HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-08-19 - Orange Coast Pilot-
Indian Oeean . . .. . Mesa 'Right
..
Quake Largest · :To. Die' ~gore
Ever Reeorded Praises Boetor
'"
ey a
Marie Leuck sayS sbe doesn't
blame Newport Beacb doctor
for not letting het 86-year-old
mot.her "die with ~ignity."
"Dr. (~ore) Alex ls a won-
derful m,an," she said in a
telephone interview. "He just
feels that what he did is right.··
Mn. Leutk's tttother. Mane
Welday, died 'Wednesday at a
Newport Beach eonvalescent
ho$pital where she had tfeef)kept
allv~ for 16 mo.nths by nasal ad-
ex
rnlnistratlon of nutrients and
heart and blood medication.
This despite a "living will" the
elderly woman had signed five
y~rs previous to a stroke sbe
suiferecUn May 1976.
A lawsuit that could have
meant a landmark court decision
on the righl of helplessly ill peo-
ple to will their own death, died
with the woman.
"I'm not going to pursue any
cour1 action," Mrs. Leuck said
tod~.
.a
1 .
s
...
S °Fr1d9, Auquel '!· 1177
Citibank Hikes
-Interest Rate
NEW YORK <AP) -CtUbant.
the n•tioo'a ~nd larcat com·
metti I bank, rai. tel ill prime
mlcrest rate today from s~. per·
cent lo 7 ~nl.
C1Ubank, which had held tho
. prime at 6"4 percent 11.nte U">'
27. did not tilaboTate lmmodJate·
ly on its movL But accordlna t.o
1t.s rormula ror ~ompuU the
prime rate, the rate worked out
to Mtween g and 7 perceat thJs
week. The formula aa based in
part on t.be rate for commercial
paper short-term unsecured
IO Us by compan1es.
Citibank u.suaJly takes the lead
in prime rate adjustments.
The change m the prime rate -
a bank's charge on loans to its
best corporate customers -had
been widely anticipated because or the Federal Reserve's recent
actions to tighten growth in the
nation's money supply.
In the past month, the money
supply has been rising faster
than the Fed has indicated it
· would lik,e, and its money
managers have been actively tr~ing to slow the rate of growth.
In the past week, the rate on
federal funds, the money banks
lend each other, has risen about
Fro9PageAJ
QUAKE •••
buildings Some refused to return
even after tremors halted. The
biggest impact was 1n Port
Medland, where parked cars
were bounced up and down by the
quake and buildings rocked and
s wayed for four minutes.
The clOBest major Jand area to
the quake's epicenter was the In·
dones1an island of Sumba, about
• 200 miles away. About 25,000 peo.
pie hve on the farming island,
famous for itc; horses.
The quake's center was also
about 300 miles southeast of the
tourist island or Bali, where an
earthquake last year resulted in
more than 1,000 deaths.
Estimates of the quake's in·
tensity varied. The International
Tsunami Information Centee's
t>bservatory in Honolulu said it
registered 7.7 on the Richter
scale while the Uppsala
Seismological Institute in
· ~weden said it reais~red 8.3, making it the most powerful
quake this year. The Vienna
Institute for Meteorology and
Geodynamics said it recorded
· the quake at 8.9 on the Richter
Scale, the tughest reading in his· tory.
Oil Drilling
Plan Advances
ooc-quan r pe tnt11e point to e e~. percent.
The prime rate is not dtrecUy'
linked lo consumer loan char1es
but may exert u psycholo&ieaJ In·
nuencti on all Joan rat •
"The only thins the two have In
common is that they are both
praces and thty may both rise,"
one banker said.
'No Bond'
For Driver .
ln2 Deaths
MEMPHIS, Tenn <AP l The
18·year-old youth accused of kill·
ing two Lou1s1ana women and
critically injuring a third with his
car outside Elvis Presley 's
mans ion was ordered held
without bail today after his
mother said he had mental problems.
Cit¥ court Judge Horace
Pierotti reversed an earlier rul
ing Chat set bond at S20,000 for
Treatise Wheeler Ill. The Judge
said he was ordering Wheeler
held without bond because of
statements by his mother, Olivia
Wheeler, about the defendant's
mental condition. He scheduled a
preliminary heanng for Wheeler
on Monday. <Related story, Page
A4 >
Wheeler is charged with two
counts of second-.degree murder.
reckless drivin g, public
drunkenness and driving while
under the influence of intoxicants
Alice Hovarter and Joanne
Johnson, both 19, took Wednes
day off from work to drive from
Monroe, La., to Memphis They
were killed early Thursday as
the stood outside Presley's
Graceland Mansion.
A third teenager rut by the car,
Tammy Baiter, 17, of St Clair.
Mo., was in critical condition at a
Memphis hospital.
Junior Slaark
With concentration worth\' of Wiliie :\lo~com . .10 ~ e.i.r·
old Scott Stebbins of Missi.on Viejo sights on the cue ball
in preparation for a s hot in a tournament sponsored b~
the SaddJeback Vallev Unified School District Recrea -
tion Department. The· event drew the besi player~ from
the Saddleback Valley·s teen and community Cl"nters to
Olivewood School in El Toro.
----..-.......~
WASHJNGTON (AP) -Pre.si·
dent Carter nominated Arizona
Gov. Raul H. Castro, a former
ambassador to Bolivia and El
Salvador, as ambassador to
Argentina today.
The ftrst-term Democratic gov· ernor nas oeen rumorea to oe in
Une for the post for months.
Castro, 61~ a naturalized
citizen bom in Cananea, Mexico,
became governor tn 1975 on his
second try for the office. Under
the state constitution, be would
be replaced as governor by
Secretary of State Wesley Bolin.
Bis current term expires. in December 1978.
Castro served as the top U.S.
diplomat in Bolivia and El
Salvador during the Johnson ad·
ministration.
Since rumors of Castro's ap.
pointment began circulating in
Argentina in May, some ot the
more conservative elements in
the military government and
some political commentators
U.S. TO TA.KE
JllET REFUGEES
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia
<AP> -The United States will
accept more than half of the 3,080
Vietnamese refugees in
Malaysia, a U.S. Embassy spokesm~aid today.
He said the first group of 50 ref·
ugees will be flown to the United
States euly nm week.
The spokesman said U.S. im·
migration officers have been in
Malaysia over the pas( two
months interviewing Vietnam~
refugees who wanted to go to the United States.
Sinatra Lawyer SoUght
Decision Sought in Nevada Gaming Issue
CARSON CITY <AP> -
Nevada Gaming Commission
Chairman Harry Reid wants
Frank Smatra·s lawyer, Milton
Rudm of Los Angeles, to step
forward for licensing as a Del E.
Webb Corp, director,
The commission didn't•issue a
formal order Thursday that
Rudin cQme forward,. b~ Reid
said that by next month he want·
ed a recommendation rr~ the
panel's investigatory arm, the
Gaming Control Board, and he
would then move to issue the Or·
der if Rudin had not voluntarily
acted in the interim.
Commission member Clair
Haycock said he wanted.swift ac·
tion on the Rudin-Sinatra matter
because it appeaced gaming
authorities had been •'running
and hiding" m delaying acuon on the issue.
Sinatra was stripped or a
Nevada gaming license in 1963
for allegedly hosting· the late
Sam "Momo" Glancana at a club
Sinatra once owned at Lake
Tahoe; Giancana, a known un·
derworld figure, was assassinat-
ed in 1975.
Reid said his main concern
was whether Rudin should be
licensed. But Haycock said he
was concerned over both Rudih
and Sinatra.
The move on Rudin came as
Control Board member Jeff
Silver discl06ed that SJnatra has
been divesting hlmself of Del E:
Webb stock. Silver also disclosed
that a rift between Sinatra and
Webb factions within the . Phoenix, Arit.·based fll'll) bad
appare:otJ,y ended. •
Sil vet" said the Webb f •cUon
had moved to dismias its suit
against RUdin, Sinatra, Las
Ve-gas Sun l>~blisbel' Hant
GreenspUJ\ and others, whlch at.
leged U>e Si•atra group con-
spired to comi>el it to sell certain
· properties to .them an~ to book
certain entertainers.
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Aeon·
troversial proposal by Occlden·
ta! Petroleum Corp. to drill oiJ
wells off Pacific Palisades has
moved a step closer to approval
because of a split vote by a City Council committee.
The spUt vote by the PJ8Ming
Committee Thursday ~ent the
proposal to the full council with
no recommendation,
TAkES FAIR REINS
Newport'• Hoose
San ]uaii Gas 'l'axes
To Ortega Highway?
Rudin had.. beett .elected to the
Del E. Webb board of directors
June 3 m· Pboeni~ and was re· c~nlly seatl!d on the board
despite initial opposition to tbe
seating, Silver said.
Sinatra and Rudin Jnitially a~
quired 560,000 sharb, or a 6.5
percent intereat, in Del E. Webb
Corp. Silver and Sinatra was
.. sy•tematically divestinc ..
hJmself of bis stoct and the end
result is expected ~o be a com·
bined interest of 425,000 &Jlares or
Only a simple nuuority -eight
votes -will be need~ fort1'efu11
council to approve the drilling.
1Police Nab Youth
Mter SC Chase
Boose Heads
Fair Board
Newport Beach businessman
Clinton M. Hoose bas been
named president of the Oranae
County Fair board of directors.
Board members elected Hoose to
the one-year term Thursday night.
Hoose, founder and president
of Non Hardware in Newport
Beach, succeeda Santa Ana al·
torney Warren T . .Finley.
Board members also elected
Gene TUnks of Garden ·aro'le as • vice president and attorne~
Elmer I>. !lon.tano or Costa Meo
as ecoftd Vice prts1dent.
stat•'& respensi~lll\y,.. Friess
said.
"I c:fon•t think we•11e going t.o
solve the problem on our own,·· besai~
Tbe CO&lncil m.tority dlrected
city officials to prepare a further
report on expenditures for the
Orteaa Hi1hway: by •tat.a agen. cies.
just under Spercent. "
Stiver also nid Rudin bad filed
notice with the federal Securities
and Excbanp Commlssioo ~at
he intaded to split up the ar· rana.ement wttb SJ.natra ao that
he woUld, have abOut J2S,OOO
shares in bis own account and
Sinatra would have the l't· mainder.
have expressed opposlUon lo his
selection, sayin1 th• appoint·
ment of a Hispanic shows a
patronizing altitude on ~ part
of the Carter admh.>iatration.
Some Argentinians believe
that a non·Hi1pan.f c American
should be 11ent because, unlike
most Lalin American nations...
Argentina ·s population consist!
or PQOPte of varJed European
stock and is not overwhelmingly
Hispanic ind Indian.
No oatclal objeetioe llas beef\
raised to the Ci'Stro ;appoin •
ment, however. ·
Relations betw"n the Vntt~ States and Argentina hav,
become strained since las,t
February, when the Carter ~
ministration ordered u.s;,
military aid to Argentina re·
duced because of alleged human
rights violations there. The
Argentinians subsequently r'
Jected all U.S. military aid. .
,,...Page Al
COACH •••
teams at one time.
He said that during this time.
there were "rumors and sus"pi·
cions" but that no formal com-
plaints were made.
Then this year, a girl discussed
the matter with police, but the
statute or limitations (three
years) had expired in her case. Brooks said.
The girl identified other girls
and ooe reported an incident on
which the atatute had n.earJy ex· pire4
Charges were filed ~ in that
.~ase; Brooks said. Another al·
leged victim was located and in·
dicaled that e vents had
transplrtd durlpg 1976. Charges
were filed in t~t caso, be said,
The glrls i.n1'olved wete 13to16
a-. the time.of the alleaec:roccur·
rences. .
Brooks said that to many of bis
team members, Gregory was a
.. father image.
"They would come to him and
discuss family problems and
personal problems," be said.
In addition to taking the team
members on tournament toun,
Gregory frequently would take
the girls on lltOe holida7s or
ateukiing, BroOb 1aid.. •
Jn a4dltion to coaching teams
In ~a Beach, Grq0f1 also
w«ked... in Santf. Barbara end
Long Beach Q"well u San Diego.
San Diego police are now qbes·
tlonlnl team members there.
'VOL. 70, NO. 231, ~SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES
VEMJTalBU. __ ..., "9.eMllft
COila eaa clty councllmen
bave held off action on an oi'-dmance that would lower the zon.
inc desu1ly oo about four blocks
on the city's west side after bear-
inc rrom a property owner who
said the law would mean a sub-
slanUal financial loss to him.
Andt Mayo's lcmg, narrow lot
at 76S llamfitoo St. is included in
the four.block ar a reconUy the
subject of a buUdtni moratOrlum
Sm poled by the CO\ll\Cll.
Lat moolb the City touncil
cave preliminary approval to an
ordinance lowerin1 the~ on
reaideatiil lots ln the area from
hicb <R4> to medium <RS and
R2> densities.
But Maye>\ who is 76 and le&ally
blind, said the zone chante on his
property mi&ht cost hlm as much
as '30,000.
"I boucht that property 18
yean 110 u a nest e11 for my
old qe," Mayo told councilmen
this week.
"I'm 76 years old, been legally
blind for 20 years. My wife is 68
and she can't co back to work,"
he said. ••1 don't want to go on re-
lief, but I'm liking a big, big loss
OD this."
Mayo's property contains a
small cottage on the parcel now,
but the elderly bird breeder said
a local builder approached b1m
last .January and offered bim
$.53.000 for the lot.
''He wanted to build five .apart.
ments on it, but now the land is
zoned R·2 and be can't <Jo. it,"
Mayo said.
The sale was predicated on the
land remaining zoned for R-4 de-
velopment, he said.
Anaheim Fire .. Kills .. 3 .
Children ·Perish ·in GlUOline Blaze
Three children burned to death
and fi ve others were injured
Thul"Sday when flaming gasoline
turned their Anaheim apartment
into "an instant ball of fire," in·
vestigators said.
Dead in the wake of the 3:50
p.rn. blaze were Jorge Vera, 10
montM, along with his sisters,
Rosalva, 5, and Ilda, 2, all of the
941 W. Bluejay Lane apartment.
The children's father, Alfredo
Vera, 30, was cleaning paint
brushes with gasoline in the
kitchen after painting a crib out-
side, firemen said.
A kitchen pilot light ignited the
gasoline fumes, firemen said, sel
the one-gallon container of
gasoline ablaze and sent Vera
rushing through the apartment
with the naming plastic con-
tainer spilling burning aasoline
along the way.
Medi«'! Blameless
'Right to Die'
Action Backed
.Marie Leuck says she doesn't
blame Newport Beach doctor
for not letlina her 86-year~d
inotller "die with clle1t,y.,. ''
"Dr. ('lbeodore> Alex ls a won·
derful man," she aatd in a
telepltone interview, "He juat
feels that what be did ls rllht,"
Mrs. Lauck'• mother. Marie
Welday, died Wednesday at a
Newport. Beach-ccnnaleleent..
hospital where she had.been kept
alive for 16 months by nasal ad·
ministration of nutrlentl and
heart and blood medication.
This despite a "living wUl" the
elderly woman had signed five
years previous to a stroke she
suffered in May 1976.
A lawsuit that could have
Costa Mesa
Pedestrian
Hit by Van
A Costa Mesa man who wit·
nesses said ran across Harbor
Boulevard against a traffic •
signal was in the intensive care
unit at Costa Mesa Memorial
Hospital today after being struck
by a van.
Keisuke Kurosa, 22, o{ 383
'Wilson st. was reported in stable ·
condition by hospital officials to-
day following tile 10 a .m. accl·
dent Thursday.
Driver Larry Joe Graham ol
Fountain Valley was Ultable to
'llOP for the rwtnln1 pedestriu.
who succeufully crossed the
northbound lanes ot Harbor at
Wilson Street before belnl struck
.by Graham'• van.
The Fountain Valley motorist
was not cited by police.
meant a landmark court decision
on the right of helplessly ill peo..
pie to will. their own death, died
wttb tbe--a-. .. l'DJ not going to purau• any
court action," Mr$. Leuck said
toda,y.
But the Qlilta Mesa ~an
said &be bO(>eS someoo. catties
the ball retarding the it&ht or
terminallYill l*>l'leto~ ·
"We need to get the law
straightened out so doctors will
be in the clear when a request
like this comes up in the future,"
sheaaid.
The lawsuit filed by Mrs.
Leuck last month asked a
Superior Courl judge to force Dr.
Alex to comply with th4! state's
new natural death law. That law,
however, applies only to persons
who sign a "living will" after
they are told their condition is
tertninal.
Ip the case of Mrs. Leuck's
mother, the elderly woman
6itrted the document before she •
knew sbe was dying,
Mrs. Leuck says she wants to
help other people who want to
.. die with dignity."
She said she has had many
misgivings about her battle to al·
low her mother to die, but added,
0 Looking back, I couldn't do any
different." -
Cella, Evans
Aides Given
At the same time a wall heater
ignlted and the ~partment ex-
ploded in names. firemen said.
Once outsi.de Vera tossed the
burning gasoline over the
second-story apartment's
balcony, splashlng it down the
steps and setting them afire,
firemen said. ·
Vera's wife, MargaritaL_'.llld a
visitor. 20-year-old Lupe valdez
fled by jumping out a window,
Grouch9
liSted as
'Critical'
LOS ANGELES <AP) -
Groucho Marx has taken a turn
for the worse and is 1n critical
condition at Cedars Sinai
Medical Center, a hospital
spokesman said today.
The 86~ear-old comedian's
pulse ana blood pressure had
become unstable, said .hospital
spokesman Larry Baum.
"Everything that can be done
to help him is being done,'' be
said. "The body goes one way at
times and your aid sometimes is
not beneficial as it might be."
~arx was sUpplns in and out of
consciousness, anoth.er hospital
sPQkesman sa·d. He was beicg
fed lnlraveJaousJy aftd oxygen
was being administered to him,
Baum said.
Marx was ~ng attended by
nurses and physicians around the
clock, he said.
)darx entered the hospital last.
June for treatment of a "benikr\
form of pneumonia, ·t doctors
.said.
also diopping Mrs. Valdez• son,
• 1.year-old Ernesto Rodri8Ue%,
and 6-year-old Lupe Vera to safe-
ty, firemen said.
Vera attempted to rush back
into the apartment to rescue the
other children but wa.s held back
by neighbors, firemen said.
The injured were all taken to
UCI Medical Center. Firemen
said the Rodriguez boy and Vera
(See nRE, Page AZ>
Douglas'
Trial Set
For Oct. 3
.............
PRESLEY FAN KATHY .FINLEY MOURNS IN MEMPHIS .
King of Rock Laid to Rest: See Story, Page A4
/Editor'• Note: The Auocfat4!1d
Preu reported Thursday OUf of
M emphU that . authoritie3 had dia·
count«t repom that Pre*" Md
3~ dnJg•problema. Dr. JnrJJ
Frand.tco, who conducted a three-
OOUT maopq, cm the ~tntamer'8
bod11, waa quoted as 1aying there wa1
no lign of any d1119 abuae. "There
WOl 1!0 4Mdence of an11 abnormal, U·
legal drtJg uu," qr. Franci8co saJd.)
bodyguards to produee a drug
pusher for Presley himseU to a·
ecute.
Presley bad a fascination with
firearms, and once bought 32
handguns in one moDth. Jfe
owned a Thompson submachine
gun aud JlD M-16 rifle, and oiften
wore three guns on his person. in·
cludina a small pistol ~once-1e.d
in his boot whenever he was on
stage. ·
Prnley wu a lonely. b~
man who wowd oft.en stay in bis
room for weeks, eating eriormous
qu.antit,ies of food, taking drup,
and ret'uStng to come out.
PriSJey bad a habit of slw>otJJig
out television screens when a
2 DAIL V PILOT
ltlgsterious Box D,tUy f'llM Slllff ......
. .
~ewport Beach police officer Scott Cade displays the
s ource of a lot of anxietv Thursda\' at the Do\'e Street
branch of the Bank of America. So.mebod~· left it at the
bank. Bank officials became s uspicious and culled
police. The bomb squad was called in. The ~ilding was
e \'acuated. Bomb squad tied a string, around the bo:\
and pulled it ~ingerly from the bank. The box \\a~
empty
.Indonesian Quake
·Largest Recorded
JAKARTA, Indonesia <AP> -
A major earthquake was report-
ed in the Indian Ocean today
between Australia and In-
donesia. Tremors forced hun-
dreds of workers to flee tall
buildings in western Australia
nearly 1,000 miles away but there
were no immediate reports of in-
juries.
The Vienna Institute for
Meteorology and Geodynamics
said the quake registered 8.9 on
the Richter scale. the highest
reading ever recorded.
Other seismological stations
reported readings between 7 and
• 8 3 on the Richter, indicating a
maJor quake capable of
widespread dama1e.
The Indonesian Department of
Meteorology said the quake oc-
curred at 1: 11 p m. Jakarta lime
1t :11 p. m PDT -and tremors
and aftershocks lasted for more
than an hour
The quake was centered 931
miles southeast or the Indonesian
capital of Jakarta and more than
1,000 miles north of Perth.
Australia.
TONIGHT
STAN KENTON CONCERT -
OCCAuditorium. 7:30p.m.
"SOMETHJNG'S AFOOT"
Costa Mesa C1v1c Playhouse.
'Fairgrounds, Aue. 17-20, 8:30
p.m. Reservations: 556-5459.
COSTA MESA WATER SHOW
12th Annual Water Show,
Estancia HJ&h School, 7:30 p.m.
SO cents.
"VANITIES" -South Coast
Repertory Theater Ulrough Aug.
'21,8p.m. • I
MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY
RACING -Fairl(rounds, 8 p.m.
I SATUIU>AY, AUGUST 20
) FAMILY PICNIC -Dept. of
I 'Leisure Services sponsors old
r Tashloned faO\ilY pic:nic, Lions
I 1Park.noonto5p.m. ti
OAANQE COAST c
DAILY PILOT
There were no immediate re-
ports of damage from Indonesia
or islands near the quake's
epicenter. There also was no in
dication that Lhe quake had
raised a tsunami, or tidal wave.
Tremors shook the length of
western Australia, a distance or
about 2,400 miles. In Perth, win-
dows and venetian blinds rattled,
chairs slid across floors and
frightened workers ran from
buildings. Some refused to return
even after tremors halted. The
biggest impact was in Port
Hedland, where parked cars
were bounced up and down by the
quake and bwldings rocked and
swayed for four minutes.
The clos~t m~or land erea to
the quake's epicenter was tbeJn-
donesian island of Sumba, about
200 miles away. About25,000peo-
ple live on the farming island,
famous for its horses.
. The quake's center was also
about 300 miles southeast of the
tourist island of Bali, where an
earthquake last year resulted in
more than 1,000 deaths.
Estimates of the quake's in-
tensity varied. The International
Tsunami Information Center·s
observatory in Honolulu sald it
registered 7. 7 on the Richter
scale while the Uppsala
Seismological Institute in
Sweden said it registered 8.3,
making it the most powerful
quake this year.
FremPageAI
ZONING •••
.. HE TAKES EVERY posllble
P.lll you can think of," Wat sald.
Coach
A Laguna Beach privat!'
volleyball coach wllo "many
famllles thouaht wais Just the
finest man around," has beeJl lll'l-
r ted by La•una BeaQh police on a warrant allqill( Ullclt sex-
ual rdottOlls with airll who were
members of bis teams.
'He takes pUlJ and shots to tet
up. He t es pain pllla durlnc the
day. He takes Demerol and
morphine shots for downs. He
takes a very strong pain medic:.a-
tion that t. lntended for tenninel-
ly ill cancer paUents; he says it
Juat Civa him a pleasant high.
He takes pills that be thinks will
prevent body odor. He takes pills
that he thinka will live him a sun-
tan.
Police Detective Gene Broo~
" said today Jan Campbel)
Greaory, 52, bad been taken into
custodf in San Diego where he is
living and coaching after bavinf
left IAguna Beach last fall. .
"All he does is want to get
himself completely out of bis
head. He had us give him shots in
bis rear end, and you couldn't
even find a spot where there
hadn't been other needles. Try-
ang to give him the shot was like
eoing into a cramped muse.le.
The fiber wouldn't absorb the
Ouid from the syrln&e. He takes
more downers than uppers. He
enjoys the downers; the uppers
are ju.st to get him to perform. l
don't know why he does it --
whether it's boredoJD, wbe"'1er
he feels. he's done everything
there is to do, or what. But I think
his life is in danger. We would
prayforhlmtostop, buttherewas
no telling Elvis what to do.
''He sincerely believes be is a
supematUl'al force. He compares
himself to Jesus. He believes he
can place bis band on a person,
and "ithdraw that person's pain
into his own body. One night I
was out in the back yard. and
Elvis told me be bad just seen a
flying saucer land. He said. ·we
mustn't be afraid. They're not
here to do us harm.·
Pete Ascb of the Stan Kenton Band shows high school
saxophone players David Moody 1 left > of Lakewood and
Mike Schafer of Corona del Mar some fine points of the
instrument during a rehearsal at Orange Coast College
Students jom the Kenton band tonight at 7: 30 in the OCC
auditorium.
Banks Hike Rates;
"ONE NIGHT An'ER we had
seen a movie in Metnphis, he had
us drive off the expressway and
House Cosis Too?
gotoafuneralhome.Abackdoor NEW YORK <AP>-Several
was unlocked. I was there, !:lvis major banks raised their prime
was there, his girlfrjend was interest rate today from 6:\4 per-
there, his cousin and his cousin's cent t.9 7 percent. One economist
wife were there. ,Elvis went up said a major effect of the moves
and down a row of corps~. lifting could be increased housing costs.
the sheets off eight or 10 bodies. Citibank, the naUon ·s second-
He would lift the sheets and show largest commercial bank, led off
how the embalmers had cut the the increases, followed shortly
throats and bled the bodies and by 12lh-r1UJked Marine Midland
how the stitches were holding the Bank in Buffalo, M. Y.
throat together. He did this on\.. C
:;everal occasions: he was . our•aeoos
fascinated wilh dead bodies. , ~
"He has a vision of being as-, f · ·
sassinated. He told us that he, B«>osts Hopes didn't want some little guy smil-
ing in a CQU~oom and ~i the ~ .-T• Ef~f:ptTey~Somfi~tord~~¥.i,: 1w1th w m
FBI and the police have their jab • .,
to do. You have yours. If I'm as-
sassinated, I want you to get the
guy first lind rip bis eyeballs out.
NEWPORT, R .J. <AP >
Atlanta Brlves' owner Ted
Turner found air for Courageous·
sails on the last leg or Friday's
duel with Enterprise, sailing past
the newer 12-meter yacht lo win
another race in the America's
Cup defense finals.
I don't want anyone grinning In
any courtroom because he killed
me.·
·'He believes he can hypnotize
people to do what is in his mind.
One night in LaS VegJs, he called
me into his bedroom and I could
tell that he thought be was hyp-
notizing me. He oft.en sald that he
had an eleetrical kind of power
that could take over people's
minds. He went to rus closet and
got out an M-16 rifle. He told me
that he wanted me to Jd11 the
karate instructor who took bis
wife away from him. When I
wouldn't do it, he tried to get Red
to l(et a tilt man to .do It. l knew
then that be bad aone, that tte had
flipped. Another time, in Mem-
phis, he c8.Ued me into his room.
He had aboUt etsht 1uns laid out
on his bed. He sbOwed me a
pclture of a guy_ who ran a pool
hall, a drug ~her,. He said. 'We
aotta git this IUY. • He wanted the
bodyi\W'da to 1et. the f\IY out
someplace where Elvis could tdU
him. He was always 1otn1
around talking about what an an-
tl·dNI crusader he was, which is
Ironic, considering his own habit. •
Couraeeous, which took the
start by seven seconds, built a
slim, 23-second lead at the first
mark and increased that to 25
seconds rounding the second
buoy in the four·leg race.
However, Ent.etprlse came on
strong on the third leg "'1d bad a
32-second margin at tM third
mark. Hq,wevei: she failed to
cover on the fourth leg and
wound up }QSing by 8: 21.
The winning margin was the
widest ot the American competi-
tion.
The New York Yacht Club
ended the race at the fourth in-
stead Of the Sillt.h mark because
of light winds at six knots from
the east-southeast.
Among others ra1san_g their
prime rates were San Fran-
cisco's Crocker National Bank.
the nation's 13th larg-est :
Mercantile Trust Company in
St. Louis, al'\d Harris Trust &
Savings Bank in Chicago.
Walter Hoadley, chief
economist of the first-ranked
Bank of America. said his San
Francisco-based institution bad
no plans to raise its prime rate to-
day, but would "continue to
study the market.··
He said the rate hike "reflects
concern about inflation and gov-
ernment monetary policies."
The prime rate is a bank's
charge on loans to its best cor·
porate c:_ustomers. lt is nolditect-
ly linked to consumer loan
charges but may exert a
psychological innuence on all
loan rates.
Kenn.on V. Rothchild, presi-
dent oi Mortgage Bankers As-
sociation of America, said in
Washington the latest increase
would cause an immediate boost
in builders· cost of construction
financing.
"The builders· increased cost
wUJ begin to show in the Price of
new homes in two or three
montbs," be said. "To the
sophisticated buyer of new or ex-
isting housing, the real meanin&
of the rise ln the prime l'ate is
that present mortgage interest
levels are more favorable now
than they may be in a few
months."
Citibank, which usually moves
first in prime rate adjustments
and which bad held tbe prime at
g~ percent since May 27, did not
elaborate immediately on the
reasons behind its move.
Gregory faces trial on fi"
felony charges of unlawful s~
ual activity with female minol'6.
Superior Court arraignment hl.s
been continued to Aug. 30.
Greeory is free on baiL
Gregory was an independent
volleyball coach. His students
paid fees for his services. His
teams ~ompeted in NationaJ
Volleyball Association and AAll
matches, Brook.a said.
"He is a very personable man.
He gained the confidence of
parents and the girls. Many of
the families thought he was just
the finest man around.·· Uet.
Brooks said.
UAProbes
lsmel Ties
To UraniUm
w ASHINGTON (AP) -Cen-
tral Intelligence Agency in-
vestigators reportedly believe
that weapon-grade nuclear
materials were diverted from an
American plant and shipped to
Israel during the 1960s.
The Washington Star said to-
day that a CIA spokesman told
congressional investigators that
CIA lnvestigatoTs reached that
conc lusion afte r agenc y
operatives in Europe received in-
formation that Israel had ob-
tained a sizable quantity of
enriched uranium.
Michael Ward, a congressional
staff investigator, had said last
week that "an intelligence agen-
cy believes there was a
diversion" of about 135 pounds of
enriched uranium in 1965 from a
plant in Apollo, Pa. He did not
idenUfy the agency or wtiere the
material was diverted to.
Officials of the Enercy
Research and Qevelopment Ad-
minUltration and the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission have
acknow)edged that 8,000 pounds
of weapons-grade nuclear
material have been unaccounted
for over the years but have said
they think that none of the
material was stolen. They said
problems such as bookkeeping
errors may account for the in-
ability to trace the materials.
The Star said the CJA in-vestigation eventually came to
focus on the Apollo plant, which
produced enriched uranium fuel
for U.S. submarines ''and also
had ties with a number of (oreign
governments, inchtding a sub-
sid iary owned in partnership
with the Israeli government."
Details of the CJA probe were
divuleed to Nuclear .Regulatory
Cor;nmissiOQ officials in a secret
conferettce in 1976, the Star said.
Participants included Kenneth
R. Chapman, the bead of N.RC's
aafeauards section, and Carl
Duckett, then the CIA 's third-
ranking official.
Some years ago while addressing the Central
Indiana Floor Covering Assbclation, an industry
spok~sman, Walter Guinan said: "Too many
people in the floor covering industry are
convinced the public only wants to buy "junk"
car~t."
DMly f'li.I Slaff f'llet•
SCULPTOR GEORG RAUCH DISPLA VS HIS CRAFT
A Bizarre Background as • Jew In German Army
Austrian Sculptor
Tough hut Sublime
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of IM O•llY l'llol Sl•ll
Craggy faced and articulate,
s peaking English and the
Spanish of his adopted Mexico
with an Austrian accent, artist
and sculptor Georg Rauch is a
tough man who can laugh with
and at hfe.
Now 5.1. Rauch knows the worst
and the best sides of mankind.
"I'm 25 percent Jewish from
my grandmother and I was in th~
German Army during World War 11:· says the ebullient Rauch.
who divides his professional
artist's life between the shores of
Laguna Beach and the shores of
LakeChapaJa, in Mexico.
The World War ·n life of the
Rauchs· Vienna household was
bizarre to say the least, accord·
mg to the artist
·'My mother was .,.h1dmg 16
Jews in our alhc at home and my
Auss~ Yacht
Nearly Out
Of Cup Race
NEWPORT. R.I. <AP>
Faced with sudden disaster If he
loses one more race, skipper
Gordon Ingale of the Australian
12-meter yacht Gretel 11 has de·
cidcd to seek last minute help for
his America's Cup challenge.
"l understand there are some
churches around town." said the
light-hearted Ingate Thursday
after losing to Sweden's Sverige
·'And the whole crew is going to
go tomorrow · ·
Sverige, representing the first·
ever Swedish challenge, got one
up on Gretel II in their semifinal
series. making her record 3-2 in
the ~l·of-seven series with a
2:1lwm.
Gretel II, which challenged for
.r the Cup in 1970, was given a day
off today but must win on Satur-
day or face elimination. Alan
Bond's yacht Australia is
alr eady in the finals, having
swepU'our from France t. '
Not far away from Sverlge and
.. Gretel II on Thursday, E n·
• terprise and Independence were
dueling to one victory apiece in
the fJDal round for def enders. En·
' terprise won tho (U'st encounter
' by l : 02 and Independence tbe
secOod by 58 seconds.
sister was entertaining SS of·
ficers at parties downstairs and I
was deal\!'lg on the Black Market
for food stamps to feed the Jews
upstairs, .. says the former
German Army radio operator.
He was 26 when eventually re
patriated from a POW camp in
Russia.
Sometimes, in POW camp,
with scrounged materials. he
continued the artistry that he has
always loved, and sent pencil
sketches of Russian Front scenes
home to bis aging parents as hoh
day gifts.
·'At 26, I was a war hero. a
crippled POW and an artist.
Rauch recalls with a good
na tured guffaw "Here in
California at 26, men are still
s urfing, with their big. fat
bellies.··
Rauch spent two years in a
s anatorium for tuberculosis or
the bone after the war. : .. "I have always painted,·· says
Rauch, wbocameto America 11
years ago.
Rauch 's education at the
University of Vienna after World
War II was in architecture and
engineering.
"My paren,ts asked: 'But why?
You want to paint.' .. Rauch re-
c a Us or his educational declslon,
during a sidewalk chat ~t Laguna
Beach's Festival of The Arts.
where he is currently exhibiting.
"Maybe I couldn"t support a
family as a painter ... says the
artist who has done admirably
well at it since coming to
America where he rflarried a
former San Clemente city
librarian.
He has never been employed ln
architecture or engineering.
"When l was shipped to the
Russian Front in a 'cattlewagon ·
train, my mother said at the de·
pot: 'Remember, son, lbe things
in life that don't kill you will only
make you more strong' ... he re·
calls.
Rauch says with one who heeds
and understands advice. such as
his Austrian mother offered can
hardly go wrong in Ute Uf e he
c:hooses to lead, • Rauch has an artistic lltyle that
is highly polished.
'"llley tell me my style is 1'HE thlrii in Europe now.·· he Sl)'I.
But J\8Ucb makeJ. tho 1ta~
mentalmost shyly.
SEATl'LE (AP) -••Rub-a·
dub-dub, three men in a
tub ••• "
The three Mother Goo•e
characten may have been
crowded, but with five do•en
diapers, 150 pounds of peanut
butler and a box full of toys
tueked away in a comer of their
cramped 28-foot homemade
sailboat, Terry OOhn and bis
family are saWn1 pretty dozily,
too
They are finally fulfilling
Cohn's 15-year dream of sailing
to lbe South Paciflc.
Depending on their whim and
lbe will of the wind, Cohn, bis
wife-, Judy, and their three
children -rancing tn a,ge from
18 months to 6 years -may not
return to the Pacific Northwest tor two to five years.
Tbeir wooden sailing vessel is
far from fancy. A bucket on lbe
main deck serves as the famfly
shower. A cabin below deck
doubles as dining room and
bedroom.
The huU of the ''S.Jiclterboat"
was salvaged froai a beach
where it had been resting for 11
years, covered with thorny
brush. One child, Theta, called it
a "Stickerboaf' and the name
stuck
With no refrigerator. the fami·
ly of five will live on a steady diet
of non-perishable foods.
"It's kind of a sad joke," said
Cohn. "We have five pounds of
peanut butler, 70 pounds of tuna
fish. Personally, I can'tstand the
stuff."
Born in Sundown. Tex., "where
the neJrest ~aterhole is 100
miles away.•• Cohn taught at
Skagit Valley College near
Mount Vernon in Washin~ton. He
left last year to prepare for the
voyage.
Their first vessel was a two·
person boat, Cohn says. which
"one person would sail, the other
would bail." .
He says he is confident his kids
will be safe on the boat. Heavy
fishing line forms a fence around
the dee" and the toddler has a
bell atta~hed to his lifejacket.
making it easier for Mom and
Dad to keep track of him. 0 Bo\,h parents have degrees in
education and teaching ex·
perl«t)ce, a .. the Anacortes
SchciOT'Syste repared a year·
long-'inderg eo and first-grade
progtam for, the two older
child'ren
'
.. Whether you win or lose. ~u to be an that com-
pany is magnificent,.. the ent~rl~mer a!d b~·
telephone from Las Vegas, wh re'he as appearing ctt
the Hotel Sahara.
Aspin, who described Lewi as .. a mun for all
seasons, all people and all tim~s· •
whose name "has. in the hearts of
millions. become synonymo s
wlth peace. love and
brotherhOod, ·· said he nominated
Lewis at the request of Kenneth
Mills of Kenosha. ..
• .Mills. assistant director or in·
struction at Gateway Technjcal
Institute, cited Lewis" work in
raising over $95 million m annual •
telethons over the past 11 years
for muscular dystrophy as one of the reason:, fo1 the
nomination.
Aspin ·s office said the Nobel Committee of the
="orwegian parliament told him the nomination would
be considered.
Aspin"s assistance was obtained because Peace
Prize nominations can be submitted only by go\·ern-
ment officials. past winners. members of the Peace
Institute Committee in Os lo and certain history and
law professors.
Solon Raps State's
Stand on Oil FlolV
ROSWELL CAP > -
California "is essentially
blackmailing" the rest of the
country with its stand on a pro-
posal to pump Alaskan sour
crude oil from the West Coast to
Texas, said Sen. Harrison
Schmitt <R-N.M >.
The freshman senator, who
was opening his area office an
Roswell Thursday, said he
thinks the proposal. known as the
El Paso-Sohio proJect, is "an ex
cellent idea."
.. Unfortunately," he added.
·'the state of Cahfornia is essen-
tially blackmailing the rest or the
country by sayjng their environ-
mental standards won't allow a
pipeline terminal to be built in
Long Beach and that they might
consider relaxing those environ-
mental standards if the federal
government would guarantee a certain level of natural gas sup-
-ply forthestateofCalifornia. •·
"I hope that that problem can
be negotiated and that we can
find a way to get the sour
Al askan crude oH across the
southwest United Slates into the
refineries. primarily tn T ex
as , ··said Schmitt.
.. I think it would benefit the
Southwest in general and the na·
lion as a whole if that crude oil
was brought into this area," he
said.
The plan bas been endorsed by
Rep. Harold Runnels <D-N.M. >.
chairman of a House Interior and
Insular Affairs subcommittee
that was assigned to look into the
problem of what to do with
Alaskan oil once it reaches the
West Coast.
Runnels, who was in Roswell
earlier this week, said there
aren 't enough refineries in
California capable of handling
the oil when the Alaskan pipeline
reaches maximum capacity.
~he compressors for the
pipeline would need to be re
versed and approximately 100
miles of pipeline would need to be
constructed from Jal to Midland.
Tex .• said Runnels.
Plane Lands
"In Canyon
DAIL V PILOT Jl:J
Women's.
Defenses
Revealed .
SEATTLE <AP> -Judces and
juries must learn that often a
woman wtll use a weapon to dt.
fend herself more than a mail
might in similar circumstances.
say two feminist lawyers.
"Historically, women who
have committed crimes protect·
lng themselves and their families have~ prosecuted where men
have not,'' said Elizabeth M .
Schneider
Ms. Schneider of New York
and Susan B. Jordan of San Fran·
cisco spoke to a meeting or the
National Lawyers Guild and Na-
tional Conference of Black
Lawyers at Seattle University.
The two women are amona the
altomeys representing Yvonne
Wanrow, the Colville Indian who
was convicted of second-degree
as:.ault in the 1972 slaying of a
man she said molested her child
and the child or a babysitter.
The conviction was overturned
by the state SQPreme Court. A
second trial is scheduled to begin
Oct. 11 in Spokane County.
''The women who have corn·
milled homicides are using
reasonableness in the
rircumstances in which they
found themselves. Women, like
Yvonne, who must have very
serious reasons.·· Ms. Jordan
said
The women s aid judges and
juries have not yet recognized
that while a man is convicted on
manslaughter for committing a
crime in the heat or passion. a
woman committing a crime un-
der similar circumstances is
charged with second·degree
murder
"What we are saying is that
women also act in the heat of
passion," Ms. Jordan said. She
s aid she bas talked to women in
prison who tell her "I pleaded
guilty because they Claw -
enforcement personnel> told me.
'you can't shoot the man who
beat you up'."
The feminist attorneys said
their role is to get judges and
juries to understand that what
may appear to be irrational,
especially to a man, may be very
rational to a woman faced with
defending herself and her
children against rape or other as-
saults. ·
Mafia ·O~n Piicirlg
Calif omia PrObe
An Anaheim aviator escaped
ihJUry Tltursday hight \Yheri he
was compelled lo land his light
aircraft In a Santa Ana Canyon
orange grove.. Orange County Sheriff's of-
ficers said engine trouble forced
Steve Weigandt, 18, to land his
single-engine plane in the last
stages of a flight to Fullerton
Airport from Gr~ley. Colo. .
"These are not trials about
facts. They are direct clashes of
ideology," Ms. Jordan said, cit-
ing the c~es of Ms. Wanrow and
Inez Garcia. who wa~ acquitted
earlier this year of the killing of
the man she aaid helped rape
her "It ls very important for the
jury to see through their own sex·
JSm and racism and rid
themselvesoftbemythsofrape,··
she said.
Although the two women say
they are encouraged by the ap-
parent application of the
reasonableness axiom, they
nevertheless believe it is a "real
long-term educational process,
because women do not trust the
criminal-justice system and lbe
court process because of its sex-
ist dominance."
TUCSON, Ariz. <AP> -Un-
derworld figure Joseph Bonanno
is being Investigated In efforts to
link him to California prostitu·
lion and drug trafficking and the
movement of stolen goods out of
Alaska, the Arizona Daily Star
has reported.
The newspaper quoted uniden·
tified sources Thursday as say·
ing that a four-agency probe of
the 72-year-old former Mafia don
has been going on for 18 months.
The FBI. Pima County
Sheriffs Department. Pima
County Attomey·s Office and the
Border Narcotics Strike Force
arc involved in the investigation.
Law enforcement authorities
will not confirm or deny informa-
tion being published about the
case, which has been tainted by
reports of illegal wiretappping
by a Pima County attorney's in-
vestigator.
County Atty. Stephen Neely
has said that an illegal wiretap
was uaed by inv~tlgatqt Edwin
A. Richards in an organbed
crime probe. J\lchards was s~
pended last nionth and ~ince hfS
Marine Held i
quit. A second investigator was
· suspended for not reporting the
illegal wiretappin~
The Maricopa County at
torney's office named a six-
member team Wednesday tom·
vestigate the wiretapping. at
Neely's reQuesl.
They said We1gandt at first in-
tended to land his machine in
nearby Featherly Park, but
chose the orange grove when he
realized he could not reach the
regional park. The plane was on·
ly slightly damaged.
Reduction
• WAX-LEAF PRIVET • JAPANESE ARALIA
• ASPARAGUS FERN • WHITE ABELIA
I Gal. Siu •SAU 79c
lteffo $2.49 PltlCE
•EUROPEAN
SYCAMORE
• Sll..KOAK
• EVERGREEN ASH
• CAROBTREE
•
ON THE ·~A('fl: As has hiap·
p~n«t to ~very l(l•nerataon of
\ ClUl'I& people, ) OU h~wr &a IOl 0(
tM lk th ~e davs 1abo1.1t how youths
of todtty urn 1i1orn11 to hell 1n 11
hundbask~t Wtll, 1f )UU n~ •
~tor) about tht· ~ouna that will
brtjlhten your d;,~. try th1~ ont!
In Huntington 84.'ath the cit~
li*nd its hfeeuard ~crv1ce opetato
a. program known t1i. Junior
.. Guard!>. Both pre·teen and teen
' ;i.g~ youngsters enroll I.ft ltul>
' program and go through sum·
mer·loog beach and ocean tl'am· j mg.
Tbe J(uardl> really put these
l..1ds through their paces. Train
rng includes everything from
water safety to first aid.
One of lht• mslructors. veteran
~uard Pat West, suffered a mis
fortune during this year's Junior
Guard program One recent
night. a buri;!lur broke into a
lifeguard building down on the
beach and made off with West~
person<Jl surfboard.
NOW WHEN YOL art• a rc<JI
beach person like West. losin~
your surfbo ard 1s hke losing your
nght arm
And the kids he w<.1s training,
the beginning Junior Guards,
reall y felt awful because West
had lost his board.
So last mghl was the windup of
the Junior Guards program in
Huntington Beach And they held
their annual awards program at
Edison High School
Abruptly. one of lifeguard
West ·s begmmng l>tudents took
mer the microphone up on stage
· Well. Mr. West's surfboard got
nppc.'Ci off this summer, ·student
Les llolland explained
And then on h<.•half of his fellow
Junior Guards. > oung I loll and
µresented West with a cert1fical<.
enllUmg him lo a brand·new,
custom designed, $170 surfboard.
The kids had pitched in two
hucks apiece to make that. little
presentation Possible
In response, West murmured,
"l really don "t know what to
:-.ay.'' Then he confessed, "You
see, I've never owned a brand·
new surfboard before .. :·
SO MUCH FOR the younger
~eneralion eomg to pieces.
Vmce Moorhouse. who heads
Huntington Beach·s lifeguard
and manne safety outfit, has his
own observations
· Sure. you hear a lot about the
kids of today gomg to hell. But
then you watch these Junior
Guards in their program and the
l'hallenges and demands made
on them. Our city could make no
better investment m our youth ··
Moorhouse noted his Junior
Guards will compete next week
in a run·swim event from San
Diego to Huntmgton Beach -
more than 100 miles covered in
fi ve or six days.
"You s hould see that finish line
when they come down the long
s tretch of beach to Huntington
Pier;· Vince said. "They're real·
Iv dragging. I'd hate to try 1t.
m yself."'
IF YOU'D UKE to witness
some real lifeguard action
yourself, you get the chance
tonight. The Laguna Niguel
Lifeguard Competition at Niguel
Beach Park . featuring top
lifeguards from San Diego to
Santa Barbara, is under way
tonight. A one-mile surf ski race
starts at ,7 p.m . under giant
searchlights set up on the beach.
Competition ends with the Salt
Creek Relay -and it's nice to
see the name Salt Creek making
a comeback.
( You might wonder why thi:f big
RCean competition is being held
at night, for goodness sake.
· Life1uards work (rom san u_,.
to sunset. That'swhy.
·LanOO Faces Added
CongFess · Inqui1ies
,
W•tHLllr~
<;reta Garbo. "ho" 1thdrew
I rom µublt<.· Ille :m }ear s
Ltgo. now fed:.. she has lived
a lonel ~. \\.astcd life and
··1t s too lak to chanJ:{e 1l. ..
.i West German magaiinc
reports. She II\ es l\\O s um-
mer months caeh 't·<tr near
Bonn when· ..,hl' reads.
-.lecps and \\ ;.11ts · · 1 real
h· don t kno\\ for '' h<tt. the
.irticle quoted ht·r
WASHING TON <AP> -Prest-
dent Carter and banking officials
ure convinced that Budget Direc·
tor Bert Unce broke no laws as a
Georgia banker, but members of
Cqnaress wont to question Lance
further about his Cinances.
Comptroller ot the Currency
John Heim ann, who had been
conductina the investigation into
i.~nce's business a€rairs. con-
cluded Thursday ttlat -no in·
formation developed to date
:•warrants the prosecution of any
ind1v1duals "
Afterward. Carter interrupted
his week-long vacation at Camp
David, Md., to fly to Washington
and tell reporters that "my faith
-in the character and competence
of Bert Lance has been recon-
firmed."
"BERT, l 'M ptoud of you.'· he
sald. s haking the hand of his
clQse friend.
Lance said tn u statement he
would remain Ill his Office of
lllIH Spirits Good
Following Surgery
:MINNEAPOLIS <A p I Sen Hubert H Humphr ey spent acom-
f ortable night and was m good spirits today after surgery that showed
the Minnesota Democrat has terminal cancer of the pelvis, doctors
said.
Dr John S. NaJarian. chief of surgery at University of Minnesota
llosp1taJs. said Humphrey required very little pain medication dt1r·
mg the night. He said when the senator woke, he lnsisted,Oll weighing
himself.
"He's domg fine:· NaJanan added "Physical findings are all
normal Vital signs are strong The nurses have said he's the
best and easiest patient they·ve ever taken care of ...
AFTERTHURSOA Y'SSURGERYTO relieve a blocked large in·
testme, Najarian had said that. barring complications. Humphrey
could be out of the hospital ma week and back in the Senate by early
September.
He declined lo speculate on Humphrey's hfe expectancy. saying.
·'It could be months, 1t could be years Predictions are impossible ·
The66-year old Humphrey in an arlicleforthismonth's Reader·s
Digest wrote. "You have to gear yourself to the continuity of the
struggle, knowing that there will be days when you don 't feel so
good."'
Bribery Suspet:t
Sighted in Seoul . ~
Management and BJJdget post. "I
feel my ability to 'c!arry out my
job has not been damaged. In this
regard 1 de~ply appreciate the ~onfidence which the President
ha's expressed In me.
"I feel strongly that if allega-
tions such as those raised In re-
cent days can cripple a person's
ability t.o carry out his or her JOb,
then we are in bad shape m our
country," Lance said.
Sen . Abraham R1b1c0Cf,
chairman of the Senate commit-
tee which held hearings on
Lance's nomination as budget
director. said the IPaJOr allega-
tions against the official ··were
definitely disproved by the
comptroller's report.''
BUT Tl(E Conn e c tj c.u t
Democrat asked Heimann to
finish his mqu1ry and tes.lify at a
Government Operations Com
tnittee hearing on Sept. 7, after
Congress returns trom its sum·
mer recess. Lance was asked lo
appear the next day.
Sen. Charles II. Percy ( R·lll. J,
'Son of Sam'
Freedom Plea
'Defies BelieF
NEW YORK <AP I -A pretrial
agency recommended that David
Berkowitz. who police say ts the
··Son of Sam" killer of six people.
be released without bail because
he had'1 steady JOb. a permanent
residence and no prior cnmmal
record.
The recommendation by the
Criminal Justice Agency Inc , a
private group runded by the city
and the federal government.
·'defies belief, .. Mayor Abraham
Hearne s aid Thursduv.
The aecncy rec.om mended
Berkowitz' release on his own re-
cognizance even though 1t knew
he was accused of being the .44-
ca liber killer, Beame said
The mayor l>a1d s1m1lar recom·
mendat1ons in lei.s notorious
cases "could permit dangerous
criminals to walk the streets on
little or no bail.··
said that if the hearlrias last
more than a few weeks, Lance
probably will have trouble doina
h1sjob.
He said the report "raises a
number of questions" and he
would like to know more about
the bank aircraft Lance used and
the dropping or several in·
vestigations of Lance·s activities
shortly before he was appomted.
A HOUSE banking subcomm1t
lee also plans to look into possi-
ble changes in banking Jaws as a
result or the inquiry.
Heimann. appojoted by Carter
a month ago. said he has not
finished his investiaation in three
areas:
-H.is own office's handline or
t he original investigation into
Lance's finances.
-Lance's banking transac·
lions before 1975.
-Allegations that Lance im·
properly used h 1s bank ·s
airplane.
An attorney for 15-year-old
Ronald Zamora. accused of
k~lling and stealing mone~·
from his elderl~• Miami
neighbor. says the youth'.
c ommitte d the crime
becaus~ he was intoxicated
from watching too much
violence m televised crime
s hows. The constant \·iew-
ing produced insa nit~. the
<1tlorne~· daune<t
Final Farewe.11
~ley ~id to Rest
MEMPIBS. Tenn. <API -A while cross of flowecs from his r or mer wife and his daughter stood by the crypt of Elvis Presley to-
day. as outside the mausoleum hundreds of people paid a final
homage.
They came in a steady stream from the ti me the cemetery gates
opened to weep and to kneel and t.o take pictures -Of the building
where the rock ·n· roll s uperstar was laid to final restTbursday.
Florists stood behind ropes to give the mourners nowers from the
3.116 displays that lay like a colorful qwlt across the lawn of the
mausoleum. None of the visitors was allowed inside the building, hut
they seemed content JUSt to be outside.
PRESLErS COFFIN WAS SEALED behind a slab or concrete
and marble m a small chamber near the front of the building. Near a
window was a three-fool·high cross of white carnations, decorated
with red roses. A silken streamer said it was from Lisa Marie and
Priscilla
Lisa Marie 1s 9 years old and Presley's onl y child. Priscilla. her
mother, and Presley were divorced .
On the floor of the chamber was the blanket of roses that cov-
ered the coffin when 1t was carried in Thursday.
AT THE HEAD OF THE ROSE display was a crown of velvet
with red and while roses-along the bottom and red camallons at the
top. Above it all was a s mall golden "X .. with a simulated diamond.
There was nothing to indicate the donor Qrvihat U\e · · X · · meant.
The mausoleum was ltept locked because the family was expect·
ed sometime during the day and the crowd clearly was too large.
SEOUL, South Kdrea <AR> Tongsun Park, '¥llnted in Wastrrn.gton
for allegedly trymg to bribe member!:> of the V S Congress. was re-
ported visiting his ailing mot.her m Seoul -\oday. but he eluded
newsmen.
Reporters and photograPlters were stopped in the lobby of the Paik
General Hospital. where Partc's
We're ·M&gic! See for YOurself !!
mother was reported a patient on ( J
the seventh floor. One television /N SHORT cameraman said he reached the
seventh floor, but a group of men
escorted him downstairs. ------------
The cameraman said some of
t h e m e n appeared lo be
plainclothes policemen .•
A hospital source confirmed
that Park visited his mother at the
hospital Thursday night, but the
source said he did not know
whether Park was with her today.
LaURelaltlf1 Slat~d
CAPE CANAVERAL. F)a.,
<AP > -The Voyager·2
s paceeraft, equipped with
television camera and recorded
greetings from President Carter,
begins a billion-mile JOUrne)' to
the outer planets or Jupiter and
Satutn and into interstellar
space Saturday.
Its twin. Voyager 1. will be
launched Sept. l, but it will Oya
r'ster route and reach tbe
planets first. Both will be
launched with Titan Centeur
rockets.
mcnts on the West Bank of the
Jordan River, says three new
camps were established by "ii·
legal acts" aod are. obstacles to
··constructive negotiations··
toward a Mideast peace.
The Israeli e mbassy in
W ashingt.on, in a statement is·
sued by s pOkesrnan Avi Pamer.
denied that the. new settlements
a re an obstacle to the renewed
peace talks the United States bas
been promOting and said Israel
still seeks pegotlations with the
Arabs.
Protlt• lnC!na.a ·
• WASHINGTON i.iAP ) -
Corporate profits jUP.)~ 1-0 ~·
cent in the second qua~, U\e ,
biuest in<:rease 1n 'nearly 10
years, the Cornmeree Depart·
rnent said Friday.
The $14.;i billion rue, which is.
figured on a seasooa.lb' ad)usted
annual rate, i$ a &tt<>bi sign or
economic actiVlty. although
some of the inctease 'might be at.-•
l'ributed t.o recovery from cold •
weatber in the first quarter.
ecoiiC?mistsaaid. .,
,
f
I ' ,
Frld!y, Aug~I ti, 1977 DAILY PILOT A 5
Stindesert Sin~g?
I uelear Law TMeatens Power Plant
r fu»ed to comm nt on the con·
voruUon. Morr!S wa reported
to be on vacaUOD and the el>v-
ernor'1 otflcedJd not comment
0 Vore also refused to com-
m nt on whether SDG&E was
thro t.enlna to withdraw its ap
plication from the state Enersy
Commiaaion. He would not com
m nt on rumors that the SDG&E
would then try to blame an an
libusmess attitude of government
.. nd the legislature.
te th t SDO&E could not afford
to spend more money and keep
other lovesters intereatecl in Sun·
desert unless the legislature pro-
v Id od some certainty th at
Energy Commission declsit>ns
would be timely.
THURSDAY WAS the last
regular hearin& of the committee
this year
But Victor Calvo, the Mountain
View Democrat who heads the
committee, said Assemblyman
Alister McAlister <D-San Jose).
could seek legislative rule
--- - -
-----
• s~·ENDSSUNDAY. AUGUST 21ST ...
HURRY, SOME QUANTITIES LIMITED!
IT WAS Tl.LL pou1ble.
holo'eH~r. that the bill could ~
\Oled upon Thur day by the
Resources. Land Use and
Eneru Committee.
O.VORE SAID he had to i.tand
on.h1s statement to the Assembly
committee. but he added. "Who
knows what our board of direc-tors will do? ...
waivers to bnng his bill back for •-'~u"'
He told the Assembly commit·
a vote next Thursday. McAlister
said he would go before the Rules
Committee and seelc the waiver.
San Diqo Gas 4r Eltttnc Co •
•SDGfrE>. wants to build two
950-meiawatt reactors near
Blythe at a cost of $2 3 billion. It
plans one reactor to start
ceneratrnc eleclricaty tn 198', the
other in 1916, for San Otego, Los
Aneeles, Pasadena, Riverside,
Burbank, Glendale and the state
Department of Water Resources.
175,000 Acres Burned
Marble-Cone Fire . ,...
FRANK DeVORE, a SDG&E
\ace pi;es1dent. told the commit-
tee that $100 million has been
spent on Sundesert since 1972 and
the company's board of directors
would not spend more under cer
taan regulat1oni.
·Finally Contained
By The Assoc:lated Press
It burned across 175,000 acres of prime watershed lands near the
central Caljfornia coast and laid waste millions of dollars worth or
timber, but the 18-day-old Marble Cone fire has finally been har-nessed.
Laws approved last year in
California include one requiring
a ruhng that the federal govern-
m ent has approved adequate
nuclear fu el reprocessing before
a plant can be approved.
Fire officials announctid 100 percent containment of the fire Thurs-day when thousands of weary flrefighte~ completed a 160-mile
noose of firelines around the
lightning-sparked blaze. PRESIDENT CARTER, rear·
i ng reprocessang would con-
tribute to nuclear weapons pro-
lif erat1on. has brought a halt to
government progress in that area.
Thus, the California reprocess-
ing law cannot be implemented.
and the state Energy Com
mission cannot give approval to
build the plant It is a de facto
moratorium. said De Vore.
T HE COMPANY sought SUP·
port Wednesday night from Gov
Edmund Brown Jr. SDG&E
President Robert Morris spoke
with the governor, but DeVore
Al West. s upervisor of the Los
Padres National Forest. which
was devastated by the fire. SaJd
about 500 fire fjghters will
patrol firelines for several days
to prevent any nareups
Myron Lee. who directed the
battle against the giant blaze:
said containment '"doesn't mean
the fire is out." only that all
firelines are completed ··we sttll
have a lot of work to do m w1den-
mg and strengthening this hne, '
he said.
LEE SAID the long battle to
choke off the fire was hampered.
v. • •I l Nudity Noted ~\
Nalred Beaches Luring Many · ;~
LA JOLLA CAP) Nude beaches like San Diego's Black's
Beach herald "baste changes m the rules or our civilization, .. a
sociology professor says.
But Professor Jack D. Douglas of UC San Diego said such beaches are here to stay.
"The general public is by no means ready ... DougJas said, but
he added: "Most o( the people who are ready for nude beache~
haven'thad theopportunitytojoin.
"WHEN THEY KNOW where they are and k now they won't get
arrested or stigmatized for life by Joining up, they'll do so by even
more hundreds of thousands.··
In an interview. Douglas expressed belief n'ew beaches restrict-
ed lo nudity will appear with "the movement developing in stages ...
DOUGLAS SAYS ~ublic nude beaches. such as a OO·foot strio of San Diego's municipal Black's Beach in La Jolla, are revolutionary.
San Diego voters will decide ~pt. 20 whether to amend the
municipal code to prohibit nuditr though Black's has grown in popularity in three years.
THE RESULT of such beaches, Douglas said, is that "fun-
damental parts of ourselves, our very body feelings, images and
sexual ex1>ressions will change in important ways."
The movement is slowly spreading •'through wildcatting with
more people joining up," he said, adding that "it's happening right
now and there is no great outcry or terrible repression being brought
idown on those who dare to demand such body freedom. even in some
-very conservative communities in Sputhern California... ·
by inaccessible terrain, heavy
ruel bwldup and dense smoke
which often prevented airdrops
of chemical fire retardants.
The state has estimated the
cost of fighting the giant fire at
nearly $10 million.
Even as the final stretches of
the fireline were cut around
Marble-Cone. fire crews were be-
ing shifted -400 miles north to bat-
tle a smaller untamed blaze rag-
1 ng in the Klamalh National
Forest
The 37,650-acre blaze, called
the Hog fire, started along the
banks of the Salmon River and
Hared out of control when three
fires burned together several
days ago.
F OR EST SE R V I CE
spokesman Ernest Weinberg
said that 4,500 firefighters fought
the fire along lofty ridges in the
Marble Mountain Wilderness.
"Inaccessibility 1s our biggest
problem." Weinberg said. He
s aid fire c rews could use
a1rtankers loaded with fire retar-
dant only m the late afternoon,
when heavy smoke Lifted from
deep canyons harboring much or
the fire.
WFJNBEl\G SAU> crews still h~d U '1Ules oC firel'i.nes to ha~k
out of sleep. heavily Cort$ted
mountain terrain. "T~ (errain is
so rugged we may j ust abandon
some or the areas and let nature
take its course
·'It should look gOOd up here m
a week, but we won't be op-
ti misUc about the fire until we
get a lot closer to containment, ..
hesaJd.
The fire has already destroyed
two buildings and forced evacua-
tion of several homes in the area.
( HERB C1'E~ )
AMUSES, Seturdep
In the DAILY PILOT
. ('
\
..... '
.
1./2 off.
Women's smart
pantsuit ch~ice.
49
REGULARLY $25
Dazzle tlfe fashion world with this creative
selection of 3-piece pantsurt.s. Choose from
many styles with 1 pair of pants, matching
shell artd jacket, or with 2 pairs of pants and
jacket <shownl. Comes in a beautiful color
array. All made of machine was hable 100%
polyester. Available m women's sizes 8-18.
~
P:1 ·;
"'
..
.. ..
'
SPECIAL
HANDSOME KNIT
SHIRT FOR MEN 4ss
Cat.ual short sleeve
stripe knit shirt in
·machine washable po·
lyester/cotton . Si·
zes S, M, L, XL. Buy!
SPECIAL
STRETCH SOCKS IN MEN'S SIZES
Soft acrylic/nylon socks 7lC for the man with comfort.
in mind. Many colors. Fits PAIR
sizes 10-13. Stock up now!
SAVE Slo/0
MEN'S CASUAL
NO-FUSS JEANS 5ss
• RECULAIU.Y $12
Off-white polyester/
cotton flares. Contrast ,
s titching. Machine
washable. Waist in
30-38; length 30-34.
l
l
I Orange l"ou~"'"~d?.!?:~~~acy ~~~!~!~~· • ~ hc.-n thl',\" ft'Jectrd a propost'd nl"l\\ork or thrc rour tbt oP!nlon at face value. .
huw 1 o.1ds th. t could l'\ rntuull> optm arc1a:, north of "Employers," he decreed. "are expected to find 11,~ion \'lt"Jo for development and hire drug ab\l!era and alcoholics just as they are
\\'hUe tht'y won't make a final decl~ion on the expected to hire blacka. Hispanics and other mlnor-
uestion of addin1 thl• nt•twork to ''ounly road plan· tttes:·
mg maps Wltal Sept. 14, Supervlaora. Rulph Diedrich But no one seemed to have any statistics on
• nd Thomas Rll ,. mad it cit" r they opPOScd the percentaaes of alcoholics and drug abusers in the na·
ond\\ ay~rn hlt'h could violoto 5>0pulatlon limits set I t tion ·1 population, to help lJet employment quotas. In ummerforthe~outhcountyro((lon . f ct. no one seemed to know just how an employer JfopresentoUve~ uf tht• Mullslon Viejo Compnn~· wouldaet aboutldentlfytngthem. ~ad proposed tht• nt•t"ork Tht•\ also hnd Jsked thut a Mercifully, a freshman Congressman has called
l.l,Jor north·~outh roud\\ a~· hukm& the i,,ime .areu to for a luJpension of the order pending further stud!-·.
h · Di L' ... As he noted wryly, such policies only reinforce the
t• San l·~o ,. rec" <A~ be kept on tne map '" a re· belief that the federal government is out of touch with t•n e i.tatus ~t But s upt·n asrn s. plwarun~ comrru:,s1onl·t~ and the the real world.
lannmg .slaH agreed the road-.a\ reserve should bt'
ide enough to accommodate onl~ u possible two.tune Same Old Tax Bill road and should end north of the freewa\ --
lt is understandable that large land owners and
fie-.'elopers would want to keep open as man~ options
~possible for future development.
t But the fact is that supen·isors ha\'e a
,.espons1b1ht~ to make sure the population limits the~· r.•,' .. set mean something.
r'' Unreal World
I ~~ Almost any large organization. and especiall~
O\'Cmment bureaucracies. has its share of diligent
nderlings who have a tendency to go overboard try·
ng to interpret and implement the instructions of
~'gher·ups
Earlier this ) ear, a Justice Department opinion
ted that "alcoholics and drug abusers" should be
nsidered ··handicapped" under Sect. 504 of the
:ehabilitation Act of 1973.
, Since the act is designed m part to encourage the
liJlployment of the handicapped. the Assistant
l
No matter how you figure it. a property tax bill is
amona the least welcome of documents.
But one Sacramento legislator thinks the method
of fieuring should be made more "relevant to the con-
temooratY marketplace.··
Assemblyman Mike Antono,:ich ( R·Glendale 1.
has introduced a bill to express propert~· tax rules per
Sl.000 of assessed valuation instead of the current
practice of citing rates per stOO of valuation.
· In the good old days, says the assemblyman. re<!l
estate valuations usually involved relath·ely fe"'
thousand dollars. so figuring .the tax rate per SlOO
made sense. In today's inflated market. he thinks
breaking the valuation into thousands of dollars
would be more understandable.
Thus a tax rate of Sl.436 per hundred would
become a rate of S14.36 per thousand.
Well. ft might ma'ke for a little easier arithmetic
But the tax collector-figures out the bill for us anywa)·
·-and whichever way he figures. the total will be the
same, and just as unwelcome.
Think he'll go for it?'
(How Oscar
Wilde Was
Destroyed
Some Advoeate Break with Tai1Can
CHARLES
l..___M_cc_A_B_E __ ~
.. I rhought $Uch mtn 3hot
themselves "
-Attributed lo Edward VII
When Oscar Wilde was arrest·
ed in Room 53 of the Cadogan
Hotel in 1895 on charges of
homosexuality, the British public
went about the business of ruin·
ing the Irish playwright with a
savagery almost impossible to
'ftn agine today.
The press pilloried Wilde
mercilessly day in and day out,
poisoning the
mands of the
l'ntire British
isles. The
police
magistrate.
Sir John
Bridge.
responded by
refusing bail
This meant
Wilde could
collect neither money nor
evidence, both or which he
desperately needed.
''His creditors at once obtained
Judgment against him, .. said
Wilde's biographer Hesketh
Pearson, ··an.execution was put
into his house. 8 sale or his
possessions wa held there and
nearly everything went for a
song, though som~ of bis
personal belongings were bought
by friends and eventually
l'\?stored to him.
"Thus the man who a few
weeks before was earning an in·
come of several thousands (of
pounds) a year was made
bankrupt for just over a
thousand. Taking their cue from
the press, a rabble or thieves and
sensation·mongers crowded the
house, broke into rooms, burst
open drawers, stole manuscripts
and everything else they could
get away with; and at last the
disorder and rowdiness became
so rreat that the pollce were
called in.
"Normally Wilde's belonitngs
would have fetched four tlmes
the amount demanded by hls
creditors; but the behavior of the
newspaper$ and the ad.ion ol the
maiistrate ruined hlm •·
Dear
Gloomy .
Gus
The Mafia can't be all bad.
They're steering clear or
child pornography while
ma.king millions on adult
pornography. But tall oaks
from little acorns grow.
Wbo was it said that?
The Godfather?
A.V.
to him suddenly demanded the
return or their letters.
A fair trial was impossible for
Wilde•in this atmosphere. lo. the
end he got two years impriaoo·
ment with hard labor at Reading
Gaol During the triat be was a
broken man, apathetic and list·
less.
Only once did he rouse himself
to an eloquent defense of himself,
and of his kind. He was being
cross-examined on the subject or
the poetry or bis lover. Lord
Alfred Douglas. With reference
to a line in one of them the
prosecuting counsel asked:
"What is the •Love that dare not
speakitsname'?"Wildereplied.
China Debate to Curb Vance
W ASlDNGTON -Secretary of
State Cyrus Vance arrives in
Peking Monday restrained
by P"esident Carter's
decision to postpone -though
definitely not to reject -the ag-
gressive new China policy urged
on him by expert Sinologists in
his administration.
'!bat decision was made at a
Waabington meeting July'30 pre-
sided over by
the President
himself.
Vance in
China has
authority to
talk and listen
-.btlt not to
grant the con·
ditlon de-
manded by
the Com ·
munfst l"ellme aa the ~ for
full diplomatic relations with
Washington: abandonment of
Taiwan.
ABANDONMENT was un·
mlstakably pointed to by a top
secret policy paper prepared by
the administration's resident
China experts, and that paper by
no means has been repudiated.
Rather, the July 30 meeting de-
termined the time was not pro-
pitious for so dramatic a shift.
"The thlntinC was,•· \)De official
told us, "that an awful Jot bad
been attempted ln foreign policy.
with not that many good re·
aul~"
Tbli auqests the. President
bu not ye& decided th~ awia
Cl_Uution. a dilflcult foreign pouey area where ht ti.s been
t ed and pulled at bJ" actttsm.
( EV ANS-NOV AK J
After first hinting at the aban·
donment or Taiwan, candidate
Carter shined ground in the
second presidential debate by
pledging "the preservation of the
independence and freedom of the
people of Taiwan.··
SINOLOGISTS brought into
the Carter administration re·
garded this as a campaign
·•retreat" from the ambiguous
Shanghai communique of
February 1m, in which Presi·
dent Nixon moved toward even·
tual recognition of Peking to the
exclusion of Taiwan. So a speech
by Vance on June 29 went beyond
the Sbangbat communique by
acknowledging the existence of
only "one Chf na," and one day
later the President chimed in by
promising only to "make sure
that the peaceful lives of the
Taiwanese, the Republic of
China. is (sic> maintained" -
moving away from bls campaign
support of Tai wan.
B~hind th1a rhetoric is one of
Waah.lnet.on'• moet closeb'·beld
and widely-criticised document.a:
PRM·24. an tnter-a1ency re,port
on China policy. AltbotaP the
style of uauna competinc ootlons results ln no formal l'eC!Ommen·
dation. there ts little <Jiaagree-
ment that PRM·H leads re·
morselessly to th1a Polley:
A rapid rupture of diplomatic relationa with Talwad and
abrogation of the U.S.-Talwanese
defense treaty, permittin.I full
diplomatic relations with
mainland China -perhaps set·
ting this up during Vance's trip to
Peking. All U.S. governmental
facilities would be pulled orr
Taiwan. However, military ald to
Peking would be inadvisable for
now.
BEIDND THE smokescreen of
competing options. PRM·24 is
wresUing with these puzzlers: if
diplomatic and military ties
were broken with Taiwan, how
could the island be protected! By
military aid without a defense
treaty? By coaxing Peklne into
some guarantee?
Whether or not the Pr'5.!dent 's
advisers finally reallzed \hey
were racing an inherent con·
tradiction. the consensus
gradually grew in the ad·
ministration ·s. upper reaches
that PRM·24 could not now be
followed to its conclusion. The
fact Mr. Carter bad bis hands run
-Israel, Panama. Korea, Cuba
-waa the reason for the July 30
decision to make Vance's
journey a goodwill, exploratory
visit. Even so, China policy remains
in the bands of the three principal
authors or PRM-24. Sinologists
Michael Oksenberg of the Na-
tional Security Council <NSC>
staff and William Gleyat.een or
the State Department want exlst-
irta ties with Taiwan broken. The
third collaborator. NSC director
Zbl.inlw Bnezlnsld, is far less
inttre.sted in deserting Taiwan
than in strengthening the U.S.·
Pekint link at the expense of
Moscow.
The gray eminence guidin&
this policy is Sinoloeist Doak
Barnett at the Brookings Jnstitu·
lion, who warns that failure lo
formalize relations with Peking
could provoke Sino-Soviet rap-
prochement. Harvard Professor·
emeritus ,John K. Fairbank is the
policy's father·figure; bis New
York Times article urging the
U.S. to meet Peking's demands
for cuttirlg ties with Taiwan is
cited f avorabl~ by high.ranking
U.S. officials.
PRM·IO, the secret inter·
agency document on world-Wide
U.S. military force structures.
reflects the hold of the Barnett·
Fairbank thesis. It compares a •
.. current presence baseline ..
<Alas.ka-Japan-Korea·Okinawa·
Philippines> in the Pacific with a
·•re(luced presence baseline"
< Alaska·J apan·Oltlna wa·
Guam>: nowhere in the massive
document is tbe military
significance of Taiwan even
mentioned. What reappears in·
termittenUy is fear of Sino-Soviet
rapprochement.
DF.SPITE the administration's
human rights campaign, the
moral argument against aban·
donlng 17 milllon citizens of
Taiwan who live in incomparably
ereater freedom than 800 million
mainland Chinese does not in·
tereat the President 's
Sinololiats. Less idealistically.
the President mi&ht want to con·
sider what the hard-beaded
eenUemeo in Peking think of a
super-power with so little
faithfulness toward small allies.
By livtns Vance a limited mis·
sion, the President gives himself
more time to compare the advice
of bis Sinologists with competing
advice from others.
Small but Inefficient
TREY aJUNG IN tbe1r ahare
of ti. Buta Whit.Houle
a~ hu found that the ontee
o( Wortws• Compensation pr,o-
. irams, a small L'abor ~·
mw ~ that oftl"IOM dll-
tribution cf')'aymenta to ilajured
worbrs. is the winner -hands do\Wll;
Cll'tlr admlnfltratlon aides
wo~.C1Qi reor1antain1 th• fedsal ~racy Polled the
115 -'*' flf COl_'aresa, eacb of ..._ MH awr memben ~llina eoatltaientll CU\ tbrouih f.-..I l'ld tape.. Nurlt 100 m.mbert cf the Ro••• and Senate have l'tlPQDW and the worken' com-
peullioo Clftlee tops the list of
a1enct• prompUnJ the most complalilta to tbeir offtcet.
80•1!: L\W•AKERS filled
out a brief quesUOGDaire about
the belt and wont federal acen·
d11 aDd otbeiJ wrote letters to JUebard A. P~rew, Prelldent Carter'• •Hiltant for re-«a.,...tlon, summartzina their
comlllatata. • '"Thia~ l• the worst ad·
mlnt"*-ed program I have ever encountered.•• wrote Rep.
(;ays Can'~ lflbtain
Marriage Licemes
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Homosexual couples can't get marriage
licenses in California, under a bill signed into law by Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. The Democratic governor, without comment on the controversy of
equality for homosexuals, announced Thursday he bad approved the
measure, ,AB 607, by As-
semblyman 'Bruce Nestande (R-
Orange).
It does not prevent gay couples
from living together and calling
themselves married, nor does it
bar a minister from performinc
a wedding ceremony for a
homosexual couple.
llldge ma.ted
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A
son ol Julius and Ethel Rosen-
berg, who were executed for
atomic espionage in 1953, says
the New York judge who sen-
tenced his parents should be im-
peached.
Michael Meeropol told a news
conference Thursday that Ju~e
Irving Kaufman, now a federal
appeals court judge in New York
City, should have disqualified
himself on the trial because he
c-0mmunicated with the FBI and
the prosecution during court pro-
ceec:U.no.
Treaties Btselcefl
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -Sen.
S.I. Hayakawa CR-Calif.>. an-
nowiced Thursday be expects to
support ratiUcatlon of two new
Panama Canal treaties proposed
by President Carter.
"If the Panama Canal treaties
f
( SF ATE J
are indeed part of a fresh ap·
proacb to our relations with all of
Latin America, and if they look
as acceptable in particulars as
they do in outline, I am ready to
support their ratitlcation,"
Hayakawa said in a statement.
Deers Clodn9't
SACRAMENTO <AP> -The
doors of the Assembly
Republican caucus, which swung
open to reporters Feb. 4, may s~ingclosed again •xt week.
Assembly GOP leader Paul
Priolo ol Malibu said Thursday
he expected a majority of the 23
Republicans to vote at next
Thursday's meeting to clOl'le the
caucus again. It would take
another majority vote to open
any caucus in the future.
1t111BeatE ....
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
Superior Court judge bas ordered
an end to the worldwide search for
the will of industrialist Howard
Huges, saying all ~asonable
leads" have been exhausted.
ciiatue Wbltle1 <D-N.C. ). ••Tbe Office of Workera' COM·
pensatton Prosram• wlthln the
Department ot Labor ts clearly
the least respoaslve. most lneffl·
ctent, and least competent cf any
feder-1 agency wlth whlcb t have
dealt.'" said Rep. G. Wl1JJam
'Whlt.ehunt <R-Va.) ..
REP. BUU.ER DERIUCK 0>-
S.C.) griped that he wrote four
times to the agency•a Jackson·
ville Fla., office last year for one
response about a constituent's
claim. • • ·u thls agency Is so un-
responsive to my requests, as a
United Staes congressman. there ts undoubtedly an even sreater
lack of response to an in-
dividual's need.I and tnqulrl-."
he wrote.
Everett Jennings, .. cttng ~
tor of the agency Cinder fire, 1ald
he is aware of some problems in
his office stemming from un·
derstaffmg.
.. OBVIOUSLY, NOBODY
wants to be No. 1 on the bad list.
We 're doing a lot of things to cor-
rect the problems," said Jen-
nings, adding that he had· ~ot
seen the White House survey and
was reluctant to comment in 4e-
tail about 1t.
Some members of Congress
responded to the survey with
capsule comments, Ute 1heater
critics• blurbs on advertise-
ments:
0 Workers• Compensation pro-
grams -lack of~ kmg
delays, outrageously slow.
"Black Lung proaram -un-
responsive, unorganized, in·
sensitive.
"Social Security program -
confusing program, heavy de-
lays, late checks."
THE SURVEY IS the project of
Christopher Matthews, Pet-
tigrew's assistant.
In additioo to asking which
agency was the worst, his survey
sought to find the best -but most
congressmen who answered Mal·
thews' questions said their con·
stitutents came to them with pro-
blems, rarely with praise.
However. among the most
helpful, they said, were the
Veterans Administration and the
Ci vii Service Com mission 's
bureau of reUremeot and in-
surance.
Complaints, recommendations
and unfavorable comments
about individual agencies will be
given to members ol Carter's re-
organlzation staff looking at each
agency. The comments will help
them rate each agency's efficien-
cy and decide bow lb functions
cah best be perlormed.
\
t>All V ,.LOT
1500 east coast highway • newport beach. califorriia
telephone (714) 644-9510
/ . . ~ ~
AUGUST 1st through 31st
18% OFF
011 ALL POTTERY • '-
(lncl~des Redw~d Containers, Straw Baskets and all Pottery) .
BenkAmerlcillid • Peraonal Chergea • M•st•r Charve
AM LJ NG -a name in California horticulture sine& 1920
lfOURSc W... .._W. l:JO to l:JO • S.. t to l:lO
.:i~
II
'
DAILY PILOT
~----------~-.
rrtday Auguat 19, 1917
BY Phll lnterlandi OC Group Pushes ERA
Fiiiii/,.raise1:5 lbiff et Schedided l1ug. 26
BJ O.C. Rl.ISTINGS Ot,.hftr,......,.
Tbo 1lx·woek-old ERA Oranie County coallUon
11 \t'Ylni \0 item what ita memben fear ls a local
movement to rescind California's raWlcaUon of the
Equal R1ahta Amendment, its leader aald Thurs·
day.
Susan Tepper of Laauna Beach sald 1n a press corderence. WJ'bere are eomt proanulve people
who live in Oruae County. We intend to make our
. tron.r01t. ..
Tbe f?Ot1p·1 first effort wU1 be an Aug. 28 fund·
rolatna bUtfet at $12.!50 per person at the Sheraton•
Newport.
PROCEEDS WILL BE forwarded to the na·
tlooal ERAmerica aroup to promote raWlcalion of
tbe ERA ln at least the three more states needed by
the March 1979 ratification deadline.
Uhder the proposal sponsored by the United
Ortanbation of Taxpayers, property taxes wouli&
be Um.ited to one percent of tho value of U.e pro-perty. •
111AT VALVE WOULD BE butd on \he 19'15-16 as~ value ol property and could only increase
at tb.o sale ot the property or at a rate of two percent
pel'year.
The initiative would also require a two-thirds
vote ot the le,i.slat\lff to enact any changes 1n 1tate
taxes.·
· Petitioners say they have until Nov. 25to1ather
500,000 sipatures.
llARBOR AREA BlJSIN~ES that have peU.
tions available include cat•s Camera, 1170 Newport
Blvd., Costa Mesa; Balboa Marine Hardware, 2700
West Coast Highway, Newport Beach; Walker and
Lee ae.1 Est.ate, 2034 Westcliff Drive, Newport
Beach, and the Marie Callender Pie Shop, 353 E.
17th St., Costa Mesa.
Deatha Elsewhere
At the same time, Ms. Tepper said, the group
will bee\n a speakers' bureau this fall and un-
dertake other efforts to di.spell what she said are
fnis~erstandings about the proposed Ccostitu-
tional amendment.
Mary Schmitz of Corona del Mar ls beading
another group, Eagle Fonun. which opposes the
ERA and charges it will take away the traditional
rights d. womeo, lamllles and individuals.
Laguna Beach businesses with petitions are
Red Carpet Real Estate, 802 S. coast Hi1hway~
Laguna Bea~h Board of Realtors, 346 Mermaid St.
MOSCOW <AP> -
Pianist Pa•el
SerebryakoY, rector of
the Leningrad
Conservatory, died in
Leningr:\d at the aee o!
68, Tass reported Thurs·
day.
BALTIMORE <AP> ·
Hilda S. Shriver, mother
of former Peace Corps
director and 1972
Democratic vice pre
sidential candidate R.
Sargent Shriver. died
Thursday. She was 95.
Deatla Netlea
CASH•LY
Olt. EDWARD A. CASHltLY, nsl-
dent of Soutll t.•oun•. C.llhwnla.
PeSMd -V AUQVSt 16, tfn at IN 999
ot 11. He luuf'Vl-bv 1111son Fr.,k G.
CnHrly, brother Denis CHMrly,
Enolend, sister Marjorie I.owe,
F 1orlcla, three orandehll«en .,d wwn
ore•t·orendchlldren. Gravnlde
servlc .. wlll be r.•d Mori., Auo 21 et
1 oo PM, Fort Rosecrans Natlo,,.I
Ctmttery In Sen Dltoo. Ca Aller BrothenMortu...-y, Vista, dlrector'-
1.0VEl.US
HEl.EN J, LOVELESS, roldent ot
Costa MIK•. C•Hlornle Peu.<'d awav Au9u\I 18, 1'17. Survived by her nu•bend How•rd, ~s How1rd, James
•nd JOM, daUOht&< Edllh DavenPO'I.
broth~ Albert and Harold J•nklns,
.. sttr Edith Trave" a'ld Polly Oya.
Al\o survlvtd by her mother Violetta
Jenkins. Servlctt wlll be held Fri., I IAM •I P•~lllc View Mortuer'(
Ch•r>el. Interment et Peclflc Vie"'
Memorial P1rk. P1clfl' Vie,.
Mort~ry direct°". WOOD
GENEVIEVE WOOD, resl«Mnt Of
H1.nt1nQl.Ofl llN<h. c.111om11. Peued
ewl'( AuQust 1', 1'11. Survl....S bv I
bro1""' Jlmts OeGuelle, HunllllQlon
Beach, Ca .• nepllews J1mu J.
D<!Guelle, HllMlnQton 8ueh. Cl. aold
Eddie DeGul41e, Selem, Or-.. Mr • ....,
M~ Wood_,.~ -n of the Wood Belt-Tac-le ShoO, Huntl"9!0n
8e1eh plw. Gr-side •nket Sat .•
2 OOPM Good Shepherd C.melery.
Pierce Brothers SmllM' Monuery
dlrKton.
NIK FAMILY
COLOMIAL FVHftAL
HOME
7801 Bolsa Ave.
Westminster
893-3525
'ACIFIC VllW
MIMCHIAL 'AH
Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Pac1f1c Vtew Dnve
Newport.
California
644-2700
McCOIMICK
MOITUAlllS
Laguna Beach
49<4·9<415
Laguna Hills
768-0933
San Ju"an Capistrano
<495-1776
IALTl-llll•BOM
MeALMOWI
Corona del Mar 873-9450
Costa Mesa 8<48-2<424
1&1.-0ADWAY
MOITUAIY
11 O Broadway
Costa Mesa •
&42·9150
SMITH nmtaJ. LAM1
COSTA .. IA CHAPIL
<427 E. 17th St.
CO;Sta Mesa • 6"M888 Santa Ana Chapel
618 N. Broadway
Santa AN• 6'47-4131
NICl•cmBS SMr1'MI" MOITUAIY
827 Main St.
Huntington Beech
53M539
FRESNO (AP) -Vic·
tor Mapakiu, one of
the nation's most dec·
orated Marines in
World War II, died at a
Fresno hospital. He was
61. He was awarded
more than two dozen
medals. including the
Navy Cross, which is
second to the Medal of
Honor in military status.
MS. TEPPER SAID SHE believes groups·
favoring the BRA have been lax up to now in not
combating the anti-ERA movement.
"We will not be lax any more,·· she sai~.
"Orange County has been known as the bastion of
conservatism. This would be the ideal plac.e for a
movement to rescind to begin.
"But we will make ratification of the ERA our
first priority," she said.
For the
Record
Ms. Tepper said the new coalition includes
representatives from about 30 member organiza-
tions and also has been endorsed by Commcm
Cause. the Democratic Central Committee and
various labor groups.
m. ........
Oflffa~
NELDA l1(YLAND OF THE League or United
Latin American Citizens said tbat the group would
be distributing pro-ERA literature in Spanish.
LAS VEGAS -Merrla\lll llcen-luuect i....1nc:IUde:
1'11edA.,at2
ltlVEltA, Rochelle C. and )OMPfl
C.; MAIR, Dlvld W. and Patrlcll I..;
SYLVESTER. 'Patricia A. end
T~ e .; BEEMAN, Mery June
and Bobby Lee; VON HERZEN.
No.-man F. and H""8 O.; I.ARA, Sten
0. e'ld Betty; AOl(INS, Rtchard E.
•nd Nlrw A ; HOUPT, Jean H. end
Herry 0 . Jr.; TRELOAR, Greg9
Slu•rt end Deborah Christine.
GODWIN, RebecceJ-and Wllllam
M
And Joan Petty, presidentoftbeOranieCounty
League of Women Voters, said her group will sup-
port the coalition while trying to raise $10,000 on its
own to promote ratification of the ERA.
BUFFINGTON, Connie end Charles
Ill ; BLIK. Toni 1nd Bruce·
RONKSLEY, Hart., I.. Ind S.ndra
J.; GRANT, StHen I.. Ind Aubrey Jr ..
WOODRUFF, Biiiy R. end Sallie I
TURLEY, Harold Stel)Nn Ind O•lre
Robl_,; SMITH, Mau<k E. and
Harry Pet11er; PETeRs, Glorl1 J . and Roc;ier I..; BEASLl!Y, c.ndlce
June end Charles Larry; JONES..
OenlWYelerle....,CurtltJr.
HAWKES, Mery Ann end Dnld
lee; IBREIGHTH, RMMc<e and All;
DEITERS. Paul I.. Ind Pam••• G.: ALLEN,~ 0. Jr. -RObert F. Jr.; EARL. Jowptl K. Md 1'-;
SCHNEELOCH, Mery E. and Richard
P.; BABICH, Hl!ea -~:
RIZZOHli. Patrlcll J. Ind SWP!Mft R.; HALLIOY. Unc11 0. end JllN9
E.; CADMAN, OorOU>'f M. end RoMrl
R.
PUBUC NOTICE
SUNltto.t COUltTOP TNe
STAT'I Ofl CAUflOllNIA flOa
THI COUNTY OP Otl.UIGI ......... u
NOTICI OP Hl!AltlNO f'Olt
l'•OMTIOP WlU. AND "OJI L«T·
Tl•S TeSTAMINTAltY, l'Olt
AUT!to.tlZATlON TO ADMINllTelt
UNDllt TMI IMDINND•NT AO.
MIMISTltATION Ofl eSTATaS ACT. , ......... CMe'"ll~)
ESl•te of PETER flfCkER,
Oeceawd.
SUl'ERIOlt COUllTOFTHE NOTICE IS HEREBY °'YEN INI
STATEOl'CAl.ll"ORNIAf'OR ANGEi.A l"ICXER WHITE NS fllad
THli COUNTY Of' ORANGE herelnapetllMftfor ....-1eofWllland
Ne. A-9226' f04' t.aners Taste~ end tor '911· NOTl«Ot< HEARINOOI' PETITION tlon lot' Aut'-lutlon to A41n!MIW
PO• AUTHOlllTY TO 1011•ow Under IN lndepalldentAdmlnl11tr1tlon
MONEY,°"· AND TO EHCUM91!11, of EIUltes ACt, ref..-.nce to whlell Is
llEAL PllOPEllTY (PrelNta CMI) midi fot' lurt .. r 1Nrtlcul1rs, -!NI
SM. et-· Ille time and place ot he1rlno Ille -
Estate ot EOWARO F. CRAIG. ""'been set for Au911st 30, ""·et tO
0.CHWd. A.M., 111 Ille COUf1n)OM ot De~
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tl\'11 No. 3 ol Mid court et 700 Ovlc Center
STEVEN EDWARD CRAIG hal l lled Drive West. In Ille City of s.nt• Me.
nereln a petition fOf' AuthOf'llY to &or· ClllfornlA> •
row Money on end to Encumber RHI 01IHAuguSt 10, 1m Propertv, reference to which ls made WIU.IAM e.StJOHH,
tor furt~ perttcul1rs, •nd th1t Ille County Clef11
Um« 1rwl p4ace of llearlno ll'oe same hH HANH & HAHM CltlCMA•D O. HANNI
bffn "'' '"' AUCJVSt n. 1•n. at •·oo •11eneeterMea...._,s111te• 1 m .. In the courtroom of Department P~CA•tMI -
No.) ol wld court. 11100 Civic C:.ntar Tel: ttul7M-'tU
Or Ive 'WMI. Ill the City of Sant• Ana. AttWMY fer,..._
Cllltoml1. Published Onlnoe ca.est Diiiy Plt.c, D•lld Auo. S. 1'71 AUQllR tt. 13, tt, 1'71 WIU.IAM E. St JOHN,
()ounty Clerk
MITOflU. & MITCMEU.
J.M. Ml'TOtlEl.L & DAVID L. l'IEIKE
Pl!HTHOUSI SUITE 0
tMWIUMllltlat.VO
LOS ANOeLES, CA. teeS7 AtMnlrflfw: ..... ._
f>IAllllhld Orange C:O.ft Diiiy Piiot,
A4191'1l 12. "· "· 1'17
PUBUC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTICE
In Irvine, petitions are available at the Village
Realtors, 5321 University Drive, the Cabbage
Patch, ~ Campus Drive. the Mouse Trap, ur>66
.Culver Drive and Walnut Village TV. 1433 Culver
Drive.
2 Jailed
In Fraud
Probe
PUBUC NOTICE
NQTICE INVITING 810 for two Ula,
dltmP. dl_,.I ~ )'20000 GVWlt
trvck. Cll'I' "' ,._,t1ln VllMY, 10100
Slit.,., F<M1l1ln Vell..,, CA, 9'H321
Purch11l119 Oltlca. Sid Oe•dll1141; tnm,10:ooe.1T1.
PUBUC NO'l1CE
Call 642-5671.
Put • few words· to work for ou.
ALLERGY?
CZ 131 214-2556
17141 543-9624 Recorded Message ·
lllEISY CONTIOl
FOUMDlTIOH -.
Boa 1513. Onnp ca 92668
Wrlt• ......... llllfOI_...
'1.UMltH~
Hl!ATIH'G
AllCOHD. mo.-........
Set'vlce In YO\lt' Artl •· C.11 MISSION VI t!JO
2'921 Camino Caplstr-IS.n D1990Frwy,11 Avery Pllwy,)
495-0401
COSTA MESA
152' .... ""PO'I Blvd.
842-1753 se. Lie. :rams1
Hallisms
RORI ST
546-5528
2'40 tt.W-llTII.
Code .... Op.a 1-hys
DWARF AVOCADO
'Littlecado'
SGil. Reg. tt>.95 13.97
H~• .nRJil trect Bean
fuU ·~ frvit. For container
O'fotdtn.
,,
,
MARMADUKE by Br1d Andtnon BOOMER
r--1 ----_:;....-,1
o ... , __ ....._ ...
''Rub his stomach and you'll be his friend
for life!"
FUNKYWINKERBEAN
TANK McNAMARA
... ..
MOON MULLINS
1HE MASTER ~5: HE W~
lb KNOUlt-l A5 PEG-L..E66£D
WC.C.Hlt>Jf •••
by Tom &atiuk
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
• 1
1
l
~--~~~~--------
.TODAY'S CllSSIDID PVIZLI
UNITED Feature Syndicate
Thursday Puzzle Solved:
You HEL.P ME FIND
M'/ CONT.ACT L..EN~fS,
'tQ.YD, 8£FORE: ;r
CoNT,ACT YouR BOTIOM
WITH A HAIR B~USH !
#Sis OU/
EMULA-
TIN8
#I!!>
,4F1<1cAN
COUSIN~ A.410
/!fj
iAl<l/116
HIS SIE~TA
INA l~EE/
8-1~
'
by wm. F. Brown and Mtl Cas n
~ O~JU.Q:]
. AtJv'1ll1ril6
rc¥A ~~
DAILY PILOT
by Charles M. Schulz
'i'OURE 1 TH INK l'LL
WAAT? USE CieNESISJlf:
ASM~TEXT ...
THIS 15 60ING 10 6E .
SOME WfOOING! IVE SEfN
ASKEO iO !M'IJ. A SALAD
MALF 1Hf Qf STS t&)ILL
6E EATING Cff ~PER MTE5.'AAO AALF OUi Of. D06 Df5HE5 !
-:::-, . .
DOOLEY'S WO~LD
lHE fACfoRY
RECALLED HIS
MOUSE ORGAN ...
DR.SMOCK
C)ltll~'--· ........... .,;:
MOTLEY'S CREW
HeY, YOLJ'F<e "IHS ONES WHO 1"0L.-P M.S TO AC-r OLJ-r M.Y FAN"IASISS,
POCTOR FRSIP .'
7
by Roger Bradfield
by George Lemont
YeAH,eu-r :X: c>I PN'-r"
"T"H INK YOU'P ee .,..RYIN' FOR AN ACAPfSMY
AWA.RP.'
, ,, I .
by Templeton and Forman .
OM N01!1'H.A.1'
WA? A GUY '1JU BOMPSD INIO!/
THE GIRLS
Ludmilla Ruddinskie of San Diqo makes
house calls aboard her motorcycle, which is
also a rolling blllboard for the services she
offers -care of plants and housepets while
people are on vacation.
CB Too Steep?
' Try Flipcards
., .
1 LOS ANGELES (AP> -The Hi Sien flipcards are a poor man's CB radio.
With the printed gadgets you can flip your way !3 converaation with the next car on the freeway
l"''thoututtering a word.
Cards with written messages are mounted on a
plastic handle that looks like a paddle for a game of
yerbal table tennis. In fact, creator Paul Stembaum
says the original handle was a table tennis paddle.
That was before he began mass-producing them.
THE BEARDED 3%· YEAR-OLD creator, who
says he's sold about 60,000 m Signs for $(.95 each,
flips the cards and explains how to talk with the 21
printed messages:
•·u you're driving along and see someone you'd
like to meet, start out with 'You're cute.• Then ask,
.. 'Are you attached?' If she nods, then flip her this
card: A 'Bye.'
"But if she seems interested, you can hit her
with 'Pullover' or go all the way with 'I love you.· "
Law enforcement officers are casting a wary
eye on the signs, and in California at least, there's
no clear-cut policy.
.. l'M SURE THAT THE first incident that we
have on this, we're 'oing to end up with an attorney
seneral's opinion, • highway patrol spokesman
Michael Moses said. "I could see a problem if they
weren't used properly. They could be a distrac-
tion." •
Steinbaum said folks spend a lot of time mp.
ping switches and dials on their CBs. What's so dif.
' ferent about sticking up a sign!
· He noted that some of the messages are safety
lated, like "Let me pass" printe<l backward to be
v sible in rear-view mirrors and "help." One card
say says, "Drive carefully."
Sl'EINBAUM SAID BE started last November
with simple cards be made himself. Today, it's a
srpall-scale business run from an office in his west Los Angeles apartment and be has hired a
secretary to help process invoices. Wholesalers now
handle the distribution, which be had handled from
his sports car.
Supreine Co~
Backs Parents
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The California
Supreme Court bas agreed that parenta -not
school officials - should determine whether their
-children will be physically punished in public
schools.
The court, without co~t. denied a hearina
Thursday by which the Pasadena City Board of
Education sought to overturn a June 23 state Court
of Appeal decision granting a preliminary injunc-
tion. Justice William Clark would have Jranted a
hearing. ··
The suit, brought by aix parents and slx minors,
jnvolved the question of whether acceptance of cor-
: .• poral punishment may properly be a condiUon to
, •nrolling a child at certain voluntary schools,
called f\lndamental schools. establlsbed by the
Pasadena school bOard.
2 D' AVS ON' v I SALE ENDS SUNDAY, AUGUST 21ST .. ~I L.1 _HURRY, SOME QUANTITIES LlMITEO!
ot
..
.e!
2 HUGE DAYS OF SAVINGS! HUNDREDS OF UNAD:VERTrlSED ·SPECIALS
AT FANTASTIC 10% TO 50% SAVINGS.:.SOME QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED! . . .
SPECIAL
23 CHAN. CB RADIO CLEARANCE
LED channel readout vol-39ss ume and squelch controls.
Many more great features. L~W
Special. elide moun~ 1.88 · AS
POOL CHEMICALS, BARBEQUES
@Giant assortment of styles, colors and sires.
All are unassembled. Great cooking fun!
®Big variety of chemicals to meet your pool
needs. Stock up today at huge summer savings!
•OFF REGULAR LOW PRICE
ASSORTED 6-IN. INDOOR PLANTS
Choose from many varie-297 ties including Moses in
the Cradle, Sanderiana EA.
and many more. Savings! REG. 5.99
-Wrought iron plant holders.
• Entire stock 2 om OFF • Bakers rack, plant ,70 REG.
stands and more PRICE
Clippy Weed Eater®.
• Practical 2288
• Fast REG. ~9,95
All in-stock ~Is.
•Variety of sizes 2 So/o ~~.
. PRICE
SAV£$7
LEACH~ RAQUETBALL RAQUET
Flexible, easy-to-handle }297
fiberglass raquet. Save1
25.99, raquet •.••.••• 19.97
3.49, raquetball •••••• 2.97 REG. 19.99
SAVE*S
STRIPE TRIM ON ~~ WARM-UP SUIT
• Pancho Gonzales
• Rosie Cassala
• Convenient
1497
REC.19.99
Durable and eomforta·
ble 100% nylon knit.
Full zipper jacket baa
raglan aleevea and
pocket. Straight leg
style pants. Machine
wash. Navy blue only.
SAVE *30
HANDY t-QT. AIRLESS SPRAYER
Needs no compressor. Hu &gss less ove~apray than most
conventional spray guns.
Self-contained. 115 volts. · REG. 99.95
SAVE 2oo;0 *
IN-STOCK LADDER ASSORTMENT
Choose from a big selection of laddeni in a
variety of sizes. Lightweight stepladders,
handy extension ladders and much more. Savel
17.99, 6' aluminum s!ep~dcler ••••••••••• lG.88
-OFF REGULAR LOW PRICE
SAVE '3
HANDY PADOMATfC$ PAINT KIT
Painting is easy, with this 688 complete Padomatic• kit.
Designed to give you ex--
cellent end results. Save! REG. 9.99
Righteous
Memories
•
Left Over
By II.ARCA FOtiBERG Ol•o.&ly NMl-
fhe cuys wore skinny ties and
r>eUed pants; the girls had bub·
ble batr do'i> and mohair
sweaters.
They dranJc cherry Cokes and
bad a blast cruisin1 Main m their
woodies. .
Lyndon Johnson was president
and "Peyton Place" was on TV
two nights a week Be-bop was
slowly fadUl4:, but rock' and roll
had al.ready established 1tselr as ...
be re to st.ay.
There was Beatlemania and
teen-age gurus were Lloyd Thax-
ton and Dick Clark.
The year was 1964, and there
was something else, too. It was
the far-out wall of sound, (tons of
echo> soul style of the Righteous
Brothers.
"You've lost that lovin' feehn',
whoa that lovin' feelan', now it's
gone, gone, gone .. and I can't
goon ... "
They sang al on the radio, they
sang it on TV -remember
"Shin<fig'"? and lb~ sang it so
much that it shot to number one
on the rock as well as the rhythm
and blues charts.
More hits followed : "Just Once
in My Lire." "Ebb Tide." ''Soul
Friday, August 19, 1977
and Inspiration," ''Unchained
Melody"
They toured the country, ap-
peared on the ''Ed Sullivan
Show'' and · '•American
Bandstend, •• cut more records
and hit cold on albums and
singles.
THEN THE RIGHTEOVS
Brothers -Bobby Hatfield and
8111 Medley -decided to go it on
their own and split up in the late
'60s.
A couple of years ago they re-
united and recorded the not-so-
hot "Rock and Roll Heaven."
The righteous sound just didn't
clack the second time around, so
the duo went their separate ways
once again. ·
Whatever happened to those
guys?
Bobby Hatfield, lounging
around in corduroy shorts and
saran shirt in his spacious
Corona del Mar home, said, "Oh.
I've been taking care or my
lawn"
The 37-year-old former
teenage idol, tanned and flt,
keeps busy taking real estate
courses and playing softball with
a local team called the Super
Stars.
His former partner, Bill
91
Partners Peggy Goldwater
Holt (left) and Janie
Wedmore sandwich together
business venture and old
family mustard recipe.
Medley. is probably doing
the same sort of thing Hat-
field surmised. .. Just iaying_
back, you know," he said.
Hatfield admitted that he's in
the midst of putting together a
band which will eventually re-
cord and play for mini-concerts.
HEARING BOBBY Hatfield's
voice again will more than likely
bring back a lot of memories for
the over-3() !Hit.
And Jocalites who were teeny·
rockers in the early 1960s may
remember when be and Bill
Medley sang on the weekends in
the summer of '62 at the Balboa
Rendezvous Ballroom.
"That was our first job as the
·llighteous Brothers," recalled fi atfield. "We got paid $25 a
night."
Hatfield, the high note half or
the rock •n• roll twosome, was
'student body president at
Anaheim High School. "Class or
'58," be added.
'He wanted to be a professional
baseball player, but claims that
his hei1ht -s· 9" -may have
been a factor in keeping that
from happening.
He got into singing, ''by acci·
By BEA ANDERSON
OI the D•lty Pilol Sl .. I
Wllh Grandma's favorite re-
cipe that you know is better than
~Y commercial product, \here is
only one direction to go ... start
a business.
.At least that's the way lt is for
Peggy Goldwater Holt of
Newport Beach, who claims her
recent venture into the business
world was a natural.
However, the desire has not
been a burning one all of her life.
In fact she only entered the work·
ing world a few years ago after
her divorce.
But, she indicated, the whole
thing must have been pre·
destined because at was at her
first job with an advertising
agency that she met her partner.
Janie Wedmore.
Known as Peggy Jr , she said.
"The vibes were right." adding
that it was a "gut level" feeling
that each knew the other would
be atriend.
IT IS TlDS "tut lhel" feelirag
and a belid that everything hap-
pens for a reason that stimulates
the duo, generates enthusiasm
and is the basis of their positive·
ness.
'they feel it was no accident that they decided on a trip to Scot-
tsdale one weekend, or that when
they stopped by a gourmet st\op
they were offered a sample ol the.
store's leadin& mustard.
A(ter ta11tinf t, Miss
Goldwater Cleclared that it. was
&OOd blit not nearly as &Ood as the
dent. I always thought everybody The origi[\al blue-eyed soul
could sing. l did oldies hUt brothers wore influenced b~
goodie$ ln the shower." sirlgen Jike ,Hank Ballar4 and,
After attending Fuller.loo the Midntgbters, Ray Chati(!S,
College, he went to Long Beach Bobby Blue :Bland and the
State as a physical education ma-Penguins.
jor with. music minor. a..:l'.neJd al infl ed b "l thought. if I couldn't be a ~· was so venc 'I
pro ball player, at least I could be the Ki.QI, Elvis Presley,, >1le a "~""'ch... as sue a gjant <d ,a elec-.,.u~ .ftijc-1 per'lon. Re ~as DIUJl~r
, , one. l was one of hh mil!::'t&! .llE SANG.AT d~ces and for• tans who was privileged
his _fratermty, Saema Alpha tQ know hit". J'Coulcln'thelp but
Epsilon. ''And, in niehtclubs. •be in aweofflim. t• ~aw, you couldn t even calUbem Reminiscing about the old rug~lubs. They were bars," he days, Hatfield said, "We re-
admitted. . corded 'Uttle Latin Lupe Lu' and Hatfi~d met Medley 10 a coffee it became a bit t>eeause ol the
-house in Santa Ana and they Orange County kids who asked
everaually formed a grol.lp called for it at the Rtndezvous. · • The Paramours. Their distinct
soul sound appeiiled to Black au-
diences, who often came to listen.
One night when they were sing·
ing, someone called out, "That
was righteous, brothers!" and
the nam~ was born.
"We weren't trying to-Im-
personate Black singers, we just
sang in a soulful manner. Until
we were on 'Shindig,' we were
often mistaken for Blacks," Hat-
field noted.
THE DUO JECORDED for the
Moonglow label and then for Phil
Spector, rock's foremost im-
presario. MGM later bought
their ClOlltrad. •
"lSoul and Inspiration' was the
first song we did for them, and it
wel'}t to number one and sold a
million," be said.
In addition to the single, the
~bum of ~ same name also
was a gold record, alobg with
"Greatest Hits Number Two.."
klnd she makes, which ahe had Another probl«\fD, she said,
been dolng for years and packag-was bow to prepare lt so it YroU.ld
ing as gifts for friends maintain shelf life as all inge.
<Her recipe belonged to her dientsareilatural foods.
grandmother, Joaephlne Goldwater, and 1t was found, AGAIN, SHE talks about luck,
handwritten, in the front of an old because the chemist they hired cookboolt. > not only knew where quantity
mixing and bottling could be Again, they feel, at was no acci-done, he also Jiad tlie expertise
dent that the store personnel en-for shelf-lite formula. couraged her to .. go com· -mercial" However, the team said they
did not wint to talk about They say they never ques-any more pitfalls as they felt it
tioned whether the .business might (liscQurage others who
would be a good venture or not might want to start a small busi-
They had "those vibes" and just ness.
knew that it would work
THE IDEA for PeggyJane's
Special Mustard was conceived
last February; the product was
marketed ln May, and today it is
sold in or used by leading
Southland gourmet shops and
food services and is marketed in
four other states.
Although they have talked
about expanding to sell in
gourmet sections of
supermarkets, they say they are
not quite ready for that ytt. -
It ~ould seem""tl)ey h~ve bad
instant success, which they
credit to a "lot of luck, positive-
ness and delermination."
They abo admit the venture
bas not been without pitfalls.·
An example, Miss Goldwater
said, is that when she prepared
the recipe at home it was Ip amaJl .
amounts and she had no idea how
to bOttle it from large vats.
"You take them (problems) a
day at a time, just lite anything
else," M~. Wedmore streflsed.
•'If we had had all that in front of
us at one time we probably would
have been so discouraged we
wouldn't be where we are to-
day."
For those ;..ho have an id.ea and
a desire l(> market it, ?.{iss
Goldwatet advises:
l •
•'We never really made a q of
money or aot a lot for aur:con· certs U.ke what's taint on .
• 'l just ~rd that EltOn <J >
got 170 arand lat on~ C00"9tt.
Tbert's not that ~uch ~oney in the world.'' marveled Batfieltt • ·o~r exp en sea were
phenomenal with a 10-pjeC!e
band, a road manai-er and three
girls as background singers. We
had a lot of fun thoujh."
He did invest a port.ion cl his
earnings in real estate, which
helps keep some funds comiDf in
now. Otherwise, he says be
ulives in debt ...
Bobby Hatfield. the once-u__pon-~-time famous person, is still te·
membered for bis talents am! bis
contribution to the world ,of
music.
In fact, he's still recogliii.S in
public.
Just a few weeks aeo when.he
was at Disneyland, he was
watching the fireworks and a
man approached him "and said
he had a $5 bet that I W(l.S a
singer.
"When I said I was, the guy ran
back to his friend and .said, 'Give
me the five -I told you be wa::.
one of the Everly Brothers.·"
constnact.ive criticism but not
pessimilm.
Mrs. Wedmore said. "~also
decided if we give it our and
fail, we are not failures. e've
done the best we knew how to do. . ..
' "YOU HAVE to be willing to
take a risk," she emphasized.
"Ir you are positive, you.end
your venture will be a success,~·
predicted Mlss Goldwater, who
also advocates .. don't be afraid
to ask questions. We ha-n't
found one person who hasn't leen
willing to share his knowledge.
h trc
Sb fr .
<N ~
.. ••
. ·.
OAJlY PllOT
lour : He~ Ca) lkld, layl~J tb• bll1• dowq and
J>OG bly dfinl, <b> run Into the car Id <instant death>, <c>
1 t clobbered bJ an oncomtni car <al.lo lnlt&nt death>. <d> hit
th ditch (JO ptrcent chance ot aQmnl).
• (S) Wbm pUllna a blker, ea\ it ~loae. tar kleb. T6ey'n ald.nnJer
tban can, to they d9n 't need a wboJ tan •
'A mat.oreycle la a Jot more
fraCiJe tban mOlt people think.
We CAN'T 9top on a dJme, dodce
flytaa ob,Jecta. drive on a two-
foot:wide pav.nent, and hope to
auniYe im, eoou1b to see our
children ll'O\f UP.
•
, Plule, PtOPl~. l pay my tUes
and ~th I••· l tty to be c:oiulderite on th road. n you
tr.at me badJy on the road. J wtll
l>IE. it'• H simple as tha~
Tbank you for lettlnt me have
myaay. -J .T.T.
DEA.JlJ.T.T.: Nowtbatyoa•ve
bad )'Oat' 1ay may I aall: a ~.
tlfa! Wlty den't yoa people "ho
want tollve ~ lealalatloa to mue belmeta manaatol')' ....
1&ea4 GI acream1D1 abolit your
eomdhr&aaaal rllhta!
DEAR ANN: Tbis is for I ''AaonY in Coonecticut:• who
wottdered lf abe should s\!Ct with
her married man. •
\
I apent .U years Of my life
(from aae JO to 33) waillnl for a
man to leave hLI wlf • tor me and
the cblld w•hacl to1ether. Thlr·
teen yura ot hearint the stan-dard excuses, .. I can't rilk the
trGuble lt mlgbt cause ln tbe busi-
ness." ••My wife's health tsn't'
good. Let•• walt till ahe's atronier... <fncldentally, they
b~ no children.> Finally I made the break and I
have never been happier. I am
seelnr a f asclnatln1 and in-
tellllJent anan who knows·about
my put ud accepts me on the
bula d wb•! I am today. I de-serve a kick in the tall for wut·
lng all those 1ood yean.
( ~,~:~~~~~.~~l:s· ~
months from now she'll wonder DEA• DONNA: T bi' ape
what she ever saw in him. 1 knows IM 11 lettlal C. ~ . ...S
LIKEMYNEWMOCCASINS be'• eQJoylol ... Glwe 'IWll
DEAR llOC: Did yo.a .. , J3 deep Ila for. few.Weeki and Me
years -and a ehlld out of wbalbappeoa. · wedlock? You'rehae•y, Lady.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I Ano-nonsenseapproachtobow
nearly cried when I read the let· to d~al witb Ufe't most diftlcQlt
ter from the woman who was up. and most rewarding arran&e-
set beeauseherson·in-lawfalled ment, Ann Landera'a booklet.
her "Hey You.'' She's got i pret-.. Marriage -What To Expect."
ty good. You ought to hear what will prepare you for better or for
my SOO·ln·lawcalls me. worse .. Send your request to Ann
l 've done everything but stand Landers, P.O. Box HOO, Elgin,
on my bead for that big ape and Ill. 60120, enclosing a dollar blll
he is completely unresponsive. and a lone, stamped. self·
Any suggestions ?-BELLA addressed envelope (24 cents
DONNA /postage>.
FromB1
: .Amb6ssadors
.. Two drunks cam~lreening
around the comer," Mte.s Baker
related, "and one reached in H'd
grabbed my shoulder (the ooys
had formed a. prQtectjve ring
around the fem ales in the group>:'
their desire to have it here."
J
SHE WENT BACK to the
brewery, after the intruders
were discouraged, and called the
hotel, only to get a clerk who
spoke no English and thought she
wanted an American hotel.
THE NEXT Sl'OP was Vienna,
where they went to an amuse-
ment park with the bigeest ferris
wheel in the world, and waltzed
until the wee hours of the morn-
ing.
Celli said be parUcularly en-~
joyed the amusement park. ••1t
was a time to forget listening to
the tour guide and have fun and
relax.··
A second call got her the
courier, who told Miss Bakerthat
she they could' catch another
tram if she could get tbe VOUP to
They went to Europe with just
their suitcases and came home
loaded with bags and bags or
souvenirs and gifts.
· Wenceslas Square. What did they buy! They all
laughed so hard it sounded lilce
they had bought out every store
• • Their travels in Europe are over but memories linger and -. are shared by (left to right) Jeff Blain, Tom Celli
Diane Smith, Stephanie Archey and Linda Baker. wh~ were
part of the People to People high school ambassador program.
But without. a map, and in the
dark, it seemed impossible to
find the square.
"We finally followed a drunk
American and his Czech friend to
the square and caught a tram
back to the hotel,'' Miss Baker
related.
"We sang 'God Bless America·
when we ccossed the border out
of Czechoslovakia."
It was evident that simply be·
ing in that country made a deep
impression upon the students.
on the continent. ·
Their treasures included SWiss
army knives, charms, watches.
diamonds from Holland, tee
shirts and cheese, they said.
Everyone brought home wine.
too, usually from the cellars or
their hosts.
All onhe aludents are ready to
go back to Europe and are de-
Ii ghted that they now have
friends to visit.
Some already have gotten let·
ters from their hosts and the stu-
dents are hoping their "families ..
wi 11 be able to visit the U. S. some.
day.
Celli noted. "One girl said it
was unfair that! lived so close to rJ ... 4 -~ ~~
tr1 ',_____________ Hor9scope: Sagittarius •• A t.•
.,
Celli, a senior at Tustin High
School, said, "I knew Com.
munism was bad, but see~ng it is
completely different. When you
go to see what it does to people it
changes your mind. If more peo.
pie could see it, it would get rid o~
... ...
Disneyland." ~ ,.
Weddings~
and Engagements
To avoid disappointment. prospecli"·e
brides arc reminded to ha\e their \\edding
stories with black and white glossy
photographs to the Dally Pilot People
Department one" eek before the wedding.
P1ctur<'s rN'<'l\l'd afll'r that time "ill
not be ust>d.
l"or enita gement announcements it is
imperati ve that the stor~. also accom-
panied by u black and white glossy pic-
ture. be submitted sil( "eekg or more
before the wedding date: otherwise it will
not be published.
To help fill requirements on h'lth wed·
ding and engagement stones. form;; are
available in all Daily Pilot offices. Fur-
ther questions will be answered by People
Department staff members at 642-4321.
Dates Chosen
graduates Stephanie
Mehaffey and Michael
Peters are planning to
marry Oct. 1 in the First
Presbyterian Church or
W estmi.nster.
Their parents are the
Carroll Mehalf eys and
Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Peters. all of Huntington
Beach.
.....
See Potential
SATURDAY, AUGUST
20
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21·
April 19): If you've been
seeking love you find
it. If you're seeking in-
vestment or business OP·
portunity, you could'find
it. This is a ''strong" cy·
cle; make the most or It
by getting involved.
appraisal should be ob· CAPRICORN <Dec.
Jective -don't talc~ too 22-Jan.19): Develop pro-
much for nanted. gram, a format, a viable
VIRGO CAUft 23-Seet. concept. Bring priorities
22 >: Erratic messages, into sharp focus. Accept
turns, calls could be responsibility. Realize
featured . What was reward factor could be
steady, reliable, perhaps substantial.
boring, takes on new AQUARIUS (Jan .
life; adventure is "just . 20·Feb. 18 >: You gH
around the comer.·· . what you want, although
LIBRA CSept. 23·Qct. procedure is Unorthodox.
22): Accent on finances. One "in Fharae" breaks
s peculation, affairs of some rules, traditions.
heart. Change, travel .. You aain wider recogni-
variety are featured. tion. Program you
Calendar
••
LOOK.SMASHING
WHENYOUENTERAROOM
Cell your apparel consultant •
GAIL-833-3495
LEcrtJJmS: Biofeed-
back and water con-
servation will be the sub-
Jects of two lecturers ~hedulecl a week-apart ._----~---------,;,...-.i at Park .Newport, p;;;;;;;;;;-~;;;;_;; __ ;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;
N eWPOrtBeach.
l>r. Marilyn GUJ of the
Behavior Therapy and
Research Institute will
talk at 8 p.m. Tuesday.
Aug. 23, on biofeedback
as an educational tool for
the community. •
Go.rdon Elser of the
Orange County Water
District will lecture at 8
p.m. Wednesday, Aug.
31.
• • Repairs • Mountings • Chains• Castlftg
..
:.C.. Mac Tarah ' flll Goldsmith, Inc.
833-3048
833·3064
4250 Scott Dr., Newport Beach
"We Buy Old Gold and Sliver"
•Findings .• • Remounting •Stones
TAURUS (April 20·
May 20): Finish rather
than initiate projects.
Spread influence
through better distribu-
tion. display. Accent on
goal, possible promotion.
Po~~ri~ increases. p~bedinputcom~to~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Member of opposite sex fruition. -
GEMINI <May 21-June
20): Unusual conditions
prevail at place of work,
employment. Services
are "changed " Nothing
1s apt to be the same;
routine is d 1s rupted.
Ride wt th tide.
CANCER (June 21-
July 2'l>: Affairs or heart
dominate. Emotion rules
logic. Quick changes oc-
cur. Member of opposite
sex is fascinated and
makes no secret of it.
Young person makes un-
usual request.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ;
caresandsaysso. PISCES <Feb. 19-
SCOBPIO (Oct. 23-Match 20): Good Moon
Nov. 21>: Cycle high -aspect. coincides now
your key personality with distance, accent on
traits come to fore and education. tr ave I •
"work" for you. You c r ea ti v e w r i t i n e ,
could receive surprise spiritual insights.
gift, accolade. Lecat U AQIUst 2ttb ls yoar.
matter can be resolved btrtbcf ay, you are
and now you are made sensitive, perceptive,
awareoflt. fond of readinJ -and
SAGITl'Alll\JS <Nov. you have a knack tor ex-
22-In~. 21): Perceive pressing younelf via thtt
potential. Look beyond written word. You un-
the immediate. Define derstand the dilference
goals, terms, aspire-between eating and dln-
t1ons. Clarify your needs. ing -you would male~ a
Whispered report could rnarvelous food-and·
be a mere rumor. wine critic.
Finall%e aareement. Be _ _;;..--:----=-~--~~-....:..~,...----_;._ firm -insist on getting
money's worth. Proper
QFF
fASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY
NEW. ~ARDEN SHOP HOURS!
~Sat. 8:3~ to 6 p.m. -Sun. I 0·10 S p.lh. ·
'. .
FICUS BENJAMINA
' We are repeating th~-offer
for those who· missed it last
week. Another chance at a
. 'Weeping Fig'
799
Reaalcr 11.99 14iiC......,
•
--.. _ --
OAILVPILOT
I Felt Nutllh
After the Hit, ..
1
;
Says Sutton
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Don
Sutton doesn't have the ,reputa·
tion ~a Don Drysdale or a Sandy
Koutax, but the numbers show
that the 3i-year-old Los Anaeles
right-hander is one of the finest
pitchers tn Dod.ler history.
One thing Sutton· hasn't done
during his outstanding career is
pitch a no-bitter. He just missed
accomplishing that feat ThUJ'S-
day alt.ernoon but even so bis
name entered the record book.
BRIAN GOODDELL SURGES AHEAD OF TIM SHAW NEAR THE 350·METER MARK OF THE 400 FREESTYLE. . .
Sutton, 11-7, allowed only one
hit -Marc Hill's sin1Le to left
field wi1h two out.s in the efgbth
inning -as the Dodgers whipped
the San Francisco Giants 7-0 to
raise their lead in the National Leaaue West to 12 games over
id le Cincinnati .
Schubert Disappointed.;·
.With U.S. Girls' Times ~
By HOWARD L. HANDY
OUM Daily P'llot Staff
There are only two individual
events scheduled for tonight ·s
second day of competition in the
National AAU long course swim·
ming meet at Marguerite
Recreation Center in Mission
Viejo but world record holder
Bruce Furniss and Brian Goodell
of Mission Viejo's Nadadores will
hook up in both races.
The 200-meter freestyle world
record is held by Furniss, a
graduate of Foothill High School
in Santa Ana, who is swimming
for the Beach Swim Club out of
Long Beach.
Goodell,· the world record
holder in the 400 and 1,500
freestyle events, along with Tim
Shaw and Mike Bruner in the 200
free and Jesse Vassallo
<Nadadores> in the 400-meter in-
dividual medley, figure as the
\ toughest competition.
1 Goodell, after winnint the 400
1 free on opening night, is a strong I contender in both races this eve-
ning.
In Thursday night's action,
Valerie Lee of the Nadadores
gained a place on the U.S. team
that will invade East Germany
and Russia later this month when
s he came on strong in the
women's 400 free to place second
104:14.20.
Rebecca Perrott of New
Zealand won but is not eligible to
make the European trip. ·Per·
TOMIGMT'SSCMEOULtl
(AJl~Mll)
7 ~·s100otne1 ... 1,...sty1e.
1 ·ts-Men's 20C>-fnel ... f ~I• 7 O-Women's.eoG-~•• lndivl-1 medlty.
I 11>-Met1's «l!>-meter1nc11v1-1meGt•Y.
9,2s-wom.n·s-.....termectl•y relay
I 40-Men's400--1ermect1eyrel•v.
SATUltOAY'S PltELIMINAltllS
(Startat 11 a.m. I
Women's lOo.meter botlerlly
Men's•l'"Ml.,.bUt1er11v.
:::::n~:~~:t~~~~ok• \' w_,, 100.meter backstroke
~110CMnetwbk-s1roke
Wonwn'&IOOo,,,..wlreestyle relay.
Men'sepo.nwt.,. fl"Hs1vle rel•y.
rott 's winning time of 4: 13.90 was
a shade over her meet record set
m Friday's prelims.
Lee started slowly, finishing
the first 100 in sixth place
U :02.49). She moved up t.o fourth
after 200 (2 :07.09) and third at
the300-metermark <3:11.36>.
Mark Schubert, coach of the
Nadadores adds: "I am very
pleased that Valerie made the
team after what she has ~n
tbro\1ih.
Sports in Brief
Reynolds to Tampa;
U.S. Romps, 136-57
Poland"s performance.
A green but h ard driving
Chinese women's basketball
team Thursday marked Peking's
return to the World University
Games a success after il long
self·imposed absence with a 67·62
triumph over West Germany.
''But I 'm generally disappoint·
ed in the times of our American
girls in this whole meet today. -
Most o( them are capable of
swimmin& at least two seconds
faster in every event.
"The East Germans are at
least six seconds faster in their
meet <the European cham-
pionships> and we will have to
put out much more if we want to
be even close over there."
The only upset of opening night
came in the finals of the men·s
100-meter butterfly when Olym-
pic silver medalist Joe Bottom
fell to Greg Jagenburg of Penn-
svlvania in a tight finish. The
winner posted a 55.46 and Bottom
a 55.47.
Allll'IMelen
Women't 200-b«l<Strokt -I, I.Inda Jfltll. San·
ta Clara. 1 U"' IAm.ricen rtcord I 2, Cheryl G•bwn, Onl•rio, C.nada, 2 11 •1. 3. Joan Pen·
nlnQ1on, Nattivllle, Tenn .. 1 11.U •. Hollda• V10,
S.1'11• Clar .. 2 11 . .0. s. GI .... IAYl.Gn. s-.mford,
Conn • 2 ·:it 1• •. Glenda Robertson. A.xtr•ha,
2 1•" Men't 100 b«ks1roll• -1, P9ter Rocca, Con-
cord. 2 03 21 2, Dan Harrloan. l.onQ a...:11. 2 Ol 56 ) JflM VnHllo, Mitt Ion Vlefo, t:~ 21. 4
Robert JKl<SOn, Sen JOH, , OS.S4 s. Tim si.a ..
1.on9 a..tll. 2 05 M '· Cllros Teml)feton, In
dl-pplls 2 M 60
W-11'• 100 brNthlroll• -'· ROOI" °'"'olla. Quebec, CM\ll<la, 1 U .JS 2, Tracy C•ulkins. NatllYllle. 1 ll OS I American rtcordl. l ICatlly
Trelt>M W•uw•t°"· WIL. I 14 •2 •.he, C.•SI• Cochran, S.n An10l'llo, Tex., 1 I• '3. Alll..,n
Gr~t. A•lt!Qh, N C .. 1 14 '3 al'ld l(lm Durlsoft,
GllM\Yll!., Fla., 1.14.'1 Men'• 100-tllrokt -1. RIC .... nl Hofst9lttr,
8looM1"91on, Ind. 1 OS t4 2. L•r><• Mkhaehs. S.nll a ..... 1 ~.60 J, Jeff Fr-n, Senta Clara,
1·06.SS.4, (tie) ONQWlnchell, L°"9 lleKll.1,06 n
•nd Olrls Woo, .._ulu, 1.0617. '· Rob l.ong. Newt-~.P•,1 '7.13. w-·1 a lrefttyle -I, R•btcca Perrott.
New ZHIMd, 4, 13 '°· 2, Valerie ..... MllSion Vlt' 10 • 1' ,.. l. SltPl\lnle l!lklM. J•OIDnvllle, Fl~ .
•:14 '11 •• Jennlltr Hooker. MIHloot VlejO,. IS II.
5. AllU> Browne, Mission Vl•lo, 4: 16 91. '·Bonni~
Gia-. S.ltlrnort. 4 18. 17.
Men'a «XI f'"1tvl• -I, Brien Goodell. Miu'°"
Vltlo. 3: Sl.'1 2, Mlkt Bruner, Los Altos. 3,S3.97 3.
Tim Sflaw. Lono 8Hch, l: SS .0. 4, l!d ltyeler, MIS·
slon Vl•lo, 3 51 00. s, Bobby Heckett, Vonkers.
N V., 3:51 t.O •, Mike Nyelloll, P .. •d~na,
4 ;00 .,.
WOfl'IM's 100 b<ltttrtly -1, 'NMCIV 9o1111011,
Ocean, N J., I ;01.16 <Amtrluon re<ordl. 2. IUncy
H09ahead, J1tkM1nvlllt, F .... I :01.79 3, ICarlnne
Miiier, N•lh•llle, 1:01.0S. 4, .. 1sv Rac>P. F•l•I••·
Va .. I :02.Sol. ~. DI-JOllannlgm.,.., Clr>elnNlt,
1 ·02 62 '·Wend'( Quirk. Quebe(. Canada, 1.07'9
M•n'1 100 bulltrlly -I. 0••9 JaQenburci.
N-town Sciuere. Pa •• SS..4'. 2, Joe 8ottorn • Los
An1Mlts, SS •7. 3, Scott Spann, Galnuvllle, Fla.,
5' "· • SteYt Gre09, l.Oflt !leach. 56.ot. S. M11<• Curl"91on Twscatoou, Ala • S6 11 •·Don T••stra.
l.on<J 8Hcll, s. n
Dilly "'"' ....... w e.ry AIMreM MV'S BRIAN GOODELL ATOP THE VICTORY STAND.
Race Was Exactly .
To Goodell's Idking
ByGLENN~E Of tllt Dally Pli.t It.ft
A close, exciting race is the
thing Olympic champion Brian
Goodell thrives on in swimming
competition.
And that's the way it was
Thursday night at Mission Vie-
jo' s Marauerite Recreation
Center pool when he won the
400·meter freestyle in the Na-
tional AAU champi9nshlp.
With 100 meters to go, Goodell
trailed surpmine Mlke Bruner
by 51 hundredths of a second and
led former world record bearer
Tim Shaw by 96 hundredths of a
second.
Bobby Hackett was two
seconds behind Shaw in fourth
place.
Bnmer was still thre~tenths or
a second ahead of Goodell with 50 meter.a to..go. .hut...tbe latta JN as
alr eady into bls pow~r£ul
finishing kick and be overtook
Bruner with about 20 meters to
go to win in 3:53.48 while Bruner
recorded a 3:53.97 and Shaw was
third in 3 :55.40.
Was Unsure of A.hilt . y
Marotta: Up and COming Announcer
Editor's note: Southern
CalaforrUa's leading 1POrtscastn1
are be;ng featured in a 17·part Dai-
111 Pilot •erle1. Today's ri%th
•portlighted figure ts Rich Maro&.<
tcr,.onnouncer fur tla. Loa Angelt.t
K'hOI bocketl team.
The one-bitter was the Mh ~f
Sutton's career, tylng the. Na-
tiottal Leque record. The 1'fn ( raised SUttoo 'a career maitr to
187·143, and tied him ..,ffh
Dr)'ldale for the Los An-etes
team record for victories. ~
In addi\ion, it was the .ce(h,
shutout of' Sutton's career, \lie
top figure amon1 active pttebets
m the major leagues. "+
"I couldn't remember evf!ry
pitch I made, but the numbers QJ1
the scoreboard kept me abreast
of what was going on," said
ton, wbo broke a four-gam• l
ing streak with the win. his fi
1lnce July 4. "I definitely kn was pJ.tdi.l.ni a no-llltter.
u1,n f •ct, l even joked a
with some or the guys in
dugout during the came,·· e
added. "There were some .,...t
plays behind me that kept it" ing." •1.
Sutton said that Hill hit a ha.Qj.
ing slider ror his clean sinele. .
"I felt numb after the hit,·• said
Sutton. ''This certainly WM one
of the best games I've ~:Ver
pitched.''
"This win meant a great deal
to us and to Sutton," said Los
Angeles manager Tom Lasqrda.
"I was not worried about !>J.l!l.
Had it not been for Don pi~g
the way he dJd in April and It .
we would not be where we are lb-
day.
"I know he can pitch, be was
just in a slump," contin d
Lasorda. "This was just what he
needed to get out of it. He may
have lost some of his conftdente
.over the past few weeks, but tllis
game should have removed\ail
doubts from his head." ..
The only other NL pitchers
with five one-hitters are TQm
Seaver, Mordecai Brown, Grov.er
Alexander and Jim Maloney. ~
Sutton finished the game with
four walks and five strikeouts.
LOSAHO•LH SAN l'ltAHClSCO
alt r 11111 -~""' L~.21> • I t •) Tlloma•, ct 40 00
Russell.u S 0 I 0 R.Adr-s.20 •OOO Smith.rt 3, 2 1 Ev•ns.ll> 1 0 0 0
C.v,Jb 1 0 I 0 Thmrnssn. 1i; 2000 M•r1n.z.ll> I I 1 0 Clarti, rf 4 000 Garvey. lb 4 0 I 0 Whltfld.lf 3000 Mon<lay,(I , 0 0 1 Foll,ss 3µ,f Burke, cf I 0 0 0 L•M~r.ss 00
II.all••. It • I 7 1 Hiii.( 30
YHoer,c 1 I I 0 B•rr.o I 0
0 Svton,o J I I \ Hftrio,p 0 01 Al•ncler, 1111 1 0 0
Wllant1,1> 0 0-0 0
McCvy,pll 100 0 •
M<Gltn p 0001 TolllS 3271?7 Totlls 21 0 I
,,. " ...... $()
hrr <L.11-101 ,., ' s s 2 \ .... _... ·~ J 2 t ' 0
Wiiiiams 2 t 0 0 ' 1 , M<Gtoehn 1 0 0 0 0 ,.
O.SuttOfl <W,lf.7) • ' 0 0 • s T-2.12.A-U.HS
Seahawks T~p
Raiders, 12-10
\
\
(
se w
w
or
M
at
V•
24
Ut 9.
th
1.
Pl ttl
tb
dJ
: r
~ s : I ..
' ! ti
: t c
Baseball
landings
1'M AJCANL AGUE
EaatDhla
Bn.,tof\
aalhmor~
~o \'ork
Detro.t
ctt"'~land
l111hlwauk4!~
oran\tl
W ~ Pel. GI
71 45 .112
t;lt 49 . Sil 31.,
G9 ~ .~ 3\~
M M .45111
S3 .'4S lt1~
53 71 427 22
40 77 .342 31 \-',
w t °'"' loa .. Tn .
&linncsota
t'htc 0 tltns~Cilv' ""' . ~e.tllle
Oakland
g M> ~76
f>S ~ :rro .,
!;fl 50 -1 lit! 51 564 11'l
~ flH .500 U
~ 73 .407 20·~
11 73 .375 231,
T-.~, .........
• .... ,_ ........ h ••
""-·•~u.i "lt•-~C•••• , .. ,..,_O
........ "••$.O.tr,>tl l T••••I T!>'OfllOt °"'•_.M._ ... T ... Y•GMllH
Cllk-IWllad) s1 •' "'•'•..,•n 1s•e1on•1J1, • " 8•11•"""• •Fl-" I ti 61 M•-• Golll ,, •l I\
• 8"1>1on ·~·"'"" • 21 al Kan .. , (lly OU•""' t \l n
H••Yor"tTOf'"f•l tl tt' ••l•"•'-'Mol'•l101 n f forQrlto c>.r"'" / ',, •• C•lltot,,•• 'Ay•f\ ti •o ..
r Cll•v•lli"d F t1tmo1r ~ • 1> ..itt 0•1t'•"d
f L"<>QIOO'<ll IJI I\ •
Oet,...q lto1~ I! •I II ...... ,. Poott .. "
~v,...,.,G•"'•"
Ji ft•ll1mor~•t M •""*""\Ol 1 ~ 0H<~•I Mlhlif•~lt~r
J ClrW'loln<I di 0..kl .. nd
\ ICMtort •1<•"°'•"'°C1h n
' Nf'W VOl'k •t Tt•d, n
t Toronto,., C•lltorni.I "
Ofolroo1 •I S.-•11141 n
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct. GB ihllad<'lphia 73 45 .619
ittsburgh 70 51 .579 412
hicago 66 52 .559 7 ~Louis 66 54 . 550 8
ntreal 54 66 .450 20
w York 49 69 .415 24
f West Di\llSion
odgers 73 47 .608
~ incinnati 61 59 .508 12
:tlouston 57 64 471 161 l !an Francisco 55 67 .451 19
an Diego 54 70 .435 21
IJanta 42 76 356 30
Thund•y'1 G•m••
P1ll\bur9'11, 01•<•90•
LosAncrltt 1 s.in Fr•n<•-..:oo
Pl\11-11)111•8 MonlfrAI]
011ly 0"""'' ,.,,..., .. 1.., T .. .ay·1<1.t"'H
I Lo• An')f'I~ I Jol\11 14 41 <11 C111(aqo 'l(ru~o.,
1 IQI
' , .Ctn<u1Mtl fMn-\hAu 3 '1 •nd C•pitl~ .t.\t at Nr w
,'f•rk 'E'l>'no...i•••ndM•ll,.tk b l)l 1 111
AUMll.t IN•~kro II 1S •M Solomon J 1) 111 Mon
lrtal IROCl"r\ 1) 11 ~n<I Atc•I•) 1). 1 I n
HOu\10n I N 1~11ro • •) al Phll•O~IPh• ..
ICl\ro\1rn~1l $) n
!ian Fran<l•<O lKnl!Pl><'t bbl a l P1lhburq111can·
d~l•rt• 12 • • n
San 01eqo •Froosleben $bl at St Lolli• IUrrra
4 ll. n
S1turdo'1 G•mn
Contlnn&tl &I N•w Y<11 k
Los A'19"lt1 •I ClllCllOO
San FrAn<ISCO&I Pilhburol't."
A11•nl• ,., MonlrHI n
Hou\ Ion al P1111..i.-1n111a n
S•n Ool'QOAI SI LOUi\, n
-Grid Practice
Set Tuesday
LOS ANGELES CAP> UCLA
will begm preparations for the
1977 football season Tuesday
with more than 100 prospects
competing for positions.
Among the unsettled positions
is quarterback. where Junior
Steve Bukich and sophomore
Rick Bashore are the leading
contenders to replace last year 's
starter, Jeff Dankworth, who
was lost to graduation. Bukich
prepped at Newport Harbor
while Bashore starred at Edison
<Huntington Beach). • ·
Terry Donahue will be starting
his second year as Bruins head
coach. UCLA was 9·2·1 a year
ago and played m the Liberty
Bowl.
The Bruins begin their season
Sept. 12 against Houston at the
Astrodom~. UCLA opens its
home-field campaign against
Kansas at the Coliseum five days
later. .,
Thirty-four lettermen, includ·
ing nine starters -six on defense
and three on offense -return
from last year. ..
• I •
-~ .W.! .. ~!~:,_·· -. ~ ........ --. ,.., .
'r •
JI .·. JI"' . -. . .. $
·-
..
. .. .... ~· .....
:.
..
..
.• ..
_, .. ~ f . . .. ... . • ..r"9 • • • ...... .. •• . . . . . . . . ~ :' .....
· .. , .. · ... · :
,.
. ..
• of'' '-'-.. *' • ,
(. ·:,
Bad Back
Helps Out
Pro Golfer
HAR.RJSON, N.Y. (AP) -An-
dy North has a bad back. It hurta.
Badly 1 al times. And be loves 1'.
"I hope It keeps on hurt.inf, ..
North slid after tying for the
first-round lead Thursday In the·
$300,000 Westchester Goll
Classic.
"Hopefully, it won't aet any
better at all.
"It's funny, but for the last
three weeks it didn't hurt at all.·
And I played hot'rible. Mi~ed the
cut in all three tournamen8t'.
"This week it's hurting again .
Kind ol lite a bruise. And every-
thing on the 1olf course just
went right. I really think it
helped. Witb the back hurting, I
dido 't try to bit the ball hard. Just
bunt it a.round and keep it in
play."
He didn't make a bogey and
finished bis trip over the hilly,
6,603-yard Westchester Country
Club course with an eagle three.
That gave him a five-under-par
66 and a share of the lead with
46-year·old Miller Barber.
An<lyNorlh J?·lA 66
M8arbotf' »33 ..
Grier"-' )A J3 ~1
HTwllty l:l-lA -.1
CCooc:ty l4 33 61
RodCurl 31 J6 68
BWad-111'> 33 lS M
MMcL..-. J6-3S-71
PJ~CIOM<I 3'-JS-11
JNIOlaus 11-)ol-11
MlktWynn :W..lS-71
VR~-36-JS-11
TWtl~ool 31-)A-11
OMoocty J?.J'I 71
FOLKS AT THE U. OF ALABAMA AR~ ALL STEAMED UP ABOUT FOOTBALL, AS THEIR MEDIA GUIDE COVER SHOWS. T Jtnklll'> 3• lA 68
BlllMellon UlS-41
TomWel'°" Jb lS-11
BNl<llols 3S.J6-11
RMas~I• 3b-3S-11
Andyk"" JS-~ -11 I e<1Pearce 3S.33-te
Jlmwiecr.ers 3S-33...,
South's Best:'Bama, Maryland 81(r•l1ert 3J.J6 .....
Llleoter :i..u~•
L Thon'tPM>n 30S·-4fl
L .. Eld9r 31.31 -4fl
LonHlnlclt JS-~•
PerryL~i. 3J.J6-6t
G.orQ118urn5 a4-ls.-.•
MarkHa.,... :w..:w-10
RonStrwc:k S4-J6-70
WAr-1'°"9 1'-:16-70
Ari Wall 11·3A-11
Tom Kite 36-JS-71
OMey,,r J6.3S-11
80!>6.Smllfl 31·3A-ll
JayHMt 35-36-11
TlmSI.._ 31.u-n
OavldThore 36-3' -n
OE1chlllr9t Jt>.J6-n
JlmSI-J6.J6-n Florida in Wings if Alabama Should F al,t,er FFe,1.,. Jt>.lA -10
TomShew Jt>.:W -10
FConner :Js.37-11
LerryNe1$Cll> l1·3S-n
J c. Snead 3~J1 -12
ATLANTA (AP) -Declaring
preseason favorites in the
South's two biggest football eon·
ferences is becoming almost
automatic -Alabama in the
Southeastern and Maryland in
the Atlantic Coast.
Jerry Claiborne, who has
steered the Terps to three
straight ACC crowns, appears to
be on more solid ground than his
f.ormer boss, Paul "Bear"
Bryant, who will have as many
as a half dozen SEC teams snip·
ping at the heels of the Crimson
Tide.
Alabaflla's bid for a sixth con·
secutive SEC title was
s idetracked last year by
Georgia, which despite losing
most of its offense still looms as a
challenger.
On paper, Florida probably
rates as the most logical cham-
pion should the Tide fall, but the
Gators have never captured the
SEC title and race some tough
hurdles on the road.
Mississippi State comeeol!two
years probation and could make
a strong bid for its first cham·
pionship in 36 years. Kentucky is
ineligible for the crown because
it begins a two-season probation,
but the Wildcats figure to be
strong enough to help settle the
issue.
LSU and Tennessee, two peren-
nial powers who have been down
recently, should be better and
ran into the dark horse category.
Maryland has so dominated
the ACC that few envision an end
to the Terps' streak of 2Q strttght
conference victories, including
eight shutouts. NOrth Carollna,
Wake Forest and Duh appear to
be the beat of the r~t.
Alabama, whlch bas won 61 of
66 regular season games .and 39
of 42 SEC games since going to
the Wishbone six years ago, of·
fers a high-powered attack
headed by quarterbacks J eff
Rutledge and Jack O'Rear, run·
Ding backs Tony Nathan and
Johnny Davis and receiver OUie
Newsome.
The Tide does have problems.
however. Team speed is only
average, the defensive line must
be rebuilt and they must operate
wlth new kickers.
"Some people have been pick-
ing us to finish pretty high this
year," says Bryant. "I hope they
.know more about our team than I
do."
Georgia's strength will be de·
fense where seven charter mem·
bers of 1975's oriainal Junkyard
Dogs return, led by linebacker
Ben Zambiasi and strong safety
Bill Krug. The offensive line and
quarterback corps will be new,
but Kevin Mc Lee ranks as one of
the area's top running backs.
having become Georgia's first
1,000-yard perform er since
Heisman Trophy winner Frank
Sinkwich tutned the trick in 1942.
Florida, also rebuilding its of·
rensive line, has one of the na-
tion 's top receivers in Wes
Chandler and an improved de-
f e~se keyed by sophomore
linebacker Scot Brantley.
Mississippi State went 9-2 a
year ago but wasn't eligible for
boWI participation. The Bulldogs
will be strong candidates for a
bid this year with Bruce
Threadgill triggering an offense
that features fullback Dennis
Johnson. Defensive standouts
are 265-poµnd tackle Larry
Gillard and cornerback Henry
Davison.
Kentucky's defense, featuring
end Art Still and lineba-cker Jim
·Kovach, returns l.n its entirety,
wlth Derrick Ramsey· back to
h'ead the offense.
LSU should have o. potent at·
tack behind the running of
Charles Alexander, but the
T,i,gers also face a rebuilding task
on defense. Tennessee is keying
its hopes to a new coach, former
Vols All·American Johnny Ma·
jors, returning t.o his alma mater
after leading Pittsbu.r£h to last
year's national championship.
Mississippi, returning nine of·
fensive starters, could edge into
the darkborse picture, witb
Auburn and Vanderbilt each ex·
pecting improvement, but still
faced with "]n'ospects or low
finishes.
Mark Manges, a 215-pounder
who accounted for more than
1,500 yards last year, is back to
direct Maryland's offense. The
defense should be sturdy, headed
by linebacker Brad Carr.
North Carolina lost stellar run·
ner Mike V-0ight, but has Matt
Kupec back: at quarterback and
tackle Dee Hardison returning to
head the defense. Duke features
quarterback Mike Dunn. the
ACC's total offensive leader with
1.835 yards.
CSlra,. 32 31-10 GArt~ lS.lS ·1n
Ml-oRl'ld ll 33-70
J•mColbe<t )6.J.t-10 wa,.,.L..r•• JS-n-10
J•rrvMco.e 31.33-10
Ptlo8rown 36-lA -10
801>1>yC:OO• 3' 1'-10
8E•\IWOOCI Jl>.lA -10
H""'°" Jl>.lA -10 8111Clli!lalrcl J1-3A -71
Bot>~l>y 3'>·J6 -11
Jwln.,,.,, 3S.J6-11
Ml~tO.llO 3~37 -n
MHet-y J6.3'-12
MM<OlouQll ~>1-72
FZ~I~ 34-ll-72
L vnLott J6.J6 -n
lV•lftlllN 3~)1 17
MRudolpll 3H7-n
llot>ShNror 37-JS-17
GllMor-J1.JS -n
8ot>Gll~r 36-16-11
Fr•nllllffrcl 3~11-n
OGr.,.,,m J1·35-n
J 1m S-05 JI>..» -11
Moerken Misses
World Swim Mark
JONKOPING, Sweden CAP > -Gerald
Moerken, the West German breaststroke sensation,
won his second race, but failed to break another
world record and East Germany's women stars
finished 1·2 in their events in the European Swim
Championships Thursday.
Moerken, who shattered American John
Hencken 's world 100-meter breaststroke record
Wednesday with a clocking of 1 ·02.86, easily took
the 200 in 2: 16. 78.
That was 1.67 seconds off David Wilkie's world
mark of 2: 15.11, set at the Montreal Olympics last
year.
Arsen Miskarov of the Soviet Union, the top qualifier for the 200 and top-ranked in the event in
Europe before this meet, was runner-up in 2:18.24.
Walter Kusch, third in the 100 breaststroke,
also was third in the 200, in 2:21.51, giving West
Germany's strong men's squad another bronze
medal.
Ulrike Tauber and Sabine Kahle gave East
Germany a 1·2 finish in the women's 400-meter in·
dividual medley, with Miss Tauber winning in the
meet record time of 4:45.22.
East German women also took the first two
places in the 200 butterfly, with Anett Fiebig beat-
ing Andrea Pollack in 2: 12. 77. .
Other winners Thursday included MiJosalv
Rolko of Czechoslovakia in the men's 100
backstroke in 58.35, Sergey Rusin of the Soviet
Union in the men's 400 freestyle in 3:54.83
191UI.--·~~,,
.._ ;1)};·1: ..
I.
DATSUN OWNERS
SUPER SATURDAY
AUGUST ZOtlt OMLY
DOT DATSUN
YOW' "Miich Mon .. Ccr 5tON
FREE SERVICE CLINIC
HO COST -HO OIUGATIOM
A complete checkup on Your Datsun Including; engine.
ooohng system. transmission. carburetor. generator. front end assembly
By Appcintment Only. CaU Now
540.0442 -842-7781
SUPER
F IH: E
HOT DOGS
SIDEWALK
SALE ova uao.ooo
INYINTOIY
n Parts and Accessories
Look At These Savings
w.
AM/PM--1 .............................. I~
lltM Spft~W-.......................... .1• oe-.......................................... ,,"
--W-'··•••·•••• .. •·•·············•••• 14.H Spellon • • • .. • • • • • • • . • • .. • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • .. • • • • • • • • • Jt ... T-T--.................................. 11.H -z-.-. ...... -JNZ-J4ft ................... ....
FRF:E
COFFFE ....
DONUT')
-Sllt.M .11
'·" .... .. ...
IZM . ...
• ._., .......................................... 1.n 1.11
---IAl-1 ............................. ,.JUI I.et
_._IAl_l ..... 4 ..................... , ..... .._... ...... ................................................................... ca ...................................................... ••-......, .,.._~_,,..14116 ...... ,., ..... ,. ............. U.tf 16M
1883'> RfACH BLVD ~40-0442
HUNTING TON BEACH 8 4'·178 1
Gentleman's corduroy.
Now, pre-season priced.
Corduroy slacks any man can wear.
Trim but not too trim with slightly
flared legs. Classically styled
wrth quarter top side pockets, front
ticket pocket and two rear flap
pockets. In a superb corduroy
fabric of polyester I cotton.
Camel, brown or navy.
Regularly 23.00
PRE .. SEASON P.RICE
Giant Fullback:
GoneatOSU
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP> -Woody H11u
beJiDI bb l'7tb Oblo State football 1euon wU.b a
cbanp tn coacblna pbllOIOOb.J.
NoJonserwW1'•bav•tbeb1mmertn1. maulve
fullt.et il)ie ot attack. tnateed, Hayes wW deploy a quid, amaJ1 backfield. No 1tarter weltti. more
than 197 pounds.
Hayes first used apeedbo,a Jeff Lotan, 18', and
Jloo Spri.n.p, 191, interchanaeably at fullback and
tailback in surpruiina CoJOl'ado 27-10 In the Orante
Bowl.
"We'll let the Une take care oft.be wel1ht and
tbe backs take care of.the quickneu," aaid Hayes,
witb m victories in 30 collqiate seasom.
.. We had one of the weakest oltenslve lines ln
seasons last year. We simply had litUe experience.
We'll be better. much better from tac:tle to tack.le:•
1be interior anchor is &-foot.-4 tackle Chris
Ward, whom Hayes says atm pounds .. is a Utile bit
o.n the skinny side." ·
Ward's buddies are mammoth. Tackle Doui
Mackey wei,ths 2:50, auard.s Maril La.ng, Jim Savoca
and Ken Friu in the 200-230 ran1e. e«iter T\m
Vogler 229 and tight ends Bill Jaco and Greg Storer,
246and216.
Logan, in Hayes' mind, saved the Buckeyes'
unprecedented fifth straight Big Ten championship,
9-2·1 record and No. 6 national ranking.
"If it hadn't been for Jeff, we'd not have tied for
the title with Michigan.''
Logan was Ohio State's leadmg rusher with
1,284 yards, the fifth player In the school's history to
pass the 1,000 yard plateau. Springs is even faster
than Logan.
Quarterback Rod Gerald, who missed most of
the last four games in 1976, has recovered and his
darting style complements Logan and Springs.
Hayes, scornful of the pass normally, has as rf:·
ceivers swift, 6-4, Herman Jones, Storer and Jaco.
He said, "The end position ~d be a great striking
force for us. I've promised to throw to Jones this
year, andjustnotinpractice."
Ohio State's defenders, just like the offense,
1 have eight regulars back. The foundations are cat·
quick middle guard Aaron Brown and tackle Eddie
Beamon up front, Tom Cousineau at linebacker and
Ray Griffin at safety.
.. The greatest compliment I can pay Beamon is
that he was double teamed 59 of 70 plays.
That's how much other teams respected him.
He's the quickest lineman we've ever had."
said the 64-year·old coach.
"Beamon is another fast one and Cousineau
ranks behind Randy Gradishar among our best
linebackers. And we think Ray Griffin is the best
. safety in the country." said Hayes.
: Ohio State opens at home Sept. 10 against
; Miami (Fla.) and hosts Oklahoma in a nationaJly
··: televised game Sept. 24 in a game that could have
· an influence on the nationaJ champion to succeed
: Pittsburgh . . .
Cycles Race Tonight
. Alan Christian of Huntiniton Beach will seek a
; return to the victory circle at tonight's (8)
~ speedway motorcycle races at the Orange County
: Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa.
; Christian bad a rough time last week, finishing
'. fourth in the handicap main t.ben bitting the wall in
: the scratch event. Earlier in t.be year he bad beeo a
consistent winner.
The speedway cycles arebeadin&fortheannoal
: national championships with the &rand finals set for
: October. Qualifying races will be held at Ventura,
: San Bernardino, Irwindale and Costa Mesa.
Bruce Penhall of BaJboa and defending cbam-
. pion Mike Bast are expected back in time for the na-
tional event from their trip to Europe to battle for
· the European championship. . . . .
:Ex-boxer
Dies at 83
LIMA. Pa. -Funeral
services for former pro-
fess ion al boxer Pat
Bradley, who died at a
home for the aged Tues-
day at the age of 83, will
be held in Philadelphia
Saturday.
CHANGE AT osu -Woody Hayes (aoove
photo) is back to coach Ohio State football
but missing this year will be the bruising
TENNIS
LESSONS
for Women
8 LESSONS
s 12so
5'91UplWsW..ti
REGISTRA 110N
AUGUST 17-21
a.-Stwt..,.12
COSTA MESA
TENNIS CLUI
457-021 I
Bradley fought 180
bouts and won 130
knockouts between 1912
and 1922 as a pro-
fessional lightweight,
welterweight and mid·
dleweight boxer. His real
name was Rocco
DeCarlo.
••After going to three .....,,lp1 to purdme
my MW Llncoln, I got the belt lrMtm.lt It
Johnson It Son.'•
He's probably best re-
membered by boxing
fans for his 1913 "Street
Ficht oft.be Century" in
Philadelphia. He took on
his neighborhood rival,
lighter Bobby Reynolds,
in a bloody, bare-knuckle
match that lasted two
hours and 40 minutes and
..encompass~ lour city
blocb.
Pollce thought the
fight was so eood, they ·
dido 't break it up.
HAROLD E. CLIFF
Anaheim
Orange County •a oldest
Lincoln-Mercury Oealerlhlp
.JOllMSON &SOR
I
fullback OSU has been reknowned for,
such as Pete Johnson <photo below>.
Dent in Head, ·
Signed Ball . .
AKRON, Ohio (AP) -
'A nine-year-old Akron
boy has an autographed
bueball and a shaved
bead to remind him of ttle day he was beaned
))y a foul ofObe bat of the
major lel&Uee' lead.lna
hitter,..
· J'oe Puzaltullcs auf-
f ered a dented skull on
July 31 when struck with
the foul drive hit by the
Minnesota Twins' Rod
Carew. The Twins were
playing at Cleveland
against the Indians.
Joe, the youngest of
Mille and Maureen
aer.r for a fracturt4 skull. .
For his ordeal. Puaakullcs received i!'
baseball autosraph~£~ the Indians, alonl wJ
~t wishes from 1ener
man~er Phil Seghi 9 expr.-lons of hope tha
hi1 next trip to Cleve!
Stadium may be m~ ·
enjoyable. ·
Joe a1ao has the ball
that struck bim -a
stadium security officer-
retrleved it. Joe bopea to
have it autographed by
Carew, who is near the ·'°°mart in batttni.
Pusakulles' 13 chlldren, ----------
is bome recovering and ... --------.
perhaps worrylnj a litUe LEASE of what bis seboolmates
will say about his ~
mostly-bald heaa.
Since he turns 10 on
Aue. 26, bis parents say
tbey might get him a wig
for bis birthday.
It was Helmet Day
dutjng that July 31 game,
but Joe wasn't wearing
bis souvenir helmet when pe went to get an ice
cream bar. He was hit
while returning to his box
seat behind third base.
He was hospitalized
for a week following sur-
Soccer Tryout
A final signup-tryout
session for the ~ewport
Beach youth soccer club
team is scheduled Satur-
d~y at Horace Ensign
School, 10 a.m. to noon.
w..,.wn
Since a VW haa
historically depreciated more slowly than mo.st
o ther cars . lease
payments tend to be
lower.
D••• the I•••• foctor ........1
Yea. We offer a lease
factor ol 7% on approved
'credit while many others
charge up to 8\4% o' more.
W"1H..-w7
Betides low Interest. we
offer a full selection of all
•model WVs to test dri\19.
And our own seniioe dept.
atands behind each one.
HAUOUR
VOLKSWAGEN
11711 IMclt ........ H..I.
14J.44JS ... ,... .. ..
Boys aged 10·11 may report, dressed and .._ _______ __.
TME 800KMA~ )
ready to play. There will (
also be a tryout for
goalies only, boys aged
12,13. .REVIEWS In the Further information
can be obtained by caJl·
lng673-2076. DAILY PILOT
'
-,
• 1 I !
.
i
DAK.Y PILOT
ABOAlU> CUAMPION -
Ev ry trip lhll 1r nd old traJn
mak aaenUm ntaljou.rney.
Rollibl aouth lhrou,h the hJUa
llOUtbem Vir uila, u1t before
• m t.. wben t.ba P•• lien
beddod down and all 1• qul -... -rcw the lullaby ol lhe rails,
the u.wtaen paUlt tn Uttlr
t'~.ud ~·to lhe windows
I Ul &bl pan lido al t.bt train.
-imcTJCNOW WBEaE to look.
·and when. Rl1ht on achodule, in
the darbleP ol the countryside,
a lleht &tows and w .. ves. With
tl\eir ftasbll&btt. the trainmen
wavtback
Another s1Jent rendezvous
kept. they return lo lhear duues.
"Nono or us knows has name ...
said Erwin Smith. a sleepin& car
porter. "Some of the oldtimers
say he's been wavln& at Uus train
for 20 years. I know he hasn't
missed in the two years I've bei?n
on Uusrun.
··0n the return trip, in the
daytime. we see tum. He's an old
man in a wheelchair, sitting on
the porch. He waves; we wave
back. That's all there is to it.
He's afnend-
WOULD THAT Tl1E Cham·
plon wt e vlalted witb 1ucb
ftltndly loyalty alt aloa1 Ua
route.
• 'Outaide BalUmoro ..,.
u 1 m<>lt count on havtn1 aorn thina brok n. Ktcb UlroW
rocu at u • b1' rocb. It'• bad at
Phlladelphla, too. We hH•toHO
that no panen1er1 are between
cars or noar windows that arm't
uobr uable. NobOdl'a been burt
that J'ln aware of, but lt aure ts daqeroua.••
Pew th• me11t part, puaenaera
•board the Champion are un·
•ware ol either friend or vandal.
AU. THEY ARE aware of Is
one fA the most pleasant tripe in
lhe land for anyone who lov• the
romance and lore ot railroads,
not t.o mention the husky bounce
and away, the fleetlnJ landscape,
the mu.steal fugue played by steel
rails and steel wheels, which Ls to
say anyone with a soul who truly
believes that setting there is half
the tun.
"It's like eavesdroppina on
people's lives," a paaaenger
aboard the Champion remarked
the other day. "You catch a
glimpse of strangers as you pus,
then '°'1're ~e."
Tbo lt!'lftlert you pau abolrd
the QWnploa Uve ln towns ..
the Atlantic seaboUd, Alona a
~ 12st.snUe path between New
'Y ort 'City and SL Petenburl,
.FIL The .names echo down tbo
tralli eorridal' llke a roll call of biatmy:
Trtiiton ••• Wilmlnltoa ••• W iaablnlton ••• Richmond • • •
Ralel1b ••• Q>lumbla , ••
Sa vannab. . .Jacklonvine. • .
Orlando ••• Tampa. • • •
"AFl'ER A WHILE;~· Erwin
Smith said, "You can glance out
the window and know exactly
where you are. You can see acer-
tain house. for instance, and
know you 're six miles from the
next stop.
"Some of the older porters can
tell without even looking. They
eet to• the rails, the feel ot a
curve, a certa1n motion d the car.
"You get to know the scenery,
and see how it changes. A clump
County Firffis Report ~
Pa.:eset fer lnronee Rf~e•
American Pacesetter, Newport Beach, has re-
ported net income of $2,652,878, or 42 cents a share •
• on revenue of $22,651,521, for the six months ended
,June30.
This 4!001pares with net income of $1_.048,196, or
15 cents, on revenues of $14,065,452 for the com para·
ble period last year.
.Far We•t E%tftld• Oler
Far West Financial Corp., Newport Beach, has
extended its offer to purchase up to $750,000 prin·
cipal amount of its outstanding 5'>4 percent sub·
ordinated debentures, due Nov. 1, 1979, for $910 cash
for each $1,000 debenture. plus accrued interest to
Aug. 31.
The primary purpose of the offer is to obtain de-
bentures for surrender in satisfaction of sinking
fund obligations in 1977 and 1978. Debentures In the
BE
CONCERNED
PREVENT
AIRPORT
EXECUTIVE
SUITES
Brand new plush
encutive sultK wltll
exciting Orang•
County airport Yiew.
Immediate OCC•C91CJ•
17141 133-,900
What about this?
~·r. No. GAECSY7030?
"NO .'tUNDAY SE£UNC"
Santa Ana
Lilicofu-Mercurv
1301 N. Tustin ~ve. 547-0511
aggregate principal amount of $.1,635,000 were out·
standing before the offer. ,
Osoeo Reports Lo•• -'
Oxoco Inc., an independent Newport Beach oil
and gas producer, has reported a net loss of $38,782,
or 1 cent. on -Tevenues °' $1,003,991 for-the alx
monthS ended June~.
• This contrast. with net earninas of $17,19', on
revenues d $708, 759 for tbe comparable 1976 period.
' ~~tftl
Peter A. Lendrum Associates, Newport Beach,
bas been selected by 'l'itle Insurance and Trust
Company to design its Loa Angeles County division
headquarters and title processin1 facility in
Rosemead.
General contractor is the Koll Company,
Newport Beach.
"Got a problem? TMri wnte to Pot Dunn. Pot will
cut red tape, getting the.anawenand actu:m you nttd
to solve ~· in government. and bu.maeu. Mail
llO"T quations to P.at Dunn, At Your Service, Orange
Cocut Daily Pilot, P.O. ~ 1560, Costa Mesa, CA
12628. Al many ldters. a posnble will be amt«red,
but phoMd inquiries or Utters not mcludmg the
rta4.r1 f1'U name. od.dreaa. and business hours' phone
number cannot bl c<>Midlred. This column appears dai·
ly except Saturdays ...
.._.... a
... .......
• of treea ii audden!y aooe and a
condominium la there, or a
trail• park. lt'• a 1001 trip. It take1 218 boUT9 and 4:S rntnut11.
But befOr9 1on1 it becomes u
fainlliar u YO\lr own atr t.
mor ~omforta.ble:· Clearly, rocks, but to count the
• ErwlnSmitblike.shiajob. wave, listen to that unm
HIS TWO YEARS aboard the rumble and envy the pauena
Champion, tbouJh, represent aboard.
oil.Ir. a moment ln t.bi• venerable THROUGH A.LL T8£ mercers tra n'1Ufetlme. and sad decline of pa.-.nC*
•
E•WIN 8Mft'R·Is A. porter In
the daallc ttiadiUon ol railroads. Tbe orllinal Champion was trains, tho Cbainploa aUn1vt$.
one d the f'lrst streamlln~ trains Since um. Jt hu been operated by
in Amenca. When it started· • Amtrak. whoae PUfPOI• ti tD service in im, the premiere perpet\late pasaen1er trains.
train of t.be Atlantic CoasUlne And the irony ii that the Cbacn·
Rallroild, .wide.eyed boys tj.ood ploq will aoon bo reduced
alona tbe tracka from tbe service only etaht pionthl d the
awampe of Georgia to the in· yeJ.r.
He LI• And 1oCP with *Peet ~.the elden ln b1a trade, lo"' to S6alt :up their stories about rallroads and rallroadin1. They
might outd.o b1ID In lore, but not
many would in profeuionaliam.
••tt's tbeacrtof Job you have to
like. You have to Wee people, like
1l'1naservice, llke accommodat· illl everyone, ml.kin& the trip
duatrtal marshes ot New Jersey Well, you can•t arcu• with
to watch that silver beauty economics. Somebody ouaht tb
streak by. explain that to an old man aitiln&
They. aWl · do. Not to throw ou h1s porch 1n southern Virlillla.
Mink Floors Optional
For a mere Sl29.000. you can get one of these little gems. 1t•s a Stutz d·ltalta COO·
vertible. billed as the wortd·s most ex-
pensive current model car. Standard
equipment includes power brakes. stereo
decks. wire wheels and pure gold plated
trim. One option is mink carpeting. There
as a cheaper Stutz on the market. It goes
for just $4.165.
Over 1,he Counter
MASO Ustinqs
MUTUAL FUNDS
-TM..: .... ~'~ ~= 'ffl 'U' em~ .at~ I~:= H1 J~t
tatlOM. .IUllPll*I .... DMd t." i • '* 1 tus. .. . . '"" ._ 41i tl3i Ule ttetlafWI AstOC'i· MOlllll I• n 16.1~ 00!11 1US H '1 lllV ColwMI! . I etlS'I Of Securities NtWS l'" t0.'2 Tai',.. IU6 NI. COPnl Ulle'll I OHllB. Ille., ere NVVn 1 .2112.'3 ,..ldlilltY 0.-: ~~ I uN.,.11
tile IM'~ et whlcto COl'und 45 1012 ·Bond U2 NI. lnm•tlll'S ~· tlltff 91<\H'ltleS CGlncm I 61 t • c.it 1,11 t.IS , ... ~ 6.U covl• ...,.. ~ S!P""' 100 1111. C*'llfd 10.12 HI. I Gf't H1 t•• IOkl (Net MM 0ffl4SllT 116111 ff D.tflt I I :f Ml,; ~ .... C.Js •• 1' 1:!~ :"' ~ o:~z ,~i :ui P, ,\~· .. Hi. ,.,... . l~ ,.: ,.,,.., ~ a.~:.,,~ &r,1 rn ""1c1~~ =t I~~ ,.~~,,:ft
AOEl<d S 7J US l'ront J.71 •OS Flllltl 1U7 11.M Select 9.lt IG.10 AcornF 1S.. NI. Sll1re 1 n 1 9' '°"'1111 10 16 11.W v ... ""' U7 7.04 AdVnlllY •.• NI. $peel s. 'n S.I'"" • a '. , .... Resh ,.. s..n Mlnel"d t.» I~ CJoMpO 11.lD NL Tll<itl 10 41 HI. 11111 1• 62 10.U
AttneSll 1J.11 M.SJ Cl1emFd 7.04 7.tt Trend 11" U.17 IV_Y .. 11 NL "fU!Unt •.n NI. CHA Melt Feb, Flntncl•I : JP Ol"tl • tS 10.a
" lst.i• • •I NI.; 1.llW!Y u• 4... Dyne 4. 1'41. '""" F 18.IXI NI. . Mriet 2.~ 2 67 l~l •· 1 HI. John H411C~--j '•
••
IJp• a11d Do.,...
Uf'S Utst J 12 7~ , ..... •v. J""t
7 7 1~
2' • 2~ s 10 ~
'"" 2'1. 2~. 13 .....
3 J ·~ •'I 11~. 10 21h
c..,..1115
+°'\ + 2 + tW. +a + t14 + YJ . \{,
+ ·~ + l11 + 14
+ "" .. Vt
+ t + nr. .. ~
+ '· + ... + v. ... ,.,., . '• + v.
+ " + " + lV,
+ -.....
~ Uo 4SS Up JOO Up I• l Up 18 7 Ult llf VII 141 Up 1• J Up 1' J
Up 130 Up lH Up 111 Vo 111 Vo 111
\JO 10 • VP 10 7 Vo 10 S Uo 100
Up 9S Vo ,t •
Vo · • 1 Up ... ,
VP I• Up I•
VP I.I
VIJ 1' UIJ I
Ust Cfl9 fie!. IS -6 on •• 1-. -.. Off ,.,
2¥1 ·-.., Off It ,
S -1 OH 'It.' ~ -YI Off ~·' '--Off10 • -1 OH 1 o , .... -\'\ Off 0 '"' s::..,,. ()If ,, M -• .. Olf •1
'l = ·~ m°'· :: .._ -~ 8.S 1\oo -... I l J -,,. 11
•Ito -.._ 1 S
J\ill · -'• on 1 1
, •• -"' ~ 71 31, -la ··17 3VJ-V.··t 7
1 .... "" 1 U14 -1 OH·, 61
II .. -'-Off 60
l '~" ....... Off • 0 • -looOff" , --.Off,.
2 -"Off5'
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
... ,.. u.. , ...
.1 !":: 't: ·~-:-.... ,. , ....
,!j !I"'• ~
1,ft1 ff"' ... H •r:. ~: n •...
"1 t 'o\ •• 1, .. _ '• '! 1 ··-.. \1 I,._"' :: g:: ::
10.I 441+ '• ,., ... "' . . .... . •J ,, .. _.,
t n 1• -t.-• '"'. ;, w b-•1'-' l~ ,}~·.~
~ ... ,, " -'-30'4 -•1 -·-·· 1 ......... .
u -·· 1.--'• »~t· ,,, .... ..... .. .. 1Jn• ,_.
Sllt• "' 12\• ••••
4S -l'AI
tJf't-"' ,. .... .
~ ..... "' C.llU 1 61111 U 1tl4t ... . Cn1Upf U7 .. 11140 22 ... + •.-. Cn1u5u2 .. 1100 JO"••~ °"" 12110 •• u ...... c.nL.a I.AO I !I 2l._-~ aMPft IAO t 1t ""'-,,,_ c.en,.r· .1010 .~ ,J ........ Ctnte 1.SOIO 13 2~ ••••• Olrllro.t tb 1l 1f7 30 ••.•• 01·-.10 • n 2~-'-Gi•nAlr I 20 7 •• 21'--•;.
Omol" ' , '" lO • ,.., Olmlpl 170.. " 20111+ \. o..msc> ,bl ' ..... 10'•-.,. °'9t1Go .cit • •• ..... 1111 CMHY, n. )I a1 ·~· \• O\a~Fd I~ 10 9'11 •••• °"'""' 2 20 ' :!90 32. " ... Owi\tT • S I~ Olef'rll" 1 )()2• 11Sl • 1 ~, • 1'<o
OlmNY ) I 41 •S'•-'\ ~SV• I 16 1 I 21 '• ~Pn Ml1 JSI 21"°+ '• Chtst1e 7 n l M JS'• • ,.._ CN8rl 190q 62 S4"··'• 0..Mh• .• 11 I• 8::~:' f' l IY :i! ~j,: .
O*F\11• 11 S •.. •
Olr•tCfl \ l}I •'• " CbrCllot I IO 10 18"-, ~.
Ol<om•I • 2• IP..+ 'a QV'y\ter .. l l ~,q ,,.i, -•.
OllltOt llOIO 2•0 21 .. +lllo
""fief! 1 ., 9 JJ ........ , OMGE 1.84 I 21) 22loo-~.
OttG p1 • z:JO ff • • • • O"Mol I tO 9 9 3'!'1 -,,,_
Ohcrp 1 00 'I i>JS 28''* + ~ Ol~Sv l • 3J8 54._-11 (l1ylnv .90 • llO 1J" + .., (.)1y1npf 1.. ~ 25 -I..
C.1t11pf I 10.. 3'I ....... . O.arkE 1.eo 6 81 .,.,., • • • OMU)I .SO 'I U IS ....
C1vOt I 90.t 9 1' S61• ••. C ... vEI l ..i 8 1'1 )] , '"' Ov£1pt740. t20" • >.. 0~W911 .60 ' 81 II 'o • '• Cloro• .6011 201 11•• -'•
C•utll•H .so s ISO 9 I -" Cs!SIC.\ .JO 7 S II 27 · • ·-..,. CslSG ptl IJ • J~ 18 , • .,.
CslS<ipfl 1q 8 2" ·-.... CDC..a811 • .0. II 1 O'i I t OX.col I ~ 1• J 11 3'1'-• • • C:-#8't /1 • 11 ,, •• • ••
CoffNttt • .0 ,_. 1 f , I~---t
Cot«o I 01 •' • •••• "':?~:· ..: ·i 2~~ ~~-. g:..,.F .20 6 l)J 9 ,
COIP9M 110 Z' l1'• • (.otnSt I O 1 .0 10· • • '•
Cotllncl J SO I U 41 •
Cotlpl 160 II 16 ••
Coll pt • 1> • •..t GolO.O\ 2 H « u I Jol • • · •
Cot~ pt5 ol I •I ColuP1c I • 48) II •
CalSOll J 10 ' .a 1~ -'> CornoC. • 10.. , I 8 JO.. • •
CmbEn 7 20 II 32 ~ •~ -• • Cn>OEQ 10 If % 70.. • ••
CmwE l 40 ~ 62' JO••-'• CmwCwlA 1 10 -• • CwEpt t'2. ·~ 11 ....... CwEpt 1.90.. " 7l CwEpt 2 • I 2S • •w
CtlfEpf t • . ' 102""-... CwEpf 'Z.JI .• 6 29 ·-• .. CwE pl 7 81.. •I lJ -' 1 CO<nlllOi' • • 6J7 ' -.. CD<nOofl.n • Jo 12•1 ·I'·• CGmNI 1 10 l >O XI'• -• 1 c.orr--, 'JI TO l 7 :!'"'° .. • • ~Sd 10 J60 ...... •, r 1 s 1 ,,,. • • c.or.e , . ., .. ).I 14.. • • •
Clwlgolf'lt ·"° 7 J4 11• • • • • • c-M 160U 18 ~ ConrK .eo 1 31 n• .. -• .. c.onid l l AllS 22-. -. > ConEpf • • 71.r... • • ConEP' • 61 • 1100 S2 • 1• •
GonEpt S 54'• -'• ConFlb I 40 ti ll/ H • • o
ConFpf 4 SO.. I o'I'• ·" GonF<gt 'D 6 123 71>.. • , ConNG 2 SO I 108 •1 •o-'. CnC.pt 10 'If> •• t200 I~ ..•.
'.ont-2.17 6 Sst 1" .;nPwpfHD •• a20 SI .• g:::~·:·· ~ :f.:;_j .. C~Pw JlflO • I 17\o\ + -. ~IAlr 7 IOS 1"t .•• IOlp 1' 4 c pf us . t70 l?\t ..
ContlCc> 313 201 H\\ • ''• OlllG(p 1 I IG »Yo -"-CntGppr l .. s 76V. •. eont•n I Ill I '7• ""41+ \lo CoftlllP 1.ll I 1' 16 .••• Conlll Al . . I 2''t ..•
<AltllOll I«' I tm )O"o+ -con1tet 1.1610 1n , •• , ...
CllO.t. .U 1 2'S 20~-'4 ~ 1.20 I 4 ~+Vo :ooll Un ,Jiit If 54 ~ •..• Cooc>ln 1.ClllO tt 4121,.._" c:-l.llb .SIU 10 Uvt-'-
CoopTA ,10 7 :s2 11\. + ''• (.opt!NS M I 6 1t\41., •. CoOowd 1.20 4 1 22"' -•• Col'ilur• .20 tt 31 ~-\11 C«llO I.Uta U3 67'1)-V.
Con-8111 Mlt 2'J 11~ •. Cou11..s • • 9 w. • Wt g:~ ~1: ,i~ ;:~::·"
Crel9 AO 3 7S 11---111 er-, 1Db • ~ ,, • 14
Cred1F 24 1 n .-. .... , Cro<ltN 166 1 a ~+ V.
Crom DIC • 'Ill ' 1' 1,..,_ -. Cl'OllHI 110 '1 ~ + ·~
CrwnO< 1 100 ~-"' Crwl.i '"I 17 ~ .. Cmlllt uo .. 110 n .... .
CrumF 1.56 1 •4' 32 .... .
CUI"° f 12 1 l 21 '-+ ''-Cuti~ ... t IS ll'r'I + loll E I.AO f 6S 4' • 14 .tsn • t'\ .... Ii.( .GI S 4CI UV. .•••• ~.1117 ', ..... ... 1 21 164-....
H1.l0 I '" '4\41-\'a 1 ... s 311 .-.--..
1.AO:ll .,. 1tllt-"'
.,
" .. s 311
• •l >I •
ldlt ... , w.. ""' ~ .., ... """'c.w ("9 '1 l""'f ~ ("Q 't 11..i. C'-(llQ
liorllon a 1-. \ MMllQ9 I t 4' ffi't + \• l'OtGlll t60 4 '""-"' *""'1 .nlo • 1M:: ,; ~-'llt.'°U • s ....... 1Jo1t1eil '4 1 l'7 11~ ,., ~ .• t U 21 t ~' .... .,. '1 1rl4-~. !'ollfll!I 1 '"0 IOt 16""+ \• ..."'"'' .. t 10 Im • 1. "'...,.. 1! 1 , ~.. ... "°'I' ... a... . 4 ...... ~ MO~b 'IOt Ii 1 .. \fa Melvlllt . tO 141 ff ... ., Pol l!ilf HM • rlOOO fO +I
.... I'll -. -Ahr< I U O IS 211 ... • \;. l'r•"''" • t tt ISi') + ' • ~~I ... ff 11 .!~ 11 .. ,., -Mel'<Mr t I '4o• '• l'ot IDf !..90 . 110 sq •
HDut11 1 t UO 1014 M<tl'dltll .IO S " II V.... , Ptoc lG 2 60 IS ?1' 11'141-'-Hew' pl t 1,. l * • Merrlv M t 2S6 11\o • • l'rOCllhl'I 7 I 11•.. •
He11f' ... 1 ~ , lS'. -'. Me .. ""' AO 17 '°" O'--'" "'°"" , • 10 , n ...... " "°"''" I MI 20t lt"4 Me~lll ... 11 10l ,...,. "4 l'SvCol l.e&ll 171 I""° ..
._NO .It! t ,, JO • • • NWllla 1 !Oe S > UV. -~. l'SCol ptt 10.. tll JSV.-·~ """"II .n • :110 .... ... MOM I• I ,. 21"4. 1. l'Svcl• 2 64 ' 126 2'"-.... Hi-o 11011 11 ,,.. '• Meir'" 1 !Cl S '2A I~.... PSvNH 1.a10 M tlV. ...•• Hua.... IO )I IU 11'• • Mii .,, ... 11 • z100 ... "-........ ~104 pfUS . 1100 »•~ . IMl.-.it .10)7 1 1• -"-MllCllpfl.OS 3 U~• .•.• l'SvNM UOIO 12 11-.-\41
"""'HI ·~ • ) 11 .... • McllGI ltOb I I 1\ltt .. .. PSvEG 1'6 I 1" 2•V. • Vt ll\lfll•TI .1 It Ht :» -.. MlllWIPIZ.12 .• S2 Ultt.. .. PSEGpt140.. I 11 ......... H......,.. 10 11 20"-•-. Mlcrowv .4010 21 2• -\o PSEG Ill• lO •• dlO S2\\ ••••• IUilCll • .JI 11 •1 1l'• • '-Mr:1ll U • 9 12 11 -'"" PSEGP!217 •• 9 i.-.+ Vt 1111111'1' • .o ) n 14 -... M Ut 1.ll • 512 ,.~..... PSEGDM.IO •• rlOO as ., Hw~.. • .. 10 ~ ll 1 .... MldlnciM t 2 lllto..... PSl:GPn.d.. 11 211.\'t Ill -I_. MlcHlt• 160 1 1• ., .. .• PSl!G11rno •• r1000 ~ ... t\ l~nds l)J • 7l 2•\o-Vo MlletL 1.211 1 1S2 2t • .. • PSEC. 1#7 IO .• 110JO " -V. : ::~J-i:·: 1; 1~~ .. =-2·· ~:=::"' ~; 2J :~:.::., ~~g~~::~~ ... =m I l"l\a J• 21 ,.,,_ ,.._ Ml t.11 t t ~-"'-Publ<llH 22 71--..
INACp 2 30 • 11' 4J .. • .... Ml 1.20 1' D SlW. + ~ 1' ... blo '6 4''9 "-IHAln I If• 2) l()'o • .,. l1U"PL I 7' 10 JI 21\oo..... P,_ C.... I I ._. •••••
1u1n11 'IO q 1sa 11~ ... • • ""l"oAI ·"" 14 JW.+ \11 f>9SPL 11010 6' W'\ ..... IM/lol' 2 16 10 SJ 21· • + "' M 111IM .41 • n ~ 14 Pullmn 1 :n 11 " JHe-\lo 1Cloti8a I %0 I U• It -• / Ml'..:C 1.IO S '1 41¥1-'• l"ur•• IOI • l7 11h + V. IOHIT »b • 11 "• o Mo PSv lb I 16 I~ ••• , PurllnFa S ) ""-Vt
11tPowr uo11 ,... 11 '• MObll 3.IO 1 •so "" ~ Purollr I 1610 ?S 24 .... llPow pl4 41 tlO U • • Moc11 .. t1 14 l \• O...kOll t1 1 1" 20\0> • ..
ITW ... II 9 21 .. '• M.OhHCO .'10 I 1l U Yt-\11 OuakSIO • • 11 I~ •.• 1m1MG1> 40 • 111 1s , MO"-°'• 11 ts • • "" au-• 110 • 4 22"'-"' IHCO 1 . .0. I 114) ,,.__ .,. Moll!IR 1.10 ' 14 ,.~ ._ OuHIW .10rn u '"'• ...
IMC# . I ~+ 1-'I =l.JOe S I 22~ ,__.. -
llld1Mpl2.IS ~ U'--~ .a 6 IJ U + '"" RCA 110 II 1'21 21" + ~ llld Get2 t1 I J ,.......... S.10 1 S24 62" .. RCApf 3 )() •• no 45 • .._ llldlPL 1 tO I 7' 14" . . • MO"OU 2.4010 6 J1t.-\lo RCA pf C.. 11 n:w.+ I•
lncll!'let 1.20 1 , 11~+ v. MortPw 1.1011 1n 2'''" •. • RTE . .eo11 70 ,..._ .. '"' lfte•C'O .Cl5en 424 25-"-~ MotttSl UCMt .. » 2'~• ... "•h-40~ IH ,.,..__ ~
.,.,.,. uou 311 60'~-14 ~·~1~ .~ ~: ~ ==:.i-~1' .~! 1~~ ... -.; 1:.11',,~ Uh 't ~~:::::.~~ =~ci1 ~ '~ ~ m: ... ~ =:~~~~ 2s.~ ,~ 2~,.: ~ :~=~I~ ~ g\.\~.Yo MorWS11 .50 • 11 1~ .•.• Reybt I SOb S 7 ,._,..,. \.\
IMltt• M • ·'1 U -14 ~,!I;m ,·; ,~ 2~~.~ =:~~"° 1 ~ I~ m;;;,:
'"'" ptAl.tt 1l ,, + ~ Motto!• .... ,. -41St9... • Reao84t ·'° • 1:12 20'e-"' :~:r.n~;20l4~ ~l ~~-Yo MIF ... I 2 9 •S 40 -Vo RCldman S )6 1'-+ V. lnteoan .l6 7 • ,~ .... '" MIST4tf 1.• • 11 ,, ..... _ ~ RffOCo 60 • 1 I~ .. ~ '"'••CO I IO 1 412 3'"9-.... Mu.ti~ .40,, 77 IV.... . Rttvse I eo 6 2S ,~. \1i 1n1erc10lv t J IV. Munv.Q 1.20 t 2 11 -"" Relcl!Ot .74 ' 31 •& ....... . lntrlk 1 :IQ • n 11•, Mu<PllC I• • 6 11'--'" RellebSI 61 I 6 U"'t .. . 18M 1016 )67 16'1'/a+ " Mur~I .IO 9 ... :n~.... R•lnlEI 1 2010 '1 ,.. .... -111
lnlFteY 41111 304 JI'• Mur.y() I I S 2'1'•+ "" R•llanGp S 30S 7S +II\ 1n1t1arv 1 IS s ., 30'-'-Mun"y()wf • 10'• RelC.pf t 70 12 41 + 'l'o Int Min 2 110 1 V l'I .... -.... Mui Om 1.32 12 lt-\t + ~. RefGpf 2 60 • 16 2S
'"'"""' 20 I s lt•o MY41tSL .CCIII 72 121\+ '"" Aellnpt 2.. S 1'l •.. l"IMulll . I I • 1''• '• -N--RepubCp I Ii •'11 + '" l"IP•PH 110 )21 •S'HIV• NCR IOll 114 44~• '• Rec>Fll'IS IS 1• '3'• ln!Re<tl 70 IS 7') Nllnd 110 9 I~ 20 "• Rfl>Ml9 I I ...
'"ITT 116 • 1>1> 33 HLT ,. ' 11 ,, .. _ •• RepSll I eo. 1 ... "'' '•
lnlTTplJ ' • SI •• ., NVF 1 4SI" SI •'-+ "• Reptex no. ' 1'·~· '• tnlTTpll< 4 ... SS'· ~ N•bl'iC02 n12 170 Sl'• AtVvOil .20 ll 707 1&•· "' ., .... ITTpfO s l 63... . N•l<O I IOU .i1 ?I ••• RtvcoOS 4011 , .. ,~ .... lnlTTpf72S 8 o10 '> N••<O .60 7 SO U•t• ''O ......... 10 1?2 12'0 '•
'. '"I TT pf ' so \) ., 1 N•Shua ... 11 l4f) 26..... • Rtvlon I ... 117 .,, .....
,.. '"11'1Xt I u I ) ~·'•. .. NalAtrl ~n • II'. .. At•lwm !O 9 Ill 11 ••• lnlrpctelf s 1 71'• •"• NAvl" 70<t 80 19'o. R .. nrd 1 .. 6 IJO 32,. •• :~:~r::..e:.: ~ H m:~ 1
' ~r~~~ ~1: : :~:; .... ==~~~:; ~ ~r~ . ..; 1111"1Un .207'6 11 • • ... HIOVL 60ct t 3S ,.. • RevM pl4.SO • 101 11 I owe Bl so s 100 2t~ .. '. Hl~lr I S1 7 ll ,,... ....,..Se ...,. ti ' ...,._ "' loweEI I !O • llO IH• . NelOl\I 160 , 241 11~. .... Rlcl!Co 1 " II 11\o ..... 1-llG 1 ... I .. 72 , NalFO 2.1• 1 21 7S''t ''• RICl!Mtr .'IOIO 71 24 •••
·-•llpf231 •• ,oo w •... ~:1i~ u~. ,~ m:: ~= =='.!.':~ ~ 1~ m: .. ~ :::::k ~ ~ ; ~: ~'4 + 1, N•llfom 10 l'•··· RloGrpf .IO. II U -Yo
lpc:oHp OS. ' 11 """ Nattncl .30 .. S-4 ···-... Rllt Ald .3210 131 17 ..... ltekCp • 17 ll 11'-:.:. "• Hllr><lpf 1 U . S IPI•+ Vo Robshw 1.1010 • 12\t-IM
llelCp ,30 I 2SS 1".+ \o ~:~e :~I~ .~; -n~~ ~: ==::I .~ ; : 2~~ ~ IUICppfl~ ):........ .. _ u• .... h HMitll'SV S.11 I) 11h-.... RocnG uo. 77 20'--·~
JamesF 111 " 14 -'.. NI Preti 1 )Cl 6 1ll 241\ + "' ROCllll I 9 sq 11·.--. ,_._
Ja"lrtn Ml ' 11 IS'• .. 't ~~~':'~ .t2 ~ S~ m:::,: =~~=·2 ~ : I~ ~;~-1
I ~=r.~ro. ~10 1~ ~-'· NSlllfld I 04 1 u ""• 1. RotimH 121110 120 Jl''t-....
JerCpt 8 rl!O 92 +I ~!:r~n ;·~11 IJ~ ;~~-I~ =~j~"" S010 ;! 1~~; :~
8" ~=~~f't 1~ ~ 1 1~ 1~"' ', Nelf.. l l'--'• Roper 1 40 s t8 m~-'·• 1] .. J•Wtl(Of' 4 11 3 Nllom I 60t> • 4'11 ~ I... Rorer ·'° 10 llJ ,, -•• 10 • • Jll"M.n 1 0010 J71 J1\; -.._ N•lmpt 160 . ~3 27'4-'• Rourlo 40b 12 JO 21..,. '• 16 " JollnJn 1401' SH 1µ, • ''-Neptune .SOii 10 16 •• '• Row•" 1111 60 7S ..,
11'• '. JollnEF ?OJ .. ••• •• NevPw 1 7~ I 1' ,~... RoyCCDI I A H ····-·~ I~'•. • JoMCll I «)It .. 4S '· Nt'vPpt 1 JO ZllOO 14' ' .... RoylO • Oil' ) ~·1 si..a,.-""'
111111 ,,, JonLQn 60b 1 '' 111".I+-•, NevPpt '·fl \I 11'•.,. '• Aubbrm Nll7 •O 1l'• '•
• • • • Jor9"" ' • II "" '• ~~~~'t' J !; ·~ n: ff'• :: =~~~OQ I~~ ~ ,n~ :~~: 74 • Jo•len• 111 I ,,.. NEC.pf '"°· 1110 JOI~-... ,_, -~~·:.:: ~ JoyMl9 1 ~ ~o_:s JS'" '" ~~~i1 r: : ~ ~~ + :~ SCA.Sv 10 9• ~!: • ' ~i.:.~lr 561; ioJ ~ ~~ H-llall .S.10 11 11'9 ~ ~~ .S:, t 11:
• " •, K•hrAI 1.cOIO •7 17'• • •, Nl'wml I llOt• 120 1'•11+ ~ 5.abint )010 l9
11 ... ~ Kell.cm u • 71 11"'-~ N111MP 1 :M ' 118 "'• s..19111n I• I 4 ~~~· .. ~::g:=;~ ~ ~r·_ ... ~::~~~~ ·~~ !!· ·~ ~"1,~·~ ~
JO•-.. ''• K•latSt I.SO s 70 70'•. .... H•aMpl 4 IS llOO SI>'. • ~,,.... 1 .J017 S'M IS -'• l<•nl'Mll .ll • 3 I'•-,,.. NIMpl II 7S l"IO 1ni, 'l SIJoLP I 17 9 9
JSV. .... l(•ntb .eolJ 431 ~· "' ~::~ 19~ I ~ ;r.:-,, !.115.oF 2 loO 1 xi• ~; ;': ~lit(;.~;; ~ :; ,,.,, ~ .. NortW" 1.a.. I 177 ,, ... • SI Pau•S It' SI '•~ • No•lln I -< • 11,, • '• Sllll)OP IM 8 63 •• + "' KCSoln I.AO 6 I :M•.--'• -' 0 !wot I ll S ~ 21"'°-'" l<enGEl 1.74 I 41 11~+ i,, No<r•\ I I 71 15·,. I'• s.t~\ '8 9 831 ,,,._"I K•"Nb 1.41 I 61 2•11.+ 1" ~:~:.~ ll ~ 2~,,; ·~ S01eGE 110 8 104 21 -. . . • KenPLI 1.111 ti 34 n\. . ¥ !.Jlrl"R 9'110 I ~·.. . • 1 Klll'L pn :n 1 21'11 + • • NoAPlll I !O 6 tl 2'\o-1 • ~·, • 118 Ke PL pl113 I 7'~• NoCAtr 12 i SI> •' •· • • !.Fe Ind 1 • 199 9•~ l(alylncl S 5'9 "•-" NoCeAlrwt «I I.. . SFt'lnpl SO '
U ·•.. . • K•:Jr. 1.46 6 21 • NC>eSIUI I O'I t 171 11' • '-" SF<llnl 1oO S S4 I 2:~.::.: ~:wec:k .~: ~~ .r-: :~ ~f.::~ '~ ~ ~ m::~ ~~~ t.O 1 Ii !~--:-.~· ~=~ ·: ~ ~: :g::~ ~ =~s~~~:: ; l~ ~ .. ~ ~ t~:r ,. ~ ~~ ~~:1•~ ~::::ai 1.~!; ~ ~:~.:.~ ~~r:!.~::1: ~~: ~ ~~·: 1 ~.8 II~
, ....... 1 .. Kelltlltl IAllO • ,. -"' HSPwr"'" 110 !I -... SevEPI 171.. 11
3S -.. K•~I . .a.o "' 2A ... •. Norte .'411 II ~-'" S.viM . .OU 6n 9•a-• • KyUlll ,,,. t d4 1l -'It Nof!llQel,e • ti 4"' .... , ~"°" 7 ~ 1~-'• l(ertOIS .40 6 75 17"--\II =:.':i'?tttl.: ~ ~ n~ . sa-ttr I 11
3"" n '\ 12~-.. 2ffl• •• s....-· .. ......
tO'" • ll'"' \t IJ • ·•
40'4 -"" IZ'•-'• ,, -'• •V.• ~ 11'9+ I ,..,.,. 1111 tV. .• ,..
,. -t. ..
~~·..,_ :~
.., -1~
13'" .. . ....
JI. • •• S:ll. ...
lJi l .. is.-. .... 13---••
•2V.+ J'-l
4 .....
"'• • l<ertMC I 2S 12 t1 6N. ·• · · NwlB'-_ ' 1_ 2 • .,, • .,, Sclvf>IO I 1111 37S
> 14' 1 • K•ylCnl 7Sl • l2 11-.-·~ -~ '" • ~ • S.Cllllll 11810 10S • q"" -•, l(iOO.Wl 20 $ \01 2•""-'• Hw1Enr2 l0 1 J7 3'1'6 '• • 03
sto. .••.• i.._ .... ,, ....
13 3''<.-.. l(idcte-e ' . 1 4"-+ '" NwEnc12:10 1 7 3''~• '• S.Ct;"0
1
4m1b 1 ~1~ 111 ~ Nwttr><I 1.H I ISi ~"' + " " "" ' • II'• • KlddepfC 4 I• ""'+ t.. Nwllrwlwt t 30'•-llo Oil.old 3426 96 !OS qi, '• Kl-prl.. > Jl'') · !t<o!kt I 40 8 211 12 S8'•-•• klmbCI 210' 21' 45~+ .. NwlPpf 2.SO 10 ,... • Sc.ollFot I • IO'I 7 II~ • l(lnqOSI 60 I S2 1)'<• ·~ NwMt..f 1tlS '1 11''• • • ScottP .7' ' 143
n n • l<lrsc:ll 'IO t 16 111.+,,. ~:'~ 1.~ ~1~ ~:;-1'• s.convs 2010 u ?l'.•,_ ·, 1<1<~at_!ln" 8011~ ..! 3~,·~-. 1,·: Sc.ov111 1 20 1 111
• 171
•22 )
21S JI 161
12 7 lllO 3)6
38
,., _.J,., , ,., , • NorlSpt 1 60 1oe. 43"' • '> S.:~r t) 41
S."" • l<oe>pe" 'Ill ' ~I ·-'• Nuce• ~ ~11_ " • •• SHConl ,, II IJ2 tr::': ~::::'.01:.-i1t8 Sfll\! :~ OkC 1101 10 l~ ,,. S.ibCL 2 ,,,.~
91, -"• t<r•ll , 3210 1U 11) -'· Dalllncl .)Oil 10 If'\-\oo t"l>WA lll : ~o '°". . Kroen~ .2~ 1 ""-"' Olklh!P 1 t I I~ Se ~r•m llO ; IJ-. • • t<roger I 60 I S1 21.. O«lf>tot 11\ t 11>11 1S -'• =i1~ · 1"'( ~ :,
79'•-. • Kul>Ot• .,, 11 l n •1t • '" O<c•P•lwt n1 u"' -'• s. .. ••G ,, io J80 ~:~:~ KY_. ~i.'~"-20V... ~~:::::ta. •: =~=:~ xm .'IOll lW
II .. , •• t..~E Cp ll .. ~-\,\ O<c1Ppt • . 34 17"> 1 o ~.::::::.JO 1; 1~~ 9.,. LTV Cp I l'D If•-~ O<clP9f1.!0 14 11'•... . ~I U I 20b I> 1'
20 .. • ... I.TVA ~ • I 116'. •••• =ol2 IJ U 71'•-'• s-i,.,.. . I 1 20 e .. lTllCpllf S. I 4tYt •• , 140 S 211 7S + '--SMll~pr "° & J u··-., l•<Gas 16-1 11 211 • .,. '" d 110' 101 70 ... ,. t• w ·so 9 9 • i..... t..tm~ I.JO 7 23 21"-'• OhEdpf • 40 • 110 S7Y>-'> sn.!:.~ ·10 4 ;
31'•-'• lo..,.Bry .IO 7 18 13 .... + "e OllPwllfl.CW .• 160 a -7'4 Slle•rH .30.t J 14
)4 , •• L~nil" ~ • 1' U'll . 0Pwl>f87 60 •• rl!Q 86 -2"• St>lollOll 1 60 6 291
11..... L&wlrOt .«IU I'll '"' •.. ()PwpfOAO • •400 111..-·-w11T .'llo 1 1 16 -•, Lu~eg 60 • 11• 14'1•-V. OPwplA 14 •• l100 1.10 •••.• 'lnllrGI . ..0. 4 St
2S • '' LeatSpUH.. 3 ""°""?"° OPwptF U .. tlSO lll . .• 51111Giptl JS t
4•-. • • • L .. \w 1.«I • '" :ri .• . .. OPw{t 7.76 •• r600ll "'•-1''1 51\rwu• 2 2044 ?2 2S • . LffdsN .60 t 11 IS + 14 Oltlll EI 4110 llS I~-''• S..•P•c I.HI 7 IOS ~ -''I l.ff,_ I 6 1> :10l4-"4 OlllG :pf .80 .• :a:clOO 10'.---,._ S•Ql'\dl 1 tO 1 12'
21 ... + ''• LtllPCt 111 "' UV.-t,6 OllleNG 2 • 11 11"°-'-Si9f'O(le 1.1210 llM
le ·-• • Len Vally 7 3S 2~..... OOl•,ln"Cowt I 76 • 31? 3"1•~= :'·. S•mPrt< IB I 11 30· •-'• L•llmn l.2St IO 10.,.. + I\ • ~ Si m 1 1216 f 90'1+ •, LtnMr IS 16 61'1-.... Ollnkrfll.!0 9 0 '7\..-V. <mp I SOI' ... Lenoit 1 t 7• ,, ... • \'I Om•tk .n • 1Sl 16'~ .• ,~ »mP • • •• lttF•y .010 > •'e . OIM•den .114 1 7 1"4~ '~ SonQrr '° 1 117 UvFdC 1 ,,~.. Opeflkll .eo 6 I 11-. .... ~rqpf l so II)
UvFln 7Slt l 14''9-... ou"A~ 1,3' • 70 I• .. • Sil~ .SOI~ :~ ~vl$1rel20 s 344 2''H '• ~: ·~ 1 1~ ,;~:-: ·~ \Aylltll' .)214 39 tT>~lzFwt 1
1! : ~--.... OUlletCo 10 I 11 ""'• ''I ~:~nl ~ : le',
L1br1yCp.611 I S1 11 ... -"' g::~¥f: ~ ~ Smlklll I 1011 lllO t:~r-.;;, 2S 1! 1~1;; .... O.enC Utll ltS 61'"• ·~ ~:: ·l:: 2~ Ll90•1 2.SO I M 30''9-v. Owenlll 1.8' 1 61 ,......,_ •• Sl:J4•81tt.' ·.011 ~
llfflllf 1 tllO '13"' +-.,_ Ownll pf4.7S . S ll11> I Sofle\I• q IU
Llllylll 1.G IJ 415 ~· "t O•lrlllll .67r 2 " l\.o • ''I SonyCp .07• 14 U8
t..lncNt I IO 7 7S J7''a• \lo -l'-0 -~" J SO. • 10 l..lnc ... I,,. • 11~,. PNBMI SO.II n 101/J '• SO'EG I St • 122 t:r.:: ,;ft,; : ·=~·i4 :n-1401: ~ ~~-1·: So.lerlri Is.' 1
LlllDn"' 2 1 21"-+ ... l'llCA\ I 7• • •11 14'-• '>II Souldwll • .0,, ll
l..OOl!d ' 107 17• •• • • Paco , • as.t ,. .. _ ... ~.·pf I ~10· ... ~
Lo«lt. .2'12 ns 11\'ll • l'ec:L'9 I ... 1 13 ltlott-1. ...,., 1111 ·--20 .. ... l'ec:Lrn 1.:12 7l lU'o• I• ~PS 1.3/t 1 > ~ ' 4 1 -• • • • " -£ 2 • 1'2 t=~"1 o:.• ;: 1::':!: K= I 1S ~ ·• .. llCol .. ' 511
St =:n t:'~ n~ ~ '°' OE 1.31 II 3' I.Ill' • 1.10 t '1 ~..... Pec:TT... 4 •. 1120 11'1>-"' ~!°!~Tiel2. I~ 1, 6511 L"lllU 1.li I 1a 1' ••. .• T1 ,.. ""'""' • l..1Lpfl US.. 1 ~-tV. PK n .to I S ,,.,,...... SollPK 2 . .0 7 IS7
LltpfN t,!•• dN 'f ,.. . PllllllW .AO 6 l2 61/J •• , •. ~ l ff I JI ti pfP •• 4 Ioli-"-!'lllWf(I 1.... Tl t.,..._ loll pf • • • 41 II.PIO Al.. t + I.II l'llfftlk .•S S 22 4'-'• " 1, ?IS l..OftlQr .S.U 72 t4 -"' ":::1it.* .1111 U .-...... Soutlnd Mn t::.•_lg d:i: J: =~:: : ... ,; uo" m .J::.:;" :t µiw .... 1 1• 1• ..... c~--, ,, n -" " =,1.:~ =: ~:::" it:m tt:: ~"::~ l.ubt'11 UO 13 17 asvt ... ,. ~tfHM ":'f t 4t U'6 ... ,. 1.~ly$ .1tll 11 IC "" + ... mf'lli:i t ,. 1~. · .. . t--.. 7 t4 ,~ ~ lt"9t 1. ,. ,... ,,... ... IA-1·i t I .,._ '-;:~a.::1f ~': ti::; \lo L~.. .. .. 1~" _, ,_ tyl(~ 'I. . 71 1~--~I 'IOI W.+.,, •" ' ~J..J·_ 1 ........ E!S=ll'!lli .!i.,,. ,::~ ~t:X'-·'\':' 11 ~:'1"41 ~=tJ:; i -.'!.1
M£1 .~ • ~ , • .,. ll(t,M,, lo't •• ._,
MOIC ·'°IO a2t 1 ,_ fl ill • 1 • 1 • • IM<~I' ,Jt!llU n I • " .. .tPl..llf 'I" •I 1 :;::: = ·'t: ll 1:~·~ ==~llQIO ~ -14 MKl!llll ff 6 1lt ' -IAI J~• I '> •• /' ••
M<1'11fl 1 .. J ,,~-"' p--!!!, f ,? '1··= !? M•tV 1. 7 ;n -YI I" -.. :;JIJ ~ .. ,.. M~#I '-•• 1 • SJI.\ .. • ~:~a . moo t11... • ... Mdll'Gt -.... j lt;-1.\ =~-.~ti~ ...,:~ "'-'IQ .. ,, .... + Ml
C!f:":','f:': dft '"-:: ... 1. ,, .. ...
1111A1: ,~ .. .
llfl •• 1 ~!,t-.SiP.l~niiJ~ ·5i!
I ti -~ = .. '":;·a 1
... ,._, .. ,. s•.-,-•19
2~-... ,,..., ..... ,,.'J• .,.
"'~ -.a. 20""'-~. 1 ..... Sf._-... :n -,,.. . .....
20"l ~ ..... .... , ..... 10"0-,,,_
31•~ .•..• ,,. . ....
J.S' ·-'h ,,,, ....
11•1-"' ·~ .... 34'4 •• ,.. "'•-..... 7 -....
ll -~ ~ ..
17-V. JO .... :11 ... -....
I• + ... 30 -.. ........ .....
U \4 111 ...... .
24 ..... ~ 41'9-.. 2tV.-... 13 ... . ,, ... ... is ...... .
l2 • "· ., ... +2'•
20 + "· I,,,,_ '4
I ... '" ... ' .. ,, .-. .. 43'-...... "~·-· nv. + '• "'"• .... J114+ 14
II . •. • 1'4-....
UV.-t.lt "''····· ~ ..... 611 .....
'i., .. .. '• ...
. ..
DAILY PILOT 8
Pesty Woes
Rot Hard to Locate
By SYLVIA PORTEa
You wouldn't knowtnily buy a house lnfeated with
termites or weakened by rot. V.t, whUo termite loapeetJon
often is required for certain types ot home mortaa1es, the
danger and damage may not be vialble ln a pe>orly con·
alructed house. And wbUe a careful inspection may be made
of an old house. the search for tbe destructive acents ~ay
not be so diligent in a new ho.use.
You wouldn't knowin&IY make an eQenalve investment
in a house in a state of advanced decay. But many buyers
don't check tor leaks in caulking around bathtubs, shower
s talls, and sinb that permit larae qu.a.otiUes of water to
enter walls andfloorlna -putlcul.arlY in a new house.
THEY MAY NOT NOnCE THAT th~ flooring is not-.
tlrely level, does not flt tighUy qainst bueboards. They
may not realize that a noor that feell apono is in a state of
advanced decay.
This eheckliat, prepared by the Africulture Depart-
ment, can belp In shopping for a house or decldinJ on essen·
ti al repalrs to a home:
-ls all the wood in &he house above tbe level of the soil?
Does water drain away
from the house? Are
there any signs of damp·
ness in the basement?
-Does the crawl
space have adequate
clearance and ventila-
tion? ls the soil cove~
Money's
Worth
with a moisture barrier? Are earth·filled porches and other
structures separated from the house?
-Is roof overhang sufficient? Has caulking around
windows, door$ and joints been maintained? Are gutters
and downspouts Intact? Is the attic ventilated?
-Is roof decking completely covered, especially at roof
edge? Does the roof sag, indicating possible rafter decay·!
Is the paint peeling or. blbterine?
-ARE DECORATIVE AND OTHER items attached to
the house likely to admit or trap moisture? Is plumbing, in
eluding drains, free of leaks. Do doors sag or windows
stick? Are frames decayed?
-Is caulking around tub:s, sinks and showers intact!
Are floors level? Do spots feel spongy when walked on? Do
ceilings bave water damage? .
-U the house is in a zone of bigb termite hazard, is
there a structural pest control contract on it? Does the con-
tract include a guarantee? Was tbe soil under the house
treated with lnsectlclde during construction? After con·
struction? Has the son under additions been treated?
-ARE THERE TERMrl'E SHELTER tubes visible on
the foundation? On pipes? Does the crawl space contain
stumps or wood debris? Are there smaU boles in unfinished
wood in the crawl spllces or elsewhere with powder under
them? WW an expert inspect the house for termites. or
other structural pests, before the sale?
Wood in a properly constructed and maintained home is
safe if its mobture content is seldom above 15 percent. To
prevent decay, keep wood~. Since that's. easier said tha11
done. treat wood that wlll become wet with preservatives.
Excellent sources of inforMation on ~t control are
university extension workers, county agents and state
forestry agencies. ·\
Send for .. Finding and Keeping a Healthy House.,.
#067E, from the Consumer Information Center, PueblQ.
Colo. 81009. Cost: 6Q cents.
Oil Issue Fears
Drag Mcirket Down
"NEW YORK {AP) -Oil issues came under pressu'Nttl>·
day as the stock market continued to pile up losses.
Tbe Dow Jones averaae of 30 industrials closed dmtfn .78at863.48.
Losers held an 8-S lead over gainers among New YoPk
Stock Exchange-listed issues.
Bit Board volumecameto20,800,000sbares.
Eugene L. Now~. petroleum industry analyst at Blyth
Eamman Dillon, said the oils were suffering from concefn
over the J>C)6Sible impact on the industry of heavy supplies of
crude oil worldwide and gasoline in the U.S. market.
Texaco announced a gasoline price reduction early thls
afternoon.
Do.,lone•Arieraga Wlaaf Staf!kll Did
~<API Fl,..1 Oow-.Jonet ~
oi.ri Hlall 1..-Ctow <Jiii JO Ind .._08 t7d06 IS..'4 IU,._ 0.71 20 Tm llS n ,,. .. 21314 2U 10-0"2
,, Ull 111.17 112.03 11001 11t.ll-1.0I u s11< m., m.11> 2t0 °' mu-o.•1 ~~"ti' :::·:::.:. ::::·:::::::. 2.A~= Ullls ....................... S.,JOO
6S Slit....................... :S..JDO
NEW \'OAK IAPI· S.les, • pm. e>rl<e
•lld Ml C-. of -'"' mo.st ec11 ... Amet1un 5tpell: l!ll<IMl119'1 ,._,
trCldl119 rieti.-lly .. mar.• ll!tll ''· UVllld'WI. •• • ~ S •" HouOUM .. • •• • 11,Q 4IO'ot -II'>
Gl8es ...... • , • 1!,00I N -4' AE ....,lie . . . . f0.700 ~ .....
Hartfld zo.tv..... '9,.00 ~-\II lm~I A... •• 34.000 1'V. -i.., TOlef Ptl NA. • • .. 31,500 1141 -V. Mllltt'#lfll ••• • • 31,iOO 4~ ..... C...-n . .... . . 30,SOO ~ + \lo o.nn1 ei...... 2•.aoo '"' ,. ,.,...
NEW YORI( CAPt
SAL.RS
Due to tate transmlssloq
today's listing will "°' appear In the Dally Piiot,
W'4AT AMU DID NE# VOltK (Af>I
Tecley 'n ..... __. 'llt JOI
Ot<llMll 3U ~ ¥=r:=. m ., .... ,.,,,...,. ,. 1•
I ttew "" 10Wt 20 ,,
I A*X SAL.a t Due to 1ate transmtsslon l
today's fisting will not ,
appear In the Dally Pilot.
I
Frida • Ai uet 11. 1m
Lasers Race f
taUon •ill ta th ip0tl11ht ln l0cal 11U· ana ~auas lhi• • end u tho Newport Harbor
Yacht Club hc»ll the W rn R~1lo al cbam·
l>Vlmbip (or the CIAN . ~ Voyaaera Ymcht Club wlU 1ta10 Lh• aixth
uce of its Humphrey Boaart Sori"8 for
Performance Handicap Racina Fleet Yachtl and
Lauabbn Sen for Mldllet Ocean Racinl Fleet
typeos Saturday and Sunday
The Dana Polnt Yacht Club will be h~l to
PllRF anJ lnternahonaJ Offshore Rule UOR> and
PHRF yachts enroll~ 1t In tho dub'a Dana Point
Scrim on Sunday.
THE MOST EXCITING action will be centered
in Lo& Anceles Harbor's breez.y "hurricane culch"
where two C Class catamarans will start competi-
hon ~the Lltlle America's Cup, the ultlmate prize
for cala.maran satlors.
The Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club will be host to
the best four or seven series which pits the U.S. de-
fender Patient Lady lll a1&lll$t tbe Australian
Cats Seek Title
Little America's Cup Set Saturday
By ALMON LOCKABEY
D•lly PllOl 9'Mlll ... WrllH
While a half dozen 12·meter yachts
O.Jl the East Coast battle to determine
which will be the defender and
challenger for THE America's Cup,
two speeQy C Clas~ catamarans start
competition Saturday at Cabrillo
Beach an Loi. Angeles Harbor for the
so-called Little America's Cup, sym-
bol or supremacy in catamaran sail-. ing
The protagonists on Los Angeles
Harbor's breezy "hurricane gulch"'
will be two solid wing C Cats -the .
U.S. defender Patient Lady III, whose
crew is determined to "keep the cup,··
and Australia's Nicholas 11 bearing
the slogan. "the loan 1s up "
U.S. SAILORS Alex Kozloff of
Irvine and Robbie Harvey of Cabrillo
Beach won the coveted cup for the
first time last year in a close four out
or seven series in Australia
Patient L11dy lII will be sailed by
Duncan MacLane or Roton Point.
Conn., with Skip Sanks on the trapeze
wire. Tony Di Maurio. owner. is the
alternate crewman
!'licholas 11 will be skippered by
Lindsay Cunningham with Graham
Nania Kai Wins
Log Race Crown
Dexter Wood of the. Long Beach
Yacht Club skippered his power boat
Nani Kai to a wm m Shark Island
Yacht Club's annual Invitational pre-
dicted log race with a low error of
0.8628 percent. Eighteen boats from
the Southern California Cruiser As -
sociation competed in the event.
An additional feature or the race
''as the competition of three·m1tn
teams for the American Marine
trophy which was won by the SIYC
team ~f Gordon Burrows, Don Smith
and Jack Honey.
The first year winner wa.s El
:'\7avi~antc. skippered by UonSmtth.
Summary 1, Nani Kai. Dexter
Wood, LBYC, 0.8628; 2. Pauhana,
Russ Keslinke, SIYC, 1 9972 ; 3, Aljo,
Mel Lurie, MYC, 2.0359: 4, Holiday
Hound, Harold Sundt. Jr., HHYC.
2.6466; 5, Angel City, Tom Collins,
Hollywood YC, 3.0083.
C'ocutal WeatfMtr
Tllere ... 11 • locel Cle<IM IOI tonl9f'll
and tll<OUQll m46-mofr>11>9 SatUf'daY
Ll9hl _I_.. winOI. HltM S.lUf•
d•ylfOf'A-70Sa1•.c11tuemlcMOI
lnl•nd
Coe\t.I '•"-r•lur•t will r.,,.e
'""" t& 10 n Inland temptraturu wlll r•nve bft-Sf lo IM The w•ltr
temperature will be 70
TODAY
Second 1119" 1 00 o m
Second low 1 34 o.m.
SATUltDAY
FlrlthlQll t·26a.m.
Flrsllow 1;10a.m.
Secondhl9" 1 •S)p,m.
S.COfldlow l:Uo.m. U Sun~iMJ6•1t• m.,te16t:SS111.M.
Mooll ,,_ 11 oe a.m., wts 10:• o.m,
Candy as crew and G~aeme Fraser as
alternate
BlG DIFFEltENCES ~tween the
America's Cup and the Lit.tie
America's Cup are money and speed.
Whereas 12·meter competition runs
into the millions or dollar~ every three
years. catamaran sailors can gel into
world compeuUon (or a few thousand
dollars.
And when 12-meters are being kept
in tlleir berths when the wind whistles
up to 25 knots or better, this is just the
velocity that C Cat sailers thrive on.
They have been known to equal the
velocity of the wind on certain points
of saiJ.
Solid wing cats in particular hke the
stronger weights of wind. That is part·
ly the reason that this type of craft
was chosen for the U.S. defense. The
other is that patient Lady III out·
classed the "soft sail" cats competing
for the defenders berth In a week·long
elim1nation out or Cabrillo Beach
Yacht Cl\lb during the past l wo weeks.
THE SCHEDULE of races w11J con·
sist of ooe i-ace Saturday and Sunday.
a layday on !'tfonday. one race on
1'uesday and Wednesday, a lay day
Thursday and one race each day on
Friday, Saturday and Sunday. The
series will be decided on the best four
of seven.
The Little America ·s Cup 1s official·
ly known as the lnlernauonal Class
Catamaran Trophy CICCCT>. It was
first olfered in 1961 t.o settle a dispute
over the fastest catamaran. It was put
un bv American sailors but never won by an American crew until last year.
It was held by the British until 1969
when it w,_s won by Denmark. The
Aussies won it from the Danes in 1970
( EARL WA Tt:RS )
in the
COVERS
SACRAMENTO
DAILY PILOT
BOATING
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'Jl»' PUl>lls.Nd Oranoe Co.st_ Dally Pllel,
July 19, MO ""911•1 S, 12,.1', 1911 u..n
PUBUC NOTICE
llllCTITIOU5 austN•U
NAMa STAT IE Ml.HT
The 1a1iow1no """'°" 11 dolno 11vs1 ------------f neuas NOTICE INVITING llD fer Mrt•l lllt A Dll'FEREHT DRUMMER, 15" truck'°' City ot flountaln v.11.., 10200 Mew Verdt E . •'47A, Cotlll MeM. CA
Sitter A,._, "U321. Bid c1~1no 9261'°" J wooo, u" Mesa Verdi E.
t/l/7HO.OO• m •OA Coat.~ CA926»
Pvbllihed DrW>99 Co.lit Dally Piiot TN; bullness ts condUcttd Illy ell i,..
.t.ugust" "11 Hl1 11 dlvldual •
O..J.Wood
Thll stat-I was 1•1.t wtlfl Ole COl#lly C»rt ol Or'"Ot County 011 Aug. f,1'71. , ___________ , """1
"""41~ Or.nge Coast o.lly Pllot.
A119. ti, ",M,tftds.R« 2, 1'71 C .... i
•---------1 --1 :1441.17 MCmCSTOC•lf'Dl,,,..
PUBl.JC NOTICE
l'ICTIT10U5IUSIN• s o,•uui:T•MflttP ;J
HAMISTAT•MEMT ftla,.6.W•U.C.C.t
TIMtollowlngpertonuredolnoboal· PUBUC NOTICE OlfNATIOtlAW•ll:AISOCIAtft N•t•ce .. lltr .. Y elven t• ti••
-----------iwuas. Tiit .,.,....,. -'" lltloor wtio ,...,. crHtters., 'rHOMAS o. ~OY Nl!TWORIC DEVl!LOPMIENT -·--,,-,a'-ITl_OU_s_•_US_IN_lf_SS ___ , """ dolne bull"'\$ .. NATIONAL· 11114 ROSI! v. MEl.1.00'f. S.S. Ho. IF/'~n HU'TL COMPANY• 1tO South Grind Ave,,.,.. NAMll ITAT•M•HT JAK ASSOCIATES at 412' 81rcll, Suite 5'7•31-1006 llllsl, Tr.,.ttww. wtiew W '-It.ILi ~ Santa Mii. c:a111omt•t2705 1~. Newpof'! ~ Qlfltomla .._.., Ml-..,..,~ tMSt -. Clrcla,
Htrmtnn L Low !Gtnar•I ,..!~~Ollowlng .,..,.__Is doing llusl· ~•b'l~ltle11Mel-llfl<11-Cltyef\ill!Mlnllftstw,o.itvlfOr.,..,
R4CE SET Part,..rl, ll20 Sovtll Gr-Aven.,., KEYSTONE PLASTERING CD .• llvsl!WSSMIN. . StateefClll...,,...,tMtatlultttr.,,.,.
Santa Ana, Calllci<n1 .. Z10i TM lktlllqus MiMH flame stetie-Is ~ tit w "**' IO RALPH G. Bruce R H•rton\ IGtner•I ~J9Auc11'9Y 0.-,, Huntlngton8atcll, CA rnanl Mllo!'lrlno tllt uM of such lk· BRANT and MARGARl!T £. llRANT, Owners of wooden hull Partner I, .oo NewPOrt Center Ori••. J.,.,.., Dtvld~•-v. 50lt Aildrey llllou$ butliwu n•m• wH lllld In S.S. No. 56947"°141 Clllsl, Tr_,_es
Newport BHch, C.lllornl• '1..0 Or., Huntington Beacll, CA t2t49 . Orenoe Goulltyon August 1. itn wllow buslnen addr•s ts JOO 3'tt. sailboats are invited to Tiiis llvsl,..n '' condu<l•d by ,, Tiiis buslfteu Is conctucttd by •n In· I Tiit ICon•tter O>rllOrtllon, •llO Strfft, Oty of NeWport hach. c-.ty · · t · th Cl k 9ener•l0trt,..rSl1tP alvldual. lllrch, Suite UM. Newport lleacn. CA of0..61199,SlateofCalllonlla. parlJC1pa e In e ar Herm•nn L Low JllmH D. -loney 92660 (ACallloml•CorpOr•tlonl The DtOPtrty to t>e tr•nJferred It Sweet annual Isthmus Tiii\ \Wltmenl WH 11••d ....... the Thi\ .... _, was lfted Wftll ,,,. 2. Nation.ti Liie lnsurllflee eom.,.ny, tocalld et S10 W.SI 1~ St .... Clly Of Cruise sponsored this County Cieri< of Orlll>OI' County on AUQ County Cieri< of Or•~ County on Aug. 1100 Quall St-•. Sulla IOI. Ntwporl Go.ia MM., ~y of or-.. Slat• of
Year by the King Harbor is. "71. "ll04" J. 1977. ~acll, CA '2MO •A vermont CorPGr•· ce111om1a
Publl.i.ed 0r•"91' CN\I Dally Pllol l'1ttM 1 onl. SaldPl'OOtf'tv lsdtscrll*J lneener.t Yacht Club, Redondo Aug ",,, Sepl1 '· m1 Mf.11 Publlstwd Drangoi Coast Dally Piiot, • Tiits buslntts wH <onduet•d "" • "'All stcn II\ trlde. tlxturn .• .ctul~
Beach. Auguil 12, 1t.2', Sepl 2, tm 9e11tra1"""""'1p l'llal\I .rld90odwtll ot lllatdrycl_,lng
)SSl-77 NATIOftALLIFE IL Coln llMHldry bvSlMtS k-" H The Wooden Hu 1 t tNSURANCECOMPAHY. l'ASH•DN FLAIR DRY CLEANING IL
O wners Assoc a· at ion PUBUC NOTICE AV•"'*'•Corpor•llon COIN LAUNDRY anct ioca...s at 110 By, WIMI...,. E C.wMautto W .. I ffCll Slt'tft, Cfly et Cftta MHa, <WHOA ) was founded by lts.Super\11-.RHI CountyolQr609,SIJltofC•JllON1IL
the late Clark Sweet who PUBLIC NOTICE l'tCTmousavs1Nus ~wtt-..iti.. Tiii• bu•k t,.,.,., w111 .. ",,._,.,. ftAMt!STATE~IENT ··~1&Pan.-·· mattct Oii ~ al"1' Ult 3tst day of for many years raced fils T11e I01tow11111pet'sanureclotng11us.. TH& 11tONW1SEJI AUfltSI; ""· 1t10A.M.: .. ~
40 root tt Ji k . l'lCTITIDVSaustN•H nesus eottl'ORATIQ!t C!t<r ... Senkes ............. ,,.u
• CU er n er lD "AMt!STATUll(HT BANZIL &OAT COMPANY. l*l tCMlfomla<~etlon Ma9l\Olla Street.. FOW!tall\ Valley, most Of the OfrSbOre Tiie followlno -ton Is doll\Q bull Producer 1.Mw, Su•le H. Huntington 6y:Jellnl(-lter c.allfor'lllamtl. · S th ,..Has Beatll Ca11lwnl•m.ft lts~f'Twldtnt So..,. et~'° tM Tr-let'ees, r a C 8 S l n OU er n DAN"S GLASS & MIRROR. 113 VM1lwa Garcle Banuelos, 21151 "Gtfte<alP•rlntr" •II lluStnnanM'81anc1-*-uted ' California. Newtonw., .• Cos••Masa. CAm11 H-•-sireet, 5Pac• m. Huntington Tiiis ~ o1 Abal\donmenc o1 .,., "" Tr..-rors tor -""' ~-The summer cruise is D8nle1w .. ,..,, P~u. 1uo 161t1S1.. e~•c11,ea111om1.~ F1c1111ous h51iwn Name ... tiled ., .. ,,.,..,SAME
CostaMHa CA.~ ~., R Ziii!!" • .-10 e 1st StrMt, wltllthe~Clerllol Orangoieounty Oat.cl July20, lf17 sch edu 1 ed Salu rd ay Tiiis IM!ntts is c-.cttc:t by an •n Long BNcJ\,Gal•t°"'"'tOIOJ onA119.12, 1m. 1ta111t1G. llrant h boats from all over dlvlduaf Thi\ llvslneH Is conducted llY a flUl.CW,ROUTOH Margeret&.11#..C W en DMI W Pi.rt• ~ner•l 119rtne<"s/11p. 8URHS&Mcll:ln•tCtt Tr-'erws Southern California will Tiiis st .. M>ent wu tll4!d ,.,,,, ,,,. V1tr1tur•Garc••Banue1~ ly:0.¥44I0.11arMt1 1111to~•SS10NAI. ~sc•ow
converge at the Catalina ~~vClef'llot0r.noeeountyonAu9 c0:~11~~~:.,.en;nc:,;,:~C::,;'~~:;: :,~~i ..... aa~m• :~v~1614,....
Island Is thmus for a F7"" 11. ,,,, ,....,..,aa.c11,ea.t2'6i 1111mi ,..,...vaii..,.c:..1H.m• weekend of fun and PubtoS11t<10rM1QtCoa'1D•11YP11o1. "'357 Publls11tc10ranoec:oa,tDa1tvP11o1 •sc...wNo.•nMt-Mtt
AU9 ll. 19. 2t, 8nd Sept 2 lt71 Pul>ll-Or~nve C.0.SI D<llly Pilot. AUSl<ISl It, 26, ~pltmb«2, '• 1'17 PuOlltlltd Ortr19t CoaSt Dally Po lot, games. lot" 11 Augus• 19 a.•ndSeot 2.•. 1977 36J3..7l' 367'•77 AUOusttt. 1m M7·77
Tough Toyota trucks. Long Beds.
StandarCJs. SP.Ort Trucks. Thinl< Of ttiem as
spor-ts cars Wiffi loads of'luggage space.
Is this ·you'? This is a byota Idea
Truck II has opllOnal equipment not
manufactured Of warranted by
Toyota, but available !hfough Toyota
Dealers and other so.K'8s. "lbur
dealer can help you put together ti'¥!
·'lbu Hauler" that fits you
And he<e's a real c-.omfort cab. waa·
to-wall carpet. Hi-back btJcket seats.
Tinted glas~. AM radio. ,PefSOOal
canfort fotyou or two.
Thts is the SR-5 Sport Truci<. S!Ook,
it's about as fancy as a lot of IOlkS
want to go. But your Toyota Dealm
olfe<s loods d personal op ons and
accessories to make ,1 m&e •you ~~;s~a .The loyota Sfl·S Long Bed ts
equipped with radial tires and
a bed seven feet long. Holds
1100 pounds of whatever you
want to haul. Ard haUls It 1n
style.
•
" .
'
. ..
E&:KENDER
A whole raft (left) of oddball char~cters
-and some strangely decorated boats
as. well -can be expected at Saturday's
Character Boat Parade in Newport Harbor,
judging from some past entries (right).
Nonsense Ah9y Set for Sat11rday
BJJOANNEUYNOLDS OfUlllOllltJ ,...Miff
I Once upon a time, In 1960, there
• was a crouP of people who de-
cided to dress up in funny cos-
' tumee and toot around Newport
Harbor in their boats, which
wert: also festooned with-strange
1 and wonderful d~orations. .
I Ob, said the rather startled
people on shore, look at all those
characters, in their boats, parad·
ing.
. Thus was born Newport
Harbor's annual Character Boat
Parade.
IN THE 17 years since that
first event, the peace and quiet of
the 1>87 bu*° assaulted once a
year by what has got to be one or
the weirdest collections ot float·
ing devipes known to man.
Numbering as many as 40, the
1 boats with their crews have
• cbuued. sJliled, paddled aod
othenrile been propelled -or
dragged -around the bay in a
two-hour celebration ol the
ablUl"d.
;· . Conservative estimates are
that. since it fint began, the
parade has been watebed· by
more than a million people wbo
have crowded the lower bay's
sborellDe or pu:nued the mad·
ness in er aft of their own.
Tbe parade, which now falls
under the respectable wing of the
Commodore's Club of the
Newport Harbor Area Chamber
of Commerce, bas even made the
hie-time of Los Angeles
television where, in recent years.
weekend tallt 6bows have been
buedooit.
THIS YEAR promises to be no
different. 1be theme -there's
been oo.e since 1965-is going to
be See Waves, a salute to
television.
In keeping with the theme,
Dick Lane, one of TV's pionee,r
personalities, will be grand
marshal. He will lead the parade
which starts forming at 1 p.m.
Saturday in the North Lido chan-
nel near the Balboa.Bay Club.
. The boats will then head ln a
counte r -clockwise pattern
around the bay, ending back at
the club about two boors later.
· In the past it has been difficult
to distinguish participants from
water-going viewers. There have
been. indicatiom that those en·
tered a!s characters as well as
tbOle there to He the characters
havehadafewdrinks as a source
of inspiration for the event.
SINCE .ltn, members of the
-Coast Guard Au>clliary and the Orange County Harbor Patrol,
who are charged with maintain-
ing a semblance of order. have
taken to confiscating water
... . .. ....
..
balloons and water pumps from
would-be pranksters.
TbeY have abo been ltnown to
take skippers in tow who are
suspected of bavinc bad one
drink too many.
The practice was initiated the
year after one participant and bis
exuberant crew capsized their
30-foot boat. creating problems
for themselves and the paraders
who were behind them.
Over the yearS', the style of en-
tries has ranged from the
ridiculous to the absurd, the
overriding principle being that it
doesn't really matter bow well
you fit ln with the theme. it's
whether you'redistinctiveornot.
TBERE'VE BEEN s everal
bevies of hula girls, well-armed
Vikings , a troop or two of
Cab1a&o dapcers -with steel
drum bands -Keystone Cops
and turn-of-the-century bathing
beauties.
Musie has tended toward the
lively, with sounds produced by
Dixieland ensembles , the· Third
Marine Corp Aircraft Wing
Marching Band, several gaggles
of kilt-clad bagpipers and a
cacophony of individual bells,
horns and drums.
One year, an entry was piloted
by a lone skipper and a crew or
big, barking Ni!Wfoundlanddogs.
Last year, the parade was held
over the July 4 weekend, instead
of in August, so that the bicenten·
nial could be celebrated.
IT WM SAID there were more
Betsy Ross e s , George
· Wasbingtons and Uncle Sams in
that parade than most people would want to see in a lifetime.
This year should offer more or
the same insanity. Watching can
be tricky, since the idea is to rmd
a piece of beach relativel7 close
to the action,
All of the beaches on Lido Isle
are private, which means that
the majority of viewers will have
to seWe for the public beaches
along the peninsula and on the
Summer
nights
f.ull of
south side of Balboa Island.
On the peninsula,' the publi1
beaches are at 18th Street, 15tl
$treet, 10th Street, Buena Vist;
Boulevar.d, Edcewater AVeD\l<
and all of the ends of letterer·
. streets as well as the ends of 9tb-
llth, 12th, l3tb and 14Ql streets. -.
THERE ARE also good view
ing spots ai the beach at Ur' M~rbor Patrol offices. 1961
Bayside Drive, and at Chinr
Cove, which cp .be reached froir
the foot of ,J>ahlia Avenue ol1
Ocean Boulevard in Corona de
Mar. There's no parking in ChiJt
Cove, so park on the bluff tot
alon~ Ocean Bouley!rd. l
' . Another good view spot can be
found in any of the several ba,Y·
front restaurants that aurroufwj
the lower bay. Unlike the public
be,ches, where alcobo)J~
beverages are not allowttlt
restaurants offer the advanta~
of a comfortable place to watdl
tbe parade and a means of 8*
ting Into the sptrit of the day. r;
l
t
DAILY PILOT
ANGEL cAP)-""'111Mmtt6bi~e
t tel v Ian bu cllacovved uJ)lriDt
·~ . . J'lnt. e u 0 a jhta a." w . N8C hu
0tc 1111.r alrid. n the c• • aert• ••A Y al t.ho Top,•• ln Whleb two Slman and
"'j)~ l,ype Ualerl achieve tuddtn IUCetU
• ,rrlth the bdp al the devil'• 1oa. Now comu
ABC'• " ar n I.'· a llt.uatlao eoaHld1 about
th,... yoc.mc 1lrt1 try1Jl1 to bruk ln u rock
•tnien. . "®Plnl off her 1kateboard, Barbi Benton
esplalned that "Su1ar Time!" lt adapttd from
tho lr\a!lsb aertet "Rock FolUos." Barbi, •
lw'own·balred beauty wllb a 1U1ht pus nos.o. was
only ldddln around lA th rthearnl haU with the
board. but 1 UP it to 1et back and forth to
tier car Kroa the hut• lf.tromedla Square lot.
llAaBI STAU ln tho 1ummert.imo Hrlea,
een cin ABC <Cb I T> cin Saturdaya at, 1:30 p.m .• with Didi Carr and Marianne Black. It pre·
mJered t..-o weeks a10 and will run for five .....
• 'lbe music on the abow ls larcety written by
Paul WUJ.iams, who also occuionaJly makes an ·
appearance to perform.
"On the first abow we tot our first job, worlt-
inl for tree in a tacly little ni&ht club," said
Barbi. "1be dressin& room is loaded wilb pipes.
crate., one mirror and only one light bulb that
bums. It's like all the clubs I've worked in for the
pastfour years."
Barbi, a country-pop singer and onetime girl
friend of Pl~boy's Hugh Hefner, said she's also
worked in Las Vegas and Lake Tahoe but prefers
the little clubs "where you can let your hair down
and the audience really responds."
:otdi Carr also worked the club circuit and
Marianne Black was ip "A Chorus Line."
BARBJ WOK!! a yellow ''Mccloud'' T-shirt.
picked up when she played a famous rock singer
•
:r1ae Arts in Brief
tirl to TV Star----
BBrbi Benton
c:xrstars 1n
the new
five-week
series
'Sugar Time!·
on a "McCloud" episode about record piracy. Sbe said it wu her only other TV appearance.
Her only movie role was m a German rum she
di.du 't want to talk about .
ABked if lbere were any parallels between
herself and her character in ''Sugar Time!," she
replied quickly, ''I hope not.''
She said, "I play an incredibly naive girl.
I'm much more worldly than Ma.xx, the girl I
play. I can identify with her in some areas. She is
what you could become it you didn't read and
keep up with current events.
"IN THE first show I played her as smart
putting on dumb. They like the dumb so now I'm
really dumb. My remarks are so dumb now that
other characters think I'm putting on.''
Barbi said she was invited to try out for the
series because the casting director had previous-
ly hired her for a commercial.
"l pas~ed the cold reading and did a screen
test," she said. "There were 12 girls testing and
we'd change around in the roles. After a second
screen test I wu elected."
Althouib the ~riea ia aclleduled for QQIY five
shows, &be aald. • 1 have my a.nee.re crossed. l
hope tbeahowdoes well because I wouldn't mind
belns tied up. l'd rather do televillon lban travel
40 weeks of the year. But.I would like to tra~el
some. I llke to perform in front ot an audlence. ••
During much ot her career Barbi was l>ro-
bably better known u the lirlfrlend of Hefner,
publlsbe-: of Playboy macazlne. They have since
spilt up.
SHE WAS asked lf she wu workint bard
now to build an identity for herself.
, Barbi did not answer directly. She replied,
"I'm very career-minded. l'dliketo be known as
something more than a &lrl wbo eoes to lunch
with her etrlfriends and 1oes shopping. In colleee
I took a lot of music lessons to pn1pare mrself~
"I cave it a stab. All my friends tbOu&bt l
was crazy, but now I've got three frieoda lolna to
my slngina teacher. I think everyone should be
creative in some way, otherwise you have no
self-respecL That's why I believe in women
working."
Theo she said, "My relationship wlth Hef
was probably helpful in some ways and hurtful ln
others. It was hurtful in gettlna commercials. I
was no longer the wholesome girl nut door. But
on the other hand I might not be as well known to-
day it I hadn't been known as Hefner's
girlfriend."
SHE SAID she considers herself a singer
first. She bas four albums out and is working on a
fifth. She also writes songs with her record pro-
. ducer, Roger Glover, artd with Carol Connors,
who co-wrote the theme for" Rocky."
"I've studied acting, but what I don't have
yet is the experience," she said. "I don't think
you become an actress just by atudyin1. I hope
one day to be respected as an actress, but you
can't accomplish that with just a few shows."
A.erylies Style Shown
ACRYIJCS DEMONSTRATION -By painter
Michael Hallinan, Laguna Festival of Arts ex-
hibitor, noon to 3 p.m. Sunday at Huntress
Gallery, 2811 Villa Way, Newport Beach. Free.
'ECHOES OF THE PASI" -Contemporary
American Indian art, now through Sept. 26 at
Mills House, City of Garden Grove Art Gallery,
12732 Main St. (in Euclid Park>. Noon to 4 p.m .
Thursdays-Mondays. Free.
FESTIVAL OF ARTS -Now through Aug. 28 at
650 Laguna Canyon Road, Lacuna Beach. Noon
to 11:30 p.m. daily. 50 cents adults, 10 cents
children.
SAWDUST FESTIVAL Arts and crafts, 935
Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, now
G~lleries J Exhibits
through Aug. 28. 10 a.IJ>: to rn.itlniabt daily. 50
cents adults, chlldren f~.
ART-A-FAIR -Tradi\jonal art, Laguna Canyon.
Road at Canyon Acres Drive, Laguna Beach,
now through Aug. 28. 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sundays.
Thursdays, 11 a.m . ~to midnight Fridays and
Saturdays. SO cents adults, children free.
DEUGHfFUL
DINING
The appreelaUon or beauty surety must be one of
God'• peat lifts to mankind. Tb.la indefinable feeling
that stin the heart when Wt admire a fine work of art enrtcbea our being.
At 'lbe Old World Art Gallery. we atnve t.o exhibit
tine art errects from many dirrerent parla or the
world. palfttinp rrom the past t.o fine antique Jewelry •.
bronzes, fine porcelain ftprlnes and unusual stn items.
We feel sure you wOuld etijoy Heinl OW' CoDeetlon.
11te old ~ ... One ptctun ts wcrtb 1000 WOC'ds" hu nev• been truer. All our merc'banclise carries a 7-day
unc0ndit1cnal-money'back paraatee.
Millirw ..... ., .. ~--
' WE'RE BACK
FROM
EUROPE! c· .. 111..ct...,..•.-...-
trtp .-...d ttle WOftcl. H YCM1 ... .. ••• to .............. ..... -c·.-• _,.., W,.,.... N
:.... -.y I Niiiy Med ,_.
Henl--""6_......._. c_,.. .-ddl -I LOVI TO w. ..,_
GIVI MONIY AWAY! It ..._. _.,. fl ~· c... .. ,.,....n. ·-WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS
1--=-R•l•f:l•Til-----1 r-----((•llI:l•nr---, . I Mew Yerti Stytt 11 At TWr........... I
I PLUMS ll IAITl.m' : I II PUltS I I SP_.5 100 II 5,...s100 I
I u.ithk fl I I Wiii TWs C..,.. 11 u.lt I U.. I I II W'a.TWtC...-I ---------------·~-------------~ .._.For DWttl -After 0... Cnilse I 9-W a. A.~ r ----((1llJ;l1J1l---:---· r•----c(1llJ;I•f 1r----. I'· "-'" ly Dlllre I 1 ..._ llt.Yor 11 COLORfVL 1
I CAN'l'ALOUPE ii CAltNATIOHS I
I 4 ,_ 5 I 00 U 2 5 , s 11s I I Ullllt4 II For I
I WIMll Tlllt C..-I I Utlllt 50 I
1_ ____ A*-,;.w.y.1H.-;: l;;;;~';~'!.'1'.! __ ._I
.. ~----((il1Jil•J1r---..,r-----«1llliltit1----,
I ForC.....Wed 11 h~Lo.... I
~13uckskin Indian· by Fntz
Scholder is part of an exhibit
this weekend at Muirhead
Galleries in South Coast Plaza.
INDIAN ARTISTS -Lithographs . by Fritz
Scholder and R.C . Gorman, opens 3 p.m. Satur-
day and Sunday at Muirhead Galleries Ud.,
I NOllTMERN : l IElMUDA :
· : ROMAINE 1 OMIOHS 1
1 2 39c I' I Oc 1
South Coast Plaza, 3333 S. Bristol St., Costa 1 Mesa. Free.
'SUMMER ATl'RAC'l'ION' -Group show, now
through Aug. 30 at DB, 1535-B Monrovia Ave.,
Newport Beach. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wednesdays.
Saturdays. Free.
I • For 11 Pamd • : I u.lt 4 I 1 Llllllt I LM. I
W'a. 'Aft~ I 1 Wlflt TWs C:..-I l--------------~L------~----~--' .
COUPOMS IXPIU AUG. 11. 1977 --~ ....... ,
••~n
.. ~)7 '4~ ! Scots Players to Vie • in Laguna
.. •
Scottish dancers and pipers will compete
during the S<:otljsh Music and Dancing Festival
and Fair, Sept. 10 and 11 at Irvine Bowl in
Laguna Beach.
Entry forms are available Crom Dorothy
Phillips, 9552 Woodlawn Drive, Huntington
Beach, CA 92646.
During the weekend, a Scottish Grand Gala
and Ball Deileidh will be held at Lion Country
Safari. Tickets are S3.50. Reservations for the
ball and booth rental may be made by calling
Lyric Opera Association of Onulie County.
831-3622 weekdays.
"A111de6d v .. r~,T .... ~-· ..
The Anaheim CiYic Ltabt OJ>ei'a will hold
auditions for "Annie Get Your Gun," wblch will
feature Sue Thompson as Annie Oakley. Monday
<singer /actQrS) and Tuesd~ (dancers) 'at 7
p.m. a\ Loara Elementfn' School, 1601 W.
Broadway, Anaheim. ,
Production dates v. Oct. 7·22 and muslcians
are also needed. For m~ information call 636'3670. . .
l.il:a Mlaaelil Jfidetil'
·A special 'phone line.has been installed to
take reservationa for "The Act" (formerly tiUed
"In Person" and then "Shine It On"), a new
musical starring Liza Minnelli and Barry Nelson
that will open Al.lg. 30 at the Los Angeles Music
Center Pavilion. It is (213) 520·1234,
'Art' Goll Tounea..eat
An "Art for Heart" golf tourn;lment to
~ benefit the American Heart Association will be
held Sept. 28-30 at Los Lagos Course in Costa
Mesa. Ruby Keeler Lowe is b~oorary
chairwoman, with special guests Ron Ely
(''Tarzan") and artist.BUI Gilpin.
Registration deadline is Sept. 2 and prizes in-
clude a $1,977 hole-in-one award. Information
may be obtained by contacting the American
Heart Association, 1043 Civic Center Drive West.
-· Santa Ana, CA92'103, 547·3001. .
........ Pahdhlg cia.•n.
OU painting classes will be .conducted by
Lorraine Edrie of Newport Beach beginning in
October at Aaron Brothers Art Mart, 1714
Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Informatfon is
available at 645-688().
'JV&glat ft.Re' A tldltfolu
The Studl<\,..Theater ot the Lona Beach Com·
munity Playhouse ~II hold auditions for "A Lit·
lie Night Music" at 10;ap a.m. Saturday and 5:30 p.m.
Long Beach. For information,
Weir at (213) 772-5584.
lce-cotheque at Ice Capades Chalet
is a brand new way to have fun on
the ice. It's kind of like disco dancing,
Ice skating and New Year's Eve all
mixed together in the most delightfuf way.
It's the ideal place to bring a date or drop in
all by yourself for an evening full of fun and games.
With singles. doubles, .mixers and just plain fooling
around, it's a nice place to meet nice people. And a
· ,great way to hear the latest music. And don't worry
ff you've never ice skated before. You don't have to
be good to have tun. JUst willing.
Come join us at the lce-cotheque. It's the
latest thin.g And It's 011 happening on the Ice.
llALL WOND a eith r lbat the
m c proYed ao lrrahtible in pullinl
~-to the dance noor. The snappy
but amootb rbytbma of the Wally Ruth
Trio .able partnen to eneqe In touch
• dancinc -an art form that barely sur
vived the last two decades .
Wally, we learned. is on hand to
facilitate your terpsichorean maneuvers
from 7:30 p.m. to 12 :30 a . m., Wednesday
and 'lbursd.ay, and from 8 to 1 on Friday
' and Saturday.
When It comes tp choosUl& something
for dinner, the Capriccio menu can best
be described u "something tor every-
body." In two parts, actually, the first
and largest section offers a variety or en·
trees and a la carte dishes for a light sup-
per.
The range of prices extends from a low
or $1.25 for baked French onion soup
(thick and delicious> to a high of $6.50 for
New York strip sirloin steak sandwich (9
oe., sened on buttered crouton, with
garnish of crisp lettuce and tomatoes).
FOR AN appetizer, escargots in
mushroom caps, $3.25., nets an unusual
presentation. The snails (prepared in
butter with .Carlie. parsley and shallots >.
rather than being served in their shells,
are nesUed in the hollow undersides of
the mushroom caps.
If you're partial to seafood a worthy
Candlelight
Pleasures
Renewed
At Marriott
consideration is the king crab seawlch,
$3.95. Served en casserole, it's actually a
hot sandwich, the chunks of crabmeat
topped with a combination of several
tangy and creamy melted cheeses. ,
The frittata omelette, $3.lS, is filled
with a seasoned spinach mixture and
cheestl, garnished with diced cooked
vegetables. Crepes Florentine, $2. 75,
yield a filling of creamy spinach topped
with a hollandaise sauce; crepes a la
reine, $2.95, tender chunks of chicken
with veloute sauce.
The smaller of the Capriccio's two
FOUR FRESHMEN SET FOR RETURN ENGAGEMENT
Marriott Offer• Dining, Dancing
Tiie"""' Mftk• ,... .. 0.-...-C..ty
•
menus -for those with 1 beart~appeUte
. -off en Ju1t flve Hl«tlons: fUet
mlanon, SS: _,rime rib, $6.75; veal •
Parm!Ji a, •.es; New York steak, $8:-
catch ol the d'7, price varied accordln&
to selection. bd for aceompanlments
there'• veeetable of the day or baked Potato. 75 cent.I each.
APART FBOM the Thursday lhrouch
Saturday feativitlea in the Capricclo
Cafe, the Marriott bu a mlJor entertain·
meQt attraction cominc up In the Kina'•
Wbarf restaurant and lounse on \be
Labor Da.y Weekend -an appearance
by tbepopular Four Freshmen..
Tb1s wW be· a return enraaement for
the well·known 11.qin1 1roup, which
pla1ed to sellout c:rowda last year.
They're set for Saturday and Sunday,
Sept. 3 and'· Beyond the Four Freshmen, each
nifht's program will offer the 17-piece
Soclety for the Preservation ot Bil Band
Music, playing music in the Glenn Miller ·tradiUon.
The entertainment packace for both
nights includes two complete shows, a
New York •teak dinner with Caesar
salad and baked Alaska, and dancing
throughout the evening to the bit band
sound. The cost is '18 per person whlc;h
Includes tu and gratuity.
The Newport Marriott ta located at 900
Newport Center Qrive. Reservations -
the only way to assure your attendance ..,
eltberevening-can be obtained bycall·-r
ing 64CMOOO, Ext. 6100. •••
FOR TBTHRIFTY sum of only Sl,
interested out 'n' aboutera can now ob·
taln a complete listing ol the 1976-1977
award-winning restaurants selected by
the Southern California Restaurant
Writers Association.
The handy and handsomely printed
booklet details the Writers first annual
awards of merit to restaurant owners
from Santa Barbara to San Dieeo. Lead·
ing off are the winners of the highest
honor, the 0 Golden Sceptre Award."
Restaurants wer~ rated by category.
and in addition to the top award, sold
certificates were given for "total ex-
cellence in a given category," "Sliver to
''exceptional restaurants in category,
worthy ot special attention," and bronze
to those "well above average hf their
category."
Awards were presented in 16
categories: American, beet and steak,
chain restaurant, Chinese, continental,
ethnic, family value, French, Jtallan,
Japanese, Mexican, seafood, supper
club, novel concept, promising
newcomer, outstanding wine cellar.
To obtain your copy of the publlcation,
send $1 plus 25 cents for mailing costs (a
total, please, of $1.25), together with a
legal size, self-addressed envelope, to:
Norman Stanley, Daily Pilot, Box 1560,
Costa Mesa, 92626. Any checks or money
orders MUST be made out to the
Southern California Restaurant Writers
Assn.
Real
eat here or
t1lce Mm.
MAVI. FREE APPETIZER OH us
wmtTtaSAD
STAG
CHINESE CASINO
DANCERS SHARI! JOY IN 'COLORED GIRLS' SCENE
Author la Bleck but Experience la Unlveraal
'For Colored Girls ••• '
P9etic Drama Moving:
By JAOOE BYMAN
Oftlleo.ltyl"OltS.-
Black women are rarely allowed to
be themselves, at least on stage.
The stereotypes onen applied to
women in general are intensified
toward the black female, who has
been largely limited to portraying
sex symbols and earthly mother types.
Those clicbes are shattered,
laughed at, stomped on and forever
demolished in Ntozake Shange's mov-
ing °For Colored Girls Who Have
Considered Suicide/When the Rain·
bow rs Enut ••• which opened lut week
at the Mark Taper Forum ot the Los
Angeles Music Center.
THE DANCE poem, a smash hit in
New York, features seven actress·
dancers in a se.rtes 6t monologs and
group pieces drawn from Miss
Shanie's poems.
The imagery ia dell&btfUI and J>Oil·
nant. the use of music and dance ef.
fective, and the acting extraordinary.
Low-key scenery by Ming Cho Lee,
costumes by Judy Dearing and light·
ing by Marilyn Rennagel help focus
on the personalities, who range from
naive little girls to tough-but.
breakable street women.
It would be bard to fault any ol the
actresses, who include Jonelle Allen,
Barbara Alston. Beverly Anne, Candy
Brown. Marilyn Coleman and Alire
Woodard, but the star is clearly
Trazana Beverly, who bas the kind of
stage pl'eSeDCe that transcends act-
ing.
ESSENTIALLY, ''For Colored
Girls .•• " ls about sell-acceptance,
and.as aresullit can move not only
black women but people of other races
and the other sos as well:"
Some ol the material is painful,
some is funpy, some ls raunchy and
some is satiric, but, under the skillful
direction of Oz Scott, it's always
fascinating.
"For Colored Girls •• :· runs thrO\lih Sept. 2.5. U you want a uni-
quely rewarding theater experience
-one that can probably never be cap·
lured on ftlm-don'tmi.ss iL
Ml l!ftSI
MEXICAN RESTAURANTS
DIHIHG • DANCING
EMTERTAINMEKT
Businessmen's Lunch Specials
5UJOOO • COCKTAILS• FOOO 10 GO
IAHQUITS • f'RIUTI PAmtS
11 J 21st Pi., }.lewport 8each OR&oe. s-95'0
Ho.toMMWtlitD.,_W..._.u.tl 1:00..._ onan-s .. ...._.,,... _OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP tO MEXICO .. .
CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH SUNDAYS
HAPPY HOURS 4-6
1750 W Lincoln • Anaheim
991-0540
547 w 19th St •Costa Mesa
842·9764
PLUS
MONDAY
THRU
THURSDAY
SPECIALS
(Fri., Sat.. Sun.,
'til 6 p.m.)
RED SNAPPER •••••• 3A6
MAHI MAHI ••....•• 3.95
GRILLED SE'A BASS . 3.96
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK 4.26
NEW YORK STEAK •. 4.96
LOBSTER TAIL • . . • • 5.9!5
STEAK AND LOBSTER 6.96
and dozens of othttrs
"YOUR.BIG
PARTY IS
OUR BIG
PLEASURE" MEXICAN REST AU RANTS
#1 . COSTA MESA• 296 E. 17th St.
HILLGREN SQUARE• 6-'5-7628
#2. BALBOA• 105 MAIN St.
BALBOA PIER • 675·9600
I
1
d • a • • ~ • •
a
SI
ti
h
b
d
h
SI
A
SI
a;
fi
n
tc
v
jf
B J•
SJ
tr ,.
tt p
~
ONLY PILOT
~ · Atlhe
·o; .Jl~::JJ~ ~
..
11IV8 IT comet ., a pleasant surprise to dis·
cov that tbt new11t ll'OUP on tbe Orance Cou~
th• Sadd.leback v= Commwilty Theater, bu an· nOUncecJ a four· uctloo seuoo for 197'7-78 of
which no few 1' than three bave never seen the licbt
of Frelnel on a loc&l 1ta1e.
The Saddleback Valley players arrived on the
scene two yean ago aomewhat lite a wary bather
testing b1a toe ln a bot tub. They put on a production
of (what elae?> a NeU Simon comedy <"Plasa
Suite"), then folded their tents for a fUll year to U·
aeu the results of their efforts.
Intermission
Tom Titus. ,.
Mary Beth Wilson as
Androcles removes ·a thorn
from the paw of the lion,
played by Ellis Estes, in
Saddleback Valley plar
They resurfaced a year later with a plea.sine
~oduction of another golden oldie, Noel Coward's
'Blithe Spirit," followed by a revival of ~
Hart's popular "Light Up the Sky." Tben, for ~ir
1978-77 finale, they dus up the psycbolOlidl dracna
"An Impector Calli," which proved to be a moat
lmpresalve work.
the fiist Sunday at 6:30 and the second Sunday at
2;30. ·-'(.> 21112 Pacific CoaST Hwy.
Huntington Beach
(714) 536-1421
"Inspector" was a virtual unknown to local
theatergoers, and its impact a]>parently has ln·
spired three other such newcomers for next seasqn.
The first of these, openine in October, will be the
West Coast premiere of "Lovers and Madmen'' by
p;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:;i;;; .... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiii.....-Texas playwright Ralph Mead.
CurrenUy, the Saddlebackers are opening their
summer show, "Androcles and the Lion," this
weekend at the Montanose Recreation Center in
LUMCHIS SERVID
Buffet and Luncheon Menu
11 :30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Monday thru Friday
THUISDAY l'ASHIOM SHOW
DIMHl!llS savm
From 5:00 p.m.
7 days a week
~olJen ··"'. ~ ~· S/:;)ragon . .
GENUINE CHINESE MANDARIN DISHES
Specializing In Olinese A Lo Corte Dishes .
LUNCH-OtttNER DAILY
Food lO T.tle OUt
11 :30 A.M. to 10 P.M.
·nu.._..~
COSTAMISA
642-7162 • 64'-'91 I WHITEY HOFFMAN TllO
Featuring Judy James
Sun. 7pm ·11 pm.
·Mon. 9 p.m.· 1 a m. ~ ·~Ro ~uarlor !lJecll
IL.Alt .. E HARDIH •' MITE CLUB
SUNDA;~;;;~;~;RUNCH ~--.:'
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. -Chicken. ribs
crepes plus regular breakfast dishes :;
CoffMShep6 .... tol0,._ ~ Prldcry .. ~.,. 14 lillows
Banquet facilities 20 to 400 people · .·
l!lii1 21112 Pacific'Co;lffi~way ~ l-E) Huntington Beach · .,
714-536-1421
~:66J.06 .. ,
LanJnt Dmce Floor oa Cod Hwy.
Features
FANTASTIC USTENING
AND DANCING MUSIC
Wecl.thnS.. ,,....to 1:30a.-.
Have A Little Fun
Every Night Wrth Us
2530 W. Coast tfwy.,
Newport Beoch
548-1177
Di1i1g a1tl IAK ·
is kk wida
' Uvelh*
'111E ·OTHER new faces of 1977·78 will be Mission Viejo. Tickets at $1 adults, 50 c,nts
George Kelly's "Tbe Fatal Weakness." an UQ· children, are available by caUJnc 83'1·9680. Show
familiar old-timer, and a Brittsb mystery-comedy. times are 4 p.m. Saturday, Sunday, and Aue. 27·28.
"The Busybody," goin¥ on the boards in March and Tbey'U hold auditions Sunday at 7 p.m. for
May, respectively. The only eversreen on the "Lovers and Madmen" at the People's Federal
schedule is Woody Allen's "Don't Drink tbe Savings building in El 'faro's Saddleback Plaza.
Water.'' ticketed for a Decemlter production. Theater seems to be catching bold in the grow.
1be Saddlebaclc Valley theater bas found a ing Saddleback Valley where the Rancho Com·
home, temporarily, at Mission Viejo High School's mtlD.ity Players performed less successfully a de.
Little Theater where "Lisht Up the Sky" and "An cade ago. · .
Iruspector Calls" were mounted last season. The Tbo6e interested in learning more about the
group's productions will nm two wee.kends -Saddleback group can do so by calling 837-1~680 or
Fridays and SatW'days at 8 p.m. with pei'formanc~ , 586-834.2. ..
' ffighest Quality .
Native Mexican fnorlc
Open7 Days
ALL SPOOTS EVENTS
GIANT 7FOOT1V ~EEN
Mon.-Thur. 11:30 o.m. to 10 p.m.
Fri. & Sot. 11:30 o.m. to 11 p.m. COCKT Alls
Sunday '4 p.m. to 10 p.m.
9093 E. ADAm. HUNTINGTON BEArn 962-?_91 l
FOR AREAL
TASTE TREAT r:r.J # .I GJjlll-.c.iOce.1
~irporter
~~~~--~~~----~~~~---:---
0,. 24 Mairs "Sun. a Mon .• Aug. 21 & 22
THE DAVI PIH OUMlm'.
. . ... ,, ,. M •: F -...
..,.~~n 7H CROWN HOUSE (f,tOiu ~OIJ$p RESTAURAHr .
32802 c:::oAST HWY.
LAGUNA MIGUEL
(AIC.-Y..,,__,.
499-2626 496-5773
Sou.Ila Coaat'• Fineal CW.U..
IVY HOUSE
RESTAURANT
384 FOREST AYE.
LAGUNA lll!ACH (llt1'119.......,..,
tJIMlellgM • GOURMET DINING -MEDl'rERRANEAN RM. • 18700 MAC ARTHUR BLVD. • CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH SUNDAYS 10-3 PM ( •
Ample Free Parking
494-9491 752-8558
al llarrioll's
• DANCING NIGHTLY-CABARET LOUNGE RVINE. CALIFORNIA
• CAPTAIN'S TABlE COFFEE StfOP -24 HRS. !Opposite Ol'lf\ge CountyAlrpord
(714) 833-2770
Cap11Mie t;aferd~~~:--~~~~-
Wed. thru Sat.
''~Beachtt® .1norr10 HOnt
•&WIOICI .amlTllll ... ~ c.,., .. :>.
Ph0ne(714)64o.4000
With the Live Braaclwayd
Hit Muelcal ~~ _·Mt~.,, \\~~~'~ . ~,,.·~ '*' . For Information & f88ervatlona
call ~) 4'92·9950 or lt the box
office Sebaatl8"'a1Weat, 14'0 Aventda Pico, 8an Clemente.
'· •
( A Q~/Ck took at th
"MACAlllTHUlll" con11lnclnoly n~s , .. looll el>d fffl ot tt\e w•u In 111e P.cllk And ICor.. cap. 111rlno the enlomallc clla•K19f' of
General of tll11 Armies Oou9IH MacArtlllK -led en eW'n 9ruter chelltn91, not fully •Hiiied Gr~
P41Ql pos~ !hf IJl>~lcAlt be•rln\J
end the her0tc -Illy tor the 1••9e•· trien.llle warrior, but nls cornpt .. ltlH
Mii noc c•unlCI In tlle Hal B•rwooel-
M•ttheW Robbins scrtpl. Splendld
$lljtp0f1Cornftlf'OITI O.n CYHerllhyH
P-ldenl A-II end Ed Fl-n .. President TrUlnlln. R•ted PG.
"HEltatl! GOl!S T O MONTE CAltLO" <Oft~ Ille .OventurH of
~ ....... ._....,.. ... ..... ., ,..,... .. °"""l!t fllM • 'flll• ..... , f f .......... ,,.., • -"""~-"~Dkll"--........ ,,_ • '""'1'W -...._ ,.,. • ._,.... 411elet\lll. .1( ....................... ......
AlltMlltla ............... ~'1-Wll•I•, (MrteOe ltatntllfl .. I• e __ ........_
.. ,... ..., ""° t.o¥•o ....... ~i ......... :w ........... ,,.... ....
Me ., ..... """'tilt for;tlff' -'" el KN. arw•ty e llWilt U-.._,._ t¥ ..,_. a.ctt, Ill ~I
1,.. a t.IW~"I m9911ete -C11rt J11r...--wlle coll«1t ~~ _..
me•I-. DlrKIOf" IA•h GllNrt
m.illtell'll • mNICYlft ol .,......,_,111¥
-lll~-·N1 ...... r-.1111-C~fol ... ill959Mc:-t'f'1 oKl.flM9clPG.
"'T'Me LAST llleMAtCe O" aeau
OE5Te" .....ut.e 9A1M l•'I' et tlnd1l'9 t<k1911~ In • ._. o1 torolon Nolon movies Some of Ille ~ ••• OUI· t r~ NnnY,......., ere llrni>i'I' outreoeous. Marty Feldm•n •nd
Mic-Yortl l'l•Y ....... kel twl'" (lwons?I ..tlO join h l1191oft. Ann.
Muoret Is tllel• luch•lous 1tep-
rnot"9r. PeC•r UstlllOY pleys IN
Mdlsllc~ '"°'
"THI! ISi.AMO Of' Diii. MOlllEAU"
IHtureseH,.cHt-8UttLenc.11ster.
M•a-l Yorti end Rkherct 84IMNtt
-In• llll.llNW tateol sclantltlc ••-1-ments beMd °" en H.G. Wells novel.
Specl•I effects •nd • fest·movlnv
cllm.,. Clln'~compensete for the In·
adltqWc1-ol the scrlpc,, -· RetldPG.
"THIE DEE~ .. Is • superb edven· ture, not es i-ntylno •l "Jews" but mon wtlst'l'•no A cOUPle CJec-llM 81sset, Nick Nolte) dlKOver •World War 11 wreck on• 1<utw1-<llvlno vece t•on In 8errn11da. Tiie c•roo· morpt,,,., ~<Ith Is.,.~
ship wlt11 Spinlllt gold. DI rec-Pltt..-y etes l"Bllllltt"I l<ee~ ,,.,. action
rnovono ebow end belOlol weter. Reled
PG.
•"STAii WAltS" ls e le!ldrl'lerk tllm,
• worlt of well aoerlno lrneolNllOn
tl>lrt It wfll M!t stenderds for vee"' to come The cast, ""ecled by Alec Gui· ness, Merk Hamlll end Carrie Fisher,
11 unlforrntv oood. but IN rHI st•~ are the spade! tlfects wlurOs. Rated PG •
.,A allllDOIE TOO ~All "
reproduces• World Wer 11 -••tlon In • levlsn 5ty1e that the wartime Al· Iles could ICMUly -'ford The wie<U· cit Is lmpresslw, .and lM lluman
storlet ere lntetl19enlly dlrect..:t. Rel· ed PG. the film contains much IMll-
tleflold oore.
n ltOCl(Y" ofvew ttw movie season• •llotofed,......lln Asmodernastod•y, It Is ,_vtr11'11tleH made llk11 Ml old-
f Hhloned mov .. , with vllelltv and llurt Syt_.., Stell-wrote the starrlnorote forlllmwu, end lle9lves • once-ln·6"11fellmt' per1ormence es a bo11ino burn IU<'Md contande<" T •lie Shire and 8uroos Muedllh also snlnt Rated PG
.--------------.. 1 I\ /k Chinese Cuisine 1
I l /?jf'-ORIENTALCOCKTAILLOUNGE I Featurine Tropical Drinks
I I I BAMBOO AUGUST I I .}4j tERR&CE SPECIAL 1.
1 "'\lJl1f-'Jt ~.::--,:-;~Mor. I
I -""-C-I ....... l'riceSS.lS
1 .uJ Im' :.=-~~.c:·~::.:~~ I
I 11 I 8C)ljr l!Oflc. _ ....... ttlicllen ....... M9d tlOe I
I .... & CIOOlc* • ~·~-U2S I . ' ... .Jt-T"1Y!ll<l llffl 5hck. CNcMn Sela! I ""''71' & Ftled RIOe I ~. ' Olllr,__~"·m' I ._J.53 EASf 17TH • • • COST A MESA 645-ss:IO .. --------------. .
Family Dilemma
11' 'First Breeze'
''Tb• ftr.t Breeze of Summer," Leslie Lee's
movtn1 portrait of a mid·
dle·eJua black family
ca..,aht between
memories~ the past and
hoPfJ!S fOI" the future, is
reprised Clll ''Theater in
America" Wednesday at
9 p, m. on KCET, Channel
28.
Presentation of the
Obie Award-winning
play marked the first ap-
pearance of New York
City's Neero Ensemble
Company (NEC> on the
series. The production
features Frances Foster,
Moses Gunn.
f amlly b ln the unlveral mold, its problems are ..•
love and death and self.
discovery."
. Furthermore, the pro-
duction is invested with
''that vibrant life that
has been characteristic
of the company's best
work."
Country Team
"The First Breeze of
Summer" was produced
for "Theater in
America" by Lindsay
Law. It was directed by
NEC founding artistic
director Douglas Turner
Ward, who staged the
premiere production or
the play, a nd Kirk
Browning. I N ••BRE~Z E,"----=
Susan Saint James and Peter Fonda portray
a pair of country music singers on the run in
"Outlaw Blues,·· an adventure comedy set in
Austin, Texas. Richard Heffron directed.
playwright Lee has
created a compassionate
domestic drama with re-
1 e van ce beyond the
specific black ex·
perience. As noted in the
Philadelphia Inquirer,
"While Lee's play is
about blacks. it is not ex-
clusively for blacks. Its
NOW!!
BOBWHITE
PLUS
LISTZ &
COMPANY
Pc:UC ... DrwM
DAHCINGAHD
EMTERTAIHMENT
TUE. THltU SAT.
9 P.M. TO 2 A.M. s.m••• r• dr IS! lest ... w Ill tM C4""1ty! We ................
.. WGll't. .. ..,_ .............
yo.Mif. w. ':'!ct:' ................. .................. ,....
... ~··· ., ......... wHll ··~ •od .... tt b•HHt• ~-----KOMA LAMES
269' MADOR ILYD.
COSTA MESA
54S.l 112
A FRANK YABLANS PRESENTATION
MARTIN RANSOHOFF-FRMK YABLANS PRODUCTION •"THE OTHER SIDE OF MIONIGHf
CHARLES JARROIT FILM ~MARIE-FRANCE PISIER •JOHN BECK • SUSAN SARANDO
RAF VALLONE• Prolkaf11rfRANK YABLANS • ~Proclar HOWARD W. KOCH, JR.
0recta1 bf CHARLES JARROTT • ~ tiy HERMAN RAUCHER n DANIEL TARAO~H
. ~ • ~ N br SIDNEY SHELDON • Music tr, MICHEL LEGRAND
l!}J RESnCICIED ~l:C~~~,':cr~::'=1~0estroerJOHN OeCUIR
,. --·-~-PR1~ISBYDUUX[.•
--~ ~ CINEMA I
TfW C11y ShctiJVt"'I C'1'Wue o....... •34-3911 •L--=:.:::...~-=..:.:~.:..~~~~~.:..-__...__.=.::.;.:.;;..-=..----.~J-~~
8:00 u ((ll) CJ)) "" ..... .,......, si-Andy W1lh1ms cvests. e Ible: a::> (21K) W(wes) '72-0on Murray, Carol lynley. CD lllM: CC) {2111) "Tllil _,,
feeli•c" (com) 'SI-Debbie Reynolds. Curt Jurgens. Jolin Suon.
0 DONNY & IWltE * BACll o• FRIDAY!
• CJ) (II <• CJ)) o.a, r. Marie Guests tfe Anne Meara. Bert
Cony 11111 Paul lY!l4L (J)~lt OUt
G lllewie: a::> (?W) ~ fir A C.llgllttr'' (wei) 6S-llo4
CallltlOll, Stepbt11 Mcl'taly. ID Sm Our ~ "lmciprme ..
The StcOnd of a five.part series dais
""th d1SC1Pline in tlle schools ildfd·
ing such ~ as racaat lltlSiolls.
drugs. permissivtMss at home ~nd
tn Ille cmstoolllS. ope11 edatioll and mlence aa society.
ll)P9nY.._ a """= a::> (Zk) .,.. '*"
(adv) '72-Glenn ford. mew.....-..........
O)OQne
-1:30-u (Cf» CJ)) (I) A Yar .... T•
Cre1 and Paul stluple to bep tlltir
balance on tllt t~ ol mrdonl
but come dancerously dDle lo fallillc
into Hanover's nat 1' &r•ed. D @ ()) ~ _, S.. fftd's
stlfdt for ltd own "r.ts" le* flint
lo 1 Wdy tir111 !Nt tells 111111 that
he's Jewrsh uda desce~dant ofKln1
Solomon.
())Siii Diete ID~ m CD wau Strett WMl/PM1•
Bruk
m~o,._
E1lJ Cellp M Merlcla T-QJ~ ... o..-
P.
.I SATURDAY I
MORNING I
OAll.Y PILOt Friar. Augu.t it, tt71.
Times/Places Star Role for HB Man
~.AU9Ul1' ..
-n.•-..--~---..·· ............................. , ... "' _.... ............... '"'·' •"'·,_.., ............ ....
C.--llY .. """' .. VIHI P't•ll All•l'-"1-, C ... I ... ~ Ll4IOll\
, ..... "..,.... ...... t.J ........ " "'' ~, .... ..,., ..... ~. ,, .
... 11 ................. ._ "' ...... .. ,,....
JAC• tftOOP' 6 ..... ,. W1t11
•o<th" CA•••• °"'IM"' ' t'cl•<'
.......... --.. 0r-.. ... T""t"'A_C.._llt....U.• Li" ..... o..e-,,_
. tout• NCIPtctOINI.. TOtlll-~_. ,_jt Wllll .... .,_, ... flt-,
1 •1141 l • m. s.t~'J' •l Hlllll~ C.lllft, 1'11 t•l•r Avt, Mllllt• . ...._ ...... ,, ...
MOMe 6 ... M .. eMOW -'-fw• ur ,..,.,. A14. • 81 tile AMl!elm
c-tl!I*' ~tt. --It'°•"'· 1otl11~ .... 1ttfM ...... t.t
tt ,_ '-"' ........ H • edlllb, ti
(lli!Wtll ..... ~··'"
0"CaA ac.llNll -A<tt ,,._.,, "Oool .. a~•." .......... .,,. O..tel" ....
• LA ...._, .. I I""-~l#'Nr ...0
~y 111 Coif se... F1.1il...,.,, L1tti.
t11eai.r, a N. tlAltc.tl ... 91...0. U .
1'kk .. Ut ......
tov1 Seott, a 20-ytar-old Hunt·
tntiaD Be cb entma.lller, appean as
1lnftn1 narrator Of the musical 1ta1e
1how 11Hol1day_I" at M1mott'1 GNat
Am'edcan park ln Santa Clara.
Enl.rtalriment 11 fn Steve's 1enes.
HJ1 moth once toured wlth the Man bro u a um nut. H1a lather,
now an execuUvt •dth the Security
Co~atlon. wu a dlsc Jockey. at one
tlmt And h d a aecret wish to beeome an entertain r. Hll parents, Bonnie
and Stan SCott, now reside at lOOS'Z
If errhnac St. tn Huntln1ton Beach.
Steft hu two brot.hen and two sis·
tera. Hla YC>Wlltat slater. Shirley, 13,
hopestoMa1ln1er. too.
''I 'try to be a 1ood example for
her ... steve aald.
muslcal trip throuih Am rica. In one
tcene be brin11 the audience to their
feet wlth solo rtDdltion of• 'Comer of
the Sky."
A craphtc1 art rnajor at
Golden West Collete. he aays he 'a
··gettln& more aftd more tempted to
become an entertainer. If the rest of
the entertainment world Is like UU.,
I'd like to be on 1ta1e for th r of
myllfe." •
STEVE AND th& Great America
Singers will play to about 750,000 peo •
ple this year. "Some da)'I, we
perform ln six shows. that can be over
1,000 performances for the •Insert ln
a seascn."
The young entertainer saya there's
little oneupsmanship amont the
·'Holiday!" cast.
Huntington liJeach
singer Steve Scott
Is sfr!ging
narrator Qt
amusement park's
musical show. aCLLY ........ --l.a\I~'" ltllo. .,.-__..., •t11<1... I t '(IOO '°""'" • !oenl• .... ~ --................. trlll .... at1U•I
C:MAaACTCa 90A1' \tAaAOC -
Sltr1S 1 0 rft ~ 111 NtwPOrl
HarllOt.*"-Ct.
BEING ON 1t11e is llke fulfillln& a
dream. I know that's a cllcbe. but as a
chUd I'd eee an .. ntertalner on staee
and would be enraptured by the
maelc of perforrn1ne. Now, I'm on
stage and children look up to u.s and
set their own dreams about ~min&
entertainers. It's 1~at."
"We're a team. I have kind of a bie
position in the show as moderator, but
in the dressing room, nobody cares.
Back there, the e1os. when they do
surrace, are put down because what -::;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;::::;:;;====;:::=:::::=============S::
makes the show work is team work. ,., .. a.. Slerr"'e ~ --·" ,, ... CAltlflVAL -"'All Al'MrlCM Ile·
l•av......_. J~ ..... wllll •kin.
MY OAU•MT•• '•ATCO • --1111 -~. -t• s pm. c~ • .....,. tw...., ~ n •I ~lul'deyl11U_....._,'111Strwtalld
Steve Scott hu bad a busy career
already. He discovered his talent a.s a
member or the Edi.son Hi&h SchOC?l
Madrigals, in his junior year. In 1973,
he joined Young Americans and
toured.
.. Actually, off stage as well as on,
we're very close. Many of l.lS live
together, share expenses, even spend
our day off together. We boost each
other when we're down and have a
family atm.osphere in the cast. We
think of each other as 'extended'
Ille l!deawal•• Hyatt Hou,. Parlo.A..-,Coal911MM.
WHlrn•MlW ......... ard •nd Pa<1h CMM ....,_.,, L..tftt .. «II 01,..,.r , ....... m..m.
'STAlt·S .. ANOLllO Ot•L' -N••I SIMCHI <omectv. dillfttf' llle•t•• ••
A119•lt'I •nd Vl11<I'' Tl•••tu
R•"..,ranl, HarbOr Boulevard "'
c11a-A-F11llar'°" ton•oht through S<tl>t. I I, wttkands only sn-•ns
JAJ:l QOHCUIT -Sla<l Kanton Jau
B•l\CI ...ct •luclent IHncls. 1 JO o < loO
tonight 111 ,,. ~·~ Co.tit Co•ieoe
AuO•IO•IUM 2101 Fairview RHd
Cost• Mew. '3 ••door 11 avall,abte.
'SOMETHIMO'S Al'OOT' -M<"IC41 ._,, l :)O o'<kl<k tonight alld S.l11r
day Colt• Mes. Civic Playhouw di
II•~ Community RacrMUon Centor
Oranqe County F•lr9f'tlllld\, .. Fair
Ori•• C~la Mt•a U SO QeMrai, n SOstuoe111s-•e<"11ors ss. ~s•
'VANITIES' • ComKy, I o'clocll
1on1;111 #Id S.wrc1tv. l ...o I p ,.,,,
Sund•v al South C:O.\I R•c»r1orv. 1111
Newoort Blvd . Col.I• Mest. -U4J •lier Ip m. cltlly
lllNGLF'NO •ROTH••s -And
B•r11um ~ 8alle-.Circus. tt I~ l°"'9
8HCll -"-· J anCs I O'CIOf" lonl9hl
II a M., l -I p m S.l ...... Y; I JO
and • p m ,.,,,.,.., SI •V 90, \O""'
""'d••n"• dlS<ounh Tl<"•h al
To<kelron, Mutual and L•llel1y •9en
(tf'\
JOI! .. AS$ -9 And IO·O o M •nd
11:30 • m. 1111\ltfll -S.lunltv •I Tlla Wlllla Hou ... 1•0 s Coa \I
Htt11-v. IAtUIWI 8t<Kll• Coml110
Seawlfld, Tw.oav lfweuoll Auo 17.
Both lantf'OUO'. ~"
TOM 1'. HALL -1 JO, •• ,.., 10 JO
o'clo<" to11lg11t and Salurday In "nol l's O.rry Farm's G4IOd Time
Tnuler In 8ueN P•rlt, Plul R•nclV Vdn Ho<ne and c.om,..ny In Cloud•
Ballroom. Coml119 Sklltl and Hen
otrSJH1. AUQ. 16-P M 15 aclulll, U 7S
Cllllil,....,,
'THE OOD COU .. LC'-all Simon
comeoy, tonlglll llW'ou;ll Sunday 11
Harlequin 01Mtr PlayllouM. 30Sl
HarbOr Blvd. Stllta An•. \13 liS.
'" SSl1.
COMEDIANS -Al IAlf SIOP, 1112
S E BrlUOI SI • N-rt Bu<ll To-
day lhrQU911 Monde\t • Gallttlfler and
l,.. Gr..,.tet. A.uQ. 1).2': Mvl-r,
L@Ofltrd 8err -Jlmmr Gooll. I .JO •nd 10 o.m ...-...m; 1:)0 etld 10 30
p "'· Fri~ 8fld S.iu...st°" U SO o•u•...,. .,.1,.,. m1t•t-_.11lgll1S;
\l SOOIU51WOdrlr!ltl ..........
SI 8AmAN'S OINNCa THCATl!aS "My l'alr L.Mv," now tfW'ou9ll Saol
4 •t uo A.....ida Pico, Stn c1...,..,1e,
01 MSO. SICHIS "Carftoval." llOW
111rouo11 Oct. 2 at IM Grand Hotel, I
Hotal Way, AnahalM, 172 7710.
\II '16.
UNIVCaSAL AMl'tflTMCATt!lt -
Nattlle Col•. ""''°"' 11,,-.ii Sund•v: Rendy Newm•n •1111 lty Coocter,
Tuasdty; Nall Sedtl<a wllll Enoland
oa11 & Jofln l"trd Coler, Aug n tt..
•11)1 .. !Mll.
THI! NllWG1t••K TH•4T•• -80&
\c ag9" tonloM 11\rouQh Sundty, Cleo
L~IM tf>d Boblly Short, Aug 14·?7.
I) 1l1 '61).1.iOO.
HOLL YWOOO llOWL -Los Anoetas
P11111111rmonlc •t 1:30 •·"'·Nth nlgllt. Ton19111 and S.llH'dty: tdlllkoYSk\I
•i>e<l<Kular T~sclty: J41t11-Pll'rrw
Rampa!, llullst ll\Uf'MMY •nd Aug.
21 1 IThllk Pwlm.11, vlotlnbt.
ti11•0tC MOUMTAtM -l11 °hltft<la
Notti\ of HOiiywood. Tonlthl lfwouglt
Svllffr: 11tt1111Y "'*'· ~ l).a: Tiie .... 9oollf ~ty. '!~"f .... tts. 14 tSdlllelrlfl,IN:l.,._rldH.
MAOtC.t.en -Neeftto7:fSp m. I•
.,.., "'""""' ~Y •t lollltl coest Pina, 8'lsttl Stffft at tile San o~
F,_y,Co&\tMelt Ft•
• CONTIMUI ... IM '-OS AMMLH -" EQUUS. ~ ttn.IQll s..t. 4 ft tlle HUlll· '""* ........ ~; ''.Tl!9Wli.·· tl1tOU911 Sept, 10 ., tlle AlwnanMn
Tllt•ttr; "flw Cotortd Clris ... ·•
tllrwoll $etlt. U .. h ~ T_,
Fotum. t1*flllltt l'Vlll' "Hold MafH
•I Iha Waltwao• Pl•YllOUH;
• A Cllorl" Liiia" «t t"-lbu&>vt
Thtater.
~TUa04Y,AUOUSTa
KP'AC l'OUt l'llll' -"""country
cr•ftllNl'Mt, 11 e.lft. te?it.11'1· s.tur-
day •lid Sullday at "-i. 1>a101 Verde~ot"I> ~•wt"8rnt llvd.,
Palos • ~.-.1.. •adults.
'1 cl1Udr9" •It.
OUTalOClfa aAClf -From Mtrone
dtl lley 10 ~ .. 1<11, arrovl"9
about s om. Saturday •I Ill•
Wara-.W Rast..,ent, Lido VIiiata'
SUNDAY, AUOUST21
'SOMET1Mt!$ I l'CCL LIKE
N080DV'S LISTCNINO .. ' -Ver...,
proie •nd dr•matlc ra•d1119s by
C••den Grove Voutll theeter Devtl<>Om4'nl W.,..ksllop, 7 lO o m
Sunday al Santiago Hloll Sc11001
C•leteroa, tlJO Tr•sk Ave G•rMn
Cro•e FrH
COUNT aASI& -And his orc"9\lr•
I lO P m 10 12 30 • m. Sundav
lllrouQll .t.uo 11 •I Ol$11eyland, olu\ tirewon<s and eltctrlcal oerlde. ss so
adulh, "4 SOU-11. USO children
WEDNHOAV, AUGUST 14
MUSIC O~ THE ·--Wllll Ansell Hill, , JO p.m. WtdneMl•y •I Soulll
Coa\I VIII-. Sunllo-r and S..ar
Strttl\, S.nta Alla Free.
l HUllSOAY,AUOUSTlS
JAMES JOVCE'SWOMCN' -Wo.ld orem1.,•, one--wom.en tihOW by Fton
"That.'s where I met Bill Harris
(manager or theater operations at
Great America). He encouraeed me
to audition in Los Angeles for the Mar·
riott's Great America stage shows. I
got the job and was ln last season's
'Music! America!· stage musical."
THE YOUNG entertainer was also a
Baxter St. singer at the restaurant
neat the Orange County Airport. ''Bax·
ter St. helped develop my poise in front
of close-in audiences and also taught
me to grab the attention of a
sometimes indifferent audience.
through showmanship."
Steve dances, sings, narrates,
acts and helps pace the show. a
nut• Fl.._11. directed b1 Bur .. n -----------. Moredllh I pm .t.ug. 2S.2t tt Sooth
Cot•I Reoer1orv. 1117 N-potl Blvd.
Co~•• Me•• Ip m e>hlS J p m. Sunday mallflff -.1a>eller I p.m. cltlty,
~ltlDAY. AUGUST 26
8ANOCONCEllT-Bprn.Aug 26al
L•ons P•rk, 11th S1reet •t P•rk
Avenue (;ostt MtW. Ouldoou, lrea.
DANIEL AMOS -C!Vlstlan country
rock, 7 .lO p m. .Aug. 26 •I C.lv••Y
Cllapel Of DaN Point, 33732 Big Sur.
J:rte
OPPORTUMITY
knocks often when you
use result·eetUng Daily
Pilot Classified Ads to reach the Orange Coast
market.
Pbone&t2·5678
"THE SPYWHO
L07'B> Mr CPGl
DAILY: l:l0.J:JO.S:l0.7:4S.t:IO
"LOYI AND DIA TH"
J:J0.7:00.1 O:JO
"ROCKY"
I :JO.l:OCM:JO
brothers and sisters."
From the moment Scott and his ex·
tended brothers and sisters eet on
staie. to the end of the performance.
they exhaust themselves throu1h a
nonstop routine or songs and dances.
''To give you an idea what it's like,"
Scott explains, "do pushups for slx
minutes straight.
·Tm dead tired at the end of the
show, but don't realize it 1Ul the cur·
tain falls. Then I think, 'Oh·my 1osb,
what have I done to myself! The
fatigue hits and I'm really tired."
.. But I can't think of a more satisfy.
ing feeling," be concludes.
,\ 1(1 Jiii i< I 1 11 \I< I' ~ • • 11<\l " ll 1,1,l I I' p .... • • \ \1 \IC II' .... I 11('1 ... t ....
LIZA MIS'.\:EU.I ·ROBERT DE SIRO .
"~E\V 'rORK. SEW YORK"
A different kind .~~· ... ~
of love storq. /'
. ---lllft TIE BID IDS BURS ARE 111£ YUR CIJIR lllJ llE YEAR WILIER
They've fired their coach. They've "borrowed" a van.
They're on their way to the HoustonAstrodome ...
with girls on their minds.
cops on their tails and the game of their lives at stake.
TOP bad them 1umpin1
· seats with its hl&hlY pro-
f sional brand of horn-laden
,sl'.>ul. it was a Sunday rugbt ap-
p ear an c e by L. A . area
sinaer /songwriter Richard Tor·
!.ranee that left a deeper im·
:pression.
'
: GUITARIST Torrance, who 41
:last appe'1'ed at the Bear in an
:acoustic duo, unveiled a powerful POTENTIAL ROCK SUPERSTAR AT THE BEAR
Richard Torrance Played to Small Crowd five-member backup band, this
·time featuring lead guitar. bass.
.drums, congas and keyboards.
. His new focus is on straight·
ahead melodic rock and roll, de·
livered with authority and a true
sense of commitment.
Torrance'!! songs are basic but
never bland, and his talented
cohorts played with a flair for
economy and tightness that
brought LitUe Feat to mind dur-
ing certain passages.
Whether almost attacking the
microphone with his rugged
vocals or bouncing around the
stage while engaged in some fine
guitar trade-offs. Torrance was a
delightful performer to watch,
somewhat similar to Springs-
teen.
His music and its execution
carried an honest urgency that (tw . ~~
. ......
cut to the core of what vibrant
rock should be.
THERE WAS, however, one
perplexing aspect to the set.·
Although Torrance has recorded
three albums (bis latest,
"Bareback," 1s on Capitol>, he
remains a relatively obscure
artist. Fewer than SO people
showed up for one of the more ex-
citing shows of the summer.
Perhaps Torrance has been
cast in a folk/rock mold but this
s hould change with added ex·
posure. Those who caught his set
already know they have seen a
potential superstar just waiting
to happen.
TOP is always guaranteed
fun<k>. There have been
numerous personnel changes -
including four lead singers -
since the 10-man band emerged
from the Bay Area in 1971, but
the heart of TOP bas alwa~s been
its brilliant born seetion and solid
soul rhythms rather than lyrical
content.
LEADER EMILIO Castillo
(~enor sax>, Steve Kupka
<baritone>, Mie Gillette
(trumpet), Greg Adams (flugal>
and Chester Thompson
<keyboards> remain Crom the
classic "East a.-Grease" era
and are still theoand's most ex·
citing performers.
TOP caught stride quickly and
maintained an energetic groove
throughout its Friday evening sets. -·
;A CHORUS LlnE "A BRIDGE TOO FAR" (PG)
"SORCERER" (PG)
"THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" (PG)
"LOGAN'S RUN" (PG)
~ ! • 'I •• . ,
I
"NEW YORK. NEW YORK" (PG)
"THE WAY WE WERE" (PG)
"FANTASIA" (G}
"MARCH OR OlE.-' (PG)
"THE EAGLE HAS LANDED" (PG)
"SMOKEY & THE BANDIT"
"MOONSHINE COUNTY EXPRESS" {PG)
"THE LAST REMAKE OF BEAU GESTE"
"BITE THE BULLET" (PG)
"THE SPY WHO LOVEO ME''
"VIGILANTE FORCE" (PG)
"HERBIE GOES TO MONTE CARLO"
"NEVtR A DULL MOMENT' (G)
SPllCIAl CHtlOREN S PAICES
"OTHER SIDE OF MIDNIGHT"
"EXORCIST ll:THE HERETIC" (Rl
"\f I
A plane crub, music,
black athletes and the
ft1bt qaimt hunger are
aou•ll the subjects of
televlslon specials slated for the comlmc week.
'nlree bistory-maklng
events are re-created In
the premiere episode of
"Eyewitness," a one-
hour special airlne Tues-
day at 10 p.m. on KOCE·
TV, C'hannel 50.
"The Cf ash of Flight
212" probes the mystery
ol the 19'14 air tragedy
that claimed the lives of
71 people near Charlotte,
North Carolina.
The second segmont
deals with the unusual
case of "A Man Charged
With Prostitution." Seg·
ment Three re-onacts the
controversial case of
"Karen Quinlan: Life or
Death."
The lire story of
Charles John Huflham
Dickens, one of the first
bestselling authors,
comes to "Masterpiece
Theater" Tuesday, when
"Dickens of London" airs'
at 9 p.m. on KOCE·TV,
Channel SO.
The story of Dickens'
rise from a penniless
childhood to the Came
and extraordinary
popularity of hiJ adult
years is told in a series of
10 episodes.
Laurindo Almeida.
Brazilian-born master of
the classical guitar,
performs in concert on
"Latino .Consortium,"
Tuesday at 11:30 p.m. on
KCET, Channel 28.
Taped at the Scot·
tsdale (Arizona) center
for the Arts.' Almeida
Friday. August 1t, 1en D~LY PILOT Cl
AIRPLANE COCKPIT IS SETTING FOR DOCU.DRAMA
•crash of Flight 212' D~awn From Tape
displayshisvirtuosityon The new English-Pro Team; Nell C.
such compositions as language version of Jackson, the first black
''Malaguena," "Black Giuseppe Verdi's .. La woman on the board of
0 r p he us,'' •'In· Traviata" will be broad· directors of the U.S.
tern\ezzo," and a medley cast Tuesday from 9:10 Olympic Committee: ,
of Juan Carlos Jobim 's to 11:10 p.m., on KCET, Wendell Scott, the first
works, including "The Channel 28. black professional race
Glrlfromlpanema" and The sumptuous period car driver: Edward
"Quiet Nights." (18 4 o s > production · Stanley Temple, coach of
KCET repeats the con· features so prano two consecutive Olympic
cert Thursday, at.2 p.m. Elisabeth Harwood as teams, 1960, and '64, and
and Aug.27,atnoon. the ill-fated courtesan manyothers.
"A Woman's Place Is Violetta and tenor John More than 40 personal
in the House" is not, as Brecknock as her lover, stories falmed around the
the title might Imply. a Alfredo. world bring the reality or
Cilm about domesUcity. KITV, Channel 11, will hunger to .the t.elevision
The house, in this case, is air "The Fourth Annual screen in "The Cry of a
t b a t o f t h e PreseRlation of the Hurting world ••. I'm
Massachusetts State Black Athletes Hall or Hungry!", to be shown
Legislature, and the Fame Awards" Wednes· Tuesday on Channel 9 wo~an, avow~ lesbian day at 7 :30 p.m. It is from 7 p.m. to midnight.
Elatne Noble, is an elect· hosted by Bill Cosby and Guests include Steve
ed member~ was taped at tbe New Allen, Shirley Jones.
Airing Monday at 7:30. YorkHilton. Julie Andrews, Vincent
p.m., on KCET, Channel Athletes honored in· Price, Art Linkletter.
28, the film is the fifth elude: Dick "Nighlrain" Carol Lawrence, and
presentation In the Lane, of the Football All Dean Jones.
"Something Personal"-------------------series on "28 Tonight.··
AN OUTRAGEOUS MEAL
OF MADNESS
Mfl.&)
. •) ... -''
,,Ider, AUQuM 11, 1m
mE we endless. Not only
would it be a bell Of a ~tqe effect. lt could create a
situahon where several Aero~miths could
simultaneously be OD tour~ t.he~try. with
holoeraphic imag• repl.cinl tho Nal thin& and
taped music provldin& the sound.
Synthetic rock c certs? It wQUld be great for
bands with members tQO m lQ io on t.be road -just
replace him wjta a bo~am.. <You could even
replace the audieoce wiih a bolo&raa for lesa sue~
cessful bands.> Or boloerams could ~lp out when
there was a dettiaa:id fOf' a band -say the Rollinll
Stones -but for one reason or another they didn't
• want to undertake tile riaora of touring. Bands
•could even tour ·and record albums at the same j time.
r Of course moving holograms have yet to be de·
veloped, and we're probably years away from such ~ a PoSSibillty. TYler cert•lnly isn't doing it so fast.
"When we really ~ought about it," h~ said. "I re-
alized that we were talking about lasers, and wMn
you think of lasers, you think ~f being burned to a
crisp.
"l DIDN'T F£EL like bePig th~ first one to
wind up in a Mason jar ansome mti:Mlwn shelf.''
But when Aerosmith g<>eS.on stage this fall, you
may see somethhlg' slightly different from lead
singer Tyler. He'll still have those scarves draping
his microphone ("I'd reel naked Without tbem," be
says), but he may play some instruments.
P.L. la San Dleao: Hu Bqb Marlq
rescheduled hll eurrent U.S. ~t
)'es. Al~h the foot injury Mattey suffered
wblle pliylng soccer ts now okay, he started that 30-clty tour at the New York Palladium Aua.18, and
. wlll wincl \IP ln MUwaQkee. Wla., ou Oet. 2.
r
"I'm gomg to have a piano up there, a little
Yamaha. It's ha!( the size of a Steinway grand, the
size or a harpsichord, and it sounds exactty like th4;1
piano. It's small enoush so t!Jat three people can
ca rry it on and offstage. CINEDOME23
"I want to play it because l'rn getting tired of
singing 'Dream On.• if you doh't mind.
EVERYDAY: "And I ma,y eve.Ji play guitar on one sonl(, too.
ll's fun, and it will 'ive me something to do besides
spit and pick my nOse ...
1:00, 3:15. 5:30, 7:45 a 10:00PI(
' .....
"ROCK" FILMS abound. ''Sgt. PeJ>~'s Lone-
ly Hearts Clut> Balid" is about to go intb production
in Hollywood with the set to Heartland -the all·
American per(.ect.dream town -,_~g built. "The
sot '.T ll CO:\:"'T
I t'4l .A I Ht
I Ar.UNA R I /I\ MO• 1,1&
THERE IS ONLY ONE THEATRE IN OMNO!
COUNTY WHERE YOU"CAH EXP£AmlC£
STAR WARS ON A GIANT 7S FOOT SCRUH,
IN Rll Mm AND DOLBY I TRAQC ·CifEJEO AND 1H THE COlllFOllT ol ONE OF OUR 1252 LUXURIOUS MOHAIR CHAIRS.
1'H£ FORCE IS wmtTOUAT
EDWARDS IEWPOllT CIN£MA. (PG)
He fought wars
' and won them.
He defied
Presidents -
and might
ha~ been ........... """'A"""
one.
SHOWTIMH
DAIL¥-12:00.
2'.llM:-.7:»
• 1 O:OIMlllONtGHT
30QO W ~PMAN A,'1£ • • OR.ANOE •
634-2553
EVERYDAY:· ,
12:45, 3:00, $:30. 9:00 & 1CUOPM ' .
STAAAfNO
GENI! H.M*MAN ~Rl!HCa ttU. MAX VON SYDOW
fPG)
PLUS
-rPO>
Slnbadand
The~ of the
Titer
Frid!y.Auputt19, 1977 DAILY PILOT D (
/
If your hon1e town is -in the South Coast Area,
we're your hon1e town real estate companyl . .
OU MESA VERDE VILLAS
You ·u II. pt*id 10 own lhK 1orgtc>Uf
~-.......,, Cl!Mnw w/1 Stwn~
Mcen1 Del•Nful "'he word loflM l bdfm townhouse w/dloo<e ~MIW ol
fM1m11c srounca lftl pooti.tde !oa-
t.on In Mal Vetek f« 1n ~l'IUte,
ull nowl (714) 54.S-~91
GARDNERS PARADISE
Is the only way lo dHaibe this
llMIK'Ullle l bdrm 2 blth home. No
l.iwn~., nfllded here. 1~1 e nioy
th11 btll cool lree •h.ided groun<k
from your Jae cov'd p.ilio. A v.ilue buy
.c> hurry. (714) 897·0321
YOU'U LOVE IT
the minute you see the btfl dochdndr.i
l.iwn le.tdlng to the lge entry court.
Pride ol ownership os .ippuent thru·
out the entire home which hu ) lge
bdrms, fmly rm, block w•lls, guage
door opener & much morf'.
(7141 &97·0ll1
CLASSIC BEAUTY
\.A Terms. PriCtoully new ch.irming
ipeoout 2 tlOfY home. 0Yet llOO Ml·
IL, w1lk·in blr. Pllllh r~I urpet.ng,
front brick p.1110, ne1r So. C:O.S1 Shop-
ping Center & 111 Khools. Make your
offer " get in before sdlool tutu.
Only $97,900. -
(714) 54S-9491
''WE WORK HARD TO SELL HOMES RIGHTI"
PRESTIGE 4 IORM
hmlly '"'·din rm, 2 bich M•ny •Ir&
5&4.~. C1ll lor info· "6bml1.
(714) 963-5611
DOU HOUSE-SANDPOINT
Shike toof beauty on huge loc
w/room f« pool. Boll or Umpef
K"Ces. Cul-de-Mc 111ect lelds 10 .i
pull. Only $77,950. C,11 nowl
(7141 S4S-9491
$56,900
Cle1n 3 bdrm 2 blth, many extru •
FHA/VA terrm OK. Submit.
(714) 96).5671
REDUCED $5,000
Don't mlu this! £1~~1) bdrm 2 b~th,
many luxury xtrils +cool, btll pool. Try
your terms.
17141 961·5671
ELEGANT 2 STORY
4 bdrm 3 blth, dr1m.i1lc vaulted
c,111ngs, open wrolllcht Iron ""''' &
b1lcony. lge family rm· hi floor bdrm
& b<1th, lge mstr lUi1e • 3 c.ar gar111e.
81fl landsaplng, m1ny fruit trees -
gre<1t ue1. f.V. HL let us guu<1n1ee
wle of your present home.
(714) s.46-17.54 °' 1n41 966-3l71
VA TERMS
lovely 3 bdrm 2 b11h townhome. 2 cat
ga11ge • formtlf' model home.
Occupied only 2 yri. by 0tlg1n<1I
owner hcelleni condition, good H.B.
lociltoon. <™J 968-Jln
$62,900 "FIXER"
Gre1t H 8. •ea • nice home, J s~
coous bc:tnN 2 baths & more -submit
)'OUr termi. Hunyl (7l4) 963-5671
BIKE TO BEACH
8tfl Se1breue Condo, 191111 wrought
Iron "ll1tw.ly, loll mw bdrm, frplc.
pr1v•te p.itlo Btfl cond11ton.
(714) 968-3371
HIGH ON HILL,
r •n1~111c condo. shows like model,
b1 fl coord1nited w~ll & window cover-
ings, p1nehng, plu\h crpts. frpk,
p•too. See to •ppreci1te. S79,900.
(714) 968.)Jn
Ml. SQ .. PARK
Across from My "founcaln Park"
Townhorne. Cire11 IOI' rec, golf,
swimming. tennis, h.indb.11, etc. 8111
cond1uoo.
(7141968-337101 (714) 546-\754
WAUC TO BEAOf
from this 4 bdrm 2 bath w/dinlns
room. l1rge fmly room w/conVfl·
ntlon pt! & firepbcc. ~ mile from
OCHft on quiet cu~ r rol•tion-
ally llndtaped. Re.ii pride of
ownenhlp homL (714) 646-nll
FRONT ROW OCEAN VIEW
• from this bcflly deCX>med J bdrm J
blch residence w/fe>AMAL dlnlfll
rm. Wilk to the ti.di or to mm~
flali11es o4 2 tennis <lOUrts, pool &
jKUm. Just listed. (714) 646-n11
HARBOR HIGHLANDS
S11r1 the school yeiir right with this 3
bdrm Harbor Highl1nd1 Specl1I. Best
school diltrlct. Close to 111 lhopplng.
Pool size yudl Ju" listed! Only
Sll0,000. (714) ~7711
POOL HOME -ONLY S73,9001
Superb l bdrm, 2 blth fmly home with
~rKl.ve large pool & p.itio with
ab1n1. Topcondltlon.Xlnc"cfo.eln"
lornlon. (714) S40-8944
EXECUTIVE HOME
Prestige H.B. ""-4 bdrm, l bl1h
family rm & more. $110,000. C.ifl fot
more info.
(714) 963-5671
sao.soo
hecutf\oe l bdrm 2 bath + room to
IOllT\. Anxloul -tu bmlt.
(7141 "l-5671
WFU saL YOUR WIFE
On this be~tlful fpic 6 9'*' 3 bdrm
S&S quality home on qulec oil-de-we
St. Mudl IOUlht alter Gulswar model.
When the hot s..m. Ana wlindt blow
you 'If Cfljoy )'OW' n:frilerated llr
condklonlns. You1t r~ In cool
ocean breezes the rm of the time.
Shows like • model Only $96.SOO.
(7W)S4Mm
TIRED OF NEWPORT PRICESI
You ctn ~ )'OUf boat on thb Lvp
lot In bdl M-..i Verde. LOll9ly upcr»
ed 2Aory,4bdrmhomew/poohable l1nd flt.~ bdrnw. O¥ef 2200
tq. ft. wJb. Oil Quiet U.. ttucied A.
wlfrieftdly nelshbors. ltedumd M.000
IO $130,!0G. '7'14) 545-Ml
PAMPER YOUR lADYl
l'tlCll her "' this PJ110W 4 bdrm Mesa Vmle pedalall You'• wine "
dine her In the Norp '°"""'Oil. She11 loweyou ,___tor~ hfrlnthls
tastefuly upsreded Cillde. And Its only
$122,500. (7141 S4M491
HOLD ON TO YOUR WALLET MESA VERDE HUGE FR. f p
When you view this breatht1klng 4
bdrm "1ake roof be1uty ilS she will
st.e<1f your he1rt awayl Thru the tiled
entry yoU view 1 huge P'V Slone
double f P. The modern kitchen & flt
are }Int stepl from 1 g.mlen pllio.
l1rge MBR suite, sh1ke roof. Dr.WC-
•lly reduced to $89,900.
(714)~
lnlo summer in your own sp1rtding H
.. f pool. This btfl l bdrm c;.c. home Is
loNed. New qX, new plinl. cov'd
patio, ps 88Q & much more. An un-
befle¥llble buy lit under $10.000.
V14)W-Gl21
You haveto-thls4bc:trmupgrlded
1.,,.11y home to 1ppred1te Its v.iue.
Plenty of room here fOI' your pool
11ble. Tatefully de<0t"ed. 8t1u11ful
11ounds. llJ priced rl1ht It only ses.ooo. C11f now to see this one
(714) 56-9491
Walker & Lee Sold 13,889 homes in 1976 ••• and that's a record! List your home for sale with the hard-working record setters!
IB COSTA MESA
OFFICE:
"11110•0 2790 Harbor Blvd.
_ Costa Mesa, CA 92626
(71-4) 545-9491 or (714) 545-0465
--------Hotnes Fors.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
OFFICE:
17213 Brookhurst Street
Fountain Valley, CA 92708
(n-4)·546-1754 or (71'4) 968-3371
HousesForS.
WJ·:s J.l :Y N
HUNTINGTON BEACH
MAGNOLIA ADAMS OFFICE:
9032 Adams Avenue
Huntington Beach, CA 92646
(714) 963-5671 or (n"4) 556-7035
HUNTINGTON BEACH
SPRINGDALE BOLSA OFFICE:
6042 Bolsa Avenue
Huntington Beach, CA 92647
(714) 897-0321
' NEWPORT BEACH
OFFICE:
2043 Westcliff Drive
Newport Beach, CA 92660
(71"4) 540-8944 ot (71"4) 646-7711
H• .... ForS.
D
NEWPORT/IRVINE G)i
. OFFICE: · ==
2640 San Miguel Drive
Newport Beach, CA 92660
(71"4) 759-1501
I ft1llUC NOTICB
QloC7I
lllOnC9 'TOC11991"°"5 ....... ~"' ... ,... . ITATaOftCAUll'Ollllt4 Na11ta CllM*TYCMI~
TAYLOR CO. VA
TERMS
COUNTY PIOPERTY
Cute. remodeled 3 bdrm. home on
huge lot. Won't last! Just listed! Near
Orange County Airport. S73,900.
A .... ......
I!~ el I~ H,' fllTOf, ... t•MAHOUMAf'ITOf.~
• ~'sNoffu:
All real estate advertised
in lhlS newspaper 1s sub·
ject to the Federal Fair
Housin& Act o r 1968
which makes it Illegal to
advertise "any pre·
rerence, limitation. or
discrimination based on
race. color. reUgioo, sex,
or national origin. or an
intention to make any such preference. llmlta· tion, or d.iscrlmlnaUoo."
.. --~'JI.. HERITAGE
. • RCALTORS
.-
4
CO.US~ WALLACE
RE.'.l [-STl\Tf 1"-U.
IU:A LTOHS ~1111·1· 1 ~1 .\li
c Years "NEW"! Trailer
aceeu! 3 Bedrooms. 2
baths! Near South Coast Plaza! Low Down !
182,400! RED CARPET
754·1202
I .
L • y IB 81.11Ul.ESTl1t
91H II .. aft.; CISTA MESA
.. -.ioe 556-7777
p
. I
L
0
t
NOTtCll IS H••eev GIVU .... c,...._..., .. ..,._...~
!Mt ... ...,_ Mwllll dllrlll ....,.st
"" Mid~ •• ,....... to flle IMA wlll .. __., _..,... 11'
.. ofHmfl .. der'llel .. ~-ntledQIUl'\er•pr....e ..,.,wtlltttie
llK-V_.... .... undlrllOMd
It the I .. offlc• of WIL.l.IAM v . SCHMIOT, aMSM .w,.t Dr1w, Suite JOO • ........, 9Mdl, Clllflrni. ~
.tltdl lat1!9Pl-el ----._ _
.,.,._. tit "' metten Plfflllnlnt 11> IMaUQrlteld ~.,...~,.tour .....m111 .,_ tN nnt Plilll oit ot
tlllanotb. Dated~~ 1'77. u.AADE.FTTCH
l!JMlltorof ... Wiil ......... _-...it.
WILUAMY. ICMMIPI'
=-s:~ltr ........ ..... c.. ....
OMt ..... ~-....... ,,..... or .... c...e Olaf""' ............. "" WWI
PVBUC SOTICE
..a1'10US IM'9l• .. tuMlllTATUll81n ,.,. ~ ........ 111'9..,.. ....,_..:·
9'1!1lD•MATMl!WS
CONIU&.TAl4TS, tlSSt MecArttlur ..... ,.(,,, ... ct, IM!le, CA. '21tS
• -..-. lllC., • °" ......... ~ 1ISS2 MecAltllr ...... S...422.1~ tt7tJ
,_... , -MecMtU 1-., .... lrYIM, CA. '21H
TMs ..._._ Is ~-!rt a .._ .. ...,...,.... ... •M.J ... _
TMs ~ ... fllef Wfttl Illa
OMlllty a.it fl Or-. °"'"""'.I• Cf""· .. outtMTll •" ........ ... ....,0ru.,•m ............ ... "'"" ~Or ... CroeM Delly Plitt.
Jutr a. ---.. u. "· "" ... .,,
\
I
:
PlJBUC N<n'IC£
llOTICI .-.ui.1 fllCTITIOU1auai111n
NOTICl' '' WllllllV GtV N NAMllTAT•¥••T
--·11191.ct-•-IOU11•1"" l"° 1411-"'t ..,_..It ...... 9'111
1 ••• c-...... ,. ..... c..tltotftl• I... .. .....
_,..... 0-. ~ _,.. t.• $1 N0L T t 'O"rYOll•·ANO
J~H ~JTc.1.,-::...t•I~. rJ,,, 7 ...... CA
!loll .. M .... _,,,.. Ct ,.,.., 10•-• Our OIL" "" 1111ua. ~ 1w a. ... ""°'"' c• .,.,. ... c ..... ,.,. (.A•Jttr ~· .., ....... Jf .. H .... Tith -..i;,_., It lMNtH Illy .. In ...... _. .. _..,_... .•... . ........
(•'""'''• w 1111 .. 1 lltt N• 100!1.,dOwyDIL.89
'6 .C, ....... -.......... ""If T!>it l I -II!• Wiii\ 1111 ... I' L..,.._tl • C-..CMrll•Or ... ~ .. ~ II~ Ill ... .._ --ti t.illfY .. 1tn .... , .. _ .. .....-.... ..... .. ....
"' .. .._,,.. .. t-611.tl -•' '°°*' .... or..., C»t.a o.llY f'OIM, ,.,__ ................... "'"· .......... "1fpJ -•»n ..,..i-.,,.., , .. ,. .. .,. .......................... ....................... " ,.,,. --...Oeolf-. o.-.,....._..,,..c......,
)ut1i...o.1 .. 0-.. ....... t, c-. "1•1'
.._.., ..... Or ..... {M\I O.•I• ....... """"" " ,.,, .,, .. ,,
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
BIONO· HI
CONTllACT NO 12-71
NEW~T-Mf.SA UNt,.ED •
KHOOL DISTiii CT
Notice lnvttl,,. Ilda
"IOTICE IS HEREBY GIV&N thtt
the Sotr<l o4 Educ•tlon of 1M H•WPOrl·
M~.., Ufllfl!!O S<Mc>I Olltflci qi ~ ... QI
County wtll •Kelw M•l<ed bid' up IO
2 00 p,'11. Ol'I the 2'th <l•Y Of A11911tt.
1911. at the olflc. of Nld SchOol Ola-
t ,.cl, 1cxat!!d a1 llS7 l"l.centl1 9trMt. C~t• -.. Ollitoml•, et wt!ICh tlrNI
:Wld Didi Wiii lie ..... ICll'f °""9t end
rudtor: RE~ct!Ml!NTVANS
l All bids w• to be lfl kcefdanc:• with
ConditloN, ~l(lft ... ~ ScMclllc• tJo1U W!tldt.,.. _ Ol'I Ille lfl the off le•
iit the PwCN!ll"9 Director <If s.1<1
Sc'-1 DIWlct. ltt1 ""-""' StrMI. Costa Mesa, C.."-I•, •2'17.
A Pw~ 90fld m1y be ,..
qu1rff llt !Ndltct9tlonol "'9 0111rlct.
Ho lllddw....., wltlMlrlW hit 91d for•
period ol fef'ty-flw dlYt (AS> IOfler ltie
~l•Mtf«tM-"'noattoereof
The Soard ol Educ1ll0<t ol the
Newport·MeU Uflllled S<llMI Oltlrlct
fPSlf_... b rl9"t lo 1'9ltcl ..,V Of' 111
Boeh 91'11 root ftttn-llv l<COOI '"' 10 .. ••I !lid ...er to walw .,..,. llllorm•ll· •v M 11'f'99111.,ltv In 111v Sid •ec•lved, NEWPORT ·MESA VNlt'I E 0 5C~l OllTRICT
of Or.no-County, CllHornl•
Dorollo\I H-v Fltller, CPM,
Purtl\ltl"9 Olre< I« 11'41S~Jn0
OATEO·A~tl ... n
, Pul>llSl'l!!d Or~ Co.ut Dally Piiot,
, Aug. 12. 19, 1.r1 35e0.n
PUBUC NOTICE
. u-Ol9llmY r. ,,104
at I. '·'°' 3. m .. t,lS4
). m .. ' 1 1 • 1 • '·"' I '° ,.
11 10
'2. :S'
lJ S1
14 I
1S I
"' 1
"· ' ,.. t . ... ..,
ll -tt. ,...
SE~.' 14 • ••• t
PUBUC NOJICS
NOTICE TOCREDITOltS SV .. l!ltlc>tl COURTOl"THE
STAH Of' CALI flOftNIA f'ott TH~COUNTYOl"OllNtOa
No.-..Z127
Est.ieol CARRIE M. BESORE,au
MA8EL N. BESORE, alUI MABEL C:. HSC>tl•, .. CAIUU!l N, a.uotll.
Oecetsed.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to UW
c...Sltor5 of IN -Ye lllfnld ~ UMl all ...,_ 111¥1no claims 19111\St
Ille uld Clacedll1ll we ,_iftd te fl ..
1Mrn. wttri the......,.,,,_...,"'
IN off a of ,,. clertl o1 tM ..,.,_. -1JUMc-.t,orw~.._ ... ,t1tt1te ~~-..... -... .., 81 h tlftcle t/I PAUL. D. McCLARY. JR .. AttarNY It uw, 191>1 Wes1iclllf 0r1¥•, Sulle 112, N---1 ae.cll,
C.llloml• '2t60, wllk:h Is the piece of busl-al 1111 l#MtWllone<I In •1 INt· ,.,., pett.tt1n1n9 to the ~at• Of yld o.
cedltnt. wlt111n 1-montlls .,t.,. tlle
I Int publlcallon oft Ills notice.
Datecl A.,guSI S, ten
OONALOH. llESORE
Encutorof the Will Of
tlla lbow' Nmed doc•dtnt
PAUL D. McCLAllY ,Jll.
Atl«MY•IU.
Ult wn~llff Ort.,.
SllllleJU
Newpot't ~ CA9UIO
Tel: (1MI~~ AntrNylere~
Publl!lhed OrMtit Coast Dally Piiot,
A119. 12, 19, 2', Sept. 2. lffl
PUBUC NOTICE
•
lt17
PUBUC NOTICll
l'\J UC NOTICE
C'""41JI MOnC. T'O at•OIT'Otll SU ..... <Mt COUltT CW TN&
STATS Oflc:AUll'OltMIA POii
Tld COUNTY WO..-....
•IM!DCS Est•t• of FLORliNC& J.
MAVLDI N, Ille "LOIUlMC•
JOHNSON MAULOIN, eke MRS.
RICHARD C. MAULDIN, .-. MltS.
R C. MAULDIN, 0.C...S.
NOTICE IS HERE•Y GIVEN• the
creditors of the aboft _.,.. dee•
dent tMt 111 _..,. e..111 .. clllms
19•\Ml.,.. said __... ... reqwltltd
to Ille tMm. with Ult t\tcunrv
'llOUCNl"S, In tN aff1ce 9f Ult cleril of
lM abOYe entitled ~ fllf to ~
them, with !ht nK•-V \OOUCller .. ID
, ... llfldenlgned .. tlw ... office ..
WILLIAM V. ScHMIOT. 166 lln
Mlou11 011 .... Suite aoo, Newport Beac II, CllllOrnll 92660, WlllCh II the
place of bUSlness of ttw ~
In 111 metters f)efUlnlno to 1N estllt•
of Mld dtcedlnl, wllllln lour monthe
1rt•r the first putAIClt• .t tlll• notice.
o.ied "*' .. ""· RICHAAO C. MAU\.Dttt
tEMQlllOP 9f ... Wiit
ofUlllllO\l9_,.....,...
WIUMM ¥. SQtW01' ....... Or ....... _
............ CA. ....
Tit: aM>...aD
PVBlJC NOTICE
. ....., ........ "'*"'*'or-.. c:em °""',.... , __________ _
.MY 2', _. ....-t. tt. "· "n • llOnCS TO Clt9Dt1'0lt5 ISlto1P SUf'eM<Mt COURT Of" 1"t STATWWCAU~IA,._
PUBUC NOTICE Ttll9 couwrt °" OltMOS
PUBLIC NOTICE
("'4117
llCmC8 TO ca•ot1'04llS
IUNlllOtl COURT Of' nt•
STATS OI' CA&J~NIA l"Olt
TltC COUNTY 01" 0 .. A ....
PUBLIC NOTICE
... IC1'11'out 1"111 .....
NAMiltTAHM•NT
, .............. ""'-........ 111.w1.
........ .....-
PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
•U ICY 14CllM:I
Reduced 930.000 to . Pw'cbued 2nd
home. mt amiow1 ror Immediate ol· r er. Prime Newport loeaUon.
M1W DUPUX DCWSIYI
Corona del Mar cbartnf'r. Tbree
blocks to beach. New carpet, 1uper fiJUl.Dcina. Oaly Sl37 .soo.
Nie COMIHG DOWM
Bluffs draatlcally reduced. I m·
maculate. Huse playroom or 5th
bedroom. Gor(eou.s 1reenbelt view. -A flOllST Oii YOUR OWM
Prime Newport Beach residential tear
down ror Y<Jll" dream home ln this uni·
que settin1. 182,900.
IAl.IOA ISLAHIM.IASl/Orn<>M
Two separate houses each with street
frontage. Opportunity to buy a future.
while only paying renL
PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP ·
you buy n Cadill•c.~ d<in't
h a y e t o x p l a t n W ll'Y t o
anyotu: ... nelthut wtll ANYONE
quest.ton your judgment when YoU buy
in SPYG~ RIDGE. We are offing
a blgbly UP1raded HlLIBBOROUGH
Mod&!, looaWd at tho 4tnd of a cul de •ac. wtt.b a apect.acular vtew -.You
could eftft have a pool wrth a view. The property consists of 4 bdrms •• f amlly Tm .. wet bar & formal dining
r rn. Price just reducad to $2T7 .500.
759-0811
, l IDRM IM OLD CDM
Light. airy and cheerful is this 3
bedroom. 2 bath home on one of your
favorite streets in Old Corona d tsl
Mar. J ust walk down tb6 tr~ linoo
a venue to shops, restaurants and
services. Then back home to new ap-
pliances. fancy flooring and roomy
comfort. Proudly presented at
$149,000.
U,._ICJUI: liVMl:S
REAL TORS~ 676«>00
2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar
also in Mesa Verde, at 546·6990
/Jn NIGEL:
01\IL[Y &
l\SSOCIAI [5
CORONA
G.erol I 002 I GtMrof I 002
...•.••..........•....• ........... ~ .......... .
HIGHLANDS
'The Ideal combinatloo of
a new hom e i n an
estab l is h ed
neighborhood, featurini
all the latest appoint·
·ments. Oversized
garaee. wee rooms. 3 bath. atep down wet-bar ,
mlni ocean view. all fully
laud.seeped, walking dis·
tance to private beach.
$195,000. fee. Mf:=SA VERDE 3 Br 2 Ba.
CALL 644-721 t Din Rm. Fam Rm, va. Q .. .-... ••••••••••••••••• • •• •• • • ••• • •••••••••••• GtMral I 002 G1Mrel I 002
. -. IRVINE TERRACE, CdM c~~~:g,AL Ds~D~~~~ usTSIDE ~ di! I~ . Picture the ocean as seen thru Needagoodcommen:ial Shake roof beauty on COTTAGE
canL S89,950. m -2386 /Jn NIGEl
GAILEY &
A55!JCIATES ' •• •14".,. beautiful, lush green foliage & ~stand location? We have U. huge lot w/rm for pool, ==..;;.._--..,.---1 One of Costa Mesa's ~---~....--.;;; £Qise1:Ji@f of stately pines. from your ~1tcben. close in on Newport boat or camper access. most desirable street..s. --=-living rm. & mstr. bdrm. wmdo~s. Blvd. with good parking CUl-<18-eac st. leads to a 8 MORRO BAY Just now available 2 Br --. Balboa Island Realty 70x1·oo·Ft. lot. 3 Bdrms., 2 baths. Wl_ t t\ & including a small park. Only $71,.950. Call n---sat/SWI 1-5 refurbished culle. W/2
.&: building. Lot size ap· DOW! 545-9491 -r-· car detached garaae &
IY.OWNER
Eastalde 1100 sq. ft. 3 Br. .De.n. 1~ Bath. Fam •
Laundry rm, Pantry, ~. Island Kitchen.
Ref, Stave, Dbbwuber.
9' Flbertlus Bar, Heat·
ed Pool. Cov. Patio, Hot
Jtowie. Fenced Yd. Sep. Gar, New Plumbing.
Boat or Traller Area.
$89,000. MS-067&. 545-5897
41RHOME
OR DUPLEX
1.onin& wiJI allow you to
convert thll.Pewly pain1·
ed &c carptfted home to a
duplex if you would
rather have it that way .
Call.Now!
Al ,~~
17830ra119e,C4Mla .._ ..
645-9161 . AND INVBSrMel\7eOMPANY new carpeting thruout. All for JUSt prox. 70x117 and zoned Beautiful upgraded alley entrance. $74,500.
673•8700 $l62,500 C·l: A rare opportunity. [~l\'/tfow1t1rn;t POrtsmouth Mdl. Lowest CallNow! OPEM HOUSES ~~ Callustoshow!643-7171 -_.,_,_ price in Spyglass .
f GeMrel 1002GeMf'al 1002 673-4400 OPfNlll9•"SFIJNrolllNKE' RealEetate $225,000 & you own the ~ 2S26Comegie
•
. · land. James D. Tatum Just reduced. $83.500.3+
_.,. -
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
LUXURY •TRl-PLEXES
LIVING •FOUR.PLEXES
3 Huge .BR, 3 tile BA, Avellable. Sun~t den, dinme room, 2 sty Heights and downtown wi26' open beam ce1l· Huntington Beach. Good
ings, Uleent.ry, frplc, wet tax shelters & appreci.a· Dl.tslOft of H.-. lnnsflneftt Co.
b_ar. laundry room, over· t 1 0 n . p r i c e d Ir o ro ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! sited double gar,~ ~q. $165,000 and up. Call for '= I
fL ol very unique living details. GeMrol I 002 GtMf"GI I 002
space. 1159.500 in Corona •••••••. • •••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• del Mar.
JACOBS REALTY
675-6670 cm •SPLASH• R EALTY INC.
& frolic. for the fun lov· 714/846-1371
1ng family. Huge pool. I~~~~~~~~ y11rd, ram-rm. 3 Br, 21:
frplc's, many xtra
amenities. Come see for
yourself.
2 STORY0 41DRM
LIDO ISLE home. 3 BR .. 2 ba .• street
to.Jstreet lot. Brick patio. $196,000
PE'.\;lNSULA home, 3 bdrms. 3 ba ..
all amenities. Lovely neighborhood, a
few steps from the beach. $195,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Buy~ode Orov1.-. N Cl b 75 -6161
~ . 2 STORY·4 IDRM Rltr752-T199or494-0029 F.R. + Pool. Beaut .
:·.. .·~ PLUSPOOL --------• ~ 1~0rar1ve.c--. cond. ~-'"'' , .. ,..,~ Winding stairs to master Owner Must Sell! ~ 645--9161 l 5 S Princeton
MAMTUCkET suite. New plush carpels Lowest priced Ocean 3+ 1-'Mm. $83,500. Open
BucH ESTATE t hroughout. Wa lk to vtew avail. 2 Frplc's. 3 ONE OF THE Dallylol2·bS L -SuiLL,· ~ beach fr om t his de· BR. fam-rm. formal din., H ES uc •• 2 STY· 5 BR corater 1arden home. Spanish tile, warm & in· NICEST OM UNITED BROKERS $86,000 Priced at $74,950 for vilin&. Great entertain· On West Side. Approx. 646-7414 7Sl·S9S9
H quick sale Call 963-6767 1500 sq fl. 3 Br. din area. Tree lined entry. uge ,,....,,119•irsr~TOptHtC£1 ment home. 1114 White l ·-d cbed 2 op1::a..1 HOUSE llv. rm. with cracltlin&.:-"~ Sails Way, 7S9-9'U8 beaut trp c "' eta m Lrm\~. :Seofp•€t)g~:'~ t•IMll ~ =~rui.~ s~w·~~~~~s
... .. MEW LISTING a Br.. well maintained
secluded guest .suites. CdM l·stinas Orig. owner moving to Mesa del Mar home. sweeping stair~ to .._.____._.~... 1007 J 6 mobile home, offers thtS Ready to move in . hldeaway master swte & ---ni:m..-a R pd children's quarters........................ Roger's Realty neat. well kept 3 B . Beaulifullylndsc .
Hurry!Justlisted.Won't OPEHHOUSE _,.,23ll home; lge. lot. fruit Agt.832·8752 546·2018
lastlong!963·7881 SUNDAY l·S j--...::._.r --~-d~'<~~· Opens1244 ·-J USTREOUCEO!
OPENrrt9 -trSFuNr08lNl(f• JOlOWestBalboaBlvd. ~~-----~ Congress. $62.900. Xlnt to $81.500. Prestigious !;·· .. ·!·:·~~;Iii ti~ IALIOA DUP'LEX Enc Family Home financlni. Mesa Verde patio home :.. ·:: •, Invest In an old stan· 4 Bdrm, frplc, walk to GLODEN FA y w new carpets. drapes &
·:::. '"} ;' • dar~. Duplex on Balboa ~aches. S205K. make REALTOR 642-5333 wall coverings. Call In· Peninsula, one block to orr. lern 'I Real Estate Open Sun 1 ·5, or by appt.
2338COLGATE
<College Park)
Agt 642·2237
--------1 the beach. 2 % Bdrm. up· *Cote Realty Network 1s2-0861
'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! CORONA DEL MAR per, studio lower. SUll & Investment. WESTSIDE MESA DEL .M_A_R_
DUPLEX time to enJoY this sum· SUPER STARTER
SP AHISH VILLA
Ovbr 2000 sq.ft. less than
one year old. Owner
must sell. Assume
S60,000 at 8~11} interest.
Low monthly paym\!llls.
Hurry! CalJ ~767 G....-aa I 002 G-.ral I 002 --------i (")(lfN 111f./•1t ~ION ro''' ~rf' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• LICENSED ., SALESPEOPLE I• . : Che(·k help wanted sec. • •
957-070 t ·t'
Crawford & Assoc.
~ll mecnab I lrvtne ?-realty
FINER HOMES
ROM $58.500 TO SI ,350.000
42' IOAT PIER & SLIP
Belong to this ~autiful 5 BR. 5 bath
home w /formal dining. brkf st, .rm.
fa mily room & spacious m aster
suite w /fireplace. Extra wide lot
w /room for pool. $555,000. Appt.
only. Rosemary Sietz 644·6200.
MOIE H:RRCT THAN ones
Baycrest estate combining both ex ..
quisite elegance & cheery warmth.
3 'BRs. gran d formal dining.
spacious surrounding grounds &
gardens creating the ultimate in
privacy. Jack Custer 642-8235.
CJ· 12)
DtttAM A IJTl\.& DREAM. • •
But make \t a realit.Y in the Rancho
San Joaquin townhome with park at
your doorstep. 2 lg. BRs. den w /wet
bar, gourmet kitchen off .formal
c-dining rm. + sunset on the horizoi11
$108,0()0. Lila Hat"p,er 75a·l414.
(J .]3)
HUNTIMGTOM
BEACH
4 UNITS
$230,000 c Luxurious units. with
spacious owners unit
AllD06t carries. Owner
Will belp finance. For proflt pro}ectioo includ·
ing tag shelter beoe(1ts.
cal1963-178S.
• K€Y 1 1P.E:ALTOP.Sh
MES.A VYDEA
B~UTIFUL HOME
Orte ot our fineet. Ready to rnovetn. Quiet street, 4
bdrms. fam. rm. dining
nn. wet bar and pn.ced to
•VETS*
••FREE••
VA Counulinq &
Info. Senice-
frH Apprai5'CM
Free Liet of VA
Homes in O.C.
Orange Co's. Largest
VA Home BrokPr
Call 24 Hrs.
675-2626 woru.,o REAL ESTATE sell fast & wilh fast
escrow. It will sell it!'elf -
when you see it lhe first --------ume. Call for your ap·
point.ment. 546-2313
Ol'fl" Tit 0 • " SIUH ro ~I N ~I'
;a·~<-· -~ i • • •
~w -. -~
LAGUNA HILLS
USTBLUFF
3 BR, 2 BA CONDO
$65,500
2468 I Via San Juan
UNITB> BROKERS
FRAM WOLF
646-7414 76M370
OPEM S.A T /SUM I ·5
MAIN
ATIRACTION
associated
S'>'"l• £R<. IJI l\t ~CJPS
l .JJ f ..,,, ,, ... t .... t) .. • '' ~.
mer in Newport.1124,500. 640-5777 Large 4 bdrm. Calif.
Lovely duplex., eaeb unit .... ORIMS RE•LTY --------Excellent .home for a ranch style home wU.h
tiavmg 2 bedrooms each. " "" HOME sm young family lDtereated shake r oor. covered
Walk lo beach. Priced to * 494-8057 * Ocean vieww/small ren· In anveeting in a good patio. frplc. Walk to
sell. ,..~del M-I 022 taple cottage for interim home. Many new up· schools. 0.C.C. & shop-
--· $122.500 grades. excellent price. pmg. Best buy m area~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ~AL PIMCHIH Hurry!! CaJI 6'5-0303 SllS.900WPORT BEACH
CDM.. BEACH REALTORS HE
~
l l <; I\ le I~ I \ I I \'
..; J '"-i 1 1 I .. .1 • \ • f ri•~ 1 Cu\t "•r Ct1t1U ti1 10 COTTAGE 675-4392 REALTY 675·1•42 l~~~~~~~~~I Lots 0~';,~ and stained Custom built CdM, 2 Br. 2
FORESTE
OLSON .. ... . .. SlMPU glitc. T.t:YLOR co. a.. quality home by MESA VERDE
aEGANCE IM 955-0350 owner. R·2 raraie plan j..:...· _:•~·~c.i....~~-~c=·~·~-1 A-FRAME
THE BLUFFS for 2.nd unit. Comu lob. Enjoy thla aunny home
New exchasive oCfering VICTORIAN llAUTY sus,soo Open House MESA VEltDE wrapped around a very
features Ute entry. total· :!~li 721 Marlaold, 3 BR" Fam·rm or' BR. private swimming pool.
ly remodel~ kltcherti Dyna mite view tr om ~....;... ______ , i:i~ ba, blt ns. heated Home offers 4 bed.rm &
gorgeous view, ano widow's walk. Redwood CodaMna 1024 pool, EX:Wnslve upgrad. lof\.CentralJylocat.edlor
highly upgraded. This hot tub & charm you will ••••••••••••••••••••••• lng. S94,950. Call for schools and shopping. home is spotless In every only find tn CdM. Owner ________ , appt. 549-3745 C4US40-US1.
deta.i· 1 and is truly a de· a--•-us 1 Yr warranty
ruuu • • • REAL ESTATE By owner 3 BR. Condo. 2 light. to view. This won 't Car aar, fed patio, lastCall67~today! DUPLEX ~ t.1 e & or co will 0
OPFN m Q . ir s 1vN rollf NICI' "''"'a v pr • ·. . comm. pools. s:n. malnL
-'('~:.If>. HERITAGE
· sooo be opening ofc s ln fee. You own the land. Nr
[.' · ':1~~~·11·~11 Newlr li~ted. 3 BR Npt. Sch " c.~. areas. City Hall. l8J Yorktown' _______ _ , · .. --~~-.~,:]l ',1 owner s umt w /1 BR te· We have openmgs for Ln. 163,500. 540.3402 Dano Point I 026
,_-· ----~----naot. New car~els & new o r exp e r . ••••••••••••••••••••••• drapes. Don't mass this aalespersons &. mgrs. YOU DESERVE IT! INVEST
I • REALTORS
ooo,call today! who are tnterested in a An enclosed front
VALLEY 640-9900 career. Apply by call1ng courtyard invites you in· DONT SPEND iiiiii~ forin&eniew. to t his artistically de· Large commercial cor· 631·0400 corated 3 bedroom, 2 net suitable for motel. __ ... _ ... ___ I bath family home in IOY· Located near the Dana
FOREST E
OLSON
·~ . . ...
ely MESA VERDE area. Poin\ Marina & walking
Cocoa brown carpetinl & distance to the beach.
custom drapes, re· Act now & lake advan·
modeled kitchen area tage oC Lhe low down pay·
PLUS brand new pool & ment&subordinat.ion.
jacuzzi & covered patio!
$89,600. AMCHOUCM
IUESTMBCn
1714t 496-719 I
DUPLEX
in excellent Da.na Pojnt
loc:aUon. 1·2 BR. 1-1 BR.
one or our btst. only
1119.900.
..
..
8EALTV INC.
714/&46-1371 .~r~_. ................ -i
Wt'U.SELL
YOUR WIFE
• tHl this htfl spic & 1p .. n 3
1.' bdrm S&S quality home
LUSE OPTION
, Brand new 2 bedrm •l•• plush home. Community • pool. 5aW1a, JaCU:tZI. 6
Mos . lease option.
$90,000. S475:mo. BKR
Snct'At~ ARBOR LAKE CON·
DONlNlUM.. onte-in-•·Uf &time OP..
portWlltY for tho a11kln1 ! Step out of
this lovely 2BR + d~ bome to tht: boa~•· lake. & spa In Woodbrld1cs.
J>f:lirablft comer location. Waitlna fol'
the rlabt own~r & avallablfj for sale or
lc,a ,.,[option. <A·U
At4Y BROWN 752-1414
MACMAllllVI I llALTY CO.
.Campus V&Uey C«ltbr. Irvine
ILUEllRD CANYON
-Gt.at .... ty -............. .....
locllW • • -......... ., .... c..,..
...... 311.--.2Mltlwffltl"DOlllfw
........... $151 ,tlO.
497-248'
NEW CUSTOM HOME
View. privacy. xtra apact. complete:
garden. xlnt location. FamUy livin1.
Pleasant climat~. Mov~ in now for
only
$139.500 I Why not call for an appointment.
MAY.OCK
CORPORATION
LAGUNA BEACH
494·2146 ---------------SOUTH LAGUNA DANA ~~ •. -...... !~!~1~-·•••••• .. !~!~ =A ~Y7~ °'~= 1.apoleadt 1041 LoganaHIJI• IOIO N\l TwtleroC!k Hl,i.land.I 3 la + IONUS •••••••••• .. ·-•••-••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
-----• Plan J w/4 Bdrm.a, Cam S79 too Ready by mid Sept Sbr & llST VflWl rm. Avail Aq. 1165,000. Gareeoua r;rmal living LaglMa leach I 041 ~ IHdl I 041 atudy, 2ba. Ocear: & ca· SaddJeback Valley, adult
IOSS ....................... -.;root*
PARADISE RambltnC •lll1Je al)'
Deane bom• rea~11 4 BR. e aep. dea w/~c.,b open bea: ~~ru!lltf, central air I& wall&of glasa.over·
looltlnl patloa " apukl-lnl Hti" pooU Walk to ••·pub.• irn. tennis club ..... (()wQerwill
help finance>! CaJJ'761-G1170wa/Aat. room bolts maplf1cient. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• nyon ""· 1211,soo. ooJy condoi 3 bdrm1., 2
WOODIRIDGI ~ br1ck f'lreplace 41tl·31A.THS OP~HSE·BYOWNER OC·5729 bat.ha, auumable '"*~
New Btoadmoor ~~l~o~~lv~e:, View! L&e. liv. rm. has
1
• 31'2 BERN DR. ~ M ER AL D BA y . IQan. &,~ * * *
Laurelwood GI t a.d bon beam ceU .. frpl, walls or OCEAN VIEW . Exqulaite 3Br 38a
4 br 3 baScaraarCutlsan b°': blusroom. glaa.sleadtopatio&lath OfSailbotita.lsland,aun-white water
0
view' 7~9·0226 *GOOD de-~ac.' Mio. d'ow~ ~trtd!..4 FC::UY house; Cam. rm.: bltn set. in fabulous .area. library, bdwd nn: ~---·-~
Mll.2'1.ll:ll paymt to qualif'led ,__. bedroo d k.ltcb., laundry area. Al 38r.2Jla, rormaldinrm.I $235.000 •. Owner (714) ........,, . •~ ms or en buy. $126.500 fam rm. sll.Dlcen Uv rm, 494-41Z7 tlf E buyer. rl4S,OOO. 7~1 for dad & mo.m. E-Z care Mission Realty 494-0731 ftplc, patio, many xtras,
1
M !WI *
VA TIRMS I yard. C.llqwct752•1100 a ~ ~Sugl2el lotoo'oquipet.isecJod,ed. •OCEANFRONT• 6 Bdrm newly decorated can ~ youn;! Sellers
OPIMSA.T/SUN 12·5 I Pl ACE ;i • · r n °0 Y· 3Attb8aJFanWticVu home in estab area. have move1i ! very
RanchSpeclal' Jbr 2ba -REALTY .491-7T39 ·----· ~~lyn9mod3Br Close to Frwy, Sl'hJs, motivated. Swim. f'ish,
highly up(!'adtd sa5 500 • t~ P\QQ! --c.. .. ,.."'°" J f" I Sacrlflce By Owner Sbop'g, Xlnt. finauciai. un or play tennis at your · · · ~ Es~ OPEN 1•5 1replaces 1 Below Market-1350,000 Assume VA 8~ 104n. pvt. club within walking 1.~=========i 241Nyes .... Sl!ie,OOO. 1 Stroll throu&b peaceful 1 494.7144 973.1373 1105,000. Prine. on!Y· diltance. Jmmac! Va-
1· 2Br.2Ba,ocn vu, furn I ti(erdens Into another era. 546-0075 770-121113 ·--cant! 4 BR, paneled f•m·
DEERFIELD Walk to beach StJ&lned aiaas, anUques ON BEAUTIFUL tree-LOC)mMINlguel I OU rm .• atep.up dining.
t
..... d
1
I and ocean vJstas sur-lined North end street· ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• cstm. cpt.s & drps in
SUpersh1rpParkHome ... a e or may ease/op·I round you 1n this . · • coroa's &whlte.Custom Plan 5. 4 bedrooms'. ti011. Jmmac. 3 yr old 3 superlalive Wood 's Cove spar~lng. mint cond. IYTHESEA creme stucco lnslde &
formal dining room step BR, + 2 BA hm w/pool,' estate. Stand in front or home. 2 BR .• 2 ba .. den, Two POPUiar models 1n out. inclurun& wlllJs &
down to beautiful f~mUy out.side gas BBQ & fire I the olde mantlepiece and ?1lnmf r~ .. frPJ··nhdwd. the private Sea Terrace courtyard paUos. Fan·
room. Larae kitchen. ring. 1n Lag Hills sss,000
1
gaze through trees out to &~· ov:Xi/~ • owers communltY; with beach. t.ast1c! Super price of
breakfast nook .& 3 full -$28.SOO equity + cash the m a g n I f i c e n t ~EG ALLEN pool &tenrus. They are: S79.9:i0.
baths. Sltlinll room off forl.iag.Bchproperty. I panorama of a realless REALTOR 49..,5.,8 TOWHHOMi *TOLLE*
master bed~oom . Zaarodzky,Rllr. I sea. Host your weekend 2 •torY. ocean view & •
Prof ea s Ion al lY,_ 494-8611 iuests !"itb an Intimate 3 Br2la Ba. ~eaB& Ca· 1>parkllng clean. 3 •RIALTORS•
l.aq(i$caped. Great loca· t pre-Jesllval reception on nyon view. ~000. 1059 Bdr'lll·· 2\.'i b~ths. 2 hon to new park. I HILLTOP HOME : iheexpanstve \'erandaor Santa Ana or. 75N807 flf'!lplaces &hue~ master · •586-ISOOs BY OWNER I Viewocean,city,.mtns. , let them entertain! dysor642-890'1 swte. Move right Jn! Wood ld-b -·-.-
Universit.y P.adt .. Ter-• 3Br, deir.game rm, 3 ba, themselves in their own Sl.29.500. s e. U1te Jacuni 4 C mb · d \,wnhm I 2300 sq n.. SZ35.000. l upa1tment, or If it's not! OCEAN VIEW HOME BR. 2l, Ba. lvc. tm. an!1 ·000~ Pri~';eenbelt S15Poplar CNoofHigh> rented, In the separate 4 Br Z Ba, form. din. Lee GARDEN HO.,_.E dng rm. AIC Suo-sa1&
loc. 3br or 2 & c!en.
2
ba. CONDO $63,500 McGarvey/Clarlt Rlty. I 'uest house with Its own P~lio, courtyard w/Veoe· Tranquil 3 Bdrm., 2 bath Club. Open H~e Snt
1
din rm. Many up&rades. End unit lo perfect toe. 1·933-SlOOorl-528-8762 cozy fireplace open t1an rounuln. newly with Cireplace. dining SUn l-5pm VanlaD Co.
31 EueJ.lyptus. ~13l8 Beat buy 111 Walnue • OPENHSESATiSUN 1 beamed ceil
0
lngs, lndscpd "decorated. rm.,largeeat·inkitchen 631.(»00 ---·--·-
""-Sat/Su 1" Square. . . , hardwood Cloors and Avail lmmed. Owner & 2 u A efuJ
'V}'U 11 "" RAMCH REALTY Laguna Beach exqws1te It view decks. See this w help refinanl'e. 2705 pa os. peac Owner must relocllt.e.
3
UHIVERSITYPARK FIX UP 551-2000 acre FAt.a~. 5000 sq ft.I 1andmark or a mbience Temple HHls. By owner retreat.Sla6,500. BR, fam-rm. Choice Most beauurul entertain· I todav. (490) I 494-4444or'94·9968 locaUoo.inShadowGlen.
fW OWNER 2 br. l~ ba, Cbanoeilor. 4 Br 2"'1 Ba. This 3 BR, 2 BA w;some euu~ol!.tl!£ a~ ment house, around a • · I REGEHTREALTY Stlll time to pick Cfl>l &
.id. HB Joe on C1,1l-de-sac, lge Fam Rm. walk to elbow grease & bave a '""'""" rrsoR "G pool, on pvt road,• ~{iiJi , FOREVER VIEW I 17141496-950 I flooring. First phase
pnn.only.848-9491 shops, pools, tennis. lovely family home. heavenly garden 3 Bdrm. 2\.~ BA. 1045. price. $12S,OOO.
77
0-0077
SPOnESS!! $115,950.Byowner.Princ Lowest.priceinareaat PlanlllTurt.JeRock.4 ·w/ponds, water falls, I Balboa, La& Bcb . FIXERUPPERH! or837-1136.
Ir 963-9047
R only.551-623l()penSan. S'70,900. BR It fJmily room. On wallrways & more. Must I $132,500. By owner. 0 NORTHVIEW" By Owner. Executive
.... ~1!s ·( s~~~lrf~~~i;l,~t NEW LUSK HOME huee secl~ded lot. 1 Yr. be seen. Emergency sale 499-4685or873-99'78 'l'wo story, 3 bedroom + home. 4 BR, fam·rm.
6
oxlOO. Quick PoSSess. m Turtlerock Highlands wjll'l'anty mcluded. ! 7by4 ,.O,,,,w!er · ... !~5.ooo . {J1.1 Co 2\.~ baths, with lorge, lov· country kltcb., cust. bit Only $144 950 Agent 1· 1 .....,....,us,..........,13 · I iled kl h F BBQ •-ti L k 5Jl9.SOO ' • • COMPARE! PRI E REDUCED ·1 e y t . tc en. amiiy "" pa o. a e
...
"" • CAYWOOD '152·2!000, 955-1839 EXCILLENT T Of • ..t~ room watb used brlck ForeSt's most exclusive
:· REALTY.INC. UMIVERSITYPARK Deane Homes,·Kens· '11teColony.4BR 2BAI MOTR rp. ~reworld,oceanl JJ1 *~ fireplace.Covcrt.'<l patio. communityinthewoods.
S41 1290
ingtoo Model. 5 Br, 3 Ba, ho ded th' v ew · t s super Camlly '"'./ :g Large comer lot Hurry Designers own home.
, ___!::__ __ • __ • __
1
Deane Bendemeer cntey kUch. Lgeyard. by On meupgra · ru·out. ~eart or Laguna. locu-, hom e ha s r: r e at I ::::; on this, priced f~r quick Completely decoraLed. Model, located right on owner. $143,500. 644.-5403 ly $82,900. See this I t1on; xlnt condatlon, possibilll1es Cor ~x -~ ~ sale sin 900 air cond. & landscaped. tbe.J>!-!~1.thia3Brbouse orM0-7981 one-you'll buy it. l Yt., large pool & recreation paoslon. 4 Ddrms .• 21 t" ~· · · S169.000. 770-0017 or
Is ~Ulb' deeoriited, 1----------1 warranty Included. are4.' Short walk to baths. new carpet; com· I ~ 837-}Ug·
beautifully lndscpd & a BY OWNER VALLEY 640·9900, beach. For information plctely fenced; lots of , . ~~ --------
secluded spa a<f'JOlns the College Park. bltbyS&S. call • storage. Ni ce yard . REAL OC"T" ........ E ~ MiwonYiejo 1067·
-------1 :161.-& dues w/pools. & parks: ~o\CZ ~ 4t..S671 499·2100 STUN .. IHG... . OPeMHOUSE JI'~ ~AG·'i MADRID 671
ma.llttl'bdrm.ByoWller. LaLb&plaster Lo assoc ,-ii]2 Ri•;erallealty Sl35,000 &;,.;>uu ~fltil ~ i,~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
Beaut." br, 2 ba bome . "~ .. CO:-ITEMPORARY; a I SATURDAY I S .~A)p-By ~oer. 4 br Casa
witlle roof. Newly de· l m~t unusual home in j . • "' • Sarga. Spect .• un-
cor'd. & Jndscpd. Very REDUCED CA.HY()K.OCEAH VU Monarch 81y Terrate:..i 31.888H1llsldeLane obstructed mountain & • lg. bkyd. w/patio cov. & 3 Bdrm & den "Spanish t.his lge. 2 bdrm. feature'-South Laguna WALK TO HACH golf coune vu. Walk to
dog nm. $89,500. Open HOWS76,500
1
Home'', View deck. a studio gallery which 1 (offof.9tliAvenue> Oneofaklnd.5bedroom aolC course, lake. rec sat & Sun.. 101.l Athel, ror tl'19 central air condi· Pe.rf'ect for family enter· could be a 3rd bdrm.: M <><;:EANodVl~W . home in Laguna N1auel, center. Prof. lndacpd. ~6 lloned home with 2 talning.$199,500. barn siding. spruce ove in t ay. Quiet oceanside of hichway beaut. decor w;an up-•--------'----j•;;;;;;::::::::::;j bedrooms and a DEN in floors & ceil. & be1tutiCul hideaway above 9th St. Pnvale tennis couru & gndes. Aft 8 ~kdays
:rREE FO'l SAl'E
Shading a delightful
home in preat.lgious
~ neat .adult compl~• SUPERI landscapin& + decks lo Beach. 2 Bdrms .. 2 many other recreaUohal 83'7-32e0
POOL SPA TENNIS -OCEAN YIEW enJOY lhe marvelous I baths, fireplace stained I rac11ltles. Sl92.500. ---------
and giro racilltiea. BET-Luxunous wood & glass view:i1! $29$,000 I glass window, beamed HIGUEL SHORES lnlaw ~uarters + 3br
:..·• THE LANDING
:. PLAH400
Beautifully maintained
Bedrooms, 2~ bat.ht. Up
graded carpets, Sppnis
tile entry. trash compac
-tor • larce c:overe
~ 1)8tiO, Sl4t,900.
,-,ror
• t.f"
rn.
"bt-1 :
.hll :•1•·
.R8 .. t?. .,. Hawaii• r .. acllJt
,.. • 81' + lam rm W,iWie~
red hill ~, ..
552-7500
'l'ERHURRY" l condo overlookmi Aliso VICTORIA BEACH c~lUn& & modem conve-4 Bedroom professional-Deane Home .. MllSlOI\
.. Pier. Walk to beach. Ocean view; this one has ruences. S138,000. I Y deco rated & Vlejo :sctiJ. Special Price.
I $189.500 it ... c h a rm • v I e w • A HOME FOR landscaped. Patios front <>.vnr. •·
5616
Fausta Vitali R.E spaciousness & it's le rur. close to beal'b & Shows like a model. ,-• 1 clean: Partially re· AU.SEASOMS recreation. Must be seen Madrid 6:IO. 6 mo. new.
Catl4 9·2.241 I modeled, l'omplelely Owner leaving area & to be apprecia ted. Near lake, 4·Br. 21.; Ba
charming! Room for ex-anxious. Catalina sW1Aet Sl64.900. plus much more. Super
RANCH REALTY
SS 1·2000
C:Mlon. 2 Bdrms .. lo/• views plus 3 Bdrms., Logma ~Realty upgrade!J. Open bouse
I albs. Sl57,500 I Camlly room, 2'h baths. IJO SQSO 49._ .. 0 .. 0 TI1urs-SUn 12~ 22951 Lu· Elegance .& charm • _.. " c:ianao.tnerS139.900 , ~ I abowld ln the this well ~ $30-~;m~ . located & tel'ri.fia f•UV.b' · Sf
home. 11':.~ 25 I 6Z La Estrada
t "~;,._ t AU.OCEAN LacJwtaNlpl 1 OSN.C-.tfwy.,Laguno I VIEWS 495-0018 MJSSIONVIEJO'S
IH THE TERRACE
A Great S bedroom home
wltb formal dlninl room ln the presti&ious ~~~~~~~~I Univusity PJr~ area of Jrvtfte. Now aaklng
31601c!!~.:!v~Loguna • Latsortots! From SSS,000 3Br. 3Ba Uv rm. frple. NO. l REALTY FIRM "_.._4S9l tos:M,000. din rm, kit, paUo. prof
___ ......,_7 _-lndlcpd Coed yd. 67 x 157'
REAUSTIC
... is the word for these
OMMrS who bave pnced ----=-------• tt:lt}r bouse to sell I Take adVantage of this chance
to have a neat 3 bdrm., 2
R
NEQARLITNYS =@= RAHCHHOME ~~o~!.11r. $91.500 • St.ables plus Income from ------~-
commercial kennels wit.b rRICE REDUCED! 4.2 doi nms, groomlnl
ar'ea & office. Profitable FOR t;>UICK SALE
RETIREMENT SEE THE OCUH! I operation & close in. 4 Br. 2i~ ba, la"• comer HAVEN and the toWn from thl.s Owner will carry financ· lot+•u. Now JU$t$8UOO.
Bli gbt & airy 0 -Y .o well constructed 4 Bdrm iftl. n97.500. A• k for W a .y n e ,
1KANCHRIA.LTY · apartment. 2 Bdrm. & 2 ~-Two \lied baths, -Richardso n Rltrs . 551.JOOO bath. A short walk to open livln1 tm, frplc.I ausY.IUSYt 831·3960 wkdys O'r 1-~----...-,; ...... -1 downtown It the ocean. Good terms & lo•n. Prime locatl<>as for two _499~·-18_19_e_v_es_+_,w ... knd~--I
UHtVERSITY PARK Newly redecorated. Sl.54.000. proeperous &established
•• 900.
I.
S94.tS0 Great for weeQ!\d1 or DOLPHIN lt.E. .. beaut.)> uloO• in Ute
Ex<lllni !:dlnbura redrement. OWner will Call49•-ISll heart pf La1una. ~x· 1------..,....--1 D>()del towl)_bom.e w fi ti.rtance. SM,500. ~~~~~~~~~j cellent groea ~ (abulous ba"1DS, fa!llll1 rm. 2\.t I-decor. S30,000 & 150.0oo.
batbl. Hu1e baekyard IWOA. OUPLEX UNl9UE Check tbeM~! 11 w~:~~r:=~L Q{~01;l~~f Cedar & el as a home 1/J ACRI UHeH 8311400 3010 West Balboa Blvd, nosUed ln the trees on a I Close ln ranch llome on >I' • NEWPORTBEACH huge lot. Many frt1lt1 •11 acre. Room f~t 3
CULVERDALE Invest ln an old 1tan· tr 0 e 8 • i az e b 0 • 31 horses with 2 Bdrm. & 2 dard. Duple)( on Balboa B • d r 0 0 m ' 2 b 8 th bath home. Excel ent
Fotonly ,900. you can Pentnaula, one block lA> hlduway wlth maa1,. terms. Sll'f,500.
own tMa popular 4 beach. 2 Bdrm. upper, ele1ant. f'ea~ure1. ---. ~~~:11~0!"re•a.'~:.~ studlolower.SUllUmeto Complete prlva~y . 1104So.CoastHwY .io JOOl, parlt,tdiool and enjoy this ~um mer In Ol'ean " can1on view. I LAGUNA BEACH
lubbwse. Newport. $124,500. ,.sali.®0
t
t ..
JOOL 8 t.l &OON t:,..., f1m1ly hm. J BR.
!!OCI lanai, hu • l ('ar
1ar. I min to •II •<"hb 1n
'Iii» Kt• Redu<"ed t(l
•l+.,500 ~ Au1 t'flh
111lh 2U.1 •l I(
Tht! bc1l front row vlt:W uf «Wt.ian.
lhu·hur & hMhU.. 4 BR homt• w family
room & d1nan1 room &-autirul pool &
SJM ~' Sruuu~h tat d~ck!\
$277,000
a.\.t. I!:!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:!!:!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ C.11 C.lt'o ill ·l'IJI
Unatld Bn:attnW.7U4 ________ ,
REAL ESTATE
,. •• prof. f!'O Wiii
M operun1 ufc'~ 1n
~pt Be .. • C.11. ,.,....
We h\te optn1n1s for new or e11p~r
sa1-persons 4' mgrs w
are 11tere1ted 10 a
career. App!J b~ ulti11c
torimervaew.
631-0400
12 ll P&ellOKE
•~ACRE Horse ranch w,'2
houses. workshop &
barn. Back Ba~· area on
lhe golf crse Must. sell
~oon 5119.000 Owner.
JClJ-0119 & 546-6013
BLUFFS
HARBOR VU
PALERMO
4Br. 2 1'J8a, ram rm. din
rm, prof tndscpd,
JdCuz.zt.. Owner at re·
dooed price or S184.900
644-6221.
• • WESTCLI FF 3 br, 2ba,
F.R .. patio Wallt to
~hops.'schools. S149,000.
Owner 646-01001646·6219
WATERFRONT ,
Newport Shores, 3 Br.
den 3 Ba. 2 tplc's, c:omm
pool & tennis. 5139,500.
By owner. 6J5-t911
BLUFFS
f'am1ly home. <t BR , 3
ba , huie hv rm Best
area! Ld(&new' Sl45,000
AGENT 640-5560
Ml•,_. •ect. I OH"-.,... hach I OH ..............................................
·~ CAMYOM sacuam • PIJYACY
Charm1nai 4 BR home w:apac master
BR. Jiving room & ldtcbeti looking °"1t
onto attractivt:ly landscaped private ~ ard w magniClcent pool & jacwzi.
Catht:tdral ccilings in living room. dt:n
& f onrial dining room: 2 lrg floor to
ceiling firtiplaces
DAIL V PU.OT
REALTY INC.
714/146-1371
UHCHUALTY
511·2000
IB«AlS
2BR.2ba .......... IMO
2 BR + 0, 2~ ba S38S/43i
3 BR. 2 Ba ..•••. DIS/5:IO
JBR.2~, Ba ......... MSO
4 BR. 2' a Ba.. .•••.••. 1795
S40.00 WHK & U,
•Studio & 1 BR Apts
•TV & MaJd Serv Avail
•Phone Serv. Utd pool
2376 Newport Blvd , CM
3106
lM> of Orange County's
most beoullful a~
·------- --S·T·a--s·T·o·a·EA-C·H-•D :=:~=~
3 BR, 2 ba S4SO yrly wo19ffals, ond mojesllc
2 Br, den, 2ba $600 1rees. FecJNrtng pools. SPECIAL RAT.ES Bea~l. 3 Br 2 aa, adull Mewporihach 3269 1GiantSteptoocean.4br. Forsummerrentals Jacuzzt,souno,1>9ords.
Huntington Lanamark. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 ba. gar. Super clean =~~, nrreccenter . 960-«S6 •WATERFROMT• Singles ok. S600 mo.
BR r I
. 67s-6764. gym, and YOll)t>ol at
New 3 Br c u s t l oft 3 • n> c, blt.n.s, avail The'Jloge.Mcnof akyllchts, fplc, i blks Sept.1st. Yearly lease. BLUFFS WATER VIBW bch. Dwntwn. S650. 774·4384; S75·61H 3 BR+ ram. Beaut. gal· ~you·,.lookilg
G-2181 ev/wknd ~ed~oourt~~yd~·!.A~gt~._!644~·1~133~1~~~~~~~~1 tor. Fun*urt Is OYOIOble. One and lM> Bedroom Hw ·~-Chann1nl a BR, 2 BA. 35,' LIDO ISLE 1 BedrOom with flreplace. '~~-3242 &~fld2 St{(•>"' .-w1 Newlydecor .. 3BR,2ba. Oarafe.MIO/mo. AdLILMng.
••••••••••••• .. ••••••• c reoO .S'75-61'15.. bome.SouUlpatio;ateps Call,\fnt.eat-1400 omc.CIPI09:00to6:00.
WATHFROMT Mewporthoch 3269 ~~~:i:~" club. 2Br.gu&ate~tobeach, NClW ~
85' Dock, 2 br, 2\4 ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• · Nopel.I.
Condo. S895.Mo. 846-2708 87~2125 ~-maenab/lrvtna Lae 2 br, 2 ba condo. Mln
cond. V. ml bch. $350.
842·9820 Call between 5· p.m.
)"lne 3244 •••••••••••••••••••••••
~-realty . Tt •
l'Hl.GOOD LIFL •• OM UDOt ComCortabl~ 3 BR. 2 bath quality
home on quiet street. Bright A alry·
w /spacious windows to So. patio.
2·car garae«= w /elec. opener.
Children & pet O.K. $7S>tmo. John
Ga:anath 6'2-8235. CJ-17>
Ocean ~!a bile, 3 Br, t Ba,
fully equipped. Dl W. frplc, Avau Sept.June,
yrly, Open: 10·2:80 Wed•
Sat. 125 89th St. or Call
63().3687
1•2•3 llDIOOM UNm
·~TUllMG•.
UMIQUI AND DRAMATIC flOOlt PUMS
Custom dealiDed with exceptionally
large rooms. ·dramatic entry ways a~d luxurious amenities throughout. •
Located on
HARBOR BLUFFS CIRCLE
(Near Bolsa Chica and Wamer)
HUNTINGTON BEACH
846-1328 or 840·1123
2 IEDROOM + DEN
U,.,Dd c..,... & Drape.
Clll • •• Slrffl. At 1ptleca, , ..... to ....
.......... OcaipmKJ
3 ...
~ 1711'170.7170
............... ..... 4000 ..............................................
Ntw~ IHdl 316' Boom tn lovely Lelnre
•-•••••••••••• .... •••• World hmi to born at•lo PAD MIWPORT auutlu ad7. 55-85 yrs. Bachelou. 1 or Non-smoker, non· BedroomalrTownbomes drlnk•, very raob'l for
Ute dulles. must drive.. ~"':l:r~!? totaJ Ml.0180.orS»ell.
"creation proiram La• .• alry room w/full ===-=.u'C· ldtt~b-house priv. Pool.
JallDd, J mbone • 8 CM vie OCC. for nap. J~ Ula,.._ n--d. emplayed non amoUr. ... ._ Moderate drinker. male. 7141644-1900 Jdeal lot' &ood student.
SttT mo + ahr, utU. New~-2·3 br ~1 ap yrty. Fam.Uy & pet.a:•--------
ok. 675-411.2 Room for rent part. turn.
SO responsible adult. 1 mi
2 Br, ~uge deck, w/'riew. ·from beach, must. love Lee Liv Rm, 1 blk SO bch. arum.ala ........ .,.,. aft 12 ~.673-1280 noon • ___.,
Nwpt Hats du~ Nu LAG. BCH. SlOO. QuieL 3124 Br. 2 Ba. pet.a, chUd o.K. neighborhood. For yng. ~1mo.646-11n penon.OM993
LACASAILAHCA
BAYLEAF APTS· 1 & 2 WESTCLIFF. Adults, n S.-.rRffttals 4200
bedroma, unf. • From ~la. 1 or 2 br. 17 ••••••••••• .. ••••••••••
$240. Di.ahwasher, pool, estcllff Dr. apt 18. 3 blks to bcb In Laauna.
laundry. AduJlS only. 329 Lie teeluded 2 Br. poot, lbc' w/klt. ti~ 6. Avail
DO pets, S2185. lit & lat +
....................... Baclt., l & 2 IR
A•all. How--SSO Dep.
AJI utils s>Q., cpt.s, drps.
pool, lodry, Cac's. Adults ---------1
S275. Near new 2 Br. 114 ba, patio, ga rden.t-'---------
Adulls. no pets.
_TSLMgmt 642-1603
HOWREHTIH~
2 br. 2 ba, all blln1. frpk,
encl. gar. Balcony. patio,
lndry rm. 1325.
TSLMgmt 642·1603
MESA PINES
Brand newt Studio, 1&2
bdrms 5:226. l'l8S & S350.
Occupancy avail. Au g.
Beaut 1&2 br garden
apt.~ Din rm, Mhwhr.
frpk. P\'l patio. Nr
Irvine Ind area. 557 21141
WALK TO BEACH!
•Beautifully l~caped
•F1replaces
-Gas heatlng/cooking pd
•Adultsonly/nopets
CASA DELSOL
21661 BrookhUTSt, HB
150 I Wutcliff Dr. -----~ . Newport Fin~clal Ctr . 3_B_r_2~-Ba Townhouse. 2 L--*J Offk• Spac•
car 1ar, pool, 1 ml from Callon Site Manager bcb. Adult.a. only 1425 __ m_4_) M2 __ ·_3l_l_l_e_xl_24_6_
mo.631·1249or54H472 DB.UXIOFRCES
Comml Ii: incbtl spaces.
200 to 2CJOO sq. ft. M low
uasr1q.ft.La1Nlguet& Ml•slon Viejo areas.
Handy to S.D. Fcwy.
QIU:CIHfOO
Alreott Offices -,h flONTHFRtE
Full Ml'Vlce. No lease re-
q'd. 200.eoo aq. ft. Plenty
of par1Un1. 20s; S.E. Bristol St, Newport
BldJS'MOtt
--
Add 1t .•• Bulld 1t ... aper lt. .. Hemmer It ... Carpet SERVICE it ..• Cem nt lt ... Wire it. •. Hoo it ... Clean lt...Move
it. .. Pr s 1t .Paint It... ii It .. Plaster lt ... Flx It. ..
lifdw.ct • .,. C..,.. w•lt• °""""'111... h ....... .._., ~ -....~......... P~/P•• *t 9toofln9 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• ;;r ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
a•J s.rv ampoo "1tom clun s.wtn1 A Otttan •l 1t'a LAWN S ! RV ICE· C AP EST haulln• In llou1tcluoln1 wHkly. Paint y C Ke cu~ruJ quality wallpiper ROOFS instilled facto ·
TalP IAJlGE110 C-Oluc briahtaa•r.. wht t.t. Al>o alttratlon1 & ''Charlie The Clipper.. . Fr .. u. CHEAP! Good work. Good refa. •·-r•ft!t'xl!f'r •St~·-· l'aniina fretesUrnates direct: estab'I 35 ·''rs. l.M.U.,&A qulOmh\bl .. ch Clean <'l.Llttom dtape.rte11 CdM . M 0 W , EI> GE & ·•or~l390 Exper. ,..~ ~ • ·~ .....,., 'ssl·aM · Call Hnold Gunp. ~ U?-Ol• !Iv, din rm. hall ats . Ava f.iO.U• VACUUM Llcanaed. ~~--•~• 875·9$89 2&ory&MS.lotrl4Srm :M9-2961 nn 17 50, C'OUCh 110, chr -TSll·821M N. B area only. ~-'"1 J>r1cn Incl matl''l-labor fltasht-/1...Jr ------• Guar •llm pct odor. 8ectrictl ---....................... M...., 'I Guar:lnard. Free eal. .. ....... .;z-.~-~•••••••u ROOl'"S FOR LESS
•••••••••••••••••••••• Cl)& repair. U )'rt eapr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• E" pert J a I> In e I e Want a REALLY CLEAN ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ted.553.0134 or636-70M VERY NEAT PATCH All types. loo<~ F1na!1c·
1>o work m)'Hll. Refa D..ICTRICAL SERVICE Gardener. Compl yard HOUSt:;! CaU Glnaham Brtclcwork. Small Jobs. JOQS .. TEXTURE In!(. Free Est. Lac. Vr\ll baby11t, my hcMM.
\\ C.\a •• D•Y• OlllMl-0744
~l.OIOl. ·CA.U.St15hr,"SMALL 1trv. Cleanup. Pree eat. Olrl.FteeestS4!-512a Newport, Cotta Mesa It PROFESSlpNAL Paint· r.-etest. 193-Ha8 Bonded. Insured. Call --------1 JOBS w.uu HJ"'483 aft. lpm . Irvine S75-31'75tv" tn1. lnter1 Exter. Reas, anytime. 894-0421 C.lllrtfL AcouaH' -Windowa/ltouucleanlnJ · · work cuar 6-12·0386 ,._..._, -........ At... ................ u ..... H~ IJectrtc Gtfttrd Ser•lc•• Good ratea ·Good refs Mevlng F4l ........................ Tia.
....................... ~m)' Aco~Uca · Qu•I 1Jcl21138 tl~S 81174 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call Mr. Lynn 636-7711 ....................... : ~rk.riState lie. ~,1r HOMESAVEIUI Plilinb •••••••••••••••••••••••
PRCJl'BCT Yuur lloma, •prayed cell1n1i. rt HAIN OrtYMANI :ICarpebl nt~'. IMMACULATE CLEAN· CITY SERVICE L; mex~a~lc~=-·~. ln1 la a.atlnt A aJr eon'. ~A'.\IUIC !!LE. Ntew m omc. etc Rea. r.t• p&Jr1 1u1r Uc tmel$ e eel ca • p um n1 "' . MOVERS "I dlUon1nt Free est 110 ... MO< c . uee es . sm.
for f;H Hl ull Jim tr..t.t531-ilUO • G••"""9 noora6*Wl,'47·Z'187 IBNESTG. YouOES7ERVEthE LOCAL&STATE·WIDE WORK GUARANTEED hr. Hon~•t" reliable Jobs welc.-ome. s34HMI> .-,._ -••••••••••••• ••••• • • • •• • 7S9-037 a.& Hrs 1 d E ..._ I 0 -•• M 'C OK aft S -------------ic-td/Coac,..fe WE!:DlNO·CLEANUPS HANDYMAN ays Jntedor/ xtr . ...-ee est. aerv re. UO#Jn, , . ----·-C.pcuAa ....................... WeeklyMalntenance NOJOBTOOSMALL AUce'sHousecleanint. i~t=-.~ 2Syrsexp.642·0295 751·3UO Tr.e5-Mic•
•••••••••••••••••••••••ON!!· MAN Crew. S rra ex· P'ret et1t 642·9907 675-2"0 ~.:· ~;~•!.e~~ . ·--Know I e 1 Pa l.n l In i . DRAINS CLEARED •••••••••••••••••••••••
Carpentr1. any t ype. pr pounng • n1u1hll\J. Handyman: Exper ttlla· · lnt 'Ext. commercial FROMS3.50 Removine. trimming Pwl, doon. de. Ab< Set:rourownforma.a.av~ f'tof1G••Hr ble painting cabinetry PaiRtfng;P.,..;nt apts. residential & Cal1751..Ql42 l01>Vtn1.rrest.Jic.ins.h
Cornm'I. lk/ut. Alt 5, muney.~13423 Act aow! ror c ocnp etc'!IQ-8046' 'WOMA='i Would lllte ••••••••••••••••••••••• mobilehomes.838·1120 . ~eat•yr~.T0~645·~'
5e2flt CEMENT WORK· P1tllOI, mamt. ol lawnt. shrubs -housecleaning job. 7 yrs QUALITY PAINTING Anyplumban1.wateraer~ Remo,·als. trimm1n,: & trees Reli. & comm -A exp .in Palm Springs •LowatPrlce1 YOUNG !\fan. 5 yrs expr leaka. bathrm encl F , L 'd
t"ramtni. tuush, cemodel. s1dew a lk1 . v 3 r I 0 us Mcweeney, M:J.51.24 .Gt-ng area. 963·3458 •Houses/Apta. lnt/Eitt. in wallcovering. Free ceramic ll le. Reas rr:rma ;r~si.ulC repairs. Lie. Quick rlatwork. Hl·l979 or ---••••••••••••••••••••••• •WorkGuar. Refi;. ests.645-8576,Andy 832·2'68 ~-yinsur ·
aenlce Wrk c uar 416.&34S Gardenln1Servlce: clean Skaploader, dump truck, HOUSECLEANING wrth •Free Est 552--0675 ·-·-• --wa-..1...w Cl j
!IQ.Ult · ,.~ up & baulln&. weekly htullng. tree work, arad· a PERSONAL TOUCH · Quality WQrk . Int/ext. P'r'Opftiy •• .'::' ..... :!':'.~ ...... -_.--.o--maintenance. Reasona mi. demo. etc 751 ·3930 Reliable, refs. 5:)8.3718 PETERS PAINTING Avg. rm. S3.S. Refs. Free Monog11Mnt . c.-,.t W•lce ••••••••••••••••••••••• ble rates. rree estimates Expr'd Reas Rate a est. Dan. 831·2898 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Window Washing! Rea!.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Speclalaz1n1·Buildlnc Me 4 30 k f R CARPET WINDOW F E t c 11 G · --Orange Ct I P Reliable work Rer .. ~rpetManw1Ulayyours Arch OHien Planes ror ~~ll:or:.:-498~r on HaulifkJ FLOORCLE,ANlNG ~~~ s. a ene Int/Extdependable.reaa. Pro1M1mt1'1.ra~vAprpeopals f'reecsl Mark.673·4"37
.or mane. Repairs Add. residence apt. Xlnl ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dutch Maintenance freeesUmate.~allJay Aopprallals.Ed534-6840 -----
cluruni too! Guar wor refs.NB 646·1573 Reliable Expr Japanese Hauling, movlna. cleanup ServiceS3T·LS08 PAINTING Int/Ext. Ex· '45·7965 ---NOTICE
t bi F Gardener. Reaaonable. $7/up. Treework. Reas, p'd honeat neat Reas - -how Daily Pilot Class 11 Jt~aviogs. re R.J. Huffman & Son. Gen freeea.t.64S-S230 Mike. fast. rreeestM2·•S97 Houaecleanlne·Windows· Lic:d. Dave9&4.1o4s · Paint Your House Remodet & R_,air 111ed ads display theu est. Contr. Custom Alt & Add , thorough. al) area. Yrs Free Est. Low Rates. e.•••••••••••••••••••••• messafes with legibiUl~
p at 1 o s, cabinets. YARD REJUVENATION OCC Student. BIC ~ T exp. 543.2313 Shields &Clark 646-2986 W.R. Parker Const Co. l'nd Impact? Our ads, w•
SELL idle items with a rorm1ca. New const. Res Clean.ups, commercial .truck. Trash, tree trim, SELL Idle ltems with • Spee In rm add & are proud to say, reall~ Da.ilyPilotCluaifiedAd. & comm. 8'6·4644 ,-& residential. Call Bo~ etc. Randy 642·S703. Have something to sell'! OallyPllotCluslfledAd. Have something to sell? remdl'1. Llc#306624. aet res ults . Phont
61%·5678. S48·4S41 Lie. Bondest 646-9288 M·F after 5pm. ~9·3006 Classified ads do Lt well. 64i-5678. Classified ads do It well. bonded 581·9150. 642·5678.
OfflceR .... al 4400 lusiMSI Lost&found 5300 PtrSOnals . . 5350 HtlpW..ted 7100 HtlpW..ted 7100 HtlpWmhcl 7100 HlfpW..tH 7100 HelpWanttd 710f ••••••• ,............... C>pporh.l~y 5005 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~
EXICUTIVESUITES •••••••••••••••••••••••FOUND : Poodle. sm •AUDITIONS!• ACCOUMTIMGCLK Auto Mechanic or mec BABYSITTER needed. BUSBOYS COOK
Deluxe private omce, fem Vi c Fountain Thr associated Students Mortgage banking firm helper. Expdr le tools. my home. mature Exper. only need appl~
personalized phone cov Restaurant Valley. 963 3976 of UCI will be holding In Orange Co. haa an im· Wag ea open. Dau woman, over 40. Good Days & nifhta, 11pply daa· an person. Harry·i1 Nev.
erage, secr e lar lal FullLIQ.LIC.·seats l OS. audit1onaTorthelrl977·78 med. openin& for IUl ac-Toyota Volksa Porsche w;chlldrentocareforl3 ly, 7AM. MlCasa, 296 E. York Bar & Grill. 424:
service. Easy freeway Excellent parking-good Lost· older min1alur~ iqooN CONCERTS on ctng clerk w/exper. in 542·243' rno.oldboy.Owntunsp. 17thSt.C.M. Martingal e W'lrf'
lft'cess. 666 Baker St., lease large dance floor male salver Poodle. Saturday and Sunday b k 111 ti Mon.Fri. Mesa Verde NewPort Beach nr o.c
C.M. Nr. OC Airport On P~cificCoast Hwy. · w out med1e1ne will die September24. 25, from 11 p~~ asr:c~~~ l· ~a ~isy Automotive TO area.CM. 751·9630 Bus Person, part time. Airport
!546-2982 Reward.S46·2848 :i m to 4 pm. For more Thompson at Unlcal MEW AU Apply in person.~ E. · •
inlormahon or an ap. Mortrage, 7141963•7873. DEA.LHSHIP IEAUTY ?i>ast Hwy. Snack Shop Cook. Head Exp ne~ .::r:n"::J;.!~~~~'.C::or f~i:"~isssT~abl~Y~~m L~~~ Point men t • ca I I E.O.E. Orvlne Auto Center> Accepting applications • Salary ~pen. Apply ir
Downtown H.B. 963·1243 Halls area. 83().3978 m4 l833-S547 HAS IMMEDIATE now for full time Recep· Cafeteria, lrill cook. S person. 2007 So. Coasi
Xlnt Pbot0Stud10, Lab
Small Store.
DwnlwnHB.
963· 12'3 or 960·3224
LAGUNA BEACH
Deluxe oHice or art
studio. Coast Hwy.,
ocean view. prlv. park·
ang. 600 Sq. ft. S3JO, Mo.
Realonomlcs 675·6700
--------PtrSOnal SerYlcH 5360 ALTERATION woman, OPENINGS FOR: • Llonllt&Manicurists. dayt M·F Company _Hwy,La!._8~·_494-8223.
F'ound Bi -focals, 811 ••••••••••••••••••••••• must be exp'd. Lillian's Callfor1ppt. Tue-Sat benefits. Call for appt. COOK. S4.00 per hour. ap
Corona Beach, Sat ChrtstlanCounselhng Dress Shop, So. Cat. .AUTOMICHAMICS Karen10Beautylnat. 752.7113 ply btwn JPM & 4PM
moni. 640·5298 Healing of Memories Plaza Experienced. For Lin· <714 l7S2·9541 Cashier Over 11 Appl; Ch a r I es Di c k en ~
LOST: Blk. male Terr. Joy Coykendall. O.S L. coin-Mercury & Kooda BEAUTY Oper. needed. R 01 ~ma r ·Y · S 1 n Restaurant. 3344 E_
mix w wht on chest & By ap·pt 646·7841 .AMw•rServPIX cars. Full company Stations for rent & Clementelnn.492·6103 CoastHwy.Cd_~. ---
't523CAMPU5l>l:IRVIME neck. Very nervous! Vic Wanttoworkdays,afler· benellts & paid vaca· Manicurist who does c k Cl
Paularino & Bristol, CM. INVESTIGATIONS noons &evenings ln N.B. Uons. Acrylic nails. Hair CASHIER, dependabl
1
e ~~ia~[i~Petri<·~:n'!.: !ni
Great Opportunity 556-8168 All types • Missing & CdM areas'? Work Therapy,963-0717 resp. woman. Full & p,l train Rer5 req Perma·
on gros~ Sl42.000 sales. . persons.826·9648.24hrs f i time or p /tlme . LOTM&t eves lnclud. Apply art · t · R r Make neLprolit or ove LostCockat1ellnNewPort EmPlo & Weekends a must. Xtra Jmmedlateopenlngs. BEAUTY-Person for 5pm Gift Shop OC ndnl pogi ion oom or
22'4. lnvestjustSlOO, BehchatJamboree Rd& p,..
1
vm:t pay for exper'd cleanin&ElTorobeauly A!..pc;rt. • ~3~cemenl. Appl)'
CHOICEOFFICES including lge inventory. Cst Hwy. Call Newport •••• ~f.C!~ ••• ~~••••••••• operators. EOE. Call DISPATCHER ulonP/T.831-4743. CHILDC RE h
Adjoining Westminster Retail & repair plumbing Dunes, 644·0510 ask for School Ii 64().-0812 Female required. Ex· Bkkpr;AHlstant, Full· yr old ~lrl.' ~Jn ~~~~---------Cl vic Center, 14282 shop Cull549·2330 Mrs Murphy.sp11ce120. s H 700 perienced. Fullcompany time. Mature. Call W>-5464or979·2651 COOKS
B h Bl d d PH.LAIMBEERRLTY . . -lnstruc °" 5 benefit•" paid VICI· """'7"EAMrs.VanHorn. Applyinperson.3·5d;ai eac v " secon &INVESTMENTS. LOST .• ~urm e.~e cul,••••••••••••••••••••••• APilTMl!MT t1 ,,..,. _., CIYIL-.Af .... llR ly, 27750 Crown Valley noor, 1792 sq.ft & 896 male, Leroy . CdM EMBARRASSED By poor u•..a•Amt ODI. ....., .. "
sq.ft. Call Paul. 979·8889 area. $600 REWARD No spelling? Send for ~""" .. ---BO OK KEEPING Desliner·Calculator. Parkway, Mission Viejo
orMS-1260 MOCMytoloan 5025 questions a s ked booklet to help. Spelling StudloforoneorlBrfor FortheaepoJ:~·app-MACHINE OPERATOR Donald E .. Stevena. Inc. F.qualOpptyt:mployer
••••••••••••••••••••••• 759-121-8:759-1222 Rules, P.O. Box 10881, 2.+amallincometoful· lytoHoward c ee. & lite bookkeeptne. 1828Fu1lertonAve,CM. Small office for rent. S30
mo. Placentia/17th, C M.
759-0J17 early am.
lv manage ~ntal units IA Y Fl.ADUOE insurance Agency Fred 646-891.S. ---------
ht, 2nd & 3rdT.D.'s Lost Siamese cat. nr cor Santa Ana, 92711· Encl. on Cliff Dr .• L11una Uncolft.Mercwy Jamu. Laeuna Bch. -•--------
LOANS AVAILABLE Jordan/Michelson Irv. ~ & your name & ad· Beach. No peta. Must be 16-UAutoCenterDr. Contact Mrs. Bradley CLERICAL •COOKS•
Creditnotimportant. Call551-0730. d ess reliable & have re· IRVINE 494·1087 or S0-3058 Night Shift. Exper. DayShift DeJux~~~d~~frice for lrobr. 493-3102 FOUND F 1 Be-I-Jobs W.t~. 7075 ferencea. Call Mr 130-7000 E.O.E. helpful. but wlllln& to Apply In Person • : ema e ae ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• Wightman497·3'93 train resp. lndiv. Job re· Mon·Fri afler3pm lse. 504 sq.fl. 2 large SWING LOANS German Shepherd. On Relocatini lo Orange Automotive ••BOOKKEEPING q'• naure a'pUtude, typ-TMA.ftci.nt Marin.,.
rooms. S360 mo. 1151 2nd &3rdT.D'S MacArthur nr UCI on County from San Fran· Apt manager, ~ouple SALESPERSON CdMrealtyanddeveloP.: l.at&lG-ke.y.Xlnlwork· 2607W.CoastHwy, N.8 Dove St• Ste 285, NB 8 i 1 6. St a r v Jn & ! cisco area. Female with need~ for 40 umt com· ment firm needs exp d ln1 cood1 4r beoefih
833-9651 b~~Yt.~~~~~by~ 673-6168/832-0242 14 years experience plex an Costa Mesa. Lotaoltrafftc 1lrl Friday, exec/secy w/Fuhion ls.land firm. ---------
lusiMH Rental 4450 manaa1n1. sellinc, de· Husband may work out. Greateami.ofpoUDt.lal type. Must have con· Hrs6Pm·1:30am. Call ani---------1111!11
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~t,~~~11:.>1a1~ F~e~~r~~lllon~~:1~ monatratin& sewing Apt+salary.831-29.50 SelliD&TOyot.a"Volvo atructlon bkkPI exp. 5.CP1,MM360. COOKS
Oachs h u n d Va c . machines & vacuums in ARTISTIC AllLITY You need automotive CommunlcationUllla es· ---------4 DELUXE OFC'S Money Wanted 5030 Goldenwesl & Talbert retail store. Xlnl ex· aalea experience to aenUal. Salary open. CLERICAL TINE Daya llNlghta Avat.1.
Conr. nn .• a eat 25. all ••••••••••••••. ••. ••••. 960-15~6 peraence w Ith Elna & and Layout work. lntel1. quality Welton la Co. 81$.8900. FasbJoo Island tlnaoclal Appl)' in penon
paneled. sm. whae in re 20o.0 RETURt-1 ' Viking includ1n1 classes. oulfolng personality a CallSalaMana1erat IOOICl(~r.a firm ia Jookinl tor 9am·4pmMon·Fn
ar. 1 or 2 yr. lease. Lake . FOUND· 2 Grey kittens For more loformaUon & must tor cu.st. service. MAIQUIS MOTORS .. ..--employee wanUn1 a SM.ACK SHOP
Forut area. Kent On :sS.000. and up. on Highland in Dover reference call Nita. Mature person pref. Sal Mls&ONVIEJO 2 Yrs A/P•'/ & Gen'l challen1ln1 oppor. Need 3'46E.CoastHwy,CdM
Harkins. Secured by free & clear Shores.642·0857 646 ·7217 eves or opn Write: Orville lll·211049S.1210 ledrer exper. req 'd. resp., accurate lndlv. F.qualOpporEmployer 114·S81·9393 real estate. 556-0338 weekends Paki:atz 24001 Muirlanda Phone 673-7730 lo ar· who can h•ndle phones In Mort~I Trust rou_·~u: Sm Terrier Poo· ' EIToroCA92630 Automotive ranae an appt. for In· mature buslneas like --------
SHOP RENTALS Oeids ' 5035 die, gray ·while, fem~le. SALES CONSULTANT ARTIST/FreeLance • New Detail Shop need.a tervlew. manaer. Many co. COOKS ~:~M:v:~LLlGE •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• ~r~bJrs~.fu~nt;H1.Bc :,e~~rledi::~8:t~;ec:!i;;: For illus or children/· Topwaee:e~~id. E111lne BOOKKEEPER, Jr. =~Jf.rta~rJe!!!t;.: Full ume & Part lime
Several available from LOANS 93 968-6956 ground, seeking P . time !:~!'..e~ :!~'i~;8,i3.~epen~ Steamers, enJ palnters, Some fen. bkpg. exp. & Ctr o NB 644-4380 k shift.I. Apply in person S65tol430perrno. workOCarea. Extensive ..... bulfers & pohahera, up. averaae typln• skills for~yfflJeman. • 15 2305 E . Coast Hwy, Also 2nd TO Loans FOUN D : Lg New · backeround in sales to & lnk samples to Read· hol1tery shampooers, needed for CPA ofc. Snack Shop #l
t~u rr Whitl'. lkdl~r FairestTermi;sincel949 foundland St. Bernard wide variety of In· lng De•elopment. 1.5562 check out. pick-up ltde 833-0110. CLERICAL FREE-------
SattlerMtCJ. Co. dog, wht. male. needs dustrial/manufacturing Graham St, H.B., Ca. Uvery.Appl,yat Speclallaln1 In all COOKS
/<,\ll '~""'""'' u1.,1 N 0 I/ o I I h/!I ol(,3() 642•217 1 54S·06l I flledlcane 548-7055 concern. Will assist In 92849. 205Hurbor Bl, CM *~ SISO• clerical type, bankiol & Breakfast ShlCt & Dinner
---_ FOUND : Puppy Afghan. setun1 up sales rorce, ASSEMIL!RS r ~1030 Youngiroup,creaUve adminiatratlveJobs. Shift. Apply in person.
---------Retired couple has money gold, tan color. Vic l9th & market p I an n In 1. Fl & d bit & f 1 Alto Fee Jobs Ma Barker's, 212 E. 17th
FREE RE"1Tf. to loan on 1st & 2nd Wbitl1'er. c ... I. h•• tags strate~y. time " ler· rst aecoain .-a1 t.,. ""--·~,.UC:hTceaaB !p· L 5404015 St,C.)4. ~ .. ..., l g l l Must like det 1~ work AVON .'".,... .. .,. · · C t 1 ------TSD's. Agent 496-0800 836-821-5 n ory mana emen • e c. .._ be able to work with Em.Jo.,en Pay All Fees oas • l'V\l\U~ "-wa1•~s-. So. Girl w, own Scty business For more Information • .,. ~ Pe---.-1 A"-"lt vvvna • .. """ ~ c·an work for herself flbergless. Li.z Reinders Agency • """u'"' •"'m Laa, CM. NB. P;tlme & Desk, new IBM Selec· FOUND: l Boy's Ba.lte. vac reply lo Ad No. 953, Daily Cam bro Mff. I .... r.n ir.VTll • ,. •sH, 4020 Blrcb St, Ste 104 2'790Harbor Bl, C. . F;time. Coffee Shop ex·
tnc. prestigious orhce. HO IS E IME l<tthStH.BCallloiden CostaMeaaCa92926 ay, un . · Eamin ood-h ewportucac _...., CLERK for H .B . per Refs pleau W TH T Smith & Dwyer Schls. Pilot. P.O. Box 156-0. 7601Cl H t Bch I ._...... llOAl"A~~ • N n-b ...... 0190
loc. oppoa It e 0 . C. (or job seekers to check tifv 536.2719 . . <W. of Beach Bl. So. of n arbrre ~ o~ CaJHor Appt/Estab '65 druptore p/tlme Ex· Charlie's Chill Ot'c. 1714 I
Airport. Tr~de Lo an~. tht' Daily Pilot Help · ---L.V N would like relier Garfield) u . :': Ae~O~ ~e•:,~C:~ per. not~~. Min aie 24. Sti-0351.
ph's 8 30·5, Mon·l"ri. for Wanted class1f1cation. H P"°'onals 5350 work p/thne .Xlnt rera. E.O.E. _, F tatJve. Call 540-70Cl or 847·2563. -------
Mamt Consulting Firm. the iob you. want IS not •••••••••• •• • • ••• •• • ••• W 111 d o I 1 v e · 1 n · ASSISTANT wanted for ZenitJ\ T·l.359.
tncome tor xlra work. there you might consider Drinking problem•• 2\3 lllS7·1814. busy sa Ion. Mu st bel•--------
7Sl-5741 otrerin& your services Call Alcohol Helpline Conscientious, hardwork· licensed Heady s •
1-..&.-trtol R-t_. .. 500 with an ad in the Job 24 hrs a d.ay 835-3830 Ing Colleie irad wi'l yr 67:;.oaoe • • Babysitter. RELIABLE
.-.,, 111111 ,. Wanted category. Phone for 2 yr old. M'/ home •••••••o••••••••••u•• 6'2·5678 PREGNANT? ofc exp. seeks job where ASST, MAM.AGER 9~. $25. wk. 548-46T•afl. Caring confidential gd typlnc skills & ability \ counseling & referral. to d.eal withe public are Youn a men's retail Babysitter mature to al
Abortion. 1r<ioption & I m Port. ant . I 1O0 sportswear. Co. benefit.a. baby & he'lpful 8 yr old
SlOO AkeepAins.E Minimum. Write Jean. 0.11 Mr. Reid)' 55&-&141J Varled hour1. 586-08$2 0
••••••••••••••••••••••• ,PC R 547-2563 9531 Blackfln. HB, CA AUTO 981-~1aft.8 ---------1 LIMO.A & VICICI 92648 J4CH~NIC 8abywllter Harbor Vie
Outc.U Men•-Realstered nUnl!z Mile. ExpaieQ<:ed auto luq.. Elemental')' area.t H.B. f!---111t.-of-'7tt-! Private duty. r;x~r. up mechanic for ntwJY r,ton·Fri Me·6502 aner 5. ,.._.-.,... ~ 4!M·5Sl2 09entni hU~·t'1a• Servlne all Oranae Co. 710,.1 CA!nter hi San Clemaril~ Bab)'aitter wanted Mo
1135-'nlS Hetp WCIUlhcl " Mutt have scope •ltd •n· thrU Wed. 7:45 to 6: ••••••••••••••••••••••• fr•red experience' At-itrts. boy lOmot. Perm ..
•MICHELLE'S*
Oui.call Massage
10AM·2.AM 731·""2
Sphituol Rtoder
1815 So. El Camino Real
SariCl.emenw. Fully Ile
For •PPl• 492·7*
tractive salary & ex· reliable. C.M. area. 5'ln·
ceUent working c:ondl· dy,aau31.2or5G-7'32
Uona. Must be clean cut, O.b'/lltt.er Matute, t Mo.
aa1reu1ve & nl•t old. Vic. Santa llabtl a orl~ted. £1cellent op· or• n i • Ave , c M • portuolty f6r advance· 131.JUhtl6pm
rnent: can 13();5808 da1 · oreventn•todnte~1'. BAllYStrr£.R·M1 bome.
.Noa-Fri. 7AN~:•·"''·
l:aGPM .. :IOPM, 1tilttins 5eptll;~
$'1 " ·~ r'\1 ·.~UllOCK'S O~~WllSUIR~
LOI ANOIL&a
P'ALM eP'fllN09
WOOOl.AN.0 MILL.9
N&WP'O"T NACH
c:&.IYK TfflST
\
T&AQIE&S MeCkld lo
Qriatin School. t Bto0lbu.rtt, Fountal
Valle)'. IU·3Sl2 6
~ 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... 1005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Teleph11 S4llH
a111 to siad:• money! Wonderla'nd • Cao you sell on th
s*oM! TOp s Ul our bw.1 Of Antiques!
nes:s. '31·38'1<>, a:)k Co HUG E warehouse tt.~·. crammed with over 500 _______ ....
Telepbooe Siilles-Advert. music boxes. n1ckelo-A deon pianos. circus ot· (alcy. fllJ.l & p;Ume. gana. wall clocks.
4 Great POt.. Sal+ comm grandfather clocks,
m-Mi. fascinating antiques.
Telephone Tool Roo Over $1,000,000 Wonh
• Salt'!!s·Eara to sao.ooo+. U Locations. Otance Co.
& LA. Great benefits, security & rapid advan·
cement. Call Republlc --------=---• Distributors, Inc. Mr. Roy. 714i834·9088.
Telephone Sales
YOUOOH'T
HAV!TO
STAMDOM
YOUR HEAD
TOftND
-AGOODJOBI
Time-Life Libr:iries bus
absolutely the rines t
p,·ume sa~ Jobs :ivalla-
ble in Orange. Co. No
door to door & no pre· ssure tactics. We use a ________ __.
Western
1:~cr:.H! :rm~t: :!ic
PUBLIC F\1RNITURE
*A~TION• TCMlih7cJOPM
DAILY PtLOT
·SO.CAUF'S
LAI GEST
tte«ot•'New" Motw
Home Relltala. OvW 140
llT1 model; toe~ rrom: unoa;•. Insurance lfiC!JUded Dale'• RV Rentals. tnr en•>~
Brand new 21• Pace Ar·
~ mtr hm. AvttU for
rent AUi 27th op.; l!fo ·~/pd.a. 55f.01'9
,
I
Your ''Much More" Car Store
GIVES YOU A MU~H MORE
. WEEKEND
7 5°/o of cars In
stock specially
marked and priced
· ready to go.
BARWICK DA TSUM
'ol It/ tf\ t 11r It 1 '•I
8 JI· I J 7 S 49 J. l l7 S
~I
•Kl:! 1'1 UI ACll lll VO
llU,... t llll• TON Hl/ICH
R\} ;,•111 1110U·\1;•
IMPORT C:ARS
ALL MODELS
WE
MEED
CLEAN
USEDCAlS
HOW
CALL PAPPY
540·5630
IOllXSO\' & so~
• LINCOLN Mr BCURY
Sales·Servtce-Leasing
Roy Carver.Inc.
Rolla lloyce L B~W
1540Jamboree
Newport Belich 640-WC
'71 BMW Bavaria. reblt
fnl, 'r8,<XIO m1, ~nt cond. MOOO. 752.0160 days, or
613-8291 eves.
COMl lH&
~1630CSi
MOW OM
DISPLAY
OUR COMl'Ll!TE
IODYSHOP
15 ... 0WOPEH
73 CAPRI
<t spd. stereo tape. V6.
Blkon81k. Ltt' 111JER
SUH
1l6SI~,......,_
CHrcMn 9716 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BMW RESALES '73 FM. Auto. Xlnt cond. 1969 2002 $7,500
AutomatM:. alr cond .. & <213)!~63-7255
~~~~~r~~:tA~'4~l.one Datsun 97ao •••••••••••••••••••••••
19722002
Auwmauc with au-cond.
One owner t•r.
(1.21FTQ).
19722002tfl
•speed. air cond.: stereo
cassette & maea.
<S2'7FGX).
1974 2002
4 speed, AM/FM & only
23,000 original miles.
Supersharp! (030KYT>.
IE.AT THI! PRICE
IMCRIASEl!I
96NEWCARS
ATTHEOLD PRICES
All models now avaUa -
ble. Call or see us before
you buy I!!
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
2M5HAllBOR BLVD.
5404410 540.02 'l
I a 74 2002tll . 76 Oat.sun 8210, 21,000 mi.
"7 13100/orr. Xlnt cond. 1731
c 4
4 speed, air cond., s un Superior , CM. 642·2434 .roof & stereo cassette, _:.___;___ _ _;.,.,. __ _
lOOheels. (569MC1''). '75 2ROZ. Air , ta pf.
radials. $5500 or best df·
197 6 2002 rer. Eve14 768-4159
4 speed with stereo Bil cassette. Superb!j
<400NMV).
73Datsun
•llMed.~-...... rlllio. e>w ot a lllM. I~
5 1699
Bill MAXEY
TOYOTA
1•ll l l1t~••llut ••'e\~~
MUNflNC..14.."t4ll4 (.t4
SPECIAL SALE
THIS WHICEND OML Y
s5195
Ser.16e018 "'9t a-Tiwv 1122
..... ill •• r; •;,,......:
. ' . .
· .._,Mew euel..._ M.-UMI ...... Mew t100t.....at-.. Mew . tlOO Aadot. I ported Auto., l,....W · Fr!d!y, August 19, 197"1' • OAILV PILOT DJ J .................. ;:~~ •••••••••••••••••• ;;.-.-;i ••••••••••••••••••••••• i;;; .. -;; ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• !. . Dahun . . 9720 Dahuft 9720 Aafot, fMpot"fed ........ port.cl Auf0t. l•porhd
• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
. .
• ' I I I
J
· 1
I
I ' I •
. * DRIVE A * 'T.? Datsun t200. Gd cond. Dcrhun ' 972u""""' 9132 Mtrc.-S IN1: 9740 n Xlnt mpa. 11600. evea ••••••••••••••••••••-• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Gueu .which Car haler
11 MAD b1Cau11 h has
the world's lou1le1t
locatlonm
• ,.. ........ ,.. ..... "......,......,., ................... ~ ..... ""JOU
.. Nltf.W."-k•ttt.e .............. .. ............... ._.. .......... ,.. .............. .
ttnDATSUH .. 210 ltnDAnUMP.10
2 Door. 4 speed Coupe. 5 speed Demo
1.-it.8'10893087) (WPl.F100214!50)
COW'I
Thia rwe elaalc has
low mileage and 1s
Immaculate! (GYC946~
5 1499
ALHAM8H DATSUN
ANAHEIM DATSUN
ARCADIA DATSUN, INC.
WALLY TOCKEa DATSUN,
INC.
BALDWIN DATSUN
CANOGA DATSUN
COSTA MW DA TSUtl
CUI.YR CITY DATSUN
DOWNEY· DATSUN, IMC.
~ "1A M
' · . ., "•' . : , \
'' • ' ; ~I 1
s 1999
1977DATSUH
PtCena-TlUCK
With white exterior A
Demo with low. low
.miles. (HL620161 192).
53499
lt71HOM>4 cmccoun
4 speed. redlo, hMtw a
·v1nyt interior. Rune Ilk•
NEWI (015MVF).
52699
53773
WEHAVEMAMY
MORE DA 1'SUtil
~MS
* LI L~. * ~l-02t0 T51 ~ 280Z. Air, map, steel 1974 JfNSIEN .... ~""rt __. 2 t Jow
SAVE A LOT - -rads. AM/F M. MOO rnL HIALIY ,,, _, ~ ""• ops. · J9TO Datsun Pkk11p with !6800 840-23e0or~lost • d A~ / F mllee. Mal wheels, SHOP &COMPARF~ shell Good cond $1200 -" 1 pt t • ,.. m many exttu. Top cond.
BARWICK OATSUH S49-10t7 . '19 4 dr DaL~un Rblt eng caasctte. radlala, both llS.000. 211: gsa.250.1 • • · tops & sharp! Only' 11,000 ---------
~Ill I 1t.1tl t ll" .• r.1110 _______ _...._, !ilm o_r best orrer. Call mdes. (6TSRJl'A). 1974 450 SL. 40.000 ml.
!!6 9561> S. Priced-$5230 · XJnt cond, 7~-2'l44 daya. tlJl-131~ 493.))/S
NEWPOR"f DATSUN
FORTHllEST
FLEET PRICES
Call Jim Needham
TODAY!
88800VESTREET Near MacArthur
& Jamboree Roads
813-1300
'71 2AOZ, clean, low mi,
AM/FM 8·trk, ma&a.
auto. air. xtraa. $3600.
675-38&&
53399
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
........ J "''"' •t' ... ,.,
tt VMflH•.f( Hit Ill tt
Mtoe, Mew 9100Mtoe. Mew 9100 ..............................................
HO•DAS
HUGE STOCK
JMMEDIATE DELIVERY
FOOTKlll DATSUN, INC •
MIRACLE MAZDA &I0-12l3 e_v_es_. __ _
21.50.Harbol' Blvd., C.M. '11 • 280SE. loaded, xlnt
645-5700 condition. 62,000 ml.
Aat 9725 •74 JENSIH HEALEY Sl'IOOO. sa&-8901
••••••••••••••••••••••• .Conv. <481KZR> Must 197lt280SLR.ondster, mlnl
1975 FIAT
ROADSTIR • ~ speed, air cond. &
AMi FM stereo cassette. (827NAT>.
Sale 'rieecl-$4675
MIRACLE MAZDA
2i:;o Harbor Blvd., C.M'.
645-5700
see to appreciate, a yr. cond. BQt.h tops. $13,000.
34000 mile wartanLy _n_uc_MI_08 ___ _
available '75 l'tfBZ 450 SLC, fully
$4999 eqwp'd, incl sunroof. Lo
COPELAND JEEP mi, best cir over S20.000.
2001 E. lstSA558-8000 714·'159-1196 eve/wknd.
Mnda-9731 m..sBMwkdys.
••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 :llOSL. Both tops. A beauty. Only 43,000 ml.
673-0728
•72 SPORT COUPE 5-spd, mag wheels, IMMACULATE
AMi FM radio. dual 19744SnSEL. $12,500:
ptpes,blkvinylbard-top, 21 ....._llYd. ~
unary yellow. Good con· COlhl Meta '45-5700 1967 Mlt 230
d1t1on. Ask.ing $19SO or --------• Automatic, air cond ..
make olrer. 846-3818after 1974 MAZDA radio & heater. A nice
Spmor673-ncMandleave RX4COUPE sharp car! <UPY769L
msg for Tammy. 4 speed, r6'io & ateel EZ terms-0 .A.C. 1 yr.
1976AAT Ill
2DOORSEDAH
belled rad i a Is . parts & labor service
(697NPC>. Special this policy avail. Auto Cen·
weekend at ter'a pnce is Jn showroom condition. OHL y S 1999 OML y S 1999 (161PV J). A fantastic savinp this wee~end at SADDLEIACK MAIERS VALl.EY IMPORTS AUTO CENTER
MISSION VllJO IMPORTS
•••• 't '• .. . .. . ~ . . . .... .
83I ·1148 49S· I 10·1
831 ·2'040 495-4949 Dav.-Nabers Cadillac
1425 Baker St., C.M.
'7 4 MAZDA RX·4 ~2 blk east of Harbor Bl
WGM $1795 ___ 5_4G-_9 _10_9 __
1974 Fial l24TC. AM-FM. ' • <032MBY> 67 Ml JSOS
15,000mL Radlab.· KENT 4 dr. l ow mileage.
12100. 494-2130 MOTOR SALES Absolutely loaded & an outat anding buy (ser '7S 131S 4 dr, auto trans. 16292So. Harbor 7915)
AM1FM .Weo, 'A;C, I~ S.A. llf.0710 $3687
mi. XJnt. cond. $3l50. Aft . MOTOR C "'RS 4PM, 552-4136 '73 Mazda RX-S Sta. Wac. ""
XJnt cond. Below fih.sle. , D'B.EGAMCE 75 FIAT X I /9 &-Swkdays548-6526. .626W.17thSAs.t7·9250
!isM~M stereo, Ii ~. Aatot."•w 9IOOA11tos.New HOO
. $4295 ................. ·-·-············-·······
.MIHION Vil JO IMP ORTS .. '• . . .... ..
HJI l!ol" .IYS •104
1973 "Al us .
4 spee~t'1'FM
cassette. '.Michelin
• • • another Santa Ana
Lin,.oln )lerc.-ury· FIRST
1st in sales·-' .
1st in service
Isl in parts
and itow., ••
MOON DATSUN
radials & this car runs ~ .... ~ .................. ~~--111111!'~ well. <309JDR), ' •
'" W. Pricff.S 1225 MIRACLe MAZDA
TAI-VALLEY DATSUN, INC.
LONG BEACH DATSUN
DOWNTOWM U. llOTOIS
IMPERIAL DATSUN, INC.
NEWPORT DATSUll
21.SO Harbor Bl9d., C.11.
•• 645-5700
9727 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Brand Mew '77
HONDA Cars
MANY
To Choose From!
UNIVERSITY
OfdsMObile
Honda C... • GMC
TrllCb
31SOHarbor Blvd.
Colta Kesa 540-9840
'76 Hooda CVCC, 5 spd,
overud tires/rims,
am/fm stereo cassette,
lo mi S342S/bst. ofr.
S3N861.
~Monda CVCC, d.k bnvn,
1 w/aold pin stripe,
radials, mags, xlnt cond,
842·4061or962-6839
'14 HONDA New tires,
twie up. tape deck, CB,
blue, bestotr.6'6-6817
'74 Cl VIC Blue MtrtaJllc,
• Whl V·top, perf. cond.
Must sell! Best ofr.
Lincoln .llen-un· Df'aler
in Orange Count~·
to close
on Sunday
• • • to ;?h·,. our f"ltl,,fo,·f"t"~ a day uf
rc•tit .•• a •l:n "it • th .. ir fut1tili""
.•. aml u clat". to utt .. •ul th~ rhnr•·h
of 1h .. ir c•hoic•;• •••
Ptr1111t• frf'l rr .... ,., ht•>\\'tW thruulfh
41ur m:w ancl U$t-tl t•ar ilw1·lltor,· un S11111la~ ... tlwn c•11111 .. in ~arl~ fur
our
~--e~--+-~.._:1~7~~~·111289;.;.;;.. ____ ~~Cil.r--MQNBAY
SP.ECI.Jf 'E~ •74 HONDA CIVIC
~ SUOOor makeor-fer. Must sen. 639-5e43
1
..
NABERS CADILLA€
''DeVille Sale''
Th Offer: Nob~rs Codilloc. Inc. wul sell nttw
Coup: deVill~s and St1don deVilles which or~
in stock at substantial discounts during the
next few weeks.
The Reason: Automobiles. and Cadillac in
porti,culor are currently selling well in
(:i,itom;a. Nabers' sales of n~w Cadillacs in
t 977 ore running well aheod of lost year s
record-setting pace. ,
However, automobile sales ~n certain other
ports of the country ore relatively slow.
Ther~fore . Nabers Cadillac ha~ agr~ed to ob-
' m •0m Cadillac Division extra allotments of
Sedan deVilles and Coupe deVilles which
norrnolty would go to dealerships in other
States.
The Opportunity: During the next few
weeks you con become the owner of a new
Nabers Cadillac at P'ices substantially less
than you would normally expect to pay .
Nabers Cadillac
2600 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa
Hours: 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. -Monday thru Friday
1 O a.m. to 6 p.m. -Saturday & Sunday
. -t
~1· \ff)N VII 10 IMPOlllS . '. -. . ..
llJl•, .. 11 •9~110•
Leal•
Hew-Used ova too
MERCEDES
OH DISPLAY
Houi• of lmoorts
.\lJTHORJ.ZtD f/MERCEDF.S DEAL 1!:R
0862 Manchester.
Buena Park
521-7250
On I.he Santa Ana Fwy.
1974 Ml1450H
Aulotnat\c. AM I FM atereo, cruise control,
pwr. windows & low
mlles. !M3LRE>.
MISSION Vil JO I ',IPOllT S
~ • I •
dl-1748 .. 9:, 1704
MERCEDES
LIMOUSINES
Low malt:s . 1967
(Ser.0392J Also black
~ch available.
MOTORCARS
D'ELEGANCE
628W.17th SA S47-~
'734SOSEL. drk. blue, ori&
ownr. Serv records.
Superb con d. Wknds:
4714> 499·3548, wkdays:
(213) 793.6645 ___ ........
9800
'72 Mercedes Benz 281>SE cognac white· int, super
clean. xlnt cond. 60,000
mi, orig. owner.~900 or 52'7·2297 ·
MISSION VIEJO IMPOIH~ . . . .. -' .. .. . ...
8J, , 748 •95·, 104 --
·""~.,,;;:
MIS"l<..lN V1tJO IMPORT\ . . ' .. ... ' ~ ~ .
8!'., 74J 495 I lC'•l
Johnson and Son will be substantially reducing every car in stock
beginning immediately and continuing for the next thirty days.
This sale will include every car we have in stock. We must make
room for the 1978 models which will be Atriving shortly. This once
a year clearance is your opportunJtY. to purchase that new car
7!1CA.RIERA
TARGA
s spd, alloy whls. ltt\r
rt!O, atr, Lie 5301,1u~
SIS,495
E<::ot-0\1Y CARS
1974 Qevy Yep Wap1.. Sl599 •cyt _,.._.,_ ,..,.., _&•od
t&dt 1'71KLH
1972 Vn Wapn S3299
• cyt ....... -toe,.._ ... -_...
•llCl•O & -. llllOH'fl
Pa>ULAR INTERMEDIATES
!!1~ ~ i'!!!i.-...E4!
.-.no ' -••'II -• l -... Jop «13111'1)1
1975 F•• Tirino Sqairt $3499
WAGON 111 -" laco°" '" ~ oow , .. ,.no-orv• -11.,.., ,..,,. -~-"'-"' ... """' ..... l •
197' F• fnialb Ciiia S439I
• DOOi' Ill. -~ laeAery ... -• -
...,.,.. _____ .....,.._
11..oi.1 •
7
USED CAR .
.·SALE
s71ooWM .571 ...
MOMTM
. .
1961 IUICK SKYLAB
,---.-..... OCll'Oll~
196' OLDS CUTLASS ..• _....,_low ....... (SUG032~
5.nl119ootcel1 '14000! .. a84, .. ,13"--. Aflft
la ti <M. t4 lllOnlhlv ~on~...._
TOTAL PIUCl-Sl775
585ooWM-sss~
I '72 CHIYSLER HEWPOtn'
QUSTOM. (7350Xll.
1972 CHEVY MALllU
---(831!tJ). 1972 AMC SPORT AIOUT ___ _....(241l'Gll
1973 FORD PIMTO • ~ -"'oond (tnJNJ).
1973 VW SUPER IUG
8llelp <*' (301'GNI().
9'111"'9 PflCI le 12000 OI .. •I 20 tu a 13 ._ AM 161114. IOtf!OdHy _...,..on_...._
TOTAL rRICE-$2635
From 53333
'73 COMTIMEMT AL COUPE =::. ----s3333
•75 CADUJ.AC SIDAH Dmu.I
~0:.t~·~·· .. S6666
• '71 CADILLAC AWi> .... llM. .A:-o-'"~~ s7333
. SPORTSCARS
'76MGI :.v=c:~~ 54777
•) 6 TRIUMPH Tl7
Wit~ e1111rool a al•s5999 COlldtOcrq "31REJI.
AIC:... ........ ,__.We
Al,._ ... TalU.-.
................. Nl•17
,.~ ................
-
~.:r.e! ....... ~·.~~ ....... ~ ... ~-:~.~ ....
YtlliWMM tno YiililwCICJlft t770 VOivo • t 112 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1i·1s···l.'-n·····c1i····~-••••••••••••••••••••••• ~I VWUllrT l';v~l~:. n:a.e cfrK. ORANGE QOUMTY :~~ut~t'!~ ':'~':~ ~='ofter by aizi VOLVO
«iadhlcml UllUiJt), · EXCLUSIVELYVOLVO
OHLYIJ4tl ~a~.1,:::4: ~Y: 1fn'f::~~~~~·r
M• ,,, '· ' '' . '"'' \ rywa1. Priee ~ blwn BUY otLEASE
&o •hi ~.M).U*> DIRECT
· 2 c....-,~t-Ta th QlllJe back to col·
'11 POP TO Cmpr. Lo l•I•· Priced ri &bl! ~ .. ml, Uh new. rn t tell! Slee'IJS5. <•A!FBW) --
OU""81 or U l • UCM • • .;[ ~ S
vw Coovt "JS. S40QO. See • Anaheim 760-2011
1, If I .,. I 11 I 'V•I
Ill 11 s.rvtcel Marine at Parle Ave, a. blnd. • ~ 1 p,.. bus s,1200. Nu ••icM" oout.avAM>. 111u Autos.~ . 5+ brka/line/1bk1, AM/FM '""'°'*°'",_..,., .... ,,,,.._,., • .,., ......
eue deck. t.Ook• fa run Vot•o 9712 RMEUS&QCARS
xl.nt. MGpm, 142·~· •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• 'frl .ChevS' Chevelle. 2 df
"10 VW Bua runa 1ood IEf.ORI YOU Hrdtp w /409 e.o1. G4 new UJW. St2IOO or Mat Silt; YOUlt cond. Gd UNI. l\lkin1
ott. Cati Andy ~i.-ra · VOLVO. ~Ca~aro, 2 dr HJ'dtp
'74 VW Super Beetle, im· See us tor a t.op dollar 327 w /l barre1 • xlnt
mac. cond. New ti,rJ•· estimate! cood. & xlnt tires. Aakina
12i1185orotr.IUM...,_ MARQUISVOLVO . ~·
'68 VW Fastbc-krreblt MJSSlONVlEJO 68 CadlUac Coupe do
efti', nu clutch. braltee 93 1.2180 4n.. I Z I 0 Ville ~ dr J{rdtp, xlnt
etc seoo. 846-~41. cond. Nda new pa.int, you
'73 BUI. auto stick ahlft, "JS VOLVO 2'2GL, 5 apd. choose cotor. Askinl
radio. 12,000 ort1. ml, air, PJS. aw:uf., lealhet' ~aiuar XJ&, 38,000
like new. 12.115.. or offer. lnt, oriJ. ownr. SSlOO. mi, yellow, ln ltlnt cond.
962·3513 F\l'IJ\ ....... 1 . • ..... n:u•nt seeoo.
'74 VW BUS FM tape 1 y '16 Mazda Kotmo, ellver
stereo. xlnl coad., lo mi. ... 090680VROSLED~ ~ w ;burgandy ant.. just
645-9989 .. """" llke new. Will necollate
.71 DUS/CAMPER, S/R With a1r cond. Rum nry purchase priae. P'br all ~ well. <VYR641). T~i.s these.caUJ\ay,iril.'1'ft9 tires + an xlra set. New weekend i~:~~t~a~: ::t:!~~:t.~::: ;;:::t .... ;;c;i
. .,.. VW ood d p 2150 Harbor Blvd., C.'.M. •••••••••• • ..,; ••••• •• -• a coo . vt. 6 ... ~5700 , party. Make offer. ...... *'s5a9 Sate* 675-9747 '70 Wagon, auto, radio. f
173 vw good cond, Wht/blu int. nu rad'4Js.
S2800/Bsl Ofr. (213) Sl.900.640-7087
944.9544 days, 675-2549 '89 STATION Wgn. Xlnt. running cond. SJ.900 or
-,-,.-Su_pe_r_B_u_g-,o-nl-y-22-.000--1 best ofr. frlS.6879
mi, xlnl cond. S2800. '62 Volvo Sedan,
75 RABBIT
4 spd, stereo tape, sunrf,
26,000 miles. Llc. MXH
$3795 ----,---Fn,
ll631 ~dltl~
'70 VW VAN, walk thru.
Foldout bed. icebox.
reblt. eng. S1650. 559.e688
bt wn 8AM·l2Noon
'69 VW, must see! Pully
cuat. Quad soun d
system. Bat ofr. 549-4339
69 VW Camper w/poptop.
Very good cond. $2,500.
~21Slor615-8447
'69 Squarebact. llchl
blue, new muffler. IWO-l238
'72VWBu1origoW1'er. Lo
mi. clean . .t9H743 after 8 pro. •
9915 . "' "
Nabers
·Cadillac Olds .
ti . CUllAS
som-• r.i11..-.•"*Y* ....... ............
IHlll", ,,.,_ redi..n. _... ............. ..... .-..
SONORA WHITE
W!#HITE
SUMMER
SALE
SIPRIME ·PICKUP
•
OrCMCJ9 County's
5eYilleC ......
•
1976 CAOlu.AC
SEVILLE
Split power aeat.
AM/FM stereo w/tape,
cruise control, full power
\&low miles. (Q500751).
$9988
•
...
7
••
~ 0
at BAUER BUICK.
THIS IS YOUR ,.
LAIJ ,(HANCE.J
ALL GOOD THINGS. SQOHH OR LATH. MUST COME TO AM·~ •.
OUR SALi OFFICtAU. Y ENDS THIS SUMDA Y AT 5 P .M. AND WILL IE ..
HIGHLIGHTED IY THE DR.A WING AT I P .M. FOR A IRAMD NEW 15
FOOT SEA SPRAY CATAMARAN WHICH WE ARE GIY.JHG AWAY
· AISOLu1'B.Y . · . ·~
1
Colored sails f ~I
... I
No purchase necessary to be eligible to win
All entries must be received by August 20. 1971
and must be from a licensed driver. There will be one prize consisting of one 15 ft Sea Spray
Catamaran end trailer. The winner will be
selected from a random drawing of all Qualified
entne&. Ttle drawing will take place at Bauer
Motors on Aug. 21. 19n at 1 P.M. The winner
wlll be notified by mall promptly thereafter
Black mesh trampoline !
Boom vang •f
Hiking straf)!>
" ft ; ~
This drawing Is open to all residents of the U.S.
· except employees and their families of Bauer
Motors. its afhhates. sub61dlaries and advertising
agencies All taxes if any. and OMV registration
fee!S will be the aole responsibility of the winner.
Ratcheting main ~heet block
Window in mainsail
Adjustable outhaul. down h1ut
Ad}ult1ble 11b cleats
SO, MOW IS YOUR .CHANCETO WIM A FREE CATAMARAN
AND TAKE AD VANT AGE OF OUR 1977 YEAREND CLEARA CE SALE:
DO ri' tODA Y. THERE HAS NEVER BEEM A BEi I ER TIME TO BUY YOUR BUICK.
Full)' eQUipped inefudlhg pwr. wi~ . e will pwr, seats. electric trunk rerease.
tinted gt•. air conditioning. Landau top.
<;)Ilise oontrol. tltt ~I. etlrome Wheels. AM~eo&.muchmOIWl(Ser.152436)
(Sttc. 7631) Faot04Y Suggested Sticker
Price VT79 85.
,
DISCOUNT
s 120000
Fulty equipped. air -COndltion1ng, PQWtf'
• steet1ng. powet brakes. windows & seat.
crurse cootrot, padded vinyl top. electric door l()ci(S. Ctunlc release.. all the de(ux•
extras. (Ser. 75575} (Stk. n18) Factory
Suggested Stlct«< Price $9831 as
. .. .
'70Sta. Wgn. Kngswd Est.
must sell, xlnt mech.
New tir~. S1795. Ong
ownr. 646-8405
'70 KJDgswood Wgn, xlnt
coodilion. suoo.
49S-Sl60
~
""'IHION VIEJO IMl'ORTS . . .. . ' ... . .. .
73 CONTIMEHT AL 431.1.si;; 41.:..•o.s
MARK IV "13 ~. Auto. Air, Silver ~'111 'power, factory air. w/blk Int. He.Oers, CB.
ult "'bl .• speed control, AM. FM stereo rsdio
leather. AM1 FM stere &ff-4868
tape. vinyl roof-loaded ---------
w1oxtres ~ (81023l l. "nVet.RareLT·l.Air, T·
HOW $4975 top. 4-spd. rw tires. pnt.
Xlnt cond. $8895 or bst
oCr • .MustseU.
9631867
·73 Chevy :i.. ton P.U. 350 ~
V-8 eng. Custom 20 830-7000
RAY FLADEBO£
LINCOLN-MERCURY Cougar ....................... 9933
model. Call963-1988after -------i'73 XR-7 l oad~d with 5pm Corvette 9932 many extras. like new.
------••••••••••••••••••••••• mint cond. must see.
'72 Luv, Air cond. recently CORVETTES $3350. 581-4576 over}lauled, cnslom 4\
shell. $1495. 759-1470 175 CUSTOM 19000 mi,
CHO'CE OF I 2 spoke wbls. WM wr'blue ~
'66 Chevy II, 6 cyl, new Int. S5400. 673-117l ""
brakes, runs good. 1973 THRU 1977 ,
$350. __ 192-02:11 4sC&Automallcs •C~ucar e7. au.\o 396.
C ty• Pr;Pty, P .S, P.-B. ~Int
Chtysl«" 9925 rarNJe oun s d Sl200 SS7 5661 •••••• • •••. • ••••. ••. ••. ~st & Finest con ·• · ·
'75 Cerdoba, all pwr. Selection Dodge 9915
cruise-omatic. AM; F:-1. EZ FINANClNG •••••••••••••••••••••••
vinyl top, $3995. 540·3222 WELEASE 74 Chai. PS. PB, AC.
(9-5) CORVETTES AM.FM. VS. vin top, like
'72 Chrysler New Yorker
Brougham, all oplions. lo
blue. Sl325. 838·9427 or
&iS-2991
HOWARD Chevrof~ new. 30M, S2950. 768-1129
.Dove&QuailStreets '72CRARGER318
NEWPORT BEACH sharp conditiOn
833-0555 $1150. 645-1369
'411 Newport, 4 dr. Sports '67 Yl>tle F/B. Restored ·74 Colt. 4-spd. 27,200 mi.
Sedan Full pwr, A/C. to stock. Superb condi· S2000
new radial tires, :dnt Uon. $6000. Ph 836-55.M 54&-1982
cond. S900. 96.l-267~--The fastest draw m the '66·Dodge. 4 dt. PS. A~.
Find what you want in West . .a Daily Pilo radials. very depeQdSble
Daily Pilot Classiheds. Classified Ad. 642-5678. S62Si0fr. ~0-2491
Autos, New 9100 Aatos. Mew 9100 Autos. New . 9100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
•
7
J
r
l • 0
r
fl i
Ii
JI • • I
• ! I
;;x •
H60 '70 SAT&LITS Gd.
Nibers
cadlll8c .. " ....... ~ .......... lraJillWt. Needs IDl.Dcr
1971.,..YMOUTM wodt. sm or beat. oft.1 __ -"-------·••
26WH.wtw d. aT-&Lm l68000 • '74 SWioD Wp. Air, C
C..w ~ 540.9too ~~·J.~omatlc, ''"· wdiac 9965 spd. Jo mlleace, xlnt ~:V. • brakes, alr .......... ••••••••••••• cond. •1sootofr. PP
ate IHI lloatere1. tcM., cUo a vinyl top. 'alSLdbns V4 auto xbal._sa_i_~ ______ -1• tlltKBZ), EZ term•· ~.a m• ..._ ..:..., ·-•.TOO ml, ori!. cood. O.A.C.lyr.puta•labot .. _2902 o1 or ,__vuer. Vega Kambaek. A/C,
llabo&r.Sll-04I tenlce poltcy avall. fM6. • auto. xlnt cond. taoS>. ~-.,.-..... ...._ TI llett•f'J llarqul1. AutoCatd'a,p.rlcelli '5Pontiac:9psgrwlJ'I. '63 540-11'4or5*1111 ~--...._ PS/PB P/W • seals. ON&.Y,'899 CbevyVan.S600ea.Look 1973Bron.zeVecaStaWen
C-4.r. 1 owner. 11500. MAIERS &runweU.631-4063 GT. AM·Flf, radials.
"1' GNDada I Dr._~ • .-wkdlsaft5:JO AUTOCIHTM_ 'e9Lell•-iowormn-833-2811 <Mr.Gorman> w/...Wle int, A•IPM """ ...__Cad --. -. s19'90,A/C. "400ortake 197' M!ltCUIY ..,.•.·Na..... illac nma cood. l50t. 540-11'5 '71 Vega Wa~ 1ood
ovw lie at SUS mo. Dis· GIAHD MARQutS ~1:f: =~~in oras..9582 · t.'OJld. S700. « oiler.
COftr1 lbna1ement Co. Full power, factory air 54MIOt '82 Le Mam Convertible, 49M749aft.5
m4)820-19TO ofc hrs II cond., tilt •beet. speed runaCOOd, 1375. · '11 COUPE 4 apd, rads
-
DAILY Pl\.OT Dll
I IOal:JO or evea/wknda control. ~/FM •*-'C VALIANT, new ti.rel, 979-U7S Brandnew,wonongame
<1M>Sil""33 tape, v1n1l reof. pot., auto tran:s. Xlnl ._..._... tlOO abow! Mu3t selH PP • ._...__ ... _ ,.._·._......._ ...__ -· ._...__ ..._w _,.·._...._..M_ tlOO •16 •....,. 4 d 2S 000 mi Sb ow room c 1 ea n I ear. ssoo. 962·1!i67 -. ... ew S2ll50 ~ _...,....,,., Y--.... ll'W'W -.-_ ._ -..vv-a. .. .... .., .. ,,,, r, , • (516388). ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• ................................ ••••••••• ........ ~ .............. . snoo. 957-0871 btwn HOW SUt9 7:30am.Spm
RAY FLAD£BO£
LINCOLN·MERCURY
1959 Edsel Ranger 6 cyl. '66 Auto 289. 57,000 orig
$495. 552.Q75. 1969 Dodge mi. 2 ownrs Xlnl cond.
Monaco, air, pwr. $650. SUIOO. 831-J.548
494-5546 Gd conds ---------f '69 Fastback, 42.000 mi,
'7S2Dr. Granada, pi~. air automatic, P ;S, Xlnt.
cood, xlnt cond. ~.ooo Must see. Sl.700. 492·5286 .
mi '1. 928$0. H• •'23. ----------1 Must Sell-'69 Mustan1,
'62 Ford Falcon S385. good cond. $700.
After 5:00 or anytime Call64S-8557
r
. wknd.s. 675-21662. '7% Fastback. Low mi. ·54 Falcon 4-dr wagon, 6 Air, •uto, PS/PB
cyl, atk. Solid "strong. S2.200/bstofr. 673"°"' SllZS. 548.()lJS '74 4 Cyl, 4 spd, air P /B
Fant. auto. V8, PS, 19153 P/S, v top, A"ttf/FM, spmt coupe, new reblt 58M. Loots ~ood, rum
eq, ask.in& ssso. 556-7300 good. '2150. 544"741
aft5 ---------t8SM~, Fastback, 289
1976 FORD en1, auto, PS. PB,
GRANADA AMi FK 8 trlt, S700.
AutornaUc, pwr.1rteerin1 213-Slll'2-2S70; 114.sa&-73U
& brakes, alr eond., con· • Mustani, 6 cyl. a apd
venaence packa1e It manual tram, xlnl cood. 20,006 actual mHea. 830-8;!25 <04PPO t. EZ lerm1· ---'-_.... ... ._ ___ ..:.:;..;..;.a
0 .A.C.l)'r.parta&labor lllOble 9955
service poUe1 avail. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Auto Center's price Is 1972 QI.OS
OHLY $3999 TOROHAOO
HAIRS FUil -power, alt coftlt.
AUTO CENTER AM /FM stereo & cruise
Div .-Nabers Cadillac control. Just a beautl!ul 1'25BaJterSt .. C.M. car! (988FUO>. EZ ~ blkea.stofHarbor Bl tenns-0.A.C. I yr. parts
540-9109 " labor service policy ---------1 avail. Auto Center's ' 9947 price is
••••-•••••••••••••·-~ ONLYSl999
*70 MAVEJUCK
i;'Dr~l Auto trans
$1099 J7'8ASMJ
KENT
MAIERS
~UTOCEHTU
Di'4.-Nabers Cadillac
1425 Bater St .. C.M.
~ bUt east of Harbor Bl
MOTOR SALES 540-9109
16292$o. Harbor , s.A. 839-0710 72 Olds Delta 88, 4 dr, air, ---------t full ·pwr, AM /FM, Mercury 9950 rldlall,origowner. Must
••••••••••••••••••••••• MU Sl800. 75'-1758
ORANGECOUNTY'S '68 Delta 88. Dependable
. HEWEST tn.os. PS/PB. Gd Ures.
LINCOLN-MERCURY .x>ibstofr. 538-9439 Dealenldp Is now-OPEN
RAY FLADEIOE Delta • c.onvi '7a. Cream
LINCOLN·MERCURY Puff. $USO.
11-1.IAutoCenter Dr. Call640-l606
SDl'w)'·LakeForestexlt Plftto 9957
IRV'JNE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 130-7000 .,, Squire Watoo, 13,000
'71 Monarcb, 4dr, x1ht
CGQll. A/C, apprx U,000
mi. 1'150. 551-8487
mi, auto trans, all' cood,
J owner. $2000/bst olr.
979·6124 MOn·Ft"l
8am-'pm
'76 PINTO
WMOM 4 soetd, '9dlo. heJt.,. G• SIY9t
wMl'I ~ C80tN\'Ml
'72 FORD
• ltAMCHWA.otil
V·I aJfO t,_. elr condolo()njng. -et~ redlO. hell., . ...nltew•ll htel Ii~._ wllMI COWtS C90eEIDl
.
,~ 4 ' ~ r ~/ t·I. ,,
NEW 177 GRANADA
4 DOOi SEDAM
WE
·LEASE
ALL
MAKES
AllD .
MOES
VICE
· OPEii
\
MONDAY
Ill
9:00PM
COMPARE OUR PRICES NEW '77 FORD
F-250 c ..... StJtell• Pkmp 166.MUSTANG
•
7 1 77 MODELS
EMONSTRATO
SALE!
GIANT SELECTION
OUTSTANDING VALUES!
·. DONT MISS THIS
~..,,,, GREAT SALESt:VEMT!
'· !74 BUICK
ELECTRA
V-8. ·automatic. air conditioning. oower steering.
power brakes. power windows. pcwer seats.
AM/FM stereo radio. heater. whitewall tires. vinyt
roof. tilt wheel. (3'48LPA)
52895
· '75'CHRYSLER
BROUGHAM
V·S. IUtometic. air conditioning, pOWer steering.
power brakes. oower Windows. power ... ts.
AM/FM stereo radio. heater. whlte'Nall tires. vinyl
roof. cruise control. tilt wheel. (508RFBl
175.PONTIAC ·
GRAND PRIX v..e. automatic. air condltlonll'lg. pc>wer steering.
power brlk ... pOW8I' wlndoM. AM/FM stereo
radio. heater. whl~ll .tires. vinyl roof. rallve
wheels. tilt wheel. bucket seats. (138MML)
Ser. #SS22J7R305616
Set:.#SS22J7R305615
Ser. #SS22J7R3051 69
Ser. # SS22J7R302576
Ser. #SS22J7R281948 ,
Ser. # SS22J7R300084
•
7
•
H~tiµ~on Go~e
I a, ao K•T &\&II:& proved this week by the commit· ahould be appointive. . • .. ...,, ,......,.. t" .mlch aet publlc bearlnes on -Election of clty council mem-
'n>.e Hu.aUncton Beach Charter the proposali tor Sep~. 15 and bers should remain at large from
lleviskm Committee ls about to Sept.19. ... the city insteAd of from districts.
take the wraps oft a aeries ol rec· M aJor reeommendatlona ln-Mefubers also would be limited
ommeodaUons lot' cbaqes in elude: totwoconsecutiveterms.
city's farm ol 1ovemment. -The otftce of city attorney -That clcy department <lift'C·
The committee bas been examin· should remain elective. ton should ~ eliminat~ f~
tq the chart« since last Oc· -Tbe office of city treasurer protection o • e city personnel
tober. should be eliminated and a city system. ..
The first draft ol the aroup's auditor elected instead. • The •last recommendation
recommended chanees was ap--The office of city clerk stitred lively comment wh n
represe.C.atives of the depart·
ment heads appeflted before the
charter revision committee this
week.
Harbors and Beaches Director
Vfnce Moorhouse told the com-
mittee that, if department beads
are r~moved from the personnel
system, they would be subject to
hiring and firing at the whims of
a future city administrator ''who
may not be as professional as the
Anaheim Fire· 'Kills -3
Children Perish in Gasoline Blaze
Three children burned to death
and five others were injured
Thursday when naming gasoline
turned their Anaheim apartment
into "an instant ball of fire," in·
vestigators said.
Dead in the wake of the 3:50
p .m. blaze were Jorge Vera, 10
months, along with his sisters,
Rosalva, 5, and Ilda, 2, all of the
941 W. Bluejay Lane apartment.
The children's father, Alfredo
A-Bomb
Materials
To Israel?
W ASIDNGTON <AP> -Cen· tral Inlelligenc~ Agency in-
v~stigators reportedly believe
tbat weapon-grade nuclear
materials were diverted from an
American plant and shipped to
Israel during the 1960s. The Wubiniton Sl@r .. Id to-
day that a CIA spokesman told
congressional investicatqrs that
CIA investigators reached that
eonclualon after a1ency
operatives in Europe ret!elved in·
formation that Israel had ob-
tained a sizable quantity or
enriched uranlum. ·
·,Michael Ward, a conaresslonal
i\aff invesueator, had said last
week that "an intelligence aJen·
cy believes there was a
diversion" of about 135 pounds of ~nriched uran•um in 196S from a
plant in APollO. Pa. He did not
Identify the agency or where the
material was diverted to.
Officials of the Energ'y
Research and Development Ad·
.ministration and the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission ha~e
acknowledged that 8,000 pounds
of weapons-erade nuclear
material have been unaccounted
for over the ye an but have sald
lbey think that none of tbe
Jnaterial was stolen. They said
problems such as bookkeeping
errors may account for the ln· ·
ability to trace the materials.
The Star said the CIA in·
~estieaUon eventually came to
focus on the Apollo plant. which
produced enriched uranium fuel
for U.S. submarines ''and also
)lad ties with a number of foreign
1overnment.s, including a sub·
Jidiary owned in partnership
With the Istaell 1ove.-nment. ••
Detaill of the CIA probe were
dhrulced to Nuclear Re~atoty
CommiSS'ion officials in a eeccet
conference in 1976, the Star 1ald.
Partlcipanta included J(ennetb
R. Ql~man, the bead ol NRC's
sate.auarda aection, anCl Carl Ductett. then the CIA •a third·
r~offlclat: • '
Vera, 30, was cleaning paint
brushes with gasoline in the
kitchen after painting a crib out·
side, firemen said.
A kite.hen pilot light ignit~ the
gasoline fumes, firemen said, set
tbe one-gallon container of
gasoline ablaze and sent Vera
rushing through the apartment
witb the flaming plastic con·
tainer spi..mng burning gasoline
along the way.
At the same time a wall beater
ignited and the apartment ex·
ploded in names, firemen said.
Once outstde Vera tossed the
burnini ~uoline over .J.he
second-story apartment's
balcony, splashing 1t down the
steps and setting them afire,
firemen said.
Vera's wife, }4argarita, and a
visitor, 20-year.Old Lupe Valdez
fled by jumping out a window,
Pete Asch of the Stan Kenton Band shows high school
sax0phone players .David Moody <left l of Lakewood and
Mike Schaf er of Corona del Mar some fine points of the
instrument during a rehearsal at Orange Coast College.
Students join the Kenton band tonight at 7 :30 in the OCC
auditorium.
also dropping Mrs. Valdez' son,
1-year-old Ernesto Rodriguez,
and 6-year-ol~ Lupe Vera to safe-
ty. firemen said.
Vera attempted to rush back
into the apartment to rescue tbe
other children but was h~ld back
by neighbors, firemen said.
The injured.were all t.aken to
UCI Medical Center. Firemen
said the Rodriguez boy and Vera
<See FlllE, Page AZ>
Biggest
Earthquake
Reported
presenlone:" present gyatem. department
Clty Administrator Bud Belsito dlrect.Ors could be fired "but you
said he didll 't a.sk ·for changes belle be able to prove you have a
and agreed that department darned good reason.•• .
heads should have legal protec-MoorhoWJe was miffed because
tiop from possible whims and he said the committee didn't con·
capriciousness. suit department beads before I\ was believed that the charter makina its recommendations.
committee recommended the He was further aneered at
changes to strengthen Belsito's what he called the "dictatorial
band. · and autocratic manner" ol com-
Belsito added that under the (See CHARTER, Page A2)
Marie Leuck says sbe doesn't
blame Newport' Beach doctor
for nc* letting her 86-year-old
mother "die with dignity."
''Dr. (TheodoTe) Alex is. a won-
derful man," she said in a
telephone interview. "He Just
feels that what he did is right."
Jdt'S. Leuck's mother, Marf e
Welday, died Wednesday at a
Newport Beach convalescent
hospital where she bad been Jrept
alive for 16 months by nasal ad-
ministration of nutrients and
heart and blood medication.
This despite a "'living Will" tbe
elderl)' woman had signed five
years previous to a st.rOte abe
s.uftei'ed in May 1'76. .. • •
A lawsuit that could have
meant a l&nWnark court decision
on the right of helplessly ill peo-
pie to will their own death, died
with tbe wqman..
"l 'm not coing to pursue any
court action," Mrs. Leuck said
today.
But the Costa Mesa woman
said she hopes someone carries
the ball ·regarding· the right· of
terminally ill people to die.
''We need to get the law
straiehtened out so doctors will
be in the clear when a request
like this comes up in tbe future,··
sheaaid.
The lawsuit filed by Mrs.
Leuck last month asked a
Superior Court judge to force Dr ....
Alex to comp}J with the state's
new natural death law. That law.
however, applies onty to persons
who sign a "living will .. after
they are told their condition is
termini.I.
In the case of Mrs. Leuctc's
mother, the elderly woman
aianed the document before she
knew she W8$ dying.
Mrs. Leutk says she wants to
help other people who want to
"die )Vlth dignity.••
she said she has had many
mislivlnis aboUt her batUe to al·
low&« mother to die~ but added,
"U>Okins bick, I coutdn 't do any
different." ,
•
2 DAILY PILOl H /F
Arizona
Chief Due
ASffINGTON <AP> -Prtll·
d nt Cart.-nomlnaled Aril<lfta
Gov. Raw H. Castro. t lornicr am odor lo Bolivia, and El
Salvador. aa ambaHfldor '° AramtiN today. •
The f&nl· terta DemocraUc 1ov·
ernor has been rumored to be in
hne (ortbepa&t for months
Castro. 11. a natunllaed
cittun bom tn Cananea, Mexico,
b«ame 1overnor in 1815 on hla
:second try for the office. Under
the state constitution, he would
be replaced a1 governor by
Secretvy of State WHley Bolin.
His cunent term expires in
December 1978.
Castro served as the top U.S.
diplomat 10 80Jiv1a and El
Saludor dunng the Johnson ad-
mmistrallon
Smee rumors or Castro's ap-
pomtment began c1rcuJaUng in
Ar1entina in May. some of the
more conservative elements in
the military government and
some political commentators
have expressed opposition to his
selection, saying the appoint-
ment of a Hispanic shows a
patronizing attitude on the part
of the Carter administration.
Some Argentinians believe
that a non-Hispanic American
should be sent because, unlike
most Latin American nations.
Argentina's population consists
of people or varied European
stock and is not overwhelmingly
Hispanic and Indian.
No official objection has been
raised to the Castro appoint·
ment. however.
Relations between the United
States and Argentina have
become strained since last
February, when the Carter ad-
m in is tr at 1 on ordered U.S.
m ihtary aid to Argentina re-
duced because of alleged human
rights violations there. The
Argentinians subsequently re-
Jecled all U.S. military aid.
Clark Rehired
As School
Consultant
After first accepting her res-
ign a ti on, Fountain Va1ley
school trustees have rehired
• their chief labor negotiator as a
consultant until a contract
settlement c~e reached with
the district·s t~hers.
Dr Patricia Clark, who is leav-
ing the d1str1ct to become assis-'
tant superintendent or personnel
m the lluntineton Beach City
School District, will receive
Sl31 50 a day until a i.ettlement is
reached
This figure 1s based on her
yearly salary of about $27,000.
In addition, Dr. Clark will be
receiving an annual salary of
S29,971 from the Huntington City
School District.
Fro. PllfJf! Al
FIRE ••.
were both listed in serious condi·
tion with burns.
Mrs. Vera also was bein& treat-
ed and sedated at the hospital.
Mrs. Valdez and Lupe Vera were
treated for injuries and released,
firemen said.
:t Another Vera child, Martin.
was outside and not injured.
lnvesti&ators said firemen
found two of the dead children on
a living room couch and another
in a bedroom. They said the
youngsters had not moved and
had no chance to escape.
Firemen extineuished the
blaze immediately upon arrival.
Damage was coalined primarily
\o the Vera apartment wJth
minor damage to another unit
next door, firemen said.
Damages was estimated at
about $25,000.
DAI LY P! lOT -
Interest
Ratellike
Revealed
NEW YORK (AP> -Citibank,
the nation's second largest com-
mercial bank, raised its prime
interest rate today from 6~ per-
cent to 7 percent.
Citibank, which had held the
prime at 6:i4 percent since May
rt. did not elaborate immediate·
ly on its move. But according to
its formula for compuUng the
prime rate. the rate worked out
to between 6% and 7 percent this
week. The formula is based in
part on the rate for commercial
paper -short-term unsecured
IO Us by companies.
Citibank usually takes the lead
in prime rate adjustments.
The change in the prime rate -
a bank's charie on loans to its
best corporate customers -had
been widely anticipated because
of the Federal Reserve's recent
actions to tighten growth in the
nation's money supply.
In the past month, the money
supply has been rising faster
than the Fed has indicated it
would like, and its money
managers have been actively
· trying to slow the rate of growth.
Jn the past week, the rate on
federal funds, the money banks
lend each other, has risen about
one-quarter percentage point to
6·6.,._ percent.
The prime rate is not direcuy·
linked to consumer loan charges
but may exert a psychological in·
nuence on all loan rates.
.. The onJy thing t.be two have in
common is that they are both
prices and they may both rise,··
one banker said.
TAKES FAIR REINS
Newport's Hoo••
Hoose Heads
Fair ~ard
L4 0il Tank
Fire Cmaea
$50,000 Loss
LOS ANGELES (AP> -An
electrical fire has caused $50,000
damage to the first tanker to de·
liver Alaskan oil to Los Angeles,
shipyard authorities said.
Three main electrical control
panels inside the Mobil Arctic's
engine room, which is flanked on
both sides by the oil cargo bold,
caught nre Thursday afternoon
while the ship was being repaired
al Bethlehem Steel Corp.
shipyard in Terininal Island,
firemen said.
The fire burned for more tban two hours before it was ex·
tingui.shed. Fire Capt Robert
Schulz collapsed from exhaus-
tion during the ordeal and was
taken to San Pedr.o and
Peninsula Hospital, fire officials
said.
An electrical short a~parently
caused the fire, said Battalion
Chief Gene Smith. The fire was
not of suspicious origin, he said.
Seven engine companies, three
fire boats and « men fQUiht the
blaze in the bott.Dm of the tanker.
Shipyard officials who made
the damage estimate said the
fire will delay the departure of
the tanker for about 30 days. It
was originally scheduled to leave
Sunday.
The Mobile Arctic arrived at
the Port of Los Angeles Aug. 12
and discharged 862,000 barnls of
Alaskan crude oil. A Mobil Oil
Corp. sS>Okeaman said it· was at
the steel shipyard Cor routine
maintenance.
Church Seta
FBI 'Schems'
LOS ANGELES <APl -The
Justice Department claims tbe
controvenlal Church of Scien-
t o to gy has planted an un-
speci11ed number of members in
the FBI as part of an tlaborate
scheme to leak secret infonn•· ticm to the church.
A~t. U.S. Atty. Richard Stilz
said In U.S. Diatrlct Court 'lbun·
day that the FBI discovered the
alleged lntUtratton while review-~ne the mote tban 23,000 docu. ments aetted dwi.ng ebUrch ralcb
here last month.
ltarior Slaark --
With concentration worth\· of Willie Mosconi. 10-vear-
old Scott Stebbins of Missi.on Viejo sights on the cue ball
in preparation for a shot in a tournament sponsored by
the Saddleback Valley Vnified School District Recrea-
tion Department. The event drew the best players from
the Saddleback Valley's teen and communih· centers to
Olivewood School in El Toro. ·
Sinatra Lawyer
Sollght in. Nevada
•
CARSON Cll'Y <AP>
Nevada Gaming Commission
Chairman Harry Reid wants
Frank Sinatra's lawyer', Millon
Rudin of .Los Angeles, to step
forward for licen1J.Dg as a Del E.
Webb Corp. dlrector.
The corporation owns and
operates the Newporter Inn in
Ne~rt Beach.
Tht comsnlialon dJdn 't iuue a
formal order Thursday that
Jtudin come forward. but Reid
said that by next month he want-
ed a recommendation from the
panel's lnvestlgatory arm, the
Gaming Control Board, and he
would then move to issue the or-
der il Rudin had not voluntarily
acted in the interim.
Commission member Clair
Haycock said he w&nted swift ac-
tion on the RudJ!l-Sinatra matter
because It appeared gaming
authorities had been •'running
and biding" in delaying action on
thewue. ..
Sinatra was stripped of a
Nevada aamlnJ license in 1963
for allegedly hosting the late
Sam .. Momo" Giancana at a club
Sinatra once owned at Lake
Tahoe. Glancana, a known un-
derworld figure, was assassinat-
ed in197S.
Reid said his main concern
was whether }tudin sbould be
)icensed. But Haycock said he
was concerned over both Rudin.
and Sinatra.
The mov~ on Rudin came as
Control Board member Jeff
Silver disclosed that Sinatra has
been divesting himself of DeJ E .
Webb stock. Silver also disclosed
that a rift between Sinatra and
Webb fact.i,ons within the
Phoenix. .Ariz .. baJsed firm had
apparently ended.
Wm/y~t.B,
Lazy GuiutJA?
W ASIUNGTON C.Af) -
The guards at Ute Dtstricl
Building: Washington's c~
ty hall, still have their
cfesks but are without
chairs. .
Oliver Cassell, the
Bureau of Bu11dlnes
m anageme,t' director,
won't talk to reporters
about tJie matter, except to
say the chairs were taken
away from the guards to
increase the pro ·
fesslooallsm ol. the Carce.
The guards are respoosi-
bl e for security at en-
trances to tbe bu.lJ.djnc.
•
Beldon
'Sex Rap
A L9guoa BHcb private
volleyball coach who "many
families thouabt was just the fl.ileat man around," h beea ar·
rest'4 by WUna Beach Police
on a warrant aUegtng llllcft sex-
ual atlons with Sirla wbo were
members ot his teams.
Police DetecUve Gene Brooks
said today Ian CampbeJl
Gre1ory, s:z, bad been taken io40
custody In San Diego wh~ be is
Uvinf and coaching after bavtng
left Lacuna Beach last fall,
Gregory faces trial on fi~
feJooy charges of unlawfU.l .
uaJ activity with female mi
Supenor Court arraignment b
been contim1ed to Aug. 30.
Gregory iSfree oo baU.
Gregory wu an independq>t
volleyball coach. His stude.!\S
paid fees for his services. Jtis
teams competed ln N aUonal
VolleybaJJ Association and AAU
matches, Broob saJd.
"He ii a very personable mao.
He gained the confidence M
parents and the girls. Many of
the famiUes throught he was just
the finest man around.·· Det.
Brooka said.
The detective said Gregory
had lived in laguna Beach for
five to six years during which
time he coached several girts· teams atone time.
He said that during this time.
lhtire were "rumors and suspi-
cions" but that no formal com-
plaints were made.
Then this year, a eirl discussed
the matter with poli~. but t.be
statute of limitations (three
years> had expired in her case.
Brooks sajd.
The girl identified other girls
and one reported an incident on
which the statute had nearly ex-pired.
Charges were filed in that
case. Brooks said. Another al -
leged victim was located and in-
dicated that events had
transpir~ during 1976. Charges
were filed in that case, he said.
Tbe girls involved were 13 to 16
at the lime of the alleged occur-
rences.
~
Brooks said that to many or his
team members, Gregory was a
"father image.
••They would come to him and
discuss family problems and
personal problems,·· be said.
In addition to taking the team
members on tournament toui-s.
Gregory frequenUy would take
the girls on litUe holidays or
wat,er sltiing. Brooks said.
In addJtion to coachinf teams
in Laguna Beach. Gregory also
worked in Santa Barbara and
Long Beach as well as San Diego.
San Diego poUce are now ques.
tioningteam members there.
Crash Kills
Grove Teen
A 17·year-old Garden Grove
eirl was killed Thursday morn-
ing when the van she was driving
crashed into the rear of a parkM
tractor·traiJer rig in Anaheim.
Orange County coroner's d~ ·
utfesreported.
Ro!ezella Carnes. or 11762
Medina Drive, was pronounced
dud at the sc:ene of the 6:35 am.
cra~h on Ball Road at MacDufC
Strfft. d~d taid.
The ~aase ot the crash ls un-
known, depqUes sald.
Some years ago While addressing the Central
Indiana Floor Covering Associati•n~ an lndustrv
spokesman, Walter Guinan saiel: "Too many
people in the floor covering industry are
convinced the pubnc only wants to buy 'junk"
carpet•• • ':"°T"""'. --~-.
~
V0t. 70. NO. 231, ~SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES
JllUJPaolllA ....................
... A def\met cltJien1 committee
-hltb studltd llriO use policy for
JrvlM was re-uUvattd b1 the ci·
ty cow\Cll 1lnascta1 alter the
council was accused of bloctifta ti then lapUL
No action ·~ taken on a echeduled adopUon ot amend·
ments to the clty land use
Policies which govern future d•
vetopment.
The eouncll ordered Mayor Blll
Vardoulis to act as llaiaon
betw clty offlclala a.nd the economic study committee
wbtcb had been dbmissed by the
councU May 12.
Study will focus on the
politically sensitive subject of de-
veloPment ot so-called Vlllaie 14
in west central Irvine. A report is
due Sept.15. ·
Vlllage 14 is bounded by cu.Ivel'
Drive, the San Diego Freeway.
Pete.rs Canyon Wash, San Diego
Creek and Irvine Center Drive.
The area now is in agriculture.
Councilmen have debated for
more than a year whether to
yield the land for houses and
apartments.
The action followed charges by
the chairman and a former
member of the economic study
committee that the council tried
to "destroy .. the eommittee.
Committee Chairman Charles
Huegy and Bill Littlefield said
their committee was abolished
before they pubicly were able to
protest purported errors In a
computer economic study of
Village14. ·
Littlefield claimed that
acreage statistics fed into the
computer somehow deleted five
Anaheim Fire Kills 3
Children Perish in Gasoline Blaze
Three children burned to death
and five others were injured
Thursday when flaming gasoline
turned their Anaheim apartment
into "an instant ball or fire, .. in·
vesligators said.
Dead in the wake of the 3:50
p.m. blaze were Jorge Vera, 10
months, along wit}\ his sisters,
Rosalva, s. and Ilda, 2, all of the
941 W. Bluejay Lane apartment.
The childi-en 's f atber. Alfredo
!Judget
Hearings
Delayed
Th.e I rvine City Council
postponed bearings on a five-
year city budget projeetion
Thursday rescheduling them for
an October meeting.
The projections show that pro-
posed expenditures wm outpace
expected revenues bY as much-as
18.4 INl'cC in a •INl• l!aeal
)'e•r.1979-80.
Cilv Mtnager W-alllam Woollett Jr, explatned that delc:i.Dig res-
lclentJaJ dev,lop1ntot Will ac•
count for the gaps.
The projections are estimates 1o be used by tbe City~ aa
.A&uide to poljcymald.ht. ·
They show that during the next
four years:
-The Irvine population will
double, from 42,000 to 84,000.
-Total citr re~enues will in·
crease by abOut 45 percent. Sales
tax, the largest smgle revenue
source, will increase because of
steady industrial and com-
mercial development.
Revenues will 10 ftom current ·
~0.9 inillion to $,1.S.9 million in
·~931. I -~tur~ will jump 61
,ercent. Crom f}0.8 million to
'17.7miUion.
-The cost of fire and police
protection will increase nearl1
80 percent as addlUonal service 111 provld~tor l)tW resldemial .
areas. SU million to $4.3 million.
• .-'J1)e public works budcet will
lcreue almost as mucb, from
.1 mllllOb to $6. million. for a
mllar reason. ,
Vera, 30, was cleaning paint
brushes with gasoline in the
kitchen after painting a ctib out·
side, firemen said.
A kitchen pilot light ignited the
gasoline fumes, firemen said, set
the one.gallon container of
gasoline ablaze and sent Vera
~ushing through the apartment
with the flaming plastic con·
tainer spilling burning gasoline
along the way.
·.
At the same time a wall heater
ignited and the apartment ex-
ploded in flames, firemen said.
Once outside Vera tossed the
burning gasoline over the
second·story apartment's
balcony, splashing it down the
steps and setting them afire.
firemen said. ·
Vera's wife, Margarita, and a
visitor. 20-year·old Lupe Valdez
fled by jumping out a window,
!'Jewport Beach police officer Scott Cade displays the source Of a lot of anx1~ty Thursday at the Dove Street
branch of the Bank of America. Somebody left it at the.
bank. Bank officials became suspicious and called
police. The bomb squad was called in. The building was
evacuated. Bomb squaders tied a string around the box
and pulled it gingerl~· from the bank. The box was
empty.
also dropping Mrs. Valdez• son.
l·year·old Ernesto Rodriguez,
and 6-year-old Lupe Vera to safe-
ty, firemen said.
Vera attempted to rush back
into the apart.Jnent to rescue the
other children but was held back
by neighbors, firemen said.
The injured l\'ere all taken to
UCI Medical Center. Firemen
said Ute Rodriguez boy and Vera
<See FIRE, Page A!)
Biggest
Earthquake
Reported
• square triiles Of temtory ..
· He said enr ec(>nornlc C®·
cluslons drawn· frcun the
. purportedl'Y faulty data are
therefore uselts$. The coxnmlttee members' Qb.
jecUons to adopting land use
policles witJtout renewed study
took on the character of an "us
against them.. haggle with the
council.
Huegy and Uttlefleld accused •
~ilmen Of not actively s :
in& cftiieq;.partic:lpalloo lJi &he land use dedJkMS. "Tbe council made a cons~ous
act," Llttlefteld said, "to destroy
tbe stUdy committee ...
He said the council .. choked Off
means of communication," arid
added, "The •new majority• ran
on a platform of cltlzeu
partiClpatioo. Not one citlzen ill"
<SeelAND, Page A%>
AP ........
PRESLEY FAN KATHY FINLEY MOURNS IN MEM,HIS
King of Rock LalcJto Rest; s.e Story. Page M.
v ...
• .. c • I
f
I
. '
2 0.\IL Y PILOT
Weit aad two othtr former
PreaJ bodnuard1, Red Wiit.
cSonny Wat's finl coualn> and
Da\e Hcbler
Wt'tt uad he worked for'.
Pr lfJ h'o<n l_, t.o 11'71, when
ht> IUld u,. otb r two bodyl\W'(ls
vwere t~rmln•led by Prelley'1
father. Vernon. "Wt were
there, .. Wnt satd. "We saw tt all
happm l IC>ved that man. and io
~way I stlll do But someone bad
to eitplain wh1tt haa happened to
Elvia. and we will all take Ue de
tector tests to show that what 1 'm
:-.4y1ni lS true.''
Presley, who was 42, had been
reported to have been in deep
p~ychological and physical trou-
ble in re<-ent years. Presley
himself had not given an in·
terv1ew in almost 20 years, and
unt.Jl this interview no one among
his confidants had talked to re-
porters.
"RE TAKES EVERY possible
pill you can think or," West said.
.. He takes pills and shots to get
up. He takes pain pills during the
day. He takes Demerol and
morphine shots for downs. He
takes a very strong pain medica-
tion that is intended for terminal-
ly ill cancer patient.a; he says it
just gives him a pleasant high.
He takes pills that he thinks will
prevent body odor. He takes pills
that he thinks will give him a sun-
tan.
··All he does is want to get
himself completely out of his
head. He had us give him shots in
his rear end, and you couldn't
even find a spot where there
hadn't been other needles. Try-
ing to give him the shot was like
going into a cramped muscle.
The fiber wouldn't absorb the
fluid from the syringe. He takes
more downers than uppers. He
enjoys the downers; the uppers
are just to get him to perform. 1
don 'l know why he does it -
whether it's boredqm, whether
he feel s he's done everything
there is to do, or what. But I think
his life 1s in danger. We would
pray for hjm to stop, but there was
no telling Elvis what to do. "He sincerely believes be i$ a
supernatural force. He compares
himself to Jesus. He believes he
<:an place his hand on a person.
and Wlthdraw that person's pain
into his own body. One night I
was out in the back yard, and
Elvis told me he bad juat seen a
fl ying saucer land. He said, ·we
• musln't be afraid. They're not
here to do us harm.·
''ONE NIGHT An'ER we bad
seen a movie in Memphis, he bad
us drive off the expressway and
go to a funeral home. A back door
was unlocked. I was there, Elvis
was there, his girlfriend was
there. his cousin and his cousin's
wife were there. Elvis went up
and down a row of corpses, lifting
the sheets off eight or 10 bodies.
He would lift the sheets and show
how the embalmers had cut the
throats and bled the bodies and
how the stitches were holding the
throat toiether. He did this on
:-.everal occasions; he was
fascinated with dead bodies.
"He has a vision of being as-
sassinated. He told us that he
didn't want some little guy smil-
ing in a courtroom and telling the
world. 'I'm the man w.ho killed
El vis Presley.• So he told us, 'The
FBI and the police have their job
to do. You have yours. lfrm as-
sassinated, I want yo1.e to get the
guy first and rip his eyeballs out.
l don't want anyone grinning In
any courtroom because he kiQed
me.'
"He believes be can hypnotize
people to do what ls in his mind.
One night in Las Ve1as, he called
me into bis bedroom and I could
tell that he thought he was byp-
notlzint me. He often said that he
bad an electrical kind or power
that could take over people's
minds. He went. to his cloeet and
got out an M·l6 rifle. He told me
that be wanted me to kill the karate instructor wbo took bis
wile away from him. When l •
wouldri 't do it, he tried to get Red
th n that be bad &ono, that ho bad
flipped. Another time, In Mem·
phi1. b eaJloiS me into ht• room.
He hod about lltht auns laid out
on his bed. He &ho*~ me a
pcllul'• of ,. 1uy. •ho r n a pool
JaaU, a~ pu 1h • tt• ••ld. •we
1otta iCel thl11uy. •He wanted the
bod)'JUards to 1et the 1uy out
aomeplac1 where Elvl1 could kiU
hlm. He was alv.iaya aoing
around twldna about what an an-
tl·drua crutader he was, whicb is
aronio, comiderioa his own habit.
"'RE LOVES GUNS. He thinks
they're tbc &realest equalizer in
the world. He once tried to give a
.357 magnum with a aold inlay to
Spiro Agnew as a gift. He's
always givina people &uns as
aifla. He often wears one gun in a
shoulder holster, one in his belt,
and a llWe four-shot Derringer in
his boot -including when he's on
stage. When he comes out of his
bedroom after waking up, he's
carrying a gun. Wearing his pa-
jamas and carrying a gun.
"There will be two and three
weeks at a time when be won't
come out of his room and come
downstairs. He just eats and gets
high and watches TV. We'll go
out on the lawn and start toeslng
a football around to try to coax
him out, but he won't come. He'll
just stay by himself.
"Many times he'll pull a gun
out and fire it at a television
screen. Sometimes it's for tareet
practice. Sometimes it's because
or a program he doesn't like. He
doesn't like the singing of Robert
GouleL Once Goulet came on the
screen, and EJvis just raised bis
gun and shot the screen out. It's
hard to rationalize that even as
you 're seeing it.
"He's a very lonely person.
He's a very unhappy person. I've
been around him since he was an
unpoplllar high scttool kid with
acne, couldn't make the football
team. After all that he's become.
that kid is still inside him. He's
Elvis Presley, but he's a lonely
little kid."
F,...PageAJ
FIRE •••
were both liated in serious condi-
tion with burns.
Mrs. Vera also was being treat-
ed and sedated at the hospital.
Mrs. Valdez and Lupe Vera were
,treated for injuries and released,
firemen sJlid.
Another Vera child, Mtrtln,
was outside and n~t injured.
Investigators said firemen
found two of the dead children on
a living room couch and another
in a bedroom. They said the
youngsters had not moved and
had no chance to escape.
Firemen extinguished the
blue immediately upon arrival.
Damage was confined primarily
to the Vera apartment with
minor damage to another unit
next door, firemen said.
Damages was estimated at
about $25,000.
Crash Kills
Grove Teen
A 17·year-old Garden Grove Jirl was killed Thunday mom-
mg when the van she was drtvtng
crashed into the rear of a parked
tractor-trailer ri• in Anaheim,
Oranae County coroner's dep-
uties reported.
Rosezella Carnes, of 11762
.Medina Drlve, was pronounced
dead at the aceoe of the 6:35 a.m.
crash on Ball Road aL Macl>uff
Street, deputies said.
The cause of the crash lJ un-
known. deputies said.
to ut a bit man to do it. I knew •
MEMPIUS. Tenn. (AP> -The
18-year-old youth accused or kiU-
lnl two Louisiana women and
critically injurinf a thlrd with bis •
car outslde E vis Presley's
mans Ion was ordered held
without ball today after his
mother said he had mental
problems ..
City court Judge Horace
Pierotti reversed an earlier rul·
ing that set bond at $20,000 for
TreaUse Wheeler Ill. The judge
said he was ordering Wheeler
held without bobd because of
statements by his mother, Olivia
Wheeler, about the defendant's
mental condition. He scheduled a
preliminary hearlng for Wheeler
on Monday. (Related story, Page
A4.)
Wheeler is charged with two
counts of second·.degree murder" reckless driving, pu1>lic dr~nness and driving while
under the influence of intoxicants.
Alice Hovarter and Joanne
Johnson, both 19, took Wednes-
day off from work to drive from
Monroe, La., to Memphis. They
were killed early Thursday as
the s tood outside Presley's
Graceland Mansion.
A third teenager hit by the car,
Tammy Baiter. 17, of St. Clair,
Mo., was in critical condition at a
Memphis hospital.
Froa PClfle Al
LAND.· ••
this city bas input on the general
plan."
Most or the council disagreed.
Councilman John Burton, fre-
quently shoutine at Littlefield to
be quiet so he could talk, disput-
ed the claim that the committee
was "destroyed."
The job bf the committee was
finished, he said, so the commit-
tee was disbanded.
Burton, supported by Coun·
c ilwoman Gabrielle Pryor.
charged Littlefield with a
personal crusade against the
council.
Littlefield in turn accused the
council of paranoia.
There was this exchange
between Burton and Littlefield:
Burlon: "I don't see the need
for som~ne carrying a spear,
looking for a wall to put someone
between Ute wall and the spear."
Littlefield: "This is roughly
equivalent to Capt. Queeg's
search for the slrawberri~." '
Burton: "The difference is,
there are five steel balls up
here!"
Littlefield: "You said it, I
didn't.··
Mrs. Pryor also disputed Llt-
UefieJ<fs Lheory that the commit-
tee was abolished. "I ret the im·
pression," she said, turning the
tables, "you'd like to abolish the
city council. I eet this feeling of
sheer hatred •.. a political ven-
detta."
LitUefield conceded, "There's
an element of Lhat. · • ·
But Councilwoman Mary Ann
Galdo said she shared Lit-
tlefield's concern about stunted
citizen participation. ·
"It's up to us." she said, •-io in-
volve more citizens, and to make
sure we have tbe fltaff tQ work
with them ... IJttlefield charged
that city 1taff had been un·
cooperative with the committee.
P ete Asch of the Stan Kenton Band shows high school
saxophone players Oa\•id Moody <left ) of Lakewood and
Mike Schaf er of Corona del Mar s ome fine points of the
instrument during a rehearsal at Orange Coast College.
Students join the Kenton band tomght at 7: 30 in the OCC
auditorium.
Doctor Absolved
In 'Right to Die'
Marie Leuck says she doesn't
blame Newport Beach doctor
ror not letting her 86-year-old
mother "die with dignity "
"Dr. <Theodore> Alex is a won·
derful man ... she said in a
telephone interview. "He jus~
feels Lhat what be did is right. ..
Mrs. Leuck's mother, Marie
Bogus Levi's
\
Confiscated·
BASEL, Switzerland <AP>
An international posse bas
rounded up four tprelgners ,JlC·
~used of t'rytng q, \)Oar COUil·
terfelt Levi's into the Europe.an
market and corralled 52,000 pairs
of the bogus pants.
Swiss and Dutch p0lice said the
jeans were made in Taiwan and
South Korea and carried forged
labels of the Levi Strauss Com-
pany, the world's best·known
manufacturer. '
Polar Route Seen
MOSCOW CAP> -The Soviet
Union plans soon to create asblp.
l>ing route through the Aretlc Cir-
cle, the Soviet mtnilter of
merchant marine said in an in··
terview aboard the lct·breaker
Arktika, returnin~ from a his-
toric voyage to the North Pole.
The interview was Teported in
Pravda today in a dispatch
describing the voyage of the
atomic lcebreaker, which on
Wednesday became the first sur-
face vessel ever to teach the top
of the world.
W elday. died Wednesday at a
Newport Beach convaJescent
hospital where she had been kept
alive for 16 months by nasal ad-
ministration of nutrient.a and
heart and blood medication.
This despite a "living will" the
elderly woman ha4 siened five
years previous to a stroke she
suffered in May 1976.
A lawsuit that could have
meant a landmark court decision
Orl the right or helplessly 111 peo-
ple to wilJ their own death, died
with the woman.
"I'm not ,oing to pursue any
court action,·· Mrs. Leuck Did
today, .}1 I I
13~ tbe Cotta Mesa waman
said tlhe boees someone., eanles
the ball regardina the ritht or
terminally ill peop\etodie.
··we need to get the law
straightened out so doclors will
be in the clear when a request
like lhls comes up in the future,"
she said.
The lawsuit filed by ?ttrs.
Leuck last month asked •
Superior Court judge to force Dr.
Alex to comply with the state's
new natural death law, 'l'tiitlaw,
however. applies only to persons
who sign a "UVtng will .. af~
they are told their condition is
terminal.
Io the case ot Mrs. Leuclt's
mothe1'.'1 the elderly woman
signed me document before she
knew she was dying.
Mrs. LeucJt says she want.a to
help other people who want to
"die with dlenlty." ~
She .said &he has had many
misgiving& about her battle to al-
low her mother to die. but added,
"Looking back1 I couldn 'tdo any
different.''
A Lo1una Beach private
volleyball coacb who "many
tamill• tJiO;qht YU Just tbo
man afOdlid,"bu ar·
"5t$i by a Beach police
on a warrDDt. atnlt&Wilt sex ..
ual relaU~ Wltb·ai?U wbO were
members ol his teams.
Police Detective Gae 8roC>ks
aald today Ian Campbel\
Gregory, 52, bad been taken into
custody to San l>ieao where he iA
Jivlnt and coac:hina after havtnc
left Laatma Beach last fall •
Gregory faces trial on fiv
felony cbarges of unlawful s
ual activity with fem alt m1non.. •
Superior Court arra1111ment h
been continued to AUi-3
Gregory ls free on ball.
Gregory was an indeJMmd
volleyball c:oacb. His studen
paid !ea for bis service!$. His
teams competed la National
Volleyblll Auodatton and AA~
tDalches1 Brooa said,
.. Be ls a vr; personabJlltmad
He gained the confidence d
parents and the girls. Many of
the families throu&ht he was just
th• flnesL Dlan around," Del. 8rook:a said. . The detective said Gregory
had lived in Lacuna Beach for
five to six years during which
time he coached several girts·
teams at one lime.
He said that during this time.
there were "rumors and suspi·
cions" but that no formal com·
plaints were D\lde.
Then this year, a girl di9COS8ed
the matter with police, but the
statute of limitations <thre4'
years> had expired in her case,
Brooks said.
The girl identified other girls
and one reported an incident on
which the statute had nearly ex-
pired.
Charges were filed in that
case, Brooks said. Another al•
teged victim was located and in·
dicaled that events bad
transpired during 1976. Cbarees
were filed in that case. he said.
The girls involved were 13 to 16
at the time or the alleged occur·
rences.
Brooks said that to many of his
team members, Gregory was a
"father image.
"They would come to blm and
discuss family problems and
personal problems," he satd.
lD a4dition to takJng the team
members on totanuunent tours,
Gregory frequently would take
the &irlg on little holidays or
waterakilng, Brook• said.
,,. In addition to coaching teams
· m Laguna Beach, Gregory also
worked in Santa Barberi! and
Long Beach as well as San Diego.
San Diego police are now ques-
tionilll team members there.
Hoose Heads
Fair Board·
Newport Beach bufint!9Slban
Clinton M. Hoose hH be~n
named president of the. Otutje
County Fair board of directors.
Board members elected Hoose to
the one.year term Tbursday
night.
Hoose, founder and president
of Rion Hardware ln Newport
Beach. ~ Santa Ana ~
tom.e'y Warren T. J'inJey.
Board memberi also elected
Gene Tunks of Garden brove as
vice prestdent and attorney
Elmer D. Montano of eo.ta Mesa
as second vice president.
VOL. 70, NO. 23t, 4 SECTIONS, .f2 PAGES
ByBOBCR BN£ ~· .......... .,.~
.. Sometimes l couldn't bell•ve
It. Elvis would be 1itt11>1 ~.
bis eyes clOHd, h1a heed ban&lnt
down, h1a inout.h open -ind be
couldn't even manate to tet his
eyes open. He was on pills all day
Ione. and he would Cive himself
shots in tbe arm or the lee wlth
those little plastic syringes. He
would have ~ give him shots in
,
the rear ena. We prayed for this
man mtnY Ume.. His dfUg habit is ao severe tbat I'm convinced
be is In danier: of loslna bis lUe. ••
The speaker ls Delbert "Son·
ny" West. for 18 years a confl.
dant and bodyguard to-singer
El vis Presley. Tuesday -only
houn belore Presley's death, in
the first newspaper interview on
the subject ever given by a
member of Presley.'s entourage .
-West outlliuid aatartllnillst of
particulars about the Pr.esley
li(estyle., a li t that bore out re-
peaUd rumors of Presley's de-
terioratlna physical and mental
well-being. As the interview was
being typed, news pf Presley's
death was reported by wire
services.
Among the areas touched on in
theinterview, Westsald:
(See BODYGUARD, Page A2)
l:lheim Ap~rtment
Fire Kills vee
Temblor
Strikes
Far East
JAKARTA, Indonesia CAP) -
A major earthquake was report-
ed in the Indian Ocean today
between Australia and In·
donesia. Tremors forced hun-
dreds or workers to flee tall
buildings in western Australia
nearly 1,000 miles away but there
were no ima:nediate reports of in·
juries.
The Vienna Institute !or
Meteorology and Geodynamics
said the quake reaistered 8.9 on
the Richter $Cale, th '"hiabeft
reading ever recorded.
Other seismological '1tation.t
• reported readings between 1 and
&3 on tlw B.icbter, lndlcetin& a
major quake capabl• of
Widespread damaae.
The Indonesian Department ot
Me~logy said the quake OC•
C!urred at 1:11 p.m. Jakarta time
-ll:llp.m. PDT-and tremors
•nd afterabock.a lasted for more
than an hour.
The quake was centered 931
miles southeast of the Indonesian
eapital of Jakarta and more than
J.,000 miles north of Perth,
Australia.
There were no immediate re-
ports or damage from Indonesia or islands near the quake's
epicenter. There also was no in·
dication that the quake had
raised a tsunami, or tid:il wave.
Tremors shook the length ol
western AusLralia, a distance of
about 2,400 miles. In P~rth. win-dows and venetian blinds raWed,
chairs slid across noors and
frightened workers ran from
buildings. Some refused to return
even after tremors halted. The·
biggest impact was ln Port
Hedland, where parked cars
were bounced up and down by the
quake and build.lngs rocked and
,1wayed for four minutes.
The closest major land area to
Uie quake's epicenter was the In-
donesian island or Sumba, about
200 miles away. About ~.ooo peo-
ple live on the farrnlni island,
famous for its horses. •
The quake'a center was also
about 300 miles southeast Of the
tourist island of Bali, where an
<See QUAKE, Pafe.U>
With concentration worthr ot Willi~ Mosconi. lO·year·
old Scott Stebbins of Mission Viejo sights on the cue ball
in preparation for a shot in a tournament sponsored by
the Saddleback Valle~· Unified School District Recrea~
tion Department. The event dre\\· the best players from
the Saddleback Valley's teen and communitv centers to
Olivewood School in Et Toro. •
Gasoline
Ignites
Fireball
-~..,.....
PRESLEY FAN KATHY FINLEY MOURNS IN MEMPHIS
King of Rock Laid to Rest; See Story, Page A4
Lagana lneldent · .
Volleyball CoaCh
Faces Sex Charges
A Laguna Beach private
volleyball coacb who "many r • 'II as .n1° ... ~.'41•
tineSt roan around.".has been ar-
rested by Laguna Beacb. Police
on a warrant -all~ng illicff sex-
ual relatloas with girls who were members o( bi• cearus. Pooce Detectiv~ Gene llfOOks
said today Ian Campbell
Gre&ory, 52, bid been taken into
custody in Su Diego where he is living and coaching after having
left Laguna Beac:Jl last fall.
Gregory faces trial on five
felony charges of unlawful sex-
ual activity with female minors.
Superior Court a,raignment has
been continued to Aug. 30.
Gregory is free on bail.
Gregory was an independent
volleyball coach. His students
paid fees for b.is services. His
teams competed in National
Volleyball Association and MU
matches, Brooks said.
.. He is a very personable man.
He eained the confidence of
parents and the girls. Many of
the famlU~ lhrougbt be was just
the finest man around. n Det.
BrOOks aaid.
The &iris involved were l3to 16
at &he timo of the alleged occur· renc•.
Broob said Uiat to many of his
team members, Gre&ory was a
.. , alher image. ·•
·~ wowd come to·him and discuss (amlly problems ~nd
persOnal problems,·· be said.
In 11dditJcn to taJclng the team
members on tournament tours, Gregory frequenUy would take
the girls on little· boUd.ayg or
waterskling, Brooks said.
In addition to coaching teams
in Laguna Beach, Gregory also
worked in Santa Barbara and
Long Beach as well as San Diego.
San Die,eo police are now ques·
tionlng~am members there.
Cella, Evans
Aides Given
New Deadline
Lttwyers for Dr. LoWs J. ~Ua
Jr. and former hospital ad·
ministrator Stephen Robert
Evans have }>een given until Sept. 15 to complete preparatiOl\S
of pretrial motions which include
a requeatfor a change of venue. ,
Orange C.Ounty Superior Court
Judie H. WarreJt Knight made
the ruling TbW"lday after noting
it has taken i year to cornplete
earlier pretrial action m tt>e
criminal case.
(ella, 52, and Evans. ~ were
indicted by the Grand Jury on
· tnultlple felOl)Y counts stemming
lrom their alle1ed embenlement
of aniestiD\ated $2 ~Ulion ~ two-'c~y ~~tals contrOl*i by t..:dla as secre~-treuurer.
t
'
DAILY PILOT
I
· Pna1ey'a dru1 habit was
.a ent tbat h bad to tab plU..
to IC up LD tb.o , to ID &o
the bathroom, to atop loilll to the
ba\hroom, to puf wm. &Dd to 10
to to P1&ill11....,..thatuwua • .. ,u atutal powe.r" put on
~•rlh u a klnd or modern.clay
Jesua. •nd felt that ho had
.pty c bealiaa powen. ._,..... "'9f.S t&ktn1 friends
to IUnera1 bomea and mortuariu
to pamh14 embalmed bodi .
Presky u-ed ln mortal fear ~
assasamatioo, and had instruct·
ed bis boci.>'JU&rds to "rip th.
eyeballs out· of aay Pr ley u ·
b&SSlrl before tho assassin could
be brou.cht to tnal.
PrHley ••d orc1ere• bis
bodyguards to kill the man who
took his wtfe from him, and, on
one occasion, ordered bis
bodyguards to produce a drug
pusher for Presley himself lo ex·
ecute. Presley bad a fascination with
firearms, and once bought 32
handguns in one month. He
owned a Thompson submachine
gun and an M-16 rifle, and often
wore three guns on his person, in·
eluding a small pistol concealed
in his boot whenever he was on
~tagc.
Presley was a lonely. brooding man who would often stay in his
room for weeks, eating enormous
<1uantities of food, taking drugs,
;ind refusing to come out.
Presley bad a habit of shooting
out television screens when a
show appeared he did not like.
West, 39, agreed to the in·
terv1ew an conjunction with the
publication or a book. ''Elvis: Wha~ Happened ?" written by
West and t"o other former
Presley bodyguards, Red West
1Sonn v West's first cousin> and
l>ave ilcblcr
West !>aid he \\-Ork ed for
Preslev from 1960 to 1976, when
he and-the other two bodyguards
we re terminated by Presley's
I a ther, Ve rnon "We were
there," West said. "We saw at all
happen 1 loved that man, and an
a way I still' do. But someone had
to explain what has happened lo
Elvis, and we will all take lie de·
tector tests to show that what 1 ·m
s aying is true "
Presley, who was 42, had been
• t reported to have been in deep
psycholog1cal and physical trou·
hie in recent years. Presley
himself had not given an in·
• t~rview in almost 20 years, and
until UUs interview no one •mong
Concorde OK
Stay Urged
NEW YORK <AP' -Port
Authority lawyers plan to ask a
federal Judge Lt> stay his order
that would allow the Concorde 1et
to land at Kennedy lntemat1onal
Airport. The ruhng could take ef·
feet Aug 27 if at is not delayed
pending the outcome or the ap·
p eal.
Port Authority attorney Joe
Lesser said he and his colleagues
would ask U.S. Oastnct Judge
Milton Pollack today lo try to
persuade ham to stay bis ruling
r that permits the British-French
s upersonac airplane into the
airport on a trial basis. Lesser
!>aid at would take them two
weeks to prepare an appeal.
The Port Autbortly bas vowed
to go a&_lugh as the US. Supreme
Court if necessary an its effort to
bao the Concorde from Kenned).
Doctor Withdraws
SACRA!ltJENTO CAP> -Under
fire from Chinese-American·
leaders, a doctor picked by Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr. to sit on a
,state medical board has
withdrawn his name. Dr.
Michael Geokas withdrew his
h 1lame Thursday following weeks
1 <lf criticism fTom Chinese com-
JJt Unlty leaders who cited' a ~federal hearing oo a complaint
J filed ag8.1J\St Geokas.
l I
~ !
#
DAILY PILOT
u11E TAKES EVOY poulble
put YOl1 can think of," W t said.
••Ha tua pJUs and 1boli to a
up. Ket.UH pain pUls durl!"I the
clay. He take• Demerol and
morphine ahot1 for downs. Ro
tuke1uvt:ry1tton1 paln m~ica·
tion that 11 lntended tor termlnal-
1y ill cancer patients, he aays it
juat elves him a pleasant hi1h.
He takes pills that he thinks wlll
.Prevent body odor. He takes pills
that he thinks will give him a sun·
tan.
"'All be does is want to 1et
him.self completely out or his
lJead. He bad us give him shots m.
his rear end. and you couldn't
even find a spot where there
hadn't been other needles. Try-
ing to give him the shot was like
going into a cramped muscle.
The fiber wouldn't absorb the
fluid from the syringe. He takes
more downers than uppers. He
enjoys the downers; the uppers
are just to get him to perform. I
don't know why he does it
whether it's boredom, whether
he feels he's done everything
there is to do, or what. But I t.tunk
his life is in danger. We would
praytorhimtostop, buttherewas
no telling Elvis what to do.
"He sincerely believes he is a
supernatural force. He compares
hiD)self to Jesus. He believes he
can place bis hand on a person,
and withdraw that person's pain
into bis own body. One night I
was out in the back yard, and
Elvis told me he bad just seen a
flying saucer land. He said, ·we
mustn't be afraid. They're not
here to do us harm.'
"ONE NIGIIT AFTER we had
seen a movie in Memphis, he had
us drive off the expressway aod
go to a funeral home. A back door
was unlocked. I was there, ElVls
was there, his girlfriend was
there, his cousin and his cousin's
wife were there. Elvis went up
.apd down a row of corpses, lifting
the sheets off eight or 10 bodies.
He would lift the sheets and sho
how the embalmers had c e
throats and bled the b and
how the stitches were hold g the
throat together. He did this on
s everal occasions; he wa!>
fascinated with dead bodies.
"He has a visfon of being as·
sassinated. He told us that he
didn't want some little guy smil·
mg in a courtroom and telling the
world, 'I'm the man who killed
Elvis Presley.' So he told gs, "The
FBI and the police have their JOb
to do. You have yours. If I'm as
sassinated, I want you to get the
guy first and rip his eyeballs out.
I don't want anyone grinning in
any courtroom because he killed
me.'
"He believes he can hypnotize
people to do what is in his mind.
One night in Las Vegas. he called
me into his bedroom and I could
tell that he thought he was hyp
notiz.ing me. He often said that he
had an electrical kind or power
that could take over people's
minds. He went to his closet and
got out an M-16 rifle. He told me
that he wanted me to kill the
karate instructor who took his
wife away from him. When I
wouldn't do it, he tried to get Red
to get a hit man to do it. J knew
then that be had gone, that he had
flipped. Another time, in Mem·
phis, be called me into his room
He had about eight guns laid out
on his bed. He showed me a
pciture of a guy who ran a pool
hall. a drug pusher. He said. 'We
gotta get this guy.• He wanted the
bodyguards to get the guy out
someplace where Elvis could kill
him. He was always going
around talking about what an an
ti-drug crusader he was, which is
ironic, considering bis own habit.
Injured at Beach
Laguna Beach lifeguards carry Brendan
Shea. 16, from Agate Street Beach after
he was injured while body siirfing Thurs-
da~·. The Colorado resident was relea.~ed
from south Coast Community Hospital
where he was taken for .treatment of aa
E'romPageAI
QlJAKE~ ••
earthquake last year resulted in
more than 1,000 deaths.
Estimates of the quake·s in·
tensity varied. The International
Tsunami Information Center's
observatory in Honolulu said it
registered 7 . 7 on the Richter
sc al e while the Uppsala
Seis mological Institute in
Sweden said it registered 8.3,
making it the most powerful
quake this year . The Vienna
Institute for Meteorology and
Geodynamics said it recorded
the quake at 8.9 on the Richter
Scale, the highest reading in his·
tory
Casino Gets Study.
neck mjur)·. •
The city of Laguna Beach will
hire an additional planning staff
member for $10,000 to ease a
baclllQI ln processina apPllc•·
lions for $75,000 remainlnf in the city~s boUStngYebabllltaUon pn>-
. gram, the cilf council voted
Wednesday. •
The new staff member'asalary
will come from the funds
~armarked for the low income
and senior citizens housing pro-
aram. however, decreasing the
amount available for dispersal to
the needy.
low income people lo repair their
residences. A special priority
was placed oo the addition of
locks and security improvement.
The backlog of 15 unprocessed
appllcatlons was caURd by an
overload of the planninfc staff, Planning Director Doug Jmit.z
said.
Hiring an additional staff
member would allow appUca·
tions to be expedited. and de·
velopment of a community in-
formatie>n program on the
availability of bousinJt funds as
well as supervision of the repair
work being undertaken, Schmitz
said.
1
t
t
W ASIDNGTON lAP> -CeO-
tral Iotelliaence A•ency ln·
vesti&ators reportedl)' believe
tltat weapon·erade nuclear
materials were dl¥erted trom an
American plant and bipp04 to
Israel dunne the 1960s.
The Wasbinaton Star said to-
day that a CIA spokesman told
congressional investigators ~t
CIA invesUgators reached ~t
conclusion after agency
operatives in Europe recel~ in-
f onnatioo that Israel had ol>-
talned a sizable quantity If
enriched tinnlum.
Michael Ward. a co~i_.
staff intJestlgator. had said t
week that .. an int.elUaence ag•-
c y believes there was·: a
diversion" Of about 135 pounds~
enriched uranium in 196S froll( a
J>!ant in Apollo, Pa. He did not
identify the agency or where the
material was diverted to.
Officials of the Enerjy
Bese.uch and Development ~·
mlnlstratioh and the Nuclelr
Regulatory Commission have
acknowledged that 8,000 pounds
of weapons-grade nuclear 1
material have been unaccounted
for over the yeats but have .said
they tbiok that none of the
material was stoleri. They said
problems such as bookkeeping
errors may account for the in-
ability to trace the materials.
The Star said the CIA in· vestigalion eventually came to
focus on the Apollo plant, which
produced enriched nranlum f\lel
for U.S. submarines .. and also
had ties with a number of foreiin
government.a, lncluding a . .sd\r
sidiary owned in partnenbip
with the Israeli government ...
Details of the CIA probe were
divulged to Nuclear Regulatory
Commission officials in a secret
conference in 1976, the St.ar said.
Participants included Kenneth
R. Chapman, the bead of NRC's
safeguards section, and Carl
Duckett, then the CIA's third·
ranking official.
CARSON CITY <AP ) -A
federal probe into whether
Detroit underworld ftgures hold
hidden interests in the Aladdin
hotel-casino in Las Vegas has
prompted the Nevada Gaming
Commission to reopen a probe of
its own
The panel acted Thursday at
the urging of Commission
member Clair Haycock, who
wanted a renewed probe of
James Tamer.
The council's action came at
the urging of the city's citizen
housing committee: which also
criticized city requirements that
a ll rehabilitation paid (or by the
government funds be done by
licensed contractors.
The committee said frequently
the work being sought was so
minor that licensed contractors
were reluctant to undertake the
job. The committee suagested
that a• "handyman" be allowed
to undertake the fix up jobs.
San Juan Gas Taxes
To Ortegall_ighway? .,
The rehabilitation programs
were designed to help elderly and
~
Mesa Snuff Suspect
f
Trial Set for· 0ct. 3
Costa Mesa upholsterer Fred
Berre Douglas will be tried Oct. 3
on charges that he planned the
murder by torrure of two women
he hired for roles in porno·
graphic movies.
Orange County Superior Court
.Judge Robert Rickles set the
date for Douglas, 54, or 276 16th
Place, afte'r the defendant
pleaded innocent to charges of at·
tempted murder and soliciting
murder.
Judge Rickles ordered Douglas
returned to the courtroom Tues·
day for a hearing into a defense
motion that Douglas' bail of
$250,000 be reduced. Douglas is
held in the county jail.
Douglas w arrested July 20
Firm Tells
Purchase of
2 Boein_g Jets
in the Yucca VaUey area by two
undercover policewomen al-
legedly hired by him to ~lay
parts in pornograpbJc movies.
Po .. ce claim that Douglas in·
tended lo murder them and dis-
member them as the fmal scene
in hi& 0 1ouff porno·· movie.
A wttneu testifi•d ·iP
municipal court •ction•'qainst
Douefu that tie ortered ber $1,000
for each or fl.vo T'QtneD be asked
her to recruit for moviemaking
.and subsequent torture and
elimination..
• She testified that Doqlas told
her he bad already killed five sucb·women wbo starred in.his
movies, dis.membered thein and
buried th2m i4 the 1urr0undi.ng
remote desert area.•
Orange County's dangerous
Ortega ffiibway may be the
rec'pi.ent of Saa Jun C.Jistrano
gas tax funds for impron.ment or
the ro~·~ hazardous curves.
Elg.bl people have dled in acci-
dentsoo the Ortega this year.
City councilmen 'Voted 3 to I
Wednesday to delete SSS.000 from
another 1977-78 bud&eted city
street improvement project and
moved the funds toward re-
b a bUi tati on of the Orteca
Highway.
Councilman Ken Friess object-
ed to the move. citing the state's
respoos.ibllity for the bi1hway. "I
don't feel it'.s appropriate for vs
to spend our· small' amount of
funds oo soinethlng tbat•s the
state's responslbllity.•• Friess
said.
Prof Talk Slated
Carroll Richardson. Sad-
dleback College psychology in-
structor, will address the San
Clemente Parents Without
Partners chapter toniehL The
meeting is scheduled to begin at 8
p.111. at the El.ks Club. 1505 N, El
Caroino Real,
"I don't thfuJc we're going to
solve ~e problem on our own.·· '
beaald.
The council majority directed
city oUicials to prepare a further
report oo expenditures for the
Ortega Highway by state agen-
cies.
WmfySeats,
Lazy Guardi~
WASmNGTON CAP> -
The guards at th~ District
Building, Washington's ci-
ty hall. still have their
desks but are without
chairs. Oliver Cassell, the
Bureau of. Bulldlngs
manarement director.
won •t talk to reporters
about the matter, etcept to
say the chairs were taken
away from the guards to
increase the pro-
fessionalism of the force.
The guards are responsi·
ble for security at en-
trances to the b~Uding.
. '
. I
' 1
VOL. 70, NO. 231, ~ SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES
JAltARTA, lndoneala tAP> -A ma,Jur earthquake wu ~port
ed ln t.be Indian Ocean loday
l>etween Australia and Jn·
don.ala. Tremors forced hun-
dreds of workers to flee tall
bulldinis In western Australia
nearly 1,000 miles away bul there
were no immediate report.a of In-
juries.
The Vienna Institute for·
Meteorology and Geodynamlcs
aald tbe quako reglatered 8.1 on
the Rlcbtw scale, th• hiCheat readinceverrecor~ed. .
Other ael1moJ01ical 1U.Uons
reported readinp betweea 'I and
8 3 on the Rlcbt.er, lndicatini a
major quake capable of
widespread damaae.
The Indonesian Department ot
MeteorolO&Y said the quake oc·
curred at 1:11 p.m. Jakarta time
-11: 11 p.m. PDT -and tremors
and aftershock.I lasted for moro
than an boUr.
Tb• quake-was centered 931 r
miles southeast ot ~Indonesian
capital d Juarta ai'ld more than
l,000 miles nortti ~f Pei11j,
Australia. There were no Immediate ~
port&. ct dam ace from Indonesia
or lslaods near the quake's
'plcesrter. There ail.so was no in· cllcatton that the quake bad
raised a tsun l, or tidal wave.
Tremors shook tbe Jenet!I ot
western Auatralla, a distance or
about 2,400 mtles. Jn Perth, win·
dows and Yen~ bltnd.s retUed,
c'bair.s sU<l across floors and frightened workers ran from
buildings. Sorfie refused to retun\
even alter tremors hilt.eel. The
biggest impact was n Port
HedlaDd. where parked cars were bounced up and down ti1 the
Anaheim Fire Kills 3 -. . . .
Children Perish in Gasoline Blaze
Three children burned to death
and five others were injured
Thursday when flaming gasoline
turned their Anaheim apartment
into "an instant ball of fire," in-
vestigators said.
Dead in the wake of the 3:50
p.m. blaze were Jorge Vera, 10
months, along with his sisters,
Rosalva, 5, and Ilda, 2, all of the
941 W. Bluejay Lane apartment.
The children's father, Alfredo
A-Bomb
Materials
To Israel? ..
WASIDNGTON <AP> -Cen·
tral Intelligence Agency in·
vestigators reportedly believe
that weapon.grade nuclear
xnaterials wer~ diverted from In
American plant and shipped to
Israel cluril!C the 1980s.
Tbe Wubinlton Star said to-
• day that a CIA spokesman told
~ongressional inveslieators tlJat
CIA lnvest11ator1 reached \hat
conclusion after agency
operatives in Europe received in-
formation that Israel bad ob.
tained a sitable quantlty of
,nriched uranium.
Michael Ward, a congressional
staff investigator, had said last
week that. "an intelligence agen-
cy believes there was a
diversion" of about 135 pounds of
enriched uranium in 1965 from a
plant in Apollo, Pa. He did not
identify the agency or where the
material was diverted lo.
Vera, 30, was cleaning paint
brushes with gasoline in the
kitchen after painting a crib out-
side, firemen said.
A kitchen pilot light ignited the
gasoline fumes, firemen said, set
the one.gallon c.onta.iner of
gasoline ablaze and sent Vera
rushing "through the apartment
with the flaming plastic con-
tainer spilling bu.ming gasoline
along the way.
At the same time a wall heater
ignited and the apartment ex·
pl oded in names, firemen said.
Once out.side Vera tossed the
burning gasoline over the
se~ond-story apartment's
balcony, splashing it down the
steps and setting them afire,
firemen said. .
Vera's wife, Margarita, and a
visitor, 2().year-old Lupe Valdez
fled by jwnplnf out a window.
also dropping Mrs. Valdez• son,
l ·year·old Ernesto Rodriguez,
and 6-year-old Lupe Vera to safe·
ty, firemen said.
Vera attempted to rush back
into t.be apartment to rescue the
other children but was held back
by neighbors, firemen said.
The injured were all taken to
UCI Medical Center. Firemen
said the Rodriguea boy and Ven
(See FIBE, Page A.Z)
Groucho
listed aa
'CritiCal'
LQS ANGELES <AP>
Groucho Marx has taken a tum
for the worse and is in critical
condition at Cedars Sinai
Medical Center, a hospital
spokesman said tod y.
Th IS·ynr-~ld -eomed ...
pulse tmd blOOd pressure bad
become unstable, tald hospital
spoketman Larry laum.
"Everytb.in& Uiai u.n be j!one
to help him la belftl aone, he
said. ·~e body a~ one way at
times aftd your aid sometimes ls
not beneficial a it mieht be."
Mant was slipping in and out of
consciousness. another bospltal
t;polcesman said. He was being
fed intravenously and oxygen
was being administered to him,
Baum said.
Marx was being attended by
nurses and physicians around the
clock, he said.
J·
Officials of the Energy
Research and Development Ad·
ministration and the Nuclear
Reeulatory Commission have
acknowledged that 8,000 pounds
of weapOl'IS·grade nuclear
material have been unaccounted
tor over the years but have said
they think that none of the
material was stolen. They said
problems such as bookkeeping
errors may account. for the in··
ability to trace the materials.
J
The Star said the CIA in·
vestigation eventually came to
focus on the Apollo plant, which
j>roduced enriched uranium fuel
for U.S. subniarirles "and also
had ties with a nftiber of foreign
governments, including a sub.
sidiary owned in partnership
with the Israeli govemnient."
Details of the Cl.A probe were
divulged to Nuclear RecuJatory
Commission officials ln a secret.
confe1'ellce in 1976, the Star said.
Participants included Kenneth
R. Chapman, the head of NRC's
safeguards iectlon, and Carl
Duckelt, then the OIA 's thltd·
ranking official.
Newport Beach police officer Scott Cade displa\·s the
source of a lot of anxiety Thursday at the Do\•e ·Street
branch of the Bank of America. Somebody left it at the.
bank. Bank officials became suspicious and called
police. The bomb squad was called in. The building was
evacuated. Bomb squaders tied a string around the box
and pulled it gingerly from tile bank. The box was
empty.
quw and bUildJnts rocked an4 ••ated for four mtnutes.
·The closest m~or land area to
the quake'• epic~ter was the In·
doM&lan island Of Sumba, about
200 miles away. AbOut 25,000 ~
ple live on the farming islarid,
famous for its horses.
The quake's center was aho
about 300 miles southeast of ttie
toUriat island of Bal.I, where an
-~WI~ PRESLEY FAN KATHY FINLEY MOURNS IN MEMPHIS
King of Rock Laid to R•at; S.. Story, Page A4
11.2 DAILY PILOT
ht1 Ufe ln daa1er. We wouJc.
prayfcwhlmto top. ~tthorewu
notelllna Eh'b what to do.
"Ho afncerely be v ll a
u~ f Hecompue9
hlrnHlf to J \&I. Wlev• be
UD plet9 b . cm a penlGO.
und Withdraw Ulat per19n•1 pain
• into his own body. One nl•'ht J
w 11 out in the ·back yard, and
lilvtt told me be bed Jut seen•
n) in& saucer lud. Ho said; 'W•
mustn't be afraid, 'Illey'N not.
here to do &&a harm:
·'ONE NIGHT AnE& we had
seen a movie in Memphis, bo had
us drive off tb• e¥P?"euway and
~o lo a funeral home. A. back door
was unlocked. I waa there, Elvis
was there, his airlfriend was
there, his cousin aod h1a couain 's
wife were there. Elvia went up
and down a row of corpses, lifting
the sheets off eight or 10 bodies.
He would lift the sbeeta and show
how the embalmers bad cut the
throats and bled the bodies and
how the stitches were boldin& the
throat together. He dld this on
~.everal occasions; be was
fascinated with dead bodies.
"He bas a vision or being as·
s assinated. He told us that be
dido 't want some little guy smil·
, ing in a courtroom and telling the
world, 'I'm the man who killed
Elvis Presley.' Sohe told us, 'The
FBI and the police have their job
to do. You have yours. lfl'm as-
s assinated, I want you to get the
guy first and rip his eyeballs out.
J don't want anyone grinning i
any courtroom becau~e he kill
me.•
.Brisk Pace
Of Building
Will Go On
Bwlding Director Bob Fowler
s ays he believes building activity
in Newport Beach, will contiaue
its current brisk pace through the
summer.
In his monthly report on build-
ing permits, Fowler noted that,
during the month of July, the city
issued l~ building permits with
a total valuation of $7. 760,338.
Last year during the month of
July, the city issued 192 permits
1 with a valueof$6,854,723.
!..
Looking at statistics for the
1977 calendar year. Fowler said
the city has issued a total of 1,475
permits worth $41,482.871 for the
first seven months. Last year's
figures were 1,375 permits worth
$40,666,468.
Fowler said the permits in-
cluded those for 33 new dwelling
units 31 single family homes
and a duplex. Of those 25 were is·
~ued to M.J . Brock and Sons for
another phase in Jasmine Creek.
The Jasmine Creek permits had
an e stimated valuation of
Sl,639.~2.
The largest commercial proj-
ert for July was a building to be
built at 4590 MacArthur
Boulevard in the Koll Center.
Fowler said th'e.six story build-
ing has an estimated value of
$3.420,000 for the exterior shell
only. He said additional permits
will be issued for the interior or
the building.
~ Pups Stolen
ln1Newport
Newport Beach resident.
Robert Barley would like to get
his dogs back.
Barley told police that thieves
took advantage of bis temporary
absence Thursday morning. to
steal his two puppies from his
y~rd at11843rdSt.
1 The missing animal• are
iescribed u a ftve-month-old
rown and white ftmale Sl.
ernard and a aix·montb-old
1 lack male Malamute bu&lrle.
arley said the two doaa are
1 worth abOUt $550. ..
N
DAILY PILOT
• • • H bell be can hYll'Mltlae
l*JP}e to do wtiat. ll In hliiDlnd.
One n.leht Ln Lii Ve1u. be called
me lnto bi• bedroom and I coWcl
tell that ht t ~u hyp.
notblq mt. He 1ald UW
bad an ti trtcal kht\l .GI power tb•t could t•ke over P4!0pl1'1
minds. Ho wtnl tO bl1 closet and
•ot. out an Jl.lS rlfle. He told me
tbat bo w me to ldll the
kar to instr\ICt.or who took bis
wife away trOm him. When I
wouldn't do It, he tried to aet Red
to l(et a bit man to do it. I knew
then that he had 1one, tbat be bad
ntpped. Another tJme, ln Mem·
pbll, be called me into his room.
He had about el1bt auns laid out
on his bed. He showed me a
pciture of a auy wbo ran a pool
hall, a drui pusher. He said, 'We
gotta get this guy.' He wanted the
bodyguards to get the auy ou•
someplace where Elvis could kill
him. He was always eoing
around talldn• about what an ID·
ti-drug crusader be was, which is
ironic~ considering bis own habit.
.. HE LOVES GUNS. He lb.inks
they're the greatest equalizer in
the world. He once tried to give a
.357 magnum with a gold inlay to
Spiro Agnew as a gift. He·s
always giving people guns as
gifts. He often wears one gun in a
shoulder holster, one tn h1s belt,
and a liWe four-shot Derringer in
his boot-includlne when he's on
stage. Whet\ be comes out of his
bedroom after waking up, he·s
canying a fUD. Wearing bis pa-
jamas and carryioi a eun.
·'There will be two and three
weeks at a time when he won't
come out or his room and come
downstairs. He just eata and gets
high and watches TV. We'll go
out on the lawn and start tossing
a football around to try to coax
him out. but he won't come. He'E
just stay by himself.
0 Many times he'll pull a gun
out and fire it al a television
screen. Sometimes it's for target
practice. Sometimes it's be<:ause
of a program he doesn "t like. He
doesn't like the singing of Robert
Goulet. Once Goltlet came on the
screen, and Elvis just raised his
gun and shot the screen out. It ·s
hard to rationalize that even as
you 're seeing it.
"He's a very lonely person.
He ·s a very unhappy person. I've
been around him 1iQce he was an
unpopular high scl\ool kid with
acne, couldn't make the football
team. After all that he's become,
tha~ kid is ,u14 in•id• hini. ije's
·Elvis Preslq. but be'a a lonely
little kid."
Sinatra's
Attorney
To Get Order
CARSON CITY (AP> -
Nevada Gamtn1 Copimlssion
Chairman Harry Reid wants
Frank Sinatra's lawyer, Milton
Rudin of Los Angeles, to step
forward for Ucensln& as a Del E.
Webb Corp. director.
The corporation owns and
operates the Newporter Inn in
Newport Beach.
The corn mission dldn 't islue a
formal order Thursday that
Rudin come forward, but Reid
said that by next month be want·
ed a recommendation from the
panel's investigatory arm, the
Gaming Control Board, and be
would then move to issue the or·
der lf Rudio bad not voluntarily
acted in the Interim.
Commission member Clair
Haycock said be wanted swift ac·
lion on the Rudin-Sinatra matter
because it appeared 1amlnc
authoriUes bad been "run.nin&
and hi'dlna'' in delayina a~ on
thelasue.
Sinatra was stripped of a·
Nevada eaqilna license i.a. 1063
for alleiedly hoaUna tbe late
Sam "Momo" Olancana at a.club
Slnatra once 9wued al l'.Alce
Tahoe. Gi~.: a tnowrr. wi-
derworld fi&titt. waa assusinat·
edlnlln5.
Here's Bow
Pete Asch of the Stan Kenton Band shows high school
saxophone players David Moody <left) of Lakewood and
Mike Schaf er of Corona (lei Mar some fine poihts of the
instrument during a rehearsal at Orange Coast College
Students join the Kenton band tonight at 7: 30 in the OCC
auditorium.
Consultant Sought
For Parking ~tudy
Businessmen who comprise
the Central Newport Parklng
Committee wilJ ask city coun·
cilmen Monday to hire a consul:
tant to conduct an $18.~ ~tudy
on the possible formation of a
parking district.
Committee members ,
representine businesses from the
Lido Village lo McFadden
Square at the Newport Pier, have
been asking councilmen to buy
two pieces or property near the
pier.
The businessmen say the city
could hold the property until they
form a parking district, then the
district would buy it ,.ml tum it
intopark,mf loU. .
If the etfort to organize the dis-
trict falls, the city could make a
profit by selling the land, the
businessmen say.
But councilmen have indicated
they would rather take a survey
Flrlll Tells
Purchase of
2 Boeing Jets . . .
• Robert Clifford, presldedt of
Air Calllotnia, *On<>unced Tbura·
day the airline ii buyint two Boe-
in• 737-100 jet a.ircraft from Aloha Airlines. .
Deliveries of the two alrttaft
are expected on Sept. » and·
March, 15, 1971.
ln announcinl the purchase to
the airl.ln~ shareQ.olden at their
annual m~ting this week at the
Newporter Inn, Clifford said the
·craft arf belng bought. to meet ln·
creaaed customer d-ma.nd.
Clifford told sbaieholders the
financial arran1ementa of the
purchase are still being
necotiated.
I
of all of the area's property
owners to see how much interest
there is ln form\ng a district
before committing city funds to
purchase ol tlle two parcels, the
lareest of which is valued at
$400,000. .
Committee members Monday
afternoon will ask councilmen to
take $18,900 out of the area's off.
street parking fund to hire the
consulting fll'm of WiJbur SD\tth
and Associates to assess the
various types of distrlcb W'd aid
them in deciding the best way to
for.J1l a parking agency.
They say they want to hold off
on survey Ull'Ul the~ is
c.om ed • •
Cltt atatr ~bets say tbey
wlll advise councihnen to delay
any moves to purchase property
in the are.a until some kind of sur-
vey can bt made.
In a memo sent to councilmen.
City Manager Robert W)'ll.D not-
ed there is $83,992 in the off.street
parldnJ fund for the central
Newport area. There iS a total of
St 77,665 In the f)Jnd citywJd~.
Newport Legion
Post Plans Luau .
Newport Harbor American Legion Post m is ~nsoring its
annual fund·raisitil luau Satur-
daY at pan headquarters at 215
15th st., Newport Beach.
The $7.:;o dinner lets under
way wit.H c:ocktaUs at 6 ~,m, and
will in~~ dinrier and dancing
until la.in,.
Reservatl6ns ~an be made by
calling 873-5070.
r. •
llai1e teuek 1a,y1 she doesn't
blame Newport Beach doctor
for not lettinC her 86-yeu-old
mot.her .,die with dlsnltf." ••nt. (Theodore> ~ex ls a won·
derful man.'' ahe aald in a
telephone interview ... He jus~
feels that what he dld is rlcht. ·'
Mn. Leuck'• mother, Marie
Welday, dled Wedneeday at a
Newport Beach convalescent
ho e>iial where she bad been kept
aitvt tor 16 months by nasal ad·
. Rate Hiked·
To7 Percent
By Citibank
• NEW YORK (Ap') -Citibank.
the nation's ~ond largesrl:bm·
merclal bank, raised its prime
interest tale today from 6:W. per-
cent to 1 percent. Citi~k •. wbich had neld the
pritQe at 6~ ~~t since May
27, dld not elaborate im1Qediate-
ly on its move. But according to
its formula for computing the
prime r.-te, the rate worked out
to between 6~ and 7 percent this
week. The formula is based in
part on the rate for commercial
paper -short-term unsecured
IOUs by companies,
Citibank usually takes the lead
in prime rate acijuslments.
The change ln the prime rate -
a bank's cbaree on loans to its
best corporate customers -bad
been widely anticipated because
of the Federal Reserve 's recent
actions to tighten growth in the
nation'~ money supply.
In the past month, the money
supply has been rising faster
than the Fed has indicated it
would ttke, and its money
managers have been actively
trying to slow the rate of growth.
In the past week, the rate on
federal fwtds, the money banks
lend each othet-, has risen about
one.quarter percentage point to
6-61til percent.
The prime rate is not directly
linked lo consumer loan charces
but may ~ert a psycbololical in-
fluence on'all loan rates.
.. The oaly thing the two have in
common is tbat they ate both
prices and tbey may both rise ...
one banker aald.
Movie: sia~d
For Newport
Kid Readers
Children who have participat-
ed in this year's summer reading
protram at the Newport Beach
city libraries will be lreated to a
movie Tuesday momlne. -The Friends of the . Newport
Beach Libr~ are aponaoring a
showing of 'Captain Nemo"
starrin& Omar Sharif at the
Newport Center Edwards
Cinema at 10 a.m..
A drawing for door prizes
donated by local merchants will
b•held during lntermissloo.
Su~ will t>e.provided by
children's librarians from all of
the br-nch libraries, the Friends
and Tic~Tocker volunteers.
The program wm conclude at
about 12~ 1S p .m .
I
ministration of nutrient. heart and blood medication.
This despite a "ll!iDJwID" tbe
elderly woman bad 11~ed five
years preTious to a striate she
suffered In May 19'16.
A lawsuit that could have
meant a landmark court decision
on the right of helplessly lU peqo
p)e t.:) will their own death. dled
with the woman.
"I'm not goini lo pursoe U\Y
court action.'· Mn. Leuck saiid
today.
But tbo Coata Mesa wo
said sbe hopes •omeone curl
the ball regardlna the right•
termlnallytll people to die.
"We need to get the 1
straightened out so doc\on
be in the clear when e requ
like this COD\e'S up in the future,••
she said.
The lawsuit filed by MJJ.
Leuck last month aak~ Superior Court judie to force •
Alex to comply with the sla e's
new natural death law. That law.
however, applies only to persons
who sign a "living will" after
they are told their condition is
terminal,
ln the case of Mrs. Leuck's
mother. the elderly woman
signed the dotument before she
knew she was dying.
Mrs. Leuck says she wants to
help other people who want. to
"die with dignity."
She said she bes had many
misgiviogs about her battle to al·
low her mother to die, but added.
"Looking back, I couldn'tdoaJay
different."
NB Says 'No'
On Pinball
• Plans to in.stall a pinball parlor
in Newport Shores met with a re-
sounding "no" from Newport
Beach planning commissioners
who voted unanimously Thurs-
day night to deny operators a use
permit.
The appli'cants, Douglas Jobson
of Huntington Beach and Ivey
Mimbs of Long Beach, were seek-
ing commission approval to
establish "a recreation center
with skill games" in the building
at6100W.CoastHJshway.
Commissioners. rejected the
request on the arounds that it
would be lna~t:iate .for the
surr<>UQdlng neigbborh0C>4.
F.-..PafleAI
FIRE •••
were both JUited In serious condi-
tion with burns.
Mrs. Vera also was being treat-
ed and sedated at·the hospital.
Mrs. Valdez and Lupe Vera were
treated for injuries and released,
firemen said. .
Af'\Otller Vera child, Martin.
was outside and not injured.
Investigators said flremea
found two of the dead cblldren 'on
a living room couch and anottier
ill a bedroom. 1'ey said the
youngsters had not moved and
bad no chance to escape.
Firemen extinguished the
blaze immediately upo~ arrival.
Damage wu confined primarily
to tbe Vera apartment with
minor damaee to another unit next door, firemen said.
Damages waa estimated at
about $25,000.
Junior Shark
With concentration worth~· of Willie Mosconi. 10-year-
old Scott Stebbins of Mission Viejo sights on the cue ball
in preparation for a s hot in a tournament sponsored by
the Saddleback Valley Unified School District Recrea-
tion Department. The event c;trew the best players from
the SadcUeback Valley's teen and communitv centers to
Olivewoo<l School in El Toro. ·• . 1
leged victim was located and in·
dicated that events bad
transpired during 1976. Charges
were filed in that case, he said.
The girls involved were 13to16
at the time of the alleged occur·
rences.
Brooks said that to many ot his
team members, Gregory was a
.. father image.
t'They would cotne to hlrn and
discuss f~ily probl~ms and
personal t>robleJns,' be said.
In addition to taking the team
members on tournament tours,
Gregory frequently would take
the girls on liUle holidays or
waterskttng, Brooks6aid.
In addition to coachina teams
in Lagtma Beach, Grecory also
worked in Santa Barbara and
Long Beach as well as San Dieio.
San Diego police are now ques-
tioning team members th~
Tbiee children bUmed to death
and five others were injured
Thunday when flaming tasoline
. t\Jl'lled their Anaheim apartment
lnto "Min.st.ant ball of fire," in·
vestllators said.
De4d in the wake of the 3:50 p.m. blue were Jorge Vera, 10
moot.bl, along with his sisters,
Rosalva, S. and Dd~ 2, all of the
941 W. Bluejay Lane apartment.
The children's father, Alfredo
Ver ... 30, was cleaning paint
brushes with gasoline in the
kitchen after painting a crib out.
Biggest
~quake
Repqrted
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) -
A .major earthquake was report-
ed 1n the Indian Ocean today
between Australia and In-
donesia. Tremors forced bun-
dreda of workers to nee tall
buildings in we.stern Australia
nearly 1,000 miles away but there
were no immediate reports of in-
juries.
Tbe Vienna Institute for
Meteorology and Geodynamics
said the quake registered 8.9 on
the Richter scale, the highest·
read.in1everrecorded.
Other seismological ·stations
reported readings between 7 and
8.3 on the Richter, indicating a
major quake capable of
widespread damage.
The Indonesian Department of
Meteorology said the quake oc-
curred atl:ll .ll'l. Jakarta time
-u~ . P -and.tii mo~
lf!!Qr more
side, fil'emen said.
A kitchen pilot light ignited the
gasoline fumes, firemen said, set
the one-1allon container of
gasoline ablaze and sent Vera
rushing through the apartment
with the naming plastic con-
tainer spilling burning gasoline
. alongtheway.
At the same time a wall heater
ignited and the apartment ex·
pl oded in names, firemen said.
Once outside Vera tossed the
burning gasoline over the
second-story apartment's
balcony. splashtng it down the
steps and settln& them afire,
firemen said.
Vera's wile, Margarite, and a
visitor, 20-year-old Lupe Valdes
fled by jumping out a wiDdow,
also dropping Mrs. Valdez' ~.
1-year-old Ernesto Rod.ricuez,
and 6-year·old L\lpe Vera to sife-
ty, firemen said.
Vera attempted to rusb....ba.ck
into the apartment-to rescue tbe
other children but was held back
by neighbors, firemen said.
The injured were all taken to
Elvis Drug llabit
I
.labeled 'Severe'
fEdUor'& Note: TM Asaocicded
Pre31 reported Thursda.g out o/
M emphia tbat . authoritie• hod cfU.
counted reports tbat Prealq had
serious drug probl~. Dr. Jm,J
Franci8Co, 1Dho con®cttd 4 llJrtt·
hour . autopcy on ~M entmabwr's
body. was quoted a.1 taying thert W06
no sign of <mJI druo abuu. "flWITe was no ttlidtacf of anu abunnal, u.
~dl'Ugiue, .. Dr • .Fr;ancUc~)
f
UCI Me(ftcal Center. Ftremen
aild the Rodriguez bOy and Vera
were bOth listed in serious eondi•
lion with bums •
Mn. Vera also was beintireat·
ed and sedated at the hospital. Mn. Valdez llnd Lupe Vera were
treated for btjuries and relea.S«t,
firem~ said.
AnOther Vera child. MaJ'tin.
was oUtside and not lQJUrid.
Investigators aaid flHmen
found two ottbe dead children Qn
a living room eoueh 90d anotber
(Seti naE, Pqe 42>
A-lJOrnb 1
Materia"ls
To Israel?
WASmNGTON <AP) -Cea·
tral Jntelltaence Agency in·
vestigators reportedly believe
tbat weapon-grade nuclear
materials were diverted from an
American plant and shipped to
Israel duringthe 19608.
The Washintton Star said to-
day that a CIA spokesman.. told
conjl'elS!onal investigators that
CIA investicators reached that
conclusion after agency
operatives in Europe receivedin·
formation that Israel had ot>-
tained a sizable quantity of
enriched µrmtum.
Michael Ward, a congressional
staff investlgalor, had said last
week tha~ "an intelligence agen-
c y believes there was a
diversion'' of about 135 pounds of
enriched uranium in 1965 from a
plant bi Apollo. Pa. He did not
l'e.tlfy .,.,cy or wher• the
material wudiverted to. •
Officials of tbe Ener17 Besanm and Development Ad·
inlstnttoa and the Nucle~ W•~ Cofumlsatoa ha".• aeJmooilid1ed tfaat 8.,000 ~
of weapon•·•rade nucleak'
material have been unaccounted
for over the years but bave said
they think that none of the
material ,..as stolen. They said
problems -such as bookkeeping
errors may account for the in·
abiUfy to trace the materials.
The Star said the CIA in~ veatlaation eventually came td
focus on the Apollo plant. wblc}t
produced enriched uranium fuel '
fQr u,s.; submarines ··and also
bad U• with a number Qf foreiipf
aovetntnerJt.1, includint a su~
sidiary owned in pa.ttnersjlip
with the hraeti government.··
Details ot the CIA probe w~ di~id to N~ear Regulatoey.
CoQUni.ssion officials ln a secrel
conference in 1916, the ~d.
PartielpaJltS included Kennetlt
Jt. Chapman. ~ head of NRC''
sateguatds section, and Cart Duck~ C.ben the CIA ·a third'
r&iik!Dg officlat .... •
01'1l Y PILOT
and w• •UI all take lit M-
l« Co 'b<lw tbahdaaU '• tatru ."
y • Who Wb U 1 bed
nnottJ!!d to b.ve blien in ...,
y ical and l'b1a1tal ~· I• In recent yura. Pr t1
m r had 1lven aQ tn.
.... ln almo&t • ~· and
until lhiJ lnt~rvtew no one atmonc
"'' eonf'ldant.s had t.alked to r• porte-n..
••HE TAKES EVK&Y poulble
pill you can think of, .. Wect said.
.. 11• tak~ palb> t.nd shot.a to set
up. He lakes pain pilla du.rinl the
day. He takes De erol aod
morphine shots for owaa. He
takes a very ~troo1 medica·
lion that is intended or terinlnal·
ly ill cancer patie ; ho aaya it
ju.st gives him a eaaant hich.
)'le takes pills th he thinks will
prevent body odor. He takes pills
that he thinks wlll give him a su.n·
tan.
"All he does is want to get
himself completely out of bis
head. He had us 11ve him shots in
has rear end, and you couldn't
even find a spot where there
hadn't been other needles. Try·
ing to give tum the shot w~ike
~oing into a cramped muscle.
The fiber wouldn't absorb the
fluid from the syringe. He taltes
more downers than uppers. He
enjoys the downers; the '}ppers
are just to get him to perform. 1
don •t know why he does it -
whether 1l's boredom, whether
he feels he's done everything
there is to do, or what. But I think
his life is m danger. We would
prayfo.-tum to stop. buttherewas
no telling Elvis what todo.
"He sincerely believes he is a
supernatural force. He compares
himself to Jesus He belleves he
can place his hand on a person,
and withdraw that person's paan
mto his own body. One night I
was out In the back yard. and
Elvis told me he had just seen a
flying saucer land. He said. ·we
mustn't be afraid They're not .
here to do us harm.·
''ONE NIGHT AFTER we had
seen a movie in Memphis, he had
us drive off the expressway and
go. to a funeral home. A back door
was unlocked. I was there, Elvis
was there. his girlfriend was
there, his cousin and his cousin's
wtfe were there. Elvis went up
and down a row of corpses, lifting
the sheets off elgbt or 10 bodies.
· He would lift the sheets and show
how the embalmers had cut the
throats and bled the bodies and
how the stitches were holdJh,( the
throat together He did this on
.:-,everal occasions: he was
fascinated with dead bodies.
Dad Watches
As Two Sons
·Die in Crash
CEDAR, Mich. <AP) -As a horrifl~d. father wat.c\ed, a
seaplane carrying his two-sons
on a pleasure excursion plunged
into a resort Jake near here, kill·
• ing all fow people aboard.
Killed in Thursday night's
crash were the pilot, David Race.
23, of Carbondale, Pa.; and his
three passengers. Bob Frixen,
22, and brothers Kurt Lawicki,
, 11, and James Lawtcki, 22, all of
· this northwestern Michigan
town.
Al Lawacki. the father. re-
portedly suffered a mild heart at·
tack following the crash.
Relalives said the elder
Lawicka. owner of the Lake
· Leelanau Rustic Resort where
the crash occurred, bad 1iven his
' sons t.be mooey to late the plane
ride.
Leelanau ColU\lY sbetiff's dep-
uties said Race operat.ed. a 11.y.
L lna service at the resort. Accord-
ini to witnesses, the 1in1le·
1 en1ino plane was rnakin1 a loop
• durina a routine excursion flJ.tbt when it crast).ecl into t..be lpe
about 75 yards from shore.
ORANOI COUT
DAILY PILOT
I
MEMPHIS. Tenn. (AP) -The
J8.year·old youth accused of kill·
101 two Louisiana womeo and
cratically injuring a third with his
car out1ide Elvis Presley's
mans ion was ord•w:ed beld
w llhout bail tod•Y after lats
m other said he had mental problems.
City court Judge Horace
Paerolti reversed an earlier rul·
H\& that. set bond at $20,000 for
Treatise Wheeler tu. The judge
said he was ordering Wheeler
held without bond beuuse of
s tatements by hls mother, Olivia
Wheeler, about the defendant's
mental condition. He scheduled a
preliminary bearing for Wb~ler
on Monday. <Related story, Page
A4 >
Wheeler is charged with two
counts of second·.degree murder •.
reckless driving , put>lic
drunkenness and driving while
under the influence of lnt~xtcanu.
Alice Hovarter and Joanne
Johnson, both 19, took Wednes·
day off from work to drive from
Monroe, L-a , to Memphis. They
. ~en/ killed early Thursday as
the stood outside Presley's
Graceland Mansion.
A third teenaaer hit by the cillt.
Tammy Baiter, 17, of St. Clair,
Mo., was an critical condition at a
Memphis hospital.
Cited ·by Mesa 'Right to Die'-.Eigllre
.. HE LOVES GUNS. He thinks
they're the ireatest equalizer in
the world. He 6nce tried to give a
.357 magnum with a gold inlay to
Spiro · Agnew as a gift. He's
always giving people guns as
gifts. He oft.en wears one gun in a
shoulder bolster, one in his belt.
and a liWe four-shot Derringer in
hls boot -including when he ·son
stage. When he comes out of has
bedroom after waking up, he '>
carrying a gun. Wearing ttls pa·
jamas and carrying a gun.
"There will be two and three
weeks at a time when -he won t
(:Orne out of his room and come
downstairs. He just eats and gets
high and watches TV. We'll go
out on the lawn and start tossing
a football around to try to coax
him out, but he won't come. He'll
just stay by ttlmself.
"Many times he'll pull a gun
out and rare it at a television
screen. Sometimes it's for tareet
practice. Sometimes it ·s because
of a program he doesn t hke. I le
doesn't like the singing of Robert
. Goulet. Once Goulet came on the
screen, and EJvis just raised has
gun and shot the screen out It s
hard to rationalize that even as
you 're seeing it.
"He's a very lonely person
He's a very unhappy person 1".e
been around tum since he was an
unpopular high school kad wath
acne, couldn •t make the football
team. After all that he's become.
that kid is still inside ham •Iles
Elvis Presley, but he·s a lonely little kid.··
FirmTell8 .
Purcba8e of
2 Boeing Jets
Robert Clifford, president of
Aar California, announced Thurs-
day the airli,ne is buying two Boe-
ing 737-100 jet aircraft from
Aloha Airlines.
Dchveraes of the two .aircraft
are expected on Sept. 30 and
March, ts, 1978.
In annoul}clng the purchase to
the airlipes shareholders at their
annual meeting this week at the
Newporier Inn, Clifford said the
craft are being bought to meet in·
creased customerdem~nd.
Clifford told s~reholders the
financial arrangement$ of \be
purchase are still being
negotiated.
Fro•PageAJ
Marte Leuck say~ sh~ doesn't
blame Newport Beadi doctor
for not letting her 86·year-0ld
mother .. die with dignity ...
"Dr. (Theodore) Atex is a won-
derful man,•• s he said In a
telephone interview. "He jus.
feels that what he did is right.•·
Mrs.' Leuck's mother, Marie
WeJday, died · Wednesday at a
Ne wport Beach convaleseent
hospital where she had been kept
alive lor 16 months by oasal ad·
ministration of nutrlentt and
heart and blood medication.
This despite a "living will" the
elderly woman had· signed five
years previous to a stroke she
suffered in May 1976.
A lawsuit that could have
meant a landmark court decision
on the right of helplessly m peo.
pie to will their own death, died
with the woman.
"I'm not going to pursue any
court action,·· Mrs. Leuck said today.
But the Costa ·Mesa woman
said she hopes some<>ne carries
the ball · regardlng the right or
terminally ill people to die.
"We ne.ed to get \be law
straightened out so doctors will
be in the clear when a request
like thir~mes up in the future,··
shesdkl ..
• The lawsuit filed by Mrs.
m a bedroom They said the Le uck last month asked a
youngsters had not moved and · , Superior COurt jud'e to force D~.
had no chance to esca·pe. J\lex to comply With the state s
new,natural death law._That law.
howner. applies only to persons
who sign a "livin' will" after
FIRE ..•
fo'arem~n extinguished the
blate immediately upon arrival.
Damage was confined primarily
to the Vtra apartment with
minor damage to another anit
next door. firemen said.
Oamages was estimated at
about $25,000.
Oil Drilling
PlaD Advances
San Juan Gas TaXes
'Co Ortega High'":'_y?
LOS ANGELES (Ai)) -A con·
trovers'ial pro1>9Sa1 by Occld~fo·
tal PetrolQum CQ~. lo drill oil
wells o(f P-cifio Palisades has
moved a :step closer ~o approval
because oC a split vote b)I a City
Council comrnlttee.
The split vote by Ute Planning
Committee Tbursda)' $ent the
proposal to the full council with
no -recommendation. ,
Orange County's dangerous
Ortega Highway may be the
recipient or San Juan Capistrano
gas tax funds for improvement of
the road's hazardous curves
Eight people have <Hed in acca
dents on the Ortega th as year
City councilmen voted 3 to 1
Wednesday to delete $88,000 from
another 1977· 78 budgeted city
street improvement project and
moved tbe funds toward r e·
babilitation of the Ort~i a
itigbway.
~cllman Ken Friess object-
ed to the move, citing the sta~e 's
responsibility for the highway. "I
don't feel it's appropriate for IJ.5
to spend our small amount of
funds on somethihg that's the
state·s responsibility." Friess
4'aid.
"I don't think we're Coing to
!iolve the pf'9blem on QUr own.·•
he sald.
The councU majority directed
city officials to prepare a further
report on expenditures for the ~rtega Hfih\4-ay bf state ageh·
CJ6S.
Only a simple majority -eight
votes -will be needed r ... the run
council to approve the drilling.
they are tqld their condlUon is
terminal.
In the case of Mrs. Leuck's
mother, the elderly woman
signed the document before. abe
knew she "85 dying.
Mrs. LeUck aays she wants to.-
Costa Mesa uphoti&teter Fred
Berre Douglas will be tried Oct. 3
on charges that he planned the
murder by torture of two women
he hired for roles in porno·
graphic movies.
Orange County Superior Court
Judge Robert Rickles set the
dale for Douglas, 54, of 276 16th
Place. after the d efendant
pleaded innocent to cbarees or at·
tempted murder and soliciting
murder.
Judge Rickles ordered DoQglas
returned to the courtroom Tues·
Crash Kills
Grove Teen
A 17-year-old Garden Grove
girl was killed Thursday morn-
ing when the van she was driving
er.ashed into the rear of a parked
tractor·trailer rig in Anaheim,
Orange County coroner's dep·
uties reported. .
Rosezella ·Carnes, of 11762
Medina Drive. was pronounced
dead aUhesceneofthe6.i3Sa.m.
crash · on Ball Road .at MacDuff Street. dep1Jties said.
The cause or·the C:Vash is un·
known, deputle$salcf.
~\
Tax~ Grip,ing
LOS ANGE~ CAP). -Even
the tu.man is com1;>laininl about high~ In a property tax ap-
peal made public Thursday.
county Assessor Philip Watson
said the $176,000 asseesmen• on
his new home was too biJh..
help other people who want to
.. dle wlth dicnlty. ••
She said she bas bad many
mlscivtnp about her battle io al-
low her mother to die. b)&t added,
••Loc*fng back. I eould.Q 't do any
cliffercit." ~
\
day for • heart~ Into a def~~e
motion that Douglas• bail of
$250,000 be reduced. Douglas ls
held in the county jail.
Douglas was arrested July 20
in the Yucca Valley area by two
undercover policewomen ~1·
Jegedl,Y hired by him to plltY
parts an pornographic movies.
Police cl.aim that Douglas fu-
tended to murder them ,nd dis-mem~ them as ~e final scene jn his .. snuff porno· movie. / A witness testified an
municipal court action a1ah¥t ·
Douglas that he offered her $11000
for each or flVe womcm h~ asktd
her to recruit for movieinaldng
and subseQuent torture and
elimination .
She te:stified that Douglas told
her he had already killed five
such women who starred in h.is
movies, dismembered them and
burled them in the surrounding
remote desert area.
Bogus Levi's
. ' I Confisc~ed ·:
BASEt., SwiUer1and <AP> L
An inte"1ationa1 po1$e h4s
rounded up four foreignet:S a~
cused of trying to t>olll" coun-t~rfeif Levt•s Jnto the European
market and corTalled S2,000palfs
of the bogus pants. .
Swiss and Dutch pollc, said Uie
jeans were made in 'taiwan and
South Korea ~d carried forg~
labels of the Levi Strauss Com-
pany, the 9'0rld 's best·JcnoWn
manufacturer.
'• ...
'"' .... .. '. '.
·~ ...
'• ..
.... -"' . .. ,, ..... .
~ .. . ,., .... , ..
11'4-... U•11+""' Uli6t#•-· 8:\o-~ 1& -,,, ., -.,,
32 • •
141'1. 1.-V 101/4 -...
2S'• -•11 , ..
10'• ... ,,
6',-"'• ,, .... '"'·· IN •.
U V1-·~ 7&1<t ~ ••
l P t • • .. lt'•-... n~-•• 11 •
lO -.. 37"•• .. l71 .. -'• ,., __ ....
l"-· ... Ill/•+ ..... tlh+ .... 16 ... -.,,, ,, -"" 3:J • • • • ~·"' ,,.,._ \t
~ ...
, 1 °'°'' (bi l"4 =~H··· .~ -ri ·~~:!~ l!Mhetct W • H 14' ... -"
IM!llOta " " • + ~ ~ .. -110 • ,. 1""--. ,,__.. , .. s ' 11'•• '· ""-·j' JU•"' ~' 1 ... '11'11-. ii t to • i1"-v. II 64 .f6"e ••••• ••·i n ua. .... .... b ' 11l••"' ~ ... ' p »~-··· MOfltl\ t1D SS ~ ..... Mot~'J& 1 , ~·:. :
=r.lrAITI • t 4\11+ "' MorNOI' 1 t llt ?m-" Motrela .MU • ~-:% t::Cr.I 1 el : t: ~:Z= v. Mvnlonl All1' 1• e•Ai .•••• Munq 1.• t I If~-"'
MlirllflC 1 • • • 11-. 14 MlifOOll .eo t * l>Ve-w ¥vtryO 1 • • 29._ •••
Murty() wt • • 3 '°'"' ..... Mu10ftl 1.:a • 1 14v .. , • t
Myet'll.. 4011 • 11"'•+ h -N--NCll .,11 Sit 6' -\It Nllftd I 20 t llf 10 + \• NL 1 1' I )I lf'4-" HVI' 201 6 11 6'1> ..... N•bliea 2 51 n t• Sl\'t-\e Nalco I 1ott '31 ,.... .. '• NtrClll M 7 4t 17"t+ ~ .... ~ .... , :us 26 ...... N•IAl'1 503 14 UV.-~
N'lvia ·~ ... It-. ...•. !:!f,~~ : .. ,f : :~~ ~ i:it IVL .60t t 11 14 .,.. ~. NI Ir 1.St 7 t VVI+ 0,. NllOlllt UO 1 223 21\'i-~i NatfG t. 16 1 10 2$\la-h Nl'Gof 2.10.. 1 2'h + ~, N•IOYI> I.OS t 10f W• + '-Net Hom • • 1 J' <. ••••
"''""" .JO • 1J 61!, ••••• NMda .l•ll 61 2~+ \'t N"°'"E A 1 wl1 11V. .•• NMlntSv 1t 11 6 11ft-I 1
NIP-I Uf 6 '1 2'''0+ If> SCA~"
Nlitmk 10 -n·--~ SCMCo NSVCINt 12 I 1 Ult-'' SO$Ceft N$11ftd I Of 1 S 11'11.
NSlr<h I Ol 12 l 43'~ -•-. NellSU 2 ~ I 11~ J1'• 1"9 NelTN • 1 3 ... -~.
Helom I tob A <IO'.J 3' 1•1 N•lmpl 160 . l3 17''>-...
Htp1une 50 10 I~ 16 '•• NevPw 1 76 I ll 26'-.
NeYPpf 2.JO rt00 701•1 + '• NevP~ 1 9S 11 21'• + ·~ ~~~~e1 l !:'g 11; ~!:!. :: NEGpl q., 1120 IOI'•-'• ~~St~ r~: 1H ~~= ~ Newl\811 s. t 1S 171, -• ,
NHrml I 6016 US 1'-.. • '• NlaMI" I :Joi t ., 16''t -'" Nl•Mcll J 60. ll!IJ 41'•-14• Nj•Mlll lto. 1100 .,, -'-'>
N Mpt II 7S • ztO 12711>-'' NI~ '7e.. 1f 10"-+ h Nie:...-2 » 1 A) 32 •••••
No<!Wn I .. 7 12' 21\t .••.• N0<lln I «I S • 21 •••
NMrl' 1 1 1f 2Sfit-1 ""ft:' u • 11 -.... ~~~~1.50'6 '! ~~:; \~ NoCAlr 1J S Sl 4''f ••
NoCeA.1•111'1 • 7S 1'4 + \1 NotSllJl 1 In t 116 11 ,. • NClll!t:"" 60 S 10 11 .... -'•
NlllCIPS 1.4' 8 91 I~+ '• NorNGn «> • 15 3Q•,-~.
NoSIPw 2 0& 9 1S8 ~'' . NSPwC>lo 10 • 1100 S7'• + •,
NSPwr• 11 z10 SI -'•
NorT• Mii 16 --·~ Nort~lf J •1• • Nortrp I 20 • JO ?1 ... + '• NW\IA.lrl 50 1 16 , ... NwllkP .. • 1)4 24 ~ ••• Nwll!M220 1 JO J'I~. • NwtlnO 7 15 7 110 u1. -• • HwtlnCIW\ 1 30•_.-'• NwlPpl 190 10 ti'• .. NwMLf tf' 1\ 11 111 • • t 4
N0'1on I ., I 3' JS -'• NorS1m 16 • 7486 ••'io -•-. NorlSpl I 60 !Oil «•> • '• lolU(Or 16 6 H 1q_,,. '•
0-0
OKC 1701 I 16'0-'• oa-1n0 l013 1 "'•-'• O<c1 Pt11 ,s ~ 1•1s ,...,. _ '•
Oc<ll'wlwl 111'1 11'•..., '• OcclP 1117 16 :16 3''·• -?••;.
O<c1P pll 60 1 90 -2' • Occ•PC>I • JO 77•'>-2'• Occ1P 1>12 50 U 17'• ••• , O<clP pl? 12 . '3 ,,,,._ ·~
OgcMn I 40 S 21 7S + i,_ Ofl<oE.~ ',.,' ,. ~· "' O!ll!•P' • «> • no s2"1-•.-. Ol\Pw pll °' . zJO .. -1'.llo Ol"wpf87 60 .• r20 17 -114
Ol"w ptCHO •• uoo 17\io-"'° OPwPll' u .. 1100 llO -1 0 .,._pl 176 .• 16000 .. V.-IV. OllleG~ 1 ... IO Ill 19Y>-'°' OlllGl!:pf ., •. 1700 10\• -'lo
Olll•NO 2 6 tS 31\, -'" OllnCp 1.?t 6 11 ll -\ii Ollnkrfll.10 t 35· lJ •••••
Omarll 11 t "' 17 • '>II Oneldan .t.f 7 1 IS -.,,, Opelllta a.i 6 1 11~+ •111 Or1111All I 3" • II 161 • .. ·~
OranQ!' 20I> 11 6' • • • OUIMer I ol() I • ll'lt-'"° OUlll>ICO 10 8 11 18 ... + • t Over II Or 60 6 10 11 • • • bvtrSI\ .30I> I 8' 10>.. • °""tnC I 1012 314 671•• \, Ow•lllll I.I» I 37 2011 -'t OWnll plOS.. S 113•·1-1
O•lrdln .'1r t SA Ill!• '•
Plol8MI SOe~-4,7-IOK-'" PPG I 60 6 113 10"°-I'• PSA 1' J.1 71t ••• PecAS ' ,. "1 141.') + •• flt<O[ 2 12'3J 7~-~ PecLIQ I 61 1 Sl 19t..-'• Pecl,m uo1t 1' JHe• .,.
Pt< Pet I& I It Jt . • .
fle<Pw 1I0'10 " 2711. ••.• Pe<TT 1.40 I 23 17~-'lo Ptcllpl 6 . E20 79YH '·I Ptctln .IO I 1 ,, -"°"
PelneW ·'° • IS ......... . ll'llWlll l.ilO • • IW. •••. Pelrnk .6S s 13 14''•-..., ParnlOe .12 11 " '"? •;. PenArn 10 m f'....+ '' •enf P 2 '° 1 " .,.,._.,.,..
lt-ctl.tOb 1 2 IS -'"° ::::r~ .. : : n ~"'= ~ P•rH•n I ' i10 UV.-... flerlll'ftn• t I IS'-+ \'II PetPIJ 1 is1 n uo n~ •.. ... ,,_" '°. 19 ,. ••• PHllOOV 1011 63 lJ + 1•
PtllMf t• 10 11f'J JI -"' PePL l.t2 1 tt 23 .... -I\
PoPtl1' • 90. 150 SS + "' "'" pl'·'° . 1110 " ••. PePLPf f.2f •• rsb 107'h • • PePLpl 11.. ti«> 115 -.... P•Plpf 13 • 11ol0 132 ..• PtPLof I .• r20 tf • . Ptnwll UO 10 20 ~-''\ ~wlJ! I 60 . t 2S -'• P-u.i I., 1 l6J lHt-~. ,_..,p19 •. •2l00 ., ••.• Pee~ .101 l ~ .... ~ s ... 1 JJ '8"--1 ~""' '371'> •••• ~eo •t> m 2~ ••• ll'•rlllnE tl16 " to'I>-'? Patine 1.IO I 10 Jllo\-"' ll'"lllC.. 1. • I 1e ... •
""""' • • n 1•'--lll
Bl 6Yf.VIA eoaTU
You wouJcln•t knowjnaly bU1 a hou lnf'ested with termi~ or weakened by rOl. Yet, whllt tennlte INpeqtJon
onen is"i'equl~ ror-certain types of home mortca.tet. the
danger arid daril•a• ll)ay uot be visible m ~ PoOC'tY con-
1tructed house. And whlle a careful tn.ipeetlcn may be made
of an old hou:te, the aearcb for the deltract.lv• qents inay not be 10 d.Wteat tn •new house •
You wouldn't knowlDllY make an uJ*laive lnvestment
In a house lft • state of advanced decay. But man)' buyers
don't check for leaks in caulk.Int around batbtut.. shower
stalls, and sinb th•t permit l~e quanUtle. of water to
elfter walls and floorln1 -»'&rtlcUlarly in a new house.
TREY MAY NOT NO'l1<$ THAT tho n0onnc Is not en·
tlrely level, ~ not Ot tJdlUy Uainst baseboards. They may not realize that a floor that feels 1p0niy l& ln a state of
advanced decay.
This checkllat. prepared by the Avtcultul'e Depart-
ment, can help ln abopptna for a house or decldinf on essen-
tial repairs to a home:
-Is all the wood in the house abovetbe level of the soil?
Does water drain away
from the houaet Are
there any aians of damp·
ness in the basement?
-Does the crawl $pace have adequate
clearance antf ventlla·
tton? ls the soil covered
with a moisture barrier? Are earth-filled porches and other
structures separated from the house?
-Is ropf overhang sufficient? Has caulkine around
wln~ws. doors .and joints ~ maintained? Are gutters
and dowmpouts lntact? ls tbe awe ventilated?
-Is roof deckln& completely covered. especially at roor
edge? Does the roof sag, indicating p0ssible rafter decay?
Is the paint peeling or blistering?
-ARE DECORATIVE AND OTHER items attached to
the house Wcely to admit or trap moisture? Is plumbing, m-
cluding drains, free of leaks. Do doors sag or wind,ows
sUck? Are frames decayed?
-ls caulklng around tubs. sinks and showers intact.,
Are noors level? Do spots feel spongy wbeo walked on? Do
ceilings have water damage?
-U the house ls in a zone of hieh termite buard. is
there a structural pest control contract on it? Does the con-
tract include a auarantee? Was the soil under the hou~
treated with lnsectlclde during construction? After con·
structlon? Has the soU under additions been treated?
, -A.RE THERE TERMITE SHELTER tubes visible on
the foundation? On pipes? Does tbe crawl space contain
stumps or wood debris? Are there small boles in unfinishetl
wood in the crawl spaces or elsewhere with powder under
them? Will an expert inspect the house for termites, or
other st.ructuraJ pests. be!oretbesale?
Wood in a properly constructed and maintained home is
safe lt its moisture content is seldom above lS percent. To
prevent decay, keep wood dry. Since that's easier said than
done, treat wood thnwill become wet with preservatives. .
Excellent sources or information on pest control are
untversjty extension workers. county agents and statd
forestry aeencies. •
Send for "Finding and Keeping a Healthy House~·~
'#067E, from the Consumer Information Center, Puebl°i
Colo. 81009. Cost: 60 cents.
Solar P.:ower
Plan PWJhed
LOS ANGELES CAP> -ls it possible to create a new
Cautomia industry that Will supply a major Portion of tbt
state's eoerey need.I while also providinl jobs and reducina
inflation! J
That ambitious scenario is the 1oal or SolarCal, a prd
posal being pushed by Tom Hayden, the tormer student •<*
tivist who was defeated last year ln his bid for the
Democratic nomination for the U.S. Senate seat vacated b~
George Murphy. • •
HAYDEN, DIRECTOR OF THE Santa Monica-ball~
Campaign for Economic Democracy, which be describes af
a "grusrootS poliUcal organiutioa," wants to see Gov. E<f.
mund G. Brown Jr. create a public corporation to promott
Calllomla 's fiedslin• solar enero industry. •
''The general ptoposaJ is that the Brown admlnistr•tioti
have a partiau.lar .,ency or departlbent that ls resJ>OOSiblf
for the development of tbe state's solar enerty industry, v
Hayden said lo an lnlervtew. Details of the pr<>posal are be-
; inc w0rked ou.t, be saitt
and will be presented al
(
-----------]energy hearing!
D7D' ~,..,,~ JUVIW scheduled before the /u •. w DA.I. ·,.-:, l 'f nw se~bly this fall. ~
Research fot
Hayden's plan is .belnf
done"by a nonprof
group called ~e Calltornta Public l'ollcy Center. "i"be
ter's ~ector, Fred Btanfman, says SolarCal could pro.
vide a major impetus ~ Callt~a 's ecO~f!lY. .
.. We're talldni about creating a wbole nnr indu.sUj.
nOtJuit promotme &Olar," Brimf'lban said. ••caUfomia h"i
hail succesaiH booms over the years -aold, oil, movid
TbiS coUld be a new boOm industry that cnatea tbou.sand.S cS
jobS. lt aiao WW lead to lower. prices ror enerP.• wb.ldt ~: in tum lead to lower prices roreverytblnc else.· •
'The Dana o nt Yacht Club will bo boat to
PHRP anJ Int rnallonal Offshore Rule UOJU and
PHl\F yachts ~rolled it an th• club'a Dana Point
r ClftSunday.
• MOST l:XCITL~G action will be centered
an Los An•elca Harbor's breeiy "hurncane &ulch"
..,,b two C Cl catamarans will start eompeu.
cl the Uttle Amtrlca'1 CUp, the ultimate prize
for catamaran aailora.
'l'be CabrlUo Beach Yacht Club will bt bost to Ute best four ol aeveu ffries which pill t.be U.S. de-
fender Patient Lady Ill against the Australian
~ats Seelt Title
Little America's Cup Set Saturday
By ALMON LOCKABEY
D.tty l"llet ....... WrttM
While a half dozen 12·meter yachts
on the East Coast battle to determine
which will be the defender and
challenger for THE America's Cup.
two s~y C Class catamarans start
competition Saturday at Cabrillo
Beach in Los Angeles Harbor for the
ao·called Little Amel'ica 's Cup, sym·
bol of supremacy in catamaran sail·
'· ing.
The protagonists on Los Angeles
Harbor's breezy "hurricane gulch"
will be two solid wing C Cats -the.
U .$. defender Patient Lady IU, whose
crew is determined to "keep the cup,··
and Australia's Mcholas II bearing
the slogan, "the loan is up ··
U.S. SAILORS Alex Kozloff of
Irvine and Robbie Harvey of Cabrillo
Beach won the coveted cup for the
first time last year in a close four out
of seven series in Australia.
Patient Lady lll will .be sailed by
Duncan :MacLane of Roton Point.
Conn., with Skip Banke on the trape1e
wire. Toh)' Di Maurio, owner. is the
alternate crewman.
Nicholas ll will be skippered by
Lindsay CUnningham with Graham
•
Nania Kai Wins
Candy as crew and Graeme Fraser as
alternate. ·
BIG DIFFERENCES between the
America's Cup and the Little
America's Cup are money and speed.
Whereas 12·meter competition runs
into the millions of dollaq every three
yea'ts, catamaran sailors can get into
world competition for a few thousand
dollars.
And when 12·meters are being k"ept
in their berths when the wind whistles
up to 25 knots or bet le~, this is just the
velocity that C Cat sailers thrive on.
They have been known to equal the
velocity of the wind on certain points
of sail.
Solid wing cats in particular like the
stronger weights or wind. That is part·
ly the reason that this type of craft
was chosen for the U.S. defense. Tbe
other is that patient Lady III out·
classed the "soft sail·· cats competing
for the defenders berth in a week·long
elimination out of Cabrillo Beach
YachtClubduringthepasttwoweeks.
THE SCHEDULE of races will con·
sist of one race Saturday and Sunday,
a layday on :Monday, one race on
Tuesday and Wednesday, a lay day
Thursday and one race each day on
Friday. Saturday and Sunday. The
series will be decided on the best four
of.seven.
The Little America's Cup is QfTtcial· Log Race Crown ly known as the lntemaUonal Class
-catamaran Trophy <ICCCT>. It was
Dexter Wood of the. Loni Beach first offered in 1961 to setUe a dispute
Yacht Club skippered his power boat over the f~est cat_amaran. lt was put
Nani Kai to a Win in Shark Island 110 bv Amencan sailors but never won
Yacht Club's annual Invitational pre· by an American crew ~ill l~ year.
dieted log race with a low error of It was_ held by the Bntish until 1969
0.8628 percent. Eighteen boats from wb~ it was. won by Denma~k. The
the Southern California Cruiser As· Aussies won at from the Danes m 1970.
sociation competed in the event.
An additional feature or the race
was the competition of three·man
t~ams for the American :Marine
trophy which was won by the SIYC
team of Gordon Burrows. Don Smith
and Jack Honey.
The first year winner was El
N avigante, skippered by Don Smith.
Summary: 1, Nani Kai, Dexter
Wood, LBYC, 0.8628; i. Pauhana.
Russ KesUnke, SIYC, 1.9972; 3, Aljo,
Mel Lurie, MYC, 2.0359; 4, Holiday
Hound, Harold Sundt, Jr .. HHYC.
2.6466; 5, Angel City, Tom Collins,
Hollywood YC, 3.0083. ·
( ~ARL W ATERS ) ..
:
"""' PUBU C NO'tlCE Pvt1111Nct Or'"9t c..st o.ity l"lklt. , ___________ , .... 12. tt. i._.oSept.2, 1m
FICT1JIOUS altSINUS
......asTATbaNT TI.-'°"°""',. ter11tM ••• Clolno Ml· _____ __,~--~~----1nus•:
NETWORK oaveLOPMBNT
COMPANY. 1211 Soutll Grend A-1111.
S..taAM,CAlllfonli•t270S
PUBLIC NOTICE
WOODHULL
R4.CESET
Owners or wooden hull
sailboats are invit1?<1 to
participate in the Clark
Sweet annual Isthmus
Cruise sponsore,d this
year by the King Harbor
Yacht Club, Redondo
Beach.
The Wooden Hull
Owners Association
Herma1111 L. Lo"" IGen.,el
Pert.,..), IJe SOu"' Grend A.,..nue.
S.111• AN, c.tlfomle flPM • 8r~e Ill. Harklu IOentrtl
l"er\,.tl, GI NiwllOrt C.nltt Orlw.
Newport 8Hc.h, ~lllorft4• '2660 Thlt business I\ dno..ct~ct by ~
vent•el ~llllP
ru:rmous aus1Nus
.u.AaSTATaM•NT
Tiit tottow111t ,..._ '' Oelno t>vti.: llHSH~
ICIYSTOHI!: PU.STl:JUNG CO., SOii Audl"ey 1)f, Hyntl,,.ton Bttch. CA
92'49
JamesOevldMaloney, 50ll AUctrwy
Or • Hunll"llfOn 1 .. c11. CA '2~
Tiii• llU'lrwu k concluctect by an In· d•vlduel Htnnann L Low
This ste....,_I wH ltlea """" IM Jtmes O Maloney countv Clet'I< of O<lln9f County on -.1111 This tlelttnent wts lllect w1111 the
IS, 19n. County Cl-ol O<•n119 Ceunty on -.119. "*JI 3, 1917 PUbli~ 0U"llf Co•~I Ototy Pilot "79104
-.uo " , •• StPI l. 9 1977 :i.. .. 77 PublllNCI Or11119t ea.st O••IY Piiot. .. "9Ull IJ. It, 26. Sept 2, lt17
PUBLIC NOTICE
<WHOM was founded by 1----------1 tbe late Clark Sweet who PUBLIC NOTICE "'a1nous1us1N1SJ NAMI STATCMINT for many years raced bis 1-------------1 T11t1o1iow1na~•.,•dol"!l1>us1-40·foot culler Jinker in .. ICTtnOUllUSINt:U llHIH ' NAMIUTATIMaNT e-.NZIL eo-.T COMPANY, U661 most of the offshore Tiit to1towtnv person•• dOl"9 111111-Proctjjnr I.Ant, Suite H. Humlr1Qton r a c es i n S o u t h e r n nes.sa•. ••ec:l'I, c.111or111 .. 2~ DAN'S GLASS I. MllllAOR. 77J Vlflhlfe "·-le ._...... ~1••1 California. N .. tonWy.,C.i.Mesa,CAn.11 lffwlandSl...t.'~eitJ,H~~"';,. The summer cruise is ~wwt;;.:r«.1ao,.111s1 . hac:11.c..i1fom4•'2M6
scheduled Saturday c.o.~s~ 1nonductect bn? 1n. L°"9"::c:.~N::.:ni~~ "' StrMt. when boats from all over dMciu.t. This bu~ ..... is <Of>du<t.., bv •
f OM W l"..,.u ~neral ...,,,...rthlp Sou them Call ornia will Tiiis ""_, •M 1111e1 .,,., ,.,. v"'""•Ge•<I• •-to• con verge at the Catalina Coul'lly Certt of OrtftOI Coumy on .. UQ Tiii\ '1~1 •• , lil@d Wit/I ....
Islaod Isthmus for a 3' "11 "'"" ~:-;~~~o-o10t••Coun•y.Auo1111
weekend of fun and Publltlled Orer>Qe c:oe,, o.,,., P11o1. F1tm
games. """' n. 1t. i..enct s.pc l 1"7 PubllShlCI 0r.-. eo.u1 Deity Piiot.
i.1 .. 71 "'""~""·~ 2.9.1'71 3'J).77
And here's a real oomfort cab Wall·
t~wall carpet. H1·back ~t seats.
~ T tnled glass. AM cad10. Personal
comfort for you ex two.