HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-08-31 - Orange Coast Piloti.-
ArsonUt on ftanlpag.e .
r
x·Laguna · CoaeJt
To Stand Trial . .
On Sex Charges
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 31, 19n .
VOL 1'. NO. IO, 4 NCTIC*f. 4t l'AOtll
j ~Woman
Aw.arded
Damages
A Huntington Beach woman
who claimed that hospital and
medical negUgence lead to her
serious injwies three years qo
in Westminster Community
Hospital was awarded '250,000 in
damages in Orange County
.Superior Court Tuesday.
A jury in Judge Robert Green's
courtroom ended an eight-week
trial and two days of deliberation
by ordering those damages tor
Mrs. Barbara Harvey, •1.
Lawyers for Mrs. Harvey suc-
c essf u 11 y allegeCl ~hat the
hospital and the estate of the Jate
Dr. Robert Trace, of Garden
Grove, .incurred those d1Pnaies
bec~e of the treatment sbe re-
ceived in May 1974.
It was testified that Mrs.
' Harvey underwent a bysterec·
tomy and was recoverinc trom
sargery when Dr. Trace ordtred
an enema. ·
It was te9tifted that the sboCk
of the enema led to the perfora·
tion ol Mrs. Harvey's colon iiMt
ttie beginri1Df of a lone Hiiet ol
medical and sur1ical treat-
menta. '
The orl1lnal~ malptacUee
law~uit aou&bl tsoo.ooo Jn dam~es.
,
• IC
Huntf.aeton Beach poUce and
fll'e investlgators are probing a
rash of predawn anons in the
north-central sector of the city in
whicb alx blues have destroyed
nine vehicles since Sunday morn· lng. .
Police Detective Bob Russell
Hid the arsonist, who pours a
fiammable liquid and ignites the
vehicles, bas no apparent motive
except "malicious destruction ...
"He either pours the liquid in-
side the unlocked can or j~t douses the cars on the outalde, ..
•aid Russell.
The first blaze was set at lqrt
Kim Lane at 2:27 •.m. and
destroyed a sedan, compact
pickuptruck and compact sedan.
Just half an hour later,
Russell, said, a ve in a rear al·
ley was torched a block away
from the ftnt arson.
Mond•J night between 2:30
ad 3:17 a.m., two sedans and a
compact car were hlt wttbiri a
blOct Of each other just 10Utb of
lleil Avenue between G«bArd
Street and Beacb Boulevard;
R\adell.aid.
Tuelday morn.Inc • sedan aild
van were torched two bloca eUt
Of Morida,'1 flres, police 1atd.
!F.lre dePUtlnent omciala in· dleated··tlit ·1arsonlat mat be s~ 1~ lince a tu con· taliMit ... touDd Dear the seen.
Of .cme~tbe lnMdtnta. ~•tors are ID the proc.. eubf ~upthedama~
.,
DB Woman Ge.ts ·
$250,000 FroDI
Hospital Suit
• cane • 1ta
f • / ,
,
• •
OAllv Pl or
Razor's Edge
Shaving Bring• on Hireupa
MINATARE. Nt•b CAP J For more than 30
years, Larry Ct ur ha• hiccupp~d every time he
sha\·~d. SnmC' huve been mildly violent •nd
daoaerou , m vaew of lhe Hinale·ed&e razor Cruz uses.
Surpn1>in ly, Cr'Ur. never huis oven nicked himself
while h.i~upping
Cnai can hiccup without a 1 ator, too. 1ust by
touchintt .., sensitive spot on the right side of his chm.
tie bhaves that spot last
Cnu hus been hiccupping "for years People
stand and watch," says his wife, Millis.
He's nev~r seen a doctor about his condition,
because it's never really bothered him, Cruz says.
S~orsl'ote .
OC Property
Tax Rate Set
Orange County properly
owners will pay $1.33 per $100 of
assessed valuation this year to
help finance the cost of county
government according to tax
rates adopted by supervisors to-
day. .
In addition, homeowners and
business owners will be charged
a rate of 18.8 cents per $100 or as·
sessed valuation for flood control
and a 16.6-cent rale lo finance the
county Harbors, Beaches and
Parks District
Supervisors this morning
adopted rates tor those govern-
ment programs as well as for the
county's 26 school districts and
v a n ous street bghtang, Ii brary,
vector control and water dis-
tricts.
Typically 59 cents of every
Orange County property tax
dollar goes for education, 17
cents to county government, 10
cents to city government and 14
cents for special districts.
The county's $1.33 tax rate
represents a 10-cent cut from last
year's $1.43 tax rate and many
other agencies have reduced
their rates as well.
But because of the countywide
average increase in asstssed
valuation of 19.7 percent, most
property owners will face-higher
tax bills this year.
Assessed valuation is the
figure to which tax rates are ap..
E',.... P,,,,e A I
ANITA •••
plied in calculatin& property tax
bills.
Smee an estimated 4.S percent
of the 19. 7 percent aseessed
valuation irtcrease was attrlbllt-
ed to new construction, taxing
agencies would have to cut their
rates by an average of 15.2 per·
cent to keep property owners
from receiving higher tax bills.
Transsexual
Files Suit
OAKLAND <AP> -A teacher
w.ho was suspended after un·
dergoing a sex change operation
has accused the school district
and several officials of waging a
campaign of illegal phone laps
and harassment against him.
The charges were contained in
a suit filed in Alameda County
Superior Court by Steve Dain, a
gym teacher name d Doris
Richards before the widely
publicized operation in 1976.
Besides the allegations of u.
legally tapping his phone, the
suit said Dain was publicly and
falsely accused of molesting
children. The suit also said
school officials released to the
pres&, without his consent, in·
formation about the sex change
operation.
·<Mnn Vieu.
Korea Scandal
• .
SA Man
Held in
Robbery
Newport Beach police reported
today they have arrested a Santa
Ana man in connection with the
$300 robbery of a Corona del Mar
liquor store last month.
Craia William El•, JS. of 1113
E . Fruit St. wu taken into
custody by Detectives Lee
Roberta and Gary Black at bis
home Tuesday afternoon.
They alle1e Eb l.s responsible
for the July 19 holdup of the
Windjammer Liquor Store at
3537 E . Coast Highway.
Black pointed out that Eb l.s
the brother-in-law of James
Gano, the alleged "baseball cap
bandlt" who wu arrested by
Newport Beach detectives
earlier this moot.b.
Gano, the suspect ii\ a chain of
more than 50 southland bank rob·
beries, was initially pick~ up for
questioning by police in connec-
tion with the murder of his ex·
girl friend, Jane Ellen Ben-
nington, 29.
She waa found raped and
strangled in her CofQna del Mar
apartment Aug. 2.
Police said they cleared Gano
or connection to the murder case
but booked him for the robberies.
Black said that \vhen they were questioning Gano about the rob-
beries bie b suspected of commit-
tina, he mentioned that his
brother·in-law, Eli, had been
picked up on a robbery charge by
the Tustin police.
Black said be began inve.stiaat·
ing and asserts Elz has been
identified as the gunman who
commiued the liquor slore rob-
bery. Court action in the Tustin
case is still pending againsl Eb.
He remains in custody in
Newport city jail today i.n lieu of
$25,000 bail while robber1
charges are filed against him in
the Harbor Judfcial District
Court.
FroaPageAJ
CARTER •••
sent out for $.568. 73 to reimburse
the firm for two chartered'
flights. I
Corporate campaign contribu-
tions are illegal.
The fifth night during Carter's
trip to the Carolinas was paid for
by lhe state of Sou lb Carolina and
Huron estimated that the cost of
lbe lugbt would be ~ut $200.
Carter wu accompanied on
the rueht on the state·owned
plane by U . Gov. W. BranUey
Harvey ofSouth Carolina. tell when the storm might reach
shore.
.. Things can change," he said. TOKYO (AP) -Sen. John It was previously disclosed
Glenn said todav South Korean durin& the investicatlon of the "It's drifting rather slowly west,
and the steering currents are still
quite weak. A small change in
the steering currents could have
a dramatic elfect on the course of
the storm."
The growth of the storm from
tropical depression to hurricane
in less than a day wasn't unusual,
he said.
A weather servic• advisory
early today located the atorm
center near laUtude 26.3 north
and longitude 91.3 west, south-
soulhwest o! f'.rew Orleans. Gales
ex.tended 150 miles to the east
and 100 miles to the west.
• Anita drove blah tides onto the low-~ Gull shore, causing
bayous and riven to run over
their banks, abd was within usy
strUdng dlat.ance of land If it
veered north.
A tOtal of 4,500 Offshore oil
workers were evacuated to shore
Tu~ and 10,<MIO reeidents at
vulnerable points alona 430 miles
of coaat were adYJs~ lo bead In-
land to avold becoming trapped.
Multlmllllon doUar drilling
rigs and m'1Ulod production plat-t or ms, battened down and
closed, st.ooa deserted in tbe
lurbulent sea.
Emergency valvea wer~clQled
OD thou.sand$ Of oft.hore Oll &al wellJ. Tbat ~cUon stopped Ule
daily f1oW of atiOut Jla1f a mll1'9n
barrels ol crude and mUUons ot
coble feet of i:ratural CH ~
lfderwater d~IJnes.
President Park Chung Hee told""V finances of budget director Bert
him he hopt8 the Wasbington Lance that Carter was aot bill~.
scandal over alleged attempts by for five other fllgbts· valued at
South Koreans to bribe U.S. con. $1,793 on a plane owned by tbe
gressmen "doesn't drag on for National Bank of Georgia.
years."
Glenn said Korean leaden be
$poke with ln Seoul this w~k on a
tour.day visit repeated th4\.r aov.
eminent's denial ol any •ltempt
to buy influence in Congress for
continued U.S. support.
Glenn said the scandal may
jeopardize . pa1sa1e of a pro-
posed $1.9 blllioo ••compensatory
aid packase" to bobter SoUth
Korea's armed forces durina ~
withdrawal of 33,000 U.S. troops
over the nexl four or fl ve yean.
. Voyager Studied
PASADENA (AP) -As
Voy~er 2 cruised without mta-
bap '"" million mlle1 away. scientists were to meet at Cape
Canaveral, Fla., today to atudy
the problems that ha•e pl.,-Ued
the craft, the f allure of a 7'Al·foot
data-gatherln« boom to lock ln place, since its launch a w"k •
and abalf ago.
Killer ro Die
By Chemical
JWNT$VIU.E, Tex. (AP) -
Tbe death injection1 appro\fed by
Texas' le,Watur• ror condemed
priaioners, will be adminiatered
to convicted murderer Howard
Lincoln King, 53, in the electric
chair that bas Jdlled 361 people
since 1923, ata1e corrections of-. ficials said TueSday .
..Instead of electricity pusi.ne
through h1I bc)dy a chemical Wlll
be i!Uected," Ron T~lor said.
The corrections department will
not tdentily tbe person who will
admlnlster the ln!ectlon. be said.
So far, it. bu not been de-
termined what chemical or cotn-
blnaUon of chemicala wUl be
used for exeeut,lon.
Regents Take Seats
Four University or California regents re-
cently appointed, by Governor Brown
reflect their relief in a ·Senate Rules Com-
mittee meeting ln Sacramento where they
won comm1ltee approval of their appoint·
ment. Frorn left are John Henning.
Theodore Kroeber-Q uinn. Yoi:itada Wada
and Stanely Scheinbaurn.
Two Childr-en Di·e
;' •
In Refrigerator
BRIDGEPORT, Conn. (AP) -
Bridgeport police said today the
deaths of two girls found In a
refngerator probably were ac·
cidentaJ, although they earlier
said the case was "def\nltely a
homicide.··
The victims, who were found
Tuesday night, were Identified as
Jaimeria Croom, 2, and Michele
South, 5, both of Bridgeport.
Police Inspector Anthony P.
Fabrizi said police first thought
the girls had been killed because
of marks on their bodies. But he
said authorities learned early to-
day from an 11-year-old nei1hbor
that the girls had been playing in
the refrigerator Tuesday after-
noon. •
·'We believe any injuries they
sustained came in struggling to
get out of the refrigerator," said
Fabrizi.
Police or1giaally s•id there
were signs that one of the
children had been sexually
molested. Fabrl:d said today that
post mortem examinatioras
would be conducted to "de-
termine if these children bad
...
been abused.''
Police said the children's
bodies were found uiside a closed
reffigerator that measured nine
cubic feet inside. The unused
refrigerator was on the second-
floor porch at the bome of Mrs.
Caroline South, mother of one of
the victims.
The bodies were discovered by ·
police after the girls' mothers
reported them missing.
Disease Hits
Atlanta Kids
ATLANTA CAP) -An un·
usually large number of children
in metropolitan Atlanta have
come down with whooping cough,
the national Center for DiJea.se
Control reports.
ftesearchers said T\4es<{ay a~ut 60 cases of whooping couib
have been reported here, includ-
ing 10 cases involving children
under 6 months of age.
Man Slai"'
Girl Kidnaped
In Robbery
SAN PEDRO <AP) - A
Northern California man was
robbed and shot to death and his
girlfriend kidnaped in a bizarre
robbery plot here, officials said.
Police said James Ratcliff, 2'.
of Arcata, and bis girlfriend,
Nadine Collier, 19~\of Pasadena.
had pulled up to a phone booth in
the harbor area Tuesday to ask
directions of John Sykes, 24, and
John Davis, 22.
The men, both of Perris, al-
legedly told Rat.cliff to pull into a
nearby parking lot where
Ratcliff was robbed and shot,
police said.
The pair then reportedly
rorced Miss Collier into their car
at gunpoint and drove off. When
police stopped the car five blocks
away for erratic driving, Miss
Collier pointed to Sykes, who was
seated on the passenger's aide,
and told officers, "Ke shot my
boyfriend,., police added.
Sykes fled on foot and was be·
ing sought by police.
Davis, who bad been driving,
was booked for investigatlon of
murder, authorities said.
VOL 70, NO. 143, .. SECTIONS, A6 PAGes ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Allaway's S~nity Now J
BYTOMBAaLBY -1111 .............
u Edward Cbarlel AllawQ
tan or lDune when be took a ri·
fie tJ> the Cal State Fullerton
tampus to kill seven people and
wound two others?
That quest1an WU taken to tbe . Jury room today by 1lx men and
alx women who bave already
found the former campus janitor
guilty of seven counts of murder
l'iolent lflairl
and t.-o « ault wltb a deadly
weapon. ·
They were elven luatructiom
by Judce Robert P. Kneeland to-
day after hearina final &rl\l·
ments from Chief Deputy Dis·
trict Attorney James Enritbt
and deputy public defender Ron
BuUer.
Enrilht urced tbe jury to come
back with the "°'Ung that Al·
laway, 38, was .. lecaJJy sane and
I Anita Skirts
Gulf Coastline
I
• Dlllas
TEXAS
Gains Ion
0
t
.............
ANITA NEARS LANO
Map Spot• Hurrtcen•
'Refrigerator
Cl.aims Livea
OfTuv Giru
NEW ORLEANS CAP) -Hur-
ricane Anita churned slowly
westward in the warm Gulf of
Mexico today, packing winds of
95 miles an hour and &rowing
stronger as thousands of Jittery
coastal residents worried. and
watched.
Forecasters said the storm,
centered about 300 miles from
both New Orleans and Galve.ston,
could continue its slow drift
across the Gulf toward Texas.
But there was no way to be sure,
and advisories were posted from
Tarpon Springs, Fla., to Corpus
Christi, Tex.
Some coastal towna in western
Louislan already were evacuat·
ed. Recommendatlons allo went
out in earl)' morninc for people to
leave low-lying areas on the up-
per Texas coast.
Wlth~ less than 100 miles an bodt, the ltonn wu put tn the
lowest classification of hur-
ricanes -but forecasters
warned It would pr<>babty con-
tinue.to strengthen during the
day ~ push high tides ahead of
it.
Nell Frank, director of Na·
tional Hurricane Center in
Miami, aaid there wu no way to
tell when the storm might reach
shore.
"Things can change," be said.
"It's~ rather slowly west,
and the steeriila cunents are still
quite weak. A small change in
the ~ clU'l"eOts could have
a dramaticetfeet on the couneof
the storm."
absolutely responsible" for the
campus camag~ on July 12, 1976.
"Every shred of evidence we
have given you in tb.i.s trial In·
dicates that the shootings were
carefully planned and that F.d Al·
laway knew exactly what he was
doing from the time he bought
the rifle to the time be telephoned
police and told them what be bad
done," Enright said.
And the prosecutor reminded
Auto Atsons
~obedby
118 Police
the jury that Allaway asked a un·
iverslty librarian a month before
the shootiniS to check the law re-
garcling the carrying of an uncon-
cealed wea~n.
'•All thes e stories he told
psychiatrists got better the more
time be spent in jail," Enri1ht s~d describing the Oranie Cowl·
ty Jail as "an institution of
higher education.
"When be s poke to a
psychiatrist on the evenln« ol Ju·
ly 12. 1979, we didn't eet any Of
tbeae stories of mental lllness
and deli.WoQ.a,'' the prosecutor
said.
But Butler.ur1ed the jury ton,
co~ that they were about to
rule on tbe mental condlUon of a
man with a lona record or meatal
illness.
Four defense psyctiiatdsts
have defined that menW to bi
.. ~·-=
Today' <:losing
N.Y. StoekS
TEN CENTS
paranoid schizophrenia and they
have told the jury that Allaway
was legally Insane at the time of
the~. Butle11 reminded the jury that
Allaway was conflned to a
Michlcan mental hospital after
becoming tncreastn111-and falsely~vtnced that his wile
wu having au with black men
and that the Black Panthers were
(SeeAUAWAY.PaceAZ>
Opposes
License
By STEVE MITCREU.
CM•Dllltr ..... loUff
The Oranae County Fair Board
is ahead in the final stretch to ob-
tain fall horse racinC dates at the
Los Alamitos Race Track.
8ut a lawsuit filed by the
Hollywood Turf Club still looms
over fair board members after a
decision favorable to the fair
board Tue$clay by the California
Horse Racing Board.
The state panel's decision was
greeted with relief today by fair
board president Clinton Hoose of
Newport Beach.
"It's not over yet, .. Hoose said.
.. but fetting the state board's ap-
proval fot a license is going to
make it a beck of a lot harder on
them <racetrack operators). .
Hoose aald Orange County wiU
have a fall fair ln the Los
Alamitos race track parking lot,
"no matter what the outcome of
the (Turf Club) lawsuit is."
Operators at Hollywood •Park
and Santa Anita are seeking a
collrt injunction halting the fall
racing dates to be held Nov. 8 to
21 at Los Alamitos.
Attorneys for the two tracks
,claim the. fair board did not pre·
pare envtronmental 1 m p act re·
ports on the proposed parking lot
fair.
The Orange County Fair
stands to gain at least $114,000
from fall racing dates. That
money would go to speed up a
$16.7 million facelift of the Costa
Mesa fairgrounds.
Hoose's opt.lmism today was
echoed by Santo Pietro,·
spokesman for the three-man
California H°"e Racing board In Sacr~ ·
He aaid attorneys for the two
tracks have a diflicult road
abw In getting a Loi Anceles
Superior Court to overturn the
hotae ricing. 'board •s decl1lon
Tuesday to er ant a racin& license
totbefairboard. ·
l
GJsta Mesa's Stonehenge
Although these 12-foot .high brick columns do l~ a bit
prehistoric, they are the foundation for a trelliswork
patio in north Costa Mesa's uncompleted Shiffer park.
The seven-acre, $345,350 park near Bear Street should
be ready for public use in mid-November.
Deputy· A.-.rested
In DruDk Dtj:ring
A Los Angeles sheriff's deputy
was arrested on a charge of
felony drunken drivin& after the
car he was driving smas;hed into
a traffic signal pole at
MacArthur Boulevard and Red
Hill Avenue In Irvine today.
The officer, Ronald H.
payhoff, 31, underwent emergen-
cy surgery at Tustin Community
Hospital early t.hia morning. He
fl as listed in stable condition.
Passengers in the car we.re his
-''wife, Paw, 24, also a ~ce of-
ficer, and Nancy J . Smith, 28, of
· Los Angeles. --
The two women suffered cuts
11tnd bnae"and tNere treated at
the hospital and released to their
homes.
Irvine Police Chief Leo Peart
refused today to identify the
police department or depart-
ments for which the Dayboffs
work.
Los Angeles County Sheriffs
Department spokesmen,
however, confirmed Dayhoff ls a
member of their department.
Medical reports listed an
Anal\eim address for the
sheriff's officer team, .
• Dayhoff is assian~ to the Los
~ngeles County meo 's central
Gknn View11 .
Korea Scandal
TOKYO (AP> -Sen. John
GleM said todav Sooth Korean
President Park Chung Hee told
him be hopes the Washlnlton
scandal over alleced alterrtpts by
South Koreans to bribe U.S. COO·
,ressmen "doesn't dra1 on for
years."
G ieM said Korean leaders be
spoke with in Seoul th1a week on a
four-day visit repeated tbtir' 1ov·
ernmeot'• denial ot any attenspt
to buy influence in Conareu for
continued U.S. support.· ....
Glenn said the scandal may
Jeop*14ise pusaa• ot a pro·
posed $1.9 billion "compenaat,ory
aid packa1e" to bolateT &iiath
Korea 'a armed forces d~ the
withdrawal of 33,000 U.S. ~
over the next four or Ave ye~
ja'il ; his wife to tbe county
medical ward, accordinC to a
sheriff's information officer.
The couple were off-duty and
driving a private vehicle, police
said.
Traffic officers said Dayhoff
was driving west on MacArthur
Boulevard at an unknown speed
wben be struck the DOl'tbwest
corner signal pole.
The car was destroyed.
Darlkff. suffered hea4 ~aies and severe cuts, accordinc to
paramedics. ·
J>oUce said an inv,.MJ•'tlan is • pendtii1. • -'!'.'.'t'
'
Pfune Crash
Kilh Three
A light plane crashed
and burned today on a
hillside near Corona, kill·
in g all three people
aboard, authorities re·
ported.
The dead wttre not yet
identified and the plane's
destination or point of
origin was not known.
Riverside County
Sheriff's deputies said ~e
burning WTeclrage was
spotted about 9:15 a .m . by
another pilot. The plane
crashed in~e Ea1le Canyon area tonemlle
from the Corona city llmiL
. . .
·Caner
To Pay
Air Fare?
W ASHJNGTON <AP> -The
White HO&Ue sald today that
tbr~ an overtl&bt the Carter
campalp committee failed to
pay lor rides by candidate Jim-
my Carter on corporate and
1bte-owned planes during a
swln1 through the Carolinas in
April1975.
But Douc Huron, a campaign
committee official and now a
White Houae attorney, said the
money -approximately $1,000
~ -ta beine paid, now that the
matter was broucht to the ad·
ministration's attention.
The fr~ airplane rides were
disclosed today by tbe
Washington bureau of the Cox
Newspaper chain.
Huron also said the di.scl($ll"e
prompted campaign otnd~s to
go over their books to determine
if any similar rides on small
chartered planes bad not been
paJdtor.
However, Buron said that" the
campaip previously paid bills
totaling $151,332 for small
charter planes. He said this de·
monstrated there was nothing in· ~
tentional in the failure to pay for
the trip tbrouch the Carolinas. ·
A .. It's not like we had a practice
of not paying for those -plane
trips," Huron sald. · ·
CUt.er took five flights during
a three-day swing throueh North an~ South Carolina in April 19'15.
Two ~ts were paid for by R.
R. "Bobby" Allen on a plane
owned by D. R. Allen and Son
lnc. of Fayetteville, N .C.
Huron said that Allen was be-
ing reimbursed tor $211.25 for the plane trips since Allen previously
contributed $1,000 to the Carter
campalan, the legal Unlit for in-
dividuals ~federal law.
The other firm-involved in
Caroline campaign trip was the
Diamond SUpply Co. headed by
Harvey Diamond of Charlotte, . ~.c.
Huron said a check would be
sent out for $568.73 to reimburse
the firm for two chartered
fli.cbts.
Former Coach
Faces Trial .. ,
lnSex Case
A for~et JJ~1.aa• Be-eh vallefbail coach who aJJecedly
sexually moltiikd leVeral mem-
• bers ol girls' teams he coached
in · the Alt Colony was ordered
Tuesday to face trial Oct. 3 in
Orange County Superior Court.
Judge William L. Murray, who
will be on the ~ch for tbe trial
of Ian Campbell Gregory, 52, set
the trial date and a pretrial bear· ing for Sept . ._ Gtegery is free on
$2,500 bail. •
Gre,ory, who now lives in San
Dieao, will be tried on five felcmy
counta of unlawfUl sexual activi-
ty with female mi)lors.
It ls alleged that the free lance
coach had sexual relaUonsblps
with Sirls between 13 and 16
yean of a¥e wblle world.n& wtth
teams that participated in Na·
tlonal Volleyball Aasociatlon and
AAU corttesta.
Arresttnc Laguna Beach of.
ficers said San Dleeo police a.re
now making inquiries in that
area where GreJ~ry b coaching
a number ot girls teams.
DlllJ ..............
SCHOOL TRUSTEE DON SMALLWOOD GIVES MARIAN BERGESON A PARTING GIFT
A• Truatee C•rd M•rtln L•ugha, Retiree Trtea On 'Float' For Size
Chemist Refi~s
New Can£er· Test
Berg~on
lids 'Bye;
ToNMUSD CHIC~GO (AP) -A leadlna
chemist said today he bas de-
veloped a relatively quick and
easy way to determine which of
the thousands of cbemlcall ln·
troduced ln recent years may
cause cancer.
The chemist, Dr. Bruce N.
Ames of UC Berkeley, pointed
out that Ii.nee the USOs this coun·
try bas been "exposed to a ftood
of chemicals" that have not been
tested to determine whether they
cause cancer or alter genetl<
material.
"A steep increase in human
cancer may be the outcome if too
many of the thou.sands of new
chemical's to which humans have
been exposed turn out to be
powerful mutagens and
carcinogens," Ames said.
Ames told scienUsts at the na-
tional meetlnc of the .American
Chemical Society that he bas suc-
ceeded in .refining a test he de·
veloped earlier so that tiny
amounts of urine, and possibly
· other body fiuids, may be used in
Factions Clash
BEIRU11. Le!>qon (A~ ).-
larae¥·backe4 nn·wtnc GhllS·
ttans cluhed ln tresb artillery
duels with PalesUnJan guerrillas
in south Lebanon Wtm\esday.
'
cancer tests to identify
mutagens. which are generally
cancer-causing agents. There was a Jetter from th~
Previously, the Ames test r~· local congres•man. a whole
quired totally pure samples ,.of bunch of resolutions and
the chemical to be tested, a much certificates of appreciation, an
more cumbersome and time· honorary depu\Y sheriff's badge,
consuming method. three Gr four bouque"5 of roses. a
Tbe development. Ames said, couple ol standlng ovatioos and a
"has all sorts of poteoUal" for stnaing teleo-am delivered to the
detecting cancer•caasing prop-lune of "PegO' My Heart."
e rties in tbousancls of sub· With some laughs and a few
stances. tears, .Marian Berg~n ended
He said his method should be her 13 years as a trustee in the
used to examine the urine of a Newport-Mesa Unified School
large population of non-smokers District Tuesday night.
to detect unsuspected mutagens Jn an hour-long ceremony the
and carcinogens that 01ay be en· Newport Beach resident beard
teringpeople. herself praised for her
In addition, Ames said, ex-leadership, integrity, unequaled
aminations should be made of service, courage, expertise, in·
·'particular populations that are sight and lovely looks.
likely to be ab9sor;bing sign.iii-The kudos came from parents,
cant doses of mutagens. such as administrators, two former
women dyeing their hair or superintendents, local politicians
children in sleepwear treated and her fellow board members. with add-on flame retardants... Mrs. Bergeson is leavin1 the
Ames' method does not direct· school board to seek the
ly test for cancer-causing prop-Republican nomination in next
erties. Instead, it tests for year's election for the 74th As-
mutagens -subs~ces wbicb. sembly District seat now held by
alter genetic material. Democtat Ron Cordova.
But, be said, teats on 300 • Fellow board member Doll
chemicals prove that all cancer-Smallwood presented her With 111
causing substances are inflatable inner tube. "You'll
mUtQetlS and "mutatfm ate hffd lt it you're goi~~ to be
carctnoiens with few ... excep· awash in the sea of pohtics," be
lions." told her. ·~~~~~~~~~~~
C Yout
a GllANVIU. ...............
Al'WI ......
BILLY CARTER HUGS 'MISS PEANUT LOLITA'
·1·11 Probably Catch Hell Wh'n I Get Home'
Peanut Power·
Billy Wmm·'em in New York
NEW YORK <AP> -Suffice it lo say that Billy Carter was
here at'. the "21" Club lo promote a new peanut liqueur and had
something to say about just about everything.
Here are excerpts from h.is news conference:
About why he was drinking the liqueur calle<i Peanut
Lolita instead of beer: "Because I have no idea where the damn
bathroom in this place is "
-ABOUT HOW MUCH HE WAS getting paid for the promo·
tionaJ appearance· "I don't know. But if I did, it:s none of your
damn business " .
About New York· ''I like New York. I u~ed to thin~. 1t was
full of (expleli ve deleted) but I met some re fl mce people.
About whether be will ever again seet elective oflice an~r
being defeated in races for mayor of Plains, Ga.: ''I can 'l win so I
ain't goin' to run."
-uovr Hl8 f'ff EUNGS TOWA&D Mil• Ptuul Lolita, a
belly dancer at the promotional appearance~: "She'• the
best-looking damn peanut l've ever seen in my llle. U I look her
home, I'd quit raising 'em." .
-About how hls wife would feel once she saw h1m on
television bugging and kissing Miss Peanut: "I'll pr~bably catch
straight damn hell." . .. .
-About how good a president bis brother is: The Pres1de~t
takes none of my advice. If he did, he'd be a much better presi-
dent ....
BUT HE ADDED: "HE'S the best president I've eyer
known "
-About Bert Lance: "He's the best mah ~Washington, bar
none.'' _
How about your brother? ..
"Lance he's the best man in W uhlniton. bar none.
-Abo~t whether he ts Wlcomfortable w1th tbe idea that h~
might make more money th1s year than h'lll>r'Other, the Presi-
dent: "I travel more than bedoes." ,
-About peanuts: "I don't even Ulle the4amn thiaP.. I m a
peanut liqueur lover.·'
Controversial
1977
health team •s effort at the hall,
be called the psycholo1ical
services "neeeasary and valua·
ble" to Juvenile Court and the
Probation Deparqne.nt.
1t was Superior Court Judie
ft.jlymond Vincent, prealdln1
judge of Ora~ce County's
Juvenile Court, who decided the
Wilson report should be made
public.
Judge Vincent's decision came
despite prot~t by county Mental
Health Director Ernest Klatte
that some of the statements in
the report "may be libelous."
Simultaneously. in a letter to
Judge Vincent, Klatte said, "We
agree with many of his
(Wllsoa'a) findlnp and recom-
mendations and bad already
taken steps to correct many of
the problems he ldenilfled."
However, Klatte continued, in
some areas there ls dluaree-
ment resulting from "what we
believe are errors in b1s percep-
tion or honest differences ol opi-
n lo11 between two weU-
Presl ey Bedy T h eft Plot
Suspect Tipped POiice
MEMPIDS. Tenn. (AP > -One
of the men arrtsted in a possible
attempt to snatch Elvis Presley's
body was the informant who
tipped police to the plot, a police
official says.
Police Director E . Winslow
Chapman called Ronnie Lee
Adkins, 26, a usually reliable in·
formant who has worked with the
department on other cases for
more than a year.
Chapman said Tuesday night
that charges against Adkins will
be dropped.
A preliminary hearing in City
Court for Adkins, Raymond M.
Green, 25. and Bruce Eugene
Nelson, 30, all charged with
criminal trespassing was con·
tinued Tuesday until Oct. 4.
The trespassing charges were
brought Monday after police ar-
rested three men who they saw
neeing from the mausoleum at
Forest Hill Cemetery shortly
after midnight.
Chapman claimed the three
conspired to break open the
sealed crypt, take Presley's body
from the coffin and bold it for
ransom.
A fourth man was released
Monclay without being charged.
Chapman s aid the arrests were
made after police received a tip
from Adkins thai there would be
an attempt to steal the body of
the singer, who died Aug. 16. The
police directoc .said Adkins pro·
vided information about when
the break-in would take place
a nd who was involved.
Mom Charged
ln 'C~'
Qf GW,d, 5 I
RAVENJllA, Oh.to CAP > -
Portage County sheriff's dep-
u tl ea have ~barged Mary
Whitesel, 36, with felonious as·
satill, sayina their 1nvestigatfoo
Indicated she bad beaten and
caged her 5-year-old step·
'dauahter.
omc\rs said Tuesday the in·
vestlgation stemmed from a
neighbor's report that the chlld
bad been locked in a chicken·
wire cage 24 inches in diameter
outside Mrs. Whitesel 's mobile
home in Randolph Township ..
When investigating officers ar-
rived at the traller Aug. ll, dep-
uties said, the child was inside
the home. They said she had
severe bruises over her body,
couldn't walk without staggerlnt
and couldn't talk.
There was no word on bow long
the child had been in the cage.
The lirl was turned over to
county welfare officials. Mrs.
Whitel9el wu free on bond pend-
ing a erand jry investigation ex-
pected to begin next week.
Pair Guilty
Of;Tot Abme
Presley's personal security
employes said they received a Up
last week that a plot was un-
derway to try to remove the
s inge r 's body from the
mausoleum.
Dick Grob, a former Palm Spr-
iocs police sergeant who worked
for Presley several years, and
Sam Thomp&on, a former Sbelby
County sheriff's deputy. said
they l'eeeived information Fri-
day from personal sources about
the plot and tipped officials.
Sta te S t 1"19 S.....,.
Abuse of Patients
Low in Hospitals
LOS ANGELES CAP> -About
one in 20 p;ttients hospitalized in
California in 1974 suffered a dis
ability caused by medical care. a
malpractice study concluded.
But less than 20 percent of
those disabilities were caused by
improper treatment, according
to the study. It said the vast ma-
jority of disabilities were un-
avoidable results of correct
treatment for whatever was
wrong with the patient.
The California Medicai As-
sociation paid three doctors who
are also lawyers $700,000 to con-
duct the study, which fi&s based
on a 1974 s ample of 20 ,684
hospital charts from 23 hospitals.
Exp~ng the findings lo the
more than three million patients
hos pitalized that ye.ar in
California. the report estimated
that 140,000 persons suffered dis-
abilities as a result or medical
care.
Eighty percent of these were
temporary disabilities, and only
5,300 were .. luttn&. functional
disabilities," the rel)'Nt said.
E. Kuh Rose. pre1ldent, of the
association, said Tuesday be was
.. pleased with the results "
b•c•me. tbe report rbowed few ~sesofpoor medlca treatlJlln\.
The assoclation'JI House of
Delegates will conslder the re-
port in October, when it recom-
Nationwide
Walk Ends
SAN DIEGO (AP> -The fil:lt
thing John Cushman did when he
reached the Paclfic Ocean was
jump into it. Then be went home
and fell uleel) after a record-
. se\ting tran.scoaUnental walk.
Cusbn\an. 21. of San Dle10, said he made the 2,&51 miles on
foot from Tlmes Square in New
York to the Paclflc in 49 days,
beating the 1972 mark
established by John Lees, :n, an
Englishman, whose walk took
him /rom the Los Angeles City
Hall to the New York City Hall.
The purpose ot Cushman's
walk was not simply to break re·
cords, but also to raise funds for
the Muscular Qystrol)by Associa-
tion. "
mends how to deal with rising
malpractice insurance rates.
The report estimated that
13,800 people died in 1974 from
treatment-caused disabilUies,
but one-fourth of those "probably
would bav~ died independently
within one year from unrelated,
underlying diseas~ ot condi-
tlbns ... "
The report's chief author, Don
Harper Mills, a doctor-lawyer
from Los Angeles, said It was a
first step to considerinc
alternatives to the current
system ol dealing with malprac-
tice claims.
~·The malpractice litigation
arena is so expansive both for pa·
tients and for physicians and
hospitals that we've got to make
some change," said Mills.
The report did not recommend
specific changes.
Driver Cited
In Accident
That Killed 8
8ALTLAKECITY <AJ>>-Tbe
FWJertcn driver or a semJ-truck
that eollided headon with a van ~d killed elght members of a
Califomla family last week has
been clted for driving too fast for
existlna conditions.
The Utah Highway Patrol cited
Richard Henry Miller, 30, of
Fullerton. Farrell A. Lee Jr., 34. ot Newbury Park, Calif., his wife
and their six children died when
their van was· crushed by the
truck.
Trooper Gary Taylor said
Miller's b'1ck was three feet over
the center line a1 the time of the
crash ca rain-sllclened U.S. 91 ln
a desolate stretch of central
Utah.
Juab County Attorney Milton
T . Hannon talked to MUler
before the truck driver returned
to California_ He said Mlller re-
ported bis truck was out d con-
trol at the tlme of the accident.
Miller said the van driven by
Lee wu also out of control and
coming straicht at bJa truck.
Hannon related. Miller said be
slammed on bis brakes and went
out ot ~l.-strikina the van.
Harmon said.
recoiJltRd aCbooll of thoucht. ••
The aiental bealtb director
went on to charce tbat Wllaon'e
report M8med "more deslinod
to make newspaper headllries
and to promote controversy
to help relOlve problems."
Pa t Of Klatte•s headline· IW.DUlif •Crltlciam of tbe Wilson
report. was bauf on the
p1ycbolo1fst'sd finding that '•wqrkln1 con ltiona of the
Juvenile Hall mental health
team ftmain oppreaaive be.YODd
measure.''
"I have never before seen a
1roup of people so demoralized.
depreued . thorouahl y
scape(oated and feeling totally
impotent to make their working
condition4 happier," Wilson said.
He went on to note that in a
short time the ment.a.t health
team "has become stlfllng,
m IUtariltic, authoritarian,
ricidified to the point of fouilisa-
Uon."
And Willon placed the blame
for thQle cooditlons aquai17 on
Klatte'• dooratep.
••The responsibility for this
count.er productive atmosphere
rests with Dr. (William) Loomis
and bla supervisors, Dr.
(Bernard> Rappaport aqd DI'.
Klatte," WUson said in his re· port.
Additional heft in the Newport
Beach p sychologist's report
came when he declared that only
60 percent or mental heaJth team
Juvenile psychological evalua-
tion reports be examined "meet
or exceed minlmal standards of
clinical competence."
In a partial rebuttal to Wilson's
findings, Klatte noted that two or
the three evaluators whose work
was found deftcient by the con-
sultant "bave been terminated."
The th.lrd worker was down-
sraded. Klatte said.
He also noted that the mental
health team bossed by Loomis
was inherited from the Probation
Deoartment in 1975.
'7Dr. Loomis inherited a staff,
some or them too poorly trained
for the tasks assigned, and a
supervisor who appeared unable
or unwilling to supervise them,''
Klatte said. •
"The present staff should be
applauded for their loyalty and
dedication,'' be cotftinued.
But Wilson also criticized t.M
menUll be al th team's practice of
applying diagnostic terms to the
youngsters they ev aJuate al
Juvenile Hall.
· 'l see no useful puJ'l)Ole ln salt
dUng a minor within the Justite
system with a (prejudiciai) label
which other than treatment
personnel will undoubtedly see,"
Wil&OO said in his report.
But Klatte in bia letter to JudJe
Vincent defended the practice ol
applying diagnostic labels to the
youngsters by calling it "by far
the best recognized and used
system in the United states.•· .
··surely the very act of arrest-
ing_ a youth and putting him in
Juvenile Hall poses a greater
threat or labeling him a s a
juvenile delinquent.'' Khitte
said.
Jn an attempt to minimize tile
undetl.Yina friction bet.ween ..-e
mental bealtb team and proba-
tion efforts at Juvenile Hall.
Judie Vtncent recently an-
nounced that, as presiding judge
of Juvenile Hall, be wlll oversee
administration of tbe mental
beaitheffartiri Juveiiile Hall.
Al the same time, however, tbe
j ud1e made it clear the
psycboloClcal evalu1tloil pro·
gram at the ball will stay under
the Mental Health Department's
domain.
,tf DAILY Ptl.OT l/SC W.Oneed!Y, A"QualSt, 1m
• Q Angry Worker Kills ~ Tri.a Slain at Ammunition Center wlda T._
~lal•e
~NO?RBR 8APPLBa:
Sometimes )'OU rnl1ht narure as a
workin1 .. ur that lhfJ atnuent amooa us have everything aolng
their way Maybe not Consider
the plight of certain citizens who
live at Dover Shores m Newport
Beach.
Dover Shores 1s one or
Newport's finest residential de
velopmenls, wandering along the
western bluff area of Upf>!!r
Newport Bay Some beautiful
homes are right. on the
waterfront with finger channels
cut between to provide docks and
slips fOI' yachts.
From time to time. however.
these finger channels fill with
s ilt and sand To keep the
waterways clear and usable, it's
necessary to dredge these chan·
nels.
SO THE TIME had come, and
the Dover Shore& Community As-
sociation got together and raised
$25,000 of its own money to do the
dredging job.
Further, there would be an in-teresting side benefit
The nearby North Star Beach,
a public beach, is rather ugly and
pock-marked and thus would
benefit from some additional fill.
Thus a happy arrangement was
possible. The Dover channels
could be dredged and the sandy
material pumped over on North
Star Beach.
NEWPORT, Ind. <AP) -A
aecwity 1uard, 1&pparently ln·
cenled by a reprimand, •bot and
killed bla aupervlaor and two
other men Tuesday at the
Army'a Newport Ammunition
Center, aut.borillu aaid.
Two other persona, lncludina
an expectant mother, were
wounded
Authorities identified the
guard as Juan Gonzales, 53, of
Terre Haute, Ind He was
hospitalired in cr1hcal condition
after being wounded by eunfire
when subdued by fellow security
officers.
The dead were ldentitled as
Tony Lacopo, 38, of Rockville,
Ind.; William DUlll?d, tn his late
40s, of Cayu1a, Ind.; and James
Clarice, 54, of Terre Haute.
Listed in critical condition at
Terre Haute's Union Hospital
was Steven Posen, 23, of Euclid.
Ohio. Seriously wounded and
taken to St. Elizabeth Hospital at
Danville, III., was Charlene
Tris Blasted
Harmful to MtJle Organs?
WASHINGTON (AP) -Two California scientists have informed
federal officials they believe the name retardant Tris may cause
harm to the reproductive systems of boys if contained in their sleeping garments. ~
The scientists -Arlene Blum and Bruce N. Ames or the University or California at Berkeley -made
their observations in a Jetter l(>
John Byington, chairman of the
Con.sumer Product Safety Com-
mission, according to the
Washington Post.
The commission earlier this,
year ordered sleepwear treated
with Tris off the market because
the flame retardant was believed
to cause ca nc er. Court
challenges have frustrated the
ban, but a federal Judge in
Washington state on Tuesday en-
joined one company from selling
Tris-contained clothing.
"The risk of reproductive er-
fects on children from Tris-
treated pajamas is amplified
because the scrotum is about 20
times more permeable to
chemicals than other skin," the
scf'entists said.
The chemical DBCP was
believed to have caused sterility
in a number of male chemical
workers at the Dow Chemical
Co., plant m Magnolia, Arlt., and
an Occidental Chemical Co ,
plant in Lathrop, Calif.
Dunham, ln her 20I, of Cayuca.
The Army quickly Imposed
tight security •t the faclllty, and
details of the sbootln1 were sketchy.
But reports Indicated that the
suspect, armed with a .SS.caliber
revolver, was called to Lacopo's
second-floor office to be
reprimanded for insubordina-
tion. The shooUng be1an tbere
and continued until Gonzalea was
wounded.
AUTHORITIES SAID
Goll%alea waa retired from the
Army and bad been employed as
a guard for about 10 years.
His relatives at the hospital
said they bad spoken briefly with
the suspect, and he had said,
"It's all over now. I'm sorry."
Lacopo, the plant protection
superintendent, was employ~
by Uniroyal Inc., which makes
explosives-related material here
under Army contract. Dillard
and Clarke were government
employes.
POSEN, AN employe of
Young-Posen Inc. of Euclid, was
reportedly visiting the facility in
connection with his firm's con-
tract to raze a number of old
buildings at the sprawling com·
plex.
Mrs. Dunham. sectetary to the
installation's commanding of·
ficer, is eight months pregnant.
An Army spokesman said doc-
tors felt confident her child
would survive.
S ehool l itters
Laurie Saunders didn't want to be left as she started the
first grade Tuesday at an elementary school in
Louisville. Soni Suell. a friend of Laurie's family, re·
assured the girl before defarting. Meanwhile, a federal
Judge who ordered schoo busing in the Kentucky city
three years ago has srua the court's involvement may soon end.
But you just don't go and
dredge out channels and spread
the sand these days. First you go
get a permit from the coastal
commission .
Thus it was that the Dover
Shores Community Association
went lo the coastal commission
to gel permission for their dredg·
ingjob.
The two California biochemists
said that Tris-BP is .a chemical
closely related to DBCP, which
recently was linked to sterility
among workers at chemical
plants in California and
Arkansas. The plants produced a
pesticide containinR DBCP.
Floridians Boycott 2 Utilitks
IT DEVELOPED THAT clear·
ly , this was not going to be a
popular project in the com-
mission's view There was a lot
of chatter about the dredgings
raising "toxic levels" at North
Star Beach. Some discussion cen·
tered on the limited public access
to that beach Other rears were
expressed that the dredged
materiaJ might raise the level of
the shoreline too higb.
After all the debate, the coastal
commission in its infinite
wisdom granted the dredging
permit for Dover Shores. But
there was one interesting Uml1a· lion :
No dredged materiaJ may be
spread upon North Star Beach.
The dredging must be placed on
barges. The barges must be
towed out to sea, to an Environ-
mental Protection Agency dump-
ing site four miles offshore.
Out there, I guess it can get as
toxic as it wants tb.
Meanwhile, the prtce tag on the
Dover dredging job will no longer
be $25,000. It will be $50,000. Dou-
ble yOur money, folks.
r SOMEHOW, YOU wonder bow
we got aloni before the coastal
commission came along to pro-
tect us against all these dredged
toxics. When they dredged
Newt>ort Harbor and piled the
dredgings along the Peninsula.
When we threw everythlng we
could find on the West Newport
shoreline to save the beaches.
Why, we must have toxics just
about everywhere.
WRONG THINKERS might
wonder ii the commission at·
titude would have softened oo the
Dover Shores project bad a cuh·
poor public agency requested the permit.
After aU, tbe Dover Shares peo.
pleau"eratlter wealtb7.
JN THE letter to Byington, the
scientists said they have "new in·
formation that reinforces our
fears" that boys who have worn
pajamas treated with Tris may
suffer sterility, sperm mutations
and testicu!11r abnormalities.
Grade Change
Pint Found
At Lehigh
BETHLEHEM, Pa.
• CAP) -Lehigh University
officials say they have un-
covered a scheme involv·
ing payment by students of
at least $2,000 to alter their
grades in the school's com-puter.
Five undergraduates
suspected in the scheme
failed lo register for
classes Tuesday, and the
investigation is focused on
the registrar's oflice, said
Lehigh official ~uatin
Gavin.
Gavin, assistant to un·
iversity president Demln.r
Lewis, said, "It's valid to
~$ume they've (the five)
dropped out, although they
do have the opportunity to register late."
GAVIN SAID the four.
month investigation start.
ed when university of·
ficials received
anonymous leUers wblch
provided oo names or de-
tails but stated that stu-
dents were buying trades.
The scheme was un-
covered after a cbeck of
last semester's crades and
interviews with students, said Gavin.
Telephone, Electric Firms Claim Protest Flops
MIAMI (AP) -Backers of a one-day consumer boycott protest-
ing higher electric and telephone rates here say a ball million people
or more participated. The utilities called the protest a flop.
"I want people to say, 'Dammit! I want a review or the whole
system that allows tMse outrageous rates'." said WINZ News Direc-
tor Steve Daily, who initiated and organized Tuesday's boycott. "I
just got rurtous after ~earing Southern Bell wun 't even satisfied with its Jatest increase," Daily said.
"We think it's a great success,·· said a spokesman for the all-news
station that urged southern Floridians not to use electricity or make
long-distance telephone calls Tuesday.
THE SJ'ATION .MAILED BOYCOTT kits to anyone who request·
ed them. The five-page kits contained information on how to complain aboutrateincreaaes and wbotoconi.ct.
The station says it made the estimate of 500,000 particir,ants
because 2,ooo' people mailed in requests for & "boycott kU, ' ~
teJepbone switchboard at the statioa "was fioocled wlth calls," Ud
several institutions announced theytoolc part in the protest.
But the utilities insisted that business was as 1ood aa, if not better, thanusuaJ. .,.
PRESLEY ARTS
CENTER DlJE? -NASHVILLE, Tenn <AP) -A
state representative says he wilJ
ask the Tennessee Legislature to
name the state's new performing
arta cent.er here in memory of Elvia Presley.
Rep. John Spence (D·
Mempbia), aald he would in-
troduce a resolution to that effect
when the lawmakers return in January.
"People from Memph.ls will
feel that the center reJH'eSent.s
them fully if it honors the
memory or Mempbts' most
famous citizen," be said.
Mao Viewed
TOKYO (AP) -Yqoslav
Prealdent Joslp Broa Tito viewed
the bcxly of his old ldeoloefcal
foe. Mao Tae-t\Cng, at a just-
compJeted mausoleum in Pell·
inc'• tnaln square today, Ollna's
official Hslnbua news aaency re. potted. .
Tony Bruns, a Florida Power and Light Company spoke$man
said that at one point in the day. more electricity actually was being used than expected.
"AS OF l P .M., THE WAD ON our system was 8,000 megawatts,
which was about 75 megawatts higher than forecast for that period,'•
Brunssaid. ''At4p.m.itwas200megawattsbigberthanforecut.
Tempetatures in Miami, where air conditioning acCOWlta for a
good share or electric usage, were in the 80s during the mostly-rainy day.
Southern Bell spokesman A. W. Weber said his atility 'fU not af. reeled.
"As of noon. it Ooog-d.i5tance dialing) was the sameUds Tuesday
as last Tuesday, even tbouih school started this Jloa.da7. which nonnally causes a drop."
FPL recently received a $195.S million rate bite. increaatq the
average bomeowner's bill $4.39 a month based on I.000 kilaWatts usage. The average bill now is $37 .51.
11IE PSC APPROVED A $133.S million increase for Southern
Bell, sendinc up the basic monthly resident telephone bill SS cents. Also,tbecost~apublicpbaoecallls2Scents.
"
fJhrekout on the "Wlwrf
Dinner by Candleli8b.t Please Clien~ele
SAN PftA.NCJ8CO <AP> -It
by candlell1bt at P\a·
hennm's Grotto rataurantaftcr
a tnbstormer uploded. knock·
-llaht.a -tourlst-JUXUMd llDt!l"llrtan'a Wharf.
"W• rul.l1 don't mlDd. lt'1
more fun U111 way," 1ald
arlana.e Curtis of Loe AnPI u &bonlbbled on ber H&food din-
ner dUri.QC the brief Tuesday althl~out.
Padftc G &t Jtl~tric Co.. aa.ld about so resi.w-a.ata, ban and
1 1n a four-block area
WtN wlt.boat pow duriif tM.
mloulH tt took to I " the
tran1former. UUUty oftlclala
blam.d the power outa1• o0 an
undetermined mecbaoleal
!allure.
Cwi01Jly lffker'I at the lamed Wu MUHUm were elven an.ex-
tta thrUJ when tho JJ1b1.t went
out. Employ• wltb niahllabts
bad to le..S the vlalton u.rou,b a
maze of waxy buata out to tbe
at.reel.
Mastermind Like
A Businessman
SOtml GATE CAP) -The mysterious "Mr. Goldman," who
transformed a vacant building here into the key web in an elaborate
plot that involved tunnel.i.ng underneath a street to reach a bank
vault acrosJ the way, apparenUy seemed the perfect busineuman
-well-dJ'essed and well-educated.
"How was I to be auspicious?'' wondered Mack McArthur Tues-
day, a neighborhood businessman since 1930. McArthur had leased
the building t.o a "Mr. Goldman" in June, but shook his head in dis-
belief as he watched workmen fill in the UO-foot tunnel lead.inc from
his store to the bank.
Yet it turned out the would-be burglars would have wound up
with chicken feed had they succeeded, as the Security National
Bank vault onJy contained "a totaJ of $100,000 t.o $150,000," police Sgt. Al Knox said.
T~eo w ........ ., ••• CattOR
EL CENTRO (AP> -Cotton growers recovering from a de·• vastaling flood now face a new enemy: worms.
The tobacco bud worms are expected to devour half of lbe Im-
)>erial Valley's colt.on crop, slate farm officiala said Tuesday.
('--_ST,_i4_TE __ J
Loues due to worms could
exceed $50 million, compared
lo flood damage estimated at
$8.5 million.
BIU to Boo•t Pntnort• Vetoed
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A measure that would have allowed
many cities and counties to ~t pensions for retired workers has
been vetoed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
When the Uabta came back to llfe at 9·-'0 p.m., the normally
·heavy sJdewrlik tr.affic along the
ED\barcadero wu almost non-
exlatant.
Cllentele at several
restaurants and bars groped
throueh the darkness by
candlelight. But most tourist
amuaementa Jn the darkened
zone closed up shop for the nl&ht.
fearina it would take hours to
restore power.
Police reported no crim.ibal in-
cl den ta resulted froim the blackout.
Jean Hagen
lnses Bout
With Cancer
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Ac-
tress Jean Hagen -once a lead-
ing lady in movies and television
-bas died after a two-year bat-
tle with throat cancer that even·
tually took her to Germ.any for
controversial Laetrile treat-
,ments. She was 52.
Miss Hagen died Monday at the
Motion Picture and Television
Country House and Hospital in
suburban Woodland Hills, but
her death was not reported until
Tuesday, a hospital spokesman
said.
Aft.er being told by doctors ear·
ly this year that she had only a
S0-50 chance to live, the actress
replied. "That's not good .enough
for me ... I want very much to
live."
She twice underwent cancer ·
surgery and radiation therapy
before turning to the Laetrile
treatments, which are illegal in
most states.
Miss Hagen made her screen
debut in "Adam's Rib" in 1949.
Among her other films were
"Singing in the Rain" in 1952,
"The Big Knife" in 1955, "Panic
in the Year Zero" in 1962, and
"Dead Ringer" in 1964.
Wedn!!cf!y. August 31 , tt1'1 ... DAIL V PILOT .45
By BU Keane Aero$ol Baa
"Wow! look at all tho toy cars down there!"
Divorce Won
By Joe Alioto
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Fonner Mayor Joseph
Allot.o's 36-year marriage has ended, but an estimal·
ed $8 million in community property still must be
divided.
The 60-year-old antitrust attorney on Tuesday was
granted bis request for---------
dissolution of the mar· . in support pending court
riage -the technical disposition of the case.
term for divorce in The couple has been
California. separated since Dec. 2. But Superior Court 1975.
Judge Jay Pfotenhauer
denied an attempt by
Angelina Alioto to find M p) -I~ her husband ln contempt AID eaue
for disposing of $600,000
of his law firm's assets in GuiJ
violation of a restraining ly' order.
The judge ruled Alioto Esca
hadn't willfully dis· pes
obeyed the court order
restricting the spending LONG BEACH CAP> -
of community property. A man. who moments
Alioto has been paying earlier had confessed .to
his wife $5 500 per month armed robbery in
' Superior Court here,
F• F• d escaped as he was being
Irm me escorted back lo jail
HACIENDA
Bill Awaits
Brown's OK
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Alter a two-year bat-
tle, eovh'onmentallsll and their leatslative allies
have pushed a bill throuib the lelialature ban-
ning most fluorocarbon aeroeol apr~, llJlted by
studies to cancel.
On a 21·9 vote Xueaday, the Senate sent SB
153 by Sen. John Dunlap (D-Napa,), to Gov. Ed-
mund Brown Jr. The meaau.re would ban the
manufacture of the aerosols In Callfornia atartln& OcL 1.5, 19'18.
A growing number of sclenUsts say the:
fluorocarbons, commonly found in bair sprays
and deodorants, attack the oaoae layer that
shields the earth from ultraviolet rays which cause skin cancer.
The upper house also approved the Assembly
version of the bill. AB 236 by Assemblyman John
, Vasconcellos <D·&n Jose), on a 23-7 vote and
sent it back to tbe Assembly for action on Senate
amendments.
Both bills bad to be watered down to clear legislative hurdles, and most sections of them
would be superseded by proposed federal regula-uons.
The legislation, however, would go into effect
on its own if the federal rules were dropped or
delayed. In addition, after April 15, 19'19 the bill
would ban the sale in Calitomla of the sprays
produced before the manufacturing deadline.
The manufacture of most containers tor
fluorocarbon sprays would be banned atarUnc Dec. 1.5, 1978.
Convicted Rapist'
Arrested A.gain
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -PoUce bavebooked
a 22-year-old man convicted ofl.5 rapes in Pasadena
on charges be raped or aUempted t.o rape aeven
women in this quiet coastal community.
Anthony Hughey o! Santa Barbara admitted the
rapes during a lle detector test, Det. Brian Abbott
said Tuesday. Hu@ey wu bei.ni held without bail.
Aft.er arresting Hughey based on victims'.
descriptions, officers learned he had been convicted
of lbe 15 Pasadena rapes in 197• and 1975. Abbott
said. Hughey served slightly less than a year in
priSOll, Abbott added.
AB 734 by Assemblyman Norm Waters, D·Plymouth, would
have allowed agencies that contract with the Public Employes
Retirement ~stem to elect to make a one-time increase tor local
members who retired before Jan. l, 1974. ' HEIGIITS (AP> -A re·
after ask1-to get a
drink of water,
authorities said,
Hughey bas not been charged in the rape-
killings or three young women -two of them UC
Santa Barbara coeds -whose bodies were found in
couty territory. But a sheriff's spokesman said dep-
uties "will be questioning him in regard to those rapes."
Nuclear Pa1aer Pla11t lle«jllfttecl
SACRAMENTO (AP)-Pacmc Gas & Electric Co. has told the
state Energy Commission it wants to build a nuclear power plant in
the upper San Joaquin Valley.
The commission said Tuesday the utility is proposing
alternative sites for the two.unit, 2,400-megawatt plant in
· Stanislaus, Merced and Madera counties.
\lehattary late,,..atiea Approeed
SAN BERNARDINO <.\P> -A voluntary integration plan was
approved Tuesday for this city's 31,000-student school district, but
the judge gave officials only one semester to make it work.
Los Angeles Superior Court Judee Paul Egly ordered the dis-
trict to put the plan int.o effect next February - a year earlier than
officials bad suggested.
financier'• Attor11e11• WI• C'lal•
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Attorneys for financier C. Arnholt Smith
will get $230,000 claimed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
after all.
-~-...-... A motion by the FIC to block release of the money from a Smith·
related company was denied Tuesday by U.S. District Court Judge
Leland C. Nielsen.
DIES OF CANCER
T
EARL'S· P'W ........ HIAl_.. ,.,. co .. o.
St. Lk. 217U7 s..,.., r.,... Storu • v-,,..,
le.II Store NMreJI v-ArHl •
COSTA MISA 642-1753 ,,......_.81,,...
MISSION v1-.,0495-0401 Jim~~
(S. °""' ~. llt ..... ,....,,,
Jean Hagen
$100 GIFT CERTIFICATE FOR BOY AND GIRL
Fill in the entry below and deposit any Fashion
Square store August 18 thru September 9.
Contest rules: Boys ahd girls thru age 18• may
enter. Drawing Sept.10. 'Mnners need not be
present td win. Notification by phone & mall.
Gift cei'tfficatos good "i
at any Fashfon
store.
alty firm here has
agreed to pay $2,500 in
civil fines and end al-
leged false advertising m
a stipulated judgement
by Superior Court Com-
missioner Leo S. Rich.
The firm, Hacienda
Heights' Really, try
agreeing t.o the judge-
ment, ended a lawsuit
filed by the at.ate at-
torney general's office.
They said J.D. Walters
was leaving the
courtroom of Superior
Court Judge Roy J .
Brown Tuesday after
pleading guilty to three
counts of armed robbery
when he asked for water.
His handcuffs were off,
and as he headed for the
fountain, he broke into a
run down the ball.
BUTTE
KNIT SALE
49.99-79.99
Originally $60-$116 If you're
a Butte collector, you're
probably already looking for the
car keys. The name's new? Then
come try beautif ut workmanship,
design and lush Fall colors,
at temptlmg savings. Shown, in l~i:w11~
powder or pink, 6-16, $80,
59.99
Radio Booklet Ready
. WASlilNGTON <AP> -The National Associa-tion ~ Broadcasters bas prepared a booklet
descnbing the workings or radio stations
"Radio: Get the Message," includ~ sections
on news and actualities, public service announce-
ments, promollons, use of muslc and sound effects and production techniques.
It is available for $1 from the Radio Informa·
lion Office, 1711 N St. NW, Wastunaton, D.C .• 20036.
t I
Orange Coa t Daily Pilot Editorial Pa .. _.e ___________________ R.obe·rt·N·. W·eed-/Pu_b_ll~_r _T_~_,_K"."'."./E.dit-or U: ,Wedneaday, A~ust31, 1tn 81rt>ar• Krelbtch/Edltorl•I Pege Editor
c c
Mesa Initi ~tive:
How Will It End?
Homeownws launching an 1nmattve campaign 1n north
C ta Mesa now f.IC• two deadlln• 1n their effort to hah •
~It home and apattment protect planned for their
n~hbottlood
The Nonri Costa M..a Homeowners A.taoc1atlon haa until
ttte end of December to collect algnaturn from 10 percent ot
th• city's votera to place the rezone initiative on the M rch 7,
1978 general election ballot.
But they have less tune than that to prepare their argu.
m4tnla for an Orange County Supertor Court date next S&pt.
14 as a result of a lawsuit flied last week by developers of the
contrOYerS1al 4&-acre parcel
The A.rnel Development company of Santa Ana claims in
1t~ $2.5 million damage suit that information being distributed
in the in1t1at1ve campaign contains many errors and m1s-
reprasentat1ons.
They also claim the homeowner movement has delayed
financing of the pro1ect -estimated to cost between $20 and
$30 million. .
Amel spokesmen say they are not filing the suit in order
to block the initiative process. Leaders in the petition drive
disagree.
Homeowner representatives see the lawsuit as an effort
by the developer to cause them to abandon what they con-
sider a constitutional process.
And they claim there are errors and misrepresentations in
the lawsuit filed by the development company. They say the
suit distorts wording in the paid petition filing notice. and
claim the lawsuit is based on semantics.
The homeowners predict the court will toss out the pre-
l1m1nary in1unct1on sought by Amel.
Amid these twin swirls of contradictory opinion. appear
these ma1or issues of consequence·
1 The court will have a most d1tf1cult time 1n determining
1f the wording of the pet1t1on is legal. Hyperbole 1s a natural
weapon of those who seek to correct wrongs through their
constitutional nght of petition.
2. It is more difficult than ever to declare one of the two
sides nght or wrong. Amel t;las valid points to make in stating
. that the firm has worked tong and hard to meet the city gov-
ernment's demands for development. of the property.
Homeowners, on the other hand, have a persuasive argument
in declaring that continued dense. multiple-family home con-
struction 1s not in the best 1nt8'ests of them-or of other pro-
perty owners in the city
3. With all its legal validity and constitutional privilege.
the 1n1t1at1ve process can be a mischievous device. Should
this one succeed. others will follow. Which brings us to an ul-
timate point that Costa Mesa may end up being governed
by pet1t1ons and init1at1ve elections rather than by a city
council.
That could prove a telhng blow to a city that up to now
has en1oyed steady ,and firm guidance by its elected council
members.
Worthy Support
Costa Mesa city councilmen carefully considered ap-
plications from 11 social service organizations in the Harbor
• Area before selecting eight to receive federal funds.
Those agencies were granted a total of $83,000 to con-
1 tin ue their very worthwhile projects through 1978.
Service groups receiving council approval for the federal
funds ranged from the Mardan Center. which assists students
wltb MV8re learning disabilities, to the Youth Employment
Servi ... which provides job opportunities and counseling for
Costa Mesa yeung people
Councilmen were quick to remind other social service
groups in the community that $66,000 in federal revenue shar-
ing funds remains to be distnbuted.
LocaJ organizations with bills to pay -and with good
causes -can contact Mayor Norma Hertzog or Councilman
Ed McFarland for guidance on how their worthwhile efforts
can be hetped from the fund.
• Opinions expressed hl the space •bove are those of the Daily Piiot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
•rtlsts. Reeder comment is invited.
Jack Ander8on
~.
Jets, G~lf Clubs .Uefi . Behind
WASHINGTON More than
three yean after ll\e United
States pulled out of Indochina, a
full accountin& has yet to be
made of all they left behind.
They abandoned millt.ary in
stallatlons, industrial pl~~. oil
depots , pi e rs , dock s.
warehouses. repair faciUties,
barracks and hoapi\als. The
warehouses were jammed full of
munitions, the docks piled hrgh
with equipment
The conquerrng Commurusts
inherited the finest airports and
seaports m aU Asia, uruntended
gifts from the U.S. taxpayers. All
over South Vietnam, ~~ Com-
munists round 10.000·foot con·
crete runways, complete with
planes that streaked over the
jungle so fast the foliage below
looked like a green blur.
THE DEPA.RTING Americans
also left behind personal
possessions, ranging from a
$1,400 set of crystal dishes to a
$1.40 pair or nail clippers. Some
fortunate commissar may still be
walking the streets of Saigon an a
pair of "alligator shoes made to
order" for a U.S. official in too
big a hurry to pack And hopeful
ly, a needy Viet Cong wound up
with the four bottles of Jean Nate
bubble bath abandoned by
another offtc1al
The lost billions are hidden m
secret inventories that may
never be dug out. But we have
succeeded at least in exammmg
the claims of tbe foreign aid of
flcials, who tned to collect from
the government (Or their dJS·
carded possessions.
The lists of lost valuables
fortify our impression that many
U.S. officials didn't let the war
interfere with their high living.
One official asked the gov-
Paul Harvey
ernm~nt to relmburse htm, for
example. for "three bottles
Cognac, four bottles Boutboo.
one bottle Scotch, five bottles
various liquors " Another left to
the Communists "24 wine
glasses, crystal i 18 champagne
glasses, crystal ; 12 sherry
alasses, crystal; 16 brandy snif
ters, crystal."
STILL ANOTHER official, with
a taste for culture, left behind 10
oil pa.mtrngs and a Chinese rug
worth $2,000. Nor did he have to
to pack his 154 shirts, with 18 sets
of cuff links to bold the quffs
toeether. He elso 1ave up 30
smoking pipes to the Com-
munist.a.
The fellow who lost the fancy
alligator shoes also put in a cfal m
for two pairs of "turtle'' shoes.
one palr of "ostrleh bide'' shoes
and three pairs or common golf
s hoes. Another sought reim-
bursement for 18 cans of shoe
polish, "assorted colors "
'Congratulations. Bert! I knew you'd fit in!'
Several envoys made a
hasty exit without their golf clubs
and tennis rackets. One de
manded $1 ,085 from the tax-
payers to pay for two sets of
abandoned eoU clubs, plus
another $120 for an "elephant
hide'' golf bag. He helpfully
itemized the miasinc clubs, in-
cluding "woods 1-3-4-S, irons 2·9
and PW Cpitchin1 wedge)."
A TENNIS BUFF pulinaclaJm
for••26cansot Wilson tennis balls,
four boxes Tretorn balls, six cans
Dun}op balls" and three boxes of
"all weather" balls.
Others asked for compensation
for the pets they couldn't bring
home, including two German 1 Shepherds valued at $800, a
"five.month male" hunting dog
worth $200 and 10 goldfish and
tropical fish valued at $50. But
the State Dept. ruled sternly
''No allowance could be made for
the ... dogs orfish."
AB it happened, the State Dept
provided its personnel in In·
dochlna with housing and
furnishings suitable for com-
fortable living ll cautioned
them, therefore, not to take
valuable personal possessions in·
to the war zone.
UPON their return. the 0C-
f1c1als were notified that they
could claim up to $15,000 for
personal possessions left behind
Most of the returning AID
personnel abided by the rules.
but 86 put m claims exceeding
the legal limit.
Some claims were made for re-
imbursements as high as $50,000.
In view of the advance warning,
no one got more than $15,000. The
total reimbursements added up
to $2.5 million, slightly more than
half of what was claimed.
Cab 1838: A Lesson in Free Enterprise
It was a sticky hot day in
Chicago when I hailed a cab on
Michigan Avenue.
A Chicago cab ride is not
something one looks forward to
On hot days
es p e c i,;ll I y ,
cab drivers
are hkely to
be surly,
other drivers
inconsiderate.
Traffi c
signals seem
green for two
seconds. red
f or rive
minutes.
But this day I got a surprise -
perhaps the most refreshing cab
ride of my experience
Not all cab driven are created
equal. Paul Gosenpud bad made
of his tedious Job an enjoyable
profession .
HIS YELL01f cab appears
much like any otbe:r until you
.
open the door. but once inside you
are Alice in Wonderland.
First, Paul 's cab is
immaculate. Instead of sttting
on rageed upholstery with your
feet ankle deep in soggy clearette
butts -the upholstery of Cab
1838 ia intact aiJd inviting -you
discover the carpeted noor is
fr.shly vacuumed.
Then the fun begins.
There is an assortment or
periodicafs gratuitously
provided for lbe rider -
including the cultural.
Background musfo is offered to
the taste of each passenger,
including taped classics.
AND ON the rear deck -
between the rear seat and the
wide rear window is an
assortment of candies from
which you are expected to help
yourself.
Neatly bracketed to the panels
behind the side windows are
potted plants ... real ones.
In a hanging vase in rroot or
you (on the-rear of the front seat)
are fresh cut flowers. Real ones.
You may help yourself, says the
cabbie, to a boutonniere of your
choice.
"U your favorite kind of candy
1s not back there," Uys Paul
Gosenpud, "I have three kinds of
cookies up here.••
Then, as an afterthoucht,
·•Also cough drops, ,should you
need them. -or aspirin, should you need them." _
A neat note in front of you
mentions that the driver has city
maps -including bus route
maps -and a dictionary
Now that your first flush of
surprise is subsiding you realize
that 1838 is air conditioned; most
Chicago cabs are not.
NA11JRALL Y I am expecting
that there must be some extra
c harge for all th)s. On the
contrary, the cbeetlul driver
explains, "I did ~ k'aise my
rat.es when the others did."
I remembered that Mayor
Bilandic had negotiated a labor
settlement which resulted in a
starting-fare increase of 70
percent.
"The taxi drivers are calling
him Santa Claus," said Paul
Gosenpud. "I'm sticking with the
old cheaper rates."
Won't this lead to bargain
hUpting by customers, to friction
wil.h C>tber drivers?
"I don't care," said the Jean,
bespectacled young
entrepreneur "I lease my cab.
I'll charge whatever rates I like.
And I like the cheaper rates."
Doubtless. I'm thinking to
myself, he 'll make it up in bigger
tips.
Paul Gos enpud reads my
mind : "The tips I really
appreciate are tips from
customers on how to make my
cab -not just the best in Chicago
~but the best In the world!"
Thanks for the "Jlft," Mr.
Gosenpud.
MailfJox/Whell You're Out of. Oil an Offshore Rig Is Beautiful
I To the Editor:
Your editorial of Aug. 23 (Here
CometheRigs) reflectatbesortor
negative thinking wbicb could
mean the end of tt)is country as
we knowil
Both the press and the politi-
' ciaos have mana&ed to convince
the majority of America.n5 that
we ue not. in serious. trouble
J frOIJI an ener1y standpolDt, but I let•a look at the hard, cOld factSc
1. We are u1n•an1 us>
astronomical balance of pay.
menu def\cit paylna th OPEC
up to $12.00 per barrel for crude
oil wbicb costs, probably fifty
cents per barrel to ptOdu
2. our. oil companies are re-
ce..lvin&. on an neraaet a little
I over auo per baml for cride oU
which t'Olts u .muc:b If;()() ptr
barrel to p~c
the day when an offshore oll pro·
ducing platform will be a
beautiful sight to the average
American who wants to have a
JOb, heat his home, and to drive
his automobile.
The camel you refernd to ls \n
reality the American public and
the tent in wblch that camel's
bead is stuck ls the one fumlahed
by the politicians and envift>I"·
mentalists.
DALE JOHNSON 1
some years ago 1 wrote as beerthandoves,intbecontestthe
follows: moonung dove will no doubt be
"Mourning doves are beautiful the loser. But we think in tbefinal
creatures which are now being judgment made b)" the majority
slain (in some states) by coward· of inteflifel\t and decent
ly assassins who are lkeosed by AmUicans, the doves wtll be the
tbe state, to murder tbetn. They moral Vlcto ."
are lovely and helpless creatures So. like we say, there are so
with neither tusks nor claws to many tbings we cannot quite palr
mue the contest a level pt0posi-up witb reasoa. :We jott doo't
tion. 'lbeyarethegenUestofbirds seemtbbellble10te~upwlththe
and their feet are too dainty to veryl~tofthosetechnolt)lies.
kick fheiralayer1 and they are too • ~NRYM. WEBER
weak to ru11 lhem off with noarl.
· "ntey don •t btto tbose who tor•
ment them and depend on their:
sad aJances to provoke t0ercy in
the craven lifetaken. Tbey ar~
not cunnine and they do n~
molest meo even when they tear
holes tn them With their:
sbottunJ." . •'So \be1 are put down as stupid
but thlS b ttie comtnon slander the
weak must Ondure, Jt ia one« the
tricks of the u1Jy and bnttal to
villfy the comely a~d shy as
dumb. nte ignorant have always
been vandals and take pleasure in
the de1tructton of beauty SO
whUe th dove·killers are blUer.
better armed, and full of rnott
Although experience in deficit
financma may be a qualiricat.ion
for a U.S. budget director, the ob-
jective should be to reduce Inna-
lion by reducine eovemmental
deficit s~ini and one should
not take a personal advanu1e
from a position to the detriment of
his employer (bank or eovem-
menl).
Furthermore, the fact that
others de> what Lance did la no de-
lense. A U.S. president resiped
under threat of hn~achment tor
having done tbin&a which other
presldentadld.
ROY B. WOOLSEY
You have to have a httle teamwork when five kids want to ride two
~kateboard~ al the same time. These kids from Danville. JU., are
<from left> Barbara Harrier, 9; Matthew Henderson, 3; brook
gllbrath, 5. Brandy Gammon. 3. and Llsa Henderson, 8.
Ripoff?
WASHINGTON (AP)
-Deceived by profit.-
bun cry s alesmen,
Americans with bearinc
problems often purchase
expenalve hearing aids
that otter little help, a re-
po rt to the Federal
Trade Commission says.
Some consumers
would be better off with
surgery. Others are sold
used hearing aids by
dealers anxious to make
a sale, said the report, is-
sued Tuesday.
The FTC official who
wrote the report, G.
Martin Shepard, rec-
ommended adoption of
several l'tlles proposed
by the agency to prevent
unfair and deceptive
practices in the advertis-
ing, promotion and sale
DA!L 'Y PILOT Al
'llh~ee Hours Of Energy
By JAY SHA1l8U1T
LOS ANG~LES CAP) -
Tonlgbt CBS ta bumpin1 its usual
entertainments for a three-hour
news special on a topic inany
viewers m.laht con.sider a sure
cure for lnso~a : 1be enern
crisis. (Channel 2, 8 p.m. > Competlnc against ABC rerv.os
and only l'At houra ot ~t-run
frivolities on NBC, the special,
anchored by Walter Cronkite, is
"Energy: The Facts .•. The
Fears .... The Future."
ITS INQUWES RANGE from
the cosmic issues -such as in·
ternatiOl\al implications of the
energy crisis and President
Carter's energy proposals -to
questions about windmill power
and whether lone lines at gas
pumps are again in store f~ us.
"We've done energy stories
before, of course, on tbe evenini
news and '60 Minutes,' and we
were preparing a fresh loot at it
when the Carter energy pro-
posals came out," says CB.5' Bill
Small.
CBS Airs Report on Crisis
( .TV RDIEW J
is mighty long for such a broad
subject as energy in one night.
WbY not air it in one-hour chunks
on three consecutive nights?
Well, he replied, "the network
asked which is the best way to do
1t, and the best way seemed to be
to do it in one eveoiJll. So they
made the time available.''
AMONG OJHEll THINGs. the
show, 11 weeks j.n tbe inalring,
with a dozen correspondents cor-
responding, did 200 man-in-the-
street interviews on whether
citizens really feel they face
serious energy shortages.
But in tryln1 to help folk.a
understand such a btc. aeemlnJ-
ly amorphous subject u the
enerey crisls, mlaht not tbl'ff.
hours of explanation and
anal)'lia strllte folks u a reason
to switch.to other UUnp tontiht !
"Well, the individual bas got
an important atake in thla."
Small said.
"It's true there'• come to be
viewer apathy. A lot of people
are going to want to 10 out and
watch the Dodcers play. or stay
at the beach late at night. But one
would hope enouch of them will
find this show of sufficient in-
terest to watch.
.. AND IF IT doesq!t get the
biggest audience any broadcast
ever had, we'll Ju.st have to live
with it," he added sardonically.
aware that news specials aren't
exactly known to get king-sized
ratings. of hearing aids. ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--Dealers paid an AFl'Ell THE PROPOSAL was
pondered, added Small, senior
vice president at CBS News, "it
just seemed the dimensions of it
were such that the only way to do
"it properly was to do it
thoroughly.•'
And. Small said, "we found a
lot of cynicism on the part of the
average person because he or she
can't see that crisis.'' ''In the news business. we
make a mistake if we say we JU$t
want to do things that are Boin&
to be popular and attract big au-
diences . ;t.> olice Target
In Des Moines
DES MOINES, Iowa CAP> In 11 months, five
of the 310 police offi cers m this city of 200,000 have
been shot, and two have died. The mayor says. it 1s
part of a myst1rymg rise in lawlessness.
"This 1~ JUSl crazy It 1s beyond my com·
prehens1on," sciys Mayor Richard Olson. 'Tm just
sick about 1t ··
OFFICIALS SA V THERE ARE NO racial
motives in the shootings but in two cases white
policemen have been shot by blacks, and they fear
resentment could put police and blacks at odds.
The incidents, apparently unconnected, have
few elements in common.
But they come at a time when crime in general
is rising. Eight people have died in fires set by
arsonists In six months. There have been 10
hom.ic1des m the eight months of this year. com·
pared with eight for all of 1976 Overall, there were
15,668 violent crimes m 1976, an increase from
15,313 In 1975
"IT'S A PATTERN WE'RE looking al," Olson
said. and he complained of "an utter lack of people
wanting law and order."
The latest shootings killed oCficer Denny Hill,
30, and wounded officer Charles Cramer, 26, after
an apparently crazed man opened up with a shotgun
in a racially mixed neighborhood.
The man, who was black, had shot two black
civilians before shooting the white policemen,
police said. The officers had been called into the
, neigh_borhood by a woman who heard the first
shootings.
mE SPATE OF SHOOTINGS began Oct. 1,
and the victims then were officen James Oster·
quist and Michael Nehring. They were cheeking a
car when a man who had been reported as bother·
mg women pulled out a .357 magnum and opened
fire
Then. April 21 , officer Brian Melton was fatally
shot after he and other policemen stopped a car on a
traffic violation. Authorities prosecuted David
Louis Welton, who is black. on a murder charge,
saymg he had grabbed one officer's gun and shot
Mel ton with it But Welton said he never meant to
fire, and a j ury acquitted him.
Because the acquittal and the new shootings oc·
curred within two days, officials urged both
civilians and police to stay calm.
POUCE CIOEF WENDELL NICHOLS said he
is concerned about possible "tensions between
police officers and blacks. and between blacks and
whites."
s2a ·-~RO!n'O MmORU
NCOHCHNI• D PHVINf WILDl.ANO ;-> <(' ..... ----~
........ ____ .. _ ~i
average of $100 for a
hearing aid in 1975, the
report said. The same
devices were sold to con-
s umers at an average
price of p , Shepherd
said. Still, thr# hours for a news
special, wbiie nothing new, still
The aim of the show is to help
them see the crisis from various
angles, ·from energy legislation
and a covey of Capitol Hill lob-
byists trying to influence same to
how conservation may ease
power woes.
We bring you from· China
th.e artistry of the Ching Dynasty
$500,000 of Chinese porcelains and other works
of art, including bronzes, embroideries, wood
carvings and many more. All over 100 years
old. All authentic. (Cert1f1~ates upon request)
Imported by Michael Srednick, who will have a • representative to assist you. The perfection
achieved by the porcelain makers of the
Ching Dynasty has not been equalled since.
Many affordable prices as little as ~15
and ranging t o $18,500.
In Decorative Accessories
"We have to do things that are
important -and there's nothing
more important at this moment
than the energy crisis ...
..
Deaths
Elsewhere
CLEVELAND CAP) -
Raadolpb Eide, 89,
former board chairman
and president of Ohio
Bell Telephone Co., died
Tuesday.
LUDLOW, Ky. (AP> -
Battie RJus, believed to
be the oldest person in
Kentucky, died Tuesday at the age of 109.
BELLEVILLE. N.J.
(P> -Dr. Richard C.
Robey, 42, dean of
Rutgers University
College of Arts &,
Sciences from 1972 to
1976, died Sunday.
Suit Settled
Lawsuit Dropped
Exiating EIR Effective for Base
A lawtuit. to force the Cellf ornla NaUoiW Ouard \0 PfeP&N
an mvt~mat.al lsnpact report (Ell\) bt:fort taldu ov• Loi
AlamJtoe Naval Air St.atloD wu dropped Tuwdat f>1 Oranl•
County aupervlton.
Supervllor Laurence Schmit tald ht tt1ll wu •'totall1 dll·
satWied" wtlb tbt cooper Uoo of fed al deftme olflcitll over
tbe balt'I cbaa•t ln DIUl .. elDIQt. N9"1'tbel Scbmlt aCl'Md wtth CClanty CouDMl Adrian
Kuyper Use 1wt ,bc;id be dJamlued proYlded the Doutment of
Def eme etvt tbo county aiaurances th• chanl• wl1l ~ave ~ -4· .·
vc:no tmpacts. ~and the Am\ed Fotte1 lletlreea AuodatlaD ha{
both fifed 1ulta ruardin1 t.be ban transfer.
But at.torneya for the uaoclation said their cue became
moot after federal defeme oftldala assured tbem hue acUTitles
would remain wlthin the scope of a 1913 BIR.
In add.Won, they 1ald. federal autborlU• have told them the
hue exchange and 1olt course would remain open.
In a report to superviscll'S, Kuyper 1ald be believed tJte .. eoun-
ty's legal acUon helped prompt tbost ul\U'ancea.
He said be would seek similar written usurance1 from
federal authorities on the county's bebalf as part of the lawsuit
dismlsaal. In addition, he continued, if National Guard actions later
prove detrimental to the surrounding community, the county could
inatitute another au.it.
Schmit contended federal authorities would require an en·
vironmental assessment it someone other than their own a&en-
cies were involved i.nthe tranaf er.
U federal officials think environmental refUlatioos are good
for others, he argued, they should notexempt themaelves.
Tri peters
Plan Tours
The San Juan
Filing D~te
Extended Tripsters have
-The deadline for filing for senior citizen rental schedul~ three outings
assistance has been extended to Sept. 30, the Santa during September, in·
Ana office of the state Franchise Tax Board report-cludin& a two-cjay ex-
ed Tuesday. · cursioo to Las Vegas
The legal deadline is a~ 5 p. m. today_.. but Sept.10 and 11.
•
Fine Aris Gallery of ~~ottsdBle
.. IN NEWPORT BEAOt
3295 NEWPORT Bl.VD. NEWPORT BEAOf, CA.
32nd sr. • NEWPOIT aw. -OffOSITE arr tlAll . -ANNOl.JNCF.S-
WI HA YI COMl'IACTID WITH A wa.L KNOWN
MAMUFAC1UIR C» LIATIB GOODS .. 'IHI
LOS AMGP IS A..lllEA ro UGUIDA11 A ...
SB.Ec;11oMOF GAIMENTS TO SUPPLY A MllDID CASH ROW
l ~ . -~-. ,
A PUBLIC AUCTION SALE
OF NEW LEA HER GARMENTS •
OMTHIS . :...---
FRIDAY -ATURDA Y
SUHDA Y -MONDAY
SEPT. 2nd THROUGH SEPT 5th
.. FROM 7:30 P.M.
EXHIBITION THURSDAY THRU SATURDAY
11:00 A.M. TO 2:00 P.M.
·SUNDAY 1:00 P.M. TO 4!00-P.M. -
HUNDREDS OF
COATS -JACKETS
BLAZERS -SHEARLIHGS --ACCESSORIES ~F TOP 9UALITY
FOR MEN AND WOMEN
ALL SALES RMAL
PHONE 714·6 75-9990
LOS ANGELES (AP>
-The city attorney's of-
fice won a stipulated
iudgement in Superior
Court in connection with
a suit against Schiff 8io· Food Products, a New
Jersey vitamin distribut-
ing firm. The firm,
which claimed its "Rose
Hips" Vitamin C was de-
rived mamly from rose
hips, agreed to a $2,500
settlement, without any
admission of wrongdo-
ing.
officials said because the program is in its first Tb e gr o u p b a s year, and beacuse it was not well publlcbed, the scheduled trips to Los
deadllnewasextended. Angele9' Chinatown and
~ear~thisw~k,o~y~~~anestim~ed O~&a~~t00Se14.~---------------------------------~--
200,000 Californians eligible.tor senior citizens rent and the Ice Follies show
T be li "bl f th be ef't th S"DNEY HARRIS assistancehadfiledciaims. Sept.11. ( ) KEEPS YOU ON YOUR TOES
o e gi e or e n 1 •persons mus ave For more information • DAILY PILOT been 62 years or older by Jan. 1, 1977, and have OC· and reservations, phone In the
cupied a rented home or apartment, or a mobile '--------------------''------------.-..;..---.-;--i home on rented land. since at least July 1, 1976. _4_93-0337 __ . _ _;_ ________________________________________ ._~_
Household income for 1976 cannot have been more
than$5,~.
The size of the benefit depends upon the size of
income. For example, an income of $4,000 per year
will reap a state check for $46; an income as low as
$2,400 a year makes the person eligible for $1S2 as-
Death Notice• sistance. •
HAY
EOWARO EARL. HAY, resident of
Fount.in Valle'(, C:.lllornl•. Pa.WCI
•••v Au!IUSI :io, 1'77. S....Vlved 11y 111s
•lie Patrie I• H•y. !IOnSJOHPl\Wllll•"'
tllrel911rOI Ft. 8r~. NortllC..rotlM•nd
••nnelll Scott 8ret11er of f'o..nteln
"Mlrf. C&. .... deughter Er1n PWkle H•v of f'ouol1aln valley, C... ~lal
The program is separate from other rent as-
sistance benefits; receipt ol other benefits does not
rule out eligibility for the senior citizens assistance
program.
To obtain the benefits, a claim must be flied.
• aervlcn will De held on Friday AuQust
'· 1'77. l:COPMat P6Clflc V .... Cllapel. Vllltatlon Thu<Sday 4:COPM to t:OOPM. al P6Clllc vi.w Mortuary lntenftaflt
Pecillc v-Me..-i.1 Park. Pacific
Claim forms are available at the Franchiae Tax
Board office, 28 CiY.Jc Center Plaza, Santa Ana. or
forms will f>e sent 'Dy c ailing 558-&540.
VlewMof't.-ydlrecton.
llONAWITZ
KARL. ANTON 80NAWI tz. resident ol N~ 8"ch. C:.lllOr?lla. PasMCI
.... y ~ 2', 1'17. Survlw<I by 1111
son Karl Oonawlti of lntlne, C:.., t-
daU911ten Marlon Coulon of N...,,!»01'1 Buell. c.. .. Sonia Cool< of Newl)Of'1
8••ch, Ca , l•o sisters Anna E. 8on•wllr ol NewPorl 8eacll. Ca ,
Ceclle 1(1 .... of 0.ytona 8H<h, Flor1.S..
5even V~ltrl •ncl 11.,. 9f'MI·
gr•ndclllldren. Rowry wlll be lleld
TllurSday September I, 1•11 at l:OOPM
•nd maH Friday S.ptember 2. lt77 at
10 OOAMlllOurU<lyofMt C..-i.1 ...
Persons who choose to appear in person to ob-
tain forms should bring with them verification of
date of birth, name of landlClr'Cl. the most recent
federal income tax return, the amount of the most
recent social security check and whet.her that check.
bad Medicare deductions withheld from IL
OC Board He~d
By Karen Peten
,.,,.,...,, Good SheQtlerd eame1~. in Karen Peters. of
""" oft~ oonatlons may be m-0 b ~--I ted lo favorite Charity. Baltz Bergeron range, 35 ~n e ec
CosteMes.Mortuarydlrec:ton.. Ch 8 i rwom 8 n Of the
lltAUL.IK Q C t C L.OISLOAAINBAAULIK,resldentof range oun y om-
La9una Hiiis. c.i11oro1• PasMCI •••Y m unity Development
August n. 1m Sul'i'lved 11y lier son Council board. J•clt J. Braullll ot D•llH, Teu1.
d•U911t•r Nancy Barnes of Cost• ,....... Ms. Peters previously
Ce , five 9rancklllldren Memorial served as treasurer and Servlcn wltl be lleld 2:00PM FrkMly . . September 2. 1t11, ., st. JoM t11e vice chairwoman of the
Olvlne EsPlsc-1 Olurcll, C:OSIOMM, b 0 a t' d . S b e h a S ca lnwrment Pacific View Memorial • rep ........... t.ed th Oranoe P•rlt.PKlllcVlew~dlre<ton. •~ e a
KHN County Chapter of the
ANN CROCKER KEEN, r"Hi.nt ef N ti a} Q • ti
(LULAC) and Robert
Aspinall, repr.,enu.n,
the Stato EmploYment
Development Depart·
ment.
New officers on the
board are~ Jerry
Dadurta, Fountain
Valley. vice chal~an;
Betty !!lcobos&. Placen-
tia. secretary, Qd Kay
J acklln. La Habra, treuurer. Tustin. C..llfomla. Pastlld '"'•Y August a On raan1za Otl
21 , un a1 111. ao• of n. for Women on the board -.;..;;...----------1
survived by lier son A•IPll ICHn. for the past three ye an Funeral _..Ices will be lleld 'flllwMay •
Sept•mber I. lt77 at IO:OOAM, OtherneW board mem•
"',,. ~v•rv Olurdl, •t 1010 Hort11 bers are Steve Baca Tustin , Santa Ana, Ca., • th • wltll IN Rw. FNd It. Morse offlci.t-tepresen.ting 8 Sani. ,
'"' ·~ w111 .... •• r:a11M¥tft Ana chapter of tbe
Memotlel P9'111f'ISenlaAM,C..s..-Hlll League of u-ated La°'-Tutllut lArr* c:.o.a Mott ... ry dltKo W W.U
to"....... • America n Cities
McCORMICK
MOllTUAlllS
Laguna Beach
'494-9415
Laguna Hills
788-0933
San Juar\ Capistrano
'495-177&
1
I
'I
Vatkan Denks RepOr:is
'Pontiff :Won't Abdicate for Any Reason'
beautitU.I, myatertoua "camel lady" wbo avoided
otb« travel .. in the f~ Olblon Desert.
rquJdonb' be a.,,. Da....._. a 21-year.old former
acbooUncber on tr ... aaw empmeot for~ Na-
Uonal Geoaraphlc ma1ui.De, the ma1u1.De'a edltcn rulJ.Jed.
Tbay were n,llt.
)liq Davtdaoo ta believed nartna the 1old min· Ina town ot WUuna, the end ol her flv•montb,
1,UO.mlle trek that started taAUce Sprinp.
* Fonner Florida Sen.. ..__.. GarM,, wbo left
Conireu to defend bimaeif qaln.at perjury Ind
bribery conspiracy cbarces.
says he's thinking about trying
to return as Rep. Loa Frey's suc-
ceuor.
Is your Galaxy in tro~ble? _
Your android malfunctioning? Do
YoU need a starship to the next _,.ar system. quick? Don't cau Dr. ~ H. A•••· He's working on more earthly problems. He won't get
involved with space unless it's
between your teeth.
Although a lot of Dr. Ff._...,,
patients think he's pretty far out. the
truth is he's a dentist. He doesnl get
involved with star wars. want to find
out how little it can cost to get all
your dental work taken care of? Call
Dr • ..._.., but don't be startled. He ·s
very down.to earth. In fJVery way.
Dmuing
ClaJJs Set
At Col'lege
W!c!Meday. Auaust St, 1m
By Phil IAterlandl ·
Ani•al c,.relq,
.Mail Carrier
Faces Charges ,
MIAMI (AP>-~Uce say a part.time postal
carrier killed four clop and tortured two others by
hanging them on leather man straps inside his mail
truck.
Oiarges of cruelty t.o animals were filed
against Armando Brana, 3', after a policeman bap-
penecl by and saw the dogs slnaallnl, police said.
Police aald Brana cut the clop loose wben be saw be
ha4 been obsened.
•'JIE WAS STANDING TBE&E laughing,
watebiDg them dle, .. a police spobsman said.
Four other clop, their bodies still warm. were
fou.Gd under a ne41'by tree. Two bad crushed skulls
and tbe other two had been atranglecl. All tbe dogs wereuntqged females.
No animals bad been reported missing in tbe
area. said animal control supenisor Roy Asbury.
ELEANOR DEVIN, A POSTAL Service
spokeswoman, said that Brana was suspended
pend1ng an investigation. She said he joined the
service a year ago.
The charge against Brana carries a maximum
one-year sentence and $1.000 fine.
YOU TO
llOWSI
WIClll. ETC. k¥ 7111 w .... ,,_ i . . --"~-:....... ..... 1 l !!!!! 147-4140 . -iiiiil .. ~..:..~... .
!!!,~, {?.~~U~!f !2!!!? eun. ,..QJ--A guide to commu".'llY churchea -u someone tries to sell ton and left it in Gerster. and tbelr event• a-ra Satuwt-you IOIDe cheese oo tbe Mo., minus $4.5,000 in in· nr-•-:r•
street today, be careful dividually wrapped
-it!M)'bebot., Americancheesesllces. l£UCIGI In the DAILY PILOT Thieves blj a eked a The company offered a
truck from tbe Clearfield $«,OOOreward. ---
C...nunelllt
t1tt Completl Fiii
Calllcti11ill •
Sal1ll Coat Pim
Tn'*r.-a
Fridly.--.lllt1 .. ~
Cont1mpar11y luxury
tonight. Soft.
f lotting dllml dalt •
slidton,lllh
to lhlpe. R..n.
gnytwlrled
lltiM1riptd golllmW
tilkonHiza
d11& Soutb Coat
Plaza. lnnw Clrde
"· .
Y PILOT Wtd
6-l•n--•O•••••-ft
DEAR PAT; I waatodtotcftJC. W., Costa lle11,
lb at abe allo CCM&ld cMck tat.o I lieal lnlorma·
UoO on passlbJ• u~ anee1tora at tht Hun. tarictae Badl aty-~Ubt&17, 1Ul Talbert Avt. Pl let yow-rPdirl know tlaat ao extiulve and
valuable collection of 1~eal matenala, .. IJ av aUa at uua Ii tary. Tb1I collect.iao .. Ult
property of th• Orantio County California O~al Society, which has .a meinbenhlp of
435 petsom. Additional informaUon allots available
at the national arcllivea bulldln4 between Latiuna
Beach and San Juan Caplatrano.
C.J.M .. Santa Ana
1"lauks for llartq tMI iDlcwmatloa wUll K. W.
and o&kr A YS readeu.
.. ....,,. .... ej .......... ..,.
DEAR PAT: I have heard that women takiQi
the birth control pill have increased need for soD)e
v1tamms and decreased need for others. Please
g1vemeanmdown.
G.E ., Huntington Beach
Scleatlftc s&aclles IDcllca&e &Ila& wemea •IM ase
oral CClldpcepUvn bave u laereued Med for
VUaata JM (pyrldoxlae), follc •~Id -(folacba),
Vltaarba C (ascorbic add), VUamla JUJ ud
VJtamba E. A decreased need far Vbamm A. Iron
aad copper •u tOW1d. Check wttll your own pbysl·
clan before starting a self·prescrtbed program for
possible vitamin deficiency. Spedflc ~ood tests
can determine if you require vitamin supplements.
...
"Got o problem• Then wnle 10 Pal Dllnn. Pot t.CJU
CUI rtd •®t. Qt.'lbng '"' OlllWtTS Qlld OCtlOn YoU need
to tolN~hn m govmtmcnl.ond bu.smeu. Moil
Jl-OUr q '°"'to Pat Dufln, At YOST Snvlct, ~
Coott DatlJI Palo4 , P.O Boz 1'60, Codci Meaa. CA
9%Slf Al mGllJI kUna cu poPt,,.. ioiU be.~.
but phoned ~nu or t.tten Mt me~ the
rtodtr't /1.lll aom•. oildreia. ond ~II hovrs' phoM
numbtrccmnot beconftdned. Ttwcolumn~radat·
111 ncrpt Salurda111.' •
Rfffpe Cid• iu ,,._,.,.,,
DEAR PAT: My mother used to make her own
mustard when I wa.a very younJ, and it was d~
liclout. I asked her for the recipe, but ~e hasn't
used lt for years and can't fbtd lt. Can you or your
readen provide a reclpe? l'vetold my child.re bow
good homemade mustard la, and they would Uke to
try lt. •
A.J., San Clemente
Try tblJI one. In a small bowl, •Ur tocetber t,t.-
cup dry mustard and 2 tabl~ water; set
atlde. In 1-quart saucepan. mb well Z~ cap water.
•
1 /3 cup cider vinegar. ~ cup su1ar, 3 tablespoons alJ.
purpose nour and ~ teupooe salL Cook over low •\
heat three mlaatff or until thickened. aW-ring con· · 1 r.~'°"'!I' stanUy. Remove from beat; stir ta mustard mlr· ~ > ~l ... 11'"."1.lli'.w-~
ture unUl smooth. Cover and refrigerate. Makes ~-: f" .. one cup. •. $ ~~ •
Fees C'cua B~ Recu011afJw · ~----'
DEAR PAT: My husband and I want to draw up
a will that will provide our children with a legal
guardian and all our possessions in case we should
die simultaneously. We can't seem to eet any in-
formation about bow such a document should be
worded to be legally binding, and we don't feel that
we can afford a lawyer's fee.
F.D.,CostaMesa
Arranging to have your will drawa ap by an at·
tomey can be accomplished fot a reasonable fee if
you contact Lawyer Referral Service of Orange
County. The Initial 30·mlnute consulation fee ls Sl5,
and $30 for one hour. You also may wish to contact
the Legal Aid Society of Orange County for
qualUlcaUon inform atlon by phoning 835-8806.
The book, "Settling and Safeguarding Estates
-----
Actress
Elizabeth
Taylor. 43. has
been discharged
from the
Georgetown
Hospttal in
Washington.
D.C., Where she
w~s treated for an old injury comP,licated by
bursitis.
--
Mo1D1tain lion
Killing &Dned
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A bill extending for
five years a ban on the sport kllllne of mountain
lions bas been alfned into law by Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr., the 1ovemor's offlce reported.
'lbe measure by Sen. Job Dunlap (D·NapaJ.
bus the kllllnc ol a mountain lion unless the bunter
bu obtained a permit from the state Department or
F1sh and Game. .
To issue the permit, the department must
verify that a lion bas ldlled livestock.
The Dunlap but extends the ban {tom Jan. 1,
im to Jan.1, 1982. · ·
A Dunlap aide Hid the ban, designed to protect
mowrtaln Uona and to tlve ~ state time to study their habits, bas been ln ell~ since 1971.
Quiet H1•nt
Man Seeks 'Bigfoot'
DF.S MOINES, Iowa CAP) -An Iowa man who
claims to have seen the )f8end.ary "Bigfoot" in bis
home state says he plans to begin a search for the
creature later this year.
In California Without An Attorney," by Clive
Hinckley, also provides do·it·yourself information
and legal forms. Request this book from your
library or by contacting the author at 106 E. Sunset •
Dr. So., Redlands, CA 92373. / THE NATIONWIDE SUPERMARKET OF SOUND® DOES IT AGAINI
Cliff LaBrecque, 38, says he intends to try ad
take the creature captive, study it, ftlm it and then
release it.
PAST JtEPOllTS OF THE man-animal
generally have come from the north woods, but
LaBrecque and his wile say they have seen the
animal "15 to 16 times" near here. They refuse to
name the location for fear of frightening the
animal.
"There's a bunch of them out there," he said,
and claimed that hundreds of the animals live in
North America and some 24 are in Iowa.
MEANWIDLE, LaBRECQUE, WHO formerly
worked as a truck salesman, has built a 7-foot-6
fiberglass model of the creature and is showing it at
state and county fairs. He also sells T-shirts~and
I posters.
And how wllt LaBrecque hunt Bii:foot in
November?
"Quietly." "
C•ll 642-5678.
Put a few words
to worlc for ou.
~ Wa tdaa tor Repairs
DEAR PAT: I bought a watch in Switierland
about 10 years ago. It needs lo be repaired, and so
far I've had a problem locating a repair shop that
has the required parts. Any advice?
L.E .. Fountain Valley
Contact the Watchmakers of Switzerland ln-
formatJoo Center Inc., 606 S. Hlll St., Los Angeles,
CA. 90014. Provide all tbe information you can
about speclllc parts needed. The center may be able
to tell you where to obtain the parts or refer you to a
watch repair firm.
Now open dally!
The exciting new out.
door California Plan1
& Restaurant 01
Mo11leland Wax
Museum Is open fr~.
to the public and offer'> d
festive dlnmg atmosphere
reminiscent of early Callforn14, The Callforoia Plaza
1!> also available for business meetings and luncheons.
Plan your visit now! Call 714/522-1154.
Freeway cloee at 7711 Beach Boulevard,
Buena Park. California
I BINGO!
PRIZE ilOllEY GALOREI
ALL NEW PROGRAM-ALL NEW. HOURS -
FREe COFFEE. SOFT DRINKS & POPCORN
ON SEtn'. 13, 16, & 18, 19 77
.
' ' •I
SAVE $100
DELUXE 'liEAUStlC® AM-FM HI-Fl RECEIVER
Reg.
29995 19995
SAVE SSO
I
(!
b r
(
•
.......... ,. '"•••• .. ,., ~u. ..... c ...... t..
.k ... -..-e. l ntf '4tletM ..... ..._CA ...
~ .......... ~, .. .,,. ...,...._ .... .. ............ _.
Tlllt _....,. -Ill• • '" .... C-ly o.t•Or .... c:.-ty ....... """· ....,.
~ o.-.. c.nt Qjjlly Polee, ....... .,,._, .. ..._,,..,,
*'""
l'VllUC NOTICE
f'tc:Tt110US llUSINIUS ......_ STAT1EJHWT
Tiie llllllOW1119 l*"IOM.,.. .ing busl·
ftUSa5:
M&N IKTa .. IOllS. 1Cl9 Via Kor on,
HowpM ISMch, CA '2.6'S
MMy A1W1 Jeppe. IOI VI.a I< or IS!.
N""'°" Buel\. CA '2 .. 3
Haney Lee ShelfMr, "' V•• Orvlek>.~BH<lt.CA~ Gell Blumln, 1112 Temple. Ul91111A
9ff<.h,CAYJ6St
Thl5 l>USllWU Is cOlldU<.led by A
oeneral per1MrSlllP
Mary Anna Jtppe
TltlS IC.et...,.,.. was filed with tile
Gou11ty c1e111 ol Orenoe eounry on AU9
10.ttn.
FfOUO
Published Or•noe Cou1 D•111 Piiot,
AUQldl11,:IA,31 Stpt 7.1917
3Sll0-77
PUBUC NOTICE
c_,.
NOTICE TOCltEOITOltS
SUl'l!ltlOlt COUltT 01' THE
STATE OF CAI.I fOltNIA P'Olt
THl!COUHTYO,OIUIHOE
Ne.A.-
E\Ule of FREDERICK NATHEH
WATERS, DKHMCI
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to IM
credit~ of llw -Mmfll d«edent
lllAt •41 pe,_ ltavlng claims ~•l11st
ttw salcl decedRlll are requlnt<I lo Ille
tMm, wllll the neceuary vouciw~. In
llte o#flce of the clerlt of lite •bo•• ,.,.
lilied cO<J<t. °"IO P"t&ent them, wltlt the
nKUWlf'Y -.c:~. to tlte und«\IQM<I
et 11\e IAw olllce et COOKSEY,
COLEMAN & HOWARD, IH(., Intl
East 11th Sirwet, Wftt Bulldl119, Tustin,
Calllomla 92611), wtllclt Is tlte place of
btlslnAU of tlM undeniQned In all mat·
1 .. s penAlftillQ to llte HIM• Of said de-
~nl, within tour "'°"'"' oflOr tlw tln;t l>Ullllcatlonot t!'lls 110tlce.
D•ttd AUQUSI', 1'11.
OOESSAWATE~S
EllKVlrlao#llteWlll
of uw •bove llan'\«l dece<knt.
COOKSSY, ~MAN & HOWAltD,
INC.
1na •· 11t11 st, WesHl<le , T..UR,CA.,__ T .. : C'1w1m.wc .. .....,.,_.__....
Publlthed Dr..-. Coast Da lly Pilot.
All9ldt 11,ic, JI, 8l1d ~ 1, 1977.
:io.1 .. n
PUBLIC NOTICE
c ...... ,
NOTta TOC1tao1TO•I SU~lti~COURTOP'THI IT Ata Of' CAU P'OtlN IA POil
,.Ha COUNTY 0 .. 0 .. ANGll .... _,,.
E steteOI' E1'HELGl.EH, Oeceawd. NOTICE IS Wtltl!llY OIVEH to the
<•e<l~ ..... ~ .... mocl-.Cedenl
lllAI aH --ttavlno ctall'lll aoal11tt
Ille wl4 Oe<eatnt •re required to Ille ll•m. with ttw NceSsary _ .... ,.., Ill
IM offln of 91e c .. ot IN OMYe .n-
tllled c_,,orlo SM"-t llMlm, wlltl the
.-uMry \IOUCllOn, to tl" undff•'9>td
at the •-office of J.,.,_ e. w 1111a1mot KINDEL & ~DEASON, 1020 Horffl
Broac!Way, SAM• AN, catllorllla ~I.
wltlclt Is the P'K• of b1.151MM ef ll>e un-
darsi9Nd )II all ma-.. pet1elnlftg to ·t,.. estate o1 Mid dece<let'lt, wllnln to.w
rnontlls after tllt lint llUbllcatlon or tllli
notlc•.
FICTITIOUS ausu1an
NAMa STATaMaNT
Tiie lolloWlllQ penon It dDl"8 ......
llHS AS:
TRANS MOltTGAGE, 115U
Mec:At111ur Blvd., No. QS, trvlM, CA
92715. Allen A SNPO Jr., m Bayside
Cove w.st. H-1 ...... CA.,....
Thi• b<nlrwu Is conoucted by ., i.
dlvldual.
AllenA ~Jr.
This _._, wn fUod wltlt the
c;ounty a..11af0r-. County 011 ....
26, ""· " Publl!Nd Or-CMtt DAiiy PllOt
A119u.st lt. 5"11-7, 1<1, ti, 1'77 177).n
PUBUC N011CE
FICTITIOUS 81nl ... U
MAMESTATUd .. T
TIW lollowing ....--•rede4"8 bull· neues;
P.O.$ H., A6 FHllltll llla110,
Newport-I\, CA.,.._
T. E Y•• de l(amo Co • a
CAllftlmla QW1IOl'a!IOll. 1310 No 8rM
81\ld., Ful..,,_,, CA '2..U
Tiiis buSlrwa Is conduetod by • cor·
poratlon
TE VendelCempCo.
PMrkla Averett
Secret¥¥ This stat-I WH lllod wlllt , ...
C-ly Clerk Of Of•noe County on
Al191dl 23, lffl. ...,,,
Publlftd Or ... CNfl 0.lly Pl•
A119.J1,s.pt 1, U,Jl, 1'71
PUBUC NOTICE
OatedAuouAto. tf17. PICTITIOUS austM•n
H£1t81!AT CA.EN NAM• STATaM!INT E~Ol'IMWlll of-eboW namod de<ede<lt. TIW fOllowlng per-...... bulf.
JAM•S L WI LHaLM MISH: of KtND•I. a ANDaltSON LIM'S &. ANG'S 06Vl!lDP•ttS,. l_Hertll ......... y I.TO~ 6411 Tu4agl Avenue, C'rP"KI. CA S..UAM.~'27tt ,.._ a I TI I Tel: C'JM)S9-m1 Theim• ... l. m, "'" II ••• .. ..,_.,.._11__ Cypress, CA '°'30
Plltlllll!M Or-C:.O.st D•llY Piiot, llOIOll A. Lim, •41t Tltllfl, -...... CV~CAalll AUINlt t7, 14,lt, Mdse.it. 7, m7 Tltl$1111.t1INH Is~ l:tS' a llWll .. -----~------"-'"77-1.., ... ~ • ,,.....,. A. IJl!t PUBLIC NarJCE Tiiis ,..._, -m• llfltt -. ------------1 C-ty °"" fll °' .... Olwntv ... Jiily
Monca OP' MdlllP'P'llALa
.... c.11PW21 s. JOff ICAl!l!D¥AH & co .. etc ••
,...lftllff
2', 1'17.
Publllltld Orange Coall 0.llY"= Allf. :IA, 31, Sopt, 1, 14, 1'77 3711-17
PUBUC NOTICE
~ICY1'1ouSaustMaU
NAIMITATllMaNT
auc NOl'ICE
• ·--
PtJBUC NOTICE
Nemca INYITINO ••os NGllcie 1$ ....-.1111-tMt h lloenl
f/11 ..... , ... el 1119 lnlM U"Hled
k!IOtll Dlllrftl of Of91199 County,
c.ll!Wtll-. Wiii f'WClllv. -IN OI• •
.. ti• P.fl'\. fl/I -12rld clo,y If Se• t.l\'I~ "71M wN<I\ tkTM Mld blclewlll Ille pUblklY ope;IMI and rffd for the Se4lt
of District lklMS.. 81dc9"dltl_..,..._.
structloM Md bid '°""' may be ob-ta!Md • "'°Off Ice of ....... , Support Set'vlclM. IMI Alton Aw11ue. lrvlN,
C.lllemla. TM Olllllld ,._, II•
rl9'11loretKt111'1' °'•II llldSw to welw
WIY trngul•llWt or lllformahtlM '" any bldJ«lnhblddhlO
INlnt U11lllOd
Schoql OISlrlct c;o.,. HOl'tllrw '
AllllWIR'~
• ,..,.._, Orenvt CUR. DAiiy Pllol,
A.,..J1,..is.c.1.1m JU0-77
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
PlJBUC NOTICE
MOTICI: TO C .. EDtTOllS SUNlt1QaCOUl(T0P'TI4•
STA ff OP CALI l'ORNI A P'Ott
THECOUNTYOP'OttAMG•
....... 11•
Est-of HERALD C. HYL TOfl,
0.C•ned. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to ltrt creditors ol the-...,...,,..., do<edenl
tltat All per1DllS l'lavinQ d.im1 .....
ttw wld __... -r~r• t• flle IMm, wl91 lN NC•SArY _,...,.._Ill
"" offlca el tlll c ler1t ol llMI allow -tltlod c.oqr\ ortaPAtent tltetn, wltll the
MCKSMY ~S. to the Ulldersi91*1
at thO elflce of OUIUoNTE AND WAR·
ltEN, Atlomevs at Lew, uot weskH"
Drive, Suite 212, Newl'Orl BH<lt,
C.lllOl'IN 92IMO ""'*"Is 1'19 place ol
llushwss ol tlw undenl9Md 111 all mat·
.... ~ ............. of uld ..
udlnt. ..tlltll -,,_,. ... ,,..
first pulllkatlcln ol tllls llOllee oa1ie11iw. 2', 1m.
MAltY F. HYLTON
ElaKUtrl• al lite Will of IN .......... ,...., dtcede..t
DUllAWTa AHOWA1t1t•M A........,..tuw
1M1 -tdlft e>nw
s.H\eJµ N_,..,....,.,
Cal ........
Tet: cncu11 .. ut
Att.....,.• laclllr4•
. PtJBUC NOTICE
fl'ICTtTIOUlaUSt••SS IMMllSTAT&MllN'I'
The lllll.wlnl ,.,_..•rodlllno "*" -·..:. Oln.oNICS. ". W. CMlb"lt SI , '°"t• AM, CA ftlO:» J-E. ui.1, 16'AllfOl>e"I'• C:O.te ~.CA'l621 _. ...... 16' M...,_.,, C..ta
Mua,CAUU7 Tltl• llonlMtl It ce_I ... •v e
.. -al-1Mr1'1lP JeMl..optJ
T1tl1 ~ •• filed wllll tM c-1y o.nt 4lf Orall9t C-ty °"
Aug\Ol ?S,. 1'71
P'tlk! ~,.,._.Or .. Coel& o.tly Plklt, Awe. JI, 5'1ot. J, 14, 21, 1'71
PUIUJC NOTICE
51614'
llOl1Cll TO Ctt•DITOllS No.A-tt217
SUNRIOltCOUltT OF TIU!
STATWOfl!CM.IFOltNIA FOR
Titl!CIOUMTYOP'OltANO•
l"tlWMMWeflhe E1t111eof ETHEL
MAE BLACK. elS> kMWll es ETHEi.
M. 8LACI<, O.C-CS. f'otlce It~ 01.,.., to c..Sltor1
i..vlllfJ dall'ftf •'"'' IM said oece-dOlll to ID• Mid c1111ms In the office of
tM ci.tc ttl tte atoresald cO<Jt1 « tc
IM'eMtlt -to lite "'*"'9o>ed al tM olfke ft# ROt41t AND 81.ANCI(. Al·
torntYS .i Lew •so s. Sprlno s1r .. 1,
S111to IOU, lA* A11oeln, C4Jlfornla
fOOl<I, '°"'Id\ lat~ offke It thO 11111<0 ol
IMlsl,,.uol ttw ~Ired 111 •II-·
ters ...-ini ... to Mid estate. 5<lc1I
ctalma Wltll .. IWCflMrY vouc~
must be llltd w ....,...,.., H a~sakl
wlllllrt IOllr montl\I •lier tlMI first
pub I icetlon tJll INS llOClce.
D•ted"'-51IS,1'77
UV-El<tund
Admlnlstretrt• of the
estateol~dO.-nt
llDMll AMO 8LANClt
Att....,....·Uw
t>AIL v Pilot A J J
PUBUC NOTICE
~,,
IUl'S.IUQRC:OUHOP 1HI
UATa OP CAY POftNIA f'Olt
TitaCOUNTY Of'OllAMO•
.....Ml7M NOTICa Of' MCAatNe OP
1'8TmOM POft l'ltOe•\T• 011 WILL ANO llOll t.llTTalll THTAMaN·
J' &a\' ltMt!O A,tlTHO. Ii. Tl OM TO AO•
,._INlllla UNDllll '"• INDaNNO«NT ADMlllllTllATION
OP' HTA1a5ACT •
Est.• °' ERSte G. ST1lPHCHS.
0.C•bOd. NOTICI IS HEltC8Y GIVllN lllAI
8AHK OP' AMl!RICA NATIONAL
TfWST SAVINGS ASSOCIATION llff tn• llenlll a petition tor PfoNI• of Wll 1 end for t sswenc• ti L•tt•r~
TllS1_.,..,.,etld ~l•t-.. Ad-
mll!~ llfodW ... ~t AO-
m!lllSlntlM tll Estlt• Ml, ref•eft<t'
to wlllcll Is mado tor tu•tllar Pll'tl<Ulen. end lhlt IM time end pl11te
of ,..r1119 .... --beall ... fOr
SalJltr'nMf ll. ""· " 10:00 '" .... eo11nt-.i ot ~nrnent No 3 of Hid cout1. al 1GllClvk c.n1w OtlwW.•'-In
""City. San\a ~. C.lllwnla.
· Det..i ~sl24. nn
WIWAMl.SIJOttN,
County O~I<
ltOa•RT II.. HUllWITX HUllWITI, REIM .. , MAQ>ONALD,
MUDll & ..OSIJIWALO
A PltOP. CIDllP •
.............. C.-Drhe
hltoUIU .. ...,...~~.tt ... AlwntY'lflr:,._.*-t'
"'*11....,0r ..... COHt D•llr P1lol,
A119-.$\,M11$att.6, 1't1 a 1• 11
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NoTICE'
P1cnnous aus1Nau
NUWSTATllMIE"T
Tlte followl11t --It Oolng bu\I MUUI
BEAT l(RAMEA. 202 Vl1la
Hoqar, Newport llaacll, Calllornl•
t2..o
Albert Geor99 l(oltnlt0rst, 2AS2 V1s-
I• HOQAr. ~rt Beach, C.lllornl•
92660
This business b condllCtod bf en 111< dMdutlo.
Mltrt Georoe l(ohnhorst
Tlllt It~ WAS l.!!.8 with the
County Clerll Of <>ranee ~,.,en Auo. t0,1'77. .. .... w
Pvblltflad ~ C:.O.st Daill' Piiot
A"911St11,24,Jl,~7,1m,
3SS6-n
PUBUC NOTICE
MWW"'CMlT .... SA
UNI '111Dso.oc>L DISTIUCT MIUcattwl .....
PUblllNd 0ranoe eoa• o.1111 Piiot.
""9·''·Sttit.1.1•.21, 1m.
.. s.s,rw~
StlfteteM LM._...,CA .. t4
NOTICE IS Wll .. 118Y GIVfN ... t
the lkwlnl af EducMIOll If IN New PO rt·
IMM Unified ScNel Dlltrl<t .. Oungp
County Wiii recelw -i.ci blelt up to
2: 00 p.lt\. on ttit 15th day of September.
1m, M .. office of Mid ScMel Oh·
trkt, lclUted .. 1m PIK"""· SlrMt,
Colt• __,.t c.Mllorflia. et wtlldl time Mid bldll •111 be jMllllklY oteMd and
ruGIDr!
STl!AILIZINGCABINETS Tei: C2Ql6274al •
All bllllll -to lie In KO>nl9"'9 Wlllt c...illlG111, lnslnletl0M,-Stieclliu· -------------1tleM wN<:lt We MW on fife lfl the office PUBUC NOTICE
Publlllltd 0r-. c.o.st o.llT .......
Aug.17,24,21,-Soilt.7, 1'77 »O•r
of the Pvrc1\asl119 Dlf'9CtlW .. Mid PlJBUC NOTICE SclMof D4*kt. 1U7 Pl«entla &1reet.
-------------1CG&ta~Callf0nlle,'2•27.
•141 llOflCll TO Clll a Dt TOltS .... ...,,..
SUN .. IOR C:OUaTOP' THll
STAftOl'CALlt"O"NIA FOR
TH4l ClOl*TY Of' OltAllfOa
In U.MattWOI' l"9 Estat .. f l'AANI(
A. SMl'Ylf. Jlt., etso 1Lnow11 as FRANK
AL8ERTSMITM,JA., Decauecl.
Notlco Is ......, --to Credi .... MYI .... daltN afllllln&t Ille Aid ~
de11t lo fie Mid cWina In -oftlca of
the ci.tc f!I "'9 efortM6d -1 or to
pr.-lllem .... ""'11enl111M et lfle
office of GRAHAM A .. O JAMl!S,
WILLIAM .J. 9COT1'1 ROBERT P •
P'ALA.ZZO, 1'7 WllSlllre 81vd., JWI
Floor In .. aty of Lae .,.,.!es. 11 "'° ltf-.ld OlufltY, whlc:h latter llffice Is
IN plea of business of Ille undllfS!Fed
In all INlltWI perte4nl,. to said estalo.
Swch Clol-wllll tlte 11ecHHry
VOU<lllf'llMllf •flt• fl/(~ -Oforeseid ~ ,_ montlls altar t?w
f lrst ,..lt«loll of ..... notle&.
De\ed Aulult 10, 1tn,
a.tty Srftllll
~n1.str•i.o1n.. ts<e,,, Nici Otcocleflt
GltAtcAMANDJAMllS.,
WIWM4J.ICOTT
ltOa•lrTP'. l'ALAZZO ..... , ... u.
,., '#nllllfweMI. .... .__
IM ....... CA"'17
Publltlled or.. Coatl Olllly ... lot.
Aue. t1,M,11,Mds..&. 7, 1'7J -....11
PUBUC NOTICE
E.cfl blddtf' '™Al .....,11 a ..,d de· -It 111 the torm Of a Canlfled or
Casltler"s a.cl< or• Bond equal to live oercent ~ ot IM.,._.. of ltMt Blo.
made NY81• to Ille ...... Of ....
N...-i-Mlw IJll!nM kMol Oblrk l.
Ill Vie ewetol fMiur.teMtw I""° tuel'I C.Vect, .. ,.,_., .. II .. CllOCk will
lie forlelted w Mid 5mool otstrlct of
OrMOe OllUl!ty. A ...,..._IC9....., may be re-
qu/l'W M 119 clxr9'1M Of tM Dltlrkt No 81dller,...y w4ttwr-llb 91d lor a
period°' lorty-41ve dllys 1•s1 at .. r tlw!
dat• ut for tlto optfll119 thenlOI.
Tiie Boerd of ,Education 01 t""
NewOOl't·Mesa UnlflW ~ Dl1tr1<1 ,...,...... .. "9l'lt to reject 111'1' or •II
BICIJ -not -sartly accepl Ille 1-t 8tcl. end lo welve .,.Y lnlOl'm•tl
ty cw lr,...,.arfty In any Bid reeel.,.d
NEWPOl'f ·MESA
UNIFIEOSOiOOL DISTRICT
Of OrlllQI C8wlltY.
C.llfOrnla Oorolt.yH..,,.y FlllllOr,CPM,
PWcllnlne ot~
T•; OWi S'6-i.t
DATED:..-30.m7
Putlll.,.. 0r-. Coast Diiiy Poot,
AUQ.Jl,llllCIStslt.7, 1'77 -.0-11
PUBUC NOTICE
' )
f.
1.. I'
ST"'TI u.
GOl..P
TE~M
'
l'1 11T7
A:ekDowledgement of
\ . YDerleDsiOn Urg@d·\
-dyilexla la your aon. Yoa m~ ~~
aubjectlq blm to u:nnec:esucy suf·
fertna.
DL &TEIHC&OBN acta 11.ke a normal boy -fuJl ol
vhaesar and enern? Dcn't you
thJnk practically every problem In
younasten ii bemc blamed on ~acttvtty th•• dQS? -Jin.
Deu Or. ....._: J haw a
boJ ~molt J*)ple think ll pretty
1man. He re w~ Coocl 1radell and 11 a nice bOJ ol •• Wbat I am lncenaed Ytlth ll a
D i'1lbor wbo aayt be la a bfperac·
Uve cblld. Sb• blamn blm for
atal'tlna ftlbtl wtth her own aon
and with CJthw kids OD the block.
rrs ftUB ftlAT be oeculonal·
ly 10 lnto fi&htl. Be ls also fldlety
and dfftlcult to mana1e when In the
hoUH.
But how dare abe call my &00
byperacUve 1imply becaute be
NO-SPILL POURING SPOUT
Al~P'T
REG. 14. 96
SAVE 5.97·
99
COMMENT: What was once ~rlooked as a problem ln child·
red 11 now more readily rec-
opbed. But. as wltb any other ill· nea1. once lt becomes widely known lt ls often misdlqnosed.
Many children wear tbe label
"hyperactive" when tbe reason ls
to be found elsewhere.
Nevertheless, Mrs. ff., I belleve
that many parents ate actually
ashamed to think that their cbll4
'' .01. so'f1\.lS
CASE OF
12
FOi
fto.lefWll Bottles
COLUMBIA
BEER
ALEX'S
TORTILLA STRIPS
~~ .4.S!
GLOllmA
TOMATOJUla ::i4·9c ,.,. ................
DOCTOR IN
THE HOUSE
may be called hyperactive. Other
names are dyslexia and minimal
braindamqe CMBD>.>
YOU SAY YOUR aon read!J well
an:sets good marks. This would see rule out dyslexia as a
dia . But it doesn't. The syn·
drome la 10 involved that
sometimes a byperacUve chlld who
can read well manllesta bis trouble
by difficulty in contr0Uin1 his
P\CM\C SPlC\Al\
pbyalcal movements.
I have seen such younisters who
could not catch a ball or run
without stumbling. They become
Irritated and unmuaieable wben
their peers do DOil allow them to
play ball or enga1e in other ac-
tivities. They re4ct by startln1
filbts; by beina unn:aanaaeable ln
the home. They are resUesa and 11·
gressive -ready to disrupt the
household.
RATREB THAN FEEL hwt and
i.nSultecl by your neighbor who ls
putting down your SQQ, why not cet
the opinlon ol your family doctor or
pediatrician? It's possible, you
kllow. that you are overlookln&
FRUIT OF THE
I LOOM BRIEFS
AND T-SHIRTS
HOT&COlD
7..0Z. FOAM CUPS
PURR CAT FOOD
ASSORTED FLAVORS
21c ~~ 1&c
"-llMllf &T•IU..
LADIES' COWL
100% ACRYLIC
SWEATERS t , ........ ..., .... ...............
...... S, M, l 11 .............
Whether he will need Ritalin or
1im11U' drue• or a special diet to
belp him, will depend upon bis ~
tor'• judgment. But &ive him a
chance to improve. The aoooer bis
condition Is diaenosed and trea\«I,
the less likely will be (l'OW up to '
have emotional problems. ••• Psoriasis ls not catchin& says Dr.
Stelncrobn In his booklet. "Prac-
tical Guide To Skin Problems ...
For a copy write him at The Daily
Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa
82626, enclosina 50 cents and a
stamped, self-addressed envelope.
• m
<AP) -Jim
't pttcb like tM
Wtn.DU ol old,
tflont lilav•
"of tbe BalUmot'e
d ri1ht·hander
bits in an &-2 vie·
alifomia Aqels
t keepi•c the
es behind the
nkees in the
East.
e in three nms
Una h~lf of
• a.nd he also
seventb with ao
oUl PoP with the
at's happened
never seen it,"
morf manager
at was really
the kind of thine
dously."
d home from
w Jackson and
umphrey go for
her Dyar Miller
mmates. First
lalta made no
a lot better than
. but it's not the
," Palmer said
record to 14·ll
nd victory since .-
ed by neck and
hrough much of
ost a bit off his
ball. But an ad·
livery seems to
ds.
y lee as high
e ball quicker,"
to be working.
e better, and so
as won 20 or
six of the last
the Cy Young
, stranded six
ring position.
ended with
aged only six
the Angels, but
n batters who
d to score.
was one-for·lO
en Brett, beat
gle in the first
n rbi single in
ng two walks.
second hit off
but it finished
left-bander.
on Mora's in·
Eddie Murray
5 slump with a
e off Dave
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Oh,
.TOKYO CAP> -Sadaha
Japan'• Babe Ruth, tl
Amen can Ra Aaron'• ~ r
home run total of fS5 W eaday
n11bt with a 211-foot drive lnto
Koraku n Stadium .. rllhlfield
tandl btlor I0,0001pectilcn.
The 37·YHf·Qld left-banded
first baseman hll th r cord·
equalln1 bol'Qer -hil nua this season ln hi• firat at-bat ~aahist 21-year-old left-hander
Mlchlo Miura of tbt Taiyo
Whal(W.
It WU t.be 2,425th professional
1ame and 7,87llt Ume al bat for
Ob. a Japa.n-bOrn Chin e lu1·
ser wbo la playlnt bll lttb 1eason
with the Tok.YO·b ed Giants.
Aaron, 42 and now reU~. hit
his '75Slh career home run on July
20, lt16, olt Gary Rosa ot the
Callfomla Ancels. Aaron ended a
23-year playin1 career with the
Atlanta Braves and Milwaukee
BrewersonOct.11, 1976.
After Ob sent the a.and·l pitch
out ol the p.ark, a thunderous roar
erupted and Oh trotted around
the bases waving to the crowd.
Tbet-e wa.s another roar on hb
neit trip to the plate when be
blasted the first pitch into the
right field seats. But that one was
about· 10 feet foul. Oh flnaUy
walked.
lrnrned.lately after bls record·
tying homer, Oh played one in·
ntng at a brand new position.
right field, before returninc to
his cust~macy spot at first base.
There was no immediate ex·
planatJon, but It was tbougbt the
idea was to move him closer to
the tans wbo bad been waltinc
Going All Out for TtDins
Minnesota Twins catcher Terry Bulling, a
former Golden West College star, missed
on this diving attempt to catch a pop foul
off the bat of Toronto's Alan Ashby Mon-
day night in the first game of a
doubleheader. won by Minnesota in 10 in-
nings, 7-6. The game was at Minnesota.
Renee-Wade:
A Hate Match
NEW YORK (AP> -Virginia
Wade said she passed Dr. Renee
Richards in the passageway at
the West Side Tennis Club earlier
this week and almost froze from
the chill she got.
"I said, 'Hello'," Wade, the
reigning Wimbledon champion,
said. "She just bruabed right on
past me, not saying a word."
Without fake press agentry,
the label of "hate match" is be·
ing applied to the first-round
m atch in the U.S. Open cham-
pionships Thursday between
Wade and the 43-year·old
transsexual who bad to get a
court order to play in the tourna-
ment.
They meet Thursday afternoon
in the main stadium.
··1 have nothing against Dr.
Richards personally. I think she
bas conductedhe,rsdrwell in this
situation. 1 simply am. not com·
fort able with the whole idea," the
31-year-old Btitish woman said.
"J welcome the chance to pl!U'
an important match on center
court so early ln the tournament.
With all the attention focused on
her, she's bound to be nervous.
Me, I'm not concerned. l have
had a lot of pra,ctice playinJ 40-
year-old men."
Dr. Richards, 43, a Jeadlne op-
thaltnolagist and raDklng 3S-t.nd·
over men's pla~r before UD·
dergolng a sellt chang' two years
ago, told friends that sbe was
rankled by a comment attributed
to Wade •hen the U.S. Open
. draw was ~ea.
The Wimbledon titleholder was
rePotted to have snap~, .. JI she
beats me, she ought to be
checked out."
~ast, Present Greats ... ' ;,..._
To ~CoUide at· lrvi.De
Two of the beavys among
world tennil elite will be playing
in the Orange Coast area Sept. 13
when teen-aged idol Bjorn Borg
tangles with Rod Laver, hero of
much of the older set.
It'll transpire at Irvine Rac-
quel Club and profits will be
passed on to the Harbor Day
School to help it build an activity
center.
How did day school offteiats
swing such an imposinl(
challenge match to be played in
their behall't It's simple: Lave.r's
son atWncts the school.
The winner of the match will
court, which may favor me
some.
"But if Borg can win
Wimbledon two years in a row oo
allp}>ery grass, be can adaJ)t to
anything."
Laver says, "he plays his best
tenni! when he's under pres-
sure--he seems to be able to set·
tie down and come up with bis
best game." •
And so it will be. Put great
against present great. A duet of
champ om.
TRUE STORY-It may loud
f11lay, bJat A11oelated Press
soareea near It'• tnae. Dvle Love wu fllldDg ocean wat.s
off ~-earlle.r tlWI aaollClt whee his bJ'aad ew walld fell
OYert»oanf. Wlld7. be forever.
Y 8' a tew d~)'S later a ldllaet· ~r ...... the Walle& lJi his ftabJni as near &Jae m ot
CoJ•inbla atver at Astoria.
"I wu ....,.U$ely ftabberpsted
wbeta I WU·~ .. d told It
bad beta loud,'' to .. aa1d.
an>Uously slnce Oh bit his 754th
home nm Sunday.
Oh has been the No. 1 home run
bitter in Japanese profesalonaJ
baseball slnce 1982.
The S-foot·lO, 175-pound first
· baseman's belt two seasons were
1964 when he hit M -still a
, 'J apa.nese record -and 1973,
wben be bad Sl. He .iso ahares
the l"eCOrd of hlttlng four homers
in a alncle aame which be
established in 196'. He also set a
Japan record by hittlna seven
borne nms in consecutive at·
bats. JolJUni the Yomiuri Giants,
the perennial Central Leacue
and Japan champions, from
Wueda Commercial HJgb School
in 1958, Ob started bis home run
career with seven that year. Mer bJtting 17 and l3 homers
in the nut two aeaaoo.s. he
smashed 33 in l96Z and bu bit ,
more than 30 hotnen in •very
season atnce. •
Ob reclstered his fint home /
nm in this same stadium in 18.
Buckner Retunu
SeH-appointed;i
Destroyer ·of L~
By a Dally Pilot Write.r
LOS ANGELES -Bill
Buckner misses the Dodgers. He
admits it freely and can't help
but wish be was taking part in
Los A.ngeles' drive to the Na-
tional League Western Division
title.
"Sure, I miss LA ," be says.
''And I still feel close to Dodgers
manager Tommy Lasorda. But
it's a llWe different now that I'm
on the other side of the field, and
l 'm going to do my best to beat
them/'
The popular lefthander isn't
exacUy brooding over bis trade.
For the Chicago Cubs, he's bit·
ting .310 with 10 homers and 52
rbi in limited action-he was in·
jured most of the first half of tbe
season.
He bas also become a iJelf·
appointed Dodcer wrecker.
Against Los Angele$ he bas 10
rbi, more than any other Cub,
and he's bltt~g a torrid ·.404
a1alnst bis forJJler teammates.
Tuesday nlght he singled,
doubled. scored twice and drove
in one run as tbe Cubs beat Los
Angeles, 4.·1, at Dodger Stadi~m .
"There are some advantages
to pl~ in Chicago," Buckner
says. "It's a smaller ballpark
and I like the day games. You
can see the ball a liWe better and
it 's a little easier on your body."
That's especially important to
Buckner, who has been pligued
with injuries for three seasons.
He .still limps from a lea that was
broken two seasons ago and la
nursing a tender right band.
But it doesn't keep him out ot
Ute ll*up. • • especially again.st
tbe Do4ers. This ia still h1s
hometown (be lives in Woodland
Hills) and d01.eDS of ftienda come
to see him play when the CUbs are
in town.
Fans differ from city to city.
says Bucknelj and Chic2'go.bas a
special ·breed. it 'a one of the
. .
asons be doesn't mind that if be
had to be traded, it was to th~
Cubs.
.. The fans are more en:
tbusiastic, even though the
crowds are smaller than in LA,"
Buckner s ays. "They're 11.).ore in-
to baseball. In Los Angeles the
fans are just coming out tobave a
good time, to be entertained."
Three weeks ago the cut. were
in a struagle for first place in the
National League East. Buckner
says be never saw such behavior
from fans than during that
period.
"It was unbelievable. People
were going crazy," Buckner
says. "They were hanging from
the rafters in the ballpark. Stand·
ing ovations were common. lt
was a lot of fun."
But aome of the fun in Chicago
has disappeared. The Cubs have
lost five of their lastaeven gam~
and have dropped behind the
division-leading Pbiladelpbla
Phillies by nine games.
"We're not out of it yet,"
Buckner says. "We just have to
start playing like we were a cou-
ple of weeks ago. Weoandolt.••
CHICAOO
Ot.letWN <:¥ ..... Cf
ll«kNrl•
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4000 4000
1000
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4 1 I 0
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4000
3 0 1'0
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0010 1100
1000
Rhoilen Duels CUbs
By a Dally PUot Wrtter
LOS ANGELES -The
Dodgers' Bick Rhoden. enjoying
the finest season of bis brief career, seeks his uth victory
tonight agaln•t Ray Burri&
<11·1.3) aJMl the Chicago CUbs.
But, while Rhoden is 15-8 with a
3.79 eamed run avera,e, no one
I
n ' .
DAI V PJ\.OT
• ~an
~-Pineli.ert
Dies at 69
LO ANGELES -rny
Ptaekert. a two-lime All
Amel1ea .. alfback ror the
U VW'llllJ~ Calitbnua
in l and a form«J" m.nbtr
·of u. Natioul ootball Leapt,
is dMd Ube ot•.
f>iDckert, who died Tu day at
ht• borne here, wu known aa on~
ot u. best bk>clr:iq batu durin1
h11 three &C!UOl\S wllh use.
He b8d been tn ill health the
past 10 yean;.
Standinganly S·ll but wei11hing
lM pounds, the }ou.n&ster from
San Bernard.loo, went on to c&J>-
tun the Player of the Game
-.ward in the 1932 Rose Bowl,
when be sparked the national
champi~ TroJans lo a 21-12 v1c·
tory over Tulane.
He went on to play for the
NFL's Boston Redskins, wbo
became the Washington
Redskins while Pinckert was still
a member of the team.
He was a member of the col-
lege football Hall of Fame. He
was elected to the National Foot·
ball Foundation Hall or Fame.
DU»fM Ouatefl
BROOKLINE, Mass. -Third-
seeded ManueJ Orantes of Spain
drove Edd~ Dibbs to racquet·
flinging frustration Tuesday
night with steady ground strokes
and added ~e $125,000 U.S. Pro
Tennis Championship to his list
of court titles.
The gruelling 7-6, 7-5, 6-4 vic-
tory over the fourth-seeded Di bbs
was Orantes' second major title
'In the past month and was worth
$20,000. He won the U .S. Clay
Court Championship 1n In-
dianapolis.
Dibbs' clay court performance
at the 100-year-old Longwood
Cricket Club was almost as con-
s 1stent as Orantes', and the
three-set match lasted 2 hours, 35
minutes.
n ... oaWcdeed
SEATTLE -Veteran
quarterback Bill Munson and two
'other players were placed on
waivers, and rookie wide re-
,ceiver Larry Seivers was traded
Tuesday a s the Seattle
'seahawks <!ut their National
Football League roster to the re-
quired 52.
Veteran defensive back Rolly
Woolsey and rookie wide re-
ceiver Forry Smith joined.
Munson, a l.3·year NFL veteran,
on waivers.
. SmtFal&
·'
PASADENA -A Superior
Court jury has ruled that the
family of 29-year·old jockey
Alvaro Pineda, killed at Santa
Anita Racetrack in .January,
1975, should not receive $25
million for his death.
Star~ Fall Again
The El Paso I Juarez Sol
,handed the Orange County Stars
-their third straight International
Volleyball Association defeat
Tuesday night with a 8-12, 12-3,
12·3, 9-12, 8-4 verdict before 1,712
·• at University HJgh (Irvine).
-: The loss drops the Stars' re-
cord to 19-16 with one game re~ .
malning Friday night at San
Diego. Santa Barbara trails with
a 17-18 record )o the Western
·Divisim.
J
Jog~g· :Qas lls Benefits
With an.·Easy Approach
HARTFORD, Conn. <AP> -If
you 're • focllnc tiuff or about to
become ooe, here'• a Up from
one ot your k1n4 -nua ln • re-
mote, secluded artJ• lnateacl of
traftlc-snarled, polluted, urban
'Am,rica. ·
"Life ts too abort to a pend your
recreation awal1owln1 otber
people's smoke, .. say1 DT.
Edward P. FJanqan, •one-time
Boston Marathon runner and dt....
penser of advice on ebOOlln1
your site.
"U a eey's eo1ng to Jo1 and the
only'J)laee ii in the clty, lt'a bet·
ter that he Joi than not," •aid
Flanap.n, a Jouer for 10 yeara
who now jogs an averace ~three
times weekly. But it there's a
choice. be said in an interview, it
should be a more aesthetic 1et-
tin1, such as a park OJ' reaervolr
area. ·
More advice offeffd by. the
42-year-old anesthesloloaiat wbo
admittedly takes a conservative
approach to jogcinf and oth« ex-
el'cise, includes starting aradu-1·
ly and don't become a f anattc.
·'One of the things that bas
happened is some people in the
Jogi'ini fraternity have gone a littfe bft overboard," he sald, • d
cautioned tha joe on't
solve all your he roblema.
Fanatict.ot the jogr~ world
hopefully will . be "Identified as
the new fascists that they are and
the honest, moderate partlci-
panta can proceed wlthout e>t·
tremism or guilt,·' Flanaaan
HARDBOILED HAGGERTY IN HIS PRIME.
· writes 1n the current issue of
Good Health, a monthly pUblica·
lion on medical topics for con-
sumers.
HARDBOILED ... He describes him1elf as old
enough to know better than to at·
tack the famed Boston race's
26-mUe, 385-yard course but
nevertheless gave tt a Co· He
finished about l 'h boura behind
the winher and, although won-
dering why he tried it in the 11.rst
place, leaves the impresslon be
may be back next year.
Contlnaed From Pase Bl
name. It went over like a bang
and I wrestled under that name
the rest of the tiliie I stayed in the
ring," Mcclary aays.
He wrestled Lewis and Londos
along with all of the other top
names of that era, and r(!Calls a
match with Strangler in New
Haven, Conn.
·'I weighed about 275 pounds
and he weighed 340," McClary
says. "The eye on the turnbuckle
was not welded and we fell
against the ropes. He was trying
to throw me over the ropes when
the turnbuckle broke and we tell
to the noor below.
"Be landed on top of me and
the llpts went out although l was
still conscious. We bad fallen on
concrete and Ed hit his head and
gotacyt.
.,1 was partially paralyzed and
they put sand bags by my neck to
hold it steady.
"An bour later, I was in the
hospital and in bed. In walked a
nurse who said, 'Mr. McClary,
I'm your night nurse.' I was
there five days and fortunately I
was able to walk out. Six months
later. the nurse and 1 were mar·
Tied."
McClary remembers his first
professional match.
''It was in San Francisco
against Sol Schlagel," besays. "l
was told to stay away and just
push with him Ul\til he started
breathing heavy and I "°'*1d be
abletot.ake him.
"l won thtS rua.teh encl years
later l wu in a small town iJl
Kansas and saw b.fin in the back
seat of a car. He was handcuffed
and latel") found out be bad en-
dorsed some of his dad's checks
and was being taken to prison.··
Was wrestling a legitimate
sport in those days and not an ex-
hibition?
"You bet it was." McClary
says. ''A lot of people may have .
felt we weren't trying aU the
time. But you don't go all out all
the way and we had what art:
called breather holds where we
Flanagan said there's proof
that jogging helps control one's
weight because extra calories
Lhat would otherwise become fat
are burned up.
But, he said, the key to Jouing
is the di~tancc, not the speed. He
could catch our breath "
Weight was a great advantage
in the ring, along with quickl\e!S5.
McClary could' run the 100 in 10.l
because he had long legs and a
big stride.
"Instant reflexes help m any
sport, .. he says. ••And if you can
anticipate an opponent's move, it
Area Waters
Warming Up
With Bass
helps a lot "
With a name Like Hardboiled '1''1stung along the Orange Coast
Hagcerty, was he the villain has picked up tbe last few days
mostofthetime" with larger counts of Je1aJ·si1e
"I cuess you could say that," barracuda be mg taken alon, with
he says. "twas a big guy and hm1tsofbassandalargenumber
with that name, I had three or mackerel accordini to
strikes against me in that. spokesmen ror the three area
respect. But I never lost a match , landlnQ--• m California where I was the PasseJ!ger counts are down but
state champion." ' more fish are being taken in tbe --Ralll8 Drop Vets
LOS ANGE,LES -'Veterans
Rob ~ribner and Willie Miller
were placed on tnjured waivers
Tueaday by the Los Angeles
Rams.
waning summer months on the
hall~ay and ~·day boats out of
Art's Landing in Newport Beach.
Davey's U>cker at, the Balboa
Pavilion, and at Dana Wharf
Sportfiabing Landing Jn Dana
Point.
•·Fishing is excellent rl1ht
now." a.1poke$man for Davey's
, Landini says. "We've bad limits
, of ban and a lot of barracuda the
past few days. We're &oinl otrt
with llght passen.ser loads and
catcbing a lot offish."
· "Water temperatures are
warmer andwe'recettinitbb." a
spokesman for Art'• Landing
says. "We caucbt a lot Of bar-
racuda Monday and threw a lot of
them back beeauae they were un-
derslze. But they're bltlna ...
1 • "We're gettln1 a lot of
mackerel and ISaaa,'' a
spokesman,for Dana Wharf re--
oorta. "Lefal barracuda are also
beinfcaulbt."
added tbere'a no definite
evldet>ce that Jo11ln1 and ex-ercfJe prolong llle and, despite
some cl alms to the contrary, JOI·
gtng probably does not bav• any
value in treating mental illness.
.. Some Jouera claim they iet
a very definite hlgb from 1"UJ'· nine. . .It would be dangerous lo
expect too much."
A few other tlPI he Offen: -
Take it easy at the start. Wall
before you run. -Consult •
pbyaicWI. But be earetul. Ar
overwel•bt pbyalctan wb1
smok• Will, beC:ause of his guilt
prol)ebly t.i~ you ~ of exerels
lnr. ·
-No lessons are necessary
The beat teachers you ever bat
taught you to walk a 10111 Um·
aco.
DOGS; ONE OF THE PERILS JOGGERS FACE.
Baseball Stan~ngs
. AMERICANLEAGUE
East Dlvhlon
New York
Boston
Baltimore
Detroit
Cleveland
Milwaukee
Toronto
W L Pct. GB
79 S2 .603
75 54~.531 3
74 5S .574 4
62 67 .481 16
61 70 .466 18
57 79 .419 24 "'2
45 84 .3C9 33
West Division
Kansas City 75 54 .581
Chicago 73 56 .566 2
Minnesota 75 58 .564 2
Texas 73 57 .562 2'h ·
Aageb 61 67 .4'?7 13~
Oakland 51 78 .~ 24
SeaWe 52 82 .388 251 -i
T_.r10.-.
Cllk9IOJ. a....!_ I
e.111more '· CAIHotni. J Bolten 71Olklllfld2
H-Yon .. SNttlU, l lllWllrtq\
Ottl'lllt4,Mltw-.. 2
Te• .. a.K-Clty1 Only---~ltd T9NY"1CS.-C•llf•r11la T•n•n•. IS.1 •I llalllmo.e o. ""-'tllln '1•7,11
"
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Te-Alfll.alldef' TJ.I 9t I<-City c.a110rn
1 .. "'" O.t..sllMllOl7 .. etM~~n111"'9>trd ,..,II °""' ...... 9C'llMll...,
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eut Dlvlalon
W L Pcl. G PhJladelphi~ 80 so .615 -
Pittsburgh 77 SS .583 41
Chicago 71 59 .546 9
St. LOuis 71 61 ..538 10
Montreal • 60 71 .458 20'
NewYork Sl 79 :392 29
West Dl•blon
Dodgers 79 S3 .598 . -
Cincinnati 71 62 .534 8''
Houston 63 69 .477 16
San Francisco 61 72 .459 18•
San Diego 58 76 .433 22
'Atlanta 48 83 .366 31'
. T.....,'10-S
C1ndnn.tl 4, "4ont'"' 3 Plllladlllltll• 1 I, Atlanta?
Hous'°'•,HeWYO<lt1 S.n oi. r .s.. \.oui• • Pltt~t, Sef\ Fran<i>Co t
Clllc.tOO •. LO!. ,Mgetes 1 T••'•oame• Pl!Uburgh (ICISGn 7 .. 1 ., S.n Fr•nc•<.eo 19,,
lHt) I
ClttClnnall 15_,...,., 15-S) •t Montr~al ITWlttlt
3 •l.n
Atlfftla (P Hlelcro 13 16) •I Pltll-lpl
CCarllon IM>. n
..,.,. Yori! llCoosmen f · 10 •t Housl ILemon11eOoS.141,n 1 SI. I.outs fOllM'( Ml •I S.n 01-oc> fOweftlr • ti,"
Cl'I~ <~ u-m .t Los AflQefH <Rlloc!i 1~1),n
. Tennis Summaries
Tonight~s TV
Highlights
c ~ • a·oo -Wh t·re We Sund:
Enf'rl)'. CBS Ne" unchormun Walter Cronkite narrutes thl•
lhrl'e·hour n t.'Wa. 1pechal
<'xo mlnlng the ~neray
Mtuation from the view·
potnls of the Wh it e
House, Congress und the
man 1n the street .
<Review, A7 > KTLA m 8 :00 .. "The Real GIOry." Gary
Cooper and David Niven ~,.,. head the ca.st of thia 1939
war drama
!'\BC 8 10:00 -The MakiM of "A
Bridge Too Far." This special documen·
tary loon behind the cameras during the
Iii ming ol the current war movie spec-
tacular with its all·star cast.
. KHJ B 12:00 -"Murder My Sweet." Dick Powell plays Philip Marlowe in this
1944 myst ery movie with t;lrure Trevor.
(TV DAILY LOG]
I WE"NESDAY I
E2iNING
6:00
0 CJ) (Clll (])) Qt) """ D !ZJl CIJ (Jg) m 11..,. D ~&els lmb1ll Cont'd from
4:JOPM. C1hlorn11 Anaels vs
81lhm01e 011oles
(I) liolttr 'Yle
8 CD ((Bl JJ) llns
Cl """""'' m The hrtr~ .. f amity m Ali&s Slllitll ' Jot1cs m ......, " Mmiturt a 11.owt lJKy m DKtrit c..,,"' m DfllllltJc Sena
(!'!) LIM It lilt
-6:30-
f> Mowie: I~ (90) '11lt D111n1
611111" (adv) '68-lloyd 811dces.
Mic~I Ansm Jou Bliekman
Cl) Wy lintfitll ® Mefy Griff111 Slllw «DAndf 6ottittl
((11) l TM i.-ttanclf ~V1110yM
• ((28) (J)) lewikhell
~(})News
'19 rublic Polley F0t11111
three corceous sleulM to find out who 1s tr'Jmr lo d11ve llet 1nsa11t just
u site is 1111k1n1 a bi& COl!ltbacll.
(j) Mtflt: CC) "Tiit llltllt Tiier llaidell .._.,., .. (com) '68-Jason
Robards. Bott Hland. m Mefy '""1n s. m Tiit Wir&lniln
fJ8 S,.cial 1f U1e ""' Rose KfMedy Remembers
fl) C1eat Perfonll.Mtces
<Hi f au Ille lsalll
(!'i)lnl'tr1onMnce1tWelftrlp
-9:30-
D ~ rn m a ""' ~llibu J4ck Carter euests u an
unscrupulous TV pro411w who oHers
J r SSOO after he lealllS that the
Kdlltuks aie part ol the sample used
to determine JV 11t111p.. m La CriNJ .._ Ctiaft
10:00
D .a.ti 00 m 111> Tiie Mlkint II
"A Bndce T• flt' A behind the
scenes look at llow the movie was
made
D l'J""' CV llMil: "Dud EM" (dra) '37-
Joel McCm. Humphrey Boprt II CJ) Cl§) (Qt) Cl)) llew Len
INt The t1pl1Jn of 1 uu1st ship
becomes inlttested in a buuhful
younc woman passeneer. un·
awareshe 1s 1 stowaway Cmn Mac·
leod. Bernie Kopell, Fred Candy star.
Qt) Marca Wellly
fD Tiit INI' Maten "Arnold New
man ·· m El lien Alllado m !Iowa
-10:30-m mm,....,
fil) Macie ill Catitornil m llatkltre
11:00
OD CIJ~GUlltm U (al Cl)) Lift Mtricn Style : ffi~'1f CV) @ Cl) Im
m a '"""* 1"idlt IDMMca.._., m ....... -~~ -11:30-
f) taS US OPOI Ul'OATl
_. TEWNIS HIGHUGKTS
,....-8 U.S. 0,... T11111is HichftPts/
Movie: (t) "Hell's A111eta "
Wlltta" (dr1) '67-Jack Nicholsoft,
Adam Roar~e.
IJ ~Cl)·Oj)~ Cm
(!) llMle: "'"' ... "' tilt Slluetr Men" (sci fl) ·s1-s11ve Tenetl Glor•• !Ast1llo.
D CV CiJ (a.ti (I)) Reokinf
Mystt!J of lti. ~ mMttrtMWS
(Ml TIM 70I Clw~
f2l> taptiol* UC Ins ma..aM
12:00
•hllitMZ-
• llowlt; "Ill"'" lllJ SWllt" (mys) '44-Dick Powell. Cl111e
Trnor. m Ill* "1'e Olllcr lift .. ( dra)
'47-DMCI ll!Wlft, Barbara SIJnwyd.
Rtellanl Conte.
8) ~"TIMM MIMsS...,..
(dra) '56-Bob Matbais, Wiid Bood
-12:30-
" Dnpet 1:00
D @ Cl) '""°" g Mwlts: "Term of lnal.'' ··Esape by N111\t." "1.anzabd\u" '
-1:30 ...
m .... .,,.., • • •· ccecn> '42-lblpb Ulal)IY, !rent Du1111•
2:00
D ~ ''You Cam• Alona."
''That Lady ''°"' ~111&" • MMesi "Bloo6 o.n tflt Su11;"
"fllM S.0.ts"
-2-.20-
.... : ~ (ci.,) •so .. Jaa
Stttlift&. EJetflor '¥.M,f, ~ MOof·
ehtad.
Turner Chosen
Cup Defender
NEWPORT, R.I. CAP)
Sportar:nan Ted Turner will skip.
per lhe yacht Couraceous aaainat
Aualralla's new entry, named
AuatnUa, in the best·ol·aeven
America'• Cup race.
T~rner, 38, who owns the
AUant• Braves bueball club, tu1ded the yacht to the finilh line
Tuesday, beat.lnl the cballqer,
. Enterprise, for the right to
· reprMent the United States in the
mid·September event.
Courageous reached the flnlsh
oae minute, 16 seconds before the
Enterprise.
In 23 previous races, the Unit·
ed Slates has never lost to
challengers from Britain and
Australia.
THE YACHT Australia won
the right to make the 23rd
challenge for the cup by beating
Sverige of Sweden by 13 : 19, one
of the most lopsided races in ci.u>
history. Jt was an embarassing
end t.o what had been a re·
aaonably competitive challenge
by the Swedes, who never had
been in the America's Cup.
Three years aeo. over a two·
hour dinner at Christies
restaurant here, Turner and boat
designer Britton Chance Jr. were
discussing the relative ments of
the 12-meter yacht Mariner
"Britt, why can't this boat
go?" uked Turner.
"There's nothing wrong with
the boat, Ted,'' Chance replied.
.. THEN BRl'IT, why are there
no square-tailed fishes in the
sea?" asked Turner.
"Why?" asked Chance.
"Because the pointy tailed fis.
hes ate them aH up," said
Turner.
Chance, who designed the
pathetically slow Mariner with
her chopped off s tern, and
Turner, who had the dubious
honor or skippering her, were
dining that night on crow
by Commissioner Bowie Kwt;
tor tampering with outfielder
Gary Matt.hews, then a member
of the San Francisco Giants.
TUmer had bis nice-guy hat on
Tuesday, but it has not always
been that way.
ABOUT A WEEK ago, he
called sailmaker Lowell North,
who was fired as helmsman of
Enterprise, and his business
partner John Mmhall, liars for
promiaing to sell him sails, then
reneging. He said, "I can't think
of two more deserving fellows to
starve.''
He said they were carpetbae·
gers, cashing in oo the cup tor its
advertising potential.
"I'm just in it for my own
pe rsonal satisfaction," said Turner. "I want to do a good job
and do whatever I can to help th~
New York Yacht Club. I'm not
going to make any money off
this. l 'mstrictly an amateur.··
INDEED, TURNER seems to
stand to make little if anything.
He has .invested a reported
$250,000 in the syndicate and has
not even mentioned the name of
his television and radio empire,
Turner Communications Corp. VICTORY DOUSING
Defender turner
, DAILY PILOT •3
IFK Murder Pletr
Carter Snubs
Man's 'Proof'
WASHINGTON <AP> -A Dutch joumallst,
who claims to have proof that a conspiracy was
rupomlble for the anassination of John F. Ken·
nedy, has been rebuffed 1n his eflort to set an ap.
pointmeot with Pra.ldent Carter.
Willem Oltmans. the joumallat, aaid Tuesday
that fonner President Gerald Ford at one Ume re-
ceived proof ot the assassination plot and proof lbat
Lee Harvey Oswald was oaly "a fall auy. ''
A spokesman for Ford aaid In Vail, Colo., that
the former President would bave no comment on
the subject. The spokesman. Bob Barrett. said
Oltm 'all~ation.s were ••rtdlculous."
Olner Apltftll tt'~med
9 BELFAST, Nortbem Ireland (AP> -Tbe
B•it.isb and Irish governments welcomed President
Carter's appeal for peace in Northern Ireland to-
day.
Protestant politicians --------in the province brushed it ( J off, and there was no re-IN SHOR~
action for the Roman ..__ --------"-Catholic and Protestant
guerrillas.
Carter in a statement issued Tuesday after con·
sultation with the British eovemment urted an end
to the eipt.year war that bas taken at least 1,'1'16
lives.
<> S-Ull te Get fta•date1
SALISBURY, Rhodesia (AP) -Rhodesia's
white voters, electing a new parliament today, were
expected to give Prime Minister Ian Smith a man-
date to negotiate with moderate black leaders for a
political settlement excluding guerrilla leaders.
Opinion polls indicated Smith's Rhodesian
Front party, opposed by ultra-right·wine whites
and a small multiracial party, would win at least
the two-thirds majority in the 66-seat Legislative
Assembly needed to amend the constitution.
Cflpra Prnfdeltt Due
NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) -Acting President Sp)'1"06 Kyprianou, 44, emerged unopposed as this
island nation's next president today as the deadline
for candidate filing in a special presidential elec·
Uonpassed.
A formal proclamation naming him president
was to be issued later ln the day ln accordance with
a legal formality requiring a seven·hour period for
submission ot objeetions to his candidacy. .
7W1telear Lut Reeealed
· ATLANTA CAP> -A list that includes names of
-2,235 persons who witnessed a nuclear test 20 years
ago today has been given to a federal agency trying
to determine whether the exposure Increased their
risk of developing leukemia.
The U.S. Surgeon General's office has provided
the list to the national Center for Disease Control
here, which bas been trying to locate persons ex·
posed to the Aug. 31, 1957, test at Yucca Flats, Nev .
MARINER WAS eliminated
from the defense series in early
August, and Courageous finally
was picked to defend the cup
against Australia's Southern
Cross. Tuesday, Couraeeous -
with Turner at the helm th.is time
-was picked again and will de-
fend against the new yacht
Australia.
Turner now is dining on a more
palatable bird, the Bird of
Paradile.
" laflatlota Plan Stlldled
"I think seven or eight of the
guys were with us with the flt .
fated Mariner," Turner said of
bis urn crew. "And I think we
have a lot to show. We wanted to
come back and s how not necessarily that we were the
world's ereatest, but that we
weren't a bunch of backs Hke we
looked last time."
THE NEW YORK Yacht Club's
selection committee made the
decision to eliminate Enterprise,
the last of Turner's opposition,
shortly afte~ Courageous beat
Enterprise by one minute, 26
seconds in the final defense
series . Independence,
Courageous' sister yacht ln the
King11 Point Syndicate, was
eliminated Monday.
Sverige eot to the rmal by beat·
ing Gretel ll, the 1970 Australian
challenger, but she lost four
straight to Australia in the best·
of ·seven series.
THE CHALLENGE Wiu be
land developer Alan Bond's
second straight. Ht heads the
Australlasyndlcate and held that
same position In the Southern
Ct'OU challenae three years a10.
"We're very happy," aaid
Turner, 38. who won his fame not
by aallina yachts, but by buying
the Atlanta Braves baseball
team ln January, 1978, thtn beinf
banned from baseball for a ye..-
.,,..,.....
THEY'LL CHALLENGE TURNER FOR AMERICA'S CUP
Alan Bond (right), Noel Robin• of Aultratl•
NB Skipper Back
To Dra~ Board
Undaunted after a near dis·
aster in last year's singlehanded
sailing race from Great Britain
to the United States, Mike Kane,
Newport Beach insurance man
and member of South Shore
Y acbt Club, is already makidl
plans to try again in the l9a> race
in a brand new trimaran, Spirit
of America II ("We'll call it
Spiritot Atnerica Jr.")
The new trimaran will tie $t
feet overall length and -'6 feet on
the waterline to conform with the
new Observer Singlehanded
Trans-AUantic Race rule liQ\,11·
ing boats to thatlengtb. •
monohulls. .. 1 intend to singleband her
back from Hawaii to qualify fOI'
the 19800STAR."
AND IF THAT were not
enough alnJlebanC(ilng, Kane uid
be plans to sail the craft non.stop
around Cape Hom to England to
enter tberace.
Amante Leads
Etchells €np
WA.SJDNGTON (AP) -The Carter administra·
lion is at work on new measures to reduce inflation,
possibly Including voluntary standards for wage
and pnce mcreases.
Aclmini.stration economist5 have concluded the
April program announced by President Carter will
be insufficient lo reduce inflation much below the
current rate of between 6 and 7 percent, it was
learned Tuesday
Pag Baun Aaft01111eed
WASHINGTON (AP> -White·collar federal
employes and the military will get a pay raise in
October. President Carter will decide next month howmueb.
Carter announced Tuesday that he has decided to increase the pay for 3.4 million government
employes, excluding those at the highest income levels.
Dollar Copier Released
KALAMAZOO, Mich. CAP) -A 30-year-old
man wboduplicat.ed a dollar bill at times on a copy.
ing machine and fed the copies into a laundromat
coin changer baa been sentenced to three years pro-bation.
1be defendant -Eugme Wbltside of Benton
Harbor -was charged wilb recelvin1 counterfeit
money with the intent to ~it, a felony that could
bave added up to 10 yean in jail and a •.ooo fine.
But U.S. District Court JOc11e Noel P. Fox. see-
ing bumot lil the case, impo&ed only probation. ·~e was so amateurish. and Just the tboijgbt of
blm st8ndinl at the Xero machlno . • . , '' Fox aald.
his comment tra.lllns Oft into lauahter • .,I said. 'M1
Goa, '1th1i ls a dumb thillf. '" •
IAU'S
Cl£lllAID MMSLlllW .... .,.
"'THE DEEP"'
I :l0-5:30.f:lO
"OUTU W ILUES .. CPGi
3:40.7:45 --
"THE SPY WHO LOVED ME"
''THE SORC.ERER" (PG)
"SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT"
"THE STING" (PG)
"NEW YORK. NEW YORK" (PG)
.. RGTURN OF THE PINK PANTHER"
.. FANTASIA" (G)
"A BRIDGE TOO FAR"
"MARCH OR DIE" (PG)
"ONE ON ONE" (PG)
''LIFEGUARD"
' MJND YOU, NUREYEV'S obvious restraipt ls
perfecUy undentandable in tbe U&bt of wbat he bu
taken on ill lh1112·ni&ht Greek enaaiement.
. . .
hll Mlf·lmpoeed reins and danled us with the ·
footwork and sheer Joie de vlvre that have become
hlab•Umark.
Btrr•ESTRAINT. llUDOLP, restraint; much
mored that ln this aruellng Greet season and you won't have to fake the death dance in "Gl!elle."
Qinaratulatlona, you happy· Canadians. You
have built up a splendid ballet company while thole
of us with more ample resources do nothlnt but talk
aboutlt.
He intends to dance every performance of nv~ ballets and that ls a herculean task for a man wbo ••11111'"' •11R11U11• SOl 'TH CO:\ST
ftH &1 kl can no looger be consldend to be at the peak of
physical end~ce. But that's not important. What was tmportaat
Monday night wu the way be partnered an ex·
tremely capable Karen ltaln tbrouehout a
"Gi!ielle" that does great credlt to the National
Ballet of Canada. ·
NUREYEV DEARLY LOVES this ambltiobs
Canadian company and bls ruest appearuces with
them invariably spur bis partMn to new helgbta.
His duets with Miss Klin proYl~ some of the
most memorable momentsJn a baUet thathu been
considerably enriched by the mule revision and Or'*
chestration woven into the wort by conductor
George Crum. ·
But Nureyev is Nureyev; tiler' were moments
in the ballet when he slipped what we believe were
• For the kid who wonb o IO·spoed with plenty of durobllity.
• Fully-lugged 011d brazed frame for responsNeneu.
• Sun Tour-Seven derollleurs for smooth, reliable 5'Mftfng.
• E11ten00n broke ir..e,.. for easy reodi ..
• Bocked by rhe Roleigh/Rompor 8fcyde &lyet's F\otection •
Poltc:y.
We hove lt!11 ond other Rolelgh/Ron1por bock-to4diool
models to f1t the age, ~H. tmi., and sofety needs of~•
Come OI\ II\ ond try us out for SIU.
. M'•JtlN•
World's lorg,.~t mo11ulocturer ol b1cyc/es:.
l Ac. J ... A Rt Al H Hf t•'t
O,..HltMfy
......... s.t.-S-.1;45 -nEAT111-------
"THE SPY
WHO LOVED
ME'' i,.,
THEATU·11--
Musical entertainment for the entire family
· SATURD~Y. SEPT. 3
I 0:30 A.M. • I :30 P.M. • 3:30 P .M.
DOWNTOWN SAN CLEMENTE'
At OJ; Vista & Del Mar
• • .
. 'Flash' Eilrn ·8et
LOS ANGELES (P > -Dino d LlurenWs bu
acquired tbe rum and t evtaion nebta to "Fla.sh
Gordon ... tbe COoilc at.rip~ hei'O created ill JJM
by Alex Raymond.
nus MOVIE IS 10TAIJ.,Y our OF CONTROL
-im ·
-~----.. ~ ~·'¥3 CINEDOME23 .... ,.
~ .. ADAMI e COIJA Mt:SA
1714) 141-3102
I: I l Ull.1:4l UD a 10: I llPll
............... ,al~
"ACAC'8 !llllf£1I:l DOM9 -..:1---.-~ ..........
ftUl'MYl mt. IA ta .. I .... IPUlll-1--f lllMl_U _
.
N w Disney Star
CAP> -Edward HeTrmana
Walt Dl oe1 Productions comedy
, "North Avenue Irre1ulart."
GGESt Its BOND.
And l+Y.Offll.
~""'"II BARBARA BACH 1nc1 CURI JURGENS a-'Stftllnbo•q ·
l'lod~ctll tr ALBERT R BROCCOLI O.ri:-'•a •1 l (WIS Gll8f'l1
SCI~ t-i CHRISIOPttlR WOOD & RICllARO MAJBAUM lrol 11 • ...c. br 1U•1 ~ HA~.WI I ·tel rl\Ai ~ Umted Artists
CINEMA VIEJO"
. S.D.FREEWAYTOLAPAI
MISSION VIEJO 830-6990
N
Mike "Mafutlx" Connors will
f lay a po-
lceman who
believes he la
unworthy of reclvtng the
Medal on Police Story this aeuon.
..
He fought wars
and won them.
He·defted
Prelldents-
and might
liave been
one.
.. .
Pilot ~· Candid ~mmentarl•,
Logbook'
exclualvely_ln the
Happenings •.•
~ Ftlma
Theater
Dance
OOtlTll.m Televlaton
In the •
DAILY PILOT
DAILY PILOT
SHOWTIMES
DAILY-7:15-10:35
SAT.-SUN.·MON.-3:G-
7:15-10:35 ..
~. Auoutt St. 1917 • DAIL V PILOT. •ft
GBS Top,s ··~y .I Margin ··:
1 NEW YORK <AP) -CBS was the lol>-rated
network last week by a slim mar11n a.a th a!usitsh
summer season draw• to a caose, accordJ.ni to the
latestA.C. Niel en figures.
But "Laverne & Shirley" on ABC was first
amoag 67 prime Ume televlalon shows tor the week
endina Aug. 28, the Nielsen ratlnas dtscl~ed Tues·
day. ·
NATIONAL AVERAGES FOR tbe week gave
CJIS a 15.8 rating, repreaenUna 11.2 million
households. ABC bad a lS.7, or 11.1 mUllon, and
NBC had a 14.4, or 10.2 million.
In order the top 10 shows were:
"Laverne & Shirley," a 23.2 rating, which
represents 16.S million homes; "Switch," CBS, 21.8,
or J.S.5 million; "Ha)>py Days," ABC, 21.3, or 15.l
.million; "A Fistful of Dollars," ABC's Sunday mov·
ie, 20.9, or 14.9 mWlou; "Charlie's Angels," ABC,
20.8, or 14.8 million; "Shamus," NBC's Monday
movie, 20.6. or lUS mllllon; "Attack on Terror, Part
1," CBS' Monday movie, 20.5, or 14.S million;
"Smashup on Interstate," ABC 's Tuesday movie,
20.3, or 14.4 million; "M.A.S.H . .'' CBS, 30, or 14.2
PETER FONDA
"
SUSAN ·
SAINT JAMEi
• .
mlllioo. "Attack on Terror, Part 2,'' CBS' Wtdnes· !
day movie, 19.S, or 13.1 miWoo. :
THE NEXT 10 SHOWS in order were:
-rhree's Company," ABC; "Saysmyk," CBS;
"Welcome Back, Kotter," ABC ; "Qui.rte)·," NBC;
"All in the Funlly.'' "Jefferaons" and "Allee," all ,
CBS, tied; "Rockford Files," NBC, and "8.,-ney
Miller," ABC, Ued, and "One Day at a Time," CBS.
CINEMA C£NTEI ..,.......:~-;;~J;=~;:::;=:t
THI
11'0..Y OF
AWIN~ (POI
STAAIUNO AONY
BENSON
= State May Lose Power Phone
Over Milk Controls Workers .
SAC1\AM&NTU tAP> Th con
troursy Oftt' ra• milk 11 Uke ao
many at.ben onr "natural" foocb ,
•• dtv and producen ~mplaininl [ CONSUMER ) Move
'l'he movement of 780
employes to a new three-
county operations center
1n Union Bank Square,
Orange, has been com-
p I et e d by Pacific
Telephone and Tele-
graph.
• ot har mmt. public healt.b olflctal•
wamlf\loldan1 r . tmala uy th•t u1 uboul 95 P'lrcenl ot
<.: lllllornia '1 toh1l Now tbe Catarornaa Lea lalun ap-
pean on tha" riie ol JumpJn' lnt.o the
fray by puslnf a m~asure lhat, local
hu1lh olf1~ Uy, wall w~&ken their
power to &top c1 ease from 1preac:Un1
Unputeur11ed raw malk c11n be sold
leaaJlJ in only 11 handful of elates
Puteurii.&Uoo, u heat treatment,
k1ll1 bactenu
. wbenrawmmd contaminated Dev~o( raw mild 1>ay the process
ullio k1lll eniymes and other beneficial
m"reclienu.
l'actnc Telephone
leased 10 floore anl!-the
basement -a total of
130,000-aquare·feet of
space -in Union Bank
Square's 12-story South
Tower for its Orange,
Riverside and San
Bernardino operations
facility . The head-
quarters serves more
than 1.5 million
telephone customers.
• THI: BIU.. Aa Ml, would require
loc: al health officers lo 1et a court or-
der before movin1 against a raw milk
·dairy 1uspected ol causlna disease -
"EVE& Y TIME a country requires
its milk to be pasteurized, you can
look for an increase in heart disease
there," says Harold Stueve, manag-
ing partner of Alta-Dena, which ls run
by bis family
• a procedure they must follow ror no
other food product
Four lames in two decades, health
officials have forced Alta·Dena
Dairy, the state's m~or raw oulk pro-
ducer, to stop making raw milk for a
time because or an outbreak or
-salmonella or other disease which
They list several medical experts
who concur in the dangers or
pasteurized milk, though the bulk of
the medical community dJsagrees.
There is less dispute about the
elaborate safety checks Alta-Dena un-
dergoes, from the Los Angeles County
Milk Commission or on its own. Its
milk is tested daily, as opposed to
monthly for pasteu.rized milk, and
must meet a stricter bacteria stan-
dard.
dairy olfic1als 1ns1st d1dn 'l come from
their milk
TIDS YEAR, THE slate Health
Department says, salmonella is on
the rise again, and in eight of 19 re-
ported cases that needed hospitaliza-
tion, the person had drunk raw milk.
The biU was awaiting a Senate floor
vote. From there, it needs only As -
sembly concurrence in Senate amend-
ments to move to Gov Edmund
Brown Jr. 's desk.
Its author is Assemblyman Bill
McVittie, an Upland Democrat whose
district east of Los Angeles includes
Alta-Dena Dairy
ALTA-DENA SAYS 1t sells 20.000
gallons of raw milk a day. State of·
"ALTA-DENA HAS an excellent
operation," says George Humphrey,
chief of veterinary public health in the
state Health Department. "But
th~re's no way 9)liminate human er·
ror."
The principal disease involved is
caused by salmonella dublin, a re-
latively rare bacteria. It causes a
stomach disorder which can spread to
the bloodstream, causing serious
complications and even death.
PERSONNEL Crom
seven Pacific Telephone
locations have been con·
solidated into the Orange
office complex located at
Main and La Veta
streets, adjacent to the
Santa Ana and Garden
Grove freeways and
Bullock 's Fashion
Square . Canal -
Randolph Corp. is
owner of the office com·
plex.
A major structural ele·
ment in the program in-
volves construction of a
• 167·foot elevator tower
outside the building.
·oc Business Highlights
, ,. •
Computer Automation Inc , Irvine, has report-
'ed net earnings for the year ended July 3 increased
72 percent on a 42 percent gain an sales.
For the 12-month period, net income totaled a
record $5,317,000, equal to $2.70 a share, on sales of
$43,038,000, also a new high. Comparable results for
1976 were $3,098,000, $1.60 and $30,398,000, respec·
tively.
For the three months ended July 3, net income
was $1,828,000, at 93 cents a share, on sales of
$13,052,000. This compares with $885,000 , or 46 cents
a shar€, on sales of $8,066,000 for the fourth quarter
last year
Net income as a percentage of sales increased
from 10.2 percent for the prior year to 12.4 percent
for fiscal 19T7
Bank Bllfl• N~port Laad
Irvine National Bank has entered into escrow to
purchase 2.2 acres of commercial property in
Newport.Beach for its first branch office.
The bank, opened in mid-1973 and has its head-
quarters in the Irvine Industrial Complex.
The new property is m a triangular section
bordered by Superior Avenue, Placentia Avenue,
and 15th Street near the Hoag Hospital medical
complex and the Costa Mesa commercial-industrial
area.
Plans for the 5.5000-square-foot office are being
prepared by Ficker and Ruffing.
Corporations ~Lrad' Ezft!•
Orange County corporations will "lend" some
15 executives to United Way of Orange County
For 16 yean.
Airlines
Merger
Dispelled.
.: ' -Individual Investors. d'>
weU as trust and profit
<>haring plans. hll\le
urned 10.12~• on then
money-and ~ometlme
more. .. •' ,..,. ,
~: , ..
" ~ t'·
)·.
f
The mnnev ha been bivetted In 2nd trUlitdeeds
on choice C.llfomlo
real utate through
A. A. A)ax c.o.
In 16 years. no one
has evn lost a cent or
fJlled to cam at le.aat 10%
or more-no one.
"When a loan I•
PftPBld before m.turlty.
you rc«lv. up to • 1lx
month Interest bonus on
80% of the loan balance.
This may lncreaH $he
yM!d up to 12.._
For a cktalled
brochure, plea IA!Titt
or call:
North/South for the duration of its 1977 campaign
from Sept. 15 lbrough mid-December, according to
loaned executive chairman Harold H. Jackson, re-
gional vice president oC Bank of America, Orange.
Through the proeram, middle management
personnel are assigned to United Way by their
employers, who cover their salaries and expenses.
Loaned executives Crom the area to date in-
clude Michael Harris, Mission Viejo, Allstate
Insurance Companies: David Holden,
Westm~nster, Disneyland; Mrs. Phyllis Kyker,
Fountam Valley, Southern California tdison Com-
pany; and Robert J . Shaw. Newport Beach,
Northrop Corp.
Dair, Skin Studio Open•
Fox and Hounds Inc .. a skin and hair care
studio, has opened in Lido Village, Newport Beach.
Executive directors are Jacques Desrochers
and Patricia Bates.
Mesa SIMJe Store~
Standard Shoe Stores has opened its eighth
store at3077 S. Bristol St., Costa Mesa.
The 10,000-square-foot facility will carry more
than 50,000 pairs of shoes in st~k at all times.
Mlcrodata Reperts Sale
Microdata Corp., Irvine, has announced that
Arthur Andersen & Company bu indicated its in-
tent to purchase approximately $2.8 million or
Mlcrodata Reality systems for delivery from the
spring of 1978 to the sp,ring or 1979.
The systems wlll be installed in 53 U.S. and
Canadian offices of Arthur Andersen.
Balllc r.tdJUslla Gtdde
Bank of America has published a new &uide,
"Leaving More to Your Family with a Trust.'' that
provides a form for estimating the value of an
estate and tables for ftgurtn& federal estate and
state lnherllance taxes to determine how much a
trust miChl save. The guide is available from trust ofnces of
bank branches.
LINCOL~MERCURY TO UNVEIL NEW COMPACT CAR, MERCURY ZEPHYR
Zephyr Lineup lncludea Sedan, Station Wagon and Sport• Coupe
9 New Car Lines Due
By CARL CARSTENSEN
Ott•O.lty l'lletltatf
Lincoln-Mercury dealers will
begin the 1978 model year Oct. 7
with a broad new nameplate
lineuP.. Included will be a family of
Mercury Zephyrs, which are new
compacts; the Diamond Jubilee
Mark V, in recogl)ition of Ford's
75th anniv.ersary, and a freshly
styled Monarch.
"OUR DEALERS WILL cover
approximately 87 percent of the
automobile market from the sub·
compact Bobcat to the Diamond
Jubilee Mark V, considered the
most completely equipped car
ever offered by the division,"
said Walter S. Walla, Ford Motor
Company vice-president and Lin-
coln·Mercury general manager.
"The lineup for 1978 includes
nine car lines; Bobcat, Capri,
Zephyr, Monarch, Cougar, Mar-
quis, Lincoln-Continental, Mark
V and Versailles -with a total of
28 models,'' he said.
THE FULL RANGE or Zephyr
models, which will replace the
Mercury Comet for '78, share a
( IN HICH GE.4R J
trim 105.5-mch wheelbase. They
will be available in two and four.
door sedan and station wagon
models and a two·door sport
coupe to be introduced later in
the year.
The Mercury Zephyr bodies
were developed with the aid of
computerized structural analysis
and underwent more
aerodynamic testing than any
previous U.S.·made Ford Motor
Company vehicle, Walla said.
Mechanical features include a
strut.type front suspension
adapted from use on some im-
ported cars; a smooth-riding,
four-link. coil-spring rear sus-
pension and precise rack-and•
pinion steering with variable-
ratio power optional.
ZEPHYR'S STYLING IS
clean. A bright vertical theme
grille and dual rectangular
headlamps highlight the front
end. A low cowl and belUine,
sloping hood, thin roof pillars and
Over The Counter
MASO UstiftCJS
expensive glass areas provide
ex eel.lent visibill ty.
The interior offers seating for
five. Front bucket seats are stan-
dard with a bench seat optional.
The functional instrument
panel includes easily read instru.
ment.s and convenient controls.
Notable are the stalk-mounted
controls for horn, headlight dim-
mer, tum signals and windshield
washer /wiper.
THE ARRAY OF power teams
mcludes four, six and eight-
cylinder engines; three and four-
s peed manual transmissions,
and a thre~speed, select-shift
automatic transmission.
Zephyr buyers will be able to
choose from a list of options in-
c 1 u ding distinctive trim
packages sucb as the Luxury
Decor Group and ES option.
Special ventilation options will
include functional rear quarter-
wmdow aar extractors and front
vent windows.
A simulated.wood-grain
"Villager" trim and a rear-
window wiper /washer system
will be available on the station
wagon
llp• and Do..,..
f'ct_
Vp 6\.S Up .,
Up 33-3 Vp ~o Up 114
Up 17.•
VP ISi
Up U l
VP II 1
Up 111 Up 10 J Up 10 J Up 10.1
Up •> Up ti Up It
Up 1.3 Up 1.2
Up 11 Up 10
Up 11 Up 7.7
Up 7.J Up 7.1
UP 69
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w.df?!!day, AUQU.I St I 1971 I /N DAILY PILOT
PIGnning Ahead
Self-employe~
May l..ike Keogh
By SYLVIA PORTE&
L..-111• ......
For David and Lynn, the future ll bright. He 'a 35, a self·
employed arcbited, earnlna $41,000 a year and hla list of
clients ls SJ'OW.:f.· She ll three yean 10\Ullef, a freelance
wrtter whose 111meuts Are atvt.na bet an U11\lal Income
of around •.ooo. They've been mvrtect 10 years, bave two
children, •I•• and 7, bave Just moved to an attractive home ln tbe suburbs.
They apend about $1,000 for ski equipment eacb year
but, for the most part. they..,.. scrupulous savers. After UV·
int ~es. including a health plan and insurance P~·
menu, they bank most remalnlne funds, and have $18,000 m
cash savings. ·
Btrr EVEN IF THEY continue to s•ve $1,800 each year,
earning about 5 percent annually, they will have accumulat·
ed only $25.572 ln 11 years. when their oldest c~d becins
collece. Once these expenses are met, t4ere won t be any
aavinp left for emergencies, the fu~ reUrement.
They need a better plan than that. ~ause they are self-employed, a Keogh tax-shelter re-
tirement plan could be ·the wisest move at thla atage.
Under th1a plan, they set up their retirement trust and defer
taxes QO a portion of their income tbroucbout peak earning
ye an.
/\t the ates of 35 and 32, they can assume a fair degree
of risk with their investments. But as \bey erow older. in-
vestment objectives will change. And as retirement nears,
they can tailor their portfolios to meet their chanting needs .
They could buy dis· ·
count bonds now for
capital appreciation,
suggest Merrill Lynch
executives. Years from
now. they could sell the
Money's
Worth
bonds for capital gains. 1 Discount bonds ....__....,...._ _____ _
often sell for substantially less than the prices at which they
will mature because they were issued when prevailing in-
terest rate levels were much lower. They might buy $10,000
of 6 percent bonds at a price of $8,000, leaving $2,000 of a
$10,000 stake for other investments. The 6 percent bonda will
return the full $10,000 when they come due.
WITH TOE $Z, ... , THEY COULD invest in growth
stocks with an average dividend yield of 2 percent and ex-
pect the stocks to grow in value along with their bonds until
the bonds mature.
Of the $18,000 ln savings, they might keep $6,000 in the
savings insUtutioo for emergencies and invest the balance
of $12 000 in highest grade municipal bonds quoted al a dis·
count'and almost surely heading toward their issue price at
maturity.
This way, they would get three benefits: a capital g~n
on each bond, favorable tax treatment on the capital gatn
Chalf the normal rate under today's law>. and tax.free in-
comeunW the municipal bonds reach maturity rate.
~UMING TREY BUY $11,oot of bonds al $*)() per
$1,000 par value, they can get lS bonds at a tax-free interest
of 3~ percent. Over the years, tbe bonds will pay~ tax·
free a year. An investment or $12,000 in taxable savings at
511.z percent wUl pay roughly $660 in taxable income -or
S363 aft.er taxes. By buying the tax.free bonds. they save $1~ a year in taxes.
Staggering Market
LAJses More Gr.o und
NEW \'ORK <AP) -The stock market posted another
loss toda.Y amid fears of an economic slowdown.
The Dow Jones average or 30 industrials, down S.20
points Tuesday, waaoff2.60moreto861.49.
Losers outnumbered gainers by an 8·5 margin among
New York Stock Exchange-Hated issues.
Trading was Ugbt. Big Board volume totalled 14.09 million shares.
Brokers said the market was depressed by recent de· velopments.
.. ~(AP) 1111"91 -.IOMt -.....
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tS Sa •• ~.~-~.~~.m.01.;,:•~ Trllt .................... . Utlll ..................... . tS.. ....................... ,.
Amerf~an Leader•
HF# YORtC (A"). Sales, • I'•'"• tlll'lee tflCI lllt <""'-of Ole left me.t active Al'lltrle.ell S4ock I~ ts.., tr.-.. NllloMlly .. v 11. . ._ ......... -. ~ ~Vind W\ ...... , • • + ~
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fltlOrP ""'".... r.: 1~ ... i6 AMAX ..t.... •. 41' 2 cH ~·~ aMMt !lid...... 1i* ,."' + ...
HEW YOftK <APl
SAUS
Hl!W YORI( (APl -HY !it9<11 i ,...,, ............................ i '-•v .......... ... .... j ............ ,~············. :.:::::::::::::::::::". ,.;...
i-.. ""' aoo ................. 12,21J1.1•
Jen \:I .... · .. · ........ "· • ·~.-.-tt7t ...................... ~·~ tt7S Cllltol • • • • .. • • • .. .. • J .11';.Gt
WHAT AMU OID
NEW Y~lt CAP)
I I
YPILOT
NCJSCO ( P J -An
moklftll c mpatcn aim'4 at
1cboal had all bu
1nil1ea t reaulta bJ
-them e\>out the hn·
....... ~~• health haaarda I teld ot v.·b mltht bappeo to them in
30 1evt. a Nou ton PSYchotoellt
r~tud \a abo were tauabt
EARTH BORN
ff atlll'al pH Baluce
SHAMPOO
Chemically formulated
with natural
1ngred1ents!
12oz. 1.39
Beach SANDALS
for MEN & WOMEN
5 layers.
with vinyl
strap hned
with suede.
1.99 PR.
lo be aware of bow comp
u11 dv rU m nll Ceaturtna at· \factlve women end oth r media
technlquet to 1ncoura1e th•
habit, said Or. Richard I. Evant
or th Ul'ilv nlty ot ff outton . Another part of the campalp,
h• 1a.ld, told them how to aay
"No" to aotlal proaaur ~m
othtr )'OUU\a to amo e.
''LILT" HOME
PERMANENT
Wire or nylon
bpstles in
assorted colors.
Evua Hid the auccess of the
proiram amonc the students -
who are u th crucial aae wben the habll ofteQ be&lns .:._ In·
dicatci It could help prevent
1omt Youths trom ever smoking.
Wh t may h•ve clicked ln this
pro•rtm where others have
railed Js that the youths were told
of tho lmined!ate buatd.J and ~e
THERMOS
Cooler & Jug
DISPOSABU-PWTIC ·NO•nco Complexion Plus
GLASSWARE
IN ADOBE BROWN 9 IZ. Old Fa•
1'111 Of 20)
43 Quart cooler.
1 Gallon JUi
Great for outdoor
activ1t1es
m" 19.88
~l~ ~~.·I "COVER GIRL" MAKE. UP n . .
OCHER • I Hou lJqlld Eyesbdow 1 19 GIRL Use as a shadow or 3$ a liner. •
• Elcapsaated pnder
Moist•eWear powder
' • Tllick·lasb Mascara
Build thick beautiful lashes
1.49
1.19
• llqtid Make· IJ 1 oz. 1 49 Blended with nch. wet
moisturizers. •
REVLON'S "Natur.al Wonder"
:..::::.. 210 "1.ht. •
----. CORDLESS FACE SCRUBBER
"-. ~ Thoroughly ·
/,, cleanse every •M
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Features 2 •C1t· I
~:r~5e l9 88 blades •
Prcmdes 1nlra·red
heat plus massage
\; throuah. elf1c1ent 4 1 0 BS ~way action.
•Jtlll111M •
Foste( Creek , ,1 ou
BOUrl;on
1't#hisltey J 49
1.15 lnEI •
<}, CLAIROL ''The Nail Works"
\ ' S1peri0f Nan. CAIE SYSTEM
, •. ' Cordless. portable with
autom~hc bulhng for 11 88 r glossy nail hmsh
\.. • ...,,.. •NMI •
~ · "Power -Pro"
~ Prof eSS10nal ~.,\ 1200 WATI MA• DIYll
~/ style pistol dryer
/ • ~~~ehome hair l 6 88 ~ tHO·& •
Sw1tchts from
steam to dry at
a push of a
button 11 88 •f·6S •
-~CHARMHN
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..
"2 ~s5
ft
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GYM/SPORTS
BAG WITH 18" Zipper
Canvas with
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resistant
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gusset.
lll·Y
5.95
SOUMDESIGN
POITUl.f 8. TRACK
TAPE PLAYER
Operates on 6
"D" Stzt
batteries, or AC 11-
w1th adapter . ·.e.111~
(1ncluded) t
. •4GJ2 .... .__._
27.88 i_ -POITAIU AM/FM
RADIO
1 214" speaker •
with easy carry
~!fii~:g:sa
percent sud they h d smoked at ·
least one cigarette in the pre-
vious month -and tested aalin
10 weeks later. No anUsmokiDI
inst.ruction was given to them. • Other aroups of students were
asked the.same questions, then
part1Cipat~ in various kinds Ol
anUamolring instruction.
NA TIONAl SEMICONDUCTOI
CALCULATOR
fluorescent
areen 8·d1g1t
display designed
to provide quick
& accurate
calculat1ons.
' "AIR POT"
PUMP · ACTION
VACUUM PITCHER ~:tu'P
• "DIGIT Al"
Clock Radio
Easy·lo-see and easy·to·look
at Contemporary walnut
grain finish.
•1 .. 441S 24.88
"ONE .. A. DAY ~' .
VITAMIN PLUS IRON •
~':s';'g~ FREE 2.90
BARE FACE
ACM£ SKiii
MEmClllE
....., ......... ..,fMtdlf/DMlll4'
Dessie Brooks waves to Dorothy, Bob Pettit.
\Yednesday.August31, 1977 C1
Do Adventists
Live LonQ~I'."?
By JUDITH OLSON
Of, .. O.lly ...... s ...
IC you want to live a long, healthy ure, you might consider
becoming a Seventh·day Adventist.
According to a study made in 1958·65, the risk of death for
many kinds of diseases is lower for people in this group than for
Californians of corresponding age and sex.
Since Adventists usually do not smoke or drink alcoholic
beverages it is. understandable that their health might be bet~r
in these areas.
But. wby they en.Joy so mucb freedom fro'\' traffic accidents,
breast. cancer, leukemia, diabetet and other causes of death still
lS unknown.
To determine the cause of their good heallh in these areas, a
study is under way among California Seventh-day Adventist
church members. It will continue to 1980 when results will be
tabulaied by the Loma Linda University School of Health.
DOCrORS AT Loma Linda have suggested ltlat the Adventists·
low death rates are because or their dietary and health pracUces,
socioeconomic factors, medical care, genetic inheritance and
level of immunity as well as their abs&inence from ciearettes and
alcoholic beverages.
The study, t>etng conducted by the National Cancer Institute,
is valuJble accordine to Loma Linda spokesmen, because it has
"great potential for providing clues as to the cHsea of some or
the major types of cancer and other chronic dlsfa.ses."
Lifetime Adventists also will be compared to tbose who adopt
the church lltestyle later in life to see whether the ear!y exposure
has any merit.
One or the prime areas of concern in the Adventist way of life
is a good diet, according to Robert E. Rleaer, putor of the
Orange Seventh-day Adventist Church.
~gh the church members eat no meat.. vegetarianism is
not the main emphasis, the Rev. Rei1er asserted. He ta more con·
cemed about Americans' high protein intake and their love for
refined white sugar.
~EATS. POULTRY and fish are sospec because of the
"negative elements" they bring with them froq their own eating
patterns, the Rev. Rieger explained, and they llSo are shunned
because of the Adventists• belief that the human body needs far
less protein than most people think.
The church's dietary practice goes back to its doctrine that
the human body ia a temple of the Holy Spirit.
"The first thrust of a person's embracing the dietary practice
would be acceptance of Jesus Christ as personal savior," the
(Sff ADVENTISTS, Pa1e CJ)
I
FISH Wfleels Meals
BJ cmcaYL OMO .... Dell, .........
Tomorrow 11 Saturday a:Qd the
clock Oil the manUe tJclcl quieUy
aa tbe 1Uver-halr'td man, who
1enerllly bout.a abotlt h1I "72 cood ~ .. lOott at tbe white
eeUh'f from bl• bed and la
frighteDed.
He hll Jun tiien released from
the l*Pttal. He's all alone; bis
wl(e died last Christmas and they
bad no children.
Tho man wbo used to .. shake
'em up" on the dance floor is
stuck In his mobile home, with no
one to help tlX hls meals.
tn a matter of hours, thanks to FISH, .a cobcerned woman
knocks at his door with a bome-
eooked, bot meal and a cold
snack for later. She stays a few
minutes and talks.
She will come again tomom>w.
• • • FJSR. A NON·PBOFIT, \'Olun·
teer organluUoo sponsored by
tbe Newport Harbor Coun.d1 of
Churches, helps people lo many
ways.. lncludinl providiU tbe
ebrooically ill or temporarily in-
capcitated with meals.
Tb• p,ro1ram works tn
two ways. The flfit la a federally
fUndtid mobile meals proaram,
with meals prepared for a
noQ\lnal ree by Hoag Hoepital
and delivered by FISH volun·
teen in conjunction with the
Soropt.hnist Club.
Tt\e cost for this service 1i $3
per day and meals are deli\iered
at noon, Monday tbr®'h Fri·
day.
Both • hot and cold meal tre included and service will con-
U n pe, according to Fl$H
spokesperson Jo Mllh, "as loni
as a need exists." "'
Ftom April 1 throuah June 30,
more than s.ooo mobile meals
were delivered by volunteers
Special diets are prepared for
those who are in need of Utem ne second program is free
and consists of volunteers cook-
ing meals in their own ho1nes and
delivering them to persons un-
able to do tbeir own c~g or
arocery sboppin1.
Often, tb1s type of service is
given ii there is an emergency
situation on a weekend, when the
Meals on Wheels Program is not
INFO&MATION ABOU elthef of the two pro1ra.,,
may be obtained b'./ calllni t.Jl
FISH office at 645-8050.
• • • ' Mtldred Ingalls of New~
Beach ls one of the volunteers
the home meals program:
.. I try to take food that ll
keep and ls appropriate for Ul
person. Often, I just take a por>
ti on or what my f am Uy is eatin .
"ldon'tuse any special reciJMIS
-but I certainly try tQ prepar• a
wholesome meal.''
~ Pettit of Costa M~a
says, she too, doesn't have w
"special recipes" for her hom4;
cooked meals but says she does
call ahead to see Uthe person re-
quires any type or special diet.
"J usually make a meaUoaf>W
(See WHEEL. Page C7> • ...,
Sarah French
tries not to think
of children's
wants when
buying.
.. ..
.. ' ....
Buy only_ specials, says HeilJZ Biesdorf.
...
Supermarkets," includes a ~
pa1e gulCle to bUying techniques,
a series ol forms on which in·
aividuala can report purchases
and prices, and pamphlets to
help people compare prices "of
dUferent size packqes.
The kit ls publiabed by the New
Yort State Extension Service oa
a nonl)rofit basis. It costs $2.50.
Checks, payable to Cornell
UniWntt,y. ahc>wd be sent to Bet·
tel" Slq>per, BOx 191, Dept. N-2,
Ithaca, N.Y., 14850, A )'fiore ex· ~ve'venion, lncludii\i &Udes,
I.I av&llable for schools and com·
m Wilty 11'.0!JPI.
speeials on most of the ilenU
and, a little at a tline, can blilld
up your own tttores of vari~
products, Once you have Ws
backlog, you can pick and choose
your sbopplng times, buying
replacement items only when
they are on sale.
In order to buy now for future
use, you need extra money, bUt it
may take less than you think. "If
you have $S worth you have not
planned to spend i,n a aupermancet. you •re well on YO\.q'
way,'' Biesdorf says, "tietause
the first week there is no way you
could thlCI everYUalgg you use at
the beit pnce:• You can evtn
start Yiith u JiUle as St extra, he
aay~
..
1
..
I •
One sandwich serves them all.
Super Sub for Crowd
Expecting a crowd'! Make one sandwich to
serve them all!
This super submarine sandwich loaf can be
.baked up to 17 inches long, and will feed up to 6
hungry guests. The loaf, easily made using a one
Pound loaf of frozen bread dough, can be baked
ahead of time, allowed to cool completely and
sliced in half lengthwise.
To freeze, wrap the loaf in freezer wrap. For
impromptu get togethers. pull the loaf out of the
freezer and heat in the oven.
SUPER SUB LOAF
11-Pound loaf frozen bread dough
1 tablespoon melted butter or margarine.
Sandwich Filling
I package pepper loaf
I package cooked ham
1 packagejalapeno loaf
1 package dry salami
1 package bologna
1 package Swiss and Cheddar cheese
1 package sliced American cheese
Allow frozen loaf to thaw until pliable. Roll
dough with the palms of bands out to 15-incb
cylinder. Place on lighUy greased sheet pan,
brush with melted butter.
Let dough rise until tripled in size. Bake in
pre-heated 375 degree oven for 25-~ minutes, or
until loaf ls golden brown.
Let loaf cool completely on cooling rack or
absorbent paper. With sharp bread knife, slice
loaf ln half lengthwise. Spr~ad each half with
mustard or favorite dressing.
Top with luncheon meats, cheese, lettuce,
tomato and onion. Serve on long board.
Spaghetti Sauce Tips
Complete coverage of county
government and courts.
Every day
In the DAILY PILOT ..
Ull400on
We 'Wclllt to p~ to you MJB tastes good when it should.
.. --1.Q Sa¥t 4f«t-rd tllc
K••MofOMClln lUa CofTtt CHy 1lxc I •vtlld1.
GROCER: Ple:a't redeem I I
Limit OM co•poa ~ pun:'llew., t")
C011po11 uplim 'f«bf>Hry 18. It'll. ~~I
CPN 7-309 ~ 1:
\
\
)
H e r e a r e s o m e growth of food poisoning
answers to commonly ~acter!a c~d take place
asked questions pro-_ID the interim lukewarm
vided by tbe Cooperative stage.)
chan~intbe~ructu~ But these keeping~~~=~-=~-~=~~=~~~=~~==~~=~~=~~~=~~=~~~=~-~ orthe hair. times depend on storage
Extension division of the One good thing about.
State Department of spaghetti sauce is that it Agricult~e. . contains acid from the
Q. We re pl~ang to tomatoes. The acidity ls c~ok spaghetti sauce a protection against th~
with ground beef to serve growth of bacteria. On ~ people for our. fund the other hand, protein
raiser. If we cook this the food such as ground beef
day befor: how s~ould lt is a likely source of bac·
be stored_. Would ~t have terial growth. For ttua
lo be refng~rated · reason, rapid chilling of
A. Refriger~te the thesauceisnecessary. cooked spaghetti sauce * * •
by all m~~~· ~d keep it Q. 1 keep hearing ads cold until it s tame to re-for shampoos that con.
heat for s.ervlz:1g· To be lain protein. Does thi%
sure that tt chills quic~-· protein in the shampoo
ly !·do not ~frigerate ~t ID help imptove the growth ~1g, deep cooking . utensils. Instead, pour' it and textureofhau?
into shallow pans to a A. Proteins in sham·
depth no greater than 4 poos have no effect on
Inches. Thia will allow the growth of hair or its
the sauce to chill quick· texture. 'Ibey may add a
ly. (If stored ln big COD·. little extra body OD the
tainers it will take so hair surface and make it
long to cool down to a easier to,.\1lanage but this
safe temperature that is not a PhY•lcal
• * * conditions. Seeds stored
Q. How long do vegeta· under cool, dry, airtlght
ble seeds keep? I found conditions, are likely to
some OD the top shelf in still be good after the
the cupboard that must times lbted above. Seeds
be about three years old. stored on the top cup.
Would they germinate board shelf in the
after this long a time? kitchen, where it gets
A. 1be keeping quality very warm, would have
of vegetable seeds varies a much shorter keeping
by the type of seed. Most time.
have a rather long life, When in 4oubt about but there are Important b exceptions. For exam· t e quality of ~tored
pie, com and onion seeds ve1etable seeds, It a best
have sbort life spans.· to throw them out and
They should not be kept buy fresh seed. So much time, effort, water ano over one year. Bean, other resources go into
pea. and carrot seed& crowing vecetables that
can be stored for t~o you don't want to ~aste years. Pepper, pumpkin. them on seed that may beet, and tomato seeds nn1n won't germinate after not ge ate.
more than three years. To extend the ~eeplng
Kale, lettuce, can· time of lettover seeds,
taloupe, spinach, place them in a Un,
squash, turnip, and tlass. or plastic con·
watermelon seeds will be talner which ii air tight
good for as lone as four and store ln your
years. refrigerator or freezer.
.
't I
Colorful
Country
Cooking
Fresh corn chowder.
A Snappy Bean
w )' <'Ont aM aweet ll'ttD peas, fields of red tom toel, I\ ldJ ol ru-Ht pQlaton.
me people 10 Jnto raptuns over autumn hues, but for
others lt'a the country ca&on ol aummer that set hearts a·
pound.lnl. 1tom1c:hA •·troWUn'. ... and taste buds •·Unilln '.
Two favorite c ntrt: food reclpea fot summ~r are Alven low -a C'9tn cboWder fhat bestna by cutUn1 the kemela off lbe
Hr& OI b 1weet. corn, ind baeOn-1tuUtd tom•tc>es crammed full ol a blCOD .nd erumb mlxture with cbeeae topplna: COWl~ cOJon, countnr eoOkln'. There'• notbinl like them on Ood'a treeo artbt
Fa BOO&NCHOWDEa
4 medium ears com
2 tablespoons butter ~ cup chopped celery
l 1mall onion, chopped
2 cups bot water
l teupoon salt
14 teupoon white pepper
2 cups lltbt cream z tablespoons nour
'\\cup bacon bits
Cut kernels Crom corn wt th sharp knife (will measure about 2
cups>. With knife, scrape remalnln1 pulp from ~b. In laree
skllletor Dutcboven melt butter; add corn, celery and onion.
Saute over medium beat 10 minutes, stirrinc Qften. Add bot
water. s.it and pepper. Cover and simmer until veeetables are
tender <about 45 minutes). Shake cream and flour to1ether in a
Jar. Add rream mixture and bacon bits to chowder and cook until slightly thickened. Serves six.
BACONSl'tlFFEDTOMATOES
4 largetomatoes
2 cups fresh bread cnunbs
1,2 cup bacon bits •1, cup water
1 tablespoon butter
l bouillon cube, any flavor
1 tablespoon chopped green pepper
1 teaspoon minced onloa
dash pepper
14 cup grated parmesan cheese
2 t&blespoons chopped panley
C1,1t off top quarter of tomatoes; remove inside with knife or
grapefruit spoon. Drain upside down on paper towel. Mix bread·
crubs and bacon bits in small bowl.
Heat water; add butter. bouillon cube, green pepper, onion
and pepper. Combine thoroughly with crumb mixture. Stuff
tomatoes and top each wilhone tablespoon parmesan cheese.
Place on lightly greased pie plate or baking dish and bake at
350 deff.&.ees F for 10 to 12 minutes. Sprinkle with chopped parsley
to serve. Serves four.
RES SWEET DILLY BEANS In to a medium
AND CARROTS saucepan turn Ute sugar, Alf tfle goodness Of vinegar. 2 cups water
2 pounds snap beans. and the dill-seed bag; reaJ mayonnaise
tipped bring to a boil, stirring •
,, pound (about 4 until the sugar dissolves; and fewer calones!
large> carrots simmer for 5 minutes. ·
2 cups sugar Discard the iill-seed
2 cups cider vmegar bag.
2 tab)espoons coarse
salt Put 6 dill spries in each
1 tablespoon dill seed of four sterilized 1-pint
tied in a chees~cloth bag jars; pack some beans
Fresh dill sprigs a n d some oarrots
with stems cut off lengthwise into each jar.
. Cover with the hot sugar· If necessary, trim the vinegar mixture, leaving
ends.of lhe ~ans .so ~hey "'2-inch headspace. Seal
wlll Just fi~ into pint Jttrs with 2-piece Mason caps,
w h e n . i n s e r t e d lids and metal or plastic len~lhw1~e. P~re car-rings following manufac-
raots , cut mto s~1cks that lurer's directions. Place
re about the size of the Jars on a rack in a large
beans. saucepot; add hot water
Into a large saucepan to cover jars by at least 1
turn the beans and car· mch. Bring water to a
rots; add enoufh boiling boil, then keep at a gen·
waler so it comes up tie steady boil for 20 about2 inches; bring to a minutes. Remove jars to .,__ _______ --t
boil; boil until the a wire rack to cool. Store
vegetables are tender -in a cool dark place.
about 15 minutes. Drain. Makes about 4 pints.
C•ll 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work for ou.
Best Idea Sioce
Shopping Carts
J t::Now you can do a week's shopping
o ~ witho.ut forgetting a single
item! Use pre-printed
shopping lists
prepared for you by
PILOT PRINTING.
140 Mparata pffnted ltama,
ptua Hdltlof\ .. ••ce• you ctin flll In youraalf.
on
•
•
------·----
\
Tastes like a million· ••• Costs less than others
Pick a six-a-Dlxi at these supermarkell:
-
mixes his
philosophical dissertations with
quizzes and thumbnail
observations to keep
readers on their toes.
Year aftery~ Wish-Bone is America's best-selling
Italian salad dressing.
And this year is no exception.
Why? Because only Wisb-Bone Italian has just the right
combination of select herbs and spices, lemon juice, tangy
vinegar and pure golden oil.
Perfectly balanced and blended as only we know how for
true Italian flavor.
When you put your name on one thing and one thing only,
it's got to be the best .
Cut out the coupon below and save 15¢ on any size bottle
of the Italian dressing America has made its favonte. .
Wish·BomSalad~ingisthe
only thing vreputournameon.
r----... ···-...----·--····-·-···-~ : 15¢ STORE OOUPON SD-128 15¢ :
I
I t I . '
'
. .
,I
r
Turkey
Costs
Rising
By DON KENDALL
WASIUNGTON <AP)
~ Shoppers niay aee holiday turke)'s coat
• about a. nickel a pound
J. more thi5 year, accord·
ing to new aoveroment
forecasts.
Broiler chickens also
will cost more this fall
but egg prices will be
• down from a year ago,
the forecast says. The
/.griculture Departrnent
says that somewhat
higher prices for beef
and pork will help boost
prices of poultry.
The department's
Outlook and Situation
Board said in a pte-
li m inary report that
wholesale prices of
turkeys may average S3
to 55 cents a pound in the
fourth quarter or the
year. up ft"om 49 cents in
the last three months of
1976.
''Turkey output
t hrough June was
the same as in 1976, ••the
report s aid. "Fewe.t
birds were marketed bu\
weights were heavier.
Output will be dowll this
,
summer but may about
match a year ago during
October-December."
Dependl.QI on the out-
come of tbla fall's grain
harvests, feed costs are
expected to decline and
-thus trigger some ex-
pansion in turkey pro-
duction in the first half of
next year, orficiall said.
Wholesale prices of
b,roiler-fryers are ex-
pected to avera,e 38 to 40
cents a pound int> the
fourth quarter, com-
pared with 35.S cents a
year ago. However, this
will mean a seasopal
decline from this sum-
mer's broiler prices o
around 43 cents a pound
"as people shift to othe
meats for the holidays,"
the report said.
Looking at the first
quarter or 1978, the board
said that broilers may
average art>und the 40.
cents a pound during th r st three months of thi
ar.
Egg producUon ha
ged behind 1976 so f
this year but may step u
this fall and contlnu~ in-
creasing in 1978, the ~ port 'Said. Unusually hot
weather this summer ire
many key producing
areas has helped reduce
egg output. ·
Even so, egg prlces
have been well below ·
year-ago levels, ac:cord·
ing to the report.
Wholesale prices-in the
fourth quarter are
forecast at 61 to 7l cents
a dozen, up from around
63 cents this summer but
down from the averag
of 78.4 cents in the las
three months ot 1971.
~
l>rfl)are aandwlches by using
1llcea of your favorite bread ••
Arrance turkey and SwJaa ~hffle oo balf of the allcea, and
1enel'ou1ly spoon on top a
ltntnlUI porUon of the aalac!.
Top with another slice of but·
tered breed. and eQjoy.
l&allan Dres1tn1
14 cup salad oil
14 wme vinegar
~teaspoon a alt
14 teaspoon pepper
14 teaspoon oregano
14 teueoon sweet basil
1 teaspoon sugar
Combine and shake well.
'
PEARS
.:ANCY• UTT\.£ ROCK• llARTLETTS
19c, ..
--·~
Two great
meals~
salad and
sandwich.
/
I
• •
l11t mut'h
t;eiQm!G , for
a e,c k~for
\IP to an ln dry, cool plac • bu\ molt ••.
rts l'C'('Ofl\ftlend 1lC">rln1
Ulem for no more thin
ODe) •
ih t tr you don't have
U.. Um to a.twp around? Acam, Blesdorf uys:
Fiad lt How much tJ me
do you devol~ to
televt. Ion! •· tfow much
doH it t'OSl to watch
telev1i.lon! It t'o1ts
Um~ ...
On you h11ve bec-ome
familiar with the better
shopper pro1r1tm,
Bies<! rf says al takes
less than haJf an hour a
week to s;ut your (rocery
b ll by U percent. How
much money can you ea.ra in half an hour -
e\l~n if you work over-
time?
Biesdorf also dis-
misses areuments that
hfs plan requires a lot or
storage apace "H
somebody offered you
$50 worth of free
groceries. would you
turn them down because
you didn't have room? OC
course noti." Rearrange
cabinets to get the max·
imum use of available
space. Consider
stepshelves in the closets
for more surface area.
Store paper goods in
cartons under the bed.
B1esdorf stresses the
importance of using unit
pricing where available
to compare the cost of
items sold in different
size containers. Suppose,
for example, a six-ounce
can of something is 29
cents and a 13-ounce can
is 60 cents. Which is
cheaper? The unit price
label will tell you the cost
per pound of each item
77 CE:nts for the six-ounce
size and 74 cents for the
13-ounce size.
If the unit price ts not
given. figure il out
yourself. Biesdorf re-
fuses to be discouraged
because many people
are unable to do the
necessary arithmetic.
"The fact that some peo:
ple are unwilling, una·
ble. iqcompetent. don 'l
want to ~e bothered,
have too much
money, not enou1h
• education, sbouldn 't stop
a professor from
teaching what he knows
will work," Biesdorf
says. so mewhat
dogmallcally. "The ones
who pick it up will
benefit greatly.··
*** Like millions of other
women, Sarah French of
Norwalk , Co nn .,
balances her food budget
with an agility worthy or
a professional
economist, matching de·
mand -the tastes and
appetite of her family -
against supply -her
husband 's biweekly
paycheck.
In 12 years of mar-
riage, Mrs. French has
learned many of the
tricks of supermarket
shopping.
She passes up displays
or tempting, but ex-
pensive products,
strategically placed to
catch the eye of the shop-
per. She reads labels and
studJes the fine print in
the ads.
Mrs. French clips
coupons, buys house
brands, watches for
specials and tries not to
be swayed by the pleas or
her daughter, Emily,
8~. "~ou·ve got lQ resist
children," she says •
.. Children want this or
th~t. A Jot or parents will bur just to keep the kidJ
quiet."
Recently, Mrs. French
learned a few more
tricks from "Be a Better
Shopper -Buyins tD
~upermarkets," a kit
prepared by Cornell
University experts.
Before getting the kit,
Ira. ~nch did virtual· n Mt tiOpplng at
one supcrmark,.~. A
Oril). tit.ft':. 01 • IS ed hree competing stores
take :advantaae or d· ~rUsed specials. She rct more attention to
ptlces an the 1econcl ttlp,
co~ •upermarht
Olf eri11P. She ltocked up
Mftie lttma \hat ~re 11.aJe. Mrs. Ftebch~~
flt tM IUIQltlons
tM ~. hoWewr.
Uid:lbe toa1dn"t;,ee
erselr •P•ndln& the &olrrile~ .... ,,. pu~ •Price as re· conrirfen4ed. She 'tlras
u 'f!ncU111 M.~!11:'9• ffe
Calhert , l!r\ monUt •
and who plana to \U1t
to h cttrlcal Job ia th• fell. Mn. t"rench a110
.aid that the experts did
not pau-enou1h attenUan
to lndh1dual ta1tM.
• 'Ther are certeln
lhln11 wo wUI eat and lt'•
no uae for me to bUy
other thln1•," aht 1 d.
When lt coma to cb I·
tn1 brands to take •d·
vanta1t ol a 1pecl1l,
Mrt. ,..._ch it eel• t.
· ·c~rt•ln one1 are w
lht moneJ. t wouldn't
1wltth no rnau r what
tho prict."
Hein• Bleadorf, the
Cornell prof 11or who
heade4 thO team th•l de
veloped th Better Shop·
per kit, concedes th•t
consumer pref ere nee
c1n be a factor ln shop·
pln•· But he ar1ue1 that
mott people do not really
taste any difference;
they only think they do. ti )'OU hone&tly can tell
the differenoe, Blesdorf
HY•. ~OU should \fY to
deeidi which 11 more Im·
~rt1111t-Uie tute or the
money -and spend ac·
eordlngly. Blesdorl says
hls aim ii n~ ao much to teach ~ople what to
spend as It r.s to make
them aware of the money t.boy have and the use they make of it.
Mre. French ia de·
termlneCt not to make
concessions when it com·
es to quality. She says of
food: "It's one of the
.
..
nee IUes of llfe and it
can t°UY well be enjoy a-ble.• t
Mrs. French does her
main abopplna once
every two weeks; the
trips cotnclde wlth
French's payday.
Perishables aucb aa
bread and .mllk are
replaced mwe frequent·
ly. Wben she needs an
item like nillk, she says,
"I try to ao 1tra11ht to the place where lt'a
located, get lt and eet out
or there. If you. don•t.
you're doomed to lm·
pulse bu)'lot."
"It took a 1on1 Ume" to
learn to withstand
temptation, abe adds.
·•And It's atlll bard to 10
by ~e little goodies at
the door. I always stop
and look at 'em. I never
buy'em."
With a tamlly income
somewhat at)ove th~ U.S.
median of about $14,000,
the Frenches have a lit·
tie leeway wbeo it comes
to food purchases. rs.
J'rench says she t 1w1re
of loflatlon, but feela
there b llttle abe can do.
"You just sort of •bs9rt
it,'· she says.
Had she learned
anYth.Utg from the abop·
plngkft?
Yes, said Mrs. French,
particularly about laws
~d regulations on labels and pricing practices.
She also was determ1oed to cmttnue shopping ln
at least two compellnc
Introducing an informative· series about
how we do business thi way we do, ·
and what that means to your budget.
•
Key Buys This Week
labor Day generally marks the end of the
vacation period. With any luck, the weather will
be great for a cookou~.
With that in mind, our
buyers have talked
with the manufac-
turers, and together
they've come up with
some key buys that wiU
make this weekend easier
1 on your budget, whether you have folks in. or
keep the feast in the f amity.
For instance. we have Morrell franks at 38¢
below our everyday low price. Our own Harvest
Day hot dog and hamburger buns are 1()¢ a pack·
age lower than usual. Our Harvest Day potato
chips are 15¢ less than normal. B&M Baked
Beans are down 10¢ this week. And to complete
the feast, a 6-pack of 7-Up in cans is reduced by about
40%! We/re very proud of our low everyday prices Of'\
steak and ground beef. Compare. Then stock up ..
with us.
You have a right
to know. As we
indicated
above, this ad
is the first in a
series. We
want to call
your attention
to a lot of
information
that will help ~our food budget.
From talking with our customers,
we know you feel that portioning
out a budget is a serious business.
The more informed you are about prices
and what's happening in the food business,
the more likely you11 be a lucky shopper. So '
we feel it's our responsibility to keep you informed.
Fresh Meats Fresh Meats
GROUND
BEEF 49 3 LO. l'l<G. OR M011C cao.n·r~ J0% tatU.•
..
Stretch that shopping list. . .
Key Buys, like the ones we
listed below, are manufacturer's
promotional allowances.
They're short term savings
you need to know about to
/ add to your shopping list , while
they're available. We call
them to your attention
with a "Key Buy" sign on
our shelves. It's your sign
that there are savings
over and beyond -
our everyday low
discount prices on
that item.
Canned BC Packaged
!HAl\VEST DAY ~~~~~~59
...
.~
,.
...
•(t
·:;
,. ...
•(• ,, .. ,.
11•
•ti
'
' .. ~~ri •• t
I
I t •
•
Ult 31 ttn
trl m d 1round
r . ak
1arUc tall and ~· per ball d • pit• pocktl brtld, or 1mall Prencb or
ltaUanrall
1 ounce auce ol reta
chftM
l tableapoon
tutee lb lt.HU. Un!Que. chopped fre1b paral•Y
Tana J.t mild. tori of <orfr•hmint>
t1. crumblJ but Udn 1Uce of onion
creamy. So ricb·tutlnl •. <oi>tlonal> tn flK't. tbat every .,. tk Sba.pe meat lnto a flat
w l ca ftl t.b• patt.)' tnd cook qulckly
c count. "It mu.st under broller or over
co•l•'I. h1rnin1 once C1boUla ~ raroJnslde).
:1r•Ulllll With 1< and P•P·
per.
e while, c:rlap the
bre d ln a bot oven or
toa1t over\. Jf uaJna a roni cut lt tn half, then pul out and discard
dousby center <cuts
ealorlet!). Pur the
cooked hambur1er. cheeae, par1ley and
onion fn the pita pocket
half er roll and aervo lm·
mediate!~. Servea one.
about 2"15 calories.
• IS
•EAt· IZB~~K& CJIEr8
for uch &ervln :
2 CUPI 1hredd
lettvce
• or 5 small black ollves.eUCild 1 amf.l) rjpe ton.ato,
quartend
2 hard·coote4 J,ai1,
quartered
l ounce feta c:h.se,
diced ·
l tablespoon
chopped fresh panleY.
2 t-blespoons oyve
j ulco (from cann•d
oUvet>
1 teupc>on oU v bU
2 tabl••Poon1
chopped r~ or yeUow
onion
2 tablespoons lemon
Juice or win• vtnei .. r one-half teaspoon ortJaPQ
sarUc ult and pel)\
per
Cut or tear lettuce Jnto
blte-alse pieces ln a lar1e
soup bowl. Arrao1e
olives, tolJ)ato, e111 and
!•ta cubts on top.
..
-..
Sprinkle with parsley.
St.Ir remalnlnt int~•·
dients together ahd paur
over salad. serve Im-
mediately. Servea one,
about 380 calories.
GREEK FETA
COITAGECBEESE
Here's bow to jazz up
a dlet cotta1e chc.iae
plate!
for each serving:
one·halt cup larce
curd low-tat cottage
cheese
1 tablespoon
c pped acallloet5 or red
ocUoa
1 lableapoon
chopped fresh panley
aalt, or 1arUc aalt, ~d pepper to tale Dice the feta cbeeae in·
to pteces about the 1amo
•l• aa the cotta1e
cb"5e. Combine all ID·
1rtdlentl, then mound
9n lettuce. Garnlab with
ripe tomato slices, 1reen
~pper rln11 or other
rJW v91etab1" for a de·
llck>us luncb. Selves one,
WMler 160 calories.
. . '
THE Sl f M
GOURMET
b faltenln1. •• people ----------..-----------":":'"" ___ _;.__ ___________________ ..,... _______________ _
w ite. Others take a
more hopeful view "It
b a liWe bl like cot·
ta1e cheese." Some let·
ter wnt.ers attn 'l sure of
lhe name, callin1 it
.lfGreek Salad Cheese," a
ereace to their first
"'1COCJrn1ter with at One
ader called it "Greek
Fat Cheese." expecting
tbe worst. and another
called it "Greek Fetid
Cbeese · • -a definite dis·
seTvice m view of lta de·
ftclous flavor.
None of the calorie
'2000" Winner
l.
j .... ..,.
___ ,__, Adults Only. -
, . .
uides widely available
ts feta. However, the
deral government, as
rt of· its nutrient in·
f mation update, re-
~tly released a new
k on dairy and egg
ducts, Agriculture,
ndbook 8-1, which
3049 Coast Hwy., Corona Del Mar• 10114 Adams St., Hun~.· Bea~h
does provide data on
ftta. According to the
\J-:-S. Dept. of Agri· f ulture, feta cheese
1s 75 calories an ounce -
'more fattening than cot·
\age cheese (24 per
ounce). but a lot less
then cheddar (114 per
tc>unce,) Feta cheese ls 20
1per cent fat, mostly
saturated, and otrers
:rour grams protein per
.ounce. Whal this means
is that if you can have
'cheese, feta "is better
\!lan most.
t.:• FETACHEESE OMELET
for each serving: '
! , 2 eggs, lightly beaten
2 tablespoons skim
milk
I ounce feta cheese,
cubed or crumbled
salt and pepper to
taste • -chopped parsley (op-
tional) .
pinch or onion or
garlic powder (optional)
Lightly beat eggs and
milk. Spray a small non-
stick omelet pan witb
cooking spray for no-fat
~ing, or wipe lightly
'*'ilh salad oil on a paper
~el. ·Heal pan over
oderate flame. Add
aten egg mixture.
eke pan lightly. and
Uy lift the eggs with a
ber spatula to allow
cooked portion to run
(lemeath. When egg is
. top with cheese and
asonings. Fold over.
Tum off the heat. Leave
the folded omelet in the
skillet one minute, cov-
ered with a plate. <Thia
will heat the serving
plate and warm the
cheese.> Makes one serv·
ing, about 260 calories.
• ~liced ripe tomatoes,
t diced cucumbers
pped with yo1urt
uld make a nice aalad
side dish for this omelet.
LOW CHOLESTEROL
egc substitute may be.
used in place of U,e eus;
c>e serving would be un· *r 300 calories.
FETA
tllEESEBURGEBS
for eae!h servinc:
3 ounces fat·
~aked -
PEAllPI E
4541 Campus Dr., Irvine
Janet Lee Charcoal
' I I •
From C1
• • .Adven ists
RH Ret1er uplalned.
"Then tht're would be a aWdy ot the doctri which ar• uni·
quely v lh·day Adv nUaL Part ol that '11fould takin1 care ol
tbebody."
Not all c hurch membtrt and convttta accept the
\t etanan.lam pbJIOl()plb', lht mlnlai.r added. Ht tatlmat11 that
70 petttnl of hi• tonJre11tlon la In reated or w~ticln1 lt
Th member. txcban1• reclpe1 and ln lar1er chu~hes at·
tend coolun11chool1 taucht by profe11lonal d1-1tiana
Tilt: REV. RIEGER aald antereat ln lb•'ft1etartan diet 11 ln-
crusini. particularly amoni the youn1. ~ churches ln farm
and ranch area!>, iiuch as Texas and the Datt~as, are cllnclna to
\.hear tradataonal mtat dletl.
"Convert.a" to the vqetanan re11me "'ually are first at-
tracted b> the fact that it is tauebt aa a P-1 of lhe CbriaUan
mess,.ge, the Rev R1e1er noled.
But other "selhng" lS done by choe>qt1 someone who
repr~enb 1t well as a salesperson
This mi1ht be a penon who 1s "SS and 1
bu a &lint m the eye and ta vivacious,," the p
Ht has followed the Adventist diet ainat
high school and says he bas erUoYed good be
His diet includes a lot of fruit, nuts and , tossed rreen
salads and dairy products He eats meat qt rare occasions,
such as wben he goes out to dlnner and it w~d be awkward to
dt'chne, or when nothing elsel.5 available.
A typat:aJ breakfast in tbe Rie1er house$today ls wbol•
gram breakfast cereal with milk, sunflowers and fruit.
He and his wife often eat their bicsest mea at. lunch time and
this might include squash with cheese, beans, ce, tomatoes and
cottage cheese
"Al dinner we take it a little light," he sai4 "We sometimes
will eat just fruit and toast.'·
They try to use as many unpr*s~ed f s as possible because ''the more they are processed be mo food value they
lose "
The Rieger~ also a bstain from tea nd co e because "caf.
feine is a stimulant it makes yours em be e the enern you
really have. You have lo draw on your reserves.
Their dinner guests are served a high-quality fruit juice, as a
mealtime beverage, he said.
Not even a social glass of wine 1s ~red in ttaeir home either.
' We bc>lteve that with every bat of alc.taol you're destroying the
grey <'ells of your brain," the Rev Rieger explailed
I
HE SELDOM TAKES a pill either unless it is an emeriency
and absolutely essential For a he~che, the pastor recom.
mends "a good walk, a hot or cold sbo r or some recreation."
Some church members, such ~tlen Excell, llke the
vegetarian way of life because it s· pUfies cooking tremen-
doilsly.
While she is whipping up a quick~ or Jacob's Pottage (len-
tils with brown rice and onions), o er cooks are defrosting
roasts, struggling with mashed potat and gravy and cleaning
lots of dirty pans.
Her three teenage children are ve*tarians and she became
<'Onvinced after reading "statistics on ctws that h8'1le leukemi-."
lier family enjoys whole-grain br$d, almonds <she buys a
30-pound sa<'k every year), sunflower~ds, lentils, beans and
tossc-<I gret'n salads
Shi' onct' :;erved her famous pott ge ·which is eaten with
gret•n salad on top, to some of her teena children's friends.
"They thought they were in heaven. she said with a laugh.
From C t ,
.. Wheel· ~eals
chicken. something soft. I try to
thank of things almost anyone
can eat anci use my microwave
oven for quick cooking," she
says.
Author Ruth H il burn of
Newport Beach. whose cookbook
"They Laughed When I walked
into the Kitchen" focuses on the
preparalion o f economical
meals. is another volunteer in the
home meals program
''I make my own old-fashioned
vegetable soup and corn bread
ahead of time and cover the jars
with foil. Usually I only have
about an hour to prepare a meal,
so l prepare something simple, ..
she says·
ALONG WITH SOUP and
bread, Mrs Hilburn sends
cooked, dried apricots. She has
delivered lo as many as nine
homes in one day
She ha.'> made some lasbng
friends over the years "I love to
do it, and as far as I'm con·
cerned. there's no cost
"More than anything some of
these people JUSt need someone
to hold their hand."
Costa Mesa's Ann McBride
says she delivers about 12 din-
ners a year and tr ys to take
things that are easy to carry. She
says her Frozen Orange Salad Is
a handy recipe, easy to take out
of the freezer and cut into pieoos.
''I make mY own vegetable
, beef stew," says another Costa
Mesan Irene Rippitoe. "It's easy
for old people to eat and contains
almost every vegetable you can
think of, beef and beer stock."
For a look at how Ruth Hilburn
and Ann McBride prepare easy
to make items ahead of lime, we
present their recipes for a
nulrillous meal:
dientand simmer another hour
Add ter, as needed.
Ba y may be used instead of
rice, 1r if you prefer potatoes,
usettato. M four servings for two
com emeals.
;JOT~RN BREAD t cup stone eround meal,
white ~ellow up flour
aspoons baking pawder
aspoonsalt
slightly rounded tap.
sugar t tor 2 eggs, depending ·on
size f"
hcupsmilk
:lablespoons oil
•argartne ~Uy, etc
Prett-t oven to 4SO deerees.
Greas«f>ans thorouebly
Max 'lry ingredients in one
bowl, in another. Beat wet
mixtur ·th an egg beater, add
to dry gredients and blend
quickly ilh a spoon. Pour Into
tle less than half full.
about 20 minutes or
from oven for five
then. with ~ tleJp
'p bread over. Return
ive minutes.
OltANGE SAIAP hp lemon 1elatin
•
RIB EYE FOSTER OR ZACKY FARMS
BOMEl..ESS FRYING CHICKEN
SPERIER LEIS &
I STMKS TH•HS
_rtlJ_,·. _2_7_!__... 7::19~
DUBU9UEROYALBUFFET
·BEEF .
FRARKS
1u: ''C PGk. EACH
I I'' '°' TEMDIRIJ.ED 13.tbs. .. FRYING BREA~T u . BEEF CUBE STEAKS
NISH
GROUND
BEEF
IZOZ.
CAMS
FUHCHONIOM
GAIUC IWE
sr11.-..a.o -sru#ID; 1 oz. JA•
MANX THlOWH •
· ~IYIOTC ...
COIHD
IHF
l ••
I I)• ...
'W •
3,C OSCAltMAYER . 12oz.. a•c
EA. ttNlt'SAUSAGE .~
ut Up
hose
eets
BMf Loin-T1il A91noved
Porbltlouse
Steak
Honolulu. san Dleco and
Olkland.N.J.Bythe d
of tbe year, Vector bopu
to have cable programs in Francuco, San
J(>le, Lene Beach, Hunt-ln~ h, Schenec-
t ad).', N.Y .• and
PaslMlena. Tua •
Al' wttb lee cream, the
piJce dlfferentl~ls fo'f.' meat and produce can be
atartlln•· Meat prices
commonly vary by 10
cen~ a PQUnd or more,
aaya Smith, with produce
))rices almost as widely
acatterod. Canned aoOds
vary tile le ~taY•• but there CJQ bO a
$2S dltf erence ween muketa oo tho total
price tab·for a ~Uem
list.
Vector: Enterpn1es,
w~ch does consumer
consulUng wort 4q. addi-
tion to its price autdes and newsletter, now
employs 2S people to fer·
ret out itema of use to consumers. And in case
there's any llngertnc
doubt in your mind as to
Vector's motiv , ~·· Smith again, describin
low bis staff uncove
IUCb wormaUon.
"It's amadni wba
you can pick up from
trade publications Tb ere 'll b4' some ex
ecutl e in Supermarke News, for example
who'll. live a speech say. Ina bow they can rip oft the pui.uc mor~ ex-
pedieiiUy. But they figure
no ODO is reading these
thlngS except people in
the business.''
,_..,,..Plafn Hlmbuf9«
HatDog ...
pkg.
oft
.........
Oles Mayer;
Fnliks
II
Pantry Fillers
:.-:: .69
loz. 49 Cell 8
12o&. 95 -.
1!:.99
,~ ... 95
~r:.79
~.89
4;.: 111
'::.Z. 1"
Medium Siu
Rad PUiis
=-· ': .29
ldFallklned
. hatf II pL ctn.
Dr .. Smith .
says stores
keep costs:
down ..
lb.
II
_,
(
I I I l
I • I I
J
Super Produce
.............
Purple~
L.lfv9,Cr .. O-BelJ Peppers
S...Cllll.notr,.._
Honeydew Melons
'-"Crl'I> Cumnbers
Super Floral
Super Deli
Frozen Foods
15 ...
'::' • 1fll'
.... 15 ,.,,
'I!) j
.._..898 nut
..,.· 321 '·"'
• t I
• • l
12v. 69· ,... . '" ,.... 49 "~ ctn. • , i ') },
• ··1') ... 95 Jl1! •
.-... 11~
111'::!'}'~
'::' !II , '•
1::-1••
".... 59 <;tl''l l ca. • .
'•1
3 1 •.. 11 = -)('' (r .,
tt-. '.Alr,1':11' ca.~, .... ~
i:t·.851tr
, ... , ..... 'I: .... . .
,.!)fq
I -
I I ,
' t
Egg Dish is a little Bit .Stuffy
Pate stuffed eggs.
1f you are not plannlnt to travel to another
country lD pertoll WI 1ummer. by not tout via
culalnt?
And what better way to •~le the culinary.
dell..,tathUwltbfrieftdl?
The po11lbWtle1 ar• .ndt .. and tbe final re--
aulL ·Just mltbt be fonnlQc your own aourmet
• 'travetln1 club.
Tbeftrtt 0 nt1bt plan" mlabtlnclude a atop at
a country where a friend hu Just vacaUoned or
where )'OU dream of vltltbJI t0meday yourself.
Eatabliab a "tour autde0 for each 1et-
to1etber. LeUhebostcbooeethevacaUooapot. To
en.aW'e 1ome real travellni why not plan the oc-
caalon.s as pro1renlve dinners with the bo,,tguid-
ina tho tour and aelectlna the menu?
For a Spanllh adventure. we suicest Pate
Stutrecl Eua and SpanlaJi Beans and Sausaae for
snacks and Cabbaie Twlat and Arroia a la
Espanola for main counie dishes.
PATE STtJPFED EGGS
U hard·cooked •Hs
1 pack.aae (8 ounces> braunschweiger
liveraausaje
14 cup cbopped sweet pickle
'4 cup dry whi~ wine CrbiDe >
3 tablespoom mayonnalae
2 teupoons prepared mustard
Cut eus in len&tbwise halves. Scoop out
yolks and mub; add remaining iqredient.s and
mix well. Stuff egg halves with m.lxWre. Makes
~. SPANISBBEANSANDSAUSAGE
8 ounces (~ package> great northern beans (about 1 lh cups, uncooked)
3 cups cold water
•;, cup olive oil
1 small onion, chopped
"".i medium green pepper, chopped
2 cloves garlic. finely chopped
1 bay leaf
1 teaspoon salt
11, teaspoon ground pepper
1 package (12 ounces) smokie links. cut
into bite-size pieces
l large tomato, peeled and chopped
Rinse beans. Combine beans and water in
heavy pot or Dutch oven. Bring to boll; boil 2
minutes. Remove from beat and let stand 1 hour •
or overnight.
In skillet. beat olive oil. Add onion. green
pepper and garlic; cook unW tender. Add onion
mixture, bay leaf. salt •nd pepper to undrained
beans.
• End of Summer Fun
LEMON FROST
1 cup cold buttermilk
l cup ice milk
112 cup cold milk
1.r.i cup frozen
lemonade concentrate,
undiluted
"Measure all ingre-
dients into pitcher or
blender container. Mix
until smooth. Makes 4 servings.
CJULLED P(J'ATO
AVOCADO~UP
1 mediu ripe
avocado, pee d and
chunked
1 a cup sour
2 teaspoon
juice
3 drops liqu· pepper
sauce
l t e a
W orcestershlre
1 recipe
TOMATOTANG Vichyssoise (a
SALAD DRESSING 1pe >
2 cups cold but-Place avoca
lermilk cream, lemon j
1 can (6 ounces> uid pepper sa
lom)lto paste Worcestershire uce in
2 teaspoons lemon blender containe Blend
juice until smooth. A l re·
CREAMY LOW·CAL
DRESSING
2 cups cottage
cheese
1 cup cold buttermilk
1 tablespoon red
wine vinegar
2 tablespoons
chopped parsley
l teaspoon seasoned
salt
Measure cottage
cheese into small mixing
bowl or blender con-
tain er. Blend until
smooth. Add remaining
ingredients. Blend to
combine. Pour over
tossed vegetable Salada.
Makes J1A cups .. •, cup r in el y cipeSpeedyVic soise.
chopped green pepper Blend to combinefdakes ---------
1 tablespoon finely r--6_s_e_l'Vlllg_· ..;;:;<..s_. --------------chopped onion
Salt
Pepper
Measure buttermilk
and tomato paste into
small mixing bowl. Mix
well. Stir in lemon juice.
green pepper, onion, salt
and pepper to taste.
Serve over tossed
vegetable salads. Makes 3 cups.
SPEEDY
VICHY5.501SE
1 can (10 ounces>
frozen potato soup
1 ~ cups cold but-
termilk 1----~~---11-----...,..,.------•~
Place soup and but·
termilk in bl~der con-
tainer. Blend until
smooth. Add garlic and
onion salt lo taste. Serve
cold garnished wltb
chopped chives Makes 4
servings.
MINTED APPLE FLIP
2 cups cold but-
termilk .
2 cups cold ap-
plesauce
l medium banana.
sliced
2 to 4 drops mint
navor
Duh salt
Measure all insr•·
,, dients into blender con· r tainer. Blend untll
smooth. Makes 4 serv-ings.
Brint to boll: simmer covered, 1to1 ~ hours
or unW tender, atlrrinc/ent.ty and occasionally. Add smokle l1Dh an tomato; almmer un·
covered 15 Jnlnutee. Makes abouU C'U.PI·
For appetiser -serve in tureen With amatl
Jaclle. Gueits 1uve themtelves oin small plates.
Mak4!S as •ervin••· CABBAGE TWIST
'4 cu9 olive oU
2 tablespoons chopped onle>Q .
2 cloves tarllc, llnely chopped
1 medium bead (about 2 J)OUDds) cab-
bage, thinly sliced
1 ~teaspoons salt l packaee (1 pound) wlenera. dlagoaally into tb&da
4 servlnp hot mashed potatoes
l c:an (8 ounces> tosnato sauce Spanfab olives
In large 1aucepot or Dutch oven beat olive
oil. Add onion and iarlic; cook until tender. Add
cabba,ce and salt; cook and stir over medium
heat tmW tender-crisp.
Presa cooked cabbage into •-cup rlq mold. Cover to keep warm.
Jn same saucepot heat wieners until licbtly
browned. Invert cabbage ring onto, large serviq
platter. Arrange wieners and potatoes around
ring. Heat tomato sauce; pour into small bowl
that fits in center of ring. Makes 4.S servings.
AltllOZA A IA aPANOLA
14 cup ,plus 2-tablespoons olive oil
l clov~ garlic, finely chopped
l ~ cups parboiled rice, uncooked
3 cupes water
1 teaspoon salt
1 package (6 ounces) Canadian bacon
6eggs
lean (8ounces)tomatoaauce
Parsley
In large paella pan or skillet boat 14 cup olive
oil and garlic. Stir in rice, water and salt; heat to
boil. Reduce beat; simmer uncovered 20 minutes
. until rice Is tender and water is absorbed (do not
stir). '
In large skillet. beat Canadian bacon ln one
tablespoon of olive oU. Remove bacon and ar·
range on cooked rice in paella pan. Add remain·
ing olive oil to skillet and fry eggs. In small
saucepan beat tomato sauce.
Top bacon with fried eggs. spoon tomato
sauce over eggs and rice . .Garniab wi1b parsley.
Mates 6 servings. '
a sandwich,. ,
a salad or atr
~
a banquet! I ,
A gourmet will tell you "what goes"
in a real Thuringer sausage. Strictly the
finest meats and spices •• : that's what ~
makes this Teutonic tempter so dehdous. ~
... Here's a tangy blend of pure beef and r
spices, hickory smok'ed and cured naturally
for extra flavor. Just slice and serve
for party-time or sandwlch-tlftle:
look tor tlte little Scttfrmer'a Sauur• Mafcer ~~~ on the p1d111• In your martet.
~Schlrnitn®
the Sociable Sausage
· Av11lUfe In the Dell sedloa of:
ALPHA BET A MARKETS
•' • t
• ti
FUNKYWINKERBEAN
'•
!'M REAU.I,) uP116ITT
ASOUT GOtt.lG 10
sc.oooL 100A9 ,~K !
WHAT IF1J.IERE'5
1'ROU8L.£~
r---------. OOtJ'l' OXIRR<-f,.Jt»JE&x:i !
HEQ SAID 1fiE:4 ()()N'T
ANTIC.I PATE. ~
PROBLEM~;...../ __
TANK McNAMARA
~'~ PlA~ Al.VAY~ ta'AAI
A8XJf ~ LOCATa..l
OF~t.JI~~
NoW, TMSN •• iHE
l w1s..i You1t> Fl)( BUJf PRINT S,..'IS
iHIS LEAt'YF,AUCST. . iHE VALVE STEM
INT,AkE IS ...
TODAY'S CIGSSIDID PUIZLI
ACROSS 45 Ory
-46 Actor
KrUOtr
48 Leas steady
52 Flr•flghtlng untt:2woraa
58 Freetrom liquid .
'67 Greekusem·
bly
58 Cflett IOll'td
UNITED Feature Syndicate
Tuesday Puzzle Solved:
p 0 s t RU N E S II " p .S
0 c E E E R ) E s 0 u l
T ill A N s v E R S E p 0 l 0
S E T T E E • T E N I 0 E A
"A T H s . T R I
iOIS lt •'t T ~TR E N IJ s
A S T u R'Wii II l 0 t IA
v £ R y
I R E•
S E T T
t 0
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IA N T S
I N t E R E S T I N '
0 S T ~:. llCN E
E R.N ll •50YS
't'A l 0 • SA
P A
0 v
R 0
IT R
"• 'A S T l II
ER E X t t T E
S I H 0 II A I.
IE All 11 t l 1L
44 Stretch tight
45 Bedding lrt•
lclea 4 7 Part of the
•
by Tom Batiuk
by Jeff Millar and Bill Hinds ·
NOW 1He~e 's
A CRY ANY
SHRINK woui...P
ReSPOl-.IP
10!
MOTLEY'S CREW
VfAH, DOt,1.Y, rr WOUL.O
:fAl<ES A REM. OtSA61eR
1'0 GG'f ME. DRlNKIN' . KE~ .AGAIN /!
-----
l'M WOAAIEt:>iHAT I
Ml6HT 6ROW VP TO SE
A DITCH DIG6ER ...
by Roger Bradfield
.bY George Lemont
HOL..P ON! .:X::'L-L.. ee RE:APY FOR YOU IN A
MOMeNl'.1
l
I I .
4
<
' t
'•
tr
1.75
Liter
TOWNHOUSE
PORK&·.
BEANS
Heat and Serve
c
More. Great Safeway Savings!
Pllg, ftftC
o1300 ;iv~
USDA Choice Beef,
Full Center Cut
Bone-In
.
Ideal T.o
Serve Ala
Model
I
· LUCERNE
LARGE ·
·AA' EGGS
Safeway, Fresh
All Safeways OPEN
Monday,
Labor Day
For, ........
CoiMnilncl.
All SlfewlJI ..
Operi at I A.M.
Monday tlw Saturday
lYPt OT 11 1117
Foolin' AroUnd, Nearly Drowned
. ' • tho ~·mOWlnf. Wby? Beeau.. tblnkl ~
1 ould ~ the need and do 1' Mthout beln1 asked.
Mother ~Uov• Fath r should aUJp tbe tuk to
.
..
BUii ...... ee.
91.aNd foOl.Ut' around.
Son, u do1 a out duUes to daqbtera. Son sees
QO lion 'between havtna a cu to drive, free
• • . drowoecl. l tMt.tad
&H, allowance, room, board, clothina and love -
IUld doin& the lawo-mowlne and snow-ahovelin& for'
hi1 on·th•feet-all-day father. Son's total conlribu·
Uon 11 oecasJOIW traab-bwntng.
CONFIDENTIAL to Settle Thia Areument So
We Can Decide How To Go: Go any way you want to
but here are the facts: Statistically speakiQc, yov are much rsa!er in the air than on the highway. Ia
1976. the U.S. commercial airllnes flew a record 2.S
billion miles and carried over 220 million
passengers. It was the safest year in history with
the fewest accidents and least number of fatalities.
I'll make love ln bod.
-810 DADD\' FROM AlABAMA
O£A& DADDY: Ok. Y• wla. lleep JOU ...... ...,.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Thia is the atory of
boJ',.lnOW, and srau. Tbe boy 1111. athleUc, a biCb achool bonor student. Father woru 10 bou.ra a day
and 101De weekeods. Mother allo woru.
I was reliewd wbeo the soowy winter ended
and I no lon1er had to wateh Father do all the
sboveliJll. Now. •videatly Father it &oin& to do all
Plea.o, Ann, SJ>4talt to this Yount man and say
what his rarents aro not able to. He will understand
1C you tel hlm, and be will respeet himself more in
10 years. He does not mean to be thoughtless or
aelflah, and be will soon expect some help with col-
le1e expenses from the very parents be does not
give help to now.
ls l8 too Youn& to expect a person to beat bis dad
t.o the ~wnmower if he is not asked? Maybe your
words tC? the parents might help, too. I have a feel-
.
Are your parents too strict? Hard to reaeb? Ano
Landers' booklet, "Bugged by Parents? How to Get
More Freedom," could help you bridle the eenera·
tion gap. Send 50 cents in coin with YQW' request and
a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to Ann
Landers, P .O. Box 11995, Chicago, ID. 6061L
Do You Call HiiTI Mid-Husband?
By DAN HALL
NEW HA VEN (AP> -
John Collins ls a male
midwife who says his
biggest problem is that
peopte don't know wbat
to callbim.
_ "I get 'mid-hubby' and
'nurse man.' One day I
could hear one or my pa-
tients coming down the
hallway asking, 'Where
is my? ... where's?
... John?'"
The bearded Collins is
one of the first men in the
United States to become a certified nurse-
midwife.
Since he broke the ice
four years ago, fewer
than a dozen men have
followed him into the
world of about 3,000
female midwives, so h&
expects to remain a bit or
an oddity.
Collins, 35, entered the
Yale School of Nursing
master's program in
1970 "ignorant of how
much pioneering I'd be
doing."
Today he sees himself
,as a small but important
part of a health-care
.. ~evolution. He considers
• the small band of men a
"minority group" but
that doesn't mean a male-
midwife can't be suc-
cessful, he said in an in-
terview.
"When the patient first
blinks and says .
'YOU'RE a midwife?' it
actually gives us
something to begin talk-
ing about. I doo 't know
about you, but I don't
want to have someone
give me a physical exam
until I know him better,"
be said.
Midwives who have
had children may have a
special basis for their pa-
tient relationship, but
Collins insists that he. . .
does, Loo, because he
"won't be tempted to tell
a patient I did this or that
differently when I was
Preenant."
Since the nurse-
midwife tries to minister
to the whole family, not
just the mother, being a man can be a plus.
"It really doesn't mat-
ter whet.her it's a man or
woman providing the
care as long as they
follow the principles or
nurse-midwifery," he
said.
After breaking away
from the tradition of-
m idwi ves helping
women give birth when
no other aid was availa-
ble, today's college-
traJned midwife is gain-
ing popularity among
women with un -
complicated pregnan·
cies who want a closer
relationship with their
medical adviser, be said.
"There are a lot of sick
people," . he noted, and
they take much of the
typical obstetrician's
time. "We're geared to
health. not to illness."
The nurse-midwife
learns the trouble signs
during the two-year
training period and will
refer a patient to a
specialist if necessary,
be said-.
CollinS was with his
wife, Judy, when she de-
livered their ~on. John,
almost four years ago
but be said he couldn't
imagine attending her as .
midwife .. Their second I
child is due in Nov-•
ember, but she is under a
doctor's care because of
possible complications in
the birth, be said.
John Collins
is one of "
first men to
become a
midwife.
DENNIS IOSEME
410 West Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach
645-6470
Sagittarius ·in for Romance
"See me for ear
home, life, health
and busiaea
insurance." THURSDAY
SEPl'EMBER 1
By SYDNEY OM ARR
ARIES (March 21-
April 19): Go in new
direction. Get financial
agreement in writing.
You find love. You re·
discover what is impor-
tant. Accent on being at
right place at right time.
TAURUS (April 20-
May 20): Issues could be
clouded. Key is to seek
counsel from one ex·
perienced in mone7,
home, property affairs.
Emphasis on hospitals,
institutions, special
clubs. grolips, organiu-
tions.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20): Friendship, ac-
celeratiOG of social ac·
tivities -these are in-
dicated. Romance, creativity~ travel,
marvelous ooptaets
could all bean t-.i durini
this meaningful period.
CANCER (June 21 ·
July 22): Direct ap.
proach, steady pace aids
Calendar
ln achieving goal. You're
asked to review and re·
viae. Do so with un-
derstanding that original
imprint will not be
erased.
LEO (J'ulj 23-Aug. 22):
Key is expression, move.-
m ent, meeting people,
giving feelings a chance
to give and receive affec-
tion. Young persons play
paramount roles.
with yOQDg persons or ff . . 0 ~fl.1rcoBN <Dec.
22-Jan. 19): Solid in·
formation available -
one in authority can be
convinced to give you
ereen light. Insist on
specific data. Promises
make for conversation.
AQUARIUS (Jan.
20-Feb. 18): Relative
confides ·•ioonuwn1!ntal
problem." Key 1s to keep
perspective -and sense
of humor. Be versatile,
understand that repUt•·
ti on will stand up.
PISCES (Feb . 19·
March20): Emphasis on
values, reviewing con-
tract, getting proper re-
turn on investment.; In
persooa1 lite, me~bel' of
opposite ·sex sings siren
song. ll you want in-tJ'ieue, dance1o the tune.
If AU&d& 311& b your b~, you are com-
pleting major project,
g~ new perspective
o~ g~. w}\ere you are,
whtre >"0U1~8 IOing -
and ~ ol your be·
ing,
""" , ... A
INSOUANCI •
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. ~~~~~~~~~~~---....... ~_-.;.:..::J~,__..;...;...:;.:::=:;.._;;..:..;;..._~~~~~~~-...:;.;~~,__~!>J
22): Money, luxury
items, art objects, pleas-
ing family members -
these are spotlighted.
One close to you wants
reassurance, needs addi-·
tiooal security.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct.
22): Lie low. go slow,
plan, make contacts.
plant seeds -legal mat-
te rs resolved after
money situation is ex-
aminecJ in calm. cool manner.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-
Nov. Zl): Get house in
order. Organize, accept
responsibillty -know that ·a relationship is
becoming ••mean-tnifw.'• Get basic issues
u.nder control. ..
SAGm'AB.IUS (Noy.
22-Dec. 21): ·You learn
where you stand with
special situation -and
f erson. Accent on
romance. ·ereatlve ell· ,
Introducing "Paf;' ,.
deavora,~fieeot c~. tatiOCW -,i~-.....-....-.. ..... ..._....,,....,~~--....;-..-.. ..... ~1
•
See why so many residents In Costa Mesa
are having all theJr .
dental care.performed by Dr. Alan MIDer.
Family Dentist.
Dr. Alan Miller
2979 Fairview
Costa Mesa, 979-3970
All Our Stores Are
Celebrat' the n-..: ·~ ... ~~ng of Our Newest St0re in
San Bernardino Wdtl a. .•
I
Lynne Williams, director
of CBS' reading program.
j Using Television
1-To Learn to. Read J . ~ ,
•
,.
.
I
~ __ , .
I ~
i
f
I
I
~
' )
81' MIKE GOODIUND
LOS ANGELE.5 (AP) -Come
fall, school children in some
cities will be watching television
as part of their homework.
The idea: To use their passion
for television to improve both
their interest and skills in read·
ing.
The method: Give them TV
scripts to read along with the
shows. ,
Philadelphia schools have used
a televiaion readi11,1 program for
seven years. Variations of that
program were tded last March in
Los Angeles. St. Louis and
Boston.
This year. school systems from
coast to coast are looking into the
idea.
Results sometimes have been
bittersweet. Lynne Williams,
CBS' newly appointed director of
television readin1 programs.
said one student looked at a
television show unfoldinl and
then pointed to the script -"I
can't read tbJs, bull want to."
But most are exciting. Dr.
Robert Mauller, a Los Anieles
school district oCCicial, said he
asked a high school student l! he
had read drama before reading the TV script. " •yes, but thia
feels like It's so real.' The visual
effect made it come alive for
him.'' says Mauller.
Mauller and other school or.
flciala report that school library
checkouts soared as much·
• as 50 percent right a(ter kids
w atcbed shows with scripts.
"For thole who aren't reading
well it provides motivaUoa. For
those who are, it has tremendous
creative writing applicaUons. It
goes into scnpt wr1WJf, atuaents
originate dlalogue," says Dr.
Michael McAndrew, director of
television-related programa for
the Phlladelpbla ICbooll.
McAndrew thinks the Idea bas
nationwide potenUal and .. 3,900
school systems from New York
to the Navajo reservation are
looking into it.'.
ABC, CBS and NBC, have pro-
vided acrtpta or excerpts at one
time or another for students, but
now~ lS Pl'Orirotinl the idea on
a larse sCal~ Dwina tbe test
nm. hundreds of t.bou.aanda or
students took part. in BOiton, Los
AnpJes, Phlladelpbia ahd St.
Louis -including homework as-
s l gn men ts• related to the
material.
In Philadelphia and St. Louis,
scripts were published as
newspaper supplements, giving
every0ne a chance to read along.
c~ invited 23 of its largest
network-owned stations) and af.
filiates to New York <sJuly 12 in
the hope of expaodhii the con·
cept to more cities thla year.
Philadelphia's McAndrew
pioneered the concept seven
years ago with what be admits
were scripts "pirated " or
transcribed frotn TV without the
producers' knowledge.
Later, netwo~ks agreed to pro-
vide advance scripts for such TV
specials as "Eleanor and
Franklin," an ABC historical
drama about the family of Prest·
dent Franklin D. Roosevelt.
During the four-clty trial lut
March, Lynne Gra.sz or CBS-
owned KMOX·TV in St. Louis,
said a telephone survey during
the telecast of the "Circle or
Children" special disclosed that
23 percento(the total vlewinl au-
dience in an estimated 43,240
hoaaes was readine the script
wbne watching the program
about autlsUc children.
The show, she said, was the
most·watcbed program in its
timeslot.
The script was mass distribut-
ed after the Monsanato Fund
shelled out $20,000 to print a
special supplement published in
a St. Laub newspaper two days
before thi show and distributed
to 100,000 pupils in area blgb
scboOls and some elementary
classrooms.
In Los Angeles, the Sparkletts
Drinking Water Corp. paid to
have the "Circle" sc.rlpt
published ln a pamphlet handed
out to 60,000• students from
elemetitary to community col·
legelevel.
In Boston, tbe Herald
American printed a supplement
which wu given to 15,000 atu·
dents. · • Ia ftllldelphla, a l))eclil dell·
inl ~ the violence of. ,pro-"'
feaaioiial sport.a. •'Tho Deadlltlt r
Sea80b.'' WU usediD March. Tb•
Pbllidelpbla Bulletin published
tbe lciipt. with extra copies for
scboOI c:Uitributlon.
By LOUISE COO
Auoclated Prna Writer
The· art of schQOl 11 approaching
and parents Wit.I\ younpten abOut
to attend class tor the lJrst time
should start now to make sure that
the big event aoes smooth!)'.
The Office Of Child Development
of the Department of Health, Educ a·
Uon and Welfare has a guide for
parents, prepared by Luleen S. An·
derson, coordinator of psychological
services and elementary guidance
for the Quincy, Mass., public
schools.
The pamphlet, .. When a Child
Begins School," is available. at no charge, from the Consumer. In·
formation Center, Dept. 635E,
Pueblo, Colo .• 81009.
Here, meanwhile, are some sug.
gested dos and don'ts:
-Don't make the beginning of
school a topic of daily conversation.
Treat going to school as something
that happens in the normal course of
events -something that is expected
and natural.
-Don't allow older children to
frighten or tease the younger ones
with horror stories about school.
Talk to ·older children and make
them partners in the effort to help
younger brothers and sisters adapt
easily and without fear.
.
-Do answer all questions honest·
ly. You can help ease a child's uncer-
tainty by telling him how long the
school year lasts, how many hours
he will be away from hoUle each day
and how he will get to and from
class. If you try to reassure the child
by lying-telling him it won't last
very long, for example -he will on·
ly be more upset when he learns the
truth: ·
-If both parents will be working,
arrange for before and after sc.hool
care and make sure the child knows
exactly what the setup is. Again,
knowing the details of what's ahead
makes a child feel more secure.
-Do see if your school system
runs orientation sessions for parents
and first-time pupils to f amillarlze
the youngsters with staff members
and physical f actuties.
-Don't give the imJlf'ession that
the child has a choice about going to
school. If your youngster announces,
leatli~r tops.
majoring in bottoms.
15.99 at Leeds
AS SEEN IN serenteen
AUGUST ISSUE
uet31, 1971 OM. Y Pl.OT C 8
"T~ can't mi.ke me go to scbool:•
reai>Orid call111y, but llrrnty. Let the
cbild_kDOw you understand his COO·
cem, but take a positive attitude:
You believe he can ba.i:idle the 1ltua·
ti on.
-Do let the child !mow ¥9U sup· port him and understand the effort
he's making. Give the Child some
control over the situation. Ask wblch
clothes he wowd like to wear on the
first day of school. Or what he'd like
in his lunch box.
-Do make transportation plans
clear. Uthe child is going to walk. go
over the rou~ once or twice before
classes begin or ~ccompany.hlm to
and from school for the flrat few
days. Check to see if there are other
neighborhood children with whom
he can walk. If the child will be
picked up by bus, point out the kind
of bus he'll be using. if possible, take
a bus ride before the first day of
school.
-Don't drag out farewella by
walking into the class.room and
standing around while the child Jets
seated. This may lead to tears which
gets the child off on the wrong foot
and can prompt teasing by other
children. Say goodby at home or in
the school yard. If you are taking the
child to the bus, let him board by
himself.
Because their bottoms
are tops. everybody's into our
tan ties in leather and split suede.
-.. We're big action on all the
·back-to-school looks. Boots to
athletics to fun heels. we hav~ it!
Incl uding socks. 1.29 to 1.99.
Heinz Relish • • • 39c
B\.l11tt, Hot Doc. Sweet, lndia-91• oz
Bu~er Buns • • • 33c !i Ill MCI Springfield-pkg of eight
MustardFIDll'S ••••• 59c
'The bi'.t 24 oz jar lasts and lasts
Miracle Whip •• gge
'fhe dressing that's 8 apread! Quart
·Heinz 39c Ketchup ,
The rich, thick slow one! 14 oz '·
Wesson Oil • • • • ggc
The one with "WeSS<m-ahty" 24 oZ. •
Potato Chips := 79c .
Laura Scudder's Reg., B·B·Q or Dip
Pepsi Cola mra • s101
Regular, Diet or Light-12 oz .cans
lte Tea Mix ... 5169
iJpton'11 Lemon Flavored-24 oz jar .. ..
BARBECUE .4,c
'SAUCE
Chritl & Pitt Hot, ~-· Jbckory
14 oz
Snack Crackers 73c
:Your choice of Nabi!Co's varieties ·
FKidney Beans •• 23c
Plump and tender Springfield-No 300 . iee N~pkins . • • 39c
t:.uau colors . . . package of lOQ .
Teri Towels. • • • 55c
~sorted colol'S or decorated
;1cE
· ''(REAM 39c .
• Springfield-all Oavors-half-gallon
Ripe Olives • • • • 49c ·
Lindsay Bxtra Large-Pitted-No 300 .
It '" ti•" la"t lrntidcr,v nf tht Rummf'r .•• mokt 't
mf'ttwrohlt for tltt fnmilv! Plan a patio part_v ••• or
ll l1111bo 11• ·=~···· ... ;
You bow the ..utJ "'*'the D llncbo .. Is bebiild tilHi selecte4
lep-tillder, ~and~
ICClldile to -""' si*ffications! (ntlr eddecl)
Butt Portion ••• s 1 •t
El Rancho's own hamt (at. MdN)
Whole Ham ••••• 511!
El Rancho•s own quality! (Rt• ~
Ham Slices ••••• '21!
Our own ham-Center Cut! (watlr MM)
Cure 81 Ham •• ~. '21!
Hormel's-boneless-whole or half
· fr11h Turk~ l~• .......... .
SPARE $12! RIBS ...
Fresh! Meaty! Lean Eastern pork
Game Hens u oz • • s 13!
Lean! Does not exceed 22% fat U.S.D.A. Grade "A" and 24>ounces big!
Ground Beef ::Ur 512t Sliced Bacon ••• 512t
Does not exceed 15% fat (Clloppe4 Ste• tto) El Rancho's thicker "ranch style"
Ltllfcat of W.A. Cl.lee beef •.• lean
iliil "'*' liid flnorful • . . and natlrilJ aced to nb it a very special
treat! I.oft D Rancho's beef!
Top Sirloin :r .. s2s~
Loin cut-U.S.D.A. Choice f>eef
Chuck Steak •• , &9c.
Sausage ITMJUmu. '14t
Made by our own special recipe!
Bratwurst •••••• s l 4t
Pork. Qur own veal and seasoning.
BOND.£SS ROWD BHF
ROAST
Chuck cut shoulder clodf Choice
..
~~.~ .. ~t~s~.:.;.: :.:~2~ ~
Cooked Shrimp s35,
The right size for shrimp cocktail ~
fR£Slt ,.
Salmon
Liquor Dep 't.
REDUCED $1.00!
R UNCllO'S $ 4 99 !!f!!;! ..... d ••• quart · 1
Cluny's Scotch s14
The ~ aize . . . I. 75 liters
W. d s59t 1n sor ••••••••
Save 90e on Canadian! Quart
=~~~' s21•
Chenin Blanc ot Rhine Reisling
M8Jnum
, ••••••• t000.2999
··········~"
Announ< , Penona!J.
lest & f eund •• , • , . 5050-SM """* & ..... 600M09t
'q .......... Motlce:
All rtal •late advertl.aed
ln lhi. newspaper la aub-
.)«t to tbe Federal r11r
llous101 Act of lNI
'*tue:h makes rt lUe1al to adverttae "any pre·
ference, llm1tatlon, or
discnmmabon based on
A HOMIY Otl A PAD
. . . and you don't n etd lo bt, a
bach~lor. becau1t: Uua 1harp con-
domlnlum in Th4' Bluff• has 3 bdrms
& 2 baths. $117,000. w does that
grab you?
OPel ,,..s. 1-5 JIU
race, color. religion, sex, Dl•lliN ofH..t.or llt•estn.lftt Co. or nallooal oricin, or an
intention to make any !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
such preferenee, limlta· General IOOZIG....... · 1002
tion. or discrimination .• , ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
W ESLEY N
nus newspaper will not
knowingly accept any ~ advertising for r eal TAYLOR CO. !!Slate which is In viola·
lionoflhelaw. _
Houses for Sale flEALTOHS ~i nee UMH
•••••••••••••••••••••••
General 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
•LJSTINGS•
JolM Soar 752-2020
Quail Pl Properties
LUXURY
LIVING
OH llG CYM GOU COURSES 191,500
Fantastic long range view of fairway.
2 Bedrm & den 3 ba Pinehurst model.
Beaut. quality cptng & ilra~s. Lge
patios, closed dbl gar. end unit. Comm
pool, jacuzzi & tennis cts. $18,500 cash
for lease/option moves you in!
3 Huge BR. 3 tile BA, 2111 5Cllt .loa ...... Rood
den. dining room, 2 sty MEWPOl'T CENTEI, M.L 644-49 I 0
~126' open beam ce1l·
ings, tile entry, frplc. wet
bar, laundry room. over·
sized double gar. 3000 sq. GeMrol I 002 Getterol I 002
ft. of very unique living •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
I
"
1URTLHOCI C ...........
Hardly lived in during the last 3
years! 4 t>OOroom townhouse with 2
stories, 2 fireplaces, 2'1'.t baths and
2100 sq. ft. of luscious living! Location
is cl06e to pool and schools. Now va·
cant. $129,000.
U ,_.. l()U I: 1-t()MI:§
REAL TORS~ 676·6000
2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar
also 1n M1~sa Verde, at 546 5990
I Getterol I 002 Gnerol I 002
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .
LUXURY waterfront condo, 2 BR, 21h
ba. Pool, jacuzzi, 24 hr. security.
Brand new: comp. furn. ~.ooo
PENINSULA. 4 BR. 3 ba. home. All
amenities. Lovely area. $195,000
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
FROM $900.000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
34 1 Boy!.1do• 011v~· NB 67S 6161
space. SlS9 ,500 in Corona !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!P Jiel Mar. JAc,~:~,~~LTY Charming 1 Sty ow~!~~~~P~~~~nd ~~!'! .......... !~!~f.::::~!'! .......... !~!~
4 BR + Fam Rm must sell. Best buy In all
Costa Mesa. Sharp 3
Much m demand model, bedrm, 2 bath, family
very popular floor plan, rm, + artist's· studio.
almOlll like-new condi· Many· extras. llurry.
tion. Situated In very de· priced only $74,900. Call
sirable neighborhood. 546-5880
IWFFS
Beautifully expanded
end upgraded 3 bdrm
end unit with night light
view. Th.ls property is
perfect m every detail
From the exquisite tile
entry to the totally re·
modeled kitchen .
Xlnl local.loo near beach
and man y ot h e
amenities. Reasonabl
priced along with good
-~:_.._ HERITAGE
• • REALTORS financing terms. $98,500. ,_ ______ _ 67s-8550
Vt'flol Ill 9 • II S ICJN TO Bl NICI I 546--4141 ~itlHlll
IE SURE TO
SEE THIS ONE!
~
COAT~ & WALLACE
REAL ESTATE. INC.
Great 4 bdrm, nicely de---------
corated fmly home.
Huge all purpose fmly
rm has space for pool la·
ble & frplc. Has btfl
gardens & its priced
nght at. $85,000. 54.5·9491
~ Walker & lee
Real Estate
. , ti-·-HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
CORONA DEL MAR
Oce4n side of hwy.: de·
lightfully charming 2
BR. house + near new 4
BR. apt + 4 car garage.
$185,000!
lalboa lay Prop.
Realtors * 675-7060 *
CORONA DEL MAR
DUPLEX
1..ovely duplex, each unit
having 2 bed.rooms each.
Walk lo beach. Priced to
aell.
~
I l " ~ ii I( I \ I I )
" I I ' ' ~ ·11 \ •• '
~I~ I tus1 H•1 C111n~ dtt 11,.
-
®herbert
hawk ins
REALTORS
'· \ • j ~
PRICE .IUST UDUCID
105 E. Avenida Silva San Gabriel,
San Clemente, $129,900. Custom home
onY.Jacre, 4 bedrooms, 3 bath, 2800 sq. flc Hilly clif£side lot. Ocean view Xlnt
neighborhood. Easy freeway & beach
access. Huge game room w /prof. wet
bar. This is one of a kind.
COUMTRY UVIHG
177 No. Mohler Dr .. Anaheim Hills,
$108,500. Lovely 2 story, 4 bedroom,
2~ baths, family room, sep. dining in
beautiful Anaheim Hills. 1 rear old .
Japanese landscaping, fron & back
s prinklers. Refrigerated air
conditioner w/air purifier, wet bar.
auto energy time saver. Many more
extras. Model 205.
rtEDROOM TIM.EVa
1631 Avenida Selva, Fullerton, $68,000.
Enjoy the quiet & beauty of Sunny
Hills retreat to 3rd level, to master
bedroom pvt dressing room & bath.
Kitchen features dbl oven & indirect
lighting, sep. dining room w/crystal
chandelier, living luxury.
SEA<MIU.S a SIAWl9
8141 Fox Hall Dr. Htmtingtoll Beach,'
$67 ,900. Price just reduced on this 3
bedroom, 11y2 batb, surhlde
townhouse. Homeowner and investor
financing available. Walk to the
beach, schools, and shopping. This is
a 1300 sq. ft. home, double garage and
briclt patio. 963-831~. ·
..
w.dl'l!!d!y. August 31, 1m * DAILY PILOT 8 J
rrs A llG "'UTTU COTTAM ......
The charming appearance of an old
cottage, yet the size and convenience
of a Big Canyon townhome; it's all
b~rts in this 4 bdrm 3000 sq. ft. re-
sidence in Old Corona del Mar: rose-
lin~ walkway, dormer windows, sun-
ny brick patio, two firaplaces and
heavy shakoo roof. Just an evening's
stroll from Inspiration Point. Present-
ed at $23.5,000.
U ,_.. lfJU I: liVMI:§
REAL TORSta: 675-6000
2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar
al.$0 en Mesa Ver.de. at 546 ·5990
JHE ILUFFS
Beautiful Carmelita end unit ; 4
bdrms., 3 full baths, close to schools &
shopping. $162,500 Includes the land.
One year wan-anty. -
IRVIME TERRACE. CclM
Picture the ocean as seen thru
beautiful lush, green foliage and a
stand of stately Pin~. from your
kitchen, living rm. & mstr. bdrm.
Sparkling 3 bdrm., 2 baths, with new
carpeting thruout. 70x100 Ft. lot. All
for just $162,500. This home protected
by American Home Shield Warranty.
673-4400
.,.
DM1IOR of Hcnor '9v.m.-t Co.
~~ .......... !!»!!!~~ .......... !~~
CHAIMIMG CAID&ITA
)St VISTA MADRA 0,.. w-. • 'lllft. •• ,
Beautifully maintained 2300 sq. ft., 4
bdrm., 3 full baths, family home on a
lush greenbelt. Oodles of extra
storage in rare basement area. End
unit, gives more light as well as
privacy. $162,500. And you own the
land!
JUSTUSTEDU
IASTSIDE
COSTAMISA
4 Bdnm., den + pool.
Abaolutely cbarmln• &
1potlesal LaDal, fruit
trees, pool hou1e,
ca.baJia;.thls borne wu
featured In Redhook !!U~no. Prtced at
m3ii3 m.-.Evu.
associated
n" ..:_,,. r "' . '" 1 t. .. , 1" .
.. I ""' I.' • /I
MOMKfY AIOUM»
.. •
your own BANANA -TREE in your
private room.for-a-garden back yard!
The balance of this 5-bdnn., 2 bath ,
family home is, equally UJ)ique from !
its wood. framed brick firet>lace, ,
custom drapes & plush carpeUn& to ~
tht: spacious 20x13 qpstairs bedroom! J Roominess and selectiveness mark '
this fine home! $82,950.
IACI IAY
In Newport Harbor IDgh School Dis-.I
trict, on a CORNER lot With room for 1
cam~r AND boat in your fenced back
yard, you'll find a massive 2-story.
4-bdrm (two huge donn·Size bdrms
upstairs, each with full bath) 3 bath
family home with family room &
formal dining. So MUCH for $115,000.
MIY9-LIVfD.IN
•SPYGLASS•
Designed for the owner for whom
beauty and view are a necassity, this J
home exudes class -from its n
spacious elegant interior to the strik-
ing combination of brick/wrought iron
fencing. 4-bdrms, family r.oom, formal
dining, TWO brick fireplaces & one of l
~.~.eliest locations imaginable! .
t I i
•SPYfiLASS•
Never-lived-in! Double French doors
leading to a central courtyard with.
fountain, surroundoo ~Y sky-lighted ~
living room. den & family room. lfmd
to the easy flow of spaciousness in this
largest, single story 4·bdrm
NEWPORTER PLAN luxury ·home.
CO'Zy breakfast nook w/city lights &
water view -TWO large entertain-q
ment areas -professionally
landscaped. QUICK POSSESSION.
$249,500. ft
TWO MASTBlS! ~
Why settle for ONE? This rambling
2-story, 3 bdrm. home has TWO
master bedrooms, separate dining I
room, brick fireplace in living room. a •
new upstairs c~ting. freshly paint-
oo exterior AND beautiful pool! Great
liveability in lovely neighborhood near ~
schools. PRICE REDUCED to $9'l,SOO. I t
NSOMIRSEr !: ' In prestigious HARBOR VIEW area, a 1 l
professionally decorated ~bdrm. a~ :
bath family home, close to park and
school, awaits your inspection. Faml·
ly room, 2 fireplaces. fcrmal dining l
room. Great Newport Beach area.
*flVl.STAl-50..-SET•
This professionally decorated ~bdrm
PLUS family room "SOMERSET"
home is introduced by a Terra Cotta "'4
tile parquet entry hall New wall cov· "'•
erings, extensive used brick patios.
custom wall units & bookcases. Fan·
tastic Newport area! t'
TWO 4-Pl.EXES-COSTA MESA J\
Excellent corner location, newly
painted & completely decorated inside
and out. Will sell separati!ly or f
together. PRICE REDUCED -SUB.
MIT OFFER!
11.MQuliil
liil.IPlac•
Prapert:i•• . 752-1920
1400 QUAIL ST. NEWPORT llACH
& ......
. EASTSIDE 1·2
Witb channbaa 2 bdrm
home brtn&in• lncome wblle 7ou develop
another Wlit. Close to
ahoPPlnc " tnnaPOrta-tion. Just listed. Better
take a look. M-T1U
(
' (
• •
81 0AU.. Y f't\bT *
PURSUANT TO SECTIONS 3111
T HROUGH 331$, REVENUE AND
TAXATION CODE, THI! PUBLISH D
DELINQUENT LIST IN AND FOR THE
COUNTY OF ORANGE, STATE OF
CALIFORNIA, HAS BEEN DIVIPEO
ANO DISTRIBUTED TO VARIOUS
NEWSPAPERS OF GENERAL.
Ct RCULATION PUBLISHED IN SAID
COUNTY FOR PUBLICATION OF A
PORTION THEREOF IN EACH OF SAID
NEWSPAPERS.
DELINIUmT
TAX NOTICE
CERTIFICATE OF REAL PROPERTIE~ I
SOLD TO THE STATE
ROllet1 L. Cltr<*, Tall CollKWl'•Tr.awrer al IM C-ty ot Oranvt. ,,.,.
at Ca111orn1a, 11ere1>y certllln H lolltWl;
TNll notk:• I• he..Oy9l11en Intl becauvot ft0rll)ll'(f'*11 of Ille total amount o ... 1or1• .. s,us.sunenuan<1othercl><ffoa~•vlodlnt1wYeatl'76f01ttwFl1·
t•I YHr 1916-1'77, U!own In dOll•r> •nd cents ~le lne d .. crlptlon to the oropt'1yconlll!ned lnlhe li1lbelow, llw rMI pr-llesonwllkllwcntmounts
.-.re a lltn wtf'e, by operetlon of l1w, In my offlct at R-..110 FIMnc• 811ll6-
1nQ, '30NOn11Broa41oy, City of S...ta Ma, COuntyofOranvt. soldtalheSlal•
al CtlHotnlntSo'clock o.m .. 011the~CS.val J..,., 1'171,
RHI property sold lo Ille St .. • may be·--by payment al all unpaid
IUH -•-flit "'991her wllll we/\ addlticw-.1-111• end IMS U Pf• .cribed by la#. °' mav be redeemotcl -ran Install~• plilfl of r~lon.
All lnfOf'l'l\Allon comeml~ rtdetnlltlon. or -Initiation of 1n Install"*" pl•n of redel'llPllon "a' lak wld IWGPlrtY Will, ._, •-st. bf lumlsllH by
Robert L Cl"'°"-T .. Cotlector-Tr .. wrer -Aedlml!llonOtflc.er, "omi 110
F 1nance BllllellnQ. UONortllll..-ey, Santa AM, C.l!f01111a.
t <ertlf y under -•tv of per lurv lbet Ille fQre;oln9 ls mie aod C0'1'td. R-11 L. Citron
Ta•COllec1or•Tf"ff--E11tcuttd.tSan:~~C>ranoton~to. 1'n
TM foll0wt"9 ~let'-.,. UMd Jor __ wt_,tetlw'ft: IMA)·MAAAllEO
Adm ·Adm4n1stralor MIQ. MatlllfactlKillQ
Adm•· Admlnlstretrhc (Ml I· MINOR
AP ·AU.Oww'•MaPP«~N~ IMMl·MAARIEDMAN
AP4 •rtmenl IMS I ·MARAIEOMAN, SEPARATE
A"l n Au«IMIO"I Mt·Mo<ulf
AW>C. AW><lalti. IMVl·MIXEDVESTINGS!etell
BldQ-Bulkl1r>Q IMW)·MARRIEDWOMAN
Bros Bn>Owr~ NA· Nt\lofwll Awoci.tlel\
C•llC•llt (.at1larn1a Nall Nellonal
!CO) ·COMPANY Not • Humbe<
Co C-ny INOl ·NO VESTING Can•t ·Corlslruc:tlon INR). NOT Rlii5EARCHED
COOO·'-r•llVf' NT & SA ·NatioMITNStalldS.•lnQ
Carp· eor-atton Auo<letlon ICPI COMMUNITY PROPERTY IPT) PARTNERSHIP
tCR) ·CORPORATION S&L.S.wln9und LO<ln
Conwr · Canservolar (SE I ·Sl!PARATE
Otpl · Oe!Mlrtment SECY· SeC'ref.!lrY
Otv 0.11tl0Pm9'\I ISi I ·SINGLE
Olst·Dlslrkt IS,,..l·SINGLEMAN
Olv • Dhllslan Sr• 54lnlor
Ed· Edocoliort St. ~Int
Enll'l>'ll·Ent-.prl .. s CSWl·SINGLEWOMAN
EU· Est ale tTCI. TENANCY llHX>MMON
f'I al·andotllef's IUMl·UNMARRIEOMAN
Extc·EIKutw, Eotutrlll (UNl·UNMARRIEO
F & M • Farmert & MM'clltnl9 USA· United Stales of Amerk•
(Fl)-FRACTIONAL INTEREST CUWl·UNMARRIEOWOMAN
Gdn • Guarclarl Ve"· Veltl'ens
<HW).HUSBANDANDWll'E IWDl·WlOOW
Hwv·Hl;ll-v IWRl·WIOOWER
Hwys-Hl~avs (WSl·MARRIEOWOMAN,
fnc· lnc.otllO'•t!d SEP.\RATE
Ins• ln-ence IXFl·WHOU.YEXEMl"T,
tnv· ln,.._t FRACTIONAL INT.
Jr.Junter CXTl·MtOl..LVEXJ!MPT
UTl·JOINTTENANCY TAXOEEOEO •
IJVl·JOINTVENTUAE <XXl·WHOl.LV EXEMPT
LA· LOI MQ9Cfl ... Md
ILEl·LIFEESTATE &IOr·Ard/Or
Lid Llml•d •·N-
~ArtC•L NUMaartlNO S'l'STIM •Xll'l.ANAT10M
...
T"" AUH--~ mtP l*r'C•I ""-wtlen uMd co describe pr_,y In tllls llsl, rMn la Ille 41\MIOr'l meit-. tfle MeP'l>t0900' tlfod nUn\ber In llw bo'4I and Ille li.cslvldual parcel numbef on the maD paoe or wllllln rt.-bloct. A perc:el
number " fat example, ·~.-MS'',' -Id ,,,_n CloOlt 44 Of the Aswnor'1 Maes. 8Mlck 363 l~ Peoe a , Block 31-P1rcel s w11111" llltt blactc. T1'e _.
te lerr.ci to ere evallablt for !MM<".,. "'Ille office elf Ille M•H«.
PROPERTY IN
HUNTINGTON
BEACH CITY
-........ \; .............. . . .... '\• ~
••
C NO'tlCE
TAX llATS ArtaA ....
Taylor, ftolltnd T'. IJTJ, Allt .,,,.,,.10, aa7 .tS.
Gulltrru, Jasepll J. ISMI. AP 1t$-t1Mll,$4&8t.
TAXRAT&AUA ...
l
I DeNild J. Sc!IOU & Co ICltl, AP
1t7·010-5', M,815 ....
AP 111-01().S4,Q,,35S.86.
AP <11.otfl.SS, Sl,"49.30.
TAX ltATa Alt•A 7.e74
I rvlM Co of W Ve &/\I<' Loucks. Roger
E. !JTl,AP""411·16,SIASS;~ ...
Gllllll\, Pwter J. UT>, AP Gl-Olf-4$, ~.JO.
Hlrl'nOtl, Wiiii-8 . lCP). AP 4SIMIM7,$1111.'6.
R•antr, Mactor A. f.ITJ, AP
UMDOS, $t;1'0.GI.
SllM, Jolw\ C. (JT), AP~
St.511.tO.
Hodge, Rlclllrd 8. <.IT), AP
451-10t4',$191.'4-
INIM C. at 'ff/ Ve &/W llOlld4JMIM
D .. AP& II \47. S1, 100.3L NIC'IKlllOft, sttllMn P, (JT), AP .-1U.t3,S60.M.
TI1emtt ... IOit, "-Id t.. (JT), AP
••nt-12, sno.31.
!Sus, hnv N. (NO>. Aft'ut-212'°9, sno.31.
PlJaUC NOTICE
Ysleh .__Co lCR>, AP 1"1-0l'I·•·
U1,63UO.
Nort"91te, AP 141-5124, "'61 . .U • Hickman, J•ne< R fNOl. AP
10.SZUt, S4ff.M.
Mcf'1!1-. l<enMtll R. (NO). AP
141-S3M2, "12.74.
B•rmore, Gafy E. <JTI, AP 14 "71 .. 1.4, $410.:W.
Mcl(enzi1, Wflflam s. IJT), AP
41f.022.23, $607.'43.
P-. Edker INRI, AP 41t.071 .. S,
$10,&50.Jel.
Kelley, Mkllllet G. et el ITC), AP
41t-OllMI, $227.41. Heftier EnterprlHs·Brookvl-IPT), AP~l6,S1,t59.327'.
AP~,"62.06.
TAX ltAT• AltU 1H1S
'
Tu~nell, Bessie M. IWOl, .t.P
139·00 ·12, $943.:18.
Collins, Le Roy J . IH R).
139.CJ42.S4, $t61.29.
8r•ssler. St•1tley o . IJTl,
~ay.Auaust31, 1871 *
PUBUC NOTICE
DAILY PILOT
PUBUC NOTICE
~l~l
' Wt~, a.-•VW), ~'-"51-41M'a, ..., .....
L.elft, ...... T UTJ, A/>4SMJt-H, / .,.. ' .
~-.. K~ IJTl, AP~ --·~ lrl"* ~ OWP ~I, '"' ~.t1tUl.
AP IA4-0ft...._ ll"'G.
Sclloe1111tr1, O•w 2. <JT>, aet
144o-01H9.S1,C71.fM. Ho-non, Wiifred M . (JT), AP 1~M.S717.41.
Rlnl, Arthur G. (JT), AP \44-uc.tt. sno.u. Fugent, E•mer G. (JT), AP 1'4-1JMl,~.67.
Lal•,°'911HP. UTI, AP.....,MJ.11, $5'2.SS.
En4•1•ir. G•n• M . (HW). AIJ , .... ,~.$1.027.12. Amiee.,, ltucloll)h T. (JT), AP
144-161.ol,im.lt.
Oallllte, Oen11l1 tt. (JT). AP
1'4-20M1,S121AI.
Collins. WMt a. UT). AIJ,........ "*·'°' . . 2egonlly, Alan F,. AP 1 ......
SlMU..
0.1111 ... .,.... S., AP MWl9rMl5. a.m.•.
OOWMI", Terr•-"· ""''· ,.,. ~1 .. n ,SIS13L
Stutt. Jamls e. (JT), Al' MMtt.QI.
174US.
Jollnl, Pranklltt G, UTt. AP ~l,SM.O. Tlllll,Rlc:MrdL.UTt,API~, mt.09.
&lcllerly, Ste'"" lit. <JTI, AP
loM-50). ... ..,, .9S.
ROJton, Maxwell L. <SE), Al'
1.,_21t-22,S3.73tM.
Ray, J-0. et al, AP 1 ... 212-07, $6,SlO.fl. •
Woodlt1, R•IPh (HR), ,. ..
1"'2tt-1t.01,tt.9$1.00.
AP 16'"212'11,02,$12,306.04.
Safto.. Georvlt (JT), AP 1 ... tt>W,
S2U1.
AP 16f.m.09, SM.•.
Edwtrds, Jolin o. (JT), AP
930-IMm,SIU,62.
TAXllAftAdA~
01~,...,. 0oug1as R.> un, AP
10&4Jl-40, S6A7 .06.
Tiede, Dennis A., AP 10..:SU.CW,
M4US.
(JTI, AP
TAX UTE AltEA 21 .. 19
UT>. AP Bernett, Jerry R •• <CP), AP '31-24-421,~
(JTl, AP Bis!lop, Ooiuld G., ·UT>, AP
m ·zs.otl,fJ&:UI.
BroW!I, Jack (JTl, AP m.-.ou,
$974.4'.
IMM Ca &,W ....... ec.¥111 0 ., AP 41iHZ1-lt, $10.11',
l"linl c. •• .. , .......... ~. A .. '5MISWt, .,,, .. .
lrvlntOl&.W~,.,..,...AP ~.Pll.M.
ll'Vlne OI ol W. Ve. &Aw> (Nf11. f .
OeM.AP~M11.t6.
lrvl"' Cll ot W. Ve, &IW Mllnrve, .............. ~MIS.fl.
Irv-co ., w. V•. ""°' ~Je..-"-,AP~...-.•. ·~Ille Co .. w. v.. ·-........ Deft! &.AP~W...,tt.tS:.
lrvlM Cit #If w. v.. &M' ,..,.,_,
MtmW1J .. A .. ~$S7.t4.
lrvllte Ct '11 '#. VI. a.,w ~·. '°"" P., AP4S$07f.57,t.mM., Atklll/S, Ooflove" O. (CPt, A1" .SS-O~tw.«t wrey, IUClllrd IC. (CPI, AP 45).1.w..~m~ * 1>9nNld, H. Gonloft CJT>. AIJ 453-t#·l~SM.--
lrvlM CD &Air tsanks, C>oftlllt L.,, AP
$t«Nt.st.,'40.n.
Selcede, 011nlel A, UT), AP
~ tS?-51, $2,092.3'.
lrYIM C. (C:ft>. AP •S.160·10,
$2,2a.a. Feilrt, Tl!Om .. J . <JTl, AP
45>14246, $544.73.
Slllpp. Pttllllp 0 . et •I (JT), AP 45).tU.JIJ,$519.51.
l(ellll, ftart (JT). AP (s.1.lM-12,
UtO."-A-., Dale W, et al (MVI, AP
4D-17S-2',Wt..53.
JtvllW Qt (Cit), AP 4,.UJ>IM.
":\'!s1ow. c1111rlff "· <Jn, AP ~.$105.12.
Gent, ElllllM R, CJT),AP 51N0t.IJ, $6U.61.
W-lf\.JdtnJt CJT),AP,......U. $ttt.5'.
lrvlftl 00 of W, Va. &Alt.......,,
C......V., APUt-4M1l,,WUt.
lrYIMOl>Of W. V•. &.W~.
S1eptien. APtlH-41.o:M, 1715&
Irvine coot w. Va. &lor Sclll»ftlor;i,
Rldlard A., AP tlSl-41.o«i, sns.n
Lerson, "'•teller C. IJTl, AP '31-414'7.~Sl.
lrvlneOlot W. Va. &AWOI Olstaftlo,
George L., AP931-414'0, S17U6.
lrvlneCoofW, va.&Air a.tier. Wirt
C., APt1St.o.os2, $799.1',
Partcll, Belle W. (WO), AP
932-19-0ll, ses1.00. HOWi, Ruby 1. et •• (JTl. AP
9tt-4MOt,S4S.$S.
Mee Oottald, .,_ W. (JT>. AP
932-4CMllJ, Som.53.
TU aATll UaA .-.
Rewen. Gereld L , CJT), AP
'33-9NQ6, "'5-17.
lrvlne Co ICAl. "'" t'3·'3·06S, ~-AP~.~···
AP '33-f3..067, sa, I 13.61.
AP tllMHM, $2,010.30.
A Pm-D469, ~ 124.52. AP~. fl,716.9'.
AP~,$1,135.59.
AP'3:MU12, '1"36.1'.
AP~Sl ..... 96. AP t3).9).07._ $1,M.IO.
AP'3MJ.C75, U46 .•.
JI. P'3M).076, U46 ...
AP '3MU77, $.$46-•• Broom•ll, Hury Ill, (JT>. AP
'36' 11Mm, "'7 .6'.
KHlff, l.ucltte ~. CWOJ, AP
.,.. 10411, "'°'Sot:.
trYIM CO (Cltl, AP tJ4•2MZO, 13t4.97.
AP fM.JMZS, $403.0L
AP'36'2MJL $403.0I. AP~1,$403.QI.
AP~.$274.97.
AP f3.WIMl35, 12".30. AP~,$216,,.
AP~$264.17.
TAXUTEAltUJMI\
INlfte Industrial Col'nt>l•x CC:Al, 14P 43S.011·24, $1, 162.7'.
AP~11-31,Sl,161AO.
AP~t6,$1,ol67.JI.
TAX ltATIE AltliA 2'41.J
WOOdblne °C«p !CtO, AP ..._.,.,.SJ
S70.12. AP '4f.411·SS,$10.12. AP~l<6S,,$10.13.
TAX ltAft Alt8,A JM~• W-. 11en M. CJTI, AP ~I~. Sl,S41.10. Cameron, Gene P . (JT), AP
4'>-017.01, $1,A4.42.
Intl ... Ce eA W. Va. &AW Robe,_.., C>avldL.,AP~U,S«J.76. ~RlilglrW. (NO),AP~. -"·"· IA .... L. CJn,AP4Q.o.M7,
S1$UL
,._,._ Lm £. (J1't, AP "6MIM3,
S™.21.
Oyw,WilltlmC.UTl,AP~.
Sl,"2 .••
Brewer, llur1eJ111t .J. UT,, AP ..,.,01<09, $77!.0t.
RY•n, Oouat•s B. CJTl, "'" (UWl, AP 1"1M Ce (Cit), AP 4S:J.ffl•tt, ..S.t2Ml,S1,12A,.._ •
'$Ml.1S.. S-.Rk......,IC.IJT) AP ... )-lot:i.11 AP~,S1Gl.7S. sm..... •
AP45).20Ni0,s101.1s. j Embry, H•"Y ~. (JT),AP ... s-u2.10 AP 45:J.20MI, SIOl.7S. $113.8$, ,AP4SJ.~.SIOl.7S Collln~. Richard M. (CP), AP
AP 4$)-202'51l, $108.7). 463-171~ 1,stl .I I.
AP dWO:M4, $10l.7S. Luttins, a.tty S. CHO), AP 46>t1J.24
AP &20M4, 1214.50. $1,556.36.. • AP~S?Ql.75., 1st~WalterJ. IJT>,AP.0.2'H1
AP 4SNOM7, 13St.9'. S .m . . . . AP&--.SJll.8'. lrvlno Co &/of' Reed, OtlO A., AP L•wr.nc.. Wiii~ c. ~t AP ...,_~$702.19. .. ... JO.OU.sut.u. • Irvine Co &.-.r Re!H. James A., AP
-!AX.IAftUllA..-
Doltllllflllft, .,,_ .. ,un. AP w~•.S6w.et.
.-a.101i.11.-.. ...
Oolill9f, .,._O. Urt.AP~,
S7Jt.11.
lrvl119 CID &/1/11r Oddgt,,,_. K .. AP ~$710.11.
TAX RAT* AWU 2Mat
•·
Im• C• 1011 -'" 4'1 UI e1, ... ........ ~" .... ...........
.......... \lllt• ... 41.NiiMt. to•. ........ ",.. ... .w. .... , ....
Tuaanaua_,
.,,,,,.. c. 1c•1, ,.,. ... 111 •• ., .. _ ' ...... ., .. 1#---..
ROP RTYIN
N WPORT-M21A
·UNIFIED
SCHOOL DISTRICT
YU •Hll AltCA .._
........ l .-UMl, ... P•,.fll .. ..,,.
..-~ o.w... ..... ,,,., AP' Ot4t•• U.tt• •
1'AJlllATttA•&A .....
...,....,, •-, .. o •. "" ... mo \1,1 ...
lAJl llATt AllaA IMM
UtUf 1m
PUBUC NOTICE ....... J11•y I ol ., !Jt I 41' 1.._»1•,U~HO 1-----C-~------
M•#tll. P11y11u ¥ NOi, AP IUHlll0.~•1'0P'TMa
11•»> 11, UU ll S1' A1'1 Ofl CAU l'OIUllA P'Ott l'lul\t#, Oa111e1 J CHWI AP TNl!C:OUMTYOl'CMIAMOI 11 ....... ,,,.1" ...... .tU•t
llillllf1"' 'With-\ AP tl•MU. NOTICE 01' NEA•1•• 01'
••U..Jl. NTITION "'°" ... oeAn 01' Wit.I.
1'All llATll AlllA suu ANO P'<Mt t.l!TTl!llS TlflTAM81f•
f Alt Y AMO AUTitOlllV. 1'10.. 1'0 Al).
P1•ro11,A .. •r•sH •CP1,APM1N11r111 u•oaa TM•
11•n~te .... , .. II, IM08NNOCHT At>M!MtlT•A'flOH
s.nodll, "-9, AP 11._?1).U t7M • 01' lfSTATH ACT
1'AllltATIAlll!AU.lt
t:tlall or TONI DAVIS, •k• MA TILOA OAVIS, De<easld.
NOTICC! IS HEREBY GIVEN tNI
Bourgoll, Norma F tNOI, AP BRAOLEY J O"VIS ~RUBY HAii·
""20>-l!O '* :M. 1us ... .,. 111«1 .,.,.tn • .,.u11on "°'
T•UltbtrO Al WI n IJ TI A p ProtNl•of Wiii -!or ls-..ca of t.•t. ,. .. ,.XI $111 02 ' ters Tesian-1ary lo lhe "91111-• Cal~ J Merle AP 11 .. un4 •nd -lielloll to aclmlnltter the "'4 OC ' ' • ttl•t• u.-r lhe lntltlpendenl AO·
· v1nino Chari ts F tJTI AP ministration ol Estatn Act, reference """lU~ SS» I• · lo w lll'h I~ mad• for turlller ' · par11cul1r1,""" Illa! tJw u,,,. •nd place
TAX llATE AlllA SS-OU ol 11orlno .... -Ila$ .... ,. set for
LH.Mar1<W .APl1 .. 1'H1.Uel 37
Todd, Ja_, I! fJTl, AP 11 .. ,._. XI,
\363"'
Lut91. Fr-" flH~I. AP 119 1'• u
Stt4. ta
AP 11 .. ~5 '13' 01 APl1 .. ~.~0
Gre9ory, Jamu H fJTI AP
1 tt.J».11, ins u
Campion, ICtYln A (JT). AP
a3'.0f1 17, St, 1S3 06
Garcia. Gvsino (Jl), AP ~.Of.
S'°6 :z2
Gr•y, Roy C Jr, AP 43'· 101 20.
SJl7 2t
Mc l(...,..y, JOl\n M AP '3t·tOM1,
SMtS.
Tak•la Tar11ml T. fJTI, "P
4Jt 111 XI, S 1. 06t 06
Hoflay Allan E. Jr IJT ), AP
~ 111-<n. sm o
Allen. O..rltt B at al U T), AP ~112· .. ,'-I01.17
Mollna. 0.waldo E ti al CMVI, AP
9l4 01.oo:J S'90 .0
Newoort Mru Chrl\llan Crnltr
((Al .... P•l4-01101,UU flt Prlc~. EOw•rd S , AP 04 011 2l ,,., ,.
TAX llATI! AllllA SU41
Poc>t Eclller INR I "P 411011-(14 U,1'9.06.
Ale•ander. Rollert B 41'1 •I (JT I AP
119.1'1· 1•. '42'1 "'
Maxwell, M•r .. t n IWSI AP
119-2'1-39. "16.,
TAX ltATI! Alll!" SHO
ICr-r B•tl AP11~1 "·"" '4.
-U:l•~or. RallJll A INRI AP 11~1-«I,
Mc N""· SltpMn ) JTI. AP 11~4-17.~U
Runyan, Robert w !UM), AP 115-0Jl-40, \I, IXI 71
Miiier. Rolle rt A . A p 11S-M1 17 .... °' a ... of Atntrlc1 NUSA et ., !NOi
AP 11MS1.cM, UffAJ
Beeuor•. Oona Id A
431 OJ).1S U>6 SS
Mulllto. Donald A IJT1
, 43'> OJA 11 Sl27 U
TAX RATI Altl!A SJ.047
s.:ii:.••Y. JoM A ICPI. AP lll·llJ 30,
Mullan. Jact. w e t Al fTC), AP
11'M34-:z2. l1.l~7 S..
Fllhback. Charin J. Tr •I •I !MV),
AP llHJ.4.3.S, Sl,018 tO
SI. John, Aildrey 1 ti al IMVI, AP
119-JlMO, U7H1.
Mc Carty, Grey\Ofl M . AP 11' ,,, 21.
$t07 M,
O~ Vrt••. Gtoroe !MSI,
119ZG13, U10.U.
.PROPERTY IN
HUNTINGTON
BEACH SCHOOL
DISTRICT
•l PROPERTY IN ·OCEAN VIEW
SCHOOL DISTRICT
S.pl-r 13. 1m, 1t 10:00 a.m , In the
courtr-'I of o.i>ertmenl Ho l ol said
courl, at 700Clvlc CA!nl•• Orlw West. In
ti.. City of SanleAna, C.lllornl•
Oalec:t AuQull 19, 1t77.
WllUAM E. SI JOHN. Couftly , .. , ..
Jacll t.e.ln
aLOCIC,alllCJtNEll &LOPIN, INC.
11M-....... ay
5a11t1Mil,Cl.tt70I
(714)m491
Att-yfw: ,..."'~ Published Orange Coul Oallv Piiot
A\19 14, ?S, lt, 1'77 J7Sl·n
PUBUC NOTICE
STATEM«NTOI' AaAND<*MEN1'
Ol'Tl4E USE 01'
l'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAME
The lotl-lnQ Ptr'°"J Nive abln·
dontd u.""" ol 1"" llcttltou• buslnau
"'"'~ NOTRE Pt.ACE, 170 E. 17ttl St
Costa Mne, CA mll>
TM Fictitious Buslna'5 Nam• r•·
l•rr•d to abov~ wM filed In Ol'-
Countvon AUCJ. 71, 1916
Nancy Lee Slleffn•r, 111 Vi•
Orvltlo, NIWoor1 a.acn, CA 91643
Mery Anna Je-. 108 VIA !Coron,
Newpot1Be.en,CA92661
Thi\ b\;\IN•u Wa\ conducted bv •
9tner•l -1Mnhlp
MaryAnnaJe-
Tllit •ltll......,nl was !iltd with Ill
Countv Cle11t of Or-County on Auo. 10, 1'71 1'410,,
Publt-Orange C:O.st Dally Piiot
AUO.nl 17, 2t, 31, StpC 7, 1'71
lUt 71
PUBLIC NOTICE
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A
s
s
I
F
I
E
D
r
....... For Wt Ho.net For W. HoeHt For Wt Holtut fCM" Wt '-S.
••••••••••••••••••••••• ............................................................................................ # ..................... .
......... ., 1002 ._... IOOZ Miol...,.. 1-• G1 .. . 1002 G1Mrtil IOOJ Carw .. M_. H JZ. -.. , ..........•............ ·-····-···-········ ••• •• • • •• • • • • •••••• •• • • ••• •• ••••• •:•• .. ••••••• .......... • • ••••••• •••• ••••••• ••• •• •••••••• ••• N'WP'f ltlt9NrS COllOMA
HUMTIMGTOH 120,000NICI tlGHLAHDS JUSTLIST!D
Cbarmln1 Cap Cod
DUPLEX ln. CORONA
DEL MAR 2 Dedrm. llrtplau, frant unlt .
tittlileed yard }Jpper un·
I\. beamed ~·olllnga. 1 badnn. Walk to ahopplog
and b••cll. Aakina
'1$4,500 644·72'10
TAKI YOUR PICIU
Avoc odos. peaches,
mammoth zucchini, in
big, pnv back yard .
t.h.ls neat 3 bedrm T-plan
In Mesa Verde. Ne
ptunl inside & out Owne
"anl:; otrer movin
north. Listed al $79,500
<.:all Stan !\feyer. Agt
540-4141, 549 ll66.
----1
NEW UNITS
Ten 2 bedrm apts i
Costa Mesa. less tha
ooeyearold. Call now ro
information on thes pricaor ownership units.
640-616 I
~
COATS& WALLACE
REAL ESTATE . INC.
IALIOA ISLAMD
CHARMING
IEACH INVESTORS-SEE.THESE! UDUCTION The Id al c:ombl11aUon of
4 UMITS w~ have several ex--•nnaJ dupl-x· BeauWul HK. bOmt, 3 • o•w home ta an
SI'. 000 "' """i'V....,. ,.,. bdrms. a betlaa, pool & e a l a b I l a h e d • es, including a 4 bdrm. apt. & othtrs Jacuasl. w.. Sll5,000, nel,hbortlood, reaturinc
' Lwturious wtlls, with with 3 bdrm., 2 bath apartments,,. from now •us,ooo. Ownen •ll lbe lat.eat appolnl-
apaclous ownen unit $l'19.SOO to $lS9.500. Also, trifleies havealreadymovecland D\ent 1 . O veralzed
Almoet carries. Owner from $1 ...... IUU\ to •22S,OOO. Al p---wt.U CUTY 1 Znd TD. You prage, larce rooms. 3 will help finance. For ~ <7VV • • v· can pun:b&H with teas both, Np down wet.bar . r.,~it project.Ion includ· pertles are ln very 1ood coodJtion & than m. down. o~er mln.l ocean vlew, all fwJy ~ t.ax shelter ~nerita, located in fine r~ntal areas. We can ~ CallM&-23U landscaped, walklnl d.is-
J982-'1788. help you arrange tax deferred ex-CWHr14 •11\fuNroeiNi<c• . ta.Me t.o private beach. • ~4'=~5 . ~r:.:'d':ia1f.1; .. :.~;;; I us for com-! IMj\ll ~~7211
Rut.,.,._
Gtw Wea,._. 'Bfq.
MIWPORT II.ACM
Unusual, neat. A-frame. 3 BR. 2 b•., a paUol. Walk 3 ,:a., 2 ba., ~an "bay
t.o oc:eu, poota "tennis. e°1lROKER 140.1002 OnlySS8,SOO
450 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE 759·0811
CAYWOOD
REALTY, INC
• 141-1290 . SMALL
House
BUY Now G1Mral I 002 ,GiMral I 002 ~!~ ..... !~.~~ :J.~
• •• • • • • • ••• • •••• ••••••• •••• • • •• • •••••••••• ••• • Pr rt H 842 3850 forfuturebeachvnlue1n-~ 3 BR. extra lg. lot. bay ope Y ouse ·
crease! l and 2 story Bl.Un"l' A NEST VALUE view. $185,000. By owner· Vtty nice s br, 2 ba & l br Newport Shores homes. rr .J 67S-50t9 re o ta l _. $ 16 2, 0 0 0 .
Walk t.o beach, tennis lalloct Pi•iillla I 007 Lease/ option Sl0,000
and pool. A great area * * * $139,500 * * * ....... •••••••••••••••• clown.Owner,640-7030 for ENJOYMENT AND
INVESrMENT! 311., 2'12 IATH, SPLIT LEvB. IALIOADUPLIX ~.ur6~ fORJM IA Y & MIGHT LIGHTS YIEW! ~.';':.' ~1!: o~ld a.~~ ~·.~ ... -:.·-...... Totally r~ecorated, all ntlW interior; Peninsula, one block to -r. 5m professionally designed, with neutral the beach. 2 BdnD.1. up · tones, custom drapes & window treat-per , •tudio lower. Still
MORMIMG SUM7
You bet in this beautiful 4
lime to eQJoy this eum· ments. Impor ted wall coverings merlnNewport.$124,500.
thruout. Tiled kitchen & parquet en -MORIMS RIAL n
trance. An absolutely "show stop-* 494-1057 ping" Trina Plan. A very special
home at a very affordable price. Owner's pride, 7 units
1216 W. Balboa. $345,000
Marshall Realty 67M600
SPYGLASS HILL
DramaUcally alt11at.ed.
ocean&bay views;' BR. ram. rm., pool & jacuui.
3Cargar. 1289.500
PAUL MARTIN
REAL ESTATE 644-1383
bedrm plan 3. Many up·
grades, water sonener.
Elec gar door opener.
Decorator drapes and $187,500 pror. landscaped. Balboa Duplex, 4 Br 2 Ba
& 3 Br 2 Ba, . $185,000.
Prine only. 67S-2321
SHORECLIFFS
Two s ty cust hme in
CdM's finest area. 3 Br&:
den, 3 Ba, mstr bdrm in-
cl<b fplc, his & her bath.
& pvt deck. Pvt beach &
view point, fee land.
1225.000. Dennis Ricketts Realtor
95S-0497 or 642·3263
Best localJon and an m· '$92,000. RED CARPET
teresttng home guest Realtors, 645-3474.
qua.r\ers A perfect hom~~~~~~~~~~~I for enJOymg island liv·
mg. Beautiful large pat!
with 3 bedroom an . . . . .. "
~aliHh11r11 ... . .
HAI.HO\ ISLl\'fJ
• 673-6900 •
Have something you wan
to sell'! Classified ads d
1t well Call NOW,
642·5678. -
GeMrtll 1002
Wl1el.-111
Al Al (~IATl
1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
CE
llDBGI ILllRS .•ca.
OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE
NO
DIRT
Immaculate 5 Bedroom
Newport Beach Ex·
eculive. Home' Ocean
View! Now reduced to
$176.0.00! Call RED
CARPET, 754·1202
Don't give up the ship!
"List" it in classified.
Ship lo shore results!
&'2-56711.
FOR
$35,900 ·
Unbelievable price for
an unbelievable condo!
West of Har bor with
Garden Grove Schools!
Run, don't walk! Call
RED CARPET, 754·1202
People who need People
That's what the
DAILY PILOT
SERVICE DIRECTORY
is all about!
CORONA Da MAR
DUPUX
plus guest studio. New
listing I Walk t.o shopping
& beach. Tennis & rec.
center close by. Ex· ce l lent & well
establl11bed a r ea .
S184,500.
MORINS RIALn * 494-8057 •
CDMllACH
COTI'AGE
Lots or wood and stained
&lass. S139,9SO.
R.C. TAYLOR CO.
9SS.Oll0
DUPLEX-E/SIDE
COSTA MESA
Drive by 190·192 Al~rt
Place. Please do not dis·
turb lhe tenants. 3 Br & 2 BrS84,600.
Pacirlc Coast Really
(21J) 433·4968 -Slashed Off
The price of t h i s
handsome executive
home. Big 3-bedroom.
formal dining, huge family room with brick
fireplace. Large patio,
sparkling pool,. for de-
tails, BKR, call540-1720.
FtRST OFFERING
NORTH IWFFS-IA Y VIEW!
HONEYMOOH 'l'A8111!11 I
COTI'AGE IR~
Old CDM charm, brick, ""#I .. Callfonlla ..
Sharp And Immaculate, Popular 2
Story E Plan Townhouse With Up-
per Bay And Mountain Views. 3
Bedrooms. 21h Baths, Open Beam
Ceilings. Lovely Secluded Entry
And Patio. "A Joy Of Newport"
Listing. $179.500. Including Prime
Land.
111 DOVER DRIVE 631-1800
~~~! .......... !~~~1!:~!'! ..... a •••• !~~~
mecnab I Irvine realty ·
STUNNING IXICUTIYI HOME
SltS,000 _
Large, airy living rm. & convert.
family rm. open onto beautiful,
manicured pool-sized yard. Lovely
2 bdrm. home, on one of the largest
lots in Irvine Terrace. Features up-
datt:d gourmet kitchen. breakfast
nook & plumbed dark room for the
photo enth usiasts. App't. only .
Paula Bailey 642-8235 CK-84)
SALi OR LIASl/~I
Move right into this lovely Akins
condomi.tliuni ln WoOdbridge Cross-
in g.. El egant Brighton model
w /view of adult pool & ~acuzzt.
Mohair-colored, upgraded carpet·
ing, minored wardrobes. levelors &
some wallpalM!f'. A steal at $119,6001
·Amy Brown 752·1414. (K-82)
WOODlllDGI VIU.AGa
Budget priced 2 BR Poplar model I
lmmaculate & sp arkling w/up-
p-aded no-wax kltch«:n floor + Iota
of decora tor wa llpaper. C OD·
dominium own.-ship, ao you can re-lax ~.enjoy . lovely . patio _ 'f'/&aa
BBQ, lake, pools & 1paa + all the
parks mamtal:h.ed by the associa-
tion. All ~ for the Jow price of
$72,500! Forrest Powen 752-1414.
{K~) .
Smart Knit!
Fashiotl's d1rlin1! Go tot' of _places 1n this new j8'ket!
The lints 111 slimma, Jtl jacket fils '°mfortably Mr
e.trylhina. K•1t ii of worsted
ftom Ille COiiar down. 1nchld1n4
sletm. P1ttt1n 71 S9. Mmes
. Sim S·IS Included
$1.25 for eech pattein. Md JS. each patte.11 for hut-class
;11rma1I &tld handlina ~ tr.
· knotty pine, wood noons. ---------2 BR, 2 BA. all new. Lre.1--------~ lot. can expand to ocean
view home. 5122,500. Try
SlS,000 clown.
HALPINCHIM
REALTORS
675-4392
OPEN HOUSE
DAILY l·SPM
Z20J..-.,CdM
1/J 1UC to OCEAN
Completely remodeled
MESAYERDE
A-FRAME
Enjoy th.ls sunny home
wrapped around a very
private swimming pool.
Home offers 4 bednn &
loft. Centrally located for
schools and shopping.
Ca II 54().1151.
~~HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
on an oversized lot. A1·---------smashing 4 BR plus den ---------
plus formal dining plus Luse with Option
huge family room with To Buy
open beams, natural 4 CUSTOM HOMES wood textures and ocean and jelly view from Leaseexercisablel-1·79
master 1uite & sundeck. ll28Seabluff Dnve Just steps t.o Ocean Blvd. <Formally Hamilton
$235 000 Dnvc) ·eaa· 64 .. 7211 Tues thru Fri 751·3850 ~ Sat thru Mon t>42·0758
/Jn NIG(L
GJ\11.(Y & Find what you want in ..;;;;=----------------• Daily Pilot Classifieas. l\~SUCl l\ TES
SIEK& FINlf THE ROCKS
N V N E W S P A P 0 H I E R N Z W l
S YBHE WXRUENMUORON
E ( D W C S 0 P P W 0 R E I H A 1
Tl TAMQEAREENTP L K
T T J 0 U 0 P V P N D A P J4 C T
l S 1 L L C Y A W E C I 1 0 A R
E RZPA IPAP N TBRST T I
ZE A LZ H P EIPOECRRC ••
MLHYIJ K NRPR L P S EA L
RT RHBYt PDRI ET LON FZ A
ITNO KN QE T RVTUW WIF S E S E ~U CHN~COIPL Y J KE EA
YSDTJCCSBLRMT E LCJHL
HACffELNlMHHSQWDKGIC
C LADAIBEACNERAZ K COR
'
..
••
. .
l'fO~
,:QRC:ST E
OLSON ... ... . . ....
Sir. H'~· all cop~r
plurnbiQI. BuullfuJ -. w
carpeUn1, new paint,
baocll wall fenc:101 . pat.a
co1ru. All on a c:ompl•te
1y landscaped lot with spnnlllers 10 m1nute·•---------
WESTSIDE dnve lo beaches, abort
walk to aboppang and
schools .
......... lsted price
S7 I. HO. Our priu la
$69.500 • ..b offw.
541-1771.
CRY $80,000
Sharp4 br in Costa Mesa.
S.51 Pierpont St.
NoDowwYA
556-7777
Wortd Real Estete
SAVE Thousands of
Dollars. 3 BR house &
owner w/carry
mortgage. To see.
646-3490
By Owner. 3br. 2ba Con·
do. 1340 sq rt. 1-'acang Wftelc111
lllAL i!>TAH Clbbse Cir. 2 car al --='"-=;....;.."-----t
tached gar. rncd patto BY o~ER
Nr OCC. $61.750. 181 "" Yorktown 540-3402 Sharp 2 sty, SBr, 1"4Ba.
---------• home w/ncw paint. cpts
New Condos, 2 Br. 2~~ Ba. & dl"Jl5, auto gar opnr,
2 frplc 's. ceramic talc many other xtras. only
kitchens & bath. Pool & $82,900. 1122 Charleston.
s-'p'-a_. _67_5-4_9_12 _____ 1 M7-4387
Easls1de 4br, 2ba, dan Village Creek Townhse.
area. Complelely redf'ro. 3br. 2ba, pool, 1acuizi.
New crpt & wallpaper, l'ourts. Jo''l1rthcr Info Call
chopping blk counter Lee Ann al 957·1372
tops. Nicely lndscp'd.
S94.750. By Owner. No
Brks. 269 Ray St . Opn
Sat/Sun. 646·8265,
640-1984
Shone rest
Realty
846-5573
BY OWNER Hunt',::
Landmark adlt condo 2
Br, 2 ba, brand new plush
rpt &drps, Call 960-1624.
For Sale by owner 3 Br,
41DRM FIXER
ONLY $68,900
Property has been rent
ed and needs some help.
Motavatt'd seller. ca II to
see
MEWPORT
HEIGHTS
R·2 Cute 2 bedroom home Franciscan fountain
with fireplace and home. i92.900 Cal l
French doors. patios _842_·_1390 _____ _
large fenced backyard
with trailer access off al-
ley. Zoned R-2 and only
182.000
•u11uin, I .... QPlua~ ~ 0"1!H MOUit llULT'f ... I .. -
1nao...,. .. eo.1e-Praplll"tln
645-9161 1s2-mo ---------1 l400 QOAILU HlWPOlf llAQ4
ABUY
~ 3 bedrooms, 2 ba,
greenbrook. xlnt loc ..
l cor. lot. fresh paint.
super carp. Priced under
' market. HADLEY REAL TY
963-8933
-
n, 1-f,,.!.1T1• '•1c
J r.«~",,,,, IJ.1, P1,11.1
661 \1&1 HJ\ :3888
1055
HAUORVU
PALERMO
4Br, 21hBa, fam rm, din
rm, prof lndsc pd,
jacUlll,. Owner at re·
duced price of $184,900.
644-6221
lh ACRE Horse ranch w /2
houaes. workshop &
bam. Back Bay area on
the golf cTSe. Must sell
soon. Sl19,000. Owner.
8.13-0119 "5'6-6013
· · Price
Slashed!
on • bedroom U4 pool ln Harbor Hllhludl with all oow camel caJ"ptt. New price HU.HO.
Hurry. 540-U.51 .
.... '~· HERITAGE
. • REALTOR~
Fabo.lous Newpolt Crest
condo w/ocean •iew.
Hup price Nduetion. 3
BR, 2~ BA. MUST
SELL!
VAU.11' 640..'900
LARGE
HoUle
Boat Dock
$&25,000
Property House 642-3850
BAYFRONT
EXCLUSIVE
Located on the pre-
stigious main channel an
Newport . This im-
pressive 4 Br & Family
Rm. 5 bath home or
coorse has docking for
your 48' yacht or your runabouts. Beautifully
decorated th.ruout and
lr).lly a k>vely residence.
OPEN DAILY l·SPM
646 Via Udo Nord
Lido Isle. $650,000. Xlnt
financin&. 8 A Y F R 0 N T
PROPERTIES
Maxine Mo'rrlson
6'6-S002 or 645-5000 X216
REDUCED
$25,000!.
NEWPORT CREST
TOWNHOME. End unit.
2 Story, larp Uvin& rm
w/balcony. Spac. open
master bedrm. Xlnt
price. Won't last. Call
645-0303.
FORES TE
OLSON ...... . .. ... . ~ ......
·---~
J
.l
·'
~
I
J•
f.
..
·I
~
. :
.. .)
Lachenmyer
Realtor
Out of CCMlllty rrop.rty 2550 1800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
•MEW DUPLEXES•
.. ,,.
. , .
llOME ,,., ne eds
, t( $96,500.
I· BERTHA HENRY
·I REALTORS
I I 215 Del Mat 492·412 ., '
'•'
Wllel-111
PIAL l~IAll
if*
Dbtnu ,,.riyl
I can find It ~ou. ii. flx. Blach area 1 a.list. -r.r• Probates, Foreclosure.,
1 1 Ba~cles,Dlwrce. 1n:enic~1e1 . Be mar tpriae. w.ww•• lrobn
Call 8'1M545
-~1
..
l •l •l aooM UNITS
• NA TUlllMG •
UMIQUI ... DllAMA TtC flLOOa ftAt4S
C tDm d lgnt-d with exc ptlonally
large rooms, ·dramatic· t·nlry way•.
and luxurious amcnaties throughout.
· Located nn
HARBOR BLUfo"'FS CIRCLE
tNear RolH Chu~n nnd Worner•
HUNTINGTON BEACH
r,-1328 or 8.4<H123
3 Br. a.r ocean • •boee. 811! .. 8 .. Geneva ~ft aft.er
lpm $21110 Adults 536-l.286
1 Br, S260. No pets, 4 blks
to pier, lodry facal
DS-7S42
•LOOK*
Deluxe 2 BR. l b3 apt
New crpts, freshly paint
ed. bike to bch. $26S. mo.
For more info. call Make,
847.rolO
•l Br, Long Beach Blvd
at PCH, adlts. $150, stove
refrig, oo pet s.
714-833-8974
--
Mai.:nab -lrvme
H LtV CO Pi\NY
COIOt4A D& MAI
OHi
CkHD y ·PGOl·beach. ll -~-.. --..-----.~-· Bdmt.1., ~ ba., cloH to
btacb. Avail, dally, '40,
ur weekly s:soo. incl.
llil ' Rolernary Steu Mc.COO
-....
'
... _~ .. ·--.. ... . ~ . ' ... ....
DAILYPILOT * t31 1m
-. ':.., • .
.. rAda it. •. Bultd lt...Olaper lt ... Hammer It .•• Carpet SERVICE DI REC'PiORY e_1u~b lt ... Patcb It .... Pipe l t ... Remodel .it.~., ·• it •.. Cem nt u ... Wlre it ... Hoe lt ... Clean lf...Move 1. 1 Roof t. .. Landscape tt ... Tile IL.Trim lt ... Sewtt...
a..lt. .. Prass IL.Paint tt. .. Nall lt...Plaster lt. .. Flx It... . ~ Haul it ... Add It... Plant it... Alter It... Learn It. ..
-*WJ•c•...,. c:.,.t..,..,.. Qlldc.r. ...... ...... H••ct.mt•nt • rtw'-91'•....., · r-.....1'.m~ ,......... ................................................................................................................... ···~ ................................................................. ~;;~;;.~~~ ...••.....••..
1 6 .IA_.,..:;.. • --• 111 in cl an. L'OVJNO CHILD Caro. Oard nJntServlce·cleao Ralllltl1,movtoi.cteanup Kouatcleanloa, 2 men PJ:T!!UPAINTING Sml pilnllna co. 1mall HOME.SAVERS. Plumb.
Pl. 11.:.~ Sll.> Culor 'lirl1hte ; wh\ Uc'd, bot. luncha. Rula. up • baullna ;eeldy fl/up, Tr...,otlc, ReH, honeat. reliable• depen· Expr'd. Rta1 ftatea. prie91 lnl/Extr. Depe.n· Int~ lkaUn1 Is air con
__ -·-•am. A
1111
ciita 10 mln bl ach. Cl an cau MH290 Ut. m¥Jnteoance. Reat0na fast, tree•U42-097 d.able. IMO-DS FrH Eat. Call Otoe d.ablo. Work au.ar .• free ditionlnc. PNe eal. 110
-151.01 bv, d1o rm, hall SU. Av1 c· -I ble rat.es fr .. esUmalt• T • -..1...--a.... ~ eat. 75'4921 hr. Koneat ~ rehablo -.. ,_... nn rr ao <'OUCh 110 cN' -• auctor All 4.:io k i RA>a. OCC student. Bia 114 -...,._,, service. BofA, M/C OK • .-... • GU.~ •Um ...... ~or. ........................ aa ~11· .... all or . truck. Trub. tree trim, ....................... , .. YOW" c.... qualty ,~ 7Sl·3l!IO
;:-••••••••••••••••••• Cpt r.palt'. u;;; ••pr. Spoclal11101 8ulldln1 __... ... 54S-G87 etc. Randy 6'2·5701, 8 )'rt exper, fneest, allo Avttaatlxullkr)'saN •Low•thtcet ---------
4' ~..._ ) JJo work m~tlt. llet1 Arch Dat1n 1•lana for Expert Jepaoe1e 548-31188 lndacpo1cnattrialavtU, 18tor>'tN5,lntrM5rm •Houlel/~, f':c;'!Ypmeat
n.c. ,~.~~1~· ~HUOl. ~· r•tdence •P"-Xlllt Gardener. Compl )'ard CHBAPEST bauUnJ ln ~~~P .!., nfa. JQ Prite1Sld roatr'Mabor .. , .. •0otr ExtrRer •••••••••••••••••••••••
1-Ca •Upbols re ... N.B.8Af·U13 aerv. Cleanup. Free •l. town Fr etta CHEAP! _._or--ai.A Gwat/lftlrd,f'rte•t. • ...... uar.-1• OranaeCtylnvProp
Uc'd daJ c:~ Nr So. ,.."f:'cte1n. rt=t. R.J, H"fman Ii Son, Oen 541-Maaft ?pm ea.28esorMS-i..> SPRINKLER SYSTEMS Ted-.OlJ4orU11-7CU •Pree &ta. 653--0575 ProtMcmt/TaxAppeals
o.t P1ua. &n.bthnat 82171:17ot~l Cootr.CuttomAll&Add, VERYLOWPRICESI HD ., .... g ID11-11aUoo&aervice. PROFIUIONAL Pa&tit· PAIN1'1NG. lntr/Extr. APWAlaala,Ed&S4-«MO
yra..!11.-il petloa, oablnet1, OD 1erdening metn· ....................... Uoemed 11'reel!ai. Ula. 1n .. r/Jbt« a.a. Exprdi..bone•t. neat .
• I • C1•-p. A&emtlc form.lea. New conat.. Rea t.tnance. Goorae 549-2015 ..... .., M $pat, Bob. fO.a&ll work 1U11IG03ie ' RH a. le 'Cl. "4·104: RoofliMJ a.n_, 1 ··-·-••• .. •••••••••• " comm • 4 •. 4 • .. "I Wt.at• REALLY a.~.. . Davo ••••••••••••••••••••••• -•• .. •••••-•••••••••• . " " ... • HOlJS•f Call Otnabam .......... •-,,,... ..... 6 , EcloooCQY Acouatlca: Qu.1 ~l lJc:. Do1'ded Joel'• Green P•lma ~ .,,..., • cA 1nm rem. Fine work. ltlW Uc 6 ln ROOFS lnatalled factory
PaUo co .. n. Tr.Illa. aprayed ulllna• r•· Gardening. Tree prun· Olrt.FreeestM5-5123 Roto ·IOU prep. aprkln a.rd. EJdtrior epetlalllt lot/Ext PalotU-1. Rea. direct· e&tab'l 35 yr!>
P'ude,. DecU01, P&in. au.ar, Uc U~IMB5, Uc. ~tract«: Nmodel, lng, abrub removal, re· UIMACULATlt CLEAN· repr, lawn renov. • lDft TrySM-<:allcoQS..5155 · ratea, quality " oeat Call 'Harold Gunn: Bri~ • Oai.. Bob fNef'ltDS-1.IUO decu, paUo covers. No oovaUoo, aprinklera, ING y DESERVE the eomp.MS-58S3 oeea • .Freutt. &48-%129. M9-al MIMIZllaAIPll. job loo small. Evea. rpn,cleao·ups.&42-6160 BEST. 2!!._,._7 U 'I WOR.KOUARANTJ:EO .__.C.M'"'""'tr_.· _;;...;;;..~-----
C-.t/C1H1e.. MJ.mT · ,_.._, • •1:• lnterior/&tr. ll'rt0 •t. ,.._ --ROOFS FOR LISS C41't• .. •• •••••••••••••••-·••••• G•wal ~Ices , -••••••••••••••••••••• 25ynup.ea.0285 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... •••••••••••• •••• ON&llAN c .... 5 n ex· a.ctric.al ••••••••••••••••••••••• AllC'e 1 ffousecleanl.nc. Brickwork. Small jobs. Pelt COntroL Flea & ant AIL TYPES. 40 yn ex· Carptatry aay type ...,..,.,." .._ :.yibin" •••••••••••••••••••••••HANDv..AN C ....... 0 ..... Reu,reUable,rets.~ N.....,...,. .. CoetaMeaa•-Knowlu Palnt101 abatement Landlca""' peneoce. Finan avail . Panel doc(.. ' pr.,..... .... • fto1I •· i,.. : -...... ;1. tram.~7207or646-48u -......... • · • • ,.,.. Free eat. lid'd bonded • • etc. Ahr.o Sdyourownform.a.Hve Hllbbmrda.ctric electrical, plumbing & I.rvi.Qe.615"3175eves. Int/Ext, commercial malnt, Comm I• res1d, CaHaoyUme894-0Ul
O>mm1. lic/eaL Aft. s, mooey.661·2423 Uc321l36 645-6974 noors641Mi851,847·2787 apt1, ruldentlal ' aft5.548·1239or642-S334 ~li -CARPET, WINDOW, Mo•ing mobile homes, la.lllO StwtocJ/ MleratioM
• CEMENT WORK. All ELECI'RJCIAN·priced HANDYMAN FLOORCLEANING .. ••••••••••••••••••••• "-fer/l.,al •••••••••••••••••••••••
• ~=;~c.reQ~~~ kmds. Reuonable. Free right.free esUmate on NOJOBTOOSMALL Dutch Maintenance ENERGY CRISIS? ~~~l~~~Jn~~ F::! •••••••••••••:••••••••• NEEDLEPOlNTERS
service. Wrk iuar. est.s.Ca1J 75CHl625 ~georsm.a11Jo~73-0359 615-2440 Service53'M.508 ~tcatll ~ lt all. ~ity eats.~78,Aruty VERYNEATPATCH Let me tum your worlc
•, 912-8314 B & D Concrete All c HANDYMAN-Homes & 5 8 e wi e mov ng JO~•TEXTURE Ultolovely pillows. Quall·
•, , phases coecrete. blOct & Gcwdlning Apts. conscientious Rosemarie's Houseclean· service. ~·~~-~days. C.Om.m'l&.Resldenilal No Freeeat. 893-1439 tywk,reas.~
Shelvm&-8torage ~ablnet..s bri~ work. Free esta. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Craftsman. Pb 645-0302 mg. Xlnt work, refs, ad 213-9"-411 • "'463 job too big or too •mall, T ~~ for ear " uul rma. lJ 'd&bondecl675-9720 rates,owntrana.6'2·1403 PainttngjP..,tng 20 yrs expr. Roome l'lun:blnCJ '" Formica lop, cstm bit. c ReGllardable Expr Japanese ~ HOUSECLEANING•-••••••••••••••••••••••• 115/up. Fully lnsrd "Uc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••--••• MC).71.U eoer. Reawnable, ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'our Oddjobltoo838-t995 Removal1, trimming, ---------.iTrade Your old atutf for rreeest.MS-5230Milt:e. Sklploader dump truck Business. Rellable Int/Extdepeodable,reu. DRA.INSCLEARED pruning. Freeeat.Uc'd, SELL Idle Items wtth a new goodies with a hauling ~ee work grad: :service, Janice's Rag· free estimate. Call Jay Sell things fut wltb Daily FROM $3.50 fully insured642-283'
Daily Pilot Classified Ad. Clasalfiedad. 842-5878 Classified Ads 642-5678 ing, dea'.io. etc 751.3g30 gedy Anns at.61>6SS3 6'5-7965 Pilot Wa.otAds. Call 751442
Clencal
I
'~~~ ..... ?~.~~ ~~~ ..... ?!~~ ~r.~~: .... ?!.~~ ~~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~~~~ ..... ?!!~ ~!!!"!':! ..... ?!!! ~~~~ ..... ?!~~ ~!!~••••••••••1 •• 1.0.0. Help WCMhd 7100 '"'~·-P f d U ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• ....,....~r ersoo or e • File Clerk Tramee. HAIR STYUSTS MAHAC'iER MOTOR ROUTE . P/t1me. Some exper. Escrow Instructor The Sky Is Umit Im med openings for KITCHEN HELPER IECEtVtMG The Daily Pilot has ~ Part Time, mornings. CLERK pref'd. Apply• Gary's 5 Yrs exper. m the field I d h I tt The Blue Beet. 107 21st large ro te . M14S >t Newspaper del to coin
Newport Ctr financial Deli, 3309 E. Coast Hwy, necess. toqualiryfor pro-In Uus ,runt,vlapety pued ~~~~erviceas~o~ulo:r~~ Pl. N.B. Apply iD person YOWll.~~!:!or manage-VieJo are~ g~ for h:~h machines. Small truck
· · firm seeks resp person CdM • per credential Call pos. w na inn or a · aft 3p ment u1WW•g procram. hool '11 d OK 645-2591 f 1 . 1 Lil t . · Ca . · bnGht eager indiv. Ca11 busy So. Cst Plau Mall. · m. We need a self starter to sc or co ege stu ent. --·--------,~; c ~~!':.:Om~~~. COUNTER HELP, no ex· ~~~To~}';rt,~: t!g~· Lisa, ~·1288. Denrus & Call for appl. Regis Hair Landscape Maintenance work in receiving & ad· Approxearnlogs $300 per Part Time ltO~ W/cllents. Good r~~R De nn is Personnel Salon,540-8888 work iD Newport Beach mioiatralio~ of fine rmth. Call=-4~l a nd SUMDAYOMLY
figure aptitude & al least SANDWICH MAKER ~~ Service of Huntington HOSPITAL H~ .. " Irvine are•. 40 hr wk women's retail clothing. eave name p oe. Driven to deliver Daily
t yr ofc exper. req'd. KITCHEN HELP ExecSeey_'s to$12K Be3ch, 16168 Beach Blvd, FOOD s-VIC......-E Mon·frl Call6"-48Mall Sel\d band written re· Pilot to carriers. Hust be
Good co. benefits. CPI, Apply lo person btwn Recepttorust $750 Ste l2L -6PM aume tQ Mr. Reynolds, NEW IN TOWN? Dls· 18 and bave good driving
• 1.80NewportCtr Dr, N.B. 2:30-5pm. 4250 Scott Dr, RE/C.OnstrSecy toi900 GAS MAN, exper. for Car WIHOOWWASHER 16165 Algonquin, H.B. sat.iafied w/presenl posi· record. Requires atation
644-4360. Ask for Donna Newport Beach. 833-2'&91 Jr. praitsperson $12K Wash 540 s Coast Hw HOUSBESllHG AID LEGAL SECRETARY 92&t9. tion? Would you like A wagon or van. Call
Oahl,ext339. lrvmePersonnelAgency LagBch.494.1922 y, PIXOMCAU Needed for N.B. Law MANAGEMENT, LOCAL Career oppor. w/mulli 642-4324 ask for Harry
Couple req'd to manage 488E17th Costa Mesa Flrm. Good skllls re· ·m .., c· ., E · Seeley Cocktail busy 30 unlt motel. Sulte2A4 642·1470 GENER AL WARE. PleaM cOllfad ~ quired. Call Naocy at BUS 1 N ES S MAN 1n1 on -irm · armng __ ;.__ ____ _
Waitress Telepbone644-2562. ~4':w.-~ HOUSE help, part·lime Ml office. 499-1311 540-SC(X; NEEDS PART TIHE potential in excess of PASTE·UP ARTIST ex-
Apply4450Newport Rd. . Fabricator general. Must or fll;IJ lime. heavy I.tiling South Coast CCNRIUUH· ' ASSOCIATE. 1/894-5047 S'20,000. Will train. Call per'd. Pleasant wo;lung COURT Director. Tennis k •. . reqtared. 642·6222 LEGAL SECRETARY. An'. 7 P.M. 751·9134. c.'Ollds. Co. benefits. App. COCKTAIL Club. H.B. Exper'd only now H~harc welding. ty Hoapltal. 31172 Corporation. Exprd. ly. Pennysaver, 1660
WAITRESS need apply. Over 30 pre· Apply in person at General ore. CLERK Coast Hwy. South NewportCeoter640-0800 MANICURIST MURSESAIDE Placentia,C.M.
Learn m 40 hrs the most f'd. Prev mgmt back Wes~port Marine. l 24 TYPIST Cor busy O.C. L.agMna Accepting applications exciting. glamourous, ground. Call betwn 3pm TusUn Ave, N.B. 645-4520 Mfr or auto dealer iden· Legal Secretary for f/time pos. in Euro· Training class starting PERSON needed to care
highly paid profess. Day &5pmoo.ly. 536-8832 FABRICS SALES tif1cation products. Good Hostess .& Busboy exper •Your Own Judge pea n beauty inst. 9/12 · Ap PI Y • Park for mtenor plants on or eve sessions. Place· . P/lime exprnec tele manner. Able to apply m person. Mon· oflhis career pos. w/fasl w /follow. pref'd in Superior Healthcare. commercial account!>
mentasslsL Good job op.-Dell very-Drkl ver & Call6464040Lmd~ work under pressure Thurs, btwn9& 10, 3 &s. paced local hrm for acryllcs&Jul. 1445 Superior Ave, NB. Must have exper Call por. Production Wor er. $3 to w / m 1 n i m um of at Gulhvers Restaurant, talented person. Call . Callforappaintment 642-:1-UO Margaret, 557·0150
Cal714/751·9194 start.M2·2256. FACTORY WORKERS supervision. Xlnt work· 18482 McArthur Blvd. Amy. 848·1288, Dennis & Marengo Beauty Nurses Aide, P /time, 8:»4::.lwkdays.
So. Calif. Cocktail DEL I V E R Y • Manufacturing planl ingcond.innewofc.Call Irvine. Dennis Peraonnel Institute elderly man, wheel PersonFrlday t.o$600
WaJtruses, Inc., 17922 AFTERNOON AUTO needs factory be.Ip. Call forappt Service of Huntington 7141752·9541 c hair. Convalescent •TRAIHEE•
Sky Park Bl Ste C CARRIERS NEEDED torinfo.646-8244 Benmattlnd Inc. Housecleaoers, mature Beacb,16168BeacbBlvd, MAT U RE WOMAN Hosp. Alert of mind. Your basic ore
Irvine.Ca92714'. ' ~~.J~~~5s~ FACTotlYTRAIHEE 38SC1Jn~~M92S26 =~~~~~~ refa, Stel2l. p /tlme to welcome Nwptarea.640-8292 knowled&e unlocks door
COMPANIOH AREAS. $350-$400 MO . Mrs. Gillan Liquot' Sten Cterlc newcomers & contact HUllSES AIDES to future w/congenial co.
HA Will train ln operation of E 0 E HOUSBCEIPERS Mature. expr'd, full merchants. F1eJCible hrs. E 'd .,11 & 11.7 Good ea. II Ray, 848·1288, Den·
Loving woman MUST VE DEPEN· automatic &/or hand tbl · · · F /time. Btyview Manor time. Apply in person. Need car, lite typing. xper .,. rus & Dennis Personnel
to bve iD with elderly DABLECAR.~3008 silk screening. 10 ~ 4 GENERALOFC.Litctyp. Coov. Hoep, 2055Tbwio 895W.19thSt,CM 547·3095. salary. C.M. area. Service or Huntington
w om• n • G en ' l Dent.al Asal. chalrside, day work week. 7·5.30 '"-'· reservations. Must Ave, CM642-3505. 549-:.ltJl Beach, 16168 Beach Blvd housecleaningandprac· F/Ume. 6 mo's exper. Mon·Thur.Applyat be depend. Apply in UQUORCLERKover21, MEAT CUTTER or Stel21.
-tlCal nursing care. Nice SomeSats.H.B.846-3540. THEHF.SIKCOMPANY person: 1131 Back Bay HOUSEKEEPER, hte exper preferred, lrvine counter belp. Apply. 462 HURSESAIDES PHOTOG•••~/ homewtth yard+room & . 38SCLINTON ST. CM Dr NB cook.ing, live in. Cor cou· 752.1336 E 17lhSt. C.M. Exper'd or will train. All IUU"'tft.
board. Non smoker, DOD· • Dental. Orthodol!u~. Equal Oppty Employ .. pie. Exper. 615-9388 Shifts. Mesa Verde Conv PRIM'TIHG SHOP
drinkerwboiainneedor HchaltrsBldbe ... 4!!pd,7 C'iEHERALOFFICE Liquor Market·Casbier / Medical Office Trainee Hosp.661CenterSt.C.M. Booklet assembly •. home. Sal open, Costa un c ,.,_.110 ~ FACTORY . H 0 USE KEEPER , Stock Personnel. Exper. must be able to work "'" Mesa6'2-2932 DENTAL Ass T . PACKAGERS Entry level ~o:si~lon mature. 3·11 shirt. ln pref·d. Good pay & bra. everungs & or weekends. Nuning pacltaelng help. Non· gradrng exam1nat.1ons G u e s t H o m e Apply In person before Spanish desirable, lite LYM C'"--HWM Smoker. Flexible hri.. Cbainlde, full time for Female. $2.50 per hr to for National Education CM '"'" -16 t 7771 ·-7'" Apply 108m·3pm. COOK al ct! X .A ... Merit 1s.,., .,._..., noon """l S 9..; .. •-1 St yping.548· Pursue a n exciting gener pra ce. ·ray s........ raises. .,, Fl rm. Requires neat · · · "'" · .... .., • OnSite PholoarA-1.1cs
A I · bt "S rt Sal M I A N B SA career tn Psych nursing. • cqn.q ppy 1npel'900 wn..-ce . necessary. ary oor ov a ve, . handwriting & ble typ. HOUSBCEEPER ·~al~ 3303Harbor.ES,CM PM. Hrs flexible. Jolly open.642-6880 548.Sl.25. in~. Apply National --··-r LVN position available
Roger Restaurant. 1727 DEHTAL Systems Corp. 4361 Birch ~~;~~J0w~s1e~Q~~ ~!MP~~Tto~~F ~~iJdoc'to~rch~~!pr~~I~ for 16 hours on day shin PIANO PLAYER-Perm
E. Dyer Rd. Irvine. uA~~ xlnt full •-p/ti·me St. Newport Beach <Nr Tr 7"'" 1431 Id h ofc. 60wpm+,10 key, bk· &h 16 hou,rs on even mg position for Sun & Wed ...... .., m Factory OCA!rport)E 0 E ansp. """ . see ni c arge nurses s 1fl Xlnt sa lary, church services. Call COOK, Colony Kitchen ls asslaUnc positions are · · . "for evening sbifl & nite lcpng, med Insur. Exper. benefits. s_nack s hop. Bob MoUneSSl·l096
now taldnc appUcatioril, oowavail.Pleul)Call General Hsekpr/cook liv~ 10· shirt. Xlnt salary pref'd. Top pay for right Ca ll ror inter view.---------
for exper coou & cooks Dlt.PERSOHHa GENERAL Cl.~K :'~~Pl~ba~~~;~ beoeflb, 1nack .sbop'. girl.646-0.S16. Royale Coov. Hos p, PLAHTOPERAT<>a
trainees. Apply in AgencyofOrangeCo Expanding N.B. fman· vu home. Salary oego. Call for lnlervlew. Medical 546~ _ Sal. S932·$1133 per mo.
person, Colony Kitchen, 1201 W.LaVeta,Ste209 HELPERS cial organization has 768-671'7 dys,469·5028evs Roya le Conv. Hos p, OFC MGR/SUPERV "" Req's equivalent. lo 1045 s. Coast Hwy. Orange 633-9740 . f i di 546-MSO OFFICE WORK d ti r H s •. 2
Laguna B"h. r 23701 Fr •-F operung or resp. n v. sua• CE Supervisory exper. in gra ua on rom .. "' Moulton Pkwy,o Laguna ee"' . ~ for switchboard. mail IM -H . LVM 11-7 medical field desired. Lady, 2J. yrs or older. yrs exper in the opera-
H11l1, Ca. At. Moult'oo Dental Asst Trainee fTempouryJ room. filing or micrortlm SALIS C.M. area. 549·3061. Transcription or medical :u"b1tc.~ ;~l!e!t :~!~ lion & maintenance or
-otr....•PlA•" SHIMEITOH! W L---1--...u duties. Exper. helpful. Forum Insurance Co, . -records knowledge be l mech·t eqwp. Contact ~ .. .,1 GA.Ao •_ ... ,..mt --"''ate but not req'd. Apply, b l did f u.a.cHl ... E--•·Toi bel ful Sal to $1000 . nea in appearance. Personnel Dept. City or Your sunny smile will _.__nt :t:rtuni-CPI, 2nd Floor, 180 s u ·' a r Y o ll"IA " vn;1u" _,_Pl......:..,. .. ~ry .f KIRK JEWELERS San Clemente. 100 Ave ~OOK, exp'd, apply ln light up busy offices of ..... .,...., •• _ Newport Ctr Dr, NB MONTGOMERY WARD For Costa Mesa Co ...... ...,-uc:mn. 2300HarborBlvd. CM. Presidio, Sao Clem. person, Sam's Seafood, succeasful practice t ! ty for 2 l•d vlduala 644-4360 ask for Ed Cook. ls seeking FIT & P rr Female Dept. No exper. • DI. PERSONNEL 545-9485 for appl. Cahf. 92672 (1l4) 492•5101 #2, 3901 E. Coasl Hwy CaUSUsan841M288, Den· who are MMdnc) lhorf salesperson tor it's necessary. WlU train. AgeocyofOrangeCo. b Sept Sthl977
_Corona ___ d_e_l_M_ar_. ---• n1s & Dennis Personnel ._ worti for approx• Insurance Booth oper lo Xlnt company bene.llta. 1201 w. La Vela, Ste 209 OFFICE, p/time. after· _Y · ·
COOK. Exper'd. Service or Huntington inDttly 30 lo 45 days General Office C.M. Guar. sal, traininad MS-0403 Oran&e 833-9740 noons, type 75-SOwpm. PRODUCTIOM
Pnvate Country Club. :::~~.18168BeacbBlvd, mdwhollavtSOIMex• HOUSEWIVES :::M~~:rry~~!n. MACHtHESHOP Free&Fee ~~4handwri ti ~I· TRAIHEES
Forapptcall:6"-54M ---------1 peri I IRdettt SSSSSSS tial interview call Precl.alon (rloder opr MEN OR WOMEN WHO Rubber boee products. Dhlrwaher Wanted bo~• " ry Fall ls here & although It 545·8243 or •'PPlY lo (Centerleas) Some expei WANT T 0 EARN Office Help F /Ume perm. Must pus co. pb>'l'ical 'COOK. exper'd. Ap11ty in No exper. nee. Night ~ and pockCICJiftcJ may be early it'& lime to p e r s o n t o prel'd or will train aome $50,000. A YEAR OR pos. for exper 'd person. includinc back x·ray.
' person. Velvet Turtle shift. Mr. D's Coffee ICll"CJf and s:naU •~ale start making aome extra M o NT G O M E R y one w/good mecb'l ap MORE. MUST HAVE Heavy phones. Use of 10 Irvine area. Call for
'Restaurant, 58 Faahlon Shop,lmOE.c.outHwy, prod11eb which in• cash for CHRISTMAS. WARD, 3088 Br11tol, tltude.54$-0403. SOMESALESEXPER. keyaddingmachimPor· ap~.~7639.
_J_sl_ao_d...;.,_N_.B_. ____ CdM did. bogging. Hahg nme/Ufe Libraries bas C.M.E.O.E. u•CHf ... ESH-• TO SELL MOBILE tanl " Ille typlnc."'---------
. _.... Ill u~. the finest & one or the '"""' " VI" HOMES. CALL MR &f2.000. ,. COOK DfSHWASHEllS -,._nc ng. .... it moat profitable p/time IMSURAMCI Small maout. near O.C. SIMMS,898-990t ------....-,--PROJECT
Fast Food. P /Ume Apply, Bayview Manor ahobeabtetooperate jobs avall. We orrer 3 Beautiful Newport Airport needs 1 male tc EMGIHEER
o lgbts. 3 : 30· 8 :'30. eoov. Holp, 2055 Thurio a fortdlft. If quaHfi•d shift• per day to fit into Beach Flre • Caauallty perform machining MESSENGER openlnc at OFFICE . Espr. nec-.ary. Calif ~anotN,B~n!: Coaat Ave,C.M.&U-3505. md....,._atedMtlMH )'our schedule, a bate lns1.111oclfrlced nerieds operaUonsinourproduc: ~ APtlobet~':-d!~rrt~ig IMMEDIATE regil\raUoo desired or .. -1. . .......,~ ltl t hourly wage + a com· qua e un erw ter Uon macblne abop. Some ~-Ulll" ..-• t 1 DISHWASHER po• ons. opp y in rnlaslon&aoxlntbonua. With experience In pro· geo'labopexper. desire tloo iovolv DI record OBrlllN~S obta n•b e. Strong
COOK Apply ln person, Mui· personto No travel. F /tjme is cesslng, servldn1. & ble, .but not nee. Own keeping, some proof re· f"ut a knowledge or water &
For small retlremeot doon'1 Irlah Pub, 202 · • avail. marketln1 or com· tnnsp.40Hnwk. Prefer adina, measencer runs. For People With sewer ayatema required.
home in La~a Beach, NewpottCtrDt,~ TlREDOFTIIE meroiahccounta.Sal1ry aae 18·23 yrs old. Requires reasonable s.cret.tet.Clerical Apply in penon to Kr.
, , exper. pref d lo home ffi~ ROUTINE? open. Xlnt benellta. Mrs 557-7283.-• language ak.Uls, a valid SWft.Y..--' T'-"-, Fueotea. Robt Beln, Wm.
style cookio1. Good Drapctr7salesperaon THISJOBISFORYOU! Baker,m.9550. drlversllceoMwlthgood .~ .. ~ Frolt " Aasoclates at : woridq coodL For in· Newport Draperlea (41; CALL US NOW AT * MAIDS* record. Oood oppontmlty •r~ -1401 Quall St. NWl>t Bch.
, WvlewphcneGt-Ma 831.-0 13WOf5 Investment aervice clerk '1'tie Ion at Laguna for adnncement. Apply DaN PrOcess Skills
TDIE·LIFJ!! ReQtare1 bullnea math. 2UN. CaUlwy,La&una in pertOl1 at Dally Pilot, CtlOOtO the daya, wee.ks ,. .... .: ~ . ""~ $4.00 per bottr. ~ DRIVERS. & Helpera BRUNSWICK LIBRARIES ir {yp1D1. Nr ruhlo11 . 330 Wtlt Bay St., Costa & location in wbtcb )'Qu r-_. ~ ~' · P11 bl"'1l lPM & 4P . needed. Local household 'Eq--'OppEmp'.._,..1• lale.CallMf.flO:M , MAIDS Wanted lm·11 Jlesa. F.qual Opponunl· . ra ~llootlmedapcdy , ... 1001• ~~!,1l•rt·
• Charle• Dloten1 movinlt0t11p&n)',exper. CORPORATION ...... '1&1U ~ • medJately. /tbQe. Ex· tzEmp!oyu: ~ q,_ • uee Ullo --,. , J\eetaurant. nu It. nee, J!'or appt. call JANITOR Cpl. Deya. Ap-per. unnece11. We ualn. • _ tlmo po1ltlon on nlte
• .coutRwy.CclM M'1·mB •--'---OI 1•1..:....:. ~OHtel ply ln penou. 1131 Baek Apply. N~rt Channel sbif&. Join lb• team.
DRIVER WANTED ml .,.,.,... 'f -Part-th:n 1'b lll'rl BayDr.,MB_ . Inn, 8030 W. Paclfl~ M-1 .. ,, ne~pa~ auto • Royal• Coov. Ho1p,
-N C~~i>r reUred, 1entlema:9 ~ j33J .... wllvd 8:~to5.•R.E,~ct. Ea: Janitorial Fioor man, CoutHtry.N~.'42·~· ~~x..hnUam • -~---_.;....;.__._ __ _ ~ v • drive me. m7 cu, N•~ ,......., u.u.;. ... :...f per. requlrtd. 8011 nlshL ablA. M\t.lt be ex· MAID dally. Perm. attuaUon. ti · ..; ...__ PIMc Stit.tr • : N.fJ..-'t.l!/li bet~ a.u Bch erea to Anabthn _...,.....__ • pbooH \Jptna, lt. ~r'd. •S r wt. Co. ''" ·lmniod. optnlftJ for ~~W,pl') OhplltQeci
' ~: .. , ~~-.,'"-· dally.call~touya. Eq 1 ""rt 11 .~ 21 l'o ~ P"'-.. benefH•.So.Coe1tPlau, WlU train, f\llJtime, 2845 mature~ w/amall --,~MNtce s.i ~ll105 per mo ua op.,.. W'I Y ferred .~-. . ,., 1 •1 Harbor BIVd, CM Coral carWN>bUnetclforaub-IJJ.7711 R • • l lHt ·
1!. c.-s.'T 'lt ' DRUOrtSTOR.f CLBRK, empl~M1r C.llSU.te611"4400 .n .. 1-1 I ~. l\uf llloteli But •taftUil nU'a income, CO\dweUBankerBld( I v~u~U:~:it~ ~; n: upe tnc • Lal\&DI !loo.thrul'?l. Jewelry Mfl ftda ~ Weat.ern.;5'.5-9'7 •. Call bef noon. Tbe to«>MaCArthurBl~d yrs or resj)cmslblo ~•n'l
t'-r 'n..-H''""•• U. ' ,Betch:41M-'7Sl6 ,., ., ._ ._-;; .. ~"~' ... "~-~...-~, ·~-1 jeweler, poll•her Is u · .. ·"'-'-' ...... .,. .. c:-, • ,RellaW,5'0-l008. ' Sle80I _., Newport8ch elerical ex ... •. Ol'·"'UbJic , .,_. ._A~· -. ·" . ..--~'C' ·-woma, Glrt.Prtdayto .. llturuee ~tl•mond • ttu. Xlot. fltilinlan•c:•~tilit. -..-\II'
)i"' .\PPl)i lapenon DlbWJbr/B boY fan\atUc oppbrh1stlty aaoapr. Neu Fublon 1"0ftinl ~ • trtn1o F/Utne. Apply en n, MOTOR 'ROUTll _ contact wort1 Co"tact
_ _..pcnlloa~fi.i Pt/fulltltne•el\f!:fl' Uc wtlbBMUne.Subltantlal 111.~. '.,,f r ,\ bentfl\1. Orn•• Co. Saft Clemeote l~tS 1bl Dally Pilot has a Otfiet....U..R ~1 dtpt; Cltt• of
Yr• SMACISHOf Qe.anc..-,.. _,.-.79re11-.eatalo11 without , • , rf9.f1M _, .. . ,. Eaplancliao san Cltal,' tart• ~oute ln;Bouth Esper manorwomanto San Clefn!~loCt, 100 Ave JMllC.;Golllt~ OcUI .. ~-.... , , nt11eellnl ~ f1mllf. GtRLSMBDID .4 ' ... , _". . ~-a.eio:1; ' u,un• . approic earn: Ail Dlclc run PNsldlo, .--n emeote, • ~f'Aaal()ppoi'Emp°ao,et _, ... _.IC Full or l'•tt Um•. Sindwlcb del.1 J>~ ~ • , ~ • , ,, .. tnoSllOOpsr IDOl\tlL Hon :!:.. iood .],re::;. the Ca Ht. &2112. ('114 > ~=~~~~~=~ _, ASS84.. UDUmlt.eddlift\C'efottd:1,4 hr d•>"· Own t.r&M. J~ MtJnten1nce~CIUn-thni f\'t ~ and }rtahl pereoo Gro•IAI 48W!Olb)'&tpt8lh.11T7. in . :N ~ .... .J~t... • ~,. fOI'. expr\t 6 namnt11'-lrwtam ~ Elm <WV suo hr-. c.111,. •~<~••mt Ina tor PfN(hool. Kri s.t• &.t.n ~Car MO-UM , ... _ .... ___ __ ~;O>Ota'¥ap, ;IMWU lblA. tratn .... P.C.>ilJoarit; Ill c:hect1. Oall t•r ~·ipm. PbomoMMm HAU.JIWILl.mts(t ,niiible.ta1114cMD>. fr: •&Id ,ancxl dr\Yln1 feCOrd cons_~:.. ·~.-Riet&utesalea 0 ~!:!fl~~ WiMI Ii~ tab. ,pe1,1oa•l lnt nlew. <•,Ql(Si;o '\:ieea.~•-;;..1......,.1-rial'tmrh'*"'\tWmaror _ .. . reqilrido Call 1424111 orncALIMSPICTOa IOO'/.COMMlrs«)M '~::.;;:c.,,..... , ... ~".... Small:~eumptinJ w/xlDl -7.fTOorNl•llOJ.r, '• P r-,., ,~...,..j.a. -, Ii Leavll1&Mm•anCS~~ ,. blah p l•lon op'
• 'cooerswANTID '' '·l;.·~·b. ··~··"·· F'EKALtSION i • =~:f'~.~·~t11 s~ i lf:~ m:DP 'luratitl .. , l\, -. }~Jt~;_,.tl~. Requi~• exper: :i~p~:.~!C:t!~;
I\ 1111t•lunth~'l.\.fif""~r..'O~P•l'l1 , SALDPUSON ! ~ ,_ r -· .. 1 'iApp}Y •• _., .. Coaa\ PAlti~ll · JL..,c ~. >1,.w/lnlerferome.try, & ti,tp,
-:; Ma '8UtllW. 2.1.1.£. um • ' .. _'' ·". IAlil.,.. Callf~•P~ ...U:COOtC ."r ~flau,8*JiittotC•t.. ,, ~ i 1 ' ,, , • '"·~r qu•ll~l\lrfaot ln·i. L:ACASAILTY
a.ex.," '• ... rum 11~ .~ ,_!'~.:.·:"i rift 'M::t.:"0: _, ~ ~ ', ~•Wcnd e Hlt'agot -~~~;· ••nr open •. -.mo eie:a1:om
t ,..oftlls "I~ u.LUt" ,,..__.. -, ..... IOGO E OOtit ... "'* dm!.t. Utd Amtaa.QIJ.1 ~ • ltiftidllS ~ct n .D. Buu..Atd. ~ Vft ~ ... -~oppor lllry.Cd.Wf.i.l .,, -:.~ 1 ~'Wtll'tt mW'!.illGet· Xlii& ......,.., you'tlll'•b oPTt'5YSTEMs1Nc., ,,. · ~· wtuu~.,.A.~~--~ t\ SMBIOllTloMS ~..a iac• ror bdabt'. t ... _ 'i tr·tlllJl'IU11.~m• am . Cl'llforil~•ent 1·1 a sale ~}_V0At<irrn1t• ,, Peo$1.!!_w~ntedf~ ""_ ...... ,, ~J ~~~re-Hll•Uo:mlhiftfJCN-Owft ·i\rapap. Ovet 21 1 rA~~llsaoAll . .J lnLtl'll,c •. m~u " u1ll l W1• hhe 1f)~~:,J,:~-.~·.t J~:: c~1tt•r~•lri ~~n:-= 1~,:n!-~~~ada~ ~a:.~,_11.P.!i.:T•IM ~ =-o:=wr-:1 ir:::~G 1
" • SER~i~~ifR~ Y ~-iiJit"a :i.6 \itC ~~ .o ·~...__,, , ,_ _ "-I• ?5 'i...... I llNll ARAOE SALB ln , ibihl>Wt? ~f!-~;ar ,1.;::i ...... ,' ~111 n-., P\:1: &~~ '). . ~m ~.Tltelm wllh ~1~1dreD~:!lf:.,• ·~'~ •• 1112 • .c ••.,.·~.1 tht~ts·~ ,rta1b P· ·-i 1,,. .,:' .: " "'""""""•-"'-';.,;,.. ~ ,.. .. Mb• I !Y, _ • .... 11 P'l •--.c "'"' ace r ne (ls\llt drC.'f .10 th • l ..... •..:.~ *r4alioiU.a.iii•d W•Mt C~l&llJth t=~lotOl.ilalfWdAit. Pt1et ~CIHftJ ... fl~. ,_, ·-~ dra"lnl ~ard, pllone,,w .• a Dtny )>Uot .ft7.lll :GM It.. [I ' ( .• 1 .... ..__ ~ ' W-11tdlat. I • I j ea..10MMt~·
,. ; --· -.. [i
,,
f1
Q ,.
• •
RECEPTIONIST· one girl
needed for Sat work only
&W-849'
RfCEPTIOMIST
F/t1me. Must be
fashionable. Male or
fem. for busy salon
Richard Ouellette, 200
Newport Clr Or, N B
RECEPTIONIST, apply
m pcr:.on, Tom Rae llatr
Styles, 218 E. l 7t.h St.
Costa Mesa.
RECEPTIONIST
Beauty Salon Allral't1ve
w1pleasanl personaHty.
Betwn 20·3S. Work Tue5
ThruSat. Irvine. 752-6141
RECEPTIONIST
Bright. friendly young
lady for our buay front
desk. Typing req. Apply
tn person. btwn lM PM.
Executive Row, Inc.
39021 MacArthur, Ste
211. Newport Beach.
Restaurant Counter Help Salesperson
~anchoSan.Joaquin Gou YACHTS Course. Irvine. 552-1224
Contact Manager Brokeraee & new sales.
Fuji/Newport Bcb. Rest. help, exp only.
Waitresses, dis ·
hwashera, b1.11boya New
Yorker Rest. 428 E. 17th
St.,CM.
RETAIL
CLERKS
UTOTIM
C:O..vtwleece M_..ta
Poslt.lonl open lat, 2nd &
3r d 1hifta In San
Clement• " La1una Beach. otber areu have
openll\19 also. No ex per.
req'd. Apply at any or ourat«es.
25m!Newport Blvd
Calta Me11 642· 7102
SOUTHWESTERN
YACHT SALES
21616 Newport 673-9211
DAJL y Pl1.0T ••
I
USED CAR
• DMSIOM
SALE ..
RIDA y.54 TUltDA Y·SUHDA T
AUGUST 26-rf ·21
2 YEAR OR 24,000
MILE SERVICE
CONTRACT AV AIL.AILE•
LOOK~~~~ .
ECONOMY CARS
FROM '1222
'H IUICK 11.ECTRA. ~~~··"· c•••• s 1222
'H OLDS CUTLASS -~~-ISOQ532 s 1222
'61 IUICIC SKYLARK
~~s~~ .. u. ~ ""* s 1333
••74 AUmH MAIJMA
:..=~ Hanomouoon s 1555
INTERMEDIATES
FROM s1aaa
'72 C .. YSl.8 MEWPOIT
f1~~~ -~~ S 1888
••7 4 FORD PINTO
• tP••d 1nn11"i111on s 1 999 1&13MMI..
LUXURY CARS
FROM'4444
'73 CADILLAC UOIADO M•u~!flOI' sa.444
"75 CADILLAC SEDAM DEVIW
In eb1otwt•IY fl1wl•t1 $6666 CO•Khlll)rOI ~DI
••77 POMT'IAC GU.MD NIX
"""""' 1481MW> ~ EQulpm•nl tncitudeo ~6666
••75 CADILLAC a.DORA.DO ..... _ ....... ,,., .. S6'm_
SPORTS CARS
•77 TOYOJA CBJCA ~~i ""'~ .,, ~ $ 5333
76 TllUWH n1
• aoeett ....... ., c-S5666 1172~1
I
IHh. Sllpe/ ...,.yclitt/ 4 WMtC Drh et 9150 D9cD 9070 Su ... , 'aso ..................... .. '°' • w 9060 ....................... ....................... ~-..... w .....
•M•••••••• .. •••••••••• 74 Ya.maba TX 500. muat 4t I ..... c-f "'"'-A-, ••• ,,,.. WANTEID: S'f' SHp ln •• n. hlavtn• •tate. 'If - -• ~-• uae new, wr or Dan• Point by 496-7t70or4M-ICO WEOVl'SELLALL att • trlr, 11600 or belt Ml Sept. 142.0095 or J~£PDEALERS off • '14'41·1"9 ves ...-KAW·UIO, 2,000 ml. Lady !NTH.ESTATE
1 -rider oa1y-oo-off road. HUGllNVBCTOllY IHh. s,..4. 1295. 875-lm/146·'7390 All Mod Is New• UMd YACHTS SW • 9010 '12, 2SO am11U din bike Leulft&Avall.able
Bcdler• la n 111 ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• lood C9nd. m u1t sac. Cotta MeN
Fllli part lkh lmp 17' V-6 110 129SO. 2182 SUQ/oftlG4ZI& AMC J ... SOU1MWUTaM I Zl.ll&t. .. mi&KA.RRORSLVD.
TOP
DOI.LAI
PAID
FORCL!Wf
~~··1
1,.M \'1 lif A1 •• hl 11 11
ttur.' 1~4C,', )N t·H A• t1
.............. ........ ...... ... ..............................................
.,... t71 .......... 9740 .............................................. * DllYIA 'Ir Hard&op, fll 117''4dL,
* UTILL. * 11000·0.~~ .
SAVE A LOT
SHOP CO PA •
BARWIC !f 0.A T<.UN
' ' ,, ' ' .
8J l .1l7'>1fi J.Jl7!>
'72 lhrcedu 180 1Jl'!. -~ wJoopa lnt,: AC. &o au,• cood, on&
OlWDT t1 Farm. PP ~«627·Ja'I YACHrSA.LU ~ 3t00 ...,_......._I.e./ CoirtaM.. ~-8023 - -a.t/ShwGfl ff60 :.11116 Nciwp0rt 61'1•tan 1953 CLASSIC •••••••-••••••••••••• JEEPS -,7.. • 2505. 4 dr Wu. "no
CJ • "' • • • c J • ., • I • IMPORT c. •s 1'Wll!l!!IJl!l'-llll!llll!llll!ll• &all no.·· auto .. AC, ;Gi; ~ •• u boat 12' fbr11.a 1t•cHJUSClAFT _)_ --.. ""' II I rnoo1n-.
H..I .' : ,• M 1 •, l -1 0 1 1 J
w/trlr. Xlnt cond. S600 RACING RUNABOUT SO. CAUP'S Cbetok... Waconeera, AU,; MODB.S c ean, ..... er
SSU328tw Casual Bay Crwlo1 OT LARGEST Plck·ui-,upt.ol1,200dil· -~~~~~~Jllli~~TH~~llST MNm
Water SIU. Veey tood neetol''New"Motor c.'O\mtll. $yr 80.000 mile WI MG 9742
Warrucn cat. 36' Lua Ria ~....a "··crili-•• -'MVl n-.. _._,_ 0 l'"" wan.n•~a available. MEED • fl&.mf PIUCU ···-············-···· Ketch. YulJv unulp. ,,_..,...,. ,.. -.,._,,. .nume._._... ver "" ~ ""-Jt-M ,, ... Pb615-a.l8lor~ tmmodelltocboOee CopelmdMtnlnc ~ , .. ~•A41• MGTC lt41
110.000. Eva 497·2196, trom: 18'to32'. 20GllU.1t,SA$58-8000 Cl IAM TODAYl 38,000 orts. mllea. Too
cbtya41HM3 t4'Gluaboat.trlr,MHP lnlutanceinclllded --USIDCAIS 888DOVESTREE1' ruce for word.I! $8'150.
Udolt,<.'wltombum,xtn Jahnaon. elec atart. Dale'sRVR4SOtala.lnc. li._._ 9560 MOW NearMacArthur 84().1225
cond. X\J'a. $1750 or or Sll00/0fr~9al4 <114)~ ,,...... 4rJamboreeRoada ft:f'. 87J.7tl.8 ·-•••••••••••••••••••• CA.LL PAPPY .....a 9744 ••••••••••••••••••••••• T•• 1pa1tatloA "74 Ford noo ahortbed, 540 5630 133-1300
11' MOIGOM 01 ••••••••••••••••-••••• RENT Fireball M.H 23' low mt clean, $3400/bes -IEA.TTHE PRICE 72 MGB. w/bard t.op, m
Loadod with oow eqwp· ~ "'*'/ self-cont, plus aterw " otrer 1'1675 Locust. F.V. ~•••SEii! goodcood.,S2SOO.
rnent Slee(JS 6 adul~ m Rtftt -9120 CB.Slps6.~ _sm._5Gl56;._ ______ 1 ,.___ 651·3843
t'omforl low tlme on •. •••••••••••••••••••••• "73 DODGE Pride & Joy, "II UJV, w/abeU, custom. atoauc ~· .~enoa. dm.&Y. 71 vw Camper. 12900 20, motor home. lmmac xlnt cood. H,OOO mt, 262C60SHAlllOR llVD. 13NEWCARS 71 MGB, AM/FM. I trk
VHF. 6 3 head room Mml coodJtl()n, rebl1 en&, ~ loaded. 35,500 ml, '3800. 84S-.304G TA ME AT'Ilm OLD PRICES Sl. UM. Like nu, must M~r~ room that muny raduils. tape deek. pp 19•000. 548.6891 or --__ All models now availa· sell.$4~.49'1-13'15 .
32eni Owner un:iuous. ~dayaonly l7S-2000. "'1%QaevyLuv,sac.lcav· WEPAY ~Cal~?fseeusbefore Opet 9746
m-1403orm 9211 bk.rs. ma country w/camper TOP DOLLAR Y bUY · · · ....................... .
, . -'74 VW Safari. A/C, FOR RENT-20' Minl shell, mag wbeela$1'195. 19760.ca 17 ~kTb18UeClassac Coleman stv, refrlg, MotorHome,oompletely 6.57~ FORMIFTY ..-...
Woodie w trlr, 2 a>eta ol holdull tanks, etc. Hvy equipped, very clean. ---------• IMPORTS OnJy 6000 nules •stUI UD· sails-cover $850. 3bp ena. XJnt. 49,000 mi. 613-Sl33 Dod&e Pickup, 1973, ex-der factory warranty.
Seagull, long shaft S200. 499-3808or491M825 eel $1'195. Gu or pro-Mil"'UISMOTORS 2845HARBOR BLVD. Sold new 6 mo. ago 96fH"85 eves -For rent: '76 Far West pane. &.1!M237 "I" 540o64 IO 540.02 ll Automauc, mooaroor & 8' Cnb OvCT, very clean, Mtr home. 20". SC, lower 28802Marguerite Pkwy. _______ _:__1 AMi FM radio. <588SPS>.
SHOCKlaclllgSabot, xlntcondS600. fall rates start 9 /15. "73 Toyota w/abell, wht MISSIONVIEJO Red 19'17 Datsun King Showroom cond. S250 S48-0256 54&-91Dl 642-<848 sPoke rlm1, nu tires. 831-2180 495-1210 cab, AiC. AM-FM stereo Bluebook-$3400; our ---------1 $2.&50.6'6-3402 casi.. player, bucket pnce1sonly$2995!
Sorenson Sloop 17'. Just Well t'OOStruct.ed camper Trailen. Tram 9170 WE IUY seats. 8800 mi. $4400. HEWPORTER n
restored w1sails, aux sbell for small imPort ••••••••••••••••••••••• 197lToyotaPk• USED CARS! 960-4658 642-0795 mtr. everything. $2690 .. lr~k Windows and boot. 18' Coastllner. Self con· Hllux Model mag wheels, w • th Cb l --dys 521·5920 evs. 979-9065. First ~5 takes. Call tained, good cond. $1350. wide tires, comp eng ere ~ o~w evrole "72 1200 Datsun. f'ac sun--6313149, 642·L060 aft. 5 C811548-3011 ' overhaul. runs good. dealership m the Irvine roof & maes S2400 '70 Opel Kadett. recent 25 · s p ARK MAN & PM Xtra top for bed. $1&75. Auto Center. We need 556-6677 afters. reblt en&. R i H, S800. s T E p H E N s .... • ....-.,,__...1--.1--.. your used car' 642-32<15 FIBERGLASS SLOOP ' ,,..,... ..,. ,._.....-AftS,842-9'1S3 JOI:. QUJCK DAT PU '73 --------
Inboard loaded fuli Motoriud BlkH 9140 ~eepl I. Includes Stove, '" Must Sell. See to up· Pantera 9747
lect . •-. I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sink. Jee Box. Good Con· ''14 LUV Truck, Mikado. .._,. •c PHERSO"""' ••••••••••••••-•••••• • e rorucs ""very c ean. _..ti , c.oncn t d " wide tires, camper shell, ,..,,_ " prec1ale. 540-7058 Mike Sl4,950 or make offer. Honda Exprescse. good w on. -or ra e .or rear bumper, clean. CHEVROLET ----74PAMTERA. ITI4)642.2717 condition. $250. 545-6084 older economy car. 111150 ~13 2 A Ce D . '73 Datsun 240Z. Xlnt ~.000 miles, ruUy tac·
----ask for Steve 834.()699. · · 1 uto ot.er nve cond. Bnght red, mags. lory eqiapt, <ser.H0'1296) 12'Kste.ne~ mast,i.a1l,& - -• -"13~TonChevyP.U olt8 IRVINE a1r,AM1FM,$4250.16361 OneoftbelasUOOmade. rig&mg Ji;t S62S tllkes Yamaha 600, like new. 23 Terry. new. awning. cab-over Carop°er' &d 768-7222 Wuoblcdon, Hunt llrbr $14,419
675-471!1. 4 7 wkdHys, 180MPG,50mph,xtras. MmaoyeUxtras, bke new cond.M,500.968·593S· --Ph(213)592-2491 ~c•RS
anytime weekends Sacrifice $290. 846-1256 ust s . 551-2054 _.1
""' ""' --MfloSentic:e Pwts Autos. Import~ 74 260Z. 4 spd, AC. mags. D°ELEGAHCE
Catamaran Spint 17 w/ ~r_.~J • ....................... AM / FM. xlnt cond 626Wl7tl\SA54'l-9250 '
trlr S1300 mo 871:5000 Sc 9150 &AccetioriH 9400 v-. 9570 .AlfoROllWo 9705 $4450 833 1361 dyi.
X4il dy~ evs wkods ••••••••••••••••••••••• •:•••:••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• 675·5430 ev~ wk.nd~ • Porsche 9750
731·3966 BMW '76 R60 6 fa1nng. 64• 11 Used Muitan1 Hon '66 Chev step-van '76 AlfeUa GT. 5 yr warr. -;6280z . t t -•••••••••••••••••••••••
-SM m I S2 l 75 p P Parts. 990 No. Parker, w/i36 cyl eo& 14 mpg AM/FM lik air. s ereo, ape. SPORTS CARS is· Hobie w trlr, dbl (6L9~ > 752·6-WO Orange. Ca.11997-2000 everytbini gOOct cond' new,S67~~;:os:_~., e lmae4!';_·.,·~5 .,.,,..,opr ·pai.!tume , ~&Sold lrapeie, xlnt cond $159~ -l4'x6' bed. windows, e:i· ~ .,.. ...,,.,.,, ' __,..,
S52·1S93evs/wknds Honda ATC, 90 SlOO '15 WANTED: lras. Call 6'"5-3219 ·, • -----------1 250XL,$600 VW Traosaxle '68 or • '73 Datsun Wagon 4 i.pd, WESTGERMAM
22' Columbia, <I sails, 6 HP 4.96-7561or8'13-4670 lat.er 646-7898 Auel 9707 Gd cond. Radio 2 new
mtr. good cond, w1sbp, 548-8778 ••••••••••••••••••••••• tJres.SZ200,pbS48-8082 IMPORTS
$3800 979-7391 '74 Yamaha enduro 360. '1 5 D 0 d 1 e R 0 Ya 1 '76 Fox, A/C. cruise coo----714/ 541·1186 -Low mileage Must sell MoYlll& out. VW parts, all Sportsman Maxi, 8·300, tr I AM/FM te 4 11::1~ ---=------Hob"" Mono Cut 12' Xlnl Call""" 53 8 ... ,_ .. _ .. .,.,., W Roberts auto, loaded Must sell 0 s , reo. · nus 9725 -·g lE s ti ~ ooOc.· l ........ ua. '""" • • spd. stick, White 4-door, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ''! 1 portoKma . c. ni:w cond Asking $4S01best S.A.531·'1225 below book , $3600. mats ~,.495 552 -tJres, pamt, orus. Air. oHer. '76 GLlOOO excel cond, -493-911>5 ..... · _,~ i1 · 850 Spyder Convt. $6800/oCr.499·2712
642·1520 fa1nng +more. Moving, 66Volvo-AMlolAesiftcJ 9580 '73 lOOLS, AM/FM tape, Great shape, great fun. • . . .
must sell Bst ofr. Wlllaellparts ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sorf.air,Auto. Must sell, best offer 199UTTarga.Newt1res.
9070 645·4440,675-7013\rade Call&al-2'176 1977 oma...oo $2960 558·7837 6'13-42ffl mags. Xlnt eond. Many
F
. ...,. -----xtras. 96500. 645.11873
••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED ord engine 289 cu m. in ClEA.RAMCE! '72 Audi tOOLS. 4 spd, 81.lD· i5 Fial 124 Sport Coupe. -WANT two 27 Sllilboat 3.Wllondaengine.l970or good shape, gone Call now tor low. low roof,SlSOO.firm.&33·2Z92 clean. sharp, lo mi. lug '61 Porsche hardtop
Slips. Newport, Ba Ibo"' ne~cr !):J6.J582. A!.k for ~~f:e~~~-211c;' milettge lease rata. An example or644-4039 .rack. 13'750. 960 1492 an coupe, Karmen body.
Mr Whlle. 675-1393 Don 1977 POMTIAC - ----6PM rare model, very lood Su 1974 Fox. 35.000 m1, 'auto, -cond, clean $3.500. PP ·r~ . 1uk1 250 Otrt Bike. Autos for s• RNbird TrwK AM air. AM/FM. reasonable, Honda 9727 546-8900or52'7·229T
Classified Ad& i.cll big Good l'ond1t1on Must ••••••••••••••••••••••• --must sell 548 7895 items, i.mall item~ or~·acnl1ce Sl50 orrer. •...:--../ CortfoxLealRcj · ••••••••••••••••••••••• RolsRoyce 9756
any item 642 5r.78 642 .i238 __ -~ 9520 645-1661 IMW 971 % lrand Mew •77 •••••••••••••••••••••• • •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• •1 DEALER IN US.A
5, Hew 9100 "M•w 9800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Autos w-.d 9590 HONDA Cars · ·
•••••• ••• •• • • •••••••••• •••••• •• •• • ••••••••••• 1 9 4 8 p 0 N T I A c M ... 11.1y IR{ ROY Silverstreak 2 dr ••••••I'•••••••••••••••• ~ CARVER
Streamliner Unrestored WE WIU IUY To Cllo•• "'°"'! ROUS·ROYCE The Summer but all orig. Best ofr. YOURDATSUM UNIVERSITY U4'UmNrM , over $800. 494.9401 ext , PAJD FOR OR NOT COME IM & 511 Oldlmobat ==r a.w.
Sensation 22S.askforDoug. .FOTOPRT~c··s THEALL.HEW Honda Cars • GMC ClOSEOSUNOAYS
'51 Plym convt, 6 cyl. Nu vr -630CSI MOW!!! Trw:ks ·~~F·· at Xl ~9 top, brks, pot. Runs ed. 2850Harbor Blvd ' "II / . Ofr. 963-54Jj aft 6 COMPLETI Costa Mesa 540-964U
IUY OR l955BulckSpectaJ IOOYSHOP
CONCANNON'S
HORSELESS
STABLES LEASE 4 door'~&inat e<IUJJ> MOWOPEH ~~~~ ~~-50·~--.w...-\¥EBUY '
SPECIAL SALE
THIS Wl89tD OMLY
55195 ·
hcreaHoMI CLUH CARS
Vthldff 9530 Ir TRUCKS •••••••••••••••••••••••
SADDLBACK .
V AU.ff IMPORTS
811-204049Mf4'
CREVIER
'73 Civic Hatcbbclt,
AM/FM, air. 40,000 m1.
new pl!Dt, &d runnln1.
$l8SO. 644-7~
'76 Hatch back 5 s pd,
yellow, stereo FM cass,
xlnt cond. 759·0488
Brokers or fine contem-
porary ROLLS ROYCE
BENTLEY
automobiles.
2'111 E . Coast Hwy
(714) 675-0930
JtftMft 9732 Toyota 9765 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
''l41f.a Jensen Healey, IEFOREYOU
24,000 ml, lmmae., $.S295. SB.I. YOUR =' t.o aeu 642-4369 TOY OT A,
.-.-,--GMa---,-7-3-5-1 !::.~fa top dollnr-
••••••••••••••••••••••• MAR(i>Uts TOYOTA
Ml.s.5ION VIEJO
131-2110495-1210
?IMOMZATC w vw Bue, auto. oric "7Ute&al 2-dr. \'tDJl anrf, XlntCOllid. Uke new. owner, dean & re.Uable, IJll·FK stereo. pwr will Oniy11,000mi. lluat woa.~im dowa, V·&. Like new .ellaowlm.-92 --------1 131SO.M0-10U VWCmpr, "70 pop-top. Nu Cllitller 9925 enc. clt.cb, tires. AM-FM. c '' 11 ........ -......... ..
l2300.-..nSl ••-••••••••••••••••••• 1976C .. YSLa
Vol•o 9772 •••••••••••••••••••••••
IEFOREYOU
SB.L YOUR
VOLVO, -
. COllDOl4
Full power, factory air
cond., tilt wheel & many
moreextru! (612REM).
• $5499
1975 CADILLAC MAIBS
See us for a top dollar
estimate!
COUP! DEVILLES AUTO cana
(5) to choose from Div.-Naberi Cadillac
MARQUIS VOLVO
MISSION VJEJO
831-2180 495-1210
Cloth or leather in· 1425BakerSL, C.M. teriors, all with power !,!a blk east of Harbor Bl
'assists & stereos. 44~9909
ORAHGI COUNTY
VOLVO
EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO
(<mLE!). Priced as low--------
as '74 2Dr Braugba.m. Wblte
$5988
Largest Volvo Dealer 1'1..T-LA.'\....-
in Orange County! 1 ~13
BUYorLEASE ca<1•11 DIRECT , ac
~, .. w~ .2600 ..... bo, Bl··· • J • Com MeSJ 540-9100
2025 S. Manchester
Anaheim 750-2011
& lo m.ileaae, loaded.
3311 frwy ml, $'500,
M2.ma
'73 c.onette. 454. 4 apd
stict. loaded. $8750. Call
btwn 7 :30 & 9 pm,
982.3229 '70 EL DORADO
~or best offer. 642-iMSS VEn'E "70, red, 2 tops,
auto. 1 owner, 3'0, mint!
••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Cadillac Sedan de S.'5000.494-0805
G11!91 al 990 I Ville. Showroom cond. • •••v•••••••••••••••••• Fully eqwl)ped Call Corvette '75. ,Al.: cond, * $599 Sale * 7es-3822 ~'tl.: .. r~~-top.
'73 Cad. Sedan de Vllle. , 31M mi, vinyl top. All ex-78 Vette, T·top, cluaic
tras. Like new inside & ~t.e on blk leat.b.., elec.
out. S<WOO. Ph 833-2292, windows, lo4ldecl. 14,000 644-4039orl35-5593 mi. S88$0./be1t offer. --------1 6'5-flC17eves &wlmds.
Try a Daily Pilot Caugw 9913
Classified Ad to bQ)', sell .................... , •• -----___;;=~ orrenhomething. '68. Dllpt. 62.000 ml.
• ..._Mew Mew tlOO Loaded. Stereo/air. 1
e ••• e •• e. e e ............ eeeee e eee e ..... I I I I.... OW'DI". 835-3437•1"13-8484
RARE
, .__ ...... u...'""'
"711--..... #1131 ·n 1--.... #7044 '711......t ..,_#IOU
SAYE ·
?2 T..e-i1t .,, •••••••••••••••••••••••• nae
Hird lo ..... ''""'" 87Jc:...I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $1411 • .-..~«i:i
7rT~ c-. 4 •· w ............... SIJll AUIO.. llr, ,..._ aeoo ..---. l12t:J<X
"71 fW ISO~ C..-. • .....•.•.•••. Slnt roo---tD~~r•1'HIN :
.~
OVER 25 1961·1975
VWBUGS
TO CHOOSE FROM
.,, 'IW ,_ T• C--................ S211f
All ......... --.W(tt1•
'74 YW' ... •••••••••••••• ............... , .. ~to-IObW. t104f •uvw:z: -~ .............. 0 ... 11111 ........ .., .,, .,. ................................. ... ~ titir&WUYSll
••t YW._ ••••••••••••,•···~·····11111 ........... ~ ........ tor-ar~ •
'71,'IW .. k...., ....... ,... ........... .. ................... _......,4ctJ0 . ., .. .,. ............................... .... ~--ltJXRll&...--.-"1'4o'K 71 'YWlll ............................. ~ ••. Mll'M. ..... ,..,..... MltfTN
IEST SILIC110M OF MEW
177. IAlllTS • DASHEllS •
SCIROCCOS
•SIS & C4Mfll5
IN OIAHCH COUNTY ....,..._ .......... , ........
•s Cougar. 1 owner.
, A Real Bea~!
014) 551.()116()
DCMtg. 9935 .......................
Dluat sacrifice 1978
Coroet. $1175/ofr.
Perfect cood.. 5'5-2095
Ford 9940 .......................
OALYPILOT p
I
....................... -. '911
SALES!
SERVICE!
LUSIMG!
y OU can· Believe> I
THE 1977· BUICK.etECTM WILL BE
ON SALE THIS WEDNESDAY THRU SUMDA Y -•
TAKE AD VANT AGE OF THIS LIMITED OFFER TODAY! • y • . -
THIS MAY BE THE BESTi 'filME IN YEARS TO BUY
YOUR 1977 BUICK ELECTRA LIMITED AT 1976 f:>RtCES! ..
I'
'77 BUiCK ELECTRA LIMITED
2 DOOR COUPE
........ 1
).';
Fulty «PClPGd I~ power ....
auto. air oonditJonJ~ tJlt ~ electtlo
trunk release, C.andau top, cruise
contrd. ctwome wheelt. AM/FM 81-.o
& muon mor•. (Ser. 628252) (Stk.
7907). Factory SuggHted Sticker
Pri0.-Ctee7.86.
DISCOUNTED
$ .....
R PICK
17·~ BUICK ELECTRA LIMITED
4 DOOR SEDANS
·Alt 3 cars are fully equipped including power eeats.
electric door locks. auto .• air condition. vinyl tep.; cruise
control. tilt wheel. ·~M/FM stetao. chrome wf\eels & much more.
(5-1'. &'«1988J(S&.1981) Factcxy ~~Au 19979.8& •
(Ser. ecMe73) (Sttc. 7831) fadOfY Soogea1ed StkMr Pt'tce ..... 85
(Ser. 57t'IS75) (Stk. me) Factory SUggiated 8tldcer flir~.15
·~ .... .... , . •,..•, ..... , ·--·· :-·· · ..
'· !
THE 1781s
ARE COMING!
Record discounts
. on literally acr.es
Of new 1977 cars,
· trucks, vans and
RV's in this gigantic
wall-to-wall
SELLOF.F!
I
••
-
7
,.
~ 10, NO. 243, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES
FLAYS COLLEAGUE
Mayor Pattinson
Storm
'Anita'
Brewing.
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Hur-
ricane Anita churned slowly
westward in the warm Gulf of
Mexico today, packing wi.nda of
95 miles an hour and growing
stronger as thousands of jittery
coutal residents worried and
watched. .
Foreeasters aiahl ar. ~.
centered about 300 mil.el trvm
both New Orleans and Galveston.
could continue tta alri dttft
across the Gulf toward ~all.
But there WU DO way to be sure.
and advi5ortes were postM from
Tarpon Spnno. Fla .• to Corpas
Christi, Tex..
Some coastal towns in western
Louisiana already were evacuat-
ed. Recommendations also went
out in early mornine for people to
leave low-lytne areas OD the up-
per Texas coast.
With winds less than 100 miles
an hour, the storm was put in tbe
lowest classification of hur-
ricanes -J but forecasters
warned it would probably con·
tinue to strengthen during the
day and push hieb tides ahead of Jt. .
Neil Frank, director 'of Na·
tional Hurricane Center ·in
Miami, said there was no way to
tell when the storm might reach shore.
"Things can chan1e," be said.
.. It's drifting rather slowly west.
and the steertni currenta are stll1
quite weak. A small chance in
. the steertni currents could have
a dramatic effect on the couneot
the storm."
(See ANITA, Pa1e A.2>
Tax.Meet
• ,..oaEaTBAUU ...............
Emotioal eo11tlnued to nm h1ch
lD HunUn~ Beach offlcial
circles toaay 1n the aftermath ot
Monday niebt'a stormy ta.x-
seW.nc sessi<m by th• city COUD· cil. • Mayor Ron Pattlmon accused
council collea1ue Harriett
Wieder ot crandatandlna on tax-
es 1o her open Inters to residents
which urced them to attend the
aesslon and de.ma.nd a IO.cent tax
cut.
·~1 want to know why Mrs.
Wieder ~ doing this at this
• Dallas
JflAS
Cal11stn
,.,, •' ......
time, .. Pattinson said •
.. She was aware tbat the meet-
inl W8$ ooly '°set the tax rate and that tbe time for public com•
ment wu at pre~ious budget
IUSiOl)S," be a-1d. ·
"We all bew we would cut the tax rate and the results would
have been the same bad we
opened the meet.Ini to the public
or not," he added.
Mra. Wieder, wbo has advocat-
ed a 10.cent·tax drop. aJoac with
Councilman Richard Siebert,
said today that the people should
be heard OD sucb an important
matter.
Allaway
Sanity
.
Weighed
By TOM BARLEY
Of ... OeltJ,.... ......
Was F.dward Charles Allaway
sane or Insane when be toot a ri-
fie to the Cal Stata Fullertcn
campus to till seven people and
wound twootbers?
ll'bat qu.tkJa " tat• to tbe JUJTl'OOID to4a1 by atX a:nen and
1bc wocnen who have alrelidy W .... l!lim-. .. 1!1111! • .-llll!liiii • fOllDd tbe fOl'lllel' eampus.J~
1ullly of Mven counts ol 'IDGtdei'.
and twO of auiu1l wtlh a dead.17
weapon.
Woman Wins
Hospikd
IJamtiie Suit
A Hubtinaton Beach woman who claimed that hospital and
medtc-1 negligence lead to her
serious trijuries three years qo
in Westminster Com~untty
Hospital was awarded $250,000 in
dama1es in' Oran1e County
SuperiorCourtTuelQy.
A jmj ln Judie Robert Green'•
courtroom eided an etaht-week
• trial and two days of deliberation
by orderilll thoM ctamaaes lor
Mrs. BarbaraBUVey, 41.
Tiiey were etno tuatructlana
by Jticfae Robert P. Kneeland~ 1
day after hearing fin• arau-
ments from Chief Deputy Dk· trict Attorney James Enright
and deputy public defender Roi\.
Buller.
Enrt&ht urged the jury to come
back with the ruling that Al· Jaway. 38, was ••tecally sane and
absolutely re1poaaible .. for the
campus carnaae on July 12, 19'1&.
· ",Eyery shred of evidence we
.have liwn JOU in this' trial ln·
d,lcafei that tbe sbootlnp were
carefWly plumed and that F.d Al-
Jawq lmeW esactly wbat he 9U
doinf fiom the time be boa6t
the rifle to tbe time he telephoned
police and told them what be had
done," Enript said.
And the prosecuto~ reminded
the jury that Allaway asked a un-lveratb' librarian a month before
the shooffnga to check the law re-
la.rdiaa the carrying ot an imcon-
cealed weapon.
.. All these stories he told P'ichlatr:lstS got better tbe IDOfe
CleeALIAWAY, Pa1eAZ)
Sbe said she w~ 11bast that
the public was dflded that op..
portunlty (she, Siebert and Ted
Bartlett were voted down) an4
that the refdsal ••was an insult to
the people ol HunUngton Beach.••
Pattinson said be thought If ra.
Wleder's deal.res were rigbt but
the way she goes about lt la not
"and that abe is becoming t dis.
ruptive factor at coW1cil meet-
ings."
He was particularly miffed
that she apparently sent the let·
ters without his or hi.a colleyues•
knowledl'· He said that Mn. Wieder had
Arsonist
Busy in •
... .,
Pre-daWn
..
•
........... 1 .
~l1LAWAY •• ,
time be tpent ln jail." Enri&Jlt
11Jd deltrltim1 the Oranse Coun·
&.y lall H "an insUtuUon of
~ber tdue.Uon. •When .h • 11>oke to • ., atlht •th evenlilC of Ja. Ji u. me we d1dn 't cet any ot
then atorles of mental Uln.eas
and delualOnl," tbe proMCUtar
Hid. But BuUer urced the jury to re; cOCntu that tbtY w .... about to
ro!e on the mental eondlUOD of •
111ao with a tona record of mental
lUn•. Four defense psychiatrlstl
have deflnecl that mental to be
paranoid scbliophrenia and tbey
have told tbe jury that Allaway
MINATARE, Neb. <AP> -For more than 30
yellfll., Larry Cruz has hlccupped every time he
shaved. Som.fl have been mildly violent· and
dangerous. in view of the single-edge razor Crui uses.
Surprlalrudy. Cruz never bas even nicked hlmSelf
while hiccupplnr. .
~ can hiceup Without a razor. too, just by
toucblng a sensitive spot Oil the right side of his ~
He shaves that spot lut. Cruz hu been hiccupping "for years. People
stand and watch," says his wile, Millis ..
He's never seen a doctor about his condition,
because it's never really bothered him, Cruz says.
.. wu lecall)' tuane at the time of
tb•abootQ.
Batter reDllDded the jury that
Allu1ay was confined to a
YlcblpD mental hospital after
becomln1 lncreaalncly-and falsely~Vinced that hil wlfe
wu bavtn& sex with bl.et men
and that the Black Panthers were
about to takltover bis bome city
oll>etroil
Chemist Refines
New Cancer Test
.; Butler said lbe same pattern
was renewed last year with Al·
law~'saecond wile, Bonnie, who
sued him for divorce three days
before the shootings.
The jury was reminded of Al-
la way 'a conviction that his
estranged -wife waa being
tortured by university penonnel
who mocked him and told him
they were having sex with her.
Saooze TtcUt
Sometimes you 'just can't find the right position for
anything. That seems to have been the case for this elder-
ly Amish man unW, with customary Pennsylvania Dutch
ingenuity, be reversed the usual position of sleeping on a
rocker and ended up snoozing on the porch. The photo
was made in eastern Lancaster County near Monterey,
Pa.
F,....PageAJ
ANITA BREWING. • •
• The growth of the storm from
tropical depression to hW'ricane
in less than a day wasn't unusual.
be said.
. A weather service advisory
early today located the storm
center near latitude 26.3 north
and longitude 91.3 west. sout.b-
southwest of New Orleans. Gales
~tended .i50 miles t9 the east
.pd 100 mllea to tbewesl.
Anita drove hl&b tides onto the
• tow-lying Gulf shore, causing
bayous and mers to run over
their banks. and was fiithln euy strlkine distance of land if it
~red north.
, A total of 4,500 offshore oil
workers were evacuated to shore
'l'uesday and 10,«¥>0 residents at
vrlnerable points alona '30 mUes
o coast were advlsed to had ln-
land to avoid becominf trapped. .
Multimillion dollar drilling
rtgs and manned producUon plal-
f or ms. battened down and
. Betreh CrowtD
Dwindling tu
SchoolNean
,besptte ocean watel'I wa.rmlna
~ to 72 decrees now. vlsit.cn oo
Wf'lt Oranae CoUoty beaches are v~lahinf like autumn leaves
fl"QID trees. on the eve of another
schoolyear. Lltepards said today the
crowds have dwindled down and
tbA only real Tuesday action re-P<>rl.ed by Ule Huntlqtou Beech
cit>' crew was 16 rescues, none of
them serious.
'besda1 wu routine ,at. Hunt-
ingtai S&ate Beach, Bolaa Cbiea
Slate Beatb and at $eal Be'c,b"
. spokesmen fol' au three depart·
mentasald. • , Many 1U1DD1er.lon1t beach vis-
itors bave abandoned the no.
balmy awf which ran two to
tbree fat 'l'Uesda7 _for the co4ll ~
aiNDJclltioGed •llOPl>lna m.U..
buytnc their back·to-1ctlool
dotbes. •
closed, stood desert~d ln the
turbulent sea.
Emergency valves were dosed
eo thousands of offshore oil fas
wells. '!bat action stopped the
dally flow of about ball a mllllon
barrels of crude and mllllons of
cubic feet of natural cas t.broueb
underwater pipelines.
WASHINGTON (AP) -
PresidePt Carter called to-
day for strict enforcement
e>f tbe 55-mile-per·bour
speed limit. ••Jina fuel savings would be
"enormous, I think maybe
eiebt to nine gallons a
day.'"
Carter also said In·
trocluctlon ol that national
limit is savtni eight to nlne
thousand lives annually.
The President plut1ed
for speed enforcement at
an Oval Office meetint
timed to the approach of
the traffic-producing
Labor Day weekend.
Youth t,o Aid
EnergyPUuu
• LOS ANGELES (AP) -The carter· adminlatraUoa h con-
aldmng using the. n•ti6a'• youth
to keep track of bow effectively
their neighbors are saving
energy. • Los Aqeles nmes reportect toda1.
The newspaper sal4 that under
the proposed Youth EnercY Pro-
gram high icbobl·ale JOhmteen
with gov~roment cbeck..llats .
would ao door-to-door euminlbl
bo~ from the outside. Ulen tnoa • lhe door and tell the' oc·
cupantst.belr "score."
'Tlle·)'oelths would then .U to
ao thrOulb th• lnald• of tbe • bouaea .. ftniab. thetr cmero·
CODMr'fidlGD IRil"Y9Y.
And Butler recalled Allaway's
falsely held belief that Bonnie
was being forced to participate in
pornographic movies which were
then privately screened to Cal
Stale employes in the m~a
center. .. There is only one possible
verdict in this trial." Butler said.
"Ed Allaway was legally insane
on July 12, 1976."
Los Alamitos
Changeover
Bites Slated
Formal ceremonies will be
scheduled soon to mark the qulet
change of command of what was
Los AJlmitos Naval Air Station
to the California National Guard
Loa Alamitos Armed Forces
Rae'rve Center.
The base, wbicb bas exiat.ed in
west On.nae County sinee World
war n. WM affidally taken "O~er
by the California National Guard
on~.
The base coaimander will be
Bri1. Gm. J mes D. BeMon.
wbO worked :with tbe military
team that arran(ed transfer of
Los Alamitoe from the Navy to
the Anny, which licensed its
operation by the California Na-
tional Guard.
AuthoriUes repeated earlier
aaaurances that the base will not
be used by commercial or •
civilian aviation.
Nearly all rugbt acttvlt1 there
now Involves bellcopter tralning
and tbls will continue oa its ~ aent basts, a.erat Ben.sontlald.
The facility will a1&0 be used by
•arious militant reserve units as
a meeting ,arid training center
and will continue to house a
tullUme actrqlnlstraUve staff..
A civilian advisory board of
civic and business leaders in the
1urroundiQ3ommuities bas also been anized by General
Benson and staff to studJ and correct any opentional prob-
lems.
··we are part of the eommumty
too and we will do our belt to be
the best of neighbors.'" General
Bensoo said.
CIDCAGO (AP) _:_ A leading
chemist said· today be bas de-
veloped a relatively quick and
ea.sy way to determine which of
the thousands of chemical.a ln-
trod\leed in recent years may
cause cancer.
The cbemlat, Dr. Bruce N.
Ames of UC Berkeley, polnted
out that a~ the 19508 this coun-
try bas been "exposed to a fiood
otchemlcals" that have not been
tested to determine whether they
cause cancer or alter. genetic
material.
"A steep increase in human
cancer may be the outcome If too
many of the thousands of new
chemicals to which humans have
been exposed turn out to be
powerful mutagens and
carcinogens," Ames said.
Ames told scientists at the na-
tional meetiDC of the American
Chemical Society that he has suc-
ceeded in refming a test be de-
veloped earlier so that tiny
amounts of urine, and possibly
otlter body fluids, may be used in
cancer tests to identify
mutagens, which are generally
cancer-causing agents.
Previously, the Ames test re-
quired totallY pure samples or
the chemical to be tested, a much
more cumbersome and time-
consuming method.
The development, Ames said,
"has all sorts of potential" for
detecting cancer-cauaing prop-
erties in thousands of ~ub
stances.
He said his method should be
used to exaiq~e the urint of a
large popdlitloll of non-aniakcs
to detect UD1Suapected mutagens
and care~ that may be.,_en-
terinJ peopl•-•
Io addiUOa, •Mes said, ex-
aminaUon.s should be made of
"particular populations that are
likely to be abosorblnf s1cnifi-
cant doses of mutagens, such as
women dyeing their hair or
children lo sleepwear treated
with add.(IQ name retardanta. ..
Ames' method does not dh:ect· Iy test for cancer-caaalns prop-
erties. Instead,. it teats for
mutagens -substances which
alter geneUc material.
But, be said, tests on 300
chemicals prove that all cancer-
c au sing substances are
mutagens and "mutagens aie
carcinogens with few ••• excep-
tions."
Fro.a. Page A I
MIFFED •••
members."
"I guess that I was intimidated
by my position as mayor.'• she
said.
"I'm going to continue to fight
the i~ea that what the ad·
mJnlstration says on fiscal mat·
ten bas to be the law.
"I have always been a team
player, but lfthe team doesn't go along, I will carry the ban:· she
added.
Mrs. Wieder said that h'1' ef-
forts will be focused on further
lax cuts next year.
"I'm going to iusist on looking
at the source of revenues before
we talk about spending. This ob-
viously hasn't been done in the
past, .. she declared.
Monday night the city councU
cut the tax rate seven ctnta to
$1.5.5 per $100 assessed valuatiOn.
It also voted to set aside another
three ceots of tax rate money for
a reserve fUDCl ln cue a lpPe-1
on a 11>2 milUoo la,,..•u.it tS re-
jected.
·()€Cot~,
Property·
Tax Rate
Otaa•• Coant7 prepetti ownen will ,_, $1 IS pet $180 ~
useesecl valuaUon tb1I year to
belp finance tbe ~of COUD\7
aovemmeot 'aecordlna to tu
rates iidOpted.,, ~to
day.
1D addlttcia, boaleoWJMn and
buaiDS' owners .nl be dmc.S
a rate at.II.I ceatl per '100 ol u-H:lied •alulltioP for fJOod CICllltnll
aDd alt.I-cent r to an-. tbe coumy liar_, 84'.cbil u4 Para Dlstdet.: ' · • · Supervlaort thl• monalne
eilop&ed rat.ell for tboiie ~
ment procruns u welt as tor die
eount;r'a 28 ICbOol d!strlcts aad
nrioua itrelt UCht.IDI. IUftry. •eetar c:olitro1 ud ...w dis-
tricts.
· Typlcalty 19 cents of every
Oranae County propert1 tu:
dollar aoes for education, 17
cents to county eovenunast. 11>
cents to dty Jovenunent 11114 l'
cents for apeclal dJltrlct.. Tb8 county'• $1.33 tu rate represmtl a 10.cent cut fma last
year•a $'.l.48 tax nte ud many
other a1encles ba•• ndueecl
their rates u well.
But because of the eountywide
average Increase in assessed
valuation of 19.7 percent. most
property own.ers will face blgher
tax bills this year.
Assessed valuation is tbe flsure to which tax rates are ap-
plied ln calculating property tax
bills .
Since an estimated 4.5 percent
of the 19. 7 percent assessed
valuation increase was attribuf..
ed to new construction, taxing
agencies would have to cm their rates by an averaae of W per-
cent to keep property ownera
from receiving hicher tax bills.
r ..... r.,,eAJ
RACING •••
fair will run from Nov. 8 to 21 and
will Include a carnival area,
show area for animals, exhibits
and other fair activities.
lt will be located on a 13-a~e
site in the Loa Alamitos parking
lot. "Thia fair has been dilficult to
plan," said fair board president
Hoose. ''1bings have been tnJ.im.
bo for llO loGC, but. Jre decided a year aco to ao ahead witb the fall
fair. race dates w not.••
"Unfortunately. we•l'e dealiaa
wri\tl IUD?MP wbo aca tryinf to
throw up roadblocks without any
sublUnce to them.••
VOL. 10, NO. 243, _. SECTIONS, .. PAO
Allaway's Sanity Now J
SY 'roll &\llLSY ...............
WM Edward Cllarlea Allaway
11 or w n be loM a rt· ne to t.be Cal ate Nlertcli
cam to kill MYeD ,_.. Md
woUnd two otbera?
That question wu taken to tbe JW'1 n>om today by 1hr men and
six women who bave already
found the former campu.a janitor IUllty ol seven· CO&aDta ol murder
Aqltalt Rl"er
and two ol aaaautt with a deadly
we1poa.
They. were ctven lustructlons
by Judie Robe.rt P. Kneeland to-
day after bear~J final ar1u· mm.ta from Chief Deputy Dis·
trtct Attorney James Enrl1ht
and ~ public defender Ron
Butler.
Enrt&ht urced tbe Jury to come
back with the rulint that Al·
laway, 38. wu ••tegally aane and
Long, lazy meanders of an Irvine bicycle trail wind like
a river through an August afternoon. The bike path,
part of a system of several miles of off -street roadways
reserved for bicycle or pedestrian use, is next to Santa
Fe railroad tracks, hidden by trees. Power poles are to
the right center of the picture. ,
Dogged Sr«iin lroine feat
A giant black Labrador wbo
forced his attentions on an Irvine
sprineer spaniel returned Tues·
day and killed one of the puppies
it fathered, a woman told police. '
Attorney Geraldine ~ ol
18711 Yi• Palatino in Turtle Rock
hid the huge doe baa been
boundin1 over a five-foot
wrought-Iron fence every two
hours for the pa.st several nt1bta
to get at his onetime par*1!lour
and his olfaprin&.
Mrs. Sandor said hit renwed
attentions has \l)ade her spaniel
a nervous "1eek.
Police were called Tuesd-r
night and chued. the bic ammal
who ned lnto a ereenbelt aHa
and escaped.
Animal control offic•n who
were alerted to the beast's ac·
tivltles reportedly were not op-
timistic about catching blm.
"My husband can't eet
anywhere near it," Mrs. San·
dor said today. "It $narls and
takes oil."
abtolutely responsible" for the
camp11 camaee on July U. 1976 .
"EVery ahred of evidence we
have atven you ln this trial in·
dlcalel that the shootings were
carefully planned and that Ed Al·
laway knew exactly what he was
doing from the time he bought
the rifle to the time he telephoned
police and told them what be bed
done," Enright said.
And the prosecutor reminded
the jury that Allaway askett a un·
iversity librarian a month before
the shootirits to check the law re-
garding the carrylnc of an uncon-
cealed weapon.
••All these stories he told
psychiatrists got better the more
time he a~nt. tn jail," Enrlcfit
said descnbl.ni the Orange Coun·
ty Jail as "an institution or
higher education.
•'When he spoke to a
Hurricane WatcM~ ..
psychiatrist on the evenlni of Ju.
ly 12, um. we didn •t cet any or
these stories of mental lllriess
and delusions." the prosecutor
said. .
But Butler ureed the jury to nt·
co1nlze that they were about to
rute on the mental COl\dltioo of a
man with a long record ot mental
illness.
Four defense psychiatrists
have defined th(lt mental to be .
•
paranoid schizophrenia and they
have told the jury tbat Allaw-.y
wu legally iasant at the tlme ot
the sbootinp. ,
• Butler reminded the jury that
Allaway wu confined to a
Mlchifan mental hospital after
becominr incnaaln1ly-1nd
falsely~vinced that his wife
was having sex with black men
and ~t the Black Panthers were
<See ALLAWAY, Pace AZ)
• laJlls
· ita Stronger~ fEIAS
NEW ORLEANS CAP) -Hur-
ricane Anita churned slowly
westward in the warm Gulf of
Mexico today, packing winds of
95 miles an hour and growing
stronger as thousands of jittery
coastal residents worried and
watched.
Forecasters said the storm,
centered about 300 miles from
both New drleans and Galveston,
could continue Its slow drift
across the Gulf toward Texas.
But there was no way to be sure,
·~::~:r
Quits Over
Dispute
Western World Medical Foun-
dation ~rd me01ber Frank
Hurd reslgned his position Tues·
day.
HW'd quit In a dispute over Irnne l\elreu J oao Irvine
Smith's $1 million gift to UC
Irvine to expand campus
medical school facilities.
He claimed that her gift will
ruin Western World plans to
locate a $400 million hospital
complex on 18 acres next to the
UCicampus.
Hurd said her lift s hould have
been to the planners of the com·
pl ex.
"People in Irvine have been
cheated.," be said.
The grant has yet t~ be accept-
ed by the UC Board of Regents,
which would have to match the
lift with another $1 million.
Master planning calls for the
next phase of the UCI medical
racillUes to be a $10 million am·
bulatory care center.
Hurd said the establishment of
the center will jeopardbe ap.
proval by Orange County health
planners or a nearby hospital.
"Now ls not the time for the un·
iversity to do it.s own thine,"
Hurd said. "Health planning,
common sense and the needs of
Irvine point to the early develop·
ment of a hospital and am-
bulatory care center ...
" ... Jn a medical
crisis ... you need a hospital -
(See QUITS, Pa1e A2)
Tarpon Springs, Fla., to Corpus
Christi, Tex.
Some coastal towns in western
Louisiana already were evacuat·
ed. Recommendations alsO went
out in early morning for people to
leave low.lying areas on the up·
per Texas coast.
With winds less than 100 miles
an hour, the storm was put in the
lowest classification of bur·
ricanes -but forecasters
warned it would probably con-
tinue to strengthen during the
La
day and P'fh high tides ahead of
it.
Nell Frank, director ot Na-
tional Hurricane Center ln
Miami, said there was no way (o
tell when the storm might reach
shore.
"Things can change," he said.
••n•s drifting rather slowly west,
and the steering currents are still
quite weak. A small chante in
the steering currents could have
a dramatic effect on the course of
the storm." <See ANITA, Page AU
,,,, •' ••aict
0 • 200
1
MILES • .. ~ .........
ANITA NEARS LAND
Map Spot• Hurricane
Faces Rap
Deputy Held After Irvine Crash
A Los Angeles sherlff 's deputy
· w aa arre•ted on a charae of
felony drunken driving after the
car he was drivinf !$mashed lnto
a traffic sfgnal pole at
MecA,rtJ"tur BdUlevard and Red
Hill Avenue ln Irvine today.
The officer, Ronald H .
Dayhorr, 31, underwentemergen.
cy surgery at Tustin Community
Hospital early this morning. Re
was listed in stable ~nditlon.
Passengers in the car were bis
wife, Patti, 24, also a police of.
fleer, and Nancy J. Smith, 28, or
Los Angeles.
The two women suffered cuts
and bruises and were treated at
the hospital and teleased to their
homes.
Irvine Police Cblef Leo Peart
refused today to identity the
police department or depart-
Disease Hits
Atlanta Kids
ATLANTA <AP> -An un-
usually large number of children
in metropolitan Atlanta have
come down with whooping cough~
the national Center for Disease
Control reports.
Researchers said Tuesday
about a> cases or whoopine cough
have been reported here, lncl\ld·
lng 10 cases lnvolvinl children
under 6 months of age.
ment.s for-which the Dayhofls
work.
Los ~eta County Sheriff's
Depa•tment spokesmea.
however, confirmed DayhoU 1' a
member ot t.htinlepartment.
lledlcal reports Usted ~n
Anaheim address for tbe
sheriff's officer team. D~bOff iS assigned to the LOs
Anfeles County men's central
jai ; hls wife to the county
medical ward, according to a
sheriff's information officer.
ne couple were oft-duty and drlvtrii a private vehicle, police
'aid. r-.. Traffic ~ers aald Dayhoff
was driVfila west Qn MacArthur
Bouleviifd at an unknown speed
when he slf'4ck the northwest
comerslpaJ pole.
The car was destroyed. .
Dayhoff suffered bead injuries
and severe cuts, according to
paramedics.
Police said an investigation is
pending.
SupervisOrs OK
CouDty T~ Rate
~
Orance County property
owners will pay $1.33 per $100 of
assessed valuation this year to
help flll8llCe the cost of county
government according to tax
rates adopted by supervisors to-
day.
Free Air Fare
For Carter
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
bJt. Houae • d todQ lb.al
th u overslcht the Cater easnlMUn m u.. f a&Jed to
pa)' IOI' -ncte. 'Y c Id Jim.
Rl>' Carter on corpont• •nd stat.owned planes durlna a tW·
Inc throuah lht CaroUnu lo
Afri)ttra.
Bat Douc Huran. a campa,lp
eommlU. Clfftctal ud ... a
Whit. House att«Dey. aald t.M
IDCIMJ -~lelJ' '1.000
-la belal paid, now um the au. .. brouallt to u. ad·
m1Dls&ntJoD '• attmtioo.
Los Alamitos
Changeover
Rites Slated
Formal ceremonies will be
icbeduled SOOD to mark the quiet
cbangt ol command of what wu
Loa Alamltoe Naval Air Statiol\
to the California NatJonal Guard
Los Alamitos Armed Forcea
Reserve Center.
The base, which has existed In
west Orange County since World
War 11, was officially taken over
by the California National Guard
on Sunday.
'fhe base commander will be
Brig. Gen. James D. Benson.
who worked with the military
team that arranged transfer of
Loa Alamitol from the Navy to
the Army. which licensed Ila
operaUon by the California Na·
tional Guard.
Authorities repeated earlier
assurances that the base will not
be uaed by commercial or
civilian aviation.
Nearly all fliaht activity there
now involves helicopter lra\ning
and thi1 wtll continue on Its pre·
sent basis, General Benson said.
The facility will also be used by
various military reserve units as
a meelina and training center
and will continue to house a
runtime administrative staff.
A civilian advisory board of
civic and buslness leaders lD the
surroundlne communillea has
also beer:\ organized by General
Benson and bis at.aff to study and
correct any oi>eraUonal prob-
lems.
"We are part of the commtmily
too and we wtll do our belt to be
the best of neighbors," G.neraJ Ben.son aaJd. ·
Ji',.... Page Al
ANITA •••
The growth of the storm from
tropical depression to hurricane
in less than a day wun 't unusual,
he said.
A weather 1ervice advisory
early today located the storm ·
center near latitude 26.3 north
and lClftlitude tl.S west, IOUlh·
southweat of New Orlean1. Gales
extended 150 miles to the east
and 100 ml lee to the wut.
Anlla drove hilb tides onto the
low-lying Gulf shore, causing
bayous and riven to run over
their banb, and -.u within ea.ay
atlikiq dlatanc• of land if it veered north.
A total of 4,SOO off1bore oil
workers were evacuated to shore
Tueeday and 101000 reaidtnts at
vulnerable points alone 430 miles
of cont were advised to bead in·
land to avoid becomlnt tr•pped.
Multimillion dollar dri1Un1 rte• and rnanned production pl al· form•. battened down and
closed, stood destrted 1n tb.e
turbulent sea.
Emergency valva weH cloled
OD tboulanda of ollahor• oU Cas
welll. That actlon 1topted .tile
datl1 flow of about halt a inUUon
barrels of crude and mll&klm Of
tuble feet of natural pa tJaroucb
undtrWats plpellnM.
The free airplane rldt1 were
dltclo1•d today by the Waardniton bureau of the Cox
Newspaper chain.
Huroo a1ao said tho diaclolurt
prompted campal1n oltlclal1 to
•o over their books to delennlne
lf any 1lmilar rides on amall
cbanend plan• bad not been
paid for. However, Hurof\ Hid that the
campai&n previO\LllY paid bills
totallna $151,332 for amall
cbaner plana. Ht aakl thil de-
mOftllrat.d there wu nothlnc in·
tentloul in the failure to pay for
~trip throu&b tht Carol1Du.
"It's not like we bad a pr.ctice
of not p-.,ina for those plane
trip&." Huron aald.
Carter took five ftlghta during
a three-day swin& tbrou1b North
and South Carolina in April 19751
Two flights were paid for by R.
R. "Bobby" Allen on a plane
owned by D. R. Allen and Son
Inc. of Fayetteville, N.C.
Huron said that Allen was be-
inl relmbuned for '211.25 fcw the
plane tript ai.nce Allen prevloualy
contributed $1,000 to the Carter
campaign, the leaal limit for In-
dividuals under federal law.
The other firm Involved in
Caroline campaign trip was the
Diamond Supply Co. headed by
Harvey Diamond of Charlotte,
N.C.
Huron said a check would be
sent out for $568. 73 to reimburse
the firm for two chartered
rushts. -
Corporate campaiin contribu-
tions are llleaal.
The fifth night during Carter's
trip to the Carolinas was paid for
by the state of South Carolina and
Huron estimated that the cost of
the flight would be about S200.
Carter was accompanied on
the flight on the state-owned
plane by U . Gov. W. Brantley
Harvey of South Carolina. /
It wu previously dfsclosed
during the investigaUon"'()f the
finances of budget director Bert
Lance that Carter WllS not billed
for five other flights valued al
$1, 793 on a plane owned by the
National Bank of Georgia.
UuterPlugs
Speed Limit
WASHINGTON (AP) -
President Carter called to.
day for strict enforcement
of the SS·mile-per·bour
speed limit, aayln1 fuel
savin&• would be
"enormous, I think maybe
eight to nine galJons a
day."
Carter also aatd In·
troductlon ol that national
limit is saving eitht to nine
thousand lives annually.
The President plugged
for speed enforcement at
an Oval Office meeting
timed to the approach of
the traffic -producing
Labor Day weekend.
QUITS •••
not an outpatient clinic."
Hurd claimed an Irvine Com-
pany plari to build the hoeplta!
had been shown to P.rotpective Irvine residents and 1 praCtlcally
everyone who hu boucbt •home
inlnine.••
He aald if Mrt. Smitb•1 action
sootchet those :'t>lana. 1'thta
•vtrY Jrvtne resldent ll entitled ~,Pe for breach of e»rorill ... "
,
By STEVE MITCllBIL ..................
The Orange County Fair Boa.rd
is ahead tn the final s~tch to ob-
tain fall bone racln& ilata at the
Los Alamitos Rae.Tuck.
But a lawsuit filed by the
Hollywood Turf Club still looms
over fair board members after a
decision favorable to tbe fair board Tuesday by the Calltornla
Horse Racina Board.
The stat& panel's ckcialon was
sreeted with rellet today by lalr
board president Clinton Hoose ol
Newport Beach.
"It's ootover yet," Hoase aald,
"but getting the stat& board'• ap.
proval for a license is aotna to
make it a beck of a lot harder on
them (racetrack operaton).
Hoose said Oranie County will
have a fall fair in the Los
Alamitos race track parkina lot,
"no matter what the outcome of
the (Turf Club) lawsuit ls.,. .
End ol s ... iaer Rites'?
Operators at Hollywood Park
and Sant.a Anit.a are seeldne a
court injunction battlna the fall
racing dates to be held Nov. I to
21 at Loe Alamitos.
No, Councilman Paul Ryckoff <l~ft) and Parks, Beaches
and Recreation Director Cal Stewart are not throwing
an end-0f-the·summer temper tantrum. They are trying
out the newly installed exercise course at Newport
Beach's Irvine Terrace Park. Despite apparent pain and
strain, RyckoCf managed to hang onto nis cigar
throughout the ordeal.
Attorneys for the two track.I
claim the fair board did not pre.
pare environmental impact re·
ports on the propo1ed parkina lot
fair.
The Orange County Fair
stands to Sain at leut $114,000
from fall racln1 dates. That
money would 10 to 1peed up a
$18. 7 million f acellft of the Colla.
Mesa fairgrounds.
Chemist Refines Hoose's optimlam today wu
echoed by Santo Pietro,
spokesman for the tbree·man
California Horse Raclq board 1n
Sacramento New Cancer Test
CHICAGO <AP> -A leading
chemist said today he has de-
veloped a relatively quick and
easy way to determine which of
the thousands of chemicals in-
troduced in recent years may
cause cancer.
The chemist, Dr. Bruce N.
Ames of UC Berkeley, pointed
out that since the 1950s this coun·
try has been ·'exposed to a flood
of chemicals" that have not been
tested to determine whether they
cause cancer or alter geneti.
material.
"A steep increase in human
cancer ma.y be the outcome if too
many of the thousands of ne¥'
chemicals to which humasu have
been exposed turn out to be
powerful mutagens and
carci.no&ens," Ames said.
Ames told scienwts at the na-
tional meeting of the American
Chemical Society that be bas suc·
ceeded In refinin& a test he de·
veloped earlier so that tiny
amounts of urine, and possibly
othe-body fluids, may be used in
cancer tests to identify
mutaaens, which are ienerally
cancer-causing agents.
Previously, the Ames test re-
quired totally pure samples of
the chemical to be tested, a much
more cumbersome and time·
consuming method.
The development, Ame5 said,
"hu all sora of potential" for
detecting cancer~auslng prop-
erth~s in thousands of sub·
stances.
He laid his met.bod should be
used to examine the urine of a
lar1• population of non-smokers
GET THE PICIVllE
wtlH PILUI' AD
A Costa Mesa woman who
tuned into the best sales market
on the Oranae Coast cot ''r.reat reapQOle" wtth ber Dail,y Pilot
clasatfttd ad.
HeN'e how she wrote her ad:
·n J>hllco, U" color con· aole. XJnt cond. f15. ~lCX•
xxxx.
It you want to ctt the rltltt pie·
lure in clusllled adverttsina,
call S0.:$878; Alone the Orani•
Cotat, tile DallY PUot ls the btst
mtdlurn for your sales mesu1e.
~
l ... ..; ... n o __ J
lo detect unsuspected mutagens • &/W~ Df.Uft,f,
and carcinogens that may be en·
tenng people. p '
ln addition, Ames said, ex· ~.o Host any
aminations should be made or
''particular populations that are The University High School
likely to be abosorblng signifi. marching band of Irvine hosta a
cant doses of mutagens, such as pot-luck party to welcome its
women dyeing their hair or new direct.or, John L. Granier
children in sleepwear treated and to launch its fall proaram.
with add·on name retardants... The 6:30 p.m. Sept. 1 party will
Ames' method does not direct· be held in the Culverdale
ly test for cancer·causing prop. clubhouse.
erties. Instead, it tests for Granger is a native of New
mutageM -substances which York; is a professional oboist
alter genetic material. and French Hom player; and is
But. he said, tests on 300 workingonadoct.orateatUSC.
chemicals prove µiat all cancer-• He plans to establish a full
causin1 sub•t•nces are symphony orchestra, and a
mutaeens and "mutagens are beiinnin& Instruments class
carcinogens Wlth few ... excep-open to students with no previous
tions." music experience.
He aald attorne)l9 for the two
tncka hue a dtrfleult road
ahead In gettins a Los Angeles
Superior Court to overturn the
horse raclnc board'• dttlsion
TueadAy to grant a racin1 licen.se
to the f a1i'tmi'd.
Other arcumenta over the off.
seaaan fair included a dispute
over whether bone nelng should
be hel4 .t the Costa Mesa fair· arovilds. Pietro •aid there .. no
claUM In the state law which
HY• the bone races have to be
held at tbt location of the fair:
•'So the &rl\llD«mt ii, can you
10 to a .separate area -in this
cue Los Alamitoe -and have a
second flir," Pietro •aid.
Under at.ate law. countr fairs are entitled to 1' days of racing
per year. Orange County's fall
fair will nm from Nov. a lo 21 and
wnl l.ndude a carnival area,
show area for animall. ablblta
and other falr act1Ytlies.
It will be located • a J.S.acre
site 1n the Loe Alanlltoe parkln&
lot.
'"lbU fair bu been dlfflcult to
plan.,,. 1aJd f alr board preJident
Hoose. ''Things have been in llm·
bo for so long, but we decided a
year ago to 10 ahead with the fail
fair, racedatesornot.••
''Unfortunately, we're dealln&
with attorneys who are lr)'1na to
throw up roadbloelt:s wit.bout any
aubttancetothem ...
t . PageAJ
AIJ,AWAY. •
about to take over bis home elty
of Detroit.
Butler said the same pattern
wu renewed last year with AJ.
Jaway'a ~d wife, Bonnie, who
sued him for divorce three days
before the sboolines.
The jury was reminded of Al-
1 a way's conviction that bis
estranaed wife was being
tortured by university personnel
who mocked him and told him
they were having sex with her.
And Butler recalled Allaway's
f alaely held belief that Bonale
w•s beinl forced to participate ln
pornographic movies which were
then privately screened to Cal
State employes in the media
center.
"'There Is only one possible
verdict ln this trial," Butler said.
"Ed Allaway wu legally lnaane
on July 12, 1976. ••
EDITION
..
.. ·-
VOL. 70, NO. 24 4 SECTION} "6 PAGES
•
A11away's
ltv 10• llA&L&Y -111t ..............
W Edward Charles Allaw&,J
aa.n or JDSAM • be toolr a rt.
ne to the Cal State hllertoa
campus to kill seven people and
woUnd two others?
Tb.at quest.ion wu taken to the
jury room today by six men and
six women who have already
found the f0f1'ler campus janttor
1uilty of seven counts of m\U"der
Hurricane Watched
absolutely responsible .. for the
campus carnge on July 121 19'18.
••Every shred of evidence we
have g.iftn you 1n thJs trlal ID· •
dlcates that the sbootinp were
carefully planned and that !'.d Al·
laway knew exactly what he was
. dolng from the time be boueht ·
' the rifle to the time be telephoned
police and told them what be bad
done," Ellright said.
And the prosecutor reminded
• 011111
ita Stronger -.
TflAS
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Hur·
ricane Anita churned slowly
westward in the warm Gulf of
Mexico today, packing wind5 of
95 miles an hour and growing
stronger aa thousands of jita.ery
coastal residents worried and
watched.
Forecasters said the storm,
centered about 300 miles (rom
both New Orleans and Galveston,
could continue its slow drift
across the Gulf toward Texas.
But there was no way to be sure,
and advisories were posted from
·Tarpon Springs, Fla., lo Corpus
Christi, Tex.
Some coastal towns in western
Louisiana already were evacuat·
ed. Recommendations also went
out in early morning for people to
leave low-lying areas on the up-
per Texas coast.
With winds less than 100 miles
an hour, the storm was put in the
lowest classification of bur·
ricanes -but fof,ecasters
warned it would probably con·
tinue to strengthen during the
day and push high tides ahead of
it.
Neil Frank, director of Na·
tional Hurricane Center in
Miami, said there was no way to
tell when the storm might reach
shore. "llUngs can change," be said.
"It's drifting rather slowly west,
and the steering currents are still
quite weak. A small change in
the steering currents could have
a dramatic effect on the course of
the storm."
(See ANITA, Page AZ>
• • 2H
.........
ANITA NEARS LANO
M9P Spota Hurricane
Cancer Tests Refined
CID CA GO (AP) -A leading
chemist said today be bas de·
velopect a relatively quick and
easy way to determlne which of
tbe thousands of cbemicala In•
trodue!ed i.11 recent years ma,,
cause-cancer. -• The chemist, Dr. Brvee N.
aminations should be made of
.. particular populations that are
likely to be abosorbing signifi·
cant doses of mutagens, such as
women dyein~ their hair or
children in sleepwear trttated
with add-on name retardants." But, be said, tests on 300
Ames· method does not direct· chemicals prove that all cancer·
ly test for cancer.causing prop. ca us l n g au bat an c es are
erties. Instead, it tests for mutagens ind "mutagens are
mutagens -substances wbicb • • cardnogens wttb few •• ~
alter genetic material. ~·:,.. -· -,. . ,
psyChi.atrlat on the even.fntClf J'u-
ly 12, 1171 we didn't 1et l'A1 ol
thete ttori• ot mental lllDela
arid delusions," tho pr01eCutor
said.
But 'Butt. ureed the jury to No
copbo t.Ut they "ere about to
ru.t• on the mentJJ CODdtUc111 ol a man wlth-a loal record of mentlll
llJAeu,
Four defense psychi•td•ts
have cleflned that mental to h*
i
paraooid schizophrenia and tbey
ba~ tGlc! the jury that Allawa)I'
\VU Jeeall)' l.nlane at the time ot tM ihOotings. ,
BUtler ftminded the jury that
Allaway was confined to •
Micbipo meotal hospital~
becominC lnoreaslntlY-end
f alsely-convtnced that bis wife was having sex with black men
and that the Black Panthers were
(See AU.AWAY, Pase AZ>.
Faee. Drtadc Rap :
• Deputy · Hits
Pole in Irvine .
A L<>I Angel~ sheriff's deputy
was arrested on a cbar1e of
felony drunken driving after the
car he was drivinl smashed into
a traffic signal pole at
MaeA.rthW' Boulevard and Red
lllll A venue in Irvine today.
The officer. Ronald H.
Daybolf, 31. underwent emer1~·
cy SUflery at ~Un Community
Hospltal earl)' this mol'lllnl. He
was llstA!d In stable conditlcm. P~ers bl tM car were bi.I wife, J'aW. 2'. a1So a pollce of.
ficer. and Nancy J. Sn1itb1 28. of
Los Angeles.
The two women suffered cuts
and bruises and were tr~ated at
the hospital and released to their
hoQtes. • ·
lrvlne Police Chief Leo Pearl
refused today to identify the
police department or depart·
ments for whtch the Dayhoffs .
work .
Las ~etes County Sheriff's ~epartme.nt·apokesmen,. ~.~9dDQ'boftlls• . ~ ,.~
Medical ~ports U1ted an
All.ahe1111 • A41l"re11 far tbe
Daybolf suffered bead injuries
and severe cuts. accordlnc to
paramedics.
Police said an invest.laation is pendina.
.;
Trial Set
For Fonner
LB Colich r
• •I I
A former Laguna Beach
volleyball coach who allecedlY,
sexually molested Hveral mem-
bers of girls' teams be coacbecl
in the Art Colony was 6rde~
Tuesday to face trial Oct. a bi
Ori.nge County Superior Coult.
:Judie William L. Murray. who. wlll be Oil l.he l)eftch lot the trial
of Ian C1.mpbell Gregory, S2f set
tbe taitJ ~-a pretrial bear.. 1Ja1fw~ a; G~ory 11 tree~..i:
$2,500baiL --· ~ . .:.
GregOQ. wlto now lives in~ .
Amee of UC Ber"1e>'. iOinted · ·out tba,t r1nce tb• 1950s tbis coun-
try bu been "exposed to a flood
of chemicals" that bave not beerl'
te.eled to determine whether they
caU9e cancer or alter 1enetic
material.
SU:p~~sors OK
• sberift's Cllfieer team. • Da.YtlDff la aasiln6c1 to the Los. Anal9 CoWit1 an en·· ce,ntrat • JllJ; ~atJ wtt.. to the county
mectiCil ~ accordlna to • sb~'ahafonnatlon officer.
Diego. will bi8 tried on five felOIQ'
counts ol unla1'f\11 sexual ectivi·
ty witb female lnlnonr.
••A steep increase in human
cancer may be the outcome lf too
many of the thousands of new
chemicals to which humans have
been exposed turn out to be
powerful mutagens and
~arcinogens, •• Ames said.
Ames told scienUsts at the na·
tional meeting of the American
Chemical Society that he baa suc·
ceeded in refining a test he de-
v eloped earlier so that tiny
amounts of urine, and possibly
other body nwds, may be used ln
cancer tests to identify
mutagens, which are generally
uncer·causing agents.
Previously, the Ames test re-
quired totally pure s,mples of
the chemical to be tested, a much '
more cumbersome and tim~
consuming method.
The development, Ames said,
"has all sorta of potential" for
detecting cancer·causlng prop-
erties in thousands of 1ub·
stances.
He said bis method abOuld be
used to examhle the urine of a
large populatJon of nou·smobna
to detect unsusl)ffted mutagens
and carcinogens that may be en·
tering people.
In addition, Ames said, ex·
. .
County Tax Rate
Oranee County property
owners will pay $1.33 per $100 of
usessed valuation this year to
help finance tbe cost of county
eovernment according to tax
rates adopted by supervisors to-
day.
ln addition. homeowners and
bustnesa ownen will be ehar1ed
a rate CJ{ 18.8 cents per $100 ol as·
aened valuation for flood control
and a 18.6-cent rate to finance the
county Harbors, Beaches and
Parks District.
Supervisors this morning
adopted rates for those 1overn-
ment procrama as wen as for the
county's 26 school districts and
various street lltbting, library.
vector control and water dis·
tricts..
Typically 59 cents of every
Or ante County property tax
dollar goes for educatlon, 17
cent.a to county government, 10
cent.I to city iovemment and 14
cents for special districts.
The county's $1.33 tu rate
repreeents. a 10.cent cut from lasi
year's $1 . .a tax rate and many
other agencies have reduced
their rates as well.
But because of the countywtde
average increase in assessed
valuation of J.J.7 percent, most
property owners will face higher
tax bills this year.
Assessed valuation is tbe
figure to which tax rates are ap.
plied in calculating property tax
bills.
Since an estimated 4.S percent
of the 19.7 percent assessed
valuation increase was attrim.t·
ed to new construction, taxinl
agencies would have to cut their
rates by an averate of 15.2 per·
cent to keep property own~rs
from receiving higher tax bills. ·
Tax Rate Declines
LOS ANGELF..5 (AP) -Hqp-tnc tO collect almost $20 mlllit>n
from the federal government to
take up the slack, tbe county
Board Clf Supervisors on~
cut the property tax rate by men
than a cents.
Funds for a fix-up. paint-up,
clean·up program setv~ Jaw.
income residents ol Los Bios
Street in San .Tuan Capiatnno
and three otbet communlUea
won the approv•l of Ol'&lll•
County supervison Tuesday.
The board gav•tbe eom..m•
ty Developinent CowtcU '65.000
in federal tlllMls to buy sllPP*
for the minor bom• repair ,...
gram. · • i
In addition. supervisors
already bad apeed to pto;Sde
$.59.256 ln federal ComJ>teheiJat'e
Employment and Trainlnc Act
funds to hire 20 wot'lunen to make the home repain. · ·'
The proif'am will nrve lcrir-
lncome famWea alone LOI Rios
Street and also ID barrtoe iii ta
Placeiltl8; Stanton ud ~ii areaa. • ~ .... 1
Paul Bruffey, a plan11er :with
the Commwiltr Development
Council, said re~ wU1 bidUde
paintiu; l trash aftd weed re-
moval, InltanaUon or smoke d•
tectora and IOcb •heN needed.
along with Pt'9V,dlne weatber-
1triJ>Pinl and water heater Jn.
sulat.lon to ~rye enerp.
· <See CLEANUPt Pase.At)
• * *
' 'l'he tc>Uple were oft-duty and drivinl a private vehicle, police
said.
Traffic officert said Dayhoff
was drlvlna west on MacArthur Boa1e~ at an unknown speed wben be &truck the northwest.
corner atoal Pole.
The oar was destroyed.
#
It II aDece4 that the tr. Janee
coach bad sexual reJatlombiP'
with girls between 13 and 16
years of age 'While working with
teams that participated in Na·
tional Volleyball Association and
AAU CCJ11tests.
Arresting Laguna Beach of-
ficers said San Diego police are now making inquiries in that
area where Gregory is coaching
a number-Of girls' teams.
UJ · F:estival,S · Over;
iti!tists Break Camp
•
Free Air Fare
For Carter
P.,...P-.4.J
HOUSING. • •
~onnectioos '1'd other req~
ments few bousini aaf ety. which
he said he was sure Wat ID San
Clemente rental units.
The HUD letter required a
response within 30 days.
Cit.y Manager Gerald Weeks
said a letter signed by Mayor
Donna Wilkenson was malled to
HUD OD Tuesday. objectina to al-
JocaUon ol any rent asslatance in
San Clemente.
Mrs. Wilkenson said city coun-
cilmen have conslstenUy and un-
•nimously opposed housint as-
sistance in any form.
' "My husband and I wanted to
move to the beach for a lorqr time
before we could afford it," she
said in an interview. "We worked
hard and saved our money, and I
don't see why other people who
want to live at the beach
shouldn't get here the same
"'ay." Mrs. Wilken.son s-1d she ob-
jects to taxpayers subsidJzin&
rents of youne people wbo want
to work only part time, to qualify
for assistance, a.nd spend the rest
or their time Oil the beach.
Roy Shimizu, executive direc·
tor of the Orange County Hou.sing
.Authority, said San Clemente ci-•¥ councilmen may miaun·
derstand the assistance pro-
gram.
The OCHA administers the
Tent assista.oce program in 21
cities and the unincorporated
eounty territory, f ollowln&
federal IUidelines, Said Sblm.lm. I "A person must be over 62
• years of age, be handicapped as
defined by the Social Securi~
Adminiatration or be ln • low In· co~e f~ tQ q'4allly for thla ••istance, be said. , ''There ia no way a bunch of
kids wbo want to bang out at the
beach could qualify for the pro-
gram.
"On the other hand, there are
plenty of people in San Clemente
right now who need rent as-
sistance, and as city residents,
they would receive preference in
qualifying.
"Elderly people on fiKed in-
comes are having a bard time,
making their rents, as they go
up. But we see some middle
management people, ·too, who
are laid off and need temporary
assistance for their families.
"All of us, at one time or
another need )lelp," Shlmisu
said. ''Peoole who need heln. and ue ellllhle for help, should have
assistance," be said.
The OCHA director Hid be has
ofofered to meet wltb San
Clemente city councilmen to ex-
plain jbe federal rent sublldy
program. but has received no
respanae.
·HUD's Chatham said ad-
ministration of tbe rent as-
sistance CLam 1s not bound by the(lty U.
"We're not 1olng to order
anyone to do an:ythlnt one way or another, •• be said.
"We will almply determine
eligibility. If tben la a need for
the prosnm tn San Clemente, we
will advile llr. ShlmtlU tol*'OO-
eu rent Mst'*ance applications tor San aemmte u well u Ure
GUier county dUes and uni.D· cmparlltedareas. u
DAILY PILOT
Tbe tree airplane rldee were
dhcloted today b1 the Wu~ bureau d tbe Cox
• ..,.,... Clalfu.
)I ~ a1IO Hid the dllelolure
prompted eampal1n offtctal1 to
IO over tbclr book.I to determine It aa,y llmllar rides on amall
cllut.secl pl..-bad not been
paid for.
lfowever, Huron 1ald tUt the
caD)D&lln pnvtous~ paid bUls
totallna $151,132 for 1mall
chart. pl.am9. He aald tllb de-momtrat.ed then wu nothlnl ln·
tentbW tn the failure to pay for
the trip throup the Carolinas.
''It's not like we bad a praeUce
ol not paying ror those plane
trips," Huron Hld.
Carter took five fiighta during
a three-<11,y swlnt through North
and South Carolina tn April ms.
Two tu,ht.s were paJd ror by R.
R. "Bobby" Allen on a plane
owned by D. R. Allen and Son
Inc. ol FayettevUJe. N.C.
HU!Ul aaid that Allen was be.
ing reimbursed ror $271.25 ror the
plane trips since Allen previously
contributed $1.000 lo the Carter
campaign, the legal limit for in-
dividuals under federal law.
The other firm involved in
Caroline campaign trip was the
Diamond Supply Co. headed by
Harvey Diamond of Charlotte,
N.C.
Huron said a check would be
sent out for $568. 73 to reimburse
the firm for two chartered
nights.
Corporate campaign contribu-
tions are illegal.
The fifth flight durlne Carter's
trip to the CaroUnas was ~d for
by the state of South Caro and
Huron estimated that the cost or
the flight would be about $200.
Carter was accompanied on
the flight on the s tate-owned
plane by Lt. Gov. W. BranUey
Harvey ol South Carolina.
It was previously disclosed
during the investigation or the
finances of budget director Bert
Lance that Carter was not billed
for five other fli&hts valued at
$1, 793 oo a plane owned by the
N atiooal Bank of Georgia.
Workshon Set
In San Juan
The Orange Count)' Environ-
menta• ManaselQent Aaency's
Housinl and Community
!>evelopment Division will con-
duct a special workshop for south
county communitles Friday ·in
San Juan Capistrano.
The session will take place at
the Capistrano Unified School
District offices at 32942 Calle
Perfectol' startine at T: 30 p. m.
RepresentaUves of the county
agency, which administers
special tax funds used to improve
communlttes occupied by the
economically disadvantaged,
will discuss their pro1rama,
finances and the citizen
p8.!_t.i~patlon process.
* * *
F,....P.,,.AJ
CLEANUP. •
He said the repaln would be
considered midor and are de·
signed primarily to lmprove tht
appearance of deterioraUna
nei&hborboods. About 200 bocnes
in the four areas are expected to
receive some repair work wtthi.D
tb.e next year.
In addition, Brufley contloued.
aeparate arran1eme~t have been approved by the anta Ana
Clty Councll for re airs to
another 50 homes ln t t com-
munity ••
" ftpcn. to aupervilort iclen· tified L09 Biol u the co.mty•a
oldestriildmtial ltnlet.
At least tbrie adobe boine1 ltW
standing there were built
betweln 12'80 a.ad 1110. abortlJ
after the toUndtn1 ol the Sim
JQan MiaikJG 1D 17'18.
llegnat• Take Seats
Four Uni.vers1ty of California regents re-
cently appointed by Governor Brown
reflect their relief in a Senate Rules Com-
mittee meeting in Sacramento where they
won committee approval of their appoint·
ment. From .left are John Henning,
Theodora Kroeber-Quinn, Yoritada Wada
and stane]y Schein!>aum.
State Socks SC
With Sa/ ety Bill
The city of San Clemente finds
itself with an unexpected bill in
excess of $15,000 as a result of an
unannounced inspection last
week by the state OccupationaJ
Safety and Health Standards
(OSHA> board.
James Paige, acting pubhc
works director, said the city was
faulted for not having exits from
tunnels, which run under the
sewage treatment plant.
·'These three tunnels were de-
signed to be extended when the
treatment plant is expanded,··
said Paige. "It seems rather
wasteful to put in doors that will
have to be knocked down again.
but we have lo do it. apparently,
to be in compliance with heaJlh
and safety standards."
Paige said the tunnels house
electrical panels and pipes.
Knocking out the end of each or
the three tunnels, putting in
doors and building steps to the
outside will cost about $15,000 he
said.
fi'ro• Page Al
ALLAWAY. •
about to take over his home city
of Detroit.
Butler said the same pattern
was renewed last year with Al·
laway's second wife, Bonnie, who
sued him for divorce three days
before the shootings.
The jury was reminded of Al·
laway's conviction that bis
estranged wife was being
tortured by univenity personnel
wbo mocked him and told him
they were having sex with her. ·
And Butler recalled Allaway's
falsely held belief that Bonnie
was being forced to participate in
pornographic movies which were
then privately screened to Cal
State employes in the media
center. •'There is only one possible
verdict in tbis trial," Butler said.
"Ed Allaway was legally imane
on July 12, 1976."
Store Owner
Slays Teen
LENNOX (AP) -,._ liquor
store owner fatally shot a J.6.
year-old Inglewood youth during
an attempted holdup of his store
by two teenqers, offt~ials said.
Sberritr's depati.. T\leaclay
identified the victhn in the Mon·
day sbootina as Mkbael Simms.
Another lS.year-old )'OUth was
later arrested and boOted for m-
vest11ation of murder for his al-
leged ~clpaUon in a felOay
leading to a death.
St<ft owner ff.yun Soo Kim. z.
told lnveatigaton tb•t one ol the
youLba h8d been armed wtth a .22U-callber rifle. Kim Hid be
pu .a a revolver from uncle&' the .counter and find tlve times. hlt-
Un1 Simm.a twice.
OSHA aJso cited the city for a
wet and slippery floor in the
plant's incinerator room and a
stairwell with no railing. Paige
said steps have alreadv been
taken at minimal expense to cor·
reel both these hazards.
OSHA guidelines stipulate that
the city must present plans for
correcting violations within 30
days of being cited. Failure to do
so could result in heavy fines.
F,....PageAJ
FESTIVALS
&allery contacts. The response for
the public was fantastic and they
got the recognition they deserve,'·
Foster said.
He noted that while each ot the
f estivals bas a diffe rent
character, having all three in the
proximity ~nablits visit.ors to see
Laguna's entire artistic picture.
"It takes all three to set the
mood," he said.
F ..... P-.AJ
ANITA •••
The growth of the stol'm from
tropical depression to hurricane
in less than a day wasn't unusual.
he said.
A weather service advisory
early today located the storm
cent.er near latitude 28.3 north
and longitude 91.3 west, south·
southwest of New Orleans. Gales
extended 150 miles to the east
and 100 miles to the west.
Anita drove mp Udes onto the
low-lying Gulf abore, causing
bayous and rivers to run over
their banks, and was within easy
striking distance or land if it
veered north.
A total of 4,500 of(Jbore oil
workers were evacua~ toabore
Tuesday and 10,000 residents at
vulnerable points along 430 miles
of coast were advised to head In·
land to avoid becoming trapped.
Multimillion dollar drilling
rigs and manned producUoo plat ..
for01s, battened down and
closed, stood deserted in the
turbulemsea. Emergency valves were closed
on thousands of offshore oil eas
wells. 1bat action stopped tbe
daily fl~ of about half a mllllqn
bamlf or crude an4 mutlw bf
cubic feet of natural gas through
underwater pipelines. -
ft! ........
TRUIMes
Weighifffr
Pay Hike
Pay btUs ol •.5 percent for the
chief ICbool admlnlstraton will
be wetibed by the trustees ol the
Laguna Beacb Unified School
District wben they meet at 7:30 .
p.m. 'lbunday at the education
cent.er. /
The packaae of salary ln-
c-reases wUl total nearly $20,000.
Distrtct teachers were liven a s
percent increue earlier this
1ear.
Tbe nlary of Dr. Robert
Suddl. dlltrtct superintendent.
b proposed to IO from $36.0tO to
$3'7,8152, an tncreue of ,,$ per-
cent.
U approved, i.a.un•'s three elementary achoo[ prlnelpals.
Mike Carroll, Top of the World;
Lyle Proctor, Aliso; and Bill Al·
Jen, El Morro; would receive an-
nual salaries of $27 ,335 plus
longevity pay of $500 per year
after 15 yean with-tile district,
and $750 a year if a doctorate
degree ts held.
David Uoyd, Thurston prin·
clpal, would receive $29,222;
Wick lobo, adult educaUoo prin·
~ipal, S27.335; Betty Davis, assis-
tant blah school principal,
$2'7,45e; Robert Hughes, high
school principal, $31,824 and Bill
Barnes, director of educaUonal,
services, $33,144.
Art Ftsber, principal of the
summer achoo! would receive
$2.230 a mooth when acting in
that position.
Loocevity and merit increases
for the adminialraton other than
Dr. Sancllis will add about an ad·
ditional three percent to the base
4.5 percent increase proposed.
Similar addltlooa stepped the
average Laguna Beach teachers'
salary to 8 percent over that re-
ceived last year.
The school board will also can-
1ider increases of 5 percent for
supervisory personnel.
Clyde Lovelady, district busi-
ness manager, is proposed to re-
ceiv~ $33,144.
Physical Exam8 Set
For Laguna High
Physical examinations fo!" Lacima .Beach H.llh School stu-
dent.a wishing to compete in
school athletic programs will be
given Thursday at the aebool
gym.
ExaminaUons will be given •
fcom 9 to 10 a.m. for &lrls and
fl-om 10 to 11 a.m. for boys at
their respective locker rooms.
"rbereis a $3 fee.
~~~~~~~~~~
• I 'r "" • ( ~
..
Free Air Fore
For Carter
F.-P ... AJ
HOUSING •••
c;onnectii:ma ~ other req~
mata for houainl safety. which
he said he was sure eaist tn San
• Clemente rental cmfta.
The HUD letter required a
response within 30 days.
City Mana,er Gerald Weeks
said a Jetter aianed by Mayor
Donna Wilkenson was malled to
HUD OD Tuesday, objectln.8 to aJ.
location of any rent asslatance in
San Clemente.
Mrs. Wllk~ s~d city coun· ~ilmen have consistenUy and un-
animously opposed housing 8.S·
sistance in any form.
' "My husband and I wanted to
move to the beach for a lone time
before we could afford it," she
said in an interview. "We WOl'ked
bard and saved our money, and I
don't see wby other people who
want to live at the beach
shouldn't get her~ the same
.-ay."
Mrs. Wilkenson Sllid she ob-
jects to taxpayers subsldizln&
rents of YOUlli people wbo want
to work only part time, to qualify
{or assistance, and spend the rest
of their time oo the beach.
1 Roy Sh.imiau, execuUve dire<:·
tor of the Orange County Housing
. .Authority, said San Clemente ci·
'4y councilmen may misun·
derstand the assistance pro-
gram.
1 The OCHA admlnisters the
rent. assistance prolfam in 21.
cities and the unincorporated
csounly territory, followin&
federal paidelines, said Sbhnisu. I .. A person must be over S2
• years ol age, be handicapped as
defa.aed by the Soci4l} SecuriW
A~ation or be 1n a low in-
come (Amilv tQ qqallfy for &hi5 -..istance7 be 8,ald.
,,"There ls no way a buneb of
kids who want to hang out at the
beach could qualify for the pro-
gram.
"On the other hand, there are
plenty of people in San Clemente
right now who need rent as·
siltance. and as city residents,
they would receive prefenmce in
qualifying.
"Elderly people on f&J(ed in-
comes are having a hard time,
making their rents, as they go
up. But we aee aotne middle
management people, too, who
are laid off and need temporary
asaistance for their families.
••AU of us, at one time or
anotheT .need )lelp," Shtmisu
said. "Peoole who need halo. and are elllible for help, should have
aaaistanc:e, •• he said.
Tbe OOHA d.lrector aald be has
offered to meet wltb San
CJemente city councilmen to ex-
plain jhe federal rut aubddy
.Pl"Oll'8JJl. but has received no
respoaae.
·HUD'• Cbatbam sald ad-
mmbtrat1on of the rent as·
sistance prccram ls nOt bound by
the Qt;J Comldl.
·-we're oot 101nc to order
any<81 to do anytldng oce way or another ... be aald.
"We will almpl7 determine
ellsibility. U tbere ia a need for
the JllOlll'mD iD San Clemeate, we
will advise lb'. Sblmlsu to anc-
... rd emst.mee appllcaUons
for Sao QellMiDte u •ell u the· other county eit1es and Ullin.·
COl'palatedueas. ••
The rr.. allplane rid wen
dllcloHd toda1 bJ the
W buNau Ol tM Cox . ..
Haroo alto uld the dl1el01ure
prompted campal1n offtciab to •o over thelr book& to determine if aay aimllar rlda on small
dwUnd p1ua bad not been
paldfw.
However. Huron Hld that the
c:ampatan prevlo..&1t, paid bills
totallna $151,382 for small
ebarter planes. He aaid thla de-
moustra&ed then wu notb1nt ln-
tentfcmal in ~ failure to pay for
the trip tbrouab the Ca.rollaas. .. It'• not like we had a practice
of not P•Yi.n& for those plane
trips," llw'oo said.
Carter took five nights during
a ~ swtna through North
and South Carolina in April 1.975.
Two Oighta were paid for by R.
R . "Bobby" Allen on a plane
owned by D. R. Alla and Son
Joe. olFayettevUJe. N.C.
Huron said that. Alleo wa,s be-
ing reimbursed for· $271.25 for the
plane trips since Allen previously
contributed $1,000 to the Carter
campaign. the Je&al limit for in-
dividuals under federal law.
The other firm involved in
Caroline campaign trip was the
Diamond Supply Co. head.ed by
Harvey Diamond of Charlotte,
N.C.
Huron said a check would be
sent out for $568.73 to reimburse
the firm for two chartered
flights.
Corporate campaign conlribu·
tions are illegal.
The filth fiigbt durln& Carter's
trip to the Carollnas was paid for
by the state of South Carolina and
Huron estimated that the cost of
the fiiibt would be about $200.
Carter was accompanied on
the filght on the state-owned
plane by Lt. Gov. W. Brantley
Harvey of South Carolina.
It was previously disclosed
during the investigation of the
finances of budget director Bert
Lance that Carter was not billed
for five other flights valued at
$1,793 on a plane owned by the
National Bank of Georgia.
Workshop Set
In San Juan
The 0r8Jlle County Environ-
mental ¥anagement Aaency's
Houatnf and Community
Development Dlvtslon will con·
duct a special workshop for south
county communtues Friday · in
San Juan Capistrano.
The session will take place at
the Capistrano Unified School
District ottices at 32942 Calle
Perfect.or st.artinf at 1: 30 p.m.
Representatives of the county
agency, which adrniolsters
special tax funds used to improve
communities occupied by the
economically disadvantaged,
will discuss their proarams,
finances and the citizen
pa!_ticlpatioo process.
* * *
Fro.P-..AI
CLEANUP. •
He said the repairs would be
considered minor and are de·
signed primarily to bnprove th•
appearance of deterlotatlna
oei&hborboods. Abolrt 200 homes
in the four areas are expected to
receive some repair work wltbln
ti\• nut year.
In addition, Sruffe1 eontlnued,
separate arran1eme11tt have
been appl'O\'ed by the Santa Ant
Clty Council for repairs to
another SO homes in that com.
munilY • .,.
I& ~ to 1upe.rvtaon tclen·
tlfied Loa 8109 as tbe ~·1
oldest rella.mtal ltNet.
AtleaA~ adobe bomee atilt
1taodlna there were built
between J.'180 and 1810, abortJy
aftet the founlllnJ Ot the Sao
J uaJi Mlssm in 1ne.
... ,,......
llegfmts Take Seats
Four Uni.versity of California regents re-
cently appointed by Governor Brown
reflect their relief in a Senate Rules Com-
mittee meeting in Sacramento where they
won committee approval of their appoint-
ment. From ·left are John Henning,
Theodora Kroeber-Quinn, Yoritada Wada.
and Stanely Scheinbaum.
State Socks SC
....,__
Wit~ Safety Bill
The city of ~n Clemente finds OSHA also cited the city for a
itself with an ~expected bill in wet and slippery floor in the
excess of $15,000\as a result of an plant's incinerator room and a
unannounced in~pection last stairwell with no railing. Paige
week by the state Qccupational said steps have already been
Safety and Health ~andards taken at minimal expense to cor-
<OSHA) board. · rect both these hazards.
James Paige, acting )l..ubhc USHA guidelines stipulate that
works director, said the city was the city must pres plans for
faulted for not having exits from corr ecting viol · ns ~ithin 30
tunnels which run under the\ days of bein ed. Failure to do
sewage treatment plant. \so could r u t in heavy fines.
"These three tunnels were de· i
signed to be extended when the '-
treatment plant is expanded," ' ,.... Pflflf! AJ said Paige. "It seems rather
wasteful to put in doors that will FESTIVALS have lo be knocked down again.
but we have to do it. apparently,
to be in compliance with health
and safety standards."
Paige said the tunnels house
e lectrical panels and pipes.
Knocking out the end of each of
the three tunnels, putting in
doors and building steps to the
outside will cost about $15,000 he
said.
F,.._PageAJ
about lo take over his home city
of Detroit.
•
Butler said tbe same pattern
was renewed la.st year with Al·
la way's second wife, Boonie, who
sued him for divorce three days
before the shootings.
The jury was reminded of Al·
laway's conviction that bis
estranged wife was being
tortured by \mlveraity personnel
who mocked him and told him
they were having sex with her. ·
And Butler recalled AUawa.y's
falsely held belief that Bonnie
w•a being forced to participate in
pornosrapbic movies which were
tben privately screened to Cal
State employes Jn the med.la
cent.er .
''There is only one possible
verdict iA tblS trial," BuUer said.
''Ed Allatray was legally mane
on July 12, 1976."
Store Owner
Slays Teen
&allery contacts. The response for
the public was fantastic and they
got the recoemtion they deserve,'.
Fostersaid, .
He noted that while each ot the
festivals has a different
character, having all three in the
proximity enabl• 'Vlaitors to see
Laguna's entire artistic picture.
"It takes all three to set the
mood," he said.
ANITA ••.
The growth of the stoTm from
tropical depression to hurricane
in less than a day wasn't unusual,
he said.
A weather service advisory
early toda;· located the storm
center near latitude 26.3 north
and longitude 91.3 west, south·
southwest of New Orleans. Gales
ext.ended l!iO miles to the east
and 100 miles to the west.
A.nit.a drove high tides onto the
low-lying Gulf shore, causing
bayous and rivers to run over
their banks, and was within easy
striking distance of land if it
veered north.
A total of 4,500 offshore oil
worlc~ were evacuated to shore
Tuesday and 10,000 residentl at
vulnerable points along 430 miles
of coast were advised to head in-
land to avoid becoming trapped.
Multimillion dollar drilllng
rigs and manned production plat··
forms, battened down and
closed, stood deserted in the
turbulent sea.
Emergency valves were closed
on thousands of offshore oil gas
wells. 'lbat action stopped the
dail,Y.fl<r¥ of about half a millkJn
barrels d crude and mllllOna bf
cubic feet of natural gas tbrou&h
underwater pipelines.
'I' nu tees
WeighiJHI
Pay Hike
Pay bikes of f .5 pel"dnt for tbe
chief ICbool adm.l.D1sttatorl wtll
be we!O>ed by tbe trustees ol tbe
Lacuna Beach Uo.lfied Sebool Dlatrlct Wben they meet at 7:30 .
p.m. 'lbund91 at the education
center.
The packa1e of sal•ry \n·
creuea will total Dearly $80,000.
District teachers were liven a s
percent increase earlier this
year.
The satary ot Dr. Robert
Sandals. diltrlct 1aperi.Dteadent.
ls proposed to 10 from '31.fHO to $31,ea. an tnc.reue of 4'.S per.
cent.
U approved, Laguna'• three
elementary school prtnclpals •
Mite Carroll. Top of the World;
Lyle Proctor. Aliso; and~ Al·
Jen, El Morro; would receive an-
nual salaries of $27 ,335 plus
longevity pay of $500 per year
aftu 15 years with the dJstrtct.
and '7~ a year If a doctorate
degree is held.
David Uoyd. Thurston prin-
cipal, would receive $29,222;
Wick l.A>bo, adult educatlGD prin-
cipal. $27,335; Betty Davis. assis-
t._nt high school prlncipal,
$27,458; Robert Hughes, blgh
school principal, $31,824 and Bill
Barnes, director of educational,
services, $33,144.
Art Fisher, principal or the
summer acbool would receive
$2,230 a month when acting 1n
that position.
Loqevity and merit increases
for the administrators other than
Dr. Sancbia will add about an ad-
ditional three percent to the base
4.5 percent increase proposed.
Similar addittom stepped the
averaie Laguna Beach teachers'
salary to 8 percent over that re-
ceived Jut yur.
The school board will also con-
1ider increaaes of 5 pet'cent for
supervisory personnel.
Clyde Lovelady, district busi-
ness manager, js proposed to re-
ceive $33,144.
Physical Exams Set
For Laguna High
Physical examinations fo!'
Laguna Beach Hl,ch School atu-
denta wishing to compete in
school atbletie prouams will be
given Thursday at the acbool
gym.
Examtnatfons will be given •
from t to 10 a.m. for ctrls and
hom lO to U a.m. for boys at
their respec:tlve locker rooms.
"I'bereis a $3 fee.
\ C LISC
Rail C • oswg
Still a Pro6lem
The l°"G"awattecl ruling by the Public Utllltle• (PUC), al·
' lo•1ng tlw city of San C*"'"t• n at-grade rallroad oroaalng
to the munlclpat p18f and main t»teh, tatlafl" no on.
A mcqor pc>tnt or t ruggle that the new CTO ting
was to r•pJace • &O-yaat <*I tunnel under the tracks, which
has beeome a bhghted, high-crime public nulaance
The PUC said San Clemente could have the at-grade
crOS1o1ng It wanted. but would have to keep the tunnel aa well.
The new crossing. to be paid for entirely out of city funds,
would be located 500 , .. , north of the tunnel. near city
lifeguard headquarters
The city is left with an unsafe, un11ghtly tunnel, while
railroad and PUC atatf concerns about opening the way for
pede$tnan traffic over busy railroad tracka go unanswered
At least the dec1s1on indicates. tor the flr•t time in a dozen
years that the PUC will consider an at-grade crossing
It remains now for the city to press for greater PUC ac-
commodation to public safety and to the leg1t1mate efforts to
upgrade the pier area aesthetically
·Encore! Encore!
Great performances on the stage are recognized with the
Tony Awards. For the soreen. it's the Oscar. For TV, It's the
Emmy. Too bad no awards have been established for
performances on the Laguna Beach City Council bench.
Council members Sally Bellerue and John McDowell de--
serve little statues on their mantels right now as a result of
thetr performances at the budget and tax rate hearing.
Mrs. Bellerue's fervent defense of the $3 parking fine. her
emotional protestations over increased parking permit tees
and her ecstatic relief when 1t was found these twin evils
could not summarily be approved win her "Best Actress ··
And, for "Best Actor," Councilman McDowell wins tor
his portrayal of "The Magician" who proposed to lower this
year's tax rate by using federal money and pushing other
costs into next year's budget-fiscal wizardry at its best.
Fortunately. council members Carl Johnson and Phyllis
Sweeney avoided actS'1hatwoutd have made them "Best Sup-
porting Cast "
Water Problems
A proposal to spend $72,000 to put grass, shrubs and a
wall around Laguna's Crescent Point Park seems not only too
much money for too little result. but even the result is ques-
tionable
Planting grass on the point means some 1mgation system
must be put 1n , a ma1or expense and a cost not only in dollars.
but in environmental damage as well. Irrigation introduces a
foreign water source to the point.
One ha§ only to look at the d1ff1culty caused by watering
along the C"ap1strano Palasades. along East Bluff in Newport
and in Laguna's own Heisler Park to realtze the folly of de-
veloping an unnatural environment dependent on a constant
irrigation.
Development of the point should merely enhance what 1s
there, not change 1t into something unnatural. The point -
and not just views -must be preserved lest man with his un-
derground sprinklers and <Jutomatic timers water it into an ex-
tention of Crescent Bay.
• Op1n1ons expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those of thetr authors and
artists. Reader comment is invited
Yes. your Daily Pilot editorial page has changed in
appearance. The new typographical design is intended
to make it easier to distinguish our opinions from others
that appear on the pages It also should provide more
flexibility for presenting columns and features 1n an at-
tractive manner.
Thomas Keev1I, Editor
.-.;---------·-------.
Jack Anderson
Jets, Golf ClUIJs Eeft Behind
W ASHlNGTON More than
lhret: years after the United
States pulled out of Indochina. a
full accounting has yet to be
m»de of all they left behind.
They abandoned muttary In
stallatioM, industrial plants. oil
depots. piers. docks .
wurehouses. re;>air facilities,
barracks and hospitals. The
warehouses were Jammed Cull of
munitions. the docks piled high
with equipment.
The conquering Commumsts
inhented the finest airports and
seaports in all Asia, unintended
gifts from the U S taxpayers All
over South Vietnam. the Com
munasts found 10.000·foot con·
crete runway!>, complete with
planes that streaked over the
Jungle so fast the foliage below
looked like a green blur •
THE DEPARTING Americans
also left behind personal
possessions. rangin g from a
$1,400 set of crystal dishes to a
$1.40 pair of nail clippers. Some
fortunate commissar may still be
walkm~ the streets of Saigon in a
pair of "alligator shoes made to
order" for a U.S. official in too
big a hurry to pack. And hopeful
ly. a needy Viet Cong wound up
w1Lh the four bottles of Jean Natl'
bubble bath abandoned b\
anothcrofflc1al ·
Th<.' lost billion!> are hidden in
~t'('rel inventoric!> thill ma)'
never be dug out But we have
succcc..'<led at least in examining
tht.> cl:ums of the foreign aid of
f1c1als. who tried to collect Crom
the government for their di!!·
carded possessions
The lists of los t valuable!'>
fortify our impression that many
U.S. officials didn't let the war
interfere with their high hvmg
One official asked the gov
Paul Harvey
ernmenl to reimburse ham. for
exlniple. for "three bottles
Co nae. lour bottles Bourbon.
one bot.tie Scotch, five bottles
various liquors." Another left to
the Communists "24 wine
glasses. crystal; 18 champagne
glasses. crystal. 12 s herry
glasses, crystal, 16 brandy snlf
ters. crystal ''
STILLANOTHERoffacial, with
a tastf' for culture, left behind 10
oil paintmgs and a Chinese rug
. • " .
worth ~.ooo. Nor did he have to
to pack bUi U4 shirta. with lit sets
of cuff links to bold the cuffs
logethtt. He al$o gave up 30
smokiJtg pipes to· the Com-
munis . ,
Tho tellow who lost the fancy
alligef»r$hoeS also put In a claim
for two pairs or ''turtle" shoes.
one pair of ''ostrich hide" shoes
and three pairs of common golf
shoes. Another sought re1m
bursement fOl' 18 cans of shoe
polish. "assorted colors .. •
'Cojigratulations. Bert! I knew you'd fil in!'
Several envoys made a
haaly ex.it without their aolf clqbs
~nd tennla rackets. One de·
manded $1,085 Crom the lax·
• payers to pay for two sets of
abandoned golf clubs. plus
another Sl20 tor an "elephant
hide" golf bag. He beJp(ully
ilemiicd the mlsslng clubs, in·
eluding "woods 1-3-4·5, irons 2·9
and PW (pitching wedge)."
A TENNIS BtJFF put in a claim
ror"26eans of Wilson tennis balls,
tour boxes Tretom balls, six cans
Dunlop balls" und three boxes of
.. all weatber" balls
Ot.bers asked ror compensation
for the pets they couldn't bnng
home. including two German
Shepherds valued at $800, a
"five·mooth male'' hunting dog
worth S200 and 10 goldfish and
tropical fish valued at $50. But
the State Dept. ruled sternly
"No allowance could be made for
the ... dogs or fish."
As It happened, the Slate Dept.
provided its personnel in In·
dochina with housing and
furnishings suitable for com-
fortable living. It cautioned
them, therefore, not lo take
valuable personal possessions in-
to the war zone
UPON their return. the of·
hc1als were notified that thev
('OUld claim up to $15.000 fo.r
personal possessions left behind
Most of the returning AID
personnel abided by the rules.
but 86 put in claims exceeding
the legal limit
Some claims were made for re·
1mbursements as high as SS0.000. I
In view of the advance warning.
no one got mere than $15,000. The
total reimbursements added up
to $2.5 million, slightly more than
half of what was claimed.
Cab 1838: A Lesson in Free Enterprise
It was a sticky hot day in
Chicago when I hailed a cab on
Michigan Avenue
A Chicago cab ride is not
sometlung one looks forward to
On hot days
especially,
cab drivers
are likely to
be s urly ,
other drivers
inconsiderate
Traffic
signals seem
green for two
seconds, red
for five
minutes
But Uus day I got a surprise -
perhaps the most refreshing cab
ride of my experience.
Not all cab drivers are created
equal. Paul Gosenpud had made
of his tedious job an enjoyable
profession
IUS YELLOW cab appears
much like anr other until you
open the ~r. but once inside you
are Alice 1h Wonderland.
First, Paul's cab 1s
immaculate. Instead of sitting
on ragged upholstery with your
feel ankle deep m soggy cigarette
butts th~ upholstery of Cab
1838 is intact and inviting -y'bu
discover tbe carpeted floor is
fresllly vacuumed
Then the fun begins
There 1s an assortment of
p,e r i o d i c a I s g r a t u i t o u s 1 y
provided for the rider
including the cultural.
Background music is offered to
the taste of each passenger.
including taped classics.
AND ON the rear deck ·
between the rear seat and the
wide rear window · 1s an
issorlmenl of candies from
which you arc expected to help
yourself.
Neatly bracketed to the panels
behind the side windows are
potted planL~ real ones
In a hangmg vase in front of
you <on the rear or the front seat I
are fresh cut flowers. Real one!'>.
You may help. yourself, says the
cabbie, to a boutonniere of your
choice.
"If your favorite kind of candy
1s not back there," says Paul
Gosenpud, "I have three kinds or
cookies up here."
Then, as an afterthought,
"Also cough drops, should you
need them -or aspirin, should
you need them ...
A neat note m front or you
mentions that the driver has city
maps -including bus route
maps and a dictionary
Now that your first flush of
)>Urprise is s ubsiding you realize
that 1838 is air conditioned; most
Chicago cabs are not.
NATURALLY I am expecting
that there must be some extra
charge for all this. On the
contrary, lhe cheerful driver
explains. "I did not raise my
rates when the others did."
I remembered that Mayor
Bilandic had negotiated a labor
settlement which resulted in a
starting-rare increase of 70
percent
"The taxi drivers are calling
him Santa Claus." said Paul
Gosenpud. ''I'm sticking with the
old cheaper rates."
Won't this lead to bargain
hunting by customers. lo friction
with other drivers?
"I don't care;· said the lean,
bespe~tacled young
entrepreneur. ··1 lease my cab
I'll charge whatever rates I like.
And I like the cheaper rates.··
Doubtless. I'm thinking to
myself, he'll make it up in bigger
tips
Paul Cosenpud reads my
mind : ·'The tips I really
appreciate are tips from
customers on how to make my
cab -not just the best in Chicago
but the best in the world!"
Thanks for the "lift," Mr.
Gosenpud .
MoilfJo~/When You're Out of Oil an Offshore Rig Is Beautiful
To the Editor
Your ed1lonal of Aug. 23 <Hete
Come the Rigs> refiects the sort.of
negative Uunkmg 'Which could
mean the end of tbls tounlry as
we know1t
• Both the press ~rid the politi-
b aos have managed to convince
the m~or1ty of Amfricans that
we are not 1n serious trouble
from an ener1y standpoint. but
let's look at the hard, cold facts •
the day when an offshore 011 pro-
ducing platform will be a
beautiful sight lo the average
American who wants lo have a
1ob, beat his home, and to drive
his automobile.
The camel you referred to 1s in
reality the American public and
the tent in which lhat camel's
head is stuck is the one f\Imished
by the politicians and environ·
mentalists. 1 We ar.e runntn1 up
nslronomical baiadce of l>•Y'. '•
me.nts deficit paying \he OBEC
up to *12.00 per b....-rel lor erode
oil whlcb costs, probably fifty
cents per barrel to produce.
DALE JOHN~ON
2. Our oU companies are re·
celviq, on an verll'Ct, a tittle-·
over $5.00 per barrel ldt c1'Ud ~1
which cost.I as much as $4.00 per
barrel to pi'oduc·e.
Quotes
some years ago l wrote as
follows
"Mourntng doves are beautiful
creatures which are now bein&
slam fin some states) by coward·
ly assassins who are licensed by
the state, to murder them. They
are lovely and helpless treatures
with neither tusks nor claws t.o
make the contest a level prdposi-
tion. They are the gentlest of birds
and their reel are too dainty to
kick their slayers and they ate too
weak.t.on.tn tbem off with a snarl.
"They don't bite those who tor·
ment them and depend on their
sad glances to provoke mercy in
the craven lifet.akers. They are
not cunning and they do not
molest men even when they tear
holes in them with their
shotguns."
·'So they are put down as stupiCI
but this is the common slander the
weak must endure. It is one of lha
tricks of the ugly and brutal to
viliry the comely and shy ~
dumb. The ignorant h11ve alwar,1
been vandals an<I take pleasure in
the aestruction of beauty. So
while the dove-"mers ate biuer,
better armed, and full of mo~
beer than doves. in the contest the
mourrung dove will no doubt be
the loser But we think tn the final
judgment made by the majority
of intelhgent and decent
Amencan.s. the doves will be th~
moral Victors.•· .
So, like e say. there are so
many things we CflAnol qlute pair up W\th reaSOA. We ju.st don't
seem to be-nble\C> keep up with the
'lery latest 6fth6Setet'hnolpgies
HENRY M. EBER
rr~aa.w.;,
Although experience m deficit
financing may be a qualification
for a U.S. budget director. tbe ob·
ject1ve should be to reduce infla.
lion by reducing governmental
deficit spending and one should
not take a personal advantage
from a position to the detriment of
his employer (bank or &overn-meno.
Furthermore. the fact that
others do what Lance did is no de·
fense, A U.S. president resigned
under, threat or impeachment for
having done things which other
presidents did.
ROY B. WOO~EY •
•
but part of a year at a stipulated
annual rate somewhat under
$10.000
J
.
Blackout on tM Wharf
Dinner by CandleligJ&t Please Client~le
Cl
WU bJ (' ~atfil•
bennan .. Grotto re taurut alter
• tramfcwmer exploded, knock·
1n1 U•hU on tourllt·Jaau:n-2
l't1herman '• Wbarf ··we really don't mind. lt'a
more fun tbls way." aald
N arianne CWUI of IAS An1
u a. nlbbled on h r seafood din·
n r dunna the brtef Tueaday
ni1ht blackout Pac1nc Gu • Electnl' Co 11ld
about SO r tauranb, ba and
buat ln a rour·b1oclt &NJ
were wttbout dvlnl t.M • mlnulH lt took to ffl( the
tran1former. Utlllty otllclala
blamed powtr outa1e on an
undtttrmloed meehanleal rauure.
Curlc.ity He.ken at the f amid
Wax Mweum w re atven an.ex·
tra lhrlll when lb• llil\ta went
out. Employes wltb tlalblllht.s
had to lead lb~ vlaltors tbroup •
mue of waxy bu1ta out to the
atret1.
Mastermiml Like
A. Bminessman
SOUTH GATE <AP> The mysterious "Mr. Goldman," who
transformed a vacant bwJdina here into the key web in an elaborate
plot. that involved tunneling underneath a street to reach a bank
vauJt across the way, apparently seemed the perfect businessman
well-dressed and well-educated.
"How was I to be suspicious?" wondered Mack McArthur Tues·
day, a neighborhood businessman since 1930. McArthur bad leued
the building to a ''Mr. Goldman" in June, but aboolt his head in dis·
b~lief as he watched workmen fill in the 110-foot tunnel leading from
his store to the bank.
Yet it turned out the would-be burglars would have wound up
with chicken feed had they succeeded, as the Security National
Bank vault only contained "a totaJ of $100,000 to $150,000," police
Sgt. Al Knox said.
EL CENTRO <AP> Cotton growe ·ng from a de·
vastating flood now face a new enemy: wor .
The tobacco bud worms are expected lo devour half of the Im·
periaJ VaJley's cotton crop, state farm officials said Tuesday.
( J
Losses due lo worms could
exceed $50 million, compared STATE to flood damage estimated at
_ _ $8.5 million.
BfU to Boo•t P~rion• Vetoed
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A measure that wouJd have allowed
many cit.Jes and counties to boost pensions for retired workers has
been vetoed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
AB 734 by Assemblyman Norm Waters, D-Plymouth, would
hav~ allowed agencies that contract with the Public Employes
Retirement System to elect to make a one-time increase for local
members who retired before Jan. l, 1974.
N~lear PotDer Plant Req..e•ted
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Pacific Gas & Electric Co. has told the
state Energy Commission it want.s to buil? a nuclear power plant in
the upper San Joaquin Valley.
The. com~1ss1on said Tuesd~y the utility is proposing
alternative sites for the two-unit, 2,400-megawall plant in
· Stanislaus, Merced and Madera counties.
Vol-ta111 l•tegratloa Appro1'ed
SAN BERNARDINO CAP) -A voluntary intefration plan was
approved Tuesday for this city's 31,000-studenl school district, but
the judge gave officials only one semester to make it work.
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Paul Egly ordered the dis-
trict to put the plan into effect next February -a year earlier than
officials had suggested.
flnanrler'• Auornev• Whl Clai•
SAN DIEGO <AP> -Attorneys for financier C. Arnholt Smith
will gel $230,000 claimed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
after all.
A motion by the FIC to block release of the money from a Smith-
related company was denied Tuesday by U.S. District Court Judge
Leland C. Nielsen.
-th U,ht.1 cam ba '° Ute at 9:40 P..m •• t.be botm&lly
·heavy 1ldewill.k tratnc alone tho
Embarcadero wu alma.t Dem·
txlltant.
Clientele at a'••eral
1"Htau.rant1 and bar1 1roped
thrbufth the darknesa by
oandle 1ht. But mo1t tourist
amuaementa in the darkened
ione cla&ed up shop for the nlthl,
rearm, lt wouJd take hours to
restor'epower.
Police reported no crfmi'nal in·
cldents resulted fro-m the
blackout.
Jean Hagen
Loses Boot
With Cancer
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Ac·
tress Jean Hagen -once a lead-
ing lady in movies and television
-has died after a two-year bat-
tle with throat cancer that even-
tually took her to Germany for
controversial Laetrile treat-
ments. She was 52.
Miss Hagen died Monday al the
Motion Picture and Television
Country House and Hospital in
suburban Woodland Hills, but
her death was not reported until
Tue&d"Y. a hospital spokesman
said ..
After being told by doctors ear·
ly this year that she had only a
50-50 chance to live, the actress
replied, "That's not good .enough
for me ... 1 want very much to
live."
She twice underwent cancer ·
surgery and. radiation therapy
before turning lo the Laetrile
treatment.s, whlcb are illegal in
mos t states.
Miss Hagen made her screen
debut in "Adam's Rib" in 1949.
Among her other films were
"Singing in the Rain" in 1952,
"The Big Knife" in 1955, "Panic
m the Year Zero" in i962, and
"Dead Ringer" in 1964.
APWI,......_•
DIES OF CANCER
Jean Hagen
·ALLERGY?
12131 284-2556
(7141 543-9624 Recorded
Message
AllERGY COMTIOl
FOUNDATION
$100 GIFT CERTIFICATE FOR BOY AND GIRL
Fill in the entry below and deposit any Fashion
Square store August 18 thru September 9.
Contest rules: Boys and girJs thru age 18* may
enter. Drawi,ng Sept. 10. Wnners need not be
present to win. Notification py phone & mail.
BH 1513. Or111p ta 92661
Wri .. f# ~ llttor..tf•·
Gift Certificates good .
at any Fash ion
store.
Divorce Won
BY .Joe Alioto
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Former Mayor Joseph
Alioto's 36-year marriage baa ended, but an estimat·
'ed $8 million in community property still must be
divided.
The 60-year-old antitrust attorney on Tuesday was
granted his request for ---------
d~ssolution of the mar· . in support pending court
riage -the technical dispositionofthecase.
term for divorce in The couple bas been
California. separated since Dec. 2,
But Superior Court 1975.
Judge Jay Pfotenhauer
denied an attempt by
Angelina Alioto to find Man p) ds her husband in contempt ea
for disposing or $600,000
of his law firm's assets in Guil
violation of a restraining ly,
order. The judge ruled Alioto V ..._ __
hadn't willfully dis-~pes
obeyed the court order
restricting the spending LONG BEACH CAP) -
of community property. A man, who moments
Alioto has been paying earlier bad confessed to
his wife $5,500 per month armed robbery in
Superior Court here,
escaped as he was being
escorted back to jail
after asking to get a
drink of water,
authorities said.
FirmFmed
HACIENDA
HEIGHTS <AP> -A re-
alty firm here has
agreed to pay $2,500 in
civil fines and end al·
leged faJse advertising in
a stipulated judgement
by Superior Court Com-
missioner Leo S. Rich.
The firm, Hacienda
Heights Realty, by
agreeing to the judge-
ment, ended a lawsuit
fl)ed by the state al·
torney general's office.
They said J .D. Walters
was leaving the
courtroom of Superior
Court Judge Roy J.
Brown Tuesday after
pleading guilty lo three
count.s or armed robbery
when be asked for water.
His handcuffs were off,
and as be headed f~ the
fountain, he broke into a
run down the hall.
BUTTE
KNIT SALE
49.99-79.99
Originally $60-$116 If you're
a Butte collector, you're
probably already looking for the
car keys. The name's new? Then
come try beautiful workmanship,
design and Jush Fall colors,
at temptimg savings. Shown, in
powder or pink, 6-16, $80,
59.99
Town & Travel Dresses
DAILY N..OT Al
Bill Awaits
i
Brown's OK •
tl
SACRAMENTO (AP) -After a two.year bat;
hae,. 'mvh'omDem.1111.1 ud Uielr Jqlllative allies v. pushed a blU ~ tbe leli&lature ban.
nlnf molt Ouorocarboll aerOlol 8PfQI. linked by studies to ca.ncel.
On a D·I \IOt.e 'l\aesday. the Senate sent SB
153 by Seo. John Dunlap (J).N•pa.>, to Gov. Ed·
muod JJ?own Jr. Tbe measure would ban the
manufacture ol the ael'CllOls in Callfornla starting Oct. 1$, lf'l8.
A trowlu• number of aclenUsts say tbe1
fluorocarbons. commonly found in hair sprays
and deodorants, attack tbe 01one layer that
ablelds the earth from ulti'avtolet rays which came akin cancer.
The upper house also approved the Assembly
vendcm ol the bW. AB 236 1>Y Aasemblyman Job.q
, VascooeellGs (J).San Joee>. on a 23-1 vote and
sent tt back to the Aaembb' for actiou on Senate
amc:nd~ta. -
Both bills bad to be watered dowa to clear leglslati.e hurdles, and most sect.ions of them
'!ouJd be s~ed by proposed federal regula-tiona.
.The legislation, however, would 10 into effect
on 1ta own if tbe federal rules were drQppecl or
delayed. In acld.ltion, after April }.St 19"19 the bW
would ban th• aaJe In Callfomfi of the sprays
produced before tbe manufacturillC deadline.
The manufacture of most containers for
fluorocarbon sprays would be banned starting
Dec. 15, 1978.
CoJWicted Rapist'
Arrested A.gain
SANTA BARBARA CAP> -Police have booked
a 22-year-old man convicted of lS rapes in Pasadena
on cbar«es he raped or attempted to rape seven
women in this qulet coastal community.
Ant.bony Hughey ol Santa Barbal'a admitted the
rapes during a Ue detector test, Det. Brian Abbott
said Tuesday. Huihey was being held without bail
After arresting Hughey based on victim~•
descriptions, officers learned be bad been convicted
nf. the 15 Pasadena rapes in 1974 and 1975. Abbott
sai_d. HlJi}ley served sll&btlY less than a year in
prism. Abbott added. •
Hughey bas not been charged in the rape-
killings of three young women -two of them UC
Santa Barbara coeds -whose bodies were found in
couty territory. But a sheriff's spokesman said dep-
uties "will be questioning him in regard to those
rapes."
Radio Booklet Ready
. WASIUNGTol'-J <AP> -The National Associa·
lion ~f Broadcasters bas prepared a booklet des~~bin' the workincs ol radio 1tatlons.
Radio: Get the Messa.ce. '' includes sections
on news and actualities, public service announce-
mend ts. promotiorus, use of music and sound effects an production tecbolques.
It ls available for $1 from the Radio lotorma-
tion Offlee, 1T7l'N St. NW, Washinet.on, D.C., 20036.
' I
'IJail For Texaa'
Hu1·ricane Anita
:
Builds.Up Force
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -HW'-
rlcue Anita churned slowly
w•twanl in ti» warm Gulf ol
Mesko todlY, pacttq winds of
1$ mB an laour and O'OWhl&
at.roncer as thousands ol jltterj
coastal resJdents worried and
watched.
Forecasten said the 1torm,
center,cl about 300 miles from
both New Orleana aod Gal vest.co.
could continue its slow drift
across the Gulf toward Texu.
But there was no way to be sure,
and advisories were posted from
Tarpon Springs, Fla., to Corpus
Christi, Tex.
Some coastal towns in westem
Louisiana already were evacuat·
ed. Recommendations alao went
out in early morning for people to
leave low-lying areas on the up-
per Texas coast.
With winds less than 100 miles
an hour, the storm was put in the
lowest classiCication of bur·
ricanes -but forecasters
warned it would probably COO·
tinue to strengthen during the
day and push high tides ahead ol
it.
Neil Frank, director of Na·
tional Hurricane Center in
Miami, said there was no way to
tell when the storm might reach
shore.
• Oaf las
111AS
•SS.
,.,, ., ... ;,.
0 • 200
• 1
llllUS ... ....,.....
ANITA NEARS LAND
Map ~ Hurricane
"Things can change,"' he said.
"It's drifting rat.her slowly west,
and the steering currents are still
quite weak. A small change in
the steering currents could have
a dramatic effed on the course of
the storm."
Seek Rehearing
Dover Residents. .
FiTm on Dretljing
BY JOANNE ltEYNOLDS
Ol .. DeltY ..........
Residents of Dover Shores say
they•d rather ftaht than switch
plans for dredging their two boat
channels -a switch that could
cost them $25,000.
Dorothy Doan, president of the
homeowners association, said
they are trying to eet a rehearing
of their application for a dredg-
ing permit before the South Coast
Regional Zone Conservation
Comltllssion.
Last week the commission ap-
proved the dredging permit but
commissioners ruled that In·
stead or burying the dredeed silt
on North Star beach, as residents
ol the Upper Bay community had
planned, the material would
have to be hauled out to sea and
dumped.
Mrs. Doan said her rroup is
asking for the rehearing on the
grounds that the technical re-
ports submitted by the
homeowners were ignored by the
commission.
She said that if a rehearing is
denied, then the orl1lnat declalon
will be appealed to the state com·
mwlon.
Under the prdposal submitted
by homeowners, 5,000 cubic
yards or silt would be dredied out
or the two channels between
Mornin8 Star Lane and North
Star Lane.
Tb~ 30-day project called for
vacuuJnint the 1and off the bot•
tom of the channels and deposit-
ing it In three nine-foot deep pita to be dug in nearby North Star
ach.
She laid the pits would theft M
flllect with two ffft of excavated
soil and the entire area Jraded
smooth.
Accotd.ina to Mri. Doan; that
project would ba~ cost about '25,000.
But. commi loners halted at
the ptopolal and iftsllteid tbe ftoloiical balance Of UM beacb
woukJ . be damaaed by aueb a
p110Je(:t.
They ordered the bomeowners
to have the silt placed on barges
and taken to a 600-foot deep sub-
marine canyon four miles off the
Newport Harbor channel en·
trance and dumped there.
Mn. Doan said the drediing
contractor bas estimated that
project will cost $50,000 and take
at least90days to complete.
She said the soil test results
prepared by an Independent test·
ing laboratory hired by the
homeowners as well as
testimony from the Newport
Beach Marine Department
Director and bis Tidelands Ad·
mlnistrator were icnored by the
commissioners.
"We're ask.inf for a reheartni
so we can fmd out what the fac·
tual basis for their deciai6n was.
As far as I could tell. their
theories were not included in the
. tact and findings of their own
stalf. I'd like to know precisely
wbat the adverse impacts are
that they attribute to our pro-Jecl0
The growth of the storm from
troplcal depression to hurricane
in less than a day wasn't unusual,
beaaid.
A weather service advisory
early today located the ston:n
center near latitude 26.3 north
and l~tude 91.3 west, south·
southwest of New Orleans. Gales
extended 150 miles tO the east
and 100 miles to the west.
Anita drove high tides onto the
low-lyiDJ Gulf shore, causing
bayous and rivers to run over
their banks, and was within easy
striking distance of land if it
veered north.
A total of 4,500 offshore oil
workers were evacuated to shore
Tuesday and 10,000 resid111ts at
vulnerable points al6ng 43> miles
or coast were advised to bead in·
land to avoid becoming trapped.
Multimillion dollar drilling
rigs and manned production plat·
forms, battened down and
closed, stood deserted in the
turbulent sea. ·
Emergency valves were closed
on thousanda of offshore oil gas
wells. That action stopped the
daily flow of about half a million
barrels of crude and millions of
cubic feet of natural gas through
underwater pipelines.
Rosary Set
Thursday' for
Mr. Bonawitz
Rosary will be recited Thurs-
day J)iabt for lonc·tlme Newport
Beach ruldent Karl Anton
Bonawitz who died Monday at
age BS. •
Mr. Bollawitz was a nationally
known oreanist whose career
spanned a quarter or a century
from the early days of radio to
the early days of television.
During his career be spent
several years as an organist for
the Fox-Warner Brothers theater
chains. He received the first
Radio Age Award ln 1925 and
concluded his show business
career with his own televisi'ln
stiow th• aired in 1?5@. After retiring to Newport
Beach, Mr. Bonawitz became the
otganlst and choirmaster at Our
~dy of Mt. Carmel CathoUe
Church.
He leaves his son, Karl Jr., of
Irvine; two daugbten. Marion
Coulon and Sonia Hook, both of
Balboa; sisters, Anna Bonawitz
of Balboa and Cecille Kane of
Daytona Beach, Fla; seven
grandchildren and five great·
1randchildren.
Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m.
at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, 1441
W. Balboa Blvd. Mass will be
celebrated there at 10 a.m. Fri·
day with interment at the Good
Shepherd Cemetery. The family sugiests contribu·
tlons to favorite charities in Mr.
Bonawitz• memory.
Disease Hits
Atlanta Kids
(;I lag
Clllltr ........... ~
SCHOOL TRUSTEE DON SMALLWOOD GIVES MARIAN BERGESON A PARTING GIFT
As Trultff Carol U.rtln L•ughs, Aetfrff Tries On 'Float' For Size
Ca1Dpas Caraage
Jurors Pomleriftg
Allaway' s Sanity
By TOM BARLEY
°'""Dally ....... "'"
Was Edward Charles Allaway
sane or insane when be took a ri·
fie to the Cal State Fullerton
campus to kill seven people and
wound two others?
Thal question was taken to the
jury room today by slx men and
s~ women who bave already
fQund the former campua ~\OT IUilt1 cf seveo counts of m~r
ud two d ~awt witb ad~
wtapqn.
They were giyen lustructlom
by Judae_Robert ,r.. Kneeland tA>'.
day aftet eann& final UIU·
ments from Chief Deputy Dia·
trlct Attorney Jam ea Enright
and deputy public defender Ron
Buller.
Enriaht urged the jury to come
baclc with the ruling that Al·
laway, 38, was "legally sane and
absolutely responsible" for the
campus carnage on July 12, 1976,
··Every shred Qf evidence we
have given 700 in this trial In·
dicates that the shootings were
carefully planned and that FA Al•
,aw~ knew ex.actl)' what be was
doing from the time be bought
the rifle to the time be teleplwlned
police and told them wb•t be bad
done," Enright said.
And the prosecutor reminded
the jury that Allaway asked a UD·
iventty librarian a month before
the shootings to check tbe law re-
garding the carrylna of an wcon·
cealed \'rr'eapon.
.. All these stories he told
psychiatrists eot better the more
time be spent in Jail," Enri&ht
said describing the Orange Coun-
ty Jail as "an institution of
higher education.
•'When be spoke to a
ps1chlatrist on the eveninR of .Tu·
lY 12, 1976, we didn't. eet any of
these stories of mental lllnesi
and delusions," the prosecutor
said.
But BUtltr urged the jury to re·
coplze that they were about to rwe on 1be mental cQnelition of a
man wtt.h a Jona record of mental
illt)es,,.
Four defense psycbiatriltt
have defined ttiat mental to be
paranoid acbllophtenla and tbe7
have told the jury that Allaway
was legally insane at the time of
the shootings.
Butler reminded the jury that
Allaway was confined to a
Michigan mental hospital after
becoming lucreas.in1ly-and
falsely-convinced tba\ his wife
was baring sex with black men
and that the Blatt Panthers were
about to take O'fer bi.a home city
of~f'~i:;;n,<..il.U~
Butler said the same pattern was ren.wect last year .ttti AJ.
laway•saeeond wife. Bonnie,. who
sued bim for divorce three days
bef cn the shootinp.
The jury was reminded or Al·
laway's conviction that bis
estranged wife was bein&
tortured by universjty personnel
who mocked him and told him
they were bavin& sex with her.
And BuUer recalled Allaway•s
falsely beld belief that Bonnie
was being forced to participate in
pornographic movies which were
then privately screened to Cal
State employes in the media
center.
"The.-e is only one possible
verdict in this trial," B~t~ said.
"Ed Allaway was legally insane
OD July 12, 1976."
ManS~
Girl Kidnaped
lnRoblJery
Bergeson
Bids 'Bye
ToNMUSD
There was a letter Jrom the
local congressman, a whole.
bunch of resolutions and
certificates of appreciation, an
honorary deputy sheriff's badge.
three or four bouquets of roses, a
couple of standing ovations and a
singing telegram delivered totbe
tune of "Peg 0' My Heart."
With some laughs and a few
tears, Marian Bergeson ended
her 13 years as a trustee In the
Newport.Ke .. Unified School
District Tuesday Dig~
In an hour-long cerem~ the -
ffewport •Beacb resident beard
herself praised for ber
leadership, intqrity, unequaled
service, eourqe, expe~. in·
sight and lovely looks.
The kudos came from parents.·
administrators, two former
superintendents, local politicians
and her fellow board members.
Mrs. pergeson is Jeavtng the
school board to seek the
Republican nomination in next
year's election for the 74th As·
sembly Oistrict seat now held by
Dernpcrat Ron Cordova.
Fellow board member Don
Smallwood presented her with an
hJfiatahle inner tube. "You'll
need it if you're 1oin4 to be
. awash in the sea of politics." he
told her.
The singinf teleeram. wblcb
was preceded by a 60-second tap
dance, ended with a recited
messaee: "See Marian run.
Marian runs after Ron. Run.
Marian, run."
The message was sent by Mrs.
Bergesco•s close friend Jukle
Heather, chairman of the
Newport Beach Planning Com·
mlasion.
Al the conclusion or the.
bu morous and toucbinc
ceremony. Mn. Ber1eson told
the 8',ldlence that she "fteelved
more than I was able tO give"
dt.Uinl be.r yeara on the isehool
board.
Describing the llonon as
"oncwhelming" ahe .smiled and
concluded: "You'd better Ute
good care of t1'f.s dlatrict because· ru be watchi.De you ...
r
' J
Held in
I
Robbery
..,,., .................
~ridge lleadM!d for Blooms
Two skateboarders take a shortcut from
the beach across the Goldenrod A venue
footbridge over Bayside Drive in Corona
del Mar as it is prepared for the finishing
touches in a year-long rennovation pro-
jecL Work began with major structural
repairs and will be completed with the
planting of the new flower boxes being
prepared by Henry Bourget of the
Bourget Construction CQmpany.
Property
Tax Rate
Cut in OC
Orang~ County property
owners will pay $1.33 per $100 oC
assessed valuation this year to
help finance the cost of county
government according to tax
rates adopted by supervisors to-
day.
In addition, homeowners and
business owners will be charged
~ rate of 18.8 cents per $100 of as-
sessed valuation for flood control
and a 16.6-cent rate to finance the
county Harbors, Beaches and
Parks District.
Supervisors this morning
adopted rates for those govern·
ment programs as well as for the
county's 26 school districts and
various street lighting, library,
vector control and water dis-
tricts.
Typically 59 ~ents of every
Orange County property tax
dollar goes for education, 17
cents to county government, 10
cents to city government and 14
"nts for special dlst.fic\s. J The county's Sl.!3 tax rate
represents a 10-cenl cut from last
year's $1.43 tax rate and many
other agencies have reduced
their rates as well.
But because of the couqtywide
average increase in assessed
valuation of 19.7 percen(. most
Jiroperty owners will face higher
lax bills this year.
Assessed valuation 1 is the
Cigure to which tax rates are ap-
plied in calculating property tax
bills.
Since an estirqated 4.S percent
of the 19. 7 percent assessed
valuation increase was attribut·
ed to new construction, taxing
agencies would have to cut their
rates by an average of 15.2 per-
cent to keep property owners
from receiving higher tax bills.
Youth to A.id
EnergyPlam
LOS ANGELES (4'\P) -The
Carter adminlstratlon is con-
aidering using the nation's youth
to keep track of how effectively
thelT neighbors are savidg
energy, the Los Angeles Times
reported toda)'.
The newapa"r said that under
the proposed Yout.h Energy Pro-
gram bigb acbool-age voltmteers
with government checkU~
would go door-to-door exam1ning
houses from the outside tben
knock OD the door and tell hie oc·
crupants U>elr "score. ..
DAILY PILOT
,.
Two Children Die
In Refrigerator
BRIDGEPORT, Conn. <AP> -
Bridgeport police said today the
deaths of two girls found in a
refrigerator probably were ac-
cidental, although they earlier
Plane CrCU1h
Kil/,s Three
A light plane crashed
and burhed today on a
hillside near Corona, kill·
ing a ll three people
aboard, authorities re-
ported.
The dead were not yet
identified and the plane's
destination or point of
origin was not known.
Riverside County
Sheriff's deputies sald the
burning wreckage was
spotted about 9:15 a.m. by
another pilot. The , plane
crashed In the Ea,-te
Canyon area about one mile
fromtheCoronacltylimit.
~ounty Fair
Race Dates
Facing Suit
s aid the case was "definitely a
homicide."
The victims, who were found
Tuesday night, were identified as
Jaimeria Croom, 2, and Michele
South, 5, both of Bridgeport.
Police Inspeetor Anthony P .
Fabrizi said police first thought
the girls had been killed because
of marks on their bodies. But he
said authorities learned early to·
day from an 11-year-old neighbor
that the girls had been playing in
the refrigerator Tuesday after·
noon. "We believe any injuries they
sustained came in struggling to
get out of the refrigerator," said
Fabrizi.
Police orj,g.i~ly said there were signs t at one of the
children had en sexually
molested. Fabrizi id today that
post mortem xaminalions
would be conducted to ••de·
termine if these children bad
been abused."
Police said tbe childHn 's
bodies were found inside a closed
refr11erator that meHured nine
cubic feet inside. The unused
refrigerator was on the second·
floor porch at the home of Mrs.
Caroline South, mother or one of
the victims.
The bodies were discovered by
police after the girls• qiothers
reported them missing.
Kids to Show
Their bogs at ..
CdMCenter
Kids between the ages or 4
and 14 and their dogs are expect..
ed to tum out in large numbers
for 'nlursday's Kids at the Com·
munlly Youth Center at Fifth and
l ris avenues in Corona del Mar.
Registration will remain open
unW 1:30 p.m. the day of the·
show, which will start at 2 p.m.
The show 1s sponsored by the Na-
tional Recreation and Parks As·
sociat1on, Ken-L Ration and the
Newport Beach Parks, Beaches
and Recreation Department.
Any dog may participate in the
show, reeardless of pedigree,
although they must be' leashed
and they must have rabie:s shots.
ln addlUOJl to givin; a best or
show prise, judges will award
first, second and third pllce
prizes in tbe f ollowiD1 seven
cateeorles:
Belt trick dog. .smallest dog,
largest (loa, bellt lookirit doe,
beit coetumed doa, funniest dos
and bestbebaved dog.
,
Newport Beach pallce reported
today they have arrested a Santa Ana man ln connection with the
$300 robbery of a Corona del Mar
liquor store last month.
Craig Willlam Ell, 25, of 1913
E . Fruit St. was taken into
custody by Detectives Lee
Roberts and G80' Black at h.la
bome'J'uesday afternoon,.
They allege Eli 1' responsible
for the July 19 holdup of the
Windjammer Liquor Store al
3537 E. Coast Highway.
Black pointed out that Elz ls
the brother-In-law of James
Gano, the alleged "bueball cap
bandit" who was arrested by
Newport Beach detectives
earlier this month.
Gano, the suspect in a chain of
more than 50 soull).land bank rob-
beries, was lnlUally picked up for
questioning by police in connec·
lion with the murder of bis ex-
girl friend, Jane Ellen Ben·
nington, 29. She was found raped and
strangled in her Corona dd Mar
apartmentAug.2. &"-.. of S•.... Bit • Police said they cleared Gano .:..•---.9er es•
of connection to ttie murder case -
but booked him for the robberies.
Black said that when they were
questioning Gano about the rob-
!>eries he ls suspected of commit·
ting, he mentioned that bis
brother-in·law, Elz, had been
picked up on a robbery charge by
the Tustin police.
Black said be began investigat·
ing and asserts Eh: bas been
identified as the gunman who
committed the liquor store rob-
bery. Court action in the Tustin
case is still pending against Eli.
He remains in custody in
Newport city jail today in Ueu of
$25,000 bail while robbery
charges are filed against him in
the Harbor Judicial District
Court.
Tramsexoal
Files Suit
OAKLAND (AP) -A teacher
who was suspended after un-
dergoing a sex change operation
has accused the school district
and several officials of waging a
cam~ of illegal phone taps
and haras1m.ntaplnst. him.
The charges were contained in
a suit filed in Alameda County
Superior Court b)lj Steve Diin, a
gym teacher named Doris
Richards before the widely
publicized operation \n 1976.
1
No, Councilman Paul Ryckoff (left) and Parks Beaches
and Recreation Director Cal Stewart are not' throwing
an end-of -the-summer temper tantrum. They are trying
out the newly installed exercise course at Newport-Bea~h 's Irvine Terrace Park. Despite apparent oain and
s train, Ryckoff mana ged to bang onto nis cigar
throughout the ordeal.
Heiress Gift Blamed
For Resignation
Western World Medical Foun·
dation board member Frank
Hurd resigned bis position Tues·
day.
Hurd quit in a dispute over
Irvine heires s Joan Irvine
Smith's $1 million gift to UC
Irvine to expand campus
medical school facilities.
He claimed that her gift will
ruin Western World plans to
locale a $400 million hospital
complex oo 18 acres Dell to the
UCl campus.
Hurd said her gilt should have
been to the planners of the com-
plex.
"People in Irvine have been
cheated,•• he said.
Th• er ant bas yet to b~ accept·
ed by the uc Board ot lleeents.
which would have to mat.ch the
gift with another $1 million.
Master planning calls for the
next phase of the UCI medical
facilities to be a $10 million am-
bulatory care center.
Hurd said the establishment of
the center will jeopardize ap-
proval by Orange County health
planners of a nearby hos pit.al.
.. Now ls not the time for the un-
iversity to do its own thing,"
Hurd said. "Health planning,
common sense and the needs of Irvine poinl to the early develop-
m e11t of a hospital and am·
bulatory care center •..
•• .•. In a medical crisis •.• you need a hospital -•
not an outpatient clinic."
Hurd bas been on the Western
World board of directors two
years.
r1
Pet iness hown
.: By Their \V atkollt
# .. tt's Mw watching one t11am take their bat and ball and
ta ~ the game after the first Inning.
AA one meeting. envlronmentall1ta announced lat
---. they would no fonger wonc with ttt. commlttM of de-
~topera and land ow,,.,. who hlld come together to '"k
solutions to Newport 8eaah'a tratflc"<Seveloprnent problema.
Led b'f Jean Watt. the env1ronmentaflata uid they could
• · not part1c1pate on the proJ.ct until a mor1torlum has been Im-
posed end ~uildlng denliues lowered. Attar that, thly said,
they'll be more than happy to work on whatever projects de-
velopers come up with that they find tMy can agree with.
,1 •' I
n.se are the same people who lnalat they are not ob-
structionists and who bn&tle If their point of view 1s delcnt?ed
as ant1-growth
At this point 1t appears as 1f they dehberately s~k to have
the city polarized by the moratonum issue We were hopeful
that the committee of developers and environmentalists
working together could come up with something practical
and reasonable by involving people of good will on both sides
of the issue.
By w1thdraw1ng from the action, these people are draw-
ing the line that could divide the city - a division that will
work to the benefit of no one '
Pay Problems Ahead
Members of the Newport Beach Police Employes As-
soc1at1on say they are reasonably pleased with the contract
they 1ust signed with the city.
They are not too happy that the contract calls for no pay
raise in the 19n-78 fiscal year. but they did get the all-
1mportant pension plan change they've sought for so long
and they didn't have to commit themselves to a multi-year
contract.
While those involved may be heaving a sigh of relief that
the problems have been settled amicably this year'. we can
only look to next year with concern.
The city council in approving the contract by a one-vote
margin made it qlltte efeat-therewHI be nothing-but a rek.lrn to
their old policy of a five percent pay raise next year
And the new police chief has made it equally clear that
such a policy is going to cause problems for the department
in attracting and keeping top personnel
Given those two divergent points of view, we can only hope
that whatever disputes emerge do not diminish the quality
performance of the police force.
We think it is essential that the council. the city staff and
the police department start working now to talk out and re-
duce this potential area for serlotts trouble long before the
next contract negotiations approach
A Fast $19,000
Councilmen Paul Ryckoff and Lucille Kuehn were right in
voting against spending nearly $19,000 on yet another traffic
survey in Newport Beach.
The latest effort is a study being done prior to formation
of some kind of parking authority to build and run parking
lots in the central Newport area.
We don't disagree with the Idea of a parking authority or
a parking district -it seems like a reasonable solution to the
area's biggest problem. But we think it might have been wise
for the council to heed Mrs. Kuehn and Ryckoff and first do a
survey of local property owners to find out their views on the
subject.
If local property owners are not willing to pay some addi·
Uonal taxes to finpnce for parking facilities, then the $19,000
being spent to find out what kind of parking agency to form is
going to be money wasted.
There was no deadline forcing a decision on the parking
study that could explain the council's hasty action. We think it
was ill-considered. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is invited
Robert t~. WO?ed/Publlsher ThomJS Kcevll/C:~itor
B•,-.,.r• Kntlblch/Ed \orlal P~ Editor:
Jack Anderson
~ .
Jets, Gou ·c1UhS ~eft Behind
WASlilNOTON More than
three years after the United
States pulled out of Indochina. a
full accounting bas yet to be
made or all they left behind.
They abandoned military 10-
i;tallations, industrial plants, otl
depoli;, piers, docks ,
warehouses. repair Caclllties.
barracks and hQspitaJa. The
warehouses were Jammed full of
munitions. the docks piled high
with eqwpmenl
The conquering Communists
mherited the finest airports and
suports in alJ Asia, unintended
gifts from the U.S. taxpayers. All
over South Vietnam, the Com·
munLsis round 10,000-foot con-
crete runways. complete wtth
planes that streaked over the
jungle so fast the foliage below
looked like a green blur
THE DEPARTING Americans
also Jefl behind personal
possessions, ranging from a
$1,400 set or crystal dishes to a
Sl.40 pair or nail clippers. Some
fortunate commissar may still be
walking the streets of Saigon in a
pair of "alligator shoes made to
order" for a U.S. official iQ loo
big a hurry to pack. And hopeful-
ly, a needy Viet Cong wound up
with the four bottles or Jean Nate
bubble bath abandoned by
another official.
The lost ballions are hidden in
secret inventories that may
never be dug out But we have
succeeded at least m examining
the chums of the foreign aid of·
fic1als. who tried to collect from
the government for their dis·
carded possessions
The lists of lost valuables
fortify our impression that many
U.S. officials didn't let the war
interfere -.yith their high living
One official asked the gov-
Paul Harvey
ernmeni to reimburse !Um, tor
eJCample. for .. three bottles
Coenac, four bottles Bourbon,
one bottle Scotch. five bottles
vartQUS liquors." Another left to
the Commuoists "24 wjne
ght..sses, crystal; 18 champaane
glasses. crystal, 12 $h•rry
glasses, crystal . 16 brandy snif-
ters, crystal."
Sm.J... ANOTHER offic:ial, with
a taste for culture, left behind 10
oil paintings and a Chinese rue
" I
..
;
I
worth $2,000. Nor did he have to
lo pact bis 1M shirts. wlth 18 sets
of cuff llnks to hold the cuffs
together He also aave 'IP 30
smok1og p1pes to the Com
rouni!ts.
The lellow wt\O lost the fancy
alligator sb~ also put in a Claim tor \WO pairs of ''turtle'' Shoes,
one pair of "o!itrtch hlde" shoes
and thre. pairs or common golr
s hoes Another sought reim
bursement for 18 cans of shoe
polish, ''assorted colors "
'Congratulations. Bert! I knew you'd fit in!'
Several envoya made a
hasty exit without thelr golf clubs
and tennis rackets. Ono de·
manded Sl,08.5 from the tax-
payers to pay for two set.!s or
abfllldoned golf clubs. plus
another $120 for an "elephant
bide .. Jolt bag He hel.,Cully
ltemiz the missln& clubs, in
cludini "woods 1·3-4-5, lrons 2·9
and PW (pitching wedge> ·•
A TENNIS BtJFF put ln &claim
for"26cra.oaof Wilson tennJ.s balls,
four boxes Tretorn balls, six cans
Dunlop balls .. and three boxes of
· aJl weather" balls
Others asked for compensallon
for the pet.s they couldn't bring
home. including two German
Shepherds valued at $800, a
"five·montb male" hunting dog
worth $200 and 10 goldfish and
tropical flsb valued at $50. But
the State Dept ruled sternly
"No allowance could be made for
the ... dogs or fish ...
As it happened, the State Dept
provided its personnel in In
dochina with housing and
furnishings suitable for com·
fortable living. It cautioned
them. therefore. not to take
valuable personal possessions in·
to the war zone
UPON theJr return., the or
rictaJs were notified "'that they
could claim up to SIS 000 for
personal possessioni:. left behind.
Most of the returning AID
personnel abided by the rules.
but 86 put in claims exceeding
the legal limit.
Some claims were made for re-
imbursements as high as $50,000.
In view of the advance warning.
no one got more than $15,000. The
total reimbursements added up
to $2.5 million. slightly more than
half ol what was claimed
Cab 1838: A Lesson in Free Enterprise
fl was a sticky hot day in
Chicago when I hailed a cab on
Mi chigan Avenue
A Chicago cab ride 1s oot
something one looks forward to
On hot days
especially,
cab drivers
are hkely to
be s urly ,
olher drivers
mconsiderate
Traffi c
signals seem
green ror two
seconds. red
for rav e
minutes.
But Uus day I got a surpnse
perhaps the most refreshing cab
ride of my experience
Not all cab drivers are created
equal. Paul Gosenpud had made
of his tedious job an enjoyable
profession .
HIS YELLOW cab appears
much like any other until you
open the door. but oncf! inside you
are Alice in Wonderland
First, Paul 's cab i s
immaculate. Instead of s1ttin~
on ragged upholstery with your
feet ankle deep in soggy cigarette
butts -the upholstery of Cab
1838 Is 1t1tact and inviting -you
discover the carpeted floor ls
rreshly vacuumed.
Then the fun begin$
There 1s an assortment of
periodical s gratuHousl}
provided for the rider
includif\i the cultural.
Background music is offered to
the taste of each passenger.
including taped classics.
AND ON the rear deck •
between the rear seat and tht•
wide rear window -is an
assortment of c and1es from
which you are expected to help
yourself.
Neatly bracketed lo lhe panels
behiQd .the side windows are
p<>tted plants. . real ones
In a hangsng vase in front o(
you <on the rear of the front seat)
are fresh cut flowers. Real ones:
You may help yourself. says the
cabb1e, to a boutonmere of your
choice · ··u your favorite kind of candy
1s not back there.·· says Paul
Gosenpud. "l have three k\flds of
cookies up here "
Then, as an afterthought.
"Also cough drops. should you
need them -or aspirin, should
I re membered that Mayor
Btlandic had negotiated a labor
settlement which resulted m a
starting-fare increase of 70
percent
''The taxi drivers are calling
him Santa Claus," said Paul
· Gosenpu 'm stickihg with the
~c perra ..
this le d lo bargain
bu ting by mers. to friction
wi other drivers?
you need them "
A neat note an front of you b e s P ~ t a ~ 1 e d Y o u n g
mentions that the driver has city e~treprenenr I lease my cab.
maps including bus route I 11 ch~ge wb ever rates I like
maps and~ dictionary And I ltke the ch per ra .
Now that /our first Oush or -OOU S. I' thi king o
"ur pr1sc 1s i.ubs1ding you realiz ~yself. ~ e it u n bigge
that 1838 1s • .ur conditioned . mos tip.~
Chicago cabs an· not Pa Gos en
m I Th l 1 p11---+-y ~\Tl'R\LLV I am expecting ~pr ec 1at e arc taps from
that thcr<.• must he some extra ( ~~$tonier-, how to make my
ch arge ro r all this On the ~b;.::>ft(Jrjn thebestinChicago
contrary. the chee rful driver · butthe best n the world!" e>.plarn~ ' I did not raise my Thanks for the "lift," Mr.
rates when the others did · Gosenpud
lff ai.lbox/When You're Out of Oil an Offshore Rig Is Beautiful
I ;
I i
r
I ~
I
To the Edilor-
Your editorial or Aug. 23 <Here
Come the Rigs) reflects the sort of
negative thinking which could
mean the end of this country as
we know it.
Both the press and the polili·
cians have manag~ to convince
the majority of Americans that
we are not in serious trouble
from an enerey standpoint. but
Jet's look at the hard, cold facts:
t. We are ruonlng up
a&tronomienl balance or pay-
ments deficit paying tbe OPEC
up to $12.()() ~r bai;"rel for crude
oil wbicb costs. probably fifty
cents Pt!!' barrel lo produce.
2. Our oil companies are re·
ceiving, on an average, a little
·over ~.00 per ban-el for rrvde oil
wblch Cl06ts a.a much • $4.00 per
bar'tel to produce. , ·
I
the day when an offshore oil pro·
ducing platform will be a
beautiful sight to the average
American who wants to have a
job, heat his home, and to drive
his automobile.
The camel you referred to is in
reality the American public and
the tent in which that camel's
head is stuck is the ooe furnished
by the politicians and environ-
mentalists
DALE JOHNSON
s ome years ago I wrote as
follows·
.. Mourning doves are beaut.Jful
creatures which are now being
slain (in some states> by coward-
ly assassins who are ltcensed by
the state, to murder them. They
are lovely and helpless creatur~s
with neither tusks nor claws to
make the contest a level proposi-
llon. They are the gentlestofbirds
and their feet are too dainty to
kick their slayers and they are too
weak to run them off with a snarl
.. They don't bite those who tor-
ment them and depend on their
sad glances to provbke mercy in
the craven li!etakers. They ~
not cunnine and they do not •
molest men even when they tear
holes in them with their.
shotguns."
·'So they are put down cis stwid
but this is the common slander the
weak must endure. It is one of th~
tricks of the ugly amt brutal to
vilify the comely ond sbj as
dumb The i1oorant have alw~
been vandals and take pleasure in
the destruction or beaulr,. So
while the dove·killers are biiger,
better armed, and full of rnore
beer than doves. 10 the contest the
mourning dove will no doubt be
the loser. But we thjnk in the final
judgment made by the majority
or intelligent attcl decent
Americans. the doveS'will be the
moral victors.··
So, like we say. there are so
many things we c annol quite pair
up with Teason. We just don't
seem tot>eabletokeep up with the
verylatestoft.b05etecbnologies
HENRY M. WEBER
Although experience in def1c1t
financing may be a quahficat1on
for a U.S. budget director, the ob·
jedive should be to reduce infla-
tion by reducing governmental
deficit spending and one sbould
not take a personal advanta.ce
from a position to the detnmentof
his employer (bank or eovern
mentl.
Furthermore. the fact that
others do what Lance did is no de·
fense. A U.S. president resigned
under threat or impeachment for
having done things which other
presidentsdld.
ROY B. WOOLSEY
I
m 1 nded persoru.
When the ropes circling the
seats were removed at 7 p.m.,
one woman rushed in and re-
served thirteen chairs by putting
cards with names on all of them.
Some ol these seats were even-
tually occupied, but slx ol. them
sat empty. not only t.il 9 o'clock
when the concert started, but all
during the concert. This selfish
person held these empty seat.s
even though dozens and dozens or
persons had to stand around lbe
outside or lean against the build·
in gs.
I had to wonder what her
thoughts were wta.n she looked in
tbe mirror the next mornln&
How does she stand tierselt? Oile
mao in front of me expressed
most of our sentiments when he
loudly said. "Wouldn't it be awful
to be married to that •em.ab old
woman?''
fllackout on tfi:e .Wliarf . THEF4MILYCIRCUS·
~---...__,_.......;..:
Dinner by CancUeU-.t Pie~ Clientele
SAN RA! CAP> -1t
Tt d by undl U1ht at P'la·
btrman'a Grotlo r tauranl an.r
a transform~r exploded, knock·
lnl out ll,lhta on tourlat jammed
lshennan's Wl\arf .. e r .. Uy don't mtn.d. tt'a
more fun tbls way," 11ld
Marianne Cun.as of Loa Ansel•
as h rubbled Oil her seafood din·
nt"r durtn1 the brief TUuday
ntcht blackout
Pacilk Gu & Electric Co. st.Id
about ~ restaurant.a. ban And
Wllo'd S•speet?
bu l • fou ... bloek .....
..... wttbaal,.,,... nni tM.
m I nu tea lt took to tf x tb•
tranlformer. UtlUty otrle,l1l1
blamtd the power outai• ~ a.n
uDdetermtned mecbanlcal
fatlUN. • Curlollty seeken at th• famed
Wu MUHUm were tl• n an.ex·
tra thrill when tbe Uibq w nt
out. !!mploytt with i1uhllp\.S
had to le&&d the vtlltort tbroulb a
maie ol waxy buatl out to tbe
ttreet.
Mastermind Like
A Bruinessman
SOln1{ GATE CAP) The mystenous .. Mr. Goldman," wbo
transformed a vacant build.in& here into lhekey web in an elaborate
plot that involved tuonelini underneath a street to reacb a bank
vault across the way, apparently seemed tbe perfect bualnesaman
-well-dressed and well·educated.
"How was I to be susplcioua? '' wondered M•ck McArthur Tuft.
day, a neighborhood businessman since 1930. McArthur bad leued
the building lo a "Mr. Goldman" in June, but shook tUs bead In dla·
belief as he watched workmen fill in lhe 11().foot tunnel leadlnc from
his store to the bank.
Yet it turned out the would·be burglan would have wound up
with chicken feed had they succeeded, as the Security National
Bank vault only contained "a total of $100,000 lo $150,000," police
Sgt. Al Knox said.
Tobacco Wo..-l111'ade• Cotte11
EL CENTRO <AP) -Cotton growers recovering from a de·
vastating flood now face a new enemy: worms.
The tobacco bud worms are expected to devour half or the Im·
perial Valley's cotton crop, state farm officials said Tuesday.
Losses due to worms could
( )
ex1:eed $50 million, compared Sf'ATE to flood damage estimated at $8.S million.
BIU to Boost Pftldotls Vetoed
SACRAMENTO <AP) -A measure that would have allowed
many cities and counties to boost pensions for retired workers has
been vetoed by Gov Edmund Brown Jr.
AB 734 by Assemblyman Norm Waters, D-Plymouth. would
have allow ed agencies that contract with the Public Employes
Rellrement System to elect lo make a one-time increase for local
members who retired before Jan. 1, 1974.
Nuclear Po..,,er Plant Re4uated
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Pacific Gas & Electric Co. has told the
state Energy Commission it wants to build a nuclear power plant in
the upper San Joaquin Valley.
The commission said Tuesday the utility is proposing
alternative sites for the two·unit, 2,400-megawatt plant in
Stanislaus, Me.reed and Madera counties.
Vol.,.tarrf l11tesratlo11 ApJlraeed
SAN BERNARDINO (AP> -A voluntary integration plan was
approved Tuesday for this city'!! 31,000-student school di.strict. but
the judge gave officials only one semester to make it work.
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Paul Egly ordered the dis·
trict to put the plan into effect next February -a year earlier than
officials had suggested.
flnancier'• A ttonaqs 1t'l11 Clai•
SAN DIEGO CAP) -Attorneys for financier C. Arnholt Smith
will get $230,000 claimed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
after all
A motion by the FIC to block release of the moner from a Smith·
related company was denied Tuesday by U.S. District Court Judge
Leland C. Nielsen.
Wbm tho U1bt1' came back to
Ille at t :.O p.m., the notmally
·heavy aldewltk tr~nc aJon, the
Embarcadero wu aJmott non·
exl.ltant. ·
Cll•nteh at a'•vtral
reataurant.a and bara 81'0ped tbro~1h the dartneas by
c1ndJell1ht. But most tourl11t
amusement• In the darkened
•one closed up shop for the nl&ht,
feartna It would take hours to
restore power.
Police reported no crimlhal tn-
c id ents resulted lre>m the
blackout.
JeanH&gen
Loses Bout
With Cancer
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ac·
tress Jean Hqen -once a lead-
inl lady in movies and television
-bas died after a two-year bat·
tie with throat cancer that even-
tually took her to Germany for
controversial Laetrile treat-
ments. She was 52.
Mias Haaen died Monday at the
Motten Picture and Television
Country House and Hospital in
suburban Woodland Hills, but
her dealh was not reported until
l'uesday, a hospital spokesman
said ..
After being told by doctors ear-
ly th.ls year that she had only a
50-50 chance to live, the actress
replied, "That's not good enough
for me ... I want very much to
live ...
She &wice underwent cancer ·
surgery and radiation therapy
before tuming to the Laetrile
treatments. which are illegal in
most states.
Miss Hagen made her screen
debut in "Adam's Rib" in 1949.
Among her other films were
"Singing in the Rain" in 1952.
"The Big Knife" in 1955, "Panic
in the Year Zero" in 1962, and
"Dead Ringer" In 1964.
..... ,...,..
DIES OF CANCER
Jean Hagen
·ALLERGY?
12131 284-2556
17141 543·96Z4 R e c o r d e d·
Message
lllERGl CONTROL
FOUtlll18M
$100 GIFT CERTIFICATE FOR BOY AND GIRL
Fill in the entry below and deposit any Fashion
Square store August 18 thru September 9.
Contest rules: Boys and girls thru age 18" may
enter. Drawing Sept. 10. 'Mnners need not be
present to win. Notificption by phone & mail.
lot 1513. hip Cl 92UI Gift Certificates good
at any Fashion
store.
t
"Wow! look at all the toy cars down there!"
Divorce Won
By Joe Alioto
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Former Mayor Joseph
Alioto's J&.year marriage baa ended, but an estimat·
ed $8 million in community property sWl must be
divided. The 00.year-old antitrust attorney on Tuesday was
granted his request for ---------
dissolution of the mar-·in support pending court
riage -the technical disposition of the case.
term for divorce in Tt\e couple has been
California. separated since Dec. 2,
But Superior Court 1975.
Judge Jay Pfotenhauer
denied an attempt by
Angelina Alioto to find Man PJea-1-her husband in contempt ue
for disposing of $600,000
of his law firm's assets in Guilt violation of a restraining y,
order.
The judge ruled Alioto Esca
hadn't willfully dis· pes
obeyed the court order
restricting the spending LONG BEACH (AP) -
cf community property. A man, who moments
Alioto has been paying earlier had confessed to
his wife $.5 500 per month a r med r o b be r y i n
' Superior Court here,
F• F• d escaped as he was being J.rDl me escorted back to jail
HACIENDA
HEIGJITS CA P> -A re·
ally firm here ha s
agreed to pay $2,500 in
civil fines l,U{d end al-
leged false advertising in
a stipulated judgement
by Superior Court Com-
missioner Leo S. Rich.
The firm, H acienda
H eights Realty, by
agreeing to the judge-
ment, ended a lawsuit
filed by the state at-
torney general's office.
after asking to get a
drink of water ,
authorities said. They said J .D. Walters
was leaving the
courtroom of Superior
Court Judge Roy J .
Brown Tuesday after
pleading guilty to three
counts of armed robbery
when he asked for water.
His handcuffs were off.
and as he headed for the
fountain, he broke into a
run down the ball.
BUTTE
KNIT SALE
49.99-79.99
•
Originally $60-$116 If you're
a Butte collector, you're
probably already looking for the
car keys. The name's new? Then
come try beautiful workmanship,
design and lush Fall colors,
at temptimg savings. Shown, in l_,.,.::11-..:..
powder or pink, 6-16, $80,
59.99
Town & Travel Dresses
• . ..
(
* ' DAIL y PILOT A 5'
Brown's OK
SACRAMENTO (AP) -After a two.year bat·
tle, eovironmeot.U.ta and their leclsl•tlvt allies
have puabed a blll tbrouCb tho leCialatute ban· ~t Ouoroc:arbon aeroeOl apra.ya, linked by a to cancel.
Oil a 21·9 ~ TueadAlY, the Senate sent SB
U3 u!f Sen. John Dunlap«l>-NtPa.>. to Gov. Ed· m Brown Jr. The me ure would ~ the
manuf actwe ot. the aOl"OICQ Jn Call!ornia starting Oct. 1$, J.m. A arowtnc number of scientists say the:
tluorocarbofts, commonl)' found ln hair spuys
and deodorants, attack the 01one layer that
shields the earth f.rom ultravJolet rays which
cause aldn cancer.
Tbe upper bowie also approttd the Assembly
versloo ol. the bill, AB 238 by Assemblyman John
, VaacoocellOI (D-San Joee), on a 23-1 vote and
sent it back to tho Aasembly for action on Senate
amendments.
Botb bill5 bad to be watered down to clear
lelial.ilve hurdles, and tnoet aec:Uon.s of lhem
would be superseded by proposed federal regula-
tions.
Tbe legislation, however, would go Into effect
on lts own if the federal rules were dropped or
delayed. In addition, alter. April lS, 1819 the bill
would ban the sale tn California of the sprays
produced before lhe manufacturing deadline.
The manufacture e>f most containers for
fluorocarbon apraya would be banned. starting
Dec. U. l.9711.
Convicted Rapist'
Arrested Again
SANTA BARBARA CAP> -Police have booked
a 22-year-old man convicted of lS rapes in Pasadena
on charges be raped or a~mpted lo rape seven
women in this quiet coastal community.
Anthony Hughey of Santa Barbara admitted the
ra~ du.rina a lie detector test, Det. Brian Abbott
said Tuesday. H\!Uey wu being held without bail.
Alter arrestlni Hupy based on victims·.
descript!ons, officers teorned be bad been convicted
nf lhe lS Pasadena rapes in 1974 and 1975. Abbott
said. Hughey served sllgbUy less lhan a year in
prison, Abbott added.
Hughey bas not been charged in the rape-
killings of three young women -two of lhem UC
Santa Barbara coeds -whose bodies were found in
couly territory. But a sheriff's spokesman said dep·
uties "will be questioning him in regard to tho.5e rapes."
Radio Booklet Ready
. WASHINGToN (AP) -The National Associa·
lion !>f Broadcasters bas prepared a booklet des~~bin' the workings of radio stations.
Radio: Get tbe Message," includes secllons
on news and actualities, public service announce-
ments, promotions, use ol music and sound effects
and production techniques.
. It is available for '1 from the Radio Informa-
tion Office.1771 N St. NW, Wa.sbington, D.C., 20036.
•
VOL 70, NO. 243, 4 ECTIONS, ~ PAGES
A11away's
99,'IOllUaL Y -lf .............
Was FAwa'd Claul Allaway
l&De Cl' w he ta a ri·
ne to tbe CaJ State ruu.tce
campus to kll1 sneo people ud
wound two others?
1bat question WU tak• to the Jury room today by aix men ud
sis women who have already
foUnd UM former campus Janitor cuilt.Y ol seven counts ol m\lJdeT
twool 11111ult wltb a deldly
ftapab.
Tbey were elven tustructlons
bJ Judge Robert P. Kneeland to-
day after bearlna ft8al ar1u·
menta &om •Cbld Deputy Dia·
trlct Attorney James Enri1ht and deputy public defender Ron
BuUer.
Eruiibt ur1ed the Jury to come
back with the rullnl that Al-
laway, 38, wu •·t~1all1 sane and
absolutely responsible.. for the·
cam pm cam.,• on Julr 12. 1978.
"Every ab.red of evidence we
have liven yoa In this trial In·
dlcates that the aboottnp were
carefully planned and that F.d ~la way knew exactly what be wu doing from the Ume be bought
the ri:Oe to the time he telephoned
police and told them what he bad
done," Enright said.
And the prosecutor reminded
Precarious Perrla
Bloomington, Minn., policeman Scott
Reinhardt gets out of his half -submerged
squad car in a flooded section of the cit'y
only minutes after responding to a cave-in
call at a residence. A near-record seven
inches of rain caused spot flooding all
around the Twin Cities and resulted in
flash flood warnings.
Method Det,ect11 'FQ;U/,ty' ClierrUCalA
CIDCAGO (AP> -A leading
chemist said today be baa de-
vele>ped a relaUvely quick an4
easy way to determine which ol
the thousands of chemicals in·
troduced in recent years may
cause cancer.
The chemist, Dr. Bruce N.
Ames of UC Berkeley, pointed
out that slnce the 19508 lhls COWl·
try has been "exposed to a flood
of chemicals" that have not been·
tested to determine whether they cause cancer or altet genetic
material.
"A steep increase In humab
cancer may be the outcome lf too
many of the thousands of new
chemicals to which humans have
been exposed turn out to be
powerful mutaaens and
carcinogens," Ames said.
Ames told scientists at the na·
tional meetln& ol the American.
Chemical Society that he baa sue·
ceeded in refinina a test be de-
veloped earlier so that tiny
amounts of urine, and pciealbly
other body m.uds, may be used tn
Schools Set
Registration
ID Saddleback
cancer tests to identify
mutagens, which are generally
cancer-causing agenW.
Previously, the Ames test re· quired totally pure samples of
the chemical to be tested, a much
more cumbersome and time-
consumi.ng method.
The development, Ames said,
"bas all sorts of potential" for
detecting cancer-causing prop-
erties in thousands of sub·
stances. He said his method should be
used to.examine the urine of a
large population of non-smokers
to detect unsuspected mutqens
and carcinogens that may be en·
t.ering people.
In addition, A!'les said, ex-
amlnaUons should be made of
"particular populations that are
likely to be abosorbing signifi-
cant doses of mutagens, such as
women dyeing their hair or
children in sleepwear treated ·
with add-on name retardants."
Ames' method does not direct-
ly test for cancer-causing prop-
e rties. Instead, It tests for
mutagens -substances which
alter genetic material.
But, he said, tests on 300
chemicals prove that all cancer-
c au sing substances are
mutagens and "mutagens are
carcinogens with few ... excep-
tions."
Razor's Edge
$havUig Bring• .on HiccupB
MINATARE, Neb. (AP> -For more than 30
years, Larry Cruz has hiccupped every time he
shaved. Some have been mildly violent and
dangerous. in vtew of the single-edge razor Cruz uses.
Surprisingly, Cruz never has even nicked himself
while biccupping.
Cruz can hiccup without a razor, too, just by
touching a sensitive spo~ on the right side of his chin,
He shaves that spot last.
Cruz has been hiocupping "for years. J>eople
stand and watch, .. says his wife. Millis.
He's never seen a doctor about hi3 condit.ion,
because it's never really bothered htm, Crui says
the Jury thai Allaway ukecl • un-•
lveratt.y librarian a month before
the ahootinp to check the law re-
garding the caJ'J')tiDS of an UDCOO·
cealed weapoa.
'•All these 1torles he told
psychiatrists got better the mon
time be spent in jail," EnriCht
said describing the Oran1e ~·
ty Jail as "an in.stituilon. of
bisher education.
"When be spoke to a
(
psychiatrist on the eventna ot Ju-
11 12. 197$ we dldii't 1et any of
these atiliries 'fJt m·eotal illness
and delmioas,'' the proaecutor
Hid.
But BuUer urged the Jury to re-cognize that they were about to
rule on tbe mental condiUon ~ a
man with a Jong record of mental illness.
Four defense psychiatrists
have ctermed that mental to be
Hurricane Watched
Alt r.DOOD
.Y. Stoeks
paranald ecbhopbffnla and theY
have told the 1urY that Allaway
was Jeially wane at the time ot
the lbOotlilgs.
BUUei' re:mt.nded the jury tbal
Allaway waa confined to a
Micbi1an mental tiolpital after
becomln& Increasingly-end
falff}y-convinced that bis wife
wu havtn& sex with black men
and that the Black Panthers~
(S.ALIAWAY. Pace.U)
ita Stronger ~·
NEW ORLEANS (AP> -Hur·
ricane Anita churned slowly
westward ln the warm Gulf of
Mexico today, packing winds ol
95 miles an hour and IJ"OWlnl
stronger as thounnds of jittery
coastal residents woJ'ried and
watched.
Forecasters said the storm,
centered about 300 miles from
both New Orleans and Galveston.
could continue its slow drift
across the Gulf toward Texas.
But there was no way to be sure,
and advisories were post~ from
Tarpon Springs, Fla., to Corpus
Christi, Tex.
Some coastal towns ln western
LA Deputy
Bits Pole,
Arrested
A LOI Allleles sheriff's deputy
was ~OD a claara• of f~lot)y dfWlken drivlill after the
car be wu drhlln1 amubed into a traffic ,,,1,nal pol• at
MacArthur Boulevard aDd Red
Hill Avenue ln Irvine today.
Tbe officer, Ronald H.
Dayhoff, 31, underwent tm«gen-
cy surgery at Tu~ Commmlit.y
Hospital early thla mom1n1. He
was listed in stable C:9Ddlti<m.
Paaengen to tbe car were bla
wife, Patti, 24, aAtO a police of.
ficer, md Nancy J . Smith, 28, ol
Los Angeles.
The two we>tqen. suffered cut.a
and bndses and wer6 treated at
the hospital and released to their homes~
Irvine Police Cbtef Leo Peart
refused today to identify the
police department or depart·
ments ror which the DQboffs work.
Los Angeles County .$heriff's
Department spokesmen.
however, confirmed Dayhoff is a
member of their department
Medical reports listed an
Anabelm address· fer tbe
sheriff's officer team.
Dayhoff is asslcned to the Leis
Anfele1 County men •s central
jai ; bis wife to the county
medical ward, according to a
sheriff's lnlonnation officer.
The couple WeTe off.duty and
driving a private vehicle, pollc:e
said.
Traffic officers aaid Daybolf
was driVing west on MaCAl'thur
Boulevaid at an urumowa apeied
•• when be struck t.be · northwest
comer 11l~al pole.
Tbe car waa deab'oyed. .
. Daybolf suffered bead tnJurtes
and severe euta, acco~ to paramedic's. •
PolJce siid an .lri•estliattoe la pea~. •
Louisiana already were evacuat-
ed. Recommendations also went
out In early morning for people to
leave low-tying areas on the up-
per Texas coast.
With winds less than 100 miles
an boor, the storm was put in the
lowest classificaUon of bur-
ric anes -but forecasters warned it would probably con· ·
tinue to strengthen during the
day and push h1gh tides ahead of
it.
Neil Frank, direct.or of Na·
tional Hurricane Center in
Miami, said there was no way lo
tell when the storm miebt reach
shore.
Carter Plugs
Speed Limit
WASHINGTON (AP) -
President Carter called to-
day f« strict enforcement
of the 55-mlle-per·h~µr
•Pl8d tlMl~ aaytnc fuel savings would be '•enormous I think maybe efpt to Oliae calloJU a .
dJf!' Carter also 1 •id in·
tre>ducUOri ot that nationi.I
llmtt is saving eight to nine.
thousand lives annually.
The President plueged
ror speed enforcement at
an Oval Office meeting timed to the approach of
the trafrtc-produclng
Labor Day weekend.
Preservation
Of 'Gifted'
088s Sought
"1bings can change," he said.
"It's drifting rather slowly west,
and the steering currents are still
quite weak. A small change in
the steering currents could have
a dramatic effect on the course~
the storm ...
The arowtb of the storm from
troeical depression to hurricane in less than a day wasn't unusual.
be said.
A weather service advisory
early today localed the storm
center near latitude 26.3 north
and longitude 91.3 west. south·
southwest of New Orleans. Gales
extended 150 miles to the east
(See ANITA, Page AZ>
County Tax • Rate .Sliced
10 Cents
Oran1e County property
overs Will pay $1.33 t>9r $100 or
ll~ valuation this year to
help finance the cost of county
aovemmtat according to tax
rata ~ by supervisors to-day.
In addlllOli, homeowners and bwilneu owners will be charged a rate Of 11.8 cents per $100 ot as·
sessed valuation for flood control
and a 18.kent rate to finance the
county Harbors, Beaches and
Parks Di!trict.
Supervisor• this morning
adopted rates for those govern-
ment programs as well as for the
county's 26 school districts and
various street Ugbting, library,
ve.ctor control and water dis-
tricts.
Typically 59 cents or every Orange County property tax
dollar coes for education, 17 cents to county government. 10
cents to city government and 14.
cents for S}>eelal districts.
The county'• $1.33 tax rate
represents a 10-c:ent cut fl'Om I.st
year's $1.43 tax rate<""and many
other agencies have reduced
their rates as well.
But because ol the eouni:yW{de
avera1e llicrease in assessed
valuation of 19.7 percent, most
property owners will face hl&ber'
tax bU1S this year.
Smee an estimated 4.5 ~t of the 19.'1 pen:ent assessed
valuallon lncTeaae wu attri~
ed to new construction, taxiQg
aeencles would have to cut their:
rates by an average of u,a '*"'"
cent to keep property owne.ta
from receiVk:&g hllhet tu~
Regents Take S~ats
Four University of California regents re-
cently appointed by Governor Brown
reflect their relief in a Senate Rules Com·
mittee meeting in Sacramento where they
won committee approval of their appoint-
ment. 'From left are John Henning,
Theodora Kroeber-Quinn, Yoritada Wada
and Stanely Scheinbaum.
E'ro• Pllfle A J · Two Children Die ALLAWAY. •
about to take over his home city
of Detroit.
Butler said the same pattern
was renewed last year with Al-
In Refrigeraioi-
faway's second wire, Bonnie, who BRIDGEPORT, CoM. (AP) -
sued him for divorce three days Bridgeport police said today the
before the shootings. deaths of two girls round ill a
The jury was reminded of Al-refrigerator probably were ac-
1 away 's con viction that his cidenlal, although they earlier estranged wHe was be ing ...
tortured by university personnel •
who mocked him and told him {;k1111, J1ieivs
they were having sex with her.
And Butler recalled Allaway's
falsely held belief that Bonnie Korea Scandal was being forced to participate in
pornographic movies which were TOKYO CAP) -Sen. J ohn
then privately sc~eened to C~l Glenn said todav South Korean
State employes m the media President Park Chung Hee told
ce~ter. . . him he hopes the Washington The~e as. on~y ~ne possi~l~ •. scandal over alleged attempts by ~c!td1ct m this tnal, Buller said. · South Koreans to bribe O.S. con-
Ed Allaway w.~ legally insane gressmen "doesn 't drag on for on July 12, 1976. years."
Store Owner
Slays Teen
LENNOX CA P ) :-A liquor
sf.ore owner fat41Jy shot • 16-year-d InglewoOd youth duriq
an al mpted holdup of hla store
by t teenagers, officials said.
Sh rrirrs depuUes Tuesday
iden fied the victim•ht the Mon-
days 'ng as Michael Slmms.
Anolb 16-year-old yollth was
lat.er rested and booked for in-
vestigation or murder for his al-
leged participation in a felony
leading to a death. .
Store owner Hyun Soo Kim, 25,
told investiaators that one of the
y9ulhs had been armed with a
.22-calil~er rifle. Kim said be
pulled a revolver from under the
counter and fired five limes, hit-
Un& Simms twice.
Hospital to Sell
Cookbook for $4 :
The Saddleback Community
Hospital has announced plans to
sell an original cookbook with
proceeds to benefit the non-profit
health care f acWty.
The $4 cookbook ls available
now in the main lobby· of the
hospital at 24451 Vi~ Estrada. Laguna Hllls, the hospital's
volunteer office, 23561 Paseo de
Valencia, suite 33, La1una IWJ1.
and the Thrift Shop at.23701-C El
Toro Road, Saddleback Valley
Plaza. El Toro.
Factiom Club
BEIRUT. Lebanon CAP)
Israeli-backed rll.ht-wlnc Chris-
tians clashed ln fresh &ttlll~
duels with Pa1eat1niail perriUas
ID aoutb ~ WeclD41sday. l
DAILY PILOT
Glenn said Korean leaders he
spolre with in Seoul thia week on a
four-day visit. repeated their aov-
emment"s denial ol *Jl1 attempt
to buy influence in Congress for
continued U.S. support.
Glenn said the sc&nllal may j~opardi~e R.aasaae of a pro·
posed SU~ bi~!fon .. compenaatory
aid package' to bolster Sou\h
Korea's armed forces durini the
withdrawal of 33,000 U.S. troops
over the next four or five years.
F,....PageAJ
GIFTED •..
being spent on each one.
<The state requires that al
least $75 be spent on each MGM
s tudent. State MGM funds
amount to about $82 per student. )
Mrs. Webber said this will re-
sult in a reduction of the pro-
gram's services.
"We still have to look at the is-
sue. We're noi resolving our
dilemma here," the MGM
supervisor admitted.
The state will continue to cut
its financial backina in an at·
tempt to feduce the prosram
while the number of eligible Sad·
dleback students grows, she said.
Eventually, she explained, the
district will have to make some
cuts in the program.
Mrs. Webber said the commit-
tee hopes to keep all the students
involved while they study what
should be done ill the future.
Mis&ion Obyed
JBRUSALEill (AP> -Aftu a
three-year. dispute, Israel baa
agreed to allow UNESCO to send
a ta~ mlislon to tsraell·
.. occUPMid Arab terrltori• to rn-\'esU,ate "c\lltural treedom" amona ~ Arabs. the Foreign
lltilistrY.11ld Wedneada,y.
said the case was .. definitely a
homicide."
The victims, who were found
Tuesday ni&bt, were identified as
Jaimerla Croom, 2, and Michele
South. s, both of Bridgeport.
Police Inspector Anthony P.
Fabrizi said police first thought
the girls had been killed because
of marks on their bodies. But be
said authorities learned early to-
day from an 11-year-old neighbor .
that the girls had been playing in
the refrigerator Tuesday after-
noon. .
"We believe any injuries they
sustained came in struggling to
get out of the refrigerator," said
Fabrizi.
Police originally said there
were signs that one of the
children bad been sexually
molested. Fabrizi s aid today that
post mortem examinations
would be conducted to "de-
termine if these children bad
been abused."
Police said the children's
bodies were found tnalde a closed
refrlserator that measured nine
cubic feet inside. The unused
refrieerator was on the second-
Ooor p<>rch at the home Of Mrs.
Caroline South, mother of one of
the victims.
The bodies were dlscovered by
police after the cirls' mothers
reported them mining.
CUSD Trustee
To Conduct
Public Meet
Robert Bachelor, the Laguna
Nicuel representative to the
Capistrano tlnified School Dis-
trict board of trustees, will bold a
"meet the public" session from l
to 4 p.m. Friday at Crown Valley
Elementary School in Laguna
Niguel.
The period will be beld to seek
community input and sugges·
tions about the school system,
Bachelor said today.
.. It is a demonstration ftl. my
belief that an elected board
member ls to represent com-
munity feelings," Bachelor said.
He said be hoped to "open chan-
nels ol communication to make
the school bo._rd a more reach-
able governmental entity.••
uachelor said be will try to
aQawer questions that residents
may have ancJ will refer those
with specJal problems to Abt ap-
propriate dilWlc:t staff oUlcer for
acUon.
Th meeting is in the scJ'ool
auditorium.
Medical
Dir;ector
Resigns
. Weal.em World Medical F<M&n·
datlon board membtr Frank
Hurd re1laned bis postUon Tues-
day.
Qurd quit ln a dispute over
Irvine beirtH Joan lnlne
Smith's '1 mllllon 1itt to UC
Irvine to expand campus
medical school f aclllties.
He claimed that her lift will
ruin Western World plans to
locate a $tOO mlllloo hospital
complex on 18 acres next to the
UClcampua.
Hurd said her glrt should have
been to the planners of the com-
plex.
''People in Irvine have been
cheated," he said.
The grant bas yet to be accept·
ed by the UC Board of Reaents,
which would have to match the
gift with another $1 mllllon.
Master plannlna calla for the
next phase of the UCI medical
facilities to be a $10 m11lloo am·
bulatory care center.
Hurd said the establlabment of
the center will jeopardize ap-
proval by Orange County health
planners of a nearby boapltal.
"Now is not the time for the un-
iversity to do its own thine,"
Hurd said. "Health plannlna,
common sense and the needs ol
Irvine point to the early develop-
ment of a bospltal and am-
bulatory care center ...
•.• .. ·. In a medical
crisis • ... you nee<l a hospital -
riot an outpatient clinic." -
• Hurd claimed an Irvine Com·
pany plan to buiJd the hospital
bad been shown to prospective
Irvine residents and "practically
everyone who has bought a home
in Irvine."
He said if Mrs. Smith's action
scotches those plans, "then
every Irvine resident is entitled
to sue for breach of promise."
The new ownership of the
Irvine Company has withheld
comment about the 18-acre
property, pending study.
Hurd has been on the Western
World board or directors two
years.
Voyager Studied
PASADENA (AP) -As
Voyager 2 cruised without mis·
hap 4'1'J mtlllon mllts away,
scientists were to meet at Cape
Canaveral, Fla .. today to study
the problems that have pl.,ued
the craft, the failure.of a 7'1'J-foot
data-gatherlnt boom to lock in place, since fls launch a week
and a half ago.
'•" tf ......
• 200 • t
llUS • ,.,....,..
ANITA NEARS LAND
Mllp Spol9 Hurrtcen•
F,....PageAJ
ANITA •••
and 100 miles to the west.
Anita drove hi&b tides onto the
low-lying Gulf 1bore, cau.sln&
bayous and rivers to nm over
their bank:s. and was within euy
striking dllt.ance of land lt It
veered north.
A total of 4,500 offshore o1l
worked were ev~cuated to aboN Tu~ and 10,000 resldeotl at
vulnerable points along 4.30 miles
of coast were advised to head in·
lanctw avoid becoming trapped.
Multimillion dollar drilling
rtaa and manned production ptat·
forms , battened down and
'closed, stood deserted in the
turbulentsea.
Emergency •alves were cl06ed
OD thousands of otfshore oil IU
wells.
Arsoni8t
To~ches
9 'Autos
H~ Beach police and
fire lnvestigaton are problni a
rash of predawn arsons ln the north-central uctor ol the city in
whtch 1lx blaaes have destroyed
nloe vehicles llnce Sunday morn-
ing.
Police Detective Bob Russell
said the arsonist. who pours a
flammable liquid and lpltes the
vehicles, bas no apparent motive
except "malicious destruction."
"H'e either pours the liquid in-
side the unlocked cars or just
douses the cars on the outside,"
said Russell.
The first blaze was set at 16271
Klm Lane at 2:27 a.m. and
destroyed a sedan, compact
pickup truck and compact sedan.
Just half an hour later,
Russell, said, a van in a rear al-
ley was torched a block away
from the lint anon.
Monday nlcht between 2:30
and 3: 17 a.m .• two aedua and a
compact car were hit witb1n a
block ol each other Just south of
Hell Avenue between Gothard
Street and Beach Boulevard
Russell said. '
Tuesday morning a sedan and
van were torched two blocks east
of Monday's fires. police said.
Fire department officials ln·
dicated the arsonist may be
stealing gasoline since a gu COil·
talner was found iiear the scene
of ooeolthe incldenta. lnv~atora are in the proc-
ess of count.lng up the damages.
Hospiitil Expamion
Meeting ScheiWled .
Saddleback Community
Hospital's proposed $1.3 million
expansion t>lans, which involve
addition or 10 more coronary
care beds, will come before a
mandatory public meeting Sept.
8 ill Santa Ana.
The session will be c;onducted
by officials of the State Depart-
ment of Health, which would
have to approve Saddleback's
plans before the hospital could
proceed witb consb'uctiC>L
Health aeency reprfteDlatlve
Barbara Wright said the upcom-
ing meeting is the first public ex-
pos~ ol the p]au Anyo~e istt•
tiUtd to si>e&k at th• .,aaioo.
whfch is set for l p.m. in the San·
ta Ana City Hall annex
auditorium.
Miss Wrieht said facts
gathered at the meeting will be
compiled for later presentation
to a panel ol Health Department
-bearing officers, who will rule on
the hospital's proposal.
The eddiUon of 10 "acute care"
'beds would bring the hospital's
total ln that cateeory to 21 and to
165 beds overall. The expansion
would be ac:complisbed by
fl.nish.lng off a abell portiClD of the
Lagwla Hills facility.
According to Miss Wright, the
state health agency will be study-ioa ~al availability of acute
care bed.a to determine if Sad·
dleback's proposal would con-
stitute "overbeddlng."
;
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e a
1lubs
de-
tax-s of
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tlant ully
ln·
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md
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Irvine He&dache
Won't Go Away
The city of Irvine ~ormed wh•t many thought was a
gooct 8nd nec .... ry deed lat year when It built a public
• akateboord couru k\ Untwnity Patk
It took children off the str"ta, where the record ot In·
1ur1• and fatalitlff proved 11<.ateboardlng a hazardoua sport.
But 1t mired the city In predlotabte problems.
Ownet-9 of townhomn which abut the courM are 1u1ng
the city, claiming the skateboard• are • nouse nulunce.
Now comet the news that the city may be unable to ob-
tain lllbihty 1nauran~ to cover potential 1njurl" on the
course, Of will have to pay tronom1cal premiums for It •
Thus 1t was good news to report recently that the counc1~
"stood up for the kids" and voted not lo spend S.W,000 to re-
locate the course away from the offended homeowners
The news was not eo good, nowever, that 1t will.cost the
city almost that much every year. JUSt for insurance to keep
the park open
No matter how 1ust1t1able the protect. the skateboard park
seems to be a headache that 1ust won't go away
.
But the Bill Is Up
Every schoolchild koows that arithmetical figures can be
iuggled to show whatever you want them to show.
So. apparently. does the Irvine City Council.
Announcing an 8.5-cent reduction in the city property tax
rate, council members risked some strained muscles when
they patted themselves on the backs before a cable television
audience over the "tax cut."
A rate cut 1s not a cut in the tax bill Increases in assessed
property values mean taxpayers will pay more -4.3 percent
more -in total property taxes despite the rate reduction
The Irvine council should have had the courage and
taken the occasion to explain to its cable TV audience what
the "tax cut" really meant
I.and -With Problems
What is left of the undeveloped land once called the
Moulton Ranch sprawls over 6.700 acres 1n the Laguna Hills
area and waits tor the spread of development to change its
virgin landscape
The property is called Ahso V1e10 these days. It 1s owned
by the same Philip Moms Corp that bought and built nearby
Mission Vie10
Though 1t is still pnstrne and virtually untouched, there
presently seems no other future tor the land but development
ot some kind.
To say the least, however, planning for the urbanization
of this unique parcel of land will take great imagination and
creativity
Not only is the land impacted by 1et noise from El Toro
Manne Corps Air Station and steep terrain. but 1t also contains
some of the most sens1t1ve environmental areas 1n the south
county.
It seems unlikely that the Ahso Vie10 planners can. come
-close to pleasing all the parties interested in the future of this
property. .
But one thing is sure, there will be more than routine in-
terest in what kind of plan the developers ultimately devise.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are tho~e of the Daily Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists Reader comment is invited
Yes, your Daily Pi lot eclltonal page has changed in
appearance. The new typographical design 1s intended
to m~e it easter to distinguish our opinions from others
that appear on the pages. It also should provide more
flexibility for presenting columns and features in an at-
. · tractive manner.
Thomas Keevil, Editor .
Robert N. Wffd/Publl$htr ThorM1 K. vll/E<Sitor
Jack Anderson
Jets, G~lf Cltitis Eeft Behind
W ASIUNGTON -More than
three years after Lhe Uniled
States pulled out or Indochina, a
full accounUn1 bas yet to be
made of all they ten. behind.
They abandoned military in·
stallat.ions, industrial plants, oil
depots , piers, dock s,
warebouaes. ~pair Cacilities,
burack& and hosp,tals. The
warehou!es were Jammed full of
ernment lo reimburse him. for
example, for "three bottle~
Cognac, four bottles Bourbon.
one bottle Scotch. five bottles
various Uquors." Another left to
the Communists "24 wine
glasses, crystal; 18 cha,rQp~gne
g lasses'. crystal ; 12 sherry
glasses. crystal. 16 brandy sntf
ters. crystal."
munitions, the docks piled high STILLANOTHEa official, with
with eqwpment • a taste for culture, left behind 10
The conquering Communists 011 paintings and a Chanese rug
inherited the finest airports and
seaports in all Asia, unintended
gifts from the U.S taxpayers. All
over South Vietnam, the Com-
munists founp 10,000.foot con
crete runwuys, complete with
planes that streaked over the
jungle so fast the foliage below
looked like u green blur
THE DEPARTING Americans
also ldt behind personal
possessions, ranging from a
Sl,400 set of crystal dishes to a
$1.40 pair or nail clippers. Some
fortunate commissar may still be
walking the streets of Saigon in a
pair of "alligator shoes made to
order" for a U.S. official in too
big a hurry to pack. And hopeful
ly. a needy Viet Cong wound up
with the four bottles of J ean Nate
bubble bath abandoned by
another official
The lost billions are hidden m
secret inventories that may
never be dug out But we have
succeeded at least in examining
the claims of the foreign aid of
ficials, who tried to collect from
the government for their dis -
carded possessions.
••
worth 12,000. Nor did t\4: have to
to pack his 154 shirts, with 18 seta ot cult links to hold the cuffs
toaether. He also iave up 30
s moking plpes \o the Com·
munists.
The fellow who IQSt the fancy
alligator shoes also put In a cWm
ror two pairs of "tW1l~" shoes.
one palr or "ostrich hide" sh<>es
and three pairs of common eoir
shoes. Another sought ream·
bursement for 18 cans of shoe
polish. "assorted colors ..
The lists of lost valuables
fortify our impression that n\any
U.S. officials didn't let the war
interfere with their high living.
One official asked the gov-'Congratulations. Bert! I knew you'd fit in!'
Paul Harvey
Several envoys made a
hasty ~jt wit.bout their golf clubs
and tt>nnl.s rackets. One de·
manded $1.oas from the tax-
payers to pay ror two sets or
a bandoned iiolC clubs, plus
apother 5120 ror 11n "elephapt
hide" golf bag He helpfully
itemited the m'isaing clubs, in·
eluding ''wood! 1·3·4·5, irons 2·9
~nd PW Cp1t.chln• wedce >. • •
A TENNIS BUl'F put in a claiJD
tor .. 26cans of Wilson tennis balls,
four boxes Tr~om balls, six cans·
Dunlop balls" and three boxes ol
"all weather" balls.
Others asked for compensation
for the pets they couldn't bring
home. including two German
Shepnerds valued ~t $800, a
"five-mQnth male" hunting dog
worth $200 and 10 goldfish and
tropical fish valued at $50. But
the State Dept. ruled sternly:
'No allowance could be made for
Ule ... dogs or rish." ·
As it happened, the State Dept.
provided Its personnel m In·
dochina with housing and
furnishings &u1table for com-
fortable Ii ving It cautioned
them. therefore. not to take
valuable personal po11sessions in·
to the war .zone
U PON their retu'rn. the of-ficial~ were nontl!d that they
could claim up to $15.000 for
personal possessions left behind
Most of the returning AID
personnel abided by the rules.
but 86 put in claims exceeding
the legal bm1t
Some claims were made for re·
imbursements as high as $50,000.
In view or the advance warning,
no one-got more than $15.000. The
total reimbursements added up
lo $2.5 million, slightly more than
half of what was claimed.
Cab 1838: A Lesson in Free Enterprise
It was a sticky hot day in
Chicago when I hailed a cab on
Mi chigan Avenue
A Chicago cab ride is not
something one looks forward to
On hot days
especially ,
cab drivers
are likely to
be s url y,
other drivers
inconsiderate.
Traffi c
signals seem
green for two
seconds, red
for fiv e
minuteg
But this day I got a surprise --
perhaps the most refreshing cab
ride of my experience
Not all cab drlVers are created
equal. PauJ Gosenpud had made
of his tedious job an enjoyable
profess.ion.
' . HIS YELLOW cab appears
mucb like any other until you
open the door. but once inside you .
are Alice in Wonderland.
First. Paul 's ca b 1s
immaculate. Instead of s1ttmg
on ragged upholstery with your
feet ankle deep in soggy cigarette
butts the upholstery of Cab
1838 is intact and inviting you
discover the carpeted floor 1s
freshly vacuumed.
Thenthefun begins.
There is an assortment of
peri9dical s gratuitously
provided for the rtder
including the cultural.
Background music is offered to
the taste of each passenger .
including taped classics.
AND ON the rear deck
between the rear seat and th~
wide rear window 1s an
assortment of candies Crom
which you are expected to help
yourself.
Neatly bracketed to the panels
behind the side windows are
potted plants. real ones.
In a hanging vase in front of
you <on the rear of the front seat )
are fresh cut flowers Real ones.
You may help yourself. says the
eabb1e. to a boutonniere or your
choice
"IC your favorite kind of candy
1s not back there." says Paul
Gosenpud, "I have three kinds of
cookies up here.··
Then, as an afterthou ght.
·'Also cough drops, s hould you
need them -or aspirin, should
you need them."
A neat note 1n front or you
mentions that the driver has city
maps -mcluding bus route
maps and a dictionary
Now that your first flush of
surprise 1s subsidmg you realize
that 1838 is air conditioned. most
Chicago cabs are not
NATURALLY I am expecting
that there must be some extra
c harge for all this On the
contrary, the cheerful driver
explains. "I did not raise my
rates when the others did ·
I remembered that Mayor
Bilandic had negotiated a labor
settlement which resulted in a
starting-fare increase of 70
percent.
"The taxi drivers are calling
him Santa Claus." said Paul
Gosenpud. "I'm sticking with the
old cheaper rates "
Won 't this lead to bargain
hunting by customers, to friction
with other drivers?
"I don't care.·· said the lean,
bespectac l ed yo ung
entrepreneur ·'I lease my cab.
I 'll charge whatever rates I like.
And l like the cheaper rates."
Doubtless. l 'm t hinking to
m yself. he'll make 1t up an bigger
tips
Paul Gosenpud reads my
mind · "The tips I really
a ppreciat e a r e tips fro m
customers on how to make my
cab -not just the best in Chicago
but the best in the world!"
Thanks for the ''lift." Mr.
Gosenpud
ltf ailfJox/When You're Out of Oil an Offshore Rig Is Beautiful
• To the Editor:
Your editorial of Aug. 23 (Here
Come the Rigs) reflects the sort of
negative thinking which could
mean the end of this country as
we know it.
Both the press and the politi·
cian.s have managed to convince
the majortly of Americans that
we ~ not in serious trouble
from an energy standpoint, but
let's look at the "'rd, eo1cl facts:
1. We ate. runnin f up
astronomical balan~• of P~·
ments defidt ll&)dng the OPEC
up Lo $12.00 per barrel lot c;rude
oll whioh costs. probably fil\)I..
cents pt?r barrel to produce. -.
2. out oU conipan(ls are re·
celvin1, on an average, • little
over a .oo I*" bariti for:erude oU
wbfch costs as much as U 00 per
ba~ to produce.
,/
The carnet you referred to is in
reality the American public and
the tent in which that camel's
head is stuck is the one furnished
by the politicians and environ·
mentalists.
DALE JOHNSON
c-.i1.o.r.
To the Edit.or ·
I am firmly opposed to any
giveaway or the Panama Canal.
We own it, we have certainly paid
for it, and our elected repruen-
tatives have no right toil ve away
something wJ)ich belongs to ALL
American citiiens.
RAYN.GIBBS
recalls to mind the name of Jim·
my Cannon, New York. Post
sportswriter. whose very pungent
use of words were enjoyed by
many people. To paraphrase him
on the subjed of mourning doves,
some years ago I wrote as
follows·
"Mournfog doves are beautiful
creatures which are now being
slain (in some states> by coward-
ly assassins who are licensed by
the state, Lo murder lhem. They
are lovel)' and helpJess creatures
with neither tusb nor claws to
make the contest a level Pf'OPOSl·
lion. They are the aentlest ol bi'rds
and their feet are too dainty to
kick their sJa.yers and they are too
weaktorunthemoffwith asno.rl.
'"Ibey don't bite those who tor·
ment tlteiri and depend on their:
sad glances t.O provoke mercy ln
the craven lifetaken. They a~
not cunn.lnl and tbey do not.
molest men even when they teu
boles in them with their
shotguns."
"So they ate put down as stupid
but~ is the comanoo slander th
weait mustendure. lt Is oneOfthe
tricks "' th ucty and brutal to
viltfy the comely and shy ai.
dumb. The ignorant have alwayl>
been vandals and take pleasure in
the destruction of beauty So
while the dove-killers are bigger.
better armed. and Cull of more
beer ttian doves, in the contest the
mourning dove will no doubt be
the loser. But we think in the fin al
judcmeot made by the majotlty
of intelligent and d ecent
Americans, the-doves will be the
moral victors."
So, like we say, there are so
many things we citonot quite pair
up with reason. We just don't
seem to be able to keep up with the
verylatestofthosetechnolofies
HENRYM. WEBER
To the Editor·
President Carter says that Bert
Lance's overdraft at o bank of
which Lance. was president was
miU&at.od by Lance's other de·
posits ln the bank. tr Lance re·
celved interest ol\ the other de·
po1ll undiminis hed for the
amountoftheoverdrart <te. if the
bunk paid interest to Lance on
money which the bank supplied to
him mtcrcsl Ire<'>. lht• matter'"'
only mad1· \\ orst·
Unfortunatl'ly. whether or not
hl• took such unearned interest
has not been revealed
Although experience 1n deficit
financing may be a qualification
for a U S. budget director, the ob-
Jecllve should be to reduce inf1a·
tion by reducing governmental
deficit spending and one showd
not take a personal advantage
from a position to the detriment of
h.is employer (bank or govern·
ment). ·
Furthermore, the fact that
others do what Lance dJd is no de·
fense. A U.S. president resllfted
under threat of impeachment for
having done tilings which qt.her
presidents did.
ROY B. WOOl.SEY
•
Bkickoui on· tfl:e Wlwrf
Dinner by Candleligl,)t Pie~ Clientele
CAP) -
was b7 u.ncn lltlll •
berman'a Grotto resl1urlUll after
1 lr fonntr exploded] •
J OUl l chts OD tourll\· ammed
l'tab«man'I Whuf. .. w. rcall.1 d n'\ mind. n·.
more tun th la way," aalcl
Mari Curtis ol IM • aa abe a.lbbhxl on h 1 ai 4in·
a.er dur\ni tho brief T\alld.ay
nl•bt blackout.
Pacific Gas" Electric Co. uld
ebout ~ rest.aW'anb, ban and
1flao'• S•speet?
bu l in a IOur·block
wen wtt.bout PoWW durina the
mlnutH it took to flx th•
Lramformer. Utlllly otn~lal1 bla ed the pow r out111 oa an
uadettrmlntd mHbanlcal
failure. Cur10llty a kera et th• famed
Wax MUNUm w re rtvtn an.ta·
tra thrill when tbo U1hta Vfent
OU Employ• wttb QathUCbtl
bad to lead tbo vlalto.rt throuib a
U\UO ol WU)' buata out to tho street.
MasterminJ, Like
A Businessman
S0l!l1{ GATE (AP> -The mysterious "Kr. Goldman,•• who
transformed a vacant bu.ildina here into tbe ke)' web in an elaborate
plot that involved tunnellQI underneath a street to reach a bank
vault acroas the way, apparently seemed the perfect buainelsman
-well-dressed and well-educated. ..
"How was I lO be suspicious?" wondered Mack McArthur Tues-
day, a neighborhood businessman since 1930. McArtb"1' bad leued
the building to a "Mr. Goldman" in June, but abook his head ln dis-
belief as be watched workmen fill in the 110.foot tunnel leadinf from
his store to the bank.
Yet it turned out the would·be burglars would have wound up
with chicken feed had they succeeded, u fbe Security National
Bank vault only contained ••a total of $100,000 to $150,000," police
Sgt. Al Knox said.
T~co Worm l11eade• Cotton
EL CENTRO (AP) -Cott.on growers recovering from a je.
\a stating flood now face a new enemy: worms.
The tobacco bud worms are expected to devour ball of the Im-
perial Valley's cotton crop, state farm official.a said Tuesday.
Losses due to worms could ( J exeeed $S0 million, compared SI' A.TE to flood damage estimated al
_ _ $8.5 million.
BiU to Boo•t Pfttdons l'etoed
SACRAMENTO (AP> -A measure that would have allowed
many cities and counties lO boost pensions for retired workers has
been vetoed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
AB 734 by Assemblyman Norm Waters, D-Plymouth, would
have allowed agencies that contract with the Public Employes
Retirement System to elect to make a one-time increase for local
members who retired before Jan. l, 1974.
,'Wllf!lear Po.,,er Plant Req..ested
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Pacific Gas & Electric Co. has told the
state Energy Commission it wants to build a nuclear power-plant in
the upper San Joaquin Valley.
The commission said Tuesday the utility is proposing
alternative sites for the two-unit, 2,400-megawatt plant in
Stanislaus, Merced and Madera counties. ·
Voluntarg l11tegration Approl'ed
SAN BERNARDINO CAP) -A voluntary integration plan was
approved Tuesday for this city's 31,000-student school district. but
the judge gave officials only one semester to make it work.
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Paul Egly ordered the dis-
trict to put the plan into effect next February -a year earlier than
officials had suggested.
ftnancler• Attoniq• Wfa C1ai.
SAN DIEGO (AP> -Attorneys for financier C. Arnholt Smith
will get $230,000 claimed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
after all. '
A motion by the FIC to block release of the money from a Smith-
relaled company was denied Tuesday by U.S. District Court Judae
Leland C. Nielsen.
~-"7 TH JEARL'S· l'UIMtltfG .... ,.....
Al• COMD
SI Lie 211657 S..·-,_ 'l4'tJ"' "-D<w IC.Oii Stor• NMreit YO<lf ArH) •
COSTAMESA642•1753 , .. ..__ ......
MISSION v1uo495-0401
2llfZ2 ~ .. c..lltl-cs. oi... r-rwy ... ""'"' ,..,,,., . )
WMn tho Uc,hta came back to
Ille at 1:40 p.m .• the normally '
·heavy 1ldew lk tralflc alooi the Em~adero wu almoet non·
exlltant.
Cllentole at a'everal
r11taurtnts and bars 1roped
throufth the darkness by
candle 1bt. But moat tourist
amuaementa In ihe darkened
ion• cloeed up shop for the night,
f earln,g It would take hours to
restore power.
Police reported no crfmlhal in-
ci den ta reaulted from the
blackouL
Jean Hagen
Loses Bout
With Cancer
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ac-
tress Jean Haeen -once a lead-
ing lady in movies and television
-bu died after a two-year bat-
tle with throat cancer that even-
tually took ber to Germany for
controversial Laetrile treat-
ments. She was 52.
Miss Hagen died Monday at the
Motion Plcture and Television
Country House and Hospital in
suburban Woodland Hills, but
her death was not reported until
Tuesday, a hospital spokesman
said ..
After being told by doctors ear-
ly this year that she had only a
SO-SO chance to live, the actress
replied, "Thal 's not good .enough
for me ... I want very much to
live."
She twice underwent cancer ·
surgery and radiation therapy
before turning to the Laetrile
treatments, which are illegal in
most states.
Miss Hagen made her screen
debut in "Adam's Rib" in 1949.
Among her other films were
·'Singing in the Ram" in 1952,
"The Big Knife" in 1955, "Panic
in the Year Zero" in 1962, and
"Dead Rmger" in 1964.
-~ ......... DIES OF CANCER
Jean Hagen
·ALLERGY?
l2 I 3) 214-2556
1714) 543-9624 Recorded
Message
ALLERGY° CONTROL
FmATIOll
$100 GIFT CERTIFICATE FOR BOY AND GIRL
Fill in the entry below and deposi t any Fashion
Square store August 18·thru September 9.
Contest rules: Boys and girls thru age 18• may
enter. Drawing Sept. 10. 'Mnners need no\ be
present to win. Notification by phone & mail.
lex 1513, ~ ca 12561
Wri .. t,r r.._ liia ... le«
Gift Certificates good
at any Fashion
store.
•
---. J • • -#• • .• :-.._.-.ir.... -
"Wow! look at all the toy cars down there!"
Divorce Won .
By Joe Alioto
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -Former Mayor Joseph'
Alioto'• JS.year marriage bu ended, but an estimat·
ed $8 million in community property still must be
divided.
The ~year-old antitrust attorney on Tuesday was
granted bis request for ---------
dissolution of the mar-· ln support pending court
riage -the technical disposition of the case.
term for divorce in The couple has been
California. separated since Dec. 2,
But Superior Court 1975.
Judge Jay Pfotenhauer
denied an attempt by
Angelina Alioto to find Man pJ .-I.-her husband in contempt eatm
for disposing of $600,000
of his law firm's assets in Guill
violation of a restrainin& y' order.
The judge ruled Alioto Es
hadn't willfully dis· capes
obeyed the court order
restricting the spending LONG BEACH (AP> -
of community property. A man, who moments
Alioto has been paying earlier had confessed to
his wife $5,500 per month armed robbery in
Superior Court here.
escaped as he was being
escorted back to jail
after asking to get a
drink of water ,
authorities said.
FirmFmed
HACIENDA
HEIGHTS (AP) -A re-
alty firm he re has
agreed to pay $2,500 in
civil fines and end aJ.
leged false advertising m
a stipulated judgement
by Superior Court Com-
missioner Leo S. Rich.
The firm . Hacienda
Hei&bU Realty, by
agreeing lo the judge·
ment. ended a lawsuit
filed by tbe slate at-
torney general's office.
They said J .D. Walters
wa s leaving the
courtroom of Superior
Court Judge Roy J.
Brown Tuesday after
pleading guilty to three
counts of armed robbery
when he asked for water.
His handcuffs were off,
and as be beaded for the
fountain, be broke into a
run down the hall.
BUTTE
KNIT SALE
•
49.99-79.99
Originally $60-$116 If you're
a Butte collector, you're
probably already looking for the
car keys. The name's new? Then
come try beautiful workmanship,
design and lush Fall colors.
at temptimg savings. Shown. in ...,,__~..._~,,.,.,,,.,..,,.
powder or pink. 6-16. $80,
59.99
Town & Travel Dresses
, . ~
*.. DAILY PflOT A5
I Ba•
Bill Awaits
Brown's OK
SACRA.MENTO (AP) -After two-year bat·
tle, envinlllJDentalilCa and their leplatlve allies
have pushed a bill thro\A&h tbe lelialature ban-
ning most fluorocarbon Ul'()SQl •Pff.Yl, linked by
studies to cancef.
On a 21·9 vote Tuesdu, the Senate sent SB
153 by Sen. John Dunlap (l>-Napa,), to Gov. Ed-
mund 2rown Jr. Tbe measure would ban lbe
maoutacture of the UlOIOla bl California starUQg Oct. 15. 1918.
A arowlnc number of sclenUatt HY the!
Ouorocarbom, commonly found ln ba sprays
and deodorants, attack the ozone layer that
ahlelds the earth from ultraviolet rays which
cause skin cancer.
1be upper house abo approved the Assembly
version ~ the bill, AB 238 by Assemblyman John
, Vucoocellos (l>-San Joee), on a 23-7 vote and
sent lt back to the Assembly for action on Senate
amendrneots.
Both bllls had to be watered down to clear
le&ialative hurdles, and most. sectioos of them
would be superseded b)' propoud federal regula-
tions .
The legislation, howe;ver, would eo into effect
on its own ii the lederal rules wwe dropped or
delayed. In ~tion, aft.er April 15, 19'1'9-the bill
would ban the sale ln Calllornla of the sprays
produced be.fore the manulactwin& deadline.
Tbe manufacture of moat containers for
fluorocarbon sprays would be banned starting
Dec. 15, 1978. '!>-,
C~nvicted Rapist
Arrested Again
SANTA BARBARA CAP> -Police have booked
a 22-year-old man convicted of 15 rapes in Pasadena
on charges be raped or aUempted to rape seven
women in this quiet coastal community.
Anthony Hopey of Santa Barbara admitted the
rapes during a lie detector test. Det. Brian Abbott
said Tuesday. Huahey was being held without bail.
After arresting Hughey based on victims'
descriptions, oflcera learned be had been convicted
nf the 15 Pasadena rapes ln 1974 and 1975. Abbott
said. H~y served slightly less than a year i.._
prison, Abbott added.
Hughey bas not been charged in the rape.
killings of three young women -two of them UC
Santa Barbara coeds -whose bodies were found in
couty territory. But a sheriff's spokesman said dep-
uties "will be questioning him in regard to those rapes.''
Radio Booklet Ready
. WASIUNGTON (AP> -The National Associa-
tion !>f. Broadcasters bas prepared a booklet des~?bm• the workings of radio stations.
Radio: Get the Message," mcludes sections
on news and actualitiea, public service announce-
ments, promotiona, use of music and sound effects
and production techniques.
. It is availa~le ror $1 from the kadio Informa-
tion Office, im N St. NW, Wasiu.nit.on. D.C .• 20036.
•
NYSE COMPOSf.rE TRANSACTIONS
•
s DAll. Y PILOT 8 f
SeH-emRloyed
May J,ike Keogh
B7SYL~POaTB& ...........
For David and Lynn, tb future la brt•ht. Ho'11S, a atl.f'-
employod architect, earnlnc Ml,000a1ear and hll Ust ol
cllenbl ls l"OY'lo1. Sbo la three years yocmiet. • fl'eelallH
wrlter wbose ltSalPmentl are SlYtill ber an UmuaJ lDcame ol around •ooo. 'l'My've been married 10 1ean. baft tWo
cblldrea, a1ea 4 and 7, bave jun moved to a attndlve
home in tbe tuburbs.
Tbey spend about Sl.,000 '°'" lkl equlpalellt eadl ynr
but. for the mo&t part, tbe7 are~ a&ftfto Aft4s' BY· log apenses. lneJudloc a health an uct msmuce 11«1·
ments, they bank most remaJnini , and have $18.000
cuhsavinJs.
Bur EVEN IF TREY continue to 11ve $1,D each year,
eamlng about$ ,percent annually, they wlll b1ve accumulat-
ed only *25,m to 11 years, when their ol4-t chU4 beCl.ns
college. Once these expense5 are mtt. t1*'e WQD't be &Qy
savinga left for emereendes, the fUl:ure-« nd.remeat. They need a better plan than that.
~ause they are stlt-employed, • Ktocb tuitl'selter,.. Urement plan could be the wisest move at atqe.
Under this plan, they aet up tbelr retlnment trust and dtler
taxes on a portion of their lDcome tmouPout peak eamlng
years.
At tlle ages ot 35 and !a. they CID assume a fall' decree
of risk with their investmen~ But as Uaey pow older, in-
vestment obJecUves will chanae. And u l'etirement nears.
they can tailor their portloUoe to meet their chanp1needs.
They eouJd buy dis-
count bonds now for
capital appreciation.
suggest Merrill Lynch
executives. Years from
now, they could sell the
bonds foe capital gains.
Discount bonds
Money's
Worth
often sell for substantially less than the prices at wblcb they
will mature becauae they were issued when prenWng in-
terest rate levela were much lower. They might buy $10,000
of 6 percent bOoda at a price ol •ooo. leaving $2,000 ot a
$10,000 stake for other tovestmenta.. Tbe S percent bonds will
return the full $10,000 when they come due.
wrru TllE #.•.·TREY a>UU> invest tn growth
stocks with an average divtdend yield ot 2 perceat and ex·
pect the stocks to 1row jn value alone with thelr'bonda unW the bonds mature.
Of the $18,000 to savl.nP, they might keep $6.000 lo the
savings institution for emergencies and invest the balance
of $12,000 in highest grade municipal bonds quoted u a dis-
count and almost. surely heading toward their issue price at
maturity.
'Ibis way, they would get three benefits: a capital gain
on each bond, favorable tax treatment on the capital gain
<half the normal rate under today's law), and tax-free in-
come unW the municipal bonds. reach maturitY rate.
ASSUMING TREY BVY $U.• of bonds at $800 per
$1,000 par value..l they can get 15 bonds at a tu-free interest
of 3~ percent. uver the years. the bonda will pay $525 t.ax-
free a year. An investment ct $12,000 lD taxable aa.tnp at
s~ percent will pay roughly $680 to taxable income -or
$.163 after taxes. By buying the tax·lree bonds. they save
$162 a year in taxes.
' \ HB Man' to Head
Texa,s Office
Terry A. Daniels of Huntington Beach hubem Dalnecl senior mana1er of tbe V.I.P. Corporattoo•s ftnt Tens ol·
fice, which is scheduled to open Sept. 7 lo Houston.
V.I.P. Corp.L~n exeeuU•e 1ear9 qency head-
quartered In Los All&eles bas betm ua1q
40 WATS llnea to serve Texas cllenta.
V.I.P. bas 156 executive recruiters ID 1%
offices around the country.
-~·
"' f ,
I
' ' '
~·
._:. .
" '~
Daniels, who bu been Hlllor
manager of V.l.P.'tt Orange County of·
nee, joined the agency in July. um.
after serving U a meht en0Deel' OD
McDonnell Doualas Corporation's DClO
program. During the Vietnam war be
served aboard a C.180 carso aka'aft IA the Air Force. .,.._.
Daniels was tracta.atect with honon in la from Penn
State University where be lettered three,.._ In baseball
andialf.
ComproJDise LNG
Proposed Advances
SACRAMENTO (AP> -A eompromfae bnl that could
lead to Calltornla's ftnt llqueOect uatilial iu termJ.na1
mewed to the Aaaembl1 flool' wi1b littledtbate.
A 1$-1 vote ot the Auembl)' Wap aad lfec. Commit-
tee on TuesdQ apDl'Oftd SB 1081 by~ AJmd Alquilt (J).
San J~). ltbascfeariid tbeSe.nate.
The bill WoUld call for a cteol.sc.a b7 Ulie Public utDltla
COIDml.salon nut IUl'lllll9' OD ....... ID LNG titullDal
should be b\lllt. Tho cleef.atai WOUid be l>ii.s ca &1ta ~m
ttiendatlona by the Coaatal Ooftimililoo. ~tian donlltl•ta:ndai-dl la the MD NCl1di'e t!Jat tbe termlnAJ be &ocateid la anmote ~ abcl Pt.~ ls
the -altAt ~ b)' tbe ... ~-IJ Wt desc:rljldcn.
~.
Campa~ Warns of ·Immediate Health Hazar~
SAN P'llANCISCO ( P) -An to be aware of how companies Evans aaid the success ot the measage was chanted frequenUy phy ema. • But at thJa age they 'percent satd they bad smoked at
t campal1n timed at u ldvertla mcnta featurini at· proeram amon1 the atudents -to avoid the "oa1 effect," Evans are living hi a present-time least one c:11arette in the pre-
bool ttudcnta h tracUv women and other media who art at the crucial •I•. when said. perspective." vious month -and tested qain
1 • 1nlflcant r aulU by t hnlqu I to encoura1t the the habit often t>e1hia -to-"Fear la not en~b.'' Evans Tbe study undertaken by 10 weeks later. No antlsmaklnt
warn t tm about tbt Im· habit. 11 d Dr. Richard t. vana dlcates lt could help prevent aald in an intemew at the Mtb Evana and his colleaaues in· instnactioo was 1lven to them.
ate . th hanrda lri.sttkd of th Unlvtr1lty ol Houliton. some youths from ever smoldni. annual meeting of the American volved 750 Houston Independent ol hat m1Pt happen to th ht AMth p rt of the campal1n. What may have clicked ln this Paycboloiical A11oclatlon ... For SehOol Dlstrictseventh·traders. Other groups of students were
30 ,,...... a llouaton P11tbolo1l1t ht eald. told them how to say proaram where othera have years, kids have been 1etUna asked th~·same questions, tbeJl
reports "No'' to aoctal preuures from failed is that the youths were told messages sayma, 'When you 1et One group of the students was pa~ctpated in varl~s klndS ol
:=rtait •~1t1Ma allo were tau1ht otb r youtN to smOll . ot tbe llnmedlate hazards and the old you'll aet ea~cer or em· asked abo~ amo~n1.b1bits -31 antismoklni lnstruetaon .
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