HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-06-29 - Orange Coast Pilot'
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Navg t Reveals
LBI~ BIOi Skin Cancel-. . . . .
"°'-• Jlf !90, ... • HCTIOfl .. • .....
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• • • •
.. Set .. . ·oc · Airport Study
1
Top Court 8 ""11 '·I Ditching .on a Ditcher I 33~o,o~o
Rework
Death Penalty ·-~ · ~ EIR Needs
-Nixed in Rape 0=G~~~~~~ ·~
• WASIDNGTON <AP) -The
U.S. Supreme Court ruled today
that stat.es may not impose the
death penalty for the crime or
rape.
The court said the death penal-
ty "is a dJsproportionat.c punish-
ment for rape "
"Jl is difficult to accept the no·
~ion. and we do not, that the rape,
ith or without aggravating
ircums tances, shoula be
unlshed more heavlly than the
ellberalc killer as long as the
apist does not himself take the
lfe of his victim," the court said
n an opinion by Justice Byron R.
White. I The court's action. decided by
.a 7-2 vote, struck down the death
.11entence a Georgia court 1m-
'P<>Sed on Ehrlich Anthony Coker.
GKI'mEBIRD
Wl1H PILOT AD
' He walb, he talks. ho dances
on his belly like a reptJle ••• but
your landlord said, "No pets"
Now what do you do?
.. J eold blm, case and all, with
a Daily PUotclaaslned ad."
That's the testimony or a p,sta
Mesa woman who placed this
claaallied ad:
Conure parrot with cafe,
BeautlfUl eolorln1. $'7S.
XXX•XXXX
tt you can't keep your :fJt, or ban aomethins ~IH you d like
to convert to cuh. call 842-5678. Tbe Daily Pilot Is the place to
•4verti1e alon' the Oranae
.Coast.
convicted rot 4 rape of a
16-year-old Waycross, Ga ..
housewife who three weeks
before had given birth to her first
child.
Althouah Georgia's law con-
cerned the rape of adult women,
the court deci1ion 's wordin1 in-
dicated that states may not im·
pose the death penalty even for
the rape of children.
Joining White's opinion were
Justices Potter Stewart, Harry
A. Blackmun and John Paul
Stevens. Justices William J .
Brennan Jr. and Thurgood
Marshall, who oppose the death
penalty under any circumstance
for any crime. filed concurring
opinions.
Just.Ice Lewis F. Powell Jr.
voted to strike down Coker's sen-
tence but said he did not think the
death penalty for rape was cruel
and unusual puniabmeot ln all
circumstances.
"Although rape invariably la a
reprehensible crime, there la no
lndlcaUon lhat petiUpner•s of.
fense was committed with ex·
cessive bruUlity or that the vie·
Um sustained serious or lasting
injury.'' Powell said.
Chlet Juattce Warren E.
Burier and JusUce WllUam H.
Rehnqulat dllseoted, saytnc that
the death penalty for rape can be
a Justified puniahment.
The cowt'a declaton dealt only
with the crime of rape but It may
have a profound impact on the
history of capital punishment 1n
tbe United States.
Had the court ruled that atates
may lmpoee the de•th ·Penalty
for crimes ln whith tbe Uf e of tlwt
vicUm wu not taken, tt could
<See RAP£, Pase AJ>
Skin Caneer
I.BJ DUeaae RevealBd
While Wes Willoughby pedals, Denise
White tags along on roller skates, pulllng
Deborah White with her. The scene ot the
chaln re1ction hitchhiking
Beach In San Diego.
Lawyer Sick;
Judge Delays
Cella Hearing
Sister Serea s
Scout Abducted
From C'1tm'p Tent
An environmental impact re-
port coverln1 Orange County
Airport headed nowhere in a
hurry Tuesday when the County
Planning Commission ordered it
overhauled
The commission's order to re·
turn the four·year, $300,000
airport study to the county staff
members and the consultant who
prepared it fell short of outrighl
reJecUon. · But it wu the closest thing to it
as a tt\ree-hour public hearing
ended in victory for crillcs of the .
costly study.
It won't be until "sometime •
between Christmas and Easler"
that the reworked environmental:
impact report will make its way
back to the planning commission
for acceptance or rejection .
Meanwhile, operations and
proposed capital improvement
projects al Orange County
Airport wlll be ln a holding pat-
tern, bolled down in the failure
or the report to win approval
from the planning commwion
and the board of supervisors.
Commission action on the
study followed the recommenda-
tions ot. the county's Environ·
mental Mana1ement Agency
<EMA) staf( .
EMA's manager of environ·
mental services •. Denoia
Sundstrom,· conceded that the;
hefty report tn ltl present fonn ls .
(See AIRPORT, Page AZ)
Coast
Weather .
Patchy low clOuda 1long
the coat ton14t and early In the mornlnr. Mostly · f
sunny Thursday with some
hlib cloud.In 1 at times: 1
Lowa tonl1bt 58 to 83. f
· Hl1ha ThUJ'ldQ 68 to '72 at
beacbea to '18 to 8' Inland.
. .
IN IDETOD.4Y
.l
'
'Yaellt ft• F o a•d er
C. V. Wurdemann
I
Succumbs a t 86
Converse V. Wurderuann ol
Newport Beaeb. • retired Edlaon
Company executive and one ol
the founders of the Newport to
!:nsenada Yacht Race, died ear·
l)' Tuesday al a Costa Mesa con·
valescent holpilal where he had
been confined with a lon1 and de-
bilitating Illness. He was 86.
Memorial 1ervice1 for Mr.
Wurdemann will be held Friday
~t 11 a.m. at St. Michael and All
Angels Episcopal Church, 3233
.Pacific View Drive. Newport
8each. Followlnc the service a
Oot11Ja of yachta will carry bis
famlly and friends beyond the
tflree·mile limit where has ashes
wall be scattered al sea.
Besides his widow. Pi>arl. Mr.
Wurdemann leaves a daughter,
Mary Ellen Armstrong of Studio
City: a .stt>pson. William A.
~eav1s of Moraga ; s ix
grandchildren, and two great·
gr andchlldren.
. Mr. Wurdemann was r1ghl·of-
way agent for the Southern
Cahforma Edison Company for
34 years before h1~ retirement in
1956.
Born m Milwaukee, Wisc., Mr.
Wurdemann became infatuated
with sailing and sailboat racing
at an early age, winning his first
trophy at age 6. His early sailing
was on the Wiscon.sln lakes. He
later attended the Unlven11ty or
Wisconsin, graduating tn 1913.
Mr. Wurdemann and his fami-
ly moved to Balboa lsland in
1945. He sailed out ot the Balboa
Y acbl Club of which he was com-
modore in 1952.
He and two business friends
and fellow yachtina enthusiasts
are credited with startina the
Newport Harbor Yachtsmen's
luncheon group when they would
drive to Balboa from Santa Ana
once a week for lunch and a dis-
cussion of yacht racing.
He was also one or a group or
yachtsmen. including the late
George Michaud, who were
credited with roundine the
Newport Ocean Sailing Associ&·
tion <NOSA> which started the
famed Newport to Ensenada
yacht race.
As a racing skipper Mr.
Wurdcmann's preference ran lo
!">mall boats and the fast meter·
boats. He was a champion in the
Pelican Class and later was
known as the "sliver fox" of the
Rhodes-33 Class. He won several
fleet championships In his
crimson-hulled Rhodes-33,
Midslup.
In addition to his activity in
Balboa Yacht Club and NOSA.
Mr. Wurdemann was an
honorary member or the
Southern California YaohlingAs-
sociahon <SCYA).
Fair Weather On
BJ'111e A.asoclated Press
Fair weather will continue
throughout moat of Nortl\ern
California, with toi and low
c louds along the coast and a
chance ol thunderstorm• iD t1le
higher elevations. Inland tem-
peratures skyrocketed Tuesday
wltb reports in the northern
s:nountaina in the a>s aod eoa.
OltANO• COAST I
DAILY PILOT
SUCCUMBS AT ee
ConverM V. Wurdemenn
F ro.Page A l
RAPE •••
have opened the door for future
rulings that capital pumshment
may be valid for crimes such as
treason, espionage, kidnaping,
hijacking and terrorism.
Of course, the court stilt couJd
rule in favor of lbe death penalty
for such crimes but that proeped
is less likely after today's ruling.
"We have conch~ed that a sen-
tence of death is grossly dis-
proportionate and excessive
punishment for the crime of rape
and is therefore forbidden by the
Eighth Amendment as cruel and
unusual pWtishment,' • White aaJd
in speaking for the court.
"Rape is not without deservine
a serious punishment, but in
terms of moral depravity and of
the injury to the person and to the
public, it does not compare with
murder, whieb does Involve tho
unjustified taking ol human
life," White said.
The court's decision affects on-
1 y six: of the 350 death row
prisoners across the nation. Ir the
justices had ruled the other way.
stales thal do not use the death
penalty for rape could have come
under pressure to enact such
legislation.
Youths Throw
Rocks at Cars;
Four Injured
POMONA CAP> -Four people
were hurt and 15 cars dama1ed
when several youtha threw
.grenade-sized rocks at puaine
cars on the San Bernardino Freeway, hichway patrolmen
Hld.
One of the cars hit Mociday
night was that ot Pomona police
Lt. Chet 1bomu. A three-lnch
roct c r ashed through bis
windshield, 1howertnc blm with
chunks of glass and tbWQPlnc
him on thecbest.
.. I ...,ear to God I thou&htl was
shot," be said. The youths all escaped: 'Ibey •ere seen running down an alley
by one witness.
Tot Slayer
Convicted
tyolOP
cou::ntn• cil tho
or••••1•Uon -Alterla, c•ad.Or, 01bo , J donate,
In Kuwait, .NI i , Qatar,
a 1d a -••• resolved to f cw appllcatloa ol lbe acf.
dlUona llve percent inc:teue in
the price ot oO ot July l," I.be
1&.atemanuald.
Tb* oth«' &.wo members are
UbJaandir.q.
Hamid Zahm. the OPEC tn·
formation department chief,
decllned to say why Libya and
the Iraq did not 10 along with the
decllion of the other nine. and
what acUon the remainmg two
OPEC members -Saudi Arabia
and tbe United Arab .Emirates -
wouldt.ke.
There waf 1peculalion that
Uby a # lrM, would to ahead
wtth tbi laditJOnal i percent in
creaHJUb'l.
PrlcH CbJrged by Saudi
Arabia IOd the UAR are still S
percent lower th.n tho.a charged
by the other members, and there
wns speculation the two coun-
tries would not brine their pnces
in line with the majority.
That was the compromise ad-
vocated during a recent Mideast
tour by Venezuelan President
Carlos Andres Pera.
The decision to end the so-
called "lwo·llered .. price
syistem, under which Saudi
Arabia and the UAR charged dif-
ferent prices for oil than the
other OPEC members, has been
widely rumored for weeks.
The Middle East Economic'
Survey said last month the de·
c1slon could s ave otl consuming
nations S2 b1llion. But U.S. oil in-
dustry sources said there would
be litUe savings at the gas pump,
especially Jf Saud1 Arabia boosts
1i.pru:eS percent.
If translated directly. each
dollar increase in the crude oil
price boo&ts gasoline prices by
about 2"2 cents a gallon.
The United Stales imports
about 40 percent of its oil, and
about 20 percent of the imports
are from Saudi Arabia and the
UAR.
OPEC'a members hold about
8t.1 perce nt or lhe non .
Communist world's oil reserve~.
The cartel has :1uccessively
raised prices since the Arab 011
boycott during the 1973 Mideast
war. Before the war, oil cost $3 a
barrel.
From Page Al
AIRPORT •••
Att enti on on Beek
The crew of the Royal Navy aircraft car-Elizabeth, passes by. The Arlc Royal is
rier HMS Ark Royal stands at attention as the flagship of the British fleet assembled
the royal yacht Britannla, carrying Queen fortheSilverJubileereviewatSpithead.
Nader Eyes N~e
Fight in California
NEW YORK CAP) There
will be many more anl1 nuclear
demonstrations such as those al
Seabrook, N.H., and the next one
probably will occur tn Cahfom1a.
possibly near San Luis Obispo.
consumer advocate Ralph Nader
:;ays.
Nader. a !onetime cr1t1c of
nuclear-produced electricity,
said in an interview Tuesday that
opponent& o( nuclear power have
no choice but to express their
views through demonstrations.
.. Its sad that that 1:; the way
the people have to do it," he said.
"The government has closed of(
access to changing decb1ons
through the regulatory pro·
Tranquilizer
Blame d for
Party Illness
Military investigators from
Camp Pendleton Manne Corps
Base are blaming overdoses of
an animal tranquilizer for illness
among six Marines and two
young c1v11ians.
Pendleton officials snid the six:
were found either unconscious or
a c ting irrationally at an
Oceanside apartment occupied
by one of the civilians after a
Monday night party.
Most of the people came to
after being treated by fire de•
partment paramedics, but three
of the Marines remained
hospitalized at the Naval
Regional Medical Center at the
base Tuesday.
Investigators said it appeared
those stricken were consuming
"angel dust," or PCP, an anJmal
tranquilizer capable of knocking
out an elephant, by mixin& lt with
fruit juice.
Baseball SbOas
cesses. What citizen group can
afford $500,000 for legal rees to go
through the tortuous process they
(bureaucrats) have developed?"
Some l ,414 people were arrest·
ed May 1-2 during d emonstra·
ttons against the proposed
nuclear power plant at Seabrook
There were no injuries dunng the
sit· in or subsequent arrests.
In California, the Diablo Ca·
nyon proJecl near San Luis
Obispo has been the source of
controversy because opponents
s ay it is built near a geological
fault that is prone to earth
quakes. The project, virtually
· complete. is awaiting licensing
by federal officials.
Opponents plan a large de·
monstration at the California site
around Aug. 6.
Nader s aid the basic problems
with nuclear energy are tfle
danger or a massive accident.
the huge costs; the need to insure
security of radioactive devices
and lhe storage of dangerous
radioactive wa!!ltes.
The nuclear industry says
there has never been a major ac·
cadent and the possibility of one
1s slim; that reactors produce
cheaper electricity than conven·
I 1onal power plants; th al
radioactive devices can be pro-
tected from extremist groups;
and that storage solutions l!.rc be-
1 n g stymied by cnvironmen·
talista and federal officials.
Action Def e nded .
MOBILE, Ala. CAP> -Mobile
County Shertct Tom Purvis, ac·
cused of helping plot the ambush
s laying of a jail inmate, Louis
Wall ace. 22, says his men were
just carrying out their sworn du-
ty to protect citizens from a
fugitive murderer.
All Purpose Shoes
Soccer Shoes
•
RuMfn2 Shoes
football SIMies
Tennis· Stioes
Yot~l SllOes
BISletml Sllaes
·F~Page AJ
CELLA •••
courtroom · whlle Oella refused
further comment and declined to .
name the other lawyer.
Both Cella, 52, and former
hospital admirustralor Stephen
Robert Evans. 32, face trial on
multiple criminal charges con·.
tamed m a grand jury criminal
indictment.
It 1s aJle~ed that they were in·
vol ved m ac~ of fraud that cost
two hospitals controlled by Cella
as secretary-treas urer an
estimated S2 million ln funds.
It 1s alleged that a s ubstantial
portion of the money utilized by
Cella was used by him to support
poll ta cal candidates
Both men have been tried and •
ronvictcd on related charges in
Los Angeles federal court. They
are free on appeal from CeUa's
five-year prison term and the
one·ycar commitment. ordered
for Evans.
Three Doors
Stolen From
Mesa Center.
The theft of three doors from a
Costa Mesa shopping center to-
day isn't considered an open·and-
:;hut cruse by pohce.
Beaut1c1an tiylv1a Mae Miller,
employed in the center at •62 E.
17th St., reported the three ex-•
terior doors to electrical ouUets
serving tbe center. stolen Tues·
day. ·
Police Officer Eric Snow· told
superiors he is sli&hlly skeptical
of the well-meaning,
hairdresser's door theft accoµnt.
based on h.is own experience.
"For the past lwo years of
patrolling the area, this officer
has observed that these doors
hang on one b.in&e each m0&t or'
the time and lt appears that Lhe ·
doors could have fallen off and
been thrown away," he noted in.·
lua log entry.
Basketballs
· Soccer Balls .
Playfra Balls
otttmls
BaiebilS
Hand Bi1s
lacqiJet Balls · ·
Tennis WI ."'
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:
Mrport
Rep() rt
Returned
BJ GARV GRANVILLE OI t ... o.lly l"I ... IUff
An environmental Impact re-
port coverins Orange County
Airport beaded nowhere in a
hurry Tuesday when the County
Plannin1 CommlJSion ordered it
overhauled.
The commission's order to re-
turn the tour-year. $300,000
airport ~tudy to the county staff
members and the consultant who
prepared it fell short of outright
rejection.
But lt was the closest thing to it
as a three·hour public hearing
ended In victory for critics of lhe
costly study.
It won't be until "sometime
between Christmas and Easter"
that the reworked environmental
impact report will make its way
back to the planning commission
for acceptance or rejection.
Meanwhile. operations and
proposed capital improvement
projects at Orange County
Airport will be In a holding pat·
ten>, bogeed down In the failure
of tbe report to win approval
from the plannln1 commtaaloo
and the board or supervisors.
ComJDiasion action on the
study followed the recommenda-
tlon1 of the C?OWlt)"., Sntiron·
mental Mana1emeut A ncy
<EMA > staff.
EMA'a manager of environ-
rn en t al services, Dennis
Sundstrom. conceded that the
hefty report in its present Corm 1S
"flawed."
"We don't feel the enUre en-
vironmental impact report
should be chucked out .
however," Sundstrom told the
commiaaion.
Newport Beach airport fi1hter
Dan Emory didn't agree with
Sundstror:r)'a assessment. of the
•report.
( In a 4.5-minute dl5course on the
ls hortcomlnrs of the study,
\Emory charged that lt had been
!''deliberately per verted," was
1mlred In bias and ts "little more
i!~an a fraud from start lo 111nisb."
"You should throw the whole
'think back at. the consultant
(Danlel. Mann, Johnson and
'Mendenhall)," the lo ngtime
airport foe told the commission.
He was especially critical of a
Sl0,000 aoc:ial survey done by
POS A11oclatea that accom-
panled the bulky environmental
imp•ct report.
Emory potnU!ld out that the sur-
vey team queatJoned M'1 penons
about. their reaction to the airport
operation and the noise problem,
but that only 19 of those ques-
(8ee AIRPORT, Pa1e A2>
For&ue
29, 1977
s Mesa Park Land Buy
Th• wue was compHeat.ed
further wben a private firm
End of the Line
made a lMt·rnlnute otttt to bu.1 the pl:rk land then atve the coun-
ty ou•tblrd <ii the area for a park
tree ot cbar'I•·
Yet apOkeamen tort.be land's
owner, State Mutual Savlnp and
Loan A.uoclatiol\ of HwiUnctoo
Beach, said they were not ln·
terested 1D lb offer.
ln tbe end. 1upervfaora voted
Def ending champion Chris Evert tries to get her concen·
tration together during a break in her semi-final match
today at Wimbledon. She didn't, losing to Britain's
Virginia Wade, 6-2, 4·6, 6-1. Wade will meet Betty Stove
of The Netherlands in the women's singles final Friday.
See story, Page Bl.
Oh, Yes: Police
Can Do Something
If there is a moral to this story.
it Is self-evident in what hap-
pened to Mary Ann Johnson, 45.
address unknown, at a west side
Costa Mesa intersection Tuesday
night.
Police allege Miss Johnson was
toolln1 down the roadway at
PlacenUa Avenue and Center
Street in a sporty new little
Japanese import auto, too new to
even have license plates yet.
They furtlaer allege she had a
problem ln adequately applying
Ill brakes at a posted boulevard
atop; such a problem tbat the
vehicle •kidded to a halt
sideways.
And th.y allese even Curt.her
that Mist Johnson dealt with Of·
fleer ll'rank Veloz, wbo happened
to be aittlne there w at.china ln b.11
patrol car, in a banh verbal
manner. And they allege even further
that she made these statements
after being pulled over:
..I dldn't run no stop
afsn ••• No, I don't have any
tdentiflcatlon and you can't
make me do anytbln1," ti what
Patrolman Veloz aald she Hid.
Today, Mia Johnson la free on
ball, awaltlna arratinment' ln
court on cbarces of obstructini a
peace olflcer in the perforsnance ot hi• dutte.; relualnc to provide
adequate personal tdenUIJcatlon
to a police oftlcer and runntna a
•atopalgn.
Police never did set her home
addreu fl-om Oran1e County Jail w r w wa• boolted. At leaat no, yet.
C·l to QP1"0YO UM purchue.
SuP.ervlaor Ralph Dledtlcb cut tbe lone dlueriUnc vote. He
1a1d the $14.711 pun:hue price
wu a 1ood offer but he waa not
convinced tho addJUonaJ part
land was needed.
Frederick A. Gace of Currey-
Rlacb Company aald hia firm
was ready to offer the aaviQp
and loan firm $20,000 an acre.
* * *
H4J Af,d part of land would .. , U.. leut. ..
be OPed. by hla firm and Howard ~. teDJor -.le. pre-
about ane-tblrd elven to tbe coun-llld• d ~ · aav1Ap aDd loan
ty frM of ebar•e· He uked llrm. lllked lti,Penilon to pro-
aupervbon to delay their action ceed witb tbe purchase. ff~ &aid
ao be could J)W'IUO acquiaJUon. the firm wlintad the 1ale to be ~ completedbyJuno30.
But Supervisor Tom Riley He ll1ao aa1cf bis firm had re-
q u Htf oned the last-minute celved no offer from Currey-
nature of the offer, saytn1 •• Rlacb and was not. interested an
••Frankly I am very annoyed to dlacuulq it.
* * * * * * ·Preserve for Mesa
Recreation Progi-ams Set iii New Park
The new 284·acre Fairview
Reclonal Park ln Cotta Mesa will
contain a mixture of nature study
and wildllfe areas along with pie·
nic and family recreation
facilities.
Tuesday county aupervlaors
approved the park's develop-
ment plan. expected lo cost about
$6 mUlion.
The new park will be located on
land aloni lbe Santa Ana River
south of Adams Avenue and wlll
be used jotnUy for county and city
recreation prosranu.
Supervisors also hired the
Newport Beach firm of Boyle
Engineering Corporation to pre-
pare constnaction doc:umenu for
Tentative
N-M Budget
To .Cut Tax
That means Newport-Mesa
Unified School Diltrlct taxes for
1977·78 would be about $3.73 per
$100 uaeued valuation In Costa
Mesa and S3.'3 per SlOO useued
valuation tn Newport Beach.
Tb• anticipated reductJon ta
due to projected tncreates ln at·
1e11ed veJuatton for the two
cities and potential financial re· net from Sacramento, dlatrlct of•
ficialuald ••
It doesn't necessarily mean a
decrease ln tax bills. That wUl
depend on the size of Increases ln
asseaaed valuaUon.
The acbool board approved a
$4.9.3 mlllton tentaUv.t spendina program for next year. District
officials said tbe 2.3 percent In·
crease over latt year'• bud1et is
due to aalary and fringe benefit
lncreua.
Trustees a110 dtseusaed the
possibility or a further one~t
cut In the dlatrtct'a community
nrvice tax rate, but held off ac·
lion on the propoul until dJstrtct
officials c1.11 prepare a report on
what such a cut would mean.
The final school budeet will be
adopted durln' the first week ln
Auauat. The 1pen4lna plan tor
fiscal year lrTM8 ls subject to
cba!lie unUJ then.
the park'• Urat phase.
That phase, expected to cost
$3.1 mlllioo, Includes gradin1 the
area1~dina access roads and
parkmg for 850 vehicles.
It also will provide a 15-acre
lake for a privately-openled f"ls-
bin1 and boaU.ni concession. In addition, the initial develop-
ment will provide a mea~
area. rest rooms, administra-
tion and wilfllfe interpretive
structw-es.
Later development will include
an area for model glider flylni,
free play areas and facilities for
campina and bicycle, bikini and
equestrian trails.
A report to aupervisota said the
For Rapists
development plan aJ10 calls tor
preservation or an area in the
park once lnhablted by Indians.
Bluffs in the area also will re-
main undisturbed, tbe rtport
said. 1be area will be restored t.o
a natural state by planUn1 native
ncetation, and by 1rading to
create marab, woodland anll
wilderness areat.
The development document
noted the park's annual ope.rat· 1
in1 bud1et will require about
$.110,000 includln1 a 15-membel'
rancer and maintenance staff.
County and Costa Mesa of·
ficiala ue studying the possible
use of r~lalmed waler for ir·
rig a Un& the park area.
High Court Nixes
Death Penalty
WASHINGTON CAP) -The
U.S. SuJnme Court ruled today
that stat.ea may not lzopote the
deatb peftalty for the crime ot
rape.
Tbe court said the death penal.
ty .. is a disproportionate pu.n.iah·
ment for rape.'•
"ll 15 dilficult to accept the no-
tion, and we do not, that the rape,
with or without aggravatlnc
circumstances. should be
punished more heavily than the
Search Opena
For Kidnaped
Girl Scout, 15
deliberate killer as long as the
rapi•t does ~ himself take the
Ute bl h1I victim," tbe court said
in an opinion by Juatice Byron R. White.
Tbe court'• action, decided by
a 7-2 vote, struck down the death
sentence a Georgia court im-
posed on Ehrlich Anthony Coker.
conTtc:ted for the 1974 rape of a
16-year-old Waycross, Ga.,
housewife wbo three weeks
before had 1lven birth to her lirst
child.
Altbouab Georeia 's law con-
cerned tba rape of adult women.
the court decision'• wordin1 in·
dlcated that states may not im-
pose the death penalty even for
tbe rape of children.
Jolnfni White'• opinion were
JuaUces Potter Stewart, Harry
A. Blackmun and John Paul
Stevena. Ju1Uce1 William J .
Brennan Jr. and Thurgood
Marshall, who oppose the death
penalt.y undet any ci.rcumat.ance
for any crime, liled concurring
oplnlom.
Jastlce Lewis F. Powell Jr.
voted to strike down Coker'• ~a·
tenca but said he did not think the
death penalty for rape was cruel
and unusual pu.niabment in all
circumltancee.
..Althouth rape Invariably ls a
reprebemlble crime. there 15 no
Indication that petitioner's of.
tense· wu committed with ex·
cualve bnrtallty or that the vic-
tim austalned aertoua or lastlng
injury," Powell said.
£oast
COnilOminiuma
Wrn Support of
Mesa Plannsn
Succumbs at 86
...., ..... "~
ELECT!D MAYOR
Irvine'• Verdour •
Tactics W in
Top Spot
In Irvine
By IOI.ARY KA YE Ol tllt O•llY ...... St•ll
Bill Vardoulis, the mun who
gummed up the works at city hall
three monlha ago when he re-
fused to cast a vote for mayor,
was elected mayor of Irvine
Tue1day nieht.
Vardoulls' election came on a
4-l vote, with only John Burton
dlsa1reein1 Burton nominated
Mary Ann Gaido and then cast
the sole vote for her,
Mrs Gaido was then elected
mayor pro tem on the same 4·1
vote
When 1t was all said and done,
an obviously disgusted Burton
1rabbed the microphone and
commented. "I know It's only the
end of June and turkey season Is
a Ion~ ways off But 1 've had
enough turk~y hl're rnr one
night ..
Which 111 omptl'Cl Mr!'> (iitHlo to
retort, "I thouRhl 11 was rallt•tl
eating crow, John, not turkey "
After the meeting, Mrs. Galdo
said she thought the change of
mayors was important and
111gnalcd a new unity among the
council
··Rather than hold out and be
mayor mys<'lf. l thought it was
more important that the city be
united," said Mrs. Gaido, ex-
plainin~ why she voted for
Vardoulis.
She said electing a new mayor
was symbolic and eapeoialJy im-
portant now that the city races
new 0'4-ners and managers al the
Irvine Company
The hubbub over who would
hang the gavel in Irvine began
last March, when the council
made several unsuccessful at
tempts to reorganize
The first attempt ended in a
2·2· 1 stalemate, with Mrs. Galdo
and then-mayor Dave Sills each
receiving two votes and
Vardoulls casting the only vote
for himself.
At the next meeting, that vole
changed to a 2 2 deadlock, with
Sills and Mrs. Gaido again rece1v
1ng two votes Thal time.
howeVl'I', Vardouhs reru~ed to
vote for either Sills or M r'i Ga1do
He was no long('r in the running
smce his name was removed as
lhe third place finisher in the
balloting
Vardouhs at that time said he
beheved he should be mayor
because he had received the
second-highest number of voles
tn the council election.
Finally, the council was able to
muster three votes to table the
matter, wluch. in effect, left Sills
as mayor unless the matter
was brou1ht up again.
It was Gabrielle Pryor was put
the matter back on the agenda
and she was the one to nominate
Vardoulis.
At the beginning ot the mcetlna
Tuesday, Sills announced he
would not run again for mayor antt thanked the city staff mem·
bers for makln& his year as
iaayor"rewardlng. ••
DAILY PILOT
yGA&Y GllANVILU OI ._ Doiltt PIM! •l<lff
PollUC'al conaultanl Ar
rde put la •D •PP ar ce
Tuad_, . Ora J• ·
ty Qr J u the JW'Y •1>-pa~n01 Mated th end of lta
••1ht·monlh probe into county
poUUca.
Forde la a partner to William
l.ltcbcr in tile C'OUMJ'• roternoat
polltlcal campaJ1n con.ultln1
firm.
Amona tbe aucceuful Butcher·
Jo'orde candidates in una was
county Supervisor Thomas
RUey. The campaJen slrale&ists
also mana1ed the aucceaaful
primary election camp11ans of
Rep Robert Badham <R
Newport Beach) and Jim Siem
ons, the Newport Beach auto
dealer who without Forde and
Butcher at the controls loet to
Democrat Ron Cordova in the
7'th Assembly District genera.I
election.
But it was Forde's role in coun-
ty Supervisor Philip Anthony's
'76 campaign that was ot interest
to the Grand Jury.
The Butcher-Forde duo saw
then Westminster City Coun
cilman Anthony through the
primary election and into a
runoff for county supervisor with
Santa Ana City Councilman
Harry Yamamoto
Outwardly at least, Anthony
went his own way m his general
election victory over Yamamoto.
But Butcher and Forde were
never t• Crom \'tew u AntbclQy
raced otJ to a b avaly ta eel
lopald 4 victory over Yamamoto.
It ta the .llnanclna of that cam·
paip and th Riles played in 1t
by Supervboc Ralph Olednch,
Fullel'Wn attorney Michael Rem-
tn•ton and ted raJ lndictee Gene
Coorad that bu auract.ed lhe
Grand lW'J'• attention.
Tbrouah amended public dis·
closure statement.a, Anthony hu
admitl~ that saa,ooo wortb ot
loans to hia campaign committee
were not from him but from
Reminiton.
Both Anthony and Remington
insist lhe Remineton loans were
to Anthony personally and that
the cand1date. in turn, lenl the
money to his own campai&n com-
mittee. •
However, a $30.000 loan from
Conrad was originally shown on
Anthony's statements as bor-
rowed from Newport Beach
travel a1ent Ted Cook.
Though those disclosure ad-
justments are known through the
amended disclosure statements,
the Grand Jury also heard Tues-
day from a trio of bank
employes whose testimony is
believed to have bolstered
evidence seized from banks
through recent search warrants.
lt all eoes Into an Investigative
mix that is expected to come to a
head somellme this week as the
Jury's term draws to a close.
Hospital Schedules
Early Fourth Show
A glorious f'ourth ol July
weekend begins early on Thurs
day for patients at Co::;ta Mesa's
Fairview State Hospital with an
aerial fireworks display to <.oqual
what Francis Scott Key saw from
his cell m a British prison ship at
Fort McHenry. Md . the niaht he
wrote the national anthem.
The aerial pyrotechnics begin
at 6 p.m. behind the hospital for
the mentally retarded and
physically handicapped at 2501
Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
Hospital Executive Director
Dr Francis M. Crinella points
out the public 11 invited to attend
and share the fireworks specta-
cle and a series of events on Fn-
day
A 10 30 a m. parade with
floats. wagons. costumed partici-
pants and band music Friday
morning is expected to last near-
ly two hours.
A wild west-style rodeo 1s
scheduled after lunch at 1 p.m. at
the hospital's Bar·40 Ranch
toward the rear of the hospital
grounds on the perimeter road.
The event features cowboys
and a variety or competition for
the pallents at Fairview. plus
plenty of country and western
music.
Pickens and Reid and the Boys
With the Noise will be featured
entertainers with both vocal and
1 ns trumental country and
western sounds.
A sheep chase is scheduled at
1 :30 p.m .. with patients going
after a sheep with a beribboned
tail and a special prize going to
the one who finally removes the
rtbbon.
The annual Tug-0-War pitting
teams of rive male and female
clients each competing to pull
each other into a classic mudhole
ia one 2 p. m . event planned.
Simultaneously, other paUents
will be competing in the always
popular greased pig chase, whlch
Coast College
Board Meets
On Finances
Trustees of the Coast Com-
munity Colleee District meet ,
tonight lo discuss a 1977·78
bud1et of about $88.2 million and
faculty salary matters for the
coming year.
The meetlna wlll be at 8 p.m. in
district offices al 1370 Adams
Ave., Costa Mesai adjacent to the Oranre Coast Col ece campus.
Additional dlacusslona at th~
monthly meetin& wlll lnclude
10111 end obJectl•u dl•trlct trust-. would Ilk• to establiah 11\ t.beco~year.
Tnisleel also wlll bear and dll-c:u11 variom recommend~om offend bj an aecredttaUan team
that nctntlY vlaltecl and ev.iu1t.o
ed t.be Golden West Colloaoeam-
pus In ~untiJlctoo Beach.
promises plenty of fun for
participants and spectators
alik{'
SUCCUMBS AT 86
.converM V. Wurdemann
Fro• Pag~ Al
WTES ...
and fellow yachting enthusiasts
are credited with starting the
Newport Harbor Yachtsmen's
luncheon group when they would
drive to Balboa from Santa Ana
once a week for lunch and a dis-
cusalon ol yacht racina.
He wu also one or a iroup ot
yacht.amen, includlhg lhe late
Geor&e Michaud. who were
credited with founding the
Newport Ocean Sailine Associa-
tion <NOSA> which started the
famed Newport to Ensenada
yacht race.
As a racinl skipper Mr.
Wurdemann 's preference ran to
small boata and the fast meter-
boats. He was a champion ln the
Pelican Class and later was
known as the "silver fox" of the
Rhodes-33 Class. He won aeveral
fleet championships ln his
crl~son·hulled Rhodes-33,
Midship.
In addJUon to his adivity in
Balboa Yacht Club and NOSA,
Mr. Wurdemann was an
honorary m•mber of the
Soutbem CaUromla YachliDC As·
soclaUon <SCYA).
l'erDMed
OU1sid ot Praldent
-t lour yean after be toak
aN vy 1po man d today.
crywu not announced at the time.
"Thero wu never a r«urrence," the spokesm n.
Cmdr. Thomas Coldwell, 1 d of the cancer. r'FrOm
1965 throuah December 1 • some 30 to 40 lesions
were rtm0ved from tho President. All were beni.p.
exceptfor the one episode In October 1967 ...
Coldw 11 said he received authorization from
.Johnson's widow, Lady Bird, to make the surgery
public. Mrs. Johm1on earlier denied rePorts that.
Johnson had a skin cancer on his hand.
Inquiries into Johnson's skin condiUon were pro-
mpted by a story in the Reader's Digest in which Dr.
Edmund Klein. a dermatologist and cancer re-
searcher in New York. says Johnson had skin cancer.
Johnson died in January 1973 of heart disease.
Lal r,
ac eowt
t
lal
port'• • n .._ Gntered • cost. bmeftt •l~y rtlated lO ~ ootati
economic r Ut.y or '*"° operaUons Ill the airport.
Before lsauJ thole
and dlrectl111 the stu4y lO be
vamped, the plannlq& com-
m iHion beard Newport Beach
City Attorney Dennis O'Neill en-
dorse tho staU recoD.1mCDd&Uon
for an OYU&baul.
O'Neill made lt etear tlMt dty
eontl tbf n=port 1Dldequ&Se
because It doesn't aim at arcHlc .
prol)Oled airport proJec&s.
.. Tb.ls document ls no moto
than a 1eneral plan for ~e
County Airport." O'Neill said. •
Oil Price Increase Off
OPEC Majority Cance/A Planned Move
VIENNA, Austria (AP) -A
majority of members ln the
OrganliatJon ot Petroleum Ex ·
porting Countries -OPEC -
has decided to cancel plans for
a five percent increase in the
price of crude oil July 1, the
OPEC secretary general an-
nounced today
The 13-member oU cartel has
been split over price~ since
December when 11 members
called for a two-staee lS percent
The 10 percent increase im·
posed Jan. 1 by the cartel majori-
ty raised the price of their crude
oil to $12.. 70 a barrel. The second
stage of the increase was to have
gone into ettect July 1.
Ali M. Jaidah, the secretary-
generaJ, said In a statement that
the decision to cancel the in-
crease was made "in the interest
of unity and solidarity of OPEC
"The following countries of the
organization Algeria,
Ecuador, Gabon, Indonesia,
Iran. Ku.wait, N1i;t<.'ria , Qatar,
and Venezuela have resolved
to forego the application of the ad-
ditions five percent increase in
~he price of oil of July I." the
s tatement said.
The other two members are
Libya and Iraq.
Hamid Zaherl. the OPEC in·
formation department chief,
declined to say why Libya and
the Iraq dJd not go along with the
decision of the other nine, and
what action the remaining two
OPEC members • Saudi Arabia
GETTHEBIRD
WlTH PILOT AD
He walks, he talks, he dances
on his belly like a rcpl..lle . . hut
your landlord said, "No pets''
Now what do you do?
·'I sold tum, cage and all. with
a Daily Pilot classified ad."
That's the testimony of a Costa
Mesa woman who placed th1s
classified ad .
Conure parrol with l':tl!•'.
B<>aullful colonnt: s7.·,
'('(ll·XXXX
If you can't keep your pet, or
have something else you'd like
to convert to cash, call 642-5678.
The Dally Pilot 1s the place to
advertise alona the Orange
Coast.
and the United Arab Emirates -
would take.
There was speculation that
Libya and Iraq would go ahead
with the additional S percent in-
crease July 1.
Prices char.ged by Saudi
Arabia and the UAR are still 5
percent lower than those char1ed
by tbe other members. and there
was tl)eeuletlon the two coun
tries would not bring their prices
price hike tor 1977. The other two
members. Saudi Arabia and the
Unitect Arab Emirates, opted ror
a five percent increase for the
whole year.
H translated directly. Heh
dollar increue in the crude oil
price boosts gasoline prices by
about 2'h cents a gallon.
The United States imports
about 40 percent of its oil, and
about 20 percent of the imports
are from Saudi Arabia and the
UAR.
OPEC's members hold about
81 1 percent or the non ..
Communist world's on reserves.
The cartel has successively
raised prices since the Arab oil
boycott during the 1973 Mideast
war. Before the war, oil cosl $3"'a
barrel.
Congress Pay Hike
Rollback Refused
WASHINGTON <AP ) The
House refused today to roll back
a $12,900 pay raise members of
Congress received this year and
and corresponding pay raises re-
ceived by more than 20,000 other
officials and employes.
The House defeated an amend-
ment to the legislative ap·
proprialion bill that would have
cut out funds for the raise. Thus,
it reaffirmed with a recorded
vole the increase that went into
effect in March without such a
vote. The vote defealm& the
rollback of the pay hike was 241
to 181.
Opponents or the pay rais<'
argued that the methods by
which tt was put into effect was
s habby, and that Congress
should not protect itself against
an inflation it helped cause.
But supporters said the tn
crease, the second in eight years,
did not even keep pace with the
rising cost of living or the level of
business salaries.
House Spe._ker Thomas P
"Tip" O'Neill was applauded
when he argued that the House
had adopted, to accompany the
pay raise, an ethics code whose
·'heart and soul was full financial
disclosures and a limitation of 15
percent on outside earned in
come ·
The March pay raise went into
effect automatically without the
need for a vote. It raised the
salaries of congressmen and
senators from $44,600 to $57,500
and included pay Increases for
the vice president, Cabinet mem-
bers. other high officials and top
civil servants and federal judges.
Members of the House were
also in line for another pay h.lke.
a cost·of-Uving increase, on Oct. ·
l. But on a 397-20 vote Tuesday,
the House sent lo President
Carter a bill denying the cost-or-
living raise to anyone who re-
ceived the March increase.
The cost.of-living raise has not
been computed but is expected to •
be a.bout J·3 percent. which
would hav amounted to about
$3,500 for members of Congress
TONIGHT
COAST COMMUNITY
COLLEGE BOARD -Regular
meeting, 1370 Adams, 8 p.m.
"JACQUES OREL" -South
Coast Rept>rtory Theater,
Tuesday-Sunday lhrouah JulY :ll,
8p.m
THURSDAV. JUNE 30
FAIRVIEW CELEBRATIOfll
-Fourth of July fireworks show
al dusk Also parade and otber
event.a Friday.
---~ ----=--=~--------
• •
O.lly ll'l•t SUft ,.,,_..
FIREWORKS -THEY'RE NOT LEGAL EVERYWHERE
Don't Do Thi• In Newport Beach or Laguna Beech
Newport Most Firm
On Fireworks Ban
B.r WILLIAM E. HODG£
Of 1"9 D•llY "llol Sutt Fireworks sales bf.'gan Tues
day in three Orange Coast c1l1~
At least two other communities
reiterated their bans on the
pyrotechnic devices.
"We do not permit the sale.
possession or use of fireworks in
lhe city," Newport Beach fire
Captain Jim Topping said Tues
day.
Laguna Beach also prohibits
the a ale or d.lacbar&e of fireworks
Wllhin the city.
But aU other Oranae Coast
cities and county oreas allow
fireworks althou&b selling
criteria vary from place to place
In Fountain Valley, lrvi~ and
Costa Mesa, fireworks went on
sale Tuesday. Fountain Valley 1s
the only city of the three that re
quires a purchaser to be at least
18 years old.
Irvine and Costa Mesa have no
age restrictions.
Huntin,gton Beach. San
Clemente, San Juan Capistrano
and the Saddleback Valley-
Mission Viejo area all restrict
the sale of fireworks. Stands may
not open before 9 a.m. on July I
and must clo~c hy JO pm. on July
4
San Clemente
Woman Guilty
Of Murder Try
A San Clemente woman whose
alleced role in a Placentia killing
wu to inject battery acid into the
veins of the 1crramlng victJm,
pleaded guilty to reduced
charaes Tuesday In Orange
County Su~ior Court.
Scheduied to face trief July 11
on murder charaea, Cynthia Ann
Mendenhall pleac!ed flullly to al
tempted murder in a brief ap·
pearanc:e before Jud&o Everett
W. Dickey.
Mn: MeadenhaU, 24. of 143·C Avenlda del .Mar. wlll be aen-
teneed luly 21. She faces a 'J)Oll'I·
bl• 1tat9 pr\lon term or ~ t.o 20
yean..
She was accU1ed or lnj.cUn&
battery acld lnto the velN oC
Ervin SuUon, 22. of Garden
Grove. after he bad bef!n beaten,
kicked, nogged and dunk9d t.otho
point ol drowning by bta attackers
Three or the four men who •l-
tacked Sutton are now 1ervln1
lone state pri5on terms. A fourth
man drew a county J•ll term
after aid.lng the pr01ecuUon 1n a
aerl .. ,. or 11uper1oc-court trial•.
Age restnctions 10 those c1t1cs
vary Httnlington Beach sets
18 vears old as the minimum
age ·ror fireworks purchase wh1lt•
the other two cities and the Sad
dleback area r~qu1rc a
purchaser to be 16 years old.
All city fire officials said the
age restrictions have allcviatt•d
many problems with fires set by
fireworks.
Counlywide damage Crom
fireworks last year was estimat
ed at $103.000, according t.o coun
ty fire officials. That figure IO
cludea a f70,000 hre in Tustan
which was caused by firework11
thrown on a roor
Total countyw1de 1976 injunes
were estimated at 29 Fire of·
r1c1als stressed that 14 of those In·
1ur1es were due to illegal
fireworks such as cherry bombs
or M ·80s.
Costa Mesa fire Department
spokesman Russ Henderson said
Tuesday his city would prosecute
people for posaession of 11legal
fl reworks.
"According to a state Attorney
General opinion, M·80s and
cherry bombs are considered u
ploaivea and may be prosecuted
as felonies," he said
Fireworks companies are ex·
pecUne 11111 sales to increase
"We're expecting our volume to
increase thts year after a
decrease last year from the
bicentennial." Red Devil
Fireworks vice president for
sales Fred Brookins satd Tues
day
Brookins said fireworks sales
were off last year because many
communities sponsored local
bicentennial celebrations "All you had to do wu 10 out into your
front yard and looi up into the
air," huaid.
According to Brookins, m-
du.try·wide firework• sales are
$10 million in a four-gtatc area
The states are California.
Neyada, Oregon and
W ashtnatoti.
, Brookins said he was nol con·
cerned oYor Possible firework11
buna because of California's ex-
t re rn e drought condltlons.
''There ha Ye been some o.orthem Ca111oroJa cities pauln1 or-
dJruinces banning fireworkJ but
no southern area comraunltles
have," be said.
Meanwhile, a National
Weatber Service spokesman pre·
dieted a .. hot and dusty" Fourth
of July weekend In California
The weather service estimated
temperatures would reach as
hi&h as lOS·dt>grees 1n som<'
areas of the state
State Department of •·orrstry
orllel-1• advised people to keep
llrewoi'ks away from tho bllll
and said the devices should OCtlv
b dltcb•r•ed where they're
told.
l'oratry offlcl1l1 made the foJlowtna rttom.mendatlona for a
ute andaane Fourth of July:
-Keep firework• away from
dry weedl and araas.
-D\achar1e nreworkt at ie .. t
U·feet trom other rtr•workt.
tooee.fttUn or
al could c t<'h
., . .,..
8 ul TuHd•1 tber told
supervtson that wu aa1Y ee
method ccw•rrtm 01 eo\lfd re-
coup U!ie funds and wat DClt ln-
eluded ln I.he packa,. &o be
lo Sacranumto. * * * Tax Plan
Wins No
Support
Orange County Supervisor
Laurence Schmit can publlcite
inrormatton showlna how cities.
school districts and other taxing
agencies can trim tax rates this
year if he wants to.
But he won 't be Joined bv rel low supervisors m doing so.
Schmit said his guide would
show taxpayers ·'who to lay the
blame on'' (or Increased tax
bills.
The board reJecled Schmit's
proposal to publish a taxpayers'
guide 11howing how taxing agen·
c1es could trim their tax rates to
keep property tax bills from go-
ing up this year
They did instruct county of-
fices to cooperate with Schmit in
supplying the data he needs to
make sue}\ information public.
Schmit said the guide would
!>how how much the tax rate
t"ould drop, In light of increased
assessed valuation. to keep tax
bill'I al the same level as a year
earlier
'This will not necessarily stop
the increased spending," Schmit
said. "But it will affix the
responsibility for tax increases.··
Supervisor Tom Riley said the
guide might JUSl confuse citizens.
rather than clearlnJ( up ques·
ttons. He s111d the information
Schmit was discussing already is
public information and available
to those wanting 1t
"The problem 1s it 1s difr1cult
Cor the average person to dig it
out." Schmit complained
He 11rud he wa.'\ told from the
outset "I would receive a
tremendous amount of heal" by
trying to publish such a guide
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich
said such a guide would be fine
for county.operated taxing dis·
tricts But be opposed stepping
into other agenc1c5' business and
into their relationship with their
own taxpayers
* * * DoorKnocla
To Dog Dogs
Profits County
By KATHY CLANC\' &11"9 a.i1v p11e1s11tt It cost Orange County govern-
ment 94 cents apiece to knock on
73,252 doors durtni the past year
to learn 1f families had dogs and
I( so. whether or not they were
licensed
But the same door-lo-door calls
In 19 county communities
brought in $168,714 in new dog
license fees. or $2.30 for each
knock on the door.
County health department of-
rtcials, ln a report to county
supervisors Tuesday, termed the
door·to-door llcens.e Inspection
program "a howling success."
They also won permission from
supervisors to make what had
been a temporary four.person in-
spectlOb program permanent.
County Health Officer J . R.
Elpera aaid \he license inspecti~
proeram was ~ded because of
an overall decline in the ,past few
years in the levels of rabies vac~
dnaUon1 in the county.
Since rabies ncclnations are
required for do, Jlcenaes, the
license inapectlon program and
mcreue in vaccinations go hand
In band.
!:\pen noted that rabies ls ever
pr .. ent In the county, poinUni
out that lut September, tor ex·
ample, a dead rabid bat was
found on tbe lawn or a Costa
Meuhome.
"This decllnlq level or rabid
lrnmunlnUon preaenta a very re·
al publlc beallh haiard," EJpers
cooUnuod. "We have Indeed been
fortunate 'nOt to have had an oul-
break ol tab amone domestio-
peta tn OrUI• County.''
Eh>era ialO of the 73,252 homes
confacted, 0,862 doe• wero
located. Of tbote only 37 percent were licensed.
"Jt can bo uaumed that the
majorlt)t cl the aame unllcen1ecl •
do11 wen not voeclnatt4
tlther.'' h aald.
Comnwn!Utt aloni tile Oran1e coaat canyuatd tn the door-to-
r program eo far Include El
Toro, Mlaalon Viejo, L11una ' HlU1, auel, Dana Point
and Fount•ln Valley.
T1it county handJts anlm•I
tontrol roe &U tu
Orans• Co11t ucept. lrvtA•.
Le1una 8 ach •od N wport
Beach.
ao .. t~
w••ad a.tmare
UWI '10. 'Ro ..id \hat means
about balf tba t>omoowa.en ln
Oranp Coull~ be ld'lout..
Newseaster 'Target'
Brink1By S'4:>i~ of Coll,eaguea'· Pronka
When navld Brinkley planned a New
Enaland vacatJon, one of bl.a colleasuet at
NBC sent a pen· in-cheek letter wamin1 an in·
nkeeper about the fame~ ancbonnan'a sup-
posed eccentricities. ·
TM Innkeeper proved be too had a aenae
of humor, wriUn1 back a made-up account or
elaborate measures taken lo deal with
Brinkley.
•'MR BRINKLEY is a very fine
ho unfortunately hu certain
weaknesses," network
public relations executive
Joe Derby said he wrote to
the crusty Griswold Inn in
Essex, Conn.
Saying that the co·
anchor of the NBC Nl.chlly
News enjoys settin1 up
games of chance at
wayside ums. Derby con-
tinued
a1u111icuv "As a matter of fact,
most honorable establishments try to contain
Mr. Brl11k4ey from minellng freely with the
other aueet.s. Some or them go so far as to lock
him In his room after be hu retired."
He added that il might be awkward to do
so, but "it probably would be prudent \o col·
lect his room bitrs m advance -as most other
innkeepers do "
'PROMPTED BY anchorman John Chan-
ceUor. Derby wrote again t.o warn of "a mat
ter of some delicacy," that Brinkley was
"quite deal" and "very sensitive" about it
"extremely so" preferring that individuals
shoult at him when trylne to communicate.
Brinkley has been known lo withhold tips
"because of his inability to hear those who are
serving him or waiting on him," the letter
said. It suggested that the stair be so informed
and "act accordingly ''
INNKEEPER William Winterer replied
North-Central Lines
promptly, Hying In his letter that he was In·
debted to Brinkley's solicitous colle.,ue. Two off.duty stale
troopers poled e waiters
and potted palms encircled
·the Brinkley party of six,
the let~r eaid. Nor wos the
anchorman allowed to
leave his table, the letter
said. . L
"Incidentally." Wm·
Lerer worte, ··we aaree lo
pay for a new suit, being
unable to remove the clam
bisque from the one ht> cHANc•uo•
wore."
The Griswold's owner's letter said further
that Brinkley was served watered·down
drinks, that a tough, 210.pound teacher of the
deaf did the shoutln& al him and that he was
locked in a iuarded room after dinner
"HE DID SEEM to enJOY his sli.y,
although he was mumbling to himself at
breakfast the rollowin&: mornin&," Winterer's
letter went on
Wmterer s aid that when Derby's first let·
ter amved. "I thought It must be some kind of
JOke. "But then l thought. maybe he's some
. kind of a kook." Winterer said. Then the
second letter arr1 ved. and Winterer satd he de·
cided it muat be a joke and he ml&ht as well
play along. Thus the fictitious account in his
return letter.
He said he had not told Brinkley about the
letters Wltll Saturday morning. when he asked
whether the anchorman knew Derby.
BRINKLEY SAID he did and that Derby
had a great sense or humor. according to Win-
terer, who then proceeded t.o read the mis·
slves.
"He thought It was great," Winterer re·
counted. "He JUSt went. Into convulsions."
OC Board Opposes
Airlines' Request
Niguel Judge
Appointed to
U.S. Session
Judge Marvin G . Weeks of.
Laguna Niguel has been named
by California Supreme Court
Chief Just.Jee Rose Bird as one of
three state delegates lo the ='Ja-
tional Conrerencc or Special
Court Judges.
North-Central Airlines won 't
be flying into Orange County
Airport if county supervisors
have their way.
The board voted 4·1 T uesday to
oppose the airline's application
to the Civil Aeronautic• Board
for rout.ea thal would link the
local airport to Minneapolis·St
Paul.
Supervisor Laurence Schmit
cast the lone dissenting vote
without com men\..
The resolution, proposed by
board chairman Tom Riley, also
asks that a hearing before the
CAB on North Central's applica·.
lion be delayed from July 1 to
Sept 1.
Riley said the new routes,
which would stop 10 Phoenix and
Laa Vegas, would violate e;ounly
policy that the airport be linuted
to sbort·baul ruabts or no more
than 500 miles.
He said the apphcahon also 1s
·Gem
Talk.
coming at a time when
supervisors have yet to resolve
alrport noise problems and their
impact on surrounding r~
bidences.
Pot Smokers
To Be Fined
ALBANY. N.Y. (AP) -Casual
marijuana smokers will face
fines rather than jail terms the
first two times they are caught
under a measure passed early
today and sent to Gov. Hugh
<.;arey. who has said he will sign
the bill.
Months of pollttcal maneuver
ing and three hours or somel1mes
emotional debate preceded the
32·28 midnight roll call in the
slate Senate. The Auembly
passed the blll Monday night.
The West Orange County
Municipal Court jurist has been
advised that the conference wm
be held m Chicago Aug. 5 through
10 In conjunction with the annual
meeting of the American Bar AR·
soc1aUon.
Jud&e Weeks, 29035 Pueo de
Ocaso, served as a Juvenile court·
referee from 1974 to 1976 when
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr
named him to the west county
bench
Remapping Urged .
·LOS ANGELES <AP) -Thl'
dismanUing and redistricting or:
the sfrawh~ Angeles Unified
Schoo District hu bee.n ureed by
the 1976-77 County Grand Jury.
FOR YOUR. YALUAB&.t Jf:M?LRYA1-DlfATCl!f;.4'
IS A& CLO!E TO YOl' AS OClt ST'ORt. \fTIERI,.
OUR OW"N CR.AFTSM£f'vCt1RF.F1JLL Y DO T/W
'WORIC VNDEJt OVlt P£R80NAL SVP~llVf SIOX'.
···~·······~
Jewelry Repairs
Watch Repairs
Appraisals
Special Orders
••••••••••••
· We have our own full time. Jeweler
·and' a full time watchmaker. .
All work done in our shoj>. . . . ~ , '" . -·~~···············-·~····· •
-mtmrrr ftRICEf l'AtD ,;,UMPOMANrOrJIJ ANO
J£Wnl\Y ,,1c£1 F:<Nlf!'l.Y APPIWsto av c.:s.
-...-~---·------=--------
t
t r
t I ' ' I ' I • • .
I t. '· t. ,.
--------------
t ra fcw
' area '1nawn
PAD)' 1lw
Li h rtld 1n o p
1n Nt-wprlf1 Rt-iwh
\1 the umr t1nw, th•· thr1~·
m~n who lOmpolc.' th 'ompam
top m;ana1'c'rnt•nt tt!am r1•111•ned
H " W;,bon "'t'Vl>t!d down ,...,
pr~ Mt nt \'1l'l" pn·~1ch-n\i. Tom
Wolff OAnd l.<1n~u111t E~·rltnl( abo
Utd &oodb)I'
Walton, alf<1ble man with 110
ra:.y gnn, ll"uvri. )OU with the 1m
pressaon o{ it nAual. l'Omfortabh.•
man who Wt'Urll wl"ll . Ilk<• an old
'hoe He wu lht• rt>ma1n1ne sym
bol of the time whl'n profl11>S1ooal
m anaeement took ovt'r lht·
Irvine Ranch 1111d lt·d it into a
period of lonJC·rilni,:c.• mastc.·r
planned dcv~lopmcnt lhat ma)
nt·ver b<• wllne11st'd uloni.: this
<·ousllint• ui:uin
,.. I Rs T (' ,\ M ..: {' h •• I I .....
Thomas. form1·r l' S S1·nl'l<11)
of tht• Nan'. "'ho h1•c.·am1· In 11w
C:ompan\ pn·st<ll'nt lit· t>ei.:un
forma11011 nf lh1· Ill''-" manJJtt'
rnt'nl ll•am
That \I.as .,oml' 17 ~t·ar., .1~11
"'hen an t•ni.:1nt•1•r named Bill
\I a son and tht• l<1nd µlann1·r
namrd Wah1111 "t•n• 11rawn rnln
tht• romµ.iny :\la..,.111 and Wabon
r o s t• st <•a cl JI ) :i ., r a n c h l' x
1•<.·ut1\1•s Wht•n Thoma' ret1rt'd.
\1 ason lw1'itnlt' n1mp.1n~ prl'SI·
tfrnt
\fll•r Bill \la ... on ~ 11nl1ml'h
rfrath in 197:1 H<n Watson took
OH•r tht• tu11 l'ha1r an<I <.•onlll\Ul'<i
th!! pl;1nrw<I j!rcrnth of 1h1· \a .. t
I rv11w r.ind1l.1111b
S1nc·1· th1· I l'th·r ,ti t.1x rdorm
.11·1 for1·1•1l 1l11· In lrll' 1"011ndo.1IHH1
In d1\1'"l thl'lf Pl 1an1 la 11•nlrol.
rnost 1·oasliJI 11•.Hlt•n. 11:.i\1• lx:t·n
\\ 11nd1•f'lnl! \\ hul \\ 11llld ht·tonw of
thc· ll\'lnl' t 'omp;in~ •
Tiii-: fAllRMA' '\l.1.l."11 corn
h11ll' I h.11 "'1111 th1· h1cldtn1! war has
nu" l!l\'1•1\ us a small pl•t•k h<'htnd
tht· curt Jiii Jnd rntu the futun•
I ht•n· "111 ht• nt•\\ h•a1krsh1p
undt•r J 111•w pn•,1d1•nl 1'1•lt•r {'
K remt!r, 38. who ~int·t· 1!1&1 h.1,
ht•<>n an t'X<'CUI I\ 1· wll h th1.· I.inti
dC'' elopinl! 'It•" h,111 1.;rncl anti
Farmtnl! Compun)
Kri>mt'r in h10, 1n1tial pres'
1·onf1•rt•nn• ht•rt· 't't•m1•il 1ntt•n1
nn .. ooth1ni.: ,1n) 11ltt'r-. that m1,.:ht
h,1\ e dt•\t•lorH'd <1mong lht•
IP.tekrsh1p of our <.'Oast:il 1·om
mun1t11•'
fo'or c1111• 1h1ni.:. ht• announcPrl
that th1.• 1.·nrn1>an\ namt' "g111111ot
lo n•ma111 till' samt• It ' still ~o
inA lo b1.· th1· lrv1n1• Com puny
ror anolht•r ht• SUf.!l!t'st<•d lhal
lht• f1vt• yt•ar plan for ranch d•·
velopml'f\\ a!I 1.•nv1s1oned hy
Watson and h1 ... 11Hlt•s. will n·
main \ 1·rv mul'h 111t at'l
What ' Vl'I \ much · mt·ans. "'''
"'ill simply h~1n• to w111t and s1·1·
Rl'T \I.I. T tlf: .. 1at1•rnenh
from Kreml'r :ind two nf the Ill"\\
ownl'rs pn•s1•n1 at the pn•ss con
f1•rl'nc·1.• l>onalcl I. Bren and i\
\lfr<'<l Tauhman. set•mcd a1mt>d
.1t .1-;surinl! that lhl'rt' "ill tw a
fru·n<lh .incl t·oopt•ratn 1· rhanl!
1n)! of lht• i:uarcl from tht• old
11w nl'ro,h1 p and l1.•adt•rsh1 I' to lhl'
I)('\\
1\ncl ,,._fur "-rt•mt•r . vou h.1n• to
\\ 1 sh h 1 m w c• 11 1 n · h 1 s n P \\
lt•adersh1Jl 1>01111100 ll1s futun·
1frc1s1t1n<1 will haVt' a "idc
ran)t1n1e eff<'rt on thr izrowth and
dt•velopmt•nt of th1• OranJ,Z<'
l'oasl
And hr ha'> a tough url to
follow
A,_ W•tt ehOIO
Fatal Fall
Th re1· men and a \\om an from South Caroltna \\en·
killed Tut•scta\. wht!n lhc tractor trailer in which the'
were rnhng ri1ppcd on•r a bndgt! rathn~ and plunged
711 fc>et lo !ht• stn•t-1 h<•low \nother South Carolin<J
\\Om Jn ''as cnlt(•all~ in1ur<•d in the noontime accident
tn c10\\0lown l'tlt'-hllrgh
Jetliner Skyjack
Halted by Troops
0011 \, t/atJr 1,\l'l ,\ ~nunM l.1·1J1111•"••' rn::in arm•·d w1'h ;,
pistol and two hand J,:n•n1ull•s ~11)<11.:kdl a <iulf t\11 \'t'JI) Jl'llint r \\ 11h
6H persons aboard. hut I ro11p" lt:<f Ii)' Q.1ta1 \ 1·ro\\ n f>rtn<·t· 11\ c•r
pow 1.•r<'d him ltidd\' aftc•r lht· plane• l:tndNJ on lh1· -.oulh shor1• of
the Pt•rsi.111 tiulf
A m1lllan spokt'sm;1n s.ucl .di f;() r>a!'.Sl'nl!t'J' JOO l'll!ht l'rt'W
nH·mbt•ro; "t'fl' sar" arid .. 11un1I
lk said thl' hi1at k1·r '~as Sam11 \luh;immt·rf llu''<''" l.\hararah
:!ti from thl' ">ulh l.1 h.irll'~t· \Illa.:•· of flint I hail. m•Jr the.· th•· hr ,1l'11
ho rd er
'\trport ... oun•t.•.s ''11 d m1mw11t!'. lwfort• hio, :1n···.,1. th" h1 •. 1el:1·1 clt-
mande<l a ransom of ;,11(111011 n~al ~1·11 uoo in 1·xr·h;.111J.!l' for th•
ot ht•r pu~scnacr~ ,111<1 l'rl.'\\ rn··mb1 r'
W1\Sl!l"H:To'll 1AP1 /\ l..1•\ roni.:11·,,11mal pan•·I h," illJ
pro\ eel Pr<.'l'.1!11•nt C JI tt·r·, flft>PI"'''' rww u1I I:" a Inn!! "1th a prr1
\'1~ion that would d1v1<lc llw m11n1' 1\ r<.11sl.'s <1mooi.: all \mt.'n1·;1n
adult!(
t 'nt11•r tlw Ill'\\ cruclt.' 1111 '"' .1nd rc·fund '\''''Ill .1ppr11• "" I , .. ,
da~ by thl' lloust' W;l\S ;md M1•;111!>. ('11mm1lll't' t•at·h atlull \mcrlt':lll
"oul<l /l.l'l ahnut $22 n<•xt yt•nr J' a 'h;in· of Litt• mon<') lo he r a1st cl h~
ttus ll•Vy R1.·~1nn111~ in 19711, .md 1•ndin1t S1•pt 30 1981. this Wl\ wo11lil
( J
h 1 k t' t h t' ~ o \' 1· r n m •· n I
('ont rolll•d JH'lt'l' ol t 1 S /N SHORT prnduct•cl erud1• 1111. "hic·h
no\\ sell' f111 from ~ 2~> lo
SI\ 28 pc.•r .\2-l(allnn harrel. tn
!ht• um·1111trollc'<l w11r111 m.i1kl'I prcct· n11 n•ntlv <l\'t•rai.:rni.: uhoul
:SI 3 50 ;,i hurrel
Drrision Due on BI B1>mbc>r
WASHJNC;T<)"I I/\ r I Pn•s1<knt t'artl'r told a Sena LP ~roup tn
day hr will announce hy Thur...duv ;1 d1•r1s1on on whether to go aheacl
with produrtmn of th1• RI bomlwr wh1<'h has won fr1•sh llouo,t• hat·!.
IOjt
A1dt's ~a~· the Pres1drnt C'Ould .settlt· on iinyth1nl{ from halttn~
production of the plant• to produrtng all 2HI homht'" thl· t\ir f'orrl'
want~ at an l.'st1matl.'d <'<'st of Sl1 8 btlhon
l rt"hfrishop D.-ftr• Popf"
ECONE S\\1t1erl<ln<I 1AP1 /\rchb1shop Marrel l.efehvre or
damed 13 priests ancl c•on•wrrutt'(f 22 suhdt>acon1i todu· in ht"
crusade against modern11at111n of th1• Koman C;1thohc church HC'
said he v.ould eont1mu.' to def\ Pope Paul VI hcrau"{' \\{' rt.'fUS\.' to
collnborate in the di>strurt1on of the church
Rej~ung the Pope s thn•at to cxcommun1<.'ate him 1r he carr1erl
out the ord1nullons, lht>·71 year old fo'rench pn•latP -,:ud "We do not
hesitate to t•ontinuc on our t't>urs<.• · ·
Texas Gets ·Heavy Rain
Up to Three Inches F al/,s in One How
TftflJH'rat urf"•
Mt•9' \.ew "<"· A 1h1111~1 "11,. .. ..
Am~r lln ., •• \< ., "'"''" ., I• ",,,..""""'" ... I\
Ro1\r •• \I ,_,.. ,,, .. ... •• I~
f\f"\.,O If ,. "' •• f\olf.41rt II •• ,,
,,.,.,,,. t~ '\( " All
(~ "'" .. • • (tn1cnn,.11 "" •) I •I ., .. ..,., ... ""' .. ll " 0Alt• , t 'Wtwl" 1c.> ..
(\r ""f'' llO ..
~trtut "" •1 .... ...... .,It .. II ~
... M\0,~11 II 1) ~.,,,u.., •• •• ·'•' .. '""'"'". ,. 10 ,.,..,, ... cny ., /Ill JO I,, Vlt1)4i 111 ..
t.1111~ ltoo ~ .. ,, ,_-."'°"'" " 11 II
Mhtm! .. .,
N1fW6UkflP . ., ., " M"O'' ......... , " I\ . .., ........ ....., ..... I Ml
M1'\"hy,fNU'f """'"' ..,.,..,,.
Wl'" -... ~ \0 " .. -""'°'• , '"""""-c ... u..,~,..
N~wO•I-..,
H•w\'110 U
Olil•IMIM•( llV ... 0m.11.. ,. °''"-IJ "'""""''""'• ., ,.~Ill• ,,,
... 11 .... ,,,i. lit
"""" '"" "'". 0 "I("'"" ., 51 l6'1•• ll
I fft>l•nt>w<'• ,,,,_., •1
~llL"-~Clly .. "911 ,f-tt(O .0
•lli. H ..
11 ,,
" M
1J
" In fl>~ ..... ftJOtll llO<>d ...... I) """
>t •"'"'"9'-.,,,. '•"c•"•• '" ""' ·~ ltrlllltl~IPl\IA •I< lnlh ... 11~ .... y ,,.,,.,
OJ 0'""'""11ed TllH~ """ wlntl Qu•tt of "' I• '° ..,,1,. ~· ti-"' '" Flfnl fl\ltll fun tlA• .. 1'061bfMdnWt0\ft~rll'<i"t'ltl
.m 01 r nr1 w•YI"' lfld for~' "'"•
.. 11 ., ... ·~ ..
IS ~ ,, ,.
I•
"'"~ '"'*"t.w tlH'.,iAv fn Ohio f••u
0 ~nil ICt~~y TllH• wt0N' "° r11,.10• .•• ~~:~;"''""'rind .... '"'""•• _,,
(f\Ofl'" * t• t1•pP< 1.-d •" N•w • ' ......... '"'"'I ·~ ... -· , .. , '"•d•••r !Nr•INll_,el ,,.. Al••n
lit ~ ... ,, \l.tlf'I ~ .. I"-H•I '" ~r\ 1111"-QMeYallft I.Op 11 .. 1, ,,,., ... ,. .... ,..,..,., .....
••euf>ll "'" ""'"'" ..._.. i;..., ~ Ot "'A•• ,.,.,,,. lll!lf l ••141 ... ,.
.Y*fll 10 til!U ,(•hi
11,ollthltrn C.t11tl)f-"1A w1tr, 1u\I If h·W
n•of"I• foud'-\lfrttf'Wod'tc'"'"',,. """' 0,.,.,,,. ~ oo"''bli• t U~oc'\'~'' in
l"f' t'ftOunfA1ft\ II w ill tai-Mt flind \ur-.riv
mo\I of ltv d..~y ~•vtt 1"4< -Nt ••rw-r
,,.,._,, •• ~tf'tt~h•Qf'IClood\••lt
di\Ar'.,.flf ~ftlQt'lf•f'f'._,.'"'"'•'wt•f
tAna• '""""''° .n ,,.... \ O\ A~,,,°'',.,.
fl •ot>ut Alt •n ,,,.. mo.'"'"'"''"''"'"
'" IP<M\tat..,.tllt~" ll'ft'tOr•"' 1rr,
tiWIU ft•f'" •1 '"'"-''' IT bt t ~ I rfT'l,,,••tlftv•fl4'yfwah\Of Nt4trly 11'1(\
'"' ~l'll•~Wtt.M'C!Or.,...C:•·~"'" ..,,,,.,..._,...ltll;ktwt-\11\li.
,.., .... •M •Artv j"Ntff\t(\Q N>Uf\ H•ct•"
Al IN' f). Mf'NI' tlffU W 1n ,,_, ... 14' t1
r•nu• tf'lifl ttt• .. ff!'~
Coiutal •~«tlwr
M•llly .,_, n,V".O•y il'AICllY to ..
c JftVOtn.ortt •M••rfY motnt~ ,,.,,,,
\ ,.,,,, 'IAfhtbh~ Wlrtd• ntQf\t 1tnd
mor,.l~"Otlf• "'Ofll •n '""to-Alt•• ltU(,.11\ ifNf JO\ lll!Anct
(Cl .. IAI l-1"'••111r•1 Wiii r•no•
l>tl,..Hf! .0 """ II lnl•nd l•M
f"ljllUfl'• ''"" 'llllO'f ......... .0 ·~· ~ f"111t-•f ,,,,.,Alu,,w11111{~•
ft .,..
th
mi
ratH
p.i H
··we C' rlatnl)' inlend to
rh 11&-nlt 1t, .. OP Alaalca
:spolc man Funlc l.1cllwood • d
Tudd y a~r th ICC rul\'d un
tinlmnualy th I timfrl proposed
by thccocnpa w retootuah
THE ICC de>chuon could reup
the state or Aln.kll m\lhon or
dollan in extra lu'.'u-1' from th1·
l'tCht comp~naH that own tht·
pipeline ll do..'.S not ufferl tht> ul
umatt-cost of )!asohnt' at the
pump. ho"'en·r
The eight h.ud propo:wd tunrr ...
of $6 04 to $6 40 a harrl'I for mo\
1ng tht> oil from Alnaka s north
slope IO thl' :wuthl'rn port of
Valde1.
Tht• comm1ss111n said t ht! t ult!i-
should range from S4 68 to $5 10 u
barrel the rate ror euch nrm
dependinf.l on ho\\ much o( the
pipchn<' tl invested 1n Com
Kis8 BringB
$230Fi~
.I 0 11 A N "-: E S B l H <;
South Afnc:a < t\ P l A
.voung bl!Hk mJn wJs '>I'll
lcnred to a f1m• ur S230 or
200 days in Jail in .Johan
nesburg today for k1:.iung a
wh1lt' woman on thl' rhct•k
m an dt•\ utor
My d1gn1ty "'a ... inJurcd
bet· al.JM.' he was J i-lrangcr
to ml' and black. tht•
woman i\muur Lorl'n. told
tht> court The• ract•s an• uf
flciall} se~rt.·g;..te<l undt•r
South Afr1t·a ., poltt} of
apartheid lntl•nat·ial w"
relat1onlt url.! outlawl·d
T h e d t• r 1• n ti a n l
Chrisostnm•· M:.ii:utrnnt'.
den1t•d k1ss1111t M1~s l.or1•11
.u1d saul !'>ht• had J ;1 bhl•tl
him with h1•r l•lhow Ill lhl'
l'lt•\ ;ilur In .Johannesliuri.: s
1·1·11tr•ll 1><1!'>t oHit·t·
II (' t 1· s l 11' 11• d t h al h 1 •
it'>kt•tl hl•r '"hat wa .. "nm~
anti th1· youn~ "'11ma11
c allt.'ci him a kaffir a
tlcru.:aton South ,\frtl'an
t1•rm for lllad.i. and i.;ut.I
ht' stunk ~f:H:ul1a1w said
sh1• ll'f\ \ht• l'lt•\ .;tot af\l•r
hl• 'oUJ.:,l(l':-ll•d ,h1• ;..h11t1ld j{ll
h:il'~ to "·twol lo l1•arn
m a11111·1.,
it• INCOM from
oil t.t b ed OCl CM
wellhtad lhq prica. wlncb IS
&be s llhaa prict> an ' U s
mJnus plpehnC' and tanker
tharaea. The lower the ~·ellhead
price. ttw tesa taitea the com
panln P•Y the !itate. wh1th "' wby they would like to tua vt• a
tucb tra.nsportnlton price taa
Alaska Go\• Jny Hammond
hutle<i the order al> "a rar
reachm&. s1gn1fiunl dttii;1on ..
for the state
The Justice Oepar\mt>nt. tht•
ICC'• Bureau of lnvestlgatton
and Ertforcement and the Arcltr
Slope Regional Corporation also
argued that the proposed tanm.
were too high.
Hammond said the ICC dt•
r1sion. if sustained. will yield thl'
l'IOall. OtL '18ld It wa:c
·ahoc:ked" b~ th<' ICC decl1aon
Allen E furr•>·. preiJldent ot thl'
comp y 't. U.S markeUnf nd
rtoflnin!' div\111on. u'd tbat
""'ilhOut "tlhtr ll run 1nvesti1a
uon of Ow facta or a formul bear·
'"'· t~ ICC has dt'Cld~ lO pt'f"
\'ent iavt'tllor:i. from carmna a
fair return "
BP Ala.ska'.., l.1ckwood said lht>
'"" f'r ratl'i. "~imply will not
~I\ t> w. UK• rah• o( return that
W(' should J:t'( 10 a prOJt'Cl ()( lht5
kind
Several other oil company
n•presentat1ve1> called the ICC
url1on unreasonable They sa.1d
they were relldy to :.eek a tem
porary restraining order or an 1n
Junction in a federal court. A
spokei.man for i\RCO said.
however. lhut his firm had not
decided whether lo lukt' the rasc
10 COUr1.
Tip Leads to Find
Of Todd's Remains
l'•OREST PARK Ill 1AP1 \1t'd1<'al .iuthortllt>!o. today <.'On
firmed that remains found nt!ar tht> violated ~ran• 'i1h· of )11chac•I
Todd are those o! the late mov1t! prodl.lcer
Robert J Stein, Cook Count' mt•tltrnl exam11wr. "><111l 1denllf1ca
I rnn v. as made throui.: h Tridd ·., dC'nt al t•harts
The rt-matns of Todd. former husband or a('trcs' Eltiabeth
Taylor were n•portt"<.1 missing Sundo\ in what \I.JS bt'11c•vt•<.l to bt• a
grave robbmg attempt to find an\ 11.•v. t'lry buried with Todd
Authontirs s:.11d lalt•r that no nnM ... •ir othl·r It'\\ t•Jr\ h;icl ht l'I\ hunt·d
wtth the produn·r
/\ ruhher ha~ ronl:11ntnit humun rPma1n' w:is found TuPsthi)
Forest Park Polit'\' Sgt H1chanl Arehamh;iult h;1<.I 'uHI he ''a'
t'onfidt.'nt the rem•t111s wt•n• Todd's and lt·ll•ph11npd !\11clw1·t Todd .Jr
on °fUl.'Sdtty with nC\\' of lht• rllsrtt\ 1·n
F.i\RUt<;R, a Ch1t·a~11 ar1•.1 prl\ alt• rfrl«•t'tl\'l'. "1th dtrt'ct1on!'>
from an u111dc11ttf1cd source. led pol11·1· 111 lh1• llru!>.h l'1t\ l'rt•d 'POI
JUSl 120 fel'l from the opent.'0 j{ril\'t'
Anthony Pc>ll1c11no, a dl'll'rl1\•• not ('rJllnl•ctNi off1r1ally "1th the
1nvt>sl1gat1on. said ht• hurt rcc1•1\ 1·11 .1 lt•kphont• lip lo tht' local 111n
aflt.'r a numbt'r of phont• l'all-. \I.1th a numtw1 <lf d1rft.rt'rll peoplt•
O\~rth•lastt"ricluy-.
Todd was burH·d at the S11\t-rmJn and W""' l'1·mHPn l!t n.•ar-.
ago His bod) had het'n burnt·d '"badly m th<' rra'h th<1t dl•nt",11 n·
cord:. wl'rc the onl\ "'""n" h\ wh1rh 11ffH·1.11, 1rJpnt1(1t·cl II .i .. lwing
Todd''
When we want to find out if
our School Program
is effective in getting
young people involved
in their world,
we ask the experts.
Teachers.
They lelt u1 our VEC School
Program. In com1>1n1tlon with tod1y •
new1paptr, 11 the moll •lf•ctlve way
they've lound to build 1tudent
1w1r1n1H 1nd to d.,,elop 1tudent1'
c:rltlc1I thlnlclng, rHdlng, and dl1cu1·
•Ion •"Ill•.
Our pr~r•m 11 dHlgned to dfl"'
1tudent1 Into dl1cuHlon1 of tod1y •
major l11u ... BHI ol all, the program
ch1t1engH kld1 to UH their mind• end
im1glnellon1 and to become Involved
In their community Ind In the world
around them. At partnera with the
1chool1 In th• edue1tlon ol our young
people. we IHI thlt 11 °"' ol our mo1t
jmpon1nt project•.
Wt could ltll you more 1b0\.ll our
1c:hoot progrem, but the educalore at
thue 1ehool1 Hy It 10 much better
"Th• VEC fllm•trlpa are vital to my aocfal atudl•• program. I
have uaed them for th• peat five year• beceuae the 1tudent1
enjoy them and become rnuch more aware of the world
around them.••
Mart"• View l!lementary IOhool
Huntington h11Ch, Callfornl1
~~-==-~~--=--=--------=----=------------
Court
Nominee
SACRAM&ICTO (AP>
-GOY. 9rown
Jr.'• ......at nomlnee to •
the at.ate Suprem Court la Ft N.-rn , wbo •
wu one ot Chief Juat.lce
Rose 8lrd'1 f avorlte
teachers. .........
BROWN NOMINEE
Frank Newman
to Stop
.
RALP·DOVll, O•e-da1·•·•..elt show la be-
in& ~nued. t.becompany anDOUDced 1\iesdar.
b\lt lt\e 140 setmtnll already made will run lh~r
course -endlQJ an euly im.
A 1tud10 apoknman sad the show wu being
canceled beeause ''the revenue potential of an af.
ternoon chlldttn'• show Is not enouib to warrant
ccmtinued p.f'Oducuon. ••
"The Mickey Mouse Club" was aired originally
from ~to 1959.
Newman 59, a
Unlventty of California
law professor aloe• 19'Cll, wu named Tuesday to
bo the Democr.aUc 1ov-
ernor's third appointee -;::±;;;:;::;:;;;;=====;;:;;::======================::; to tb• aeven-member
court.
H tm'• llUnmblp t.o Chari•
M IUHOD and h•r role 1n tbe
tnurdena
Th• last defenq rebuttal Wtl·
nea• wu Dr. Michael Coburn. a
p17cbJatrut who clalmed the
M ansoa "family" suffered from
• eroup mental 11lnes1 tn wbJcb
all shated the same dehmon
Demi flllalce 'l/11Hlu!"''
SACRAMENTO <AP) -There
is up to one chance In 10 tl\at an
active e1Jrthquake hull
traven;es the Auburn Dam site.
says a consultant hared by the
federal government.
A malfunction ot an auxiliary power unit during
Tuesday's second manned night of the Space Shuttle
caused officials to postpone a third mission scheduled
FrJday. Crewmen Joe Engle a.lid Dack Truly leave the
sbutUe after riding it during a shallow dive test, a move
that will release Jl from the mother sh1p. The test was
made over ~wards Air Force Base.
Fl 4 Tomca,ts To Fly
.Deipite 2 Crashes Lloyd Cluff. presadC'nt of
W.oodward Clyde Conl}'1ltants1
aocMJ,S. l~n~au of 1\ecl$matto11
offleiall" briefed reJjOtteh Tues-
day night on conclusions reached
in the 14 month, "1..S·m&llio~ 4 liAN DIE(f(> <AP.> ..-A Na"y spokt•sman s J):. lhl.'re arc no am
;.t.udy. r ,_ roediatQ J}a~ to gtound the Navy's 200-plane t•omplemt'nl of Fl4
_.. .. , • J. 'tolbcftltr.filhtAlts as decucred last year desptle lwo new crashes
He replace• Justice
Marshall McComb, who
was forced to retire by a
judLcial review com-
mission on the eroundJ
of senility.
NEWMAN WAS
described by nssoclatea
as a tonatime clvll
libertarian and worker
for human nghts. as well
as a widely rubtisbed
scholar n ad -
ministrative and in·
terna4;looal law.
He al10 le ap out·
doors'11&n and music lov-
er, and worked his way
through Dartmouth
College playing In a
traveling jazz band, said
Sanford Kadish, dean of
Berkeley's Boall Law
School, where Newman
teaches.
Newman was dean al
Boalt from 1961 to 1966
and taught Ms. Bird, who
So, May~ You Need Another Bill
like you need a
hole in the head?
But you've got a hole in your head.
and it's not going to go away by
Itself.
Surprise -you might be able to get
all your dental worl< taken care ot at
ftO cost to yw. Your union, employer's
or personal dental insurance plan
might very well cover the tMtN cost
at Dr. Arnold H. Flanzer's.
That's a whole lot better.
Dr. Arnold W. Flanzer
370 E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa • 642·0 I 12
lJOOnl Rattle• SD Crashes Tuesday involved one of the $14 5 malhon aircraft that fell
SAN DIEGO CAP) -Although s~ortduring a landi.og approach to Miramar "'la val Air Station and the graduated ln 1965. She ----------------------------
it was longer m dutat.ion than daiching at sea of a second Tom·
normal, scaentasts say at was a cat. sonic boom and not an earth All four crewmen escaped with
tremor that rattled the city for m mor injuries.
about 18seconds Tueaday. The Navy said the crashes
Although military maneuvers wlthln .(\ve pours of each other
are being held off the coast. no were the ,Uth and 14V' opera·
aircraft mvohed reported break· \i9nal ~~es of F,14.S smce they
ang the sound barner and tM went into i;ervice thi;ee years ca~se of the boom remained a ago. .. '
m) stery Tuesday night. Six or the crashes were of
aarcrull from Miramar, where
about 90 of the sophisticated at·
tack fighters are based. Another
tour Fl4s were lost in tesung
before delivery lo the Navy
began
All Tomcats were grounded in
June lelbl )ear after crashes at
Mtramar on June 21 and June 23
that daJmed the laves of four
creu.men.
has described him as an
important Influence in
her hfe, and mentioned
him by name an her In-
vestiture speech after
her hard·wQn confirma·
taon in March.
MS. Bl&D, Brown's
Agriculture and
Resources sccrelaryr
and Wiley ~iin.uel. a
black ~lained• Count..Y Canyon Fire Quelled ;.-io_.___.._..._ ___________________ .., Superior Court judge,
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
stubborn fire north of La Canada
that nared up for the second time
an two days has been contained
by the U.S. Jo.,orest Service, of·
fic1als swd.
Sales Booster? were Brown's first two
court appointees 1n
February Newman i:;
has second non-Judge and
· • first white male Taj,es Ruling May A.id Finn 0/~:w~::~~":u~c:~ The 60 acre fire in Vetter
Canyon, which briefly cut off the
Angeles Crest Highway Tuesday',
1Va5 part or a 2.000-acre blaze
that had been declared under
control.
LOS ANGELES CAP) -The Supreme Courts decision
involving confidentlallly of the famed Nixon Whit~ House
tapes may help Warner Oros Records 1n its efforts to
maf'ket atwcrrecord album of the Watergate conversations,
a recor:fil comRany spokesman sal(! Singl.e Route l.J,'*'-ii rdi~hael Ka.Pp. product•r of the album, railed the high cour\'s ~lsion Tuesday · encouraging" and said at 10-
RIVERSID!: (A PJ Th~ staff directly concerns.the record company's suit seeking to make
of the State Energy Comm1ss1on the 30 White House tape recordinas played during the t974
has recommended that San Watergittecover·uptrialofN1xon'stopadv1!'!ers
Diego Gas & Electrrc Co . use a The Supreme Court ts slated to hear arguments before
single route for bolh of its power October on the suit which was hied Jointly by Warner Bros .
transmission lines from a pro· three televtsion networks, pubhc television and a ne~s
po:.ed nucl<!ar power plant near directors' association.
Blythe. • The former President's lawyers were concerned that
. Under t~ st.~r ~n • .mda-· J t (lM'Wttt1•~~ oonveq~*'"' w~<I bo "1Sed •f entertain· ta on mad• 'fut y,...Jh• $uo O • '-llfeht aUoH-.all 11irtlee. irhd tmalthek' Jleleaso.tt\. the pubhc
De!lert nudear Pant .at Palo wouldinvadeNlxon'srlghttoprivacy.
Verde Mesa would be hnked to Tuesd~~uweme Court <lecislOf\ did not pertain to the
San Diego by J>(?wer lines runnin«""" '!) ~fil.~ iftjrcj'1 use ot,ttfeiaP'e,,)ly the neW' media.
through R1vers1de County. ~ ,!"'~ 1 ·-'-_7 '-·· • • -' ·
,
~ . . .
• .
J
~
t • . t
. . . . -
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M..cComb would be e>t·
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ThatSftlstpart of the action!
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-SAVINGS. .,
I
out
tt
whtch
w1 y rl .,
-an c 1~1!1cD..lly pr-0hab1u, ··any on or ll to be pr nt t any am ment n ,. the ur or 10 p m unleu accompan ed
parent. lt!11al 1uardlan or other pro ly
adult."
But a bu1ln~umon who 1 crnl~ electronic
mout.er·type .i1unes told councilmen thu law 11
archaic and wu meant lo k p tccna out of the old
aeed.y p00I balls. nOl local bowlin1 ..Ueys, 1co rinks
and lllO"Ac lhcittcr lobbae .
ctly olf1c1ab were not persuaded They clalm
that young ~rowds ill many of theae amusement
centera tend to chair. off fam11i~ out for an t!venlng ol
bowlin or ire skatln
They did aeree to vtew the curfew ordinance,
~d. when they do, they perhaps look into
slTicter meal>ures to prevent children using the
arnuaement centers as hang-outs and places lo
gamble.
Protest Backfires
Thank you for your public sptrit, Mr. Attorney,
but no thanks.
That might be the feeling of Costa Mesans who
may have to pay more for copies of city documents in
the future.
What sparked the controversy was an Irvine
attorney who told city councilmen the city charges t<?O
much for copies of documents and records stored m
city hall.
The current charge 1s S2 for the first sheet and,
since the document is already off the shelf, 50 cents
for each sheet thereafter.
Councilmen discussed the poss1bil1ty of cutting
•
a bit when the attorney la d
In th "&.bou.Jd be return lo
_ 1 , " hlJ er that eould be achieved.
nc ........ council m bers becan filurlnl out bow
aay a polace sereeant makes per bow-, tb
dd bow long tt takes to 1et some records out ot the
l.l_~cment. ~ came up wltti fieurt.>S like $20 to $30 as the
t of retrieving l\ome document.a. Quite a jump from
tho cu.rratt S2 charge.
Tho city manllger wos directed to re·examine the
f eo r te. So keep your finaers crossed, Costa Mesa.
Acqulrinl your own personal copy of city documenta
may become more o! a luxury.
Mesa Spirit
Costa Mesans celebrated the city's 24th birthday
wlth a salute lo service organizations who help the
city the most over the years.
About 200 well wishers turned out to honor
members o( nme service groups who contribute to toe; al cbarfty organizations, youth groups and schools.
The Costa Mesa Chamber ot Commerce
sponsored the birthday party and led the salute to the
service groups.
Organizations honored included the downtown
Kiwanis Club, Kiwanis Club North, Kiwanis Club
South the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club.
the o;ange Coast Lions Club, Optimist Club, Rotary
Club, Sor9ptimists and the Zonta Club.
It is groups like these that give cities an identity,
a perSOf'\ality of their own.
And it's groups like these that lead people li~e Air
Cal's Bob Clifford, guest speaker at the celebration, to
call Costa Mesa ··a community with more spirit and
down.to-earth qualities than any city I've been in "
That description fits Costa Mesa to a tee. c
'I want the truth, now! Have you ever received
payoffs from the Korean lobby?'
Gay Debate Misses
Civil Rights Point
Dear
Gloo1ny
Gus
Curb :for Special Districts
To the Editor
l believe lhc main point in the
hysterical response lo the "Anita
Bryant versus tht~ Homosexuals''
fiasco h11.s been entarl'ly missed.
I hold no truck with either ad·
vcrsary but I definitely have an
opinion on the real issue at hand
i.e . a law wh1ch says that
employers must hire homosex·
uals so as to uphold their civil
rights as a .. minority" is
absolutely ludicrous.
If I were m the position of h1r·
mg personnel and the govern.
ment told me I must hire anyone
whom I personally did not care to
hire. homosexual or not, I would
!>Cream loud and clear in every
court in this nation and 1( my con·
<>lllut1onal right~ \4 ere not Up·
held, l would close down my
operation
AS A bch<'ver in the "maJOnly
rule," I wonder what ever hap
pened lo the uns poken motto of
my youth, when a ~ood day's
work was reward(•d by a iiood
day·~ pay, regardless of rJCC,
color or crl.'ecl
By the same token. what has
happened to th(' lawmakers who
once believed 1n our Const1tu
t1on'! Why are our reprt!sen-
tatives runnin& scared every
time a small ~roup or dissidc'nls
threaten our way or hf(•" It 1s
tame for the American people to
wake up and demand a return to
the princ1pll'!" on which this coun·
try was founded
MAHYO MOORE
P~t Safety
To the Editor
The following prt>c aut1ons
taken by pct OI.\ ners hl'fore lht•
July 4 holiday can prevent loss
and death of pcti;
1. Confine pt-ts indoor'>. keep
on Jeal'h when outdoor~ Pets
panic rrom fireworks leave
them at home.
Z. KEEP COLLAR, license.
and identification tag on pet at
all times. Some pet shops make
tags "wttile you wait". Tags can
be obtained by sending $1 with
name, address, and phone
number of owner, and type.
breed, sex. and name of pet, to
Animal Assistance League of
Oranre County, P .O. Box 818.
Hunlinaton Beach, Calif. 92648.
Key tap, sold by supermarkets,
will serve as t.emµorary taas if
information la printed in
waterproof lnk.
3. If YoU lose a pet: Advertise,
post notices, que1tlon children
and nel1hbors, and report to
pet·flodin1 orsanJzaUons. Keep
checkinl ads ln more than one
newspaper. Go to the shelter!
Your pet may take several weeks
to get there, but he will be kept
only three daya. Don't tlve up too
900D.
EMJL Y ft. RICE
EdUerlflf ProNb•
( MAILBOX J
lAtl9" '"'"' , .. 4.,. •rt wetc-T .. r1ttll t• cOfMlt"te ltlltr> to tit tpl<o or tllmlM4t 1'-tl I• fl · ,.,.,.d LAltors ol JOO words .. l•n Wiii bt ''"'"
..,.elottftO All leiltrs ''""' IMI-11-tv,.. ..,d -111~ ....... l>vt ... ,.. .. -· bt .... -..... ,.
'"'"' If 11rfll<,lt1t rtUllll It .,.. ...... ~ Wiii MfM9"1bll .....
farm. I do not think that you
intended this ed1lor1al to• bo e
Joke that it is to those who
possess the skills to evaluatt'
your proJ)Ofals.
While carefully q~oting the
temperatures or both the milk
and thl' water which 1s heated
\\1th energy recovered from tb~
milk chilling process, you have
cleverly neglected to mention
that the dairy farmer 1i;
inherently commit.led to the
capital and operating energy
expenditures associated with Lhl•
heat pump <refr1ger-nllonl
sys tem employed to chill the
fresh milk.
II E MAY very W<'ll augment
his equipment and recover
otherwise rejected energy for
onsite use with an economically
attractive incremental increase
in his capital investment. Your
notion. however, that the dairy
farmer can go one step fart.her
and competitively collect.
convert, and market any
potenlial s urplus of this
1nterm1ltently available low
quality heat energy is highly
questionable, If not foolish.
Your .. n e xt logical
apphcat1on· , proposing one or
two cows in every backyard to
provide every family with a
.. warm place to sleep". ii; pure
nonsense. A quLck calculation
reveals that my small. passively
solar augmented home would
have required over 2:0 cows to
meet last December's space
heating needs with your
proposed system. There would be
no just1ficatJon for every
household to incur the cost and
effort of keeping a small dairy
herd for the corollary enern
source when the same heat pump
technology is available with
comparable eUlclency •nd
superior economics when uatnc
ambient air, ground waler, or
even solar tempered thermal
storage u the low temperatvi'e
heat reffrvoir. ,.
THOMASA. MATCHAK
l"m afrald co. milMd the iMG /or
morcthonihocuuxmh -scator.
. Co .. t PolUle•
With the water district try.
illS to save f'&ter, why did
the city council approve
coMlrucUon of hundredi of
new apartments and
houses in north Costa
Mei;a·1
R.'f.ll. ~,.
article called 1t a "seven year
ballle" over shorelJne d~elop.
menl, 1t was instead a new
µohttcal party that wanted its
members to be appointed to the
office, so they could not be voted
out or oCfice except by not al·
ten<hng enough meetings. and
not agreeing enough lime~ with
other commissioners
THE ENVJR~NTAL c:ry
was just the means1td put the new
pohtical party lnto i)O\ol(er, the
means land control, hoping to
rapidly become the most
powerful force controlling the
future of our stat<>.
It waB puzzling to find this the
first article that dadn 'l state it
was "the mandate or the peo·
pie " But just how much of a
mandate was it? Initial reports
showed 55.29 gercem voted for it.
yet a survey re-ceJltm only 2 per·
ceht or Lo8 Angeles and Orange
County regtStered voters remem·
bered a Coastal Plan was to be
prepared. since Proµosition 20
was so vague and confusing.
When the absentee votes were
counted only 50 02 percent of the
voters voted for 1t which l don't
remember s eeing in any
newspapers.
Californians have problblJ
raced more poUUcal ~now job5
than any other slate, but not.hi°'
would have been woree to our
state's !uture than ii thb CouUal
Commission had been 1lven lbe
full power It demanded.
PATRICK M. ROYCE
'Dynasties' Challenged
An inroad for the curtu1lmenl
of the practice which permits
governing boards of special dis·
tricts to select successors to fill
vacancies 1s moving towards
final approval in tho Legislature
The measure, AB 13, authored by
Assemblynvm ~ill Lockyer of
San Learidro, haj'I ~asaed the As·
sembly apd awal~ d.isposit1on of
a Senate ctmmiU.et.
"" The bill wovJ61~01.-the cnll loa of a $~al ·••ttUon to fill
yacancim un·
less they OC·
cur within 120
d~)'s of a g~ral •lee·
tioq. To en·
courage the
boards to call
special elec·
lions Lockyer
has provided
the vacancies
may ht-filled by the board of
supervisors if the district board
refuses to order the election.
The weakness or tho Lockyer
bill is also its strength. That ts.
the bill applies only to municipal
utility districts of which there
are only four in the state. L1m1t·
ing the provisions to that field
has eliminated the opposition
which would have been made by
the more than 4.000 special dis·
tricts scattered throughout the
state. Yet. on principle, the ob·
( EARL WATERS )
jections Lockyer raises to the
.. exclusion.of new blOO<f and new
ideas'' in the municipal utility
districts by r ealjon or the
"perpetuaUon of conltot b)' 'cli·
que" are jwit as valid in apphca·
t1on t.O all special {ljstriFt.8·
But Lockyer, as a proper
represent.alive of tris distnct. JS
aiming at a local problem. name·
ly the East Bay Municipal
Utilities District where, he says.
the people baven 't selected • new
member to the board in 50 years
His measure includes the three
other municipal districts simply
because all four are governed by
sectlOns of the law which deal on-
ly with munlcipal ulihty dis·
lricl!I
THE WHOLE problem of the
near exclusion or the people from
participation jn the running of
special districts was covered in a
study conducted by the Institute
for Local Self Government. It is·
i;ued a report in 1970 which was
as crlticaJ of theJr operations as
the title, "Special Districts or
Special Dynasties? Democracy
Diminished" implies.
Except for the fact tha~ the
number or special districts has
doubled since the time of the re·
port. nottung has changed and
the flndines regarding them uc·
curately describe prei;ent condi·
tions.
Holding that, "The basic tenet
or local self government is its
repreaentatlve democratic
nature," It declared that
"special district incumbency
patterns show characteristics
more akin to dynasties than de-
mocracies.•·
The report didn't stop at
criticism or the Incumbency pal·
terns which strain the "one.man.
one .vol~" concept of self.
goveram•nt, but hlt bard at the ·•tow talblllty" of the ad-
m Ion of t districts and
th•lr on·accoantab11ity. • •
IT ALSO raised serious ques-
tions as to the need for the pro·
liferatlon or special distracts
terming the system the "step.
child or expediency.''
Loclcyer's blll goes in the di rec·
lion or curbing "the abuse of in·
cu m~ncy" but the political facts
of llft preclude hlm from at.
tempttna to apply his remedy to
any sa~able number or special
districts.
Yet, accepting the findings of
the 1Mt1tute 's report, the tax-
payers would save hundreds of
millions tr m911t, if not all, or the
special distrij:U were eliminated
and their fUhctlons returned to
the cily and county governments.
Young~HomefrontRok
Andy Young ill no longer an
enigma
It took a while for us to re·
cognize what he was up to .
At first 1t appeared lo make no
sense rOI' a diplomat to be mov·
ittg about Africa ln the un
diplomatic role of a gadfly.
The very ldea tbat the chler or
the United States' U.N. delega·
tion should ht
going around
Africa !an·
ning smould·
ering pas·
&ion s into
flam e -it
dldn 't seem lo
make sens~.
It doea now.
Our U .N .
Ambaqador
Andy Yow.,1, tn Uie name or
"human rlshta." told bfack
Africans lo bot. oU white
nterchants; called th Britllh
..dalcken" Oft racial matters; hn·
pll•d black American tr6ops
would rd\aM to fllht on ~ alde or South African whl •
. All Oda t.able l>O'I made
j
( PAU[; HARVEY J
no difference whatever lo the
principals mvol ved.
Africans cannot boycott white
merchants any more than they
bave.
Brltain derruua~ and got a
fine·•rint apology.
The.re never was any question
about our military involvement
in South Africa.
Then why all the innammatory
rhetoric?
l 1u1eesl the parallel purpose
Is to create a homefront hero
whose protestations tend to shush
dissent
AS GOVERNOR or GOOTgia.
Jimmy Carter was similarly
akillful -sacrificing home·state
support on the race issue ln order
to build the only kind or a national
reputation that could wln national otllce. Andy Young. then and
now, has helped with elegance
and eloquence to establish and
su1taln that lma1e.
Thlt may be the fint-c!'fer Ad·
mlolltraUon In our nation which
has manaaed to neuter domesllc
race restivtmea by -In effect -
moving the race problem to
Ah-tea.
f
•
i J
..
!WBbBP
Wonderful Weber wall win vou
romphments • America's favo.rite
outdoor cooker • Porcelain in & out.
A propoHd study of Saddleback
Collece trustee area redistncttng has
been delayed for al least a year witn
plans to proceed Jn the recular board elecllons ot March. 1979.
Ttie board voted unanJmously to
hold off on the realignment because of
the cost ol stagins a special election to
decide If the new boundaries arc ac-
ceptable to voters.
SEVERAL TRUSTEES vot('ed an
interest in remapping the district
because of disproportionate growth in
the Irvine and Saddleback Valley
areas
Jt was s ugge&ted that James
Thorpe, a mathematics instruct.or at
the college, conduct a stat1sllcal study
of the district to determine where the
new lanes should be dfawn
ADMINISTRATORS told trustees
that Thorpe could be appointed Lo
perform such a study next year m pre-
paration for placement on the next re
gular election ballot
In the sprina of 1979, four o{i the
seven trustees will be up for etecijon.
including those in the districts
believed to be tophea vy In populallon
C•ll 642-587'.
Put • lew word1
to work lor ou.
SOH OF HllACHl
Carry this BBQ like a
suit case • Opens Into a
DOUBLE BBQ • Coals are
reusable ... selr-rleaning too.
1488
••A PABIQ& NSB to be atiov.
reproacb ln bia ministry awid
bomoteXU.A1JtY lt a •lo and ban a
penort to onhnaUoo,'' ho aald. "We
1boald devise a mlnJalry far tbe
homosexuall so they can be cleared of
th1'1ln."
The Rev Edward D. Gthra Jr. of
Decatur, JU., said the proceu •tarted
tut year 1bould be allowed to con·
Linue and arped that to do &0YthJD1
elJe would be an error.
"WE SHOULDN'T BE stampeded
by a motion to take an uninformed
posltion." said Mr. Gehrea. "Thls de·
ciaion can affect the Jives of millions
of human belllgs. If we truly are in
fear ot God, we will take every pre·
caution to make informed declslona.
We muat be positive, not neiaUve."
The issue came befou the As·
sembly on resolutions from presby-
terltl In Huntsville Ala., _.oo Pitts·
burih. They alleged that tpe taak of
studying homosexuality was an Im·
proper function, clalmlne the Scrip·
lures were clear and unequivocal that
gay behavior is just as slnfUJ as pro-
slitutlon. adultery and fornication.
SFARCH PRESSED
FOR. 'SON OF sal'
NEW YORK CAP> -New York City
police have stepped up their manhunt
for "Son of Sam." the .44-callber
killer of five.
On Tuesday 10 detectives were
added to lhe force of SO officers work·
ine fulllime to catch the killer. It has
spent more than $1 million on the
manhunt and is checking some 2.000
aeencles, clubs and businesses to try
to track bis weapon.
SOMY •ETAMAX. Sony'• ta• dlagC)naJ
screen Bttamaic home vtdeococdlng •Y9t•m.
Record your TV favor11H rtght on VICS.0-
cassetlt ••• Build a video llbfary OI UM caste II" over and O'le(, B•t mu records
while you're viewing and will even record
automaucally while you'rw away. Brilliant
Trtnllron color and SOny craft1man1hlp
make Betamu an .... y-to-operate addltlon
to home entertainment. •
Take Betamax h0me lmmedlatelyor'*8 tt
delivered A. great w~ to reward youraell All
Bank ol Newport Time SllYlngs Programs ant
baSed on maximum allowable lntemt. and we
can also atrange to hlWe your funda transfetrod
from othef financial Institutions tor you.
YDUISIF FDI SAVING AT DANE DF MEWPD!T
OPEN A TIME DEPOSIT AND TAKE HOME SONY'S
FAMOUS BETAM AX HOME VIDEO SYSTEM ONLY
AT BANK OF NEWPORT.
BE!E~ HOW' Open a Time Certificate of Deposit account at Bank of i\ '1 • Newport using any of these 3 plans ..•
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60 111onths at 7.25%
2 Dep osit $10,500
37 months at 6.5%
~ Deposit $15,000 W 26 months at 6%
(Other In lieu
of Interest
Hvlngs plans
also av•llable)
Substantial Interest penalties required tor early withdrawals Member FDIC
Stop by, phone, or write ... Bank of Newport, P.O. Box 1747, Newport Beach, Ca. 92680. we can open your Time Cert1f1cate of Deposit account In Just a few minutes, and you can
claim your Betamax reward. CALL 831·3110
MAIN OFFICE. Dover at Sixteenth Street, Newport Beach
CORONA DEL MAR OFFICE: Coast Highway near MacArthur, Corona del Mar
LIDO OFFICE Thirty-second Street at Lafayette, Newport Beach
It happens
only
once a year.
REFRESHMENT CElllER
REFRIGERATOR/FREEZER
Thrs Fr1q:darre fHcluwo dispense~ ore. chilled waler, ond 2 1uir,.~
riqht th<ough the door!
• 20 cube feel
• I OO'l. Frost.Proof
•4 fresh food compotment shelves
• "vorloble rrt Fr1()1do1re•, nfl'W decorolOf' color -"l(Tlond
SAYE 570 NOW
WASHER
DRYER
f.,rJture\ uP·Ond rlown o.,•'<llc1
·~'''°" 18 11; <Ql:OC ty, Kn.•~ Peitrr• f'r,.\llJl~ 7 WrrJ, (11(1,.\. """<t>nq
18 lb. c*ys ""'h Gentle f!ow.n9 Mal.
Sntoky Joe •••.....••...•••••.• It.I I ..,_ _________ _,.
11" l&odt .••••.••.••••.•••••.•• lt.81 SAYE 57011 23•• llclctc •••••••••.•• --.............. .
Unassembled /Colors Available
Glidden
SPRED SATIN
A beautitUJ laallilg finish from your bruah or roller. Now the biaaeat
bar9aln ~ver. White or colors.
WEED
EATER .
CLlPPE
R Inch cut
24.88
SNIPPY
10 Inch cul.
44.88
NEED IE
18 Inch cut
lleavy duty
59.88
•You've seen lt on TV ... Y.ou•n Jove lt • Cuts wttb
nahl"g lfhe ... no bladee .• siafef •Cuts around treea ...
a,l on( Al~ewnlks
everywhete.
• A formr-Vi..d ~er ofld dryet comb.Md
'" o .,nqi,. cobr>er 111\1 2 lael '"'Id&!
NEW HOURS TO
SERVE YOU
9~9DAILY
9.!6 SA TUROAY
lipecdly pnctd d..tillQ ""' ~fl ody r Po• .. ~"''"""'...., . .,°'''°"· 3 c.,.o.,,. I! r " & J-i..)ld, r,.-.d ,.,,_,,\)Y ~
ript.on
.~\~
REG.
4.96
99
EACH
FOLDING PATIO
OR POOL CHAllS ~ ....,, ......................... ....
..................... '1'11M s* .. .......,, ,..... _ _._,....,...~~, .. ~
DIODOWCT
PLlnD TAMPONS ............
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•
•
OUR REG LOW PRICl 2. 9 9
.
. -i~~-"HOT DOG" TATAMIS
:I r'. •CANVAS WITll MACIAMI •HINTED YELOUI .,,._...~~ •YELVO WITH STUW INSOLE •UINIOW TlllY
utiicr~
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~ WIAI ualOGIS OI OUT
99
ea.
MEN'S ~ WQMEN'S
SUNGLASSES ,........., ......... .....,,. ..... ~ ... .....
.... •• 1'1'; ........................ . ..,,... ........... :.....,. ............ ""'"
'
Tbrc ewport Beach women. Barbara
Stewart. left. Lynn Newton and Barbara
Ward, study aar route11 to be used an the
30th Powder Puff Derby's Commemontive
Flight \hat begms Frtday with an 8 a.m .
takeoff scheduled in Palm Springs. The
commemorative rhght will follow the
course oC the original race m 1947 . This
year's fli&ht, however. is not a race This
trio will fiy Lynn Newton's new plane.
background. The fhght will Cinsih July 4 at
Tampa, Fla
LB Easements Action Studied·
T he Callforn111 Attorney
General's office 111 invc11llgatina
actions lt may take in the wake or
abandonm ent of county·held
easements to the beach at
Thousand Steps in South Laguna
by the Orange County Hoard of
Supervisors
In a leller to Lagunan John
Gabricls. who 1s f1ghtlne the re·
turn of the easements to property
owners. Katherine E St.one, de·
puty attorney general, reiterated
an opinion that the county 1s pro·
hiblted from disposing of the
easements by state law.
Mrs. Stone said "there is a
strong possibility that such an
action would be overturned by
the courts."
"Please be assured that this of
f1ce 1s quite concerned over ttus
possible loss of access to the
tidelands and as continuin& to in·
vestigale this matter to de·
termine what courses of action
m•y be available to resolve this
problem," Mrs Stone wrote
Gabriels said he was "buoyed"
by the interest of the attorney
general's omce He has also writ·
ten to the Orange County Grand
Jury and has received a letter in
return sayane the matter 1s being
considered.
Saddl
lrutt
tb ir
l w
byl•l•
1al va • ay1nc 1tat.e
buUdinl .alitance pro·
aram.
Ourtni d1tcu111on of
proposed flnunc1n1
methodsforth dbtrlct'11
1ermlnat1n1 1econd
camput in Irvine, col
lege Pretldent Robert
Lombardi appealed to1
the board to put pre~sur~
on Sacramento
"We need you lo sell a
special program for Sad
dleback smce we are an
unusual case in the 11tate
rieht now. Lombardi
saad
HE EXPLAINlm that
Saddleback 1s one of a
very few districU. an the
state that is still arowmg
at a rapid rate
Last summer, a new
law (Senate bill 1641 >.
changed the formula for
state aid to college dis·
tricts by eliminating
funding based on student
enrollment inc reas es
and imposing a lid on dis
t rict tax rates
The ceiling meuns Sad
dleback's ~eneral
purpose tax rate cannot
be increased over lhl'
1976-77 level of 95 cent11
per $100 of asses!led
valuation
According lo Lom
bard1. the amount of
money consumed each
year by operating ex
pill ol
aaboul on
r pt ~
third• for operat on1
With a fnttm tu rate.
how • Lomb I t'O •
tended th bua wW be
rnore like one-ellhlh and
1oven..tahLhl by the ear·
ly 1 .
"It l1 &OU\I to oceur."
m S ra
"We haw to
them to ualat an our
bulldlna Pf01ram ao lhc enormous caet will not be on our tupayert alone," ...__ ______ ,
be added.
63 a year for xour money.
And you don t even have
to leave it a week.
Suppose you open a regular account with us
tomorrow Any amount Then later you decide you
need cash and you take some or all of your
money back
Your money still earns a1 the full 6% rate, from
day m to day-out T~ere's no Wlthdrawal penalty
Anytime your account bat~ce 1s $5,000 or
more, the interest rate 1umps to l/2% With the same
liberal withdrawal terms And Glever the rate.
we compound 1t quartP.rly
No rrurnmums no tie up, and 6° It II pay you
to call us for the details. Available to md1v1duals,
corporatlons end orgarnzat1ons residing in
Cahforma
COMME(\.CIAL C~DIT Computer Study
Of Deruity OK'd , penscs 1s 1ncreas1ng
steadily, leaving less and
less for capital expen
d1tures. such as n<'v..
COMMER.CIAL CR.EDIT PLAN
INCOR.rGR.AT ED
COSTA MESA ANAHEIM HUNTINGTON l!C:ACH ORANG£
370 Ea•« J'/lh Street 650 Soulh .067!i Golaen Wott 1111 Town b Counlly Rd
HEALTH FOODS
lrln9 ttUt od fOf' your there of ow llrthday
C•l.twaflori Discount Sal•.
I 0°10 OFF ON ALL FOODS
b e.,. Dlffry ..,d 1e1i...., GocMh.
2 0°10 OFF On Appliances, Books
& Vitamins.
V.lltlt• A"9-ht.
27041 La Paz Ro ed Mlu lon Viejo. Ca. 92675
768-7680
Plan11 to develop a computer program to predict
the dollar impact of changing population and density
in Orange County won the approval or supervisors
Tuesday
The board hired Dc c1!>ion Sciences Corporation for
$44,437 to develop the
computer program.
Countv officials said
the firm has developed
similar programs
elsewhere The <'Om
puter system would help
county officials in plan
ning by predicting the
dollar Impact of chan~es
in population, ai. well as
increased populittion
density
The proaram also
would address areas
~uch as the age of county
bu1ld1ngi. and other
changes 1n county demo·
graphics
A MESSAGE
FROM T.HE KID
INSIDE YOU •
No matter how old you
are, there's a kid inside
you who's trying to tell
you he wants out this
summer.
He's dying to cut
loose and have
a good old care-
free time like
he used to. And
not spend all
his allowance
doing it.
You m ay think
those days are
far behind you.
But we have a
surprisingly easy way
to get back that free
and easy way of life.
It's called the bus.
That may not sound very exciting
right off. But think about it. Part
of the joy of Y,outh was not
havin~ to worry about posses·
slons. (Like ~our car.) Or. being
responslDle for things. (Cike
remembering to buy Qatoline
and keep change for the parking
meter.) Or putting u~ witti things
you didn't ltke to do. ~Uke ClrMng
Jn traffic.)
• " Well, that's what the bus is
all about. Orange County
Transit District buses take
you to all of the fun
places. Disney land.
Knott's Berry Farm.
The Fun Zone at
Balboa. The beach.
Anyplace.
Without the ·
hassle and
responsibility
of driving.
It doesn't take
a pocketful of
change to ride
the bus, either.
Just 25¢ one way.
So you can save
all your money to spend
when you get there, instead
of spending It getting there.
l.!isten to the kid inside you.
He's right about a lot of things.
I
For complete information and
sctleduling on all OCTD routes
a ct services, call Orange county
Transit District at 547-3311.
buildings 64~-R700 Brookhura1 S1reet 847.7771 S1111t1 Zt
HE SAI D thl' current 774-6740 '> i? ~87 1
CALIFORNIA FEDERAL !
PRESENTS
TWO WAY SAVINGS.
Now: A savings plan that-JOU the most
for your money--and easy withdrawals, too.
IC r,ou'vt.• l(ot l:!.000 or mort.• Lo suv1.'. oua· "'rwo·
Wuy_ ' Plan h1 tht.• ~mortest wuy to i.nve it.
That's becuusf' it's Ruch u !«'O"lihlt1 wuy lo
divide your soving!I '*'you'll huw money for cluy·
to-day need~-und for Jong lc..'rm ohjC'ctive11, loo.
Two-Wl!.Y combine~ two of our mo"lt r1opulur
nccounts: A Cnlifomln Pim• Honu"' ucN>unt for
your rt•n<ly mcinc~ Anti, nur hight.•'lt int~rt•"t
1·(.'rtiflcut1 ..
They're togf•th •r in 11 sin)(lt'. conv1•nit•nt
puckage.
llonuJ Interest
for your ready money.
Your &nu aarcount ~nrn~ 1flt-.% 11nnuul
int.ereat rat~ the fir~l 110 clay~. Tht•n, w~ U<M tt
\AJ% bonu11. Thul hrinl(H your unnu1l rtth• tu 5~%. And you ~llrn it from lhen on.
f\lnd!J withdrawn in th • ftrat U1ty1t ~urn no
int.erc111l. Thcreuflt1r. you won't low. u ~·nn,v ul
Interest If you with1lri.w ul nny t)Uurwrly
intero1t per1od. And withdrawol I lW"t•n
quane am ut the 5\4% rate.
So ff you h11vf' the pntiencu t.1 wuit UO duy ,
-
A Y II THAT Lhe CJ·)'ear-old
rom.la womim ••• •••Y I of fV1.I ol r atory l • month..'I aeo new• fvtnn that pn~sumably wa& not unrtlated lo
effort. t.odrum up publ11her 1nkrdll in tbe book.
Al Mn. E:itner rel•t~ at \be ume, and now hu
rn>eat.ed wilb addltJonaJ detail, aUe1ed lnlimuac:iea
with · u f)'ant Sinatra led to lntrodutUona to
Kennedy and mobst~r Sam GJancana, each of whom.
by ber Kcounl, . hared suual comparuonah1p walh
ber.
JUDITH EXNER
In ''MyStory,"Mra.
Ellner speculates that
Giancana may have
used her because of her
alle1ed ~e lo Kennedy.
However, the question is
Jert unanswered
Mrs. Exner became
natwnally known in 1975
when the Senate Jn-
tell1aence Committee
reported, without men
tionlng her name or
gender, that it had
evidence that a "close
friend" of the late presi-
dent also was a "close
friend" of Giancana and
fellow gangster John
RosellJ at a time when
the Central Intelligence
Agency allegedly was
For the Record .
I
Blrda•
l'OUNTAINVALLl!Y
COMMU,.fTY HOS,.Tl'L
Jun• I I, ltll
Mr o11M M'• M •i ""' 1 ~01tot1t. Hutu
'"<If On 8•<1< n Dtty
JUM 11, ltll
Mr .. nn Mr\ \h·v .. n u""'''"
11\lllOll 1101 h bny
ttu11t
Mr "nd Mr' (,rnv .. , RN .,n,,m Huot
1noton fh•tt<h,lX>'t
Death l'Wotlc:-e•
JUMl4,1'17
""-' And Mr\ R•nootf Sc,,,.,•<tr.
w .. \ltn1n\lf'1' q1rl
J-11,HTI
,.,.,. 4'nt1 Mr\ Cr•1Q Morr I\, llount•ln
V'dHI '( rliOV
Jun••• . .,,,
Mr •nti Mro,, Q.Javld Sofort~r\O. Foun.
l111n VAlh:y tw1nb0y\
IC LY L&A&NSD
• c
to •• wu 1towrtl9abookto
t t record 1traJ1ht."
"111 , •· wblch na much Uk.• th script '°" a opera, rdates that Mra. Exner knew.
notbln1 about any CIA plot
However , abe write. at one
Point·
"All I look back, it'• posalble
that SID\ 1ot exacUy what he
wanted ftom our relatlonahtp.
Now that I know of his involve-
ment with the: Central tn
telll1ence A1ency, it is possible
that I was used •I most from the
be1lnnlng It never occured "'""'ov to me that Sam's interest an me was simply becawie of my association wath Jack
Kennedy."
ON THE OTHER HAND, SHE depicts Gtan·
cana, who was murdered an 1915 shortly before he
was to testify before the Senate committee, as a
generous, loving and lovable man, albeit one sur·
rounded by people with odd gangland nicknames
who were given to talking about "dese" and
"dose "
By Mrs. Exner's account, first aired at her
news conference, she was introduced to Kennedy,
then a senator seeking the
Democratic presidential
nomination, at the Sanda Hotel
In Las Vegas on Feb. 7, 1960. She
reports that singer Frank
Sinatra, with whom she al~o
claims to have had a sexual rel a·
tionship, was present.
She writes that Sinatra 1n
lroduced her to Giancana, Jona
reputed to be the crime overlord
of Chicago, at a M1am1 Beach
s1H•Tu hotel March 27, 1960.
IN EACH CASE, SHE WRITES, T Ht: men
peemed to take an immediate interest in her. She
goes on to claim that Kennedy
subsequently romanced her in
Miami, New York. Los Angeles
and Washington -even at the
White House after he became
president.
Close Kennedy associates,
named in the book as having had'
knowledge of the alleged rela·
tionship, huve denied ever know
ing Mrs. Exner or knowing
OIAHCAHA about an affair.
The alleged relationship with Kennedy ended,
she writes, sometime after March 22, 1962, the day
the then-president had a private luncheon with J_,
1ASHAM w111 Edgar Hoover, the late director ol the Federal · MARV ~HA" BASHAM, .,.le••d A AL PH EOWAAD WE88 ot M>O W f I • I h •-'li
... 1~ ol Ctwirlff E., moth• r ol Ontd Bonita, Cl•r-t, C•lllor"•d 01 d Bureau 0 nvestigal on w ose agen ... were ta1 ng
Wo"" 8<ttNm. d-..ghl•r nl Arthur H MoM•y .--r11no '" Pomon.o v111!., Giancana. ~~ ;:;oi.:c~:·,. 11~~~:~ 1(~~~1:i,"~ Clol mmut\IMIY ~t•I rollowln9Ja "'°'11' The Exner book contains reputed examples of
' nr\\ , ~-was°"'" ""• . II alk" be h d K ed d I . 1• )()AM, T""'' •1 th<' r .... ,, h n• oor 1'0S '" 0.11 Par11, 111. He came 10 "pi ow t tween er an enn Y an c aims
"•1""" "°".-r lawn Cypr•• Hu••t C•1<•n•"I• rrom Tues In 1t10 ~ h"<I to explore, with a minimum Of explicit dclatl, his t.Awn MorlUM'y 1..,·d •n rHw!JO<I &.acn Ca rtt1or IO ttus11v '"'"'"'l to c14,...,..,.r ,.,·Jury of 1'1S. sexual preferences. MINNI( HU~St'Y """""' nl (e>•I• Mr W•bC> .... , Q•Mlualf'd from Phlllt ... Ni .. w. C•Htotn•• P., ... .,, ,.....,.,.Jun'" 1I E ,, .. ,,., Ac.,.mv W1Hl•rl'ltCone~ •nd
•t11 S-rv1c•\ -''• ()t"'1HV1 Al ._,m•I" 11)1\t) tf'WI lJ"lvf'f\1ly of (hlf49QO l .. .,
Tulhlll L•mo MIWluarv. Co\te Mtt,•, Xhool Mt". Wtbbr••• .ntmbot:rof th~
... •Ill& llr.lllPd ChllrO• ol l'hfl•I C-·f'Cl~llona•
HOLLAND In Clar-I. 9t SHIH hi\ wlOO,., Mr> . tllfNE HOLi ANO, r•\ld•nr of k.,,,. •• ,. v w-...... '"'"lffd by
A"·'" 1m (•l1forn1• PeS\ed •w•Y lwo d•uoMtH1 Mrs. -.,rdtn W~t>t>
Ju"" 11 1'71 5erv•<n ••• ~tld•nQ •I WAl•on •!Id Mr., "••M:H S..zanne
\m1U\ Tuou11 L•mb W.OrluAfY (0\1• M··n\O\t,.•d. bnlf"I of WAinut CrHtri. (•
M•\tt 6tlt '*"" \ ttor Mn Ht-t\f'V W,.bb A.-to Cl•re
HOLLAHO rnol\I brOlhor Aoberl H. 'w•Db,
College Accepts
Fall Applicants
Jf~S HOl l A,.0. H\ld•nl or tn1i1t•ood C• ar>Oll-.grencklllldr..-.
AM,,.,m < •101nrn • P•"""" .... v '·r••o• ""'" .,. i.1c1 r11urJ .. 11 :OOAM Orange Cout Colleae is accepting apphc a lions Jun• 1' , .,, \I 'V '·"'.'It• cwnoinq •t 1n 0•11( P•rk Ce,,-w.trrv. Ct•r1mot1t, C•
stn11h ''''"'" 1 '"'~ Mn••u•r. <Q"• Tndd M.,,.,..,,.1 c11.,,..1 Pomo"• 1, ,,. for the fall aemeater. ·
Mua 6•b 'Ml <ll•rv•otarr.,,.,.m~nl; Registration materials can be obtained from
\TU•f ~EOfllSON h d i l offi Th ff' 111sHlfY n A1u1 \TINE r•'""'"1 llLLl• M•LiNoA PEDERSON r. t e campus a m sa 001 ce. e o 1cc is open o lrvll'\ ... r .. ofnrn,.. PA\\ed•V111tyJun1 c: ' 1 M d thr bTh d f 8 9 O 1•. 1911 ""'""''' "'" "'"dina •• \rnilh "dtnf or T,;c...,.., Arltol\A, Pen.clewav OD 8yS OUi ura ay rom a .m. to : 3 p. m. 'lllh•ll l om1> IM•hhUV CO'I• Mua Ju.,• JI, 1'7I ~"-1\\urvM>dDyher !Ion and 8 8.m. t04 :3() p.m . On Fridays. 6~ ••111 °•1" v 1"""1 P"""r.on. rusuon, Ari•· Registration will be conducted by aprviinlmcnl SIMPICIHS qrat1d\on Oel• 1111\C.nl ~dt~ll 11, ,, ..
v1 !lr.1N•11 t ~IMP• IN\ -q• 60 or fut'M>n Arll • qr•l\ddauahl•• Dt1>roa11 from Aug. 24-Sept. 6. ~'unt1no1nn nf" .. , n ( .1!itorn1~ ,,.,,~ Sotncftr, fuC\on. Arh . twn orrat· F m 1 t ti h l:CD "'735 ,.i.,., """" 11 1w ~urviv•d bv 1~~:~h1~";.~n ~:!!~\~ci!"~~,~:~':."::~i .---o_r __ o_r_e_n_o_r_m_a_o_n, p one...,.. . ., . ~~~:~;: ~~::: .~'; '~~:~·~~::~~~·:.', .. ~ .. "'"'" ~t Jvlv 1. fO-OOAM .tt tM PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ,.,, Alef\•• l.4'1i,.. < .,.,11,~,,,,. W•d• ,1,. M~lro\e Abt>wy Merno<tal P•rk,
citondtPlildr•n p,.,.,,, ,., '" °' w1i1 II• b•neh~"" C~ .'"~':~~~:i~~or..1~1~; t-----S--tS-, .. -----"CTLTIOUI IUSIHESS n•ld Tf\Uf\ at J MPM "' w .. ,1m1ntt•r IV ef"f'\Of' • Oii ·TO,TH• • ~•mOrl•I p.,, M ·••u•r• ... d l•mo Mot1uerv (O\I• "'"'" dlroC SU~llll cou.. NAM STATEMENT • 1 1 ........ STATIO,CALJ,OltHIA,Olt Thtlollowl119pertons~rtd0tnqbu<1 m•h-ry funilv "•O•tnl< C<>nlrll>U or THl!COUMTYOllOfllAMGa MUH
,,.n\loti..ar11v11"J "nd•l•on H .. A • .-JI ~"OJl!CT INOEPfHOENCE
WILSON HOTIC:a 0, HaA"IMO 01' 221',.tlrv-,ltor421,CO\t•M••e.CA
.. VAU(.HN wu ,(\N rtt•cl<o"r ot D t L-llaTtoftoN "'°" o•o•• Ol••CTIMt '"1'
NtWPOrt R•a<n "'''' r111a P•\\•d ea flJJ C 0 H VI 'YA H CI 0, a a'A &. S.11llltr11 (tlllornl• S•rvlct
••avJlllW'11, 1011 ~"""•dDyhtUflf• ~ltOllattT'Y TO COMf'&.ITll Dtll.,.ry~.11\< .. )1)9 Falrv-..,,
lih•t M . ""' r r•n>t•n L. Wilton, El IA'-• OH C:ON'TltA~INTlalO IM• I0•42,,c.oti.MeM,CA.,U1
T•ro, C• • d•u'lhl•r '" I•• 8•tfY Els he TOeV OICaASaO T"I•........., M condudN •Yf co< Yl(ll\ot1, on• orMd<l•uellt•r lu1en ew W'h l!Jlalt 01 MltOH H. 9"1JM, .tlt.t ..... .tllOI\. ' C~rl•r,Sno•o"" W•\h rwoorencllo"I • ~ AAllLOH 14AflllllY lf!UM IKY, SOIJTHllOCCALIFOANIA
"kh•r<I -A-.n W•IMln, IU Toro. 0.CHMd ll!ltYICEOl!Ll'(EllY
Cl ~""'"' tOOPM H1urt., Pa<llJC CHICAGO (AP) -NOTICE IS Hlltf'9YOIVl!N hi SYS'Tl!MS,rNC.
VI"• ,,..,,.1 wlln P ... w Ao0tr ll~r9 Helen B. Wrlglev, 75, .,;HAllL'-15 a.4UMSl<V""' filed ..,.1,. ·~·· P411•'1'
oth<••l•"'I '" ''"'' a• ••-•rs, lam1tv J 1 """'"' '#)ll!lllll'Ottl, llM~ "~'"""' .,,.,a•sl•""'mor••l•""1"0u11onstoTN widow of chewing gum ,,...,,,....,,onltfdlftt1111tPttltlorwr1e This atet-m wu 1110d w1111 ,,,.
HltwPOrt "••hnr l ... ,... .... Churcll Ill executive and Chicago tomplttetlle ....,,,.of"'9<11tlrecte,.. O\lntvetwllClfC>-Covnr~eflJUM
..,.morv"' H V•,.•1M Wiiton lt1l•r 1er..i111tat1vA.tte11H lttum,ak41AarOI\ , '"' ..,,.,, p,.,,,,. "'""' MrrP10tla1 Per• Cubs owner Philip K. Herrv""""611y,dK.-.,1.w .. 1<11tlftQ 'il""9
,...,.,,, V••wM<>•h•••• dorec:w' Wrigley, dted Monday in •lld •n-1no ' con••"'"'" of ttHl Plltl4t"'9d °"""", .. ,.Dally P1101.
Elt..horn, wi·s ,rtlperty lo flli<Nt'tl ~. OllrCllaltf' 111\e "·-July6, IJ. 20. ttn 111>-11
· rtHCI HOTHHS
SMf™S' MOllTUAlY
627 Main St.
Hunltngton Beach
S36-6539
PIRPAMILY
' 4:0l0MIAL ,UHIUL
HOMI
7801 Bolsa Ave
Westminster
ag3.3525
PACl,_C YlfW
MIMOllAL ,All
C.metery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Pac1f1c Vrew Onve
Newport,
C11tlorn1a
a.4-2700
"' of certain rffl twOMrtv lltueltd In City t------------
LO NOON <AP> -Nov-
elist Phylll1 Bentley,
who wrote besl·selUng
stories about b~r native
Yorkshire, died at aae
82, her family aru\ounced
Tuesday.
PUBUC NOTICE
ol Mallbu COillltv ol Loj Antelu,
O.tcrlbtdetfoll~ l.ot IJ.Jln looll JI, ~' • & 10 OI llle<or_., rfla'91\Ct tt
wt11cr1 " -tor 1ur111tr ptrtkllltn. tftd 111•1 ,,. tlMt.,,. pltt• of 11ttrrnt
11\t 1e n1tl'IHllMllMtlof Jlll'l'M. 1'71,lt
' 00 1.rn., In ,,... couttroom f/f Dep.trt-
ment No. >of Mid court, •I 700 Civic c.Mti 1>11w We\t, Ill the Clly of S.tfl\.t
AM, C:.tllNtni•. Oettd J\lfl# 17, ttn
WJLl..IAMa.l(JOl4M,
CourllvCf~rk
TAHHIMIAUM,MCrMAN
&91LLIT
JU s..ttllleW9ffVOr .... ,
$11lltJIS
le,,erlv Hiiia, CAttltl
At .. r!HIY1fer "'I~ Publl"'9d OtMIOll Coal! 0.tll'I' Piiot,
JuMU.n,,., ''" 1711·11
Don't drop the ball! Get 11
job with a low-~tt Dally p,1ot Clautnto Ad.
Phone &42·5G'78.
. Neptune Society
CltlM.\TIOH ltJlllrA'-AT SEA
646-7431
'Y-lklel ~, Mtll '-flt. _.,_,_c_,_~
C.lltw,,...~ ........ ~.·
CASH &CAARY
B THE UMISTORE
w.sTat CHAAG& ~IU.>
FOOO SBYICIJllODUCTS .
PAPllGOOOS
JAMTOIJAL SW9UU
llllOM
MllCHAMDlll IAeS
. GENTLEMAN'S RING
1\R;>CT nntLL1/\IJTCt'1
DIAMOND It-I/\ Cl A.·N T YPt. r,1ouN rn-H >
IMPORT ANT EMERALD
(I J ! ()\1\1,1(\I I' l \,\"ti r· r
sr T IN A. I A.DY:.;
l'lJ\Tll'lll~f ',('\I IT.l\ln[ lvlOUl'ITINf;
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SUPERB DIAMOND AND SAPPHIRE BRACELET
WITH 7? SAPPHIRES '>4 CT ANO 210 01Atv10NOS ?4 Cl
78 CT TOT AL WEIGH'
. . .
I 8 .94 CT mm.I 11\N T Cll T
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PLATINUM SOI 1 l /\IJff M(llJl·J TINC
GENTLEMAN'S SAPPHIRE RING
rnr·n /\If mic /\FINE BLUE
•, ~1r,, r SAH·~ llHE IN
/\ S(JI 111\IHr MOIJN f lNG
_ ·:· FABULOUS 20.05 CT.EMERALD SET IN A
LADY'S FANCY RING WITH 9.43 CT. OF DIAMONDS
GENTLEMAN'S RING
WITH3 SOU/\H[ 111rlll/\l\M>IJ[)'.,
. 2 Q5 CT TOT /\I WI 1(;1 tr
EXQUISITE DROP EARRINGS
Wiii! ·1 rv'/\Jf llf'[) mJBIES
1111.,r T 11>1/\I l/JLIGHT
FINE CHOKER-TYPE DIAMOND NECKLACE
WITH 13.36 CT. Of GRADUATED DIAMONDS
BEAUTIFUL CANARY COLORED
EMERALD CUT DIAMOND, 5.77 CT.
WIP1 1lli'l/f!1T( 1>1/1~,~(>t;~,.~'1 ?:1 r·1
TU r /\I Wll!~I q 'l 'l•I ( r Ir J I\ 1.AfW: l
PL/\ T1r.11r .. i t M JI y .'·,£ T TIN(',
GREEN COLORED
PEAR SHAPED DIAMOND
1 f"l< I :.( T t"J /\ <~f I'll! E'l.,1AN •,
·~C·l IT /\IPI MOI JNTll~(;
IMPORTANT DIAMOND BRA CELET
Wlfil 1:ir,i/\f(l!(f)\J /\!1•;11t;·1 · 111·:1 1tJ1)', l.l'10fi
3·1H lllW Ll/\NT (tll :i1M/<.1rl1•. •: ,.,. i •f, l'I /\TINIJ~
FANCY SPRAY PIN IN
PLATINUM WITH BAGUETTE.
(ii< It I 1/.t H /\N[l r~l/\!<1; 'I' ,t
( • i 1 1 11 /\ Iv'< ir Jf 1: , 11~ • · ' ' r
OVAL CUT RUBY,
·1·rf';JT11,A
1 1• 1i',~/\flf'il~HJ',
>'/1I11 ·I '•) ! T ()I iJt/\~'1 l~~I ::,
Tbe Galveston, Tex., Court House is plC·
t on tho first ln a 1enes of color post
cards debuting this year, accordin1 to the
U.S. POILal Se"ice. Theme is historial pre· senatioo. The card will be issued for the
first time July 20.
on your.
N-·---f
p loft Jau
choHto rt t. Too bfld . tt wu a c to
h .. r experaraental Jan and
orlttnal ml.Ilic thetr Too
bad for the Revolutionary
EnHmble and Double Jmqe -
they played lo a near-empty
Allee Tully Hall oo Monday
nt1ht
BUT FO& TH08£ true
roUowen and cur106lly seekers .
who au.ended. it wu like belnl
an oblerver m a well·plannecl
laboratory. Classically trained Leroy
Jenkina waa m lop form witb lbe
Ensemble. He mana1ed to cap·
ture every nuance of the violin -
Crom the squeal of the altar to the
depth or a cello. He'a a versaWe
musician who feel• jual as home
on viola, recorder, harmonica
and kalimba.
two ot ,.,,... Coapel'
-WIN ually 900d. Bu& all
t med lll .... on a con·
cert tqe. The, aomebow tried
to retrieve the intimacy and
l.nforniallty of the loft by pla)'tna toe tb stqe center in a U•ht·
knot ad by aot amplllytn1 their
inatrumenta, Tb.11 allowed them
to acbl"• a purity of sound
Hldom heard ln Ulla ... of elec·
tronica.
SIRONE P&ETl'Y MVCH kept
hi• back to tbe audience wben h ..
bunched over his ban. He
poaned and erunted, clutchlna
the instrument in death·llke pip
and then releasin1 it u he dis·
played an exciting rbythnuc
vitality. He started the concert
on a rather subdued note with his
trombone. He became freer
when he a witched to bass.
Cooper la a subtle but precise
drumlJler. He also plays
balapbone, bui!e, piano and the
saw.
July 6, we'll pay 7%3 =~~UM
·aeposit account.
Nob no savings & loan
can pay you more.
Opening an lndividual Retirement
Account at Bank of America can benefit
you In a number of ways.
There's earnings. of course.
No bank or savings & loan can pay you
more on Individual Retirement Account
funds held in tl time depo">il account.
At Bank of America. your lRA plan will
now earn a sohd 71'1~ annual Interest
with a minimum maturity o{ three years
•. . or as long as 10 years. Interest is
'
compounded daily with an annual yield
of 8.06%.
If you 're confused about the
details of the IRA plan, we have courteous,
knowledgeable people ready to help you
fully understand the program.
Simply stated. the lRA plan 1s
uvailabl~ to persons who are working ~nd
who are not covered by a qualified
pension plan. With an IRA plan, you can
set aside up to 15% of your income (up to
$1,500 a year) and deduct it from your
current income when you file your federal
income tax.
You don't pay taxes on funds
deposited or interest earned until you
retire or withdraw from the plan. Generally.
you can't withdraw from the plan before
you reach 59Yz years of age without
paying substantial penalties as prescribed
by law. Husbands and wives can have
separate accounts if they are eligible .
It pays to have your IRA plan at
Bank of America in another important
respect. Conveniei:ice. The convenience of ·
having all your financial services at one
location. And. Bank of America has more
than twice as many California locations
as any other bank or savingc; & loan
If you maintain an IRA plan
or 1f you're planning to open one-
come to Bank of America. Discover why
more Californians depend on us.
m BANKOFAMERICA
Individual
Retirement
Account
a All01LINI>Tlt£11
m t7ot
Wu Wlra ta > tht1 car• on t Uae two mlWoD
fan1 l~ ~'° 1et • · Udet to on.-ol · tbe.i.r 50 ri~Tops ln Pope~ 1 w1 IWlllMl' than ~ ~ about tradltloaal rock
--lt&I trs~.
WbeD Zeppelin come
here. tbey atom\ acrosa the couotrJ with a relative·
11 •mall entouraae C20 people>, do three boun of
noostop, ear-split.Uni roek and roll Hveral n.Jabta a
week 9Dd still manaae to throw In some muaical aurprt.a.
I would never bave believed that my favorite
part of their show would be the four-son1 acoustic
set, but thiJ summer it is.
THE WEEK THAT LED Zeppelin took over
New York they also showed SQme cbanaes in
~eraonallty that w~e hard for a veteran Zep-
watcber to keep up wiU.. They bad their famllies
with them (they had ~rou1ht them especially to
t'lorida to see l>ls·
ney World and that
rained-out Tampa con·
cert). So. opening night
backataae at Madison
Square Gard en waa
a I moit llke b elnc
around the Grateful
Dead.
I couldn't believe
this was Zeppelin as I
heard shouts of "Dad·
dy ! Daddy!'' and looked
around to see Robert
Plant's 5-year-old son
Karac tu11in1 at Dad·
d y 's flowered print
CAROL CHANNING blouse. Plant's 7-year·
old daughter Carmen
was dressed in a chamo1:. minidress, as was her
mother, Plant's wife Maureen.
John Bonham's wife Pat and his son Jason (who
appears In the film , "The Song Remains the
Same") were there. as was John PauJ Jones' wife
. Mo and their three children Keira, Cindy and Tam-
my. Even manager Peter Grant's son Warren was
on hand.
WHEN THE FAMILIES RETURNED to
England, Zep hung out In Trax -a local cellar dis·
co -alter the shows. In the same club, on a regular
basis, were Keath Richard, Ron Wood, members of
Aerosrnith and Kiss. So much for socializing.
Robert Plant played soccer In Central Park and
bought a pink Llncoln Mark IV (with red interior) to
ship back to England John Paul Jones shopped in
the Rlzzoli bookstore, Jimmy Page stopped by the
Atlantic Studios to see the Rolling Stones, and John
Bonham stayed in his
room a lot and watched
TV.
H you wanted to
make up your own
version of Zep's 1977 set,
culled from their re·
cords, it would go like
thla: "The Sona Re·
mains tbe Same,:• "Sick
Again," ''Nob od y's
Fau lt but Mine," "In
My Time of Dying,"
"Since I've Been Lovin'
You," "No Quarter,"
"Ten Years Gone,"
.. Battle of Ever more,"
KEITH RICHARD "Goin' to California,"
"Black Cou n try
Woman," "While Summer" (from the Yardbirds'
"Little Games" LP>. "Kashmir," "Moby Dick."
"Achille5 Last Stand," "Stairway lo Heaven," and
then the encores "Whole Lotta Love," "Rock and
Roll,"Trampled Underfoot'' and "Black Dog."
MANAGER PETER GRANT ONCE said that
rock and roll remains vital by not playing too long
at one hall, and by the end of the week at Madison
Square Garden, Led Zeppelin was Itching to move
on. Playing in the same venue every oieht for a
week 1ets to be hke punching a clock.
So, as 20,000 fans were still cheerinC for another
encore at the sixth, and final Garden sbow, Led Zep
aped away in four cars to JFK Airport where their·
private 707 jet waited to take them to another city.
OAK WALL UNIT
2DRAWll ·6 SHaVH
IMMIDfAn RB DWVRT
SPECIAL · ~399 .... ""·
'
100-foot ""..., d\.-5'7 Steel Tap•-~~.~·:'!. a.ch
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Saw Bkade. · ~ .~~!Y · a.ch
8-Polnt ,..._., c-•-A 17
26'' Hand Saw~~!•~
Propane c. ..... wuh 5''
Electric --4• 1" 411 to-~· ~ Glu• Oun ............ ..
13-P\•c• ... ~ 3•1 Drlll llt Set .. '?!.~..... 1t1ch
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Double Row H.W. ,. 157 , ... Sia•• Tool lack · ...... · · ·"" .~ Torch ......... ~~~.~~~~.. SMh
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A lvety~ 16' ' Pleettc Swltdt Plete ....•.•
I tvetyC-'--4 16' • P'leettc Ovriel ,.., ....... .
c. ::.~.it .................. 26' D.=-S=h .............. 34'
··~~~ ............. '
F. :~~~~-............. 48<
G, ::.'t w:.~. Nvt1 ........... 48'
H StvHly '-«Nin 68' • C:.lllnt flf••-..... " .. ".
I So.It. 14/2 l ett1 .. 4 58 • Wire With o-in4 ". •
J Slnt le'91e 2 88 · Olmm., C-tr.. . • • . • •
I( 41" 0 .1. 40.w 97c ....... _..,, T11IM ••••••••
L. ~~ .. r.~ .. ~~13.88
VllSATILI
TWO-WllEIL
HAID TIUCK
14!~
J/1-INCH, 2-AMP
POWER DRILL
~~:1~~~; I I 11
or ~" wood. Sole
ends Monday. Shop
ot Kmol't ond save.
------QUALm; 2.1-AMP . _
B&D JIG SAW ~-. -.
Will handle up to . -.. •
or 1 'h ·inch soft· ~-....
wood. Double in· '
svtoted 2.1 amp
tnotor. Save today.
B&D FINISHING
POWER SANDER
Hal dependoble ~i~~s:o~odn~ ~~:i: 144 7
motor, doul>I. in·
sulo11d. Save now.
Sole ends Monday.
LATEX FLAT
HOUSE PAINT
GLOSS HOUSE
& TRIM PAINT
ACIYLIC FUT
LAnl EIAMIL
5~!
. ~:~:: ;,~;,~ ~::~114
soap ond wollr
cl•on-up. Sov1 Oal.
SEMI-GLOSS
LATIX llAMIL I.!!
For lillcht11 olld botti.
FLAT LATIX
WALL PAllT
.I!!.
Ryan Set
To Battle
KC Tonight
, By a !)ally Pilot Writer Even though the injury.
plagued Angels have lost two in a
row to Kansas City, Royals
roanager Whitey Herzog says it's
not all over yet ·' 1 still say if you finish ahead
of Cahfornia, you're going to win
i( (the American League West>,"
K.e sajd Tue~ay ni&ht. after the
BQyala defeated California 3·1
"'Whether it is us or someone
else, I don't know ''
He s&d he lhou&hl the An ~
.. haven't put everything tOJ~her
fet.'' recalling that hist am allO
was troubled by tnjurl Inst
year.
Herzog noted that neither Min
nesota nor Chicago. who are
ahead of the Royals and Angels
in tne standings, have a Frank
Tanana or a Nolan Ryan." Ryan coes agnmAt Jim Colburn
tonight at the Big A
It's getting so that if Tanana
A "fie'-Slate
All OMfteu11 W.fl'll'C. a.Mi. nwl
Jun,.l•l(-M .. CllvetC:.llfMl\llll I lh"'
J111v 1 OA>land ol C'all!M"4• I HP I"
July 1 Oa•l•NI •I ('~ltl&<nl• -7'P""
I
To KC'• LaCock
Sudden Success
• Is No Surprise
BJ DA VE CUNNINGIL\lt Of \M OallY Pltet Steft At tbts point, Pete LaCock
must be wondering what a guy
has to do to break into the Kansas
City Royals' startlni lineup.
He 's hitting .370 and has con
nected for aix game·Winning hits
this season, but Lacock still
spend• most or his time collect-
ing aplinterson the bench.
He 1ot the hiib average as a
pinch hitter, utility ouUlelder
and occasional designated hiUer
"Sure, I'd like to play every
day but they're t)le Western
Division champions and I just
came here from a new organiza·
tion," LaCoc~ says. "You don't
expect to just run somebody out
of the lineup riaht away.''
LaCock was traded to Kansas
City lul winter from the Chicago
Cubs, where he had hit only .221
over five seasona.
The sudden 1uccess or 1977
hasn't baffled LaCock, and he
doesn't think it's just an early-
Slew Is Sharp
NEW YORK <AP> -Seattle
Slew. the undefeated Triple
Crown champion, worked a snap-
py thr~-quarters of a mile Tues-
day on Belmont's main track
before being shipped to
California.
With regular jockey Jean
Cruauel aboard, the 3-yeat-old ~olt WU ttmed in 1 minute, 102/S
aeconda. includin• an impressive
233/5 for the 18't quarlef, a clock·
tng that delighted trainer Billy
Turner Jr. Crutuet then eased
Seattle Slew over another eighth
or a mile in 1:24. The Slew will go for the 10th
victory of his career Saturday In
the $300,000-added Swaps Stakes
at Hollywood Park.
summer surge of adN!nahn that
w Ill settle down ln July.
''Hey, I'm doing it. How can
~ou ear, it's a fiuke when I'm do·
ang it? 'LaCock asks.
"Sure, there's always some
luck Involved. I could hit the baJI hard every time and JO O-for-20,
then suddenly get a lot of bloops
and chip shots to fall in. But no, I
don't thirtk my bltUng is a Ouke.' ·
heaays. Deapit.e LaCock 't bitting sur-
ge, mana1er Whitey Henoi doesn't. appear to view the 25-
year-old u anyth\ns more than a
utility player.
"He ti ves us versatility."
Heno1 says. "He can help us at
first base. in the outfield, and
coming off the bench as a left·
handed hitter. Those are all
areas where we can use the
de th." iacock accepti. has role
gracefully. "l come every day ready to
play. At this 1>9int or the season
some guys are hurt or tired and
need a reel. I can play a Jot of dif-
ferent positions and l 'll gel my
chances," he says.
One benefit oC LaCock's hitting
is that people are finally re-
cognizing him as Pete LaCock
the ballplayer instead of Pete
LaCock, son of Peter Marshall,
the Hollywood Squares game
show tiQ.t. "People alwa)'.S Jsk me what
it's \Ute to be the son of a famous
father. I feel the same way about
hlm that you probably feel about
your father. except he'a just in a
different buaineH, •• l.aCock
says. "Most of lhe guys know who
my father ii and l get l Uttle rib·
blnl aboUt it. but they don't over
do It," he adds. ''I'm •ery proud
or my father and he's very proud
of me.''
• • • -
~----•r_ -_,._ -1~ -_-
n tX nlv~PA1litm
ck.''
Robert plans to waJk and joc
.. loq c b can and his '°" tblnltshehu alotofyean left.
"Ho'» ln 1ood 1bape for a
man IOOft to be tl. tll• heart
beat ls 50 pet minute and nu
blood pressuN ls 107 over 70 -
the tame as mtne." says
Harold.
ROBERT WILLIS GETS A KISS FROM HIS WIFE DELL.A. BOTH AR! 90.
Goodson ·Boes It Again
.154 Hitter Scuttl.e1 Luckl.e11 Brave•
ATLANTA CAP> Pinch hit·
ter Ed G«>dson, p1aylng very lit·
tie and hitting very little ror the
Los Angeles Dodgers. used a bor
rowed bat to \mock out the Allan·
ta Braves. The utllityman, who entered
the game with a .154 batting
average. drilled his fifth hit of
the seal()Cl and first homer lead-
ing off the moth Inning Tuesday
night, lHtlng the Dodgers to a 3-2
victory over the Braves
.. Quick, ask me some questJons
while I'm hot," the left handed
hitting Goodson said afterwards
"He <Max Leon) gave me a good pitch to hit out, high and fast. I
had known for two innings I was
going to hit, 110 I had time to be
mentally pre~ared . It hall been frustrating. I m happy to finally
contribute."
Goodson said he had been US·
ing other players' bat.a, but de-
cided to go with a heavier one
this lime, Boog Powell's 36-
ouncer.
The Dodsers tied the score at 2
in the e1ghth on two errors by
Mlanta third baseman Jerry Royster and Dusty Baker'• run-
scorlng sinaJe. The Braves had led from the
second lnnint when Gary Mat·
thew• tripled in one run oft Los
Angeles starter Tommy John
* * * 1..0J ANOILU
l OPl'I ,D
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HO!itll I t t t I I Har..,. 1 • t t J i
canop ,, 1 ' 1 t • 1 1-•t.t>t • 1 ' ' •• Ctm""'I I 0 0 0 t t Sa .. $. ....,.. 1111 WI> -ltMfl" 1' -2 1', A -t .2't.
and scored on a ground o'ut.
The Dodgers scored in the
opening inning oU Atlanta
Dodgen Blau.
Ml.._.,. KAIC l1"1
Ju-?'l.ot~tlAllMlt • »D"'
J-llll..ot""Otfet .. Al •t"t• • :IOD m
July 1 letA ...... atSoln Fref'C""o 1 lDD"'
starter Steve Hargan on Dave
Lopea' sm,le, a stolen base. a ground out and a sacrifice fly by
RonCey. . · The Braves only had three hits
orr John . and relievers Mike
Garman ~nd Charlie Hougb.
Garman, 4 o. picked up the vi<:· tory with Leon, 2-3, laking the de-
feat.
"There was no letdown for us
here after the big Cincinnati
seraes. no sir," said Dodgers
manager Tom Lasorda. whose -
club has won two straight agamst.
the Braves ant"r splitting a four·
game weekend series with the
Reds. "This cuts you deep, playing a
club like that two days in a row
and coming out with nothang."
said Atlanta manager Dave
Bristol
Half-court Bucket
LUCK OF TltE PRAW-
Dennis Fltipatrick. Does that name ring a bell? lt may ii you
followed basketball in tho late
1950s when he played at Oranre
Coast College and later at Cal .
His nam& ·has been out of
basketb&IJ news for years, now
tbat he is in the world of finance
and bankinf. However, be got lo
do bls Sportl thing earlier UU.
year at tbe Forum. He #M in the audience for a
Lakera·PJilladelpbla basketball
game when he was cbOMn by
head "-'Mr'I random aelection lo be in a balttlme promotional
simmlclt. It was tak\ni a shot from half
court. U tht shot went throu&h
tbe basket, tbe sbQOter won ~new
Toyota. · Fltipatrick's shot hit the
backboard and bank~d tJu'ou&h-
undeniably; tbe most worthwhile
bwl1qebllcareerproduced.
OL MPlC l'ILM -A 11•
dbl• .. Offldal mVJle or the trrt
WlaurOfymDfe Games I• nalla·
bl• to IMIYldaal• ud lrta" U1roaib Moa&aomery . Ward .cot• at. DO dla,.e. Evtl'J' ..-
aad tbe p1pw, OI .pabii Ud
ctoaac eereiaOaJel are l.aefilderd.
Soaadl like ttie bar,aha of t.be
cntilrJ •.
OF VOLLEYBALL-The team
the Laguna Beach senior boys
beat ln the national junior
volleyball championships held
recently near Chicago was com·
prlsed mcstly of college kids who
attend Ball State
Folks from the midwesl were
duly Impressed by the powerful
showing of Oran1e Coa1L area
teams in t.he tourney as those
teams 1wept the various
divisional tlUet.
oLaNM ~Oll'rl
••
AP L HILL. 1 .,
DUIS•.Dal.I
... .... t llil' ..,.,...,,_wn frorD l'On
d•r•U•• to u .. lJCl.A
lfitV<ollCll-JOb •at:. b)' t.imf' th 111\UDth
u.14 ln a wntua annuun
cmaeiia UCLA t direr.. 1.D ...... nJJtd blm and .............
UOR'Mr. fuYe d)Qa9fl not lo
a aadidale lor t.Jtat po1.1 tkJa. • • 8m.tth. COUit ol lb.
1m U.S. Olyrnpte &old mt'dal
team ... C'()Kb for Ui IHSCJnl •l NorUa CardJna.
.....,,,.~
S•An"LE A' new po11I •
uon colle&iaU f00tball same
••tchfn& the best aenlort from t!ae Pae" acaan.at tbe1r coun-~ from the Blg Teo w1U be
held m SeatUe's KJnfdome an
.1.-nuary. ll will debut before a
nadoowlde TV audJence at 11 30 ·
~m.Jan.14.
6.d'KllW
GREENVILLE, N C. Rick
'Bankston. defensjvc Une coach at
East CaroHna University. and a
27-year-old woman have been
ldlled in an explosion and fire
that destroyed Bankston·., home
bere
Aulhor11Jet. said the expl0b1on
Tuesday afternoon apparently
was caused by gas leaking Crom a line broken by workmen repair
ing a septic tank in the
Jfeigbborbood.
Bankston, 31. and Bonnie
}pnsauJ Langston, aJso of Green
vllle, were killed by the blast . ,.,._ s.IJaaAHlag
MIAMl. Ohio Doctors at an GENE TUNNEY (LEFT), JACK DEMPSEY MIX IT UP.
Ohio clinlc have scheduled open
heart surgery Thursday on Lou
Saban, the Umvers1ty of M1am1 's
new head football coach ForMeEnroe
Saban, SS, disclosed the plans
Tuesday in a telephone interview
from the Cleveland Clinic
He said he would undergo a
double coronary bypa11.!I and that
his phys1ciaM "expect it to be as
routine as somc•thing likt• this
can be
Connors Nex·t Foe
·'I am flgurin~ on twin~ rully
recovered and back to work 1n
plenty of time to get the team re
ady for our opening gamC'
ln a coronary bypass a vt>in
from another area of the body 1s
j mplanted to carry blood around
impaired coronary arteries that
supply the heart
1llra. lt'rigletf Die•
CHICAGO llclen B Wrigley
widow of the late chewing gum
executive and Chicago Cubs
owner Philip K Wri1ley 1s deed
at age 75
•The William Wri1tley Jr Co
~pnounced Tuesday that Mrs
Wrigley died the day befort> 1n an
Elkhorn. Was , hosp1t1:11.
Mn. Stea,,.1 111
''GLENDALE Mr~ F.dna
St engel. whost• late husband
Casey 1s a memhN of the
Baseball llall of Fame. was re
ported in unstable condition
Tuesday 1n the rest home where
.!lhe hu been confined nearly fiH·
years
Mn. Stenael. 82. recently suf-
fered aatroke When her huaband
died in 1975, she waa so tll then
that she no longer recoeruzed
hlm. They hod been m arried 52
ye an.
WIMBLEDON, England <API
"l'm not shy," says John
McEnroe, 18-ycar-old tennis
sen sation from Douglaaton,
N Y . in the understate ment of
Wimbledon·~ centenary tourna-
ment.
McEnroe. son of a lawyer,
t·ame here primarily to play in
Wimbledon's Junior tournament
He s scratched himself from
that He's got far more Important
things to do. like playing Jimmy
Connors an the m en's singles
semifinal
McEnroe reached the last four
the yount-test in Wimbledon's
history to do so ....oby knocking
out Phil Dent, the Australian
seeded 13th, 6-4, 8-9, 4-6, 6·3. 6-4 ln
the quarter-finals Tuesday. In
the previous round he effectlvoly
disposed of the very experienced
.Sandy Mayer.
In the semifinals ThUJ'sday,
he 's due to meet Connors, the No.
1 seed and hot favorite. He's tak
ing the prospect coolly •·1 don 't
know I've even met him,•• he
said.
Cauthen Wim 3
NEW YORK -Steve Cauthen,
the 17-year-old ndlne sensation
from Kentucky, be1an bis career
aa a fuJJ.fledged rider Tuesday
by scoring victories Ln bis finit
three mounts at Behnonl Park.
McEnroe's passage to the last
four hasn't been a quiet one He's
already drawn one rebuke for his
language And he threw a temper
tantrum once or t w1ce in his
match against Dent when calls
went against him. "I'm very in-
tense," he explwoed afterwards.
·but l 've controlled myself here
Wimbledon ts a &real tourna-
ment. but I m not ll•ttine it m-
Um1date me Thal way, you lose
matches ·
The prospect of playing Con·
nors doesn t seem to bother him
But what to do with the prize
money does Even 1f he loses his
semifinal. he'll have netted
himself $6.800
H e 's still very much an
amateur, though be thinks he
mi&hl change his mind about 10-
lng to Stanford University in the
fall, and may take up tennis pro·
(eaaionally instead_
As an amateur. he won't be
di&lble for any prize money. ··1
don't know what happens." he
!!&Id. "I trunk they give it to me
a nd I have to give it up to
someone else We 'll f1o d out about
that later ··
ln the Dent match, as in earlier
ones. McEnroe made tittle effort
to control hia temper At llmes be
looked like an embryonic Ille
Nastase
A couple of limes the gallery
See McEnroe Pa•e B3
COSTA MESA
AMC & JEEP
ajor League Standings
1977
MATADOR
WAGON
........... AM ,._.....,...._.
A7M8?H f ~2'78
1977 JEEP
J.10
PICKUP
. 4+4T .. , ..... P.S.. .... .._
J7M28MPo7&189
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Dlvlsloo
Boston
New York
Baltimore
Cleveland
Milwa~kee
Delro1t
Toronto
W L Pct. GB
41 30 .577
41 33 ."4 11.,
38 34 .528 31;'J
34 34 .500 5¥.
35 38 .479 7
3.1 38 .485 8
28 44 .389 11111
West Dlvtsloet
Mmn~a 42 31 .575
Chlcaeo .o 31 .5'3
Kamas City 38 34 .QI
AaCeb 35 35 .500
Texas !M 36 .488 t~
Oakland 31 40 .UT 10
SeatUe 33 45 .423 11~
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division W L
Ctuca10 47 22
Philadelphia 39 31
St. LouJJ 40 32
J>ltUburgh 38 33
t.tontreal 29 41
New York 29 42
West Dlvlaton
Pct. GB
.681
557 fl'~
556 8lt:a
.535 10
.414 18~
408 19
Dod•en •9 25 . 662
Cinclnnall 38 33 535 9~
San Francisco 3' 41 .453 151h
Houston 3.3 42 .440 16.~
San Dteeo 3l 46 .403 19'-il
'Atlanta rr 46 .370 21 1~
"
T .... Y'•k-!il L ....... I), ~II ,,.,,.. 14
C"lll~-4, -lrMI' flOlnfltNl'\I ~o~A .... J.41 .... t c11.c1-u 11. S4WI ~t-·•••
'°"lltlltlj!Ha).c.::.Y-I
1<40ollt-f,..,. I
T_,llM'• .. M••
(l!IU(lf f .. lfYK ••I et Mo!ll•t•l IJ I•-A f l,
ey, _ey
Famous Fight Of 1926
8dUor'1 Not~ T"-ntOdnft ma
epona wca u pro'*tino ntcr
IGinfMnt, quality ..S OCCGliof:lal·
111 cOlllb.,.,_,. on o ICOUo wr
bf!~ otto#Wd tn llN IOOr4d o/
athuUc• Yet aporll o/ do11• f10M
()r bod Or«ll tnornnl• and star ,,.,r/<mn1W1. TodaJI our look ol
l~Mft dav• JocuM• °" the ttm
Jack DempH11·Gene Tunne~
hea llJIWdghl fighl in Z 92f
NEW YORK (AP> ·"Rt
was a very impressive
fighter, quick and s mart, but
l was ru1ty I felt u \C I had
never been ln the rln&
before." -Jack Dempa.y.
'l knew h e was a
murderous puncher, a killer
in the n.ng. But 1 also knew l
had trained hard for the fleht.
1 WH reedy I WU confident I
would win '' Gene Tunney
It was nearly 51 years ago
that lheae two boxers squared
of( ln what was destJned to
become one of the most
memorable heavyweiaht
fights of all time. the tlrat
Dempsey -Tunney fitht ln
Philadelphia on Sept. 23. 1926
These two old warrion recall
almost every detail as if it
were yeaterday
lf there was any bitterness
at the lime, It has evaporated
over the years
"I always have had the
greatest admiration for
Dempsey, as a fi&hter and as
a man." says Tunney, 78, a
semi-retired millionaire who
lives on a palatial estate an
Stamford, Conn . and spends
one day a week \n h\s 37lh-
floor office on Park Avenue
"Gene was a far better box
er than I expected. He bas
been a credit to the eame,"
says Dempsey, the former
Broadway restaurateur. Still
an imposing fiiUfe at age 81 ,
Deml)ley la busy wrlttne his
memoirs ''The Name's
Dempsey·· at his Manhat-
tan home
Although both call New
York home, they are rarely
seen together. Just as their
Cightln1 techniques wer~
strikingly dissimilar, so are
their lifestyles
Th e b ee ll e ·browed
Dempsey still hu the roueh
edges of the onetime miner
from Manusa, Colo . who
hoboed on freight cara and
fou1bt for pocket change an
the back rooms of Westem
saloons Tunney. the former
stenoerapher and Marine,
married an heiress. Joined
hlch society and became re
nowoed for has penchant for
heavy reading. They dubbed
him "GenUeman Gene."
The first Dempsey Tunne>
n1hl, tn P1'dl.Selpbla'• Sa·
qulcentenniaJ St&cUwn. not
only ended ln an upset but
divided a natlon la ils
toyaltlea. Youoc1ter1
scrapped on str~ corMrs
and aona argued Wl\b fat.hen
over the retpecthre menu ol
the brawler, Dempsey, and
lhe acleotific boxer. Tunney .
Tbeoltldal aitendance was
120, 757 The gross was
$1,895,733 ol which Dempsey,
the beaten champion, re-
ceived $717 ,000 and Tunney saoo.ooo.
Tex Rickard was tbe pro-
moter. He wu prodded into
making the match by a rest·
Going Back
IN SPORTS
less, casb·hungry Dempsey,
who bad been virtually inac·
live aince knocking out Luis
Firpo In 1932, and by the
pressure from backers of the
asplrinaMarine.
The sky was overcast and a
light rain began falling when
the two fighters entered the
outdoor ring Dempsey
checked in at 190 paunds,
Tunney at 1851,IJ
Nat Fleischer. late editor or
Rina Magazine. remembered
later that Dempsey w~ tense
while the younger challeneer
looked cool as an ice cube
"l wasn't a bit nervous,"
Tunney said recently over
lunch at the New York
Athletic Club, where be
swims daily "f had heard
about Dempsey's l ack of
training. I was certain I could
take bim."
Dempsey adm1lted that he
entered lbe fight with some
reservations . "He looked pre·
lly l ean and sharp , ·
Dempsey recalled "I still
thought I had too much punch
for him. I felt ir l could catch
him, l could beat him."
The trouble was that
Dempsey never cornered the
quick, superbly conditioned
c hallenger
James P Dawson of the
New York Times wrote of the
fight
·'He <Tunney > was complete
master. from first bell to the
lasl. He outfought and out·
boxed Demps ey at every
turn. Where it had been ex
peeled that Tunney would
break and run before the
vicious attack of Dempsey. he
not only failed to back up but
he went lorward all the lime
Quarrie Sizzles
~-l. ol I.be tnaa
leitlla'IMl!ll:!k JD ....
Drill*1 Y, a cbiYlnt attack wh dl ..,_eel DO rect.ral.alDf.
ettott on \be part of the di.am-·
pioa."' Pl•laeber aaid •that
Oompeq ... an1, a • ell d ·
the Yldous. relentleu atuuer
who Ud demolilbed blc Jeu
Willard in lbree round1r
Cl'Ulhld Geortes Carpenter
11ft four aDd stopped Firpo hi
• two prior to b1a three-year
period at loactlvtty
"Gene went into tbo bout a
4·1 underdoa but be made
Dempsey look Uke a rank out·
alder," P'leiscber wrote.
· · Wltb the exception ol two
rounds, Geoe wu the muter
of the situation. In several
round&. be made Dempsey
look foolish."
Dempsey showed only brief
s purtl at bis old form. In the •
fourth round, he PoWlud Oil
Tunney at tbe bell aira 1ent. '
him reellna lnto the ro~
with a left book. Later he
stagaered Gene with a ritht
but the chaUen1er took the
punches and snapped back.
Tunney wu landlng punchell
whel'l the round ended.
There were no knockdowns.
Once \be arm·flalllng
Dempsey almost slipped on
the wet canvas when Tunney
s1de-1tepped. Tunney opened
a eash over Dempsey's right
eye in the fourth. ln the si.xtn
a cut opened over Tunney''
n&hl eye when the two buttecl ·
heads
Both judees agreed Tunney ~
was winner by a 10-round de-' •
casaon, neaattng the necessity
for the referee, Pop O'Brien,
lo caat a vote. It marked the
first paulng ol the
heavyWel&hl title on a de·
cislon.
The ring in which they
fought was purchased by
Br iggs Cunningham, a
wealthy sportsman, and
donated to Hill School in,
Pottstown, Pa
A year lat.er, oo Sept. 22, .
1927, lD ChiCAgo, Tunney was ,
to repeal his victory in the·
fa m ed "long count" fight,
then retire with the word&,
· · Boxln1 can offer me nothin&
furtbec that I detire "
Ho ver, T\ulney d1d fiaht
one more time -July 26. 1928
1n New York -when he
~mocked out Au.straJia"s Tom .
Heeney 1n lhe 11 lb round tor
lheUUe
Dempsey continued fight·
ina unW ~ when, at the age
or 45, he bun1 it up. But the_
"Manaasa Mauler" remained
a ring leeend
in 200
Jamaican Clocb 20.1 in 01lo Spi~feat
OSLO. Norway <APl -
Jamaican Olympic champion Don Quanie'a 20.l In t.be 20().
meter duh -taateat tn the world
so far lh1I year -highll1hted the
intematlooaJ track and field meet
at BialetStadlum Tuesday oieht.
Five Olympic champlons and a
flurry of other medal wlMeni
from Montreal had come here for
the meet. But the excitement and
results this promised never oc·
C\ltttd becauae of heavy rain and
thunder durillt the last 1 ~ houra
of the 2·hoor meet
The bf~ .jump competition.
which had promi1ed to be the
highlight of the nleht wllb all
three medal winners lrom Mon·
treaJ brouaht toaether aaain for
the flrtt time 1inct &he Olympics
last July, failed to live up to ex·
peetaUona.
Champion Jacek W11ola of
Poland, runnerup Grea JoY of
Canada and bron•e medalist
Dwight Stonea or the Unit~
Heat Downs Stan·
t
PHOENIX -The Southern Callfornla"Stin
absorbed a 4-12, 12-4, 2·12, to-12. Wddeat~da,y
ni1ht at Brophy Prep hen u the Pbomlx Heat pr ..
valled before 3,088.
Al~ Wilt Chamberlain, Larry Vocte Mel
Jon Roberu playod wtll, tbt Stan droned lhtlr
We•tem Dlvfaion rtt0rd to 4-3, a nOtch· back OI
division leadel' Sant• Barbara <1·2> •
1oniahf the star• are al Denver.
QuarTie in 20.4 and 20 7 .
Huniartan Olympic champion
Mlklo. Nemeth won the javelin
with a flnt toss of 224·2 while Mac Wllldm, the American dJJ.
cu• wlnrier et Montreal, was
beatem J;y countrymen John
Powell .nd Ken Stadel, u wen as
Norway's Kaut HJeltnes.
PoWeU bad 216 feet. Stad'1
215-f. l\lelloes 20M and Wllkiu
2()6..5.
: CRAIG
:SHEFF
~......__~
ind lbJrd m two other aeuons.
t..t year Bellflower r~orded a ~4 record in winrung ltA league
! Greenfield 1raduated from
•urbank Hl1h, then played
ltasketball at Glendale College
4nd Cal State <Long Beach>. His
'irst teachln1 job was at 'ellflower .
: He also helped with the 11rls proeram at Bellflower .
: AMAZING STATISTIC ~EPT.: Saddleback CoUe1e hu
a 4'·7-4 football record tbe put
•11ht year• a1alut MIHloa Coa·
ferei:ace teama.
: The only Mluloo opponent the
('aacboe have had any trouble
"ltlt ta Chna. Tbe Owl• have a
3· 1·3 edge over Saddleback.
: S1ddleback'1 record a1al111t
Che other Mlaslon tearna: Chaffey
•·•; RI veraide 7 ·•; San
8eroardlno 7·0; Palomar l ·l ; ~tbtwestem l ·Z: San Dle10 4·1; fnd Groamont s ... J. The latter •11 sblfted to the South Cout ~p after lbe '74 seas.n .
; Ray Thornton, UC Jrvlne's
athletic director, will be on a sab·
t;atlcal leave durine the 1977· 78
~chool year
: Thornton will be in Madnd.
$pain where he will rc11earch and
(each at the National lnstitute for
Physical Education and Sports
. Linda Oempsay, assistant
athletic director. will be the act· itlg AD.
D
la lb
C I C r ~•••l11lo n1r . repl
II• H
W Id It down • • . ~ H all·1tat• ocnfltlder from
Coll ot tbe Can)' , wlll .Dl•J'
at U XlHUOft. IUr1M b.itea .ao · put .)'ta~. • aMthck
C..J ha added • lotb loc&ball
1ame. c.11 el ...
Dffert Sept. 10 at M1ulon Vlejo .......
lhrt~ell aHkaer. an ln-
flelder from CenteruUal Hl&h In
Compton. will probably ~roll at
Or u10 Coast. ii be doean 't do-
c Ide to 10 lo Arizooa Slate. BackMr wu selected the mOllt
valuable player m the recent Cal
coaches North·South All·star
baeeball game at Dodger
Stadium He'• 5-6 and 160 pounch.
M 7roa Pl••• 11 tile n ew Pacifica Hltb <Garden GroveJ
bueball coach. PtDes. a former
Golden West standout, wu an U ·
slsta nt at owe la s t
seaaon. . .Sant• Monica College landed one o! the biggest high
school basketball plums in the
Soutbland in 6-8 Sam Williams, a
two-time All·LA City star from
Westchester High. WUUaau re·
celved 275 lettera Crom four.year
sc hools. but because or bad
grades, picked Santa Monica.
McENROE •••
CGlltbuaed From Pa1e 82
around the No. l court booed
him. John was nonplussed.
He vigorously protested a call
in the tie-breaker of the second
set. Then, rallying, he forged to
set point 7·6 and lashed over a
servict! which he lhouaht caught
the line.
The linesman called "out 1 ..
McEnroe stormed to the um·
plre's chair. The umpire asked
the linesman if be wished to
change his caJI. The linesman
shook his head negatively.
"What do you mean you don't
change the call?" Mc Enroe
blurted ln a loud voice.
"l thought the ball waa good,"
he said a.lt«ward. "I lhlnk the
linesman would have changed
the ball if the umpire had pre·
ssured him. I was really upset "
HONEST EVERT. • •
• Continued f·rom Pagt Bl
Wimbledon for many yeors
• The match wns fought mainly
Crom the baselines Game alter
hme went lo deuce. with the
$pectat.ors holdJog the\I" breath ~urina the long rallies
• Wade led 4·0 before Evert got
ioin1. The AmericaQ, bidding for
ier third Wimbledon title, then
won two games Ollt of the next
three
nut she 1lumped badly when
~he served al S·2. She double·
faulted twlee and netted a
forehand from close 1 n. and
Wade wrapped up the set 1n 3R
minutes
q,.\vlt\ Of lu-o\<Uf \ "'"" ,,.., 1n 1~ W1tnf't1~
f .. nn1\ (fWf"'C>'Ol"'t\hilDt
Meft•S1,..1 ..
o..an••·fl~h
"'"'" &oro~ at u..-NA,t•lifl • t. I• • _. )OM Mc e ..... tiotal Pnll 0.ftl .... • • • • • I •• VII•• G<t<ulalll• """'' 81fly Mamn • , ••• 1 • 1
Jlmfl'l1 eor-n .,.., e,r..., ll•nrem µ, J •.
to-• •·1
MtA'll>Wtlfft ~ ..... ,,...,
Morll Cos -Cllll Drv1dat•. bHI M•rtv
11111 .. nanclRot<.,.T-.•·•.•.f,7·•,• &,12
llob C4trrnl<Ntl Al\d Brl ... Tt..CMI' bHI W04ltk
Ff ball end Ol<ll SloOI...,, 6·4. 6·•. •·T
SPORTS
Pele, Cosmos
Duel Aztecs
At Coliseum
LOS ANGELES <AP>
Behind the scenes, three people
try to keep Pele popular with his
rana but alao protected from the
thousanda who want to meet and
touch t.be world'• best known and highest pajd soccer player.
· 'lt can eet pretty nasty." says
Jim Trecker, publicist for the
New York Cosmos, here to play
the LA Aztecs In a North
American Soccer League game
Saturday <2> at the Coliseum.
Trecker says there are hun-
dreds o! requesta for Pele to
make a personal appearance.
"We hatt one request Crom so-
meone who alm<>!t demanded
that Pele address a 1roup of eight
or 10 children," Trecker says.
··From a bualness standpoint,
that's absurd
"But people will tell us 'your
public relations stink' or 'Pele's
credlblllty will be completely
destroyed' If he doesn't speak to
a group of boy scoulA.''
Elizabeth Gans . Pele's
personal secretary, says the
Co1 mo1' S4.7·mllllon star re-ceives as many at 100 letters and
telephone calla a day, from every
continent.
··A lot or children aet very up·
set when I tell them they can't speak per11onally to Pele," she
says. "They don't understand
why Pele can't answer all hls
phone calls. I have to give them
some story. t tell them, 'I am ln
the omce but Pele's never here.'
"For the kids, It's very
!rustrat1n1."
}\ut most of them get a form
letter and a free autographed
photo of Pele. 11he says
The third person who tnes lo
keep Pele sale is Pedro Garay.
who became director of securicy
for the Cosmo5 in 1975, the same
year Pele s11ned. ln eHect,
Garay Is Pele's bodyguard.
''Really, there aren't many
problems. Pele is very well liked
People do not approach Pele to
s hove him or hit him or
anytbln1." Garay says. "All they
want Is an auto1raph or to take
his shirt off of him while he's
playtne.
"Tbe ColmOI carry a good sup.
ply of extra 1hlrta for Pele."
Pele bu been injured only on·
ce In tM United States to a crowd
incident. Garay says.
...... "'°",,__. • ......,. .....,... ......... .. --SICOM> •ace _.,..,_, r .,_
•••• Cl~ ,._ _,_,, '°""M
\1000
Cl<.,.IMTl-
10.IOf'lllNI •:IO 1• ,.
... J .. ,. Sll••L ..... •ICalll
... VM-IWerdl Ott• •• Tl--ta.Ill
A"° It.., -Ntr, fH °""' Go Bor• CO., (Niii Hiii Wll-, 0.Vll 1'1 ... t•r,
Pr-T ..... , ltO\lel fedclr. 0.U..t
\<r•l<Md -Somell"'• -'•"'• \Nldnt ....... W-. W<tkll ICet
1-ICIO
THlltO 1tAC• -.000 ,.,.,, J v-
oid• AU-...c.,l'\lrwUOOO
GoWlldol'lllHM11 1160 1fll • o(I
-· BtKk f Paull .. ) I 411 J H l 06::,1.:~r..'..~~T'1 •.01
Al.O llMI -ICtUr 5'1n ........ -·I r,1111411.., H9fllll. DMcly l'roetv. l'lfl .. 1 If lrltll. , · NeKrwCMt.
• _,.. ..........
urlll • lecta nae fi ., •
tudl •• atonea. a_..., p ,
etc.). To mo.re• aoo.e lmt*St·
mtnt In a rd calla • t01 a
pena~ of lou of hota In match
play, or two urokn In stroll•
P'-1·
However, you ire allowed to remove ob•truct1ons
from •~h h.rarda without pen1lty.Obstruct1onsare
unnatur1t ob1ect•. auch n bottles, cans, cta1rettes
and the like.
In tither caae, however. be •ure that you do not
touch the h111rd with your club before makln1 the
shot. Groundln1 lht club 1n a hazard c1ll1 for the
aame penaltlea aa does moving a loose Impediment.
QP.C) HA"--..... -
U luctl .... WI ..... -S•M.tct ll<Kll,NNUU.•
,ou•Toa(i°:jiov••d• ,., ... ,Major Lead'ue <>kl•. c1e1m1no. !'or ..... _, ""' .. ___________ e ____ _
\)GOO.
TwCHtCMr0tr re, .... ,, 1.0 s 00 • 00
r1>trct .._I Br-•• 12 '° • •O Un< .. Aocco 10.....,.,.1 10 60
Olft II' n,,,. 11 O
SC r•tcllld Vain Ell•I>•. 01000
MIM "'"·"'"Pan Ova. Tiii!• R«k•I '"™ ltAC1[ -'70 Y•relt J y .. r 0101 & uo Cl.imlno PurM ~200
*""" °"""' IW•rdl I• 00 1 00 • •O
Nul ..... WlllOw lf•NIU•~) •IC) J 00
Ruaup I Adair I J 10
Ofl t lJT•--41.oJ
Al\o lten ·-0011"111• l'N>•br noc-•v• 11_.uncl, Blatt llrotll••. Un
Cn•r9e
NOKr•tcfW•
51 •TM ltACI tOO r••OI 1 ... ,
~''" & up Clalmu>q ,..,, .. l>IOO. Dot C.NI ,.._,,, t 00 I 00 J 10
HolM ._,, 11(1>\fMI • 00 I 00
vant ... ManlAllttonl 10.0
Off IO~Tl .... -20 U
AIM .... -Tiny No ...... B•o ltor•I
llob, ~~ JOCI 1 Ca1un Oevll
Hu>lllnSuo
Hos<•M<lw•
U •ucta .. 0.. Cati! & I Holtl ........ ,... .... ,.
SIVINTH ltACI JIO v••d• J v•., olds & up, Pu'" Sll.000·.oded
G•o" "'·*·TM Double 81d l 1ttl• Bl"' ~o
'Llpl>...,I
fl•vld C.torl IMylnl
Ottk '1!"1 IAoatrl
J 00 1 to 2 10
'10 140
110 Off 10.U Tl,,,. II ~
Al..., llen Go 81.t>v Go Iv• Hnot
f0ftto'\Ml\•C1>10
Nos<ralClw•
If IOMTH RACE JlO u•O• J yo<1r
olO• c1a1 ... 1no Pu••• nooo Pl\~ I" Citt•r
lt f"11Qf\t\
Pvn IC 111¥ I Hart I
JO'\"\lj)t JtQ fA0,,1rt
•• llO I 10 • 10 ) •0 1 .. ,
J 00
0 11 10 S/ T1""' II ..
_,_., A4Wt -*'" >-trr ttow .. NUOw•f
C"01 Vltton.tfy 01-M B•M•l•t
r ttDI• 8ootn l ut "• s.d•,. s1 ..... "vi
\f\1ntt
\<rel<...., M• Rnt kel A .. voo
H• IA AUifW'llf'f.
U lakU •P111• '"flea• I 4 """ IC1tty ... ldl7I »
NINTH ltACI -JIO rorcl\ 1 •~"'
old1&uo Cl ... ml ... PurMUIOO
Ca11t11rH E"rlci.• •c......,., • .0 J '° ' '° D•ndy\SIM ltcnlgNI 4 fll 140
Old .. 11\llOoodle 10.lomlNI 1 10
0t111.1n1Me -11.u
Alto It.,. -Ht'I Ott, My k l119
Ma ... r, OeMf1 o.m, SI raw ,..,. 1
S<ftl<Nd -F .. tta.1 !'rink.
u ··-~·.,.,,< ... & 2·0AIMIYI 54«, ,_i. '12 ...
Att~.6.71'
The Leaders
AMa ltlCAN L•AOUa
BATTING llU el Ml\) c .. -.
Min, .401; 0-. c ... »T; P'll•, B•n. J~. &o.tocti. Min. 335. BallOr, Tor.
J1'
ltUNS -C.rtw. M•n ... 1'1111, B\ft,
". Botl«•. Min. SJ Botldl. Cal. SI.
GScoll. B""." L-. Clw. ••. RUNS BATTED IH -Hiii•. Min
Tl Car-Min. iS Aucll, C411. SJ
Ytlrtmtlel B"' 51 M..,,....,,NY,ll
HITS -C••tw. Mln. llf, You111
Mil ... : Ill<•. B•n 11. C--. ICC IT llOllO<k Min. 17 H1tl1. Min II
DOUBLES it.JacUOf\, HY, n
tem•"· (111. 11. M<A .. KC 71
ll11rtttol'. II..,. It. Htll•. Mlft tt
TltlPLES c ... -. Mlft, ll, Alee,
lhn 7 ·~· HY.,; Cowan• l(C
' B.-.c.1.•
HOMI ltUNS GScott, '""· n 1t1ct. 8i.n, If t4111•. Min ta: z .. •.
Clll. 17 JonH Sea. t•
STOLEN BASES -11...,,., Cet lS Poto. l(C. ,. J Horri., Cl• 11
8onch. Cal, 17. L•l'I"'•· Del, 1'.
PITCHING (7 Oechlonsl
ToJohn•on Min, • 1 •. Ill. 1 s• r 1drow, NV • ?. 7l0, 111. Fldrvcl\, Del, S 1. 114 IAO; 1.ylfl, NY, ~t. 11•.
I .. l aA0<1M, Ca., ~1, .114, ) SJ,
ClMlll~r. Col, S.7, .114. • . .JO· Grl"'ti•v.
0•1, 1-J. ,100, i U : llarrlot. Chi, 13.
.100.' Oii.
STAllCIOUT$ -AVlft, C.tl, Ill
Tenena C.I, llS; ~r•. ICC. 101
P1lm1r 811 ... Blyl•wn. Tu,.,
NATIOfolAL L•Aoua
BATTINO llU Al bat\I -Parko•
Pol>. ,,. '""'" Cll• •• JIO Simm""' StL )JI t u11n1111 Pftl, )1'. U.Hl•r
Cln 371
llUNS . Wlm .. ld so u 5mlln
l A S• Go'•fl..., Cln ,., MofO""n, (In
... 110 .. C1n i'
Area Sporl8 ·--II 1.-loetK1I CltT c.tl-L•a-S.ncaMont<a 7l, Orlr>Ot coa11 n
" ........... tKltl.e ..... """"~ latKll "''" W1tt...,IMlf'fSI, VIII• Pert SO
Marina .O, lh Yftda SI
All"-"""
f'O\ll\\411ftVAlltY "· L°'Amt!IO'•I H•mllnotoft la.tell f1 Edi'°" s.1011 c:.ta-°"" Al ... _la Hlflt
l'CAl7,Cblta"""41CllpcieB 1'
5paM'a 77, Bullcl a. Grow 71
c.ea-..c.Mi...-At C.U MeN Hltll "1 To...75,CM.leMtMM
Veltnele Gold7t, ,.._POn 81119JI
TlleUC4flll1 .. l"*INll
f'vlle ..... A'al, '1V OodQtrU
RUNSBATTl!O IN GFo.ler Co,.
61 J 0.-V.y, LA ... ; C•Y. LA "
B•ncll, Cln, .O; 9~• All, II.
Wlnlltlcl, SO, .le.
HITS -Parto.er. PQll ft G"fley,
C1n, •1, Wlllllelcl., SO, O. Tmpl•tafl.
Sil. tO A-, Cll', tO; Gar.,.y LA, tO.
DOUBLES -C•°""U.· Mii. 1>
Ae1u, Sil. 13. Aow. '"'· 1l Parhr,
POii. 20 UlllMkl, Ptw. "
flllPLES -MumOf\rv. SIL, 6
Almon. so. • Wlftl••IO. so •
Cromrll•. Mii. 5 ll•o<k. Sil ~
Tmpt•Con. !.CL. s W••-"'" •• GAl<l\A•cb, SO, 5.
HOME RUNS -!.c:t>Mldl Pllt 10
t111rr~. All. to; GF061H Cin. 10
Gervev. l..A. II ltncll Cln 11 w ..... fleld.~0.11
STOLl!N BASES Tev~r~ "9"
1': Callell, Hin. U. ~. Hin, 1S
GlllCM-. SO 1', Mor .... Cl"· U .
LOOff.LA.7•.
Pl TCHIH(; 11 Oe<l\1°"'' A...,. LA. 1·1, .. H . • 11, 1111...,,c,,.1. C1t1
11.i, .146. 111 c-1r1e, Pon 1.1
900, 1 OS: o.ro.v. Sil. 7 2. 111, J ••
lleed, Pltl, .. ,, ·''°· 1 o 811fo/ltm Cln. 1-l, .nr, 4.7S. No'"'""· C1n, •l
IH, J.7'; OSutton. LA,I J. 121, 1 11
5Tllll<EOUT'S-PNtellro. All,'°'·
Roaers. Mtl. 102. ICoo""•"· NY. 99. H11ldlckl,SF,H, A1ct..rd Hln,'5
·Deep Sea
Fish Report
NIWPOllT IMt'• uMl ... 1 .,
.. ,.Qltr\ 54 Welp be\>, IS""° IUI\\. MlO
m•<ke,.1, 1 bonito 1 b.trracuoa 10
ro<k cod I oa ... ,., Le<lletl -11 1
•nole" 6 barra<UO. I t>On•IO. Jll
be•s. SO-lltod, 1.001"'•'••••~
LOtiO llACM llat......,I ,.~l •1
•"Qltt• 11 ce11co be\\ II m.o<k..,.•I
•10 roO cod 10...'t Wfwlrtl -IMI
•llQl•r> ~lUll<o!Mn, 71wlloul,JU
ro< k COd. .OS Dlw ban
SANOtaoo1--P .. r1 ·1\\
M\QtP'' 3'f1 •tb&COf• ) ytlfowtA1I t D•rr•cuaa tt <•lice b••• ~,
tna<kerPl,lt l)OftjlO. I] rO<k Cod
S&N Pao•o ,...,.. O' ca111 -"
an9ltr\ JO ma<ke,.t. l DOftllO, •
Uli<o ban. J....., INS., 100 rod <Od in ... St. ~I -.. ""Ol«n I
nallt>ut. 410 -.k cod. 32 c•li<o llln.
210sllNlbltst, 1Sbl"9-•
SIM. aSMH -ut MQl«t: 1,bJO .-cOd, tO ..-.._, 11 cetlce ...,,
1S -"-· ..... -.., tfttfetS; , ... ...-.,. .... ,_,....,, 2 11e11M. se -•to. .
OAHA Wt4A•f' -2• """'": 406
bonito, '' .,.,,.~Ud•. a bOnlto, I tl•llllU1, 12S,OCll "-M, 74mac ... ,.I ••
... . :·
TMl .. O ltlo(W -'1t Y«d\ J .......
... -.. Cl ...... ,.,.. u.e.. Ci.i ....... prKtl2* WMltHlwlAdel,I
~M910ln••l 'fftti.•u .... ,.,_,,
C.w.cesen.10.....,..1 o. .... CW'I IHMtl M¥191 Lee• f.,._lll4cll
Veltl'W ....... (l(~I
Hewtllefl t• Cc:..rel
:~ '" 117
111 ... ...
lf'I
NUltTM It~ ->JD.,... ,'!ff;
etdl And ..-. Claiming • ......,. UOOO.
Cla1"11"9 P<'IU lSOOO. GffM#O.IOt~bw> ,,.
Cl!l<11Oo(Mlft1~1 lat
Sel•• Clwlrlt IWttdl llt c~.,. 1t1Q11110it10mN> '"
t'm 4 fem 8ov ILlpMml '" HI ftmp lc.trdoffl 1:12
HIOMnTalMITOOIT,__I 11>
•-SVtc. ll<nftt!CI 12'
l'll'TH •AC• -Jj) Y-. 2 ,_. otdmei...,.,_..,uoo • H•llV9ftl~ITrMwrtl 1n
War Truclt .. IHM!I 177
LO•elle IMy ... I ftf
S41"11 l'llly ,.,._,I I ..
f09 atevtti... I Adelrl 1n
Oul11q•'1 w ... w..,_. IC•--' 1tt hlk lacll IAGUVlll Ht
8 1-111 A94tk1 ICM-at llt
ltotiele<o IW.,..,I 122
SIXTH •ACll -JlO Y-. 3 .,_ olds Alld WP Clat..,,.,._ ......_ '2JOO.
Clalml,."'1<.e'2SOO
C ... rl .. Grey CMll<lttlll
Mr 9e•C."°lllH .... I tCl-tl IC!triu.t
Aleo ... lltouglll ~~-• Cc.tnlDul Go C•J"" IAdalrl .. A(lf k Cl'Mll ( OelomlMI I ll•v-1'1\•tr CTr-•I
'" '" m
"' "' '" •n lit.. •
Hll•HTN 1tAC• -__, Yerdt J
.... ... Olcli -up. Al,_, li'\#w "''°°· lt•l"Y Butt IMllC""lll
P'O"ly Katt IC.rdo1el
Mr MOIM,.Tw .. CTr-rel
API To l'ly IHenl
tlreaM ,.atl"IWercll
Tl'lrH Oh'• WU I Ad.Mr)
·n1
'" '" 117 "' . "' a IOHTH ltAC• ->JOY•,.,.. 2 _.
olCIJ All-t Plll'Ml)OQQ.
Ptll'lttJetler IAllllOlll tit
Ml Btt IMV ... 1 tH
ltomflfl Ael> IH«fl lit
PHtTMJuolTrNJu .. 1 '" CHUdeCoo\I IU.lrl t12
!.MPOY T191r rc..u I 1 te Pludys Truckle ICrt-rl 11,
M .... lnMoonlL~I ltt
Mr AlomllOSGoOCI 10.._) lit
Pebble.i.f IC:-cloul ,n;
NINTH ltACI -:U0 r•nl• J ,_
old•. C•fllmlng P\11'1111 uioo. Ci.tfml,..
Pf'•t• w.soo .. ,., l'ootln nreaw.-1 11•
Mr O•vldMoot\ 1Htr11 11• ~·ttcll\Cla-IL-1 1?7
T .. , Abl .. Tull I Adair I 111
CorMnl,.,. ICl'Mof>r I 11'
can,,._., IM~•t "' £11• Blobl>\' tWardl ttr
C1>tr91n Foot •All•"'"' 1tt Mid llo<Mtlte lllrootillt40• 111
l!r.WHIYourwt!flC:.W-•I lff
St. Louis Cardin.al
pitcher Harry
RasmusHD has lerau,.
cbaqed h1I f1nt a.am~ to
Ertc. Tbe "Great Dane••
J)lcked Eric because ·Mr f eelt It 11 more tn keep.
tng wlth bla ancestry, ac~ ·
cordln1 to the Red Blnla. ·
"My hatS off to hair tran~plants
••• the intelligent sOlution.''
by Ed Chavira,
SALES ENClNBBR
"Partial baJdn911 ta a drag. It's a constant
concern .•. l'Obbins you of mental time
you could 1pend on aomethlns mefu.L
Some attack the problem with
batrptecee, 1pray paint.or co~.
But all of thete simply compound the
worry.le th• patirt covelingf Ia lta good
match?WW the bairpi.ceend up In the
far c:om-.of the bandbell court?WUl the
comb-0Yer1tay combod Oftrf
Dey ofter daypreoccu~<m1. FooU.b
when you QODliderthesuper a]letnjtive
of hair tnJUplantlon.
only do I think 10, my gWfrimld thinb
so.And. my perenu do too.
WhJ the BolllJ' Group
When I flnal1y 1J1tde up my mind to go
ahMd wt th the tramplmtl, I abecbd
,nerywhere. The Botley Medical Group
impnaed methemOlt. For a number of·
l'tUOlllJ
L The literature I ubd for cmn• tfahl away. It WU quite complete and
.venllXJ)lalnecltbatbalrtnmplumdl'OD
areatobewtmed. Ba.t.lt'alnthe .
beDperk with dental~ lr1a1ati..
apenl(vetba ccm.sf.ntltiwpledng
WOl'IM>Qthalrpl--. ..
Call Ille Bosley MecUr.I Gr0up
·Itcouldchanp~W... ..
,· .
em ••lb CJVnlts ud re
Nl:PPm ere .... •ore 1laortald• n Uoe (be blufta
"" Saa Pedro to watcb I.he f aelata vn for poeaUon
•ulUI tJle 10 m • from th ~Ii al WlW \be blut
flt • deck CUDOD Hod.t than on
lbeJ t ••)' to ta. wat end ot
Cat•lina laland. the fl.rat and only.
rn ark otthe 2,22S-nule cour1e
Bill Muncey
Seeks Sixth
In Indiana
MADISON, Ind. CAP>
Defending champion Bill
Muncey. the A.J. Foyt of thun·
derboat racing, wUl pilot hi• un-
beaten Atlas Van Lines -broken
root and all -in a bid for an un-
precedented sixth victory in Sun·
day'a 30th M•di1on Reiatta for
unlimited hydroplanes.
The annual Jul y 4 ex
travaganu, witnessed by a
crowd or 100,000 .iopi the In·
diana and Kentucky banks of the
Ohio River, draws nine or 10
hydroplanes, the I argest and
fastest racinc boat& in the world,
competing for a purse of more
than P>.000
MUNCEY, LIKE Foyt in auto
racing, has an unparalleled
string of successes The 48·year·
old from La Mesa, CaUf., won last
year's Madison race whlle chart·
Ing to his firth Amerlc•n Power
Boat Associalion national cham·
pionship.
lo his 27-year career, Muncey
has 41 c•reer victories -his
clo•est chaJlenaer has 20 -and
has won the APBA Gold Cup five
times.
!t1uncey's five victor\es last.
year and three so far this seuon
-includinc last week's Gar
Wood Trophy race at Detroit
gave tum eight triumphs in his
last 12 outinas.
TWO HOURS BEFORE the
Detroit race. Muncey slipped off
h1s trailer and broke his rltht
foot. He had lo be carried \o and
from rua cockpit tor Heb of the
three heat& and refused to taJte
patn-klllin1 druaa because ''I
dldn 't want anythint to affect my renexea."
Re1ardless, Muncey still must
b~ considered the favorite here,
with the atron1e1t challen1••
likely co ming Crom Tom
Sheehy's Natural Llaht and
Mickey Remund 's Miss
Budweiser , second and thJrd·
place finishera at Detroit, and
the hometown favorite, lliaa
M •di.son, driven by 34·1ear-old
rookie Jon Peddie. wbo fhllabect
Jot.irth.
The 2"'2·mlle Ohto River coune
separating Madison and Milton,
K31 ., was opened for testing and
qualifying Thursday •nd Friday
Saturday was allotted to the
smaller "limited" boats.
THE "VNLiMJTEI) ..
hyjfroplanes weigh about three
to.,a and are about 30 teet fonf.
All of them are powered by ilJ· ternaJ combustion engines that.
tutn a propeller. for the most part, the power
comu from bl1 v-12 aircraft
en1tnes formerly used ln World
War ll "'11~ planes.
AND THEN mE&E will be
John B "Jim" Kdroy'a two-year·
old maxl·ketch, the 79·foot
KJ&Joa wb1ch bu won all but one
of the major offshore races she
bu entered 1ince her launchin1
Nearing Ba1Dall
TROE UE· tt &oata la &be
U1bt dllplacement catecory1 ct.
•i1n•ted u Dtvialon 11, ma the
other S6 make up the beaYJ dl.t-
placement Dlvillon J. Thne of
the potenUal Urat·to·finlab
y acbta Drlf\er, Merlin and
Raiume are i.n Division II, while
Paa111e and Klaloa are tbe top contenden in Division J.
01 N D WW ~IS'l'Y l wld.n,.... of time allow
bUed • lpeelal TPYC ratillill wa.Jeb are a modlllc•Uon ot t6e
JntemttklPll otr.bore aw..
For SDltance,, the top three
boat.a ln DtvialOll ll and all carry
mJ.nua time allowuu:tt. Drifter
la the bitbeet rated with a Ume
allow1Pce of minu 20 boun;
Merlin bu a mi.DUI 15.17'8 bourl,
and l\a&Ume la 11ddled with a
Electronic
WIDchSet
For Trailers
Trailer boaten who are
becominl arm weary from haul·
ln1 tbelr craft from water to
trailer will be ll•d to learn t.hat a
new electron.le w1Dcb h• been
deviaed. uatn1 the car'a battery ror power.
Keeptna step with the develop.
ment ot J.araer m«on and boaw, Maiten ot trallen and related
items have ateadJly improved
their produota so that .ven tbe
Jaraeat tra11erable rita can be
manqed without strain, aCCOC'd· in,. to MercH,a.ry Marlae,
manulacturera ol traiterable out-
board and stem drive boat.I.
A• size •nd toad ratlna ao up,
the eeartnc lo manually operated
winches muat be chosen to aull
the Job. 1be 1reater raUoa tend to
be on the powerful but •low aide.
That la, althoush t.he crank it
easy to tum, many revolutiom
Jerry Sehl and Patti Cart.er, both residents of Newoort
Beach, are expected to arrive in Hilo. Hawaii by week's
end, culminating their first blue water cruise in Sehi's
Islander·36 Seahigh. The couple departed Newport
Harbor June 15. After cruising the islands the couple ex·
pect to return lo Newport Beach about Sept. 1
are needed to haul the boat.
WhlJe each turn does not call for
undue effort, the Jarae number of
/ turns required can leave even a
/ strong man 1aapin1 for brt•tb.
But with an electric winch the
car's battery provides the power.
The MerCrulaer stern drive ex·
perts point out that hauling a
boat from the water i1 u euy as
bookina up and operat1.n1 a COD·
trot switch.
caa.. c It topped by Milt
Smltb'a 2-ton aloop Mamie wttb •
time allowance of 1U1hUy more
tbu 10 boura. Bottom of the daaa
i• Georce Thonon '• modified
Cal..O &loop Arlana with an al·
lowance ot 1S boun.
CLASS D IS beaded by Terry
'Lelcbtluaa' Cal-40 Anona U with
an allowance of 13. 7380 boura.
Bottom of the cl.as .ad the
lowest In th• fleet la Deftant, a
Columbt..as alclppered by LarTy
Poulton, with an allowance of
IS.J317.
A bunted glance at the tlnie al-
lowances 1n Dlvi.sion I ahowa •
spread ot more tbM three· daya
betWeeft WJndTt'afd ......... and Deft ant.
Anotber chance In the Tranapac rating format th1a year
will favw the hicber rated bow in the handicap •tedlnp. The
race bu traditionally han-
dicapped over tbe true dlatance
ol 2,225 miles. With the advent ol
the f uter .au.rfina •mall boata.
however, and the tact lhat the
race 111 predominutly down-
wind, thJ.a ·year' a race ta being
handicapped on an imaginary
distance ol 1,689 mila.
UNDER THE OLD rule it was
alm01t impo11lbJe for a hlgh-
raUnt Claas A yacht to win o-ver-
all handicap. The last y•cht to
make a dean 1weep of the r.ce
wa1 Windward Pusage when
abe set the record In 1971.
Here ts the breakdown or
·dlvi1lon1 and classes In thls
year'aTranspac:
Dlvl11M I ll•ur< IHMtl CL.USA
w 1nt1werd P•u.,. 17).11 11~"111 M•rll '*'-,
L•"ttn• YC. ICl•lot 11._tt utclll Jfm Kllrov LO\ ....... vc. S.orc•ry IUG-t1 ,,_, Jt CoO WOOd, Callfonlla
Y~ll•ntom IC&C .. 4 sloopl Anthor1y o.tttno,
LAYC
. .__, ... .,_,_, oi-.u-.c: .,,,.. • .. °"""'· ... _., "'· • ICM& altt CIU4'_, ...... IA~ ....... ~ ........ ,......, .. ~ ....
On YC. • ~ Ill«-.. -.... o..iey, "...it v~ . . .•• ---~""""'--"~ ••••Ye. . • . """' """ '" ca..,..... "..,. ~ "9'f'C. • • •
,_ .. IV -~ .._. Ml .... T, c.lk"• eve. . . ,__.._. COlpll.-.-.> "kMNM911W. uvc o....-u.r..A 4 ...... , O.vlCI ...,._,.,, eve:.
0"'""" ""-$ " .,_, M•-•d Smtih, SM>
Ol ... VC. I~ rT.in.,..~t ,._. h"Y Lt,,.,....•lo.r,
so";,~, Oul:ll 1111-...... J-ICH-. C•11t'. .. ~ ... ,,.,_~.... -,
C_ ...... CC.1 .... 1 ">c"-rf O•l\Hllt, Wll"llftf!M 1
w.,_YC i
C\.AUC
Mam HI l(Mt•rl·lonl Miii Sm1111, CYC
S•,.9vl"f •C•l.Jtl W•lr•tl• ' Andtrlon, •
Mef ..... lllctnYC :
l11cr1dllllt , ... ,.,..,,. '·IOftl ClllCll I.Hon,.
Mt\rollOI~ YC • L N IC l«llt.cutlttrl lttMelll P•r1low,()lympl1,.
Wttll.YC. :
Tln1clly (modlli.d C•l·1') Miii• Ml<~ •
W11•1 .. YC. • .r'
O.llko II l'r•n z.tenl H•,.,.1111 & Sllll'lflrv. : J~ •••
M._'11h\ 5-IM CC&C·Jt) Vt,... ~Gui~
Gorlf'ltl! ... vc. ~ ! StN<'-«:.oklmbl•SOI c1w1r115111n. sovc; ~ v CAl it. Ut<111...,..... "'''*"· w_.1 CM•IVC. • •
JMfltgo.Mry \l....t CUI-«>) J-• ~ , LO(tl l.-'((.
l'lyl" Ooud CCAl-401 •"ltM l'el!Nr, ~,. YC ' ~
"KY 1Pel•r14111 IOlll L.W TIYIOr, St l'YC
OU4< ..... \T~ll Mike Hiii,...,., ....... St"-, r '"' """ -~ Arlt,.. ll"Ofll ... Ctl·401 ~ .. , .. Tt'Onon, ,
LAYC
CL.&SJO • Olyf'l'lplM (Qt.I()) ~,., Sc~mltll, s .. u. :
W•Jll.YC ' •
A-II IC..1.eGI Frtd L.•l<l'lll\OU, PKt/K • ... ,,,,.,, YC. I
Mltlr•u Ill I Tart.,. 411 --•I Ko .. VCI 5'111. :
1"9A-i.tleft, I
lllYM Cc.tl..01 Ale..,,,,., & "o-e, NOlll'Po'1 I
H•rborYC. : 1'9fMMICll·40IC ... rte1M-.SOYC. ,
OVtw.,d t..lnf ICM ... t·ftl Jim \.9"1"911 o-1
Pl)l11t vc. ' CotlOOl~t ICl'·l71 Jollfl .,.,.,, S.IOIMI YC ;
Ctlo• CMlllW·3'1 Nl<lt Aleaoncler. Crul•l"9 Ctvb 1
ol Au1tr•lla. ; 1
Tro11t1lt"'l1Ur IHTG •M·IOll) Jim ,. .. 119J
MtlrOllOlllM VC. • o
T•ll-ICot. 3'1 ""'' C•mtron, lol••'I' YC ~ • 8HCll I
l Alleo<O IC.I J41 Ptter Ar•r>Oll. H•w•ll YCJ. l OuHrl tUC~l c..oroa 01•,..nclrN, tt•r-M , HerDOrYC •
Ott,.nt tCol. >61 urry l'olllton, Mt1,_lit•lt ~ vc.
0Mt191'1 tt 1-ct•nl
Orllltr i.t.toohloo11l H•"Y LoloU.co. l llY<. • ,, '°4•'"" IW·IOOI ~fooe>l 11111 lff. s ..... Crw. Y~·· .•
"•<allrne 16S-loo1 1100111 W11111 &. P•~1111.·• LIVC, . , , :
N•ll•• So<I ''°'1001 •loc:>cll "'<"••ti Fou & SY"(. 1 die •ttt, L_,...'"• Y( f
P•nacM UO·IOOI tfoop) ""'"''' Ptr•J I "•cllm-"d YC. : v~oco lllafll• lfl 1c.1.,t a'-Pl JI""'"'" llllllltlt,:
Ap•re110 .. IJS·IOOI ...... , ... , • L 'lllfjtot/ '1 Wutw•r~ CtQl9tr>O Cl ull
Fr" Stlltll IM<lll "' lhtll.,d 1:111,,.., ~ FY( I
Sw~•· Oll94t IJ4 lool ••00111 G~ OHloltt, ,· WelluklYC.
TlllllayLIQN IMuil :llt.I H ... ryOrtl\d111 SI FVC I France in Overhaul;
Aussie Boat Arrives PVBUC NO'l'ICS PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
NEWPORT, R.l. <AP>
Chaneea aboard the deck or
France I, the 1910 and 1974 UDJUc-
c e u Cul challengel" for the
America's Cup, continued to be
m•d• Tuesday at the Newport shipyard.
Meanwhile , the first
Australian challenger for this
year's famed America 's Cup
serie!1 Gretel II, arrived from
New rork.
A worker at the Newport
ablpyard detalled that France 1, o-.raect 1>Y Baron Marcel Bich, wHl have the deck t ayout
cllan&ec1 to meet standards in the
12·mete1" rule Utat requires crew statlona be Included on deck ln water u,btcockplta.
THERE WAS EARLY specula·
tion tti-t the deck from France 11,
the neweat 12-meter owned by
Bid, wou.ld be removed and
, flltened aboard the older 12-
metuyacht.
It was reported that Frence JI
aata. faster than France l ln
Hcbter winds and may be uaed ln
elUnin•tion races a1alnat
challengers for the America'•
Cup from Australia and Sweden.
Reports Tuesday d1acloaed
that when the new deck waa com·
pleted aboard France I It milbt be
used ln lbeellmlnatlon races if the
wlnd b llght. lttbe wind is stroni,
tbe elimination races are
scheduledtobe1inAu1.4.
FRANCE II WOULD be used to
sail In the round-robin series
against Sverlge, the Swedish
12·meter; Gretel fl and
Au1trall1, the two Australian
12-metera.
Australia, the newest
Australian challeneer for the
America's Cup, is scheduled to
arrlvein Newpon Wed~.
The winner Of the rOW>d·robtn
serlet will meet the New York
Yacht Club's selected defender
Cor the America's C~ in the best~
of·aeven race aetiea beiinnlnl
Sept.13.
Blch'• two pr&vlous attem,pta
to win the elimination rues were
tolled In 1970 by Auttralia's
Gretel and In 1914 by Au1tralla1s Southern CrQ!ls.
\
"Hurry upl 'Cauae here com11 Marmaduke
with a •trawl"
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
smc,> 'TUNED FO~ I JACQUE
COU6Tl:.AU'b MA~INE UFE I!
TANK Md4AMARA
MOON MULLINS
~TDDAT'I' aa1ss1111 PVIZLI
UNITED Featur• Syndicate
: lw1May,~WeloM• .
.• ACltOH 42 U u . .-.
1 •• •3 ~"" . ". dellgn911: 1nvree11tn1 .,"*i... .. 1-~ 44 Slockl\Hd " rom -" .... 4& Wolly )JakOb crtatur .. Ammann o4e ·eatttt ef • tonowen Britain"
1 Uo11c11 119roe1·
• Cuttoll'ltf a Abbf
: bratenly 47 Acc..,t•d
tjrTal Mahal a~tr•Gt•
• 111e 49 Military
1 J E. Ind Ian ohalMln
noblewoman el I AIPoNI
17 C1ntata 64 Tempc>rarily;
•Olo 2 WOtdl 1 It Spitting 158 Thofoythlut
lmegie: 2 Abbr
WOfd1 eo ·-20 Tellt(I rnulut\I.
compartment Btttlnt 21 Ending with eyettlfl
rnod or c11t e 1 Drew an 22 Jewl1h lml)f'QYtd
11ctllc aketch
23 WHI Colet 83 Aevl•• ahrub 94 Proof ohrhO 28 Mouon one 1,:
Dlctu(t allot Abbr
27 tarly lrlth es Al•• unit
elpllabet ee Not arty
• 29 Int. T ride 91 Oranctm1
OfQ.
30Crlp0t.
34Taut19"
3eOarT>10t
'81taltOI
ee Young
ll'Mllet
89ThfM:
Spenlah
DOWN
conllnemtnt
3t W11lllngton'1 nelol't bor. 2 word• 1 l11-Unl1·Ttw
H l p • • r • • IM i •
A~ • • . VI 1n n , .. : . :,
T r. r I I • ",, tlt'llO
~ .I, I I II' • I ~ IE 11'
I[ F 1111 ··-4 ti.I
II Ille-• : I • • 11
c "'T M''·-I ~ •
' ,1 f ri1w1.1-' "' c;
e ,~ o• ~If IT
s ~' ~
c Ai II '~ r n
'A N T ( ll'i I P Air 111
'" 1• I ILJ
IA l"I II N Cl
l"l E ll l 51
USA
2 Weter wtlffl
3Eac:ullon
dtvu:e
4 Germen
POWc1mp
5 Commancted e Rl1>9n1no
1gen11
7 Eur dlCll·
IC>f' 2 WOfdl
8 TVpl1y-
w11Qt\I ···
Mo HI
IJComelnto btlng
10 "A···· I
mart ... " t t ''0 loOlllY
Dean"
12 ObttrVtd
13 In 11111 place
1t Mlnne10t1
lake
24-·· A.1M1lca
29 Cller1cter of agrouo
29 ltlltf •d· dtt•• abbr. 30Cooylno
11\ICll
-
, I l r: • ll A ~
E I IT s
31 Foreign of·
fleer
32 Wadlno bird 33··0ow,,.
Under~ Ire•
3,.Com1>9t.nl
35 Ricing team
37 In 1dv1nc1
3801tti.moon
40 Poetic con-
treollon
41 l"eoltnt talk: Slang
48 8fanc11 ..
48 8t CCW!lrlle
49Annoylng
things
60Nomatter Which
152 ThfMIC>tnt
83 Plota of land
8481VWU.Md
lntltdQte
8e!AtttYle HYtrttt
51Rl*n:
8uff1a
&IJWWll
re1llit11Ct
92 r,.o;:~
• '
• I I 1\
GORDO
(, ( ' 1' ••• 1"11 I ' , I
by Tom Batluk
by Jtff Mlllu and Bill Hinds
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
You ~OT NO SeNSe
OF HUMOR·· THAT'S
A $",000,000 JOKE'
DR . SMOCK
by Mell
N0.1MIV\.&,. STILL
NllD u~ ~wyi.r~ TO.,-_,-
TH& CllSPl..ITt~ .
MOTLEY'S CREW
by Gus Arriola
™E(RE AR6UtNG
ABOUT THE 5'0Re
by Roger Bradfield
,,, .. ...
p .
Q-.
by George Lemont
by Templeton and Forman
THE GIRLS
'•
"Our propam chairman •UUCIU lhal follattirina our m«tir\p .,., ·
dl1penac with the rcfmhmcnll and devote the time to.
calilthcnlca-arc thcruny objcaloos '7" . I
DENNIS THE MENACE ·
.. •
. t fo_
a trr VNIVES.S.U. Pictur~ is pay-
r&ree Join Cast
Pf 'King' Movie
: LOS ANGELES <AP> Ossie
~avia, Dick Anthony Williams and
erry Alexander have been added to
e cast of "King," the five-hour NBC
lnovie baled on the life or Martin J,.utber~. Jr.
• Davis will portray King Sr., Alex-
,.nder will play a close associate of the
.civil rights leader, Bernard Lee.
!\\'UUams takes the role of Malcolm X
;after the withdrawal or Harry
{Belafonte, who had conflicting com·
;mitments. • Paul Winfield as portraying the
lYoun~er King, with Cicely Tyson as
:tus ware Coretta
YOU REALLY
HAVEN1
SEEN
LED
ZEPPELIN
11 r d,, -1 rOIJl'lb.
•ht m l
xtra ch r
k evt>n,
He that a
th mualcal Hlrava anaa, to be
dlreetr.d by Sidney "umot.. will pro· b1bl~1tn on Ji.tty 6 and th t •boot·
ln1 • d •t.art oo Sept. 30.
Diana Rost playa Dorothy, and in·
dldtr)' aource11 aaJd JUch1rd Pryor la
to replace Redd •·o:u as the Wizard in
lhe 1ta.rnn1 rolt1.
TWENTY·•1VE MILES of ''yellow
brlck road" have already been
ordered from a lineoleum company,
Wood 1&.ld, notinc that Lumet lled Jut
worked ln the cavernout racllity u a
chlld actor who jumped from a nam-
ing roof in krucken The 1938 film was
··one Third of a Nation."
The Astoria Center firat was opened
in 1920 and used by Paramount for
silent movies. It converted to sound in
1929 and housed the film debuts of
Claudette Colbert and Edward G.
Robinson, among others. Gloria
Swanson and Rudolph Valent\no
played there, too.
BUT mE LURE of HollywOod and
its weather and World War JI led to its
closing for years, except for the mak·
ing of Army films.
It was resurrected in 1975 for
"Thieves," in 1976 for "The Next
Man" and now for "The Wiz."
"l don't know what life it's on,"
Wood remarked, .. maybe Its ninth "
NewYork ·
Sinatra
Film See~
IWEW YORK CAP) -
"New York used to be
the Hollywood of the
world," said Mayor
Abraham Beame as be
visited the set of a new
detective film starring
Frank Sinatra.
Shooting for "Contract
on Cherry Street" start· ed at the Burllngton.
House skyscraper on Six-
th Avenue. Sinatra ·
plays apollce inspector.
Unhappy about New
York's image in some
past police films shot
here, the mayor said he
was glad to learn that in
the end of this one, ''law
and order prevail."
V anocur on ABC
WASHINGTON CAP > -Sander Vanocur, a
former television network newsman and now
television editor at the Wasllington Poet, b~ been
named an ABC vice president in charie of special
reporting units.
Roone Arledce, president ot ABC News and
Sports, said Vanocur will be based 1n Washington
and will supervise the network's political '1'd in-
vestigative reporting. He also will make oecuional
on-camera appearances.
UNTIL YOU'VE
SEEN THEM
Vanocur spent 14 years at NBC and served u
that network's White House correspondent, na·
tlonal political correspondent and Washill,&tQtl cor-
respondent for the "Today" show.
ON THE SCREEN
IN CONCERT AND BEYOND
PLUS
"GIMMIE SHELTER"
1 "ed~~.~~~L B~S!~~~~~MA
540-7444
y They're
Night Sticks
Jn the col al daJ' •b New York Clt1 ·wu aUll Now Ai -Um • .s&bt. Ouieh
were hind to patrol &be ~ from t p,m. to
dawn. 1bey were empower.t to Hft7 woqden
clubl in cue of alt.ck. It wu bOcD t.b1t bet •
ninl that police forces aa tbeJ alowly formed
over the yean deveioped the common· l'f.C-
tlce ot cl.IT)'lllt dubl. And tbe time of the
worklni ehift of thoee orl&lnal etabt qsen ln-
dlcat.ea wb)' said clubs are called niahtlilcu.
Thole ti' mualcal inltnlmeall which most
atudenta prefer to learn, ln descendlnl order, are: piano, ,Wtar, vlolln,
accordion. clarinet. trumpet, cornet, flute,
trombone, drum& and sax·
ophone.
Oo you ha\le any idea
just how much this coun-
try's skin divers pay every
year for air? About $150
mUIJon.
HARPISTS
Q. "Who's the world's' greatest harp player?
A. Don't know.: don't know. Twenty years
ago is was Dr. Carlos Salveclo, then age 75. Ir
anybody has replaced him for that distinction, ·
it's not ln the record at band. Dr. Salveclo was
t.be man who said, "At leaat 95 percent of the
U.S. harpists are female, and almost all of
tbem are youne and good·looklng. I've only
known one old female harpist, and she was no
good."
Q. "Do pregnant women ever committ
sulcide! .
A. That's rare, Very rare. Recent studies
showed that out of 168 female suicides of child·
bearini age, only one was pregnant.
AddtQI mail to L.M. BO)ld, P.O. 8o% 1560 COltci
M e1a 9'l616.
"THE DEEP11
•••
IPGt .
l:JO.J:40.l:IM :OO.IO:I O
u ·s 'THE (PG) .
SI. tMST PWA SORCERER.. . :=-.: WICDA YS 7:20.9'.JO *"" SAT /SUtl l:JO.J:JJ.S;4 .. 7:4S.f:lt '-~----~....;.~ .. ~~
•
KTLA•e:oo-"Life With Father."
Tbe"1947 movie based on the long.running
Broadway comedy with William Powell,
Irene J)unne and young Elizabeth Taylor.
C~8 9:00 -"A Warm December."
Sidney Poitier stars ln this 1973 movie
drama about a young widower doctor
from Washington who !al.ls in love with an
African wqman in London.
KCET @ 9:00 -"Waiting for
Godot ... Samuel Beckett's absurdist
drama ls presented on KCET's Great . J
Perf a,mance series. · ·
THI! 1'71 CO•ZDY about 1he
army'• fron\W' camel corp1 d1dnl la· MULBD&Y SQtJUll is t.eatlna ita
nite the natioft'• box offices, but it has own operalion UU. June with the 50().
Will Nixon
... ~Be Socked
A N1W RALPH WAITE OM 1V TONIGHT rr0 ..4 n • ?
Actot Shown In 'Godot' Roi• .I. ~ ~tun
,,,..,........
MAKDARQU!L
Dog Star ·••nJ''
R8lph Waite's:
'GOdoi' on TV
LOS ANGELES (AP)
-Richard Nixon, who
began his presidency by
ukine people to "tock it
to me'' ·on "Lauab·ln,"
bas been uked to make
a comeback on the
abow'a return thil fall. For having a good time at home.
' By J~f SUA.R~VTr
LOS ANGELES (AP) -lo urrs, Ralllb W~ite,
the father on "The Waltons." tqok able chQOk of hla
TV earnings, located a beat-up theater here In an
area not frequented by BeauUM People, and leased
the joint.
And thus began his Los An1&eles Actors'
Theater.
Tonight at 9 on KCET, channel 28. he's on
public TV in bis troupe'• version of Samael
Beckett'• "Waiting for Godot." It's ln the fine arts
series that PBS atations and Exxon, tlle oil cotn·
pany, have bankrolled.
WAITE IS AN UNLIKELY prospect for a
theater-founder. Now 49, he didn't attend hla first
acting class until he waa 32.
A recovered alcoholic, he'd previously been an
ordained minister , a Yale Divinity School Graduate
and before that a social worker.
And Hollywood's an unlikely place t.o start a
theater, the legend goes. But not for Waite, who did
much of his early acting for Joseph Papp, New
York's fiery.off-Broadway theater founder.
Waite, a tall, pleasant man from White Plains,
N.Y., said he wasn't finding much of his TV work
here fulfilling. After each "Walt.ans" season, he'd
rush back t.o New York, back to the staae and his
friends there.
THEN, An'ER HE Fl NALLY bought a home
here, it dawned on bltn that many of bis New Ybrk
colleagues had mlJrated here. And, he said, Ke
tbou&h1: Why not rent a theater and put on qualltx
play1? I
Which he did, the first production of the Los
Angeles Actors' Theater being Euaene O'NeUl't
"The Hairy Ape."
"l was lucky to be In a position where I didn'l
care if it paid off," said Waite, who esthnat.es he pu
more than $100,000 Into the theater's first year of
operation.
"But I wasn't Just burning cash .. .I knew if Wt
had a theater of Integrity and importahee., we'd
eventualJy begin to get outside funding, and that in·
deed has happened juat. thia year." . '
WAITE'S TREATER IS A two-story operation
that from Thursday tbt'ough Sunday nigtlts usually
has two plays eotn •• o'(te on each floor, according to
the act.or. <<! •
Bia n ain't. Upstai~s sea~ between lfll and 200
souls, lie UY.., downetairs frorn 40 to 1001 dependiria
on the size of the cast.
The actor, asked why he'd left the pulpit io 1964.
cited tb~e reasons:
.. Like a lot of guys in their early 30s, t h1u\ voe•
tlonal aM ~rsonal crises pushlng me intp a cotttet.
I'd 1one Into the church. not because I'm~ellatmls,
but because I felt It an instrument for soc.ial ju.Uce.
ll dldn't1eem t.o be working out that wr;.
"And my marria1e was breaking apart," said
Waite, divorced In 1969.
RE SAID llE'D ALSO beiUn drinkinc heavily. He took three montha oft to think, to write. to be
alone. Then one day, an act.or friend asked him to
attend actine class with him. It started the process
of change.
And after staee work in au.ch plays u "Bluea
for Mr. Charlie," roles In such films u (•Five ,Euy Pie~." he landed a steady role ln "The Wal tons,"
wbtcb he aays he1ll probably leave after next
season, its sixth season.
Producer George
Schlatter said he bas re-
ceived a clearance from
NBC to invite the former
president on the openine
special in September
"We haven't heard
back from Nixon yet,•·
said Schlatter, who
added that he la also
negotiating with Cuban
President Fidel Castro
for a series of orfe-linera.
He aald b~ wanted Nix-
on to come onto the show
for a few momenta and
say, •'Ten yean a10 I ap.
peared on "Laugh-In'
and invited the
A1»et1crart people to sock
it Jo me:. You cal\ atop
now.'' '
Does he tbJnk the
former p1'esident wUf ac;·
ceP,l? ·I doh 't know,' he said.
"He did It before. We're
offering hlm more
money than we paid him
tllen. We paid him $210
and nqw we're ofterioe
bbn $375. Not only has
scale gone up but hls
\'ltoe u an actor has
dertainly been proven.''
. \\
'
1moduct'd h) '"iuen ;iod d1~u-d b)
Robert Altman Alan Rudolph
hlmt:J 1n p .111.lVISIOn•
l!l~:J!~I T ~!I~~
CINEMA CENTER
HAR I OR AT ADAMS, COST A MESA
MESA VERDECEHTER 979-4141
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Of41\I I,,
.-.
bH tJ' r ftll~:u
rotk •• alatl (wbo e.lle!> to tholr nm
AnAI It w• a fea la the cap Super Bowl trhunpb.
ol lboM ect.ed wlU. tbl• UP. Via a Clortoul 1eor• and the
pJ enterprtM .i Golden W•t moat en&bualutlc u1t we've
eou.,e to bave • prlvUe1• of 1eeu on a coUea• 1ta1e In yevs,
ltallai tM WOl'ld pnmlere of Joan, ber t.retMt euef\&lly bid-~ lalllt. tftort by Alf ClaUMD dea ln her laeluiet, puta N w and Tommy Wolf of .. When EnaJanddownforU..count.
Jerem.lab Sant tbe Blau" rame. But we know •bat's comln1
TR£ OHL Y T81NG wroa1
with "Jo .. la tbatlt oaq JQ tor nve performanc ...
It rlcbly deaerva a more pro-
lonted local ~ and it'• to be
hoped that we can ... It qala ln
Oranae Copnty before Ute rat of
the world 1eta ita handl on this iem or a production.
What tbe1 do ln "JOUl" ia aum-when the r~uvenated Joan dotrs
man the 1plrit ot Jeanne d' Arc . her helmet and reveals to a
from the pearly 1atee to take on aboeked world that the Super
an Enlland tu removed from Bowl winners were Jed to a vlc-
the perfidious Alblon abe and her tory by a girl.
troopa mauled ao viciouly in the
memorable campalsna of 1429 And lf we aee the likes of ll'ra:n
Tarkenton, Roaer Staubacb and
Joe Namath th.row the lont bomb
next ael.'IOD and be rlcht there in the end zone to make the recep.
tion we can conclude that_they've
taken a leat rrom the book of
"Joe, Baby."
THIS nME ITS New Enlland
of Patriots fame who are 1iven
lbe business via the quarterback·
lnt talent.a of a Mald of Orleans
who leads the New Orleans
BURNED AGAIN? You
1ue11ed it but this time Joan.
who perished at the stake the
flrat Ume around, disappears in a
my1teriou1 hotel fire shortly
after the is casUBated at an of.
flclal inquiry.
'Atlantis Tops TV Poll
NEW YORK (AP) -NBC's Monday night mov·
ie, "Man from Atlantis," was the top-rated prime·
lime television show last week, according to A. C.
Nielsen figures made available Tuesday.
An ABC comedy special telecast before the
Monday night baseball game was the least-watched
of 64 rated shows.
Nielsen said national averages for the week
ending June 26 put ABC back in first place with a
14.6 rating, which represents an estimated 10.4
million households. NBC had a 14.4, repreaentinl
10.3 milllon households, and CBS had a 13.3, or 9.5
million. ,
In order. the top 10 shows were:
"Atlantis," 25.1 rating, or 17 .9 million
households; "Charlle's Angels," ABC, 24.2, or 17.2
mlllion; "Laverne & Shirley," ABC, 21.4, or 15.2
million; "MASH," CBS, 20.7, or 14.7 million ; "Hap-
py Days," ABC. "How To Break up a Happy
Divorce," NBC's Sunday movie, and "One Day at a
Time," CBS. each 20 4, or 14.S million ; and "Quin·
cy," NBC, and "Barella," ABC, both 18.9, or 13.4
mil hon.
The next 10 shows were •·Barney Miller.·· ABC ;
"Ko)ak," CBS; "The Paper Chase," ABC's Sunday
movie, and "Barnaby Jones," CBS, tied ln 13th
place; "Fish," ABC ; "60 Mlnutes," CBS; "Jef-
fersons," CBS ; "What's Happening." ABC, and
"Shields & Yarnell," CBS, tied ln 18th place; and
"Hawaii Ftve.O," CBS, and "Panic in Echo Park,"
an NBC movie, tied in 20th place.
·Director Ousted
From 'Jaws' Movie
PENSACOLA. Fla. CAP> -John Hancock.
director of "Jaws JI." felt lhe bite of the film's pro·
ducera when he found himself off the picture.
Joe Alves. associate producer for the Universal
Pictures rilm. said Hancock was asked to resign
over the weekend because "art.IBUc dlflerences re·
quired a resignation · ·
Hancock's credits Include "Baby Blue Marine·•
and "Bana the Drum Slowly."
A 1tt•MllHMt1tlll•llC\ll,\ll'lo;llJt l • .i,..,., \ \1\1111''"111( ....... I ..
LIZA MINN£U..I · ROBERT DE NIRO.
"NEW 'YORK. NEW YORK"
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..... ,141 \HI \f \t M\l It llw· .-!I \f\Ml""'40H-1"1
t, ,._,J 1.., H(\l" \l "tri.I • M -110 ~HI t t I \U ff Mt
t )t..,....J,.,.,,.\ ,,._..,._,,,,lct M-•IKltHt\H "-"°"''" .. , -J• ..,.._.,. ''\I l'tllH ,_,, ..._ ..... ..,.,.1,....,,._t1, ~ •. I. •
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~~ ~'t:i T UmtedArt11ta
•
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TV,.,ILa• ....... "' l A ..l '4 ' .• .,.-.. .. ,, r•r ~ ,..
HACHATl\.US,H.a. SHOWTIMES 9.a•oll8 8HOWT1Ml!S
DAILY -7:00-11 :05 '------"'---------DAILY-1:55
SAT.-SUN .-MON. -SAT.-SUN.•MON. -
3:15-7:30-11 :35 1:0G-a:10-t:2S
(PGI THE S'f/NG
SHOWTIMES
DAILY-9:00
SAT.·SUN. -5:00-1:15
MON. -4:20·8:40
SHOWTIMU
DAILY-7:00-,1;1
SAT . .SUN. -7:1 .. 11:30 MOH.-2:15-8:40-10:55
. -
''We can't hove it oD tM time. W• have to
share it with Chinese kids." ..
"Got a problmi? Thffl writt to Pot Dunn. Pat will
cut red tape. Qftth&g tM 0~1, and. action ~ need
to solve~'-• in govmiment.ONf bulinfH. Moil
11our question.I to Pot Duma, At Your s.rtnce, 0rQnOf
Coa•t f)ailJI Pilot, P.O. Bo~ 1540, Coeta Mcaa, CA
92628. JU motl1I ~ttf"I 4' pouifU will bt GtalWertd,
but phoned fnqtdne1 or letter• not blclt.tdbtg tM
r.oder'• lull DOmt, oddreu and bu.drlla laow'•' phone
num"-1cannot be ccmlidered. TMlcolumJ&appca,. dot·
lfl ezcrp( Sa.tW'doJI•·"
rapa OldU..e Lall''• ......
DEAR PAT: Ia there any source for obtaining -liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-
free legal advice on a specific subject? t would Uke
some eeneral information about adopting a child,
but I'm not yet ready to retain an attorney.
R.S., Huntington Beach
AYS .. uau pbODlnl Tel·La• at 134·11•. Thls
U·bour a day 1eneral i.Dform.U. eervke Gftet"t H
u&eulve Ubr&I')' of taped lllfor9S&Uoll &Ila& ean
auwer bulc queattou aad darU_y wlaea a lawyer II
aeeded. Almott every allbject .. cot-... bleladlnl
&llrff adoptioCl laformaU. t.,... 1a& &ell tbe
operator the aabJed or a.mber ol U. tape yoa wbb
&o bear. A lll& of •ubjecta b anllable a& that
number.
Fourth'• No Blfut tor Fide
DEAR PAT: We Pet Aasl.ltance FoundaUon
volunteers hope you will pass along a few words of
advice to animal owners. The Fourth ot JulJ brings
with it frightening experiences for animals and
their owne~. Fireworks· noise tenifies animals.
Aa a result, many pets run away. We ur1e pet
owners to take particular care in keeplnc their pets
confined to their homes or yards a few days before
and on the Fourth of J u.ly,
L.L .• Garden Grove
• Tllukl for &his timely rembadtr. Ravtn1 owaed
a nreeracller·aby do• myself, I bow &ha& a frtotened animal will do anJ(llf.91 &o cet away
fro._. tbe olfendln1 sc>eu1d. When nreeracker aolte c~o• be nolded, 1 frllhteeed doe stto.ld be re·
sand u well u restralaed. Pren ••r cloae a&
baad aJao belpa aa tan a mUd tranqallber If your
n&e..._,.aa presert.bea oae.
I
Cit• Coll Selee Bair P...we.ia
DEAR PAT: My problem 11 very long, thick halr. O>Wd you please tell me where I can buy a
larse batb1n1 cap alm~ to the ones profesalonal
awlmlden wear? The o,ily kind I have been able to
find aretooamall for all my hair.
K.ll., Newpo~ Beach
Hart'• 8PorUn• Gooch, 538 Center, Co.ta Meta, speelalbd ID awtmalq equipment. They HJ the
"8peedo" lyera b1Wa• eap alaoa.ld attommodate
loll' balr. U •Gt. ebetlt tbla ftrm for Miler aoartea.
Spod lwt.m•JJll caps are Ulla ud eu, to atretch
evea t.boa"1 tbey appear ckllcate. ~
ColOrStreaftBerTra-. / .tj
D~ PAT: J have a terrible problem. I de·
c\ded l wanted to change my hair color from brown
to blonde. 1 've ended up with an obnoxloua
strawberry blonde ahade after ualn1 bleach and a
toner. I followed inltructioM and u.sed Sood pro·
ducta. I need some help f alt!
J .J .• Newport Beach
Call tbe Clairol Hair Care Bot UDe Monday
tlaroaO Frtdat I a.a. ~ 8 p.m. A Ralf of It tODluJ·
tant1 h avallable to bitter balr tare qaesdoaa, la·
eladlDC color rrobl•mt, allampoo1, ctndltlonen, appliances an ae'*• ancl premlam offep. u ..
&1M1i IGll.free ... ber, C•> m.UM. "rtt&en la· qalr .... cu be ~ to aa1ro1 Coahmer Coaaaltaa&I, QalrGI I.De,, JU Park Aft,, New York, NY lfttl. . • I
Not aactly • tzed, Ulla n lire was developed by tb GoOdyear
Company mt Akron, Ohlo. tor a aark tront·loader, which can Ult 36
t.o -d dirt in a 1incle aooop. The tire measures 11 'h feet in
diam , w lahs 12,500 pounda and costs about "°·000
THAT WAS BEWOaB TIU eon.sumer
mov.sment when, mOll"9 ao OUao today, It •u a caao ot the naive, amat.Mar buyer
•iaJnst the aophJaticated, proleu onal
teUer. Bl.It accocdt.nl tO u;. term PaHr he
wrote. b\a HYll\I• eould be obtained.
Today, Hana Biesdorf, prole&sol' and
economist, atilt roam• the 1l1lea. He
bellevea that someone with no ex·
traordloary expertise to be&ln with can cut
1 family food bill by 10 to 15 percent. savlna
thousand.• of dollars lo a llfetlme.
--------------------------------Really? "Of course, no problem." Hu.
.Avco Reports Record
. For Quarter, I st Half
Avco Flnanclal Services Inc .
Newport Beach, has reported record
net earnln11 lor the 1977 second
quarter and first half. The company ls
a wholly owned subaidJary of Avco
, COTp. of Greenwich, Conn.
For the second quarter and six
montJ\ periods ended May 31, net earn·
logs, before unrealized gains on
forelp exchange fluctuations and ex·
traordinary credits arJsing from the
carry(orward of prior year's foreign
tax cJ"eClita, totaJed $14,602,000 and
$27,013,000, up 30 percent and 24 per-
cent, respectively. from the restated
1974 levela oUll,301 and *21. 779,000
· llftttl~ Tel& Gain•
Bentley Laboratories, Inc , Irvine.
has announced that sales and earnings
for U\esecondquarter were the highest
recorded for any quarter since the firm
was founded in 196C. Sales for the first
six montha were up 32 peN!ent and pro·
flu were up 70 percent over the com·
parable period for 1976.
Earnings per share for the period
grew to 59 cents, compared wtth 35
cents for 1976. Revenue• reached
$13,950,000, compared with $10,813,000
and net income ror the six months was
Sl,297,000, compared with $762,000 for
the same period last year
Bcnllc Set• Dll'Jdelul
Direct.ors of Irvme National Bank
have declared a 5 percent 1tock
dividend on outatandln1 aharea lasua
ble Sept. 1 to shareholders of record
Aug.I.
Subject to regulatory approval olthe
comptroller of Ute currency, Ute bank
wilJ issue 13,167 addiUonal shares. dJs
tributed among Ute shareholders in
proportion to holdings.
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
•
HOTIC.Ofll'UILIC LllH
SAL•O,M>AT
JunP 11, 1tf1
J Hump/Irr(
PO 8o•2t6?
New Port Bffcll, C.A 9,,,60 Ou r Sir;
'"" It 10 ""II'• o! our 1ntH1llOft to
1>o10 • ti.,, ... t• on INI totto'"''"" ""' .. 1
7'' -m-<t•!t CFtMOC,J
Ttw WIP •ltt M NlcSC>4' fl>f•.Oo July
••. 1'11 41 IO·OO • m ., »> (, Co.st
Hwy , N-pe>r1 8U<lt C: A '74'0
Ttt# Nit durP .,,,,,~ M '"'' VP~\•I ., ol J..,,. !, 1'11tHJ .. .a ........... , ..
:\Mn NIQ<o
~r•t MAn..tl]9t
M 1t.n1• B•vtttt. '\/•tl"'Q91
P.tbh"""' Of-(t>A\I O•lly P11c>t
JtJf'W" n, ,.,,
1'1),,
PUBLIC NOTICE
U!O 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
1'11 ...
Publltlltd Or-CM1t D•tlv Piiot,
JUrwt 2t,•llOJUIY6, l ),.20, 1t71
7IOPI
PtJBUC NMICE
f'ICTITIOUI tUllNIU
NAManATIM•NT
TM lollow1"9 Wto!ll •r• eti"1! l>Ull·
reply was peremptory. tt11 authority
founded on the facts. Since comin& from
West Germany Jn 19SO be bu recorded, ex·
amlned and examined a1a1n the price ot an
hia purchaaes .
"EVERYTHING WE (HE AND hla wlfe)
ever bouiht. it went lnto my recorda," be
sald. "U you don't keep records you cannot
learn."
Mlllions have learned from Bleadort and
his assoclatea at Cornell University. He has
appeared on or writ.ten •cores of radio and
television shows, He supplled much fodder
for the consumer movement.
Jn 1968 he and his associates wrote "Be A
Better Shopper -Buying in
Supermarkets." a home study kit. Some
43,000 orders were received, and a related
slide program has been used in 200 blgh
schools here and abroad. '
A NEW EDITION OF TUE lot and slide
program baa been completed to include de
velopments since then, such as unlt pricing,
raincheck policy, nutrition labels and the
Universal Product Code.
For the klt, checks for $2.50. payable to
CornelJ University, should be sent to Better
Shopper, Box 191, Dept. N·l. Ithaca. NV.
l~.
An example of the style:
"f'm too busy to spend another half an
Pl1BUC NOTICE
NOTtCI TOClllDITOIU
SUl'•••Olt cov•TO, Tl41!
UATI OflCALlflO•NtA f'Olt
TH• COUNTYOflO•ANOI
Ne.A-917'1
F 1tett ot NOllA 0 POWE •S,
0•<••..0 NOTIC! t• Hl!ltE8Y GIVIN to I""
crocll10<• ol ""' .i.e.,,. Nmecl !1«9cl•nt , ... , ... .,.,_, ... Ying <lefmJ ag.lllMI
'"" Wld CIK ..... I ere r-rf'<l to Ill•
ltwm. with lhrt "8'<P\Wl'Y vovcher,, tn
tM ofllu °' ,,. c ..,. .. al ,,,. •IMI•• ..,.
!1114'<1 co''"• onoor....-t '"""'· "'"'' '.,. rvo\W<VY~n, lotNlun.Wr11-d
•• '"" o!tto of o·MELV!NV A
M V[lt\ Altorno• •' LUol Attn
~t1Hrt p TotwwnM\ &I I w .... ~ ... ,"
!>trNt, l~ Aft9"l.,. C.ltlOfnlA ~11
•111(11 " t,... Ill«• OI b<J• ''"'" O! tn. un· ,,.,,,.~ •n •II mAlhtr" ~rt•lnlno lo
IN Hl•k' Of Mid 0.C-1. Wltlll4' ffMJf
fTIOfltl" •fl .. t'-ftr•I llUDllt•flll" et tllu "°'''-• O•t•O JI-... ,.,,
VlltOINIA Oll!fElllCH
!c"(.utrtlollheWltt ... , ............. ..-..... -...
O'MI L.VINY A MY8 H
Atl-yuH .. #
At"'· 14""" fl TMh,...,. "' w ••• ,.,..,.,_
LHA,......,CA. .. 11
Tel: UIJ)Ul-11. ""_"._.._..,,. l'Ublltllff Or ..... ~t O•llY ... let, J.-u.:it.-July•, 1).1tn '~"
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUI 8UllNUI
NAMe ITAT•MINT
T"41 loltowlno PHIOn '• ~11\0 .,.,,, • .......
CONCl!~U IN D!llON, l11t~
••lm•r 51-t, l"ounleln Vell•y, CA. ttl'CI
lt61 Ar1ne HM'!,.., 111~ ···-Slrffl, l"011111•lfl Veltev, CA. tl/ot
1'111• ~lntn II condlutt.cl 11¥ .,. '" dlvtcluel.
ltot Nlfte Her1100
Tll11 ttal-1 ... 111.0 wllll 111•
Coun1, cw.rk ot Or_C-,,onJ._
1J, '"'· n19'f
""•b41tNICI °'"""' C-'I 0.lly Poto<, J_,.,.,..MV•.1a.20,1m
PUBUCNOTICE
• 'IUPPO & YOV
emp14tJer offers to
pq )'09 : ror warklu
• boUr Oftl'tlme each
Nit. MtM deductions, 1• a.re 1uck1 to
come a...,.y wlt.h •· 8U1 by a betl4lir
•bopper, rou eel• tu: rr.. in oa.1¥ ball theUme.'
So much mor. aware ba"Vo abOp.,.rw
become in the put d cad• that tho tocbzll·
qua mtaht Hem aell-evlden.L They baft
been widely accepted and l:>.l'OmOted, but
they're the aame ones u.sed in that term
paper 24 years a8o .
1. Buy when the prtce .ta rl&ht. 2. When the
prlce ls rilbt buy more lhan is needed in
one week. 3. Compare sue 81\d pric$ (be 1
unit 1bopper). 4. Try atore brand•
<sometimes as much u 40 percent lea~·
penalve>. 5. Shop in motet.ban one com~
lnt store 6. Plan meals a.round weekly
specials
SIMPLE? OF COURSE. But the advice
offered ln carrying out the ideas, and the
charts. the record sheets and the document·
ed savings make rather lmpi.ring readini.
Bleadorf knows his fractions. No savin1s
are ifnored. ·'I you learn shopping techniques on food
S&L Diaplay Shows
How to Find 'Roots'
Great West.em Savings and Loan As·
soclaUon's "How To Find Your Own Roots"
campaign as under way at the Newport
Beach, Huntington Beach and Santa Ana of.
flees through July 31
Historical artifacts and memorabilia of
the 18th and 19th centuries are on display
Visiton can trace family ancestry with a
complimentary Clrst edition of Lisa Ray
Clewer's book, "How to Find Your Own
Roots.''
8u1loeu hours are 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
weekdays and from 9:30 a .m. to 3 p.m.
Saturdays.
Ext
Tbey ....
, aDd Ofta DO e'l"fld!L
'l'llAT OTll U •A&& l181 ol tho
.mat•rlala fiat.Ura him •. B .,dorf a,
althoulb be~. ·•credtua 1ppnct •
ed.'.' Ile 8'joya.bla w~ the ~
•b lt eoJIMll.• and b.la pt'afesacnhlp 1t
Col'llell.
A ~. be beUnw Cb re are
areas wbere'further eoasumer orotec:Uon
lan't ~. Be bellev• that .. with
more· aopblltlc1ted buyers and more un·
blaaed "iftlonnatloo. i ... telisl•Uoo •bould
be tberoutoottbo luLure."
Be lhllNI abopplfta wllb h&a wlro, EllC!l'I.
''WhoeYer baa more tlme de>e1 lt: if we tiavo
lbe tlnae-.. both 10." he hid. "We conslder
•hoPPi.ni a riJce challeqe. ••
Sma/,l Buiineu
Opportunitiea Get
Area ShoUJing
Individuals ln~reated in small bualnesa
opport.unlU• can aee producta and services
rrom 85 companies •t the 11th annual
southern Califomfa "Owo Your Own Busi-
ness" show July l'-17 at the Anaheim Inn at 1'be Park.
Full· and part-Ume lnvett.ment proifams
include uuu\y ofloted by locaUy baaed com-
panies, locludlnt 1-Eleven Stores, Irvine.
AHociated Tax Consultants, Huntintton
Beacb and California Skateboard Traclu. Newport Beach.
TBB BUSINESS SHOW LS produced by
Hop Eb&Jhb Productions of HunU.n&too
Beach.
Houra are l lo 9 p.m. July lS and 16 and I
p.m. to6 p.m . July 17. Admission Is S2.50for
adulta; people under 16 will be admitted
free. Couples will be admitted for U on Fri·
day and Saturday niibls. ·
Over 1"he Counter
MASOU1~
I t ' • ,
HIW YC*IC IA,;, -lo'NI acllw ·-• tt.-<Oll..t" •wctu WPPli..t ., NASO, 1 "'""' v•-BIO AlllN c,,., I '°"'" Gp i= 2S 16 t 7·16 ..... Atlht'!M II U''I U -'°' 'IO
l"n•IOG •• CICIO "''"' U l't -Mo I' Dnllll ~ ·'"" 11111 •Mt 1 Wr!Wll!!11 , "'°' '' ,.,. • " a 0.llMr • l'fP/I I'' J,. • 14l t• ~~ . a :!: = :.:·" ,: D.'li111 AO 2~ ~ -t" 11
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w.:ia It '
"""' Coflll)Ci1 """ ti. tales d neufy • bUUCID )'al'.
r do,_
trUtPla&to~ llDd ,.,.... producta !
•••••••• lbat tbl• ii a com·
pan1 wlt.b • product
lineup tbat aeemlnal1
atret.Cbet to fn.ftnj~. In
the Briltol·M1era medldne chest aro aucb DftK?fpllon
dru" Pob'clllln, Kantrex and AmUdn: alf tbe Cfalrol
halr product.I; the Poly. Vi-Sol vltamJ.a; tbe Ban deodorants.
such an&laesics as Bufferln. Excedrin and Datrll; lbe
Vltalla ll.ne ; Sal HepaUca laxative; such acne flshtera as
MulUScrub and Fos~x; Bromo Quinine cold tablet&.
NoDoa; Drano; Vanish, Windex; knudt; 0-Cedar mops
and brooma; Mr. Mu.clecwendeaner an4 Wellb.t Watcber1
packqed foods. 'Ml4' answer ii $378 mllli<Ja. For every $S Briltol·Myers
taket1 In. It apend.I about S1 on advenlains and ptOmotioo
The promotional expendl&u:NI are more tban flve times
wbat tbe eompany spends on l'tllleattb and development.
Does lt pay off? You be\. Even after 1pendlnt all tbat
money on adve~. Brtatol·Myera rolled to pret.u profits
of~mllllon.
WHILE A COMPANY NEEDS TO APPLY a lot ot ad·
vertilt.ns weieht to move drop and tolletlies orf 1belv•, it
also must come up wtlb new product.I all the time. Aod for
Brlstol·frfyers, 1t78 was a bumper year on that front N •t
capltallJ:ed alertly on tbe arowlng concern over the use or
aerosol propellants.
Briat.ol·Myen scored significant market advanc• wtt.h
three products powered by a pump lnstead or an aeroaol.
They were Ban Basic, Final Net and Vitalls Super Hold.
Ban Baalc was wheeled tnto national distribution in
March JB76, heralded as .. an antl.penplrant spray that
doesn't spray aerosol propellants." lt was backed wilb a
hu1e ad bud1et. and It turned out to be the moat aucceaful
new product inlroducUon in the hlltory of Briltol-llyen. By
the time the year waa over the product bad done so well that
the Ban line knocked GIUeu.'s Rl1bt Guard out Of flnt
place. reclalmln& thetop1potfor Briatol·Myen.
FINAL NET, A HAIR FIXAnvE. WAS brought out by
Clairol In um, but it took olf last yeBr. Bristol·Myera
clalma lt'a No. l In lta field. Also No. 1 ln lt1 rleld Is Vltalls
Super Hold, a hair spray for men, which Bristol·Myers pro·
moted heavily In 1976 under the theme "The Pump.'•
BrlJtol-Myers reported that these products together ac·
counted for more than $50 millioa of sales in 1976.
With that super year behind It, Brialol·Myers can an·
dulge ln the luxury of consurqer education. It has hired Beu
M1eraon. fonner commu1loner of Consumer Atlaln ln New
York Qty. aa its consumer CONU.ltant, and ahe bu pro.
duced fOt' the company. a dandy 122·P•lle pocket.book.
· Consumer Guide to Product Information."
JT'S A GUIDE FILLED WITH USEFUL information
about products (what they do, what they don't do). and alter
Bristol-Myen ran ads in New Yortc and Piltsburp earlier
thu1 year offering the book free of charee, tt received orden
for more than 100,000.
You can probably look for Brl•tol·Myera to ad"1'llae it
an your town later tbla year. lf not. you can try wrltln.i
directly to the company (at 3-U Park Ave .• New York. N.Y.
10022) to demand equal treatment with Pittsburlh and New
York. lt comes out of an advertl•ln&·promot1on budget that
will probably top '400 million thiJ year.
Report on Indicators
Depresses Market
NEW YORK (AP> Stock prices conUnued lower to-
day in what analysts saw partly aa a raponse to an uii·
favorable report oo the economic outlook.
The Dow Jones averace of 30 industrial stocks lost 2.29
points to 913.33 on the New York Stock ~chanee. Overall,
losing assueti outnumbered gainers by more than a 3~2
margin.
The Commerce Department reported today that tta
May index of econooilc fndlcatbrs showed a tw~t.eDtha ot a
percent decline followlnt incttues in tho three pteYlous
month.a .
..... "°"''"'Pl ,,,.., Oow-J-•-llllil" ITOCJtS
30 '"° 91~ ,,'tit «ie.'T>' ~.':.~-B1 10 frft 1».61 ue.12 23UO 216 61-0.1' IS Utt ltUI HS.16 llJ .. tM.14-01'" 6\ St IL J IOM JlJ.41 >OIS.tt Jll,00 • 0 '8 t""u. • . ....... ., I, \11,IOO
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AMCXIAUS
~ ,..., ... ' .• '&!I' S""11 tllle ..., ........... , ' ...... fllll:. ............. .. ..............................
Sfor"-l•Tfw> s,,.cu9111
~A~;~ LIQUORS
Count Vasya '
VODKA 6 79 V2 GAL •
Foster Creek s Yr. Old
BOURBON 8 19 112 GAL. •
MacKlnnon's
SCOTCH 8 39 1h GAL •
Canadian Reserve
WHISKY 8 69 V2 6AL •
llf CU£ Of TY'05U,HICll Utol,
MllUMUM FAii THO£ PllCU Will 1£ IN mm
D1sPosA1u Glassware
Perfld for P•rtltsl
• "Uf 2Uet. · .~~F~ • 2~s1
10ti.lll·lal • m Plates & Bowls
,,./,, ''" lu ,,
COMET
"SH-THRU''
CAKE PAN
with COVER
Transparent cover
protects food$ & keel)$
thel'A freshet IOnaer.
u,~, n 44
912" L.
Mountaineer
33"x 77". Nylon
cover, Dacron 88
Filling. 3 LB.
'"-~rmo 16.95
IOYS BAG
33"x68". Ny loo
~__. c.over, Dacron 88
F1lhng 2 lB.
•7SOO 12.95
33" x 76", Nylon
co ver. Dacron
F 1ber till II filling,
2\lr LS
•75·25124.95
-.....
I , •••
47c
9oth for Only
PYREX BRAM)
Patio 'n' Pizza
12" PUT£
22. 88 L:::::::::a::::•212 =::c:::::l • 3::::::o::::J9
~ BAT & BALLS
lty HI G TOYS
30'' plastic bat. 2
plashc baseballs, 99c .
CHARCOAL
BRIOUETS
"GLAD"
TRASH
BAGS
E itr a B11gh t
(specially su1led
lor boat111g, as
tronomy & use 1n
poor hghl
DRUGS & SUNDRIES
"AIM"
TOOTHPASTI
4.6 OZ. 6&c I
fl( Al.0'C
M ~q ·~RAY"'7eogsolc ~ aoz.
ANACIN ::1:~200 2.29
CE PACOL
MOUTIIWASM
11111$ Slzt 24tz. 99c
sou1:o~s ggc
Of 150
i.
fAIOGl BRUT 33
IHlllMT ST1CI • lltJ.,.,..
mca 77c
2~ IL (1.
•
Care and Feeding
Of Transpac Crew
By BAllBABA GIUS-BOWEN
Ol llll O.lly ,., ........
You've just bou1ht a slick new
sloop and you're off on your first
adventure, the prelude to the
Marquellea, Bora Bora ...
Warning to your galley mate:
What you consider fuel for you
can be just as important aa fuel
for your boat.
Take a Up from Dave Woods,
charged with the care and feed·
ine of the all:male crew aboard
Silverlox. a shlny new -tl-foot
sloop that vies this weekend in
the 2.225-mile Transpac race to
Honolulu.
.. My philosophy about food on
board ia that it ls as important for
the morale of the crew as it la for
their nourishment," says WoodJJ,
who clainu to serve up galley
grub "just li..lte the men would
have at home."
This ls Woods' ninth Tranapac
race; the fourth he's cooked for.
And, J~linl from the verbal
pats-on-the-back he received
from fellow crew-members dur-
ing thia interview' the auy knows
hi• stuff.
"WHEN YOU'RE RACING,
·you're racing, and that's all
you' re doing. Your mind's on one
thing, and that's getting there as
fast u you can," he sats.
··A meal becomes IOIJlething
the crew looks forward to when
they change watches. lt'a a Ume
to socializ.e, go over the proireas
of the day. to break the routine and relax.
·'And the guys ually •P·
predate it when a little extra ef-
fort ls shown. not just in terms of
what the food tastes like, but in
how It's presented."
Woods admits to having an ad-
vantage that's sure to win some
points: He's crewed with 1bc of
the men before aboard another
Newport sloop, Bmgo. so he's
aware of their personal likes and
dislikes.
"You gel to know someone
pretty well when you race with
him." he says. Partly because of
the Intensity of their race, and
partly because of the confines of
a boat, mood frequencies and
habits become easy t~ chart, as
does the consumption of snack
food and brew.
"There'll be plenty of that on
board," quips one crew member.
Bill Lawhorn, a veteran of 12
Transpac races.
SILVDFOX is skippered by
Dr. Robert Kelleher, who re·
portedly liked his old boat,
SIJverlox I. so much. he had
builder Denoia Choates design
him another with a silver-gray
hull to match bis own silver-gray
shock of hair.
Choates will also be crewing
aboard Sllverrox, as will P4it
Kelleher, the skipper's son, Or.
Maurie Smith, Richard Blal·
term an and Stan Gibbs.
Woods says, jokingly, "Lucky
for me, there are no vegetarians
on board. Stan hates peas and
Dennis bates chicken. . . ao
naturally, we've planned a lot of
meals around creamed peas and
cbic\en."
Actually, WoodJ' menu, which
he shared with the crows on the
UCI sailing teams' Ml1tress and
Free Splrlt, calla for ample
"ho¥St, homestyle food," he
says. Included are a couple
roaata, both beef and lamb, a pre·
cooked lW'key and a baked ham.
According to rules laid down
by lb• Loa A.ngeles·Honolulu
Tr·aupactrlc Yacht Club,
1pon1«11 of t1* race, stores are
required aboard all boata to last
the crew 21 days.
·•And there's plenty of cabba1e
in the aft locker to keep us going
ll all else falls," he said.
CABBAGE, explains Woods, la
one of the hardiest vegetables to
stow at sea. It will be ~ as
long as three weeka without
refrl1eration, he says, given a
quick manicure or outer leaves.
But alnce it's characterislical·
Jy odlleroua oo the stove, Woods
says be saves it for "a lut re·
sort."
Other hardy fresh stows are
onions, potatoes, carrots,
melons, aquuh and trapefrult,
he aays. But he'• also packed a
1ood share of frozen ve1etables,
caMed drinkl, tuna filb. chipped
beef and combeet bub -and
nlne Jan of mariAat.ed artichoke
a heart.I. "Y•, we like them," be
H)'S.
A1tbou1b far from a beginner
at prepartna a boat for sea,
Woods had some assistance for
this race, from veteran pro-
visioner Sandy Blatterman, wire
of crew member Blatterman.
W ooda, a bachelor, is the first
to admit that her "woman'•
touch" will add some spark to
their repast.. For instance, Mrs.
Blatterman took special care thia
race, to pack red. while and blue
paper plates and napkins for 4th
of July meals.
"NOW, THAT'S something
special to euya at sea," says
Woods.
··At leut it'll be something dif·
ferent." adds Mrs Blatterman.
As planned, the crew will eat
all·Amertcan fare on that day:
pancal(es and sausa1e, hot dogs
and potato salad. and prime nb
and peas.
"That's about as ethnic as we'll
get on this trip," says Woods.
Within the next few days, he
aays, he and Mrs. Blatterman
will be cookina up a storm, pre-
parint rout. to freeze that will
need only thawing and a short
tlme in the oven before dinner.
They've also prepved a few cuserotes. 1aucea and 1ravies,
and packed them in plastic, re-
heatable cont.alnera for freezing.
This way, explains Mrs. Blat-
terman, foodl can be reheated by
slmply immersing the containers
in bot sea water on top of the
stove. This aavea on fresh water
and Cl'*1·Up.
Wltb hll job mapped out for
him aheadoftlme, Woods figures
It takes him about an hour and a
half to aerve up dinner, and he
looks rorward•to It with no rear
of claustrophobia In the bOal'I
1alley.
"I've only been sick once, and
that wu in 1959. I don't forsee it
happenlni It again."
Clearly, his major concern ia
eating up th: wind.
For mlcrocooks ln the 1alley:' An lntema-
tloaal rue of holiday beef entreell tO uvor like
your favorite tradlUoul ~lpea 1n 1 .. than half tbettme.
ZUOCIUNIBEEPMINCEV&
1 pound lean around beef
~ teupooo aalt
\'4 teupoon pepper
In WinninQ
Time:WaVce
1 ~ te8IJ)OOftl oreelllo, crumbled ~teaspoon chill powder
1 medium succhlni, diced ~cup chopped areen onion uaraetomato. cubed ('1\PCJUnd)
l quart shredded icebera fettuce
4 ounces provolone cheese, grated (1 cup>
. l avocado, 1Uced
1 oranie. •Uced
Crumble beef into 2-quart rectaniular oven· J>TOOf J1asa baklna dish, Sprinkle wttb ult, pep·
per, oresano and chili powder. Layer 1ucchinl,
peen Gillon and tomato on top. Cook uncovered
With full power'. ln microwav. O\l9D 3 mlnutea.
SUr. Cook. •t.lrriJia once,' inlnutet laqeror un· t1l beet ti cooked. . ~-fi-11.u a bed ot lettuce oo lndMdual dblner
pJa\el. T09 wlth hot be 11tablu. &pi'tUh .tt.b choeM: Oatnllb avoeaao ud
crao1e llices. PUI aour c:reun lt XU. ........
SAVOBY8&al'.vvu1.1tW1A
•
After nine Transpac races, galley chef Dave Woods says,
what the crew gets for food -and how they get it -
is as important as any other factor in retaining the spirit
to win. Woods, along with Sandy Blatterman, shown
above with a checklist of provisions, and Suzanne Choates,
stocked Newport's Silverfox with "honest, home-style grub. "
Cut beef into ~·lncb cubeS (no lar1er>. Pare
potatoes and cut into ~-inch oubes (2 oupa).
Combine all tnaredf entl In 2-quart rOGDcl oven·
proof &Jau bakinf dish with cover. Cover and
cook with full power In microwave oven, aumnc
ever_y 10 minutes, ao minutes or untll beef and
potatoes are tender. Mak•• MJ'Vinl•.
1 PoUDd beef top round •teak
3 tablespoons fiour ~ (lo.ounce) packaee frozen small peas (1
cup)
Co nt Plump
sserts: A 'h, ~::.:;,___> In 350 Varieties
ecta r B1DONKENOALL ll"Owtb" ol Clo9trldium acidity Ud prod •"~-..._ botullnuam, the or-otrnavon. no
( I n re Hyin.
· •1 an abu dant rrop or
bl fruat ••al lint aummtr ~· umuth«i, 1l a •ma.
J w t«'a droullht.
On• alu thln1 •bout nee· lartan. wblt'b ll why meny
cook.a arid uaer •• ra dM>Oee UMm ov peachet, la they are
·lesa &Dd I I.One, makiq exu...a1 &o .,,.pare or en· .....
.Boll bo ownert •ltb a
c:rv.-ne oven will rejolc• over ...op.. Tbb frult needa lit·
U. .....uni to 1how otl it.a faUv.navor 1D cooktd dea1eru.
AAOtlMr nice th DI ... very liUJt
gF1'9CA=ni.ilur ii needed to •how
ID oft \n cooked dnaerts.
Here are some microwav
W~ Uabt-textured dumplloO
lloatiq atop tbe 1olden-red fretb
fruit provides a delectable and
eye-c:atcblnc conclusion to a.QY
m•al in minutes.
NECTASINES AND
DU•PUNGS
4CUPI1llced nectarines
Ytcupl\llar
YI cuporaniejuice
1 teaspoon cornstarch
'..\ teupoon grated orange
peel
11 .. teaspoon cinnamon
Dumplinas
Place nectarines in shallow
glass baking dish (7xl1xlo/• in·
~bea). Mix sugar. oranie Julee, ~rnataftb, oran&e peel and cin·
)tamon together. Drizzle over
fruit.
Drop dumplln'8 in 6 mounds
over nectarines. Lay a sheet cl
>waxed paper over dlab.
i:ilicrowave 8 minutes. Serve
warm. Makes6servin1s.
Dumplln11: Combine 1 cup biscuit mix, 2
RIPE 'n' READY
ta lupoona ~~and ~ cup WASHJ .. GTON T 1ant1m that eauae• Vlne,ar11notuelrec· milk andmixllaJlU1. n -be botulllm. However. of. ttve aa citric acid or AarlcultureDepartment, ficlala said, Garden lemon juice and can baaed on re-port.I by tel en· s N~CTA&INS t11'81DE DOWN tilU atudylnc Ui e tale tomatoes, In · cause an off flavor, the CAil£ lroduced in IMS, are no aclentiat.s found.
J tablHpoont butter c>r harmful efftcta of bac· lonaer commercially · The report said that martarllM terla 1rowth lo home· available. I "proper procedures" caooeclto.motoes,haare· be '•cup brown 1u1ar ported that more than 350 Three other varieUes ' lln with the seloctJon
2cup11Uced fteth nectarines tomato varieties •bow -Ace. Ace S5 VP and ' of tomatoes that are not lpackeaeyellowcakernlx thatthe)'containenougb Cal Ace -aro low in .overripe or decayed .
.Place butter aDd auia.r Jo natural aC'ldl to prevent acid. They were de· Fwther, home eaMen nloped for commercial should follow ''teated
u1llow •tncb round 1Iu1 bat· botull~. growers who produce and approved" pro·
lnl cUab. Cook ln electronic oven But ibe department tomatoes for the fresh cedures such u in
Ht minutes, to melt butter. aald home canners can marketandshouldnotbe USDA'• publlcatlon,
Remove from oven and arranae eaally add citric acid or used for home canning. HG·8, "Home Cannint of neetann. ln mixture. Prepare· lemon juice to tbelr Fruits and Ve1etablet" batt«from take mlx u packaie tomatoM u furl.be!' ln· The research, led by lwhlcb may be available
dk-a. Pour over fruit. Cook ln • u ranee a I a Io• t Dr. Gerald M. Sapers of !from county extensl0&1
eleCticQ!c oven e mlnutea. Turn botu.llam. the USDA'• Agricultw-al offices.
dlab.Cook5mlnutealonser Research Service, The publlcallon can ·
Let stand 1 mln\&te, then invert Th• study to auesa \be showed that one· fourth also be ordered for '5
onr ierrinl d.iah, aUowlns bak· aafety 01 bom•canned teaspoon of citric acid or cents a copy from the
in• dilh to rest over cake a lomatoea wu condw:ted one tablespoon of bottled U.S. Government Print·
mlnute ao ayrup will drain. Cool by USDA'• Baatern lemon Juice in each pint line Office, Washington,
•ll•btly before serving. Good Re1lonal Rea•uch wUl incre11e tomato ,D.C. 20402.
topped with yogurt or whipped Center, Wyndmoor, Pa.,-------------------
cream.lllakee 6toB1ervln1s. after queatloaa were .,,·------------------ralMcl Mwn1 years aio
JIFFY NECTARINE-PEAR
DESSERT
2 medium-size freab pears
2 teaspoons lemon juJce
2 medium-size freab nec-
tarines
~ cup brown sugar
'4cupflour v .. cup uncooked oall v.. teupoon cinnamon
V.. cup butter or mar1artme
Pare, core and slice pean into
a 1hallow bakina dish (9xllll2 ln·
cbe1). Sprinkle wttb lemon JUie..
Slice neci.rtnes over peara.
Combine supr. tlour, oata and
elnn•mon. CUt in butur to mate
fine enunbL Sprtnk.le over fl'ult.
Place la el~c oven and coot about '1 mh:wtel, Juat until
fruit ls tender. Serve warm.
MakesSto6aervinp.
=:o r:t:it: eo·called ''low aeld.,
tomatoe. eanned at home.
Officlalt aald the teats abow "there bu been no
conllatent chance tn
tom•to acidity of
v arietles introduced over
the laat 25 years,"
althoulh four vartetiee
are low tn acid and ahOuld
not bemedforbomecan·
'Dln1.
One ot thele; Gardera
State ••• Jow flDOUlb bl
• acid~ pwlN,y ~
Get Your
Best Zaps-
THRIFT
STORE
UNION MAID BAKERY
VISIT OUR HEW LOCATION
·SUMMER SAVINGS .. . . uno5030M
. " , Sundae Starters
A few special techni·
ques will help
microwave oven users
1et the best results. (714) 751-4901 .3o36 S. FAIRVIEW ....__ ,_,~~""!"4 If you are preparing a
caaaerole, atew or other
What a way to start the 1 pound (2 cups) cot-Klx eottqe ebeete with recipe that bu a con-
SANTAANA
HOURSe MOM. ttn
SAT.lte6
..
Whether you call 'em Wieners, Dogs
or Franks, and you've been wondering
where the flavor went ... then it's
time to try Schirmer's German
Brand Franks. Made the tender,
delicious "Old Country'' way from
the finest meats and seasonings. So big
and so plump that each one
weighs 3 ounces.
{ook tor th• little Schirm.r's S111111e M1/ftr
o" 1111 p1ch11 l11 your m1rk1t. ·
Schirm£~®
the Sociable Sausage
Available in the Dell c11e of:
VONS MARKETS
dAY-with plump, sweet taie cheese (mild, not remainiQI 2 tableapoona alderable liquid content.
strawberries and cream, tan'1') oran1e Julee, oranse •Ur aeveral times durins 'or a sundae salad with 1 teupooa 1rated riJ1dandlr8bOlacereal. cookln1. Tb1a "1lJ aaure ._ ________________ __. c~ta1ecbeeseandf~b«~e~ ~-~~~~~~~b~-~~.~--------------------~-~--------~----
sranola. Mt cup araaola cup cottaie cbfllle mill· Remembetto allow a 10 ,.
Either way, you set cereal ture ana remaintn1 mlnut• •tandln1 time MJB your day's worth of Combine in electric sliced strawberries. be f o 1' • I er v \ n g
vitamin C per every 10 blender container 1 cup Serve with pureed mlcrowavefood; it'astlll
. berries, some other allced atrawberrlea, 2 strawberry sauce and cooktna when you take it
vltamlns and miner ala tablupoons orance juice sprinkle wtth additional out of the oven and much ~.~:i;;c~~f~~!l~~~:,e~~ :~:c:::~~tft°~~r:e1d~ :!::~.~ereal. Makea ~ tohottoeat. Rice MIX S1eelaJ I
the benies wlll be awed
enough on their own; but some people tbmk their----------------------------
navor's enhanced with dr.~~f!f~:~ tg!m~0:rei • ~ . .& mg~aa 7C: off on one or ISO off on two.
zprlnklin1 of confec-~.mm-ru .,
.tt.oner'a su1tar.
WHOLE Bft'e ~ STRAWBERRIES ..... ~Jiii.OD
wmlFRENCH . Uz:.1~ ~~2r' CR~AM
t;~~:~e~~~:n~rs' Open Sunday, July 3 • Closed July 4th ~
·au1ar
12cupsourcream •---.. FRRDR Ill WHOU ftea~~r~:~'d 1rated FO.· ....... :.="~",-,c _TOP s149u.
2 pint." strawberries. TW"''u EK
rlnsedandhuJled IEEF .n•~••WT "" La. SIRLOIN ~ Grated dark sweet __
::01:.ilk chocolate, op· IEEF LotH S J7LL9 $189
Beat heavy cream un-'"'" cMUCC MCnoot LOMDON DOIL lU SUff; fold in SUiSr, ~ITIA&U¥1UMWT.t7"' CefnaCIW'10f.._
.sour cream and oran10 s13! sr' rind. Serve as topping IEIF LotH ,...,...,
for whole strawbeniea. ~·,=::,. WT. u"'
Sprinkle with 1raled
chocolate. Makea 6 to 8
aenin1s.
STRAWBERRY 8VN· ....... QUCll
STRAWBE&BY 11HDl-lllf SUNDAE SALAD :;._ .:;-.,,...
·POTIOASf
CHIDDAI cHBa __._ 1 pint strawberries,
nmaled, bulled and sliced ~ cup treah oran1e J'lllee, divided
1 tablespOOO aupr
1>,1ni.E 11'1 Oll0(11 170 E. I 7th ST ..
IF'fl ;llll'H<I Ol'I SHOOOll"'Olll COSTA ME' A
WITH"< I', Ml IJ,\QllJ':. )
' ... ~, ~ . .r<VY t•I! :HARlfV 641· 7 I 91
lltl&OOm ' l ' J •
-.
. eue•yday ••• you'll .,.,, llundPeds -~
SPECIALS at Safeauay! He•e aPe j11St a few!
FORTHESETAGS! ;g;i,8o;~.
come end save. SAFEWAY Stodc up on SJM'C-• ...,.. ..... .....,...., ,. ial& AJid dOft't tofaet -.UUU UIAWUI 4!1•• .....
theee uvlnp are ln Riverside
addltJon to our every-
c:t.y low p;tces. Look
for shelf tags high•
lighting thesE> excep-
tional vat~es.
ALL SAFEWAYS OPEN
MONDAY JULY 4th
Scotch Treat
Frozen Conolnlrate
..... ·-8=1
~-Pork & Beans
Hot Dog Bugs ..................
~;· 9c
Hunt's Ketchup
. RlcbTlllllltO
~IJI
1..-... ,...... . \ sac· 14mft c.....
'
WATERMELON
Fresh, Regular
Any Size Package
~llolbmed . .. , .. ,
lip Smacking Flavor!
A· Treat· .for tfte Whole
. Family to Enjoy!·
WHOLE •ELON .·
rerr1~ral.lilltl •
Bow do you "provtllOC1
)OUT' alley" or "atock
Y " wblll fat·
t food• are off·llmlt1T Por
st • tuna packed i•
w ter. Each • and one·
• h ounceor7-oune can t lS only 230 calories. yet ll
J offers S2 trams ol tum
• my·fillin1 protein ,
enoush to serve two.
<OU-packed tuna l• more
than double the caJorin
for the same number of
servin,-s. >
SEAGOING
SPAGHETI'I WITH
TUNA ZVCCJDNI
~lank
I
Uean
The biC demand tor
flank steak and the fact
that. there are only two
per beef carcu1 affects
both availablllt.y and
price. There is no wute
in this lean boneleaa mm·
cle which may wet1h
between 11~ and 21f.i
pounds.
A marinated flank
steak is indeed a 1pecial
treat (or the barbecue
season~. It'• euy to ~ut
into t.hln dla1onal sllcea
across the grain and the
flavor is great.
MARINATED
FLANK STEAK
lbeeffiankateak
11.a cup catsup
1 :i cup red wine
vinegar
'li cup red table wine
1 tablespoon
worcestershirc sauce
l small on\on,
chopped
1 small clove 1arJtc,
crushed
1 teaspoon prepared
mustard
oil
1 tablespoon cook.in1
1 beef bouillon cube
~:i cup water
1 tableapoon cor·
nstarch
· Marinate beef several
hours or ovemlaht ln
mixture of cataup,
vinegar, wlne,
worcesterahlre aauce1 onlon, garlic, mustara
and oU. Drain, relfrvtne
m arlnade. Broil or
barbecue steak to rare or
medium rare.
Meanwhile combloe
marinade with bouillon
c ube, waler and cor·
nstarcb. Heat, stirring
untll sauce boils and
thickens. Slice beef
diagonally acrou the
grain. Serve with nuce.
Makes 4 to 6 servinp,
Lobster
Splurge
Altiertsons Supreme Beef Chuck
Steak
•
NotTo
!1Cffd
SKF1t
ur r • •
Cr -ck'EmUp
With Slaw
Ham eottUnoe
to rank biib IA populart-
t y ••on1 b•ckyard
chefs aa a way to eapreu
.ome penooall'l· Hve are lwo burier n' •law
ideas for 4th of July
parllea. llecipea are
easy to double.
FLYING F&ENCB
BU&GEJl8
2 pounds ground beef ·~cup crumbled blue
cbeeH
~ cup chopped
peuut.. or walnul.a
\ii cup ma,yonnalse
"' cup IOW' cream
2 teaapoona honey
1 t.eaapoon caraway
seeda <opt.Joo al>
TOH all lngredlenta
to1ether. Season with
Hit and pepper, lemon
juice to taste. Serve im·
1Ued1ately. Serves 6.
TACO BURGESS
2 pounds IJ'C)Und beef
1 cup thredded ched·
dar or monlerey Jack
cb .. • 2 tableepoona yellow
IUUltard
1 tablaP<)On mtnced
1reen pepper or 2 teu·
l>OODI minced aeeded
Jalapeno peppers
Sall IDd pepper
6 hamburger buns
1 cup diced tomato
1 cup shredded let·
tuce
Shape sround beet Into
12 lar1e flat patties.
Combine cheese,
muttard. and minced
peppe.r. Place a tables·
poon 6t this mlxture 11\ the center or aix patties;
top with remaininc pat·
ties and press ed1es with alorktoseal.
Sprinkle filled burgers
with Hit and pepper;
grill, broil, or pan fry.
Place on buna and top
with tomatoes and let-
Factor
~ aad
lteab .... all tt.e.., to
tbe ~ Cll' , 1lt.. rna ... _. otMr
perllllablH tbould .s • .,. "c.n.d to ud from Cludqa ID u Ice
c .. Ht H 1t1roloam
cooler. Car tnmka C&D set very warm. Once you
·reach JOUr destination,
avoid open•nc the cooler
aay more tban
neceaaary, and keep it out of dlreetauallcb'.
tuce. lhkahervtnia. WHILE llNJO~lNG
OAIASIAW ROAST BEU at the t.a-
1 envelope (l l4-01.) ble doe't ltt atta cooked
aour crum sauce mlx Poriiooa or other let·
~ cup milk tovena alt atoUnd ln a
2 packa1e1 CS·o1. warm kitchen for more
each) lemon flavored tbao 4S minutes. It ls
1elatin much safer to put meat
2 cupe abredded cab· and other cooked foodJ
b.,e lnto the refrlferator
1cupsr1tedcarrot wbile •Wl f9'.r11 warm. ~ c u p a I i c e d Coyer when cool be.tore
radJlbel 1tortni.
Wheth~r you ·call 'em Wieners, Dogs
or Franks, and you've been wondering
where the flavor went ... then it's
trme to try Sthirmer's German
Brand Franks. Made the tender,
deUclous ''Old Country" way from
the finest meats and seasonings. So big
and so plump that each one
weighs 3 ounces.
loot tor th• little Schirmer'• Seuu1• Mahr
on tht pach1• In your mlfhf. .
I
~ cup prepared
French or vinegar and
oil salad dressing
~ 1reen pepper,
chopped tine
Lettuce leaves,
tom at.o slices for 1arni1h
6 whole French rolls,
sliced in half
Saccharin Risky, Ban Stalled Sthirmtr~®
the Sociable Sausage
Avallablt In the Deli case of:
Mix &fOUnd beef with
blue cbee1e, salad
dressing and chopped
areen pepper. Shape into
6 elongated pattles to fit
French rolls. Grill or
broil about 4 inches rrom
heat, 7·8 minutes on each
side, for medium.
Heat French rolls on
grill. either wrapped m
foil or spilt ol)en t.o tout
over flame. Serve
burger~ on rolls and
pass lettuce and tomato
condiments.
APPLE-NUT SLAW
1 head of cabbage,
finely shredded
2 green apples, un·
pared, diced and cored
WASJllNGTON (APl
-The bead of the Food
and Drug Admlnlstra·
t1on is convinced sac·
charln pose• a cancer
risk to humans and
should be taken off the
market. But many mem·
bers or Congress are
equally convinced the
1overnment should wait
a while before acting.
FDA Commlasioner
Donald Kennedy said
that a new Canadian
study shows a clear link
betwHn saccharin use
and the tiak or cancer in
men. But the House has
voted against spending
federal funds for the next
15 months for a sac·
cbarln ban, and the
Senate is conaidertng
similar leJ.lslatlon.
A Senate committee
rejetted the same pro-port continued sales of
poul last week, but· saccharin as Iona u it
only after one senator re· carries a label wamins
ported pledges that that it may cause
separate le1islallon to cancer.
staJI • ban for 18 montht Meeting In San Fran-
ts belnc readied tor clsco, the AMA HOUH of
Senate and Houae votes. Dele1ates also aald it
Donald Kennedy, FDA wants to change the Jaw
commiasioner, aald a under which the FDA la
new Canadian teal, ailll propoelng its ban.
unpublished, shows a The FDA first pro-
clear link between sac· posed a ban on aaccharin
charin use and the risk of on Mareh 9, cltln1 a
bladder cancer in men. Canadian test that found
He aaid opposition to a a connectloa between the
saccharin ban will aweetenerandtumoraln d I m In l 1 h bot h l n laboratory rat.a.
ConJt'eas and among the The proposed ban
public once the validity drew thousand• or pro·
o( laboratory tests la re· testa from the public as
allzed. well H oppoalUon in
Despite Kennedy"s Con1ress. The public op·
prediction, the Alnerican posit.ion bas come from
M ediCal Alsoclat.lon vot. ell e t e rt 8 D d w e 11 ht
ed durlnl the day to sup· watcben u well as doc·
Ki nu-size
Double like.
Save 20C with two coupons from Nestle.
Mmm. Neall A Crunch~ NestlA • Milk Choc:Ollle. Nettlf• Miik
ChoCOlate wllt'I ~ Nettto• Choco Ute~ Kl~ blrl made
wilh (DI milk choColale
~
-·
tors who aay 11ccb11in ia an lmportant tool in con-
trollin1 diabetes and
other dlaeaNt.
Sen. Thoma•
Ea&Ietoo, I>-Mo., utJed
defeat or the $13. 7 bllllon
FDA approprtattona bill
after usurances from
two key members of
Conere., that a nar-
n>wer 18-mOfttb ban on
MARKET BASKET ................. __________________ _, • . • -~
~~----------------------------~~----------------~--------~~~~~·,
to
A TRUE SIORY BY TIIE VLASIC S10RK
••••
Babies were mY business-my Only
business.
Dcllverini: babies waa
the family bu1ineu,
and I don't mind tell·
Ing you lt made me a
bundle. The missus
and 1 had a tee0nd
nest In the countty.
We went South every----~
winter. Yea. we were Aylna hiah In
thote d1y1.
I landed a ~delivering
: VJuic MJe.. ~
I wun't what
Vlaaic'a pet10nncl
man expected.
"This i& no-fly·by-
nlaht operarion,'
he aaid. But I imprc$·
aed him with my experience.
He realized I'd baby Vla1ic
Picklet In the delivery,
just 11 Vlasic babies the
In the rrowlng. pickini
and packing.
I helped make
Vlasic America's
11 Pickle.
From Orlando to
Minneapolis, from
Boston to San Antonio I
detlverall96Vlulcvarieties.AndeveryVlaak
deltwn che crunc~y aood taate people crave.
lt'a not turpda(na Vl.uk la now America'• ll
l'klde. That' a why-.wn If the birth rate soa
up-I'm tdckincwfth Vlaslc Pkklet. They're
a turt thtnt •••
•
•
"
., ...
. • .
Party
In Your
Pantry
Tbe sun's out, the
family's at play and the
appetites are bulldin&.
Now's the lime to look
around the kitchen for
nibbler in&redient.s.
Summer's a eood tame
to stock-up on canned
!beat and fish products,
which turn out these
snacking ideas for the
sporting life
SUMMER SNACKS
1 loaf (1 pound) un ~liced bread
Liverwurst mixture
Deviled flam max·
tu re
1 small red onion,
sliced and separated into
rings
1'2 pint cherry
tomatoes, shced
1 jar (61 2 ounces>
marinated mushrooms,
quartered
1 can <3 oun cesJ
pitted ripe oh ves, sliced
1 me<Pum green pep-
per, cut into strips
IA pound sliced
Cheddar cheese, cut lntQ
strips
Preheat oven lo 3SO
degrees F Trim crusl.S
from bread Butter
slightly and slice
lengthwise mto fl slices.
Place on a baking sheet
and bak e 10 to 15
minutes, unhl lightly
toasted throughout
Serve with liverwurst
·and deviled ham mlx-
•tures and assorted top
~ings. Makes 1 lo 6 serv
~ini:ts
Liverwurst mixture:
In a bowl max together
4·5 ounces liverwurst or
braunschweiger spread.
2 tablespoons mayon-
naise and 1 tablespoon
chopped green onion.
Deviled Ham mixture:
In a bowl mix toeether
1 can (41-'J ounces> de·
vlled ham, 1 tablespoon
mustard and 1 tables-
poon pickle relish.
M EXI CIDCKEN DIP
4·5 ounces canned
chicken
3 tablespoons
chopped green chill pep
})ers
2 tabl es poons
chopped onion
14 teaspoon chili
powder
1 bag (512 ounces>
corn chips
In a bowl mix to&etber
; chunky chicken apread,
chill peppers, onion and
chili powder. Chill. Serve
as a dip with corn chips.
Makes 1 cup dip.
SWEETCRlJNKY
CIUCKEN BALLS
ln a bowl, mlx toaether
4'~ ounces canned
chicken spread, 1
packa&e (3 ouncea> aof·
tened cream cheeae, and
2 tablespoona flnely
chopped aweet pickle:
.Roll mixture into coo ln· •ch balls. RoU ba11I In a
mlxture of V. cup finely
chopped walnuta aDd '4
cup chopped p•raley.
Cblll before 1ervln1 • .Mata: 11 to 20 hon d 'oeuvrea.
~· ·-.-Part
811B&81ED CftlC&EN C.AaSftOLS or mar•arioe
telll5'*• IJ'OClad nutmet Comblne f0Uowln1 in,rtd ts:
4 cub9d Coc*ed chicken Remalnlna chicken mixture
3 CUP' cooked 1pa1bettl l pacbf• (10 ounce•) lroaen broccoll
ape an, coOk.S and dralned
Orated Panneaan cheese
1 cup abredded 1har-p Cheddar cheete
2 iablapoons chopped panley
2 table.apoona chopi>ed pt.micnto Ia aaueepan, combine aoup, cNam, water, but·
,
Refreshing
.,
® COCA
COLA
6 Pack 99c ' 12 Oz.
Cane .. ~
@ ~!!"!!'.~'!.Juice .. . . . 5~
) Aluminum Foll 68c
\... Herltege ~ 11"•2!> A Ro41
~ Pepsi Cola Light 99c \& fS PllCll lfS Oi BolllM PM ~I
® P~:! ,~~· c!!. ~~ .. ~0.'.~ .•1 1•
.•11s
Wlleon MEAT
FRANKS
49c 12 Oz.
Pactc11ge
@ ~~"J: ;~ce ................ 530
Wines and Spirits
/::J;\ UebfraumHCh ,,... "'& MW* Gefnlan WIN • "'"' 'I
® ~~.?~ ~~~~~fllUl.'521
AZTEC A O !_E~UJ~~ ........... ·""" sa•
La Pez Mix"
0 ~~?w~ ........ CMrt 7
0 ~~~~/~!.:.' ~~ ......... •1•
Health & Beau,yAlti
o =~~~ ....... »
0 Antl-...,.plrant 97c ~"'*'.,...,,....Qi.; .... -
0 ~'=.:J:'.':..·.=: ....... W
F' "I
® Freshly Ground
GROUND
BEEF
3 Iba, °' M0te 48~ Fat Content
0099 No\
ExCMd 30Ve
"" ~
Dell-Dairy
®~~~~~~ ................ 58°
O Pfmlento Ch .... Food83c
H9rttege HouM Slced f'rc 1111d I OL
0 Funtlm• Fruit Drinks 6fte frull l'undl,Onlpe.L.-.Or-..OllOft v-
o ~=g~ ......... •109
Produce
® iitJG
CHERRIES
NorthWINt 49c
OrOIM\ / Lb.
® ~~.~,~~•r• :=-... 51c
~SEVEN-UP """-~
~BEVERAGES 6f9fte
"90· 00' &uoer·f,.. 11 <>i. au R ;,-
Q ~~!fo~f!~ .<:o~.~.~~I ..... *141
0 ~==· 3~!,!'!~~ ........ 5gc
0 ~~:o ~~;_~~·~~~-· ... •1 1•
Heritage House
FRESH
BUNS
~~~~o: 29c 8 Pack
0 !wr.=.' 22~~~~ ~~c~I~• 99c
® ~·~~,2~~~~~'~ ... 54°
r Beef Loin Steaks
'PORTERHOUSE
OR TOP SIRLOIN
@ ~~~~ed s 1 a9
~ Lb. ~
® ~~~~-~~~~-~.~!'2•
~ Wllaon Bonet ... H•m• t"9lt ~ ~ ....................... U>.-6.--
Entree ·
Frozen foods
0 ~=cc!?,!r~ a.. "'' ........ •141
0 ~~!~!~ ....... 3&c
Herl~ Houae
PORK&
BEANS
~~-59c
~ Little ear Cob Corn ~ 81rd1 Eye I lat f'tlg
~ Chopned Onions ~.Ore Id• 1f Ci. _Pkg
88°
32°.
~ Fish Stick• .. •111 ~ V1111 d9 Kemp 20 01. Pkg
0 HERITAGE HOUSE
~~~O~~-~~~ ..... 6 For $1
@ ~2~~~~k~~ ..... 121•
0 Eve.rfreah Veaet•blea .
evt Com. Mlaed v•.'P-..,... & 55c canott 20 OL Pfllol. Beg • • . •••••.• ·=" ® ~·!~!'= :. . .... :·~~ .... 95c
~ "'II
® Value 1"knmed
T-BONE
STEAKS
Beef Loin •~1~~ Barbeeue Favorite ... ~
® ~=---~~~·.~· ........ lb. '231
0 Alb Ste•k• 1181 cepona..t ................... UI.
0 J!.Pr~'!! ~.~~~k-~ ..... Lb.•141
0 ~!!1:!!~~~-.~~~~~Lb.•1•1
0 ~~~-~.~ ...... Ul.··1·
0 ~~r!!:!!C:-~ .. ~~~!~u. •1•
0 Boneln• Tip at .. k• ,._ BM"'°"""· ........................ u . I-....
0 !!~.~.~~~~ ....... ~ ... Lb. •1•
0 Pollth ·aa~ ftftG
,.,,.,, Jotwt • • • • • • • • • • • • • .............. ..,g-
@S~lt FRYtNiered
CHICKENS
• •
•
81nana.;chocol1te chip lost wins fans
at picnics. It's an energy packable.
).oaf
I
A p-c'8fed buUermilk
biscult. mill comet in
handy tn any 1aJley -
for pceakee. aromatic
dinner rollJ and quick
brew. Uke \his one,
packed with flavor and
ener.ay. ,
QWCKCl(OCOLATE· BANANA LOAF a c:&' buttermilk balcihl
Banana-sweet
~.cup sugar
1 eu
a .. cup water
1 cup semi sweH
chocolate bits
1 cup masbed ripe
bananas <about 2·3
medium)
Preheat oven lo 350
dee. F. In laree bowl,
combine buttermilk bak-
inl mix and au1ar: mix
thorou1bly In amall
bowl, combine egg and
water: beat well. Stir in-
to flour mixture until
moistened. StJr in Semi-
sweet Real Chocolate
Morsels and bananas
Soread into well-greased
9"x5"x3'' loaf pan.
Bake at J:;o deg. F. 60-~
minutes. Cool before re·
movtn1 from pan.
s 148 LI.
USDA CHOICI
SIDE of BEEF • 88C LI.
CUf&WUrPID
Best Idea .Since
Shopping Carts
~ -~,
· ~Now you can do a week's shopping
without forgetting a single
item! Use pre-printed
shopping llata
prepared for you by
PILOT PRINTING.
140 Hp•et• pf'fnted "•ma, ,.. ................ ~
~" M ti\ ~uteett,
~
DAILY PILOT
• • • •
.
ti 11 Draws a Crowd
~·· ooe navor lbal even aaak ~ealtb food faddt,ta Corl their carob~oated erMd an 1urttad r -cbotolat.e.
Enjoy tbtH treat.I when a
1peclal qcculon calla tor a tut.y
AOltull.. .
A.UIOMJ)CHOCOLATE
80Vt'l'LE
1 eovelope unflavored ••'•Un ~~pau,ar v, teupoon aall
1 cup mil.It
3 lar10 eggs, aeparuled
2 ounces unsweetened
chocolate. cut up
1 teaapoon vanll)-
1 cup wblpplnt eris am
~ cup chopped touted
almondJ
Mix 1elatin with 14 cup sugar
and salt In small saucepan. Add
milk, and slowly heat to scalding
O'VU low heat. atirriQ& Cr~uently. Beat e1e yolk1. Stir a litUe ol ·
th• bot mixture Into yolb. Corn· blne with remalnln1 milk.
Add chocolate. and cook. stir-
ring constantly, until chocolate la
melt.ed, and mixture coats spoon.
Remove from heat and stir in
vanilla. Beal with rotary beater,
if chocolate is grainy in ap.
pearance.
Cool until mixture begins to
thicken. Beat egg whites to soft
peaks. Gradually beat in remain-
ing ·~cup sugar, beating to a sort
meringue. Beat cream &Litt. Fold
cream into chocolate mixture.
then eu whites. Sprinkle a
tablespoon almonds In bottom ot
oiled 6·cup mold. Fotd «iP•lnlna
almonds inlo chocolate mixt'Ve.
Spoon into mold. and chill until
firm. Unmold to serve. M.itee 8
servlDIS.
•1i.1t CROCOLATS lCS
CllSAll
V• cup IU,11'
2 tablt1poons all-purpoae flour
~ t.eupocm aall
1 cup llOt cream
2 e1p. aU.lhUy beaten
2 mllk chocolate bars (If.I
pound each). broken into pieces
2 teupoons vanilla
! CUJ>I Hcht cream
1 cup heavy cream
Combine sugar, flour and salt
ln medium saucepan; add 1 cup
U•ht cream. Cook and stir over
medium hHt until mixture com ea to a boil. Boll and 1tlr one
minute; remove from heat. StJt •
1mall amount of cooked mixture
tnto e111: return en mixture to
aaucepan and stir until well
blencled. ,
Add broken mllk chot'olute
bar•; 1ttr unttl melted. (1!
net!et•Jf1. place over low heal
until mel~.> Pour into larae mlitPg bowl. Add vanilla, 3 cups
light cream and heavy cream,
blend well. Chill.
Freeze in lee cream freer.tr ac-
cording to manufacturer'• dlrec·
lions. Makes about 3 quarts ice
cream.
CHOCOLATE PECAN PIE
2 cupe semi-sweet chocolate
morsels. d1v1ded
2eggs
••teaspoon salt
1 :i cup firmly packed btown sugar
1 cup chopped pecans
If' J.>ie crust '
Whipped cream c optional I
Pecan halves (optional)
Preheat oven lo 375 degrees t·
MeltP".&r bot (not t>olling > water.
l cup chocolate morsels, remove
frosn beat and
peratute ~ mt.uu •
lo small bowl, eom
and ult: beat unUI very th ell:
and lemon colored (about S
minutes> Gradually beat In
brown •utar. Blend lD melted
chocolate. SUr in PtCIDI aod 1
cup Semi-Sweet Real Cboeolate
Morsels; pour 'nto unbaked pie
crust Bake at 375 de•rces F.
20 25 minutes. Decorate with
whipped cream and .-.caA
halves, If desired.
Ml.SSIS.51PPI MUD BAU
~cup butter
cupsugiar
lefl ·~cup mlllt
l teuJ>()On pure vanUta ex
tract
\i cup cocoa
1 cup flour
12 cup regular vacuum
pucked whea\ 1erm
~ teupoon aaJt
1 cup chopped walrautit
l"'ClU> mlnl marshmallows
Icing
Beat together butter and sug
ar. Beat in eae, milk and vanilla Hix cocioa. nour, wheat germ
and salt. Stir into batter. Mill an
wafnutl. Turn lnto well 1reased
9-inch square baking pan Bake
tn 350 degree oven 2.5 minutes.
Sprinkle with marshmallows
Bake 5 minutes longer or untJI
pack 1n1crted anto cenler comes
out dry nnd 111nrshm111lows melt
Cool Spread l41lh Icing When
set. cut into bars :\I akes 2 dozen
bars
ICING:
Melt ' 1 cup butter. Mix ln 112
cups powdered sugar. '4 cup
cocoa, 1 :a teaspoon vanilla and 3
tablespoons milk. Beat smooth.
T\\e Sb MlWl P'ounda·
&Jon ln Corona del Mar
will be featwinJ Hveral
wtne And food workshops
this tum.mer. u well •• elu1es ln bouae plant
and herb propa1aUon.
Included in the topics to be oovered will be tbe
F\&ndamentala of Wine
Appreclatlon, the
Cuisine ol Northern Italy
II, Nou"11e CUialne d~
France I and IJ, loterna
tional Summer Entre
Salads, French Deaseru
and eourmet cookiag for
men.
Basic Botany for th
Home Gardener, Indood
Plant Care, Herb
Garden• .od Hanglna
Gardena and Containet
Gardenin( will also bf
featured. Additional anl
formation can be ob-
tained from Tom
Tbompcson, 613-2261.
* Orange Coaat-
Coltege's on-campus
reataurant, The Cap-
tain's Table, will be open
this summer, serving
public breakfasts and
lunches, according to
food services instructor
Dan Beard
Br~akfast.s. 1ncludin1
cereals, eags and waf-
fles. will be served from
7 :30 to 10:1S a .m .;
lunches, Including a soup
and salad bar. are
served from 11:30 a .m.
'·
Clam Cousin
International
Favorite
I
1 •
mussel, a
feUow 1 k b!cb ls
about tbo best bu,y on
today's 10ati.ai seafood
market.
Muuels share rn.,,y of
the cbar1cterlstio of
clams and can h. pre-
pared ID much the •ame
way. ~lh they are
rarely eaten raw, at
leaat, noun this country.
The blue muuel
abdunds Alq the AUan·
' Uc COMt from the Arctic
to Cape Hatteras. The
molluak la also available
on lhe West Coast.
Llke It. cousin t
e1 a , tbe ...... ,.__ ••P. ope&) ore ~ook..S bat 11n1lke lbe
clam, lt cloeA't
cloH Ila abell when
handled. ~ is a tett. however, to aee whether
a mu.sael la fresb and
alive. Run cold wateci
over the abell for •
minute o:r 19. lf it aUJl
does not clQM tbrow Ule mussel away.
In cue you decide to
co hunUn1 for qau.aaela
by the aeaiide 6b your
own, theN are also a tew
word• of cautlob. For
one thin1, make sure the
molluaka dwell In aov·
ernment-certtrled un-
. _ ...
...... . .
polluted •atera. Also Jou~ and u "cone"
11 •It• ertetni ti) at b1 ~Jtallana. w er v r you flnd , o ln the aourmet m~ clustered, tboy uteaory but less well
ar. aubm ed and ex· koowo ia a creamed
poced1wttb the rta.e and mussel soup laced w1tb
faJI oft.betide. • wlne, Henbtbe recipe.
Mu11el1 are usually 2 quarts larae
heavUy encruated wllh a mussell (about60>
hardened sand, rn\14 and 4 shallots minced
bamaaJ• ao tbal 1crub-"'9 cup fmely minced
bins m cleao can be parsley .
quite •a job. But lt ls 1 cup dry wbJte wino
worijl tm. efCort · U yoi.a 1 cup water
like thO ptuq, fteah in· 2 allces fresh lemon
side. • v. pound butt.er
The l>lut m.usel bas 2 tablespoon.a fiouf''
until rec•t years been 1 cup U1ht cream .
l•re•IY \lftlppreclated in l t a b l • a p o o n thta country. Yet tbl1 ta choppedcblvea
the ume apeclts prized Salt and pepper to
as "moules" by French tHte
I • ·• • ~
-..... ~ .
W ~. el'lb and 8°•
beanl lllUNela. Place ln
lar1e pot wltb tllbt Ud.
Add aballota, ualey.
wine, wat.. lemon. but·
ter. ~ and coo over
bilb beat till m.uaaela
open.
Remove muucla at
once and when cool
enou1h to handle, re·
move from abtUt and aet. uldt. Dlteard•heU,. Relum mu,sel• to pot
to beat. Spnn'1e broth
with nour ~d at1r t.tll
•lllhtlY thickened, Add
ll1ht creain end atlr.
Brll\I to boll and aerve in
bowls at once w1tb at sprlnkltna of chopped
chives, pepper aM aalt..,
·Swiss
Spuds
Elegant
Here's an Ameri-
c anhed versjon of
famous Swiu Roesll, a
potato "pancaJ<e" of
sqrts, that features a
creamy Sww cheese fill·
ing.
Ralphs, -umber ~Gne for
SuperHolldayCookout Fun
. Enjoy with fruit and
sausage llnks for a
wtekend breakfast, or
accompany it with a
spinach·bacon-onton and
mushroom salad for &up·
per.
SWISS POTATOES
1 112 pounds (4
medium) potatoes
Salt and pepper to
tute
14 cup salad oil
I tablespoon butter
11 cup erated SWlSS
cheese
Scrub potatoes; do not
peel; cover with boiling
salted water and boil,
covered, until partly
cooked -15 minutes.
Drain, chill, peel and
coarsely. grate; season
wlth salt and pepper.
ln a heavy lO·lnch
skillet heat the oil ; stir in
the butter. Add half the
potatoes and spread
evenly; sprinkle with the
cheese; add the remain·
ing potatoes in an even
layer.
Over medium·low heat
cook, un covered, until
unders ide is well ·
browned and crusty. In·
verl a large plate over
the potatoes and turn
out: slide back into
skillet. brown underside.
Cut in 4 wedges and re·
move with a wide
spatula. Serve at once.
Makes 4 servings.
Skill
·saves
Waste
Remember when
packing provisions In
your ice box to pack the
moat perishable fooda
near the top.
Chicken. for example.
should be used within
three days of 40~e1ree
refrigeration. To protons
ill storage liCe, butchers
recommend fteeilni
firm packaaes ot chicken
parta: then us Ina them
as they thaw for fut,
one·aklllet fare.
By buyln1 boneleH
euta, such a• breut
fUets, you'll 1>e cutttng
down on your diapoaabte
••ate.
r.
Al Ralpm stores wlll be OPEN .
MO.-.clay~·July 4th •. · · ~ .
a..ck·vm. loeal Ralphs tOr lpeclal holcl&ly hours. . ~~\ ,,
J ~ ~ \ ... '
•tetloln°101nd 141b•. Avg,
I "/
A1lpfll.P11ln H1mb11t9tr or ~ HotD Bn og
23oz.
btl. II
Pantry Fillers
·~ p~"""& Beans 110& 29 U tl I
California Grown
Foster Fanns Fryers
0.,. F,..,_I
Whole
Top Slrtoln 57 ~ sil8d'P.1'8caroni
~Heinz·~-~
~r~~:h.91ce
''°' 43 P'8-I
t•.or 43 1•• I
Uor 53
• whole
per • lb.
IHf Chuck·Blldt Cut
Chuck Steik
per II lb.
per
lb.
BNI Lo1n·lonelft1
Top Sirtoin
Steak
per
lb.
ISHl·Any llH 'tcklge
Ground
Chuck ..
,,., II
lb.
USDA Choice Beet-Golden Premium Meats
~ , .. D ~~PC>f'.1<Chops
~ 1" Dc~trystyleRibs
99 --·-'",.''0'"' :-• "'-Hen il'urkey .1 ,
,ISi D . .,..,,.QtrMlfdl_,.,.' lilt Pl!•'.,, ~ Com King Bacon
on I
~ t;;i"Prited Oliv• IOI 45 Ceft 8
~M ... ~1owa '::;· .51
~ ,Uf, '1eper.cl French's Mustard 2ht. 59 ,., .
~D;;tictHam ...... 59 c... • .
, ~ r<o;.;;am Pickles 2ht. 59 ,.. .
~i<~rlektr. llo.r. 55 bol I
~s;t;io,....ng lor. 57 bit. •
~ ora'PiiU'tt Drink S4or. 61 blL I
~ Min~wi*t cerea1 llor. 62 boa I
~ .... rui ... ny °"" A "'1inum Foil 2SH. 69 toll I
~ P-o1a~-c~-o,, loL 79 pll9. I
:.' 111 Health & Beauty . :.' ,4. ~BabY'""'s~
~ · .89 [;21 iiufi.in'O" Tablets
~· 111 ~i:'.:diel Shaver
i:: 2 .. ~B'Mi.ttT'ab1ets
11•.r. , ..
bll.
t0c1. 99 1141..
... 1°'
1" IOet. ....
Old FHhlontd
Ralphs
lc:e Cream
"2 g1I.
ctn. II
RtdfUpe
Whole
Watermelon
P•' lb.
Supel' Produce
~ p~l., .. 111• .Jt lll I
D c;k;yo ...... IM
~Red Onions
Super Floral
~ ti~8d Bouquets
~ M;;;' riiants
Super Dell
~ Fniit"orink
D P;tato Salad
D Niild'ct;ddar
D i<;?;'f:~n;~i;O<
Dci'nn':,d ti;m
Dc788;;Eheese
Frozen Foods
~~Ot,M
~;;,~·~·~·~
~ J-TIMc~Cfllll Combination Pizza
~ ,,_,,_ Tllicll CMI
Cheese Pizza
':' .29
•Kh .25
':' .15
~.99
.. c,.211
ti .59
7111. 10• peg.
101. 89 pllg ••
110.. 1aa
"''·
11b. 241 c ...
let. 53 .......
'!:: .45
hr 29 P'-1· I
lht. 1'' ,.. .
2::-, •• ~ 1" O M~Ham
~ 141 0 FreihSdeFillet
:; .99 0 co:ked stnnp
:.' z2•
.r 22•
For Fun in the Sun
Wines & Spirits Super Bakery
~.a. a• .... •Vil
::t .79
HN. 83 ......
:;. .59
f,t,,99
•,ir. 2•1 tlH
HCll1911
01.i.-10-"""'-PaperCup1 .... 99 ellfOI crn'Trtqu.t. ,. .. 1a ...
-~~,.,, ....... 4n Patio Chairs .....
A411111Mt 'tltlitlt Chaile Lounge .... a••
J
t ...
DAii.. Y PU.OT ('I \
weets Sea-w:orthy · The eluslcal dlah of nalae with rematnlni in·
Spam. Paella. becom .. a & r e d le n l a e x c e p l
wbole·meal salad fit for tomatoes. Pour over
an1 hUQIH)' crew. shrimp mlirtun and toss r~sA.f,,AD ,. · U&hti,,anu.
1
I
t
I t
aA.NA.NAPEAN'tJ!'DaOPS
2 aiffted all J"lll1*8 flour
~. cup wheat m •
1 l;'t teu~ i powder •. , teupoon•&R .
1 teaspooa cinnamon
"'•teaspoon allspice
1 ~cups firmly packed brown suear
~cupaoftenedbuttelrormarganne
ieu
(2 small
1 te poon vandl.a.
1 dbed·f:lSM'banunas <about 2 large)
1 c~'choppecf4alt"' peanuts, divided
Coinblne-t1ouF, wheat germ, baking powder.
ult andjplcee on wax paper. Star well to blend.
Cream sugar', butler, egg and vanilla
thorou~. Add blended dry ingredients to
creamed tnlxture alternately with bananas.
beginning with dry ingredients Star in ~ cup
peanuts.
Drop by rounded tablespoonfuls a few inches
apart onto greaaed baking s heet. Sprinkle tops
' with remail\bJg 'A cup peanuts. Bake at 37S
degrees for 10·12 minutes. Remove from baking
sheet. Cool on rack. Store between layets of wax
paper lb cqntalner with loose fitting cover.
Makea4•,;d~cookles.
I CINNAMON CARROT BREAD
214 cups unsifted all purpose flour
~ cup wheat 1erm
2 Ya teaapoona bakiJ"!l powder
1 teaspoon sell .
' I r
1 teaspoon cinnamon
'h teaspoon soda
2eggs
lcupsugar
'-2 cup cooking 011
1.'2 cupmllk
112 cups finely shrj)dded carrots
Combine flour, wheat •erm. baking powder,
salt and soda on wax p4''1et. Stir well to blend.
~air Calypsos
A pretty way lo team tomatoes and
avocadoes for n first course for dinner, luncheon
or brunch.
AVOCADO CALYPSO
2 envelopes unrt a vored gel a tin
3 cups Tomato Juice, divided
1 can (16 oi.) stewed tomatoes
4 teaspoons lemon juice
i •~teaspoons Worcestershire sauce
14 teupoon seasoning salt
3~ teruspoon salt.
Guacamole
Cucumber 1Uce11, ...,U.h
Sprinkle gel a Un over 2 cups tomato juice in a
mediwn saucepan; let soften for S minutes.
Heat, stitrlng constantly, Wltil gelatin is dis-
solved; set aside. Plt,c~ stewed tomatoes in blender container,
cover and whirl until smooth; poor into a
medium bowl. Add gelatin mixture, remaining
tomato juke, lemon juice, Worcestershire sauce,
liquid seasoning and sail. Stir to mix well. Cover
and chill Wllil set, al least 4 hours.
To serve, break aspic up with a fork. Llyer
with guacamole in 6 parfait glasses. Top each
with cucumber sllcee. Yi'1ds ~appetizers.
GUACAtlOLE
2 medium-size ripe avocados
4 t.eupoona lemon juice
~cup dairy sour cream
2tablespoons minced onion
~ tea•poon carUc salt
Peel avocados, remove pits, muh with a
fork. Combine with remaining lngred.ienta ln a
small bowl. SUr to mix well. Yields about 2 eup1.
I
Beat esp, IUIU' oU tboto\&Pl1. Add blended
dry lftlndSentt to creamed mJxture alternately
wJU. ml.Hr. BleJld wtll. Stir In carrot.a.
~batter lo IJrea..cl h5xa·lnch io.,rpan.
Bake at J:iO ctecr (or :s.s.tO minutes unW cake
teat.tr lnlttted lo cerater ~m• out clean. Cool
5·10 tn.l.outei. RemoYe fl'Om pan: COot Oft rack. Wrap tn foH or pJ,,.Uc wrap ~•tore ovemtibt
fore.. ellclni. ·
autWY wUsAT GERM Bac>WNlES
2 Q1JP' •uiar I
l ~ tUPt unalfted all PW'POllO flour
44 CUP wbeat 1erm aie..pQCIGI bildn• powder
44t.•poonHlt
'4 eup butMr or marsarine
4 ounces untweetened chocolate a Wf, weJl beaten
2 vanilla ,
1 cup Chopped DULi .' Co~lilt dr)-in1r ln'liOWt. Stii well to
. Melt butter end C~ tofether over
lo,r b • Cool. Add c•olate lnlltuie. ens and
v aolll1 to dry lnstedienll. ll1x well.
Spread ln 1reued 13xtx2·lnch pan. Bake at
350 de~ for 25-30 minutes. Cool on rack. Cut
into but. Sprinkle wlth cOQfecUonen su1ar or
•pfead lrith choeolate Ira.uni lf ckak.ed. Makes a do.a tinwnla. .
Paella: Rice
Salad Easy
On Chef
1~ (loi.)~allior n.Ttt tomatoH fort ~ f(>Ulld 1m.all fresh de· & rllbft or tou with
vetnedlhrimp salad before chilling.
3 cups cool cooked Mates 8 ~ cu pa or
rice • enou1b for I or I . 4
l can (8 os.) 11llncied GOLD COAST _.
clamt, drMnad " . CICEN SALAD ,
1 ~ cup1 diced 3 fresh peaches,
cooked chicken peeled and sliced ~ 1~ cups each sliced l~ cups allced~
~elery and cooked 1ree~ celery
peu
~ cup diced 1reen
pepper
~ cup allced ireen
onions wltb tops
1 cup mayonn111e
2 tablespoons dry
white wine
J,4i teupooo alt
'A te11p00n ••ch
carUc powder and pep·
per
2 medium fuah
tatuatoel. cuUn wedies
Thaw and slice shrimp
inbalflensthwlse.Com·
bine with rice, clams,
cblcken, celer7, crMn
peu, ereen pepper. and
onlona. Blend ln•Yon·
cup chopped •
creen pepper
2 cup1 cooked 1
chicken, cut ln thin atrips 1
3 cups cool cooked •
rice I
1 cup mayonnaise 1
l tablespoon honey.
l teaspoon each
ground 1Inaer and dry"'
mustard
•2 teaspoon each}
onion powder and salt
Combine peaches with
celery. green pepper.
chicken, and rice. Blend
miayonnalse with re-,
ma,ntn1 in1redtents . J
Pour over chicken mix-.-
ture and tosa lightly.
. If you like .the t~ste
'
Out not the price ....
,. •·r
1 w•
! ·' \
I ..
(
..... .. , .,. ..
·Tasters ChOice
costs much less:
..
' •
Dal
&ICS
' pounda country. ~ rUat h.lt and M1a1uncd --1 pureed canned OI',....... pe:acb•
1arllc po-der, and pep·
per. ll>rtnkle l tables·
poon ol lht H onlnt on chlcktn pltc•. Drown
thicken on aJI 1tdet ln
oil, utlni ~ oven proof
1klll t. Jltmove chicken
andHtuld . In tame 1klllc.<l •dd
onlona, 1roen popper.
and rice. stJr In broth,
cumin feled, anct remain·
Inf 1easontn1. Return
ch tken to 1ktllet. Brin1&
to • boll, tcwer, and bake
al 150 defNel F. f~ IO to
35 mlnutea or unlU
cblclr lot\der l.lld ll·
quid la ab1orb•d
Garntah wtth chopped
paraley, U dHlred. MakNftervln~
llAWADAN Allaao IA
'-'t cup1u1ar v. teupoon aalt
1 tablespoon cor·
natarch
• • ' .. ... .... • • • 4 ••• ._
1 .. ,
1 can (13~ OUDCN)
pineapple Ud.btta <re-aorv• l)'l'UI> > a tableaPoOn• rum
(or rum eatract, about l
t .. I POOQ)
1 cup wbJpped cream
t papaya, peeled.
1Hdec! and cut ln wedges
1 t>.nana, sliced and
dipped ln lemon Julee
,... cup e•ch shredded
ooconut and miniature
I I n
manhmallowt .
"4 cup broken nuts
Ccashewa, macadamlaa
or walnuta)
In top ot double boiler.
blend su1ar, salt and
cornstarcb. Whisk In
egg, ~ cup pineapple
syrup, lemon Juice and
rum . Cook over hot
water, whisking until
thickened. Cool to rooll)
temperature. Fold to
whipped cream.
In a 1,... quart bowl (f rererably 1Jaas),
a ternate layera of
cooked creain rntxture
with papaya w.a,ea (re·
serve several for
1anusb). p!nepapplt tld·
bits, banana, coconut,
mar1ham•llow1 and
nuts. Oam11b with re·
terved papaya. Chill two
hours or ovenlilbt. To
1erve: Spoon lDtodeasert
1lu1ea. Serves 6-8.
. . . .. .
~cupcblUaauceor-.jiiiiiiiii!iiijiilij!ijii:lllmmiiiiiii~iimmmmlDIIijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~fii~ eataup I
l,'<t C'Up cad r vln 1ar
I \.ablHpOOOI 101 sauu
Dessert: Amb~a
\;. e-up brown • ucar.
firmly ~eked
3 clovu &•rile ,
ttUlbed
1 tablelpoon ITOWld
&Uller a cup1 bot cooked
rice
Rub nbs on 1tll sides
with saJt and seasoned
pepper. Place rits, mea-
ty aide down, an a foal· lined pat. Bake at 450
deerees for 20 minutes.
Spoon otr cxcei.~ fol.
Blend remaining In·
gredients except rice
and pour over n bs. Cov·
er; reduce the heat to 350
degrees and bake 11~
hours or unlll tender.
Remove the cover 20
minutes before ribs are
done so meat can brown
Baste with sauce several
times while browning.
Serve ribs and sauce
with hot cooked rice.
Makes 4 to 6 servings.
SP ECIALCIUCKEN
Blend salt, paprika,
Salsa
Makes It
Sizzle
Don 'l underestimate
the flavoring power of
canned or dehydrated
pasta sauces. They come
in handy tor not only
flavorine platters or
spaghetti, but veeetable
ct.lahes, too.
When provisioning
your boat. camper or
yacht. remember that
hardy vegetables such as
squash keep tor a long
time in cool storage The
most perishable varieties
should be kept near the
top or your rresh rood
stow, so they won't get
squished in the throws.
Use older veaetables
for co->ked dishet1, such
as Moving Man's
Ratatouille, below. Save
the crisper ones to eat
raw In salads or with
crackers and cheese
spreads. <Sliced zucchini
i:s good nibbling food as
is. or sprinkled with
seasoning salt. l
MOVING MAN'S
RATATOUILLE
2 medium-sued zuc·
chini, washed and sliced
into 1 i·inch chunks
2·3 summer squash, coarsely chopped
l 5-ounce jar button
mushrooms
1 cup prepared pasta
sauce
Drizzle a 1 quart
saucepot with olive oil to
cover and add
veeetables. Pour pasta
sauce over; season with
1all and pepper to taste ..
Cover and cook over
medium-low name about
20 minutes until squash
la Just lender to the touch
of a fork.
Sprinkle 1ervtnas wlth
P anneaan cheese, if de·
•lred.
STATIRBROS.
MONIY BACK GU AR ANTU
ON QUALITY MIAJS
l~••t • f (t Of ..... f I\
Nt"OHOfftOfrit•u f r.u•••-•tH1 r(l•lf&~f tOV 0 1 fOUI #0 .,.• I
llllf'U If C••U••Vh f ltfVNOt:J
14NO 0 J•Olf • t v1oa
CHIPPED MEAn H>l ... C:
HOH 1 • WlfNta$ Otl
BEEF WIENERS • 1• ,,.c:
'.MMC a JOHN
WIENERS I u ••G
ua.fll • IVll\ •\<!CID
IOlOGNA OR WllNIRS
Al.& 81'Aftll .. 08. MA•Kn8 Wll.& U..... 1•1Y 4111~9 IO 'I
..... OL' Yl•elNIA RllUIB 'R ·oulUID llllP · lnll FlllAllKS ROAST
BEE' IMAUENDIUILB. . 49~ $i1!
c lllF CHUCK
ROAST
IEEF
RIB
STEAK
SMALL END SUI LB.
LB. 13 ~ $ i "i!
l.C •IF•QIUCll•l'OT .,. -·IUOC.C:Uf 79• 11
l& AIUI HUT. . ,la CllUCK SnAK La.
•
C -·OIUCll ••• •U•CllUQl•toNIUU • , 49
LL 6 , •••• HAST . ..... .. ...... 11'Wl 1•
.1 ft ..,.~Sl•t,)elL • 12• llO•ll~•IOMILlll $17•
u ..... ITaAK :~:· TIP •TJAK Le I
L• •1 2 • uoeu;~" ..... L• 'IJ• i•o•ana• 1• '21•. .,J. -·llOllND•IONtillU •1•• lft,•LQIN•ITI"" •21•
LI . TIP•O&ST ·' POllnlUIOUU l• I
• MlJ • 1 •• ll"•l()jjj•lllo\11•_.H •21•
La 198 CU-•nAK. LI TOP 91111.0IM ll ,
CORN
LAlllOE •EXTRA-FANCY
SWEET• TENDER
J
I Island Fruit I Dresses Roast t
This reclpe may sound txot1c,
but the j>reparaUon is simple
The South Seas Le11 1s basted
while roasting with a i.auce
rtavored with coconut and
pineapple During the final
minutet or baktna time. a touch
of naked c()C9out is sprinkled on
the lamb. AcktJlionaJ coconut ll>
toasted and tossed wilh pmeap
pie chunJas and macadamla nuts
and served with the leg as a con·
SOVTHSEAS .
LEGOFLAMB I dimenl.
l three-quarter leg of lamb
1 cup coconurtoaat spre11d
1 can (14 ounces) pineapple
chunks, drained, Uquid reserved
11, teaspoon allspice
Salt
2 cups flaked coconut
11 cup macadamla nut.a or
almonds
Combine coconut i.p rud. 1!1
cup drained pineapple liquid and
allspice; blend well Sult lamb
and place on roasting rack. Baste
with coconut sauce mixture and
pl ace m 325-degn•c oven f Roast lamb for 2 lo 21-:i hours
or until meat thermometer re
gisters 170 degrees Baste frc
quently with coconut sauce mix
ture throughout roasting lime
, Shortly before the end of roastmg
time, remove la, and 'Prinltle
' with 1• cup flailed coconut
Return to oven only lona.411noi.mtt
to toast coconut; remove.
Spread remaining co~ "9'1
cookie sheet and toast lightly~
der broiler or in 375·degree oven. I Combine coconut with plaeapple
chunks and nuts; toss together
Use coconut mhtture as a gam1sh
and serve as a condiment.
•combine 1 cup honev and I tablespoon coconut rtavoring; or
14 cup honey, • ~ cup vegetable 0 11
and 1,a cup canned coconuilk,
whipped in blender.
LAMB TERIV AKJ
KEBA.BS
2 pounds boneless lamb, cut
mto long strips. 1·inch wide
1 cup Japanese soy sauce
''z cup brown su~ar
1,. cup cookin1 oil
1~ cup vinegar
3 cloves garlic, minced
2 teaapoons sesame seeds
1 teaspoon ground ginger
1 teaspoon sail
Water chestnuts
Pineapple chunks
Place strips of lamb in shallow
glaas or enamel dish. Io. a 2-cup
bowl. combine soy sauce. brown
sugar , cooking oil, vineiar.
garlic, sesame seeds, ginger and
salt: then pour over lamb.
Refrigerate meat for several
hours, turning occasionally
To assemble bamboo lt!r1)'akl
sticks. remove meal from
marinade, then thread lamb
strips on bamboo skewerk accor
daon fashion alternately with
water chestnuts and pineapple
chul\p. Broil under preheated
eleaa6nt tor S tO 6 minutes. or un
lll dnired decree of doneness Is
reached. brushing occasionally
"ith marinade. Do not overcook Turn the leriyaki stacks frequent·
ly durmg cooking time Serve im
mediately Serves 4·6.
CONSUMERS SURVEYED
I
Shopping
For Food
By ALTON BLAKESLEE
,.,. kl..-<• ldlltr
NEW YORK -Consumers sec
health u the most important
aspect of food , above cdnve·
nience, taste and expense. two
food industry nutritionists said
today.
A Search
Realities
Mrs. Calender said the public
perhaps "doesn't undergtand the
reason for food processing" and
the use oC chemical addiUves.
The purposes are to make foods
aa sare as possible, free of
harmful mkrooraanisms; to pre·
vent spoilage al9d to malce them
acceptable lo appearance, taste,
convenience and nutritlonol
value, she said.
The FDA is more concerned
about food safety and nutriUonal
quaUty, and other aspects of
foods, than about additives put in
to serve specif~ purposes, she
added.
She quoted-the FDA·.t• aaylnc
natural vitamins are also "chemicals,'' and no different to
the human body than synthetic
ones. "It is a false belief that. so.
called natural' viiamins have 11n
advanta11e over l)'nthetlc ones.
" 'Natural food•' may be
equal, less or more nutritious
than pro~essed ones.'' Mrs.
Calender added, "but you can't
11y all natural fooda are more
nutrlttous than processed. Bread
which bu not beell enriched « la
made of unbleached flour ®'a
not baw as high levell of Yitamin .
8 and Iron as white enriched
bread.0
As for vegetablet, lt all de·
pend.I on bow they are handled,
and cooQd, abe Hid. Veaetables
taken dlrec:tly from the field to be
froicm can be more n\lpiUoua
lhan thole shipped Jone cfiitW.
and •tored for Ions p rl0d1
before1ale.
(Qfdit:
Copp·ing
A Fresh
Flavor
Tbe,1>roduce man la rl1ht, "tM t ••n ol y rUf4f' 1rt1Uieonesyov.e.at\Mf\libt~,.a
1hop for them. The older th tan touper
thoke s. • Cdl~tel'dtr kemelt df tdta· ciu~k ~ a.I· StJck t.he ears pfd1j ~ldn"
U1ht?Y SUGARED water: cover your pot and
cook 3·5 minutes. MAXI UM.
LENTIL·CO NSOtlP
1 cup lenUJs •
110-ounct can beef broth
1 cup <•bout 2 ears> f retb com
1 small bay leaf
VI teaspoon coriander
~ te poon cumin
1 teaapoon lemon pepper
lit cup thopped green pepper
2 carrot.a, 1t1ced thln
2 stalkt celery. 1Hced thin
1 omen, chopped fine
1clove11rlic, minced
2 tablespoons oil ve oil
2 cups bolling water
In saucepan, heat oll ve oil and saute onion and
aarllc until trall!parent; add chopped pepper.
car~ott and celc;ry and conilnue to co0k. sUrrin11 aboutSmlnutes •• Md all sealOl\lnp and pourovet
beerbrOth; heattobomnr.
Put rinsed lentils ln slow cooker and pour bo·
iling water over Add Vtie~es and bro\b and
cover crock. Set on low and cook 6 hours. Add
fresh com and cook IO lriu more. Dollctous
2 CU.Pl Cal.X)ut ea.rs)~-
2 cupe dlced CoiOk ttam
1 amallonlon, f\J\e\y cboP
% cup finely chopped ,,eea pepptt
· i m.diull) potaio.t, c*ed• =Dd cubed 11ar1• tomato, eeed.ed .net c
~ teupcqi aalt •
Dash pepper · ''•cup but~?' or martarine ~ cup shredded Cheddar cheese
Combine all ln1redlenta ucept butter and
cheese ln tnhdnc bowl. Melt butte!' in lar1e
sklllet. add corn mixture and pat. down evenly.
Cook over medi\U'll beat about 5 minutelt'UOtil
bottom bealns to brown. Ualnt a wide metal
•patula. tum huh, scraping up browned bltl at
bottom or skillet, and continue cook(nf about S
minutes lon1er. loosening from pan frequently
with spatula. Sprinkle with cMele. Mak• 4 acrv•
in,a.
CORN-PEPPER OM.El.ET
3 eica, beat.en with Cort
2 tablespoons milk 2 tablespoons fres h srupped parsley
2 tablespoons fresh or (1 tablespooQ de·
hydrated) chives
l wtUl wann torUllu and a tano 1ra~t·
avoeac1oUlad. •
2tablespoons diced caMed Jalapenopepper
14 cup zucchini. hahUy marned and diced
1 cup (about 2 ears> fresh com
SUNBEAM CUSTARD
2 cups (about 4 ears> fresh com
4eegs
1 can (11~ cups) evaporated milk
3 tablespOOtJ.s chopped onion
1 h tablespoona butter or mar1artne, melted
2 teaspoons auaar
1 '~ teJSpoons salt
11:. teaspoon nutmee
'·--teaspoon pepper
In medium bowl, beat egas with undiluted
evaporated milk. Add corn, onlon, melted butter.
auaar. salt. nutmet and pepper; mlx well. Tum
into a 11eued shallow l a.t"(luart culfrole and
place tD a I arc er pan with l inch bolling water.
~cup <lleddar cheese
1~ cup Monterey Jack cheese
Salt and pepper to taste
Whisk together eus and milk and pour in
lightly buttered omelet pan for one or two
omelets. Turn pan to let upc:ooked mixture flow
to bottom of pan. Cook over medJum-low flame
until top is almost set.
Dlvlde remaining ln1redleots evenly
between Of'lelels so that each contains abou~ .1A
cup zucchini, a tablespoon eaob of peppers, para.
ley, chives, 'I.a cup corn and mixed cheese. Fold
omelet over muns and conUrJ.ue cooking until
cheese melts. <You can balce ornelet in 300-
degrce oven for about 5 minutes to keep bottom
from getting scorched. Makes two servings.
See the difference;. ,
Taste the difference.
Even before you taste it, you'll
see the smoothly blended pnme
pulp that makes Mott's Prune Juice
Blended With Prune Pulp different,
. with a mellower, richer prune fla-
vor. And we've added Vitamin C,
,oo, Try Mott's Prune Juice Blended
Wlth Prune Pulp. You'll nevergo
back to ordinary prune juice again. .. ---..... -------~
111• UR u•
I 150 .
ON MOTT'S.PBUN'E JUICE
BLElfDED Wl'tH PRUNE PULP
·-
(
Browse
To Get
Health
Foods
ByPAUUNE • BONDONNO
ca....-NenSentee SACRAMENTO -
Brow1io1 throu•b a
health food at«e can be
confualoi as you eye
stran1e-SC)UodJnf ltema
like sea kelp or brewer'•
ye.at. Amonl the wares
are some true health
buys, butlOIDe aredud1.
Certainly uslne some
health foods can make a
more nutritious diet, but
health foods are not
wonder foods. nor wlU
they compensate for a
diet that lacks whole
grains, fruits, ve1etablea
and protein sources.
For the shopper who
carefully selects both the
store and the foods, there
are some good health
food products. Firat,
walk through a health
store. See whether pro-
ducts are labeled and
whether perishable
vegetables are
refrigerated. This la an
indication of how in-
terested the owners are
in the quality of the food
they supply.
READ LABELS
carefully. By cbeckine
ingredients. you may
find some products can
be duplicated at home
for taalf the expeme.
Remember. some
health foods are availa-
ble at the supermarket.
Compare prices, and for
variety and value. shop
at either location.
When it comes to
whole grains, health food
stores are better than the
supermarket. And, ac-
cording to one health
food store owner. whole
grains are probably the
one most Important food
to integrate into your
diet nowadays.
WHOLE GRAINS
contain both the wheat
germ and the bran.
important sources of
hard-to-get B·vitamlns,
trace minerala and lron.
You can buy whole
wheat bread or whole
wheat flour to make your
own baked goods.
The outer layer of the
wheat -the bran -and
the germ are both
available separately in
health food stores.
Either is good Jprinkled
over cereal~. or com·
bined in your own oat or
1ranola cereal mix.
You can add wheat
1erm to hotcakes, wal·
nes and breads by aub-
atitutlne half a cup for
the same amount of
flour. Tbe wheat bran ls
important becauao It
contatos not only the
vitamins but larlfe
amounts ol fiber. lJ:QPOr·
tant f Cl' lD1atln.a1 bealtb.
BBEWE&'B \'ZAST,
whlcb wu once the
realduaJ product from
beermaltlns, la a storehouse of
B·vti.mtn1, lron and
proteiD. A tabl•POOG of brewer'• yeut cootalo.a
ODt)' 12 calories and Call •
be mlud witb fruit Julee
or milk f# llll't.Ulecl OY
cereal er nla4. ·
Healtb f oocl 1tore1
senerally •tock 1ood souroe1 of pretela
alternaUvea to meat.
Soybeans -dch ln_pro-
teln, calcium and B·
vttamlnl -cc be eaten
roast.cl u a ueck or-
~ed aa a meta dbb.
-'
Aloha Is
When Htnlb11 art
bot, lbiJ •boncake wiU •t you out of~ ldteb o iD record tlm •
lli\WADAN SllOM'CUE
1 (1 pound 4 ounce> can plneappto cbunkl
. . . ... . . . . . ..
fruita, brown auaar. '-• marcart..oo until f.n floe
cup syrup from pJneap· crumb-.. SW' ln 1 Iara
ple and bruised mint e11 <beatu> and" cup
1prtp.OcrrerandchJll. ball and bait Ub16
2 cup1 aUced
S atrawberrtes
, ~ cup brown 1u1ar Weet "• cup Juice from pla.oapple Such
Su ppi ng
Pt'cpare and bake Rieb cream>. Spoon dou1b
Shortcake run,. Prepare f.n I or a mowMSa UOWld
Lemon Cream Toppln& ed1e ol srqaecS .•tncb
and rd'ri1erate. Serve caie pan. Bnalb do\atb
allortcalte warm w1lb with a Uttle addJtioaUl '
plpeapple-btrry and m elled butter and
LtmOP Crum Topptnc. aprlnltle wltb tusar. Make18tolae~1. Bake tn a hot oven (400-
F) about 25 mlnutta.
Servo bot. or cool. 2 mint itnrf"• a1c• SJaorteake Rina:
Rich Shortcake JUnc Retlft 2 cups aifted all·
Lemon Cr .. m Top. putpoM nour. 2 tablet· IAacia Cha Toppla&:
p1n1 • J)OOJls auiar. 3 teupooM Beat 1 cup wbippln1
Dralnplneapple,aavtn& bakina powder, ~ teu-cream to soft peaka wiU.
syrup or Juice. RinH, poon aalt and ~ teupoon 2 tablMpoona sugar and
bull and 1llco berrle1. cream of tartar to1etber ~ teaspoon vanilla. Fold
8U1bUy crueb 1 CU.Jl. ot Into mix1oa bOwl. Cut ln ln 1 teupoon 1rated
the berries. CombiaWlall ~ c u p l> u t t e r o r lemon peel.
For the 4th, have a picnic
with lower P,rices overall.
.r
.
9\.A IUDA *OftANOI •IANTA A .. A ' LA MAOJ IMOfMCl CUTIA ... L CKAPllA .. •nNUl IO. t t'JOI. ITMaf ,
• • 1
ALL LUCKY STORES
WILL BE
OPEN
JULY 4TH
10 A.M. to 7 P.M.
Family 1-Gallon
Picnic Jug 311
WI OI 0-. fAIY Al ~l<il C~~ IT~·AWAY ~ tolOOl\011 -
r
' I I
' ,.
BaANDIEDCllEF.SE
l pac1rta1e (8 ouncn> cream cheese
2 table1poons crumbled blue cheese
1 tablespoon brandy
l '-blellpooo mtlWd buu.r
2t.tup0ocia powdered qar ' 1A teaspoon paprika J
3 tabl•poona touted aeaame aeeda
Soften chee1e and beat smooth. Bflat ln blue cheese. brandy,
butter, •Uf.&r and paprika. Shape into a email cylinder (or pact '1l
a small oded can) and chill. Roll io toasted sesame aeedl just
before aervtq. Makn 114 cup1.
A party platter of fresh-cut nectarines
and assorted cheeses shows what can be done
with seasonal fruits: Slice 'em and spread 'em.
FROM THE GREEKS
Feta Versatile
Feta cheese is a marvelously flaVQrful contribution from the
Greeks. It hu a pun1ency all lts own; its crumbly texture li
suitable to salads as Is, or whipped creamy in a dresain1 or
spread. Slnce lt ls an import, It bean an Import price tac. Therefore,
\he more varied your reclpea for ualn.c lt. the leas chance you
have ol leavln1 it for apoU.
There's one favorite whole-meal salad, borrowed rrom the
Grteu with Americana adaptaUoos. It makes a nice luncheon or
Utht supper, served with warm wbol•fl'•ln bread And butter:
IN A 1AaGE SALAD bowl, combine: 1head1Ptnach, rinltd tborou.ahlY and torn lnt.o bite-alze pieces; Y, cup each chopped
eelery and 1reen pepper; 1·2 tablllPoOJ)S minced white onion; ~
packace <or 1 CUJ>) froaen ~. bOiled tender·crt•p In 1alt4d
waler for 3 minutes, then drained; v. cup (about 2 ounces> Feta
cbeue, crumbled, \6 cup cboppetd, freal\ partley.
Wbeo ready to serve. tou au tnaredl ta toaetbet
dreutnc:
'tablelpoont olive oil
l teaspoon Dijon mustard (or brown JDustard)
1 teaspooa sqar
1 teaspoon lemon IMPl*'·Muonl.nl aalt
2 tableapoonl wblt.e wine vme1ar
B1tnd all lnaftdl ti~. Adiut ~.Pour tmr
Hlad. toll and Mrft lininediatelt.
PAPER
··~ 5UIOX
'3.45
ALLR.AVORS 140%1onLE
SP INGFIELD RIPE
: OLIVES
FOSTER F~RMS
.FRESH HEN
f i¥
TURKEYS
····~ WISCONSIN FRESH CUT
CHEDDAR. CHEESE
BEEF CHUCK
SEVEN-BONE
u.
c
..
I
'
Larry I.Jin de/of (above) ·
makes wini:J chimes from
silveri spoons, forks
and knives. He and
china painter Frances
Morrill (left) will be at
the Orange CountY Fair.
PHOTOS BY
ROBIN TUCKER
Potter 'Raohael Mallory
(right) will demonstrate
handiwork in the
California Crafts
Building at the' fair. :.:.)f;l~~~~;e:.;;~~~~~"" >t
c ... mAM MY$11CISM a COSMIC COMSCIOU~SS
493-8642 ; .
. c'Al~lls
TMI MOST IMCllDM.I LOW fllCIS
YOU HA ft lftl S9e ...... -..cftOMS TO CMOOSINOM
ALL SOLID I 4k GOLD
lft ml Tl SUL UI Ill Sil . us 111&Y ~ 1n Wlltl 1'1 mu
THE GREAT ANTIQUE
I . ~~DIME STORE . ~~::-~o I
YOGA & ·coNTOURING · . . 'EXERCISES .
• Resh.Ing ' ·ietuvenatlng •
•Relaxing
· CLASSES NOW FORMIMG
... DeYMl1t11fltcl Twhin ' .
Pieering
Around
NINE LOCAL hllb
school aod col.lee• 1t'1·
dents wUl travel to Ox·
ford, Enaland th11 sum·
mer u part of a cultural
exchange prosram
sponJOl'ed b)' the Brtlllb
Euroipeao Centre.
They are Kathleen
Early and LiH Marr,
Newport Beach; Laurie .Morris, Co1ta Meu ;
M arJorle We11ell,
Heather Artftld, Kathy
Seboepleln and lUrld
Stetter, HunUoclon
Beaeb: aJ)d Heatbu.
llcClar• an4 lanclta Scbulle, Gtrdela Grove.
do a lot to improve tbelt
ap ,"beaald.
NllA, or l'annle Jla , WM once a IOVtnl·
mot <D07 Ore&ted to
keep the bou1tn1 lb·
duatey acUvt. No.Ulla
prlvate corporation
wbteb buy1 up
mort1•1• from banu
d Joq iMtlt\lt.IOU.
• ' be Ulocl1tlon deal.I
tv rt 4'1 wtth bankers
al\4 MCUJt~ Jnal~ab and hu a eonserv1Uve
drtH code, •lthou11' 1om1 are more nam· boy ant than othen,.. a
1poknmuuatcl.
Hunter •Pl>•reotly
tboulbt IODle were too
nambOyaat •
.. Some time a10 ft
•Ponsorect a serle• of
P!ff C'Oftductecl bY the Plt.rlcla &event
•
Weddings~
and Engagements
To •void dbaPDOlntment. proepec:tlve
brides are reminded to have their weddlne atorlH with black and white glosay
phototraphs to the Daily Pilot People
Departmerit one week before the weddlni.
Pictures received after that time will not be 111ed.
For •n1atement announcements it ia
lmperatlve that the 1tory. also accom-
panied by a black aod white cloasy pie·
ture, be submitted aix weeks or more
. before the weddln' date: otherwise it wm
not be pubUlbed.
To help IJU riqulrementl on both Wed· dlU~arid a1•1ement ltortes, form.a are avalJablit·_-.,.-;au Dail¥ Pilot offices. J'ur..
tbet' quatlorit wlU M answered by People
o,p.rtmat ltatl members at 8'Uall.
e,
( L ltl. 8011'.
In the
1
DAILY PI LOT
...._,___._._ ---
IJJc11aood.... ...~
Sllafaalatbeta. G9
rA • CELEBaATINOUMll"~~~~t-4------~~~~-------~!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~======~~~~ ,.,qLJBflLJS 2Stb wecldlDI ati-
nlvenwy wttb an ~ i G • s boute 1D theti' HuDtlli oa ~ a In ca ry Beach home were r. _ . an:~~B=b:;.. ~!;
active ht coanmuaUy l THURSDAY, WNS30 service, havbll been the l By SYDNEY OMARR charter pretldeat and
, ARJES (March 21-Aprll 11): Your viewa are founder of the Hunt·
sought by one "tqh up" -deltne your term• and ineton Beacb Chapter,
set your fee. Be reall1tlc. Don't iell yourself American Alsoctatlon of •boJ't. Knoft' that community atandardl prevail. Unlvenlty Women, l1 a
TAWUS <April 20-May 20>; Lona-raqe cbuur member of the ~tw llneceuary. Wbat Memed a fantaay comes LeasueotWomm Voten
Into foeua. PbJJoeophlcal mat.ten dominate. Put and a meo1ber of the andBMetn to blend. llbraey'!loard. E~ ()lay 2hlwat ~>: ilnilb tub ' BaHr bu been In·
wbte bad been put u~ '1 f« credJt due you. volved 1n school board
Accent on money ot part:nd', mat.a One who actlvlUea and hu 1erved
rentl to you or makes loan expreaes curiosity aa pr11ldent and a
about your activities. member ot the board of
CANCER (June 21-Julv 22): Accent on l•ial trustees of the Hunt·
tlet, ~bUc relaUona, the lln1ah of a deal, a re-ington Beach Union Hieb
newed ~tract under ''dWerent cond1Uona." Be School and Ocean View
direct, lnde,endent without belni arrof &nt. Elementary acbool dla-
LEO (July &a-Aue. 22): Follow tlD'OUlll _ trictl. ' rise above petty detaile. Teach and team. In-Tb• honored couple
1ratlate younelf wilb. ontt ""° ba muteted a have two eblldren, Eric ph11eol operations essential to ulUmatttsucceas and Elaln. · ' or your ".rniaalon."
Vl&OO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22): Lunar position
emphal1M ehance, speculative ventures, acUvt-tr connected with children, intensified tela-soum COAST ~croas oo-oP UOQ1bl1.__0nauve Juices are activated. U-U (Sept. 23-0ct. 22); Check flne print T" '' •1wm -..cl!IN tor -°' read between the llqea. Deal. with ooe who, jn ~ :;:~--=:' "'· ••~.
cent put, Jiu been err•tlc. Accent on •teadlne11.
foolproof 'atet1 meaauret, airttabt property ar-
rancementl, mature decl1dona reiardin6 your own-uc:Uamily-..1ecurlty.
&<X)aPIO <Oct. 23·Nov. 21): Activity, ~qulri•, relatives with complaint.I, quelllont, r•
queats u. in picture.
8AGITl'ARJUS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Full Moon
poaltlon accentl wbat you poueu, what la of
value, the love and security, the beauty in your
life. Yes. an "accountlnc" takes place.
CAPaJCO&N <Dee. 22..J'an. 19): l'ull llOOI\
c1cle faftll'I you -'°" cu define, 1Uc:e tb.tn, be
rid of extraneou1 DJ•terlal. Ute lat, the aupertluoua.
AQVAalUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You &aln
enli&btenm.-and, Jn UU. cue. knowled1e eould be frtOtemq.
PISCBS (l'eb. 19-MIU'Ch 1()): Empbuls on
what you 18Y and tbe effect ot 'oor words. Social ' mores. social J\&IUce. aoclal acUvit.y all are In ptctu.._.
(714) 957.o212
in.the
DAILY PILOT
Prka lffedl-. th..vgh Jwy 2ncf ".u
/
Floppy Sun Hats J 19
Popukrr fteppy brf"'rnM ttyt..
Vinyf lwatd In auoned _,.....On•
lize fib med.
•
._,,.
·I I
Frozen Food .
' . . ::.~:GE 49c
C'al Fame conceotrate-12 oi can
. CREDI mlt . I
. ;
Ham Sli~s ••.• s211
Our ham. ttnter cud .....,
Let It beiln at El Rancho! It'• • day for
celebratiq--so why not do it justice with a picnic. a
party or a barbecue &hat will bt remembered?
..
- -Sweet and mellow, with that deUcioua juicy ~--10 we!Dame at the picaic. tM barbecae •••• a;Jtbnt!
Fresh Carrots ~ ••••• 2 .. 29c Bennuda Onions •••• 2 .. 29c
Crip and tender ••• 1 lb. pUorLlm bags ~~ , r.: , .
I
...,· ENTREES 39c ~ '/
1
,
l C'abbaate Rolla, Stuffed Peppen, / /
.. Saliabuey Steak ••• 14 oi. pk«o . ~
Pineapple .............. 2sc~
N~ sweet! ••• Maturity tndt fiom Hawaii .
The fun . begins with El Rancho values!
lc:e Crecim HALF-GAU.Ol •• 39e
It'a always more fun when you have Ice cnam! Springfield-half-ttallon . .
·B·B-Q Sauc:eamsamrs49e · ·
Chooee Hot, Rqulu or Hickoly to add tliat tpeCia1 naw: they Jove! 1' oz
=·1· • 01• 49c ? 1pe nres rt11m ....
L Batra larse aize clivea f?om Un~t Don't they belonc in your party plant? No. 300 ~·
~~~'!:.!': .: ~119
Dtink Mix ...... s1 21 ·
Polish Sausage s1 ·~
lJllnier'.,,_12 Ol f\1 •TllllT ..... ,
CliUed Drilti •• 55c
Mbnite Maid l..mnOnadt. GNpt. Punch
'BURGER33 . BUNS::~ C
Springfield-Hot Dec bum, t.oo
PotatO Chip$·: 75c
L&UJa Sc:addtf• ~Dip, 8-8-Q
Com t.hint·~ ••••• Frito1-~·;r:;-...1a oa
.
B . I'.. BAWNTINE'S 9 ft c eer SIXPACK.................. ~
'A name~ bow et a price JOG an appndat.e! Stock ap t.bll tMk! 12 • Clllll
I
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'
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PVBUC Nal'ICB
f'ICTI '1out eutlNIM NAMe ITATIMINT
"""' tollowi!IQ --•• OOlfl9 ...... fltMMI
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THE RI:Al .
I: STATER~
UMIVasrn
PAllC HANOVB Goracoba Uiilvetaltt Part townhome,
Hanover moct•l. setlucted wrou1ht Iron 1ate entry. Dramauc
beamed and vaulted cell·
ln1. lhulve brtck
~,f,.~ HERITAGE
. . • REAL TOR!_;
~.TH-[ REAL I
ESTAlEHS __ _.J
~~OU
ltn'lllSTI01
What are you lnttrest.ed
ln rrdm u Real F..atale
Coml*IY Xan~u b6 re
ady toll.lsteo~.U. 75'-v761
Give°' '9Uf' Ideas. Want only ~te•uve and •IC·
areulve i'ulns>eQPle who are 1,........ in a We r.
tOOZ
drive by
A CIJllf Dwa&.11 StM.tOO
.C bdrm, 3 bath c:uatom home.
diff.Qd lot w/Yiew ot the blue
ciltc. Clua nei&hborhood " ea1y
twY •cceu. Too many extras to
num rate. Chln••e food t1ke..out
· tat root of hilt.
"'IH)OG;i 1MI SIAGUUS S6t,IOO
ou know how much beach property
· available at tb price. Walk to th~
sand PoOls & shopplna from thl& 3
.bedroom. 1 ~ bath aurf side townhouse
pgraded carpet. brick paUo. double
arage. bltns. Hear the surf, smell the
seaweed.
IMYISTOISI OPPOll'TUMITY IHOCISf
Lovely duplex located in prime area
bf Huntington Beach. Has lot large
. enou1h for additional units. Situated
·end of quiet cul-de·sac. Room for boat
!'f R.V .. Fine!t in area. Challenges
comparlSOn at $119.500
aEDUCED SIOOO.
OWMa ANXIOUS S12t,900
Open the door to this fabulous home &
·be ready for a unique experience. 5
1 bedrm. Greenbrook Granada features
~l'of. decorating. new Italian entry Ute ~ new no-wax flooring. A Classic
Jiome in a classy neighborhood.
llOllM.,..a.St. ,,..t•Ytley
HJ.8311
· .... ,.. I OOZ GeMtal I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
WHlft W4Tll qw
Tbla S:.St«Y. • bOCltoOm home with bea\JUM rcnvet VJew of wblte water,
CIOfOD and viii~•· U1bt1 bH •
f abwous entertamment cent.er with lta
own kitchen r elllUcs and larae deck.
d d ct. off llvlnl room and
kitchen. off en additional 1.Pectacular view. PriCed at $188,SOO. Cill either of
OUT offt to I it.
IJ,_.IVtJI: ti()MfS
~EAL TORS~ 876.ec>oO
2443 £ut Co11t Highway, Corona dtl M•r
'8150 1n MeN Verdt. •t &46 ·5990
DANA
POINT
4IWllJ
LAGUNA
Br.ACK -·~
NHDSW•
..
..... ,...... '007 Cotto Mn• 1014 !!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~!! ftllWltOIT llACH •••••••••••••••••••• •• • ••••••••••••••• ••••••••
IAY Ir OCIAN IXCLUSIVI AXB UP.Pa
• BR. 1'41 IN, btlnl 10me WMn you anum• the t«Xlet k>Ylni care and
""' lnt.el'elt loan. W&Ui· steal Udl OM at 113,000. l• doHb, mlnored XJ.DtH.B.,ati()!\. •.. , .. 1002 ••• ., .. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
DUPLEX-3 BR. EACH
We have it! Hard to find, idenUca1 un·
its; 3 bdrms .• 2 baths each. Top quali-
ty construction. Large rooms; close to
shopping & beach. Drive by: 514 Iris,
CdM & call us for app1t to see after
June 27th. $179,500
fLut""' 6'ut WuU.. 1H4
Ge•ral tOOlG ... re& 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
PENINSULA home. 4 Or 5 BR, 3 ba, .
all amenities. Lovely neighborhood. a
few steps from the beach. SJ..95,000
OTHER prestige waterfront homes with p}er & float from $3851000 up.
BA YFRONT, pier & float, lots $250,000
to '825,000, u, build your own custom
home. S.Verat a!"eaa to choose from.
BI l L G RJI N 0 Y, RE ALT 0 R
1·11 lluy\111• fl• •v• N 11 bl'J t>lbl
P£'"1!111
Brlng any reasonable ofrer on this
beautiful 3 bdrm., 2 bath Mesa Verde
home. Vacant -immediate
possesslon possible. Listed at $86,000
VllW 'IH ,OIHT WITH POOL 1~· untllevered over Cuatom bl\ •Br,· 28• Needa palnt and carpet.
cliff wltb 1pectacular home, to be remodeled. All It tall• ta a lltue lm·
Uu r o o m • b r I c k 1Yi !\l,I • dticin, a bedroom•. clift· •• ··--
fi.repleee. SJl,.500, .BKR, ~
view cl N= .. _ Buy now at Sl8'7.JOO. or .,..y fl $24~.ooo after extenalve aaJnaUoB • wotlt and the ocean. hi&hb' in· )'OU11 have a beautiful divtduaU bedroom home remodeling. Plana avail, pool horn•. Hurry, call
features custom elltr&a call bkr for appt. 'JU.1108 ~
t!all•1m I~~~~~~
too nwneroua to anen• Uoo. Secluded court.yard
pool .+ huie woodtd 14
acre Jot. Pleaae phone for
aooolntment. to inspect.
Cal19f2.7'788.
6 K€Y '81 P.€ALTOP.sh
Attention R.E Brkr
Npl/lrv w /complete
financial atandlng, In·
lereated ln expandln1. I
have new concept for
AOUd &rowtb. '45-1403 .
FORESTE
OLSON Xln' location Qr. ~ HIWPOITHTS. ~~~0 6
WestcllCt 1hoppln1 ".I ~CRIN=~~~~~~~~~ CAUfl. LtVIMG Harbor Hlah. 3 Bdrm a., a1_ _ _
Ii IMCOMI TOOi •·~-~ be\hl, dlnlna r~ .• lae. .
.. ,,, '
DUrLIX * _ __.... ___ --:...;..;___,family rm. wtwet bar; 3 MtredffhC'i.-...S
u1.1 buklng In t.heaun on IXICUTIVI HOMI frplc1., bit· In 1t1rco a 84 by owner. 1119.500. •
lhl1 ocean breete palio MISA VUDI qsiem + much more! 50«5i20 __ . ___ _
view\nit the Puclflc Enc:IOlied courtyard en• $129,'°° · -OLTIMlt ocean Mtcr you nave try to a •Br, 3ba retreat. t4IWPOttT IEACH •r~ •
your fantusllc tan. enter· Family fun In ener;g llAl.n '75-1642 4br, 2ba, tam/lut, r11>k.
l 1av•-• _...... It jtt o ol.Ymplc lize pool, room taln In your 1pac OUI "'• .,.,... . ex~uTIVE for tennll court. Only round tdtctien, and open 1159,800. ...,._ front & dlnlnl room. DAV ID B 0 UR It E 1110,000. 7~ Vant.are
LAICIROMT whtch 11 made for RLTR. • DREAM Dr. ll • B. Bk r
LAKE FOREST-brand Callforniu llvlng You Call546-911150 SpaclOul 2 at7 home, _21J._M4_~-----
new with \liew cl binest can then retire to 2 BR'• Prtme Met• del Mar loca· neatled ln qulet cul-de-RISH AS A DAISY
lake. 3 Bedn:nl &damlly of relaxation 2 Car t1on 4 Br bome for the aac. Seautllulplank Oooc ~" dellahU:ully
room-2atorywithlarae encld. aara&e c:an keep bu1y family w/added ealtY leada to m .. lve decontec13Br,2Babeau·
m a • t e r • u i t • • 2 you orr the atreet. The den at.ereo " pool table brtcklplc: ln llvln1 room. ty. Deeorator abarp •
f\replacea " will have a tecond half or thla beauty lnc:iuded. Low main· M.str bdrm i. a dream aparkllnC brtl}lL Featur-
boat dock! &aper term a, ls the Ideal rental. A lltlle tenance 1round1. Nice with It'• own f P le. 101 wall• of mirrors.
may 1e 01 e 0 pt l 0 n . cottaae like unit. ~ith 2 paUo, blln brick BBQ, all Charmine ii the word for pl\.llh carpeUn1. &t lush $148000 BR, 1 Da, keeps It 11 aelf achools Is OC College the rear yard. Comple\e land1capln&. Only
PET
• E. BARRETT flt with u tidy Income. All Wltb.l.n walklna dbi.n~ wtth 2 wood decks" Ore •.750. Ask t.o aee IL this for a mere Sl68,950. Sec and make an offer. · rtrur . Jf 1.1 rry I Ca II NOW!
-REALTY-759·0761 AllPolntaReatton ~. ~~-st
642-5290 C«oMdet Mar 1022 894·1361 --·
------•••••••• •• •• ••••• • • •••• 4br below market, 1198 lttlty -=--~~ Beautiful rustic duplex, 2 Auauata. (Palrvlcw • 146-5573
BR. & I BR. buam cull.. Autualll) 556-3149 bf.r/aft.
garden putio $140.500 9 962-0771 anytime •·~-~ DOWMTOWM
PAUi. MARTIN --J OM I
Real aitak 6'4 7383 IASTSIDI (~ Se arale bomu <3
OCM VU HIDIA WAY IY IACK IA y :tro. 2 bedrm> oo dt·
Ba
. St11U'J> 2 yr new Condo. J Y• C W..t 11rable R-J comer lol
chelor or artist 112BR. BR. 2 Ba. Heluded pvt Prof es• I o n a I l y with alley. Owner oc·
2BA w1old CdM charm. patM>. pvt deck off JDltr landscaped. decorator eupjed-calltordeta\la.
Huae I ot w I room to bdrm Very quiet area lo mirrors wet bar ta the S:Jl"'800 ed81-772S ~~d500Jutil reduced to popular development. ram.Uy room. "•elf clean w~:. .........
·H JlL ...... CHI.... Arthur Reese Realtor. I 11 J · ' le I t c h e a 1 4 .... , RI.......,_. ""' ,..... " 751-1473 bedrooms, dlnln1, fadllJ1 REALTORS room. 2 llreplac.•. ;;;;;.;.;.;;;-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.
67S.Ot2 NEW·3Br. 2~Ba home. S1'7,500. BK R. tr.If dramal1c livln1 rm )40-1720
9 Yr old 3 & 2bd duplex w /vaulted cellln11 le HOlstraomTY w11r1 guest rm & bo . rtplc. separate dlnln&
Beauillul ~ home In Terrific Income $195.000. area. modem open atyle Oranae .. Oak cabinets. By Owner 640-7l1186 kitchen. '8$.500. Prin. on·
sell cln~oven +Micro ---ly Aat.&40-l925 wave, le, equestrian, _______ _
trail. b lly property. 1av1HE TOR. MUA YMDI
Form. d1n'1 rm Is fam Charmlna 3 bcdrm patio Very &ood luck, Cultom .,_,_. 102'
rm. Onl)' $139,850. oriented home. Shake 1 built homo ln tho Meta ....... •••••••••! .. -•
l'QOf. Owner wlll carry Verde aedkm of Cotta HAUoa LAHI
WISTSIDI f1.o&ncin1. Sl35,000 M•a. 3 Br. tam. rm. 4s NOMI
LACUISTA
:nlO Sq. n. &ntArtaln in
this 82S IQ. n. bonu11 room Up1rade1
throughout. Sl!V,900.
REALTY INC.
714/146·1~71
UA1-n.1HC. -~~M.,clCO~· w6 ~I~;·~ 3~;nr;i 3 BR, l~ BA. private 141-Jl2J _._-,....w,..... • &7H900 • fenced )'ard, near J>ana ~~~~~~~~
I 002 \mmedlaluale. 3 BR, atrtmn, new crp\3 •-====....:..__;.,---Cotta .. ICI 548·7729 MIJ Point Mar'lna. Priced tor F-.biu!OU9 Dano Gardena, •-.-------1 M~I WOODS •~MAii.A.A.i 4' drpa. Jn oew cond . • ,. --------~ SPYGLASSHILL . _._.._. 1104,HO. Owner/Aat.
F...,... Y•r Ei!! 1 1~11 Th1t 1>eaut.1.1u1 hom• haa Sptendld 4 BR • ramur.1 IMYHTMllMTS •em a.Al &.MUNA 4 beclroc>tm. and 2 ba\ha rm.: oceun view, poo • 1714149 ... 7711 -----
Set amon1 the lneat Panoramic mountain and Jt'• Nua Wood• lacu~zl, 2 frplc11 . fee DOLL HOUSI iUPtR 4 BR l 'BA HOME ~ylnt~/•!i;.a:·~r,~ vM'# Modcrn4bedrm a moat~ar Ooor plan and.'298.000 Grab au the 1usto ltfct ,._,alllVllty 1034 :::t~.n~~=.Jfr:
crlrninatlnf buyer at bath', enclosed entry. wtt.b IJtl nEac-r,,1r•~r· Reat~~a~:'ART~·7Ma butoofferbymovli1aln· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~7.~. Aat. 645·9950 ~
000
Over 200014.tl. $175,000. parq oan amTby to WI cut.le, tM lowett By ownr Condo. Tiburon OpenHouMSal/SUn 1 5
QofikaBay,NB WUl consider ucban1e •DUPLEX 3Br house. prlced condo. lo bma,.,..,2~t...fam.nn, ·
~
COATS.e. WALL AC£
REAL ESTATE . INC
W\l1a. tlnplace, D.R. Patio & 2 Bl"OOkvl...,. a BR, I~ S., open hie Sat/SUD 11·5, SHQllCalST
CJl.40l7uraA'4'1'tRMl£\' !fu 'f~~~~T: ~~·=· anxioua. _.. -~"......,' -·--IM0-'73S9 71t-o761 4 bdrm rim, 2 ba, CUil PanulJ room, cnckUnr ~/cptlt Mlf cln ovea n~. atudk>. Sweep-+ •••• 3 BR I 2 b a . • Ir.. 1mooth:'coolc top, dth lnl atau;c•ae to mt1r ~ .
Nlce2 Br bousew/yard4s work•hop 11 ar. 171 Wlflr, m!Cro tOlanea nr childrea. auitn. Chef I patio btwn new 1paclou1 Mainolla. '72,500. Br p 0 0 l • t tr• r l n 11 : klteb.en. Formal dine.
4 car 1araae with 2.Br. owner.840-7114 • •DriSllcl«'f. auto iar•a• Exec:. decor thruout ;:::r:: over· IJ\lt\ com• cfooc-.IOO. ~ nnanct BKR taz.5511
). 511 Acacia. A1k· WHYllMODllJ avaU.OwnttlC'J.l.. BEAUTIFUL·58r, 38a.
nial0.000. Ph&TS-05!'1....:_ Buy t.hla up1radid aid .......... lffdl 1040 ram rm, cover.cl paUo.
Oceanvlew lu1tUtY 4 BR1 • eitpanded· Freedom ••••••••••••o••••••••• many•trUM!-lMS
Ba, home w/8 frplc •· Homa. Now hu 4 Ml&;C&.IAM
newl)' _decorated 4' bedrma. 2 baths, fplc:, UYllMlll I"'-1044 ;~~ga~~';' appt. recreation room & over· :tl)tf.kllnC 8 ., 8 Parll •••••••••••••••••••••••
•-------1it4!d 11ra1e. C•ll "°"' Huottn1ton. Ctnl. air PO~SPA ·
MeM I 014 540-Ull Cc;Od, ~pula.r hard io and • whole lot mor•
· ... ~ .... HERITAGE
. . ~£/\lHH,.._,
fln4 Qu11wa7 Model, '* dh thll 4 bedroom abow1 Uke • inodtl. SAN MIOU&L In tba
Ptiated latalde •CMit. Im· a.\JCt ol lrtlnla. Call
tJ1ac J bdr••· ••• for&bilia.t.DaotU>ta .... •~•l• fml1 rm .U,pea.lb'O'll t..d1r:::.~ I ~-~c:_,oo martli~at ~ ~14H4fl. • 'Y'W
-
red hill ~,:.:.
~52 ·7500
TwoBedroonu ';.
RanchoSanJoaq -2.Woodbrid1e M15
Rancho San Joaq $C95
Woodbndae ~
Peter'• townhomes 5525
Rancho San Joaq p
Three Bedroomt
University Park
Unlvenlty Park
Detri'ldd "' Woodbridae U1S Ckncellcr Hom• _,
C.mpm Vt.rt 9'00
V\ll&&e 111 25 Woodbridae _,
1'urtJe Rock ~
~hoSanJoJQ. M
Turtle Rock -· Four Bedrooms
OUlverct.a. M'1S .
Unlvtrtlly Pm IGOO
1'tttlt J\ock 1821
red hill ......
'1'•7 • l''iOO . HOWAITIMG ...
/mo.
a'JJ ... -= 1441
ii 1 1
&..ifiM... 3%IOS.a..tde 327' ....................... ··~···········••t••••••
t.MSIJ0"10M 3br, 2bp, 2 bl~k• to
· £ s; Hilla Townb... ~Y };~~ :!':· t'lu~~~~~~~~~I ~will .bold 2nd TD. . .• ., ... I uu--MT 1--...,.-~~~~-1 call l>UdJ.., St. John .... flOW, "'10 mo. "~' ~v et th• il"omeaelle-;:: · M Rg.,._TOU4~·:Uoo ::!. ~~::r. ~; =?,'l
!'JcUlOorbm495-•729 Ne\v t•nl\lie, ~n vl~w. BR.,m.Mo.
&.ai... MigYef 3252 s Br 2'4 Ba, poola, patio. ll{Y.._GRUNDV ;;.,-;;; ................ suomo.~ R~ •• ~·
Lovely a br home, tie
$.525/ytty. Nwpt Hah
38r, fom rm, 2ba +boa noraae.
$850/yrly. Oceun Cron
home, super cond.
B<tnns
11100/mo. on the Wutc
Condo. new shar
2Br+den. view.
WATERFRONT HOM~
CaU631 1400
•
.... . --...
. ••
,. ~ ,,
-r
.. .
..
•
'INTll·~. h'M-..
yrs upr. n f1. Gea
511·111'
------------• u •.&..-.J'"""-..... -.... -~---,_.nemonoa. &rlmmlaa. a:htcll up ~ llowl•! -~-• ~ .. .-.. al· toA;iiQ&. fr Nl. llc/1111. 111 Horm'• l'aputlaA•la.c. h'I· SiH• lNt. Ou art=sHfn. Tonyl0-$1.Jt IJl klDds, &eeat. State price• varp 'fl/you
Uc: S30IJll. W-170~ or nHdl frvm e tom i--. ;
evallable. o.. .,...., d•nup~ ---·•••••••• .. ••-. r ·vln • D•m ••Uca. Lt ~ cf '1&1-40: Math Tutoc' K.ath 21y...,, lbaleworlt. plaot cut. ~ .r • P11JnUt PaPeri111. 2' )'fl VIT!\OC PAINTING. exp Call.fSUitecerurled 1---------1 party bolt-'9, batten· NrV'I Harbor uu. St Culom, Re1lcl/C011l'l, ~ache'r. n4..-l·~ ;
den. dwilftun. tooU, Ur Wil lie l8"ll Refs roro Qual work, free eau.
airport trant llc'd. ••••H• .. ••••••••••••• tcz.ZbS · ·· Me-21111!11. '131"'78Seve1. . TUTOIUNO ..
uytjme M2-~ ~~·~·Planttn ....._. ,...-. ~· In Learninc Ali . floulMJ &li Bric Conerete Patio Koo w I es Paint In I· •·-··~·;f.;9••••••••• cap. Call 873-3989. ~
n-ce •_u bt •, 0w"' Bleck all1 BBQ Pita flJl/Ext. com mtrcaal U'll'avN"'AT P"..,,..H MA....t.....-......... -'--
R d ""'"• r-.ia e,.re s. n a... ...... ..... .......... aplt r eaid~•ll•I & ·-• ... •·u " ...,_.... --""W bt .... MW fOOlr. We'll 1te. an y • ftl·$7n, tr&lll.8'f.487ljin)'thne nc>S, .,.... .. ,........,.'" rnobllehomet.a:Je.1120. JOBSarTEXTIJRE •••••••••••••••••••••••
c 'lla1na snue. oU SOiie ol .. nhii. yard re· a..1188 • • • . Block bric« tlumP1lone Freeesl 8831438 Olli. Student needs work. •rwt. '8 cSoO 'l &1Ka cu c19... Reu prie•. CaU c-w;..; • J Fr h• I Homeclearunc by reliable 1' 1 I t • Paint Y _. Catte GlH• me a chance will
t.o cov rt.he ~V.Wf.¥. att.er•.&tt-210t 1";7ciu~~'. etc~r mu•: c:oupM. Bel=~ Call ;i"a,!iole a;u·l~!: AveraceE.xt.rlSlry$395 looflng do good job. lnliExl. •
Call Cortcret~ Jle. blelt.eou. Fence1, bldg'1 MM81Jorl walltw4.)'e. ~xpertl.Y In aStoryS4tS,lnlr145rm ••••••••••••••••••••••• Reas.rates.615-211191
)llvaaten,"2-IU& S~ Idle~· with a removc!d.M7·20M Housecleanin&. Mature, stalled • 1pecfally Pncealn•lrutr't.Jabol' Repe1rs Lie " Jiu; All ldJ 1 . b w you wan\ aa 0.UyPUot 11liedAd. experienced, reliable. priced. Free eaUmatea. Guar/Insrd. Freeesl. types. Free est.. Walt. SELL Pe Cltema,11wedit da DaJIY PiW Cl...uJW.. *2-6578. Cl4Ssl0-4 Am M2·58'71 po wkly, re!s 536-0950 536-98Qt, ~ Ted »2-0134 or t3~h7085 Qill anyllme. 541.5930 Dall1 tlot utu1 A ·
!!!~.'! .......... !?.~. ~~~ ..... ?!.. ~.!!~, ... .?!!~ ~~~ .. J .. ?J~~ ~-~~ ..... !!!~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~!.~ ..... ?~.~~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~!~ ..... ?!.~! .. Ori.llldu~lll•rn? ART Stlfdef\t ma le or ~· . • ' ' ' '• CLERICTYfltST · COok, for evenlnc meat, 1 GIRL fflIDAY Needed Larae DAILY P ILOT ' ~ltMtOhotKelplln• tetn. 3 bi's: 3 days a wk. ~TB.LR CLERICAL Expanding Mortgage Co. t" 2 ~=· 890 Wiil5UI 0::C~~~lc~r:a'r\:'aiaa~: )fust oo mature, depen'. ~r!!""*,.r~a~~~:~
2'hra •Y 835-3830 '2.50. Asst I· ~1393 T~iil Bank of OaUr. baa • In Oran1e Count)! has an !J. 0:U ~ i:uJ.1-« !> /Ull\t, dable. ltl addition to Friday, Morninp Satur- .
UNO.A & ViclCI , ._.-,,If 1 .. ,.,.... an 1mmed. openln1 for• immediate openinc for a COOK, lull'Clmo, some ex-540-1W3 secretorial skills, must duy •nd Sundoy. $350.00 •
. Wa need a JUl!Jtbu or ~~er.41\ ttJe HwiL receptionist/clerk typist. per ntceS$1lry. ApQIY tn have a knowledce or aross profll per month ' ~ ...._.. ~ I lor l d ~b.. bl'M\Ch. ¥u.sL hav~ Immediate openmc lor Must type 55·60 wpm p e r 11 o n • D e r b y Dlc;t°"*" Typist payroll & bkpg. Spanish Jdeul supplement ror re: · ,_._,. .. tit ~~e or '\"ne • e"p, lo. CQl)ect~. in· Cull lime clerk/lyplAl to P lease call Cathy Rutauranl. 1282 S. E. Full time. Jrvlne area. helpful, hrs . flex .. tired person or student ·
Sen-itlaallOrenaeCor tnet.ba~lc~l.o°:.:e:~J>; •W1¥f1t&comm.loaos. auilt In the legal ad· Tompson al Uni -Cal 8riltol,CM. Call ror int•r view benefits provld~. Call Must h ave Good •
835-131.3 .1-nt w-v~r h"l-'ul. b"t lnsurans:e & handling verUainadepanmcnt. Mortga,e, 714-963-7873. 751·3800 Ralph, 58l·Z2CIO automobile and '"'" 00. '
---O'lln-......-• .,.. ,. DMY'.J Qualified appll· E 0 E ·· COOK -' ...,., • REl..AX1NC&1ASSAOE notnec.Co.paldbeae/lt. ~an\s; p)•. conhcl: l\\ be \ · . . . D1tTJJlYSUPllV. Go·Go Girls le Coinbo cosh ut!posll .. Call
Bob Jal}les. an~ vac a tlo1u, Cole '46-71..218 for •PPI· u.st cap&b • typtst CLllK/TYPliT Health care raclllty Lie. Req. Apply, Garlaeld Dancers. Good ·tipe 4t 642·433.1, ask for c1rcula
Lac.Ma\teur instrum e n ts Corp. ' WtthlSMSeJectric. Insuratace Co. In HWlt. Beach. Call Mon Co"v. Hoap., 7781 waaes.944-6644 _h_on. ______ _
Outcalll9·941M·5U1 " 6C2·8680 ~,,_ p "IMI At>QJfy lb work well w1t1t Newport &ach ndl ball· thru ffl., &AM.ZP)L Garileld, HB.847·9671. LEGAL HCP TINE
.AUTO D ... "' .. Y .._..!i:ll$ '• det.atted matc:.tr\al 1Mpor. 111~ clcrlt w /&d typin& &n.3515 Ex\, 43 GUARDS Energetic ind1v. sought. *MICHEU.l'S* · -CY ,. ~ .. Sr.l has o.-.-nlng b 1· a t•-•-10 key. Ev pr. DfUCTOtt. A... c t M •· fiTJ'~ Rec~Nefo'ipaper 4 tn ~-.. ~-· u b. b taot.. A 1 1tr tom.. ,.. .. ,. COOKS osa eaam ""' ror varlety poa. • OUt~all Mat1•re e J\ I!: J300/. r 1n b.~ \Alllt& ,..eu ~ •nc work deadllftes ls euen• pre(, but not nee. SaltrY 0.Y~M PrOCJ"9M Permanent. f\111 Part· w/1nrJuent1al practice.
JOAM·2AM 731..f482 Mull av:rr'!uable ~; fotln·P.~1 yeueraba·-~lav· CW· t.os:;cJ()orc~mmensurale ~~oTu~,·~~y'ionE.•s;::,, Cerebr~I Palsy Assoc. ume.Pbone&transpre· Call Marlon Man n , ~31'.lOS • 81 oa .. or '"" n1 wJexpr. vd company ...... Oratage Co. Serving DD q'd. Retired welcome. m.2100. Dennis " Den· ~ leader eiq>. prelerred. ~ual be A~blle rtqulred for benefits. 833-8450 J u 8 n C a P I s l r a "0 · clieo~. MA w /nunlmum Call 546-0tf4, ofc hrs 10-2. rua Personnel Service of
18l55o'. El Camino Real A~mQtlve able t.o work Sat 1• For oce.,Jonal locAll f)ri'Vinii. 49:H95t 1 yr upr in DO in Closed Wednesdays: Jrvllle, 2082 Michel1on Sa"£1!menpt~~Uc. New De\all Shop needs ~~"t •1~'1°4 8~\1114~i· COCKTAfl. QiunterGlrl/1lrl Fri. supervisory posit.Ion. 3 •u"IDS Dr . ..... ap .~.._.,....., help. :J~e, . · · · Salary commensurate WAllltESS Jndep . Print Shop y r s ex~" In DD & w ,. •---------
Topwana paid. En(ine E. · · with p;ul work ex· Leam1n40hnlhemosl Newport Beach. Full superv.lalonaposslblere· NB.facillly.Perm.Full LlGA.LSlCIETAIY
Steamer&. enJ palntUs. OAftMAJO Nl1t1.t.t, beer le perlence. exc1llt1g, alamourous, ume. &U-1212 or 931.2227 quire an e 11 t. Sa I ar y & plt.Jme. Unlrorms rum. Sm bu1ine111 litigation
Wren & pollfht1rs. UJ>" wine. Experience. The highly paid proCesa. D•y eves. wknds. SlS,200. GOO<I benefits. Teleph & car rcq'd. nrm ta Newpart Center
holat.ery 1hampooere, LOI TM, 549.9446, btwn Contact Mike Tinsley at or eve seasioM. Place· Malj reaume to 30aG West ltet!red ok. Call 833·4893. seeks exper.'d 1..eeal
cheek out, pick· up & de· 91\M & UAM 642-4321, E•l. J33 fol' In· mcnt assist. Good Job op. C 0 UN TE R GI R L . Har ver'd. S anta Ana, blwn Sam & l pm ror Secr•tary or trainee.
MASSA•E
FIGURE MODELS
ESCORTS
OUTCAU. O .. L Y
63 f·ll ft
llV1!ry. Apply at tcrvlew appotounent. por P 1time. Capt. Mikes 'b 92704 appt. Must have xlnt skills
20GVHmrbor81,CM BARMAIDS; Di.r. Night Calf7f4 /751~91'4 Fishl''r§.815W. l9thSt, H ANDYMAN . Mesa ~ll~daat640-QMJO •.(
645-1030 I ' &Jtelief..Shilta .. 'call for o••tY PILOT So. Call!. Cocktail CM DIR.OFHURSIS *KAREN'S* .......__ apPt.548'·7181 ~ Waltresaes, Inc., 1'1922 SNF elC'pcr lence pre· Verde Conv. llospt. 661 Legal Sec'y for nttorney • • ''""~tt.nnySt/ Sky Park Bl, Ste C, Co u nt.er l(irl, dr/ (crrlld. Apply, Garfield C~t:rSt .. CM. lnNptCntr.JBM MagA, 1 OUTCALLMASSAOE AVON Bllrmafd pa\'ttlmcdays& ...,.,,.,. .. cleane .... Exp'd pref'. c l , .• ft 7181 ----xlnllyplna 6446006 '"''""'"· -"'xper preC'd. COstaMesll,Ca It. lrvine.''a927t.a. unv .• os,... Hos"'ltal central supply ---.... · 6PM 2PM 973 0893 .. ..... r. "' Fashion Clt:uners. 145 E. G ..... 1d ...... •u1 ....... 1 11 -----. . . S43·4S2'7. Equal Op~unl.ty lllth, CM arne · "0 ·'" ""'"'' • check. Exp necessary. LYN'S & AIDES
EXCITING RECORDING ..__ • .,. ·-" c.a.507 '-,_ t E mp oyer ,. __ u.-.11 Waltre1,1 Eve & night ahllt avSall. F\111 lime part time all ABOUT BEAUT Ctn'Ui ~-·-,. n IJeauty·n Ou-S yllst want· "'-••911 COUPLE t.o manaie 42 Appiy in person. an ' G 'i I
cCl\c1cJ\ 11u .... ., .. Earnlne~areeood·bOu.rs ~for Laguna Illlls f;\illtlme&partUme.In· unlts.38R apt+1mall · DRIYIR C,1ementeGeneralHosp shifts. Apply, arfed ~ ~""'( ,,_.._ 0 -'bl .h • 511to..1o•y 0 ... LY I L Conv. Hosp • '1T8l .. are eiu e w en XoU re 0n.8.T7·2t'lS tervlew btwn S & 6:30, salary Call9·5.833-9312 v" ,. " 654 Cam no De os Garfield HR 847.9671 •SHAROM'S* an AVON ropresen· CUUU~tTYPl~ l •Tues IJ'lru Sunday. 2530 Deliver Dally Pilot Mares,S•nClemente · · UTC tatJve. Call 540-704l or Bltlcpr/olc. Mat. w/exp in • •.. W Coastllwy, NB CUSTODIAN bundles to carriers. Re· ---:\Wl> needed for elegant.
0 A4~~ASSAGE Zenlth7-L3S9. A/C P•Yable, Rec. IN$1JRANCt p lime. Approx 3 hrs. qulrea van or large HOUSEKEEPER·Llve• J>l.'n\house condo. m NB. :-------~~~-~-I~~~~~~~~~~ pqbo~rd Sfltem, qrtly CofledlOft R.,. ~1(Jn thru 1-,rl. Apply, waeoo and a good driv· tn, Laguna Bch hse. Parl time. 25 hrs, s ~
SEEKS w lth d ·at t ax r etu rn .tc. Gd Expandln~Mortgageco. Pennyaaver. J.660 Inc record. Phone drive,2ch•ldren494·3138 days/wk. En&lishspeak·
inguished ~!ni1%,;,an1 t~ S,l!tyaJj•~0 mca:~e•r::a~ ..-~phone. NeiU Neon • CIJIMS · in Orange Co'!\has an 1m· PlacenUa. Costa Mcaa 642·4321, ask for Harry · onl s.t6 9500 d le ro m ode\ r~.~m4 mediate openltut for an Seeley. Equal opportuni-~ekeeper for disabled ..!.!!.g_y_. __ . ___ _
a r er m · 1l 1:02 days per wk. 1ndmdual to do collec· CUSTOM DRAPERY t,y Employer lady. Short hours. MAJ D S . Top wage . -559-~U '1e-. 11r,l\ed · my home. Bookkeeper, full chrg PROCESSORS lion work m the field INSTALLERS Expr'd, 979-6798 Laguna ~'.?,l_e29961. ftertOMll S..-.lcH 5360 ~fn COM 675·1ill tbru flnacial statements. FHA. VA It Convenuonal Cull lime 547·6752 8 am to Drtver. fork llft loader. HOU S E K E E p E R .,.,...
•••••••••••••• •• ••••• ~Y$JTTER wa~ted. ~i:!sc::~lul. CmorthgagTehs. Contact 3.0·T448pm'a r~:d~:.~~·8~~:~it~ Mature, 3 to 11 shirt in'--~-~-A-IDS_W_A_NT_E_D_ ~._ture woman. Noon to a.... t'9ot 111..... at Y 0 m P 5 0 n · DElJ Help wanted. Apply File appl. at Cal·Turf euest home. CM 1146~716 Don Quixote Motel D VORCE r-·~chi a"e chll..i .. en. BUSBOYS-P f.'••-e. CM .. .,.. t .......... ._ 114·983-7873 Equal Op· b •. r ~ • "'" H•11 • iu peraon twn. 11 "' Inc. 9870 Trabuco, Irv. HOUSEKEEP ER. Full 2100 Newport Bl, CM eatc tr area. 63'q.01s lcNB. Day ornlgbt1h1n. ••el1119 at WcD....U por. Emptoyer 4PM. Tradewlnda Wq . 581'2260 Le~a!Typln&Secvlce dS. Chat1Je'1Chlli.54t·0351 D= <rs Ill J•a:tlF60lt --....--~----Ume. Mesa Verde Conv. •lntenance Person . TypeServe·.Flle .,.. ..,. COMMlsSJONSALES Store. 6710 W. Coast Hocpt..661Ct!olerSt.,CM m ust be ener getic
...
...
Complete Guoranieed BOb)'Jltter, matur4!, r'e&;f." aVsBOY Now acceptJ.01 leocW Are Yo 1,1 a P R 0 • Hwy. NB DRIV~va in· ~ chlld 11 ti E Ji'ESSJONAL Sl\LES eornc. ~rly morn. de· Housekeeper 1' Compa mawreptl"IOnfordetail· ·
-
645.·9580 f"''L .. ~.~~a""'.~·~56° ::l~ruJ.8 l>fs~s~all •f:; N,r-a ... •MM,..-. J!ERSON:r Can you sell ~ntal Secr~l.l'Y/Book· lJvery LA Tlmea.,. $300 nion, roe eld •IY lad . log fine cua • JJhop • •
"null •J ~ FURNITUltE? Want teeper'. Matute-4lxpet. le mo.CM54S-0770 Qoo Llve tn, 5~ da,.. pwilnL Position avail Im ¥Pl-~~.ell.ye> i •1pltt. c• flt• llC• xlni Income opf)Ot'tunlly hl1hly motivated. 4 Day mo.+. ~aUt~ ref'ar• med. Apply In ~son.
8ANK • ' C'anfeta ''alelr. 'Photo ~ ............... w /tot at boraetlt pro· week.$;'6:3()()() Sedroolc ,,.. • .,. q'd.@.9·3861or494""409 The Ferrari St.ore Inc·
Retlrln& exci: couple. lttUsb'gi Count.er exper. ltd to Wclworit ~ • sram? P lus pleasant Denf .. Ailhtent •Technlc191S Wl E. Pomona St .. San·
from Artioop consider· ~lRllMCtD tletplul, full Co. benefits. Mth-•"-.,......._. wotldnt cond's.? 1' you !\Jll time. oxper In front Baclc&rnd dlcltal " HOUSEMAN Cln ntnc, ta Ana.~
Ing thl~ area. Would like P.ARTTIM. J)Jfl time. CaU for appt. .. •r. lte thit op-qualj(y you can sell at: "baclc ofc prof'd. Xray a n a t o a cl r c u i t r y. housek eeper porter . MAIMTIHAHCE to houae slt. be( maklna • ... OOS.3334. C:.: 1 Y .. J.C. Penney U u--··led fl Oiverslfled work toad fn Exp. Mt req'd. Pis. call deciliton. Xlnt ref's . TILl.Cll • .,, you ... .,. 24 Fash10ntsf4nd, c nee. IU""" i 6 0 D· de9lgn & testing o( In· for appt.645-5000,ext.520 ro11 . open Mon-.f'rt.
. Please call 67S.7293 CAR WASH I-"'-ffw. tt.... N rt n -h suranu helpful. Salary t.ru tali 12AM-8AM -.. ewpo ...,ac · open. Mon-Frl,6"42·8880 5 men on. INSTALLER l'RAlNEE MCDONALDS
Trfl'ttl -5450 UHlnD CASHtmtS ~-.,. •, ..!!~ .!." ... ·~~-.: Priorexper required. ap· A:i;i~~~~l~ril.c~-~1f fOf' window l1nt1n1, start 161166 Beach Bl, H B
••••••••••••••••••••••• CALIFORMIA IAHI( t ·~ """'' .---• ~. l~&~~':.t~tfoihru DENTAL ~ISTANT for 646·7165 E 0 E JZ.50 hr, raltcs to SS. hr Call ror Interview
Nd driver to share drive Part·,..~:a·y 111 ta..._..cen•W'S Pedo Proctace, expcr · · · wlthlnlyr,over2l tall& (714)847·9100
to F.,.,condldo. orr It on 22~0c ..... ~ METROcARWASH tt.e U. ..... Nd hw COMPUTER ~1.~tia!t~f~t~c5-~4d. EMGfMEIEAING :.~expor helpful. ----Retlable.ref&.~7~ 098"9 2950Harbor,C,M. 'roceHlflt lto1,ttal OPERATOR --DRAFTSMAN Manufacturinl
ln...,.._ttta. 17141494•650 • flltdlcal cf.tnt1 fOf' Exper'd. Street \)tans lft1Ur'9te•
QD .. llllJ ..;foy_.., Swmg ihlft. 2 m. job Desl1n. Tent. Mapc. AP· Fire ~ Casualty• in·
~ ~UR) OppOrtultity •••••••••••••4••••••••• Em"loyer SchooQ' • , ____ II" __ _
ply ln person w /work depeftdem. aieocy Meda
---'--'-------1 1a111ples. Robert, Beln, qualified ... ency claims W\Ufam Fros\ & Assoc. -1401 Quall St, NB. person, Xlnt beneftlt, ftr09'WNMM
......... 1005 •••••-,•••••••••••••• Bfnldnc Trainee
Math tutor. Horae tutor· GH&4 Y ALLIY
inc by exp'd tchr. ?Ul Ambitious per.on. can
thru Jr Coll. 1183-1'25 ctim)> ,l,o Areal bel1~t1 ---------wtnew branch ofc. Cf',11
Jobi W..ted., 101 Kiate xku. 833·2700, ••••••• ••••• ••• •• •••• • • Dcn!US. Denni$ f'ert6n·
Man 2$.deslrH work. us rlel Serv ce ortrvlne, 2082 to trtln. fast l••Nl•r. Michelson Dr. , ________ _
Thft is mt HCtHHt. '°""":T' f ct~ ....... who w to won tiwd ESCROW
Sl.000
Caeh bonua for qualified
escrow offl.cer /mana1er.
Wdl known r qale com·
pany. 1ood benefi u,
pleasant working (Ondi•
Uoos. No fee to appll.
cant. Escrow P...onnel
Cletrrtn1 Houae. 73N530l
salary ()pen. K•Pft" nee
CaUMni. Batet'.~~ When you think or
numer ical control •,
maehtne profummtnr .
think of McD01MJell
Dougla11 Your op.
portunilleii here are ex·
tensive; yoursnlary, lop
fU&ht; your ~efll"I, aut
lltandlnf
fantastic qb\llty. ca11, _______ _
John. 21.a. 592-5~1 O p ein1ni:1 s for
experienced APT
..
..
• II
1 ...
-
. ' ~ ' . ~ ',, '' -·
-----------
Lal • I 1•11 tt e. llal Tei a.
........... L.L ~ ,..-..r. l&MlG• W/Cflt~UH dnl n • ---. ...... 11 --ifti AJIQla -\OIAN LSI .,,U.,1Htllf88
WOOot..o 14tLt.9
;, wl'O•T llACH
r\ '•·'I ,-,-. ........ -.-~
•''I' • ••'' '' I
f19"1!JDW 1C0:1Mtr. Wallnm WH'if \t f~~~---•• .. IMO. •BT. BBJ • tood6 OlVIJ. ==..,...·:-o.~~ Btcl,c:oml)M•m.
WM. FROST 111 ASSOC. Call "--lltwa i•a: ..;-;;.:-~;;..;.lne.=.;;.; .. ;;;.,.;...;..--.---1 Refril -Dull 850 " 54M4 1401 Qlaa,IJ ., NB ~ a.maa , 1 mot old. men. P1l142·1*
'$ 11DSkJpu'll vd. STOCK CL IUM'IUICIC WwtboUlit Jc.all.._ Wat«btd.ldn11l•.te1m·
si.101 Irvine ORlVO. Pull time for STOCK ea.mo ~•t•, Stlll ln wam~J·
-ON~ npat ce ln
R. &.Sa.lea
•Koowledae or U1e
Oun1• Co. bou1lo1 .... ..w
LSIUIE, Equa.l()ppf'Emp6oy•r small m1Dutacturla1 COMTIOLLa «.o ENO 8JlEE'PDOO. OO&e¥9"'-!SSI
vlant. in Hunt. Beb. ....___ ..... .-.. __ ...._. Mate, t ma., pa~n. MOVING! Bunltbed• Ir alelldJn1rubloo1peclal· .. .s3Sl --................... ebotl.bomcbrolc GOO old l1 •&ore wlU open it.a flnll--------•I foe' bully l>ockahop oper. ~ en. • mau,....., • "'°'-· OranJI• Co 1ton ln SlUDDITS--IOIS Call BW Ibey m.2100. SlOU. l40-l.15t
NEWl'ORT BEA.Of on Secretar•1es FOil SUMMB Dcnn1I a Den~I Penoo. 9slrinler Spaniel P\lpp1-J Dnucrl. minor. coftee
•P\all 'nm• Cal"MI' Com·
mdmmtt
Aasaat11t, 1m. w.on.,. P/tlme ror suuo per ne1~o11rv1n..aoa AKC. a wh, abole, tablea. btDCb. 21 .. BIW
.oppar\'4Nt)' to joaa •• mo. Growm• ro. Must be MlcbelJOG Dr. IM-197$ TV, dtalr .le ottoaaao,
PfrMEDIA
BROADCAST
BUYER
Weotrer:
•Full time mau&cf .. ~•nd attention •CompeUtlve comm.
tchedulo
a~-!~l<»T._!f':.~ !leists Iii-. Call JOAK·lPM. WeneedlOpeoplewboan Sprlar•r SpanJel .. AKC burnldlller.5Sl-41Dd
::a;;:' .. (o'r :btctt:~ 71HS1-828:S · at least 10 lbs ovt r• ~ .. •hlle. m. Ari Prov. All wb.lte velvet
are acce:g:1n1 appllca· p &Stal •STVDDITS• ,.ellbt. C.ll K1. 8'ooe at IPl(,91().Z9S.'J aora. Very Cd cond.
MEDICAL NF.WPOfiT RJo;ACH
ll.lot. S>O*ltlOf\S avl L o t: I\ T £ D
tbruout Orance Cly. For AOVP!RTJSING AGP.!N
'
...... ·-a 11 1s1.s11s. We can tell )'OU ..... -...,..., req re'""'' • · ---••--Full or p/t1mc to di. bow to IOI• pou.nd8 6 ,,_ .. Y• ICMI ----------
lnl backl1'04lnd: a! i' •J ;• lnbule zap code dlrec-earn mooe)' at tbe a&JD' •• .. ••••••••• .. •-••••• All wood Mediterranean
•StabUityoh lar1eco. .()pporWnlty ror advan· cement.
L:-!~$00.1$ •k'Aw1 i tortes ln own area. Need bme. Loveable blll/Wbt m ix mirrored caoopy bedrm ~.. ---· • acceu to car, over UJ. brtd female, IO·Ulba, Mt. Sl.300. G97·2'338 <Hoelery,Handba1•" ll41C..... •• S3 50 per hr. (71') WORK P/Ume without loves klda must have
OetterJewelry) 54M741 839-0700. ne&lectinlYCK&rfam.Uy.2 aoodhomedayw552-11U, Korean chHt. bran
lltti""4fa Ap I <Acroufrom t.o3evea.perwk.8ffll~ ev•MO-..,.,Llnda hrdwr, Ideal liquor·
mcndeti.11.t • CY JS LOOKING 1''0R A
DR PERSONNEL PERSONABLE JN·
l.201 W.LaVtta,1te208 DIVIDUAL TO BUY
Oran&'t 6339740 ADVERTISING TIME.
Vor conf1de0Ual lnt.ervlew nwuau:i pare OranJ•Co.Alrport> STUDENT, tor yard Fuhlon1 provtdo chtoa a·&oraae.
Equal 0ppor Employer work. Cleanln1 care • educaUonal tralnln1 • Lovtnc home needed for 2 2UISSMllM
MOTORIOUTI
"ftle Dally Pilot hae a
Jarce route In M111lon
VIQJo a ... a. 1ood ror blab i.chool or colleae student.
Approx earnlnas $200 per
moalb. Call &42-<C321 and
leave name and phone.
HEAVY PHONE, TYPE
ACCURATELY. MON.
ntRU t'Rl.,4 TOS HRS. EVENTUALLY WILL
TURN lNTO FULL
Tl.ME.
& Foundations boata.875-8991 free umplet. Car &. Sllvertlp Oerru. s-----11---.. --bro--phone nee. Call ror S. Shepherd. Adult male 6 .-~e v. rm.--. wn Lufltnffl SUPERVISORS tervlewappt.Ml-'lf'fO. rem.5CS-21111t.eva. orw1~7 ~ aaoo. M8 &803 .a•• SECRIT ARIES! Production & tnspecton. .,;..__----"~----... ~
Men's Clothinli' Openings pruently extst We will train. 842·6830 Yacht RISPl"'EJCper'd Pemale s:e•~ ~!t,~: SoUd maple din/set MO., z
6 at our Santa Ana facility Tailor S...,. s.llRfJ Sp. 11>9)'ed. b1 Blk naui. chatn, MO. ea.. MY STROM
ASSOCIATES Res~urant. & Sportswear for secre.tarlal can· SILVERWOOD$ 546-3602 ~ 2deska.GO.ea.83l-0168 didates in several I Lab/Shep fem 1pa1ed engineerln& areaa. Wiii SecretarJ. entry l•H • well • lned. Ail NICE hort Colored MllliRlrY maintain all neeessary flt'fflON ISLAND mu•i be take·charre ~~a Couch. Good price. HIGHT CLERK P9"IOta111l ACJM1Cy
;n Hours per week. Call 3723 BIN:h SI.., NB 5'6·9471 or apply an 557.0045
COOKS Ii
COUMTEa
PERSOHHEL
(WlgStyll11t/xp) files and records, pre· IW ~ype.ppt$50MOO. 9'19-0t'l& • 642-9138
pare special reports; re· We have full lime open· ora . UDt--.llli.lF. 7-.eka Social En11rayjnn quires typing speed 50 inas In our Newport/ Advertlalnc old-Part ·~IAMESE . GocroteSGle aoss
•' • wpm. ability to operate Fuhlon l!lhind store for Cl.ASSIRID ~ •••M••••••-••••••••••
Part·Time, Full·Tlme ~ ... -.. Woman's oil orr1ce eqwpment. 2 experienced Tallora. ,,.._.IS LH Sbortba MoY-~
person to, C'oral Reer 100?0 A p PLlCANT \totel, 2645 H11rbor Bl, FREE
(.;.M. See Eb or Sbirley1---------Days&Nl1hta ~~· years lncreosln&IY Xlnl ulary & benefit PH"" A GERMAN tn, re-Choltt Itouecbold &
Apply In Person: Women's fine responsible ciencal an· package. Call Mr. Webb, Loolung ror a career! sistered. Need 'ood Collfl:tor-. ltema. Wed PUI I& TRNIE 2.5pM d /or secretarial ex 714·6'4·242'. E.O.E. Fast 1rowln1 Orfnac homes. Call a t er Thurs Fri Sat 9-4 • NewDynam1cCorp,look· Active pos. for en-..,.. __ _.ay-Satur .. -y A I nanence. Pertee orrera Count y 1roup ·or •:OOPIU5l•l4M 2l7JumbteAve:CdM ma for eaier youna man th u k g ~ _.... ..., p~8 ~ 1 t Tel ho Sal newspapttt <circulation to learn valuable trude in ~•aa c pus .. see m permanent emp oymen.1 ep RB 8$ 210,000) la looklnl for a Lr1 Dob/Sbep, male. GARAGE SALE·. 21•5 'I c h •-Can prestiae eo. Call Sally C •RL'S JR. We are 1 so acceplin° excellent tralnln° ana Verv 1entle Love a " :!"innedu.s'::y:oar:'atop. Clark,833-2100,Dennisli "' appllcullons co~ oulstandlng be.neflt Workp1llme . .E11mexlra motivated, expr'd ~lrcbUd·e.S7CM Rural Pl. CM. Rot.
110rtun1lyfor pen1onw11l· Denoia Peraoooel 8C>Z2Adama BEAUTICIANS'" our package. Pleue con· c&llh In our circulation cla111fled aaleapenon. . mower. Lott of Junk 1n" to work. 631·30lS3 Service or lrviDe, 2082 Beauty Salon tact; 8111 Kysor, (714) aalot room. F1exlble bra Good apelllnt A lfJ>lnlZ Pllll pup blk male 2Z mo. cbup. • Mlchelsoo Dr. Htmtlniton Beach, Ca 540 _83~0. 17021 Von AM or PM. Men, women nec.Sa.lary+comm.Xlnt Nda lovlo1 bome. ·-~----to-AlcM ___ _ d111aya!!!;!686-~26S~·~1~e::v~e~s--.I--:-:--::--=-::=-:-::=--.. tud •· 18 "---"'•• ...... • ----------• We orrer an excellent KJrman, Santa Ana, CA. ors en.... or ovr. company u.:"'""1... 875-._. •
'IGHT .. -1 •--' 7PM REALEST.ATE ·--------·1 M0-0301 LATlmea For»ppt.callD.S~ Must 1e everythlnr. N '"' pwan....:u. compensalion plan In· , • rCC <714l53'7-7S10 Doberman. 4 m os, LoUolf\.DlkyJuoll.llo9 • . to lAM. mWJt be 18. Mae SALESPERSONS RETAIL eluding a hl>eral dl11count Telephone work part WestOrance PublllbCo remale, champ. brffd. Tues. l.hru Sun. 64$-2061.
· Oonald'a, 16800 Beach "--'rtunltv now availa· MAHAGIR on11tore merchandise. IUSIHESS time No sellin". Hourly h Rldd p F e to 1ood bome oow ·-... St c•• Blvd .. JIB. Apply in pers. """" J E y Pll'Jlle upply in pen1on .. AKnl& t er aper re · 1 • ......, ., .. ble for auressive DOUIL DA DAILY 10.12&2.4 SYSTIMS wage. Handicapped OK. EqualOpport. Emply'r _'7»<*11 ________
1 ---------1 salespersons to join a IOOKSHOr t:quaJ Opportunity Cull Georae. 54g..3420 __
:-COW Rccrulllng sharp, progressiveoffice. . 83 FASHION Employer TELEPHONF.
ambitious man to sell CC111My Ii C.nono11mpc1111--'/ A rareer oriented op-SOLICITORS Mlfoc"-dJN llardwarc. tools & shop 1104So. Coa11t Hwy.-portunily with a com· ISLAND E'<p<>t"d mature female •·qwpment to rndw1trlal LAGUNA BEACH pan y that ha 11 an l h di hones & ················ ....... ~~_:........;...;.._.;...:. ____ ,
.1ccounts. Avg SllJO per 497·2457 oulstandlna record oC Equal Oppor l::mployor S.C't $100.$1200 /mo 0 an c P
L......._G-•R.E. ~J>.~~~i11e other alrls. wk. No exper. nee. Call•---------contlnuoua expansion. ~ .... ,. ""° .,__,
7519134. REAL ESTATE Our new Newport Beach -Employers Pay All Fees -
AGIEHT w ANTED at.ore will require a ca pa-Sales Liz Reinders Agency Teder /Proof 0pr
Proft:lUltonal Hies train· ble manuger with good ASSIST ANT MGRS. 4020 Birch St, Slo 104 fmml'd. openings tvall HURSES AIDES retail bookstore ex We r1e-ed two people eit· Newport Beach 833-8, 190 ror aharp, well aroo-ed '"" pro"ram. Separate 'd i Men's Fashions b • •u .111.CountryClubConv. d;ik,: phone. Call per • e n c e · P · n • ~~Ca~l~li~or~ap~pt~/H~ta~~6S~I personsw/minlyr.exp.
-11_06...;;p..;.._S_.A_._54_9_306_1_. --1 Atanaeer, Walker & Lee Responsibilities will in clothing Ii aport11wMealrl Xlnt. l>eneflta Ii sol. call elude ordering, person ror our Westmm1ter a l 64S-53J3 Nursea aides 3·ll & 11·7. Real Estate, Fountain nel supervision, and in· store. Salary + comm. SECRETARY perS:':itofNewport
EXJ>'d "trainees. Mesa Valley Of'Oce. 968-33'1! or vent.ory control. Send re· + profit shartng. Coll F /time. Peraonable. Eq lOp E 1.-Verde Convalesrcnl :w&-1754. sumewil.h 5aJary history Denyer, Mon·Sat, 10AM Strong typ1q & ah nee. ua pot mp..,, ...
tloep.661CenterSt,C.M. r~-:--"'l"\"'fJi1m9'ljf•fa••1">l"(•g•1• to: tn 6PM at THE LOOK, ~ylo person, Robert.~--------1
· -.. -···------PERSONNEL 644 ~ Beut, Wilham Frost " TOOUMG
MURSES AIDES MANAGER ------Assoc., 1401 Quail St, OPPORTU .... ITIES liOROERUES REALESTATE DOUILIDAY So lf'sman. Xlnt op· N.B. "
All Shins. Wiil trnln in· c•REER IOOKSHOPS portumty. hra fle"Clble.
cd di d I ~ lnterc~lin". pleasant out SECRETARY ... _. D .... t__. ter~l '" va ua i.. "'~urity, '-de,....ndence, ...,,. ... h Ave " N t Reh Reall"r •-.,_.,... • J.1d0Conv. <.:enter ~ m r-"'""" door work. Top comm. ewpor " J~ ,<1gdure lldrs l55SSuperlor Ave, NB top income! One vacan· New York, N.Y 10022 Our be~t ulesmen are needs someone to handlf' • ...,,. •
Cc11l G4S-?7&4 cy for hcoosee, achoolfor Equal Opportunity mak•nFt 115.SJO per hr details! $600. mo. Call ·~~le Mallen
......_ __ .unlicensed. See George ~~~E~in~p~lo.yy~eer~~~I worklnl( p/t. Reputable Ronllenry,979-6666 • JlcJft>leMc*~
--------· Davts, Red Carpet :: co w t°/. 11ttr1l1.1vc low· Secretary gen1 orcskllls.
OFFICF. Realtors San Jtian lH/LVH prll·~tl '-l'fVll'l'' & no typing JOhrawk.Jrvlne. Invl"slii:atc lhl"~e or,· IMMEDIATE Capistrano,831·99M. C<lm1X'tlt1on an thts area .... ,,..,.""'.. portunit1c~ today! You II • Full time, part lime. Call 631 1147 8:30AM tll _.,...,._..:..::..:.'"_,,.. _______ , be 11ll•d you did. We'll days & PM. Active ook f t •-l
..... 8005 •••••••••••••••••••••••
OPENINGS Receptionist Geriatric Rehab. J1011pt.1_9_·:io_r _M_w_k_d...,Y_5___ SECRETARY I orwart "' see na
A.TI'YS OFC TINE 642·2'10 5 ... , l!S/ORGANS??? RECEnlONIST ~nc!t ::: :;;~~~~de:: ---~---For Peoalplc Wi~ I The evidence proves RN or LVN p/tlme Coun ~ y ............ ,..__ Typing. Sii, salary com· •i.-... b Friday, between Furniture Stripped fr S.CNtmi • Clenca pou;ed ind1v. cao have • · ....-. au •-"'IW mensurate w/exper, fr. v u v ... nd• Refiniahed by EXl)erta. Swrtchboard,TyplncJ, uxcitlng poa. in try Club Convalescent We are l ooking Cor angebeneflls.S49·3833 Sa.m.a p.m. 752-~dyg.646-8838ev• K h speclallzed practice. Call _Ho_m_e-'-, S_A_._S4_9_·306_1 ___ , several high energy level
---------························ Dtcorator'• 7• corner
waterrall. atlacbable
avallable.
1070
~ °"sa..lll Mini Parker, 833.-2700, RN,permancntP/fime& lndlvlduall for an exclt· SECRETARY McDONNELL App1mce1 8010 ---------•
Data ..-~es·c:a " s Oennla & Dennis Person· On call position avail. All Inc career m the music P/lime Cot Medical Ofr. DOUGLAS ••••••••............... ---------
ChOC>t>c thl' cl.I)"'· week!\ nel Service of Irvine, 2082 shifta. Call Santa Ana business. We a re the irt Hunt. Bch. Can train ASTRONAUTICS CO. 8071
& locution In wh1<'h you Mlch ... 1 ....... Dr. Ornun Exchan,elocatcd Intelligent, pleasant k """" Psychiatric lloap .. wor . f£l ---------S43-848I, EOE in 00) So Cati . reelonal per1'on who can tyJ>C SlOl lol A ltccept/Sec'y, Real shopplni< molls. We offer well. Reply w/re!lume •0 •e.
&tate knowledge req'd RH s.i,_..asor u prestlg1ows career. xlnt lO' Ad #951, c/o The oa1 HunthtgtOft .. och. Ce.
hr preC'd New Resldcn· 11.7.&LVN, Medication!! train 1na program , ly Pilot. po. Box 1560, 93647 ---------
llal Heal F.tltate ofc. Full &trealmcnlsl·ll.Mcsa hl&hbtcomm/1&u11rn.& CostaMesa,Ca.92828 f'RGHT DAMAGED
• ttmc Jnqwre963.o902 _.. c H 661 many fnnae bencrlls We i\n EQ""l Op""rtunllt HCYfPOINT SALE. 3308 ti W v ...... e onv. oap.. . SECRE""ARY ..... "" w w nr "arbor rl"')(?,CZ.:::i..~ "7a -C.CntcrSt, CM 548·5585 rt'Q. profeulonaliam in •• Employer • amer n • --,.-;.~' ~-c RF,CEPTlONISTtrYPISl the art or aelllng & a Exper, con11clentlous~:;iii~==iiiiiiil Santaruia.979-2921 temporcxyseMce WfflcendJ only, call at.er RobWe's leg & Mop t.trona determJnahoo to person needed for all -
833-7755 SPMorwkoda838-336.1or Women needed for 11ucceed. Somo orian phues or ofc work. 911.._VB. &l!.e.,..T HURRY!! • Coldwell Ranker Rldg ..:511.:.1_·3223.;..;.;.______ housecleaoinc .ervlce. keyboard ability is req'd. Shrthnd rcq'd, call Linda 'f'A ,,_.,-s;" •MOVIMG SALE•
ICMO&bcArthur Blvd 548-0757 IC you are the c.ine-<:all Corappt,&40-M70 Minimum 3 yrs expr REFRIGERATORS Desk 5 chra, II 4realer.
SCeD Newport ltch UaphneJett. 5118-7300 ood ood VacaUon travel. Bu.y of. D YERS round tbl ......... couch Room Attendants Sec'y f/t. G pay, C rice. Newport BHeb. WASK.ERS R • •·v~ ' hrs Phone 833-9484 Mon New-UMd·l\epos ltet'eo, all 10Ud walnut Top wages paid' SALES p/time. no exper. · Good Dencht11. Qualified D'"'" ... ..,541.1780 hlthqualJtJ49:M736 1'he Inn al Laguna nee. Will train. S.9PM. thru Thurs 12·3 only plea!'le. 644·1661 u•,~"'
1010
ov1-·1cf.: h\'111 ~ .Ullt!tl. Recept/Gen Ofc
m•turc \\01111111. uo11-1nol.1·r. no pre' 11111:. ,., . Min 3 yn exper. In 1en'l
11t•r nl'L 1>Jrl lime to oCc procedurei1. Enjoy
.. t11rl. korn l 1·1111d1l1ons. telephone eontllcl Ii c.111.111~ i.:11 l"I:! workJl\i under somo pre·
211 N. Cllt Hwy. La~una _Mon-Fri S3+ hr. 531-0811 S£CURIJY l8U Npt Bl, Costa Mua DlftC!IUe ped table, 4 swivel
---CMH p AID yellow /Wbt chain, 2 lcln1
RUBBER PRESS Oper. RDS TRUCK DllVEA For Wshr/Dryrs/Refrif size bdlprda, 4 tubular -----------Day shift, co. beneClta, Sales·Real Estate GUA & Ute bktt. matnt. Appfy workina/not. 957-8133 chrome {J shaped chain
lnclu4ln.C incentive. Ucensed bul ran'l wor~ Weekly P•Y & paid vnc. '" person, Pennyaaver. w/yellowaaddlelabrlc, 1 -1111ure. Should type 50·60
Oii 1l·l· hl'h>. 1 i.:1rl ore. hk wpm accurately. Work
lq.i·i.:. t ll1ng. &. tn> 1'· Able div.rallied lo locludo
lu t"Omf!O'll' ~ood lnM· phones, re11pon1lblllty n•·~is lette1!i. ~r.Jl Bch tor mall dl1trlbutlon,
ll't'lt. ,\ \'ht1n('t.' to J(l'C)W personnel clerical func·
with a i;rowmai <'omp11n} llonl. bllllna. t>tc. Call for Send 1e11u1ttc w :111lul')' appt. tt'Qull'l:mcnt. to Ad •UiJ6.
O.aily Pilot. P.O, Dux ll Schaffer 546-31144
1';60. Co11t11 :\lc1111, CA ORISWOLOCONTROLS
:t.'626 I.JC E. Dyer Rd, S.A.
>rder Desk --F~·Pd F.Qu.al Oppor Employer
.. ILICTIOMIC:S
Perm. Olli: 962-M48 8 to full Ume? We have open Xlnt fringe benefits. HJSO Placentia, CM Apt. alze Re1t11. llSO. Ls• lime greert occulonal
5 m&• for • persons Ir Above avenge wagea. cheslfreezer, lt5. upholstered chalr, lamps
11rowln1 Casto Meaa or Un I f 0 r m & <' q u I p 173-0BM + other ltemt . ..._.5$
flee to start part time rumJ:iihed. Cur & phonl' TYPISTS/ GE double door rctri1 7 .,. cut velvet ~tr)' Our goal ls to help yot req'd, Call (213) 573-9150 _..... xi t hd • """' h • ..1 ...... , •· I
uuw or ocn app · · · · M0-21181 bl-..14191 l0Lo2 ..__me a full time rea f I I t E o E S£CR£TARI£$ .,.,u.e, n co • • r~cnc 11V1a, """•_• • l.
eatale profe111lonal
Whal'" youn? For In Soc'fi/l(enofcCballenalni: Jotnlhoteamthat ofttrs COLDSPOT Refl1r. T~ Movtqosolatate.rura
formation call Tl rt ~.~~~I ''?!i:'fiu~~ri';0 opportunity, ne.. h'9." Freeiet, .15 cu. ft. ... •mtac. Z6M3 Pueo&an-
Muabcr at845-347•. exp. In addllloQ to com Rood pay. CALL TODAY 531-0D80 t.a Cara. &.J.C • .-o:MS
&&.art Tomorrow. •'--'-a ~'1pm. plete rc!lpontlb1111ty for --,.-.. '~Wf-~~-------1
varted duild In 1mall or ~o~ Off i Ce • •••••••••••• .. ••• .. •••• 7 Pt. ~lte, cold tttro BR
flce,)'OUwi.llact1111stt')' 0 overload Super Le Tour U.2 bJ aet Incl. headboard Iii to owntrt. Heavy typlna Schwinn. R1ddtn once, frame, nl11tt stand, dbl •
It dlctaohone Some bk H7.0061 ms. m •>aa.8341 d.reaet mlrrOJ', detJt1
. Switch on ln lb.la edivc RIC.,. /1'Y'1ST
spot for Pllclter w /lnl'l For boot aala omce. Ap
M Also Fee Jobs. Call Utude ror r11ur. dcslra-
Rill Muf, 133-2700, Dea b&e. • doy wee~t ~Ids 1 ----:.--------•
nia " Dmnll Penonnel wlmds. 61$-3212 11on-Frl,
~~ ~e~_bl: 3723Blrch t,N.B ~M ...... IOU ~.rJs.~ Gooa
bendlta. Male or Fem •••••••••••••••-•H••• ---..;.....,------• SM-vice or Irvin~, 2082 D-5•30
Michelson Dr ---------
$1.62 per DAY
n.tt 'I ALL )'OU pay
fora
30dayad
. nth
DAILY PILOT
SERVICE
D RECTORY
Call Tufk for appt, Typist Tot700 llaed Lumba', J'')ca"x22' Baby fumlture. f'rcnch ~ 7422 ~ st..t <220>. 2"xlO"x20' ct>, provincial couch. Color
4"•U"xu • (IO), TV.8f«St8 Fnr nmblllou1 pera. 1 .. x 10 .. x 11 1 U) ~-,,0.....,, ...... ---~-1
l'Cdtlnl aene.roua corp. 2 •. xlO"xl4W' (al), t: Cutom lndlao Colton
Call Barbara Ka~. bracket.I {28) tu.()111 Sol•• loveseat, Z quwa CJ.;noo, D"'nl' " Dt'D• • IOI• beds. WM tttUoet
nia PtrlNIMCl Servl~ pt BARN WOOD. bOf, tocW,AIMricuabdnn
4xfd.; Aeaoea· auttei 't l1m,. 1ame Ntt
.:.:::i ............
'97JDATSUM
2401
nnbhed la allnr 1ra1. a
ol\9 own•r car la lm
maculat• tbr11oul!
t*1KX>. CO fil 'T~ Spydtr, nm, 1ttitco, $3ffl FllM
Crul»e C0111. Xlnt t.1ov· MA19U1$VOLVO CHE'VIOL£T tna to boon1. UlOO. MISSJONVIEJO
.......................
'-.........
OYll 1 ..
..aCIDIS
OMDtvl.AY
~~=t: ....
MERCEDES D~R
88112 Wanchelt.er. • Buena Park
HJ.72IO
On the Santa Ana J'wy. :mtHarbotBlvd. 995-2268 dy1, 962·520 lll·21104tS..1210
COSTA MESA evea • 'St MB UIO, radlala;clean
146-1200 IMW 9712 714. door610, Id. cond., int., nd.uome ~·--·
---------••••• .. ••••••••••••••• • $1.200. O.l oil' ovr lltoO. MZ·T• '-----------WE PAY TOP DOLLAR e7&-Q39.&. By owner. days, gu.2331 eves. •PIUGIOT Factory tnatalled glus
1UdJng sun Roofs. FORTOPUSEl>CARS 'Tt 8210. Ta119 deck, plr '61 280 SL. A/C All·Fll ........
FOREIGN, DOMESTIC 1trlpin1. 16,000 m.i. stereo. ,.1p4. New ena •• 79 p1;!aeot Wason. Financing & Terms avail.
CATALINA AUTO SUM IOOF
16.f6 5 .. lriM, Coste MeM
642-4040
orCLASSlCS 4'H9'9atu New clUlda.. Both ~· If •-t tea Never reslltued. your car .. ex rac n ,..,_.. 972 ~ !B,495/bst oCr. MO· 2S ~my, luxury, atlli·
tee i~ua IUl<:I COMI IM & Sii ••••••••••••••••••••••: dys. &75·M2e evca la ty, au IA one wap. Can
2925 Harbor Blvd THI AU MIW ·74 Dino Spyder l\tl11t PV1 ,_w_knds____ rtnance or Inset ~tJ for
CostaMeaa 9'192500 6JOCSIMOWll! pty Make otr. ~m '74 -280, l\ory color dftaJll. (fQkl7}.ffou.Hof d>•. 631 ·18111 eves wtu ddle int. xlnt cond, Import• 211/121-tlll.
14•suuY ...... SU I A.uto$..-•lce ,... TOP COMPLITI
lmDaCoul Cowl•-Clu Radar equip 'd, 4th of Ju. Docks pa 9070 l Ac~t.-.t• 9400 DO•• "'R IODY SHOP
wkncb srzoo. 1-633-t:m SlHUO 1_l_1_4;.../SZJ-_72'0 _____ _
9710
-1 b' 1peclaJ. Price reduced ••••••••••••• ,......... ~ ... 0 w Golfllll memt>er1hlp thni Uwt 4th. Sundancer ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ OPl!N •••••••••••••••••••••••
NlpOGMloAd "917, Dal en&" hvy dly 0/drive. area moortnf, can han • FOR CLEAN SAODLllAC:K canary yellow, with ~ IUOO/l>1t ofr. Su '78, in warr. Mere crw~; Moorina & boat for uh~. C US~Vf .i"E1itllLT PAID ?1114 SPORT ~'fjf5~
l)' PUot.. P.O. Box ueo $4800 of elec equip die up to 30' Aft 6, FOREIGN CAR PARTS VALUYIMPORTS black vinyl top. 85,00C ~ +~ kl
Oaltdfeu,Ca.92GB (bnnd new>. 100 eal of ~ll:Wl6 /Entin~ Ul·Z040'4'5-494t miles, AM /FM atereo, 1..:.. .. -1~-...__-.._.;._be-.-1t---•• -.-ap-
futl. Outri11era llah pole ITransmlulon1 . ., •--' d I pl 4•-~ .... ..-...-,...,,. ... Tbatmuter broiler SU holden, awlm step, llPI Boat allp av~l4ble N 8. /Rear Endl ....,........,. ua llpea, JDC pear group. radiala.
PareelaJn Bat.broom ._ •tv, Ice box, atandup Ml.Dlmum40 . ITlrea br&kel, map, xlnl Utts. ·, map, AM/Fii 1tueo.
GI. Cor:•rtone 1a bead, rull canvus "top, 675-7837 IFendi?ra ~~u~;e!~· ~~ ~~11J xlntcond. MS-G875
.IC-211'3. loaded wtadd equip .• to.h.S--'& IDoora & AM.or8T3-1144andleave '-·-_ 5 Poncbe 114. Sliver,
MOVING SALE: Couch. tandem trlr w/1lde raila std .-.·-9080 IBumpel'll IMPORT CARS · 1 5' • UOAOWAV m~sage. YOU CAM LIASI AM/Fiii, 34,.300 mile..
• ewl n I mac hi a e . s-.1e avl. 133-2575 art ..... •••••••••••••••••• AUTtMOPSOURPTPL"' ALL MODELS u111A ANA A USID U8SO, (210· MM K > Ralonabl riced. c JI '1, d ya 546·4300 D . . • 8353171 '76FlntXl!I $4~/bstofr. S48.al98
... 0 ... ..,, .. 'Y '! a Maniellus 16 f'latbottom. Xlnt cond, JOl N. Manchester. · 546-464! eve:. & wknds, MIRCIDIS llM11 ...,,... ... -orr& 321 enll. Cully eqpd. Mu5t A.nahelm 776·9900 WE TtlluLrtMATUll•V•NOMAtMINt li98·26216dys Wide Selection 6'l p 0 r ache t ta :
BABY and other furniture '76 Ch ry 1 I er Va flan l. sell. 673·5951. After 6pm. ...,ED • USED IM w·. * for Example: ,Oomplet~•u rebwll. Runs
, Chd JtC eom...itrlr dAll S2"""' Onu D11t•unSlOen1. xlnt " '7130C S/R7'"lWB Hoftda '727 '7 .. .,,IOC •· look1"1ood .... 800 1orsale. I Cu rib& h .... •n · .....,, 19'Min1Cnnser 11klboal. cond 1. MGB 1970 CLEAN pe • ..,,, .a.. ..,. • ., mattress~; f.laypen.~3'724 460 Ford J11cu.n1 y tra111mlu1on xlntcond. '7620024eipdS/R950NLlo' •••••••••••••••••••••••Sunroof -Ivory/Bamboo. S73-SMS
DST.:JO; M3 dapd. LbRke, .. ~: 28' Owen1. new paint, pump. Tandem trailer. Huao Preate. '151-9039 USS) CARS '71i2002 Aulo '240RlDIU lrand Hew •77 432K.AX. '---,-1--Lo--_-,,--p-p
an. m. liwlti. cph 1aueea bil&e Covers, extras, xlnt ------MOW '762002,41pd mD I. HO ..... DA C '74210C~ 4. w ,Ul es. .
slpr. IOla $2.S. chair, Sl~: pomp, elec bead. Chevy cond. ~1·3-t97 l!J:)S Buick eoa & trans, CALL PAPPY ·75530i Auto. Al)s 1900 " ars Wh1t~/Whtte282MIG AM/FM atereo caaaetW.
coffeetable$15,9bylt VS, dock avl. $6200. l!IOOGMCV6en1.early OOL'002,4lpA1r,ZKGl3ll MANY '7545051 Veryclean.SSZ.OOU
carpcf t A pad, S25 • 2 sce..111142· 962·0362 ask for Trwporfaffoft 3UI Dodee truck enf, 427 540-5630 · Closed On Sundoyt To Choose Front! Met Sliver 192$6 15.\ 3.56 SC Por1cbe. Gd
• ~luffed cbair1. SU ea. RI .. J' hn • Chv blk 67~~MO-am ......,. ••---"'"""' .... Herc. plaJd sofa.120. Cati c .. or 0 ••••••••••••••••• •• • • • • ·----ORA.MGI COUNTY'S UNIVERSITY '75 450 SB. .. ..,. .... .iuc-. -or ual
S51-489'J evea. • 19'16 Aluminum nveled Ci.t"a.Sale/ tUO AutotforSde OLD!ST OldslftObB• Elec Sunrf. Blue/Bluo, ofr.Evat7l4>491-GD
Movlne. muat aell ever-boalw/~= ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2626HAalORILVD. & ..... c ... • GMC llhr7~05LC...-88 PORSCHE 912, Dr.
ythlna. Call 551-4076 . s Pac Camper ihell for '4 WhMI Dri•ff '550 COSTA MESA TnlClu Low Mil~ 383 PKG ~~i well kept.
a.Aer 5 Boat w /on-ehore moorina Import truck. Sips 2, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2850 Harbor Blvd. Buy Ot' 1.A!••e
IST"'TIS"'LI Bal Ill. 14' Boatoo verydean.Tbl,lcebox " AMc.JllP WEPAY Sales-Scrvlce·Leosin& ColtaMesa 5'0·9640 . 48MonthBank ollltoyc• 971• ~ ~ W ha 1 er w / 2 5 HP Uorage, S400. 980-21M # t la Callf. TOP DOLLAR R C I Fillandna Ava\1 OAC .. •••••••••••••••••••• zn 18th Pt .• No. 7, CM . Evlnrude. elect start. eves. WEOUTSELLALL fOtlNtPTY Rolloy 4 crver. "ec.MW '75 Honda Civic cvcc 21.3/921-1.588 •tDEAlERINU.S.A.
646-17Tt 1>y1 213/844-~43. ova '7 Che JEEP DEALERS i~-s s koycc Hatchback. brown, xlot 71•1~.72~ au~ 3 vy. "~ ton. llUJ>t'r --Vftl LWOJamborel! oond. days. 834-5155 orl----;,_.. ___ _
Mital•IOlll rond .. lull powt'T" ahell, IN THE STATE Nownnrt Beach 640 64-H .,..,.,_90'"•vc~. •'66 250SE Cou"", l(lnl W..t.d 1011 20' Bertram. conv top. 26,000 m1 . Sl<tOO /ofr HUGllMVINTORY ~··r--· -0
'" ..,~ " r~ MAl"'UIS MOTORS S J 9730 cond, new paint, 1uper ••••••••••••••••••••••• New uphol. 427 Ford eni. 492-0265 All Model• New• Uaed ""' 1 t7l IMW l .O egi.tOI" bU)', $4000. 835-3700 ask
IOY
CAlVEll •
AOlLS·ROVCE ,,.J .... .., ••
NtW-111Ndt ,._ __ _..,....... •Prfftf'f * 8crkley Jet. Americ.'an Leaslna Availoblc 28802 Mariuerite Pkwy. 4 i.peed. r11dlo. hc11tt'r, ••••••••••••••••••••••• fOl"Bria11
W t d h tandem trlr. $3,495. Cumper shell, mml trnck. Cotta Mffo &.USS& N VIEJO air cond , 11unrQof. '72 XJt'I whll"/rcd lnl an e or mo ., .......... .., 6'be<t. $50orofr 111·2110 495-1210 1 th · · •-II 'h ' ' "' · '66 MB 250S Id !d araver (embo11111~n ° ~-_ u 1.1593 AMC: J~ cu \Ir 111tcraor"' u • c goodcond $6800 · r sc an, CLOSID$V DAYS • ...., r "t ry c ul t .. ~~-11•3' full pwr A1km1 $3000. N machine). Wlllpaycaah. 17' boot trailer oo hp 20 25.U llAHDOR LVO. Autoa.lmporlM 8 • 0 •I pmon · '"" • T, Call8704564<Fullerton >. hrs co~er ext~as ~" 'i5 Slarcraft Xl, T ent Cot.ta Mesa 549·80U ••••••••••••••••••••••• t893KBS> '72 XJ& Jua. Completely Call om:MZ·121-2---nAT\l{ 1 A ~TT"
-,-, -oo.'5412aris Trlr Great for l!mall -, --ChMral 9701 NOW$6791 reblt mtr. newly pntd, 1972 Mert'edes Benz 250 l-'L~ l.JL\l~fu.
WANTEDTODAY -trucks Xl11\ cond JEEPS •77u ••••••••••••••••••••••• MARQUlSTOYOTA rellow.552-ll>U. . &edan . Red w /alr & Mo1-rf"'1,..... ... Co Back-pack sullable foru· Lar1on. '76 135 6574765 CJ s·,. CJ 7 'i., '76Tr4_.. MlSSIONVIEJO stereoradlo,scyl. Ex· 1\&.J '-=<11. ~~t ReaaonabOoule. Evlnrude & lrlr Fam ;:..,...___.--_-_....,1-1L-. 9140 Cherokees. Wa1toneer1, c.JUh. 131 2180 '495 1210 KWWIDftft Ghio 9735 ceptlonal cond ti1S·6311 Rolla Roy"~ & n--tlc:,
· ~ 1kl/llah/dive Mu1tse11.~-• t Plck-upi,uptoS1.200dls •t "'M..,....d. d ~· • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Byownr aa1-•-aerv .. .,i"e. """' !
......... 1-...1 medical. $3840.673-11669 ••••••••••••••••••••••• couota. 5 yr S0.000 mile "'" c ra ao. 4 111P • c-.a 9715 l.n ""',. " --TwoV Cl d factory hardtop & ...,.... '7lK.armaMGhla:x tin MG '9742 •·63CLOUDJIJ .......,..,.,.., 1013 21, DAY CRUISER Olds eapa ao mos><' '· warrantys avallable 1 C ••••••••••••••••••••••• & outba11le84-0-reo.2153radlals, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,._ . Gd cond ~ •••••• •••••• •••••• • one year old. aood cond•· c.....,-~ Mtrs In• raatop. Low m1 ea. an 1976 C,. •Rt 11.uay n . ""'"ver.1on. . · • •• • powered. Jacuzzi pump. lion. $Z7S racb Call .....--• buyorleasc. 066PQW l ""r .. '74 MG Mldaet convertl· $11,S00<733NOK> Conn Mlo.().llfaUc elee. SIS,985.540-7063 ~7 2001 Elit.SAMHOOO HATCHIACK 74 Ghla convert. lo ml, ble. Perfect for 1ummer '155"A .. W.1'7\hSt,CM
orean. exc:ellA!nt condi· •7• Bl Vr_Ch__ •7.1. Tri ...... Tl7 '·'6. "UlOm"UC. Dir ··ond I E "l 7P .... Sun r 0 -I 1 11141831.0SU tlon, '900. P.P . 532.1259 Chris Cral'l Bay Launch. ~°!':C~'/ .. uer _, e)•cnne • :--:r.: .. v .. " c ean. vea a., •· un. ~c nil oran1e. n ---------• Boat cvr, extra engine 9 I SO Parkage, 9300 mt, 350 cu. 4-apd, A~1. t lJ Stereo & ttlem> lit pc• t'1rui.hcd thru Tue~. an l. -t94-9317 tip-top cond. Low miles. A~tk ewtars, Glb1on $800. eau 675.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• auto, air. tape. chrome w tape, radial:<, I\ C. 1 n i; 1 I \ l' r 1:1 r a Y Mado---9731 $2650 or best oCfer.
J .45 deluxe, aunbursl ---- -·-i. po kc 11 1 Io ox 1 5 :.lnp1ng. one ow11er 1 w matchini: two.tone in· 511&-4-U7 S200; Yamaha FG-180 $80 32' SIEPHE:\S Sport Fis· BMW •O 75o S. full> Fire !Hon e s. S7 500 . other TIU'!$ lo chooi.e le rt or l,CJw m ii e 1> ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----'744 wtcaaes.000.2226 her, twn Chrysler dreued, loaded. perf 4943779 from!Zibuylcai.t!plu~. t5S5SLD> MGI
cro-.ns new VHF & bot· co11d. Bur11lar al;1rm -l993RSO>. -....LY $4395 •••••••••"'•••••••••••••
tom job. Need• paint & Must be seen. ~~ ~ 4X& ·72 Ford ,, lon S WB ~ '&4 MGB. Roll Bar. recent
minor repairs slip nft.6pm A~t1 PM 8 track. A/C. '7)C:apri MAaqUISTOYOTA Uru t brakes. wire
ov•llable. P'lrst' $7500 '72 YAMAHA 100 xlnl ~ 640917!..:_ --2-dr. 4-spd. AM /FM 13MI 1SS211100N .. v9~E.Jt0210 wheela, very 1oodd •PrintlftCI• ca.<ih ofter 5411.4192 dys; cood.$275 Ca~h · Stereo w /lape v.6 • .. r m echanical con .
Wanted -Thermo· &121122evi. 963-6823 Tn.ckt 9560 en&lne. Sharp! C~11lom '72 Capn. 2000 CC. c.NW... 645-1700 ~~~~5:~·
craver <embos1lna ••••••••••••••••••••••• Clnanctn1 available. AM/FM tape, 1uck. S.l ... ~ ... 9800.
machine). Will pay cash. H 0 n d • ST 9 0 · 1 4 • "711 El Camino w /1heU <097JLT>. ofr. 615-8396 -"•w AtilMI.. Mew f
Call87<H564 <Fullerton). ""'! ahowroom cond. '350. or Sh Low 1 -... ,.: ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• ••••••••••·---• a..ter 'OSO batorrer.t13·94Gt .U:.~ m . -·"""· '74Ponchtfl4 '74Capri.Perfrond,mUc
Oak Desks. t3ble11, 11wvl & ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7 U UK 0 -s -epd trans. AM /FM blue, 36,800 ml. A/C, 6
side .chain. Drnn.ln& &: HARTER 60' LUX 48 z 1 380 T-Mlnt '55 FORD PlCKUP Stereo.Nlcecar -Drlve cyl,AM /FM.aulo.$3275.
arch1tectural t11blo1. 900 YACln' Hourly Or Dal-cond, lo ml. $490. 404.7109 SHARP! MAGS. NEW it! Can buy or leHc. Ph497·3641oft6 __ _ :r:ii:,~gth St. 631·2777 or ly. NB. 81s.2172 &49H53S PAlNT. (7571..KX). ahun f7%0
Hod.aka 125cc <Wombat> 557·7904
,... IOl7 loats. W 9060 equlppe. d for street it •• C"-"Y •• Pkup w/8' •....•....•............ ..... ,..,. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• lraU.132$. 546-31(8. "abover "ampr . 1ood
T II h len L 14 sloop. Uke new. " ... ame Dbl ye o~ cad '875 or best. Motor HoMta. Sale I cond. $1800 493-2198 Amazon parrot. Very kewt /Sf f 160 JP~rett~Y~·~S?00~:._:5M-~~21~1:!11 __ 1. __ -::645~-=·334_5 ___ •••••••••~•••••••• M 11 id• 1 012 P / u ra_.. & Orpna totO LIDO 1' MOTOR HOMES w/camper 1bell. Comp.
••••••••••••••••••••••• TralJer.Extru FORRENT rblt mtr, nuri carb, G,1115 642-3761 .,_ SlSO k T7().""H radiator & wi n1. Gd ~ r om w . ""'"'" Ures. SI .500. 48~
'74Tri ..... T1l6
4·apd, AM /FX radio Low milea & Cherry! 4
other TM's in i.t.o<:k. Call
for detallll CScr
Cf'l.3478U)
•••••••••••••••••••••••
DRIVEA •
LITTLE .••
SAVE A LOT
SllOP "COMPARE
IAJtWfCI< DATSUN
. San Juan Caplalrano
13 l ·t 375 493-U7' S3388.~
CONCANNON"S HORSEUSS
STAILIS
Broken ol fine conlem·
pora.ry
ROLl.S ROYCE
BENTLEY
aut.omobllu.
7111 E. Coast Hwy
( '114) 67&-0830
.......................
'71 J..-XKl
AM/FM 1tereo. 4·1pd.
A/C, Su1>4r Sharp! 60
mo. financing avail.
OAC. (096N0T). NEWPORT DAT SUN
SPICIALS
New 77 Rabt>ft tnctudlng fuel infection. 1.8 llter OHC 9n0fne ... ~
front disc brakes. rack & pinion atHr•ng, 4-<wM•t 6Mepeftdent
suspen11on. and hatchback Ser #1n3175"1 74J.,,,_XJIZL
Loaded! AM /FM S\ereo
w/tape, PQWer wlndow11
&door locks. A/C. Pnced
riaht! Call on our custom
buy / l ea:.• plans lmc>MEP>
New 1976 Datsun
Longbed Pickup. l,oaded
w 11pec1al point Interior
Un!!! & moon roof. WH
U7!.l5 Sa\' e S1600'
UUl3851
Immediate Dellvety on Alt '71
Volkswagens tnctudlng 8cirooco
'75 MGI lloadat•r
AM /FM radio, 4 11pd.
l.ow m\leagt, Sharp'
May buy or I 1'1111t.
\739P~P)
NOWS4195
1M18 DOVE STREET
Near MttcArthur
&J amboree Road~
lll-1300
We'll buy your dean MG TOP IUftlt
TM, TR·7, or Jaeuar lo See WI tiral, fl l11st! Top
ct.y. We need cars! Cal dollarpaldforlmeon..
uall.rat. COSTA MISA
~ ~!!~~d. ~ Co.ta Me.. 14<H410
... t(l\lf'4111\A'°'ll,lVA~·-A ,. 8210. 2 Door. AM/FM
11....01'Ql• 1•>•0• lt\• radlq Lo ml. llint cond
C.dlllaca lo Go-Carli;
Whatever tbc FBd
Roll 'em off Uic market
With a ctaulf\ed Ad
C.11 Now' &42·167t
842·11171, t62 1111.
5'Z 61111 Coonle
Don'l •Ive 1AP Ule fhlpl "U.t'T ll •tn cluained
Sblp to ahore reaulta I
M2·SITI .
. . ·-
,
I
• ..
..,1 VW Camper. aelf·cont, 'M Baja Bui Zenith carb,
must see to apprec. sunrf. Beat Ofrer.
S3000/orter. (213)598-6575 M8·5282
1975 MONARCH
B1at1lll\JI o'"n met11t1e wllh wMe Interior &
l\'lllCl'llng vlnVI roof. etr col\d1Clonlng PO~ I 1tHt1"9 & 1>0oN11f bf•k... rtclto. 1ulbl\'lat1c
cr1nsmlQ.on. A r•al .i.we1. l ie. •<1e1Pt;'I
'4395°0
1974 FORD •
Torlno Oo\lj)4t Shtro 81\4 ctNn. Whit• wllh black vlnvt root a Interior. 1utom1tic
• trentml9'•on, pawer bfllcts. oower steering rtdlO, t1r concMonfflO. Llc. •835LAK
'2995°0
197 4 LINCOLN
ContlMntll ' OoOf &tdln So~ ~ wtltl IHfllef lnteriOr, tnd brOWn \111¥ l'OOI. ~n ~.,.of CCllHM. stereo. •Ir COftd1t1onino. • orHI llltllly car. an out1t~1no b\N. Lie. 18eek.IC
..
1968. A IC. 3·spd. Roni.
well. Great body. $1800.
601 .().t()S, -193-6891
Oldlmobll• 99 5 ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
'i I Cutlass Supreme. A\r. v.a. nu tires. lo mi Gd
Cond. 962-4674
'7:1 PINTO Wagon. stick
sh1ft.1ood cond,
645.-6493
'73 Sq. wgn. Air. lo mi.
A~l/l"M stereo rud. nu
tires. ~.350. St0·6597
9100 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1977 CHEVY 1/2TON PICKUP
I 195211CC0147Z1942961
BUY or LEASE
53999 5 85t~ .
P•"• toe M "'° 0 £ l Ceo ~SI 14•2• l•-~ .,...,. Pf0011'<~""' <ml 1•1 _,,.... 6M l 7 • l~ lll8 6 --l'l0117 lot•oll"",,,.,.....,....l •3.-ffWM-~~
1977 CHEVY EL CAMINO
1171l 11C80ul Z07331 I ..
BUY or LEASE
54499 599~.
I •
USED CAR .SPE·OIALS
197 4 LIMCOLM
Conllnefll 81 Coul)e Medium Betge exterior.
with datlc brown vlnyt roof •n<' brown l1t11ner lnterlof. lull PoWOr. 1lr conditioning 11.,eo.
~peed conlrol lllt wll .. I. l mor., See 11 now. lie •07~EI(
'4995°0
1973 DODGE
Pol are ' Doot a.den Medium~ INtallle.
wit I) oOld colored ctotn lnttnot. Pollttf Mitts.
cower ceerlno. 11r cond1llon1nQ. nie110,
eutomaljo 1~110n. ~· ..._ lldan. Prlo.d ,. 00. Lie. 1503RDI<
52195°0
1974 FORD
' Door a.den Nic. IOll. )lltllq,,, wllll trff!'I Jnlet!Or ~ vfilvl reef. Oowet1t!Nftl\O a ooww brake•. ,, co11cM1on1no. radio. autom1t10
tr1ntmolllon LlCl • 7801\YI
5269StO
1972 LIHCOLM
4' D6or Sedan. Black Miii matching Interior
tnd vtnvt roof l ull /)Owtr of course. air
oondlllon1no lfld more. m1ny m1let ol OOOd
tr1naC>0r1atlon •ta IOwortce Lie U33EHI>
52495°0
1972 MERCURY
Merouls ' OOOf Sedan Full power, comfort lounge HllS. rlld10, 1lr condttl0tl1~ vinyl
tqol automahc tran1m1u1on. pnoea '° io... lie. •1701!50
1972 FORD
Countl'V SQulre W1ton. NI~• w990n wlttl l»~•r -~ l ~ ~.. l'ldio ••r eond1&1criftci rfaf llfce for ll'ION ~
trros. l.tc. •242ELU
, I r, PH!
'
1972 T·BIRD
Onlv ?9 000 miles e r11a1 •v• catelltt. POWCtf
1te11r1no & POwer bralcoA. 11r cond1t1on1no.
ttdlo. eu!Ot'Mlic t11Mmlu1011. lilnyt root. nelll
& c:le1n. Lie. •b3.'.IDZK
s3195oo
1972 FORD
Pinto Be109 ""''h !Nllehlno tllltfiOf • f:lll~ 4'
r.peed rlldio. l•n tn::in ~o 000 ITlll" UC.. •061010
s 1895°0
1975 COMET
• Door ~ AulC>fNl1e trllft1~ •power •'•••no radio. air condillQnlno whtlt lllfllh a •acldl• 1111 Inferior. pnced lo Hll .. Lie. •t87MlCO
f
...
ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A
Jllteraooa
N.Y. Steelul
• •
TEN CENTS
BkJod DDnors Bush .to AM Gain l'ietim
W ter poHco aafd tbey
1UU baV9 DO IUJPe\a or motive f oc-
th• • nc -whkh ocouri'ed at
an •f= t complex 1t 15123 Broo t St., W tminakr.
Mex.one wu rushed to Fou.n·
tain Valley Community Hospital
at I p .. m. where he contll'lued to
bleed heavily.
"A• fast u we could put blood
Into hlm, ho waa ptunpins lt out,"
Hid hospital laboratory tecbnl-
clan BUI Horan.
Tbo 0rlJlle County Red era.a
transported 10 plnt.a of blood to
the botpital but emer&ency room
attendant. knew it would not be
nearly enou&h. aaid Horan.
While McKeone underwent
1ur1eey for removal or s hot1un
pelteta, hospital empJoyea began
Ii vln1type0 poslU ve blood.
Secw1ty auards Mlke Gorman
and Tony Mora, aldea Ken
Roberton and Judy Luth, t«hnl·
clan Llnda Monte, aee,.etal')' Jl)l
Foster and clerk Tall Taulo1a all
responded to the vlcUin 'I need
for lif e-1Mn1 blood.
John Smylbe. hu1band of
Jubell Mary Smythe, a sur1lcaJ
floor nurae, and Dou1 Jac~z
son of Ann Jackson, a bospiw
housekeepln& supervla~r, alao
answered the call for blood dona· .
UODJ.
A friind and two relatives of
MeKeoo alaodoaated blood.
Nurte Pauline Chandler aald
tbe hoepltal emplotea • re1pome
wa1 "veryunusuat."
While bolpi\.11 employes asked
co-workers for donations, a
friend of tho abotcu.n vlcUm sent
out a call oo b.11 CW1ena' Band
radio for blood.
By lrfooday, bolpltal officials
.
told many callers who bad heard·
tbe call on their CB radios that I
the blood need had been met.
.McKeone's uncle. EUls Hunt,
pralsed the ettorts of the bospital
employes.
•'Wit.bout the blood donations.
Matthew would be dead," said
Hunt. ••The response from the .
employes wu just fantastic and
the way the lab processed the
blood was incredible.••
Rapists' D~ath N,ixed
Top Courl: Penalty 'Disproportionate ~
.
'Nel'er Too Late
..... "" . •
Al"W~
An apparent victim of the skateboard fever that crossed
the ocean from the United States ls this bearded native
of Zurich. Switzerland, who's laking part in a recent
competition.
I
lAttorney Election ' . .
opported by Panel
Jn what is probably the hottest
aaue con!rontlne them, mem·
rs c4 the HunUneton Beach
Charter Revision Committee vot·
d Tuesday night in favor or
eeplne the city attorney elected
by the people.
The question of whether the al·
rney 1hould be appointed by the
Clty Council or remain elective
thu been raised ofteQ ln recent
years.
Members of the revision sroup
,agreed that an independent city
attorney J1 nece11ary to
repreaent the public and to servo
u a check and balance on the Cl·
tyCouncU.
· • Tbe final vote was 4 to 2 with
one abtttention. The recommen-
4atlon wtU co to the City C~
alone w\Ul a aeries of othet ~
po1ed chanaea in the charter, a;
docu ment which 1overn1 the
oper aticft ot the city.
Tbecbarter, wblcb was lutr•
v\sed in li66. wlll ulllma~ly bo
voted on by the city'• realdents.
because he aerves as both
treasurer and lhe city's risk
manater. He is paid separately
for both Jobs. The nlne·member panel (two
were absent) also urged a1ainst
setting a limit o( two four-year
terms for the city attorney.
A t.wo-t«m celling haa been re·
commended. for City Council
merubers but the consensus was
that this limit shouldn't be ap-
plied to the attorney because ol
the pr<lieaslonal nature of the job.
Incumbent City Attorney Don
Bonf a aaid he fUlly conoun with
the commiUee's rttommenda·
lions.
"I th1nk the city would have a
dJfflcull time flndina biih quality
candldat U . Uley could only
terve for eiOt yun." he tald.
City AdmfnJattator Bu~ Beltito
bad urtecl the p•el to make the
poattton appointive ao that be
could eaerclH •upervlaory
authority.
Panotilt Elaine Hankin aaid.
<See ATl'OllNEY, Pase AZ>
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
U S. Supreme Court ruled today
that states may not impose the
death penalty for lhe crime of
rape.
Tbe court said the death penal·
ty ··is a cfulproport1onate punish·
ment for rape."
"It iJ difficult to accept the no-
tion, and we do not, that lhe r!U)e.
with or without aegravating
circumstances, s ho uld be
punished more heavily than the
deliberate killer as long as the
rapist does not himself take the
Banner Ad
Flights
Off at HB?
Advertising banner towing
operations by airplanes may be
voluntarHy halted at Huntineton
Beach'• Meadowlark Airport, it
bu beesa learned.
But lheri a1ain, they may not.
A city omcial has received a ·
communication from a represen·
latlve ot airport operator Art
Nerio to the ~feet that towing
wlll no lonaer be allowed at the
airport because of "possibly un·
safe actlviUes."
Nerio said Tuesday. however ,
that If it can be proved that tow·
in& Is safe, "We may change our
mind&."
"I would rather not say uni.II another day,•' be a aid.
It was reported, however, that
discussions have been held which
would allow the Sky Ad Company
to pick up and release banners at
uninhabited areas while continu-
ing banner ruehts over the city.
Neighbors of the airport who
have lon1 protested flight opera.
tions at Meadowlark because of
their salety concerns demanded
recenUy that the city council halt
banner towing operaUons.
The latest protest followed an
incident May 29 when an alrcrah
baMer feU lnto power lines near
the airport at .Bo111 Chica Slrfft
and Warner Avenue alter an at·
telftpt to drop ii off at the airport.
Franlt Allen, Federal Aviation ·
Adminlstratiop cbtef of IUiht
1tandardl ln i.one Beach, said
the bla~ aa with the pilot. and
not withSky Adi.
A amall atrJ was kllled a day
earlier when a banner towtn&
plane crub·landtd at San Juan
C1pl1trano, while opuaUn1 out
or Caplatrano Airport. • ...
T he Huntlniton Beach City
Council hU Ht e pubUc htarinl
for JU)yUtoconslder alle1ationl
tJlat Sky Ad poaod potential
huard1 and if Ha bus lnesa
llceMe 1bould be revoked. Jn another acUe>n dealina wilt\
an elected city official, the ?'e-
mlon committee asked for a full
deflnlt.lon of city treasurer War·
~D Hall's duties before 1 recom-
mendatlon is made on hla atatus.
H&ll'• position is complicated
rfmgedy SJllll:I
PlaiJtia Te9t
Skin ·caaeer
I.BJ Diseaae Revealed
life of bis vlcUm," the ciourt said
in an opinion by JuaUce Byron R..
White.
'X'he court's action, decided by
a 7·2 vot~. struck down the dea~h
sentenc~ a Geor1la court im-
posed on Ehrticb Anthony Coker,
convlcted fot the 1914 rape Qf a
16·year-o1d Wayctoss, Ga ••
housewife who three weeks
before had &1ve.n birth to her Clrat
child.
Alt.hough G.or•da'a law con·
cerned Uie rape of adult women,
the court decision's wordlnf In-
CITIZEN OF tHE VEAi'
Huntington'• ErtckSOn
,
llB Umt Piela
YMCA Chief
Top Citizen
Dale P. Ericklon, chairman of
the execuUve committee of the
Huntin1ton Beacb·Fountaln
Valley YMCA, has been named
citizen of the year by the Hunt·
inst.on Beach HOME Council.
Erickson, 40. wu nominated
for the honor by the Junior
Women's Club of Huntington
Beach.
Membera of th• club said that
under Erickson'• tuidance, the
YMCA emerged from near
bankruptcy Ln 1915 to an annual
bud1et of t86.000 for 1971.
Others nominated Jor citizen ot
the year were Fran Andrade ot
the Oak View Center: Mtraaret
Carlberg, Environmental Coun-
cil; Herb Chatterton Arnl•ot de
Bolaa Chlca, apd Ha\'rlett
Wieder, former ma)'Or and pre·
sent city councU member.
dlcated that states may not im·
pose the death penalty even tor
the rape of childJ'en.
Jolnin1 White's oplnion were
JuaUcea Polter Stewart, Harry
A. Blackmun and John Paul
Stevens. Juaticea William J .
Brennan Jr. and Thurgood
Marshall, who oppose the death
penalty W1der any circumstance
for any crime, ft.led concurring
opinions.
Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr.
voted ltlttrike dOwn Coker'• sen·
tence .but a aid be did not think the
Abortion
Op~ing
Books Due
A HunUniton Beach Union
Hl1b School District official
Tueaday told trustees anti·
abortloA pamphlet. and bookl
•Ul De a va U•bl• for· bf
teachers at their dJscretloo.
Alstatant Superintendent J•ck
Gyves tokl trust.. he and other
d11trlct officials met wlUa Pro-
Llfe SpMken Bureau membtrl to dlacuu the uu of antl·abortlon
materials tor atudenta.
Gyves noted that parental con-
sent is required by atate Jaw for
all student.a who are exposed to
death penalty for rape was cruel
and unusual punishment in all
circumstances.
"Although rape invariablY. is a
reprehensible crime, there Cs no
indication that petitioner's of.
tense was committed with e
cesaive brutality or that the vic-
tim sustained serious or lasting
injury," Powell said.
Chief Ju1Uce Warre n E .
Buraer and Justice William H.
Rehnquist dissented, saying that
the death penalty for rape can be
(See RAPE, Pase AZ)
High Tidea
Due Tonight,
The highest tides of the
· summer-a pair or seven·
footers-will hit the
Oran1e Coast shoreline
tonight and Thursday
nl1ht.
LUeauards said mild ·
surf and lilbt winds are
· forecast tor both nights
and that no damace is ex-
pected durtns peak hi1h
Udts. ·
Tonlaht'• peak Ude wlll
occur about 8 :30 and
Thursday night's at about
9 :15.
subjects dealing with human t
reproduction. a· h S h I Jda Bila, a Planned Paren-. _Jg C 00
thood 1po1'esman, asked trustee-.
to lnclude lnformation from her
oraanlzation tor teachera' use In ·appropriate classes. .
District offlciala s aid they
would screen the material Ln the
1ame manner as the Pro-Ufe
boob and pamphlell.
Pro·Llfe apokeaman Chris
Taulber. a retlst~red nurse, said
she wu disappointed that dis·
trlct ofnclala would not allow her
etoup to present a film depicUne
aborted fetuses during a public
board meetln1.
Mrs. Taugher said she hopes
teachers wlll invite Pro-Life
speaken on campuses. However,
she added, "If we don't 1et
enou,h invitations we will pass
out eaflets ln front of the
schools."
Trustee Dori• Allen s aid she
viewed the J>ro.Ufe presentation
and called It .. -excellent."
Muscle Men
Teachers Pact
Extended
Hunttn,ion Beach Union High
School Di.strict trustees have ex. •
tended the 1916-77 teachers' con·
tract until July 31 to allow Dia·
trict Educators Association
<DEA> members a chance to
ratify this year's proposed pact
by mail.·
District officials and teachers'
union negotiators reached a ten·
tative agreement tut week on a
new one·year contract which
calls for at leut a four percent
acrosa·the·board pay hike for the
dlstrict•s 830 Instructors.
DEA octiciala said 'J'uesday
they hope teachers will return 1 ballots ui the proposed contract
by mail before July 19.
District and DEA officials
have agreed to elve teachers
either the four percent pay boost ,
or 58 percent of the state funds, ,
that can be used for salaries. f
l
Co ast
Weather
. Patch)' low clouda atone
the cout tonfibt and early
ln the Ulo'rn1n1. MosUy
aunny Thursday wttb aome hilh cloudlrteh at Umes.
Lowa tont1bt H to ea. H11hl Thunday ea ton at 1.
beacbem to 11to14 lnland..
()Ally Pll 0 I H /F
llASO'TA. t•1., <Al'I A
H ·Y -old Girl .SCuul wcartl'\I 1
ltkty ou1e T a hlrl WH
duned •Un1 from her t1111l
IJl 8 p by 8 b JVdf buUl
m a today u h r l'lllitot aind --i::r IC'OUl uu.t ln ttlr• ror, •'-'thortlU.•& auld
Tbe &Ari '• nam ••• not 1m medul~ly rt1J.ia1ed, llul
aat.horiU aaJd ahe w111 from v ire. na.
The mao nppcd Ol)t'n lho b11ck ot Uw three-per on tent an 4.fiU.
acre Oscar S-:hcrer Stal• Paerk
about I a m , crabbed the i1r1 by
her l(Xll t>ro.n I.lair and dragtd
het' tnto 1b.arp po1nkd palmetto
scrub. Saruota County Sber1ft'• deputies said
The man wJ~ desrnbed as
heavily bwJt with dark hair and a
dffp voece. He was wearlni dark
dot.bes, officers aiud.
(!!artier lhi.5 month, three Girl
Scouts were sexually asHuJted
and then murdered at a camp io
Locust Grove. Okla. Authonties
have charged 33 year old Gene
Leroy Hart in the June 13 :.laying
and are std I searchin~ for him >
The abduct.Jon here touched off
an 1mmed1ate manhunt 1n
Sarasota County About 100 law
e nforcement officers, volun
leers, a mounted posse and even
Florida Power & Light Co
service trucks Joined the search
that was sel up under the
sherlrrs specialized weapons
and tactics unit CSWAT J.
The park is located two miles
.south of the tiny town of Osprey
and 12 miles south or Sarasota on us 41
The girl was on a ramping
trip wUh 16 scouts under a sum-
mer program sponsored by the
Sarasota Girl Scout Camp
lier father Joined the ,earch
wh1l<' her moth<'r. '>Isler and
grandparents waited for word
with park ran~ers and dctec,
tiV<'S
The scouts were camping in an
urea near the northeastern
border of the park Just north of
the mwn pavilion which 1s re
ached only by a narrow dirt road
and 1s i;urround<'d on three s1dl•s
by thick palm<•ttoscrub.
Lawmen Find
Stolen Boat,
Hunt Suspect
A man who apparently rented
a boat under a hcLillous name
Monday at Avalon on Catalina
Island and later left 1t high and
dry on rO<'ks south of Laguna
Beach 1s st1ij al large today after
Jumping two ston es to rscapc La
Habra police who arrived at h.is
home, authorities said.
U.S. Coast Guard officials said
a 16-foot pleasure crart was re-
covered Tuesday aftt•rnoon about
a mile south or Laguna Beach It
1s the same crart rented Monday
on Avalon to a young man who
listed lus name us "Mark Hat-
field " and later as "Mark
Hathaway "
The boat was r~·portcd stolen
Tuesday to Coast Guard orric1als
who began a search for the miss-
ing craft.
La Habra police became in-
volved after authorities put a
trace on the names used by the
missinc sailor. Police arrived at
a La Habra home Tuesday but
the man they sought for question-
ing Jumped out a rear window
and escaped
Fair Weather On
By Tiie A1soclated Presa
FaJr weather will continue
throuthout most or Northern
California, with Coi and low
clouds along the coQl and a
chance of thunderstorms io the
hiaher elevatlons. Inland tem-
peratures skyrocketed Tuesday
w!tb reports in the northern
m ountains In the80s and 90s.
OAANO! COAST HI~
DAILY PILOT
llltclalng on Bitclaer
Wh1J e Wes Willoughby pedals, Denise
While tags along on roller skates, pulling
Deborah White with her. The scene of the
chain reaction hitchhiking is Mission
Beach in San Diego.
Campaign Adviser Heard·
Jury Probe of County ·Politics Nears End
By GARV GRANVILLE OltlleOally ~UeUIAllf
Political consultant. Arnold
Forde put in an appearance
Tuesday before the Orange Coun·
ty Grand Jury as the jury ap-
parently neared the end of its
eight-month probe into county
politics.
Forde is a partner lo William
Butcher in the county's rorernoet
political campaign consulting
f'f'091Page AJ
RAPE •••
a JUStlfied punishment.
The court's decision dealt only
w1lh the crime of rape but it may
have a profound impact on lhe
hi story of capttal punishment in
lhe United States.
Had the court ruled that states
may impose the death penalty
for crimes in which the Ille or the
victim was not taken, it could
have opened the door for future
rulings that capital punishment
may be valid for crimes such as
treason. ,espionage, kldnapln&,
h1Jacking and terrorism.
··Rape is not without deserving
a serious punishment, but in
terms of moral depravity and of
the iQJUJl' to the peraoo and to tho
public. It does ndt compare wittt
murder, which does Involve lhe
unJustlCied taking of human
ltfe," White said.
The court's decision afrecta on-
1 y s ix of the 35-0 death row
prisoners across the nation. Ir the
Justices had ruled the other way,
states that do not. use the death
penalty for rape could have come
under pressure to enact. such
legislation.
Fft1111P~AI
ATTORNEY
however. that the public feels
strongly on the issue "and it Is
not right lo deny tho cituen.s a
right lo vote on matters which
are so important."
Two weeks a10, the charter
group recommended that the
term of city clerk sbouJd be ap-
pointive.
Mrs. Alicia Wentworth, who is
curr•ntly filling the role. aa1d
that her job ls running the city
elections and that it l5 not re·
ahst1c (or her lo be put in the
position of campaifnfnc.
Harold Bauman was elected
permanent chairman after Jerry
Bame had previously surren-
dered the reins. Barnes wu
named acting chairman.
firm.
Amon1 the successful Butcher-
Forde candidates in 1976 was
county Supervisor Thomas
fUley. The campaign strategists
also manaeed the successful
primary eleclioo campaigns of
Rep . Robert Badham <R ·
Newport Beach> and Jim Slem-
ons, the Newport Beach auto
dealer who without Forde and
Butcher at the controls lost to
House Refuses
To Roll Back
Pay Raises
WASIDNGTON CAP> -The
House refused today to roll back
a $12,900 P•Y raise members of
Congreq received. this year and
andGorrespondln1 paY. raises re-
ceived by more than 20,000 other
orrtclala and employes,
The House defeated an amend-
m en( to the letlslative ap-
propriation bill that would have
cut out funds for the raise. 'lbus,
1l reaffirmed with a recorded
vote the increase that went into
effect in March without such a
vote. The vote defeaUna tbe
r()$li,.ct ot the pay hike was 241
to 181.
Opponent& of the pay raise
argu~ that Ute method.a by
wblc.b it was put Into effect was
sh1bby. and thal Congress
should not protect itself against
an inflation lt helped cause
But supporters said the in-
crease, the second in eight years.
did not even keep pace with the
risln1 coet of Uvin& or the level or
buslneu salaries.
House Speaker Thomas P.
"Tip" O'Neill was applauded
when he argued that the House
had adopted, to accompany the
pay raise. an ethics code whose
''heart and soul was fuJl flnatlcial
disclosures and a limitation of 15
percent on outside earntd in-
come."
The March pay raise went into
effect automatically without the
need for a vote. It raised the
salariea of coniresameo and
senators from $44,800 to $57,SOO
and Included p._y Increases for
the vice president, Cabinet mem-
bers, other biab officials and top
civil servants and rederal judges.
Members or tbe House were
also tn line for another pay hike,
a cost-of-living Increase, on Oct.
1. But on a 397·20 vote Tuesday.
the House sent to President
Carter a bill denyia1 the cosl-Of-
li vin1 ralae to anyone who re-
cel ved the March lncreaae.
Nad~r Eyes Nuke
Fight in California
Democrat Ron Cordova an the
74th A'lsembly District general
election.
But 1t was Forde's role in coun-
ty Supervisor Philip Anthony's
'76 campaian that was of interest
to the Grand Jury
The Butcher·Forde duo saw
then Westminster City Coun
c ilman Anthony through the
primary election and into a
runoff for county supervisor with
Santa Ana City Councilman
Harry Yamamoto
Outwardly at least, Anthony
went tus own way in his general
election victory over Yamamoto
But Butcher and Forde were
never far from view as Anthony
raced off to a heavily financed
lop s id e d victor y over
Yamamoto.
It 1s lhe financing of that cam-
paign and the roles played in 1t
by Supervisor Ralph Dlednch,
Fullerton attorney Michael Rem-
ington and federal mdictee Gene
Conrad that has attracted the
Grand Jury's attention
Through amended public dis·
closure statements. Anthony has
admitted that $28,000 worth or
loans to his campaign committee
were not from him b\Jt from
Remington.
Both Anthony and Remington
10s1st the Remington loans were
to Anthony penooally tnd that
lhe candidate, m turn. lent the
money to tus own campaign com-
mittee
However. a $30.000 loan from
Conrad was originally shown on
Anthony's statements as bor-
rowed from Newport Beach
travel agent Ted Cook
That statement has smce be<>n
amended to show the money
came from Conrad.
Though those disclosure ad-
justments are known throuah the
amended disclosure statements.
the Grand Jury also heard Tues-
day from a tr lo of bank
employes whose testimony is
believed to have bolstered
evidence seized from banks
lhrou8h recent search warrants.
It all goes into an Investigative
mix that. ls expected to come to a
head sometime thJa week as the
jury's term draws to a close.
Baseball Shoes
All Purpose Shoes
Soccer Shoes
Runnln1 Shoes
Football Slioes
Tennis Shoes
YOllijball SltOes
Basketball Sboes
Celia 's
.He_aring
Delayed
By JOANNE &EVNOLDS
Of .. Oe1111 l'01Ui.H
Pre-trial acuon in the Oran1e
county 1uperlor court. ~He
•t•lnat Dr. LoWs J. Cella Jr. bu
been delayed until July 11 dt.JO to
the conlinuine illness or his
lawyer.
Judie William C. Speirs erant-
ed the del~ Tuesday In a bear-
t ne on a motion .to suppress
evidence after rejecUnt Co.ta
Mesa attorney Georae Chula's
plea that court action be deferred
to July 11.
CbuJa, who recently underwent
opeo heart surgery, told Judie
Speirs that he is weak, depretaed
and suffertns from ''post auraery
blues."
Judie Speirs, who has fre-
quently reproved Chula for de-
lays in a pre-trial bearln& t.bat
beun 11 months afo, warned the
lawyer that ir he ls not. ready lo
proceed July 11, the court will
take the issue under submission
without further testimony or
araumenl
Turnini to Cella, Judie Speirs
asked the poUticaJ activist if it
w aa true that. he is arranginc to
have another lawyer defend him
on the charaes of fraud, con-
spiracy and grand theft.
Cella (Oft.firmed that he l5 in-
volved In negotiations with an at-
torney who is at the moment
"back east bandlinc another
political case."
The statement appeared to
take Chula by surprise_ "This ls
the first I've heard of it," be
ruef"'1.ly commented out.side the
courtroom while Cella refused
further comment and declined to
'name the other lawyer.
Both Cella, S2. and former
hospital administrator Stephen
Robert Evans, 32, face trial on
multiple criminal charges con-
tained in a grand jury criminal
indictment.
ll is alleged that they were in·
volved In acts of fraud that cost
two hospitals controlled by Cella
as 1ecrelary-treasurer an
estimated $2 million in funds.
It is alleged that a substantial
portion of the money utilized by
Cella was used by him to support
political candidates.
Both men have been tried and
convicted on related charges in
Los Angeles federal court. They
are free on appeal from Cello's
rive-year prison term and the
one-year commitment ordered
for Evans.
Tot Slayer
Convicted
LOS ANGELES CAP) -An un
employed Southwest Los Angeles
m an has been convicted of in-
voluntary manslaughter for dip-
ping his girlfriend's baby
dau&hter in a tub of hot water to
punish her.
The verdict against Ronnie L.
Brown arrested July 15 in the
death of 2·year-old Sonjur CoJUns.
was returned Tuesday after six
days or deliberations,
Authorities said Brown placed
the infant into a tub of bot water
July 6, 1976, to punish her_ She
died Aug. 3 of second and third·
degree burns from the waist
down.
·.Saccluzrin
Bill Killed
WASfUNGTON (AP) -
The Senate voted today to
kill a Hou1e p1ued
· measure thal would pro.-
blb1t any government ban
of nccbann use for is
months. ·
But the Senate is expect.
ed to •ct later this summer ·
· on a bUl to impose an even
Jooger fuspensJon of the
proposed saccharin ban
than the U months the
House voled.
The Senate action ctme
on a $1( billion money bill
ror tho Aariculture Dopart·
ment, Food and Dru& Ad·
mlnlatratlon and otber
a1enctea. The measure
eventually pasaed on a
volce vote.
2ProDloted
To Edison
High.Jobs
An Edison }ljgh School busi-
ness teacher and a Wlntersburg
Hi1h School counselor will take
on new posts u assistant prin-
cipals Friday. Huntington Beach
Union HJ&h School Diatrt~t or·
flcials announced.
Ann Chlebicki, a district .
employe since 1972. will move
from her old
Edison Hieh
Si:bool post as
buslne1s
education de-
part.men t
coordinator lo
a1slstant
principal at
Huntineton
Beach Hich
School. CHLIHICKI
Mrs. Cblebickl will r eplace ·
Don Walker who has moved lo a
similar post at Marina High
School.
Walke r rep I aces ro rmer
Marina Hieb School assistant
principal
Jack Kennedy
who moves to
Ocean View
High School.
W i n •
tersburg High.
School
counselor
Marion Grant
HANT h a s b e e " •
seJeded u Edison High School's
auistant principal to replace
Allee Evans who requested re-
assignment to an administrative
post In the di1trlct, officials said,
Mrs. Grant has been a Win·
lersbura counselor smce 1975.
Police Await
:KUlnap Story
SANTA CRUZ (AP) -Poliee
said Tuesday that a woman who ·
apparently was kidnaped as she .
walked home from work was
under "emotional stress·• and .
has been unable to relate details·
or her ordeal.
The victim, Lois Wyckoff, 26, a
water conservation analyst
employed by the County or Santa
Cruz, was found Monday after-
noon in Redwood City.
•
......... -
Irvine
EDITION
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF'ORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1977 TEN CENTS t
Scraps Skateboarding
pany t.bat would have built the
courH on clty pro~rty.
The other council memben
aald I.hey did not want to _punue
.omtt.b.lna that wu dt1Uked by ao many S*>J>le In the area.
Mary Ann Galdo. who turned
oul to be the decldlnf vote
a1aiD1t the .J>roJeet, &al abe'•
been 09P08fld to the co111merclal
akat.board coune from the 1tart
A '·Neao Adeenture·
because abe doesn•t think the city
should be •etUn• revenue trom tu teenaaen.
It would coet skateboarden S2 for a two·bour vlalt to the
1kateboard park, plus a *1 equl~
ment renUl tee. 1t equipment
wuneeded.
John Burton Hld he oppoMd
the pJ'Oject because he viewed it
H marfinal from the 1tart and
, Irvine youngsters wbo come to Adventure
Playground these days will notice a few
\ new adventures, including this bridge,
f made out of firemen's hose, stacks of ola tires, a boat and a mud slide. Shown
above, from left, are Lloyd Mestas. 9,
Jason Clark, 7, (partly hidden>. Crail
MacNaughton. 9, and Kathleen Mac·
Naughton. s.
~ Oil Price Increase Off
OPEC Majority Cance& Plannsd Mtme
VIENNA. Austria (AP) - A
jq\ajority of members in the
Oraanlz.ailon of Petroleum Ex·
pckt1nc Countries -OPEC -
~ decided to cancel plans fo?'
fl~e percent Increase in the
ttce· of crude oil July 1, the PEC secretary general an·
uncedtoday.
IJ'be J.3.member oil cartel has
(t!en epllt over prices since
rcelllber when 11 members
called for a two-stage 15 percent
price blke for 19'77. The other two memtM?rs, Saudi Arabia and the
United.Arab Emlratee, opted fot'
a five {>et'Cent increase tor the
wholey~.
The 10 percent Increase Im·
posed Jan.1 by the cartel majort·
ty raised the price of their crude
oil to $12.70 a barrel. The second
at.ace ot the .increaae wu to bave
ProfJe Nears End
Consultant Talks , ..
To OC Grand Jllry
BJ GAllY GaANVILLE Olt .. o.ltyl'tlllCIC." ~ Polltlca1 con1ultant Arnold rorde put In an appearance
Tueaday before the Orange Coun·
ty Grand Jury as the jury ap-
parenUy neared the end of lta
ellht·montb probe into couot.y
polltlca.
Forde 11 a partner to WlWam
Butcher in the county's foremoat
pollUcal campaign coosulUna
flf'Ol,
Amona the successful Butcher·
F9f(le candidates in 1976 wu · cqunty Supervisor ThomH
RUey. The campaign slrate1i.st1
allo m~a1ed the succeaarut .
CBI' THE BIRD
Wl1H PILOT AD
• walks, he talb, he dances
on h1a belly Uke a reptile ••• but
14 landlord Hid, .. No pet.a"
Ntl'fl what do you do?
'I IOld him, cqo and all, tilth
a Dail>' Pllotclauifted ad."
rz'hat'• the teetlmony of a Colla » a woman wbO placed tbia
cl••llled ad:
primary elec:Uon campaJps ot
Rep. Robert Badham (R-
Newpart Beach) end Jlm Stem·
one. the Newport Beach auto
dealer wbb wit.bout Forde and
Butcher at the control.I lost to
Democrat Ron Cordova In the
14th Aalembly Dlltdct 1ener"1
election.
But It wu l'oride'1 role in coun.
ty Supervtaor Pbillp Anthoay•a
'76 campaian that wu of interest
to the Grand Jury.
The Butcher-Forde duo nw
then Westminster City Coun·
cilman Ant.bony throu,h the primary election and nto a
runoff for county 1upervf1or with
Santa Ana C1t1 Councilman
Harry Yamamoto.
Outwardly at leut, Anthony
went bis own way in bl• ienerat election victory over Yamamoto.
But Butcher and Forde were
never far from vt.w u Anthony
raced oa to • heavily financed
lopsided victory over
Yamamoto.
lt ii the financtn1 of that cam-
paltn and the e1 pl11ed ln tt
by Supervtaor Ralph Dltdricb,
Fullerton attorney Michael Rem·
in1lon and federal lndJctee a.te
Conrad that hu attracted the
Grand lut>''• attention.
Thr0utb a erided pubUc dl§-
closure ltate nta, Anthony hi.I
admitted that 000 worth ()f
loan1 to hll campafin commltteo
were not from bhn but trom
Remfniton,
AntbonJ 11nd R ml~ ~lnrt.On loa
l'.aDll ,PIJe.U)
gone into effect July t. ·
All M. Jaidah. the aecretary·
ieneral, •aid ln a 1tatement that
the declalon to cancel the in·
crease was made "in the interest
of unity and IOlJdarity of OPEC.
•'The following countrlu of the
or1anization -Alaeria,
Ecuador, Gabon, Indonesia.
Jran, Kuwait, Nigeria, Qatar,
and Venezuela -have reeolved to forero the appU~aUon of the ad·
dlUona five perc~t increase In
the price of oil of July l," the
atatemenllaid.
The other two members are Libya and Iraq.
Hamld Zaberl, the OPEC k>-f ormatlon dep1rtment chief.
decllned to •.V why Libya and
the Iraq did not ao alooe wltb the
decision ol the other nine. anCI
what action tbe remaJnlna two
OPEC memben -Saudl Arabia
and the United Ai'ab Emlrates -
would tab.
There wai 1peculatlon th1t
Libya and Iraq would 10 ahead
with the addiUonal 5 percent l.n-
creue July 1.
Prices char1•d by Saudi
Arabia and the UAR are lt1ll 5
,percent lower than thon cbar1ed
by the other mtmbert, and there wu specUlatlon the two COUil·
trio woUld not brtAI their prices
· <SMO~ Paae AZ>
tltat It wu even moN maratoat
now, ln Uittt of all the protest. Re1ldenta of seven
homeownen auoclatlona took
the city to court two weeks aeo
and obtained a preliminary in· JuncUon. That lnjunction stopped
clty offtciala from alplng the
leue qreement unW certain ln·
conalateocies In the envlronmen·
tal review process are cleared
up.
Tbe councD adopted a resolu·
tlon on a 3-2 vote that was an at..
tempt to clear up the con1laten-
cle•. It lltat.ed that the EIR pre-
pared for the enUre Hertta1e
Park complex was adequate and
included tbe com merclal
akateboard course, too.
Mn. Galdo voted in favcr of
tbat motion, but then turned °""t
to be the third vote aia1mt sip.
lnl the contract. Mrs. Pryor ukl abe aunartta
the project because abe ®-not
aeo any adverse tmpact from Jt.
The resldenta claim lt will at.-
tract ~ DtODJe to Berttue Park and tltils-cauae trafffc,
parld.U, noise, nndallam and
related probletlll <SeeS&ATi,PqeAJ)
Co111·t ·Rejects
•
Death for Rape
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
U.S. Supreme Court ruled today that 1tates may not impose the
death penalty for the crime of rape.
The court Hid the death pena.1.
ty .. is a dlaproportionate punlah·
ment f« rape."
"It la difficult to accept the no-
tion, and we do not, that the rape,
with or without aggravatine
clrcum1tances, should be
punlahed more heavily than the
deliberate killer as long as the
rapist does not bimaeU take the
Irvine Vote
life of bis victim," the court said
in an 9PinJon by Justice Byroo R. White.
The court's action, decided by
a 7-2 vot.e, struck down the death
sentence a Georgia court im·
posed on Ehrlich Anthony Coker,
convicted for the 1974 rape of a
16-year·old Waycross, Ga .•
housewife who three weeks
before bad &iven birth to her first child.
Although Georgia's law con·
cerned the.rape of adult women,
the court decision's wordin& in·
Tactics Pay Off,
Vardoulis Mayor
8y BDAaY IL\ YE °'""Delly .. , ....... Bill Vardoulll, tbe man wbo
pmmed ~ woru at cit,y ball
three 'SO wb be H• f\alecl to cut a vote tor mQar,
WH elected mayor of Irvine Tuetday~t. Vardoulll elecUon came on a
4-1 vote, with only .Joba Burton dJsa~. Burt.oQ nomlnaUd
Mary Ann G9!do au4 then cut the 1ole vote fol' ber.
Mrs. Galdo waa then e1eded mayor pro tem cm the Hme 4-1 •
vote.
When It wu all 11ld and done. an obvtoualy d.ltpsted Burton
arabbed the microphone and
commented, "I know it'• onlytbe
end of June and turkey eeaaon is
a lon1 ways off. But I'•• had
enou•b turkey here tor one night!•
Which prompted Mrs. Galdo to retort, "I tboulbt It was called
eaUn1 crow. lo6n. not turkey."
Alter the meeting, Mra. Galdo
said •be tboulht the cbaqe <A
mayors waa important and
si1naled a new unity amont the
council.
•'Rather than bold out and be
mayor m)'lel.f, I tbou1bt lt wu
more Important that th• clty be
united," uld Mra. Galdo ex·
plainin1 why abe voted for Vardoulla.
She aald eleetlna a new mayor
was 1ymbolic aod eapeclally lm·
portant now that the city faces
new ownen and manqera at the
Irv!neCompany.
The hubbub over wbo would
bane the 1ave1 ln Irvine beaan
lut March, when the council
made MVeral Ullluccenful at·
tempts to reor1antie.
The flrat attempt ended ln a
2·2·1 1talemate, with Mn. Galdo
and tben·mayor Dave SHI.a each
recehtlne two votes and
CSeellAYOR,P .. eA:>
!Mfl\I ................
ElECTID MAYOR
Irvine'• Verdoull•
Pair Drown
As Cloudburst
Bits Yosemite
YOSEMITE NATIONAL
PARK (AP) -A YOUDI couple ln
their early »a drowned here to-
day when a cloudburst caueed a
muchllde and trapped them in a
creek, officiall reported.
The victims had not been Iden·
tlfled, and only the woman's
body had been recovered, a park
apok•man 1aid.
Apparently the couple were
wadlna or 1wimmine ln the c:reet
near Mirror Lake when the
cloudburst struck. Tbe youna
woman reportedly aot her foot
wed1ect between a rock and a toe and her companion and two «bel'
men tried to Hve her. However. the awlrllns water ·
swept t.lle tbree men downstream. l'h• two unldentJfled men, wbo
dJd not know Lbe drOWMd eoqple, were able to climb ubore, Qf·
ncJall 1aid.
dleated that ltatM mq not 1m .. ,
poee the death pmall)' even for 1
tbe rape at ch1klreo. •
Jo.lnini White'• opinloa ---Jutlcea Potter stewart, ·
A. Blackman Ud John Paul
Stevens. Justices Wiiliam J .
Brennan Jr. and Tbarsoocl.
Manhall, who oppose the de.alb 1 penalty under any clrcumltance
for any crime. filed concurring
oplnlons.
Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr.
voted to •trike down Coter'a aen·
(See BAPB, Pase AZ)
Girl Scout
Abducted
FroJD. Cmnp
SARASOI'A, l'la. (AP) -A ~year-dd Gld Scout weartac a
Mickey MeuH T·1blri waa .,
dr....-1 ...... troaawt.t · la. AMe pan.,, ... bem.17 Wit
man todQ u ~ titter and
another Iced aereamed la .... ror. autllori~aeicL
Tbe lid .. oame wu no& llD-medhtel~ r•l••••d, but authorlti~ Pld lbe WU fnm Venice., Fla.
Tbe man rtgped open tlle 1-ct
of the tm. Pel'IOD tell& ID -..
acre Olcaa' Scherer St.le Park
about 6 a.ai.. 0"8bbed tbe 81rl by
ber Joq brown ball' and. draaed
her into lharp.palated palmetto
1crub. Saraeot&QM&.ntr Sberttf'a
deputies said.
Tbe man was described a heavily~ with dark hair and a
deep voice. Be wu weartai dark
clothes, Clfftcera aald.
(Earlier tbia month, three Girl
Scoma were 11e.xu1Uy auault.1
and then murdered at a camp In
Locust <Wove, Okla. Autbarltles
have charled 33-year-oJd Gene
Leroy Hart 1n the June 1J ~
and are still~ for him.) The abduetloo here touched Off
an immediate manhunt In
Saruota County. About 100 Jaw
enforcuient oJftcen, Yolun•
teen, a mounted poue an4 even
Florida Power le Ll1ht Co.
servh:e trucb jolDed tbe Hardl
that was Ht up under the
1berlff'• apeclallied weapooa and tactlnuntt <SWAT).
The put is loeatecl two mll8I
south ol the tlb1 towrn of~
and 12 milell 9Gt1Ui ol Saruata OD <Seeaootrr, .... &2)
Coaac
..
A '
RAPE ••
F,.,,_P~Al
MAYOR •••
Vardoulls casting the only vote
for himself. At the next meeUog, that vote
changed to a 2·2 deadlock, with
Sills and Mrs. Gaido again recelv-
i n g two vote1. That time,
however, Vardoulia refused to
vote for either Sills or Mrs. Gaido.
He was no longer In the running
.since his name wu removed as
I the third place linlsher in the
balloting. 1 v~ at that time said he believed be should be mayor
because he had received the
second-highest number of votes
10 the council election.
Floally, the council wu able to
muster three votes to table the
matter, wblcb, in effect. left Sills as mayor unless the matter
was broupt up a1aln.
It was Gabrielle Pryor wu put
the matter back on the agenda
and 1be was the one to pominate
Vardoulls.
At the beginninJofthe meeting
Tuesday, Silla announced be
would not run again for mayor
and thanked tbe clty staff mem·
1 hers for maktni his year as
mayor ''rewardl.n&. ••
Fro• Page AJ .
OIL •••
in tine with the majority.
That was the compromise ad-
vocated durlna a recent Mideast.
tour by Venezuelan President
CarloaAndres Perez.
The decision to end the ao-
ca 11 ed "two·tlered" price
syatem, under wbicb Saudl
Arabia and the UAR charted dif·
fennt prices for oU than the
other OPEC members, bu been
widely rumoTed for weeks.
The Middle Eut Economic
Survey aald Jut month the de·
cislon could save oil consuming
nations $2 billion. But U.S. oil in-
dustry sources aald there would
be Uttle88vtnp at the gas pump,
especially if Saudi Arabia boost:I
ill price5percent.
DAILY PILOT
Fish Invade Court
For Seattle Trial
SEAITLE (AP> -The judge
called it the fishiest case he's
heard in 31 years on the bench.
Five thousand tropical filh -
neon tetras, black skirts and
silver tips -were brought into
King County Superior Ctiurt as
evidence in a trial involving
95,814 misslni aquarium Cish.
"My experience was limited lo.
guppies and goldfish my children
had when they were little,"
Judge Euiene G. CusbJna said
Tuesday, rnidwv tbrougb the trial. •11 bad no idea that triplcal
fish could be so big -or so llWe.
and said fish won't eat other fish
m the dark. McDuff explained
tropical li5h transported in total
darkness ••undergo
psychological changes," includ·
mg a lowering of the metabolic
rate.
"They were asleep anyway."'
he testified.
Throughout the trial there
have been repeated references to
the "00As" -flab who died en
route to the rtteiver.
''They managed to clear up one
point ln the case," said Cushing.
·'They aireed that a certain
number of fish can be expected to
arrive dead."
ehmann
Council Lauds
Irvine Heroine
Irvine's Jane Roi1chmann wu
given a commendation Tuesday
by the Irvine City Council for her
berolc actlona last February
when abe aided a woman who
was crltlcally stabbed while In a
supermarket parking lot.
Irvine Pollce Chief Leo Peart
said Mrs. Roechmann possibly
saved the woman'a Ille due to her
fast actions.
Mrs. Roecbmann received a
framed commendation slaned by the city councll members and
waa congratualated by the police
chief and Mayor Dave Sills.
Accordln1 to Peart, Mrs.
lloschmann was putting
groceries into her car when she
• heard screaaus. saw the attack
and then rushed over to 11ve first
aid to the woman, dlare&ardmg
her own safety.
"Mra. RolcJlmann should be
highly commended for her ac·
Uons. which were in the best
tradition of American citlzenahlp, ••said Peart.
The woman in the parking lot.
was atabbed repeatedly by the
assailant and .suffered aerious ln· JUries.
Mra. Roscbmann, who at· •
tended Tuesday's council meet·
inf with her husband and two
youn1 children, la eurreoUy
worklnc in La&una Buch as a
marriage and f amlly counselor.
OtilffliMI .........
IRVINE Hl!ROINE "
Jene Roechmenn
Cormty Planners Order Overhaul of ElR.
vironmental Impact report
should be chucked out,
however,'" Sundstrom told the
cornmilalon.
Newport Beach airport fiibter
Dan Emory didn't agree with
Sundstrom'& assessment of the
report.
In a '5-mloute discourse oo the
shortcomln1s of the study,
Emory charged that it bad been
"'deliberately perverted," was
mired in bias and la "little more
than a fraud from start to
finlsh."
"You should throw the whole
think back at lbe consultant
(Daniel, Mann, Johnson and
:Mendenhall)," the longtime
airport foe told the commlsalon.
He wu especially critical of a
$10,000 social survey done by
POS Associates that accom-
panied the bulky environmental
impact report.
Emoey polnted out that the aur··
vey team questioned 667 persons
about their reaction to the airport
operation and the noise problem.
but that only 19 of those ques·
lloned lived within the noise im·
pact area.
Later, the commission
acknowted1ed Emory's argu-
ment when it ordered a new
social survey to be part of the re·
port's overhaul.
ll also ordered a cost benefit
study related to the potential
economic feasibility of air carRo
FroaPageAI
... operations at the airport. ·
Before iaaulng those orders
and direcUng tbe study to be lo-
vamped, the plannina co
mlaaloo beard NewPort Be
City Attorney Denni• O'Neill •
dorse the staff r~commendatioo
for an overahaui.
O'Neill made it clear the clty
considers the report inadequate
because it doesn't aim at 1pedllc
proposed airport projects.
"Tbl.s document ts no mote
than a general plan for Orante
County Airport," O'Neill aald as
he pointed out the report's failure
to single out the environmental
impact of specific projecta.
"Staff, for whatever reasons,
however, came up with the cor-
rect recommendation," the city
attorney said u he quietly ur&ed
the commiaaion to send the study
back foe rework.
Send lt back the commission
did on the strength of a quick 4-0
vote that also ordered the new
social survey and the air car10 study.
Lone defender of the costly
study was county Airport Direc-
tor Robert Bresnahan.
Bresnahan said the rework or·
der would be hke "walking a
treadmill of debate and delay."
F,.._PageAl
PROBE ••• "This is the first time there
have been any flab of any kind In
my codrt," be said. "It's been
great -I've learned ao much
aboutftah."
Dra100 Fisheries or Hong
Kone sued Aquatics, Inc., of
White Center, Wash •• because.
Aquatics refused to pay $4,032 for'
shipments it claimed were 96,000
flab abort. ·
The courtroom Monday was lit·
tered with styrene plaalic cases
holding from one to 1 000 fish,
some "no bigger than the end or
my finger,"thejudgeaald.
Congress Pay Hike
Rollback Refused
SCOUT •••
U S.41.
The girl was on a camping
trip with 16 scouts under a sum·
mer program sponsored by the
Sarasota Girl Scout Camp.
to Anthony personally and that
the candidate, in turo. lent the
money to bis own campaign com-
mittee.
However, a $30,000 loan from
Conrad was originally shown on
Anthony's statements as bor-
rowed from Newport Beach
travel agent Ted Cook.
Though those disclosure ad·
justments are known throueh the
amended disclosure statementa.
the Grand Jury also heard Tues·
day from a trio of bank
employes whose testimony ia
believed to have bolstered
evidence seized from banks
through recent search warrantS'.
"I had them brtni in the fish
because part of the issue con-
cerns a claim on bow they were
packed, and the plaintiff says
some of the fish could have eaten
each other. I wanted to see just
how small some o! these fish are," he said.
But Richard McDuff, manager
of Aquatics, testified that in·
flight cannibalism was unlikely.
McDuff said the fish were
shipped in light-proof containers
F.._PageAJ
SKATE •••
· ··1 understand the reasons for
tbe or,posltlon. but I don't agree,' said Mn. Pryor. She
also said she wu concerned that Leisure Specialties President
Jay Henderson be treated
''equitably."
Vardoulis said he favored the
project because the city still
Jacka commercial faclllUes.
"How many towns of 45,000 can
you name that don't even have a
movie theater?" Vardoulls
aaid.
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
House refused today to roll back
a $12,900 pay raise members or
Congress received tbla year and
and corresponding pay raises re·
ceived by more than 20,000 other
officials and employes.
The House defeated an amend-
ment to the ie1islative ap-
propriation bill that would have
cut out funds tor the raise. Thus,
1t reafflrmed with a recorded
vole the lncrease that went into
effect In March without such a vote. The vote defeating the
rollback ot the pay hike was 241
to 181.
Opponents of the pay raise
argued that the methods by
which It wu put Into effect was
shabby, and that Congress
should not protect Itself against
an infiatlon It helped cause.
But supporters said the in·
crease, the second ln eight years,
did not even keep pace with the
rising cost of livlne or the level of
business salaries.
House Speaker Thomas P .
"Tip" O'Neill was applauded
when he argued that the House
had adopted, to accompany the
pay ralse, an ethics code whose
"heart and soul was full financial
disclosures and a limitation of 15
percent. on outside earned ln· come."
Co11ncil Action
The Irvine City Council acted on the followtni Items at Tueaclay'a meet.inc:
-BUDGET: Awroved a $10.tm.893 bud1et for 197'1·78.
The new city tax rate will not be set unUl Au1usl
-Tll&ES: TaclUed 1everol tree-related lMuca, lnclud· tna approvlq a new policy for the preservation of eucalyp.
tus trea, approving a poUcy of increased 1treet tr • main-
tenance, and aendint back to tho clty ala!( tor revisions an
ordinance rqardlD1 removal of trees.
-INDU8Tlt1A.L: Gave final approv1l to • new or·
dlnane. which 1mcnd1 ral\ilaUc:ttt In tbe Inlne Jnduatrlal com~a, wtn tbo area ol provtd.lna.•1clewalks end trafOc: alcn .ilnin• retail Hies and aovetal other e~anded
uae1. otenCchan• IHduelaterthlnear.
-WAJl'JlEM : Contlnuod unUl !uly 28, at tho re-
utst ~ the apptlcant • requnt to o.,.rate a cocktail ~aJtreu tramln• achoo\ ln th Irvin• Jndua"1a1 COmpl~.
The w 11 NqU wu turn dawn by lhe cll1 manaa
appealed. '
-·
The March pay raise went into
effect automatically without the
need for a vote.
lier lather joined the search
while her mother, sister and
grandparents waited for word
with park rangers and detec· .lives. Members of the House were
also tn llne for another pay hike,
a cost-of-llving increase. on Oct.
1. But on a 397·20 vote Tuesday,
the House sent to President
Carter a bill denying the cost-of·
iivlng raise to anyone who re-
ceived the March increase.
The scoots were campin1 in an
area near the northeastern
border of the park just north of
the main pavilion which is re
ached only by a narrow dirt road
and is surrounded on three sides
by thick palmetto scrub.
It all goes into an Investigative
mlx that is expected to come to a
head sometime this week u the
jury's term draws to a close.
Lynn Hort HART'S John Hort
SPORTING GOODS
538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919
Baseball Shoes
All Purpose Shoes
Soccer Shoes
Runninf Shoes
football Shoes
Tennis ShOes
Volleyball Shoes
Basketball Sh
Basketballs
Soccer Salls
Playir Balls
Seftballs
Baseballs
Hand Bils
Racquet Balls
Tennis Bab
Tennis RacMIS
Racquetball Racquets
Handbalf Gloves
Tennis Shirts & Shorts
T ennls Drams
Warm Up SldtS
O.P. Swbn Trunks
Varsity Jadets
• '
,
L
tVOL. 70, NO. 1IO, 4 SECTIONS, SO PAG~S ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
autbortU• uld abe wu ~
V Ice, FIL TJi• man ripped open the baek
of tho thrw-,Penoo tent ln -.
acre Olcar Beherer S~te Park
about 8 Lm., erabbed tho ltrl by
her Iona brown balr and drtaed
her Into 1Juarp.poiated paJmcUo
aerub, Sarasota County SbuUf's
4eputlel Aid.
Tbo man wu detcrlbed as
b avily bullt with dark balr and a
dee\) voice.
(Earlier th1s month, three Girl
Scoutl were sexually uaaulted
and then murdered at a camp in
Locutt Grove, Okla. Authorities
have chareed 33-year-otd Gene
Leroy Hart ln the June 13 slaying
and are aWl aearching for him.>
Tbe abduction her. touched otf
an Immediate •ana-unt to
SarU<Jta County. About 100 law
enforcement oflleera, volUn·
teen, a mounted poeae and even
Florida Power & Ll1bt Co. service trucks joined the NarCh
that was set up under tbe
sheriff's speciali1ed.. weapoas
and tactics unit (SWAT).
Rapists' Death Nixed
' Top Court: Penalty 'Disproportionate'
W ASIDNGTON CAP) -Tbe V.S. Supreme Court ruled today
itiat states may not lmpoae the
death penalty (Of' the crime of rape.
The court Hid the death penal·
ty "is a disproportionate punish·
ment for rape.••
''It is difficult to accept the no-
tion, and we do not, that the rape,
witb or without aggravating
circumstances, 1bould be
puniabed more heavily than tho
deliberate killer u long as the
rapist does not himself take the
Uf e of bis victim, .. the cOUI'\ said
In an 9(>inlon by Justice Byron R.
White.
The court'• action, decided by a 7-2 vote, struck down the death
sentence a Georgia court im-
posed on Ehrlich Anthony Coker,
convicted for the 1974 rape of a
16·year·old Waycross, Ga.,
housewife who three weeks
before bad given birth lo her first
child.
Altbou&h Georgia's law con·
cerned the rape of adull women.
the court decllion's wordin& in·
.Plc!lceting Likelg
1.abor Strife Thorn
To LB Birthday
BJ JACK CllAPPELL
Of ti• Delly Pllet lt»ff
As Lquna Beach celebrated
ill $0th blnbday today, the city's
nonpublic 1afety employea were
1 srumnoveraalari . Emplofa Nprehllted bT the
• La1una Beacb .Municipal
Employ .. Aatoclatlon tU1'necl
down su11eaUons tbat they
picket today'• fesU¥lUta '° ex-
l)reu their discontent. TheJ aald
it would "loolt bad," and not ac·
compli.shmucb.
tbey even proposed that all
employes receive a nat dollar in-
crease, rather than a percentaae
increase of their ex.lating salary.
He criticized the tendency of
gov~ to baM laercue on percent-a• 1ayin. that •'the rick 1et richer and tbe poor get
poorer."
He d ample of an
eml>lote ,400 a month and one~ makes 9llOO a moath.
The rant with • seven percent in-
crease would get an additlooal
•a month. and the second.•· Aller city refusal to consider
<8ee8'mU'E, P81e AZ>
dicated that states may not im-
pose the death penalty even for
the rape of children.
Joining White's opinion were
Justices Potter Stewart, Harry
A. Blackmun and John Paul
Stevens. Justices William J .
Brennan Jr. and Thurgood
Marshall, who oppose the death
penalty under any circumstance
for any crime, filed concurring
opinions.
Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr.
voled lo strike down Colter's sen-
tence _but. aald be did ool lh.iok the
Saccharin
Bill Killed
WASIDNGTON (AP) -
The Senate voted today to
kill a House -passed
measure that would pro-
hibit any government ban
of saccharin use for 15
monlba.
But the Senate ls expect-
ed to act later this summer
on a bill to impo11e an even
lonter IUS lon ol the
pr6posed aaccharln ban
than tbe lS montlls tne
HOUHYOted. Tlie Senate acUoo came
on a 114 billion money bill
for the A(ricullure Depart-
ment, Food and Drug Ad·
ministration and other
a1eocles. The measure
e•entually passed on a
voice vote.
But, Kicbael Townsend, presl-
' dent of the a.member aasocla·
; tlon Hid tbat unleas a ne1otlatlon
1esai0ft Friday produces move-
ment by the city, ••1 can uaure
I you there will be plcketinl, pro-
l bably at a City Council meetini."
Townsend was critical of both
the pro1re11 of the ne1olla-
Uons and of the city's consultant,
Hamilton & AS8ociatea, who is
conductin1 the neeoUaUooa for
manacemenl.
Part al lbe pay issue centers
around the city's insistence at
meaaurlnc employe salary P06i-
ti ons against those of the
pttvate sector.
Betty Forster, Capo
Civic LeQl/,er, Dies
Under this proposal, for exam·
ple, meclwlics mipt 1et ereater
tban averaee pay incre11es
'becaUle mechanics In the private
t sector' cct more, while clerical
t staff would receive leu than tbe
neraie increase because their
• private industry counterparts eet
leaa.
"Our al'IWDeDt ll that the cost
of llvin& bu aone up tor ever·
ybody, for secretaries and
mecbanlct. The cost of a loaf of bread ii die same all tbe way aroudd, .. be taJd.
Townsend Hid tbat when the
employes entered ne1oUaUooa
Coast
Weather
Patchy low clouds alone
tbe coast tonlaht ud early
ln tbe mor9ln1. Mostly
1unn.r Thursday with some
bith cloudiness at llmea.
Low1 toa1aht ss to ss.
m1hl Tbunday 88 to 12 at
beacbeltoT8to84 inland.
Elizabeth "Betty•• Joyce
Fbrlter, a San Juan Capistrano
community leader for more than
30 years, died today at San
Clemente General Hospital,
following a heart attack. She was
69.
Rosary will be recited for Mrs.
\
Forster at 7:30 p.m. Thunday in
tbe Serra Chapel at the San Juan
mission. A funeral mua will be
said at 10 a.m. Friday in the
chapel.
Hrs. Forster firat visited San
Juan CJI\ weekends as a youn1 11rl
from Los An&elea, when her
father, Anthon1 Joyce. aerftd u
Father St. John O'Sulllvan's
superintendent at the mis-
sion. Jpyce lived at the miuion
and was Uttve io ita reatoratloo
1underO'SUlllvan'1 leadenblp.
After atten4lng lmmJcutate
Heart College and UCLA, where
the ma,Jorld ln blatory. Mra.
Fonter came to \he mission clb'
ln 1930 to teach at Sall Ju"'
Elementary School.
In San Juan 1be met Marco
•urom" Fonter. a fourth genera·
On Art Show
Uon descendant of John Forster,
an Endlshman who established
hJs family in San Juan in 1844.
John Forster at one time
owned more than 250.000 acres or
Capistrano ranchland, including
what ls now Camp Pendleton and
Rancho Mlaaton Viejo.
Marco and Elizabeth Forster
were married in 1934 ana re-
maJned active ln civic and school
atraira Wltll Mr. t'orater'a death
in 1966.
Mrs. Forster served on the
Capistrano Union High School
board for more than 20 yea.rs. She
wu a charter member of the San
Juan and Oran1e County ffls.
torlcal Societies and a director of
Bowers Muaeum in Santa Ana.
"Mn. Forster had a regal pre-
1ence -she entered a room like
a queen," said San Juan his-
torian Pamela Hallan. "She was
comp1Un1 a f amlly history and
planned to write a biography of
Don Juan Forster before her
health failed."
Mrs. Forstel" is survived by
two aoaa. 1bomu and Lawrence
Forster, both of San Juan.
Thomas ''Tony" Forster ts a
<See i"OllSTElt, Pase AZ>
death penalty lor rape WU cruel
and unusual punishment la all
circumstances.
••Although rape Invariably ls a
reprehensible crime, ·tbere la •o
indication that petltloner'a of.
fense was committed with ex·
cessive brutality ot that the vie·
tim sustained aerlou1 or lutln&
injury," Powell said.
Chief Justice Warren E.
Burger and Justice William H.
Rebnquilt dissented, a.yin& that
the death penalty lor rape can be
<See RAPE, f a&e A%)
Oil Prices
Won't Hike
Another 5%
VIENNA, AUJtrla (AP) -A
majority or members in the
OrganlzaUon of Petroleum Ex•
porting Countries -opgc -
has decided to cancel plau for
a five percent lncreue in the
price of crude oil . f u,ly 1. ~
OPEC a rfiary I erat an
nounced today.
Tbe is.member on ca ha
been apUt over prltes 1lnce
December wbtn 11 meaibera
called for a two-1tace 15 pe.rcedt
price hike for um. The other two
members. Saudi Arabia and the
Uruted Arab Emirates, opted f«.
a five percent increue for the
whole year.
Tbe 10 percent increase Im·
posed Jan. l by the cartel mliOri-
ty rajaed the price or their crude
oil to $12. 70 a barrel. Tbe lecoDd
staee of tbe increue waa to have
gone into effect July 1.
Ali M. Jaidah, the secretar)I·
general, said in a statement that
the decisiop lo cancel the in-
crease was made "In the lntereet
or unity and solidarity of OPEC.
"The followina coun'1tes qf tbe
organization -Aleeria,
Ecuador, Gabon, lndoneal~
Iran, Kuwait, Nleeria, Qetar,
and Venezuela -have resolved to forego the applicaUon of the ad·
ditiona five percent blcreue ln
<See OIL, Paie ,U)
GET 1'HE BllW
WITH PILOT;.40
He walks, be talka, lle Clances
on bis belly like a repWe ... but
your landlord 1ald, "No pell"
Now wutdo you do?
·'I sold him, caae and. all, with
a Dally PUotctasaUJed ad."
That's the tesUmony of a Oolta
Mesa woman who placed thJ1
cluaified ad:
Conure parrot with c111e.
-BeauUCul colorint. f75.
llX¥•UxX
If you can't keep your pet, ot
have somet.hlnJ etie you'd Ullo
to convert to cub, cill "2·5618.
The Dally PUOt ls tbo place to
ad verttse alons tho Qraaae
Coast.
The park b located two miles
1outb of tbe tiny town of Osprey
and 12 mlles IOUlb ol Sarasota co v.s.u.
The '1rf waa on a camplnc
trip with 18 acoutl under a SUJn·
mer protram rponaored by the
Saruota Girl Scout Camp.
·Her father Joined tbe search while ber motbtr, slater and
Af raooa
N.Y.S&eeka
TENCENT
1randparenta waited for word 1
wllh park raqen and detec~
tlvea. Tb~ SCCJUtl were campiq tn an
area near the northeastern
"bordtt of the park ju.st north of
the main pavilion wbicb ! re-
ached only by a narrow dht road
and ls sWTOUDded on three sides
by thick palmetto scrub.
An apparent victim of the skateboard fever that crossed
the ocean from the United States is this bearded native
of 7.urich, Switzerland, who's taking part in a recent
competi!ion.
Smelly Task
Firemen Chaae Pe•ky Skunk
111 LAURIE KASPER Of U. O.lly Pli.t It.ff
Franklytbe situation stank.
SherlU's deput.tes wouldn't
touch it. No dice, said animaJ
control. So wbo'a left?
"Hooray for the liremen! The
true representative or the
American tradition of concern
and help for their fellow man!"
eulogized Cathy Chiavetta of
LafWUl Niiuel. Over the pat weekend, sbe ex-
plaJned altlt.eratively, "a 1kunk
WH fiACJ'antly flag1ing its tail tn
a not too !nJl'ant fashion and re·
tused to bUdle but a few feet in
any direction 1n my backyard."
Jrtrs. Cblavetta said she called
the American Society for the
PreventloD of Cruelty to
Anhnals: No help. Then.Jshe
caUed tb8 aiilmahthelter: Still no
help.
Sberttr.~ deputies said It was
®t of tbelr jurisdiction. They
1u11estec1 ahe try a1aln to collar
anlmal control. Jnatead. she
called the firemen who could also
bavunllledattbetuk.
l"tremen ••~ally don't eva reatue cab in ttMS anymore.
•·wetve beGl out of tbe tree bust·
na& lfW quite a while beCauae
••'ve lilicl too m&Q1 firemen 1et
hurt," explained Capt. Clift'
Bergen at the Laguna Niguel fire station.
But they felt sorry for Mrs.
Chiavetta. With long poles, they
persuaded the pungent pest to
park bis pelt elsewhere.
Although it moved into an ad·
joining field, the skunk did re·
taliate. "Luckily, I was upwind.'
of it," Capt. Bergen said.
The fire captain said his men
don't normally rescue residents
stuck with a smelly skunk. "It's
not county policy to do these
thin1s." be explained. ·
Capt. Berien said they just did
it to help the woman.
Animal control officen aay it is
not their policy to capture
1konka. Normally, if it ls in so.
meone'1 backyard, one officer
explained, the skunk will leave
when ni1htf all1.
They will pick the skunk up if
the resident traps it first, be of.
fered.
I
More Water ABked'
LOSANGEUES CAP)-Tlleci· ty la aeddri1 court pa-mJ.islon to
pump more water from its
OWens Valley wella as "drou&bt
insurance," a Department of
Water and Power oflclal ••Y'L
% DAU. V (llt1L.0T L/SC
Shooting
Delays
Hearing
A _ on del Mar man, ac•
l'UHd af bur1larl1tn1 plan •l
the San Juan C:aplltrpo aJrport
w e wurkod aa a • curi\.,)' auatd. an lad flnlte d•la>-in
ti lnltlal oourt •&JPeaT111cu rattu
autborllln Jurned h abot.
hlms lf. otnctm of tho South Oran1c
Coant-, Jud1clal Oi trtct Caw1.
aid today no new date haa ~n
•e\ for tbe appearane• of orman Howard t:llla, 23, ol tzl Bcaocua Ave .• who lac thatl•
ol u. tnJC, mallctuua mil·
cbiel, baU.ery on an airplane and
bwllorJ. Ellis wu to havo ~n •r·
raicned Monday. but Sunday be
wu wounded m what Newport
Beach police de1cr1bed u a
I Ulcido attempt.
Accordi.nt to poJlce report.a. EJ.
1.-bffame despondent over the
termmation or bis relaUonablp
with bis e1rllrlend, so he re·
portedly took a cun and tried to
.shoot blrmelf in the neck
PoUce said Ellis told them he
miaaed and shot. himself in the
shoulder io.atead.
Tbe wounded man called police
who had bim taken to Hoae
Memorial Hospital where he was
treated and releaatd.
Ellis was arrested earlier this
month at tbe alrport where he
was hired to work as a aecurity
guard after Orange County
Sheriff's deputies alleged they
round office supplies and aircraft.
parll in }us car.
Laguna Moll8
5 Applicants
For Plan Post
The Laguna Beach City Coun·
c1l wJll consider tour men and
one woman for the sole vacancy
on the city planning commission
when 1t meets at 8 o'clock tonight
at city hall
The candidates are Suzanne
Howard, an artist und activiat in
animal protection and 811 ·
sistance; Terence Glblan, presi-
dent of the Canyon Acrea
Neighborhood Association, Lloyd
Milne, a realtor and former plan·
ning commissioner, Daniel
McMann. an architecl and
member of the city board of ad·
JUStmenl; and Neil Fitzpatrick.
active in the Porlafina
neighborhood.
The suslon it; public. In ·
tcrv1ews are ~chedult•d lo run lo
9 20 p.m
The opening on the commission
was created with the resignation or then-Chairman William
Peckham. who left because of the pr<>ss of business.
From Page Al
RAPE •••
a 1u1t.iCled punishment.
The court's decision dealt only
with the crime of rape but it may
have a profound impact on the
history of capital puninhmenl In
I he United States.
fl.ape i5 not without deserving
a <;erious punishment, but m
terms of moral depravity and or
lhc injury lo the person and to the
public. 1t does not compare with
murder, whlch does involve the
unjuo;tified taking or• human
hfe,' ·White said.
From Page Al
FORSTER. •
former mayor of San Juan.
She also Is survived by a
daughter, Joyce Hamner of
Norco, and o atep1on, Frank
Forster of San Juan; by 1even
grandchildren and a 'reat-
grandchlld.
The family aska that memorial
<fonations be m ad e to the
American Diabetes Association.
DAILY PILOT
-
.... . .. --·-
IBtrhlng on Ritcher
fJZ900Ralse
Ho11se Backs
Past Pay Hike
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
House refused today to roll back
a $12,800 pay Hise snembers ot
Conll'fJU received tblt year uc:t
and corresponcUnf pay ralse11 re-
ceived by more thWl 20,000 other
officials and employes.
The House defeated an amend-
ment. to the le&ialallve •u>-
propriatlon blll that would have
cut oui fund.I fort.he raise. Thu.s, •t reatnrmed with a recorded
vote tho increase that went into
effect in March without such a
vote. The vote defealinc the rollback ol ~ pay b.lke wu 241
to 181.
"Tlp" O'Nelll was applauded •
when be arped thal tbe Houle
had adopted, ·to accomp&D,Y tho
pay rcll e. an ethics code wbole
''heart and soul wu tlall ftnancfal
dlscloeures and a limitation of lS
percent. on out.aide earned in·
come."
The l4uch pay ralie went into
efCecl a'1tomaUcally without the
need foe a vote. It raised th•
salaries of con1restmen aod
aeoators from '64.600 to tl57,:IOO
and lnchaded pay incr~uea for
tbe vt.ce president. Cabinet mctn•
bera, other hl&b ofJlclala and top
civil 1ervant.s aod federal Judees. ·
While Wes Willoughby pedals. Denise
White tap alone on roller skat.es, pulling
Deborah White with her. 'The scene of the
chain r eaction hitchhiking is Mission
Beacb in San Diego.
Opponents of the pay raise
a rgued tht&t the methods by
which tt was put i.oto efCect was
shabby, and that Congress
should oot protect. itse!f acalmt. an tnflatloo it helped cauao.
Members ot the House were
also in line for another pay hike,
a c01t-of-llvin1 tncreue. on Oet.
1. But Oil a 397·20 vot.e Tuesday,
the Houae "ent to President
Cartu a blll den1inc the cost-«·
Uvtna raise to anyone who re·
cei ved the March increase. Campaign Adviser Heard But. 1upporters aald lhe ln-
creue, t.be second in eight years,
did not even keep pace wilh the
riain1 cost of living or the level of
bualneuaalaries ..
House Speaker Thomas P. Sheriff's
Substation
PactOK'd
Jury Probe of County Politics Nean End F,...PageAI
By GARY GaANVILLE 0t1i.01111,.,..Mwt
Political consultant Arnold
Forde put la an •ppoaraoce
Tuesday before the Oranse Coun·
ty Grind Jury •s the Juey ap-
parently qeared the end OI its
elcbt-moath probe into county
politics.
Forde Is a partner to Wlllla.rn
Butcher in the county's foremo.t
political campaign coQlulUoi
firin.
Amms the succeaful Butcher·
F,.._PogeAl
'REGIME'~ •.
cards on the table," said Peter,
"and play them, win, loee or
draw. Some people don't like to
play it that way. I guess."
Peter said that alnce Weeks
became city manager in April ,
1976, "l 've felt that, wlth the new
regime. I wasn't muns in.''
"I felt like I was standint by
the waraide, thumbln& my way
along,' Peter said.
Peter said be thinks the city
has been aimed "in a 1ood, solid
direction,'' toward a "well·
desi,ned procram or arowth."
He aaid, ''Their dealrea are
proper. but I don't. acree lbey'U
fulfill them by thelr methoda. ••
In quittin&, Peter walked away
Crom what amounted to a salary
Increase of 10 pucent a year over
two years ln a cont.tact retroac-
tive to July l, 1976.
His current $28,238 a year
salary would have atone to $34,404
next month.
"Salary bad nothinl to do with
it," he said. "I waa happy with
the settlement, except that it took
a year tosetUe it."
Peter said be wa1 not happy
with the failure of Weeks to
replace Howard Birlew, aasls-
tant city engineer who resigned
nearly three months ago. lie sald
!'lince Birlew1s departure the de-
partment workload haa been
stlntng.
Peter aereed the 1uddenneu ~
his own leavtna was brouabt
about by some reeent Incident -
a last straw -but •laln rel'bled
to be spedflc.
"I just had bad enou1b of
the ... routine. You take H
much u you want. and then
th•l'• it. ..
Peter aald he preferred to be
vague because, "Some people
might look at tt and uy .. 'Oh,
he's juat acreamlna .. foul ball."
1 don't intend to •cream 'foul
ball.· They knew my capablUUea,
and they didn't appreciate them,
then that.'• thelr problem."
Pfter plant to develop blt own
business in structural de1l1n
en1lneerlng and po11ibly, he
aaid, get back into coal mlno
ensineerln1, where he be1an hi•
career.
Post Office
NoQukkStop
. •
Forde candidates in 1976 was
county Supervisor Thomas
Riley. 'lbe campalgn strategists
a lso man11ed the .successful
primary election campatina or
Rep. Robert Badham <R·
Newport Beach) and Jim Slem-
ons, the Newport Beach auto
dealer who wit.bout Forde and
Butcher at tbe controla lost to
Democrat Ron Cordova in the
741h Aaaem.t>ly Dist.rid eeneral
election.
But il was Forde's role in coon-
Tranquilizer
Blanled for :~.
Party Illness
Mllltary investigators from
Camp Pendleton Marine Corps
B.,e are blaming overdoses of
an animal tranquilizer for Ulness
amon1 1ix Marines and two
youn1 civilians.
Pendleton ollicials aald the six
were found either unconscious or
actlDI irrationally at an
Oceanaide apartment occupied
by one of the civiUana af\er a
Moaday ~t party. Most of the people came to
after belna treated by fire de·
partment par.medics. but three
of the Marines remained
ho1pitallied al the Naval
Re1lonal Medical Center at the
base Tuesday.
Jn vesU1ators said it appeared
those stricken were consuming
"an1el dutt," or PCP, an animal
tranquiliier capable or knocking
out an elephant.. by mhtlng It. with
truitjuice.
,.,,.... Page Al
STRIFE •••
the flat nte ne1otlation -City
M•naier Al 1beal has Hid that type of pay 1cale reduces
employe Incentive becaute there
is no flnanclat reward tor moving
up the hierarchy and taklnl add1 -
t ion al re1ponalbility -the
employeamovedtoapercentage.
To\Vf\la'ld 1ald the nonpublic
safety entploYet now were seek-
ing a pay and lrln&e benefit
pack&I• 1hnllat to tbe one won
recently by the police, Just over
7.2 percent.
The firemen approved a two-.
year contract Jut year abd ao
are not nqotlatln1 thlJ year.
Townsend acknowledCtd a lot
or the clty employea by virtue ot
th air tans tenure are at tbe top or
thelr p-.y tcalet, but he said there
has been a stenlllcant tumovor
amon1 the lower ranks.
"There are a lot of people who
are unhappy with the city." he
uid.
Clty mana1er Hid tome con·
tu.loo uiatl over the Drlvate 1ec·
tor survey taken by t"h• city. He
1114 it wu for 0 lnformallonaJ
pal'l)Olel only." Tbe•l 1atd the
10.called "benchmark level•"
for each pc11ltlon, are bued oo a
mutually a1reed-to survey ot
other munlclpaUU¥.
That survey •hows certain
clertc.i potltJonJ to be hl1h, and
certain otber po1ruons
(mecbaoJ~> t.o be low, he •aid
Theal d,cllned to aay > JW
m eh tbiD t.otal 1•ckace t Anc
neaOtJated woul cost bt .iuto
the matter lt tUU ln tbe u Jlt of
talk•. He taJd be_ boped •• • wrap
thlQCI.,. with 1"11.d11'• neaotl•t· lnj OQJ
..
ty Supervisor PhlUp Anthony's
'76 campai&n that was of interest
to the Graod Jury.
The Butcher-Forde duo saw
then Westminster City Coun-
cilman Anthony throueh the
primary election and into a
runoff for county supervisor with
Santa Ana City Councilman
Harry Yamamoto.
Outwardly at least, Anthony
went his own way in his eeoeral
election victory over Yamamoto.
But Butcher and Forde were
never far from view as Anthony
raced oft to a heavily financed
lop si ded Vlctory over
Yamamoto.
It 1s the financing ot that cam·
pa1gn and the roles played in 1L
by Supervisor Ralph Dlednch.
Fullerton attorney Michael Rem
ington and federal lndlctee G<>ne
Conrad that has attracted th1•
Grand Jury's attention.
Tuv Lagunans
Sue Neighbor
Over Trees
Two La&Una Beach residents
who claim their nelehbor's over
arown trees and shrubs block
their view of the ocean and
Catalina Island have taken ac-
tion aaalrut him in Oran&e Coun-
t y Superior Court.
Korey S. Jorgenson and Stuart
Wilson. 2876 Chatcau Way, name
Michael 0 . Kiscda, 2867 Chatcau
Way, as defendant in a lawsui t
that aeeka an injunction and
$35,000 in damaaes.
The plaintirfs further allege
that Kiseda has violated the re·
gulatlons of the Top of the World
Community Asaociatton by al-
lowing his coral tree to exceed 30
feet in heiaht. The plaintiffs further seek a
~ourt order that would prevent
the defendant. Crom parklnl his
boat and trailer m front of hi•
home -a further alleeed viola·
tioo of usociaUon rules.
OIL •••
the price or oil al July i.·· the
s tatemesitsaid.
The other two membf'.rs are
Libya and Iraq.
Hamid Zaheri, the OPEC in-
f ortn ation department chler,
declined to say why Libya and
the Iraq did not eo atone with the
decision of the other nine, and
what action the remalnlnc two
OPEC members-Saudi Arabia
and the United Arab Emlrates-
would take.
There was speculation that
Libya and Iraq would go ahead
with the additional 6 percent lo·
creaae July 1.
Prices cbar1ed by Saudi
Arabia and the UAR arc still 5
percent lower than those charged
by the other members, and there
was speculation the two COWl·
tnes would not brtng their prices
in line with the majority.
That was the compromlse ad·
vocated durina a recent Mldeut
tour by Venesuelan Pretident
Carlos Andres Peres.
The declaion to end tbe ao-called ••two-tiered .. price
syatem. under which Saudi
Arabia and the UAR cbarJed di!·
Cercnt prices for oil than the
other OPEC members, has been
widely rumored for weeks.
The Middle East Economic
Survey said last month the de-
cision could save oil consumln&
natloM $2 bJlllon. But U.S. oll in-
dustry sources said there would
be little savings at the gas pump,
especially if Saudi Arabia boo.<sts
its price 5 percent.
H translated directly. each
dollar increase in the crude oll
price boost.a gasoline prices by
about 21;; cents a gallon.
The United States imports
about 40 petcenl of its oU, and.
about 30 percent of the lmporw
are from Saudi Arabia and the
UAR.
OPEC's members bold about
81.1 percent of the non·
Commun.lit. world's oil reaervu.
The carlel baa auccesslvel)'
ni.sed pricet since the Arab oil
boycott durin& the 1973 Ml.deul
war.
A $127,SOO contract to pay for
de1i&nlnl the new South Orange
County aberltr's substation was
awarded by supervisors Tues·
day.
The board hired the Cmn of
Blasell/Ausust Associates Inc. to
plan both the 26,076-square-foot
substation and a S,400-square-
foot service station for patrol
cars. •
Supervisors also asked Sheriff
Brad Gates and County Ad·
minlatrallve OHicer Robert.
Thomu to identify areaa in the
new 1talion that would not be
used immediaLely so they could
be turned over to olher county de-
partments.
The staUon is being designed
larger than needed immediately
so It can serve the needs of the
unincorporated aoutl\ county
area throueb Ule 19805.
It will be built adjacent to the
South Oranae County Municipal
Court buildlnl at Crown Valley •
and Allcla Parkways ln the
La1una Nleuel are•.
The 1ubstaUon also ls to in· •
elude a detenUoo area for bold.,
)ne prisoners temporarily so
1berlff's personnel can avoid
haullna those held only briefly t.o
the main j all In Santa Ana.
Thomas said Tuesday the pre-
sent plan calls for tbe detenUon
area.. to hold 53 beds, which he
contended ls too Iarse for what.
was intended as a temporary
holdln& cell area.
Rabies Clinic Set
For Laguna Beach
A low~ost rabies vaccination
clinic will be held from 6:30 to 8
p.m. Wednesday at the Agate
Street fire station In Laguna
Beach.
Shots are $2. Tho clinic is
sponsored by the Lquna Beach
Pet Responsibility Committee.
City dog llcenaes will be availa-
ble.
Lynn Hort HART'S John Hort
SPORTING GOODS
538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919
Baseball Shoes
All PllOJOSI Shoes
Soccer Shoes
Runnlnr Shoes
Football Shoes
T ennls Staoes
Volleyb Shoes
. Jisketb II Shoes
lasketllalls
Soccer Bils
Playrr Balls
SoftbiJs
Baseballs
HandM
Racquet BaJls
Tennis Bi
•
~d~eppelin
·People's . Band
WEU.." 8 AIOUND1110 a lot It to know
that with all the mlljaty of their el&ht year "relan ..
(the1 aln the ~11ut~r1wlnt rock •nd roll •ct m llMI Worid> they care more •bout'lk two mllUon
ran. lutky cnoush to 1et •
, Ucket to ~ ol their 50
. Tops In Popa!':. '1 1bow1 th1a aummer than ~~ ti!!JjJ about tradJUonal rock .... _______ ..., • .,. __ · atar trappines.
When Zeppelin come
bere, they storm acrou the country with a relative·
Jy s111aU entouraee (20 people>. do three hou" or
nonstop, ear·•rlittin1 rock and roll several ni1hta a
week and stil mana1e to throw in some musical
aurpriaes
I would never have believed that my favorite
part or their show would be the four-son& acoustic
1et, but this summer it 1s
THE WEEK THAT LED Zeppelin took over
New York they also showed some chan1es m
personality that were hard for a veteran Zep·
. watcher to keep up with. They bad their families
•lth them (they had brought them especially to
-•·1orida to see UIS·
neyWorld and that
rained-out Tampa con-
cert>. So, opemng night
backst.age at Madison
Square Garden waa
a lmost llke being
around the Grateful
Dead.
1 couldn't believe
this was Zeppelin as I
heard shouts of "Dad-
dy! Daddy!" and looked
around to see Robert
Plant's 5-year-old son
Karac tugging at Dad·
dy's flowered print
CAROL CHANNING blouse. Plant's 7-year-
old daughter Carm en
was dressed in a chamois m1mdre1>s. as was her
mother, Plant's w1(e Maureen
John Bonham's wife Pat and his son Jason <who
·appears in the film, "The Song Remains the
Same") were there, as was John Paul Jones' wife
Mo a nd their three children Keira, Cindy and Tam·
my. Even manager Peter Grant's son Warren was
on hand
WHEN THE FAMILIES R ETURNED to
E;ogland, Zep bung out in Trax -a local cellar dis·
co -after the show~. In the same club, on a regulan
basis, were Keith Richard, Ron Wood, members of
Aerosrruth and Kiss So much for soc1almng.
Robert Plant played soccer tn Central Park and
bousht a pink Lincoln Mark IV Cwith red interior) to
ship back to England. John Paul Jones shopped m
the Rizzoli bookstore, J immy Page stopped by the
Atlantic Studios to see the Rolling Stones, and John
Bonham stayed in his
room a lot and watched
TV.
I( you wanted to
make up your own
version of Zep's 1977 set,
culled from their re-
cords, it would go like
this "The Sona Re·
mains the Same," "Sick
Again," "Nobody's
Fault but Mine," .. In
My Time of Dying."
·•since I've Been Lovin'
You," "No Quarter."
"Ten Years Gone,"
"Battle of Evermore,''
KEITH RICHARD "Goin' to California,"
"Black Country
Woman," "White Summer" (from the Yardblrd.s'
.. Little Games" LP), ··Kashmir," "Moby Dick,"
''Achilles Last Stand," "Stairway to Heaven," and
then the encores "Whole Lotta Love," "Rock and
Roll." Trampled Underfoot" and ·· Black Dog "
MANAGER PETER GRANT ONCE said that
rock and roll remains vital by not playing too Iona
at one hall, and by the end 9f the week at Madison
Square Garden, Led Zeppelin was itching lo move
on. Playing tn the same venue every night for a
week gets to be hke punching a clock.
So, u 20,000 fans were still cheering for another
'encore at the sixth, and final Garden show, Led Zep
sped away in four cars to JFK Airport where their
private 707 jet waited to take them to another city.
LUGGAGE TAGS
Send one card for each tag
+ one spare. We return
permanently sealed
attractive tag & strap,
meeting airline 1.0 .
requirements. Prevent
loss & theftl"For a
personalized tag
enclose wallpaper.
fabric or ''Day Glo'·
paper & we will
back & trim your tags. Or
try two cards back to back.
$2 ea. or 3/$5
4/5tagsS1.60 ea.
6/9 tags $1.SO ea.
10 or more $1.40
ea.
S.Jff Tix Included
No C•rd1
Electric a.Ml• 1" 411 100-Foot """' ~ 5'7 Glue Gun . /t!':.~·... a.ch SteelTape .''.~!~.~. IMh
t 3-Plece ~ Me~ J67 · 7" Quality o-.....i 111 .__ 0t w-lech Sow Blade .. ~-~. '9Ch DrUl 8lt .-t .......... ..
All Stffl, ~ :~ .. 9?!h I-Point Tefteft' ~• 17 Staple Oun .. ··· .. ····· 26" Hand Saw~~!•..-
•.a Double Row "-~~ 1 57 Propane c..-. With 5-Tool Rack · ... .1~ .. · ·" .....
Torch .. ·······~.~'!~~·· •t.<-h llllllll~!!!~~==:
·~ Pfl.1!Y
o. /[11).' ~J~,'
H.
A ._., c.i.,., 16' • "°•tk Switch "9te ...... .
I tw.y c.&ete4 16' ...... "' O..t4et ,..,. . .. ••.
c. :-!:'.'\~ .................. 26•
D.~~~h .............. 34'
L~To:~ ........... 44•
F ,.Inch St... 48' • Swltchk1 .. . • .... .
G . ~~ ~. N11tt.. .. ..... 48'
"·=~~ ........... 68•
I so.Pt. 14/2 ll-• 4 58 • Wlte With Of'911n4 .. • e
J. ~'tentr-' ..... J.88
K 41" 0 .1. 40-W 97c . ,..,.._.1 .........
L S11~C:.illn113 88 . 2'•4' °'" ,..,.,,.. •
VEISATILI
TWO-WHllL
HAID TRUCK
14!~
Sturdy tnetol with
two eo1y-roll
wheelt. U'e for
troth he>uling,
moving. etc
Dep.ndable motor, I double inwloted .
Will drill ~,. metal
or 3>." wood. Sale
endl Monday. Shop
at Kmart and save.
B&D FINISHING
POWER SANDER
~~~':o~~~; ,!!~~: 144 7 Hol dependoble
motor. double in-
lvloted 5ove now. •
Sole endl Monday.
°LATEX FLAT · · 'GLOSS HOUSE
HOUSE PAINT
llesi~ts chlppi.ng, 8'" peeling, crocking. !II
Soop ond woter
cleon·vp. Save, Oif,
& TRIM PAINT
~~~: :1~il~ ~::~ 8'4 soap and water
clean·vp. Save. Got.
ACIYLIC FLAT
LA TIX lllAMIL SIMI-GLOSS
LATll lllAMEL
FLAY LARI
WALL PAllY
I~
For wollt, woodworti.
··1~!. I~
f« kltch.n 011d both.
L
!
Serie. Opener
The Galveston. Te1' • Court House is pie·
lured on the fir:;t 1n a senes of color post
cards debutmg this year, according to the
U.S. Postal Service. Theme is h1storial pre-
servation. Tht! card will be issued for the
first lime July 20 .
on your.
Few See Jazz 'Lab'
Newport FestiYal Rewards Sparse·Audience
•tOOLOaES BUCLAY
Nl!W YORK <AP> -The
Newport Juu f'est.lval offered
fan• a rart lnsiaht Into the avant-
iiarde loft jau scene, but rew
chose to experleoco It
1'00 bad. H wu a chanc• to
hear experimental Jan and
oruunul muinc at their bu\. Too
bad for the RevoluUonary
En.amble and Double lmaae
they ployed lo a near-empty
Alice Tully Hall on Monday
na&ht.
8 UT FOR THOSE true
followers and curiosity 1eekfrs
who attended, it waa hltt bell'll ·
an observer an a well-planned
htboratory
Classically trained Leroy
Jenkins was In lop rorm with the
Ensemble He manaaed to cap-
ture every nuance of the violin
from the squeal of the Sitar to the
depth of a cello. He's a veraalile
musician who feels JUSt as home
on viola. recorder, harmoruca
and kahmba
The other two members of the
tr lo -Sirone and Jerome Cooper
-were equally &ood. But all
three seemed Ill al ease on a con-
cert staee. They somehow tried to retrieve the intimacy and
informality of the lort by playlne
together stage center In a tight
knot and by not amplifying thelr
instruments. This allowed them
lo achieve a purity of 1ound
seldom heard ln this age of elec·
tronica.
SIRONE PRETTY MUCH kept
his back to the audience when he·
hunched over his bass. He
1roaned and grunted. clutchln&
the instrument in death·like 1rlp
and then releasing lt as he dis·
played an excitine rhythmic
vltallty. He started the concert
on a rather subdued note with lus
trombone. He became Creer
when heswitched to bass Cooper ls a subtle but precise
drummer. He also plays
baJapbone, bugle, piano and the
saw.
DAIL V "LOT ,t J
July 6, we'll· pay 7%%=~~.,M
aeposit account.
,no -savings & loan
can pay you more.
Opening on ln<l1v1dual Retirement
Account at Bank of Amenca can benefit
you in a number of ways
There's earnings. of course
No bank or savings & loan can pay you
more on Individual Retirement Account
funds held in ?\ tmw depnc.1t i\ccount
At Bank of A111enc:c1. vour IHA plan will
now earn a solid 7 •11 ~1 t1nnual interest
with a minimum nwturity uf three years
. . or as long as 10 yeitr~ Interest 1s
<.,
,,
compounded daily with dn annual yield
of 8.06C{',
If vou ·re confused about the
details of the IRA plan, we have courteous.
knowledgeable people ready to help you
fully understand the program
C...,1mply c;tated. the IRA plan is
av,11lable tu persons who are working and
who arc n11t covered by a qualified
pension plan With an IRA plan. you can
set aside up to 150/1 of your income (up to
$1.500 a year) and deduct it from your
current income when you file your federal
income tax
You don·t pay taxes on funds
deposited or interest earned until you
retire or withdraw from the plan. Generally.
vou can't v..ithdraw from the plan before
you reach 591 L years of age without
paying substantial penalties as prescribed
by law. Husbands and wives can have
separate accounts 1f they are eligible .
•
It pays to have your IRA plan at
Bank of America in another important
respect. Convenience. The convenience of
having all your financial services at one
location. And. Bank of America has rnore
than twice as many California locations
as anv other bcmk or ':>avings & loan.
If you maintain c.in IHA plun
or 1f you.re pli'lnning to open one
come to Bi'lnl< of America. Discover why
more Californians depend on us
m BANK OFAMERICA
Individual
Retirement
Account
\
.. I
1 I
·I
j • I
•I . . --
Oraage Coast
EDITION
Today'• Cl Ing ~
N.:Y. Stoeks ~
..
VOL. 70, NO. 180, 4 S CTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY JUNE 29# 1977 N . TENCEN
t OC A. ort Study Rework Set\
1'J GA.SY G&ANVlLLlt __ .. .., ........
An envtroamental Impact ,...
port covuin1 Oran1e County
Airport beaded nowhere in a
lllUrr7 'l'Ueiday when the County PllAlllna Commia.11oa ordered It
overt.aul.ed.
Tbe commiuion '1 order to l"f-
tara lhe four.year, $300,000
airpert llUd1 to the cowrty atalf
m bin and Iha comuJtant .-bo
prepared It ftU 1bort of oulrlpt
rejection.
lhat It w the cloaett lhinC to It
11 a lhrffobour public hMlini
ended ln victory for criUce of th costly 1Wdy.
Jt won't be until "eomeUme
betwMO Chriltmu and Euler"
that the reworked environmental
Impact report will make Its way
back to the plannin1 commisaion
for acceptanceorrejocUon.
Scout Grabbed
While Camping
Fowl.Play
In Newport
Apparently the tempta·
lion wu too great to be re-
sisted.
First. Mayor Milan
Dostal noted that the city
had enacted a "birds and
bees" law.
His one-liner was topped,
to the moana of audience
members, by Councilman
Don Mcinnis, who said he
opposed the ordinance
because it was a "fowl"
Jaw.
After the Jokes were
over, Newport Beach coun-
cilmen enacted two new
laws to go into effect in 30
days which prohibit the
keeplna of apiaries (bee
blvea) and wild fowl within etty llrntta.
Appoiniments
Made Public
By Council
With seven terms on five city
boards and commissiona explr-
· 1ne Thursday, Newport Beach
councilmen reappointed a few
people and selected some new
faces Monday.
In an unusual move, the Coun·
ell resorted to public debate to
settle a dispute over planning
commission apPointmente.
· Normally, differences over ap..
pointments are aetUed out of the
»ublic eye In the council's com· a.1uee on appointments but the
debate was made public when
the committee members said
they were unable to reach an
agreement.
Appointed in council action
Monday were:
-Mary Rlcbmond, 1307
Seacrest Drive, Corona del Mar,
to the Library Board of Trustees 'o fill the e:<pired term of ~tricia Black
.,_Beryl Mellnkoff. 104 Via koron, to the City Arts Com-
mlsl'iOo to fill the expired term of
Joane Evans.
-Paal Wickman, 28 Pt.
Loma Dtave, Corona del Mar, re-
• (See PUBLIC. Paco A2)
..
SeaScouta
Need Funds
For Base
Orange County Boy ,
Scout officials, faced with
a Thunday deadline, are
increasinti their ef4orts to
raise tt1e refnaintn1
$118,000 ·needed for their
major overhaul of the
·Newport Beach Sea Sc~t.
base.
The scout.a have been
told they can have S«.2,000
of 1tate tJdelandl lundl It
they can rallo $111.000.
The remodellna pro·
sram would tum l.be bue into the Aquatlo Youth
· Center, open to an or·
canl&ed youth troupa In the' ounty. It S. locat.fld on
Wut Coast Hl1hw1y nut
to th• Collectate Cr.w and
SaWn1Base.
· Conlrl but.or• ue belnl
u9'e4 to caU teout h ad·
quan..t ln Santa Ana at
54t·OOO or · Raadall
Prtal•1. fund drive
, c:bal • atMO-OSOO.
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) -A
heavy-set man ripped tbroueh
the back of a camp tent in a re·
mote state park at dawn today
and dragged off a lS·year·old
Girl Scout by her long brown hair
as two companions screamed in
terror, authorities said.
More than 100 searchers, arms
linked, began moving through
the sh~pointed palmetto scrub
with tracking dogs while helicop-
ters hovered overhead in the ef-
fort to find the girl.
Authorities said the abductor
bu rat into the. tent shortly after
.5:30 a.m.
The girl, clad in a Mickey
Mouse T-shirt and underclothes ..
was dragged out by her hair as
her sister, 14, and another scout
screamed for help.
Eight scouts and two adult ~unselors were spending the
ght in the park, which covers
acres on the edge of a vast un-
populated area etretchine east
for nearly 200 mllea. The other aev~ ltl:JI wore Mat J>om• early aftet tlie attack was reported.
The abductor was desert bed 14
six feet tall and beavY·aet. with
dark hair, a de•p voice, and
weartn1 • • clothing. Deput18r I knew of no
moUveforthe
<Earlier this month, three Girl
Scouts were sexually assaulted
and then murdered at a camp in
Locust. Grove, Okla. Authorities
have charged 33-year·old prison
escapee Gene Leroy Hart in the
June 1.3 slayings and are still
searchine f<>l' him.>
Today's abduction h e re
touched off an immediate
manhunt. About 100 law enforce-
ment officers, volunteers, a
mounted posse and even Florida
Power & Light Co. service trucks
joined the search that was set up
under the sheriff's specialized
weapons and tactics unit
(SWAT>.
The girl's father joined the
search while her mother, sister
and erandparenta waited for
word with park rangers and de·
tectives at a command post set
up about a ball mile from the ab-
duct.ion site.
The park is located two miles
south of the tiny town of Osprey
and 12 miles south of Sarasota on
U.S. 41. Roadblocks were set up
on the hipway, lhe only mBJor
road in the area.
Dana Point
Man Arrested
In Abduction
A Dana Point man, arrested on
suspicion of lddnaplng, posted
$25,000 bail within hours of his ar·
rest by Newport Beach police
Tuesday and was released from
jail.
Detectlve Sam Amburgey said
Patrick Alan Gibboney, 30, of
33782 Blg Sur St. was arrested at
his home in connection with the
abduction of a 14 ·year·old
hitchhiker in Newport Beach
Monday. ·
Amburgey 1ald Gibboney was
traced because one of the
hltcbhlker'a companions waa
auspicious ot him and decided not
to eet into h1a car. Ambur1ey
said the •lrl acratcbod tho car'•
license number down on the
sidewalk wttb a rock.
AmbQrpy aa1d the H-year-old
and her cornpanlon were
hltchhiklnc to their West
Newport Boacb hotnes from
Corona del Mal' when the girl waa . picked up.
She told })Ollce the motorf 1t
police believe It Gibboney turned
nortltbounit on MacArthur
Boulevard and when 1he object·
ed a e ensued. The 1irl told police,e Jumped out ot the
car t stopped for a tr&mc 11 t after I l&W & m1t
Meanwhile, operations and
propoeed capital improvement
projects at Orange County
AlrPort wlll be in a holding pal·
tern, bolled down in the failure
of the report to win approval
from lhe planning comm1ss1on
and the board or supervisors.
Commission action on the
atudy followed the recommenda·
lions of the county's Environ-
mental Management Agency
End of the ~iae
<EMA) staff.
EMA's manager of envlron·
mental services. Dennis
Sundstrom. conceded that the
hefty report in tt.s present form la
"fiawed."
"We don't feel the entire en·
vironmenlal Impact report.
s h ou Id be c buc Iced out.
bowevel"," Sund.atrom told the
commission.
Newport Beach airport ftlhter
'"w....,._..
Def ending champion Chris Evert tries to get her concen-
tration together during a break in her semi·final match
today at Wimbledon. She didn't, losing to Britain's
Virgirua Wade, 6·2, 4-6. 6-1. Wade will meet Betty Stove
of The Netherlands in the women's singles final Friday.
See story, Pa~e Bl
Betty Forster, Capo
Civic Leader, Dies
Elizabeth "Betty" Joyce
Forster. a San Juan Capistrano
community leader for more than
30 years, di ed today al San
Clemente General Hospital,
following a heart attack. She was
69.
Rosary will be recited for Mrs.
Forster al 7:30 p.m. Thursday in
the Serra Chapel at the San Juan
mission. A funeral mass will be
said at 10 a.m. Friday i,n the
chapel.
Mrs. Forster first visited San
Juan on weekends as a young girl
from Los Angeles, when her
father, Anthony Joyce, served as
Father St. John O'Sulllvan's
s uperintendent at the mts·
alon. Joyce lived at the mission
and was active in Its restoration
• under O'Sullivan '1 leadvahip.
After attendin1 Immaculate
Heart College and UCLA, where
she majored in history. Mrs.
Forster came to the mission city
in 18~ to teach at San Juan.
Elementary School.
In San Juan she met Marco
"Tom" Forster, a fourth eenera·
lion descendant of John Forster,
an Englishman who establllbed
his family ln San Juan in 1844.
John Forster at one time
owned moce than 250,000 acres d
Capiatrano rancbland, lncludiu
what is now Camp Pendleton and
. Rancho Mission Viejo.
Marco and Elizabeth Forster
(See FORST Ea, Paae AZ>
Yaeht Raee Founder
C. V. Wurdemann
I I
Succumbs at 86
Converse V. Wurdemann of
Newport Beach, a retired Edison
Compaoy executive and one of
the found ra ot lhe NewPort to
Enaenada Yacht Race, died ear· lY Tuesday al a Costa Mesa con·
valeaccnt botpltal where he had
been connned with a long and de·
bllltattnc Wnea1 . He was 86.
Memorial aervices for Mr.
WurdcmaM wlll be held Friday
at 11 ,.,m. al St. Michael ancf All
An••ll Eplscopal Church, :1233
Pacific View Drive, Newport
Beach. Followlna lhe 1frvlce a
fiotUla o( 11cht1 wlll carry his
f 1mll1 and friends beyond tbe
th'"·m le llmlt whore hill uhet
wlU bt'lkattered at sea.
• B I hls widow, Pearl, Mr.
Wurd man.n leav a daulhter,
'Mar7 Ellen Annstroo1 of ,Studio
CltJ; a aU!p on, WUlftam A • . .
Reavis or Mora11; ah
grandchildren, and two IN~
grandchildren. •
Mr. Wurdemann wu riabt-of·
way aeent for the Souther,n
California Edison CompanJ fOr
34 years before bl.I retirement in
1958.
Bom In Milwaukee, Wlle.., lllr.
Wurdemann became lnlatuated
with 1&ntn1 and aallboat ractng
at ao early as•. wln.Qins hb nrat
trophy at qe 8. Kla early •alHJit
was on the WlJcoa.ln Ilk•. H•
later attended the tJnlvenltJ Of
Witcons 1, andUatl lo 1111.
Mr. Wurdemanl\ d tdl flini•
ly moved to Balboa l1land In
194S. He ..Ued out ot th BalbOa
YacbtClabof Whlch b wu com-
Dan Emory didn' agree with Sund.atrom•a aueument of lbe
report.
ln a ~minute discourse on the
shortcomlncs of tbe study.
Emory cbarced that It bad been
"deliberately perverted," was
mired in bias and ls ''little more
than a fraud from atut. to
finlab."
.. You sbolald throw the whole
tbl.Dk back at tbe consultant
CDanlel, Mann, Johnson and
:Mendenhall>," the loQ1timc
airport foe told the commlaaloo.
He was especlelly critical of a
s10,ooo 10Clal survey done by
POS Auoclates that accom-
panied the bu1Q environmental
impact report.
Emoey painted out th.t the sur··
Yey team questlooed &61 persons
about their reacUon to the airport
<SeeAJ&PO&T, P11eAZ>
Top Court Sa•• · · i
Death Penalty
Nixed in Rap~
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
U.S. Supreme Court ruled today
that states may not impose the
death penalty tor tho crime of
rape.
The court said the death penal·
ty "ls a disproportionate P1lllilll·
ment for rape.••
"It ls difficult to accept the no-
tion, and we do not. that the rape,
with or wltbout ag1ravatine
circumstances, should be
punl•bed more beanly than the
deliberate klller as lone u the
rapist does not himself take tbe
llfe or his victim," the court said
in an 9plnlon by Justice Byron R.
White.
The court's action, decided by
a 7·2 vote. struck down the death
senlence a Georgia court lm·
poaed on Ehrlich Anthony Coku.
convicted for the 1974 rape of a
16-year·old Waycross. Ga ••
housewife who three weeks
before bed elven birth to her first
child. A.lUloalh OODl'lla's l eenMld tlil raped adult---.
the court dfftaioo'• wordlna in-
dicated tbat st.atet may not lm.
poae the death penalty eveQ for
the r_aee of cblldren.
lli,gh Tides
Due Tonight
Tbe blahest Udes ot the
summel"-1l pair of seven-
f ootera-· will bit the
Orange Coast shoreline
tonieht and Thursday'
ni1bt.
LUeguards said mlld
surf and llOit winds are
forecast for both nights
and that. no damage is ex·
peeled durtng peak hlgb
tides.
Tonight's peak tide will
occur about 8:30 and
ThurldQ night's at about
9:15.
N-MBudget
OK May Mean
SOo Tax Cut JollUDI WbJte'a opinion ,_,,
Juttic• Potter Stewart, HArry
A. Blackmun and .John Paul Uubor area property owners
Stevens. Justices William J. can IOOk forward to a SO-cent cut
Brennan Jr. and Tbur1ood in school tu rates next year
Marshall. wbo oppose the death bued on a tentative budget ap.
petaall)' under any circumstance proved by school trustees Tues·
for any crime, filed concurrine day.
opinions. That means Newport-Mesa Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr. Unified School District taxes for
. v<>!~-to ~tJ:ike down Colcer's ~-1977·78 would be about $3.73 per
tenee but said he did not think the $100 aasessed valuaUon in Costa
death penalty for rape was cruet Meu and $3.4.S per $100 assessed
• and unuaual punishlPent in au valuaUon in Newport Beach.
. circumst.aoces. The anticipated reduction Is
"Altbouib rape invariably la a due to projected increases in as·
reprebeoafble crime, there fa no se11ed •aluatlon tor the twct
Indication that petitioner'• ol· cltiea ud putential financial te•
feue wu committed with ex· lieff""11 Sacramento, district oC·
ce11lve brutality or that the vie· ficlalasald ••
tlm auAalned serious or last1nc It doesn't necessarily mean a
injury.'' Powell said. decrease in tu bills. That will
. Chief Justice Warren E. dependootheaizeofincreasesht
Burier and Justice William H. assessed valuation.
Rebnqullt dlaaented, aaylq that The acbool board approved a
the death penalty tor rape can be • l'a.l npll.ioo tentative spending
a juatlfied punishment. pro1ram for next year. Dlatrict
Pico Rivera
Man Rescued
In Newport
offidala aaid the 2.3 percent in-
crease over last year'• budget ls
due to salary and frinae benefit.
1Dcreues.
Truttees a1Jo discutsed the
poeslblllty ot a further one-cent
cut In the district's community service tax rate. but held off ac·
Uon OD the propoeal unUI district
officials can prepare a report on
whattueh a cut would mean.
Coast
Weather .
Patdty low cloudl along
the cout f(JnJght and nrly
in the morntn•· MosUy • sunny TlwradQ with aome
hl&b c1oad.lneU at Umes.
Lowa tont1bt 58 to ea. ·
Hi&hl Thurlday 81 to 72 at beacbelto7tto~~d. ~
INSIDE TOD~ Y
ON o/ tM .:r.U o/ !Ad
Zqp.U.•• ncccu ti that
Uwr/'lt o ''pflopl;• band.•• A"
Wtde loot.« roct.and toll'• •
molt ~ frOJ4> fl Oil ~Ali; r
•
l
DAILY PILOT N W.ctn .. c1ay Jul\e 21. 1111 .... -
Consultant Testifies
Grand Jury frobes Forde Activities
81G4aY GaANVILL£ °'""' o ... , .......... ,. l'ol1t1ral t'un1ull;.nt Arnold
rord Sl\ll ln &n ll"iJUr•nc
Tu d•r bet Mt th• Oran1• Coun
ty Grand Jury •• th~ Jury •P
pan:nUy neared lb ''"" ot ti.JI •At·moatb probe tnlo c:ounly
pollUaa.
,...., ta a partn r lo William
Sutch• Lo tho couat)'':1 fo1 rltl()ll
pollucal c-ampalgn conaulting
hrm.
A IDCJq Lho 1ucoet.1fut Butcbtr-
Fordo cand1dat• In lt'lO wu
couotJ :>upenlaor Tbomu
l.rvlneVote
Riley. 11lo campal · atntqtltl
also rnana1ed the 1ucce11ful
1>r1mau-r elecUoo campalp of
R•p. Robert 81dbam <R·
Newport Beach) and Jim Slem
ona. the Nciwf>C:>rL Beach auto
dulttr who wtthout !o'onhl and
Butcber al the cootfoll loet t.o
O.ni0ctat Roa Cordova ln tho
74lh Allembly Da.trtet po«al
election.
But It wu Forde'a role in coun-
ty S&qlK'rvllOI' Pb1Up Antbo01'•
'1G campalcn tut wu of lmAnlt
to tho Grand Jury.
.. • ...... '
...
Tactics Pay Off,
Vardoulis Mayor '
By IULARV KA YE
Ol t• D•Oy l"olel $ull
Blll Yardoul&a, the man who
eummed up the works at city hall
three montha a10 when he re-
f used to t•aat a vote Cor mayor.
was elected mayor of Irvine
Tuesday night.
Whlcb prompted Mrs. Gaido to
retort, "I thought it was caJled
c attn1 crow, John, not turkey."
Aft« the meetlne, Mrs. G111do
said ahe lhoucbt the change or
mayors was important and
.signaled a new unity amone lht!
council.
Tbe Butcher-Forde duo saw
then Westminster City Cou11
cllman Anthony lhrouah the
primary electlon 1o1nd Into a
runoff for county supervisor with
Saola Ana City Councilman
Harry Yamamoto
Outwardly at least, Anthony
went his own way In hla 1eneral
elecUon victory over Y umamoto.
8ut Butcher and Forde were
never tar from view as Anthony
raced off to a heavily financed
lopsided vicLo ry over
Yamamoto.
It la the financing or that cam-
pl11n and the rolH played ln it
by Supervtaor Ralph Diedrich,
Fullerton attorney Michael Rem.
lneton and federal indictee Gene
Conrad that has attracted the
Grand Jury's attention.
Tbrou&b amended public d1~
closure statements, Anthony bas
admitted that 128,000 worth of
Joans to his campaign commlttef'
were not from him but from
Remlneton.
Both Anthony and Remington
insist. the Remineton loans were
to Anthony personally and that
the candidate, In turn, lent the
money to his own campalen com·
mtttee.
However, a $30,000 loan from
Conrad waa ori1inally abown on
Anthony's statements as bor-
rowed from Newport Beach
~.'<l!;"~Li'Y'll'./' .. _ ,, ....... ~ .......... -~
Car Crunched
F,....r.,,eAI
AIRPORT •••
operauon and the noise problem,
but lhal oc1ly 19 of those ques•
Uonfd llved within the nc>Uo im·
pact area.
t~ater, the commission
acknowledged Emory'!> argu.
ment when It ordered a new'
aoc:lal survey to be part or the re-
port •e overhaul
l t also ordered u cost benefit
:.tudy related lo the potential
econorruc (easiblllty Of a1r C&ri<>
operati<>n5 at the a.Lrt>ort
Before issuln1 tho. e orders
and d1recUn1 the study to be re·
vamped, the p lanning com-
mission beard Newport Beach
City Attorney Denn.ii O'Neill en-
dorae the sWf recommendauon
for an overahaul.
O'Neill made It clear the city
conalders the rer.rt inadequate
because It doesn' aim at specific
proposed airport proJ~ts .
•'Thi.I document la no more
than a general plan for Orange
County Airport." O'Nelll said as
he pointed out the report'• failure
to single out the environmental
impactor specific projects.
''Stair, tor whatever reasons.
however, came up with th~ cor-
rect recommendation," the city
attorney aaid as be qwetly ur1ed
the corninWlon to tend the study
back for rework.
Send it back the commission
did on the strength or a quick 4-0
vole that also ordered the new
doc1al s urvey and the 4'.lr curgo Vardoull1' election came on a
4·1 vote, wltb only John Burton
dl11ereeln1. Burton nominated
Mary Ann Ga1do and then cast
the sole vote for her.
"Rather than hold out and be
mayor myself, 1 thouaht \l was
more Important that the city be
united," said Mrs. Gaido. ex-
plaining why she voted for
Vardoulia.
travel apnt Ted Cook. ~
Though th01e dlacloaure ad·
juatmenll are known throulh the
amended dlacloture statements,
the Grand Jury alao heard Tues-
day from a trio of bank
employes whose testimony is
believed to have bolatered
evidence seized from banks
tbrou1b recent search warrants.
As police officers survey the scene, wreckers begin
hauling ~way a car that ran off Big Canyon Drive at the
country club early Utis morninf. The auto apparenUy
left the roadway at high speed, fl ew through the air. hit
the edge of the bridge and landed upside down on the
golf cart path. Newport Beach police didn't make a re-
port on the accident because. offlcers said, the uniden-
tified driver was uninjured and it took place on private property.
I ~tudy,
Mrs. Gaido was then elected
mayor pro lemon the same 4 1
vote.
When it was all said and done,
an obviously dlaeusted Burton
grabbed tile microphone and
commented, "J know it's only the
end of June and turkey season 1s
a long ways off. But. I've had
enough turkey here for one
night."
She said electing a new mayor
was symbolic and especially im-
portant now that the city faces
new owners and managers at the
Irvine Company.
The hubbub over who would
bang the gavel in Irvine beaan
last March, when the council
made several unaucceaafuJ at-
tempts to reorganize.
It all 1oes lnto an Investigative
mix that i1 expected lo come to a
head sometime this week as the
Jury's term draws to a close.
'lo
Front Page Al -~ j i Coast College
. r PUBLIC POSTS .••
appotnted to the Civil Service
Board.
-Joan Winburn, 1612 Cornwall
Lane. to the Parks, Beaches and
Recreation Commission to fill
the expired term oC Bill von
Esch.
-Dr. Kmnetb Schwan, DDS, '
:1soo Surlv1ew Lane to the Parks.
Reaches and Recreation Com
mission t.o nu the explred t.erm of
Evelyn Hart.
-George CokH, 1612 Santiago
Drive, reappomted to the Plan·
nmg Commission.
-Larry Lynch, Z773 Vista Um·
brosa to tt1e Planning Com.
mission t.ofill Ule eapltcd term or
Hall Seely.
All except the two planning
commission appointments were
routinely approved by the coun.
cil after Councilman Don Mein·
nis, chairman of the council's ap·
pointmenl!! comm1tlcc, recom-
mended them.
However. when Mcinnis got lo
the two planning commission
vacancies. he said the committee
wa~ unable to tt'ach agreement
and had four nominees that he re
com mended the council chooi.c
from.
Thi' committee includes Coun-
cilmen Paul Ryckoff and Luc1llt!
Kuehn, but Mrs. Kuehn was un·
.1blt> to attend rt'rcnl committee
meelln~s while she was rt .
c.·upt•rating from fool surgery.
The four people named by
\f clnnis wt>re Coka11, Lyn<-h.
lkkn MrLau~hlin, or SH
Seaward Road. Corona d<'I Mar
Jnd Bun-Allegacrt of 2200 Aral1a
St
Mcinnis said C'okas was being
nominated because he had been
on the commission less than a
vcar following his appointment
to fill the unexpired term or
rormer commissioner James
Parker.
.But Ryckort took issue with
Lynch's appointment "because
he bids on work for the Irvine
Company." He said It would be 11·
I-advised to appoint a com.
missioner who would bave to di&-
I,
------~--~--------, OAAHCR COAIT
DAILY PILOT
........... .......,. __
... ., ..... ~ "til~• ... O._.,,......
... -:.. ......
N
rrom time to , Board Meets · qualify himself
lime.
A secret ballot was taken and • On •
the winners were Cokas and ~ Fmances Lynch.
Councilman :rrudi Rogers ,,~ Trt11tees of the Coast Com· as~ed that a public vote be taken munlty Colleae District meet
which showed a unanimous vote tonleht to discuss a 1977·78
for Cokas. The vote for Lynch budget ot about $88.2 million and
was 4 to J with Mrs. Rogers, faculty salary matters for the
Ryckoff and Ray Williama op-coming year.
posed. . The meeting will be at 8 p.m. in
Lynch 1.5 a partner m the land dislrlct oCflces al 1370 Adams
planning and land.scape archltec-Ave., Costa Mesa. adjacentto the
tural firm of Kammeyer. Lynch Oranae Coast College campus
and Partners. Additional discussions at the·
monthly meeting will include .~ goals and objectives district
F trustees would hke to estabhsh in the coming year. Suicide Try
Halts Hearing
ForCdMMan
A Corona del Mar man, ac·
t'used of burglari.zing planes at
the San Juan Capistrano airport
where he worked as a security
guard. won an indefinite delay In
his initial court appearance after
authorities learned be shot
himself.
Officials of the South Orange
County Judicial District Court
said today no new date haa been
set for the appearance or
Norman Howard Ellis, 23, of 821
Begonia Ave., who faces char11es
of trespassing, malicious mis-
chief, battery on an airplane and
burglary.
Ellis was to have been ar-
raigned Monday, but Sunday he
was wounded in what Newport
Beach police described as a
!>U1ctde attempt.
According lo police reports, El·
lis became despondent over the
termination or his relationship
with his girlfriend, so he re·
portedly took a 1un and lried to
shoot himself bl the neck.
Police said Ellis told them ho
missed and shot himaelt Jn the
shoulder instead.
Truatees also will hear and dis-
cuss various recommendations
offered by an accreditation team
that recently visited and evalual·
ed the Golden West College cam-
pus in Huntington Beach
SUCCUMBS AT 88
ConverM V. Wurd•m•nn /
Fro..P~Al
The wounded m an called police
who bad him taken to Hoag .....
Memorial Hospital where he was
treated and released. RITES ••• Ellia was arrested earlier this
month at the airport where he
was hired to work u a security
guard after Orance County
Shertrrs deputies alleged they
found office supplies and aircraft
P•rll in hiacar.
GEr1'HE BIRD
WtJHPILUrAD
He walks, be ta.lb. be daces
on h1I beUY Uke a rept)le ••• but
YOU1' l&ftdlord Hid • .,No pets"
Nowwhat.doyoudoT
"I aold him, caf• and an. wtth
a Ditty Pllotelualfled ad.''
That'• the teatJmony of• dGlta
Mesa woman who placed thlt
claaatflod ad:
Conure parrol with ca1t.
Beautllu.I c:olorJn1. f111.
.XXJMlXU
It 1'0lJ can't toep your~ or
have tomethlq ell~ ybu d Uke
• to convert to cub, call 9'2-$f18.
The Daily Pilot ta tlle place to
ad wertlH aloa1 • Oran1•
Cou&..
and fellow yachlmg enthuslut.•
are credited with 1tarUne the
Newport Harbor Yachtsmen's
luncheon group when they would
drive to Balboa from Santa Ana
once a week for lunch and a dis-
cussion o( yacht raclng.
He was aJIO one of a group of
yachllmen, including the late
Oeor1e Mlcbaud. who were
(rtdlted with roundin1 the
Newport Ocean SaiUn1 Asloda-
tlon <N06A) which started the
famed Newport to Enaenada
1acbtnce.
Al a raclnsr skipper Mr.
Wurd~man.o'• preference ran to
small boat.a and the fut mtter·
boat.. He wu a champion In the
Pellcan ClaH and later was
known as the "11lv r fox•· of the
Rbi>d Clu1. He won ••Vtral
fl .. t champlouthip1 ln ht•
crtm•on·bull-4 Rbode•·!3,
Mldlblp .. In addlUoo to hla activity In
Balboa Yacht Club and NOSA,
Mr. Wurdemano wa1 an
ho"orar1 member of tb•
Soutbem C&lllomla YaabUnc Ns·
1oci1Ucn(SCYA).
Lone defendt•r of the costly
study was county Airport Direc-
tor Robert Bresnahan.
• Bresnahan said lhe rework or•
der would be like "walking a
treadmill of debate and delay."
Oil Price Increase Off
. OPEC Majority Canceu Planned Move
VIENNA, Austria (AP> -A
majority of members in the
Organization of Petroleum Ex·
porting Countries -OPEC -
fi'rot11 Pag~ Al
FORSTER. •
were married in 1934 and re·
mained active in civic and school
aCfairs until Mr. Forster's death
in 1966.
Mrs. Forster served on the
Capistrano Union High School
board for more than 20 years. She
was a charter member of the San
Juan and Orange County His-
torical Societies and a direct.or or
Bowers Museum in Santa Ana.
.. Mrs. Forster had a reeal pre·
sence -she entered a room llke
a queen." said San Juan his
torian Pamela Hallan. "She was
compiling a family hl11tory and
planned to write a biography of
Don Juan Forster before her
health failed.'•
Mrs Forster is survived bv
two son.,, Thomas and Lawrence
Forster, both of San Juan.
Thomas "Tony" Forst<'r is a
former mayor of San Juan.
She also is survived by a
daughtt•r .. Joyce Hamner of
Norco. and a st<•pson. l•'rank
Forsl<>r of San Juan. by seven
grandchildren and a great·
grandchild.
The family asks that m<'morial
donations be made to the
American Diabetes Association
has decided to cancel plans for posed Jan. 1 by the cartel maJOn·
a f1 ve percent increase in the ty ra1sed the price of their crude
price or crude oil July 1, the 011 to $12.70 a barrel. The second
0 P EC secretary general an· staee of the Increase was to bav6
nounced today. gone into effect July 1.
The l3·member oil cartel has Ali M. Ja1dah. the secretary·
been split over prices since general, sntd in a statement that.
December when 11 members the de<:ISlon to cancel the in
called for a two-stage IS percent crease was made "in the Interest
The 10 percent increase im-of unlty and solidarity of OPEC .•
Congress Pay Hike 1
Rollback Refused
WASIUNGTON CAP) -'lbe
Houise refused today to roll back
a $12,900 pay r aise members of
Concress reeeived this year and
and corresponding pay raises re-
ceived by more than 20,000 other
officials and employes.
The House defeated an amend·
ment to the legislative ap.
proprialion bill that would have
cut out funds for the raise. Thus.
1t reaffirmed with a recordl.'d
vote the increase that went into
effect in March without such a
vole. The vote defeating thl•
rollback of the pay hike was 241
to 181.
Opponents of the pay raise
areued that the methods by
which it was put into effect was
shabby, and that Congress
should not protect itself against
an inflation ft helped cause.
But supporters said the in-
crease, tbe second in eight years.
did not even keep pace with the
nsinf coSt of living or the level or
business salaries.
House Speaker Thomas P.
.. Tip" O'Neill was applauded
when he argul•d that the House
had adopted, to accompany the
pay ralse, an ethics code wh<>se
"heart and soul was full financial
disclosures and a ilmltallon of 15
percent on outside earned in-
come··
The March pay raise went Int()
effect automatically without lhe
nt>ed for a vote.
Members of the House were 4
also In line for another pay hike,
a cost-of-living increase, on Oct.
I. But on a 397 20 vote Tuesday,
the House sent to President
Carter a bill denyine lhe cost-of·
llvlng raise lo anyone who re-,
celved the March increase.
Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart
SPORTING GOODS
538 CENTER ST. • COST A MESA • 646-1919
I Spe
Baseball Shoes
All Purpose Shoes
Soccer Shoes
Runninf Shoes ~
Football Shoes :
Tennis Shoes
Volleyball Shoes
BaUetball Shoes
Booo Boards
Kick Boards
Duck Feet rms
Masks
Snot kl es
Swim Suits & Trunks
Water P o Balls
Volle Balls
Basketballs
Soccer Balls
Pf 3J1round Bafls
Softbafls
Baseballs
Hand Balls
Racquet Balls
T ennJs Balls
T ennls RacUts
Racquetball Racquets
Handball Gloves
Tennis Shirts I Shorts
T ennls Ormes
Warm Up Softs
O.P. SW m T
Varsity Jackets
l
Saddlehaek
EDITION
'VOL. 70 NO. 180, •SECTIONS, SO PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE, 29, 1977
A fte oea
N.Y.Stoeka
TEN CENTS
Girl Scout Abducted From Camp Tent
SAMSOTA, Fie. (AP) -A
tJ.J ·old GJrl Rcout wurint •
Nlelre)' Mouae T ·ahlrt w11
4raned ltnl&i.lJns from her ttnt
la a aM l)*rk by a hnv1ly butll
man tod.Q u hM 111tC!r •nd
aDOtber acout scrtamC'd in lt•r ror, a ues u1d.
Tbt C\lt'• name wa• nol 1m
aud .. tely rcleait•d , but
1u1lhorttle1 laid aha wa1. from
Venice. 1'1a.
Tb• man ripped open the back
of tho lhrce·pcraon lt-nl 1n 490-
Mcrct 0.cl&I' Scher\:r State Park
about 6 a .m .. 1rabbcd the iirl by
her Jona brown h1dr and draued
her lttto •h.arp pointed palmetto
~crub. Sarasota County Shen!f's
depul1~ saJd
The man was deacrlbed as
heavlly built with dark hair and a
deep voice.
(Earlier thla month, three Girl
Scouts were sexually aasault.ed
and then murdered at a camp ln
Locust Grove, Okla. Authonties
have chareed 33·year·old Gene
Leroy Hart in the June 13 slaymg
and are sUll searching for him.)
The abduction here touched orf
an immediate manhunt ln
Sarasota County. About 100 law
enforcement officers, volun-
teers. a mounted posse and even
Florida Power & Llihl Co.
service trucks joined the search
lhat was set up under the
sheriff's speciallied weapons
and tactics unit (SWAT).
Rapists' Death Nixed
Top Court: Penalty 'Disproportionate'
WASHINGTON CAP) -The
U.S. Supreme Court ruled today
that slates may not impose the
death penalty for the crime or
rape.
The court said the death penal
ty "is a dJsproportionate punish-
ment for rape."
"It ls difficult to accept the no·
lion, and we do not, that the rapt!,
with or without aggravating
circumstances, should be
punished more heavily than the
deliberate killer as long as the
r~lst does not himself lake the
Oil Prices
Won't Rise
Another 5 %
VIENNA, Austria CAP> A
majority of members in the
Organization of Petroleum Ex
porting Countries -OPEC
has decided l.o cancel plans for
a five percent incrtue in the
price of crude oil July 1, the
OPEC secretary general an·
nounced today.
The 13-member oil cartel hu
beel\ apl\t over prf<:H since
December when 11 members
called for a lwo-staae 15 perc:ent
price hike for 1m. The other two
members, Saudi Arabia and the
United Arab Emirates, opted for
a five percent increase for the
whole year.
1 The 10 percent increase 1m·
I posed Jan. l by the cartel majori· ty raised the price of their crude
oil to $12.70 a barrel. The second
t staee of the Increase was to havo
gone into effect July l.
Ali M. Jaldah, the secretary·
general. said in a statement that
the decision to cancel the In
crease was made "In the 1nlerest
of unity and 1olldarity of 0 PEC
''The following countries of the
organlial\on -Algeria.
Ecuador. Gabon. lndonesia.
Iran, Kuwait, Nigeria, Qatar.
and Venezuela -have resolved
1 to forego the application or the ad·
dit1ona five percent increase Ul
the price of 011 of July l." the
statement said.
• Tbe other two members are
Libya and Iraq.
Hamid Zaheri, the OPEC In ·
formation department chief.
declined to say why Libya and
the Iraq did not go alone with the
declalon of the other nine, and
what action the remaining two
OPEC membera -Saudi Arabia
and the Uniled Arab Emirates -
would take.
(SeeOIL. Pace A2)
Co ast
Weathe r
Patchy low clouds aloni
the cout tonJght and early
in lhe morning. Mostly
aunny Thuraday wilb some
hilh cloudiness at times.
Lowa tonltiht 58 to 83.
Hilh• Thuraday 68 to 72 at.
beaches lo 78 to 84 inland.
I NSIDE T ODA 't'
Ou of the NCJ'ff• of I.Ad
Zep,,.Un't tuccH• l• that
tts.11'r• a "J»OPl•'• bond.""" iMllU look at rock and roll'• "'°'' IUCCfN/1d Q'rOtlJ> b cm Pag•Al2.
life of hll\ victim," the court said
in an opinion by Justice Byron R
White.
The court's a<.'laon, decided by
a 7·2 vote. struck down the death
sentence a Georgia court am
posed on Ehrlich Anthony Coker,
convicted for the 1974 rape of a
JG.year-old Waycross. Ga .
housewife who three weeks
before had given birth to her first
child
Although Georgia's law con
cerned the rape of adult women,
the court dec1S1on's wording 1n·
Saccharin
Bi ll K i l led
WASHINGTON !Al'>
The Senate voted today to
kill a House·pas scd
measure that would pro
h1b1l any government ban
of saccharin use for 15
months.
But lhe Senate 1s expect
ed to act later this summer
on a bill Lo irnpo,e an even
longer suapenslon of the
proposed saccharin ban
than tbe 15 months the
House voted.
Th\ ,Senl\e action came
on • '1C b!lllon money bill
for the Arrtculture Depart·
ment, Food and Drug Ad
ministration and other
agencies. The measure
eventually passed on a
voice vote.
d1cah.'<i that slates may not im-
pose thl' death penalty even for
lhe rape of children.
Joining White's opinion were
Justices Polter Stewart. Barry
A Blackmun and John Paul
Stevens Justices William J
Brennan Jr and Thurgood
Ma rs hall. who oppose the death
penalty under any circumstance
for any crime. filed concurnng
opinions
Justice Lewis F Powell Jr
voted to strike down Coker·s sen·
tence ,but swd he did not think lhe
death penally for rnpe was cruel
and unusual punishment in aJI
circumstances.
"Although rape invariably ls a
reprehensible crime, there ts no
indication that petitioner's of-
fense was commitkd with ex·
cess1ve brutality or that the vie·
t1m sustained serious or lasting
in1ury," Powell said.
Chief Justice Warren E
Burger and Justice William H
Rehnquist dissented, 1>aymg that
the death penalty for rape can be
<Stt RAPE, Paie Al>
Probe Nears Ead
Consultant Talks
To OC Grand Jury
By GARV GRANVILLE
Of I,_ 0•11• l'•IOi S••ll
Polltical consultant Arnolrt Forde put In an appearance
Tuesday before the Oranse Coun·
ty Grand Jury a1 the Jury •P·
parently neared the end or Its
eight-month probe into county
polllict.
Forde 11 a partner to Wilham
Butcher in the county'& foremost
political campaign consulting
firm
Among lhe successful Butcher·
Forde candidates in 1976 was
county Supervisor Thomas
Riley The campaign strategists
also managed lhe successful
primary election campaigns of
Rep. Robert Dadham CR
Newport Beach) and Jim Siem
ons. the NewP.?rl Beach auto <Soler who w•thoul Ford• and
Butcher at the cOl\trols loet to
Democrat Ron Cordova in the
74th Anembly District general
election.
But ti was Forde's role in coun·
ty Supervisor Phihp Anthony's
'76 campaign that was of interest
to the Grand Jury.
Smelly Task
The Butcher·Forde duo saw
then Westminster City Coun·
cilman Anthony through the
primary elecUon and into a
runoff for county supervisor with
Santa Ana City Councilman
Harry Yamamoto.
Outwardly at least, Anthony
went b.la own way In his general
election victory over Yamamoto.
Firemen Chase Peaky Skunk
By LAURIE KASPER
Of \!Ill D•llY l'\10( S\aU
Frankly the situation stank.
Sheriff's deputies wouldn't
touch it. No dice, said animal
control. So who's left?
.. Hooray for the firemen! The
true representalive of the
American tradition of concern
and help for their fellow man!"
eulo11ied Cathy Chiavetta of
Laguna Niguel.
Over the past weekend. she ex-
plained alliteratively, •·a skunk
waa nagrantly Oa1tgin1 its tail in
a not too fragrant fashion and re·
fused to budge but a few feet in
any direction in my backyard."
Mr&: Chlavetta said she called
the American Society for the
Prevention of Cruelly to
Animal&: No help. Then she
called t.ha anJlllal shelter~ SUU no
help.
Sheriff's de1?ulles said Jt was
out of their jurisdiction. They
auuest.ed she try again to collar
animal control. lnalead, she
called the firemen who couJd also
have sniffed altbe task.
Firemen generally don't even
rescue cat.a in trees anymore.
"We've been out of the tree busl-
nen for quile a while because
we've had too many firemen gel
hurt," explained Capt. Cliff
Bergen at the Laguna Niguel fire
station .
But lhey felt sorry for Mrs.
Chiavetta. With long poles, they
persuaded the pungent pest to
park his pell elsewhere.
Althou1h lt moved inlo an ad·
joining field, the skunk did re-
taliate. "Luckily, I was upwind
o! It." Capt. Bercen said.
Tbe fire captain aaid his men
don't norrnally retcue residents
stuck with a smelly skunk. "It's
not county policy to do these
thin1s," he explained,
Capt.. ~rgen said they just did
It to help the woman.
Antmal control officen uy lt ls
not their pollcy to capture
akunia. Norm ally. lf It Is In
someone'• backyard, one officer
exi>lalned, the tkunk wut leave
when nl1btf aJla.
Tbey will pick the skunk up iC
the resident traps 1t first, he of·
fered.
Congre•• Pag Bikes
But Butcher and Forde were
never far from view as Anthony
raced off to a heavily financed
lopsided victory over
Yamamoto.
It is the financing of that cam·
paign and the roles played In it
by Supervisor Ralph Diedrich,
Fullerton attorney Michael Rem·
ington and federal indlctee Gene
Conrad that has attracted the
Grand Jury's attention.
Through amended public dJs·
closure statements. Anthony has
admitted that $28,000 worth of
loans to his campa11n committee
were not from him but from
Reminiton.
Both Anthony and Remington
lnsisl the R.emln1ton loans were
to Anthony personally and that.
the candidate, In turn, lent the
money to hla own campai1n com·
mittee.
However. a $30.000 loan from
Conrad was oriclnally shown on
Anthony's statements as bor·
rowed from Newport Beach
travel a1ent Ted Cook.
That statement .bu since been
amended to shOw the money
came from Conrad.
Ho1tse Refuses Rollhack
WASIUNGTON CAP> -The
House retused Loday lo roll back
• SU,900 pay ralN memben ot
Contreu received thl1 year and
and correspondin1 pay raises re
celvf!d by more than 20.000 other
offlclal1 and employes.
The House defeated an amend·
ment to the leglalallve ap·
propriatJon bill that would have
cut out fund.a for the raise. Thus,
It reaffirmed wlth a recorded
vote ~ lncreu• that went tnto
effect In March without 1uch a
vote. The vote defeatlns the
rollback of th• pay hike w 2'1
to 111. Op,.nfl1ta ot the pay raJ1
ar1ued that tb• method• by
wbl it !WM JMlt brto effect rwu
ababb)'t and ·ahat Cooare11
lhould not protect lt.ael( acalnst
an lnfiaUon It helped 'huse.
But 1upporters 11Jd the ln·
create. t.ho aecond ln elaht yeara,
did not even lceep pace with the
rtJln• COit ol llvln« or the Jevel ol buatnaualartes.
Route Speaker Thomas P.
"Tlp" O'Neill was applauded
when h ~ a.rsued that the House
had *pted, lo accompany U>o pa~ rilae, an ethka code whoH
''heart and IOUl was full financial
dltclo.uret and a limitation ol lS
percent on outside earned in·
c:ome."
The piirk is lOClated two miles
south ol the tiny town of Osprey
and 12 miles south of Sarasola on
U.S.41. The cirl wns on 11 camping
trip with 16 scouts under a sum·
mer proeram sponsored by the
Sarasota Girl Scout Camp.
Her rather joined the search
while her mother, sister and
Never Too '-'ate
arandpareott waited for word
with park ranaera and detec· 1
Uves. The scout.a were camping in an
area near the northeastern
border of the park just north of
the main pavilion which is re·
ached only by a narrow dirt road
and is su.rrounded on three sides
by thick palmetto scrub.
An apparent victim of the skateboard fever that crossed
the ocean from the United States is this bearded native
of Zurich, Switzerland, who's taking part in a recent
competition.
Dr. Celia's Pre-trial
Action Postponed
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Ot-O•ll'r l'llel S1411f
Pre-trial action lo the Orange
county superior court case
against Dr. Louis J. Cella Jr. has
been delayed until July 11 due to
the continuing illness or his
lawyer.
Judge William C. Speirs grant·
ed the delay Tuesday in a hear·
1ng on a motion to suppress
evidence after rejecting Costa
Mesa attorney George Chula's
plea that court action be deferred
to July 18.
Chula. who recently underwent
open heart surgery, told Judge
Speirs that be is weak, depressed
and suffering from ·'post surgery
blues."
Judge Speirs, who has fre·
quently .reproved Chula for de·
lays ln a pre·trial hearlns that
be1an 11 months ago, warned lhe
lawyer tbat If he la not ready to
proceed July U, the court will
take lhe luue under submission
without further testimony or
arcument.
Turnin& l.o CeUo, Judie Speirs
asked the political acUvlat If it
was true that be Is arra.ngin1 to
have another lawyer defend him
on the char&cs of fraud, con·
spiracy aod gr8J1d theft.
GEi' 1'HE BIRD
WITH PILOT AD
He Welb, he talks, be dances
on hi ~like • reptJI ••• bot your ord nJd, "No peta0
Now whatdoyottdo?
"l sold him, case and .U. wtUl
a DIUY Pllot elaaallled •d. ..
Tbat•a the tetUmony of a Cetta
ldua woman who placed &h1a
cluaU1td 84:
Cella confirmed that he is In·
volved In negotiations with an at·
torney who Is at the moment
"back east handling another
political case."
The stalement appeared to
lake Chula by surprise. "This is
the fln1t I've heard of it." he
ruefully commented oulside the
courtroom while Cella refused
further comment and declined lo
name the other lawyer.
Both Cella, 52, and former
hospital administrator Stephen
Robert Evans, 32, face trial on
multiple criminal charaes con.-
tamed in a arand jury criminal
indictment.
It ia alleged that they were in-
volved ln acts of fraud lbat C()8t
two ha1pita11 controlled by Cella
a1 secretary.treasurer nn
estimated ta million ln fundJ.
ll 11 aUeced that a .ahltantiat
portion of I.be money utUJied by
Cella wu used by him to 1upport
political candidates.
Pair Drown
As Cloudburst
Bits Yosemite
,
I D~IL y PILOT S8 1171
EIR Overhaul Due
$300,000 Airport Study Nixed
IJ GAaY liRANVll.U·;
Ot llOo l.M<f• ....... , ...
An vLroom nta.1 llnpacl r
port l"OY r1ni Oran1c <.:ounty
Alrp(•rt hndcd nowhcr~ In •
blU r l'Uada y w hcO tho C'uunt v
Pl CommU1a1 ordorl"Ci tl -eonunluuJn • order tu r.,
t.urn th four ' ... ,. •:too ooo
&irpcM't a\Ut1y tu th•· tOUOl}' »llllf
memben and the tunaultaanl who
ft~pattd tt fC'll 11hort of outrl1ht
~Jttllon
But It wu thr cl<>' st thins tu II
u a lhr hour public heanni:
C"nded i.n vtc:iory for cnttc• o( th•·
co.tly alud>
ll won't be until "iwmetJmn
Ht•een Chrutmu nd Euit-r"
RAPE •••
• JuaUned pwushmenl.
Thl' court's decia1on dealt onJy
wtlh the cnme of rape but 1l may
have a profound impact on lhe
tuslory of capital punishment in
the United States
Had the court ruled that statt•i.
may impose the death penalty
for crtma m whach the life of the
victim was not taken, 1t could
have opened the door for futurC>
i-uhngs that capital puni!lhment
may be valid for crimes such a$
treason, esp1ona1e. kidnapang.
hijacking and terrorism.
Of course, the court still could
rule an favor or the death penalty
for such crimes but that prospect us less hkely after today's rullng.
··we have concluded that a sen-
Lence of death as ~rosslv dis-
proportionate and excessive
punishment for the crame of rape
and is therefore forbidden by the
Eighth Amendment as cruel and
unusual punishment. · White •mad
an speaking for the court
··Rape as not without dcserVlnR
a serious punishment. but an
terms of moral d<.'prav1ty and or
the an1ury to the person and to tht•
public. at docs not compar<' with
murder, 1.1,h1ch docs involve thc
un.1ust1f1('d takan~ of human
ltfe." White said
The court's dcc1s1on aff<'cts on
ly :.ax of thl• 350 death row
prisoners ac•ros:; the nation If th<•
1usllces had ruled the other way.
slates thJt do not use the death
penalty for rape could have come
under presi.urc to enact such
ll'gislataon
Youths Throw
Rocks at ·cars;
Four Injured
POMONA IAPl Four propl<'
1.1, rn· hurt and 15 rars damagl•d
whc•n "ll'vt•rul youths thn•w
grenad<' sized rocks at pa.!sang
cars on th<' San B~rnardano
.Fr<'t'\hlY hti.:hwav 1>:.ttrolmt•n
salcl
Om· of thi· 1•ars hat Monday
night "'as that of Pomona polic<'
1.t C'h\'I Thomas A three-inch
rock crasht•d through his
1.1,andshaclci, llhowl•nng ham with
r hunks of glasi. and thumping
him on lht' L'hc•sl
"I swear to God I thought l was
shot ." h<' said
The youths .!II l'scaped Thev
were seen runnmA do\\-n an alley
by onr w1lnc•ss
Rabies Clinic Set
For La Paz Plaza
The La Pai. Pla1a shoppanit
center an M1sor;1on VaeJO will be
the site of a lo"' cost rabies chnac
Thur'lday from 7 II 3Q p.m
The clanac, SJ)()nsored by the
Mission V1eJo K1wnnis Club, pro--
vides owners of do1s over (our
months of aae with the chance lo
have their pets inoculated for
$2. The shoppmg center la locat-
ed at the corner of La Pu Road
aod Chrisanta Drive.
OAANOE COAIT •II
DAILY PILOT
tfrwtO,, ·ll'Co.tttO.t t.,.tt1ttrt ••ttrr.~•(.Al\l""" ............... "'"'···--...... °'_ CIM•l-h'""tC•,,....,t ,... .... __ _
""ltO\trt.~d M"fttUy lhtttrw04"t 't•Ut f~ (Ml•
M.1!'49 ... ••l'W•'f f'"•H"' ... IJ"lt•~ .. .,., t~
••·" V•"•• '' ,.,,_.. \aCMtt'tAilt. v.-11,, •Nf ~ !;.:~..!:'1:f::~~'n·~~·~ .,"" ... ' _,. •• .,. .,..,, " •• no """ .. , ~tH'f C..laM.l\•,(AI ,,,,.,.~
that the rttWOrked •nvtronm0T1ta1
impact repe>rt wtll m•k'° lu way
b•ck lo tho plannlnl commwlun
for ace.plane• or rejection
Me•nwhlh:. operation• and
prnpc>-te<l 4'Upttal tmprovl'menl
vroJect• at Oranae County
Alrport will b4I In " holdi111 pat-
lt'tn, bo11ud down In the fa1Jure
ot tht• report lo win itpproval
from thu pliannln.i co1nml11uon
und tbc bolU'd of au~rYlaora.
Commiuion action on th~
i.tudy followed the recommend ..
lum"' of lhc county'» Environ
mt-nt~I Manat1:cmc:nt A&tnc:y
\EMt\1atalt
about lh~r ttac\lnn to the airport
operation and lht• noise probl1•m.
but that only l9 of those que~
taoned hved wJUUn tht' noi&e im-
pact area.
Later . the commisaion
acknowled1ed Emory ·~ areu-
ment when it ordered a new soc I al survey to be part of the re·
port's ove>rhaul
fl al.so ordered a t·ost benefit
study related to the potential
t'conomlc feasibility or air cargo
operations at the airport.
.. ,. •. ,,.._. f: MA 's manager of cnvaron-m en ta I service!\, Dennis
Sund1trom. conceded th1tl lhc
hefty report in iUI preunt form U.
"ni.lwed ·
Before Issuing those orders
and directing the study to be re-
vamped. the planning com
mission heard Newport Beach
Clly Attorney Dennas O'Neill en·
dorse the staff recommendation
for an overahaul Bitching on Ditcher
"We don·t reel the entire tm
vironmental impact report
should be c hucked out.
however." Sundstrom told the
eommlaston
O'Neill made 1l clear the city consider~ the report inadequate
because at doesn't aam al 1pecil1c
proposed airport proJecls
While Wes Willoughby pedals. Denise
White tags along on roller skates, puUJng
Deborah While with her The scene of the
chain reaction h1tcht11k1ni; 1:-Mission
Beach m !San Owgo.
Newport Beach airport fl&hter
Dan Emory dtdn 't agree with
Sundstrom's assessment of the
report.
ln a 45-minute discourse on the
shortcomings of the study,
Emory charged that 1l had been
.. deliberately perverted.'' was
mired in btas and ls "little more
than a fraud from 11tart to
finish."
"This document is no more
than a 1el'\eral plan for Orange
County Airport," O'Neill aaid as
he pointed out the reports failure
to smglt~ out the environmental
am pat:l or spccafic projeds
"Staff. for whatever reasons,
however, came up with the cor
rt>ct r<•commcndation," the rity
attorney saad as he quaclly urged
the commission to send the study
back for rework
Property Taxes Lashed
Most Believe Federal Levies Produce More
"You should throw the whole
think back at the consultant
<Daniel, Mann. Johnson and
Mendenhall)," the longllme
airport foe told the commission
He waa especially critical of a
$10,000 social survey done by
POS Associates that accom-
panled the bulky environmental
impact report.
Emory pointed out that the sur ·
vey team questioned 667 persons
l'ro• Page A I
OIL ...
Send al back the (•ommiss1on
did on the strength or a quick 4·0
vole that abo ordered the new
'>Ocial survey and the air cargo
study
Lone defender of the costly
~tudy was county Airport Darec
tor llobert Bresnahan
Bresnahan saad the rework or-
der would be lake "walking a
treadmill of debate and delay.··
WASlllNGTON <AP> Most
taxpayers d1i.like the loral pro
"perty tax more than the federal
income tax and believe they get
more for their money out or
federal ta~es, say!! a JUSt·
released poll
Of those responding to the poll
sponsored by Lhe Advisory Com-
m issaon on lntergovernmt'nlal
Relations. 33 percent said they
fell the local property tax was tht:
Skin Caneer
LBJ Disease Revealed
There was speculation that WASJONGTON I AP> -Surgeons removed n
Libya and Jraq would ~o ahead sm<tll skin cancer from the outside of President
wath the addatrnnal 5 Pt"rccnt an .Johnson's left ankle almost four years after he took
crease July 1 nfCtcc, a Navy spokesman said today
Prices charged by Saudi Th t d t th t' Arabia and the UAR are still 5 e surgery was no announce a c 1mt "Th<•rt· was nt•vcr a recurrence." the spokesman.
percent lower than those charged (.'mdr. Thomas Coldwell, said of the cancer "From by the other members. and there was speculation the two roun 1965 through December 1969, some 30 lo 40 lesions
tries would not brmg their pnces "t•rc removed from the President All were benign.
JO line with the maJority t•xccpl for the one episode in October 1967 ·
CoJdwoll said he received authorization from
That was the compromise ad .Johnson's '~idow. Lady Bird, to make the surgery
vocated during a rerent Mideast public. Mrs Johnson t!arher denied rcporls that
tour by Venezuelan PreMdent .Johnson hod :.i skin cancer on his hand Carlos Andres Perez The decision to tnd tho so I nqumet. mlo Johnson's slon condition were pro
<.·ailed .. two-tiered ' price mpt<.'dby a story in the Reader's D1eest m which Dr
s'istem under v.h1ch Saudi F.dmund Klem, a dermatologist and cancer rc
A-rab1a and the UAR charged daf searchl'r in New York. Sa)S Johnson had skin cancer
rerenl prices for oat than lhe Johnson dirc1 m .January 1973 of heart disease
other OPEC members. ha!> been \.--------------------------..,., 1dely rumored for weeks
The Middle East Economse
Survey said last month the de
c1s1on could save 011 consuming
nahona S2 billion. But U S. oil in
dustry sources said there would
be little savings at the gas pump,
t•i;peciaJly aC Saudi Arabia boost!>
its price 5 percent
H translated directly, each
dollar increase in the crude oil
price boosts gasoline prices hy
J bout 21,.1 cents a gallon.
The United States imports
about 40 percent of ats oat, and
about 20 percent of the import.~
arl' Crom Saudi Arabia and the
UAR
Fish Invade Court
For Seattle Trial
SEA'ITLE (AP> -The judge
called It the fishiest case he's
heard In 31 years on the bench.
Five thousand tropical fish --
neon tetras. black skirts and
salver tJps -were brought into
King County Superior Court. as
evidence in a trial involving
95,814 massina aquanurn flsh.
and said fish won't cat other rl!>h
in the dark McDuH (•xplaaned
tropical fish transported JO total
darkness ''undergo
psychological changes," Includ-
ing a lowering or the m<'labolic
rate.
"They were asleep anyway,"
he tesllfied.
.. least faar " of the taxes they
have to pay.
Another 28 percent named the
federal income lax. followed by
the state sales tax, 17 percent,
lhe state income tax, 11 percent.
and those not knowing, 11 per
cent
When asked what level of gov
ernment gives them lhe most for
their money, 36 percent said lh1.•
rederaJ government. 26 percent
local and 20 percent stale
.John Shannon a .. -.1 ... IJnl
d1recotr of the commas-.1011 .1
quasi-governmental agency. '>81d
Tuesday the poll s results show
that "'the property tax as monng
up as the worst tax "
Shannon satd Social Security
taxrs were not included In the
Porpoise. Shot
TAMPA, Fla. <APl A ~>II
y<'ar-old man, James Smith of
Seminole. has been charged wtlh
shooting a porpoise in wh&I of
f1r1als say 1s the first such arrt·sl
under the US. Marine Mammal
Protection Act of 1972
poll, although they may be in the
rutur<·
I le ab.o said the survey mdicat
ed that people's atl1tudes about
taxes vary dePt•nding on where
they hvt>
For example, Shannon said, 4~
percent of lhe people living in the
West who responded to the sur·
\CV listed the local property tax
as tht• worst tax and only 25 per·
cent named the federal tax But
an the South. 33 pcrrl'nt of the
rt•.,poncknh t'llcd lht• income ta'
as lht• most dc'>pt:ocd lax, wlulc
only 25 perrcnt hi.led th<-' proper·
l)-tJxanthatcate~ory
Shannon l!a1d '>U<'h regional
\'anataon!:i 1n opinion 11lustrale
the d1fflrult1cs fared by the
Pr("Hd<•nl and thl• Congress an
t•nactanj.( nataonJI tJx pohcit:s
and laws
Th~ poll as conducted c-ach year
for the <.'omm1ss1on by the Op1-
111on lkscar<'h Corp. of Pnn·
ct>lon, N .I. The survl'Y was con-
ducted during May and involved
about 2.000 rt•s pondents con-
sadt'rl°'d to h<• a typaral cross-
sc•<'taon of lht• l l S population.
Substation Pact
OK'd for Sheriff
A $127,500 contract to pay for
dc'lagning the new South Oranj.!I"
County sheriff's substation was
awarded by supervisors Tu~
day.
The board hired the farm nf
Bissell/August Ass0e1ates Inc to
plan both the 26,076-squarc foot
subslat10n and a 5,400-~quan•
root service station for patrol
cars.
Supervisors also asked Shc•r1H
Rr ad Gates and County Ad
min1strative Officer Robc•rt
Thomas to identify areas m th<'
new station that would not b<·
used immediately so they could
be turned over to other county de·
partments
The station is being designed
lar~er than nN.'ded 1mmed1alcly
so it can serve the needs of the
un1n<.'orporalt•d i.oulh coun\y
area through the 1980s. a will be built adjacent to the
South Orange County Municipal
Court building at Crown Valley
and Alar1:i Parkways in the
L11.:unll Niguel nrea.
The suhst ation a lso as to in
1·lude a detention area for hold-
ing prisoners trmporarily so
sheriff's pt'rsonnel <'&n avoid
hauling tho..,c• held only brieOy to
tht> mnin Jail JO Santa Ana.
Thomas said Tuesday the pre-
sent plan calls for the detention
area to hold 53 beds, which he
contended is too large for what
wac; intended as a temporary
holding ('ell erea. OPEC's members hold about
81.1 percent or the non -
Commumst world's oil re11erves
The cartel has succe,slvely
raised pnces smre the Arab oil
boycott duran~ the 1973 Mideast
war Before the war, oil rost $3 a
barre•!
Court Rules
No Spanking
"My experit'nce was limited to
guppies and 1oldflsh my children
had when they were little,"
.Judie Eugene G Cushing said
Tuesday, midway through the
t rt al. .. l had no idea that tripicai
rash could be so bag -or so little
"Th11 1s the first time there
have been any fish or any kind an
my court." he said. "It's been
great I've learned so much
aboutfish."
Draaon Fisherles of Hong
Kong sued Aquatics, Inc.. or
While Center. Wash .• because.
Aquatics refused lo pay $4,032 for'
ahlpment& lt claimed were 96,000
fish short.
Lynn Hart HART'S John Hort
SPORTING GOODS
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A
stat.e appeals court has ruled that
students attending fundamental
achools in Pasadena may not be
spanked without parental con·
sent, the American Civll
Liberties Union sp.id Tuesday.
The ACLU had filed suit
oulnst the Pasadena school dls·
trlct after the district claimed
parents enrolling their chJJdren
an the disciplinarian fundamen·
ta! schools had given implicit ap
prov al to corporal punishment
Uoder a recenUy enacted ata~
law, parenta of public school stu-
dents mmt give their consent
before corporal punishment is
used on students.
Pol,i,ce A.wait
:Kidnap Story
SANTA CRUZ (AP) -PoUCCI
said Tuesday that a woman who
apparenUy wu kid.naped abo
walked home from work was
under "emotional atrnt'' and
baa been W'28ble to NII~ details
of lterCll'deal. The victlm, Loll Wyckoff. 218. • water coaatnatlon an1ly1t
pJOJ9(1 by tM Cou.n~ °' crus. was found Moudq afta"-noon lkdwoccl Clt7.
•
The courtroom Monday was lit-
tered with styrene plaalic cues
holding from one to l,000 fish,
som e "no bigger than the end of
r · finger." the judge said.
"I had them bring in the fish
because part of the issue con-
cerns a claim on how they were
packed, and the plaintiff says
some of the fish could have eaten
each other J wanted to see JUSl
how small some of these fish
are," he said.
But Richard McDurr. manager
of Aquatic•. test1fled that. in-
fi11ht cannlballlm •u unlikely.
Mc:Duft aald the ftsb were
1hJppecl ln ll&ht-proof containers
Y oanger Calls Off
Speech in Newport
Attorney General Evelle Youncer had to make a Jut·
m lnute e1ncellatlon of hls
1choduled appearance before a
convenUOft of dJalrlct at.tomon tn Newport Boach today. Younc•. who waa atat.ed to ap-
pear be.tore tho 1roup to '4~ •oute llxed ttrm1 for 1tate
Supreme coUJ't jutJ~•J_.!~ llOme ID bid wtt.b a lv~ tem~, .ad aald:.
•
538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919
Baseball Shoes
All Purpose Shoes
Soccer Shoes
Runninf Shoes
Football Shoes
Tennis Shoes
Volleyball Shoes
Basketball Shoes
80011 Boards
Kick Boards
Duck Feet fins
Masks
snortles
Spaedo Swim Suits & Trunks
Water Poto Balls vony Batts
Op11 I ti I • Cllsltl Slldly
\
Basketballs
Soccer Balls
Playground Balls
Softballs
Baseballs
Hand Balls
Racquet Balls
T ennls Balls
Tennis Rackets
Racquetbafl Racq ets
Handball Gloves
Tennis Shirts l Shorts
T ennls Dresses
Wann Up Suits
O.P. Swim Trt11b
Varsity JaQets
' ..
COMPOSITE
'
TRANSACTIONS
Slowdown Indicated?
WASKINGTON CAP> The gov-
ernrnenl said today its index or
economic lncUcators declined In May
for tho first time in four months,
possibly Indicating some slowing in
the rate of economic growth In months
ahead.
The Commerce Department sald lts
11o·called composite index ol leodln1
lndlcatora decreased two-tenths or 1
percent In May. While that wu a
small decline, it followed increases or
rive-tenths or 1 percent in Apnl, 2 per·
cent In March and ntne·tenth11or1 pet·
cent In Febn.iary.
The Index, a compos1te oC 12 in-
d1 vldual economic atalletlca, ls de·
lligned to foreshadow future trends in
the economy
GM Probe to Besame
DETROIT lAP) -A. ara.Dd Jur7 la •
to re1wne It. tnve1t11auoo lbJi week
oC alletatlom tb9t General Moton
Corp. trled to cheat tb• covcmnaeu of
mlllloquf tu doll.an. •
A federal jUdp threw out O •1 mo-
tion Tu-511 to block tho lnvostlle-•
Uon. and U.S. Atty. PhJUp Van Dam
Hid would reconvene the jury
wltbln ''l.bo next dq or to." barrtn1
an appeal. · •
U .S. Dl1tr1ct Jude• Jaron P.
Chu.tebllJ aJao ruled that the IOYe?n-'
m nt m.e.y not ditclOM jury evtdencc
to tho lnlerna.l efatuo nice for lw
use ln coJltCUna mon•1 lht '"ay be owf'Ct. • .. •• • • • • •
s DAIL y "LOT • I J
AdSP~yOff ·
Firm Can A.fiord Booklet
By MILTON •osaowrrz
1t take9 • hHp or moaoy to promote a druanore pro
duct. You must realize that )uat rrocn watcbana the CBS
Even.Inf News wttb Walter Clooklte. The commerclala for
denture cloanen and lau.Oves keep curuln1 at you, nt1ht
after nlJht.
How much il 'akea. thouab. tllll bo11lea tht-
miad. 11\e latest annual rtPof't from New York'• Brl•tol·
Myers Company diaclotes that tho coiupany reitatertd
tall:I of nearly $2 billion lasl 1ear. Now bow much of thoae
NYeDuts do you thlok wu apent to advertiae
and p~ product.a!
llEMEllBBa
that tbla la a com·
paoy wltb a producl
lineup that seernlngly
stretches to infinity In
Money
Tree
the Brislol·Myen medu:inc Chell ar~ such prer.cripUon
druii• as Polycllhn, Kantrex and Amlkin. all the Clairol
hair product•. the Poly· V1·Sol vitamia, the Ban deodorants
such analieslcs as BufCenn, Excedrin and Datri I. th('
Vitali• Une. SaJ Hepat1ca laxative; such acne f1gbter~ a~
M ultlScrub and Fostex. Bro mo Quinine cold tablets
NoDoz: Drano. Vanish, Windex, Renuz1t; O·Cedar mop<.
and brooms, Mr Muscle oven cleaner and Weight Watcher~
packa1ed foods nus MSWer IS S37R million. 1-·or every ~ Bristol· Myers
takes \n, \\ spends about $l on advertisin1 and promotion
The promotional expenditures aro more than five t1mei.
what the company spends on ~earch and development.
Does it pay off? You bet. Even aner spending all that
money on adverti1>1ng. Briistol·Myers rolled to pretax prof1L"I
of $282 malhon.
WIBLE A COMPANY NEEDS TO APPLY a lot or ad
vertlsinl weight to move drugs and toiletries oH shelvt>s, 1t
also must come up with new products all lhe hme. And for
Br\stol·Myers, 1976 was a bumper year on that front ns It
capltaJbed alertly on the growing coneern over the use of
aerosol propellanU;
Bnstol·Myers scored s1gmf1cant market advances with
three products powered by 8 pump lnsklU.I of an al'rOSol
They were Ban Baste. Fan al Net and Vltahs Super Hold
Ban Basic was wheeled into national distribution m
March 1976, heralded as "an anti pcrsp1rant spray that
doesn't spray acroaol propeJtonts." It was backed with a
huge ad budget, and it turned out lo be the most successful
new product introduction In the history of Brist.ol·Myers. By
the Ume the year was over the product had done so well that
the Ban line knocked Gillette's Right Guard out of first
place, reclaiming lhe top spot for Bn<>tol Myers
FINAL NET, A HAIR f'IXATJVE, WAS brought out by
Clairol in 1972, but il took ofC lasl yeBr. Bristol-Myers
claims it's No. l In its field. Also No. t in iL'I field Is Vltah~
Super Hold, a hair spray for men. which Bristol·Myl'rs pro
moted heavily in 1976 under the thcmt: "The Pump "
Bristol· Myers reported that these products together aC'
counted for more than ~ million or sall•i. in 1976
With that super year behind it. Rrt!ltol·Myl'r~ r an in
dulge in the luxury of consumer ~'<lucat1on It has htrl'd Bes~
Myerson, former comm1ss1oner of Consumer Affairs in New
York City. as its consumer consultant, and she has pro·
duced ror lhc company a dandy 122 page pocketbook.
"Consumer Gulde to Product Information ·
IT'S A GUIDE f'ILLED WITII USEFUL 10format1on
about f.roduct.s (what they do, what they don't do>. and after
Bristo ·Myers ran ads 1n New York and Pittsburgh earht>r
this year offermg the book free of charge 1t received order;
for more than 100,000
You can probably look for Bnstol·Myers to advertise It
In your town later this year. If not, you can try writing
directly to lhe company <al MS Park Ave . New York. N Y
10022) to demand equal treatment with P1tt .. burgh and Nt·w
York It comes out ot an advertising-promotion budget that
will probably top $400 m1l11on this yl'ar
Gen Tel to Pay
Refund, Cut Rate
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A $10 malhon refund and a
rate reduction have been ordered for customers of General
Telephone Company of California
The Public Utilitaes Commission (PUCJ imPosed the
rate reduction Tuesday. It wlll lower bllla by 30 cents a
month for homeowners and 40 cents a month for businesses.
THE $15.7 MILLION RATE reducUon-amounUnt to
2.6 percent-becomes eH~Uve July 18. The refund plan
must be submitted to the PUC by Aug. 12 for final approval.
The refund stems from a toll rate increase granted
Pacific Telephone in January, 1975.
General at that time realized an increase of about $7.S
million a year prtmarily due to an increase ln Pacific's an
trastat.e long distance rates and the method of settling how
they spilt the revenue from calls requ1rini: both companies'
equipment
THE REFlJND AND REDUCTION actually stemg
from an application filed by Gilnera1 in December or 1974
ftlklng for a $45.9 mUllon rato increase.
The PUC held pubhc hearings and concluded General us
earning a 9.4 percent return on Its investment at present
rntes, above the ft 85 ~rcent return the commission said
was fair.
Specllic rate reduct.Iona ordered mclude one·puty nat
residential service from ts.15 to SS.4S in the Loe An1eles
metropolitan excban1es and SS.95 to ~.es in General's other
e.xchan1es.
THE UFELINE BATE AVAJIABLI! in the freater Los
An1elcs area will be reduced from ~to $UO foe llO outgoln•
meHqes not to ~ceed 400 minutes• month.
Flat rate business service tn ouUyina areaa wUl co down
from the present $13.2> to $12.IJO.
The present maaa1e unit rate or S cent3 for each five
minutes of telephone uaa.ce wu reduced to 3 cent.a. Tbt rate
for bualneu and residence extenaions WH cut to 70 cents a
month.
wrm REGARD TO BSTABLISIUNG UfellDe and othet
mtaaured local service rates In areu outalde greater Los
Antel•. ~ PUC tald Implementation '" un~omical at thlJ lime.
TM exact amount or the ~lO'ld ls not known but It will
rllllectservtce from J•nuary 1975
lnvesbnent Told . .
..
. -.