HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-08-16 - Orange Coast Pilot,
I •. • me t
t I
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-Beaten With
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Tennis Racket
Alaska Pipeline Shut
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 16, 1977
Dy Pump. Sta~.ion Leak
VOl.. lt, ..0. DI, a HCl10Ms, • .. AOH
t
1• Tra.,e"lers Stranded
Desert Rains
Cause Floods.
I : LOS ANGELES CAP) -Wind·
~riven rainstorms spawned by
Hurricane Doreen, lashed the
normally parched Southern
.<rlilifornia desert, causing nasb floods and stranding thousands of
.travelers.
There were no confirmed re·
ports of injuries, aJlhoueh
aevual persons were reported
missing early today.
Law enforcement officials said
they may have checked into
motels and were unable to .con·
tact their families because of
downed telephone lines.
A flash flood watch continued
Jn err~t after the rains halted
this mornine. More raln was
forecast by tbe National Weather
Service.
• Traffic was stopped on ID·
terstate ts, the trans-Mojave
highway that is the major link
between La& Vegas and Los
Aneeles, when flood waters
.several feet deep dum~ tom Of
mud and debris on tbe road sur·
lace at several polnts.
California Transportation
• •
. '--
. . Mike and John Harrison (left ~nd center>
wer&~ng. Th~ result? Instant bubbles
and at least a half hour ot fun Monday lor
the youngsters and pet cockapoo, Abby 1·
Good clean fun , too.
Qi). ~low .
f;urtailed
2nd'f inJe
-..DELTA. Alaska (AP) -The
trans·Alaska oil pipeline wu
shut down Monday night after an
oil spill at Pump Station 9, a
spokesman for Alyeska Pipeline
Service Company said today.
lV was the second time the
pipeline bas been officially shut
down since oil reached the
Valdezterminal. --
Alyeska spokesman Job Rat-
terman said Pump Station 9 'Nas
sbllt down about 1:30 p.m. Mon-
day after a small amount ot ol1
spilled outside the building. He
said there was a .. sub&tanUal
amount .. of oU in the pump build-ing. ., . .
The automatic Ure alarm
system went off, and'the oil was
sprayed with foam to prevent
fire, he said. .
Ratterman could not estimate
the tothl amount of oU ~pilled,
nor would be confirm that lbe ac-cident was similar to one at
Pump Station 8 in July. In tba1
accident. a man wu killed in an
eaplolion which f ollowect. l :.:.
He H.ld a determination wc>Uld •
.be made later today abOUt Wbel'\
operations can be reaumed.
WASHINGTON <AP> -Wlth th m to live WI an accountlnt.''
dent Cart•'• 1pproval, tho Hid Sarah Francis Sh•y. "Th•y
Pen1*p ordered today a re· (the Vietnamese) uld \hey.
tumptlon of mlht.ary revaewa or would 1t would take about a year
the olfaclal !llatua or 712 Us. 1r this country would push them
1erv1cemen stiU II ted u mlasina int<> It "
in acuon or war prlaooen In Mrs. Shay a& a director of the
Sc:Mrtheast Asia. NaUonaJ Leaaue of FamUJes of·
"'lbere ls no credable evidence American Prisoners and Misalng
lo indicate that any U S."" in.SoutheastA.sla ,. aervi~men are alive and being But Rep. G V "Sonny"
beld a1ainal their will in Montgomery CD·M1ss. ), who was
Southeast Asaa " the Pentagon chairman of a spe~ial House
said lQ makUlg the announce-committee that studied the prob-
ment. lem, calle.d Carter·s decision "a
There has been a four-year humanitarian 'approach lo a very
moratorium on s uch reviews sad situation."
because of court challenges by In its announcement, the
families of those unaccounted Defense Department stressed
for and by congressional and that the United States will con-
presidenUally ordered invlsU1a· tinue ~forts to obt~n ·;,as full an
tions designe.d lo find out whether accountmg as possible of what
there is any hope for survivors happened to the 712 still listed as
among thole still unaccounted missing or as war prisoners and
for. another 1,793 men who have been
A respresentatlve of many of technically declared killed in ac-
Ute families or men still Uste.d as lion although their bodies have
IJlissing denounced the decision never been recovered.
lind said no status changes Families or those unaccounted
should be made until Vietnam for and still carried on the books
gives a full accounting of as missing or war prisoners con-
American dead. tinue to receive their full active
"We should put pressure on duty pay and allowances pending
a determination of their fate.
Fro• Page A J
STORM ••.
but so far we have no reports of
anJuries." said Kenny Dukes,
commurucations supervisor for
the Imperial County sheriff's of·
fice.
The noods left dozens of cars
stranded , while hotels and
motels in nearby Barstow were
completely booked up b y
nightfall. causing officials to set
up an emergency shelter to han-
dle the overflow.
Meanwhile, a dozen families
from Bombay Beach and Niland
on the eastern shore or the Salton
Sea were forced from their
homes because of flood waters.
Three trailers homes were over-
turned in lbe flood.
A Pentagon spokesman said
that Carter approved resumption
of the case reviews last Friday,
acting on a recommendation
from the secretaries of the Army,
Navy and Air Foree who have the
legal responsibility for any
change.;S,.i.D~llrt.Y§ 9r..£il~U;tlti~.
Lt. Col. Carlos Matthews. ad-
viser to Defense Secretary
Harold Brown on POW-MIA mat-
ters. told newsmen that a large
number of the 712 have been
missing for more than 12 years.
or this total. 31 are s till
technically listed as war
prisoners although North Viel·
nam released all those it said it
held in early 1973 and the govern-
ment has not suggested that any
are still alive.
Approval Seen
•
•
SOME OF HUNTINGTON BEACH'S 375 JUNIOR LIFEGUARDS BETWEEN 9 ANO 16 ~EARS ENJOY SPRING ON SANO
Youngsters Tuning Up for Gruetlng Run-awlm-run Teat •t End of Summer H They Train for Future Beach Jobs
J
.Junio.,.BB Gtm~ds Tested • • • "I"
By MICHAEL PASkEVICH c:w , .. Delly f'l ... $i.# .
There's a Jot ol pride and
character building under the sun
just south of the Huntington
Beach Pier.
That's where 375 junior
lifeguards between 9 and 16 years
old spend four hours a day run-
ning, swimming and most impor-
tant. learning lifesaving teeh-
niques.
'rhe 10-year -old program
serves as a sort of minor league
after which the most skilled
youngsters, at age 17, can move
up lo a permanent lifeguard posi-
tion
But as junior lifeguard pro-
gram coordinator Bruce Simcox
notes, "our basic philosophy is to
give every kid in the program a
feeling of accomplishment."
This is done by setting in-
d'l vidual goals for each youngster
through a program that com-
blnea fun with 014.rashloned dis-
cipline.
A heavy emphasis is placed on
the daily challenges of being a
lifeguard. On busy days the red
•wlm·tuited youn11ters man towers u back-up units to the
regular ctew.
'And they're l earning fast. ~me of the junior llfeguards
ve a number of rescues under
eir belts and Simcox pridefully
mentions the 9-year-old 1lrl who
spotted a swimmer in dialresSi
under the pier before the tower
veterans were aware of the
problem.
In July, the competition squad
of about 65 junior lifeguards cap-
tured the National Junior
Lifeguard Championship, defeat-
ing teams from 10 California
bea..thes in competition at San
Clemente.
Now the junior lifeguards face
two more challeng>es, one
physical, one financial.
liresuard Mike Quinlan vows
there will be no dropouts or
stragglers left behind.
Quinlan and lifeguard Peter
Noah are gearing up for perhaps
an even more difficult challenge
set for December.
That's when the lifeguards
hope to take 10 of their charges to
New Zealand for a Christmas
vacation stay ·in Waitemata
("sparkling water .. ), Huntington
Beach's sister city on the out-
skirts of Auckland.
There ·the youngsters w11\
demonstrate their techniques to
the "nippers," New Zealand's
equivalent of the local junior
lifeguard program.
Fundraising eftorts-11re now un-
der way to generate $15,000 for
the trip. Since there has been no
indication of financial support
from city government, the
lifeguards may soon be seeking
help from the community.
It would be firs t trip abroad for
local lifeguards who annually
play hosts to crews from
Australia and New ~al and.
Fro• Page A I
FIRES .•.
with fire fighters and weather
forecasters on duty on the fire
lines predict favorable condi~
lions will persist for severl4
days, Morrison said.
Off\cials sai d contingency
evacuation plans for nearb1
towns should not be needed.
"There's no reason right now t.Q
be talk-fng evacuation." said
Morrison. "We don't thil)k it'll
get away from us this lime.•·
A sheri,ff's department
spokesman said the towns were
bit by floods after the All·
American Canal northeast or
1 Niland developed a minor crack,
sending torrents of water into the
two desert communities.
Homes and businesses were
also reported flooded m Brawley,
SO miles fartller IOOth. where
two-foot flood waters broke
through hastily.made sandbag
dikes.
Valley CoUncilmen
Study Pay Hikes
On Monday a crew of the
hardiest would\ be lifeguards will
jojn instructors for a casual drive
to the Mexican Border.
The 130-mile return trip will
take a bit longer. The youngsters ·
will run and swim their way back
to the pier in a ll"Ueling four-day
test of mental and physical con-
ditioning.
The participants will nm at
least ~ miles a day, and when
they come to a nautical obstnic-
tion like a pier or jetty, the1'1l
put their tennis shoes around
their necks and swim around the
obstacle.
Irvine Couple
Filing Suit
Over4 Dogs
An Irvine couple have gone to
court in a bjd to compel their next
door neighbors to get rid of four
dogs.
Terry and Eleanora Wong of
4882 Tamarack Way claim that·
the dogs owned by Robert E. and
Shirley Nightingale. 4892
Tamarack Way. are responsible
for "loud noise and obnoxious
odor."
Al the fire's slowing rate of
growth, it would take seven to
ni~ days to reach the closest
towns, he said. By then, flre
fighters hope to have the blaze in
, hand.
Meanwhile, two blazes burning
along the Salmon River, one in
Klamath National Forest and
one near the Humboldt and Sis-
kyou county Jines, expanded
dramatically and grew closer
together.
Highways 88 and 111 had also
been under water from Brawley,
near the Mexican border, lo the
Saltoo Sea while Hiehway 78 was
flooded between Brawley and
Blylbe. But all three were rePort·
ed open today.
Twenty to thirty homes. valued
at $100,000 to $200,000 each, were
ravaged by flood water at the De
Anza Desert Country Club in Bor-
rego Springs in the desert east of
San Diego.
Power outages were reported
throughout lhe area, while hail,
lightning and 60-mile·an-hour
winds were reeorted in Palm
Springs.
The.National Weather Service
said the heaviest thunderstorms
were centered in the Mojave
Desert.
A weather service spokesman
nld Hurricane Doreen, lyina off the southern tip of Baja
£alib-nia, would likely ne dltwn-
graded to a tropical storm today.
Mausoleum Viewed
BELGRADE, Yugoalavia
<AP> -The Chinese cot their fU·•t IO<>k toda)' at the white mar-
i.te maU$0leum where the em-
,i,atmed body of Chairman Map
Tse·tuna will rest on display in a
crystal 1arcopbagua1 the official
Yu1o&!1v news atency Tan.Jui
eported rtom Pekina. , ---~----...... .;...o..~~---s
DAILY PILOT
Fountain V ey City ~il
members are expected tonl1ht to
approve three-year salary airee-
ments with the city's thre.? major
em ploye groups.
The agreements, which wm
take effeet Nov. 26, will provide
for salary increases averaging
7. 5 percent over a three-year
period to police, fire and general
employes, according to Mayor
Roger Stanton.
The cost of the settlements to
the city for the first year of the
agreement is estimated at
$231.000.
Under terms of the agre.?ment,
general employes (those who are
not firemen or policemen or
those io top management post-
tions> will receive an erght per-
cent sarary increase the first
year, seven percent the second
and 7.5 percent increase the final
year.
City Controller Howard
Stephens s aid the increase
means that the maintenance
worker' who is at the top salary
step and who now earns $13,320
per year will make $14,288 the
Allaway Jury
Delille rates .
Seven· Counts
first year of the setUement.
Stephens said the city actually
won't be out the full 8 percent
because it will soon start paying
a reduced amount for the
employes' retirement benefits.
There are about 100 employes
in the general employe aroup.
Non-management police and
fire department employes will
receive a 7.S percent salary in·
crease in both the first and
second years.
The third year would be devot-
ed exclusively to retirement
benefits.
The salary for a police officet
at the top of the pa)' range-would
go rrom $18,076 annually to
$19,428 the first year.
A top.rated ftreman would go
from $18,188 a year to $17,410.
Fountain Valley employs about
56 policemen and 3S firefighters.
Stanton aald that the city also
has made salary adjustments to
administrative officers and pro-
fessional and technical employ•
averaging 7.5 percent for one
year.
Employes in this group wiU be
evaluated under· a new
performance evaluaUon system.
Stantoa says salary lhcreues
will not be automatic. Instead.
they will be base.d on the evah1a·
ti on which the employe receives.
Aching muscles or not,
Criminal8 Target
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A bill
is being prepared in the
California LelfsJature that would
prevent criminals from profitiug
on their notoriety Jn books or
movies, The bill is b)' As-
semblyman Jerry Le..y,is. R·
Highland. J
It is also alleged in the Orange
County Superior Court lawsuit
which seeks $270,000 in dama1es
that Nightingale struck Wong
during a discussion or the dispute
and that the J>r~gn.ant Mrs.
Wong miscarrie.d as a result of
the stress.
Also named as co· def end ants
in the action are Paul H. and
Cynthia L. Busby who are iden-
tified as owners of the property
adjacent to the Wongs.
Infrared aerial photographs
s howed the Hog and Fong fires
separated only by the Salmon
River canyon Blackened
acreage totaled 16.700. the Forest
Service said. Some 1,700 fire
fighters were scheduled to battle
the blaze today. ·
The Bear Trap fire in Sequoia
National Forest doubled its size
and spread to 2,009 acres during
the night. Information officer
Barney Buckley said erratic
winds are moving the fire about a
mile an hour and conditions are
extremely dry.
This is the second major fir"
this season in Sequoia National
Forest. •
'I
VOL. 70, NO. 228, 3 SECTIONS, 6 PAGES
Sto1-ms Trigg~r Desert Floo
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Wlnd·
driven rainstorms spawned by
Hurricane Doreen tubed the
normally parC!hed Southern
California desert, cau~ng naah noocts and stranding thousands of
travelers.
Th«e wen no confirmed re-
po tts of injuries, altbouch
several persons were reported
missin.e early today.
-Law enforcement officials said
they may have checked lnto
motell a.ad wer• unablt to ~
tact their lamllies because ot
downed telephoae lines.
A Oub nood watch contlnued
ln elf eet alter Ute talns halted
this moroinc. More rain was
forecast by the National Weathe/'
~vice.
Traffic was stopped on In·
terstate ts, tbe tran$·Mojave
hiehway that ls the major llnk
between LH Veras and Los
~naeles, when flood waters
several feet deep dum~ tons of
mud and debris on the road sur-
f ace at several points.
California Transportation
Department work crews cleared
the southbound lanes early to-
day, but there waa no word on
when the northbound lanes would
be open.
"Crews and heavy equipment
~es, They Can Can-Can
Costumed Costa Mesa recreation leaders
practice for performance at city's 1800s
Alt American Extravaganza Jubilee slated
Saturday at Lions Park. Family picnic
will feature can-can girl411, carnivals, con·
tests and food from noon to 5 p.m. Prac-
ticing their routine are, from left, Ellen
Jacobs, Sue Shively, Brooke Sutherland
and Del>bie Utter.
8 ... Agencies
To Receive
I Federal Fund
Eight of 11 social service agen·
cies which applied for more than
$130,000 in federal revenue shar-
ing funds rrom Costa Mesa will
get all or part of their requests
after council action Monday
night.
Council members took the ad-
vice of Mayor Norma Hertzog
and Councilman Ed McFarland,
who reviewed applications from
the 11 aeencies which serve
various programs within the
city.
The other members of the
council a.greed with their recom-
mendaUon to fund eight of the
ageocjes for a totaJ of $83,317,
leaving another $M,600 ln federal
revenue-sharing allocations for
appropriation at a later date.
Agenciestoreceivefederalrev-
enue sharing funds, and the
amount they will receive Jn·
elude: •
-Assessment and Treatment
Service Center, Sdhta Ana, a juvenil~ diversion and family
counseUng agency, will rece.ive
$8,000, wtth permission to bill the
tity fer an addJtlon&l $1$,000.
Tbe cost per family h~l~ in
the ATSC prop:am 18 estlm~ed
<See aEVENVE, Pate AJ>
Alaska Pipelirw
Slwt DOwn Again-
DELTA, Alaska (AP> -The
800·mile tran~·Alaska oil pipeline
was shut down for tbe third time
after an oU ~pill at Pump Station
9 overflowed the buj)ding, of-
ficials said today.
A spokesman said the spill in-
volved "several hJJndred barrels
of oil, maybe fewer."
No injuries were reported and
Ford Backs
Agreement on.
Panama Canal
damage was described as
minimal.
Monday night's shutdown,
which otficla.Js said might last up
to two days, w,as expected to
have no, immedi~ effect on
lo,.ding of tankers io Valdez
harbor, becauseAJyeska Pipeline
Service Cornpany still bas con-
siderableoil tnstoraie tanks.
The pump station was im·
mediately evacuated of its half
dozen or so workers because of
the danger o( explosion after oil
flooded the building, said an
Alyeska spokesman. He said a
slight amount of oil apparenUy
spilled outside the building.
There was no fire or explooion.
The spoktsmab said workers
were trylna to restart a pump at
the station about 7:30 p.m., when
the-oil overflowed onto the putnp
room floot. Cause ot the trouble
was not immediately known.
BULLETIN
,Edward Cbarle6 Allaway bas
been !ound ~~llf six counts of
first-degree m\&fder, one count of
aecOl'\d-<ltgree m~rder and two
counts ot ... ault with a deadly
weapon, the Ounce County
Superior COWt Jur,y decided at
mld·aft.el'DOoO today.
have been aoing all night on the
northbound lanes and have yet to
get down to where the pavement
is _. or was," said CalTrans
spokesman Lance Stalker.
The effect of the rain on the
state's drought was expected to
be minimal. The drought has had
its greatest impact in tbe
Northern California area, while
the Mojave and surrounding
desert areas are normally one of
· By STEVE MITCHELL
Of Ille o.lly l'llM Swtt
Costa Mesa councilmen sliced
18 cents from the city tax rate
Monday night.
That will mean, for example,
about a $3.60 increase in the total
city tax bill for the owner of a
$59,000 home in the city.
Last year's tax rate of $1.32
was cut to $1.14 in a motion ap-
proved unanimously by the five·
member council.
City Manager Fred Sorsabal
said about a quarter of that tax
rate reduction was· due to an
analysis of the delinquency rate
in the city.
He said that in the past, Costa
Mesa has determined about a
five percent delinquency ra\e -
the per~entage of Costa Mesa
residents whodonotpaytheirtax·
es. But a city-sp0nsored study
showed that in the past few years
that delinquency rate has only
been abouttwopercent.
the state's most arid sections .•
In the Imperial Cou11ty area,
where irrigation has turned an
arid plain into one of the nation's c
most productive caah crop areas,
!LOme crops were reported
flooded.
l'Dhe National Weather Service
said 1.02 inches o! rain fell Mon·
day at Alplne. .6 inch al Borrego
Springs. and .39 inch at Mt.
Palomar.
eludes a 2.5 percent salary in·
crease for police and fll'e of·
ficials~ but salary adjustments
for other employes have not been
set. These pay increases will be
announced in October, according
to Sorsabal.
He said that an adjustment in
the budget may be required at
thattlme.
"The whole Imperial Valley's
pretty much under water now,
but so far we have no reports ol
injuries," said Kenny Dukes,
commw\lcations supervisor for
Uie Imperial County sheriff's of-
fice. .
Tbe floods left dozens ol cars
stranded, while hotels and
motels in nearby Barstow were
completely booked up by
(See STORM, Page AZ)
The budget also reflects the ad·
dJtion of nine new employes to
t.he city payroll as well as $.S.3
millioo in capital improvements
to the city.
Those improvements range
from $1.09 million for an in·
dustrial storm drain in north
Costa Mesa to $440,000 for street
maintenance.
\~
\ . .. . '
...._ __
ol
He advised council members
they could shave another four
cents or so from the tax rate if
U)ey reduced the expected deUn-
qµen~~ rate U> two ~rcent. UQUOR ORE ISANDtTS GET 13,000 IN COSTA MESA
• Councilmer) approvect the tax
rate for the ~.7 million budget
for 19'71·78, taking into considera-
tion a final assessed val&aation
figure of 17 .4 percent.
• CotOQOllte Drftllnga of Two Ht. Tlme Suapects
Elltlier estimat~ by the city's
finance department showed an
expected 15 percent increase in
assessed val~ this year.
Mesa Liqrwr Store
Bandits Get $3,000
When the "\Ssessed vaJue ls
added to the new tax rate, the
owner of a $50,000 home at last
year's prices will pay $168.81 Jn
city taxes this year l\.f opposed to
$165.20 last year.
.._Two gunmen threatened five
employes in an office area or the
Hi-Time Liquor Store in Costa
Mesa Monday and fled with
about $3,000.
The $22. 7 million spending 1695 Irvine Ave. at about 10:30 The menf tered the stl>re at
document, approved June 6, in· a.m. Mond y, walking to an of.
Carter Approves , ·
Pentagon Renews
Probe of Viet MIA
fice al'ea of the store where they
s~rprised five emplores.
Costa Mesa police said the pair
ct aimed they were looking for the
owner of a car parked outside in
tile busy parkins lot when one of
the men drew a six-inch revolver
and threatened the liquor store
employes.
"You know what this is?" one
of the bandits asked. ·'It ·s a rob-
bery."
The two men quickly gathered.
receitb from the office as well as
money from several clerks
before neeing.
Employes said they did not see
the pair leave the parking lot and
police were unable to find wit·
nesses to their rapid departure.
Both men were described as
between 2S and 30 years old. One
suspect was six reet tall, weighed
about 180 pounds and was wear·
ing a li&ht colored shirt, denint-
trousers and black shoes.
His accomplice was described
as aboUt five feet six. thin build,
wearing a Jongsleeve western•
style. sblrt. brown pants, ~n
shoes and speakJn.e wi\b. a
·southern accent.
C Tuesday, Auautt tt, 1m
88C C•
OCTD Tax Rate . . .
Trim Slated
lrvant' tran~portallon tom
ml ton n are C'on•td rln1 11end
Ins a complaint to the Callrurrui.
lllahway Com minion th al Ora.nae Coun1y &1 not 1etun11u
falr ahare of &tat e 111 U1xea. •
The htttt-r. to ht' considered by
Irvine's comm1!>1ioners next
week, points out thdt Orange
County resldenL~ pay 7 3 percent
of the total stall' ~MB tax fund. but
only 4.J percent of lhttt fund 1s re
turned to Oi;.ange County
"Cons1dd"1ng the number of
crallcal tratflc links. the high
growth rate and the need for new
factllties, lhfJ return on the gas
tax funds is not commensurate
wath lbe actual needs of Orange
County," the letter states ..
Commissioners s uggested
sendmg the letter at the last com-
mission meeting after learning of
the state's six-year planning pro-
gram.
The six-year program in·
dicates that the funds to be aJ.
located to Orange County will not
m eet the mintmum transporta·
• lion needs of Or ange County, ac-
cording to Irvine Transportation
Engmeer Les Card.
The proposed letter stales that
Orange County residents benefit
from roads built elsewhere in the
county, but that the state's
economy aJso is partially depen-
dent on business in Orange Coun-
ty. Without sufficient roads,
Orange County business wilJ
decline, the letter continues.
The letter, if approved by the
commission, will be sent to the
next state highway commission
meeting, to be held in early Sep-
tember in Santa Monica.
"It is our hope that your com-
mission will provide a more
equitable distribulton of funds
From Page A J
REVENUE. • •
at $300.
-Mesa's Mobile Meals,
operated by the Costa Mesa
Memorial Hoi.pital Auxiliary.
This group prepares and delivers
food for shut-ins who cannot feed
themselves. The auxiliary will
receive $10,512.
-Family Crisis Center, Costa
Mesa. which includes intensive
counseling for youngsters and
parents, will receive $18,000.
-Mardan Center, 695 W. 19th Street, ;issists students with
severe learning disabilities.
Mardan will receive S23,205.
-Share Our Selves (SOS>.
emergency housing for Costa
Mesa residents and transients,
will receive $6,600.
-Voluntary Action Center.
Newport Beach, which generates
volunteer opportunities for older
citizens, will receive $7,000 this
year.
-Youth Employment Service
<YES>. which provides training
and employment counseling for
youngsters, will receive $3,900.
That amount will provide six
months for a full-time counselor
for the project.
-The Department of Mental
Health wlll receive $8,100 for
"The Shelter," a youth and fami-
ly counseling center located in a
home on Del Mar Avenue.
Councilmen did not fund three
other aeencies which applied for
the federal revenue-sharing
money. In the case of tbe Feed·
back Foundation, that gro\ip
withdrew its application.
Two other organizations were
thought to be duplications of
other programs receiving the
'federal funds.
~ool Burgled
Otllcials at 'J.'eWinkle In·
termediate Scboot; 3224
California St., told Costa Mesa
police someone entered a storage
room alter removing a door vent
and stole an unknown amount of
stationery sometime Mon.Jay.
°"ANOI! COAST c
DAILY PILOT
throuaf\out lht stMto relative to
level ot contributlon and proven
nc~. '· the letter concludes.
Briggs Setfj
Fiuul Drive
In Newport
Orange County Republican As·
semblyman John Briggs could
pick up as much as $30,000 in his
campaign for California gov-
ernor after two parties to be held
Thursday night in Newport
Beach.
Organizers say the two affairs
-a cocktail reception at lhe
Marriott Hotel and a dinner at
Ambrosia restaurant -are
aimed at getting campaign dona-
tions from the county's develop-mentindustry
"We're gelling an unbelievable
response," said Scott Biddle,
sponsor of the cocktail reception.
''There's really a tremendous
amount of interest."
Biddle, who is president of Bid·
die Development, Inc ., a
Newport Beach firm, said lhe
cocktail party. for which guests
are being charged $100 a couple,
was moved from a private home
to the Atrium Court or the hotel
because of lhe large response.
"We have in excess of 300 peo-
ple conung," Biddle added.
Biddle said Briggs• campa1gn
committee has set up the dinner
that follows at the exclusive
French restaurant.
The 30 guests, aJso members of
t he development commumty,
will pay $500 each lo dine with the
Fullerton legislator, he said.
Man Arrested
In Assault
With Racket
Laguna Beach pol ice arrested
a 22-year-old man Monday after
a yowrg woman told officers she
had been kicked, choked, bitten
land beaten with a tennis racket.
George P. Ripley of 1349 Ter·
race Way, Laguna Beach, was
booked on suspicion of assault
with a deadly weapon. He was
scheduled for a court appearance
today.
Police Sgt. David Avers said
the 18-year·old female victim
was treated at South Coast Com-m unity Hospital for bruises re·
ceived in t.l]e beating.
The woman told omcers she
and Ripley had split up last week
and that she had gone to ·the
home Monday to pick up some
personal items.
She said during an ensuing
argument, she was kicked in the
stomach, thrown against a wall,
bitten, grabbed by the throat and
after throwing the tennis racket
at her assailant, was clubbed
with it.
~· --·----~
• • •
Al"wtl'l .... '9
CHARLES CRAIL OF FOREST SERVICE WALKS THROUGH BURNED BRUSH ANO TREES
•complete Dev~statton Reaembllng the Aftermath of Atomic Bomb' In CalJfornl•
Big Blaze N ea;rly Held
• Aftermath Said ~ike Atomic Bomb Blast
By Tbe Associated Press
In the wake of th~ lvfarble-Cone
inferno is "complete dev.asta·
ti on'' resembltng the aftermath
of an atomic bomb, but the fire
still searing Central California
coastland may soon be con·
tained, forestry officials said to-
day.
The blue, now the third
largest in the state's history, has
consumed 130,500 acres in the
Los Padres National Forest and
adjacent private land. It was re·
ported 60 percent contaJned.
Back-burning -fire lines eon·
strucled ahead of the path of the
fire with the brush or fuel burned
in between -so far has proven
effective, officials said.
"We're hoplng by Thursday
we'll have the back-burning line
Judge Won't Order
~
Employe lie-hiring
A judge refused Monday to or-
der the reinstatement or Harbor
Municipal Court employe Carol
Nazario to her former post or
Jury services clerk.
The decision means, in the
absence of successful appellate
action, that Miss Nazario will
continue to be employed in her
present capacity of assistant
court clerk.
She took Orange County
Superior Court action last month
with the allegation that she was
demoted because s he filed a
grtevance based on the assertion
TONIGHT
"VANITIES" -South Coast
Repertory Theater~ Tuesday·
Sunday through Aug. 21. 8 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 17
MUSIC OF AMERICA -Free
concert, Light classics with Jim
Christensen and Pacific Pops
Orchestra, South Coast Village,
7:30p.m.
that she was not being paid on the
scale normally granted to the
jury s~ces clerk. ·
All six Harbor Court judges
were named as defendants in the
action before Judge Mason Fen-
ton.
Judge Fenton noted in his rul·
ing that Miss Nazario was not
hindered in filing her grievance
and was part of a court rotation
systems that permittt:d such
transfers.
It was unsuccessfully argued
for Miss Nazario that while she
bad served in the jury services
post she had streamlined court
procedures to the point that an-
nual savings of $19,000 had been
effected.
Judge Fenton was also told
that Miss Nazario was recenUy
commended by California
Supreme Court Chief Justice
Rose Bird and bad won a $1,SOO
award from the county Soard of
Supervisors for her cost-cutting
efforts.
Lawn Mower Gone
Allred Ducharrn told Costa ·
Mesa police s9meone stole a $225
lawnmower from bis trailer
parked in front of his home at 9U
Joann St. Monday night.
tied in all the way," said WiJUam
Morrison. U.S. Forest Service
spokesman. "If everything goes
right then, it will probably be on·
ly a few days until lt will be con-
taine<t"
Besides the huge Marble-.Cone
fire, six other fires still burned in
drought-parched California, the
state Department of Forestry
said.
Lightning, the culprit in a
chain or nearly 1,000 fires that
began Aug. l, sparked the newest
blaze Monday near Lake
Elsinore in Riverside County.
Flames engulled 400 acres, but
the ftre was hoped to be con·
tained later today. the CDF said.
The Marble-Cone was among
those torched by 111tore and of-
fic ials would only hazard a
damage estimate of "sever-1
millions of dollars." ·
"It looks almost like pictures
of Hiroshima after lhe atomic
bomb," Morrison said. "There
are areas of complete devasta-
tion, with onty little twigs stick· ingout."
Morrison said officials
estimated the energy released by
burning 1,000 acres in the fire
zone was "equivalent to a one
megaton atomic bomb."
In assessing the siege at
Marble-Cone, he added, "The
fire is in a way a part of a natural
cycJe.
Mesa Cyclist, 6,
Hit by Car, Hort
A 6-year-Old Costa Mesa boy is
in good condition at Hoag
Memorial Hospital in Newport
Beach after the bicycle he was
riding collided with a car in
Costa Mesa Monday a(ternoon.
Brian L. Balla.rd of &36 Capitol
St. was riding his bike out of a
driveway when be was struck by
a car driven by Daniel L. Ken·
nedy, 19, of Tacoma, Wash. Ken·
nedy was not cited.
-
•.•
nlabttall, cau.sinc orticlals to aet · up an em ·se.ocy &belt.er to ban·
dle lbeoverllow.
Meanwhile. a doien famlli
from Bombay Beacb and Niland
..... on.~eutero ahoJ'e otiM s.tton
Sea were forced from their
homee because of flood waters.
Three trailers homes were over·
turned in theftood.
A sberiU's depaTtment
spokesman said the to.u wens
hit by floods after &be All·
American Canal northeast of
Niland developed a minor crack,
sending torrents of water into the
two desert communities.
Homes and businesses were
also reported flooded in Br-awle;.
50 miles farther south, where
two-foot flood waters broke
through hastily made aa.Ddbq
dikes.
Highways 88 and 111 had also
been under water from Brawley,
near the Mexican border, to the
Salton Sea while lDgbway 18 was
flooded between Brawley and
Blythe. But all three were report·
ed open today.
Twenty to 30 homes, valued
at $100,000 to $200,000 each, were
ravaged by flood water at tbe De
Ania Desert Country Club ln Bol'-
r ego Springs In the desert east of
San Diego.
Power outages were repollted
throughout the area, while hail,
lightning and 60·mile·an-bour
winds were reported in Palm
Sprii;igs.
The· NalionaJ Weather Service
said the heaviest thunderstorms
were centered in the Mojave
Desert.
" A weather service spokesman
said Hurricane Doreen, lying ofl
· tbe southern tip of Baja
California, would likely be doWJ>
graded to ..tropical storm today.
* * * Wall of Water
Crushes Homa ' .
In Mexicali
MEXICAU. Mexico (AP) -A
wall of water aod mud bas
crushed fihnsy houses in poorer
sections of Mexicali after a thun-
derstorm.
No deaths were reported, but a
police spokeeman said many peo-
ple in the border city were in-
jured. "' "It's sWl raining here." police •
Lt. Mario Ortiz said today.
"About two-thirds of MexicaliJ.s
underwater.
"For hours Jast nJgbt, we were
throwing water out of our homes
and, when we threw it out, it was
into streets that looked like
rushing rivers."
Telephone and electrlc servic~
were out for several hours.
In a telephone inter~w. OrtiJ
said Mexicali houses "weren't
made for rain. Even major build·
ings have gotten soaked. Some
houses ln poorer areas have
fallen in."
Ortiz was unable to estimate
how many bou&es were
destroyed or damaged.
, -~
T'*!faX. August tt, tm QAILYPILOT
In1nates Want Youth to Staf Awa~
A:J .
I f
WOODRRlOOE. NJ <APJ ttoduc\lon to Lbe realh1•• ot Juda . But lt will end unless to•e:odthemllterat.u.reaboutt.ho Corcetnent Assistance Ad-qency. •
Con\llrtcd murder ra and armed prf• Hf•, ftom J llJ\oua.tar• to . ah•t• fund&nl comes aOOR, said ~rocram: we can't atrord the ministration, which administers ·•we wtll be in close contact
f'obbetc bue are demandn1 tlaotttrorof1 tr&J)Ot. RJck Rowe. a convicted posi.goortbe~bills. S700millionayearincrimefl&bt.-wlthth atateDepartmentofCor· 11·_, -in bllla of any de Maa1 of the youlba have murdererandoneo!t.he!ounders jncas.slsi.nceforst•teandJocal rection1, but we can't have nomuiation to""''' •JI ve • pru walked out ot the prllon In l ar1. of the pro1ram. ''Somo of us haven't •one to the crimefl&titiia" a a encl es. formal approval untll tbe govem-1r am that scans youncaten 01 the cnon than 2,000 who have comtnlssary Cor yean, ".buaid 0 • inr boa.rd meets again Oct u, .. • ·~'w !."~.. , partlripated, only 1 h•ndtul have ··We're not sayin& this to pres· "l gave up 1moldng ln order to An application tor the $11,000 sbeaald.
••on or oa .. way·-;;:1Vt' •nPr~~ ,·
0
•·. •oll• tnto trouble acaln, court sure anyone into fundtna the belppayfortheproaram." grant was submJtted to tbe atate ... ., " ~ ._ provam. WeJustcan'taffordto The Lifers previously had a1enc1. bul It wasn't presented Robert Mulcahy, com-
mit•. made lb• pubJtt appeaJ rec~rdtahow .• · keep doing It anymore with our a&ked the State Law Enforce-at the covenling board's Auguat miaaloner of the state Depart-
Monday. They want to <'Ofttlnue T.f\a proaram ha1 aervtd u • own money," be said ln a ment Planning Administration to meetlns because U was filed a ment of CorrecUom, satd hia de-
tM Pl'Qlrain UMty •tarted I Oc· model for other rnatlluUona telephone Interview Mondn. come up with $11,000 yearly. mont.b past the deadline, said part:Jnent wJll try to-'und the pro-
tober in •b1ch youn• offenders around th natlon and hu been "Prisons and juvenile groups Thal state oflice dispenses Bernice Manshel, assistant rram ft SLEPA <leoies the 1aare liven ilreet·lan1ua1e in· pral&cd by several juvenile court Crom around the country ask us grants from the U.S. Law En· director of oper~tions for the uppUcallon.
RepOrt
On Lance
Upcoming
WASHINGTON CAP>_; Presi-
dent Carter's spokesman is let-
ting slip veiled, md1rect di$plays
of support for Bert Lance, but the
While House still is refuslog to
comment directly on the federal
investigation of the embattled
budget director.
White House Press Secretary
Jody Powell said Monday the
President remains satisfied that
.he knew all he needed to know
about the budget director's back-
ground before nominating him.
And Powell volunteered that
Carter played tennis last
weekend with Lance, director of
the Office of Management and
Budget and a longtime personal
friend of the President.
Meanwhile, the Atla'nta
Constitution reported today that the investigauon, by the comp-
tr o 11 er of the currenc¥, is
finished and a report wm be sent
to a Senate committee Wednes-
day or Thursday.
The newspaper guoted sources
close to the tnvesllgat..ion as say-
ing the report would be a sum-
mary of findings and would not ~elude a recommendation for
prosecution or a finding of guilt
or Lnnocence.
A spokesman for the comp-
troller's office declined com-
ment.
Powell told reporters that
Carter initiated the Sunday ten-
nis match on the White House
courts. He said Carter and Lance
~poke about the investigation of
the budget director's finances by
John Heimann, the comptroller,
but they did not deal with any de-
tails of the probe.
While offering the information
about the tennis match after re-
ports that Carter and Lance bad
not spoken with each other slnce
.Aug. l, Powell cautioned against
reading too much into it.
· Lance and Carter met Monday
for their first official session in
two weeks. They talked about
government reorganization, one
of Lance's projects. With about
'20 persons taking part in the
lneeting, the federal investi1a-
tion was an unlikely topic, Powell
said.
Planners OK
Doheny Beach
· Rezoning Bid
Spray Away
Firemen from the Doheny Fire station
spray away floating fuel collected around a
gas dock in Dana Point Harbor Monday.
Although at first suspected to be leakage
from the. fuel dock. a team of engineers
combed the landing overnight and ruled it
out as the source of the pollution. Harbor
Patrol Deputy K. Spagnolini said today it is
believed the gasoline spilled elsewhere in
the harbor and floated into the vicinity.
..
Schmitz Launches Drive
&sown Seeks Ban on Forced Bruing
Fortner Orange County con-
gressm2.n John G. Schmitz an-
nounced today be will bead a
committee promoUng a 1978
ballot initiative that would bM
use of tax money for support of '
forced acbool busing aimed at
achieving raciafbalance.
The proposed initiative
measure also would prohibit
publit school teachers from
striking and bar teacher or-
eanizatio:ns from contributing
money to campaigns of local
school board trustees ·as well as
state legislatures.
Schmitz announced formation
of what will be caned the Tax-
payers' School Reform Commit-
tee at a press conference in
Sacramento.
Joined with the one-time con·
gresainan. in forming the com-
mittee are former state superin-
tendent of. schools Max Rafferty
and ex-Lea Angeles mayoral Cafl·
didate Howard Jarvis.
For the eommittee's proposed
initia~ve to make it on the next
year 1 ballot, roughly 500,000
si1natmes of registered voters
must be affixed to its petitloas.
c~ of the Prc>P!>Sed
ballot measure is w'aat woUfd be
a state constitutional ban Ob the
use of tax money to support
forced school busing as a means
. ./
O.lly ~ ... ""' .....
8USINO HIS TARGET
Ex-congressmen Schmitz
or obtaining racial balance.
In a statement prepared for re-
lease today, Schmits called
school busine "an ill considered
deculon of Supreme Court
justices who are conlu.sed by the
world ot legall9m in which they
Lov~ B~gs ·up .
. Marriage Spam IJUtance
//f/JllOA • .. f"
Ii ve and who disregard the ef-
f eds of their jud&ments on stu-
dents and taxpayers.
.. A!!. a public school teacher
myself, I have decided to un-
~ dertake this effort because
edueation In this state bas
become a sick joke," the Schmitz
statement read.
The one-lime American In·
dependent Part)' presidential
candidate is a politic:at science
instructor at Santa Ana College.
In his prepared statement,
Schmitz called the p<>litical con·
tributions of teacher unions
"stacking the deck Ln favor of
teaching unions rather than tax·
payer citizens who elect and pay
salaries or these (elected> of-ficials.••
The proposed ballot iniliaUve
would prohibit teacher unions
from contributing to the cam-
paigns of state legislators u well
as campaigns of candidates for
governor and state Jchoot
superintendent.
Schmitz in bis prepar~ state-
ment said that records show the
heaviest single campaign cdll-
t rib u ti on to many st.ate
legislators• campaigns have
been teacher unJon ortanba·
tions.
His statement went on to HY
that if teachers want to strike
they abould get jobs in the
privatesede>r'.
Nazi Suspect
I
·Deportfttioii
Issue ·Stalled
• LOS ANGELES CAP> -U AD-
drija Artukovic of Seal Beach b
to be deported, new evidence
must be provided by the U.S. Im-
migration and Naturalization
Service, a federal court Juc:tae
has ruled.
The 77-year-old Croatian is
'Wanted in Y~oslavia as a Nazi
war criminal but revered as a na-
tionalist bero by Cro.,atian emigres.
U.S. District Court Judge Irv·
ing Hill banded down his ruling
Monday in response to a lawsuit
filed by Artukovic in June
against U.S. Atty. Gen. Griffin
Bell and three Immigration and
Naturalization Service offteials.
A.rtukovic claimed ln ~ suit
that INS clficlala_ do not have the
authority to revoke his 1959 stay
of deportation.
He contends only the Board of
Immigration Appeals in
Washington bas the authority to
deport him if it uncovers ''new
evidence'' of Nazi collaboration
d~ World War II.
However, the judge pointed out
his rullng rested on a "narrow
technical issue" and had nothing
to do with "what Artukovic may
or may not have done during
World War II."
Artukovic served as security
minister of the Nut-controlled
Republic of Croatia, and the
postwar government of
Yugoslavia has accu~ hJm of
.,. .. ...,.....
NEW EVIDENCE NEEDED
Seat Beach's Artukol/lc
ordering 750,000 Serbs and 20,00o
Jews put to death.
The short-llved Republic of
Croatia was formed in 1941 after
Germany conquered and parti-
tioned Yugoslavia. Croatia allied
itself with the Nui government
and other Axis powers.
After the war, Yugoslavia once
agaln absorbed the republics of
Serbia. Croatia and Slovenia.
~
l)aria Man IRj11:Ted
In San ]luin Crash
A Dana Point man suffered serious injuries, including the
loss or bis lef~ lee. when he lost
control ol bis motorcycle in the
County Gets
Gum Factory
Warner·Lambert Company,
the natlGn's leading gurn
manufacturer;ls plannfbg a $23.5
mllllon chewing gum plant in
AnaMJm.
Tht! eoippany announced Mon-
day the pliant. scheduled to be
finished in um. will employ 600
in ita t>rodUction of Fresben•up,
Tddent su1arless and Bub-
bllclous Bubble sums.
Currently, the company makes
gunt at its pJants in New Yot"k Ci-
tr and Rockford. lll, Warner-
Lambert said. The new plant will
be capable of producing 40 in~ boxes of gum a year ..
San Juan Capistrano area early
today, Orange county Sheriff's
officers-said.
DepuUes said Richard Dion
Sarraille, 18, or 33941 Street of the
Amber Lantern, apparently lost
control pf hJs machine near the
lntersectlon of Del Obispo Street
and Paseo de la Pu in San Juan.
They said the rider was thrown
from his motorcycle into the
roadway aftel' the machine
skidded from . the road and
smashed into a guard rail. Metal
from the rail penetrated bis left
leg they said. Tb; victhn received emergen-
cy treatment on the scene from
county paramedics and was then
rushed to San Clemente General
Hospital.
Authorities said he was later
transtern!d to the UC Irvine
Medi.cal Center where his left leg
was amputated.
Ho.pital officials described
Sanaille today u being in
criUcal but stable coodition.
. l
'
AL8ANY. N Y <AYJ GO\' ,J~IUll'h Car.)'. wtw.t wtf dJtid ol
aac• tht'H )'Uri tfo~ U
locked t atiHUon of La le
New Von Slat• *•~ M aya it can pin a t ·er I boa•"
n famthu farln1 :iitm•l'r
raaedl•
Carev·s olt•ce anf>O\lnced Mon·
8)' lh'iat the coveTnor. q®l1n1 ·ovcrwh lmang" evl4 nee th11t
La t.nle does no aood, had vetOed
t"1o bills iumed at I 1allung the
dllputed substance. (Reta d
toey, Past' 86 ) (:'; ,
Citing the death of nil wife.
elen.. by cancer, Carey bad re·
P••tedly criticized the fl&·
tionwide Laetrile campaign. He
)¥a med that the advocates of
Laetrile were playina on the
desperation of cancer victims
and their families see~ng any
kind of a cure.
«'Alnal Brl~fin9• s~t
'.: WASlUNGTON tAPJ The
Carter administration, hoping
for Republican supp(>rt for the
.new Pana·ma Canal agreement,
·is giving former President
· Gerald R. Ford and his secretary
of state special briefings on the
pact.
Senate ratifica,tion of the
agreement 1s considered less
than certain and a boost from
( IN SHORT J
Ford and Henry A. Kissinger
could bely President Carter in ~
anticipated fight with con·
servatives.
Carter arranged for his two
treat' negotiators and members
---of"the Joint Chiefs of Staff to pro·
vide briefings for Ford and Kiss-
inger amid strong indicntions the
two would endorse the agree
ment.
Pfe1Uur~ Trip Flayed
WASIIlNGTON <AP J Rep
Les Aspin accus-ed the U.S. Coast
Guard Money of permitting a
group of Coast Guard officers.
their wives and some of their
friends to take a "Pacific
pleasure trip" mostly at govern-
ment expense.
The Wisconsin Democrat
maintained the Lr1p was
authorized an violation of the
Coast Guard's own travel regula·
tions. A Coast Guard sp(>kesman
denied any impropriety.
Two admirals, three captains,
six retired officers and all of
their spouses were listed amona
the travelers. Vice Adm. A. C.
Wagner, commander of the
Coast Guard Pacific Area is the
group leader.
Odna Btdlck Mud~•
W ASIDNGTON CAP) -China
is building its own strategic
rocket and intercontinental mis-
sile force, but mainly depends on
Soviet-designed weaponry of
195os vintage for defense, says a
CIA :itudy released by a con·
gressional committee Monday.
The Soviet Unlon lap behind
the United states In most\~ of
weapons tecfmology.r including
aircraft, missiles, computers
and electronics, and the Ollnese
are about 20 ye}rs bebilid the
.Russians, according to Ute re-
port.
,.,..,,.. Ha. Su~
LITn.E ROCK, Ark. <P> -
Former Arkansas Gov. Orville
Faubus is reported in satU.f•c·
tory condi,tion after SUf'lery to
implant a heart pacemakel'in bis
chest.
Faubus, 67, entered the Baptist
Medical Center Friday and re·
cel•ed the temporary
pa-cemakw, a spokesman .a.id
Monday.
Elizabeth Faubus, bis wife,
told report.era that the former
covernor experienced chest
patnf .oii • reeenHril> from.Uieir ... home at Hun'-vllle to LIUle • Rock. . •
Pe c. C'c
e.~ O"'l ..tJ.... p &.--·"~, 1-~
A J..:Uu-of ~..A~
APWltw"'91•
PART OF LETTER WRITTEN BY 'SON OF SAM'
Penned While David Berkowitz Wes In Army In Kore•, 1972
Innocent Pied
'Son of Sam' Arra~gned
NEW YORK <AP> -Lawyers for Davtd Berkowitz entered a
plea or innocent at his arraignment today on ~harges or murder
and assault in the Son of Sam killing case. They said he would plead
innocent by reason of insanity jf he is brought to trial. ~
After the brief proceeding before State Supreme Court Justice
Leonard Yoswein in Brooklyn, Berkowitz. 24. was remanded to
Kings County Hospital There be will continue the psychiatric ex·
aminations that will determioe wbether he as mentally capable of
~landing trial.
BERKOWITZ, his hands manacled in front of him. wore blue
Jeans, a blue and white pin-striped shirt with a white T-shirt un
derneath. He was clean-shaven and appeared alert but displayed no
emotion. ......
The innocent plea was entered by lawyer Mark H. Heller, an as·
sociate of attorney Leon Stern who was retained .by Berkowitz'
father
mE ARRAIGNMENT was on charges stemming from the July
31 slaying of Stacy Moskowitz and the wounding or her date, Robert
Violante. They were the last victims of the man Police call the
.44-caliber killer, who-killed sbc young persons and wounded seven
during little more than a year. ~
Yoswein also took up an application by attorney Philip Peltz to
withdraw from the case as one of Berkowitz· attorneys. The Judge
said he would hold a hearing on the matter three to five days after:
getting the psychiatric report on Berkowitz
AN ESTIMATED 40 uniformed policemen .ranged the
courthouse, and .an equally large number or court officers were m
the building.
Berkowitz was charged in the grand jury indictment Monday
with murd'er, attempted murder, felonious assault and illeaal
possession or the .44.caliber Charter Arms Bulldog revolver tha~
ballistics expetts say was responsible for all theshootings.
Meanwhile published reports s'llld that police had uncovered a
diary detailing the acts· or Son or Sam, including a previously. un
disclosed 14th victim.
't. U,1 I
' NEW YO~K CAP> -Apart·
ment 6J at !580 Castle Hill Avenue
in the Bronx was ~eor1e Curet's home. bis cage a d µltima~y
the site he ch06e tor his self·
destruction. He was 10.
Hour after bour, day after day,
George• Curet was left in the
apartment to tend to bis 6-year·
old brother, Bruce. Their mother
and two older brothers worked.
Their father did not Jive with
them.
AU. TIUS MEANt that the
two boys idled awa'f their hours
• an~lde-; while other children from
"TIOS VIAR, he didn' come
down a lot. His tnolher wouldn'l
, Jet him co~e down," said Robert
Alvarado, 14, who deseribed
himself and hi~ 10-year-old
brother Robby as George's only
friends in the building.
C8rter MaY ;Eft:i~
In Ecollomy @oaf?
HIS MOTHER wasn't alwaya
happy with th~ way Georte
hanflled Bruce. Tbe younger boy
would often lose things or else
cry lO his mother that tais older
brother had mistreated him.
George would be blamed -and
sometimes yelled at or maybe
hit.
That, at least, i' the version
Robert Alvarado tells. George
wouldn 'l talk about it -not even
to his few friends, includin&
Alvarado.
''I never heard him say
nothing," the youth admitted. WASlil.NGTON <Al» -ll mc)y
be impossible for President
Carter to achieve each of his
three major goals of stemming
inflation. reducing unemploy-
ment and balancing the nation's
budget by 1981, a congressional
study says.
The study. prepared ror the
Joint Economic Committee, was
released Monday by Rep.
Richard Bolling CD-Mo.). It used
computer models of the economy
and other techniques to examine
chances for Carter's three major
aims for 1981.
IN A NATIONALLY televised
interview Sunday, the President
conceded that his administration
is not making satisfactory prog·
ress towart,t attainment or its
economic goals.
Bolling. the committee's
chairman, said the congressional
staff study does not necessarily
reflect the views or the Senate·
House panel itseU.
In another development. the
government reported Monday
that the natinn's industrial out·
put rose at a slower pace last
month. confirminJ (orecasts or a
slight slowdown in economic
growth.
The reseorchers' simulations,
they reported, "Illustrate the
awkward position the ad·
ministration hllS gotten itself into
by promising a combination of
economic targets that are plainly
inconsistent."
To reduce inflation to the
target rate, the report said.
restrictive fiscal and monetary
Policies would be needed -and
these would raise the unemplo,Y·
ment rate well above seven ~rcent. ..
TYPICALLY, the two brothtrs
were' alone in the apartment
Monday morning when telephone
company worker McKinley
Alston urived to install a phone
But George Curet 's patience and
hopes had run out.
··is your mother home?"
Alston asked. A
"No. just my brother." the
young boy said. "But he's hang·
an&."
ALSTON FOUND George
hanging from a closet doot, a belt
lied around his neck, a chair
tipped over -benelltl\ him. "A
defiinite suicide,•' a police
sPokesman said.
Bruce told pol~ce his old'er
t>rother had asked him to kick the
ch~ir out from under him. When
he refused, George kicked the
chair out ror himself.
1H£ ULLOPll& GROOMER HAS l GOOD THIMG GOIMG ... GOING
RICllT TO YOUR DOOR! ,
A fleet ol bright blue 1977 Ooc111e vans. complttetyoutfilleO to
lfOGm your pet to perfecllOn r19ht 11 yOur curt>, IWlllS your
Clll •• :(114) U.-81941
THE WOPING GIOOMER ... MH£S
HOU$£ CALLS OllY ... at proces compar11>1e 10 1t'lose in lr•dl·
1101111 grooming satoos ... •nd lhe GALLOPING GROOMER
1llmin1tu all the luss Ind bOttier in the barg11n.
OOS UIJQU( PET GROOMIG SERVICE... erongs .1, 1t1e
flCilitlH of tile f111Ht pet parlour IO your dOof in .uomptetelv
,.lf<ont1lned N)Oblle unit tt\lt often c.onvtnienCAt to vou and
lir condttloned comfort to your pet, wtio Is blthtd 1nd
groomtd10tM soft "r•ins of mus10.
PIOllJ IS 11t£ PET ... wno NS been 'gr~'&., the
GALLOPING GRoOMER ... I skilled P'OfessionaJ wt'lo
~ comt>lned scientific lenow-hoW 1nd
cr11tiv. 1rtiltry to provide. service thl1
will hive you Ind your Ptt ~for
more ...
•
COnse
Or Pay:
Foster
SACRAMENTO fAP> -Bob
F tu. naUon er ol th
1tate !nttty COmml Ion, pul
his money wW moutb
He told th operators of the
st te' bu1ldm e woWd U·
am t.ht>1: f•c ht tor wan &o
HU ent!t'IY and 1r be didn't
rind any, they wouldn't ha•e to
pay for &Men min tlun1.
FO.TE• t'l(fUaES the
i.latl•w1de exam1nabona Una year
~all COSl hi~ aceney about
s1so.100. to be covered by
trans er paymenlli frdm the
agencies whose facihtaes are ex·
am med
Starting w May, Foster first
approached the state Military
Department and Department of
Trans portation. The gamble
paid: Foster says that on only six
of their facilities, bis five-man
team o( energy auditors found
ways LO save about $101,000 in
utility bills this year
He sald an an interview MQn·
day lhat by the time 19 more
buildings or the same agencies
are examined, the savings should
rise to $300,000 a year.
THE TEAM looks for ineffi·
c1 ent heati ng and cooling
systems and makes s uegestions
for reduced lighting and in·
creased uses or weather strip-
ping
"ln some cases boilers were
stopped up and needed clean-
ing," he said.
The team ha~ recommended treatine windor.v to keep build·
ings cooler in th ummer, but he
said most or the i!vings can re-
sult from routine uil g opera-
tions and simple m enance ef·
forts
THE SAVINGS averaged 2Q to
25 percent per building, Foster
said. They were $2,277 a ye8J' in
the National Guard's Sacramen-
to headquarters, and $63,162 at
the highway department's Los
Angeles headquarters ~-that
was 30.4 percent of the huge
building's annual gas and eltt·
t ricity bill.
The Los Angeles building was
the largest so far. and • 'tl?e
Jareer the building. the greater
, lhe opportunity for finding sav-
jngs."
At CalTrans buildings iri
Sonora, Bishop and San Di~go.
the savings were sf ,861, $? • .'Z~
and $8,043 a year, respectively.
THE TEAM also found $22,895
in savings at Sonoma State
Hospital. Fosler said, and the
commission is trying to contract
all the state hospitals for aUdJ'f.
Foster sa1d the first $101,000 in
savings. "pretty much pays for
our audit t~m. W'e'l'e toilll '° ·
save the state some money."
He said the additional 19 build· 'inis, generally larger ones, will
be audited by Jan. t.
Haig Def ends
Neutron Bomb ·
De~nt
SACRAMENTO <AP> Gen.
Alexander Haig says deployment
or the neutron bomb would in-
crease America's nuclear deter-
rent and ,probably not escalate
the arms race
Hnlg, mllltary commander of
the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization, told reporters
Monday the military buildup bv
the Warsaw Pact nations has m·
creased steadiJy "without r~gard
to corresponding western de· r ense expenditures.•'
HE SAU> the fear that deploy-
ment of the neutron bomb would
encourage the Soviets to speed
development of such a weapon is
"dubious " because un'ilateral de-
cisions by the United States not to
deploy weapons m the past have
·'not provided ... reciprocal ac-
tion on the part of the Soviets '' ·
"In purely military terms, it
would enhance our deterrent It
wouJd serve to prevent the use of
nuclear weapons,'' Haig added.
HE CITED sUll u,nanswered
questions aboUt the size of the
budlet urplm and the full ~ts
of the tax teUef bHl and a pending
$4 .1-bJJlion school finance bill
A 1peeial legislative commit·
tee agreed Mondi.)' on a tax shift
bilJ that would Impose $2.5 billion
in new taxes ovet the next five
years and give $7.1 billion m tax
relief for a net tax reduction of
$4.6 billion.
Most of the I.ax relief would go
to homeowners in annual rebate
checks which wouJd average $22S
and to renters m rebate checks
avera&tng $113.
MOST OF the new taxes would
be imposed on business to make
up for the proposed abolition of
the business inventory tax, a
$443-million annua~ source of
revenue wruch both liberals and
conservatives say dri'!es busi-
nesses and Jobs out of the state.
President Carter, Haig said,
faced an ••anguishing" decision · ·
on whether to deploy the weapon,
which uses enhartced radiation to
kill people while lea\'lng proper.
Ly relatively undast bed.
ALSO, THE bomb would mean
·•more fJexibility to political
leaders" and pro\ide insurance
against the day enemies develop
the same thing.
On the cruise missile, Haig
said he .will await the out.come oj_ studi~ ~bout baaes, delive~*na
other ~bjects "bef .. e t would
become an advocaf~ for that
systemln Europe~"
Haig said el~i'lon of Com,.
munist governments in Italy,
France or other Western Euro-
pean rountrles would "have a de-
ld~tious impact or/ the relations
of the Vnited States with the na-
tions concerned.''
'rberormer lilbite House chief
or sl@ff declined to answer ques·
Uor\$ ;it>Qut Watergate or related • ~\1bJ~t$. aod al~ refus.ed to talk abo\l'ftW~'Bt boinoer.
In a telep))one interview,
Drown was enthusiastic about
the cornpromise approved by the
tax committee.
''We may have to cut some, -but
the concepts are there. The
leaialators have done their )Ob,·•
hesald.
aUf BROWN sald fi&ures on
the tax bjll and on the school
finance bill indicate "one or the
other will have to be cut.'•
Brown said if he signed both
the schools and tax measures in
their current forms lt woutct re·
quire a tax increase in two to
three years, which he said ls "un-
acceptable."
Brown said the proposed
higher bank and corporation tax
rate proposed in the bill and
other new taxes on business
would not violate his no-new-
taxes pledge because "they are a
tradeoff."
"WE'VE TALKEQ to a lot of
business people, and most of
them support this tradeoff. We
completely eliminate the busi·
ness inventory \ax. That is an
historic move," Brown said.
All four Democratic members
of the special Senate-Assembly
conference committee wrilln1
SB IM, the tax rellef blll. voted
for the~ presented M~riClay by
Sen. Jerry Smith <D·Saratc;aa>
The two pybUcan, voted no,
but they had opposed most pro-
visioos of the plan throuOo\lt a
monU\ ot neeotJatlons.
\, ...
'WASJU.NGTON CAP>
Barbara Lindemann Scblei ~u
appointed administrator or the
AgricuJtural Marketina Service
by Agriculture 5.ecretary Bob
Bergland.
The agency administeh many
of the government's retulations
affecUng farm commodlties and
food production.
She has been wllh the Equal
Employment Opportunity Com·
mission In Washington and Los
Angeles since 196S. For the wt 10
years, sbe also had been on the
facuh.ies of the University of
Southern California Law Center.
the Loyola Upiversity School of
Law in Los Angeles and the ..
School bf Law of the University or
California at Los Angeles.
•
C,rooner ~ing Crosby, 73, tis
due to take to the boar(f!)
again tonight to see if he
can '$till function' after' a
fall from a stage last Mar~h left him severely hurt. e
opel)s for one night at t e
Concord, Calaf .• Pavilion. ,
L' Af fEJir Trig8re · · . . .
Plus a top-drawer bonus ...
now at Robinson's! •
Ae
1 fellow county upervi pr
at a di hearln1 la.at
Oran1e 0 unty Supervftor
.am'fliil"A Schm1t blurted CJUt 1omethlng
df\ce secretly k.ln1 to form a
,cc:iWi11.Yerbno c:ommlsaion. .
Schmit was talkln1 about w 1 a
tffon by hls then·chlet aid LOren
ortan <aubeequenUy indicted for ~rjury > d tan a comml too that, In Sthmit's '9ft·..,.., would ''tell us wh ti happenlnl in
ranp County.··
A~ to both Schmit and Nort~n.
Ually there wa 1reat interest in the
· mmlsslon among thole unnamed persons
ey contacted to serve as commissioners.
ut. both men admltted, that early en·
usi m turned to apathy. And, the crime
mmission nev~ got off th 1round.
Thank heaven for that.
The only possible rtval in foolishness for
Schmit-Norton crime commission would
a similar commission Supervisor Ralph
Biedrich and political wonder boy Gene
Conrad allegedly schemed to form early
this year.
Considering the fact that the most visi-
?»e form of crime in Orange County has
been in the area of campaign dlsclosure
statements, the only demonstrable need for
a county crime commission might be to look
ipto the political affairs of the supervisors
ttemselves.
And we doubt that Schmit-who com·
111itled blatant errors in his 1975 disclosure
slatement--reallv wants such a com-
mission around. ·
Wrong Solution
The increasing demand for mobile
home spaces and their continuing short sup-
ply has resulted in charges of rent gouging
on the part of JllDbile home park operators.
Tenants contend their rent increases
far exceed the owners· increased expenses
for taxes, water. utilities and the like.
So a bill has been introduced in the As-
emb1y to ''atabillze .. these rents. It woftl<i
permit t nant to cliallen&e any rent in·
ere c from the Jan. 1, 1977, level and fotce
the porJt own r to justify the lncreue by
doc um nUng. in court, hls Increased ex·
pens plus a "reuonab1e"rate of return on
hla lnveatmemt.
Jn other words, it would impose rent
control-but only on mobile home parkl5.-
Unlortunately. when demand exceeds
~upply in any area, prices go up. And
mobile home spaces are no exception in the
t'urrent housing shortage.
Undou~tedly more spaces are needed
~nd local land planners should be trying to
provi~ for them. But Tent control--
however named-is not tne solution. Nor is
1t reasonable to expect this one class of
Jandlord to go to ~ourt and incur legal ex-
penses to justify rent charges.
Balance Needed
The California Teachers Association
(CTAJ and the Parent-Teacher Association
f PTAJ are in disagreement over a bill that
would give local school districts more say.
so in deciding which teachers should be laid
off when school enrollment drops. ·
Under present rules of the game. the
last-hired, first·fired principle is applied b~·
lottery, with teachers whose contracts
started on the same day common in
education drawing lots to see which ones
get fired.
While this ma) seem fair as the CT A
insists--it has had some ridiculous results.
like a school losing its only physical educa-
tion teacher while being required to retain
' more English teachers than are needed.
The PT A calls the system ""blind to the
needs of children," who are entitled to the
best teaching skills and a full curriculum.
The bill just sent td the governor would
abolish the lottery system and let local
school districts decide which teachers are
to be fired if the need arises and thus main-
tain a reasonable staffing balance. It makes
sense.
~ow: Much Coddlin_g
·Must We Tolerate?
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Transportation Secretary
Brock Adams is demanding that
all new cars by the mid-805 must
be equipped with automatic air
i>ags or automatic seat belts.
You aµ-e going to be protected
• whether you want to be or not.
lhaveOown
airplanes
since I was 14
-never once
without strap-
ping myself
in. volun-
tarily.
Bul I do not
use the lap
~trap in our
car and I re·
s·ent any government require·
m ent that I do so.
.A rented car which l used re-
cently in Phoenix was so
equipped that the doors locked
themselves automatically -and
"-!Ould not unlock uPW the Igni-
tion key was t.upled off.
· Now I suppc>6e that protected
me from some unwanted
passenaet who micbt invite
bi mselt aboard. ..
But I couldn't help wonder
what would happen should a fire
break out ln the ilJl!Uon wmnc. I
guess the locked-in driver would
be asphyxiated.
CERTAINLY. any rescue ef •
fort from outside the car woU.ld
be frustrated.
None can deny the way small
accidents become big ones when
somebody's head slams into a
windshield. None can deny that.
Yet one must wonder wher. ~1,
( PAUL ~ARVEY)
Brothers Government might go
from here in bis well-intentioned
effort to protect us from
ourselves.
The traditional role of govent·
ment was to prevent anyone from
hurting anyone else.
Recently. however, to try to
prevent us from hurting
ourselves, we have legislated
helmets for bike riders. many
states have taken away our
Fourth of July firecrackers.
there is agitation to ban
skateboards a-s "unsafe."
Montclair. N.J .• has already out-
lawed them.
TllEJ1E IS calculated rlsk in
alm.ost everytbine we do -
especially for recreation.
Sen. Bob GrWln of Michl£an
shares this coacern. He saya ft ls
both irooic and appropriate that
tha government. decialota to J>Ut
Big Br«ber in the front seat of
every automobUe 11t tvct\ecl tor
completion in the )'ear 1984.
In the past detade three Presi-dents and Congress have vasUy
increased the reacti d power ol
the regulators. The number or major regulatory agencies hu
doubled in 10 year.s -now 24.
Tbe number of personnel in-
volved and the cost to tupayers
bu more than doubled.
For nery new Jaw passed by
Congress last year, the
bureaucracy chumed out 20 new
reaulatlo!Da with the force of laVI.
Last week a movie I was
watchin& on the lube was
interrupted by a news com-
mentator with a "special
news bulletin." Seems they
caught the Son of Sam.
About two minutes later
they did. it again. Then it
occurrecUo me that l have
not ever, never, even once
seen them interrupt a com-
mercial for a "special
news bulletin."
B .H.
So in Chicago a batch of rubber
squeeze toys was confiscated
because the squeak they emitted
was louder than permissible
levels.
ROW FAR do we allow govern·
ment to go in protecting us from
our&elvat Does it eventuate ln a
bureattcrat lo the bathroom
• watchlna over our shoulders to
make sure we brush our teeth pr~Jy-Snourown interest. ol
course -and at our own ex· pense, ol courser
For eovemrnent to advise us -
as the USl)A used to advise
farmers -what's potentially
hazardous ls one thing.
For government arbitrarily to
deny what few individual
freedoms ~ choice remain -
that•• another klod of covem-
ment frOm the kind ours is sup-
pased to be. .,,
'
...... -fr' •
t' :· •.
..
~ --
·--··~· .· -·~ .. --· ·.·~~ • • • #. ,,. '""'¥'. .· .... •
Breakthr-..la Stcaged ~arter
Cruise Missile Secret
w ASIDNGTON A dramatic
technological breakthrough on
the cruise missile, it can now be
reported, made ll easier for
President Carter to cancel the
B-1 bomber program.
The new development is Car too
secret to identify in the public
prints. but the
be~ind-the ·
scenes story
can be told or
its impact on
the B·l de-
cision.
Incredibly,
this super-
s e c re t
weapons de·
velopment
was first brought to the attention
of the president's national securi-
ty adviser, Dr. Zbianiew
Brzezinski, by two sophomore
congressmen.
They were~. Robert Carr <D.·
Mich.) and Thomas Downey <D.-
N .Y.), who learned about the
breakthrough during a secret
budget briefing given to the
House Armed Services Commit-
tee last spring. The new develop-
ment is so sensitive that some
stall members, even though they
bad security clearances, were
asked to leave the room durin&
the diBCUl8ion.
THE CRUISE misaile is con-
sidered a weapon's generation
ahead of anything the Soviets
have . Now the secret
bre~hrougb sbOuld increase
this U.S. advantaie. Jt struck the
(1~CK ANDERSON)
two congressmen, therefore, ea a
strategic development that could
affect the B·l decision.
They. sought an irnmediate ap-
pointment with Pres}dent Carter
but were ushered iilatead in to
see his national security adviaer.
They launched into a dlseussl.on
of tbe cruise missile
breakthroug.b. with emphula on
the possibility that it mi&bt dis·
placetbeB-1.
At fll'St, Bnezinski tboal)>t the
congressmen were talkina about
a known weapons project. Theo it
became obvioua they were refer-
rin& to a development that he
knew nothm. about.
Brzezinski refused to discuss
the incident with us, but our as:
sociata T4ll)' Capaccio and Gary
Cohn spoke to Carr. The con-
gressman acknowledaed . ~ ..
1flt!la ..
---: ·-----.......... ---··-
~ -y ':-.-.:::.}'.: ..
~
... God. 11Ny,. ... ,,_ ,,.., .. , .,,,,,,,,.,
. .
cautiously that Brzezinski ·was
startled over their disclosure and
that he also conceded it was the
flrat he had beard atiout it.
PENTAGON sources tell us h•
was furious over recei vin&
sensitive security information
from two junior congressmen.
He telephoned Defense Secretary
Harold Brown and demanded the
secret details. As one source put
U, Brzezinski was "bitblY qit,at.
ed" that be bad not been in-
formed about the teclmological
breUthrouJh.
Not only was Brieiinski given
the full facts. but the prQject
director also gave the two con-
1resamen a corpplele briefmg.
They were required to sign docu-
ments, b~ever, that they Would
not dlscJose any inlormation
about the project. Their
signatures were requested ln
splte of the fact they already held
top security clearances as mem-
t>ers of the Armed Services Com-
mittee.
No one at the White House
would say what impact the
brea)(througb bad on the presi-
dent's B·l decision. But Carr
said: "I felt it bad an impact
because it knocked down most of
the Air Force's arguments about
the B-1 bomber. Tbe info was '
•uch as to reduce the ma]ority ot
the A,ir For£_e arguments about
the B-1 to ablMute zero."
This project will. have .. a
tremendous deterrent effect, .. be
added, when it is eventually re-
vealed.
·Industry Not Pa~ Fair Share of Coat
". Ate truckers carrying their
lair share of Callfouila's
hilbW81 coat load? Not accord-
ing to studies made by the
Le&l•lati ve
Auditor and
the Depart•
ment ol
Tran1pqrta-
t ion. The
auditor foUnd
that truckers
not only
area 't payt.ni
a propor ·
tionate share
of the cost&. "but larae truck
operators pay substantJapy less
in California than in an1 other
states." '
•
~ 1 • t ;,
c c
" ti ~ I
A s.
sl
i: r1
J
b u
of
iq
b\ n
nJ
.. Don't tell me we've hcked pollution and lllterlnc. _I
just ran Into a whole tribe d Indiana with tears in their
eyea."
Deaths Co~tyOkays
School Walk
Construction of a
sidewalk to serve
·Bid Tactics llit
8)' KATHY CLANCY Of"90.lly ..........
Procedura uaed by""Otncialt ~ the
Orans• County Tranalt Dlatrlct
(OCll>) ln award.Ula contracta were
critlebtcl Monday by COUJ1tY. Auditor· Con\roller Vic Kelm.
Helm, ha • 1S.pa1e report on OCTD
contract pollclot, aaid the diatrtct
Jacka 1WMlard procedures tor eoltclt·
101, evaluattn1 ai.d awardio1 con·
tucta and, ln some caaes, violates
procedUJ'eS that do exlat.
Heim Hid, (Qr example, certain re-
quisition forms have not been used In
1ecurtor 1ervtce contracts, and OCTD
records fail to indicate whether the
district's legal counsel has reviewed
all coatract documents.
OCl'D DIRECfOBS aaked ~neral
Manager Ed Loritz to respond to
Helm's report wit.bin 30 days. They
alao delayed adopUon or a new
purchasing manual for one month.
Heim recommended. that, lo the
future, all contracts be channeled
through Ray Ratunas, the newly
hired manager for contract ad·
mini!tration and purchasing, a pro-
cedure the auditor said already is be·
ing implemented.
Helm's report said that, in some in·
stances, established contract
prodecures were nol followed in part
because Rakunas' department did.not
have the authority to force com·
pliance.
R.tration Set
At Golden West
Golden W,est College wjj) begin
registering students by appouuitment
onAug.26forlhefallsemester.
An appointment may be obtaiped by
----l ----
MAlm>cmlZI ........ '116.
.. YIAa
COLU•I STUDIMT •
SIM•LI OYI& 21 • '168.
PBTIAI
SUBSTANTIAL
SAVINGS
FOR
LARGE BUSINESS
P.OUCIES
$ TIAILY· S 173 50,000 ••• • .... •
$100,000 •• ~~! $363. ............... s.w119aa.o.
~,.. ..... ........,,.,... ............
YACHTS.
LARGE BOAT DISCX>UNTS
EXTENDED \\
WORLDWIDE I CRUISJNG COVERAGE
NEW YORK <AP) -students at Silverado
George Oppenb~lmer, Continuation JJigh
22-year drama critic for Scbobl in the Mission
Newsdfty • the Long Viejo area has been
Island newspaper, and · approved by orange
co·founde.r of the Viking County supervisors.
Press. died Sunday at The sidewalk will run
the 1lge of 77. He. along Jeronimo Road
wrote screenplays for between Alicia Parkway
suc_h ~ollywood a nd Los Alisos
luminaries as G.reta Boulevard. The Mission
Garbo and the Marx Viejo Company has
Brothers. agreed to pay hall the
HE SUGGESTED that a routing
system for contract documents be
established and that OCTD oCficlals
require strict adherance to all pro·
cedures.
coming in person to the admissions .. -----~!lllm ______ .. ___________ 11111! ..
and records office in the administra-
COMMERCIAL BOATS
MIAMI (AP) -Lod
W altera, father of
telev~slon . personality
Barbara Walters and
estimated $30,000
construction cost, county
officials said.
founder ol the old Latin D la ., tic Quarter nightclubs in .eat ,..,o e•
New York, Boston and CVMMJNOS
M . . died M d H JOSl!PH H. CUMMINGS SR., rftl-ialDl, on ay. e dfftt of Costa Mew. c.tlfM!lla. Passad
Wal 81. away """8t '4. 1'71. SWYI"" 111 wl ..
· N0<a,~-.WendJOMPf1Jr ..... lh
• of HIWilll, df1111hters Lorraine L. RI c HM 0 ND ' v a. Broad, CMta Mesa. ca .. JOMPl\lna
The report noted tha~ district policy
tion building.
Walk-in registration without an ap-
pointment begins Thursday, Sept. 8
and cootinues through Sept. 22. The ·
fall semester starts Monday, Sept. 12.
All County Solons
OKDeathOverride
(AP) Donald p 11 Rall!eS, .._.II, Gerrt lkWtwn, Costa -e. o, a Mesa, Ca. and Vivian l(apololu. By o.c. HUSTINGS 51-year-Old retired Hawaii. &tot'-5 Pwker Cummings OftlleDeltyptl• .. 1-.
BOB p~~EY HORTHOC-·54~·3205
& ASSOC, INC~SOUTHOC-642-650~
w e J d e ~ f r o m' ;:i.=. ~ :;aewi::,~ All six Orange County ~emblymen voted ID •
Philadelphia who re-orut-QrandchllOrtn. Privett lamlly favor of overriding Governor Brown's veto of the ceived a new heart In memMl•I ""'''• wed., Au9. t7. death penalty. Just $32.45 (one way) from Orange Coun1y airport.
•·OOPM, Bell BtCNldway Ctlapel with transplant surgery at the Rev. 0wir1nSmllhott1c1at11'19. Private -The half-dozen Orange County vole$ for the
Medical College of Inter"*''· Tho5t #ho wlslt In .. .., of death penalty bill (SB lSS) included those of . . . b llowert, m•'f make donetlont to V1rg~ Hospital ere ca1v•rt c11ape1. ee11 aroadwav Democrats Ron Cordova of El Toro, Dennis
July 24, dJed Monday. Morluarydlrro~.L. Mangers of Huntington Beach, Richard Robinson of
&0wA110 A. 1uc)4()MEL, rttl4ant Santa Ana, and Chet Wray of Garden Grove, plus
of Mis.., v .. io. C.llforlll•. Paued Republicans William Dannemeyer of Fullerton and ... FAMl\.Y
COLONIAL llUMlllAL
HOMI
7801 Borsa Ave.
Westminster
893-3525
PACtffC YllW
MIMOllAL PAii
Cemetery MonulllY'·
· Chapel
3500 Pacific View Driv. Newoort. · calitomi.
8"-2100
McCOllMtaC
MODVAlllS
Laguna Beach
awey AllCIU'l 11, 1t77. 8ttovecl !Mnb9M
of L1111an v. Suc1111me1. '°"'llO , .. ._of Bruce Nestande of Oran1e.
Edward J., Mn. Judith HlrKh and * * * MrL s..s.i L. Gnlve. Alto survlWd by
si.1 erancklllldntl. two bf-others end AND ALL TllREE of the county's state w .. s1sws. F .... ra1 servkas w..i.. senators -John Briggs of Fullerton, Dennis tt·OOAM at O'Con,_ Leoune Hiiis h
Mort111ry. Interment EI Toro Carpenter of Newport Beac and Paul Carpenter of
cetMterv. o•eon.-Laouna Hiii• Garden Grove -voted for AB 807, which would ban
MornMtvctl'k.::n,H legal recognition ol gay marriages.
ROH RT w.c BOWYER. rwslOenf The blll passed the upper house 23·5. lts author °' stockt°"' c:.111ont1e. Fortnfffl'"' is·--)J.,_ B -u ...... __ _. c• 0r > Laouna .. ecil, Ca. PasWd awa'f n.iNteal"4N' .... art ruce rn::::n.anue n• an&e •
AJ19lltt 1'. 1977 at tfte -ee Of N. * ft ~ • ='= =~·:=,.T~= Btrr T8E ORANGE County contingent m the ........ ~ ._,., c.a. .....,_ Allembly split wbeo it came to the vote on a pro-
Jim of 1..os AngNs, ca .. .JoM °' ..,, -...a constitutional amendment that would lower DMgo, ca. enc1 Wl"'-m of L-a had!. ~ ea. ~ -vicn 10:10AM.--. the legal drinking aie in Califomia from 21to19.
•t Pacific view Mamor1e1 '"•••· One Republican -Bruce Nestande -jolned Pec1t1cv1ew.~":~ • two Denu>erats -Ron Cordova and Richard
SunJet Tours and special fares for families and groups, too.
Ry.Air Calffomta and make it easy on yourself.
494-9415
L~na HtOs
. 788-0933
San Juan C&pfalrano 49~1778
ZARA M. RHAltCHEK, rnldel'lt of Robinson -in voting for ACA SS. ~!:~'t;n~:;"~=~P::! However, the measure was opposed by AIR., CALIF 1 RNIA :~ .:,~!c, -:.·8!= Republican William Dannemeyer and Democrats .,,
Amlel. Vltl'-tloll Tues .• 4:00PM to Dennis Mangers and Chet Wray.
•:OOPM lit Pierce Brothers Smll!ls' • . * * lit ~rc-~~~=::'1~ u.s. SENATORS Alan Cranston and s.r. We're easy· to take.· IALTIAH•llOM
• FUHllAL NOMI
Corona del Mar 873-9450 Costa Mesa 648-2.f24
IRl.UOADWAY
termtnt at Good ~d eanw1erv. Hayakawa say they are workinc together. to to-to :,~~rotws smiths' Mort1>ar., iet Los Angeles designated as the slte of the 1984 '
HYH Olympic Games. _ Cati Afr CollfOmlo· R~servatlons In Oronge County. (714) 752-1CXXl;. Downey. NONA~l'.ttS1e1t11to1e-0ei They are hoping to get a commitment from tbe (213) 924-3313; Laguna. (714) 4~ Los Angeles, (213) 627-5401; Son Cle~te, ....,., CellfonN ......... ,,,., Augvst ,., I 2r:.~.£nnn I I t I "· 1m. !ur'vlWd by lier Nil&...._. federal aovernment (or financial backing for the (714) 496-6CXX>; ·~lwrslde/Son Bemard no, (714) 8 VVY\AJ, or your oca rave agent.
I •
MOUUA.IY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-9150
oeoro-VaftKavollMt, M1nllatte" xxm Olympiad. 0"" ..... .... .. ~ca. ... A.H. Y*'llCIUGMet. ...... ~
LaPal!NI, Q. ~I Mnll<a lilfacL, .--------------------~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiijiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiliiiiiiiiiii;a; A119. 17, 2:IOPM at 8altt 8trvaron
F.-ral .-.a.... CW....dtt Mar, lnurtlment at Felrhew11 Mamorlet
Peril. 8attl 8-rgtron, Olftna at M«, IMl1M 1Vh&L LANI
COSTA llm.IA CHAP&
427 E. 17th St.
Cost• Mesa • fMe.-4888
Santa Ana Chapel
518N.~
'Santa Ana * 547-t131
"8Cl•cmas IMnW MCMlTUAlY
627MalnSt.
Huritington Beach
53H6S'i
dlrecters.
PVBUC J'.iOTICE
•
I CC> Oilr) "fir ...... We" (~ I TUUDAY '74-Batbra Streisa11d, Miclltel ... _______ • Sanazt1. Utellt Pnias. A lovin&
wife btcomts an lncolllpetent criml-l!VeNINQ J 1111 to suppott '* h~lldthroup
-tolleae. '
e:oo
o m u m ® ""'· D ~ ({) m Qt"-II Vor•c• to II>• Bottom ot 1111 Su
(I) Padru la1tll1ll Cont'd lrom
SPM. San 01eao Padres vs. C1ncinnaU
• Reds
a~· m Tiii rartridtt f111ily m Alias Slllit11 ' Jones ((ll) CJ)) (Qt ())) Mns m Joan1eJ to MwHlllfl
CISl~Lllq m £lectrk c..pa"' ED Dr1mlit Stria
@ltullafcs
-6:30-
D Mme: CC> (90) "Wines ti f1rt" (dra) '67-Sumne Pltsllette. Lloyd
Nolan. Jimes farenlJno. ru News I~ Men Grrffhl Show
CD Andy Grrfhth
(ft 1l (~ ) Tiit i..e blletr
~ Otd Van °"' si.. m P'ledce 81nk/Ztom
( (29) m) lle.rtcllecl
e!> Man Builds. lla1 Dtltrop
7:00
m 1i1en Giiffla ._ a> Tlll J'111W11 fa Opera llltalrt hThr Mikado"
O'Oyly Carte Ope11 Company is seen
m 1ls classic film version of this
Gilbert and Sulhvan story. ED Espectxu '77
W Masttrpilce Tlleatre
-9:30-D (<Ill Cll) CJ) 0111 Day It A
T11111 (R) Ann aets stoQ in the
middle whe11 a couple she hardly
knolfS have marriac~ problems.
10:00 II (<Ill Cll) Cl> ._ (R) Season
Hubley &Uests as Slslu Maria. a 11an
with rmnce in l1lllld apimt 111
attline exewtive.
8 0 Cl> ca 9 hlk.t Story
(II) Otsl Alw Jr .• and Tony Musante
star • a 1ooq Pollct-Offu and Im
tra1111n1 officer whose irnohement 1n
thetr tobs Pit an unbearable slri1n
on their alrady unsuble Nma&es. n a 11ews
({) Movie: CC> "Tell Mt Where H
HMrts" (dr1) '74-Maureen
. Stapleton. PallT Somno. fD PitUdilly CirM
ED D Bltn Amclo
ei>At• r.,
-10:30-m mm11en (Slttpl's...,_
11:00
U (])UCI>CIDOlltws D 0 Cll ((ll) Cll) m ._ u (13 (()) l..a ..... SQle
01...-
mSFtnlllllMZIUOt a>MarmW.,,•.O.
m r1e41• 111ak/Llti ..
eo..rtillll m 0nut1t Series m~m-.n
-11:30-u ((ll) Cl)) CJ) Mtwte: <J:) ... . lllM .. ......... (d11) '58-
•l(enneth More. Ronald Allen. Honof
Blackman.
D@ ()) m 8 lllll9J t..
()) Mnie: "D111ereuly TMl1"
(adv) '37-Cmi Romero. u (]) (121 ()))
'W U.S.A."
9 .... m~ an. 100a. G~AIC .... EDa.--34
lktit:
12:00
0 Twiljpt l.ollt Cl ~: CC> "llleatN .. ~ ..
(hof) 67-Christopher Ml. m htll ., S4lnial
II> ~ <J:) "lttfalltl. s..... & Utysm" (adv) '65-llirt Moals..
-12:30-
UDnclMt · • CD .. vie: "Hema C.1 Walt* (com) '43-Gene Tie~.
;
Chris Collins. cocktail waitress at Salt
Lake City Hilton Hotel's Room at the Top.
..sl)ows off Utah's newest T-shirt fad. the
1977 Utah .legislature passed a law requir·
ing warning, "The consumption of
alcoholic beverages purchased in this
establishment may be hazardous to your
health and the safety of others.·· Liquor
safes ye up since posting the signs.
, " . Birt h . Control . -.. . .
Pelle t Studied
cmcAGO (AP> - A researcher says he's d~
veloped a contraceptive pellet that could be im·
planted under the Bk.in to prevent cc:mcepUon for two
to~years. Three versions of tbe pellet. including one for
use by men, are planned for clinical studies involv·
ing men and women, according to an article in this
week's issue of the Journal of the American
Medical Association. .
The pellet apparently has been successful in
tests with rats, the article said.
IT WAS DEVELOPED BY Gopi N. Gupta, an
investigator at the Population Council at New York's Rockefeller UDlversity, the article said.
Enough contraceptive hormone to prevent
pregnancy for up to three years could be contain~ in
a pellet about one centimeter long, sllehtiy larger
than the typical pill, Gupta said.
The pellet would be implanted through an in·
cision in thE! skin and would dissolve slowly, makina
removal unnecessary.
..
I
87 B'Y SJ1Aaaun .,, ............ ....,
When the neW HUCID bec1ns 1lQt mooth. the nllbt ol Sept. lS may llv•
many viewers Crilt for lfipeil. By gOJ. Jy,~-tbe networks Will offer HZ aiM:l
vtoleo(e then.
ABC wm etart It• sex-1ptced
"Soap ... NBC will battle it Witb "Sex
and tile Married Woman. 0 ·a TV mov-
ie. And CBS has a Ml nJiht ot filbtln1 with four. count •em •• four boxlne
bouts.
TBE NEXT NIGHT, NBC C()mes
back with tour more bouts to fl1bt the
sea.son premiere of ABC's "Ei1bt is
Enough,. and "Cbarlle'1 Antels ..
minus Farrah Fawcett·.M~. CBS
bas two 90-nllnute movies.
SUch is tbe fremted network scram-
ble few ~trons this season. which with luck im,ht be the one in which a pre-
emption actualb' wu interrupted for a re&War1Y acbeduled proeram.
Such 1cramb1Jn1 and proiram
jousting aims at booting millions of
re.War viewers early In the same. Jt•s been quite brisk, particularly at
ABC and NBC, where one-upmanship
runs rampant.
FOR EXAMPLE, NBC in May put
the new "Off the Wall," "Clasa of '6S"
and the renewed "CPO Sharkey" on
its September roster. Then, poof, it
dropped "Wall," put the other two on
later-in-the-season status.
Jn July, it moved its new season up
a week, installing the fint of six
.. Laugh-Jn" specials for Sept. s. It
also hired a new series, 0 MuWgan ·
Stew," and moved four other series to
new nights.
ABC pondered. then set
.. Washington: Behind Closed Doors"
-based on a novel by John
Ebrlicbman. one-time aide to former
President Nixon, for two hours a
night, six nights, from Sept. 6 through
11.
TIDS WAS SEEN.AS an effort t~
bug NBC, which earlier bad set a
blimp burning, "The Hindenburg,"
for Sept. 6, and various specials for
the rest of the week, ending with the
Emmy atyards on Sept.11.
ABC further sought to harass NBC
by advancing the start dates of four
ABC bit comedies by a week, among
them a one-hour return of "Happy
Days," once set for Sept. 20. It now
opens Sept. 13, against the premiere
of Rt.chard Pryor'a weekly comedy
show on NBC. ·
Reg. S .95
.85
LIKE NBC• CBS ioes ln blc for special programming tbe fliat tull
week in September. Tbe foods ranie from "Bugs Bunny in Space" Sept. 6
to a tennis caper, "Super Nitht at
Forest Hllls" on Sept. 9.
Excluding moviea and ABC root.
ball, 64 new or returning weekly
shows are on tap this fall. "llafferty••
is rust. then NBC's direct-from-ABC
"Bionic Woman." Sht arrives with a
bionic dog' <no joke) OD Sept. JO.
Tbirty-cne more weeklles will pre-
miere between Sept. 11and17 •. 1be
rest triekle ln o~ succeedln1 nl1hta. fighting for attention am.id special
programs. The last regular is NBC's
"Police Woman," which won't open
for ~ine$s until No~l.
By~. vi~ei:s may have give11 up trying to decipher what's on and
when, and taken to reading -about
the new pre.-emptions, speclals ,and schedule changes for the mfdseason.
Some might even listen to radio.
THIS CADILhA'C
HAS EV'ER1:1filNG
SAN DIEGO (AP> -Louie Mattar
has a shower, kitchen sink, electric
stove and refrigerator. all in his
Cadillac.
Since he bought the car new in 19'7,
said tbe Detroit native who operated a
garage in San I>ieeo unW retirement. be has spent *7s.ooo cuatomizinl it. 441bere's nothing to add now -only
wings," be said. "But, it's too heavy
to fly." •
..
t's a Struggle
EYeqtiRie, Says
__ gels Tanana
TORONTO (AP) -V*ran
Ulcber AJwb ~cbe 11 lD a plUon to know what makes
100d pitchers sreat.. bavln• spent U...,. In tA. m.i« rucua.
f 'AQy pitcher c wl when
't t"lhb ltutr, beat WhlDyou're
bl• \0 win wheD JOU baV9ft 't sot
pod stuff, tben you'n a peat
pitcbei'." said the CaUforn.ia ADI pl ch.
That was bow be described
Frank T&nlll\a'S performance
..4...,et.s -.ie
All CO.-• ICMl'Cll .... 4ml
"'""'·,.,.,,,.,.,,...Tor-,,..,. ltT-•~C.lltlen>I• • AllQ, 10 TO<Onlo•I C.htor..i•
• UP"'.
7 1)P "'
1 "'°"'·'
QOdQ' night as the ace Jeft.
hander overcame some shaky
moments early and went on to
atrike oat 11 in the Anaels 7-4 de-
cision over the Toronto Blue
Jays.
''Tbe same was true when I
uught Dave McNally and Mike
Cuellar. They also bad the ability
to win on off.. nights.
"His curve ball wasn't good
tonight and he bardly threw it in
the later innings," added
.Etchebarren, who paced the
,Angels' nine-bit attack with three
, slngles i.q four at-bats. He even
stole a base brthe-toorth inning.
Tanana, 14-1, gave up a total of
11 ruts, three in each of the first
fourth innings aa the Blue
Jays picked up a palr or runs on
both occasions. However, he
thwarted the Blue Jays the rest
of the way, giviJls up a seventh·
inning single to Bob Bailor and
base bits to plncb-bI(ter Hector
Torr~ and Steve Staggs in the
nJnth.
!l'ony Solaita aided his cause
wltb a two-run homf't, h1I ninth
of tbCI aeuon, which came ln t.M
fifth ott reliever Jerry Johnson
and provided the An1el1 with
lheirlinaJ lwOl'UJ\I,
.. Every Ume I 10 out lt'a a
•truale, .. aaid Tanana who bu
been bolhered wtth ll•htnea1 ln
his elbow which caused him to
mill two at.arts earUer in the
season. "J think I'm at about 10
percent now, but I'm 1Ull 1olna
towin20-lthink.''
Toronto manaeer Roy
Hartsfield, seeing Tan~h
for the first time, said: "He was
two different pitchers tonight. In
the first tour inninaa, I thought
we had him and were going to
• will'. But tor the next five, he just
dominates our hitters. He throws
a ehangeup on 3-0 to Doug Rader
for a strike, and then to show it
wasn't a freak, be comes right
back with another for a strike. He
showed me right there what kind
of pitcher he is."
The Angels struck for two runs
of their own in the first off loser Jesse Jefferson, 7·13, without the
benefit o( a hit.
CAUPOllNIA
arll"
Bosley<f ' O O o Aemy2b 'I I 0 eonc1u1 '2 o o
Scll•ll•lb 2 I 1 2
RO.JkklCln pit I 0 1 0
8rlOQ$ lb 0 0 0 O
B•Y'°'"°' A I I I
CMlk3b l 0 0 0
M1111lnlksn A 1 2 1
FIOl'es If A 1 0 0
Etthelwlrrenc 4 O l 2
TOttONTO
J S<ott If
St~
B•llord A~rdl\
Veter rf
A111tlb Howell:lb •
McKrtH
Whlttc
H.Tonwsllft
arllW s. 1 0
• '2 0 S I 2 I '0, '
'' '0 '' '0 '0' 0 • 0 I t
3 0 0'
I 0 I 0
Tottlt 33 7 9 • Tot.is • 4 11 4 C.lltomla 200 320 000 -1 TOl'OlllO 100 lOO tot-4
E -Mowttt1..0P-Toronto2.L0tl-C.llfornl•
1, Teront• •· t~ -IUder, ll•Ylor, Aull,
Ao.Jeckson.38 -SIAOQS. HA -Sel.it. (9). s•-lloncb, Soltlta, FIOr••· Elcht~rnn. S -O>alk.
Tan•N CW. 1'-71
Jetfff10n IL. 7·U) J.JoMson
WTill1
II" H " E• tll SO . "'''" l~ 5 s • l '
'"' J 2 2 3 ' I I 0 0 0 0 91' Smokey Joe Says
IJe'll Fight Ali Again
second time by Foreman in the
fifth round of a fight at UnJon-
dale, N. Y., in June, 1916.
There could be more than
money In a rematch for ttftl
boasUul Ali, wbo Fraiiet to this
day· continues to call by the
cbamp'a former name, Cassius
Clay. •
II
. ' °"" ..... ..,. CHARLES WHITE (12} WILL: BE USC'S NO. 1 TAILBACK. HERE HE GAINS GROUND IN THE •n ROSE BOWL AS A FRESHMAN. . "
Streaking Vila&
Rips Gottfri~d .US(:·· Loaded, ~s UsUal
DUBUN, Ohio <AP) -Argen-
tina's Guillermo Vilas won his WIUte Ready w Follow in Bell'• Foott1~
fifth consecutive tournament :tOS ANGELES -Ricky BeU
Monday night, defeating Brian is gone, and so are Vince Evans
Gottfried 6-2, 6·1 in the finals of and some other pJayers, but sym-
the $125,000 tennis tournament at pathy cards are not in order for
Muirfield Village. the University of Southern
In the doubles finale, Stan California.
Smith and Bob Lutz of San The Trojans, 11-1, riutked
Clemente survived two :niatch second behind Pittsbureh at the
points al 4-5 in the second set to close of last season and winners
win 4"6, 7·5, 6-2, over Gene Mayer o{. the Rose Bowl, look u u·
and Peter Fleming. they'll be the same as they usual·
Vilas was awesome on the clv ly have each year for the past de·
courts, breaking Gottfried's cade and a half -very, very
service in the first game and good. ·
never lo.sing control of the Bell, the bullish runner pick~
match. He achtev~ the win in No.. 1 in the National Foetball
one hour, 11 minutes. · League draft, will be replaced by
1'ut .Ytlas' strong J>USiDC shots Cbarleif-Wbite, a fleet and elusive
quickly undermined Gottfried's sophomore pegaed u the latest
strategy. in a long line or ouut~ding Tro-
After Gottfried bad broken -jans tailbacks.
Vilas' service in the/ourth game Rob Hertel, potentially one of
of the first set, his only break of Southern Cal's finest passerB
the game, bis serve became lnef· • ever. will move into the
fec~ve. That, conbined with bis quarterback slot vacated by
inablllty to score at the net, Evans, the MVP of the Bose
sealed bis fate Bowl. Hertel, a multi-talented
Vilu, who won his last 3S senioc who plays third base on
matches. '°'-clay, broke Gott· the SC baseball team, hit 30 of 46
friend's serve fn th fifth and passes for 452 yards and eight
seventh eames of the fint set and touchdowns in relief or Evans
served out in the eighth game for 1 t season. ,
a.lint.set.wininjuatOminW.. 'J.¥ojans ol'feme should be
varied and explosive -and ac-
cording to second-year coach
John Robinson, his team may
need all of it.
"On paper we have more ques-
tion marks on defense because
we have less experience,"
Robinson said, te!erring to the
loss of seven starters.
The four starters back are All·
American safety Dennis
Thurman, tackle Walt Un·
derwood, linebacker Clay Mat-
thews and cornerbaek Ricky
Odom. But the key, Robinson
said, .. is how quickly the new
people become accomplished ptayen;n
The only real mystery an the
offensive unit is who'll start.
" White, who averaged 5.5 yards
per catty lD rushing for 858 yards
and 10 touchdowns last seasc)n.
may be pressed for the tallback
job. Junior Lynn Caln, a Ricky
Bell look-alike, has power aod
speed. and Dwight Ford and Rod
Connors also are promising nm-
Qers.
jans retarn tackle otis Page aDd
center Gary Bethel iD addiliCP tO
guards Brad Budde and Pal
Howell and tackles Anthony
MW10% and John Schuhmacher,
all o(wbom started at one time or.
another last fall.
The Trojans may find out in a~
hurry lf they bav.e a-shot at the '
national UUe. They again open•
with giant.killer Missouri, who
handed them thelr only loss last i
season. a stunnlng '6-25 setback.
.. We're shootinl for the na·
tional championship," uld
Robinson, who then alluded '°J
lastyear'slosatoM.lssourl. ,
"If we ever relax again, we
ought to be taken out and shot.•• / .
FootlNdl Players
Face Rape Charge •
MANHA1TAN. Kao. <AP> ~'
Five Kamas State Unlvenlty: -football players have been.
charged or implicated in tbe af.
leged gang rape ot a ~-&ate CoMj
lasUlarcb. ': h
Nate Jones, 20. :and Ken t.o.'e-c• .
ly, 19. were being held in lieu«-
KeHy Admits Partiality
Once Yell,ed lnio Mike: ''We Wini''
Mosi Tatupu alternated with
senior Dave Farmer at f\lllbaek
and, while be averaged seven
,.ants per carry, bis ~ suit
may be· his blocking ability.
Robinson said Caln, a 6-1, 204·
pounder, will also see duty at
fullback.
Hertel 's top targets ue expect·· ed to be Randy Slmmrtn,
s peedy wide receiver who
grabbed 32 passes for 653 yards
and five touchdown5 Jast seasoo,
and ti&ht encl Willl'm Gay. a starter last year.
. $2,000 bond each, following tbelJ'
arralpment Monday in Riley
County District Court Oll d18J'leS1
of· raping a woman in a
dormitory.
Jones and Lovely, along With.i
Mike Woodfin, 2>, surrendered to
Riley County authorities earlier:
Editor'nou: Thia ii tM tMrd in
a •niea of 17 articla f~ tJw leodb.o S'1uUaern Calif cmdo radio
and TV •.PD't' .announctn. Today'• apotlight /ocuaet on
radio'• Tom Kdl11.
on the offensive line, the Tro-
MCllDdaf. Woodlin ls to be at·
raigned later, according to RU~
County AUy. Denni$ Sauter.
..
..,.,,... ....... ..,..,, .......
1 • MV'S BRIAN GOODELL, DOUBLE OLYMPIC GOLD MEDALIST, WORLD RECORD HOLDER IN 2 EVENTS .
G oodell, FtirnisS Head D eep Se a
R eport .
' M ew Swimmers at MV l'AllADI .. COVa -190 e11gi.n: u cellGo bAS. 4':> rocit QNS. JI rM lnepper.
MIHIOft UY -• enoteo· 7' .,.,._, • '
World records will be en·
dangered in several events wben t.ne national AAU long course
swimming championships are
contested at Mission Viejo's
Marguerite Recreation Center.
Thursday through Sunday.
l>rcliminary races get under
wly at 11 each day with the finals
sUlrting at 7. Consolation races
will precede all final events in
men's and women's compet1Uon
with scoring for 16 places in the
battle for team domination.
No less than eight world re·
cords are held in the men's com--
'petition but no world standard
bearers will be present in the
women's competition where
Shirley Babashoff, formerly of
Ute Nadadores, bas retired. This
wiJJ not cut down on the competi·
li90, however.
.Winners in the 12 events for
men and women will
· aitomatically gain a spot on the · U:S. national swimminr team
Uiat will invade E~t Germany
Alig. 27·28 for a meet that ba.s
been sold out for six months
<llSOO>.
A week later, the Americans
Eld erly Pacer
'Yo~'t End Up
~.Dog Meat
will compete in Lenin1rad in a
dual meet with the U.S.S.R. This
could be an impressive two
weekends of swimming with 28 of
31 world records held by swim·
mers competing from the three
nations.
In the Olympics at Montreal a
year ago, U.S. men collected 12
of 13 gold medals, 11 world re·
cofds, 25 of 33 medals and nine
one.two finishes out of 11 in-
dividual events.
Among the contestants here
beginning Thursday with the
200·meter backstroke, 100.meter
breaststroke, 400-meter
freestyle, and 100-meter butterf-
ly, are holders of eight world re-
cords in the men's com~tition.
Brian Goodell of the host
N adadores and Bruce Furniss.
an Orange County swimmer
competing for the Beach Swim
Club of Long Beach, hold two
apiece.
GOOdeJI bas the .coo free record
of 3:51.93 and the 1500 free stan-
dard of ts:02.40. Furniss has
world bests in the 200 free u: 50.29) and the 200 individual
medley (2:06.08).
Other standard bearers in-
clude Jonty Skinner ln the 100
free (49.40; Rod St.rachen ln the
400 Individual medley (4:23.68>;
SAM NOltO ,...,_ O' cetl) -•• MIQl9"; 31 bll'rkuda, IO cetlc• bMt.
M 'k B · h b " 1'7 m«k•rel, ta7 roclt cod, ,,_ tt. 1 e run er m t e 200 utterfly uM11111-•0•1ti.to•:1ou1-.cer•. •
(1 :59.23); and John Hencken in Ytl!Ow\el1, 1wt111u .. bilss.101u1ko
the 100 breast (1 :03.11). bn1,211rMC1t .... 1,' ... """'· MAU8U f'lall -.0 •"91ert. 2 The other three world Si· "•"t>ut. 43 ce11eo beu, 2 wl'llte ... dards contested here a're held " bass, 1 bilrrtcllCSll, t tionlto, '° roc.11 .r CCIO retired swimmers, Mark S ti Mono au <Vlrt'•I -•o
and John Naber. ~ o•ton: s 1int cod, A.rec.IL cod. While East lierma11s llOld :~"::~~.'!::.-;:;..!,°',::.~oc.
of the mark!! on the distaff s , SAM s1M110N -11ie1111Mr1: """ COd, 1,011 rCKkCOd. young Americans are com j'lg SANTA MOWt~ -.., ,,,gi.n: •
along strong with weight po-w111tuHtiets.2heflbut.2 .. ,,ecude.
f 11o1. • cetl0> beH. 14 Mnd belt, • redl grams but don't igure lo Ca U cod. 8art• -41 e119ttn: JOO the record holders this season. meOwel,4SreelcbiltS,Jbarrecude, 'Ou b SAH 01100 -Uf •AV'-' JIJ ' r women are ecom~g ••bee.,.., ,. -,.11ewte11. ,, 111ut11n
more competitive on an Jnte . '""'·
tional level in the stroke eve ts. 40~=!:~~°":"'1 i'1'0 -
(breaststroke and butterfly~ oc1iun1oc -n WI01en: • y11ce th e i n div id u al m e d le y " ~~· 14 Yfll'I 11t11, 0 •1111ue. s.t roc.11
Nadadores coach Mark Schu lll!bCMtOO -ta efloOlen: 10 ._. says. "We've never lost our . •ec!HM, 2 """'1• ... NM. u bOllle.," ullco bnl, 720 1Nc.ll..ret1 • l\ellbut. petlUveness in distance freestyle 1,ou 1>1ue 9M•·.....,. -1M •t\Qf-''
but we still have a long way to go !;1'!:'1t~ .._..,..., 2 ._. uu.
in the sprints and backstroke.•• suL HACM -1• eno•en· 1.1.0
Among th ... -~ ro<kCllld,41-recuiM,5'0mecqrel. e n.,wcome ... e · 1~1w.ier.enc1botU.•c•t1coban. ed to do well at Mils_lon ~~o MIWl'OtlT-<An'•I -12 eft;ters: 2 Alice B..,.. .. -e of the Nada 0 .. wrrecudl, to cattc;o beu, no blue ,__... ' ban, 1' ITIM-f(e/, U rocll coef. N an c y Hogshead , Trac y 10.~1 -M1 MVlen' '" cellc• Caulkins, Jill Sterkel, Stephanie • 11.,S, 1) ~ICllW1ell. 2t1 roek CM, I ~ ... ltlu'l. Jf1 blul Nw. Elkins, Wendy Boglioli, Cynthia l"011T ttuaM1M• -H e11o"'•·
Woodhead, Jennifer Hooker, Ufi. 1to ct11co ous. S«I roe• coc1. 11 ""'
da Jezek and Nicole Kramer. ''1,1.::':t:i.11~ -m ano•.,.•· m
Vie1·0, both on a daily and seas SANTA •A11••11A -11 M91tn UT•lbKQt9, basis. _ v .. ITUU-6t~: 300c.ilco
wu. " Mild ....., '° rode cOd, u• •lbeCW9.
Tickets for the meet are und i.s. s 11etTec11CM, 10 '*"''°· 1
available at the Montand:fo 114l'::'d1~W:,1:_"'f.::1•.!:. q
Recreation Center in Missif anoten: "''~COd.'45rouc.-.
• OJtttA•O -lO •n9lert· 275
Baseball Standings1 · ;;;:;~ ...
AMERICANLEAG1JE 'NATIONAJ,LEAGUE T"MMThtilttPfti&..
Eat Dlvllloa Eut Di•lllon ••
Boston
Baltimore
New York Detroit
Cleveland
Milwaukee
To!Ullo
W t a»ct. GB W L Pct. r*· 9"tOll : ~ .~ ~ 69 44 .611 Philadelphia 11 44 .617 J:. ' N-•vor11 u 11 .1• t
67 49 .578 a~ Pittsburlh 69 49 .ass 3~ ~:!..~ ~! : ::: ~ ...
66 SO .569 4~ Chic~ 6' Sl .$$7 .,1~ TMSo~• 11 12 .m n
M ' 61 .410 16 St. Louis , 65 S3 .551 1*' · ~-.. ._ • ,. _.. _
53 63 .457 17~ Montreal 53 64 .45.119 GoMitnoet• u " .,.. i
52 69 :cso 21 New Yor1< 48 68 .f14 23k ~=-:: : :: ~
40 7, .351 29~ W-t Dl•.t-lon 1.JKAllOll• 11 JS .2'0 '17 W.Di'Yllioa ~ •Ut ........ "'.~
Minnesota 68 50 .576 Dodgers 71 47 .fm ==~o:::r:,.
Chicago 66 49 •574 ~ CtncinDati 80 SS .308 n . Nr1rVOl'l•,tllll'-tt
Texas 6$ 50 .565 l'.4 Houston se 83 .en~ .. .....n~:=-:.!' San Francisco 55 6S .458 11 KansasCity 64 50 .561 ~ L°'"""'"""·1tN1ettt• Aaceb 57 68 •498 8~ San Diego 53 69 .434 20 ~=~~~-,~T
SeaWe 48 72 • .00 21 Atlanta 41 75 .3S3 2Q
Oakland «S 73 .m 24
..._!,IC-~ar.-
._1 .... 11,~f Cofll~l,!tTI ,.,..,,...... t •
~,,.~ Ml,_...41.T.,_S ,.....,. .....
l{eftMSOty ~--J) et.._ taiiiit-U,11' ~·--(~a,o et 8"ltlmort ............ 11-IJ),ll • • ,
j c.1"'""• ~l .. 1)at~ (8~n1,..Sl.n.
o.lllaoid 111119 •m fl~ l"...,.... H-fl.tl ~ , ...... tt-4t ....... Yn (°"*Y .. ,,,. .
S.at!lt (~,...I et o.t"9lt tMefrla Ml,11 'hxa IAlelW'ldt, 1t.r1 e\M11Wtvla ~ •$1.tl •. • .......... ....... ci(j•o.wt"" s.eftli~~ ... ,...,VtrtlMOMriM\I\ f ..... llf""-11
....... ~l"''Mti II Ol>ly...,_~-
'
LOs AI R e slllts
s•co..0 11Ac:.-ay•r4'~ 3 ner llld\. Allow*"Ct • ..,,,. MlOO.
n111MiM11 (l(nl911C 1
20.IO 5.lO l.00 Sl'~IMor ITrN1111n1> J.00 t..o S..J:-Jildl (c.dc)u > 2 61
1 •me-20.22
NoKA4dltt.
TttlltO ·~--=m yerdl l y-olch & up. Oell'l\lf\G. Pvrw '3700.
, • "' • $lnuolll Jtl I~ T4.00 9.10 4.IO
Mklllfto SC*lel IAdlll r> 1"-~ S.60 "-~ ll<nltld> 2 IO Time-17.'6 knldlld-Tlle~I
POUlnM llACa -till yents. 3 vear oldt & \11>. OeuKltcl ettowence. Purw "*· OH~S.,l~I
4.00 • 00 2 ..
DH·RoQel L.9undler IKnl9'11l •.to ~.40 2.40 CIMw1llr ,._,., cc.rooze 1 2 10 Tlme-1,,71
S<rwtd!M-Natt ... we.,
OJ'Ola.._tforwlft
TENNIS . .
·LESSONS
for Women
8 LESSONS
s.12so
Tl--4S..tl.
ScrMCMO-T'he Moonlhl...,.
s•v1NTH uce -.ta0 v•"'' 1 v••r 010\. '""ll•tlOftet 11enolc•P. ~unests.ooo.
Tiie J.,.,. I• Inv 1141t lonel MMdlc.e11. Easy 0.ll•Jtt (C.rdoul uo c.• I.GO O.-MoO!loi.w ITnHurt) iuo •10 ,,., Sunny Meck•y CW••O) Tl--10o:I
HOKTeklltS A -Greril~enlry,
••«>NTH RAC. -a vena. i.,....
o+ds. 011"""9-Puna UJOO.
Stntet F~i.r IWardl
1S.IO 10 40 •.10 lolOl.Jtt lliHt) . 11.00 1.00 l'mGcnNGo1a..-,, 780
TT--2G.17 5<retc'*I -c-m-. Mk:lw~ ltulw, 54#'t1n 0.-et ·
.. blda ,.tn.t ~ & ••Wt ............ ....,_.
, NINTH RAC• -JlO Y•rch. ) rMr
olds & ....,_ Clalm1!>9. Plll'M illOO.
Clllck Ooo4i11 CKk11
1M C60 JOO
CMfl•Cilll IKl\IGlll)
e A different
kind of ...
LA MIWA • • lMfWOOO 4 WAl.ll.aN aAllOA#I ~lltea llM • .,.....,_ ... ""'.,., .............. 11:» .....
LA llllllAOA 4 ONl Y SUND YI a ttOltOA'tt IUD te l;Ot
u.-....m • ....,.,...._
NIW TOK, HfW YOlK l11JO • ,,,, ....... . ... .,, ... .......
~ ::= 1 ,~~1s~-;::.,
,.. ~-iio) I e ,J:.sr;:o:.::i:.!NI
,. nil STOIT Of A .........
OHi ON OHl<l'OI
1111 I WI t 1111 a•• a .... a MIU
airts tbroulh hl&b clllool anH colle•e is compelllna-I
ly couat•balanced ln ~finale as we Qleet them ih
their tm.. a_ jaded, depreued Uct rudely retomed
to reilit.Y. .
ENSl118L~ 00BESIVENES8 is cot always
present lO a bi1h detree 1n dJfeetor John-David
K lier'• productiQn. but tb8 dutCtemauom of the
actresses -Marthe Mcl'uJand.t Lee Sballet and
Carou.DO Ith-are finely t\in'ed. Tbelr TUu ac·
centa are conYklcln1i and lbetr eventual mat\ll'a· tlon •fd.llfUU1 accomp ilbed
Mlas McFarland, In the role ot tht most
vacuous end ahaUow of the trio. also la the mOll
memorable, cllnlinf'donedly t.q both her Yir,UUty
aQd her outdated Ideals as her friends slowly beglri
to dlana . lier •ltbta are low, and u a result abe te
e ~ ont Who finds tultlUmeot. tbouth the edges -'-:'~-:-i-'--"-.-.:...-...:..,:.--.. ...... .__...._.._ ____ ..._ I her ltapptnep are tarni!bed. .
AT 111£ OPPOSITE ~e ls Caroll.ile Smat.b as
the re.bdlious flirt who divt1i1 ijeacNirlt Into We an_d, throUlh •beer brass, 1urfate1.as a survlTOr. Mia
.Smith. in her flnt SCR ~e. ~Pl*Y• the most
versatility ot t.be three, thCJUiti her part b not over-eacumbered witJa depth. •
Fox Ri(les 'Force'
The moat startling tranarormatlon is ac·
oomplisbld b)' Lee 'Sballet as the leader of the trio,
tbe pep rally and sorority project promoter who can
iorgaoue everything except ber own life. When
-we viey1 her in the third act. abe is enigmatically LOS ANGELES <AP>
The force is with 20th
Century.Fox this sum·
mer.
The saJes force, that is.
WbU e some of the
other film companies
watch thelr supersum·
mer attractions sink
slowly In the West and
East. Fox is the happy
~ustodiar\ or two
runaway hits.
EVERYONE KNOWS
about "Star Wars." But
then Fox was gifted with
another winner, "Th&
Other Side of MldDtgbt,"
bated by the criUCI but characterized as a woman who bas given in, never
adored by millions le!S.S :havm, had a real goal, and morosely contemplat·
picky. 1 ·Di a rather dreary future.
How does a sales force The inanities of hi•b scbool life in 1983, wbere
ride tandem hurricanes? eheerteadi.ng la the ultimate achievement. a.re
"JT'S A NICE problem beautifully portrayed in the first act. A sobering
to have," comment.s har~inger or what is to come intrudes when, on
feter Myers, vice pres1-hearing an announcement that the president has
dent l n c bar & e 'of . ~een shot, they believe it is the president of the stu·
domestic distribution for dent body.
Foll.
"Our Research has
found that in each
market when people
stand in .llne they seem to
enjoy the film more,"
Myers observed. "ll
helps us when Johnny
Carson says to his au-
dience, 'I'm glad to be
here toaieht: I'll bet
you'd rather be at "Star \f ars''. •
CHANGING TIM ES AND attitudes seem to pass
•he trio by in their college years as they plan a
$orority carnival while others are protesting lhe
Vietnam' war. Separated by graduation and thrust
+ut into the world, they become three very different
;eople, yet their paths are clearly marked by liiiJiiii!1iiiiJli)iijjiijiiijijiij!iiiiiiiii flaywrlgbt Jack Heifner's tant.alizin«i script.
"Vanities" will be on stage tonight through
unday at 8 p. m., with a matinee Sunday at 3, on lhe
ge of the Third Step Theater, 1827 Newport
lvd., Costa Mesa. It deserves a much longer•
ngqement.
The love lugU.. ~~ ~ ., _
Into Cl btaftd MW ..... DStlYJ
~ '1• WAl.TDISHEY~;-4 •
GOU MOtmCAllO ..o..oe tb'ltO«JTTS ~~
KOW H iH[ S[ . nlJTRE S' . ......... ••1111 . m• DU.iii . 111-tm
c.tl.l TllUTU.t e FOi Sllll'llllU e
"A BRtOGE TOO FAR" PG
"'°"-"LOGAN'S RUN"
.
"NEW YORK. NEW YORK" (PG)
"THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" (PG)
"MARCH OR DIE" (PG}
"ONE ON ONE" (PG)
.. THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" ·
'VIGILANTE FORCE" (PG)
.. HERBIE GOES TO MONTE CARLO •
.. NEVER A DULL MOMENT" CG)
8lllfCIAl CM.CMH'8 Me11•
"OTHER SIDE OF MIDNIGHT" "EXO~CIST If :THE HERETIC" R)
... .,.......,..
-MAN REFUSES HISTORY'S VERDICT OF EDSEL CAA '
Hugh Letfey Shows One of His Favorite Reatored Flopa by1'ord Motor Company.
No -Edsel 'Is Dead~
Man Owns 90 of Car Industry's 'Duds'
OXFORD, Pa. (AP> -Hugh Lesley is preserv-
ing the Edsel, the automotive industry's most
notorious dud, whose quick death came when the
Ford Motor Company canceled production in 1959.
Lesley claims'to own the world's bluest collec·
lion of the ill-fated can. More than 90 convertibles,
hardtops and staUon waeons in vartou.s p)\ylical
condition dot his 400·acre com farm ln Lal\cuter
County. .. • "IT'S NOT A GRAVEYARD. No Ed$el is
dead," said Lesley, a persistent. man whp falled to
accept history's treatment olthe Edsel.
"There are lots of car collectors. Everybody
bas their own tastes. Ours just happens to be in the
Edselline.," he shrugged. .
Lesley built a 40· by 13().foot shop to house his
orpha111. A big "E" from an extinct Edsel
dealership adorns the garaee. Hubcaps,· spare
engine parts and other memorabilla l!ne the walls.
TWENTY·FIVE OF IUS CARS still run. The
other chm.leers are scattered in a nearby grove.
They offer spare parts lo keep their more fortunate
brethren on theroad. .
Uke people who treasure such rare oddities as
a stamp with a number upside down, Lesley enjoys
dabbling with his toys. At night or durln& the winter
months, he tinkers with the en8ines or does body
work.
"We work on them when we have time and do
all the work ourselves. It's no fun going out and buy·
ing a car that's all ready £o go. It's fun to put them
together:·· Lesley said.
Tbe last of the 110,847 Edsels produced in 2~
years came ofrthe assembly line Nov. 17, J959. The
car, named after the late Edsel Henry Ford, was
envisioned as a unique product.
ITS MOST DIS'nNCftVE feature was a split
front bumper with a horse cellar grill, which later
became the butt of many jokes. It was irreverenUy
referred to as "a oosemobile sucking a lemcm." '
Its four models -Ranger, Pacer, Corsair atid
Citation -also came in wild color schemes Uh
black and orange or copper, black and white. ~
Bµt the car, priced in the $3,500 range, nev t
caught on. Ford reportedly lost $350 million bet t
abandoning the venture.
When production ceased, Lesley, a practi
man, figured it would be a good buy as a family c
"I TOLD MY WIFE, 'LET'S get an Ed
They're so cheap.' Then parts st~ get
scarce, so we picked up ~ C.W more. We cot cant
away," hel5aid.
Many of his current crop .were fowad rus · aw~ ln junkyards or in somebody's back y
Many were purchased for around $25.
When a group of collectors meets ln kau
City late this summer, Lesley will drive up in his l
Pacer convertible. Thepinkandwhttebeauty, whl
he purchased at a sbertlrs sale I<Jyears ago for
is his pride aDd joJ. lt would brine about SS.000 it ~
wereforsaleoow.
''People don't mJss us. Tbey s~e us coming ~
Lesley said. "A lot of people study lt·tq figure
what it is. Tbere•s surprise. . . and disbelief."
T eedar'•
Clo I Prl e1
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N' '+ \• 4SV.-It. 2ll"4. •
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ftl"w p(l.U •• 1120 .. -..... CnPwpf'l.n .. r10 17'--'"' ~nPwpt7.'8 •• 1100 t1 -114 nl"wllfl.Q .. u 1714t+ ~ nPw pfJ,!O .. I 11--.1\4t
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Cont Air 7 '1 '"" .. . ~onlCop .. 11 4 ... .. ntC~ US .. rlO IN ... .. ont~ JIJ IU SS -14 CllC "2.!0 .. I .0'"1 .... C"tl ' l I 64 33'<-.... CntOi>pr t •» ~ .. .. ~1111 110 •_ IU 11\1 .. . °"'l'p .21 • 31 1• -... .,., lltt 11 1'•-'• IOU f«I t 100. JP.-'-
o..tY.i 11•10 1 '' . O.U U1 ti ----°"" 1201' 20 ..... Eun .lOl 12 11 J'~+ ...,
In IOl16 16 0\6+ °" t.a11 10 u 1 ta tt'l!I-l) c ... TR .7' 1 m 1i.-~
CeoTpf IU. S If''-~ C-lnd Ill t It 1t\\,. .. ~OUta lO I .0 --... .... mG 1 SJU 47 •>--._. orr81k •11 It It~ .. °"''"' n no.. . Cowles .M17 30 14""+ \It Co•80Ct SS 1 )t ~+ .....
C••le 40 l 1• 11~ ..... ,,_ ,,., • SJ 30\lo-• Creetf' 14 1 U ,,,_ ,,._ CroclO~ 1.6' 1 2w 251/t-l4i '=..r"" '. , ~· '" c .to ' 10 Crou I 110 J.t
B1KreTOM .. OWM
ttyoa wanted to buy IOiM m.Uum·prle.cl Jboel tor~
f arnny.·)'OU mlPt npalr t.o a Thom MCAil 1ton if \here w o In YCNI' aru. With men tb&n t..000 outletl in tbe ftllm ... ~. ll'• ~Y one ot lbe moct ubiQUltoua abOe ftores
·~ IO commonplace. _ bitaus• lt'~: )'.OUDI. 11 tho v~ lboe ebaln. It hu 50 um. al>Qdint a\ Ute rat.o
of flve a year. You ml1ht bhd for Vf.J\IUard lf )'OU were
looklq for aomethlni more 1tyllib -and expensive. Its prl~ ranae be• at tn and lt carrlta aueb btaDd.s aa Fr;c
boots, amt cuuab and ~d.ldal.atblidc aboel. • •
TD PHYSICAL FITNESS BOOM b111paWMd a new
cba!D where~ mlah.t 1hop onlY fot sneakers. There are
now ll stores in the Jo~ c!Wn.
On the otbet bud, lf )'OU h.llPpened t.o be 1boppptnc ln
<m• ot the 1,000 K Marts that clot the n.Uon •1 hl1h••>'•· you mltht just settle for a palt ot Inexpensive 1h0el aold ri1ht
tb~ M ~
What YoU may bOl reaUn ls that -bleMVll' of tbes•
routes you took, you would be bu.Yin.s .from tho aame com-
pany: MeMUe Corp .• headquartered In Hamsara. N. Y. ,
A lao,tlme leader of tbO fQOtwear lodu.stry. Melvllle
made lta oriatnal mart t
with the Thom McAn
chain. It started
Vanguard in 1969. It
launched the Jox chaln
last year. And it bas
hit.chbiked a spec-
tacular ride with tbe
MOney
Tree • •
fasl·growing K Ma.rt dlacount chain. MelYille operates all of
the self ·service shoe departments in the K Mart empire. . ..
THE CARTER ADMINJSTRATION recenUf came lo
the aid of the belearuered U.S. shoe lndustry by getting
Taiwan and South Korea to agree to reduce their shoe ex-
. ports by 20 percent over the next four years and by mount-
ing a $56 mlllion proiram to shore up domestlo ahoe
makers. One of the elementa or this proeram Is the auembl·
ing of 20 teams of "experts" to adme hard-pressed shoe
companies bow to improve their technology, mark.etin1 and
management. At least one of the teama should be l'f!CJ'Uited from
Melville. It's a major company in the footwear lndustry.
and it's not beleaguered at all. How can you be beleacuered
wbenyou'reearnlng$61 milllononsalesofSl.2bllllon?
Whether Melville can -or wants to -transmit its
knowhow to others is something else. And whether com-
panies smaller and less integrated than Melville can even
take advantage of this knowhow ilJ sometbint else again.
MELVILLE BOTH MAKES AND sells shoes. As a re-
s ult, its stores, which are close to the marketplace, can
quickly relay to the factories information about what to
make.
Of course, one reuon Mel villp bu done so well ls that it
has diversUieclout of shoes. Ten tears aao it wu Primarily
a footwear company. Today, it's dolnl 40 percent Of lta buai·
nesa in non·foot.wear. Among the Melville conaponenta:
CVS pharmacies and health and beat&ty aid stores, 2'10
units; Chess Kini Men's sport&wear chain, 280 stores: Fox-
moor young women's apparel stores, 310 units: Clothes Bin
, promotional women's apparel chain, 50 stores: Manballs,
40·at.ore apparel chain that sells manufacturers· close.outs,
over-runs and PoSt-seaaon items.
At the end of 1176 Melville wu operaUnt 3.280 st.ores,
which certainly made it one of the larceat -lf least known
-retailers in the nation.
Stock Market Fai'3
To Sustain Gailis
~
NEW YORK <AP) -The stock market slipped into a
moderate decline today after Sivilla up on the rally lt be&an
late in Monday'••ession.
The Dow Jones avera1e of 30 lndo.strials, up 3.03
Monday. closed off 4.SS at869.28 todq.
Trading was moderate. Big Board volume tctalled
19,:MO,OOOsbares. ~
• ADalyats said the Jlght-volume uptwlq Jn tJ>, ft.nal bGIJr ~
of Monday's seaslon apparently f alled t.o stir ui> much en-·
Uulliaam, anditfadethoon aftertbeopenlna day. .
~CA,.l FIMI o-lwtaW!'._
••1111 °t':u~1~f:." ... ~ 201• °!.,"' 117,,. Ntt t1S.71 tlUO-UO , .,11 11UO 114.U tll.S7 llS.t6-0.57 .s Siil m.•-.. **' 2'S.Q-1 n ....... ...................... '~·-Trllfl ...................... 3:Jtd
Ulll' .• .. • .. • .. .. . .. . .. .. . .. • !!!·!!!! .s SClt ....................... ._ __
A~111;eobn
l'IE\llf YORIC IAPI· ~' -·"'-llfk.9
... ""dlln9t -.... &_. adlW •rnenc:.i ~ E 1.-., 11~ MtlolWl!y lit -St. Gtaoh l'llt........ 1 7¥1 --MMSl!t flL..... 7 .. 1'0 ~16 -~ HOllOllM •...•... ii ,.... ..... AlfdM .......... ' 1-•• ., Miii.,..... ..... ~ -" I """'911. A. • • • .. , JO -" Tftt .••• ,... ~'I 10 _ _. ...... "' ,. . ~ ~....... *' ~ ..... I ....... '1 M •••.•
U.L.a~ NEW VOltK (A... ... .... .................................
P,.vtowt de¥ •t•••·••··•·••••••• 1S Wtt« ........................ .,tt, Mtllt~·····"···· .. ·······~"·-Vt•r ••••••••••••••••••••••• :TW .................. . ~ .. . ........... _ .. 1m1 ...................... fA~ 1'1$ to ............ " ....... i,ttt;tiP;.Nt
ll
, •
Actress Rita '.\loreno t akes a close look at Will.
a n Indian li on cub. at Chicago·s Lincoln P ark
Zoo. It"s one of an estimated 200 of its en·
danJ!ered species known to exist in the world .
Adopt Record
Secrecy Hit
SACRAMENTO <APl -Adopted people over
18 should have the right to learn who their natural
parents are, says state Health Director J erome
Lackner ' Lackner endorsed a task force report Monday
th at recommended changing the present system un-
der which adoption records ar e kept secret.
UNDER THE PROPOSAL, ADOPTED ~rsons
would have access to their birth certificates and
other reeords of their origin ooce they turned 18.
They are not allowed to see those records under cur-
rentlaw. But the task force also recommended allowing
natural parents to block release of the information
if the adoption took place before the Jaw was
changed. ·
Changing altitudes toward a'doption and toward
childbirth outside marriage, and increasing de-
mands by adopted persons to learn their origins
justify relaxing the secreey of adoptive records,
Lackner said.
"AS THE NATIONAL television series 'Roots'
dramaliied, people have a natural and reasonable
desire to fully realize their identities through a dis-
covery and appreciation of their origins." he s aid.
Some of the changes recommended by the 34-
member task force would take legislation.
·-Last year Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. vetoed a bill
that. would have set up procedur~s under which
adopted people over 18 could meet their natural
parents, using the state Health Department as an
intermediary. The author, Sen. William Campbell <R·
Hacienda Heiehts). is back with a similar bill this
year. SB 535. It has been defeated on the Senate
rtoor , but Campbell says he will try for passage
again in January
L Jtf. Boyd
3 ·smallest
'
• AtJ\jlSkcd to compare the effitiency or the
old Pony Expl'ess with ti:>da,y's postahervice.
Can only report that the Pony Express lost one
bag of mail, just one, ln its 19 months of opera·
tlon. •
SMAu.EST COUNTRIES.
Q. Name the three smallest countries in
the world?
A. Vatican City, Monaco and the eight·
square-mile Pacific island ot Naura.
CA &JTY,. .. a aoc:laUon that tnsure1 more than
half ol N•v a '1 docton tor malpr~· tk• IA)'J l_t won'i C'Over lawaulta atem·
mln1-rrom pr enpUon ot Laetrllt, the controversial 1ubltance backen
claim la etfecUve ln treat~ cancer.
Nevada lt on ot several atates in
which doctor1 may prHcrlbe
Laetrile, thouah use of tho aubltanc•
haa not been approved by tbt f e<teral
Food and Drua Admlotatratlon
CFDA).
NEVADA'S MEDICAL Llablllty
Insurance Aaaociatlon, wblcb writes
about 60 percent of the atate•s
malpracUce policies, ruled after the
subst.ance waa te1aliied ln the •tale
its,. coverace would not extend to
Laetrile. The exclusion coven all sub-
stances not approved by the FDA. A
survey of principal malpractice car·
riers around the country indicated
none bas plans for shnllar action.
However, Oklahoma, one ol the other
stales in which prescription of
Laetrile ls le&al, 'requires paUenta to
agree to waive malpractice suit upon
request. Other states are conslderlnc
s imilar requirements .
DICK ROTTMAN, Nevada's in·
surance commissioner, said th~ in·
surance association's move is not a
judgment on the value of Laetrile.
While it may limit Laetrile prescrip-
tions in the state, he old, the restric·
tion was designed to keep the associa·
tion from going broke.
Bob Byrd, who directs the associa·
t ion progra m, s aid, "If we took
unnecessary risks, we would probably
be in the same boat· as other com-
pa nies t hat ·went broke" in the
malpractice insurance business.
But ~· Paul Insurance Company.·
w~chprovides malpractice coveraae
.
TV'Dominam'
lnElectiom
SACRAMENTO <AP) -Television
bas become the dominant force in
California elections, even tboueb
television coverage of campai&m is
dect.iiU.ng and that pf ~apers has
been improving, a new book says.
"Phantom l>olitics, Campaitninl in
California," by Mary Ellen Leary, i.s
based on a study of the 1974 campaign
for governor, narrowly won by
Democratic Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
over Republican Houston nuornoy.
The book concluded that television
news coverage was the most impor·
tant factor in v9ter decisions, and that
obtaining exposure on wlevision was
a top priority of the campaigners.
"The election latered so openly to
television's interests that print re·
porters were swept along, .. she said in
the book.
•
:.!
for: about 31,000 doclon cros th
country, said it would nOt follow the
Nevada assoclaUon's lead. "That's
tellinc medical specialists bow to
pracUce roedicine. We wouldn't do tha~" said David McDonald, a St.
Paul spokesman.
Bob Miller of th'-Medical Protec-
tive Cot0pany, whlcb writes malprac·
tlce pollcles in the Midwest, said hlS'
firm also has no prohibition on
Laetrile or other substances not ap·
proved by the FDA. "It really
becomes more a question ol legality
.•.
For fast relief from that
run d~wn feeling ...
-call us hrst. tiike a First Na«onJI
Auto Loan. ancigo directly lo
your dealer! Thats all there Is
to rt. Upon apprOllal of a simple
creclit applica11on. l.\'t 11 loan
you up to 80% of the pur·
chase price of any
new car you
chooK. lnclud·
ing ac:ussones•''*~~::-T"'\
And here·s a
bonus: Since ~fj~~~~~~JJ ':5~~~~~~~::."Cl~~~;zj~~..._~ ...... --.... ....,.._otF.OJ.C. MAIN OFFICE
At the Plaza in downtown Orange
COSTA MESA: Mesa Verde & Adams
IRVINE: University Dr. & Michelson Dr.
LAGUNA HILLS: Alicia Parkway & San Diego Freeway
-
!
• By CREaYL aO.MO
Of .. .,.., ......
.. I can't seem to meet any
wo~ who are ri1ht for me."
.. How on earth do you 1et back
into circulation after nine years
of marriage?"
''Wbe'i'e are ill those dlvwced
men I used to hear about?" "How
do I st.art?" "Where sbould I
10?" "What s hould I do?"
.. Where in the bell is every-
body!"
The above questions are com-
mon. They're asked frequently
by people wbo inhabit the otten
lonely sineies' world.
. Due to the current high divorce
rate (1be number or adults under
• 35 who live alone has more than
doubled since 1970) and the
postponement or early mllJ"riage,
many people find themselves
faced with a dilemma.
They tread the footworn path to·
bars, singles clubs and friend&'
homes hoping to find that certain
Mr. or Miss Right for some kind
of relationship.
Oftentimes, they become dis·
enchanted with what many con·
sider lo be a shallow and cold
life. Blind dates become the ob-
ject of ridicule and "meat
markets" (bars and discos) are
sometimes devastating lo tender
egos.
BUI' TIIERE IS a group or
singles, albeit small as com·
pared to the crowds in the local
watering hole, who are trying
something new.
It's an electronic method
called video datinc. Por
a fairly hefty membership fee,
dating brokers filrn an interview
of you acting as natural u possl-
bl e. And, suddenly, you've
becom~ a member of an ex-
clusive video bank of sinclea.
Your "Uve'' interview ti then
made available to othw mem-
bers, whereupon ~ may view
each other indepeooenUy prlor to
an actual face-to-face confronta-
tion.
The innovative method is most
often scoffed at as a '"thine for
losers." But is it really?
"It's a screening process,"
says one member. Another adds,
"It's a lot better than a dlmly-lll
bar. At least you can see what
you 're getting into."
Kit Wilson, 32, is an advert.ls·
ing ·agency executive who says
he joined a video firm a few
months ago and bas experienced
partial success.
''I was divorced a year ago and
moved to California. Becau!e
I'm in advertising, I'm generally
in the office Unle8s I go to the
bars or something.
"Video dating sounded good to
me; I like the idea of someone
working for me when I'm busy,"
be says.
Wl~N SAYS he's chosen
nine women from the tapes, but
only one bas consented to date
him. Five women chose his tape,
but, be says, "it just didn't
click."
Sherry (not her real name> is a
clothing designer in her late 20s.
l
·'Video is a thing of the
future. But right now
it has to live down the past.
You must tmC:lerstand its
limitations and how to
deal with them. r
By OIERYL tOMO. 0t•De11Y ..... 1Uft
It w. shall• we say, an un·
usual assianment.
I, single female reporter, was
to-date men and report the re-
sults. Before the asslanment was
over, I would be mugaed, taped
and asked per$0nal questions
t
•
about what I wan~ from the op-
posite sex.
This reporter was to become a
video guinea pig.
My assignment.' WU to join a
video datina servl~e ud go
through all the 5'ept. The firm I
cbQSe was Great ExPe<:tatiOllS
(GE> m Westwood (Newport
The striking, 6-foot bl•nd has
been a member of a video service
for a year.
"I joined after reading an arti-
cle about video dating in a
newspaper,'' she says. "As a gar-
ment desioU, it'1~ard to date
wlthln the lndustry.
"I thoqght -l'm not finding
people. Maybe they should find
me. You have to look at it from a
business point of view. You have ·
to advertise yourself... Lee Sherry says she's bad good ex·
periences and bas eliminated
some potentially bad rela-
tionships via video.
Williams and Louise McA/eer, shown beaming at each
other, apparently tuned into the right channel at
video dating service. They were married la~( week, "I've had a lot or relationships
that have taught me more about
myself becaustl I don't have
many single friends. It's like
having a good friend with a lot or
contacts," she says.
A doctor, who flies his own
plane, says he turned to video
because he "was tired of the
farm girls" where bis practice is
located and needed a date when
be flew In to work at a large
medical clinic once a week.
' A MIDDLE-AGED woman,
disgrunUed with the service she
joined, says: "People who join
video services do it because they
say they're too busy to do
anything else. But they're also
loo busy to be interesting."
Lee Williams, 46, is divorced
and works as a sales rep for a
larae manufacturing firm.
Recenily Williams married the
former Louise McAleer, an ac•
counting clerk he met through a
video service.
Prior to meeting his flancee, he
dated five women through the
service.
"The tapes lack color, so you
can't select on just appearance. I
found people much more attrac-
tive than on tape. Personality is
more important to me.''
Another physician complained
about women lying about their
weight on the applications.
"Sometlmes it's a real shock, ..
he says.
A radio station executive says,
"Alter my marriage broke up, l
W&J in the big, cruel world for
awhile . .nten I discovered video.
Since that time, I've bad a lot ot
fun.
"When I first became a
member, I felt awkward. Now
it's like going to a club onee a
week. I see people I know and it's
kind of a social place.'•
Some people receive special
Beach aftices opening soon).
I chose this particular firm
because lt appeared to be more
smoothly run than other firms l'd
contacted.
proving that modern matchmaking methods have
merit for some ~ouples.
treatment.. like the prominent
clinical psychologist who hu the
&ervice pick for him and then
comes in later to see the person's
tape.
An executive secretary In her
mid-305 says she uses a service
because "I don't believe in mix-
ing relationships with business."
AN UPHOLSTERER says he's
looking for a "sort, delicate,
sensitive, honest woman with a
~ood sense of humor" and is tired of look.in& for compan-
ionshlplnban. ''
Mary, an elementary school
teacher, says she considers the
tapes to be a "distilling process•·
and doesn't want to "spend time
out on the street."
A well-known television.
newsman, who did a story on
video dating, says be joined
becadse ••it seemed like an in-
telligent thing to do."
J elf Ullman is president or
Great Expectations, a Westwood
firm branching into the Orange
Coast area at the end or this
month.
''Most of the people who come
to us have dated a lot. But they're
just not findin& it. Most or our
members are look.io1 for a cer-
tain depth -a sensitivity.
"At least when they come here
they can narrow their odds. They
can see someone they might have
asked out on video tape first, and
can decide ag~t them because
they know a little bit 1hore about
them," he says.
Introview's president, Michael
J acobe, says: "You would expect
the All American Hamburger>, I
mOWlted the s~alrs with ap·
IJrebensioo and was greeted by
Estelle. uuman.
She is the 1ltm 's vice president
and perennial tnmhmaker. She
gave me an aspirin for m7
headache (it had been a Iona time since I bad ventured into
smoe city) and introduced me to
berlClll, JeHUUman.
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Tueeday, August 19, 1977
people who join to be a UWe
awkward, but it's not true. We
., deal with people who are looking
to expedite more than just a one
night stand. I
.. BUT THERE STILL is a
stigma abo~t. using a datina
service." be Jidda.
He says theprofr•m his Irvine
firm offers is often unsuccessful
for older women because .. most
older men bav1 their eyes on
younger women. •
Ullman says that a video dat·
ing service just gives a person
tools to work with and doesn't
guarantee any results:
"It's a form of advertis'""• saying. 'Look world. I'ai bere~
Normall ROeki:Dae~ w'°le. lec·
ture series, Mating It as a
Single. ls currenUy being dfered
by Coastline Collete, saya people
who join a video sertice general-
ly join for one of two reasonr.
•'They say they don't meet
anyone, Ot' those they do meet are
not of the quality they're looking
for. Some e>eople, such as doc·
tors, doo 't choose to take tbe-
tlme, but the other people who
dop't -choose not to leatn to
fish. "Video ta a thing of the future.
Allt ri&ht now it bas to U ve down
the past. You must understand
lta limitations and bow to deal
wtth them. People must realize
they wlU not always tlnd a love
relationship." be says.
The past Rockmael refers to is
the early demise of many of the
oilihlal ~ datinl firms soon
after they collected membenblp
fees Crom alntles.
WHAT ABOUT those who
joined a service and were dlaap-
polnted?
(See SINGLES. Pue Q)
ll
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My
husband and l are lnvtted often tO
eat dlnner at his brother'• house.
Hls Wile is a Dlce .,.noa aD4 we
all 1et alone fine. But abets a ter-
rible b<>uadeeper and to rn.-e
matters worse, they have a cou-
ple <:A~· cats that have the run
DEAR ANN: Yetterday I
answered the phone and there
was gasping and heavy
breathing on the line. I thougbt
either someone was havina a
heart attack &r thia was one ol
those 1'funny calla."
After I bung up I wondered if
people who are in trouble know
they can dill o for Operttor and
cet help immediately. Even in
the dark, a person who can't find
bl• gla.saM can dill O -the last
dltlt on the phone. Knowing this
'ill f1 ve folks a sense of securjt)'.
Tell , Annie. -OSHKOSH
DBU OSH&08H: Yoa told
'em. bt •GU. Ud I tlauk J'IL
Discover how to be date bait
without falllog hook, line and
sinker. Ann Landerg'a. booklet,
'"l>atlril Do'a and Don'tat" will
help you be more poiaed aijd sure
of younelt an dat11. Send $0 ~enta tn eotn alona wlth a long,
stamped. Hlf-addressed en-
velope with your ~uest to Ann t
Landers, P.O. Box 11995,
Cblca,o, lll.'GOSU. ·
'Discovery' Al I Wet AT
WIT'S I•
END
Bill Kaiserman
collectlonto
be shown.
By ERMA BOMBECK
A mother wrote last
week and said, "My son
is so shy and uncom-
municative I probably
won't know be is going
through puberty until he
bas passed it."
Boys are like that. If
my son came home and
found me unconscious on
the kitchen floor, he'd
yell in my unconscious
ear. "What's for
snack?"
Aetually, lhere is only
one surefire, telltale, in-
fallible way of telling
whether or not your son
bas discovered that girls
need more paddini on a
softball team than boys·
do.
.I call it the Shower
Syndrome.
For four or five years,
the only contacl-my sons
had with water was a
sponge in the back of the
church filled with holy
water. I bad the only kids
on the block who could
take a shower and not"get
their hair, t.rousers or
shoes wet.
· I nagged them to death
about it.
''Did you take a
bath?" "l~emswlmming.··
"Did you wash your
bands?"
"I washedlhe one that
was dirty. See?"
"Why don 'l you take a
shower?"
•'Where are we go-
ing?"
Then, for no apparent
reason, we beard tbe
water running. .run-
ning. And runnlne. And
running.
"What is he dolne tn
the shower this loot?"
asked my husband.
"Washing away bis
sins?" •'He has just dis-
covered girls."
"When ls he going to
.discover that we only
have a 30-gatlon bot
water tank and be
emptied that to wash his
hair?"
''Cleanliness is next to
Godliness,'' I quoted.
knowil"
If you can't hear the
water nmntng, there are
sim other clues to your
son's diacovery Of the op-
PoSlte sex. He will use a
can of deodorant a
day ••. for each
arm .•. each time he
takes a shower. He will
use mouthwash like it
runs free out of the tap.
As for shampoo, I never
tbouaht I would see the
day when I would hide
two tablespoons of sbam-
poo ln the tea canister so
I could wash my balr
over the weekend.
As my husband ob·
served the other day as
he stepped from his cold
shower, brushed his
teeth with baking soda,
squirted hair spray un-
der each arm and
garated with a cup of cof-
fee, "I think I liked 'em
better wbeo they were dirty."
"Bllly Grabam isn't--=========~-------.;...__ that religious." r-
"Look," I said, "I
kuow a body left in water
three days ia not attrac-
tive, and you know it. but
the point is, be doesn't
~-Gala Fashioned
Membership Grows
Animal
Pet Zoo
In the Huntington c.nter
mall today thru Suodav
Aug. 21 Ollldrens favorite
entertainment and Its an educattonl
Bring them dally
during mall hours
to pet and feed
these cuddly baby animals. Aleo kJddles rides and pony rides.
...
; Brand-new men'.s and women's
• fashions by Bill Kaiserman of
Rafael, a Coty Award·winning
~ designer, will be shown when I.
!-Magnin opens its new store in
South Coast Plaza with a benefit
" preview. The gala event, to take place
• Friday, Aug. 19, will benefit
projects of the Junior League of
Newport Harbor.
Also aUendi.ni the festivities
Horoscope: Virgo
will be Sol Laykin of Laykln et
Cie, who will present a display of
estate and antiqu~ je·welry at the
store through Sept. 2.
Rounding out the evening will
be hon; d'oeuvres, dance music
by th~ Socifty for the PrevenUon
of Big Bands a nd Kim
Lawrence's Calypso Steel Band.
Ticketµiformation is available
by callfng Mrs. Randall B.
Hanson, prestdeot, at 640-1450.
1z · B~ More lndeP~ndent
f ED NE s DAY , ticality. Re!usetoaccept •-e.r~atility. E<pand ~ AUGUST 17 "secondhand" goods. horizons.,
By SYDNEY. OMA.Bil · lliibllght quality. Don't SAGITrARJUS <Nov.
sell yourself short. Those 22-Dec. 21): Stick to
ARIES <March 21· ~who really care will .aid facts -let fantasy,
April 19): Play waiting you in climbing over ob-speculation go for
game. Costs of b'asic stacles. another time. Accent on
materials become evi· LEO(July23-Aug.22): creativity, romance,
) dent -and a major fac-Aecent on Qelgbbor:s. feelingofwell-bein1.
tor in future plans. abort journeys, mail. CAPRICOR~ <Dec.
1 Digest information. telel'hone ~~es. rel-22-Jab. 19): Accent on
'
M a k ~ in q u l r 1 es to atlves whq claim they accornpUsbment, wrlt-brious quarters. are being Imposed ll;pon ten records, establishing
TAURUS (April 20· -look beyond l m-relationship with "the I May 20): Low-key ap-mediateturmoli. boss."
; proacb brings most d9' VIRGO <A'-'1. 23-Sept. AQUARIUS (Jan.
: sired reauJts. Accent 22): Accent on ftnancial 20-Feb.18): What you've
1 moderation -avotd prOlpects, •billt1 to col-been waiting for comes
l ~.Uonalism. You ob-lect.data, to make use of to pass. ~amlly li" lD·
· what you need, but evatlable material. Take volved. Key ls to be re-t u maJ' not e~n ~ new view, highlight ceptive,.nohu.bmlsaive. l are Of actual proc-greater LOdepe.ndence or ..PlSCES <Feb. O•
1 • thouiht. action. March 20): Your Daturll
UBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. qualities, capabtlitles GEMINI <M~ 21.June 22): Cycle reaches peak surge to forefront.
AMERICAN AS·
SOCIATION OF
UNIVERSITY
WOMEN: The Newport·
Costa Mesa Branch will
host a coffee f()r prospec-
tive members at 7:-ao
p.m . tomorrow ln the
Costa Mesa home of
Barbera Murray.
Information is availa-
ble from Joan Littlefield,
833-3166, or Sue Kirsch,
557-7272. ..
MOTBE•S OF
TWINS: A salad potluck
dinner ls scheduled by
·From C1
... Singl~
"When people are dis·
appointed, they say the
trouble with me is
them," he says .. "You
have to know where to
go. Actually, it's niore
like people handle tbe
scene badly -Um acen,
is not so bad.
"You must, ftrst of all, become an interesting
penoa. Video ia flne, lf it
ia on top ol other thhip. ••
Rockmael ad.tses.
He saya singles
abouldn 't "put all their
eu• iD one basket," and
adds, "DoO't tr)'. to get
e•erytbina,·J o one
place.j'
. ....... <f~1-~-·-.,......ll':'t-'!'""1 'f): GOod lunar aapeet -Intuition is on target. ~inddes DQW with love, Play your boncb. Be r---~:o--:~":"---~"=-:"'.~~~~--:--~
•!llpUlse, specutetlon. direct, orlainaJ, confi-
Yoant pel'llOftS. ~ou 10 dent. Express yourself-
th?QU8h ~ 'fhlch lD-from the heart.
eludes hm1eht, clecep-SCOB•IO (Oct. ·23 •
• tion1 focus on what is as Nov. 21); &!et a.MW4'fl
contrasted to what might tn out-of ·way places. Dls·
oreOuldbe. . card the bactneyed.
CANCE& (June 21· E sch e w cl'( ct\ e $ :
11"1ly 22): stress• prac-Hllbltatit curiosity,
the Saddld>ack club for
7 ;30 p.m. tomorrow tn
the home of MrS".
Charlene Delgado, Costa
Mesa. Reservations may
be made with Jeanne
Woodward, 586-0103. .
SECRETAIUES:
Members of the Harbor
Area Legal Secretaries
will meet for a potluck buffet at 6 :30 p .m .
Wefhlesday, Aug. 17, in
the· Pavilion Room, 329
Riviera Drive, Costa
Mesp.
[)an R. Kirkham, MD.
of Newport Beach will be
the speaker.
Only the Delly Piiot ,..ny tell•
~ wMt'e MW In your local
comnwnlty ••• .wt1 def
1.1.11r1;n.11 Tickets 50' each
Of' 3-fot $1.25.
San Diego fwy.
and Beach Blvd. 1---------
You Can Lose One Dress . .
Size In Time for Fall
MOTHER and DAU~HTER SPECIAL!
'This Week"
(UMITEO OfFER>
FOR THE
PRICE OF
..
MADUK ' by lrtd Anderson
"Can't you make It a short blessing,
Marmaduke? I'm hungry!"
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
WHAf'b ~ NAME I 50NN<.> z ~K4> WINKER8€AN !
TANK McNAMARA
MOON MULLINS
TODAY'S CllSSIDID PVIZLI
I
ACROSS 50 Ocean phe· nomena·2
J Pen. Inmates words
med violin 52 .. Peter -•
mb wool TV progrem
odule 5" Soaks flax
tS 01 Hindu • 55 Sleeping
culture wear lnlor
16 Japanese mal
Isinglass 59 Sea: Pref1'll
17 Get well 63 81ue-pencll
19 Mounlain"l6' Moisture
20 Elrthqoalle extrlCIO<
21 M0$1 66 M.,.,,OI
obscure
~Young
animal
25 Ooany
UNITED Feature Syndicate
'
by Tom Batluk
~AKt AL.E~ J
by Jeff Millar and Bill Hinds
by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Cuson
~T PIP tit> SA'le . ~e f"~? ,.?r.:~J'--,;~
DOOLEY'SWORL·o
YeAH. j: 6uess Wl'IH A
e>UNCH OF tN"T"'E!RNS SHARI""'
E:XPeNSes, YOW CAN AFFORP
A M ICE!R PAP ~A"" M051'"; l!!H ?
..
INFORM 1l4E fiH1l.EMNJ • TMATI ~5 A
WORLD WAR I R.l{IN6 ACE!
by Templeton and Forman
,, MrtD Nt:Vl:R 61\'e UP 141?
MORNING "TV CARTOOM5.
''"
SaxbeBro~n
., ......
When YWt aamo la ••a.
are a former attorney 1eneral, form
fornier atnator and world
tra\'t1er, )'OU can unload even a ~-brk• a& )IOUr yard W•. Tba Subes 1old "pr ttr,
muc everythlnc we wanted to•
at their two-4ay w"kend aaJe al
Mee bur1, Obk>. and oow
a about ... 000 healthier for the
effort. They aaad U'HI maln rea·
eoa tbey,beld the sale was that
tb houle wu too crowded
•ltb objects they had acqul(ed
overtbe yean. .......
Tbc most e:1pensive at.em purchued was a
room.me hnlan ru• that broucht about Sl,SOO .
• The Jeut ex~nsive Item! "Would you believe
one ti oar voluntett helpers sold a broken brick for
50 cents, .. Saxbe's wile, Dolly, asked. "We had
usectit to bold down lhe plast..ac we covered some of
the ~s with under lht;. t~t · ·
" * . < When Ule presaden'f 'does something a con-
,,.~man approves o(. the con1ressman usuall)'.
says somethlnc like, "l am gratified by the pre3i'."
dent's wise and farai1hted decision" or "The presi·
dent bas demonstrated great statesmanship and
courage by bJs forthright action.·'
Not so Rep. Gunn McKay <D-Utah). When
Pre1ideot Cuter signed a bill containing funds for
the Bonnevllle Unil of. the Central Utah Reclama-
tion Poject, McKay put out a one-line press release.
as follows :
"I'm elad he signed it. Hoop-hooray!"
•
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
ll'IC'TITICIUt IUSINHI
MAM& ITATU-ilN~
Tl!* IOl'-"'9 --I• dDifte ~ n•\:s a1
CHl!MICAL Sl'l!Cl ll'ICS. t2l1
Syd,..Y Of-., Hunllt19l4HI lt..:h, C4 ,,..,,
JK• Ger'IQfl, UJI SVdlMIY Dt Hunl•
lt1910ft BNc", CA '26C1 r .... _,,,.., •• c~1ec1 "" ... ,,,. (11¥10utl
Jl>(ti 0.•¥!"
Tn11 iltl-M wt• 111.cl with IM County Cltrk ol Or•not County on A\19 •• "11 .. .. , ..
PutMl"*I Or•not Coa11 Dally Piiot,
Aut . 16, n, au, Sept.•. 1'77
PUBLIC NOTICE
Soap opera faM are coming out of the closet,
says Joyce Becker, who emceed a Soap O~
Festival at Paramus, N.J.
"What we do wtth our festivals is to help the
feel not ashamed ol being
1..-a
NOTIQI 1'0c•IOl101tl
SU ... ltlO..COU•TOf'Tltl!
STATI Ofll CAU~l!NIA ,Oa
THECOUNTYOll'O•ANGI
He.A·t21U
( J so~p opera addicts," sbe PEOPLE s aid ~1~-------''The kids go to rock ... concerts, the husbands go
lo the bowling alley, but these women stay home and do the ironing all day,
so OW' fesUvaJs ar«! really one or the rew times they
ean get out alone," said her husband. AJlan Sugarman.
• Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D·Mass. > says h•
'4t ill introduce a Senate resolution after the Aueust
recess calling for full dlpJomatic
relations with the People's
Republlc l>C China.
.l1. Anticipating Secretary of
-.ate Cyru.a R. Vance'• pending
trip to Peking, Kennedy said the .. ~~: ... ~
time has come ror the Carter ad-
ministration "lo beiln now the
negotiations necessary to com-
plete the process of normaliza-
tion. pref er ably by early im. • ·
His remarks were in a ONNeov
speech prepared for delivery at a joint meeting ot t.ne Boston World Affairs CounciJ, the Fletcher
School ot Law and Diplomacy and the Harvard East Asian Center.
PUBUC NOTICE
••
In Ille Mtllt r ol Ill• Estel• Of
GLADYS I! WEINl!llT, "'° know11 as
GLADYS WEINERT, Dt<Niff
NOiiet 11 '-tW o/vtn 10 etedll .. s
llavl"9 ci .. ms ... ,,.1 t11a w 141 Cite•· *"' 10 fllt ,._. c1.im1 lrl lllt Olfl<t ot lht clt rl< tlll ,,. llNrtWld court OI' to
P<tffl'I U..m lo lht unci.rs~ al lllt
offlct ti EUGENJ! &L&•Ol'4G, Al-
l04'11ty IC t..., J All•rl ..... ltd., •JOI.
Orlnclt, CA "4J6l Wllkll ••«• Offlct la
the Pl«• ot ~""'""" UftOtt"NGYIH 111 •fl ,.,,.tiers .,.n.1n1119 10 u ld •lat•
Suell Cl•lm• with lllt 111cuury
VO..CWI fttUll De Ill .. Of' llt*MfltM ti
t lOf'eMld wlltllll f.w ~ efttr tM
fl'1il 1111bflo t1onof thl1t10llce
Dt t.c!Julytt, 1'17.
COAALYNNANNWATICINS
AOmf,,111ralrl•oftMHtata
ofialdelt<tdelll
with Wiil 41\ntlCH CL1'-4142
l!UOl!HE •Ll!ltOIHG SU ... IUO. COUllT Ofl TMI ......._.,._&..• IT,.. J Al\arlllda lld. ••t A•" Ofl'CAU flOIUOA ll'Ott OrlMa,CAtUU ' TMICOU~Ofl01t""G'
Ttl: 141SIU&-11n -.; 4""41
Put>lllllled 0rll>Qf Coast Dally llllot, NOT IC I 0,, MI A a I" G 0 I'
July26,WlllA4la&ist2,t, 16, ttn fllTITIOlt "°" fla09AT11011' •ILL ANO f'O• LnTaH TISTAMIN-
1----------..;.12_7_ .. _n_I TAllY A.MDAUTMOtlllATION TOAO. MIJlll~Tla UNOlla TMI!
1#08NNOINT AOlllUNtfTaATIOH
1-------------1 011' l.STATHACT
PUBUC NOTICE
lttalo of 401tlEN CHAllLES
Pl!LLITIEA, eke ADRIEN C.
l'l!LL&Tll!lt, alla AOll l EN fll LLETI l!ll OKffMd.
NOTICI! IS HERl8Y GIVEN IMI OONAU>A M. PEU.l!Tl&ll llas filed
llffel11t•tlt'-' I« ~leOI Wiii eftd fOf' ,...,_. ot Let~ THtamtfttary IO
Ille Pwtl..,,_, Md ~lutlon to ..
1111111mr h "'"• ..,.., tM rfWlt..,..
dtftl Admllllt11'9tltll ti &1\lltn ~
Ntwttce to ""'1<11 It made '°' -11<111-. tlld lllllt Ille •'--ll«ae.e
.. l\ffl'I .. the -"'" ..... ~ tor A'-JI ll lt77, llt IO·to a.m., Ill Ille
court-fl °"'*'._. Ho. l ot teld
court, lit ?GO 0 •1< c...~ Df'lw w .. 1.111
Ille Cltyol SMl•-"Y. c.ltfor~t
DOfed,,....tl~.
WIWAloflE. !AJOMN,
ONnty Clerll
Ra ... IT J. ICMAGJ• • • .. ,......_.,_..c;.,er .. , ..
ft1tlllftlbliM ... o .... u ..
................ Clt.92*
(114)10.•16 .. ..,..., ... , ........... ~llhlld Clrtntt CMst Delly 'Piiot
"'"'· u, ,._ u. 'm *4-17
PUBUC NOTICE
PVBUC NVJ'ICB PUBLIC NOTICB
PUBUC NOTICE
lfOTI" OllT•uSTal'I "'~ 011Sepl...-rt,1'71, al ll:OO•'clllcti. A ~ .• MID CITY INVESTMENT CO~ l'ANY,'91 dUI~ _.,.,,...,, Trut ......
dff lllt pun.-IO Oeod Of Ttlftt,...
COf'OM Stot ........ lO, lt7S, Ill Boell usu ...... 1sn. '11 Offlclal •ec-"'
"--''-We ........................ ·······•·•············· ...................... . -------•1telolll1•••s'tlil.. 1001 ......... · 1002 •..............•..•.... ....•....•.... ~., ..... .
moe5: A4tt.......,.. DUPLIX • MAMTUCICIT
...... ~.... llM;HISTATI .., e4 ...,.,. _... S Aneta BR,. frplct. J ST¥. S .. • .. ............., -...... Xlnt.area.IM.IOO ,..••wwwt· ·-ryt'Wlllld hc.h•P• Sl6.ooo DM.Y Pl.OT•• •n • ....._.. IJ).;176' Tret llntd entry. Huae ••WJ tor .... flrtt e. Jlv. rm with crackllna
WT4td ..,.,... .... , UNIVERSITY rARIC nreplace & wall"' aJaaa
·, VMw of Kro1mds L.la•e --------•I Th I 1 b • • u t I f u l Z oounuy kHdusn. Dlnln1 bed~m. Z 11.ory hH ll rm. Separa~ wlruc for Ptf .. .,._ Mettft· all ~otr~hir eoodllion· 1ecluded 1uest •ultes.
-l • &n&. MW drapes, electnc 11weepio a •ta I rs lo ~real •t.ate "fJ'UHd P1aCAt door Ol)efl~r. cov· biden<•Y master l\l!le &
•\hkMwtpe ilaia!>-er brick pat.lo. Ila dote chtldren'a quarter& Jed lo the l"«leral Fair to pool and hub areen· , . Houalna Act of 19fl belt.I nd riced for a H~. Juat listed. Won\
1URTUIOCIC CQAMPUff
Hardly Jiv(o:d in during the last 3
yt!ars! 4 ~droom townhouse with 2
stortes. 2 fir&places, 2~ baths and
2100 sq. ft. of luscious living! LocJUon
is close to pool and schools. Now
vacant. $133.000.
UN l()U I:. t1()Ml:S
REAL TORS': 676·6000
2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Ma(
also'" N,lesa Verde, at 546-5990
-a.1~i. m&l It LU aJ a P Jut Jco1! 993-7881 -~ • •C le at $83.500. Cl"IN111t•rt"Sl4W1ofl,..<1• j 1002 achertlH .. ••Y pre· 'C 751·3191. I G......, I OOZ G ... NI . =~=t~ :~ C: SELECT ~ .1JJJ1. j11:r1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• r.ce,c:olor,~,aex. T'PROPERTIES _ i L_ ~ I « naLlonal ort1m. or ao1--------=
illlentlon lo cnalre any 2 STO•Y-4 IDRM
auda pmerence, JiJnita· PLUS POOL 104 TERS & RV'S Uon,or~crhnlnaUon.'' Wlndlna stain lo master ATTENTION
Thia newspaper will not suite. New plush carpets Huge lot <60 by,120> with ·
knowln1ly accept .. any throu1hout. Walk to block wall & boat gates,
adverllslng to't real beach Crom this de· frwt tree$. double de· UDO ISi.i-$270,000
estate which &a in viola· corator &•rden home. tached garage. Attrac-Outstanding 2 story home on lge cor·
tioooflhe law. Priced al 174,950 for tive 3 Br H~ Bath home. ner lot. 3 BR, FR, 3 baths. Beamed
quicksate. CaU963-6767 Hardwood noors & bu1ll· ce'1Unas, charm1·ng WTaparound south HouwsforSale OPfNlll9•Jl"Sft.wlOBCNICf' · Ab · !66200 e
•••••••••••••••••,••••• .•. ,, 1ns531.~·~~:~.2·348 · patio add to the pleasant open feeling
Ga•r• , I 002 : ~ ·inn RE M.tworlc thruout. Prof. decorated w /high quali· ........... •-••••••••• t . ~ ty cptng & drapes. Great kitchen. -~~~~~-r;;<*·~·.., ~,~~ 521 VIA LIDO NORD Daily 1·5 Soler Heated Pool LargeZstDryCosta Mesa COHDO S79,,50 EXECUTIVI CONDO 2111 San Joall'Jht Nh IHd •
4 bedroom home. Heavy This nearly new c:ondo is OM WATER NEWPORT CEMTllt. H.I. 644-4tl 0
t k a beauty! Decorated in shake roo • custom bric lovely earth tones. 3 br. 3 SI ~5.0~0
.
. FERMLEAF:fRIPLEX
wen ~neatly d aniil triplex · baa the appearance of an'Jridtvtdual
home. LOCated allghUy over a )>lock
from Ocean BJVd. • with .'11 edy walk to the beach. 11le unlts \\ave 2·2 &.1 .
bdrms. There ta a 3 car garase.
Property ls"'sltuated on a full size R·3
lot. Please call for app't., lt will be a
pleasure to show. 1225,000
759-0811
BEST IN· BLUFFS
t .uva. ee UNrr Delightfully charm·
ing "Angelita". Spacious 2 BR .• 2 ba .•
form. din,,,. cathedral ceil. On
gorgeous, wide greenbelt, nr. pool &
putting greens. Low, low lease & tax·
es. All for $129,500! ! ..
Ol'IM l·I MOM.. TVIS.. WID •
t'f02t VISTA CAJON ·-HELEN B. DOWD
llALTOI 644-0134 and tile work. Gas BBQ ba, tennis crt.s. &: pool. Communding vaew or ult I
Low maintenance yard Cls. to So Coast Plaza. the boating action & G....-ol 1002 G.......e IMfJ . Hurryp'rt~TLI <;!..,Ssooave One. orthelargestcondos c .atalio.a Island and •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• G• --' 1002IG ... r.e -IOOZ S$S. "~on Y ...... • mthearea 759·1501 night lights. Adult 2 -w.--.
Submlt yoqt .torms. Call . bdrm, 2 bath with boat ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
M6-!i880. (.;.iwtil!foi!li4ii s11p avat1abte. conve· IRVINE TERRACE. CdM . -"·-··-------n1ent location with . th Real Ea~e security. Shown by ad· Picture the ocean ~s seen ru LIDO ISLE home. 3 BR .• 2 ba., s treet
•--------. vance appt. only. beautiful, l~h green foliage & ~ stand , to street tot. Brick patio. $196,000 -'!,!~HERITAGE
. • R EALTORS
•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili•l1~-~'ll----of stately pines, from your ~tchen.
· ~ OCEAN AIR WATERFRONT living rm. & mstr. bdrm. windows.
DUPLEX R~or~TE 70x100 Ft. lot. 3 Bdrms .• 2 baths. with
4 Bdrrns. up, 2 bdrms. 631-1400 new carpeting thruout. All ror just
IMMEWPORT
IEACH down . Sun decks, --------$162500
balconies & patio; justl--------' 3 Bdrms. tam. rm .. 2
baths, beaut. cpt·a. steps to beach. $180.000
673-3663 548-0715 Eves bltns, (rplc, dbl. aar. & • ADULT CONDO 673-4400
room ror boat & trll'. Big
cor . Jot w,'sprlnklers & Gold Med a I Ii on
view of golf course. Townhome in adult area. a.~feesimple. Z BR. H~ Bath. CJOse lo JACOBS REAL TY clubhouse, SiAuna & pool. $48.SOO. ~~'~1~s~-'~'~10=---~~~~~~1-44~rnt-ii~mm-~~!~!-i@-·
GARAGE SALE ada In iS
the Pally Pilot brinl hap-The fastest draw in lhe
py resulu. To place your West.. . .a Dally Pilot
drawlnt card, phone Classified Ad . Phone ~l.oday. 842·.5678. ·~_,...~-~--~
PmrtsmY~!. Pansy-cttsm
BAA *TRI.PL EXES
• •FOUR.PLEXES
BAA··.~
Sheep, Chlckens. Few
Restrictions on this ~,
Acre Country H6me.
RED CARPET 754-1200
Available. S unaet
Helahts and downtown
HunUn&ton Beach. Good
tax abelten 4c. app~I•·
Uon . Priced rrom
SUIS,oro and up. Call for
detalla •..
MESA .VERDE ·
SBDRM
2600 Sq.ft.
$120,000
REALTY INC.
714/Mt.·1371
Yes, you read correctly!
This spaClous family •
borne Is pricCld a~prox
$16.000 bt:lo\4> "market vatue" to ••ll promptly to the r l&bt buyer.
Features.5 bedrooms. 3
baths, famUy room,
large mater bedroom
with rlteplact. 3 Cat garage and more. Just
olfered, IO better hurry I ~ Walker I~ lt:t! 546-4141
~
COATS & WALLACE
REAL ESTATE. INC.
~ Walker & lee
PENINSULA home. 4 or S BR, 3 ba .•
all amenities. 'J,A>vely neighborhood, a
few steps from the beach. $195,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J•l I H11y\1d•· IJ11v•· ~I ~ lJ,"'J biol
associated
OPri. f~'. Ill ·,.I' II'.,
,.,. w fl !t •• , '• ,,,.
)
rn JUST eon• 11. ••.•
'the •'*t buy aro\md: 4 b(;droom. 2 ·:
storr, ln Eastblulf with formal dining.
f DJntlY 4~n. b"ak!ast eating area and ,
spa<!lous sunny living room. <One •.
bdrm down, thre~ up) Also note
~autif ul terre cotta tilework. brand
new carpets... 70 x · 100 lot affording
maximum privacy and aJi owner who
is anxious to move. A new listing at · 1
just $U2..900. It's gotta oo the best bey
around. ..
u~·1vu1: t1()Ml:S
REAL TORS": 676-6000
l443 East Coast Highway, Corona det Mar·
also in Mesa Verde, at 646·5990 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~·'
1002
COUNTY PROPEITY •• ti
Cute. remodeled 3 bdrm. home on
huge lot. Won 't last! Just listed! Nea~~
Orange qounty Airport. $73,900. 11
•• r'n D.IUBTAff L13 3115-1 II ... RYI.. CISTA llW
ll4"4!09 556.7777
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EXClUSiVE
ClM . Ust101
Roger's Relt_tJ,
8'$,ZJU
HOMISITE °' l,!jeQ 'IOW w,1maJI ND· tahlt' l'UllUlf• (1)r lnlt"nm
inc.:omf. Sl22.SOO
HALrlHCHIH
HE.AL TOR~
675-4392
--------tSUP~R :'llei.adel Mar, for
•DUPLEX + GUEST•
Charming 1 and 2
bedroom plu~ gu4tst
house with pallo..,_and
l1rep1t r:ach unit has •
fireplace Walk lo sand
~175.000 Xlnt l11cat1on
REALTY INC.
714/846-1371
VICTORIAN BEAUTY
U) nam tlt• 'tl'W from
widow's wall.. Redwood
hot tub & lharm you ~111
only find in CclM. Owner
an;\tOUS. 1 Yr. w<1rranty.
DUPLEX
rJn NIGEL
llt\ILEY &
ASSOCIATES
rJn NIGlL
OAILEY bi
l\SSOCIATLS
safe by owner/ace.nt. 4
Br 2 Ba, many xtru. as-
sumable loan:·. '85,000.
1154 Mission Drive.
5.'J&-019Sor 642-7692
1 unr .1 1
OLSON
•IR·314THS
View! L1e. llv. r m. baa
beam ceil., frpl, wails of
g)a.tJ lNd to patio & lath hou5e; {am rm .. bltn
kitcb.. laundry area. A
buy, Sl.26,eOO
Mlasion Realty 49'-0131
•/,ACRE
PARK LlKE l'ettlng in
Chffhaven. 3 Bedrms. i
baths, beamed ~eilin8S. formal dinin& room.
lanat. breakfast room,
2l1J' cond. Ii in~ulaled.
$161,500.
RoyMcCardl.
baitt« 1110 Newport
CostcrMHo 548·7729
SOUTH
LAGUNA
.Wl
LAGUNA BtACH
4112.4
............ h 106f S.Juan ....................... Cap't"'-o l 071
EASTI UFF •••••••••••••••••••••••
FfXEA $49,500
GOl.'COU 51
POUl..P&.IX
Cir"'•t !or ation on
ltfe1dowl1.1rk Golt
R~ALTV INC.
714/8'6-1371
Bring your pa ant & Casa de Cupastrano Con· 8 UMITS·IALIOA
T.L.C.Corlhislarees BR do '2 Br, l ba, custom 4dunJev'es,all2br,.,ba, pricedto11eU drp:., d11hwshr, pool. ., A " R.C. TA YLOI CO. 493-430 __ 1 ______ 1 4 car encl. garage. 81&y
,511 "lSO view. $180,000 dplx
r-v CASJTA.S. $pac1ous 4br, Tom Lee, Rltr,642·1603
SCHOOL BELLS SOON ~~~c~' ~~: d::: ~~~:i---------1 Great family hm, J BR, munaty rec facilities. Dlttr.u Pro,.,.+y!
encl laruu, hu~e 3 car 176,900. Ownr. 493-5955 or I can find it for ~ou. gar, 5 m .. to all schls in •M7780 Be h 1 1· t Npt. Hts. Reduced to _.....,..________ ac area spec a is ·
$144,500. Open Au&. 17th, Santa •-I o•o Probates, Foreclosures, -,. Bankrupt~ies,Dlvorce. 18th, 20th, lllst. at 3000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Investment properties.
Clay St. BR A 0 F 0 RO PL ;f c E Below market price.
Call Cleo at 548 2739 Townhome 4 br best World~~-I k
United Brokers 646-7414 loc. $.59,950. 'Agt. ~5S·4556 ca;;'~~s:; ,,,.. Souths;;t;LLcagun;;:a~l,Oioa~6;1~~~~~~~
REAL EST AT~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Creative & pror. co will QUIET QUALITY
soon be openine ore's in 2 br. ram rm, 2 ba. All
Npt. Bch & C.M. areas. ad u I t co m m . T r y
We have openmgs for lsc. opt., $89,000."
DUPLEXES, H.1 ..
2
£iu:luahe. Lido late J!:xec
Mine. 3br, 21 ~b», Ji'.Jt. 2
frplcs. corner lot.
n e w o r e x p e r . Smith, Davidson Rily
salespersons & mJ1rs who 493-2252 831 0655 6 UNITS )) are Interested i n 11 ---Pnme 11.B. location. All &Toro 3232
career. Apply by calling OtMr.Real Estate 2 Br. 112 Ba . Owner w11t ••••••~•••••••••••••••
formterview. ••••-.••••••••••••••••• sell or consider all Lovely. 3 bedrm. 2 bath, 631-0400 Mobile Homu trades. Agent. _ :-fplc, DW, drps., crpts, ~~~~~~~~ Fors• 1100 846-1351 CLOSE TO WATERA-in fenced yd. Kida & pet
-••••••••••••••••••••••• Real Estate Mart Old Corona del Mar. 2 welcorne. ·s:r75. 963-4567
--------· 2 BR "furnished, complete ... Bedroom. no children, no Agent, no fff.
WANTED• ocean '1ew, sun deck, So OCEANF~ONT. 14 units, pets.~,month. -· FouHt•Y~ 3234 • Laguna.s32,000.~ Oceanside. $300,000. • _...., HOME ON WATER . Ownrw;carry. 759·9108 0 N LA 8 KS PU R -.. ••••••!••••••••••••••
Avail lm~ Yrly Rental Nice 1 Br. pool, adults, nQ
Charm ing Dplx, clean, petS. SUO. 64$-3798 art I~~~~~~~~~ spac. Heart or Laauna nr 6PM. 642.SZSl Mermaid & Glenneyre. · 2 BR Condo. close t.o bcb, • AdulU no peta, refs. l er Adult.a, E/1ide 2 Bds,
frplc, wet-bar, super up-$295 2 Br S37S P h pool, juc.z:d, lndry, encl. gr~.~-mo. Ask for 494-4420 4.94·4460 or gar. $270, &M.()878 M l k e o r P e g g y 7co n.,.,.. ' (213l920-U122 ,...,._.... • TIIE VICTORIAM
Newport leach l769 2 B<ffms. 1~ J>a, with
WESTCLIFF 3 Br 2 Ba. •••••••••••••••••• ••••• .Rar. $250.' Adlt:S .• carp,
-----------fl>lt. pa~o. dbl gar, $475 WATERFRONT J rps . range, fried yd grcfnr incld. Avl 9 /1. W/pallo. Water" ,pd. 667 TWOBedl'OOms 644·7727 dys; 548-1232 And water view luxury Victoria 'St. Call 1·5
WalnittSquarc ...... S375 evs. · apC.s. l·BR, $1200 mo .• 2 636-4l20
RanchoSanJoaq .. $450 ---------• BR.,$1500Mo. --------
RanchoSanJoaq .. S500 On water w;boat dock. R&J.~RGRUN~7~-616l NOW RENTING
THREE Bedrooms Lge 39r, fam rm & ofc. New 2 Br. Crom $290. l'
Oi'aneeTree ........ $450 Patio & privacy atr--------... 1 Br. 1265. Ehcl garages
Woodbridge ........ S475 S1500,mo. STEPS TO llACH w/storage, patios. No
Univ. Park ....... S47 Lido Isle. 2 br, den & SBR.2ba S450yrly ~ or children. Open VUla&elll ......... $525 view...,.... ls 2Br,den.2ba S600 Y 11:30-5:30. 332 Vic· RancboSan Joaq .• ....,.,,mo e. SPECIALRATES tona. Btwn Hafbor &
Turtle Rock ....... ~75 ~mo1'1!:.e1 Br & den, For summer rentals Newport Blvd. Call
FOUR Bedrooms ......,, ~ · 646-2824 or 540-2960 Vi Lido Isle, 2 Br & den .Mullan Realty 11lage 111 .......... Sl200, mo associated WATERFRONT HOMES
631-1400 BR::'~.CRS ~tlllTOllS
l!J] 1 "" ff r11 .JC Q ,, 1 I <I ,, !
Garden Apartments.
38edrooms w/.patio.also
1 bedroom le Bach.
Mature adults only. ~ w;40' plus, boat dock . .Keywest '73, 24x6S', Cami-CORONA DEL MAR-Lovely 4 bedrm, 2 bath,
Litlda Isle, Dover Shores ly park, pets, JBr, 2Ba. 17 new Ocean vu units Spacious 3 bedroom, 2~!1 all new cpts & paint. NWPT HG HTS Jge f BR, 3 orn Private party only. By owner 581-0319. Prime C.M. bluff proper bath: close to everything. Fncd yd, kids & pet OK. Ba. ram-rm, pool home. 3 1 Bedroom with fireplace.
red hill ~.
55 2·7500 Marttm.-Apt #2
275 E. 18th St. C.M.
631-3001 &44-1452. ...c:--for 1_1_ I lOO ty. Gross inc. $73,000, US01month. $395. 961M567, Agent. no '"-,,.--r ""' S790 ,000. 675 -7520 · fee. OrangeTree,new3Br&
·-.·----......,..-----•••••••••··~·•••••••••• OwnriBrk SUMMER RENTAL- . Fam Rm, central air, up-
---------rAVOCADO COUNTRY · . One block from China Executive 4 BR, Green-graded thruout. Nr pools -----'--------• SPLASH SPLASH s Acrea. fantastic view. TRIPLEX, SJC. Pride or Cove beach in Old b~ook Barcelona & tennis. $450 mo.
•It's that lime again. Over200avocadotrees& ownership. 2·i? Br, l ,·3 Coronadell4ar. w,<!lymplc pool & cl~b ~-1.800
Cus tomized 4 bedrm two year-old housc .. Xlnt. Br. Sl63,000. By owner. COLEOFHEWPORT facil. Nr scbl & shop g -.--------•
hdhle in Newport Bench terms. BKR. Ptinc only. 496-5902 REALTORS area: $.'500. mo. '1192.~ MOVE IH HOW
with large sparkling (714)676·5717 675·55 I I or963-6994 1::U1 den
pool. And for your OR~-2080 LohforSale 2200 -. H.aalioqtonhach 3240 2BR Adult S340/mo.
privacy a slumpstonc ---••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 BR, 2 Ba, gar, crpts, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2BR'+ d $360. ~~~t~traFt~;~·s 8 5 ACRES VACANT LOT drpe, bltns, yrly. JlOlris. adult;~ $360 O~k trees like you've CDM l·29s-6827or22.3-~ '· *A~Al'LAILE* 2BR $425 .,. ___ H 3 b 2 b 3 · ... OW · 2BR + den A1 C never seen cover this Rare Spyglass Hill lot ~. ome, r , a, *" * lBR
gentle rolhnr S acre w1magnificent ocean & car aar. Beaut. view. Houses. condorninfoms 3BR .,~ HERITAGE
. • REALTORS parcel on paved roads. Fashion Island views. SpyiJass HiU, CdM. $USO and townboJnes. Month 4.BR ~~~~~~~~~I AIJ utilities avail. Terms Perfect tor your custom per mo. Ready Sept 1st. to month rentals starting 4.BR A ·c
HARIOR VU BKR. home. Call Now 640-6l9i at S32S to S'IOO. ~ated in 4BR; AfC
PALBMO. i~= R.C.TAYLORCO. Cozy l ·BR. trpl., beam ~gtonBarbourand 4.BR
4&-. 2•.\Ba, ram rm, din -955-0350 ceil, patio, no pets. Adlt. ~ S:i~!'" Call , r ~ sus.Agt6'4-2212 us10fmotede . I ~~~u~.~0ow~:.;1'a~ Pr~: fors• · t 300 Oceu View, level, Mi&uel .
dUil'td price of Sl.84 900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Shores. Approx 12,000 sq eo.tq ~ 3224 .... -6221 . I . Nu4. Plex. 01ma Pnt. All 2 ft. Nr ocean, walk t ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ..
---------'-• br patios rrplc $22.5 000 beach. Guarded area. Beaut-4 Br 2 Ba h.
BLUFFS m. t>eP,.. 8~. 142~ ~~~~' Terms W/1Mtio. new c~. t~'. REAl TY INC.
8yowner.4. Br,3ba, fnm Ol'lf0.lf.4l iu~ yard. 833-05831485 714/M6-l3'1 RA~CH RE.ALTY
rm. lrs pa~, dbl gar. Commtrcial Mobile hotM J!V'· -· 55 I ·2000 ~ew palnt anslde & oul ~ 1600 Tric'PN I 2300 4 ~Br~122tba;)Jd~es~a~di;e1i:MPhar;:.~~~~~~~~~f ----....a-----1
any .upgrade features. ••••••••••••••••• ••• ••• · G dn • ..,.,. .,,,, 7,-.0 Lo 1 ... __. r........ ~ I 3 BR 428 Vasta Soerte Open . ••••••••••••••••••••• •• r er. _.,,.. •• ......, • .,. , ve y 4. ._.tm, 2 ba, __.. new gos: v ew
house 1·5 Sat. Call evea LEASE--OFFfCE ext.15da~or84CM>008 it.one fplc, cov patio, w/~nvle , pool& ten 548.aoo:Jor1s1~days. COMMU.CIAL MOBILE HOME KIDS fTSOlt .. K'j~~ ~t.-~. ~;;: ~~~54~ mo. Red
fHE ILUFFS ~orncl~~USTRIAL 20'x44' nestled among E/Side 2 'h•~. gar. $345 96MSG7, Aeent, no fee. 3.Br---.. --0 ------• ~" the trees HunUngton mo. 646-4848 or ~786S , '°'• frplct ~ cu.1..cfe. 2Br. 2Ba, spUl Jevel, up· Costa Mesa ...... 39c-ft. ~ach. Swimming pool sac, wlk to seru1 fr pool,
"iraded cpta/drps, light From300to2500sq.ft. clubhouse. ~pJce rent 3 Br 2 Ba Eaatslde. L•e
l'bculres, air cond, close bock yd w/ehade trees.
lo pool, shopplnr center. •Medical-•
188.500. By "Owneri agent NewJ>Orl ••...•.. 75c ft.
ti40-1!36 From eoo to900. sq.f\.
t,~.ACREHorie rand\ w/2
houses, workshop &
barn. Back J!ay area on
\be golt crse. Must sell
SOOll. 1119,000. Owner.
133-0U& &~13 . .
WESroLIFF BEST BUY
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lt ... Cement ft •• , Wire tt.-Hoe Jt ... Cfean lt...Move
lt. .. Press lt ... P Int rt... Nair ft ... ~te1ter lt ... Flx It ...
~.~!~!.~~~~..... ~~~.:~ ........ ~~!~-· ........... ~!!:!~~~~~ ...... ~:~:·~!! ......... ~~ ......... ~~~~~'!'! ...... ~~ ..... ~[. ..
86JAllDllUte • 61te1m ~lean. ......., ..... , lrANDYM.AN:C~ W11Jt1REALLYCL£AN HOUS~G PtrERSPAlNTING Comm'Urll J~t.t J.No ................ , ..... .
T1UP-CH.Aft01U10 • lbt ni; wht Ad nowr tor ump eJed't;1~1umblnf a. HOUS~t·Cllll Glntbam .By Ruby ~ lbpr'~! Re,. RatH. Job too tits or tocumaU, OranoQYla•Prop
lhia,l.A Cllb lO bl adl. CS.an malot. of aawu. •hnat.ie tloort t,147·2TIT Girt FrffatMMm s.usractlon, rera., o.-n t'ree •st. Call Gtn• zo 11'1 upr. Room• l'rofMnltl'l'exA-ppeale ~!:!!!,. __ _!!16~1~~!!1 ~ llv, tin. ball J.11. A.a "uw a. •~Into Wlndowa/HousecleaDinl tran•pottatlon Pbone ~ &fi!up. J'ul.ly lnsrd llUc. APlftfl&Jl.§d$SM840 ....... ...._ Ir NU:,· :U:h.,!:00:0~~ Mew ,;.y,.U.aIJt · NO~~~t:ALL Goodr••·Good,.f• • PAvmHG Int/ElU Et· djobetoo• W .-.,,..,.... '
•••••••••••••••••••••• 'lit repslr. U 1" nl)t. MOWJHG·EDOlNO 875-2"0 C&JlMr.LynnSS.7711 C ...... ~ p'cl., bcmest. pea~ Req. BRlGRTENVPWJTII ••••••••• .. ••••••••••••
PJW'l'ECT VB\&r Hom• Do ••k •nett. R•f• Trlmmlns. Cle1oup1, DOGTRAJNlNG UOIACULATE CLEAN· Fl.re w, Uc'd.DavetSHOU • c ...... ,. ,.., W.R. Putttt CQnaf dO. Oflkooe. .c.~. R .. • r.tti DloG\01. Haulln.C· etc Rut y ING You DESl:RVE tbe r ........ lnt.-Jht. l!:uropeu Spee ln rm actd Is tor lrH •it ~a ll JlD'I C m A .. _ ~ , • · JobnoorplaceorMJne BEST 7~-0377 !>_utfh Maloten1nce ctafteman~IP• Qual remdt'r. LldlOHH. Gsm ( I !!• .-.n• 175-2440 . ..,.,rv ceSIM.508 ·AvenfeExtrlstry$395 palots. "l~Olta\Jmmer bandecl!i81..UO. c...,..... ~~· •n•n•::_•:Q•••• Oard,!nfnh 1S.Jlrvlct: tlt•1n ffl.ndyman: EICJM:t reUa· Housecleanlni by r~llable Hbuaecleanln1·Wlndow1· 2StorySMS, Jnt,r~m ntee''875-e93'll~Mt. • ......._ -1n1 Mows...,;i • ual up • au nf, Wt•• Y bl t-tl bi =e, Rete"'nces. CalJ tho ...... 11 Prices lm:l matr'l·labor 1 ._ ... .,, ....................... 1pra)'•d C!ttlln••· re· malnttnanco. ReUOll•· e, pa .. , nc, ca nttry, · 18orl-626-6128 ro_.., a arei. Yn Gu.ar/l rd Fre e t Patlot ••••••nn•••••••••••••
CuJM1try. an1 lYP•· J>Ura, l\W'. Lie taaDcl>S, blo ratea frff eatlmat.ea. de. llG·9044. exp. 543.zs13 Te<lsf134orea:.~ •n•••••••H••••••n••• Bepaln; Lie • Ills. All 1
PaMl. doorl. etc. A lr•~ltS»-1800 After 4:SO ••k tor Ron.~ Alice'sHousecleanln1. MalllM'Y •Cust.oml>etlpPtUot types. Free est. Walt.
Com.m1. lic/•l. Al\ I , C '/C t M!Ml511or548-4M'f •• .. ••••••••••••••••••••Reas, rellabJe, ref1. Own •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• PROFESSIONAL Pain\· Wood Patlo Coven, Call anytime,Ml..s930 ~· l 1. o.crw, m.1 I .a-trans. 642·7207 or646-4871 8rt It k s ing. lnter/Exter. Reas, bdwooct Deck.inf, J do .. ,_ ---------·•• .. ••••••••• .. ••••••• Ren'• Lawn ~rvlce llow ._.p oa'"'r• dump truck, c wor . mall job1. work auar8C2-0386 k Free ti , _ F\'aml.q. tlniab, remodel. ON£.UAN Crew 6 n H · " ed&e al.lo yd ctn.ups. baullni. tr~ work. sr•d· · Newport, Costa M•sa & rny .= wor • a ...................... ..
repairs, Lac. Quack pr powina 4 ~bins. 557-6'109forfreeest. .lnf,demo,etc751·3930 WILL CLEAN YOUR lrvtoe.S7&-U'l6evt1 F1ne-.ortc. State Uc & ln· 552 CERAMIC TILE. New, __
service. Wrlr 1uar. Sftyourowntorm1 iave ~ , HOUSE EXPERTLY. mt Exterior •pectaliat. Plclstw/I.,..,. remade.I. ~ ett. ••
tll-83U money.111·3'23 • Reliable Expr .Japanese•••••••••••••••••;••••• C.ll~ MoYlfta Tryme-Calko838-55SS .. •-•••••••••••••••••• jobs welcome. .... ------------r Oatdtner. Reasonable, • .... 1•••••••••••••••••• VERYNEATPATCH a.ftS • SMM.aa•lor•&e cabl.aeta ... qi treeesl 845-523011Uce. Haulin1, moving, cleanup CITY SERVICE WORK GUARANTEED ....lorpr•naUlrma.BJt ••••••••••••••••••••••• S7/up.Treework.Reu, WOMAN ~o~ld like MOVERS lnt.erior/Eldr. Free est. JOBS•TEXWRE Tt'Ms.rtke
Otdir.N0-7154 ELECTRICAL SERVICE YARDBEJVVENATJON fast.t.reee1tS42-4597 ~leaning )Ob. 7 yn 'LOCAL&STATE-WlDE 25m~.6Q.-0295 ~est.. 893-1439 ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• CALLS 115 hr le SMALL Clean·upa, commerelal exp. an Palm Sprln&s 24 Hts ........... Removtor t 1 ., c..p.tSllr*k• JOBSM2-1233. & reeldentlal. tau Bob ~Studen~. Bir 114 T area.963-3'S8 714523-4482 7day1 Kno•l•• Paiotln1. ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• toppiq tr~n'!'/:!s nri;
• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8'M2SIM·P'afterspm. etc. ·R1::d; ~'i:.r,o't Super clean, mature 2~4110 ~j,1/,E•!es~~-=~r~lal HOMESAVEas. Plumb-areuc1n. Tony~
Carpet Man will lay yours tMll.-d Bectrfc G••NI 5-Ykft Sd-3968 European woman de· mobiJ9 homes 835-~ & inl & Heating I& aJr con· --------"---.--
or mlne.· Repairs Llc3Z71..96 ~74 ••••••••••••••••••••••• sires regular houseclean· PalnttngJPaptrin9 · ditaorun1. Free eat. SlO Removal•. trlmmin,r.
cleaning too! Guar work G ......_.. Home4Apartmenl CHEAPEST haulini in ing. Refs provided. ••••••••••••••••••••••• YOUNG Man, 5 yrs expr hr.· Honest & reJJable ~ull ,_:.~!51· Lied.
at bluer aavi.np ll'ree• w9 a--1 .. •-od Un town. Fr et~. CHEAP! -t94-6662 ~ALITV PAIMTING ill waUco\'etin1. Free l«'Vlce. BolA, M iC OK. Y ....... ...,,,...26U -.......... " . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ .. ~,:-~m783 e I · ""'"·"""'•or••"'·l390 ., """' .._.._ .._..., """'..,,..., '"" • west Prices 'e$b. 64S-a5'76, Andy 751·31.50 WEEDING-CLEANUPS .HOUSECLEANING with H /A .... • l t/Ext --------1ffave10~)'0l1want
Find what you want in Weekly Maintenance Find what you want in SELL Idle ltem.!I with a a PERSONAL TOUCH • OU5eS ., .... n · DRA.INSCLEAREO toaell? CJuaUJed ads do Dally Pilot ClasaUleda. free eat 642·9907 Dally Pilot Classified.a. Daily Pilot Classified Ad. a-liable, ref• . .,..., -18 · •Work Gur. Refs. Have something to sell? FROM sa 50 it well -Call NOW, ~ " ..._..,, •Free Eat. ss2.0575 CJaaaUled ads dolt well. cau 751.a>a 6'2·5678.
Apa lw11f1 Uldwa. Apm h""" Uldwa. Apot tww•h u.fww. Rftlfaft to Share 4300 iuslMH/lnvest/ Jobs W.ted 7075 ......_ w ..... ~ ••••••••••••••<!•••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• .. ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• FinartCe • ....... .,. •--7100 Help W.tecl 7100 ·~········'············ .....•........... ~ ............................ . Costa Mesa 3824 ~on Newport leach 3869 Cut down ···~··••••••••••••••••• LOST: Toy Poodle, Lie
••••••••••••••••••••••• HarbOur 3842 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LlvlrtCJ hpettHt! 8us1nen #~ blk/aray vest & ::lf;.:~~re:~:C~e. APPREMTICI Auto5'!~11veSPERSO,_w I
S275 Near new 2 Br 1~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Shareahomeoraptment Opportunity 5005 race, nr Beach Blvd. t 1 i d TR.AIMEE ~ ""
b · t · d. ~ H"'RIOUD Ll"-HTS 1 br, crpts, drps. No pets. ~ ,._,, __ • ••••••••••••••••••••••• btwn Garfield & Warner, 6 ee n us~ry back· Lotaofttafllc a, pa 10, gar en .•. "' " w Adults f \,.Ul\Ju Um.v.uTm ground, seeking P/time Local Dl1tributor ror .,. ~ Adults, no pets. orrers . ele1ant adult · 673-2938 -JANITORIAL Business. H.B. Reward. 842·8329 or work OC area. Extensive larp manUfacturer now ure!lteamlngpotenU,1.:.,.
TSL Mgmt 642-1603 apartments. LocQted in lik '1« ~ ~--Sl500 mo. income. $5000. 9684614 background ln sales to hirfng ror sales service le Selling Toyota l:Vol'1t:J
NOWREHTING exclusive Huntington UDO-CHOICE 2br, view, o,,~>:kJuolwq Firm,493·0664 Lo8tS 'l4 male cat, 6 mo. wide variety of In· delivery. Must have Yo11 need autom~-"'
Harbour. The Harbour's patio, fprlc, din rm. ForoverSyrs.832·4134 R t t Orange stripes. nds dustrial/manufacturing valid drivers license. s~ 'xperleac~ ~
2 br, 2 ba, all bltm, frplc, only apartment complex. Adults. SSOO. 675-6359 es QUrQn medication. Call 549.1301[ concern. Will assist in Earn up lo quaJ Saly -,.. ·:-· r • encl. gar. Balcony, patio, Spacious l Br, 2 Br, & 2 • _ Fem rmmt wanted to shr Full L Q o1 settin& up sal c $7 p H Call --&1U11era .... -lndryrm.S325. Br+ den. noor plans Attractive 3 bdrm CdM2brhse.S170moln· I .LIC.-seatslOS. or549-8957 market pla~nf~C:; Call7w519ow790 MARQUISMOTORS .
TSLMgmt 642·1603 from S280, are com· townhouse, frplc, bltns, eludes ut1I. 991·2213 dys. ~~!~'fal:/ea~~l~~-,f~ Los t. .gold Angora strategy time & ter· . • IU~ONVIE.10 M~APINES plemeotedbyencbanting crpt, drps, 1 car gar. Nr. 7~·116Sevs • -·OnPacificCoutHwy. longhair Cat, female. ans ritory mana~ment, etc. Apt manag~r. couple 131·2810 4tS.12l
1 • gardens & streams, a Hoag Hospital. AduJts. w · • to .. Little Doll". Vi c. For more in!ormatloo needed for 40 unit com· A •-moU .•• :r~ ~: ::Sdi&·~ !e:a~:u~~u~::~e ~~ts. S38S. mo . J!1J. ~~~ ~~~~~~:~ Baker, C.M. Any info. replytoAdNo.953,Daily plex in Costa Mesa. ~;'. neWt Shop Deeaa
Occupancy avail. Aug. l~fe ~l & ~t of au' rent for very nace 2 Bdrm 'I DA • 979-8978 or S40-6833 · Pilot, P .O. Box 1560, Husband may work out. bel . ~
lSth. Pool, jacuzZJ, frplc, d rtW 1~ W in' San Cltnwnte l87& apt rilht by beach in ~ ~ Lost. female · reddish Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626 Apt+ salary. 631·2950 Top waaes p:td. En~
d.shwhr. Adulu. no pets. = /o..i lo ~ft Har~~ ••••••••••••••• •••• •••• Newport Good rent, 6: 30 /i~ l ~r b row n L a b m i x , Conscieiltious, hard work: ASSEMIL y TaHES Stea men, en1 painters, ~4d;~~to16·s~ Liahts. Pacmc Coast2adBR.ul aar. pool, view, callaftPM.675-7635 't '1; "Sassy". Fri. Au1. 12, Ing College grad w/1 yr suo Hr start. Xlnt co. bufrerw & Pollshera.•oP-
to · ar a t. • Hwy to Warner to Alioo· ts, no pets. S300. 290 G'l'l 8600 vtc. Newland & Atlanta, oleexp, seeks Job where benefit.a Apply 212$ So holstery sbamp0oeu.
loft Mesa Verde Dr quin or off S~n Diego Delgado. 493-1988 -R__,,at .. 400 w~· H.B. Reward. 536·5189 gd typing 1k.llls & ability Lyon& -SA ' cbeck out. Piclt·up & de~ bet Ween Ha r b or & '1'''"' at Bois Chl ...,......,ce 'ln1T " lo deal w /the publjc are ' · · livery. Apply al
Adams. l ti31·2950 w';~ne:r to Aison~~i~ ~~tr.lo 3171 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Found male Irish Setter import. $700 min. Write 20S8 Harbor Bl, CM
Beaut. l&2 br garden 16700 Saybrook Lane. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 181~~:--rJLY~NB lf523 Cuf PUsDR~IRVJ"E vie Bluebird Canyon, LB. Jean, 9531 Blackfin, llB.. ASSEMILR 645-1030
apts. Din rm, dshwhr, 7l4-348·l34l 2 Br 1 Ba. Condo. Pool, nr AGT. 541.5032 Identify. 494·2540 QI., 92646· TRAIHEES
frp.lc, pvt patio. Nr. Condo 2 Br, 2~2 ba. Gar. beach. u 15 m 0 . · HOBBY SHOP FOUND· Poodle am H011s..-L••u1uG Does a 10 hour day 4
-Irvine Ind. area. 557·2841 Swim pool, clbhse. ten. Wtrilrashpd.~.7~ 150 I W•itcJJh Dr. SUPER BUY! fem . Vic. Fou~lai~ ,... B..,..yR-b"" days a week appeal' to
..-n Fantastic Laguna Hills Valley~ 918-3978 u y . ""'11? ConsclenUouf ap· '• BAY MEADOWS All year rental. $450 mo. SouthLOgufta 3886 ~ewporlFinanclalClr pot XI t t 11 Satlafact.lon, refs., own pll~nta'WiUbetraJnedto ';~,.,
Serene & cozy at· 84S-t3399·5. ••••••n••••••••••••••• Leas'-OfflceS-ce so . n derm s adva 1· Found Female min whl transportation. Phone bl I t ' HEEDEXTRACAS~
h S 1._ .. b .•• '7 .--wner rea Y to ea Poodle. Vic Tust.1'n 493-3346 ~~~.ecalmprodeuc~-.awaeo'rc . .,. __ ,__ ood .. _ ..... mosp ere. pac. """ r L09MG Beach 3848 Lge. quiet, luxurious, ex· Callon Site Manager now' """" .. -.nUJJ-are C . .,., ..... apts/orstableadulls.no ••••••••••••••••••••••• ec. 2 hr, 2 ba apt. (714)642·31llext248 UBi iSl-3741 7daya Avei JJollY' Ln. NB. HtfpW~ 1100 fer a startinl salary of arefiexlblew nyou•re
kids, pets. 1230 to 1270 No end r Sha • c · Elevator to scenic prlv &U-4373. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $2.75/hour. and excellent an A VON repreaen· 646.()()73 · • n · w s ove, · DELUXE OFFlCES Be /Wi T taUve. Calf 540·7041 or _ l·Bdrm. apt. Ocean view bch. Party ~game room. er IM a .. m Pef'SClftClh 5350 benefita. W)meovertlme Zeolth H35e .
. Lge3Br2Ba,enclaar,& balconyS.295 t~t.al security. Perfect Comml & indstl spaces. ALLHELPRUN! ••••••••••••••••••••••• AcoountingBookk'eepine required.> Call (714)~~~~~~~~~,,.~ patio. adults only. SJOO. Turner Assoc. 494·1177 livmgorwkndretrealfor 200 to 2000 sq. n. As low Busy local tavern + adJ. . TEMPORARY 835·2'22 or apply int-'-·
S46..""7S· 540 4431 the adventurous adult. aa 35< sq. Ct. Lag Niguel & to Stale Park & Beach Drinkm& proble"l? a .... .,;,.ter T....a-v .A wor.. person. BAB.-SITTER needed!.
"' ' · $..Ul. Cor.y 1 Br apt, 1'~ Starting at SSIS/mo. Mission Viejo a reos. U>wn Asking $29,900. CaUAlcoholHelpllae ·';-;"artous';°~~tin .. & WllllamHarv.y my· home, matar•
2br. 2ha. \l,Pper. Adults. blocks lo beach. All util ·~ Handy lo S.D. Frwy. 1'tmsava1J. 24hrsaday835·3830 • Reaea~b woman, over 40, Good'.
infant OK. No pel.s.1275 incl. Woods Cove area. Call:831·l400 UBI 837·4200 7days PREGNANT? b01° .. °..ktslc.eewpolnr~ c•1!!eianto. 142SS.VUJaaeWay w/chiJdreatocat'aforU Mo + cln'g. U40·A Call eves/try days. J.pw•Hwnts.Fumlshed c .... • -San•• ......... CA old-.. "'-Coriander Dr 494-7214 oru..furWfhe4 3900 AirportOffices 300/oRETURH arlng conCidenlial your home. F1cure -"'-· mo. .,.,,,,..,,.._uvna• counseling &: referral. Cler"--to Sr. Accoun· Equaloppempl mi( Mon·FrL Maa Vei:d• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l MONTH FREE GUARANTEED ,.. ~ Sl~ INCL All ullls. Le 1 LCICJl.ltO Migutl 3852 F\JU service. No lease re· Plus great potential. Abortion, adoption It taots needed tbruout . area.~ ... 751·9830 .,
hr. bttna, re( rig. CJD. ••••••••••••• ••••• ••• •• q 'd. 200-800 sq. fl. Plenty Photo drive·thru slores keepins. Oranae Co. ASSISTANT wanted for 8abY11tt.er, HJ1b sclioo)
Adtts. no pets. 548-1517or Luxury condo, first llr, 3 of parkln1. 2082 S.E. with successful tract re· APCARE 547•2563 Robert Half's busy salon. Must be student \o 1it W/OQe i'"yt
646--0112 Br 2 Ba, on pvt golf Bristol St. Newport cord. Little or no LIHDA&VICIO Account.empa licensed. Headya, old boy, M-P, 8.S. CdM
f"OURSEASONSAPTS course.K2Smo.640-6843 Beach.SS7·7010 management required. OutcdUMouocp 500S.Maln,Ste501 &7$-()808 tl9H720ukforAI •. , ,
Spaciou.9 2 br townlae. H.wport hach 3169 2 Pvt OCfic:es. reception & 556-0338 For tM Fuw of ~I No. Tower, Union Banlt 1---------ii--------lllia
1' ~ ba, pool. pvt paUo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 restrooms. 720 sq fl Money to Loan 5025 Servi.of all Oran11e Co. Inllle City of Orange ATTENTION: Ba.nkln1 •·
S260. •735 Joann St. Npt Hts: Bach, brand nu. total. Fnt Valley962·3200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 83S·7313 Ope~l~~~?:..t:ao We've got • Job \o fit TELLERS
646-64S3 S225Do_!~ lse. UTIL PD. p•--1st. 2nd & lrd T.D.'s ICHE&.Lil:'S ~~~~~~~~~ your daUy routine. Work Positions open for full· Small apt .. stove &:reCrig. __ 1U.U_u_c_646-__ 7i_7_s. ___ , ""-LOANS AVAILABLE Jii * I• as hr shill. Eam extra &lane & p/time exper'd
New cpts, center of ExecWl•eSutt.s CredlLnoLlmportant. OutcaUMuaaae i-----•••-1 mon•r and 1UH ha-ve TellersatTustJnomce&
downtown , $220/mo. Ot'tlce avail. Overlooks lrobr.493-3102 tOAM·2AM 731-«'2 ACCOUHTtNGCLK lime for your family. Airportoffice.
Agent548·7729 airport & mountains. --------SpirftualRtCIW GIMEIALOFFICI J)ol\'t worry Gbout ex· BOOKKEEPERS =c'h~~!~~:Vi:~·· s~r~~~~~s 1815So.EJcamlnoReat ~:!U::'!• e;i.,::."~ ~e;:· ~~11:i:t::y:c,u~ ~T!::C:~~;lc~~~ OGMPolftt 3826 •••••••••••••••••••••••
2 Bdrm Apt.s., ..... vallable
immediately.
661-0798 or 493-0075
'752-0234 1 DAY ~PPROV A.L San Clemente. Fu.lly Uc. A/Pay • A/Rec necess. tum. In addlUon to your l:"JSTALLMENT. '
Credit·Dlo Problem For •ppt. 492•7298 Dutl• ~uire Sood trP-salary you can eam ex-LOA~
ComtructlonLoam *K~M'S* ln1, pleaunt t)hon• tra money with our SECRETARY · CALLANN873-116e penol')a.Uty,ordertakJDI bonus pro1ram. AU thl1 OUTC MASSAGE etc. Pleue call f.or ap-& work cloH to your Bank esper. uci.'d'.
8PM·2PM 973-0l8J ~ between 8:-30 home. It loterHt.ed Tustlnolfi~. / It,:_, please appl1 at yo1n Apply P~l o.j>t , •SHARON~• eo..-uuncou. ne&nltF<*>mat.~•or SANTJA(M).IAMK :
OVTcALLMASSAGE 711 W. f7.t1o5f r~Gt..o31: SSSEtstSt, TustiJl • • -..1224· ,.. Petlon.nel Dept~~ WJdlMj"" I I Equal 0pp0r £mp&oy~I"•
D4HCI OF FUM c..ti M ... 64S..I ao I
Beaut. n\ide atrls. dance -------•itt Cl rap HSJlons. lOAM to
2AM. ~°" thru Sat. W N. Euclld, .\JlaMlrn.
AUIRGY CONTROL
IMPOltM4 T10H
Pre·rec.<orded muuae
(213 > 2Hy2SH, <714)
---------• ~ or,-.nte: Aller.o Q.mtrot FOundaUod, Box 1583, Orange, Ca. taea
---------. RELAXING litASSAOlt ....-..---------• BobJ•rt'let·Llc MUHW'
'· OutcaJI N1 '94'5111
,fl
.... We ofter an opportunity
t.o Joi• an exciU01
, fuhlon-forward
organization. • Please Apply In Person Mon thru Frl 3·5pm
13 Fuhion Island
Newport leach
~uaf Opp Empfyr m il
18 or over Apply In COUNCIL Needs 3 person. Delaney's Salty women p, time. 673-4786
~:.S 600 Lido _Park Dr. FACTORY
Counter Girl Needed For Work in Air cond. & cpl'· ed. area w, FM music. Orycleaners. 18 Or over. Must have palie'nce lo ~~ __ work w,microminlllturc
COURT Director. Tennis P a r t a u n d -e r a Club, H.B. Exp'd only microscope. lat & 2nd
need 1 o 30 shift openinga. Top pay app y. ver pre· + co. benefits. Galser f 'd. Prcv. m1mt. back·
IMSULA TIOM r
INSTAUll
Needed Immed. Ex·
per'd, Batt. Han1•r1 on·
ly need apply . 714/558-1619.
MAIHT.MA.M
~ pt·tlrne. Appt)t
NOW\ RUJ !'.atate
GOOD
BUDDY!
Secntary for lnlurance otn~. NB. Exl>9f. pttf.
Busy st.a~ J'arm AJent's
otnce.14M('10
Secretary/Bklrp.r. 'PJT. sm. b1.11. nr Dfef Rd.
Able to orsan.. handle
Thl1 It.... ..... ..... re1p. $.1.llO/hr. C95-1370 .................
~ In o,_. Co. We Secretary /receptlonl!lt
l~~~~~~~~!I Offtt> • bese pay. a lor eQ•r1eUc, •rowth ._ _______ •I good co•m.. xlftt oriented firm. T)'plni
.-L--• 1 t akllh • pleuaot uvaua • ca1u• • • Wephone pel'IOl\IUbt a .,.,..,.. to CJD .._, must. IS»S'I». Send" re-
W /W staff IMMflta. aume to GOO Newport
Mo door to door. Our ~~r Dr., Bo118, NJt.
Rest.u.rant
NOW HIRING
SHACK SHOP
3446 I. Coast Hwy
~ .. M•
All POlltiOhS
Re-Openine Aug. 31.rt
Apply lo per.on
M Mon thru Friday
Equal Oppor Employer
ofc spoce.11 bewttful -------
Ir no •J&PV· Meffl, WtTNlft. SECRETARY·GIRL
0 ..... f' R I D A Y M on ·Fl' i S v"D GOOD7 1·5PM. Good typing
Then Cati skllla NOD mo. ~-18" ltUllER DUCk _rnomtn __ aa ______ _
At
U3.aots . SECRETARY
RESTAURANT· TIMl-'LllURllS NatJooaJ Fresh Produce
Mature stable adult EqualOppEmplyrm1r Wholesaler. 0 .C .
needed for F/t & P/T~~~~~~~~!I Airport. 1 1lrl ore. positlDn.. at Naugles SAL""' - -Dependable. fa9t, ac-
Drive Nu. Cln, friendly I:,.;) ·-• c u r a t e \ y p l n 6 &
atmotphere. · Faat mov· PET STORE ~alc"1ator. Lau of varle·
Ing & challen1log. Apply ty. Salary open. Call for
at 21.01 Brookhurst (at TROPICAL inten1lewappt.SS6-lOllO
around.Callbtwn3PM& Tool Co., 1701 E . I'---------• SPMonly.536-8832 ~!~!!!lie Ave. S.A. ---------1 ~shier. Over 18. Apply -__;,~_;,.;;_;._:_:..:.:... __ I .,..,.....,.,., FISH Secretary·Admlnlatratlvt Accuracy, intUaUve
paramount. Sbortbaad.
typtoi, tel. 1lmple bk· '
1t o • e m a r Y • S a n CltlA TIYE MS _ __.._ _____ . _.,
• Clementelnn.412-6103 Needed by Artist t a . FIGURE Mode~. neiuble 0 5 hrs, averaae f1glll'9 ok ... CASHlat •lstoute~~~roJects. wiutrain.541-9089 •
.Fobd·Hote1. exper. pre-FRY·COOK nt. BoUda)' Inn. WcWAa • CUSTODIAN
• Jllm, coatact personnel lead; elemenlary school, Exper'd, Faat675-2850 ~. $769·1937, month. Apply
District ofc, Laguna GARDENER CASWER, dependable Beach Unified School :ft1151>. woman. Full & p1t District. Laruna Beach Wanted for comm'I bid gs no lnclf.1d. Apply art by 8123171. ¢94-M48. m Newport. Call Brenda
lpal, ·Gift Shop, OC -------l <213>324·2757
Airport. Day C81'9 ror elderly bd1---------.. patient, pret Christian
DAILY PILOT women. s days Mon/Fri Clrc&llcltion Clertc 5'&5-4 __ 940 ___ _
J'art time telephone DELANEY'S M.,T ~k. no aelllng. Hours "
8:00 AM to 12:00 Noon. STREET
Monday through Friday. PRODUCE MAN AO ER
Must type. Phone CASHIER'S
4M2-4321 Ext 219 for ap-MEATCUTI'ERS ~ilnment for interview. CLERKS
Q.EANING MAN Send resume to: P.O. .,. Box #86, CM, Ca. 92627
• Coffee Sbop, Balboa All replies held coqtlden·
Call875-2650 tlal.
~NJNG·Woman to
clean h.se, 1 dat wk, M.00
bl'. Mual .,. versatile,
'NP-2410
r' Cl.ERICAL
l!aa!aion 1'1and financial
firm seekl.ng resp.
~---------· DELIVERY
DENTAL LAB
Part-Time. 846-~
DELIVERY MAN ,
f /ttme. must be
ener1euc "neat appear· 101. Beach Slat1oners,
GENERAL
LABORERS
VOLT
TI '-'W •( •111' J' "Ill • .1 t • 1 •l t ~ •
Knowteda• Required. FUture • 442·S.522
S •• •r•RAso...a kpn1roe1 men oftlce. 28 ___..._ " hrl per week. OJder ap-COOKS For fine jewelry 11.ote. pllcant. All a day
DISHWASHERS Exper'd iJl window dla· weekends ·ort. DetaJled
--'-'--------t RealElbi\eSalesperson WAITIESSES play & howled~ of resume. Jay E}'e Corp., 1000/•COMMISSIOH Apply In person sam· china, .crystal, 1Uver & Suite 130 UO Blda.
We furnish desk lOam & 3pm·5Pm. 10142 fine jewelry. Full·time. Gateway Plaza. 180
telephone-secretary & Ad a ma Ave • ( A t _673-9 __ 334_. ------N:;rrt Cal~r Dr. NB. help. · :!:okhurai, in Hunt. SAJ.8'Elt$0H/Exprd. _91 ______ _
LA CASAA&.TY ~&!OppotEanployer Good opportunity Cor SECRETARY
495-1870 eve: U14117 mature woman . .0 brt Varied du&les leelud. --------1 per wk , includioa bookkeeplnl. No amok· J i __ REAL ___ EST_A_T_E--1 RETAIL eves/wknd:I. 1J:ply in Inc. N.8. Sal open. nla~~ori1anl Floorina1,nd, -----~_:..;..;..::.J *SALES* persoo. 1911 ewport. ~1. ao•.._sh , eJCperpre . CLERKS Blvd.CO&l&Metia -------
45 hr week. Company Real Estate aalespe<>ple ----'"-.,..----..:...._·!•-... -----·
open .vour ruture. Let us · SALES SECRITAlY --------1 --,.---.:.--~1 help 1ou Into the buai. UTOTEM Part time. 5-9pm, Mon-OtderCoordlnator oeaa-jotn a company Convenience Mrim Fri, perfect for Colleae Reclonal aale1 ofo for
pa.me 14 years In Oranie Poclllona open lat. 2nd.& St&ldent, no pres.s1.1te this world wlde manuf. 3rd" 5 b if ta i a s an sales or quot.as to meet. ·bat an openlnt for a
Clemente ck Laguna 531.o&ll sales l~/cOl)l'dinator •
Beach. Otber areas have POI r'eq • accurate t..YJ>-openlJ)p also No exper SALIS lng & 1ood telephone
--------• nq'd. Appty'at au oi TV & AlH>llancu. communication aklU.. ouutores P/tlme. Eves It Sun a Exptr. pre(dL but we ZllN~Bwd must. will train tne rl1'bt
OoltaMes.a 842·'1'102 !CennRlniaHardware peuon. Good aal • 2688Harbor Bl. C.H. ~ Ji'or •Poto eall
G3-93019am·5pm
. SALISPBSOH AMP, INC.
.vanted tor marine PotterltBrumfleld Div
2$181.\ventda
~ SU Juan Capistrano
EqiatJ OlltOI'. Bl'QPtoYer
llCUTAIY
X1nt t~ MUilmal bk·
kllb.f aper. N.8. lawofc.
Call Trts~ MUSS2.
SECRETARY .
~~
to ft.mctlon u 1ecretaey
to Salea and Mvertlainc Hanageu. !ttqulrea mlntml.lm a,..,. at.roog
aecretartal upetlence
wlth If th& 1bortband,
pre(etabb' ln techoleal ~ucta w .. depart-ment. IA&ervleW b)' lipllt oaJy
Call mt> ~ru
•
,.,
T elepltone SalH
Wanl to make monev .,
Can you sell on the
phone? Top Sin our bus1
ness. 631-3690, ask ror
Ray
...
SUMMER
CLEAi AN CE!
SUPER SELECTION OFGMCTRUCKS
"VANS HUGE SA YIN(f S!
r
8ARWICtc DA r~v,....
' ' 811-137'> 493j_1c;
WE BUY
CLUMC:AltS
& TltUCICS
CONN EU
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd,
COSl'AMESA
546-1200
WE PAY 'l'OP DOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CARS
FOREIGN. DO.MESTJC
or CL.A.SSlCS
U your caf is extra.clean
see us first.
IAUEAIUtCK
2925 H8J'bor Blvd ..
Costa Mesa 979.2500
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
FOR~EAN
IMPORT CARS.
ALLMODas
WE
NEED
CLEAN
US£0CA.RS
NOW CALLPA,,Y .;1
540·5630
1011 \~0\ & SO\'
• LINCOUl· MERCUH'I'
WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR
FORHIFTY
IMPORTS
SADOLEBACK
BMW
COM!IN&SH
ntlAWMEW
~ '30CSi HOWl!!
~UNd ••••••••••••••••••••••• . ................... ....
Mus'-9 9952 PWo ·"'' ....................... #••····················
'8S A~ m. 57,000 Od1 '7J Pinto w .. oa. • 1pd,
ml. 2 ownrs. Xlnt cond. A1~ 9e.fda wark. Runs. o::t~.. sitoo.m~ .... UIS-~-.~ '75 Mach I. V~. loaded. 1971 Plnto·Very, lo)'91 I
New pat.ot • tires. Call New tir , ahot~. paint. lt76 CADll.lAC M2-0'729evs/wknda. ~I. earbu~r. •·
SIVIU.IS '81 FASTBACK,, loaded, 1~; a.lr. AJd/FM radt0, O.A.C.lyr.parts&l&bor
• Utoc~froat> lob of Qtras. va 390. ~!oEr c•ueette. SSQO. service poller avlal.
Leather 011 cloth lo· An, P/S, pwr disc bra. _._,,. • · avail. Avto ceater's
teriara, fully eqwpj)ed ~·.:..~c.::--:=: Sharp l $1500 firm. '7• Squttt Wason. 33,000 P'iceLs
with •tereos, t1tt wheel, '111.aeM ml, auto trans, air cond. ONLY $3199 cruise control. etc. (~) Prt.ced a low '68 Mtaataog 298 VS, vnyl 1 owner. S2()00/blt olr. • MAIRS -----~---• u · .• s "16 Granada 1 Dr, white top. auw, p 15, aew Urea, 97 & -612' Mo a· Fr J AUTO c:ana
, $9888 ='!!ic~~!~re ~ w!unecLb .......... ~t cood. aam-&pm .otv.·Na~rssC•dcllMlac CMMOitl•~rp
OUMGI C:OUlifTY"S
OLOIST
• over lie et'13$ mo Dls ..,,.,,_. _._... 174 Plnto wsn. Jow 1as&.er t .•..
<.'Overy Manqenietit Co~ '8T i'aatback, 3 spd. STOO milea1e, aun root. Ctocl ,,.,blktastofHartlOr Bl
.. ~T-L....;...rs <714)1'1o.1870 ofc bn MF call 980-1803/$884912 coad.48M888 540.9109
1 ~ 8:»5:30 or ... /wtncb belm.•pm '11 PlDto l\UQabout. auto,, Cadillac• <n4>ast.eo:t •• Futbac:k .u.ocio ml elr, eust sier .. lo ml'•. 68LelifansV-8, auto, xlnt
automaUc. 'p1s, Xl.Dt'. $2900.-.-r. cond. ms or best offer.
• 114~108 '71 Pop Top Camper. lm· 2600 H.irhor 81vcJ . ~d& 994 Must see: $1700. 482~. •-...u-9965 ,~841-ao2 ___ . ____ _ &
·-I -• nd. M t JJ lm c M 5..JO 9100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .-~ 11 d sata~rv1ce-a.ocas1n1 '74 CMC Blue a{~talhc .74 MBZ w SLC, fully mac. ro · u.s se · ustJ cSJ • '10 M ri k R&H Must Sell-'S9 Mustaq ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1972 Cata 1u, 4 . r loy Cw•er,lnc:. Wbl V top, new clutch eqwp'd, Incl sun.root. _med. ~.581·75CM . u-an:v: ~ i xlnt •au~ eoodcond. $600. ' lt76 POMTIAC hardtop, Sl~U. ~rag
Rollat\oyce BMW Nt11t tires &t brkes. ml. bestofrover$!0,000. VW7411UNG, 16,000 m&, -550 acs-uis'd conlyn · CaU645-8557 GRAND PRIX ownr.so.ooom1.673· 531 • 1540Jambof" 752.9299 714·7S9-ll&a eve wknd, 53250. Xtra nice 640-1090 C.dillac, '1HI PUHnger · ays 0 -
Newport Beach 640_,... lt'n Honda Al·cord&. 5. 833-3884 wkdys. eves/wkndt,644-0"54d)'I !!~7Jl~lm"~~9Jg8800 Mercury 9950 OldMnobile 995 ~jh~bplpedue efni:~:.!':f; YICJll 9974
I • U CK &-~ .... -•••• .. -••••••••••••••• IY eq1 -••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 BMW Bavana, reblt 1pd, air, atereo m · MG 9742 • SQ AREBA lf t . ••••••••••••••••••••••• cood., pwr. ateertne " •
78000 xlnt d rntdlate delivery . blue, auto, ed. cood. '68 EL OORADO 44,000 ORANGECOUNTY'S 19720LDS windows crui5e control, VEGA 76 ~ 752.Jri:o da conor LM/buy. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl20C>. W.D. Schock ml. Leather upbol, fully MEWIST AM;FM' stereo tape & HATCHIACKGT
67}&291eves ya, HarborLea~inflnc. 1976 MG MIDGET Corp., 3502 S. Greenville equip'd.640-7776 LINCOLN-MERCURY Full TOROJ"l~DO d low, low miles. Bank DEMO. 5 speed trans ..
...,.-:...---·----1 640-itil COMVERTllLE St .. SA.549-2277 DealershlpisoowOPEN AM 't:w~t~ con ..• terms.(7'5PPF>,Prlced air cood ., etc •
• "3 BAVARIA 4 spd, AiC. '75 Honda CVCC 5 apd 4 speed, radio, plo strip· •74 VW IUS '68 Fleetwood Brougham, RAY FLADEIOE cooirot Juai a~~~ toselll (6:i05/3.m). Wu$379S.
:c:fue ~ ~~t re':,~· overnd tires'Jrlms: tn: ~tb ~pecia1{ac~ & Lomi,S3SOO.SU.9989 ~~· xlntcood. S1200. LINCOLN·MERCURY car! °c988FUO>. EZ ONLY S~997 ONLY $3298
Orl
1
g . Own·. 5<10·3232 am, Cm stereo cassette, :U:.,~ ~~~a ow Rare '74 Jtd. ed. Sun Bu# ,.__ .9917 l6-lBAutoCenterDr. terms-0.A.C. ~yr. parts HOWARDCheYrolet
.. tdya8to5P/P Jo ml S3U5/bst ofr. OtJJ.LY$ltf.S cpnv. Blau.punltt ~ SDF'wy>LalteForestexit ·6labor-1erv1~pollc, Dov.e&.QuallSt&T ""..;...;...-=-----'-----• ~. " AMiFM, Bilstctn susp. ••••••••••••••••••••••• IRVINE avail. Auto Centers ·NEWPORT BEACH
Capri 9715 c uew top steel belted '76 Camaro, 15,000 mi, 130-7000 price is 284SHARBOR oLVD 833·0555 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Honda eve · dk b~wn, rads. ~nt cond. (213) loaded, $tudent mus OML Y $2699 ~ .
'73 V-iCapri,greatshape. 1 w &old pin stripe, 880-8549or mo•96-3451 sell.496-3()15 70Monhqo$700 MAIRS S40.64IOS4~021J '74 Vega Wgn. Xlnt cond.
S2700 radials. mags, xlnt cond, - -Good cond. See at 2881 AUTO CENTER 73 Pontiac Ventura, cust. Llke new. 4 Spd, fac.,air,
Cal.1548-9708 bef 4pm 842-4061or962·6839 w~~ ~:~::i~f j ·~.Pt?~ !~:. ~~r se~ ~Ilea~::~· 4~~~~s:l~t; ~1~~1~·~1~4S19 C . M . Div.·Nabers Cadillac air, PS, blk vin top & int. $1600. 646-3003; 631·2617
'73 Capri V6. New trans, J 9710 642;4468or 63H304 495-6873 1425 Baker St .. C.M. Lo mi, xlnt cond. $2250. '74 Station Wgn. Air. 4
brakes, batt, good cond. CICJllGr '72 MG Mld1et. Needs ,68 VW IUS '75 Montego Wagon. All ~~blkeastolHarbor Bl firm. Illness forces sale •• pd. lo mileage, xlnt ~.bstofr.497-2138 ••••••••••••••••••••••• work. Beat orrer. Call '75CamaroLT.28,000Mi, extraa,5newbres.Sale 540·9109 897·7S26;540..S1QO cond. 116oo;ofr. PP
Jag l 9 6 1 X K 1 5 o Greg, SSl-0788 · S850ortrade? 642·1961 xlnt con~. $3995. Wkdays or trade. Below blue 1965 L M Rblt •OO S81·3458
9720 drophead Xlnl running MGB 97,.,. VW C t .75 $4000 .,_ 996-4010, 547-8378. evs boolt. Ph 673-0368 or 67 Olds, good transporta· Te abons ... 00 t --------· oond. Body & mt. clean. .... onv · . · """e ~2080. • 642-8583 lion S250. eng. ur • r ans. '74 Veaa Karnbaclc, A;C. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Make ofter. 559-8074 ••••••••••••••••••••••• at 76 Service, Martne at 548-0747 Holly mags, runs very auto, xlnt cond. $20SO. * DRIVE A * '68. Must seU now. Xlnt. Park Ave, Bal lslnd. Chevrolet 9920 '72 MarquJs 4·dr, p ;s, well. Must seU. SlOOO/blt 540-ll4'orSC8.a6lS KCll'.'f'NIM Ghia 9735 R-adiala, elltras. very • ••••••••••••••••••••••• P/B, P/W, P;Seat, A/C, '88 Olds CUt1ass Supreme, otr. S86-l364 ·~-* LITil.E ••• * .. 7•••••••••••••••••••• clean. $1700 Ph837·2385 6? VW Van, nu motor & '59 CHEV. BEL AIR. On-RadJala, Original owner. AC. PS. PB , new • 1S73BronzeVe1aSt.a Wgn
AVE A LOT '73 CPE New valves, clcb · 1 ~· X~n~~j0 nds ly 34,000 original mUes. $2500. 1175·11S8 300 E. tires /brlcsi batluy ~ what you ~ant In GT. AM-FM, radials.
& trans, stk, FM. Nds. Opet 9 46 wo · · This car is in PER.P'Ecr CoutHwy#50 551-0T70 DailyPUotC1assifleds. 833-2811 IMr.Gorman>
'SHOP It COMPARE body wk $2200. 494-2130 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '67 vw 9 bl l)lt original cond.iUon. You
BARWICK DATSUN 1--------11970 GT. Xlnt. cond. AU · ug, u~ re must see! LooU runs -. New flOO.,,.._., lffw 9IOO ....._..._ ,. 9100
'1?1 l·,.111 C. •P' Ir .t111• nda 9738 black. 4-spd, mags. Call enim~~t~ tery, 1 excellent. $1,000 cic-best ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• aft40NLY.PP.835-3886 ownr · cashoffer.638-9308. ............................................. .,
,.
8Jl-I J75 49J.J375
NEWPORT DATSUN
FOR THE HST
FLEET PRICES
ol'640-343S '67 Baja Bu1, reblt eng & r CM 9750 trans, new tires " paint
.. ~ •••••••••••••••• ·---· $1200. 67~5317
,~t!~~~ 1973 914 2.0. Alp.1 FM 8 lrk, VW 70 Bug, one owner. if ct mag whla, xtnt cond. good cond . SlOOO. Pvt
Costa Mna 645-5700 $5200. 552-9156 aft.5 PM Ply. 673-2247: 759·1694
Cttll Jim MHdham -------'73 914 J.7. Appearance '73. 9 Pass bus $3200. Nu , TODAY! •1971 Blue Mazda Cpe, grp. Air, stereo, lo m1, brks1t1res11hks. AM /FM
888DOVESTREET piston cng. gd cond., pvt pty. Call 673-2823 cass ·dec:k. Looks & runs
N M A..... ..,A,. C~U aft 6 ·JOPM Xlnt. Aft6pm,642·2650. ear . ac 1u1ur ..,..,,, .. · • Must sen imtned! Yellow --------
&JamboreeRoads D62·3S66 '73911TTarga, A·l, must '7P VW Bug, runs Cood.
833-IJOO ·72 Mazda 808. Xlnt cond. see. $10,950. or best. new tires. S1200 or best .. " ....... ._l _EA_T_T_H_E_P_R-IC_E_ Neweng. ~17 ofr.CaUAndy55Hl615
INCREASE!!! SlOOO-S73-07S6 Porsche 914 1.8 litre. Ap· ·74 VW Coovert. Xlnt
119NEWCARS
Mercedes Beni 9740 pear group. lS,000 mJ. cood. N~w top. Best ofr.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Mae wbls, mint cood. CaU644-8633aft5pm.
1976CHEVY
"ELCAMIMO
Automatic, pwr. steer-
ing. AMiFIC radJo 4t air
cond. In excellent condi·
t ion ·liH brand llew !
(50S7"5).
OMLYS5795
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
~HARBOR BLVD .
54CM+f 0540.02U
AT THE OLD PRICES
All models now availa·
ble. c.au or .aee us before
, J'OU il,\G' J!!
'75 MIZ 4SOSL $6800. (1)595-4733.
•'&CC08VAJR• Conv. Clualc. Nu top,
PDL Sl.495. 538-9993
'74 VW Super Be~e. i•· ----------With metallic paint. RolsRoyce 975' mac. cond. New Urea. •Chev Vega, auto trans,
stereo & is luxury ........................ 12m5orofr.~·8447 A/C,uking$1700.
equipped. In showroom *1 DEALER IN U.S A • ~--631-·_337_s __ _ condition. (447MXN ). · • Y•o 9772·-COSTA MESA
DATSUM CARVEi ·IEFOU YOU Loaded-sbeU. s1.ooo Mi.
Pnced tosellol' lease. ~ ROY ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 El Camino. immac.
?4 Ml%-4SOSE ca• YOUR • ~ibstofr. 581-4582 ;194$HARBOR BLVD. Automatic, cruise con-ROll.S·ROYCf ~ • MONTE C • ~o.:MJOS40.0JJl trol, AM /FM stereo, ~'-.::. VOLVO. llr1Fll, cruiM ~:01.
'u, $1.t, '4dr sedan, A/C, ~~. ~~~~~-ll low ''""'"D~'"'S =r::i:r a top dollar =·)\eats,;~·~~·
ct ea n . s 15 o o fl rm . -"'-.vn"'"' MAR9UIS VOLVO · Df¥. . __..
673-S881,an.spm•95-4188 '71 MBZDIESL CONCANNOM•s IUSSlCJN\>IEJO ·sa MALIBU. vinyl
"73 I>ataun 240Z. 1 owner. Jn showroom oonditlon! HORSRESS 131·2110 4'5-1ZI0 Jlttdtop, full.power, $'190. White/red lntr. Mag For the t-conomv of 640-3322 days, 545-6411 t .ll'l)lJ, 4 spd, all extras. diesel & the luxury or a ST ABLES ORANG&<:OUNTY 1_ev_es ______ _
• iti.50.673-0368or642·8S82 Mercedes. US7NRN>. Brokers of l1ne contem· V01VO Chrysler 9925
·!73 Datsun 51~ 2 dr, good 'Other Cine Mercedes in j)()r8R"ou.s ROYCE EX<lUSIV.E.b" VOLVO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~cood, new tires. 33,750 B..,....,._ EY Largest Volvo Dealer 1976 CHRYSLER 1m.I ... ftftt "'~ .. _,,,,,, =~~u inOran•eCounty! • .......... .....,._,,,., automobiles. BUY or LEA.SS CORDOIA
75 Dataun 280Z, 4 spd, air, zru E. Coast Hwy DIREO'l' Only 7025 actual mlles-;;.,~rr~~P•;,:~~~g; Y!Y!~:::::::!?!!! f!~~~i:·~ g:E§i! §~
m J>at.sun 8210, 21,000 mi, IEFORE YOU -• - ---::: :: = = 1768PDC>. EZ ter011-
GOO/otr. Xlnt cood.1731 SEU YOUR 2026 S. O.A.C.1 yr.parts &labor
·or, CM. 642-2''4 TOYOTA, Anaheim 750-2011 service PC!llc~ a.vall.
!725 See us for a to;> dollar 1972 VOL¥0 Auto CeO:feyr sSpnS,. cefflS
Fiat 124 Sprt Cpe,
a~at cond. ne-. valves It ~ must see, movln1
mustseU Sl350. M2-Q46
73 Fial 1Z7 Coupe L Great
cood. Slf()O. Must sell
estimate! -nL ..
MAft9UIS TOYOTA ft 1800 COUPE . MUHS
MISSlONVIEJO Already a .. claaJlC"·C AUTO CIHTER
831·2180 495.u I 0 ~ed w, ourdrhe ~ Div.-NabenCadil,lac:
1 ~ frre ~: e~C: r~ 1425 BakerSt .. C.M. <a>lETV >. '~ blk e&st of Harbor Bl OMI. y ..S4395 54Go9109
lllDSMUSTGO! ***~************************************* I • )
19.77 PINTO 2 DR. SEDAN .... -----,
4 speed, front disc br8"M, rack & pll)lon
steering, electric rtar wlftdow defra.tw,
wheel coven. 2.3 litre eng1oe. deluxe
bumper orouP a tlnt.c:J glass.. (127830~
AV~~ $3~89 AT ONLY \J
4MlllCA'S PAVORnt COtiWA.CT
1977 GRANADA 2 DR. COUPE
Equipment c.1.0. v.e engln4l. cru11H>-mat1t
trwis.. radlaf tJra, JIO'Mlf' front dlscbraltel &
deluu bumps group. (241808~
NEW'77
CHEVEITE
TWO-DOORf
With four-6J)eed manual trans.,
power brakes. radio. s3 98
#8534/1204. Fed. price label, heater/defroster. etc. 1
s3•4ss. Our~· ONLY
New 177 CHEVELLE Our price
TWO.OOOR COUPE! On'
trans.. air oond .. pWr. steering. •
Malibu Classic with auto. $51 8 etc. 19093/0811. Fed. price
label. $6.1811
New 177 IMPALA Our price
FOUR-DOOR SEDAN! Only
With air cond.. aoto. trans .. $ 98 p w r . st e e rt n g • e t c 1 55 18171/1114. Fed. price label.
$6,9551
New •77 MIRAGE ~ price New •77 NOVA OUr price
HATCHIA~I! OnlJ. ·FOua..0001 SEDAM! 0n9 ,
Two-door with auto. trans .. air ss l t8 With auto. trans .. air cond .. s41 8 cond .• fNK. steering & brakes, pwr. ateerlng,, and more.
and IOOCh more. 13431/0596. #488311172. Fed. price labef.
Feel. price labe11S6.!500! 15,510!
•
New.177 MONZA Our price· New '76 PLUMBERS' Oilr ce New '77 CHEVELLE Our price
2 +2 TWO.OOOR! Qnly ELECTRICIANS1 TRUCK! OnJY FOUR-DOOR SEDAM! Oftly .
Wit.b auto. trans .. pWr. steering 54098 ~ boJv on ~ ton LUV $4698 Wltheircond.. eutotrans.. pWr. $ 291
1687S/0824. Fed. price label. 1527313987• Reedy to got 1729410670. Fed. price labef.
& brai<es. and more. c & c well·equlpoed ateerlng & br.akes. etc. 5
S5.199! • se.~
New '77
MONTE .
CARLO!
. , Onty
73 Pont. Grandv9e -eutomltlc. POWer' s 1411· : steef"ing.· brakes. wtndowl. etc. Priced •eoo.oo
Below CUn-ent Whollllle Blue Book. to79MOJ' •
73 PINTO WF -4 &pd. air cond. ttereo
system. mag wheels. etc:-Priced s200.oo Below
Current Wholesale Blue Book. t797HOF
71 VW ~ -4 .spd •• maos l AM/FM radio. Extra nice. m90FC
~ VOL. 70, NO. 228, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES
..
BJ CHA LPAS £VIOi ... ...,"" ....
Fountain Valley Mayor Roaer
Stanton •owed MoDday nltht
tba\ he would joln cltiiem in
front ol bulldozen to atop a ~
posed U.S. Marine Corps bousinl
development ot 1,300 unill ln the
130-acre eore area of Mlle Square
Park.
Mayor io Join Citizem at Bullili>zers-, • inter Avenue. •
Tbe Marinel would then trad• r
U\ia parcel for land closer to El
TOTO Alr StaUon but curreoUy
owned by the Irvine Company.
Stanton announced durin1 a
public hearin1 attended by about
120 people that the City Council
would consider a resolution
tonight formally opposin1 the
plan or any chanee In the recrea-
tional zoning of the park.
Bus Tax Rate
Shaved Down
By Half-cent
The 1977-78 property tax rate
for the Orange County Transit
District <OCTD> will be trimmed
by less than one halt cent to 3.96
cents per $100 of assessed valua.
lion, OCTD General Man-.er Ed
Loritz said today.
Loritz based the rate on as-
$essed valuation figures received
Monday from county Auditor·
Controller Vic Heim.
Last year's rate was 4.26 cents.
OCTD can levy a rate or up to five
cents per $100 of assessed valua.
lion.
The rate will raise $.1.6 milllon
of the $50.3 million budeet adopt·
ed earlier by OCTD directors.
The built.of aero revenue comes
from state and federal subsidies.
Loriti said directors will be
asked to hold a special meetlna
Aug. 26 to formally aet the tax
rate.
With Jut year's 4.26-cent rate.
the owner of a home aue:sMCI at
SS0,000 spent *5.32 to flnance
OCTD operations. '
Not one citiie.o spoke ln favor
of the Marines proposed develop-
ment on land formally used as a
helicopter landinl strip.
•'II the Marines move 1n, then I
move out," remarked one man ln
the audience. About 3S people
spoke against the plan.
How~ver. ..Stanton admitted
that the Marines. ..can do
anything they want ... they
could put up the framing before
There's a lot of pride and
charactet buildin& under U\e sun
juat south ol the Hun\inglon
Beach Pier.
That's where 375 Junior
Uleguard.s between 9 and 16 years
old spend four hour! a d•Y run-
ning, swimming and most impor-
tant, learning lifesaving tech-
niques.
The 10-y'ear-old proeram
secves as a sort of minor league
after which the most skilled
youngsters, at age 17, can move
up td a permanent lifeguard po&i·
ti on.
But as junior lifeguard pro-
gram coordinator Bruce Simcox
notes, "our basic philosophy is to
give every kid in the program a feeline ot accomplishm~t ...
we could blink." "'\...
The Marines wlll announce
their intentions at a meetina with
city officials on Sept. 8, at 2 p.m.
ln Fountain Valley Council
Chambers. Also expected to at-
tend are representatives from
Westminster, 8.anta Ana, Irvine,
Garden Grove, the h'vtne Com·
pany and Congressman Robert
Badbam <R·Newport Beath,).
Badham, who represents
This is done by setting in-
dividual goals for each youngster
tbr~b a proeram that com-
bines fW\ with old-fuhioned dis-
cipline.
A heavy emphasis is placed on
the dally challenges of being a
llf eguard. On busy days the red
swim.suited younesters man
towers as back-up units to the re1warc~.
And they're learning fast.
Some of the junior Jitegua.rds
have a number or rescues under
their belts and Simcox pridefully
mentlons the 9-y~a.r-old girl wbo
1potted a swimmer in distress
under the pier be(ore the tower
veterans were aware of the
problem.
ln lluly. the competition squad
(&ft GtJA&DS, Pa1e A!)
FoUntain Valley, was seen as the
villain by many clUiens who at·
tended the hearina. -
Through his aide, Howard
Seelye, Badham last week sue·
gested a three-way land swap
between the Marines, Irvine
Company and Oranee County.
The swap plan has been con·
demoed by Fountain Valley of.
ficials, Supervi!or Phillip An·
thony and Congressman Jeny
Sweep Desert,
Strand Many
M. Patterson (0-Santa Ana>.
StantoJ> reported that As·
s~mbJyman Dmn1I Mancera <D·
Hunlingtoo Beach> said that Sen.
Alan Cranston has taken a
"personal interest" in the city's
effort to block t)le developmen\.
The swap would mean that the
center portion of the park would
be traded for county-owned ter-
·ritory on the edle of the park
near Brook:bursl Street and Ed·
Top OfficlalS
Badbam 'a aide l\as announcecl
that the consressman "would
prefer" the ho,isinc proJ.et bi loca~closertoEl Toro.
Badham ls 1 member ol ~
Armed Services Committee that
will vote on the Marines• fundln&
request for the housing project.
He has power to veto Ule move.
City officials fear that the swap·
(See FIGHT, Pa1e AJ)
I
aB Coun£il
OKs Pay ._Hike~
Pay raises for Hu~tington
Beach City Adminbtrator Bud
Belsito, Assistant City Ad-
lfllnlstrator Richard Harlow and
11 department cllrectors were
unanimously approved Monday
nieht by the Huntinaton Beach
City Council.
The raises, In the form ot a
. ~even ~ cost of llvlnt ad· -~~ Belslto's salary
ris101 from $441496 to $47 ,604 an-
nually.
Harlow will be mtking-0 .. 444
while four senior department
head:S now will have an annual
salary in excess of ~.000 In ad·
ditlon to benefits.
In J&dopling_ tbe salary
package. city, council membenr
agrefld to form a commit.tee to in·
vesUaate a new approach to the
compemaUOll Of emplo7ee.
Tbe le\'eD pefCebt raise w. tn
liM witb lDtteases glvea otbitr
city empJoYes. ·
A reaolut.loa to appro\le tom•
J>eJtJatton for Cl1 Attorney Don
80ri.f a was del~ on the advic•
of lecal counsel Nicholas
Counter. •
A diSpute over a salary in·
crease denied Bonfa· lri ms is
still bapgina fire and council
metnben lhdicated they didn •t
want to act oo the new increase
14ntil last rear's controversy ls
settled. ,
Earlier Monday. the Hunt-
inatan Beach Chamber ol Cont·
merce called for a moratorium
on s•lartes of administrative
personnel.
The chamber directors said the
new schedules would mab lt
possible for tbe clt)' ad·.
m~tralol' to earn ~.244 when
be reaches the top of bis pay
scale.
The resoluUon said this figure
Is considerably in excess of Gov•
Valley \Vame
18sue Slated
ernor Brown•s salary and tbdt
the city's ability to pay such
amoun~ should have taxpay~
conslderation.
Later in the day. tbe chamber
directors amended their resolu-
tion and requested only that a
chamber study ~ommlttee
become lnvol ved in a future lona-
ran1e study of city salaries.
Huntillgton:
Tax Plan
'SCiittled
JtillOBBftT BARKE& Ot• 0..., l'""SIMf
-A tebite plan that woulcl have
beld the city ta• rat• and btOtiiht a tlleck for about S30 to
each homeowner; apparently
was scutUed Monday niibl by the
Huntmgt.oft Beach City CouncU.
Instead. the c:ouncll members
served ootlce that they want a re-•.
duc:tiOn In the city's property tu
rat• tbat bas remained at $1.62
per $100 assessed \'aluatioo for
more than a decade. -
Council members scheduled
Aua. 2t to set the property tax
rate for the new fiscal S'ear and it
appears that a cut of about seven
cents ls now probable.
Despite the expected cut.
homeowners would still pay• -a
bigber clt,y tax bill. .
An ~ ol an SB0,000 bonie
paid about $295 In cltJ property
taxes Jut )'ear. If a seven-ot1tt
reduetioo ia approved. tbe ta
bUl Would climb to approxiplate-
Jy $350 becllUle ol. 2.L6 perceat in·
crease in the cit1'• assessed
valuatl~ ~
Mayor Pro Tem Shenkman
stroqly backed bis pt-o tor
keeping the tax rate at its curreot
level while rernitUn& rebates t<>
bomeownen. ·
But hiS support didn't have Ule
support of bis colleaauu.
particular&y Harriett Wieder wttc>
has been the t vocal advocate·
o!atax fdn. • Wlectet arlUf)d for a to-
ce11ltiX rate reduction. o
She said that • t'etiate wotUd llie IUce •:tm-owin• the property ottae:ra a~" : .. • . . . . .
( TAXl:.$,PaceAZ)
H /F Tuetday. AugUll "· 11n
Order
' (
W NCroN <AP> -With
Preld l Carter' a approval, the
Pen~ ordered loday a
tumptlon ol m1l1Ua.ry r v wt ol
lb• am at ,taWJ ot 111 v.
aervt U ll•\94 u mb1tn1
tn ca or war ptl1onera tD
So\lt.beat Alla.
· ''Tbece ks no credible evidence
to indicate that any U S
servicemen are all ve and bein&
tlehl asalnat th el r wtl l ln
Southeast Alla," the Penta100
aaJd ln makin1 the announce-
ment.
1"bere ... .., been • rour·year
moTatorium on such reviews
bffause ol court challenges by
families of those unaccounted
for and by con1ressional and
F,....PageAJ
STORM •••
be minimal. The drought has had
its greatest impact in the
Northern California area. while
the Mojave and surrounding
desert areas are normally one of
the state's most llrid sections.
Jn the Imperial County area,
where irrigation has turned an
arid plain into one of the nation~
most productive cash crop areas,
some crops were reporled
flooded.
The National Weather Service
said 1.02 inches of rai• Cell Mon·
day at Alpine, 6 inch at Borrego
Springs, and .39 inch at Mt.
Palomar.
"The whole Imperial Valley's
pretty much under water now.
but so far we have no reports of
Injuries," said Kenny Dukes.
communications supervisor for
the Imperial County sheriff's of·
flee. ,
The noods left dozens of cars
stranded, while hotels and
· motels in nearby Barstow were
t:ompletely booked up by
nightfall, causing officials to set
'-up an emergency shelter to han-
dle the overflow.
Meanwhile, a dozen families
Crom Bombay Beach and Niland
on the eastern shore of the Salton
Sea were forced from their
homes because of flood waters.
Three trailers homes were over-
turned in the Oood.
A sheriff's department
spokesman said the towns were
hit by floods af\er the All·
American Canal northeast of
Niland developed a minor crack,
sendinl t.ocrenta or water into the
two desert comtnunllies.
Homes and businesses were
also reported flooded in Brawley, so miles farther south, where
two.foot flood waters broke
"' through bastily·made sandbag
dikes.
Highways 88 and 111 had also
been under water from Brawley,
near the Mexican border, to the
Salton Sea while Highway 78 was
flooded between Brawley, and
Blythe. But all th.r'ee were report·
ed open today.
Twenty to 30 homes, valued ·
at $100,000 to '200,000 ~ach, were
ravaged by flood water at the De
Ania Desert Country Club in Bor·
rego Sprinp In the desert east of
San Diego. Power outages were reported
throughout tbe area, while hail,
lightning and 60·mile-an·hour
wlnds were repocted in Palm
Springs.
Th' National Weather Servtce
said the heaviest thunderstorms
were centered in the MoJave
Detert.
Imu.-ance Talk Set
A representative of tb.e Wesiem
1J11urance lnf ormaUon Service
will dbc~s home loa~e& from ~urelary or fire at a W ednelSd-.Y
i"eetioa of tll• H\Ultlna Hunt·
1tnaton J:ieacl\ Netahborhood
~ .... Watdt Orcanlzation. The pro.
gram be&ins tt 1 p.m. in the police
altditorbam, 2000 Main Street,
1Huntinlton Beach. . ______ ._ ........... ~~--~--'
I
I
' I
t
I
' l
I
' I
I
'
pr lckntially ordered lnv..U1•·
tlona deelgned to find out whether
there &• any hope ror survivor•
amoow ~e stall unaccounted
for. A rfllpresent.ative of many Ot
the fam11Jes of men still listed as
mll!ltng denounced the deeialon
and said no status changes
i.hould be made until V~etnam
gives u full accounting of
Amencandead.
··we should put pressure oo
them to gi ve us un accounting,"
said Sarah Francis Shay. "They
Cthe Vietnamlse) said they
would. It would take about a year
if this country would push them
into it."
Mrs. Shay is a director o! the
National League of Families of
American Prisoners and Missing
in Southeast Asia.
But Rep. G .V. "Sonny "
Montgomery CD-Mass.), who was
chairman of a special House
committee that studied the prob·
lem, called Carter's decision •·a
humanitarian approach to a very
sad situation."
In its announcement, the
Defense Department stressed
thal the United States will con·
tinue efforts to obtain "as full an
accounting as possible" of what
happened to the 712 still listed as
missing or as war prisoners and
another 1,793 men who have been
technically declared killed in ac·
lion although their bodies have
never been recovered.
Families or those unaccounted
for and sllll earned on the books
as missing or war prisoners con
tinue to receive their full active
duty pay and allowanc.es pending
a determination of their rate.
A Pentagon spokesman said
that Carter approved resumption
of the case reviews last Friday,
acting on a recommendation
from the secretaries of the Army.
Navy and Air Force who have the
legal responsibility for. any
changes in status of casualties.
Lt. Col. Carlos Matthews, ad·
v1ser to Defense Secretary
Harold Brown on POW·MlA mat·
ters, told newsmen that a large
number of the 712 have been
missing for more than 12 years.
Of this total, 31 are still
technically listed as war
prisoners although North Viel·
nam released all those it said at
held in early 1973 and the govern-
ment has not suggested that any
are still alive
HB Planners
Poll Citizens
The HUntington Beach Plan-
ning Commi5$ion will seek opin·
ions toni~ht from city residents
interested in the future of the
coastal areas of the city.
The meeting starts at 7 p.m. In
city council chambers.
, Associate Planner Bryan
Austin noted that efforts to de·
termine citizen concerns regard·
ing planning problems and OP·
portunities is part of the local
coastal program mandated by
the California Coastal Act of
1976.
p,....Page..4J
GUARDS •••
or about a Juftior llf e9uards cap.
tured the National Junior:. urecu,t.rd Champlonshlp. defeat·
ln& teama from 10 CallfCJrn1a
beach in competition at San
Clemente.
Now the Junior Ufe1uard.!S face
two more cbaUtn&ea. one
physical, one financial.
On Monday a crew of the
l\ardlest would·be lifeauards will
join instructors for a casual drive
to Ute Mexican Border.
The l»rnlle retw-n <rip w\n
take a bit lonJer. The )'Ounpten
will run and swim their way back
to the pier in a grueling four-day
test of mental and physical con·
ditlonJng.
The participants will run at
leas\ 20 miles a day, and when
they come to a nautical obsµ-tl~
lion like a pier or jetty, they'll
put their tennis shoes around
their necks and swim around lbe
obsLacle.
Aching m11scles or not,
life1uard Mike Quinlan vows
there will be no dropouts or
stragglers left behind.
Quinlan and nreauard Peter
Noah are llearing up tor perhaps an even more difficult challenge
set for De(ember.
That's when the life11uard5
hope to take 10 or their charges to
New Zealand for a Christmas
vacation stay in Waitemata
("sparkling water"), Huntington
Beach's sister city on the· .out·
skirts or Auckland.
There the younesters wm
demonstrate their teChn.iques to
the "nippers," New Zealand's
equivalent or the local junior
lifeguard program.
Fund.rai1ln1 efforts are now un·
der way to generate $15,000 for
the trip. Since there has been no
indication of financial support
rrom city government, the
lifeguards may soon be seeking
help from the community.
It would be first trip abroad for
local lifeguards who annually
play boats to crews from
Australia and New Zealand'.
FroaRPageAJ
TAXES •••
"A rebate is tokenism while a
tax cut demonstrates our int~n·
lions," she said.
Councilman Al Coen· said that
he was in favor of cutting the t.ax·
es but also urged that money be
set aside in case of an adverse
appeals court ruling in the
transfer tax suit against the city.
H the city loses an appeal, it
may have to return abou( $1.S
million it collected in taxes on
real estate transactions for parts
or 1974and197S.
Coen said that is Cavorin& a tax
rate reduction of about seven·
cents while putting three cents
into a fund ror the lawsuit. The
case may not be settled for two or
three years.
Shenkman said that the city is
toying with fiscal chaos and
pleaded for a long-range plan for
property tax cuts.
He said he wouldn't support a
tax cut of more than three cents
this year.
Blockage Fails ·
SAN DIEGO t(P) -San Diego
County and coastal cities have
lost a court bid to tem1>9ranly
block the eale of lease for off·
shore oil drllline off th• county's
coastline.
• Al'WI ........
CHARLES CRAIC OF FOREST SERVICE WAU<S THROUGH BURNED BRUSH AND TREES
'Complete Oevaltatlon Resembling the Aftermath of Atomic Bomb' In California
E'ro•PageAJ . FI'fHT ••• ·
could lead to an Irvine Company
takeover of the 130·acre parcel.
In a letter to Secretary of the
Navy Graham Taylor,
Congressman Patterson said the
proposal "has caused un-
necessary friction between the
community and the Marine
Co~." · If we could get our
Conereuman to draft a limilar
letter, perhaps the problem
would 10 elaewhere.'' said Stan·
ton. He added that h• hoped the
swap proposal "waa only a trial
balloon that can now be fully
deflated.''
"If I were in his (B-adham's)
shoes -and I certainly wouldn't
want to be -I could give no
reason why the home$ should be
built there," said Stanton. One
man suHested a move to recall
Badham.
City offlclala have looked into
the possiblity or blocking water
and sewer hookups to the de-
velopment, but admitted that the
Marines could dli aeptlc tanks
and wells to get around thole
efforts. There ls only one access Toad
to the park site and officials say
the development would mean
severe traffic congestion.
Gardep Grove School District
officials have announced they
could absorb the l.300 students
generated by the project when
completed in 1982.
Bur@IH mjuftd .
In Surfboard Theft
Huntln«ton Beach police are
. seekinl a bloodied burglar who
apparently surrered severe
lacerations when he broke a win·
dow to enter th~ junior lifeguard
headquarters Monday nicht, tak·
in& two surfboards valued at $10.
Police reported findina a
blood·covered surfboard outside
the waterfropt hudquarters
shortly befote mldntgbt Monday.
The burglar was apparenUy In·
jured by broken atass and left the
board behind. but managed to
haul off two others, police said.
Marble-Cone Blaze
60 Percent Choked
I
By The A11oelated Preu
In the wake of the Marble·Cone
inferno is "complete devasta.
tion" resembling the aftermath
of an atomic bomb, but the fire
stlll searinc Central California
coastland may soon be con-
Allmmy]ury
'Deliberates
Seven CoUIJIB
A jury that bas been asked lo
find ac~used campus killer
Edward Charles Allaway guilty
or seven counts of first deeree
murder res\lmed lts delibera-
tions today in Oranae County
Superior Court.
Th~ panet, whtcb ls also con-
sidering two additional counts of
assault with a deadly weapon,
• deliberated about three hours
Mond~ before being sent home
for the evening by Judge Robert
P . Kneeland. ...
If they find Allaway, 38, guilty
on any or all of the murder al-
legations they will return to the
courtroom to begin hearing
testimony in the expected~anity
pba.se of the trial.
Alla ... ay baa pleaded not aullty
by reason ot insanity to ctlarges
that he shot nine people, seven of
whom died, on the Cal State
Fullerton campus on July 12,
1976.
PrC?Secutor Jam es Enright in·
dicated to the jury during final
arguments Monday !hat the
toll might have been much
higher bad not Allaway lost his
box of cartridges after claiming
nine VfctJms.
Deputy P\lblic Defender Ron
BuUer said be will prove through
psychlat.rlsts and a record ol Al·
laway's previ~, mental Illness
that his client was insane
throughout the six-minute cam-
pus carnage.
tained, forestry orncials·said to-
day.
The blaze, now the third
laraest in the slate's history, has
consumed 130,500 ~cres in the
Los Padres National Forest and
adjacent private land. It was re·
ported 60 percent contained.'
'Back·buming -fire lines con·
structed ahead of the path of the
fire with the brush or fuel burned
in between -so far has proven
effective, orficials said.
'·~e're hoping by Thursday
we'll'1ave the bacl<·burning line
tied an all the way," said William
Morrison, U.S. Forest Service
spokesman. "If everything goes
right then, it will probably be OD·
ly a few days until it will be con·
tained."
Besides the huge Marble-Cone
fire, six other fires still burned ln
drought·parched CaliCornia, the
state Department of Forestry
said.
Lightning, the cutprit in a
chain of nearly 1,000 fires that
began Aug. 1, sparked the newest
blaze Monday near Lake
Elsinore in Riverside .County.
Flames engulfed 400 ..aCr"es, but
the fire was hoped to be con:
tained later today. the CDF said.
Fro111 Page Al
PAY •••
ed exclusively to retirement
benefits.
The salary for a police officer
at the top of the pay range would
go from $18,076 annually to
$19,428 the first year.
A lop.rated fireman would go
from $16, 188 a year to $17 ,410.
Fountain Valley employs about
56 policemen and 33 firefighters.
.Stanton said that, the city also
has made salary adjustments to
• administrative officers and pro-
fessional and technical employes
averagJng 7.5 percent for one
year.
L09 ANGELES CAP> -Wind·
driven ra1mWml spawned by
11'\lrric.ue Doren lubed tbe normally parcbed Southern
C'aUlorilla d ert. cauSiq ftUh
(1oodl iind ·~ tbouaaods of Uavden.
• Tbwe wwe no eonf"mned re. ~rls of tnjuriea.., altboa1b nnl perlOQI were reported
lssiQlearb'~.
Law aan:emenl ontcJala said
---L~..;;,uo.__. ... ,.
they may have cbecke4 nto
DlcMll and were un bit co COO·
tan tbelr famllla becaYH of
downed teJephciie t1ne1. •
A nuti flood watch continued
In etreCt alter the rains hatted
thla monaint. More ratn wa
forecut by the National WeJther
Service.
Traffic was stopped on .In·
terstate 15, the trans-Mojave
highway that i.s the major link
They're Squeakg Clean
between Las Ve1a1 and Los
An1ele1. wbeo flood waters
aeveral t t deep dumped tons of
mud and debris on the road sur-
face at several points.
California Transportation
Department work crews cleared
tbe eoutbbOuDd lanes early to-
day, but there was no word on
when Use northbound lanes would
be open.
"Crews and 'heavy equipment
Mrs. Patricia Stroich of Costa Mesa was
. cleaning her pool deck when she knocked
' · over a bottle of detergent. The liquid
• cleaner poured into the woman's Jacuzzi
:-where son Sammy <right> and his friends.
Mike and John Harrison <left and center>
were soaking. The resulj? Instant .bubbles
and at 'least a half hour of fun Monday for
the youngsters and pet cockapoo, Abby.
Good clean fun, too.
By MICHAEL PASKEVICR oe ... ~.,.._. .....
Fountain.Valley Mayor Roger
$t,aoton vowed Monday night ~t be would Joln citi.Jena in
"bot oC bulldozers to stop a pro-posed U.S. Marine Corps housing
~evelopment of 1.300 units in the
130-acre core area bf Mlle Square
PJlrk.
Stanton announced during a
Rllbllc hearina a\tended by about
lZO people that the City Council
would conaider a · resoluUon
tooicht formally opposb11 the
plan or any cban&e in the recrea-
tional .Una of the park.·
Not ~e citizen spoke in favor
of the Marines proPQSed develop.
ment on land formally u.aed as a
helicopter landine strip.
"If the Marines move in, then I
move out," remarked one man in
the audience. AbQut 3$ people
spoke aeainst the plan.
Howevei. Stabton admltt~
have been goi~ all nlaht oo the
northboundlabes and bav~ yet to
get down CO where the pavement
is -or was,.. said carrraos
spokesJDan Lance Stalker.
The effect o( the rain on the
state's cJ.rouabt was expected to
be mlnirital. The drou1bt baa had
its ereatest impact ln tbe
Northern California area, while
the Mojave and surrounding
desert areas are normally coe of
tbeatate's m06t arid sections.
In tbd Imperial County area.
where ir!':icallon .l\u tu~ an
arid plain into 00$ of the nation'•
mott PrQduetive cash crop areas,
some crops were reported flooded. .
The National We•tber Service
said 1.02 Inches of rain fell Mon-
day at Alpine, .6 inch at Borreeo
Springs. and .39 lncb at Mt. Palomar.
'"lbe whole Imperial V.alley•s
pretty much under wate now.
but ao far we bave no reports ol injuries,.. said Kenny Dukes.
communications supervisor for
the Imperial County sheriff's of-
fice.
The floods left dQ%ens of cars
stranded, while hotels and
motels in nearby Barstow were
completely booted up by
(See STORM, Pa1e .\!)
:Cam.pns· ~ork Set
Development work on Sad-
dleback College's controversial
second campus js expected to
begin In October. according to a
four-phase time schedule an-
nounced by college pfficial.s tbist
week.
The satellite campus, which
was stalled for more than a year
as trustees and residents arguect
over its location, is expected tO
open its doon to realdeota of the
college district for the fall
semester, 1978.
It will be built on 20 acres at the
intersection of Jeffrey Road and
Irvine Center Drive in Jrvtiie.
Escrow on the $900,000 purchase
from the Irvine Company is ex-
pected to close this inonth.
District officials said they will
have to stick to a strict Ume table
of development and coostructlon
if the)' want tp open the campus
ontlme.
"Each phase ls1scbeduled ao
that we will be proceedmg with
one while planning the next, 0
said F.dward A. Hart, district U•
slstant superintendent. "All
phases must lntermesh for us to
meet our goals.''
Ht Nid a contract for the ·eo to
-d~___pr0Ject of aracllng. prep-
aratRii o(-lhifs for buildblp.
some pavtn1 and olf tedev ...
ment ol uWlUes is ached\lled to
be awarded by Oct. 10.
The constnactiop contract for
the buildblg "sbella'~ should be
awarded in Decem~. aceord·
ing to the plan.
The colle1e bu ~ desieiled
with a cluster con~ that Will
permit flexible ud inexpensive
expansion as l~ ls needed. IniUal-
ly, it will provide between 30,000
and 35,000 square feet for
clas5rooms and admlnistrauv, offices.
•
MISSION
~ VIEJO
~
2 m 8
J
O.llyl'\llll ...
SECOND CAMPUS Seddl~k Wiii H•v• Two
Tax Cuts·
By 'Fra118it
BOard~yed.
TliiJ 197'1'.11 property tu rate · ·
for tbe Orange Coynty Transit
District (OCTD) will be triDlOled
by leu tbAD one half cent to 3.96
cents per $100 ot asseQed valua-
tion. OCTD General Mantlger Ed
Loriti said today. Lot1tz based the rate on as.
sessed valuaUon figures received
Monday from county Auditor·
Controller Vic Heim.
Last year's rate was 4.26 cents.
OCTD can levy a rate of up to five
cents per $100 QI assessed valua-
tiOQ.
The rate will raise $3.6 million
of the $50.3 mWJon bud1et adopt-
ed earlier by OCTD ~tors.
The 11ulk of OCTD revenue comes
from .iate and federal subsidies.
I.:oritJ said. diftctors will be
asked to hold a special meeting
Aue. 26 to formally set the tax
.. rate.
With last year's 4.26-cent rat•.
the owner Of a home assessed at
$50',000 spent $S.32 to f'mance
OCl'D operations.
J/his home went up in assessid
value this year by the lS.2 per·
cent countywide average, bis
home now is assessed at $.5'1,600.
The 3.96-cent rate then would
costblm $S. '10.
Assessed valuation countywi.de
went up by 1$. 7 percct but Coun·
ty Aasea•or Bradley Jacobs
estJmateS that 4.$ ~rcent of that
was f<>f new conatrucUon, !Man·
in& UMi av.erge,li:icreue in exiat-
inl homes was abOUt lS.2 per-
cenL ·
I.
Offlc1ab ol the We1lern World
edical FoundaUOD, who are
pl&nn.ln1 lo build a lS3 ·acre
h09pkal compl• .ut to &.be UC
l campus, aay they an~·
tused °"" a Sl mllllon •lft 1tven
th• UDl ty'w medltal school
by lo.n ltvlne Smith.
The doaalion, which rnu.st be
met wtth an addiUonal 11 million
from the unlvenlty's re1ent.s,
wu announced Jut week by Mrs.
Smlth. She •aid it ls t.o be used
"u a stimulant to the 1rowth of
UCl'a medical school and health
sciences complex ··
Gas Tax
Share Hit
By Panel
Irvine transportation com-
missioners are considering send-
ing a complaint to the California
Highway Com mission that
Orange County is not getting its
fair share or state gas taxes. '
The letter, to be considered by
Irvine's commissioners next
week, points out that Orange
County residents pay 7 .3 percent
of the total state gas tax fund, but
only 4.1 percent of that fund is re-
turned to Orange County.
"Considering the number of
critical traffic links, the high
growth rate and the need for new
{acilities, the return on the gas
tax funds is not commensurate
with the actual needs of Orange
County.'' the letter states.
Commissioners suggested
sending the letter at the last com-
mission meeting after learning or
the state's six-year planning pro-
gram.
The six-year program iq.·
dicates that the funds to be al·
located t.o Orange County will.not
meet the. minimum transporta-
tion needs of Orange County, ac·
cording to Irvine Transportation
Engineer Les Card.
The proposed letter states that
Orange County residents benefit
from roads built elsewhere in the
county, but that the state's
economy also is partially depen-
dent on business in 0ran1e Coun·
ty. Without sufflcient roads,
Orange County business will
decline, the letter continues.
The letter, if ~pproved by the
commission, wilf t,e sent to the
next state highway commission
meeting, to be held in early Sep-
tember in Santa Monica.
"It is our hope that your com-
mission wlll provide a more
equitable distribution or funds
throughout the state relative to
level of contribution and proven
need,•• the letter concludes.
Irvine Cc;>uple
F.ipg Suit
Over 4 Dogs
An Irvine couple hJ'le 1one to
court in a bid to compel their next
door neiehbors to eet rid of tour · dogs.
Terry and Eleanora Wone ot
4882 Tamarack Way claim that
the cloJs owned by Robert'!:. and
Shirley Nlfhtingale, 4892
Tamarack Way, are responsible
for .. loud noise and obnoxious
odor ...
lt is also alleged in the Orange
County SuperiOI' Court la~ult
which leeb $2'10,000 in damlges
that Niabttneale struck Won&
durtu a dlacusslob ot the dispute
and fbat tr1e .J>re_enant Mu.
Wong mi.Scan1ed as a result of
the stress.
Also named u co-defendants
i,n the actUIG are Paul H. and
Cynthia L. Busby who are lden·
tiffed as owners of the property
~acent to the Woqa.
A $U rrullfon medical educa·
lion Md reHarcb bulldlna ii un-
der con.lrUttloo on the campua
and t 1 ner•ll)' believed that Mra. Smith'• 1m would bo wsed to buUd a •.1 million •mbulatory
patient care center on campus to
provide outf atient and emercen-
c y medica services for com·
mumty residents n-.t agparenUy confiicta with
WHlern World plans for a
~mlliar faclllty. Representatives
of UCI have met with Western
World officials for the.past three
months to plan for such a
medical complex.
The complex is to be built on a
133·ac:re parcel of land given to
the foundation in 1968 by the
Irvine Company.
The confusion arises over
whether Mrs. Smith's gift will af.
rect the foundaU0n's plans ~ch
foundation board chairman Alan
McMUlen said were to have been
filed within 60 days. He said he
was hopeful of having ground
breaking in early 1978.
··Right now we 're Just trying to
verify Mrs. Smith's donation,"
he said today. '"Two of the mem-
bers of our board of directors are
having lunch with her.·•
He said the foundation is also
trying to meet with the new
owners of the Irvine Company to
find out if Mrs. Smith's gift to the un~· M!ity in any way affects tBe
co any's nine-year-old land
gift t the foundation . .
'"The new management of the
Irvine Company has been ex-
tremely busy, so we've been una-
ble to meet with them so far," he
said. "I am trying to contact
(Irvine Co. director> Don Bren.
"I just hope thJt a S1 million
gilt to the university doesn't scut-
tle a $100 million hospital com-
plex," McMilJen said.
. Fro.PageAJ
F1GHT •••
Badham is a member of the
Armed Services Committee that
will vote on the Marines• funding
request for the housing -project.
He has power to veto the move.
City officials fear that the swap
could lead to an Irvine Company
takeover of the 130-acre parc.'"el.
In a letter to Secretary ot the
Navy Graham Taylor .
Congressman Patterson said the
proposal "has caused un-
necessary friction between the
community and the Marine
Corps."
"If we could get our
Congressman to draft a similar
Jetter, perhaps the pr<tblftn
would go elsewhere," said Stan-
ton. He added that he hoped the
swap proposal "was only a trial
balloon that can now be f\ally
deflated."
"If I were in his (Badbam's)
shoes -and I certainly wouldn't
want to be -I could give no
reason why lhe homes should be
built there," said Stanton. One
man suggested a move to recall
Badham.
City officials have looked into
the possiblity of blockln& water
-and sewer hookups to th• de-
velopment, but admitted that the
Marines could dig septic tanks
and wens to get around those
effortl.
There ia only one access road
to the park site and officials say
the development would mean
severe traffic congestlon.
Garden Grove School Dlltrict
official• have announced they
could absorb the 1.300 ltUdel:lts
generated by the project when
COlJlpleted in 1982.
A citbens ~ tommittee baa been
formed and members will take to
the streets this weekend with a
petiUoo drive lo eenerate com-
munity opposJtloo to the plan.
As a ftnal eUort. Stemoo said
he wquld &it in front of b'1lldosen te> block the develo.e_ment.
"It's so biiarre. that one would
th.int tbey Couldn't poulbly eo through with tt," aaid Stanton
with a balf~•mile. "But they <Harli>e1) aren'tamUlna."
AJ
A sheriff's departm•nl
apok mM a d the town1 w
bit by nooda after the AU~
American Canal nOt"tbeaat of
NUand developed a 01inor crack,
sending torrents o/ water int.o t.he
two desert.communities
Homes al'ld businesses were
also reported flooded fn Br,wley,
50 miles farther south, where
two-foot flood waters broke
through hastily-made s&ftdbae
dikes.
-*',..,..... CHAR .. ES CRAIL OF FOREST SERVICE WAL.f<S THROUGH BURNED BRUSH AND TREES Highwa~ 88 and-111 had also
been under water from Brawley,
near the Mexican bbrder1 to the
Salton Sea wblle Jnghway 18 was
Oooded between Brawley and
Blythe. But all three were report-
ed OJ)eD today.
. 'Complete Deveatatlon RHembllng the Aftermath of Atomic Bomb' '" CalHornla
Big Blaze. Nearly Held Twenty to 30 homes, valued
at $100,000 to *200,000 each, were
ravaged by fiood water at the De
Ania Desert Country Club ln Bor·
rego Springs ln the desert east ot San Diego.
Aftermath Said .Lfke Atomic Bomb Blasi
#
By Tbe Astoe:Jated Presa
In the wake or the Marble-Cone
inferno ls 1'complete devasta·
lion'' resembling the aftermath
of an atomic bomb, but the fire
still searing Central California
coastland may soon be con·
tained, forestry officials said to-
day.
The blaze, now the third
largest in the state's history, has
consumed 130,~ acres ln the
Los Padres National Forest and
adjacent private land. It was re-
ported 60 percent contained.
Back-burnlne -fll'e lines con-
structed ahead of the path ot the
fire with the brush or fuel burned
in between -so Jar has proven
efrective, officials said.
"We're hopinc by Tbunday
we'll have the baek·burnin1 line
Briggs Seeks Cash
In 2 Co~ast Parties
Orange County Republican As·
semblyman John Briggs could
pick up as much as sso.ooo in bis
campaian for California gov-
ernOl' alter two parties to be held
Thursday nieht in Newport
Beach.
Organizers say the two affairs
-a cocktail re.cepUon at the
Marriott Hotel and a dinner al
Ambrosia restaurant -are
aimed at getting campaien dona-
tions rrom the county's develop-
ment industry.
the development community,
will pay '500 each to dine with the
Fullerton legislator. be said.
The key element of Brius'
campaign is a stronc stand
against homosexual leacbers.
tied in all the way," said William
Morrison, U.S .. Forest Service
spokesman. "If everythlne goes
right then. it will probably be on·
ly a few days unW it will be con·
•tained."
Besides the huee Marble-Cone
fire, aix other fires sWl burned in
drou&hl·parcbed California, the
state Departmen~ of Forestry
said'.
Lightning, the culprit in a
. chain of nearly 1.000 ~ that bee an Aug. 1, ~parked the newest
blue Monday near ·Lake
Elsinore in Riverside County.
Flames engulted 400 ac;res, but
the fire was hoped to be con-
tained later today, theCDFsaid.
The Marble-Cone was amon1
those torched by nature ud of·
ficlals would only hazard a
damage estimate of "several
millions of dollars."
Power outages were reported
throughout the area, while hail.
lightning and 60·01lle-an-bour
winds were reported. in Palm Springs.
The· NatJonal Weather Service
said the heaviest thunderstorms
were centered in the Mojave
Desert.
A weather 1ernce spokesman
said Hurricane Doreen, l~ off 1 the southern tip of B~aja
California, would likely be down·
graded t.o a tropical storQ.l today.
* * * Wall .of Water .
fDghesHoma
In Mexicali
"lt looks almost like pictures
of Hiroshima after the atomic
bomb," Morrison said. ''There
oe areas .. of complete devasta-
tion, with only little twigs stick-MEXICAIJ, Mexjco <AP> -A
ing out." wall o1 water and mud has
Morrison said officials crushed rumsy houses in poorer
estimated the energy released by sections of Mexicali after a thun-
burning 1,000 acrea in lhe fire derstorm.
tone was ··equtval9nt to a one No deaths were reported, but a
megaton atomic bomb." police spokesman said man}'peo-
ln aasessin1 the sieae at "le ih the border city wen in .. ""We're eettlng an unbelievable
response," said Scott Biddle,
sponsor of the cocktail reception.
"There's really • tremendouJ
amotint of-11\ler.est.''
County Okays
Asphalt Plant
In Irvine Area
A proposal t.o build an asphalt
and concrete plant in an un·
developed regioa north of.. Jnine
was approved unanimoual)' Mon-
day by the Oranae County Plan·
ning Commission.
Marble-Cone, he added. "The Jured.
fire is in a way a part or a natural "It's st.Ul raining bere, '' police -
cycle. The forest will almost Lt. Mario Ort.i• said today.
begin to rebuild immediately." ''About two-thirds of Mexicali is
Biddle, who is president otlUd.·
die Development, Inc., a
Newport Beach ti.rm. said the
cocktail party, for which auests
are being cbarged $100 a couple,
was moved from a private home
to the Atrlum Court of the hotel
because or the. large response. "We have in exceu of 300 ~
ple coming/' Biddle added.
Biddle said Brigs• catnpai,0
committee has set Ul> the dinner
that follows at the exclusive
French restaurant.
The 30 guests, also members df
Man Arrested
Iii Assawt · .
With Ra~ket
The proposal by Blue Diamond
Materials or Long Beach ls de-
signed in part t.o reduce sand and
gravel truck traffic through
Irvine and south Santa Ana.
Blue· Diamond curreiltlY has
plants near Jamboree and Bar-
ranca RQada in Irvine al)d in
south Santa Ana. accordlne to a
report to the commission.
But, . once the new plant is
o~rating, traffic inLo those loca-
Uqns•bould decreaae.
Som.e :5m.all animals -liards underwater. rodents -have already iiturned ... Tarhou...lastnitht. wew.,.
to their homes in the blackeoed · • throwing water out of our homes
bruahland, be a aid. and, when we threw it out. it was
Weather is for now wtrting ·into streets that looked like
with fire fighters and weather rusbingrivera."
forecasters on duty <>n the fire Telephone and electric service
lines predict favorable condl• wereoutforseveral hours.
tions will persist for several In a telephone interview, Ortiz
days, Morrison said: nld Mexicali houses "weren't
Otficlals said contingency made for rain. Even major build·
evacuation plans for nearby ings have gotten soaked. Some
towns should not be needed. houses in poorer areas have
''There's no reason ri•t now to faUenin."
be talking evacuation,., satd Ortiz was unable to estimate
Morrison. "We don't think it'll bow many houses were
Rel away from us this time... destroyed or darnued.
• ..... ~ • I
~ • '
Mrs. Patricia Stroich of Costa Mesa was
cleaning her pool deck when she knocked
over a bottle of detergent. The liquid
cleaner poured into the woman's Jacuzzi
·., wh.ere son Sammy <right> and his friends,
Mike and John Harrison Cleft and center>
were soaking. "l'he result? Instant bubbles
and at least a half hour of fun Monday for
the youngsters and pet cockapoo, Abby.
!'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Wlnd-
c1riven rainstorms spawned by
•llurricane Doreen lashed the
:normally patched Southern
• Californla desert. causing flash
flood! and strandln1 thousands of
· travelers. .
There w~e no confinn6d re-
port;s of injurie$, although
teveral persons were Teporled
missi.oa eafly today. Law enforcement officials salct
Good clean fun, too~
they may bave checked into
motels and were unable to con-
tact their f~Uies because of
downed telephone lines.
A Oash fiood watch continued
in effect after the rains halted
this morning. More -rain was
forecast bt tbe NaUonal Weather
Service. ,,
Traftlc was stopped on In-
terstate 15, the trans-Mojave hiehW'aY that is lbe maJor link
"Two men )lave to go out to the
rlsld ee; pU!l the meter out of
\tl• ll'CUnd aDd brinl it into the ·cop, .. Weeu said. "This can
add up to quite an expense for the city. 'l'bat IS wby we have to
charge."
~ VIEJO
" 2 8
J
DAILY PILOT L/SC
Lawsuit
llejecied
l
)
'A Laaua NlfU•I womaa'1 cMI~ GI Or • OoatJ Cor Der '• rulint that ber
1'uband cmunllted suicide•
hit CV Glf a cwt 11tar
Dau kUbor WU~ lfon.
df.7 la er.a. CcJUDt1 ar eo.t. J~ Frank Domentcblnl told laW,.. (QI' lln. SbU'OQ 5'eftm
" tbat he was bound b¥ law to .-
bald Ibo llDdlu ID tho f Gary w-.anr Ste•
ject her CGDlmtlon that b.b
was an accideat.
Ste¥em, u. "' ... to Bay,l..apna Nl&\lel, dledCIDJWy
14, 19'16, wbeo bis car left the
road at high apeed and fdl 200
feet from cliffs overlooldq Dana
Harbor.
But Judge Domeruchini made
it clear Monday that he thou&ht
the coroner's finding waa Wl·
reasonable. He uraed llrs.
Stevens• lawyer to pursue aJt1aJ
reversal of the J'Uliq.
Corooer's offtcers returned a
verdict of suicide after notiftC
that Stevens was drivlq at a hi~h rau; of speed, made no at.
lempt to brake at the clilf edge
and had been drinking heavily.
It was also noted durlnc lbe
coroner's investigation that
Stevens argued with bis
~stranged wile shortly before be
left in the car. '
It was argued ror Mrs. Stevens.
beneficiary of a $2.S,000 life in·
surance policy on her husband,
that she and her busband bad
been planning a recooclllation.
She testified that be left no
suicide note and 1ave no
evidence of despondeocy to
friends or reJatives.
Brigg• Sets
FundRaUen
In Newport
Orange COOnty Republican Aa·
semblyman John Brilas could
pick up as much as $30,000 ln his
campaign for California gov-
e rnor after two parties to be held
Thursday night in Newport
Beach.
Organizers say the two affairs
-a cocktail reception al the
Marriott Hotel and a dinner at
Ambros ia r estaurant -are
• aimed at getting campaign dona·
lions from the county's develop-
ment industry. •
"We're gelling an unbelievable
response," said Scott Biddle,
sponsor of the cocktail reception.
·'There's r eally a tremendous
amount of interest."
Biddle, wbo is president of Bid·
die Development, Inc., a
Newport Beach firm, said the
cocktail party, for which auests
~re being .charged $HIO a couple,
was moved from a private home
to the Atrium Court of the hotel
because of the large response.
''We have in excess of 300 peo-
ple comin&, ''Biddle added. •
Biddle said Briggs' umpaip
committee has set up the dinner
that follows at the exclusive
French restaurant.
The 30 guests, Also members of
the development community.
will pay $500 each to dlne with Ute
Fullerton leplator, be said.
The key element of Brlus'
campaign is a strong stand
agaimt homosexual teacben. ·
TmmPonden
Playboy Bali
STORM •••
on the eastern $hor'e ol the Salt.cJG
Sea were force4 from their
homes bectµse of Ooocl Wat.a.
Three t:talles lio&nes wen over-
turned in the Oood.
A sflerUf'a department
spokesmao said the towns wt!r'e
bit by floods after the All.,
A'merican Canal northeast • of
Niland developed a minor crack,
sendi.ng torrents ol water into the
two desert communities.
Homes and b\ISinesses were
also reported flooded in Brawley,
50 miles f artber south, where
two-(oot Oood waters broke
through b~tily-made sandbag
dikes.
ffllbways 88 and 111 had also
been unc:\er water from Brawley,
near the Mexican border, to the
Salton Sea while Higl,way 78 wu
flooded' betweed Brawley and
Blythe. But aJI three were report.
ed open today.
Twenty to 30 homes, valued
at $100,000 to $200,000 each, were
ravaged by flood water at the De
Anza Desert Country Club {n Bor·
reao Springs in the deselt east ot
SahDiego.
Power outages were reported
thn>uabout the area, while ball,
li'htning and 60-mUe-an-bour
winds were reported ln Palm
Spfino.
The· ~ational Weather Service
said the heaviest thunders1onns
were centered in the Mojave
Desert.
A weather service spokesman
said ltunicane Doreen, lying off
the s outhern t ip or Baja
Califomia, would likely be down-
graded to a tropica1 storm today.
land Accepted
LOS ANGELES <AP >
Tlllrty-tbree years after be fiaa
inducted into th& Army at Ft.
.Mac.Arthur, city schools Super\n·
tendent Bill Johnston returned to
the site to accept 52 acres ot land
on behalf of the school district.
By..,.AueclatedPress tied ln all t.beway," said William
lntbewakeoftheMarble-Cone Morrison, U.S. Forest Service
inferno is "complete devasta-s~kesman. ..If everything goes
Uon" r.enQlblipl the .aftermath rtibt then, it will proJ>ably be on·
of an awmc ti"omb, bltt the fire ly a few days unW lt wUI be con·
sUJI searing Central California tained."
coastland may soon b~ con-Besides the huge Marble-Cone
talned, forestry officials said to-fire, six other fires still burned in
daI. .... drought.parch~ California, the
The blaze, now tbe third ?Stile Department. of Forestry
lafgest in the st.ate'• history, bas \.said. consumed U0,500 acres in the Lightning, the culprit in a
Los Pam-. National Forest JlDd chain of nearly 1,000 fireS that
adjacent private land. It was re-began Aug. 1, sparked the aewest
ported60percentcontained. blaze Monday near Late
Back-burning -ftreiines con-Elsinore in Riverside County.
structed ahead of the path of the Flames engulfed 408 acres, but
fire with the brush or fuel burned the fare wu ho~ to be con-
in between -so far bas proven tainedlatertoday, theCDFsaid.
effective, officials said. The 'Marble·Cone wu among
"We're hoping by Thursday those torched by nature and of.
we'll have the back-burning line ficials would pnly hazard a
damage estimate of "several
Pie P14'1ters
Ohio Chi,e/
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP>
-Ohio Gov. James A.
Rb~ was strutk in the
side of the face with a
cream pie today arter
demonstrators cbantinc
"Remember K~ SUik!"
disrupted op~ning
ceremonies at the U4th Ohfo~te Fair.
The 67-year-old gov-
ernor, whose gJuses w~re
knocked l~, later com-
plained of paib in his right
eye and said be would seek
medical treatment, ac-
cording to an aide.
Seven people were ar-
rested, Including Steven E .
Conllff, 27, of Columbus,
who was charged with mis·
demeanor assault and with
disturbing a lawful meet· ing, police said.
millions of dollars."
"It. looks almost like pictures
or Hiroshima aft.4'r the atomic
bomb." Morrison said. "There
are areas of complete devasta-
tion, with only little twigs stick·
ing out." •
Morris on s aid officials
estimated the energy released by
burning 1,000 acres in the fare
zone was "equivalent to a\ one
megaton atomic bomb."
In asaessint the s iege at
Marble-Cone, he added, "The
fite is in a way a part of a natural
eycle. The fores..t will almost
begin to rebuild Immediately."
ISome small animals -lhards,
rodents -'have already returned
to their homes in the blackened
brusbland. he said.
Weather is for now working ..
with ftre fiahters and weather
forecasters on duty on ~ fire
llnes predict favorable condl·
tions will persist for several
days, Morrison s aJd.
Officials said conttneencx
evacuation plans for nearby
towns should not be needed.
"There's no reason right now to
be talking evacuation," said
Morrison. uwe don't think It'll
~et away from us this time."
C~ Unified ScbGol Ola·
trict lnlst.ees ~Ced the IW•
igoation of one el•m•ntary
school prlncjpat MO'ldu -4 tmt
appainbnent ol two ...principal&
and two allistut prin"Jlals.
Michael Cole. principal of
Dana Elementary School I.Del the
Multiple 1lan4lcapped Fac\lity h\
Dana Point ,since. Septtmber.
1975. is leavtn1 edueltlon to
eatablishbisown buah1~.
Cote. 39. hu been ott ilck leave since January, when he col·
lal>Sed at a distrlct·SPGD!ored a4-mlnlstr.ators• Ylorbbop ln Escon·
dido. I •
A resl(lent o£ La~a Niguel,
be came' to tbe Capistrano dls-
t,rict IJl 1966 u a -cla11roorn
teacher and was princJpal at
Las Palmu Elementary School
in San Clemente tbr four y..,..
before his asslg'nment to DanL
Appotntmmta announced Mou-
da1 were:
-Unda Landers, new prtn.
clpal ot Barcelona Hil1I Elemen·
tary School ID M1"lon Viejo,
-Richard Campbell, new
principal of Dana Elementary
School and tbe Multiple Han· dicapped Facility in Dana Point.
-Dennis Gibbs, full Ume U ·
s is tant principal of J>ana
Elementary School 8~.tbe
Multiple Handicapped Facility.
-Sharon Sandeliu, full time
teaching assistant principal of
P allsades Elementary School ln
Capistrano Bea.ch.
Mrs. Landen. 33. comes to the C~iltrano district ftorn J'oun.
tain Valley where ahe ,,., upper
level learping coordinator for
grades six to ~t. A resident ol
Huntlngt.oo Beach. abe worked
nine yean lD lhe Fouotaln Valley
school di3trlct. :
She holds a muter~• derree
from Pepper<lhie and a
.
No.oney,
No Bingo
Friday morn.ln1 bingo
games in I.rvlne have been.
canCeled because there's .
not much tntetest hr play-
in& binao without gam-
bling.
The city pl'GIJ'am, which
began.. last spring, drew
mostly ienior citi~ens with
a •Prinklin& of younger
housewives.
Butinrecentmonths, the
turnout fell rrom an
averageof2Sbingoplayers
to aboot 10 °old f attbfuls. ..
which wasn't enoueh to
sustain the program.
A city aide eitplalned
that the bingo enthusiasts
were not quite as en·
thusiastlc about \he came
after they learned t~at
there WOUid be no money
pr11es, just little trinkets
brought from home by the
participants.
r
bachelor'• from Arbon• State.
Richard Campbell, "Sf. came to
tbe Caplltr-.no dlatr1ct 1D 1'12 aa teacblna vie prJncipal at D
He ha been aaabtant _ertpclJ*
U.. llnce 1Vl5 and aeiani t>da·
dpalalnce Januaey.
Campbell lives ln La~.~ Niguel and hU been tea
since 1186. He ls currenUy work-
inj toward a doctorll\e at United
States Intem.atJonal UaJ"tll"&ily
in San Dle10.
Denali Gibbs, !!_r tauiht "1 the Redl~ Unified :school D~ct
before com.lq to the CapUt:nno~
district in 1974.. He bu been the
elementary assiatant principal at
Pallaades School In Capistrano
Beach since l!rlS. He is a San
Juan ~trano realdeot.
. Mn. Sandelin. 29, bas taueht 11
Moultoo Element.Uy stbOOI • in
Lacuna Nl1Uel ·~· 1'1$ ~ WU teachJ.ng asslst&Dt Pilnch>&t
there tut year. Sbe was-recently
chosen "Ed~atar of they~·
by the Lag\lnt NJ,uei ..r-.ycees ... .
Allaway Jury
Delibenitea
Seven Couni.
A jury that bas' been abd to
find accused ca111pua tiller
Edward Charles Allaway guilty
of seven counts of flnt dearee
murder resumed lts dellbera·
tions today in Oranae County
Superior Court.
The panel, whicb is also con-
sidering two additional counts oC
assault with a deadly weapon,
cW.lberat.ed about three hours
Monday before being aent home
for Uie evenmg by Judge Robert
p . Kneeland. ~
If (bey find Allaway, 38, guilty
on any or all of tbe murder al-
legations they will return to the
courtroom to begin bearing
testimony in the expected aanlty
pbaseofthe trial.
Allaway hu plea~ed not cuilty
by reason of lnsanlty to charges
that be shot nine people, seven of
whom dled, on the Cal State
Fullerton campu1 on July 12,
1976.
.Prosecutor J 1.111es Enright ID·
dlcated to the Jury dW'ina final
arguments Monday that the
toll might have been much
hldler had not Allaway Jost his
box or cartrictees after claiming
nioe victlms.
Deputy Public Def ender Ron
BdtJer said be will pcove tbrou&b
psychiatrists and a record of Al·
lawa.y's previous mental Illness
that his client was insane
throughout the six-mindte cam·
pus carnage.
• LOS ANOELl:S CA~) -Wlftd·
riven ralQltor'ml 1pawned by
urncane Dof'ffl\ luhed tbe ormaUy parched Southern
Calllarma deSftt. nuslnc n•h ftoodi and atrandin• tboUsands ol
lfaVdel'$
Tbere were no coJlflnMd re-tort& _of tnjurlH, althoucb
~ penoo.s were reported
~iau11 early~.
Law enforcemut officlala "1d
tb y may b.ave cheeked tnto
motdl and wen unable to COD·
tact tbelr f amUiea because ol
downed telephone lines.
A 0 .... noc>a watch eontinqed
tn fllfect after the ram. halted
this monung. More rain WU
forecast b)' the National Weather
Se[Ytee.
Trame waa stopp4!1d on Jn-
terstate lS, the tra.ns·MoJave
highway that is the major link
have beieli aorN all nt1bt on the
northbound lanes and have yet to
get down to where the pavement
is -or wu,.. aaid CalTrans
spokeaman Lance SU.Iker.
The elf ect ot the raJn on the
state's drought wu expected to
be i:n.inlmal. The drou1bt bu had
its greatest Impact in the
NorlhMl Cali!Omta area, while
the Mojave and surroundJng
desert areas are normally ooe of
"The whole lmpcrtai Valley's
pret't.r much Un<t.-water now, .•
but so far we have no report-s of
injuries,.. said Kenny Dukes,.
communications supervisor for
the Impetjal County sberifra of.
fice.
The floods left dozens of cars
stranded, while hotels and
motels ln nearby Ba.nrtow were
completely \ooted up by
(See ~RM, Pase Al)
·M~~ PlmiSo~h~
They're Sqaeakg Clean
•NB,M~t
In Slaying
_ The wtdow Of a man wbo was
.accidentally shot by police dUrlnt ''be attempted robbery of a
Corona del Mar market took le1&al
action Monday a1ainst the city of Newport Beach and the market.
'Damages tb be determined in
trial court are being sou1bt from
the city and Albertson'• Market
in the Orange County Superior
Court lawsuit flied by Mrs. Eva
liines of Dana Point. ,
: She claims that ne1Ugence led to. the death of handyman Joe-~ines, ·61, who 4tepped in the
path ol a shotlUD blast as poUce
'\lursaed armed robbery suspect
~ichard Sutton in lJte market last
l>ec.23.
: An inquiry held by the district
ttomey ended with the nillna
· Ntat the sbootin1.was accldeatal
. 'ind theollicerwasnot to blam~
. Sutton was later conVicted ln
SuperiOl' Court on 14 count.I Of
armed robbery and sentenced to
not less than 10 years in state
.riaon. -
Mike. and John m~rrison <left and center>
were soaking. The result? lnstJmt bubbles
and at least a half hour of fun Monday for
the youngsters and ·pet cockapoo; Abby.
Good clean fun, too.
Orante County~ ltepub1icu Aa-
semblyman .lOtm Brtcp could
pick up as much as $30,000 in bis
campaign for CalJfornia •ov·
ernor after two parties to be beld
Thursday night in Newport
Beach.
Oreanizers say the two affairs
- a cocktail. receptlon at the
Marriott Hotel and a dinner at
'Ambrosi• restaurant -are
aim84"8t getting campaign don•·
lions tn>m the county's develop. medt~.
•'We're aetting an unbelievable
response," said Scott Biddle,
sponsor ol the cocktail reception.
''There's really a tremendous
amouat of interest."
1 Biddle, who is president of Bid-
die Development, Inc., a
Newport Beach fl.rm, aaid 1he
cocktail party, for wbicb·euests
are tiel.06 chareed $100 a couple,
was rpoved fJ'Olll a private home
to the Atrium Court of the hot.el
becauu ol tbe large response.
"We have in excess of 300 peo-
ple com1na." Biddle added.
Biddle •aid Brins' campaign
committee has set up the dinner
tbat f0Uow1 at the excluaive
French restaurant.
The 30 guests. alao me,mbers of
the development commu¢ty.
will pay $500 each to dine with the
FuJlertooJogtalator, be $aid.
The key element of Briggs•
campaign is a strong stand
against homol"e.xual leachen.
FV Fumes Over Housing Project
By MICHAEL PASKEVIQI
OftlleOelfyPIMtltatt
Fountain Valley Mayor Roser
Stanton vowed Monday n11ht
that he would Join citizens ib
front of bulldozers to stop a pro-
posed U.S. Marine Corps housing
development of 1,300 units in the
lJO•acre core area ot Mlle Square
Park.
Stanton announced durini a
public bearinr.attended by about
120 people that the Cit1 Council
would consider a resolution
tonight formally opposlna the
plan or ·any cbanee in the recrea·'
tional &Olllng of the part.
Not ooe citizen •poke in favor of the Marines proposed develop-
ment on land formally used as a
helicopter fandin& strip.
"II the Marines move in, then I
move out," remarked one man in
the audience. About 35 people
spok"9 against th• plan.
However, Stanton admlUed
tl}at the Marines, ••can do
anything they want ••• they
could put up the framing before
we coul~ blink." . ne Marines wm announce
their intentions at a meeting with
city officials on Sept. 8, et 2 p.m.
in Fountain YaU-s1 Coµncll
Cb • At ted to at..
tend are l'epl'eSentativ~ from
WeatmlnSt411', ~Ana, lrvinet
GardeQ Grov~ th• Irvine COm· pany arid congressman RObert
Badham CR-Newport beacl\). Badbam. who rep.-eaent1
Fountalii Valley, was seen u the
villaltl by many ciUzem who a~
tended the hearini.
Throu1h bis aide,, Howard
ForCIBacb
Agreement on
Panama Canal
Seelye, Badbatn last week sug.
gested a thr~\yay' land swap
between tbe Marines, lrvine
Company and Orange County.
The S"'1•P plan hasl been con·
demned by FQUJltain Valley of.
ficials, Supervisor PhlUip An·
thony and Coneressman Jerry
M. Patterson CD-Santa Ana>.
Stanton reported that As·
semblyman Dennis Mangers <D-
~ pmen threatened five
employes in an office area ol the
Hl· Time Uquor Store in Costa
Mesa Honday and fled with
about $3,000. .
The men entered the store at
1695 Irvine Ave. at about 10:3>
a.m. Monday, walking to an of•
fice •ea of the •tore where they
Huntlnaton Beach> said that Se.n.
Alan Cranston bas taken a •:personal iotf'leSt'• in the city's
effort to block the development. ' The swap would mean that the
center portion of the park would
be traded for county-owned ter·
ritory on the edge of the park
near Brookhurst Street and Ed-
in1er Avenue.
.
• 11" ••• '
~ ... ..
I'
. .
...
G08 Tax
Share Hit
• By Panel
Irvine transportation com-
missioners are considering send·
101 a complaint to the California
Highway Commisslon that
Orante County ii not 1ett1n1 its
fair sbu. ohtate 1u taxes. •
The letter, to be considered by
Irvine's commissioners next·
week, points out that Orange
Count.y residents pay 7.3 percenl
of lbetotalatate gas tax fUnd, but
only 4.1 percent of that fund ls re·
turned to Orange County.
"Considering the number of
critical traffic links, the high
growth rate and the need for new
· faciUtiea, t'he return on the gas
tax fWlds is not commensurate
with the actual needs of Orance
County," the letter states.
Commissioners suggested
sendiJli the letter at the rut com·
mission meeting after learniD& of
the state's six·year planning pro-
gram.
The six·year program In·
dicates that the funds to be aJ.
located to Orange County will not
meet the minimum transport.a·
tion needs of Orange County, ac·
cording to Irvine Transportation
Engineer Les Card.
The proposed letter states that
Orange County residents benefit
from roads buill elsewhere in the
county, but that the slate's
economy also is partially depen-
dent on business in Orange Coun··
ty. Without sufficient roads,
Orange County business will
decline, the letter continues.
The letter, if approved by the
commission, will be sent to the
next state highway commission
meeting, to be held in early Sep·
tember in Santa Monica.
"It la our hope that your com,
mission will provide a more
equitable distribution of funds
throughout the state relative to
leveJ of contribution and proven
need," the letter concludes.
f'ro•PageAJ
HEIST.· ••
before fleeing.
Employes said they did not see
the pair leave the parking Jot and
police were unable to find wit-
nesses to their rapid departure.
Both men were described as
between 25 and 30 years old. One
suspeet was six feel tall, weighed
about 180 pounds and was wear·
tng a light colored shirt, denim
trousers and black shoes.
His accomplice was described
as about five feet six, thin build,
wearing a longsleeve western
style shirt, brown pants, brown
shoes and speaking with a
southern accent.
Police Pay~~
Not Smpended
A stu-y in Monday •a Daily Pilot
lncorrecUy stated that Newport
Beach city councihnen aua-
pended a five percent pay ralae
recently c.tven to pollc• wben
police and dty r~preaentaUves
reopened contract ne1oUaUona.
City ottlclals aald the ta!Ms,
which totaled six percent
because of a one percent lncre,ee
in the cost of f rinse benefit.a •
.have not been suspended anct re·
• 'tnaln ht etteot c(u.rtna reaumptloa
of contract tal •
by Joan lr • ltb. The donatJoo. wbloh must be
mtt "1th an addlUonal *1 mlmOft
from the unlvoralcy•s reaenta,
w11 ced laat week by Mn.
Smtth. She aald lt fa to be used ··u • atJmulant to the arowtb ol
UCI'a medical school and b41alth
sciences comp\eJt."
A ~ mUllon medical educa.
tJoo and JWearcb bulldin1 ii u.o-
der construction on the campus
and it la generally believed that
Mra. Smfth•s gift would be used
to build a $1).7 mJIUon ambulatory
paUent care center oh campus to
provide outpatient and emercen·
cy medical services for com-
munity residents.
That apparently contllcts with
Western World plans for a
smiliar facility. Representatives
or UCI have met with Western
World olficials foi'the past three
months to plan for aucb a
medical complex.
The complex is to be built on a
133-acre parcel of land given to
the foundation • in 1968 by the
Jrvlne Company.
The confusion arises over
whether Mrs. Smith's gift will af.
feet the foundation's plans which
foundation board chairm4Ul Alan
McM11len said were to have been
tiled within 60 days. He said be
was hopeful of having around
breaking in early 1978.
"Right now we're just.trying t-0
verify Mrs. Smitb'a donation,"
he said today ... Two of the mem-
bers of our board of directors are
ha vlng lunch with her."
He said the foundation is also
trying to meet with the new
owners of the Irvine Company to
find °'-lt if .Mrs. Smith 'a clft to the
university in any way affects the
company's nine-year.old land
gift tothefew:ldation.
"The new management of the
lrvine Company has been ex-
tremely busy, so .we· ve been una-
ble to meet with them so far," he
said. "I am trylng to contact
<Irvine Co. director) Don Bren.
"I just hope that a $1 million
gift to the university doesn't scut-
tle a $100 million hospital com-
plex," McMillen said.
Man Arrested
In Assault
With Racket
Laguna Be b police arrested
a 22·year-old man Monday after
a young woman told officers she
had been kicked. choked, bitten
and beaten with a tennis racket.
George P. Ripley-or 1349 Ter-
race Way, Laguna Beach, was
booked on suspicion of assault
with a deadly weapon. He was
scheduled for a caurt appeuance
today.
Police Sgt. David Avers said
the lS.-year·old female victim
was treated at South Coast Com·
munity Hospital for brwses re-
ceived in the beating.
The woman told officers she
and Ripley bad split up lut wfflc
and that she had gone to the
home Monday to pick up some
personal items. ~ne said during an ensuln&
arguc:neot, she was kicked in the
stomach, thrown against a waJJ bitt~ grabbed by tbe t~roat and
after tbrowinc the tennis racket at her assailant, was clubbed
with it.
Alljm:ay Jury
Deliberate•
Seoon . Counta
4P .... CHARLE& CAAIL OF FOftEST SERVICE WALKS THROUGH BURNED BRUSH AND TREE&
'Complete Devutetton Aeaembllng the Aftermlth of Atomic. Bo,mb' ln Cantomla
Big .. Blaze ~earl}'· H~ld
Aftermath~ Lilts Atomic Bomb Bl.fut
By The Aaoc:latecl Press
In the wake of the Marble-Cone..
inlerno is "complete devasta-
tion" reseinbllni the aftermath
of an atomic bomb. but the fire
atill searing Central California
coastland may soon be con·
tab)ed, forestry officials 'said to-
day.
The blase, now the third
largest in the state's history, bas
~onsunied 180.:SOO ac;~ in the
Los Padres Natton~ Forest and acfJace~ private land. It was re·
ported 60 percent contained.
Back-burning -fire lines con-
structed ahead of the path of the
rll'e with the brush or fUel burned
ln between -10 far bas proven
effecUve. officials sald.
"We're bopin1 by Thursday
we'll have the back·bumlnl line
Franz, Longtime
NB Resideiii, Dies
Walter G. Franz, rormer presi-
dent of a famed Newport Beach
shipyard, died Monday at his
home in San Marino after a long
illness. He was 67.
Mr. Franz joi,ned the South
Coast Co. in 1936 and became
president and owner of the firm
Mom Saves
Tot, Killed
ROCHESTER. N .Y .
(AP) -Diana M.Jlillo, -26,
was struck'and killed by an
automobile seconds after
pushing her 9·month·otd
daughter to safety in sub-
urban Ocden, the Monroe
County sheriff's office said.
Deputies said Mrs.
Milillo, of Ogden, was
walking aton1 the shoulder
of a road Mohday night,
wheeling her daughter in a
carriage wben an ap-
proacbJna car struck her.
She shoved the carriage
out of the car's path,
d,puties satd. The baby
was notinjured.
E"'1ies Sought
For Charaeter
lloat Parade
in 1944 after the death of Jts
founder, Walton Hubbard.
Besides building many of the
area's-most well-knoW'll yachts
and one design recing chas~es,
the South Coast Company under
Mr. Frani built small sblpg for
the Navy during World War U
and the Korean conflict. Thefirm
won six Navy E awards.
Mr. Franz himself was an ac-
tive yachtsman. He was com-
modore of Newport Harbor
Yacht Club in 1953 and was a
three·time winner of the Sir
Thomas Lipton challenge lfophy,
on his 46-foot Cal 32 sloop Andale.
He was also a member of St.
Francis Yacht Club of San Fran·
cisco and the CNisin1 Club of
America
Mr. Franz sold the South Coast
Company in 1965 and be and his
family continued to live on I.Jdo
Isle until moving to San Marino
in 1971.
He leaves his widow, Ullian; a
son, Walter Jr.; a brother, Ed, of
La1una Beach; 8J\4 a sister,
Clara Burris, Phoenix.
Private funeral services wHl
be held at the Rose Hills f"uneral
Home In Whittler. Memorial c~m
tributions can be made to USC
cancer center.
tied in all the way," said WWlam
Morrison. U.S. Forest' Service
spoke:;man. "If everything goes
right then. it will probably be on·
ly a few days µntil it will be con-
tained."
{Jestdes the huge Marble-Cone
fire. six otherfires still burned in
drougbt·parcbed California, the
state Department of Forestry
said.
Lllhtnlnf, the culprit Jn a
cbai.Q ot nearly 1,poo. fltes that
beganAug.1, sparlred.\he"bewest blaze Monday n•u Lake
Elsinore ln ·1UversJde County.
Flames engulfed .400 acres, but
the fire was hoped to be con·
talnedJatertoday, theCDFaaid.
The Marble-C4ne waa among
those torched by· nature and of·
flcials would only hazard a
damage est1lnate of "several millions of dollars."
"Jt l«>ob almost like pictures
of Hiroshima after the atomic·
bomb," Merrison said. '''There
are areas of complete devasta-
tion, with only little twigs stlt:k·
ingout."
Morrison ~aid officials
estimated-the.energy released by
burning 1,000 acres in the fire
zone was "equlvalen~ to a one
meaaton atorolc bomb."
rn assessing the siege at
Marble-Cone, he added, "The
fire ll in a way a part of a natural
cycle. The forest will almo&t
bejin to rebuild ilftmediately.''
Some small animals -Uzards,
rodents -have already returned
to their homes ln the blackened
brusbland. he said.
Weather is for now working
wJtb fire fighters and \reather
forecasters on duty on the fire
lines predict favorable condt·
lions will persist for several
days, Morrison saJd. ·
OUlcials said contingency
evacuation plans for nearby
towns should not be needed.
"There's no r~ason ri~t npw to
be talking evacuation," saJd
Morrison. ·•we ~·t thln1t tt'll ·
iet awayfro?D us this.time."
nlahtlallt causln• officials to eel
up lllllle:{I cy • t to bu. di• thaOftrflow. ,
MeanwJUJe, a dozen f •nilll•
from BOmbay Beach and Niland
• 9n tho e.,tem shore of the Salton
Sea wer• forced from tll•lr
1 homes, because ol flOod watcn.
Three trailers homes were over~
· turned in the Oood. ,
' A aherlff'a dep~hne1at
apo •fnan said tho towns were
bit by hoods after · tbe Al'·
Amtrlcan Canal nortbeut ~f
Nil4Uld developed a minor crack,
it ending torrents of water into the
two desert commWlitJea.
Homes and bueJpesses w~
also reported tl()Oded in Brawl~
~ mUes farther south, where
two.root flood waters brolt•
through hastily-made san~
wk~. ·
Highways 88 and 111 bad also
been under water from Brawl~.
oear the Mexkan border, to tie
Salton Sea wblle Highway 18 waa
flooded between Brawley and
Blythe. But all three were report.
ed open today.
Twenty to 30 ho1Det, Valuwt
at $100,000 to '200,000 each, ~
raqeed by flood water at tbe'De
Anza Desert Count.I')' Club in Jlor.
rego Springs ln the desert eat of
San Diego.
Power outaces .were rePorted
throughout the area. whUe bail,
lightning and 60-mile·an-bour
winds were reported In Palm
Sprini;cs.
the· Natf0nal Weather Service
said the heaviest thunderstorms
were centered in the Mojave
Desert. .
A weather service IPOk•man
said Hurricane I>oi-een.11inc oft
the soutbern tip of Baja
California. would likely be down--
graded to a tropical storm today.
* * *' Wall of Water
Cmshes Homes
In Mexicali
MEXICALI, Mexico (AP> -A
wall of water and mud has
C1'U17hed mmsy houses in l>OOf'er
sections of Mexicali after a thun·
derstorm. .
No dea~ were reported, but a
police spokesman said many peo-
ple in the border city were in·
jured.
"It's sWI raining here," police •
Lt Mario Ortiz said today.
.. About two-thirds of Mexicali is
un'der water.
"For hours last JU.cht, we were
tbrowina water out of our homes
and, when we threw lt 01,1t, lt w~
into streets that looked like
rushing rivers."
Telephone and electric serVice
were out for several hours.
In a telephone interview. Ortiz
said Mexicali houses ·'weren't
made for rain. Even m~or build·
ings have gotten soaked. Some
houses in poorer areas bav~
fallen in."
Ortiz was unable to esU
how many houses
destroyed or damaged.
120 POOPl• tbat the Clty Council
would -consider a rHohatlon
tonlebt formally oppoilnc lM
plan or aay change iA tbe'teerea·
Uonal ~ofthe park.
Not one citiJen a poke in favor
of the Martn. propo1ed develop-
ment on land formally used as a
helicopter land.inc st.rip.
"If the Marines move In, then I
move out," remarked one man in
the audience. About 3S people
1 • qatJJttthe plan. HOWeYtr. Stanton admitted tbat tb• Marines, ••can do
aofthhlg they want • ·• • they Could put up tbe framing before
Wt cou.J.ilblink. ''
Tbe Marines wilt announce tMlr ilitenUons at a meeting with
city Gfficlala oo ~pt. 8~ at 2_p.m.
in P'ountain Valley Council
Cbamben. Also expected to at·
tend are representatives from
Mrs. Patricia Stroich of Costa Mesa was
cleaning her pool deck when she knocked
over a bottle of detergent. The liquid
cleaner poured into the w man•s Jacuzzi
where son Sammy <right and his friends,
Mike and John Harrison <left and.. center>
were soaking. The result? Instant bubbles
and at least a half hour of fun Monday for
the youngsters and pet cockapoo, Abby.
Good clean fun, too.
,r,
·rit ~-storm Soa~g DeSe~
: FfOOOj Strand TliOUMuuU o/ 71rUDSU!
LOS ANGELE.S <AP> -Wmd·
.cbiven ralnstonns spawned by
Wurricane Doreen lubed the
oormally parched Southern ~ali,fomla desert, causmc flub tloods and stranding thousands of
travelers.
There were no confirmed re-
o rts of injuries, although
aeveraJ persons were reported
missing early today.
Law enforcement officials said
'
they may have checked lnto •
m~ and were unable to CCJD·
tact their tamllies becaua• or
downed telephone lines.
A flash flood watch continued
in effect after tbe rains halted
this morning. More rain was
forecast by the Natiooal Weather
Service.
Traffic was stopped on Jn.
terstate lS, tbe trans·Mojave
hi1bway that is the majcr link
Alaska ·Pipe~i~
Slwt Down Again
~
between tas egas and Los
Jmaelff, •hen flood waters
several feet deep dumped ton.a ol
mud Ud debris on the road sue:
face at several points.
Caljfornla Transportation
Department work. crews cleam
the southbound lanes eari, to-
day, but there was no woid on
when the northbou.Dd lanes would be open. •
"Crews and heavy equipment
have been going all night m the
northbcund lanes and bave yet to
get down to wbete the pavement
is -or •as,,, ailid CalTrans
spobsman umce Stalker. .
The effect ot the rain on the
state's drought was expected to
be minimal. The drought has bad
it:s .1reatest impact tn .the
Northern Callfofnla area, while tb-o Mojave and durrounding
desert areas are normally one ol
life itate'• nao1t arid sections.
In the lmpetlial COW'lty area,
wtiere ~taUori .;flu turned an
and plain lido one« tbe nation's
mast prod1.1ctive cUh ch>P areas,
some crops were reported
fl~.
Westmloster, Santa Ana, ln1.ne,
.Garden Grove; the Irvine com-
pany and Congreuman Robert
BadJ\8.m <R-Ne~rtBeach>. Badbam, wllo represents
Fountain Valley, was seen as the
villain by many cltl1ena wbo at·
tended the bearing.
Through bis aide, Howard
Seelye, Badbam 1841 week SUI·
gested a three.way land swap
between the Marines, Irvine
Wllege Ready to GO
~ Development •work on Sad-
dleback College's controversial
second campus is expected to
be.gin In October, according to a
four-phase time schedule an·
nounced by college officials this
week.
The satellite campus, which
was lttalled for more than a year
as trustees and residents argued
over ita location, is expected to
open its doors to resldenta of
coUese di•trlct for the
semester, 1978. •
It will be built on 20 acres at
intersection of Jeffrey Road and
Irvine Center Drive in Irvine.
Escrow on the $900,000 purchase
from the Irvine Company is ex-
pected to close this month.
District officials said they will
'ha v~ to stick to a stricl time table o( development and conatrucUon
if they want to open the campus
ootime.
"Each phue is scheduled so 1 that we wiU be proceeding with
one while planning the next."
said ~ward A. Hart, district q.
1i1tant superintendeat. "All
phases must intermesb tor us to
meet our goals.••
He said a contract for the 80 to
90-day project of grad.tq, prep.
arail~ of 1>ads ~ •uu~. some pavµll and off-sit. develop-
ment of utilities 11 ~beduled to
be•watdedbyOct.10.
Ttie eoaatruction CODt.ract for
e building 0 shellS'' should be
awarded in December, accotd· ~totbeplan.
Tho college bas been desiped
wJth a cluster concept that WW
permit flexible and inexpensive
expanskln as it IJ needed.Jnitial·
ly, it will provide betweerl30,000
anCl as,ooo square r~el for
classrooms and adm.lnl$trative
offices1 ..
The third phase of the plan in-
cludes interior development and
equipment for the buildings. The
contract for this work ia expected
to be let in mid-M~ with the
work beiog completed by July.
At the same time as tbe In·
terior work is being done,' the
Jandscapil\g and parking should
be completed. '
College trustees have budgeted
$1.2 milUoo, in addition to the
purchase price, for develapment
d constructioo of the satellite.
An initial en">llm@t of 2,000
students h.u been projected for
this campus. Officials said the
enrollment can grow to 3,000
before expansion is needed.
Initially, lecture classes in the
buic subjecta are expected to be •
taught there. But ultimately. col·
lege officials believe, it wiU
become a full second college of·
ferlng allbasic courses and-some
specialized vocational programs.
The district bolds ~ option on an additional 80 acres acijacent to
the satellite site. AccordiAC to
their purchase agr,emtnt,
trustees can exercise the option
on all 01' part of the property at a
fixed price for the next five
y.ears.
-A long-r,mtgesite 1lan bas · ~ tcii' the entirt IJ.00.:acre
pared. • • E~anaton, !JoWever, WW ~
pend ort enrollmept at tbe cam·
pus. '# It was deslcnea primaril)t to
aer.ve residents of Tustin. Irviri.e
arid LaguD.a ~ch who live tar
from the exist.ini Mlssioo Viejo
camP\18. But some crustln school
officlm said earlier this month
that they want to get out of the
SadcDeback dfjtrlct aQd tieci>me
)>art c6 the neighboring Rane!»
Santiago Community Colleae
System. ..
\ ..
fl'tESENT
SADOLEBACK
CAMPUS
c 8
J
0.11., .... ~
SECOND CAMPUS
Saddle.ck W111 Have Two
I I
NN, W t Oerm.ny fAP>
The W t G rman aovemment may r fUH t\a)f '1 req t. to
b nd ov r a Nu w criminal
wbo ~•P d from an 1&.altan
~in a 1 tcaa• t..uuae the
coasUlutial fotb di eJtraditton
of G rman natJonalt, the JuatJte
M lnilt.r)' l4I today.
In an<>lMr development, the
ltallen SoVttnment aald th9 dar·
inl escape of convicted Nazi
murderer Herbert Kappler, 70-
year·old ro·rmer head of the
Gestapo in Rome, bas forced the
postponement of a meetlnc
between Premier Giuho Andreot·
li and West German Chancellor
Helmut Schmidt. They were
scheduled to meet ln Verona Fri· ·
day.
An announcement by Andreot·
ti's office said Schmidt's visit
came at "a moment in whieh
public opinion is profoundly dis-
turbed by the escape of llfe-term ~risooer Kappler and could be
\}le occasion of demonstrations
that could be unduly interpreted
as cracking the solid friendship
between the Italian and the
German people."
A spokesman or Andreotti's of·
£ice said no new date for a meet·
ing was set.
Kappler, reduced to 105 pounds
by terminal cancer, was smug-
gled out of a Rome mtlltary
hospital in a big suitcase by his
wife early Monday, the Italian
government said. He was serving
a life sentence.
The Federal Criminal Office in
Wiesbaden issued a nationwide
police alert for Kappler, who or-
dered the Ardeatine Caves
massacreof335 Italians in 1944.
FromPageAJ
FIGHT •..
that the congressman "would
prefer" the housing project be
located closer to El Toro.
Badham Is a member of the
Armed Services Committee that
will vote on the Marines' funding
request for the housing project.
He has power to veto the move.
City officials fear that the swap
could lead to an Irvine Company
takeover or the 130-acre parc:el.
In a letter to Secretary or the
Navy Graham Taylor,
Congressman Patterson said ~
• proposal "has caused un-
necessary friction between the
community and the Marine
Corps."
•'If we could cet our
Cengressman to draft a similar
letter. perhaps the problem
would go elsewhere," said Stan·
ton. He added that be hoped the
swap proposal "was only a trial
balloon that can now be fully
deflated."
"U I were in his (B.adham's)
shoes -and 1 certainly wouldn't
want to be -I could live no
reason why the homes should be
built there," said Stanton. One
man suggested a move to retail
Badham. City officials have looked into
the possibllly of ~lockin& water
and sewer hookups to the de·
velopment, but admlUed that the
Marines could di& septic tanks
and ~ls to eet around thos'
efforts. There ia only one access road
to the park site and olficialJ aay
the development would niean
severe lra(fic coneeaUon.
Garden Grove School District '
oflicials have announced they
could absorb the 1,300 studerata
generated by the project when
completed ln 1982.
A citizens• commttteebfal ~
formed and mem-. will take to
the streets thls week•d with a
petition drive to sen.rate com·
munit.Y opposition to Ule plan.
As a final eltort, Stantof\ said
he would stt in front of bulldo&e,.
to ~lock the development. "It'• so bizarre that one wo"1.d
'think they couldn•t ,POSSibfy' eo
through wttb it." said Stanton
lwitb a balt·smtle. "But tlle1 ;•Mannes) aren'hmlllnc."
'
. ~
CHARLES CRAIL OF.FOREST SERVICE WALKS THROUGH BURNED BRUSH ANO TREES
'Complete Devastation RHtmbltng the AfterMath of Atomic Bomb' In Callfoml•
Fro•PageAJ
STORM •••
on the eastern shore of th• Salton
Sea were forced from their
homes because or flood waters.
Three trailers homes were over-
turned in the.flood.
A s heriCf 's department
spokesman 5aid the towns were
hit by floods after the All·
American Canal northeast. of
Niland developed a minor crack.
sending torrents of water into the
two desert communities.
Homes and businesses were
also reported flooded in Brawley,
50 miles farther south, where
two-foot flood waters broke
through hastily-made sandbaa
dikes.
Highways 88 and 111 had also
been under water Crom Brawley,
near the Mexican border, to the
Salton Sea while Highwlly 78 was
nooded befween Brawley and
Blythe. But all three were report·
ed open today.
* * *
By Tbe Assoeiated Press
ln the wake of the Marbl•Cone
Inferno is ''complete devasta·
lion" resembling the aftermath
ot an atomic bomb, b\lt the fire
still searin& Central California
coastland may soon be con-
taineq, forestry officials said to-
day.
The blaze, now the third
largest in the state's history, has
consumed 1.30,500 acres in the
Los Padres National Forest and
adj-cent private labd. It y.oas re-
ported 60 percent contained.
Back·burning -fire lines con-
structed ahead or the path of the
fire with the brush or fuel burned
in between -so far has proven •
effective, officials said.
the fire was hoped to be con·
talned laterWday, the €DF said. Th~ Marble-Cone was among
those torched by nature and of·
rtcials would only hazard a
damage estimate or "several
millions of dollars ...
"IL looks almost like pictures
of Hi~hima after the atomic
bomb," Morrison sald. "There
are areas of complete devasta-
tion, with only little twi11 stick·
ing out." .
Morrison said officials
estimated the enercy released by
burning 1,000 acres in the fire
zoQe was "equivalent to a one
meeaton atomic bomb."
In assessing the siege at
Marble-Cone, b~ added, ''The
fire is in a way a part of a natural
cycle. The forest wlll flmost
begin to rebuild immedJately."
Some small anJm'1s -lizards,
rodents have already returned
to their homes in Ute blackened
\
Two Principals
Capistrano Unified School Dis· trlct trustees announced the reg.
ignation of one elementary
school principal Monday and the
appOlntmnt of two principals
and two assistant prlnclpals. Mlchaol Cole, principal of
Dana Eleme'ntary School and the
Multiple HandJcapped Facillty in
Dana Polnt slnce September,
1975, is leavin• education to
establish his own business.
CoJe. 39. has been on sick leave
since .January, when he col-
lapsed at a distrlot-sponaored ad-
ministrators' workshop in Eacon·
di.do .•
A resident of ~ Niguel.
he CanM to the Capistrano dis-
trict in 1966 u a classroom
teacher and wu principal at
Las Palmas Elementary School
in San Clemente for four years
before hls assignment to Dana.
Appointments announced Mon·
day were:
-Linda Landers, new prin·
• clpal-4-Bareelona Hills Elemen·
tary School in Mimon Viejo.
-Richard Campbell, new
·principal of Dana Elementary
School and the Multiple Han-
dicapped Facility in Dana Point.
-Dennis Gibbs, full time as·
sistant principal of Dana
£lementary School and the
Multiple Handicapped FacUlty.
-Sharon Sandelin, run time
teaching assistant J)&'incipal or
Palisades Elementary School in
Capistrano Beach.
Mrs. Landers, 33, comes to the
Capistrano di$t.rict from Foun·
taln Valley where she was upper
level learnJ.nc coordinator for
trades six to eight. A resident of
Huntington Beach. Ai1e worked
nine years ln the FOu!'tain Valley
school district. She bolds a master's degree
from Pepperdlne, and a
bachel°'"'!s fitom Arizona State.
Richard Campbell, 34, came to
the Capistrano distriet in 1972 1'
leaching vice principal at Dan4.
Palisades School in Capistrano
Beach since 1975. He ia a San
Juan Capistrano r~ident.
Mn. Sandelin, 29, has tau1ht tt
Moulton Elementary School tn
Laguna Niguel since 19TS and
was teaching ~~istant prlnclpal
there last year. ~he was recently
chosen ''Educator of the Year"
by the Lquna Nieael Jaycees.
Pie Plaat,en
Ohio Chief
COLUMBUS, Ohio <AP)
-o.afo Gov. Jam es A.
Rhodes was struck in the
side of the face with a
cream pie today after
demonstrators cbantln&
"Remember Kent State!"
disrupted opening
teremontes at tbo l24th
Ohio State Fair.
The 67-year-old sov-
ernor, whose glas1es were
knocked loose, later· com·
plained of pain In his ri1ht .
eye and said he would seek
medical treatment, ac·
cording \o an aide.
Seven people were ar-
rested, including Steven E.
Conliff, 27, or Columbus,
who was charged with mis·
demeanor assault and with
disturbing a lawful meet·
ing, pollceaaid.
Newton Trial:
Proof Sought
Wall of Water
Crushes Homes
In Mexicali
"We're hoping by Thursday
we'll have the back-burning line
tied in all the way.'' said William
Morrison, U.S. Forest Service
s pokesman. "If everything goes
right then, it will probably be on-
ly a few days until it will be con·
tained.''
brushJand, he said. ,,
Weather is for now working
with fire flgbters and weather
forecasters on duty on the fire
lines predict favorable condi·
lions will persist for several
days, Morrison said.
He haa been assistant principal
there since 1975-and acUna prin·
cipal since January.
OAKLAND CAP) -Black Pan-
ther leader Huey P . Newton is
innocent of murder and assault
charges but cannot get a fair trial
if the prosecution fails to deliver
all the evidence sought in a 157-
page defense discovery motion,
saya bis lawyer.
MEXICALI. Mexico (AP> A
wall or water and mud has
crushed flimsy houses in poorer
sections of Mexicall after a thun-
derstorm.
Besides the huge Marble-Cone
fire. six other fires' still burned in
drought-parched California, the
state Department of Forestry
said.
Lightning, the culprit in a
chain or nearly 1,000 fires that
began Aug. 1, sparked the newest
b 1 aze Mood ay near Lake
Elsinore in Riverside County.
Flames en1uJfed 400 acres, but
Officials said contingency
evacuation plans for nearby
towns should not be needed.
"There's no reason right now to
be till king evacuation," said
Morrison. "We don't thlnk 1\'11
~el away from Ui Ulii time."
Campbell Ii ves in Laauna
Niguel and bas been teaching
since 196$. He is carrently work-
ing toward a doctorate at United
States International University
in San Diego. ,
Dennis Gibbs, 31, taught in the
Redlands t1bifled School District
before coming to the Capistrano
district in 1974. He bas been the
elementary assistant principal at
No deaths were reported, but a
pollce spokesman aaid man>r peo-
ple in the border city were in·
jured. •
"It's still raining here," police
Lt. Mario Ortiz said today.
"About two-thirds of Mexicali is
under water.
Jury Mulls Allaway Fate
"For hours last night, we were
throwing water out or our homes
and, when we threw tt out, it was
into str,ets that looked like
rushine rivers."
Telephone and electric service
were out for several hours.
In a telephone interview, Ortiz
said Mexicali houses "weren't
made forrain. Even major build·
ings have gotten soaked. Some
houses in poorer areas have
fallen in.••
Orti~ was unable to estimate
how many houses were
destroyed or damaged.
A jury that bas been ask.ed to
flnd accused campus killer
Edward Charles Allaway guilly
or seven counts of first desree
murder resumed its delibera-
tions today in Orange County
Superior Court.
The panel, which is also con·
sidering two additional counts of
assault with a deadly weapon,
deUbetated about three hours
Monday before being sent-home
for the evening by Judge Robert
P . Knteiand.
U they find Allaway, 38, iullty
on 8ll,Y or all oC tbe murder al·
legations they will return to the
courtroom to begin bearing
B~ggs See~s Casli
' li1 2 ~oast Parties
pie coniin1," Biddle added.
Biddle sald Briggs• campaign
committee bas set up the dinner
tbat follows at the e')CCIU$ive
French restaurant.
testimony in the expected sanity
pbaseolthe trtaJ.
Allaway bas pleaded not guilty
by reason of inaantty to chuaes
that he shot nlne peopl~ sewn tJt
whom died, on the \:al State
Fullerton canipus on July 12,
1976.
Prosecutor Jam ea Enriabt in·
dlcated to the JW'Y durinl final
~reumenta Monday that the
toll might ·have been much ,
higher had not Allaway lost his
box ~ cartridges after clahning
nine victims. .
Deputy Public Defender Ron
Butler said be will prove through
psychiatrists and a record of Al-
la way's previous mental Illness
that hls client was insane
throughout the six-minute cam-
pus carnage.
"We're demanding that the.
truth be presented and the items
be brought forward," lawyer
Sheldon Otis told Oakland
Municipal Court Judge Cortland
0 . Ame on Monday. .
Deputy Dist. Atty. Tom Orloff
said there was "no connection" .
to much of the Information
sought by the defense and the
specific charges brought against
Newton. Newton Is accused of the
Aug. 6, 1974, shooting ot a lT·
year-old girl •. Sfle died after be
jumped bail and fled the country.
Afterlife Near?
CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy
(AP> .-Pope Paul VI, his voice
vibrating with emotion, departed
from a prepared text and told a
congregation here that in his 80lb
year, "I see the threshold of af.
terlife is approaching." •
BJ L'ION llOSKOWl'n
tr YoU wanted to bu:yaome medlum·prlced shoes fort.bi
family. you mtsbt NP&it tO •Thom McAa stor. ll tbere w one yocar area. Wltb more than J,000 outlttl ln Uio COUil•
try. if• certali\ly one ot the moet ubaqwtou11 aboe IWri& aroUncL •
Not 10 commonpt-.e, beeauae lt't;.).'O\lnl, la lbe
VanaWml 1b0e cbalft. It bl.I so llnka. upand.lnl at t.M rate ot five a year. You ml&ht head for Vaquud 11 you were
looklna for somethint m~ stylllh -Pd ~•Ive. Its prl~e rangt begins at S2'7 and U came& auch brands aa FrYe bOOt't Clark casuals and Adldaa atbletic lhoea.
THE PHYSICAL FITNESS IOOBI bu 1pawMd a new ctialri where you mtC}lt •boP only fOf' aneaten. 'lbere are
nowu stores in the Jo it chain.
On tbe other ha.net,'' you happened te> be &boppplna ln
one 4(Jho 1,000 K Marta t.bat dot the n1Uon '1 blsbwaya. you mtahtJnst-setUo for a pair ol lnexpen,stve 1hoei sold riebt
th-ere.
What you may not realbe ti that whichever of these
routes you took, you would be buYini from tho same com· ·
pany: Melville Corp., headquutefed iJl Haniaon. N . Y.
A lcln,Ume leader of the footwear IDdUlb')', Melvll
Money
Tree
made lta original mark
with the Thom McAn
chain. It started
Vanguard tn 1969~t
l aunched the Jox chsm
last year. And it has
hitchhiked a spec·
tacular ride with the
tut-growing K Mart discount chain. Melville operates all of
the self-service shoe departments in the K Mart empire.
THE CARTER ADMINISTllATIO.N recently came to
the aid of the beleaguered U.S. aboe industry by 1ettlng
Taiwan and Soutt\ Korea to agree to reduce their shoe ex·
ports by 20 percent over the next four years and by mount·
ing a $56 million program to shore up domestic aboe
makers. One of the elements ot this program ii the auembl·
ing or 20 teams of "experts" to advise hard-pressed shoe
companies how to improve their tecbnoloey. market.Ina and
management.
Al least on of the teams should be ~rutted from
Melville. It's a major company in the footwear ~ustry,
and it's not beleaguered at all. How can you be beleaiuued
when you're earning $61 mUliononsales oUl.2 blllloa?
Whether Melville can -or wants to -transmit its
knowhow t.o others is something else . .And whether com·
panies smaller and less integrated than Melville can even
take advantage of this knowhow ls somethlnc else aealn. . ...
MELVILLE BOTH MAKES AND sella shoes. Ai a re-
sult, its st.ores, which are close to the matketplace. can
quickly relay to the factoiies fotormation about what to
make.
Of course. one reason Melville bas done so well ls that it
has diverslfl~ out of shoes. Ten years ago it wu primarily
a footwear company. Today, it's doing 40 percent of Its busi·
ness in non-footwear. Among the Melville components:
CVS pharmacies and health and beauty aid st.ores, 210
units; Chess King Men 'a sportswear chain. 280 atorea; Fox·
moor young women's apparel st.ores, 310 units: Clotbea Bin
promotional women's apparel chaim SO st.ores: Manball1.
40-store apparel chain that sells manufacturers' close-Outs.
over·l'W\$ and post-season items.
• At the end or 1978' Melville was operating 3,2IO atores.
which certainly made It one of the largest -ii least known
-retailers ln the nation.
World Reeord?
Family Tallies
537 Years on]~b
MARCUSHOOK, Pa. <AP>-Twolnterrelatedf&m.Ui•
believe they have set a new world record (or the amoant ~
time its members bave worked for one company.
The 39 members of the Mootella'Ud lmbutli• tam.lllts
have worked a total of 537 years for the M~us Hook re-
tlnery or the Sun Company and they are sUll coift.c 1tnma.
IFTBE FA.MIL Y HAD WOllKED a& the refinery one at
a tJme -with no person's service overlapping anotber's -
the tint one would have had to punch ID'° years before
ColwnlNS discoverrlEerica. In terms of pay you use $100 weekly u an averaae
over lhe years, tbe ontella·Imburgta combine would have
earned more than $2.S million ln waaes.
The record 1tarted with Anielelio Montella. wbo
broudit ln bis aon, Carmen, ln 1911. Carmen bad five 10DS
and a daqhter. All of them worked at die rtfi.Deey. So did
hia two brathen, four nephews, a alster, a brOther-bHa•
and aalster·ln·law.
WBEN CA.JlMEN, NOW II, retired In t•t be had
worked at tbe refinery for 47 rears. Tbe total ot years ,
worked there by members of the Montella f amllj'ls b.
Carmen waa marrled to tbe former Mary lmburlia.
who died last year. Sbe was a 1l•ter ol J.,. Jrnt>urata. whcile
famlly hai worked at the Marcus Hook retiQery for a total ol
228year1.
Jot Jmburlf•. now 77 and Ntlrtd, beta.D wortlni wlth
the company ln 1913. Hil tatber. John. worked~ 6elcn
him. -
'
r.~ Bello Tlaere ,
Actress Rita '.\Ioreno takes a close look at Will.
an Indian hon cub. at Chicago's Lincolo Park
·Zoo. It's one of an estimated 200 of its en·
dans;?ered species k~wn lo ex isl in the world.
>
Adopt Record
S~crecy Hit
SACRAMENTO <AP > Adopted people over
18 shpuld have lhe right lo learn who their natural
parents are. says slate Health Director Jerotrte
Lackner.
Lackner endorsed a task force report Monday
that recommended changing the present system un-
der which adoption records are kept secret.
UNDER TllE PROPOSAL, ADOPTED persons
would have access to their birth certificates and
other records of their origtn once they turned 18.
They are not allowed to see those records under cur-
rent law.
But the task Loree also recommended allowing
natural parents to block release of the information
J if the adoption took place before the law was
~ changed.
~· · Changing aUlludes toward adoption and towar'd
·', childbirth outside marriage, and increasing de-
"M'•I mand.i by adopted persons to learn their origins
ot I justify relaxing the secr~y of adoptive records, fl'' Lackner said.
,,. "AS THE NATIONA(; television series 'Roots'
.... dramatjzed, people have a natural and reasonable
~" desire to fully realize their identities through a dis·
h& covery and appreciation of their origins, .. he said.
"'' Some or the changes recommended by the 34·
"' member task force would take legislation.
·-Last year Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. vetoed a bill
,,. that would have S(!L µp procedures under which
~· adopted people over 18 could meet their natural
parents, using lhe state HeaJth Department as an
co intermediary.
The author, Sen. William Campbell <R·
Hacienda Heights>. is back with a similar bill this
t;, year. SB 535. It has been defeated on the Senate
"# floor. but Campbell says be will try for passage
again in January.
L ltl. Boyd
3 Smallest
C 0 11ntr i.e$
• Am asked to cotnpare the effic!iency of the
old Pony Expr~s with today's postal»service.
Can only report that the. Pony Express lost one
bag of mail, just one, in its 19 months of opera·
lion.
SMAUESJ' COUNTRIES.
Q. Name Ure three smallest countries in
the world?
A. Yatican Clty. Monaco and the eight·
square-rriile Pacific island ofNaura
DICK ROTTMAN, Nevada's in-
surance commissioner. said the in-
surance association's move is not a
judgment on the value of Laetrile.
While it may limit Laetrile prescrip-
tions in the state. he said. the restric·
tion was designed to keep the associa-
tion from going broke.
Bob Byrd, who directs the associa-
tion program, said, "If we took
unnecessary risks, we would probably
be in the same boat as other com-
panies that ·we9t brpke" in the
malpractice insurance business.
TV 'Dominant'
J
In Elections ..
SACRAldENTO CAP> -Television
bas ~me the dominant force in
California 'lections, even tbOUl(h
television coverage of campaigns is
declining and that ot newspapers has
been improving, a new book says.
.. Phantom Polftics, Campalioin1 in
CalifornJa," by Mary Ellen ~ary. is
bued on a study of the 1974 campaign
for governor, narrowly won by
Democratic Gov. Edmund Jlrown Jr.
over Republican Roust.on Fluorno)'.
The book concluded that television
news coverage was the most lm'1C)r·
tant factor in voter decislona, and that
obtaining exposure on television fias
a top priorify of the campaJeners.
"The election catered so openly to
television's interests that print re·
porters were sw~pl along," she .said in
the book.
...
•
•
'
.. . ..
.
.. caU us faql take 4 Finl National
Auto Loan. and go clirectly to
vour dee~ That's~tlwe It
to It. Upon appl'Ol(al of a sln'flle
credit application; we1l loen
you up to 809f, ol the pur·
chase ~ of any
new car you
choose. lndud-lng ~·4iM~"T""'::""W"'\
And hire'• a
bonus.: Since ~fj~~~~~;:!.}J
At the Plaza in downtown Orange
COSTA MESA: Mesa Verde & Adams
IRVJ~ University Or. & Mi<:helson Or.
LAGUNA HlLLS: A~icia Parkway & San Diego Freeway
-. 0
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