HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-06-15 - Orange Coast Pilot7
II
. . .
295 Po1•nds Lost
..
Man Face Probe
. \ In Mail's Race In Sex Mt•rders
With Snails Of Girl Seouts
DAILY PILOT ercuts
-* * *,10< * * *
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 15, 1977 Laetrile alne
VOL. 70, NO. 1M, 4 Sl!CTIONS, 41 .. AOH
A .. Wl...,...lot
'THE MAGIC IS YOU'VE GOT TO BE MOTIVATED'
Foriner Fatty at .t90 Powtd1, (Left), H9'~ ;rrtm at.185 Now
Loser Wins
'Racer' Tri11111 295 Pounda
ANCHORAGE, Alaska CAP) -Dr. Robert Mallin raced
anaha and lost-a total of 295 pounds.
Eleven moot.ha aao. Mallin wei&bed 490 pounds. Today, after
raclna more than 5,000 miles on an exercise bike aaainst the
snails in bis fish tank, be 's down to 195.
"'l'llE llAGJC IS YOU'VE GOT to be motivated. And even
then the 1oin1 lsn 't euy,' • said Mallin, who combined hard work ontbeblkewithadietrestrictedto400ca1oriesaday.
He'a mllbty proud of the feat. ca1linl the huge losa in weight
.. the outatandlna achievement or my life ...
The plastic sureeon said a friend's poor health led him to the
conclusion.
"BYGEORGE,l'MMORTAL. TOO.l'mgoinetodie."
Deciding that belna 87 years old "was better than the
alternaUve," he went to an lntem1st and said: "Here I am. Do
me." To keep from 1oing back up be has reoriented his life.
.. Doing It ls hard," be conceded, lhou1b there are benefits:
-His dau1htera no longer are embarrassed when be comes
to pick them up at school. .
--Be comes home from work ready to go, instead of ready to
1otobed.
-He lites himaelf.
2'1-1ear-cld t'1ia Van Hout.en uld
TuHday In SupMlor Court.
durln1 contifttiiill teatimOQJ In
berdeteme.
Alted at blr 1871 tttal JI abe
were sorry. ab• answered,
usorr.'(: la OG\Y a flYe·l9tter
wont.'
Veil Lifts
On Ranch
Use Plan
By JOANNE llEYNOLD8
OI ""Oalty ,., ... Slaff
On July 25, a group or 10 in-
v ea tors known as Taubman-
Allen-Irvine, Inc., is scheduled to
complete the purchase of the
Irvine Company for $337 million.
What happens after that bas
been the subject or conjecture
and rumor-speculation fed by
the fact that the 10 Individuals of
T Al have clothed the partnenhip
in secrecy, refusing to talk to the
preu, and avoiding all but
minima1 contact with company
management.
Part of the curtain drawn
around the aale was lifted Tues-
day by Col. John Gottlieb or
Bever\y Hilla, the 79-year~Jd re-
tired military man known to the
business world as the man who
put TAltoeetber.
He'• called the Candy Man. He
aaya he ii the brOkenn the sale.
Here'i what be had to say dur·
inf a two-and-a·half-bour in·
tervtew Tuesday:
-The only plannin& under way
by T Al for company boldinp is
ln a1rtculture which the IJ'OUP
plans to expand "drastically."
-No one involved ln the con-
1orUum foresees taldnt UlY i>re>-fttl out ot lbelr investment for at
leaat ftve yean.
-There are no plans at present
to either speed up development
or sell the assets of the Irvine
Company.
-No one in company manaie-
ment will be forced out.
-The memben of the COD·
(See VEIL. Pase Al)
B04'T S4.ILED
our Jf'lm AD
Testing
111JD18DS
Urged
NEW YORK (AP) -A major
study of Laetrile shows the sub-
stance bas no ''preven:
live ... nor curative anticancer
acti vtty," Memorial Sloan-
Ketterlng Cancer Center an-
nounced today.
"We do not have evidence sup-
portinf taklnl amygdalin
(Laetr le) to clinical trial
althou1b other considerations
may require that one be cODduct·
ed," the cancer center said.
1 Dr. Lewis Thomas, president
·of the center, bas said be believes
human trials of Laetrile must be
conducted because of such fac·
tors as the growma number of
states that have legalized
Laetrile.
Charles Robb, son·in·law of the late President Johnson,
addresses friends and sU}')porters in Rf cbmond after win·
ning the Virginia Democratic nomination for the post of
lieutenant go9emor. His wile, Lynda Bird, applauds the
speech.
. • •
Recarda at tlle Ottawa County
1berlff'1 office at Miami showed
tbat. tbe ODl1 man in the jail was
booked there after beina uftltid
Oil a public d:ninkeoness eouol
durilai the Dl&bt.:
BIJ'Uer, officiall reHaled thty
found bloioiltY fOOlJ>riDtll, ap·
parent.17 left by lar1• teanta
...... wlddl were fouDd oa the woodtil pl.etotm of tbe um in
r wtlleh the Otrl SeOuta ·~kW.ct
(8eist18PBCl'.P ... Al) I
The U.S. Food and Drue Ad-
minlatratioo bas banned use of
Laetrile ln interatate commerce
because it aaya the 1ubstance bas
not been proven safe or effective.
In the pa.st year, L9-etrile.
which ii derived from peach or
apricot plta or bitter almonds.
has been letalbed in Alaska, In·
<SeeCANCE&; P .. eAZ)
Weatlaer
Some low c1oUdlOeu late
toni1ht tht'ougb nald·
moraine Thursday,
Otherwile aunny Tbiinday
with biahs rU\lfJii from ti
to 72 at beaches to 75 to IO
lDJancl. tows tonight S8 to
63.
INSIDE TODAY
Nazis' Rally ,
Wins Backing
WASHINGTON (AP>-A na·
tional ar1ani.zatlon espomlng
Nui doc1Jtne won an i mportant
legal victory in the U S. Supreme
Court today when the justices
voted s to 4 that Skokie, Ill., can-
·not bar the group from publicly
demonstrating for an indefmite
period ol time.
The cowt ruled that Illinois
~ourts must allow the National
Socialist Party df America to
hold a rally originally scheduled
May 1 in Skokie, a Chicago sub-
urb with a large Jewish popula·
tion, or give immediate appellate
review to a court injunction bar-
ring such a demonstration. / .
The Nazi organization wants to
protest against J ews and blacks.
Skokie bas an ordinance which
requires the Nazi organization
and its leader, Frank Collin, to
take out a $350,000 liability in-
surance policy before obtaining a
park permit to hold a .. white
supremacy" assembly.
Newsman
Nabbed in
Drug BUAt
State Bureau of Narcotics En·
forcement agents visited the
home of Anaheim Bulletin
newspaper Managing Editor
Marvin R. "Marv" Olsen .Mon-
day night and arrested hlm on
marijuana possession charges.
Olsen, 43, was booked for in-
vestigation or possession of mari-
juana for sale and cultivation of marijuana.
He was released from custody
on his own recognizance, promis-
ing to appear to answer the
charges on a date yet to be
scheduled in Central Orange
County Judicial District Court.
A spokesman for the Bureau of
Narcotics Enforcement said to-
day that three plants were seized
as evidence, in addition to a
small quantity of alleged mari-
juana inside the home.
Investigators s aid they
checked Olsen's backyard on the
basis of a tip from Orange County
political financier Gene Conrad
who is presently indicted on
seven counts of fraud connected
with his loan brokerage firm.
The state agency normally
concentrates attention on drug
dealers. City pollce would
normally handle a matter involv-
ing smaller quantities of alleged
marijuana.
Olsen discussed his arrest at
great .length with a Daily Pilot
newsman today, but declined to
elaborate on any issue of guilt or lnn~nce because he had not.
consulted his attorney.
The Los Angeles Times quoted
financier Conrad as saying be
tipped off authorities partly
because the newspaper Olsen
edits is owned by Freedom
Newspapers, Inc., which also
pu bllshes the Santa Ana
Register.
Conrad told the Times he has
been anlatonized by the
Freedom Newspaper chain's
coverage of bis political ac-
tivities and criminal indict-
ments.
DAILY PILOT
To pnitat the cJty-1 tmurance
req uiremeat, tbe party
scheduled t.be May 1 demonatra-
. lion in front ol the Skokie City
Hall. City officials, however. went to court.
Cook County "circuit Judge
Joaeph II. Wasik told Collin and
bJ.a party that staging the protest
would be treated as contempt of
court. He barred the group from
.. marching, walking or parading
or otherwise displaying the
swastika on or off their persons ...
The Illinois Supreme Court re-
fued to immediately review the
case and, in effect, upheld
Wosik'sdeclsion.
The appeal lo the Supreme
Court said Wosi.k's ruling pro-
hibits free speech and assembly.
and asked the nation's highest
court to, in effect. allow the pro-
test rally to be held while a legal fight is waged.
The Supreme Court asreect
that free.speech right.a could not
be adequately protected if the
Nui group were barred from de-
monstrating during a long legal
battle.
Attorneys for Skokie argued
that Collin and the political party
he heads would not suffer great
harm if forced to wait until the
legal fight is over before holding
a rally.
.. If a state eeeks to impose a
restrtdlit of this kind it must pro-
vi de strict procedural
sa(eguards, including immediate
appellate review," the court's
majority opinion said.
"Absent such review, the state
must allow a stay," the majority
said, in essence ordering that the
Nap eroup be allowed to bold
whatever rally it desires.
Tbe hi&h court's decialon came In a two.page opinion. Dissenting
were Chief Justice W a.rren E.
Burcer and Justices William H.
Rehnquist. Potter Stewart and
Bryon R. White.
White gave no reason for his
dissent. The three other dissen-
ters said that the appeal by the
Nazi group was not ripe for
Supreme Court review.
F,....PageAI
SUSPECT •••
on the first night ot a campiq trip.
The platform bas been nown to
the state Crime Bureau bead·
quarters in Oklahoma City,
where tests were being conduct-
ed OD it and other pieces or
evidence, including a red
fiaabllght found near the girls'
bodies early Monday.
Flnterprints were lifted from
the flashlight and from the skin
of at least one of the girls,
sources close to the investigation
said. It wasn't known whether
the prints were left by the killer
or by someone else, possibly ln-
vesti1at.ors.
The shoes that made the prints
are much larger than any shoes
the girls bad left in the tent after
donning bed clothes.
Mayes County District At·
torney Sid W"lSe said "lolic leads
us to conclude the murderer Is a
man, a stealthy, physically agile
man."
Investigators reportedly found
other evidence early Tuesday
about 200 yards from the tent at
Camp Scotl near bae. Tbe beavi·
ly wooded camp area bu been
closed off and a Police command post set up at the camp.
The bodlee Of Lari Lee Farmer,
8, and Daris Denlse llilner, 10.
both ol Tulsa. and lllcbelle Guse.
9, of suburban Broken Arrow,
were found Monday morning
about 13)yardl from their tent.
The Pia were alatn on the lint
mtht of a sc.btduled two-waek
star at the 110.acre camp. Tbe
alte la alone the eds• of the
COobGn Hilla area of eaatern
<>kl•bom•. aboutamlles wen of Tulaa.
Wile aakl an •utoOIY-~ tbat all three ot the;Gfrt ScclutS Mel been ··'41&'a111tJ mCliles&ed in
aometarm.11 •
U.tening at OAS
Secret.ary of State Cyrus Vance scratches his forehead
as he listens to discussions at the General Assembly of
the Organization of American States at St." George's on
the Caribbean island of Grenada.
Normalcy Sought
At Irvine Company
Within the balls of Irvine com-
pany headquarters there is a con-
certed effort to keep things on an
even keel as the days tick off
toward the July 25 deadline in the
$337 milllon sale of company
stock.
In a succession of memos from
company President Ray Watson
and a series of staff meetings,
employes have been told not to
panic, buaineas will be conducted
as usual.
Watson currently is touring the
Soviet Union with a delegation
from the federal Department ol
Housing and Urban Develop-
ment. Before he left last weet, be
talked about the sale.
From within and without, the
question ls posed in hundreds or
different ways, but it comes out
the same:
What's going to happen when
the new owners take over?
W atsoo says there bas been
some limited contact between
T Al and the Irvine Company in
order to work out the financial
and legal technicalities of the
sale.
That means that TAl's lawyers
are looking at all o! the lawsuits
pending against the company-of ·
which Watson says there are
several dozen-and auditors
from Kenneth Leventhal and
Company, hired by TAI, are go-
ing over the books "with a fine
tooth comb.''
After July 25, It will become a
matter of learninl about the new owners by being exposed to
them, said Watson.
•'I think the uncertainty will be
cured by exposure to the in·
dividuals who run TAI." he
added.
---
......... eA.I
VEll,UITED •••
90itlum bne a tatal Mt worth in
tbe a blWaa to • bWioa range.
Tba will -QP .. at least $100 millloo" ~their own mooe;y in
buytqtbe eomJ>&QY.
GoWJfb is particularly dis· treuect by the namors that TAI
will bit tbe Harbor Area like a pact ot carpetba~gers, grabbinC
olf a quiet proftt to leave trabT deve1opmmt and a patchwork~
a mall landowners in their wake.
Nothing could be further from
the truth, be insists.
"We are all businessmen with
&ood reputations. We're not com-
ing in to tear things down. We
build tbiDgs up. We're not a
bunch ol rapists."
A spokesman for A. Alfred
Taubman contacted today_ said
the Detroit developer would have
no comment on Gottlleb's state.
ments and further claimed that
GoUllebtsnot'1nvolved"inTAL
But Gottlieb says be was the
cai.tyst in the formation Of TAI.
In addition to being a retired
military man-be graduated
lrom the U.S. Military Academy
in 1921-he is also retired from
the trucking business in Chicago.
"I'm ~!lpposed to be retired," be ~ .. but I like to put
tbinc• tocetber.'' Be apparently
will get a ab.are in TAI u bis
eommiaim in the sale.
••The Colonel" is a cbarm.i.nl,
kindly man. well-known in the
Loa Angeles business community
ancl called the "Candy Man''
because ol his habit of c~
wrapped candles in bis pocket.a
and bqdtn1 tbem out to people
he meets.
He said be began following the
sale Of the..lrrine CompaDf l8
months ago, but did not act on bis
idea to form a group to buy it
because he assumed the deal
with Mobil Corp. was wrapped
up.
He said he f'ound out otherwise
from a friend and business as-sociate, Keith Gaede. Gaede is a
directer Of the Irrine Company
and husband of Linda Irvine
~ • .James Irvine's
Gaede repJrtedly told Gottlieb
that his wife's cousin, Joan
Irvine Sm.1th. bad tied up the
Mobil sale in court, that tbe deal
was far from wrapped up.
Gaede declined all comment.
Gottlieb said he was in-
troduced to Mrs. Gaede and Mrs.
Smith and decided to form a
partnenhi'9 to get into the sale.
The first person he contacted
wu bis friend and bus~ess as·
sociate ~ 50 years, Charles Al·
len, the corporate combat
special.lat from Wall Street.
"Charlie," as he's called by
Gottlieb, contacted A. Alfred
Taubman, Max Fisher and
Henry Ford II, all Detroit men
he'd worked with before.
Allen also brought. in the COD•
sortium'a passive investors,
Milton Petrie, a New Jersey resi-
dent who owns a chain of east
coast clothing stores and Harold
==:a~ '\'aJJcy The tenth ma.a la the ecm-
sortlum la buDder DcU1d Bren.'8
one-Ume Newport Beach res}.
dent ud tanner preddea& CIC &be
IO.aslcn Vlfdo ComPQ1.
Gottlieb Sil.JS Bren ls the calY
man wbowu natlJl'oqbtintothe
eonscrtlmn-be ubd to get mco
the deal throu&h Taubman _.,.
whom he'd worked on a project
in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Like other consortium memt>erS.
Bren declined all comments. .
As far as the inner workings ot
the partnership, Gottlieb is
charminl, butevaslve.
Taubman was more or less ap-
pointed spokesman and he WOQ1t
be talking to anyone unW after
July25.
According to his public rei.•
tlons staff, Taubman feels it Is
premature to say anything about
the aale until it closes.
Acquaintances say Taubman
views the sale as extremely
tentative-i'ather like an optidn
to buy-ad until tbe de.dlioe
bas been met, he won't ha~e
anything to say.
Gottlieb hints there will be no
Ertner wbo wDl COii~ • ma. rity OfTAI. All will app'1'fSltly
d mlnorit.7 interests baaed On
the portloD Of their investment.
He paused. "You know.
Charlie Allen could have handled
this whole thine himself, but be's
an tn an investment house and
tbe SEC baa a rule that IQS if
you're col.Di to make an offer on
somethlq like this. you have to
aet that much mooey aside.
.. Charlie needs the capital 'to
keep bla Investments going.
That's wby we set up TAI."
Leafing through a tJiick packet
of documents. Gottlieb read off
the names of the banks that will
provide the balance of TAl's in-
vestment in the Irvine Company.
It appears there are commit-
ment.a up to about $300 miWoa_
but no bank bas a commitment
greater than $35 m.lllion.
He stresses that no planning fs
under way for the com~• de-
velopments-a statement that
will doubtless be a disappoint·
meat to tbe rumor hawkers who
have bad TAI selling eveeyUting
from company headquarters to
the 10,000 acre coutal area to
pay the int.ereatoo its loans.
"We don't plan to see any pro-
fit out ol this for at least five ·
years. That way we don't have to
do any of those things, 0 Gottlieb
said of the rumon.
As for the continued m..-age.
ment of the company, Gottlieb is
concerned that TAI is being cast
as a group of greedy, robber
barons who are lnaensiUve to the
mark the company bas made <IQ
the community.
He dismisses Mrs. Smith's
court deposition that said com-
pany President Ray Watson
would be reduced to atafl plan-
ner.
Wat.son said be has no way ~
knowint and doesn't care to
speculate. but he supposes that
the new owners will not make
any drastic missteps.
After all, be reasoned, they are
talented businessmen who have
pride in their work and reputa·
lions to uphold.
For example., be pointed to
.consortium member Donald
Bren, a former Newport Beach
resident who at one tfme headed
the Mission Vlejo Company and
who bas built homes in the Irvine
ranch in developments such as•
Cameo Shores. Dover Shores,
Weatcllff, Harbor View Homes
and Greeab'ee.
Lynn Hort HART'S John Hort
SPORTI NG GOODS
F..._P ... AJ
CANCER •••
dlan1, 1torid.a. Ari.Iona, Nevada,
Texu aDd Wuhlnlton State.
At a news eonference today,
Sloall-KetterlDC said the study
sbowa Laetrile po11esaes
"neither prevelitlTe.. nor Qunotl.
repeuant. nor l.Dtlmetatattc_
nor curatl•• anUeaneer ac•
UYllJ."
Tb• anee.r CMlllter ftleaiel1 the nsulta~ alour-year~Of the
aubalance. Two manuscripts c:omPrillna 80 Pll• are to be p~bliibed tn the Journal of
&ar1ical on~ ..
One Of lbelD dei.Js wtth tumors·
that are trinjPJanted In l'OdeUb. •
Tbe second, more exteft•lva.
1tud1, deali wttb tpODtaneousl7 occurriq cue« in mice.
In the traaapJlntei tumon..
Sloan.iJ(«terinl IOI, Laetrtle
abowed no beaeflclal effect.
qalnit my of 10 CUfftnat tnes·
OIC&DCer.
•
538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919
Bnell Sits
DulUell Sets
Solid Dumbells uerums ·
Jum'llpes
Trim Wbeels
Door a.
Wilson-Dun~
Yonex-Davis-Prince Radats ·
Racquet Ball Racquets l BaDs
Handball GIOYIS & Balls
Tennis Ms
Badminton Rmts
Table Tennis hdlles
T ei1nis S'"1S & s.irts
T•nis tisses
VOl.. , NO.'"•• ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNlA TENCE ;st
'Candy Man' Lifts &vine Co. Veil . 1
,• ., UYNOUl9 .. ...,,_ ....
0a I ·ZS. a IJ'OUP cl LO
•••lon toowa aa Taab ID·
AUea·lrviDe. lac., aeboduled to
complete t.M parcls ... cl tb. Jf'rin• Cclmpa.ay f~ S33'7 mllllon.
Wba bappe:ns after tbal haa
......... subject ol ~
Ucl rmDm"~u.tatloira fed by de fact that tbe 10 indMduals ol
TAJ bave clothed lhe partnerslUp
Crash
Pilot Not
BJ ANNE OOOPEa
Oft .. o.Hr .... Sutt The pilot flying the plane which
kUJed S.year-old Jennifer Zell on
May 28 when it cruhed behind
her San Juan Capistrano home
1dld not have a commercial flying
license.
1 Albert Sibi, 23, of Laguna
:Niiuel is to be cited for fiying the
!banner-towing plane without a
commercial license and without
•uthorizatioo to tow, said Frank
Allen, chief of flight standards
for the Federal Aviation Ad-
ministration in Long Beach.
Pacific Aerial Advertising,
blcb hired Sibi will also be cited
for flying without towing
authorization. The maximum
naUy is Sl,000 per flight in
iolation, Allen nid.
"We could also r evoke the lot's Oying license," the FAA
,official said. "It is our un-
derstanding he bas left the c00n-
try, but we are proceeding with
the action." Si bi's whereabouts
could oot be confimied and an of-
ficial of Pacific Aerial Advertis-
ing declined comn:ient.
Slbi escaped miuey w~ ))14
plane crashed in a dry creek bed
adjacent'to Caplslrano Airport.
~able became e9tangled in the
ne's tail assembly as tile pilot
ssed over the airfield after
:takeoff to pluck an adve'rt.ising
anner from a support.
Children playing in the creek
ed, a partially developed
ecreation area behind the Troy
omes tract, scattered as the
mall plane approached. The Zell
hlld was struck by a eropeller.
San Juan reslden\s of four
usln& tracts adjacent to the
lrport urged city officials to
lose the airport after the acci·
ent. Homeowners had actively
ought greater control or airport
ctlvity from the time the Homes
ere first occupied fl ve years
10.
City Manager James Mocalis
baa recommended that slficter
enforcement be imposed as
airport operations are phased out
over the next year.
He has also recommended a
concerted effort to locate a site to
wbh:h. the airport could be re-
!Q~a ted, possibly on Camp
Pelldletoo or Rancho Missi.on
Viejo property.
Jn thO meanUme, the city laired
a atcurit.y officer to mollltor al~rt acUvtty. Sunday, that
aetdrit.Y CUard, Normanl Ellis,
hired thrOugh Se4;urity and Jn.
dustrlal Services, was arrested
for buretary and malicious mis·
cbJet at the airport.
Orange County Sheriff's of-ncen tald Ellis, 23, ot Corona del
Mu, is in Orange County Jail to-d,y.
Dr:. Riehaira
To Quit Pro
Tennia Tolll!
tD MCNCy, ntua1nl to Wk to lbe
prtH, and avolalDI all but
mlnhul eontact with eo.,pany
maaa1r11tm111~L
Part of the curtain drawn
around the •al• wal lifted 'J'Uel· day by Col. Jobn Gottlieb ol
8evetb' Hllla. the 19-year-old re-
tired IQ,llltaey man known to lhe
bu11Deu world u tbe man who
put T Al totetber.
He's called the Candy Man. He
aay. M ls tbe broker ln tbe sale.
Hen'1 wbat be bad to aay dur-
lns a two-Ud·•·baU·'bour in· tenlew 'l'Ulldq:
...,.Jl'be QDly Planhlnc under way
by TAJ for eompao.y bQJdlnga ia
ln ••riculture whldl tbe 8fOUP plw to~ .. drutlcally."
-No one lftvolved ln Uae coo·
IOrtlum (Ol'eM!ea Wini UJ pro-
flta oat tA tbftr lDvettinent for at
leut flv• yean.
O.llr "''" ,._.. 1111y ,..,,.,. 0'0-11
THESE READER LEADERS RAISED $110 FOR CHARITY
Karen Gray (left), "4•ri• Bonura and Brlld Rendrtcka
KUl.&ad for Rerarded
About 100 students at Adams School in Costa Mesa dld a
lot of speed reading over the past three weeks.
They weren't cramming for exams. The youn1sters
were raising money for the retarded.
And. with Principal Ken Killian and Librarian Phyllis
Kessler keeping score, the children read enough books to
raise $1,700 Cor the California Association for the Retarded
·in Sacramento.
But when the students decided to take on the charitable
task, Kll.Uan admitted be bad his doubts.
"I WASN'T QUITE SURE if it would be successful. It's
hard to get them to sit down and read this close to summer
lime," be said.
But read they did, with youngsters from the fil'St to fifth
grade participating. Support -in the Corm of donations per
books, Cll!Jle from f amlly and friends, Killlan said.
"Each student bad to get aspon.sor to back him, payini
so much for each book be read at his own appropriate read·
in& level," explained Ms. Kessler.
.. rr OPERATED ON THE basis of an honor system,"
she said.
So, at Adams School, the students benefited by reading
books, the charity 1roup benefitted by the donation, the teacb~ reaped the benefita of quiet classrooms. And the
principal?
"Tblnp were really calm aJ'OWld tiere for three
weeks," be beamed.
. ' NEW YOJ\K CAP) -A major
study tA Laetrile abowa tbe aub-
stance has no .. pre•en-
tlve ... nor curaUve antlc~er
actlvlty,'' Memorial Sloan·
Ketterin• CU'ICet• Center an-
nounced toda1. · ·
"We dO not ha\le evidence sup.
portins takinr amyadalin
(Laetrile) to clinical trial
although other considerations
may require that one be conduct-
ed.'' tbecancer center said. The aclentista said thelr eiq>eri·
menta on mice dld not teet
-wbelher Laetrile tan lessen ~n,
u proponents claim. They 18.!d
tbe experiments also indicated
that Laetrllo doiei not have any
harmf\al effect. alth9U1h some
mlce died when alven eacesatvety
lar1edolel.
Dr. Lewis Thopas, president
ofth•center hasHld~•
human trials of Laetrile rQust be
conducted becauH of sucb fee·,
ton 11 the growln1 nwnbei' cl
1tatee that. have lesatised: i..etrUe:. •
At a news eonf erence today,
Sloan·Xetteriq said the •tudJ
shows Laetrile poneases
"nelther preventive, nor tu~
rerreaant. nor uUmetutatic.
nor curative anticancer ae·· ti•ity ...
The cancer center released the
result& of a four-year study ol the
-Then are no plans at present to either speed up development
or Jell tbe uaeta ol the Jrvtno
Compuy.
-No one ln company manace.
ment will be forced out.
-The memben of the eon·
sortlum have a total net worth in
the $5 blllloo to $8 billlon range.
They will put up "at leut $100
milllon" tA their own money in
b.uYina tbe company. ·
CotWeb ts pudeularb' .._
treued by tbe rw:nan ~ TAJ
will hit tbe Harbor Area like a
pact at. caJlM!lbaaen, srab:bbll
off a quiet prdlt to leave trUb7
development and a patcbwort Of
small landowners in thelr-.te.
Nothlnl could be further from
the truth, be lnsilt.s.
"We are all businessmen -1th
good reputaUons. We're not com-
inc in to tear tbinla down. We
ba.1W Olla.. p. We're DGt a bundi fllnpiaU, 1'
A spok•ma for A. Alfred
Taubman COGtaeted today. Mid
tbe Detroit developer would uvo
no comment on Gott.Heb'a atate-
me.nts and turtMr claimed tbat
GoUllebLI not .. Involved" in TAJ.
But Gotllleb says be w11 tbe
catalyst iD tbe formation cl. TAI.
In additioa to being a retired <See VBJL. Pase AJ>
Reaction Mixed
New Flights to County Mulled
Reactlon to news that a
Midwest airline plans to file for
Civil Aeronautics Board ap-
proval to fly Into Orange County
Airport four times a day ranged
from dlsmay to chuckles today
among Orange Coast civic
leaders.
Newport Beach councilmen
learned Monday that North <;en-
tral Airlines is seeking a route
from Minneapolis·St. Paul to
Orange County via Las Vegas.
Supporten and opponents of the
airline's plans have unW June 24
to teij the CAB bow they feel
about the application.
A CAB spokesman said the
board will review those state-
ments June 24 before deciding
whether to move the airline's ~
quest to the top of its I lat.
lf a bear1ng la granted, it would
be held sometime next ran. the
CAB spokesman said.
Roland UtUe, a spokesman for
the airline, said it plans to seek a
certiftcate for trips between the
Twin Cities, Las Ve1aa and
Orange County,
Nor1b Cent.rat would \lke to br--
ing lta OC9·1501 Into Orange
County four times a day, LitUe
said.
'Nftpori Beach cny Attorney
Dennis O'Neil said be expects the
city wlll receive documents con·
cernl.ng the application today,
and said bis city will oppose the
flights.
He added that John Hardy, a
representative of the airline, will
be in Orange County next Tues-
day.
"They {the airline) are ap-
parently unaware of the
lawsuits, pending environmental
impact reportt existing lease
restrictions ana the state noise
standard variapcea required
each year,". O'Neil said.
"We hope to have the op-
portunity to enlighten the
gentleman from Minneapoll.s on
our local problems." he said.
"They really don't have any idea
of what'• 1olJ\r on here."
Costa Mesa City Manager Fred
Soraabal said he is not that con-
cerned about the CAB appllca·
tlonnews.
"Centlnental Airlines received
CAB permlulon to fly into
Orange County years ago,"
Sorsabal said. "But the county
wouldn't give them any counter
space to operate."
substance. Two manuscripts
comprising 90 pages are to be
published in tile Journal of
Surgical Oncoloo.
One of them deall with tumors
that are transplanted in ll)dents.
Tbe second, more extebslve
study, deals with spontaneouslY
occurrina cancer in mice.
Sonsabal said he was certain
North Central would face the
same problem.
Costa Mesa Councilwoman
Mary Smallwood said Orange
County hasn't resolved exlsUng
problems at the airport.
"We certainJ.v aren't coini tO
add to those problems by lettinl
~other airlin in," she said.
"Besides, who in the beck
wants to go to Minneapolis,
anyway," she quipped. .
Councilman Dom Raciti said
CU,bta into Orange County by the
airline would not be welcomed by
him.
"Aa far as I know, the city ol
Ontario would welcome more
filgbts," Raciti said.
He •Ullested a monorail or
(8eet\laUNE, Page AZ)
lntentionallfl Set
Mesa Police Probe
Motor Home Fires
By STEVE MITCHELL
Ol .. Dllty,.._S'-ft
Costa Mela detectives were
poldn1 through the rubble ~ two
!J1~r bosnea today whlcll ~ !Ound abllldon6d Md bumlniOfl
the bluft.t in the city's wettside
by firem.,i early Tuesday morn·
~
Sako/Three
School Sita
Approved
Tnut.eea ol the Newport-Mesa
Uoilied School District approved
the sale of three unused school
sites for U.8 million Tuesday.
School Qtfkials noted that,
because the sites originally were
bou1bt with aid from the state,
the dlatrict will have to five
Sl,583,000 of the proceeds to the
state.
The three sales approved ~~
-Wakeham School Site: A
10.6-acns parcel to be bought foe
$1,850,000 by Fol!l Construction
Company of Tustin. Jt la located
in Costa Mesa on Sunllower
A venue between Fairview Road
and South Coast Plaza.
-Smalley School site: A 10-
acre parcel near Fairview Road
adjacent to the Mesa Woocb
tract, it wlll be bought for
Sl,825,000 by Propertles West,
l.nc. of Newport Beach.
-18th Slreet Site: An 11.S.acre
site partially in Newport Beach
and partially in county terrttory
near the Banning oil property
which wtll be sold lor '1.213,Dto
the Frederi~k W. Field trust. •
The action Uken by trustees
Tuesday means tliat escrows on .
the three sales wlll not be
opened.
The $3,305,800 which the dbO
trtct will Det from.. tbe salf.S will
go into tbe dlatrict's capital out-
lay bud&~ IC~l olftclala not.I.
The mysterious blaze was re-
-ported to firemen at about 1 a.m.
Tuesday by nelgbbors on Canyon
Drive who said gaaoUne-fed f)a•es dwarfed nearby tNea in
the secluded area. Betty ~ohan, ·who lives on •
nearby' .pacific Drive, sald she
WO awakeMd b)' the fire and
·looked out be.r d09r to find flames
licking the 'Sky from the two
motor homes, parked one behind
the other.
''Whoever put them there real·
ly picked a good spot to park,"
she said. "They must have
know it wouldn't bum anything
elae around them."
Detective Matt Collett said the
two motor homes wf!fe inten·
tionally set afire after one was
rammed into the other lo the
field.
"The ldentificaUon numbers
bad been removed ftom both
motor homes," be said, "but we
found some hidden numbers on
tbe other one."
Fire Marshal Robert
Beauchamp said the intense beat
melted the aluminum frames
and gutted the vehicles.
''Whoever set. the fires poured
a flammable liquid mslae the m~orhomes and then a trail ol
fuel outside where they touched It
oft," be said.
Beauchamp aald firemen
found several car seata and car
doon inside the vans, but little
else d value.
Detective Collett said
refrl1erators, stoves, butan~
tankl and other valuables ha4
been taken out of tbe motor
homes before the fire.
Both men place damqe to tbe
<see A&SON, "Pa&e .U) .
Coast
laa ot m .., ......... .., ,, ....
........ ol ............... Dattri
• ,_,,_, ... COlll&lict.ld .......
Waamcwauq la the
ScwSet um.a ~ • d atkxa
from federal Department ot
Houlq ad Urban Develop..
mlllt. Brian be left lut week, be Wkect about the aaJe.
From wWdn and wit.bout. the
queatian is posed ln hundreds of
diffeRDl ways, but it comes out theaame.
What's going to happen when
the new owners take over?
Wataan said be bu no way ot
knowin1 and doesn't care to
speculate, but be supposes that
the new owners will not make
any drastic missteps.
After all, be reasoned, they are
·talented ~lneasmen who have
pride in thelr work and reputa-
tions to uphold.
w at.on • .,. there bu
aome limited contact between
T Al and the Irvine Company In
ontu to work out tbe flnanelal
and J.sll tecbnlcallUea ot the
Hie.
That meam that TAI'a lawyers
are lootJ:nr at all of the lawsulta
pendU:ag qainlt the company--<>f •
which Wat.son says there are
several doien-and auditors
·from Kenneth Leventhal and
Company, hired by TAI, are go-tnr over the books "wiUl a fine
tooth comb."
After July 25, it will become a
matter of learning about the new
owners by being exposed to
them. said Watson.
"I think the uncertainty wlU be
cured by exposure to the in·
dividuals who run TAI." he
added.
* * * * * f',....PsgeAJ
VEIL UFTED.
military man-he graduated
from the U.S. Military Academy i,n 1921-he is also retired rrom
Che trucking business In Chicago.
"I'm supposed to be retired."
be confided. "but I like to put
things together." He apparently
will get a share in T Al as his
com mission in the sale.
"The Colonel" is a charming,
kindly man, well-known in the
Los An&eles busineas community
and called the ''Candy Man"
because or hJs habit or carrying
and handing them out to people
he meets.
He said be began following the
sale ol the Irvine Company 18
months ago, but did not act on his
idea to Corm a group to bey it
because he assumed the deal
with MQbil Corp. was wrapped
up.
He said be found out otherwise
from a friend and business as-
sociate, Keith Gaede. Gaede is a
director of the Irvine Company
and huaband of Linda Irvine
Gaede, one of James Irvine's
granddaughters.
Gaede reportedly told GotUieb
that his wife's cousin, Joan
Irvine Smith, bad tied up the
Mobil sale in court, that the deal
was far Crom wrapped up.
Gaededeclined all comment.
Gottlieb said he was in-
troduced to Mrs. Gaede and Mrs.
Smith and decided to form a
partnership to get into the sale.
The first person he contacted
was his friend and business as-
sociate of 50 years, Charles Al·
Jen, the corporate combat
specialistlrom Wall Street.
"Charlie," as he's called by
Gottlieb, contacted A. Alfred
Taubman. Max Fisher and
Henry Ford II, all Detroit men
he'd worked with before.
Allen also brought in the con-
sortium's passive investors.
Milton Petrie, a New Jersey resi·
dent who owns a chain of east
coast clothing stores and Harold
Marguleas, an Imperial Valley
agri·businessman.
The tenth man in the con-
sorUwn is builder Donald Bren, a
one.time Newport Beach resi·
dent and former president or the
Mission Viejo Company.
Gottlieb says Bren ls the only
man who was not brought into the
consortium-be asked to 1et into
the deal through Taubman with
whom he'd worked on a project
in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Like other consortium members,
Bren declined all comments.
As fu u the inner workings of
the partnership, Gottlieb is
cbarmin1, but evasive.
Taubman wu !pore or Jess ap-
ORA~Ol COAST c
DAILY PILOT
............ ,.,..... .. -....... ~
"'•"'-=~=......_.. ' ""':~ .,'C:J;.T.C"
°'""'""·...... -~ -........ _ ....... """"""'
• •
pointed spokesman and he wou't
be talking to anyone until after
July 2S.
According to his public rela·
Lions staff, Taubman feels it is
premature to say anything about
the sale until it closes.
Acquaintances say Taubman
views the sale as extremely
tentative-nlher like an option
to buy-and until the deadline
has been met, he won't have
anytbln1 to say.
Gottlieb hints there will be no
partner who will control a ma·
jorit.y of TAI. All will apparently
bold minority interest.a based on
the portion of their investment.
He paused. "You know
Charlie Allen could have handled
this whole thini himself, but he's
an In an investment house and
the SEC bas a rule that says If
you're going to make an offer on
something like this, you have to
set that much money aside.
"Charlie needs the capital to
keep his investments going.
That's why we set up TAI."
Leafing through a thick packet
or documents, Gottlieb read off
the names of the banks that will
provide the balance of TAI's in·
vestment in the ltvine Company
It appears there are commit·
ments up to about $300 million,
but no bank has a commitment greater than $35 million.
He stresses that no planning is
under way for the company's de·
velopments-a statement that
will doubUess be a disappoint·
ment to the rumor hawkers who have had TAI selling everything
from company headquarters to
the 10,000 acre coastal area to
· pay the interest on its loans.
. "We don't plan to see any pro-
fit out or this Cor at least five
years. That way we don't have to
do any of those things,'· Gottlieb said of the rumors.
As for the continued manage-
ment of the company, Gottlieb ls
concerned that TAI is being cast
as a group or greedy. robber
barons who are insensitive to the
mark the company has made on the community.
He dismisses Mrs. Smith's
court deposition that said com.
pany President Ray Watson
would be reduced to staff plan-ner.
"She said it in the beat of the
moment. No one will leave the Irvine Company unless they
want to," Gottlieb said.
CM Ice Cream
Shop Robbed
A bandit brandishing a silver·
finisb automatic held up an ice
cream shop In Colla Mesa Tues·
day niaht., escaplna wl{b $S8 from
the cash registel'.
Police said clerks at 1001 Sun·
daes Ice Cream Parlor. 1150
Harbor Blvd., described tbe eun·
man u beina of Latin deaeent,
with medium hei&ht and build
and between the aees of 19 and
22.-
Tbe robber left tbe store on foot
after collectiftf the eUh. police a aid.
Gas Station Rifled
Generator Stolen
~ Mesi portce ar •eeklns
an employe of a aelf·servtco gu 1talJon who mar hive helPed
ber1elf to $2,400 tn recelptj.
Openton Qttbe 'nutftr OU eom.
PU7at.tiGD,111 W. 19th , IAld
• chedt of rec !pt.a Mond17
1holrid $l.400 miMlDt.
t
•
o.lly .................
BURNED-OUT SHELL WAS ONCE SOMEONE'& MOTORHOMI!
MeN Polle• Say Araonlat Wanted to Cover Up Crtm•
f',....P.,,eAJ
ARSON PROBED •••
vehicles ln excess of S'l0,000.
Police today are attempting to
rind the owners or one or the
vehicles through the bidden num-
bers.
"What we are doing now is
backtracking those numbers to
the factory through the National
Auto Theft Bureau," ColleU ex-
plained.
He said an auto theft expert
will also attempt to raise the
numbers scratched Crom one
vehicle with acid. Some or the
identification numbers were
destroyed with a cutting torch.
"Whoever went through the
one van really knew what he was
doing," he said.
Collett said he has several
.
theories as to Why the motor
homes were destroyed.
"It's possible the owner of one
of the motor homes wu tired of
making payments on it. He may
have eooe out and stolen another
one. taken the tdentiflcation from
his, then set both on fire to make
it look Ute an auto theft opera-
tion," be explained.
Aootber bunch ii that a ring is
steallnc the motor homes, taking
out all the valuables, then
destroyi.n1 them, Collett said.
"It's preUy obvJous the arson
was intended to cover up some
other type ot crime."
Collett raid it will be several
days before detectives receive
information from the Identifica-
tion numbers.
1"an·Faceslnquiry
In ScoUts Slayings
LOCUST GROVE. Okla. (AP)
An unemployed Locust Grove man was arrested early today in
nearby Ottawa County, and the
sheriff questioned him about the
sex murders of three young Girl
Scouts.
"We are very interested in this
parson," said Mayes County
SherifrGlen "Pete" Weaver.
He Sa.id orficers from his de·
pa rtment went lo Miami
Okla., the Ottawa County seat
some 60 miles from here, to talk
to the man he said was arrested
by the .Oklahoma Highway
~atrol under "suspicious
circumstances."
"We have reasons to believe
that he could possibly throw
some light onto the Girl Scout camp slayings," Weaver said.
The aheriff declined to disclose
other details until after the man
was interviewed.
Records at the Ottawa County
sheriff's omce at Miami showed
that the only man in the jail was
booked there alter belng arrested
on a public drunkenness count during the night.
Earlier, officials revealed they
found bloody footprints,· ap-
parently left by large tennis
shoes, which were found on the
wooden plaUorm of the tent in
which the Gltl Scout.a were killed
on the first night of a camping trip.
The plaUorm has been flown to
TONIGHT
GRADUATIONS -Newporr H~rbor High School, Davidson
Field, 4 p.m. Costa Mesa Biah
School, Davidson Field, 7:80p.m.
TRUISDAY,JUNEH
GRADUATIONS -llcNally
Hieb School, 10 a.m. Corona del
Mar High School, CDM Quad, S
~.m . Eatancl• Hl1h School
avid.son '1eld, 7p.m. '
BOABD MEETING -State Aeronautlca Board, Costa Mesa
Councll Oiambera, 10 a.m.
• ~Page/IJ .
AIRiJNE. ~.
the state Crime Bureau head-
quarters in Oklahoma City
where tests were being conduct:
ed on it and other pieces of
evidence, including a red
flashlight found near the itrta'
bodies early Monday.
Fingerprints were lifted from
the flashlight and Crom the skin
of at least one or the girls,
sources close to lhe investigation
said. It wasn't known whether
the prints were left by the killer
or by someone else, possibly in-
vestigators.
The shoes that made the prints
are much lar1er than any shoes
the girls had left in the tent after
donning bed clothes.
Mayes County District At-
torney Sld Wise said "logic leads
us to conclude the murderer is a
man, a stealthy, physically agile
man."
Investigators reportedly found
other evidence early Tuesday
about 200 yards from the tent at
Camp Scott hear here. The heavi-
ly wooded camp area has been
closed off and a police command
post set up at the camp.
Revival Due? ]
NEW YOU (AP) -P
OeorpGall Ir. uidtoda7that
SWT.,S U.. fOUDd atountlRf
mdaee u.. United States.....,.
be In •-17 Ital• of a prdobnd reup,ua rttiffl.
Wrltlnf ID tbe June l.uue ottbe
Journal ot CUrrent Social Iaues.
Gallup nJd ..t.dcnc• for bla IUl-
'"tJon lneludect a die tn e.burcb
att•oclance tn 1'71. for the llnt
Umein neariytwodec8des •
Be said bis survey aboWed 42 percent ot American.a attended
church OI' •Ymloeue lD a typical
week.
"Our surveys also sbowed
church membersblp to be oo the
upswia& d~ the year, with
about seven in 10 now describing
themselves as church mem-
bers,'' he wrote.
He aalcl ai.x in 10 people sur-·
veyed say their religious beliefs
are "very Important" and cited
aa further evidence of revival the
considerable Interest In what be
termed experimental reu,ton.
such as mysticism. yoaa and tranacendental meditation.
He said the evangelical move-
ment appeared to be "provldinJC
a powerful thrust" for the re~
. llgioua revival.
But Gallup said the surveys
sufleated that America Jll&y be
on y "1uperficially religious"
with religion on the upswing,
"while .. morality la loafnl its in-
fluence."
• He aaid that while N percent or
people respond.in& to Gallup irr
'lerviews said they believed in
"God, or a universal spirit,., only
«percent said they bad "a creat
deal of confidence in organised re·
Ueion."
Among the factors be s11d
could account for increased re-
li&ioua activity in the nation
were:
-A turning inward to seek re-
fu'e f~m pressures of everyday exatence;
-A search for nonmaterial values;
-President Carter's Qpen dis-
Rites Slated
For: Ex-mayor
Charles Hart
Visitation bas been scheduled
Thursday evening at Pacific
View Mortuary for former
Newport Beach Mayor Charles
Hart who died Monday al the age
of82.
Visitation will be from
5 p .m. to 9 p.m. Services
will be conducted Friday at 11
a .m . at Pacific View Chapel with
entombment to follow at Pacific
View Memorial Park.
A widower, Mr. Hart is sur-
vived by a cousin, May Stewart
of New York.
Mr. Hart served as mayor
from 1962 to 1964 and spent a total
of eiiht years on the city council.
He was a past president of the
Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa
Board of Realtors, a life member
of Newport Beach American
Legion Post 291, and a member
or the Seafaring Masonic Lodge
708.
cuuloa ot bl.t 0W11 r•Uc,loul
belle&;
-A normal 11P1win1 fOIJOWIDC a decllDI In lntenst aDd actlY117.
Tbe )oQrna1 II a publlcaUoa ot
the Board for Homeland
lllnlltrlte ol the Ua.lt.ed Church olChrlst.
Neimman
Nabbed in
Qrug Bust
'
St1te Bureau of Narcotics En·.
rorcemenl agents visited the
home or Anaheim Bulletin
newspaper Mana1in1 Editor
Marvin R ... llarv1' Olien Kon·
day night and arrested him on
marijuana possession charges.
Olien, 43, was booked fOf' in·
vesti1aUon of possession of mari-
juana for sale and cultivatiOll ol
marijuana.
He was released from custody
on bis own reco1ntzance, promis·
ing to appear to anawer the
charges on a date yet to be
scheduled in Central Orange
County Judicial District Court.
A spokesman for the Bureau of
Narcotics Enforcement said to-
day that three plants were seized
as evidenc ... , in addition to a
s mall quantity or alle1ed mari-
juana inalde the home.
Investigators said they
checked Olsen's backyard on the·
basis of a tip from Oranie County
political financier Gene Conrad
who ii presently indicted on
seven counta of fraud connected
with hil loan brokerage firm.
The state agency normally
concentrates attention on dnig
dealers. City police would
normally handle a matter involv-
ing smaller quantities of alleged
marijuana.
Olsen discussed his arrest at
great length with a Daily Pilot
newsman today, but declined to
elaborate on any issue of guilt or
innocence because he had not
consulted bis attorney.
The Los An&eles Times quoted
financier Conrad as sayi..ng be
tipped off authorities partly
because the newspaper Olsen
edits is owned by Freedom
Newspapers, Inc., · wblcb also pu~lisbes the Santa Ana . Re1ister. ·
Bloodmobile Set
For H08pital Visit
!be Red Cross bloodmobile
will be at Hoag Memorial
Hospital's Grace Hoag Con-
ference Center June 29 from 2:45 to7:30p.m.
Hoag i. sponsoring the blood· ~obile to increase community
mtereat ~ voluntary donor pro-
grams since commercial blood
drives will be banned in
Callfomla belinning July l. For
an appointment or further in-
formatkla, phone84S-8800. ·
.. ~ .........
INSTRUCTOR OAlfY klNSE• I • (LEFT} GIVU SAND CASTlE BUILDING TIPS
8e11Ch Palldine hcomee • CotJege Credit CourH at UC San Diego
Castling for Credit
<:allege Teacher Gi't'ea Sand Structrue Tips
SAN DIEGO CAP) -Your sand casUes fall-
ing down a Jot lately? Try "An Introduction to
Sand CasUe Building" at the UC San Diego.
The "professor" of the uoiversity extension
class. Gary Kinsella, usually a pottery in·
structor, says the class will not only help stu·
dents build castles that stand up but will help
them deaJ with the inevitability of the tide
knocking them down.
"They last only one day. But there's
something perfect about the cycle. Building it.
W atchlng the erosion of the sun and the wind.
And then sitting on the beach at sunset and
watchinc it wash away with the tide.
"I LOOK AT IT THE way I look at a good
game of tennis," Kinsella said. "You play it.
You experience the challenge. U you've done
well you feel &ood. But when it's over there's
nothing to take home with you.
KINSEUA. JOINED ON THE beach by
fellow Instructor John Laver, said the best
way to build sand castles is to sculpt the sand
from the top down, never going back once
you've finished a section.
You use wet sand -about 500 gallons of
water for two tons of sand to make a four.foot·
high castle. And don't let it dry out or it will blow away
before it can be washed away. "These things are ephemeral," he said.
Leather Boat
From Ireland
Nearing Coast
LONDON (AP)-The leather
boat Brendan and its crew or four
were reported tooay to be within
280 miles of Gander Bay, New·
foundland.
A spokesman for the Leather
Institute, which Is sponsoring the
cross-Atlantic voyage, said that
the boat contacted a New·
foundland radio station to report
their position and that "all's "1ell
on board."
The men are attempting to pro·
ve the possibility of a voyage by
Jrish · Saint Brendan in an old
manuscript which claimed Bren·
dan sailed lo the New World
about 600 A.D. The adventurers
made Iceland last Jlily after a
two-month voyaee from Ireland,
but were halted there by storms.
The boat, sewn of 42 oxhides over
a wooden frame, set forth again
May 8 for the remainder of the
4,000.mile trip.
Bombings Hurt 3
MADRID, Spain CAP) -
Separate bombings this morning
1n1ured three persons and
damaged commuter rail lines
just before polling places opened
for Spain's first free election in 41
years
•
'Chastity Crimea'
Still Go Unpunished
BOSTON (AP> -The
Massachusetts legislature is in
no hurry to protect men from
"crimes against chastity."
Ratification of a state Equal
Rlghts Amendment last fall was
followed by a flood of legislation
to rewrite more than 100 statutes
to make them apply equally to
men and women.
But so far, none of tbe bills bas
become law. and there are signs
that they may be permanently
stalled.
A controversy centers on one
measure that would, for the first
time, allow police to nab male
prostitutes ..
That bill simp\.y inserts the
words "man" and "boy" into a
law which imposes penalties for
"whoever fraudulently or deceit-
fully entices a woman ... or girl
from her father's house ... for
the purpose of prostitution."
The legislation ste,ms in part.
Crom a case in Brockton, Mass.,
several years ago. A young man
who advertised in a newspaper
for female "companionship" was
arrested for prostitution, but \,be
case was thrown out of court.
The judge in the case said the
man was in fact involved in pro-
stitution, but that the state laws
prohibiting it were limited to
women.
The male prostitute bill was
not part of the original ERA
package, though It is now in·
eluded. The measure, "lone with
four companion bills, was ftled
by the Police Officers Legislative
Organization of Massachusetts.
Lumped under the handling of
"crime against chastity," the
bills would allow police to snare
not only male prostitutes but also
women woo lure men away from
home for "a clandestine mar·
riage." male brothel keepers and
female rapists.
Among other ERA-related bills
is one that would outlaw the pre·
f e rence g iven to military
veterans in civil service hiring,
an advantage usually enjoyed by
men.
All the bills are in the
legislature's Judiciary Commit·
tee, and apparenUy they will stay
there.
Walkout Avoided
LOS ANGELES CAP> -The
county bas avoided a doctors'
walkout at three hospitals by
agreeing to terms of a two-year
contract with the county's 1,500
physicians.
'Can't Say for Sure'
·. New ,Planet Shapes Up?
MOUNTAIN VIEW CAP) -
, S cient.lsts at the ~ational
Aeronautics and Sp•ce Ad·
ministration reported today the
possibility or a first in man's
st.udy or space -obsetving the
formation of a planet.
"The process of planet forma·
lion is not well understood at all,
so we can't say for sure," said
Dr. Edwin Erickson, co-~ investigator on the discovery.
• "But this star has a disc around
it. We have never seen another
stellar-type object with a disc
around it."
Tbe star. called MWC 349, ls in
tlle constellation Cygnus and
cannot be seen from Earth. It
was spotted about 40 years ago
but only until the past year has
the disc been observed and scien-
tists considered the Possibility of
a planet being born.
Erickson said there w.,.. at
least three sctenUfio reasons to
believe the star is evOlviDg into a
.Planet. -The star Is much brtchter ln
vwb1e Utbt wave 1.atbs tban it
should be. be said. Also, il has
steadily 1<11t ~btaeas ii.Dee ta
first idenUflcatJon in the 18309,
and the spectrum of ener11
radiated 11 not that ot a hot tar,
be said.
In addltJon to rldtlOD, Ot.btt
team members 1tudytng th It.at
include Drt. Fred Witteborn and
D.W. Sbecker ot NASA'1 Am
Reaettth Centu aCd Dr. Pttft
Strittmatter of th Ulliveraat.t ot
Arbona. Dr. Rods ~ ~al tM Unlveniiy ot Arf.llOaa,
!
• J. ••
...... ,.,....
ARTIST'S CONCEPT OF Pl.ANET..fORMING 'DISC STAR'
A First for ... n·e Study of $pace?
la cbieloftMteam.
ibe team said In an announ~ement that "the
•linltkance of the find lies In the
fact t.bll planets may well be
fonntna now ID the lumlnoua disc
Ol bave just (onned ln the cas
outlido the 1tir'1 lumlnOUJ dQc.
Cbaracterl&Uca of \hit rapidlf
cha•ilOI di.Jc 1bould n.a UJht an pi.Mt ronnatlbn iri our IOI• .,..i.m. ••
The star 11 about 10,000 lltbt
Jears from Earth, meaning
tbat evenu observed now
actually occurred 10.000 years
a10, Ume required tor ita U•bt to
reach Earth.
The scientific findin11 wens
announced 1lmultaneou1Jy fn
Mountain View and In AUant.a.
•b•re the American
4ftrQDoib1ca1 SoCiety ii botdinl
ill annual meit.baf. .
•
Shelved
A flDPNal to an foraer Or•••• Coaat7 Oraad ,.,., ........ ,.,.. ... ~-ol UMil' ........ u-CID
coaty =--operlll-• wu•rTlrr lubf~ ~~ l'!d1 An~ .....
,..., tW .... eo0......-.._,
lb• ProDola1. llllllQf • a1mYar practice bM been ltu1ed Ira Lm
Anttlee Olu.Dty.
Ke IDd there hu bMn aome frustntlcn oa the pert of fonner
Jur1 snemben wbo bave not
learned ti actJon bu been taken
oa tbe:lrnieoaus*'clations. . ""...,..... ·: Tbe recommendations con-tained an eud-of.tbe-year re·
pOrt abor'tty belOre t.be Jury la dla·
mJNed•cb year.
SENATOR BRIGGS SQUARES OFF wmt GAY PROTESti!R •
Aroualng the Hornoeexuala' Ire In &an f r•nclaco ·.
Supenilor Tom Biley said be
would oppoae paat juron• re-
vlewt, adding "ahtmni ll'OUPI
can be very devast.aUnc to the
system."
He said the review could offer
some put jurors a chance to br·
ing up a "pet peeve and provide
embarrassment."
Supervisor Ralph Clark added,
"lt is good in theory but in fact
some ol the grand jurors' recom·
mendationa are not viable ...
Briggs Seeks Ban
On Gay Teachers
He said county officials
already must make public
response to jury recommend•·
lions. Imposing another review,
he said, would overburden the
staff. .
"I don't think they (grand
jurors) are necessarily experts
.in governmental e>rocesses or
management.'' be added.
Anthony said bis proposal
would be that the members ol the
Grand Jurors Association, an or-
g ani%ation of former grand
jurors, would do the reviews
without coet to the county.
He said the Idea was to make
sure Gnnd jury reports are not
hastily answered by county of-
ficials and then forgotten.
Anthony said perhaps the pro-
posal could be discussed again
alter supervisors learn bow the
reviews are working in Los
An&eles.
<:aunty Bus
For Coronen'
Meet Nixed
County superriaot;p think it's
fine that the Callf8mia State
Coroners• and Public Ad-
ministrators' Association ls bold·
ing its July 18 th.rough 2' con·
ference in Orange County.
But they don't think the con-
ven tloneers warrant free
t.(ansportatlon to local tourist at-
tractions in a county-owned bus.
Supervilors unanimously re·
jected a request from Sheriff.
Coroner Brad Gates and Public
Administrator /Guardian James
Helm to use a bus which normal·
ly carries jail inmates.
Supervisor Phil Anthony said
transpartatlon to the tourist cen·
ters should be paid by the as•
sociation or individuals wisblng
to visit the attractions.
Warning Issued
BELGRADE, Yllgoslavia
(AP) -Yugoslavia ope~ 35-nation preparatory co
terence on the Helsinki
ments today with a warning that
''!inister forces" are trying to
undermine East-West detente.
SAN FRANCISCO -Sur-
rounded by a jeerine throng of
gays, State Sen. John V. Briggs
(R·Fullerton), announced from
the city hall steps his introduc·
lion of a bill to bar homosexuals
from teaching in California.
County OKs
$2Mmion
Jobs Plan
A $2 million federally financed
jobs program for 12 cities and 11
school districts won the un-
anlmoua approval or Orange
County supervisors Tuesday.
The proeram will create new
jobs for the unemployed under
terms of the federal Com·
prebensive Employment and
Training Act CCETA>.
Supervisors later ar• expecte<l to approve another $1.9 million in
new positions for county govern·
ment, cities and other agencies.
The county administers the
program for some cities. wblle
others receive direct allocations
from the federal government.
Agencies along the Orange
Coaat receiving allocations Tues·
day included the Huntington
Beach Union Hiib School Dis·
trict, $63,342; Irvine Unified
School District, $112,130 ;
Capistrano-Laguna Regional Oc·
cupatioo Program, $9,910.
Also, the Saddleback Com·
·munity College District,
$258,603; City of Laguna Beach,
$82,404; City of San Clemente,
$41,172; and City of Seal Beach,
$65,874.
Countywide the CET A pro·
gram wlll bring ~.3 million in
federal funds into the county to
provide about 3,000 jobs, half of
them positions already filled a
year ago and half of them new
jobs. ,
County Manpower Commission
officials said the county's share
is part of a $6.6 billion na·
tioowide program providing
600,000 jobs.
The new positions are designed
for abort-term projects which
would be completed in 12 month.!
or less.
..Nazi ... Bigot. •. down with ,
the new Hiller" . a crowd of about 75 to 100 gay protesters
cried Tuesday as police guarded
Senator Briggs, a candidate for
governor.
One San Francisco policeman
had to help Bnges up after he
tripped oo the stairs and fell dur-
ing his address, at first leading to
spectator fears be bad been
knocked down.
Following the tumultuous
public press conference lo which
Senator Brj.,ggs insisted be
foresaw no loud or violent reac-'
lions, be was escorted away from
the gays by policemen bran-
dishing batons.
"Any reasonable person would
have expected trouble, .. said San
Francisco Police Department
Public Relations Officer Michael
O'Toole.
His precinct is in th,e
nieghborbood of Brius' talk 0n the steps of City Hall, just six
blocks from Polk Street, tile
-center of San Francisco's gay
community.
Briggs aaid bis bill would not
deny homosexuals employment
or the right to rent a residence
but would allow public school
boards to bold public bearings on
allegations that a teacher is
homosexual.
Asked if he feels his anti-gay
campaign will aid his
gubernatoriaJ candidacy, Briggs
was quite candid.
"That's up to God." be said.
"I might," Briggs told
newsmen when asked if he may
pursue legislation aimed at
eliminating homosexual ad·
mini.strators or district trustees
from school board systems.
Briggs returned last week
from a trip to Florida at bis own ·
expense, where be and bis wife
worked as aides in singer Anita
Bryant's anti-gay crusade.
·'This ls just the first shot in the
war against the battle of the sex-
es,•' Briggs said at that time. ·
Another Orange County As·
semblyman Bruce Nestande, R-
Orange, has a bill banning
homosexual marriages that has
already passed the Assembly.
The bill was to be di.scuased on
the Senate floor today.
Nestande's measure stipulates
marriages may only be contract·
ed between men and women,
while the current Jaw mentions
neither gender.
The Cherished Gift!
Gem
Talk
. 1
By J.C. Hl'M Pl/RIES
ISAAEL'S DIAMONDS Israel's scrappy neht for survival
Includes a heavy dependence upoo,
the diamond industry. More than half,
of the diamonds sold by jewelers in
tbls country were cut there. Some
Israeli• even bellevo that tbeh-
nation's ~ic sun1val depends
upon holding, and lncreJSina, their
share of the diamond-cutt(Qg market.
It Is a m~r source of American
dollars, wh1cb are lhen used to bUJ
American products~ includln•· cSefense armaments. Ramal Gan,
out.side Tel Aviv, is the center of this·
busy dl.mond cutttnc tncSustry. The
Israel Diamond Exchange, also
f
COIN JEWELRY FOR IBM
in 14 Karat Gold from Wideband
located there, is a multi·atorled
beeblve of buyh\« and sellln1
acUvity. The buUdinc, desltned to
houae 1,000 buyera and sellers,
averqet aboiut 7,000 d&Uy. It hat
been compared \<I the \nside Of a city
1ubway train at rush hour.
Frequently, thtte lre $50 mllUon m
diamoi>dl ln the li'•dln1 room at one
time. The diamonds come from
Af rlca, but the Israeli t.oUcb Jtt.I
them ready for aettln1. taraell
.diamond export• c \lid_ hlL flJO
mJ..WciDW17'U. 'il;lilrMX::~~::c:;=:::a::;::::D;:ije:~~Cii::=~:D;Ji:llm!lllitJ:
(
3 l'-.eeC'••n
NEW YORK CAP) -Tbn!e
CroaUan gunmen who forced
their way into the Yueoslav
mission on Fifth A venue after
shooting a security f uard were
brought loto Crim nal Court
under tight security today fDr
arraignment.
· A Yugoslav ambassador said after the gunmen were arrested
Tuesday afternoon that
( IN SHORT J
AQ818UD8 IN DINING CAR ONCE 9RAC!D NEW YORK-cHICAGO AUN
Raturbfahed, But No Longer Elegant, 8ro8dway Umlted I• 71 Tod•J
Golden Era ReeaHed
PHILAl>ELPHIA (AP )-The.
Broadway Llmlted, a crack train
of the golden era of railroading,
turned 75 today and tome rail
buffs planned a birthday party
for her en route from New York City to Chicago.
It was on June JS, 1902, that the
old Pennsylvania l\ailroad
unveiled the Broadway Limited,
and the arcbrlval New York
Central introduced its 20th
Century Umited.
col'n field alanaled the Broadway
Llmited's passage.
On its maid en run the
Broadway Umlted, then a steam
engine and four wooden cars,
traveled the 904 miles from New
York to Chicago In 20 hours.
Today it takes 19. The best tittles were reached in the late 19405
when a spanking new Broadway
Limited made the westbound trip
to 16 hours, and returned in lSIAt.
ln U187, an edltorlal in the
Chicago Times applauded railroads:
"THE INVENTION OF the
printin1 press and the creation of
the railway are the two leadinc
events in the history of man," the newspaper said.
They'll drink to that on the
Broadway Limited toni1ht.
Allelbee.Y Airlinet aireed to tuarantee a ·seat ln a nonsmok·
in& section ol an aircraft to all
puseqen requestina them ln a
settlement reached about a year
ago. AlleeheslY, which paid an
$8,000 fine. then imposed a Smok•
inc ban ca• percent of ita aeat.a, a percentqe that would tncnue
if sufficient numbers of
passengers demanded to sit in a
nonsmok:Jp1 aeetion. The All~ tullng followed
a complabit by two antiamqking
groups.
A CAB spokesman mistakenly
reported Tuesday that the
Eastern decision marked the firtt time an airline had agreed
to 1uarantee a passenger'• re-
3-wee~ Coma Eads
••n CDTA00.1' IS UM tint
tlm• toCMtblaf Ilk• tb.1a de:allnc
w1t.b 1.-en b., llapJ*Md, '' aald Alu Pollock. a CAB •pakeamaa.
CODIU.IMn ll'OU.PI la.Id they
hope tbe 'larffment. which 1oes befor. the CAB board for ap-
proval. wiJl le.d to the same out-come In similar complaints penct.
in1 •lain.It TWA and United
Airlines.
A spokesman for the Tobacco
tnatitute, wblcb represents
manufacturers, urged smoters
to "~ly protest this ap-
parent cave-in by a major a.iJ'llne
to the tyranny ol self-appointed
zealots wbo CCIOtemptuousl,y re-
gard smokers as second·claas citizens."
The spokesman said It ia time
for Consreu to take a "new loolc
at whatever authority the CAB
thlnka it bu to push some free
citizens out the back of Eastern
AlrUnes nitht cjblns. ''
authorities here had been
warned that the separatist
Croats would attempt violence to
coincide with the opening ot the
Helsinki aereementa copference
in Belgrade.
THE RIVALRY between the
two was intense, their "speed
wars" filled with the hoopla of
the steamboat races they replaced.
But after World War II,
jetliners began cutting incredible
time out of schedules. Modem highways made travel by car
more convenient. Passenger trains were left behind.
IN 1105 SHE WAS clocked at
127 miles per hour. Today,
thanks to speed limits on the
deterlorafed roadbeds, she
seldomdoet haltthat.
It wu a time of rotebuds for
the ladies, mint.a after dinner,
shined shoes, whlskbrooms
lavlably wielded, hair alnged for
a quarter by the barber on board,
conductors with sUver watches
and paternal bearini.
Child-hero Succumbs
Veto Collld Bold
WASHINGTON (AP >
Members of the Houae or
· Representativea, voting againat
·.President Carte~ in Cavor of 17
, controversial water projects.
don't appear to have the strength
to overcome a possible veto.
The 218·194 vote on fundin1 16
of the project.a was unexpededly
close Tuesday, apparently
surprlslna even White House
aides . One said the
administration expected to have
only 175 votes on the issue. The
amendment did not attempt to
eliminate fundini for a 17th
project Carter opposes, the
Auburn Dam in California.
Ftmd lJse E,,ed
WASHINGTON CAP> -A key
House committee, approving
President Carter's plan for
· higher oil taxes, now must decide
where the money should go.
The vote Tuesday by the Ways
, and Means Committee on higher
oil prices Is expected to lnereue
the cost of 1asollne by 7 cents a gallon by 1981.
' MUer Re-elec!ced
WASJDNGTON CAP) -Arnold
Miller claimed t a e has won election to a
second term
as president of
the United
M i n e
Workers. His
two opponent.a
conceded they
had lost. In Ch a r·
leston ,
' W.Va .. Mlller M1
• thanked his supporters tor aivln'
' him another nve years In office.
' He promised to work toward~nd-
• in& the bickerlng in the 277,000-
member union and to resotre
• peace in the s trike-ridden
coalfields.
The Broadway Llml~'s dnce
glistening red cars now carry the
red. white and blue Amtrak logo,
a symbol ot hope for the stubborn
traveler who loves the
clickety·clack sound of wheels on rails.
SEVERAL GROUPS OF
raUroad buffs have booked space
on the Broadway Limited for
toniibt's anniversary ride from
New York City to Cbicaao, the
occasion to be marked by
complimentary champa1ne and
a birthday cake.
But a wobblf roildbed wtu keep
the train wel under the speeds
reached decades ago when a
nash or red through an Ind1ana
A time when little boys' eyes
got blc when a train went by.
IN 1917 THE 20TB Century
Limited made her tut run. The
Broadway Limited and the
Pennsylvania 'a other New
York-to-Chicago train, the .
General.. merged, but retained
the Broadway Limited 's name.
When Amtrak took over
respon.slblllty for the nation's
. inter-city rail pusenger service
on May 1, 1971, the Broadway
Llmlted's rolling stock was in ·
need ot repair, the fresh flowers
long gone fro~ the dining car. A
year later Amtrak rolled out a re!urb~b~ lrain.
Nervous Children
Name Man as Killer
DETROIT (AP> -Three nervous second-&raders who watched in
terror as their teacher was shot to death in the classroom have pointed
In court to her estranged husband u the klller.
A fourth child, not a member of the class, also identified defendant
Al Lewis, 47, as the man be directed toward Bettye ldcCaster's
classroom shortly before the
shooting.
THE FOUR WERE among 15
children who testilied in the
opening Tuesday of the
Recorder's Court trial of Lewts,
charged with first -detree
murder in the death of the
45·year·old Mias Mccaster.
Robert Snow, 7, pointed toward
Lewls and told the Jury, "He
talked to Miss Mccaster. He shot
1 her."
But 11 ot the 15 children who
testified said they dld not
recognize the killer in the
courtroom..
STUDENTS IN THE class
have received psychiatric
counaelini since the murder to
help them recover from the
treuma. ,
Pamela Burnett told the jury,
"When I waa in the classroom,
somebody said to her, "Your
husband wants to talk to you.'
Then be came in and pulled a gun
and shot her.' "
When she left the witness
stand, she ran to her mother and
be~an sobbin«.
1'HE CmLDREN answered questions quietly, forcing the five
men and nine women jurors to
lean forward to hear. .
El1ht-year-old Fred Mrozek
jiggled in the chair, took a deep
breath and replied, "He walked
in and said Mr. Kline (the school
principal) wanted her. Then be
pulled out the J(un and sbot her."
Thunderstonns Weaken
Hail,, TwiAten Dot Pana_ of J!~•t
occurred In Scottsblutf •ftd &aytrcl.
TN<e-•rt0re-1s.,lnlllt'le1.
Hi.ti Lew ~~.
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UlftN-•llllla.~i. •
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.
(AP)-A S.year-old boy who was
revived after 30 minutes under
water bu lost his three-week
battle for life.
Gerald Finkbeiner bad been in
a coma since he almost drowned
May 24 while trying to rescue a
2-year-old brother from a pond
on the family's farm. A new llfe·
savin1 technique was credited
with reviving Gerald despite the
lonetimehespenlinthewater.
HOSm'AL OFFICIALS said Gerald suddenly stopped
breathing and died about 5:30
p. bl. Tueaday.
"I'm golni to miss him ... he
was l1l)' ri&ht-band man," the boy's father aatd.
Mr. and Mra. Gerald Fink-
beiner" had completed their dally
visit to their 10011 bedside Just a
short time before the boy died.
They learned of their son's death
by telephone when they reached home.
THE FAT&Ea SAID today his
son'• death was "a blessing to
me. The way the circumstances
were, he would never have been
right. The doctors said be never
would be the same and would need constant care.•'
Gerald wu.Jn crltlcal condi·
tion the entire three weeks at
Butterworth Hospital. Doctors
said there was no real improve-
ment although be breathed
without a mechanical respirator
for the final few days of bia lite.
Gerald waded into the farm
pond last month to save a 2-year-
old brother who had chased a toy
boat lnto the water. A '·year-old sister 1ummoned her moth~r.
. who reecu~ the younger boy but
, .
wu unable to fmd Gerald. A
rescue squad found him.
GE&ALD'S TBBEE·WEEK:
survival was attributed to the pond's chilly waters and a new
llfe-savtnc technlq\le that avoids
trying to restore the heartbeat
wlth electrical shock or drugs UD·
til the body has been warmed.
Cold water lowers the body
temperature and reduces the
body's need for oxy1en.
Dr. M. J. Nelmerotr, assistant
professor ot Internal medicine at
the University of Michigan, is
credlted with devising the tecbnl-
que. Nelmeroft, who waa not
penonally involved ln Gerald's
cue, said most persons revived
with the tecbnlque recover
within 12 to 24 "hours and show
marked improvement quickly •
..
IAlrgeB• ..
A property d.iTWon Ml'leant for the Loe
Angeles Police Department looks over
part ol three tons of marijuana seized by
narcotic officers in Ea.st lps Angeles
Tuesday. The marijuana had a~ street
value ol $5.S million, police said. Three
men were arrested.
Vidow,
Kida Due
State l-ay
VElftUBA (A.P)-Tbe
widow ad two chlJdren
of a Camarlllo State
Hospital pedeat wbo wM·
stra.naled wW let a tot.al
of $180,000 from tbe
state.
The '#ron1ful deatb
------------------settlement for tbe sur-
Pay Hike Bill
Veto Planned
SACRAMBNTO (AP)-Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr. says the ~11 to raise the salaries of state con·
stitutional officers by $15,000 to $20,000 a year "wiU
never see the light of day." In other words, he'll
veto the bill bf Sen. Albert Rodda, D-Sacramento, if
it ever reaches his desk.
In a side ... alk news conference, Brown said he
didn't even care whether
the proviai~bikin1 rus ( J own pay fr $49,100 to ST.ATE
$65.000 were eleted -he _
would ve\o the bill "-------anyway.
He said be favors some raise for constitutional
officers. who haven't bad one for eight years, but he
wouldn't speelfy how much.
S,,. Vertrlet a..ne..,,e Set
LOS ANG'ELES <AP) -Attorneys for convict·
cd spy Andrew Daulton Lee will challenge the
verdict Monday on grounds that Lee's sequestered
jury found out his co·delendant bad been convicted.
One juro~. Pe1gy Fuller, revealed in an in·
terview with the Lancaster Ledger-Gazette that the
jury accidentally learned of the conviction of
Christopher Boyce when they saw a newspaper
headline readi•&: ••L.A. Spy Guilty!"
Teaellen Bit tt'lt• c .. tempt
SAN DIEGO (AP> -The San Dieeo Teachers
Association and ita president, Hugh Boyle, are be· r 1ng cited for C<lltempt l)f Court for refusing to obey
• judicial back-to-work ocden last week.
About 3,000 of the city's S,800 public school
teachers st.ruck for four days, despite a temporary
restraining order issued by one judge on June 6 and
a temporary injunction issued June 8 by Superior
Court Judge Jack R. Levitt.
· nee S.tet• t'W•t.._. l/Jtltdd ~
LOS ANGELES (.\P) -A state bearing ex·
amlner has upheld tWio safety violation cbar&elJ
against the city Fire Pepartment that stemmed
from an airplane crash find fire in which 10 firemen
were injured. •
Administrative Law Judee Jqnah Lebell said In
his 36·page decision Tu~day that evidence at hear·
Inga showed city fire f htera' polye.ter uniforms
inadequate for protectl n against heat and name.
Lebell dlsmtssed 25 less r charges.
SF Sez S..._,• Be'*4 .4 .. 111
SAN PAANCISCO (~P) -For the se<:ood day
in a row, police raided lhe Arena -a spot where
patrons sit behind one·WliY mirrors and watch live
sex shows performed on • round bed.
Police arrested the 1>wner, James Verdon, 31,
and performers Moolca l'denchlni, 21, and Victoria
Verdon, 22, also the owhers's wife, Tuesday. The
three were cited wlth ind~cent exposure.
vivors of Tbomu Lee
Riddle, 37, of Lona'
Beach became public
Tlfesday when tbe file
wu unsealed in Superior
Court.
~lddle was found dead
Feb. 4', 1971, in a
seclusion room. The cor·
oner'• office said be bad
been strangled, but no
witnesses could be
found. He bad been
brou&ht to the h<Mlpilal
for alcohol and druf pro-
blems and bolpita wlt·
nesses said be became
violent an d was
restrained by nine
penom.
lllDDLE'S DEATH
was one ol several at the
hospital probed by a
Ventura County crand
jury last year. Several
doctors and otber employes were indict·
ed, but charges were
dropped for lack of
evidence.
Tbe agreement with
Riddle'• widow, Betty
Jean, and children was
reached May 19. but
sealed because a
criminal charge was
pendinl 11aJ.nst a doct~
who prescribed a tran
qullller for tbe man That c harg e was
dropped June 1.
Tomb1tone
Ordered
Removed
WEAVERVILLE,
Calif. (AP>-A judte bu
ordered apaveatone re-
movtd because It aaya
the deeeaeed, Jail
escapee Leon Whlttleld,
was "murdered, shot in
the back b y John
Howard, Weaverville
sberitf's deputy."
Howard bu brought a
$1 million libel suit
aaalntt the deceased's
father, Ralph Whitfield,
contenttini the atone de-
fames llDC1 dama1ea his
character.
Wbitfteld was shot and
tilled lut Sept. after be
and two others ~caped
from the jall of Trinity
County, ln northern
Calltomla.
-----------....-.. .........._ ------------....-.t ...-._ ---............_ --..-.,..... . ~~~~
Roe~ Star Sued
WomaniSeeb Annual Support
LOS ANGELES (A1 -A woman who lived with rock st Allee Cooper
for six years la suioc or more than
$7 .S million because s says he pro-
ml.aed to support her the rest of her.
life. (Related photo, AlJ >.
Fashion model ~tress Cynt.bta Lani, Z'T, filed the s it Tuesday in
Superioc Court. elalm I that Cooper
agreed to ctve herbal la eamln11.
The tult uU for 000 annual sup·
~rt • .phas Sts milll~as her share of Joinify held uaet.t. T suit alao seeks
SS million in puniUve amaaes .•
"WE'il£ VE&Y s rtous about this
suit," said Ml11 n's attorney.
Marvin MitchellOb wbo says Miu
Lant Is enUUed to a east half ol what
Cooper ls worth -Umated at about
SlO mlllloo.
Mitcbelaon said that Cooper had
verbally 8'l'ffd while they were llv-inl together to support Mias Lan& f~
tbe reat of her life. The couple
separated in August 1915. Two years
ago Ccloper-married Sheryl Goddard.
'"l'llE TWO 01' tbem lived toaether for•~ years when Cooper wu ltlU stru~~ 11 a .,.r1ormer," 11ld
Mite "Al be roee to fame and
fortune, lbe w•t alooi. bell>inl mold
his plMnomeoal career.'' ·
In a similar caH, Mttcbel1on
repretenled Mlcbe!M Marvin in bet
1ult ag.aiut actor Lee Marvin. That
cue wu settled Jut December wben
tbe st.ate Supreme Court beld &hat un-
married Uvtna partnen may lecally
1eek community propel11.
MiH Lane'• caae la "eveo
1tro111er/' MitcbelloOaald.
-------
•
wevegot
the rQnt .
Hqover· upright for you!
--~~~-------------------.
Indoor, outdoor. shag,
sculptured. Whatever your
carpet. we've got your
Hoov~ With apeolol
features for superior
cleaning. With 3-posltlon
. handles. comfortable
grips, quiet< easy.change
bags. super suction power
and edge cleaner for
baseboards. All. to make
your Job o little f~ a
liftle easier.
Vacuums, n. aft stores
except Palm Sprtnos.
A. Convertible Upright with
tip.toe carpet
~. $89.95.
Attachments $14.95.
,
•
mac•-
WatJ to rly
t ta lak Uae GIUt tdttch, but
•• •IT . . o .~icteJa .. op1rad d, revl1ed," or repnonliud ir he-year plan of freeway con-
alrudion.
In otber words, tbe ewport Frffway w put on
tb bact . Wt th the pilot Uc.ht out.
CaJTra du ( Adriana GJanturco aaid rreeways ~osl • kJt ol money and that perhaps Costa Mesa could
look · buildini tennis courta ln the Ditch.
Which brinfs us to the second cift to Costa Mesa
from the department: instut used car lots.
That's lbe Amencan tradition of sitting your old
crate ~ton !he state right of way and sticking a For
Sale sign on 1t. Last week more than 30 such vehicles
were parked on a stretch of dirt off Newport Boulevard.
This does not enhance the beauty of the
boulevard, which bas always needed help.
Which brings us to Newport Boulevard print shop owner Jim Hoover.
Hoover's run-in with officials of the state·
maintained roadway came When he tried to spruce up
a plot of parkway along Newport Boulevard.
It was a weed-choked se.ction of dirt that fit in '\Pery well with the rest of the street.
-
1)' hall.
to dolt In Ju.11. lust In me for the
Spruce-op Rewarda
lt ·s the snowball effect that members of the Costa
Mesa Tomorrow group are looking for.
The downtown businessmen and property
owners group bas initiated an incentive proaram to
recognize commercial or residential property owne~
in the downtown area who do the most to spruce up their area.
Dick Sewell, vice president of the downtown
group, said that by recognizing those cleaner-uppers,
the organization hopes others will follow.
And that's what Costa Mesa Tomorrow is all
about. Winner of the first monthly Project Improve-
ment Award was Betty Burkart, a longtime Harbor
Area realtor who turned a run-down photography
studio into an attractive realty office in less than two weeks.
Mrs. Burkart put about $10,000 into her project,
but Costa Mesa Tomorrow officials said the award
can be won by residents just' showing real interest in their properties. ,
But when he took shovel and hoe to the mess and
tried to landscape it, CalTrans officials told him be
couldn't clean ue his act. Not without a city i>ermit. Their reasomng?
"You don't have to go overboard to clean up the
downtown area," Sewell said. "If everyone would just
maintain their own properties there would be 100 per·
cent improvement." 'Why do you keep pestering us? Can't you see
If Hoover were to quit maintaining the parkway, And that certainly wouldn't hurt the business c Ii mate in the downtown area. C we're still on our honeymoon?' •\
Take a
Long Look
At Miami
( SYD~EY H4.RWS)
While it is admittedly hard to
stigmatize any group as such, it
is becoming increasinely clear
that amon. those who call
themselves 'builders" or "de·
velopers" many will have more
lo answer for in the next world
than most of us.
To take only one glaringly
gross example, when you look al
what these
people have
done to Miami
Beach in
sca r ce l y
more than 20
years, you sec
a v i v i d
caricature or
lhe unbridled
greed. short·
l>ightedness,
vulgarity and ul\imate
bankruptcy oC the building
mania. They have taken an Ideal
phy s ical location and
transformed it i'nto a grotesque
distortion of community and
recreational life.
This indigenously c;harming
stretch of peninsula, a mile wide
and seven miles kmg. suffered -
and I use the verb advisedly -its
second boom starling in the
1940s, when wildly rococo hotels
and apartment buildings were
permitted <nay, encouratged> to
dominate the ocean-front.
" CHEEK by jowl, together wJlh
the adjoinine Maches which re·
duced public access, thls edifice
complex became, in effect, the
private domain of a handful ofm.
vestment companies and factor-
ing cqrporations, controlling
struelurts that were mortaaged
up to their eyeballs, over·priced,
und~financed, and competing
with one another no~ in services
Pr cuisine. but in expensively
tawdry glitter and high kitsch.
When J visited thiit enclave, a
half·doien years ago, Miami
INSIDE LAS VBGAS .. By
Mario Pwlo. Grosset and Dunlap.
as3 Paces. $14.05.
For thole mildly interested in t.u Vesas but '1rith no are1t de-
fire to Co to the neon city to
Nlilty that 7en, Mario Pum's
.. Jna1de Las Vqu" oupt to pro-
,. a aaUafactory 1ub1tltute.
Puso, aUt.boi' of the belt.sewn,
•'The Godfatber." tella in chatty, nlaxed. anf)cdot6:.loaded proee
!••rytbin1 anyotie could joulblJ want to blow about Lu
Ve1u and b1I tat is reinlOtted
u well u mllwned by an •bun·
dance ·o1 pbotoaraptil -bath in
black Md WbJti and In color -
tbal are l e)J exc:ellaa •
.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Whatever happened to
Costa Mesa's 1reat
Garbenstangel Contest?
There mt.ISt be dozerus of
old models lying around
gathering dust. Why not
drag them out?
E.W.E.
Gloomy Got• cemmtnts art"'-"'" lly ,.aOtrl 111d don .. nt<enorHy "''IKI IM •le-41 ol lllt nt~INPtr !ttncl your ,_i
..... to GIOMtt[ OH, Dally PHOI.
•
Beach officials were still rejec-
tive and resentful of any
criticism. All this has changed
now . City officials and civit
leaders are openly worried about
lhe decliJie as a tourist mecca.
and are currently proposing a
vast S750 million "redevelop·
ment" plan. It had not occurred
to them that "redevelopment ..
would not have been necessary if
de\'elopment had been planned,
on a rational. ·environmental.
und egalitarian basis.
WITH THE rarest of excep·
lions. cl~velopers are interested
in developing only one thing: lhe
rate of return on investment per
cubic fooL All other concerns are
subsidiary, if existent at all. As
private enterprisers, this may be
their privilege; buJ as citizens of
communitieS', we bave the com·
mensurate obligation to restrain
and redired t.taeir megalomania
by the most rigorous supervision ot land-use for the welfare of the
whole. <Including, ironically, the
true long-term welCare of pro-
perty-owners themselves.>
It was hardly Adam Smith ·s
concept ot capitalis& to allow
privateers to r~vage the
landscape. and then have public_
funds pay for the repair of these
rava~es. Rather than penaJLze
the pu_blic for the ex·
cesaes of a few entrepreneurs
who have no abiding interest In
the good or the community, so
such heedless .. development ..
should be curbed or techanneled
long before it has a chance to
turn a lovely piece of land like
Miami Beach into a travesty or
Whf'l the travel posters promise.
THE BOOKMAN
...
Bearitag l•pafred Clrilclren ' .
Pllre°:tS ShOuld Act Promptly
To the Editor: .------------
Thank you ror your article on [ ]
the school tor Hearing l('l'lpaired . MAILBOX
Children. (Wed., Jane 8, 1977) _ .
"Infants Aided." As a parent of a ------------~
hearing impaired child, one ot Letter• Jrom reader• are Wtrlcome.
the &real.est probl~ms we have The right to condenae Letter• to fit
raced in our education process i.s apace or eliminate libel ia re1erved.
the education of the general , Utt,.,., o/ 300 word.s or leH wiU be
--«public. giveit pre/erf!ttce. Alrlettns miut in·
Not only have some hearing cl"" siQ1Jature and' rnaiUng address
losses been discovered as early but 11amea maJI be withheld on re·
as s ix months, many have been · (JWff f/ tu//icfent rea-. ii apparent. di~covered at birth and training l'M'I/ wm not be publiahed.
of the child and the parent begins
immediately.
This article. in my opinion.
leads one to think that the Taft
Hearing Impaired School js the
only school, in the area or the 15
county school districts, that
serves the hearing impaired
child. This is far from the actual
truth.
A VERY important fact that
should have been brought out is
that the Taft School ofCers the
"total communication" ap-
proach in deaf education. Thal
means the children are taught
sign language, finger spelling
and speech.
The Newport-Mesa School Dis·
lrict also has a program for the
deaf and hard or hearing children
in the same county school dis·
trlcts served by the Taft School.
The Newport.Mesa Program is
an oraJ program. which means
that the children are taught
speech and language, with nc'
sign language or finger spelling.
Their program also has a class
for the 18 lo 36 month children.
Thjs program also has Middle
and High School.
The John Tracy Clinics in Los
Angeles and Costa Mesa also pro-
vide education for the deaf.
Children may enter their pro·
gram at any ave, up to 6 years
old. The Los A.:geles loeation
also provides evening classes for
the parents. Education of the parents can also be a prime fac-
tor in the development of the
child. The clinic also provides
audiological testing of the
children.
PARENTS or a child with SUS·
peeled bearing loss sln>uld not
contact the school first. First
they should contact an ear
specialist who tn turn can direct
them lo an audiologist Cor an ex·
amination which can tell them
how great the loss is.
Before the parents contact a
spectlic adlool about their child:
they should eontact lhe Special
Education Directol" of their own
school district. ThJs person can
tell them about all the school$
that are available for their c:blld
and can help them anange for a
vlsit to each 1chool to view t.he
program.
The audiologist can usually
direct the parents to schools in
their area, but are known lO
sometimes favor one program
over anot.ber~Aaain, iL ii the de·
clslon olthe parent.s.
Finally. ume is ol lhe essence.
Uur children are tMnorrow's chalts, and in ordu for a deaf or
h1td ot hearlnc per:aoo to be a
lf·1Uflicient, 1uc('ftal\il adult,
lhla penon mmt be 1lven th
beit possible educaUon ind 1t
muat begin lmmediately u~
di&1n01J.S.
MARTHA L. REITER
To the F.ditor: ...
As a 1ear·round oceanfront re·
sident I strongly object to the ban
oC dogs on the beach and side·
walk: durtne tb~ summer months.
I see no reason why the residents
can't continue their walk and ex·
ercise , period during the early
and late hours of each day.
The city coamcil mu.st be aware
oC the fact that the property near
the ocean allows very limited
yard space. BecaO!e of this limit·
ed space we must rely on the
beach area to e"etcise our dogs.
The council must alsctoe aware
that the year·round beach resi·
dents have their dogs for the
purpose of property protection as
well H for companionship. Out of
kindness to the anlmals• they
must have an an area for ex· ercise.
As a taxpayer and resident of
Newport Beach I do not accept
being relegated to the alleys,
narrow sidewalks and busy
streets with my dog while the
non-reshienta are permitted to
leave their brok~n bottles and
abandOMd picnics on the beach
day aflerday.
MRS. S.M. COLLESTER
to tbe Editor:
We just wmted ta thank you for
Barbara Guie·Bowen's article on
MalaJi Indra Devi (June 3).
Not only did sbe upture her as
the beautiful human beine she is,
but she was also able to touch the
"somethlne special" about her.
It is to her credit th~t she was
able to weave \he two together in
such a meanin&ful, deep way.
Mataji is so very 1piHtual, but
also so very down to earth.
WE AR£ chuckling over the
picture of ber pumping her own
well water: and harvesting her own crops. She probably 11e1lect· eel to ten you she has not ooly a gardener, but servants as well.
That is our beloved Malajl, thoulb-attudylocootrast.a.
Please tell Dack Kobler that we
do not know very much •bout
photography, but it looks like he
has done one of the most
beautiful studies of a face that we
have seen in a newspaper in a
long lime.
JUAN DASHIELL
CATHERINE BOWDOIN
.a.et..Bere
To the Editor:
The demonstrations al the
University of California cam-
puses. as reported in your paper
June 5, "UC Regents Review
Stocks," protesting UC invest-
ments in corporations doing busi·
ness with South Africa, musl
have been patterned after the
Arabs' boycott of American cor·
porations doing business with
Jews.
That puts racism right here in
-the U.S .. not some far-off coun-
try.
GOLDIE JOSEPH
To the Editor:
I 'm impressed with Gov .
Brown's consideration oC Helen
Reddy for Stare H1ghway Com-
mi$sion. Meanwhile I see nothing
wrong with nepotisim .
Furthermore I have nothing
against Aussies. Considering
show biz people in politics takes
away the day-to-day drudge for
us little people.
The Democratic machine
should consider Linda Ronstadt
for the important position on the
State Higbway Commission.
Let's face it. there are many
more young people on the roads
of our Golden State. Ms .
Ronstadt seems to me to be more
in touch with the needs of my
generation. Helen Reddy has on-
ly one big hit while Ronstadt has
had several hits on the charts.
If our good governor ignores
the qualification. on the latter I
guess, "that's show bi%.··
WILLIAM CARDENAS
, ... M6ttlkf
airport. and finding DO intelligent
answer. ,, '
It may be just y stupidity
that makes me t ow up my
hands in dismay a people that
slate, ''It was only question of
time!"
1 am extremely otry for the
pilot and the famil or the small
child involved in he accident.
But when are peopl going to look
at themselves an:ask the ques· lions. ··Am I with t guilt, Am I
not re.'>ponsible r that child's
death?" I
In 11JY small and harrow realm,
1t 1s only apparen~hat accidents don't happen, they re caused.
STEP EN DIMOND
C••P•/flen
To the F.dilor:
I yawn when I •ear of the con·
cern for the •nvironment.
particularly when It comes from
the direction of Corona del Mar
High Scho!>l. or course, the en· '
vironment of cont:em may be'on
Mars because anybody who ob-
serves the constant litter of cans,
bottles. ~artons, wrappers,
papers and assorted junk would ~now thathe athletic field, park· 1
mg lots, tters, campus and en·
virons c ldn't be included in
this World.
The :t school area Is a dis·
grace eyeS<.. e. ls it lack or
cleaning acUilies; lack of facul-
ty inter•t; pennisslveness by
the admbUstraUon or lack m stu·
dent training? Whatever. all
amount ti a lack of pride in ..,hat
should bf an attractive part of
the local-nvlronment.
THE CROUNDS could use
more strategically placed trash
receptac~ (not open top cans);
the tennie; buffs could clean up
their act; so could the softball,
baseball, et cetera, teams and
the n~· gh cbool people. But. they are a m r part of the daily del
uge e there Is nothing too
large. •mall for tbe Litter Klnggto porthrow.
Whoev has the responsibility
for posl rules, placing recep-tacles perJodicaUy deaning
up has been~ too well
Whoever• as lhe rn~slbilitT
for stud~ indoetnaatlon h8-0unked subject; IO 'have th.r'
students. ut, lbey need not to
too Car to erve much better re-:
suits -ewpon Harbor Hieb
School.
I CALVIN G.BICGLE
l
THE BIRD IS A SIMPLE cardboard contrap-
tion with a revolving disc numbered from zero to23.
The way the Johnsons work it, each half hour of
viewing time equals one watchbird "unit." After
Christine watches a program -carefully selected
in advance so she'll get
the most out of her 10
half hours a week -she
~~ moves the wheel to keep
track of how much time
she has left. 'Televl•lo11
Jaa• cecued to f)e
an l•porta11t
p a r t o I
c1an.t111e'a , Hfe.
She'• l•u111f
otlaer 4ic•
tivltte.....' .' '
San Jose artist Mike
Lee designed lbe bird·
with its bright purple
plumage and owl-lllte
eyes. With the help of
"Pet Rock" promoter
George Coakley, the
Johnsons are marketing
their birds with a mail-
~ orderpricetagofSl.30.
Groups including
the national PT A and
the American Medical
Association have expressed concern about the ef-
f'ects or too much television -specifically too much
televised violence -on young viewers.
The AMA called televisipn violence "an en-
vironmental hazard that threatens the life of
America." One study cited in a recent issue of TV
Guide said the average 18-year·old has spent more
' I than two full yeaJ'S Of hil life ..,1tting in front Of the
TV set.
I
BESIDES P\.A YING UP VIOLENCE,
psychologists say, televisioh presents a picture of
an oversimplified, unreali,uc world where pro-
lSlems are solved in 3Q or60 r;ninutes.
• Jean and Barry Johnson say Christine now
Cilrefully chooses the programs she'll watch each
-,yeek. She's given up most of the late-afternoon re-
l'uns in favor of sho~s likej "The Wallons," "Won-
derful World of Disney" ana "Happy Days."
•• The o1ohn.sons ban,ned "Sonny and Cher" -"too
sophisticated for an 8-year-old" -and "Charlie's
Angels'' -"she doesn't stay up that late anyway."
Btrr THEY SA~ tHEV haven't bad to worry
too much about whl~li television shows she watches
because Christine isn't interested in the more
violeht TV cop shows. •
. For children who are, t)ie Johnsons suggest,
!)arenta could assien higher unit values to shows
they consider objectionable. Thus a child who
~atched the cop show "Hawaii Five-0" might have
to subtract four unJts ftom t\is 10-unit qµota while
"Wonderful World of Dlsney",might c~l only two.
"Television has ceased to be an important part
of Christine's life." Mrs. Johnson says. "She's
found other activities in which to channel her time. f~ taUJhl her lbe responsibility of planning her own
time.
• "And ittake1 pressure off me. I don't have to be
the na1£ing bad guy who gays no more TV. time to
set the table, do your homework, whatever. The
problem seems to have elimin!lled itself."
Whenvousee
Pizza Ads on TV
EarD8 Degee
Philip K. Sweetland of
Corona del Mar received
a bachelor's degree in
political science at
Brown University in
Rhode Island.
Meet Keith Nielson,
Tennis Pro from the
. -
very proudly announces the e~hibit and sale of
THE SOVERIENTY
The chess set you must see! The men are s~ulpted in sol.id 14K white
and yellow gold and set with diamonds, rubies, sapphires and other
precious gems to create an authentic 13th and 14th century medieval
look ... complete with costumes of the era. These spectacular P.ieces
are set on a board befitting such works of art, made from African.
woods and inlade with ebony, sterling\5ilver and jade. Only at Bullock's
South Coast Plaza,·for a limited time on exhibit in the escalator well.
Sculpted by John James Grahl.
The price. $75,000 for the set.
THURSDAY, FRl~Y & SATURDAY ON LY. JUNE 16, 17 & 18
If. your Dad isn't ·sby,
count on a litt_le hint. "Jockey!"
The message is loud and clear. Every
man knows the pleasure of relaxing in something
cool and sharp looking. And Jockey's got fNery
detail down pat-they've set trends in
menswear for generations I Here, shorts cut
extra short for plenty of freedom, white with
orange trim, 32-38, $15 Engineered stripe shirt,
orange/navy on white, S,M,L,XL, $17 Both, -----
' polyester I cotton, from a collection of colors.
)
Town & Country Racquet Club.
·let him show you how
·\ in Men's Active Sportswear i\ , '
to improve your game &
your appearance with
Jockey tennis wear.
Saturday..June 181-4 P.M .
Men's Sportswear/Middle L~vel
j
-I. ,
.
r
1
1
,
., Uftn'u.~,. .. ---~-. ~ . 0 • eo..&y•a Ull1DCOrpOra&.ed
are ~ b.a~e to pay .... IA bu.l1d.lnt
perm t t.. .YNr to pay ror praervlna foeslls
d artltacll lltMattbed • ca t.rudJon
aila.
upn-Ybon 1av• tentati•• approval Tuffday
to a 000 budlet for arcbeolotleal preservation
durlnl th• lt'7T·T8 fllcaJ yHr
s391s ~} ... .,
Tlwy a1lo uked official.a of the county Environ·
mental Manaaement A1tncy CE.MA) to keep them
informed of H~ durtnc the rosaU·findlnl ef·
fort.•
,::::~19ts.sz33•
BUIRI smus
...........
..... .Wt
WICIER, ETC.
7552 wmo AVDCUE
IUITltlJUM MACH --·-·· 147-4140
M-..FrL lo.I . 's-. 12·
n ~TTAH
HDTlAYS ---'191~
MOM TREAT DAD
TO THE
BIG BAND SOUNDS
of
WALTER MALZAHN
lfOf"IMf'fy with Ch«fl• lamett's lmdJ
presentlnCJ
THE SOCIETY FOR ·THE
PRESERVATION OF BIG BANDS
at the .HuntinCJfon Beach Inn ·-
ain Dining Room, Sunday, June 19th
6 p.m. to I 0 p.m.
$3.00 per person $5.00 per couple
$1 .00 diacount Oft ~ets purchased before J•e f9th
~ ,1Jeac1i #ntn
The
2 I I 12 Pacific
Coost Highway
Huntfngtow leach
536-14211
g rand b wr
$595.
Panel Set
For Homes
~onalPark
T U E S D A Y
•; supervisors accept-Eyed for Brea
ed the county staff report · and, as required by state Oranie County parks
law every fo1,1r years, officials are involved in a
aut horized its sub· four-county_ study .of a
mission to CaJTrans. posai.ble joint regional
George Os b orn e , park in the Brea area.
director of the County · A report to county
. :· Environmental Manate· 1uperv1s<?r~ Tuesday
·· ment Agency, predicted said off1c1als from
that maintenance and re· Orange,. Los Angeles,
habilitalion of roadways R iverside and San
10 the unincorporated Bernardino. Counties are
area during the next four working wtth the State
years will cost about SDS Department or Parks
• million. and.Recreation to locate a site for an 8.000 to
I N ADDIT I ON, he
said. about Sl06. 7 million
will be needed to· main-
tain existing roadways
between 1982 and 1986,
although maintenance
sources through the
county's share of state
. sales tax on gasoline will
· only generate about $95
., to $100 million.
Osborne's report also
.. noted that, during the
· next rive to 10 years, the
.. county will need about
· $50 to $75 million to bulld
.: new highways and widen
· existing roadways in the
county's unincorporated ·areas.
Alcoholism
Plan OK'd
A $111>,039 program to
provide vocational re-
habilitation to those im-
paired by alcoholism
won the unanimous ap·
" proval or county
supervisors Tuesday.
The program, fmanced
primarily by ~e federal
and state government.
will cost county govern·
ment $1,809 for the
19'17·78 fiscal year, a re·
port to supervisors said.
12.000-acre inter-county
regional park
~I()()() Ht-:B.\TF ... , L \'1~~1 ·\
~ ' "
I• I I '
, I• I •I 1 ,, 1
alt sooaks aQ€ not cli€at€0 €Qual.
Serving great steaks is no .
accident. And even if you've been eating at a lot of fine steakhouses,
You may be in for a pleasant surprise at the Cask 'n Cleaver.
From our "blind taste test:' to hand·plcking our
meats, to serving only Com Belt beef. to careful aging. to cutting
your steak to order, to searing and sealing in natural juices and
flavor. to really warm service. no one does more to serve you a better
steak and great things \o go with it than ~
k
the Cask 'n Cleaver ~; cas 'n :'~:
Cl€aV€R ;,--
1660 0ovft St
Newport Be.icn
i52-2531!
tNe.ir Orafl94l County
Airport. T.ike MacArthur
tv Bm;h lo Dow
N;.;xt 10 M.me Callend.ir ~ ;
Now Open -Newport /3ea€h
{Just in t ime for Grpdt;lation)
.~
r
-~: ~ • ._..,,.._.o
..
r•uon for your discomfort these
pa t tew months.
COMllEf'CT: A1 your doctor
1111, Wa likely tbal you are
healthy. Peoplt doo'tl\ave to be re·
tally 11dr to aet headaches. For tit·
ample. 1ln la-ouble rarely pro-
duce. h..iadac:hea. Neither does
bl1h blood pretaure. Ir your doctor
haa come uP ~lth a dlal(noc1s or tentlon headache It's probably t.he
From what you aay. your job
1eem1 to be too much for you.
Many people are not psychological·
ly attuned to belnlit manaeers or in
other positions ot importance. So
they &et tense. ll builds up unW
they au/fer from headache.
THE HEADACHE Itself is
caused by muscle contraction in
LIQUOR
SALE!
2 ~!
CHOICf
•UGWJOIDAH
llCOIO IUM, FlnH
•JALTA HAND YODU
750 Ml (25.4 Oz.)
•CAml LONDON DIT
GIN 750 Ml (2S.4 Oz.)
••ADUT'S IUNDID
WHISlll, flnN
St.cti.,tllw .... lewtfn.
-• ..,.,., ... price!
MEN'S SELEaED SPORT SHlm
.. ....., a-m. SS tff.,.. YOUI CHOICE NOW ONl Y
., ••WM sWrts II dieft or ft cW • ..,,.... tf..., bit 2" .... -.......... .
.................. 1'0 5 ,...~ .... ,,i.t •. lltt
WOODMERE DELUXE STYLE I OlD WOILD COlUCTOIS
BRIAR PIPES 211 UIAI PIPES 311 ,..,. .... .. ....... .... ft .. , Deil
•tietti'ft llrilr1. """ t... 1 .. .,.. tW ll9tWNI ., ........ ... ........ ..... ..,, ...
SUPER THRIFTY VALUES
~ .IOIMU-
lled ..... Met ... Cbl~--
that wt.ea u. budacb ~ -you rub the b k ol 10W' neck Md
maHaJ• It. Uahke mlcraloe
e d cbel. I.be pa n ti usually on
both aides ol I.ho head. It la various-
ly ducrtbfd u bctq a dull, tbtob-
bln1. pressure palri ln the held.. Oc·
caslonally, there ls nau.tea and ex-
treme irritability.
Whal to do! The simplest
remedy would be 1iving up your
responsible Job and demotin1
yourself. But I tblnk this should be
the last resort.
CBANCF.S ARE that when you
visit your doctor a1aln, sWl com·
~
MEN'S FASHION BELTS MEN'S COURTLEY MEN'S COUnLEY
DRESS OR CASUAL "CUSTOM" TIES DRESS SOCKS
All-OCCASION SELICTIOH REGULAR 01 IEDl·TIE 'IN ASSOITED COlOIS
,_Wt., ..... Wtt. o,.......... ctlln, ............. "'... .... .... , \oi ......... ~ -·· ..., .... Autrtttl altn, Oi.ic. tf .-.. ...., tf Well .....,. tits. C....,. M4a. te.W..,,., tf '*t. Orlte Aoyk
....,, IM!tlw 11yttt. Slan 21te16. t.yt tt lit• ............... A ... lift ""'1 /Nrt-, Mlalt ..,..., ...........
REG.3.99 233 YOUR 219 IEG. YOUR CHOICE CHOICE ttt
NOW PAii
FOR INDOOR·OUTDOOI COOKING
PORTABLE TWIN-l-BACHI
:..::::.:."?; w:::~·= 9 99 "'*"' ...... '-fwt ..... ....... 1 ........ ,..,_,
OUR LOWEST Nia EVEll
OO COMIACTQV WYTO 001--· SIU ~· ~~: Jt:, " I %~": CAUY fi> ~ lfflCl • \ (lfM
SOLID WHITE TUNA
CHIClllN Of THI SU, 7.01.
HORMEL CORNED BEEF
12 OvtKI UWFAST, lUNCJI OI DINNll TllAT
SNACK CRACKERS :~::~: :::.!.: •A111S39c
ftlSlt, NfW SlllPMPITI JUST INI •1.01. wu CMm 11.
HORMEL CHILI WITH BEANS
1S OUNCt MAMI WND fAYotm 43c
,\
FABERGE 1.oz. aaur 33 SPWH ON LOTION J 69
A fewlritt whtl flit MW, n.. tttlly -Cllllt.
MEMNIN WM IUat 6 OZ. J 19 a. .w merit• w llttt...., ftr..., , .....
WtGO Ami SHAVE 01 COLOGNE
4.01., riri11 '9tti.cti•• ICetlt .... "" ..... 12~
~RAMSNTO CAP> -MOit C w nwrw .. toe'°*,.. nft1al 11r.
Ml tM r8'idl Ml IDON ... nftJns D· ctDIM la Glim' ....... IUUI. artvernpll'lu11.
Lo &lllot~ preatdnt of ua. 0 profit
AID4iric• alwr-i: A•= l#Lnn. 1ald tau lD· ..,.'-" that U.. cJraq . bal 11 .Umlnated the at cantcnla tlda ,.....
WILL '118 ONLY 1$> to 2.000 people
runolq tbe rapkll ol CallCarnla'l mountaiti rtven
thl• year. compared to 50,0001n normal yeara, El-
Uottaald. •
IJlf 10 • raft.t.D1 rinra ••baym't been burt at l. lo SO;d.bm
Oresm. t.bere'a a UWe d.ropca lD mer Inell, b9t I&
wUlbe al a normal year OD U. Rope.'.'
Ellloet aaJ4 theN llu been no raftlq tbe
Grud Cl.QYOD t.b1I 1ea.r became wat.r hU beerl
beld lD the bit dams on the .,.pper Colorado river 1y1tem.
MOTICI OF SALi IY ••Jkat outa.lde the atate ol Calllornla, our riven are not burtlni, or are burtJna onl)' • little,•• Elliott
a,td. "'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:;mmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--iiiiii:I "I've been on riven at hllh water when it wu
Just ao tw.. All you can do is float by the
But the releases are expected to return to
normal in mid-June, and Grand Canyon trips -tho
most DOPUlar rattlu run in the n.attoo -wilt be
normal far the rat of the 1ummer, Elllott aald. AUCTION
CASH & CARRY ' RECEIVED LA. INT. AIRPORT DUTY a.EARED rt
campeltea," be aaid.
• .,._ Y'EAJt. TBEaE'S GOING ·to be more
rapldl to nm. and more roe.kl to bounce oil of with
our rubber boat.a. I 'd aay there will be mOl'e excitin.c
ru.iu, but not more dan1erous."
B THE UNISTOR U.S. CU$TON~~·fll INCOARECT CX>NT!HTS rt •W~OOC_,l"J;EAR
MASTEROiAAGE~
lt.CMlll '"""co FOOD SBYICI PRODUCTS
"A >OUlll whlpp1r1napper ,_.. to ... you." PAPBGOOOS
Band Sues
Elliott'• uaoclatioa raises l!)OQey with f!ICOrt-
ed toun oo about 20 western riven and spends it on
educatlooal and poUUeal efforta to preserve the
wild riven and wlldernesa areas. JAMITOIW SUPPi.JES ORIEMT AL RUGS
RJllOM TAN To Cover Frefght. 0uu.. Sb--&~ BMica.e.
~Sale DUputed .
He said 50 commercial and nonprofit groups
take lS>,000 or more tourists on raft trips annually
in the western 1tates, and another 125,000 or so
persona run the rapids independently.
MBCHAMDISI IAGS AUCTION WILL TAllft.ACIAT
SHIPPIHG CAITOHS GtPr IOXU ' HOUDAYM4
ZS205 LA PAZ IOAD
LAfMIMA M&.LS
(alongside 405 Fwy.)
•
Froa AP Dlapa&cMI
Members of the Eacl• rock IJ'OUP filed an an-titrU1tr.auit against thelr former mua,er, l>a.W
Geffea, their present publisher, Warner Bros.
Music: and their former publishers, Companion
Music and Benchmark Mu.ale, accotd1n1 to court
record.a in Los Angeles.
OP THE NEilLY lot 8AFl'ING rtv--ers west of
the Mi.aslaalppl, only five or six California rivers
will betoolow, Elliott said.
VANl-SOL
IOWLCLIAMER
"1be Stanislaus, the Tuolumne, the American
-they're j\.l.lt not aoing to be runable this year. The
Eel ia doubtful. The Russian will drop down too low.
W e'U have trips on the Klamath. Rafting won•t be
hurt, althou&b it will be lower.
DhlnfKh -Dt0dari1n
llCJ. 2" Qt. SAU szao
BLOWER PAPER COMPANY
~ °""""9 ~,.,, ~, y-
OM SUNDAY It JIM Z:OO PM
View 1:00PM
Band members Gleu Frey, Jlandy Metaner,
Don Healey, Don Felder and ex·Eqle Bernie
Leadoo filed suit in federal court charging violation
of the group's rights under the Sherman Antitrust
Act.
''But Utah la probably aoing to have 120 percent
of normal water this year. The Green, the Yampa,
1525 I. EDIHGH. SAMTA AMA
For Information. call (213) 995-8323 T.-ma: c.h or CheQIJe
AUCTIONEER: A. ASHER
One issue was reportedly the selllna of the
group's "Desperado" album without consultation
with.the band.
1lt
Jolul S. Gleuon Jr., former board chairman of
the Mercantile National Bank of Chicago, wu in·
dieted on federal charges of mis·
applying more than ssoo.ooo in
bank funds for personal use.
Gleason, 62, was head of the
Veterans Administration in
Washington from 1961 to 1965
and national commander of the
American Legion during the
1950s.
He obtained the money by
causing the bank to make loans
to Earth Watchers Inc., a oL•ASCNt
Wisconsin corporation that processes wood chips,
the indictment said. Gleason owned 60 percent of
the company, but told the bank's loan committee
that he owned only 2 percent, the indictment
charged.
1lt
"CSN," the first album by Crosby, Stills and
N asb since 1970, is to be released Thursday a
spokesman for AUantlc Records said.
Davtd Crosby, Stephen StOls and Graham Nub
formed a short-lived but highly successful group in
1969 when they cut their only album as a trio,
Crosby, Stills and Nash.
Neil You.ngjolned the --------..)
group the followinc year. (_ P'rOPLE when they released "De· ~·
ja Vu,·• the last studio ---------
album before the group
disbanded.
Death Notice• De•tlt Notice•
Board OKs
Parole
For "/Uller
SACRAMENTO CAP>
-Leo Lewie, a former
Israeli freedom fighter
who has feared deporta-
tion for years because of
his 1958 murder convic·
tion, should be paroled, a
state board says.
A Los Angeles
Superior Court Jury con·
vlcted Lewie of shooting
hls wife and step-
daugbter to death in the
office of Murray
Chotiner, a Richard Nix·
on assoc I ate from
Newport Beach wbo was
Lewie's attorney.
Chotiner, who died In a
1974 traffic accident, was
h1lDd1ing the woman's
divorce from Lewie and
Lewie's business con-
cerns at the same Ume,
said Lewie's present at·
torney, Steveq Fishbein.
By a 7·1 vote, the Adult
Authority urged Gov.
Edmwid Brown Jr. to
pardon the 60-year·old
HUT 1 OOPM 1o ':ooPM a1 1i.. Dr_,,. Lewie, who put off his re·
CHARI.Eli £ HART, ruld•nt of R-.. Chepel OI O'C-r L-O-Hiits QUeSl for parole for years ,..~,.POrl Sue~. Callfornla Pa.>..i ~ortuary. fUMral urvlcK Wed,, heC8Wle };e dfcfn 't Want tO •w•v Jun. 13, lt11 S..rvlwCI b'( 1111 2 OOPM, CommUl!lty OltlSl~n 0111rd1
(OUll" M,,, Mav s1 ... art. Rllloe, ,..w ol Sen J ..... C.plSl,.no, )!612 El be deported to Israel. He Yor~ Mr. Hert wes. former Mayor ol cemlt>VA .. I, Sell Ju.n C.tt>lllr~. ,,.. is in Folsom Prison. N•,.oort llHCh, pa1t Prttldenl of , ... lermtnt M e1 Toro Olnl.tffy. 0 toll-" , ,
NPWPOrt BHCh Bo.rd ol AHllor•, Ille nor l-o-Hiiis MOfluMY 2SJOI Alkla He 1S the most peni-
mr m btr ol lhe Newport Bue .. l'arkwtv,dlrtclors. tent man I have ever
Am•rlc1n L•OI"" Po•I ?ii. m•mlMr of o.9••1t • • R bbl '"" 5.,18 rlt19 l~ No 108 F.~11.M. FRANZ E. OeBEE,_, rulcllont of COme acrOSS, a
Former onol"r"' lo• lh• c'1v 01 Cosl• Mesa, C.lffornla. Pas~ ewav Joseph J . Ehrenkrant
Parnd"'"· Served'" World W•r I A\• Ju,.. 13, "n. S..rvlved ti'( his wlft I.Of• t Id th bo d "I Na•v Ensl9f' Servlcu ll:OOAM, Fri., ralr>e E. of the home, '°"' R-ld 0 e aJ' . n &
June 11, Peclllc View Clttpel, entomb· Wtieon. Atddlno. ca., Gary M<Danltl, wai· he. ls crushed. He m•nt P.Clllc vi..,. ,.,,._,,,1 P•rk. Htwall, Gtne De8Mr, lrvlne, Ca .. h t dr bo t
f.amllv 'IUC,IOl?MI mtmo<lal cor\lflbu-dtllOhHl'\R-~~llttrtndSvn• 8 grea eam& 8 U
11ons 1oyour 1avorl1tcharllv. vr111a11on thla Oellffr, llolll of LAs V•oas. lilev. his life."
Thtlrl . Jun~ t&, S•OOPM 10 , QOPM, llroti..,. Alblrt De8ffr, Deiert HOI
Pacllte VlewMorluarydlrKIOrl. Sprl~. Ct., Gene De9"r, Woodl-
HURST Hlll1,Ca.,O-.yC-y,N..,.Vork,IM,. 2 G ad led DORIS GLENN HURST, '"!dent ol totn MM!oft COit, •t Sevur>elo, Cl., r 08
MIUIOfl Vltlo. C.tlil°'nla. Ptued ewtv Adrl4111,.. .,_,, Hew YOfk, l'.t
Ju,,. 13, 1'11 Beloved ""'bind ol Mrs Ruswll. De-1 Hot Sortnp. Cl. S.ven w l l l i am Br 0 0 k e
ChrisllN """' lo'tlnq fttt•r OI Mr\ orandehlldnft. Mtm«lal Mrvlctl l'rt,. St d b-'-f C ltayla Crcm of 'c_,i. Mtw, CA., Mrs. Jun• 11, 11 OOAM, Ntw,,...I Herbor U A -er 0 Orona
s."1a Mcca1111u ot Fresno, ca • lute-.., O>llf'th wllll Pm« Roger del Mar ~d Gary Alan
RO<WldG anct'fllomasJ Hurat bolhotl lfff offlclatlnQ. Prlvst• ln1~ ... 1. 0 bid f F t .
Ml ionVlelo Ca Also;._rvlvedbn••'Thow wlsNno may <ll"trlbut• to -S a 0 OUn atn ar:~cklll~. his.....,,., M,. Ollie An .. rlcen ClncerSoci.ty, ,.u .......... Valley received bachelor
Hu•1I 01 Tun end sister M<l. June llvO., T111t1n tfflQ. lkll 8rotehoey Of arts de•rees in Laflutt ol Tun. Orie broOwr Gathen Mor111try ... rt<1ors. • , • •
Hunt .,, 1'11UOU<11, ca. Vltllahon wlll OUltL&Y ~-cerem001es held at Race
be Of\ Tun . 3 OOPM to l OOPM and GLORIA L GUltLEY. '"""""' ol Uru'versity Cotta ~ Glllfon>i.. PtlMd a••'f ·
HUllOADWAY
MORTUAIY
110 Brold••v Cotta Meaa
942·9150
SMITH~LAMI WISTCUflll CHAPIL
427 E. 17th St.
June 1.a. 1m. Survl-bl' he• da110hl.,.
Glorla LtmOtrl, Kentucky, slster----------
Norma Gut'lty, ,._,&..ch, Cl., t>rot~ ~. c. H. Wiiiiams, s.... Dtevo.
Ca .. 9randda11ghler Lisa Smlll\,
l(tnHS, ''a"dlOllS Mlcllatl and Timothy Robtrtton, Wyoming.
Strvl«e ftrt., J.-1', 2:001'M, Peclllc
vi.w °""'· Newpo!'t Be.ch. 111 l*'al 11 .... en, famlly llUQ99tts conttlblltl0n1
to tllt Sam Gurley Jr. MtMorltl !'\Md,
cl9 HOIQ Memclflal .._1111. Pt<lfk
Vltw Mort...,., di....: Ion. '
Neptune Society . .
Cl'UAATIOM aU"IALATNA
646-7431 Y-tMlal tee•rtty .._ ...... , ....., __ , ___ _.....
c.11 t« ,,.. .-rtte1,. I .. ..... l Cetll.Jlll.lr.'
Costa Meaa • &4M888 Santa Ana Chapel
518 N. Broectwav Santa Ana• 5-47"4131
PlmCIMO'TMHS SMITMI' MOtrTUAIY
827Main St.
all steal<s ~e not
cReateO equal.
Huntington BNch
63&-8539
"•MMtlY COLOM.AL NMllAL
MOMI
7801 Bolta Ave. Westminster
H3-3526
PAClftC YtlW
..-.OllAL ,AH
0.rnetttY MOf'tuaty
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Dnve
Ne-s>Ort
Callfomll
&44-2700
MICOltWICI
MOlTUAllll ltQuna Beech
41M-9415
~~~· &In ';,~:;¢.111trano
4D~1718
You may be In for a pleasant surprise et the
Cask 'n Cleaver. From our "blind taste test:' to hand·
picking our m~ts. to serving only Com &It beef,
to etireful ~Ing, to cutting steaks to orde" to tearing and
sealing In natural juices, to rally warm service,
no one does more to SQM! you a better steak and great
things to go with It than the C.uk 'n Cleavu caskn . cteavea -~ .,,. •:
'
••• • •• •
!weber.
• If Dad· is King of the BBQ ... or
would like to be • Wonderful Weber
will win Dad compliments •
America's favorite outdoor cooker •
Porcelain in & out.
s..olry Joe • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • '' .11
11• 1a1c11 •••••••••••••••••••••• lt.11
23" llocll •••••••••••••.•••••••• 49.11
Unassembled/Colors Available
SOMOFt9ACHa
• Dad will carry this BBQ
like a suitcase • Opens into a
DOUBLE BBQ • Coals are
reusable ..• self-cleaning ~.
SKIL QUIC~ CHAIGI l/I
COlDl.ISS DllLL Ir SCllWDllVEA
•Use this drill anywhere ... boat ..
.camper ... ca_,in • l hour QUICK
charge ... no more waiting
overnight • He'll love the
rreedom it gives him!. . .& u 4
the thought! • #2006
12002 Ovemite Charge 29"
S~ll
SKIL 3/1 VARJAILI SPllD DllLI.
• A good price for a single speed.
.a great price for a variable
speed drill, • #1626 Is•
S~lt
SICIL 3/1 VARIAILI
SPEED Ir REVHSIMG DllLL
• An exceptional val\,\e for this
most versatile of dnlls. • Perfect
for driving & removing screws. •
#1786 ~2-
S~ll
SKIL SAW 71f 4•
• The #1 Saw for the #1 Dad! •
Deluxe ... the saw that made Skil
famous. • It'll make Dad happy
too!• #574
'l' Rockwell lntemabooal
1/2.;ft.P.
ROUIER
. . WEED
EATERe
CUPPIE Does everytblng a good rvilter jhol(Jd.
De\\elops 28,000 rpm for fast, ~
routing. Diil depth contnJL lliCL lA .. ' liplit
collet, wrenches. ..,
Exceptional vilue for a val~ Dad.
• He's seen lt on TV. •
.he'll love it • Cuts with
ftshing Une .•. no blades .•
.safe I • CUts around trees. . . alon1 sidewalk1 ..
everywhere.
FOi DAD, GFI' SUGCHSTIOMS
FROM CIOWM: •
"Super Dad" License plate frame1.
Finest chef quality lmive1 • lolld 'Oik
blocks. Gourmet BBQ Tools. Bar Is wiDe
glaa1es. Beach chain. And OR-.more ... more.
QPEN SUNDA¥S
,
._._.Alt-..... -flmer1lls r~ -. ..... .._-aid .__ Tatt. t.1w tow:a
a > a n r ._., -~•c w. c
...... al~i*w·z 'alt.edcaket.. It.
_.._._lwill•a._adt f11U1amlimas and roses ... .....,6-_ • a' ;LL 1'lle ._..as . t•--·--"*'* le ........... O'll'ft -...:.
~ ._ I , .. tie b:w imait..l:
1 &11 a•
Rod: sbr AJiee eo.per wllD will
1-e ail A•ahftm
9afimn 5mdaJ' ._ Wk•el a
pGllpalsnaka
fer lais latest ,_._ nr early
fayorit~ is a
»foal IDa CGD-
st r i rt or .
Dea4J ..
..
• "'1peinl • Mount"'91 • C...... • c.tfftl
~ M.eTa.uh
fll.r ~Jne. m-.. m.....
GSOScott Or,, N~ Beach
0 we Buy Old Gold and Sliver"
•f"tnCMga • Remounting
~eAi< MAKES A
SUPER GRADUATION GIFT
"'This fsnous corduroy ehort .. mede
In 111IJIO't9dcolora.Size23 to 28, $11.00.
You'I find ttmn In our bop-dept.
m
WIDOUllCIC W1• HfJ ..... msar-. Newport~. Ctidorm.. Phoae ~1061
Well, thafs what the bus is
all about Orange County
Transit District buses take
you to all of the fun
places. Disneyland.
Knott's Berry Farm.
The Fun Zone at
Balboa Thtt beach.
Anyplace.
Wrthoutthe · -tiusre1lrld ___ _
re~nsitilllty·
of driving .
l
FAMILY SCOTT
Bathroom TISSUE
In Asst'd. Colors & Prilts
4ROLL 69C PAK El
REYNOLDS WRAP
HEAVY DUTY
ALUMINUM FOIL 5gc
18"x25 ft IOLL
MRS. REIS
EGG NOODLES
• BROAD • FINE • MEDIUM
PURINA 'VARIETY MENU'
~.·'.I CAT FOOD iilllt.! 6 OZ. TUNA-ASS1 FLAVORS
fiii.iJ iilllt.! 5~1.00
MEN'S Dress or Casual
SHIRTS
. Fill Qnllty fer S_, Wear ...
~?,S~t:o:nar3with 99
for a fine fit.
El •
MDn Neckties ., ......
Latest styles, 2 0' 3 00 desiens 1nd cofors.
100' Polyestet. I •
EYE'S Creations~
2i5.00
'
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M ·'"~ ... ~11 .... _
I DRUG STORES
A[E Place To Shop!
ENGLISH LEATHER 'MON TRIOMPHE' "THE BEST BET" SR
20ZUClfOF 4 00 • AmR SHAVE
• £0lOCN£ •
n.. "·--,,,.,..is ....,, ",,.,.,,, ... ..,, -........ ;,, ---
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• After SU.. 5 00 (hz)
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($ IZ)
MONSIUR HOUltGANT
"MUSK" G.r s~ • "Wind Dritr 3 50 Am• WYE J~ IZ • .........""'
• 4 ez COlOW/AmR SHAVE
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British Sterling
Give Him the Le1e11dary Fra1raace
with a Personll To1ch.
COLOGNE
2 IZ
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AFTER SHAVE
2 ez StZE
3.00
ENGlJSH m nu 'MU SK'
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5 oz
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• SPLIT LOTION u tz.
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hz.Slzl ........
J.QOa
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A ttache Case SIUT~ "OLD SPICE" FOR HIM
DB.UD Travel Kit • With ~lch Brown Vfayl Ba&
With aluminum tongue & groove .
closure. 11 88 Assorted
colors. #63·4 •
• After nm lttlll •~ u.
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oap-on .. a-Rope au.•• ~~ 5tL1.66
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BLEIDED · 11 99 WHISKEY IO PR. • .
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ROYAL CRYST Al
WINE SET 7-PC.
'Emil& CW httn
• 3112. Decalter
• 5· I tz. Clams
19.88
ANCHOR HOCllNG
Ice Bucket • re. sn
~Jf~~~ket /Cover, 5 95 ~~":!:'J
Handle & Tongs. •
, 2-PC. SPINNING RODS
' by TRI-STAR . .
With fast-tip action, a corkgrip
& a fixed aluminum reel seal
~--1•1-..
FIESIWAlll
r
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Smgle·lans reflex viewing &
#ti,. ••• • • focusing. Monitored flash,
INSTAMATIC 38
CAMERA
OUTFIT
•uu49.88
~~~ built-in tripod mount, neck -; THERMOS ~ l Vacuum Bottle strap. Chrome~ leather. i~ STAIHUSS STHL R 70 16 9 • 9 5
: Holds hot or cold
:: liquids. Ea sy grip
• cup & leakpro ol · t POLAROID COLOR FILM
; ' I ~ :tl 6.95 :!i ~:iJ.~ .... 5.29 !i~~SOllS 4.97
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.
~ .
1:
j
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"
"All A11erim" Powerful searchlight
beam. durable & dependable ••• ideal
lor car or boat.
EVEREADY
#108
FLUORESCENT
LANTERN
Ideal for all indoor &
outdoor needs.
.s209
PANASONlC
AC/BAmRY
RADIO ·~~;~
PLAYER
"Double Dynamite"
Gives you great stereo sound
via two 3" PM speaker s
#1$-133 44. 9 5
FM/AM/VHF-Public Service
Band High Portable Radio
#Rfl005 39.95
------------------------wEsrcLox Portable Radio
FMIAM,Clock·bdlt Clllllilatill
Walnut Wood· 42 9 5 ~m:1n1sh •
13.95 :r THERMOS COOLER & JUG
7•35 Brilliant wide
ft 525' field ideally
suited to action
viewing.
#13·7361 37.95 r I
.,~ UITY
i BILLFOLDS
"l1Q llllf1ld" Soft,
l11•ur1ous leathm In
assorted styles.
VAlOR
·ouARTZMATIC'
Wrist Watches
lty Westdu p .. rec1s1o n
timekeeping of
hours, minutes,
seconds, months
& date.
134334/34332
49.95
£J.
~Jewelry aons ~
'1SQUIRt•
Simul ate~d reptile 'trii
covering with • -4
velour lining.
#558
4.99
.. TREASURE CHEST''
• Walnut stained wood 1n
,_ :~.: 1
"d 6.99,
SHAVINGsn
"'MOlfTCLAlr
Bristle shaving
brush, shaving
mug & 2 oz .
q·&~'9g
0 HUX E Travel KIT
Leather grained vinyl, holds
~
all shaving
eeds. JCta
;.> ' -~..;. ··~ ~ 2.99 . .. ,,,.
I . • I
<J•-
5.95 fl !: A ltflstertll •••r•aclst Is t• ·
lllty tt Slnt Jll 7 bys I wet. uv .o• nu•aclsts An:
. -....
CODITIIUI lil1 llAUflO
.·
I
18" Conertible BBQ 444 ~:!r~s from r 7 88 7-iri --\· ~abletop size to 23" . .; ~
m seconds. • 1120 • ~ ·: \ ;J
mmlC Charcoal llGHTll
~MElEOR 3.99
I •lllYP
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The perfect go· 7 gg anywhere gas llghtei for
home, camping. boatinl •
etc. •M
CHARCOll WATtR
SMOKER wiu 1s .. cnn
by lig Boy
Top dome fits snug to lock in
s moke &
moisture for 29 88 outdoor
cooking. •1600 •
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DENTAL CREAM
wit~ MFP
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120Z.149
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I A.R .M.
ALLERGY •
RELIEF
MEDICINE
(
..
' .
Llff.BOfld
lOOW&ysTo
Cook Potatoes
How many different ways do you know
bow to cook potatoes, young lady? A teacher
of chefs says no woman should consider
herself a good cook unless she can come up
with at least a dozen different potato•
preparation techniques. Numerous cookbooks
list as many as 100 ways, incidentally.
First greeting cards in history were the
equivalent of our "Happy New Year's" cards
viously.
with no mention of
Christmas. The old Egyp.
tians exchanged such.
Last I beard there
were 1,140 streets in this
country named in honor of
George Washington.
Half the girls no.w
e ngage d have been
engaged to other men pre.
WINE AND SALAD
Q. "Why aren't you supposed to drink
wine with ~ vinegar·and-0il salad that con-
tains hard·boiled egg slices?"
A. Because the egg slices contain sulphur .
That dulls the taste. And the vinegar taints the
flavor of any wine. Or so say the gourmets.
Q. ''How come all the baseball umpires
are always smaller than the baseball
players?"
A. They're not. Just looks that way. The
umpires wear-dark-clothing usuaHy;--the-
players light. That creates an optical illusion.
Q. "What's the estimated life expectancy or a kitchen range?.'
A. Depends on its whereabouts. In the
country, 13 years. In the city, 16 years. Rural
folk cook more.
The typical 18·year-old boy is twice as tall
and five times as heavy as he was at age 2.
Seventeen out or every 100 moonlighters in
this country are either police officers or
firemen.
,t.ddrH\ mall lo L M. Boye!, P.O. Bo• 1560, Cost• MeMI 92626
· Bomique Sale Set
At Hospital Shop
A boutique sale will be held Friday and Satur·
day from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Saddleback Com·
munity Hospital Thrift Shop, 23701·C El Toro Road,
Sadctleback Valley Plaza, El Toro.
Dresses, suits, sportswear, evening attire and
accessories will be on sale.
Additional information is available by calling
Rowena Gordon at 837 ·4500.
THANE
For Father's Day, Sll1day Jn 19th .••
• . . I
11·rw REALISTIC~ 40 CHANNEL MOBILE f J f; WITH EVERY WANTED FEATURE
Nf WI REALISTIC 40 CHANNEL
BASE/MOBILE RADIO Wmt
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TRc-455 tums on at pre-set time
with or without alannl PLL Delta 2 49 9 5 tune, ANL. blanker, RF gain, SWR
Cal., PA. squelch controls. Lighted 21-1542 SWR & S/RF meters.AC & DC power
cables, mobile mount.
,NEW!
40 CH. MOBILE CB
PUTS All CONTROLS
--·~·-~ ---·-l -~
~ 1NvouRHAND1 T ... SAVE 20o/o
Ofte.lllln4tr HEAR ALL 40 CB CHANNELS
Realistic TRC-461 handset has OVER YOUR CAR AM RADIO! ;r~1~Ut!~~~i -1911 rrans:~e~.:X,~~ 2~' 21• s,~;::~;;;:-. $24.95) cable!
169 9 5 No license required I No crystals
21·15:25 needed! Uses existing antenna. euy plug-ln·hookupl
R~L~!C s cH .• MO_!llLE c~~ADIO -NEW I-
S AVE •so . NOISE CANCEL -
CB MIKE NEW!-~ -
l9t· 29!.§
Give-away priced TRC·11 features ANL switch. lighted
dial, push·to·talk mike. Ready to use on one channel,
add optional crystals for up to 5 more -Ch 1 to Ch 23.
TWO GREAT CB BOOKS!
ACTION FROM THE MOVIE
& FACTS FROM THE SHACK•
SAVE 66o/o
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175 Reg. ... 1047
Exciting 224 page
novelfrOm
Paramount's new
movie!
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125
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~ 15!!7'
Realistic close-talking mike
cuts road, engine and
background noise!
CB SPKR. SOUND DIRECTOR
11~~
Attaches instanttyt Directs sound
upward lo you, not the floor.
lf~w,UNIVEASALCB
fl C • CARRY CASE
Protects CB
equipment! Ole cut 1495 foam interior easy to 21..a
flt to your gear.
ARCHER9 BASE & MOBILE ANTENNA$ JMPROVE ANY CB RADIO I
SAVE *10 : ~..:
MOTORIZED MOBtlE 1Wr. MNT.
l
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SPEAKER
. 101:-At
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34'9~
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HUNTINGTON BEAcH NEWPORT BEACH
'
• 8941 Adaina Avt. • 3'2'1 Pacjflc C.oast Hwy.
• 2700W. Coiast HWy.
(MarN'1 Mlt Squort)
SANQEMENTE
• 814 South B CamlnO Rtcil
.l\
.-
I
WESTMINSTER'S CARLOS PALOMINO HITS DAVE GREEN WITH A LEFT HOOK. -~-
Angels Erupt for 12 Runs
Booming Bau Not Enough for Twbu
BLOOMINGTON, Minn. CAP>
-As usual, the Minnesota Twins
bats were booming.
_ T1!!Ds' hitters.miubed.14 hit.s
and scored nine runs Tuesday
ni1bt. but lost!
The surging California Angels
battered three Twins pitchers for
17 hits en route to a 12·9 decision
over the staggering American
League West Division leaders.
"It's the first time in a longtime
we'vehadgoodhittingtwodaysin
a row," said Angels manager
Norm Sherry. "Everybody was
hittiJlg."
Mario Guerrero, filling in for in-
jured Bobby Grich at shortstop,
lashed five straight bits, scored
twice and knocked in three runs
for the Angels.
Red·hot Joe RudJ, bidding for
)li.s first 100.rbi season, smashed
two homers, a double and drove in
five runs, while Don Baylor had
four hits.
"I'll bet we'll win with 12 runs
tomorrow night.'' Dyar Miller
said referring to tonight's game
when Frank Tanana, 10-2, ls
scheduled to go against Min-
nesota.
Miller, acquired from
Baltimore Monday, blanked the
Twins over 214 .inniQgs o! relief
after talring over for starter Paul
Hartzell in-the .fourth. Miller is
now3-2.
The Angels jumped to a 4-0 lead off starter Pete Redfern in the
first inning, but the Twins rallled
A119e& Slate
All 0-• IC.MH: 11 ... Oltl
Ju,,.UCalllorl'llaatMI~• s•npm,
Ju,,. 14 C.lllom"' at Ml""ffOla S JS p m.
Ju,,.17C.lllOrniaatMllwaukM S·lSP.m.
with five runs in the next two in·
Dings and took the lead.
Rudi's tbr.ee-run homer off
loser Ron Schueler, 2-4, climaxed
California's second four-run in-ning and gave the Angels a 9-S
bulge in the fourth, but the Twins
ciime back with three more runs,
closing within 9-8.
Rudi, who also drove in five
runs with two homers Sunday In
the Angels' 11-4 victory over
Cleveland, boosted his rbi total to
52, second in the league to the
Twins' Larry Hisle, who knocked
in two runs -bis SStb and 56tb of tbeseasoo.
"My only real personal goal is
100 rbi," said Rudi. "I hadn't been
doing much until the last couple o!
Anteaters' Scott
Oocks 3:57.9 Mile
EUGENE, Ore. (AP) -Matt
Cent?owiu won both the S,000-
meter race and the hearts of the
• fans Tue&day night at the third
annual Prefontaine Classic track
and field meet at the Unlvenlty
olOre100.
• The Orecoo junior wu in third
place when be betan bis move
-some m yards from the finish
line. After overtalldn1 Tom Hunt
of Arizona and the Maccabl Club
at the curve with about 60 .Yards
left, be sped put leader Paul
Geil of~ Toblaa Stridera.
Jn other eventa, Steve Scott ol
UC Irvine won the mile and
Olympic 1old medal winner
~mie RobinM>n captured the ;.l_on;Jump.
planned to break in front of Mar· tv Liquori in the race.
But instead be uaed a burst
of speed with aome 70 yarda left
to edge the veteran clbtance star
and post a 3:57 :92 oJoeking. lJ·
quori was second at 3:58:02;
Pete~ Sptr of the Ore1on Track
Club third at 3: 58: 71. and Ed Ar· -
riola, fow1b-ata:»:'1. ·
In the long Jump, Roblnlon's
victory came despite a subpar
performance which saw him
pass up bis final three Jumps.
The .1976 Olymplc cbaa\pion ad·
milted be lost interest when lq
jumpers RandY Williams, l...arr7
Doubley and James Lot\on., all
26·foot·plus performers,
withdrew. ,
"Nobody stiowed up,0 1ald
• Robinson. "I don't know wb1
they (Williams, Doubley, ud
Lofton) didn't come here ind
compete against me. They a.re
iolng to have to beat me, before
they can beat anyone else I.ft
YOl'ld com,J>8titiOI).. ••
Dave Voorbeea, Ore1on'1
junior d1scus thrower. recovenid
from knee surgery, won hls
specialty with a toss of .200oll,
beating Oregon Track ClUl> team-
m ale Ray Burton, who threw
188-1.
However, a hltb 1chOOI •ta'Y,
South Euc~·a Dirk LUtmu,
was the aurpriae performer OI Uie
mte He beld bis°"" tb mile
behind the four runoen i*Urc
sub-four minute Umea. He
rlalsbed sixth at •:ot.M, the beit
bJ a prep inllW WI ,.ar, _ .. _ "'-
games. lhopeitdoesn'tstop."
Twins manager Gene Mauch
said, "I get a liWe disappointed
when we acore-lik&thl&-and-eao!t
win."
Mauch also was concerned
about the ph~ical condition of
Redfern, who has been hit hard
mostoftheseason. "Pitcbingbim
doesn't appear to be the answer,"
said Maucb. "I'll get some expert
advice from Dr. O'Pbelan (Twins
team physician) and then decide
wbattodo."
Lyman Bostock led the Twins
with two singles and two triples, raising bia batting average to
.343.
CALll'OllNIA
Baytordll
Remy lb
Rudi II
Sol•ll• lb
BOftds r1
CllAlk3b Ouerreron R.Torrescr
HumPllrevc
altrltM
S I 4 I
4200
4 J J s
5 I I 1
S 0 I 0
4100 s 2 5 J s 1 , ' s 0 1 1
MINN•50TA
Hlslell
C.rew lb
806lOdcf
Wyn99rc
Adems rl
Rend•ll2b Cllllesdll
ICuslclt• s.na11.,-n
Cubbe9aa»
Fordrl Wllf0flg2'b Terrell :lb
.......
s l' 1 s' '0 4 3 4?
4 0' 1
4 0 ' 2 I 0 I I
3000 2000 4' '0 ll I 2 0
2 0' 0
3 ' 1 0 200 0
Totlls .Q 12 17 11 Totats 4t • 14 I
C.lllotnle 401 4lO 11»-IZ
Minnesota 230 JOO OIO-• E-Remy. OP-MIMHola 1. LOe.-<alffomlo.
MlnMsola •· ,.,_-.,.., ....,lor, Stl\lllt.y, ....,.._
pllrey, CUbCleoe. 3&-eolloo 2, R.T-. c;.r. ~ro. HR-it..dU llJI.
·~ " II •11 •• so HarlNll 3~ • t S I O
0 .Mllltt <W.H l 2' t 2 0 0 l O
l..•11-J 3 I 1 1 J
Redltrn • 7 5 4 4 1 I
SChueltt 11..,l 41 2 S S s O o
0 .Joflnson S 1 s J 1 I
S.v•-URocllt (I), WP-H...Uell t. H~
O.Joflnson IRudll). T~;OO. A-U,M4.
•
Palomino's
hftBook
Rips Foe
~LONDON -Westminster rai·
dent Carlos Palomino knocked
out British cballen1er Dave
Green in tbe 11th round Tuesday
night and retained bis World
Boxing Council welterweight
crown.
A tremendous left hook to the
chin by Palomino put Green
down aa though he bad been hit
by a bolt of lightning and the
Briton's bead struck the canvas
with a tremendous blow.
A doctor rushed into the ring to
attend to him and two or three
minutes passed before be could
be helped to h1a feet.
~v.-•• • LONDON-Rod Laver of
Newport Beach was eliminated
in the first round of the Queen's Club teonis tournament Tuesday
as Jorge Andrew captured a 6-3,
6-4 victory.
Also upset in the first round of
the tourney was John
Newcombe. who lost a 6-4, 1·9, 8-6
decision to Sherwood Stewart.
The favorites bad no trouble
Tuesday aa Ille Nastase toppled
Frew McMillan, 3-6, 6-2. 6-2 and
Jimmy Connors dumped !Qell
Johansson, 6-1, 6-4. ,
Alao Ray Moore 0111ted Jaime.
Fillol M, 9-8 and Tom Gullikson
beat Andrew Pattison, 4-6, 6-3,
6-4. •
- t • ' ....
The California An1els an-
noQnced Tuesctay night that •
atartinl abortatop Bobby Grieb hu been placed on the 15-day dJa.
a bled list, retroactive to Junet.
Grieb baa been bothered with a
back injury and bas been a pa-
tient at St. Joseph's Hospital in
Orange since the weekend.
The Angels said that Grich's
spot po the mater wW be filled by
lnfieldl!r Rance Mulllnecu, who
bas been recalled from Salt Lake
City of the Pacific Cout Leacue
uere be waa hittilJg .31S with 11
home runs and 50 rbi.
• I <SIA A•1'•t1ea
OMAHA -Frank Sutherland
checked Clemson on four hits and
Gary Adair •inalecl in an eJgbtb-
innini run as California State
Loa Angeles edged the Tigers 1-0
Tuesday ni&bt to stay alive in the
31.lt annual College World Series.
It wu CelDIOCl'• first shutout in 187games.
Mike Henderson i>anaed out
four bits and drove in three runs
to lead ' 14-bit usault .u top. rated Arizona State downed Min·
nesota M in the nl&bt's other
elimlnatioo contest.
•••W••~ LONDON-Jimmy Connors
was seeded No. 1 and defending
champion Bjorn Bjore of Sweden
See Brter• Pase BZ
-. . .
TOMMIE SMITH (rOP), JOHN CAR1.08 (Rl°"1').
<Atuld Sway T•••gs l
Gift-win Boosts
Dodgen Momk~i ....
· LOS ANGELES (AP>-Lee Lacy said the Los Angeles
Dodgers had been short on luck in
recent games, but Tuesday night.
"Wefmallygotsomebreab."
The Docleera came up with two
runs in the bottom of the ninth ln-nin.I toovedake.PittaburghWfor
only their sixth victory in the last.
11 games.
It wu a pinch single by Boog
... ,
booted the ball and everyone Wu
safe. .
Next WU Laey, who bounced-a
·single throuCb the middle ol th
Pittlburlb lnfleld. 1cortnc H.Qet
to tie tbe game and put ~ runner 3obn Oates oa tb1rcl. Wle.
BW ltmlell at. tbe pla&e,.· •• • .i Gossage's fast balls eaeapilcl
catcher Ed Ott and Oates radcl
bomewft.btbewinnlnl nm. .
Detfgen Slate ·'That'• the kind ot th1nl t1aat
can tum us around," said ~·. .. Tbe ball I hit. the doable-~ ~;~~:::: ball and tbe paued ball were jl(
All 0-S• ICASC: '""-JUflli u Ptttlllurgll at t.os ""'9elft
June 16 Plttsllurllf\•l t.osAnQeles J_ ,, Oll_cAIP-1 lM Angefas 1:up.m. breabthatwentou.rway." .. : :
------------~ITTA411tOtt LOSANOaa • Powell, a single by Lacy and two
misplays by the Pirates tbatled to
the two-nm rally.
"We needed that," said Powell.
"We needed something. I'm not
saying we've been playing dead.
but a win, more or less a gift win,
canswaytbi.a wboletbing."
Lacy said, "We've been playing
pretty good ball, but we Just ha-
ven't received any brealts. But
tonight we eot the breaks, all in
the ninth inning when it nally
counted." •
The 'Dodgers entered the Dlnth
trailing 2-1 and Rieb Gossaee.
who struck out eight Dodgers in
. three •pectacular innings a
month ago in Pitt.sbur1h. wu
world.ng in relief of Pittsburgh
starter Jim Rooker.
Gouqe struck out Rieb Mon·
d.,.. but Powell followed with a
solid slngle to center an(! left for a
pinch nmner, John Hale. Another
pinch-bitter, Ed Goodson, sent a perfect dpp}>Jeplay ball lo
short.top Frank Taveras, who
T • .,., ...
Otte
~.,.er rt
Oflwerlf St ..... ,,.,
llobl-• Mandoaa
~(f
~,.
11-erp
°"""91P
•r•~ •rU( • 00 0 uc,a .. ttt.
4 1 2 1 R.utMll• .....
• 0 • 0 Smltllff ll ••• .coeo cer• ~•O•. 3000 81111ritlf .....
3111 ~lb .. , ....
1000 e.eierlf :so·o ..
'. '0 MMllNd~ • •tr. 2 0 0 0 Monda'd ...... iooo Y•eowc .,oto
0 0 0. .......... '. t"' Helepr t •1-: O.Slltton ~ 2 t a;
Mol•ilf' 1 ...... Wellp O Q;'e• ~-10.t•• O.tes sir 0 ,,. .:
-
..., .... ... y ........ -.... •• a ,..., ...... &Ma.& ••••••••r1r11111a...-_. ........ , ........ kc.-au -... ....._
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~..,.molt~•
baUttMJt aco.a.te, lb• •s~. ~, 1 1 t• coatruu abarpb-
.,..--ir • llle~lwtbem ~QMmlJAD«ar~
Nil same Saturday D.ilht at
Ofap OIMt OaDece (8).
JI• ... bit tM boaNs and be
fallows dl.rectlOm wlthout ex·
pJ,uatiaD or CCJddHna-t.o a point
tbat amazes bJa coach, Dave
CUlllle ot Eatancla, the South
meator.
Wttb a reputatlon f or1 accepting
DOtb.lal Isa than the mqet he can ••t ti-om bl1 players and •
poafUOI" of an acid toncue at
t1iae1, Carlisle tells tbla ae·
q•ence with bla All-Century Ltasue atandout.
'"J wasn't happy with Pete's
pl11 ~ In the season," says
C•Uale. 'He wasn't really coli-~tralln& and he seemed like be
. Wfl In a loS. Well, I bad chosen
hi'8 pour team'• captain and I really ripped him two or three
tiiues. ldidn't mince any words.
''He Just aaid. 'ok coach.'
"While we were at the Hunt-
incton Beach tourney I learned
his mother had died Nov. 6. I re-91JY felt terrible, Pete had not
mlJaed a sl.ngle practice.
"I tried to apologize to him for
the tongue lubings, but he just
said, 'That's not necessary."'
A player of few worcls.
N•umann says be enjoys hitting
the boards for the reboupds. "It
makes the other team look bad,"
sa11 Neumann.
His best moments at Estancia?
"Tbat's when we played Villa
Park at home," says Neumann.
"Even if we lost the rest of our
1amea we were co-champs and
we were re:!:{ loose. I bad a lot
of aullta it'a the bell I've
ever felt."
ltltancia won that one, 88-56.
Neumlnll was a fint team all·
Jeaaue cbotce and an All-Orange
Coast area select.ion, but be says
Saturday's same gives him
another chance to prove himself.
His ecoring average of 12. 7
polnts a pme is the lowest of any
South All·star, but Carlble says:
0 Neumann is a jewel in the
roa1h. He's the most underrated
player aro.nd and he's a steady
influence."
A three-year starter for E&tan.
cla and captain of Estancla's on·
ly championship team in the scbool 's history (outside of
golf>. Neumann's immediate future ls at Orange Coast College
under coach Tandy Gillis.
South aasistant Larry Sun-
derman, former Costa Mesa
Hilb coach and assuming the re·
ins at Estancia, gives Neumann
a supreme compliment: "Gillis
is lucky to get him. He's a coaeb'aplayer."
PETE NEUMANN
Fishing
Outlook
Flablnl along tbe Oran1e
Coast remains about the same
this week with water tem-
peratures slowly rising to &ive a
bright ouUook tor the summer
ahead.
After a slow weekend, Art's Landing out~ ol Newport Beach
reports that 35 passengers
brought in almost 600 fish on the
morning half-day boat Tuesday
wltb 400 mackerel aboard.
Davey's Locker out of the
Pavilion reports that bass and
mackerel are making up most of
the catch with some bonito and
barracuda along with other
varieties of fish including a fey.o
white sea bass, sheepsbead and
sculpln among them.
Davey's will becJ,n a twUlpt
halt-day run tonight with women
getting free passage with a paid
adult (are every Wednesday.
Dana Wharf Sportflablng re-
ports that fishfng aTons tbe
Southern part of the cout la pick-
ing up with warmer water tem·
peratures. ·
"The swells we had a while
back are gone and IWUng ia get-
ting better again,'' a landloc
spokesman said.
DAMA WMAlt'° -ltl ..... ..,: SO Mst. 21-· re<...,., lsl boNto, 3 Mllllut, J ~lowi.11, 107 reu ben.J1•m.c11em.
NeWf'ICMlT (Dnty'a Uott«J _.,......,:"'
twrr.cudil, 112 bonito, 2o6J MW. 4JO _._.,I
Wlllt• Me best.. 1"'1'1 Le..rl"ll -5' '"91en: •
berrKudil, IOI bonito, n _., betl. • ........,..., t
Wllll• M•bnf.•t rockcocs.
SANT A MONICJI-17 M19Mn1 1 ... llbut, 2 """1• •• btis, It Miid ...,., .i.s roe II cod. ,...,., -n
•nvltrs: tJrocllbMs,'5.--.1. •~llceblls..•
Hnd bes$, I Nllllul,
I.ONO Ht.CM,...._.....,, -U ....... ; 4
v•llowt•ll. 2IO CMl<O beH, '2 Ml'IO ...... "l>Onllo,
950 meck•rel. 10uffft'9 ~rfl -" ~: UI canco beH, 1$ uncl bes" 4 Mllbut, 1' rocll coe1, 210 IN(kffWI,
HAL. •et.CM -114 ......... ! MO rock cod, ..
.. nc1 bell, ten Gelleo beU, m me<k-1, t """'• ... bess,illorllto. C..,._l-11M>Qltn:4-.ito, t send beu, Jm.c11 ... 1, 2 .,.llbut.
SAN Dl•OOIMllN<ftNI .. wl-•SS ......... : ~
v•tlOloftell, 127 rock cod. tt l>Mr9C\ICM. M ullce
beH,21111wflft-. 1-1•-INIU, Sllelll-.
SAN N.DltO ,,_. 0 ~Ill -11 ~ .. "°""'"lend besS., "41owte4.!J. 4S Nell <9'. t<IO
meclet'el, 201 -llMs. tnM a Le ..... > -41 •11411•": , ..... ~ •• ' .............. .OcMlc9 bas, 7 $.-cl b9ls. 16 bonflo, 41 roctt c-.
~ Ute ?fCll1ll ... .. .... .. eGllClMd La ~·Tea Wallla, f .. woa't er.,
fHorl II two ol b1a t.,.. .... tbe IW11na Damp &~~Orase Ccub ...... ldlool all«ar iame bellu al a Sat.W'day la the
Oru,.o-t Colles• am. TIM tw La Habra pl.,-en-.,
could atat are Quek Pltusald
aad Ted W'lalttlnlton. boCla all-
CIP foe wants. n., were central
ftlurea OD a La Habra team that
we.at 2$.a and iuade lt to tbe
Dlayoft Mmlftna.lt. Wallll 1819 be
haan•t decided 011 a starting
Une\19 yet. but be concedes that.
FibCerald and WhiWqbam are
both atroq CIDdldata.
"Fitzterald la a great team
player, very unselfish," uys
W allla. "He wu our belt de-
f enaive player and also set a
school record for his sbootlng
perc~e, which wu about 60
,percent.' ·
La Habra started two players
who were taller than Fitzgerald,
but Wallis •Wl aulined him to
guard the opponent's biggest
maa. At M, he was onen over-
matcbed in size, but made up for
it with 1ood Jumplng ability and
a ru11ecl style of play under the
basket.
WhiWnctoo la two inches taller
at 6-6, but be plays more like a
guard than a forward.
"I really think he'll switch to a
auard In college because he's 60
quick and handles the ball so
well," Wallla says. "He's a good
outside shooter and be makes the flashy plays that people notice."
A two-year pick for the all-l ea 1ue squad, Wblttlngt~n
avera1ecl 20.0 points per game
thil aeasoo and made the all-ClF team.
Alter the all-star appearance
and a summer vacation, Wbit-
lngton will bead for Santa Clara
University and Fitzgerald will
attend Cypreaa College. * ·* * South Tabbed
By Nine Points
The1South bas been installed
nlne-point ·favorite Saturday
night in the 12th Orange County
All·alar basketball game at
Oranse Coat Colle1e.
Coach Dave Carlisle's Rebels
squad lncludea the first team All-
Oran1e County team or 1977
(Corona del Mar's Jack TU% and
Alex Black, Fountain Valley's
Geor1e Barrios, Santa Ana
Valley's ~9 Ron Cornelius and
euard n., Oreill of Costa Mesa's
Estancia> and are unanimous
picks following a luncheon ln
Costa Meea Tuesday.
Tile South was also favored tn
the 1976 same, however. won by
the North, 108-100. The South
leads in the series, 7..C. North
coach Tex Wallis of La Habra
Hieb told a gathering of 150 bis
team would be a r;unning unit and
presented a front line which ap.
peared taller than published
fl1urea ..
Gauchoe to Texas
Saddlebact Colteee tennll
players Debbie Dominski and
Barbata Lember1 bave accepted
acbolarahlpa to play for tbe
University of Teua next year.
COSTA MESA
AMC & JEEP
I MajorLeague Standings
1977
MATADOR
WAGON
........... AM ............. _...
A7A887H1m78
197'1 JEEt
J.10
PICKUP
... y ... .... , .......... ...
J1M2SMP076199
56295
Bolton
~ewYork
Baltimore
Milwaukee
Cleveland
Detroit.
Toronto
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eu&Dlndea
W L Pe&. Gii
Cblcqo 37 19 .861
Pittsburgh 32 23 .M2 ·~ St. Louil 33 2S .569 "5
PbUllCleh>hla 31 27 .534 7
Montreal 25 32 ."39 12'AI
NewYan 2S 34 .uc JJ'Aa
WeatDITilloa Dodi.. 39 21 .650 -ctnclnnatl 31 27 .53& 7
San l'ranclaco 28 34 .433 13
San Dleco 21 s1 .m 14
BOUiton 2S 38 .'10 1''Aa
Atlanta... 23 38 .371 17 ,........~
A l. ..... YtrllS
CIMIMltll, ""' ....... •I ..... -~---· CM<A1116; W .,_t, ttlMlflel
Seit lll'r#C"'-!t_ II, UI* I
&M ......... "'"'*"""' T.,....,._..
lffw ...... CMllllKtl WI• A"-'l• «McL.1 s Al : ... .
,.......,.... C&Mrll ~· M 0.-CINIMI '*'-' .. ,, .,._,...,.,_H ... .._. .... Clt~J.S>
QlluelMlt. """"'"W> It ltft DI..-ISllWtey ... ........... , ... ,.OltlM....._4 ......... W>
St. Ulltl ~., ..... ,._ .. ·~ _ ....
----------
M t.be beat butetball PW'er and
baaeball pltcber 00 tbe Lq\laa Bach
Hip campus, M BeD BllCOD lbare9
bonon a player of the Je&r. 8acoe WU
the b8*etball team'• captain and moat valu1ble player. Bacon ii Lacuna
Be1cb'1 all-time rebounder with Gt u a
aen.ior and MO In a three-yur span. Be's
No. 2 on Lquna Beach'• all-time career
1cortni lilt with 1,111 point..
ldl 6.--.e-.a, lo••m• ••ell
A three-sport atar, Jeff Gnmougb
shares player of the year honors at
Laguna Beacb W1h. GreeDOUlb wu a
two.way starter in football Where the
Artists en.Joyed their best aeuon since
1968. 1n .ddIUoo to pick.log up All-Soqth
Cout Leape atatua u a lineman ahd
All·Oranae Coast area, Greenough wu a starter In basketball and was the moat
.waluable fleld atblete In track and fleld,
qualifylq for the state meet In the dis-I
cus with a best ot UlM. ' ........... ** ...
By Leavlag Bndlls
Wooden: Bartow
Made Right Move .. .
LOS ANGELES (AP)-
Former UCLA basketball coach
John Wooden believes Gene
Bartow made the ri1ht move In
leaving UCLA and becomln1
athletic director at the Universi-
ty of Alabama.Blnninghatn.
"I know be'a been DI at ease.
Aa Iona a he wu ill at ease and wasn't bavinf peace of mind be
was wise to aecept tbla oiler,
which should be quite a
cballqe," Wooden aald Tues·
day night. "I think he did a fine
job at UCLA."
Bartow was not the first poet.
Wooden coach to draw heated
criticism at UCLA nor will be be
the lut. Bruins senior forward
Marques Johnson said Tuesday,
''Some of us who played for"
coach Bartow had been around
during the Wooden years," aald
Johnson, "I remember even be
drew a lot of criticism a couple of
yeara ago when we lost two
straight in Orecon.
be Barlow's job to establlab
sports programs-including one
for basketball.
GU')' Cmmlngbam, a former
UCLA assistant coach under
Wooden and coosidered one of
the 'top prospects to replace
Bartow, aald be felt be could
tolerate the Pressure of being the
Brulna coach. but added that be
was not sure be wanted it.
o~ eoaaidered In the nm·
nlns for tbe job include coaches
Diner Phelps of Notre Dame,
North Carolina's Dean Smith,
Loulavllle's Denny Crum,
Washington State's George
Ravellng, Pro~idence's Dave
Gavitt. and Oklahoma's Dave
BU.a.
UCLA athletic director J .D.
Morcan aald be was in no hurry
to replace Bartow slnce recruit-
ing wu over for the year.
"You have to be able to walk
before )"OU can nm, but 1 f~l we
should be able to run fairly quick-
ly," Bartow said Monday la tak·
lnltheJob.
1•.•~1r '
I ' . • •
~r·•••• . BKBKBLEY -Bust ·
Crltcbfteld. lbe Unlftftlt:r ol
Ca11fGrnla'a MCoad·ludlnl all-
tlme baketbel.I aconr-, wu ap.
pointed tod.Q u au ualataat to
eo1eh Diet Dhra:nt..
Critcbfteld., 30, WU au All·
Paclfte.I p.ud all a.m.e ol bis
.YarsitJ HUODI al Cal and .
totaled 1,431 polnta, incladlna •
achoo& ibWHeuon reeof'd ol 5'5 1D the 1181.eaaeuon. •
J
·wESTWOOD-Llnda Goen. a
hi1b 1cbool 1opbomore from · •
Bakersfield. let one of six meet.
records Tuelday at the National
AAU Women'• Junior meet with
·a2:05.4lntbel00meten. ·:
· The flnt two ftnlsbers In tlw
flnals at UCLA earned berthS in
the U.S.-USSR dual meet Jn
Richmond. Va. July 23 provided ~
they were not born earlier than -~
19.59.
El Toro's Ll.sa Gourdine mis-
sed ln the loq jump and 100-
meter burdJea. After qualllying
ftnt in tbe loa8 Jump, Gourdine~ ·
the at.ate .h1*h school champion, .
flnllbed seventh at 1~. Sbe '
WU eiCbtb In the hurdles at H. 78. :
,•
STOCKHC>i.M-ftHul II of U.. "'terNtloRel treclt .,.... fltld _, .t Slod!Mlm'1 dtympk ,
St.Olum~nl"'4dls\Mcft"'met9":
1,S00-1, 5'MlmM N.,.mbu!, T-la, 3:>6.6. ,, '
MlcllHI l.Aclw9r, w.tt ~. 1:3U. a. Ar , P_,Fl,,, ...... ~ ....
. 400 ll<lnll-t. Tom --· USA • .,.l6. 2. '• RochGreybehl.USA,50.•I. • .; 900-1. WlltyW\14~11. W.lto.nn...y, 1:&4.2.. Merk E"'l'ler\ USA, 1:.,,1,
~1. ~ Pr•llis-., IMdan, ... SJ. 1.
EYIM JeMlftOS, USA. a... .. Lloyd .,.,.,._.,, • USA,47.4'.
100-1. a_, Edw ..... USA, 10.u . 1. Aldwvn MOlllllHU, SweClen, 11.tt.
S,OOC>-t. Fllbtr1 6•yl, T11111anla, tJ: n. I. 2. 0411 • Glens, s..eci.n, 1):24,7. >. Duncan Mec:OonalO, • •
USA, IJ:'2.1,.._lbf9hlmJllM6, T..,ranla, 13:11.4.
DIKut-1. Mac Wilkins. USA, 221·l'h. 1. 1e ... $1ad91, USA, 216-5111. J. Ak lly 8ruc,., ~· ; , ... ~. '
LOfl9 l....-w1Hle a.Me, USA, t~.
Hip ,__,, T0191 Woodl. USA, 1·~. 1. A-
AllMfl, s...o.n, 1-?1111. I. Ed flerfl. USA.~ 1 ,._, ........ l,JDO.-t. Fr-lturrilll-t.W.USA.4:12..0.
Hltfl Jump-I. ,.ton! IMlti.y, USA. S-IOl'I.
Qargn Drepped .·
LOS ANGELES -Drug
possession charges against
former professional football ·
player Mack Herron will not be
filed due to insufficient evidence
linking him to cocaine found in ,
bis.hotel room May 31.
The 28-year-old former New
Fogland Patriots star was ar-
rested at the Airport Marina
Hotel, where police said they
found one eram of cocaine in bis
room. But deputy district atty.
Roger Gunson said they could not
tie the drug dlrecUy to Herron
because another person had used
the room.
. "I think the players expected
the criticism this .time because
we didn't 10 all the way. I think
the fans were a little harsh on
him (Bartow). as wu the presa,"
Jobnaoa continued. "But, war-
ranted or not, that's the way it is
at UCLA."
"I believe many people feel I
need psychiatric care for leaving
UCLA, but others feel I'll be ft tJ S •t b much happier in Blrmln1ham," 1l8 en WI C
Bartow, who bad a sz.9 record
and won two Pac-8 Conference
cbamplonabips durlnt bla two
yean at UCLA, realpecl Monday
and toot tbe Job in Blrmln,iaam
Tuesday. Despite hia relative
success at UCLA, neither ol bis
teams were able to win a national
tiUe. ·
Alabama-Blnnlngbam bu no
intercollestate tea.mt, and it will
betoldanewaconference. Five members of the national
Wooden bad won 10 national AIA W cbamfionahlp Golden
tJUet In the previous 12 yean and W eat women s softball teatn
Bartow e,augbt some nu on tbe . have indicated they will continue
West Coast lor not winning a na· play at four-year universities. • tional championship. Kathy David la scheduled for
That. be said, "really didn't Cal State (Long Beach); Terri
have that much to do with my Gilreath and Sarah Strube, Cal
leaving. I just think 1 will enjoy Poly <San Lull Obispo); Sherry
life so much In there. anc! eQjoy Wetutein, San Dieqo State; and
building a program from the Eileen Hebets, Northern AIUooa
lroundup." Univenity.
f
WfTH YOUR $2 CASH BACK FROM
...., YOUlt COST IS THEN
ONLY $1.99Pflt GAU.ON
WHEN YOU 8UY 2 GALLONS
---- ---------------------------=--
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OH -~-Wlft
~•TNllACa--~-J•N• -""-.. ,......_ """"-Ullle
~ • 1c:.re.-1 ........
O..ndy l'""'Yler-.1 I .. 4tll
~-114(• 1......_I ••
Time ->e 1'
Al .. ·--Hefvll, ...... .irate,
lln•I M--. to..HI ... K r*""
'I l'TM llACll --Y•"" J ye•r Old~.r.VP 0-119 P\lnet.J109.
N 191>1 $"90 !Hert I
t40 fOO 1IO "'ldr11le 5"c:t.i ILl.,..ml t 10 • tO ~•l"ll"ISllm flSt-•I 4.00 Tlme-211~
Aho " ... -Ovlles Lo Ml......,. Go
Ztp Poc•et. Wlnlle11 L•rk, Sun .. r
C.•ll•ntJet
NO,C••IChH
CNnet l'Wty 1c..r-.1 4.. J • a..• 11•-'*-•• ue ,,_ 1\4)
4'ne ... -Mt C..rtr1, Dully
,..... ""' ....... Y1-. "". .... ""'' .,._ ........ , \fly ..... ~_,,..,.,,.t
A lell•l•'T' IHMtt
Bird\ l 1tn1t t flMMff•I ,, .... Ml• ,., ... .., z-1 .. or. V•••...,..rn
C><O I . ()ly"''"'' -.. UntootrM, E• .. Oft. C.•I /Ill# H•tk. Atl<tf>llye
kr•t<--MI Mio Tr ... /llll•trl•t u1~•u-.~1.,i.a J .r.1.-....... _.,, ....
NtNTH ""'ca -l lO v••d• 3 yur
Old• C1a1"""' P\>rse tJOOO
lun., R-rt IMllcllell>
110 l lO JIO
MIO#•y (Ol)y ICW•IHe' lJ.00 10 60
MIOw•y •u1•r IA1t1sonJ J 110
Tim• ti 41
Al'O 11.tn 0.,..,, MO. Fl<ll"t Jalt,
$111pl>*• \MOU Act 1. Pin• Sl•P. ,, ..
Pl• Boom. o.ddy -· !>cr•t<Nld -Josnue J19, Countmeln
SJ Eu cta 4 L110y •olNrt & 1·
Mtclw•y c.ttv ... ldU2t.ot
AttellOo<><t -• • .c>S
'" ...
tit 1n
'" llt
tit
'" Ht
111
m In IJI m
Knopoff's
Arm, Bat
PaceMV
111 Miasion Vlejo's :~ A m er l c a n Le c i o n
baJeball leam upped its
record t.o 6-1 Tuesday
night at Anaheim's La
THl•O aaca -.iso ,,_, >¥Mr
010, • ,_ Cl&•m•"9 P\lr\41 UIOI
C•••m•"91Wl<eUSOO
V•ftt .. ~f,.111,.,..,1
SI loull Jr IW•rdl Top Too IA.Wirt
Shu &r•I• ,..,, 1~1
tct,.1 s C.,,...,,,18'00k•I
Tru Cuo111 •C..-d0,.I
(l)&h~st IKnlgMI
'" Palma Part as Kalella
::: <Anaheim) fell. 6-3.
m Gary Knopolf was the
::: edl• Mission Viejo had, 11• scatterlnc eight hit s
l'OUltTN •.r.c• 110 v•rd•. J ,, .. ,
old\ & uo Cl•lmi1>9-PurM USCIO.
''•' ""t'WJ Oft(f "3000
while striking out two
and walJcine three. At the
plate he had a triple f •QI• l •nd•nct •C•lll Ju<h' \MIJf"t 'A~irl
Nor B"d'Onct IW&rdl
Httw•H•n .,..,,. •Hartl
Jon"" l!ock•t IA11"0111
SllOrt Aocketn ILIPNml
:~; among his two bits.
::: aJM1ission Viejo never
m tr ed, getting a pair of
in runs in the first inning
P"TH ll"CI -5SO yerO\ J yHt
010~ & up. AllOw•nce. P\jru S1100.
and putting it out ·of
reach in the rourth with
m three more tallies.
Miner Aids OCC;
Collegiates Lose
Min Barred Limit I Brook\ I
Cu•lom T•llored IAlllsonl
Rosy Joy '~•rll
Havd Good Day lllPNm J
lf'O'\ B•llY IW•rdl
Cop•sellc ICltrlu.I lU\po IACS.lrl
AccPIPr•r• tCa,.dcuaJ
&In Strfft ::..... ITr .. •urel
117
112
"' 1n
111 ,,,
171
117
SIXTH llACI 3JO Y••ds 3 yo.,
old\ & uo. Clelml"ll PurM U IOO Cl•tmlng price UOOO
Costa Mesa lost a pair
of games to host Canyon
(Anaheim>. 6-3, and vis-
iting Anaheim, 17·7, in
action Saturday and Sun·
day.
Mln-vi.ielll
•II r " rlt1
Orange Coast College
got a strong pitching
performance from Tim
Miner a nd beat the
Irvine Athletics 6-2 Tuos-
d ay in Metro Lea gue
baseball ac ti on a t
Memorial Park in Santa
Ana.
The C os ta Mes a
Collegiates, meanwhile,
traveled to National City
and lost to their host 8·4
in Collegiate Lea gue
basebaU Tuesday.
Miner gave up four
hits In his victory over
Irvine. He walked three,
FVRoyals
Held to Tie
::l'he Fountain Valley
Royals , be hind J on
Furman's 12 str ikeout
pitching and triples by
Stev e Vota w, Dean
C ampbell and J i m
Thomas, iitruggled to an
ll·lnning 4·4 tie with the
Fullerton Reds Tuesday
ni&ht In Thoroughbred
bas eball ac ti o n at
Fullerton 's Amer ig e
Par k.
Furman walked three
and scattered seven hits
as the two battled on
even ter ms after the Is·
sue was tied in the top of
the sixth by Campbell's
and Thomas· triples and
an rbi single lrom J err
Reed.
,y llOy•l• 10
but struck out four. 8~rron 81d 'C•rdou1)
"•rrCIOOme I"' F•U I Myle s I Str•w Parr110.IOMIMI
0.af\dy\ SI• "Cnu>!•l I
l .Olt lunch •BrOOl<llalCll
s-v ol O•-.d •c1.,,,.,.,
Pac1l1c (rHk •tr•~,,
C•Plureo Enr1er.s IAll110nl
111
119
119
119 ...
'" 111
'"
Grttlo cl
HoPP ti
l Uolt rt
H••-ln\. rt Rh II
l IY•'tlV r'llf't
Knopoll p
W•lktr Oft 5<hmldt :lb
A•td lb
J t 0 0
0 0 0 I 0 I
0 0 0 I 0 0
0 0 0 , 1 I
0 I I
I 0 I 0
l 1 I I
Miner , the CIF 4-A co-
player of th.e year after
l e ad i ng Sa n
Bernard i n o 's S an
Gorgonio High to the
crown. picked orf three runners.
SE VENTH llACI lSO v••ds l TolMrt c l 0 0 0
Orange Coast College
struck for two runs in the
first inning when Scott
DeLong walked, Guy
Krikorian tripled him
home, and Yogi Hopkins
singled to drive in
Krikorian.
Vf'Ar old\ I. uP 1=1111., & m•r•'· Al
IOW•nt• Pu••• S60(IO O•vh.'1'
Hite lD
1 0 I
1 0 1
E 101>• Art1•t •Cleriue t
A•aao-. •Cr•-r> FIHI N' l'ltkl@ O<•rll
Runnln A-IAlllsonl
fl" Cooy IMyleot
M•rvon'•ltacl< .. ILIDl\lml
Ch••<ior E•w <W•rOJ
Fa't Judy !A"-lfl
111
t?I ,,,
119
111
11•
110 ,,,
~ll>y. JD 0 0 To1.otl1 ,. 6
Sc-lty tMi...•
""''"on Viejo 200 )10 0
l(•tellA 001 010 1
0 I "
r II • I l • 1
C os t a Mesa 's
Collegiates kept their
game close until the
eighth inning when Na-
tional City rallted for
t hree runs . T ommy
Barnett hit a two-run
homer for Costa Mesa.
IE IGHTH •ACI o100 y•rdt. 3 Y .. r
old\ & uo Cl•lml"ll PurM SJSOO
c1a1m1no prlt• ~soo
Soccer Tiff
Set Tonight
OCC Pir•tH ltl ...
f) .. lon9 <f J
HOUlf' ct 7 ' I( rtll:Ort~. '' • I
Hoe>kln\ dh s 0
Hl)r tl .. l"lbl'rry 1C ~ 0
ArMJOn 10 • 0
Xhw4'tbf'.rf \ I
Yb•rr• .. tf l 0
MolllC.> II 0 I
A\hm.tf\ lb I
HC"ll''Gf'I c • 0
IC.t AI\ 3' &
lrVlM At~kttU 111
•b r
~
'
I
0
1
1
0
l
0
IJ
~
Gooo18k ITrta,ur .. ,
Oupl!Qulcll tMllc,,.111
F IC" le C.Ount I .. .,.., J
Gee Man Go IClerl\Ytl
Gol•• •Cr•-•I
Gr•nd 9.,, lllpn•m I
A1urt o ... IH•rll
Bayou 8-ll• IWMdl
Too !lull• •Rrook\I
B•malot tC.rCI01~1
111
119
::: Th e C a 11 r o r n i a
::: ~e~nd~~:e s:~!8m!~~~u~~
"' American League So<:-:;; cer action tonight at 8 in
the Santa Ana Municipal
BowJ. "' HI HTI4 llACI HO yerd• l •• "
0 Oto\ CffMtnlnQ Put(,. \1*1 (td:lmlno
0 Ori<• S1SOO The Sun.shine will be up
"" a g a i n st on e of l h e
:~ league's best goalies in
"' Alan Paterson, who
m played for lbe Slico Rov· :~! ers or Ireland last year
111 and posted 13 shutouts in
::: 26games.
l
1 F•tnom Go ·~''
0 MOOn\IClncM-ll!pn.oml
0 ldl'T\dlOI f8r~\t
o M•d Rockrll• · Broo•llfldl
o He's Foolln ICr•-•1
0 OOubleC_., IC..dot•I
B•oM Titre. FoGo tHarll
Bunnn Bunny llC1'1Qhll
,, Nor O~vlOMoon •Trt•\urel
Aoo 1 ... 0..rt tW.,dl
~f~dw~~
~ MONDAY thru THURSDAY SPECIALS
f>.'<4t•flu• <I 1 0 0
""""·lb 0 0 Romo.It I
H>l•n<ler JD 0
P•IM.11> 0 I
Orlpo1 c 0 0
G111t•r H 1 Q
LunCl\trom r• 0 Q
WAlttrmdn, ctn 0 Cl
Tot•h ,. , • $<Of'O by l!Wllf\9S
r h •
OCC Plr•I~\ ?00 110 ?00 6 ll I
1rv11•• 000 000 011 2 • )
con• MeH Coll .. l•IH l•l
R•rn•ll 1D
P•yton.rl
•b , ,, bl
0 0 0
( Frr., S.1t. & Sunday 't1l 6 P.M.J -[;<eluding Holttlays
d11111ers include soup or s.1"1d, baked potato or rrce
RED S~APPER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.45
~· , • I
ii. ''" 4jm1th ct 0 0 0 I I ) ! I MAHI MAHI. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.95
GRILLED SEA BASS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.95
TOP SIRLOIN .. . . .. . . . . . . . . . .. .. . . 4.25
NEW YORK STEAK . . . . . • .. . • .. . . . .. 4.95
Gr•vlU,rf
Tllomet.tl
0. Vol-'' C•mllb<HI lb
Wll\On,11
RHd, :lb
H•le-..<
5 Votaw 11>
fMrtn•~.o
S I s 0
S t
' 0 s 0 s 0
S I
• 0
0 O Fnc ~ dh
1 O Fr•ncll. <
, I.) ow .. n ( 10
f Nt't\.O" 11>0 o Town1.., n
1 Oo•l•t Jb
0 ~cld•rl ..
0 '>Aft<lltl p
0 R°""drH P
A 0 I 0
0 0 0 0
LOBSTER TAIL ... . .............. 5.95
STEAK AND LOBSTER . . . . . . . 6.95
I I 0
0 • 2 I
: ~ ~ : I
l ' ' oo' J) : ~ ~ rr LUNCHEON also served rfillly lltlftf 4 p.m.
Total\ ., .
k ... lrttMl"lt
t
I
t
II JS • I • \I tG278 P•c1l1C Co;ut H•y • HunhnflOn 8ch • 12131 592 1321
sc ... .., ·~ .. ·~· 11 , 11 • .. 11 J901 E.Coesl Hwv •Coron•Oe1 M1r • l714167S.0900
1 Tol•I\
r II • Roy•ls 110 001 000 Of • II 1
Fvll«tOr> 110 010 000 00 • I I ~~~~·~t·l~~f"\ = ~~; =~ ,; ~ ~ ~~~~ ~ -~--~
• .. • p
Cantdo.,_cn..
... " .....,... la , .. pons.
S t laDcla coach••
Mledlld of tho yen for each' 1rade
lnel. ln aa t.o Pool,
wbo Wiii m aJJ..fn~
badminton player, the
top athlet• are L1ur1
Baker Cfrubman>.
Karen Tbompaon
(topbomot"e) and Julie
Meyen (Junior).
Special award winners :
HTANCIA•lltU ......._
Venlly /Ill•• tl ... IH-ICereft W•ll. M•P
do11ble s-O.llbl• PMI •11d G•••
d'Al\99IO. MMI 1...,,.rello11al-M Ill•
lho11 ISlllQlttl. TeUlll SMtllcomb
MIG Ce lht Hllllel ldOllOIH I /lllOSl Im
P•O•cl-u..cN ICoo Csl,,..tl, Cl11dy
Cowt11enctsi-onC-ldoublffl ,__Vwslty
M•• S1119l•s-SUe l!el11ler Mvp
doubln -Llnct. 8tb4Ktwr e11d S•lldt
D•11leh . Mesi '"Hlrellon•t-telm
Vi.h•-IS lslft91HI T•ml KllCll ...a
AlveNI Castro ldoul)ltt) MOil 1m
proved-L•url C•rcelll ltlft91HI.
~:.!.ii.~l.sbet •nd hlsy Jervh
OYmMttk s Ve~ty
Mvp-Ke tll Clerk. Most l"•P•••·
lio,.•1-K•Y Powl\. Motl lmpr...,.d-
Laur• Baker
J""ler V•rllty
Mvp MICllt lle Skurtyn\-• ~nd
J•cklr ScOl60. MO\t lnsplr•ttondl
lnq rld OeSllv•. Most tmprov•d
Jenny PenC:•ke.
•••ll•tb.111 Verslty
MYO Pac••• Carrido MO\t ln\,plr•·
tlon •l -Robvn A•••v -lfld L••d
----• ....... 11. "'"*-.., ,,._..,. ••.,.•1-llettoy ,...,.1..,. M41tt "'" ..,_ ................
J.-11~ M.,_ Mery ...... -t ,,...,.,.
11e 11o11-1te•111 lllley. -•• '"' -""-o.luim-.......... v_.,
M Y• fr •c y Ceo•. M ott 111._ir ....... -O-..,_. _, ..... -... ~~ .l.,..._.V~y
¥vo-.Hckle S.C• .. ......,.t '"""'• lleftel-eretode Ht .tlll. MOSI Im·
P'tVMl-coi-Sleck
H ........ W'-n °'"' De 1...1 OW lrnhll\efl y .,,. M CHeel •11 d l i te WeUen, MIOf!Om-: llOOyn llllev. , ......... •~II• C..lde, Wftlort. .,._,,,...... . ....,...
LIS• Mc H•nlte. fr••llmeft
M•rt•iww HYMS .............. "' l( .. ll
Clerk. 1-e<l. R•ll• Kll•lll -GI .. O'AntelO,Mllior'S.
... ......... tMYH r
l •ure liner, ,, • .,.,.,..,, IC .. ,.,.
Tt\omp\on. sophomore\: J ulle
Meyefl, junior\, OellOI Pool. Mii-~
* Kathy Keys, Golden
West College's outstand·
lng middle distance run-
ne r . was select ed as most valuable performer
on the Rustlers' women's
track and field team this
season.
M a rilu Buek e r
was awarded lhe most
Pirates Fall, 98-80
LONG BE ACH J eff Golden (19) and Despite having four Tim Page a lso (18) players in double figures. scored well. led by Steve Parrino's 26 The loss drops OCC's points, Orange Coa~t
College lost to Cerritos LBCC league record to
1 • 1 w ith Cypr ess Tuesday night In Long furnishing the action Beach City College sum · next Tuesday at 9: 15. mer league basketball
action, 98-80. occ , ..... , C.~rtlH
Tbe Pirates or OCC, I• fl Pf Golden I ) l with only five· man a Akin ' 0 3
squad, dropped behind P•ge I • ,
P•rrH\O 10 6 s by eight Points at the half Wills J I • and were unable to re· Tot&h " u II
tr1 the most veraatlle vehicle you·u ever own.
iation wagon, motorhome, economy car. And, alnce Is l'(lOunted on a Toyota chau1s ttte operating costs Nill be a fraction of what you might expect!
.4S LOW AS
s 122s2 CHINOOK® , ...........
a1soo 6owrl --tor 12 mont111 o9torreo pr10e ot •1112t « 1nc1uo1119 lln""'9-0M llAl llol<l9e Al"R 13 It'll.°' IOlll CMhlJ'lce t !550'4tncl
... & I~ O A c 8111 •58112 Ser oRH2-513S
dad•s day,june, 19th
li~htwe.ignt and.comfurtab1e,
-madras ...
t h 'l most comple.t<z, S(.1~tion of hand
woven colorful
madras ~ht::re. alw~ one. of dad ls
favorite. fabrics.
......... ,.
UC~LL
COURT
SS/Hour
Ph. '42·2000
SPECIAL VALUES FOR TODAY
THRU SUNDAY se habta 1spano1
COSTA MESA FULLERTON
2946 lfUSTOl ST. 1530 S. HARBOR BLVD.
SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY. PHOH£: 170.0700
PHONE: 549·1533
OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 8 A.M.·9 P.M. SAT. 8 A.M.:6 P.M./SUN. 9 A.M .. 5 P.M.
SANTAANA WESTMINSTER
C7a.14
ua.1 4
'7 .. 1
G7 .. U
07l·l5
:
.. •\.
4 > •.,· ..
--
Bltago 'J'alces First
With one race left to be sailed in the
:· ftve-race Pacific Ocean Racing Coo· ·
: lerence, the battle for potnta will go
~ down to the wire. After four races, OD·
~ ~;~ta separate the top three
;>-, The winnell of the 100-mlle race ~ from Marina del Rey. around Santa ~ Barbara Island, to Newport 11.!acb ~· Monday was Bingo, a 37-foot sloop
; skippered by Dennis Choate of the
•· Lone Beach Yacht Club. 11le vlctA:n
·: moved Bineo to fint place ln the st:6· > din&•~ a quarter of a point beblnd
-: Hutinp Harcourt's Whistle Wlne'V,
~ Santa Barbara Yacht Club. Tblrd in
: the standinp ts Bill Powers's 47-foot ~-sloop Hig6 Boler from Newport .,, Harbor Y acbt Club.
' . Plll8T TO FINISH the race from
f :1~~';.R:i::i8es~u;,~
~ -but she failed to save her time, ;. ,, r Muncey Score.
;.-f In Hydroplane
_Pre.idem'• Cup
WASHINGTON (AP) -Defendlns
,• national champion Bill Muneey drove
•• bls new AUas Van Lines to victor)' ln ~ the 46tb President's Cup Regatta for
~ unllmit.W hydroplanes Sunday after
• • Mickey Remund jumped the start
~ with Miu Budweiur. ~ The 48-year-old Muncey, from La
•• Mesa, Calif., winner of the lnltlal :; thunderboat event of the season ln ~ Mia ml llay 22, averaged 101.a mlles
:: per boul' over the 2~·mlle Potomac
•: Rivereomse. ~ However,ltwutheltartoftherace
which proved cnadal for Remand, a
31·1ear-old macb1ntat from Palm
Desert. caut.
Remund. who earlier ln the day set
• ~ record of 112.. '712 mllea per
hour ln a quallfytna heat. jockeyed for poalUoa u tbe;;-als thunderboata
moved to the~ llD.e ot the flve-
lap nce.
finishing DO hilber than aecoad in
Class A cm corrected time.
The PORC ts an annual series
apomcnd by the Yacht Ract.ng Union
of Soutbem California for yachts rat·
ed under the International Offshore
Rule. 'Ibis year a small class of
Performance Handicap Racing Fleet
(PHRP> yachts were included.
The PHRF division is being
dominated by J. Hoffman'• 37·foot
sloop Huckleberry Duck from Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club.
RESULTS OF Monday's raee with
corrected times:
CLASS A-1, High Boler, 23:22:58;
Whistle Wina V, 24 :08:'5; 3, Bravura,
Irving Loube, SDYC, 24:24:29; 4,
Hawkeye, Dave Cuckler, NHYC1 24 :25:17; 5, Sorcery, Jacob Wooa
CYC,25:26:U.
CLASS B -1, Cadema, Cul
Eichenlaub, SDYC. 22:50:0t: Vendet· ta. Wllliam Rocera. SBYC. 23:12:27;
3,Briana, Bob Collins, SDYC,
23:28:40; .. Balder. Jay LlDderman.
BYC, 23~:19; S, Salaipuedel. Frank
Frye,SDYC,24:U:33.
CLASSC-1.Bin(o,22:'4:Sl.
PHRF -Huckleberry Duck 23:55:10. I
Annapolia Boata
NEWPORT, R.I. <AP> -Upt wlnc!a off the New England Coast
have delayed arrival of entries in the
An.Dapolts-to-Nr-rt salllna race, according to a esman for the Ida
Lewis Yadlta ,
When the boats rounded the
Chesapeake Ulbt OD &mday, tbe IO-
foot ketch Tempest. with ltrtc Ridder
u her U:iPl'el', was ln tbe lead by
about20mtrmtee
The aecmd-plaee boat at the time
WU lnvemeM, a .. foot ketch ruJded
by .Commodore Robert W.
McCuUouch ot the New York Yacht
Club. Seveat\Y·flve boats are in the
race.
I ...
' I
. TV DAILY LOG
-·
_(Wll!WWSDAYf
I IVDli6
8:00
I (J) 9 ((llJ (I)) ......
1Ul{l)C11Cllh •<aw>._ D SStlf'rra
Cl)Ge!Mr ~ .... ~ . Jll l'wtrWp F-,
• • ... Sllilll & --m o.tric c.,., • ID Dnlllllc SM'-..... .,..,.
~ -':30-• fJ Hitdlad TKllWI * MAltfl(-$att t.Mefy
D llMle: CC> (IO)"Mar.e• Pllt 1
(dra) '64-Tippl Htdren, Sun
Connerr. !Moe Bahr.
00 ID Altdr Griffitll
Men Crift"• sai..
• (d.ll (})).., n... s..
&J Zoell ( Ill Cl)) 11a.,, Days
7:00
G8 tD(J)QllDGlltws
IJUanC... • (() .., T1lrle s..
CJ) Tt Ttl lie Trllll a Conctntrdell at I law llcy G)l'lllfll
(<17J Cil) f1t11llJ Mf1ir
ED llor1111 Ll"INCt "°1111111 181 Andy lltlf~ m MacWtllltrer Report
( f8) ([)) Llvtr1lt Hd Sllirltf
QI) Cf ... Wlb
-7:30-
IJ tlD Nitll l'lllt T-U LM AIMricall Style
(}) Tiie Odil c..,.. u llllCQ GMt
(f) s 12',000 QMltiM •• Tiit ...,.. Mid
(ll .. llhrtd " ARliNls ID lewltdltd
(ill) CIJ) "' Gees tlle c..try Q.ll CV ~ S...pstaUs
t»i 1neM11 Oa~llnd As n. Suttle •• Manners.
ft) CMllllll 2'I Ttftiellt
(li) ) lfadJ ...
~(ytWitMll feca
8 :00
8 ((11) ([)) Cl) Geed n.. (II)
Tilt Enns t1m1ly ion Wiid when JJ.
WIN thl lotterr. but th• celebration cs cut short wllen they 11e confronted
by two c11ntot1n1 memben ol • cirt a•na. · D IZll (]) life tnd Tim" tf GriulY AdMS (R) "Blood Btothers"
• ~uly tells a ,oune boy the story of
lus Dll'n inih1hon-by N1ku1111 and
tht heir, Ben-into lh• w1ys of
SUM.al IA lht Wiiderness.
' · ~ lhtlt: (Q) (2~r) "Wffdtr u" (mus) '45-0anny Kaye,
1<clnla Mayo.
CJ) lllN: ~ (211f) -s.-Nd
SIMM" (clra) '6l-Ge11ldine hae.
• DllllY •• lltlrh (R) Cutsls art Buddy Hackett. P1ul Lynde,
~!!Cl..!::~~~ ...
kw" (dh) '73'-Ami Dayan, Mim T1mtt. Jun Qaodlo. -=~'='-=en.M • M 1'111 Cltttn Tiit GlobatJOft l*fY IS Oii! Anclru Pd MIChHI Sii • •«Mn witll LW .tlo w lier eyt on
-~ MllOQI tbt.
• ••• "Predictable Dimler"
Proc11111 uptoras tht science of
wtllqu1h ,red!cttom and the
clleinml of wlltlller or llof poor
DltdictlOft d worst thal Ill prtdlc· !lout all. ea1 ,,,,, .. ,.,......
:· • (d?) (J)~Maur Mlrilrll • .. lllcCet Nd .., .,.. Jr. Mff11Yn
• ' ~ 11\d Biiiy Davis Jr., ont of the
• 111uslc world'• fltwtSt hvsbltld and • wift com~111tlollS Jtar la tlltir own ·~ lltlf lloilr lll4dicll comedy nritty
. ""' ···~ ... ,.,, ... . ..
8100
I ~?J:>.:'.:.:!!'<=
?3-r.ent ~. M ...... Don-ttlf Trista~ AM Wedlewort~ Twt
tlllftt11. ... "" ••<Oll.1111 oilier aloorUlttlAMalW~
Ilia pitpllt ~Ill,..,, • ..... ., ... tRllll IMlr fritaMIJ
""11 ....nMot ttio« hit. IM tlld
eb Cll D l 1111 J I• • • .-t4rlloll el tilt !lit wanety -.ta. Otlllllt Alltll, Dlla f olr(
"" .... Keuedy ..... pat Stew "'6101 •
• (8 Cl)) llretta (R)
'I "lllfM•~r" 8artttt flM
:·: pftld to Wiiie • Mtttm
tll«llOll'Jt to trllt •tr to ~ • , • tlllt tM ftlNlt )lldal OI ll1t tase is
I I' fbl bl"ldlflliltt'I fltat l9C11111, •• • Mlft lrlll a. : e Cml hlttf9&11Cta "£11• tf
Su11111er" 1". 8tllfm1n's 1930's
COllNJ "* with ttwu celltlttiols ... waltlly and powerful American
fffhly II I bmt of llllbulent fOCial
t11nsit1011. Stirs Helen Hayes.
Pamela lewis, DeAms Michaels and
Locs Nettleton.
-9:30-
llJIWs..d
ID u Crilda •• Crildl
10:00
D tU> CJ) Ill D 1ite1t911 c:.. tldlltilf "Colden Gur Kiftcston is
embloiltd NI an lnteraational iflci.
dent imom111 • rounc East lierlh11
swimmer (Oia11t Searw1d), •ho
deledtd beca111e of her IM for a
sportscaster 111 KinptoA's orpniD· hon. and a well-klloft East 6efNft
scienhst (M1Chael Stronc) wllo
appan and daillls tllrt Ille pt Is Ills lone lost uuctitu . .....
(])I law I.Icy
• ( {I)) a Cbltie's ....
(R) "Hellnde" Tiie thfet detectiva
Hlvtstipte 1 S11Sp1C1GUS accident rn
wll1Cll a MMll.tn stoa car 11Ctt is
lifted 1n 1 fl.t1111nc wreck
fabrMITedlf
IDDliMAllMt
-10:30-
()) Diel Y• Dr't ........
Qll Htp1'1 Mtr'Otl
11:00
DDD@llews 8 (121 Cl)) LM lmerian StJle (() a .. 1'at Glltt•n
• 0 Cl) 9 llews D lfllllWt m lltlry MlrtMH, Mary Hltttut
llJ TIM ....,_"" <(]}) rn 1 • bid sa..
m Wllibllll Tht story behind
the snkillJ el I.lie flfler lusibnill Ml
Mly, 1915, off Ille coast of Ireland
-11:30-
• ((J}) CIJ) Cl) CIS Utt ...._.
C.... "l.oftly But lttlMI" G @ ([)<l&fD....., C... Cl> MM!t:-.. ,... Slttll-&et,. ..
(dr1) ·~-Altun4tf KllQJ .M11Sha
Hunt e (IB CJ)) @ Tiit ltHint
..,., tf lie ""' ......
-~= m c.-..i ue £,........,'
12:00
• Twllcllt Z-D IMit: "Secrtl tf ttie ~
Carutiel" (lllys) '65-ll<ad Hanis.
Horst Frank.
..... : CC) "Mia Wit l'llMlf-
_.. (drl) 'M-J• fener, Rita
Hayworth, Aldo tt.y, Russell ColHns.
Ol111e$ 8'oNoll. .., .... : ...... Lt Cnlld" (clra)
'50-John Ctm>ll, Vera Ralst011, Hope Emenon, Wlltilrn Clu11c
-1Z:30-
• llt-W!Pt n .. : "Carll.,, M.O.. .. .,.. w lllcW .. ...
StrMI," "jkit-Mfft ... staf1" .............
1:00 a Cl)T...,.
2:00 e ... Dn•hflltin:" .._.
.,., ....... lJ!QM, .. "Slraqers ..
s.t.• I ..... s.: "Olly Ille '*"
.... " "'• Diel •• KlnJ"
-------~ --- ------------~ -
''In a way, I guess. I was always in hot water ror maJcina jokes, especially when I didn't do my homework. Wh.ich was almost always. I guess my
teachers dJdn't enjoy my sense of humor. I was kept ~!ter school a lot."
Wen you alw aya lnterested ID performing?
"No. Firs\ I wanted to be a professional
baseball player. I enjoyed baseball and was pretty good Wltil I injured my shoulder."
Which romedJans wen your Idols?
"Jack Benny, Jimmy Durante, Groucho.
George Jessel, Milton Be'rle. But I got my first real
break from Ed Sullivan. I was introduced to
netwprk TV on a special prime-time show Mr.
' rt New Approach
For 'CB' Movie
1 J.0$ ANGELES (AP) -Paramount Pictures
has sent "Citizens Band'' back to tbe drawing board! for a new app.roach to the movie's release.
The new film opened in 200 theaters throughout
'Glad Yau
lil'f Ma It• _. Hy ea 0
llivm micced -o of the Year
AGVA Awardl.' Jncld tall1, • a k d, J wan
looked forward to the Sullivan lbow Sw:idaY niCbb
beeauae there was DO acbOol that. daJ. ••
Wbere did yoa fet m..t .,_1..,. esperlaco'
"Playtnc small clubl. 1ben i.ter dolOI tho
Playboy circuit. and rtndlnc ·«Mil 'Wbat aUdlenea
were reall)' interested in. Dofni the t.alk •bow•,
Carson, Grlfftn and Doua.tas, bolstered my con-
fidence."
You stadenta OD "Welcome Badr, KOUer" -
dld yoa bdp caat tbat motley poap!
"Only in t.bia respect: the characters are all
based on real people and each ooe relates to so-meone I knew."
Al a very ellglble bacbelcw, 1&'• 111.0'rtalaC a.ow
seldom we see your name in IOMIP eolamna llaltlal
yoa wHb equally eligible 1all. Bow IOlaC are 1" I•
tng to remain slD&l~! ·
"Until J meet a eirl I th1nk will be compatible
tor a loog run. And she won't be aomeone in show
business!"
Y.es, the teacher is lea.ming.
Send JIOUr questions to Hp Gordner, "Clad You
Aaked That," care of thU ~. P.O. ~ 1~.
Costa Mesa 92626. Marilyn and Hy CarUMr will GnatOtt' as
many qwstioru aa they can tn llwi'r c:oMn1t, but the
volumeofmaU~peraonalr«f'llea~. '
"CATHY
TIPPEL"
STA ....
MOMI~ YAMDI IM
the country last month and drew an apathetic ,,."'!ff'T~':"l~ ... ~!!!Pi!!::~~:'!~~-·~ response. despite generally good reviews. It ran in· : •
to competition rrom two other movies about CB
radio. "Breaker Breaker" and "Smoky and the
• BancSit •
Producer Freddie Fields said ''Citizens Band"
was withdrawn from release to provide a fresh look
at hew to sell it The aim is to build a following,
aloni the lines of'' American Grafitti "
4;. "MUllDB IY DIATH"" IPG v --¥11 $TUAI("
"CllOSS M llON" llJ
"AUDUY 1051"
Ttif cnv SHOP,.NG CENTR~
•OAAHGE·~tl
11'\ CITY Ch4Tllf. CINEMA~ ~
.A "'IWY IMANCt411TI" IXJ
0.0 '"W" (CITY D .. • uc.1 6M.Hll
.. loarr'CPGt
.. ST. IYIS"
• ""WIZAIDS" .. ..,...MAM••tPGJ
....... PAtma
mfl(IS AGAIM" IPGJ
.. ltOCtcr
"HUSTl.rCRJ
.. A ST AR 1$ IOIM" lltt
.. CtalY MIU HIGH'"
"11.ACW SUMDA Y"' CIJ
''Ll11'LE GtRL WHO LIVED DOWM THE LAMIE'"
"SILVB
°"TUMllllL Vt
,, ... ta •t•t'' •t"
• , , I I 1 '~
--·--·-nll ....... tut ....... 811 ....
- -LJ tNaM\I ...... 41&.L •• CAin
A UIDGI 100 JU" IOMl'. NO M9lf ............ -•IMSAUINt ...
W.C.PlllMM9MllNt •
MMe .......... nuuu.-~
W.C. JlllN AHD MICN>
f
wtffROf 7
. /iCl4DEM'(
AWARDS
~.
In 1973
..• on it
10kes Is
altttle
Confidence.
• 0 1 DON'T OONSIDE• 'September Sona' • 1ur·
vlvor 8Cllll, but there is one line wblcb expresses
why I'll never retire," be said. "That'• 'these few
soldendaya I'll spend with you.' ..
The •year-old Newport Beach resident, about
to enter hla l1xth season as the foxY crandpa detec-
tive, said. ••After th1a I'll just get into somethlnt
elle. Someotberjob. I can'tdonothlni." Eblen said beiirould like to write. "I bave about
alx plays and 1 want to write •11y Fint 50 Years in Sbow .BmioesS,' .. Ebsen said. "My mother, God
bleu ber, saved every Jetter from lt28 on. Every
cll{>Pinl. pictures. Sbe tquirrelecl tt all away."
airs ALltEADY Wat'ITEN AT least one play,
"The Champagne General," about Civil War
general George McClellan, and be ii wor1dn1 with
bia daughter, Bonnie. on a script for "Barnaby
Jones."
He said he bas more tiloe for writing since the
addit.iao ol Mark Shera as bis partner. "I said we
have two clever people on the show, Lee
Meriwether and Mark Sbera. I sa,id why don't JOU
do a number ol shows In wbicb they carry the load.
They agreed to that and it gives me more time to do the th1nia I want to do."
One ol the things be devotes his lime to ls build·
lnl catamaran boats. After flllishine lut season
be helped deliver two boats to Florida. They bad to
take the boats through the Gull ol Mexico area he
called "the hijacking triangle" because of the dis-
appearance of boats in the area. Many sources
believe 'the 7acbts were hijacked by 4nac 1mu1· sJera. ... ·
"AftOARJ~Y FUNNY SEX OOM£DY"
"Cl NDERELLA"
IS NOT JUST ANOTHER
FILM IT'S AN EVENT!
---00.WLCERl:LcilA~-~PAYOA
............ ._.. ...... -s&.\IEA S'T'FtE:AI<-...... -...... ,., ...... lllir -~" ...,.., .......... Mf"Fl(J(. Mc:QOOHAN----
'"' , trnlP' ·-· ...... _.... _, ..... ....__._ ..... ..._... ...... .._ !1l -.-.....~-
l"&Zl:wJllP:I -·:;--·-~
INVIAUOO~
....... --.rri-.
•ta9IUlllY·u.Mtmlll·U......-
......... 1IWllll.,.. ...... 11.11'1 ...
........... Tift ... ._ ...... .,, ... .... _ .......... EINllllS
11m111 • ....,1t llME BWAIDS ...... ,_. .........
I
SILVEA ITREAtll
Weetcdays-41:50
MT -1:30-9:20, edwards LIDO CINEMA w~~='44 HEWPOltTAVD. AT VIA UDO SAT-7:30-11 :11
SUN -1:15-5:10..9:05 NIWPOIT HACH 67J..IJSO SUN-1:1 .. ~10.11:00
CttnWTM"lfTllllY~O..
CINEMA CENTER
HARBOR AT AD•MS, COSTA MESA
MESA VERDECENTER 979-4141 .,
caoaos AT &ANDO• -Hearty con·
iratulat.iona from th1J column to Irvine Master Cboraledlrector Jobn Alexander.
LID llPPllJN
"THISONG
UMAINS
THI SAME"
AM-. WMS DAil Y -1 '°°41 "41ao-7t4.._.
Ht.•fAT.•1211 S-UT. AND SUN. 10a4S AM
P'lm CITY CINTla S.01 MITaOPO&.rTAN.
• t RtCHAU f UltTON IN ''THI HlltlTICu
XC>aCllT U
DAILY • 12t 15~a30-4a41·7r00-9s15
Pll. AND IAT. 11
.lobD. who ls about to lad tbe lllC on a tllree-
natloQ Eul'Opean tour. bu beeo umed Dlat·
tn1uilbed ProlellOf of tbe Year at hlS bome CUD•
pus of Cal State Northridae. He WU PJcked from too faculty memben.
-And eoqi-atulatlons an ln order for Lyric Opera o( Oraqe Cocidty with the De-Q that tbe
iroup will itv• ut no leas t.hu five operas in the ma.11seuoo.
Q&lfTllD dE: °Faust, .. wttb Georgio Toul as Mepb.latopbetes: "La Boheme.~· wlth.
Mary Costa u lllnll; "Rtaoletto," with Hernan
Pelayo in tbe title role; "Madam Butterfly,"
with John Alexander u Lt. Pinkert.on and "Most
Happy Fella" with Louls Qullico.
Opera ts taking at.nt strides in our county
these daJS. And lt's worth not.ins th•t the ldet.ropoUtan Opera audit.ions held in Santa for
the first time this year were tbe tb1rd largest in
the state.
edwards BRISTOL CINEMA
" llJSTOL AT MACAITMUI
540.7444
-
••
•!·--· ..
)
..._. · S amm1IDllC8Uicm
'ft ~ 11111 8P OD a • . .we wUl do wb t.bl7
wut w t.odo, dwy wllllt aa t.o do tt, •• Odom Nici.
AIJelka heredlft the oil GDCe lt
radle tbe pump ltatlon. lloller
com pane it With • 'llv the
teJ• of JOU&' ear t.o JOW' IOl'I. He
ha cuRod.J, butlt'• your car."
Zkb owner·compan7 &eta its
sbare of the oU cnee it arrlva at
tbe Jn.free port of Valdez, the
souUaern tennious of tbe line.
•
.. imercaaf ..... .,..,,.~.,...,.. ... 4L YESIL\ EXPECTS it to
take 30 to 45 days for the first oil
t.o reach Valdez. Normally it
would take mueb less time, bqt
tbe flow will be restrained so the
llae and pump ltatiou can be
ID'oaltored for leaks and mecbeaieaJ problems.
"'•••• #!9r"1••• .... -. .... cml•• ._
.. • ..... PadfleC..,. .. C'alta~ ......
~ listimC 4z•:eftee wtlll dl9 Jlew Yd 9-k ~
• dt .......... "' ... ~' ......
......... P.afic•• ........ ~ -... .... AJDeriaa _. hd6e .._. net ere _... u.e ,,_...RT.
F« tk '#U' ... 0... Jl.. tk CJ•J•J re-
ported,... rw~flf
'"'.. •• 511"17 .... ·c .... at' .a:r-) eoae ol ~. • •~
." SZMa._.,.,. fil tet. S'J"OC1'
·" eomparal na. 1915 re----------,,. YMllS of -.-.uz ...
nctilN mn1e'11Sl.,.,._,eracata,.,. M ,..,
r~_,,,....., r •'••~ JnetnllJlsdaa1eo .,~,.__._.
............... 7.M. ...... ..,. , ......
.-; p.a.t'MwD~BJIN!Wf//I...,_
•. 1'UJIMtw ar.i..-,.zz.-fllllyC Sp'
· • « • Padk. •~~=mt~! ... ..,.. : 1'llMa' .t ••I ~ r•: ;-J fr I r • ii -~··· 11 ...,_ ...... _ ........... _,. r.wnc•r • . .._.._..,. .. _ _.
·:mtfit .::.nrA a < AwrMal
., ..... , tfrl ,._
#~ 'Dea.ti... rw _..,,,.,_ w.w
s ~-=.... 2 dt ,, ...... .... ••' ........... ,, , ........ ... ,. .. ........
'De ......................... ...
;'tilt w &1lldy • 1'1 I Lb c a lie TWA"•
¢ 'd farrinl"9trl P NP ........... ., ..
• JI ....... ..,..,. .. ,, -
.#' A1f1Ai111 ._.. .. aadw .... ...,_, •e I ..... ....., ......... .,, .....
tfefiefil. i
ID Valdez tbe oil will be Joaded
iDt.o taken. Nobody knows for
sure where tt will go from then.
There are several proposals to baiJcl pipdloe9 from the West
Coast to tbe Jlidwest or to ute
pau _of a:lstl.ng pipelines, as
well • talk of send.l.ne the oil to Japan fn a swap for, Kiddle zuura oil that t.beo would be
lellt Lo tbe Northeast.
MrOl'llEll mEA IS to ship il
throup tbe Panama Canal to
poru m the Gull of Mexico. Still
anodaer scheme would be to use
railroad tank ean to get tbe
enrdet.otbe Midwest.
Odom and bis BP counterpart
are eoneent.ratine on making
nre lt.7 can tupply the 800,000
barnJt die pipeline is scbeduled
to carry eadl clay after startup.
Eada eompany is to supply
DJJGO barnls. Preparatioa.s so
fta iDdade bial runs in which
''•• pntmd to open tbe valves. Tbe ma. will walk to the Yalve
and be will HJ, 'I am opening
UU.•alve.'
rt'C '•" ••,_,__,•-.'I
Dl'All PAT; Seme time aco there WU a lol ot ~....._reports liakinc polyriotl chloride <•
tJfC '11 ~) to cw.er. J'ye wondered ever since w .., "' 111e p1a111e wr..-« coc*lns bap anc1 ....,...., r ' b!ft . ..-inU.bomecontatn PVC
E.L, c.ta Kesa
-. ....... I dlrl•,aallllc ....... ,..,.. nc. ca.. w..., • , •••• ..,_ ~nf, .. ,. • TIJJ• J ............. I,, rrs (llell,.,...
:·~ •as ,,,, a1111 ri. .......... al) .,.., .... .-,e 11kw 6lfl .. n -.,. ....... _ ........ ..,. .. , ..... ._ .. ,w.
•''LS1 -.-. ._ ........ .,,tn'elt ,.._
9U& UDEU: ATS U. rece.h_. a
•••...., ., l .. •lrfe• r~u•1tr1 ••••Irle apt, c .. ....,., .... ~~IM.,
-1 ra.-...e.,aalltr~O>.W.,.tlena .......... amet ..... thifll .. EnsJ' .. J
V..." 'M :tll:." fllr=• fs U. U.S. llelrte t•r lf .... ..._ .. ..._. ... , tes"
...... •., 1em, a ,.,, 181 __.~•Ilea ,,.,. .. • llim7 ... ,..-i nail ... a.ad a.-
.. 1 Aft .... ._a,llilfl--C--·• Ddtee .... 1 1 ........ liwf lrr ....... ---.•..._e _. # :: ...__ .._. elltA te fll tea-
..-,; t I •• -. ~e: de.. an ta-.......... &d ...... e.--lnmAftwlllta
rt a \ .. lf:l"au•t•• '••·
Odalla.
Two f"11·tea1• 4rUh wen
plaaeddda ....
WlamU. .... to tM
lOON • nee.-at Arco·• f'I01f
tatloa 1. Daler ialtb &Id Jolm
UarnlLl 1111 UM7'D be radJ.
JU.am.a.& •A rLOW 1U1boo operator. Be follcnn the oiJ UW
come. from tbe weU. lDto the Ila·
tioo and aut to Alyeaka.
Like IDOlt of the employea, be
worts aeveo days • week, 12
.... WI~
ALASKAN OIL WELLHEADS ARE READY -AS PLANNED FOUR YEARS AGO
Crude to Begin Moving Mondey; PlpeHne Staff Awda Signet
Over The Counter
HASDUstings
Ul'S
Ulsl , .... 31,
Jl• ,,,,,
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VD 30.ll Up '°:11" VD 17.9 VD 17.2 VD U..3 VD 1J9 VD 11 S
Up 12 S UD 10 S
VD 100 Up 10.0 Up 9.6 Vo ••
VD 9.1 VJ> I.I VD 17
Up 1.3 VD I I VD 1.1 Up 7.7 Uo 1.1 Uit 7.7 U• 1A U• 1~
l.eJI Ch9 ~I. Slit -I Oii IU I -I Orf 12.S J -~ Off 11.1 , ,, Oft 11.1
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I .Al t 112 71~'? .. \It ~.:1 n ~t~· .... U O IO 2t KY>-~ 112 tt •+11t
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Oleul• 2.:n I U4 3*l!'t+ 'h C">IM!lor • 21 I~ l,O Cl""9T 211 ,_. 11~-Vo °"''""'' .. 10 l'•-.... otOI • 1Cll Oh \ .. Cftpfl.AO.. • 1~-\It I 1 1 31 16h-Vo
-pf s .. S670 ••••• ...... I l J65 1714 ••• ., ·'° ' " ,. ..... °""'" 1.60 ' " 261\+ '• CIMGE 1.64 t 60 2l'"9-\1i ClnGDI 4 _. rlO "7.,.__.1 ClnMll 1.e12 6Z n v.+ ''•
CMkfe 1 °' I ttO ~ 1'11 CH'"5v I 1 ~ '6 -14
Of\llnv .ID I n1 '"-l<i Olylnvwt •• 10 S-'2+1-12 ~yin p1 2 . • as u i.. ••••. .,..~ 110 •• 21 ""-····· IMil IM>e I 125 40111 + 14
-I .JOIO 31 14'h--§:ff I IDit 10 I '3\lo + "II El 2 .... 14 » ..... !I Pll 7.'0 •• 1 44 0 1 1 \61+ " OvElpl 12 .. m 12' +1"' ~ AOIO IJ IJ't.i-V. Oorox .6010 ~ 121 ...... Olle!Pe• .50 s 72 t•h ..•.. OueltPPI 1 .. 4 12¥. .....
QISIGs .30 6 ... 10 + V• QtSGpfl.13 .. • 2'14+ v. CatSGPll.I. .• 22 22~+-\It
Coa8 11 . .io. 13 "' ....... . Cot.col 1.54 u 914 37 ... .. ColclWBk ,1? I 11 11\4 + 1-. $:!!•Net .60 s 21 1~ " o;;teo ' 31 6'4-\'o
eoif!:!1
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COSOpt J.42 .. St 27"'-+ v. Goml>C _ ,.,. 1 1J 21111 ••••• CtnoEn 22011 114 jl ... ,_ e·-' 1.11.. 1 Sl\4+11.-'0 EQ IOU tl7 11 -\'o 1E 2.<IO t 2.. :JO"o-Vo EdAwt • . 2 10'• .... . CWEpf 1.42 . 2 21~ .... . CwEpl I 'II . SJ 21 -~ °""""pf J • • u .... C..Epl La. 161 I~+ \1 CWEpl 2.J7 , . I 21'•· •.•. C'for£pf 211 . l60 :n ... + I~ CO...£ pll.41 • 1 IOI + .\< Comwt 1 ll , .. M''t-'• .2010 ,. 31""• •• I • UA 1' 1+ 'I 75 5 .. ,., ..... ~. 1.20 • 32 2211+ \1
Gon9ofm .60. 4l "'•-\• Car-..M UOIS II "'),
Oltw'ac: .eo • s• 24~. • (.onEd 2 S m 22h •... ~Epl 6.. I 7l"'• » Epl 4.'5 •• 1310 St'I>-loo EPI S.. IJ 54' '· Fdl uo I 87 2s•; + \\ c.oni<rvt ... I 14 ~ ..• C.0..NG t 50 I tn .. -\'o
CnGpl 10.96 .. "° 1111/a .. ConsPw 2.12 6 ,,. 2-. CnPw p14SO dlO~+,.. CnPw pl4.S2 110 SS -\> CnPw pt7.6 14'00 13~ • 11;. CnPw pl7 12 , 11310 IS"•+ 1~ CnPw l)f1.76, t6'0016Vt+1 CftPW pl7.61 . t70 .. • ,
CnPw 1112.A3 , 21 26Mi • "' CnPw pfS.'° • J 11~ • >II CnPw pf • .. 2 9611, ..... ContAlr I 100 nto .. ContCO!> .• 41 S •• , CntC pf I 2S. 170 12111 •• , ConllCp J 1J " 57 -,,. CllC pfA2.fO • 21 t11i'>• Vt CnllGrp 2 t 117 36'--+ ·~ COllllll 1 to 1 111 11 -111 ConlllP 1 21 I 12 16>1i •••• (Oftlllllt . 1 ,,,, .. "'
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CornG 1. S2• 1l 464 M"" • ' Cou~ln$ t 1•. . .
Cowl" MIT • 14'' .. Co•ad<t SS I 1 21 .. -"' ~~::: 1,: ~ ~ ~~: :!
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o.tvco lllb ' t 11 -\• Cleve II( • t5 tJI> 10'~-1 ~Vltld 1 JO I W ~ t\ 0.°"Pl, I .. t •1 I0-1<> 011'1. ... TUO rlO 11' -.. ~ Ito 1 fJI ,._ ... 0.tM., Ito 1 • 1'',._ 111 °''"""· 110l0 , .. l•llo-\, 0.lteAlr .l'I I Ill »"'• ..
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l11et..a•Mlillu1J'tW.1-ftW11 !t •••U.U.S. .-•
.-i. .._..,._.. ---dtllW.T. G,_o91.
1-PM.:'.=!7 u:.-:o:: ...... M .. tn•ll1t U.
!lewlll-. lMIHndl fll 1JUll ""'*'21•11 ID '-& .....!!.':! m•tb. 'lbe.1 cP leue tows •llO have paid"~....-~ ..
oa meld••• ma ftAuclal .......
~m BAYS JO& !'SAU comjlaln-1 abOUt
bankruptda, about lb ..,.. tW tat• !DOM'J ud dOD't
open.. builderl wbo acc.-pt 4leposltl i.Dd don't. ~a1plete tbe
coostrvctiOa.. etc.
Uoder 10 amendment to tbe f'ede-ral bankruptcy code
pre>pONd by Millicent Fenwick (ft,N.J.), couumen wOWd
be elven pre{eNQCe lo the..,.., of tmolveneJ. Tbe p~
bu the tu~ ot the commlUee on bua1nelS law oi t.beN..,
York State Bar A.aoela·
tion as well as the com·
mlttee oo bankruptcy
and corporate re·
orcanbation of the M ·
aociatice of tile Bar in
New York City. ~
But even thU lft'oWd
not *live t.be problem satisfactorily. Wbat if the retailer
already bu sold lt.a assets T EVerytbJnc on the nocw be!ongs
to a finance co111pany, or "factor." The factor t.requently
buys the accounts owed to the bualness, as well as its inven·
tory and physical assets, and may pay less than they ai:e
wottb. A small business may be compelled to agr-ee to this
because it needs money al once.
WHAT IF THE FAcroa HAS EXTENDED a loan and
the assets of the «rm have bMn pledced to pay the loan in
the event of default? The factor Is a "secured" creditor un-
der these circumstances and gets lt.a cut of the pledged pro-
perty before anybody else.
Often this system is the only way a business on the edge
of bankrupt.cy can set lmmedlate cub.
In either case, the catch ls that the consumer will not be
aware of this arrangement and you can be badly hurt.
Because of thia, many experts would io beyond the Fenwi~
proposal and give the consumer a preference even over
"secured" creditors.
AN A'ITACK ON THE PROBLEM also ls being made at
state and local levels. For instance. mlQY proposals would
require consumers' deposits to be placed in escrow unW the
goods are delivered.
It sclunds fair, but the idea raises shrieta ot agony f'ro10
small businesses that need this money as worklne capital to
continue to operate and even just to pay the rent. The
escrow requirement cc)uld cause a belly number of "'mom
and pop'' retailers to close.
Under another alternative beinl atudled, the state
would M!t up a lleft ln favor of the consumer In the Jmount of
the deposit. Under another proposal, a retail deposit ill·
surance fund would be esi.blis.bed Into which each retaUer
would contribute a small amount. The fund would help to
spread the loss when consumer deposit.a are lost in an in-
solvency. '
Stocks Surre~r .
Som,e Tuesday Gai 1U·
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market wu mixed to-
day. falling back from Tuesday's 8trolll advance.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was down ·s.oo pointsto917.57.
But gainers held a 7-8 edge over losers amon& issues
.liated on the New Yort Stock EX-change.
Analysts said blue cblpa came in for proflt-tak:ine after
Tuetct.y's advance wbe11 the Dow Industrial aven1e 1ained
more than 10 points, lt.a lar1est daily &ain in about two months.
Dmf'lon~•A.,~r•~• Wlaat St~lul Did
NPW Yorkl.AP) Fi Ml Oow-~ .... .., S"TOCICS °"""' H ltfl ~-Clot• Che 30 111d m 91 t1s.os tfol.4 "1.11 .. H D JO Trn 1311 56 J>U7 1)7 Oi 237,1'1-0 JI 15 VII 113 S9 11',tl 10 ft llS.off-01' 6S Slk Jll.9.t J1'.07 ~10... JU.SI-1,2• Ind"' ............ , ... 1,7'1-Tran . .. . .. • • •• • .. •• .. • .. • • ,.,JOO Ulll• • , ..... ., •.• , • ,. .... , . •21,eot
6S SI-. • . • . • • .. . . . .• . .. .. • • • .. 2.1u.ooe
NEW VORK fAP)· Sain, 4 p.m, prl<1 end ... 1 <""'-of ~ IM mo~ IKllVt AmertUN'I S101111 E•<'-lle It...,. tradl"9 ,..tloNllY M 1111.,~ -SI
Gt8.s Pet ••• , • 161.100 "" -'" ~ .. , .... Carp, • • • '6.200 .. ~ ...
Soll119n • • •• .. 61.200 , ..... "' IC-a.-lft. . . 54.400 4'"' • 1'6o HouOllM .. •• .!i0.200 s1-. -... Awm~• o . . . .0.100 11"-• " ~US4! Vlt. • • . . . JI.• ...... 1-.
Aydin Cp. • •••• Joi.JOO 19'• • ... ApldO.YCi • • ••• Jf,I.. t'~ .. '• Hutlly Oil •••• .,, •.10t .... -...
llp•aadDe.,,11•
HEW VOllllC CAPI
"'"' Naw vo•K IAPI -NV ~ ... ~ Al>PtO• 111\11 .................• .n .... ... ,...¥\_ *"' .. . . .. . . .......... 2S,3t0.-
¥11"" .......................... 'J1=:: Moftlll eoe ........... • .. "..... 2 """;'AO v ... "° ....................... u~~"· l: ,~:n ..:r. :!. ·::. ·::. ·::. "·:: ;;,..:-:-"" e •• ................. 2,...1,m .-"11 .. --•....•.• , ........ 2,All~
WMATAM•llt DtO NlfW ~I( •API ........
Tedey N'f ,., J»
211 227 111 m .. -l2 •
" 1J
AM9•1ALH •
~·,..,.. wli ••••.•••.•.•.•• tA»• Me<ll :U4el .,.. _.., ............ !,llA,85 ~, ..... .,..., ............... ..., ..
...,. ..... "'"' .............. ,$1,104 ...
.. •
I
'\
I
TANK McNAMARA
. MAMCY
YES, BUT
FOR-SOME-
STRANGE
REASON-~
TDDAT'S CllSSlllD nllLl
ACROSS 45 Hochy Ind UNITED Feature Syndicate lootbell t Terten 48 lfc*en TueldlyPuldttotwed:
e About 49 D1"tttd of 10 TOJpcr heir
t4 Former Fr. 60 Artlflclel l'llOntlary unit tema 15 Fen to 6' Penetrettng Include 52 Anl1111r1
16Horeo 5 C, raci~ treck 5 ary eenel 1 7 Out o portion
P'OI* M 1'*'1bld
Otdef •&OM atab t e Auto feature eo w Getman
20 LIOhl ctty
refrfftunent et Medi 1 21 Ruuiln hole4n.ont
lader: Vu. 82 HofM t t E'9-•llll>td 40 Certain cof..
23 Retnove trainer'• t 2 Siult Ste. otl bonds ..,.. 41 Haeadldl
24 un.ra harsh 13 Com unlta t 3 Shnlb pain
language 14 Faftlng 18 McM 42 TV VIP
'28 Alberta city: gently 22 Artful 43 '141g11--";
2 ~ds es s.t eystatn• 25 Oppottt. of: Alldnon
28 Boy I Preli• drlllll nickname DOWN 29 Spteld 45 Heogerd 30 ~ingola unchecked tlttl
atitp 1 8reld 21 u ... poor 48 Tinmt
31 Careleu 2-Julee iudotment 47,Vlolent 11>-
hurrylnt 3 Bird lovef• 28 f.tot be,.. nOtlTlll
32 Isolate 4 U.S. tu footed behavlOf -aa Where ~ 21 "CltllM 48Fiow.r
TOfOfttolt: 50.*"""t -": 48Unlltln0t
Abbf. ~ WtNtlfllt 6fW.11W1ra 37 Ocean e tee~ 30 Qi.et up 63 Sailing movement• COflOOCUOM32 lttat cftrtct1on
38Celendar , 1-33Dteontloft 14Tlle-of
entry KhlyyM 34 Sharp In the Roles 09 t.oat tlOfll 8 evw· Pw..n. ·tone 66 sman boy
• Ofdin.J • 35 loal•.. 11 OlalllOnef: 42 8flop auffilt 37 Rubber Slant
4AAteaVftltl 10Ca'*" ~ 58Par
\
I
t • •
•
.. . ,
. ··-' ,, ,.,
'"'• • .
. ••-1'.
...
A.'1·
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... '
Aa appeal has been
rated with the CaUfornia
coutal commission over
a propoud residential
structure ln the Dana
Point area.
Tbe appellants, ~r.
and Mrs. Paul Siled of
Dana Point, ~tend the
proposed\ two·atory.
single-family dwelllne at
33882 Blue Lantern
would block their ocean
view. They also claim
the home ls larger than
others in the area.
THE SOtJTR Coast re· glonal commission,
which lntltially approved
the development, con-
teoch lbat ptlvate ocean
vlewa are oot protected
under tbe 1978 Coulal
Act and that houses of
like size bave been built
in lbe Blue Lantern area.
Phllllp B. Layman of
~ La1una Bea~b also Ciled
,,r:v an appeal wltb the
Califomla Coutal Com-
mission over develop·
ment of a two-story
dwelllna adjacent to his
home.
'• .
I I
Layman's a ppeal
cbarces tbat tbe pro-
1tos.ad. aJ.ngla-1 a"'° l l
dwellinc at 1985 San
Remo Drive "ia likely to
seriously aggravate an ~lstlnl watenbed pro-
blem" for the adjacent
' bomes.
The re1ional com·
mission. which 'already
bas approved the struc-
ture, contends lbe de-
veloper will construct a
water gathering system
to pre.ent watershed
problems for surr()UD(l-
in& bomes.
Coon ti ans
R e dlands '
Graduates
Several Orance Cout
residents recei ved
bacbe\or'1 decrees tn
commeJ1cement
ceremonle1 at the
Unlvenity of Redlands.
Ann.C. Baker, Corona
del .Mar; Robyn A.
Birnbaum, l..aguna Nlcuel, and Beverly J.
Novaoder, Huntington
Beach, were amona the
graduat..
Newport Beac h
Jl'aduatea were Gay II.
Anthony, Jalme C .
Holmes and Leland c.
Launer, Jr.
Mla1ion Viejo 1raduates were: Lysbet
L. Jenkins and RoCbfll•
B.Nonis.
MORE
FRIGIDAIRE
•
en
rw& ANNOCNCSD last week tbat U.
wu Mllilll t.be at JN for 13 mU11oe to tbe former compUion · of Hushes. Miu
KOOi'• bu clai.med for years that lb.e ac-
tually mari'ted H11~ ln tbe lMOe,
altllou=Huallea never publlely actaow edit.
Tbe Star apokesJD.llJ &delft wu,
T dwood trim and c5stinctive 5"ded onyx accents are elegant
tws of convenience inside. ~-tough 5ner cleans easy, resists
$loins and chipping. Top-freez.er hos 4.75 cu. ft. with covered ice
troy storage and a sepaote, removal:ile f"'.....ah shelf. Door
storage includes speods. cheese comportments, removoble egg
setVers. Twin vegetd:lle Hyaotors.
SAU Plk:I
FRJGl_DAIRE 20.6 cu. ft. Refri~otor $440
one Ofiy. qeen . • • . • . . . . . . • • • • . ~~tRE~~~-· .~$350
FRIGIDAIRE Bult-in Oishwoww 0
one only .•.••...••...•.••.• SI t .
AUG10A1RE WCJSJ.
fom1y-sim .............. $2t0
25" &ogonal Sytvonio Den-lite .. SO color picture
tube. 1001 solicktote chassis. Sytvonio GT-Motic (TM) II
~olor ttriig system. Beoutifu white cabinet with top of
Rosewood groin finish. · ·
I
-5118-
PLQSMORE SRVANIA
SYLVANA25"
~t~~-=~e TV ...... $620
•
•
g His Goose:
Tips for a Wild Sommer
Karen Green is a published
expert on camp cookery.
Her message: Don't let
outdoor accoutrements
limit gourmet appeal.
Rather, pack thoughtfully
to make meals delicious,
-easy-on yourseff.
.Shoppers Sour
On Fed's Taboo
An overwhelming majority of supermarket shoppers in Los ·
Angeles and Oranie Counties object to the banning of saccharin
and aaccharin·sweetened products, according to the towtb ao·
nual attl\ude and opinion poll conducted by USC's Food Market-
ing Management Program.
The survey, which involved some 2,310shoppersin154 major·
chain 1upermarkets throughout the Southland, revealed a
wballoping 71.6 percent against the federally proposed ban. Ap·
proximately 18.2 percent of the respondents favored the ban, with
10.2 percent voicing no opin.lon.
Dr. James H. Stevenson, director or the program, said sur-
vey results abow personal dietary preferences upstaging govern·
ment w.aminp that aaccbarin could cause cancer.
• OONSVMEU ABE WEARY of bearing about what goverii·
ment says ii bad for them, and it is clear that in this cue, the peo.
ple we talked to are not at all convinced that saccharin is bad for
them. The fovemment bu not m8de its case."
A recent study by American scientists indicating that sac·
charln m:fn~ause cancer in humans has fueled the Food and
Drue Ad tratJon's proposed ban or saccharin from srocery
•helves next month. The ban was originally based on a Canadian
study llnJdna bladdet cancer in laboratory rat.a t.o the artiflcial
sweetner.
The paoel of American sclentista who presented tbelr find.
ings to a Senate health subcommittee last week, indicated they
count accept 1accharin u an over-the.counter druc for sale to
adult.a, but believed distribution of saccharin as a food additive
abould WellmlDated.
THE SACCllARIN JNQUDY among Southern Callfornla
shoppers was one or many questions presented u part of the
\JSC'a recently publhhechtudy, "Consumer Spotllcbt, "17."
Regardine other proposed leplation, a near-even split in
opinion showed up when 1boppers were asked if they would favor
a law requirinC them to pay 5 cents on every canned aofl drink ol'
beer, slmUar to rel\llations imposed by a new Oreaon statute. "'Ibe lnterestln1 aspect or tb1s quest.loo ls that the more
educaUoa respondents had. the more likely they were to favor the
law,'' nid Stevenaon.
A total ol 43.7 percent favored-such a depoait tax, and 42.9
percent oppol.cl it. The hllheat favorable response came from
aboppers with more than fqur years of college, or 62.9 percent.
ne MCOad_.,_t favorable l"91JP001e came from ~le witb at
leut four years Of coUege, S2 ~ent, while the lowest favorable
rttJIOQM cunefrom people from 28. 7 percent.: •
••0ne area that conUnues to confUse the public li the open
cMe on IOGM proClucta," 1.Sd Stftenson; remlJti.oi that ibOpper
awareoeu wbere code marklDp are concerned is at it.a lo••t
~ttnn .. ,.....
••A '""'1ft« num~ of people hav t.be impression tbat lMsfi
date. tell cwtomen wbeo • eroduct spoilt. The trut.ti w that the
product lt ...uatly CoOd for aome perlOd (7 days) aftet that date,"
be Aid. ...
ID wn, he aaid, half of the surveyed respmktenta ttated cor·
· ftcU1 that tbe code 1l1nltied the date it 111ust be removed from tit• IJ'OC!ltl''• ehelf. . ,,.,
1Slnee'then, tbere hu beeh. a.steady~· IQ~fft
ra,....., 1'M.b • pre.,.,..andi ot WI )'ear'• naollldtiati '(48
percent> ..,_1., MU~vtd the eOcle lDdleattd U..1Mt. date the ~ad eo.iN tie ........... y. Aaaln. laid StevllltOD, tM b1Hett ,.... .. ot en came from lbopptn daimtnc lbe ,,..-----· . ~ ..,_, <'Wbleh inYOIVed ~ ~ Faiio'11 LuckJ,
llarW~ Ralph'•• s.fewQ Md VOlll markets, alto re-.-.ed1DOf'8 tomUIDen fa'6rin1 ,,,... to laard·Uquor. Approx· ....... ~ ot all 1~·uaid theY 1ened wiHWitb din· r ......... ..ur~ WldalJ.2 pwttltt wbO Mid
W • cot'ltaD Wore • .
h>rtM~iluBW CMUS«>WEN. Fo041cMor At~lnl~~:edhltbejea.nube doa"t Deed to briDa alone maQJ uteuDs.'" aqd lt an also be used as J blkl.nf tool,
calla hli' aeCOOd a~Jtina Greem re-Kanau:ld.Juataddwater. • ahf•ald. .
searches tbe luretJ and the lore ot wUder· ••'J'ldl puUeular maaufacturer procluca. Karen will be demonatraU.01 eam1>
nen llYinl m between scrambles ca tbe •ai.Ula lee cream, rupberrJ Jello• abrtmp cookery at the Orange County Fair Frid~
floor with son, Jonathan, 3. enole and chicken wad wblcb can be Jul7 ZZ. at 1:30 ancl. at 7:30 p.m. lD tbe
Some people, bJ iporanee, woUld call ready to eat out of clllpoaable en•elopes in Gourmet Gallery. -.:o• ••
ber a bouieWlfe, but Sile bu actually ml.Dutel. Rectom are offered below for w oao-1)(4
earned tbe ennable atatua ot a successful "We've ta.ten some or the mixes, ~. campers stew. She iuaranteel itl arcMlla to
freelance writ.et, With .a bent for temnc after they're reb.)'drated, piled them on brlD• blken back lrom the trail Inc!~~
abOUttbetwotbJnPlb•lovesbeat: cooking bread with a piece of cheese and pilled al.lo are Karen'• nclpe for fbb. b~
and the outdoors. ' them over the fire, ao you don't have to be and two other cuy-ele1ant ways to~
It's a apeclal blend, she aays, reqllirinl limited lo your menu," 1be added. fresh catch. ~
the abWty to bf as adventurous •t the Wblle these foods are 1old at camping • .... cam~uontbetrail. · and mpuntaineerinc stores. Karen a1.!1o re-ONE-POTClllLISl'EW' ••·
"I'm just u crazy about writing about it commends packin1 other dehydrated 1~ ..... nut. -·-meat (v-:---1• u I am about doing il.'" &be says. sbowin~ foodi, available in supermarkets. otiental ,..._....... .......... -...
Qlf the compact, portable gear she uses for and gourmet specialty shops. marvelOUa. if you have it> .
"rouibini it in the kitchen." · · 2-4 tablespoons cookinl oD ..... ..
To be tD t.be wilderness, she says, is her EASY. ONE SKILLET casseroles can be l large garlic clove, chopped • ... .
way of letting go. "It's my kind ef medita· made from packaces of dehydrated potat..o 2 onions. coarsely chopped ;. llon,theonlywayllmowllowtocompt~tely mixes, for ex.mple. They require only Saltandpepper,totaat.e • --relax." water to rehydrate, and can be mixed with 216-ounce cans stewed tomatoes • .. : •
A• for prepariQc vittles cain}>lide, sbe canned flab or meat.a and other vegetables. 115-ounce can pinto (red) beans ••
says, "You learn by doing, and wttb each A great economical flavor booster for 14-ounce can chopped sreen eblles
trip you leam a few more shortcuts, a few· soups, sauces and stuffings for fresh fish ~cup dry red wine, optional ..
more packing hints, and ways to mak.e it are dried mushrooms, which arepas:ka~ed Grated Parmesan che«Se, for toppl.nf'
easierooyourself." In China or Italy, aays Karen. For use in Crumble ground meat with your Mads
· stuff~ or rice, the mushrooms can be directly into the pu and saute with the atl.
GE'ITING DOWN to grub lo the back fint recoostiluted in hot water; the water . garlic, and onl()D until meat looae1 it&
wood means using cold streams to jell a from the aoakin1 can then be added t.o a pinky, raw state. Add the cUT9ts; stir
1alact and chill beer, 8Dcl bonlng a fnsb kill broth or ~uce. . around. Se.uoo to taste wlth salt And pep.
for a meal-in-ooe-pot -hardly the life for Salad dresalDC and aravy mixes also per. an ex-Beverly WU. girl. come to bandy for the campiDC cook. They When carrots are tender, add tbe
In her "previoul lifet" she claims to have make easy ausonlnc mixes to coat chicken tomatoes, beans, and chopped cblles. Slit
zig-iaued between "g1amour jobs" she got or flab to fry; aauces to resurrect tall-end thoroughly to mix all ingredients. Stir 1D
because 1be'1 both pretty and brlcbt. proviliom or leftovers. wine. Simmer mixture for about 30
CiUfied sophistication came a easy to her "Camping ls the pertect til'De to im· minutes. To serve, spoon into large bowls.
as matchln& herbs and spices. She still in· &>rovlle," aald Kt.ren. She also recom· , Generously gamlsb with &rated Parmesu
slats on regular manicures (to go with her mendl paclcina your own seasoned bread cbeeae. hl&b·waten?>. crumb mixture to use for coating fresh U you like it a bit spicier, add a few
Then came "wild" Bill, who eventually catch, and for sprinkling over ve(etable daahesofTabuco. Hot tortillas accompany
took her away from the city and plunked dishes as well. She stores hers in a tarce. this beautifully· Serves U .
her In the Great Outdoors with a rifle lD her covered, plastic bin, then scoops out
hand. She's a good shot. but says be'a the wtiatever she needs into a paper bag to
best. shake and coat the fish.
•'On our rant date, ti. took me hiking and
dove bunUng. We were engaged two weeks
latfr and married wtthln three months "
she said, admitting a1reement to the
change in atmosphere. .
The results of their many bunting, fishing
and camplnJC trips over the last seven years
is a book written by Karen entitled, "How
to Cook Hla Goose (and Other Wild
Games)" <Winchester Presa). Her second
cookbook; "SOOlt to be-ftleued, eM\alu-
about 500 ldeu for pasta freaks. It's
called '"!be Great International Noodle-
Experlence. ·• Karen also writes a food column for
"Western Outdoors" and contributes cook·
inc articles regularly to national
sportsmen's magazines ..
ST&~G TllllOUGBOtJT her writing
that it isn't much more .,ta hassle t.o pro-
duce gourmet rood at a ctmpfire or
Coleman than it is in your own kitchen,
Karen is alao in demand u an outdoOr llv·
il!J consultant to cam1>in« equipment
manufacturers, a job which takes her to the
woods for weeks at a time to test new pro-
ducts. . .
She's ius.t returned from two weeks ot
backpacking alona the Appalachia Trail
where abe and a glrlf riend lived on one
compJm7'• deb,ydrated food products.
"These foods are very expensive, bQt it's
good to be famillar wilt\ them. Since they
welsh practically nothing, they're easy tp ,
carry, and you can mix them rtght in their
own packets to rehydrate them, a9 you
"PACK PAPER BAGS, not plastic,
because you can throw tb~m into the fire to
burn," Karen lldvises. ••Always take out of
the wilderness what you bring in." .
For additlonai seasoning, Karen packs
herbs and spices 1n plastic tube-like con·
talnen used to bold files for fiy fishing, and
solcbt bait and tackle ~tQres. -
Sbe alao carries a wood-handled Chinese cleaver. wnrpped1nside mrasbestos mitten
"to keep it away from children's hands."
A durabl~plasUc, fireproof cutUnc board
doubles u a lid fol' her stew pot. •'Lids take
up • Jot of room, and other than covering a
pot, t.bey aren't very useful." .
People pases lacla•18, Hel1
feahins u AM LUden, lloc'..eope
aad d~ eveata, llave bet9 mot'ed
from tMtr uilal a ud 3 poeltm to
pases Cit ud 11.
Karen a1ao recommends invesUgatin1
these products, new to campers this seuou,
to see if they ftt your outdoor needs: -
One ii a atyrofoam protective thermal
chest, produced by Corning to match their
larger cuserole dishes, and keep them bot
or cold. Foods will keep this way for one
1 day's journey to a campsite, anyway.
Another portable plus for fishermen· is
''$ome Sorta Smoker," which is manufac-
tured by Portsmouth Industries of Hunt·
lngton Beach. Smaller than a st)oe box, it
takes 20-30 minutes to smoke your cat.ch;
.. READlNG FOB FB~~ ~cup bi'ead crumbs · · ·
~cup grated Parmesu cheese
~teaspoon salt
1 ceneroua teaspoon Lemon-Pepper
Seasoning
1 generous teaspoon paprika ~teaspoon dned parsley
~-~teaspoon dried 1weet bull
~'-1 teaspoon garlic powder
Mix all the ingredients. Store in a COV•
ered container or plastic bag.
To coot flab, shake t.o coat 1n mixture in
bag. Set aside. Melt butter or heat oU in
skillet over medium name and brown f1atl
on both aides about ~ minutes. Squeeie
lemon over and serve.
··'~ .,,. .. -. ,..
... . , ... ,.: ·-· .·
I
Awards
Earned
Seven Oranee Coaat
residents majoring in
food service and hotel
man,gement at OCC
have received
scboJarsbips from the
Orange Empire Branch
of the International Food
Service Executives As·
soct.ation.
~bolarship recipients
lncjude: Rafael A.
Goltlales ol 'Westmlnater ($100), Ruth E.
Guarascio of Huntington
Beach (~), Victoria
Judd of Costa Me~a <Sl<>P>. Barbara Cooper
of Costa Mesa ($100),
Janft Munson of Costa
Mesa ($1SO), Cynthia D.
Tayior of Laguna Hills
<$tdO) and Andrea J.
Waite of Newport Beach
($75~.
I .
Viintner
T·o Speak
Southern California
wlnemaking will be the
topic of a presentaUon
Wednesday, June 22 at
the Mariner'• Branch of
the Newport Beach
Public Ubrary.
Glvln& the program
will be Edward G .
Russell of Callaway
Vintners, Southern
California •s major
winery. It ii 1cbeduled. to
1et under way at 7:30
p.m. and there ls no
cbar1e for admisaJon.
Further lnf~atlon can
be obtained by callln.I
640-214L
Dieticians
Get Chief
• Dom Dereltan of Los
Anaeles bas been eleeted
president of the 31600-
JD ember California
Dietetic ~latloll at
ltl recent convention lD
Sacramento.
Ms. Derellan la an~
tlonlst wllb tbe Dairy
Councll of Callfornla.
Tbe dietetic association
consllta ot holpital and
lood sernce dielltlau, nuttlU<in educators and
nutrlUoQ.lata 1&8'"141.
0161f ........ .,.
For their flnt weddin& anniversary. F.d Marcy, a
S • Costa Jrlesa bone trainer, decided to give his wife Of ree Judy a breQ Crom the kitchen with a TV dinner ot
sorts. It did receive television air time, reports
fi Marcy, PoUibly because the dinner was valued at
0 r $3,500. Marcy was the highest bidder !or the 11-coune
savory soiree. donated by Ambrosia Restaurant in
Newport for a KCET benefit auction. The Marcys'
T dinner included Pheasant Flambe and a Camembert WO Mousse, and an Amaretto soune. Attending their ta·
ble was Patti Ann Conway whose husband. James,
serYed as captain.
New Millbrook LightWhite and
Millbi.ook LiglitWheat have 25o/o less
calories than white. tiread. So, if you're
weight conscious, you11 wonder how bread can
taste this go00-and still save calories.
•
S\t9etSttuggliJ
Corn Stalks Clout
New Millbrook Light White
and Millbrook Light Wheat
have a unique mouth-watering
taste your whole family will
enjoy. Taste tests have shown
strong consumer acooptance'bf
Millbrook Light White and Ligh~
Wheat. So, try new Millbrook Light White and
Millbrook Light Wheat for less calories. More fiber.
Great taste. It took Millbrook to put it all together.
?
I
ot T sf
For· Skillet
BSEAKP.uT
BONANZA
1 5~-ounce package
dehydrated instant
mashed potato granules
6egea
1 package alroganoff
gravy mix
· 1 tablespoon de-
hydrated minced onion
II.a cup hot water
Generous pinch
thyme or tarragon
Ham n cheese, classic combo
"avor campers' casserole.
~ cup soy "bacon"
bits
Salt and pepper
serrY. p'ackables
Here's a cake that keeps as long u your
campers will let it stay
around. Keep It fresh in
an air-tight plastic con-
tainer.
BWEBEaRY
CAMP-Our CAKE
3 cups unaifted flour
2 CUlll ausar
1 cup butter or margartne
crated rind of 1
lemon
1 teaspoon salt Beat unW smooth and 3 eggs, separated well blended.
111.a cupc milk Beat egg whites until
2 cups fresh or stiff but not dry. Fold
frozen blueberrlea.. egg whiles Into mixture.
cleaned Pour batter into a
Mlx flour with sugar. greased and floured
C u t I n b u t t e r o r 13xtx2 lnch pan. Sprinkle
m a r gar in e until blueberries over top.
particles are the size of Cover evenly with re.
small peas. Remove 1 served crumbs.
SCALJ.OPED TUNA
SKIU.ET
1 5~unce package
Campers
Beating
the Heat
WASIUNGTON <AP>
·-··Tbe Atrlculture Department says
famlllea should think
about camping out this
summer as a way of
beatins the heat, hlgh
utlllty bilb and potential
power failures.
"If you live In an
apartment building with
a balcony, you may want
aleeplnS bags for outdoor
balcony 1leepin1 should
air conditioning fail,"
the department's Ex·
tenalon Service said.
"Rw-al residents may
flpd an outdoor tent
cooler sleeping."
Also, keep a charcoal
grill bandy for cookinc if
the power fails. But re·
member, this la only an
outdoor activity, u ade·
quate open air ventila·
Uon la requir~.
•
Surprise 'em with Jeno•s Frozen Pizza. Kids love Jeno•s golden crust, savory·~
sauce, and zesty toppings. And you'll like the price. Combine Jeno's Frozen
Pizza with a simple tossed salad and you have a quick-to-fix dinner that's
fun to eat. When you want variety and economy;buy Jeno's Frozen Cheese,
Sausage, Pepperoni, Hamburger or new Canadian-Style Bacon Pizza. Th~
family_ will love It and so wlll you ..
JENO~
. . .. " . .. . . .
~ teaspoon ground albplce
cup ol tbl.t mixture and Bake ln a preheated
reserve for topping. Add moderate ·oven (350
lemon rind; allaptce,. desrees F.) for 40 to so baking powder and salt minutes· or unUl 1olden ,___.;.._ _______________________________________ ~~
to mixture ln bowl. Beat brown. ·Serve warm or J ..
en yolb with milk and pack cold. Yield : 1 1 tablespoon baking
powder add to flour mixture. 13x9x2lnchcake.
" .......... ~ utac fnlt la
Ms ila.rint ..
D7tDBawall
be warted Oil bJa
110Tel, "'Eaat .... Raia.'' .
••BawalJam don't 10 ID
f Hndwtch malda•
1elves, '' be aald, "t;at they are heavy oa
fruit and use it ta ao mpy ol their nieai. that. I tof tbe idea ol mlx1n1 tt meat or flab and
uttin1 it on a bollowed-t roU. •
''lly most complicated
reation was the Eut
lad, Rain aandwicb
hlcb one of the cbarac·
. era in my novel
eamed up. It contains bout 15 ln1redlent1,
anctng from lamb and
h to fruit. all crammed
to a roll. When you eat
the over-all effect is
at s1nce I also throw in a·rew cblll peppers."
ae rule of thumb·
1h follows: A
•.aadwlch must be Juicy ta· 'be good. In fact, it
dlmuld be eaten wiUl the
·help ol a paper napkin,
not a dotb one. . ''Only a paper napkin.
can 1erYe u the true
J!e of the aucceas of a
1 wich." he sald. A
o e -paper-n apkln
1andwicb, be added, ts
poor, two napkins are
fair and on up the 1cale
to five which Nub rates
exceptional
"My Eat Wind. Raia
sandwich is so juicy that
I "'ad vile ea tine it
naked." be added.
Nash has a simpler
,a,,n100 known as the
Jllwailan Hotlock which
ljfench whitefish and
eapple. re is the recipe:
1 cold cooked fillet of
' •
f!~~,!~!!'J.I!~~y ----·L& 680
~'l!!.~~IOOY --L& 49° • !!!~~ Chuck Roast \& 680
Luc Discount Center
......... . . ..., .....
-LOMllWMA..---~91'maT
'/
•
ladylee. ~
!!'t~~!~o~ BEEF •1;-K0a1~ 8 gc .. .
Gallo Salami Chub ~ 151
-·-···-·--······-· _._ .. ___ • 1-0Ll'KO.
!~~gfont .. ~~o~~~.~~~~ 63c
~~!~!Mayer Bologn~"~· 95c
~~ca! Mayer Varie_'!!a~~l'KO. 131
2~~~-!~rer Smokie Li~~~ C::: 12•
~ NatiOnal_ Midget ~!!'L_ pt
~~~er's Polish Sausa~~:; 151
'1~;~-~~~~~--~-~~ ~~o 43c
~~!!!8~.~!L!.~~UI!!_ .. 1 •• otCAH 13c
Bob's
!~~~T~~~.S.O~L 79°
~eu~~ K~sher_~~:: 93c
~~ oreslin~ ___ _::_ 390
lady Lee Cheese Spread ~ 11•
-----»oz.ID/#
~,'!1. Lee Parmesan Cllees! t I a
!-ldY Lee Half I Ha~-»4LCfl(. 590
~d~~ee Sour: Cr~"!~t4LCftl. 390
Lady Lee Orange Juice ~ 990
FllCIH ..... ____ ----14-0l CTll.
Lady Lee Assorted Drinks 69'
···-.. --............. ~-.........._,QM. Cttt.
Lady Lee Low Fat Milk 123
• •. ._OM.LOHCTlf.
r
Wben cookin.J apace is limited, it belPI t.o prepare some
f09ds tn advance, aucb as rice or pasta. which can be reheat-
ed ln foil prap over an open fl.re, in a skillet over a Coleman,
or ln a euserole in a microwave. Or, serve them cold. . .Here are two whole-meal salads
sure t.o please your camping party or crew. While they con-
tain for the most part, canned provisions, special care
should be taken for keeping dairy products and the cooked
rice or pasta cold. /
Fer easy fixin's, boil whole packages of macaroni at one
time; draia and toes witb a liWe oll t.o keep curls from stick-
ine together, Refrigerate in large bowl. When cold, divide
into plastic baia laree enough to hold aervlnga fOI' one meal, ficurine. 1enerally, lh cup per person, then freeze until re-
ady to pack in cold chest.
Rice can be steamed in lar1e quantities too, on top of
the stove, or baked in a covered casserole. Wben.. cooked,
toss and refrigerate. Pack in plastic bags when cold. Freeze to pack. ·
Tbese salad recipes have an added bonus: They keep
seasonine t.o a minimum by using prepared It~an Ulad dresam,. This can also be mixed at home and red in a
covered shaker-jar, although some cooks like pack oil,
dehydrated seaaoninf and vinegar packets 10 they can be
used separately.
VIENNA BEAN
SALAD
2 5-ounce cans Vienna sausage drained, sliced
2 cups (7 ounces) elbow macaroni, cooked, drained
117-14 ounce jar marinated gubanzo beans, drained
115-V. ounce can kidney beans, drained
lh cup prepared Italian salad dressing
1AI cup chopped green pepper .,
1h cup chopped green onions
1h teaspooll salt
Combine all ingredients; rrux well. Chill unW lervinJ.
Makes 8to10 serviJl&s.
CONFETl1 RICE
SAIAD
2 S ounce cans Vienna sausage. drained, cut in
quarters
2cups cooked rice
' 1 cup dairy sour cream ·
l cup chopped celery
'As cup chopped ereen pepper
"'4 cup chopped green onions
2 tablespGODJ lemon juice
2 tablespoons prepared lt.allan salad dressing
'h teaspoon salt
14 teaspoon dry mustard
combine alUngredients; ~well. Chill. Tosa before
serving. Serves 6. . '
Ecooomtcal round steak transforms int.o a dinber flt for
ihe kinl of the famil)' -Dad's Steak Roll, a stuffed feast
that serves up well alongside Potatoes a la Pere.
IAIM
IOMB.ISS
IAYERN
HAM
WHOLE
0 1
HALF
FRESH GROUND
BEEF
G.&Si 1.39u
JIMS RANCH FRESH
EGGS
HEINZ
LARGE
GRADE
AA
KETCHUP
PAM
RI ADY
lllFCHUCI '
ROUND lOHI-SIVIH IOMI
BEEF
ROAST
--~
139 FARMER JOHN lie
u WlmERS u;
• t
MOHAWK CANNED.
llAIAS
J U
CAN
Yesl Something bfg Is always
happening at Safeway. We can only
show you a few of the special price
reductions lnour ads, but there are
hundreds more In the store. Bright
rec:i or yellow Safeway Special arrows
flag attention throughout the store.
Look for them! They'll merk·genuine
savings, the kind that you can get ·
excited about. Come and save. Stock
up on specials. And don't forget, th••• 11vlng1 are In addition to our
everyday 19J!Y prices. L9ok for shelf
tags hlghTightlng these ....exceptional
values.
1·dozen carton
LIMITED TIME SPECIALS
Llllllted a.:::::1111 n our f11ture 1111111 nduCld . from our prtca for not more thin a wllk.
Soml .. .-.UJICI • some n unadvtrtlsed In·
stare nduCllOal.
2 SUPER .SAVER SPECIALS
SUper lnlr lplcllla an anlnp wa cm Dlfw
...._.. of~ .uow--. dlacounta or
•Ptetlll purcbuu. Th111 rlduct10t11 fro11 our
,....... prlael ..,. In lft1ct for .._ to llx wlllla.
Sonll .. lftei11tid • hundrldl .,. not.
17
CllABCA&.ES
1 cup fresh bread
enmbs,
• \4 cup mayon.n&lse
. 1 larae •••· MPU.ud
t ~teaspoon aalt
Pinch each of
put.me, and paprika
1 teaapoon
Worcestershire aauce
~ Several sprig•
p~raley. minced (or 1h1ed flakes> , •
, 7Y.t-ounce can king
crabmeat, well-<lrail\ed
Butter
Stir together the
crumbs and mayonnabe
ad let stand about s
~utes. With a fork mix
._well the etl yolk, salt,
nutmeg, paprika, Worcettenblre, parsley
ud crab, breaking up
ciab.
Beat egg white until
sUff; fold into crab mix-
t\11'•· ID a heavy, lO.inch
1ldllet beat a little butter
(about 1 tablespoon>;
41'1>P in ~ cupfuls of the t't-ab mixture, well
ap~rt. Brown on bottom
aides, turn and brown other sides. Makes 6.
CIUllSTINE'S DIP
1 cup mayonnaise
~ cup sour cream
1 teupoon crushed 4d•d mixed b-.all,
organo and thyme
• • \4 teaspoon aalt
' ~ teaspoon curry
pqwder
• 1 tablespoqn minced Jl~e)' 1 tablespoon finely
ll'~ted onion, pulp and j~
Y.t teaspoon lemon
Jy.ice
"'3 teaspoon
W9fcestenhlre sauce Stlr together all the In·
aredients; chill -for at
Jeaat 1 hour before serv-
i•I· Makes about 1 ~
cups dip.
ORANGE BARS
1 "i cups flour
"i teaspoon baking
l\041a~ teaspoon salt 1 ~ cup butter or
mareadne
lcup1u1ar
llargeegg
Grated rind of a
Medium oranee < 1
\ablespooo>
, 1 teaspoon vanilla
~cup plaln yogurt
,~ ~ cup thick oranae
marmalade ~ cup rinely
a.opped '!"alnuts
'topping ·
On wax paper stir
~Cttber the flour, soda •od salt. Cream butler Aa sugar; beat in en,
orance rind and vanilla. Stir in nour mixture ln
several additions.
taJ&emately with yoaurt;
at1r ln marmalade .
• Turn Into a well-
tnaaed is br io by 1-tach Jelbrrol pan and
apread evenly; sprinkle
with the walnuts. Bake in
• -preheated 350-detree
ot•n for 25 minutes.
BemO¥e from oven and
IPOCMl the Toppins onr
tll• ;bcit. .. cake." Looun
~ile itlll faintly
,...m cut lntO 2 by lY.t·
iacti ban and remove
•1th a small D)etat 1111•tula. Maket so. Ntda&llierftd at once.
•
leef Loin-Bone ....
TopSlrloln
Steak
Frozen Foods
~M'iX;tdvi;tablel
.. -
Beef lllde Cut
Clllck
Steak
1•• UL;m ~Chapa
1•• n, .............. t' .1.L.1Fmmer JOhn Saus"8 .
~1''
~ea
.99 2'• ~, ... ,_ ....... ~
~Combo Pak Fryers ':.
~ .99 D~.cu11111
1··~-i~ ~ .89 ~Pde Red Snapper
111 DF;'.;iSO.. Flat
, .... 45 ..... .
Super Deli
~ 2"
•• 99
::1"
,. 21• ...
~~
~bwatnes
~c1*ken Pies
1!:" .29
:: , ..
~ 2''
11•
111
~.99
Wines & Spirits
flli&ii{$8n .
........ c..-! ..... ..... ,. .. tt c
COm 11N. Tortillas • .... ct:--:::,i::-
Ullll °"' ....... °"' ~ ... ~
Ceupcwl ....... 11 "" .... 2t, "" SUPER COUPON
COl'lllllnl
Tomato sauce
loi.· 11
CIR
Pantry Fillers
-~ •
:1
·' ·' :: ,. ,.
•' .. ,. ,.
•i ., ~·t· ~:.I?. • •1' ~j· ,.., ..
I I I
' '1 . I: I, ..
'1 __ ,
n
.. . ...
&-... 0. poup ~ ra ..... ad* adeof. w pea c• table ar. n. .._..,._ate 64
e•re•at •tarcb.
Otlaerwbe dJ-. were
MlelDUC:al, and lneluded
Uae 9« 111117 a.mounta
.. f protel• and rat •
• t•mlmMdm.blerala.
WJaM b~Ded? The
SQC9N ....... ,,.... tat
••. depo.ittna 3$ .,_.cent
lllOl'e fl& than the stareb-fed rata.
Tbe IO't'emment re.-
searcher a -
biochemistry technician ~ i.ludy Hallfriach and
craduate uai.st.ant Carol
Jorcenseo -concluded
that the research helps to
explain bow a higb-suear
diet causes obesity In
humans. (Although
t • Ameri~an starch con-
sumption bas decreased
in the last 60 years, sug-
ar bas accounted for a
.. -eteadlly ihcreaaiag
per~entaee or o u r
carbohydrate intake.
Equally important,
however, were findings
related to diabetes and
heart disease.
The sugar.fed rats
while fasting developed
high triglyceride levels, \, an Important risk factor
-in human heart disease.
High triglyceride is also
common symptom or
• eveloping diabetes.
In addition, the sugar-
Q-ee rats developed other
fmptoma of diabetes in·
eluding:
(1) A higher glucose
level while rasttne. A test
for this indicates
whether the
~ carbohydrates in food
~ (sugars and starches)
are being properly used
by the body.
The body turns these
foods into glucose (blood
sugar) to be ta.ken up by
• the cells. If the cells fail
to take up g1ucose pro-
perly, then there is an
abnormally high level or
glucose clrcutatina in the
blood.
To detect this. a fast-
ing patient is given
measured amounts of
jlµcose, and the blood Is
•'then tested. If t h e
amount of gluc()Se.in the
: blood is higher than it
:-hould be, it indicates
that the patient isn't
handling carbohydr.ate
foods properly. This ls
one of the commonly-
• used methods to di$cover
• dlabeUc disease . .. • t (2) A higher iosu1ln
• level while fasting. This
• condition may also in·
" tlicate the onset or
l, ·-.\iabetes. Insulin is a
• hormone mjlnufactured
• by the body. One or its
• :!Obs is to help the body
·:.,ake efficient use of the
. glucose (blood sugar) it
hu created from foods.
• • If the body isn't pro-i ceasing carbohydrate
• · foods properly and has
.. . an oversupply ofsugar in
• the blood, the body is
• .;. stimulated to make more
ipsulin. An unusually ~ tiigh level of inauUn in
the blood is considered
: . another indicatol' of a ~abetic or pr•diabetic
" ndition.
~f · To turtber test the ef·
rects of the bieh·au1ar die~. tho re11earcbera ln·
jecled both groups of
":rats with insulin.
-~Fish Bake
A Cinch
J
STAn•••os.
MONlY BACK GUARA,.Tll
ON QUALITY MI AT5
Ptt•Y ,~(f 01 -..t Alt', tJHCOHOH•OHA\l f (.UAllt,UrHflh tO~lA\fl'OU O•H.;.1•All,.,,.lf w1u et<>«•••Ull• 11•uHrJ•O
,._JOl4N 89' WIENERS H.UKG.,. ............... £4.
Y091KSlllllE 8 9 4 SLICED BOLOGNA HUKG .. .,U.
ltO"V $1'' , SLICED BACON «• Ho ....... u ,
iW"FUNIS 1-1.a.f'llo .......... u. 794
OfCAllMAYlll $) 49 SLICED BACON 1.c.uKo._ •.... u .
O~AllMA'fP•WARll·f-$) 4f
II SUCED BACON IJ.01.PKO ••••• u .
I
.. ...
GROUND·· BEEF
• •• RIB
ROAST
NOTTO EXCEED SO"-FAT SMAU. EHOtt.StLI.
.~.~ $ .1 ~1! '.
SMOKED
HAM
KRUSE . WHOLE OR eurr
PORTION tUL&
SHANK P<>ftl ION
··~: LB. a:c,·•AU.Dll•u•"*-$I at/. •1• Sn.AK ~ ..... ~
.E,•IC.•°'<llT 79c KU•CtlllCIC•'Qt 95c •U•CllUClt•llC;lllll• $ J 5 ~ -~ CHUCK Sn&K ..... La A .. •OAST ....... -u.. SllOULDI• an.aa .. ~ ~"-~ ~ 99• ea:'·~-99c WU'•llOllNO"IONnf.• $I"' '-==--------' VIALCUTUTS .. -.ia 7·•-•0AST ... u . n•SDAK ............. w.
'llUH"'Oztlf $) 19 KU•llO~•IOll«-IN • 12• •UP•IOMll.UMl.Jtl& • 1 ff •1P.lOIN •21' TURBOT FIUR _ ............ ,u. llUMtt«OAST ...... l.. HU-snAK :."J: T·••• SftAK .. \.II.
,.. ... ,l!QztN $2*' .... •IONCLHI • 39 lll'•ci.Uf.~ll()fj(LUS • , ... aU•lOfN•lltAll •21 HALIBUT FILLET ............ , .. ,LL STnl MaAT ......... :c.a. I .......... ,..T •. l.. POllftUOUA ... LL
'llUH"'°ZIN $2~ ... •llOUllO•IONCiQI • • • .al' $ •• tl(~•l0tH•SUAll•llOfffLfS6 •21 COOKED SHRIMP ~ ............ L.. n• •OUT ............ l.. I cu••• STIAK .... l. I to• •••LOIN ....... t•.
I
17
l'nsb baked roDI Ua twiail tJI ~b -c .... • lal'Clfftll ts¢•• '1'@111'f7're ••Uy tUde wtdl troaea bread~.~ cboppei ~ er..-..... Mild mlnced oaiom. •
F« variation, f11cJUde 'tmlt~• and
crumbled b COil in fil1i_g. BroeeOU c• bfl 'aut>-· atituted tar spUuieh. •
PINACB aou,vn
1 pJQlld loaf froim bread~b
1 lt-ouncepackage froseu cb!>P~ 1pin.acb
3 GL lf•ted Cheddar eheae lbeateneu
2 tablesPQOU mlaced onion
3 tablespoou mettad butter
. 4 tableapOoiaa cra&.ed Parmesan cheese
Let douih thaw to room temperature. On
UgbUy tlound b08rd roll doUlb out to ll" x lS"
recta.qle. Steam splnaeb for 5 mblutet; drain
• thoroughly. Mix spinach, grated cheese, egg,
and onion, Spread mlxture over dough, leaving
l·inch margin on etch sld~_Begbming with 16"
slde,rolluptlgbUfinjetJyr0Ufubion.
Spread half of the mel~ butter in bottom of
lightly greased 1 x lO'A-tnch cake pan or two
round cake pans. Sprlnkle ·2 tableapoons of
Parmesan cheese over the butter. Cut roll dough
into 1-i.nclullces.
Place slices, cut side down, in pan allowing room for rolls to rise. Brush tops of rolls with re-• main1ng butter, and apriakle with Parmesan
cbeese. Let rile wW tripled in sue. Bake in pre-
heated 375" F. oven 2S to 30 minutes. or until
golden brown. Turn out immediately onto serv· • tngplate.
c
Best Idea Since
ShoP-ping Garts
Smoked
naturally-the
Old Fashioned
A gourmet will tell you what makes real
Thuringer Sausage ••• strictly the finest In
meats and spices. That's why Sehtrmer's
semi-dry Thuringer Is right at home for banquet
hors d'ouvres or In a sandwich. This
teutonlc tempter Is a dellctous blend of pork
and beef, cured slowly and naturally, then
hickory smoked for that special flavor.
Look tor the llttl• Scb/rmer's SaUHlt Malett
'~~~ on tftt pacb&t In your market
'E!fi. 1· SCfiinntn®
the Sociable Sausage
NICIS lffltnYI WD .... IS t•1nu .. -21.1tn.
111&-..----.. -· .. -·--
17
'Equality' ToPic:
L .&DIES! Women from all over
"' Callfomla Will 1atber at WEEKDAY TIMMIS SPECIAL the Unlver1ity of
Mon. Thru Ftl. 8 a.m. '1114 p.nr. Southern California S 15 A MONTH Tbul'lday-Sunday, June
PHONE a.i1a_~ 16-11, to c:U.scuas Issues ~============~=======~ relatlqtothe equality of _ women.
GlveJ'oar
Graduate a treat •••
Soup, Seafood 8
Salad Dinner
Results of the state
meetin11Vil.I be taken to
a national conference
Nov. 18-21 ln Houston, to
be a~ed by the Na-
tional Commlssloo on the
Observance ol Intern•·
tional Women's Year,
wbicb will draw
representatives of
similar meetings in all
tbestates.
Ei1bty-eigbt women
have been named to the
committee to coordinate
,.. ,, ..... -.. .......... ,,. ..... ............ .,; .............. .-.:r .............. . .. , ........ , ...... ,_.. ... ,. ....... .......... ..,. ..... .............. rtO&
awa1. l ca't rtM killq ........
LoTe ,_,,, 1'Be pa·
Ueat. Daa't pale. He 18 )'OUn. PIM J'O'll' tutu.re with cona4* , ..••
IDl1waUm bu an el• mw d laue1 adte-
•
PotapSt.Gennaln.
fresh Spinach aal'l4,
~~::~ ~~~~c>.::: Married Six Decades
_ and our famoua CripeSt..Jacques
with scaUopsandshrlmp.
Our most popular 3·counedinner!
Coata MHa: South Coaat Plaza, 558-1225
Open untll 12:00 midnight Friday· &.turaay
11 :00 pm Sunday -Thursday
· · Atctldla: i.ftt1 ·Anita,..,.,°" P11'k, .ww115
B9"t'ly Hiiie: Camden and lrfOhtOtl WrJ, 274-6223
Qlendele: TIM Q11terl1, 2434111
Torrence: Del Amo Falhlon SqueN, 542·1757
Woodland Hlll1: The Promenade, 114-7225
e.wMmenow-Master Owo•-Alrl••CMI ~-Oi,,... Club
who are members of the Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Schmidt of Cameo Shores celebrated their
national IWY com-60tb wedding anniversary with an open house in their bome. They mission are servtn1 as · · Ang 1 d b u ed in Or ·-t ex..officio members o1 the ~ere marned m Los e es an ave v . anae co ..... Y
planrun, group. Included smce then. They have t"!O daughters, Elinor Schmidt of Corona del
ta former First Lady Bet-Mar and Mrs. D. S. Phillips, Tustin, and a son, George Schmidt,
ty Ford. also of Corona del Mar. They Mso have two grandchildren.
Virgo:· Prestige Ri.ses
more penons than an· are featured. You break
ticipated. from past.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23· CAPRICOaN (Dec.
Nov. 21): Di& deep -re· 22·J an. 19): You take de·
j e ct" s ~ p eTft--c-Ta 1 1tntte steps to in.lure, to
re1ponses. One with reinforce, to be more
legal expertise wants to secure. Collect data -
delve into tax, money af. analyse information.
fairs. Partner or mate ls Deal wltb person who
with youn1peraon.
PISCES (Feb. 19·
llarcb 20): Be thorough
in. checking detall1. Stand till tar ptincl&>tea, even lf lt may aeem you
atand alone. Recopition
ii due.
directly affected. You bas proven track record. r---~iiiiMiiii;;;=:i gelviewsonrecord. AQUA&IUS (Jan.
SAGITl'AUUS (Nov. 20-Feb. 18): New Moon
22-Dec. 21): Accent on position signifies -for
publicity, legalities, you -love, revitallza·
partnership, marriage. tion, creative chan1ea,
New start, open line of emotional fulfillment,
communication -these better communication
DENNIS ROSENE
410 West Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach
6-45-M70
"See me for -car, home, life, health
and businea insurance?' ..... , ...
Like a good neiafibor. :...8..:' '"' r ... --'-'" State Fann is there. Cl9 -...... ...._. ... -
onu•&NC~
I
Yn Stutlio
THI MOST IMC .... LOW PllCIS
YOU HI.ft IWl __.
HUM-..cmoMS TO CMOOll .. OM
ALL SOLID I 4K GOLD
IH Ml Tl SUI. HI• S&
US TIUY -In ftlTI TIE 11PH
THE GREAT ANTHiUE
FIVE & DIME STORE
....... 1'9f -4Ul~ Jl'Jft Jl~C'ft
........ T. ~ ,_ .. .,_
RJghtnow
the Gap.has the
Jeans that made
room for
father. They're
called Levts for
Men. And they're
made roomiet' In
-thneatllnd thighs for
the man with muscles.
Or a big frame.
The Gap bas them
ln the latest styles and
fabrics. Sizes 34-42.
~:
I r
I
' . ' • .I I
COSTA MESA, South CoHt Plea -'
LOI ANGELES, s. eroadw•r a Ith
NORTHAIDGe, 11478 Nordhoff 8Crfft
CANOGA PARK. 2172t Vanowen
SANTA MONICA, WU.._lre a 20tb
PAIAOENA, Lake et Cellfoml•
WJITMINSTER, We1tmln1ter Melt
ctoalng N.W York etock8. Delivered
.. m• d1y fre1h to your doorstep
In the
DAILY PILOT
MOVING SALE
OPENING SOON • FASH ION ISLAND
ELLEN
<CARTER
LADIES HABERDASHER ,
2H MANN• AVSNUE. BALBOA ISLAND, CALIFOJUflA
GRETA ANDERSEN'S 1!1
SWIM SCHOOL •· 35'1 ,. .........
L s Alalnftos CZ I 31 591-4414
-.1.4HN tta1c:s'~ SI a ck s
PORDAD on
FATHER'l DAY
SUNDAY JUNE 19
Tailorinc Is Important In
a slack. 'Glen Oaks takea
10 dlnerent steps tn
puttlnc tocether a pair of
slacks. 'So, the seams
match, the pockets don't
pull, stttcbes are stttcbed.
the ny ttes Oat. Bot moat
Important, Glen Oaks
slacks not onl)' start out.
Jn beauttfUI sbape. they •
keep their shQe, ...
weartnc alter weartnc.
We carry Glen Oaks
slacks because we
believe they are the
best alacks ror the
n1oney.
Size 32 to 42
$16.00 te $23.00
.---or oa ·~·n: ,,.. .... ~ .. lblll .. dae ... s. vi. ....... vu ... Criill9J • .-n. lUcUl'd .._ ..... _. ~:
tNUWW. U. Wlltom; ailld ......... a.4a
TaylOr aad Lola 11.,or.
llAft AND DAGG&a: Tbe ... nUDIGa al
tbe Order of Dla~Md SIMct CJ'OUP ot
Paau.a Qty Collete wUl be beld Saturday.
Juoe Ja. la tbe Bilton Hotel, ••--• ~ maJ be mMI tblou&b LlWan
Cutapa, aecutive aeeretary, PCC AJ\IJIW As-
aocladoa.,, 1510 E. Colorado Blvd.; Puadena.
tllOI.
MAIUUAGS AND PAlllLY UJ'E: Orange.
Coast CoJ,lece "will offer two eJt,bt·week cla11
· 1e111-ltldl1UJ1UDer.
ScWuled far June 20-Auc. 12. oae section
meetl ~and Thursdays from 9 a.m.·
DOOD, 8Dd the Qther section meeta Tueldays and
Thurtd.111from6:30-1:30p.m. R~ beeinl Thundv. Janell. More j=;;=,;iiii!i!!!iiiai!!Si!!!EE!!!!!!!!!,~ blf ormatiioa ia anllabl~ from OCC, 555-5'13S. iiiilliiiii
IRJlllAN SEXUALITY;-Tho Oranae Coast,
Coll•J• courae ., lifted u PsycboJoty 165 and
Sociok>IY 165 and wW meet from 8:30-1:80 p.m.
Tuesdays and Thurada15 from June 20 through
Au1.12. . lnatructor Shirley R. Lampert wUruse films,
student pane.la and guest speakers to cover
blologlcal, payct\Ologlcal and aoclologlcal
aapeetl of human HXUality.
\ More inf onn.atlon ls available fJ"Om OCC,
056·5'135 ...
DELTA GAIOIA: The Sant.a Ana-Newport
Harbor chapter will meet at 10 a.m. i'uesday,
June 21, in the Santa Ana home of Mn. Joseph
Carver• for inatallation of officers end a salad
luncheon.
PAPEaWEIGBT COLLECTOaS AS·
SOCIATION: An orguizi.ng meeting of an
Oranse Colmty chapter is planned for 1:30 p.m.
T\lelday, June 21, in Glendale Federal Savings
and Loan. Newport Beach.
Santa Crm dealer and ·~ Lawren~ Selman wU1 speak on How Paperweights Are
Made. Reservations are available from Mrs.
Freeman Fl.sher, G73-6187 .
SADDLEBACX COMMUNITY HOSPITAL
VOLUNTEEBS: The fourth annual awarda
ceremony and m.tallatlon of off'tcera ls planned
for 11 a.m. Tuesday, June 21, in Clubhouse 1(1,
Lelaure World. •
DL\PD GYM: An infam.todcller clan in
creative movement and sensory stimulation will
be offered to children a weeks to 3 yean old at the
Irvlne School.of Gymnutica begimdna Tuesday.
June2l. Tbe lix·week panmt·cblld series reinforces
the cblJd•s natural akllls, encourages ftexlblit.y,
coordination, and balance and promotes a
poalUn feeling toward physical education and
body awareaeu.
Kon f,pfonnation is available from instruc·
tor Polly O'Meara, 642·9382.
LEGAL SBllINAll-: A free legal rights
worUbop for women, sponsored by the Orange
County Commlsslon on the Status ot Women, is
planned fot 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 22, at
Corona del Jilar Hlih School.
Worbbop coordinator ls Minna Van Tilburg.
Topics will include credit, employment dis·
crimlnatlon, divorce. community property. child
custody, probate, wills and estate planning.
More information is available from the Com·
munlt.yon the Status of Women,~-
YWCA:~ open house, centered on the YM·
CA's Employment Program for Mature Women.
is planned from 2:30-5:30 p.m. Wednesday, June
22, ln the Santa Ana/South Oran1e County YWCA. .
JNTBaNATJONAL OaDBR OF JOB'S
DAUGRrEU: Arlolla Suther}and. daulftter or
of Mr. and llrs. Jerry Sutherland of
Westmtnstn, was installed u honored queen of
Bethel 321. Huntington Beach.
CBal8'l'IAN WOMEN CLUBS: Tbe Hunt·
ington Beada P'OUP will meet for luncheon on
WednesdQ, June 22, in the HUDtlnitoo Beach Inn. .
ReservaUons may be made with Mn. Rptb
Brown.* 0354.
rtlbll's Day, Slllllly J• 19tb ...
Sharp, extra
aged
cht)ddar
Have a tree ·
sample
before you'buyl
.. . .
. . . .
• • . ' •• . . •• •• • • .. . . .. . . . . • • .. ;i
}
I I
I 1 I
I
' ' ' •• ' I . ' I I . ' '
I
S1111•c. SJ19 IOAST • Meat loaf . . . . . 99i
Chili Crincl Beef 99t
Colnely pound dOHn't eicceecl ~.lat
8PlllCEI
Rib cut ateak ot U.S.D.A. CliOice l>eef ••• delicately marblfd lor ftavor and tenderness
Grocery Values
~ . .
·.;'fomalo Juice ....... 39c
'• Libby's, for that rich-flavor of red-ripe quuty! 32 o~. 1laa1
:(lake Mix ;r.i ......... 55c
• Cbooee your favorite la,)'el" cake varietl......-and lay in a apaii or two for next time
"
: Tomatoes mi ••• 35c , Beer =. ....... s1 11
Glorietta vine ripened fruit! No. 303 Tw.lve ounce cana tor hammock easel
Glad Wrap • • . . . 45c
Bil 100 fl n>ll wr.tpa so much!
•
Center cut U.S.D.A: Choice beef
Beef Roast =.as s1 s1
They'll aay .. mahalo"! from Ha
Langostino ..... s
EXtta fancy quality! 12 02 pack
51-.o and
llADl£SS
Catfish
/IL Bllllll
Tender plump juicy brntla .•. tweet, the way Dad .,..... and the family -lovea it! Large ean from Coachella Valley ~ l
Frozen Food
Pea Pods ClllSl ••• _49c
C&W .•• Plain or with Chestnut.I~ oz
·Macaroni .. amt •• sgc
Green Giant-12 ~ct package
. Super Fresh T
Cantciloupe ......... 2·5c ..
Vine ripened! Sweet. and mellow ... bre~ast treat ... for dessert ... or just fooC~n!
·GREEN ·29c BIAIS •
Snapping c.riap, with freah coodn ... ! . .
Delicatessen
Your choice oC any ol the fine varieties -wafer thin a&el (5 OZ FaY PMI .•• tse
Sliced Ham ...•
Dak·two convenient aiua"' oz
Bacon Bits ..... ·
--
~
~
c11EBR
AMMIVEISAIY SERVICE SPECIALS
install e ~~~~!a~p~s~!torcraft All CONDITIONER CHECK
points and condenser. inspect choke Clean condenser fins. ad1ust dnve belts.
throttle linkage plug wires and dist. tighten fitting!. checl< system for leaks
cap Adiust carb and timing (Fours and refrigerant. parts and necessary
s1••s slightly l ess. eights and 1nstallat1onofpartsedra1fneeded
Econoltnes shglllly higher 1 TOT Al-PltlCE S 5 50
TOTALPARTS s3001 ASDHCllB AND LAaOlt P\.U'I Tu ouJS fA'IC
OIL AND OIL FIL TEI
Up to 5 quarts of 011. Motorcraft 0 11
Fiiter and 1nstallat1on
TOTAL PARTS
AND LAaOlt s910
Pl.US TAil
AUTO. TRAMS. CHECK
Adiust bands. screen cleanl01J. adiust
manual tnd throttle linkage. 'fluid and
gasket •Jira 11 needed I
TOTALftlCI
ASDUClllED s 1430
• P\UtTA'IC
·LEASE
DIRECT!
HO MIDDLEMAN!
Investigate our competitive rates. We
lease all Popular make cars and trucks.
0 en and Closed end.
DAILY IEMT AL SPECIALS!
'77 Pinto Runabout with
Automatic. radio. pwr. str.,and brks.
$7.00 DAY 7r. MILE
Other Model Cars and Trucks
• ' 1t1ve Dle5
ANNIVERSA&Y: SAVINIS ON 5300,000 WORTH • USED YRS
,.
UNDA ISLE
''Tho Twin Towen° With 10,000 eq.
ft. of luxwioul livfng area, on 2
cbolCfllt waterfront Iota. 1 Bdrms.,
8 baths, fantastic game rm.. with wet bar & slip for large boa ta.
Completely custom fumiahed &
orf ered at $950,000. Absentee owner
will also consider commercial
exchange.
759-0811 '
Lovely 2 Story "C Plan" Townhouse
In The Newer Bluffs. Highly Up-
graded -Large Family Room With
Bar. 2 Spacious Bedroom Suites
Decorator Wallpape~. Drapes,
Carpeting, Mirrors & Shutters Ad-
joins & Overlooks SparklinJt Pool &
Ramada
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
...
IBJDI " Ok MOr ~ We have a 4 bedroom 2 bath home
in Huntington Beach for $8'.900.
•Nuffsaid!
UllllllCJUI: tiVMH
REALTORS*: M&-5990
1526 Meu Vetdt Orlw. Eut. eo.ta Mes.
•ISO in CC>f'OM def M.r. at 875·6000
RALBOA tl4LA~D
• '7Mt00 •
DO'Jm SHOlll ..... On~= the beautiful white sandY t See this fine eustom
blt 2 lltary today. Dbl door entry to -pn eoart)d. Dramatic terrazzo
lajer to DR It FR with wet bar.
Travertine & spilt nagstone dbl
frpl. Huge mstr suite & garden bath
plus 3 other bdrma, each with pvt
bath. Decorator wallpapers. lux.
cptng & drapes. Plush pwd rm.
509 EVENING STAR 'l'hur/Fri 1·5
2111 s..au, a .......
MIWPOln' cena. tu. 644-4910
A POOL TO
IEEPCOOU
J
Neat and sharp family
home witb a aparkliq
pool Great for summer
fUD I S Bedroom. 2 bat.ha. brick fireplace. nice famllY room. Excellent
location, convenient to
all shopping. All for onlY •.soo.cau. 54Ml4f
~
COATS & WALLACE
REAL ESTATE INC.
HA RPG I
~ t I I I' I • 1
17
DOOG11M1 SIA•UUS S6t,500
You know bow much beach property
is available at this price. Walk to the
sand pools & shopping from th.is 3
bedroom, l lh bath surfside townhouse.
Upgraded carpet. brick patio. double
garage, bltns. Hear the surf. smell the
seaweed.
INVESTORS! OPP<>aTUMITY KNOCKS!
Lovely duplex located in prime area
of Huntington Beach. Has lot large
enough for additional units. Situated
end of quiet cul·de-sac. Room for boat
or R.V. Finest in area. Challenges
comparison at $119,500.
REDUCED $5000.
OWHER AMXIOUS $129,900
Open the door to this fabulous home &
be ready for a unique experience. 5
bedrm. Greenbrook Granada features
prof. decorating. new Italian entry tile
& new no-wax flooring. A Classic
home in, a classy neighborhood.
1105 5 MOCJl'olla St. .....-.v...,
96W31 I
100 GeMral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••
Lachenmyer
Realtor
l
LISTED ONLY WITH THIS omcE
OVER 60 YEARS OF SERVICE
FllST OFNIUMG
IM 1ttl Oll•IMAL ILUffS ! Rare 1 Story Emf Unit .. Angelita"
Plan 2 Spacious Bedrooms. 2 Baths
Cathedral Beam Ceilings, Large
Wrap-Around Patio. In Perfect Con-
dition. Adjoins Qorgeous~reenbelt
& Near Putting Gre n. Shown Bv
Appointment. A ''Joy Of Newportr'
t;istlng. $135,000
TRI UVB.~IWH IWFFS
Wrnt VIEW!
Dramatic Erid Uni&.TownMUleGat-
fd Caurtyar'd EDtrY. Wood .Pegged
F.loors In Both Entry Hall 8'
Kitchen. Two BedrOOms 3 Baths
Den With Wet Bar. All Electric Kitch~n. Formal Dining Room, ~atlo. tmmaculat . A .. Joy Of
N w~" JJstlng 1174,500
131·1•
Bil L GRUNDY . REALTOR ,,
Wl1ela11
RlAl ESTATE
Wllela11
REAL ESTATE
I-C!I lf ',' I
OLS ON
red hill ......_
552-7~00
I
ltll', Zba aUZ:U.2 Montova. sn,aoo. C21J)e'72-1131
(2U)Tl0.2'129 -- -';
1:;··:;;·;.. THE REAL
•1lti.'11 ESTATEHS
Lingo
Rul&Dn
116 CANYOM TOWMHOMI --. 4-••lf'M.':'• ,.,. ... , " ........ . ~~ ..... wftll ...... ...
...... .... ......... ....... De zt1c == = :,;,roott=': f•r•hltl•O• ••ul •cceuorl••
IK.,..._St'9,IOO ·
SOUTH
LAGUNA
499-4551
497·2419
LAGUNA
NIGUEL
495-1728
DANA
POINT
493-1111 '16 Lancer 2'xH, 2Br,
2Ba, Wet bar, Upgrades,
$35,000 El Nido Estates. SUPMIUYI
31IDIOOM
Probably the least cotUy S&UMG NewPC!l'f leoch I 069 Newport leach I 069 _SJ_C_'96-089 __ ~ ____ ,
of it'• kind In Laeuna RULISTAfl ••• ••••••• •• •.,. • • • • •• • • • •• ••••• • •• •• •• • • • • • • • • ONE YEAR NEW
Hilla, a neat3 BR, 2 Bath NpUchtcosta 14eaa *SIA VIEW• HAalOR VIEW Mobile Home ln Costa
Mesa adult park. a Br 2 Sorrento model, ~ block !;g;c:p; 19."a Nantucket Plan -.......... "
vault-4 ceillnts, near / • New 3Br, 2Ba, TU• Or in IY O'WHEA economy price. $35,000. ta 1ra11y park. with -" 0256 '--...-
n,w carpets and fresh rCCl•UIOCIATES1 :=,view.~.C:3 Sharpest bom• "toca· RUCllRREALTY .,,. palnt.Onlyrn>,llOO. '-: ~ tlon ln tract. Fee ~ .. _ .. 7.,. ~ AasumableV.A.Joan. •'*·--. THEILUFFS 1144,900. 1145 Port _... .-•••••••••••••••••••••••
C•H .. 721 I SEA VIEW. Dynamic * * WestbourneS44..u.31 Lag. Bch Mobile home FAMTASTICVllW --------
fobi n
all.AL TY INC;:
714/~1*71
ocean/lites view. Brand Mew OfferfllCJ S.0.-nte I07' 3txS4, ~br, 2ba, distant 2116 Acres wf1;11J produc·
new. $!:S,OOO. under mlrt. Elegantly dee.orated •••••••••••••••.'••••••• oceanview,499-1078. t.niavocadotrees. Water
S279,500. 548·8614 ; "E" plan end urut w/ex· By ownr dbl wide in to trees, all utll avail on 3226 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 75&-1877 J .V. Co. panslve areen belt & PRISIDENTIAL Ba Id d 1 paved. road. Xlnt ltrms. ========'-1---------i some bay view. Tranquil HEIGHTS DeAnza ys e A u t BKR ••••••••••••••••••••••• RENTALS
~Nlf,[L
UAILD ~
1\550[11\ TES
ll'OWNER JMl Palermo fee fixer open and airy aetUna. . Parle, Np& Bch. SM,000. (n4)l16-S7l7 MESA VBDE WAIM•C~ 2BR.2ba .....• Ul0/425
18$,000. House In Lat . upper. Drtve by 1715 Port Open beam ceWnp thru· Luxurious alnfrle story Shown by appt. 548·7411 OR522-2080 Outatudlns 4 bedroom, 3br home. Frplc, fam 2BR, 2~ ba.. •••• 1475/485
'_ 1-Ull. 4br, 2ba. Lrt lot. Stirling then call ownr. out. 3 Bdrm, fam rm. P='~d'e ~~isu'::ii or76Ml842. . .Rffl ---11-......_------J bath. new ear pet1, rm. Wlktobcbfsllutaa. aor2BR, +l>,2ba •• ~
Plenty privacy. For S40-000I $158.000 with rn:.uos cathedral Fol'lalebyowner, mobile UI~ 2-0 drapes, Is dishwasher. Newly relftodeled. 3BR,2Ba .•••.•• "35/575 · appt.call586-5131. BYOWNER M.wportR.LA.11oc. ....... ,._ ..-_, 3 old home 24x52 ln beautiful n.....-.u 7 v 1!1115 Includes 1arden•. a.UMor997.a5'7 !BR,2~Ba ..... M50/650
: I --HI--' ., 052 4 Br HVH M tea 2018 ~ 645-7884 .. ._....,-o ... y years . ~ t Gard El Toro ....................... CALL '15l-3191. 4 BR, 2 Ba. ....... : •• S'35
_,.... .,,..... Port'cbel onPl pn° or II 1Qual~ _,ores000 na "~~· • SPECIAL RATE ......_.,.OR leach 3240 5BR,3Ba. ·········• tB50 -••••••••••••••••••••• aea ' nc. N....w Cr condo '"B 3 ....,, ,_......,, • M Jtl 1 Lit•· .,. THEBL:U"'-onl B L '153 500 -.... eat "" r • u Pe 1 ualS MISA DIL MAI ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~ · .fuat Ltated, 4br. 2~ba, 644~107 Y •PP ' Ba, trl level, 3 dka, wet· Pl•• AcnGIP for sal• 1200 Why pay more? • Quin· .._.. ui Cul .. _ 11 B 4 BR, 3 Ba .•••••••••• $175
P r o f · I n d s c P ' d bar , F R , x t r a s . Prap ... 1;9-••••••••••••••••••••••• tar. d Really-since 1946 • Sharp 3 ...,..room on q et ""' tac, ava ' 3 r 2 COSTA MESA w /panorami c vu . IACK IAY Overlooks pool. $125,000 7.,.1920 1114 ACRES lf73.8250 or call Realtor cul-de-sac. $450 /mo. Ba, nr beach, Fam Rm, aBR, 3Ba ........... t8(lO
Minutes lo bch. Only 3 Br 2 Ba, 2 !pie's, lge arbstofr.S42·3952Calder 1.000UAllRNIW •uat for your mobile home or Associates, V Redmon !pCALLS1:~cr . ~ !~~~c:o~~ :fortS::·, ~~~':bo~Rft's~ corner lot. Owner; Agent Realty OCIAMFROMT bldg site. Level, all util 552-7883; T. Mclntoab Prtnconly. $450. 675-1501
will finance, no loan fee. DO avaiUOntterms. BKR 5'8·3007 : E White PROPERTIES 831·3960 dys, 499·1819 Qui c k possession. . SINGULAR CON . (7l4)817-15eei 646-7238 ; v Sharp VII"/ nice, a be<lrm, 2 ba
eves. $l15 000 2298 Redlands ... opp or t \I n it y t o Less tban 2 yrs young, in OR S22·0S3o 640·0110. A phone call SBr, lba, frplc. ~ld.e. bome, cpl.I, drpl, 2 car
• Custom hme beaut area Ori~• ~ lease/optlon, 1-level the Riviera district of could get you a Quick Fncd yd, new cpts. aa.r., patio, nlce back
,. min Ir bcb. 3 Br 3 Ba, A.;. ' Bluffs J-Plan. 3 Bdr~s., San Clemente. Im mac. 2, RVI ACRES Top Dollar sale .tt SAVE •tmo. J61f Onqe St. yatd w /BBQ, children .tt
• 'amloan 831.1695 Sea View Custom abr, 2 baths, with beauhCul could be 3 BR, frplc, On P.aved road all util youthousandsofdolla.ra. 5S'1·~ pet OK. $175. 983-4567, •• · den. Best vu. Open 1·5 canyon .tt bay view. w/aJl blt.ns. Ground fir avail Xlnt for invest-Alt.nofee.
VIEW & POOL 4Br 2~ 1917YachtEnchantress Hurry, tbta one won't unit w/e>eclualve & very ment'or lot split Terms Wanted: Hombcs~lPoOI· 2br, lba, 2 car aar, cpts. -----------4
Ba New carpetln'a & last! 1625Mo. unique pvt. stairway BKR · ~CanyonOt' ::;-· drpe, lncd ~. $315. mo. !br, 2ba, man7 xt.raa.1rt lf513CA-L . .__
'" ~t,stonerrplc,openlt HcrborVuHomes Cf Col rth frompatJodwnto sandy 'm4)S7&.s717 pty.644·14.S2no s 7SH343or151~ )'l'd.VicofYorlrtownlc '""'"'Melfl.•mc
"'closedpatlos.Sll9.500. PORTOFINO • • 8$W0 IY bch. Goraeows views of ORS22-20a> Brookburat. 19442 Ra.nchoS.I hnh . 2br
"1 lftUD REALn ' 4 Br, :M ba, fa01 rm. din RIM.TORS 640-0010 whitewater, G,atallna & Rental1 • MUST SEE! SalmonLn. '450/mo. vu, pool ~ aoll a.111t!uu.• Vl""llll I 9411 rm, tame rm. $189,950 coastline Crom huge LR, Nevada land 435 acres ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br, 2 ba, Colleie Part. IA-74" '4!0/mo M4..m7 •
• ree.Owner844-4UC OCEAN VIEW kit, di.nint area & deck. MIL. Will sell or trade Hauset"'""ahecl Den,allblt.ns,fl'plc,cvrd aBrcoodo allbltns tras••---·-----,,. ________ 14 _________ , Beaut. catm tile entry, for boat, auto, or im· ••••••••••••••••••••••• patio, cpta, drpa, walk to dlsp po(,1 te11nls crt
•• 4 br, 2~ ba townhome, hallways, kit 4t baths. proved R.E. · lcAoa Ill.ct 3106 all acboola. $($0/mo. IU5 '•211io · TwoBecltoocu
MONARCH SUMMIT T'Ws CCMlld le lge master suite over· Naturally It bas plush Myers.Alpha Corp~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Kidl y-. pell no. · · Deerfield 1375
• For the young at heart THE ONE! looks pool le tennls cts. cpt's & drps, also pvt. 673-6758 UtUe Island xtra Jge 2br RIGHT REALTY Sharp 3 bedrm • .2 bath Univ. Park s:rrs ~~~~·ln~en8:1~:::::i;11; Magnificent panoramic ~~i:ll~~llar. For ~o~ t o the lrg ...._ Proptrtr 1400 & fam.rmiden. 2ba, 2 t7f .. S33 ~. cpts, drps, freshly The Terrace S395
and e xpensively up-viewofBayandOcean.s ....... o••y1t•"LTY $•,,· 000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Crplcs, wuber/clryer,40' MESAVerdexlnUoc.3Br ~led_.__2 .. car 11ar~. TIM1.leRodt 1385
Bedrm,3ba,2fplc,20x25 nA 1195 -ii • ,._~ ~_. slip avaU. 9/17 Winter, dbl f f _...,,·->'now -· WoodbrtdJe $500 g raded . E-xterlor rumpuarm w/wet bar, 147 .. 144 JACOISREALn ._... ... _..,.. ... • .S0.121E.Bayrrontoc aBa, f!c, am rm, 9S3-4587,Agt:-Noree. RancboSanJq $495/525
.. , ~:~i~~Yn 11~~da~~~t; ~1~ view. S279•500· Newport Shores by owner. 675-6670 ~wn8:~ r:~~i:,~.~~~ call l'rl4>53M799 ~r,1.!,~~=r. Jmmaeulate 3hoBr J."9 s.
1
, Tbe=:droom• S42S
" Jacuul, aame room, etc. 3br, 2ba. A-frame. Pvt U terms. A1eot, 833-0014 IJttle l1land bay front. !Br W /W cpt'I drpa areatramily me. Fp c, VU1 I
··Close to shopplne and sundeck. S88,500. Prln SHOREC Ff'S C...hry Loh/ 2br, 2ba, bcb at pier. $150 stoVe, refrta. Fncd bk yd'. dbl gar, pet Ole. $375, no tJnl:~;lik ::
f,
•I
beaches. sno.ooo cnly.646-2390 SI 10.000 Crypts 1500 yrly.2l3-4'78-3S?7 20xao 1arage house, ~lBs.~lt, t63-Gl67 VJllapl I . .1115
HARBOR VIEW HOME Sparkling 1800 sq. ft. ••••••••••••••••••••••• CottaMeta 3114 Wu.her/dryer. Freedom ' Deerfield $CJO
4Br or 3 + den, 2Ba, din home overlooking the For sale, 2 adjoining rlotl ••••• .. ••••••••• .. ••••• Hms. No pe\a, wt.r pd. 4 bdrm, 2 ba, frrlo, ~ c:ul· Villa&• Ill 1125 , a Monarch BayPlau MARIMRS S9. rm, liv rm, ram rm. nr nth fairway. a BR, ram in pa o l tt c V e w Bach. cottaae, SH.5. Utll $390/mo.646·3'90 de·uc. ad , H"nt. Woodbridge ~
LaaunaNlauel 1Hlton631-0JJI pool .tt schla, vacant rm w/frplc le wet bar. Cemetary, N ewport pd.Fee Cbarmlngold 2 st E Harbour.SUO/mo,6tno. FoorBedroom
49 .. 7222 19l·Ol3'i~~~~~~~~·~I $149,500. Wlll finance, Large muter suite off Beach. Pvt party. lfomefinders 551.(1122 side. lh·done0l'Y294 lease. 848-5192 eves 4t Woodbridte ~
.. -------•'· 588-S892AM1eve1 courtyard w/adjolnlna 551<3284 -:...1 ba. wknds. P'"''SMANYMORE -----------iOPEN HOUSE BY denotofflce.Superbnew 0-PoW 312' lll_.a.3br,2 ,den,--------¥"' North. Bluff Cond "X" · C dal ftplc S&25/mo M2-021Z ~-sao 3 IDIM ' :We,...... I 055 OWNER E. Bl\lff 4 Br, • 0 llsting.D( Wr ....................... . . .. •
....................... Fam Rm 2 fplc'a 2~ Plan.3Br.1epfam&din BERTHAHENRY rrop.rty 1600 Summer rental. Beaut CoU.Pl'k.fl'40.JBr,2Ba, ~cando.haaallappts.
'!! LAICI ea, pool 'slze tot.' 2214 rm, (plank floor). 2~ ba, REALTORS ••••••••••••••••••••••• furn ocean view /boat bckyd. immac, quiet, N1ce for children 4t peta. ~ · ,.0 ..__..'-• Alta Vlsta 644·1323 or covpatlo, rear brick sun· 21.SDelMar ~-4121 *OW ..... ERS yatd. 3Br,2llvrm1. C kidsolc.Gtdnr.tu...a. (3080)Fee.
• • "1"'•5 1441325 deck. carpeted. Opposite " be divided. !Upa 8+. Locators -..11111 •' New home. 3 Bedroom, 2 • pool + many xtras. By 3 Sped• .. • . Uq'11DATIHG• $850/mo, $250 wk. Avail 2 bdr 1 ba house, den ll• --------1 _______ ._
baths, private atrium off l.IASIJ0"10N Owner. Sl38,500 fee. CatoMHontH Prime 1~ A~res com· yrly 1850. 05·4388, rm w/frplace, private 3.'f!RS295ok.Hu(2 ... t>)ltFns,kkb 2Br dn.;IBa onlwac
.mast• r bed r 0 om • Hcrbor y., M~ MS-ll6S ror appt. under conatruetlon In mercial land in Lake •1m patio. S300 mo. 54.5-1111 ~t-· 1-~· ....... 1 •off course. tritmac. t600 • plumbed for Jacu:ul. '""WT"' 1 1 u l F -as ft ""0 _....., • Roman tub. upsuded Hi&hly uplJ'aded 4 br, 2 By OWN' 3br. 2ba 184,500. ~rest I ous mar ners ~ -per sq. · llwtlhgtonleeclt 1140 (2)-2 Br, 1 ba, enc f&r· mo. 144·5m OI' S7S.5164.
carpets" &Jr concUtlon· ba . Nr. srnblt. $700 Contract salt, owner olnt featunna 1" a Forinformatlonc:all .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Newl7 remdl d . OCEAN AIR. Nice z br, HVerde. , .... Sl2S 000 mo/S150,000. Fee. Min. e finance 9~. Private pool. story plam, masruficient •TOW* Near· beach/Lake Park. Showplace cond, wtr pd. ldda & Peta ok. flSS, Hu --TUR--.,..-.. -nnrr-__ __.
, ..... ' · mo. lse. Prln only, tennis. 548·278'7 aft 1 & ocean le unyon view. *R.:..t.1 ... 0RS• 2 b &Side. S3SO" 0)0 Aft pr A•all now (0301) &~""6 AMCHOL\M 9'0·4424 eve/wknd ; wtmda. Auto dumbwalters ...._.. E x ec · 3 b r • • · .~.,... ' F~ · · 3Br,2Ba,.11&0•COZYio & -·TM--s ~ d Bidet. roman tubl. laland SIM500 130.3771 Klda/pets ok. 1550/mo Spm,_..,.&.&o. Locators 11118-989! of.It, lsesst-5229
'"•-' ....,., ya. HIWP.ORTllACH kltchen w Hop ap· lse.~ aer.1Ba,cpt,drpe,1tcwe, --------·--------
C714t 496-7711 Rather lease? Eaetbhlff 2 IAY •OCEAN pllances. J Car 1ara1es, Cot1doMf'9hnnsJTown· Lagilile~ 3112 sar, 11 fbcd 7d, kid.I, CLEANS br, 2 ba, fam ========:::!..! tty V1!. 3 Br I Ba, FR, 2 VllW wet ban, real beameo licMnetforM• 1700 ...................... pets,900.~ rm. fplo, aood area,
•Beautiful park place fplc'a.1156. 844·14.50 ceilln., le many other ••••••••••••••••••••••• ffi&hlands t Masnolia/Atlanta 1410.
bome. 3 bdrm. many up, Barialnl '98.500. Blutts 3 ~~e~o:~,f.a':U:v:~:~: unusual features from c.-s,.cw1st frplc, Ma~~ici!: r~: 3 Br Ocean Vlew bowie, •Nr4 ;.;;.;;.;..;;:;;;.:..:.......:..;;..._......,;;.;.. __
• icndes-788-Gell Aft 8• BR. 2 ba. condo; tri· tacular view of Newport ::idc::>: ~~~~· (~~ R.B.,C.M.,F. Vly Patios, l*'k, pool, tncd. !f:.=· trdnr, '500 Ne_,,.n leodt 326' Mlwr.!f IHctl 32'9
•.500. level. All. M0-7000 Bay and tbe ocean. Thia ll3l-0158or <n4~ ,92.2808 Touc~= Rlty $48$/mo. Can turnl•h. •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• ................ ~ •••••• Mlstloft V .. lo btghly individual 4 <lilldren/dop OK. Avail • Br 2 Ba, cpta, drpa, '•••••••••••••••••••••• * ILUFF.5 * bedroom home features S-..._ 2 er 2 ea· condo. with July. bltna,dabwsbr. "85mo.
CORDOVA, DB lam <>rltlnalarea.4BR,lba. custom eictru too C.1tr.o 1071 panoramic ocean view. Newportle11r:h 3169 751-tTG
rm cp\•• upird 'd • end W\lt. Tot.ally tedec. numerous to mention. ....................... Ol\lY m.ooo. Pally K·R •••••••••••••• .. •••••••
beaut. lndaCp'I. VIEW'. ~In read1. Sl49,500 5eclUded courtyard pool NEW .. impre11lvt, Mia· ~~~roper~~rt~ies~, ee~1-oN.l~~--t-~~~~~~~-.
CaH 130.2011 HAS11MGS a CO. + b~e woOded quarter aton Creek, 2100 sq. tl., • STIPS TO llACH llALTOIS '40-H•O ac:rtlot.Pleuephooefor BR, den, 11• cor.ner tot, Duple ... / .llOO w ----------. ap;omtt'Mirt to IMpec:t. l I • 0 l l v e t r e e • <Wtt Nie .. e have summer rentals
Ocean 6 Bay view. Tri· *'"" land&caped, wet·bar. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• by week or by moath I :i'~IJYOWNER·tyroldS level Newport Crest& K€Y trplc'a, luxury Matr MIWPOltTllACH • IBJU~lltoStpU
... bi>ri1e1 t •!YJ 4Br 2 Ba. townboUse. Sbr + den, "" iltALTOP.Sil 1Ulte. $138,500. Owner DPLX • ""11 Uldscpu le decorat 2 ba. £nd unit. POol, _ ~ ZBi, 1'lBa; la. Uv rrn " · ltct~ upll'ad~ thruout &tmni1, Jacunl, sauna, s.itiAMi mttt.bdnn w/huce aun·
OIJQ Sat/Sun. Sll'f,too. walk to beach. By deck. + 1Br. iBa apt.
-1035 Owner. a.50,000. 8'$-8322 ll,500. Comfortable 3 Br Choice locaUon. 1 blk to
+ 2 be. xlra lrt 1ard ocean. a34.960 ~~=~~~~~ w/~ sate. Otl qwct l....,llfffty
cw·de·aac. PlLOTREAL •PA8.KAVE. EST AT£. MO·OSSS or BALBOA ISLE
:540-2530 m .12J0
red hill __
')'i2·750f)
associated
,, .... ) .. f •• ... •
.·. '
• I
17
I • I
PR.IV ATI PARTY wm pay more for your
2nd T.D. 6C2-3573
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Aerobic Dancin& Fitoess 0&11. Free demoaatra·
lion, Tues, June 21, 3400
lrvino Blvd, IU' Bristol.
suite 212. Claa 1larts T &
Th, J11ne 23, 9:30-10:30
am. S'2Hor6wks.
7
• I
~~~-... ?! ... ~!~ ..... ?!!! ~t!~ ..... ?!~.~ ~~~~ ..... ?!!!;~!~ ..... ?!!! ~!!~~ ..... ?!!~ ~T.!~~.: ... ?!!! ~!~:! ..... !!!! ~!~ ..... !!!!
· BABYSITrER yn1. de-CIRCU• .a.no .... Ateowltln ARTIST pendable penon needed ...-" Cl Uk Dellver Papers to \1endira1 F.LECI'RONICS Housekeeping Cllte) w /1 A AC!OUMTING to care for 2 children, CLERK N.B. lnsurance co. aeeds machlne route. C.M. GENERAL OFC yr old baby. Non-Fri.
,PASTl-UP summer only. 4 to 6 hrs. The Daily Pllot has an sharp rating & codin& •rea. 642•3148• 646•2262 ASSEMBLERS Entry pos. for a person 7:30 lo •:30. Own lfans. C&.BK Exper d ln paste-up, type per day. 2 to ' days per openln1 for a desk clerk clerk w /good typing & 10 aft6. who can work w /min $50 wk. 983-1383 aft Spm · ;:e~ ~· !nc. ~· ~· .!'or~1~111co'::!~ wk. St.art 6/20. 675·3693 Mqnday through Friday: key proficiency. Sal to Delivery-Your motorcy· supervllion to .do copy· HOUSEt<IEPER
for an induslrious~dl!. benefits. Apply NaUonal aftSPM 1~:30AM to 7:30PM. $550. w/goodco. benetlts. cle .. Fttlme. Call for In· lid Shlftt ~~J~·~Si1ftl~fan~~-Exper pref'd. l·U:!Opm. Joo~lnl for oppor. lo Systems Corp., 4361 BABYSIITER Mon·fri. :~u~t~fnnsist~'::~~I~ 833-8450. terV>eW,640•6118· Continued "rowlh re· areet visitors', elc. ,0 ; San Clemente Gea'l
f'IOW. Muat be prollcient Birch St, N.B. <Near OC your home, must drive, 1 d di O.ERKTYPISTTRNEE Delivery & ules help • s ma J l grow In i Holl>\ (114)498-llZZ.
w 110 key adder. Position Airport) E~O.E. Killybrooke area CM. ;!!f cs~:,' ~~~~es pro:i: EXPO AGENCY 956-0680 needed. FUiier Brush. = ~1:n11f ~~ ~:;t p harm a ceu tic a 1 co. HOUSEICEEPER
caJla f« 1Wn1, audltin1 646-5162 clency I~ typing and 10 2056 WLINCOLN ANA S31.f664 have 6 months electronic Previous or c ex per . Live-In. Santa Ana
oldallysaleareportalor BABYSIITER My home key addini. Permanent · . assembly on printed helpful. Sal com · Atta Call557·3170
our restaurant " misc. ASS£MBL£RS Mon & Wed' evening, position with regular Clerk typuit. Expaqdmg Delivery l"!m>n for sea circuit boards, to include mensurate w/exper. Ap----·------~al ofc duties. AIPl>IY For precision electro must drive 643-5162 raises and Cull fringes. ~ewspaper has super fdrtOOdin. Neat appearln, good.lo band soldering, compo-ply at. 1590 Monrovia Hsekpr /babysitter. Nice
tn l*SOO. l?OU Gil ette Telephone 942.4321 Ext. job. SO.wpm. Good salary v i ree. Llft I • nen:t prepping (Stuffm& Ave, N.B. lady, nicetatnily. ROOID,
Ave, Irvine lam·Spm =~;:ponaS:i:!~>£~ Babysitter wanted for 3yr 2?&forlntervlew. • & ~efil9. Immediate volved. 645·5223 or of PCB's) and touch·ups. brd,salary.~ Mon-~i. per. prel'd. Wtll Train. old. Some eves tU 10, pre Ecpil ~ opening. 956-2680 631-1155 Come join our exciting GEHERAL OFACE
D"'"" Only your home CdM area. ii:.-..a--COCKTAIL D...tal A1al1t comoany in our new Involves bvy l)'pmg, de· -.,-. 675 7021 -...... ,.. r ilr.t w off th tail work. phone contact Inspection STACOSWITCH IMC . W"'mt•.rs Chairslde, 3 dys a wk, ac 1 y. e can er e -iu-•sao .... MICH'I. --------•I M "' ~ Call 847 _.. bet 9 & 11 qualified candidates ex· & worldng w /customers. .---.... " ll39BakerCosta esa Babysitter needed. adult CLASSIAEO Learn in 40 hrs the most ·-~ cellent starting salaries Pd vacation, sick pay, IMSPECOI 549-3041 supervision for girls 8 & exciting, glamourous, amorl,.pmMon·Frl. with superior-fringe eroup profit sharing & Forlltarticleinsped.ion
Due to expansion the EqualOpporEmployer 12· Own car-drive ADVERTISING highly paid profess. Day D..,..ALllCErT benefits to include: health insurance. Apply cf small preclaion followinc positions are•-------• children to activities. or eve sessions. Place-......,. mEdical /denta! and life 9·3, Mon thru Frl. machlned ar molded
aValluble: Non smoker. M·F 12·6. 11le Dally Pllot ia seek· menl assist. Good job OP· Needed full lime, &ood insurance. lr.terviews Barder"~ Pest Cor:trol. S: arts . w 0 r l tn 1 ASSEMILERS Call aft 6pm 752.0726 ing a person to augment por. , oppor for right person may be arranged by ap· S46-M70. 696 Randolph, knowledge or YH.5 true
ACCOUNTINCi :a'Jr~!!i"~!~~~J:~~ BEAUTIClAN,fullorpart ~ ~~~:ir~n~~~~'"\~: ~7141751-9194 ~1f~:r:J:r~:~~~~ poin\ment between 5:00 _c_.M_. _______ 1 posltioningpref'd. Profi·
terlty, good eyesight. time, for busy shop. sldf telephone sales. So. C'ull(. Cocktail ar ea. Salary com · and6:00p.m. Pleaseap-cient. use of measuring CLEIK --'dering •. mlcrostvlfta Good area. 541-8729 f Waitresses, Inc.. 17922 l'nensurate w /ex per. Call ply in person: instruments req'd, Wiil be responsible for ...,. "' ~-r~ ---------• Class! led experience Sky Park Bl, Ste C, 847·3513 bet 9 & llam or STACOSWITCHINC
sortln1 and listing pay· exper. Small co. w/good Beauty,Ex-SasaonStylist necessary. Must type Irvine,Ca92714. 2·4pmMoo-Fti. 'lllEHDATA 1139BakerCo6taMesr: men\s received "on ac· benefits. Small compo· Opens own shop. Needs: 45wpm (electric). Ex· 549-3041
COllht" from customers. nenta.H~worldng,de· Styllstw/following, cellent company Colltdl0ttRep Dental re.cepUonlst, CORP EqualOpporEi;nployer WUl asaiat in preparing dlcated individuals assistantlimanJcure benefits. Salary com· ExpandingMortgageCo. gcneralpractlce. STANDARD
bavolcesanddoaomefil· needed. Call Carol, 642·S387 mensurate with ex· lnOrange-Co.,hasanim-548-7074 Inf. Neatness, accuracy, !181·3830. M.V. perlence. Jr you are am· mediate opening for an , MEMORIES
speed, good flgure •P· .Body & Paint Man for bitious & want to be paid individual to do collec· DENTAL. exper d or· DIVISION
tlt\ld• and abUlty to•--------i work on European Autos. for your efforts please tion work in the field. tbodontlc assist. wanted. operate a lO key by touch Must have own tools. call for Interview: FHA, VA & Conventional Top pay for riiht person. An Applied Magnetics Co
aretheprimaryskillsre· Good future in new co. Personnel Dept. mortgages. Contact C.M.546-5170. s!:a'ln=~~
quiftd. TyplDI ls a plu.s. Call Mr. Druehl. 957.0213 842-4321, ext276 Cat by Tb om ps on• DENTAL REC E p .
BOOKKEEPER · Full Ormtp Coast n4-963-7873 Equal Oppor TIONIST Exper'd, for Equal Opportunity CUSTOMER Charge, p/time. F1ex1ble Dalv Plot Emplyr quality crown & bridge Employer MTF ACCOUNT1N41 bn . .Must have 3 yrs. or s:.>W.lfaystreet COMTIOLLER otc. Many benenu. N.e .1--------.1 Public Acct 'g. exp. Costa.Mesa W& are seeking a person Call 644·9211. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ----.....;.. ___ _....
CLBI 963-563!1 Equal opportunity l01erve as controller for DENTAL ASSISTANT fA"CTOIY-
At lea.st 1 year of varied~~~~~~~~~Bookkeeper, part time employer our Orange Co. based Need-' full·Ume exper nAIMHS accounts recelvable/bill·1-· · d """ • help for local lnaurance Cleaning Women wanted. financially onente • necessary X·ray lie •Assemblers, =~:d'es~~e':.• ~~~;._ _______ _, agent. Strong bookkeep· sa.so+ per hr. NB/Irv diyenlfied co. We req. a salaryopen'.837-7112 ' Pack.a1ers
billlnas to customers. AssoclateRep ing, preferably w~th area.Carnec.968-8846 mm o( :J.S yrs exper., & •And Warehousemen cat ul t d t ATTEHTIOM A.R.C. exp. Also hte ability to Interface Dental Secretary/Book· JobsavaUCorall
ten:lo!se ;:., fr:!o~ct~"i Hkjt Scltool GnNh clerical & stenoaraphlc Cleanin1 Lady-Mature, w1m1mt & financial in· keeper. Mature-.xper. & 3ihifls. NO FEE
purposes, apply pay· Ir Col.ge Trahted duUes. Days, 768·3400, refs. Once every olher stltutions & a desire for highly motivated. i Day •
Monitor and reconcile in· If you're new to Oran1e11 Clerical & complete saJary bis'· Dental assist, r /t. Chr
men ts o n account. an.s, 768-5755 wk. 96&-9949eves. personal growth & de-week.54&-3000 ~ .. ;. 1 -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~liii!~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii velopment. Send resume M
put/output to computer. Co., temporarily dlscon· Bookkeeping .r __ _._..... tory to Mr. J.A. Jones, side. Mln. exp. Non·
Jnterflice with market· tlnuing your education IMMEDIATEHEED ~...,... POBoxl.1S24SantaAna smkr. lnterv. T hurs, -Tempor"rvServlces GEN. OFFICE Ina depar tment and recently discharae With or WlthoutSh Ca92'7l1 • June 16, 4:30pm. 7907 -J
ct.lstomera In re&olvfna from the servlce or ror •looll.kMperS Typists · W e a t m l n s t e r , N.:::,~ai:r5' Sts:J:71 problems and other rune· any reason seeking tem· A d a Clerk PIX 6P.rators Westmlnster 1424 s. Grand Ave
tions. Accurate typina ppraeyorcareeremploy· * c nCJ • R-~ta *COOKS* SantaAna """·9021 s1dlll and the ability to ment, consider this uni-Conslructlon --..·-· Dental aulst. f /t. No ellp. ,,,,.,
operate a lO ·key queoppor.Youcanearn Expertencehelpful Chtt10fflce Cookswantingtoexpand nee. Non·smkr. lnterv ---------•
calculator. Experience --·--•cc--"---Clril w/small co. Openlna 2 Thurs, J une 16, 4:30pm. ·--------•I with a leasing company --· ----"" -·...,. new locations, need 7907 Westminster Ave. $196 PER WEEK accoun[&gmnc: Long or short term qualified fry cooks to fill Westminster FACTORY WORICEll ls a plus. ~ 'I"" assignments corning positions of chef ---------t Machine Opn for Costa
Customer Correspondent
Applicant must be able
to compose own letters,
TRIMDATA
CORP.
Based on your produc· Plea.se.'ca1l Top$$$$S$$SS " assist mars. Xlnt Meaa Co. Female Dept. t l vi t y . com m + wages, s day work wk, DIETARY SUPBV. Noexper. nee. wm traln. -----....----•
incentives & extra profit (714) 835 .. 103' sick pay, etc. Don't miss •K.itchenHelp Xlnt co. benefits. Call -------~---
ST ANDA.ID
MIMOllES ·
sharin1bonus.Ontbejob this oppor, call Ken or Dll.OFMUISIS 545-0403. trainln1. Tremendousi--------• Craigforappt,831-1152 Lvuos& "'IDES
DIVISIOM
Ali.Applied JlaineUcs Co
• M>OW. ~eratrom santa Ana, Calli. 92704
potential to reach "" "" supervisory le manage· lttOKB WAMTED COOKS HELPERN>ights For All Shlfta
q\eDt positions. Must be Real Estate lnformaUon 54M455 only, apply ln person, Apply, Garfield Conv.
pencmable It ambitious. corp. openlng property Equal ()ppol' Employer Hosp .. 7781 Garfield, H
For appointment only management aecUon. 847·98'71
call Low key developmentalliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Hwy.
539·1113 position. Donlon. O.ERICAL --------•
1:30AMtoZPM Broderick at Anoe. ~~~~~~~~~~-$5'7-·1335 ____ TEMPORARY ~ POSITIONS
AdMllUatraUve A.1st.
:tUIMll
Prilili'llulve firm aeek·
...-i aharp, to-aette.r for a illilf ~·po1··.Clll
Uia. ... ma. J>eDnil ' Dt aRlt P.er aoniatl
County Of Orange has
~itlons avallable for
people who want tem· porary work from 3·6 ___ ....._ ____ _
_ _..... ______ -1 months . Call ('114) ---------1---------1 834-nsa ror interview. I T!MPOLUY OFFfCI ______ __,,
WORICERIV
1 Year clerical ex·
perience, type 4.5 wpm.
$3.Bl/llr.
DllV&
SUMDAY OM&. Y
Dell ver D a 11 )' Pilot bundte1 to caniers. R• qulrea valt or large
wagon anCl a 1000 driv· Ing record Phone
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT MAN
Call Jeny. NS-7023
rwnltw•Worken
Trainees foe mill work 6 assembly. Call Muntz
Eectronics (714)548-3881
l7
}
:Pull·tlme position for en ex·
perlefteed seamatrn1 to ~_pera&e M ....,....m macblM. ~o_ pre.
WkNa ~ce bi mcmacrammma n~A factOrY t.cbntCIAD·wW eom \raln 10\1• LoCatklri JI rel stiore bl ll{ewpott;'BeMh wUb
treat .,.,..ktnl ccilidl\j(;aS. t:4ili hr: ...... rt p ••• ••t1110•--T ............ ,
Ml --
SECRETARY Aaalatant to Dean. Cballen11n1 po11Uon.
Research " Develop· ment for le1•l / tberapeutlccJ..7:•1111. Lepl fl al m ft·
perience desirable. Be
able t.o edit ffl publica·
tloo. Excellent typlnt/ol· nee akills required. llu.t
be free t.o travel. NOD·
drinker would hive ad·
vafttale. &lbmlt resume.
Appointment for In·
tervlew necessary. Pb
714-4113-2850, Dr. Joaeff or
,, •
11
,
'SSPoottac
$l~Ol' beat offer.
548"6629
---------1 '49 Wlllya Jeepster. Good
eng, restorabJe, $500.
C96-Sil8.
WE BUY
CLIAHCARS
&lRUCKS
AMC-JEEP CONNELL #1 lnCaHf.
WE OUTSELL ALL CHEVROLET
JEEP DEALERS 2.828 Harbor Blvd.
INTHESfATE COSfAMESA
1011 '. ,,,, \ ,,,,
. . .
IMW 9712 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
'791
FS911e1 I
Clflf ........ . llJIG. .... ~ .... ...........
DRIYEA
LITTLE •••
SAVE A LOT
'69Y ah 250 HUGEIHVENTORY 546-1200 Used carpet, 45 yards, SS CASH FOR$ am a AllModelsNew&Used 1--------1
gold shag. Good cond. Good used furn/refrig.s $300. Runs excelle:.:S.2585 Leasing Available WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
SADDl.EBACK
BMW
SHOP&COMPARE
IARWICK DATSUN
San Juan Capistrano
131.1375 41wns
lm-S092 frzrs & stoves 546-0168 Costa Mesa FOR TOP \JSED CARS
Photo equip, Karmann '74 TM400 Suzuki, good AMC JHp FOREIGN, DOMESTIC COMEIM&SEI
THEALL HEW
630CSIHOW!
NEWPORT DATSUN
Ghia, Winnebago, Wa,i;ited. Paper Cutter. loats.Sclill 9060 condon.$600/bstoft.Ted. ~H1\RBORBLVD. orCLASSICS
""""'writer. Ansaphonc, 19 or over -1\Ydraullc •••••••••n•••••••••••• ~ Costa Mesa 549-8023 If your car ls extra clean SPECIALS
Ai"'; con d , Ste re o , 0 r I ever • 8 7 0 · 4 5 6 4 New JVC RD1696 Stereo Hobie 16. Banana, Flamer ---------1 ---------i see us first.
Vacuum, Dictating (Fullerton), ask for reel to reel tape deck. sails. $1595. + New 76YamahaYZ125CMono, JEEPS.,77" IAUERIUICK
1970 Datsun Pickup.
(18T1 ·76a>4V).
mach. 546-7206 or Dave. List $250, 1 only $178. traller$300.548·9'781 Bestoffer CJ·S's• cJ.7 's, 292SHarbo.rBlvd.
552 3310 11 b c. ·g Atlantic Music, 445 E. G 846-80l9 Cherokees, Wagoneers, Costa Mesa 97g..2500 . W 1 ' uy some re .,., s, 17th St CM 23' Ericson SlQOp, enoa, . ell '71 "Cl\
COMPLETE
IOOYSHOt-
HOWOPEM
HOWSl795
888 DOVE STREET Near MacArthur JRVINE Racquet Club. appls. working or not. • knot meter, compass. Movmg,musts _, Pick-ups,uptoSl,200dls-TOP
Transferable Family Al.soscrapmetal675·5258 super clean, Dana Pt. HondaCL.$300. counts. S yr 50,000 mi.le SADDLUACK ~membership $1400 . wanted : Quality used 23" Packard Bell Color SUp.M,995.493-2485 675-9280 w~!!!f~aMU~lel.c: DOLLAR YAWYIMPORTS TOPIUYER
& Jamboree Roads
133°1300
494 2791 & . t bl TV. stereo console. Sl.75. '74 GT550 S k. t 11 _,......-rra n P'•ID • · tuner ping·pong a e OOYds rncr t $100.ACt24'GladlatorSloop.Race . uzu 1• u 2001Elst,SASS8..SOOO ""' 831·2040495-4949 Seeusfirst,&last!'J'op 1.ruSTSELL!RefrigS225. onrotlf,lrs.642·5241. 6 67~·:m'7p, rioed.Extrais.$5500.Ph dress, fairing, bags,----------. FORCLEAN dollarpaidforimports. d. t •75 + thcr pm, · -.. ....,... travel case cslm seat, '73 Jeep J4000 PU. 4 whl COST"' MES"' • in. se " 0 WANTED 3, ._ .... _ & M-.1 °•·N•N... CB radio, perfect cond. drive. Sell for payoff. "" "" '
• •. ~:.~items. 751
·
82920r Camper for Chevy •ton ~.t ~,.. PaclficCatamaranw/trlr SlOOOflml.846·3401 494--0395. DATSUN
shortbed, Reas. 642·2073 ..,.-pmem & xt Mu t sell ---------i H ... __ Bl d
~erigerator clean $i5 ...,111~-nt 8083 Boats. Maint...anc•/ 5Jl·2SlO. Only 3,800 ml'. $t50/ofrer. cond. 37 ,000 mi. $3500. SANTA AHA • Costa Mesa 540-6410
----------,••••••••••••••••••••••• many ras. 5 · "73 Suzuk:l 185 xlnt cond. '73 Jntern'l Scout. Xlnt &'ST • HOADWAY 2845 ar!An' v •
Also Sealy Poslurepedi~ M'""""""
1 Servlc:• 9'020 2SFt. Sparltmao a r.d Aft3:00.64441158 Ph: 645-3007. 835·3171 · '76 8210. 2 Door. AM/FM f bed $35 548-2585. ••••••••••••••••.••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Stevens ftberglass sloop, . ---------i IMPORT C •RS 1111111.r1MATtORMH<lMACH1Nll radio. Lo mi. Mint cond. _ · Conn Min-0 -Mabc elec B 0 at p 8 i n t Ing. loaded with gear, sleeps '70Yamaha1.25 dirt bike. '76 GMC High Sierra "'
42 6271 552 7181 ~ink stole. cerulean col-~rg~n. excellent condl-varnishin,g. reas. rates. 4. futt· electronics, VHF Good condition. $115. Trailing Special "Jim· ALL MODELS *USED IMW•s* k~6GeoMi · •
tor,xlntcond,makeorrer taol\,$600,P.P.532·1259 3>yrsexp.Eves.&7S.317S radio, inboJtrd. Very _645-_5277 ______ -i my". All pwr. w/4 whl ---------'7~CpeS/R746LWB e
366 I fl 7 9 5 o dr.&cruisecontrol.A/C. '76~4spdS/R9SONLF 240Z, '13, air, AM/FM, !l6J.l · Fors1;1le, 1939 Martin Folk Boats. Mmine c ea n · ' · '73 Honda 500·4· rblt top AM/FM, new oversized CAR OUTLET 'i62002Auto., 240RDG mag whJs, mint cond. ~CE SKATES. girls ,Rid· G14itar. SOOOor best offer. Eqilpment 9030 7l4..642·27l7 end, cstm metal·rlake tires & trlr. hitch, lo mi, Cash For Cars '762002,4.spd. 245DHL Sl95(1. Eves, 847-8450
dell SI. 4 , $30. Two skating !jM.3074 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lido 14, trailer, extras. bhlu pnk t, chrfomt e, bboge xlnt. cond. $6200. PP. Poid --0 ... ot . ca--~ On Su...&..us
d girls sz lge d o• $2195 5 oc s. sa e Y ars. 640-0945 rv..-r..., uawu ,._, '75Datsun280.Auto,A/C, ressers, · Office hmlture & 12' Hobie, xlnt cQn · 1 · , .. 2.6706 $1075or bst orr 642'·3767 2145HARBOR BLVD. 1 $9.00ea.,640·5957 Equipment 8085 callt. D~ghy, flotation .,.. · (Harbor&Victoria) ORAHGECOUMTY'S Makeoffer.
Moving! Must sell this ••••••••••••••••••••••• s«:8t .cusb1o~s. gd cond. 2 MORGAN OUT ISLAND '75 Norton, extra clean. Truc:k.s 9560 COSfA MESA OLDEST ___ C_all_957_..()350 ___ _
or TV, mattresses, '!II typewriter, mint. $175. Boat p 9040 microwave. VHF. Ped. $1500. 646-0994 '71 lnternattonal whls, air cond, stereo·
week.Sectional sofa,col· lBM Standard •ofc FishmgChairs.631·3696 33', diesel, shower, Leavingtown,mustsell. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642·0653 & '76 280Z, 9200 mi, mag
new. 499.2740 C a n o n C a n o l a 1• ower steering, slip & more! y h 350 RD •75 Style side 8 ft bed fee· WE PAY ~. $1,000 or $250 cash, ~--------i Calculator, display & •••••••••••••••••••••~· 67S.8280or675-7884 ama a t · r ·co~ d . &assumelease.640..s069
(2) Memberships Jack print $150. Sanyo tel ans 51' Yacht, near new twm Low mi, xlnt cond. $650. 0 r Y ~ 1 • ' TOP DOLLAR Sales-Service·Leasing •
LaLanne European mach,$85.Two2drawer diesels. 60% Complete. Lease&orpartnership38· firm . Call aft 5 :30. automauc. pwr. steer· FOR ... IFTY RoyC--lnc-. '76 280Z 2+2 met blue,
Health Spa. Cheap. Take file cabs, lockable, $40. Many xtras. $30,00 North Star FG. Wahl, 536-1006 :i.~~~k Selling at "" ft -"'"""' auto. Stereo, wire whls,
over payments. 645·1240. Near new. 494.36;9 Firm. Call eves 831·9687 eve, 593-7421 Motor HomK, Sale I MOW OHL y SI 750 IM_PO_R_T.,s,._ &Us ~~~mbor~BMW ~~~ Exe co.nd 28m
~uto1• Hew 9800 Autos, Hew 9800 Autos, Hew 9800 197 3 Hobie Cat. b I u e Rent /StGratp 91 60 ~Van Moy MARQUIS MOTORS Newport Beach 640-6444 . ••••• : •••••••••••••••••.............................................. w/trlr, spare tires & tool ........................ MEWPORTER II 28802Marguerite Pkwy. m Datsun 1600 Roadster,
.-----~---~--~~~~=:::~------, box. $140(). 645·3262 aft 5 MOTOR HOMES 1969 Harbor. Costa Mesa MISSION VIEJO 67 IMW 2000c: needs work, $800 or bst FOR RENT 642 0795 831•2880491t.·lllO AutomaUc,Silvergrey offer. 673--1629,Mark or New 13' AMF Sloop FromSlSOwk.770·0644 • "' (760RNZ) 6'f3.6834lvemsg
PLUS TAX
& LICENSE
New 77 Rabbit including fuel injection. 1.6 liter OHC
engine, 4 speed. front disc brakes. rack & pinion steering.
4-wheel Independent suspension. and hatchback. Ser.
•1n317S351. CHAMPAGHEEDmONSAVAILAILE
LEASIHG A VAILAIU-4MMEDIA TE DEUVERY
on approved credit
FULLY INSPECTED USED CARS
•6t TRIUMPH TR6 •••••••••••••••••••••••••• $2288
4 fOM<I, -· L..-101>. 1beolutefy oeMcl l.k 07S flRO
'71 M6 MIDGET ROADSTER •••••••••.•••••• $1695
4 aoffd. l9dlo. ,.._ Dtinl -Su-•...,_ lie. 017 OTC
172 FORD COURIER •••••••••••.••••••••.••• $1995
O....gaat°""'~·~l·ll~eMW Lte. -
'73 DATSUN 610 COUPE •••••••••••••••••• $1995
4ljlMd,,-.1.-. IOC), ebtolul.tv .,.tleQ. IJc:. 0711 .. RO
'7 4 DODGE COLT 2 DOOR • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • S 1981
4 tpMd. ttdo. lllCC(ICI c..-tow on oa. LIC. 3IO llNfl.
169 TOYOTA CAROLLA 2 DOOR •••.•••••••• SI 218.
4 SPMCI. r9dlo. 1.-*11qi. Uc. YOC 02S
Alidia. ct-.icw .. -pnce. Uc WNI ...
•61 VW IUG •••••••••..••.•.••••.•••..•.•. SJ 318 ""*• d-.itlo-fl-price. Uc WNS 80'
'69 VW IUG ••••••...•••• •• ••••••..•••.••• $1681 A.-o.--.i..,.,.a..-Manyrm ..... M LIC. lOCl
170 VW IUS 7 SEAnR •••••••••••••••••••• $1918
llldio.,...,.. ......... Mid IO~ -LIC. lllllOll
166 VW WESTPHALIA CAMPIR •••••••••• • • • • • • • • • __,,Lia. YACOOO C•U. flOI SUl'9l ....... nlCll
w /Lrlr, $1250/offer. Perfect. Classic 495·5995. 25' OPEN ROAD. fully '74 Ford FlOO. Ranger. 360 WE'LL IUY YOUR $4689. New '77 280Z, copper. s --------.-1 self-cont. Reserve now VS, Shrtbd, AT, PS, PB. USEQ'IMPORT spd. Best ofr ovr $7000.
th int. 23' sallboal slip. for summer. 644-8385 $3500. 642·6497 AUTOMOllLE D'elecaance 955-1759, 549.2101 New sails. paint. Sips 5. ..,. 626W .lfth,S.A SlSOQ.962·3688 '750penRoad25'Slfcont. '74 Mazda Rotpry PU PAIDrOROltNOT 547.9250 . • t973240Z
21' Venture, 5 sails, many
extras. trlr included
642·0245
5Kw gen . roof-air. xtras, SheU. XJnt cond. CALLSALESMGR. Manyextras.
Cruisecont.tranll cooler. $2850 firm. Days call BILL YATES 1976 530i Stick, A/C, sun· 631-3530or673-5852
Xtras. $10,950-oHer. Jean 540·1111 Ext 440. vu. -RSCHE roof, stereo, xtras, 12.000 M FM
Must sell! 495·4859, Eves64S-0302 • ....,..,.."' ml. Assume lease or 1974 710 wgn. A •
San Juan Capistrano Sll,500. stereo tape. Low mi. Gd MONTGOMERY 12Sloop. 495·5602 '75 Toyota ~ ton Pickup. 837-4800493.4511 644.7461 cond. $2850. 751-8265
No. 73, Bristol Cond. Explorer Motor Home. Good cond. $3150. ---------1----------i-----------
Many xtras. Car topable late 075. loaded, like new. 631-0351 Autos, M•w 9800 Autos, Mew 9800 Alrto1, Hew 9100
$895/ofr. 768·5800, 865W. Wllson.C.M. '58 Ford Paneled truck.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 495-1221
. 1976 GMC Motorhome. 26' Recent suspension & 1 71h' ~lnghy .. complete Eleganza II. All options front replacement. 6 Cy!.
w/sa1ls & l.~HP 0 /8. incld. l5,000 miles. Beat Stk shift. Needs some
SJ75.548·74llor768-6842 offer takes. Days work. Good potential.
1714 )832·2860 or Eves $700/best ofr. Call Tom,
loafs, Slips/ (n4)998-5835 751·6Sll or646-0076
Docks 9070 23• Chev. eng. Runs good, '67 Chevy ~ ton pickup, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Me1s fix up. Make ofr. Rebuilt engine, trans, Boat slip, power boat, side 494•2982 small VS, Make ofre
tic, max 28'. $3 per n. ---------1 839·9567 .
Min $50. Balboa Coves --,-57-C-HE_V_Y_P_k-up-.-i
673-7737 549.4354 or 645-6759 an.
1
17
,
I I
/T'\ '~I
1976 DEMO
450 SEL
o..ly
$19,499
1977 DEMO
450Sl
5'LVM&IED
(7819)
'11 DEMO
I Vfll"/ w /bamboo only
~~~
lfOUUYS
213/921-8518
114 A23-7250
MERCEDES
BENZ
I
I
'
Lincoln-Versailles
THIS COULD BE THE .BEST TIME EVER ·TO BUY
LUXURY CAR •.. INCLUDING THE EXCITING NEW ..
Ll~COLN-VERSAILLES·. WE HAVE AN
OUTSTANDING SELECTION FOR YOU TO CHOOSE
FROM · •••
A FEW OF OUR LUXURY SPECIALS!
1976 UMCOLM
4 Or. Town Scl. Copper metallic. padded vinyl roo(, leather
interior. opera window. loaded
with extras. Ml power & air
cond. or coune. See It now. Uc.
1898NDZ.
58795
1973 T-llRD
Gold with black vinyl roof. P B .
P.S. & P. windows. air cond .
stt1reo rad.lo. a real nice car. test
drive It today. a sure winner.
Llc. l-493000
s3995
1971 LIMCOLM Coupe. While. white roor &
rnatchln1 'interior, full power &
air cOt\d .• an oolltandlna luxury
car at a small prlce. Lie.
t3SSBSR
s2095
1971 MOMAICH
Chia 4 dr Sd. Sliver with
matchlnl' Vln~I root. maroon In·
terior. P.B. " P.S. and Powtt
Windows. AM·!'M 1ter.o " 8
track tape. Air C!Clnd. aJI set to •o
at a lo• low prlo. Lie.
•498MXB
1973 MERCURY
M11rq. Brah 4 Dt. Sd. Stunning
while exterior with brown
interior & vinyl roof, comfort
lounge rrt seats and loads of
factory extras. A great famUJ car. Uc. #OSI
53395
197SUMCOLN
Cpe. This red beauty is a real
barJain. leather Interior. white
vinyl roof. full power, air cood -
all tbe factory standard extras
you llke to have on this end of
the rnontb Special. LLc . #882~WP·S6695 c
1974UNCOLM 4 Dr. Sedan. White with brown l~alher interior and white vtnyl
roof full power and air cond. Real IUl<ury at a small price.
Lie -.fTKEM.
54995
lt7JUMCOLM
Cpe. Outltandln1 black nnilh.
with matc:hlni leather Interior •
black vtn)l1 sun roor. ruu power. air coad. and more. Very few of
these around. see It today. U'~ IMJDY
'4295
1974 CADILLAC
Eldorado. Blot wtlh,AVblte vll1yl
roof. full power, Al!iffFM lterec>,
and more. Come In and test
drive this ftne penonal car. Uc. t232KRE ,. '
'5695
1976COUGAI
XR'T. Low tnllea, Loaded with tx•
tr11, Oold metallic llnllh with
m1tchlnJ Interior. A Orta•
Personal Car Str. •52e4M.
17
#
1971 DOMI POLAIA v.a. automattc. air conditioning, power
steering. power brtkH. radio. hNter.,
wtlhWlll tiNI. (011000)
'995
1975 FOID GRANADA
V·8. automatic. air conditioning. power,
ateerlng, power brakes. radio. heater.
whitewall tireL (230MVD)
'76 PLYMOUTH VOi.AU e cylinder, automltlc. alr conditioning, power
atHring. power brakts, radio. heater.
whlttwlll tira (153 PNV)
1973 IMW i~VAllA
I c:yllndlt. attometiC'llr conditioning. AM FM eeno r.SiO, hM!a'· (950Kl(H)
56295 -
OUTSTAM»IMS
IUYS OM IOTH NEW
AHO USED CAIS-AU. PllCID.
FOi iMMEDiATE DBIYEIY.
DON'T MISS THE 51EAT
CAI VALUES OfFllED RIGHT
MOW,ASA1US
CHRYSLU/PI. YMOUTtt
MUST REDUCE
IMVENTOIY
1975 CHRYSLER CORDOIA
V·8. automatic. air conditioning. power
steering. power brakes. radio. heater.
whit.e'ftlll tires. (859NBR)
53895
1915 DODGE WAGON V-8 automatic, air conditioning, power at_.
Ing, power brlket. pow« windows, redlo.
heater. whitewall tir11, luggage reek. (53eMCE)
11AND NEW I 977
INTERNATIONAL
SCOUT
TERRl PICK.UP
IRAND NEW I 977
INTEINATI9"AJ.
ICOUT II
4 WHEEL DRIVE
•
\
17
ORANGE COUNTY., CALI FO NIA WEDNESDAY., JUNE 15, 1977
tudy Blasts . Value· of Laetrile:
P YOU CAP) -A maJor •*'1 ti J..ael.rUe lboW1 tbe sub-
at a a e • ha1 •o ••pre•••· ttn ..... C'Ul'llUft Ue er
aeU•lt7.'' Memorial Sloan·
Ketterlat CD<er Cater an-
a--=ed 1. ••• .,. aat lane evi
porttna t1kln1 amyadailn
<Laetrile) to clinical trial •ltlaoucb otber consideraUona
may require that OCle be conduct-
Veil Lifts
On Ranch
Use Plan
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of 1111 DIMlf l'tlet Sl .. t
On July 25, a group or 10 in-
vestors known as Taubman-
Allen-lrvine, Inc., is scheduled to
complete the purchase of the
Irvine Company for $337 million.
What happens a~er that bas
been the subject of conjecture
and rwnor-11peculation fed by
tbe fact that the 10 individuals of
T Al have clothed the partnership
in secrecy. refusing to talk to the
press, and avoiding all but
minimal contact with cpmpany
' manaeement.
I Part of the curtain drawn
I around the sale was lirted Tues-
day by Col. John Gottlieb of I Beverly Hills, the 79·year-old re·
tired military man known to the
i business world as the man who
'putTAltogether.
' He's called the Candy Man. He
says he la the broker in the sale.
Here's what be had to say dur·
ing a two-and-a-half-hour in·
terview Tuesday:
-The only plannlne under way
by TAI for company holdings is
in aericulture which the 1roup
plans to expand ''drastically."
-No one involved In the con-
sortium foresees taking any pro-
fits out of their investment for at
leut five years.
-There are no plans at present
to either speed up development
or sell the assets of the Irvine
Company.
' -No one In company manage-
ment will be forced out.
-The members of the con-I sortium have a total net worth in
, the $5 billion to $6 billion range.
1 'l'hey will put up ••at least $100
1 million" of their own money in
buying the company.
Gottlieb is particularly dis-
tressed by the rumors that TAI
wlll hit the Harbor Area like a
pack ol carpetbaggers, grabbing
off a quick profit to leave trashy
development and a patchwork ot
am all landowners In their wake.
'
Nothing could be further from
the truth, be lns.lsts.
) "We are all businessmen with
good reputations. We're not com-
ing in to tear things down. We
build. thi~a up. We're nol a
bunch ol rapists."
A 1pokeaman for A. Alfred
Taubman contacted today said
tbe Detrdt developer would have
no comment on GoWleb'1 state-
ments and further claimed that
OotUieb\snot "involved" in TAI.
But Gottlieb 1ay1 he was the
catalyst in the formation of TAI.
. Jn addition to being a retired
mllltary man-he graduated
from the U.S. Military Academy
, In 1921-he la also retired from
the trucldnl business in Chicago.
"I'm suPPOSed to be retired,"
be coOflded, "but I like to put .,
thlnp tosether." He apparenUy
wlll •et a share in T Al .-his
commission in the sate.
"Tbe Colonel" is a charming,
ktnclly man, well-known in the
Los Ancelabuainess community
and called the .. Candy 'Man"
because of his habit of carrying
wrapped candies in hla pockets
(See VEIL. Pa1e A.U
Bll4T SULED
Olli' WITH AD
What do you do ..-lth your
Sal.lboat wben you've decided to
become a mountalD climber lo
tbeS1rillAJpeT
0 J eold tl with • Dail)' Pilot
clualfled ed."
That•• tbe advertlain' aucceu
aperimc.'ftl by • l'itwport Beath
mall who placed this classl.fied
ad:
Naples Sabot w/ hand doll~. xtr• r111inp & Hll. Mmt Mii. Leevln1
for Europe. 75. JtU•
llllll
Jf you have llema that no
)Oqer Ill into your ur11tyle, COft•
Ytrt them to cut wltb a
elaul&d lld. Call IGW1I ror . ......
ed." thee r ceoteuald.
Dr. Lewi.a Thomu, president
of I.be center, bu 1ald be believes
buma trialt ol Laetrile must be
conducted became of 1ucb fac·
ton u the growtna number of
atatea that have Jesallud.
Laetrile.
The U.S. Food and Drue Ad-
mlniltraUoo bu banned use ol
Laetrile in interstate commerce
because it 11y1 the substance bas
not bellJ proYeQ •af •or effec:Uve.
lo the paat year, Laetrile,
whieb 11 derived from peacb or
apricot pita oc bltter almonds.
baa been le1ia.11Jed ln Alaska, Jn..
dlana, Florida, Arlzotla, Nevada,
Texaa and Wasbingt.oo State.
Al a news conference today,
Sloan·Kettering said tbe study
sbowa Laetrile possesses
"neither preventive, nor tumoc-
reeressant. nor anUmetastatic,
nor curative antJcaocer ac·
tlvity.''
Tbo caoeer center released the resun. of a four.year aludy of tbe
substance. Two manuacrlpta
compriainc 90 paces are to be
publlabed in the Journal of
Sur1lcal Oncoloa.
One ol them deala with tumors
tbat are transplanted in rodents.
o .. ,, ............. ..., llk ... rcl l(Mfller
FIVE GENERATIONS CELEBRATE A CENTURY PLUS THREE
From Left, Mra. Dunn, Michelle (7 moa.), Mrs. Dotr, Bertha (103), Mra. Marek
103 and Counting
She's Got Four Cardi From PreaitlellU
By ROBERT BARKER
Of IN OlllY f'ti.c ICl'lf
It's not every day that one gets a birthday Mn. Scbaum, who was born in Ferdinand,
card from the President of the United States . Ind., in 1874, said she never drank or smoked.
Mrs. Bertha Schaum bas received four. She thinks that might be a reason for her
The latest arrived tbis week in Ume to longevity.
help Mrs. Scbaum celebrate her 103rd birth-
day Tuesday in a Westminster convalescent
hospital.
She received her first presidential greet·
ing from President Nixon in 1974 when she re-
ached the century mark. Two others have ar-
rived from President Ford and the last came
from Rosal.ynn and Jimmy Carter this week.
HEB DAUGHTER, MRS. BELEN Dunn,
says Mrs. Scbaum is in reasonably eood
health except for in.fi.rmities which have near-
ly taken away her sight and bearing.
MllS. SCHAtJM TmNKS THE honors are
fine and it's nice of the presidents to think of
her, but, if she had her druthers, she would
prefer to be 18 again.
"I can't believe that I am 100,'" she said.
Mrs. Schaum, who was formerly a resident
of Huntington Beach, was joined in the
celebration by four generations of her orrspr-
ing. All reside in Huntington Beach.
They include Mrs. Dunn; her daughter
Mn. Patricia Marek; her daughter, Mrs. Un·
da Door, and her daughter, Michelle, who was
seven months old on her great-great-.
grandmother's birthday. "I'd jll!t like lo be 18 again."
New Home in Huntington
Recycle Center Gains
By MICHAEL PASKEVICB Oft .. Ollly l'ii.ts.atf
Arter three years of workine
out of their school's parking lot,
students at Circle View Elemen-
tary School in Huntington Beach
can loot forward to a formal
home (OC"their recycling cent.er.
Ocean View (elementary)
School District trustees have an
architect to draw plans for a
Sl0,000 recycling center to be
completed in September, just in
time for the start of the next
school year.
Beach Repair
Plans Okayed
By Supervisors
A $4 million proeram to repair
beach erosion along the Orange
County coastline was approved
unanimously by county
supervisors Tuesday.
Plans call for the U.S. Anny
Corps ol Engineers to build a
2,000-foot·lone, 2.50-foot-wide so-
ca 11 ed feeder beach in tl\e
Surfalde-Swlset Beach area in
1$78, a report lo 1upervisors aald.
Action of the ocean would
CaJTY that land to beaches aa far
a1 several miles to the south to
replat-e sand eroded away.
Two-thirds of the project's cost
will be paid bythefedenleovem·
ment and tbe remainder shared
by tb• county. coastal ciUes and tbeatat..
· Su~ also asked 1Wt
membert to 1tucly buildln' a
temporary Hnd berm tn the
Suuet Buch area to help prot«t
tile comaumit.1 Crom fi0odln1 d~ blah t.ldea.
The new center, destined. u a
simple 3> by %7 foot buildinf, will
be rinanced largely by money tbe
students receive through salvag-
ing bottles. cans and
newspapen. •
Chief recycler and teacher Dan
Moss estimated that the students
have collected about $10,000 over
the past three years from dona·
lions of salvageable earbace.
In addition, the students plan
to repay $5,000 to the d lstrict over
a 10-year period to help pay for
construction. The building will go
up In front al the school at 6261
Hooker Drive.
Past profits from the parking
lot site have helped finance the
school's outdoor education pro-
eram wbioh ends with an annual
trek to Yosemite for eighth
eraden. By hOuslng their portable bins,
bottle crushers, conveyors and
scales inside the new center, stu·
dents will be able to expand
services and keep the center
open year-round.
The planned expansion will be
aided by the addition of 1SO new
students from Rancho View
School which ls closing at the end
of this school ye~ ''We're lookin forward to all
that extra manpo er and brain-
power." M06S noted. "And now
we're going to have a special
place to use it all."
Elections PJanhed
RAWALPINDI, Paklstan (.\P)
-Prbne MiJ\i•ter Zulllkat All Bh\UtO has a.greed to 'hold 'new
national elections by the end ot
· the year' in hopes of endin& three
months •of vlolence that ha1
claimed 300 Uves.
The aec:oad, · more extenal•e
1tudy, deall wt&h IPQDtlneam'7
occurrtnc emcer in mice. la tbe t.ramplanted tumon,
SJoan-KetteriDf •aid, Laetrile
•bowed no beneficial effects .,ainlt any ct 10 dlfferct types·
olcaneer.
According to tbe second
manuauipt, a series of nudles
failed to reproduce reported
6all11pPoD
slgm ct aadcancer acU~ ,..,
ported prevlou1ly bJ Dr.
Kanematsu SuaJura of Sloul· Ketterinc.
Sutlu:ra'a IAlUll atadlea m
1972·'13 bave been widely quoted
by Laetrile proponents iD at·
tempts to perauade 1tate
letlalatares to leealbe tbe sub-
stance, which is available in
Mexico and several other coun·
tries.
U.S. Religious
Revival Due?
NEW YORK (AP) -Pollster
Georee Gallup Jr. said today that
surveys have found mounting
evidence the United States .. may
be in an early stage of a profound
relilious revival.••
Writing in the June issue of the
Journal of Current Social Issues,
GaJJup said evidence for his 8\ll·
geation included a rise in church
attendance in 1976, for the first
timeinnearlytwodeeades.
He said bis survey showed 42
percent of Americans attended
church Ol' synagogue in a typical
week.
"Our surveys also showed
church membership to be on the
upswing during the year, with
about seven in 10 now describing
themselves as church mem-
bers," he wrote.
He said six in 10 people sur·
veyed say their religious beliefs
are "very important" and cited aa further evidence of revival the
considerable in~est in what be
termed e]Jperimental religion,
aucb aa mysticism, YOI• and
tranacendentatmeditation.
He aaid the evangelical move-
ment appeared to be "providinl a powerful thrust" for the re-
Uglou.e revi~al.
But Gallup laid tbe surveys
suf 1ested that America may be on y ••superficially religioua"
wltb reU1ion on the upswing,
"while "morality ls losing its in·
nuence."
· He said that while 9' percent ol
people responding to Gallup in·
terviews said they believed in
''God, or• universal spirit," only
44 percent said they bad "a great
deal of confidence in organized re-
li1lon."
Amons the .factors be sald
could acCOWlt for increased re-
lig lous activity in the nation
were: -A turning inward to seek re-
fuge from pressures of everyday
exi•teace; •
-A search for nonmaterial
llB Trustees
Study Budget
Of $12 Million
values;
-President Carter's open dis·
cussion of bis own religious
beliefs;
-A normal upswinc followint
a decline in religious interest and
activity.
The journal is a publlcatioo of
the Board for Homeland
Ministries ol the United Church
of Christ.
Naval Base
Break-in
Try Bared
• By UY ESTBADA IL Of-Qmlly PIMt$taft
The mother ol a Huntiqton
Beach Hieb School studept told
school t>oard trulteea TuesdtY bet IOli rtlitned from a dQD.
sanctiooed campps club when its
naemben plou.d to break into
the Seal Beach Naval Weapona
Bue in~, 1975.
Joy Dautrich accused trustees
of~ to "whitewash" the ex·
latence ol a lfOUP . called the
American Freedom Party at Huntin~ Beach Hilb School.
Huntington Beach police in·
dicated today such a group did
ex11t )and a plot lo raid the
weapons base was discussed.
Tbe IJ'OUP disbanded in late l975,
police indicated.
Seal Beach Police Sgt. Ken
Mollohan aald today three
Newport Beach Juvenllea were arrested in October, 1975. when
tbey cut throuth a wire fence in
an attempt to 1teal weapons from
the naval base. ·
Explosives known u "M-80'1''
were found in the poaaesaioo ~
one ol the youths arrested at the
scene. The other two Juveniles
were arreated later, said
Mollohan.
Huntinaton Beach Police Capt.
Bert Ekstrom laid the arrested
juveniles were connected with
the HunUntton Beach Hilh
School DGIW&Dctloned dub.
Ekltrom said a book with
several Huntiqtoo Beach Hi&h
School studenll' names, includ·
inl that ol Mn. Dautrlcb'• IOll.
Stuart, wu found In one of the ar·.
rested youtha' POSHSSion.
Tbe 1tudenla' parents were
cae.~·•u•.U>
·Coast
.
A itapal• araH ont tbe
.... ~ the '170.-,.. , Gil•._. u tl wa can·
~:.ll'Uu.a m• • u. ...........
~=i Newsman
Nabbed in
Drug Bust
St.ale Bureau of Narcotics En·
forcement agents visited the
home of Anaheim Bulletin
newspaper llanagine Editor
Marvin R. "Marv" Olsen Mon--
day mpt ad arrmtecl him oa
marijuana poeeesalon charges.
Olsen. 43, was booked for in-
vestigation of possession of mari·
juana for sale and culUvation of
marijuana.
He was released from custody
on his own recoplsan~e. promis-
ing to appear lo answer the
charges on a date yet to be
scheduled in Central Orange
County Judicial District Court.
A spokesman for the Bureau of
Narcotics Enforcement said to-
day that three plants were seized
as evidence, in addition to a
small quantity or alleged mari·
Joana inside the home.
Inveattcatora said they
checked Olsen's backyard on the
· basis of a tip from Orange Cotmty
political financier Gene Conrad
who is presently indicted on
seven counta of fraud connected
with hi1 loan brokerage firm.
The state agency normally
concentrates attention on dnig
dealers. City police would
normally handle a matter involv-
mg smaller quantities of alleged
marijuana.
Olsen discu.sed his arrest at
great length with a Dally Pilot
newsman today, but declined to
elaborate on any l11ue of gullt or
innocence because he had not
contulted b1a attorney.
The Los Anceles Times quoted
• financier Conrad aa saying he
tipped off authorltles partly
because the newspaper Olsen
edits is owned by Freedom
Newspapers, Inc., which also
pu blisbes the Santa Ana
Register.
Conrad told the Times he bas
been antagonized by the
Freedom Newspaper chain's
coverage of his political .ac-
tivities and criminal indict·
men ts.
Chamber Seta
Mexko Trip
The chamber of commerce, in
cooperation with the city of Hunt·
ington Beach, is offering a trip lo
MexicoJune25.
Coaches will depart City Hall
al 9 a.m. There will be a stop at
the Agua Caliente Race Track
and a tour of Tijuana.
Reservations at $20 per person
may be made by contacting the
chamber at 18582 Beach Blvd.,
Suite 224 or by calling chamber
offices at 962-6661.
Reservations also can be made
at the public information office in
city ball. The phone number is
536-SSll. Deadline for reserva-
tions is June 21.
Combat Stressed
ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada
(AP) -Representatives of two
Latin-American military dic-
tatorships told Secretary of Slate
Cyrus Vance that combating ter-
rorism and subffrslon must take
precede:nce1Wer human rilbt.f.
C>AAMGtl COMT ""
DAILY PILOT
,. ins si.d at
lb dt1 pay ILi Iha.re of ~
from public fuadl and \hat ac·
couoUQI be ha.ndled separately flOID ... ,.,.....,.,. of tbe d.te
UM.er~COlla
JUCMI, tM drio ceotet and
dYil ., ... am.-cOltl were
lwDPld ~ad p.jd by tbe
Pabllc PaclllU• Col'poraUon c PPC>, a non·profn aroup
formed to cwenee operlltlcxw d
the civic center and library and
to •ct• the city's landlord.
City offidall lbou&ht all the
d1fferencea were ironed out in
April through a complicated pro-
cess.
The city aareed to pay the t.otal
cost of the center to the PP'C, re-
asoning that the federal govern-
ment would then releue its
shared the cosa. to the citf.
The PFC then would return the
city's share of the expenses
through reduced rent payments.
However, federal officials
balked.
Belsito said be would meet
wHh repreaentaUves of the
Defense Civil Preparedness
Agency Monday, along with
Mary Ellen Houseal~ a member
of the city'• Public Facilities
Corporation.
"We 8J'e hopeful that we can
resolve the differences in face-to-
race discussions," Belsito said.
OC lnereaaea
Emergency
AidPaymenta
Emergency welfare payments
for needy Orange County resl-
denta will be increased start.lng
July 1, county supervisors
agreed Tuesday.
Payments, which now range
from $150 a month for single peo-
ple up to $474 monthly for
families of 10 or more will go up
to $115 to $754 a month depending
upon f amlly size.
The increases will make the
county-financed paymenta the
same as tboee offered under the
1tate-flnanced Aid to Families
with Dependent Children
(AFDC) program.
Dennis Hart, county director or
social service, noted that the ex-
isting general relief payment
rates were adopted in 1974.
While at the time they were
comparable to AFDC payments,
he said, they have since been out·
stripped by cost-of-living adjust-
ments to the stale-financed pro-
gram.
.
A~WIN ..... 'THE MAGIC IS YOU'VE GOTTO BE MOTIVATED'
fornlS F.ny at 4IO Pounda. (&Aft). He'a Tttnt at 115 Now
Loser Wins
'Racer' TrinUJ 295 Pounda
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -Dr. Robert Mallln raced
snails and lost-a total of295 pounds.
Eleven months ago, Mallin weighed 490 pounds. Today, after
racing more than S,000 miles on an exercise bike against the
snails in his fish lank, he's down to 195.
'"TllE MAGIC 18 YOU'VE Gar to be motivated. And even
then the&oin& i.an'teuy,'' said Mal.lin, wbo combined hard work
onthebikewithadietrestridedto400caloriesaday.
He'• miabty proud of the feat, callJ.ng the hQ&e Joss in' wel&bt
''theoutatandlncachievementofmyWe."
Tbe pluUc surgeon said a friend'• PoOr health led him to the conclusion,
ueYGEORGE,l'MMOBTAL,TOO.l'mgoingtodie."
Deciding that beine ~ yeau old "was better than the
alternative," he went to an internist and said: ''Here I am. Do
me."
To keep from going back up be has reoriented bla life.
"Doing it la bard," he conceded, though there are benefits:
-Ria daughters no longer are embarrassed when be comes
to pick them up at school.
-He comes home from work ready to go, imtead of ready to goto bed. .
-He likes bimaelt.
au.LIN'S STORY BEGINS IN CHILDHOOD, as a member
of the "clean plate club." He went from beinl "chunky to atocky
to stout." By adulthood be weighed 230 pound.a.
He cained an additional 260 pounds after his family moved to
Ala1ka and be rose from a "struggling, starvine resident" to suc-cesa.
Splurelng on big-meals and dining out was "a way to show
success." And some thought fat people were "jolly." But, said
Mallin, "Generally, fat people are sad." He said he hopes his
chtldren learned from his anguish and will be "spared ... the sadness."
Looking back, be said, "I often wonder how I did it," believ·
ing at the same time the adage that ' 'under every fat man is a thin
man trying to break out."
Man Faces Inquiry
In Scouts Slayings
LOCUST GROVE, Okla. <A P>
-An unemployed Locust Grove
man was arTesled early today in
nearby Ottawa County. and the
sheriff said be plaM to question
him about the sex murders of
three young Girl Scouts.
"We are very interested in this
person,•· said Mayes County
Sheriff Glen "Pete" Weaver.
He said officers from his de--
partment would go to Miami,
Okla., the Ottawa County seat
some 60 miles from here, to talk
to the man be said was arrested
by the Oklahoma Highway
Patrol under "suspicious
circumstances."
Jury Opens
Study of
Charges
A Jury tbat baa been ubd to
f"md Bobby Joe and Velma Den~
ne1 eqoaUy pUty ol first desree
murder in the ldlling ol a~
policeman began it.s dellbera·
lions today in Orange County
Superior Court.
Deputy Diatrict Attorney
Bl'fan Brown demanded iden-
tical verdicts for Oklahoma-born
Denney, az. and Mrs. Denney' 25. of Hawailan Gardeu abortly before Judge John L. Flynn Jr.
tent the panel to the JUl'J room.
Brown argued that there is no
eubatance to the defense claim
that Mrs. Denney took no part in
the burglary that Jed to the klll·
inc of Cypress police Sgt. Donald
Sow ma.
Sowma. 44, was shot and killed
while investigating the burglary
of a Cypress medical building
Nov.19. Denney; who was biding in the
buildin,g, admitted from the wit--
neu stand that be fued the shot
that killed Sowma and fired shots
at other officers during a five-
hour aiete that ended with his
surrender.
But be insisted that police were
mistaken in their belief that Mrs.
Denney had been posted outside
the building aa a lookout while he
ransacked a doctor's office and a
nearby art gallery.
Mrs. Denney testified that she
drove to a nearby motel and
stayed there for the night after
telllng her husband that be was a
fool lo enter the building. She de·
nie~ any involvement in the
buralary plan.
Police wbo arrested her after
the killing claim that Mrs. Den·
ney somehow managed to evade
tbe cordon that was thrown
around the area by Cypress and
Anaheim police.
They said Mrs. Denney and her
husband used walkie-talkie
radios to keep in touch with each
other while he entered various of·
ficea in the building and that she
alerted him to the arrival of
police in the area.
Clinic Plans
Cancer Tests
towardtllia3111J• ........ tlle
SD7 sale ot C' ' 7 atoek.
la awcwlm ol•-•fnm <'Giii~ Pltltdilnt llQ .....
and ...... d .tan ... , .....
~~!~.:~~
uuaual.
Wat.in CUl"nllltl7 la tauJial the
Soviet Union wttll a del•04m
from the f«lenl DeparUMal d
Houatna and Urban l>e•elol>-
ment. Before be left lat weels.M
Lal.keel abaal tbe ule.
From within and wUbaat. &he
quest.Im ill poeed lo bundreda d
different • ., •• but it comes out
theaame:
What's loin& to happen when
the new owners take over?
Watson said he has no way ol
knowing and doesn't care to
speculate, but be supposes that
the new owners wW not mate
any drastic mintepa.
After all, he reasoned, they are
talented businessmen who bave
pride in their work and reputa.
Uons to uphold.
For example, be pointed to
consortium member Donald
Bren, a former Newport Beach
resident who at one time beaded ..
the Mission Viejo Company and
who has built homes in the Irvine
ranch in developments such as
Cameo Shores, Dover Shores,
Westcliff, Harbor View Homes
and Greentree.
Wat.son says there bas been
some limited contact between
T Al and the Irvine Compaey in
order to work out the financial
and legal technicalities of the
sale.
That means that TAl's laWJen
are looking at all of the lawsuits
pending aeainat the company-()(
wbicb W.tson says there are
several dozen-and auditors
from Kenneth Leventhal and
Company, hired by TAI, are go-
ing over the books "with a fine
tooth comb.''
After July 25, it will become a
matter of learning about the new
owners by being exposed to
them, said Watson.
"I think the uncertainty will be
cured by exposure to the in-
div iduals who run TAI." he
added.
F,....PllfleAI
NAZIS.~.
cont.acted and told about the ex· 1 istence of the American
Freedom Party eroup at the high
school. Ekstrom said the parents
had no idea of their youngsters'
involvement with the organiu-llon.
F .... PageAI
"We have reasons to believe
that he could-.poasibly throw
some light onto the Girl Scout
camp slayings," Weaver sald.
The Huntington Beach Com-
munity Clinic will offer a cancer
detection clinic for women next
Wednesday from l...f p.m.
Huntington Beach High School
Principal Larry Lucas told
trustees Tuesday there bas never
been a "recognized group called
the American Freedom Party"
at. the campus.
VEIL LIFTED •••
and banding them out to people
he meets.
He said he began following the
sale of the Irvine Company 18
month.a ago, but did not act on his
idea to form a group to bU.Y it
because he assumed the deal
with Mobil Corp. was wrapped
up.
He said be found out otherwise
from a friend and business as-
sociate. Keith Gaede. Gaede ts a
direct« of the Irvine Company
and husband of Linda Irvine
Gaede. one of James Irvine's
iranddaugbters.
Gaede reportedly told Gottlieb
tbat bis wife's cousin, Joan Irvine -Smith, bad tied up the
Mobil sale in court, that the deal
was far from wrapped up.
Gaede declined all comment. Gottlieb said be was in·
troduced to Mrs. Gaede and Mrs.
Smith and decided to form a
partnership to get into the sale.
Tbe fint pede>a be cont.acted
was bll friend and business as-
sociate~ SO years. Charles Al·
lea, the corporate combat
specialist from Wall Street.
••Charlie,'' as he's called by
Gottlieb, contacted A. Alfred
Taubinan, Max Ffsher and
Henry Ford ll, all Detroit men
he'd worked with before.
Allen also brou.cbt in the con·
sortium's passive investor•,
Milton Petrie, a New Jersey rui-
dent wbo owns a chain d eut
coaat dotbinl atoc'es and Harold
Jlarl'Uleas, an Imperial Valley qri~man.
The teotb man 1D the eon· IOl'Uum ll bu1l4er Donald Bren.. a ••tbne N...,port Beacb reli-dat and tCl'llMir prelk{ent ~ &be
lllaJm VSoJoComNu.
Gottlieb aa;p Bi.m·ia the Clllly
man wbowaanotbrouptlntotM
conaortlum-he ulted to 1et into
lb• deal tbrwlb Taubman with
whom he'd worked on a project
ln tlle San J"randlco. Bay Area.
Likf' otb.er COD10rthun membei'i,
Bren dedilleit all commen~ .u far u tb.e inner worttnP ot
tbe partuerahip, Ck>ltlleb rs da.rm.lns, butevaalve.
Tutwnan waa 1DC1n or Ioli Q>-
pomted l)iotelman and he won•t
be I.al.kl.DI to anycn Wltll lifter
July 25.
According to his public rela·
tions staff, Taubman feels it is
premature to say anything about
the sale until it closes.
Acquaintances say Taubman
views the sale as extremely
tentative-rather like an option
to buy-and until the deadline
has been met, be won't have
anythlni to say.
Gottlieb hints there will be no
partner who will control a ma-
jority of TAI. All will apparently
bold minority interests based on
the portion or their investment.
He paused. "You know,
Charlie Allen could have handled
this whole thing blmseU, but he's
an in an investment house and
the SEC has a rule that says if
you're goin1 to make an offer on
something like this, you have to
set that much money aside.
"Charlie needs the capital to
keep his, inv.estments going.
Tbat'swbywesetupTAJ."
Leafini through a thick packet
of documenta, GoUlleb read off
the names of the banks that will
provide the balance ot T Ars in·
ve1tment in the Irvine Company.
It appears there are commit-
ments up to about $300 million,
but no bank bas a commitment
rreater than $35 million.
He stresses that no planning is
under 1'af for the company's de-
velopments-a statement that
will doubUen be a disappoint-
ment to the rumor hawkers who
have had TAI •eillna eTerJtblng
from compan,y headquarters to
Lbe 10,000 acre coastal area to
paJ tbo Interest oo ltl loans..
"We don't plan to see an,y pro.
nt out ol this !or at leut five
yea.rs. Tbat way we don'tllave to
do &D1'af tboee thiqa, •• Gottlieb
aald of tho rumors.
Al for the continued manage-
rnent ot the company, GotWeb Is
concerned tbat 'l'AI is being cut
as • IJ'OUP of 'treedy, robber
barons who are lnsen.siUve to the
mark th company bas made oo
. the commulUty.
Ho dllmlsaea Mrs. Smith'•
court depOaitlon that aald coroo
p,n1 Pl'wdent Bar Watson
•ould bo RdUcOd to .wrpw,.; ner.
The sheriff declined to disclose
other details until the man was
interviewed.
Pap 1mears and breast ex·
a minatioos will be performed by
a doctor al low cost, according to
Susie Newman, president of the
clinic's board of directors.
"I hope no association will be
drawn from lbla," said Lucas.
Records al the Ottawa County
sherif('s office at Miami showed
that the only man in the jail was
booked there after being arrested
on a public drunkenness count ·
during the night.
The community clinic is locat·
ed at 506 Orange Ave. Further in·
formation can be obtained by
calling 536-8894, or 536-8333.
Mrs. Dautrich said she told
trustees about her son's.involve-
ment in the unauthorized group
in a closed meeting with the
school board a month ago.
"I did not talk about Nazi or
gay groups during that meet-
ing,'• she said Tuesday.
Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart
SPORTING GOODS
538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919
Barbell Sets
Dumbell Sets
Solid Dumbells
Exergyms
Jump Ropes
Trim Wheels
Door Bar
Baseball Mitts
Baseball$
BaSeball Shoes
Baseball Pints
Colored Sleetes
Baseball & Softball Bats
Wilson.Ounloplancroft
Y onex-Davis-Prince Rackets
Racquet Ball Raaplets r. Batis
Handball Gloves & Balls
Tennis Balls
Badminton RacUts
Table Tennis Padlles
Tennis Shirts r. Shorts
TenniS DrlsSes
Mny B~ Bans
liCk Boarils ..
Duck Feet rms
O.P. Swim Trunks
Speedo Swim Suits r. Trunb
Warm Up Suits
'Candy Man' Lifts Irvine
., IO •SYAV•-._...,.._ ...
0. July IS, a 1roup ot 10 •
••ttora •ao•• •• Ta•bman· All lrriDe, lDc., luebeduled to
compl.c. the purth*" ol the
lnta ~for S»'I million.
WUl ~ alter tbn bu ...., tbe subjed of ~
and nunor-speeula0o9' fed by
tbe faiet that the 10 lndlvtduala ol
T Al have clothed the partnenbip
la MmlC'J • ...r.tna total to tM ,, .. ,, aad---.. 01cUa1 111 b\tt
mlalmal tcmt.act th COIDPMJ ma..,..-.
Part ol the eurtaln drawn
U'OWad tM tale WN lifted '1\aelo
day by Col. John Gottlieb ol S.verly fflUI, t.be 'II-year-old re.
ttrtd mW~ man inowtl to the
buslneu World .. tbo man who
put T Al tocetber.
80'1 called tho Candy Man. He
a&JW be la tbe broker la tb• sale .
HIN'I dat be 'aCI to aa, dur-.
tn1 a two-aad·•~lialf·bour lD~ ttnl .. Tuelclay:
-The oaly plannJnc under war
by TAJ tor company boldinp ia
In qriculture which tbe group
plan1 to expand '1druUcally."
-No ooe involved ln the con-
sortium foresees taJdnc any pro-
ftta out ol their investment tor at
leaat ftve years.
Variety Pushed
New Industrial Rules Due
BylDLARYKAYE
ot •Deity l'lloUuff
The Irvine City Council agreed
Tuesday that more uses abould
be permitted in the Irvine In-
dustrial Complex and uted city
aides to devise a "creative and
1 ima1tnative" new set of rules to
1ovem that area.
The council suggested that in-
stead of allowin& only manufac·
luring, research and wholesale
operations within the comple~.
that retail and service operations
be permitted, too.
Although the council said it
hopes to come up with a whole
new set of rules for the industrial
complex, it went ahead and gave
tentative approval to an or·
dlnance that would amend the
current rules for the Hth time.
The decision to apptove the or-
dinance came after developer
Don Koll told the council that, if
operations are baited unW new
regulations are drawn up, bis
leasing program within the com·
plex would temporarily be
halted.
Koll said be currently bas 10 or
11 bullcllnga under construction
in the complex and S2 others that
are beinC leased.
Jnchaded in the ordlnan~e are
provisions that would allow retail
sales from manufactu.rin& com·
panles In certain areas of the in·
No Pedaling
She'll Leave Bike at Home
Juanita Moe says she's happy with her new tandem
bike, but she's unwilling to test her marriage by peda.llna
with her husband to Palo Aho next month.
J:rvtne City Councllm~ Je>Q Bul'toa sa14 he woqldn't
support spending $250 to sebd her to a bicycle planning con·
ference in Palo Alto unless she pedals there on the bicycle-
bullt-for-two. ·
LUCKILY FOR llltS MOE, a member of tbt clty•a.
bicycle trails committee, the other councll members dis-
agreed with Burton. They autbortzed the $250 expenditure,
which will pay for lodging and reitatration fees.
Prior to the council's vote, Burtoo uted Mrs. Moe what
her mode of tr-.nsportation would be.
MRS. MOE REPLIED 111AT she bad just bought a new
tandem bike, that she pedals around Irvine wJth her
husband,~ that she was tempted to ride that to Palo Alto.
But the bicycle enthusiast admitted that a tandelD bike
ls a tnae test of a marriage and she wasn't sure she wanted
to put her marriage to the test.
CouDcil Asks Look I At Artifacts Site .
I Irvine City Council members ing for nomination to tbe" Na-
said Tuesday they want a tlonalRegister.
personal expedition to a 5,000-If the sfte is included In tbe Na-
year-old archeoloclcal alte at tional fteSister, it would pave the
Unlffftib' Town Center before w~ fOt' matehtna federal funds
apendlnl any money to preserve for later preservation or exuva·
or excavate that alte. tion coets.
The slte, acro11 from UC Councilman John Burton said
Jnine, is reported to contain In· he does not want to spend a J>eMY
dlan artifacts more than 5,000 befO?e he ftnds out exactly what
years old, which trace the wlllbed~upandwhy.
cultural development ot vatious HAP Commltte. Chairwoman
IDdian groups. At lea.at one burial Theo Mabu.ry wu uked to ineet
site la believed to be located with Q&y Manager BUI Wollillett
tbere. to set up an exPeditioa to the lite,
The council also accepted a re-where ex:perta wW explain to the
port by t.be city Hlstorlcal, council the slPlficance ol the
Areheological, Paleontological site.
(RAP) Committee and asked Tbe council aaid It would de.
staff members to evaluate the cid• whetbe.r or not to 1pend the flndl~p ol that report and brin& initial SSOO wb~ lt ..,prov• the
1n their own recommendations in clt1 budceUune28.
amontb. According t& Mra. MabW'Y,
HAP Committee members are there are seven dltterent areu
auuesting preservation t.edmi· within the seven•cre site that
ques and excavation procedures have arcbeological lniportance.
ranainl in coat from $500 to Her committee ia S\llfelltine
'150,000. n,e only expenditure thJt aome areu be preserved for'
they are requestine lmmedlately <See fOSSltB, Pase AJ)
la $SOO to cover \be cost of apply· .
Dl••••p Truck
b.ashFatal
BOAT S4JUD
our Jf'ITll AD
d us trl al com pl ex, allow
customer pickup and delivery at
service-oriented companies and
allow drinking establishments.
by rllht, not by special permit,
within the food park in the com-
plex.
It would also provide a master
plan for tidewalka aod a system
for distributing traffic signals
throu1bout the complex.
Councilwoman Gabrielle
Pryor aald 1be wu concerned
that retall facilities aren't
permitted in the complex and
asked why the complex was
reetrlcted to manufacturing and
reaearcb colY£1i!•· <Bee& Pa1eA%)
Did Slew
Violate NY
Race Rules?
N!W ~IK (AP> -The
ownen ol Triple Crown-winning
Seattle Sl~ ar.a under lavest11a·
Uon for atp11rentl1 vlolatlni New
YQfk ltllle rult1 lo raolq the
colt, the state Racial and Water·
ina Bo.rd 1ays.
Prlndpal subject of the probe
ia Dr. James Hill, a Garden Cily
N.Y., equine veterinarian who
joined with Mickey Taylor in
formlnl Wooden Hone t,nvest-
menll to purchase the $1~.soo
yearUn1.
John Dalley, director of racing
for the Ractnr aod Wagertni
Board, said Slew had been raced
in apparent YiolaUoa of state
rules from Jut summer tbroup
the Woqct Memorial in April
because llill, Tayk>r trainer BiUy
Turner and otbera were not
llcenaecl~ln New York.
Further, Dalley said, the in-
vest11aUoo ia to Ing to determine
wbelbtr uur wllfully mis·
represented the New York re-
gulaUon which ban practicing
tboroqbbred veterinarians fro1t1
also owning horses which com-
pet,e In the state.
An inquiry is also under way to
sort out tbe compa financial ar-
rancemeet under which Hill is
part-owner of Slew. Karen L
Taylor, Mic.key'• wife, la \be
horse'• Usted owner.
A •pokesoiu for the board
aald It met June I to tuue a tetn-
~rary oner'• license to Hill,
who aeveral weab earlier aur·
rendered b1i veteri.Duy license
to practice at New York vacb.
Fout da,a later, Seattle Slew
wop the Belmdnt Stakes to
become the fint unbeaten win·
ner of tbofouibbred radial'• Tri-
(Sff SLEW, Pase AJ> "
Dr. BUihaiila
To· fly,it Pro
Tennil Tour
-'l'ben&Nnoplans at~
to either ~ up development
or sell tbe uaeta of OM JrvtM
Con>PaQ1.
-No one in company maue-
meot will be forced out.
-Tbe membeu of the con-
sortium bave a total net worth lh
the ~ blllloo to ts billion range.
They wt1l put up .. at least $100
mllfioo" of their own money ln buytna the company.
A~WI .........
'THE MAGIC IS YOU'VE GOT TO BE MOTIVATED'
Former Fatty at 490 Pounds, (Left), He'• Trtm at 1H Now
Loser Wins
'Rtwer' Trinu 295 Pountll
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP> -Dr. Robert Mallin raced
snails and lost-a total of 295 poymls.
Eleven months ago, Mallln'Weighed 490 pounds. Today, after
racing more than 5,000 miles on an exercise bike against the
snails in his flab tank, he's down to 195. .
"111E MAGIC IS YOU'VE GOT to be motivated. And even
then the 1oing lsn't easy,''.said Mallin, who combinedbard work on the bike with a diet restricted to400 calories a day.
Ht'• milbty proud of the feat, ealllq lhe bu1e loss lQ wetl)lt
• 'tllt OQtltandinJ a~hlev•in• of.,.,-Ute."
The plastic surgeon sat~ a friend'• poor health led him to the
concluaion.
0 BYGEOaf;E,l'MJ10aTAL.TOO.tm1oln1todie.''
Decldini that bein1 rr yean old .. ~ .. better than the
altemaUve," he went to an intemiat and aald: .. Here I am. i>o
me.''
To keep from 1oiq back up he has reoriented his life.
"Doln1 it is hard," he cooceded, tboUgb there are benefits~
-His dauptera no lon1er are embarrused wben be comes
to pick them up at school. . ·
-He comes home from work ready to 10. instead or ready to
goto bed. .
-He likes himself.
MALLIN'S STORY BEGINS IN CHILDHOOD, as a member
of the "clean plate club." Ke went from being .. dnmky to stocky
to stout." By adulthood he wellhed1:30 pounds.
He gained an additional 260 pounds.after his family moved to
Alaska and be rose from a • 'strugcllng, starvinc resident" to suc·
ceas.
Splurging on big meals and dining out wu "a way to show
success." And 10me thou1ht fat people were "Jolly." But, sald
Mallin, "Generally, fat people are sad," He said be bopfl his
children learned from his anguish and will be "spared . . • the
sadness."
Looking back, be said, "I often wonder bow I did it," bellev-
in& at the same time the adage that "under every fat man is a thin
man trying to break out."
Pilot of Death
Plane , Ulilicemed
B1 ANNE CC>OPEa Of Ult Oeltt f'll .. SUit The pilot flying the plade which
kUled 5-7ear-old Jennifer Zell on
May 28 when lt cl'asbed behind
her San Juan Capistrano home
did not have a commercial flYini
license.
Albert Sibi. A~S.· of Laeuna Nl1uel Is to be citeo for fiylq tbe
banner-towing plane without a
cos:nmercial Ucenae and wtthoUt
auU»orizatloo to tow, said ~
Allen. chlel of fli1ht standards
for the Federal Avtatlon Ad·
mlnlstratiOC\ in Lona Beach.
*
Veil .
build tbJDp up. We're QOlt • biaDcb G( ,..,....... •.
A JPOk•m-.n tor A. Altiil
Taul)mAD cootacted tod., aM4
the Detrcilt 4iveloper woWd ... ~
no comment oo Gottlleb's &t.le-
meQta an4 ~r claimed tbJt Gottlieb \I not "involved" in T Al,
But ~ 1111 be WU "tbo catalYwt lo tbe fonnatloa ol TAI.
IA addition to beinc " mind < ... vm., Pa&eAJ)
Laetrile ·
·Claimed"
No Good
NEW YORK (AP) -A mtSor
study of Laetri.le shows the sW.
stance has no "preven-
tive .•. nor curative anUcaacer
activity," Memorial Sloan~
Ketterlor Cancer Center n.i
noun~ today. •
"We do not have evidence sup.
portln1 taking amygdalln
(Laetrile) to clinical trial
although other consideraUorw
may require tbat oae be conduet;..
ed, ·' the cancer center aaid. •
The sclenU.sll said their expert·
menta on mice did not le.St
whether Laetrile can lessen.,.
u proponents claim. They said
the experiments also incllcatecl
that Laetrile does not have any
harmful effect, although some
mice died when given escesaively
lat1edolea.
Dr. Lewis Thomas, preside~
of the center, hu~he believes
human trials of e t be
conducted beea t! such rac·
tora as the crowin.g number ol
slatH \ba~ have le1allsu
Laetrile.
The U.S. Food and »rut ~
. tniniatration bu banned use ol
Laetrile lo lotf!rstate commerce
bMaUle it•• the substance baa . not Mio pmen safe or effective.:
Ia tbe pafl year, Laetrile.
which is derived from peach or
apricot pita or bitter almonds,
hu been lepllzed in Atuta. Jn,
diana, Florida. Arizona. Nevada .. Texu and \1Vuh1neton State. •
At a news conference todl)',
SJoall·lfettering said the study
show• Laetrile poueue•
.. neU.ber J>reve:ntive, nor tUIDOt'·
retresaant, nor ant.imetastatlc.
nor curall'fe anticancer ac.-
tivtty."
Tbe cancer center releued tbj
mutts ol a four-year study of tbtt
substance. Two manuscrlpt,s
comptlsing 90 pases are to be
publi•hed in tbe Journal or
Sureical Oncology.
One ol them deals with tumorS
thn are transplanted in rodents.
Tbe second, more extensive.
stu~y, deala with apontaneoua.17
occurrlne cancer lb oiice. '
In the transplanted tumors;
Sloan-Ketterlne said, Laetri&e-
showed Do beneficial eff ecta
against 1n1 ol 10 clllferent ~
al cancer.
Accordlnl to the aeco~
mabuacrtpt, a eeries of atadl•
f al•ed to reproduce reported
aiaaa of anticancer activity re-,
ported previously by Dr.'
Kanematsu Suehara of Sloan·
Kettertnt.
Weather
SoalilW~late
tonl1it tbroa•ll mld·
mornlnf Th11rada7,
OtberWIH auany Tliutsda)'
wltb biP9 taoainl from ae ·
~ 72 at beilchei to 75 to 80
lolJDd • .._. &.c:iftiiht sa to
13.
INSID8TeD~Y.
• Mid .. follDd out ot.herwtle
fi'Om a friend and bulineA U · IOClate. Keith Gaedb. Gaede la a
dindcr ~ UM Irvine Company
and b111band of Unda Irvine
Gaede., one ~ James Irvine's
cranddaugbtera.
Gaede reportedly tolt' GotWeb
th•t bi• wile's cousin, Joan
Irvine Smith. bad Ued up tbe
llobU sale In cou:rt, that the deal
was far from wrapped up.
Gaede declined all comment.
Gottheb said be w1a~s in··
troduced to Mrs. Gaede ano Mrs.
Smith and decided to Corm a
partnership to eet into the sale.
The fll"St person he contacted
WflS hls frieod and business ~
soclate of SO years, Charles Al·
Jen, the corporate combat
specl alist from Wall Street.
"Charlie," as he's called by
Gottlieb, contacted A. Alfred
Taubman, Max Fisher and
Henry Ford II, all DetroJt men
he'd worked with before.
Allen also brought in the con-
sortium's passive investors,
Milton Petrie, a New Jersey resi-
dent who owns a chain of east
tout clothing stores and Harold
Marcuieas, an Imperial Valley
agri·buainessman.
The tenth man in the con·
sortium is builder Donald Breh, a·
one·time Newport Beach resi·
dent and former president of the
'Mission Viejo Company.
• GotWeb says Bren is the only
'knan who was not brought into the
consortium-be asked to get Into
the deal through Taubman with
whom he'd worked on a project
in the San Francisco Bay Area.
tike other consortium members,
Bren declined all comments.
As far as the inner workings or
* * *
lbt
A.C'QUillm'1Det1
vi •
LMiV ...... C'allB
w Mi uatU th• M•'" hu bee m.t, h• won't bave
an~Utllll to •ll1.
Gottlieb bloc.a there wUl be no
Ertner who will coatrol a ma·
rky ol TAJ. All wlll app&renUy
Id mlnority tnterau b••od on
UM port.loft of tbttr tnve•ttnent.
He pau .. d. "You too•.
Claar Allen could have haadled
tJt1t whole thlnc himself, but he's
an in an Investment bouse and
the SEC haa a rule that 1aya if
you'~J.,~ to make an pfter on aom Ill! Ilke this. you have to •et that much money utde.
''Charlie Deeds the capital to
keep his investments Koing.
Tbat'•wbywesetupTAI." Leanne throu&b a thick packet
of doeu.rnenta, Gottlieb read off
the names of the banks that will
provide the balance of TAI's in· vestment 1n the Irvine Company.
It appears there are commit·
menta up to about '91)() million,
but no bank bu a commitment
greater than $35 million.
He atresaes that no planning is
undet way for the company's de-
velopment.a-a statement that
will doubtless be a llia•PAOint·
meat to .the rumor bawkertwbo
have had TAI selllne everything
from company headquarters to
the 10,000 acre coastal aru to
pay the interest on its loa.n1.
"We don't plan to see any pro-
fit out ol this for at least five
years. 'lbat way we don't have to
do any of tboee things," Gottlieb
said oftbe rumors.
As for the continued manage·
ment of the company, GoUlleb is
concerned that TAI is being cast
as a group of 'greedy, robber
barons who are insensitive to the
mark the company bas made on
the community.
He dismisses Mrs. Smith's
court deposition that said com·
pany President Ray Watson
would be reduced to staff plan-
ner.
"She said it in the heat of the
moment. No one will leave the
Irvine Company \,\Jlless they
want to, '1 not.Web said. * * *.
Politieal DefJut
Charles Robb. son·in-law of the late President Johnson,
addresses friends and supPorters in Richmond after win-
ning the Virginia Democratic nomination for the post o!
lieutenant governor. His wife, Lynda Bird, applauds the ·
speech.
Man. Faces Inquiry
ID Scouts Slayings
LOCUST GROVE, Okla. CAP>
-An unemployed Locust Grove
man was arrested early today in
nearby Ottawa ~nty, and the
sheriff quelUoned him about the
au mu.nlen of three young Girl
Scouts.
"We are very interested in this
i:ersoo," said Mayes County
Sheriff Glen "Pete" Weaver.
He said officers from his de·
partment went to Miami,
Okla., the Ottawa County seat
some 60 miles from here. to talk
to the man he said ... as arrested
by the Oklahoma Highway
Patrol under "suspicious circumstances."
The plaUorm bas been flown t.o
the st.ate Crime Bureau bead-
qu arters in O~laboma City,
where tests were being conduct·
ed on it and other pieces or
evidence, including a red
flashlight found near the girls' bodies early Monday.
Fingerprints were lifted from
the flashlight and from the skin
of at least one oC the girls,
sources close to the investigation
said. It wasn't known whether
the prints were left by the-killer
or by someone else, possibly in·
vestigators.
The shoes that made the prints
are much larger than any shoes
the girla bad lelt in the tent after
dQnning bed clothes.
·Normalcy Sought
At Irvine Company
"We have reasons to believe
that be could possibly throw
some light onto the Girl Scout
campslaying"s," Weaver sald.
The sheriff declined to disclose
other details until after the man
was interviewed.
Records at the Ottawa CoWlty
sheriff's office at Miami showed
that the only man in the jail was
booked there after beine arrested
on a public drunkenness count during the night.
Mayes County District At·
torney Sid Wl.se said ·'logic leads
~ to conclude the murderer is a
man, a stealthy, physically agile
man."
Investigators reportedly found
other evidence early Tuesday
about 3>0 yards from the tent al
Camp Scott near here. The beavi·
ly wooded camp area has been
closed off and a police command
post set up at the camp.
Within the balls of Irvine com-
pany headquarters there is a con-
certed effort to keep things on an
even keel as the days tick ore
toward the July 2S deadline in the
1337 million sale or company
stock.
In a succession of memos from
company President Ray Wat.son
·and a series of staff meetings,
employes have been told not to
panic, business will be conducted ·as usual.
Watson currently is touring the
Soviet Union with a delegation
from the federal Department of
Housing and Urban Develop·
ment. Before he left last week, he
talked about the sale.
From within and without, the
··question is posed in hundreds of
different ways, but it comes out
the same:
What's going to happen when
the new owners take over?
Watson said be bas no way of
knowing and doesn't care lo
'speculate, but he supposes that
the new owners will not make
any drastic missteps.
After all, he reasoned, they are
talented businessmen who have
pride lo their wort and reputa·
tions to uphold.
For example, be pointed to
consortium member Donald
Bren. a fon:ner Newport Beach
resident wbo at one time beaded
Ute Mlsalon Viejo Company and
who has built homes in the Irvine
ranch in developments such as •
Cameo Shores, Dover Shores,
DAILY PILOT
•
Westcliff, Harbor View Homes
and Greentree.
Watson says there has been
some limited contact between
TAI and the Irvine Company in
order t.q work out the financlal
and legal technicalities of the
Rale. 1
That means that T Al's lawyers
are looking at all or the lawsuits
pending a&ainst the company-of .
which Watson says there are ·
several dozen-and auditors
from Kenneth Leventhal and Company, hired by TAI, are go-
ing over the books "with a fine
tooth comb."
After July 25, it will become a
matter oC learning about the new
owners by being exposed to
them, said Watson.
"l think the uncertainty will be
cured by exposure to the in-divi~uals who run TAI," he
added.
f',....PageAJ
PLANE •••
He bas also recommended a
concerted effort to locate a site to
which the airport could be re-
Joc~ ted, pouibJy on Camp
Pendleton or Rancho XiHioo
Viejo property.
In the meanUme, the city hired
a security officer to monitor
airport actlvity. Sunday, that
security l\W'd, Norman Ellis.
hJred lb.rough Security and In-
dustrial Services, waa attested
for burilary and malicious mis·
chief at the airport.
Earlier, officials revealed they
found bloody !ootprints, ap-
parently left by laree tennis
shoes, which were found on the
wooden platform of the tent in
which the GlrJ Scouts were killed
on the fint ~night of a camping
trip.
f'.-...PageAJ ·'
~ ~:.· RULES ••• f 1
Claudette Kunzman, manager
of planning services for the city
explained that it was basically
due to parking and traffic con-
siderations and that that was the wayithasalwaysbeen.
"We've inherited these regula-
tfon.s since the start of the com·
plex," Mn. Kunzman explained,
adding that the original rules
were drawn up when the area
was county territory.
Community development
Director Eddie Peabody said the
council could "start from
scrateb" and approve a new set
of regulaUom that would allow
nexible uses in the industrial
complex. includiq retail sales
and HrVlces like a vaccuum
cleaner repainnan. Mn. Pryor suggested that Ute
staff come up with "creative and
ima&fnatlve" new rules that are
leu ratrictfve than the existing
rules.
Peabody said bis stall would
return with a new proPosal for
the complex as quickly u possi·
bfe, butdidnotsetadate.
£011ncil Action I I
Tho 1hhie City Council toak the followlnl actlon1 Tu~
daynJabt,:
• aF.CaE&'llON: o ... lln.al approval to • mie cban1e
for tbit SiD Joaqaba Beereatkle Cent.er. Tb• 100• chan6• .,ennlta the Ima• CamltDY to dnelop tile 17-acre pal'Cel
for recreldllll W. IUch U mlnlature foJI, bolfllnc, batU.q
eas• and roller at.Una rtnt. ·
POD: AutbortHcl theaaiuialUan ~tbreeaew~ IMladlnl a $700 000, 1o..aere lite la ~. Bott iulcl two
Illa 1Q Woodbrldi•, tot•Hnc JU .er. for $1.S m.lllloa.
&NND! .\ppr'OYed tb• annexatJoo to the Clt>Y of Irvine of~~.u.. ..... ~ b1theSanJ)Jeas>,SAnte
Ana and J..apatr'lftan;
. CAaLZ n: Oa" flnal .,,.,,., .. fClf a Communl~
Cablntdoll truc.blie fw UM QlJ of Irvine. It ad.ad• th$ ... ~uu.
SSND: • •••ed a flieore,ar ...-m•t lClf fln pro. tectioamlplll' ..... MttiCMwWltbe~ • -.
F.-...PageAJ
FOSSILS •••
long.range excavation work by
purchasing the sites from the
Irvine Company and that others
be preserved as park areas
through modifying the park re·
quirements and boundaries.
Other suggestions are to have
volunteer excavations conducted
by qualified archeologlsts, pre·
serving some areas under fill,
and holding pre.grarjing con·
rerences at the sfte with
arcbeologists.
U.S. Religious
Revival Due?
NE YOBJt (AP) -P«lst.w c..,.-,. Gallup Jr. said tod.,-that "'"'ys bav• found mounttn1 evidence the ueited Stat• "m•t
be in an early staa• of a proCound
religious revival."
Writinc m the June iasue ol the
Journal of Curreal Social bsuel.
Gallup sald evidence for hil 1U1-
1esUoo included a riff in church
attendance in lln'6. ·for the fi.nt tlmeinnearlytwodecades.
He 1ald bis survey sbowecl 4Z
percent ol Americana attended
church or synaaogue in a t;yplcal
week.
•'Our surveys also showed
church membership to be on the
upsw~ during the year, with
about seven in 10 now describing
themselves as church mem·
bers," be wrote.
He said •ix in 10 people sur-
veyed say their reU&ious bepefs
are "very important" and cited
as further evidence of revinl the
considerable interest in what he
termed experimental religion.
such as mysticism, ,i')'oga and
transcendental meditation. •
He said the evan1elical move-
ment appeared to be "providing
a Powerful thrust" for the re-
ligious revival.
But Gallup said the surveys
suggested that America may be
only "s,uperflcially religious"
with religion on the upswing,
''while "morality is losing its in·
fluence."
He said that while 94 percent of
people responding to Gallup in-
terviews said they believed in
"God, or a wdversaJ spirit," only
44 percent said they bad "a great
deal or confidence in organized re·
ligion."
Aniong the factors be said
could ar.count for increased re-
f'ro91PageAJ
SLEW •••
ple Crown, tacking it onto vie·
tories in the Kentucky Derby and
the Preakness.
The spokesman denied the
purpose of the meeting was to de·
cide what penalty to assess, if
any.
"The inquiry hasn't been com-
pleted and won't be for perhaps
another week or two, so bow
could the board be decidin& a
penalty!" the spokesman said.
The penalty could range from a
reprimand to a fine to sus·
pension.
Hill told Newsday, the Garden
City, N.Y newspaper: "There
was abaolutely no unethical prac-
tice. We have given them the in·
formation they asked for. My re·
cord ii\ this business has been a
damn~ eood one and as far as
l 'm concerned, let the chips fall
where they may."
A board spokesman refused
comment on today's New York
Post report that New York Gov.
Hugh Carey il)tervened to pre-
vent the possible barring of Seat.
tie Slew from the Belmont
Stakes.
Newsday also rePorted that
Kentucky's racing steward,
Keene Daingerfield. said the
owners of Seattle Slew also had
been "in technical violation" of
racing rules there when the colt
won the Derby at Churchill
Downs May 7.
li1loua acUYily • D8lloo
were:
-A bnrard lo seek re-
ftue h'clm ......ura ol everyday ttlttencr,
-A searcb fo.t aonmaterlal
value!S ;
-Pr9ident Carter's open dil-
cusslon of bis own rell1ious
belle&;
-A normal \q>Swtna following
a decline in relleiotas interest and activity.
The joumaJ is a pablicaUClll of
the Board for Homeland
Ministries of the United Church of Christ.
Newsman
Nabbed in
/!rug B1Ut
State Bureau of Narcotics En· forcement agents visited the
home of Anaheim Bulletin
newspaper Managing Editor
Marvin R. "Marv" Olsen Mon-
day night and arrested him on
marijuana possession char1es.
Olsen, 43, was booked for in-
vestigation of possession of marl·
juana for sale and cultivation of rn arijuana.
He was released from custody
on bis own recogni.iance, promia·
ing to appear to answer the
charges on a date yet to be
scheduled in Central Orange
County Judicial DiatriclCourt.
A spokesman for the Bureau of
Narcotics· Enforcement said to-
day that three plants were seized
~s evidence, in addition to a
small quantity of alleged marl·
juana inside the home.
Investigators said they
checked Olsen's backyard on the
buis ol a tip from Orange County
Political financier Gene Conrad
who is presently indicted on
seven counts of fraud connected
with his loan brokerage firm.
The state agency normally
concentrates attention on drug
dealers. City police would
normally handJe a matter involv-
ing smaller quantities of alleged marijuana.
Olsen discussed bis arrest at
great length with a 'Dally Pilot '
newsman today, but declined to
elaborate on any issue of guilt or
innocence because he bad not
consulted his attorney.
The Los Angeles Times quoted .
rmancler Conrad as saying he
tipped off authorities partly
because the newspaper Olsen
edits is owned by Freedom
Newspapers, Inc., •hicb also
publishes the Santa Ana
Regiater.
Conrad told the Times he has
been antagonized by the
Freedom Newspaper chain's
coverage or bis political ac·
tivities and criminal indict·
men ts.
YMCA Has 'Deals'
The Orange Cout YMCA is of·
fering special membershi'19 to
college rtudents returning home
for the summer months. For de·
tails, phone642·9990.
l
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Fatal Plane's Pilot Not Licensed?
Alla, dlW ot fllOt ·~ for tlM P•uaJ Aviation Ad·
m au. Lon.tS.ecll. P•cllle Atrial Advertlalns,
wblcllt l!And Slbl will allo be cited
for n1••• witbout towtn1 autboriuUon. The maximum P"alb' b aooo per rucht ln
vlolatioa, Alim aaid.
"W• could also revoke the pilot's nytnc license," the PAA
otriclal said. "ll is our un-
deratandln« be bu left the coun-
A Billdd~ Practle~
try' but we are procHdinC with
tbe ac&n.•• Slbl'• w"'reabouts
eould not be ~nned and an ol·
llclal ol Paelftc Aerial Advertls-
lnl d.clilMd comment.
llbl eeeaped injury wb.n his
plane crashed In a dry creell bed
adJaea to Capistrano Airport.
A cable became entancled in tbe
plane's tall usembly u the pilot
paaaed over the airfield after
takeoff to pluck an advertising
banner from a IUPJ>Ort.
Fire fighters from the County Fire Depart-
ment and South County companies train at
Rancho Santiago, near Irvine Lake, 1n pre·
paration for expected troublesome fire
season. From top to bottom, Capt. Jerry
Galati, San Clemente; BUI Coulter, Laguna
Beach; Alida Van Gores, South LaJuna; Al
.. Wright, San Clemente; Eugene Dasabella,
Laguna Beach 8nd Jeff Remmele, San
Clemente.
Council Funds Bared
San Clemente lnlereata· Reveal.ed Unde Prop! 9
By PIDLIP ROSMARIN
OllM o.llY ,. .... Steff
Stateinents of economic ln-
tere1ta filed by San Clemente ci-
ty councilmen show that:
-Attorney Thomas J. O'Keefe
lists 57 foreseeable conflicts of in-
terest posed by individuals or
buslnesa entities who paid him
fees of$1,000or more.
-Pawnbroker Anthony
"Tony" Di Giovanni is landlord
to four homes besides bis own re-
sidence. -Attorney Brian Patrick Lane
records developer Allan L.
Wulfeck, whom he later helped
appoint to the Planning Com-
mlssioa. arnoni bis clients. I -Developer Wllllam H.
·Walker's business lnteresu are
u diversified as fried chicken
and famlly snapshots.
-Homemaker Donna
Willdmon'• only listed source ot
pieriGiW lneome was her $2.610
per annum councilman'• salary.
All other Income listed wu from
bti' husband's landscape main-
tenaqce coatracts.
The dlaclosuro statement• were ftled under provlaiona ~the
lt'lf Political Reform Act, ~atty known as Ptopoeltlon 9
· which California votere ap·
* * *
proved to create the legislation.
The law requires public or-
ficebolders, as well as certain
other city officials, such as city
clerks and city managers, to
make regular disclosures of
economic matters that potential-
ly affect may affect their
areas of Jurisdiction.
Tbe most recent statements
cover the period March, 1976,
through the end of that year.
Councilmen were required to
declare lnvestments, interests in
real property either personally
held or held by businesses they
controlled, income and gifts.
Also, councilmen were re·
quired to list the names of
persons or entities who paid fees
to a business wbicb provided
legal or brokerage services, if
their pro rata share was $1,000 or
more.
Tbey likewise bad to list names
involving person.al shares of
$10,000 or more in fees paid other
types of business, not provicilnl
legal or brokerage services.
Object ol the law is to spotll1ht
potential confllcts Of Interest on
matters 1n -wblch olficebolden
should retrain from· dilcualon
and declalooa. '
* * * 'O'Keefe: Prop. 9
1-.wasion· of Privacy
my privacy and the privacy of
every officeholder."
••Freedom o( the press is
1Teat," O'Keefe said. "For the
man wbo owos ooe -and that'•
abouUL" ff said Proposition 9 dls·
-closures will drl•• &ood men from
office and di.scourqe othJ!l'S from
1eekm,offlce.
"The pabllsbi.Qf ot these atate-
mentl," be said. "is 1otna to have
tile result that people who have
achieved any de.,..e of success in
UfewWnotnmf•pubUcoftice.0
PubUcatlon. be said, la horrible
bad taste. Uthe press wanta to
drive 1ood peop(e out of oltlce,
tbat'athewa,ytodoiL ..
0' ee!e said he conatdend blmaelt oae ot mi COOd PiiOPIO.
Aiked wbetber that means be wm Mt Melt r•·•lectJoo. Ill• • ~~ "You can draw what in·
rtrt6NIJ'Ollilkehom thet.oDeOt
IDJltll•stta"
Listing does not mean that ac-
lu al conflicts existed. In in-
terviews, councilmembers stat-
ed they have abstained whenever
conflicts arose.
Copies or disclosure state-
ments are on file at City Hall
and available fer public inspec-
tion. What follows here are ab-
breviated portions of the state-
ments.
0 'Keefe, wbo is also a county
Harbors, Beaches and Parks
com misaioner and so must dis-
cloee ecooomlc interests coun-
tywlde, lists 11 investments and
22 interests in real property.
Of bis investments, only one, of
common stock and pension and
profit-sbarinl truata in his Santa
Ana law corporation, was valued
by O'Keefe at more than $100,000.
He listed real estate
partnerships ln the North Beach
and Sboreclitfs On San
Clemente}, Capistrano Beach
and Peralta Hills (Anaheim) in-
vestment companies and In Len·
ders Properly Resales.
O'Keefe valued the North
Beach compan)' investment at
leas than tl.0,000, and tta.
Sboreclilfa boldinp, which be
disposed of In June, 1978, at
between $10,000 and $100,000.
Lenders Property Resales, in
which bis Investment was less
than $10,000, bouaht and sold
houslot units 1n El Toro and cen·
tral OranteCounty areas.
O'Keefe alao listed invest·
menta In common stock of Santa
Fe Industries, Mariners Savtnas
(See FUNDS, Pa1e AZ) .
BOAT S41LED
our J1'ITH AD
I
CbJJdreft pl.-ytnc in the c..-
bed, a partf ally deHl~d ,..creation area behind th• Troy
Homes traett acattered as tile
small plane approached. 'ftMt Zell
cblld wu struck by a propeller.
San Juan residents of four
housiol tra~ adjacent to the
airport urted city of'riclala to
close the airpOrt after the .eel·
dent. HomeoWQlrl bad actJvely
sou1ht creater control of airport
activity from the Ume the homes
wv• Ont oc~ed ftye years qo.
City Ilana&~ James llocalis
baa recommended that stricter
enforcement be Imposed as
airport operations are phased out
over the~ year.
He bu also NCOmmeaded a
concerted effort to locate a sJte to
which the airport could be re-
located, possibly on Camp
Pendleton or Rancho Mission
Viejo property.
In tb9 ~Ume, the dt,J bfred
a security Officer to moillt.or
airport actJvtty. SG.Dday, tbat security pant. Norman l!!Ula.
hired throUlb Seeurit,y Ud ~
dustrial Sentces, was ~
for burslary and malicious lnll·
chief at t.be airport.
Oraa.ie County Sberltt'a Of.
ficen sa1d !!Uil, ZS, <:4 CorOOa dd
Mar, is In <>ranee County Jail to-
day. Radlo and navl1aUonil
(See PIAN'S, ..... A:)_
lB Pair Banned
At Graduation
Two ol seven Laauna Beach
Hilb School aenloni involved In
vandallsm that destroyed dozens
of student art works, have been
barred fl"OD\ Tbunday'1 1r9dua·
Uon ceremony.
One i.a a top athlete, the other a
scholar wbo would have been
paduated "1th biahest bonon.
All of the a~ven, who were not
idenWled, were suspended Fri-day, a day after the reportedly
drunken tumult occurred, Prin-
cipal Robert Hucbes said.
Hu&bel said all of them were
barred frOm taklna part in senior
final-days activities, includin& baccalaureate, a senior outing to
Catalina lsland, and last night's
awa rds and scholarships
ceremony.
Hughes said no school awards
were withheld, but the names ol
the students involved were not
read from the rolls of honorees.
Hughes said diplomas will be
withheld from the students unW
they finilb summer labor jobs as-
sicned as punishment for the
vandalism.
No criminal penalties are be-
inl sousht by the school district.
Laguna Beach police reported
that none of the students whose
art works were ruined have filed
criminal complaints.
In Major St•llY.
Anti-cancer Use
Of LQet:rile Nixed
NEW YORK (AP) -A major
study of Laetrile shows the sub-
stance bas no "preven-
tive ... nor curative anticancer
activity," Memorial Sloan-
Kettering Cancer Center ID·
nounced today.
"We do not have evidence sup-
portlng takinc amycdalln (Laetrile) lo clinical trial
althoueh other considerations
may require that one he conduct-
ed," the cancer center said.
Dr. Lewis Thomas, president
of the center. bas said he believes
human trials of Laetrile must be
conducted because of such fac-
tors as the growing number of
states that have legalized
Laetrile.
The U.S. Food and Drug Ad-
ministration bas banned use of
Laetrile in Interstate commerce
because it says the substance bas
not been proven sate or effective.
In the past year, Laetrile,
which ls derived from peach or
Dump Truck
Crash Fatal
An unidentified man died th.is
morning after be wu ejected
from his dump truck, which
rolled oll a freew_, on-ramp in
San Juan Capistrano.
Firemen who were at the scene
said the truck was traveling
north on Camino Capistrano
when it attempted to aet on the
southbound San Die10 Freeway
at about8 a.m.
Tbe truck. however, app~t·
ly mlued the ramp and rolled
over.
The victim was treated at the
scene by San Juan's firemen and
paramedics and" then taken to
Mission Community Hospttal.
apricot pits or bitter almond.I,
baa been legalized in AJasb, lb-
dlana, Florida. Arizona, Nevada,
Texas and Washington State.
At a news conference today,
Sloan-Kettering said the study
s hows Laetrile possesses
"neither preventive, nor tumor-
regressant. nor antimetaataUc,
nor curative anticancer ac-
tivity."
The cancer center released the
results of a four-year study of the
substance. Two manQscripts
comprising 90 pages are to be
published in the Journal of
Surcical Oncology.
One of them deals with tumors
that are transplanted in rodents.
The second, more extensive
study, deals with spontaneously
occurring cancer in mice.
In the transplanted tumors,
Sloan-Kettering said, Laetrile
showed no beneficial effects
acalnst any of 10 different types
of cancer.
According to the second
manuscript. a series of studies
failed to reproduce reported
s1gn1 of anticancer activity re-
ported previously by Dr.
Kanematsu Sueiura of Sloan.
Kettering.
Suglura's initial studies m
1972-73 have been widely quoted
by Laetrile proponents ln at-
tempts to persuade state
Jeeislatures to legalite the sub-
stance, which is available in
Mulco and several other coun-
tries.
Electio11& Planned
RA WALPJNDI. Peldstan (AP)
-Prime Minister tulfikar All
Bbut\o baa qreed to bold new
national tlecUooa by the eQd of the year In bopea ol e.nding three
month• of violence that bas
claimed 300 lives.
Hughes reconstructed
rbursday's events. He said they
:>etan as a prank. .
The seven sneaked onto the
campua at niaht. armed .ttb a
tive-1allon drum of paint, a
bei&e-pink color formed when
"they just dumped as many
types of paint as they could get
bold of into it," Hughes said. .
The object was to paint "Class •
of 77" on wails and blacktop
areas. 1be students instead also
splashed paint indiscriminately
over six volleyball courts that.
had been restriped only the day
before.
(See ACCUSED, Page AZ)
Irvine Co.
Sale Plan
Unveiled
By JOANNE REYNOLDS °' ... Deity ...... SUit
On July is. a group ol 10 ln·
veators ln)own as Taubman·
Allen-lrvlne, Inc., is scheduled to
complete the purchase of the
Irvine Company for $337 million.
What happens after that bu
been the subject ol conjecture
and nunor-iJpeculation fed' by
the fact that the 10 individuals~
TAI have clothed the partnenhip
in secrecy, refusing to talk to the
press, and avoiding all but
minimal contact with company
management.
Part of the curtain drawn
around the sale was lifted Tues-
day by Col. John Gottlleb of
Beverly Hills, the 79-year-old re-
tired military man known to tbe
business world u the man wbo
put TAI totrether.
He'a called the Candy Man. He
says be ta the broker ln the sale.
Here's what he bad to say dur·
ing a two-and-a·balf-hour in·
tervlew Tuesday:
-Theonly planning underway
by TAI for company holdings is
in acrtculture which the croup
plans to expand "druUcally."
-No one.involved in the con·
sortium foresees takin& any pro-
fits out of their investment for at
least nve yean.
-~are no plan.a at pn!NQt
to either speed up development
or sell the uaeta of tbe lntn& Company.
(See~ Pa,. A.2)
Weatber
Som• IOW clOOdtnai late
tonl1hl throu1h mid-
mornin1 Thursday.
OtherwiH sunoy Tburactay
wtth h1Chs ra.naini rrorn 68
to 72 at beaches to '75 to 80
inland. Lows tarii1ht $8 to a .
IN818ET8B~Y
..
Newsman
Nabbed in
Drug Bust
St.ate Bureau of N areolics Ea·
forcement agents visited the
home of Anaheim Bulletin
newspaper Managing Editor
Marvin R. "Marv" Olffn Mon·
day night and arrested him on
rQarijuana possession charges.
Olsen, 43, wu b6oked for in-
vestit1aUon of. pouesslon of mari·
juana for sale and cultivation of
marijuana.
He was released from custody
on his own recognizance, promis·
lng to appear to answer the
charges on a date yet to be
scheduled in Central Orange
~ounty Judicial District Court.
A spokesman for the Bureau of
Narcotics Enforcement said to-
day that three plants were seized
as evidence, in addition to a
smaU quantity of alleged mari-
juana inside the home.
lovestlgators said they
checked Olsen's backyard on the
pasis of a tip from Orange County
political financier Gene Conrad
who is presently indicted on
seven counts of fraud connected
with his loan brokerage firm.
The state agency normally
concentrates attention on drug
dealers. City police would
normally handle a matter involv·
ing smaJler quantities of alleged
marijuana.
Olsen discussed his arrest at
great length with a Daily Pilot
newsman today, but declined to
elaborate on any issue of guilt or
innocence because he had not
consuJted his attorney.
. The Los Angeles Times quoted
financier Conrad as saying he
tipped off authorities partly
because the newspaper Olsen
edits is owned by Freedom
Newspapers, Jnc., which also
publishes the Santa Ana
Register.
Danny Davey
'Doing Well'
In Hospital
Danny Davey, Laguna's
Popular deliveryman and a
benefactor to Northern Arizona
Indian tribes, was reported "do-ing quite well " today at South
Coast Community Hospital.
Davey, 51, bas been removed
from the hospital 's intensive
care unit where he bad been for
six days following a treffic acci-
dent. last Wednesday in Laguna
Beach.
Davey, a pedestrian, was hit.
by a truck and thrown 87 feet by
the impact. He suffered multiple
injuries and was considered in
serious condition when admitted
to the hospital.
The Danny Davey trust ac·
count in the El Toro Branch Mis·
sion Bank oow has $375 In it. The
account was opened by Frank
Wood of Mission Viejo with an in·
itial donation of $300.
ORANOS C04ST vsc:
DAILY PILOT
=:r.~~.~11r,:=1:;:=:;.:. C.00•1 ~.,,. .... c:_.,,, _.. ...... _ ...
~"::i..::.~~~~·: . ..::..-~ ~ ... ,. Valley •• ,.,.ft ........... k ValW •NI
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v ... ,.,_,_0--11-.... ,,... ..... ........ ,_._.,. ....... ...... .,.r•w
0.-.M,i... ........... ....
AtM-1111.t ....... -..
~· .. ~OMoe Me111111.:-..'C:.:'-..,.o •
onto.. a..u ...... -... ~-MIMl ....... "11 ,,.,, .... _ ....... _,_
~IM<,Yttl•• UJlll.A~I .... ··-~'TtftJllOll• f714>MM321
Qaulflff Adfttrtl .... M2-R71
Llfun.e le•ltAllD~nu; T tie_,,.,._ 4'"'9t ,.._...,_
~
C .., • .._ aaodlU __ lCllUOlll
to t&.1 Orf ptu for C a
Bay properu •the Lqu.na
Btacb Plaa_atn1 CommlHlon d , ... ,...., the dt)' 1bould •J tdroDtbittlliU,..dfort. Tae~..,.,.nttcptan now comet to the clty council for
a J>UbliC hearinl tonl•hl. The
plan bu pj.o1·p0111ed back and
fortb IW&ween tbe tv..o bodJes for aometlme.
Tbe ll*llle plan Heb to con· tzol M$pmeqt and redtveJop-
mqt ol lotl alone tbe oceanfront
bJull.I oil Cretcent 8ai Drift.
U.a provlllona were dealped
to prt!IHn'e public views from
Crescent Bay Point park, but the
council aJMi the commission
could not get together on bow
beat to accomplish those aims.
ln resJlOQl8 to claims that the
area m.lgb1 contain signlflcant
archeoloeical items, the specific
plan required that excavatiooa
be carefully controlled and
auperviaed by a qualified
arcbeologi.st.
It also contained a section bar-
ring release of archeologic
maps or reports to the general
public, a secrecy clause propo.
nenta claimed was necessary to
prevent relic "raidin&" by the
public.
In a bluntly worded statement,
tbe commission unanimously
declared that the city should
"drop the Crescent Bay specific
plan as it is presenUy written
because it does nothing to protect
or promote that which we set out
to accomplish.''
The commi.uion said the coun-
cil should consider passing laws
setting bluff top preservation and
arcbeologic controu for the en·
lire city rather than dabbling in
one small area.
Without the specific plan con·
Hearing Set
On San Juan
Street Issue
The San Juan Capistrano City
Council will conduct a public
hearing tonight on application of
the California vehicle code to
private streets in the Captain's
Hill development.
The counci I meeting is
scheduled for 7 p.m. al city of.
fices, 32400 Paseo Adelanto.
Passage or a council resolution
approving application of the
vehicle code would bring Orange
County Sheriff patrol cars into
the Captain's Hill area or south
San Juan to enforce a 25 miles
per hour speed llmiL
Such a resolution was recently
passed for the Village San Juan
community in north.Sao Juan.
Lt. Harry Gage, south county
substation commander, bas said
added traffic enforcement
responsibilities will dilute the
ability or a Sheriff's unit to patrol
an area.
·'The eventual e(fect would be
~ lessening or patrol effective-
ness or addition of patrol units to
maintain a performance level, al
an increased cost lo the city,"
Gage said.
Fro. P.,,eAJ
PLANE •• ~
equipment valued at $.1,900 was
reported stolen from aircraft
parked at the Capistrano field.
Steve Heath, assistant
manager at the airport, said El·
lis reported to the airport on June
2. No connection bas been made
between Ellis and the tampering
with plane brakes reported June
1, Healbsaid.
City Manager Mocalis said city
employes are being used tem-
porarily to monitor airport ac·
tivily until two qualified airfield
spotters can be hired.
"H's unfortunate that the
person the security service sent
down got involved in this lllegal
activity,'• Mocalls said. "That's
something over which the city
had no C<lfttrol. ••
Casket Goof
Nearly 'B~'
Wrong Woman
SAUGERTIES. N.Y. (AP) -
.. Tbat isn't tnother " 1asped one
member ot the irlevln• funlly
as the ca.stet of Ella Shaw was
opened at a funeral bom• here.
.. A.n ati.c>Jutety honest mis•
take," uid Dr. Herman Snow.
director of the Hodson alver
P•ychtatrlc Cente.r ln
PouchUepaie, describtnc bow
the tiocb' of Laura $haw found llJI
wa1 mto the casket lnttnded for
Ella Shaw.
90th were patJents at the atate
ho.pit.ill. Ella ii still alive, but
whtn Laura dl*d Thurtday,
bo1pttaJ otnclala tneorreet11
DOlifted ,llla'8 i'elaU• and the
fWl al.wu~ed.
.,... •• nirrent reslden>-
tlal •laDdard.I appl.J. The
area ii n.bJ«"Ct to Coutal
Coue:rvatloo Act provlslom.
Tb• 1pad.tle plan hu been in
tbe wad.a for about a year.
Ckmente
Eyes Plan
For Sewage
Tbe San Clemente City Council
wUI weilh environmental conse-
quences ol it.a planned participa-
tion in a regional sewage dis·
posal program a1a1;30 meeting
tonight at City Hall.
A supplemental environmental
impact report bas been made of
the proposed land outfall, or
sewer line, that will connect the
city treatment plant to an ocean
outfall off the mouth of San Juan
Creek at Doheny State Beach.
The regional ocean outfall is to
be built by the Soutbeast
Regional Reclamation Authority
(SERRA>.
San Clemente rejoined the
sew age disposal project last year
under pressure from tbe San
Diego Regional Water Quality
Control Board.
The environmental impact re-
port considers three alternatives
for sewage disposal:
-Ocean disposal of treated ef.
fluent th.rou1h a land outfall from
San Clemente to the SERRA re-
gional ocean outtall.
-A program or total reclama·
lion or waste waters, including
storage in reservoirs, or surplus
storage on the San mateo Creek
basln, or disposal of surplus to
lhe ocean through SERRA and
limited storage in the San Mateo
Creek basin.
The report recommends dis·
posal through the SERRA out-
fall.
Also on tonight's agenda are:
-A public hearing on an ap.
peal or a planning commission
denial or a use l)ermit for a nine·
unit condominium at 268 Avenida
Montalvo.
-Initial presentation of the
$12.7 million um-78 city budget.
The council is expected to set a
date for a study session and
public bearings.
150Laguna
High Seniors
Earn Honon
More than 150 Laguna Beach
High School students were toast-
ed in an honors convocation
Tuesday al which about $90,000 in
awards and scholarships were given.
The awards night was the next
to last of the ceremonies or pomp
and circumstance. The last is
Thursday's commencement for
the approximately 280 graduat·
ing seniors.
Top cash award winner was
Robert Brunswick, who collected $2,300 in scholarships.
Processional starts at 8 p.m. at
Irvine Bowl, 650 Laguna Canyon
Road.
Commencement speaker is en·
tertainer Art Linkletter, whose
grandson Mike Linkletter is
among the graduates.
Jill Martin and Tricia Toliver, co-valedictorians, are scheduJed
lo speak.
An all-night graduation party
is planned at the school following
commencement.
* * * F,....PageAJ
ACCUSED. • •
Some of them even wrote their
own last names in paint. Hughes
said a clumsy attempt was made
by other students to cover the
names.
Wben they un out of paint, one
of the yout.ba fished out a key to
the student art wing and opened
the paint storage room. At that
point. Hughes 1aid, three of them
decided tbe)t'd had eoouab and
left.
The principal said the remain-m. four filled their bucket with
paint. Two more ol tbe students
also decided they bad gone too
far, and also Id\.
Hughea aald the two who
stayed splubed paint o•er an art
room wall and onto palntfno,
macrame and othe1' art objects.
Ont of them, be Hid, •ent tntO a
ceramics room aod t>~hed ewer
a storaa net that contained
pottery worb.
"The paint tbrowo in the
atorece room hit one person's
whOle ye&T;'I output. deatroylni
half of them -eight to lO
works." .Hqhe:l sald.
"The ceralQlC worn w.re til treat .aJue., many ol them ._..
fcill·JM.r, PnUecta_ • A lot of blood, nreat aa·tear.·went don wU.b
tbat rack. .. be •aicL
i.-Wnllalr c.r,. .. Fluor •• ... • ..... r11 ... u.. ... ..... ..
&aaCl • 1D
O'"Keefe
10&--..-..:
-Rla r.11 deac-e. •t Camlao~
-A aum Vla v....._.
-Improved propertJ le-1 to
• Nla1l tnll 1uppty at lMO N. m Cmm.0 Ile.al.
-Vwant Pl"OleTtY at ao. 4Z2
end Gii Via Alejft. O'Keefestat-
ed be disposed ot this interest in
June, 1971..
O'Keefe nported income ol
more than $10,000 in proceeds
from sales ol aecuriUea. from
Dean Witter and Compuy in
Newport Beach.
F,.,...P-AJ
Among the 51 people or com-
panies from whom be collected
lecal fees of $1,000 or more were
Barr and Baysbore lumber com-
panies, Councilman Aolhoay Di
Giovanni, Douglass-Pacific
Corp. of San Clemente and
Gordon G. Construction Inc. VEILUFTED •••
-No one in company manage.
ment will be forced out.
-The members of tbe con-
sortlwn have a totaJ net worth in
the $5 billion to ts bUUoo ranee.
They will put up "at leaat $100
mllllon" of their own money In
buyio& the company.
Gottlieb is particularly d1'-
tressed by the rumon that TAI
will bit the Harbor Area like a
pack ol carpetbaUers, arabblng
off a qufclt profit to leave truhy
development and a patchwork ol
smalllandownersinlbeirwake.
Nothing could be further from
the truth. he insists.
"We are all businessmen wlth
good reputations. We're not com-
ing lo to tear tblngs down. We
build UU.O.s up. We're not a
bunch of raplsts."
A spokesman for A. Alfred
Taubman eoatacted today said
the Detroit developer would have
no comment on Gottlieb's state-
ments and lurther claimed that Gottlleblsnot"lnvolved"lnTAI.
But GotWeb says be tkas the
catalyst in the fonnatioo of TAI.
Io addition to being a retired
military man-be craduated
from the U.S. Military Academy
in 1921-be ls also reUred from
the trucking business ln Chicago.
"I'm supposed to be reUred,"
be confided, "but I like to put
things together." He apparently
will get a share in T Al as his
commission in the sale.
"The Colonel" is a charming,
kindly man, well-known in the
Los Angeles business community
and called the "Candy Man"
because or his habit of carrying
and banding them out lo people
he meet.!.
He said he began following the
sale of the Irvine Company 18
months ago, but did not act on his
idea to form a iroyp to ~ it
because he assumed the deal
with Mobil Corp. was wrapped
up .
He said he found out otherwise
from a friend and business as-sociate, Keith Gaede. Gaede is a
director of the Irvine Company
and husband or Linda Irvine
Gaede, one of James Irvine's
granddaughters.
Gaede reportedly told GotUieb
that bis wife's cousin, Joan
Irvine Smith, had tied up the
Mobil sale in court, that the deal
was far from wrapped up.
Gaede declined all comment.
Gottlieb said he was In·
troduced to Mrs. Gaede and Mrs.
Smith and decided to form a
partnership to get into the sale.
The ftnt person be contacted
was his friend and buliness as-
sociate ot :SO years. Charles AJ.
len. the corporate combat
apeclallstfrom Wall Street.
"Charlie.'' as he's called by
Gottlieb. contacted A. Alfred
Taubman, Max Fisher and
Henry Ford ti, all Detroit men
he'd WOl"ked With before.
Allen also brought in the con-
sortlum •s passive investors. Milt.on Petrie, a New Jersey resi-
dent who owns 'a chain of east
coast clothing stores and Baroid
Marguleas, an Imperial Valley
agri-bualneasman.
Tbe tenth man in the con·
aortium is builder Donald Bren, a
one-time Newport Beach resi·
dent end former president of the
Kilslon Viejo Company.
Gottlieb says Bren is the only
man wbowas not brought intothe
consortlum-be asked to get into
the deal through Taubman with
whom he'd worked on a project
in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Like other consortium members,
Bren declined all comments.
Al far as the inner workings or
the partnership,. Gottlieb is
cbarmiq, but evasive.
Taubman was more or less ap-
pointed spokNman and be won't
be talldng to anyone until after
July 25.
According to his public rela·
tlona staff, Taubman feels it is
premature to say anything about
the sale until it closes.
Acquaintances say Taubman
views the sale d extremely
tentative-rather like an option
to buy-and until the deadline
has been met, he won't have
anything to say.
GotWeb hints there will be no
partner who will control a ma· jority or TAI. All will apparently
hold minority interests based on
the portion of their investment.
He paused. ••vo11 know,
Charlie Allen couJd have handled
this whole thing himself, but he's
an in an investment house-and
the SEC has a rule that says if
you're going to make an offer on
something like this, you have to
set that much money aside.
''Charlie needs the capital to
keep his investments going.
That's why we set up TAr."
Leafing through a thick packet
of documents, GotWeb read off
the names of the banks that will
provide the balance of TAI's in-
vestment in the Irvine Company.
It appears there are commit-
ments up to about $300 million,
but no bank bas a commitment
greater than $35 million.
Councilman Di Giovanni listed
investmenta val~ at between
$10,000 and $100,000 in h1a loan
and jewelry, locksmith and
automatic 1ara1e door opener
businesses housed at 217 S. El
Camlno Real.
He held common stock be
valued at between $10,000 and
$100,000 In tbe Bank of San
Clemente, where he was
chairman of the board.
Di Glovannl's real propert;y in-
terests included bis residence at
909 Avenlda Preaidio, and
ownership of. bousini units at 115
and 111 Calle de Los Molinos, 221
A venlda Granada and 204
AvenidaSerTa.
Councilman Lane listed no in-
vestments. He stated he owned
his home, and his law office at
228 Avenida Del Mar.
Byron 0. Marshall, a real
estate investor. and developer
Wulfeck were listed among
clients who paid Lane fees in ex-cess of $1,000.
Councilman Walker listed in·
ve1t.ment.s in a Photo Drive-Up
film processing store, at 800 S. El
Camino Real, owned by bis
daughters, and photo stort!S in
South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa
and Cypress.
He held stock in the Bank or
San Clemente and the National
Bank of San Juao, and majority
stoC!k in Walker Brothers
Development Corp.
San Clemente properties in
which Wallcer bad financial in-
terests were a vacant comer lot •
at Avenida San Gabriel and
South El Camino Real, and at 700
S. El Camino Real (where the
Kehtuclty Fried Chicken chain
leaffS a building owned by him) .
Other Properties listed were
vacant land at 2340 S. El Camino
Real, where today Walker broke
ground for a $1 million shopping
mall development, and the El
Camino Plata Shopping Center,
where his daughters' photo store
is located.
Walker listed income earned
by bis wife at Western Mutual
Escrow Corp., 647 Camino de Los Mares.
Mayor Wilkinson listed no in·
vestments or real property in-
terests. Her home is at 930
Avenida Salvador.
Income listed other than her
council stipend was her
husband's, from landscape main-
tenance projects, none of which
were located in San Clemente.
Lynn Hort HART'S Joh n Hort.
SPORTING GOODS
538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-19 19
Barbell Sets
Oumbell Sets
Solid Dumbells
El er gyms
JumJ Repes
Trim Wiiiets
Door 8*
• BWliall Mitts
Basebills
Basebitl Sllots
Baseball P11ts
Colored Sleives
Baseball & Slftbll eats
Wilson-Dunlop-Bancroft
Yonex-Davis-Prince Rackets
Racquet Ball Rac;quets l Balls
Handball Gloves & Balls
Tennis Bils
Badminton Racbts
Table Tennis Paddles
Tennis Shirts & Sborts
TenniS DresSeS
..
17
..
I'
...
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
'Candy Man' Lifts
HCrecy. refullnl to talk to &be preu. and avoldlft1 all but
mlDlaw ~t wlt.h C9f»pany
mlGa wn.t.
Part of the curtain drawn
arCIWld tbe 1ale ,.._ tll\ed na.-
day bf Col; Joba Gottlieb ol
S..trty JW11, ttie '1f.1ear-old re-
tired milltar)' man known to the bu.tiD .. world u the man wbo
put TAJ toSetber.
He'a called t.bt Candy Man. He
HY••• UM brDker ln the 1.ie.
Here11 what be had to aay clur·
IDC a two.and·a·hllf ·hour. ln·
tervlewTUaday: -ne only plUiaLDf underway
by T Al for company boldinp la
in alSriculUiie wblcb tbe croup
plant to expand "clrut.leally."
-No ooe involved in tho·eon·
1orthw foresees tald111 IQY pro. ma out of their lnveahnent for at
lea1t five years.
o.11\' l'llelSllff .......
JEFF DAY (LEFT) ANO CAM DOUGLASS READY TO ROLL-ANO RUN
Newport Beach Youth• Plen to LHv• Frtday on Unuauel Summer Vacation
Cross Country 'Feet'
Newport Youthll Plan 2,4oamiJe lfRt; >
By WILUAM E. HODGE
Of .. Dall\' ,ilee Stttt
Jeff Day and Cam I)ouglaiss of
Newport Beach will be traveliftl
coast to coast this summer -on
1 their feet.
I The two Corona del Mar High
School cros1 country runners will
by leaving Friday for a run from
I Oceanside to Jacksonville, Fla.
"It will be a relay," said Day.
"Each of us will be running 22
miles a day."
The two plan to ride mo-peds
across country at the same time.
•'The lint rt.u:U\er wlll .belb) bis
11 mlles while the other drives 22
miles ahead with the Volkswagen
bus," explains Day. "Tbe second
runn~ will drive back 11 miles
on the mo-ped where he will
change places with the first run·
ner.~·
Each YOW\& man will nm 22
miles a day. Eleven miles will be
run in the mornine and another
.Coast Unit Grants
NB Urban Exclusion
Members or the state coastal
commission voled Tuesday night
to 1rant Newport Beach the
state's first urban exclusion. It
means most homeowners in the
city will no longer have to deal
with the commi88lon.
· Commission members ap·
proved the exclusion whtcb gtves the coastal permit granting
authority to the dty for homes
and duplexes in Col'OJla. del Mar
areas, Balboa Jalaod, Dover
Shores, Newport Island, Lido
Ille, Cllff Haven. Peninsula
Polnt1 Central Newport, West
Ne~port and the Anniversary
tract 1n the Upper Bay.
However, Bayshores, which
oricmally wu included ln the area quhtlor excl-.slon, will re·
maln iindet" commission control.
That neighborhood was re· •
moved from the list by state com-
Jnlaaion stall membeni in a dis·
pute with city offi1:ials over ~ublk access to the private
beacb in the bayfront community
located neir the interaeclton ot
Pacific Coast Hi•hway and
Dover Drive.
The exclusion also won't apply
lo multi-family construction,
comemercial iones, duplex lots or less than 2,400 square feet, or
any beach front property on the
ocean or bay.
Planning officlals in Newport
Beach note that the exclusion
means tbat toaatal com.mluJon
regulations will aWl be enforced,
but now it will be up to the city to
enforce them and issue the
permits.
David t>omhowlki of the cjty
start aald the HclwsicSn wW not
go into effect for •bout five weeks
to rive time for the city council to·
formally ac~t the conditions l~ by the ccnnmlssioo and
to alloW commiaaion stair me"'· ~ to rue th• excl..aioo wJtb the ~etarYof$ate .
-Tbere are no plw at PJ•ent to eltber speed up develoPmlnt
or ..U tb8 uaeta ol the lniDe
Compaay.
-No one ta ~_pany m~e· ment wUJ be fatted out.
-Tbe membitn of tM eon-
aortlum have a total net worth ln
the., billion to. billloQ ranee.
They will put up "at le• *100
milUoa" of Uielr OWll mODef ln
buylo1tbecompany.
New Flights to. £aunty Mulled~:
Reaction to news lbat a Oranae County yean "°',.
Midwest airline plans to nte for Sorsabal aald, "But the county
Civil Aeronautics Board ap· wouldn't live them any counter
proval to fly into Orange County spacetooper"te."
Airport four times a day ranged Soraabal said he was certain
from dismay to chuckles today ·North Centtal would (ace the
among Orange Coast civic sameproblem ..
leaders.. · Costa Me1a Councilwom"an Newport Beach councilmen Mary Smallwood .-1d Oranie
learned Monday that North Cen· County baau't resolved eJClatiM
tral Airlines is seeking a route problems at the airport.
"We eertainly aren't 1oin.c to
add to thole problem.a by let.liq
{lnotber alrlin in," she aaid.
•• Besidea. -.vbo in the betk
wants to 10 to Minneapolis,
anyway:• sbequipped.
Copne,Uman. Dom Raciti sald
ruetita into 0ran1e County by tbe airline would not be welcomed by
bill).
<SeeAISUNE, race.\%) from Minneapolis·f,t. Paul to
Orange County 'iia Las Vegas.
Supporters and opponents ol ~
airline's plana have until June 24
to tell the CAB how they feel
about the application.
A CAB spokesman said tne
board will review those state·
ments June 24 before deciding
whether to move the airline's re·
quest to the top of its list.
Pil»t of De,aih
Plane ffnlicerued ,,.
I
If a hearing is iranted, it would
be held sometime next fall, the
CAB spokesman said.
Roland UtUe, a spokesman for
tbe airline, said It plans to nek a
certificate for-trips between the
Twin Cltles, Las Vegu and
Oran1eCounty.
Nonh C.tql wouJd lik' tO tw•
ln• its DCt·l601 Into Or&J\1e
County four times a day, UtUe
Hid.
Newport .Beach City Altomey
Derutls O'Neil said he expecta the
city will receive document.a con·
cernl~ the application today,
and Hid hll city wUl oppose the ruahta.
He added that John Hardy, a
representative ot the airUne. will
be in Orange County next Tues·
day.
"Th~y (the airline) are ap·
parently unaware or the
lawsuits, pencJlng environmental
impact report, existing lease
restrictions and the state noise
s tandard variances req'1f.ted
each year," O'Neil said.
"We hope lo have the op-
portunity to enli1hten the
gentleman from Minneapolis on
our local problems," he said.
''They really don't have any idea
of what's 1oir\I on here.'•
Costa Meea City Managerhed
Soraabal aald be is not that con·
cerned about the CAB applica·
tionnews.
"Continental Airlines received
CAB permission to fly into
FIDO IWVNED
FROM BEACHES
Man's best friend ts·
banned aa or today from
runnina. rompin1 or even
bein1 walked on a dog
leash on any or Newport
·Beach's aandy atranda. at
least until summer'JJ end.
Do&• will not l>e
permitted on. tieacbes
aeain until Sept. 10 under a
city ordinance.
By ANNE COOPEa oe•o.,..,.,....,..,..
The pilot O~ing the plane which
killed S.year-old JennUer 7.ell on
May 28 when it crashed bebind
her San Juan Capistrano b6me
did not bave a comtnerclal ft)'ina
license.
Albtrt :slbl, 23. of Lullaa NtlWCS.w bl Jt*1 forl11~9" banner-towing pl&\)e Without a
eommetttal lf~e and 1~
Trustees ol the Newport·Mesa
Unilled School District a~ed
t.be sale of three unused ~
sites for $4.8 lllillion Tuesday,
School offtci•Js tuned that,
became the sit.es onsmaU.1 were
bought witb aid lrotti t.M state,
ttte district Will have-to ctve
$1,W,OOO of -the proceed.a ta the
slate.•
Tbe ~sales approved are:
-WakebJm School Site: A
10.S·•tte parcel to be bou•bt foc-
$1,850,000 by Foley·Conatruction
Company of Tuatin. ll R located
in Costa Mesa on Sunnower
A venue between Fairview Road
ana South Coast Pl.Sa.
-Smalley ~hooi site: A 1~
acre parcel near 'Fairview Ro.a
adjacent to the Meu Wood$
tract, tt will be boa.ht for
$1,325,000 by Pr'Operties Wesy
Inc. of Newport Bead.
-16th Street Site: An 11.S.acre
aite partially ln Newport Beach
an,tl pardally in county territory
near the BaQnlog oil Pt•rty
whJth Will be aold 101' $1,213,800 to
the FrederickW. Field trust. .
The acti'on taken by trustees
TUesdtl)' meam that escrowa on
the tbree •ales win ·not be
QPened. • f .n
Tbt $3,IOS;IOO Wldeh·. tk dll·
trtct will net from the ••lei will
10 iDlb the dbtnct's ca~ltid out-
lay budlet,.. 1c l.olflci•t&ilOled.
autb~ to tow, siid Frank :
Allen, chlet of flight standards :
for the Federal A ~lation A ..
mlniatratlon in Long Beach. l'acific Aerial .Advertlain,,
wbich hired Sibt will also be~
for fly.inJ •Hbout towint
authorization. Tbe maximuf"'
pn.aty ta Sl,000 r.r rupt t" vJolaUon, AUeo aafJ • "We could also revoke tbe
.pUot'a ~I license.'' the FM
ofllclal ,.Jd. "It. 1• our \41l• dera~ he hu left the codn.
tr)'. but ft are proceedin1 witk
the action.'. Sibl's wherubouta
could not be confirmed and an olt
llclaJ ol P~ific Aerial AdveJ"tia.
1ng d~llned commenL
Sibl escaped injury when . hi4
plan• crashed in a dry er• bee\
adjacent ~ Capistrano A.irwrt<
A cable became entaqled in the ·
plane'• ~l assembly as the pilot ~
passed ovw the airfield aftet tak~ to p~~k an advertism,
b._nner rrom· a 1upp0rt.
Cblldten pla)'in.1 in the c..-
bed, a .p~rtralJy deve\opecl .
recreation area behind tbe Troy
Hom• "&fact, uattered a.s-U. small pJ-.approached. The z.ill
cbiYd'wustlvc:k by a propeller. •
San JuJD .residenta pf fout
housin1 tracts adjacent to tho
airport '"led ciiy officials ~ close the airport after the ac ~
deJ\t· Homeonen bad active
aoucht ereate.r ~ll'ol ol ajrpor_(
activlty from the time the~
wer.e nnt occupied five )'elll'll.
aio. •
Clty ManalG' James llocallst
hH ~lQtneMeci that strictd
entorcetnent be iinposed u
aiqort OJ>eraiton. att phased out overtheDQtyear. ~i
Jte h-. ai.o recommend«l •~ concerted 'effort. to locM.e a tite tO •
<~PIAN,:, Pqe A!)
t f
.
aia:mpur, • " eUd to cons t&m memNr DotlaJd
• .ar...-~ .... . ,.. ....... •l ODe u..-...... ..
-~men ot • ...,. rrom
eom.tllt1 a., WIUGD
...... o1 ... --... ·'4il•flkl,,. .... &old DOt to
~-..r., l ' rr a. caatu ~c.cl ...... •--c-.•.U1 It ....... &.he
.l!Ciiwt.lll um.. d.11 ........ . ,.._ .... ,..... .. ~"' 11oaaa. ad Urbu Develop-
-'-....... Wltut •eek.be &&Uted aboa& daeule.
Preen wtWn amt wil.bout, the
qaestian ls pc.eel in hundreds ot
dilfereal ways, but it comea oot
lbeaame:
What's 1om1 to happen when
the new owoen take over?
Wai.. said be baa no wa:y ~
knowiDf aad doesn't care to
speculate. but be supposes that
the new owners will not make
any drastic miaateps.
Alter all. be reasoned, they are
talented bulinesamen who have
pride in their work and reputa· tlons to uphold.
U.. 1111GD VleJo ,_..., ...
• WtMt11•....atbom• ln .. IniDe
nDcb clnelopmenta aoeh a·
Cameo 8horu. ~e:r Shores.
W..UUft. Han.or View Hamel
andO....,....
Wataon uy1 there bu been
some 11.mlted cont.act between
TAJ and the IrvilMI ComPW ln
order to Wk oul the-ffnaDdal
and Jepl technlcalltlea ol the •al•.
fta1 me.ms t.bat T Al'• lawyers
a.re lootiJ1a •t all of the lawaulta
pend.1a8 aimmt the company-of ·
which Watson says there are
several dozen-and auditors
· from Kenneth Leventhal and
Company, hired by TAI, are 10-
ing over the boob ''with a llne
tooth comb."
After July 2:5, it will become a
matter ol learninl about the new
owners by being exposed to
them, said Watson.
"I think the uncertainty will be
cui:ed by exposure to the in·
divlduals who run TAI," be
added.
* * * * * * I' .... P.,,e Al
VEIL UFI'ED.
military man-he eraduated
from the U.S. Military Academy
in 1921-be Is allo retired from
tbe trucking business ln Chicago.
"I'm supposed to be retired,"
he conftded, "but I like to put
things together." He apparenUy
will get a share in T Al as his
commission in the sale.
"The Colonel" la a charming,
kindly man, well-known ln the
Los Angeles business community
and called the "Candy Man"
because of bis habit of carrying
and handing them out to peopl&
he meets.
He said he began following the
sale of the Irvine Company 18
. months a10. but did not act on his
idea to form a group to buy it
beca\15e he assumed the deal
with Mobil Corp. was wrapped
up.
He said be round out otherwise
from a friend and business as-soc(ate, KelU:l Gaede. Gaede is a
director of the Irvlne Company
and husband of Linda Irvine
Gaede, one of James Irvtne's
araoddaupten.
Gaede reportedly told Gottlieb
that his wife's cousin, Joan
Irvine Smith, bad tied up the
llobU sale ln court, that the deal was far from wrapped up.
GaededecUned all comment.
Gottheb said he was in-
troduced lo Mrs. Gaede and Mrs.
Smith and decided to form a
partnership to get in'° the sale. The first person he contacted
was his friend and business as-
&ociate of SO years, Charles Al·
len, the corporate combat
Jpeclalistfrom Wall Street. 1
"Charlie," as he's called by
dottlleb, contacted A. Alfred
Taubman, Max Ffsher and
Henry Ford n, all Detroit men
he'd worked with before.
Allen also brought In the con·
sorUum'a passive investors,
Milton Petrie, a New Jersey re:si·
dent who owns a chaln of east
c_out clothing stores and Harold
Mareµleas, an Imperial Valley
a&ri·bullneaman. Tile tenth man ln the con·
sortlum ls builder Donald Bren. a-
me-time Newport Beach resi-
dent and fa.;mer president ol the
Miaaloo VleJO Company.
GoUlieb •a:t• Bren la the only
man who wu not broutbt into the
contortiuin-be asked to cet lnto
the deal throu&h Taubman with
whom he'd worktd on a project
in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Like other consortium memben,
Bren decllned all comments.
Aa far u the inner workings of
the partner1blp, Gottlieb is
" cbarmin1. batevaslve.
Taubman wu oion ar less ap.
• •
pointed spokesman and be wou't
be talldng lo anyone unW after
July 25.
According to bis public rela·
tlons staff, Taubman feels It is
premab.D'e to say anytblng about
the sale until it closes.
Acquaintances say Taubman
views the sale as extremely
tentative-rather like an option
to buy-and until the deadline
has been met, he won't have
anything to say.
Gottlieb blnts there wUl be no
partner who will control a ma·
jority of TAI. All will apparently
hold minority interests based on
the portion of their lnvestment.
He paused. "You know,
Charlie Allen could have handled
this whole thing himself, but he's
an in an investment house and the SEC has a rule that says if
you 're going to make an offer on
something like this, you have to
aet that much money aside.
"Charlie needs the capital to
keep his investments going. That's why we set up TAI."
Leafing through a thick packet
of documents, GotUieb read off
lhe names of the banks that will
provide the balance of T Al's in·
vestment in the Irvine Company.
It appears there are commit-
ments up to about $300 million,
but no bank has a commitment
greater than $35 million.
He stresses that no planninc is
under way for the company's de-
velopments-a statement that
will doubtless be a disappoint-
ment to the rumor hawkers who
have had TAI selling eveeytblng
·from company headquarters to
the 10,000 acre coast.al area to
pay the interest on its loans.
"We don't plan to see any pro-
fit out ot this for at least five
years. That wa:y we don't havt; to
do any of those things," Gottlieb
saidoftberumon.
As for the continued manaae-
ment ol the company, GOUlieb is
concerned that TAI ls being cut
u a group of 'creedy. robber
barons. wbo are insensitive to the
mark the company bu made on
the community.
He d.iamisses Mrs. Smith's
court deposition that aald C4)m·
pan)' President Ray Wat.ion
would be reduced to staff plan·
ner.
"She said it in the beat ot the
moment. No one will leave the
Irvine Compapy unless they want to,•• GotWeb said.
listening at OA·S
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance scratches his forehead
as he listens to discussions at the General Assembly of
the Organization of American States at St. George's on
the Caribbean island of Grenada.
Man Faces Inquiry
In Scouts SI8.yfugs
LOCUST GROVE. Okla. (AP)
-An W1Cmploye4 Locust Grove
man was arrested early today in
nearby Ottawa County. and the
sheriff questioned him about the
sex murders of three young Girl
Scouts.
"We are very interested in this
person," said Mayes County
Sheriff Glen "Pete" Weaver.
He said officers from his de· partment went to Miami.
Okla., the Ottawa County seat
some 60 miles from here, to talk
to the man he said waa arrested
by the Oklahoma Highway
Patrol under "suspicious
circumstances."
"We have reasons to believe
that be could possibly throw
some li&bt onto the Girl Scout
camp slaytngs," Weaver said.
Tbe sheriff decUned to disclose
other details until after the man
wu lnteniewed.
Records at the ottawa County .
sheriff's office at Mia'Dli showed
that the only man in the jail was
,,,... P.,,e Al
PLANE •••
which the airport could be Te·.
located, possibly on Camp
Pendleton or Rancho Mlssion
Viejo property.
Jn the meantime. the city hired
a security officer to monitor
airport activity. Sunday, that
security guard, Norman Ellis,
hired Jhrougb Securit7 and In·
duatrial Services, wu arrested
for burglary and maliciows mis·
chief at the airport.
Orange County Sheriff's of-
ficers said Ellb, 23, of Corona del
Mar, la in Oranee County Jail to-
day. Radio and navi1ational
eqalpmmt valued at $3.900 was
reported stolen from aircraft
parked at the Capistrano field.
Steve Heath. assistant
manager at the alrport. said El·
Us reported to the airport on June1
2. No conn~on bas been ~e
between Ellis and the taml)eJ'lng
with plane brakes reported June
1. Heath said.
booked there after belng arrested
on a public drunkenness count
durin1 the nieht.
Earlier. officials revealed they
found bloody footprints, ap-
parently left by large tennis
shoes, which were found on the
wooden platform or the tent in
wliich the Girl Scouts were killed
on the first night of a camping
trip.
The platform has been nown to
the state Crime Bureau head-
quarters in Oklahoma City,
where tests were bein1 conduct-
ed on it and other pieces of
evidence, including a red
flubli1ht found near the girls'
bodies early Monday.
Fln1erprlnts were lilted from
the nublight and from the skin
of at least one of the girls.
sources close to the Investigation
said. It wasn't known whether
the prints were left by the killer
or by someone else, possibly J.n·
vestigaton.
The shoes that made the prints
are much larger than any shoes
the girl.a bad left in the tent after
donning bed clothes.
Mayes County District At·
tomey Sid Wise said "logic leads
us to conclude the murderer is a
man, a stealthy, physically agile
man."
Investigators reportedly found
·other evidence early Tuesday
about 200 yards from the tent at
Camp Scott near here. The heavi-
ly wooded camp area has been
closed off and a police command
post set up at the camp.
Seniors PoUed Barbell Sets
DUmbell Sets
DAILY PILOT
•
t:enl,er PriOritiea Sought iii' Solid Duinbells '
Exeroms Senior citisens in Newport Mn. O'Shauahnessy said near· Jump Ropes Beach are belnC uked to tell city IJ all ol the aurveya iDdicate in·
ofticlala just alldl7 wbat -=·d terest ID tbe volunteer Procram Trim Wheels like to have in tbelr center ch in wblch seniora Would either Ja atat.:l to ~lDSeptember. work Jn tbe eommUilty or woWd Boar Bar JlldJ O .. qtineuy, ~ cib' .,.LotberMiaion. ~ sujNtnisOt wbo bU Uld there is DO deMUno been wcnma on the center. aald for C<W~ of Ute auneys. aw~_.. malled to tbe 110 ••svm after tbe "°'*' £• •• Of tbe l'rlenda of we'llUllDtWmembento one OASIS (tlriil name al tbe Center> aat IO W can htp a~ .... and .......... aftllablj la dJ.Y cord of wba~ama tb• lbrart.. at U.cbamberof ec>l'll· aerilorl an in in," 11.n.
llMl'Ce llDd a t.be Voblatary Ac· O'SblaPQ 11 IJ UGD Caal° la Balboa. • Tbe ---• the C'Cllnlet' ol • Piftb aDd Mliaip9rite A.-1n ••E197 ~ I 1et it.US d Corona del Mar la slat.a to OIPtll tllea back,'. Jin. o·sbautb· = 11 Mi tbe DOfth wtq of the nea1uld. kllqCclliPla *ated Ulen. . ~ foar-r=: ~., 41.tda Th• "9tol&MballdiDll ril bo
prosrama to four •roup1-oet..,W~.-eebool.
ild•eaUoeaJ and cultval. in· T1M tor tbe cmtswUl
fonaidba .. rtfsnl, ,.,... MeoQlll ....... ~ .... 1. birt tbe
Iba ... 80dll an4 valtmlMr • .... Wiii be • .....,.. .....
wort. w1 rtWtn•wea•a.t.
( 1/ t J I
Laetrile
'lneff ective'
ND YOU CAP)-A ~
aludy ~ l..MlrlJe ahowa lb• aub-
tt an c e bas no .. pre••D·
th'e.. • ~ cwative ~ activity,.. llemorlal SJou-
JtetterlaC Cancer Center q.
aounced todaY. .. We do not have evidence~
portinf taklna amyfdalln (Laetr le) to elinlea trial
althoueb other considerations
may require that cne bl condUct-
Newsman
Nabbed in
Drug BIUt
ed ... tMc...-ca&a-Ald..
Tbe sdeatiata s"4 tMtrea:peri·
menu on mlc• dli aot t-1
wbl&Mr LMtrfJe can lllMD pain,
as pu+:wJMta dalm. They uld
tb• eipeiimeab aJao illdicate-1 that l..Htrile don not hant Ul)
harmful effect, altboudi aomt
mice died when atva escelllvd)
lar1edoles.
Dr. Lewis Tbomu, presldent
of the cen~has aald het>elleves
human trla1a ot Laetrile must be
conducted because ot such fac·
ton as the IJ'OWina number CIC
states that baTe leaatbed
Laetrile.
The U.S. Food and DrUI Ad·
mlnlstratioo bas banned uae of
Laetrile tn interstate commerce
becauseltsaysthesubstancehas
not been proven safe or effective.
In the put year, Laetrile,
wblcb ii derived from peach or
State Bureau or Narcotics En· .apricot pits or bitter al"'CDh,
forcement a1ents visited the baa been leeallled ID Aluka. ID-
home of Anaheim BulleUn diana, Florida, Arbon8..!.Nevad.a.
newspaper lhnagio1 Editor Texas and Wasblnston ~te.
Marvin a ... Marv'' Olsen Mon-At a news coo.ference today,
day nllht and arrested him Oil Sloan·Ketterina uid the study
marijuanapossessioncharges. sbowa Laetrile poaseues
Olsen, 43, was booked for in· "neither preventive, nor tumor.
vesUCaUon of possession of mari· reereaant, nor antlmetutatic,
Juana for sale and cultivation of nor curative anUcancer ac·
marijuana. · tivlty."
He was released from custody The cancer center released the
on bis own recognizance, prom.15-results of a four-year study of the
inl to appear to answer .t~r substance. Two manuscripts charges on a date yet to ~ comprising 90 pages are to be
scheduled in Central OranKe published in the .Journal of
County Judicial District Court. Surgical Oncology. ·
A spokesman for the Bureau of One ol them deall with tumors
Narcotics Enforcement said to-that are tramplanted in rodents.
day that three plants were seized Tbe second, more extensive
as evidence, in addition to a study, deals with spontaneously
small quantity of alleged marl-occurrin& cancer ln mice.
juana lnslde the home. . In the transplanted tumors,
Investigators said they Sloan-Kettering said, Laetrile
checked Olsen's backyard on the showed no beneficial eUeets
bull ol a tip from Oran1e County af a.inlt any ol 10 dillerent types political f"mancier Gene Conrad o cancer.
who is preaenUy indicted t'.eclon Accordinc to the second
seven counts of fraud connec manuscript. a series of studies
with hi.a loan brokerage firm. failed to• reproduce reported
The state agency normally signs of anticancer activity re-.
concentrates attenti~n on drug ported previous ly by Dr.
dealers. City pohce would Kanematsu Sugiura of Sloan·
normally handle a matter involv· Kettering. ing smaller quantities of alleged
marijuana .
Olsen discussed bis arrest at Rites Slated. 1reat length with a Daily Pilot
newsman today, but declined to
elaborate on any issue of guilt or
innocence because he bad not
coDJ ulted bis attorney.
The Los Angeles Times quoted
financier Conrad as saying he
Upped off authorltles partly
beca\de the newspaper Olsen
edits is owned bf Freedom
Newspapers, Inc., which also
publishes the Santa Ana Register.
F,....PageAJ
AIRLINE •••
"As far as I know, the city of
Ontario would welcome more
flights," Raciti said.
He suggested a monorail or
subway system near the Santa
Ana River could solve
transportation problems from
Orange County to the airport at
Ontario.
"If we could get transporta-
tion, say every 15 minutes from
. Ontario, I think our problems
down here could be resolved," he
said.
. .
For: Ex-mayor ;·
Charles Hart
Visitation baa been scheduled
Thursday evenina at Pacific
View Mortuary for former
Newport Beach Mayor Charles
Hart who died Monday at the age
0(82.
Visitation will be from
S p.m. to 9 p.m . Services
will be conducted Friday at 11
a.m. at Pacific View Chapel with
entombment to follow at Pacific
View Memorial Park.
A widower, Mr. Hart is sur·
vived by a cousin, May Stewart
a( New York.
Mr. Jlart served as mayor
from l~ to 1964 and spent a total
or eight years on the city council.
lie was a pas\ president of the
Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa
Board of Realtors, a life member
or Newport Beach American
Leeton Poet 291, and a member
of the Seafarlng Masonic Lodge
708.
WilsoMJanlo,..aft
Y111ex·Davis-Prlee Racbts
Racquet Ball R~ts & Balls
' Handball Glms & Bills
Tennis 8*
Badminton lacbtS
Table Tennis Padllls
TennlS SMts & SMrts
Tennis Dnssas
MnylllOllns
lick ams
Duck Feet rlftS
O.P. s• Tillls
s;iedo Swim WIS & Trinks
Wn Up Slits
1 ),
•
VOL. 70. NO. 166, ~ CTIONS1 ... PAG6S ORANGE COUNTY, CALJFORNIA WEDNESDAY~ JUNE 15. 1977 TENC
'C8ndy Man' Lifts Irvine Co. Veil
ID 1ecney, ntuatn1 to talk to the
prt11. aad avohUn1 all but a\.IAimal eantact wltb comp&D)'
mana1emml. Part ot the curtain drawn a.round tbil HM ... lifted Tuel·
day by Col. Job.a GotWeb of
Beverly Hµla, the '79-year-old re-
tired mllilar7 man known to the
bullnea world u the man who
put T Al tocetber.
He'• called the Candy Man. He
11y1 bell the broker ln the Hle.
Here'• wbat be bid to 1ay dur-
ln1 a two-and·•·balf·bour in·
terview 'l'Uellday:
-Tbe oaJy planntnc under way
by T Al for company boldinl• is
ln afrlculture which the IJ'OUP plant to expand "druUcally."
-Mo one involved in the COD·
aortlum fOftSeea takinl any pro-
fita out of their inv,stment for at
least five yean.
-'l'beN are no ptana at preeem
to either speed up development
or aell tbe uset.a of the Irvine
Company.
-No one in company manace-
ment will be forced out.
-The members ot the COil·
sortlum have a total net worth In
the $5 blllioo to $6 billion range.
They will put up ·•at leut $100
million" qi tbeJr own money in buylng the company.
Major Study Reveals
.Laetrile lneff ective
'~~~~~~~~~~~ I
1
Crash
Pilot Not
Lice med
By ANNE COOPER
Of IM 0.llY f'llet Sult The pilot flying the plane which
lled ~year-old Jennifer Zell on
May 28 when it crashed behind
her San Juan Capistrano borne
did not have a commercial flying
license. Albert Sibi, 23, of Laguna
'Niguel is to be cited for flying the
banner-towing plane wit.bout a
;commercial license and without
autboittatioo to tow, said Frank
Allen, ehlef of rucht stahdards
for tbe Federal Aviation Ad·
1 ministration in Lorif Beach. 1 Pacific Aerial AdvertlJ~1 which hired Sibi will also~ Cit.ea
for flying without towing
authorization. The muimum penalty is $1,000 per flight in
violation, Allen sald.
"We could also revoke the
ilot's flying license," the FAA
fficial said. "'It is our un·
eralandlng be bas left the coun· ry; but we are proceeding with
e action." Sibl's whereabouts
could not be confirmed and an of.
ficial or Paci.fie Aerial Advertis·
g declined comment.
Sibl escaped injury when his
lane crashed ln a dry creek bed
adjacent to Capistrano Airport.
A cable became entangled in the
ane'a tail assembly as the pilot
used over the airfield after
eoft to pluck an advertising
'anner frorn a support.
Cbildren playing in the creek
1 ed, a partially developed
•recreatico area behind the Troy
Homes tract, scattered as the
small plane approached. The Zell dllld was 1truck by a propeller.
San· Juan residents of four
bouinl tr.eta adjacent to the
airport ur1ed city officials to
close the airport after the acci·
dent. Homeowners had actively )OQaJlt ireater control of airport
acUvity from the time the bomee
were first occupied flve yeara
•10. CJty Manager James Mocalis
bu recommended that stricter
nforcement be imposed •• ~operations are phued out o.er the next year.
He bu abo recommended a
eooeerted effort to locate a lite to
wblch t.be airport could be re-
1 o ca ted, possibly on Catnp
PendJeton or Rancho Mlsslon
Viejo property.
Jn the meantim•, the city hired
a security officer to monitor
airport activity. Sunday, that
1eeurity pard, Norman mtla,
hired thrCM&lh Security and In·
dQltrlal Services, WU arrested
<See PLANE, P11e AJ)
Dump !frock
trasli Fatal
/.f'Wlre,Mtes
'1ltE MAGIC IS YOU'VE GOT TO BE MOTIVATED'
Former Fatty at 490 Pounds, (Left), H•'• Trtm at 185 Now
htser·Wins ..
'Racer' Trima 295 Poundil
ANCHORAGE, Alaska <AP) -Dr. Robert Mallin raced
snails and loat-a total of 295 pounds.
Eleven months ago, Mallin weighed 490 pounds. Today, after
racing more than S,000 miles on an exercise bike against the
snails in his fish tank, he's down to 195.
''mE MAGIC IS YOU'VE GOT to be motivated. And even
then the 1oing lan't easy," said MalliQ, who combined bard work
on the bike with a diet restricted to 400 c&lories a day.
He•s mJghty proud of the feat. calling the huge loss in weight
"the outstanding achievement of my life."
The plastic surgeon said a friend's poor health led him to the
conclusion,
"BY GEORGE, l'M MORTAL, TOO. I'm goin1 to die."
Decidine that being 37 years old "was better than the
alternative," he went to an internist and said: "Here I am. Do
me."
To keep from going back up he has reoriented his life.
"Doing ilia hard," he conceded, though there are benefits:
-His daughters no longer are embarrassed when he comes
to pick them up at school.
-He comes home from work ready to go, instead of ready to
goto bed.
-He llkea himself.
MAI.LIN'S STORY BEGINS IN a:llLDBOOD. as a member
of the .. clean plate club." He went from being "chunky to stoclty
to stout." By adulthood he weighed 230 pounds.
He gained an additiopal 260 pounds after his family moved to
Alaska and he rose from a ''struggling, starving resident" to suc·
cess.
Splureina on blg meals and dinin& out was "a way to 1bow
aucceu." And aome tbouabt fat people were "jolly." But, said
Mallin, "Generally, fat people are sad." He said he hopes bis
children learned from bis anguish and wlll be "spa.red • . . the
sadness."
Looking back, he said, "I orten wonder how I did it," bellev.
ln1 at the same time the adate that ''under every f'at man is a tbln
man trying to break out.''
H11man
Trials
UFged
NEW YORK (AP) -A major
study or Laetrile shows the sub-
stance has no "preven-'
tive ... nor curative anticancer activity," )Jemorial Sloan-
Kettering Cancer Center an-
nounced today.
"We do not have evidence sup.
porting taklnc amy1dalin
(Laetrile) to cUnical trial
although other considerations
may require that one be conduct.
ed." the cancer center said.
· The scienU..ts said their experl· menta on mice did not teat
whether Laetrile can le.9aen pain.
as proponents claim. They said
the experiments also indicated
that Laetrile does not ba\le any
harmful effect, although aome
mice died when given escessively
large doses.
Dr. Lewis Thomas, president
of the center, baa said be believes
human trials ol Laetrile must be
conducted because ol such fac.
tors as the growing number of
states that have leaalized
Laetrile.
The U.S. FoOd and Drug Ad-
ministration bu banned use ol
Laetrile in interstate commerce
became it says the substance bas
not been proven safe or effective.
In the past year, Laetrlle,
which is derived from peach or
apricot pits or bitter almonds,
has been lecalized in Alaska, In-
diana, F1orida, Arizona, Nevada,
Texas and Washington State.
At a news conference today,
Sloan-Kettering said the study
shows Laetrile possesses
"neither preventive, nor tumor-
regresaant, nor antlmetutatic,
nor curative anticancer ac-
tivity."
The cancer center released the
results ol a f'our-year 1tudy of Uie
substabce. Two manuscripts
comprising 90 pages are to be
published in the Journal of
Sur1lcal Oncoloa.
One ol them deals with tumors
that are transplanted in rodents.
Tbe second, more ektensive
study, deals wltb spon~ly
occurrinl cancer ln mice.
. In the tran1planted tumors,
Sloan-Ketterlnf said, Laetrile
showed no beneficial 'ffects -against any of 10 different l)'Pe9 S ddl b k C D ofcancer. a e ac 0 eoe According to.tbe1 aecond
· " manuscript, a settes of atudtes
Remap Needed?
The number of reaistered
votera tn the Saddleback Collece
Dllbict bas more than doubled in
the put five years, leadlnl
trustees to the conclusion tbat
some redlstrlctm1 ls in order.
It WU iJinoilt live years lCO. ln
Nove~ber ol 11'72, that votera q>-
proved the lut redl1trlctin1
plan, -ti.Ith expanded ttie Collea•
board fl'Olft ftftl to seven mem.·
bef1 by placlni Jtvlae and the
Saddlebact Valley·lnto arua ol
their own.
At the time. there •ere about
1$,000 •ot•r1 ~ll the dlat.rlct,
which tDcom~ about~ {let·
cent ol the count.J0& •eotT•pbJcal area. The •ots roUa at• now
OYft' 150,000.
11CiinQy ftlabt ll'Ultees decided
to ... lei the Jot, of •tud.Jina NI'·
.rent boundan• and t.rUau. area pop•laUoa fll•r•• to
mat.Ma#k:a s.wuetor James
~· ataUaUeal tiackpcNncl
wt Jm ~· ln local~·
emment made him the lotrical
choice to study the possibility ol
recllatrictlng," said District Busi·
nesa Manqer Roy Barletta.
U 'J'.borpe'• findings support
the lOl\i·b•ld opinion of di.strict
offlctats that some trustee areas
are out ol line 1" terms ol op-
tl mum population, a new re.
district.lnl vote mllht be·~
"An election can be a Yery COi•
t1y tblaa." said Barletta. "l think
t:ruatee9 would pt'Obabty try to aet
It for a time When another elec·
tlo_!\ ·~~~lace." Tt»orpt. w bu been Mqorol
San .luao Capl1trano and an
Orani• OOUrity plal)nlnl tom·
ml.Mlootl'. aald today be aUU
lln •t too ture wbat the at.Udy Will ntaU.
••Tbf q\MltlOD of redlltrlctini
wu rabed about a yur 110.
before tbe mt UWit.ei .iec&D,"
flMW'pt Mid. "S..etil Ll'1llleel tbaupt the cllltrkt •1 u u wen
wa.rOilotMl.-..''
<IMUllAP,P11
• failed to reproduce reported
slim ol anucancer acUvtty reo
ported previously by Dr.
Kanematsu Suaiura oC Sloan-
Kettertna.
Gottlieb is puUcularly dis··
tnated by the ru~ors that TAI •ill bit the Harbor Area like a
patt of earpetbaaen, 11abbi.ne Ott a quick praftt to leave tnahy
development and a patchwork of
small landowners in theirwalte.
Nothinc could be further from
the truth, be insiats.
"We are all businessmen with coocl reput.at.Lom. We're not com·
inl ln to tear things down. We
build tbinl• up. We're not a
bunch ol rapltts."
A spokesman for A. Allred
Taubman eontacted tocla.Y nld
the Detroit developer woatd"bne
no comment en GoUUeb'• state-
ments and further claimed that
Gottlieb'5not "invol'ftd" lnTAI.
But Gottlieb aaya be was lbe
catalyst in tbe fcrmaUoa of TAI.
In addition to beiq a retired
(See VEIL, Pase AJ)
.., ...... s.... .....
BENITA BRYANT DOES HER THING AT VIEJO SCHOOL
Am Woman Groundskeeper In C•pl1trano Dlttrtct
Rake, Shovel Job
Tools for .Woman
By ANNE COOPER
Of IM o.llY ~lot Slaff
The groundskeeper at Castille
Elementary School in Mission
Viejo this weeJt carried tbe wsuaJ rakes an(j shovels and wore a
work shirt, jeans, boots -and
mascara.
Benita Bryant. 23, is one of a growing number or female
maintenance personnel in South
Orange County schools. The
Capistrano Unified School Dis·
trlct employs a woman custo-
dian, as welt as Miss Bryant.
The SaddJeback Unified School
District bas two female custo-
di ans and a female
groundskeeper. Inine Unified
has a woman custodian and a
woman pbys~cal education equip.
New El Toro
Postm~ster
Carries Mail
ment pei-soo. Saddleback College
baa a female groundskeeper. On-
ly Laguna Beach Unified bas an
all-male maintenance staff.
"I think Mr. Dawson hired me
because his daughter is studying
agriculture," Miss Bryant said of
her interview with Capistrano's
facilities and services direct.or.
'•He said other guys bave given
her the benefit of the doubt in ber
field, so he was willing to do the
same for me."
After six weeks of' work.inc as
the only woman on a seven.man
crew, Miss Bryant aaid she likes
her job and wants to stay with tbe
school district, working into posi·
lions of ereater responsibility
and higher pay.
"l make good money, get to
work outdoors and I'm not work·
ing under etreas,:• she said. "I'd
<See DEPE&, hte AJ)
Coast
Weather
Some lOW clOUdiiless late
tonl1ht throu1b mid·
morninc Tburad ay.
Otherwise 1U11DY 'nlunday
wltb hlJbl raniinC from 68
to '72 at beaches to '75 to *>
inland. Lows ta:Uibi $8 to a.
INSIDE TODAY .
··-II• rt .... ~HSllet
~-.-:.:: .. ~eel ~ • ot lnllla but tu Id·
........ ElTon>.
la bM: roocn ot U.. •mall ;mt amc. ca ltl Ttn Road. Uaere
• ve alots full of m for ad-
4raaa wl11e:re lhc:re are 110
And. there are m.aa.y
«bu slGb with mall for compiel·
eel and ~ housea wbett
th_.. an ao mailbox-..
"Somec.lmea Jt takes a new
homeowner quite awhile to put
up • mailbox... the poatmuter
explalned.
Until the boxes are installed,
new residents have to go to the
post office to 1et their mail.
Often, be aaid, half of the people
in the llDes at the small office are
w aitiog to pick up their mail.
Vlletstra believes this ia part of
the reason for the two big com-
plaints about the office -long
lines and liWe parking.
By trying to get the new de-
liveries out as soon aa possible.
he hopes to eliminate some of
these problems.
Otherwise, he said, little can be
done until a new. larger office is
built "hopefully" next year, be
saJd. I
Vlletstra said he has no major
changes planned for the office.
··A post office la a poat office," he
explained. "You really can't go
out and do anything on your
own."
o.11, ,.,~Ji.ft ......
CARRIES MAIL TOO
Postmaster Vllestra
Eight Seized
. In Gay Proteat
CHICAGO (AP) -Eight peo·
pie were arrested during a de-
monstration by an estimated
2,000 gay-rights s upporters
against a concert appearance by
singer Anita Bryant.
Four of those arrested Tuesday
night were charged with dis·
orderly conduct and released on
S25 bond each. Four others were
cha rged with battery and dis·.
orderly conduct and were re-
leased on $100 bond each.
Viejo Thief Gets
Television Set
A television set valued at $300
was stolen from a Mission Viejo
home by a burglar who entered
via lbe kitchen window, Orange
County sheriff's officers said.
Deputies aaid engineer Roger
Monroe Daty, 48, and his family
were asleep in bed when the theft
occurred. They said the intruder
toot a container of Ult from the
kitchen cupboard and left it on
the rear fence witb a beer bottle.
OftANGICOAST se
DAILY PILOT
.. -
DMIY PIW ,.__.,., aic...-K.-.W
FIVE GENERATIONS CELEBRATE A CENTURY PLUS THREE
From L9ft. Mn. Dunn, MlcMlte (7 moe.), Mn. Dorr, Berth• (103), Mra. M•r•k
I 03 and Counting . .
1 She'• Got Four Cards From Preaidenu
f By ROBERT BARKER
OI IM O.tllr l'llOl 51.tff
It's not every day that one gets a birthday Mrs. Schaum, who was born in Ferdinand,
card from the President of the United States. Ind., in 1874, said she never drank or smoked.
Mn. BerthaSchaumhasreceivedfour. She thinks that might be a reason for her
The latest arrived this week in time to longevity.
help Mn. Schaum celebrate her 103rd birth-
day Tuesday in a Weatmlnater convalescent hospital.
She Neeived her first presidential greet-
ing from President Nixon ln 1974 when she re-
ached the century mart. Two others have ar·
rived from Prealdeat Ford and the last came
from Rosalynn and .Jimmy Carter th.is week.
HER DAUGHTER, MRS. HELEN Dunn,
says Mrs. Schaum is in reasonably good
health except for infirmities which have near-
ly taken away her sight and bearing ..
11&8. SCllAUI TBINK8 THE honors are rme and it's nice of the presidents lo think or
her, but, if she bad her druthers, she would
prefer to be 18 a1aln.
Mrs. Scbaum, who was formerly a resident
o( Huntington Beach, was joined in the
celebration by four generations of her offspr· inc. All reside in Huotiqton Beach.
They include Mrs. Dunn; her daupter
·Mrs. Patricia Marek; her daughter, Mn. Lin·
da Door, and her daughter, Michelle, who wu
seven months old on her great-areal·
grandmOther's birthday.
"I can't believe that I am 100," she said.
"I'd just like to be 18 again."
Pot Bust .......
OC Newsman Arrested
State Bureau of Narcotics En·
forcement agents visited the
home of Anaheim Bulletin
newspaper ManagU1g Editor
Marvin R. "Marv" Olsen Mon·
day night and arrested him on
. marijuana possession charees.
Olsen, 43, WU booked for in·
vestigatioo of possession of mari·
juaoa for sale and cUltivation of marijuana.
He was released from custody
on his own recognbance, promis·
ing to appear to ans wer the
charges on a date yet to be
scheduled in Central Oran1e
County .Judicial District Court.
A spokesman for the Bureau of
Narcotics Enforcement said to-
day that three plants were seized
as evidence. in addition to a
small quantity of alleged mari-
juana inside the home.·
Investigators said they
checked Olsen's backyard on the
basis of a tip from Orange County
political financier Gene Conrad
who is presently indicted on
seven counts of fraud connected
with his loan brokerage firm.
The state agency normally
concentrates attention on drug
dealers. City police would
normally handle a matter lnvolv·
iog smaller quantities of alleged
marijuana.
Olsen discussed his arrest at
great length with a Daily Pilot
newsman today. but declined to
elaborate on any issue of guilt or
innocence because he had not _
consulted his attorney.
The Los Angeles Times quoted
financier Conrad as saying he
Upped off authorities partly
because the newspaper Olsen
edita 11 owned by Freedom
,...,. l"llfle Al
I
VEIL UFl'ED ••• ·~
military man-be graduated
from the U.S. Military Academy
jn 1921-he is also retired from
the trucking business in Cblcago.
sortium is builder Donald Bren, a
one-time Newport Beach resi·
dent and former president. of. the
Mission Viejo Company.
Newspapers, Inc., which also
publishes the Santa Ana Register.
Conrad told the Times he bas
been a ntagonized by the
Freedom Newspaper chain's
coverage or his political ac-
tivities a nd criminal indict-
ments.
F,.._PageAJ
REMAP ••.
Thorpe said it would probably
be (airly easy to realign the
trustee area ~undaries to main·
tain the integrity of existing
cities or other political boun·
daries.
He said he expects some ex·
pansion in the geographical size
of the two srnall areas serving
Tustin, which was once the dis·
trict's m08t populous r egion.
Although Saddleback trustees
are elected ''at large," they also
represent a particular group of
constituents that ls theoretically
one-seventh of the total number
of registered voters in the dis·
trict.
eligions
Revival Due?
NEW YOU <AP> -NJstco ........ to be "~ OeoqeGallupJr.UldtoilQtti.at a powWft&) t1uuatn for U.. ,.
turveya ban found mounUnc ll•lowl ....tval.
evidae. Uliil U~ States ••1na7 But ~p Mk! the IUneJ'S
be lD an eUIJ 81.qe of a prd.ound na1..a..l that Amert ca IDl7 be relJ&Soi.aueviril.. oaJ1 •-svperad•llY re ous,.
Wrltlnc ta tbe Juqe issue of the ,.Stb re.lieiao Oil Uae U9Swlnr.
Journal ot CUJ'rent Social lsaaa, "while "moralltJ is loslq ita io·
GaU'lP aald evidellce for bls auf· Ouence."
1ation iocluded a rise in church • He laid that while M pereeot of
atteadwe in 19'18, ·for tile first people nsponcHq to Gall\q> in-
tlmeln nearlytwodecada, terv\ewa •aid they believed in
He said bis •utTeT showed C2 ·'God, OI' a unlvel"lal aplrit;• onb'
percent of Americans attended U peieem aa.ld they bad "• peat
church or synaioeue ln a typical deaJotconlidtaceinorsU!&edn-week. llcloo."
•'Our surveys also showed Among the factors be said
church membership to be on the · could account for lncreued re-
upnriq duriJll the year, with Ugious acUvity In the nat.Jora
about seven in 10 now describln& were:
themselves as church mem-A•..-~ .... in -~ •-__.. ben ''bewrote -..... ....._ w .. u MIS~~ ~ said six· in 10 people sur-· fu'e fro~ pressures of every~
veyed say their relleious beliefs ~ extstence,
are "very important" and cited -A search (or noomat.erial
u furtbe:revidenceofrevival the values;
considerable interest in what be
termed .-.experimental religion. such as mysticism, yoga and
transcendental meditation.
He said the evangelical move·
F,...PageAJ
KEEPER •••
. m ucb rather do this than work as
a store clerk or office worker."
Employed in a traditionally
male position, Miss Bryant
makes about $100 more a month
than she would have if abe bad
started with 1he district in a
clerical poeiti&n, tl'aditlonally
held by women.
ln fact, even clerical positions
requiring advanced skills pay
Jess than Miss Bryant is earning
a.s groundakeeper.
•"I've had to learn quite a bit -
bow to operate a rotary mower,
do pnming and the like." she
said. "But I don't find it physical·
ly straining. l think any average
girl could do it.'•
Miss Bryant, who supports a
5· year-old daughter. Mollssa, ap.
plied for the groundskee~r posi-
tion when she saw it advertised
in a newspaper.
A friend works as a
groundskeeper at Saddleback
College and introduced Miss
Bryant to bis female ~ounterpart
there, Darlene Hill.
"l talked to Darlene, and she is
enthusiastic about her job,•' Miss
Bryant aaid. "It sounded Ilke
something l'dliketodo."
How does she feel about being
the first woman groundskeeper
in the Capistrano school district'?
"Oh, I'm not at all liberated,"
she said. "I'm not a screamer. I
just do my job."
And what if she found out a
man with the same work ex-
perience bad been hired at a
higher salary?
"It wouldn't bother me," she
said. "I do my Job. I don't miss
work, and I show up on time.
They notice that."
"Miss Bryant is working on a
groundskeeping crew responsi·
• ble for five schools at the north
end of the Capistrano school dis·
tri ct," s aid facilities and
services director Dawson.
"She is bandilng heavy equip.
ment. doing everything the other
groundskeepers do. She is wOl'k·
ing out very, very well."
-Presldent Carter's open dis·
cuulon of bis own religious
beliefs;
-A normal upswing folJowing
a decline in religious interest and
activl'>'.
The journal is a publication ~
the Board for Homeland
Ministries o! the United Church
ofChrisL
E'rea Paffe Al .\ ,.
PLANE •••
for burcJary and malicious Ulis· chief at the airpor\.
Orange County Sheri/f's of-
ficers said Ellis, 23, of Corona del
Mar, la in Orange County Jail to-
day. Radio and navigational
equipment valued at $3,900 was
reported stolen from aircraft
parked at the Capistrano field.
Steve Heath, assistant
manager at. the airport, said El-
lis reporU!d to the airport on June
2. No connecuon baa been made
between EJUs and the tampering
with plane brakes reported June 1, Heath said.
City Manager Mocalis said city
employes are being used tem-
porarily to monitor airport ac·
tivlty until two qualified airfield '
spotters can be hired.
.. It's unfortunate that the
person the security service sent
down got involved in this illegal
activity," Mocalis said. "That's
something over which the city
had no control."
Service Station
mt by Burglar
J
An intruder who cut the glass
out of the door to gain entry took
$28'1.10 in cash from a Sad·
dlebact Valley service s~tloo;
Orange County s~eritf's officers .
said.
Deputies said the burglar used
a hidden key to open the safe at
Chuck Miller's Union '16 station,
25912 La Pu Road, after Miller
bad closed the premises for the
night.
"I'm supposed to be retired,"
he confided. "but I like to put
things together." He apparently wm get a share in TAI as bis
commission in the sale.
. "The Colonel" is a channine.
lundly man, well-known in the
Los An&eles business community
and called the "Candy Man"
because of bis habit of carrying
and handing them out to people be meets.
He said he began following the
sale d the Irvine Compan1 18
months a,go, but did not act on his idea to form a group to buy it
because be assumed the deal
with Mobil Corp. was WTapped
up.
Gottlieb says Bren is the only
man who was not brou1bt into the
consortium-be asked to get into
the deal throup Taubman with
whom he'd worked on a project
lo the Sao Francisco Bay Area.
Like other conaortlum members,
Bren declined all comments.
As far as the inner wOl'kings of
the partnership, Gottlieb is
charming, but evasive.
Taubman was more or less ap.
pointed spokesman and be won't be talking to anyone until after
July25.
Lynn Ha rt HART'S John Hart
SPORTING GOODS
He said he found out otherwise from a friend and business as-
sociate, Keith Gaede. Gaede is a
director of the Irvine Company
and husband of Linda Irvine
Gaede, one of James Irvine's
uanddaufhten.
Gaede reportedly told Gottlieb
that bis wife's cousin, Joan
Irvine Smith, bad tied up tbe
MobU sale in cowt., that the deal
was far from wrapped up:
Gaededeclinectall comment.
Gottlieb said be ~as in·
troducecUo Mn. Gaede and Mn.
Smltb and cledded to form a
Plrtiie"lhlp to 1et into the 1a1 ..
The nrat person be contacl4d
1'U l\ia friend and butln &I·
aocl1t.e of'° )'HJ'I, Cbafles Al· lf:D. the corporate combat
1peelalllt t'tOm Wall Street.
"Charlie.•• as he'• called by
Gottlieb, contacted A. AlfNd
Taubman • .Max Fbher ana
Henry Ford D. all Detroit tnen be•d worted "1th befqre;
Allen aJ.io brciUcht tri th• too aorUum•a pa11lve innatbrt,
MUtoft Mrl~ a New Jener leilJ.
ct.Gt .tlD owu a cb&ln Of edt
COMt e~ lt«el .ncs Hafald.
Mar~~ an lmpett.at VllJey qrl·lneeemu.
Tb• tentll m111 la lb ~·
Accordin& to hls public rela·
tions stall, Taubman !eels it ls
premature to lay anything about
the sale unW It closes.
Acquaintances say Taubman
vtewe the sale as extremely
tentatlve--ntber like an Option
to buy-end unW the deadllne
bat been met. be won't have
ao)'thinc to aay.
Gottlieb hint5 there will be no
tanner who will control a ma·
ortty of TAI. All will apparently
old minority btterefls based OD
the portion of their investment.
He paused. "You know,
Charlie Allen could have handled
thll w._,.e UUni himself, but he's
an tn an investment house and
the Sl!!C hu • n.ile that St.JI tC
you'"-Solrilto make an offer on aometJUDi like thls, you have to
• t that mucb money asldo.
"Charlie need.I tho caplt.J to
keep hi• Investments 1otn1. T'hat'awby-.MupTAl.0
• LedQa tlitoalb a tl\ick J)acltet of doeumtell, Gottlieb tead Oft
the lllmt9 ol th banb that Will
provtct. I.ht balance of TAl'• in· veatmen\ln the lniine company.
Jt appe"1s tbero are comnut· menu up to abaut '3(M) Wllloa,
but no bank bU a commitment
'1••terthu $35 niil.Uon.
'
538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919
Barbell Sets Wilson.OanfOp.Bilcroft -' Yonex·DavfS·Prilce Racbts Dumbelf Sets Rac1paet Ball I~ Is Balls Solid Dumbells Handball GlneS & Ball$ Exeroms TenniS Ws Jump Ro,.. Badminttn Rackets Trim Wiiiets Table Tiim PaMas Doors. Tennis Shirts & Shorts
Tennis DrisSIS
' .. •
f
• CONSUllDS BA ft IQt Y&US comp& ... .,_
~ about bealtb apes tb:at tab lllCllM7 yd b"t
ope.a. buUderw wbo accept depoel'-..S doa't ~ tlle
collStJ'Qcdion, *· Under an amendment to tbe feden! ~ eoc1o
propoeed by ll1llleetlt Fenwick <R·N.J.}, eonaumert WClald
be stven preference lo the eventol lnaolveaq. Tbe ~ bu the support ol the commiuee cm busJ.neq law al the 1ti;r
York State Bar Aasoda·
tioa u well q the com· mitt~ on bankruptcy and corporate re·
orcanbatiion of tbe As·
sociatloo ol t,he Bar lo
New York Ci~.
But even this would . •
not solve the problem satisfactorily. Wbat Uthe Htaller'
already has sold lta asset.st EverytblDg on the floor beloap
t.o a finance company, or .. factor." The faetor frequeotty
buys the accounts owed to the buslneu, u well u its lnftn-
tory and pbysJcal uaets. and may pay less than they we
worth. A small business may be compelled to aaree to thll
because it needs money at oace.
WHAT IF TOE FACl'Oll llAS EXTENDED a loan aDd the useta of tbe firm have been pledaed to pay tbe Joan JD
the event of default? The factor ts a "secured" creditor UD•
der these circwnstancea and sets its cut of the pled1ecl ~
perty before anybody else.
Often tbla system ls the only way a business on the eci.._
of bankruptcy can 1et Immediate cash.
In either cue, the catch ts tbat the consumer wlll not be aware ol tbia arrancement and you can be badly hurt..
Because of tbts, many expe~ would go beyond the Nwict
P.roposal and live the consumer a preference eveta ~
'secured" credit.on.
AN A'ITACK ON THE PROBLEM also ls beiJli made at
state and local levels. For i.DJtance, many pf'OIJO.'ala woald require consumers• deposibl to be placed in escrow until tbe
goods are delivered.
It sounds fair. but the idea ralaes abrieks ol aeonytrom small businesses that peed this money u workJ.nc eap\tal t.o
continue to operate and even just to pay the renL The escrow requirement could cause a hefty number of 0 mom
and pop" retailers to close.
Under another alternative betne atudled, the state
would set up a lien in favor ol the consumer in the ameunt of
the deposit. Under another proposal, a retail deposit ln•
surance fund would be established into which each retailer
would contribute a small amount. The fund would help to
spread the Joss when consumer deposits are lost in an In· solvency.
Punch
"Pa.rely la tum• of ..W.,.. coplu, I da1Dk..,. om rt,.n
eheuld be .. ·~·· ......
Am.ex Okays List
Of Mercury·Stock
The American Stock Exchanae bu approftcl for
orlCinal lilting 2,880,181 commoll aharea of MerC1U7 Sa'f-
in&• and Loan A.asoclaUon. ffantmatoD Bea.Ch. Mercury la a Callfomia corporaUon UeeiUell b1 tllie
Department of Savina• and i.o.n aDd ii a member ot tlle
Federal Home Loan Bank System; .. ,.lnP aecounta are Sia·
au red by the Federal Saviftt,I ~Loan tmuranee Orp.
The company ls licensed to operate left oftlees, ol WtiJCh
seven are m Oranae and Lo& Angeles counties aDcl three iD
Santa aara CoUnt1. • o~ in April 1964. Mm:my ahowed llM!U ot nearl1 *340 million as of Dec. at. 1m. Wiu.out llaviaa participated
In elth~ mereen or acquialtlom. For the 1m J\acat year, Ntf"CUl'Y ~ umtncl ell
$3,920,000 m iroat ineome o1 Sfl,710.000, eamput!d WiOI · earni.a.P Of "'9,000 on ~ l.neOm• ol $11-..11*.' Ill the~
vl~year.
Forecast in RePort