HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-06-06 - Orange Coast Pilot...
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MONDAY AFTERNOON1 JUNE 6, 1971
Vk ,. lllO. tt1 J HCTIOllll, U ll'AOal
•
8,000 lam Lottery
For 85· lrftne llomes
• • .• •
l=Halttelllan, Mi~chell Lose Freedom
I . .
Cop Killers
71 '
Court Nixis
I -S11re Death
1 · WASHINGTON CAP> -States
cannot make the death penalty
mandatory for people convicted
of killing police officers. a sharp-
ly divided U.S. Supreme Court
ruled today.
The court, voling S-4, struck
down a Louisiana law requiring
people convicted of killing police
officers to be executed.
"There is a special interest in
aff ording protection to these
public servants who regularly
must risk their lives in order to
guard the Silfety Of other persons
8,000 Show Up
A.t Lottery /or
85 Townhouses
BylULARYKAYE
Ol IM Dally "11•1 Stall
Theturnout at Sunday's lottery
for 85 moderately priced
• townhouses in Woodbridge
Village surprised even Irvine
Company officials -attracting
more than twice as many
hopefuls as the first such lottery
last September.
While about 8 ,000 people
listened carefully as names were
ANTI·SPECULA TION
BILL VIEWED--£dttorl•I, A6
and property," the court's ma.
jority opinion said. "But it is in·
correct to suppose that no
mitigating circumstances can
exist when the victim is a police • officer."
Louisiana and New York were
the only states with laws impos-
ing the death penalty for murder·
ing a police officer. California
sought to Impose the penalty, but
BRIGGS WRONG ON
ISSUE--£dttortal, AS
its capital punishment law was
struck down earlier.
The court noted that it was not ruling today on the question or
whether such mandatory death
sentences may be valid for
prisoners serving life sentences
who murder prison guards.
Presumably, the court will de-
cide that question sometime in
the future.
Today's dedsion spares the life
of Louisiana Death Row inmate
Harry Roberts. convicted in the
Feb. 26, 1974 shooting death of
New Orleans police offlcer Den-
nis 1dclnemey.
Chief Justice Warren E.
Burger and Justices William H.
Rehnquist, Byron R. White and
Harry A. Blackman flJed dis-
sents. They would have upheld
Louisiana's law.
In a series of capital punish·
ment decisions July 2, the high
court appeared to reject on con·
stitutional grounds all man·
datory death penalty statutes.
But the court agr~ to review
Roberts' case, solely qn the quea·
lion of whether such automatic
executions can be ordered for the
murders of Jaw enforcement of·
flee~.
Tht! Louisiana law struck down
today wu aimed at protecUng
(See DEATH. Pas• AZ>
Teachers Go .
OiiStrilie
I -
Fry Babies Feted •
The biggest smiles are on the faces of the
parents, but the kids were the real winne,ts
in the Costa Mesa Fish Fry Baby eontest.
At left is Mrs. Judy Barrett and'nirie-month-
old Brandy Anne, winner in the six. to 13-
month-old category. The. two l~ies live.
with husband Steve in Newport Beach. At
right is Dean Murphy and son Ryan
Patrick, winner in the 13 month to 2-year·
old category. Twenty-two-month-old Ryan
lives in Placentia with Dad and mom,
Robyn Murphy.
Killer Taunts· Police
J11ne 22
Prison
•
Date Set
-WASRINGTON CAP>-H.R.
Haldeman and John N. Mitchell,
the biggest fish in th~ Watergate
prosecutor's net, were ordered to-
day to report to prison no later
th an noon June 22 to begin serving
their sentences for their
Watergate crimes.
The ceremony that effectively
ended their years-long fight to
stay out or prison took only four
minutes. Both have been sen-tenced to serve 21~ to eight-year
prison sentences, imposed Feb.
21, 1975, for their roles in
America's biggest political scan-
dal, the Watergate cover-up.
Leaving the courthouse. the two
were accompanied to their cars
by United States marshals.
"More than four years ago, J
started on a J~al process r
. thought was proper," Haldeman
said. "I knew it was going to be
difficult. I still think it was right. l
am preparednowtoacceptthere-
sults."
Asked whether he had any re-
morse ror the actions that are put-
ting him ib prison, Haldeman
said , "It's been a tough four
years. But during that timel have
greatly appreciated tbe support
and the consideration beinc ex-
pressed toward me by people
throu1hout the country. I deeply
appreciate the love, concern and
understandlngofmyfamily."
Autlwrities C:liiil~nged to Catch Him
Mitchell, surrounded by re-
• porters and cameras, walked to
his car wtt.hout sayina anything.
As be climbed In, he said, ••1
hope nobody gets killed out o(
you along. Fo«war<1 them to the
ioepector for usO-by NCIC," the
l~tersay1.
The NCIC ts the National
Crime Information Center, a
colhputer bank of criminal re.
cords maintained by "the FBI in
Washington, D.C.
Tbe letter was postmarked Enalewooct, N.J., and cowd have
beeA lilalled ~m within • larto
area near tbe Georae
WasblilitCJO Bridae, the paper
said.
The stylized lettering has led
detectives to speculate the killer
is •'someone with trairiiJ\1 in let·
tering, a drattsman, cartoonist or even an architect;• according
to the News.
He wrote to Breslin, 4'Don't
thJnk became you haven't beard from me for a wblle that I went to
sleep. No rather. I am still here.
Like a aPirlt ro&J»lD« the lllgbt.
Thirsty, hWicrJ, seldo.m stOppin•
toreat."
Breslin turoed the letter over
to police, wbO confirmed that it
wu written by the same person
•ho left the potlce a n!M in April
at the tcene ol a double-murder,
the fourth and fifth kiUlnp al·
trlbuted to thakiller.
The earlier mea8,fe was foUnd
betWeen the bOdiea of ts-year.old
V alentlna Suriani aJld btt 19'-
year-old bOyfrlend. Al•leander
<SOtmJ.q; t.,..u>
thJs." • u.s. DlStrict Judae John J.
Sirita indicated last week that he woUld give the two form~r Nixon
admlniatratlon officials until
<SeeOOVEJl-UP, PaceAZ)
s Mond!y.Jurtet. tt11
·~
'Treated Well'
Puffout
Sclll')d.le
Re Jiii rited
TOKYO MA> -!IJllr Udtt~
States has i.td'ormed Soutb Korea
and Japan it plans to withdraw
about .G .. 000 Amec~an tcQqgs
from th Koftla by tt.e ad .i
19Te .. i w te .... ~ ..
'Jbe JaJ)ffn.u BTa.dcastulg
Corp, •• ~ ii~ gOVttP-
mtnt .--.rces for ~ rel'Qet.
whMb tould nQt be c.onfirmed.
Tlte Untttd Sta\es ttws some ( 30.-.-4\fmf pnunnol in ialtth
Korea.
The withdrawal is expected to
take about four or fi ve years,
Carter administration oHicials
have said.
The broadcast said the United
States received assurances from
the Soviet Union and China that
they had no intention or increas-
ing tensions in the a(.ea after the
pullout is completed.
Jlul~ New YorJt 'Iimes ~
ct-.y AUOtcd. Ame~an off .. iab in w,.st\jpgton as sa,ylQI t}My had ""'Yed no foemoJ assuranees on the issue. The newspaper said
U.S. officials claim they have not
discussed the matter with the
Sovict•Union.
Tb~ .:rimes ~aid the ini\ial
timetable for the withdrawal had
been conveyed lo Korean and
J apanese officials by Philip C.
Habib, ulldearetttt.ar.y (I( !'talc
for politieal ltffam, end Gen.
George S. Brown, chairman ?f
the Joint Ghiefs of Staff, on Utt1r
tripU>the-erea ~lmontb.
'lhere was no immediate.com-
ment from officials in South
Kotea oi::Japan.
La&Uno Beaoh Rofule arl'.esti?d
a 19-y_~..old yoiith and ~i~ .100
gr~of marijuana packaitd in
plasllc b~s Sunday after a fool· ~trol officer noticed u oiiai:ette
beirnt guaed among a lrotU> of
people ut North Main Bettilh.
Stephen J. DQugheny. whom
police s1tid was o h·ans~\. was
QQoked fQr all4t1ed R06S~Qll of
macljuau for sale.
Reserve Qffloer Doutt Je>hn:lon
made the a rr.eat aHer ap-
proathinC a jlroup of ,peqple on
the be.ath. J(e rePQr~ed tb•t the
fll'arijuana was found in a Canu>·
in&Jlatk.
But JusUce Mlnlsttr Andreas
vun A&t nld there is no lndlca·
UQn that rele.u.e is near for tbe
other hoetaees aboard the train
near Assen or four others held in
a ulw>oJM&le.
"lt is afrf ully d!fficutt to pass
1 ttnw," said the women's
tatemE!lll ''We ba'49 asked for
re r4Mding maiafal and em·
ftoidery pattem:s b> be sent lo
•tae train. Even Ute ~n have
st.aned tmJtroidfties because of
th nstom ."
"As for the rest, we can do
nothineeJse but.bfn>e th.at.all wUJ
end ~n as JJOSSible."
Botll' women Jlookcd rtelaxcd
and ~~ actenUteir niahl in tae
hospitAJ,•where zrhs. BtGUwer1b
emp~ in tbe ,pe~el ct.
parl!Jlftt. Thay were teleaffd
ftAO'.l' u.et h.o:igitdl 1tfter e.Tarnioa·
\hms• J1y a 1Ph3SI i c tan a nJI o
psychiatrist.
Van Agt said a six-hour media-
tion meeting Saturday between
the militants on the train and two
leaders of the South Moluccan
community made li ttle progress.
and a second meeting has not
been fixed.
"I don't yet.see any reason to
be qutimiatic that tt will ell soon
be ClYer," he said as the 1twin
sieaes weet into their third week.
Justice Ministry spokeswoman
Toos Faber said the terrorists'
demands a r e basically un-
qhat)&_ed. :ihtl.V ha.1te ®truladed
\he release or 21 other South ~loluccans imprisoned for ter-
rorist activity and a plane to.fly
them all out of ~eounb'y.
oow -UP ••
June ?2 to get their alfaiTs in o~
dftr. Haldeman asked throurh his
lawyer to remain free lo at~d
his .da~ghter's graduation
ceremon.,y rrom law school a~d
¥ltlQ~U asked to help. his
lawy~ prepare a l~t·dltch,
~Umtebam:e appeal \o the t:.S.·
S'lP'-~Court. trhey have a chotQe or \.Uming
themselves in ti> a U.S. marshal
at 1.0 a.m. or to voliintat'll.Y ap.
pear attherprisOfl_ga\es by n~.
-Sirica onl.Y plned the men into
the ttuslo~ of tb4! auorne,v
g~ei:al and it is up to•the llu:sllce
:JNma11unent to desiana\c the prison.
llalchmtan:S law.yer, John 11.
,W.ll:ton,:#laitl•he had att~ tor
rhia C?lient to ao to Ute mmunum "cw.ctt.N f actlity at '.Lompoc. =cuur. lllla.to Cat!heaia. ~U'®eU's
law~. ~'llrl'arutements were
nqt,~l~e bu.t that the fonner
altotae.Y •erteral ptObably Will be
l\ent toAUenwQQd . Pa.
,.J. • = Seen!lt_.y air-•
Suspoet Aweitetl,
In Knifi,ug 'fkallt
Fullerton poli ce anes.ta! .a
30-year-old man Sunday eharged
him with the i.tabbing murder of
a 20-year-old secretary whose
nude body wus fQund in her
apartment late Satutday night.
Charged with the murder or
Deborah Liem, 20, of 2623 Yorba
Linda Blvd., Fullerton. was
'
.Mesa Yo .. la
Faces 'Charges
"'CAp Attaek
A Costa Me:sa-youl)\Js slal~to
agpear in tile llatbor .OU.dlcial
Di8trictCouJ'l ~uesda)"tc>fac~ol·
legations that he assaulted a
Newport Beuch policeman and
slole-tneom~·s pn.
Jam~ Kenneth •Carey. 20, c;>f
264 E . Bay Sl., WU In.cl on has
own 1eoo11nizanoe ~ Judge
Calvin Schmidt laK IJiau~d~y
af\er bis initial a~<?e m
municip&I court.
Carey wu arr•ttd l.Mt Wfdl..
nesday oo a wnrratlt tnaf.c~~
$751000 bail. Poli.cte say th~ inci-
dent took plllcze May 15 IP the
Newport H~ts He-a WMn or.
h cer Bob Parker ~lopped
Corey's.car.
Car.ey rema ine.d at larJJe
roUo.wtng the incid.nt until la,,t
week when he surrendered to
police.
6-s De• -·•r .. l~rri•
SAN lf\RANCH:roO CAP>--il>r.
IJobn\C. ltenttersor(. ptesitlent or
the lrwin Memottol 1Blood iBank,
has wfltten 1Go.v. Edmund C.
1Bvo.wn Jr. <lermmdinl ttu! n·
movol of Richard ll. ~otm.
dtnalor of the Depanment. ~f
Co'm'umer ~ffatt"8, ahnq1ng
"8lOSS mbconduct."
WAlfrang Wa1neKoaurak, a>.
"Kocourak lives in un apurt-
menl within the same Yorba Lin-
da Boulevard apartment com-
plex where Mj ss Liem lived, .
police said.
He was arrested Sunday after-
noon as police began talking with
t h e vi ctim 's frie nds and
neieh.bors in an attempt to puzc:e
togetfler the last hotm1 of the
youn:gwoman.'sUtc.
Pi>licte bdie'(e her deeth.came
in the early eveniq,g. hcwPs &atur-
day •when~he ·reniwd mult.Jple
stab wounds in her body ap-
parently after stepping out or the
i;hawer. .
But her body was not ths·
covered untilaCtcr 10 p. m.
That is whtn,a friend, worried
when'his tel~e calls weren't
answered, went to the one-
bedroom apartment, found \he
door unlocked and, after enter-
ing, discovered.&lbs'Lie1!1 's ~
on thebedroomfloot,.pohc~11.aid.
Th~ r~ported lthett WU no
evidem:e th.at ·b young woman
nad betm ~exuaJly mdlested by
h.er it~ • ..Pollce ulso ruMd out
robbery PQSBiblemotive.
~-,.~ ......
r. Be ,.,..,,,,,
W MUllNG'IQN h\..P> -l\n·
drew ·YoW\g's 1cttu1nttleri2ation
of foLmler Presitlents Nixon end
Ford ~ ra.cUlts '1¥>inls 4P •the
fact thLll !he is .a diploma~ic i~;
oom-pe.tent whn-41ho11ld be f1ted.
BeP.ublinan 't11alionill Ohairm.an
Bill•Brooksaidltodl\Y.
Br.oak aald in B '5t.a\ement that
Young, the onetime blaok tllvil
rignts aatiiV'ist ~ ia am-
bassador to ,lhJ! Uniteii Na\lons,
hm "generally smt'°1"med in a
manner thot ahn08t daU.y
highlights his ineptitude. His
1 'behavior as a diplomut is one of
the .sorriest in the hiittor_y or our
nation.
· 'Tbe veey least thlll President
Caner can do is demand an
apology Crom YQun.g," Brock
s.ald. "To do ottterWise, the.Presi-
dent stands m silent agreement
with him.
The out~n Youna. in a
pu bitt£h.ed in~ r v •ew. a Is o
deoll•J!d:that tt'S"time:to "let up"
on criticism of the Soviet govern-
ment's human tights poli cies.
GEaJUieretoey .. AJ>.>.
HeHyBecb
J l.ftfhia,. ·Mom
LOTIERY. •
'1he difr.t'ence between the
t\'rtll'6tta;y.and Sunday's .draw-
1inJ 'W8S that all of the winners.
11\.atl tto •be able to qualify for
f~edellll fHousing and l!rban
Development CHUD> 235 fmanc-
1ing, whidl.means that only ma r-
1ried cout.s. single heads of
housei'lolds. end people over 62 or
handic4lpped qualified.
Thal stipulation was added to
try and Jceep out speculators who
could bU)1lhe houses and then _re-
sell them.quickly atgre~t prof.its.
Under the HUD fina ncing
rules, homebuyers must a~tually
occupy the homes to qualify for
the loans, although there is no set
time on how long that occupancy
mua11lasl
While aboqt half of the
rmotlerate-imom.e Im~ bQJel'S
llast September were smt;le peo-
stle, none wer e allowed m Sun-
d ay's lottery.
However, the nelCt group of
moderate-income homes, in the
Heritage Park East developm~nl
now t?eing built by !Jle Irv.me
Company's mult1·fam1ly
Division on Walnut Avenue near
Jeffrey Roal!, will be dlff ere111.
Those units pr.ob ably •Ill . be
priced in the low $40,000 pnce
range and will be offered for CO!!·
ventional finanoblg for people in
the moderate i.ru!.ome reqse.
That means that ajt:Mfle people
with limitea iDC'Omes wnt be
eligible for those houses.
Aocording•to Irvine a,mJ>8.l)y
officials. the-82 houses went to a
wide range of families including
several Vietnamese famflies.
blacks. ~ientsls and •Chicanos.
besides Anglos.
'People beean streamin:g into
the 'Irvine 10ompeny parking lot
In 'Newport•Oent.er as eal'ly as 8
a.m . and traffic was ba«'ked up
unUl 9:80 arm., when the fi1"15t
names were caJled.
I t took obout+thNe hoan; to call
off 310inames, .w.ttb .od1">:.'the first
85 pecrple eomvlet>mg the
ptrpe11wort. 'lrtre other '11.ames
were put In reeerwe in case •ome
or the fiftlt>winnerg {all t&quallly.
KILLER •••
Esau. Both had been ahot lo ~
ath in a ,oar, a block .from Miss
fiuniani!ll ..Bl'Dnlt home u.d • few
bJookl Crom the home of 11-fear-
oldlDonnaLAIDi•.
Mias.Lau.Di.a was ckillecl'la&t.Ju-
ly. the first of ~ auspeded
killer'6 victims. Lille '1be other
·fo111;, ab.e was ahot ~lb .a A4·
cali.berpistol.
•In thiB l.at.e&t. Je1ter. ..lion of
Sam:· a~s he lbou Jorw.ard to
meeting Breslin "face tto. face
aome:d~ or ,perh,qpa J will be
blown awa.v b.Y JICUlll wJlh am.ok-
tinc JIBs.''
Beaches \
.f ~
• ct i t
Crowds '
Sadtlebadt
Wife Dies
Marilyn Lombardi, wifeofSad-
dlebaak .COUeae Sttperuntenttant.
Robert'Lombardl, died "Saturday
after suffering a longJllness. She
was4l.
Ro11aey Wil11belfeoitedlfor Mrs.
'
Lomba:ftli tonight at 7;IO in St.
Did acus Catholic C hurch.
Sylmar. A funeral .mus will be
all.id at 10 o;fl't-. Tu,,..es ... d1IO''-~iitlnr-ttl@---':f
church followed by ]Dtvate in-'
ternment.
Funeral arrangements are be-
in g handJe..d b,y C.rJ.p.J>en
~1ortuaey. 2900 BondlUlu St.. La
Crescent a.
In addition to her lwsbana,
'Mrs. LoD1.b.aJodi is SW"Nived ·~ two daughters, Kathle.en 2. JWl
-Valerie, a 19·)1.0M·Old s1u®nt at
the college; her mother. l\bs.
John Kirby; her lather, Llqyd
Bu¥ns: sl6ters, Carolyn lhmns
and J.ackie Carpent.er .. •nd
Jlrandmot.her .J.nga Burns.
Death Panel
Aide Qom
LANCASTER. Pa. <AP>-
Alvin JI. Lewis Jr. said S..y
that he hu resigned as m.-ftng
chief counsel or the Ho.use com-
mlU.ee imre&ticauni tbe •· seeinefion& df John 'F. Kennedy
and the Rev. Martin Luther King
Jr. .
"l have '°esipel And ha.,. no
intention of stay~ on .as teia-
por.a...-counsel to the ~
Select Committee QD Aaaa ... N•
ti.ooa, '' l.ewis u.14.
lAwis, who lives .in aav.tav
Palmyra. aerved •• aa Ja-vestlgati ve aide ·l.or .l«MIDl
months .before £Mum~ ihe ln·
leX.i m .. counsel·~ Jo\> •b.en
'Sprasue quit In a dl®ute With
then·commiUee cUiNlum Hemy
Gonules. CD.;Teus).
~ar'A~~
Uza S'l'Jlrillea Crowd : .
I
1 VOL. 70, NO. 157, 3 SECTIONS, 2~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY., CALIFORNIA
Automatic e~p-er.·
.Death Nixed by Coun:
0.llY f'li.t .... I. tty LH f'rtM
Pla9 Time at Harper
Harper Elementary School sixth graders
(from left) Mike Parks, Janell Rains and
Randy Redmon entertained students at
the Costa Mesa school this morning with
Universal Studio play, "Th~ Hairy Tale of
Leslie Long Ears" or, ''Gone With the
Wolf." The 47 -minute play is accompanied
by a rear projected screen so the students
can act along with animated cartoon
characters on a screen.
Battl~-Ends
• I
Prison Date Set for Hakhman, Mitchell
WASmNGTON <AP>-H.R. ~ Haldeman and John N. Mitchell, I the biggest fish In the Watergate
1 pros~utor's net, were ordered to-
! day to report to prison no later
I than noon June22 to begin serving
their sentences for their
, Watergatecrimes.
• The ceremony that effectively I ended their years-long fight to
stay oul or prison took only four
! minutes. Both have been sen-
1 tenced to serve 21 2 to eieht-year
prison sentences, imposed Feb.
21, 197S, for their roles in
America's biggest political scan-
dal. the Watergate cover-up.
Leaving the courthouse, the twc;>
.were accompanied to their cars
by United Stales marshals.
"More than four years ago, I
started on a legal process I
thought was proper," Haldeman
said. "I knew it was aoing to be
dlfCtcult. l still think It was rhtht. I
am prepared now to accept the re-
sults."
Aaked whether he had any re-
morse for the actions that are put-
tine him in prison, Haldeman
said , "It's been a tough four
years. But during that time I have
greatly appreciated the support
and the consideration belne ex·
pressed toward me by people •
.
Afternoon sunsblne wa•
promised for today and
Tuesday, following low.
clouds both mornin1s.
High in the upper 60s al
beach .
I NSIDE TODAY
throughout the country. l deeply
appreciate the love, concern and
understandingofmyfamlly."
Mitchell, surrounded by re·
porters and cameras, walked to
his car without saying anything.
As he climbed ln, he said, "I .
hope nobody gets killed out of
this," referring to the crush of
people around him at the
courthouse.
U.S. District Judge John J.
Sirlca indicated last week that he
would give the two former Nixon
administration oCficials until
June 22 to get their affairs in or-
Shot Kills Teen
LOS ANGELES <A P>-Gary
Araujo, 18, of Bost.on, visiting his
mother in southwest Los
Angeles, was killed when a gun
he was hand.Jing discharged ac-
cidentally.
der. Haldeman asked through bis
lawyer to remain free to aUend
his daughter's graduation
ceremony from law school and
Mitchell asked to help his
lawyers prepare a last-ditch,
slim-chance appeal to the U.S.·
Supreme Court.
They have a choice of turning
themselves In to a U.S. marshal
at 10 a.m. or to voluntarily ap-
pear at the prison gates by noon.
Sirica only placed the men into
the custody or the attorney
general and it Is up lo the Justice
Department to designate the
prison.
Haldeman's lawyer. John J.
Wilson, said he had arranged for
his client to go to the minimum sec~rity facility at Lompoc,
Cahf. Philo Cacheri.s, Mitchell's
lawyer, said arrangements were
not complete but that the former
attorney general probably will be
sent toAllenwood, Pa.
Top U.S.
Justices
Split 5-4
WASHINGTON (AP) -States
cannot make the death penalty
mandatory for people convicted
of killing police omcers, a sharp-
ly divided U.S. Supreme Court
ruled t.oday. The court, voting S_., struck
down a Louisiana law requiring
people convicted or killing police
officers to be executed.
"There ls a special interest In
affording protection to these
public servants who regularly
must risk their lives In order to
guard the safely of other persons
BRIGGS WRONG ON
CALIF. ISSUE-Edltorlal, Ae
and a>roperty," the court's ma-
jority opinion aaJd. "But It is ln·
correct to suppose that no
miligaUng circumstances can
exist when the·victim is a police
omcer.''
Louisiana and New York were
the only stales with laws impos-
ing the death penalty for murder-
ing a police officer. California
sought to Impose the penalty, but
its capital punishment law was
struck down earlier.
The court noted that it was not
rullng today on the question oC
whether 11,1cb manda~ry death
sentences may be valid tor
prisoners serving life sentences
who murder prison guards.
Presumably, the court will de-
cide that quesUon sometime in
the future.
Today's deci$ion spares the Ute
oC Louisiana Death Row inmate
Harry Roberts, convicted in the
Feb. 26. 1974 shooting death of
New Orie~ police otricer De.n-
nisMclnerney.
Chief JuJtice Warren E .
Burger and Justices William H.
Rehnquist, Byron R. White and
Harry A. Blackmon tiled dis·
sents. They would have 'U)beld
Louisiana'slaw.
The Louis~ana law struck down
today was aimed .at protecting
policemen, firemen, sherll(a and
their deputies, eame wardens,
federal law enforcement aeents,
jail and prison euards, ana
judges, district attorneys and
other court officers.
In a series of capital punish·
ment decisions July 2, the hJgb
court appeared to reject on con-
stitution al grounds all man-
datory death penalty statutes.
But the court agreed to review
Roberta' case, solely on the ques-
tion or whether such automatic
executions can be ordered for the
murders of law enforcement of-
ficers.
...............
WEATHER SATELLITE CAPTURES 'GLOOM' ON FILM
Gloomy Eddy
Gray Guck Stairu Skies
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
, , Look! , , .I,-04 IN o.lly f'llel Stall
"Up In the sky .. .is it a bird ... Is it a plane ... ? "
Heck no, du°'mies, at this lime or the year it's the June
gloom, nemesis of beachgoers who tum up too early at
Orange Coast strands between mid-May to about the end of
July, eq>eeting sun tans.
-THE GM Y AEUAL guck aprinkles all over your
brand-oew ear, too, or tbt older one you just paid $3.SO to
have washed. -And it fouls up the decklnc you stained Saturday, hop-
ing jt would be dry for a Sunday afternoon barbecue for
friends and relatives.
-AND JUST WHEN you get home from work lo go put-
ter ln the garden, it scoots in from the Southwest like a jug-
gernaut out. of last November, wetting down your sum-
mertimemood.
·-And-who cares?
Not the weathermen.
''We don't concern ourselves as much with the condition ~the factors that cause that condition!" declares KABC
Channel 7 weatherman Dr. George Fischbeck.
"We've got a Catalina Eddy out there that should be
getting stronger, ".he predicted.
A CATALINA EDDY is a bl'ftze out of the coastal
southwest that brings moisture-laden air from an offshore
high pressure system into and over the California coastline.
"The clouds are caused by the moisture in the at-mosp)lere over-the sea, naturally," says a spokesman for
the U.S. Weather, Bureau.
He said the June Gloom is particularly created by a
high pressure weather system occurring at this Ume of the
year over the southwestern U.S. states and central Mexico.
r And in summertime, there's a marine air inversion
layer," he continued .
THE Ala INVE~ON layer offshore keeps the eray
stuff close to the ground, where ab weather-watchers can
readily see It.
Anyway, lt'a perhaps a bfessine lJi disguise for those
wbo may not have a calendar bandy.
Yoocantellwbenit'sJ"unealonatheOranieCOast.
Mission Viejo ·Man
Given EObo~ Post
and an lldvbor to tht U.S. Navy phyalcal fibiea proaram.
Hi.I civic activities include
participation ID the Marine Corps
Leape, Veterans of P'orelp
Wara, Uliiversity of Southern
Caliloriilil Democratic Club &ad
~alilOrilla Jaycees •
. )
First-haild
At Mesa Traffic? •1 l'l'EVE MrrCR&U. ..... ...., ........
J doa't bow why soinlCIDI dlda't tblnk \0 invite Adrtana
Olantureo do'tl'D to ti. 1rand manbal •t th1I ytar'1 J1ab Fry parade-.. ca.ta Maa.
NM' THAT i.t1'11loa woatb.ermao Dr. Oeor1•. .-..H-~WlllD1SNaLH9w
\ But wllal bttlet way_ to ~ate tbe Mid far the·
New part Freeway ....... U.. to lnrite the State Depart·
m cirr~ (Cal'l'nm)directordownforal • •ouvamewoee.
Wlt.b • uw.~ Dat1ftl', the == ~ to the -~ ot ~ advocatAll wbo •ant
to aee a stretch ol freeway ~ the eo.ta Mela Ditch CID DOrtb Newport
Boulward.
U you were amon1 tbe at.tmated
S,000 parade watchers in C4J8t.a Men
Saturday, you probably participated ln
tbe pTe-parade of can l1ni.q Harbor
from the San Dleeo Freeway to Newport
Boulevard.
t.T. JOHN Reean, Colta Mesa's traffic bureau com-
mandercalled ittbeworld'slar1estparting lot .•
"As if traffic isn't bad enough without the parade:• he
snorted.
And If you were in one of the 7 ,000 cars police chased off
of Harbor and onto Fair Drive at about parade time Satur·.
day, you probably remember the traffic lineup on Newport
Boulevard. }{eadllght to taillight all the way down to the beach.
This led to hot tempers.
IT ALSO meant about $3,000 in overtime for police of-
ficers on duty.
But it could all be worth it next year if Adriana is grand
marshaJ.
What you could do is place Miss Gianturco in a fancy
CadUJac, preferably a hardtop with a faulty air conditioning system.
Stick a couple of city officials on either side of her. Roll
up the windows.
HAVE THE driver get in line at about the San Diego
freeway and sta rt driving down Harbor Boulevard toward
the beginning of the parade route. I
Thls should take about two hours.
When the parade r eaches 19th Street, have the driver
mumble something about missing his turn, and continue
clown Harbor to Newport. By the time the entourage swings
onto that mess, it'll be too late to do anything but follow the curs to the beach.
Judging traffic last Saturday, that should put Miss
G1anturco at the Newport Pier al about 3 p.m .-just in time
to turn around and catch all the beach traffic heading back
through Costa Mesa to points north.
This might all seem a bit cruel.
BUT TO SHOW there aren't any hard feelings, the city
rathers could offer her a free fish dinner.
Mes a Youth Facing
Charge of A ssault
A Costa Mesa youth ls slated to
appear in the Harbor Judicial
District Court Tuesday to face al·
legations that he assaulted a
Nixon '1,ike
Louis XVI'
NEW YORK (AP) -Former
Watergate prosecutor Archibald
Cox has compared Richard M.
Nixon to King Louis XIV of
France and James I of England.
Cox, honored by the NAACP
here, said the kings contended
they were not bound to the same
laws as their subjects, much as
the former president did in re·
cent televised interviews.
Newport Beach policem an and
stole the officer's gun.
James Kenneth Carey, 20, of
264 E. Bay St., was freed on his
own recognizance by Judge
Calvin Schmidt last Thursday
after his initial appearance in
municipal court.
Carey was arrested last Wed·
nesday on a warrant that carried
$75,000 bail. Police say the inci-
dent took place May 15 in the
Newport Heights area when Of.
ficer Bob Parker stopped Carey's car.
Carey remained at large
following the incident until last
week when he surrendered to
police.
GRONJNOEN, The
.Netherland:$ (AP) -Two preg-·
nant women Teleased by South
Molucacan tenorlat.I alter 13
da)'t captlvtty said today that the
. otbtr ~ boltac• aboard a train
1n aGl1.bem Holland are lo IOOd· condlt.lon despite ••very sreat
• p1yeholotlca1 pffilure."
"Jn atenfral, the hostases are !Mint treated correctly by the·
Moluccan1," •aid Annye
Brouwer-Korf, 31, ln a statemem
~oad to reporten before 1he and •
15-yeal'-Old Nelleke Ellenbroet-
Prlnaen left the Oronlnseo
Unl verslty Cllolo wltb their
husbanda.
. .. . .. -----· _. ...
o.lty 111'11.e ....... -. llklleN KMlllw
Mra. Ellenbroek, who ls five.
months pre1naot, and Mrs.
Brouwer, who ls two months pr~
gnant, were freed SUnday.
BELLFLOWER MAN SITS ATOP COSTA MESA HOTEL AND THREATENS TO JUMP
But Ex99lrtfrtend •nd HI• Slater Telk9d Him Out of It Sundey Afternoon
But Justice Minister Andreas
van Aet said there ls no indica-
tion that release is near for the
other boltqes aboard the train
near Assm or four others held in
a schoolhouse.
"It is awfully difficult to pass
the time," said the women's
statement. "We have asked for
more reading material and em-
broidery patterns to be, sent to .
the train. Even the men have
started embroideries because of
the boredom."
3 at San Quentin
Get T er•ns Reduced
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Three
inmates on San Quentin's Death
Row will have their death sen-
·tences reduced to life with
possibility of parole by a U.S.
Supreme Court ruling today, a
state official said.
The court held states cannot
make the death penalty man-
datory for people convicted of
killing police officers.
Suspect Arrested
Jn Knifing Death
•
William Jam es, a deputy state
attorney general, identified the
three affected by the ruling as
Harrill Hill, convicted of killing a
Highway Patrol officer in
Merced County; Steven Michael
Miller, convicted of killing a
police officer in San Bernardino
County; and Fred Harvey, con-
victed of killing a police officer in
Los Angeles County.
Fullerton police arrested a
30-year-old man Sunday charged
him with the stabbing murder or
a 20-year-old secretary whose
nude body was found in her
apartment late Saturday night.
Charged with the murder of
Deborah Liem, 20, or 2623 Yorba
Linda Blvd., Fullerton, was
Wolfgang Wayne Kocourak, JO. Koc~ralc lives in an apart-
ment within the same Yorba Lin·
da Boulevard apartment com-
plex where Miss Liem lived,
police said.
He was arrested Sunday after-
noon as police began talking with
the victim 's friends and
neighbors in an attempt to piece
together the last hours of the
young woman's life.
. Police believe her death can:~
in the early evening hours Satur-
Teachers Go
On Strike
SAN DIEGO (AP )-
Teachers went on strike to-
day over issues of pay,
class size and binding
arbitration but district of·
ficials said initially that all
schools would remain
open.
Contract talks broke
down Sunday when San
Dieeo Teacher.s Associa·
tlon negotiators com-
plained that district
representatives refused to
discuss the issue of class
size.
Pickets went up at
several schools, including
more than 80 at Patrick
Henry School.
day when she received multiple
stab wounds in ber body ap-
parently after stepping out of the
shower.
But her body was not dis·
covered unW aftei:: 10 p.m.
That is when a friend, worried
when bis telephone calls weren't
answered, went to the one -
bedl'oom apartment, found the
door unlocke<J and, alter enter-
ing, discovered Mlss Liem's body
on the bedroom floor, police said.
They repdrt.ed there was no
evidence that the young woman
had been sexually molested by
her slayer. Police also ruled out
robbery as a possible moti ve
Mesa Man
Suffers R e al
H ard T imes
A Costa: Mesa man. who
befriended two s tra n gers a
month ago a t a bar called Hard
Times, was suffering a little of
that himself this weekend after
los ing more than $2,000 in
personal belongings taken from
his apartment.
Mark Scott Loi, 21, of 177 E.
22nd St., told Costa Mesa police
Sunday he put the two Michigan
men up for about a month in his
apartment after meeting them in
the bar.
When he and his regular room·
mate returned from a rock con-
cert in Los Angeles this weekend,
they walked into an empty living
room.
Their two lodgers had alleged·
ly taken two stereo s peakers
worth $100, various skin diving
equipment, a gold watc h, 20 re-
cord aJbums, sleeping bags, a
camera and about $175 in cash.
James said the state court of
a ppeal in each area will have the
technical task of reducing the
men's sentences. All three were·
s ent to San Quentin last year
following their coovicUons. ·
Smtill Blaze
At Hoag Eyed
By .Pro"bers
Newport Beach fire in·
ve s tigators are probing the
source of a small fire that broke
out Sunday in a closet of the lob-
by of Hoag Memorial Hospital.
The damage estimate from the
11 a.m. fire was set at $500, but
fire and hospital officials said the
fire was especially smokey, fill·
ing the lobby and driving visitors
out into the parking lot.
The blaie. was discovered in a
storage closet in what used to be
a ground floor nursing station in
an area now occupied by ad-
ministrative offices.
Hopsital spokesman Sharon
Sinclair said the closet contained
only obsolete equipment.
Firemen have tentatively list·
ed the source of the fire as being
of suspicious origin pending
further investigation. .
Miss Sinclair said the hospitaJ
staff Is trying to locate the visitor
who first spotted the blaze and
wOt'ked with a security guard to
douse the flames using fire ext· inguishers.
The man apparently was over-
come by smoke and the guard
suggested be wait outside, but
Miss Sinclair said the visitor
could not be found after the fire
was out and the smoke cleared.
"We would certainly like to
thank him in person," she s aid.
Mesa H otel
'Percher'
Rescued l
t
A Bellflower man, apparentq
despondent over a deteriora~
relationship with a eirlfriend, sat
atop the roof of the 17·story ~ Coast Plaza Hotel Sunday aft
noon for two hours before be w
talked down by bis sister, the~· girlfriend and police.
Thomas Andrew Kelley, 29,
straddled the south wall of the
hotel and told officers Tor6
Owens and Ed Zuorslti hp
planned to kill himself.
Costa Mesa fire department of.
ficials dispatched a truck com.-·
pany, engine company and squa~
car to the hotel, but bad to st~
by helplessly u police talked " the man.
Battalion Chief Gary ·Golsoo ·
s aid Kelley wu too high for etl
feclive rescue inetbods. "W~
could. not have reached him ·at
ihat height," Golson said.
I
The drama, which began aC
4:20 p.m .. drew a crowd of
curious onlookers. 1
Kelley was talked down from
his perch shortly before 7 p.m.?
according to poJ ice.
TONIGHT
COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL
Regular meeting , City Hall,
6:30p.m.
TUESDAY, JUNE 7
SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB -
Comm\lnity l{ecreation Center.
Tues., Wed., Thurs., 12·3 p.m.
COSTA MESA PLANNING.
COMMISSION -Study session.
sign ordinance, 8:30 p.m.
"BEHIND THE
HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T.
Brown lecturer, OCC Forum,
7:30p.m.
'' EQUUS " South Coast'
Repertory Theater, Tuesday.
Sunday through JWle 11. 8 p.m.
"JESUS CHRIST
SUPERSTAR" -OCC
Auditorium, June 7·11, 8 p.m.
8,000 Take ChOnees on 85 Townhouses
8ylDLARYKAYE
Ott ... D•lly ,llolStall
The turnout at Sunday's lottery
for 85 moderatel y priced
townhouses in Woodbridge
Villase surprised even Irvine
Company officials -attracting
more than twice a s many
hopefuls as the first such lottery
las t September.
OftANQECOAS'T c
DAILY PILOT
"-"-Pro .... m•fld -·-
'41011 c-Vco..._n,_Gt __ __
,._ ... -,,, .. ..
~.,._..,. M·-·--0.t1•"M'--' 11-P,!le" 4U h tet"t ..,.,,. ...... 0!111)1\
While about 8,000 people
listened carefully as names were
pulled from a drum, the 85
hous es went to youn1 couples,
full-size familie1 and older
widows and widowers from all
over Orange County and Los
Angeles.
The first house went to Helen
Kirk, a 69-year-old Huntington
Beach widow, who jokingly pre·
dieted to her son last week that
she would be the first name
called Sunday.
"I was just kidding," Mn.
Kirk remarked later, after she
picked a three-bedroom unlt
priced at $3C.800.
Two and three-bedroom unlts
were available for the winners.
priced at either $U,.COO or s:M.800.
All of the units are located within
lrvtne's newest vlllaa•. located
near the corner ol Culver and
Irvine Center Drive.
Mn. Kirk 1aid she baa been Uv-
inl ln a two-bedroom -s>artment with ber a daughter for the past
18 months, after ruldlna in a
Hunt.inlton Park home f~ 30 years .
.81 I.he cnrt.off time Saturday·
eveoina, C.'35 penona bad •toed ·
up for a chance to bay one ol the
lower•CCJlt homa. That's allpUy'
more ·tb•n double tbOla. who
slaned up last S.pletnbtt. when
the Hut U Woodbrld1e modtrate-~t homes wereeOld.
· Tlie dllf utftc bilween the
l1.r1t kittery and Sunday'• draw·
•lnl Wll &hal all of the "1ailen
na'd to be able to qualify for
Federal Housing and Urban
Development <HUD) 235 financ-
ine, which means that only mar-·
ried couples, a1ngle heads of
households and people over 62 Qr
handicapped qualified.
That stipulation was added to
try and keep out speculators who
ANTl·SPECULATION
BILL VIEWED-Edltort•I, Al · .
could buy the houaes and then ~
sell them q\alck.ly at ereat profita.
Under tbe HU.D financinf
rulu, bomebuyen inuat actuaU)'
occupy tbe b'Omu to qualify f«
··the loans, altho\ith there ta no aet ume on bow lone that occupancy
mustlaaL .
While about half of tbe moderate-1.Dcome boule buYers
last September were 1IQ1le peo;
'ple, ~ were aUow..t in Sun·
day!alottaey. ·
However, the next sroup ol
mOderate-lncome homes. in the
Hentqe Park Eut developmaat
now bllDf bUilt by tbe lr\rtM
Comltan.y'a mulU·famUy
l>lvt1lm on Wilnut Avenue neat
Jeffrey ROid, wtU be dlffe~.
ThOM an.It. Probab17 Will be
priced ID th~ low $&0,000 price
ran1e and Will be ottered for con-
vcmtional fl.nancina for peQple in
the moderate income ranae.
That means thet siqle people.
wllti lJmited lncome1 wlll be
ell it bl• for t.hoie bOu ....
AcCordina tO lmne C<>mpany
officlall, the a hOUiu went to a
.wide ~e.~ fapllU~a lnchJ4!1ll •
(
several Vietna mes e families.
blacks, Orientals and Chicanos,
besides Anglos.
People began streaming into
the Irvine ComplJnY parking lot·
an Newport Center as early as 8
a .m . and traffic was backed up
until 9::.> a.m., when the first
names were called.
It took about three hours to call
off 300 names. with only the first
85 people completing the
paperwork. The other names
were put in reserve in case some
of the fl.rstwinnera fail to qualify.
WREN YO HAVE the June
Blahs, it means that early Into
th~ weekmd, inJand weather ts
turni.nc hot and sticky.
Thus the inlanders desert in
droves and bead for our Orange
Coast beaches. Once here, they
discover themselves surrounded by early day fogs and cblll.
This is what caused the two-
way beach traffic early Saturday
on the Peninsula. Everybody was
crossing the Balboa Boulevard
carryl.ne beach blankets, towels,
beach cbalrs. umbrellas and
small. sUcky children.
Some groups were crossing
with all this gear to get lo the
beaches. But others, carrying the
same kind of equipment, were
crossing the street the other
direction to get back to their
cars,
These were the ones who had
already tested the beach and
found the mists of the morning
too much for them.
AMID ALL THIS, we had smog
fears for the weekend. It didn't
really strike in the proportions
feared ln some quarters. Somg
alerts are called when oxldent
levels <gluck> reach ,20 parts per
million, whatever the devil that
means.
Highest levels rnached on Fri·
day in our region were .12 parts,
And this happened to happen in
Costa Mesa, where the popula·
tlon was poised to celebrate the
famous Fish Fry.
This sort of makes you wonder.
I can remember when Costa
Mesa's proud community slogan
was~. ••eoo1. Clear Costa Mesa
When sulfur smog rears were
raised last Friday, It caused the
anti-smog people to order the
electric company to cut back use
of suUur-tyf>e fuels, This caused
one official to warn that If power
companies are arbitrarily or-
dered to reduce emissions, we
could end up suffering ·•rolling
blackouts."
We did not have any rolling
blackouts. I do not know if I
would recognize a rolling
blackout if I saw one rolling down
my street.
You have to wonder if a rolling
blackout would make any noise
as It rolls along.
IT CAN BE CONCLUDED.
however. if we do get some sum-
mer power shortages. we may all
find out what one 1s and what it
looks like.
And speaking of shortages, we
still had the water shortage with
us over the weekend. But you
wouldn't know It seeing all the
water running in our street!>
along this coasUlne.
It all seemed to be coming
from gov<.'rnment 1nstallat1ons
like parks and median strips,
Nice going, governmenl
Readied
WASRJNGTON <AP> -The
United 6t tea ii bout to beJln
produeuoo "of • nuclear warhead
that can kill people without
dutroyt111 property. the
Waahlnatoo P01Uay1,
The Post aald today Lbat tbe ••rhftd for t.h• Lance mftsUo will be 'ithe nnt pracUc&l use of ti•• IO·called neutron bomb
theory wldcb 1ov1rnment Iden·
Ult.. have bMrt worklns on for maa11ean."
THE New&PAPE&, quotina an unnamed nuclear weapons ex-
pert, Nid the new warhead "cuts
down on blast and beat and thus
total destruction, leavioe build·
ln11 and tanks stand.ina. But the
rreat quantWes of neutrons Jt re.-
leases kill people.'·
A president must personally
give approval before production
or a nucJe.ar warhead can begm
lllnd the Poet said former Presi·
dent Ford signed the order for
the new Lance warhead before
leaving office.
Lance missiles, deployed with
NATO forces in Europe, now
have regular nuclear warheads.
Storm Cited
By Survivor
ATLANTA <AP> -A survivor
of a Southern Airways jetliner
that crashed and killed 72
persons testified today he saw
large hailstones batter an engine
and lightning strike a wing just
before the plane went down two
months ago.
Donald Foster. a Decatur.
Ala., pilot who was a passenger
on the flight, was the first sur
vivor to testify at a National
Transportation Safety Board
hearing into the cause of the
crash, He said he heard popping
noises from both of the plane'::.
engines just before they stopped.
&....rial
A Southgate, Ky .. fireman
reflects during memorial
service for victims of the
Beverly Hills Supper Club
fire .. We have cried. but
we must go on, .. said Mayor
Kenneth Paul.
A"Wl.-o
ANDREA McARDLE, STAR OF TONY-WINNING •ANNIE'
With Mike Nlchol1, Right; Charles Strou1e; Reid Shelton
'Annie' Wins Seven
Of 19 Tony Awards
NEW YORK (AP)-.. Annie," the smash bit musieal about comic
strip heroine LiWe Orphan Annie's climb from rags to riches. was the
big winner in Broadway's 31st annual Tony Awards. The major acting
awards for dramas went to Julie Harris and Al Pacino.
For Miss Harris, who portrayed the reclusive poet Emily Dickinson
tn her one-woman show "The Belle or Amherst," it was her best play. "Sh~dow Box" dlrec-
firth Tony as best actress. tor Gordon Davidson won a Tony.
P ACINO, BEST known for his
movie roles in "Serpico" and
"The God.father." won the best
actor award for his performance
tn the title role of David Rabe's
Vietnam War play, "The Basic
Training of Pavlo Hummel."
··Annie'' took the Tony in seven
of the 19 categories at Sunday
night's nationally televised pre·
sentallon at the Shubert Theater.
Its string of awards showed why
the musical is already the hottest
ticket in town.
Thomas Meehan. m accepting
his Tony for best book of a
musical. said that when lyricist
Martin Charnin phoned him with
the idea for a musical based on
the comic strip, ·•1 thought it was
the worst idea I'd ever beard:·
Charnin and composer Charles
Strouse picked up Tonys for best
score.
"ANNIE" PRODUCER Mike
Nichols accepted the Tony for
best musical. Comedienne-singer
Dorothy Loudon, who runs the or·
phanage. won as best actress m lf
musical. Peter Gennaro won for
his <'horeography. David
Mitchell for his "Annie" scenerv
"Annie" designer Theon1
Aldredge tied with Santo Lo
qu<islo. who did costumes for
"The Cherry Orchard." as best
designer
Barry Bostwick won as best ac
tor in a musical for his title role
in "The Robber Bridegroom," a
rustic caper that opened in Oc-·
tober and in closed in February.
"THE SHADOW BOX," a
drama about death that recently
won the Pulitzer Prize for author
Michael Cnstofor was named
He also accepted a special Tony
for the Center Theater Group at
the Mark Taper Forum in Los
Angeles, which he heads.
Tonys for best featured
performers In plays went to
Jonathan Pryce for "Come·
dians," which opened in Nov-
e mber and closed in April. and
Trazana Beverly. one of seven
young women in "For Colored
Girls Who Have Considered
Suicide When the Rainbow ls
Enuf."
112 IJniaj•red
Jet Hijacker
Overpowered
KUWAIT (AP) -Kuwaiti tnlops dr'elMd N 1Dedallllka over-
powered a Lebanese man in a wbeelchair who bljacnd a Lebanese
JeWner with W otber persons abOard and dem1Ddecl ~-milllon.
airport sources reportAld.
The lOI«ber passe.oeers and n crew members .... 'Qiabariiled.
The hlJacker was ldentlf1ed as
Nas.ser Mohammed All Abu
Khaleel. 28, 'from the ~
Lebanese village ..of Kubateb.
One of the other pusengers said
Gay Rights
Campaign
lnte~ifies
MIAMI <AP) -Sunday·s
sermon was full of old-time re·
ferences to the sin of Sodom and
Gommorab but it had a more up·
to-date slant: Vote to re peal
Dade Countv's homosexual
nghtslaw. •
· · 1 wake up in the middle oC the
night with the thought ·vote for
the Repeal·,·· the Rev, William
Chapman told his Baptist con·
gregatlon, which includes among
its members singer Anita
Bryant, who has spearheaded the
drive against the law.
... DO NOT believe that YoU
will ever have cast a vote with
greater significance." Chapman
said.
Voters del'ide Tuesday
whether to repeal the con·
troversial law, wlficb prohibits
housing and employment dis-·
crimination based on 8eXUal pre-
ference.
Miss Bryant, who was not in
church Sunday because or an out-
of-town trip, helped start Save
Our Children Inc .• an organha·
lion which claims homosexuals
recruit children. She says she op-
poses the law because private
schools in the county could not
prevent homosexuals from
teaching her children.
THE CAMPAIGN ON both
sides or the gay rights issue in·
tensifled for the last remaining
days before the vote, with
television and newspaper ad·
vertising, telephone banks and
religious involvement.
The Archbishop of Miami's
Roman Catholic diocese asked
its priests to read a letter from
the pulpit advising churchgoers to
vote to repeal the law.
''I All A SICS mm uc1 I am
forced to do tb1a. I nled the
money.". •
Abu tchalecl hlld b8eil ellrrted
aboard tbl ;&ane ID Beirut ln h1s
wbeeJchalr. Offlclal1 at the
Seirut a1rport aald be WU not
given the uaaal senrlly seareh
because.he was an Invalid.
RadJo Kuwait uid Abu Khaled
wu betQI queltioned by securib'
ornclala and by the Lebabese and
Iraqi ambasadors.
THE ADLINBS. A BQetng 7f1T
operated by Lebanon'• Middle
East Ainra)'I. was nearing the
end ol a flieht from Beirut to
Baahdad, Iraq, Sunday when
Abu Khaled wheeled his chair
down the aisle, held a small
pistol oo the pilot and demanded
lo be flown to Kuwait. passenger
Kamel Dawi reported.
After the plane landed in
Kuwait, the hijacker made his
ransom demand. Officials at the
airport be1an to ne10Uate with
him, and the ambuaadors ol
Lebanon and Iraq Joined in.
Meanwhile, Kuwait's interior
and defense minister, aheUc Saad
el-Abudlla el Sabah, and bis
security forces made plans to
capture the m~ a government
announcement broadcast by RadioKuwaitsaid.
After nearly ei&ht boors o{
negotiations, the Kuwait Jn.
formation Mlnlstry announced
that Abu Khaleel had agreed to
surrender after being promised
saCe conduct out of the country.
Instead, a group of commandos
boarded the pJaoedia1uised as air
conditioning technicians and
grabbed them-an with the help of
two male stewards.
DA WI SAID ABU Khaleel fired
a single shot from his piatol as he
was seized, but no one was hit.
He was brought down the ramp
from the plane in his wheelchair
with his hands tied behind his
back.
.. Hew• a patbeUe ftsare and
we felt we ~d subdue him. but
we waited," eaid Dawi.
Two Britons were the only
Westerners amons the passengers.
Tornadoes Hit Midwest
Do you have time to
listen to Walterread?
In 1 S minutes the average person can read to hlmaelf
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In 15 minutes the average news broadcaster on radio or
televl1lon reads only half as many words.
That means you get a lot more Information In leu time
by reading a n9W81>8per than by watching .ameone read th•
new. to you.
And, your newspaper gives you the choice or storlea you
need to be rut~ lnfOt'med about events In th• world, nation.
state and cou~.
Addltlonally, onty the Dally Piiot brings you the new• of
your communl~ every day -news televlalon Ignore•.
DAILY PILOT
r
UWj,.......
HARVEY SAYS 'NOT TONIGHT, JOSEPHINE'
'AnKk Aebbtt' (left) Dodo•• Cupid'• Arrow
Nipper Nuts?
Guard Hare Needa Shrink
NEW YORK <AP) -The world's only known attack-
rabbit qwte obv1ously isn't very hoppy. In fact, he's ob--
vaously nuts.
Not about a lovely ball of fur named Josephine, to whom
he waa inlrQduced. Not about an amiable rabbit named
Jacli. And certainly not about the executive director of the
local ASPCA, Duncan Wright.
BITTEN TWICE ALREADY by the cranky
Uttle creature. Wright wanted to see whether Harvey the
watch-bare gels along with rabbits better than with people.
He doesn't.
The family that once owned Harvey apparently used to
tease hlm, Wright said. That made him neurotic and that
made him bite. And that made bis owners turn him over to
the ASPCA. Now he needs a psychiatrist, a veritable rabbit· shrink.
"We're willing to pay any price." Wright said, unable to
suppress a smile. '
THEY KEEP THE GRAY and white rabbit caged m
solitary, behind a door marked "medical cases." Harvey
shares the room with a kindly cat. a gentle sort which re·
gularly donates blood , and a relaxed rooster, which is re.
covering rrom a fight.
Cautiously. Wright look Harvey from the cage to the one
that Josephine and her llttercaU home.
With Harvey in his right hand and Josephine in his left,
the ASPCA official made Introductions.
"She's saying, 'I don't like attack-rabbits'," Wright.
translated, as Josephine wriggled her nose at Harvey a cou·
pie of limes and plllled away. But not before he nipped her, too.
"WE KNOW ONE THING," the official remarked. "In· troduce him to a nice little girlfriend and he bites her. Look
at him, he's really mad."
Then he and Jack were brought together. One sniff was
enough for Jack, who retreated in fear of i>erhaps the laid·
back ears, the smell of anger or the cast of Harvey's eye.
"Look at him," Wright said. "Stony-faced. He doesn't
like them, and they know it." .
Unless he becomes a reformed rabbit, the ASPCA of·
fici~I Jokes he might make a good watch-rabbit. But
chances are that Harvey will remain the unhoppy hermit
hare. I .
College Approves
Moving Expenses
I
SaddJeback College trustees
have awarded contracts totaling
$669,000 to move their lower cam·
pus buildings to the upper cam· -pus.
Trustees recenUy ll.lllarded a
$141,000 contract lo Miles and
Ke11ey Construction Company
for the relocation of lower cam·
pus buildings onto the upper
campus near the college's
library. They also appointed
Shirley Brothers of Pasadena to
supervise this work at a fee not to
exceed $17,000.
College officials expect 80 per-
cent of their services will be
located on the upper campus by
Christmas. The school's business
division is erted to be the only
gr4Upleft..on wer campus.
The Pasadena firm, which is
currently building the college's
music and arts facility, also was
awarded a $494,000 contract to
complete parking Iota and
landscaping needed near the re-
located buildings.
Lyon Movlna: and Storage was
given a $2,819 contract lo move
some or the equipment from the
lower campus buildings to the
upper campus.
1Marina High
Voll,eyballen
Claim Recoril
Trustees also expected this
week to award a contract for the
remodeling or the library and
construction of a bridge between
the library and new buildings.
Bids for this work, however,
were more than double their estimates.
Dr. Edward Hart, assistant to
the college superintendent, said
the high bids were due primarily
to the short time given for the
complelloo or the job.
When they rejected the bids,
trustees agreed to have the
bridge and remodeling done in
increments spread over a more reasonable time.
Mesa Auto Thief
Won't Get Too Far
Clifton Ellis Yount of 204.0
Placentia Ave., told Costa Mesa
police Sunday someone stole bis
1967 BUick from a parking lot
near Thrifty at 2300 Harbor Blvd.
But the victim isn't too con-
cerned about getting his $1600 ve~•te back. He told police the
car has an overbeaUna problem
and that it probably didn't get
very far.
:SUSpect
To Face
Charge
A t•rat bank robbery suspect
who 1urttndered peacefully to
Garden Grove poJlce Friday alter they barely missed him
with two cunshots was to be ar-
ralaned today.
Chria Glenn Jackson, 22, ot
12701 Kaster St., Garden Grove,
w •• 1cheduled to appear thJs
morntnr before U.S. Maalstrate
Arthur Bradley In Santa Ana,
FBI a1ents said.
Authorities booked Jackson
Friday afternoon following. the
10:50 a.m. holdup of American
Savings and Loan Association,
12141 Garden Grove Blvd., in
which tll64 was taken.
Police spokesmen said the sav-
ings and loan aasoclaUon bandit
slipped in through a south door
weartna a ski mask and bran·
dishing a revolver in one hand
and carrying a cloth bag 1.n the
other.
He ned after forcing two tellers
to fill the sack with money, ac·
cording to Garden Grove police
spokesmen who later captured
Jackson bidini in an apartmen~ house carport.
Witnesses to the holdup ob-
talned a license plate numb(!r
and description of an orange,
1969 sport sedan used in the lone
gunman's getaway, in -
vestigators said.
Detectives Lee Vaughan and
John Woods first spotted the
• vehicle near Harbor Boulevard
and Banner Avenue, claiming
Jackson bailed out and ran from
the auto when he saw them.
Vaughan and Woods opened
fire when, they said, the suspect
ignored orders to halt. He later
came out with his hands in the air.
Investigators said inside the
abandoned car they found a bag
containing $964 cash, a pistol and
a ski mask which were confiscal·
ed as evidence, in addition to the
car.
Rock Concert
Too 'Rocky';
52Injrued
TAMPA. Fla <AP) -Tampa
orcicials called off a Led Zeppelin
rock concert for the second night
in the wake of a rock·throwing
disturbance that injured 35 fans
and 17 policemen.
"It's the safest thing to do.
Tension ls high. We don't want
violence to break out again," a
police ~fficer said Saturday.
The <1isturbance broke out Fri-
dav night after rain and lightning
forced the rock band off the stage.
The concert was rescheduled for
Saturday ntiht and concert goers
were told to show ticket stubs at
the gate. But many had already
thrown away their stubs in the
huge Tampa stadium, and about
4,000 enraged fans in the crowd
of 70,000 screamed and threw bot-
tles and rocks.
County Park
Staying o ·pen
Despite Debt
LOS ANGELES (AP) --.
Enchanted Village, a year-0ld
amusement park in Orange
County, has acknowledged
serious fmancial troubles in a
petition filed for rearrangement
of ils debts uoder bankruptcy
law.
Attorneys said Friday the park
intends to remain open while a
way is sought to restructure
debts amounting to ~.25 million.
Enchanted Vlllege is located in
Buena Park on a 30·acre site that
was the home of the Japanese
Village and Deer Park, which
closed in 1974.
According lo the petition filed
in federal court, the new park has
assets With a fair market value or
$6.9 milllon, but is unable to pay
its current 4ebts as they come due. '
olher non-electlve board.
Current. law allows secret
a,111ons only for conslderatlon of
lull·tima staffers and open meet·
Inge ror other employe matters.
The bill, AV 1265, waa orialnal·
ly approved by the Assembly
May Z7. But an oppol\ent, AS·
aemblyman Bruce Young, (0.
Cerrttoil), won the right to have
the vote ttconaldercd last. Thuta· day.
Danntme)'er amended lhe blll l"rlCJ~ and plana to brln1 it up
for another vote early thla we~.
1
•
..... ,.. ...... ~
A PARTMENT COMPLEX ON THE WAY UP NEAR THE CORNER OF VICTORIA AND CANYON
In Coate MeM, • Multlple Unit Boom la In Full Swing All Over th• City
Apartmen~s Snowball
Costa Mesa Leada Way in BuilJing Boom
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of IM Oally l'llollt•ff You would have been hard
pressed to find an abundance of
apartment complexes going up
along the Orange Coast in 1975.
But in 1976, according to
statistics from sever al cities
along the coast, the apartment
boom was on in earnest, spawned
by lower interest rates, a
shortage of such units and a big
demand for housing.
The City of Costa Mesa showed
the largest increase in apart-
ments completed between the
two years, with 542 apartment
units finished In 1975 compared
to 837 the following year.
Paul Dudley, a pJanner for the
.city. said more than half of the
units constructed last year were
apartments in large complexes.
·'There were 380 units complet·
ed in the Pinecreek Adams com-
p lex alone," he said, ''and
another252in Park Mesa."
Most of the units in the Mesa
Verde Villas complex were com-
pleted that year. he said.
Dudley said many of the ra-
m aining apartment projects
were in the six to seven unit
variety, built by small de·
velopers on Costa Mesa's unique
Jong and narrow lots.
Newport Beach building direc·
tor Bob Fowler, said new apart-
ments are a rarity in bis city with
most activity being single family
homes or condominiums.
"We haven't seen much apart-
ment construction in Newport
Beach recenUy," he said. Fowler
said the city issued 10 permits for
75 apartment units In 1975.
Figures for 1976 show 221
multi·farnily dewlllng units were
constructed, but Fowler said
most of those were actually con-
dominiums.
"The building code doesn't dis-
tinguish between the two," he ex·
plained. In New.1?.9rt Beach con-
dominiums can be classified as
either single Camily homes or
multi-family dwellines. depend-
ing on how they are constructed.
"I don't think we've had any
apartment complexes go up this
year," Fowler said.
Pulling accurate figures from
Huntington Beach is a UlUe like
comparing apples lo oranges, ac-
cording to that city's building
director, John Behrens.
His office reports more than
1,400 multi-family units -includ-
ing apartments, condominiums,
•
'
and duplexes, were constructed
in 1975.
Figures for 1976 show onJy
1,124 units completed In the city,
but Behrens said that does not
mean a drop in actuaJ construc-
tion of aeartmenls.
"Between those two years we
started classifying con ·
dominiums as single family un-
its," he explained. "That's why
there appears to be a decline. Ac-
tually we're Just busting out with
new apartments. I'd like to know
when it will stop," be laughed.
Laguna Beach shows a big
goos egg for 1975, with not a single
apartment being constructed in
the art colony that year.
Planning Director Doug ~hmitz said most of the land zoned for multi.family dwellings
is filled up. "There's just no
place for apartments to go," he
said.
He said 13 apartments and
duplexes were constructed in
Laguna in 1976, adding that con-
dominiums are lumped in with
single fampy homes in ttrat city's
classification.
Pat Terrill of the San Clemente
building department said 8S
apartments were constructed in
her city in 1975, compared with
129inl976.
She said townhouse units are
on the rise in San Clemente, and
that her city classifies them as
single family units.
"We've mostly got single fami-
ly homes here, thanks to the
. c~astal commission,'• she said.
New Yorker Works
120 Hours, Fired
NEW YORK <AP>-The city
government. citing violaUon.s of
city work rules, h~ gotten rw of
a 59-year-old boiler engibeer
becauseheworkedtoobard.
Sam Zitron not only worked a
full CO.hour week lot' the Public
Works l>epal't'11~t, but also held
full-time jobs tending boilers for
the Peninsular Hospit~ Center
and the Hillcrest General Hospital.
His 120-hour work weeks
brought Zitroo an annual income
of about $60,000.. or wblch $18,700 was from the city.
A city investigation ot Zitron's
work habits found him ill viola-
tion of the city work rules for be·
Ing absent fr om his city Job
w lt h out au t b.o.r.lty .-and . a lso
d ocumettted 52 i nstances in
which he flied false time sheets
from bis city post. No evJdence or
criminal wrongdoing was found,
the investigators said.
The dismissal apparently
stemmed from t.be tight schedule
Zltr<m kept to make it to his jobs
on time. For example, on Sunday
he worked from mi~ight unW 7
a.m. at Hillcrest Hospital and
was scheduled to begin work at
the BrookJyn Courthouse at 7
a.m. He worked atthe courts until
3 p.m., but was scheduled to be at
&~WI ......
r
HARD WORKER FIRED
New York'• Zltron
Peninsula Hospital at3 p.m.
Asked why he did it, Zitron said
"I had to meet bills -a kid in
school, a mother-in-law who's
sick, other items.
classic we1 king shoe. by Al.DEii
of new england *
soft. brown grain
upper with plan-
tation cre.~and
leatha lip for
longer. wear
It
)
ayboy Island Chief
Toppled, Blames Russ
vtCTOIUA, Seychelles <Al» -Lef.
Uat Prtsne Mini ter Albert Rene ousted
playboy President James R .
MancbamwbileMancbamwasinLon-
don and announCed he would make the
tiny lndlan ocean nation "free or · capltallata and forelen countries.·•
Mancharn. 87, who took office in
June 1976 when Britain eave Ute 8S island.I and Utetr 80,000 people in-
dependence, aald he would ask Ute
United NaUone and African states
"who stand for stability" to help him
re1alnhi1office.
He char&ed thllt the coup Sunday
bad the "active a1reement and con-
nivance of the Sov,tet fovemment and
ill part and parcel of the Soviet policy or
controlliQI the Indian Ocean.·'
( INSHORT J
vl1lt to Peru to the toughest challenee
ot ber Latin American tour: Bradt and
the dlssatl.lfaction or it.a military re-
&lme with aome of her husband's key
pollcles.
"ROl!lalynn Conquered Everyone,··
said a headline tn lJma 's tabloid El
Correo.
"She's won us all by her sympathy,
sweetness, slmpliclty and the frank
manner with which 1he treats us," said
Forelp Mlniater Jose de la Puente.
~ ,.,,.,,. IJraeeUed
WASHINGTON CAP) The In-
ternal Revenue Service says a tax pro-"My roots 1o beck to Wenderhotren, Parkson and
..,.__._ Satt--.c l•r Nfz0ttf
nna.e lleaelaed WASHINGTON (AP> -''There is
ctiantic whale more than 110 feet long and 14 feet wide, made someNi.xooaenUmentouttbere."says
out ol sand. smil back al members of the American Cetacean Sen. Robert Dole of Kansas. But the
be of U.S. corporations shows the ex· Clifton, and thirty-five bucks a week."
1stenceof 4Slpossibly illegal corporate ..--------------------slush funds. of which 71 may represent Sociezy who beJped sculpt the monster at San Pedro. 1978 GOP vlce presidential nominee ----=----.......;~ __ ..;_ ________________ _, stops 1bort of predicting a quick criminal rraud.
EiBt.or, 12,
Exposes
'Scandal'
REDWOOD CITY.
CAP) A 12·year-old
crusading editor with a
nose for news stuck it In·
to some garbage cans
and sniffed out a scandal
that blew the lld off Mt.
Carmel Ele mentary
School.
Martha Mondez says
she poked around in the
school trash cans a nd
plucked out numerous
lunch sackl>. som e of
which were more than
half full of untouched
food. Ms. Mendez knew a
story when she saw one.
Gr~om Slain
By His Bride
STOCKTON (AP>-A bridegroom of just six
hours was stabbed to death during an argument
with his bride, Stockton police said.
Elmore Walton, 42, and his new wife. Stella
Hamilton Walton. 45, both of Stockton, argued at a
wedding reception Saturday night over his drink-
ing. police said.
Mrs. Walton refused to go home with her bride·
groom because he had been drinking. Walton al· legedly pushed his bride, and she pulled a knife
from her purse and stabbed him five times in the
chest, police said.
3 Kiiied After Partv
PLACERVILLE fAPJ -Three young men are
dead after lheu· car went off a 600-foot embankment
following a high school graduation party
El Dora4o County Sheriff deputies identified
the victims as Michael ( J
G r e b . 2 0 • J o h n SIA.TE Ca lanchin1. 19. a nd
Rodney Hadon, 18.
J2J Sef:ed at Cora~•
LOS ANGELES (AP>-Pollce report arresting
121 persons during the Music Sound Funk Festival.
which drew a crowd or 42,700 to the Los Angeles
Memorial Coliseum.
A police spokesman s111d most of the arrests
were for drug-related offenses and the rc>st for dis-
turbing the peace and resisting arrest.
THE JUNIOR
journalist toted up the
bread, bologna, peanut
butter, jelly, turkey1 eggs, fruit a na
vegeta bl es In ·
vestlgators checked the
prices at a grocery store
and calculated a dally
food waste of $17.90 /\
few days ago, a bold.
black headline in the
school paper screamed.
$17.90 FOUND IN THE Boy Killed""' Brotllfto GARBAGE .. SAN JOSE (AP >-Police say a 15-year-old Martha wrote an ac l11J~ ward youth was accidentally shot to death by
count of how the amount h1:, to-year-old brother at a local amusement park was arrived at, ex-shootmggallery
P I a in e d h 0 w s h e Anthony F. Ricca died about an hour after be-"timesed" the figures in· Ing ~truck in the chest by a pellet fired from an aJr. to a weekly waste of
$89.90, then "timesed .. _Po_w_er_ed_n_n_e_a_t _F_ro_n_ti_e_r_V_il_Ia_g_e_. o_ff_ic_e_r_s s_a_id_. __
some more and got u
!>C hool·yenr waste of
SJ,222.
THE EXP<>SEE went
on with a recitation or
the names Martha found
on the lunch sacks th11t
contained good food
Finally, in a crescendo of
Journalistic indignation,
the reporter lashed out
''With all the money
that the kids waste, we
could get new equipment
for the school . . or we
could pay the teachers lo
n ot give u s any
homework for a month. ·
By Bil Keane
political co,meback for the fallen
f ormtrpresident.
Fortbe moment. .. I don'taee any ac-
tive role far former President Nixon ...
Dole said on AB~TV's "Issues and
Answers" Pf'Oilr&m Sunday. He &aid
Nixon may become an elder statesman
in the Republican party. but not yet.
OdCClflO PoUee Baeked
CHICAGO <AP> -Officials have
turned aside criticism from leaders of
the Hlapanlc community who said
poUce overreacted ln a Puerto Rican
Independence Day disturbance on the
Northwest side that left two persons
deadandmorethanlOOinjured.
Witnesses said the six-hour dis-
turbance that included looting, street
fights and store fires began Saturday
after two policemen went into Hum
boldt Park to break up a dispute
between membersortworivaJ gangs.
llMalpa a Bit la Pn-11
LIMA. Peru <AP> -RosaJynn
Carter is moving on from a triumphant
The IRS said Sunday 1t uncovered
the slush funds in a special question-
naire audit of the nation's 1,200 major
corporatlona,startin& In April 197S.
'11..e te Let lip -t'ounfl
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y tAP) -
Andrew Young sars it's time to "let
up" on criticism o the Soviet govern-
ment 's human rights policiE¥> because
he doubts that complaining does any
good.
"Frankly. f've said almost nothing
about Soviet dissidents because I don't
know that it helps anything,·· the
Carter administration's ambassador
to the United Nations said in a in-
terview in the July issue or Playboy
magazine.
£».Turk Chief Lead•
ANKARA. Turkey <AP) -Official
returns from Turkey's general elec-
tion gave former Premier BuJent
Ecev1t ·s center left Republican
People's party a shm lead today over
Premier Suleyman Demirel's con-
servativeJusticepart~
$2,500
How1Quchwill
do it for you?
Commercial Czedlt's been helping
people for more than sixty years.
So whatever you need. A fa.v hundred.
Or even as much as $.5,CXX>. Just call us
about a loan. Vk'IJ ftnd \A.ey5 to heJp.
We ftnd ways to help.
COMMEROAL CR,fDrT PLAN. INC.
IA Cahforn10 Corporahonl
Colta lfesa • 370 E. 17th Streat • 645-8100
Oran-• 1111 Town A Country Rd. • Nf-1871 .. ~ Suite 28
Let Us Help
... A father discovers h is .---'.,lescent daughter 1s experimen ting w ith drugs. He doesn't know what to do.
... A lonely wife sobs ·int o a pdlow. He1 marriage is breaking up. Her elderly parents h ave becorne a
bu rd en. She can't cope-!
... A m iddle-aged man with a good job shakes unconttollably as he reaches for, a bottle of booze. He
tried to stop drinking, but failed . '
(
1· ~~'~.
,;}_ ·r':PJ} ~ . >.~ . I . ~ 't f l ' . '. --
These scenes are common everyday experiences. All of us have problems and we search for their solutions.
Sometimes we succeed. Other times we can't. Then we need professional help. Where to find this heir>
can become a problem. PROBLEM TALK SHOP helps people find answers to their proble ms.
PROBLEM TALK SHOPS are free counseling and referral servic~s located in Orange County.
Theater
Workshop
Scheduled
PROBLEM TALK SHOPS are here to offer you help through counseling a nd refer1al. There 1s no
"Mommy! Where's.that playpen we used to c harge for our serv.ice to you . We refe.-to both public and private agencies in Orange County. Facil1·
_______ kee~_P_J_in_?_" _______ ties to cara. for individuals are available on a 24-hour basis. That means we can help you whenever you C h ildren ages 8
through 14 are invited to need help. Appointments are not nec essary .. If you prefer to rnake an appointment. day and evening ~n!~ :e~e ;i~~t~~*;~ 1 rs are available. (Office hours: 8 :30 a.m. -5:00 p .m .• Monday through Friday. In extreme
Workshop sponsored by emergencies. a counselor can be reached af te1 5:00 p .m .• a nd on weekends.) the city of Irvine.
The workshop will run
June 20 to Aug. 10. from
1:30 to3:00 p.m. on Mon-
days and Wednesdays.
The cost Is S25 per stu·
dent.
The workshop will be
run by Teri Ciranna and
cover theater games, ex·
ercises, improvisations
and scene work. Each
child wiU be given an op·
portunlty tor perform-
ina.
Registration will be
held from 6 p.m. to 10
p.m. Tbunday, and from
9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Fri·
day. For more informa-
tion, phone 754-3639.
Let Us Help With:
I
Crisis Intervention -When a problem is so big or
tomplex that you a re unable to see alterna-
tives, talking with a professional may help.
Marital Discord -A counselor helps establish a
s tar ting point and g uidance for husband and
wife.
Adolescent Problems -The years 14 thro11gh 18
are trying for the young person as well as his
parents, learning to c ommunic ate 1s one of
the basic steps a counselor can help bring
about.
!Single Parent Problems -The single parent 1 ·1 av
i o ften feel ignored in a couple-oriented society
1 Trying to be two people. mother and fathe1.
can be too difficult for o ne person to handle.
Geriatric Problems -Sometimes a son1or c1 t1zen
parent needs tender loving care away from t he
family, specialized nursing care, o r a plc'.lce t o
live with others near his or her own age, c'.l11d
tho c h1ldron wtio maKe tnese decisions must
learn how t o c.ope with their feelings of guilt.
I
Afcohof and Drug Problems -More and more
people are becoming dependent Qn alcohof
a nd other drugs. Specialized medical care and
a treatment program are needed.
Individual Psychiatric Problems -Sometimes we
feel that our world is caving in on us. Tension.
a nxiety. and fear may keep u s from coping
e ffec tively with·everyday life. Psychiatric help
may be your first step toward healthy living.
Speculation Curb
• • At a time when only about 15 percent of Orange
. c'.ounty residents can afford to buy a new home, it's
·eaumated that 30 to -40 percent of the houses on the
•market are being snatched up by speculators seek-
·iag 11 f t profit.
The result-steady inflation of prices as homes
are sold and r~sold, often without even being oc-
cupied by the buyers.
This has been a particularly sticky problem for
communities seeking to encourage development of
lower-cost housing.
A bill introduced in Congress by Rep. Jerry Pat-
terson (D-Santa Ana), could provide a partial solu··
tjon. The measure, called the Housing Piracy Preven-
"tion Act, would make it illegal for federally regula-.
ted lending institutions to give loans to people who
buy houses on speculation. Loans still would be
I
available t.o thos who genuinely Intend to occupy the
hom .
Som lending lnstltution.s have voluntarily adopt-
ed similar restrictions on loans to apparent
speculators, but at present there is very little leaal
backing ror th policy. .
Patterson says he will follow up with a second bill
imposl.na heavy taxes on profits made from obvious
apecuJatlon in the housing market.
The measures probably will be challenged on
constitutional grounds, but any attempt to restrain·
what has become an ugly local phenomenon is worth
considering.
Misplaced Politics
State Sen. John Briggs (R-Fullerton), an an-
nounced candidate for the Republican nomination
ror govemor next year, bas introduced a particuJarly·
unsavory note in the ongoing debate o~er restoration
of the death penalty in California.
Briggs, a strong supporter of the death penaltr •.
called a press conterence to say that he would abst81Jl
from voting to override G<>v. Brown's veto of the
death penalty bill for which he previously bad voted.
The override requires a two-thirds majority In both
houses of the Legislature.
If it fails to achieve that majority, Briggs ex-
plained, the bill can become an initiative measure in
, 1978, when . Brown presumably will be seeking re·
election.
The debate thus could be kept alive and made "an
albatross around the governor's neck," says Briggs.
. "The issue," he told reporters, "is not the death
penalty. The issue is Jerry Brown.''
The senator is wrong. The issue is the death·
penalty. His desire to beat Brown in the gubernatorial
race is understandable. But this deliberate attempt to
politicize so sensitive a matter as the death penalty is
unconscionable. '''t'ou'te A1WAY~ looking out for yoursilf.''
l
l Lawmakers' Pride Dear
Gloomy
Gus
The Human Rights Issue
I
l Delays Legislation
t' Whether by design or because
f exasperation, the Senate
udiciary Committee chairman,
l Song, attempted a blow for
~t o re s s i o n a 1 i s m i n t h e
egislature the other day. After
engthy hearings during which
\}le authors or three competing
bills vied for committee ap-
proval. Song banged his gavel
•nd told the Senators lo get
together on one bill and come
back the next week.
~l The instant situation is re-
atively unimportant. It hap-
e n e d the
bills SB 817. 740 and 428 by
Senator s
J\obert
.Presley, Bob ~ilson and
Newton
Russell, all
pere aimed at
~unishing
those who are
using children in porno1rapby.
While one would think existing
laws adequately provide for child
abuse in any form, apparently
the problem is that much of the
pornography photographed takes
place outside the state's jurisdic·
tlon and the laws seek to crack
c1own on the distributors and ex·
bibitors who profit from it within
the state.
In any event the authors, while
agreed on the need for more laws to cope with the problem, have ~efinile differences as to the pro-
visions necessary to do the job
lM withstand court tests. At
least that seems to be the moUva·
lion for each fighting for his
version rather than joining
(orces. Behind it. unfortunately,
It also seems there is a slight
[ EARL W' ATERS )
case of pride or authorship and
the desire to win the credit with
the public for being "the solon
who stamped out child Porno·
graphy ''
ONE MAY well wonder why
Song didn't take Possession of the
three bills and advise the authors
that the committee would redraft
them into a single bill?
That is more along the lines
that Congress operates with the
various bills being taken in hand
by tbe committees which even-
tually deal with the subject in an
overall package, if at all.
But, despite tbe continuing
claims of the membership to be·
ing professionals, the
Legislature bas yet to come to
that system. Instead, each
member ia free to propose law
changes ai any and all subjects
and retain control over the In·
dividual bill. Amendments of-
fered by the others may be re-
jected by the author.
It is this pride of authorship, in·
spired in part by the prospects or
headlines and other credits
which hopefully will aid in re-
election, which is responsible for
literally dozens or bills all deal-
ing with the same subject not on·
ly being Introduced but being
passed through the entire
legislative process.
Sometimes, but not always, a
committee chairman will hold all
bills on the same subject for a
single committee hearing. That
doesn't assure the best one
emerging or only one emerging.
The switch from big, gas.
guzzling cars to small,
economical, fragile ones
does have its drawbacks.
Last week I saw one of the
little ones get dented by a
roll of toilet paper that fell
onlt.
BALTHAZAR
Otoemy Gu• comm•nh .,. tullmltttd llY
rt•dtn •net do ftOt nt<eu •r1ty rtttie<.t tM
•l•W> ol ·~· n•.,•P•P•• Send VOIAr pet -••loOtoomr Ou" O•llr PllOI.
A good illustration of the prob-
lem it creates for the entire
Legislature is the present battle
over property tax relief. There
have been at least a dozen major
bills dealing wilb the problem in·
troduced in each house and
numerous others which tou~h up-
on the issue and others that affect
whatever may be done.
FOR THE most part these-~
each receiving separate treat.
ment by the committees. Some
will fail in committee because of
disagreement on some or the pro-
visions but not all. Others will be
moved along despite having
some flaws or provisions not ac·
ceptable to the majority. Some of
the objectionable provisions may
be amended out by the entire As·
,embly or Senate or in a subse-
quentconferencecommittee.
Much or the burden for all
could be eliminated if the com·
mittees would take all bills on a
given subject under considera-
tion and draft a measure which
extracted the best features, or
the m6st Politically acceptable
provisions, of the various pro-
pos als.
Vend-a-Shrink Arrives
A debate is raging In the scien-
tific community over whether
~omputera could or should be
programmed to help
psychoanalyze patients.
Many eminent psychiatrists
eel that the stresses of modern
ivina have
reated more
euroses and
1ycboses
ban human
ractioners
Ian hope to
andJe. Com-uter1. they
1•1, would
teem the ob-Jlou1 tolu·
t.ion.
Actu&lly •. pi1Qt models have n teated. Tbus far, th r ults
a.a proved lnconclusave. Take
e cue ol Fred Frisbee, who
ound bSmsell atl alone ln the bus
epot late th• other nliht.
tBatrSING A row of v.adii
acblnel ChOt col.fee, hot aoup,
MX}na.azlna}, he cam• on
E lnacritiro: ''Vcnd·a-Shrlnk -• •• More out of ldlo curiotity
an all)'th.ina elseo be dl!poal\ed
• q.iaitet arid puUW down the
•andl
Up lrom the bowels of the
1n1chino nunb10d a aoolhlr\I, lf
ewhat aiechanleal o The aowma c:oav.naLion enaued:
.. Wbat 1eem1 to be your
probiem?"
( ART HOPPE )
"Problem? Who's got a prob·
lem? I just stuck a quarter in to
see what would happen.''
"Yes, please goon."
"Well, I didn't have anything
else to do. So I I ... Look, this Is
crazy, talking to a machine."
"Do you think you are crazy?"
"Crazy? or course, I'm not
crazy. It's just that it's a UWe
lonely in here. So I ... "
.. WBYDOyoufeeJtonely!"
"Because I'm all alone in here,
that'awby."
"How long have you felt you
were all alone fn life T"
"Not in life. In here. Oh, I've
been living by myself the past
couple of months -ever since
my wife left me."
·'Why did your wife leave
you!"
.. Sbo wu just Uh you, always
uklns Q\Mtioos. !'lnalty t told
her to abut up. Sbe aaid I didn't
love her any more."
"V , I u.ndenJtand your prob·
ltm now. Your problem Is thet
. • .Deposil·anoth r 25·centl··
please!'
"Ok.,., okay, wait a minute.
Hero it ls. Then. Now, wbal's
my problem'"
"Your problem II' that you
need love. lt ls nothln1 to be
Hham_ed of. Everyone needa
love. Tell me about your
mother.''
·'She always said she loved me.
But I know she loved my brother,
Marvin, more. She always gave
him the corner piece of the cake
-the one with frosting on two
sides."
"Did you love Marvin?"
''I hated Marvin! And be bated
me! And I bated my father, too.
He ... look, I shouldn't be tell·
ing you these things."
"Please feel free to tell me
these things. They are nothine to
be ashamed of and I want to
know everytbin1 about you."
"It does feel 1ood to get them
off my chesl. And you have such
a nice, gentle voice. I love listen·
in& to tt. llove. . Well. . "
"Please, fallin1 ln love with
your thera,plst is quite common
in analysis. It Is nothing to be
ashamed of."
"Yes, but you. How do you
feel?"
.. Do not worry. I love
• . . Deposit· another-25·cents·
pleaser•
"Sure, sure, wait a sec. Good
God I l don't have another
quart.erl I don't have another
quarter!"
POU fO\lftd F1i1bee rran.
tlcally tr)in1 to atucr a $10 b111 bl
the rnochlne's coin lot. 'l'My
took him to th Daisy l>cll Happy
Farm. Doetora there say he 15 •
c 1u1lty of one or the many
a tresses ol mOdern llvin1.
Tough. Talk Softening?
W ASlilNGTON -President
Carter declared after taking of.
rice that be would never retreat
from bl5 unequivocal stand on
human rights. But be now is
quietly asking Congress to
weaken national policy on the
human ri&hts Issue.
Carter received International
acclaim for his moral battle
against
repressive re·
gimes as be
slashed
American
military aid
to Ar1entina,
Uruguay and
Ethiopia .
Both con -
servatives
and liberals in
CoJtgress applauded his actions,
and the House quickly responded
by cutting military aid to
Nicaragua and the Pblllppines.
The House also paned a bUl re-
quiring American represen-
tatives at world lendln& institu-
tions to vote against loans to
countries that tla1rantly violate
human rights.
In the last few weeks, however,
Carter's foreign policy advisers
have been getting signals from
abroad that the president may be
pushing bis human rights of·
fensive too far. Consequently,
Carter bas had to backtrack from
his aggressive stance.
On May 19, for in.stance, be met
pri\'ately with a group of con-
gressmen at the Wblte House,
and soon found himself under
tough questlonine on human
rights by Rep. Louis Stokes, D·
Ohio.
As me of the participants re-
ca 11 s, Carter said that if
Congress cut off funcb to human
rights violators, it "would
seriously handcuff u.s in terms of
our relationship with other coun-
tries."
SPEAKING persuaalvely,
Carter said his policies alreAdy
had convinced authoritarian
Paraauay to admit a human
rights task force from the Ualted
Nations. The president added
that hil wife'• visit to Peru could
help induce that nation to foUow
up its release of some poUUcal
prisoners with sUll more human
rights gestures.
Some of.tboseJ>resenl •lJ'onily
felt that Carter was dodfinl the
question, they later admitted.
But Cart«, apparently senstnc
their weulneH, usured them;
"I'm not 1oini to betray
America."
AcC<Jl'dlng to 0t1e source, he
continued: "l bope that~
isn't~ to tie my handl," 'I'll•
presldeot described America'•
problema with auCb wllea u lm·
micratioo quotas befote aaldna
ror creatt.r "fiulbility" from
lflrlca
(JACK ANDERSON)
Congress.
Stokes was so convinced by the
president's argument that he
cast the key vote to continue
U.S. ·sponsored training of
Argentine troops in the Panama
Canal Zone. The foreign troops
are taught such techniques as
psychological warrare, urban
counterinsurgency, and other
skills for sqppressing opposition
to dictatorships.
A NUMBER of Stokes' col·
lea1ues, however, are bitterly
crumbling that Carter is no
longer willing to back up bis
tough talk by cutting off aid or
loans. Some congressmen
believe that Carter's private plea
for compromise is part of an
emerging pattern to move U.S.
relations with foreign tyrants
back to 1l business-as-us\Jal
basis.
Both publicly and privately. of·
ficials at the White House, Pen-
tagon and State Dept. have
called for greater "flexibility" .-
the administration's code word
for "softening" -on the human
rights issue.
State Dept. human rights
coordinator Pat Derian, re-
garded as one of the most mill·
tant administration officials on
the issue, recently said. "I would
like to see us place stronger em-
phasis oo positive action as a pre~
rerable way to increase respect
for human rltbts, rather than re-
ly too much on aid cuts, public
denunciations and other of the
more negative approaches."
Such words might have come
from the great compromiser,
Henry Kissinger, who preached
quiet persuasion on human rights
witb a notable lack of success in
such countries as Chile, Brazil
and Argentina.
SIMILAR statements also
have been made by Un·
der,aecretary of State for Latin
America, Terence Todman; U.S.
AOl b-.sador to Argentina Robert
Hill; Undersecretary of State
Lucy Bemorl Wilson, and many
otheri.
One high administration or-
fic.ial argued forcefully that
Carter bad not wavered on the
human rights issue, butconceded
at the end ot a long talk: .. Let's
race-It. theprob~m is implemen-
tation ... He <Carter) is just as
committed. He's just not as purist.·•
Footnote: Carter's opposition
could kill the legislation, wbicb is
now stymied in the Senate, to bar
international loans to repressive
countriets. The president believes he can more effectively influence
other countries by retaining the
opUon to personally oppose the
loans.
Terkel Remembers
TALKING TO MYSELF. By
Studs Terkel. P'antheon 316
Pages. $10.
Chicago personality Studs
Terkel likes to talk to people. He
finch much or what they have to
aay fascinating. He puts his con·
versations with both the high and
the low lnto books and the results
are such absorbing reads as
"Hard Times" -what it was like
during the Great Depression -
and "Working" -what
Americans think about tbelr
·jobs.
Terkel's new book, "Talkinf
To Myself," is subtitled "A
Memoir Of My Tim~" It differa from the others in t the con·
versaUon.s recorded re COD·
cem Terkel's lifer than lhe
Uves of others. The people who
were and are important to tbO
author speak in these paces Md
wbat they have to say ls most lD·
terestmi,
In time, tbe \lotees range fn>m
those Terkel beard In hl5 youth lri
the lJOOI "P to tbOso that are
1pealdn1 now. Thia dou not m n, bowtv.r, that t~ bOok is
In chronoloaical order. lt a not.
As one conversation rem ndf
Terk l of another he reng s back
and forth ln lime. aeem1 ntly
without etrort arid with no dis·
coa\fort at JI to the re.dee, wbO
is able to rotlow th~ lra~ei. In
umeeuily.
( THE BOOKMAN )
family, and the street-tough pal·
ter of some minor hoods Terkel
remembers from his youth.
All of these seemingly unrelat..
ed pieces fit together smoothly in
thls well-paced book but the best
. parts are those in which Terkel
recalls the days of his youlh. He
talks fondly of his older brotl'ler,
he recalls old CbJcago dance
halJs that are long 1one, and be
romembera, usually wllh·
pleasure, the obscure people who
• moved in and out of the rooms or
the family's hotel.
PHIL THOMAS
AP Books Editor
DAILY PILOT
... ~Root-eer and Mee~ Cripe
Beginning for MaNiott On Nuts :
W GTON {4P) -1 Mar·· amott riUllated OQ both honta. pays Off'
n t. • l*IPI• d wlth rut food operatiou aucb u Roy·
fenb • eat ln reet ~ Boeen and Bl• Boy ratauranta, and &.ravel CID llrpJ-.. or • ..., ln . hJ1her priced d.lnner bouaea •uc.b Al BARTOW, Fla. (AP)
At be'I prmld t Ind tbi U · Pl,ilnlU Prime Rib and JOlbua Tr", -Tbe WIY ensmeer and
nomc.r ol tb• Mantou C ., a offtrinc atem. prim• rib and loblter plltacblo nut lover Fred
tuburbu & DllOD•bUed COO• tllla. Wri1hl fifured lt, the
l)om•lltet.batullalt.a UUMnaUon'• averaae of 11 "non-
,Rep. Clair w.
Bur1ener CR· Calif.) says be
bas "a new lease
on life " and
flans to run for a
ourtb term despite bis re-.
cent hospit.aliza·_
tion for chest
pains.
!:!ond!Y· JUM e. 1 m
1108for
BUDAPEST, HWltU'Y <AP) -A court bu
fined G~ IYuka $100 for cbompini olf a
chunk fl ber ndeb.bor"a flneer in a fi&ht over her
dQI.
ACCCll'di.nl to t.e9UmOQY, the M-year«d woman
was pl.ayiDI with ber do1 outaide be.r apartment bull~ when bel•hbon started to complain about
the ndle. In defiance ol their abouts for her to
leave, abe unleUbed th• doe. and lT·year-old H. •
Janos wentdowu to further complain.
l ' food 1trvlct, 1odl1ol A LT u o v G n MA a a 1OTT•8 open able" pistachio nuts
andl...,.Ml'Vic•eompaqy. rdtaunnt oporaUQftl are a mldlet per can added up to 17.5 c~~ed~N~oo~~.~y~c~~~too~~-----~---------~------------~-------~
•ilalO'IT nonn JOU very very ft.tll, a company was cheated out of over
The dilbelleviDI court called in a medical ex·
pert to verify that the part ol Janos· flnser Iott wu
the r..Wt of a bite from a human, not a dot. and the'
rmewaslevied.
eat at a ao1. Ro11r1 PamUv 1-"•m••a-'d theput20yean.
Bob B ' .,..... -· ... · So be wrote to tbe pre-Ret........_ a '• t1 Bo1 cott.. Part ol Ute Marriott phlloeopby, be •'dent -'C!•-..... ard Brand abop, • Hot ~ cafeteria: when 1ald, la not to be the bt11est but to be 1 "'~IU
)'OU tide• lllY Ol lJO Mllloel •bc9e effective. Food1, maker of Plan--
food bclllsed by Man1otl: .-JOU "We veey tele(Uvely penetrate in ten Plltacblos. about
sl.-p a Man10U hotel In .IUl1 ot • dltferent. klnda of bu.lness and dlf· the problem. The com-~iUa; wtma JOU t.Ue tM kktl to • feunt kinda or locatlonf, •• lbe pany sent Wright 16 cans "Grell Americ:a" amu.acmeot park apokaauuuald. of nuts, but postscripted
near Sm FraoclacoorChlcaco. Before Marriott atarta a restaurant a note 1aytna it bad only
The corporation, wltb butlne11 or hotel, ita ltaff analyzes the market. been in tbe pistachio
arms ltretchiftl aeroM 3t 1ta1e1 and d _.,_ f lblU• d d it bualneaa ei&ht years. into 11 CJtba cowrtrlea, aJ,ao manaiea con U11;w.ug ea.a •Y an eQ.I Y The 18 cans completely
food aentce contract.I for mare than studi~. 1'!!1ccbe an opofera~on 11 •P-aati.afied him, be said, as
b . 1 d pr~v....., iw anees •uCClll ar• did a. letter from ""ary ISO uuoe11ea, Inst tutlon1 an ood k aid .u schoola. ltoperates restau.ranbl aloni ' 'acompanyspo esmans · Lynn Woods of the com-
biOwan and in alrlin• t«mlnala, MADJ<nT ENTERED THE hotel pany'a consumer service
and owm condomin.hu111, three cruue field ln 1957, expanding to 35 hotels department. which said
ships md a travel bureau. wltb 13 more under francbiae by 1977• a ''thorough investiga-
In this field, too, Marriott ls no giant. tlon" would be made. THE llA&SIOTT BVSINl!SS
celebrated lta SOtb annlvenary May
21 and broke O'O'IDd at new inlema·
~ ........ -..,.......____~
He adds that be must "Holiday Inn has more motels than have been eatini another
we have rooms," a company brand of pistachios back spokesman says.
But with an empbuia on site, selec-in the 1950s and early
lion and concentration of hotela· l960s.
around airports and suburban areas, ---------
the investment is ~ayine off. One of
the largest hotels ism Newport Beach.
.. All our hotels are doing from good
Cell 642-5678.
Put a few words
lo work for ou.
1M£ UUON& G100B HAS l SOOD THllli COllG ... &a•
llllT TD YOUl •t .
A tl"t Of llrloht l>h,.1f77 Dodge -ans, compteterv outfm.d to ·
vroom ~ pet to Ptrf9cilon right et your curb, 1w11ts your
dfL(714l .,..1941
l1I( Ull.OPllG CROO•l ... lllllES
ll)IJS[ CAllS OILY ... et prices comPITlblt to ttloSt In trldi-
tlonll grooming selons .. ,1nd tN GALLOPING GROOM~R
tllmlne"11ll the f"'5 end bothtf In the blrt11ln.
THIS UHM PO CIOOlllC SERVICE... er111g1 a11 the
... tldlltlnof the flne&t pet .,_r10ul' to~ door In a compi.MIV
1elf-cont11ntd '"°"'le unit tnet offffs eoftVeftlenct to you end
•Ir COndltlonld comfort lo yOvr pet, Who Is twlttwd Ind
groomtd to tN soft 1tr1lns Of music
PROUD IS THE PET ... Who l'llS been groomed by the
GALLOPING G•OOMER ..• 1 skllltd professlonel wtio
l'IH comblntel sci.ntlflc llnow-Nr# 1nc1
crtetlve 1rtlstTy to Pf'OWIOe •service that
wm f\lyt you •nd your pet begging for
more ...
THE Ul.LOPIH UOOlllEI 11COMI* JOI tJkl fOlU !Ill tt a Y1t at lw~ llCt a par!
ltfarrioet ~Iii•.., .....
11011 eat at ••e •I fib
re•t•ur-t-, llfl Oii oae ol 128 alrHna tllat 1Ue
hi• catering •er.,lce,
when t1011 sleep at a
Marriott Jaotel or f10 to •
Great A•erlca a•u•e··
Mleftt park.
to spectacular," a company executive --------------------------~..._------------------said.
J, W. MARRIOTT JR. succeeded bis
falherinl.964whenthecompanybad ..,. ........ ._._ ............................................................................................................. ..
annual sales of $85 million. He put the
'uonal headquarters. The firm's presi-
dent predicted in an lntervlew that the
corporation will continue meetin1 or
exceeding its goal of 15 percent an·
oual trowth in sales and profiu with
recora eamJngs thia year.
It. 'fll all started by bis father, who
opened a nine-stool root beer stand in
1927. ~eral mOftthl alter openln&
the small parlor here, J . Willard Mar·'
riott borrowed recipes from the Mex·
ican Embassy, put his wile behind the
counter to cook hot tamales and chile
con came and renamed the business
The Hot Shoppe.
THAT WAS THE START of a pro-
gram of expansion and diversification
that turned a family run shop into a
corporation with sales expected to
reach $1 billion this year. Marriot
forecasts that within five more years,
its volume will have doubled.
Over the last 10 years Marriott has
had an average, annual compound
growth rate in earnines of 20 percent.
And sentimentality bu been no bar·
rier to extraction of profits.'
All but 10 of the 40 Hot Shoppes
spawned from the root beer stand
founded by the senior Marrlo~t bave
been cloted and another one will be
shut ln the next several months. Each
was guilty of declining profits or out-
right losses:
'11T WAS A PROBLEM for Mr.
Marriott for awhile; he grew up with
those operations," a company
corporation on a path of international
expansion, opening the company's
first overseas airline catering
kitchens and foreign hotels and ac-
quiring a cruise ship line based in
Greece.
Like bia father, Marriott Jr. 1a a de-
vout, teetotalina Mormon wbo says he
considers work a privilege.
Marriott Jr. drivea himself to the of.
fice, works a 12· to 13-bour day, eats
lunch in the company cafeteria and, If
he goes out at night, often visits one of
his own restaurants.
WHEN HE TRAVELS OUT of town,
Marriott flies tourist, believing Orst-
class to be a waste of money.
Marriott says he wlll spend nearly
$100 million on expansion this year.
most of it in the United States, for
ho'tels, restaurants, airline catering
and other enterprises.
The corporate chief said he would
like to slow down the pace of his work.
But he hasn't found a way to do it,
commenting, "I think I've got an ob--
ligation to our s hareholders and
employes."
THAT SOUNDS LIKE bis father.
the chairman of the board, who once
was quoted as saying no one will
amount to anything workmg only 40
hours a week.
"Work, that's the answer," the
senior Marriott said. "You cannot be
fooling around, wasting your time at
cocktail parties."
spokesman said of the founder. "But
he saw what was happening." ( TH 1: BOOIUI \" ) The Hot Shoppes, with a limited din· _ .
ner menu, withered under competi· 5 tion from fast-food chains such as REVIEW
McDonalds and mote expensive din-
ner houses with higher qu all~·~ty:-f::ar~e·-::::-::~-:::~:-:::;nfnp;;;;th;;e;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;i;i;;;;;;;iif I DAILY PILOT
Coinbo Eyed·
LOS ANGELES CAP >
-Tbe count1'1 2'
munlclpa.I COW1I and one.
Ju.Uc• ol the peace court·
should be consolidated•
int.o on• coun\ywlde
court to eave $3 mllllon a
I ·THE
CASH & CARRY
B THE UNISTORE
MASTER CHARGE l!ANKAMERICARD
IUIWP '"""CO ..................... FOOD SERVICE PRODUCTS
GIFT Wit.AP.
~
JANITORIAL SW'PUH
ltlllOM TAN
MBCHA.MDISI IAGS
GIFT IOllS
,,
'
VAMl·SOL
IOWLCLUMIR
DbWtch -Deodorint
Reg. 2" qt. SAU 1220
'------~----------------------~ .. BLOWER PAPER COMPANY
• ....... O!Wll9 °""'"'"'" y_. I IU I: EDtNGa. SAMT'A AMA
year, &l'*10r Court of· .. l•liiii..ii..-liiiliiiliiiiliilii!ll._ ______ 111!11
nctaluQ11•L ~ •
We're good a1·figures.
--
Different 111ambership
programs available
including our 2-week
introductory offer.
Let us change your figure for the better. Now's
the time to shed winter's old shape. Slip into a trim,
firm new body and a summer filled with fun and
excitement.
We'll help you get your body back in top
condition with a personalized program of body
improvement, which includes exercise programs,
steam, sauna and whirlpool at all locations plus
heated swimming pools at key locations. And there's
Jazznastlcs for the gals. (Fun group exercises done
to up-tempo music.)
And, You'll find our unique combination of
exercise programs, facilities and service give you~
one of the finest values anyWhere.
So, figure it out for Yourself. If Y9lJ want to enJOY
summer fun and excitement, Jofn the Holld8Y Spa
Health Clubs. (Where summers have a new
beginning.)
......
17031 V.ntur1 Goulev•~
West of Galbol 121:u 988-63so
~-...... 18$85 ~•ft Stlfff
Mean St 1t Beacn Blvd.
(714) 142•14~t
..
/
~
I
' \
\.
wut to pUt the tOinpany contrlbUUon
to lh lRA plan. '1'1'l1 can be don tuUy wtth tub. but I doo't know
bat to do with tbt 1toct to 11tllfy
JRA 1ul•. Savtnt• and IOIJl · com· pan .. want cub oaty, but the IRA in·
lormaUcn •If•\ "PrOperty Other than mone1•• muat De tran1fe~ to the
newplM."
M .S .. La1una Ni1uel
ORANGE COUNTY
lnf:oA.ide
For County
'
Appointed
HunUncton Beach resi-
Pot Smoker's
'Eransf er OK'd $10,000
A decision by authorities to lnNfer a Dana fOr onl'Y s·1ss.26
H1lll Hieb School student to conUnuaUm school f Ii
after he allee~ smoked marijuana oa campus a -DlOD •
bas been defen ed in Oran&e County &.lperior Whether you nied $3.500 or $10.000 get it Court ..
Judge William L. Murray refused to rrant the from the people who lend mtUions.
restralnina order souabt by the 1&-year-old boy'a Commercial Credit Monthly payment
mother aealnat the acUon taken by school based on a $10.000 HomeO.vner loan, for authorities.
It waa unsuccessfully ariued in her Jaftult that 120 months. at an annual percentage rate of
her aon'a future employment proepects milht be 14%. Total payment $18.631.20.
jeopardized 1f be does not t• bis diploma at Dana NO POINTS. NO PREPAYMENT PENALTY.
Hilla Hleh t.hls month. We flnd ways to help. -The acUon ar1u~ that the boy's attendance at
Sierra ConUnuaUoo School would be noted when the CQMME~IAI.: CRJEDIT
timecameforblmtoseekaJob. r,O PQD 0
School authoriUes took disciplinary actlon '-..,; RJ 1,ATI N ~
aiaJnst the student after he wu reported for al-~ Loans ·~ le&edlih~mokina marUuana ln the mall •t Dana
Hills . A .,,_,, nl S.\ 000 ....i --• be -unod b,t •
Walt Cra&ttadea III, wltb
............ 6 Weeb·UemplllU Noye. n.eu Md ....., la Orant•:. 9dv1Ha iUt IM ndtt clo allow a rou-over of
.-... ,_. uarea •r •&odl lato an IM MCI .. u toq 11 &My an part
di a,..,.,,,.. ...ur...Ht tavtaai plu. Cri Mf m wlll ull(ala tile procedue
lli detail ti >W etetaet Mm bJ pbanla1 ~J'M. dent John Bushman has .-~~~~~~-.,...~~~~~~~~~~ awnhtutltlfl ~I~ ..... p.tt-.il pr~.
co.t&Mea • 870 E. 17th Street • 8'5-1100
•~1-.1orSal'i"fl .
been named the new
Oranee County govern-
ment public information
officer.
Oran-• J 111 Town & Country Rd. • 6'?-687l •· Sult. 26
DZAJ\ PAT: I 've heard that
floUretceat lllbt bulbs last looeer and
use lea enern to produce more Ugbt
than lncandelcent bulbs. Why aren't
more flourescent table lamps availa-
ble?
. Bushman, 35, will be
responsible for coordinating publicity-4-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..;;....~~~L-~~~~~~~~--~~----~.-.~------
IRA Cola1'n"SIOll Olcq G.T., Mission Viejo
a bout governme nt
s e rvices and news,
handling touri of county
buildings, planning de-
dications and
groundbreaking
ceremonies at new
facilities and coordinat-ing county printing and
DEAR PAT: I retired recently. Perbpa dten will be ID tbe tutu.re,
bttt rtcllt now 1oa eaa modify lncan-
deseee& n.mu. .. tbat nounsc:eat
1>.i.N eu be med, An ada.,Ur, caller
KU1et' wau. from Jolm&on IDdutrlfl, seren '*° "rel1dar" lamp socke'8,
ud 1• Ja19e u IDstant OoaNtceot
lamp readY for use with a standanl
clrclllar balb.
While employed, I participated in a
salaried employe aavinea plan.. I will
receive a cuhout from this plan in a
few weeks. Along with cash, 1 wiU re-
ceive stock certificates in an wllmown
amount. 'lbe stock portion and part ol
the cash are company contrlbut.tooa,
so no income tax has b~en paid. J
publications.
A former public in-
formation officer with
the City of Cerritos,
Bushman also bas
ANO•I W
GOql)()>j LESLIE ANOAl!W '""
"""' of Co\ta AM.,. Calllor nl• Pau~
ww•v J unp 4 1•11 Survived bv hl!l wife
h<n•c• dalltl'>I., Sus.,, Boyer SI
C.,.r, .. s M""' o"" 11•.tnt!<l\lld ''"'' Oor \ Ad .. m\ (0'\'4 M,." Ca Prh,•t•
lfmftv qf'~tt\10-y.ry1 •\ M ~ h--ftt W•d l ,.,PM Pi1ejf1r V1•w M_.mc>rtll
P-lr.. V 1\tU ho"I S OOPAA t"J ' flOP~
l "'""' JUf\e 1 P&r1ffc y ,,.., MM•u•"'I
dlr"(tOf"\
B••L•Y
f'R•NCE'i" BAILEY ""°""' ol F'>Un'•'" V•H•v CaH40tftli• P•\\-<I
0"'4' J.-\ t•17. $<1rvl""d bY ... r
tu\ba'l<I J1~oll "'"' l.t,...v B Ballev
(?\t. ""°'" C.O R1cllard L 8allev N•wo~·· B••tll C• a nd J Uk B
8.t•l•y H u"lt•,.qftV\ 8••<~ t".a
tHuQP,t""r OP•'W J F~,.,1nqton Fo\11"1
0 111"1 V '"""Y Ca brt>t""'" G~orq•
M1ne-r Ori l,. ~·Mr both ,,, C•I•• ""'<I H11rrv ~ M11-..r C'Xt• Mf't• C•
,,,,",. Rill• Hl\ll11"id C••U Et•v•n
Qf""f'l.,d"hlld'f'., Priv,Jtt• fa"'llv w rvlC•\
w111 b" nti<I on W•d • OOAM •1 Bell
8 "0;\dw.!v Cti '""'' wlt'"i 1ntflrm •nt At
>1.itrbnr A•\t M,.mor•,.1 P 111rtrc 8111
Bro"rt~~'f Mo,.tuttrv dlr''' tor~
CRUM
PHYLLIS CRUM r~'~"t Of C'l~I•
M,.\tl ca11tor,,lll P&\\f!f1 lJWlJV Jun• ..
1~71 Fu,,..•At vrv1(1U. arfl DM\(tit'iQ I t
Smllh Tulhlll L•'"b Morluuy Co•1•
M•'d t.•6 •Mfl •LBRIOHT
EqNEST .. Lfl'llGHT rMlll~fll of
<.oc.t4 M4'\A CallfQrnl., Pa,,,~ ltiN1''f
June \ t'77 t;ury•v"'l'f hv '1•\ w•f• Max
,,,, Albr•qnt f:un,.rttf \1t;v1c1\ .,,.
orn1lln11 •1 !>m lth Tulh lll L4mb
M'l<llHlry C<Xlo M•-. 6'6 ~'Ill~
Fl~H
IOA ql)<;[q~ Fl~H •'°'l<!e"1 of
l aQun• .... If~ (•ltl,l)f"'li ' P H""'" ttWAY
June ' HU7 ~'""'•wrt nv ht-,. OlllJQ~t•r\
Mr\ 0()f'l"Jt.,v V<ll""• CorGfU d4:1 "-\8'
C• Mr\ M v io .. ,,. Pw-mt)fort'W\ CO\t•
M••a Ca IW'I qr .. M<hlldr"" Funeral
~rv•r \ w ilt b4 ~Id l\if'\ 7 OOPM
o·t,,,..n~r LllC'IUf\4 Hill' Mot'fU&'V In
.. eu ot tt~r\ '"ton41Ho"' rn•y be mfKt•
IAL n -lllGHOM
RIMIUL HOMI
Corona dOI Mar 673-9450
Costa Mesa 646-2424
HU.llOADWAY
MORTUAU
110 Broadway
Cosla Mesa
642-91 50
SMmf TUTHIU U.MI
WISTCLWf CH.APIL
427 E 17th St.
Costa Mesa • 64~888
Santa Ana Chapel
51 8 N Broadway
Santa Ana • 547-4131
P'IBCI llOTHlltS
SMmtS' MOltTUAllY 627 Main St
Huntington Beach
536-0539
f'IHFAMILY
COLONIAL FUMllt.AL.
HOME
7801 Bolsa Ave
Westminster
893·3525
P'ACIFiC VIEW
MIMOUUP'AH
Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel
D L-worked in market re-
10 1M lh lflll'> H1lll ~O'Oilal RHMr<li eat11lf Search and for a SWim•
Foundation. ttt Oover, Newoort ming magazine.
~~~~~;.-".:::~Kro,~r L~.,.,. E'-D9•,L-•n A graduate of Cal State IQ\.ou "3~wlle• ~ Northridge, he lives with
l'LORl! .. CI! "-80LGE•. resldtnl his lf p t t th of M•nlon V .. lo C.llfornl• P-od W e, a • WO-mOn ' ~wo Ju,,. s 1m s..rv1ved bv twr EL DORADO, Kan. old daughter Christine
hu,ben-i John P eo199•, •oM JoM w. (A p ) -Rolla A. Clym'"'r, and four-year-old son Bolq•r >4ou\lon Tu qobt'1 8o19"r, "' c;~•v•""" To• Mic .... , &o•• Mis. a renowned speaker who Charles at 8351 Alvarado ''~" V••1<> c.. O.U9111<!<'< M~ Ma.rqle b alded b Drive oav'' ""'"91"" He1q111, 111 • Mr~ was er y some as ·
Su••'I Bu11•r, Y°""9s1ow11. Olllo the Cr e 8 t 0 r 0 f th e
b•o1...,. qafoh W.,_11\. Omuc,y. edlto 1'al g d ri
q-x••Y Will "-he'll '"'' .,,.,.,n<i ., r pa e u ng a T Thief 1 lOPM arid "'°"'Of Cl!'l1tl-'1 llurlel, _7 0 • Y e a r C a r e e r j n 0 ro ~::~ui ~~ ':!!: ~~':!,~~ Journalism that he began
m•nl •K•MIOn C&fM1ory O'Conner a s 8 reporter for the
Laciun•>iOllMCYIUarvdoroctor• legendary WilLi am Allen Gets Gems
MILLI• Wh' d'ed s C•qTHEL W MILLEq, rHl<ttnt of tte, I 8tUrday.
Hu"tl"C!'on BU<" c.111..,.,,1a PHW<I --
..... ., J...,., "n a1111e-01a.,..n NEW <
Su•vlv•d byl!••wlfe L_.,a '°" Evd•ll YORK (AP) -
H Mlll@r daUQhtt•,l!clMJ Ml"•'""" War(f Melville 90 who
8•111• R . .Jotwl<on, lour cirandchlldr'!fl d th h · ' ' ""'d 1en ci•••1 cir~1111c1r .... Brothtr use e c atn store con-
Hu11h Brew\1•• and ~lster lhva c e pt to p a r I a y his C~oe•ar>d Servl<H 10 be l!!!ld Tuts. r th • all h b I 1·00PM et t"" Flrs1 un1t•d Mt•llod••t a er s sm s oe us -
Cl'turc" ~un11"'1tO'I Bea<~. lnter,,,.,,1 neSS into the $.."i()() million
a1 W•stm1,,,1er Memor1a1 Park. dollar Thotn McAn and
We\lmlM14rMemor141 Park MO<'luary Mil b d
dlr4c1ort. es ran name en-
c Ecv1. E ~~cc-...~TT':.yv. rn lden1 of terprises, died Sunday
Cl>\1• """" ca111orn1a Pass.«1 • .,.. after a long illness. JuM 1 1'11. ~rvlved by 1wo ,.,,,,,
)u\lln T McC..'1hY WH ttalte Vllla'I".
r e ""d Jo"" P .,cCar1hy. Co.la Mn a. Ca de...;,19' Merle ,..,,,. Soa"lqller
Gle.,dAle Cl .. ''"" b<'o1.,.,. .t..udr.., 0. True C ... rl~ T Tr .. Dorian True alld
Thu r<lo" True. Columbla Sp
c.trollna • "'"' qrandchlld••"· M•mor'lal •••vice• Tu.• . ~· 30PM.
We\tmt,,\l•r Pr1\bVt1r len Cfturcf\.
We•l•alt• 11111•9• Ca • 1n1•rmt"I Columbia So C¥041f\A h ll BroadWav
Mor1ua.,,loc41dl-lot'l
tt0'"4C.ST\.•
GR•CE HOR.,C4STLE ~lde11t 'if
LaQu'I• Be•<" Ca llforl'tla P"....i. •w~~ June s "" '" ...,,..,.Im Cll. el
lhe •9• of 1' vea" 5u"'"'-d b¥ twr "'''
LOS ANGELES CAP>
-Funeral services will
be he ld Thursd ay a t
Forest Lawn Memorial
Park for Elise Graf
Mead, 81, who died
Saturday in a Napa
hos pital. S he was a
founding trus t ee• of
C laremont Pit zer
College.
V•nc•'ll MOMC••11• L-ciunt !Mac .. Ca ....... _________ .....,
~rv•r•\ -ll't1eMl..,I will be orlvale. Shefl9' L~ &at<h Morluary dlrK · PUBLIC NOTICE
tor• -----------
SNOOG"•SS J .. SPER 0 "J•CI(" SNOOGR•SS
r••ld•'l1 of .,_oorl Beach Celllornle.
Po""'' ""'•Y JU'>e '· •911 Survl....i by
hi\ wll• Madqe w. SnodqraH COU\I" M••. WIH•tta ~all•H Downey, ~
Prlvat• •-'MTIHV \.-v1ce1i W@re t\etd. wit" • .,,.,..,.,.,,...,, at qo.., >illl• Mtmorlal
P•r~ Bell Broadway Mortua•v direc-
tor"
PICTITIOUS IUSINHS
NAMI STATl!MINT
Tiie fo41-1"9 "''°" 11 dOln9 bull· neuu:
F qlS8EE POWEq, 21S Cectl
Place. Cos1a Mase, Calllomla
Wut•y LH Frisbee, 2U Cecll
Pla<t, COS1• Mew, Callloml•
Thl1 buslneu ll c0fldu<1ed by • ., ,., . dlvldual,
WHl•Y Frlsbff ThlS sta1 ....... 1 WH flied wl1h Ille
SCHl!•F COUflty Clenl of Or'8f\9!t County on M.i~ !'."~•RLES F SC~EqF, r•\lde"1 of 17, 1977.
Hunll~qton ~ac" Call•ornl•. Paued P7UU
.. wAv Junp • 1011 Survived bv his wife Published OrM911 Coa11 Dally Pllol
Frp•d• •on• C"•rlo •nd Jo"" May23,30.-June6, IJ 1•77 11S2·17
tf1uo.,1•r CA'~''"" Rob'"'· b"others •-----------" ••d•rlc ~ a~d Lto llft•t n qran!Schlldr-'I q.,....ry todn l•OOl>M
Olldn 8r~'""" Cha""' '1111\era• Ma« Tut• • 'WI •Mal SU Sl'TIOn a'ld Ju-to
C•t'>Oll< C'>ur<:'I HunllnqtOll B•ac'°' 111°
'"'"'"""' G~ 'jt\fot\f'rd Ctm•t,.rv Olr•ct""(f bv OltdaY Broff'\tf'\ Mof"tu•rv
... , 71'1
D•Y
MELE., I> D•Y r"tcM111 llf Laq\IN
fl.lfQ1.,.1 (tJH'""'.,.a Pt'\,..O ew•v June
i 101• ot 1"" '"Cl" ol 'Owor• Survived
bv h•r nu'b"nd WUU4m dau.ql\t•r
~UY BrldbiJt'V "tU"ltfnQt°" 8tKt\
C• b"''""' Willl•m Fl<,<'>er U'llon To'llffn O"i•o ,.,.,. ... qt' .. ttdtl\rtct"n
Fu~r41 wrv•c~ •"Wf 1,,te-""""°"t wt,.
o• 1v,\t1111 Sh•t••r L l Quna 8 e1ch
M flf'f\Y "'V Olr~t°"
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
PIC"tl nous IUSIHtHS
NAMI STATIMINT
The lo11-l'tll .,...son Is clolnci bull·
neuas
THE PEOPLE Cl!NTER n s· 1
34111 SL N-1 BHCh C• '160
llotleft Gonl9n Beyd t2S"\ 341h $1 .
New!IQft llMGll CA 'H63
This bUSlnen Is <Of)dUcted by • ., '"
d lvlOUAI
l'tobet1G lo'ICI
Tiiis su1-nl was ftlH •tit• Ille
Counly C1¥k ol Or41199 County on Mav u. 1'71 ,., ....
Publlv.t Oranvt Coa•1 0.lly Pllo1.
MayJO,_,.J,_6, U,20 1'17
PUBLIC NOTICE
A burglar who ap-
parently entered via the
unlocked front door took
jewelry. cash •nd a hand
gun wi~ a total value of
$2,258 from an El Toro
home, Orange County
sheriff's officers said.
Deputies said
mechanic Leo Juarez,
31, of 24145 Hurst St., dis-
covered the theft when
he returned home from
an out-of-town trip.
New Graduate
Richard G. Rovin, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Rov·
in of Costa Mesa, will
graduate June 11 from
the National College of
Naturopathic Medicine
at Mt. Hood, Ore.
When there
are no
words •••
let flowers
speak
for you.
For a complete selectlon
of sympathy flowers.
call YCM FTO Flonst
•
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ESQUIRE LliASING. H t W, 1.U.
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John Hawlllns, $10 Paularlno,
C011• MHe. CA. mn Tiii• 1>ui1,,.,1 11 conducted b'r •n lft•
cllvltlual
Jotw't Hawkins
Thh sl-4-1 •M flled with \119
CovnlY Clerll ot Or9\91 Counl'f'OflM,,.,
In~~~;,,...., 0r.,,.. Goait 0at1v~r:.
p Mo l• U.JO,ANIJ""'l6. ttn ----------' ""'"
JACK L•l.ANNI! NUTRITION
Cl!HTt!A. 12111 Harbor 81vd., Oard<tn
Grow, G•11fomla'16'!0
JAl\•I L. Waif, 1~0 MK Arthur
11.,d. a w, $111\la An•, Ca llfornlat1707
Thh bllJlntSl ll conclu<led by an In·
dl\llcMll.
Janel L.W•lf
Thll ltflt-1 Wts flled wllh Ille
C0<111ty Clerk ol Orange Counl'r on Mo
11.1•n P7Ult
P\11111~ Or ..... Coast 04Hy "'llot.
Ma<, u. ,., .... u .... '· 1), 1'17 ~17
LOSE WEIGH T KEEP IT OFF
... EAT YOURSELF SLIM
By Shfrley Bright Boody, Registered Diot1t1an
LOSE 10 to 18 POUNDS OF F.At A MONTH . permanent1'l
\
Mr. Gotcfon ls • life time mldent of Santa AN,
wetetan of World War II, member of S.nta AM
Lion's Club, MaJOnic lodge 1604, and lhe Or•• County Shrl~ Oub.
Mt. Fussell is a W0tld War II veteran, member of
SI. Anne's uthoUc Churd\, S.f'h Ana EIS. Lodp
#794, the Notth S.nta Ana tOw•nk Ckib, •nd
was Sute President of t-FunerAI DI~ Of
Ulifornb In 1969.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP>-
Experience was tbe key to his
victory ln the Kemper Open golf
tournament. Tom Weiskopf said.
A regained puU1ng touch brought
him through the multlple·man
scramble.
But wife Jeanne deserves a
large part of the credit, too.
... was really down after my
disappointing, discouraging
finish in the Memorial Tourna-
ment in my home town,"
Weiskopf said Sunday after a
flnal-round 70 had broken a two-
ye1tr victory drought.
''I just wanted to get away
from tournament golf for a while.
I hadn't won in two years. I was
playing bad. It wasn't any fun. I
was confused and angry. I didn't
know what to do.
''I just wanted lo get away for a
while and not play and try to get
things worked out.
"My wif~ told me I was like a
rookie trying to win his first one.
She told me I had to stick with it.
She said I was the only one who
• ·could make it happen, and I
couldn't make it happen if I
wasn'tplaying.
''Sol went on to AUanta."
He shot a nine-birdi _ _,,..,
last round at Atlanta after the round, decld play
in the Kemper. That dee lon-
and his critical play on thel>ar-
five holes-led to a 277 total, 11
under par, his third vtctory in the
Kemper and $50,000 from the
total purse or $250,000.
And it prompted him to enter
this week's Danny Thomas-
Memphis Classic. He filed his en-
try moments after posting his
12th career victory and only mo-
ments after posting his 12th
career victory and only moments
be Core Ole deadline.
"I'm a great. one for believing
in good play continuing," be said.
"I want to keep it going. I'm not
just going to Memphis to try to
keep my game in shape for the
U.S. Open (two weeks away).
I'm going to Memphis to try to
play good and win."
Fl,,.1 <-..a'1d monef'wlMlr>q< '" llw ICtmoer <>o-" 9(111 ,.,.,..,,.,,._, °" ttw 1 lto·ytrd tw1r.1Z
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1hooUQf touch ,_med for tho
final came. tank • 20-footer to
llee the Jud to 109-iOT with 18
aecon<t, to ao. Then McGinnis
tled up Portland'• BC)b Gro1a and
controlled the aubse<tuent ~ump
ball.
The Sixer$ cot three shOtl lil
the final ei&ht seconds, but hOlle
found lta taraet. The first wu t>y
Sullua Ervin&, who led all·
scorers wltb 40 ~lnts, but hls
18·footer bounc~:;o(f the rim.
Lloyd Free 1rabbed the rebdwKl,
but his shot was blocked by
Walton.
McGinnla grabbed the ball and
lired from 12 feet, b~~:~he hot
was ehort. Walton tippeo tbe re-
bound to Portland's Johnny
Davlt and the game was over.
The crowd or 12,SSl swamped
lhe tourt in what looked like a
PORTLAND'S BILL WALTON IS MOBBED BY FANS.
scene from a Cecil B. DeMille
epic, and the lm mediate post·J•me hy1terla was tame
compared with the celebration
that followed downtown. A
parade through downtown was
planned for noon today.
Thousands ot delinous basket-
ball fans thronged Portland's
downtown area Sunday la
celebration of Portlancl's cham-
pionship. Police sald the de-
monstration, tor the most part,
remained ~acerut.
Sbt>rtly after the Trajl Blazers
defeated the 7~• to end the
championship series, rans
poured Into the streets, chanting:
"We'reNo.1! We'reNo.l!"
Police said they were monitor-
ing the boisterous but generally
peaceful demoutration. A
spokesman sald the cheerful fans
would be allowed to blow ore
s t eam without police in-
terference unless trouble de-
veloped.
"I don't see that we really have
a choice," he said.
The spokesman said no arrests
or serious injuries had been re-
ported in connection with the de-
monstration. One young woman,
an apparent fainting victim, was
taken from the downtown area in
an ambulance. Sbe raised a
finger in the "We're No. l " sign
as she was carried into the am-
bulance.
Fans beat on utensils and a
cowbell and formed a snake
dan.ce in one busy intersection or
Broadway. Many of the males
were shirUess under a hot s un.
A man wearing only brief
shorts and tennis shoes climbed a
traffic signal pole to string a ban-
ner saying "NBA Champions.''
Several blocks away, about 300
people, mostly young, drank beer
and wine; including champagne,
openly ln an Intersection, block~
ing traffic for three blocks.
Motorists were patient, leonine
out their car windows, wavlng at
each other and echoing the
chant: "We're No.1."
·'Thia was one of the best
games I've ever played in,"
Walton -said. "A lot of guys
played well and it was exciting."
Walton won a new car when a
panel of writers selected him
MVP. Blazers coach Jack
Ramsay couldn't argue with the
choice.
PHllAOll~HIA 11011 -e,.,.1,,q olC) M<Gtrv»' lt. C. JOl>e' 10. Bibb .. '>. Collins 6. Mh Z Oa•klnU.
Free •. 8rvan11
.. O.TlANO 110'1 -G•O't ?•. luc•• n Wallon
to. O•V'' IJ. '4olllns 20. C•IMun '· "IHI '· Twaroki-7
P'llta<MIP'lla l7 ti 17 ts -107 ~onl•nd 27 ..., 11 11 -1°'
Fouled oul -C Jonn Tot•• •ou•s -
P'lllae1t1at1I• 21 Po<tt•"1 'l " -n.~s1
Hope DianioridTamis11:ed
Hough' Holds On tU Dodgers Triumph, 4-2
LOS ANGELES (A P )-Tom
Lasorda's ''Hope Diamond" got
a little tarnished Sunday. But
Charlie Hough, the ace reliever
of the Los Angeles Dodgers, still
was sharp enough to record his
15th save.
Hough replaced Doug Rau
after seven innings and the
Dodgers clinging to a 4·2 lead
over San Diego. The score was
the same at the end of the game,
bul not be.Jere a few anxious mo-
ments provided by Hough.
The knuckle-balling specialist
issued six walks in the final two
innings, but escaped unscathed
as the Dodgers maintained their
IO-game lead over Cincinnati in
the National League West.
"What happened to my Hope
Diamond?" kidded Lasorda, the
Dodgers' rookie manager after
the game, referring to the usual-
ly reliable Hough. "But, after all,.
I felt Charlie played a major role
in getting us where we are and I
wanted to show confidence in
him."
Hough, for all bis wildness, did
not give up a hit. He took over
after Rau, 6-1, had allowed five
hits. After walking three straight
batters with two out In the ninth,
Hough retired George Hendrick
on a fly ball on the first pitch,
ending the game.
Dave Lopes socked a two-Nn·
homer ln the fifth tnnlng, his
lourth ol tbe'year, providing the
eventual mar~h1 of victory. The
Dodgers madothe most of their
* * * SA" oi•GO LOtAMGClll .. ,11... ..,111111
f!"'IM....Olt • s 1 1 o loeH2b •I 1 f
AIMo<ISS • I 1 0 llu IH l 0 0 1
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four hits off three San Diego
pitchers, incluCling loser Tom
Griffin,4-4.
Rau survived a shaky first in-
Dodflen Slate
Ml 0-.M tcAK C1'tl
Ju"' 'L.OI AnQeltUI CNc• June 11.osAnge1eaalClllC4'9Q
June I I.OS ""9fleut Clllc;aoo
11·U•.m. 11:U ... m.
11,Ua.m.
ning ih which the Padres collect-
ed two hits and had two walks
and a hit batsman but scored on·
ly once. A double play pulled Rau
out or trouble.
Los Angeles tied the score in.
the second when Ron Cey
doubled and cam~ home on a
wild pitch by Griffin.
Mike Ivie homered for San
Diego in the fifth, making it 2-1
before Lopes connected. The
Dodgers got an insurance run in
the seventh on Bill Russell's
sacrifice Dy.
Lopes' homer was the seventh
In the three·game series between
the team, and after 52 games,
Los Angeles has belted 63
homers. Last year, the .Oodgers
did not hit No. 63 until tli• lOtst
game.
Gottfried
..,,..,,--'
No Match
For Vilas .
PARIS <AP>-Fortennis stars,
it's "au revoir" to the clay courts
of Paris and on to the green,
green grass of England.
Wimbledon is two weeks away.
Guillermo Vilas, Argentinian
superstar who tore Brian Got-
tfried to pieces in the final of the
French Championships Sunday,
immediately became a favorite
to challenge Jimmy Connors,
Bjorn Borg and Roscoe Tanner at
Wimbledon.
"I really don't know," Vilas
said. "I have not begun to think
of Wimbledon. We must wait and
see .
''We have said all alon.t that
1978 is to be my year.''
By "we," Vilas meant himself
and Ion Tiriac, former Roma-
nian Davis Cupper and one-time
doubles partner of Ilie Nastase,
who manages and coaches Vilas.
Vilas' win over Gottfried on the
center court of Roland GarrQS, in
wind and rain, was th~ most de-
vastating af(air Par!Sians have
seen in years. The elegant left.
hander, hitUng almost exclusive.
ly from his baseline, won 6-0, 6-3,
6-0.
He appeared intent on gettin"
the match over before the
weather got worse and halted
play. It was all over in a little less
than tW() hours-and that is a
short engagement on these
courts, where the ball bounces
slowly and rallies stret.ch on.
A month ago Gottfried
managed to win only slx games
against Vilas in the course o£ a
humiliating Davis Cup defeat.
"I thought he could never play
better than that,·• Gottfried said.
"But he did play better ln this
match."
' Funk ~ana 'ave tl'le Im· pression he had ust lost 1~
seventb aame o tbe W'r'ld
~rl~. ~
•1That wun't me tonicbt,' tbe
CallloriUa Anaels pitcher tol the m~la Sunday night. "Go talk to
the fielders and the hitters.'' •
The media did not •ant to leave him. Tanana bad just be~ome the first nlne-i.me win·
ner i.n t.be major leagues t\ls
year. pitching the Angels to a ~-1
victory over the Detroit Tieers at
Anaheim stadium and bis e~ed
run average had dropped to 1.99.
It was not one of his more
artistic performances. Seec>nd
ln the majors in strikeouts to
teammate Nolan Ryan, Ta.rmna
fanned only four Tieers.
A three-day break In tbe
schedule bad given Tanana live
A-.etsSlaU :....
• &11-....-.. lcMPC ll_.. (Jtf)
JUM tOelrOit .. C.llfWfllt 1:,S ... '!ll.
.111111 7TonintoetCalltotnla 7:f$o.m, ,,,_ ll.,.....•Callfornl• 1:•...,.:
days off between starts. In bis
last appearance, he had dropped
a l·O decision to Cleveland as
Dennis Eckersley threw a '"nO-
biUer al the Angels last Monday
night. "Six days are too much, but
what are you going to do?" said
Tanana, now 9-2. "I was in too
good of a groov., before the
layoff. Everything the Tigers bit
tonight was at someone.'·
Marie .. The Bird" Fidrych,
winless alter two decisions, r~ceti
the Angels tonight on the mound
for Detroit .
Fidrycb underwent knee sur
gery In the spring. His oppoqenl
tonight is Gary Ross (2-2). A
crowd of 30,000 is expected.
Tanana's teammates gave him
strong support Sunday night .. In
the first inning, Gil Flores
singled, moved lo second on a
sacrifice and scored on a single
by Don Baylor. Detroit tied it on
Jason Thompson's eighth home
run in the fourth inning. •
•' l 'm not noted for 'm~·
smarts," said Tanana ... I st.ruck
him out in the second inning and
kept trying to blow the ball by
him. He bit 6' fastball out."
California blew the game open
in tbe sixth inning with three
runs off Tieers starter Fernando
Arroyo, 3-3. , · .:
Baylor opened with a smp~
and Joe Rudi singled to left field.
When Bay)or beat the throw tG
thitd base, Rudi took second.
Then Bobby Bonds doubl' ~th
runners home.
Dave Chalk followed with' a
single to short center, with Bonds
stopping at third base. Pinch~t.:
ter Ron Jackson forced Ch!fk· :.~~ Bonds scoring, makin~gt it
The Angels tiecf an Amerfo
League record with thr "e"
sacrifices in the eighth lnn . I when they scored their final
Bonds walked, Chalk bunted 8P!
was safe when Bonds b¥t
pitcher Jim Crawford's tbrow)k)
second base. Jackson sacrific,d
the runners, and, after an int•· tional walk to Bobby Grich,
Terry Humphrey squeezed
Bonds home. I
oaTttOtT
alllrl!M
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FunlH!b •'I l O
Staub"" • o l o
OqlMerf • 0 1 0
T..,tn-11> I 1 1 1
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_ ......... ~~~----~..--------~-------------~------------11 ~ -.
end plaa to return to th pro
tlrcult later thla year.
Jn 1•. he teamed wltb Erte
V n Dlll~n to win the U.S .. amateur doubles champlonsh1p., If• h played and der altd aucb
pro1 • Jlmmy Connort, BJom Bor1, Rod Laver and Roy
Emtf'IClft ln 1ln1le1 wbUt on the World Ch1mplonahlp Tennla
tlrcult. ••1 hlven•t p1~ed a lot In tht
J11t lhne )'tart, ' Leonard Hid.
"But. I'm rohil to It.I.rt on tbt
circuit .iain and thl1 Um• I will
take lt a little nu>re Htloualy and
train tiardei'. ''
• H• hu been ranked aa hJCh u
14th ln men's open 11n1lea and
once WN lbltd·ranked ln Junior letinls.
Van IJnae w,._ ranked twJce
while play{nf on tbt clrcu.lt and
is a natlveolNtw Zealand •here he wu the top Junior player. He
la a two-Ume winner of the open
doul>lea ln thl toumament and
1110 captured the mixed doubles
tlt1e a year a10.
U waa a lOUlh afternoon tor
Trout wbo teamed with Julie
Hayward of the bolt Newport
Beath Tennla Club ln the mixed
doublea open llnala. They were
deteated by Lea AntonoPQlls
<Glendora) and Randy Verdieck
<La1unaNl1uel), 7·5. 6·3. Suk~y Doyle lnd Jane Willens
of 1Uv1era won the women's open
wlth a M, 8-1 wln over Sue Ince
<John Wayne TC) and Lea A.lln
Fischer (Loi Alamitos). Wlllena,
the daughter of football at.er
Frankie Albert, ls seven months
pre1nant.
IUNOAY'l"NA\.I -·•0..11 1.to"a"'Y•ll LI• 11.-.111e llCI Mf Trout 11'•-lery ... !>I TCl-Miltliell llNl'M llC:I. M .....,,, .hlnler \IMt
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GWC, Anteaters
Split Doubleheaders
-··•O...tslell Wt•111.()oftrat'" 1s.11 -.drel def Ot""leed· lmitll •Mlto\lol\Vl•lol .. 1,4·1 IMll'tCON~
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TC:IFl'IC ..... 'l.o•A• .... tto•IM .•·2.
UC Irvine and Golden West
CoUege summer baseball teama
split doubleheaders Sunday In
?.fetro Leasue action asaJnst
Ahahelm and Chapman. UC Irvine ripped 14 bits en
roate to an 8-4 decislon over
Anaheim in the first game, but
the latter bounced back with 14
hits to taJte an 8-7 nine-inning de-
cision in the nightcap al UC
Irvine.
Golden West also got ort on the
right root in the first same, tak-
ing a 7-3 verdict over Chapman,
but Chapman rallied with six
runs in the fourth inning to take
the second tiff, 8-7, at GWC.
In Golden West's victory, the
Rustlers played Jong ball as Tim
Innes doubled and Frank Meraz
followed wtth a single.
Jn the fourth inning Innes had a
bases·loaded triple. Peder White
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Wllllt o ? ? O ? Ct,.t\C'> 11
')111'>'> D 0 ') ') 0 "l)b4rt'°" 0
To111\ n 1 •o ' ..... ,,,'-OO o
p.,.1.,1-t 0 T.,,,.,, '" ... ,111\TOAME S< _ _.,,..,,, ... . " . 000 001 ? -.J • ' 1~ 0 0 • ~ 10 ' SECONOOA"'ll
S<••tltYIMI-
,lllST OAMI! UC,..,,,. 111 lb," 11>1
~IYUU• (I } J 1 1
Ro ... o, 11 1 1 1 1
Fr416nci.r " ) 1 7 0 ~"" .. ,, o .... ,,., lb ; 0 1 0
Mu'14t • d'I l 0 1 1
()rlOol c • 1 1 0 """""'·lb • ' ' 0 Gatttr. 7b 2 I 1 I
l(rtmtr, o 0 0 0 0
Tot•lt ?t ~ 4 I
. " . 11)4 JOO 0 -' 0 0
nl.00 •-411
SECONOOAMI
uc1 ... 111e "' •• r" rill MIVHV• ct • 1 I 0 Romo II • 1 1 J
Frot1nder l\ \ 1 l I
01w...,,, II) • 0 I I
Alltn Jb \ 0 1 I
G•lool c • o o 1
GAltt r 11t • 0 0 0
l.und•lrOM,rf 4 0 0 0
P•lnt.dh 3 l 1 O
e~ow,kl o o o o o
Wlllt•rn.., o 0 0 0 0
Tot•I• )I I 10 1
"llSTOAMll
and Steve Slaton combined on the
mound for the victory. In the second game Innes had a base hlt
Lo score two runs and added a two-
run triple In the fourth. A three-run double in the sixth
inning by Steve Morton was the
key blow for UC Irvine in its win
over Anaheim. Morton also had
two doubles for the day.
Mike Mayeaux had three
singles and two solen bases for
Irvine.
Scott Romo had three singles
and four rbl in the second game
for UC Irvine.
Irvine and Anaheim's Giants
return to action tonight at
Orange's Hart Park 17).
Wtrnt<1'14 OIY11Mll
Crlqqtr.St Cl1I• 1wn ... TC: I dtf Sl•a1IOll •
IEmt•tld l "•'·Slll\IOft IMIHlofl Vltlol 1-6, J.j, w-•• • OIYl1i.
Wtllllm 'We""' TC•·Rtl"' IM'Hlofl Vltlol ... f
S.t11rbl._......,.,tt '''"'"' RCI 4·1,4·l .
W-11'' C Otvhlt11 Wllllt 'l""•1llj •~Yl·8t•CI 'B•lllo• Bey Clulll
d•l L•'"""''"'"'''' rw..,... TC' 1·•·•·1, w-·10 OIYl•ltll
Hutc~t-.-ou•1<;11 •c1ol1t•...o ltKquet 0 11111
oet M•llv F0<11t1 'Llllt ,..,,.,, TCl 6-t.6·•.
MlotMo.tll
4nltl\OOOll\ G1trte1ort l•Vt•dl-Cll 'l.equ111
Nlquen tMI 'i•vw••d ''ltwoor1 &tee" TCl.Trout •P•o~to•vl'Ol..tTCl1 S •·1 MllM A OIYltltll
E '1•')11 'IUlbo-t 8•• Club I lto\41M• rwa.,... TCI
Ml ~tr4,. Oorli\ W1.,.,. TC> l .. •·2. , ..
MIH<l80Mtlt11 e ...... a·-...... oo•I 8ttcl\ TCI _, "'"'"" i:oof M \\'Oft vi.1.,1 ~ 1 ~
MIHd C: Ohltl.,.
ljl•Uc.1 ''St•' 84.C:*"' 0,.,. 'G4"'(9ilt.f't G""We\ OP'
1<1r11 C"4o'M C•t•• 'l11lt ••t •!•v Clllttl l .. 4·l , ..
Mletd 0 Ol•hlM
A VtN"'I " V'lt.t"'I •l.t11t Fo•HI TCI dtl
f.ltrltft\1•11Wl"1ll• IWt""' TC IM 1·S
Thoroug hbred Loop
FV Nine in Sweep
The Fountain Valley Dodgers
picked up a pair of victories In
Thoroughbred League baseball
action Sunday, taking 3·2 and 5·4
decisions from Ocean View, the
first game going nine innines.
Costa Mesa's Captains
dropped a two-game set to
Tustin, however, as the hosts got
more out of their hits in record-
ing 2·1 and 7-3 victories.
The Dodgers got pitcher Jon
Furman two runs in the first in-
ning of the first game as Bill
Grilz walked, Dave Votaw
tripled and Jerry Wilson singl.ed.
The winner came in the ninth
'9111TGA"IE
Ctti.Mtw 111
•II r II Al
G• .. n 11 'o 1 o P,.,, .. c• 1 '> o o
ltl)t.•Hon \\ ' 0 1 'I
G••• lt'hon lb 1 I ? 1
G•llllfl 11) 1 0 0 0
Flt "'l"q ,.. l 0 J 0 e .. \\1t• 1~ 1 o o o
Curr "' c J 0 0 0 Sultlv•n 11" l 0 1 0 •MO•"'''' o o 11" o
Sl!CONOOAMll
cosi.MtwOI
c; .... 11\." ......... nq '1
Rol)ort.on " G" q ·1...., lb
Gr1ft1n.o
P1vr>e (I
8 r•nt•r. lb
l(lnd•• lb
•II rll _,,.
• 0 0 0
'0 • I)
• ' l 0
1 1 ? 0
' ' 1 ' • I) 7 0 1000
?000
3000
Tote'' '11 t I t Tot4t'\ 10311\
FlllnGAME Sc.,.,y .... 1...,. ....
010 000 0-1 I •
JOO'l'JO •?~O UCOOfO OAME S<ertltYl,.111,.., . " . 000 011 )-1 ' 0
010 ''° 0 -1 ,. 1 when Dean Campbell walked and J1111sTOAMI!
Jim Thomas doubled. Furman ,,v ~ •J1 HC~OOA¥•
flV~•s1
struck out eight. G"'' ,, ••; ~ ~ G"'' ,, Tb.e Dodgers scored in the G••v•11 .... • o ' ~ W••d d" !~vt~~ t:'u~:l~ao~~ t:cer~;:~~:~ ~·~~~?: : ~ ~ l ~:~~~'
~~~~ ~8!.1~~ sr,o::~ .o2 a a~ ;~:ri ~~~;7~· ~ ~ ~ ~ g ~~~=:;~;:
stroked a two-run singled with TMrn•' c• • o ' o Fu""'" 'lb
twoout. "~;;:.~0 ,~~~~ ~:~:;•~< Ray Craft and Steve Sickman s1c11,,, ... o
combined for the victory Tot•••
h d ho fllll\TOAMI
•II• II rlll
• 0 ' 0
1 0 1 0 t I I 0
1 l 1 0
• 0 , 1
' ' ? z • 0 '0
1 0 1 ' JOOO
1 I t 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
31 \ " •
Alatnitos
Bacing
ED.tries .
Pel'T.,.._
trlnt"9st:1:4S t
PlllST llAC& -UO yerdt.. 1.....,.
Old\. Clalrn1"9 ""M ttooO ClelrnlnQ
o•lctU!OO.
0t11uue 'C'"''•' 8uM\l'l 8tr 11<1 'M'llHI
C ... •llt !tl<ll ITtM\U"<tl
Gllld1bOUI ICMdoHI
Cute Bui Pun<"I• IDomll'IQUtrl
AC! I 'Herll M• G•v p .. , IF11r10n9I
011 Colonel Cit ICru99rl
Secluded Sowrtlian IWardl
llldv C•tm118•001ltl
117 n t
'" 1n ,,,
'" Ul
'" 122
117
Marina Star
eonirol Key
Bohick's
Brother
-
:16' . Killed For iriangano R~~e~~:ick~~ns~~;
ring partner for world
By BOWARD L. HANDY heavyweight champion
0t111eoa11yP11ont.i1 Muhammad Ali, was
When any team soes through a season in un-killed Sunday night when
dereated fashion to reach the championship finals, his car smashed Into a
it has to be a cooperative effort on the part of all in· power pole near his
divlduals involved. hometown in northern
The Marina High School (Huntington Beach) Minnesota.
AIMlllltfi.te
GoSt'91ktn 18f001l''
girls softball team with a perfect 16·0 won·lost re· Boblck boxed ln the
cord wtll tangle with El Segundo High for the 4-A shadow of his brother cba~plonshlp Tuesday night at the Santa Ana Duane, a highly ranked
m 'Bowl. heavyweight contender.
Game time IS' set tor 8 o'clock but a late start ls Rodney always was con. 01!~~?::.::,c:,,-~::,:~~.!:i:; a ntlc1pated due to the ~-A UUe eame and awards sidered "the other
orlc• \4000. ce·remony before the Marina-El Secundo tllt. Boblck." S.••1
•,..,.,,., 'M1'"
1
'" While it is • team effort on the part of coach The State Patrol said Al 8oy IC..rdotl I U2 'f
Lvc1tvs.ctio 1.t.ttt1r1 m Betsy Ward's Marina Vikinss. it is also an in-Boblck, 25, died about a J*'•"''• .i-, '8'00k• 1 m di vidual thine forseveral mem~ of the squad. half ·hour after the accl-,.~1 ... 91tnd ITretiurtl lit lr
''"' A.S.lnl 1uP111m1 m Diana Mangano, winner or 13_.of those 16 vlc· dent on Minnesota 238,
Oflthl4CMt11or1 1ci ... ,, .. , m tories as the Vikes pitcher, has a remarkable 0.34 two miles west· of
e .r. a. and has walked only four batters in 88 innings. Bowlus. Tbe patrol said THt•o llACW -no Y•rd' ) y .. ,
old\ and uo. AllOw•nc• PurH U?OO
"119ln •Clerlnel lit
l.to'• Bally 'I.I .... "'' lU E•t'lltl_.,,M ll< ... 111 1'2
NoedaFIYt•IT••••ur•I '" M in 81trttd urn11 10om1,,.,.,., 1 tu 4«t-IQtnloral 111 Fll\tl M.IUIOll IMylft) II•
l'OU llTM llAC• -a Y•rft. 3 VH•
olds e.rtCI up. Cl.in'llf't. Pvl"M U200.
Clel'1'11"4 orlctSj()OI)
Blq An tsreerv •t.lplltml
COUl\lyllrnll IMllc"'"' A!u••One 1c1.,1,w1
l•llfl"IS-0 •4Cllltr l Swll'M;ll"'I Sllrn IW.,dl
Ju•lfllt P• 104.,,1
11•
'" 1n 1n
'" '" ""™ llACI -400 yerd' 3 yoar olds trtCI uo Fllllt1 and,.,., .. Cl•lrn·
1119. PurseSWOO. Cl•lmll"'J pr let SI~.
Lonq A Go 'Del-) I 1'
Rouq" Mt,,.,1e llrHsurtl 111
MIH Rtw•"'9a' lll•OOll\I 11'
MIU BIWldUtcl •c.rcto1a 1 "' Ml Vlllt IMyttt) I It
Queen MOI,,,. ''•evl 111
"She has great control and she ls very .coosis· Bobick's car lert the
tent," Ward says. "She's also deceptively fast. I highway, bit the power
don'tthink the opposing batters realize how !astahe pole and rolled. The
is really throwing." fighter was alone in his
Mangano, a senior, has pitched eight shutouts ciu-, an officer said.
includins three in rour playoff games. In the 13.
sames she has started, she bas pitched in 88 innings IRS Probe
which means she has been relieved for only three NEW YORK-Dwight
innings of the 91 possible in the seven-inning con· stones, w or Id re ·
tests. cordbolder in the high This relief has come in games that Marina was jump, along wlth many
winningeasily. other world class
H'er strikeout total for the season is 65 and op-amatew-athletes, ls un·
posing teams have garnered only 27 base hits der Investigation by the
against her. Intern a I Revenue
Her first playoff game against Bishop Amat Service according to
was a no·hltter. She also bas three one·hltters and Time Magazine.
several other two-hitters this season. The IRS, according to
With only four walks in 88 innings, control is her Time, is trying to de· Scot• by 111111..., , " . OCM 000 O_. S 0
Gary Robertson a a me Score•Y'""'"''
run in Costa Mesa's first game 010 000 000_; ~ ~ SIXTH uc• _ 350 v.,01 3 v .. r
and Glenn Robertson tripled in ~~·~~~ 100 000 00, _3 • 1 o10s. ""--P1.rrse\Zto0
biggest asset on the pitc~ing mound. t e r m in e w h et h e r
The Marina girls have played together for amateur athletes have
M•• .\911Mor lf.lar11 'tt
110 104 •-4 .. ? the second tiff. But Tustin. s ECONOOAMI JAooree101t.1-m1 m about six years, beginning in Bobby Sox softball. accepted under-the·table SECONOGAMI
k ott llY '""''"' althou'h OUt-hit 1·n both games, sc-iw "'"~ i:1v1n ~e41e1 'A"''°"' 111 r 11 t lrn• Eny t.owr •4dtlr l 111 • " • got the hlts when they counted Fv Ooefclt•' 011 ooo 1 ~ 11 ' M•n eec11 '" ... ",...' 1n UAnCtlh•4v1l,,,11e 001 OlO 700:! !O ?J t O<t•" VI-201 010 O_. • 4 lme Tiny lf.lertl 117 .:::::=:____,,..---..::''°:_:000::....:00:.:..•--....:_1..:.' _:__..!m~os::!!:.:__ __________________________ 01c~•nHt..._ 'C.•do1e1 111
·•1 don't know how long they have played payoffs to support
together, but it has been quite awhile, .. Ward says. themselves and have
One team member s ays it has been six years and failed to report the tn-
they know each other pretty wen. from that long of come to tax authorities .
COSTA MESA
AMC & JEEP ·
!Major League Standings
1977
MATADOR
WAGON v.a. ........ AM ,._.._......_..
A7 A887H192278
AMElUCAN LEAGUE
Eut Dlvlslon
Baltimore
New York
Boston
Milwaukee
Cleveland
Detroit
Toronto
W L Pct. GB
28 22 .560,
29 23 .SSS
27 23 .~ 1
26 27 .(91 31,Aj
22 25 .468 41h
20 28 .417 7
20 30 .400 8
Wut Dlvulon Minnesota 31 20 .603
Chica10 28 21 .571 2
Texas 24 23 .511 5
An,ela 25 U .510 5
Oakland 25 26 .490 6
Kansas Cil)' 24 25 .'90 6
Seattle 22 34 .393 11~
s....,·,~, "'-v-• Clll<t90• s.~111t• c:i-•lftd-1 ~IOt\ S M·-tol• I T••tt1 M•lw ..... tt • Ken•M Cll\I • .. ,lt~t) c:a11t0,,..•t S 0..1'941 t
To""'i. r Otl<llll'd 1 T_., .• ._,
Hew Y°"" IQ\I....., j.t l tl Ttwec •A...-r
.. ~~ ... !JtMlllt ,_,, 411 ic.-CIW I"""" ,.,,, ..
C:l\•C-, .. ttl .. ,. ttt ¥•11MMlt 1%-"'! .. \I, II ••"'mo•• '"'•11•t•11 l·SI at Mllwtlllr.tt '•M•lcrvet'·tl,n
tltwl-·~•Sht0..1...-t~WI.
II Ottro!I "'1~11 O ,I -4 Calt~ll '"-H tr M.\rtMll , ... I II
°"'".._,~..-
Kelly ~N ••r°'UI 117
A·"-""'•Cltvqer 1Trea1llt'e l •n HtlYll l(ler1t•I ltt
an association. The investigation,
But Cew softball teams wUl 11urvive fo r long which could affect the
without a pitcher or the caliber of Mangano. On~ in-eligibility of many to
terested spect.ator at the semifinal game with War· compete in the Olym·
ren High or Downey was Golden West College coach pies, is expected to
Judi Garman. sf read to other world
Wll\dv llOCllM IW.,dl ltt
A·81-$tlW-.... ldl lrt lMd tfllrV
SWYINTN llACll -400 Yffd' 3 ~., oldS -uo. 4JIOWll\Ct. Pvl'W "'*· SIYt........,1~1
Fl"I N' '1clll• 1Hartl '" "I haven't talked to her yet. but I would like to c a ss track and field 111 • '" have her play for us. ·Garman says. stars. Viva Vitti ICfll I OlcbYS~ •Centotal
M"ltry Tt IMyltt) Ac:H C6""' ,,..,._,I
PlnlMlllWlcH<d IWe•dl
llocktl '-*"'<1111• 11.lllll.IMl
•n Garman bad another Marina graduate pitch for m two seasons at Golden West -Melannie Kyler -
'" and the Rustlers won two national AIA W cham-
m pion1hips do ring her stay.
•10HTH11•c...-=i,.,;.,..;i .... ., Mangano has successrully followed in the
0•<1t. c:1e1rn1,... ~-uoao (1•'"''"' footsteps of Kyler at Marina. :i::N.:-i,s.....,..~, m The determined young pitching star will be
0o11ae_,1W.,d1 ~:; heard from again, whether it be at Golden West or =:;::,:.=,;, m some other college, as she pursues the softball sport Toe,.•1Toa..t1~1 tu and perhaps a scholarship and an education to go
""· ~O(ktl ••VOii """' m with lt. iomtriOI ""'' 11( .... 110 ••• Ttvt Ila" '~I 111 VeJ11WllCfl l.t.111'°411 117
SllllW 00 IOerl!M 1 ltt
Gordle Barr bomtted
to risbt·center In the
first inning, briefly tyin1
the 1ame at 1·1, but
Anaheim railed for four
runs In the secood lnnin1
t.be break the game open.
MW0 11 w1 ...
ZOLDER, Bel1lum-
S wed en's Gunnar
Nilsson In a JPS-Lotus
won the raJn-awept, boUy
contested Betsian Grand
Prlx Sunday, beating
Austria's former world
champion., Niki Lauda,
by 1• seconds.
1Ct1fi ... IM~ .... ,-. ., u,.ce,.. ... , ....... .. -... , Tl"' • ,.,,,,,"'It. ··-·· •ltv.C..n GWal\,lf ............... ,,
ff , II
' 0 0 I 0 I
,_.. 80«• lit
t T ..... Y.«
t Tllalt
• 0 ' 1 I I • 0 0 , 0 0
I 0 0
t 0 1
t 0 0 , • 0
' • 0 ' 0 • 0
' 0 0 ' . . lS I '
• , • 0 • • 0
0 • • • • '
.. • • • ' • • • • , • • * • • • • •
Native Son, the new 50-f oot sloop designed
by Marshall "Duffy" Duffield especially for
·the upcoming Transpac race to Honolulu,
heels to a brisk breeze in her first tuneup
sail on Newport Harbor. The light displace-
ment yacht will be syndicated by the eight-
man crew in the Transpac.
Thrillseeker, skippered by Bill Filsinger of the
.B-.hla Corinthian Yacht Club, was the winner of the
Huntington Flats race, the fourth in Voyagers
Yacht Club's Humphrey Bogart race for yachts rat·
ed under the Performance Handicap Racing Fleet
1yatem.
Winner in the Midget Ocean Racing Fleet in the
Laughlin Series, sailed over the same course, was
Wildcat., sailed by Peter Schoonmaker, BCYC. Swn mary ofresults : ·
PHRF·A -1, Thrillseeker; 2, Animal Farm,
Byrne/Hansen, VYC; 31 No name, Don DuBose,
VYC; 4, Candrice, Mike Kirby, BCYC; 5, Enchan·
tress, John Lee, VYC.
PHRF·B -1, Bebo tr, Bob Darnell, Capo BYC;
2, Pussycat, John Szalay, VYC; 3, ~iger Lilly, Ron
Deacon, VYC; 4, Cat's Pajamas, Carl Last, VYC; 5,
qel'\tsls, John Siple, SSYC.
, MORF -1, Wildcat; 2, Andale, Gordon
Graham, SSYC; 3, Aloha JI, Glenn Reed, SSYC.
'lbree Sailboat
Cha~ps Cr~ned
National championships for three classes of
Windrose sailboata were h~ld Sunday at the Dana
Pola\l Yacht Club.
, Winner In the 18·foot Windrose was Bob Naier,
Los Angeles; second was Bill Haseltine, Anaheim,
an4 third was Bob Nicholson, San Diego.
George Remlneton of Encino was the winner In
the Windrose-22 class.
Trophy winners lo the Windrose·24s were San-dy Smith, San Clemente; Bob Ruth, Oceanside, and
Knowlton Fernald, Santa Ana.
'Belles Becalmed
,l#ght, fluky winds plagued the women skippers
fnvolved in Dana Point Yacht Club's seeond race of
the Dana Belles Series Sunday. The winds ranged
ft'om zero to five knots over the nin~·mUe course.
'tbe.terles is belnl sailed 1n Performance Handicap
Racina Fleet Yachts.
,, The winner Sunday was Joan Malanosky in the
Cat.allna·27 Sunshine. Runner·up was Fancy, a
·Mor1an-27 skippered by Marti French, and third
was Wind Runner, a Catallna·27 sailed by Julie
Timon, Capistrano Bay Yach\ Club.
) ·$7,000
fOr oDly $135.0
anaon&
WhtrtMt you need $3,500 or $10,000 get It
from the people who lend mUllons.
Commercial Credit. Monthly payment
based on a $7.000 HomeONMt Joan. for
_ 84 mc:inth:S. at an annual percentage rate of
15$. Total ~Cfll ll,345.88.
NO POINTS. NO PREPAYMEm: PENALTY. , W. find ~ to help .
. ·~ COMM~~L <:~IT CORPQ~ATION ~
'"' ~LOIN ·m.
Aio.tf/#S.~000 ...... ..-.. ~tifa ~ ......... ...._..,..,.,.,.
~ 11.. • 110 z. l'lth 8trtn •
• 1U1 a'OWB • C.ut17 M.
Suite ft
b;.Ut. ._.. ........ ~ .. UctWe ..... _ ... ~
Choate Yaeht T~ Whitney Serie• . .
Bln10. ·•kippered by Dtnat1 · Shamrock; 3, Victoria,· Dave
Choate, ot the Lone B .. ch Yacbt Callender, LA YC.
Club, emtt1ed tbe Ottra1.l and CLASS B -1, Concubine; 2. Mis·
CIHI C winner of the Loe Mieles tress ID; 3. Scud, Oeor1e GrUlltb,
Yacht Club's Wbltnty Serita for LAYC.
yacht.I rated under tbe lntemaUoa.aJ CLASS c -1, BinJo: 2, eottcatall:
OUabore J\ult. • 3. Wblte Ulhtnl.na.
BOATING
wu ccncluded Sunaay wtth the 128-. CLASS f> -1. Deelaton; 2, En·
mllt San Clemente Ialand race which terp"" Broob Barnhill, LA YC; 3,
took the neet around CataUoa and San Tlnaley Lllbt. Henry Grandin, St.. ..... ---. 1-.. -l .--~ ... ---"1
Clemente lalandl, flnlahlnc at the FYC. ~ __ 99 .. 1 ..
Em my oil lalaod off Huntln1ton UUle Whitney• flaal raee . AU'NINSU••bNuC:al· Beach. The race atarted Saturdl)' at CI.A$ A -1, Mallbinl, Ed Zlm·
Loi Ancel Harbor. merman. CBYC: 2, Zap, Ed Lorence, ~ 1,,. ......, la:ois ...
LA\'C A.UO WOUND up lts LltUe CBYC.
~.• 8:00 -ctrcus ol the Stars.
Movie aha. TV tan display their new
talents as elrcua puf ormera lil thll
apectal p'n>d\tctlon. ,
KTLA .• 8:00 -The Fltht ua1natt Slav~ A dramaUc documentaiy locus· 1
ma on ~aJanct•a ao..year battle to aboUu;
slavery.
NBC • 1:00 -··A Sen11u:~ Paaslooate :Maa.0 David Januen
Angie DlekiDson portray a happy couple'
'whose marrJage la threatened when
J usses> loses his job and becomes an
81coho11c.
ABYC: 3, Holon.ui, Paacoe/Cundlft, ~ COSTA MISA.
WhitneySeritdorMldcetOceanRac· CLASS B -1, Quick Jabs, Allen ~ . 141-UM
ln1 AAOdaUon yacbt. and the Harris Johnson, CBYC: 2. Mad Mamma, 1---------,1 "llll---=-••-•••CC111C1•im•r. series for Performance Handicap Crosbere !Russell. CYC; 3, Olvera St., · - - -·-• • -I Rac:tn1 Fleet rat1n11 on Saturday Cutlllon/WUson/Sellers, PMYC.
wttb tbe OU lalanda race. UUle Whitney final 1&aDCll.Dia
The overalherles winner 1n the IJt· OVERALL -1, Sunnyside Up; 2 •.
tle Whitney wu SUn.nyslde Up, skip. Holonui; 31 Wizard.
pered by Cbarle1 Gautier, Kin& CLASS A -1, Sunnyside ~: 2.
Harbor Yacht Club, and the Barria Holonui; 3. Zapp.
(
Serles winner was Flambuoyant, CLASS B -1. Wlurc!; 2, Qlvua
tailed by Barney Flam. Looi Beach SL; 3. Mad Mam ma. Y aclit Club. llurtl Serles, flail race f CLASS A -1, Flambuoyant,
llESULTS OF TOE San Clemente Barney Flam, LBYC; 2, Psyche. Don
lllandrace: · Salisbury, LAYC; 3, Gboet Wlnp,
OVERALL-1, Equation, G.F •. Dave steiner, LBYC.
Somonis, LBYC; 2, Bingo, Dennis CLASS B -1, Ruflian, Ted Zellmer,
Choate, LBYC; 3, Decision. CBYC; 2, Resolution, Jerry Hunt.er,
CLASS A -1, Equation; 2,: KHYC; 3, Shawnigan, Craig Norton,
Shamrock, Roy Disney, LAYC; 3, · LAYC.
Sumatra, Al Martin, LA YC. . CLASS C -1, Bacchanal, George
• CLASS B - 1 Celox Nick Alex· Kaneko. PMYC; 2, Vilten, Morgan
ander, CBYC ; £ Mistr~~ Ill, UCI g:vcI:AYC; S, Serena, Don Zinn,
S~lling Association; 3, Concubine. Jbrn. Serles ftnaJ abndlnp
Richard Daniels, HHYC. OVERALL -1, Flam buoyant,
CLASS C -1, Bingo; 2, White Barney Flam, LBYC; 2, Restless, Bob
Lightning, Steiner McEachern, · Young,LAYC; 3, Bacchanal.
LBYC; 3, Cottontail, John Arens, CLASS A -1, Flambuoyant; 2,
BYC. Restless; 3, Psyche.
CLASS D -Decision. CLASS B -1, Luma.ran, Bill Rohrs,
FINAL SERIES standings:
OVERALL-I, Bingo; 2, Decision;
31 Cottontail.
VYC; z. Shawnlgan, Craig Norton,
LA YC; 3, Cherokee Spirit. Barry
Branin, KHYC. .
CLASS C -1, Bacchanal; 2. Cavi·
CLASS A -1, Equation; 2, Yacb.1, Robert Alberts, HHYC.
Wins Barhor Series
Ullmiin Lido Champ
Dave Ullman of the n i n g the F 1 e et I
Balboa Yacht Club con· (NewPort·Balboa)cham-
tlnued his supremacy in plonahJp, Sunday. The
the Lido-14 class by win· six-race series was
Co11ins Conquers
Ing Race Field
Tom Collins of the Hollywood Yacht Club ex·
pertly predicted the currents between Long Beach
and San Diego and San Dleio and Long Beach to
navigate his cruiser Misty Sea to a decided victory
in the Craig Tropby predicted Joe race.
Misty Sea finished the two legs of the 180-mile
course with an error o( O. 771 percenL
The Craie Trophy ia the oldest and most pre-
sU1eous predicted log award on the West Coast.
Runner.up in this year's contest was Nani Kai,
aldppered by Dexter Wood, Looi Beach Y acbt Club,
with an error of 1.39 percent and third was Ron·
jumar, Fred Woodward, Lone Beach Yach\ Club,
wlth an error of 1.270 percent.
Predicted log racing is a contest of navigation
ln which the skipper predicts in advance the time he
will navigate the course at a given speed.
~···· .. .... w J ..
I ' •• 'I ' • •
• . . .
TV ·DAILY LOG
,. MONDAY
lviNINQ I I
,..... Mn" (dla) 77-"""'
Jatmn, ~ OkkillSOll, T ocN lOQll. ,
Inland, .hsti11 lbndi, Mariclllt Cbeo
teUo, lllchatd Vulurt, RWtt '· • Reason, Rithlrd Butt. A dr1ftle GI n
1ppartntly happy covple w1IQst
lllll•llCt IS betft1 torn apart lly the .. husband's 11(ohohs111. MlcMet
Delaftty (Janssen) is • IOYitll •
husband and father who$S INlldi •
c:olllpses wtltn lie loses ~1$ job IS 1111 •
1t10space eclenbst chit to a lacll ol
WOIL HIS drillklftC bouta cm llUWier
Ind lleavitt, IYH 1"°41p Ills 911&
trlG to Ctl hft lo strllclitta liJhlml I•
eut llld look for anoUia II*. • .,c.-.. ....... ~. er..-..... Clrtfla ..
• Or..uc Ssr'8 = PalliMn Qth1ta Stl4t.
;sher of lbt J!llow IJfGI "Jiit •
• s Baattr. pvblilllM • sioly
about P1111t11eut'1 ifttht•ett
111ttl Lopez' ullSICICUSfll ~.
lead1111 to • Sl>IOll data la die •
House GI Commefts. •
-t.30-.., .....
10:00
• (ml ())) CJ) s-r ... Ck :JI) Aa ntra 1ttlp1111 ol amic and a IPOflf of 1 chatty 11tWICISt ir't
'utUl9d 111111 1uesb Gltt1 C.mpbell.
loti Kaotts and r 1rr1h hwc.tt• ~ .......
:I) WiW ........ alillJc.-..c.....
• Clllu-. A mtellnl llok tl ...,. v_. .• a.illlM COllllllUlllty •
........ "" DllOt ....... a;;: ~ ... Md ...... ....
1111 da111111 1ttitMu ....
CMllllllilt Ciiia .El ......
-10-.30-·· · .. 11:00 ••Cl>Cll ... eD<IHllDIM .• •<aC1>>LM--.SQ11 Cl>l9Mn.tfilnNI
•flrilc u.. .ltlfy...._..., ..... a» Tiie ,....., II lrl
(<l?J ())) "' .... sa... ........
• Dr..uc Sllt&I
-11:30-• «m ())) Cl) CIS &.-Ill* ... HHm ,_OW GI' YOI Diil:w Clal •
lllllae "Assault on GMlorll" ea>Cl><mm...., e.. .
Cl) llle.i.: "fill .. f• Ttut'
(wt$) '•7-JlllllS Ctalt. LJllll Bart •<a Cl>> a Slrllb ., s. rr..-.Jt• CD ..,.._ mso.-.. SlilMCM. -~ ... ,.ttis ....... ...... -....,.....
12:00 •TwMt• • lllN: a:> "11lt Inhale TmV' (111y1) ''3-tla11ae1
Si' • ··-· Ell• SctllMs. ': l l.111111 S.S . •
lllMal "(.-.. nr. °""" ! . (ldy) 'U-Jtedy t..ln. ~ •c ........... ~· -12:30-... ... .., ~
'1100 eGCl>CllT_,,.
-l.'00-• II* "f1ICM U1•1alt"' :
(aft) ''2-Gl•111 Fort ftmst ·1 llder, Cftlyft ~ ' . .
'
•
Beau Pit~ :
J • P.romote llealJ .. . !
• a,JllL'IONllOIKOWl'IS ~l You are atiOut to be IOSed'" tbe lllMritl\
ossault ev momated for a sinale ~t av ~ anyw~. .. ~
The beneftclary of t.bt. p.mch, a JOU mlPt ~-·
new cigarette. Real, which JI tieiN latrocluffd =*lloD ,
R.J. lle)'DOlds, tben1tlon•a1a:raencJP,reUem •• I ' UNUSS YOU CtJT YOUSSELP OF.P enur.&;a . :
clvillaatioo. you will bave a tiU'd Ume aftldina tbe : !
plteb• for Real, ao named bec..e it ha DO : i
benc• ~ Reynotcla &DJlOUDCemtllt lllM: '"TM,. ;.. elpretteJ.a hero!•· • :1\41
Reynolds pl'OUlbea to spen,d ~ llke NO over~ next ab months to make are 1°" dan"t
meHqe. The bombardment -.ill be at lts beavlett
JUl, and August.
A $tO millioo ad ex·
penditure crammed into
alx months is UD ·
precedented. even ln •
eountry and an lnduatry
known for their hl1h·
wheeling promotions.
Corporations, to be c!!'J sure, have spent that much but the expencllture IQP
..
variety ot products aod /or brands -not j'4St cme rAllllll
product , ;j ·l To grasp bow massive the Real usault will be, note :
it exceeds the total amount of money spent on a4vertla : !
by Quaker Oats or NeaUe or Polaroid or 8eim or Ullltej : I
Airlines or Exxon for all producta and services darin• aa : •
enUreyear. · : I There are two strategic reasons for this blockbuster l,P· .• proacb.
ONE IS, DlONICALLY, THE LAClt of media.~
ci1arette pusben hue not been abh to advert.lie Gil
television Of radio since Jan.1, 1971. Some maaulnes-~
Reader's Di1est and the New Yorter. for example -alaO
will not accept thelr ads. As a result, the tobacco merchaota
have greatly increased their buying of space in maa~
and newspapers that continue to accept clearette nu>ni.•
The second factor is to take speedy advantaae al~
most prooounced market trend in smoking since th~& · of the filter cigarette. Millions of nervous smotera ·
ing to the low-tar brands, and Real is still another
this expanding category. ..: ~ •
Reynolds already has the leading brand ln this cat~
with Vantage, which baa 2.8 percent of the ci.Jafelt~
m~ket. But Vantage is being .cballeng_ed s~~ -Philfp Morris entry, Merit, which bulled it.a way to 2.
cent of the market in one year. ~~ :
PHILIP MOBUS SPENT AN ESTDIATED ~ ~
to introduce Merit durint 1976. Tbft was $tO mWlocr.•ra
months. So now Reynolds will sl)end "° million iD
mon'lhs to launch Real. Merit bas a tar content of t·
grams; so does Real. Merit's nicotine content ia 0.1.
grams; Real 's nicotine level ls 0.8 millignms.
How can a company afford to spend so mucb
troduce a new brand? Easy. With this onslaught ReipofdS
expects to capture al least 1 percent of the cigarette titiiAM.
tor Real. A 1 percent slice translates to sales ot $80 mmni.,
for Reynolds at the factory level. It doesn't cost muc=
manufacture cigarettes; and if Real can establlab
toehold, Reynolds should then be able to expand lta mvk
share with considerably reduced advertising expendit--~
The latmeh is always the biJgestexpense. • .1 . • ... :-r::J t ) .
~'ft I
Srock Markel LOses j
Gains From, Friday
NEW YORK <AP> -The stock market t
downward today, failing to R>aintaJn the moment.f
Friday's rally.
Th~ Dow Jones aver~ge or 30 industrials. which r0se .g.os points Friday, backed off9.16todayto903.07.
Losers held a slight edge on iamers amon1 New York
Stock Exchange-listed issues. ·
Friday's advance refiected a ravor~ble response f.GVCM
items -the gove.-nment's report that the wholesale price in~~x rose only 0.4 percent last montb, and the decls{Qd by
New York's Citibank to hoJd its prime lending rate atr6'4 percent. ... ,a
_i._~ut Charles Jensen at Merkin & Co. said inv~ts ~wned to be having some ''second thoughts" abouu,fiOse
developments today. iH Jensen said traders seemed to feel that the droporr in the rise or the wliolesale price lndell mi1bt .a temporary phenomenon .. And he noted expectaUooi,. Cit(ban.~rould raise its prime rate th.ls Friday to 7 perees . ·
..
•
. I
I
I .
• I ...
17
lose noUme.''
EAGLE
Nobody irowa fm1ernalls faster than the. .
golden e.,,e. In two and a half months, ita tiny
talons tum into meat books tour inches long.
That bird'• wJDaapread trowth Is pretty swift,. too. F\'001 a few inches to alm01t seven feet,
llkewlsein two and a half months.
African slaves in the plantatlQ1' flelds o!
Trinidad years ago were forbidden to ~ tO'
one another. So they sang their convensation.s.
Jn tbe French Creole dialect called patois.
That's bow calypso got started.
Not a minority but a majority of the men .
in this country when buying shoes jU$l walk in·
to any store, point to what they have on their·
feet, and say, "Something like tbese ... Or so
reports a shoe salesman Of len1thy er--
perience. Sounds about ri1ht. It's exactly how
I buy shoes, anyhow. · .
....... ~
AUDBY llOlltNt """ . lft(. • 1111. • 111 (Mt
" "°'' MOUi """'-""""" NAii
IATOfM.......S
To Pla~e your
••Fast Result"
Sttvice DireclorJ
ad •..• Call Now
642·5671
\ bt. UJ
!I'll& ivrva ISICllS 1JNUllft'SD ro? D c~
. Martin. la a year¥ u.,.u ~<:n~roduclnf a~· ed,y lfriel. :with or wlt.bOm l .. star; in two
1un be'U oonald• dlreetJ.na a f eatme. One thbia ia
not on ID ICbedole; A mum to "'La~ln, •• slalC ·tor a aeries ot apectala nut ~cm NBC:
17
Vocal Teacher's .
Life • 1n
BJ D 'NI. Me LE Lt.AN .... o.o.~ .........
Holly Luh Vliet. Qn lndomua-
ble •pirlt ln her 71th year. sreet·
eel the vt it.or to her amall, wood
paatled NfttpoC1 8 acb 1t.udio.
e '1 lllll ~ms tronf lo this, her Slrtl year or vo ce and
dramlilc arts teachin1.
"Now lbat E sounded
beautilul.'' continued Mra. Visel
acaiD le.illed at her p1ano in fJ'Otlt
of an open window. "It should be sblnr a ray or sunshine· Ee·
~. Eeeb. Eeeh."
She repeated the noleJ on the
piano and her young pupil
Claudia McComb-t.ratning for
liaht opera responded: "Eeh.
Eeeh, Eeeh."
Mrs. Visel was pleased: "Now
E·A·I."
"Eeeh. Aaah, li1h; Eeeh. Aa-
ah. liih," sang Claudia. To the
untrained ear it was perfect.
Mrs. Visel was not satisfied.
"There's 11ome breath leakage
there," she noted. "Let's get rid or that if we can and make a
clean sound."
Clau<U.a corrected the error
and repeated the exercise, this
time sounding as clear as a glass
made of crystal even to the vis·
itor's ear: "Eeeh, Aaah, liih."
·'Good," congratulated her
teacher
MllS. VlSEL'S ART of draw-ing out the best In her students-
from 5-year-olds to retired
military colonels is what keeps
.
them trekkJnc to her 1tudlo by
the droves to reap tho benenu or
the teacher'• half-century or ex·.
perlence.
It has been extensive, to say
lheleut.
She wu director of an Oran1e
County n.ne art.I studio between
1923 and 11M3. That waa followed
by teachlnc drama and speech at
a private Utah hilh school,
Tustin Hi&b School and Southern
California Colleee.
That's not to mention conduct·
ing innumerable choral IJ'OUPS
and, or course, her private
lessons. Mrs. Visel figures she
has given 14,000 hour-long
sessions over the years.
Born in Maxwell, Iowa, she
began her formal singing train-
ing when she was 12. She and her
mother moved to Santa Ana
when she was 15.
"I just naturally responded lo
it,·' said Mrs. Visel. seated on a
couch while accompanist Jane
Owen continued working with the
student.
"I WAS IN the jazi orchestra
~nd every play and operetta at
"":)ants Ana High School. Evident·
ly I just tuned into everything of
this kind.··
She graduated from the Cum·
nock School ef Expression in Los
Angeles and went on to slng pro-
fessionally throughout Southern
California.
She also dire.cted and sang with
the Santa Fe Concert Tours for
three years-whJclr performed all
BEAANOERSON, Editor
Monday. June 6, 1977 Cl
• • .
A vigorous 76-year-old, Mrs. Visel
conducts daily private voice
lessons tor students of all ages.
At right, she joins in singing
with Ann Kathryn Jordon,
Col. William Jones and
Shannon McComb.
Balancing
pH Factor
alone the rallroad route.
Mrs. Viael is proud of the many
student! she has tau1bt who have
1one on to professional careers in
the arts.
Amone her current student! are lbe Gentry Family Singers,
the KnoU Family Singers and
young Gavin Fenski wbo has a
strin& of commercials to his
credit and the role of "Marcus
Welby's" srandson.
"I Uke them three and four
years old," she noted, adding she
trains their "personal abilities,
their proper conduct befon au-
diences and how to speak proper-
·1y and independently."
SHE'S UP OFF the touch to
retch an invitation to her annual
Oral Arts Festival, presented by
her students at Southern
California College June 18.
"I have a 12·year·old who can
get up and do a half hour enter-
tainment with the proper body
movement, dramatic expres5ion
and tone," she boasts.
"It's a thrill to take a
miniature per'°nality and l~ it grow until it becomes very
significant and meanlngrul. I
think what human beings need
more than anything else Is the
ability to communicate."
Mrs. Vlsel's attention turned to
Claudia, sineing "Love Is a
Many Splendored Thing.•·
"That's lovely Claudja," she
said. "Now open up."
"When I taueht ln Santa Ana."
she continued. T'Tbad chleTiy pro-
By JUDITH OLSON
QI Ille D.ity l'ii.t Slaff
The clerk in the drugstore who
1pecialiie.s In sell101 cosmetid'
had to admit she didn't un-derstand what "plt-banlanced"
cosmetics are au about.
A dermatoloeist, questioned
about the same topic, said he'd
h•ve to do some research to be
able to discuss it intelUgently.
If a salesperson trained to de·
monstrate cosmetics and a doc·
tor who la an authority about the
skin don 't understand pit-
balanced cosmetics: hot.' is the
avera,ecorisumer going t<f.
Advertlsements touting pH
promise a "youthful, glowing
fessional people's qhildren. They
feel it's significant for their chJld
to make his personality known in
the world of affairs."
Does someone have lo have an
inherent talent to become a stu-
dent?
"I WOULD SAY you could take
the averag_e child who is recep-
tive and do almost anything wi~
skin ," but a Newport Beach
dermalolog1st said that anything
which makes such promises is
catering to a "hopeful wish" for
youth.
•'The great computer in the sky
programs us for aging," he
added.
Much or the confusion over pH·
balanced cosmetics is that few
people remember enough from
high school or college chemistry
classes to know what It's all
about.
Holly Lash Visel, a prominent
figure in Orange County's
music scene for a half century,
sang in 'Carmen, ' left,
,
in 1928., Above, she plays
role of Allan a-Dale
in Robin Hood, ' in 192 4.
him. They will do thl!; as easily as
they play-if you make i~ play."
"Sing 'Climb Every Moun·
lain." she suggested to Claudia,
"That's good for you."
"The Orst thing I do," she said,
mentioning a young student who
was shy. "is converse with him
and find out his interests.
"l'd have.-him tell me little
stories he knows and gel him in·
skin can fight bad bacteria and It
makes a nice home for good ones,
which 41re nice to have around.
"An acid pH prevents the bad
ones from growing and allows
the good ones to grow. This, of
course, is a gross generaliza-
tion."
Dr. Hert.en said the idea of
making cosmetlcs with the same
pH of the skin is a good Idea
because ills "physiologic."
But he said medical science
does not know why the skin
should be around 5.6 and that he
doesn't knaw of any caau of skin
problems caused from the dis·
turbance ot the acid mantle,
Emll Klarmann of N:ew York.
U niversity, in his book
··cosmetic Cbemls\ry for
Dermatologists,•· said that
neither soap nor cold cream re·
maln Oil the skin long eno\llh to
disturb the normal physiolOJical
pf{ and that dryness, not lhe dJ•· turbancealth• •cid ••mantle," is
the main c.oftcem ol aoap users .
volved in conversation in his o'f1
world. Then I begin to learn thf"
personality
"When 1 find the core of~·
personality I find the materl4!
<songs) in the chiUt's world lie
can understand. Then J get fin'
class interest." • One 13-year-old girl student
she discovered. was a chet
leader. Mrs. Visel got out "I Lor
a Parade." ''And she's made>;
real thrilling number out of itt
she noted.
She sees each student oncer··
week for an hour. She doesn
think they can learn properl.
with any less time. "In this b~
busy world you've got 'to be dar
serious to aet anywhere," she ol
served. Mrs. Visel said all her student .
are reqUlred to learn the elc
ments of acting-dramatic 4!'>.
pression, both physical an11
tonal. ''I think I'm just a d.ri~
for technique.
"You have to learn the sk1U c ·
how to present an artistic so~
You have to breathe at a certal:
place ... There are certain rule ..
and regulations.··
Descnbing what motivates be
to teach, Mrs. Visel said, "l thin!
l have a love of people.and a lov
of the art or smgmg and the art o
self-expression.
"l can't understand a perso · my age saying they want to rr
lire. Let's see, I started teachln·
at 23... I've never lost an ir.
terest. ''
She turned to the afternoon·
next student, Marcia Lisle-.
Sonora School klndergarte
teacher...'.who was singing "Th·
Goat. Herd'· from •'The Sound o
Music."
"Come on." said Mrs. Visel
now on her reel. "Use the whol
body."
he questioned. ''Ir they make an~
therapeutic claims they have ti·
register with the Food and :)ru1
Administration. What ar<! cos
metlcs'> They are just a t !ung tc•
enhance beauty. You look better
so you reel better.
I
omeA
atur.al
On aa oak-laced hilltop n
be Sc Ysabel Valley in
porlb-ctntral San Diego
"County, ~culptor Jam es
, ,Hubbell carved a home out
• ol rocks and native wood.
His wife, Anne, says it isn't
a house at all but "a habita-
1 ble sculpture.'' Since 1960,
~he Hubbell family has
'erected six hand-hewn
., .. buildings, made of cedar,
~,stones and reinforced
1 i adobe, that flow into nature i '~ and make up Hubbell 's
~ home and studio. The free-
!o rm e d skylights and
arched windows are
rimmed and etched in
•t piosaic, and cathedral ceil-
4 tngs and hand-cut doorways
efiect the natural wood.
.. ubbell believes that ugly
prawl is unnecessary and
hat man's environment is
ot a commodity but "an
-extension of everyone."
.... Couples to Wed
' Hm=aftb prin\ablll: D ANN:l'41ae .. _..
,.., Md. WllJ .....w ........
l'Qf II li'M-fw Mr ---~Qd'a . .,.., ......... .,~..................... ............. ,,..,. ..... ................ Jiiii ••
111 ••'• JM HJ ••re. Werk ...... t ............. .......
atN•I -llAUllALLTOWN,
101fA D~AJ\ ANN : I know my buab.aad *>kl cOdawt\al •• we co out but I ean •t 1'elp it. ff• roUI
up hll lleevea and pope bwttou -force• b11 favorite w•d• belt
...
Dates Told
' ' " . I
...
~·"' ...
\.
Larson-Fregosi
Caita Mesa High School graduates Leslie
Larson and Frank Fregosi have announced plans
to marry Aug. 27 in St. James Epis~pal Church.
Newport Beach.
Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Del Larson
and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fregosi. all of Costa
Mesa .
Fregosi attended Orange Coast College,
where his fiancee currently is studying. ••• Haggard-Hi 11
Neighborhood Coneregational Church:
tbrouah loopt that are too 1mall
nf\Ma to cut b1a toeaalll a1'd
hl1 1ocb an tom after two wear· tas•. JI .you wot to koow wb be
had for lUneh or dban• Jut look at hll t1e. Oll'll ftnd um,_ ot
tv.rytbtq. He'• a aleepy ud I DO·eare 11*4 hlm but be II also
• tlob -daat'I HIS pro11Mm. -SUFPJ;RING IN MANHA'M'AN
DEU ANN: Der• bew UIY la••• .... •tu.cu.fltlletr wU1'1 dMMif .Iola tt.e _.tea·
.. ry, IQMo. -SBEING &ED
AND IDON'T llMN BUTl'ONS OZA.ft ANN: My Jen bu a
)
··'·
Laguna Beach wUl be the settinl for the July 24
wedding of Doreen Haggard and Gary HilL
Their parents are Mrs. Dolores Haggard or
Laguna Beach, )\aymond Haggard, Laguna Hills
and Mr. and Mrs. C. Dean Hill, Hunfmgton
Beach.
engineering from UCI. Re is employed by an
Anaheim engineering firm. and presently is on
assiinment in Saudi Arabia.
'.llti
' ..
~·· ,., ..
'•
"'' ..
·"
Miss Haggard Jraduated with honors from
Laguna Beach High School. The betrothed are
students at UC Irylne where she is majoring in
biological sciences and he, electrical engineer-
ing. •••
Koefelda-Marienthal
Mr. and Mrs. N.H. Hawkins, Newport
Beach. have announced the engagement of their
daughter, Leigh Ruth Koefelda. to Michael Jay
Marienthal.
Miss Koefelda is a graduate of Newport
Harbor High School and cu.rrenUy is a junior ma·
joring in biological sciences at UC Irvine.
An Aua. 6 wedding ls planned. •••
Portela-Piper
I
Carol Lorraine Portell~ Qf Huntineton Beach
and WUliam Piper, Santa Ana are plannlng to
marry June 18 in the First Church of ReUgious
Science, Newport Beach.
Both graduated from Anaheim High School.
The bride·to-be also studied at Fullerton College
and the School of Electrology. Her flance re-
ceived his BS and MA degrees Crom California
State University, Long Beach.
Parents of the betrothed are Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Portela of Dana Point and Mr. and Mrs.
D9nald Piper, Ni•heim.
dozen 1o0d tu.its in the closet, but ock1, a T-shirt a.nd Bermuda
be toes to church In polyuter shorts ln the Wint.er.
slacks and a polka-dot ahirt with Last week be went to a
a striped tie. I've elven up. -barbecue In thati.s1.om World
AUGUSTA War II. They ere enty tl&ht
DEAR ANN: U a •o•u loob and J wariled bim. eU, be split
aloppy, ar "let beneU se." U rlsht 6Ut the back and t.ad to bor·
1&'1a mu. "IBI wlfedoes•'teare row the host's bathrobe.
altoat la.Im.'" Yoa're aut1. -Everyone roared. I couldn't bave
.Ml:KPIDS caredlesa. -COLtJMBIA.S.C.
DEAR ANN: Sorry, dear, you DEAa ANN: I l&H ap tr)1DS
tooled and you're 1oln1 to hear 9'ie dr my U.bnd after ••
plenty. My buaband la a honey 1ear1 ~ tena~ JM 'alt-
and I love bJ,m. but be dOllD't ptllU.,. Toida' I'm relaxed and
give a damn about how be loob. my bfood ptenure ls down. Be
If the Invitation says "Informal" 1tlll bu IDk •fotl • all bis &blrU
he'll show up in aandala. no from pea. *'•* luk. Every
pecket la n..-. b'ota ~bll 9YU·
loaioi. lie a.l two coatl last
WlaW' ud tMr-e are ftn lotel7 ............ -all .. ..,, llaM. ll'• -, • ., ,.. to
•Y • .,.., ~ ._. ldm.J care
1 lot Ml lie'• a alob:o -ST.
CL01JD, lllNN.
DEAR ANN: Ihavefour)'OUQI
children who take bett• cu. of
thelt'clotheltbm tbtlr tathef, He
aoes blklnl ift the WoOd.a iln a $100
au.it -t.ear1 h1s ~ta oa renees. tu.Int bis $10 shOes walking iD the
mud, and atuffs a $15 tie iD bis
back pocket. Don't blame me. I
dldn't ralH him. -POT-
TERSVILLE. N.J .
E:lubs Crowd Calend.Dr
.
PARENTS WITHOUT
PARTNE&S: Ann Martin,
author of •'Calleo Families," will
speak at the ll)eeting of Oranie
Coast chaplet 26 at 8 p.m. Wed·
nemy, June8, in the Costa Mesa
Country Qub.
Ms. Martin's book of poetry
grew out of her own experiences
and talks with parents without
partners. She wlll present Opera·
lion Re.entry Dressing for
Health, Confidence, Sex Appeal
and a Bri1hter Future.
All single parents are invited .
Further information on the meet·
ing and other June events is
available by calling the organiza·
t.ion at546-5788.
ORANGE COUNTY
HISTORICAL SOCIETY: The
paleontology and geolo1ic his·
tory of Orange County will be dls·
cussed at 7:30 p.m. Thuraday.
JUne 9, in Bowers Museum, San·
ta Ana.
Dr. John C. Cooper of Cal State
Fullerton will presenl a slide
show to illustrate rock units ex·
posedthrougboutthecounly,and
to explain.the origins and ages of
geologic phenomena.
AMERICAN SOCIETY OF
MECHANICAL ENGINEERS:
The Ora.nae County section ol the
woman's auxlllary will host a
Men's Nlght• Holbrau at the
Laguna Hills home of the
Michael Hunsakets .at 7 p.m.
Saturday June U . New Olficen illso wUI be in·
stalled. ReservalionS' may be
' m.ade with Mrs. Hunsaker.
581·3465; Mn. William Williams. ~·4080; or Mrs. Louts Kolich.
S2S·6938.
IJUNTINGTON HARBOUR
ART ASSOCIATION: New ex·
"ecutive bollrd members are
Earla Snow, ·president; !Uren
Peoples and Lil Johnston, vice
presidents; Bernie Herron. co-
ch al rm an; Betty Hyde.
secretary, Dorothy Johnson,
treasurer; and Dodie Anderson
and Shirley DeHeras, directors.
BETA SIGMA PHI : Xi
Lambda Gamma chapter of Newport Beacb ended 1ls lll'ltHI
season by making plans for the
summer and the new year.
Anyone interested in being a
pledge to this or other chapters
are asked to call Judy Kranz,
545-1775, or Jackie Lopez,
751·6213.
NATIONAL SECRETARIES
ASSOCIATION: Bahia Chapter
has elected new officers. They are
Catble Argeanton. president;
Jane Angel, Unda Jlooker and
Louisa Ellis. vicepr84dents; An·
drea Little and Esther Gordon,
secretaries, and Helen Thome,
treasurer. The chapter awarded
scholarships to Margaret Haleli,
Deborah Foster, June Lazich.
Connie Jo Tecnes. Patricia Ann
Shaffer and Nanc-y Robertson.
The chapter will meet at 6:30
p.m. Thursday, June 9, in the
Crossroads restaurant, Fountain
Valley. Howard Tangier. a Dale
Carnegie instructor, will speak
on Wow! World of Winning.
WOMEN'S ARMY CORPS
VETERAN'S ASSOCIATION:
Queen City Chapter will meet al 1
p.m . Saturday, June 11, In
Mariners Stvings and Loan, Seal
Beach. Off~ers and convention
delegates will be elected.
OCCUPATIONAL JIEALTH
NURSES: Maxine Breakfield is
the new president.
Assisting on her board are
Dorothy Collins and Betty
Shepherd, •ice president. and
Mar1aret Richards, ucret.a'y.
FJlEBDOMS POUNOA110N:
Orance County Women's
Cb•Ner will honor area
Con1ressional Medal of Honor winners. Col. William E .
Barber, Walter D. Ehlers and
Sat. Richard Pittman.
Honors will be 1tven at an in·
stallatlon luncheon at. 11 a.m.
Friday, June 10, ln the Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club.
New olficen are the Mmes.
Edward Dow, president: Frank
Dave. Allison Froman, Donald
Conlee, Louis L. Curtis. Vesta
Redmon and John T. Thurston
vice presidents; Roland Krueger
and John A. Sttvens, secretaries.
and Heracbel Whitaker,
treU\D'er.
From C1
there ii no doubt. Mrs. Ross said
she considers her work a
spiritual maUN. "U I tried to
give something phony to so.
meone I couldn't 11ve with
myself. I have a God wat.ching
me."
Though users and makers of
pH-balanced cosmetics praise
them, the fact remains that few
people understand them.
whether they be customers or
salesclerks.
One salesperson posed an im-
portant question that so tar has
not been answered by either
dermatologists or manufac·
turers:
"How can one pH-balanced
cosmetic be rleht for everyone's
skln since all skin is sligbtJy dlr·
(erent?"
1 'l
•Lit; r
Taurus Encountersn'Trufh
TUESDAY,JUNE7'
By SYDNEY OMAR&
Aan:s (March 21.
AprH 19)! Place con-
. fldence in one who has
proven "track record."
Forces tbat operate
beblnd 1ceaea impinge
Oil yow plana. Be pre·
pared lor eecretlve ac-
tion.
T Ar\S&tJ8 (April 20·
May 20): ri'iendship,
social actiVity blend;
you are rid of red tape
and details. You gain
overall view. You en·
counter truth as con-
trasted to the huff-and-
puff of pretenders.
analysis, publishing,
communication -these
are accented. Member of
opposite sex is in picture
-you are able to
articulate feelings. \'ou
1et message, call or let-
ter which stimulates
creative process.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22):
Emphasis on money as tt
relates to mate, partner.
SpqtUpt also on locating
what bas been mie~
placed, Jost. Concern
with mystery, glamour
or the occult also is
featured. The number
''6" could play promi-
nent role.
schedules, work and
benefits from invest·
ments -these are •ery
much on agenda. Older
individual talb moaiey
-be sure there is mqre
substance than mere dis·
cussioo.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-
N ov. 21): Favorable
Moon aspect colncldes
now with creative
changes, excitement of
discovery, intensified re·
lationshlp. Children, af-
fairs of heart are in pic-
ture. Be confident.
AQUARIUS (Jan.
20-Feb. 18): Avoid ex-
travagance. especially
In travel-entertainment'
areas.
PISCES (Feb. 19-
MJrch JO): Persons and
plllces come together -
"for your benefit."
SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. ,.. .. ~5;;;;;;;;;;;.:=;::::;;~
HEARING PROBLEM?
~'· ,, . Marienlhal, the son of Michael J. Marienthal
of Culver Clty and Evelyn Marienthal of
Inglewood, holds a masters deeree in civil
Peering
GEMINI <May 21.June
20): Look ahead and
raise slghta. Potential 11
1reater than mJgbt be
Aro Un d imatined. You're 1oins
places and one at toi> wW
support your position.
Stand tall; be ramlUar
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22): Marital status is
spotlighted. Lunar posi-
tion emphasizes legal
Uet1 commitments. Mar-
rlea or single, a contract
may have to be re-
viewed. Before alptlQg,
1et second emotional
wind.
22-Dec. 21): Basic issued
command attention. Get
to heart or matters. Deal
with one who can get job
dode. Eschew excuses.
further delays. Your
general wellare depends
now Oft eorrectinf saf et.y
hasard.
CAPRICORN (Dec.
22-Jan. 19): Highlight
versatility, a:-vareness or
security requirement• .
I cater to those ... ........
HEAIJHGAID
c...tllelp ....
f'UltCMASI SUIUICT
TO SATISFAC110t4
TIM YIAtS '" COIOMA DIL MAI
HM. MBISCHfR
HEARING AIDS
Hit I. c:..t Nwy.
... ., . ,.. ·""·.
' -
-How M"ch Should I
._. Pay to Have My Carpet
Cleaned? ...
• ~. When people phone to uk
for an estimate, a common
queatlon is: "What do you
charae per square toot?"
Your carpet Is a mfJor in-
~e5ttnent. The lowest price
la not alway• beat. Many
Cacton are involved:
~ How old ii earpet.t
• What material?
• How oft.en cleaned?
• · 11 th•~ any m~or ~toitt
JOHN ALEXANDER,
conductor of the Irvine
Master Chorale, bas
been named Dist ·
lnguished Professor of
the Year at Callfomia
State University,
Northridae .
He waa chosen from
amonf 600 faculty mem-
. with detaila. bers to receive the honor CANCER (June 21·
at the university'~ com· July 22): Movement men cement exercises. '
LIBRA <Sept 23·0ct.
22): Prod\letion. c.... .......... ,S.,.ll
1
t
PHO HIX, Arh, CAP) -i-.o
oMM der "Mic ot • Mrill ol ar&Jtltil •Mvl Ot'll Hd ~M•ID ~·~ lM Yia1Wilm a~ amall. bMl aulhaftU 111tbe1toriu kave11#o•IW IMdl tot la U&all . f'o•r flauru ••••• r .. 'l8't copJ:H t aeri• bJ IDY .. lllttive • ......,. aDd &di • lne •• bav.
Wla .... lid. BulU •• Atty." Mic! l Ha..-~toH w ...... tbe IW ..,. __. lnv 11IMID bllott
._. "*'ut.IGe ol tile utlcl•. Tbe.lr
am• uw QOt Men re•Ul.t and
U., .. bellend to be fuS)tlvee.
ftlS WAI TB& wor of .0
rqorUn llDd ed1ton repc-eM:Dtlnl D .. .,.,., ... ad two twoadeut out
.'TM seam peDt ••• mantl» ln tho
OD tM project to follow the work
ol Arlloaa Republic reportA!r Don Bolla. Re was murdend last June
• I bolllb exploded 1n bil car.
Tb• 231torie1 distributed co partlcl·
paai. lQ Marcb and enly AprU
focuaed on crime and aarcotkl traffic
Arilona. They alleced that several
prdmin.tmt ficura. meJudlns Sen.
Bany Galdw.ur (R·Arb.). b8d al
tlm• aaodated wilb moblten and
coodooed the presence o( oqanlzed
crime in the state. Some cbarces went
back m«e tbaa 20 yean and bad been
publbhed prevtou.&Jy; others alleaed
cootlnuin1 links between publlc
rt1urea and people in or1anbed
crime.
GOLDWATEa DENIED THAT be
bad condoned crime and said the
artlcles were '1ot.ally fa.be."
The publication of the aeries, be1ln·
nine March 13, brought denlals from
many others mentioned in the
articles. Three of the dozens of people
named in the articles filed lawsuit.&
forllbeJ.
Hawkins said the investicatlons re-
sulUn1 from the IRE aeries were only
beglnning.
"DURING THE COURSE of their
work, the,.reporters gave information
to federal agenta. These are all being
looked at to see if they are prosecuta·
ble."
All four were named in connection
with narcotic•.
Hawkins declined to say bow many
others named ln the IRE articles were
under inveaU1ation. but added, ''I
1u1pect there will be more who were
named In tbe series to be indicted,"
Leon Gaskill, agent·ln·char&e of the
Phoenix FBI olfice, also said hb staff
is checking the IRE series for possible
leads. Nelther he nor Arizona Atty.
Gen. Bruce Babbitt would say
whether any investigations are under
way in connection with the articles.
BABBrrr SAID THE main effect of
the series was to focus public and
leelalative attention on crime pro-
blem• in the stale and on the need for
legal reforms and adequate ap-
propriations for cl'iminal justice
agencies.
•'Certainly it brouaht to our atten-
tion some matters we were not aware
of and these are being lnvesUgaled,"
he said.
Vernon Roy, director of the Depart-.
MURDeA SPARKS PROBE
Aepot1er Don Boll••
ment of Public Safety, said his staff is
combin& tbe unedited version of the
IRE series "01eticulOU1ly to see if
there is any information that would be
val'Uable to us that we don't have."
As tor the impact of the series, be
said:
"I WAS VERY disappointed with
the effect lt's had in the state. Some
people are saying there was nothing
new in the articles, that we don't have
a problem in Arizona, when we do.
That bothers me. The impact bas
been much more mtnin\al than I ex·
peeled. It's made no difference in any
criminal justice acency's budget. And
there are some prominent people say-
inl I know so and 110 and he wouldn't
do those things. They refuse lo believe
the things that were in it."
The legislature has set up a Lask
force on organized crim~ composed of
three members of the House and three
members of the Senate and headed by
William Smitherman, former U.S. at·
torney lor Arizona. The leglslature
also appropriated $600,000 for lbe
forms to study legal loopholes which
while collar criminals can take ad·
vanlageor.
A BILL WIDCH would have given
the task force formal recognition by
the executive branch or government
was vetoed Wednesday by Gov. Raul
CastrQ• but t.l)e speaker of the House
said the JegjslaUve body would go
ahead on Its own.
Castro also vetoed a bill that would
have given the task force the power to
grant immunity to witnesses and to
keep their names confidential.
The governor. a Democrat whose
business dealings were focus of one
installment of the IRE series, said the
measures would have turned the
legislature into ·•an expensive, full·
scale, pseudo-prosecutorlal effort.·•
MARICOPA COlJNTY Atty.
Charles Hyder and Plmaw County At·
ty. Stephen Neely, both Democrats,
asked that the measures be vetoed,
Castro said.
'Don' Stays Young
Plays Same Rolefor.30 Years
DEL MAR (AP) -The little old
ladles love him -, .. Don't the years
just stand still?"
The young women around Tom
Herpandez are smWn1 their prettiest,
crowdfna in for pictures as lf be were
the mosf romantic new movie star.
AND THE BOYS, includine older
ones ·who watched "Zorro," the
television aeries of years a10 in which
he appeared, are slill wlde·eyed.
As dashing Don Die10, Spanish·don
host of tbe Southern California Ex· position. the ageless Hernandea is ln
the 30tb year of one of the lonaeat·
playlnl actor's role ever.
It's a rerun of history. Ancestors or
Hernandez were Spanish settlers near
Del Mar. The old family home of the
late actor Leo Carrillo. a dlsi.ot
coualn and old friend, is close at hand.
A BOOKING AG'ENT sent
Hernandez, a natrve of Tenerife in the
Canary Ialand1, to promote the Oel
Mar fair ln 19'7.
"1 lt111 loveit -I don't really make
any mOMy al it, but I love lt.," be says
in an inlervlew.
A widower wbo weighs the same 178
pounds ol 19'7 and looks only 1U1btly
older, Hernandes ia happiest helping
ptck the "Fairest of tbe Fair" &om
amonc 26 queen candidates picked by
hamlets and dties tbrou1hout San
Dleao Count.t.
RS ESCO&TS THE winner al
doaens ol public appearanc• 11 t.-
dld in 11511 with tho w1Me1', Rachel Te-
jada, belD&ria '• Into ahow buslo 11 u RaOq\MI \#1 eb.
Aa he did ln 1164 With Linda Aylor,
wbo t>eeamo Mlsa USA, and tn 111$1
wtlh Karla EnsU.b, winnina a '1~·
7e.ar coatract wWi Paramount Pie·
turel.
Tb•J know Heraandn ln
llQlbwoOd, «ibtte be bu a tiOme and tiu ~ bl aJmott • rums. In ,..ln md Jtal.Y. be LI a f aVarite.
AGELESS ACTOR
' Tom Hernandez
of "Hellupoppin" before spending
five years in the Army.
lo 195.1, he danced the samba with
Lana Tumer lo "Latin Lovers."
Character rOles were common l.n such
TV series as '1Wafon Train," "Death
Valley Days" and 'Laramie."
IN i-. ms WIR died. Thetr aons,
Gree and Alan, are Parts lawyers.
Time bas thinned the hair, sbowinl
a little aray, but publlcltJ pboto-
araphs reveal Hernandes u a live
rh~Jer for Don Diego of 1947.
Three Umes a day during the fair
wlilcb opens June 21, he chanies in
the Sl0.000 wardrobe which was
ullored In Spa,iri.
The UC Irvine Ex-
tea lon Procnltn bas an.
nounced the followlni nhedule ot actlvitlea
open to the pUbUc:
NtarlY $500,000 easb seeretid ln a brletcatt on
the e:ttate ot multimillionaire coametfc promoter
WIW .. Peu Palrlek beionil to bll w dow,
Superior Court Judce ruled In San Franc11co.
Maite K. Patrkk'• el&lm to tM moaey bad
been disputed bY Sa• OOve; executor of Patrtc1r•a
wlU arid Mrs. Pat.rick'• bfOtbU, Mn. P trict'was
, "tranpd from bet b.uabi.iUI 'at the time ol bii d ath •
four )'e&l"l a&o •
Judae Edwucl L. Cre1e• ruled that the
money -all but $1.1,117 -wu part of community
property and thus paaaed to the widow at Patrlek•s
death. Tbe 1maller amount. ho held, wu privat.
property belon&lnc to the late promoter Of "Holiday
Ma1ic" coameUca. • Exiled Soviet author Alexaader SolllleD.ltlya
reported an In me of $320,000 and aavln&a Ol $1.8
millloo to Swlaa tu offlclals la
1974• the year be was baolsbed
Crom bls homeland.
Tbe tax statement, whlcb is
available as pubUe record, was
publlsbed by the dally Blick,
wblcb crltlclted the author for
deplctins neutral Switzerland as
a mooer.·mlnd~ "republlc of
lacteys ' ln hls late1t book, ~nln ln ZUricb.
. 10UH1HinYtt The newspaper aald
Sobhenltsyo's .. arro,anl'' statement prompted lt to
reveal that the author was "comfortably bedded
financially" during the two years be reslded in
Switzerland before moving to Vermont In 1976.
Solzhenitlyn hu said he felt "out of place"• living in
Switzerland, the banking capital of Europe. • •
Prestdem Cuter was practically a straieht·A
student who was nrely absent or late, according to
his Plains, Ga., srammar and bflh school records.
The records were furnished by Bonnie
Glll1bat1. dausbter of
publisher Ralpb ( J GIHbus, who edits a pr.o.,nr ...
new periodical called E~· _ 0 1 T ~
tra. -------""' She aaJd they were
obtained "throueb a special request made in our
behalf by the President.''
Tbe purported photocopies indicate that young
Jimmie -as his name was spelled -only once re·
celved an academic grade lesa than A, and that was
a C for music in the sixth grade.
* Prime Minister Pierre EllloU Tnadeau, with a
broken marriage and three small sons to care for,
saya bia wife ls a "fine person" and he won't quit
politics.
MU"laret Tracleaa, 2.8, who bad been married
to the prime minister for slx years, Is pursuin& a
carter as a freelance photographer in New York.
"I have been 1pendlng a fair amount of time
PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
with J!iy c:Nldr n," Trudeau told • news
ferenc:e. ''I hope to incr"tluo that tlmt by cutU
on other' thln&J. • . .. 1,1.lPPOSe 1 am one of many sin.Ile parents ho
have to work and have to loot after their children at.
the aame Um . And I doo'l see wby I wouldn't be as
able as ln,JOlle 11.ae to dolt.•• •
Leroy atatfleld, one of Gov. Edaaad Bro•a
Jr.'1 aides, was named by Brown to direct the
Catteomla Conservation Corps.
The 42·)'eat•Old Chatfield,
who mott recently bu been
aervln& as Brown's assistant on
procrama and policy, replaces
interim direc:tot Boyd B~ of
Fair Oaks. Homer wUJ return to
private law pracU~.
The CCC, one of Brown's pet
project.a, employs young people
wbo work at jobs such as tree
plantlnl and brush clearin& In
rural areas.
•
Boris Spauky of the Soviet Union will plu
Bungary's 1AJot Portlacb in Switzerland, and Sov· iel exile Vlkior Korcbnol will
face Russian Let' Polqaevsky
in Fl'ance in world chess cham-
pionship semifinals, tbe Int.erna-
tional Chess FederaUon an-
nounced.
Organizers of the two u; ..
· 1ame matches, scheduled to
becin July ~ are offering prizes
of about $10,000 each, FIDE
said.
s"usn Spassky, a former world
champion who lost bis title in 19'12 to Bobby Fbelaer
of the Unlted States, will play Portisch at t.he lfolel
Mediterranee in Geneva, while Korchnol and
Polugaevlky meet at the Casino Royale Hot.el in
Evlan, France. •
Civil aviation authorities in India frqu.Qded former Prime Minister Indira Gandbr1 son Saal ay.
bis wife Menaka, and a Sanjay
CTOny and curu, Dblreadra
Brabmaebarl.
The 1overnment gave no
.reason for the immediate six·
month suspension of Sanjay's
private pilot's license and the
student licenses of the other two.
India's new government bad
already impounded the couple's
passports pending the outcome
·J!·~ .. ·~~ . ")
-·r.,··i. -.. ~. .. . ·. -~.
I -r· '.
~. ~
of charges Sanjay improperly u1tJ&YOANOM1
used bis mother's position to further his own fa.an ..
cial and political interests.
PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
l<IC'rtTIOUI IUltNaSS
NAMa5TAl ITATUdNT
TIM foll"""4no • .,,. I• dol119 111111. ...... '" MIKE'S POOL llal'Alll, 301 VIC·
tori• !Ste. 201·A l Coill Mew, CA.,.,.
Ml(hael Albert Plttr-llte, 302 Vic·
10<le iSle.101·A I C:0'1• MaH, CA '16"
1"111• busl•-.u ;, conducted bV •" 1,. dhtlduel
Mike Plttr-•ke
Tiiis •i.1.-wM 111eir w1111 111e
Coulltv a-al Of 11199 Coufll v Ofl Mav
11, lt17
"'"" Pllblf\lled o-.,... C..'1 Oatlv l'llot.
Mat1'.ti.».•1e1Jun .. .,1m
PUBUC NOTICE
MU41 SUl'l•10ltCOUllTOfl
Ofl CAUflO•NIA COUNTYOflLOIANOILaS
C.UINUMllttA*'7
CITATION flllllOOM flllOM
l'AltlNTAL CUITOOT ANO CON•
TltOL IAIANOONMINTI 1111:
AQ,Ql'TIONI '
'111 I"• Mall.,. of ICAllOL LESLIE
OA'IS Ml.-. A per"°" -thould"' ~,,..,..., frM from tile cu•todv and con-
trol ot t\flr ottrMt~
To OONALO HIVING OAVIS
•~ruumeo Fatl\erl Wl\ere•bou\\ Un.Mwn, SALLY ANN SALl!.Y •k•
OaVI• 4nn ForbH Wl\ereabout1
Ullk,,....,, and 10 all oer'W>ftt clalmln9 to
"" \'le fatller or moll\.., of •Aki minor
~'"°" allOYe "•"'9(1 Bw order of It.I\ Court vou are llerebv
rited end 1rl!<lul"'d 101 •1>oe11r before tlle J"°9e P~ldl!IQ 1" 0.tNrlment 44
Rm 411 ot Ille •boV• tntltled cour\ toctted ., 'It Nortl\ Hiii Street, Lot
A,...IK. C.llfornl• to0n on S.c>tember •. ltn. at~ :io" M o1 tl\et ci.v. t,,.n
• .... Iller• 10 \-caUM. II lt'W you
... \It WllV H id D9f'Wn ll\OUld "°' ti<> ~!Ired f,.. from Ille control ot .,.,.
o.treftt\ acc0tdi119 lo t"9 -II Ion on Ille
"°Pefft
1:or flllure to au....i vou maY be de •mod 9U'llV ot econt.....,t of court
Tiie oellllOn fllod ¥•Pin I\ tor tilt
-.OM al ltMlr>q IM WltlKt Clllld fOf"
e>t•••m•"llO<"~•lon
Ma.11 tU7
JC>tiN J COllCOR•N
Aclll'IQ Coun1v Cl•rl<
BvW M V•I 0.1. 0.1>11tv
r>u111o-Or-c.,.st O•llv P ttot •
'"""" •l 10 n ••11
PUBUC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS IUSINISI
NAMI STATIM•NT
'"• I01lowl1>9 oerton 11 doln9 busl "U'•' R IC CRUIS! Ml!THOO. 111?
Mtltoy Or , Hunll1>9lon 8e1<h, CA
91M•
Robt'rl l(e,,dall Melhol, 11'7
M•hov Or . Huntin-aton &each, c" ..,....
Thi\ ~IM\S II <ondU<ted by ti\ II\
ftlvldual
• RO!Jerl IC Mall\ot
Thi\ .... .....,,t w•• filed wllh tl\e C~nlv 0Mk ol Or-County on M•v u ,.,,
~ ....
"11bfl\lltd Orenoe C:O.tt O•Hv Pllol
M'\• JO -June 6 " 20 t•71
7311"
PUBUC NOTICE
"" "tCTtTIOUllUSINUS
N.t.M• STATIMINT «l\e IOl'-"'J __ , ... "°""IN••·
f'W\\•\ ROTH YOUNG Pl!.RSONNEL
SERVICE Of' ANAHEIM 1011 8usl•
-nc-•rO•I .. lrvlne.C.t. t11n
llOTH YOUNG "lllSONNl!L'
SERVICE OF LOS "NOE.LIS INC .• •
Celltornla coro . l25' Wlh"lre
S.Ulevaro S..11• Ill, Lot "n<atl•'-c.i1to•nl•~''
fl\I\ ""''"''' t\ ConclUCled l>Y. cor -•lion llolhY ....... Pitl"IOMtl S..rv•Ce of LO\ ......... lr>e
J-J 9,..,. "'"'~"' tti•s lltt•-wH flltd wl111 t.,.
C-lv Cieri! ol Oranoe Cou.,tv on May ,. ,." .. , .. u "vbh~ Orat1C111 Coe•• Oallv Pilot, Jiii"! 6, 1J IO, 71, 1•11
PUBUC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUl8UllNIU M4M•ITATIMaNT
,,.. ltllowlflt ,_,_ ..... "'Ill/ti·
~;~ST OllOVli CllNUll. HOt
04i'Vt l"ttl, MtW•ort attch.
C:.lifor'ftit'*I Koll•WetltlOa"'911 Orovo, 1'01
Oevo$f,..\,N ...... lhttll,c.tlli.n.lt
~
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OAllOINOllOVC 8T~L Str...., thh ~-. ,. .. fl ... Wiii\ ~
C-ty Otr111 °'Of-C-IY 9f'I olMv
11 ''"· nu1J
•111>11-°"'* C..•t Dell" f>llet ""-Y2>.• .... .,_6, II, ttn 111•1'
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SP.Y&L:ASS
Lown& pr ced s bedrm
hOm•, Nady to mov• tn·
to. O..n r very 1nll.10US.
Popular Porttmoutb model. Atonty l20l,OSO
-)J ~!IU!!l!lll'a
' • U ·. I'\
, • wJ. "•• • "A' W;•
I LUFFS
£le1ant Franciscan n)Odel. 3 BR, 21,; BA, on
rront row of oril Bluffs w /an unmatched view au the way to Catalina.
Prot. decorated &
landscaped.
V ALLE'f RIAL TY
-640.9900
Custom lock loy
New llst1ng, spacious 4 bedrms, spac. family tm
with rtreplace. Pool SIH
backyard with boat or
RV access. Very attrac·
ti ve yard & t!ntry. A
country kitchen with eat·
Ing area as weU as dining
room. Newport Beach
address-Woodlaqd
School Dist. Sl48.SOO.
PETE BARRETT
-REALTY-
Hz.5200
SINGLE LEVEL
BLUFFS CONDO
Beautifully decorated J.
Plan with bay & canyon
view. 3 B<lrms , 2 bnthi.
Immediate occupancy~ Lease at S62S per month or owner saya; submit
terms for option to
purchase
C. F. Colesworthv
REAL TORS 640°0010
OUR LOWEST
,ltCEIH
EA$TILUFF
Extra Jaree 2 llOt'Y fa ml· IY home on._ quiet cul-de·
sac in Ea1tbJuf(. 20 foo\
tamHy room with
massive rock flreplace.
Form1l dlnlnc room • 1152,500. Exluslve view· inc. 6734S50 OffN Ill 9 •II Sii.iN I U Nl(f'
People who need people
should always check the
Service Directory in the
DAILY PlLOT
HOW GOOD
OTHER presU1e 'waterfront homes
with pier & no t from $.185,000 up.
BA YFRONT, pter & fioat, lota $250,000
to $325.000, to build your own custom
.home. Several areas to choose from.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
i l I Hi) y \I (If ~ I I • 4 ~, f I • ' f1 I tl
------------~------
1002
Nffd ~~~ !~~!, BS· VILLA PARK
JNSSlve -eent. New nrm • CUSTOM HOMIS looldn• ror guallfitd ...
1oclate. Extremely
1eneroU1 commlulona. Xblt wwklni coodlUons. Preatlge oUice in
NC11!POrt Center.
759·07'1
MIWPORT HGTS.
$124.900
Preatlgious Newport
ffeta. Corner location.
Custom designed
charmer. Thick, plush
carpeting. Glaaa
encJoaed brick frplc.
§tep saver iourmet kitchen. Unique step
down master s uite.
Delltbtful wood ablngled master bath. Huie
separate family rm.,
too! It will be 1one
tomorrow, call now.
75241700
1119 •II $10N1081fllKI •
~
COATS & WALLACE
REAL ESTATE INC.
Two prest11e cuatom
built homes in exclmlve area.
Panoramic View Lot
alnlte level. 3 Bdrm &
eon~ den. fam & di)\·
inc rm. Lush landsc.'ap'g w/yard fenced for pool.
S24S,OOO. Shown l;>y oppt
only. 18822 Ridgevlew
Circle. Ask for Mike.
731-1522
Western Poc1fic
Propertie11
BACK
BAY
Southern Colonial home
with over 2450 square feet of h,axurtous llvlng.
1139,500. Red Carpet,
'15t·1202
~
COATS& WALLACE
REAL ESTATE , INC.
lUMITS +
Oceanfront! Two 3-
bdrm., 2 baths, one 2·
bdrm .• 1 bat}) + a 1uest with bath. Good win·
ter /summer rentals . Sf'9.500
Spacious 2 Story In An Executive
Neighborhood 3 Lge Br 2Y.t Ba
Family Rm Sep Dining Rm Coun·
try Kitchen Large Shaded Patio.
Pool Sized Yard. Owners Anxious
-Have Purchased Another
$159,900
···~OH THI SANDS
Just a block from the sUrf -and your
own ~vete p00l are fun extras that
come with tbb beautifully remodeled.
redecorated, relandscaped 3 bedroom.
Dutch-door entry, beamed Ceilir\i'S.
warm woods, neat brick &··Hie .
enhance this charmer. Offered at
$130,000.
U,._,IVlJI: li()~t:S :
REALTORS"', 675·8000
2443 E'ast Coast Hlghwav. Corona del Mar
also in Mesa Verd • at 546·5990
Close to water sports & swimntlng!
well maintained, 7 years old. Each
unit bas 3 bdrms., 2 baths, frpJc. &
encJ. garage. Absentee owner will
.exchanie for more units. $172,000
759-0811
OfflCI IUILDIMG
Beautifully located 2-story leased
office bldg., showing good return.
$420,000. Will consider exchange for
devel0i>able land.
613-4400
lll'LIX.-CoaONA Da MAI
Great location I CommWl.ity pooU Mirii
view of ocean from bdrms. Great
rental retord l a Popular "Townhouse
Type" units. Nice owner's unit with 2
BR, 11A baths le frpl in LR + 2 units
w/2 BR & 1 bath. Great buy. $175,000.
Jiii S.J~ ... Rood
MEW...,rPOlr-IT.,. CIMTB, M.I. 644-49 I 0
1002
10 UNITS, $145.000. 10'~
OOwN. 16 yrs old. Gross
multiplier 7 6. Cap rate
9.4i;t. Move on thJs one
quick 549-8655
~UPERB
F-6-l"OMES
COIOMA Da MAit
Close to Little Corona Beach, So. f>f
Hwy on Poinsettia. Lg. 3 BR. 2 bath
home w/guest quarters over gara1e. All new cpts & drps.
$189,500. Gisela Hanen 8"·6200.
(X--54>
I unl·ST [_
OLSON
Rm
oc)
'" ...
•
01mer-!!! ~' thia -Dlwil lMEf.RO · '""" 1CM4 a.,..... toscr C"Ute 4 ~room home In for owner occupant of NJI ·-·••••••••-••••••••• ...................... ,..,
nice a.-of Costa Mesa. ~eci1'te~~· • Wue ldglArtloltlll1 3br.2ba at2251Ufontova.r lktnC four pamt brush & • covered paUo. You saw what happened up 1 rad e d luxury t73.500. CJ13Ml'n-1'13l !, ,
bnlocft.QnlyS76,tOO. (plc. Excellent HB toLateFonet::tbeotm· Brlarcllrr mdl. Owner <213>'T104'729 •
·~ ... =· J
netitiborbood. Nr ocean ~''': ihaJ GWO~D· will finance. Sllt.SOO .... _______ _
CA75Ll2·NOW7315 &marlna.~.990. ARBORLAKE" will ~ Ope:a Dally. tS4 LU• llSTIU.Y ( 531·5800,eves841-tll23 In' .......... _, ............. ~ Yaew.~59NOl'S9-l.m '"I'
W.__...._ •~ ............. .., ,_ ... -Conte m po r a r~
---------' -. .. LO M lllD ........ --. at this~ bedrom + rami· •--... 1041 California Towobosne, •
NEW CONDO ,.,..,..... • W'tUMetwork '"'rm withe namber one-=-----••••••••••••••••••• n.-• At.-cHi•.~ •1 """'' UOOsq.-.. + veran:.
3,,,,,,_, ~l
Pl location, rll"lt user's tax lncen· Uve. Tb:ree top reasons to purchase
thls •mart triplex today! 3 Bdrms ..
formal dining, 2~ bath home+ two 2
bdrm., 2 bath units. facing the greens
of Santa Ana Country Club. 245 Mesa
Dr .• $210,000
~ unlts/2 Br, 20,, Ba. --=~=;::;::::_-1~~~~~~~~1 k>cation on the lake. AU IMCHANl'1MCi da w/vtew. a BR's, 1"4 ~
beam cellaa. ceramic $7~5& SAY"'HIUO"TO theupgrades!Call fOTINTIA&. ba's.A/C.2cargar.OnlJ We. 2 fJ>lc's. Pool "spa. .....,... b Val I ,..__ RID CAltPIT Fi I •• IOO. : 189.500. Prine only. 11...0t---M-•. a•"""' uy. ue s'""' ....,.133-JJIO xer-upper on arge. llDCAltPl'f' 97S-4912 Bkr. ll'l"flnU -word for th.ls 3 br. 2 ba wooded lot. 2 Bdrms. • 2 .r•.1. .... 00 Bargain priced family Huntington Villaae --------•baths. Tantalbina water ••••--home. Excellent area. home. Featurln1 a TURnEROCI course. a shade!~~~~~~~~!!
Open T plan with 3 crackll.na fl replace. weathered. Octto view, 1 _.__....__.. IOI!'•
bedrooms. dlnlng area in walls Of mirrors. plush Hl~HLANDS tall eucaJyptoa. 1125.500. -.--._,... •
the family room. stone carpetint & encl. patio. New gorgeous execs BR. MOllMS RIAi.TY ••••••• .. •••••••• .. •••,•
fireplace hearth. Two Only 1118.750. Act quick 3 Ba, Lusk home on cul· SEA TERRACE Artist'• · pa«os. Qne ls co\'.ered. on1hlsfenulnebar1a1n. de-sac, overlooking * 494"'057 * hm. studio w/bubble.
BKRcaU:W0-1720 gmblt & clbbae. Prine. · tract ~ta. 3 BR. 2 BA, SMncred only. sm.ooo. By owner. O.Y.O. APT lovely R. count0ry -~· •4~ll7J 640·6051 btwn 8·5. or Across from Heisler doW>Je car lat u-.... .,. 640-6648 aft 5 ask for Park. Oceanview & hills pool, tennis. $135,000.
Sleve. too! 2 BR. 2 BA. Adults IOMD llAL TY .... , .. 1002 lcAoa P..._.a I 001 MOOB.HOMI By ownr. Deerfield :!1cufj,~~~·500· 131•9411 ..
.............................................. MESA DB.MAI Quality la evident In this Twnhme. 3br. 2ba, frplc. J"'Y WYl!"''TS B _ ................ W·''" ........ .-c ......
Vill'HVIEW
Nearly 2 acres nestled
among gJant oaks only
2~2 miles to the surf with
a remarkable custom
built 3 bdrm + den + family rm home de· sirned to maximize the
panoramic. hilly
raochland view. Also S
car covered parking +
room fOf~&mper&, boats.
etc. The corral can ac· commodate as many
borsea as you could ever
want with room to SJ>&re OFFERING PRICE
$220,000
Cal644-7211
/.Jn Nll ,fL
Hl\ll [_ Y I..
l\Sli.iUl.IJ\ I [5
SELL Idle Items with a
Dady Pllot Claaalrled Ad
642·56'78.
lBr+den. 2 bath home upgraded. xtra lge patio. A ..,.. Y v-..... ...,.,_,. .._ Oean s Br. 3 ba w/up· E t rto _, 1 11 · SllO.OOO. 10 wuanower. REALTORS to beach. lovely Sea Tef'I •
.....&aA c:rpt cov'd paUo x e r p,.,.ess 00• Y 499.••37 ra-g-.... enhome •br 2
3 *To'6A.aHOM1:* ~-· laodscpd. Interior pro S51·0821. Open 12·5 .... """ ...... ·• • "" Ii & other xtras. Nr all .,_ /Su ba, (am rm+ sewlnl rm ~1y1r.•1 .... EW sch Is . I m med . decorated w/new cpu. ...,t n. •---------• or 4th br. Up6 raded "'" ..,,_ " drapes. blinds -------• CALLUS... 0
IESTDUPt.EX 833-2100 ~..._ ~~nc. only. wS7aJ21pa500per 01n earthbtones. REDUCED ~lis~Uintbe ta~1t mbleullinl· =uin,~~~~.~r:t
AV AILAILE I 024 __,... mott.r --------• . . pen ouse $8 500 """' t gs ava1 a to greeabelt. Pvt com-Pri:!'~a~::"fou~a ren· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~h~l~~.~rS:;.,~ 1--------•1 =~lUl/8'7-3047 2 B d r ~ .• 2 b a . LagunaBeacbarea. :;:!t~.P~~.--~':n'::
tals. Spacious bright liSTSIDE Fenced catlo. atrium. Townhome In Rancho ~-· ni& ~· tennis eta. etc.
owners unlt. large rront POOL+ GdUEST beaM m ce1 I ing. xlntt Costa Dowatoww H.I. llwf SanT .. J.oaqlC uiVnlE. WHas01FAolNr· · ~ beach parking. 5 room. view from patio. Prime Eastsi e Costa esa oc. Cle>1e o ever· PRICr Super property. ror-Jiiy ""'• gc " min. to Dana Point &-rental unit. quaint & Maaa. Towerl.01 trees! ythiag.$83.700. ~ &SCIO 3 Bedrma r course and is within ' ·2IOO Harber. Near •ehools.
warm. Both 2 BR 1 Ba. Curved drive. Rustle liv· 759-076 I nn'. roi-maJ dlnlng.' h:;! waJking distance to ever· 3 BR. den. 21.w ba, duuna, Shown by appt. only.
could be large home. ""-room hosts cathedral REDUCED!! kitchen, QUALITY ything.$110,000 living. ramlly ocun 0 w n er I A a en L Many xtra. To see tt ·ls celling+ massive brick NEW VIEW HOME redwood construction view 1136.900 Ownr m4M91-Sl58 • •
to buy It! ~~:ce. Sun':i>' gall=~ 38drm,3ba. frplc. shake EASl'Sl.DE 3 Br. 1 batb. thruout. i>op't miss on 4S'H505or49M96'7 __ 1 _______ _
759-0761 c c edn-wH"d 000 . rr. 2 story. Stlll ttme to Large lot. New paint" lhil!! To preview. call ........_.. ... _UC.llU~ •---------• oiy en. 1 ea way pick cpts/drps. S89.950. i ant Ceatury21Surf. -~ _, master suite. Gla.ot Owner/Aant.875-6695 C!ace6y569.,750 SJ6.7S42 979•1050 Fee' the youq at heart
NEEOHB.P?
Help yourself to a
Heaping selection of
Qualiried Hoperuls
in the DAILY PILOT
HELP WANTED ADS
Size 33-48!
sparkling blue pool wtth•------------1 adults. 2 Bedrooms. e
slide. board & dressing ON 631-1.185, 846-2087 ~~~~~~~ 833 8600 baths. Interior tutefull,r,
rooms too! Sepal"ate Owner. Alt· 3br CUJdo. ftl»lc, dsbwshr. and expensively uo;,
guest racllltiea with EIGHTH washer/dryer, pool, xlnt 1raded Exterio-r kitchenette! Easy care I t ded. 155 000 u:'h r.. ........ L....__ V --& Lots beautifull)' landscaped. yard. Just S98,S01)! . oca. upgra . • . ~~Ml:'IQ..C acmn -Community pool,
Hurry-calloow646-7171 rAIRWAY•.•.•. l~~~~~~~l MC>-7930or~ -------·Call today lf you're ln-jacuu1. pmeroom,et~.
OPfN ll19•11S11Jto/IONH1Cr• r, N"""RBEACH terested ln N•-hasin& a ,,.. __ to ....... plna and OF ORANGE CO'S 3BrcanF 11 CULV&DAU lot in u...!.;"~Dlamond "'"""" '""I' MOST EXCLUSIVE Get GREEN cash + am y room area • si0,&,0. Old Top of bellcbes. SUO.OOO - - -"'
THE REAL
ESTATE RS ------
HURRYTOSH
THIS DRAMATIC
CONTEMPORARY!
Blt around pool. Uv rm &
mstr bdrm suite separat · ed from rest or this great
fmly home. Children have own wtng & play yd.
Laundry rm. tort for
studio or guest or ? Blt·in
vacuum & intercom.
Kitchen has trash com· l)aC!tor. nu-tone center.
continuous cleaning
oven. 545-9491
~ Walker & lee
GOLF COURSE AND forWlilTEelephants S'lUOOBkr.983-6176 511-FAM.ltM. tbeW-ld·•c.N\n(3Q) with a Classified Ad A hard to find s bdrm. --OOUNTRYCLUB• Call642-5678 t.acltLocaHo. home In buutiful Vi torf B h Acres of green as far as Prime ocean locale-Culverdale. Over2'00sq. C G C 3Mon.arcbBayPlua '
YoU can see + trees & walk to beach. 3 BR. 2 ft ol I 11 1 ........ 3 EQJoy bautlfllJ summer • ----K&guel :
water. Single story lux· Dm.PoW 1026 BA. fixer 'U)Per. m.900. bltbs.tw;r~·~':xt sunsets from tb1s cedar 4f6o7iii"' IJ.t.OU6
ury goeswtthltusmillion ••••••••••••••••••••••• B:!,!J Io t . Man Y elegantty"~ated >assbome.Ocunslde~~~~~~~~~ dollar location. Rustic --..-Vt.-.... bllities. As is coodl· .. _.:.... .. Red ed 11 ol hwy. Stained glaaa. 2t-styUng +contemporary -·-tion.BKRl82S51l t.ruuuv.. uc tose · Cplcs. suoken tubl. (31) L91111,..... IOSl
desip equals large dble Undercoostructlon •------·----• Call today' 1217 ooo -·--•••••••••-·-" door entry leading to 3 br. 3 ba split level ~
center glass enclosed w,lots of xtras. Minutes '"9t 1044 ~•SAll.e&.UI
atnum. Cathedral ceil· to Dana Point Harbor. ._.................... ~ 3 Br, 2 Ba, Lake
Ing• ever 'I w he re . Sll.5.000. MIBfrREI Forest Home. e mos old.
Massive Palos Verde Broker. 831-0460 S9S,500 Lndry rm. A/C, lg mstr =~er.::\ T:.i~c~ WANTED: Pr I me Io c a t I on ST-LOOIC! ._ ____ ., bdrm. W'lvt patio &
much more Can never So c.t Ano HM P r o f e s s I o n a I I y vt"J --~~~~---• bath. Fpie, all bltu. AJI
be duplicated at the un· in trade for luxunous 57' landscaped grounds. Atthe end of a cul-de-sac facil's. SM.000. a»Z132
believable low prlce or Wocld Ra~rulse An· 1bick1 plush carpetlna. street •n the RANCH sits only SlOU50! Vou can nape>lis Sailing Yacht BricK Fireplace fs this SORRENTO adja·
teeolf on this one. hurry! w,Dana Point slip. Value enhanced by natural cent to a Eucalyptus 963-8961 SJ.02.M. Call Bill Gates wood bookshelves. Huge lined green belt Irvine
1067
ColonlalRealEstate 1213) 923.8187 or 12131 sunklssed country livtngatltabest!Callfor CORDOVA 4 BR. famllr· Real Estate 861.2877. 12131 923..gs77 kitchen. Second story details rm. cpt 't, upgrd 'd.
FOR SALE La w lsh hosts secluded master beaut. lndlcp's. VIEW..,
Open 1925 Lanai Dr. 5Br. rry a wing + 3 more queen ~ Downtown $71,800. Call 130.2011·
xlnt country clb loc. 3 br. 1'4 b. ramlly rm. stied bedrms. BeautlCul ~ Unique M·l property owner.
M a n y x t r a s formal dining rm on cul· BToro 1032 latticed covered r•tlo ls containing two shops. De_l_l&X_e_"_Tre_v_IDO-.-. _3_B ..... r
548-8614/540-2018 de·sac lot. Priced at only ••••••••••••••••••••••• here too! Cal fast. Just freshly painted; 2ba. By owner. Sus>W -9-£-... UT-l_Rl_L_V_t_E_W __ • S8'7,900. Move-In cond1·1·-------•I 752-1700 various uses rrom eom· sunset view rr.m .......... ._ tlon. Call 84f,s.538 or eves •-----mercial to lln .. t lndua•-.....,. lliUTIRILHOME 63IMl69S _.._. .... eryo... Cll'{HlllQ••,SIUNl'OlllN<l &>• ... ,. size Jot. Too many
Best location on btfl ~sq n 4 br's dining 1•· I I IAMCHREALTY (32)Sll9.SOO custom features to li$t ....
Mesa Verde golf CO!Jt:>e! VILLA ASSOC rm. 9xl2 doll ·house. : lilifl,'t SSl·ZOOO Motivated Showe like a model. This home ideal foY Ht& • w all the extras. Just ~ • , ---------1 Good terms for qualified SBl,IOO/bsl ofr. Owner rm I Y who needs a Broker-Realtor 7 offices Listed. 182.950 , POOL-SPA·A/C buyer. SeDtt may belp will carry Sl0,000 2nd
separate wing for grownr-o_vr_l85_saJ_es_m_e_n __ -i C.rl•g• tto.M lC.t.• ft..t.•.t.G£ finance Uus comfortable T.D.OpeabouaeSat/Sun
children or mother-In· R-..-__6H·ll35 OMLY$17,500 -·~-., 4 bdrm •• 2 ~. + tam. !!!~~~I 516·158l __.._... oh• much more In this ..... -, .. -. law or" Can he toaether • IOI~ Hunters I~~~~~~~~~ CORNER location in 'WIMBLETON. NO AS·
or could be sep apt. 4 Here's the one )'ou·ve beautirul Culverdale. SOC. FEE. Call the bdrms or 3+ den. wet ......... ltl r 0 I L.-1.e 11!.--rest Near POOL. PARK. • _ .. _ _ .. __ , d bar. rnnl dJn rm. Don't """""'' wa ng or. ., y ~ ~ SCHOOL This 4 lnmu speci ...... IOI' •
wait loo long! 5'5-!M91 1Abed.000.2fobrtha nedatbl3 Spacious & newly crptd 4 bedroom 2 story home Is taila. rm. a an g BR. 2'z Ba. home In waiting ror the famllv ramily room with wooded surroundings. ' rll"eplace. Double garae Interesting rock frplc lookln& forward to a wrth llutomalic opener. w,convenatlon pit: lge super summer In Irvine.
carpet•. drapes and lots Mstr Bdrm. approx 2500 Calltoaee.
ol extras. Excellent loca· sq. ft. Seller movina out
tlon, Just listed. hurry. of$tate. '114,500.
call540-11Sl. MCFINANClALlNC.
.;')" ~ HERITAGE
• . nEAL10RS
• I H ~I ' , 1 I
C'll :.ON
•
752-5162
Mltt"'4• leach I 040 .......•. , ...•.........
WISTMOMT
SPICtAL
Model perfect. 4 BR. 2
BA VI /truit trees. no-wax nra. oew ranee •oven ... many utru. m,900.
** DILUXI
ltAMCH RIAL TY
Hl·JOOO
WOODlalDCH
Steps to !Mach club. Choose your own In•
tenor. Tb1J 4 BR ".J BA hie la ready ror ~up
aAMCH RIAi.TY
551-2000
Ii
RINT A.LS A winning combi001lon
i BR. z ba ...•.• s.T75/S25 °' o<W Opottmlnl hOmes
ZBR,2'-'ba ......... 14'75 wtlt\luxury~ond
3or2 BR. + )), 2ba .. $$25 SUJ)efb recnanon 01 o prenwm -------·-t 3 BR, Z Ba ....•• "'35/5'75 IOcotion TenNI •gym • thllopy
3 BR, 2"' Ba •• , • S4.SO/SS01___ spa • SWlmmlng • billiatdS
4BR.ZBa ........ 1435 -°""X-:'9 5BR, SBa . . • • . .•• S6SO ont It 1'wo Bedrooms, One 8ol'1 ~ ~
.... THEBLUFFS ~·130 J>ak~Vlfs 9illt ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ~tr-to leach 3Z t I M2ESA8a Vdtbrdol t xi lutrloc. 3 Bmr c BR. 3 0. , SIJSO ---------1 <i> ...,_ _.,,. •
teW'POITllACM •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ' Pc, am r ' COSTA MP'.SA
, OJW. "75 1ncl erdnr. •sR '"Ba ~ 1,.50/Yrl" "'•wport~~~!SSO~!Pa~uJo~!!.!•!!~A!v•!.·"!· C!!oa! .. !~!--!!!!!!!!!75!1!,.!"!!!!s!!! Of1tX Custom atw, 3ba home In Avl . t79-4&75 all sPM " •" • · • · · · • _, ., ~ ... "" 2Br. 1 Q , 11 • nv rm II Palllladcll. Crph. tlrp•. Hlht• 3Br. tom rm, 2
ll*tr bdrm w /buie 100• tr1 toed lrd, 3 blka to &.Ide 2 br w Ila• fncd yd. bu boat 1toraae •-t t ,.,,.4Mcl Ap. I....,~
dock, t lBr. Ula apt. bch. Aval • June ta. 1450 Xlnt cond thruout. No S850 yrly, across from ..+G "*'' s 111 " ................ _ ..... .
Choice locatlon. l blk to p«!mo.4~.s?eu doaa. S325 tno. 1864 beach.4 ur,2ba. • ...................... Codo~s• 1124'
oceen llJ1 eso ,.__,,;.:__ ~ ..,._ lZZZ Church St. 646·9129 l600/mo yrly, 3 Br born''. Cotta....._ J724 ........... ••••• ••••••~
) I" ar:: N If 0 US£ 8 \' i.a.d Rteltv -_, ----walk t(l bch, pool, teonla ••••••••••••• ••••••• •• • 'l'HI IA Y LEAF •
OWNER t:. Bluff 4 tsr. •MPARK ,wt, SISO/yrly. Oceen fr~t $40.00 WEEK & UP Hid.rm. w11tea pd 1"40'..
hm Rm. 2 fSllC'I, II,-\ BALBOA ISL& ho mt'. 11 u Per con d •Studio & 1 Hft Apll ~aullful. apac1ou• ne_..1
tOH
U.. pool 1tae lot. 2214 fn.tlOO 3&lrms •TV & Maid ~n Avutl <'pl&, Pool, pvt iiatlos.
c ::~~1111a M4·t3ZJ or -~------•AVAfLAIL!• •523CAMM~IMM& ~:fo~n~~· ~~hes~=~e; ·=~;;'rtt~1~r.c1M ~~~~:J>o~.sM. ~.
PJ Prane, ----...---1 2 SMALL HOMES •HOW• 2br+den,view 548-97S6or84S-186T &te0883 RA RD 0 R VIEW Houaea. coodonunlums1•--------i WATERFRONTHOMES --....-... 10'7 "Carme1·· F1t1tHtlc onoaelaraolot ---and townhomK. Mooth Two~drooms Lcpfwn21r Fo•ho&lowVIUQp ..--a•nur~cfta.ID-0 view.MO-kll9 •.soo DI• 38r, 2ba, PP. pvt tomoothrentalsstartlng ...... .-il-'d S37c Call6tl-l400 Bltns. w1w, pool. adll11. 621W WalsonMG-3010 -. ._.., wrr• -"' llJlllL'llln"" " oopets S240.&u·397\ FVRNOR UNFURN • R ••• • i •I 0 e Io res Harbor View Home. 4 br. Rey McC_.. petio. 2 bl ks lo bch. No al $395 to Sl650. Located in Unlv. Park S37S Harbor View Montego •2br town home w f rpl
lfadd. J Br 21.' Bil • .:nd loottJO, Vacant. Ownr. ltadtor tllOHewport pell. HOO/mo yrly. =~= ~~ ~:3 1lleTerrace S385 •Br 2811 (rplc ram rm Studio, ver} cln, ut1I furn •Leepuuo&cnc. garage•
llDU 8) owner IO l can no.. nee. 58"'58:12 Cott. Mele 141-7729 _6'75-__ 2188 _______ , UI ror more detail&. 1\1.rtle Rock S39S pooi & cl~bhous·e priv. N; $175. 971 !111.ulon SS2 7855 •Adults. child Jti & O\•er
Pla) a S1J3.SOO &44·710t OCEAN VIEW .tqant 4 Woodbritl&e SS00 parir " &d'C>Ols. l650mo. (or appt •Pool &Jucut'll avul
Opaa H1JU.~e Sal .• Suo 5mCll•.t• 1076 S.-2~ Ba DR FR eocl RanchoSanJq $4~/525 wt &ardener.640-1396 RI"'" lo I BAY MEADOWS "J . e p M . 0 w n • t ....................... lllcw"'°fMrty 2000 IJ'dn, xtras sSoo. yr. 11 rm Three ~moms ~a w, emp y. per.on
w ~nitt.,, reallont OCEAN VIEW. 3 Br 2 Ba. •••••••••••••••••••• •• &M-29'10 The Ten-ace 1425 HV KnoU. brand new spht Maidserv Noi.mkrs, Spa• 1 & 2br. lba apts,
toed d loe I I Villa"e l M2S lev. 2 Br. den, 3 ba, ten/ 548 7197 Man) fuc1l. avail Encl. SEA YllCW Oynamu: )" 'c e lo atorea, bae • tt•r P\l patios Gai./-.1• ocean /lite.'$ utw. Brand beach • schools . Di5trff1Proptrlyl 2br,Sparklln& ,.Crplc. Univ Park S.160 pool SSS0.644-6449 MawporilHch 3769 pd No k1dio pets. Fro'Tt
.. • lor $109,500 S2U.OOO dwn, We can find it for you. patio. auto ranee . REALTY INC. VUlagtl 1475 .. BR. 3 ba. Bluffs condo.••••••••••••••••••••••• 5'!30 Adlts 646--0073 • new. cuoo11• ~0 1 owner ~arry balan~e. Be h p b OcnaJde of the hwy 1315 714/l• .. 1371 n.....rfl Id ••so .. s~~oou under mkt .. .. ac area. roatea. · _. .....,.., t .., Cara"e pool nr Waterfront, view. 1-BR --
-· 492.3044 bankruptcies. trustee _il~e~ase~. 673~~"88:1~7~-:-;--l~~~~~~~~~~I V1Ua1c Ill S52S " · f • d · $1.200 mo. 2 BR. $1500 mo N 0 W ll ENT I NG • G'ro.500$48llll4JV<.:o c.-...... --sales,forcedulea,underpr1me CdM locaUon.T~-t bedrm 2 bth Woodbridf~ SSS() schools. mme · A&:eo1675·6\6l beuut1ful new apts, t'\odvO L ft _. market values. We can ocean jett.yview 3br 2 u.1Y<:'Y 3 a FourBedrooin ~~~!!>. SSOO mo . ---• ltpaclou!> 1 ur·!>. i:reat *-••J M e '* .. ~:!!!~ ..... !~?.~ joint venture. Call World ba. t'rplc, S600 m'o. bome.f~tg,1d~,:o:.r Woodbridee 1595 --------Gorgeous upl, overlook doaets. $265. Light &
ofour5customhomesm "'·purate 2 Sty Spanish •W-ld•e•B•ro-ke•r•s•,6•'73-·4.S4S_ .• , 675-2311 1Aarva'1'1nlmcemneedg . ....,r5/mo.· PLlJSMANYMORE Newport Shores. walk to ingbay,adull,alipavul. airy 2 Br'1t, w/pvt patlo ~ • ..,, beach 2 BR avail. June $850mo . yrly 875·9877 or balcony. $295. Encl Newport Hghts. 'rhl1 2300 style borne, Ule roof, 3 or ·1·--------•1 963-456'7 Agt, no fee. 15. ssoO mo. 548.3657 gar's. lndry Caci!. Come sq Ct home has 3 Bdrms. • br, 2 ba. Unique inter & 4 UNITS 2 Br & den. a •Ba, fplc, 2Bedroom, 1 bath by btwn 11 .30 & 5:30 any
bonus rm, fem rm. llv eardcn. Warm & lmmac pool &t nn1 l900 Sharp 4 bedrm. 2 bath i,, Mi fr Bch 2 er, den. 2 2 Bedroom. 2 bath day. ~ Victoria, or ceU
rm, din rm, & room for m.900.491M876. 7~.1.:&:s.5888 home. Ct'ptd t hruout. Ba, 2 car ear. S495. 12or9monthlease Mullan Realty, M&-343' boat & camper. Sl4\ .000. COSTA MESA Newly painted, drps, 2 6'15--07'5 or 552.7074 129 35th Street 540 2960 3112 Broad St Open NEW. impressive, MIS· cat &ar. Children & pets CallCuss213·966·1711 or ·
house Sat/Sun 1 s. Call sion Creek, :rroo sq. n .. 4 $139,900 $110, Utfl Pd. f~.· $375. 963-4567 Agt. no \V--.. brldae Creekside UDOIAY COHDO ~-..... L-.. 3716 2 br. cpl!.. t.lrps, bltns. Mike 731 1522 BR. den, lge corner lot, ..... """ 2 bdr •. d • b b -11 -._-·-KJds OK Sl2S I 1 e o I i v e t re e , Sh a r p . pr Ide o I Nice~ Patlo. 1ar, yard. -------Aspen. 38r or 2Br+den. m ... en, " at · •••••••••••••••••••••••
WH ttm Pacific
Pro,...ti.s
TWO UNITS
landscaped, wet-bar. 2 ownership units m super Many more available. 2Br1 Ba, like new 2 ba. Coraeous 1ft•cp. '1. Patio ove~lookin~ bay. OCEANFRONT LAGUNA 645 2978
S II r F Llf Do t • al ad p',.. 40' boat slip avail. Full • . • frplc's, luxury Mstr rental location. No de· ma ee ree e wn own area. qu upgr es rem.tum security underground ROYALE. 2 Br, 2 ba. de S275 2 br. 1 ba ~/Sade
swte St39.500. Owner fer red maintenance. Servi~ l'nt Call now! S300 mo. 536.()880 lot & location S.70/m park mg. Custom crpts & I u x e , m 1 n :1 mo tnplex. Enc gar, bale.
496-s.t:;.1 ~~ t fo~ 3 ::Sf pr~J~~~ ~~ru.umers Guide 3 Br prestigious S& s Park ;{~~ ~~f1~~4 t.,8; 9.,5f~ci. dlll&r •1 All rlthe am1.enrue~ f~:r~~o ~~=r. A<llti1 18 Nr new 642-1603 _
<?"Peninsula . charmm& Separate 2 Sty Spanish t1on.OwnerwUltrade CostaM--o Huntington Cul de sac pm or u~u ous 1vv1!1g RUSSSWARTZ RI.TR 2Brtwnhse.p.;llo.1'2 8a, Span1i1h ll tyl<' front style home, tile root,~ " K~V •• 3224 location Fam Rm. -S42-6'984 .645-53S6e es 714 ,640 1127 near !>hops. gar,
house \\Uh rrplc I tr• bcdrms. 2 ba. Unique in· ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• w Cplc. 1 )'r tsc. $495 mo. VUla1e I 3br, 2~bo, tiled 3 br 2"2 ba Easts1de $280. 631-0995
le,·el rear t1pl "1th \lew ter & 1arden Warm & c P.E:ALT~SN MESA VERDE Call968_.602 ram.rm & kttch. 1reen· · . ·ocean new ---
ofboy&o<'ean 5150.000 tmmac $79.900. 498-7876. Pennington Properties beJt.144<>.lse. 752-5086 !:.~.l;,J_~~90un1. tennis Af:'*._!::!':!!._~ tbr apt w ram rm. lge ILv HEWPORTIEACH Outataodang 4 bedroom. ---------1--------..._, """..... wtnW'l"lll>nW'U rm. util pd Sauna. pooJ.
REALTY 675-1642 LUXURIOUS COSTA MESA 3 bath. new carpets. EXTREMELY mce 2 br. HOWAITIHGlll N Ba k Ba B 2 b ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jae. tenms & other rac1t.
d 11.:a ACU.·.Eosblde drapes, & dishwasher. l~ba.S300mo.968·1317 ovEn • .,, JlOMES ... !!:rmc Vyl'3mrw,tw.oatf' Ge•S'al 3102 S275. ~ R1\'lera-Or. 4 8 rm .. 21., baths, 3+ lJNlTS&I t t ~ lncludea &ardener. Bier .nc ~.. um ''" I HEwPORT HGHTS formal dinina r"h, fami· • 0 5 0 room CALL 751.3191. __ .-------I AV A IL AB L F. F 0 R course' view. Fr pie. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avai 611 l>l2·5m
E>.clU!>l'e Clirfhaven lyrm ;everyima&inable to build more $180,000 CONDO·lBr, lBa, bltns. LEASElNTHEIRVINE bltns.2Cargar. '.4 Acre 2Bd h E L C
Lu,,,ury inside & oul reature! 1185.000 548-l867 · I AREA! Yes. we hove a beaut. fenced yd. No 1·2·3 Bdrms Never lived Meia 0~:·mO:th osta Beaut ocean view AGENT 1133-9781 HU ..... Tl ..... GTO..... MESADELMAR cpts, U~lmac. cose to LAROEsupplyoCrentals pets.lsl&last.963-0525 1n 1 m a to beach -s1s-2&62
I 4 BR Jba 2 " " " Sha.rp3bedroom,2bath shopping s235 mo. for your selection. F'rom R50 up Open l2 5<.laaly
" poo · · ' Santo Ano 1080 BEACH on quiet cul·de-aac. _963-__ 124_2______ S32S per month for a. J HVH 4 BR Portatino 1411 Delaware Hunt· Lru tbr, bllns. crnts &. frplci. 708 St .• lames Pl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~..,., CALL7513191 b d d •·tod I I d l " . ,. 0 r•s 2111" FOURPLEX _.,,.,mo. · · Condo. 2br. lba. pool, e room c on o tn .. e. me . gar ener. mgton Beach •1-12 11601 drps. Adults only. l\fo y O\l.nt>r '" "• 53150028 lB 7000' 0 11 d I I . ssc•1
'· · R-2 Lot. Prine. only. Four attract1\·e 2 L"lQC ...,..1163 N~W home In WOOD· Mo -------ti-15·57 1G • r a .on . .SELECT close to sbop'g & rwy r~nge to a >e room yr. ease m mmum. "' 846-l82GorAgt. pets.645·3Ul8aftS
llG CANYON Ownr/Brkr. 64H758 bedroom, t buth units PROPERTIES ... ;,,, ... ,... BR I OGE ror S600 per Agent 83J..9781 Dana Polttt 3826
I HR. 2': Hu . poul, <r-.a.i.. L-o I 086 with garURtl:. in an ex --Sharp 2 br, l ba, rncd yd month. GOLF COURSE . --lcAoo Ponln1ulo 3807 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _,.n -'7-· cellent area. Will ex· Sharp. clean. 3 br. 2 ba, E·side. Children. no pets. VIEW-<:ENTRAL AIR Lots or xtras 3 Br 2 Ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• New dlx adult unit. 2br. 1acu.ttl & \ll.'W F:lcctric ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""anae Call our office ram rm. dbl gar, quiet "'-crpt./drnoc . .-.o.r.mo. ONINC FR lgeyd nrgolf&YM 2b I k. D I \"' Bk '"4 8415 .. n " ,..,.... ,... ....... C:O N DJ TI -• • · "Pemnsulo · w "'ewport. •. over oo ing ana ~1~7"' r,.,.. · 'PATIO HOME. New foranappolntmenttoi1ee location . S37S1mo . 962·2649 COMMUNITY POOLS CA. S550 mo. 644·7901 . 3 Br 2 Hu . pau'~. lndry, P0tntMar1na.493-1590
siuglelt!vel,closetopool. this Quail Place ex 540 1151 Heritag e----ANDSPAA. 770.1166 _ pk&. except loc. $475. ST 381,
IACKIAY jacuui and sauna. An clwuve.$137,500 Open Ill Realtors Comt'a redecorated 4br, Lux condo 3 Br 2, Ba 642-0720orS42-S728 oro ..
- 3 Br 2 Ba. 2 fplc ·s. l1e outstanding mves~ment 9PM ~ --1~ . $38S. Edwards & f''or rental Information in talln ' & Ill . h. --••••••••••••••• ••••••••
corner lot Owner. ARent at S9t,5(,)0, II .Quail ~ Edinger. IM2·5197 IRVINE call the Irvine c:a ~ ~r~153 nag l 2br dptx. yrd. sun deck. New 2 Br 2 Ba, 4-plex,
r ~ s,_.lallits v ew. · • gar. Yr ly $350 mo A.C. cpls, drpa. bllns, "ill finance. no loan ee. AMCMOllAGI • --Great 3br. 2ba, yrd. gar. ..-~ S7"'30l3 3,., E Ba l •320 " · k o r'll1lilliOW ,.., __ to Beacb. N..,.... Shores. walk to bch, .,. evs. w Y · 8 a r · 11° Pe 8 • • • .,..u1c poss e~s1 n -~~-P.wwww.a """""' ~ -.... 586-8lS7 S115,0UO 2298 lledlonds '""-·-~·~ -r.::.: ..-· ·. $375.645-8128 2Br2Ba.2fplc's,tennis. Coronoct.IMar ·3122 _ -----
Dnve.6420SlM 1714)496-7711 woo~sl-~uuctt -LEASE CLOSETOIEACH . pool,S49:smo675-02.55 ................ -..... FomtainV~ 3834
BLL. FFS ANITA PLAN --4-PLEX . 5 vr"I old & PRIME EASTSIDE C.M New 3 Br 2' t Ba condo. OCEAN VIEW ••B•••••••b•••Co••••d••••••• 3Ud1ms.2 batb.rrpk CONDO 2BR.2BA.dbl Bltns, pvt )'d, 5435 mo Beaut. custom bit exec ... 4 r. t~ a no. Ne•·
Sll2.:.oo O\l.nr5SJ.4038 OtherRtGl&tate absolutel> beaut gar Rrandspankin'new. 84&0800 home. very spacious. 2 r6' cplS Pool access. laun·
••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl&s,000 Prin only A11t Yrll lease S400 mo. ___ _ ___ frplcs. 3 bdrms, 3 baths. 'n., l.~f.' .. ~ dry hook up~. rrplr . OCEAN VIEW MoblS. Hoew1 "2-8550 Call ror 1i1ppt Mary 0 Hunt. Seacllff Exec hme RANCH R!ALTY S61JO. mo. S48·2928 $425 mo. 646-2627
Newport .!:':'.~.~. •• •• •••• !!.~~ .::.~: ~::~~:~~E ~LE OF MlWPORT ~~ ~~1\: ~~~P~ ;~: SS I ·2000 HVH Monaco. 2 Br. 2ba CORONA UEI. l\fA ft :\ H:· 8:1 ~!~e~~~s~d~i
Beach WANTTOIUY 12 units South Gate R~fT~RS gardener mrl. S650 mo Unw Park Deane Kens· ~1~n0ct~fr~~er 2 Br Townh<lusc. Crpk l(lll redec. Pool S38S
Double \\ 1de Mobile Sl54,500 Owner duires 6 ·5 11 st2 .. 330. mjlon 4 Br. 3 ba. a c 1:a Pool, tennis. Some ocean 5.Jli 1461: 003.2532
Tn-lt•\ el Newport Crea.I
Townhousr Orl111nal
model 1!1\d unit. over·
look., pool & tennis
courti. I b<lrm. 2•, ba.
wine collar & wet bar.
HADLEY REALTY
847-8844
Home at Huntington e~ evnhang"'forSoutllCO-ISI u \" .I h 3 B •. Cul des c va1J 3 Br 2 Water & 1urdener No UIESTCLIFF & Catahna V\ewi;. CIOS't' • -.. -3 -th S D lrt A " .. ' ... esu verul! ome r"' 3 • a . P"tS sc9". 5c2 0620 ......... t sh •-rrn ...... ~ Hunti-.ton och 840 c eu or r woo.. uru·t· or commern1 al R A 'I Ba "-h F R '" " " " O oppmg"' t vc8Cn ""'' Jl ti~ B h Pl ~ • Fam m. cozy va1 . nr u.::ac · am m Own A . Pembroke Ln. 3 Br. 2 '""~·26ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• un n on c · ease P11ul Franklin 979·8533 June llh. S400 mo. D J fplr. patio. fncd bark er at. .,.. call l 6 pm l SSt-6042 Ba. 22x18 fam rm. huge1·--------1 IRAHD MEW! Feenstra. Inc. 549·3162 yard w/grdnr Monthly TURTLF.ROCK GLEN kit lrg 11 i g dbl askro:_t:auraine. --8ES= REAL~ESTATE Princonly.$450.675·1501 4 Bl' 2' b fa . vn rm. 12 & 3 Br apts. fo'rom 3Br. lba, rrplc Eside. '· 2 8 ' m rm rrplr. rrnt patio & SUMMERREHTAL \250 /per mo 1411
BEACH ACCESS . ENTERPRISES Fncd yd, new c pts. I have several 3 br bome11 I>loitn. Nrmr ., t2enrpntt.cs pVoieowl Gb.crdnkyar~1dnc··. AEvlear1·1 Jgualry ldsrt SEAVlEW & DAHLIA Uclawure. HB Open 12·5
N.8 Adult Pk. Vacant -S.180/mo. 2116 Orange St. & townhomes. Some g~n"-it 5695 M~ · Lge 1 br, 2nd level, 1 blk Daily. 1 Mlle to ocean. 33'. t Br. Pvt Pty. S2900. Out of County 557 l25.'i w/pools S39S to $525 ""' · S600/mo. Ph 673 2425 Ct.IM beach Refri". C'42·9602Agt 536-l_808
642 2679 ..-.-.. l 5SO ' Joan, 846-1371 ~r846·2597 AGE~T 83311293 eves/wknds. range, oven. rrpts. drps. Harbor Yu Homes .:.. - -----• • ..,.... .. , VACANT 3 b 2 b c t carport & laundry facll Locallon•Pnce•Luxury PORTOFl'llO 'M NATIONAL 24'. sl™' 4, ••••••••••••••••••••••• r.h a. P 5' Sb 3 b h th Woodbridge Villager 3 BR. quiet neighborhood. ADULTS· NO pL;"'S •2 n -.. ....,,... ,... drps, dsh 'ws . dbl gar. an> r ome w eavy Con1to 2 BR 2 baths • . P k & r. • ...,... -.vv 4Rr.31?b11.r11mrm.dln completely recondi IOAcresw/Cobln Adults only.!H6-7780 so11ke roof. Liv r.m New •2·Sly 'No pets nr .. 1arineri; Far S4()01moJune1Septl BanburyCross•s.12·6604
rm game rm. $169,llSO lloned Al the beach Well-EJectr1 c1ty.View w /frplc. cheerful k 1t. · · ten n c rt ~· r PI · $300 mo ycnrly lras~ fee Owner 644 .aM-1 $1500 (213) 387 13-19 ONLY $.22,500 Lease 3 BR. 2 Ba. Cam-rm, w/dshwhr Lg yd i395 S3751"!'.rly Agt 640-0020 _ Screened an patio. I~ 673 6552 973.1373 :ifl 6 :-Jr Seal'ltrf Vllh1ge 3br,
GALAPROPERTIES pool & ltnnis. $450 .. 848.9427 CondoORANGETREES bkyd w1frwttrees Scar -. 2ba$350. 2br. 2baS290. --------~ L'PGRADED Coaches. no Call Geo. Frey s.t2-3456 833·1610 days. 6'75·8128 --· · ~r Wtklshop area. + lg Charming 2 BR 11 i ha Cu, rec area. 1907l llol-Thls Could.. pth Wife expecting -----evei. Sharp4brhomew/heavy new 1 br . 1, ba padlockedboatyd.Alley ram rm . newl~ dt't·or ly848-8311
THE OHi! baby. must sue. beaut. Ranches, fanM. -shake roof. Crplc. dshwhr Wu her dryer tncld access 5495. hi. last + s.t75. Act 644·7383 ---'iafnifacent panoramic spa~c 714 898-9966 or Grons 2700 3 br. 2 ba. crpts, drps, Ir new crpt. Only $395 Pool '275 mo. 551 1515 dep &i2·3871 ----Beach area 3 BR. 3 ba, \ll'woCBuyandOc~an 3 7G14-634-0055askforMrs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• bltns,frplc,gardenerin CallMS-9427 L&rce21ity.4 8rJBa. CostaM.so 3124 Crpk. t.l&bwsbr, pal.Jo.
f 1 20x!S ~n 1---------1 d . $.HO 6-45 2978 _ 1 unUl sold & thru ell<' row Bluffs \'1ew upper Npt •••••••••• •.• •• • •••••••• New & super aharp. ltoq Hedrm. 3 ba. 2 P c. -----NEAR Br.J\CH. 2 br, 1 ha, 675-1105 Bay from huge sundeck Adult, E side 2 br, frplr Elhs. 9002358
rumpwi rm wiwet b!'r, f'or Salt!, '.'tint cond. lOx~ HUGE flV NEWPORT RIVIERA guage 7846 Ne" man ---2br. 2ba. frplc. dbl encl patio. laundry. ~nd. gar
fplc & \'lew S279 500 Beacon. 1 Br. Mobila M 4 br, 2'~ ba condo. Fam S315 846·711Seves i..,.oa.och 3241 &ar. pool $575 mo Pool & Jacu771. $350 2 Br. G·pleJt, redec. nr
631.0.'tll Homt Pk for vdlts. No SHELT£Rl.I. rm. pool. tcnn. sauna. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644-9981 6"-087& Bois a & Bt>ach Bh d. · pets Pool. nr bus s~' JllC M2S ~ 6317 ~ 3 bedrm. 2 ba. nu LAGUNA S22S 892 7086 963 2S32
CM. "'6-3.'Wi2_____ Finest cltrus .ind grape 3 BR 2 BA hTid paint I hruout. Orps. E $275. UtU Pd.I . New 2Br. 2ba. rrplc, Ot W. Co7y lBr 2 ~, ha a -pt . ..,.._.....__sale 1200 ranch approx S200.000in · ,,c 1 ren crpts. nice rocd yard HOM On Beach! Rel.. patio Up;tau·s rear No pell Laund bk.up lge /:atlo·. "'--~ ""' grapes&: lemons to pack or pet!! .OK $t00/mo Mo\'e ri&hl In, $365/mo. Spacious 3 bdrm + din +many more avo1l now ms 166 M 1 st · c--,..,,_, I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pn S1 00000 0 557-Cl'l37&6428076 963-4567Agt .Noree rm. home. Lge. II\ rm. ml r f Se . a11no1J" cnclaars.175 Call ngrid ~ .a.11..7-s sq. nyl! ·eRES re .1 . wner SUnt .... ~' .. Froooee LI e • rv 545-1~7 Ill 846 1371or846-8413 _ ~ n s,. also hai> smaller parcels. M v d 5 8 3 8 & with fireplace & ocean .,...,,
•_.-__ 6•1 A•• i On pu•ed road. all ulil rendy for residential, eiia er e r 3 3br. Zba. many xtras. irt view. Ru1tlc exterior or ••ConAners Guiel• 2 Br, bltns. cpts. drps, ~ __... • __ 1 1 jacuzzi. Great nbrhd ! yni. Vic of Yorktown & 0 b 1 d 11 t 2 .. drootas. Jlattts avail. Xlnt ror invest· commercla & mob1 e Avail JulY. 1 5796. Brookhurst 194•2 wood shake~ gar. a u i.. no pe s 1 ---------1 ment .i Lot, s plit. home development • carport St.pstohoch! ~OS..97or5-UH291 De U'<C apt, frpl c ,
---------1 Ttrms. Bkr Agent714:646-925S !>46-5120 Salmon~;.-s.iso74•.'mo. ~MO. Oar. bltn.11. D/W. onl) en~IOS<.'<111'~f·1Jndry fac: t01tR4~.6227'.~~1 1•--------12 Br. lrg lncd yard, ___ vucr __ ... __ MISSIOHltlALTY Sfl5 yrly Lge den, uni ~~! 8'~u~ no J>ehi.
.. """" 20 •c•e RANCH plyhse. K-Sidc. Kids. SPRTNOHURST fllhone 494.on1 Rrrwll ree. 64:\-<IOOU EASTILUFF-
~p11 rk li n a 3 bed(m. 2
bath und fl\mlly room
PMde or ownership 11ru.
Neatly 'andaca ped
Y'lrtl:\, llurd to rand Mac
,. "" petsok.$325.1173-1385. Twnhse. $425. 3 .8r. 21'1 --••Consumers Ciulct. I 'I• ACRES Main house. guest house. Ba. Fam Rm, 2 rptc ·s, L4g11no Hk)llfl 3252
for your mobile home or horse bnrn & ::;toral(t' tmmac Mesa Verde hme, patio. jacuui, saunn. up· ••••o •••••••• ••• ••••••
bid& s ate . South or Shop.fruittrees 3 br,t1,ot ba,dblcar1ar, araded. Bob dys. <213> Vaewfmm4Br.2Ba.encl
Coronn Utll avail. Full SSOO,OOO·Xlntlerms walktoerade&Jr.High, 869·2007. tvs l7 14 l aar, l(e Yt1rd ~mo prlceSl~.soo. BKR. llU. GRUNDY Bllns MlO avail July 1• &i7·l814 Grdnrlnc\ 831 1695 co 310 C. EHlhluft slnitle
family h.ome. Hurry, JUSI
l111tt'd, asldna only
S\39,000 Owntr wlll -c•rry rlnonc1nl(. <.'all
541).:J.l!ll
f7l•H6'76-S717 REALTOR '75·6161 5@.2835 ORS22·~----3 or 1 ea. Fam Rm, Sl7S.21rPlushl
OMIACRE
Near new 3 BR. 2 BA
home on 1 acre. putially
med Horse stalls Xlnt
tft'ms BRR.
Re..tal1 Eusts1de tatncd back yd, Nice! Kids OK. Many
•••••••••••••• ••• ••• ••• new cpts, paint, over· tn0re lvail nov." Small ---------Houses ....,..tt..d tlzed gar w/Work bench. !:• ~llfe service,
~t:.:;;.;·········· _"50 __ MS-__ l528 ______ 1 __ •_•_com.,.-.... is.-"' __ .. ..;.,_,_Gulde _ __,.. .. ~~HERITAGE
. • REALTORS ················~······
-.......
SPRINCJIURST
TWNIIBI.-: M25 3 Br. 21,.
Ba. 1-'am Rm. 2 fplc'•.
patio. Jacu.tu. sauna, UP·
graded Bob. d}'tl. 1213)
•\H (71 4)
7
885 Amieoe Way
Chff Haven, 2 br, 1 ba,
cpts, fplc. gar .• older
$275 to $750 Wk
WATERFRONT HOMES
613-7300 CalJ 83H400
Lwt condo. Wlk to bcb. Waterfront 2 Br. pallo,
2br USO . Wkdys dock, fu:atn. $250. wk.
133·11$1. eve/wllnd Avail. 5'57.()841.~
548-9875 SO. LAKE Tabo.. dlx.
Nwpt Shores a.-ea, 1 ~ twnbse 3 bt, 2 ba, alps 8.
blksoeean.2bt, U>adpbt. Cable TV. POOi. teno.
Yrlylse. 714·9»-5171 Avl from5/8L9118-168S
LUlwry 2 BR,~ Ba. can. e.1i.o. ltlaM. aw. a ba.
do, teMll. pool, JacuW. Monthly. Whlter avalla· adults. $600/l eue. ble.61$-0884 "2·5291 --------t --------11&2 bdrou, Newport s.ca.•..tt 317' Beach. Oarqe. Steps to
••••••••••••••••••••••• bch. ~; f75-7S81
2br, 2ba new Condo. up. Gorteous apt. overtook· a r a d • d • D b l I • r IA& bl1 •ilu,ltt. June, Ju· •w/opener. pool. jacual. ly. Aue It Sept. 11050 mo.
.....
CALllQIMIA IA*
2Ulr
COOKS WANTED
Call 10.5. 673·2277
Cooks. w11itresses & dis·
hwashers. exper pref'd. Apply 2.spm '1tfon·Sat.
Denny's 529 Avenida
_Pl_co_;..., Sa_n_Ct_e_m_e_nt_e_. --1 Residential ex per req
-------•( Top pay Apply 8·llAM Co .. ESPOuDEMCE or I 4PM 17751 Skypark
" Clrde, Suite "O' . lrvme SICHTAlY
Excellent oppor. ror in·
div. wishing to 11dvance
Into word processinf(.
Type 65 wrm· handle transcr p\lon &
statistical typing Good communication skills In·
eluding grammar. spell·
Ing. edJting & punctua·
lion. WUI train to operate
modern . highl y
~lstlcated equipment
Ctll644-3319
9AM 'tit NOON
THE IRVINI CO.
MO Newport Ctr Or
NewPOrt Beach
Equal Oppor Enaployer
SALESUTAIL
for cblldren'a l••blon
clothlo f store lo
Capistrano Valley.
Call GS-C704 aft ••
17
(
,,
.
SECIOAllES Excellent oppor. for secretary w/escrow ex·
per. Good tY'Pinl fr die·
upboneskULI
Immediate openina for
secretary w /typlnc &
dicta,pbone ek!lls to work w tbulldln~ trade &
tQ&ineering section.
Need aecr~tary w /exper. in real estate propert)'
mgmt. Good typing &
dicta phone skills req 'd . .. Please Call
644-lllt
9AM 'til Noon
THE llVIMI CO
550 Newport Ctr Dr
Newport Beach
Equal Oppor Employer
SECRETARY
Fttime. Personable.
Strong typing & sh nee.
Apply in pc~on. Robert.
Bein. William Frost & Assoc , 1401 Quail St.
NB.
S.Cretary-
Productioft
COftf1e.
Great oppor for persona·
ble. gnt Frldoy type who
enloys working w_lpeo-
p f e tnterc st1og. d1,erslfied ore work re·
q'g a person who works
\\ell w Jflgurc1.1. has some
calculator exper " ls an accurate typist. In·
d1v1dual must be reliable
w steudv work record
Good salary Wt \lnt fr·
tn1o1c benefits incrg paid
medical & hfc ins + pro·
fit sharing Apply
9a.n-4pm,
CIMCO
~BrlggsAveC.M.
Irvine lndust'I Complex
Equal Oppor Employer
Service Sta. Attendant
p't1me. Avail eves &
wknds. Exper'd only.
Neat appear. &
handwritrng. Apply,~
Newport Blvd, C.M.
• Serv llta Kelp Needed Im ·
, ~ roedlately. Full or p/t.
~· 890 E cat Hw1.
ICely Senfcet
........... c11.
OpenilMJS
MUST HP• &per.
WithATMphoM
Colllpally
Customer
. Reps
lepairCHis
Service Clks
We are the prime sup-
plier of a larte telepbo
co. ~Uy Employets are
always selected first for
these aMignments
PAID VACATIOHS
YOU DON'T rA Y
WE PAY YOU
Call Or Oome In Today
IELL~
SERVICES
833-1441
TB.I.Bl f' /flME
Branch ofc seeks bonda
hie teller to work part
tune. Exper. pref'd. Con
tact Hilda Terraoove a
(n4) 644-7255.
Wnhn~ Sa•lllCJI 2744 E . Coul Hwy
Corona del Mar
Furniture Stripped &
Reflrusbed by Experts.
752.5059 dys, 64~ eve
Treddle Sewing Machine,
French desk. Oak table,
j: SewWJMadl~ -------• ...:.~..;..;...;.~--__,
Eltper. pref'd. Near ().C. TyJUts
Airport. 540-311&4. IF YOU HA VI
TIMLWIHAVI :n. A.Ill pa ....
LITSTIADI
WE BUY
CUAMCAIS
lrTaUCIS
CONNB.L
CHEYIOLET
2828Rarbor Blvd. COSTAM~A
546-1 200
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
FOR CLEAN
tr'\_~. 1-~-.. ~--·J 'tiil I !H A<'t1 ft,',.,
~t11''4 l ft'4•J I U N rjl A' ft
K-1 ... ,'>•' I\ \11 .1.
IMPORT CARS
ALL MODELS
WE MHD
SADDLEBACK
BMW
• COMllM&SH
lHIAU.HIW
630CSIMOW!
COMIUYI
IODYSHOP ~
MOW OHM
SADDLBACK
VAUIYIMPOUS
131·2040 4tMt4t -.
CREVIER
G1$f 6 ~Y
SAMfA AMA
835-3171
ntm UUWATI OlllWIO IMC..e
•USEDIMW's•
'743.0CpeS/R 748LWB
'11 UI0041pdNOMRJ
'74 2002•pd 882NAD '681600 upd VWB817
CloMd °" s.clclys
ORAHG1 COUMTY'S
OLDI ST
$
Salea-Servlce-Leasin& Rov c...,.,.,-.
Rolls fcoyce BMW
1560 Jamboree
Newport Beach MM444
143.0CS. lmmac.
Lo mi, 4 spd, all xtru m.w1
t976S301. dart blue. aUck.
CLEAN
USED CA.RS
HOW
CALI. PAPPY t520 stereo. sunroof. AC, i2.ooo ml. 111.soo .
&44-1$09 or &M-741111 540-5630
f 720 .......................
'12 1200. 2'7mp1. 89K ml. •----------Xlot lmide/out. Seu tbls
wk. 11400/blt.
5S2·1C1T7 aftlPll
'13 240Z. All /FM CuMtt•. ucOod. map. H,000 a'l6 't. $UOO.
&a;1181bll5
l7
-;a OR Torino win, pa/ '66 Mustang, auto, e cyl,
COllPL"1'J' pb/ac, air shcka, rack &Jncotn 9'45 ori& cond. Very clean. 1 ---------•
M .RC D hitch, lo mi, idnt eo"d ••••••••••••••••••••••• _o_Wfll'_ . ....;Sl...;800~--6_73_·_3600 __ _ t-:RVlCJNO "--c.-...au•a 1S5 "A"W. tT ,Cl\t --St·C· PP.fl63.1175.$2MO. '71 Mark m. Xlnl cond
TOP IUYla nm 831~ ?::'!•••••••••••••!?~~ • 1976 FORD $35()0 Call 873 0101 ~1At,!:~;:1::~;~P • IMMACU~A1'1 * mSaab991'!. Auto. 197' SIVIUES . LTD WAGOH . Maverick 9947 -------
COSTA MIS.A '74 4IO e, •lee anrf, 41.000 ml. Good cond. (3ToChoose From) Automatic, stereo radio. •••••••••••••••••••••••
cruhe cntrl, A /C, GOOO. 811-2722 "111 powtr, factory air =·&~;1~:=~~':!i '76 Maverick 4dr. vs. DATSUN AM tto•M atereo, dark .. --'-9765 oond.,clothorleatherln· rac" •·u·ood -aln tnm Auto, PS .• ,PB, vinyl top, __ ..:;_ _____ 1
-·a 1•-rbor BILd brow•. tUST SELL ..... ,....... terl1>rs " tome wlth a ... -•• AC l t ~"'1·-'71 Fstbck t v. PS <." _. ... • c SJ.2.IOO Ph (114)55&·1600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cabriolet top&.(Q452546). (91TMYJ>. •rec: in I Ii 1· or10-,...,, •au o, .,,, •
Oita _oa S4M4l tto5 lt7'TOYOTA Sale Priced from , OMLY $4695 72 Mnerick, lo ma. xlnt ~~~~~.~·ad eond.
• 8210 2 Door. AK/FM "12 e ~. Must aell. Celka UfttMtclr $8995 MAIQUIS VOLVO coad., S1600. ..;.____..; _____ •
radau Lo ma .fant COftd Beaut lore•t areen Stereo radio, a1r cond. & MlSSIONVJEJO 8'15·~7l Olds"*"'-9955 U?-6:!71 , U2·7181. w I add I e 11'1 t . 5 speed trans. Fin!Jhed 131·2110495-IZIO Mtrcsy __ 9_9_S_o-························ ~ 61• Connie p w r I Air I F M. H I ah in cherry re4 w /raclna Nabers ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1969 OLDS ..::...__;::;.__ ______ 1
;3 t!OO 2 Dr. i Spd-mlleace car priced at stripes. <033NRN>. This me Ford Pickup Short 1977 MERCURY DB.TA II '72 Duster V-1, auto. A/C. A~ FM stffl r1d111s. ~ ~blfue ~.; ~ !.,t wee~LY 54395 cam·11ac . Bed w/AY/FM. camper 51,000 orlaioal miles. cltan. nms aood. $1300 ma s n 7oo. 642.3731 _,.,. arm _,......,... .. v" I.bell Ii sliding window. GRAND MA•9UIS Ught turquoise w/black 975-5038, Ml-543S ask for
--------• &:30pm or anytime MARQUIS TOYOTA Xlntcond. (1)493-6861 SEDAN. Full tactory
Aot 9725 wkndl. ,..ISSION VIEJO 2600 H.irhor Blvd. power lncludlnc cruise cond. (719ABS>. MB •73 280SE 45 Uk .. Cost~Mcs.i540.9100 '14 Fordcountrysquire 9 control. Vinyl top. NOWONLY$175 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · • e 131-%110495·1210 pass. wagon; V-8, auto, Finished in Continental ·m tz.a Sport Cpe s spd, new. flrlly loaded. 1 air. PS, PB, Ult wheel. / t hi 1 th Joe¥caHoy
runs :dnt. Sl200/bsl orr. ownr. Sl0,000. Lve name '72 T0>'0ta Crown, &cyl. •• 75 El Do do Lo d d elec. windows & door ~t~:r~:JRS~>.ea er HEWPORTEl II
C311S49·3583 &# (714)821-8050 AM/FM radio, tape J.0 · a 8
11 locks. AM/FM 8 trk o..aLY ~6695 1969Harbor,CostaMesa Cad1llacst0Go-Cart~
• 90 MB 1 deck. Sspd. low mlJes, Xlnt con 17550· Ca stereo radio. chrome fug. "' • 6•2·0795 Wha ... \•er the Fad 75124SplderConvertlble. 65 1 • auto, x nt. d' 1 XI t d ~300 995-J.l6lor5'5·ot9M M"'R""UISVOLuO "' ""' nd ra 1a s. n con · ~ · ' gage rack. $3600 642·9165 "" ""' .. Ro11 ·e-off the market ·7• V GT W dark red. s spd. turbo co · $2400. 495-6827 ' "' • ega agon, mags. stereo. AM /FM 494.2305 ·~-~~~{fe~."~npe o1::edre.d. 1t!~~::ise::i~~ eves. 83T.~~'r4~~1~10 Sell things fast with Daily With a Classified Ad $300. below wholesale.
'974
~: ·~~~r8~~.ks air. 1972 Ml% lSOSL 1970 TOY OT A _... 548-552'1 Days Pilot Want Ads. Coll Now: 6'12·5678 Offer. 551·2152
This car has f~ll factory COROHA SEDAH .Mtot. N•w 9100 Alltot, Hew 9100 Alltos, Hew 9100 Alltot, Hew 9100 AMtot, Ntw 9100
equipment. AM/FM A1r cond., radio, heat~. is Seville, 9500 ml, irn-••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Will Sacrifice '74 Fiat wgn
124. Grt conJI. Xtras,
;tuto. eves 492·8589 or dys
831·9166
stereo. less than 42,000 vinyl roof & automatic. mac.. Moon roof. ge-
m ii es & is finlshed in Extremely low mUeace· nuine wire wheels, new one owner car. Will Voau.etires.875-1567 stlver. <2930>. -....LY SI I 500 -make a fine backup car . '70 Fiat850Spyder. v,.. • foryourfamily, !2251). '7l Cpe DeValle. lmm~c,
Good condilaon MARQUIS VOLVO ONLY S 1495 fully loaded, low mis. BIO 540-3979 MISSION VIEJO A.150. Day• 961-5511. Eve
----831·2880 495.121 o MARQUIS TOYOTA 1168-1146Cbarlie. Honda 9727 ltUSSION VIEJO
•••••••••••••••••••••••MG 97•2 131·2110495•1210 '70 SdV. Clean, 1 owner. "' New tires. $1600. Call Brand Mew ~77 ••••••···~·~~;••••••••• '76 Toyota Corona 4dr. 640-5184 aft. &pm.
HONDA Cars .. .. . Sspd, air, 12.500 ml. ~ COUPE DeVille. red
MANY ~: :ers~a~~f;! S37SO./ofr.M2-0S07. w/wht.Cab.top.AM /FM
To ChooM From! on us ! Call today for de· Triumph 9767 stereo w /tapes, T&cT.
tails on OUR exeifin ••••••••••••••••••••••• Crulae cntrl. Twl~ UNIVERSITY new Lease/Buy Plan. '67 TR 4A. reblt ena. aentlnal. PP. S400 under
Oldsmobii. Sehsible Payments. 146 trans. nu tires, lnt. top. whlale. 646-3993
Hondo Cars • GMC So. Brea Pl., Brea. $2000. best. 962-2214 e.ves. 19119 Cadillac 4 dr good
Trucks cr::~~f'.~2 '69 TR6, completely re-cond., loaded. Sliso or
2&'50 Harbor Slvd. ~.__. .J , built. cherry cond. Must bttt ofr. 640-8586
Costa Mesa 540..9640 ~ see! 494-1237 '76 Cad Coupe De Ville.
J-9730 • COLLEcrOR'·S Item! '72 Orange/wht. 18.50? ml,
-,,.--Stag convt /hdtop. 4 LOAOED.64ol-ao'.!OaftS . ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ,61 so t a11u place, 8 cyl, lutd. air, i4 Coupe DeVIJle. Xlnt 67 Jacuar Xlnt cond., 11•'9902t00•113'"-t~• stereo. lo ml. S49SO . cond. tS.000 miles. white w/blk inter. Right • hand drive. 61,000 Ml. Must sell '73 MGB conv. .t·S2S·S532 M • t a J I I c b I u e
S6800. 491>-4888 aft 6 pm Xlnt cond. Make offer. Volklwogtft 9770 w/cabriolet top. leather
Pvt party. 536·6464 ••••••••••••••••••••••• int. Many xtras. S5950. '72 Jag XJ6, red w/blk int.
reblt trans & eng MGI 9744
I guaranteed> $7900. •••••••••••••••••••••••
673·5660. ·73 White MGB for sale by
7l XJ6, brown. Sl 10 mo. ong. owner. ~Int cond.
lease, new engin e, Call 5Sl·S4lO.
brakes. 12000. cash to Opel 9746
sell. pay-ofC or finance •••••••••••••••••••••••
S3.500tosell.540·3666 '70 GT, $1400.
'72 XJ6. Buraundy w /blk Auto 645-2037
mt. See to ~heve! $8300. Panhtra 9747
6.\0-8800 d y!'I, 759·1010 •••••••••••••••••••••••
eves. '72 mech perfect. Xtras.
Jensett 9732 Ptice includes allowance
•••••••••••• • • • •••• • • • • for new pnt of choice.
•JENSEN $13,750. 673-8777
TOMORROW'S • Pantera '74 In absolute·
CLASSICTODAY! ly perf. cond. AM/FM
FREE 5 YR/50,000 m1. stereo. Corduroy seats
e x t . · w a r r a n t tY Cust trunk insert Ariva 's
w/purchase of new + eng acc., etc. Wht
Jensen Q.T. Power win· w/blk Inter. $19.000.00
dows, air, AM /FM stereo inv. Asking $15.500.
cassette vinyl roof and Divorce. Must sell. P /P. more. !Ser . 354191 27 _67_5-0800 _______ _
New Blly/Loase .Plans ,onc:he 9750
available. 60 mo financ· ••••••••••••••••••••••• mg. available OAC. Call .60 3,.6B S'I d for details. ., . 1 ver. goo cond. S'l800. 64Ui675 days
or eves, 495·1938
'64 356 SC. asking S4SOO.
540-7200 weekdays. fi ..... ...J.'
.... SOUIH IAi .. llOUllVUID. ..... ___ M2_· l_79_l_a_n_. _s __ I
"•9901900 • i•lMO 19!>, _ 914 l.8 '74. 36,000 mi. new
Maida 9731 pnl. immac cond.
••••••••••••••••• •• • • • • SS450 bst ofr. 832·2591.
1975 YW -842-·1-577------1
CONVERTllLE a..v..-. 9920
4speed, AM/FM stereo & ~··••••••••••••••••••••
low mileage-one owner. 63 Chevy Nova. wa1on.
Immaculate thruout ! Good trans. car. New
Finished in eky blue bnkes. MB-4U6. S2110.
w/black Interior & top. 19'74 Malibu Classic
(605)SU'MtVKM>.ER FU.._.111 wagon AM /FM stereo.
"'··· luc1ace rack. Good
MARO UIS TOYOTA cond. 495-6799
MlSslONVIEJO '14 NOVA Hatchback.
831 ·ZHO 495· I Z I 0 31.000 ml. Xlnt trans, like
'70 VW Bug, great cond. new. l2500. Ph 549-2243
AM /FM. new point. '67 Chevy, '75 3SO eng.
Must sell/bst ofr. Auto, s-/pb. only 16.000
752·5770. ml. Sf50· 646-3833
'65 VW SPORTS CAR. '66 Chevy Nova Wag.
Make offer. Xlnt. run Needs front end work
ning cond. 556-6975 Call eves. 645·2372. ·
'67 Sqrbck, reblt eng. 1916 Nova.vs. Air cond .•
radial tires. snrf. 30 1a p /B p /S Auto trans
gas ca~acity. Good cond, AMiFM t~pe atereo, re'.
S995. farm . Days only, ar window defroster,
(714) 646·0188 power trunk opener.
1971 VW Custom rear fen· $32$0 After 7pm 893-6460
den, wide rear tires. 1976 Caprice Classic SPOrt
Mag wheels. AM /FM VB Auto trans. Factory
radio. good condlt ion. air. till P /S, Split PW
S1750. Call after 5:30pm seata, P/W, Disc brakes,
69'7·7205 Cruise control, stereo
'10VW Bug Convert.
Xlnt.condation
$2225 497·
Must sell '76 Camper Van
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• l
VOL. 70, NO. 157, 3 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES
a 1ppo1nted m lators are
busJ . "alh W at Oran1e
County Khool dirlrf C:l of( cl Is
and t c r union represen·
tatav this le ln attein&Q to
l!lab up st lied ~tract tlllki.
School D\ltrict otnd btlieve
ttatbet' wanl to enter th
atMJaucn prOC' qu.ickly lo br·
inl a peedy HUJ,ement btlote
summe-vacation · .
Tucber 1171-77 contracts ex·
plrtJun 30.
Teacher rtprtt1entDtlves say they want a quick tsettlement but
dhtrlcll are beln1 more
• 'bardJlne" this yor than bt!ore,
accordlnt to Ed Psaltis, ex·
ccutlve director or West Oranie
County Uruted Teacben.
Neaotiators are slow lo release
much contract talk information
for !ear or jeoparduanc the col·
leclive bar1:aining process.
A .. WIN•te
HALDEMAN, ATTORNEY JOHN WILSON ARRIVE AT COURT
Four·year Battle for Freedom Ends With Prison Order
l llal~ma~ ~i.tchell
I ~'!!~~P~H ~~,.~~~?.~ poo:e
Haldeman and John N. Mitchell, throughout the country. I deeply
the biggest fish in the Watergate appreciate the love. concern and
1 prosecutor's net, were ordered to-understanding of my family.··
day to report to prison no later Mitchell, surrounded by re
than noon June22 to begin serving porters and cameras. walked to
their sentences for their his car without saying anything.
Watergate-crimes. As he climbed in, he said, "I
The ceremony that efCectavely hope nobody gets killed out of
ended their years·long fi&hl to this."
stay oul of prison took only four
minutes. Both have been sen-
tenced to serve ~h to eight-year
pris_on sentences, imposed Feb.
21. 1975. for their roles in
America's biggest political scan·
dal, the Watergate cover-up,
Leaving the courthouse, the two
were accomp~nied to their cars
by United States marshals.
"More than four years ago, I
sti.rted on a legal process I
thought was proper," Haldemnn
said. "I knew It was eoin1 to bo
difficult. I still think it waa right. I
nm prepared now to accept the re-
sults." 1
Asked whether he had any re-
morse for the actions that ar~put
ting him in prison, Haldeman
saJd , "Jt's been a tough four
)'ears. But dUriril that time I have
greaUy appteclated the support
and the consideration tieing ex-
U.S. District Judge John J .
Sirica indicated last week that he
would give the two former Nixon
administration officials until
June 22 to eet their affairs In or-
der. Haldeman asked through hjs
lawyer lo remain free to attend
his d'aughter's graduation
ceremony from law school and
Mllobell asked to help his
lawyers prepare a last-ditch,
slim-chance appeal to the U.S.·
Supreme Court.
They ftave a choice of turning
thelnsetves in to a tJ.S. marshal
at 10 a.m. or to voluntarily ap.
pear at the prison cates by noon.
Sirica onJy placed the men into
the custody of the attorney
general and it is up to the Justice
Department lo designate the
prison.
Here la i brie(r\J.nctown of the
negoUaUon·pro1ress:
Oceaa Vlew <Elementary>
School District -Teachers have
announced a mass meeting at
Oak View SChool at 6:30 P}'.11·
tonl1ht prior to a~ o'clock sebOOl
Boardm~.
A spokesman for the teachers
said they Will parade to the meet·
in& and present their views to the
Board ot TruJtees.
Top U.S.
Coor.I • • I
Split 5-4
WASJllNGTON CAP) -States
cannot make the death penalty
mandatory for people convicted
or killing police officers, a sharp-
ly divided U.S. Supreme Court
ruled today.
The court, voting s..c, struck
down a Loulsialla law requiring
people convicted ol killing police
officers lo be eitttuted.
"There is a special interest in
affording protection to these
public servants who regularly
rnust risk their tlves in order to
guard the safely or other persons
BRIGGS WRONG ON
ISSUE~dltorlal. AS
and PrQPerty," ihe court'$ ma-
.J,Odl.y opinion UicL 11 BU.t'l!"D"llr--
correct to suppose that no
mltitatinc circumstances can
exist when the victim is a police
officer."
Louisiana and New York were
the only stales with laws impos-
ln& the death ~ally ror murder-
ing a police omcer. California
sought lo impose the penally, but
its capital punJshment law was
struck down earlier.
The court noted that it was not
rulin& today on the quesUon of
whelber such mandatory death
sentences may ~e valid for
prisoners serving life sentences
\ who murder prison guards.
Presumably. the court will de-
cide that question sometime in
the future.
Today's decision spares the life
of Louisiana Death Row inmate
Harry Roberts. convicted In the
Feb. 26, 1974 shooting death of
New Orleans police officer Den-
nis Mcinerney.
Ch ief Justice Warren E .
Burger and Justices William H.
Rehnquist, Byron R. White and
Harry A. Blackman filed dis·
sents. They would have upheld
Louisiana's law.
ln a series of capital punish·
ment decisions July 2, the Mgh
court appeared to reject on con·
stltulional grounds all man-
datory death penalty statutes.
But the court agreed to review
Roberts' case, solely on theques·
lion of whether such automatic
execullon.s can be ordered Cor the
murders of law enforcement of-.
ficers.
Ocean View elell\entary
teachers are asking ror a 15 per· ~ent across the board pay boost
and other salary increments.
District negotiat.Qra have ottered
a 4.1 percent pay bUte.
Teachers .received • rive per·
cent pay bike last year.
Neeoti~tors tor the district'• 51S
teacben declared an impasse
May23.
Han~ Be~Cb U•IOJ Hieb
School District -State·
appelnted mediator Drau
ldrverchln has declared a 11.-s
blactout on ptogress at the
negotiating table.
Teactters decbf.ed impasse
May ~ after asking for an 8.S
percent pay boost. District of.
ficials are only offerin& to main·
lain last year's pay raises lor ex·
perieoce and education. -.ith no
across the board salary hike.
MedlatJon ls continulni witb
•nother session scheduled fo1
JUM 11.
Fountain Valley Celemeptary)
Sc:bOol Distnct -A spokesman
for the di$lrict'a :tao teachers
declared an Impasse m neeotia·
tionsJWle2.
But district necoliat-0r Pat
Clark sa.ld last week she bad not
decided to agree that aa jmpasse
(See TEACHERS, Pace Ai)
The biggest smiles a re on the faces of the
parents, but t he ki<ts were the real winners
in the C<Jsta Meaa Fish Fry Baby Contest.
At left is Mrs. Jud1 Barrett and nine-month· old Brandy Anne, winner in the six to 13-
montl\.old categocy. The two ladies live.
with husband St.eve in Newport Beach. At
right is Dean Murphy and son Ryan
Patrick. winner in the 13 month to 2-year-
old category. Twenty-two-month-0Jd Ryan
lives in Placentia with Dad and mom,
~obyn Murphy. · ..
HB Character
Gets National
'Gong' Date .
Onetime circus clown and silt·
time Huntington 'Beach City
Council candidate George E.
Arnold SOOJl will make his debut
on national network televlsiQn on
prime evening Ume, Jt was 1 an-
nounc~ today.
Network producers were so
enchanted with the loo\hless en-
tertainer's act on the daytime
Gong Sho'tf that he has been in-
vited' for anotber command
performance. His first Gong
Show performance will be seen
at 3 p.m. June 1S on Channel4.
Arnold, 49, a Popeye The Sailor
Man lookalike who does a song.
end-dance routlne lncludlnc a
sailor's hornpipe number, will ap·
pear next on the NBC nighUime
Gong Show. He will soon tape that segmen~
-wbetber entertalnme critl~
and Gong Show j ud1e R Reed
is ready or not -for atrtn1 on
Thursday, June 16, at 7 p.m.
S11n, Surf *·ttraCt
Throngs to Beaches
Muggy weather and a surf that
hit foiv to five !e~l along the
Oranie Coast drew near·
capacity crowds to beaches Sun·
day, but IJfeguards reported no
major difficulties.
Saturday brought the. biggest
crowds, with attendance drop·
ping off only slichtly on Sunday
at most locations, although rising
waves attracted many surfers.
Newport Beach lifeguards re-
ported they had 100,000 visitors
Saturday and only about 80,000 on
Sunday, with a,J.otal o! 93 resc11es
and l~ first aid cases.
Council Faces
Full Agenda
In ~untingto~
Sunday's lower attendance
was credited to a cool overcast
that falled to burn off before
11oon. The overcast burned off
earlier on Satui'day.
Water temperatures are mov,
ing upward, with 67 degrees re.
corded at Newport Beach Sun·
day.
Hut\tin1ion Beach city
lifeguards logged 33,000 visitors
Sunday with only 2n rescues aqd.
one major first aid case iovolv·
Ing a surfer struek by a Surf·
board. '
Huntinaton and Bolsa Chica
State Beach llleguards logged
125 res<1ue$ aloni their tonaer
strand Sunday, spokesmen said
today.
San Clemente lifeguards said
11,000 people visited ci\y beaches
Sunday, while 8,«IO sbOwed up at
the county beach stratids.
There were a total of 19 rescu91
overall.
Seal Beach uteg.uard1 said•
they had about 10,000 vWton
with just.a handful of rescues due
to lower calmer surf at their
abeltered beach. _,,,_· ""'-="_...,
I
' .
Suspect
Arrested .
p,... P,,,,e AJ
TEACHERS
exists.
tf the district does not agree on
the impasse, the state Edoca·
tional Employment Relations
Board CE&RI» will 1nv•ti1ate the situation. U EERB offidals
oy an impasse does exist, a
mediator will be appolhted.
District oUiclals and teacher
representatives refused to dis·
cuss specific details of lhe im·
passe.
Mrs. Clark said a joint press
conference with teachers may be
held this week. _,
Teachers requested a 12 ~re
cent pay boost in their initial pro-
posal presented in February.
Mrs. Clark said district of·
ficials are only williDii to main-
tain current pay Taises for
education and experience.
Fountain Valley officials could
not{ be contacted for comment tcr
day.
llunUnglon Beach City·
<elementary) School District
school board members approved
a 6.7 percent teacher pay boost
three weeks ago.
Teachers were pleased with
the agreement but the pay hike
drew criticism from one school
board trus tee and a local
homeowners group.
Teachers declared an impasse
just two weeks before the settle-
ment was reached. School board
members tried to avoid the im-
passe but teachers filed the ac-
tion with the EERB anyway.
Before a mediator could be ap-
pointed, teachers and district
negotiators reached a tentative
contract agreement.
Unwed Moms
Can Lose Aid
WASHINGTON (AP )--Slates
can deny weltare payments to
unwed mothers who refuse to
cooperate ln seeking child sup-
port from the fathers of their iJ.
legithnate children, the Supreme
court ruled today.
The court let stand a decision
by a federal court in Wublniton
last November that such require-
ments are valid.
The latest government study.
conducted in 1975, showed that
2.5 million or the 8.1 million
children then on welfare were ii·
legitimate.
OttANOI! COMT "" •
DAILY PILOT
aJc~ln. tape dee • a~. watch Ad
..._ mclalllitid lt.tiu wlU
" •nllable to the ""bUc hlt1~ wben the Hunt·
tncton Btach Police
Department bolda JU an·
Dll&l autUQa..
Tb• auction will ~1ln al
10 o.m. at tbe corner ol
Maln aad Yorkto•o.
StrM&a In the ClVlo Center
parkJns JGL Jtema •ill tie
sold to the hlthett bidder
on a c honly bull.
Debate Airs
GRONINOEN. Tbe
Netherlands (AP) -Two preg.
nant women releued bJ South
• Molucacan terrorlats after 13
daya riPUvl'1 aald today that the
other 53 Mltaa11 aboar4 a train
In nortbena Hollalicl ate ln Cood
condlUon despite _.very great
p1yctlolostca1 pressure."
"Jn aeneral, the bostaees are
belns treated cotrectty by the·
Moluccana," aald Annye
Brouwu·Korf 1 3l1 tn a 1tatement
Da1nages of :
read to rtportera before she arid
25-year.clld Nelleke Ellenbroek-
Prlnaen left the Grontn1en
University Clinic with their
husbands. ?
Spray Cans
WASHINGTON (AP>-
Residues from aerosol eprays
may be dom. more damaie to
tbe earth's ~ve ozone layer
than was prevlou.lly believed. a
1ovemment1cientist says.
At the same time, Dr. Carleton
J . Howard of the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Ad·
ministration said that scientists
may be exaggerating the ozone
threat posed by bl1h·f1Yin1
eupenonic aircraft. ·
OJODe is a f~ of oxygen in
the upper atmosphere that
abielda the earth rrom deadly ul-
traviolet radiation from the sun.
There is concern that some man-
made chemical5 destroy eome
ozone, possibly l~adina to in·
creased rates of akin cancer as
well as blolocical and climate changes.
Speaking at· a meeting of the
American Geophytical Union.
Howard noted that be and Dr.
Kenneth M. Evanson of the Na-
tional Bureau of Standards made
first direct ineasurement of 11 re-
a ctton cTitl~al to oz-one
chemistry.
He said their conclusion about
nuorocarbons, substances used
In many aerosol sprays, was
based on ~ measurements of
atmospheric chemical reactions.
Howard said computer models
using the new chemical reaction
rates indicate chlorine-
containtng c:ompo\lnda Hke
Ouorocarbons destroy 35 percent
more ozone than previously
beUeYed.
A computer model devised by
two government scientists, Drs.
Paul Cruuen and John McAfee,
predicted thai . in 1976
fluorocarbons would have
destroyed 0.9 percent of the ozone
layer. The new data revise this
figure upward to 1.2 percent.
Howard said.
"These are significant changes
in predictions, but things can
continue to change either way.
because of unknown chemical re-
actions," he said.
Nudes Nixed;
Show Can£eled·
CHICAGO <AP> -A women's
art show was canceled to protest
the John Hancock Center's ban-
ning of eight photographs of a
nude woman.
Members or the women's
Artemisla Gallery voted 14 to 7 to
withdraw lhe entire show after
the center said the nude photos
must be excluded.
"There's more nudity on dis·
play in magazines for sale in the
Hancock Center than there was
in our show," said Lucia Beier,
coordinator or the Artemlsia
Gallery.
The nude photos were self·
portraits of photoerapher J aoe
Wenger.
Mn. Ellenbroek who ls ftve
months pregnanl. and Mrs.
Brouwer, who is two months pre-
inant. were freed Sunday.
Bui Justice Minister Andreas
van Ast sald there ii no indlc•-·
tion that release ia near for the
other holi.iet aboard the train
near Alsen or lour othen beJd in
a schoo1bowse.
..lt ts awfully dltncult to pass
the time," said the women's
statement. "We have asked for
more reading material and em-
broidery patternJ to be sent to
the train. Even tbe men have
started embroiderle:a because of the boredom." -,.,,.,-.
"As for the rest. we can do
nothing else but hope that all will
end as soon u possible ...
Both women looked relaxed
and rested after their nl1ht in the
hospital, where Mrs. Brouwer is
employed ln the personnel de-
partment They were released
from the hospital after examina-
tions by a physician and a
psychiatrist.
Van Ast said a six-hour media-
tion meeting Saturday between
the militants on the train and two
leaders of the South Moluccan
community made little progress,
and ·a second meeting has not
been fixed.
"I don't yet see any reason to
be opthnbtlc that it will all soon
be over," he said as the twin
sieges went Into their thlrd week.
Justice Ministry spokeswoman
Toos Faber said the terrorists'
demands are basically un-
changed. They have demanded
the release of 21 other South
Moluccans imprisoned for ter-
rorist activity and a plane to fiy
them ail out of the country.
GOP Chief
Wants Young
To Be Fired
W ASfDNGTON <AP) -An-
drew Yoon1's characteritaUon
of former Presidents Nixon and
Ford as racists "points up the
fact. that be is a diplomatic in·
competent who should be fired,··
Republican National Chairman
Bill Brock said today. ·
Brock said in a statement that
Young, the onetime black civil
rights activist who is am-
bassador to the United Nations,
has "aeneralty performed in a
manner that almost dally
highlights his lneptitude. His
behavior as a diplomat ls one of
the sorriest in the history of our
nation.
"The very least that President
Carter can do is demand an
apology from Youne,.. Brock
said. "To do otherwise, the Presi·
dent stands ln silent agreement
withhJm.
The outspoken Youne, in a ·
published Interview, also
declared that it's time to "let up ..
on criticism of the Soviet govem-
ment 's human rights policies.
<Ear"erstory, AS).
-
................ .., 9'kM411 ic.-. •
BEU.FLOWER MAN srrs ATOP COSTA MESA HOTEL AND THREATEN& "JO JUMP !
But Ex11lrtfrt•nd and HI• Sliter Talked Him Out of It Sunday Aftemoon :
Five-time Killer
Ta111'ts Witli Clues
NEW Y<>RK <AP) A gun-
man auspected lo the kU.Unp of
five people u taunting officials
with vague clues about his idenU·
ty, challenglna authorities to
catch him, polices.-y.
The killer identified himself
with several nicknames in a com-
munique to New York Daily
News columnist Jimmy Breslin.
The nickl'lamn include 'The
Duke of Death" and ···)ohn 'Wbeaties'-Rapisl and
Suffocater of Young Girls."
The names had been withheld
because police· wanted time to
check them out In an effort to find
leads to the man who also calls
himself the ··Son of Sam,'' and ls
also known as the ".44 killer"
because or the gun used in the
murders.
Four women, all with shoulder-
length dark hair and three of
them sitting in parked cars, have
been killed. One man, sit.tine in a
car with his girlfriend, was slaln
along with her.
Unable to establish any con·
nectioo between the names and
actual persons. tbe police re·
leased the Usl in hopes that
anyone who recognized any of the
names would come forward. The
leUer to Breslin was published
by the newspaper today with a
reproduced portion that included
the nicknames.
··Here are some names lo help
you along. Forward them to the
inspector for use by NCIC," the
letter says.
The NCIC is the National
Crime Information Center, a
computer bank of criminal re
cords maintained by the FBI in
Washington, O.C.
The letter was postmarked
Englewood, N.J., and could have
been mailed from within a large
area near the George
Washington Bridge, the paper
Two Officers
Will Retire
Two retlrinJ Seal Beach police
officers wlll be honored at a June
lldlnner. ·
Capt. Roberto Gana, an 18-
year Seal Beach pollce veteran,
and U. Lee Gatti, a 14-year
member of the force. will be fet·
ed at a 7 p.m . dinner al the Ranch
House Restaurant, 1600 Pacific
Coast Highway.
The deadline for making re-
servaUoos is Tuesday. Reserva-
tions may be made at the Seal
Beach Police Department.
said.
The styllzed lettering has led
detecJ.lv~ to specula~ the killer
ls "som«!one with tralnlilg in let-
tertne, a draftsman, cartoonist
or even an architect," according
to the News.
He wrote to Breslin "Don't
think because you hav~'t h~ard
from me for a while thatl went to
sleep. No rather, f am sUll here.
Like a spirit roamine the night. Thirst.y, hungry, seldom stopping
toresl"
Breslin turned the letter over
to police, who confirmed that it
was written by the same person
who left the police a note in April
at the scene of a double-murder,
the fourth and faltb kUllngs at-
trl bu led to the ltUJer.
The earUer IJlessage was found
between the bodies of 18-year-old
V alentlna SUriani and her 19-
year-old boyfriend Alexander
Esau. Both bad been shot to de-
ath In a car, a block from Miss
Suriani'$ Bronx home and a lew
blocks from the home of 18·year-
old Donna Lauria.
Miss Lauria was killed last Ju·
IY.. the first-of t'-e su~pected
killer's victims. Like Ute other
fOJ&r, she was •hot.. with a .«• caliber pistol. ...
lo .hli laiest letter, "Son or
Sam'1 ~s hteJooks forward to
meeting Breslin "face to face
sonteday or perhaps I will be
blown aw.ay by cops with smok-
ine .381."
Cuba Slamnwd
By Kissinger
DALLAS <AP) -Former
Secretary of State Henry Kiss-
inger says the United States
should not resume diplqmatic re-
lations with the Cubad govern-
ment and should make Cuba re·
alize "what they are and who
they are and make them pull
th~ir troops out of Africa.'•
Jn an address Sunday night to a
group of wealthy Republicans,
Kissmger said that "the security,
progress and freedom of the
world are the responsibilities of
the United States."
The Carter administration has
announced that the United States
and Cuba will exchange ·
diplomatic representatives with
an eye to normalizing relations.
Cuba has said it will release a
number of Americans it bas been
holding prisoner.
MesaHotel 1
'Percher'
Rescued
j
A Bellflower man, apparently •
despondent onr a deterioratlni
relationship with a glrUrtencl, sat
atop' the root otthe 17-story South
Coast Plua Hotel Sun~ay aftec'· 1
noon for two hours befOl'e ho was ' . talked down by his sister, 'the U• t
girlfriend and police. · 1
Thomas Andrew Kelley, 29. •
Straddled the SOUth W&il Of t&e I
hotel and told officers TOBt·'
Owens and Ed Zuorsld be
planned to kill himself. 1
Costa Mesa fire departmentot-
liclals dispatched a truck com-
pany, engine company and squad
car to the hotel, but had to stand
by helplessly as police talked to
thernan.
Battalion Chief· Gary Golson
said Kelley was too high for ef •.
fective rescue methods. "We '
could not have reached him at
that height," Golson said.
The drama, which began at 1
4:20 p.m., drew a crowd ot ,
curio~ onlookers.
Kelley was talked down from
bis perch shortly b~fore 7 p.m..
accordl.ngtopolice. \ • .
'Rebuffed Buff 1
Slnaahei Glau·~
UOOrRefund
~e blf, boistm>US filtn btlff
looked 'Balbo.a Theater employe
John Ne.,.combe right in the eye
an§! asked, .. Do you like your
glass COWlter?"
Ne.wcombe and the six-foot.
four·lncn 230-pounder were In a
faceoff in the movie theater's
lobby after Newcombe ejected
the man for causing a dis·
turbance Saturday night.
The man, who Newcombe said
had imbibed a bit too much.
wanted his money back.
Newcombe wasn't goine to make
·a $2.SOrefund. 1
Did he like the glass concession
counter top? Well, yes, replied ·
Newcombe.
With that, the movie fan_
smashed it with his fist and
stalked out or the theater at '109
E. BaJboa Blvd.
Newcombe estimates it will
cost $80 to replace the glass.
17 Face Drug Raps'
SAN BERNARDINO <AP>-
Aut.horities have art"ested 17
persons in separate drug related
cases, police said.
8,000 Take Chances on 85 Townhouses ..
By HILARY KA YE
Of .. Otllr~Stllff
The turnout at Sunday's loltery
for 85 moderately priced
townhouses in Woodbridge
Village surprised even Irvine
Company otnclals -•tlracUng
more than twice as many
hopefuls as the first such lottery.
la.at September.
While about 8,000 people
Uate:ned carefully as names were
pulled from a drum, the 85
houses went to young ~.
full·•be families and older
widows and widowers from all
over Oranae County and Los
Angeles.
The first houae went to Helen Kirk.. a 69o-)'ear-old Huntlnaton
Beach Widow, who jokll\lb' pre·
dieted to her aoa Jut wee.It that
1tie would be the llrst nal'fte
calledSUriday.
.. 1 wu just kidding",'' Mn.
Kirk remarked lat.er, after -abe
picked a three-bedroom unU.
prtcod at $3C,800.
Two and t!\ree-bedroom unit.I
WON ••id1ab1e IOI' the wlnllt'l"S,
priced at either S34i400-or $34,800.
All ol the unlt.8 are oeatfd wllhln
Jmne'1 newest •llla1e. loeated near the CCJrMr OI Culver lnd
l~lneCenter Drive.
lln. Kl"wdshtj has bCtn ll•· ID1 In hfo..bedraom ttpar1menl
with her a dauaht.tr for lh pa&l
'
18 months, after residine in a
Huntlnaton Park home tor 30
yeara. ·
By the cutoff time Saturday
evening, 4,435 persons had signed
up for a chance to buy one of the
lower-coet homes. That's sUgbUy
more than double those who
signed up tall September, when
the first 82 Woodbridge
moderate-cdat homes were sold.
ANfl.SPECULATION
BILL VlEWl!o-.Edltortal, A8
The dltference between the
first lot~ and Sullday'a draw·
ing wu that. all of the winners
had to be able to qualify for
Federal Hou1ln1 and Urban
Development. (HUD> 23$ flnanc·
Ina. "hlch mtam that only mar-
ried couples. tlncte beads Of
houaehQldl and people over t2 or
· handica~quallfled.
' Ttiat tdpu)atlon was a4'1ed to
try and keep out 1peculaton wbo
could biU1 UM houlet and then ~
sell them qulcldy at creat profits.
~~~r-:-;)71'~~~,~~~~,,
j •
f
• I
EARLE TflUAX, LEFT, CALLS NAMES, ASSISTED BY DALE PAISLEY, TED HOOVER, RIGHT
trvlne Compeny end Auditing Firm Run Sunday'• Lottery for 85 Low-coat House•
a,,ooo Seek 8.5
ABOUT 8,000 HOPEFUL.$, MANY EQUIPPED WfTH FOLDING CHAIRS, LISTEN FOR NAMES
Late1t Lottery for Moderete-Co1t Ho~1fng Jama Irvine Company Parking Lot
Pmon Date Set for. HaldBman, Miwhell
WASHINGTON <AP)--H.R.
Haldeman and John N. Mitchell.
the biggest fi$b in the W ater1ate
prosecutor.;s netnrere ordered to-
day to report to prison no later
than nlk>n June 22 to be10n se~
their sentences for thelr
Watergate crimes.
The ceremony that effectively
ended their years-long fight to
stay out of prison took only four
minutes. Both have been Seti·
\enced to serve 21 :i to eight-year
prison sentences, imposed Feb.
21 . 197$, for their roles in
America's biggest political scan-
dal, the Watergate cover-up.
Leaving the courthouse. the two
were accompanled lo their cara
by United States marshals.
"More t han four years aco. l
started on a legal proceu I
lhOUgbt was proper.'' Haldeman
&aid. "I knew lt waa going to be
cflflicult. I still think It was riRht. I
Department to designate the
prison.
HaJdeman's lawyer, John J.
Wilson, said he had arranicd for
his client to go to the minimum
security facility at Lompoc,
Calif. Plato Cacheris, Mitchell's
lawyer. said arrangements ~re
not complete bul that the former
attorney general probably will be
sent to Allenwood, Pa.
o.lly l'tlet f'llO'" llY RlcMnl or.-
HELEN KIRK, FOLLOWED BY DAUGMTER MARY, STEPS FORWAR6 FOR NEW IRVINE HOM!:
Lucky Huntington B•mch Widow Predict• She'll Be Flrtt end flr1t She 11 .
Irvine
LOttery Turnout 'Too Much'
By IDLAR Y KA YE
• Ol -Oally Pl .. t "att The turnout at Sunday's lottery
for 85 moderately priced
townhouses in Woodbridge
Village s urprised even Irvine
Company officials -attracting
more than twice as many
hopefuls as the first such lottery
last September.
While aboul 8,000 people
listened <:a.N!fully as names were
pulled from a drum. tJie 85
houses went to young couples.
lull-size families and older
ANTI·SPECULA TION
BILL VIEWEO-Edftorfel, A6
widows and widowers from all
over Orange County and Los
Angeles.
The first house weht to Helen
Kirk, a 69-year-0Jd Huntington
Beach widow, who jokingly pre-
dicted to her son last week that
s he would be the first name
called Sunday.
"l was just kiddini. ·· Mrs.
Kirk remarked later. :ifler she
picked a three-bedroom unit
priced at $34,800.
Two and three-OO<froom units
w~re ~vailable for the winners,
oriced at either $34.400 or $34,800.
AU of the units are located within
Irvh1e's newest village, located
near the corner of Culver and
Irvine Center Drive.
Mn. Kirk said she has been tiv·
ing in a two-bedroom -apartment
with her a daughter for the past
18 months, after residing '""1 a
Huntington Park home for 30
years.
By the cutoff Utne Saturday
evening, 4,435 persons had signed
up for a chance to buy one df the
lower-cost homes. That's s lightly
more than double those who
signed up last September. when
the Urst 82 Woodbridge
moderate-cost homes were sold.
The difference. between the
first lottery and Sunday's draw·
Ing was that all of the wJnners
had to be able to qualify for
Federal Housing and Ur ban
Development (HUD) 235 financ-
ing, which means that only mar·
ried couples. single beads of
householtls and people over 62 or
handicapped qualified.
That stipulation was added to
try and keep out speculators who
could buy the houses and then re·
sell them quickly at great profits.
Under the HU.D financing
rules, homebuyers must actually
occupy the homes to qualify for
the loans. although there is no~
time on how long that occupanct.
must last.
(See LOTl'ERY, Page A2)
Veterans' Employment
l Mission Viejo Man
Given Labor Post
Roland R. Mora or Mission Vie·
jo, was appointed deputy assis-
tan t secretary of labor !or
veterans· employment by Presi·
dent Carter t-Oday.
Mora, 39, who has been work·
ing in Washington on a 90-~ay ap-
pointment as assistant to the
secretary of the Air Force. pre-
viousJr served a• an advance
man in Carter's national pre-
sidential campaign.
As a na\ive Amertcan bom or
Cbiricahua Apache and Hlspanic
parent., Mora wiU hold one of the
highest positions ever held by a
native American in the federal
government outside of the
Bureau oflndian Alf airs.
Mora, 23332 Saint Elenan, is a
disabled veteran •Who served in
Saddlebirek
Educator's
WifeDead1 ·
' the Marine corps from 1961 to
1969 wlM.m be retired as a captain.
He "'Orked in 1960 for Sen.
Wllllant Proxmire's staff during
the national Democratic con\'en·
tion in Los Am~eles.
From 1974 tO 1976 he participat·
ed as a worker and organizer in·
the 'United Farm Workers' move·
ment. He also has been a
counselor, advisor and lecturer
on alcobolism and drug abuse
and al\,advtsor to the U.S. Navy
physical fitness pro,eram.
His civic activities include
participation in the Marine Corps
League, Veterans of Foreigl\
Wars, University of Southern
California Democratic Club and
Cali.Com.if.Jaycees.
Mora graduated from USC in.
1961 with a bachelor's degree h\
international relations. Belon~
joinin& Carter's campaian be at·
tended law school at use.
Pope Bits Red Tie
VATICAN CITY (AP> -Pope
Paul Vl, 1n a clear reference to
Communists, today expreded
"profound uneasiness" that
some Roman Catholics SL\pport a
pollt kaJ party ••tncompatlbl~
with Christian faith.•• The Pope
did not identify the party dunng
bls audlencet'or French bishops.
State
·'Th a. 1 apeeW ln\ere1t la
1ftordln1 .PtOt•ctfon to thee•
p11bllc 11nanUI •ho rqulU'l)'
nauat rlik thllr ltvea In Order lO perd the Hlet.? Of othtr,penona 1:rid property,' the court'• ma:
jorlty ~°" 1eld. "But ll a. In· corr•~ .to auppoH that no
D'llU••tlP• clrcucn1t1nc11 c1n ewl wbm ~ vicUm I.I a Polle. ,
Da •lie Ase• e•
2 Scientists Give
Ozone Peril Views
WASHINGTON CA P>-
Reeiduu from aerosol sprays
m1&y be doing more damage to
the earth's protective ozone layer
than was prevlou$1Y believed, a
eovemment scientist says.
Two Released,
Say Hostages
Faring Well
GRONlNGEN. The
Netherlands CAP> -Two preg·
nant women released by South
~ olucacan terrorists after 13
days captivity said today that the
other 53 hostages aboard a train
m northern Holland are in good
condition despite ''very great
psychological pressure ...
"In general, the hostages are
being treated correctly by lhe
Moluccans." said Annye
Brouwer-Korf, 31. in a statement
read to reporters berore she and
25-year·old Nelleke Ellenbroek·
Prinsen left the G ronlngcn
University Clinic with their
husbands.
Mrs. Ellenbroek, who is rive
months pregnant, and Mrs.
Brouwer, who is two months pre·
gnant, were freed Sunday.
But Justice Minister Andreas
van Agt said there is no indica·
lion that release is near for the
other hostages aboard the train
near Assen or four others held in
a schooltblse.
.. It is awfully difficult lo pass
the time." said the women's
statement. "We have asked for
more reading maleriul und em·
broidery patterns lo be sent to
the train. Even the men have
started embroideries because of
the boredom.'·
"As ror the rest, we can do
nothing else but hope that all will
end as soon as possible."
Both women looked relaxed
and rested after their night in the
hospital, where Mrs. Brouwer is
employed in the personnel de·
partment. They were released
from the hospital after examlna·
lions by a physician and a
psychiatrist.
Van Agt sa1d a six-hour media·
tion meeting Saturday between
the militants on the train and two
leaders of the SouOt Moluccan
community m ade little progress.
and a second meeting has not
been fixed.
"l don't yet see any reason to
be optimistic that it will all soon
be over,'' he said as the twin
sieges went Into their third week.
Justice Minlstry spokeswoman
TOOi Faber said the terrorists·
demands are baaicall.Y Un ·
cban1ed. They have demanded
the releue of 21 other South
Moluccans imprisoned for ter·
rorlsl acUvilY and a plane to fiy
them all out of the country.
DAILY PILOT
At the same Ume, Dr. Carletl)n
J . Howard of the National
Oceanlc and Atmospheric Ad·
ministration said that 1cleot1sta
may be exageeratln1 the oione
threat ~os~d by high-tlyln1
supersomc aircraft.
Ozone is a form of oxyaen In the upper atmosphere that
shields the earth from deadly uJ.
traviolet radiation from the sun.
There ls concern that some man·
made chemicals destroy some
ozone, possibly leading to In·
creased rates of skin cancer as
well as biological and climate
changes.
Speaking at a me~tlne of .the
American Geophysical Uruon,
Howard noted that he and Dr.
Kenneth M. Evanson of the Na·
tional Bureau of Standards made
first direct measurement of a re-
a cl fo n critical to ozone
chemistry.
He said their conclusion about
fluorocarbons, substances used
in many aerosol sprays, was
based on new measurements of
atmospheric chemical reactions.
Howard said computer models
using the new chemical reaction
rates indicate chlorine·
containing compounda like
fluorocarbons destroy 35 percent
more ozone than previously
believed.
A computer model devised by
lwo government scientists, Drs.
Paul Cruu~n and John McAfee,
predicted that in 1976
fluorocarbons would have
destroyed 0.9 percent of the ozone
layer. The new data revise this
figure upward to 1.2 percent,
Howard said.
"'These are significant changes
in predictions, but things can
co,ntinue to change either way
because of unknown chemical re·
actions," he said.
Public Geu
Chance to Air
Irvine Views
Residents interested in the
shape of things to come in Irvine
will have another chance lo
speak at Tuesday's public hear-
ing on the general plan amend·
menl.
The bearing, which wlll begin
at 7: JO p.m. at city haJI, will pick
up where the last hearing left off
in May, discussing land use. traf.
fie and other iasuea related to
Irvine's future development.
For tho6e unable lo attend the
hearing in person, Community
Cablevision will televise the pro·
ceedines as they do reaular City
Council meetings on the cable
Channel 3.
Among the most controversial
Items to be discussed are the
plans for a number of Irvine
roads, including Bonita Canyon •
Drive, Walnut Avenue, Culver
Drive and Jeffrey Road.
The public will ilso be able to
comment on plans for vUlage 14,
between Culvudale and College
Park,amendedusesforVlllaeelO
<Walnut Villaae) and a revision ol
the city 's bi~torlcal
archaeological and paleon·
totoitcal element.
No action will occur al
Tuesday's meetlng and cltiiens
will have another chance for com·
ment at another special meeUng
onJulyT.
Irvlne City Councilwoman
Maey.Anll Oaldo wtll be the iuest
speaker when the Irvine unit of•
Uua Lea1u. et Women Voten
lftfft. Wedri.eaday momlnt lri lmne.
Mn. GlklowUI dltc"91 upcom·
ln1 bauea •t city hall at the e: 15
a.m. IDiiitlDC. at the bOm• or
Gale Oury. 40 Cedar Tne Lane.
LWV mem..,. and othen In·
terested In eltbtn partlclpat.lon in tocu '°"ramesat are lnVttid to attend tb meetinl. For more
tnlormat!On .• phQne 552· 7052.
IRIOGI WRONG ON
CAUP. lllU!-edltortal, Al
ltt eapltal punishment law wu
atruckdownearlier.
Tbe court noted that it wu not
rullnc today on the question of
whethn-aucb mand1tory death
aentence1 may be valid for
prl1oners servtne life sentences
who murder prl1on 1uards.
Presumably, the court wW de·
clde that question sometJme in
the future.
Today'1decision 1parea the life
of Louialana Death Row inmate
Harry Robert.I, ~nvlcted in the
Feb. 26, 19'74 shooting death of
New Orleans police officer Den·
nis Mcinerney.
Chief Justice Warren E .
Buraer and Justices Willlam H.
Rehnquist, Byron R. White and
Harry A. Blackman flied dls·
sents. They would have upheld
LouJslana's law.
tn a series ot capital punish·
ment declslons July 2, the high
court appeared to reject on con·
sttluUonal grounds all man·
datory death penalty statutes.
But the court' agreed to review
Roberts' case, solely on the ques-
tion of whether such automatic
executions can be ordered for the
murders of law enforcement Of·
fie era.
The Louisiana law struck down
today was aimed at protecting
policemen, firemen, sheriffs and
their deputies, came wardens,
federal law enforcement agents,
jail and prison guards, and
judges, district attorneys and
other court officers.
The justices who formed the
court's majority were William J .
Brennan Jr., Thurgood Marshall,
Lewis F. Powell Jr., Polter
Slew art and John Paul Stevens.
fi'ro• Page AJ
WTTER Y . •
While about half of the
moderale·income home buyers
last September were sineLe peo·
pie, none were allowed in Sun·
day's lottery.
However. the next eroup or
moderate·income homes, io the
Heritage Park East development
now being built by the Irvine
Company's multi-family
Division on Walnut Avenue near
Jetrrey Road, will be different
Those units probably will be
priced In the low $4-0,000 price
ranee and will be offered for con·
venUonal financing for people in
the moderate income range.
That means that single people
with limited incomes will be
eligible for those houses.·
Accordin& lo Irvine Company
officials, the 82 houses went lo a
wide range of families Including
sev~ral Vietnamese families,
bla~ks. Orientals and Chicanos,
bealdes Anglos. ·
People began streaming into
th~ Irvine Coll'lpany parking lot
in Newport Center aa early as 8
a.m. and traffic was backed up
until 9:30 a.m., when the lirst
namea were call~ ·
It look about three hours to call
off 300 names, with only the first
SS p eople completing the
paperwork. The other names
were put In reserve in case some
of the first winners fail to qualify.
Mesa Hotel
'Perclier'
Rescued
A. Bellllow(!f man apparently
despondent ovtr a deteriorating
relaUonahtp wltb a girlfriend, sat
atop the roof otthe l?·slOry South
Coast. Plat• Hotel Sunday after.
noon for two hours betore be wu
tallced down by bis aliter, <be q.
Jirltrlenct and police.
Tbomu Andrew Kelley. 29.
straddled the south wall ot the hotel ud told offtcen Tom
OwtH and Bd Zuonld be
pJ,.nMdtoklll blmself. •
CoiU 11 .. fire department, qt.
rlcJm -.patdled a truck totn·
pafty, tdline company and squad
car lo the bOtel, bdt bad to stand
bY. h'1Pl .. 1y u polloe talked to tbem-. •au.&on Chief Gary ~
HJd s.lley WU too hl•h (« ef.
tecUve reHue meth0d11. "We eo~ld not have reached him at
lhl\ hetiht.~ G0Ud6.sald.
The drama, which betan at
4:20 p.m •• drew a ~rowd of curio.~ ...
Kelley wu talk~ down from
bJJ plrCb tbQrtlr' before 7 p.m.,·
accordinc to police.
. .... ...,._.
WEATHER SATELLITE CAPTURES 'GLOOM' ON FILM
Gloomy Eddy
Gray Guck Staim Skies
By ARTHUll 1t. VINSEL
Of U• o.11¥ ,.lletsWf!
"Look'"' "Up in.the sky .. is it a bird .. .is it a plane: .. ?"
Heck no, Dummies. at this time of the year it's the June
gloom nemesis of beachgoers who tum up too early al Orang~eoa,t slrands between mld-May to about-the end-of
July, expecting sun tans.
-THE GRAY AERIAL guck sprinkles all over your
brand·new car. too, or tbe older one you just. paid SS.50 to
have washed.
-And it fouls up the decking you stained Saturday, hop-
ing It would be dry for a Sunday afternoon barbecue for
friends and relatives. ,
-AND JUST WHEN you ge\ home from work to go ~ut·
ter ln the garden, it scoots in Crom the Southwest like a Jug.
eernaul out-of last November, wetting down your sum·
mertlmemood.
·-Alld who cares?
Not. the ·weathermen. . . "We don 'l cone em ourselves as much with the condition
as the factorl that cause that condition!" declares KABC
Channel 7 weatherman Dr. George Fisch~,
.. We've eot a Catalina Eddy out; there-44\al $hould be
getting stronger,'' he predicted.
A CATAUNA EDDY is a breeze out of the coastal
southwest that brings moisture-laden air .from an offs~ore
hl&h pressure system Into and over the Califomla ~asUine.
4 "The clouds are caused by the moisture J.D the at.
moephere over the sea, naturall1." says a spokesman for
the U.S. Weather Bureau. ·
He said the June Gloom is particularly ~re.ated by a
high pressure weather system occurring at this time of the
year over the southwestern U.S. states and central Mexic~.
"And in summertime, there's a marine air inver111on
layer," he continued.
THE AIR INVERSION layer offshore keeps lbe gray
stuff close lo the ground, where all weather-watchers can
readily see il. .
Anyway, it's perhaps a blessing in disgwse for those
who may not have a calendar handy.
You can tell when It's June along the Orange Coast.
Adult Classes Set
For I rvine Citize·ns
Adults in the Irvine Unlfied
School District are invited to at·
tend a six·week summer school
senion or adult education
classes.
The lint classes wlll be held
the week ol June 20 and slaplups
will be taken the first day of
class, according lo .,nstrtct of·
ricials.
Some of the offerings Include a
pre·l'etirement financial plan·
nlng workshop, business classes, arts classa. langtJaae ~ourses,
homemaking classes, self·
defense and rape prevention,
photoeraphy English as a second
language and childbirth educa·
lion.
The fee ls either $1 or $2 per
class, depending on bow often the
class meets, excepl students 60
or older will not be charged. · · · ·
For more information about
the d•tes and times of exact
classes, phone sse-4900, M~ay
through Friday Crom 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
MuUJ weather and a 1urf that
blt four to five feet along the
Orance Coa~t drew near·
capacity cl'O*dl lO beadles SUD· a
day, but lifeJUards reported no l mtJor dlmcuJues. : Saturday brouaht lbe l>lQe:st ,
crowds. wtth attendance ~ f
pins off~ sU1htJ1 on ~
1
at mOlt locations. altboutb rtilna
waves attracted mQ1 surfers..
NeWport Beach UfecuarCll ,... 1 ported they had 100,000 Villtilinl
Saturday and only aboutlO,OOOon f &lndu, With a total ot83 rescues 4 and ut flnt aid cues. SaJl~~!ct lower attendance WU C . lO a cool Overcul
that t&llect lO burn on before •
oooa. 1be overcast burned off
earUer on Saturday. ·
Water tem)>e1'atures are mov·
in1 QVWard. wttb 67 dt1Teet re-,
corded at Newport Beach Sun-
day.
Huntington Beach city 1
Ufe1uards ioeeect 33,ooo visitors
Sunday With only 20 rescues and
one m.Jor nrst aid case tnvolv· •
Inc a surfer alruck by a surf·
board.
HunUngton and Bolsa Chica
State beach lifeguards Jogged
125 rescues along their lonaer
strand Sunday, spokesmen said :
today. :
San Clemente lifeguards said
11,000 people visited city beaches
Sunday, while 8,500 showed up at
the county beach s trands.
There were a total of 19 rescues overall.
Seal Beach Ufeeuards said
they had about 10.000 visitors .,
with Just a band.fut or rescues due
lO lower calmer surf at their
shelterec;t beach.
Nude Woman's ·
J!OOy F ouiiil; !
·~tHeld ~,
Fullerton police arrested a I
30·year-old man Sunday charged l
him wllh the•tabbing murder of 1
a 20-year-old secretary whose
· nude body was found in her :
apartment late Saturday ollht. ~
Charced with tbe murder or
Deborah IJem, 20, of 2623 Yorba
Linda Blvd., Fullerton, was •
WolfaantWayne Kocourak, 30. •
Kocouralt lives In an ai;~
ment within the same Yorba IJn.. l
da Boulevard apartment com-
plex where Miss Liem lived.)
pollceaid.
He was mested Sunday after·
noon as police be&an talking witll
the victim'• frJend1 an<P
neighbors in an attempt lO piece
to,ether the last houra of the
youngwoman'sllfe.
Pblice believe her death cam!
in the early evening hours Satui·
day wbeD4ahe received multiple
stab wounds in her body ap-
parenUy after stepping out of the
shower.
But her body was not di&-
covered unUI after 10 p.m .
That is when a friend, worried
when his telephone calls weren't
answered. went to the one•
bedroom apartment.. found the.
door unlocked and, after enterJ
lng, discovered Miss Liem's body
on the bedroom floor, police said. ,
They reported there was ll(>,
evidence that the young woman
bad been sexually molested by
her slayer. Police also ruled out
robbery aa a possible motive.
Two Basques Free
. MADRID (AP> -Two Basque,
priloners serving 30·year sen-
tences.for political crimes during
the Franco reelme were freed to-
day and new to voluntary exile in
Norway, military ofliclala •aid.
Jose Antonio Garmendia and
Javier hco were the alxth and
seventh Basques to leave Spain
Wider a eovernrneot procram r
lea1lna political priaonera. ~
=
name
HALDEMAN, ATTORNEY JOHN WILSON ARRIVE AT COURT
Four-yeer Betti• for Freedom Ends With Prison Order
Hallfeman, Mitchell
....
Orderea to Prison
WASHINGTON CAP>-H.R.
Haldelllan and John N. Mitchell,
the biggest fish in the Watergate
prosecutor's net. were ordered to·
day to report to prison no later
than noon June22to begin.serving
l their sentences for their
Watergate crimes.
1 The ceremony that effectively
ended their years-long fight to
stay out of prison took only four
minutes Both have been sen·
tenced to serve 212 to eight-year
prison sentences, imposed Feb.
21, 1975, for their roles in
America's biegesl polltlcal scan·
dal, the Watergate cover-up.
Leaving the courthouse, thetwo
were accompanied to their cars
by UnitedStalesmarshals.
"More than four years aao. I
started on a legal process I
thought was proper." Haldeman
said. "I knew it was going to be
dlf!lcult. I still think it was right. I
am prepared now to accept the re·
suJts.''
Asked whether he bad any re·
SAN BERNARDINO <AP)-
Authorttles have arrested 1T
persons ln separate drue related
cases. police said.
morse (or the actiops that are put·
ling him in prison, Haldeman
said , "It's been a tough four
years. But during that time 1 have
greatly appreciated the support
and the consideration belng ex·
pressed toward me by people
throughout the country. I deeply
appreciate the love, concern and
understanding of my family."
Mitchel), surrounded by re·
porters and cameras, walked to
his car without sayjng anything.
As he climbed in. he said, "I
hope nobody gets killed out or
this."
U.S. District Judie John J .
Sirica indicated last week that he
would give the two former Nixon
administration officials until
June 22 to get their affairs in or·
der. Haldeman asked through his
law)'er to remain free to atiend
his daugMer 's graduation
ceremony from law school and
Mitchell asked to help his
lawyers prepare a last-ditch,
slim-chance appeal to the U.S.·
Supreme Court.
They have a choice of turning
themselves in to a U.S. marshal
at 10 a.m. or to voluntarily ap.
pear al the prison gates by noon.
Slrtca only placed th~ men into
the custody or the attorney
general and it is up to the Justice
Department to designate lbe
prison.
HaJdeman's lawyer, Johri J.
Wilson. said he had arranced for
his dietit to 10 to the minimum
security C.cllity at liompoe,
Calif. Plato Cacheril, itchell'a
lawyer, aaid arran1ement.a were
not complete bl.It that the former
attorney 1eneral probably wlll be
aent to Allenwodcl, Pa.
"'l wa$ Juat kiddlna." Mrs,
Kirk rtmarked later. after •" plclted a three·bedr~m unit
priced •t SW,800.
Two and three-bedroom units
were available tor the wtMers,
priced at either S:W,400 or $34,800.
All of the unit.I are located within
Irvine's newnt village, located
near the corner of Culver and
Irvine Center Drive.
Mrs. Kirk said sbe flas been Jiv.
Top U.S.
Court
Split 5-4
WASIDNGTON (AP> -States
cannot make the death penalty
mandatory for people convicted
of killing police officers. a sharp-
ly divided U.S. Supreme Court
ruled toda34.
The court, voting 5-4, struck
down a Louisiana law reqwring p~ple convicted of killing police
officers to be executed.
"There Is a special interest in
affording protection to these
public servants who regularly
must risk thell' lives In order to
guard the safely of other persons
BRIGGS WRONG ON
ISSUE-£dltorlal, A6
and property,·• the court's ma-
jority opinion said. "But it is in·
correct to suppose that no
.miU1at1n1 circu111staoces-can
exist when the victim Is a police
officer."
Louisiana and New York were
the only states with Jaws impOS-
lne the death penalty for murder·
ine a police ofOcer. California
sought to Impose the penalty, but
its capital punishment law was
struck down earlier.
The court noted that It was not
ruling today on the question of
whether such mandatory death
sentences may be valid for
prisoners serving life sentences
who murder prison guards.
Presumably, the court will de·
clde that question sometime in
the future.
Today's decision spares the life
or Louisiana Death Row inmate
Harry Roberts, convicted in the
Feb. 26. 1974 shooting death of
New Orleans police officer Den·
nis ?.lclnemey.
Chier Justice Warren E.
Burger and Justices William H.
Rehnquist, Byron R. White and
Harry A. Blackman filed dis·
sents. They would have upheld
Louisiana's law.
Jn a series or capital pw1ish· ·
ment decis ions July 2, the high court appeared to reject on COO·
stilutional grounds all man·
datory death penalty statutes.
But the court agreed to review
Roberts' cue, solely on the ques·
tion of whether such automatic
executions can be ordered ror the
murders or law enforcement of·
ficers.
Viejo Man
'Picked.for.
11 month,,, att~r realdln1 In a
Huntlneton Park home for 30
years.
By the cutoff time Saturday
evenine, 4,~35 persons had slaned
up tor a chflJlce to buy one of the
lower·cost bornes. that's sll&bUY
more than doQble those wllo
staned up last September, when
the first 82 Woodbridge
moderate-cost homes were sold.
The dltrerence between the
first lottery and Sunday's draw·
Ing was that all of the winners
had to be able to qualify for
Federal Housine and Urban
Development <HUD> 2SS tin~
ing, which means that only mat:
rled couples, 11lnile heads of
household! and people over 62 or handic~ped qualified.
That stipulation was a~ed lo
try and keep out speculators who
could buy the houses and then re-
sell them quickly at great pl"Clfits.
Under ·the HUD financing
<SeeLO'ITERY, Pa1e AZ>
Death Hit·
Full Frg Cuties
The biggest smiles are on the faces of the
parents. but t.he kids were the real winners
ln the Costa Mes• Fish Fry Baby Contest.
At left is Mrs. Judy Barrett and nine-month-
old Brandy Anne, winner in the six to 13-
month-<>ld cateaory. The two ladies live
with husband Steve in Newport Beach. At
right is Dean Murphy and son Rya.n
Patrick, winner in the 13 month to 2-year·
old category. Twenty-two-month-old Ryan
lives in Placentia with Dad and mom,
Robyn M\.lrpby.
••
Cal)le TV System
To Top LB Agenda
The Laguna Beach City Coun·
ell will meet tonight to discuss
the clty•a cable television system
and again Wednesday to study
the city•s proposed $7 mlUlon city
budget.
The council will hold an in-
form al study session with the
city's Cable Televlsion Commit·
tee ~;Inning at 7:;t0 p.m . at city
hall chambers.
Wednesday. the councn wm
begin at 4 p.m. with a session to
dispose of matters not completed
at last week's regular meeting.
These include:
-Laguna Canyon Road safety
improvements.
-Selection of a consultant for
environmental studies prior to
building the Maio Beach
Lifeguard headquarters.
-An anti-litter ordinance.
-A building moratorium ex·
emptionfor Arch. Beach Hei_ghts.
-A $1,000 per house new house
park fee for Arch Beach Heights.
Al 7 p.m. the council will take
up sections of the fiscal 1977.'78
budget. The police depaf\ment,
animal services, fire depart·
ment, lifeguaTds, planning, city
manager, personnel and parking
authority budgets will be dis·
cussed.
MissiOn, Southwest
Biiiiks B lan Merger
Saddhback
Etlireator' s
Wife Dead
Marilyn Lombardi, wire of Sad ..
dleback Colleee Superintendent
Robert Lombardi, died Saturday.
after suffering a long illness. Sha
was 41.
Rosary wm be recited for Mrs.
Lombardi tonight at 7:30 in St.
Dldacus Catholic Church,
Sylmar. A funeral mass will be.
said at 10 a.m. Tuesday in the
church followed by private in-
ternment.
Funeral arrangements are be-
ing handled b y Crippen
Mortuary, 2900 Honolulu St .• La
Crescenta.
In addition to her husband.
Mrs. Lombardi is survived by
two dau&hters, Kathleen 22, and
Valertc:1 a 19-year-old student at
the couege; her mother, Mn-.
John Kirby; her father, Uoyd
Bums; sisters. Carolyn Bums
and Jackie Carpenter, and
grandmother, Inga Burns,.
Bridge Destroyed 1
SAtJSBURY. Rhodesia <AF)
-Blade nationalist guerrillas
blew up a bridee on Rhodesia's
inaJor rail-link to South Africa...
,
A 14-year-old boy was in
crittcal condition today at San
Clemente General Hospital alter
being struck by a car at the Del
Obispo Street entrance lo Dana
Harbor.
Michael Dawes was walking
tlis 10-speed bicycle Sunday when
Vie car hit him.
The California Highway Patrol
reported the driver, Larry Hall,
21, or 35135 Bench Road,
Capistrano Beach, lost control or
the car on a curve and skldded
over the sidewalk into the youth.
The CHP said the boy was
knocked several teet. He bad
been carrying a flshlne pole,
tackle box and landing net.
Dawes was taken to San
Clemente QeneraJ Hospital by
ambulance', and for several
hours was unidentified before his
pa rents learned of the accident.
Hall was slightly injured and
was admitted lo the hospital. He
later was discharged.
A passenger in the car, Iden·
tiried as Robert Mardian, or 332S
Atlantic Ave., Laguna Niguel,
was uninjured. the CHP said.
The accident was under In·
vesligation.
Stiuly Cruise
Plamwdby
Sadd/,e back
Geology and natural history of
the Catalina and San Clemente
Islands. marine ecology or the
surrounding waters and tecbnl·
ques of oceanographlc sailing
and seamanship will be covered
during a study cruise sponsored
bv Saddleback College July 22·24.
. Registration ror the three-day
excursion currently is being
taken at the college. The $15 c~t
of the trip includes food, lodging
and transportation.
The marine science course will
take students on an intensive sea
and land sojourn lo the Southern
Channel Islands aboard the col·
lege ·s 40-foot ketch, the Rock.
Mark Howe, tnstructor and
director of the Oran(e County M·
arine Laboratories al Dana Point
Harbor, said the boat will be
handled entirely by the student
crew under the supervision of a
licensed skipper.
A mandatory pre-cruise meel·
ing will befin at 6:30 p.m. Wed-
nesday, Ju y 13, in Room 313 of
the college's science and
mathematics building.
Students also will meet at 2
p.m. Friday, July 15, for a sail
drill at the Harbor Patrol Dock.
District residents with no pre-
vious orientation to the sea are
welcome to enroll in the pro·
gram. Students may earn one un·
1t or college credit or take it on a
no credit basis.
AddiUonal information about
lite cruise may be obtained by
calline the college's natural
science division at 831·9700 or
495-4950, extension 293.
OAANOI! COAST V1C
DAILY PILOT
~:..o;::.~~~~·r. =:i::=::r: OW.·•-"' ,,..c;....,.ftv .....,.., • .,..,._ ... -·-"'°""•" , ......... , ......... ,.,,. """'"4 ftrf~wPof't B•adt M.-itt~ •~r-,.~ •••n Y•U•v ll'•IM ..... ,~-v .... , ·~ l-9'>-.• _., ..... ," ,.._,...,_ ·-" -·-, ....... " --.. , ... ~~ .. c!..~...':.:.~~,·~ ...... ~.:,:· Wt\I ll.t'; I ._,._
Pr.-... 111 .... __ '"-· ~" Y•u 11\'ti-lo .. c;.---
~H ll-......
n1tment1, propoeed developer:
have been nanarled In a vdt
ud COlstlnLllril st.ate and t•rat eourt bltUe 0¥1r the pro.,.rty
One lnetud d a '31 mmton
"dvll rlaht.a" auit In feden1l couri which char1ed tho city and
43 I adln1 ctU1tnt u lndlviduala
~•P red to den,v U.e property
o-Mntt a riCht &odevelop. &dwP'd SChecJc. 1tlomey for Newport Jnv .. tmenta laid Fri·
day be bad proposed lht settle-
ment bt<:auae althouah lhe cue
Involved wiU 10 to trial next
January, uuaatton baa alretdy eost tbote involved a "alx·Oaure
amount."
He 1aid it was likely the trtaJ
would nm nine months and c~t
Sl,500 a day. Cont1nuin1 appeals
could take as loni at tin years
and finally end In the U.S.
Supreme Court, be aald.
"Nobody ever really wins in
some of these things," Scheck
said. Because of the cost, he said
he fell the.company could act as
a catalyst to reach an agreement
between tbe city and the properly
ow nu. /
That settlement Initially
sought 150 houses located on 1-
acre estates in the interior or the
property, Scheck said. Dis·
cuasion alao included develop·
ment of a farmers market on a
piece of the property.
The city council recently ap·
proved zoning for the property
which would allow up to 156
houses oo the land.
The city's ionine, however,
would require the homes to be in an area dlftering from that con-
templated in the settlement.
Additionally, the city sti.pulat·
ed that if more than 100 bOuses
were &o be developed, each ex-
pensive house would have lo be
matched with a home av11ilable
to a low or moderate income
ramUy. The remainder or the
property was &o be for recreation
or open space.
Scheck said discussion or the settlement did not imply that
Rancho Palos Verdes, a sub-
sidiary of Great Lakes Carbon,
was participating. He sald he
was in the position of "selling a
deal both to the city and the pro·
perty owner.
Laguna Beach Mayor Jon
Brand said Friday he welcomed
the discussions and he said the ci~
ty was interested lo continulng
with them. "If they are interest-
ed., in making a settlement, we
certaiQly are," he said.
John Pollock. attorney for
Rancho Palos Verdes, said he
was not aware of any proposed
settlement and said lhe company
was proceeding with litigation.
Registration
p
For P r eschool
Set at CUSD
Registration for the Capistrano
Unified School District's tm-78
bilingual preschool program is
scheduled through Friday in San
Clemente and San Juan
Capistrano.
Preschool classes meet dally
Monday through Friday for three
and a half hours during the re-
gular school year, said Irene
Romero, district r esour ce
teacher. Transportation, snacks
and one meal are provided.
The bilingual preschool pro· gram, which is stale funded is
open to children who will be at
least three years. nine months old
by September 1. To be eli1ible,
children must be current welfare
recipients, from low income
families or speak a language
other t.ban Erq:lish at home.
San Clemente and Capistrano
Beach children will attend Las
Palma.a School for preschool.
1101 Calle Puente ln San
Clemente. Registration at Las
Palm as for next fall will be Crom
noon to 4 p.m. June 6through10.
Children Crotn San Juan and
Dana Point will attend Ule pre-
school program at San Juan
School. 3l&U El Camino Real in
San Juan .. They can regi1ter
t.here from 1 lo 4 p.m. June 6
through 10. ,
YoW11sters llvin1 in Mission
Viejo or J..aiuna Niguel who meet
procram quallficaUons can ob-
tain reiistration in.(ormation by calUna Mn. Romero. at 496-Ul$.
Parenta whO plan to r~ter
their prescbOol age chlldrtn tn the program can reeeive ~et.ailed
information on what they &111 re-
qulred lo bring lo reaiMration
also b>'. ca:Jlin& Mrs. JWmero • •
MADRID (AP) -Two Basque
prisoners, let'Vin1 30.yur ·en·
ttncs for polttJeat crlmta d\lfln1
tho Franco re,ime were freed to-
d1y am new to voluntary exile in
~r•~J. mllltaty Olf1ci'1a atld.
Joae · AntOftl() Gar1nead11 •nd
;Ja•lft lzco were the 1lxUl and
MTritb ~ to leave ~n
undW a IOW"1lment:pncraJn re.
le•lftl Polftkoal prtaonin.
Classroom (Jptions
To Get CUSD Eye
Class meeUngs outdoors under
canopies or indoors ln the
federally owned zuggurat build·
ine in Laguna Niguel will be dis-
cussed tonight by Capistrano
Pair Injured
In Laguna
Auto SmaAlwp
Two people were injured when
they were thrown from an
automobile which rolled over
after spinning out or control down
Park Avenue Saturday in Laguna
Beach.
Gordon C. Brown. 48, of 210
Cllrf Drive, Laguna Beach, Iden·
tified by police as the driver of
the vehicle, was cited for alleged
drunk driving. Brown was round
lying in the street near his over·
turned car.
Ramona M. Ecke, 48, of
Anaheim, a passenger in the
auto, was found lying across the
street from the car. Both were
given emergency treatment at
the scene by paramedics and
taken to South Coast Community
Hospital. Both were later re·
leased from the hospital.
Police Officer Mark Everton
reported the 5:40 p.m. accident
occurred when t.he car went out
or control descending Park
Avenue near Wendt Terrace. The
car rolled over and the occupants
were thrown to the pavement.
Teachers Go
On Strike
SAN DIEGO (AP )-
Teachers went on strike to·
day over issues of pay, c I ass size and binding
arbitration but district of-
ficials said lnltially that all
schools would remain open.
Contract talks broke
down Sunday when San
Diego Teachers Associa-
t 1on negotiators com-
pl a1ned that district
representatives refused to
discuss the issue or class
SIZC
Pickets went up al
!>everal schools, including
more than 80 at Patrick
Henry School.
Mesa Hote l
'Percher'
Rescued
Unified School District trustees.
The meeting is scheduled for
7:30 p.m. at distrfct offices, 32972
Calle Perfecto In San Juan
Capistrano.
The May 31 defeat of the
Capistrano Unified bond and
state loan election, which would
have funded 10 new schools in the
next five years, leaves the fast·
growing district critically short
of classrooms, says J erome
Thornsley, superintendent.
.. Trustees are very much
aware of the lead time involved
in identifying an approach to pro·
vide school housing and the ac·
tual lime when il is open and
available lo s tudents,"
Thornsley said in a memo to the
district's governing board.
"With each month that p&1ses.
the district is going to be further
behind in terms or provi<ling
normal and adequate facitilles
for students."
Thornsley has urged trustees
to meet with administrators in
brain-storming sessions to dis·
cuss how to house more than
8 000 new students eicpected to ~ove inlo the Capistrano district
by 1981.
Jn addition to using tents or the
federal ziggurat building for
closs space. Tbornsley hai pro·
posed the followmg nlternalives
for trustee discussion:
-Year-round school
-Double sessions
-A lease /purchHe election.
requiring a s imple majority vote
to pass
-Another bond election
-Full utUlzation or a seven or
eight period teaching day al
junior and senior high schools
The Capistrano district, com·
prising 20 percent or the land in
Orange County, Includes San
Clemente. Capistrano Beach.
Dana Point, Laguna Niguel, San
Juan Capistrano and part of Mis-
sion Viejo.
Youth Seized
On Pot Count
Laguna Beach Police arrested
a 19-year-old youth and seiied 100
grams or marijuana packaged In
plastic bags Sunday after a foot·
patrol orncer noticed a cigarette
being passed amona a group or
people at North Main Beach.
Stephen J. Dougherty. whom
police said was a transient. was
booked for alleged possession or
marijuana for sale.
Reserve officer Dou& Johnson
made the arrest afler ap·
proaching a group of people on
the beach. He reported that the
marijuana was found in a camp ...
ing pack.
LOTTERY. •
rules, homebuyers must actually
occupy the homes to qualify for
the loans, although there is no set
tiJne on how long that occupancy
mustlast.
While about haH of the
moderate-income home buyers
last September were single peo-
ple, none were allowed in Sun-
day's lottery.
However, the next group or
moderate-income homes, in the
Heritage Park East development
now being built by tbe Irvine
Company•s multi-family
Division on Walnut Avenue near
Jeffrey Road, will be differenL
Those units probably will be priced in the low $40,000 price
range and. will~ orrered for con•
ventJonal flnancine JQr people !n
the moderate income range.
That °"ans that single people
with limited incomes wlll be
eligible for those hc}uses.
According to Irvine Company
omctals, the 82 ho~es went to a
wide range of famdies including
several Vletnamae families,
bla'cks, Orientals 'Md Chicanos,
besides Anglos. Peopfe began streaming into
the Irvine Company parking lot
in Newport Center as early as 8
a.m. and traffic was backed up
unUl 9~00 a.m., when the first
names were called.
It took about three hours &o call
off 300 names, with only the first
85 people completing the
paperwork.
Messy T r ash
Turns o ·ff SC
Collectors
San Clemente City Manager
Gerald Weeks has told the City
Councll that one thing was wrong
with a recent clty cleanup pro-
gram in which city crews picked
up trash the regular trashmen
won't touch: It was too messy.
So, Weeks asked that residents
be requlred to chop brush and
tree limbs they want picked up
during the special cleanup into
four-foOt lengths, and to place
things like lceplant and weeds in
neat little boxes.
The council agreed, though
wiUl Tony Di Giovanni and Pat
Lane arguing against the idea,
since regular trash workers will
pick up the considerately
packaged brush and weeds
anytime.
The rest of the council,
however, went along with a sug-
gestion that, if residents for1et to
bundle brush during the twlce·a·
year special cleanup weeks, they
be forgiven.
Instead of leaving the un-
bundled mess on the sidewalk,
the clty crew will pick tt up and
leave a note urginc residents lo
comply ne1Ct lime.
M-.uyweatherand a 1urfthat"
hlt four lo nve teel •loni the Oran1e Coa1t drew near·
capaclb' crowds to beaches Sun-
day. bUt lifetuard• repo~ no m aJor difflculUes.
\
Saturday brou1ht the bluest
crowds, with attendance drop.
pint orr ooty 1lichU1 on Sunday
at most locaUon~ althou1h rising
waves atlr cted many suJ'fers.
Newport Beach llfe1uards ,.
ported they had 100,000 vStitors·
SaturdllY and only about 80,000 on
Sunday, with a total ofN reacues·
and 146 first aid cases.
Sunday's lower attendance
was credited to a cool overc~
that failed to bum off before.
noon. The overcast burned ort
earlier on Saturday.
Water temperatures are mov-
ing upward. wlth 67 degrees re.
corded at Newport Beacb Sun·
day.
Huntlagton Beach city
lifeguards logged ~.000 vfsito~
Sunday with only 20 rescues and
one major first aid case involv1
ing a surfer struck by a surf·
board.
Hunlinaton and Bolsa Chlca1
State Beach llf4;guards loaed
l2S rescues alona their loneer
strand Sunday, spokesmen sa!d
today. ·
San Clemente life1u.-rd.s said.
11,000 people visited city beaches
Sunday, while 8,500 showed up at
the county beach strands.
There were a total of 19 rescues
overall
Seal Beach lifeguard• said
they bad about 10,000 vlaltors
wt th just a handful of rescues due
to lower calmer surf at their
sheltered beach.
Pair Freed,
.SO,y HoBtageB
Well Treated
GRONINGEN, The
Netherlands (AP> -Two preg-
nant women released by South
Molucacan terrorists after 13
days captivity said today that the
other ~ hostages aboard a train
in northern Holland are in eood
condition despite "very great
psychological pressure.''
"In general, the hostages are'.
beine treated correctly by the
Moluccans," said Annye
Brouwer-Korf, 31, in a statement.
read to reportel"i before she and
25-year-old Nelleke Ellenbroek-
Prinsen left the Groningep
University Clinic with tbei.i'
husbands.
Mrs. Ellenbroek, who is five
months pre&nant, and Mrs.
Brouwer, who ls two months pre-
gnant, were freed Sunday.
But Justice Minister Andreas
van Agt said there ls no indica·
lion that release Is near fO\' the
other hostages aboard the train
near Assen or four others held in
a schoolhouse.
''It is awfully difficult to pass
the time," said the women's
statement. "We have ask4?<1 for
more reading material and em-
broidery patterns to be sent to
the train. Even the men have-
started embroideries because of
the boredom.•'
'·As ror the rest, we can do
nothina else but hope that all will
end as soon as possible.••
Both women looked relaxed
and rested after their night in the
hospital, where Mrs. Brouwer ls
employed in the personnel de-
partment. They were released
rrom the hospital after examina-
tion• by a physician and a
psychiatrist.
Van Alt said a six-hour media-
tion meeting Saturday between
the militants on the train and two
leaden of the South Moluccan
community made little proereu, •
and a second meellnc has not
been fixed.
Diiiy .. MMJt ... """"
ABOUT a,ooo HOPEFULS, MANY EQUIPPED WITH FOLDING CHAIRS, USTEN FOR NAMES
Late•t Lottery for Moderate-Colt Housing Jama lrvln• Company Pandng LOt
, Watergate ~Battle En~
Prison Date Set for Haldeman, Mitchell
WASHINGTON <AP)-H.R.
Haldeman and John N. Mitchell.
the biggest fish in the Watergate
prosecutor's net, were ordered.to-
day to report to prison no later
than noon Jun~~e in ~rv~g 'th e i r s en t e c s or the 1 r
Watergatecrl es.
The ceremony t at effectively
ended their years-long fight to
stay out of prison took onJy four
minutes. Both have been s~n
tenced to serve 21 2 to elght-yeJr
prison sentences, imposed Feb.
21, 1975, for their roles in
America's biggest political scan-
dal, the Watergate cover-up.
Leaving the courthouse. the two
were accompanied lo their cars
by United States marshals.
.. More than four years ago, I
started on a legal process I
thought wu proper," Haldeman
said. "I knew it was going t.o be
difficult. ht.ill think it was riaht. I
am prepared now to accept the re-
sults. '' Asked whether he had any re-
morse for the actions that are put.-
ting him In prison, Haldeman
said , \'Jl's been a tough four
years. But durintthat time l )lave
greatl1 appreciated the support
and the consideration bein1 ex-
pressed toward roe by peop~e tbro~t ta.e coyptty I Cieeplv apprectate th~ love, concern 8nd
undenitanding of m)' family."
Veterans' E mploym
Mitchell, surrounded by re-
porters and cameras, walked to
his car without saying anythine.
As be climbed In, be said, ''I
hope nobody get. killed out of
this," relerrinJ to the crush of
people around him at the
c9urthouse. Mission Viejo· Man
Given Labor Post
U.S. District Judee John J.
strlca indicated lut week that he
would atve the two formeT Nixon
admtnlstratlon officials untll
June 22 to get. their affairs In Or·
der. Haldeman asked through hts
lawyer to remain free to attend
bis daughter's graduation
ceremony from law school and
Mitchell asked to help bis
lawyers prepare a last-ditch,
slim-chance appeal to the U.S.·
Supremt Court.
. ~
Roland R. Mora of Mission Vie-
jo was appointed deputy assis-
tant · secretary of I abor for
veterans' employment by Presi-
. dent Carter today.
Mora, 39, who has been work·
lng in Washington on a 90-day ap-
pointment as assistant to the
secretary of the Air Force. pre-
viously served as an advance
man in Carter's national pre-
sidential campaign.
As a native American born of
Chiricahua Apache and Hispanic
parents, Mora will hold one of the
highest positions ever held by a
native American in the federal
eovernment outside of the
Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Mora. 23332 Saint Elenan, is a
disabled veteran who served in
, the Marine corps from 1961 to
1969 when he retired as a captain.
He worked in 1960 for Sen.
William Proxmlre's staff during
the national Democratic conven-
tion in Los Anples.
From 1974to1976 he participat-
ed as a worker and organner in
the United Farm Workers' move·
ment. He also l\as been a
counselor, advisor and ~lurer
on alcoholism and druic abuse
Aftemoon sunshine was
promised f ot today and
~uHday. follow in& low.
clouds both mornings.
Hieb in the upper eos at '
beaches.
and an advisor to the U.S. Navy
physical fitness program.
His civic activities include
participation in lbe Marine Corps
League. Veteran11 or Foreign
Wars, University of Southern
California Democratic Club and
California Jaycees.
Mora graduated from USC in
1961 with a bachelor's degree In
international relatlons. Before
joining Carter's campaign he at-
tended law school at use.
They have a choice of turning
themselves In to a,u.s. marahal
at 10 a.m. or to voluntarily ap-
pear at. the prison gates by noon.
Damage Asses sed .
2 Scientists Give
Ozone Peril Views
By IULAR'f KAYE
Of ... INlllY "Met It.Mt The turnout at Sunday's Iott'!)'
for 85 moderately priced
townhou1e1 in Woodbrld&e
VUlago surprised even lr\"lne
Company offlclals -attract.In&
more than twice as many
hopefuls as the first sucb lottuy
last September.
While about 8,000 people
listened carefully as names were
pulled from a drum, the 8S
houses went to )'OWll c~les.
full-alae famillc• and older
ANTMSPECULATION
BIL:LVIEWED-;edhorfat, AS
widows and widOwers from all
over Oran1e Couaty and Los·
An1eles.
The first house went to H~en
Kirk, a 69-year-old Huntirigton
Beach widow. who jokln1ly pre-
dicted to he~ son last week that
she would be the first name
caUeclSuDday. ,
"I was just kidding, .. Mrs.
Kirk remarked later. aner she
picked a tbree·bedroonf unit
priced at $34,800
ho and three-bedroom units
were av.Ulable for the winners.
prJced at either $34.400 or 134.800.
<Sed.hl"l'ERY. Pa1eA%)
Beath Reversal
...
2 Mandatory e enalties lnvlil~I
WASHINGTON CAP) -States
cannot make the death penalty
mandatory for people eonvicted
or killing police officers, a sharp-
ly divided U.S. Supreme Couri.
ruled today.
The court. voting 5-4, struck
down a Louisiana law requirtng
people C()flvicted of killina police
officen to be executed.
"There is a spedal inlerest In
affo.rding protection to these
public 5ervanls who regularly
must risk their lives in order to
auard the safety of other persoM
BRIGGS wRONG ON
CALIF. ISSUE -Edltortal, A6
and property," the court's ma-
jority opinion said. "But It ts in-
correct to suppose that no
mitl1attng circumstances can
exist when the victim is a police
officer."
Louisiana and New York were
the only states with laws impos-
ing ttlc death penalty for murder-
ing a police ofClcer. California
sou1bl t.o impose the penalty, but
its capltJU puniShmenl llw was
struck ds>wn earlier.
The couf\ n<>t;ed that It was qot
rulin1 today on the question of
whether such mand~tory d th
sentences may be valid for
Rebuffed Buff
Smmhes Gllus
Over RefuM,
The big, boisterous ntm butt
looked Balboa Theater emplpye
John Newcombe right 111 the eye
and asked, "Do you like your
tlass counter?"
Newcombe and the six-foot.
four·inch 230-pounder were ln a
faceoff In the movie theater's
lob&y aft.er Newcombe ejected
the man for causing a dis-
turbance Saturday niahL.
The m~. who Newcombe said
had Imbibed a bit too much,
wanted bis money back.
Newcombe wasn't going to make
a $2.50 refund.
Did he like the glass concession
counter top? Well, yes, replied
Newcombe.
With that. the movie fan
smas)led it with bis fist. and
stalked out or lhe theater at 709
E. Bali>pa Blvd.
N~wcombe estimates it will
coat •to replace the glaas.
pri,oners serving life sentences
who murder prison auards.
Presumably, the cow:t will de-
cide that. question sometime in
the future.
Today's decision spares the life
or Louisiana Death Row inmate
Harry Roberts, convicted 1.1\.olhe
Feb. 26, 1974 shooting death of
New Orleans police officer Den.
nla Mclnemey.
Chief Juatice Warren E.
Burier and Justices William H.
Rehnquist, Byron 1\. White and
Harry A. Blackman filed di&-
senla.
In a series or capitaJ punish·
tnenl declsions July 21 the high
CQUrt appeared to reJect on con-
s tl tutlon al ground' all .man·
datorydeath penalty statut~.
But the court agreed to review
Roberta' case, solely on the ques·
tion of whether such automatic
executiOl\I can be ordered for the
m urders of law enforcement of-
ficers . -The justices who formed the
court's majority were Wllliam J.
Brennan Jr., Thurgood Marshall,
Lewis F. Powell Jr., Potter
Stewart and John Paul Stevens.
* * * Pantle ~ossible * * *
Tfuee Cop Slayers
Get Terms Reduced
SACRAMENTO CAP) -Three
inmates on San Quentin's Death
Row will have their death aen-
·tences k'educed to Uf~ with
possibility ot parole by a U.S.
Supreme Court rulinC today, a
atat.e omct..i said.
The court held states cannot
make tbe death penalty man-
datory for people convicted or
killing pollce officers.
William James, a deputy state
attorney ieneral, idenUfled tbe
three afrected by the ruling as
Harrill Hill, convicted of killing a
Hiahway Patrol officer in
Merced Countyi Steven Michael
Miller, convict~ of kllllng a
police offtcer in San Bernardino
County; and Freel Haryey con·
vJcted of killlne a police ordcer in
Loa Angeles County.
James said the state court of
appeal in each area will have the
technical tasl( of reducing the
men's sentence$. All three were
sent to San Quentin last year
following their convictions. 1 The state's 1974 death penalty
law was struck c;lown last
December by the state Supreme
Court, but the legal status of
these three remained unclear
because of earlier court rulings.
James, in a telephone in-
terview from Los Angeles, said.
there are two other men on Dta&h
Row wfae 1entenceS therefore
remain uptn the alr.
He Identified them as E. ~Jen
and E.E. Gt'aham and said they
were convicted of slaying a
pdson iuard at Deuel Vocational
Inatitutloo, the state prison at
Tracy.
. Three other Death Row in-
mates also apparently have the.lr
cases up in \he air, James said.'
Those •three were convicted of
murder after being convicted of
prior unrelated murders.
GOPCIUe/
W~Young
To 1Je Fired
WASlllNGTON <AP) -An· drew Youn1'1 characteritation
of former Presidents Nixon and
Ford as racists .. points up the
fact that be ls a dlplomJUc in-
competent who should be fl.red,·•
Republican National Chairman
Bill Brock said today.
Brock said in a statement that.
Young, the onetime black civil
ri1hts activist who ls am·
bassador to the United Nations,
has "generally performed in •
manner that almost daily
hi1hlights his ineptitude. Hts
behavi« aa a diplomat is one of
the sorriest in the history of our
nation. .
''The very least that President
Carter can do is demand an
apoto11 from Youns," Broek
said. "T~dootherwise, uM Presi-
dent stands in silent agreement
with him."
..
Seeretary Slain
Suspect Arrested
In Knifing Death
Fullerton police arrested a
JO.year-old man Sunday charged
him with the stabbine murder of
a 20-year-old secretary whose
nude body was found In her
~partment late Saturday night.
Charged with the murder of
Deborah Liem, 20, of 2623 Yorba
Linda Blvd., Fullerton, was
Wolfgang Wayne Kocoura.k, 30.
Kocourak Jives in an apart-
ment within the same Yorba Lin·
da Boulevard apartment com·
plex where Miss Liem lived,
police said.
He was arrested Sunday after-
noon as police began talking with
the victim's friends and
neighbors in ap attempt to piece
together the last hours or the
young womun's life.
Police believe her death came
in the early t>venlng hours Satur-
day when she received multiple
stab wounds in her body ap-
parently after stepping out of the ~r.
~t her body was not dis-
covered until after 10 p.m.
That Is when a friend, worried
when his telephone calls weren·t
answered, went to the one.
bedroom apartment, found the
door unlocked and, arter enter·
lng, discovered Miss Liem's body
on I he bedroom floor. police said.
Saddle back
Educator's
Wife Dead
Marilyn Lombardi, wlfeofSad-
dleback. College Superintendent
Robert Lombardi, died Saturday
after suffering n long illness. She
was 41.
Rosary will be recited for Mrs.
Lombardi tonight at 7:30 in St.
Dldacus Catholic Church.
)ylmar. A funeral mass will be
;aid at 10 a.m. Tuesday in the
:hurch followed by private in·
ernment.
Funeral arrangements are be-
n g handled by Crippen
\fortuary, 2900 Honolulu St., La
:=rescenta.
rn addition lo her husband,
\frs. Lomlolardl is survived by
wo daughters. Kathleen 22, and
Jalerie, a 19-ycar-old student al
he college; her mother, Mrs.
fohn Kirby; her father, Lloyd
lurns; sisters, Carolyn Burn..11
ind Jackie Carpenter, and
:randmother, Inga Burns.
°"AHQICOA*T "
DAILY PILOT
They reported there was no
evidence that the young woman
had been sexually molested by
her slayer. Police also ruled out
robbery as a possible motive.
Korea, Japan
Informed on
U.S. Pullout
TOKYO <AP) -The United
States has informed South Korea and Japan it plans to withdraw
about 6,000 American troops
from South Korea by the end of
1978, it was reported here.
The Japanese Broadcasting Corp., quoted Japanese govern-
ment sources for the report,
which could not be confirmed.
The United States has some
30,000 Army personnel in South
Korea,
The withdrawal is expected to
htke about four or five years,
Corter administration officials
have said.
The broadcast said the United
States received assurances from
the Soviet Union and China that
they had no intention or increas-
ing tensions in the area after the
pullout is completed.
But The New York Times to-
day quoted American officiuls in
Washington as saying they had
received no formal assurances
on the issue. The newspaper said
U.S. officials claim they have not
discussed the matter with the
Soviet Union.
The Times said the initial
timetable for the withdrawal had
been conveyed to Korean and
Japanese officials by Philip C.
Habib, undersecretary of state
for poUtical affairs, and Gen.
George S. Brown, chairman or
the Joint Chiefs of Starr, on their
trip to the area last month.
There was no immediate com-
m ent from officials In South
Korea or Japan.
Mesa Youth
Faces Charges
In Cop Attack
A Costa Mesa youlb is slated to
appear in the Harbor Judicial
District Court Tuesday to face al·
leaations that be assaulted a
Newport Beach policeman and
~tole the officer's gun.
James Kenne\h Carey, 20, or
26t E . Bay St., wacs treed on hls
own reco&Qizance by Judie
Calvin Schmidt Jasl Thunclay
after his Initial appearance ln
municipal court.
Carey ~as arrested lasl Wed·
nesdayon a warrant.that earned
$75,000 b.U.. Police aay the lnel·
dent tOolt pl1ce May 15 in the
Newport ffelah area when Of-
f 1 cer Bob l>arlter stopped
Carey'acar.
Carey ren>alned at lar1e
rollowln1 the mctdcnt unUJ last
week •hen bo surrendered to
P.9llce.
GRONJNGEN, Tho
Netherland$ CAP) -Two preg-.
nani "WOmen released by Soulb
Molucacan terrorlata after 13
day• c•PtlvltY 11ld tOday that tho other S3 bosi.,es aboard a traln
in northern Rolland are tn good
condiUon detpJte •'very great
psycholoalcal preJsure."
"In aeneral, tho ht>staaes are
belnl treated correctly by the
Moluccaos." aald Annye
Brouwer-Korf, :n. ln a statement
111 read to repartera before ahe and
ZS-year-old Ne.lleke Ellenbroelt·
Prlnsen left the Groningen
University Clinic with their
husbands.
Mrs. Ellenbroek, who ls five
montbs pregnant, and Mrs.
Brouwer, who is two months pre-.
gnant, were freed Sunday.
But Juatice Minister Andreas
van Alt said there 11 no indica-
tion that release 11 near for the
other bostaaes aboard the train
near Assen or four others held in
a schoolhouse.
"It is awfully difficult to pass
the time," said the women's
statement. ''We have asked for
more reading material and em-
broidery patterns to be sent lo
the train. Even the men have
started embroideries because of
the boredom."
''As for the rest, we can do
nothing else but hope that all will
end as soon as possible.''
Both women looked relaxed
and rested after thelrblght in the
hospital, where Mrs. Brouwer is
employed ln the personnel de·
partment. They were released
from the hospital after examina-
tl on s by a physician and a
psychiatrist. /
Van Agt said a six·hour media·
tion meeting Saturday between
the militants on the train and two
leaders of the South Moluccan
community made llttle progress,
and a second meeting has not
been fixed.
•'I don't yet see any reason to
be optimistic that it will all soon
be over," he sald as the twin
sieges went Into their third week.
JustJce Ministry spokeswoman
Toos fl'aber said the terrorists'
demands are basically un-
changed. ~ey have demanded
the nlease of 21 other South
Moluccans imprisoned for ter-
rorist activity and a ptane to fly
them all out of the country.
Dog Training
Classes Set .
For Newport
Dog obedience tralning
classes, six of them, will begin
soon at two locations in Newport
Beach and Corona del Mar. with
re11lstratlon set June 18 through
21 m personorbymaU.
The fee for a lO·week claJS Is.
SIS. Instruction will be offered at
Mariner's Park, frvlne Avenue
and Dover Drive. Newport Beach
and the Community Youth
Center, Fifth Street and Iris
Avenue, Corona del Mar.
Classes will range from puppy
learning for does aged four to six
months and their masters to ad-
vanced novice dog handling,
stressing all facets of dog care in·
cluding nutrition.
Complete information is
available by calling 631-1292, ac-
cording to the sponsoring
Newport Beach Parks, Beaches
and Recreation Depal'tment.
Mesa Hotel
Beaded tor l'icterg
Winners Russell King and Bobby Clark of the Studio
Cafe l~ad the Ocean Front Bombers, Robin and Hunter
Hutchinson, in the "home stretch of Saturday's Balboa
Tricycle Grand Prix. Eleven teams competed in the
second running of the event at the Balboa Pier.
Five-time Killer
Ta11nts With Clues
NEW YORK (AP> -A £Wl·
man suspected in the killings or
five people is taunting officials
with vague clu,es about his identi-
ty, challenging authorities to
catch him, police say.
The killer identified himself
with several nicknames in a com-
m unique to New York Dally
News columnist Jimmy Breslin.
The nicknames include "The
Duke of Death " and
"'John 'WheaUes'-Raput and
Suffocater of Young Girls.''
The names had been withheld
because police wanted time to
check them out in an effort to find
leads to the man who also calls
himself the "Son ol Sam.'' and is
also known as the ".44 killer"
because or the gun used in the
murders.
Four women, all with shoulder·
length dark hair and three of
them sitting In parked cars, have
been killed. One man, sitting in a
car with his girlfriend, was slain
along with her.
Unable to establish any con.
ne.ction be.Lween the names and
actual persons, the police re·
leased the Ust in hopes that
anyone who recognized any of the
names would come forward. The
letter to Breslin was published
by the newspaper today with a
reprOduced portion that included
Nudes Nixed;
Show Canceled
CHICAGO CAP> -A women's
art show was canceled to protest
the John Hancock Center's ban· ning of eight photographs of a
nude woman.
Members of the womcn·s
Artemisia Gallery voled 14 to 7 to
withdraw the entire show after
the center said the nude photoe
must be excluded.
"There's more nudity on dis·
play in mas~zines tor sale in the
Hancock Center than there was
in our show," said Lucia Beier,
coordinator of the Artemlsia
Gallery.
The nude photos were self-
·portrait.s of photoerapher Jane
Wenger.
the nicknames.
"Here are some names to help
you along. F'orward them to the
inspector for use by NCIC," the
letter says.
The NCIC is the National
Crime Information Center, a
computer bank of criminal re-
cords maintained by the FBI in
Washington, D.C.
The letter was postmarked
Englewood, N.J., and could have
been mailed from within a large
area near the Georg e
Washington Bridge, the paper
said.
Smtdl Bliize
•"fO I •
At Hoag Eyed
By ProfH!n
Newport Beach fire in-
vestigators are probing the
source of a small fire that broke
out Sunday in ~4:t ef the lob-
by of Hoag Memorial Hospita\.
The damage estimate from the
11 a.m. fire was set at $:i00. but
fire and hospital officials said the
fire was espedally smokey, fill·
lng the lobby ahd driving visitors
out into the parlcfng lot.
The blaze, was discovered in a
storage closet in what used to be
a ground floor nursing station in
an area npw occupied by ad-
ministrative offices.
Hopsital spokesman Sharon
Sinclair said the closet contained
only obsolete equipment.
Firemen have tentatively list·
ed the source of the fire as being
of auspicious origin pending
further investigation.
Miss Sinclair said the hospital
staff is trying to locate the visitor
who !int spotted the blaze and
worked with a security guard to
douse the flames using fire ext-
inguishers.
The man apparenUy was over·
come by smoke and the gl.lard
suggested he wait outside, but
Miss Sinclair said the vi.sitor
could not be found after the fire
w aa out and the smoke cleared.
"We would certainly like ta
thank him in person," she said.
,
~·~·....,..,.·-· r s.
)
I ' Musa weather and • surf th
hit four to five feet aloq th!
Oran.1e Cout 4.irew near
capacity c:rowdi to beaches sun
day, but ll!quardS ~no
mlljordifnc:alUes. ~t
S•turday brouaht the bfUes;
crowd.I, with attendanee ~
.. nC off only tUPtJy OD ~
at mostJocatio.11, ilth0ul9!·~
waves at&ractect many aur{ ... ~ NelfPCJl't Beach llfecuaHI
p()rted they had 100,ooe Yistt.ors
Saturday and Only about 80,000
Sunday. with a total ofN racuest
aod ue first aid cases. I
1 Sund•y's lower attendan~
'WU credited to a cool ovett
tbat tailed to bum off befon
noon. 'lbe overcast hurried
earUeronSat\irday. t
Wattt temperatures are ~~ in& upward, with 61 degrees
corded at N~rt Beach &m
day. Huntlnl[ton Beach cl
lifeguards loued 33,000 vlst
Sunday with only 20 rescues
one ma.jor first aid case lnvolv
ing a surfer struck by a surf
board.
Hunt.inaton and Bolsa OU9a
State Beach lifeguards .logged
125 rescues along \heir long
stranct. $Unday, spokeauien sat
today.
San Clemente lifeguards saJdl
11,000 people \'tailed city beaches'
Sunday. whlle 8,500 showed up ad
the c0wtly beach strands. •
There were a total of 19 rescues
overall. ~
Seal Beach lileauards said{
they had about 10.000 visitors
with just a handful of rescues due
to lower calmer surf at theiri
s heltered beach.
F,._PageAJ
I
l
.\ . • I LOTIERY. •
All or the units are located within
Irvine's newest village, loc.ated.
near the corner of Culver and
Irvine Center Drive.
Mrs. Kirk said she has beenliv-,
ing in a two-bedroom apartment,
with her a daughter for the past
18 months, after residin1 in a
Huntington Park home fo~ 30
years.
By the cutoff time Saturday•
evening, 4,435 persons had signed
up for a chance to buy one ottbe·-
lower·cost homes. That•s slightly•
more than double those who
signed up last September, when I
the first 82 Woodbridge
moderate-cost homes were sold.
The difference between the
first lottery and Sunday's draw-
ing was jhat all of the winners
bad to be able to qu.alify for
Federal "Housing and Urban
Development <HUD> 235 financ-
ing, which means that only mar·•
ried colW)es, 1.intle beads of
bouaeholm and peonte over 62 or
hanc!icapped qualified.
That stipulation was added to
try and keep out speculators who
could buy the houses and then re-
sell them quickly at great profits.
Under the HU.D financing
rules, homeboyers must actually
occupy the homes to qualify for
the loans, although there is nO set
time on how long that occupancy ·
must last.
While about half of the
moderat.e-lncome home buyen
last September were slnale peo-
ple, none were allowed in Sun·
day's lottery.
However\ the next erodp of
moderate·income homea. in the
Heritage Park Ea.st development
now being buUt by the Irvine
Company's multi -family
Division on Walnut Avenue near
Jeffrey Road, will be different.
Those units probably wW be
priced in the low $40,000 prtce
ranse and will be ottered for con-
ventional tinancln1 for people in
the moderate income range.
That means thal single people
with lfmited incomes will be
elifibldor those houses.
OMIT ~ .... .._.Irr •lclMl'll ~-I
I
ABOUT e.ooo HOPEFUlS, MANY EQUIPPED WlTH FOLDING CHAIRS, LISTEN FOR NAMES
LatHt L.Ottery for Modwat..Co1t Hou.Ing Jami lrvlna Company Parking Lot
,--~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~
[-Co~kiJJe~ De~th Nixed
Supreme Court Splits 5-4 on Mandawry Pentdty
WASHINGTON <AP ) -State.s
cannot make the death pellalty
mandatory (or people convicted
of killing police officers, a sharp-
ly divided U.S. Supreme Court
ruled today. I The cou~ voting 5-4, struck
down a Louisiana law requiring
people convicted of killing police I officers to be executed.
1 "There is a speclal in~erest in
+ affording protection to these
public servants wbo regularly
I must risk their lives Jn ordtr to
guard Ute safety of other }>erwhs I and property, .. the court's ma-
1
jority ..opinion s.aid. · 'Jll.A&. i~ t. m..
correct to suppose that no I rpitigatln& circumstances can
exist when the victim is a police
officer."
Louisiana and New York were
the only states with laws lmpos·
Ing the death penalty for murder·
Ing a police orncef. California
sought to impose the penalty, but
BRIGGS WRONG ON
CALIF. tSSUE-Edltorlal, A6
its capital punishment law was
st~uck down earlier.
The CQ4[t nqt~· th"-it was not
ruling tod")' on tf(e 4yes.aoo oC
whether 10Ch m1ndati>ry death-
~•ntentt• may ~ valid for
prisoners serving llfe sentences
Wb() murder prison auards.
* * * Parole Possible * * *
Three 'fJop Slayers
Get Terms Reduced
SACRAMENTO <AP) -Three
Inmates on San Quentin's Death
Row will have their d~ath sen-
·t enc es reduced to life with
possibility of parole by a U.S.
Supreme Court ruling today, a
state official said.
The court held stales cannot
make. the death penalty man-
datory for people convtcted of
killing police officers.
William James. a deput)' atate
attorney general, Identified the
three affected by the ruling as
Harrill Hill, convicted of killing a
l:U&hway Patrol officer-in
Merced County; Steven M\chael
Miller, convicted of killing a
pplice officer in San Bernardino
County; and Fred Harvey. con-
-.:foted of killin& a police officer in
Los Anaieles C01.1nty.
there are two other men on Death
Row whose sentences therefore
remaifi up in the air.
He Identified them as E. Allen
and E.E. Graham and said they
were convicted of slaying a
prison ~ard at Deuel Vocational
Instlt.uUon, t.be atate prison at
Tracy.
Three other Death Row In·
ma tu al~ apparently have their
cases up in the air, James said.
Those three were convicted o(
.murder after beiog convicted of
prior unrelated murders.
In an urlitt decision, the high
court said it would agr~ to hear
narrowly drawn statutes man.
dating death for life-term In·
mates who kill a 1uard and for
"prior murder$," James said.
Presumably, the court will de-
cide that question sometime in
the future.
Today's decision spares the life
o( Louisiana Death Row inmate
Harry Roberts. convicted in the
Feb. 26, 1974 shooting death of
New Orleans police officer Den-
nis Mcinerney.
Chief Justice Warren E .
Burger and Justices William H.
Rehnquist, Byron R. While and
Harry A. Blackman liled dis-
JleQt,. They wnuki have uph,ld
LouiSianJ'• lt\V.
Io a series ol c:apltal pw\ish-
ment decisions July 2. the high
court appeared to reject on con-
stitutional grounds all man·
datory death penalty statutes.
But the court agreed to review
Roberts' case, solely on the ques-
tion of wbether such automiitic
executions can be ordered for the
murders of law enforcement of-
fi cers.
The Louisiana law struck down
today was aimed at protecting
policemen. firemen. sheriffs and
their deputies. game •ardens,
federal law enforcement agents,
jall and prison guards, and
judges. district attorneys and
other court officers.
The justices who formed the court's majority were William J .
Brennan Jr .. Thurgood Marshall,
Lewis F. Powell Jr .. Potter
Stewart and J ohn Paul Stevens.
Guerrillas Fight
SIDON, Lebanon <AP) -Pro-
Syrian and Marxist Palestinian
guerrillas fought artillery and
machine-gun duels today in south
Le banon, witnesses reported.
Observers said It appeared that
Syrian-backed Saiqa guerrillas
were trying to dislodge guerrillas
of the radical Rejection Front
from Tyre, a Mediterranean
port.
By muav. KA YB
Of ... °"" ....... \aft The turnout at SUnday'• lottery
for 85 moderately prl(ed
townhouses in Woodbrld1e
Vill1ee surprlsed even Jrvlne
Company olflclals -attractinc mou than twice as many
hopefUls a.s the first such lottery.
last September.
Wtille about 8,000 people
listened (atef ully as names were
Beach Widow, wbO Jotln1l:v pre-
dicted to her son luc. week that
she would be ,the flnt name
called Sunday. ANTI4PeCULATION · ·•1 wls j\llt ldddinc.'' Mn..
llLL VIEWEO-Edltot1al, Al Kirk remarked later, after ,_
Id ~ ido Ito all pltked a tbree·bedr0<>m ~t w ows w wers rn • priced at $34,800.
over Orange County and Los Two and three·bedl'OOD\ uadta
Ah&eles. ~ere avallabl~ for ~ wlnnen.
The flnl houat went to Helen priced at either $.M.400 Ol' SM.mo.
Kirk, a 69-year-old Huntin~ (SeeLOl'TE&Y, P.a1eAJ)
U.S. Labor .. Post ; 1
MisSion Viejo M~ii.
'frapped by Galttefi
Roland R. Mora of Mission Vie·
jo, was appcinted deputy assis-
tant s ecreta ry or labor for
veterans' employment by Presl·
deQt Carter today.
Mora, 39, who has been work·
ing in Washington on a 90-day ·~pointment af assistant to the
secretary of the Air Foroe, pre-
vioµsly served as an advance
man in Carter's national pre-
sidential campaien.
As a native American born of
Chlricahua Apache and Hispanic
parents, Mora wiU holdoneorthe
highest positions ever held by a
native Amerlc-" in the federal
government outside of the
Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Mora, 23332 Saint Elenan. ls a
disabled veteran who aerved ln
the Marine COl'P$ from 1961 to
1969 when he retired as a capt:i.in.
He worked in 1960 for Sen.
William Proxmire's staff during
the natipnal Democratic conven-
tion in Los Angeles.
From 1974 to 1976 he participat-
ed a~ a worker and organizer ln
the United Farm Workers' move-
s&ddlehack.
Board Signs
2-year .Pact
Saddleback Valley Unlfled
School District trustees have
stgntd a two-year employment
contract with teachers rather'
than a three-year pact as
described by district officials
after the aareement was re-
ached.
The contract will be in effect
from July 1 through June 30, 1979.
The contract's salary provisions,
however, are retroactive to July
1 of last year.
The retroactive clauses ap-
parently caused district officials
to describe the agreement as a
three-year contract. However,
John Cooper, assistant to th•
superintendent, admitted this
was "somewhat mlsleadin1''
because not all of the contract
provllioas are retroactive.
During negotiations and the
teachers• four-day s trike,
teachers asked only (or a one
year contract while trustees
sought a three-year agreement.
Teachers' leadets said they
would compromise on not.hint
more than a lwo-year pact.
ment. He also bas been a
counselor, advisor and lecturer
on alcoholism and drug abuse
and an advisor to the U.S. Navy
physical fitness program.
HJs civic activities include
participation in the Marine Corps
League, Veterkns of Foreign
I
Wars, UoiverJity or Soutbera
California Democratic Club and
California Jaycees.
Mora graduated from USC in
1961 with a bachelor's degree in
international relations. Before
joininc Carter's campaign he at-
tended law school at use.
Appro-val A.waited .
MissioP:, SO.uthwest
Banks Plan -Merger
Stockholders have approved
the merger of Mis~ion Bank,
which has three branches in Mis-
sion Viejo, El Toro and Laguna
Beach, and Southwe~t Ba,nk,
which bas ei1ht branches in
northern San Dleio County.
It the meraer receives the re-
quired iovemmental approval,
Mission Bank •tU chanae its name to Southwest Bank.
..Jack Hilklft, ~ pretident and
cashier for Soulbwe5t Bank, said
b~nk officials hope tbe merger is
completed by tfte middle or July.
First, he said, the Federal
Deposit and IbSurance Corpora-
tion (FDIC) approval is
necessary. Then, he said, the
Justice Department has 30 days
to declare that it ia anti-
!J'eachen Go
On Strike
SAN DIEGO <AP )-
Teachers went on strike to-
day over issues of pay.
class size and binding
arbitration but district of·
flcials said initially that au
' schools would remain
open.
Contract talks broke
down Sunday when Saa
Diego Teachers Auocia-
tl on necotlators cont-·
plained that dlttrict
representatJvea refused to
discuss the issue of clasa
size.
Pickets went up at
several schools, lnctudlng
more than 80 at Patrick
Henry School.
4
competitive. He said officials ot
both banks expect there will be
no problems meeting the govern-
ment requirements.
The merger has already been
approved by the state's supuin--
tendentof bank.s, hesaid. ••
When the merger is complete.
Hilton said, Southwest will ex-
chan1~ one apd three quarters
•bares ot ita stock for each share
of Mwion's stock.
Southwest, whtcb Is head-
quartered in Vista, reported as-
sets of $821059,000 at the end of
the first quarter this yur. Jlls.
shio Bant last reported assets of
$38mUlion.
"Mlssi<m is a 1ood bank and
it'• In an area we think is a good
area to have branches of our
bank. Jt's very similar to the
area we're ln," Hilton said while
explaining the merger. He said
the policies of the two banks are
similar.
He admitted merging with the
existing independent bank is less
expensive than building n'CW
branches in an expansion erfort.
Sid Fox will continue as presi·
dent ot Southwest Bank after the
mercer. Tom Winget. rresldent
of Mt.ion Bank, wil remain
with the bank as assistant to the
president.
Win1et was president of Mis-
sion Bank when it opened in
January. 19'70. He previously was
a \rice president of Oran1e Coun·
ty Bank when it meraied with
·Southern ~aUfornia P'irat Na·
tional Bank.
Pope Hits Red Tie
James said the state court of
appeal In eaqh area wilJ have the
technical wk of reduclng the
men' sentences. (\tl lhree wen
• sent to San Quentin laal year
followtng their convictions.
James said it was not im·•
mediately clear whether the
court had ruled on the "prior
murderer" issue. Star '~dop,ed'
VATICAN CITY tAP) -Pope
Paul VJ, in a clear relettn(e to
Communlsu, today e>Cpressed
·•profound unea•iness" that,.
some Roman Calh<>llcs support a
p0lltical part)' "incompaUble
with Chriatian faith." The Pope
did not ldenUCy \be party during
~audience for Frech bi1~.
The •late's 1974 death penalty
law was struck down lul
Dfeember by the state Supreme
Court, bUt tbe leaial status of
these three remained unclear
bee a use of earlier court ruUno.
~ tmet. in 1 teleph1>ne in·
ttr\'iew from LOs Angoles. said
uza Surprhes CFOi«l
llfade Festi1'al 1!~1'eiled
Saddleback Valley Unified School Dis-
trict's booor chorus, including, from left
to ript, Erik Hanson. Cheryl Morgan,
Laura Hallada, Colleen Gavin and Jim
Ziegler, will pr,esent a scarf dance during
the district's fifth music festival. Sounds
of Music V will begin· at 7:30 p.m. Tues-
day in the Mission Viejo ln&h School gym-.
nasium. Over 800 elementary choral stu-
dents will participate.
Watergate Battle · Ends
Prison Date Set for Haldeman, Mitc~ll
WASHINGTON <AP>-H.R.
Haldeman and John N. Mitchell,
the biggest fish in the W atersate
prosecutor's net, were ordered to-
day to report to prison no later
than noon J~e22 to begin serving
their sentences for their Watergate crimes.
Tbe ceremony that ef!ectlvely
ended their years-long fight to
stay out of prtson took only four
minutes. Both have been sen-
Seeretary Slain
Suspect Arrested
In Knifing Death
Fullerton police arrested a
30-year-old man Sunday chareed
him with the stabbing murder of
a 20-year-old secretary whose
nude body was found in her
apartment late Saturday night.
Cbareed with the murder of
Deborah Liem, 20, or 2623 Yorba
Linda Blvd., Fullerton, was
Wolfeang Wayne Kocourak, 30.
Kocourak lives in an apart-
ment within the same Yorba Lin-
da Boulevard apartment com-
plex where Miss Liem lived,
police said.
He was arrested Sunday after-
noon as police beean talldn& with
the victim's friends and
nei1hbon in an attempt to piece
together the last hours or the
youne woman's lire.
Police believe her death came
in the early evenin1t hour• Satur· day when she received multiple
stab wounds in her body ap-
parently alter stepping out of the
shower.
But her body was not dis·
covered until after 10 p.m.
That fs when a friend, worried
when his telephone calls weren't
answered, went to the one-
bedroom apartment, found the
door unlocked and, after enter-
ing, discovered Miss Llem's body
Nixon 'Like
WuisXVI'
NEW YORK <AP) -Fonner
Watergate prosecutor Archibald
Cox has compared Richard M.
Nixon to Kine Louis XIV of
France and James I of England.
Cox, honored by the NAACP
here, said the kings contended
they were not bound to the aame
laws as their subjects, much as
the former president did in re-
cent televised interviews. ..
DAILY PILOT
on the bedroom floor, police said.
They reported there was no
evidence that the young woman
had been sexually molested by
her slayer. Police also ruled out
robbery as a possible motive.
F,....PaeeAJ
WTTERY. •
All of the units are located within
Irvine's newest village, located
near t.be corner of Culver and
Irvine Center Drive.
Mrs. Kirk said she has been liv-ing in a two-bedroom apartment
with her a daughter for the past
18 months, after residing In a
Huntington Park home for 30
years.
By the cutoff time Saturday·
evening, 4,435 persons had signed
up for a chance to buy one of the
lower-cost. homes. That's slightly·
more than double those who
signed up last September, when
t.he first 82 Woodbridge
moderate-cost homes were sold.
The difference between the
first lottery and Sunday's draw-in~ was that all of the Winnefl
had to be able to qualify !of.
Federal Housing and Urban
Development (HUD) 235 financ-
ing, which means that only mar·
ried couples, single beads of
households and people over 62 or
handicapped qualified.
That stipulation was added to
try and keep out speculators who
could buy the houses and then re-
~ell them quickly at great profits.
Under the HUD financing rules, homebuyers must actually
occupy the homes to qualify for
the loans. although there is no set
time on how long that occupancy
must last. .
While about half of the moderate-income home bu)'era
last September were single peo-
ple, none w.-e allowed in Sun·
day!a lottery. ,
However, the next rroup of
moderate-income homes, in the
Heritaae Park Eut development
now being built by the lrvlne
Company's multi·famlly
Dlvlalon on Walnut Avenue near ·
Jeffrey Road. will be different.
. Thoee units .probably will be
priced in the low $40,000 price ranee and will be offered for COO·
ventlooal financln1 for people ln
the mOderate In.come ran•e·
That muns that •lntle people
wlth llriitted incomes will be
elllible for tboie houses.
Accordinl to Irvine Com~
• offtclala,. the 82 house. went to a
wide rqe o( f amllles lnchidlnl
1everal-.Vletname1e famWcs,
blacks, ortcm.tal.s and Cblcanot, · bitlcles An&los. •
People belan atNamln• into
the Irvin., Company park\ni lot
In Newport Center 11 early as ~
a.m. Ind trattlc was bec:kod up
unt.11 9:30 a.pt., when the fint. nam• ...... oau~,.~"""'~
Jt tome abOU\ three M'"'1 to caU 1 Off 300 names, With only the nrat.
IS people completln1 he1
paperwork. The otla namu •
wtt put In re1erve ln cue IOmo ~===;;:;;;~=~--~·-.. -of the 11.nt. wiil.Dcn fall to 41uallly.
tenced to serve 2~ to eight-year
prison sentences, imposed Feb.
21, 1975, for their roles in
America's bi&1est political scan-
dal, the Watergate cover-up.
Leaving the courthouse, the two
were accompanied to their cars
by UnitedStatesmanhala.
"More than fourJears a,o, 1
started on a leg process I
thought was proper," Haldeman
said. "I knew It was going to be
difficult. I still think it was rlghl I
am prepared now to accept the re-
sults."
Asked whether he had any re-
morse for the actions that are put·
ting him In prison, Haldeman
said .. "It's been a tough four
years. But during that time I have
greaUy appreciated the support
and the consideration being ex·
pressed toward me by people
throughout the country. I deeply
appreciate the love, concern and
understanding of my family ...
Mitchell, surrounded by re.
porters and cameras, walked to
his car without sayln1 anytbina.
As he climbed in, he said, "l
hope nobody gets killed out of
this," referring to the crush of
p eople around him at the courthouse.
U.S. District Judge John J.
Sirica indicated lut week that be
would give the two former Nixon
administration officials until
June 22 to eet their affairs in or-
der. Haldeman asked through bia
lawyer to remain free to attend
his daughter's graduation
ceremony from law school and
Mitchell asked to help his
lawyers prepare a last-ditch,
slim-chance appeal to the U.S.·
Supreme Court.
They have a choice of turning
themselves in to a U.S. marshal
at 10 a.m. or to voluntarily ap-
pear at the prison eates by noon.
Sirica only placed the men into
the cuatody of the attorney
general and it 11 up to the Justice
Department to designate tbe
erison.
Haldeman's lawyer. John J.
Wilson. said he had arranged for his client to go to the minimum
security faciJity at Lompoc.
Calif. Plato Cacheris, Mitchell's
lawyer, said arrangements were
not complete but that the fonner
attorney general probably will be
sent to Allenwood, Pa.
Mesa Hotel
'Percher:'
Rescued
A BeW.lower man, apparently
despondent over a deterioratlnl
relatloosbip with a girlfriend. Ht
atop the roof of the lT•tory South
Coast Plua Hotel Sunday after.
noon for two hours before he was
talked down by hl11l1t~r-. tbe ex-
airllriend and police.
Thomas Andrew Kelley, 29,
straddled the aouth watl ol the
hotel and told officers Tom
Owena and Ed Zuorstl be
planned to tu1 hlmaelf.
Coeta Meta tlH department of·
!iciata dispatched a truck com·
.,any, eQltfte eompaay and squad
car to the hOtel, but bad to stand
by helpleub' u police talked to.
them111D. •
Battallaft Cblef Oary Golson
hid kelley wu too blah tor ef·
fective rescue methods. hWe
could not have reached him at
thatheiCht,'' f1001ald.
The drama, which belan at
t :20 p,m,, d~w a crowd of
curious onlookera.
K tley wu talked down from
bl• perch bon1y btfore 1 p,m., accord!~ co 1>91ke.
Muw weather and a surf that
hit four to five feet alone the.
Oranio Coast drew near·
capacity crowd.a to beaches Sun:.
day, but Ufecuards reported no
O\ajor difficulties.
Saturday brought the biggest
crowds, with attendance d.rop-
9tn1 off only allahUy on Sunday
at mOlt locaUons, 1lt.bou1h ~
wavee attracted many 1urten. •
Newport Beach llf eeuards re-
ported they had 100,000 vtaiton
Saturday and only about 80,000 on
SUnday, with a total of 93 rescues
aJ\d 14' first aid cases.
Sunda'v's lower attendance wu credited to a cool overcast
that f alled to -burn off before
noon. ~e overcast burned oft
earUer on Saturda)'.
Water temperatures are mov-
in1t upward, with 61 de(l'ffl re-;
col'ded at Newport Beach Sun·
day.
Huntington Beach city
lifeguards logged 33,000 visitors
Sun4ay with only 20 rescues and
one major flrst ald case involv-inc a surfer struck by a 1urf·
board.
Huntington and Bolsa Cblca
St1tte Beach llfeauuds logeed
125 rescues alona their tonier
strand Sunday. spokesmen said
today.
San Clemente lifeguards aald
11,000 people vialted city beaches
Sunday, while 8,500 showed up at
the county beach strands.
There were a total of 19 rescues
overall.
School Board
Eyes Classes
In Ziggurat
Class meetings outdoors under
canopies or indoors ln the
. federally owned zuggurat build·
ing in Laguna Niguel will be dis-
cussed tonight by Capistrano
Unified School District trustees.
The meeting is scheduled for
7: 30 p.m. at district offices, 32972
Calle Perfecto in San Juan
Capistrano.
The May 31 defeat ot the
Capistrano Unified bond and
state loan election, which would
have funded 10 new schools in the
next five years, leaves the fut.
growing district critically abort
of classrooms, says Jerome
Tbornsley, superintendent.
"Trustees are very much
aware of the lead time involved
in identifying an approach top~
vide school housing and the ac-
tual time when it ls open and
available to stud ents,"
Thornsley said in a memo to the
district's governing board.
"With each month that passes,
the district is going to be further
behind in terms of providing
normal and adequate facilities
for students."
Thornsley has urged trustees
to meet with administrators in
brain-storming sessions to dis-
cuss how to house more than
8,000 new students expected to
move into the Capistrano district by 1981.
In addition to using tents or the
federal ziggurat building for
class space, Thornsley has pro-
posed the following alternatives
for truatee discussion:
-Year-round school
-Double sessions
-A lease /purchase election,
requiring a simple majority vole
to pass
-Another bond election
-Full utilization of a seven or
eight period teaching day at
junior and senior high schools
The Capistrano district, com-
prising 20 percent or the land in
Orange County, includes San
Clemente, Capistrano Beach,
Dana Point, Laguna Niguel, San
Juan Capistrano and part of Mis·
slon Viejo.
·~·· ........ WEATHER SATELLITE CAPTURES 'GLOOM' ON FILM
· Glooniy Eddy
Gray Guck Stai1u Skies
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Oft• Dlllly"'" Slllft
"Look!"
.. Up in the sky .. Js it a bird. • .is it a plane ..• ?"
Heck no, Dummies, at thia tlmeof the year it's tbe June
gloom nemesis of beachgoen who tum up too early at Oxang~Coast-strands between mid-May to about the end of
July, expecting sun tans.
-THE GBA Y AERIAL guck sprinkles all over yout
brand-new car, too, or the older one you just paid $3.50 to
have washed.
-And it fouls up the decking you stained Saturday, bop.
ing it would be dry for a Sunday afternoon barbecue for
friends and relatives. _
-AND 1UST WREN y~q,get ho~e from work to go {>Ut·
ter in the garden, lt scoots in from the Southwest like a Jug-
gernaut out of last November, wetting down. your sum-
mertimemood. ·~whocares!
Not the weathermen. ·
"We don't concern ourselves as much with the condition
as the factors that cause that condition!" declares KABC
Channel 7weatherman Dr. George Fiscbbeck.
. "We've got a Catalina Eddy out there that should be gettlni stronger,'' he predicted.
A CATAUNA EDDY is a breeze out ot the coastal
southwest that brings moisture-l~en air from an offshore
high pressure system into and over the California coastline.
"Tbe clouds are caused by the moisture in the at-
mosphere over the sea, naturallY," says a spokesman for
the U.S. Weather Bureau. • •
He said the June Gloom ls particularly created by a
high yressure weather system occurring at this time of the
ye&l'overthe southwestern U.S. states and central Mexico.
.. And in swnmertime, there'• a ma.rine air inversion
layer," he continued.
THE AIR INVERSION layer o!rshore keeps the gray
stuff close t.o the ground, where an weather-watchers can
readily see it.
Anyway, it's perhaps a blessing in dis&UiSe for those
who may not have ;i calendar handy.
· YoucantE:IIwbeoit'aJunealongtheOrangeCo~t.
Ho$t~es Treated
Well, Say Women ·
.•
GRONINGEN, The
Netherlands CAP) -Two preg-
nant women released by South
Molucacan terrorists alter 13
day1 captivity said today that the
other 53 hostages aboard a train
in northern Holland are in eood
condition despite "very great
p&ychological pressure." .
read to reporters be!oTe sbe and
25-year-old Nelleke Ellenbroek·
Prinsen left the Gronln,en
University Clinic with them
"In general, the hostages are
being treated correcUy by the
Moluccans," said Annye
Brouwer-Korf, 31, in a statement
husbands. ·
Mrs. Ellenbroek, who ts ft'fe
months pre,nant, and Mrs.
Brouwer, who is two months p..-..
enant, were freed Sunday.
But ,fustlce Minilter Andreas
van Ag\ aatd there is no indica-
tion that release is near for the
other hostaaes aboard tbe _train.
u. , .. ,.., o.;. °"
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TClbil'IP .U•.. t ~-"" TOOOSll t2 A 1S .. +. " T~ldl\ Ut ' It t~-\II TotEdprUt t • l 2~"• \II · TOftll•Co •• 1 1 10 ..... TMtltouo11to 1 61'+ \II i~~: ,::,: .,: m:.·" TW~ S SS IOo.\• _,.. E .. 17 24'4•"'
y., .M, • ,.. ·~· "' 'II cl.'2.. t """-~ Tf#nUO \ a 15 to ..... T,1.,icl\ .n • 111 • + \It ITi<OPof &M •• ll '8 .....
T•GPoft!'' a 27\11 ••••• T•MIOlll'. 4 1 11~-\II t ,.nwv I 1 U 14 + 141 l~rc~' ttt.~ 1l: ti~··~ T''4~oM • • 7 I~ ••••• Trlentlld •• • ........ . Trl•PK. .60 4 1 la .... . 'Trln,Y•11 eo • 1 2t'--t4 Tl'OOIC81\ .5017 'It 27 .. -i4 TIK\nG 1. 11, t 180 1614 + 'II T-Cn ,,,,1H711 20•a+1V. TwlnDl .eo • ' 18 + ~ TvcoL<'ltl • .q t 17 11 -"' Ty•erCo JIJj 111 20 -,.
UAl.lfte Mlll~,. -n'4 ..• .". UGICo ! ... 6 1 18"-+ .. UGI or t.n .. 110 1'11/t .... . UMClnd I a t• l•Vo .... . UMl!TTr •• 3 1\'l .... . UOP .60 • 20 IS"e-.... UV1 "<I 1 S 10 37~ •••• , UVINt•I .. 21 19VI+ '-11 U4RCO 1 JO 1 1 1t-.i+ 1-11 U11llL.I .76e 1 t 3N + ... 1Jn8•!1CO ... a 1~ 11'4-1-11 UCalrlo l.!1011 o SS\\+ ,_
U1>Ca•tl 2.IO 7 _, ~-... UnCm tCe 1) 2 7 ......... 8~:!:'~0 1.3' : .. ,~ 1l~::::: UnE I or ··'° .. tlSfO 73 + 1-'l tl~~::: UL ~ ~v.::::: tl~~t~N:1~ m fi~! ~ ONE.IS. IRONICALLY, THE LACK of mediL ·
u111rov•• .so12 10a 1Q"ll..... cigarette pushers have not been able to advertiie~ • 8~~~:~ • ·; ·~ ·~04::: ~ televialoa or radio since Jan. 1, U'll. So1ne macutnea -tl~~c:'°'~.-: lt ~:.::::;.\ Reader's Dig-est and the New Yorker, for example -•
v11ei1R,1.n s " ,.."_"' will not accept their ads. As a result, the tobacco mer~ tl~~n,;~~ "'0 l 1; :~~::::: have greatly increased thelr buying ot space tn magutnes
un111uo12.1:l .. mo 2c•4 + v, papers a con nue o accep c gare em · uutum '"' • 17 '6"'····· and news th t t.i t t i tt ~ 8~11::::! :u: i 2i~= :Z The. second factor ls to take speedy adnntaae uJri•a~ 1.oi • • 11:11o.. ••• most pronounced markettrend in smoldn~since tbe ~ tl~~~Clr ii m ~1 Vt of the filter cigarette. ?dillions of nervoU$ smokers aro 8~~t1":" s. ~ ~~ ,!:~: ~ tng to the low·tar brands, and Real ls sUll JUlOther uslf~s 1.2t.e • • s IS>\• ~ thJs ex ....... u .... category. VSFldG I 1<16 '1~.. .. ............'6 usovP• 16/l11 S1 n•• .. .. Reynolds already bas the leading brand in this ca
usHom 1~ 1 11 714· ... · with Vaot•0 e, whlcb has 2.8 percent "f the "'1°·-u ~Slr\d .AO I .. &'Ii..... -.., "e.,.."' u~ ,:~Ml .«>.~ '~ 1;..:.:·i.\ market. But Vantage is being challenced stro~ -~iss=,g~1t ~ tt'°~,__ ... _-' .. 4+--.a:.tlllJl·p..M~entry"' Merit,..wbicb-bulled it&w-ay to 2.
usTobc 1.«>12 11 10 + ., cent of the market ln one year. •
UnT~ch 1.90 1 131 '8'\ ..... U"Tch of 4,. 1 171._. + 1\\o
u"Tch ol?.ll.. s """-'" v~•h• 1 21 • es 10 -v. UnlTltP't SO .. 1 2S"lo ..... UnUrOd .10 • S6 81-\-14 U11lvM S6 1 I ........ V'ILHf t 811 1 120 ,,._ -'<\ ~~t':';E ':: 1J 1:: 11~; ~
U•lll•F .'6 • 12 11'111 -•111 Ulllt!Pl..312 tO 39 O~+ ''• U18"PLwt .. 5 11 + .... UIPLof 2.90.. t ,,,,._ ·~ -v -v -
VFCo 1.10 a ., "'"'-Vo VS I Coro .90 1 31 n"" + 1"
V11lltv1n <11>18 19 ' + ....
V&•tan .2113 68 "'-'-"" V~rolnc 10 c 111\l 10 -1111
Vendo . . 7 ' .... . VMICI 1012 I S\4 .... . Ve.IS. 1.11e . . 1 H '4 ..•.•
Vetco 10e 1 '" 1••4 -•4 Vl•tom tl lSI 14'4 + 1 Vfctorc 1012 • 11 ........ VilEPw t 1' S 177 15 + Ii\ VeEPlllHO., 1110 01_,,. ....
VeEP pf2 'IO .. n 10""-"" V•EPof1.M .. r1200 ~fa.• ~ ~fr~~ro!}l.n ~~ · .._ -W-'# -Wabftol4.IO .. 110 SI -'Ill WAtllova .~ • t 17'4+ 14 Wechof t20., 1 .,..., .. 14 Wacl1Rly ., 11 > ....... W&llo\Art ,I() II 105 1• + \II ~r~~t1 ~ ~ ~t m:: ~
Wi1118U$ ~ 7 1l 17\41 + ....
Willllo\U 1 10 c 14 2•'111 + 'it ~:::.11.;";'1.~ ,,~ U""; :.':
"'""' pll '° . . 1 ,. -~ WlrdF'd .'11 .. t 6~,. ... ~:~~(01.20\0 ! ~,,,..·;,;
Wr.,(om 90 7 I~ 11~ ~ 1111 Wrll(pf •.U.. I 110 •6>11 W•<1Cof 1 U ,. I l>2 +l Wtll<t•Co.60' 3 9' ....... W4•11rL 1.10" m 14 .. 14 W•"1G\ t.01 I 26 71'4 ..... W.V."l•I 80 1 ~ 1t11o -14
W:•llSll I 8 2 20 -V. w •Wet U& 1 16 2! -~ W•~•*M 21J? 3' U"> + 1<\ wat•lnJ .n t lo 21 -14 W.VGM ..... t 6-...+ Vol WtanUn .10 s S4 sv. + Vo W•tn pl l,26 •• t 1l ..... Wutll'4 .Wt t.14 l'l>lo ....• ~tbb0.I 16 190 10 -1111 w:llV'J ~:!1! ~ !;~; ~ WIPP ~,..~ •• 1'0 SC">-.., WI Pl Pe 2 «> 7 t 23'llo + \II
WnAl•I. '° e 11 t .... w n&nt 1 ~ 1 U ,.,,._ Yt
Wn .. o.t, .<IC*• 101 21~-Yt Wnl'~ln i 3'I. I•'--'4 Wl\Publ 88 T 16' 181'9 ..... WUnlon I«> • ~68 111'11-..... ~t'?1 :ti::: ·i ;i ... :::: ~:t!i~~1·T~: ~ ~·°'.:.~ WW*~• .9915 !OS U'/4+ ~ Wa:•:~,, ~fl;; 1~ ~::t .-. t<tl It ,. 21 le~ .•.•.
IP•tol 1> •• 1100 S~+W• WM•IOOf 111 1a Hiie ..... Wlll'ICO!'l,10 7 1' 26 r Yo Wtlll¢ ore '.. 3 41,_.,, •••• ~11~1 l M 7~ ..... "~111119 1 lO 7 f4 1C'lt+ ....
Wlll11ai• 7 .,., '"-_,.. W1Cktt ,1'b 8 i ll'lt-I• Wl•l>dlSt .n 7 114 + \II Wlt•l•<nS 1 t 4 22'\-W WH\11..0 I~ • 1~ 1~ ..... WinnO• u • n •m o·~ + ~ =~~" 9 ii ~ f~;;: ~ Wlnt::f 1.f 6 IS ..... w1•ceP vi Ill ,. JIM-lo\ 'w ~G~ 1.jO s t J0"9 + Vo Wl,G.Df t.SS.. 10 ti -14 WIKPl.. 1,.0 9 '1 'lllYr-14 WI.CPS 1 .. t ,1 ltYi+ 14
Witco ,1 4'l e 20 ll'lll + "I WlatrO .60 4 1ll m~ + 11 ~~~'fco:~? 1 11 ·.:·r~
WOOclCo . .io 8 IO 7~ • :i ::~:;.~,11~ ~ ~·": .....
WOIWOf 1.20.. t ,.....,_ l(t
W'1"1f.~'' 20 t s•i. ... ,, ~~, ~.2.~11 ,t "~; ~
wv1•\,. ,toil 22 1Jv... ....
W'(1., Ct •. 'II 1-. • l'l -X-Y-Z·
)t.rOK 16010 117 4$ --1(1ta ,1M ' "1 tl'-\+ 14 tv::~o ·0= t ,J a...,::·~ S:.°'" JO.. 1 w ..... ""' . ·~ .. -. ., ,: ..... :. ~
tf\"miR lit 1~ !4 •• .. llrnt~d AO t ,. u~-._. . .
PIDLIP -.oaRJS SP);NT AN EsTIMATED $&O
to introduce Merit during 1976. 1bat was MO milll
months. So now Reynolds will spend $&O million
months to launch Real. Merit has a tar content of 9
grams; so does ·Real. Merit's nicotine content is O.T
grams; Real 's nicotine revel ls 0.8 Qlilligrama. ~,;,
How can a company afford to spend so much·'°'
troduce a new brand? Easy. With this onslaught R!i expects to capture at least 1 percent of th~ cigarette tor Re~. A l percent slice translateS to sales of $88 mllll
for Reynolds at the faetory level. It doesn't cost much
manufacture cigarettes; and if Real can estab~ toehold, Reynolds should then be able to expand its •
share with considerably reduced advertising expendit · •
The.launch is alwa,Ys the biggest expense. ;: • t
Floyd G. Belsito, city ad·
ministrator of Huntington
Beach. fias been appointed to the board of directors of
Blue Cross of Southern
California. ,
Belsito, 46, bas worked
for the city for 15 years. Jn
addition to being city ad-
ministrator, Belsito is in
his third·year of law school
at Western state Universi·
ty, Fullerton. He also
t eaches a government
class for Golden West Col~e aHhe-HUntineton Beach Ci~y Hall. He holds
an M.S. degree ln Public
Administration from
Calif ortda State Uni\'eraity
at Fullerton. '-
BEFORE BECOMING
city administrator, Belsito
was an associate planner
in charge or the advaneed
planning division, a11ts-
t a.nt to the cHy •d·
miniatrator, ~xecutive a,.
alstant to the city ad-
ministrator and deputy
tlt;v administrator. ·
1telslto has been a
·membet of the executive
board ol the West Orange Coun~ Crusade and past
pres.ldent of Huntbigton
Boac:b Ethploye's Assoda·
Uon. · .
He ls chairman oftb ad·
ministrative p.roductlvity
management team lor
Huntington Beach. .
He Will serve a U..-year term on the boaid'Of
the Los Angeles·base4~oo·
profit heelth care plaq :¥ a
public representa"'e. Public delegates bold1ial.f
the seats on the board; •