rlt wanted, f\a.ll *Seen'-'" ••••••••••-••••••••••• •••••• ••••••••• ••-•••• -•• ••• • •••• ••••••••• •• Udo41.e.Ownprtroom. Bc>catecJ nlns *r•ic. Ht..oc.lo()rsOo.;P/U.., tlme.; knoWledJc ol tyt. Jr •• ~ec.61.qJl PETWORLD CHAINSAW WANTED I hlb •• eoror TY. ,..,. ore. Gill&Jiam Qlri dar•. altu • eve• ~it.C•l!.:.::.a.,•PP . # ... ,Oh,(!eupt· ~ Bwt. p le w ·ii. MANUFACTURER & TOP CAS.H DOLLAR
IZSO/mo. 115-3R1. •$tZS io;.~· prd"d. lor . ~~~~~ .. faetK', BuJls. Toy ;o:i-re .. :ers: fiO::l ~·~~~·as p A I D F 0 R y 0 u ~
inoueue"r lot Clktl MfGaeal AAt;: PrtmarU SALESMAN 402081.ttbSt;StelO. Poodle$, Shih uu Po~ low*' IS$'5 Aavonced J£\VEl.RY. WATCHES. ___ _......_ ___ _,,_.,........__, bome lD C.N. 1am.Jpm But Ofe. ffll0Un1ton nl OPlaATOI Put Ume ror m•rL'O\or Newp0rt &1eh &13>81IO ~•:ia A~o. SUki•• ft Easlne Ptoducta, 3340 ART OOJF.CTS, GO,!•.P ·~~~--!Jllll~ll!lllll-1 ablft. Call a.itwn tam" ~ ~l(lian. Rt'pl Vlrltd lf\11.. Wbda bl. ~ CallCorAppt/&tab ' Voriua. lOO mlx..S P.-Eftltey 51, Los An&"tn, S.1LV~ER0SER~l~t-•. ~-.....,••· ~f:~~~ ~·If::. "'!W~.t':~ ;"~ ~~i ~~~!?MAwOM" ~ Suvlc• Sta. Jutcnd1nt ~.8ll1: ;,~'11'8i0!~ 1100ZL ~cru1b~6'5~ N . , I eat.aMcsa.Ca • .,... ~ _. ...... • full or pttlm Appl~. Fa!rvi w.SA.Optecvei. i-·orsalecompleteoJK-rot . • ~--hnt Uftl..C•rr9Uil~ •utect ltoWil'IJ lot I Bro•n•s Sh~•. m E. ~H027. '"' m•chin.-shop f'qlllJ)1 LUGGAGE TAGS ~ti_.. J_ RVV•~ma Mtmt, .. m .ire incomt R&\L ESTATE SAi.ES Cota~l\1 lo Oranp Co. Coost H'Wy. N. 9. all or ln part, con.tst.t Of fro"' )'our bu!lin~ilt curd !1eellsot opportunlly F/Ume Maid pee\Uoo wiUwut.1Mnaupfan:1U.1 ATTENTION ta1oottnarora1tire11h·t. PoochsA'eopl• drill preaau, mtlla, ~one eord rot' 01ch
lH hadlvldual lill'/Wo.td 1v&1L PAJlT·Tlltr; ..-i. or job H1p0111tlbJllUes. LICDISf!O. wt£olna aaJnpenon. In· STOil! P\.q>s·All drain . ~2848 Jothes. t1nnd1t11. proocs u.• ptu.s one ,pare. we
llf'OC!IU.lq bac~ Uonl avll!J frocn 1•m· We t rain. •'or IPPl UNLlCENSBb. QOmew\llm1led. OITICTIVI sbo
1
R bh ~c. Soe Mon·Thur S.S. return t>ermunentl~ ~ .. ';'!1.A\YP!_.,4?0• 1WJ>tnr ... ..;. ... ~ -z"P·PI" p-.. -a-... l GSTTJIE 8BD Ph. 6314330 C.M. aru. 1111.lSt hove ~~4:,S M ;t qu~•ltt ~~~. ua £. &6th C.M. S.IM1~1 sealed attraf\t-ff t11a & -.,,,; hauw "-~"..-,. 1 ~ ..... u ... ""' ..,., CAR RU prior c11p.:r or law \'O• ....,_ " ro ;....,., alr•P· m etlna alrhnl -t1oa 11 1iauatlcal typlng. 1oam~1>m Moa Sal, , MOl>ELS·MASSc."SES TR£ATll&tt: LES forc•mtot · bacqrouud 4c cropped,..,. 962._ ~ tOIO 1.0. ff<l\.Uremenla. frt•
Coo4 communlc•Uon THlllOADWAY PJ1una Modcla. ~~; Wa train )'Ou to HU VERWEIGHT f700 monthly to start. Lhaaa Apso Pupples, • .,. ............ ••••••••• veo~ IOd & lhd\! f'or o
.. tkllla. tndudlns cram· MIWrORT llACH = e.i.°.$.T1009
Y •es with t.n acffitrll· Mm 41 womeu wartted lo t2U > 2M·01~. AKC. llome rais~. S'>ic apt'lna.a & matt. U~ pcnot1111l1C'd tatc tncl~ ""mar, 1peutn1. t.-dltln1 " Eq\&&J Oppor Employer t'd ~rM tb.at •tart.a i!ft• putidpate lna nt\114<,... O.ll•M-96t8 n~. Pecan corf~ tuble, •allpapeX• fabtlc or
punttua\Jon. Will traut lo r:nod11t..a)'. U you ate 111-lutlonary wcl&ht coo STUDENTS 15 17 hirse throw cu•lilont. "Dll.1 Olo .pa~r & Wt!
• ~ modtrn highly MOLD PR(SS tf'NStlld In urning hl1 ~ proaram swt-eplna • Dobie pupa. chump Gn·3m&t~'tl-l'll!. will back & trim your ~c.atedeqllipment. HOUSEX!EPER money from th •tar\, aMtn\)' No drup dltt.a Wo...lc af\er 11choul & Sat. fl.an<'ho t>o~ breedlna tap. Or ti')' ~wo card.'
• Cllll644-Utt Ot'Mtal. SU$ Wkly. 5IJIJ i-t lndlvaduaJh~d free-thou 'wraps atttnu~ N-Ow. Cuarantftd Ctttme atock. papera 4J ahot• 2Wh1pploOilPolntin.is backtobac.k
9AM.ll1Noon day1, N.B. 9.5, £11" OPERATOR tralnlnaootbeJiobln1 one uuCb<:11or~cdicatlon Summer job. Tun5p. 645-0897 ~ PRICES: • 'THI lltYIMI CO. ~ald Exp & refs r~ ol m•n.Y lOp or e~ oeat... N 1 orr1 blttl PfOVlded af\er lra!nina ·c Su int Oemaro l>UP' sa ea or 3/SS
SSO H---' Ctr Dr q d. ft!:-11 to Clu11rk:d ~~ol~•o•~'p!~t ed lbrvoufot Or~~! COi!<!! ~~~ ifea1lhru9i;, In· Ca.U <52·62..2 or Al>PLY at riies Cho mp ion 'Sired Wooden storage shed • n. '15 tu;. SUOea. ·-r-w· d "'"" ctoDai1wPIJot r-~•&em "! eq lJ, C'JlU r ,,....,er i C t llm 3931 t.heArlhur Bl. no. I 6 n l bike' hp• 6/IHag1$UOea. "-wport IMclt •Poooo~"; 1580 • ..,.Costa for tabracatln• •mall t:ailt. Arlene. t 1141 UP._en1 ve. .~ ... abav~ 108• Newport lk•ch ; rom Dakota Kenne s. x .; mm · lOor mon Sl.•Oea.
EqWll Oppor Employer 11 ... a, ,.:: ......,. precuison '1•1 lthocb cgmpo-Ml-874.2 m, .. !"'web,ml• ~~J\>'., "'it"' For -in· Next to Vlrtott1's Station 063-7947. reclining rocker: aun Sales Tax ln<'h~t'd ~~~~~~~~~jf-=~~::::~::;-;:""";;;:;.;---1 ne11u. ma ' p. .... ' "'vVl. " • R t rant cab. &4'1-6782 NO CARO• -S rtCHl .... C a~EPTIONIST tormallon Call Mr. esau · Chihuahuas. A.KC. lqng . • i I HOUSf.ttEEPEA STACO W " ....,. Aklna, hm·l2 noon. coot. S75 up. Male &ClasstoPdin.lblwtchatra Draw your o~n or send Counterg:P·M f'ull·Time. ll.396alcer,Cot1a11 ... Neat appearance. non· Mon-Fri. (l)T1'..S1~. TeJeBhone Sales fem.Ml-3092. $.100, 9~· Hobie 35. ·az name. add~S$, phone & l :30AM t.o & CUSTODIAN 54t·J04 I smoker· some t,ypana. Falcon $300. 494.()6AG we·u make one card P r ~YB~~~-::l.HB. Graveyard. Hrs vatia-EqualOpllQl' Employer phone solicltin&.in SALES PlRSot4HlL AM Sb l'tt. Pi.rt-ltme. 18 Pharaoh Hounds <Rare tag. Add2Sf each, 41 branch Real Estate Of· J HER'BERT Orovcr.llourlywoges& Breedl. Registered Two redwood chnls Scndcheckormoneyor· DAMCETtACHlltS ble. Exper'd°b~:pel flee 83.00 per hr, In· HALLJEWELLERS comm.av.Ul.Fordetails PHCA&Shots.~1·6789. louJ\ges. Delu.xc p~da. duto:
DISCO & BALLROOM ~~~': ':~cpl y . rys~~ NURSES dustrial Brokers &33.as.5l Now Interviewing tor call 540-0301 Ii ke new· SlOO. Call PILOT PfllMTIMG
f'ull or p /time. Earn Cl emente General LYM occol'l_>eto 477ocamp1&S quality sales om~nted LosAngelesTimes FrfftoYot1 8045 .493.0941. P.O.Bnxl560
Sf.96 hr. Training avail. Hospiul. (710 496-1122. . ldedication " • charge Dr. Sutle200N.B. personnel al both South 1375 SUnllower, C.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rampart Athletic Club Costa Mesa. C.. 92626
Open 10.tm-lOpm. 4 O.C. . nurse rorGPM sdluft. ~ll UCEl'TIOMIST Coast Plaza ($;49·1379) TOW TRUCK DllJVER Small Tenierdmlic. 61Mos. Membership for ule. M ..... n;bin..lrvinr Coast locations · Housekeeper. live 10. Uroe. oo •• kill And Westm101ter 'd A 1 100 Gd watch og, oves M le / Fem S l 2S em~ cqr-a 549 0934 Mature, Enpisb speak· benefits. Apply Park Sb & typing 6 s (897-0327> Mall Loca-Exper · PP Y children. 962-8459. an. a • · Country Club • .-hone·
-...Harbor• Ste33 ....... I 842-<ing,80220.chlldrn S & 9. Superior Healthcare, needed. Apply. 3391SPDel tions Call for apPoint· Irvine Ave, Newpor eves. 642-3855. • ..:..640-~5306~------~ "" 1AAc. "·· · Ave NB Obispo. Dana t . · Beaeb. ds ol p d bl .-_.;..;....; ____ _._ __ ,1---------1 '""' ~penor ' . 496-S10'l. ment. To gd bm. M. S hep/ 123 Y res en ue JONG SZ bed <new) lttru
_Deliverymen for LA HousewiCe earn an ei<tra 642·4MlO ERSO S WAITR!SSES Husky. 1 mos. loves T ~~r' ~= S:e~ firm S19S lncls del. ~m;r·~o~s:;.1~40~·M· SS to ~ per hr, teacbin.& Nunes Aides Ir Practicals r C~1?:'~5l~~~ c~!~~! opport~nity Eicper·d Full or pit. children. 962-8459, an for 6 roo!s. s.aoo. Game Usually home. 835-2'l63
---''--------1hobby classes w/Tn· for pvt duty at $32, less ~·.~MOO. with new eompan,y, pro-Goodhrlo:e~~\appear. andeves. set 48" tbl w; 6 chairs, TERBEDS
DENT AL 0 r c ·Chem Liquid cm· fee. or hosp staff at • • fessional sales for ag-Surf&Sirloin 2 Male kittens, 8 wb .• Sl00.M2-8478evesonly, WA
profeulonaJ belp. broidery. Call97t·348&0 S28.80, no fee. Malprac., eceptioftht/s.cretary greuivt & ambitious $930W.CoastHwy,NB short h aired. well Evt'ryStylel>lscoul'lted
• Secretarial skills 9fi3..2300 health 4t ace ins avail. Type 80 WPM w/ac· persons. Must bewillln& NoPhooeCalls marked. Ready for SCRAM-LETS •NEVER UNDERSOLD ' absolutely essential. 41dust. Seamstregs, exp Register 9A·9P aoyday, curacy on IBM Exec, to work for bigb return. permanent homes. FromS119.81wilbHeater
6't-0680or833-Z2t
4
. pref'd, but home sewer r efs nee. Lescoulie shorthand 110 WPM. Call675-6646. WAITRESS 893-3073 ANSWERS AquaHeaven aso.7oo2 "' DISHW •SHER willing to turn coo· Nurses Registry. 351 PI ea s a n t phon e . Ei<per. for small Italian . • Wi d or Pool Table> ~ sidered.Mon.M0-3422. Hospital Rd , N .B personality Ir sharp ap.SALES·Small Jewelry rest. & deli. Full orAdorablek1ttena.6wsotd. i>.ycbc-CJ'U,)' slate~ n5ear new. Incld.~
Days.Over21 642-9955, 540-9954. Now pearance most imPor· shop. Mature woman. p/time. Apply, Carpi's MWilbavegoodbolJ\e. Ra.rpy-Forked tifCany baoalna liQht.
<.; Surf&Sirloio anltor's Helper. Mesa freelegalco.nsultaUon,l t.aJllldealworli:eond.ln WeekeXJds.NB.6'13-4734.. Pizzeria,539W.19thSt. 67~. AHEAD · cues" rack. 8550.
# 5930W.CoastHwy,NB Verde Conv. Hospital, per mo. Low rat.es for Irvioe.forexpercateer SAUSTIGER! c .M. Adorable \inymaakkil· Ifyou'rerejectedbyone
67
:M
9
u
&PhoneCalb! 661CenterSt,C.M. furtbe.rbelp. girl ~e557-92008-4: ,...._ w-k guar. Dire.... tens.cailweekdayaonly. woman. don't try to wln1---------
Mon·Fn ......, ~ ~~ 18 another. Quit while POOLTABLE-1 DONUT SHOP ANITOR F/time. Apply, NURSES· AIDES · sales, ellpl" req. Family WATCHMAN · l<iam.,..pm.646-4 1 you·reAHEAD. Moving. M.ust seU. All night shin. nan & Mesa Verde Coov. Hosp, Building staff birin& due EC E p TI o NI s T . man pref. Call collect
3
mo old pup • .,. Husky,~
8350
.-CDUG3t-0383'. t p:tlme. No exper nee. 661CenterSl.C.M. to increase census. Exp TYPISf <213)822-3936 We hire rt'· $hep. Female. 646~156 1 yr old roll·l~p desk. . .
Woman aae 25-45. Apply Lob T~chnlcloa only for PM & night shift. 70 typing WPM, immed <-'<>rds. Early Mornin g Hrs oroo.9413. perfect •. cost Sl2~. s~ll GURNEl'<Hosp1tal ~Ill in person. Mr. Donut, 135 Stable employment, xlnt 0 Pen 1 n g, 1 ea ding From 7AM to lO:JOAM. S7S: sewing machine in Xlnt cond. S.100. t E.17thSt.CM -Production work. Optics beneCits. Night differen· mortgage banking firm, SAUSWOMEM Perm. p/lhne position.funlltutt 8050 cabioet,workswell.$25; 5*3610askforRob
. OR""'f'ERY &Aldasers.edKi fcslnc ti11I. Apply al Park salary open, phon ·•and a couple of good Xlntcompanybenefiti1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• soft black naugahyd
1
e
2
Tabl
5
ws ('J..rintcr
L. .,. vane ne
1
' Superior Conv Hosp. 144S Claire835·0588 (orappt. men ... Outside sales· Apply Peraoonel OUi<.-e SAVE! New & Wied Cum, Mediterranean 11ty e S) ~ aS7:'i tho othrr I WORKROOM 1231 Victoria St. CM SUperior, NB. 642-2410. A<lvertilina_. Interesting From 10am-6pm Mon· appl's. mi.lie. Wilson's chair & sofa. bo,th SlfiSO: ~ Catt~ sCl? f M1ehine ()prs. Marker, 646-7165 EOE · Receptiollist work.full time career-Sat Bargain Nook, 54$ W. Mediterranean light "'" · • •
Tabler. Cutter. Exper'di---------.Murses&Honwmabn Glrtfr14C1y exper.sa.les type1i c:inly. THEIROAOWA'i t9lhSt.C.M.642-7930. ture, Sl5: 2 prol balr AdmiralSlereo ~~.:~ab~ae!.!~ te~~1':e: LEAD PRESS ~g:piY~l v :1t:ff d ~!tef Nea\ appear a must. SSSO Salaries draws fringe NEWPORT IEAICH Piano, 2 swivel rockers. ::re~~~~~ home, CherrywQOd
..,., ~..., RN's,•vN·s.Pra .... icals. mo.St.JobnKoitsl7312 benefits, clc. For EqualOpPorEmpoyer cbes\ of drawers. Dys 645·TM1an6Plp· 900 W. 17th St, C.M . "' .._. Eastman.lrv.540·~171 pe rsonal appt call "'-I . T isCI b OPERATOR 0 r d t r l I e s & 631·~.dayornght. 83J.~9. Eves.548·9T36 c..AC usive enn u NIXON Blcentennlal 540-MM. All h.ft membership for sale. · •. Homemakers. s 1 :1. Real Estate Sales \Vatermun, ~/lime. age45 HOUSEFULL or nr new 644-0757. Med a I . N 1 JC on '" ~ DRIVERS WANTED 4-S Years exper. in ~rrset Full or p/t. Westchrr J . 4 I TV & over. Shop Maint. Ml'<itl furniture. Must 00 Washington together.
MenorWomen production operations Nurses Registry, 1617 Olft tt hnClement~,cabl~ .0 Man.·IO yrs&over.Ex· stlld by May 14 th.Lyon ports, cabinet, 2 d•tcd,1776-1976.Mad~111 Mustbe 2Soro\'er Exper in l~. 2850. & Wcstchrr Dr, Sle 212. •Free 15 Day Training as opening or a .. • · k & · h t I 1973 of pure sllve1 . Apply lo Person Apoll() operations. Full N.8. 631-1>610 Course staller Exper pref'd Ap-per. w1mowers, true s Formal Din. Rm set, Qn tape s ooters. s ape. Sc S29 SO p 0 llox
Y .. low Cab benefit por kage lncltJ<!· -_ _ •Cadillac Car Program I t ~So El c8,'.run0 lructors. Contact Mr. Sx h1de·a bed, full sz gun, prof. bike stand ar:. ·ca 9o6'Jo in" medical. dental, tu•· Nursing Jm med OPt'n.1ngs •"lSalesOr'"ngcCounty ~:a~ SanClc~enle. Neales. 673·913.~. lrvmt> hidc·a ·bed , Kng s~ G4i-~art.6 504, 11nton, · · ' 1125\SlaterAvenut' ., LYN & " " · CoastCountryClub,1000 bedrm set . Qn st foulltaioValley hon refund program & for full .time i> • •Al Lis tings Oranae ESS E Pac Csl llwy NU .. _ _.,.._,.m set. v Kng
51
·--1111-1111 .. 1111111_ .... _ ..... lllll.~ _ _.;;..;;.:;,......;_.;.,._-.:'---I retirement. LVN Polllt1on days.& Af. County SEAMSTR . · · · ~""' I EamS600tostOOOper mo ConltAct Pel'$onncl Dept te~s. Nurses aids all • !I l Advertising in To run small cusbton Woman. Neut, energetic mattress. sofa & love
comm. Fullt'r Brush PACIFlCMUTUAL 3 sb1fts. Cbapm11n eaurorrua shop. Top pay. Good for motel maid work scat. 3 pc cofree tbl set,
• Sales. 968-83'18. 700 NewPort Ctr Or Harbor Convalescent •U AdvertiJlng in Natton (uturc. 7S2·143l. Laauna Deb Resort, 6 romer group, gaml' ta·
Newport.Beach Hos pital. 1 2232 If unlicensed. let us as fr Real daywk.494·1196. ble, stereo, pictures. r Executive Secretary• part Equal Oppor Employer Champman Ave. Garden s1st you in obtaining your EC RETCA R Yi OF h. lv_:t:ethl a~hrs.3 m' ~:ilirrra~
lime, up to 20 hrs wk.t~~~~~~~~~j~C'._t:ro~v~e::·~-....... ---1 Real j:state License Estate o., n as ion Women neede d for • .,~ -Can do typine al home.1: C 11 · Island. Must have 4 yrs housecleaning servecc l-'-pt..;..y_7_31_·-0948 _____ _
• Work ~lates to uct1\·ity LV.H. OR L.P.T a Int A expl'r, type 65·70 wpm. Full or part time. Call d ood
of M.D. as President or witbPsychexp.forperm NURSJNG 832.s:'/o s ~ 80-90 wpm. Call Robbie·s Rag A Mop. 8:;~~r~~u:!i>f:. ~s.
:.I at ion a I Med I ca I relief, gite shirt. 2 nites a RH'S, lYN'S E1l~11. 640·0123. ~·0757. Call 67S·2236. Or0 aniutton. 1714) k ~.1l'cld llo"p1't"I B kk · .,.7~,..,., wee • "'' . ., .. · ecretar'!I/ oo eeper, Yng man ·Qpprox 17-18 •. d d
2
.d .,. ....,..,. 84pro7·g~s .. Labor dispute 111 O AIDES p/llme for small local yr.., fact. wrk. 8•3 111,.11 Kiwi Sz hca bour , s1 c Charming! Graceful Swan!
'"" • firm. Lite bkkpng, PIT 3.7 must bC' depend. ta~lftll w/druwers. Med. f'allblOll Sales Trnt', nn ex· 1-=-_.;.:-------1 11·7.JOAM shit\. full or customer relations. typ. fast wrkr. 645.2702 Sl0>0. SSOO new. Wood per. Mature. 897 84l2 or Maids. Apply The Inn at s>ttlme. DiCferenllaJ pay. ing & s h req'd. Cull Cor bunk beds w/mattresse!I.
9'0-2164,Ms.McFule. Laguna. 211 N. Coast Xlnt benefits. E.O.E._..: ________ inlervw art lOam. • $50. 2 Yellow metal
l FoodServ. Positions.
Super SuirmMt' Work
O.C. Inn Raceway look·
• · log ror concession & beer
HwAysk ror M-.. Gobi.el Contact Mrs. Jensen. REST AURAHT 645.2244. Merchandt1e chairs, S30 both, 645-1870 1-----·-~---i Costa Mesa Memorial •---------••••••••••••••••••••••••
MaidWantcd Hospital. 301 Victoria. MANAGEMENT ECRETARY, typing, Appliances 8010 **I BUY**
sellers. Po~ntial mgmt
M udvancement. Exper
helpful, but not nee.
Ml·~ll.
GOOD JOB
Sr. CitlHftl
2 D1ys per wk. Car.
Steady. Call 673·2289
The Harbor Inn Motel C M. 542.2734 TRAINEE bookkeeping, telephone ••••••••••••••••••••••• Good used nimiture &
1800 W. Balboa Blvd l~~~~~~~~~j Clean cut , aggressive order entry· riling, full Freight Damage Hot point Appliances-OR 1 will N rt .,_ b 675 .,.63 II\ personwhoisinterested time.Startimmed.~ky Sul6_ 3623 w . warner, sellorSELLforvou. cwpo ..... ac · .,,.. tVfice Help, p/time sh I / Id k J d t a I " ~
VI n a career w a wor Pa r n , ~ s r 1 near Harbor, Santa Ana. MASTERS AUCTION • El t · work. Switchboard Opr. ramous restaurant or-Complex, Irvine. 8600 _..:--------1
Manne .cronies 1_W_il_l..;..t.r_a_in_._C_M_._64_S-8_197 __ 1 ganllatlon.MustbewiU· per mo. minimum . REFRIGERATORS 646-8686&833·9625
Technic.ion ---------J Ing to work hard. long 540·64.55. WASHERS DRYERS Aft 6 T o bench l cs ts hours to learn all Cacelsl_;_--------1 Recondltioncd·Repos troubleshoot radio, radar OFFICE of the restaurant busi· & Fr.,>t Damag·d. Ex c c u t iv e · s Bar.
& Power supplies. Will General Clerb 0055 which will lead to a Guar /del Designed like San Fran·
com1der good theory 1 Typish rewarding pas it ion & 29 YEARS JN O.C. eisco bar. Be"ut piece or
pluce of exper. Small s.u.tories good future. Send re-DU .... LAP"S !urniture. Cost S3500 Newport Beach co. Loot &.Short Term As· sume to Ad #677, Daily 1"'111 new.AskSlS00.644·9399. GUARDS W/"ood benefits. Cal A II bl" Pilot. PO Bo .. 1<~". Costa1_:_;.:;...;;.:...;... ______ I 181SNewport Blvd CM
" siaomentt va a ... " ~ ECRETARY, Cull lime CALL c•o.77.,,; "-Ionia I sofa, love st, chr. Co•to Meso ~·2635 or Mll·2622· Mesa, Ca. 92626. ,,..., "" "" ,. MANPQWE~ INC lllllurance Ofc. xlnt typ-Herculon plaid, pine Permantml. 1'\ill 6 P:u1· MASSAGE TRHE RcUrt'<I Christian cpl for init skills. 5'10.1005 btwn Will buy some rfgs & 3P· trim not used 581-6341 Time. Phont' & traosp Voun1t la<Jy \18-281 want· 448 Wei1t t9th S . CM assistant m~rs in apt 8-4PM ask for Jan phances. running or not. ' Chi
re<fd.Call546·027•. ed for lt'i;1tlm11te full 645-2041 <.-ompll'x. CAii 545·5004, al!.o scr ap metal. Oakhandcarved na I t I n 1 n a;•n 1 r....,,. ""mployer ,,,., 57c. <'>co Hutch. SSOO. GUARDS t m c II
0 8 1 0 ""'ua v.,,...>r"' ,_&ie.::.;..:...:~.:::;..:.1_· ------1 Secretaries to $700 ............ 646-7372 eves & wknds. F /time. p1l. Uniforms mas.~u~c·. No ei<p. nee. Anaheim & Irvine. PORTABLE dishwasher 'd We semi to school. cam -d f t 1 75
E "-t od I rum. Ph & car req while you learn. Apply in Part llmr mal or mo c . Clertca/Fill•tcJ $2. 165. G. . ..,., uxe m .. e Hones 8060
N.R. urea. Call 833·4W-3 J1Crt1on any t1ftn. or eve. 3 hu per <lay dorlna RN J.ll :36pm. O/time. Out with anti-spot devu:e. ••••••••••••••••••••••• appt. _ 2112 Harbor, c;.~. or 29 summer and wkcnd~. ~tandrng co. Anaheim. _C:..:a:..l_l 645;_;_·_9484 ______
1 lfnrdwareS.lc~ W. Co85t llwy, NR. fW6.lS55. COORDINATOR Fn.t Ofc Med to $550 G.E.Washer $65, Nor1'?e FOR SA~E , Plumbana. electrical, Mli;alon Viejo Gas dryer S95, Waslek·
plllnt. & genc•ra lH.tpW...t.cl 7100HefpW•t.d 7100 llPM·7:30AM .... T .. W. toSSSO ing Dishwasher S50. '1:1 ArabG•dln9
hardware exp nee. Rion ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• Must huvr al h•ut 2 yn SevernlloculopcnlnilJ Cold~pot reCrig S2S. 1 Yoars old. Roan t·ol?r·
llordwar". 1024 lr'\llne exper. i;upervlslon in J.Ntor S2.90 ~6·8672 Good conformollon. ~·"·
,.,.e . Newport Beach. ucuh! hospltlll. To make Duv ~hlf'l. Irvine
11
. t ,..
2 0
'"" "ellt>nt n<Jina. S3.')(). Coll 642·ll33 AskforPhil. appt. l'OnUct Mr~. ~ $3 lS otpom '' r re ,.. l-737·6449.
Hi• Fl Component !'talc"
p1rt Umc. C4)11 Mr
Has•rotyer bet s " 6pm _ unly. tm.6435.
•HOSTESS • t ~ Mornlnas & Weekenda
Bt.U I:: DOLPlllN
• ...... Vin Udo, N.B. ·--~--:..:..;..:.-.-~-'---~
Motel Desk clerk. Oaf. lblJ\. Surf&< Sand Mote .
USS s. Cal Hw7. AJ>ply ln
penon.
~ HOTE&,MOTEL
,_ Auditors and d esk
irlerkt. Apply Am·
b••••dor Inns Of
-Amtrie1. Oran1e Co. )~tot Appl1 to Mr.
HOUSECLEANING IM!eded by lady w teicpr,
must be dependable, own
( ~ns. refs. 493·~1!1
. ,..~per. T01>aalary.
_. f!C.B. ba7front. Lillie
t-Cboklne. Live in. Undtt
)!l 11Q.ff5-22S6
• MOW ts THI TIMI .'(qr job .-nn to ched; 't•• 1>1Uy Pilot Help • Wanted clusmc1Uon. Ir
Ult job you ••Ill ls not u.n you might consider
11 i1Uerln1 your 1trvlce1 witb an ad Jn the Job
Wanted catea.ory. Phocit
'41$78
Army jobs now. lle'll traia.
Costa Mm
540-1826
H111tiqton ldl
962-1121
Mission Yilj1
542-2435
Join the J>Copll'
who·vc joined the :\nny.
Jenaen, Director of Nul"!I· Cook • fre<ner. Good C<>nd. SOO---·------
1 n a s e r v i t• c a • Afternoon Shi~. Ohmer Cull 546-'SSS. R:ick Bay Corrnl, 800 mo. 71'1542·2734. E.O.Y.. . houae. Dana Polnt. 1, Block t o \ra lls,
Yltfo ~ymettt Auction 1015 151'6503 ~y ·~~·--·~~·~~·--~-:·_"~··~~~J...:.::..:/\..:Y..:....:..:_M_/\_R_E_·_P_n_r_tl It'• I '1C01'1VtrHllon tccent"
IM•a, LYH's 28752 M:uirnerite Pky Y'JJWWW:VRV swu Quarter/Arab. Expr·d 10}).22!'2 In 1ny room -fun to cr°'fle!! ~·Aide• Srnte 16 Mi.ssion Viejo ANTIQUE rldcr only. $000. 833,0039 L -tn:"~,· ..._ 111",.:-1.... H1ngln11 planter or center·
Fttlmc. top ~agea lblkotrtwy,Averyexit AUCTIO... or&45·U78 ~ "''""--"''°"'" olece-ll'!Oeavhful bOlll w•1\' M 0 r g a n N u r g f' s c• .... 924 0 ... I ..;.._;_ _____ -:--:-tr°'lltt 71,~ )t I ~·Inell Jwan GI
W h St. ~ • •J· .. 8070 3 atrtn05 bedapro•d cotton llleg~~ls~lryfJ.~6~5~7{1~1~~:.:· :t~~~~~~;;~~~ O I n t & l Jade a •w ry •""1l•rc111t1lll•.Plttt1t1731'•1 Ste D C M ""1·131.3. r e • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·•v , · · ·.... Porcelains, tnv·to·loOow duectioi11. S•ILMAICERS SECRETARY Bronzes. European· WANTED $1.00 for Hell patttrn. Add
"' Acro.tpace ex per needed Se v r c • { D r c • d o n . SAY Hmo to a MW '"'°" as, mil ~!Um for fl!1klau SEAMSTRESS for bul'y oftlcc. lmmed A mer can. 0 a k TOP CASH DOLLAR with this ar«tful drm. Solt tlrm1ll •rid llllldllnc. ,.., C.1 FULL TIME· TOP PAY O()enlru1 for secretary ~rnitunt. PI\ I l> FOR VO U n tie at tilt too 1dds ltct·fltl· Allee 81ook•
JnquireUUmanS11il1 w /good s pel ling & EitateJew0lry. JEWELRY. WATl"tf} 1erln1 lntere&t to allmmlna NetdfocraltOept.1~ .. 'O"""hSl. NewPort. aromntlcal s klll¥ & MUCH Mu,.h uore ART OBJECTS. O ' pnncen llnu. Oa11yPll01 .. -6'7$-ee70 technical typing back· I ~ '
0 s IL v ~I\ s ER v I c 1·:. Prlnltd f'tttern 9142: H•lf 8oK 163. olo Chclaoa Sh•.
11round. Xlnt company Sunda,lPM.MonlPM FINE FURN & AN· SiLH10!t>.Jlh.14Vt.lGY1. NewVor1t..NYI001t.P11n1
SAIL SEAMSTRESS benlnts & woTldna rondl· Clru~lonThruSal) ,TI.::.:..:Q:!..U:.;ES=..:::.. . ..:64_S-_2200 ____ 1 18~). 20YJ. 22V!} Sitt 14ja Name. Actdreu, Zip, Ex pr. preferred. Cd tions. Located In lrvlne •· lb11st 371 taku 2':'1 yos. 60 • Pauern Num~r
wotldOteond.042-6441. Industrial Complox. Call Uto7 PM.) Antique ring, approx. 75 Stnd Sl.00 lor etcll oattem. MORE thin rvc.t before! 2!X.
Linda, SSG-2800 aft S:ao SPRINGER & WHITE )'1'9 old, wht i.told nni.ree Add 35f for Hell pattem for dtii•ns plus 3 free pnnttcl In. !?S A.M. . 3010RedhlllAve,CM settlni with 16 tiny firlt<lln altm1ll, halldlfna. sldt .. NEW 1976 HCEOUCRAf,
ADMINlSTRATOR E.O.E. U ~ blkl So. of Baker) ddll o m od ntdss • t M ,,!ool no Sm to•.. I CATALOG~ ltas everyt111ni. 75c. Excellent opportunity amon · c · ... Marlen ... .,., n Crocllet will\ S•11•res • $1.00
c tom ptoducts division Sec-ry /f ~h Typing Plenty of free park Inf. nrm. 642·82Sl. Pattern Dept. •42 Cttt-•t a W1rfro11e $1.00 of tOW' year old milllon IB~!txec. Expr·d . RY 08lly Piiot 1111\y fifty Qallls St.oO
dollar cotnpuy. Re· Advanced Kinetics Inc. lffflJ.lllatJ %ca~ JEW,.~L i 149K 232 West 18th St .. New Ripple Crot11•1 -$1,00
q\tiru sales oriented 1231 Vldorla S~ CM Rat.yltng "' rc-pa I" ' Vork, NV 10011. Print Sew .;. Knit look . -f 1.25 person to handle 646-7l~. EOE Cwcos& Riverside Av. N.B. NAME. ADDRESS, ZIP, llttdltflOl11tleo1t 1.00 telephone 1alu and ..:..;..;.._ _______ .I !qui,...... 8030 831'1717 SIZE and STU. £i Fltwer Crocllet Itta ..• ~1 .gg
fo,.low up:sellil\d &ehools ••••••••••••••••••••••• D' d T 'f NUMBER. ltalrpln Crtcllet lttkdl .
" & Bod Gor&eoUS 1amon • I • kllO llOW 11 ••t a IDSWI! C,_clltt looll 1.00 and bu1inuH1: CO· Like New Lele• M3 1>'• fany platinum setting, Ot ':: frt1t Seo• ,..;-f., lttt.tnt M.lcrt111t look t.00
ordination and advertl1· Lath. cue. SOmm t~ matching band, nor ~:' .... flll·Win~' '•ttttll Jutallt Mam loo._ . ,_ '1.00 tng planning, kllowledge OPPOlTUMITY Jen.<;, MR meter 1300. perfect color, GIA Ctt.tltt-cllJ"'""'lllsidtfor Ce11plett ll!tltft ~ .• ..Jt.00 of advertising helpful but knocks often when you 13Smm F• lt-nt, lea\ Analysis. Stnne 3. '18ct 1,_, pattt1• ,, 10., dlelct. C.•plttt lf&Ma& 114 .$1.00
not nt'«'ssary. Must be uao reautt,geUlog Daily (ase S:?SO. Ph: 752·9"6 wtbaguelles 4 soct. Ap. Std 711 MWI 12 Pr1lt Afpns ,,z __ 50i
able to handle details ac:· Ptlot Classltlod Ad.5 to Dots 104 pr a i a e d s 1 9 . so o. Se• -ltlllt Itel . ''.25 leel tf 1• 1G~f!r-~' W~11~5:~3.s:sllu::1\~ re•~~ Oranae Cout •••••••••••••••••••••• (7l4>61.l·9680 ::-:.: :=.c:~ · l!: ;';'::~lJr.~tfotbr-ti-50~
lrv1t1eml'-ma ~boneMJ.5678 Dachshund. Iona heir Sevttal jewelry counler'I, llWlt hwlll .... '11.oo ... ll of 11 fiffJ AliCS 50,
SELL t~le items Wi1b • p1rpplei, All shots, AKC, xlnt shape, 408 E. Balb03'1..'lllll .... llll .... lll .................. ... Dally Pilot ctassltted 1'.d. reuonable 837-6645 an 5. Blvd .• Balboa. ca. I
DM.Yl'll.OT
28' Falrllnu, FIB. VHF.
b3it lank. all xtras $8900.
PP67S-i083
,
'74 C&pd VI, 12,000 ml, alr
COQd, AMJFM Steteo aeoo.~
9720 .......................
. . .. -.
• 1"6 Horbof C M. 646 9303
"74DASHU
'
4 Speed, atereo. Nice
catl 12837.
$2995
GJ.ROEM WEST VW
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THEODORE
ROBIN S
FORD
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ROBINS
FORD
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FORD
/(IC•U ~4AIH c 1U t·l¥'P
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hotcr. Extra clcnh!
373Jt'A.
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52997
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O RANGE COUNTY; CALIFORNIA
Plant B
•.
··Cella Witness
:Called Again
#
BJTOllBARLtv
.. Ot .. Oll .. , ""'""" LOS ANGELES-Orange
County District Attorney's invest-
11alor Loren DuCbesne was re-
called to the w llness stand here
today as lhe defense renewed its
•rgument that the prosecution Is
Using documents illegally selted
from a Cost.a Mesa print shop
coolrolled by indicted Dr. Lows
' .J. Cella Jr.
DuCbesne, who earlier spent
the best part of, two d~ testify.
lq on his role in lhe investiga-
tion. admitted that materials
taken from the print shop in July,
1975. were examined by Internal
Revenue servlce agents in his of-
fice a month later.
Three months later, Dr. Cella,
51, and three business associates
were indicted by a federal grand
jury here on 44 felony counts, in-
cluding fraud and tax evasion.
Rowlands
Expected
To Resign
City Administrator Dave
Rowlands is expected to tum ln Ma resifnaUon torught when the
Huntingtoo Beach City Council meet.a at 7 o'clock at council
chambers. . ,
Mayor Harriett Wieder has
called a special executive session
for t o n ig h t dealing with
Rowlands' status.
Rowlands was served with a
90·day termination notice on
April 19 when the city council
met for the first time with its
three new members -Ron Pat-
tinson. Ron Shenkman and
Richard Siebert.
The majority or the council
members says il is in favor of
Rowlands' immediate resigna-
tion because of crucial budget
discussions.
Pattinson , whose sentiments
were echoed by Mrs. Wieder and
Shenkman and Siebert. sajd, '"I
just don't feel lhat Dave is m
command any longer."
The 6l·year-old adnumstrator
bas been the ceQter or con
troversy since last August when
former Caty Councilman Jerory
Matney publicly accused ham of
failini to function openly. Mat
ney also lodged a series of other
auega\lons .
Rowlands was the subject or un
ad hoc committee Investigation
a.nd subsequently was put on a
tlx·month probation period In
January.
There also wm be a publit'
heann1 tonight on the 1976 77
budact In which citizens wlll be
uked their soy on what servic~
they want and wh•l they want
cut.
Expected to-come under dls-
cuaslon will be the possible adda
lion of 53 additional police or.
Ileen at a projected cost or about
$1mllllon.
Proposed cutbacks in thr
library and parks and recreation
department also may come up
foratudy.
The cltY also •s expected lo r-e
ach a decision tonlghl on whether
to select an outside labor
ne1oliator lo handle salary
bart•lnlns with its six employe
CJ'OUpl.
CIDZEN'8' BAND
'FAST SEUER,
"I sold my cltbens band radio a a result or the Dally Pilot ad.··
That's the ad•ertising success
story told by tbe I..guna Hills
woman who placed this ad:
CB Radio. Reatistlt'. mdl
TRC47, SSB tr ·car anlen·
na. Xltll·<citx"
tr YCMf have eJC!'ttl'Oftic gear
JOU want to convert lo ca.sh, call
"2-Sf71. We mate it easy for
)'OU to communicate with buJ~
all aJon.t \be Orange Coast. in
the Dal17 Pilot.
DuCbesne admitted today that
his office obtained those docu·
ment.s without a s~arch warrant
Under close questioning from
Judge Matt Byrne, he also ad-
mitted that lhe IRS agents were
well aware of that fact
"In other words, no one at the
print shop other than your infor-. ,
mant knew you had these docu-
ments. And the IRS went along
wilh that. right?" Jud&e Byrne
asked the witness.
"It wasn't said in so many
words. Bul the inference was
-ctear.·· DuChesne said.
D.Hy Pilot S~ .......
Judge Byrne will be asked by •
the defense when the current pre-
trial hearing ends to rule that all
documents seized from the Unit·
ed Printing Company plant on
Airport Loop Drive be sup-
196Sed.
FIRE INSPECTOR JIM MERRILL,_OETECTIVE .BOB RUSSELL PROBE RUINS
Printing Ptant Wll)ed Out In 1250,000 Huntington Beach Fire
Lawyers for both sides agree
lhat if Judge Byrne bars all or
most of the documents from the
trial scheduled to start Tuesday.
the prosecution may not haH~
any case left to try.
DuCbesne admitted agam lo
day as he did last week that print
shop employe Donald Albert Ruy
was persuaded to supply his of
fice with several boxes of docu·
ments in return for leniency on
criminal charges be faced.
Ray wu held in the Orance
County Jail on charges of plan-
nin& lbe murder or hls estranged
wife's boyfriend when district at·
torney's investigators learned or
his connection wftb Cella and his
employment al the print shop
CSee CELLA, Page AZ>
FORD TO GET
'COVER-UP'
ST. PETERSBURG. Fla. CAPl
-A shop owner says he's send·
ing President Ford his own ('OV·
er·up -a $120 wig.
"For a president who already
has earned a reputation for hav-
ing nothing to hide, certainly you
can take the liberty or this one
harmless 'cover.up'," Dan Pen·
dergasl said in a note pinned to
the hairpiece he's ready to mail
lo the White House.
llopang to give the President's
campaign a hrt, Pendergast. pro-
prietor or a w1g shop, Saad Jn hi~
note ~
"For one or the world·s ~st
quoted and photographed mnn.
you r appearance can b e
enhanced immeasurably m one
easy step ... hence. this girt or
the 'Chief Executive Wag'.··
Break-ins
By FBI
In Report
WASHINGTON <APl -fhe
FBI has conducted hundreds or
break-ins , "despite the ques·
tlonable legality or the technique
and its deep tnlrusioo into the
privacy or targeted indlvlduals ...
a Senate intelligence committee·
staff report sa.ys.
The break-ins. officially known
as "'s urreptitious entrie.," were
conducted for the purpose or
photographing or seizing doou-
ments and installing bugs, ac-
cording to the report released to·
day.
The report 1s one or a series
prepared by the intelligence
panel's staff to back up recom-
mendations in the committee's
final report.
The Justice Department still
permits the bureau to conduct
break-ins to install bugs and re-
fuses to rule out the possibility or
using unauthorized entries or
"blacf< bag" jobs to obtain docu-
ments from foreign intelligence
targets. the 17-page report noted.
··Although several attorneys
general were aware or the FBI
practice of break-ans to install
electronic listening devices.
there is no indication that the
FBI informed any attorney
general about Its use of black bag
jobs." the report said
The FBI was unable to provide
<See REPORT, Page i\2)
Not Reappoi11ted
Ex Mayor Gibbs
Criticizes Wieder
By ROBERT BARKER Ottfle o.tH, ,_.._. 9WI
Former Huntington Beach
mayor Norma Gibbs says she is
.. s hocked and dis mayed "
because she .,,. u aot reappointed
as one of th11ee city represen-
tatives to the Orange County
Sanitation District.
Mrs. Gibbs sald thot it was pet-
ty and divisive on the part or
Mayor Harriett Wieder in not ap-
pointing her to the district.
Mrs. Gibbs. who has served on
the board for five years, says she
is puuled by Mrs. Wieder's ac-
tion.
"There's no reason lo remove
· me, and lhe other mayors and
council members serving on the
district will know thal she's done
this deliberately,'' Mrs. Gibbs
said.
Mrs. Gibbs is currently vice
chairman of the county districts
and says that she would have
quite possibly been in line to
become chairman when the elec-
tions are held in July.
Mayor Harriett Wieder. who
announced the various council
appointments last week, said
that it was hu prerogative to
make appointments as she sees
fit.
"l think they sho\Jld be pa!sed
around so that all Council mem·
bers can gain knowledge or the
sanitation dlstict 's operations."
she said.
"Just because Norma bas been
on the d lstrlct for awhile doesn't
mean that s he ttas tenure." Mrs.
Wieder said. ·'There's no such
thing as tenure.'· •
"Sometimes when people
serve vn committes they forget
who lbey represent and don't re·
port back to lhe council as they
should." she said.
"I am surprised that Norma is
stamping her feet by not getting
her way." Mrs. Wieder said. •
Mrs. Gibbs implies that the re-
ason she wasn't reappointed was
lhat she failed to appoint Mrs.
Wieder to a similar post in 1975.
"But I called Harriet over lo
discuss it with her at the time.
··Henry Duke was the
chairman or one of lhe sanitation
district committees, and I (ell 1
had to reappoint him. I selected
Don Shipley to be a second
representative because it was his
last chance."
Mrs. Gibbs said that when she
asked to be retained on the PoSt,
Mrs. Wieder replied. "No. I'm
not givmg It to you because you
d1dn'l give 1l lo me."
Mrs. Wieder denied that as n
reason for her action and said she
thanks that 1t 1s a matter or
money with Mrs. Gibbs.
City re resentatives rece1\ c
<See GIBBS, Page t\2)
Adopted Dog Saves Child
\ .
A ...........
MARGARET MORAIS, 21 HUGS HEAO 000 'RED'
lrlah Sett• Reecued Girt Fro"' Burning Car
BRIDGETON. Mo. <AP> -
Two-year-old Margaret Morris
owes her ll(e to a decision by her
family to take In o dirty. hungry
dog they found roaming ln their
neighborhood.
Red. an Iris h seller adopted by
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce R. Morris of
Harvester, Mo., thrttweeks ago.
pulled the panicked girl by her
coat collar from their parked car
minutes before It was eutted by
names.
"All I can ~ay 1s thank God we
got the dog, J wouldn't have been
able to get lo the car in time."
said Morris. who witnessed the
incident from a car dealer's
showroom where he and his wi(e
were sboppinJ for a new car.
Red was adopted by the Mor·
rises alter they found him run-
ning l00$e. Tbe dog's owner was
located but he agreed to let tbe
family lleeptbe anlmal.
"'My wHe. Betsy. and
Margaret had really become at-
tached to the dog." Morris said
Sunday.
Saturday afteTn~ the couple
left Margaret asleep In the car
with Red at.andlna guard. The car'• lront windows were rolled
down about three-quarters or
lbeway.Uorrinald. Korrl• aid he frequently
1ooktd out to check on the gll'I,
but after 1S minutes had passed.
a salesman noticed smoke pour-m« from th• car windows.
"l beard him ycU. 'My God,
J
there's a girl in that car' ...
Morris recalled.
Morris said that as he was run-
ning acrou the s howroom
toward a door. he saw lhe smoke
and then uw Red jump t'>Ul n
front window.
Once outside the car, the 15
pound do~ turned bock Cor
Maraaret , who by that lime had
been awakened by the smoke and
was standing up In the back seat,
sw1n1m1 her arm& in rnght
··Al soon as Red tut the ground.
he Jumped up. put his paws on the
side or the car and reached has
head throus h the smoke commR
out the window." Morris said.
Red grabbed Margaret's coat
collar with his teeth and dragged
the little girl oul the window,
then pUlhed her away from the
car.
~ Brid1eton patrolman said
nam~ from lhe car were shoot-
ing 20 to 2S feet into the aJr by the
time he arrived. The fil't'J ap-
parnUy caused by faulty wiring,
,.iUtted the Interior.
Marg•ret was taken to a
hospital where she was treated
for minor burnl and released.
Red sutrettd signed hair and a
llpteuton his nose.
"I save Red a steak when we
got home after the Cir~." Morris
aaid ... He may get steak every
ni&bl after tbi&."
. Al t ernoon
X. Y. Stoek'i
TEN CENTi
s I
Explosion
Linked
To Trial?
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
04 U.. O•ll't f'1191 Slt*
A $250,000 pre-dawn explosion
and fire today destroyed a Hunt
inaton Beach printing plant
owned by a potential witness m
the trial of political financier Dr
Lows J . Cella. Fire officiuls said
the blate was intentionally set
The blast and bl ate that gulled
Graphics Communacallons Com
pany, 7271 Murdy Ctrt"le.
awakened raremen sleeping an
the Murdy Fire Station only
about !50 yards away.
flames were already roanng
tt\tough its roof by the time lh<.'y
ran to a rear window lo local<.' the
conflagration. according to 1-'are
Inspector James Merrill.
lnyestigalors were careful to
note the inf<.'rn() in the north Hun
tln«ton Beach industrial park as listed as being of 111cend1ar~
origin.
Police Depnrtmcnl Ar&o n
Detail Detective Robert Rus~cll
confirmed. however. the biaiw
was obviously inll'nl1onal. but
noted any specirac mota,·c l!. un
known
Aulhorilles s ay printing farm
owner Richard Thompson told
them he 1s lo be a witness an thl·
upcoming trial of Dr. Cella, who
as accused with three colleaguc.'s
or diverting $2 m1llaon from
Cella-controlled ho!>paluls for
political purposes.
Printing o r campaign
literature so Car has been men-
tioned in testimony relating to
the -«·count indictment issued by
a federal grand Jury in Los
Angeles naming Cella and co
defendants. So Car, Thompson·s name has
not emerged and he as known lo
have not been among former
business associates who teslifil'<I
before the grand jury.
Thompson, who was not im
mediately available for an in-
terview al the !ire scene. re-
portedly told investigators h<'
had done some work for Cella but
not more recently than about fa, e
years ago.
Another printer once employed
bv a Costa Mesa fi rm controlled by Cella was a prominent watnc•!>s
m his Los Angeles hearing on
Thursday and testified lo Ollll'r·
ing the shop on occasion.
Donald Albert Rn. 36. all('ged.'
ly stoic documents from the C:o~t a
(See FIRE, Page AZ>
Puppet Show
AtHB School
Ente rla1nmenl f or the•
youngsters will be provided by
thr Dob Baker Marionettes cJur rng I wo performances Saturday.
Open to the public, the s hows
arr scheduled al 9 30 and Jr
am. In Westmont School, 8251
lll'al Avf' . Huntington Beach
Tickets, at SI for children and
S2 adults. wall be sold at th
door.
Prorrt>d s will bcnr fil the
Good Shepherd Pres chool,
hponsor or lh<' ShOW'i.
Or~~:ecJ 'Coo Ht
\\'e a th e r
i\ roohng off period, with
low douds an the mornlnR
and partly cloudy in the al
ternoon. is ln store for the
Orange Coast Tuesday.
Hi ghs will run from 65 on
the seashore to 75 further
inland.
I NSIDE 'l'OD" V
Some chtldrtn or on llLinoas
ichool cu:tuall)I uritMJJUd 0 •lavino while wQJkftlo hqm,. fnrin lunch. School offJCJIJI!
tell of how the incidtnt hal ad·
Vf!July affected their lJve•
A7.
~ ....
L.M lloy" c:.111 .......
0Htttlt4 Comin
0..•W9f'f o ... u•Holl<tt
l•1wi.1 .....
lllt•<V"'-11• ~-· --.... -u.o
l•dex .. .,;..,,..,,,.. ..
Al Me•I" AIJ
AS H.tlleot.tl9"w1 At
8Mt O. ..... c. .... 1, Al .,..._.. 811 ., Sfle<1• ,. ....
At S*llMlrb" at At Te ... hl"" All
Alt 'hH1 ... \ All At WO .. _ At
::-....., A4
·.
.42. DAl\.VPll.OT H/F
A down~d pilot hiked favo mUtt
\hrou1h tbe ruued Snntia10
mountain• Saturday n1aht and
hikhhiked lo Fullerton A.lrpo.rt
before sounding an alarm that
sent an 18-man Oranie County
Sheriff's rescue squad in search
of two leenaaers trapped in
vrecu1e of a Uiht plane.
It wun't unUJ 2 a.m. ~nday
tbat the ~scue aquad found tho
pl&M and the palnfuUy l! not
aerlously lnjurtd younpten in
. lbe east rork of Fremoot Canyon,
rooJh}y five miles east of Irvine Park.
Al dawn, an El Toro Karine
Air StaUol!rescue hellcoPttr llfl·
•
Love to Live
$ex Called Good for Women
LO NDON CAP) -British psychiatrist Jane
Gomez says loo much sleep can shorten your llle but
sex can make a woman live Jooger.
Lovemaking ofCers that much exercise yalue and
is tranquilizing as well, Mrs. Gomez says io a new
book published here. For men, sex has no value for its exercise, she says. J
Sex also stimulates the glands that keep women
youthful, but male glands just don't respond to the
treatment, the book says.
Seven hours sleep a night is enough for any
woman, Mrs. Gomez claims. She says men need 10
minutes more but doesn't explain why.
''Men in their 50s who sleep nine hours a night suf-
fer double the death rate from stroke, heart attack or
aneurysms· (blood clots) than those sleep,ing seven
hours or Jess," says the book, entitled "How Not To Die Young."
"Those who sleep 10 hours run four times the risk," the book says.
99-year Ter~
.
New Trial Denied
Dr. Kill(!' s Killer
CINClNNATI (APl -James defending him The Judges said
Earl Ray's appeal from his plea they d1sappro\'ed of the fee ar·
of guilty in the shooung death of rangement bet"een Ray and the
c1v1l rights leader Dr. Martin lawyers, but said 1t did not prove
Luther King Jr. was denied today he did not receive a good defense.
by the 6th U.S. Circwt Court of King was shot to death on n
Appeals. mote l b alcony in Memphis,
The unanimous decision con· Tenn., on April 4, 1968. Ray was
eluded that the U.S. District arrested in London, England,
Courl'for the Western District of June 8, 1968. He is now In the
Tennessee was correct. in refus· state prison at N nshville, Tenn.
ing Ray's motion tor a new trial. While still in England, Ray
The district court said Ray hired Hanes. of Birmingham. L failed to prove that his defense Ala., to defend him. Ray said
attorneys, Arthur Hanes or that before their first interview,
Percy Foreman, provided Ray Hanes made an agreement with
with ineffective assistance. 1m· Willia m Bradfor d Huie to write a
proper investigation or that Ray book and articles about his case
was induced to plead guilty before the trial. The funds were
March 10, 1969 to go for legal fees and for Ray's
The appellate court said Ray's defense.
testimony at hts gu1lty·plea hear· Ray said he fi red Hanes t\\O
ang made 1t plain he understood days· befor e his March JO, 19b'9
his actions before rece1vmg a tnal because he behc\ed Hanes 99-~ar sentence. was more concerned about book
Ray argued thnt lbe attorneys royalties tha n providing a de·
were more interested in profiting fense.
from books about the case than 10 Ray then hired Tex:as attorney
It's a Ham,
Not CB Tou:er
A Daily Pilot headline Frldoy
:ibout a Fountain Valley m:in'!I
efforts to win a permit ror an
amateur radio tower from the
city counC'1l l'rront'OUS!y called
it a "CB tower "
Donald Royer. who wants to
build the 35 -root tower , sold
amateur ' h.1 m " radio 1-; d10,
tinctly d1rrercnt from c1t11cns
bund
CB o!>('rators do nol need an
cxam1nnt1on for h censin1i.
operate on a different frl'Quency
a nd can only broadcast for
, short distances.
Royer cla1m8 CB 1" primanly
• used for a hobby and business
re11.,ons. while ham operators
work primarily t o improve
1 commuolcnt1on1 techniques and
to assist In emcrRenc1cs.
f
I
I • f • • • •
OAANC.E COAST .. ,.
DAILY PILOT
,,... Or~ c .. ,. ~,,, POcM "'''" ..... I" ,, ,..,.N(i tN He•' f'11 ''• ;, ll'IOllP •i tw \.,_ °'-( ................... t--· ~·h· tetOIOI'\ AH pubft\-"'""' ~Nl•tw tf\•'°""' f •l(.My "" Ce-\1• ~'-A ...... ..,.., hr•" tt\jl'\f•t'!QhW\ e-.::~~!;~ va;~l; .!:;':~ .._~;·~·~~~.:
~· ,..,"" h 1""'1f't""' \4t•~1i1.1.,, .,., \wn • , .. , ... ,, .... ~ ... blh.11 ..... -" .. 1)1 wt\I &Y Sl...C CMI• ...... Uf•'·"""• ,,..,_
RObtrt N. Weed
Ptf>\•f"lt ..... ,." ... """'
Jack R. Curley ¥1n"''"*"'_c..,.. ... lllf_
ThomM ICHYll 111o1 ..
Ttiomas A. Morphine
llN""'f•ftt (•·-
Charles H. Lo..s Rlch&rc! P. Nan .............. ._ ...........
t OOY<ltM. "" °'-(-\ ........... ~ • :::,.~ .... ~::r.~~~r."= ::':":: I r-t.,ectvc.M wttf\ewt '"•••• Mtf'r\\\~ tf . _....,_
liocOll.r , .... ,..,,.,.. t••• • c..tt.l ._..., . ""'"""'· ~ ....... "'~""& :;,='M U-IN~.-..-..--
Percy Foreman, who made a
similar agreement with the
author, and Foreman advised
Ray to plead g uilty.
Rock Concert
Melee Blamed
On. Fair Aides
BySTF.VE MITCHELL
Olt"-D•••y ~1to1S .. 11
The promoters of Saturdn>•'s
rock concert at the Orange Coun
t y F111rgrounds are blammg fair
officials for a disturbance broken
up by Costa Mesa police
Allen Ornstetn, president or
P enny Lane Productions. o C
Orange County, said a lack of
ticket tnkers for the event pro·
mptcd the disturbance. which
was broken up al 12 .30 a m. by the
28-member Cost a Mesa Police
tactical unit.
"We told thotie officials that wr
were goln8 to bov~ a sellout
crowd. ond they said, 'Yeah.
yeah. That's whal lhey all say.' "
Ornstein sold.
The 20.yeer-old promoter snld
only two ticket takers were pro-
vided by fair officiala Instead or
the six the promoters said they
asked for .
"We had al least 3,000 to 4,000
people who couldn't get tn
because lbe)' only provided us
witbtwoticketlaken,"besaid.
"That's what started lhe whole
thing. there were too many people
waiting in Ube."
Fairgrounds officials disputed
Omst.tin 's comments, ~inl the
promoters d id not go over ticket
sales capacity ror the S2 event
wh1ch featured three unknown
bands.
Fair official Jeannie Edwards
said lhe fair board is now con·
sldering putting an end to rock
concerts planned by some pro-
moters.
"We'll still approve concerts
tor high schools and private
group$,·· she said. addin~ that
pro(esaional promoters with well
known rock stars would also bo
consJdered.
'
~ Jen MaeUt White; JS, of ~nday n.trnoon
But>na Park, and Timothy Miss Wblte, ~owever, re·
Linduy, 17, ol Sant.a Ana, ~m ·mained tn the hospital owmlf ht
\he onyon floor. aod reportedly was 1Med In Cood
The youn&Jtera were taken to · coodJUon loday .
Mi slon Communit y Hospital ln Her father, Gene Wayne Whlte,
Mission Viejo for 1ttatment of 44, of 5591 Rockledge Drive,
their injuries. Lind.sat)' reparted· Bueoa Park, was at the controls lY waa releued from the bolpttaJ or the J"ented C.srua 172 that
· plunged into the can)'On shortly
~ p Al aner5p.m .Seturday. r N• •ge Accordin& lo a sheriffs report,
While and the l wo youngsters
were merely laking a plewsure
fH&bt from Fullerton Airport
over the Anaheim Hilla aren
when lbe craft apparenUy lost
power.
FIRE •••
"-es• priolahop for the lntemal
Revenue Servjce that alleci!d.ly.
could be ineimlnaUngto~a. ·
Today items recovered from
the debris of Thompson's ftnn in·
eluded three soot·smudged
checks that lay on a table in the
adjacent Wat Orange County
Teachers• Association suite.
"l don't even know Where they
came from," said Detective
Russell.
H& and Fire Capt. Ro1er
Hosmer said later this lborning
that no one has been questioned
as a possible suspect but that
routine questlon.ing ls under way.
Cause of the explosive blaze
that originated in a production
and repair area of the shop was a
large quantity of flammable Ii· qwd.
'NO one was injured inlbattling
the two·alarm blaze, which re-
quired 26 firefighters 15 minutes
to control, according to CapL
Hosmer.
Th e fire lmmedhltely
destroyed a trunk telephone ca·
. hie serving 900 residential and m·
duslrial customers in the SUI'·
roundmg area. includlng ooe en·
tire bousinc aubdiv1sioo. ·
Inspect or Marshall said
Tho mp so n 's app arentl y
nourishing business lost SIK),000
"orth of equipment alone m the
raging names.
He said it 1nC'luded printing
presses, duplicating machines
and spare parts. The company
occupies three suites in the com·
mercial bwlding and includes a
copy machme repair service m
addition lo its own printing
facilities. .
Jnvestigators said the fire is
not listed as an arson because
that term applies only to residen-tial homes.
The structure t bat boused
Graphic Communications Co. is
owned by Murdy & Brockman
Inc., firemen said.
Thompson li ves at 19262
Worcester Lane, lluntmgton Beach.
Baboons Back
In Captivity
KINGS MILL, Ohio <AP )-Of.
Ciclals at Kings Island amuse·
ment park say tht"y have fini shed
roundlne up SO escaped baboons
and are going to post a sign over the cage:
"Here Are A Few or The Ba·
boons That Made Monkeys Out or us."
The mass escape came April
14 Animal hanc:IJers recaptured
the final two Ol1Vl' baboons by us·
ing drua~ed fruit lo ft'll them.
Only two baboons "ill be kept
here and tbe n•st will be returned
to an anunal dealer m M1ch1gan,
officials said.
Wlule hiked five miles thJ'OUgh
the rugged mountain country
before bitching a ride back lo the
airport and calling Fullerton
poll c e al •bout mldni&ht,
sberi{fs lnvesU1ators said.
Two houn later, in response to
bullhorn messages sent echo1n1t
through the mountaln.s, sheriff's
searchers beard calls for help.
~cording to one rescuer. it
took a four.man team three hours
to descend the canyon walls in
the prednwn darkness lo reach
the crash victims.
It was then that a call was sent
to the Marine air base for u
rescue helicopter that could lin
the two youngsters from the ca·
nyon at.dawn's first light.
According lo a rescue report.
the rented plane did not appear to
be seriously damaged in the
forced landlni White made short·
ly after taking o£f.
Other than White's explanation
that the craft was losint power
when he downed it in the rugged
c;myon no reason was ti\•en for
the forced landina.
Nor could ofhc1als say today
why the pilot h1tchh1kcd back to
the airport t>.rore contacting of
fic1als lo send them m search of
the two teenagers
Fr,HM Page Al
REPORT •••
the committee with a complete
accounting of the total number or
break·ins because most records
were destroyed soon afler an en·
try was accomplished, the report
said.
Figures provided by the FBI
showed there were at least 242
break·ins against suspect ed
domestic i.ubv&s1ves bt!l"een
1942 and 1968 and that since 1960
the FBI conducted more than 500
break·ins to install bugs.
.. Almost as m any surreptitious
entnes were conducted in lht·
same period against tar~elS or
criminal mvesl1gat1on~." the r e·
portsa1d.
The report named the Ku Klux:
Klan and the Socialist Workers
party as two targets of FBI black
bag jobs.
As d~scribed by the report,
agents who performed break·ins
would som etimes request the
cooperation of a landlord In en·
tering the premises. In other
cases, the agents simply would
enter through unlocked doors or
pick the lock, the report said.
One break·in specialist said
"only in a small proportion of thl'
cases lo whi ch he was assigned
was tl necessary to pick a lock."
"The number of document-;
photographed during a s mgle
operation reached as high as 220
and regularly was above 100,"
the report said.
The Bigger They Are •••
..
Maratho11 S1vi111 O.tllY l'il•I ltelf rMlt
.
Nathan McAdams goes off starting block as Don Caskey
<splash at end'ofl>ool> fini shes his laps in Golden West
College marathon· swim during the weekend. Tony
Tricoli (seated) counted laps during the effort by Golden
, West swimmers to honor college's 10th anniversary by
getting into Guinnes Book of Records. Swimmers say
Uley set a new record by splashing about 110 miles ln 36
hours, beating old record of 24 hours of continuous relay
swimming. Twenty swimmers look part in marathon
swim which began at noon Friday and ended al mid-night Saturday. •
C • J d Fro• Page Al
ripp e GIBBS ...
&at Aided• sso !>('r month for meetings and
' <'l'rta1n elt'cted offi cers recc:lve
8 Injured
The crippled Gl·foot sloop
Sorcery. owned by Jacob Wood of
Marina del Rey. was und~r low m
m id·PaclCic today with eight or
her ll·man crew in;ured.
Sorcery. ·a we ll·known CC·61.
was presumably returning from
the South Seas by way cJHonolulo
when she lost hu mast and had
her rudder carried away by 20·30
foot waves and winds of more
than 35 knots llbout 1,200 miles
from the mainland.
Accordmg lo an Associated
Press dispatch , the crippled
vessel was taken m low late Sun·
day by the Coast Guard cutler
Ml'llon and was being taken to
Kodiak, Alaska. The eight injured
crewmen were taken a board the
cutter in a difficult rescue opera·
t1on in heavy seas.
Th<' Coast Guard said the
crewmen were in fair condition.
One had a broken leg, two were 1n
shO<'k and the others had lesser in-
juries.
All of the crewmen were said to
be from Southern California but
nont• was 1dentif1ed.
The Coast Guard said huge seas
dis masted Sorcery. broke her
rudder and flooded the engine
room All life rafts were earn ed
away by the heavy seas.
The Mell on and a freighter
stood by the stricken yacht for a
full day before lhc crewmen could
be rescued and the yacht taken in
low
·-.,
O.lly ...... ,..... _, Palf'l(ll O' 0.-11
a n addlt1onal'$SO monthly
Mrs. Gibbs said that when she
was mayor s he had con.<JultaUons
with the rest or the council mem·
bers to find out what committees
they would II ke to 11erve on.
She said lhot Mrs. Wieder con·
suited all the other council mem·
bets but didn't conrer with her.
"ll 's jus t that she Is so
autocratic,'' Mrs. Gibbs said to·
day. "Al this point, I couldn't
care less about being named to
the sanitation district but I do ob-
jed to the manner m which t his
wasdone"
Mrs Gibbs also took exception
to Mrs. Wi cder's statemenu that
t'omm1ttee assignments were
passed around
·Ted Bartlett has been on the
West Orange County Water
Board for 12 years and Al Coen
eJght, a nd they were both reap.
pointed,'' Mrs. Gibbs said.
Joe Harper, general manager
or the sanitation district, said
that Mrs. Gibbs has chaired
several key committees and
would have definitely ~en II\ line
lo be nominated as chairman.
"There's no question that Mrs.
Gibbs had a great deal of In·
nuence and expertise to give to
the district,·• Harper said. He
added that Mrs. Wieder also has
had experience on the board.
Mrs. Wieder automatically
became u representative to the
sanitation distract by virtue of be·
mg mayor. She selected Mayor
Pro Tem Ron Pattinson to serve
on Sanitation District Number 3
and Ron Shenkman lo serve on
District 11.
The districts hold monthly
meetings and are part •of lbe
countyw1de district.
FrotttPa~Al . I
CELLA •••
Ray was later reworded ror his
efforts by bein~ sentenced to sllC.
days In jail ond two years proba·
tion after pleading guilty to a ra-
duced misdemeanor charge.
t>uChelinc l<'11lfricd today thJt
IRS agents were portlcufa,·Jy In·
tercstcd 1n what he !loys were••
number of "rlclltloua th·
voiccR"submltted t o t wo
hospitals under Celia's contrdl:
M1ulon Community Hoaplttl,
Mlu 1o n Viej o and Mercy
General Hospital. Salnta Ana.
He said the posalbillty ol t u
fraud was discussed by t he
agents after they learned that the
blll:ngs Involved 10 allegedly
bogus corporalion1 which billed
both hospitals .
ll is nlleaed that the defendants
bilked both hospitals of an
estimated S2 million through the
acts of fraud described today by
DuChesne.
Facing trial with .~ella a re
Theodore Schiffman, 5.1, of Santa
Ana, Georg~ Louis Ollendorfh44.
Laguna Beach and Step co
Robert Evans, 31, Mission Viejo .
The harder they fall. Members of a UCLA
sculpture c::lass entered this 25-foot kite in
the UC Irvine Kite Piying Festival Sunday
at Scotchman's Cove. Unfortunately. the
giant crashed on its first attempted flight.
So, it's back to the drawing bcJards .
All rour additionally race trial
in Orange County Superior Court
on 12'7 felony counts cont.aJned In
a Grand Jury Indictment. That
trial will be scheduled after con·
clusion of the Loi Angeles trial
which I& expected &o last two
months.
..
·I
·voL 69, NO. 131, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES
Today' Clo Ing
N.Y.Stoeks
' TEN CENTS
,Pilot Down
ll
• m Canyon llikes for Ai
••
A downed pUot hiked five males
throu1b the rugged Sanlia10
mountains Saturday nilht and
hitchhiked to Fullerton Airport
before aoundln1 an alarm that
sent an 18-man Orange County
Sheriff's rescue squad in search
or two teenagers trapped in
wreckage of a light plane.
It wasn't until 2 am. Sunday
that the rescue squad round the
plane and the painfully if not
aenously injured yountsters an
the east fork or Fremont Canyon.
roulhJy fave mUes t ot Irvine
Park.
At dawn. an El Toro Manne
Air SlatJon rescue helicopter lift-
ed Jan Maelle White, 16, of
Buena Par Jc . and Timothy
Undsay, 17, of Santa Ana, from
the canyon floor.
The youngsters were ta.ken to
Mission Community Hospital in
Mtu1on Viejo for t~atment or
their injuries. Lindsay r~rted·
ly was released from the hosp1taJ
Suoday arterboon.
Miss White, however, r e·
mamed in the hospital overnJght
and reportedly was IJSted in aood
condition today
Her father, Gene Wayne Whale,
44, or 5591 Rockledge Drive.
Buena Park. ~·as at the eontrols
of the reated Cessna l 72 that
o.lty l'I ... S .. 11 -· DELIVERY TRUCK RESTS IN FREEWAY DITCH AFTER BEING RUN OFF THE ROAD
Unidentified Auto Swerved In Front of Truck, Causing Driver to Lose Control •
Accident-causing
. \
Motorist Hunted
The California Highway Patrol
is huntine for the dnver or a
small white foreign station
wagon believed to have caused a
potentially serious rree,ny ac:ci·
dent just south of Lion Country
Safari m Irvine .
CHP Orricer Dave Pittaway
said the car wa1 southbound on
the Santa Ana Freeway at the
junction with, the San Diego
Frttway 1tnd etat -aeross three
lanes of traffic in front or a food
dehvery truck.
The truck driver. David Unbe.
23, of Los Angeles. hit the brakes.
causing the truck to swer ve
sideways. ha t a hght pole and
rolled mto a 10-foot-dcep ditch
alongside the freeway. Pittaway
said.
Unbe was treated at the scene
of the 8;45 a .m accident by
Orange County Fire DcplU'tmenl
paramedics and taken by am·
bulance to Saddleback Com
muntty Hospital. He was lasted in
good condition today with
scrapes and bruises.
"He was pretty well shaken
up," said Plttaway.
The CHP officer said there Was
no contact between the truck and
car buC noted" "the car appear!> at
fault and in a case lllce this. it 1s
considered felony hit and run · ·
P1ttaway noted that the s maJI
car slowed down immediately
after the accident and then "took
off heading south." No hc<'nse
number was taken and the CllP
oHtcer said 1t may be hard to find
the hat and run driver
Trustees to Weigh
2nd Campus Plan
A report on tht' feas1b1hty or
developing a second campus tn
the Tustin-Irvine area will bt•
presented toniJ?ht lo Saddleback
Community College Distract
trustees.
The Citizens Select Advisory
Committee was appointed in
March to consider ways lht' col
lcae can better serve residents
Uvln« In the northern area or lht>
348 square·mllc district
Collel[<' offlclals have been cnn·
slderlng the possibillty of o~n
mg A satellite forlllty which
would t'ventually •row Into &
second campus.
Const
. W~ather
A cooling off period. with
low clouds in the momlnR
and partly cloudy in the af.
temoon. is in store for the
Orange Coast Tuesday.
Highs will run from 65 on
the seashore to 7S rurtht'r
inland.
INSIDE TODA\'
Some chddrm o1 an ILbnoi.S
achool adually wit~ o
*t/tnQ 1Dlrik soallciJtg hMM from lamch. School o/fiiacJU a.a o/ hou1 the lftCidm hes ad-
wrHly . al/tdtd their lives.
A1.
l••ex .. _,,, .. .. ,..... ...
............... $
• • "'" Ae
as.1o~o..i, .,,......
.,~.
•• SllKllMt~et• ........ v.. AU,,_._, ··-·-., __ '" .,
•• ., 1
All 11 •• All
AU •• ••
The committee's report was
origmally due to be given to
trustees in April. The deadline
for the l"eport. however, was ex-
tended because committee mem-
bers felt the "extreme complex1·
ly" of the issue required add•·
tlonal time.
In other action, trustees are
expected to consider eslabUshmic
the academic rank of profes!\Or
for tenured, rull-llmc faculty
members.
Among other items on the
agenda Is a recommendation
from the Associated Student
1 Body to change s tudent health
fees from $3 per quarter to SS per
semester.
The meeting wlll begin at 7. 30
p.m. In Room 212 or the campus
library.
FORD TO GET
'COYER-UP'
ST. PETERSBURG. F'1a. tAP>
-A sbop owner says he's send-
ing President Ford his own cov-
er-up -a Sl20 wig
"1-·or a president who already
has earned a reputation for hav-
ing nothing to bide, certainly you
can take the liberty or this one
harmless 'cover-up'," Dao Pen·
dercast said ln • note pinned lo
the hairpiece he's ready lo mall
totbe White Bouse.
Roping to give the President'•
campaign a lift. Penderlast... pro.
prietor of a wig shop, said In his
note.
"For one of the world's most
quoted and photographed man,
your appearance can be
enhan~ immeasurably ln ~
easy step ... bentt. t.bls &ift of
the 'Chief Executive \\1.c'."
Elephants
Kill Tiro
SALISBURY. Hhod~1a
<API -Killer elephanU.
have battered two persons
to death 1n the remote
Karlba region of northern
Rhodesia. police report
They announced Sunda)
that the mutilated body or
Charles Pe rry. a tsetse fly
control worke r missing
since Friday. had been
found in dense bush. aod
tracks around the body 11 showed he had been al·
tacked by elephants.
A local tribal leader was
also kill ed by un elephant
that picked ham up with hi~
trunk and hurled him to the
ground. pohce said
Battin Says
Manager Kept
His Records
ByGi\RYGRANVILLE
Ottll•~ll•l"llol$Ufl Indicted O r a nge County
Supervisor Robert Battin con
linued to in11st todoy that his of·
face managers. past and present.
were responsible for the payroll
records kept m his county om ce
As Battin's trial began 1ls sixth
week. the Santu Anu supervisor
was undergoing cross examma·
lion by Deputy D1!>lrict Allornt'y
Jack Ryan
In answer to a senes of ques-
tions by Ryan related to his of
flce's puyroll accounting pro·
cedures Baum r epUcd
"l'leave these lhm1s to my of
flee manager and I rely enllrely
onmyorticemanagcr." "I rely on my office manager
to keep track or hours worked ...
-") don·lknow whathoun they
work. That's why I have an office
manager."
-"l can't rt>cnll when t he
policy went Into etfecl but 1
believe it was when Bill Meyer
wuofficemanager."
-"My omce mana1er pre·
pared the payroll report. J did
nothing with the reports except lo
sign them."
Prosecutor Ryan's interest in
lhe county supervisor's payroll
records stems from charges that
Ballin in 1~74 m ade llJegal use of
county employes in his campaign
ror state office
Those charges were brought
against the Santa Ana supervtsor
ln a seven·count criminal indJct-
ment banded down by lbe county
uandjury last Auiust.
Ba1Un took the witness stand
last Wednesday to testily on his
ownbehalt. And it was Thursday that Ryan
begon bis crou examination .
ll continued today as Ryan con-
tinued to prove to a ~\·en-man.
five-woman jury that Battin knew
in 1914 t.bat m embers of tus statr
were paid by the county wblle ac ·
tually WOl'kinu on his cam~
for fieutenaol IJO•ernor.
plunged lnlo the canyon shorU,y
after 5 p.m. Saturday
Accordinc to a s heriffs report.
White and the two youngsters
were merely talttng a pleasure
rtigbt from Fullerton Airport
over the Anaheim Halls area
when the cran appa.renUy lost
power.
While hiked five nules through
the rugged mountain country
before hitching a ride back to the
airport and calllng Fullerton
police at abo ut mtdnl1ht,
sheriff's investigators said.
Two hours later, in response to
bullhorn messages sent ecbolnc
through th~ mounto.ins, sheriff'
searchers beard calls for beip.
Accordmg to one rescuer , 1l
took a four-man team three hours
to descend the canyon walls tn
the predawn darkness to reach
the crash victims.
lt was then that a call was se t
to tbe Marine air bue for
rescue heUeopter that could Un
the two youngsters from the ca·
nyon at dawn's first light.
According to a rescue report,
the rented plane did not appear to
be seriously damaged in the
forced landinf_ Whlle made short·
ly after taking off.
Other than White's explanation
<See PILOT, Page/\%)
Prober Quizzed·
DA's Man Called at Cella Trial
By TOM BARLEY
Of IM O..lty l'llel 'i.tl
LOS A NG ELES-Or ange
County District Attorney's invest-.
igator Loren DuChesne was re-
called to the witness stand here
today as the defense renewed its
argument that the prosecution 1s
using documents illegally seized
from a Costa Mesa print shop
controlled by indicted Dr. Louis
J ;Cella Jr.
DuChesne. who earlier SPenl
the besl part of two days testify.
ing on his role in the mvestiga.
t1on; admitted that materials
taken from the prijlt shop in Julyi
1975, were examined by Interna
Revenue Service agents in his of·
fice a month later ..
Thrt>e months later. Dr. Cella,
51. and three business associates
were andicted by a federal grand
Jury here on 44 felony counts. JO·
eluding fraud and tax evasion.
DuChesne admitted today that
his omee obtained those docu-
ments without a search warrant.
Under close questioning from
Judge Matt Byrne, he also ad·
milted that the IRS agents were
well aware of that fact.
•·1n other words, no one al the
print shop other than your mfor·
mant knew you had taese docu·
ments. And the I RS went alont:
with that. right?" Judge Byrne
asked the witness.
. <See CELLA, Page A.U
Fire DestrOys Plant
Business Owned by Cella Trial Witness ·
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ran to a r ear window lo locate the
011t.eoo11ypuo1s1.1tt . conflagration, according lo Fire
A $250,000 prl'·drnvn explosion Inspector James Merrill.
and fire today destroyed a Hunt-Investigators were careful to
ington Beach printing plant ..Jljpte the inferno in lbe nor.lb Hun-
owned by a potential witness ln"'r?nJl~on Beach industrial park 1s
the trial of pollt1cal financier Dr. lasted as being of incendiary
Louis J . Cella Fire officials said origin.
theblazewas inteotionallyset Police Department Arson
The blast and blaze that gutted Detail Detective Robert Russell
Graphi.cs Communications Com· confirmed. however, the blue
pany. 7271 Murdy Clrcl~. was obviously intentional, but
awakened firemen sleeping in noted any specific motive is un-
the Murdy Fire Station only known
about 50 yards away. Authorities !'iay printing firm
F1ames were already roanng owner Richard Thompson told
through its roor by the lime they them he is to be a witness in the
Schools Hit
With 'BllSics'
Accusations
Milton Beychok. spokesman
ror the "Basics Plus Commit·
lee," has charged that Irvint-
Unified School District trustees
"betrayed .. the trust or parents
when they reportedly altered
some aspects of the district ·s
new rundamcnlal programs.
Beychok said trustees changed
their minds at a meeting beh.ind
closed doors I ast week. He ex-
plained he 1s concerned that the
elementary pro[Zram and the m
termed1uh' program wall be run
by two principals rather than one
and would not have <'Onlinuity.
lie urged the 650 parents who
said they would enroll their
children in the new "Basics
Plus .. programs to phone
trustees and the d1stncl supenn
tendent · to express their dis·
satisfaction "
In response to Beychok 's
charges, Trustee Frank Hurd
said he will bring the matter up
at Wednesday'is regular board
meeting.
Hurd, the board's st ronge11t
proponent of fundamental. or 3-R.
education, said the board will
· clanfy" its position al the meet-
ing, ot 7 30 p.m . at Greentree
Instant School.
On May ~. the school board
agreed to beein a "Basics Plus"
progra m at the vacant
Culverdale "Instant" School and
to expand the existing fundamen-
(See BASICS, Pa~t A2}
CITIZEN'S BAND
'FAST SELLER'
· l sold m y ctlltens band radio
as a result of the Daily Pilot ad •·
That's the advertising succ~s
story told by the Laguna Hills
woman who pl aced this ad·
CR Radio. RHhstlc. men
TRC47. SSB v. tcar anten·
"" IOl't """"
upcoming trial of Dr. Cella. who
1s accused with three colleagues
of d iverting $2 milhon from
Cella-controlled hospitals for
political purposes.
Printing o f campoigll
literature so far has been men-
tioned m testimony relaUng to
the 44·count mdictment issued by
a federal grand jury ln Los
Angeles naming Cella and co·
defendants.
So for. Thompson's name has
not emerged and he 1s known to
have not been among former
business associates who testified
before the grand Jury.
Thompson. who was not 1m·
mediately available for an m·
terv1ew at the fire i;cene. re·
porledly told investigators he
had done some work for Cella but
not more recently than about fi\•('
years ago . Another printe r once employed
by a Costa Mesa firm controlled
by Cella was a prominent witness
in his Los Angeles hearing on
Thursday and testified to enter·
ing the s hop on occasion.
Donald Albert Ray. 36, alleged·
ly stole documents from the Costa
Meta printshop for the Internal
Revenue Service that allegedly
couldbetnciminatingtoCella.
Today items recovered from
the debris of Thompson's firm in ·
eluded three soot-s mu~gecl
checks that lay on a table in the
adjacent West Orange County
(See F IRE, Page A2 )
Woman Drive~
In '500'Test
INOJANAPOLIS <AP)-Janc
Guthrie shattered 60 years of his
tory today and became the firs
woman to drive a race cur <it th·
lnd1anapohs Motor Speedway.
Miss Guthrie had been kep
from her driving debut h:
mechanical trouble two days an :
row, but finally m ade 1l out for .
practice run.
She is the first woman to tnt<>
the lnd1anapohs 500.
tr you have elect.rook gear
you want lo conv"'rt to cash. call
642·56'18 We m ake il easy for
you to communicate with buyers
all atone the Orange Coast. 1n
the Daily Pilot.
Fred Anderson. of Newport Beach, says he is a former
national model airplane champion. He also gets scient1f1 c
in his kale-building projec:ts. He is shown here with hts
gyro-kite which he entered in Sunday's UC Irvine Kile
flying Festival and Compel!Uon at Scotchman's cOve . -
•
AZ DAIL y PILOT
t Appeal
By Ray
Denied
CINCINNATI <AP) -Jomes
Earl Ray's appeal trom h.is plea
or cuUty In the 1boottna death or
civil n1hta leader Or. Mort&n
Luther Kln• Jr. was denied tod•y
by the 6th V .S. Circuit Court or
Appeals.
The unanimous deci51on con-
duded that the U.S. District
Court for the Western District of
Tennessee was correct In refus·
ing Ray's motion for o new trial.
The district court aa.id Ray
failed to prove that his defense
attorneys, Arthur Hanes or
Percy Foreman, provided Ray
, with ineffective aasi.stance, im-
proper mvestigallon or that Ray
was induced lo plead 1u1Jty
March 10, 1969.
The appellate court sald Ray's
test1mony at his 1wlty-plea hear-
mg made it plain he understood
his actions before receiving a
99-~ar sentence
Ray areued that the attorneys
were more interested in profiting
from books about the case than in
derendine him. The Judges said
they disapproved or the fee ar-
rangement between Ray and the
lawyers, but said 1t did not prove
he did not receive a good defense.
King was shot to death on a
motel balcony in Memphis,
Tenn .. on April 4, 1968. Ray was
arrested in London, England.
June 8, 1968. He Is now in the
state prisoll',.at Nashville. Tenn.
While still in England. Ray
hired Hanes, or Birmingham.
Ala , to defend him. Ray said
that before their flrst interview,
Hanes made an agreement with
Wilham Bradford Huie to wnte a
book and articles about his case
before the trial. The funds were
to go for legal fees and for Ray's defense.
; · Ray said he fired Hanes two
days before his March 10, 1969
tnal because he believed Hanes
was more concerned about book
royalties than providing a de·
fense
Ray then hired Texas attorney
Perry f'oreman, who made a
similar agreement with the
author. and Forfman advised
Ray to plead 1:uilty
~ Fro• Page A J
BASICS •..
tal program at Rancho San Joa
quin Intermediate School.
At the same lime. they \'Oled to
have one principal coordmnte the
two progroms. who \\Ould selel'l
personnel an·d coordinate cur-
nculum
However. at a closed, ex
l'Cut1ve session held last Wcdne~
day, the school board r<'portedly
decided to have two pnnc1pals.
one at each campus
Marilyn Harris, assistant
superintendent for educattonal
support services. said one pnn
c1pal would be hired for the
elementary program a t
Culverdale "Instant" School.
Dove llolmcs, current prin
c1pal at Ranc ho San Joaquin In
lermcdiatc School, would be
responsible for the existing fun
damental program there und
also the new "Basics Plus" pro·
grum, Mrs. II orris said.
The two principals would work
closely toJ?ethcr. prov1dln1 a kin·
derl'orten through-eighth l'rade
currtl'Ulum that hns contmu1ty,
Mrs . Harns added
Mrs. llarr1s said 1t was not a
case of a reversal by the achoo!
board, bul a clonflcallon or their
previous decision
"The Culverdalc pnnc1ool will
be m~t In charite. but wt net"d
someont' respon111ble for those
kl~s at that campus, too." ane
Hid.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed .., ..... "' ~ ftW,..,
ThOmes Keevlt ......
Thomes A. Murphlnco ........... , .....
\.
Mortd!f. M!y 10. 1171 •
........... A.J
CELl!IA •••
··u WUD"t •aid iii IO ma.q,p
wordl. But the inference w elev." DuCbesno •lid
Judi• B1rne will be,uked b)'
the dt'fenae wbn the cwnnt ~
trial Marini endl to Nlttlult all ~umentJ seized from lhe Unit·
ed Printm1 Comp~ plant on Airport Loop Drtve be 1up·
presstd.
Lawyu1 for both ·~ aaree
that 1r Judae Byrne ban all or
most of the docutnenla from the
lrlal scheduled to start TUesday.
the prosecution may not huve
an,y case left to try.
Duchesne admitted again to-
day as he did last week that pnnt
shop employe Donald Albert Ray,
was persuaded to supply bis of-
fice with several boxes of docu-
ments In return for leniency on
criminal charaes he raced.
Ray was held in the Orange
County JaJl 9n charges OJ plan· nmc the murder of bis estranged
wife's boyfriend when d.iatrict at·
tomey's investicators learned of
hls connection with Cella and his
employment at thepnntshop.
Ray "as later rewarded for his
efforts by being sentenced to six
da)s in jaJI and two years prol.la-
t1on after pleadmg guilty to a re-
duced misdemeanor charge.
DuChesne testified today that
IRS agents were particularly in-
terested in what he says were a
number of "fictitious in-
voices' 'submitted to two
MspltaJs under Celia's control:
Mission Community Hospital.
Mission Viejo and Mercy
General Hospital, Satnta Ana.
He said the possibility of tax
fraud was discussed by the
agents after they learned that the
billings involved 10 allegedly
bogus corporations which billed
both hospitals.
It is alleged that the defendants
bilked both hospitals of an
estimated $2 million through the
acts of fraud described today by
Duchesne.
Facing trial with Cella are
Theodore Schiffman. 53, or Santa
Ana, George Louis OllendoH, 44,
Laguna Beach and Stephen
Robert Evans, 31, Mission VieJO.
All four additionally face trial
in Orange County Supenor Court
on 127 fetony counts contained in
a Grand Jury indictment. That
triaJ wlll be scheduled after con-
clusion or the Los Angeles trial
"'tuch is expected to last two
months.
Eight Hurt
On Sorcery
In Sea Storm
KODIAK. Alaska <AP>
Eight people were 1n1ured when
tht!1r 61-foot sloop roUed over in
storm -tossed seas more than
1.000 miles southwest of Kodiak
A Coast Guard spokesman said
the yacht Sorcery lost its mast.
lifeboat, rudder and all radio
eqwpment m the Incident Sahir·
d.iy, but that all 11 persons
aboard the vessel survived.
The eight Injured people were
taken aboard the Coast Guard
cutter Mellon for treatment and
the yacht was taken in tow. The
Mellon was expected to arrive tn
Kodiak this weekend.
AJthough three people were
listed in serious condition, the
spokesmon said the Coast Guard
had no plans to airlift injured to
Kodiak.
The Sorcery was en route from
Tokyo to Los Anaeles when the
storm struck .. Thl' Coast Guard
spokesman said the vessel "was
l.ll the middle of nowhere" wht>n
1t ran mto 20·30-foot waves and
Wlnds or more lhan "knotJJ
Crewmen apparently were
able to message a distress signal
before the sloop lost lu radio. he
said. A Coaat Guard search plane
located the disabled sloop and
dropped emeraency 1upplles.
A Danish ship ldenllOed aa the
.. Camara" stood by the Sorcery
unlll the Mellon. which was on
flsherleA patrol, reached the
scene.
The injured were ldonllfled as
Ramona Walters. 22, of E•con
dido: Mabel Wailers, SO. also of
Escondido: L . Victoria Allen of
Lahalna, Maul, Hawall; Ben
Thomaa Choat IJI, 32, of San
Funclaco; Aulan Alexander
Fitzpatrick. 28, of Renf'reW1h.ire.
Scotland; Ronal d Edwards
Roeers. 27, of Alberta. Canada.
James Herschel Fry, 26.
Albt'rta; and Soaec Saito, 33. or
Japan .
Three other people whom the
apokesman could not ldentHy
stayed aboard lheSorcery.
Fro• Page A J
PILOT •••
lhll lbe craft waa lotlnt power
when be downed It ln the ru11ed
canyon no reason wu &iven for
the forced landJoa.
Nor could officlala su today •bl' the pilot hltcbblbd back to
UJe al.rs>Ort before corit.tctlnc or.
flclal• to send them iD MU'Cb or
Lbe two tcena1en.
-. •
·~"" ........ MARGARET MORAIS, 2, HUGS HERO DOG 'RED'
lrlah Setter Rncued Girl From Burning Car
Dog Saves Tot
Setter Pulls Girl from Car
BRIDGETON, Mo. (AP> -
Two-year-old Margaret Morris
owes her life to a decision by her
family to take in a dirty, hungry
' dog they found roaming m their
neighborhood.
Red, an Iris h setter adopted by
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce R Morris of
Harvester, Mo., three weeks ago,
pulled the panicked girl by her
coat collar from their ~arked car
minutes before it was gulled by
flames.
"All 1 can say i1 thank God we
got the dog, I wouldn't have been
able to get to the car m time,"
said Morris. who witnessed the
mc1dent from a car dealer's
showroom whe1'-e he and his wife
were shopping for a new car
Red was adopted by the Mor-
nses after they found him run-
ning loose. The dog's owner was
located but he agreed lo let the
family keep the animal.
''My wife. Betsy, and
Margaret had really become at·
tached to the dog," Morris said
Sunday.
Saturday afternoon, the couple
left Margaret asleep in the car
with Red standing guard. The
car's front windows were rolled
do*n ~out three-quarters or
theway Mornssaid
Morris said he frequently
lookt'd out to check on the girl.
but after 15 minutes had passed,
a salesman noticed smoke pour·
mg from the car " rndows
"I heard him yell, 'My God.
there's a girl !n that car',"
Morris recalled.
Morris said' that as he was run-
ning across the showroom
toward a door, he saw the smoke
and then saw Red jump out a
front window.
Once outside the car. the 75·
pound dog turned back for
Margaret. who by that time had
been awakened by the smoke and
was standing up in the back seat.
swinging her arms in frighL
.. As soon as Red hit the ground,
he jumped up, put his paws on the
side of the car and reached his
head through the smoke coming
out the window." Morn s said
Red grabbed Margaret's coat
collar with his teeth and dragged
the litUe girl out the winCJow.
1 then pu~hed her away from th~
car.
·A Bridgeton patrolman said
flames from the car were shoot-
ing 20 to 25 feet Into the air by the
time be arrived. 1/he lire. ap-
parently caused by ~ulty wiring,
gutted the interior.
Margaret -was hken lo a
hospital where 11he was treated
for minor burns and releuscd.
Red suffered signed hair and a
slight. cut on his nose.
"I gave Red a steak wh en \\C
got home after the fire," Morris
said "He may get steak every
rught after this."
Pair Free on Bail
In Irvine 'Bilking'
Two men arrested Friday on
suspicion of running an Irvine·
based fraud scheme, that al·
legedly bilked hundreds of in-
vestors out or St million in a toy
boat-bwldlnc eimmlck. are free
today on bail, police srud.
Ball wu originally set al
$100.000 for each. but Judge
Calvin Schmidt lowered the
amopnt to SlS,000 each over the
weekend and both men balled
out.
Charaed with crand then are
Richard R . McGregor, "· San
Marcos and Jamee G. Ritchie,
32. Placentia.
trvme Police are still seeking
Hugh 8 . Welcel, 42, Santa Ana.
bt'Ueved to be president or the al-
leRedly freudul'ent company, Ex·
caliber Toy3.
McGreior a nd Ritchie are
believed to be principals In the
company, which h1 alleged to
have enticed about 450 persons.
m this state and Texas, Into buy
Ina toy boat-m akin~ klt11f ~ccord
lng to Irvine Poll<'e lnveattaator
John Ston•back.
Police said Investors paid 1n
avera1e S6.000 and received in
r~turn boat molds and a few aup-
pUes. They were told the boats
they bum would be bought back
Aeronutronic
Contract OK'd
The Aeron utronlc Ford
Division Newport Beach. has
been awarded a ~.7 million con-
tract from the U. S. Army for a
four-year atudy program, It was
announced today.
by the company and that they
would gross about $90,000 for
each $2,900 they spent on a full·
time contract, Stoneback said.
However, police allege the
company officers never intended
to buy back the boats and resell
them to hobby stores, as they
promised. Police 11ey they found
about 10,000 completed toy boats
in the company's warehouse at
17092 Pullman.
By STEVE MITCHELL
OllMD.th'ff'llMNft
The promoters of Saturday's
rock concert at the Oran1e Coun·
ty Falr1round1 are blaming rulr
otriclala for a disturbance broktin
up by Costa Mesa police.
Allen Ornstein. president of
Penny Lane Productions, of
Oranee County. said a lack of
tlckel takers for the event pro-
mpted ltrc disturbance, which
was broken up al 12:30 a.m. by the
28-member Costa Mesa Pollce
tactical unit.
"We told those officials that we
were &oing to have a sellout
crowd. and they said. 'Yeah.
yeah, That's what lhex all say.· "
Ornstein said.
The 20-year-old promoter se1d
only two llcket takers were pro·
v1ded by fair officials instead of
the six the promoters sald they
asked for.
"We had at least 3,000 to 4,000
people wbo couldn't get in
Fro• Page A I
FIRE •••
Teachers' Association suite.
"I don't even know where they
came from ." said D,etective
Russell.
He and Fir e Capt. Ro~er
Hosmer said later lhis morning
that no one has been questioned
as a possible suspect but that.
routine questioning is underway.
Cause or the explosive blaze
that originated in a production
and repair nea of the shop was a l~ge quantil1 of flammablti 11-qwd. I
No one was injured in battling
the two-alarm blaze, wbich re-
quired 26 firefighters 15 minutes
to control, according lo Capt.
Hosmer.
The fire immediately
destroyed a trunk telephone ca-
ble serving 900 residential and in-
dustrial customers in the sur-
rounding area. includjng one en-
tire housing subdivision.
Ins pector Marshall said
Thompsotl's apparently
nourishing business lost $80,000
worth of equipment alone in the
raglng flames.
He said it included printing
presses, duplicating machines
and spare parts. The company
occupies three suites in the com·
merc.~lal building and includes a
copy machine repitJr 11erVice in
addition to lts own printing
facilities.
Investigators said the fire is
not listed as an arson because
that term applies only lo residen-
llal homes.
Man Indicted
In 'Payoff'
TOKYO <AP>-TheTokyopro-
secutor's office on Monday Indict-
ed YoshioKodama, the key figure
m Lockheed Aircraft's massive
payoffs in Japan, on charges of
violating the country's foreign ex·
change law.
The Indictment said Kodama
failed to follow required pro-
cedures when be received 440
million yen -Sl .466,666-ln May,
1973. from John Clutter, then head
of Lockheed's office in Japan.
If found guilty. Kodama could
get a maximum prison term of
three years ,
T h e contract calls for a
meuurement.a and analyals pro-
gram for the Balli.ltics Missile
Defense Advance Technology
Cent er in Alabama. The Bigger Tlaey Are •••
~cau11e they only provtd41d ws
with twotlcket lakera. '' beaald.
"That'• whal started the ·•hole
thins. there weN too many people
wulthlg ln llno.''
Pohcc Cuptllin R. E. Moody
uld there were only three arreslS
foUowlnti the dlsturbance. lnclud-me one lefnaaer arrested ror
arson and usauJUna officers, u
burglary at-rest and the arrest ol a
youns 1lrl for belna u.nder the in-
fluence of alcohol.
"There were no lrtjuries on
eltllt'r side Saturday night," said
Moody ... ll wasn't the kmd or
Uung I'd want to bust up a dance
over. but it might have been U we
hadn 'l sent over the tactical
urut."
Fa1rarounds security polict'
called for assistance at about
10:30 p.m . when an overflow
crowd began tossing bottles and
setting small fires outside the
New Products Pavilion where the
concert was betng held.
"Several or the fires came close
to bui !dings,•' Moody said.
Fairgrounds oHidals disputed
Ornstein's comments, sayin& the
promoters did not go over ticket
sales capacity for the $2 event
which featured three unknown
bands.
Fair official Je•nnle Edwards
said the fair board is now c-on-
sidering putUne an end to rock
concerts planned by some pro-
moters
"We'll •llll approve concer~ for high schools and pri vat
groups." she said, addinl( lh
professional promoters with we I
known rock stars would also be
considered.
Smoking Ban
For Irvine's
Buildings Eyed
Smoking m,.y berome taboo m
the near future In C('rtuln city
buildings if Jrvino City coun-
cilmen decide Tuesday night to
enact the smokine ban they've
been considering for the post
month.
During their past two meet-
ings, councilmen have haggled
over whether or not smoking
should be permitted at public
meetings.
They're expected to come lo a
decision at their 7 · 30 p m. meet
mg Tuesday.
Two weeks ago. councilmen
voted 4 to 1 to ask the city al·
torney to draw up an ordinance
that would ban smoking and
create fines for offenders. They
aJso asked for a companion re-
solution that would allow them to
designate which places woul:f be
off limits to smokers.
The only dissenter wns John
Burton. an advocate of allowing
smoking everywhere and the
councilman has been critical. in-
stead, or th(• P<'rfumt• worn by
councilwoman Mary Ann Gaido.
City Attorney James Erickson
has prepared an ordinance and a
resolution, both "bare bones" in nature, that will allow coun-
cilmen to "fill in the blanks", if
they desire.
The ordinance. ir enacted, will
give the city authority to enforce
the sm oking ban and collect
fines. The re~olution would de-
signate exactly where smoking
would be prohlh1ted.
Official• of the firm aald the
work wlll b e p erformed in
Newport Beach but could glve no
<Jther dttalla becaUJe Informa-
tion on the project bu been
classllltd by UJ• Araq.
The harder they fall. Membera of a UCLA
sculpture class entered this 25-foot klte in
the UC Irvine KUe Flyin& Festival Sunday
at. Scotchman's Cove. Unfortunately. tho
giant crashed on its nrst attempted flight.
So, it's back to the drawing boards.
Laguna/Soutli £oa8t
,
Today~ ~lo lagj
N.Y.Stoeks
ivoL. 69, NO: 131, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENT~
eport Tells of ~megal' FBI .Break-in~·
WASHlNOTON (AP> -The
I has conducted hundreds or
reak·lns. "despite lbe ques·
onable legality of the technique
nd Its deep intrusion Into the
rivacy or taraeted indJvldual1, ..
• Senate Intelligence committee
f"•trreport says. The break-Ins, officially known fas ·•surreptitious entries," were
!conducted for the purpose or
tploto1rapbing or sciung docu-
. ments and installin& bup, ac·
cord.ins to the report released to-
day.
The report l.s ooe ol • series
prepared by the lntelUaence
panel'• staff to back up recom·
mmdations lo the committee's
f111al report.
The Justice Department still
permits lhe bureau to conduct
break-ins to install bup aod re-
fuses lo rule out the possibility of
ualn& unaut.borlaecf entries or
"black bas" joba'to obtain docu·
menll trom lottllD intelllsence
taraell. lhe 17-paae report noted.
''Althouah several attorneys
aeneral were aware of the FBI
practice of break-tns lO l~all
electronic Uatenlng devices.
there is DO lndlcaUoo that the
FBI Informed any attorney
aeoeral about ill use ol black bag
jobs." the report said.
The FBl waa unable to provide
the ton>mitt.ee with a complete
accounting of the total number of
break-ins because most records
were destroyed soon after an en·
try was accomplished, the report
said.
Figures provided by the FBI
showed there were at least 242
break·lns against suspected
domestic subversives betweert
lM2 and 1968 and that slnce 1960
lhe FBI condu~ted more than 500
break·lns to install bugs.
.. Almost as many surreptitious
entries were conducted In tho same period aeainst targets of
criminal Investigations," the re·
portsald.
The report named the Ku Klux
Klan and the Socialist Workers
• party a.s two targets of FBI black
bag jobs.
As described by the report,
aienta who pertormecSbreat·ln
would sometimes tequest lh~
cooperation of a landlord In en'\
terina the premises. Jn otheri
cases, the agents simply would
enter through unlocked doors or
pick the lock, the report said.
One break-in spedallst said
"only In a small proportion orthe
cases to which he was assigned
was it necessary to pick a lock." ·
~DA's Man Called at Cella Trial
~ By TOM BARLEY
OflMO•fly l'1lelSW1t
LOS A NG EL ES-Orange
County Distnct Attorney's mvest·
igalOr Loren OuChesne was re·
called to the witness stand here
today •s the defense renewed its
argument that the pJosecution is
using documents 11legally seized
rrom •a Costa Mesa pnnt shop
CQOtrolled by indicted Dr. Lows
J. <!ella Jr.
DuChesne, who earlier s~nt
Pilot Hikes
For Help
Mter Crash
A downed pilot baked rive miles
through the rugged Santiago
mountains Saturday night and
hitchhiked to Fullerton Airport
before sounding an alarm that
sent an 18-man Orange County
Sheriff's rescue squad in search
or two teenagers trapped an
wreckage or u light plane
ll wasn't until 2 a.m Sunday
lhat the rescue squad found the
plane and the painfully if not
seriously injured youngsters an
the east fork of Fremont Canyon.
roughly Cave males east of Irvine
Park.
Al dawn, an El Toro Mannt'
Air Station rescue helicopter hfi
ed Jan Maelle White. 16. of
Buena Park, and Timothy
Lindsay. 17 . of Santa Ana. from
the canyon noor.
The youngsters were taken to
Mission Community Hospital in
Mission Viejo for lJentment of
their tnJuraes. Lindsay reported
ly was released from the hospat..al
SUnday arter~oon I
Miss Whflt'. ho"ever . rt•
mained in the hospital overnight
and reportedly was listed an good
condition today.
Her father. Gen(' Wayne What<'.
44. of 5591 Rockll'dgc Dr1vt•,
Buena Park, "as ut the conlrol ...
of the rented Cessna 172 thiil
plunged Into the con)on 11hortl~
after 5 p m Soturday
According to o ~henrr !.. rePorl
White and the two ~oung!'ltl'r"
were merely takinst .i plC'asun·
llieht from 1-'ullt>rlon Airport
over lhl' Anuheam lltlls art•n
when the craft apparently lo~l
power
Wh1tr hiked hvc males throuRh
the rug11crl m ount .11n country
berore h1tch1nf? o nck hock to th<' ·
airport nnd ullln~ 1-'ullerton
po 11 c e o t ob out m 1 tt n i ,r ht.
1h('rl(('11lnvc11tlgotors1uld
Two hours later, in r<'sponse lo
bullhorn messaRCS sent <'choan~
throu.rh the mountains, sht'r1fr's
~archers heard coils for help.
According to one rescuer. 1t
took a four-man team thrN! hours
.to descend th• canyon walls an
lhe predawn darkness to reach
the crash vl~lims
It was then that a call was sent
to the Marine air bue for o
rescue ht>llcopter that tOOld lift
the two youngsters Crom thc.-ca·
n)'On at dawn's nrst hgbt
·CITIZEN'S &4.ND
I i 'FAST SELLER'
"l sold my citiitns band radio
as a result of the Daily Pilot ad."
That's the advertisin& success
story told by the Laguna Halls
woman who pla~ed this ad:
CB Rn<ho. Rcal111t1c. rn<!I TRCl7.!\5Bw tarnntro I na ~"l:\·\'O.\
I U you have electronic gear
( you want to convert to cash, cnll
642-$78. We make it euY lot"
you to communicate wilb buyen
all alona the Orange Const. in
tha Daily Piiot.
the best part or two days testify.
ing on his role in the investiga-
tion, admitted that materials
taken Crom the print shop in July1 1975, were examined by lnterna1
Revenue Service agents in his of·
fice a month later.
Three months later, Dr. Cella,
51, and three business associates
were indicted by a federal grand
Jury here on 44 felony counts, m·
eluding rraud and tax evasion.
Duchesne admitted today that
Elephants
Kill Tiro
SALISBURY, Rhodesia
<AP > --Killer elephants
have battered two persons
to death in the remote
Kariba region of northern
Rhodesia, Police report.
They announced Sunday
that the mutilated body of
Charles Perry, a tsetse fly
control worker missing
since Friday, had been
found In dense bush. and
tracks around the body
showed be had been at·
tacked by elephants.
A local tribal leader was
also killed by an elephant
that picked him up with hls
trunk and hurled him lo the
ground. Police said.
Cyclist, 15,
Hurt in Fall
Down Stairs
A 15-ycar -old San Clemente
youth attempting to descend an
ocean front stairway on his blcy
rte lost control and tumbled end·
over-end landing on his back at
the base of the Oije Oourt Steps
Saturday.
James Shinkle or 135 de la
Guella. was treated by San
Clemente lifeguards and
firemen . He was taken for
emergc.-ncy care to San Clemente
General Hospital and released
arter treatment for a head
laceration.
Liruuard Caot Sheridan Byerly. said the lad traversed
the first l wo tiers of the three lier
'\lalrway bur "wiped out" on the
last hnk
Clemente Cop . .
his omce obtained those .docu·
ments without a search warrant.
Under close questioning ftom
Judge Matt Bym~. he also ad·
milted that the IRS agents were
well aware of that fact. ""
"In other words, no one at the
• print shop other than your infor·
mant knew you bad these docu-
ments. And the IRS went along
with that. right?" Judge Byrne
asked lbe witness.
<See CELLA. Pafe AZ>
Cmnpaign
Fmances
Revealed
Campaign money for sue·
cessCul San Clemente City Coun-
cil candidates Donna Wilkinson
and William Walker came chief·
ly from real estate and construe·
tlon Interests u well u personal
finances.
The sources of the candidates'
campal1n cub are disclosed on
records filed wlth the city clerk.
Walker was the top spender
paying out $3,063 and collectlng
$.1,463.
The financial disclosure re-
cords show Walker received a
MOO campalan loan from Carol
M. Coles. escrow officer or
Western Mutual ~scrow.
Walker gave his campaign
$296. Other campaian coo·
tributors are E.L. and Mary
Risley, real estate brokers, $200;
Mary Walker of Capistrano
Beach, retired, $200; Ann
Holloway. real estate broker,
SIOO; Ken Sumner, building con-
tractor, SlOO; and,
Ngaire Larsen, office manager
or Risley Real Estate. $100; Rex.
Holloway. real estate broker.
$100: Paul Prealey, San
Clemente Inn owner, $100: Lew
Ensel, motel operator, $100 and
James Sol burn. $100.
Mrs. Wilkinson spent the
second highest amount, Sl,957.
The record shows she received
$710 from Jack Wilkinson, her
husband. who is listed as o San
Juan Capistrano contractor.
Mrs. Wilk10son also donated S153
lo the campaign.
The record indiutes two con·
trlbutlons from contractor
Howard Ma11le, one o( $49.50 and
one of 1249.SO. Massie, a former
Parka and Recreation com·
mlssloMr. was tired by the
former city council. He hu been
<See FUNDS, Pase AZ> * • •
The Bigger Tl1ey A re. • • 0.1ly "•lot l'Mlo ty "•lflO O' o.nn.11
The harder they (~. Members or a UCLA
sculpture class entered this 25-foot kile in
the UC Itvlne Kite Flying Festival Sunday
at Scotchman ·s Cove Unfortunately. the J
giant crashed on its first attempted flight. ' '-
So. it's back to the drawing boards.
Dog Saves Tot
Setter Pull,s Girl from Car
BRIDGETON. Mo. (AP> -
Two-year-old Margaret Morns
owes her lUe to a decision by her
family to take in a dirty, hungry
dog they found roaming in their
neighborhood.
Red, an Irish setter adopted by
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce R. Morris of
Harvester, Mo .• three weeks ago,
pulled the panicked gvl by her
coat collar from their barked car
minutes before it was gutted by
names.
"All I can say is thank God we
got the dog, 1 wouldn't have been
able to get to the car m time.··
said Morris, who witnessed the
incident from a car dealer's
showroom where he and his wife
were shopping for a new car.
Red was adopted by the Mor -
<See HERO DOG, PageJ\2)
Fat Man Not Jolly,
Says Study Report
MIAMI BEACH. Fla. CAP> -
The popular .image 0£ the JOiiy
fal man ts wrong, aays u report
of the American Academy or
Psychoanalysts. The overweight
person. it says, Is more hkely to
be depressed, anxious and fllled
with self -loathing. The report
also said that people may turn
to rood to avoid sex.
And while psychoanalysis can
help obese persons be happier.
In most cases 1t will not result
In dramatic weight reduction,
the report uad.
The report, the result or a
three-year study or fat people
and psychoanalysis, was pre·
sented here at a meeting or the
Academy or Psychoanalysts.
Rock Concert
Melee Blamed
On· Fair Aides
By STEVE MITCHELi.
Of IM O•llt ""°' St•lt The promoters of Saturday's
rock concert al the Orange Coun
ly Fairgrounds arc blaming fair
officials for a disturbance broken
up by Costa Mesa polirc.
Allen Ornstctn. president nr
Penny Lune Productions. Clf
Orange County. said a lack or
ticket takers for the event pro
mpted the disturbance. which
wasbrokenupat12·J0a.m bylhe
28-member Costa Mesa Polic<•
tactical unit
· We told those offaciols that WC'
were going lo have a sellout
crowd, and Lhey said. ·Yeah.
yeah, That's what they all say." ·
Ornstein saad.
The 20 -year old promoter 11a1d
only l"o ticket takers were pro
v1ded by ra1r officials Instead of
the six lbe promoter!! srud they
~kedfor.
·We had at least 3,000 to 4,000
people who couldn't gel in
because they only provided us
with two lick el takers," he sold.
·On Ball Teani
Disabled List
The San Clemente Police
Department baseball team was
behind arch opponents Sebaa·
t1an's West when police Ueute·
nant Clirford Gates stepped to Ule
plate Saturday.
Coune<il Hopefuls
Reveal Expenses
Dr. Albert Stunkard. pro·
fessor of psychiatry al Stanford
University. said 147 J><.>oplc wen•
Included in the filudv 84 or lh~m obese and .,.he · r est slam.
The obese subjects ranl(ed 1n
uge from 30 to SO and averaged
197 pounds ror women and 247
Pounds ror men.
"That's what started the wholt•
thing, there were loo many people
wait an(( In line."
Coast
With a mighty swing, l..ieute·
nant Oates launched the
horsehide sphere across the
field. hitUn& in the l)"iftg run Tom
"Gnts" Jordan.
But rounding second base.
Ueutenant Gates foll. tearing the
· uaamettts in a Jeg. He waa re-
ported tn satisfactory conditlon
today. His lei is in a cast and be
is eqected to be out at least a
week. The game was called and
dttlared a tie.
The team's next pme is with
the Mission Belles. a women's
team.
MeChanic Charged
•
PALM SPRINGS <AP> -An
Indio auto mec:hanic, Wllllam
Lee Smith, was booted for ln·
vesU1alion of murder. kidnapi.ng •
and attempted rape in the stab-
bmg death ol a Palm Sprinas
woman
By IACK CHAPPEU. ot-.0. .. , ...........
S&n Clemente Cit)' Council CID·
d.Jdates 1pent nearly $1 per re·
atstered voter durina.the March
municipal election, according to
final expense and lncome reports
on me today wlt.b the city clerk.
The top spender ln the cam·
paip was William Walker who
apeat 11,063 to finlsts second in
the ballotlna. Walker pm*ed
2,352 vole. for a total COit of Sl.30
per vote.
The top vote setter lo the cam·
P•l1n waa Donna Wilkinson.
Mrs. Wllkinaon spent $1,957 to •l·
tract 2.MZ votes (74 cenll per
vote>. The lop-per-vote outlay came
from Russell Ric~ a write-in
candidate. Rlce ba4 GOt aub-
mltled till final ,.,,.... bi' Ji"riclQ
u required bJ Jaw. bOweftr, a
nild-nmpalp nport lboftd he
spent at leul $3.30 per WJte be r• cerid.
R.Jce, whose Dime did OOl ap-
t
pur on the ballot beuuse he had
not rereilatered after moving.
spent DU to attract 409 wrtte·in
votes.
Incumbent councilman Arthur
Holmes, who waa defeated in o
reelection bid, apent suss to
gamer 1,318 vote., a cost of 88
cents per vote.
Candidate Carlo Bocci spent
the aecond tu1hest per vote.
$1.&s, or S886 to attract 479 votes.
Ce.ndldate Marton Moon spent
$548 foe 9'70 'Votes, 56 cent.a per
•\'Ole. J Former Mayor ade Lowtr
spent Sl,198 to coll 1,208 votes.
99 centa per volt.
Three of the 10 candidates ft led
statementa declaring that they
bad not spent more t.ban $200 nor
rectf ved mote t.bu • ttom any
t.tncle lndl.Sdual.
Mu ~rg, city t1 rk, and
WUUam llilcbell, dtytrasul'er.
were ~ unoppotfc1. Both filed
.-mun •C•tementi dec!larlns
(lee EXPENSE, Pap AJ>
Although about 64 percent or
the fnt patients lost small
amounts or weight dunng the
two or three years or
psychoanalysis. Stunkard saJd.
wel&hl reduction was "not as
1ood as the hotshot programs
focusing on weight loss" such as Weight Watchers and
Overeat.era Anonymous.
He said lhe study showed
psychoanalysis effectively im·
proved the obese patients' body
Images.
Stunkard'• associate. Colleen
Rand, said 70 percent of the
obese patients considered
themnlves unattractive com·
pared to 18 percent of the slim
subjects.
"lo our sample. 41 percent
a~oided looking at themselves
Jn mirrors." said Miss Rand.
"'Some did not even have any
ml1'1'on In their hornes.''
Althou b most did not ask for
<See OBESE. Page A!)
T
Weatller
A cooling ort period, with
low clouds In the momlnK
and partly cloudy In the af·
lcrnoon, IS in Slore (Or the
Oranec Coast Tuesday.
Highs will run from 65 on
the seashore to 75 further
ml and.
INSIDE TOD""
some chtldrm at an IIUrwm 1
school actuall11 wltneutd a l
llo11lng while wcllklng home
from hmch. School o/ftdala
teU of hot.O lhe 1ncadmt haJ od· ~1el11 af/ected Chdt livea.
A7. Index
L
.ti DAILYPILpT
·~ire Destroys Plant
HB Torching Tied to Cella Hearing?
'
111 the S 1ri111
The Laguna Beach Sea Lions took part in
a ~ity sponsored swim·a·tbon Saturday to ·
raise money for stop watches and other
equiprpent. The youngsters were paid by
sponsors for each lap they completed. The
Sea Lions compete against oth~r Southern
California swimming clubs. From left to
right are Tracy Borucki, 12; Keri Drumm,
13 ; and Deanna Laderman, 13.
8 Hurt Aboard Sorcery
The crippled 61-loot sloop
Sorcery. owned by Jacob Wood of
Marina del Rey, was under tow In
mid-Pacific today with eight or
her 11-man crew injured.
Sorcery. a well-known CC-61.
Fro• Page A l
CELLA .••
was presumably returning from
the South Seas by way of Honolulu
when she lost her mast and had
her rudder carried away by 20·30
foot waves and winds or more
than 3S knots about 1,200 miles
from the mainland.
According to an Associated
Press di"spatch , the crippled
vessel was taken in tow late Sun-
day by the Coast Guard cutter
Mellon and was being taken to
Sorcery is one or the best known
racing yachts in Southern
California. She was the overall
winner of the Transpacific Los
Angeles lo Tahiti race in 1974 and
sailed ln the Honolulu race in 1975.
She also haa competed in several
races in Mexican waters.
ln 1974 she was also the winner
or California Yacht Club's Cal
Cup against her sister ship, Joli.
87 AltTHt1a a . VINSEL Ot ...... ,,.. .....
A IZS0,000 pr•d•wn explot'on
and ftre today d11troytd a Hwt·
lnaton Beach prinUnt plant
owned by a pot~tlal witness tn
the trial ot poUUcal Onanel r Or.
Louis J. Cella. Fire offklals said
the blaze was lntentlonally 1et.
The blast and blue that tutted
Graphics Communications Com-
pany, 7271 Murdy Circl e,
awakened firemen aleepm, ln
the Murdy Fire Station only
about~yards away.
flames were already roarina
through iu roor by the time they
ran lo a rear window to locate the
conflagration, accord.In& to Fire
Inspector lames Merrill.
Investigators were careful to
note the inferno in the noa'th Hun·
tington Beach industrial park is
listed as being or mcendiary
on gin.
Police Department Arson
Detail Detective Robert Russell
~ll'med, however, the blue
was obviously intentional, but
noted any specific motive ls UD·
known.
Authorities say printing firm
owner Richard Thompson told
them he is to be a witness in the
uproming trial or Dr. Cella, who
is accused with three colleagues
of diverting $2 million from
Cella·controlled hospllala for
political purposes.
Printing of cam p aign
literature so rar has been men-
tioned in testimony relaline to
the 44-count indictment issued by
a federal grand jury in Los
Angeles' naming Cella and co-
def endanls.
So far, Th~mpson's name has
not emerged and be is known to
have not been among former
business associates who ~Ufied
before the grand jury.
Thompson. who was not im·
mediately avaliable for an in·
terview at the fare scene, re·
portedly told tnvesllgalors he
bad done some work for Cella but
"It wasn't said in so many
words. But the inference was
clear.·• DuChesne said
. Kodiak, Alaska. The eight injured
crewmen were taken aboard the
cutter in a difficult rescue opera-
tion in heavy seas. Love to Live
not more recenll,y than about five
yearsqo.
Another printer once employed
by a Costa Mesa firm controlled.
by Cella waa a promlnellt witness
ln hla Loe An&eles bearina on
Tb1u·1day and testified lo enter·
lDI tht shop on occasion.
Donald.Albert Ray, 36, alleged.'
ly stole documents from the Costa
Mesa printshop for the Internal
Revenue Service that allejedly
could be lnciminaling to Cella.
Today items recovered rrom
the debris of Thompson's flrm ln·
eluded three soot-smud1ed
checks that lay on a table in the
adjac,ent West Orange County
Teachers' Assoc:lationsuite.
··1 don't even know where lhey
came from," said Detective
Russell.
Fre•PageAl
FUNDS •••
octlve ln criticiting the old city
council, accusing some members
of t'Ollflicta of interest.
Mrs. Wilkinson also shows re·
celpt of $100 from Lorraine Odne,
commercial tras h collect.or.
Mrs. Wilkinson also shows the
donation of Sl50 in printing as a
nonmonetary contribution by
Gilbert Ferguson who is listed as
"a printer." •
Ferguson is the executive
director of a construction in-
dustry and labor union lobbying
ocganiiation called Californians
for Environment, Employment,
Economy and Development
<CEEED>.
* * * Fro• Pagf! A I
EXPENSE ••.
they had not spent more than
$200.
The financial disclosure state-
ments flied by successrul can-
did ates Mrs. Wilkinson and
Walker show the bulk or their financing came from real estalc
or building interests.
He aod Fire Capt. Roser
HolJJ)er said later thh momin1
that no one hat bttn questioned as a po11ible suspect but that
routlnequeaUonln1 launderway.
Cau!e or lbo axplosive blue
that ori1ln1lted In a produeUon
and repair area or the ahop w.-a.
large quantity or nammablo Ii· quid.
No one was injured in baUlloi:
the two.aJarm blue, which re-
quired 26 .firefighters 15 minutes
to control, accordln1 lo Capt.
Hosmer.
The f ire immediately
destroyed a trunk telephone ca·
ble serving 900 residenUal and In·
duslrial customers in the sur·
round1ng area, including one en·
tire houslng subdivision.
Inspector Mars h a ll said
Thompson's apparently
flourishing business lost $80,000
worth or equipment alone in the
rag1ne names.
He said ll included printing
presses, duplicating machines
and spare parts. The company
occupies three s uites m the com-
mercial bwlding and includes .l
copy machine repair sen •lce in
addlUon to its own printing
facilities.
Investigators said lhe fire is
not listed as an arson because
that term applies only to re~liden·
ualhomes. l I
Tbe structure that housed
Graphic CommunicatlOJ\.S Co. is
owned by Murdy & Brockman
Inc., firemen said.
Thompson lives at 19262
Worcester Lane, Huntington
Beach
Poison Pigeon
Probe Plea
Pigeo1ilwled?
Judge Byrne will be asked by
lhe defense when the current pre-
trial hearing e nda to rule that all
documents seized from the Unit·
ed Printing Company plant on
Airport Loop Drive be sup·
.,rpressed.
The Coast Guard said the
crewm~n were in fair condition.
One bad a broken leg, two were in
shock and the others had lesser m·
Juries.
All of the crewmen were said to
be from Southern California but
none was identified.
Sex Called Good for Women
LONDON (AP) -British psychiatrist Jane
Gomez says too much sleep can shorten your life but
sex tan make a woman live longer.
Laguna Bro.sh
Fire Quenched'
Are the pigeons being
poisoned in Plaza Park, San
Clemente·?
No. one seems to know today
despite a formal complaint by a
resident to the San Clemente
Police Department Saturday.
The resident said the pigeon
populatJon in the park was plum-
meting. And, he said he was con-
cerned the pigeons were being
given poisoned food.
Lawye rs for both sides agree
that if Judge Byrne bars all or
most of the documents from the
trial scheduled to ala.rt Tuesday.
the prosecution may not have
any case left lo try
DuChesne admitted again to·
day as he did last week thal pnnt
shop employe Donald Albert Roy
was persuaded to supply hi s or
fice with several boxes or docu·
ments in return ror leniency on
cnminal charges he faced
Ray was held m the Orange
County Jail on charges of plan.
nmg the murder or lus estranged
wife's boyfriend when dislnct at·
torney's investigators learned of
his connection with Cella and his
employment al the print shop.
Ray was later rewarded for his
· etrorts by being sentenced to six
days in jail and two years proba·
•lion after pleading gwlty to a re·
duced misdemeanor charge.
DuChesne testified today that
I RS agents were particularly in·
terested in what he says were a
number of "f1ct1llous in-
voices "submitte d to two
hospitals under Celia's control
Mission Community Hospital.
M1 s s1on VieJo and Mercy
General Hospital, Sntnta Ano
lie said the possib11Jty of la"<
fraud was discussed by the
E
ents after they learned that the
llln1s Involved 10 allegedly
gus corporallon11 whtch billed
th hoap1tal•·
It 1s alle&ed that the defendan~
bilked both hospltala of an
estimated S2 million throuirh the
acts of fraud described today by
DuChesne.
0111.ANOI COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Wied r.·-·---Jack R. Curley v.cePt•-11•--•Mli-
Thomas Koe'<tll R••tor
Thom.s A. Mursitune
IN-(O.ter
ll'IC
OW-lesH. Loos • Richard P.Nall "''""""'""',....,.c • ...,. l..lnM BH<" Office liao_,.._ .,.. .. ,... ... _" ~o ... --.q
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._ ............. tNIJIMc"--~ V•tto• tm•u--•• '°"Cl .... ' --
TeMt*OM (714) M1'4m Qaulfled Advertl1lngMN67I
1...ttun.11 S.acfl All ~11meftts:
Tei.pttone 4'4-..... ,,...,~c .. _ ., ... °""'"'"' ttlt Ot-CH•I ""'4tft"' C-........ -•i.tltt, lllV.1111""''-........ "'lttff er .. ¥efUHIN"h Nr~ln m.y IMI ......... l .... 11 ..... 1 .............. , ...... .. ---· '"-cl•n .,.,, ... ,.,.Mc.tr•*•• c...-• \oett,,.,_ " ,.,.,_ u n ,,_ ""Y. OV,,...IW.HtftefltN•. ,,.. ..... ,.~,'°""'-
U llt-•
The Coast Guard said huge Has
d1smasted Sorcery, broke her
rudder and flooded the engine
room. All hfe rafts \\ere carried
away by the heavy seas.
The Mellon and a freighter
stood by the stricken yacht for a
full day before the cret.men could
be rescued and the yacht tjkt'O m
LO\\.
Laguna Girls
Open House
Set Friday
The Laguna Beach Girls Club
will stage an open house between
2 and 7 p . m . Friday at the
clubhouse, 1470 'temple Terrace.
as part or Na ti on al Girls Club
Week activities this week
The open house, open to mcm
bers and non-memberi.. will in-
clude refreshments, cntcrl:lln
ment hims ·a nd announcement or
"The Woman 1 Consider Moi.t
Important'' contest wmner
On Tuesday. Mayor Phvlhs
Sweeney \\Ill be ~ut.'!>l speaker.
followed by VISILS lrom pohce 0£.
t1l'ers, firemen and lifeguards on
Wednesday and a pet show on
Thursday All . act1V1Ues will
take place between 2 and 5 30
pm
Further information can be ob
uined by calling 494-7630.
f'rone Page A I
OBESE ...
help in red ucin~. "We found
that obese persons thought they
were Ul(ly and showed great
evidence of body Image dis·
paragement," she saul
She said they described
themselves as "fat slobs" or
looklne like a "tub of lard."
·'Treatment by
psychoanalysis effectively re-
duced the intensity of this dis-
paragement,•• Miss Rand
added.
Fal people turned to food
more often to counter stress
and crisis, and many used it to
avoid sex, according to the re-
port .
"Forty-seven percent or the
obese compared to seven per·
cent of normal-weigbl paUeot..s
ate to avoid sexual rela·
Uonships," said Miss Rand.
She satd some patients used
food to reduce sexual urges or
to get fat and lltttp the opposite
sex al a distan~. One man
mentioned in the study said thal
when he ate he was too fu11 to
want sex, and another 11l up
utln& late each night to wait
for hi.a wife to fall asleep.
Lovemaking offers that much exercise value and
1s tranquilizing as well, Mrs. Gomez says in a new
book published here. For men. sex has no value for its
t.'xerc1sc. s he s ays.
Sex also stimulates the glands that keep women
youthful, but male glands just don't respond to the
treatment, the book says.
Seven hours sleep a night is enough for any
woman. Mrs. Gomez claims. She says men need 10
mmutes more but doesn't explain why.
"Men in their 50s who sleep nine hours a night suf-
fer double the death rate from stroke, heart attack or
aneurysms <b lood clots) than those sleeping seven
hours or less," says the book, entitled .. How Not To
Die Young."
"Those who sleep 10 hours run four times the
risk," the book says.
Trustees to Weigh
2nd Campus Plan
A report on the reas1b1hty or
de' eloping a St'l'Ond campus in
the Tu1ttn·Irvtne area will be
presenled tonight to Saddleback
Community Coll t>ge District
Lrustees
The C1h1eM Select Advisory
Committee was appointed 1n
March to con11der ways the col·
lege can better serve residents
llvlnit in the northern area or the
348 square·mlle distnct..
Hosts Sought
For Students
Host fomilles ure being sou~ht
for JS French 11tudent.s who will
visit Laguna Beach during July.
The students, ran1ln1 in age
from 16 lo 22, will travt'I to the
United States under the Foreign
Study Leasue program.
They will attend courses at
Laguna Beach High School tor
four weeks after their July 2 ar·
rival.
Persons interested in hosting a
student are asked to telephone
Rome Friesen, 497-~.
83 ,500 in Plants
Stolen in Niguel
Potted •1anls valued by the
vtdim at 6 ,500 have been stolen
from t he rear courtyard of a
Lacuna Ni1uel home, Orange
County sheriff's officers re-
ported.
Deputies said lntrudera al the
home of halrdre11er Gordon
Uoyd Greene, 48, of 23 Monarch
Bay. had lb~ courtesy to wuh
down the courtyard aft.er they
bad carri«hrr all his plants.
• I
College orflc1als have been con-
sidering the posslblllty of open-
ing a satellite facility which
would eventually grow Into a
second campus.
The committee's report was
originally due to be given to
trustees in April. The deadline ror the report, however, was ex·
tended because committee mem·
bera rett the "extreme c:omplex1-
ty" or the luue required addl·
Uonal time.
Jn other action, trustees ore
expected to consider eslabll1hlng
the academic rank of professor
for tenured: full-hme faculty
members.
County Teen
Shot in Car,
Badly Wounded
A Santa Ana youth was shot
and seriously wounded Sunday
night as he aat with lhrH friend.a
• tn a car parked at a curb In
Oranae.
Police identl.fied the shootlne
victim as Au161tlno Godoy, 17.
Godoy reportedly was in stable
condition in the lnlenslve care:
unit at Chapman General
Hospital today after undercoin1
emergency sureery late Sunday.
Accordin1 to Oranae police,
the victim was 1ittlrta in the rear
seat of an auto parked near Chap·
man A venue and HtWes Street at
8:4Sp.m. wben wounded.
Police faid Godoy'• comp•· nioos told them an udJdenUried
youth a pproached the lfarked
car, drew a 1un from lnsfde his
jacktl and fired an unspeclned
number of bullets into Godoy's
torso before Deein1 on foot.
Laguna Beach firemen quickly
contained and extinguished a
brush fire apparently started by
youngsters smoking in a
treehouse Saturday at the end or
Buena Vista Way, Laguna
Beach.
Fire Marshal Jim Presson said
the fire had the potential to have
endangered homes, however,
prompt response by fire units
held the fire to a small patch near
the areas it started.
Firemen removed some brush
in Lht? area. Presson said the
hazard would have been greater
had not grass in the area still
been green from recent rain.
LB Cleanup
Week Slated
Burned out water hfat~. sag-ing couches, threadbare rugs
and the like will be collected free
m Laguna Beach during the week
of May 17.
Residents are asked to place
the large items curbside on their
reiular trash pickup day. Special
trucks will pick up the Items
priorlo7 a .m.
Tree trimmings must not ex-
ceed four reel 10 length or weigh
more than 50 pounds. They must
be tighly bound with rope or wire.
bound with rope or ware.
The police department not1f1ed
the Orange County Ammal Con·
. trol department But, all calls
seeking information from the in·
cident were rderrcd back to the
San Clement e Police Depart-
m ent Then>, the CJlls were
again r eferred to the Orange
County Ammal Control depart·
ment.
Front Page A l
HERO DOG
rises after they found him run
ning loose. The dog's owner was
located but h<' ajlreed to let the
family keep the a nimal.
''M y wire . Betsy, and
Margaret had really become at
tached to the cloJ!," Mom s said
Sunday
Saturday arternoon, lh<' rouplt>
lert Marjlaret asleep in the car
with Red 11tand1ng guard. Tht'
car's front wmdO'l'S wer<• rolled
down about thr<'< .. <1uartcr-. of
the way, Morn s said
Morris said ht• frequently
looked out to check on th<' girl,
but after IS minutes hart piis:<;t-d ,
a salesman noticed !lmokc pour
1ng from the car wrndow11
.,w;,..,....·
MARGARET MORAIS, 2, HUGS HERO OOQ 'RED'
lrf1h Sett• Rescued Girt From Burning Car
l
81 MILTON OSICOWl'l'Z
Not mqy Ptople, conhmled w \h lhefollowla1 nama;
eould 1.senur, t.htm ~ ~ohn P. Auslln. Pl'w Carr. R~n.ald
JOj,ie, l>On•td MacNaucbtoo and Arthur WoOd.
The aN tbe ebalrmm, respectJ ... 11. ol Coca-Coli, IBM,
Gen•r•l Bleetrlc,
Prudtntial lnsul"aoco ud Sean. lloeb11ct. ~b• anon1mlt1 of
IM.ahta1 ludn1 la •
1lrlkln1 fleet or American Hie. Th••
fiw comp1nlea ar11 Pf•· eminent ln their nelda. 1lley 1 U pl"Odueu tnd servlees u
by mUUont or Americ•n.s. Yet C>vtstdo the bualn as world,
the mm wbo run th matt virtually unknown.
TREia I NVJSIBIUTY WAS pointed up ln 1 ''Wbo Runs.
America .. poll taken by US News &c World Report. Result ~ ol the poll wue pubU.hC!d latl moalb, and they ehow that no
one apparently beUev that buainessmffl count tor much,
not. even the 1,400 "key Americans" wbo were surveyed by
the ma111l11e. .
Pr.aldent Ford headed the ti.st or 1s leaders who wer
deemed to be motl WtuenUal In our llvts. Seer~ o
&.te Henry Kl.slater placed set0nd and be was Collowed
by Arthur Burns. chairman oftbe Federal Raenrve Board.
Walter Cronlclte, the CBS newscaster, placed sixth ln
this evahaation and consumer aclM.sl Ralph Nader ranked tenth.
Not a alncle busi.neSs execuUveTDade the lop-lS list.
IT WASN'T VNTrL TllE second tier -the lSlh througtt
30th llatlnp -that bwsinesamen were mentioned and eveq,
here they were not very prominent.
David Rockefeller, the chairman or New York's Chase
Manhattan Bank, came in 16th. and Ws was probably more
a reflection of the maclc of his family name than bis posi·
t1on as a banker. Tyi.o& the Rev. Billy Graham ror 20th place
was William Paley. the chairman of CBS and the employer.
of Walter Cronkite. And then oiie hid to m ove all the way
down lo 28th place before (lndln1 the only other busines
leader believed to have major Influence: Thom1l5 Murphy,
the chairman of General Motors.
Unmentioned were the five business chiefs cited at the
start or this column. Also voteless were the chairmen ot Ex·
xoo, ITT. U.S. Steel, Du Pont and American Telephon• and Telegraph. lf the results ol this-survey a re accpe\ed. then
these men have less influence in Amerte'an life than Ronald
Reagan, Jobn Gardner, Earl Butz, Henry .Sackaon, Daniel
Moynihan and Gov. E;!Jmund arown Jr . ..
AT FIRST GLANCE, THESE findings, that busi·
nessmen h.ave little influence when compared with other
leaders, do not seem lo jibe with public OJ:uruon surveys In·
dlcallng widespread distrust of U.S. busin ess and a feelln1
that the business sertor exerts an undue Influence.
On a second look, though. they lhay be quite consistent. The bt.lSlness influence that many people rear aoos by such
names as GM. OE. AT&T, U.S. Steel, Exxon. Those are
Cam11lar names. The men who manage them remain face·
less.
More Milk Eyed,
More Cost, Too
WASHINGTON (AP> -An.er rocking along with Ultle
cban1e the past three years, milk production 1n 1976 could
Increase slightly as dairy a farmers t ake advantage ofplen-
tirul &rain supplies and reduced feed costa, the Agriculture .
Department says.
But ofticials aald the larger supply will not mean lower
consumer prices tor mllk and other dairy products. The de·
partment•s Out.look and Situation Board said retail prices or
those items as a iroup are experted to a vera1e 6 to 8 percent
hl1her tban \hey did In uns, a prediction also made earlier
t.bilyear.
THE REPORT SAID milk prices at the· farm will
decllne u the s pring ''flush" season of peak production de·
velops but that prices still will average 10 to 15 pe-rcent
above what they did a year ago. Jn the second hair of 1976,
prices "could post a fairly strong seasonal rise" but ar~ not
expected tom atch the big gains in the second halfoflastyear,
otricialssald.
Much or the anticipated 6 to 8 percent ·rise in retail
prices has already occurred and it is possible that store
prices of dalry products may be f~irly stable In coming
month$, depending on the extent or the milk production in·
crease, a department spokesman said.
Although not officiallly publlshed yet, retail food prices
over-all were predicted last week by Agriculture Secretary
Earl L. Butz to go up 3 to 4 percent this year from their 1975
average. Thal would be the smallest increase in five years.
Avco Builds at Niguel
Avco ComO'lunlty Developers Inc. <ACD> has suc·
cessfully completed llqujdation of Its overaged Inventory
and Is engaged In an active building program at its major
properties, the new communities of Rancho Bernardo lD
San Dle10 and Lagun1 Nl1uel in Orange County.
James R. Kerr, cll•lrma.n of the board. and R. Barry
McComlc, president and chief operating ofrtcer, told the
company's shareholders that sales or homes have been eood
at both new communlUes and that new conatructlon Is under -·~ . Wblle ACO continua to experience delays In develop·
mcnt of oe~antront property at Laguna Niguel, several new
product• lnl1nd are beJna Introduced there In the comln&
montbt, McComlc aald.
For Ila 197$ litcal year, ACD had• consolidated net Josi ot $12.4 mUllon on rev nuts ot $62.58 million. During the
ynr the company ~I011ed 957 housing units compared with
1.107 In 1974. Sales ot bousln1 units In the nrat quarter or t97G
<November 1975 • to February. 1976) numbered 178 com·
pared with 164 ln the like period or 1975.
Rossmoor Income
I Rotamoor Corp., Laiuna Hills, hid net Income or
13,$22,000 or $1.U • •h•re. lncfudln1 a loss from operaUoM
of "25,000 or 31 centa1 on revenues of $301912,000 for the alx
montht ended Maren :u. 1976, accordanc to Roben E.
Rolenwald, Pre.ldtnt.
Salt1 and earnings comp1rJ1on1 were atrected by
M\'eral previously announced tra.n111ctlon1 rel1ted to the
ciompany•a property dlaposltlon and debt reducUon pro-cr•m.. ROMnwatd uld. These tranaactJona contrlbu.ted ap·
proximate!)' $13,235,000 to total revenues a.tld $',4'7 ,000 to
net lncome dur1n1 the fint hall.
Ooet1Uo1 re•ulta for the second quarter showed a n t
Iott ol $589,000 or lt cent.a a aha.re, on revenue• or $8,532,000,
compared wltb. a net lc>as or $305,000 or 10 cents on revenues ot S7,Ut,OOO in the like nsu l 1975 period.
• .t J •DAILY fttt..OT
ONTA:RlO. Callr. -Lquna
!\each'• Jim Busby won lhe ln-
t ernahon1l Motor SPorls As·
toclation 100-mller (OI' CT cars,
but he wosn't as h•PPY about the
victory as ht mt(ht have befli.
Busby ran into hi• ('loso friend
and car 1pon10r, Peter Gre11. en
route lo the trtumph Sunday al
Ont11rlo Motor S»•edwgy,
Bobby Rius. a Newport S.a('h
resJdent, won the battle of the 1te1t·
es com petlllon at Ontario Motor
Speedway Sunday over Shirley
Cha Cha Muldowney
Pro driver Muldowney wus
clearly faster on the race track Ln
1 alalo.m evm but Rigs won by
1lnkm1 five of his 10 ~ 1i1.h1le
he was o.ror-10 ln the colfLD&
eompetlUon.
Crecc was leadJni t.11ht laps
from the finlsb of UM-Camt'I·
sponsored race when Busby
plowt'd Into him in a slow ('Orner
and spun him out. Crees protest·
ed Busby's drtvina tatt1cs but
later withdrew bis official com· plaint.
"I om very sorry it happened,"
uld Busby after win.nine in "
Porsche Carrera sponsored by
the Florida dealership ln wt\ich
' .../ I
Three.mis Tribe
TananaPutsEnd
To Losing Ways
Angels pitcher Frank Tanana
did not like the looks or things.
He had not won a game smce
AprlJ 19 and ~urmg the interim
·had permltte,d only four earned
runs in 29 and one·thtrd innings
A119el1J S lofe
" A" Oa_.., KMl"C 11!01 May 10C.11torn1a •I OolanJ
_., U To"' •I Ca11torn1•
1 SI pm
I llP m
1 HP m. Mll'I u ft••\ •t C•l1farttta
But he had not won, l~tl!ad suf·
ferlng agonizing losses like l·O to
Milwaukee and 2-1 to New York.
Tanana was reanng the worst
again Sunday against the
Cleveland Indians as the Angels
came to bat In the eighth mmng,
trailing 2·0 as Fritz Peterson
worked on a three hitter.
But the Angels eot off the deck
and scored three times to enable
Tanana to po!l his second \'IC·
tory, a 3-2 tnumph over the In·
dians which gave California a
sweepo(thethree·gamesenes.
The Angels "ill try to kl.'ep 1t
going tonight "hen the) Ix-gin a
two.game series in Oakl;rnd
against the A's with Nolan R) an
(3·21 scheduled to oppose Paul
Mitchell O· l ··1 said to myself 1t look'l like 1l
may be another f1nt' l'ffort do\\n
the drain." Tanana ;admitted.
.. But around the fourth inmn~ or
so l told myself to keep it closl'
:ind maybl• somcthm~ \\Ill hap
pen. I'm glud 11 did ··
Tanana "ound up" 1lh a three
hitter . embro1dl.'red by <'ll!hl
strikeouts, to improve his record
to2·3.
The key blow in the California
rally was dell vered by outf1<'ldt>r
Rusty Torres "ho rammed a
two-out. two·run triple
··We've won thrt>e in a row the
hard "'ay," Torrt>s pomtl'<I out
.. 1 lhmk our attitude 1s goo<l and
we should be able to relax a tattle
* * * CLIVILAHO CALll'O"HtA ·-, --I •b ' .....
lilo\aMlnQ <I '0 I 0 "•"'• fll • 0 0 0 Ku•OC'r fl> 3 n n 0 .:tTo"•'' 1011
, Ao011'h')l'I O" I ft 0 0 f\nn<h tt <4 t) ' 0
0 8•11 IC> • 0 0 0 -·1"""" I 0 I 0 C•rtl/• • t 1 0 &oc:Mito 11JO)
Htl'ldrJ<'U lft'10 l ,l ,,.'\tGnll • I I 0 5&11;,. rt i I 0 t) c~ ''' Sb 1 l t '\
Mow ttCI tb J U I ' [I•""' .. '"'" f 1 } 0 ) f'o ""t too o p ' Jlt( '\O'' JC> ,, ' ,, \ 0.;H., , 1 n ti n ~t"f\•rU\\ >O'lfl ,,.,,.,\CH\ u o n o l"I [lA(tt• pn I I t I
l .,RMi'v·o U llU O >•· ,,m1nn c J O ft J •nttn.itp t
Jo'''" I• P J I f ""h II! ) o 1
C '""' I ,nd r)ll) OCV. tm ,. (.•I Hrn... or-I l'V•l o • l
OP (1,..., .. , ,,,d t 1 OR f••~ iAiM J (Ail ft,,n,,
l "' Hnw,u11 t •l4tl\lun JU st I ,,,,.
p,r.f,.r <fW\ IL. 0 h
• ""°' "' J .n1"\tlW ) U
1 I !• A 10 11•
, .. " "'" •• w I \ I I
• fl n ' I 1 f I •
now. We're gelling the big hits al
tbe right tame.··
The Angels, ''ho had lost 13
straight to Cle,·eland. captured
;ill three games with late·inning
heroics. On Friday, home runs
by Bobby Bonds l\nd Ball Melton
enabled them to score four runs
in the eighth for a 5-4 win and
they scr ambled from behind
twice to beat the Tribe 4·3 in 13 in·
rungs Saturday night.
Slap S~ot
Nips Flyers
MONTREAL (APl -
Derenseman Guy Lapointe netted
a 25-foot slap shot with JUSl 1 32
remaining Sunday night. giving
the Montreal Canadiens a com-
eback 4.3 triumph over the
Philadelphia Flyers in the opener
or their National Hockey Lt'aguc
rinal playoffsenes.
Lapointe took a pass from lcrt
wing Steve Shull and broke across
the Philadelphia blue hoe with
Guy Lefleur against Flyers' de·
rensemon Jim Watson. Hefnked a
pass to Larleur, then bla.ted his
shot past Philadelphia goalie
Waynt> Stephenson lo wm a gamt>
1n which the Canadlens had
1railed2-0.
Goalie Ken Dryden saved the
nclory with a lunging toe stop on
a Jim Watson shot 1n the frenzied
final seconds.
Jacques Lemaire had brought
the Canadaens even for lhe second tame an the contest when has 30·
root backhander with9· 58left lied
the score 3·3. Just under five
mmutes earlier, Philadelphia de·
fense Larry Goodenough had
broken a 2·2 lie by sending a 35-
foot po¥·er play wnst shot past
Dryden's lale·kicking right leg.
The Flyers. on goals by the red·
hot Reggie Leach and Ross
Lons berry. had taken a 2·0 first
period lead before Montreal
frustrated by a d1sorga01wd and
oftC'n sloppy openml{ session
-.tormed buck on tallies 2: 26 apart
ll\ Jim Roberts and Larrv
rtobmson in the middle period
Ll'a<'h 's 16th goal of the playoffs
had ROllen Philadelphia 11tart«1
JU!>t 21 !>CC'onds after the openmg
fJc<'orr. ll was the 10th <'On
"<'l'Ullve playoff game in which
Leach ha<I scored, extending the
pl a\ofr mark
•
The tttt betwten Gtta and
Busby developed al\ r Ute ltadtr
for 11 taps, llltbul Keyser,
dropped out wlth transmission
I allure,
Ktyser and Gro11 bttame em·
broiled In a batUo lut wctit at
L11una Se<'t. flr1t on th~ track
where the.ir can colUdt'd u! least
three UtnH dunna the race and
later in the pits whflrc they
arcued wath e1&ch other alltr the
race and Gresc fUt'd • protest
ataln st Keyse r ror un -
sportsmanlike drlvina tactics.
The protest was affirmed by
IMSA and Keyser was fined.
In the companion ttdan 100.
mall'!'. Gene Felton toot over on
the att0nd lap and led all the w.y
to win ma Oremhn at an avuace
~ ot 19.99T m.p.tt., second
was Carton Baird, \he sen es
poinl leader an a Colt. 11 seconds
~ck, and third was Don Deven·
dorf in a Datsun. Canadian national champion
Gilles Vllleneuvc won the On·
tarlo Grand Prix for Formula
Allantlc cars in o Morch, aveni·
ln£ 106.67$ m.p.h. Second was El·
llott For~s-Robinson In a Tui 15
i.econds behind, and third was
Bill Brack In a Chevron.
APWlr•-lo
MARK HAYES BLASTS OUT OF TRAP ON WAY TO BYRON NELSON GOLF WIN.
Lose 2 in a Row
Dodgers Tackle
Cardinals Tonight
ST. LOUIS <A P > -The Lo!
Angeles Dodgers, their 12·game
winning streak replaced by a
two-game loss string in
Philadelphia over the weekend.
On T" Totlighf
Channfl'I 7 af .-;::Jo
lake on the St. Louis Cardinals
here tonight.
Sunday. the Dodgers lost their
second straight to Philadelphia,
10 3, after the Phillies had ended
the Los Angeles victory string
the day before
Sunday ~uw the end of another
<;lreak, as the Dodgers' Doug
Rau. who took a 4·0 record and a
IO·gamc winning streak into the
j!ame, lost for the rirst lime since
Aug. 23
In Sunday's game, the Dodgers
were baffled by Phillies pitcher
Jim Lonborg, whose career "as
being written off 1ust six months
ago.
At the beginning of the season,
the only guy In F1orida who
thought Lonborg had a chan<'e
was Looborg. Now h1s record 1s
4-0. topped by Sunday's near·
perfect game against the
Dodgers.
The JJ•year·old hurler missed
haU of last season after injuring
his shoulder. Not only could h~
not throw through n pane ot
glass, he touldn't throw at all
The Phillies were 110 sure Lon
borg was done, they went out an
the winter market and acqu1recl
pitchers Ron Reed and Jim Kaat
in trades . Even Lonborg, the on<'
lime Cy Young Award winn<'r
with the Boston Red Sox, got the
message
ln bis latest victory. he came
dangerously close to a perfect
game -for 61f.i innings. lie
struck out seven or the first 19
batters.
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Ne lson's Tip
K ey for Hayes
DALLAS <AP> --A tip, de·
livered b}' dose friend and fellow
pro Larry Nelson on the practice
green before lhe final round,
may have been the key to Mark
Hayes' victory Sunday in the
Byron Nelson Goll Classic.
"I was desperate." Hayes said
after his scrambling, two·uoder-
par 69 had secured his first tour
title by a two.stroke margin.
"l was sea r ching for
something, anything. Because l
really wasn't hitting it all that
good.
.. Larry and I worked together
a lot. He knows me and my
game. lie told me I was getting
too fast. to try to slow down my
c;wmg. I really think that was the
key to it ah .
.. I s lo'A cd it do\\n. I even Lried
to walk down the fairway as slow
as Don January ... a 46·year-old
vt'teran famed as probabaly the
most slow.moving, easy.going
man on the' tour '"That was the
key. After the first hole l was re·
I axed and easy."
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JIM BUSBY
Eino, Durr·
Top Field;
Borg Rolls
CARLSB AD -Ne~p o rt
Beach's Rov Emerson t~amed
with Francoise Durr to dereat
Tom; Trabert and Billie Jean
King, 6-4. 6·4. Sunday to capture
the 560.000 mixed doubles tourna-
mt>nt at the La Costa Racquet
Club. Emerson and Durr !>pill the
S20.000 first pri7.c.
Emerson dominated piny m
th<' second set as the winner~
ralhed rrom n 1·4 deficit to post
the victory before 3,500 fans.
Borg Trhmtpfu
DALLAS -Bjorn Borg over-
came lhree year s frustration In a
jittery start Sunday. to outduel
close friend Gu11lermo Vilas. 1·6,
6·1, 7.5, 6·1 and capture the World
Champ.onshtp of Tennis $50,000
htst·place pnze.
,\.:u·~• Wha
TORRANCE -Los Angeles·
George Best lied the game with a
goal in the r1nal lnree minutes or
rt>gulallon play, then booted
home the ~ame·\\ innl.'r In the tie-
hn•akl'r sN1elf u~ the The Azte<:s
do"' ned the Seattle Sounders 4·3
10 North Amt>rican Soccer
LCUJ:UC play.
Thl' '1ctory. played before a
c· rowd or 7 .165. w ai. the Aztec!>.
third str1ught al home.
ff'fH•d ftt,f Hrt•d
C'lllCAGO Chicago While
Sox pitcher Wilbur Wood was
'lcheduled for surgery today after
suffering u broken left knee cap in
Sunday's game against the
Detroit Tigers.
Wood was injured when he was
hit with a sharp line drive off the
bat of Ron Le Flore. He was flown
to Chicago and examined Sunday
m~ht by three team doctors, who
determined that surgery would be
necessary
Doctors cslim ate he will be In a
cast about eight weeks.
So.r Lo•e .~hafh
The Boston Red Sox, defending
American League champions.
lost their ninth straight decision
Sunday, bowing lo the Texes
Rangers, 6·5.
Ce ltics Rally
To Whip Cavs
DOSTON <A Pl -The Boston
Celtics, kt>pl in the game by Jo Jo
White's torrid third pcmod shool·
sng. rallied In the fourth quarter
Sunday for a 94·89 victory over
the Cleveland Cavaliers and a 2·0
lead in the National Basketball
Asc;oc1 at a on 's semifinal playoffs.
White scored 14 points as the!
Celllcs pulled to witt\in three
points, 71·68, 1n the third period.
Then the mighty Boston scoring
machine took charge Cot a com·
manding lead in the eastern Con-
krence best·of·!ieven series.
John Havlicek put the Celtics
in front.. 74· 73 for the first tima.
since early in the second period.
Clevel and cent e r Nate
Thurmond fouled out with 7:34
remasnlnR and the Cclllc11 went
to work. 11corsn1i1 seven stralghtJ
point11 for on 81 73 advt1ntuge.
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Suns Put on Beat, 133·129
Goin bl~ Pays Off
Oscar Gamble or the New York Yankees
sUdes safely into third base. avoiding the
· tnl. by Sal Bando. Umpire is Bill Kunkel.
HOsl Oakland won. 4-J, in 12 innings Sun·
day
PHOENIX <A Pl -"It seemed
like It was goina lo co on
forever," uld Golden Stale
,uard Pbll Smlth, who lt'd all
players with 30 points only to
have lht Phoenix Suns take a
133-1.29 double overtime decision
ov·er the Warriors and draw even
in their National Basketball As·
soclatton playort series 2·2.
The series shlfls l.o Oatcland
Wednesday nl1ht and bock to
Phoenix Friday nlgbL
Golden Stai. was on top 112-110
with elthl seconds to play when
Keith Etickson took a pass and
drlllt'd a 2.5 foot shot with ·03 le.fl
tolri(ler lhe first overtime.
"Rick Barry had been
eloughlng off me all day. and I
had a fttllng I'd be able lo 1el the
ball," saJd Erieksoo. "The ball
was to go lo anybody open, and
with elgbl seconds remaining we
knew we could gel off a shot or
some sort.'·
Ricky Sobers rescued the suns
with a pair of8ressure foul sbot.s
In overtime. ne wilb :02 to go
and Erickson sank e.igh1 points In
the final extra period.
G·Slate used aoal!I by George
Johnson and Barry for a 123· 119
edvantaee early in lhefinal over· ,
time but goals by Erickson an4
Dick Van Arsdale lied lt, an4
Erickson made a shot from the
comer for a permanenl Pboefti•
lead at 2: 31.
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Orange Eoast
EDITION
,
• ~OL 69, NO. 131, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
. ~
MONDAY, MAY 10, 1976
Today's Clo ••ri
N.Y.Stoeks
'
. "
c TEN CEN}S
,Pilot Down Canyon llikes for Aid • m
'A downed pilot hiked fivl' miles
throu1h the ruued Sanuaao
mountains Saturday n•aht and
hllcbhlked to Fullerton Airport
before aoundln& an aJarm that
sent an 18-man Orange Counly
Shttiff's rescue squad lo search
of two teenacers trapped m
wrecka1e of a li&bt plane.
lt wasn't until 2 a.m. Sunday
that the rescue squad found the
plane and the palnluUy 1f not
Officials
Blamed
In Melee
By STEVE MITCHELL
OlllMO•llY l"li.4Swlt
The promoters of Saturday's
r()(k concert at the Orange Coun·
ty FairgJ'ounds are blaming fair
officials for a disturbance broken
up by Costa Mesa police.
Allen Ornstein, president of
Penny Lane Productions. of
Orange County, said a lack or
ticket takers for the event pro·
mpted the disturbance. )Yhich
wits broken up at 12:30a.m. bythe
28-member Costa Mesa Police
tacticaJ unit.
"We told those 0Hic1als that we
were going to have a sellout
crowd. and they said. ·veah.
yeah. That's what they all say,· "
Ornstein said.
The 20-year-old promoter s;i1d
only two ticket takers \\c•re pro
vided by (air officials instead of
the six the promoters said they
asked for.
"We had at least 3.000 to 4.000
oeople who couldn't gel 1n
because they only provided us
with two ticket take rs." he said
"That's what started the .,hole
lhlng, there wero too many people
waiting In line.··
Police Captain R E. Moody
said there were only three arrests
Collowmg the disturbance. 1nclud·
ing one teenager arrested for
arson and assaulting orncers. a
burglary arrest and the arrest or a
young girl for being under the 1n·
nuenceof alcohol.
"There were no injuries on
either sid~aturday night." said
Moody. "It wasn't the kind of
thing I'd wanl t.o bust up a dance
over. but it m"fht have bttn 1f we
hadn't sent over the tact1cJI
unit.··
\Fairgrounds security poh<.·e
called for a ssistance al about
10·30 p .m . when an overflow
crowd began tossing bottle'! and
selling small fires out1.ide thl'
New Products Pav1hon whl're the
concert was being ht•ld ..
"Several of the fires came close
to buildings." Moody 11md
Fairgrounds officials disputed
Ornslem's comments. saying the
promoters did not go over ticket
sales capacity for the $2 <'V<.•nt
which featured three unkncmn
bands. ·
Fair ortlcaal Jeannie Edwards
said the fair board 1s now con
sidering putting Jn end to rock
concerts planned by some pro· moters.
"We'll still approv(• concertc;
for high s chools ond prlvatl'
1roups," she s aid. addmJt that
professional promoters with Wl'll
known rock storh would also he
considered.
Victims Unknown
MADRID. Spatn <AP> -Four
foreigners were among the 16
persons aboard an Iranian Air
Force 747 earao Jct that crashed
In Spain t'n ·route to the llnlted
States. the officlnl Iranian new~
agency announced today. Tht•
identity and nationality of the
foreigners was not announced.
MARKET POSTS
STRONC G.4.INS
NEW YORK (APl -Thestock
market extended Friday's rally
t.oda,y wlth a solid advance that
propelled the Dow Jones in·
dustrtal avera1e through the
1.000level a1aln.
Trading was its busiest in more
than two weeks.
Brokers made note-of op·
timlsUc forecasts of a conUnuini
economJc recovery from both lhe
Business Council, a group of
private Industry leadrrs. anft
Arthur F. Burns. chairman or the
Federal ReseNe.
The Dow Jones avera1e of 30
stocks g11ned 11.26 points to
1.001.41. (Tables.A9t.
seriously injured youngsters In
the east fork ot Fremont Canyon.
rou1hly five miles east or Irvine
Park. -
At dawn. an El Toro Marine
Alr Station rescue helicopter 11n.
ed Jan ?ttaelle White. 16 . or
Buena Park . and Timothy
Lindsay, 17 , of Santa Ana. from
the canyon floor.
The youngsters were taken to
Mission Community Hospital an
Mlsslon Viejo for treatment of ptunaed Into the canyon 11bortly airport and calling Fullerton Jt was then that a call was sc~t
their lnjurltA. Lindsay reported· aflerSp.m .Saturdoy. poltce at about midnight, to the Marine air baso for u
ly waa release6 rrom the bosplt&\I According to a sher1U'& report. sheriff's lnvestla,lutors said. rescue hell copter that could l l't
Sunday anernoon. Whlte and the two youn1sters Two hours later. in response to the tw'o youngsters from the ca·
Mass White. however. re· were merely taking a pleasW'e bullhorn messages ~enl echoi~I nyoqatdawn'sflrstUght.
mlWled In the hospital overnight flight from Fullerton Airport through the mounta.tn.s, sheriff a According to n rucue report,
and reportedly was hsted in good over the Anaheim HUis area sear~hers beard calls for help. the rented plane did not appear to
condition today. when the crart opparenUy lost According to one rescuer. il be seriously damaged ln tho
Her father, Gene Wayne White. power. took a four.man team three hours forced land10g Whlte made short·
44 of 5591 Rockledge Dnve, While hiked five mtles t.hrough to descend the canyon walls In ly aftu takt.n1 otr. e~ena Park. was at the control~ the rugged mountain country the predawn .darkness to reach Other than Wh1te'sexplanatlon
of the rented Cessna 172 that before hitching a rade back to the the crash v1cttms. (See PILOT. Pa&eAl)
Af'Wl,.-90ft0i•
Plant Raze
Owned by Cella Case Witness
By ARTH\JR R. VINSEL
OftlMO•lly "1"'4SUll •
A $250,000 pre-dawn explosior
and fire today destroyed a Hunt·
ington Beach printing plant
owned· by a potential witness an
the trial of political finant1er Dr.
Louis J . Cella. Fire officials said
the blaze was iqtenllonally set.
The blast and blaze that (Utled
Graphics Comounlcations Com·
pany, 7271 Murdy Circle.
awakened firemen sleeping m
tbe Murdy Fire Station only
about SO yards away.
flames were alr~ady roarine
through its roof by the lime they
ran to a rear window to locate the
connagr at1on. according to Fire
tnspector James Memll.
Investigators wer~ cnreful to
note the inferno in the north Hun tan~on Beach industrial park I!' listed as being of incendiary
origin.
Thursday and testified to enter·
sng the shop on occasion.
Donald Albert Ray, 36; alleged·
ly stole documents from the Costa·
Mesa printshop for the Internal
Revenue Service that allegedly
could be inciminaUngtoCella.
Today items recovered from
the debris or Thompson's firm in·
eluded three soot.smudged
checks that lay on a table in the
edjacent Wes t Orange County
Cella Case
Teachers' Association suite.
"I don't even know where they
came from," said Detective
RWJ!ell.
He and Fire Capt. Roeer
Hosmer-sald later llus morning
that no one bas been questioned as a possible suspect but that
routine questioning is under way.
Cause of the explosive blaio
that originated in a prod.11cUon
lSee FIRE, Page~>
Def en.se. Pursues.
'Illegal' Papers
By TOM BARLEY jury here on 44 Cclony counts, in·
MARGARET MORRIS, 2, HUGS HERO DOG 'RED'
Irish Setter Rescued Glrl From Burning Car
Pohce De partment Arson
Detail DetecUve Robert Russell
confirmed, however, the blaze
was obviously intentional. but
noted any specific motive Is un-
known.
0t.-. o.11, ,.;i.csu1t • cludini fraud and tax evasion.
LOS ANG EL ES-Orange DuCbesne admitted today that
County District Attorney's an vest·. his office obtained those docu-
igator Loren Duchesne was re· ments without a search w~rrant.
called to the witness stand here Under close questioning from
today as the defense renewed its Judge Matt Byrne. he also ad·
argument that the proseeutlon is milted that the IRS agents were
using documents UlegaUy seized -well aware of that fact.
Dog Saves Tot Authorities say printing firm
owner Richard Thompson told
them he is to be a witness in the
upcoming trial of Dr. Cella, who
1s accused with three colleagues
or diverting S2 mllUon from
Cella·controlled hospitals for
political purposes.
Setter Pulls Girl from Car
BRIDGETON. Mo. CAP> -
Two-year-old Margaret Morns
owes her lire to a dec1S1on by her
family to take in a duty. hun~ry
dog they found roammg an their
neighborhood
Red, an Irish setter adopted by
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce R. Morns of
Harvester, Mo . three weeks a~o.
pulled the panicked girl by ht>r
coat collar from their parked car
minutes before 1t was gutted by
names
· All I can sa v is thank <;ocJ w1·
got the do~. I wouldn't have bt.'t•n
Commission
To Ponder
Zone 'Island'
O"'ners or a c h e mi c nl
manufacturing pl ant which was
bwlt In the late 19409 amid farm
land, now find the:r plant the ob·
Ject of controversy as an · tn·
dustnal island" surrounded by
residential units in Costa Mei.a .
Planning comm1ss1oners will
conduct a public hearin& torught
to consider possible zonlng con·
flicts on propl'rty owned by
Narmco Materials, a subsidiary
of the Celanese Corp., 600 Vic·
tori a St.
City planning officials are re-
commending that the plannm..:
commission adopt medium
density residcmtlal roning for tho
4 69·acre parcel. 11ivina the <'Om·
pony a 30·year omort1iotion
period 'to plan relocation of the
plant to an Industrial area.
Location of the plant has beet')
the subject of controversy sincl' a
1968 planning comm1ss1c>n m~·
ing sn which nearby residents
voiced opposition to a proposal
ror a new building on plant pro-
perty.
The residents also complained
of excessive noise during nlgbt
shifts, obnoxious odors and
ai.rboroe particles. The plant,
which employs 150. prodQces
chemicals and resin products for
a.ircTafl and missile systems.
Last month residents a1ain ap-.
peared before the commission.
this time in opposition of plans
for a 31·unit residential develop·
ment adjacent to t.be Nannco
plant. They sa1d the potential or a
chemical explosion at the plant
would endanger residents or the
new development. Planners at
that time approved the develop·
ment.
Tonight's public hearini
begins at 6:30 p m. m council
chambers at city ball.
able to get to the car in lime,"
said Morris. who witnessed the
incident from 3 car de aler's
'lhowroom where he and his wife
~ere shopping for a new car.
· Red was adopted by the Mor·
nses after they round him run·
ntng loose. The dog·s owner was
located but he agreed to let lhe
ram1ly keep lhe animal.
··M y wife. Betsy. and
Margaret had really become at·
tached to the dog," Morris said
Sunday
Saturday afternoon, the couple
left Margaret asleep an the car
with Red standing guard. The
c·ar's front windows were rolled
down about three.quarters or
the way, Morris said.
\torris said hl' frequent ly
looked out to check on the grrl,
but after 15 minutes had passed,
a salesman noticed ~moke pour-
ing from the car windows.
•·J heard him yell. ·My God.
there's a girl in that car ';•
Moms recalled.
Morris said thnl as he was run·
n1ng across the showroom
toward a door. he s aw the smoke
and then s uw Red jump out a
front window.
Once outside tht.' car, the 7!i·
pound dog turned back for
\1argarel. who by that lJme had
been awakened by the s moke and
was standing up sn the back seat,
1>wlnglng her arms In fright.
"A.3 soon as Red hit the ground.
he jumped up, put his paws on tho
. (See HERO DOG, P1ge A2)
Printing or campaign
literature so far has been men·
tioned in testimony relating to
the 44-count indictment issued by
a federal grand Jury in Los
Angeles namine Cella and co-
defendants.
So far. Thompson's name has
not emerged and he is known to
have not been among former
business associates who testified
before the grand jury.
Thompson. who was not im-
mediately available for an in·
. terview at the fire scene. re·
portedly told investigators he
had done some work for Cella but
not more recently than about five
years a~o.
Another printer once employed
by a Costa Mesa Cirm controlled
by Cella was a prominent witness.
m his Los Angeles heanng on.
Woman Drives
In '500' Test
INDIANAPOLIS <AP)-Jonct
Guthrie shattered GO years of his·
tory today and became the first
woman to drive a race car lit the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Mias Guthrie had been kept
from her driving debut by
mechanical trouble two days ln a
row, but finally made lt out !or a
practice run.
She Is the flnt woman to enter
the lndlanapol11 500.
Love to Live
Sex Called Good for Women
LONDON (AP> -British psychiatrist Jane
Gomez says too much sleep can shorten your life but
sex can make a woman live longer.
Lovemaking o(f ers that much exercise value and
is tranquilizing as well, Mrs. Gomez says in a new
book published here. For men, sex has no value for its exucise, she says. .
Sex also stimulates tbe glands that keep women
youthlul, but male gland$ just don't respond to the
treatment, the book says.
Seven Hours sleep a night is enough for any
woman, M'rs. Gomez claims. She says men need 10
minutes more but doesn't explain why.
"Men in their 50s who sleep pine hours a nlghtsw-
f er double the death rate lrom~oke, heart attack or
:meurysms <blood clots) t.baa e sleeping seven
hOurs or less," says the book', entitled "How Not To
Die Young."
"Tho e wbo sleep 10 hours run four times the
nsk, ... t.hc book says. ..
from a Costa Mesa print shop ··rn other words no one at tho
controlled by Indicted Dr. Louis print shop other than your tnfor·
J. Cella Jr. mant knew you had these docu·
Duchesne. who earlier spent ments. And the IRS went along
the best part of two dars testify· with that right?" Judge Bymo
int on his role in the tnvestiga. asked the 'witness.
tion. admitted that materials "It was n't said in so many
taken from the Pr:int shop in July. words. But the mference was
1975, were examined by Internal clear "DuChesne said
Revenue Service agents in his of· . Judge Byrne will ~ asked by
rice a month later. the defense when tbe current pr<'·
Three months l.ater, Dr. ~ella, trial hearing ends to rule that all
51, and three busmess associates documfnts seized from the Untt·
were Indicted by a federal grand ed Printing Company plant or\
Airport Loop Drive be sup.
Report Says
FBI Resorted
To Break-ins
WASHINGTON CAP> -The
FBI has conducted hundreds of
brok·lns, "despite the ques-
tionable legahty of the technique
and its deep intrusion into the
privacy or targeted individuals,"
a Senate intelligence committee
staff report says.
The break· ins, officially known
as "surreptitious entries," were
conducted for the purpose of
photographing or selling docu·
ments and installing bugs, ac·
cording to the report released t<>-
day.
The report is one of a series
prepared by the intelligence
panel's staff to back up recom·
mendaUons jn the committee's
final report.
The Justice Department stilt
permit.I the bureau to conduct
breok·ins to Install bugs and "" fuses to rule out the possibility or
using unauthorized entries or
"black bag·• jobs to obtain docu·
ments from foreign lnlelllgence
targets, the 17 ·page report noted.
"Allhouah several attorneys
general were aware or the FBI
practice of break·tns to install
· electronic listening devices,
there ls no indicaUoo that the
FBI Informed any attorney
general about its uaeofblack bag
jobs." the report Hid. .
The FBI was unable to pro'\'lde
the committee wlt.b a complete
accounting of lb~ total number or
break·ins because most records
were destroyed soon after an en·
try was accomplished. t.he report
saJd.
Figures provided by the FBI
ahowed there were at least 242
break-ins against suspected
domestic subversives between
11H2 nnd 1968 and that since 1960
the FBI conducted more than !JOO
breat·ins to install b1.1p.
The report named the Ku Klux
Klan and the Socialist Workers
party as two targets ol FBl black bag jobs. •
f.
pressed.
Lawyers for both sides agree
that if Judge Byrne bars all or
most or the doC\lmenls from the
trial scheduled lo start Tuesday.
the prosecution may not havu
any case left to lry.
Duchesne admitted again to·
•day as he did last week lhal print
shop employe Donald Albert Ray
was persuaded to supply his of.
Jice with several boxes of docu·
ments sn return for leniency on
criminal charges he faced
Ray was held 10 lhc Orange
'County Jail on charges of plan·
mng the murder or his estranged
wife's boyfriend when district al·
torney's invesll&ators le arned or
his connection with Cella a.nd hilt
employment at the print shop.
Ray was Inter rcwnrded for hi~
efforts. by being sentenced to slJc
days in jail und two years probe·
lion after plead in" &uilty to a re·
duced mlsdemeanor chllJ'gc.
DuChesne tesUCled today that
IRS agents were particularly in~
<See CELLA• P•&e A2)
Coot
Weathe r
A cooling ore period, with
tow clouds In tho momlnl(
nnd partly cloud)C ln the af·
lernoon. ls In store for tho
Orange Coast Tuesday.
qJghs will run lrom 65 on
the seashore to 75 further
lnland.
INSIDE TODAY
Som. chtldrm.at an IUbtoia
.:hool .actuaU11 t.oitneued a
"4JIUl'1 whUe wctlkfng home
from lunch. School oflicial3
tcU of hot.0 tM inctdlftt bo..t od •
Vff'Hlfl .aff«led. their livu.
A7.
. JIJ DAILY PILOT c Monda(. !by 10. 1979
.
Court Denies
Ray's Appeal
CINCINNATI tA,,)·-Jam~
Earl Rl1'• appeal from hJ1 plea
at 1uUty in the 1boot..uia death ol
elvll rt1bta 1Hder Dr Mlttln
Luther Kina Jr. w u denied today
TONIGHT
COSTA MESA PLANNING
COMMISSION -Regular meet-
·in1. City Hall, 6:30 p.m.
OCC LECTURE -"Money,
lnvestmg, Financ1aJ Planmnr,"
Edward McNary lecturer, Fine
Arts Bldg. 119, 7 : 30 p. m.
··MARAT S ADE" -OCC
Drama Lab Theater, May 10-14, 8 p.m.St
TUESDAY, MAY II
SENIOR CITIZENS CLL'B -
Community Recreation Center,
Tues., Wed., Thurs. 12·3 p.m.
NEWPORT·M ESA SCHOOL
BOARD -Regular meeting,
Costa Mesa Ci~y Counctl cham· bers, 7 :30 p.m .
RALPH NADER -OCC
c.msumer Week program, Gym,
7p.m.$2.
"BEHIND THE
HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T.
Brown lecture•. OCC Forum,
7:30 p.m.
ONE ACT PLAYS -' "Yanks
3 Detroit 0 Top of the Seventh, ..
and "Rubbers," South Coast
Repertory Theater, Tuesday·
$t.tnday through June 12, 8 p m.
GEORGE SHEARlNC
QUINTET -Benefit for L'CJ ~holarsh1p Fund, UCI Crawford
Hall, 8 p m. Tickets, $6, SS and $4.
i!33·6587
f 'ront Poge ,, I
HERO DOG
side of the car and reached his
head through the smoke comme
out the window,'· Morns said.
Red grabbed Margaret's coat
collar with his teeth and dragged
Ule httle girl out the window,
then pushed her away from the
car.
A Bridgeton patrolman said
flames from thl' car were shoot·
ing 20 to 25 feet into the air by the
time he arrived. The Ore, ap.
parenlly caused by faulty wiring,
gutted the interior
Marjlaret v. as taken to a
hospital where she "'as treated
for mmor burns and released
Red surferl'd signed hair and u
slight cut on his nose.
"l gave Red a steak when v.e
e ot home after the fire." Moms
said .. lie mav get steak every
QJght after this "
F r one Page 1\ I
PILOT •.•
that the craft w'as losing power
when he downed it tn the ruggt.od
<'anyon no reason was given for
the forced landmg
Nor could officials say today
why thl'.' pilot hitchhiked back to
lht> :mport b<'forc contacting of
fl c1als to send them in search of
tht two teenager"
Mower Taken
A power lawnmowC'r valued al
$150 was stolen from the Youth
Services i\ssoc1ahon building,
2905 Red Hill Avl'., Costa Mesa
sometime last week. YSA dlrec
tor Arthur A. Kilts report('(! the
loss to police Saturday when he 1'hoW~ up at the youth center
building to mow the lawn.
09'AHOE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Ttw 1'<""9" fN<I Oalf' ... ~. '°''ft •'*II I\
t .,.,...,..,, tN fl.lfil9\ rt.-"· I'-~1"'"9 ttw fht "'-Co•" r..1111v.1,.. ,...._. ~ ....... nt·t~' •tt tw·IWltflt• #""'-'r '~°""" t tk.MW k• (.O\tit JrHw.. Ntfll...,, .,_..wn ..._.,,....... ~· .. ··~···" ....... , . ., .. ,. .. ~ ..... ~ \f.ih < .... L .. .,.... .. II(~-C-1 A .. .... 'f'V~f f"4!1tlifN"i •• 0"'"'''"" ~t\lif'Gfn-"' ~ :.~~ .:.~i:':..i.'t::=·~,....'~,..
Aobert N. Weed ,,.,.. .. " ....... ,.,...vw. .
Jack R. (tKteY "",..._, ___ ...._
Tlilomas KHVll •.. ,.,
Thomas A. MurpNne ,....,..,,..r•-
0\lrles H. Loos RlcNnl P. N1ll' --~~
by the 8th U.S. Circuit Court OI
Appeals.
The unanlmou1 decblon con-
cluded that the U D11lrtt'\
Court for the Westun District ol
Tennessee was correc.<t In re!ut·
knl Ray's motion for a new trh11.
The district court said Ray
failed to prove that his ddemc
attorneys, Arthur Hanes or
Percy Foreman, provided Ray
with ineffective assistance, lrn·
proper lnvesti1"aUon or that Ray
was Induced to plead eullty
March 10, 1969.
1be appellate court said Ray's
testimony at his &uilty-plea hear· in& made it plain be undentood
his actions before receivin1 a
99-year sentence.
Ray argued that the attorneys
were more interested in profiting
fl'Om books about the case thar\Jn
defendLDg bim. The judges sa1d
they disapproved of the fee ar-
rangement between Ray and the
lawyers. but said it did not prove
lte did not receive a good defense.
King was shot to death on a
motel balcony 10 Memphis,
Tenn., on April 4, 1968. Ray was
arrested in London, England,
June 8. 1968. He is now in the state pnson at Nashville, Tenn.
WhUe still in England, Ray
hired Hanes, of Birmingham.
Ala.. to defend him. Ray said
that before their first interview,
Hanes made an agreement with
William Brad(ord Huie to write a
book and articles about his cue
before the trial. The funds were
to go for legal fees and for Ra¥'s
defense.
Ray said be fired Hanes two
days before his March 10, 1959
tnaJ because he believed Hanes
was more concerned about book
royalties than providing a de·
fense.
Ray then hired Texas attomev
Percy Foreman, who made a
similar agreement with the
author. and Foreman advised
Ray to plead guilty.
Eight Hurt
On Sorcery
In Sea Storm
KODIAK, Alaska <APJ -
Eight people were injured when
their 61-foot sloop rolled over in storm-tossed seu more than
l,000 miles southweit o( Kodiak.
A Coast Guard spokesman said
the yacht Sorcery lost its mast.
hfeboat, rudder and. aJI radio
equipment in the incident Satur
da~, but that all 11 persons
aboard the vessel sun'lved.
The eight injured people were
taken aboard the Coast Guard
<'Utter Mellon for treatment and
the yacht was taken in low. The
Mellon was expected to arrive in
Kodiak this weekend.
Although three people were listed In serious cond1t1on, lhe
spokes man said the Coast Guard
had no plans to a1rlifl iajw-ed to
Kodiak.
The Sorcery was en route from
Tokyo to Los Angeles when the
!!torm struck. The Coast Guard
spokesman said the vessel "Wa!;
in the middle of nowhere" when
1t ran 1nlo 20-30-foot waves and
winds of more than 3S knots.
Crewmen apparently were
able to message a distress signul
before the sloop lost Its radio, he
i.n1d A Coast Guard search plane
located the disabled sloop and
dropped emeraency supplies.
,\ Danish ship identified as the
"Camara" stood by the Sorcery
until the "Mellon which was on
fisheries patroi, reached tho
scene.
The injured were identified as
Ramona Walters, 22, of Eacon-
d1do : Mabtl Walters,~. also of
Escondido: L. Victoria Allen of
Labalna, Maul, Hawaii; Ben
Thomas Choat III. 32, of S•n
Francisco; Aulon Alexander
Fitzpatrick, 28, ot Renlrewablre,
Scotlartd: Ronald Edwar ds
Ro1crs, 27. of Alberta, Canada:
James Herschel Fry, 26,
Al~rta; and Soaec Saito, 33, or
Japan.
Three other people whom the
spokesman could not identify
stayed aboard the Sot-cery.
CFnZEN'S B.4ND .
'FAST SELLER'
"l aold my citnem band radio as• result of the Dally Pilot ad."
That's the advertising success
story told by the Laguna Hills
woman who placed this ad:
CB Radio. Realistic, mdJ
TRC41. SSB w tear anten. na. XXX·XJOC.X
· · u you lteve •l~c cea:r
you want to convert to cuh, calJ
6'2·5878. We make It utf tor
you to communicate with buyers
all alone the Oraqe Coast. in
the Daily PUot.
The Bigger Tltey A re. • •
Battin
Repea~s
Defense
ByGAR\'GllANVllLE • 0t1 ... o.11, ...........
. ..
Indicted Ono1e County
Supervisor Robert Battin con·
llnued to in1l1t today that hi• of-
fice manaaen, pHt and present.
were rcsPon•lble tor th payroll
tteords kept In hl• county office.
As Battin 's trial beran Its sixth
week. the Santa Ana supervisor
was underaolne ctCSS examina-
tion by Deputy District Atlomey
Jack Ryan.
ln answ~r to a series of ques-
tions by Ryan related to his of·
flre'a payroll accountln1 pro-
cedures Battin replied:
-''I leave these things tomyoC
flee manarer and I rely entirely
on my omce mana1er."
-"I rely on my office manager
to keep track of hours ~orked."
-"I don-tknow what hours they
work. Thal 's why I have an office
manager.''
-"I can't recall when the
polil'y went into effect but I
belle\·e it "'as v. hen 8111 Meyer
was off ace m anag~r." ,
The harder they fall. Members of a UCLA
sculpture class entered this 25-foot kite in
the UC Irvine Kile F1ying Festival Sunday
at Scotchman's Cove. Unfortunately, the
giant crashed on its first attempted flight.
So, rl's back to the drawing boards.
-"My ofhce manager pre·
pared lhe payroll report. I dad
nothing with the report.-. exc~pt tn
signthem ••
Prosecutor Ryan's mtl'rest in
the county supt•rv1sor·~ payroll
records stems Crom charges that
Battin in 1974 made Illegal use of
county employcs in his cumpiui;n
for state office. Ex-1nayor Gibbs
Criticizes Wieder
By ROBERT BAllKER Of!M~llf~IM ... ft
Former Huntington Beach
mayor Norma Gibbs says she is
"shocked and dismayed"
bttause she was not reappolnted
as one of three city represen-
tatives to the Orange County
Sanitation District.
Mrs. Gibbs said that it was pet·
ly and d1v1sive on the part of
Mayor Harriett Wieder in not ap·
pointing her to the d1strict.
Mrs Gibbs. who has served on
the board for fl ve years. says she
is puzzled by Mrs. Wieder's ac-
llon.
"There's no reason lo remove
me, and the other mayors and
council members serving on the
district will know that Me's dorie
this deliberately," Mrs. Gibbs
said.
Mrs. Gibbs is currently vice
chairman of the county districts
and says that she would have
qwte possibly been 10 line to
bttome tbaarman when the elcc·
lions are held in July.
Mayor Harriett Wieder, who
announced the vanous council
appointments last v.-eek, said
that 1t "'as her prerogative to
make appointments as she sees
flt
"I think the)' should be passed
around so that all council mem·
bers can gain knowledge of the
sanitation d1slncl 's operations,"
,J'tesald.
"Just because Norma has been
on the district for awtule doesn't
mean that she has tenure." Mrs.
Wieder said. ··There's no such
thing as tenure."
"Sometimes when pe<>pl e
serve on commitles they forget
who they represent and don't re·
port back to lhe council as they
should," she said.
"lam surprised that Norma is
stamping her feet by not gelling
her way." Mrs. Wieder said.
Mrs Gibbs 1mphe.; that the re·
ason she wasn't reappointed was
that she failed to appoint Mrs.
Wieder to a similar post ln 1975.
"But I called Karriet over to
discuss it with her at the Ume.
"Henry Duke was the
chairman of one of the sanitation
district committees, and I Celt t
had to reappoint him. I selected
Don Shipley to be a second
representative because 1t was h1:>
last chance · ·
County T e en
Shot in Car,
Badly.Hurt
A Santa Ana youth was shot
and seriously wounded Sunday
night as be sat with three friends
·in a car parked at a curb in
Oranfe.
Police identified the shooting
victim as Augustino Godoy, 17.
Godoy reportedly was in stable
condition in the intensive care
unit at Chapman General
Hospital today arter undergoing
emergency surgery late Sunday
According to Orange pobce,
the victim was sitting in the rear
seat of an auto parked near Chap·
man Avenue and Hewes Street at
8:45p.m. when wounded.
Police said Godoy's compa-
nions told them an unidenllficd
youth approached the parked
car. drew a gun from inside his
jacket and fired an unspecified
number of bullets into Godoy's
torso before fleeing on foot.
Mesa Girl's
Death Probed
Police are awaiting the res ults
or an autopsy on the body of a 3·
year-old Costa Mesa girl who
died at Hoag Memorial Hospital
Saturday of "other than natural
causes."
The girl, who was admitted lo
the hospital last Thursday suf-
fered "whiplash IUte IJ\juries,''
according to police.
Costa Mesa police Lt. George
L. Lorton said no onehaa been ar-
rested In the case.
Fro• Pagt-Al
CELLA •••
terested in what he says were a
number of "fictitious In-
v o i c es "sub m it led to two
hospitals under Celia's control:
•Mission Comm unity Hospital,
Mis~'on Viejo and Mercy
General Hospital, Santa Ano.
He said the possibility of lax
fraud was diJcussed by t.he
agents after they learned that the
billings involved 10 allegedly
bogus corporations which billed
both hospitals.
ll is alleged tbat the defendants
bilked botb hospitals of an
estimated $2 million thtoueh the
acts of fraud described today by
Duchesne.
Facing trlal with Cella are
Theodore Schiffman. 53, of Santa
Ana, George Louis Ollendorf, 44,
Laguna Beach and Stephen
Robert Eva~. 31. Mission Viejo.
Aeronutronic
Contract OK'd
The Aeronutronic Ford D1v1S1on Newport Beach, has
~n awarded a $4.'1million con·
tract from the U. S. Army for a
four.year study program, It was
announced today.
The contract calls for a
measurements and analysis pro-
gram for the Ballistics Missile
Defense Advance Technology
Center in Alabama. .
Officials of the firm said the
work will be performed in
Nt:wport Beach but could give no
other detaUs because informa·
tion on the project has been
classified by the Army.
YMCA Offers
Those charges were brought
agains\ the Santa Ana supervisor
in a seven-couni criminal indict·
ment banded down by lbe county
grand jury last August.
Battin took the witness stand
last Wednesday to testify on hu;
own behnlf.
And it was Thursday that Ryan
began his cro5S examination.
It continued today as R)l<ln con
tinued to prove to a seHn·man.
five-woman JUry that Battin kn<'~
in 1974 th:it members of his staff
were paid by the county while 1c
tually workin.: nn his campa1in
for lieutenant governor.
f'rone Pagt> ,.\I
FIRE ...
and repair area of the shop was a
large quantity of nammoblc Ii
quid.
No one was injured in battling
the two-alarm blaze, which re
qwred 26 firefighters JS mlnutei.
to control, according to Capt
Hosmer.
'f b.e f i r e i m m e d 1 a t e I y
destroyed a trunk telephone ca·
ble serving 900 residential and In·
dustrial customers in the sur·
rounding area, including one en-
tire housing subd1v1s1on.
Ins pector M orshall said Thomp~on 's apparently
flourishing business lost $80.000
worth or equipm~nl aJone in the
raging names.
He said it included printing
presses, duplicating machin~
a11d spare parts. The comparfy
occupies three suites in the com·
·mercial building and includes a
copy machine repair service In
addition to its own printing
fal'1lilles.
Investigators said the fire is
not listed as an arson because
that term applies only lo residen-
tial homes.
The structure that housed
Graphic Communicatlon!S Co. Is
1'.Tew Classes own~ by Murdy & Br°'kman J 't1 Inc .. firemen said
. Thompson levee; at 19262 !wo new classes are opening Worce~t~r Lanr, llunt1ngton this week at the Oran&e Coa!it Beacn
YMCA . '
Tuesday, belly dancer Bat-
Sheba w1J1 offer a belly dancing Rape Try Charged
daas which begins at 9:30 a.m. at
the Y. On Wednesday, Yoga
author Renee Taylor will open a
yoea cl us at 5;30 p.m.
Clusea are open lo residents of
the Harbor Area. Further in-
formation is available at lhe YM·
CA, 642·9990.
NEW YORK <AP > -An 18·
year·old drifter, Cary
Honeybuss. has been arrested
and charged with assault and al·
tempted rape In an o.lleged at
tack on a 15-year-old girl on a
i;ubway troan.
Fat's Not So Jolly
Motlaft-, Clalld
·Victoria ~orovna Pouy and son, ristophe:r, are at
home fo owing the boy's
birth last week. ~ former
Russian actf'ess, now the
wife of an American airline
pilot. is the child .of a World
War 11 love aHair ~ween
her actress mother and an
American naval attacbe.
Plump People Prefer Food to Sex -Study ,
I
MIAMI BEACH. F1a. <A P> -
The popular image of tht jolly
rat man is wrong, $ays a report
of the American Academy of
Psychoanalyst.a. The overwei1ht
person, it says, is more likely to
be deprqsed, anxious and filled
with aelf-loathlni. The rePort also aaid that people may turn
to food to avoid aex.
And while psychoanalysis can
help obese peraona be happier,
in most cases It wW not result
in dramatic weight reduction,
the rep()rt said.
The report, the result or a
three-year stud.J of fat people
and psychoanalysis, was pre-
sented here at a meetin1 of the
Academy or PsycboanaJY1ta.
Dr. Albert Stunkard, pro-
'essor 9LP._sychlatry :it Stanford
Uruvenily: said 147 people were
Included 1n the •tudy -84 of
them obele and the rest 1lim.
The obese aubject.s raneed lo
age from ao to 50 and avero~ed
197 pounds for women and a.1
poundJ for men.
AlthOUih about 64 percent of evir1tncf" of body Image d1~
the fat plllents lost small paragcment." Shl' llOhl.
amounts or weight during the• Sh<' .,aid th<')" de,cribNI
t w 0 or t b re e ye a rs 0 f thtm'lrlvM as "fat i.lob~·· or
psycboanaly1l1, Stunkard said. look inf? l1k<' a "tub of lard."
welsht reduction wu .. not as · · T r e a t m e n t. b Y iood as the hotshot programs psychoanalysl!I etrectlvely rt
tocuslng on weight loss" such duced the Intensity of thl~ di•·
a1 Wel1bt Watchers and p a rogemt'nt ," Mias Rant!
Overeater• Anonymous. added.
He 11ld the atudy showed Fat people turned to food
psycboaoaly1l1 effectively Im· more often to counter stres11
proved the obe1e patient.a' body and crisis, and many used lt to
imaees. avoid sex, accordin1 to the re·
Stunkard'• aasoclate, Colleen port.
Rand, said 70 percent of the · "Forty.seven percent of the
obeee patients considered obese compared to seven pcr-
themselvea unattractive com· cent or normal-weiaht patient!!
pared to 11 percent QJ the slim ate to ovoid sexual rela-subjects. t.ionsbips," said Miss Rand.
"In our sample, U percent She uld some patients used
avoidesl. look!ng at-themselvu food to reducT! st?xulli urgt!~ l)r
ln mlrron," said Miss Rand. to get fat and keep the opposite•
"Some did not even have any su at a distance. One mah
mlrron in their bome.s." mentioned in the study said th1t
Althou1h most did llOl ask ror when be ate he was too run t.Q
hel_, lD reducln1, "We found want sex, and aoother Ht. up
that obese persons t.bouaht they eatJng late each nl1bt to wait
were u1ly a nd abo~ed areat for 'his wife to fall Ulttp,_
·vol: 69, NO. 131, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES
1
MONDAY, MAY 10, 1976
To•ay's £lo big :
N.l:'. Steeb
N T EN CENT~
, ·Coast Roa~ Top Newport Agenda . 1
B1 JOANNE &EYNOLDS OftMDeilf PiltllA.llll ! Development of the Irvine
eoast area and the construction
of road.a there will be taken up
t.on.i&ht by the Newport Beach
'City Council
The councU will be asked lo
take a position on the Orange
County Planning Commission's
study of the proposed develop·
ment of the downcoast area.
Councltinen also will hear a re·
port from' t heir cltiiens d · vtsory committee on road$ pro-
posed for th~ area.
The citiltena committee re-
COQlmendt that the city back
··early implementation" of the
county's proposed South East
·Oranee County Circulation
Study <SEOCCS). 1be commit·
tee also recommends construc-
tion of the San Joaquin Hilla
u The citiHns group also r e-
(r AA.f:~.: Wf ;:;~;rf~~~ [¥r!:;~g~ ~:r.li ~fir~2:~:£~¥i:~·;J~.~ .! :: ~ ~ avoid the imposition of un· The report says that the cor· ln a draft or a letter to the
COrridor from the Corona . del necessary traffic loads on exist · ridor should be .. of sufficient count y Planning commission
Mar Freeway to the San Die,o ine roads." and specifically re-width and design to protect the that the council will be asked to
Freeway at Avery Parkway aod commends construction or the health 4tnd well-being of resi· af prove several clariCications
the extension ~r CUlver Dri\_'.e corridor anq the Culver ex· dents who may live in proximi· o the ~ounty's position on de·
rrom the corridor lo Pacific tension before any construction tytothecorridor." · velopment of the toastal bilb
Coast Higt:iway. takes place in the coastal hills. A similar stand on the issue <SeeTRAFFIC,PageAJ)
~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~-
3 ·Saved
In Air
Disaster
A downed pilot hiked five miles
through the rugged Santiago
mouptains Saturday night and bit~hbiked to Fullerton Airport
before sounding an alarm that
sent an 18-man Orange County
Sherifrs rescue squad in search
of two teenaJets trapped in
wreckage of a bght plane.
It wasn't until 2 a.m. Sunday
that ·the rescue squad found the
plane and the painfully if not
seriously injured youngsters in
the east fork of Fremont Canyon,
roughly five miles east o( Irvine -
Park.
Al dawn. an El Toro Marine
Air Station rescue helicopter lift-
ed Jan Maelle White, 16. of
Buena P a rk , a nd Timothy
Lindsa'y. 17. of Santa Ana, from
the canyon noor.
The youngsters were taken to
Mission Community Hospital m
Mission Viejo for treatment or
their injuries. Lindsay reported·
ly was-released from the hospital
Sunday afternoon .
Miss White, however, re-
mained in the hospital overnight
and reportedly was listed in good
condition today.
Her rather. Gene Wayne White,
4r&, of 5591 Rockledge DriY(!,
Buena Park, was at the con\rols or the rented Cessna 172 that
plunged into the canyon shortly
after 5 p.m. Saturday.
_ Accordine to a sherl{f~~ report,
White and the two youngsters
were merely takinj? a pleasure
rLighl from Fullerton Airport
over the Anahe im Hills area
when the craft apparentl} lost
power.
White biked five miles through
the rugged mountain country
before bitching a· ride back to the
airport and calling Fullerton
police at about midnight,
sheriff's investigators said.
Two hours later. in response lo
bullhorn mess11ges sent cx:hoing
through the mountains, sheriff's
searchers heard calls for help.
According to one rescuer. it
look a four-man team three hours
to descend the canyon walls in
the predawn darkness to reach
the crash victims.
It was then that a call was gent
to the Marine air base for a
rescue helicopter thaL could hft
the two youngsters from the ctt·
nyon at dawn's first light
According to a rescue report.
the rented plane did not appear lo
be seriously damaged in the
forced landing White made short·
ly after taking off.
Other than White's t"Xplanallon
that the craft was losing power
when he dQwned It m lhe rugged
canyon no reason was given tor
the rorced landing.
Nor could offi~ials say today
why the pilot hitchhiked back to
the airport befo're contaclinR of·
flclalit to send them in seorch ot
the two teenaeers.
Jumper Killed
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A 21·
year-old woman has died .after
leaping from the nnh floor of 8
downtown hotel.
M.4RKET POSTS
srRONC GAINS
NEWYORK (AP>-Thestock
market extended Friday's rally
today with ' solid advance that propelled the Dow Jones in·
dustrial average through the
1,000Jevel again.
Trading was its busi'esl in more
than two weeks.
Brokers made note or op·
timist.ic forecasts of a continuing
economic r~overy from both the
BUstness CouncU, a group of
.private industry leaders. and
Arthor F. Bums. chairman o( the
Federal Ruene.
The Dow Jones average or 30
· stocks gained 11.26 points lo
1.007 .48. <Tables, A9 I.
Plant Razed
Owned by Cella Case Witness
AP Wt""9f!OIO
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of lite D•llY PtlOt ~II
A $250,000 pre·dawn explosion
and fire today destroyed a Hunt·
ington Beach printing plant
owned by a potential witness in
the trial of political financier Dr.
Louis J . Cella. Fire officials said
the blaze was intentionally set.
The blast and blaze that gutted
Graphics Communications Com·
pany, 7271 Murdy Circ le,
awakened firemen sleeping in
the Murdy Fire Station only
aboutSOyards away.
Flames were already rQllnng
through its roof by the time they
ran to a rear window to locate the
conflagration, according to Fire
Inspector James Merrill.
Investigators were careful to
note the inferno in the north Hun-
tin~on Bea'Ch industnal park is listed as being of incendiary
origin.
MARGARET MORRIS, 2, HUGS HERO DOG 'RED'
Irish Setter Reacued Girl From Burning Cer
Police Det>artmcnl Arson
Detail Detective Robert Russell
confirmed, however. the blaze
was obviously intentional , bul
noted any s pecific motive 1s un·
known. Dog Saves Tot Authorities s ay printing firm
owner Richard Thompson told
them he Is to be a witness in the
upcoming trhsl of Dr. Cella, who
is accused with three colleagues
of divertint $2 million from
Cell a-controlled hospitals for
political purposes.
~tier Pull,s Girl from Car
BRIDGETON~ Mo. CAP> -
Two-year-old Margaret Morris
owes her life to a decision by her
family to take in a dirty. hungry
dog they found roaming in their
neighborbood.
Red. an Irish setter adopted by
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce R. Morris or
Harvester, Mo., three weeks ago,
Eight Hurt
On Sorcery
In Sea Storm
KODIAK, Alaska (AP) -
Eight people were injured when
their 61·ff>Ot sloop rolled over in storm-tossed seas more than
l.000 miles southwest of Kodiak.
A Coast Guard spokesman said
the yacht Sorcery lost \ta mast,
lifeboat, rudder and all r adio
equipment in the incident Satur-
day, but that all 11 persons
aboard the vessel survived.
The eight injured people were
taken aboard the Cout Ouard
<'Utter Mellon for treatment and
the yacht waa taken in tow. The
Mellon was expected to arrive In
Kodl(lk this weekend.
Allhoush three people were
llsted lr) a~rioWJ condition, the
spok~smon ntd the Coast Gpard
had no pl ans to airlift injured to
Kodiak.
The Sc>rccry was en route from
Tokyo-to Lbll Aneeles when tbe
storm struck. The Co¥t Guard
spokesman ••Id the vessel "was
in the inldclJc ot nowbere0 wh<'n
it ran inlo J0·30·foot waves and
winds of more t han 3S knots.
Crewmen apparently were
able to message a distress signal
before th~ sloop lost its radio, he
said. A Coast Guard search plane
located the disabled aloop and
dropped emergency supplies.
A Dam.ah abip ldenUfied as the
"Camara" stood by the SOr~ry
untiJ the Mellon whicb was on fisheries patrOI, reached the
scene.
The injured were i~ed aa
Ramona Walters. 22, ot .Esccm· dido~ Mabel Walters. ~. also ot
Escondido; L. Vlctolia Allen or
Lahaina, MaUi, Haw~: Ben
Thomas Choat fll, 32, ot San
Francisco; AuJan Alexander
Fitzpatrick, 28, or Renfrewshire,
Scotl~nd • Ronald Edwards
Rogers. 21: of Alberta. Canada ~
James Herschel Fr_y , 26.
Alberta; and Sogec Saito. 33, or
aapan.
Three other people whom the
spokesman could not 1dtnUfy
stayed aboard the Sorcery.
pulled the u.anicked girl by her
coat collar fi'om their oarked car
minutes before it wai gutted by
flames. .. All I can say is thank God w·e
got the dog, l wouldn't have been
able to get to the car in time,"
said Morris, who witnessed the
incident from a car dealer's
showroom where he and his wife
were shopping for a new car.
Red was adopted by the Mor·
rises after they found him run-
ning loose. The dog's owner was
l~ated but he agreed to let the
f am Uy keep the anl mal.
··My wife, Bets y , a nd
Margaret bad really become at·
tached to the dog;· Morris said
Sunday.
Saturday afternoon, the couple
left. Margaret asleep in the car
With Red standing guard. The
car's front windows were rolled
down about three-quarters of
the way, Morris said.
Morris said he frequently
looked out to eheck on the girl,
but after 15 minutes had passed,
a salesman noticed smoke pour·
ing from the car windows.
··1 heard him yell, "My God,
there's a girl in that car',"
Morris recalled. ·
Morris said that as he was run·
ning across the s howroom
toward a door, he saw the smoke
and lht'n aaw Red Jump out a
front window.
Once outside the car, the 75.
pound dog turned'back for
Margaret, who by that time had
(&le HERO DOG, P•1cA2)
Pr i rt ting of campaign
literature so Car has been men·
tioned in testimony relating to
the 44·count indictment issued by
a federal grand jury in Los
Angeles naming Cella and co·
defendants.
So far, Thompson's name has
not emerged and he 1s known to
have not been among former
business associates who testified
before the grand jury.
Thompson. who was nol im·
mediately available for an in·
terview at the fire scene, re·
porledly told investigators he
had done some work for Cella but
not more recently than about fiv e
years ago,
Boats Crash
In Harbor
A 31-foot sailboat named
.. Panic" suffered an estimated
$4,000 worth of damage Sunday
afternoon when it collided with
the Pa viii on Queen tour boat.
A spokesman for the Harbor
· Patrol said theuil boat, owned by
Robert Price. 304 Diamond Ave.,
Balboa Island, was tacking near
the Balboa Island Ferry when the
collision with the Jerger veAsel
took place. .
No ioJurie• were reported to the
Harbor Patrol in coM edion with
th~4p.m . mishap.
Love to Live
Sex Called Good/or Wonlen
LONDON (AP> -British psychiatrist Jane
Gomez says too much sleep can shorten your life but
sex can make a woman live longer.
Lovemaking offers tl\at much exercise v.alue and
is tranqulliJ.inJ as well. Mrs. Gomez says in a new
book published here. For men, sex bas no value for its
exercise, she says.
Sex also stimulates the glands that keep wotnen
yout.hf ul. but male glands just don't respond to the
treatment, the book says.
Seven hours .sl~p a night is enough tor any
woman, Mrs. Gomt'Z claims. She says men need 10
ruillutes more but doesn't explain why.
''Men in their~ who sleep nilaehours • ni&btsuf-
rer doul>le Uie death rate from stroke.. heart attack or
aneurysms (blood clots) than those sleeping seven
hours pr less," says the book, entitled ··How Not To
Die Vo'tmg.''
"Those who sleep 10 hours run four times the
risk." the book says.
, Another printer once employed
by a Costa Mesa firm ~ntrolled
by Cella was a prominent witness
in his Los Angeles hearing on
Thursday and testified to enter•
ing the shop on occasion.
Donald Albert Ray, 36, alleged·
ly stole documents from the Costa
Mesa printshop for the Internal
Revenue Service that allegedly
couldbeinciminatingtoCella.
Today items recovered from
the debris or Thompson's firm in-
cluded three soot-smudged
checks that lay on a table in the
adjacent West Orange County
• (See FIRE, Page A2) .
.Defense Pursues
'Illegal' Paflers
By TOM BARLEY 0t the Dally Piiot 5'.tlt
LOS ANG EL ES-Orange County District Attorney'$ invest·.
igator Loren DuCbesne was re-
called to the witness stand here
today as the defense renewed its
argument that the pro5eeution is
using documents illegally seized
from a Costa Mesa print shop
controlled by indicted Dr. Louis
J. Cella Jr.
DuChesne, who earlier spent
the best part of two days testify.
ing on his role in the lnvesLiga.
lion, admitted that materials
taken from the print shop in July,
1975, were examined by Internal
Revenue Service agents in his of.
ficea month later.
Three months later, Dr. Cella,
51, and three business associates
were indicted by a federal grand
jury here on 44 felony counts, in·
eluding fraud and tax evasion.
Duchesne admitted today that
R e port Says
FBI R esorted
his office obtained those docu-
ments without a search warrant.
Under close questioning ftol\'\
Judge Matt Byrne, he also ad·
mitted that the IRS agents were
well aware or that fact.
"ln other words, no one at the
print shop other than your infor·
mant knew you had these docu-
ments. And the IRS went along
with that, right?" Judge Byrne
asked tbewitness.
"It wasn't said in so marry
words. But the inference was
clear,·' DuChesne said.
· Judge Byrne will be asked by
the defense when the current pre-
trial hearing f nds to rule that all
documents seized from the Unit·
~ Printing Company plant on
Airport Loop Drive be sup·
pressed.
Lawyers for both sides agree
that if Judge Byrne bars all or
most of the documents from the
trial scheduled to start Tuesday,
the prosecution may not have
any case left to try.
OuChesne admitted again to·
·day as he did last week that print
shop employe Donald Albert Ra y
was persuaded to supply his of·
fice with several boxes of docu·
menl.s in return for leniency on
crirhinal charges he faced. ·
Ray was held in the Orange
WASHINGTON <AP) _ The Counly J ail on charJJes of plan·
FBI has conducted hundreds or ning'the murder of his estranged
break-ins, .. despite the ques-wife's boyfriend when district at-
To Break-ins
torney's investigators learned of tionable legality of the technique his connection with Cella and his and its deep1 intrusion into the h privacy of targeted individuals," employment all e printshop. Ray was later rewarded for his a Senate intelligence ~ommiltee efforts by being sentenced to six staff report says, The break-ins, officially known days in jail and lwo years prolH1·
as "surreptitious entries," were lion after pleading guilty to a re· duced misdemeanor charge. conducted for the pufl>Ose o( DuChesne testified today that
photoJraphing or seizing docu· IRS agents were partlcuJarly In·
menta a nd installing bugs, ac· terested in wha.t he says were a
corctlng to the report released to· number of "fictitious In·
d ay. vo i ~es"s ubmHte d lo two The report is· one of a. series hospitals under Cella's control:
prepared by the lntelhgence Mission Community Hospital
panel's staff.to back up reco~· • Misalon Viejo and Mercy
mendations in the COJ11mlttec s <See CELLA PiJ(eA2) final report. • •
The Justice Department sliJl
permits the bureau to conduct
break·ins to install bugs and re·
fuses to rule out the possibility or
using unuuthorized entries or
"black bag'' lobs to obtain docu·
ments from.-lorelgn intelligence
targets, the l7°pa1ereportnoted.
·'Although several attorneyR
aeneral were aware of the FJU
practic4' of break·ins to install
electronic listening devices,
there is no Indication that the
FBI informed any attorney
general about lts uee of black bag
jobs," the report said. Tbe FBI was unable to provide
the committee with a completo
accountior or the total number or
break·inl because moat iecords
were deatroyed aoon after an en·
try was accomplished, the report
saJ~
Figures l)rovided by tho FBI
showed there were at least 242 bre~ll-ina against suspected
domestic subversives between
19U and 1968 and that since 1960
lbe FBI conducted more than 500
break·ins to install buo.
The report named the Ku Klux
Klan and the Socialist W<>tkers
. partr u two targets of Fill black baa Jobs. /
Coas t
Weathe r
A cooling oft period, with
low clouds In the morning
and partly cloudy In the at·
tcrnoon, ls .in 1toro Cor Ute
Orange Coast T uesday.
Highs wm run from 65 on
the seashore to 75 further
inland.
INSIDE TODA 'Y
Som~ chfldrm.ot.411 lllinoil
achool . octuaJtu wfh1ttted . a
alayfng while walking home
from lunch. School of /l.dal11
tell of how tht incfdtnt Ml od-
vtrsely .ofledtd lhdr llve1 .•
A1.
... u,,.
l..M a.yd Ut•-· Cl•nillH Comics a...-.. DHlllHotl<H £ ........... ..
l'.llt-1-Nt .. _. ---....w-.,
•••ex
OAILVPILOT N
B1STEV£ lllJTCHELL ' Ol .. O.llrf'l ... ....,
Tb promotera of Saturday's
TOek eoocert at the Oranse Coun·
ty FaJrarounds ar., blarnlni foir
ofOcl1l1 for a dlaturbonce broken
wbyCo•ta Me,. police.
Allen Oroltein, president or
Penny Lane Productions. of
Oranae County, uld a lack or
tJcket takers for the event pro-
mpted the disturbance. which
was broken up at 12:30a.m. by the
28-membcr Costa Mesa Police
tactical unit. ··we told those orticiala that we
ere going to have a sellout
owd, and they said. 'Yuh,
ab. That's what they all say,' "
teinsald.
The 20-year·old promoter said
ienly two ticket taken were pro-
vided by taJr otncial5 instead or
tM six the promoters said they
asked for.
Monciay. a.-ay 10 1t7t
;·w• bad at lust I.ODO &o 4,000
oeople w&o couldn't Stl in
becaUH they onJy provided us
With two ticket taken," he aald.
"That's what started tbt' ·vholc
lhl111. there were too mil\)' ~le
waJUna ln line."
Police Captain R. E . Moody
said there were only three arre ts
rollowtng the dlsturbancc. lnclud·
ma one teenager arrested for
anon and assaulting orficers. u
buralary arrest and the arrest of a
young girl tor being under the In
nuence or alcohol.
"There were no Injuries on
either side Saturday night." s1Ud
Moody. "It wasn't the lund or
thJn& I'd want lo bust up a dance
over. but at might have been If we
hadn't sent over the tactical
unit."
Fairgrounds security poUce
called for assistance at about
10 30 p.m. when an overflow
Fat Man Not Jolly,
Says Study Report
'
MIAMI BEACH, f1a IAP> -
The popular image of the Jolly
fat man as wrong, says a report
of the American Academy of
Psychoanalysts. The overweight
person, il says, is more likely lo
be depressed. anxious and fined
with self·lbathin1. The report
also said that people may turn
to food to avoid sex.
And while psychoanalysis can
help obese persons be happier.
in most cases al will not result
an dramatic weight reduction,
lhe repor( said
t The report, the res ult of a
t f'ro• PafJ*' A I
CELLA .•• .
(ifneral Hospital. Santa Ana I He said the possibility of tax
1 fraud was discussed by the
aeents after they learned that the
billings involved 10 allegedly
bogus corporations which balled
both hospitals.
f
It ls alleged that the defendants
bilked both hospitals of an
estimated S2 million through the
acts of fraud described today by
OuChesne.
Facina trial with Cella arc
Theodore Schiffman, SJ. of Santa
Ana, George Louis Ollendorfh«.
Laguna Beach and Step en
Robert Evans. 31. Mission VieJo
All four add1llonally face tnal
in Oranae County Supenor Court
on 127 felony counts contained in
a Grand Jury indictment That
trial will bf' scheduled after con·
cluslon of the Los Angeles tnal
which is expected ~,last two
months
r, Frone Page ,\ I
TRAFFIC ...
are asked, includln& one on
road construction.
' The City or Newport Beach
would ask the county to commit
Itself to a policy or not allowanJl
de,•elopmenl to occur until
neces!lary improvement11 in thr
clrculation system ha"e bel'n
made or are a~11ured." the let
ter read<; 'Namely, this 1n
\,lolves thl' provision of some means or access other thon
Coast Highway to the TICMAP
ar~a "
Also Included ln that hsl or
c[!!Mfiratlons to be soUl(ht are
• -/\ 1pec1fk' listing of "slRnlfl· c t visual resouces" to be pre·
ll ·ed.
.-An analysis o( the VISUlll
ICBPacl of dev.-lopm('nt In th'·
a n rlosest to Newport Stach
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Ro~rt N WHd
Pt•t.IOttU aN f"vbltW.W
Jock R. Curley
I Vi( .. "'•''*"' .,,. 64f'W,..t ~ a • I • I
"Thomas KMVll
(d•IO<
Thoma'!I A. M urotilt'W
MitMO•f'lit fO•tOf
"
ICNrles H. Loos Rldwlrd P. Nall . ""' ...... -....... ~
1 Offices·'
' C.•l<llN .. »llWo•• ... , ..... • ..~ 'r ... "i. '~fi'7..7~-
.. -· va11ty U1'• w ,._. -W alt..l•D-r,_.,
I
1 Telepflone C714l ~' I OasslflM Advertlsll'I) .. 2·5'71
~11!"• _.,. 0.-CM•• _,.....,. c:...
llNl\r. _'1., ..... -. ''°'"~ , .. .,.., .. *"' .. ...,,... ~:~':ui!.-:r.·~~~·::c·.~ ... ~~=.~~ ~ S1PY11tf'l-
~="'~'·~,'.!.:: =·~: .. ~~·1\~ .,. .• ..,_., .. u_. .. ,, -·•orv .. •~_,,.,
three-year study of fat people
and psychoanalysis. was pre·
senled here at a meeting or the
Academy or Psychoanalysts.
Dr. Albert .Stunkard, pro·
'essor or psychiatry at Stanford
University. said 147 people were
included in the study -84 of
them obese and the rest slim
The obese subjects ranged in
age from 30 to SO and avera1ed
197 pounds for women and 247
pounds for men.
Although .about 64 percent of
the fat patient&-lost small
amounts of weight during the
two or three years or
psychoanalysis, StWtkard said.
weight reduction was "not as
good as the hotshot pro!lrams
focusing on weight loss" such
as Wl'1ght Watchers and
Overeaters Anonymous.
He said the study showed
psychoanalysis effectively 1m·
proved" the obese patients' body
images.
Stunkard's associate. Colleen
Rand, said 70 percent of the
ot\1?Se patients considered
themselves unattractive com-
pared to 18 percent of the slim
subiects
"In our sample. 41 percent
avoided looking at themselves
in mirrors." said Miss Rand.
"Some did not even have any
mirrors m their homes."
Although most did not ask for
help 1n reducine. "We found
that obese persons thought they
Y.ere ugly and showed great
evidence of bod)'. Image dis·
paragement." she said.
She said they described
themselves as "fat slobs" or
looking hke a "tub of lard."
"Treatment by
psychoanalysis effectively re
rtuced the intensity of this dis·
paragement," Miss Rand
added
Fat people turned to food'
more often lo counter stress
.inrl cns1s, and many used it to
:.ivmd sex, arcording to the rl'
port
· Forty seven percent or th('
obese compared to seven per·
cent of normal-weight patients
ule to avoid sexual rela ·
t1qnsh1ps ," said Miss Rand.
She <;:ud some patients used
food to reduce sexual urges or
to get fat and keep the opposite
sex at a distance. One moo
mentioned in the study said th1t
Y.hen he ate he was too full to
"'ant sex, and another sat up
entang late each night to wait
for his wife to fall asleep.
• Aeronutronic
Contract OK'd
The Aeronutronle Ford
Division Newport Beach. has
been a~arded a $4.7 million con
trnct from th<' u. s. Army for a
rour-yur study program, It WU
announced today.
The contract calls for a
measurements and analysis pro
ir11m for the BallisUca Mls11Ue
Oerense Ad\•ance Technoloay
Center ln Al•bama.
Ofnclals or the firm said the
work will be performed in
Newport Beach but could live no
other details because Inform•
tlon on the project hu been
clllSSifted by the Army.
YMCA Offers
New Classes
Two new classes are opening
this week al the Orange Coast
YMCA. Tuesday, belly dancer Bal·
Sheba will of(er a belly dancing
class which be1ins at 9;30 a.rn. at
the Y. On Wednesday, Yo1a
author Renee Ta,yloc wUl Ol)en a
yo~a clu1at5:30 p.m.
Classes are open to residents of
lhe Harbor Area. F\u1.her in·
formation la avaJlahleattbeYM·
CA, 642·9990. ·
aowd ·Miu tosalq boWa ud
Mtun1 amatl fu• out.aide the New Products Pavlllon wt\erolbt
coo~rt WIS beln1 h Id
·'Several ot the nr• ume close
lobuildln11.·• Moodyaud.
F11rsround1 officials dlaputed
Ormteln'1 comments, S1¥loi the
promoters did not ao over ticket
sales capuclty for the IZ event
which featured three unknown
banda.
Fair official Jeannie Edwards
said the (air board as now con·
sidenn1 putting an end to rock
concerts planned by some pro-
moters.
"We'll ltill approve concerts
for h11h school1 and private
srou~." she said. addin1 lb.at
professional promoten with well
known rock stars would also be
considered.
Fro•Pa~A J
FIRE ...
Teach\'rs· Assoctationsuile.
· I don't even know where they
came from;'' said Detecta\'e
Russell
He and Fire Capt. Roger
Hosmer said later this morning
that no one has been questioned
as a possible aus~ but that
routine q uestlonlng ts under way.
Cause of the explosive, blaze
that onglnated in a proauctJon
Md repair area or the shop wu a
la~ge quantity of flammable Ii·
qwd.
No one was injured in batUing
lhe two-alarm blaze, which re·
quired 26 flrefi1hters 15 minutes
to control, according to Capt.
Hosmer.
The fire Immediately
destroyed a trunk telephone ca·
ble serving 900 resldenUaJ and In·
dustrial customers in the sur-
roundin& area, includlni one en·
tire housing 1ubdlvas1on.
Inspector Marshall said
Thompson's apparently
nouri1h1ng business lost $80.000
worth or eqUipment alone In the
ragln1 names.
He aaid it Included printing
presses. duplicating machines
and spare parts. The company
occupies three sultes ln the com·
mercial building and includes a
copy machine repair service in
addition to Its own printing
faclhties.
tnvestltiatora said the flre is
not listed as an arson because
that term app\iea only to reslden·
lla1 homes.
The 1truatur• that housed
Graphic CommunlcaUons Co. is
owned by Murdy & Brockman
Inc., firemen said.
Thompson lives at 19262
Worceste r Lane, Huntington
Stach.
MomFimh
Girl's Body
COMPTON CAP> -The body
of a 9.year·old girl who police
said was suffocated or atran,led
in her home was discovered by
her mother, police said Sunday.
The victim was identified as
Roberta Lewis, dauahter or
Roberta Joyce Robertson, 35, a
nurse at Paramount General
Hospital.
Police said they were seeking
39'.year-old Alaie Robert.son for
questlon1n1 In the death.
Gyf!o Kit.er
•.
Strange Str~ture
Perry, 8, and Paul Alvarez, 10. Long Beach. and ChelH
Thomas, 10, Newport Beach, climb on strange structure
they found on an oceanfront beach over the weekend.
After checking it out thoroughly, they learned it was a
ll!eguard tower lying on its back.
Ex-01ayor Gibbs
Criticizes Wieder
By ROBERT BARKER
Of a.. 0.lly ...........
Former Hunt1n1ton Beach
mayor Norma Gibbs says she is
"shocked and dismayed "
because she was not reappointed
as one or three city represen·
tatlves to the Orange County
Sanitation District.
Mrs. Gibbs said that it was pet·
ty and divisive on the part of
Mayor Harriett Wieder in nol aJ>·
potnhng her to the district.
Mrs. Gibbs. who has served on
the board for five years, says she
Is puztled by Mrs. Wieder's ac·
' ••
Defense
By GAllY GaANVILLE
OlllM0.11•1"1• .... lndlctt"d Oranie County
&.apervlsor Robert 8a\Un l'OO·
Unued to lnaltt to<lay th1t hi• of.
ffce manaaers, past and pretent.
were r Ponalble ror the P•yrolJ
records kept in his county office.
As Battin ·s trial beaun ita sixth
week, the Santa Ana supervisor
was undcr10Jn1 cross examina
tlon by Deputy Dlstrict /\ttorney
Jack Ryan.
In answer to a series ot ques
tiOM by Ryan relat~ lo his of.
fice's payroll accountln& pro·
cedures Battin replied:
-"I leave these thln&s to my of·
Cice mana1er and I rely entirely>
on my office man11er."
-"I rely on my Office manaJer
to keep track or hours worked. ..
-"I don·l know what hours they
work. That's why J bave an office
manager."
-"I can't recall when the
policy went into effert but I
believe it was when 8111 Meyer
was office manager.·• -"My office manager pre·
pared the payroll report. I did
nothing with the reports exceptto
sagnthem. ··
Prosecutor Ryan's interest 1n
the county supervisor's payroll
records stems from charges lhat
Battin in 1974 made illeaal use of
county employes In his campaign
for state omce.
• Those char1es were brought
aaainst the Santa Ana supervisor
in a seven.count criminal indict-
ment handed down by lhe county
grand Jury la.st Au1uat.
Batun took the witness stand
last Wednesday to tesWy on· his
own behalf
And it" as Thursday that Ryan
be&an his cross examination.
fl continued today as Ryan con
tinued to prove to a seven·man.
five· Woman jury that Batltn knew
in 1974 that membl!rs Of h1S Slaff
were paid by the county while ac
tually workinJ on his campaign
f or lieutenant governor. Tiro Charged
In Hit-run
Accident
ti~? There's no reason to remove Coins Thef l
Two Newport Beach men re·
mained in cu1tody today on
charges of felony hit and run
stemming from a Corona dl'I
Mar traf(ic accident thaJ oc·
curred earlf Saturday.
Doug Reichle, 19. of 2601
Island View Lane. is bein1 held
in the jail ward at Orange
County Medical Center and
Jerry Hughes. 18. of 4408 Chan·
nel Place Is bein& held In the
Newport Beach city jail.
Officers alleged that Reichle
attempted to change lanea on
Pacific Coast Highway near
Orchid Avenue, struck the rear
of a car in front of him. then
ran over a tree In lhe parkway
before striking a light standard.
Police asserted he then fled
from his truck and Jumped on.
the back of Hughes' motorcycll',
which had been following him.
Police alleged he ten. an Injured
pas11enger in the truck.
Police said the passenger.
Nell Parker, 20. of 940 Irvine
Avenue, Newport Beach. was
treated at Hoag Hospital for
lacerations and abrasions and
released.
No one else was Injured In the
crash, officers sold.
me. and the other mayors and
council m embers serving on the
district will know that she's done
this deliberately." Mrs. Gibbs
said.
Mrs. Gibbs is currently vice
chairman of the county districts
and says that she would have
quill' po11sibly beep io lirle to
become chairman when the elec·
tions are held in July.
Mayor HarrieU Wieder, who
announced the varibus council
3ppolntments last week~ said
that il was her prerogative to
make appointments as she sees
flt.
"I think they should be passed
around so that all counctl mem·
hers tan gain knowledge of the
sanitation dlSLicl ·s operations,"
she said.
"Just because Norma has been
on the district for awhile doesn't
mean that ;;he bas tenure," Mrs .
Wieder said. ..There's no such
thing as tenure."
"Sometimes when people
serve on committes they forget
who they represent and don't re·
Investigated
In Newport
Newport Bench police today
are invesUaating the theft of coins
valued at $3.000 from an Eastbluft
home Sunday.
Larry McNichols, (5, of 285i
Alta Vista Drive, told officers the
theft or the coins. a color
televl11ion and a microwave oven
occurred while he was eone
between8:30 a.m. to9:30p.m .
Police said the burglars ap·
parenUy aained entry to the home
by prying open a door 1olning the
house and garage.
McNlchols said he found his
front door ajar and most of the
rooms ransacked when he re·
turned home.
He told police the coins have a
face value of about $200, but they
are worth about $3,000 to a collec·
tor.
port back to the council as they .
should ... she said. Woman ·Dr1· ves "I am surprised that Norma is
stamping her feet by not getting I ,500. 'T
, her way,'' Mrs. Wieder said. D est
Mrs. Gibbs implies that the re·
ason she wasn't reapJ'Qinted was
that she failed to appoint Mrs.
Wieder to a similar post in 1975.
"But J called Hal'riet over lo
discuss 1t with her at lhe time.
"Henry Duke was the
chairman or one or lhe sanitation
d1~trlct committees, and I felt I
had to reappoanl him. I selected
Don Shapley lo be a second
repreaentatl\ e beca~e 1t was his
last chance."
INDIANAPOLIS CAP> -Janel
Guthrie !!haltered 60 years of his·
tory today and became the first
woman to drive a race car at the
lnd1an11polls Motor Speedway.
Mias Guthrie had been kept
from her driving debut by
mechanical trouble two da)'I In a
row. but finally made it out for a practice run.
She Is lh6 first woman to enter
the Jndaanapolls soo
Mrs Oibbs said that when she N d
asked to be retained on the poi;t, Antbassador ame
Mn. Wieder replled. "No, I'm
not 1ivln1 IL to you because you
didn't aive it lo m(' ...
f'rom Pa,,~ A I
HERO DOG
been awakened by the smoke and
was standlnR up In the back seot.
swlng1ni her arm9 In fri«ht
"As soon os Red hit the ground.
he jumped up, put hla paws on the
side or the car and reached bis
head through the smoke coming
out the window." Morris sald.
Red grabbed Margaret's coat
collar with his teeth and drqged
Ule little girl out the window.
then pushed her away rrom the
car
A Bridgeton patrolman said
names from the car were shoot·
lng 20 to 25 feet into the ear by the
lime he arrived. The fire, ap.
pa~ntlY caused by faulty wiring,
gutted the interior.
WASHINGTON (AP> -Pres•·
dent 1'~ord nominated a GOP na·
t1onal committeewoman today le>
be ombossador 10 Luxcmllouri.:.
sucreeding nut h L. Farkas. ap
pointed by former PreKidcnt.
tu chord M. N lxon followinJC a
~·ontrovers1nl '1onotlon to his rl'-
tlectlon cumpolgn. The nomlnu·
lion of Ro!lemary L. Ginn, rom·
mltteewomo11 from Missouri,
rontmul's the tr odltlun of 0111nf{n·
ang a woman to the post.
OT/ZEN'S BAND
'FAST SELLER '
"I sold my citizens band radii)
as a result of the Daily Pilot ad."
That's the advertising succus
story told by the Laguna HUii!
woman who placed this ad.
CB Ratllo. Reall~t1c. mdl
TRC47 SSB w/cor ontcn .
nu xxx llllX"
Fred Anderson, of Newport Beach, says be is a former
national mod~I airplane champion. He also sets sclentlClc
in his kite-bulldlng projects. He is shown here with his
gyro-kite which be entered ln Sunday's UC Irvine Kile
Flying Fesllval and Competition at Scotchman's Cove.
Margaret was taken to a
hosp.tel where she was treated
for minor burns and released.
Red suffered sifned hair and a
slight cut on his nose.
"I save Red a aleak when we
got home aner the Ore." Moms
13ld. "Ht m•y lt't steak every
rught encr this."
If you have electronic gear
you w8.Jit to convert to cash, ca.II
642 ~78. We make It eN)' for
you to communicate with buyer•
nil alona the Oranse Coast, m
the DaUy Pilot
' ...
!
'
,Mlend!y. Max 10. 1979 N DAIL v PllOT .49
J..Ouenee 1
·WIW -Really Runs U.S.?
By MIL TON MOSKOWITZ
Not m•llY :p90J)le, eonfronttd wtlb tM folluwln~ names. could tdeaUf): Ulem: John P. Ai.astio, Frank Cary. Retinald Sones, Donald MacNaughton and Arthur Wood, •
,. Tbt are the chairmen, respecU,•ely, ol Coca.cola, lBK,
Ceneral Electric,
Pr1dea\11l ICJ•urance
UCIS.an. Roehucll. Money
Tree
Tbe anonymity ·or
bua!neH leadera la a
llrlkin1 facet of Amerlun life. These
five companlet1 *"' pre· eminent tn &.heir fit'lds. They St'll produeb and SMvices used
by millions of Amencans. Yet outside the busineea world.
the men who run them are vlrtulllb' unknown.
TREIB INVISl8lUTY WAS pointed up ln a "Who Runs
Amt'rica" poll tukt-n by U S. News & World Rt.'port. Results or the poll were publlshcd last month. and they s how that no
one apparently believes that bUl.lneumen count for much,
not even the 1,400 "key'Amnlcans" who were survey"-'d by
Uie magazine.
President Ford beaded the list or 15 leaders who were
deemed to be most iotlu~llal In our U ves. Secl'etar)' or
State Henry JQssin~er ptaeed second and be was roUowed
by Arthur Burns, chairman or the Federal Rseserve Board.
Walter Cronkite, the CBS'newscasler, placed sixth in
this eulu~Uon and consumer activist RaJpb Nader ranked
tenth.
Not a single bualness txecutive made t.he top-15 list.
IT WASN'T UNTIL THE second tier -the 15th through
30th listings -that businessm<'n were mentioned and even
here lbey were not very proaunent
David Rockefeller, the chairman of New York's Chase
Manhattan Bank, ome in 16th, and ttus was probably more
~ reflection of lhe magi<' of his family name than his posi-
tion as a banx er. Tying the Rev. Billy GrahJtm for 20t.h place
was William Paley. the chairman or CBS and the employer
of Walter Cronkite. And then one had to move all the way
down lo 28th place before finding the only other business
leader believed lo have major inOuent'e: Thomas Murphy,
the chairman or General Motors.
Unmentioned were the five business chiefs cited at the
start of lbls column. Also voteless were the chairmen of Ex-
xon. ITI', U.S. Steel. Du Pont and American Telephone and
Telegraph. Ir the r esults of this survey are accpeted, then
these roen have less influence in American life than Ronald
~eagan, John Gardner. Earl Butz. Henry Jackson, Daniel
•Moynihan and Gov. Edmund BrO\l.'D Jr.
AT F IRST GLANCE; THF.SF. findings, that busi-
nessmen have UtUe influence when compared with other
leaders. do not seem to jibe with public opinion Rurveys tn·
dicating widespread distrust of U.S. business and a feeling
that the business sector exerts an undue influence.
Oo a second look, though, they may be quite consistent.
The business influence that many people rear goes by such
names as GM, GE. AT&T. U. S. Steel. Exxon. Those arc
familiar names. The men \\ho manage them remain face-
less.
More Milk Eyed,
More Cost, Too
WASHINGTON (AP> -After rocking along with litlle
change the past three years. milk prbductlon in 1976 could
increase slightly as dairy a farmers take advantage or plen-
tiful grain supplies and reduced feed costs. the Agriculture
'Department says.
But officials said the larger supply will not mean lower
consumer prices for milk and other dairy products. The de·
partment's Outlook and Situation Board said retail prices of
those items as a group are expected to average 6 to 8 percent
hi&}ler than they did in 1975, a prediction also made earUer
this year.
T HE RE PORT SAID milk prices at the farm will
decline as the sprlng "Oush" seasosa or peak production de·
vel~ps but that prices still w\11 average 10 to 15 percent
abOve what they dld a year ago. Jn the s~cond hair or 1976,
prices "could post a fairly strong seasonal rise" but are not
expected tom a tcb the big gains in the second half of I ast year .
officials said.
N•-1 AY<O Co WI 't:'Mt11 a lMMvl Inv . ..,., ,.,,.,
j l.•brll l." Of t C<lftll IRl!y .... ~,. C•o
t M<lntfr """ • ltttte11 Oro 10 cc;1 eo.o " 01..,., lllCI 11 FtlP• MIO lJ MllYCk Cit U All<O MIO ,, '"""l(tr It kal.,AI S7of
11 Vnlr• Mlf\ tt VS l~lnw ,, '" p ,. liM Ml HP
S toc-lc• I~ Tlae
Spotlight
NEW VORtt IAI>) \•Ir\. (IO>lllQ prlctt
•nd Mt c."'•"O' ot '"" '•lt"t'n "'""' A( t•W8 N.-w '/41rM '>tG-<•" i;•Chdt~ 1\\Vlf'\i
lf"A<'J•d "11t•on•lfv Occ1ctN\ P•t )11,SOO
r;~,~.;: t ~!!:::
Alli\ Ct-t111m 1f), too
C,.n Molor• 10.•00 F '9t't\INll UO 600 ... ., •• 1'fl1Y Inn Ul, lOO
F ••Powl f 111) QOO
(,~It Wn IM IM 100 f, . .,.,.,,.. lf"lr H.),8~
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A>Jf)f\ Pr()tl f ~·.st)()
P:\n /lm t \9 •OO
SrdO•• ut tSl.600 Am Tel& hi .......• 1 U,700
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New l'ork Sain
NV l\to<ti. ,,.,,.~••n•l to•••.
Ptt11IOV\0141Y' w ..... .,., Mt>"tnAQn v •• , .. qi)
r.woy11ottt'"''o J~ 110IJ4'f•• ttH tol'l1t1t 1t1.e t&O•ff
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WN&T AMt I( tUUIS 010 NlW voR~ 1<1 111
A'1w.t"r•• t)n(.hf\M\ V:f."i".~::,
Now "" l\IQI" Now 1'1t IOW\
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it 11 ............... " u
..
•
•AJODAILYPILOT
L8g11na's ~t1sb:y KOs Opposition
ONTARIO. Cali(. -Llauna
lkach's Jlm Busby •on the In
ternatlonal Motor Sporu A•·
aocaation lOO·mlltr for GT cars.
but he wasn't as happy about the
victory u he mlaht have bttn.
Butb)C ran into hi! close friend
and cu SPon1or, Peter Gre•a. eo
route to the triumph Sunday at
Ontario Motor Speedway.
Bobby Rlaga, a Newport Beach
resident, woo the batUeoft.he St'X· es competition at Ontario Motor
Speedway Sunday over Shirley
Cha Cho Muldowney.
Pro driver Muldowney wns
clearly faster on the race track an
a 1lalom evf'!lt bot Riso~
1ink1nc five of b.1110 putts while
she wn CHOJ'10 ln &be collm1
rompdJUoo.
Greti wu ludlna ei1ht laps
from the finish or tbe camel·
sponsored race when Busby
plowed into him lo a ldo'w com<'r
aod spun him out. Gres1 protest·
ed Bu'lby's drlvlna tactics but
later withdrew his otfic1al com
plaint
"I am very sorry It happened,"
said Busby after wlnrung In a
Porsche Carrera sponsored by
the .f1orida dealership in which
Three.hits Tribe
TananaPutsEnd
To Losing Ways
Angels pitcher Frank Tanana
d1d not like the looks of things
He had not \\on a itame since
Apnl 19 and during lht> lntcmn
·had permitted only four earned
runs in 29 and one-third mnm(ts
rlt1gel# Slo•t-
. AllOa-... l(MP(Clltl
M.y 10 C.lilo•nl• •I O•kl•nd
IN.y 11 T .. H at Catltornl•
, )Sp'"
1 Up"'·
I lhm. Min II T•••• •t C..tlforthtt
But he had not won, instead suf·
fering agonizing losses like l·O to
Milwaukee aod 2· 1 to New York.
Tanana was feanng the worst
again Sunday aeainsl the
Cleveland Indians as the An&els
came to bat in the eighth inrung,
trailing 2·0 as Fritz Peterson
~ orked on a three·h1lter.
But tbe Angels got off the deck
and scored three tames to enable
Tanana \o post his s~nd vie·
tory, a 3·2 triumph oHr the In·
d1ans which gave California a
s"eeporthethree ~nmcscrie:.
The Anstels \\ 111 tr~ to kc.-cp 1t
going tonight when the~ lwgm a
two·gam1: serte!I an Oakland
agam~t the A·., with Nolan Ryan
•3·21 schedul('cl to oppoM' Puul
.l\I itchell 0· 1 ·I said to m\self 1t looks Ith 1l
may be another fint.· t•ffort down
the drain," Tanana admitted.
"But around the fourth inning or
so I tolcl myH•lr to keep It clost•
and maybe som ething will haµ·
pen.l 'mgla<tltd1d "
Tanana'' ound up w1th a thrl"l"·
hatter, embroidered by E'lght
strikeouts. to 1m prove has record
to2 3
Thl" key blow in the California
rolly "as deh vered b~ outfielder
Husty Torrt>i. "ho rammed a
t\\O·Out. two run triple
· we·,·t• \\On thret' ma row the
harrl "a~." Torre-. poanll'd out
1 think our attitude 1s good and
\\C '-hould be abl(• to relax a little
* * * C\.llllLA"O .. ~, ""' ~1'n1nottl 4 I) I 0
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f '1lb1n r'\t•I'\ I 0 ('I ij
H t;..-·11 •b .f 11 (\ n
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t ,~cwn.,, 11 II ,,
4. , " •.
Ufl ·-n· lD .f 0 0 0
JI fjlt11'.(t • I 1
,.....,,,,,, 101u
""'""'"~ tot n H._,. f\I• fh I 0 t'I 1l
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(• ... 1• ~ t n 1
f I l"lf'f)t•r..f'\ f ) f II 1f
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f ', .. t\••O I) ll 0 0
f '"' 4 • I J I l••M*' 114 l ., ) '~, ., .•• ~,., mo oon ~ 1
l ,1 t\1, , ()('II• fk.0 Oh 1
nP (11 ~,.I'"" 1 t. Ot\ -r1-.Y1i"'"'1 r Ahl lf"n• .. J oti .. n.Aft) l CiilA ,,I,~ fl J.f 1 .,f,11\
,... ,, f "''l ••
l tk •tu
T '"'", W ) l f I 'I A t(t tt4
II' H It lit II tO
\ I I 1 I
I 0 n 0 0
.. ) 1 ' ' •
now. We're getting the big hats Jt
the right time.'·
The Angels. "ho had lost 13
straight to Cleveland. captured
;ill three games with lale·mmn~
heroics. On Friday. home runs
b\ Bobb\' Bonds and Bill Melton
enabled "them to score four runs
m the eighth for a 5·4 wan and
they scrambled from behind
twice to beat the Trabe4·3 in 13 m·
nings Saturday night.
el
Slap.Shot
Nips Flyers
MO!l\TREAL I AP I
Defenserhon Guy Lapointe netted
a 25·foot slap shot with Just l 32
remaining Sunday night, giving
the l\lontreal Canad1ens a com
eback 4 .3 triumph O\t'r the
Philadelphia Fl yers in the opener
of their Na lion al Jl~key Lcaitu<'
final playoff series
Lapointe took a pass from ll•ft
\\mg Stne Shull and broke across
the Philadelphia blue line with
Guy Leneur against Flyers' dl'·
fenseman Jim Watson. Ile fakrd a
pass to Lafleur, then blaz<'<l his
!-.hot past Ph1ladelph1a goalie
Wayne Stephenson io win a game
in which the Canad1ens had
trailed 2·0.
Goalie Ken Dryden saved the
\ 1ctory with a lunging toe stop on
a Jim Watson shot in the frenzied
final seconds.
Jacques Lemaire had brought
the Canad1ens even for the second lime in the contest when has 30·
root backhander with 9 SS left t1Cd
the score 3·3. Just under fl\'e
mrnutes earlier. Philadelphia de·
fense Larry Goodenough had
broken a 2·2 tie by sending a 35·
foot power play wrist shot past
Dryden ·s late·kickmg right leg.
The Flyers. on goals by the red
hot Reggie Leach and Ro!>s
Lonsberrv. had taken a 2 0 first
period h)ad before Montreal
frustrated by a disorgamled and
often sloppy opening session
!>tOrmed back on talhes2:26 apart
by Jim Roberts and Larry
Robinson in the middle pcriod
Leach's 16th goalorthepluyoffs
had gotten Philadelphrn started
JUSl 21 seconds after the openinl!
faceoff It was the 10th con
secuhve playoff game m which
L<'ach had scored. extendmg the
playoff mark
Crf'l1 ha a substantial int~l.
B~by a"erar" M 651 mllt'S ~r hour to" In by 2 319.ettonrls OVtt'
Grt-11 In a factory·bacltl'd BMW.
"l had been lry1n' lo pus hlrrr m the slow cornera, • Bldby con·
l1nued. "and be wu able to out·
accelerate me on the
1tratgbtaway I might ba\'e been
• hllle O\'Cr·iealou' when l hlt
him I don't know "
Se\en taps from thtt end a two
car crash on the front
stra 1ahtaway sent Bob
Madcovich to a hospital in
Upland with a possible con·
cuM11on aod neck tnJunes. ·
The ra~e belwMn Gr•u and
Busby de-veloped after th leader
f<'r 16 laps, M1C'h t'I Keyst'r,
dropped out wtlh transmission
failure
t<eyser and Creu t>ecameo em·
broiled in a b•Ule lost \\ftk at
Laeuna Seu. f1J'$t on tho trick
where lhe.lr urs colUdt'd at least
three times durtn& lhe race and
later In the pits where they
uraucd with each other afttt the
race and Grega fa led n prottst
against Keya<'r for u11
sportsmanlfke driving tactics.
The protest was a((lrmed by
JMSA and Keyser was rlnl'd.
In the eocnpanioo sedan 10().
miler. Gene Felton took over on
tbuuond lap and led alllhe way
to win in a Gremlin at an averaae sP«d fl 79.997 m p.I\ , st'<.'ond was Carson Baird. the serita
pomt lea<kr ln a Colt, 11 s~nds
b:ick, and third "os Ooo Oeven·
dorf in a Datsun.
Canadian national champion
Gille' VIiieneuve won the On·
tario Grand Prix for FormuJ11
Atlantic curs in a Mal'<'b. avcrng·
Ing 106.675 m .p .b. Second"•' El
Hott Forbes·Robinson ln a 'rul 15
seconds behind, and third was
8111 Brack in a Chevron.
AP Wtr.,.._tt
MARK HAYES BL.ASTS OUT OF TRAP ON WAY TO BYRON NELSON GOLF WIN.
Lose 2 in a Ro•·
Dodgers Tackle
Cardinals Tonight
ST LOt:IS <AP> -The ~
Angeles Dodgers. their 12.gamc
\\inning streak r eplaced by a
two.game loss stri ng in
Ph1ladelph1a over the weekend.
()11 'f"V Tun,ghl
Ch1u11u-I 1 a• :;::Jo
take on the St . Louis Cardinals
here tonight
Sunday, the Dodgers lost their
srcond ~traight to Philadelphia.
Ill 3. aftt'r the Phillies had ended
lht' Los Angeles victory string
the day before.
Sunday saw the end of another
!-treak. a~ the Dodgers' Doug
Rau. who took a 4·0 record and a
tO·game \\inning streak into the
game, lost for the first Ume since
Aug 23
In Sunday's game. the Dodger-;
were bafned by Ph1lhes p1tcht•r
Jim Lonborg, whose career "as
being written orr just ~•'< month-;
ago
At the beginning of the season.
the only guy in Florida ~ho
thought Lonborg had a ehanc1:
was Lonborg. Now his record I!'.
4.0. topped by Sunday's near·
perfect game against thl"
Dodgers.
The ;jJ.year·old hurler m1ssc.'d
half of last season after injuring
his shoulder. Not only could h1•
not throw through a pane or
glass, he couldn't throw at all.
The PhilliE'S were so sure Lon
borg was done. they went out m
the winter market and acquired
pitchers Ron Reed and Jim Kaat
m trades. Even Lonborg, the one·
tame Cy Young Award winner
with the Boston Red Sox, got the
message
In his latest victory. he came
dangerou~ly close to a perfect
game -for 6 1:i innm1;ts lie
struck out seven or the I 1rsl l~
batters.
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Slower Swing,
Nelson's Tip
Key for Hayes
DALLAS <APl -A tip. de·
livered by c:lose friend and fellow
pro Larry Nelson on the practice
green before the final round.
may have been the key to Mark
Hayes' victory Sunday in the
Byron Nelson Golf Classic.
· .. I \\aS desperate," Hayes !>aid
after his !>Cram bhn~. two.under
par 69 had secured his first tour
title by a two.stroke margin.
"I was sea rch1n ~ for
something. anything. Because I
really wasn't h1ttmg it all Lhal
good .
"Larry and I worked together
a lot. He knows me and my
J(ame. lie told me I was getting
too fast. to try to slow down my
swing. I really lhink that was the
key to It all. .
"I slowed it down. I even tried
to walk down the fairway as slow
as Don January." a 46·~ear-0ld
veteran famed a s probabaly the
most slow·moving, easv·gomg
man on the tour. "That was the
key. After the first hole I was re·
taxed and easy."
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JIM BUSBY
Emo, Durr·
Top Field;
Borg Rolls
CA RLSBAD-Newport
Beach's Rov Emerson teamed
with Francoise Durr to defeat
Tonv Trabert and Billie Jean
King, 6 .. L 6·4, Sunday to captur 1:
tht' S60.000 maxed doubles tourna·
ment ut thl' Lu Ct">Sta Racquet
Club.
Emerson and Durr split thl"
S20.000 first prize.
Emerson dominated play m
the second !)Cl as the "inners
rallied from a 1·4 derlclt to post
the victory before 3,SOO fans.
Sorg Trlu .. plu
DALLAS -Bjorn &rg over·
came three years fr..istrat1on In a
jittery start Sunday to outduel
close fr1en~ Guillermo Vilas, 1·6,
6-1, 1·S, 6·1 and capture the World
Championship of Tennis $50,000
f1rsl·pl•ce prize.
. t.:f e<"~ Wl11
TORRANCE -Los Angeles'
George Best tied the Aame with a
goal in lhc final three minutes of
r e1wlat1on plav, th<'n booted
home thl' i:aml' '' innl'r m the tie·
breaker !-tern·~ a~ tht> The Aztel"'
do\\ned the Sl'attl<' Sounclers .i J
1n ~orlh Aml•racun Sot•t•t:r
League piny.
The \'1cton . pluycd before ;.i
1·rowd of 7.tils , wus the Ailee~·
third stra11tht ut homl'.
MfH•d l11j11rt•d
CHICAGO ChicaAO While
Sox pitcher Wilbur Wood was
scheduled for surgery today arter
suffering a broken left knee eap in
Sunday's game against the
Detroit Tigers.
Wood was 1nJured when he was
hit with a sharp line drive off lht'
bat of Ron Leflore. He was flown
to Chicago and examined Sunday
niAht by three team doctors. who
determined that surJiery would be
necessary.
Doctors esllm ate he will be in 11
cast aboute1ghl weeks.
So.r Lo"e .\' i 111 #1
The Boston Red Sox. defending
American League champions,
lost their ninth straight decision
Sunday, bowing to the Tex&~
Ranger!>. 6·5.
Celtics Rally
To Whip Cavs
BOSTON <A P> -The Boston
Celtics, kept in the game by Jo Jo
White's torrid third period shoot·
mg, rallied in the fourth quarter
Su}\day ror a 91·89 victory over
the Ctevehli'ld {;avaliers and a 2·0
lead in the N allonal Basketball
AssocioUon's semifinal playoffs.
White-scored 14 Points as the
Celtics pulled to within three
points. 71.08, In the third period.
Then the mighty Boston scoring
machine took charge for a com·
manding lead in the eastern Con·
ference besl·Of·sevcn senes.
John Havlicek put the Celtics
in front 74· 73 for the first tame
Mnce early In the llccond period
Cleveland center Natt'
Thurmond fouled out with 7:36
r1•ma1ning and the Celtics went
to work. scoring !!even straight
po1nt11 for nn 81 73 advantol(c.
CLIYll.ANO '"' <,"""' I~. Or•-• 11 f'1o;r~f1 ti') \nyd• r I•. (1~4'1"ftfMt U ,.U,Wll t t,
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T""4ey'a 0•-
8o\lll'I Ol Ct.,,.lal>d
Suns Put on Beat, 133·129
~ Gamble Pays 011
Oscar Gamble of the New York Yankees
sides safely into third base. avoiding the t.is. by Sal Bando. Umpire is Bill Kunkel.
. ,., ............
Host Oakland won, 4-3, in 12 innings Sun·
day.
PHOENIX <AP> -"n seemed
like it was goto& to 10 on
forever.'' said Golden State
guard Phil Smith~ who led all
players with 30 Points only to
have the Phoenix Suns take a
133·129 double overtime decision
ov'er the Warnors and draw «!ven
In their National Basketball As·
social.ion playoff sencs 2·2.
The series shirts to Oakland
Wednesday night and back to
Phoenix Friday night
Goldeo State was on lop 112-l lO
with eight seconds lo play when
Keith Erickson took a . pass and
drilled• ~loot sbotwit.h :03 lett ·
lo trigger the first overtime.
"R 1ck 8 a rry had been
sloughing off me all day, and I
had a feeling I'd be able to get the
ball," said Erickson. ''The ball
was to go to anybody open. and
with eight lleconds remajning we
knew we could get off a llhot or
some sort."
Ricky Sobers re1cued the Suns
with a pair of pressu~ fool shots
in overtime. One wllh :02 lo go
and Erickson sank eight points ln
th• final ulra period.
G·State used goals by George
Johnson and Barry for a 123·119
adva11tage urly ln t.be final O\'CJ'·
'
time but goats by Er1ckaon and
Dick Van Arsdale tied It, and
Erickson made a shot from the
corner for a permanent Phoomk
lead at 2 · 38.
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Saddlebaek
I
\tOL. 69, NO. 131, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES
Today' ~los• · ,
N.Y.Steeks
TEN CENT.S
~Pilot DoWn
f A downed pilot hiked five males
throu&h the rualilt<d Sont i11go
• m Can yon llikes for Ai
I mountains Saturday njght and
hitchhiked to Fullerton Airport
before soundlne .in uJarm that
sent an 18-m an Orange County
Sheriff's rescue squad 10 search ·~r two t een agers trapped in
wreckage of a light plane
It v. ai.n 'l until 2 a m Sund av
that the rescue squad found the
plane aod the pamfuJly af not
senously mjured younpters m
the eaat fork of Fremont Canyon.
rouehly rtve m1IH eut of Irvine
Park
At dawn, an El Toro Manne
Air Stat1on rescue helicopter Uft
ed Jan Maelle White. 16, of
Bueoa Park , and Timothy
Lmdsay. 17. of Santa Ana, from
the canyon floor
The youn&sters were t&ken to
Mtssaon Commun1t~ Hosp1taJ ll1
M1111on \ttejo for treatment or
their Injuries. Lindsay reported·
ly wu released from the hospital
Su nday afternoon.
Miss Wblte. h<>wever. re
mai.ned tn the hospltw overnight
and repottedly was U&ted in good
condition today
Her rather. Gene Wayne Wlute.
44, o r 5591 Roclcledee Drive.
Buena Park. was al _Uie control~
of the rented Cessna 112 that
• ~lly l"llet S"'lf ,_,,
DELIVERY TRUCK RESTS IN FREEWAY DITCH AFTER BEING RUN OFF THE ROAD
Unidentified Auto Swerved In Front of Truck, Causing Driver to Lose Control
Accident-causing
Motorist Hunted
The Cahforn1;1 ll1i:h~a~ Patrol
IS hunttn J.( £or I ht• tll 1 \ {•r n£ a
~mall v. halt• forcai:n .,lal1on
watton belie,•t•d lo h;1vc caused a
potentially s<>raou!-frct•v. ay ace1
dent Just south ol Lion Counlr)
Safari an Irvine
CHP Ofhcer Dan' P1llav.uy
said the car v. ;1:. :.outhbound on
the Santa Ana Frc<'v. ay al the
Junction v. 1th the San Diego
Freeway and cut across lhn-..•
lanes or trarfac an front of a ft)()(I
dehver v truck
The truck driver. David Unix'.
23, of Los An~elt>s. hat the brakrs.
causintt thl' truck to swrrve
sadewavs. hat u llgtft pole and
rolled 'into '' 10 foot·det>p ditch
Jlongsidl' lht> fret>v. 3)'. Paltawa}
:-.Old
L'nbe was treated at the scene
or the 8:45 a m accident by
Orange County Fire Department
paramedics and taken by am·
bulance to Saddleback Com·
mun1ty Hospital. He was listed an
good cond att()n today with
scrapes and bruises.
·He was pretty wrll shaken
up," said Pitta way
The CHP officer siud there was
no contact bet ween the truck and
car but noted "the car appears al
fault and in a case like this. 1l as
cons adered felOD)' rut and run.''
Plllaway noted that the small
car slowed down immediately
after the accident and then "look
off heading south ... No licensl'
number was taken and the CHP
officer said 1t may be hard to rind
tht' hat and run driver.
Dog Saves Tot
Setter Pulls Girl from Car
BRIOGETO~. Mu 1 \P l
Two-year old M .iri:1.r1•1 Morns
tlwes her life to •t de<'t'>ton In her
family to tnkc in <I 11111,, huni.:r-.
dog thev founct ruamin.: an lh<·1r
ne1~hborhl10d
Rt'd, an I rash Sl'll<'r acloptt•d II\
.,1r and Mrs Brun• ft \lorn-. of
llnr\t'~lt•r, Mo . thrC(' '"'d" a~o
pullt·d the• pan1t•k1•tl ~1rl I)\ h1•1
('031 collar rrom thrar p,1ri..t•d C'ilr
minute"\ b<'forc• 11 \\ "" i.:uttt•d h'
namt•s
"All t <'tln !'laY.., thunk Coo wr
QOt ltu.• dog. I wouldn't have tx•1•n
a bit• to J!t>l to I hl' <'ur in tlmt'."
uld Morrie;. who w1lnl'"l"\ed lh1•
1nc1dcnt from a cur dcalN'.'i
showroom wh<•re he and h1i1 w1f1•
were i1hopplnf( for a nl'w car
Red w11:1 adopted by the Mor·
li!'lcs nfkr lht>y found ham run
ning loolle. The dog's owner was
located but he aji!re<.'d lo let the
family kt>eptht> nnlmal
~ "My wife , Dt't c;y, :1 n rf
:\fargarel had reillly Ix-come at
tached to the do~.'· Morns said
Sunday
Saturday afternoon. the couple
kft Marj!aret asleep an the car
with Red standing guard. Th<'
car's front v. andows were rolled
down about three-quarter s of
the way. Morris said
Morris said h e frl'que nlly
looked out to check on lhe girl.
but artrr 15 minutes hod passed.
11 salesman noticed smoke pour
ang rrom the car windowa.
"I heard ham yell. 'My God.
thert's a 11tr l in that car',"
Morris r<.'Called.
Morris sa.1<1 that as he was run·
nln1t acr oss the showroom
t<>ward a door , he saw the smok~
ond then saw Red Jump out 11
fronl window.
Once outside the car, lh 75-
pound do~ turned bock for
Margaret, who by that Ume hod
CStt HERO DOG, Page Al>
Sclwol Board Eyes
Budget Cut Metlwtb
Saddleback Valley Unified
School Distract trustees have
scheduled a special meeting at 7
o'clock tonight to dlscuss the dis·
trtct·s proposed budget and ways
of reducing the $28.S milhon
total.
• Trustees have until July l lo
adopt a tentative bud1et ond cor-
ftc:t what Gilbert Moreno. dis·
trict business mannger. con·
aiders a ··suicidal" allotment for
c!Ontingencies.
I Trustees are trying lo trim
their spendmg plan """ im:rease
the $79,9SO contmg~cies allot-
ment.
Tbe p reliminary budg~ is
about $4.5 million higberthib the
current fiscal year's plan.
Moreno has attributed much of
the increase to the need for n w
teachers aand regular employe
salary raises.
Trustees have olso scheduled
an executive session tonight
wbich Is dosed to the public.
They will m eet ln the
multipurpose room at Los Allsos
intermediate School, 251TI Moor
Ave., Mission Viejo.
Break-ins
By FBI
In Report
WASHINGTON CAP> -T he
FBI has conducted hundreds of
break-ans, "despite the ques
tlonable leeallly of the technique
and its deep Intrusion into the
pnvacy or t ar geted mdJviduels ...
a Senate antelhgence committee
sta rr report says
The break·•~· offmally known
as "surreptitious entnes." were
conducted for the purpose of
photographing or se1ung docu-
ments and anst alhng bugs, ac·
cording to the report released to·
day.
The report 1s one of a sene!>
prepared by the antelhgcnce
panel's starr to bi:ck up recom·
mendnlions in the committee'!\
Canal report
The Justacr Department stall
permits the bureau to conduct
break-ans to install bu~s and r<'
fu11es to rule out the possibility of
us ing unauthorized entries or
· blaek bu~" jobs to o~ain docu·
ments from foreign mtelli~enel'
targets. the 17-pa~e report noted
Although sev<'ral attorneys
general were awar(' or the FBI
practice or break-ms to install
electronic li5lenang devices,
there as no 1ndlcalton that the
FBI informed any attorney
general OboUl llS US(' of black baf(
Jobs," the report i1a1d
The FBI was unable to pro\'tde
the commallee with a complete
accounllna of the total number of
break·tnS becausc most records
were de11troyl'd soon after an en
try was aceomphsh<'d. the r eport
!!Old.
Figure!! provided by the FBI
showed there were ot leost 242
break-ins against suspected
domoatlc subver sives between
1942 and 1968 and thnt since 1960
the FBI conducted more than 500
break-ms to Install bugs.
"Almost u m ony surreplilious
entries were conducted in the
same period asaiMl l ar.cets of
crimlnal lnvesti1ation.<1," the re-
port Hid.
Elephants
Kill TUX>
SALISBURY. Rhodesia
CAP> -Killer elephant.5
have battered two persons
to death in the remote
Kanba reeion of northern
Rhodesia. police report.
They announced Sunday
that '\he mutilated body of
Charles Perry. a tsetse fly
control worker m issing
since Friday. had been
found in dense bush. and
tracks around the body
showed be had been at· •
tacked by elepbant.s.
A local triba l leadeT was
also killed by an elephant
that picked him up With his
trunk aod hurled him to the
nd. lice uid.
•
plWlied Into the canyon shortly
after Sp.m . Saturday
Accordln& to• sbenff11 rt'OQrt.
White and the two youo,.t('lfs
were m erel)' taklna 11 pleasure
lllabt Crom Fullt rton Airport
over the A,nahciam • IUUs area
when the erall apparentl lost
po•er
White haked fl\ e m1lca through
the rugged mountain country
before lutcb.in& a dde back lo the
....
airport and callin• FUilerton
police ot 3bout midnight.
:chert ff' a Investigators said.
Two hours later. ln respQJUe to
bullhorn m essages sent ~hotna:
throuah the mountains. 6herlff's
searchers heard calls for help.
Ac«>rding to one rescuer. It
took a (our-man team three hours
to descend the canyon walls an
the pred11wn d arkness lo reach
the crash \•1clims.
It was then that t c:aU was &en
to the Marino air ha.so for o
re$eue helicopter that could lift
Ow..two youngat(lra from tbc Na
nyon at dawn's rlrst liaht.
According lo a rts~ue report.
lhe rent~ plane did not. irppear to
be seriously damaged In thi•
forced landing White made short
ly after taking off.
Other than White's explanubon
(Sff PILOT. PageAJ>
Prober Quizzed
DA's Man Called at Cella Trial
By TOM BARLEY
Ot "'" o ... , '""""" LOS ANGELES-O r a nge
County Distract Attorney's invest
igator Loren DuChesoe was r~
called lo the witness stand here
today as the defense renewed 1t:s
argument that the prosecution as
using documents illegally seized
from a Costa Mesa print shop
controlled by mdacted Dr. Lows
J Cella Jr
DuChesne. who enrlaer spent
the best pa rt Of l WO days teSttf)
ing on his role m the anve:.llga
t1on. admitted that material
taken rrom the print shop m Jul).
1975, were examined by Internal
Revenue Service a~enls in has of
fire a month later
Three months later, Dr Cella.
51, and three business associates
were indicted by a rederal grand
jury here on 44 relony counts, m-
cludmg fraud and tax evos1on
Duchesne admitted toduy th11t
his office obtained those docu
ments without a search warrant.
Under close questioning from
Judge Matt Byrne, he also ad·
m itted that the I RS agents were
well aware or that fact
"In olher worW., no one at the
pnnl shop other than your anfor
mant knew you had these docu
ments. And the IRS went along
wllh that. right"" Judge Byrne
asked lhe witness.
"It wasn't said an so many
words But the inference was
clear," DuCbesne said.
Judge Byrne will be asked by
the defense when the current pre·
tnal hearing ends to rule.that all
documents seized from the Unit·
ed Printing CofTlpany plant on
Airport Loop Drive be sup.
pressed.
Lawyers for both sides agree
t.hat af Judge Byrne bars all or
most or the documents Jrom the
trial scheduled to start Tuesday,
the prosecution m ay not have
any case left to try.
DuChesne admitted again to-
day as he dad last week that pnnt
shop employe Donald Albert Ray
was pers uaded lo supply his of·
f1ce with several boxes or docu
menls m return for leniency on
cnminal charges he faced
Ray was held m the Orange ~ounty ·Jail on charges of plan·
rung the murder or his estranged
wife's boyfriend when district at
torney's investigators learned of
his connection with Cella and his
employment al the print shop.
Ray was Inter rewarded for ha~
efforts by bein~ sentenced to six
days m Jail and two years proba·
taon afte r pleading auilty to a re-
duced misdem eanor charge.
DuChcsno testified today that
IRS agents were particularly an
terestecl in what he says were? u
numbe r of ··r1ct1t1ous in
<St>e CELLA, Page A?>
Love to Live
Sex Cal(ed Good/or Women
LONDON t APl British psych1alnst J ane
Gomez says too much sleep can shorten your life but
sex can make a wQman live longer.
Lov emaking offers that much exercise value and
is tranquilizing as well. Mrs. Gomez says in a new
book publis hed here. For men. sex hClS no value for its
exercise. she says.
Sex also stimulates the glands that kee p women
youthfu1. but male glands just don't respond to the
treatment, the book says.
Seven hours sleep a night is enough for any
woman, Mrs. Gomez claims. She says men need 10
minutes more but doesn 't expl ain why.
··Men in their 50s who sleep nine hours a night suf ·
fer double the death rate from stroke. heart attack or
aneurysms <blood clots> than those s leeping seven
hours or less," says the book. entitled "How Nol To
Die Young."
''Those who sleep 10 hours run four limes the
risk,'' the book says.
Fire Destroys Plant
Bminess Owned by Cella Trial Witness
By ARTHUR R. VlNSEL
01 ·~· 0•11• ..... , ~ .. "
A S250,000 pre-dawn explosion
and fire today destroy<.'<l a llunl
1nglon Beach printing plant
owned by a potential witness an
the trial of political fmanc1er Dr
Lows J. Cella. Fare officials said
the blaze was mlcnt1onally set.
The blast and blaze that gutted
Graphic" Communacallons Com
pany, 7271 Murdy Ca r el(•
awakened firemen sleeping an
the Murdy Fire Station only
about 50 yards awn)
Flames were alr<'ndy roanng
through its roof by the lime they
ran lo a rear window to locale lh\'
connagral1on, according to 1-'m ·
Inspector Jomes Mernll.
Investigators were careful lo
note the inrerno m the north Hun-
tangt.on Beach industrial park is
lasted as being of incendiary
origin.
Poltce Depar tment Arson
Detrul Detective Robert Russell
confirmed. however, the blaze
was obviously intentional. but
noted any spec1f1c motive as un-
known.
Aulhonlles Sa) pnnting farm
owner Richard Thompson told
them he is to be a witness 1n the
upcoming trial of Or. C<!IJa, who
as accused v.1th three colleagues
of diverting $2 million from
Cella-controlled hospttals for
pohl1cal purpo"\ec;
Pr1nt1ng of ca mp111gn
hleralurc so far has been men·
taonrd in testimony relating to
the 44-count indictment issuoo by
Fat Man Not Jolly,
Says Stud;y Report
MIAMI BEACH, F1a. <AP> -
The po11ular Image of the jolly
rat man Is wroni. says a report
of the American Academy of
Psychoanalysts. The overwcl11ht
person. it says. Is more likely lo
'be depressed, aniUous and fille!d
with self·loathin,_ The report
also said that people may tum
to food to avoid tel'.
And while psychoanal)'lls can
help obese persons be happier.
In most cases it wUJ not result
in dramatic weiiht reduction,
the report said
The report. the result or :t
1.bree-year study or fat people llDd psychoanalysis. was pre.
aented here at a meetlng of the
Aca8emy of Psychoanal)'lts. •
Dr. Albert Stunkard, pro-
feasdr of psychiatry el Stonlord
Unlnrsit7, said 147 people were
mcladed ln th~ study -84 of
them ob4fe and lbe rest. sUm .
The obese subjects ranged in
age from 30 to so and averaged
197 pounds for women and 247
pounds for m en
Although about 64 percent of
thf> rat patie nts lost s mall
amounts or weight dunng the
two or thr ee years o f
psychoanalysis, Stunkard said,
weight rt!ducllon was "not as
good as the houhot programs
focusing on weight loss" 11uch
as W eig ht Watche rs and
Overealers Anonymous.
He said the study showed
P9ycboanalysls effectively Im·
proved the obese patients' body
Images.
Stunkard's associate. Coll~n
Rand. said 70 percent of the
obese patie nts considend
themselves un3ltr•ctive com-
pared to 18 percent of the i;llna
subjects.
<See 08ESE, Pale A%)
,,
a federal grand jury in Los
Angeles naming Cella and co·
defendants.
So rar. Thompson's name has
not emerged and he is known lo
have not been among former
business associates who testified
before the grand Jury.
Thompson, who wos not im-
medaat<.-ly available for an in-
terview al the fare scene. rt"
portedly told investigators he
had done some work for Cella but
not more recently than about five
years ago.
Another printer once employed
by a Co<;la MC'sa firm eonlrolle<.I
by Cello was a prominent witness
in his Los AnRclea hcartng on
Thursday and te11tlficd to enter·
<See FIRE, PageA21
Coast
Weather
A cooling off period, with
low clouds In tho momln~
and partly cloudy In the ar.
tl'rnoon, is In 11tore for the
Orange Coast Tuesday.
Hlihs will run from 85 on
the seashore lo 7S further
inland
INSIDE TODA V
Somt chfldrtn at an IUhtoLt
IChool act~UJI wU~snd a
1110!/11'111 while walking home
from IV?&Ch. School o/flCIOl•
lfll o/ how I~ incident baa ad·
ueracl11 af/ected thm Lhlf•·
.A7.
J SB
APP.ea! s
By Ray
Denied,
CINCINNATI <AP> -James
Earl Ray'a appeal from hi• plea
ot iuUty lo the ahootina death t>I
clvU rl1ht.s leader Dr Martin .l.A.llh~ Kini Jr. w111 den.led today
by the Stb U.S. Clrcwt Court of
Appeala.
The uQanlmou• deeiJ1ion con·
eluded that the U.S. District
Court for the West em District of
TenneJSee was correct lo relus·
Jn1 Ray'a motion for a new trial.
The diatrict ·Court said Ray
failecl to prove tttal hli defense
attorney1, Arthur Hanes or
Percy Foreman, provided Ray
wilh ineffecta ve assi.atance, Im·
• proper lnvestieatlon or that Ray
was induced lo plead guilty
• March 10, 1969.
The appellate court said Ray's
testimony at his 1u1lty plea hear·
ing made It plain he understood
his actions before receavmg a
99-year sentence.
Ray argued that the attorneys
were more interested an profiting
from books about the case than in
defendm& ham. The Judges said
they disapproved of the fee ar·
rangemenl between Ray and the
lawyers. but said 1l did not prove
he did not receive a good derense.
King was shot to death on a
motel balcony in Memphis,
Tenn .. on April 4, 1968. Ray was
arrested in London, England.
June 8. 1968. He is now m the
state prison at Nashville, Tenn.
While still in England, Ray
hired Hanes. of Birmingham.
Ala., to defend him. Ray smd
that before their first interview.
Hanes made an agreement with
Wilham Bradford Huie to wnte a
book and articles about his case
before the trial. The funds were
to go for legal fees and for Ray's
defense.
Ray said he fired Hanes two
days before his March lO. 1969
trial because he believed Hanes
1 was more concerned about book
royalties than providing a de·
fense.
Ray then ht red· Texas attorney
Percy Foreman, who made a
s1 m1 lar agreement with the
author, and Foreman advised
Ray to plead gutlly.
Mom Finds
Girl's Body
COMPTON CAP> -The body
of a 9·year-old girl "'ho police
said was suffocat~d or strangled
m her home w·as discovered by
her mother. police said Sunday
The v1ct1m was 1dent1f1ed as
Roberta Lewis. daughter of
Roberta Joyce Robertson, 35. a
nurse at Paramount Q.cncral
Hospital
Police said they "'ere seeking
39·year-old Alg1e Robertson for
questioning an the death.
lllil lbopoaou
DOo&ld Albert Ray, allqtd·
ly_..., ~mt'Gla llOIQ the Costa
11-. ~·rqr"the JDteJiW ¥.ma.~a.ntee tbal ... ilPJ cOU.ld be liiCi!Jil.Dalint toCdl .
TodaJ lttll• l"ffq\· fri>m
lhe debria o1 TbOmPIOO'• ftrmJn.
eluded ttaree 10Qt·1mudt•d cbttu that lay on a i.blo in the
adjacent West Oranae Cou.ntt
"teachers' Assoclatioo ault.e .
"I don't even know where tbey
came from." uld D«teetlve Ruasell.
He and Fire Capt, Roi,;er
Hosroer said later this momlosc
that no one bH been questioned as a posalble sus~ but th t
routine questiooin111 under way.
Cause of the exploelve blaze
that oriaanated ln a producUon
and repair area of lhe shop wa o
large quantity of flamma,ble II· quid.
No one was injured in baUhn&
the two-alarm blaze, which re-
quired 26 firefighters 1~ minutes
to control. according to Capt
Hosmer.
The fare immedia tel y
destroyed a trunk telephone ca·
ble serving 900 res1dent1al and 1n·
dustrial customers an the sur·
roundtog a rea, includma one en-
llre housing subd1v1s1on.
Ins pector M arshall s:ild
Thompson's apparently
nourishing business lost $80,000
worth of equipment alone m the
raging flames.
He said it included printing
presses, duplicating machines
and spare parts. The company
occupies three suites in the com-
mercial building and includes a
copy machine repair service In
addition to its own printing
facilities.
Investigators said the tire is
not listed as an arson because
that term applies onJy to residen·
tJaJ homes.
Woman Held
I In Kidnaping
PROSPERITY. S.C CAP > -
The shenff investigating the kid·
naping of a banker's ware who
was found tied to a tree after two
days says he hopes to make more arrests. /
Margie Bowers, 56-)·ear·old
wife of Southern Bank and Trust
Company vice president Jacob
Bowers, was recuperat1J1g in a
Columbia hospital. OHicials said
she was doing well "considering
the ordeal." which began when
she was abducted while shopping
Wednesday.
The FBI and local authont1e5
arrested Rosa Lee Lewallen. <10,
and held her on $100,000 bond on a
charge of violating federal cxtor
lion statutes 1n the abduction
llcr husband. John. was arre!>ted
on a charge of violating parole
from a 1972 perjury con\•1ct1on in
Atlanta
Trustees to Weigh
2nd Campus Plan
A report on the feasibility of
developing a second campus 1n
the Tust1n-lrvme arta will be
presenll'cl tonight to Saddlt>back
Community College District
trustees.
The Citizen!' Selt>ct Advisory
Commatt<'e was appointed in
March to consider ways the l'ol
lege can better serve residents
living an the northern nrea or the
348 ~quure·mlle district
College ofrtc1al~ huve been con-
sidl'rtng the poss1b1lity or open·
tni: o snt('lllt<' fal'11ity which
would eventually grow into a
second campus
The comm1ttel''s report wns
orii1nally due to b<-£1''<'n to
trustees in i\pnl. Thl' deadllnl'
for the report, howe\ler, was ex-
ORANGE COAST
"' DAILY PILOT
Thft(')r_,.(Oi\U t"a1tf ,.,.,,,,.,,.,,.. .. ..,,ft I\(_,.
~l""Ntw\ f"tt \,l\Puf'h~t1y Ow('l1My
C...\t P!iitH1V'l,..("m11M, ~Mt.Of!M'!"t_,.f favbti*"td Ma,.,O•t th•-...•f\ r,14,,_, fM ,,.,,.
Nf(> .... N• "'""-"' lh111tch. H-,M1,.,t"" l•~h t '"'''
tll•ft \t•ll'' h "'"'•· \#ff'trt'-14 • V~ll .. "' 4'~t l~~·~ •I., ~t"'(M•t 4 \•l"Cf'' U•\llO"""'lt•h t*°' I\ IJIWfll-~(I ktlff~'\ -~ ~¥ fhf' l~::~~\tl~t~:l-~::~.~~ \» ¥iot I •1.11
Robert N. Wefd "''"MJrt11t arfld PVOt\lfl!H
JMk R. Curlfy Vk•""•--0.-.. ..._
Thom11s l("vll
llhlOI
Thom11s A,.Murphllll' Ml>Mt•,.Cdo•
O\artes H. Loc;.s Rlctwlrd P. Nall
............. Mio ....... ""'""'
SMdi.tMl<ll Va ltey Off la HI01 u ,_,II-M len()weor,.....,,
Offkft (.-\I alif'\4 , .... ,., "'-"' ,,,...... __ ... , .. ,,.,~ ..... _ ..................... c.---. ... -·
Te~(114)~ Claultled AdverUl6ng .,.2-"11
,.,.,._, V•lltt-OlttCW
Slt~10 ''°""~"'~"' 4tJ.4630
~ ,.,, o..,.. ""'" """'"" .. ~ -"y,, No NW'l lt•I•' t•li\V*I*"'"" ..........
""•"•' er .0•1r11".,,.."" JWo,,_," "'••,o.t '''"oct"c"' •lttlowt \pect•I Mr~lu._.. •f .... -... -· \ltCMWI <••'' .. , .... O•Mf M CMt• Mf'ii* ""-· _,_,,.._ ,, ..... _ \)11 ,,_ :I,~":~ ... "' IN!f\tl"llf . ,,.It,., .......... MW'J\
tended because committee mem·
bers felt the "extreme complex1·
ty" of the issue reqwred addt·
tional time.
ln other action, trustees are
expected to consad,r establishing
the acade1T11c rank of professor
for tenured, full·t1me faculty
members.
Currently, all the college's
teachers are referred to u in
structors. The Academic Senate,
however , has asked that full-time
tl'achers be called orof~ssors after a three-year probationary
penod.
Among other Hems on the
agenda is a recommendation
from the Associated Student
t Body lo change 11tudent health
fee!; from S3 per quarter to SS per
11l'mCster.
The meeting will bettin af7 30
p.m. In Room 212 of the campus Jibrary.
f'ro• Page A I
PILOT ...
that the craft was loslni power
when be downed it ln the rui(lf'd
canyon no reason wu glvtn for
the forced landing.
Nor could officials say today
why the pllot hitchhiked baclt to
the airport before contacting or
ficials to send them ln search or
the two teenagers.
Woman Drives
In '500' Test
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)-JaMt
Guthrie shattered 60 years of his·
tory today and became tbe first
woman to drive a race car at lhe
Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Miss Guthrie had been kept
from her drivina debut by
mechanical tl'ouble two days i.n a
row, but finally made it out for a
practice run.
She is tbe first woman to enter
tbe Indianapolis 500.
•
411
.~ ............ MARGARET MORRIS, 2, HUGS HERO DOG 'RED'
lrfah Setter Rescued Girt From Burning Car
E'ro• Pagf' JI f
CELLA ••.
voices"1ubmltted to two
hospitals under Celia's control:
Mission Community Hospital.
M1Ssi on Viejo a nd Mercy
General Hospital, Satnla Ana.
He said the possibility of tax
fraud was discussed by the
agents after they learned that the
bilhngs an vol ved 10 allegedly
bogus corporations wtuch balled
both hospitals
It 1s alleged that the defendants
bilked both hos pitals of an
estimated $2 million through the
acts or fraud described today by
DuChesne.
Facing trial with Cella are
Theodore Sch1ffm an, 53. of Santa
Ana. George Louis Ollendorl. 44 ,
Laeuna Beach and Stephen
--..Robert Evans. 31, Mission VieJo
All four add1t1onally face tnal
1n 0Tange County Supenor Court
on 127 felony counts contained in
a Grund Jury 1ndictment That
tnal will be scheduled after con-
clusion of the Los Angeles trial
whil'h as expected to last two
months.
Israe l Ba~ked ...
By Kissinger
BALTIMORE <AP)
Secretary of State Henry A. Kiss-
inger has defended the Ford ad-
m 1nlstr at 1on 's Middle East
policy. sa) ing Israel must have
the s~me safeguard:. m its region
enJoyed by other nations around
the world.
"Israel is entitled to lave with
1ts neighbors in the same sense of
!>afety and normalcy that 1s taken
for gruntl'd almost everywhere
else in the "or Id." he told a
gatherine al a Jewish S}nagogue
here Sunday.
"We will not fail to provide for
Israel's security," he sa1d.
Fog Hits North
SAN FRANCISCO IAP) -A
weak frontal system headed Into
the Northwest today, ~cattering
fog and low clouds to mony
Northern California coastal
areas Clearing was forecast for
Tuesday
E'rora Pagf! A l ,
HERO DOG
been awakened by the smoke and
was standing up in the back seat,
swinging her arms in fright.
"As soon as Red hit the ground,
he jumped U'p. put hls paws on the
side or the car and reached has
head through the smoke coming
out the window.•• Morris said.
Red grabbed Margaret's coat
rollar with Iris teeth and drasged
the little girl out the window,
then pushed her away from the
car.
A Bridgeton patrolman sajd
flames from the car were shoot··
ing 20 lo 2S feet into the air by the
time he arrived. The rare. ap·
parently l'aused by faulty wiring,
gutted the mtenor.
Margaret was taken to a
hospital where she "'ru. treated
for manor burns and rcll.~ase<l.
Red suffered signed hair and a
slJghl cut on his nose
"'I gave Red a :..teak when "'e
got home after Lhc fir<', ' Morns
said. "He may get Stl'ak every
mg ht after th as.·'
Church Raps
Caner/or
'Generalities'
LINCOLN. Neb. <AP) -Sen.
Frank Church of Idaho today ac
cused former Georgia Gov Jim
my Carter or Cf1mpe1gning . '"
generalities which may be
calculated in such a way as nol to
offend the people with whompie
candidate may disagree."
Church. running in his first
presidential primary, 1s hoping
to upset frontrunner Carter m the
Nebraska Democratic presiden·
tial primary Tuesday.
President Ford faces Ronald
Reagan in the Republican .
primary m Nebraska and West
Virginia. Democrats are also
voling in both the states and In
CoMecticut. ·
Church said at a Capitol steps
news conference here in refer-
ring to Carter that "such a cam-
paign, it seems to me, fails tn
serv1ng the purpose of inform in~
the people so they will know pre·
cisely where the candidate
stands on the issues."
Tlae Bigger ThetJ Ar~ •••
Bla•ed for 1'1e lee
I:'romoters Hit
Fair Officials
8ySTEVF. MITCHELL 01 .. o.11r"41-twtt
The promoters or Saturday's
rotk concert at the Oran1e Coun-
ty Falrcrounda are blamtng fair
officlals for a disturbance broken
up by Costa Mesa poUce.
Allen Ornslt>in, president or
Penny Lane Productions, of
Orange County, stud a lack or
Ucket takers for the event pro·
mpted the disturbance. which
was broken up at 12:30a.m. by the
28-member Costa Mesa Pohce
tactical unit
"We told those officials that we
were going to have a sellout
cro"d. and they said. 'Yeah,
)'eah. That's what they aJI say,'"
Ornstein said.
The 20-year-old promoter se1d
onJy two ticket tukers were pro-
vided by fair officials instead of ·
the six the promoters said they
asked for.
"We had al least 3,000 to 4,000
people who couldn't get in
~ause they only provided us
with two ticket takers," he said.
"That's what started the whole
thin&. there were too many people
waiting in line.''
Police Captain R. E. Moody
aald there were only three arrests
following the disturbance, includ·
Ing one teenager arrested for
arson and assaulting officers. a
burglary arrest and the arrest of a
young girl for being under the in-
fluence ofalcohol.
"There were no injuries on
County Teen
Shot in Car,
either side Saturday n11hl." sal'
Moody. "It wasn't th• kind o
thin& l 'd want lo buat up a dianc•
over. but It miaht havo bcCll tf w1
hadn't sent over the tactic a unit."
Fairgrounds security pollct
called !or ass1stunce al aboul
10:30 p.m. whe n an overno"
<'rowd began tosslna bottles anc
setting small fires outside th(
New Products Pavilion where lht
concert was be1na held.
·'Several or the fires cnme clost
to buildings," Moody said.
Fairgrounds officials dispute<
Omstein's comments, saying thl
promoters did not ao over Uckel
sales capacity for the S2 event
"'h1ch featured three un.knowr
bands.
Fair official Jeanrue Edward!
said the fair board ts now con
sadering pullin& an end to rod
concerts planned by some pro mote rs.
"We'll sWl approve concert!
for high schools and prlvut1
groups,'' slle said, adding thaa
professional promQters with wet
known rock stars would also bt
considered.
E'ro• Pag~,A I
OBESE •••
"Jn .our sample, 41 percent
avoided looklnc at themselves
in mirrors," snid Miss Rand.
"Some did not even have an,y
mirrors In their homes."
Althougb..,most did not ask for
help In reducin&, "We found
that obese persons thought they
were ugly and showed great
evidence or body image. dis·
paregement," she said.
B dJ W d d She said they described a y oun e th.e mselves as "fat slobs" or
. loolung like a "tub of lard "
A Santa Ana youth was shot · · T r e a t m e n t b }
and senously wounded Sunday psychoanalysis ctrcctavel,v .re
night ns he sat with three friends duced the intensity of this dis-
• In a car parkl'd at a curb in para gement , ··.Miss Rand
Orangl'. added.
Police idenlifted the shooting Fat people turned to food
v1ct1m asAugustinoGodoy, 17. more often to counter i.trl'!>!>
Godoy reportedly was in stable and crisis, and muny used it to
condition in the intensive care avoid sex, according to the re-
u n 1 t a t C h a p m an G en er a I port.
Hospit'al today after undergoing '"Forty-seven percent of the
emergency surgery late Sunday. obese compared to seven per·
According to Orange police. cent of normal·weigttt patient:..
thenctim wasslttmgintherear ate to avoid sexual rel a ·
St>al of an auto parked near Chap-tionships," said Mass Rand.
man Avenue and Hewes Street at She said some patients used
8 .45 pm. when wounded. food to reduce sexual urges or
Police said Godoy's compa· to &et fat and keep the opposite
nions told them an unidentified sex at n distance. One m an
) outh approached the parked mentioned in the sludy said that
car, drew a gun from inside his when he ate he was too full to
jacket and fired an unspecified want sex. and another sat up
number of bullets into Godoy's eating late each night to wait
torso before fl eeing on foot. for h.is wife to fall asleep.
8 Injured Aboard
Crippled Sorcery
The crippled 61·foot sloop
Sorcery. owned by Jacob WOOC: of
Marina del Rey, was undertow In
mid-Pacific today with eight of
her 11-man crew injured.
Sorcery, a well·known CC-61.
was presumably returning from
the South Seas by way of Honolulu
when she lost her mast and had
her rudder carried away by 20·30
·root waves and winds of more
than 35 knots about 1,200 miles
from the mainland.
According to an Associated
Press dispatch, the crippled
vessel was taken in low late Sun·
day by the Coast Guard cutter
Mellon and was bC'ing taken to
Kodiak. Alaska. The eight injured
crewmen were taken aboard the
cutter ln a dlfricull rescue opera·
tion in heavy seas.
The <;oast liuard said the
crewmen were in fair condJtlon.
One had a broken lei:-. two were an
shock and the others had lesser In·
Junes.
All of the crewmen were said to
be from Southern Callrornia but
none was identified.
The Coast Guard said hugeseos
dismasled Sorcery, broke her
rudder and flooded the engine
room. All 11re rafis were carried
away by th<' heavy seas.
The Mellon and a freighter
stood by the !>trtcken yncht for a
full day before the crewmen l'Oulcl
be rescued and the yacht taken an
tow. •
Sorcery Is one or the best known
rncing yacht~ In Southern
Cuhfornin. Sho was the ovcrulJ
winner or the Transpacific Lo,
Angele's to Tahiti race In 1074 unci
sailed In the I lonolulu race In 197Sf
She al110 has competed in severuJ
ruces mMexieanwaters. I
ln 1974 she was also the wlnnc•
of California Yacht Club's C:1 I
\.:up against her sistl'rship, Joli.
CITIZEN'S BAND
'FAST SELLER'
"I sold my citizens band radio
as a result of lhe Daily Pilot ad."
That's the advertising succes:s
llory told by the Laguna lW11
woman who placed th.la ad:
CB Radio. Rulistlt'. m(ll
TRC47, SSB ".car anlrn
na xxx-xxo.
The harder they fall. Members of a UCLA
sculpture class entered this 2S·foot kite in
the UC Irvine Kite F1yin.g Festival Sunday
at Scotchman's Cove. Unfortunately, the
giant crashed on its first attempted flight.
So, it's back to the drawing board.is .
If you have electronic aear
you want to convert lo cash. call
642-5678. We make ll aasy for
you to communicate with buyerft
all along tl\e Orange Coast, In
the Daily Pilot.