HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-09-14 - Orange Coast Pilot,,,.__, __ .
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Speedy Approval
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Pipetbie Urged·
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DAILY PILOT *· * * 1oc * * *
75 he WEDNESDAY AFTE ~NOON, SEPTEMBER 14, 1977
cil VOL. 7t, NO. t:SJ. 4 HCTIONS, 46 ... on
pr
A1
st ~ Fleeing Flood
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Robert Wiggins carries his cat "Murray" and his
favorite pair of boots to high ground from his half.
s ubmerged trailer home in Kansas City on Tuesday. For
story on flood damage, see Page A4.
Innuendo, Hearsay
Lance Says Media
Barrage 'Unfair'
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Budget Director Bert Lance
declared today he has been bar-
raged unfairly with innuendo and
~ea~ay and "we're in sad shape
m this country" if people believe
his effectiveness has been clip-
Hoover 1'ies
With Nazis
Disclosed
Speedy . ./' ' . . .
Pip~
OK·Urged
WASlUNGTON 'AP> -The
Carter administration reversed
an earlier stand today and urged
Congress to authorize speedy •
construction of as many as two
pipelines to transport surplus
Alaskan crude oil from the West
Coast to the inland United States.
Federal Energy Administrator
John F. O'Leary told a Senate
subcommittee that the overland
lines are needed because of an
anticipated glut of oil from the
newly opened Alaska oil pipeline
on the U.S. West Coast. "The ad-
ministration firmly believes
that the construction of at least
one, and perhaps two, of the pro·
posed west-to-east pipeline
systems is urgently needed to as· .
sure an efficient means of de-
livering Alaskan crude oil to
those ares of the country which
need it," O'Leary said.
The two proposed routes are
the Sohio project Involving a
pipeline from Long Beach to
Midland, Texas ; and the
Northern Tier Pipeline proposal,
which would bring a pipeline
from P~rt Angeles, Wash., to
Clearbrook, Minn.
O'Leary said the administra-
tion would like to see the legisla·
lion broadened to include oU>er
possible routes, including
several that might go through
part of Canada.
CurrenUy, Alaskan oll la either
being sent. to West Coist re-
fineries or shipped via tankers
throuclt t.he PanaO'a Canal.
O'Leary said the adminlStra· lion backs legislation that woutd
cut throu1h federal and state ~
tape to get the pipeUne or
pipelina', authorized u quickly
as possible -as prevtous ~l•· Uon dld for Aluk'a on aAd yet-to.!
be built ps pipelines.
(See OU.. Paa• AJ)
NB~ Pt•rse Sitatch
Sospee·t Tackled
By 'Pell Mel'
.
Newport Incident
Thug Tackled
By 'Pell Mel'
The two couples in their 50s looked like eas y
targets for four t een.aged purse snatchers prowling
Balboa Island.
Two husbands were walking about 25 feet ahead
of their wives when two of the youths approached
from the opposite direction. passed the men and
zeroed in on the women.
As the youths passed. one reacl\ed out and
snatched the purse worn on the arm of Sti'irley Patton.
throwing her to the ground as he sprinted away with
the handbag.
SHE CRIED OUT for help and her hus band.
Melvin. sprang into action.
Four blocks later. the startled teenager was
broughtdown from behind by a flying tackle.
The young thug, it developed, had selected the
wrong victim in Melvin Patton's wife.
I le had just been run down to justice by a man
once called "The World's Fastest Human."
Patton, in the 1940s, was known in sporting lore as
sprinter" Pell Mell" Patton.
NOW UVING IN Tarzana, the Pattons were visit-
ing the Theodore Olsens of Newport/ Beach last Thurs-
day wtten the incident occurred.
Police said both Patton and his wife suffered
m,inor abrasions from the incident but were otherwise
unharmed. ·
The four youths. from San Juan Capistrano, were
released to their parents by police but they face
further action in Juvenile Court in the case.
PATl'ON, A TRACK STAR at USC from 1946 to ·
1949. was a "triple medalist at the 1948 Olympics in
London, winning a gold in the 200 meter, a silver in the
100 meter and anchoring the gold medal sprint relay
team.
A native or Long Beach, Patton set world records
in the 100 an<1'200 yard dashes. His record in the 220,
which was later disallow~due to wind, still stands as
the fastest time anyone has ever run the distance on
the straightaway. . He demonstrated in Newport Beach that he can
st.ill move right alo'!.g·
J
Death
Set For
Monday
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -
Attorneys for former Orange
County resid ent J ohn A.
Spinkellink, whose execution has
been scheduled for Monday, have
opened a two-front attack lo keep
their client from the electric
chair.
Spinkellink, 28, faces death at
8:30 a.m. Monday after Circuit
Judge John Rudd of Tallahassee
refused to delay what would be
the second execution in the coun-
try since the U.S. Supreme Court
upheld captial punishment last year.
His attorney. Andrew Graham,
Tuesday filed an appeal with the
Florida State Supreme Court im·
mediatety,after the circuit judge
refused to stay the execution or·
der signed Monday by Gov.
Reubin Askew.
Graham said the appeal is
based on Spinkellink's 1973
murder trial in which he was con-
victed and condemned for
the shooting death or Joseph
Szymankiewicz, 43.
The attorney claims the con-
viction and death sentence are
unconstitutional because pro-
spective jurors opposed lo cap-
tial punishment ~ere not seated
to hear the case.
<See EXECUTE, Pa«e A2)
Coast
Weather
Late night and morning
low clouds with afternoon
and evening clearing.
Lows tonight upper 50s to
mld-609. Hiihs Thursday
in upper 60s to low 70s to
mid-70s inland.
INSIDE TODAY
TM date Ugi.sl4ture bof
PQIW a 1'tU /avoring an LNG
plant ot ~ Concep«ton. BW
most ruldenU of th~ remot~
a'N ore MP in amu about the
P,OJ)Ofell sion.1, map and
ptioto OfC ~ ;u,
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'A Dumb Mistake'
Pm{'f?ll Apologizes for Percy Rumor
\\ ~lll N(, I ON IAI' I Whitt•
Uouae prtu ucretary Jody
)>11w\'ll lt'lt·11h11tlt'd u 1wr i.onul
polo.:) tollu~ 111 ~n ( 'hMrle~ II
•·11 y <R Ill 1, for 11pr adln&
tu111ura bout one of bud1ot chief
»•·rt L.anct'a Jlfll\elp I crlUc1
l'o\\1•11 h.id C'illlt'd the w a~h111.:1on hurt•au or the
Ch1c.·u1it11 Suu l'tml'i:t Tuci.duy and
'DUMB MIST AKE'
Press Chief Powell
Costly OC
Center Has
Few Inmates
nv <iARV GRANVILLE
OI , ... O•lt' "llot Stall
r >range County officials are
trying lo figun· out what to do
"'1th a juvenile home that ts cost-
ing $100,000 a month to operate
f11r whut now ls Just a few
t roubl~ youngs ters
Tiie client load at McMillan
f<pc·cptlon Center in Santa Ana
dropped lo JUSt three juveniles
this week 1n the aftermath of a
ri·c·c•nt ruling hy Juvenile Court
.Judgt• Ha~ mood Vincent
In that ruling. Judge Vincent
~ .. id he no longer will send status
offt•ndt•ri. to McMillan because of
the h11o:h rate of runaways from
the rt'Cl'pl1on center which, by
law. cannnot be locked.
St<i tus offenders are juveniles
who have <0omm1tled ofCenses
wh1c:h would not be offenses 1f
llwy "'-t'rt' adults. Examples of
-.1 Jtus offenders Include s uch
trans1::r<'"ls1on.!' as truancy,
c·u1 f(•w v1olat1on and running
J\.\-ay
lb a rl'sult of .Jud~e Vincent's ordt•r that no mnre s tatus of.
IL·ndl'rs were to be sent to
McMillan, a start of 33 people at
lhc re<·eplion ('enter Tuesday was
there to tend lo the needs of just
th rt•t• youngsters
County supervisors made 1t
<'leur Tu<'sduy they are dis -
pleased with the probation de·
partment's staffing of McMillan
1n hght of the evaporating work
load
They appeared to be even less
pl<'awd wh(•n deputy probation
officer Hex Castellaw appeared
before tht>m without advance
nol1<'e to su~gcst an alternative
use for McMillan.
Castellow suf(gested returning
the rE-ce11tion center to Its former
"ltatus. u df•t('ntion home for
Juveniles serving fixed terms for
er1minal offenses.
"That would put us back to
when• . we were a year ago,"
Supervisor Thomas Riley said as
Custcll aw outlined probation 's
plan. Supervisors ordered county
officials to return next week with
a proposal to remedy the costly
problem,
Charged with the reap0nsibili-
I y of finding a solution were
David O'D'cll, county human
services agency director, and
County Administrative Officer
. Robert Thomas.
ORANQICOAIT t
DAILY PILOT
p'u111C'd ulon..i rumors holly de·
nJed by Percy th•t th• aenator
uacd Bt'll und Howell corporate
~1rcrdt uod t cllltles of a
Cblc110 h11nk durln& hli un:~ re·
eleeUon camp1l1n.
After the Sun·Tlmes dlscloaed
Powell's call, a storm of con·
lroversy erupted here with the
press :.ecretary initially a c·
'MATTER CLOSED'
Senator Percy
New Plague
Case Told
BAKERSFIELD (A P) -
A 48-year-old Bakersfi eld
woman contracted bubonic
plague while camping at a
private facility in the
Tehachapi mountains east
or here, authorities said lo·
day.
The woman, whose name
was not released , a p-
parently was bitten by
fleas which had been in-
fected with the disease
from wild rodents, said Dr.
Leon M. Hebertson, "Kern
County health officer.
The victim "Is making a
good recovery," Hebertson
added.
Stte felt ill a few days
after a Labor Day weekend
camping trip.
State Orders
Refunth From
Phone Fimu
S AN FRANCISCO <AP)
California telephone companies
have been ordered to cut rates •
$73 million annually and refund
$270 million ln a rulin& that could
cost them $1 billion more ln back
taxes.
Tuesday's 3·2 vote by the state
Public UtiliUes Commission or·
ders refunds of about $29 for
Pacific Telephone Co. customers
and $34 for General Telephone
Co. customers. Rate reductions
would be 70 cents a month for
Pacific and 60 cents for General.
The action re vol vea around
how depreciation is computed on
new equipment.
Pacific Telephone said the rul·
ing would be catastrophic .and
pledged to appeal, an action that
could tie the case up ln court for
years and delay the windfall to
c ustomers.
There was no immediate reac·
tion from General Telephone.
knowledglng he made u "dumb
mlat&ke.11
Later Powell said:
"1 called Senator P~rcy and
told him 1 recretted Uie situation
very much."
Percy said just prior to the call
from Powell that he would con-
s ider the matter closed "just as
soon as Jody Powell is absolutely
convinced there is not a founda-
tion of any kind for the report and
JU&l as SQOn as he apolo&izes to
me."
Percy and officials of Bell and
Howell noted that the company
does not even have an airplane.
Sen. John Heinz III CR-Pa.)
said the Powell episode smacked
or WMe House "dirt}' tricks"
aimed at "stifling fact findlng
and serioui inquiry" into Lance's
affairs.
Sen. Abraham A. Ribicoff <D·
Conn.), chairman of the panel
conductlni the Lance probe.
called Powell's actions ''a stupid
thing t.o do."
Powell said he told the senator
It had been ''Inappropriate" for
him to pus along the rumors to
the Sun-Times and that he had
not intended to see inaccurate in·
formation find its way into print.
Powell said that Percy, who
waa reached at about the Ume
the Senate Government Affairs
Committee was resuming hear-
ings of the Lance matter, "very
gracious ly accepted" his ex·
pression or regret.
Powell s aid he placed a
telephone call Tuesday momtn1
to Loye Miller, Washincton
bureau chief of the Sun-Thpes,
with allegations about Percy'lhat
he said he I.Old Miller he wanted
to "pu a along just between me and you."
President Carter's chief
spokesman said he told Miller he
could not vouch for the accuracy
10 ( the rumors. However , he said
one of two sources he had for
them chumed to have first-hand
knowledge that Percy had reg-
ularly flown on aircraft owned
by Bell & Howell Co., which he
formerly headed , in recent
years.
In addition, Powell told Miller
he h~ard reporta that Percy used
airplanes. meeting rooms,
security guards a nd other
facilities of the First National
Bank of Chicago during bis 1972
campaign, and did not fully reim ·
burse the bank.
Percy responded that there
was "absolutely no truth" to any
of the rumor s. In addition, the
senator eaid that so far as he
knew, any expenses borne by the
Chicago bank h ad been rei m-
bursed in fuU .
Aft.er the Powell-Miller con-
versation had become a subject
of controversy, the press
secretary said he had simply re-
layed material "asking for them
to check it out and I assumed it
walti confidential."
The Sun·Times f.Ublished an
account or Powell s maneuver
that began by labelling it "an ap.
parent guerrilla offensive aimed
a t discredltinf on e of ... Lance'sdetractors.'
Powell reported that hours
after he talked to Miller,. hE' re-
ceived a phone call from Sun-
Times reporter Lisa Myers, who,
in his words, asked as her first
question "whether I thought 1et-
lin1i Percy could save Bert
Lance."
Powell said he told her she had
misunderstood hla intentions.
* * * E',.._Pa,,eAl
LANCE •••
(.
r ..... rageAJ
EXECUTE. •
Meanwhile, Tobtu Slmon, a
noted civil riahts attorney from
Miami, planned to rue an addl·
Uonal rrlotion in the U. S. J>lsirict
Court al JackJonvllle today •eek·
1ng a st~ of execution by attack·
in1 the r:1orida death penalty as
racially dlscrtminatory.
The National Association for
the Advancement of Colored Peo·
fie in Now York also wert work·
n1 on tbe appeal brief.
Spinkelllftk 11 white. .
Graham l11 arguing that
persons who kill whites &et the
death penwly but those who kill
blacks do not. He' said the 90 men
and one woman under de ath sen-
tence in Florida were convicted
of killlna 111 vlcUm1, 108 of whom
werewtilte.
Spinkelllnk's mother, Lois,
who lives in Buena Park said she
plans to leave today for Florida
with her daughter and son-in-law
to visit her son in prison before
his scheduled excutlon. She ls re·
covering from surgery to remove.
a blood clot near her lun11.
Ir the execution goes ahead as
planned. it will be only the
1econd iD the United Stales since
July 2, 1976 when the U.S."
Supreme Court upheld the death
penalties of three s tales, includ-
inC Florida.
In January, Gary Gilmore
became the first convict to be ex-
ecuted when he died before a fir-
ing squid in Utah.
Splnkellink, who was serving a
prison sentence for a 1968 Orange
County armed robbery convic-
tion, escaped from a mirumum
s ecurity prison farm in Big Sur in
1972. •
He reporte dly pic ked up
Szymankiewicz, who was
hitchhikinC in the Midwest, and
the pair made their way to
Tallahassee.
Admittln1 he shot the older
man, Splnkellink claimed the
klllln1 waa in self defense after
Szymankiewlcz forced him lo
have homose xual r e lations,
made him play Russian roulette
and stole money from him.
After the murder , Spinkellink
returned to Orange County where
he was arreated in Buena Park
on Feb. 10, 1'73 on two additional
armed robbery counts. He was ex·
tradited to Florida to face the
murder char1es be was later con-
victed of.
"I haven't 1ive n up ,"
Spinkellink aald in a recent in·
terview. "I don't think of the
chair -I'm not afraid of death."
His mother said Tuesday that
her son, who has a police record
dating to his early teens, was the
"fall guy" for bis friend.a on
m anv occulons.
"He's been in trouble since he
was 13," she Hi!J. "But a lot of it
waa because be took the rap for
his friends."
-
SEX SYMBOLS MARILYN ANO FARRAH
The Acting Ability Is Irrelevant
What Acting?
Farrah, Marilyn Compared
STEVENSON, Waah. (AP> The question of Farrah
Fawcett-MaJon' aclln1 abtuty la irrelevant to her fans, says the·
onetime pre11 a1ent of the 19*' "-'tlmate ~ex Coddesa, Marilyn
Monroe.
"When I handled Marilyn, in her happy days. she was ex-
traordinary," 1aid Roy Craft, recalllna hu~ five years, 1952-1957,
with the actreas.
I
"THE DIFFERENCE IS, PERHAPS. that Fawcett-Majors
la more ol a pertonallty. But an extraordinary personality.··
Craft, edit.or emeritus of the weekly Skemanls County
.. Pioneer who 11y1 be find.a Mtsa Fawcett· Majors "delightful,"
sald there ia a almple rule in show business: Hustle what you
have.
.. IF YOU ARE TALKJNG ABOUT popularity, marketabahty,
the acting lSn't important. Any fine dramatic actress will play the
role to which she's assigned," he said.
"But when you get a personality, l think it's a mistake to
have her play anythana but herself •• ,The thing is, when
someone turns to Farrah Fawcett·MaJorsonTV, they want Farrah
Fawcett-Majors. The question of her acting ability is beside the
point.''
Stokowski Rites Planned
LONDON (AP) -Leopold
Stokowski,..s family was reported
planning a small, private funeral .
for the fe1endary conductor and
recording pioneer who molded
the Philadelphia Orchestra lnto
one of the world's greatest and
helped shape America's musical
tastes in the first h alf of the cen·
tury.
Stokowaki died an his sleep
Tuesday at bis home in Nether
Wallop, a vlllaie in Hampshire.
His agent in Brita.in, Marty
Wargo, said the BS-year-old con·
duct.or "just slipped away" after·
a career of more than 70 years
and '1,000 performances.
Musicians and music critics
paid tribute to one of the cen
tury'a most famous musicians.
Budget Approved
WASlllNGTON CAP) -Social
Security and welfare proarams
will consume the largest share of
a $(:s8.3 billion 1978 budget that
haa been approved by House and •
Senate conferees. The budget in·
eludes a $61.3 billion deficit, the
second largest in the country's
history.
Scene Stealer.
\
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5-1•1 There.,. room ICCent• and thor. aro room ceents.
Htre'a one tfWlt doea everything, Adda contrast, &eta the
moods. brln0t r1eftnet8 to any pnrt of your home. An en-
~h4ntlng Et Cettre bookcase with lntorlor ltgtlf Ing, ftd ..
• juateble glen stt•tvos and gilt finish back panel. 68" Wfdt
by 79~ .. hlgl'I bY ~,.,deep. •
--..
Orange Coas t
ED ITION
-------
I
Today' Clo l•g
N.Y. Stoe
VOL. 70, NO. 2S7, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1_., 1977 C TEN CENTS
Powell 'Regrets' Attack o~ Percy
WASHINGTON (AP> -White
House press secretary Jody
Powell telephoned a personal
apo!C)ly today to Sen Charles H.
Percy (R-111. ), for spreading
rumors about one ot budget cbier
Bert Lance's principal critics.
Powell called the Washinglol\
bureau or the Chicago Sun· Times
Tuesday and passed alone
rumors -hoUy denied by Percy
-that the senator used Bell and
Howell corporate aircraft and
facilille~ of a Chicago bank dur-
ing his 1972 re-election cam-
paign.
Arter the Sun·Time~ disclosed
Powell's call. a storm of con-
troversy erupted here with the
press sec retary initially
acknowledging he made a
.. dumb mistake."
Later, Powell said:
"I called Sen. Percy and told
him I regretted the situation very
much." Percy said a note was handed
to him at about 10 :20 a.m. saying
that the press secretary called
and he immediately left the hear·
ing room and returned the call.
lie said he told Powell, "You
have expressed your regret and I
accept that."
But Percy said Powell did not
tell him expressly that he had
Senior Site Okayed
Mesa Project Set for Park and Center
By MJCllAEL PASKEVICH
OflNO•llr ~lle4Slatt
Costa Mesa now has a site for a
75-unlt, federally bubsidized
housing project ror senior
citizens.
Planning comm1sMonerl> ap·
proved the city Redevelopment
Agency's request Monday to con-
struct the $1.9 million project at
the southeast corner or P ark
A venue and Center Street.
The decision will go back to the
Redevelopment Agency wher<:: it
is expected to be formalized on
Sept. 21
The ~1te. located near the city'~
i.o-c·alled S--er Block area in
downtown Costa Mesa, already
ha s been approved by the
De partment or Hous ing and
Urban Dcvelopmen{ CHUO).
City omcials are currently
negotiating with property owners
to purchase the 64,000-square·
foot parcel. valued at $483,000.
~ng Fr ... Flood
Robert Wi ggins ca rri ~s his cat "Murray " and his
favorite pair of boots to high ground from his half·
submerged trailer home in Kansas City on Tuesday. For
story on flood dc.imape, see Pa~e A4 .
Famed Researcher,
Dr. Weaver, Dies
By ANNE COOPER
Of -Dall• ~ ........ Dr. Harry Weaver or San 1
Clemente, internationally knqwn
for hls medical research, died
Monday at hls home, following a
three-month illness. He was 68.
'·Jonas Salk once told me that
science Is a very dem~dlng mis-
tress." said Dr. Weaver's widow,
Jane. "He was rliht. My
husband was still working when
he died."
Mrs. Weaver said Dr. Salk
phoned her Tuesday to offer
his condolences. He \old her a
chapter o( the autobiography he
Is writing will be devoted to her
husband.
Dr. Weaver moved to San
Clemente in 1964, after retiring
as vice president of the Schering
Corp., a New Jersey drug firm.
from 1946 to 1953 he was re-
search director for the National
Polio Foundation in New York
City, where be worked with Salk·
lo develop the now famous Salk
vaccine.
After the nationwide ticht
(See DOCl'Oll. Pase .U>
The three·story project would
displace six homes, a church and
one business.
"We arc hopeful th1&t HUD
proressmg (of approved funds)
and negotiations for the acquisi-
tion of the land will come together
early next spring," s aid architect
Robert Coles.
Coles and his wife Sinee have
been selected lo construct. own
and manage the downtown senior
(See SITE, Pace ~2)
long Beach
Pipeline
Supported
WA.SlUNGTON (AP> · The
Carter administration ~eversed
an earlier stand today and urged
Congress to authorize speedy
construction ot as many as two
pip4tlinef to trana~rl surplµa
Alaskan ttude oU from the W~t
Coast lo the inland United Stat.es.
Federal E1tergy Administrator
John F. O'Leary told a Senate
subcommittee that the overland
lines are needed because of an
anticipated glut or oil from the
newly opened Alaska oil pipeline
on the U.S. West Coast. "The ad·
ministration firmly believes
lhut the construction of at least
one, and perhaps two. or the pro·
posed west·tO·east pipeline
systems ls urgently needed to as·
sure an efficient means of de·
livering Alaskan crude oil to
those ares of the country which
need it," O'Leary said.
The two proposed routes are
the Sohlo project involving a
pipeline from Long Beach to
Midland. Texas; and th e
Northern Tier Pipeline proposal,
which would bring a pipeline
from Port Angeles. Wash., to
Clearbrook, Minn.
O'Leary said the administra-
tion would like to see the legisla-
tion broadened to include other
pos sible routes, including
several that might go through
part of Canada.
Currently, Alaskan oil is either
being se~ to West Coast re-
fineries or shipped via tankers
through the Panama Canal.
He testified on legislation by
Sen. John Melcher (D·Monl. >.
that wou mandate a federal de·
clsion • one of two proposed
plpelln routes by Feb. l , 1978.
0 said the administra-
tion b c legislation that would
cu~ through federal and state red
tape to eet the pipeline, or
pipelines, authorbed as qui$ly
al possible -a1 previous legiala-
tlon did tor Alaskroil and ye~lo
be built cu pipelines.
In tbe past, the administrat.loo
has opposed such an approach
tor awett•to·easton pipeline.
found the report to be incorrect
and "I think to clear the record
he should be asked to clarify
that."
At his daily news brtetlng
hours later, Powell again termed
his action "inappropriate,
regrettable and dumb."
Asked what President Carter
said to him about the matter, he
r eplied, "He seemed lo accept
my analysis as accurate."
Powell acknowledged he called
at least one other newspaper
, besides the Sun-Times lo talk
about Percy. He did not identify
the newspaper « oewS'papets lo·
volved. The press secretary said he
acted Tuesday without consult-
Ins in advance with Carter or any
member of the White House
staff. Huaid the information did
not come to him through any gov-
SPRINTER PATTON DURING OLYMPICS AT LONDON
He Can Still Come Out of the Starting Blocks
Thief No Match
For Ex-sprinter
Four teen1&g ed purscsnatchers who were prowling
Balboa Island must still be shaking their heads in disbelief
today, wondering who that middle-aged man is that did
them in.
THE THUGS HAD selected two couples in their sos,
who were walking on the island, as their victims. One
youngster sprinted past the husbands and grabbed Shirley
Patton's purse, throwing her to the ground as he sprinted
away.
That's when her husband Melvin went into action.
Already many yards behind the youth. Patton took oH in
pursuit. -
HE RAN THE YOUNG thug down and felled him with a
flying tackle within rour blocks.
The young thief had just been outsprinted by a fif\yish
Melvin "Pell Mel" Patton, who in the 1940S was famed in
track as "The World 's Fastest Human."
Patton was a USC track star from 1946 to 1949 and a tri-
ple medal winner in the 1948 Olympics at London. He set
world records In the 100 and 220 yard dashes.
PELL MEL PROVED on Balboa Island that he can still
s print some when necessity demands.
The young suspect wus released to his parents. but will
face further action in Juvenile Hall.
'Flash Roll' G(,ne
In Narco Arr.est ··
weed. comprlSed of the nowering
tops of~female plant.
"Th~ was really tood mari-J u ana, •• Drake sald. When
broken down and sold on the
street.s.lt is worth about $12S,Ooo,
he Hid.
"When you think abo"t u, "e
really eot our money 'a worth.·•
heaald,
ernment agencies. However, he
acknowledeed his sources were
government employes, who. he
sald, picked up the rumors out-
side the course of thejr official
busine6S. He would not identify
them. Percy and olficiala ot Bell and
Howell noted that the company
does not even have an airplane.
Sen. John Heinz Ill <R-Pa.).
(See POWELL, Page~)
* * * InnuenJo
Assailed
By Lance
WASHI NGTON CAP ) -
Budget Director Bert Lance
declared today he has been bar·
raged unfairly with innuendo and
hearsay and "we're in saci shape
In this country" if people believe
his effectiveness has been c~,,.
pled as a result.
Lance lashed out at the news
media when reporters ques·
tioned him as he emerged thls
morning from his GeorgeloW'n
home. Again, he denied any in-
tention lo resign.
Said Lance: "If you can take
allegations and innuendoes and
hearsay and everything else, the
words of a convicted felon, and
all these other things, and put
them in the paper and show them
on television and then say
that's a fact. .
"And then, without having a
chance lo refute that and have
my day in court, and be raced
with the charae that because of
that my effectiveness bas been
datna&ed and crippled, then
were we're in sad shape in thla
country.''
Lance will have his day Thurs·
day, 'fhen he will appear before
the Senate Governmental Opera-
Uons Commi4ee.
Lance's referral lo the "words
of a convicted felon" seemingly
applied lo a visit by Senate in-
vestigators lo a man Imprisoned
in Athlnta for embezzlement at
one of Lance's former banks.
T h e embezzler, Billy
Campbell, reportedly tried lo im-
plicate Lance in his activities,
but hls story was contradicted by
Campbell's former attorney and
has been given no apparent
credence. The senators were bearing
testimony today Crom officials or
the Justice Department and the
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency about an investigaUon
of overcitafls by the Calhoun
First National Bank of Calhoun,
Ga .. to Lance's 197.i
gubernatorial campaign com-
mittee at a time when Lance was
chairman of the board of the
bank.
The case was closed late Jast
year by John W. Stokes, then the
U.S. attorney In Atlanta, without
pr,osecuUon.
Glenna L. Stone, former chief or Ute fraud section in the U.S. at-
torney's office, testified that
Stokes told her after closing the
case "that he should call 'Jimmy
and Bert• and tell them whal he
had done ... She took lhls u a ref·
erence to then President~lect
Jimmy Carter and \o Lance.
<...
._,,_ __ ,.....
2 DAil Y PILOT c W9dnH d•y S•el•mber 14 1977
·Ex-countian. Fights
\
eatll
Florida Attorneys File Execution Ap~al,s
~~ ' TAU.Al&ASSl-:Jt:. ••ta CAI'> ! A\~1• 'Tor fol'm r Onna•
"--County 1H14JtnL John A.
• Splnkdllnk, who'S"' HttuUon hu
~ n sch ldulcd for Monday. bavo
openc>d a two front attack to keep
thtl-r client Crom tbt eleet.rlc
chair.
, SDinkelUnk. 28, fam1~ d ath •t
8 JC) a m. Monday alter Circuit
Judat John Rudd of Tallahassee
refused to delMY what would be
the~~ execution in the coun·
try 1\nce the U.S. Supremt Court
uptield capU&J punl1bment lut.
year. • tus attorney, Andrew Gr~ham,
Tuclday flied' an appeal•with the
Floridll Slfit~ Supreme Court lm-m~diawly alter UM! circuit J'"11e
rl'fuaed to atay tht execution or-
rle r 1l1ned Monday by Gov
Reubln Askew. Graham said the appeal 1s
based on Spink.ellink's 1973
murder trial in which be was con·
vlcted and condemned for
the ~shooting death or Joseph
Siyman.kiewlcz, (3.
The attorney claims the con·
viction and death sentence are
unconstitutional because pro-
specllv~ Jurors opposed to cap.
ltal puniShmenl were not seated
to bear the case.
Meanwhile, Tobias Slrnon, a
noted civil rights attorney from
Miami, planned to file an addi-
tional motion in the U. S. District
Court lt Jecksonvllle today seek·
ing a slay of execution by atlack-
tn1 the Florida death penally as
racially discriminatory.
Tbe National Association for
the Advancement of Colored Peo-rle in New York also were work-n g on tb• appeal brier.
Spinkelllhk' la white.
Reef Gains Support
Graham ls arguing that persons who kill whites get the
death penalty but those who kill
blacks do not. He said the 90 men
and one woman under death sen-
tence ln Florida were convicted of killine 111 victims, 108 or whom
were white.
Splnkellink's mother, Lois,
who lives ln Buena Park said she
plans to leave today for Florida
with her daughter and son-in-law
to visit her son In prison ~fore
his scheduled excutlon. She ls re·
(•overing from surgery to remove
a blood clot near her lungs.
SEX SYMBOLS MARILYN AND FARRAH
The Acting Abutty la Irrelevant
-~-.........
Supervisors Vote to Preserve F os8ils What Acting?
A 17-mlllion-year-old fossil reef
in the Laguna Hills described as
"perhaps the greatest accumula·
lion of fossils anywhere in the
world" ~not likely to fall victim
to a developer's bul1dozer.
That conclusion was arrived at
Tuesday by the Orange County
Board of Supervisors.
The board voted to "be
sensitive to the archeologlcal
and paleontoloeical value or the
fossil reef" adjacent to Moulton
Parkway between El Toro and
La Paz Roads.
Supervisors also voled to
direct the county Environmental
Management Agency "to in-
Emblem 'War'
Cyclists Battle Over Patch
SAN DIEGO IAP> The Hells Angels and
Mongols motorcycle clubs are reported warring over
emblems on their leather jackets ..
A member of the Mongols saiq the dispute centers
over use of a patch worn by Mongols which'narries the
loc:at!o.r:i of the clu.Q s:hapter as "Southern California."
_ 1 he Hells Angels. he s aid Tuesday, wear a
s imilar patch with the word. "California ... Callfornia
s ignifies a st.atcwide club a nd the Angels feel they
alone arc cnt1tlcd lei say that. t he unidentified Moniol
member said.
J\lthoui::h the Mongols h<.1 ve refused to remove the
1wtchcs, he s a id , authorities declined to link the dis·
putc to the unsol vecl killing last week oft wo San Diego
I curlers of the Mongols organization.
BB-built Rocket
Blows Up in Air
Divers began probing seas off
Cape Canaveral, Fla., today for
pieces or a Delta rocket built in
Hµntiogton Beach and blown up
when it apparently fatled 54
uconds after hftort Tuesday
night.
The $42 million aerial ex·
ploslon visible for miles over the
southeastern U.S. also claimed
an experimental communica-
tions satellite built by the Euro·
pean Space Agency. .,,.
Spokes men for McDonnell
Douglas Astronautics Company
in Huntington Beach said today
their $17 million Della rocket was
insured, but the ESA satellile
was not.
'The $25 million Orbital Test
Satellit~ .. !!Y!l~.,in a cooperative ef.
fort b("lO E'._u~an nations was
blown up when a U.S. Air Force
safety officer made the judemeot
in a split second and pressed the
destruct button. ·
A remote control television
camera aboard the space vehicle
had flashed back a picture show-
ing fire emitting from one end of
an engine Inside the Delta rocket
right alter liftoff, officials said.
The rocket was blown up at
that point to prevent any possible
accident that mieht affect in-
habited areas.
_Control Sought
WASHINGTON (AP>
Groups representing postal
employes, saying manatement
of the mail system is deterlorat·
ine each year, are uldq Prell·
dent Carter to seek treater COO·
trot over the Postal Service.
Of'ANOI COAfT c
DAILY PILOT
"All we know at this point is
what NASA and the Goddard
Space Flight Center are releas-
ing," McDonnell -Douglas
Astronautics Company Director
of External Relatlona Walt
Cleveland said today.
Spokesmen at the Greenbelt,
Md., tracking center said further
information would be forthcom·
ing after recovery or major
pieces of the Delta wreckage
from 65-foot-deep seas.
,,.... Pflflf! AJ
·POWELL ••• •
sa id the Powell episode smacked
of White House "dirty tricks"
aimed at "stifling fact find.Ing
and serious lnqulry" lnto Lance's
affairs.
Sen. Abraham A. Ribicoff CD-
Conn.). chairman of the panel
conductine the Lance probe,
called Powell's actions "a stupid
thing to do."
Powell said be told the senator
it had been "inappropriate" for
him to pass along the rum01'8 to
the Sun-Times and that he had
not intended to see inaccurate in·
formation fmd its way into print.
Powell said that Percy, who
was reached at about the Ume
the Senate Government Affairs
Committee was resuming bear·
ings of the Lance matter, "very
graciously accepted" his ex·
presslon of regret.
Powell said be placed a
telephone call Tuesday mornlq
to Loye Miller, Wa1bln1ton
bureau chief of tbe Sun·Ttmes,
with allegations about Percy that
he 1,.td he told Miller ht wanted
to .. &>ass aloai Juat between me
and you."
President Carter'• cblef
spokesman said be told Miller be
could not vouch for tbe accW'&eY
of tbe namon. However, be Nld
one ol two sources he bid for
them claimed to bave fir"R·hand
knowledie tbat Percy heel rea-
ularb' IJowft on alrcnft OWned
. by Bell Ir Howell Co., wblcb be
formerly headed, ln recent ,. . .,..
tn ~ Ponll to1d MWer
be bMi'd l"ffOda illtt Pwe1 med
alrpJaDH, meeAI ro0m1, aecurlt7.~,•u•r lad o~.r f~ of>tbe Naa.aJ
·-0( CldttaO .... talliJta ~-.---IUQrribia· ........ ....-.: f
l • C;UL...!o-4'•~~~
vestigatc the preser vation of the
most significant portions" or the
six-square mile reer.
Those board actions are not ex -
p.ected to deter Aliso Viejo Com-
pany from submlttinf a develop·
ment plan for the ree area.
However, the board's position
is expected to be reflected in
whatever development plans are
finally approved for the area.
According to a report reviewed
by supervisors Tuesday. the
prized fossil reef "consists of 95
percent invertebrate fossils with
marine m ammal bones as well
as shark teeth and fish bones."
"Jn addition to the paleon-
tologlcal importance of the reef.
the area also contains important
archeology sites." the report
said. -
From Page AJ
HOME •••
Castellaw suggested returning
the reception center to its former
status. a detention home for
juveniles serving fixed terms for
criminal offenses.
·'That would put us back to
where we were a year ago,"
Supervisor Thomas Riley said as
Castellaw outlined probation's
plan. Supervisors ordered county
officials to return next week with
a proposal to remedy the costly
problem.
Charged with the res ponsibili·
ty of finding a solution were
David O'Dell, county human
~ervices agency director, and
County Administrative Orrtcer
Robert Thomas.
It was las t Jan. 1 'that
McMiilan was converted to an
unlocked reception center for
status offenders.
That conversion was dictated
by state laws that said status of-
fenders can no longer be held in
juvenile halls with youngsters in-
volved in criminal activities.
Those same laws said such re·
ception centers or other homes
devoted to the temporary hous-
ing or status offenders must re-
main unlocked, meaning that
juveniles sent there were free to
leave any time they chose to.
H the execution goes ahead as
planned , it will be only the
second in the United Slates since
July 2, 1976 when the U.S.
Supreme Court upheld the death
penalties of three states, includ-
ing Florida.
ln January, Gary Gilmore
became the first convict to be ex-
ecuted when be died before a rir-
ing squad ln Utah.
Spinkellink. who was serving a
prison sentence for a 1968 Orange
County armed robbery convic-
tion. escaped from a minimum
security prison farm In Big Sur in
1972.
He r epo rtedly picke d up
Szymanklewlcz. who was
hitchhiking In the Midwest , 'and
the pair m a de their way to
Tallahassee.
UC President
Favors Stock
BERKELEY <A P ) David
Saxon , the University of
California's president, doesn't
want UC to get rid of its ~5
million worth or stock ln firms
doing bus iness in white·
supremacist South Africa.
Saxon proposes an option: UC
should form an advisory commit-
tee, including public members,
that would suggest "social
responsibility" positions in stock
investments and proxy votes.
The issue will be before the UC
regents Thursday and Friday in
Los Angeles when Lt. Gov.
Mervyn Dymally proposes sale
within two years or UC's holdings
in firms with South African
operations.
Farrah, Marilyn Compared .
STEVENSON, Wash. <AP) -The question of Farrah
Fawcett-Major&• acting ability ls irrelevant to her fans, says thet
onetime press agent or the 1950s' ultimate sex goddess, Marilyn
Monroe.
"When I handled Marilyn, in her happy days, she was ex·
traordinary," said Roy Craft, recalling his five years, 1952-1957,
with the actress.
"THE DIFFERENCE IS, PERHAPS, that Fawcett-Majors
is more of a personality. But an extraordinary personality."
Craft. editor •emeritus or the weekly Skamanis County
Pioneer who says he finds Miss Fawcett-Majors "delightful,"
said there is a simple rule in show business: HusUe what you
have.
''IF YOU ARE TALKING ABOUT popularity, martcktability,
the acting isn't important. Any fine dramatic actress will play the
role to"wbicb she ·s assigned," he said.
\ ·:.;:_But when 'you 'gef" a personality, 1 think it's·a mistake to
; fla'!'e· her. play anything but_ hersetr .•• The ~ ls, when
someone turns to Farrah Fawcett-Majon on TV, they want Farrah
~ 'F~~cett-Majors. 1'he question or her acUngrablllt.y ls beside the
poml. .. _ ..;:..~,_. ' ~---.
E'ro•r,..Al
DOCTOR SUCCUMBS. • •
against polio, Dr. Weaver was
appointed vice president or re-
search for the American Cancer
Sociely. In 1961, he was hired by
the'Schering firm.
Dr. Weaver went back to work
after a year's retirement, ac-.
cepting a position as research
director for the National Multiple
Sclerosis Society.
"I never realized bow famous
he was, or in what esteem be was
held, until he died," Mrs. Weaver
said. "He died late Monday, and
on Tuesday I received telegrams
and phone calls from all over the
world.
"l bad a call from Amsterdam
to let me know that a seminar at
a neurological conference there
was to be held in my hUsband's
name.
"Another caller told me the
world ii a better place for Harry
Weaver's having lived In It. I feel
that. of course, but I didn't lcnow
so many other people felt tt. too.••
Mrs. Weaver said one of the
many honors conferred on ber • '
husband was an appointment by
former President Nixon in 1973 to
a presidential commission to
study multiple sclerosis.
Scene Stealer.
Whe n McMillan In early
January was hit with a rash of
runaways, Judge Vincent issued
an order saying that those who ~
run away an defiance of a court
order sending them to McMillan
would thereafter be confined al
Orange County Juvenile Hall.
Last May, an appellate court
said Judge Vincent's order
violated new juvenile justice
laws that said noncriminal
juvenile offenders cannot be held
in locked facilities with criminal
youthful offenders.
F,....PageAJ
SITE .••
citizen housing project.
The Coles will be granted a
partial subsidy from the city's
Housing and Community
Development Acency, witb HUD
rentlnl the couple the land for $1 a year.
Tberef ore, the Coles will be UD·
der contract to offer tbe one.
bedroom bou1ln1 Obits at the
Jowett possible monthly ratee.
"No one wU1 pay more than 2S
percent ol their monthly income,
tnclud.lng utilities," said Colea.
"For many older people, this
will mean the difterence between
a beUer quality of llle or a
meater niltence, ••he added.
)
Drexel's oriental adaptation
In antique bone with chlnolserie decoration
Is destined to play a leading rote
in your decorating story.
Sale! There ere roomaccents and thore are room ec:c:.nts.
Here's one _.._ does everything. Adda contrast. sets the
moods. brings richness to any part of vour home. M eo-
chanting Et Cetera bookcase with lnterlor lighting ao-
Justable glass shelves and gilt fil'llSh baok panel, 66'' Wtde bJ 78Yl .. high by , ... deep.
I
Wednetday, September 14, 1977 DAILY PILOT A3
_Tax ~elief W~~-Pane~'s ~upport
Presley
Imitator
A Hit
SEA'M'L.E <AP I It s taken
rive years, but J ohnny Rusk 's
n1&hl club act has fi nally cau&ht
on
Rusk d~ •n unabai.hed 1m1ta·
ta on or El vis Pre1>ley. smgmg
Presle>-'s songs, us ing i;carves lo
wipe the sweat off his forehead,
and passmg them out to women
in the audience -t.h e whole bat
·'Some people a re fortunate
enough to get a hat record or a
Broadway s how. Obv1oui.ly, I'd
like to do Johnny Rusk on stage,"
he said. "But as I said, every-
body is looking for a way to get
from A lo Zin this business. I do
Elvis."
Rusk says he is not trying to
c ash in on Presley's death, since
he began the nightclub act fi ve
years ago. His albums or Presley
songs, which comes out this
week, was j ust a coincidence, he
S i:I VS
:.That was timely, or untimely,
you might s ay. We recorded it
four months ago I 'm s ure it 'II be
very popular "
··w e have some people from
New York City interested an put-
t m g togethe r some: sort or
Broadway-type shows People
ure calling about having their
i.ongs recorded ..
Fullerton
Woman Killed
In Hit-run
A La Habra girl was killed
Tuesday in Fullerton when the
s mall sporL'I car she was driving
was sideswiped by a pi ckup truck
and knocked into the path of on·
coming traffic T he pickup
driver ned.
Teresa Witter, 19, of I,a Habra.
was identif1«1 m a coroner's re·
Port as the v1ct1m
Police a re seeking the pickup
truck driver whose purported un·
safe lane change 1gn1ted the five·
vehkle collision that cost Mi ss
Witter her life
Witnesses told poli ce the
pickup dnver stopped his truck
about 200 yards from the mulU-
car wreckage, walked back to
the del>trucll vc scene and then
ran off on foot
Pol1 c•c s:i1 d t he reg1i.t ered
owner o' thl' pickup left in the
road way rl'ported selling the
truck two weC'ks a~o and they ere
checking today to identify the
new own er
It is expected that whoever was
at the wheel of the pi ckup truck
when it sideswiped the victim's
lightweii;:ht auto wall eventually
be chaq.wd with felony hit and
run driving.
•
STILL ENJOYS A GOOD LAUGH
Sunaet Beach'• Mlaa Edne Snowden
Happy at 100
'Miss Edna' Still Active
Can a farm girl born in Vermont, Ill., just down the road
from Rushville, find happiness in Sunset Beach. Calif., en-
joying the s urf and s un?
Surely can, is what Miss Edna Snowden will declare to
anyone who as ks.
Especially after spending~ years -more than half her
lifetime -at the same address on Sixth Street, In a llltle
cottage a st.one's throw from the sea.
Miss Edna will be 100 years old Saturday and is holding
open house at her corner home at 17065 Sixth St .. for fellow
members of the Sunset Beach Women's Club and Las
Damas Club
"I HOPE THERE WON'T be too much fu ss .... " says
the diminutive lady who is a familiar s ight on her daily
strolls in Sunset Beach ~
Miss Edna loves life and she loves people.
She also loves the Los An~eles Dodgers and the Good
Lord, but not necessarily m that baltin~ order.
"I take each day as It comes, but I dido 't count on being
100 years old," says Mi ss Edna, a 19~ arrival in Sunset
Beach.
STILL SPRY. SHE EN JO VS seaside life in her cottage.
where during the baseball season one can bear the Dodgers
on the radio.
Miss Edna doesn't neglect other matters for baseball.
She studies her Bible along with Dr. Vernon McGee over the
radio, too.
Visit with her for awhile and she'll tell you that the year
she was born. 1877, Rutherford 8 Hayes was inaugurated
<tS the 19th U .S Pres ident <1nd Thomas Alva Edison patent-
ed the phonograph
SHE'LL ALSO R EGALE you with talet. of Uncle Finley,
Aunt Hattie, Uncle LeRoy the Dentist, Cousin EHie and Un-
cle Job, all of whom worked, lived and laughed bard.
b'ecause that's the way 1t was in those days.
She'll sit in the little house and tell how many times a
thundering, angry sea swirled through the front door and
out the back' and how the 1933 Lon& Beach earthquake
knocked the blamed place orr its foundation
But the house where she's hved for 52 years Is still
there, and so is Miss Edna Snowden
. Sailors Facing Pot Rap
HONQLULU I AP> -Thirty-
t wo crewmen of a U.S. Navy
Polaris subm arme were charged
with possession or marijuana in a
previously undisclosed Incident
last month, Navy officials say.
It was not immediately clear
whether the crewmen Involved
were aboard the submarine al
the time or at a shore facility.
Navy spokesmen said Tuesday
the men were assigned to the
ballistic missile submarine Sam
Houston , which is based at
Guam.
Voting
Slated
Thursday
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
$4.48-blllion tax relief blll -
promising annual rebate checks
for 6.8 million Californians-was
approved by a special legislative
committee early today.
The tax plan, whJch is $280
million smaller than a blll reject-
ed 12 days ago by the slate
Senate, is slated for final votes In
the Senate and Assembly on
Thursday, the last day of the 1977
session o r the Californi a
Legislature.
The bill that emerged from 11
hours of hearings Tuesday and
early today follows the general
outline of the plan which the
Senate rejected on a 16-23 vote
Sept.12.
It offers annual rebates
averaging $225 to $250 to 4.2
million homeowners and $118 to
2.6 million renters, plus ellmina·
lion or the business inventory
tax.
But the marathon hearings or
the six-man committee which
rewrote the bill produced rel·
tively minor changes which
backers s ay give it better than
even chances of passage.
One change puts an extra $646
milJlon in the pot over the next
five years for homeowners in the
$15,000 to $30,000 range -enough
to boost annual rebates by about
$35 each.
Another would boos t the bank
<1nd corporation tax -the maJor
California tax on business -
from a 9 cent percent rate to 101/•
percent. Earlier drafts or the
pl an raised the tax to 10 percent.
T hat tax increase is intended to
offset the prOpQSed elimination of
the business inventory tax, a
$500-million-a -year tax on busl·
ness.
"I think the changes are good.
I think the bill has a fighting
chance," said Sen . John
Holmdahl <D·Cas tro Valley>.
who chaired t h e committee
which rewrote the tax bill
The bill needs two.thirds ma-
jorities in both houses 27 votes.
in the Senate and 54 in the As-
se'11bly.
The earlier bill, which got only
16 Senate votes, passed the As-
sembly on a 57·18 vote. As·
semblymen Gordon Duffy of
Hanford, who represented As·
sembly Republica.hs on the tax
committee, said he stall opposes
the plan, but expects a two·thlrds
majority of the Assembly wall
pass the bill. leaving the final de·
cision In the Senate's hands.
In the Senate, w h ere
Democrats are one vote short or
the needed majority, GOP floor
leader George Deukmejlan of
Long Beach, said the revised bill
won't win Republican support.
"At the end of five years ,
you're going to end up with a
$1 .2-billion derlcit instead of a
Sl .S·blllion deficit,·· Deukmejlan
said of the amendments.
APW~
EXPLAINS DETAILS OF PROPERTY TAX REFORM
Sen. John Holmdahl Surrounded by Lobbyl1t1
Faees Life Term
County Teen Guilty
Of Holdup Murder
A 19-year-old youth showed no
e motion Tues day when an
Orange County JUTY found him
guilty or first degree murder in
connection with the s hotgun
death of a Santa Ana market
owner during a m eat locker
shootout last March.
In addition t o declaring
Michael Ramon Bradley guilty of
murder, the jury foun<t h im guil-
ty of five coupts of attempted
murder. two c<*ints or attempted
a rmed robbery and using a
firearm in the commission of a
crime.
Superior Court Judge Jerrold
Oliver will sentence Bradley
Sept. 29.
He was the first defendant in
Board Finds
Marine Guilty
In Assault
A black Marine. in whose
Camp Pendleton barracks build-
ing two crosses were burned Sun·
day ni&ht. is guilty or participat-
ing in an attack on white person·
nel last year. a court martial
board ruled Tuesday.
Cpl. Clarence Capers Jr. or
Edgewater Park, N.J., was
found guilty of six counts of as-
sault and one of conspiracy. The
court martial board now must set
his sentence.
lhe murder of How Yow Lau, 66,
to stand trial.
The market owner was one of
10 persons herded into a meat
locker at t.he Santa Ana Market,
1216 W. First St., Santa Ana, by
four youthful gunmen last March
2.
During Bradley's trial, sur-
vivors of the bloody shoot.out that
occurred in the locker said it was
Bradley who pulled the trigger or
a sawed-off shotgun he was car-
rying to touch off the bloody gun
duel that ended with Mrs. Lau's
death. •
Those witnesses said Bradley's
s hotgun failed to rlre but as a re-
s ult of his obvious attempt to
s hoot the hostages, other guns
were brought into play. •
One or those was fired by Mrs.
Lau's son as he attempted to pro-
tect the hostages. Ken Lali' sue-•
ceeded in wounding Bradley and
another bandit.
·But 1n the exchange of gun.fire,
Law was seriously woundecl and
his mother was m ortally
wounded.
Still to st.and trial in the ease
are Russel Capers, 19, Sammie
Dunn Jr .• 18, and Tyrone
Robinson, 16, all of Los Angeles.
Boots Made
For Walking
Dad Wanted Miracles
Capers was one of 14 blacks
ch arged last November with
raiding a barracks room of seven
whites in what the blacks have
Prote8 ter8 Booked testified was a mistaken belief a
Ku Klux Klan meeting was being
CHICAGO <AP > -Police ar-held.
ESCONDIDO (AP) -
The customer tried on boots
for 45 minutes before hJ!
round the ones he liked.
Then the st.ore clerk found a
pistol pointing at him when
be tried to ring up a sale.
"I'm leaving the store
with the boots," said the
six-foot-three gunman.
without paying. Karen Quinlan Book Detail• Family Ordeal rested 31 adults and young people Subs equent investigation
Tuesday after students walked showed none of the whites, six or
out of Bogun High School lo what whom had to be hospitalized, was He drove off Tuesday in a
camper truck, the boots sit·
Ungootheseatbesidehim.
' NEW YORK <APJ Even
after Kurt:n Anne Quinlan's faml·
ly won thc dramaUc courtfightto
pull the respirator plug, her
father was withdrawn behind a
"wall of fantasy." certain that
she would recover .
"I believed in miracles," said
Joseph Quinlan. in a new book
portraying lhc Quinlans' strug.
gle to deal with a person :JI ordeal
that captuH•d worldw1uc In·
terest
"Karen Anm· The Qulnlans
Tell Their Story" is a poignant
behind -thc -~ccncs look at the
QuinJan family as told to Phyllis
Battelle. It is to be released by
Doubleday and Company on
Sept.23.
Miss Battelle, the only
journalist to see Miss Quinlan,
visited her May 17, 1976.
"My reaction was not shock
but ~P pity - a reeling of 'Oh,
this popr child•,·• she writes.
Quinlan, an Irish Catholic, tells
how it would be nearly Uu'ee
months after Karen went lftto a
com a that he was able to accept
what he ,would come to believe
was God's will.
·•1 could hear people all around
me saying that Kal'en ml1ht
never recover , and I knew they
were wrong. l thought what they
were saying was obscene. 1
couldn't bear talking to them,
and I tried not to listen to them,"
he said.
they called a protest against the a KKK member, although the
Miss Quinlan lapsed into a busi.n& of black elementary stu-probe uncovered a 16-member
coma April 151 1975, after ta.kin& dents under Chkago's voluntary cell or t.he white racist organize·
a combfnaUon of alcohol and desecregation plan. lion.
tranquilizers. E ven though the ---------------------------------------New Jersey Supreme Court even-
tually 1ranted her right "to die 1 with dignity.'' the 23-year-old
woman remains comatose in a
nursing home.
Julia Quinlan tells how her
daughter tried to hold the family
together, how even a routine
family meal became nearly im·
possible. .
"I felt 1 was walking on ~ggs.
Or walking a U&htrope without a
balance pole," she said. "I didn't '
dare mlike a false step or we'd
fall apart."
She said that by the end of
June, 1975, everybody in the
family, lncludlnl her son, John,
and daU&hter. Mary Ellen, had
lost welchl.
· • ... John could never sit
through a whole meal because
something about Karen would ln-
evltablv come into the convena·
tlol\ . 1'.' . Juat the mention of her, and John would have to
leave the table .
.. But Ule wont was poor Joe.
He bad buUt up bia wall ot fan·
tu1, wbt.-. he was ablolut.iy
certain Kven would come out of
the cocna and l>e all J'\a)lt. J WU 10.trudtaHtJntd~e~
thlnl -I really dldn 't know what
wo11ld happen . He wa1
withdrawn and irritable. It wu
•• thouth he waa fl&hUn1 me a.nd ih• cbUU.n, ancf didn't eare
about ma,yoae except Kartn."
.. You',. looklnc I« a miracle,
:Joe. Ev.a If God did make a mli.el•~ Ud K.,. came out ol
th .. coma, IMr brain dam.,. 11
• IO atmllve Uait lb• would lpead
the Nit ol Mi' Ule ID an lDltttU· ~·· cme lc>e:&ar laid.
Gem
Talk
ByJ.C. IJL'MPllfUES
MYSTERIOUS JADE
The precious gift!
COIN
JEWEL:RY
IN 14 KARAT GOLD
PENDANT. Rope border design for elegant simplicity.
24" HAND MADE ROPE
NECK CHAIN . Wilh
spnng ring.
.,.__. ___ _
DAILY ~LOT
;i.::.11 Q -Flood Dantage -Set
~ 1,200 Homeless in Kansas City -··· Te• ........ ~ .,._ ..
OETTING TH& woao :
Huo&d LMven or San Clemente
bad a ~ day thll week when
be appeared belore tho coutaJ
commlalon up ln HunUniton
Beach. Not much went n1h{ for
him.
You ee, Mr. Leevora owns Ulla
blufftop home in the very nice
Cyprus Shores sector of San
Clemente. He wanted to build a
swlmmin1 pool and adjacent
ther~tJc pool for hla wire, who
bas suffered serloUJ hip prob-
lems.
Mrs. Leevers' physician fell
that treatment in the pools would
aid her recovery.
So Mr. Leevers appeared
before the coastal commluion
seeking a permit to build the
pools. He asserted that tests
show his blufftop land is stable
and he pleaded for his wife's
health.
BUT HE WAS TURNED down
an one of those frustrating 5 lo 5
tie votes on the coastal com-
mission where you need seven
yes ballots lo get approval.
Now when Mr . Leevers
pleaded that his wife's physician
had prescribed the pool treat-
ments for her post-operative re-
covery, the comment of Com-
m i ss i oner R J . Walsh was enlightening.
Commissioner Walsh, noting
he voled in favor or the pools
permit, told Leever, "Sir, if God
had prescribed it, there are some
on this commission who would
vote against you.''
, Now if some commissioners
realJy do feel that way, they cer-
tainly must believe they are the
highest authority.
You can almost see how Uus
might develop in another case,
with apologies to comic Bill
Cosby:
THE VERY OLD man stood on
the San Cle me nte blufftop,
watching the setting sun, when
suddenly a voice came out of the
heavens.
"Noah, this is the Lord. Can
you hear me?'' •
Startled, Noah stammered,
"Yes, Lord, I can." -
"Noah. J have a job for you. I
know this will be a surprise here
in a drought year but I'm really
going to make it rain around here.
You 're going to be in one awful
flood. -
"Now Noah, 1 want you to get
your three contractor sons down
here and their wives, gather
some gopher wood and build me
an ark. Make it 300 cubits long
and three stories tall."
"Wow, Lord, that's almost a
600·foot boat. I don't think I can
do that."
"Why not, No ah ?"
"Well, Lord, we're in an R·l
1.one around here. I don't think
the Coastal Commission will give
me a permit for boat building in
an R-1 z.one."
"Noah, you just tell them who
ordered it.
"They don 't impress very easi-
ly, Lord."
"WHEN YOU FINISH the ark.
Noah, 1 want you to gather two Of
every beast and fowl, male and
female, and put them on the
ark."
"Oh listen, Lord, I could never
get away with that. It would up-
set the ecology. The coastal com-
mission would never give me a
permit if there was even a hint of
messine with the ecology."
·'Now Noah, don't you fret.
Just remember when I get
through for 40 days and 40 nights,
the coastal commission will 1j who is really the Boss.''
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP>
The Rood waters r.ceded today u •wtft.lv u tbev ro1e. leavlna at
leut it dead, 1,200 bomel .. and
property damaae utlmated at *80
mllUoo. The fato of at least 15
portona 1t1U wa1 unknown.
Tho awful leaacy of 12 ioches or
rain in 24 how's waa devastation
in the expenatve Jhops ol the
city's Country Club Plaza,
tedioua cleanup alone Brush
Creek and the Blue River, and
.ravaeed farm lands to the north
andeut.
SOME F.UOUES bad to leave
their homes below Wlnnwood
Lake in a nortbem section until
crews that were frantically plac-
ing sandbaas saw the water re·
cede.
Six hundred residents were
evacuated from an apartment
house when leakln1 caaollne
from 300 submerged cars in a
basement garaae created a fire
hazard. And pumpinc crows
worked around the clock in two
public underground garages at
the Country Club Plaaa, fearing
they might find more dead in the
cars trapped there by the surging
waters.
THE DAMAGE, like the
metropolitan area, crossed state
borders and the governors of
Missouri and Ka ns as each
planned to ask for federal dis·
aster aid.
Still, because the shopping
area is so well known -its
Christmas lighting bas been de-
picted in dozens of maguines -
the flood is likely to become
known as the ''Country Club
Plaza Flood.''
The damage was awesome.
01'il Ser.,aats
Pre liminary eatlmatea In the
metropolltan area showed 65
businesses damaaed or
destroyed; 228 houses, 150 apart-
ments and 500 mobile homes suf·
fertng at leut some damaae.
''It's devastating," said Mis-
sourt Gov. Joseph Teasdale, a
Kansas City native, after a a~
hour tour ot the area. •·1 hope I
can get as much money as I ean
for the people who have been
hurt."
Gov. Robert F. Bennett of
Kansas pr~nounced the need
· critical after hia two-hour tour,
which lnchlded a shopping center
in suburban Mission where one
store alone estimated $:500,000 in
lost merchandise.
AT THE HEIGHT of the storm
Monday night, 2,600 bad to flee
their homes. The rain stopped by
the next midday and 1,400 were
able to return.
For the rest there were
shelters, like the Salvation Army
·center able to accommodate 300.
But most were able to move in
with friends and the center bad
only 35 overnight guests.
Damage to public property in
Kansas City alone was estimat-
ed at nearly $5.25 mllllon.
Despite the destruction, it was
nowhere near that wrought by
the season's other major flood -
in the Johnstown,. Pa., area.
There, the waters broke d&lllS
and swept aside houses and
trees. The toll was 75 dead and
damage ot $200 million.
In terms ot property damage,
the hardest hit area was the
Country Club Plaza, which
prides itself on being the coun-
try's oldest shopping center and
one of the prettiest.
Employes to Pay
Social Security?
W ASIDNGTON CAP> -More than six million federal, state and
local governmental employes could begin paying Into Social Securi-
ty under a blll passed by a House panel.
The change, if finally approved by Conaress and the President,
would make Social Security virtually a universal retirement plan
while providing a quick revenue boost of some $10 bllllon to the
financially pressed system.
Social Security already covers about 108 million Americans,
more than 90 percent of all employed people. The government
workers account for most of those left out.
•••• .. l•Jtwe 3 ._ Ille~
MEXICO CITY CAP> -A score or bombs exploded within a
three·bour period in three Mexican cities early today, causing
severe damage and injuring at least three persons, police said.
Several other bombs were deactivated.
... -----------The bombs exploded in ( J Mexico City; Guadalajara, IN SHORT g':x:~~~h·:!~~:~.city, and
.... _________ . --· --Officials said it was the
worst such occurrence in decades. Police ln Oaxaca sald a pamphlet
found in the center or town attributed the bombings to a terrorist group known as the "Union of the People."
'•
P81edi•ICI• 11.ee 0,,,,.Hd
BEIRUT. Lebanon <AP> -In a three.way split, Syrian-backed
and radical Marxist guerrillas challenged Yasir Arafat's Palettln·
ian movement today over the U.S. call for Palestinian representa-
tion in Arab-tsraeu MJCleaat peace talks.
The pro-Syrian Salqa group and Dr. George Habash's Popular
Front for the LlberaUon of Palestine contested Arafat's public state-
ment that the U.S. move constJtuted a "POSitlve step confirmln&,..an
objectivity" about the Palestine Llberatidn Organization.
a.1era Strllcn lle•lem.
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP> -Tbe Moslem world be1an a thrte·
day feast today with prayers to Allah .. to protect tho Arab world
against the menace of cholera,'• which bu stricken more than 2,800
persons In Jordan, Lebanon, Syria and Saudi Arabia this month.
Health officials urged care ln preparing the cookies and tarts on
which Moslems gorse themselves durtn1 Bairam, tho feast that
ends the month of daytime futtnc called Ramadan.
Street vendors were ordered to sell no sweets to children.
Five Tornadoes ·Sighted
~ Uproo~ Buildinsa UnrOo/ed
..
TRB PLAZA 8JT8 alon1 one sid• ol Jk'uab Cl'eek, normally a
trtckle dlvidinl the city out and
weat. Ttw concrete·llned c;reek
became a torrent after two six-
lnobnlna Monday.
Water coureed throu1h under-ground ,.,.ages and through the
stree.t.-.vel floors of some of the
flneet ljitores in the Midwest -10
feet deep in placea.
Fire Chief John H. Waas said
an UJlderirquod parkinc garage
was pumped out durin1 the night
and no bodies wore found in the
wrecked can ln the bottom level.
"We would not have been sur-
prised to find bodies," Waas
said.
He said other underground
earages wore being pumped out
today.
Among the storm victims was
a family of four, whose car was
swept off a street In suburban
Leawood, Kan.. into a rain
swollen creek. The bodies of
Manball Kleirust.ein, 40, and his
2-year-ol son were found in one
place: the noodwaters had car·
ried the bodies or his wife and
6-year old son four blocks
Carther. TbeJr bodies were found
hanging in a tree along the banks
of the creek.
Saccharin
Alert Urged
WASIUNGTON CAP>
The Carter administration
is pressing Congress to
s upport ]>lans t o place
cancer warnings on diet
foods, soft drinks and other
products containing aac-
cbarin.
Four administration of·
ficlals uried the Senate on
Tuesday to pass legislation
requiring the health warn·
ings on product labels and
in advertising.
Canadian studies have
s hown that sacch a rin,
widely used in diet foods
and diet sodas, causes
cancer in animals and 111ay
cause bladder cancer in
humans.
The administration ap·
parently is resorting to
health warnings in view of
indications that
lawmak~rs, una1'r pres-
s11re from many voters,
are unwilling to permit the
government to ban most
sales of saccharin.
.... ..
~ ..............
UNDERGROUND FUGITIVE SURRENDERS IN NEW YORK
Mark Rudd, Lett, Faces Charges From the 1990•
'Weather' Fugitive
Surrenders in NY
NEW YORK (AP> -Mark Rudd, a fugitive member of the
radical Weather Underground smce 1970, surrendered to authorities
today but refused to tell reporters where he had been ln biding.
Rudd, 30, walked to the Manhattan district attorney's office
a bout 9:20 a .m . He would not answer reporters' questions.
"He'll have his. say in court," said attorney Gerald Lefcourt,
who accompanied Rudd inside the building to an assistant dlatrict
attorney's office for the formal surrender.
RUDD, ~O FACES a variety of misdemeanor char1es stem-
ming from antiwar demonstrations in the 1960s and a student protest
at Columbia University in 1968, is the first major figui:e or the clan-
destine group to tum himself in this year .
Lefcourt said Rudd would be flown to Chicago on Thursday to
face Illinois charges.
Rudd led the student takeover at Columbia University In 1968,
and engaged in bloody street fighting with Chlcaao police a )'ear
later. He faces charges related lo both incidents.
IDS DECISION to surrender follows earlier reports that the
Weather Underground had split into factions and some members
wanted to "surface," abandoning the tactics of violence to concen-
trate on abov~·ground political activity.
ln Maplewood, N.J ., Rudd's father , Jacob, told a reporter
"Mark•s 30. Maybe he wants to join the establishment." '
Rudd is the best known or several Weather Underf(round mem·
bers who have turned themselves in this year. The FBI Sl)'l 14 Un-
derground members are still sought, lncludlng Bernadine Dohrn
and several other longtim e leaders of the group.
PHOEBE mRSCH and Robby Roth, who turned themselves in
six months ago, were sentenced Tuesday to two years on probation
and fined $1,000 for their roles in "Days of Rage:• the 199
Weatherman demonstration in Chicago. ,
You Can't
Tell The Players
~ Without A · Program
new1 now
Wodnesday, Septomber 14. 1977 s DAILY PILOT
Controversy Swirls Over Pt. Conception LNG
laolNT CONCEM'lOba lAJ• > Thluttnle, laolateid 1p1l-ol land
jJ ~ lnto lh«' P•dUc hu betn lar1ely bypuied durln1tho1rowth
of Calirorn1a from a far nu.na :,p.ruab colony Into a populaled. an
dlU'lri-11tate.
Dul , tbla arH hu been catapulted lnto tb• htadUnu by a
b n 1tat1I t.aJatu.rthupaaaedLbatbuapawnedacomplt1,ofteo bllleren~u·v nu1 ~nvlrunrncnldebatt .
TIU BILL "'OULO P&aMJT Hvtral uUUtlea to build a sax>
million Uqullled nalura1 au (LNO > termlnll at Cojo Ba.y in lhe lee
olU.polnt.
ll"• • aublUtute locallon, which would replace Hrller propoHls
to pu.t tbe plant ln Omard or Loi M&ote. H.arboc.
Ow\ one aide are ~a. induatry spok .. mtn and 1taLe and COW\ly
1>0Ullc1atu1 "ho HY encr1y-ahart Callfomla muat import aupvr-
ECOLOCY at ltut 1811 11 \ho atate la to ( J
cooled natural 1u by ship by
1tvold cutoffs of gu to homes
and buaineaaea.
ENVl•ONMENTAUSTS, FIGtn'ING the scheme throuah a
loose coalUJon called the Point Concept.ion PreaervaUon Commitlff,
say bulldJn1 the state's first LNG terminal here would ruin on• of
the Jut WU1poiled sections ol lhe Ca.Womia cout.
lt '1 a controveny with some local twist.a:
A d.lspute between Santa Barbara Cowlty and the state over
who wUJ make the uJUm ate decisions about sboreUne development.
-Intra-county rivalries ao bitter there's a 1ood chance voters
wm be uked next year if they want to carve a new county. Los
Padres, out ol the northwestern half of the present county.
l..OS ANGEL.ES
Del1Y"9! .... .,#rr~•
X MARKS SPOT OF LATEST PROPOSED LNG-PLANT
Pt. Conception lasue Alarms En~lronmentallata
Conception PresenaUon Comas.lttee, .US vocallY qalnat the LNG
plant.
MABKlNG, WHO SAYS IDS GROUP includes Sierra Club
leaders and several acore other or•anbatioos "bulcally oppo1ed to
this whole LNG tec:hnolol")'," explained:
..A couple of years from now, when this 'crisis~trumped up by
the aa.s companies disappean, there'• •oloa to be an LNG facility at
Point Conception. It'• plaMed u a mlle:\on& T·Pl•r, wlth roorn
enough for two 1,00G-foot supertanten and one walllnlf to unload.
Onshore, there's four lJ.story storase tanks and the recuaiflcaUon
plant. Then there's 200 mlle1 fA pipel.lne. lt'a enormooa."
"If the LNG faclUty ls alted there," 1aya Marltlnf, "other In-dustry will naturally follow. We'll l01• one of tbe laat aeml·wlld
parts of the Southern CaUfomlacoaat. • •
RA.BREU. FLETCHER 18 A SANTA Marla furniture storeo
owner, chairman of the Santa Barbara County Board of
Supervisors, and prime mover of the attempt to create Los Padres
County, which would Include Point Conception.
He ls also afraid the county ii losin1 control of shoreline de-
velopment, but he wan ta the LNG plant built bere.
Says F1etcher: "I understand the LNG facWty would ulUmalely
be worth 60methina like sa bWioo. That would brinl in property tax-
es of about $12 million a reu. becauae we'd not ooly be able to tax
the plant but alao 200 miles of pipeline ·and all the eas tbat nows
throuabit .•
"IF WE CAN GET THE LNG facility at ConcepUon," J>redlcts
Fletcher, "and if the voters approve Los Padres County,' it. would
pay _., petttlDt of the new county's tax bue. We'd be in beauWul
shape. .
"The Sierra Clubbers are opposed to a plant in Con~ption ...
MANY OF THE HANDFUL OF people who live here are reluc·
tant to take sides. Most say they'd like to be left alone to raise beef.
hunt white-tailed deer or wild pigs, dra& their trawler nets throu1h
the rich fishing grounds offshore, lend musty Uahthouses interesting
enough to qualify as historic monuments, or surf on beaches some
experts say are among the best on the Paclnc coast.
One resident is Lee Mann, 35, a security officer for the 10,000·
acre Cojo Ranch.
He hasn't made up his mind about the plant, but he's worried
about change:
Fletcher says, "Ma.ybe they'd rather aee lt. in the heart of Los
Angeles where it might kill millions of people ii it blew up. The only
thing you'd kill at Point Concept.ion would be t.hree-loed frogs ."
Santa Barbara attorney George H. Allen, who represents
Holliater Ranch and more than 100 owners of parcels ot at least 100
acres, disagrees with Fletcher.
Mann, who moved here with his family to avoid the hassles or
city living, spends much of his time chasing surfers from the area's
beach. lie is aJso hard-nosed about an LNG plant:
"What I've got is the satisfaction of producing something in
what I trunk is an ecologically harmonious way with the world. I'm
not ma.king anything plastic or polluting the air. I aue11 what J have
is a love of the land." •
Another who doesn't want to see Pt. Conception changed is 37.
year-old Wllllam Towne. a Cout Guard cbJet electronic tebnlclan.
He drives 80 miles round trip every week from hls station at Point
Arguello to tend Point Conception's automated liaht and bellowing
foghorn.
.,WE'RE CONCERNED WITH THE 1afet,y of that huee facUi·
ty." says Allen. "It isn't moral or ethical to expoae 200 people here to
a facility that.'s too danaeroua to put at Oxnard or Los Angeles
Harbor . .. IT'S VOLATILE, THEY TELL US. Everyone here is con·
cerned with that. Maybe they'll have to preserve the ranch as a buf·
fer. If the plant did blow up, It would involve fewer people."
"We're also opposed to the factllty on the 1rounds of reliability.
Mann's closest neighbors, who live a mile away in one of the old
Pt. Conception lighthouse buildings, are the Lundbergs.
Brad Lundberg. 37. manages the Cojo Ranch for the Los
Angeles-based Bixby Ranch Co .. which also owns \ho adjoining
16,()()().acre Jal am a Ranch. Both were originally parts of a Spanish
land grant.
TOWNE, AN 18·YEAR VETERAN OF duty on icebreakers and
such isolated stations as Cape Christian on Baffin Island, is reverent
a bout the point.
Point Conception la known a.a the 'Cape Horn of the Pacific' and this
entire coast ls called the 'graveyard of ablpa.'"
Allen said the homeowners have hired a marine weather expert
for research to back up their contenUon that because of bi&b winds,
strong currents and donae fop that bave placued 1.Uors in the San·
ta Barbara Channel for centuries the LNG port facWty "would be
closed at least 2' percent oUbe Ume."
A TIDRD·GENERATION COWBOY, Lundberg runs about 400
feeder cow!i and calves with the help of his two hired hands and his
two sons.
"When you work around the light and those old bulldines," says
Towne, "You realize you're a part of history that goes back to the
first. llihthouse keepers who tended whale oll lamps here in 1856.
There are some lhini• we can't afford not to preserve."
Philip Marking, a Santa Barbara attorney who heada the Poml
"WE ARE SCARED OFll'," aays Allen. "But we're buine our
opposition on economic erounda because we're afrald not enough
peoplewtll WOICTY aboutoursafety.·•
PaperClainu War Ship
Reactor Fuel Sunk for
Bomb Tested '4.:!'!?BEACH
LOS ANGELES CAP> -A secret test explosion
in the Nevada desert proves that low-grade
plutonium from civilian nuclear power plants can
be used to make atomic weapons, the Loa An1ele1
Times reported today.
The Times sai4 a recently declassified report
shows the United States exploded a nuclear device
using the s pecial kind or plutonium on an unknown
date. The paper said the test was declassified July
29, but was never made public. ·
The newspaper s aid the test was confirmed by a
s pokesman for the Energy Research and Develop·
(AP> -A World War II
Navy cargo ship that bas
spent the last 30 years in
mothballs was resurrect·
ed only to be sunk in San·
ta Monica Bay to im-
prove sportfishing.
QUEENIE Bv Phil lnttrlandi
• ment Administration. The ERDA said details of the
~l~~ll~~·n~·e".-;-explosion. conducted by the Los Alamos Scientific
Laboratory at the Nevada weapons test site, were
still classified.
The 420-foot -long
Liberty ship "Palawan"
went down in the ocean
Tuesday to become the
framework for an
artificial reef.
The "PaJawan." com-
misi;ioned in 1945 as a re-
pair shlp, was decom-
m 1ssioned two years
later. After 30 years of •~w,,...._.,
CONSTRUCTION OF LNG TERMINAL COULD CLOSE LIGHTHOUSE
The 121-year-old Point Conception Lighthouse Is Near Cojo Bay
ByBrewn
Aerosol Spray
Ban Approved
SACRAMENTO <AP) -Sales of fluorocarbon
aerosol sprays will be banned In California on April
15. 1979. under a bill signed lnto law by Gov. Ed·
mundBrownJr.
Legislative sponsors of the measure, Sen. John
Dunlap, <D·Napa), and Assemblyman John
Vasconcellos, <D-.San Jose), told reporters alter the
signing Tuesday that California's action abould
serve "as a lever" to make sure that the federal
government follows throup with Its proposed ban.
The blll follows proposed federal refutations
that would ban tho manufacture of the comoound
Oct. 15, 1978, and ban the product In Interstate
commerce ln Aprll 1979.
Bur IF THE FEDERAL regulations are de·
layed or chanced. California's ban on allea would
IUU apply, said Dunlap. Five other states bave
passed such laws, with Oreeon havln1 th• only ban
in effect. be satd.
At stake In the potential ban of the product na-
tionwide and eventually worldwide ls \he savin1 of
en Wllmown number of perscns from skin cancer,
said two UC Irvine aclentiatl who first raised the is·
sue more t.han three years a10.
Dn. F.S. Rowland and Marlo Molina. both
rrom the Irvine campus, joined Dunlap and Vaa~·
cellos at \he capitol newa conference.
ROWLAND AND MOUNA SAID nuo~arbom
over a 12·to lC-year period may break down the
ozone layer that prottctl the earth from cancer·
uualna rlldlaUon from tbe 1\m.
The NaUonal Aero111uUc1 and Space Ad·
)nlniatraUon receo.Uy reported that the oaone reduc-
tion wW be 11 to 18 perc...t lf relMI• eootlnu• •t tbe tm rat.. Eacb percent.eat of lon meau a two '9?'cent increoe ln akin cane•, Roland and Molina aald.
One million tona or nuorocarb®I art nleued world·wlde into the atmoaphm-t annually 1 tb• 1cien·
tlsta aatd, halt or It by Amrr'icana from I bllUon
pray cans.
Solons OK
LNG at
Point Site
SACRAMENTO <AP>
-A bill that strongly
favors Point Conception
as the s ite for California's firs t liq -
uefied n&tural gas
terminal hu been sent to
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
Gray Davis, Brown's
executive secretary,
said Brown is expected
to sign it soon. "We think
it's a 1ood blll, the result
of hundreds of hours of
work.
"IT'S NOT the precise
bill" Brown has pro-
posed, but "it accom-
modat.es the very real
need to inture adequate
supplies of natural gas
as well as very
le~tlmate health and
safety questions."
A somewhat reluctant
Senate approved the btll
30. 7 Tuesday.
Point Conception la the
only proposal or the aaa
companies t.bat would b'9
allowed by th•
meuure'a definition ot a
remote alte based on
population density of no
more than 60 perso11.1 per
MJUare mile wlLhln four
mlles.
OMld Porn E•pleflen E11ed
SACRAMENTO CAP) -California Is reported·
ly a production center for child pornography
hence the state Assembly has voted for tougher
penalties for employers in the booming business .
The members voted
70·0 Tuesday despite a ( )
complaint that the ap-~TATE
proach in the bill was
naive. Protested As· --------
semblyman John Vascon·
cellos. CD-San Jose), "We're looking at the wrone
end of the problem . The problem of child porno-
graphy is not a problem of supply, primarily, but a
problem of demand.·'
011 ~Late• Vt1.,efled
LOS ANGELES CAP > -The state Air
Resources ooard bas unveiled a new nine-part plan
to control oil emissions, which ARB Chairman Tom
Quinn calls the largest single source of pollution in
the Loe Anieles Basin.
Quin ouUined the proJram Tuesday to tbe peo.
pie res~lble for complym, with new reatrlc-Uona -oU execuli vea.
eop. IJse •I 6-a.a .. lfade
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Pollceomcenmaybe
liable for wrongful death damqea if \hey shoot to
death neelng suspects who are not en1a1ed ln
violence, the state court of appeal haa ruled.
In a 2·1 decision, the second appellate dtatttcl
court ruling which held that a Lons Beach
policeman was not negligent when he fatally 1bot an
unarmed college student alletedly fleeing a
burglary in 1972.
Gelldle Onllaa..ee r .....
BERKELEY <AP) -An ordinance replaUne
research on 1eneUc alteration hu won unanimous
approval from the Berkeley Cit)' Council.
'lbe ordinance adopted ~ay calla for any
qr1anlut1on wllhinf to conduet recombinant DNA
research ln the clty to be lnlpect.ed and approved by
city public health officials. Berkeley ls tbt flt'lt city
in California and aeeond in the naUon to adopt the
regulation.
nonactive duty, it was "Think of It thii; wuy-you'rc tell in~ the world, 'IT'S not
dona ted to the state the orricc 11pucc that counts. it'i; the output '!"
Department of Fish and -------------------Game by the Depart·
mcntofCommerce. Re I Ml
AFl'ER 96 pounds or pa r8 DOr
plastic explosives went
off aboard the ship, it
took about 30 minutes for
it to fa l I belo'w the
ocean's surface. Fishing
experts say it will quick-
ly become a feeding
place for sport fish.
The .. Palawan" had
been stripped down and
cleaned of all on and
1rease, as required by
the state Regional Water
Quality Control Boa.rd.
The sinking was the
flnt of three aurplus
sblps planned to become
fishing reefs in Southern
Callfomla. The other two
are to go down off
·Newport Beach and Oit·
nard.
Tax Seiitence
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP) -A San Jose man
convict.d of Income tax vlolatlona was fined
$20,000 and aenteneed to nve years Jn prilon • .But
U .S. Dlltrlct Court
Judce Spene« WJWama
s\Japended an bat ao day•
or the prison sentence
aiatnat Robert Stratton,
46, a comt.ructlon com·
panyowner.
Aq~duct Flow
Due by SunJay
SAN DIEGO (AP> -Officials estlmate
water will beain flowio1 a1ain through the Colorado
River Aqueduct by late Sunday, much to the relief of San Di.ego County re1ldent.1 wbo have been relying
on well water and cut.Una ott cropirrlaatiooaincethe
,veebod. ..•
The county's water supply, which ts 95 percent
dependent on the 241-mUe aqueduct, virtually dried
up Sunday when a weekend flash flood pushed a
2,SOO.pound steel access cover onto the Fan Hills
siphon structure near Desert Hot Sprlnes and a
combination ol mud and boulders cloned a)pbons.
As the water flow was reduced to a muddy
trlcle, the Metropolitan Water District In Los
An1eles County ordered flve pumptnr staUons to a
halt. It was tbe first time the aqueduct bad ever
beensbutdowo. ·
SAN Dl8GO COUNTY WATER AtJTRORITY
oftlclal8 1atd Tuesday that wideapread r1Uonln1
beeauae ol the aqueduct lbutotf lln't likely. LYnJi B~meral mana•er ol tbe water aUthority. saJd of the countl bu a t•-4u local wat., 1W: ply • we cut back to 50 percent t.oday <TWll4ay)."
TbecltyofSanDie1obasaa1x-monthauPply,bt1aJd.
To canserve water, communities served by the
Yuma and Vall.y Center water d.lltricts stopped fr·
rt1at1Df a.oeado and citru. crope, Bursell uJd.
JWore the s>WDPI were turfttd off, sn.on than a
b1I1Joa •aUClnl orwatar-" enoua to IUPW a tamUy
of nw '°". year -,, .. 1pWecl Oil the deMtrt floor a.a mud-dofted water backed up. •
TWO U.~·"1DE OONCSB'l'llt>ipee at th• Fan 11111 plant t.etl~ed-onl1 minor damafe, aald MWD.meta11. ,
llWJ> liM>t'8W0~81l JoAnn t•1.. laJd workm Pl'Obabl, Would be •ble to '-er b\l\ldoaera. Into IM ~..et tOday to nmon tlM bou.14~. A.· 1umtn, ao otbei' dunqe ii tOUDd, 1be 11Jd th•
tumPI are uptcted to be restarted by SWlda1 nJtht. ,
.....
••• Rob\!rt N. Wet-d 1Publlsl'\er
Barb.lra Krelblcl'\/Editorlal Page Editor Oron90 ea .... Daily Pilot Editorial page w ....... ,. Seplom'!r "· 1977 ................................................................... --
Zoning Decision
Hits Congestion
Aft9f more than five months 1n limbo. property owners on
Costa Mesa a wo&t aid• can start construction pro1ects on
lhe•r PfOJ*'tY
In a 4~1 vote last woe~. city councilmen lifted a building
lroen by downzon1ng lots between Hamilton and 19th Streets
on the north and south and Pomona and Placentia Avenues
on the east and west
The move reduces the number of units that can be built
on tho narrow lots by lowering their class1f1cation from high
den&1ty to medium density -the equivalent of a duplex on a
so-called standard 6,000-square-toot city lot
In voting against the move. Vice Mayor Jack Hammett
raised a valld point landowners may lose money through re-
duced bu1ld1ng potential on their sites.
However. the west side has long been the victim of
haphf?ard planning and now exists as the city's most con-
gested area
A decrsron to reduce further blight on the west side
should be welcomed by all residents.
Ironically, the city's planning staff is now considering 1n·
creased building density in the northeast section of town
between Mesa Onve and 23rd Street. The staff should take all
precautions to insure they aren't designing the same old
problems 1h another place. ,....._ .....
Complaint Groundless .
Last week, the Newport-Mesa Educators Association de·
cided to let the school board know that vacation was over by
opening the school year on a sour note.
The president of the California Tedchers Association af·
f1llate complained in a letter to Superintendent John Nicoll
that his organization had been left out of the selection
process in which a successor to Trustee Marian Bergeson was
chosen.
The N·MEA president. Don Kimble. said he felt his group
should have been given special notice of Mrs. Bergeson's re-
tirement and replacement.
School board members went out of their way to conduct
the interviews of candidates and subsequent voting during
public sessions.
We are myst1f1ed that the teachers· organization should
feel left out of what was a very public selection process. Or
feel that the union has rights that transcend those of any
other district c1t1zen .
School board meetings are always well pubhc1zed. If
teachers had wanted to participate in the selection process.
they had only to read the newspaper and attend the meetings
as other members of the school district did.
Credit to Harbor Area
This weekend will mark a couple of milestones in the
growth of the Harbor Area as a residential community
Saturday, Hoag M emorial Hospital will celebrate its 25th
annrversary with a health fair and Sunday a series of public
events to mark the opening of the permanent home of the
Newport Harbor Art Museum will get under way.
Both are worthy of attendance and both mst1tut1ons are
worthy of note for what they have brought to the community
They stand as landmarks 1n the community's recent past as 11
grew from a summer tourist town to a thriving year-round
community.
The hospital and the museum are also remarkable in that
they would not have come into being were it not tor the in-
volvemenl of residents who saw a need and devoted a lot of
time and talent to finding a means to fill the need.
Finally , both institutions should be a source of pnde for
all the Harbor area because they represent tl'}e highest quality
rn the medical arts and the fine arts -a tradition we hope will
continue for years to come.
• Opinions e><pressed 1n the space above are thoo;e of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is invited.
Boyd/ Artists' Wives
ByL.M.BOYD
Art editor s claim that
sketches submitted to them of
f e mal es, clothed or
otherwise, lend to be drawn
with the proportions or the
artist's wife in each case.
That's even 1r the a rtis t
worked with some other
model, they say. The artist
evidently is inclined to "cor·
rect" the rendering to more
closely m atch that most
famWar Cigure
King Louis XVI of France
kept a daily diary. But he got
bored pretty easily, so m~t of
his entries just read :
"Nothing." Historical re·
searchers say that's what he
wrote therein on the day the
Bastille was stormed, setting
off the French Revolution.
A waiter nearing retire·
ment says, "I've known for
yean tha( people Up bellet
when each is responsible f ot a
but. That's why J alwafs aive
separate checks, U po11ible. ''
In ~w\tzerland. you can be
' Jf MIQ'OI' k~oe really
feau den1lty. wby doem1l lhe vote u dou Councllman I)olQ
RaciU? Cotta Me1a ha.a
enOQlh apartll\enta and
condonil.nlun».
fined for tax evasion, true
enough, but you can't be sent
to prison for it.
Nominations are now open
Cor candidates whose descrip.
tions may-aptly begin with
"He's the kind of euy whQ
... "For example. Omaha's
Gunner Brown : "He's the
kind or guy who orders an egg
salad sa ndwich , a nd
says 'Hold the m ayon·
naise'. "That's bad. Very bad.
Any others?
. lt 's a little known fact that
when actress Katharine Hep-
burn married Ludlow Odgen
Smith io 19'l8, she asked him
to change his last name to
Ogden so she wouldn't be
identJtled as another Kate
Smith.
Q. "Sherlock• Holmes· pro-
ceas-of ·eliminaUon technique
for solving crimes was based
on the methods of a real d•·
t.ective, right! ..
A. On the methods of a reJJ
surgeon. One Dr. Joseph Bell
Earl Waters
These Strike~ Endanger Lives
H the specter of city firemen
1'tandmg idly by while your house.
burm. to the ground frightens
you, the op1><>rtunity to take ac·
lion lo prevent it from becoming
a reality may be yours at next
June's election.
Two southern Californians.
Dolly Swift and Betty Cordoba,
arc currently
gat h er ing
signatures to
place a con-
. st 1tut1onal
amend m ent
on the ballot
pr.oh1bitlng
s trikes by
public
em ployes .
They have un·
til Dec. 2 to quahfy the measure
for ballot platemenl.
No doubt the recent events in
Dayton. Ohio. will give impetus
to their drive. In that city the
specter did become a reality,
Art Hoppe
when striking firemen permitted
al least 20 rlres lo go unchec;ked
d uring their holdout for higher
wages. ·
The Dayton strike continued
ufter a judgt had ordered the
strikers back to work. However a
contempt of court action was not
pursued because an agreement
was reached In the lime which in·
tervened between the hearing
dute set on the contempt charge.
Jn California. despite repeated
court rulings t h at public
employes do not have a right to
strike. work stoppages, sick·
outs. and other refusals to work
by th06e on public payrolls have
been increa!>1n~.
VARIOUS leg1slat1ve pr o·
posals. including a constitutional
amendment h ove been in -
troduced at past sessions to spell
out a strike prohibition without
~uccess. Last year Orange Coon·
ty Sen. De nnis Carpenter
authored such a c:onslJtutional
change only to see the Senate de·
real it by a vote or 19 to 14. far
short of the 27 votes needed.
Asked why he had a utftored the
bi II in view of the consistent court
flutings aga ins t strikes,
Carpenter s1tid he believed a con·
st1tutional amendment would be
helpful. I( nothing else, he tn·
dicated. passage of s uch an
amendment would make it clear
that the people ere not sym-
pathetic lo strikes by public
workers.
He also suggested that even
though the courts have ruled
against strikers, there are no
specific prohibitions in the law.
Until recently there have been
few instances where striking
public employes have suffered
after effects. Usually the
scenario has witnessed manage
m ent going to court and obtain·
ing injunctions and orders for the
employes to return to work. Even
•
when s uch court orders are
blithely ignored no penaltie!>
have been imposed and worker~
huvc tx-en permitted to rt!turn to
their job8 after th~ strike is set·
tied.
IN FACT, ~ttempts to
terminate striking c mployes
have run afoul or court. ruling~
and sometimes public sentiment
But a most recent decision by
the court of appeals in Lo~
Angeles. holding strikin g
Pasadena school teachers liable
for damages may signal a turn in
<ittitudes towards illegal strike~
against the public.
If the effort lo place a direcl
prohibition against strikes on tht·
ballot (ails to qualify s uch eourl
rulings are the public'!> only im·
mediate hope or protection
against walkouts by firemen and
police and other essential pubhc
cmployes b<?cause no legislation
on the subject is currently pend ~
ing before the Legislature.
A White House at the End of the Canal?
All right, kiddies. just one
more story about Sir Ronald of
Holy Rood and then it's beddy·
bye.
Well, as you remember. Sir
Ronald and his faithful squire,
Sancho
Nofziger, had
plunged deep
into The
Tangled
Thicket in
quest of The
ll oly While
H ouse . But
that gli mmer·
m g goal had
tantalizingly
eluded Sir Ronald over the years
and he was not growing any
youngt!r.
So it was that he limped wear•·
ly around a bend in The Thicket
and came upon a large ditch
filled with turgid water
"Hola, Sancho!" he cried. "Be
this a moat encircling some
fortr<·ss wherein the fair damsel
of fiscal respons1b1lity pleads to
be rescued from the ogre of def·
1c1t spendmg'!"
"Nay, sire," said Sancho. "Tu.
but the Panama Canal."
"PFAJI!" snorted Sir Ronald.
turn mg his back. "Obviously 'tis
but a creaky antique that has
(ong outlived its usefulness."
"Verily, sire," agreed Sancho.
"Thus would King Jimmy give it
away to keep the peace '·
"What say yo u·'" snapped Sir
Ronald. "A give-away program·•
To whom would this coward give
it and why?"
··To Panama, master ," s<.1id
Sancho, crin'gin g s lightly
"Primarily because it bisects
that land from which we stole it
75 long years ago."
"Ahah ! " cried Sir Ronald
Mailbox
"You mean our cowardly King
Jimmy would abandon this
magnificent feat or m odern
engineering. this eighth wonder
of the world. this bastion of de·
mocracy. this key to southwest
Central America, this freedom·
loving canal for which our boys
fought ond died? Would he
violate the holy Monroe Doctrine
by yielding up this sacred soil of
the Americas to a foreign power
without a fight?''
"Well. I guess Panama is a
foreign power , s ire," said
Sancho, "when you put it that
way."
"WHAT of our Manifest
Dest.my. varlet? Does not this
canal stretch from sea to shining
sea? Should this mighty canal
slip from our grasp, how could
our Great White Fleet show the
nag?"
.. As good a question as any,
sire."
"Let us not forget The While
Man's Burden, Sancho, while at
the same time we Remember the
Maine!"
"Can you see the light at the
end of the tunnel, master ?"
asked Sancho hopefully
"No," said Sir Ronald, "but I
::::::::--.. -I
-"/ -~ ~-1 .,._. ~
think 1 can see the White House
at the end or the canal. ..
With that. he drew his famed
Swinging Sword, s houted his
awesome battle cry, ·'For Decen·
c:y, for Purity and for Just Plain
Goodness!" and vanished mto
The Tangled Thicket. yelling.
"CH.AAAARRRRGGGG E! ..
SANCHO sat on a rock and
mopped his brow. "l should have
known," he said. shaking his
head. "He always gets emo·
tionally involved when anyone
wants to gel tid or 3 creaky \lf\·
t1que."
" .... AND 1ll/5 ONE'S FOR VIETNAM ... AND 11415 ONf'S FOR THE ~YAGUEZ .... ANO
TJ.l/S LAiT1..E BITTY NEW ONE IS FOR PANAMAL I
..
Teacher's Co~laint Rings True Through Ages
To the Editor
"What have you done, what
good came of your sitting here'>"
reads a Sumerian clay tablet of
, about 1800 BC . now 1n the
' University or Chicago's Oriental
Institute recording his mstruc·
tor's irate lecture after a student
had flunked his writing test
"YOU ARE already a ripe man
and close to being aged! Like an
old nss. you are not teachable
any more. Like withered grain
you have passed the season. How
long will you play around? But It
is at.ill not too late! If you study
night and day and work aU the
time modestly and without ar-
rogance. if you listen to your col·
leef ues and teachers, you can
1lil become a scribe." •
What upset the Instructor wu
that the youth's father was a
teacher, and he claimed that it
was the father and his brothers
who have failed. not
he ... Solomon was right, there's
nothing new under tbe sun.
FRANK KLOCK ....... ,., .....
on the front page or my evening
paper today
These s1tuat1ons. which occur
every few months 1n ever y state,
usually merit front·page cov-
erage only during the dramatic
first day or two of legal confil~t.
The end result is us ually not
published at all. or perhaps
burled on page 16 of the fourth
section. For your paper to pro·
vide such prominent and detailed
coverage of the conclusion or this
s ituation is an unusual and very
much appreciated editorial de·
cision.
GARY C. SPENCER
........ 1 .. . '
To the Editor':
Arnldai· the clamor for his teS·
lgnatlon, 1et me stand up and be
couo(ed as one who favors keep·
lng_Bert Lance In tbe t~raJ gov·
ernment. Tlae only thing we need
to do Is chan1e bb Job classtnca·
·Uon. Based on hlaJ>rior banking
dealtnas, It fppearl be la the only
one who ~oulCl save our Social
Security system.
JOllN E. WOLF
"'-'~ To tho F.dJtor: It wou.ld be hlnnf tr It weren't
•o ••-U.• troubl4S that the aov-enun.t la tlndlol with nre re-
tard.Mq• children•• clothel.
Jt w .. the 1overnment that..ln· slst41d thal tbey pul lhe fire reta.r·
dantl ln, lll the tint place. Thty
wlll 1oon dl1cover ltlat
fluoroeaRJOM don't harm the
oione. You notice that the1 never
H)' that lt doa. only that lt
"may" harm Ule01C>ne. The lbMar1•4•pendt oo
flUorOf ,.... bel•I chanted llKO
ehlorinit ln the OIQM. IT'htre ii no
1vklenee Oi!t ti.. frilhl iii of thpt
altitude chan1et nuorocarbOrii
into chlott.t. ,______ -
t
IT WILL soon probably be
learned that the more gasoline a
car burns. the ·more pollutants it
pumps into 'the atmosphere. The
effect of smog controls on an
engine is to cause it to bum more
gasoline.
Nothing is "bu m ed up," jt is
just changed. Therefore. the car
that burns more gasoline wtll
cause more pollutants.
The problem is that the smog
control has becomt! so huge that
its collapse might trigger a
de pression.
All the government has to do to
fix things up is to pass a law.
They have solved the problem of
children's clothing catchlnt fire;
they have fixed the ozone and the smog. It's all In the books.
JAMES W. BOLDING
l•.eelll'•e
To the f;ditoT :
The 0 .H.P. Klng letter in the
Daily Pilot's Mallbo" of Au1. 26
is lna~urate concemln1 Marine
Midland Bank.
Ambassador Linowitz llJ no
longer a director of this bank and
Quotes
''Thll ac .... ment lt a 1y111bol of
mutual respeel •"4 cooperaUon.
It opens a new chapter ln our rt·
1aUOP1; ll tettlfies lo tl\e maturi·
ty and aood Jud1menl and dec.n·
cy of our people." -......._,
Carter, on tbe tlJnl~ of the
Panama Can*1 lNaUea.
"Man)' ol lht handicapped can·
not write but they can type. l
aloni· wtlb a million ot.btn fWl
lhll 11 dtlerlD?~ttlon ~
handkapped. -•n. 1
Ha.-... abOllt a p~ \bar
pel'10l\-1 mMI have bandwrltten
add,_. and roturn iddttUet.
has never represented it in his
role as President Carter's
delegate.
The ambassador became a
Marine Midland director in 1973
but resigned in March of this
year rather than permit the im·
proper allegations concerning
his relations hip with our bank to
i mpair his etrectlveness in
representing President Carter.
His position on· ·the Panama
Canal Is not a banking issue and
Marine Midland's good name
should not be dragged into tho
political arena.
YOt1 MIGHT be interested that
the ambassador's business al· fillattons were fully r.eported to
the Cart.er administration and
cleared through the State
Department before his appoint-
ment by the President. Further. ttua bank iuued a public release
setting forth its Panamanian in·
volvement Oess tban $8 million
in loans to Panama, all cunent
and representing about l /Hth or
1 percent or our usets l and l
peraonally met with a number of
concrtS$men to be certain they
understood Mart.he Mldlaftd has
no apeclal interest or ri•k tn the
Panama Canal treaty.
Unfortunately~ the full d ls·
clotwe tlU not stoPl*l the un· ·
truthlW reporta such as lrtcluded
in the Kina Jetter.
ARTHUR '8. ZIEGLER.
&f!CuUve Vice President
Marlne Midland Bank
• Ll'ttn-1 /rom rtoda• an wtlcomt.
f'M """ fo COMnN liffif• to ftt 'POCf or dmtllott lit.I u ,..,..,...,
Ldtm 0/ • ...,,.. or lai ""'1 be ~ Jlf'f/ff'lrrf. All~ .... "'· cludi~-~-....
""' ........ ~ bi -~---,.. qWsf lf'itif lfdiitl.,... fl.,. apt.
PaftrJI IOiU .C 1M ,. .......
Birek to R e cess
Back to school also means a return to re·
cess and fun on playground equipment
.r ' .. '" • ' !I Woctn!f!•x. ~ptember 14. 1977 • DAILY PILOT .41
Hy-Long Medicare Patients CORRECTION
NOTICE
To Pay To Foot More of 'Bill In the current ears pre-ertnt 'dverttelng
aecUon, effective through 159ptember 17, •
typographical error occurred. The compact
ateel desk #n24 described •• having •
center drawer, doe a not have a center
drawer. We regret the error and any lncon·
venlence It may have cauaed.
$40,000
NAPA (AP > A
Sonoma-based nuraine
homo firm has aareed to
pay $40,000 to Napa
County in an out-of-court
settlement or a county
c I v1l sult against the
hrm, anofllcial said.
Ron Yoang, deputy
district attorney for the
county, said Tuesday
that Hy ·Long En -
terprises Joe . also
agreed to post patient
complaint forms in all its
18 facilities statewide.
T HE SUIT, filed 1n
August 1976, alleged the
Hy.Lond fa cility in
Napa, a 120·bed nursing
home, was givlne poor
care to patients, includ·
mg leaving patients ly•
ing in their urine. Young
said.
Last December, the
county amended the
W ASHIM>TON (Al>> -lle~ltb,
'!dueallofa and Welfare Secretary
Joseph A. Califano Jr. has announced
that Medicare patients will be re-
quired to pay a areater share of their
hospital bills next year becauae of
continually rising hospital c06ta.
T he increases in the required pay·
meots, ranalng from $20 for botpital
stayi; of up, to 60 days to $10 a day for
s tays beyond 90 days, will affect an
estimated six million recipients of
Medicare for the elderly.
AN ANNOUNCEMENT TUESDAY
said he took the action "with great re-
luct8111e and only because the law
gives me no choice."
Hearings to Begin
WASHINGTON CAP> -Senate Ma·
jority Leader Robert C. Byrd told the
Senate Tuesday that the Panama
Canal treaties will not be considered
f(>T' raUficatlon before January. In the
meantime, hesald, the Senate Foreign
Relations Cqmmittee and other com-
mittees having an interest can begin
and perhaps complete hearings.
complaint to affect all or So S IJ t H!'·Lond:.S IaWiuei 10 • me e OD 8
the state, Young said.
He coupled the announcement with
il renewed plea to Congress to pass the
Carter administration's proposal to
put a 9 percent cap on hospital fee in·
creases, which he blamed for the --------------------
Medicare cost bike.
MEDICARE PATIENTS NOW
must pay $124 for the first 60 days or
hospital care they receive, $31 per day
for the 61st through 90lh day or
hospitalization and $62 per day for
stays beyond 90 days.
The patient share wU.1 increase on
Jan. l, 1978, to $144 for the first 60 days
and will increase by $5 a day during
the third month and by $10 a day
beyond that.
Now open daily!
The exciting new out-
door California Plaza
& Restaurftnt at
Movleland Wd x
Museum Ii. open free
to 1hc public and offers a ,futlve dining armo&phere
reminiscent of early California. The Callfomla Plaza
Is also available for buslneu meeting& and luncheont.
Plan your visit now! Call 714/522-1154.
Freeway close at 7711 Beach Boulevard.
Buena Park. California
THE INCREASES ARE required
by legislation that calls for annual ad-
justment of patient charges to keep up .. •••••••••••••••••Ill
with changes in hospital costs that are --------------------increasing at more than twice the na·
lional inflation rate. -------------------.. Califanosaidtbattheincreaseswill NEW? FOR ORANGE COUNTY SOUTH ,
mean that hospitalized Medicare pa· COAST
tient.s will pay a t<;>tal or nearly ssoo ** MUSIC CATERING **
million out of their pocketa next year Having a party, reception, or sales booster event?
for their share of hospital costs. That Had a problem with llve music?
is anaveraaeofabout$150each. Custom music systems are now availa-
s uch as this monkey dimb which captures T HOSE FACILITIES
attention of stud ents at Warm Springs are located in Panorama
Element:.iry School. San Bernardino. City, Los J\ngeles ,
--------------------Fr es no, Stockton,
Old Films
ble for your hom e, hall or business.
Complete i nstallat ion & operation •
featuring a Dimension 7 d isc jockey. Super
sound musical lights. Your music or
o urs. Reasonable rates, f ive hour
m inimum. Early reservations are sug-
gested.
Marines Cite
Pilot Errors
WASHINGTON (AP> The Marine Corps says
the series of accidents to its controversial Harrier
plane was caused principally by pilot error, some
prompted by enthusiasm "lo do a firsl·class job,"
not ftom mechanical or maintenance failure.
There have been 26 crashes of the vertical
takeoff plane since it began flying seven years ago,
with 10 pllot" killed. Nine crashes occurred this
year.
1,T. GEN. THOMAS JI. MILLER, deputy ch1er
of staff ror aviation for the Marines, told a news
conference Tuesday that because or this conclusion.
I ast week's sus pension of low·level flights by the at·
tack plane 1s being modified.
Pilots will be told to go no lower than 200 feet in
daytime when flying alone, no lower than 500 feet in
daytime when with other planes and to stay above
1,000 feet at night, Miller said. And he said training
an vertical takeoffs has been increased
MILLER SAID THE HEIGHT limitations are
preliminary instructions until the corps takes a look
' at all its aircraft, helicopter as well as fixed wing,
later thls month. He indicated a lower lim it would
be necessary for reaUsni in combat training.
"We find from th«;.review this week nothing.to
indic.ate there is anything wrong with -the plaoe,"
Miller said. ·'
Of the 26 crashes, 17 closed cases are attributed
to pilot error and another three crashes pre>bably
were due to that, he said, adding that the Marines
feel the rate is not unfavorable compared with other
weapons systems.
OF THE 17 CLOSED CASES, Miller said, eight
were attributed lo the vertical takeoff.
One or the mistakes 'which contributed to the
pilot error, Miller said, was moving too fast from
using only '.'elite" pilots in the program to a more
normal selection and training process.
Miller said the Harrier was developed because
unplanned battles usually last' about 30 minutes and
th'e Marines on the ground need air help as soon as
possible.
The Harrier, he said, has managed to reduce
the time of response to 10 minutes.
Directors Elevated
SACRAMENTO CAP> -Now it's official: Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr. 's directors of agriculture and
industrial relations formally have cabinet·level
status.
Brown signed legislation formalizing an ex-
ecutive order be issued last March.
The bill, AB 505 by Assem blyman John
Thurman <D·Modesto), removes the departments
of Food and Agriculture and industrial Relations
Crom the Agriculture and Services Agency, which is
renamed the State and Consumer Services A&ency.
The principal departments remaining in the
agency are Consumer Affairs, General Services.
and Veterans Affairs.
WICKER
Furniture & Decorator ltemsl
I 0°/o OFF!!
ANY PURCHASE JU~
COMPARE OUR PRICESI
Modesto, Merced1 Sant,.
C lara, Santa Ana,
Westminster, Beaumont,
Banning, Canoga Park
and Santa Rosa, Young
said.
Young said it was the
highest settlement he
knew of against a nurs·
ing home.
In the agreement, Hy·
Lond stated that the pay·
ment was in no way an
acknowledgement of any
wrong-doing , Young
said.
Body, 700,
Preserved
HONG KONG <AP J
A 700-year ·old bod y
found in China's Kiangsu
province is so well pre·
served that most of its
Joints are still movable
and the texture of Its hair
and skin is good, a Hong
Kong Communist
newspaper repqrted.
Star Anew
JULIAN <AP> In a remodeled gymnasium
where Jack Dempsey once trained, Vincent Orrell
is showing decent movies.
The "IGng of Kings," the original 1927 film
dra matization or the story of Christ starring H.B.
Warner and directed by Cecn B. DeMille, was
s hown last weekend. "°
' -"STAGECOACH," CIRCA 1931/ starring John
Wayne and Claire Tevor, is on the screen this
wc~~d . ·
Soon will come "Wings" and t'Big-Parade," the
1925 film with John Gilbert.
The 100-seat Bijou theater has been sold out
twice since Orrell finished the remodeling and
opened last May. Buster Keaton In "Steamboat·Bill
Jr '' also has been shown.
ORRELL GOT ms flRST JOB as a projec·
tionist's assistant in the old Bishop theater in
Chicago in 1928.
He recently sold one or Arizona's biggest
theater supply houses and at age 62 launched his
new career in this San· Diego County mountain
town.
Brown Signs Bills
Ta Kung Pao said SACRAMENTO· (AP> -Gov. Edmund Brown
Tuesday the body of Jr. has signed bills into law dealing with blind
ChoWi Yu, a seholar in jurors and drivers under t he influence of alcohol ot
the Han Oyn,ast,.Y, was 'drugs.
found lo a tomb in Ching Under SB 152 by Sen. Alex Garcia. <D·Los
Tan county south of'the Angeles>. blind people couldn't be· barred from
Yangtze river. 1 Juriessolelybecausetheycan'tsee.
The body was iden· On drunk driving, SB 250 by Sen. Robert
tified by books and writ· Presley, ID-Riverside>. aims to establish more
mgs in the tomb, the re-strict penalUes for offenders when there is death or
port said . injury.
N~~ORT BIACtt ONLY
STOCK ELIMINATION ,.
STARTS THURSDAY I SEPT. 15
CDS
Charlie's Disco Business
Af ter Six please;
Charlie (714 ) 955-3535
Danny (213) 691-9944 Featur ingQ:IDJ
. . .
Would the people with the brown Camaro who picked
• up this dog at cano's, NewPort Beach
it :l:=::::::::;;lE~G~O:;.fW~'i.l lt PLEASE CALL 673..0636 FOR A REWARD.
,._ ~N o ~ it NO QUESTIONS ASKED. ** * * * * * * * * *~L--..;.. __ w;.,;,.;;;;E..;,M;.;.l..;,S..;,S...;H-.1...;M_T_...ER .. R_IB_L_Y_. ___ _.
WHENIT
CO~TO .
SAVINGS,
THE BIGGER
THEBE'ITER
BIG SAVINGS ON
A THEN A• 2000
MACHINE Wl1li AN
ELECTRONIC BRAJN.
The world's first true eJeo.
Ironic sewmg madune .. -...,~;:.:~:;::s::~~ w~h a built-in memory bank of 25 sblches you
can control and chanqe
1ust by touching a but·
ton. Plus the exclusive
F/ip&Sew• 2·waysew-
mg surface. Cabinet
or carrying case extra.
•••ABIG$50 SAVING ON IBIS
BEAUTIFUL srrusr· MACHINE.
[(s got bullt·in zig·7.aeJ,
stretch and blind hem-
stitches, a bobbin that
drops nght In and our
exclusive pusM~.atton
snap.In cloth plate.
Cabinet or earrytng
ease extra. Model 533.
A8 DAILY Pll OT Wedn•ld•r. Septemb9r 14, 1911 t
THEFilllLYcrncus. ByDUKeaneNo '30'
Written
To Career
lty JACK CHAPPELL
a.•Detly ...........
Hubbard Keavy's pale blue
eyes sparkle under tho aha11y
white mopa that are his brows
as he launches into another tale.
The pale blue eyes have seen
the things a person sees ln more
than 62 years of newapaperlnc.
Murden. A shootout between the
cops and lbe bad cuys. Presiden-
tial elections. The good news and
bad news of the bum an condition.
" f --L f d AS A HOLLYWOOD columnist Is three rows o CVV'\ies or 89 cents a goo for Tbe Associated Presa, it was
..J--1?. II QVQI sa.id Keavy knew everybody who .._------------------was&QJbodylnHollywood.
Deaths Elsewhere
Relaxtna at his Laauna Beach
home, Keavy confessed that
wasn't exactly true. He never
had been able to interview Greta
GLENDALE (AP) -
l14emorial services were
to be held today for
Corrls Guy, 65, food con-
sultant and hostess for a
local TV cooking show
that ran for 20 years.
Miss Guy died Friday
after a ~rief illness.
RAVENNA, Ohio <AP)
-Judge Edwin W.
Jones, 66, who presided
over the special grand
jur y that an vesligated
the 1970 Kent State dis·
turbances, died Sunday
Death Notl~e•
Garbo.
at Robinson Memo.rial Keavy's first career began in
Hospital. 1914. At 12, he becan selline
papers for two cents apiece. He
bought them for a penny and GLOVERSVILLE• since there was an uprising along
N.Y. <AP) -Joseph ff •. theMexicanbordertospur sales,
Tobin, 6~, who ~pent hewasabletoaollabout50copies much of his career m the a day.
broadcasting industry "Fifty cents, I thought it was
and was once a personal greatmaoey "Keavy said announcer for singer • . ·
Kate Smith, died Sun-
day.
CONCORD, (AP)
George Baroea, 56, a jazz
guitarist who played
with numerous bands
a ncj performers o n
television, in concert
IN 1912!, KEA VY began as a re·
porter with a Sioux Falls, South
Dakota paper. His weekly salary
was $18, but he soon found a way
of sellint local news to the As·
sociated Press in a scheme that
earned h im an extra $7.50 weekly.
cM1ttSTEHHH tours and for recordings.
GLADYS CHRISTENSEN, •oe "· died Moodav
His first big story was a
murder. A salesman came to
town with $50,000 in jewelry. resident of Sent• Ane, C.llto""•· oJ • Pauecl ..,. • ., on S.pe-r 12, 1'77.
SurvlW<I by her lluiNftd Norma11
Ctvls~ en 0."'911 Owtl1-of •
)ka<199, CA., ClitvollCtr MvrN a.-,M For the
Record
Several teenaeers including one
of Keavy's former schoolmates,
.., were involved in stealing the
jewels.
DMly Pl ... IUfl ....
A MEXICAN UPRISING IN 1914 HELPED HIS CARE!R
Hubbard Keavy Thinks Work Keepa Him Healthy
when word came in that the of-
ficer had died. He called the
managing editor whose comment
was, ''Aw, bell, I'll have to.
rewrite the lead (first para-
graph)."
As he moved on through assort·
ed newspapers Keavy once held
the exalted position or "marble
editor," and would run marble
contests throughout the town.
IT WAS A SCRIPPS Howard.
promotion and annually, the
local champions would fo to
A Uantic City for the shoot.of .
Keavy was accompanying bis
paper 's champion on a train to
the finals when the lad men·
tioned that he was JS. Age cutoff
Cot the competition was 14.
Carefully and persistently,
press carda ln the hat band,· all of
that derring-do," Keavy aaid.
Later, though he recalled he
covered a theater robbery
from behind a pillar while the
cops and robbers a bot It out.
At 74 now, Keavy still works 30
to 40 hours a week writing
although be retired from As-
aociated Press nine years ago.
"I had one day of retirement, Jan. 1, 1868. On. Jan. 2, I went to
work as the executive editor for
the Newa-Poet," a aeml·weekly
south county newspaper.
LATER, KEAVY LEFI' that
and began hiaown feature column
service, the "Good News." He
travels extensively and writes
aboutblatravels.
In April, Keavy aaid he'WrOte
and sold 13 freelance articles and
DenaanuEIR
Agency Irks
NB Offici8Is
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
GU.DllllY ..... ltaft
Newport Beach clty offlclal1 1ay they
aren't eolni to lot the State Department of Fish and
Game 1ot by withQUt doiae a full environmental im-
pact report on a project to create an artificial
fllhlnareefby aln.klnC a ablpolf Newport.
In fact, city councilmen aald Monday, they'll
take the at;:;rrncy to court before they'll let the
proJectao •
THE Paomcr CALLS FOR the sink.Ins next
June ot a '20-foot ship 1.85 miloa offshore in city tidelandl.
Flab and Game officlala were slated to slnJc
another old ab.lp off Santa Monica Tuoaday as the
flnt ot three ftahlna reefl planned for Soutbern
California. The third wW beotf Ventura.
P1Jb and Game offlclala HY they have all tbe
necessary permits for the work and they have a
declaration of neeaUve environmental impact 1n
band.
BUT NEWPORT BEAQI councilmen say lbe
project could have a substantial environmental im-
pact and they want Fish and Game to do a thorough
study of the effects of a sinJcin& on the shoreline CW'-rents.
City Councilman Don Mcl.nnls, whole ocean-
front home in West Newport was nearly l01t during
a period ol. severe beach eroe.lon ten years qo, said
the city ought to put the a1ency on notice that legal
action will result U the project aoes ahead wltbout
an EIR. ---
Describing the agency as .. high handed" Mcln-
ni.s pointed out that two months ago the city uked
Fish and Game for data which would indicate no
problems would result on the beaches from the link·
ing ol the vessel.
SO FAR. RE SAID, the only thine the clty has he~ have been news accounts that the project is movmgahMd. ..
·Councilmen will discuss the matter •lain at
their meetin& next Monday before decldiq on their
next IDOTe.
Meanwblle, City M anqer Robert Wynn said be
would try to get further iaformaUon from Fi.ah and
Game.
<Of N<tWPO't 8Mcll, C..., llMH'I Lltlla<\ -Storv of WMtmln1ter. C.., encl Lota •umerco of lffwlftQton Conne<tkvt. ~01,., Wltllem Pern,I. of M<MIM·
"'Ole, Of-. Ill,... 9randcllll<W.,.
'Mo Owls•-•H • member of Syca,,,_e A-kell Lod9e • 140, S.nt•
....... Ce. for 2t ..... ". PHI N-• Cr•nd Births
A city pollceman, whose name
Keavy remembers to this day,
accosted the young thieves. The
officer was shot.
•& P•~· I~ •nd GwrClleM ol Ille ST.JOH"4M051'1TAL TIDS WAS BIG NEWS and the :_R•t>e ... h A»ernbly. Services •Ill be AtllWUt, im
Keavy coached his young charge
into a new birthdate one year
later than his real one.
What about the "Front Page"
antics of newspaper men depict·
ed in the play and subsequent
movies.
he recently finished a 10,000 word ---------------------screenplay concept on pyramids
in Guatemala. ... 1e1 T11u,....,.., S.P1am11er u, ,,,, at Mr end Mn. Petrl<k A9ull••. El p aper• s m an a g i n g e d l tor •1 . OOPM at Wewrl•v Chur ell, S.nta An•. "ANYBODY WHO BAS . . . . any 1magmation or enthusium can
~. Offklanl Rav. JoM Wllltar. Int ... TM0,9lrl. personally took Charge O( Writing ~ent Felrlleven Memorl•I Puk. Mr. •nd Mn. Roy Mc:Keen. El Toro, th slo
.00-·8e<ltu'beuer Morlu•rv Cllre<· 9lrl. e ry.
10rs,OrAn1J11C.. Mr. •nd '::~:;.::.' caurio. ~eavy W~ dispatched to the
• LOvo N••pcw18Mc:11,v1r1. pohce atabon and was there "I NEVER SAW ANY of that,
develop a second career." Keavy
said ..
9ETTY ESTELLA LOYD. r••ldtnt Mr. Md Nft. l.M'ry ICOlt .. , El Toro. ------------------------------------------;,.Colt•~ C.lllomla. Peu.d ewev 01r1 •
.... S.~ '· 1m et the eoe of 0 . Dr, end Mn. Wllllam SokOI, LeQune .----~m1m.r---..------------------------------· "41rvl ..... byller~AllOftl.Oydof 8.ecll,QWI. r. --· Funeret wrvlc.eawlll be held ~i, 1m Weel.....S•v Sep1am1Mr 14, 1t17 •I Mr. end Mn. John N-rt. Hunt. ... nw.15
t:toPM .... """1• Velley Southern lnVtaftlMcl\.boV. ~ ~•PllSI O>ur<ll, f'tN'll. C.. lntennent Mr. end M r1. l'dollo Ceno, ':-4~':~'::: will be .wt uw Ptrrls v.11.,. cam.ttrv In Weatm!Mt .. , boy.
P9rrll, QI. Smllll TllUMll LAmO Cotia ...,._rs, 1'77 • Ala COHO
Mese Monuarydlrect°". ~ Mr. end Mn. J-• lk'avft.ld, lrYlne, St. LI< 21707 SIMMOMS boy. ~'""'' Tt" r Slaru 11 V""t Or ·~
RUSSELL SIMMONS, r MIOent or Mr end M<s. Jemes Curley. Costa • (Qin Store NMr~t Your Arul
t.ono Ba.t<ll, Cllllforno.t P.tu~ •••"t MaW,Qlrl. COSTAME5A642·175J
SePltombff 11, 1'77 Survl~d bv h•' Selll-•. 1m 1u. H.-alv4. •II• Ooro111v '"''"V Simmon .. Mr ...... Mn. Wlfl'-n GMl.c, H-MISSIONVleJ049S-0401 O~lwr Oorollly G«>roia Hiii of &..-. lnQtoft llMcl\, 911'. ... Ceo9Me ~--8eecll, Cl., 911\ Jeck Sim,.._ of Ne• Or. end Mr'-Swnue1.....,_. lrvlne, cs.n ~ P'rwy. et A""V ,......, I Orl••n" Loul1lene , fo ur boy.
91'9nd<lllldren, Marv Kev, Crent, Mr.endMn.DonelCIP-,lrvlne. i;s;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillliiiiiiliiiii;;;;;iiiiiiiii;;;;;;iiiiiiii ltwl1, -.J•v. Prlve1e 9~ ... 1ae bo Mt'VICff wlll be Nld Tllul"ldey $el)o y.
-1S, 1'77 et 1 OOl'M al l'eclfk 1-----------1
View Memorfel Perk. l111erment PUBUC NOTICE
P.t<lllc v•-,...,,_1.1 P•rlt. Peclfk ----------Vl-Mot"luery Cllrecton. PICTIT10US IWSIMaU OAHIEU NAMalTATaMaMT
HAZEL 8. DANICLS, resident of Thelollowlng--ertdOlnoblal·
COile W.S., C.lllornla. Peuecl •••• neuas·
Sec>1am4lilr I. 1'77. F111>erel •rvkK 'HYATT OflAPEAIES "4 ProdVc-
wlll be lltld Thunday S.p4ambtr U, tlOI\ Pf Newpor1 Baactl CA 92'63
1t17 et 11 OOAM et IN Smllll Tuthill e.rttv &. Hyatt, 2m01 ~. HUllt· L•mbMorlll.,y Cllaptil. lnter,.,...1 w111 lnvton 8"cll CA 92._.. lollowatMelr~AbbeyMflmorl•I Per• Greci 0 •Hyett 25'3 Elelen St
: ALLERGY?·
. (2131 214-2556
17141 543-9624 Recorded Message ·
or. Flanzer would love tct
advertise his prices. sov.
would he ever love to.
But the law says he
can 't, so If you want to
find outJust how little
yaur dental work can
cost, you'll have tocall
or come In. And If
vou 'Ve got dental In·
surance, you might find
that It won't cost you
anything. sort of an un-
advertised specf al.
In A,,..,.lm c.. Smllh Tutlllll LAmb CoateMeaa,i:Am»' ••
cost• Mes• Mor1uery Cllrectort. Thll ~lneM 1, <Ofldu<letl by en In-
......... dlvldllel WALSH Betty E Hyett
AOIEAT W. WALSH, retlelent pf El Tiii• stet~! •H tlltd wltll tM
ALLERGY CONTROL
FOUNDATION
801 1583, Oran2e Ca 92661
Write for~ h1fonnotlo.
Dr. Arnold H. Flanzer.
370 E. 17th St.
642-5671 CasaifiedAds
Costa Mesa
642-0112
Toro. Galllornla. S..rvl.,.d bV 1111 •1111 E1t11tr Walsh, one deu9lllet' Purl c-tyO«ttofOrenot County on Sept.
Siiier of Et Toro, Cl. Funtr•I Servi< .. 12, im. -· W~Clne\Oay, OOPM •I Pallsade1 Unll· "'' .. ~=========!!llh •d MethoCllsl Church, Capl1treno Pllbllllled Orenve OM4t Delly Pltot,
Beech, CAI. o·eo..ner Leguna Hiiia Sellt. w.21,•,W1110ct.S, 1m Mori .-yell re< ton '9T7·71
ALIXAHOIA r.;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~·1 GEATAUOEA ALEXAt401!A,rKI· PUBUC NOTICE aonl of Sant• MOn1ca, C•llfornla
Pnwcl •••Y SePl-~r 17, In L-----------Hill,, ca. SN I• It. widow of tM lat• PICTIT10US •USIHISI -Alonto A. Al•uncier lovlnv ,, .... of NAME ST<\TaMIHT
Louh A. ' e._,.., E llot>erlMWI. Mrt Tiie folloMnQ ... _ ••• dolnv bull·
Marl• R Powtll •nd M ... LoulH MUH
WH..,.. ••so w.rv• .. f'O Oy lier dellQMr LIM'S & ANG'S DEVELOPERS:
Mrs. JHn Cort Ao ... ry Tllu-.Clllv Seo-LTD.,'°'" Tul99I A..,..nue, Cyprtts, CA ltmbtr u •• , 1 JOPM •I Mfflltr, '°"°
M11rpt1y & -lier MOrl\Ulry Clwipe4, Tlltlme A. Lim, U11 Tule9I,
S.nl• -.!<•, QI. Mass of Olrlllla<\ Cypr~.CA'°'30
Burlel Frldey IO·~M el SI. Monl<e Relph A. Lim, Ull Tul•gf, C.IP>oll< Olurcll, Sant• Monica, C.. In-Cyoreu, CA'°"9
terment Holy Crou C.nwtery, O'Coft. Tllltlltnl"'1sltconduc:ttdbye llml1' nerU.-HlltsMor1WryCl4rK..,...._ .ope~tL
llLL N04DWAT
MORTU41Y
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6"42·9150
SMITH nmtlU. LANI
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, 518 N. Broadway
Santa Ana• 547.-4'131
rtBCI llOTHIH
SMmfS• MOIYVAllT
627 Main St.
Huntinoton Beach
638-e639.
PmPAMl&.T
OOIOMIAL ''""' HOMI
7801 Bolsa Ave.
Westminster
8a3·3525
P4C1'4C YllW
MIMOllAL,Aal
Cemetery Mortuaty
Chapel
3500 Pactnc View Dtive
N•wpon. Cellfomla
~
MICO.WICI
MOlmt<ll
Llouna hach 494-Nte
Laguna Hlll1
7et-o833
San Juan CIP11tr1no 496·• 77t
TNlmeA.Um TNI ltat9tN!lt Wff flltd Wilt! the
c.oui.tv Clet1I of Orenge c:oumy on July
U,1'77.
l'7'4M PublllNd Orenve Coest Delly Pilot
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.Neptune Society·
a.CUMTIQH IUllllA&.ATUA
646-7431 ,, _ _...MCWttv ......... . ..., __ .._ ....... ;
call ............ ,.
M In. ' Clllf'~'.
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/
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08JECTS OF VERTU
OF THE LATE
ABBY DEERING HOWE
McCORMICK
PORCELAIMS-SILVER-fUllMITUH-ORIEMr AL ART IU~~IOMDS-CIYSTAL
-PWS-
IY ORDR OF THE TIUST D•ARTMBn' o•1HE vAwY NATIONAL ....
OF ARIZONA.; A MA4iMllllCIMT COLLIC110M OP
FIOM THE ESTATE OF A PROMIM&n' 11$91MT OF
CLUIWATH HILLS, SConsDALI. AatzOMA ·
TOllOFPHIDAT
I
~ Sfkhm! dJ:a:lct peys
SUPERINTENDENT OUTLINES
DISTRICT DIRECTIONS
Required Leaming
• StucMnts In tM Huntlntton Beech CJnlon Miah lcMol
Olatr1c:t win be "requlr9d to IHm" ctr181n ba.-Jc akllla In
addition to eccumulatlng the requlr•d graduation
credttt 8COOnllng to Dr. Frank J . Abbott. Supertnwn-
d•nt. The DIWtct wlll require atvct.nta to do "'ore than
..,end four ,...,. of .. at Um• In ord9r to e-t thefr high eohool clplomM..
T eetlng.tor knowf eda•
• In ~ tO deterMite If ltud9nta know •nd can com-
pec.ntty perform baalc akJlla, the Dlaufct wlll continue
• teeGng program bepn la .. ,...,.
• Fl'Mt.m9n atudenta (CIHa of 1111) nMd to be ... ,.
that~ wtll be r.qulred to d..-nonatrate abfllty In and
knowledge of certeln baaJo aldtta befor-. their diploma•
wlll be granted from any of the high achoola In th• Ola·
trlC1. During th• tour. yHrs In high achoot, th• student
mu1t aucc9aafully paaa and malnteln 801rd approv.ct
. atand4ard8 In
•R .. dlng
• ungu91a Arta (Including wrttJng)
• Math
• c.r .. r Education
As other atandarda are approved, atud•nta and
parents wtll be nottfl.ct when they are required for
tfeduatlon.
Gredudon •end•rdt for theae sldlls "-"been wrttt•n bf IMChtf9, validated by the Ooets Commfaalon ~
poMd of shlcknta, par•nta, and community ctttnns.
•ncl appowd by ltl• Boerd of Truat..., At thla dme,
•lt•matives ar• 1Mln9 developed fOf f1WUuring lltuo
d•nt eblOty.
• Oth•r atud•nta In the Df1trlct wlll b• t•ated
thr~ thefr high achool c:er .. rs to , .. that they·
are IHmlng th• .... nual akllla. Per•nta wlll b•
notified of thefr atudant'• acorH ao that, If n•c:eHary,
rem9Clation ~n taka plac• befor• graduation.
• !arty graduate candtdatH wlahlng to graduate
before their four yHr high achool .. parienc• la co,,.,.
pteted muet peu teat• In tM atHa of reedlnf, Wf1Un91 math. end the comptetlon of • Job eppUcatloft form.
,lncreaed Clnlduatlon Requirement•
• In en effort to man th• high achool dlplorM mor8 me~. the 8oetd of~ .. In eddltlon to ,.. quhtne ~ um t .. tlne. I Md the gradu.tton
oradft ,....,ement from 252 creitlta. Another r•
qulremant la that etudents are Nmaln In school for a
four·,..., •lrP8r .. nc•.
I
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUS I USINIU
NUii STATIMINT
TM '°4-1"9 .. ,_, fl doiftQ !Ntl· ,..,,.,
BACICWOO°' l'UANITURE l7JOO
ICeetloOn l.11 , • 14 H...,t11191on Be.o<I\,
CAn.D
llOdl\ey l n J.cob•on, 17)00
ICMllOft l.11.. • ,. Hunt1"91on BeKI\, CA~
..... u PL'BUC NOTICE
Publt.,_., Or•n941 Co°'t D•lly PolOI. -----------A1>9u11ll, Seotttm~r. I U 71 lt17
JI•~ ,, 0,l'ICE 01' THI!
SHE"ll'l'·CO"ONE R,
COUNTY 01' ORANG I
----NOTICE Ofl SALi UNOl!R COU"T PUBLIC' NOTICE ORDU WITHIN INTULOCUTORY , JUOOMEHT Ofl DISSOLUTION 01'
MAR"IACE. ---------fllCTITIOUS IUSINUS
HAMa STATaMINT
The fol'-1"9 per~ •rt dolnQ IN\I
MHIS;
2100 DVRNC:SS, A Limited
Par1,."'11p, 171}1 Sl<y Park Clrtle,
"G", lrvl,..,C.A'1/U
Geor9t G O"NHI & AUO<latet,
•M.,el.eltlcrl'lleCorp0r•hon, llUI Sky
Parll Clrcle "G" Irvine CAt'llU
Slaflley & Tllelm• Slw<,.vn. JOO
Gartleld,So Pa~t\A.CAUlll
JO!WI-PftVlll• JH n MlkllU 1107 lo4yde Ptno Rd Senta An• CA '210S
l h .. btlslnf H IHondu< led by • llmll
9CI Pt rtnerW p
~41" G 0 N••I & Ano< In(
n..~at p.,,,.,.,
By: PttrlckA o·N•at
Thlt""51natl was I oted will\ Ille Coun
ty Clertl al 0r•"9" C.ounly Oii Auq 1~
No. DllllS
LUCI AB ANDER!>ON, "-l•tiOlltr
¥\
WILLIAM W ANDER!>ON, RtsPon-
cMlll
I, IN Uf><lff\U)nl'd, 8RAO GATES,
She,,ll·(orontr. County ol Oran90,
St11lt al C.lllornlt. oo ~rtby cerlllv
"'•I by Ylrt .. of a (.ourt ~ ,., lfW tn-
t•tlc>r\llory Jl>OQ~I ot Oluoluuon of
Merri-o.ai.o ""'9us11', "'• tiw90 l ptr8qrac>ll Bl. In ltw S.-rlot Court,
C.0U11ty al Or-. St.te ol C•ll•or"4•
•11tered Oii M.<r<ll lS. 1'1• ...,d recordeCI
Oii AUOU\t 1' lt7t, tn IM•-"'lltlecl
•<l•on •ftHtln WI LLIAM w
ANDERSON, the above 11a....a r._
CM"t we\ lo rK.lfW itn t<quat d1vtit0ft' of
tf"llMmuruty oroo-rty tr~ ltw ~••·
t1on•r lUCIA 8 ANDEll!>ON. "' tn-
•mo..nt of Ul ,Jlt.00 within 'Cl <l•YS of
... , ... :!:::;":: :.::=.'i:"~ 7'~:~:~i:~:
Pub4h"90 Or•~ Co••I 011ty Pllol, "'"by ~1'1UI' of• •rllof tnl0<<•,...~l In
1'11
A119~t>l,5eot-rl U 1•. t•ll •Aid Miion •-on July 11 1911, all
lllt·17 H•• pr0perty In Ille C4'1ntv ol Or-.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Stal~ ol C•lllornl•. doct1bed u 104•-·· Lot Fiii..,, """tM 1outhw0\l1trly IS ,,..., ol Lot Sl•lt<!ll In Btocll Tl'tl'1y·flve of
Ntwport 8-a<h, at •-n on • Moll> PICTITIOUS aUSINl!SS rec or .... Ill Booe. 3, P•ge 76 of MIS·
NAME STAT•Ml!NT <•II•~ Mt1>1, rtto•CI~ ot Ont>Oe
The foUowlno peraons .,, doing butl· Cou11ty, Cllllornla. Procier1v Is com. neu~L L C.ENTEll HEW PO AT monly ll,_n a• 114 Eatl 3'1t1 Str.,.t,
NUMBER 2. ''°'Dow $1'"1. Newp0rl Newport 8ea<h, UllfOf'ni•. T~tner .. •<II.CA~ with •II al'ld tl"ll"ler Ill• 1-m•nts.
OoMlcl M. IColl, "°'Vie Lido Souct, l1trtdltament1 and appurltn•n<t>
Hew_, Beech, CA nwo thereunto btlOnOl"9 or 111 .,,,wise .a~ ""''·'~"ll llk herd C. Elllo4t, .. lll'ldl hit, PUBLIC NOTICE IS HElll!'BY
Htw-1Baadi,CA'1MO GIVEN THAT ON Tllur~h•. ~p.
Lff C. S.mmlt, •4 Llllda hit ttm~r ~ ""Al 10:00 A M o'clo<k t i Newpor1 llUCll, CA""° 0,. Ml40t-• 11 Hell Moon B•Y M•ln LObOY. C.UrlllOUH, 700 Civic
D 1 · c:Or-oet~r CAt2'2S C•nler Drtw West Cltrot Senta A"• 1
r ':'verell Oavu 111 , 2141 MU• will \ell IN! -Ont,..,.. pr~rty
0 I _,,.,,, 8"Hh CA'2'60 ull<Mr ~a writ end order,.,. '° mucr1
r ';imollty l Str~cler, ">0 Port •• may be neuu.sry lo "'"'• >t•d AllN N WllOr1 lleacll CA '1'60 •mounh with cosh to l!W lliOl'ttsl ~ s7-.:.. N. Sertllrd, 1100 Well hy oer · lor ""' In lawful ,,,_., ol tne
Ave.,Bal-,CAt2M2 Unll..SSlal" SVdneY E BuO. lll4 S.nd Key O•l•d 11 S.ntt A11a, Calllornla
C OM Ottl Mar CA t2•U A1>9u\I '" 1'17, or A E _;.._, Inc • C.lllornla BRADGATE$, ......... • .• Stwrlfl·Cor-r (.Orpo<atlofl, ISi """"'"91•11 Ave • B R T t ti ........ H•rtfOrcl. CAlnft °'"s v • unt a , .... outy
Thl1..,,..1lscOflClu<led by a llmfl. OLl!OOl\A~ANDl'llH~OTT
ed pel1lllnhlt> Ret"'°""' t A-NY
Tl,.,...ftvt....Str.O.. l4UWll11t1reatK,s.ltt1•
Thll *'-' Wis tlled wltll the Lat ........ CA."°"
CoufllY Ctel'tl of 0r.,... COVfltY on Pul>ll\,,.. Ol'enoe Coast Dall, Pltot, A"llV'I", 1tn. Au9ust lt. S.pttmtoer 7, 14, 1t17
fl11t41 3161-77
PtJ8UC NOTICE
Pt:BUC ~OTICE
fllCTITIOUS IUSIN•H
NAMI ST.llTIMINT
T"" lol'-•"9 Pit'-It OO•nq INtl
ne\\ .,
SC..ol.L STUDIOS 000 C.mP•.S
Dt .. Slo no. Newp0rt heel\. CA nMO
Denni\ M.trlln Scl\oll, 111) Port
""-P<lb4111WO Or•"lje Coatl D•llY Pilot
A1>9<l•I JI Sepl-t 7, U , JI, lt77
Jl7J.77
PLBUC NOTICE
OtlAHOI COUNTY
SUl'IRICNI COURT
1Ge(lvk C:-... Ori.,. WHI
............ CA'21tt
SUMMONS
C.MN ...... t . l .. 71·'6
Pl•lnlltf; JOELC MO'iS
Detendtnt GOLDEN COACH
"ESTAURAIH AND COCKTAIL
LOUNGE, JAMES A CLARK, 111
dlvldU•llr •nd doing bu•lneu ••
GOLDEN COACH RESTAURANT,
•ho -nown O GOLDEN COACH RESTAURANT ANO COCICTAIL
LOUNGE; I NTERNATIONAL
BROTHERHOOD OF PAIN TERS ANO
ALLIED TRADES. LOCAL UNION
ltll. tn v11l11<orporl\led au0<lollon,
•nd DOES ONE t~rough FORTY,
lll<IU\I.,.,
NOTICE! YO<I Mn-" ·-Tiie <•ur1 INiy IM<lde .... ,,., YM wlllleut
Y ... r ....... llHN IMl"t yw ,_ ...
wl.,lft • .. ,, RN<I ltle ln .. rmallon
.. 1-.
AYISOI u...-M .i.e Htnt,,,_, 11
TrlM!nal ,._. -ldlr c .... ra Ud. tlft
.... 1-la t _, q.,. Ud. re_ ....
...,,,.. .. •din. L.H i. lllMrmH .... .........
I TO THE DEFENDANT A ''"''
<oml>l.,nt ha\ -111.0 tQ•lntl VOii ISHfool••OH)
e. ti you •h i\ IO defend 11\I• 1.-.tull
vo.. ~• wlll11n JO city• •fter tl\I• sum-
mon• I\ Mr'Wd on vou Ille with lhlt
court • -•tte<1 pl~ad•nQ In •H90n'4! to
ttw <omola•'ll ot a JV\llc• Court, you
muslJ•I• w1111 lfW court• wrltlt11 plead I~ or<....., an or•I ot .. 01"9 to be en
te,..o Ill tr-. doO•ll U11len you <IO ~
your a.fault w111 ~ tnlul'd up0n •P.
Pll<•llon Of ttle Pl•onllll end 11\11 court
may e<1ter 1 IVCIQment •41"'"'' rou tor the relief 0.-"'4tncled In 11w compl••nl.
which could rtwll 1n g<tr11loh,,.,..nt of
w1991, lal<•"9 OI ,,_,. O• pr-rty or
Olfler rtlirf r9quesled In the com11l•lnt
.t~ ...... .:.~~=rJ: •• ,,_,u., H IMI ya111 wrlllett
re1-,1te11v. MIYMlllMtlflllme.
D1tl'd Aorll M. 1977 WI LLIAME SIJOHN
CIH'lc
'iEALI
By Sfltr ry Olio
Decouty
· 'OLU)Q(, "°'-LOCK a.-flAY
Alt•nMTler: ~•lmllt
1-~,.artllell,Slt.1Ut
L"A .... CA"'61 Tt4: UIJl'7M111
·1~ word "compJ11nt .. tncludtt
crO\\•COMPl •lnl, "pl11nt1ff" In·
ct~ crou <omc>talnt. <Ml•lldant"
Incl~ crouO.ltl'ld•nt tl~uter 1,..
<h•des '"' pturtl ...0 m .. cullne tn·
<lll<IH ltmllline -neuter A ••lllen 1>1-n; ff'<fUOlnQ an an1wer, d•mur·
••r, etc .. """' be In the l0<m r9<111fred
by ti. C.lll0<11la Aulet el Cour1 YOV<
or101nat !MadlflQ "'"'' bt filed In 11111 court wit" pr_, 1111"9 l•et and proof
lhtl a COVf the..of wn ........ ell ea<l'I
plalnllH'• llttorney alld on t1<tl pl•ln-
tlfl not r_.ml!d by.., •ttomey. The
llme when • llH'llmon1 11 d .. med
wrveo on• party .....,. very O.pelldlno
Oii tM melllOd of MtVlct. ,,.., tUmPI•.
-CCP•U 101hrOUQll 41S 40
Publl\llM Ol'enott (OHi Delly Piiot,
Auou•I )I, SeP4 7. u . 21. 1'17
Put1Utlled Ol'9110e Cool Dally PllOI, ----------------------·~nl,5"1.J, u .21, "" 3'1,.,1 • PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
PUauc NOTICE
---
•
From Ylpples
Mayor Gets
Pie in Face
From AP Dllpatcbee
Mayor Ralpb J. Perk wu bit 1n the f1ce with a
pie as he opened bis re-elecUOQ umpalp held·
quart.en 1n downtown Cleveland.
Police said a 33-year-old Sue KackUck or Olm·
sled Falla wu booked on an usault chuae for the
throwlna of the strawberry-rhubarb pie in the
mayor'a face.
The Youth InternaUonal Party, which claimed
responslblllty for throwing a pie at Gov. James A.
Rhodes on Aua. 16 Ill the openine of the Ohio State
Falr in Columbus, also claimed responaiblllty for
hitting Perk.
* andy Darrah got down to basics in her cam·
palgn for a seat oo the Detroit City Council.
'Miss Darrah, 33, tried to float on a door from a
demolished house across the Detroit River. Her
destination was Windsor, Ontario, in Canada.
She wore only her band-printed carQpaign de·
cals -and those washed
oil. Detroit police ol:C PEOPLE J
flcers in a rescue boa\ l _ plucked the nude and --~~~~~~~ .......
shivering Miss Darrah
from the river. Authorities said she was sent to the
Detroit General Hospital.
Sammy Dava. Jr. wlll receive the American·
Israel Friendship League's highest honor Nov. 2 at
a B'nai Zion Award dinner here.
Davis was chosen as an entertainment world
leader .. whose perceptive understandina of world
OAVll
events motivated him to pursue
liberty and peace."
Past recipients or the award
have included Presidents Lyn.
don B. Johnson, John F. Ken·
nedy and ~raid R. Ford.
* Lt. Gen. Oh1aegu.n Obasa.n·
jo, Nigeria's head of state, will
make a state visit to Washington
starting Oct. 11, the White House
announced.
The nrst Nigerian government chief to make
s uch a visit, Obasanjo will go to New York City·
after meeting with President Carter and senior or.
ficials here. • The new Miss America's views on premarital
sex will have to remain a mystery. She told re-
porters that 1t 's none or their busineSI.
"I think that's a personal matter that isn't rele·
vant to M1as America at all," said Suaan Perkiu, •
23, of Columbus, Ohio.
She said at a news conference in New York City
that pageant officials had given her carte blanche
to ''say anything I want, wear anything 1 want." •
James Meredith of Denver. Colo., said Mrs.
Mossier was paying political advisers "a lot of
money" until several persons he
did not identify convinced her
she could not be elected.
The testimony was given
during the third week or a trial in
which two adopted sons, D&D.lel,
26, and Chrt.topher: Mossier, 25,
are challenging the validity or a
1975 will supplement. The sup-
plement disinherits them and a
11sler, Martha Mossier
Meredith, Meredith's wife. ~·· Lawyers have said Mrs. Meredith is not contestini
the will. • Joe Armstrong, former president and publisher
or Rolling Stone magazine, has been named presi·
dent and edltor·in-chief of New York and New West
magazines, publisher Rupert Murd~b announced.
Murdoch, a major international newspaper and
magazine publisher, also announced other changes
at three of his U.S. publications:
MURDOCH
-John Berendt, a con-
tributing editor to Esquire
magazine, was appointed editor
of New York magazine.
-Promoted to associate
publisher of The New York P06t
was lames Brady, who was
credited by Murdoch with
performing an "outstanding job
or rebuilding the editorial con·
tent of New York maaazine."
Brady had been editor or New York alnce Murdoch
bought it in January. • The three major television networks turned
down the request of a committee of black mualcians
to schedule jazz programs on a reaular basil, a
committee member said in San Francisco.
Joel Dort.am, chairman of the Committee to
Promote J~ on Television, said that hA,l¥rote last
February to t~ networks, the White HOilie and the
Congressional Black Caucus.
Commf ttee members include sinaer Nancy
WllSOD, Freddie Hubbard, Jobla Handy and lack.le
MacLean.
Officials of ABC, CBS and NBC indicated that a
regular jazi proaram could not attract a thus au·
dlence.
• w.cfnetday, September 14, 1971
Al'Wl .......
AUSTRALIA CREW FINDS ROUGHT GOING IN AMERICA'S CUP
Courageoaa Capture• Flrat Rae• by Minute, 48 Seconde
Courageous Takes
Early Cup Lea.~
NEWPORT. R.I. -The 23rd de·
fense of the America's Cup ia under
way and. as always, the U.S. defender
jumped into the lead in the initial race
Tuesday when Ted Turner on
Courgeous defeated the Aussie
challenger by one minute and 48
seconds over the 24-mlle Olympic
course.
That much is no longer news at this
point in time. Now comes the post
mortems: "How we did it" by the lo-
quacious Ted Turner, skipper of
Courageous, and "What went wrong,"
voiced by Australia's Noel Robins.
Wire service and eyeball reports
from Newport seem to agree that
Robins and his crew selected the
wrong sail from their inventory and
could not. point with Courageous on
the weather legs of the course.
EYEWITNESS REPORTS indicate
that Robins selected a full mal.ns'l and
was Wlable to trim properly for the
15·18 knot. winds and one to four.foot
chop on Rhode Island Sound. This was
verified by the report that Robins got
Australia off to a 12·second advantage
at the start but was unable to hold ofr
Courageous on the first beat, rounding
the mark more than a minute behind.
Robins admitted: "We had our best
saib in the box, but all that will be
changed when we come back Thurs·
day. We felt that our boat speed was
equal to Courageous."
Under the America's Cup rules the
losing skipper on any day may ask for
a ''Lay day." Robins hoisted the
signal requesting the day off as soon
as Australia crossed the finish line.
TED TURNER was his usual
ebullient self. Said he: "We had no
sail problems. We changed heads'ls
only once -from a seven to five·
ounce genoa. We kept a tight cover on
Australia from start to finlab.''
Turner admitted that boat speeds
were about equal on the off wind legs.
The winning margin of 1 :48
represented an increase or only 40
seconds by Courageous over the last
five legs
COURAGEOUS AND her crew of 11
men sailed a conservative race, cov-
ering when needed, avoiding errors
and playing the sUghUy Ouky winds
perfectly, while Australia gambled
and failed. Winds at the beginning of
the race -over a 24.3-rnlle, six-leg
course -were at 12 knots, moderat·
ing somewhat later in the race then
picking up again to 17 knots at the
finish.
Several limes, the immense spec-
tator fleet threatened to create prob·
lems, churning up the water and
complaining that the fifft of 2S Coast
Guard boata was keeping them too far
from the course.
Once, on the first leg of the race, an
Irate spectator complained, vta radio,
to the Coast Guard: "I'm at least five miles from the course. Why don't you put thil th1n8 on television so we can
watch It?"
ON THE Fl1lSI' le1, Australia took
three more tacks than Couraaeoua.
which dldn 't come olJ her port tack
unUl after 20 minutes. Meanwhile,
AU1tralla'1 crew bad to retrlm a slop.
PY tnalnaail. Coura1eoU1 led by 1:08 at the tint mart.
Courageou1 extended her lead
allahUy on the two reacblu 1.,1,
lead.lnc by 1: lf at the 1ecancl mU'k
and 1:23 at the tblrd mark.
ONE FOR HOME TEAM
Skipper Ted Turner
On the fourth leg, Australia
changed headsalls and made up some
time, trailing by 1: 12 at the fourth
buoy. Again the two boats split tacks
and Australia tried to force a duel
which Turner avoided scrupulously.
ON THE FIFTH leg, Courageous
hoisted a tri-radial spinnaker, a fuller
sail than the chute she had used on the
two reaching legs. Robins took
Australia on a higher course than
Courageous -meaning he was sail·
ing at more of an angle to the mark
than Turner -in an effort to pick up boat speed.
That gamble actually lost Robins
six seconds, and Australia trailed by
1: 18 at the fifth mark.
The final leg, the third beat to
windward. nearly was a carbon copy
of the previous two beats. The boats
split tacks, nopping over to take ad·
vantage or puffs or wind.
THE LO~ WAS Australia's first
since Aug. 7, when she lost to Gretel
II. another Aussie yacht, in the
foreign eliminations. However, this
was the first time this summer that
Australia bas raced an American
boat.
While Turner's margin was sub·
stantial, Australia·s consistency was
an indication that the boata have com·
petlUve hull speed.
* * * Carter Sentb
Turner Congrata
NEWPORT, R.I. <AP) -President
Jimmy Carter con1ratulatect
America's cup skipper Ted Turner, ll
fellow Southerner and Georldan, to.
day for his victory ovfr Australia ut
the first race of the final cup aertee.
In a handwritten Jett.er on White
Houae 'ltatlonery delivered to Ban·
n.IJter'a Wharf, where Courqeous ls
berthed, Carter told Turner:
"Con1ratulaUou to you and the
crew ~the Cour11eou1. 0 1 am proud of you an and all
Americana, Yankees and
Soutbemtn, wlah you well in the comb\Crae.t."
The note was sitned: "jimmy Ca.rt.er.·•
Wathen, CIJ>O IYC. ~a -1, runn, r.un•, Ptte M~c.po BYC; .I. V&alcar Boat· roan, b C\lnan, DPYC: ~ Wbid a~. aul Ttmpn, Capo BY\.:.
CU9 C a 1, BOid FOfbel; 2,
Ja ....... , BOb Mtlri.Ue. CPYC;s,.
TOl'NJ, O..tOMilill', CQoBYC •
. NO IPDOIA&D -SIG• Gcwdo, Bii llMI., Clfl! 8YC; I, ft 11 D, g~~'lllDJ'J II, DPYC: .. MT, Art ~OipeBYC.
Ir
' ~
\
l
-------. ....... ...
•• DAil y PILOT * We<lllHOly. &1p1emb4lr ,. Hin •
'Raelst' Faees 800 Years • ID Prison for Mt•rder
CHJCAGO (AP> -A black
man bu bten ed to Ml'V•
• from D t6 IDO yoan ln prbon for
m\l.l'dstna a wbJt.e woman whose
~ar wa ait.alled ln a &orTenUal
downpour
M Balley of Circuit Court told
lhe 1tolcal Marrion Lotan on
TUHdau'.
LOGAN, JI , WAS alv•n
nother 300-lO tJOC»year sentence
to be acrved concurrenUy for the
•ll•meted murder of the
woman 1 husband.
her huaba.nd and three of tbelr 1lx
children were tl'Qped ln their
car June 14, lt'76J wfien it 1talled In a nooded viadiict.
THE ANDEa80N8 were re-
lumlnl from a party when they
were forced to leave an ex-
preaway because of floodlnf.
They became lost on the city'a.
South Side and drove for more
than an hour and a ball trylq to
find tbelr way out of town.
Wltneua testified Andenon'1
car became caught ln aideatreet
traffic atalled because of tbe floodlnc. They said a lfOUP of
black )'OQtha demanded $10 from
Andenoft for aUowlns b1S car to
paaa.
the youths atoned bl.a car, wit-
nesaee testified, and Logan ap-
peared with a .45-callber piatol
and fired the fatal ahot lnto the car.
Loian -110 Is cbarcod with
murder ln a tavern shooting two
weeka before the Anderson inci-
dent.
·•we talk about HJtler and
olh r pcoople who have com-
'" mllkd attoclU•, but Ulla 11 Juat •• u bad ... Thia ahootlnl 11 atriet·
•: ly one ol raclam," Judie Jam
" • •
I . , , . ' . .. . . .
. . . . .
~ ; ' : ..
LISTERINE
ANTISEPTIC
The victim, Phyllls Anderson,
61, ot 1ubu.rban Buffalo Grove,
·euFFERIN "
TWICE AS FAST
-AS ASPIRIN
100 TABL£1S
( ART H OPPE )
When Anderson refuaed;
PRELL CONTAC
SHAMPOO DECONGESTANT
CAPSULES
DAILY PILOT
COLGATE -
DENTAL CREAM
;t1
" . ) : Pak or to 5 oz CONCENTRATI or , . " . . . '•. !• • , .
~ ~· ·: .. ·: ::
.• ·~ ·: ., . . •4 •• •• .. •• •• :· .. •! .. .. :; ..
=· .. • ..
~ :: .. . •• ;: :-•• :: .. ~ ~ ~ :;
~
~ ~ •• •• .. ~ •• ... :: • < I I ~ '! ~ ! :;
~ ~ ,.
!! •
CARNATION
COFFEE· MATE
NON -DAIRY CREAMER
22 oz
JAR 1.39
12 oz "DEP"
BLO DRY
HAIR CONDmONING
TREATMENT
H protects
. adds
body ..
cond1hons
1.39
" ~.!i: • "Dura Gloss" ~ N1Q Wr'I & Meolili !ii
30/10/100 WATT
50/1001150 WATT I ~~~ .. _:, 1.29
11 oz llDUID[~ 1. 49 ggc
"Stayf ree "
MAXI-PADS
SUPER SIH
(9 OZ.) ggc .,
NEW/ DIAL DEODORANT
SOAP
REG. SIZE. (3112 oz)
:Fo~ 1.59 6i1.00
LADY SEYMOUR ·aAROll£SS"
IRONING TABLE "DOWNY"
FABRIC
SOFTtNER
..._..._,,..,,,. ---[IJ f50il
( -.
(lJ 88~ MING SIZ£ (64 az )
We I d e d T -I e g 1 49 7 7 7 construction. Ad1usts
to any height up to
• 36" #011· 11 • BAN BASIC ... ... -
One Step At A Time
liy WATER Piil•
A 4 step, 8 week
smoking withdrawal
cH£wnLE Flintstones
ts&Ail VITAMINS
system.
HllTERS
7.88
llPAGE'S
"Invisible" TAPE
Permanent 3 g non·yellow1ng C
'llSOO"
REGULAR or
PLUS IRON
....
"HEAD" SHAMPOO
pH balaaced ...
with IHCiOIS
latber.
16oz 1 ~9
NON-AEROSOL
Anti. Persplrant
SPRAY
Regular
or
Neutral
El
STRl-DEX
Medicated PADS
For pimples, acne
oily skin.
42 PADS
~ ~
tweezer liten® "SPIC and SPAN"
Tiie Spot. ught Tweezer
No more
squinting & , ~
squ1rm1ng! Say~ i-'~
goodbye to eye ~f ·3:95 ~~
~ ~
BONUS SIZE
64.8 oz SIZC
1.39
"Neutrogena" DYMo Labelmaker
Pusoulize Mine & seal slPPfies.
PYREX WARE "FLAVOR SAVER"
91/2" PIE PLATE DRY SKlf UTH Gil
For shower or bath. 3 00 cleans and smooths
your skin. 4 11 Sill •
AmR-BATH IOOY OI.
For your dry skin
You can make
durable, easy· 1 5 3 to·read labels
#1720 •
~~pS~ZE ASS'T COLORS 89t
For cooking,
baking
and storing.
ggc
c :ac
Immersion HEATER LIQUOR~
... after your bath 4 00 or shower.
,._-ret 8 IL SIZE • COMET
10" FRY PAN 3-HOl.E locKwAF
U.L APPIOVlDI
Portable and safe •.. for
instant heating 1 99 of water, coffee.
ek •
MRUDY 9-VOLT
TRANSISTOR
Batt~ries g gc
PAI OF 2
Calvert mu SAVE 70<
8lDaD 750 Ml 4 9 9 WHISIEY 80 PF. . •
Count Vasya s•v1 aoc
EXTU NY 1.75 lT. 6 59 VODKA IO Pf. •
FILLER PAPER
WIDE • COLLEGE l llll
PAK OF PAK OF PAK Of
200 300 300 59c 79c ggc
(11/1111) (1110'1'1) (11/i111)
DHa Or1anizer
Compact, tor office, 2 39 den, etc . Smoke
finish. •281 •
I ~
Pencll BOX ~ w mau":..~ 1.39
No· st. ick black 2 8 8 teflon II
interior. •
IVORY LIQUID
GElfllEWHITE
Deteigent
....
...,._ __ -----·-. ... .. .:.t---\
DAIL V PILOT A J J
THREE DAYS ONLY!
SEPTEMBER 15, 16, 17
Our Amsterdam & New York CuHers
Hawe Opened Their Vaults For This Sale . .
WE MUST CLEAR EVERY DIAMOND IN STOCK
Buy Now Or lay Away! Diamond Prices Are Headed Sky High!
Yl To ~ OFF REGULAR RETAIL PRICES
lob Radff, "°"'dent of Rocftt
Je~ eo..p.y, rec...tty wewt
to &rope Clfld Mew Yori& to
p11rchase fh••· exq11hlh
dlaMOAd1 directly from the
cufhrs. blly clrect and SCITe!
UNMOUNTED DIAMONDS
5893-1.38 ct. Round. exceptional Quality and value
6868-1.49 ct. Round. very good clanty and color
5869-1.53 ct. Round, dazzling brilliance. slightly Included
5894-1 72 ct Round. excellent clarity and brilliance
6010-1 75 ct. Round gorgeous clarity. color and cut
5895-1.90 ct. Round. sllghtty off-white dazzler Clean
5886-2.08 ct Round. very colorlul
5870-2.10 ct. Round. fine color. sm wht. inclusion
5887-2.17 ct. Round. vibrant value
5888-2 20 ct. Round, (ap) conniseur's choice
5977-2 &5 ct Brilliant cut flasher (A Steal)
6898-1 96 ct. Round Bnll1ant Cut
5873-00 ct Round Brilliant Cut
5969-1 44 Pleasing Stone-Great for the Money
ME/S0-1.74 Very Brllhant-mcluded
5875-.94 ct. Brilliant cut white, eye clean
5874-.95 ct Brilhant cut. Some inclusions. Good color
5876-1 ct Brilliant & very clean
. 6877-1 ct. Brilliant. Excellent quality
587&-1.06 ct. Bnlhant-white, eye clean. tiny inclusion
6879-1 10 ct. Brilliant-white & clean
5880-1.12 ct. Bnlhant, clean. color off
6881-1.14 ct. Brilliant white brilliant. infractions, (morel
5882-1 16 ct Brilliant white clean
5883-1 22 ct Brilliant white clean
6&84-1.23 ct. 8rllhant white. clean. am Inclusion. cloudy
6008-1.02 ct. MarquiM . very white & lively
8012-1.07 ct. Pear shape, outstanding quality
5853-1.11 ct. ~ear shape, terrific clarity & brilliance
eo0~1.19 ct. MarQulH, gorgeous COior, cut & clarity
68~1.20 ct. MerqulH, long INnder, graceful
8011-1.27 ct. Pear aha~. nloe QWl!lty, vlbfant .
MON-FRI
10 a.m.-6 p.m.
SATURDAY
. .
Sale
Price
$2720
$2580
No. DIAMOND EARRINGS
5398-W/G Studs 1 60 cts
5142-W/G Fancy Studs 95 cts.
5586-Sm. V /G Studs 08 cts.
5997-V/G Studs 45 cts
5441-Sm. W/G Studs .05 ct
4825-Yel/G fancy studs .81 cts
5685-Y/G sm. fancy studs .10 cts.
5986-W/G diam stud screw backs . 15 cts
Sale
Pnce
$1 999
1999
S85
S375
S50
$850
3135
$99
S2240 5143-Y /G fancy studs 76 cts. S850
S850 $3120
$4720
S5320
S4560
$4992
$4960
$4688
$8320
Sl999
$2120
1504
$976
$1739
S1440
$1120
11440
12080
12080
$2460
12080
11440
S2080
11840
$2580
111G9
s21eo
s1nl5
$3900
11058
4086-V/G lancy studs approx. one d .
RINGS
ME/JC-1 00 ct. round bnlhant diamond in solitaire
tiffany-style setting Very nice
5160-1.04 ct. round brill diamond
5187-1.08 ct. round brill diamond
5492-.94 ct. round brill diamond in solitaire mounting
6103-1 03 ct. brilliant diamond Very nice
51 89-1.28 ct. brilliant diamond
Sale r·1ce
11995
11200
11100
169Q
,995
1995
5166-1 73 ct. bnlhant round diamond In solitaire setting. Very clean.
11200
5953-1.81 ct. ,brilllant~lamond in Y/G solitaire setting 11200
6952-1 73 ct. brilliant ctiamond with W/G six prong Tiffany setting S110U
5140-1 08 ct. round brilliant diamond In W/G mounting
with two baguettes · 11995
4992-1 03 ct. brilliant diamond set into a W/G
mounting with two baguettes 12100
ME/C0-1 10 c1 Marquise diamond in WIG solitaire mount~ng S2400
PACKAGE OF
DIAMONDS
You may select one diamond, pert of a pa~kage or all and pay for only the
weight ycu select
FORMULA -If ycu select a 1/10 ct (.10 cararJ atone: Multiply .10 x
$350.00. which would equal S35.00. the price You would pay for the gem
or gems that You selected. •100 Points = 1 carat
5823-1120 .05
5833-1/8 d
5832-1/5 ct.
583G-V. ct.
5933-1/3 ct sizes
5831-1/5 ct.
5827-1/3 ct sizes
582&-Ylct.
5872_,.ct
582~/5cts.
587~ Brilliants
680&-4 Brllllants
5964-2 Kltee em .. fiery w/lntr.c. lg. white lnfrac.
6886--$Pca. Gm. Melee
15867---29 Brill Colored
6858-2 Canary Brill
15968-2 pea Great. Cognac Marq.
6842*'""6 Pear Shape
5846--Q Marquise .13 ct T.W.
5841~ -1/6 ct.
685()-...2 P.., Shaoe
1504 Peret.
$33& Per Ct.
1304 Per Ct.
S456 Per Ct.
S360 Per Ct.
1360 Per Ct.
13e8 Peret.
1800 Per et.
IQ60 Per et.
1780 Per Ct.
1700 PtrCt
1875 Per <.;t.
1840 Per Ct.
1320PerCt.
1312 Peret.
1538 Per Ct.
1800 Peret.
$800 Peret.
M80 Per Ct.
l&ec>Perct.
MOO Per Ct .
I
If
For o•• 20 y .... Ill cloWwton
Costa Mesa. Dom lecltt Illas
pledged a HlqH dla•o11d
gaara11tee: dlaM011d1 •Ht
app ..... for 400/o ........
what "-Y!"Cll Rocftt'1 or YOllr
,__, .. ,. .. , ........... Mt ....... ...,.....,._._..,,.
No. UNMOUNTED DIAMONDS
5889-1.53 ct. Pear Shape, QOllleous. beautifully cut
6856-2.18 ct. Marquise, good clarity, spar1<1ing off-white color
5855-2 33 ct. Oval. dazzling champagne color
15890-2 89 ct. Pear Shape. very alight inclusion
5891-3.01 ct. Pear Shape, eye-clean slightly yellowed
5865-80 ct Oval. bright fancy yellow
5866-84 ct. Pear Shape, fancy canary yellow
6852-. 75 ct. Oval, clean, clear & vibrant
5851-. 76 ct. Marquise. eye clean. white
5834-.33 ct. Roond. bnlllant. good color
5837-.42 ct. Round. eye-<:lean
. 5838-.48 ct. Round. excellent clarity & brilliance
5840-. 75 ct. Round, eye-clean, good color
5854-.89 ct. Oval, fantastic color. cut & clarity
6975-.76 ct. Round. beautiful olf-wht. aparlder
5859-.82 ct. Marquise. dark yellow
5862-.69 ct. Oval. cognac color
MEi JM-Mounled approx 5. 75 ct. Brilhant ~ancy
golden cinnamon color
5860-.76 ct. Canary Yellow Marq .
5861-.54 ct. Pear Shape Fiery Yellow
5863-79 ct. Brllllant. bright Canary
5864-79 ct. Blue Dia, Pear Shape, fantastic oolor
584 7-53 ct. Pear Shape. very brllllant
5849-.54 ct. Pear Shape. fiery fine whit•
5849-.55 ct Pear Shape, exceptionally whit•
5974-.83 ct. Pear Shape, amazing color
6843-.46 ct. Pear Shape, brilliant white
6844-.12 ct. MarqulH, clean & white
5845-.39 ct. Peat Shape. fine color
15962-.13 ct. MQ, Barga In • auper dla.
&965-.78 ct. M#'Qulae
i
I
l
I
'
W9dneld1y. S!pt~i.r 14, 1en
New Police Bullet Won't Ricochet
[ CLAYTON <AP> A new kind
of bullet findlnu It• w1y into
polkt rovolvers la vlr\ually
atu.ranteed to km anyone it hita.
und ellrft'tnat• the haaard of
rlcochetlna into an Innocent
bystand r
;I~
't°~E o/111t1. r"L"' 6A1f r..-B~
M~SlnfA~ A>ITH CAMEMBlllT
·'My eo11cern w u for the safety
of the officer and the eafety of the
puaerby, '• Pollet Chief Billy H.
Lorimer aald In explainlna why
he bought 400 rounds of the potent
new ommunltion for his six.man
department In this town 30 miles
t-aatof San Francisco.
"ClAYTON DOESN'T net'd to
have an officer shoot at a bank C/o/6£5£."
REG. 1.79
SELF-STICK PHOTO ALBUMS
Attroctin vinyl, cloth, gron •oil or lominated·picturt coured photo 1lbvm1
for oil your summer picturu. Ho need for ,.ste Of mounting comers. I 0 -
9 1 11" pages Mony designs & solid colon to choose frOtll hy 11owl
,~r -~\
~~.:~r-~', 12-0Z. THERMO-SERV
-:' '.. 'TRAVEL TUMBLER '" _., ti''''':t•!·IJ]99 ~
MacALPINE
SCOTCH
QUART
3''
A htht •Ul<lt
whuky lllc"4t4
' '''""•d .• kttlt"4"' tltt
•14 111d1llo•
\
, .. J' LOW '0 PRICE
lur It f .. ltt•I drifts IMI or c.o14 e>nt• a..dtl,
,-.... • St-•.,• lfftltt1 lftttrMt.....i CoHtt .. 11911 ...
CALIFORNIA
DINNER WINES
LARGE ARUY Of LAIUS
•cHAaus FtnH
•BURGUNDY 99 c •VIN ROSE
• THRIFTY EA
PRICE •
lftjoy tltt 1o<iellilrty of d""''' wiMt frMI ltli<t
hMllO Ot4 fne• v • ...,,..i Min 11114 ace..,.
robber comlna through town and
shoot someone innocently com·
1n1 out or a restaurant .. ' Lorimor
added in an interview.
The town, with 3,000 popula·
Uon, doesn't even have a bank.
Lorimor aald be picked the new
"Glaser Safety slug" after read·
lne a federal report which sald it
was the only one of 30 types of
bullets tested which didn't
rlc04:hel.
HE SAID THAT once the .38·
caliber bullet enters the body,
the slug's nose shatters and
spews hundreds of tiny ' frag·
menls in a cone-shaped pattern.
~) () >-/ / ... 1. t ~:_; WARNER BROS.
Death is a virtual certainty un·
less the slue hits an arm or lea.
and in that cue the limb will be
damaged extensively, according
to the manufacturer, Jack Canon
of McAllen. Tex.
Sgt. Aubrey Dowler of the
McAllen police department said
that many of the ortlcers in that
city of about 50,000 population
have the new type of bullet In
their revolvers, even though they
cost about 68 cents each, com-
pared to about 11 cents for a con·
ventional bullet.
DOWLER SAID POLICEMEN
like the new bullet because, "The
V,, , .. -~ PLUSH TOYS
G:t ·~~.,.., lOUI 3'' ~ ,, ~· ~ CllOIC1
PRE-CHRISTMAS TOYS
).
\-' .,.. ~ • 1y1 .......
• 1 • • tltt Clll ' ''419• '-?'. All
. • lt•KWt, ""'911lt t1y1I
Greet Christma ,nstlltsl Otoost 1 or eft of f9'lllf, kly H_. 14111 ...is, CM,..trbt4 footWI or Slilttle lowl.
only legal time to whip that aun
out of your holster Is when you
are trying to save your life or
that of a third party. When you
shoot one of theae. you 're auaran·
teed of stopping a man and not
accidentally hitting an innocent
bystander."
Canon said unlike the Infamous
dumdum. or hollow-point bullet,
his product is acceptable under
the Geneva convention.
THE FORMER ARMY officer
said he received a patent on the
bullet last year. He said he isn't
able yet to handle big orders
from large police departments,
but some police olficers alJ'eady
have purcf\ued the aluas for use
durlng oft-duty houra. de adds
he'll only sell them to law en-
forcement officers.
The sluis cont;ain 330 blts ol
"fine chilled shot" suspended in
Tenon, Canon said, and expend
all their eneray inside the victim.
They can be used in either .38
or .357revolvers.
r
l'rndc your old stuff for
nt.'w good1c:. wllh a
<.:la~s1licd ad &J2 5678
COMB & BAREnE FASHIONS
s,tciel dtcomive co111b1 & bertttt1 t• 9iwe the riflit eccent t1 fell f1111io1u
i11 1 ple1J of stylts-1tqvi11 flowers, 1ne111ltd wltll st0ttts, bvtttrflit1,
ben, tot1oise. ,.,it fHthtr tombs. lerettes witll rlli11t1t0ftt1. HeoA.nd1.
SAlt Pl\Cl
UNDER PANTY Ow,,,... t.w I.It"° 11111 A
& I it! Som11t., ..... wit• Cr-PMtf
COM,All IN ouaun TO llANDS SUUNG fOt I .2t
~!4J.~~~.!~.P · 119
•• , .. , •• lllllltl, S..Ct & ~···
COMPAll IN QUAllTHO llAllOS UUlllG IOI I.St
•Al1 .. a 1elt-rtpt.1.lt s.ft 'II' S...tlt ,_ly IMM --'J ... I. If
LATEST FASHION
DESIGNER NECKLACES
ar,.., 11 , .. ..., ,. .. ""'
ctltf ,....,. tf loldtt lol
9'11te<I 4ulfAI 111 ftld·
lt1k Hth & lt1tt•
dltiM .•• , lttffllll 88~.
SALl PllCl SAll Pl\Cl
SP~:j, 179 GLAfJ" 64 .. KODAK
400 COLOR FllM ,.," ........ '
SANDWICH BAGS YUCCA DEW SHAMPOO ,.. .......... It<\,.,. ...,..., llfy. Olly.
Is Knox Under Gun
In Q'B Dilennna?
t..05 ANG£Lf;S CAP> -Chuck
Knox was lbe babyalller for Joe
Namath back In 1965 and now
muat take fuJI re1pon1lblllty.
amid crtticbm, ror makln& the
elderly quarterback the Los
AryrelH Rama starter
Knox wu a Nt!w York Jets u -
aiau.nt coach when Namath was
dratted by both the old American
Footbal: League and the Na-
tional Football League aft er star-ring at AJabama
Knox stayed with Joe as the
then·AFL Jeta used big money to
coax him to si1n and Namath
directed the New York club a
couple ytan later to a surpnsmg
16· 7 victory over the Balli more
Colts in Super Bowl Ill
As football history goes, Knox
became the Rams coach rive
years ago, last summer the Jet.s
released Namath after 12 yea.rs
and he signed with Los Angeles.
Ironically, the Ra ms owner
now is Carroll Ro9enbloom, who
owned the Colts when Namath
beat them.
During their most disastrous
preseason slnce Knox came to
Los Angeles, the Rams have
gone 1·5 and Namath wasn't im-
pressive, yet has been named to
sta rt Sunday's league opener at
Atlanta.
Knox denied there had been
management pressure and took
r espo n s ibility for h1 ~
quarterback dcc1s1on
At the start of training, Pal
Sports in Brief
lfud~n. the 24 year old Rhodes
i.cholw-from th~ University of
Southern Call!ornla, was llsted at
No. 1, th~ pl'1ce he finished the
1976 season. The coach said
11 a den would have to be beaten
out of the assienment.
Now Knox, whose Los Aneeles
clubs have won <ijvlsion titles
each of his four years, says that
Namath's experience was the de-
ciding (actor. Even so. the head
man said the coachine staff will
resume calling all plays from the
bench. During the preseason, the
quarterbacks did the calling.
"Any decision h as to be
personal," said Knox Tuesday
when asked whether Rosenbloom
might have ordered the assign
ment
"We get an input from every-
one. but eventually it 1s the
coach's decision.··
He added:
"Namath, I'd say, has worked
harder and is in better physical
condition than he has been in a
long, long time. And it's not what
you did yesterday, it's what you
do today."
Namath has undergone five
knee operations a nd wears
braces on both legs.
"I'm glad the coach has that
confidence in me," Namath said
when the decision was an ·
nounced this week. ·'This is just a
start, not the end. I've got to get
out and start doing the job · ·
Asked if the decision was
55,269 Watch NY
Knock Off Bosox
NEW YORK Mickey Rivers
drove in the tyi ng and lead runs
with a two-run homer in the fifth
inning and Ron Guidry checked
hard·hitting Boston on five hits.
leading the New York Yankees to
a 4-2 victory over the Red Sox
Tuesday night in the opener of a
key three-game series.
With 55,269 on hand, the largest
regular season crowd m the re·
modeled Yankee St ad ium, New
York ended Boston's five.game
winning streak and pulled 2112
games ahead of the Red Sox in
the American League East. The
Baltimore Orioles. idle Tuesday
night, are three games from the
top.
night to open a two·night set of l\
appearances by the girl athletes.
12 through 15 years old. '
Nadia. who took seven perfect
scores at Montreal and three gold
medals, held the crowd of 1,500
spellbound with a parallel bars
routine that iacluded an intricate
dismount in volv in g a front
somersault and half twist.
She brought the house down
when she later came out in ful l
Mexican costume a nd did a
Romanian version of "The Mex-
ican Hat Dance" while one
member of the team dressed as a
bull and another as a matador
joined in.
made lour months ago when
Namath signed a reported
$150,000 contr act. Knox
answered with an e mph.alic,
..No.''
Still. many wonder, since
Haden threw for five touchdowns
and Namnth for only one in the
losing preseason.
Knox said all factors of the two
quarterbacks', performances
were taken into account befor~
the decision was made.
Asked why his club has been
losing. Knox answered. "We just
have to do things better -
catching, running, blocking and
tackling I don't have one single
answer.
"If I knew any single thmg, I'd
have stopped it long ago."
Knox admitted simply that his
team hasn't played up to poten·
tial.
He said that Namath would be
"limited only in sprints and
rollouts. He can go with the play
action because ulUmately it's a
dropback." ,
In Los Angeles, the Namath vs.
See Knox Page 82 · DANNY LOPEZ ABSORBS A BLOW ON THE NECK BY JOSE TORRES.
FaStBalls
Surprise
Kingman
ARIJNGTON, Tex. <AP>
The Texas Rangers held a 25·
minute meeting Tuesday night,
vowed to come together as a
team, then charged out on the
field and took a 12-7 blasting
from the California Angels.
Dave Kingman was the villain
as he hit his first two American
League homers -one a titanic
shot that traveled 450 feet. E11ch
time he hit a homer, there W ()i. a
runner on base.
Kingman, recently 1 obtail'.ted
AngebSlate
AllG.tm4'10ftKMPCR•KhO 17101
Sept. 14 canfor111a at T .. as ~ JO"·"'
S.pt.1SClllllOrnlaat Tttnl • JOP,.,.
Sept. 1• C.tlfornla at Chluioc> } Hp rt>
from San Diego in the National
League, said, "I think those were
the first two fast balls I've seen
since I've been in the American
League. It's a whole new world
over here.
AMI •ICAN LIAOU ll
I HIDl•ltlefo
Cu1Haa.c ... 1 .. ,, CARLOS PALOMINO (LEFT), EVERALDO AZEVEDO EXCHANGE LEFTS.
"There's no comparison. You
get curve balls on 3-2 counts in
the American League, where Y.PU
see fast balls in the National. •r.
The Angels scored eight runs ln
the seventh inning to spoll a ~
tori c occasion for Rangers
starter Gaylord Perry. The 39·
year-old Perry struck out ei&:ht
batters to pass Cy Young at
fourth place on the all-time
strike-out list. Only Jim Bunning,
Bob Gibson and Walter Johnson
are ahead of Perry. who has 2,823
strikeouts . He's only 32
strikeouts behind Bunning, qut.
Perry's n ot likel y to cat-ch
Jo h n son • w h o h a s 3 , ~o 8
strikeouts.
W L ""'· 01 Ntw York ~ S6 .•14 Bo\IOft 86 SI ,., ?1 1
BalUmore U SI ff4 l
NEWYORlc: ~· "'· 8et10<>J. ~Pl. 14, H, Cl•vtl-4, S.e>I 16, ll, ?I, tt, Oelrolt >. !toPI :JO, Oct. 1, 1: Away II>; Oetrolt J, Sept I•, 11 11.
Bouon J, !toot ••. 10; Toronlo 3. S.Pt Jl, U, JS
BOSTON Homt It>; New Yor~ ?. S.PI. 1•.10.
Toronto 4, 5'!pt. l&, ?I, ?8, l•c B•llfmort. 3, Seot 30, Oct. 1, 2. Away ,~ •• ,.._TOO 2. S.pl 14, IS.
Baltimore 3, S.e>I. 1•. IT. 11. OelrClll 4, Stot. 7', 23,
14, 2'.
BAL Tl MORE Hom• (IOI. BotlO<> 1 S&PI I&,
11, ti; TOf'O<>I04, ~pt ".10.11 11 0.1rolt l. Seot
11, n , :n. Aw•'f "I; Toronto l, S.pl 14, I?> 1S,
Cl•••l-3, liePI 2>, 14, JS, Bosl0<> l, S.PI 30, Ocl
'· 2.
C....llM Sp~rlde•
TIJUANA -Mex ico is ereet-
ing Nadia Comaneci, the 15-year·
old queen of last year's Olympics
in Montreal, with ovations.
Nadia led her coach and com-
rades fro m the Romanian
Women's National Gymnastics
troupe onto the floor Tuesday
COLUMBUS. Ohio Cuba's
first aUtletic team to tour the
United States since Fidel Ca!>tro
became the Latin American na-
tion's dictator will be a powerful
volleyball squad.
The Cuban National team will
play a United States all·star
squad in seven Midwest cities,
s tarting Oct. 13 at Dayton, Ohio
Aztet!s A~e Dies
• Los Angeles Aztecs forward
Miro R ys has died in an
automobile accident in Hertha,
West Germany, the North
American Soccer League team
announced Tuesday.
Rys, 20. was a passenger in a
car driven by a friend when the
accident occurred, the Aztecs
said. The driver was a lso killed.
Gree11 Ba11 Ne%t-,
Pats Axe Vataha
FOXBORO, Mass. CAP> -
Golden West College product
Randy Vataha, popular wide re·
ceiver for the New England
Patriots who was brought to the
club at Jim Plunkett's request
seven years ago and quickly
made ·a name for himself
catching Plunkett'a passes, bas
been placed on waivers.
Vataha was Immediately
claimed by the Green Bay
Packers and he said he would
probably report there after talk·
ing t.b1np ovetW'ith b1J wife. Aa a
vested veteran, be can either re·
port or become a free aaent.
The Patriot.a also announced
that wlde 'receiver M•rlln
Bria~ hu been released. The
10-year veteran waa not dalmed
immediately.
The releuea brtq the team
down to th• 43·pJay~r Um.it.
Team •Pokeaman Pat Jlome Hid
two re1ertt vacanMet wlll be
filled b1 ll&n1DC wide recelven
Azevedo ·Wanted to Quit
It Was a Terrible Fight-Palomirw'B M~er
By HOWARD L. HANDY
OI Ille Dally ,,.., S\afl
LOS ANGELES -It wasn't ex·
acUy an artistic success but Hun-
tington Beach's Carlos Palomino
retained his world boxing council
CWBC> welterweight boxing
championship with a unanimous.
15-round decision over. Italy's
Everaldo Azevedo Tuesday Ji.ight
at the Olympic A1.1ditorium here.
A crowd of 5,500 and a national
television audience watched as
Palomino chased Azevedo for 10
rounds before finally throwing
caution to the winds and bearing
In on his unorthodox opponent.
Azevedo pre/erred to back away,
occasionally clinch and then
hold.
ln a companion world
featherweight title bout, Danny
Lopez halted tough Jose Torres
wlth a seventh round knockoat.
. Torres failed to make the bell for
the ei&hth round in a fight that
had action from beginning to
e n d , l n c l u d i n g a Lo P'e i
knockdown"
to land any telling blows.
"He was quick with his hands
but he was also running and hold·
ing," Palomino said. "All he
was doing was jabbing and grab·
bing. I think the referee should
have told him to stop holding
earlier in the fight. He didn't say
anything to him until the late
rounds. I think all he (Azevedo)
wanted to do was go the full 1S
rounds. •
"He wasn't one of the best
fighters I have (aced. But he
made me look the worst of
anyone I have fought. I think, 1C I
fought him again, I would jump
on him early in the fight.•'
Azevedo admitted after the
fight he wanted to quit after the
12th round. "I couldn't breathe,''
he said lhrouah an Interpreter,
"but my comer kept saytng, just one more round, just one more
ro\I°".''
Pans booed the action. or lack
of it, in the /irat 10 rouo<h. Did
this t.other l>alomino? .. I was just lr)'lng to do my
job," Palomino said. "I dlcfn't
hear them but this was one of my
mO.st frustrating fights. I don't
think I have ever been down
more than when I lost in the
Olympic trials. I was beginning
to reel that way about the ninth
round tonight.
"I thought maybe he would
make a fight ol it, but it didn't
work out that way."
Palomino's two managers, Noe
Cruz and Jackie McCoy, felt it
was a bad fight.
"He's <Azevedo) an awkward
guy, a stinker," Cruz said. "Thal
kind or a fight makes you look
bad. Carlos couldn't put any
comblnaUons together."
·'It was a terrible fight;•
McCoy, who is moving to Lake
.Forest, said. "I wasn't afraid of
him licking P~omino, but 1 knew ·
what kind of a fight it would be
a(kf I saw b1Jn train. Ne's smart
and tough and he throws Just
enough punches to keep you
honest.''
Palomino defended his WBC ti·
tie 1uccessfully for the third time
See Palo•lno Pa1e BZ
"It's a big honor for me and it's
a shame it bad to come on a night
like this," said Perry.
CALll'OIUOA
80,Ctylf
Aemyl'b
GuerNf'O?b
M11lltnlUH
Bondsrf
R Totl'ftrf
8avtor0!\
Cl\alklll:I
Kl~man1t>
lr199ttb
l.anclrHUa cf
H11mptvtty c
Sotattapi. Hamplanc
•rlllll ~ ' 2 1 7000
200 0
4 1 0 0 s 1 1 2
0000
~ 1 I 1
J 2 1 1
4 1,' 0000
~ 2 J 0
2 1 1 0
1 1 ' 7 I 0 0 0
TEXAS arll bl
Hargrow lb 1 o o ' Putnamtb I 0 0 0
C.mPINrlSU 5 0 I 0
5uftdbtt'11 c l ' 1 0 Harralt3b l 1 O 0
HOr1on Ill> 5 1 1 t
K.!.mltlllf 4 1 1 0
O,M•Ylf I 0 0 0
Bav.te-rf 4 2 2 l
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WlllS2b 5 I l 1
Waslllnotan cf s o 1 O
T01at1 ll!I 11 U II Tolell 31 7 10 '
CalllOr"'• 002 200 I00-1'
TttaH 022 OOl 000-7 E-l<ll'IJfften, Chalk M\ltltntka. OP-Taus 1.
LOB Callfornla 2, TtaH fl. 28-H11mp1>rey,
80S1tty, JB-Oonch, Wiii., HA~l~"*I t (2) Sel•lta 031, Bev.tequa 1 ISi, Morion 114). $8 •
1hvtor, Herrell, Wiiii, W•tlllnoton. s • campenerla, S41n~g.
'" " ••••• so Moo,. s•,1.1t1s a J
llarl-(W,).2) l' • ' 0 0 0 0 Perry av. • 1 1 2 I
Umbtf"IJlr IL.HI • • O f ' 1 0 Devi,. 0 3 3 l 0 . 0
R.CuellM' 2V> 1 1 t O t H8P....,Mo0'9 CHargntW). T-4:00 ...... m. At.ooe pOlu( ln the late rounds,
referee Dlclt Young had to pry
Azevedo's gloves free from tbe
r'opes as he encircled Palomino
andhtldon.
l>alomlno, who is attenclln&
clw at OC>lden West College to-
day PNpe.ribf to work on hit
ma.stet'• degree, took charge fn
the 11th and conUnued to Oall
away for the final live rouDds. He
John Battles R'-'d.s Topjght
lA"1 Magic Number Now Four After 184' Win
wu diaappointed that be couldn't
put hil opPOfleni :eway wlt.h a
ltnpck°"t.
Palo.mloo w90 on Younata card. 1U:lf0 w1th ]udie Vine•
Oe!slaq ~S it 144·139 aad
jud .. Jotift 11'oma1, 1''7-140. Tiie oant. Pilot bad it 147-ut. ~...Uywoa:tl1l111tfiye
i'ciiuiiM • Mfort tliat. tt wu a ~ .-0a ...... llalnft •bl•
f
I
GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE'S CLASSY SOPHOMORE OB, BILL HOLST.
Valencia
Gets Boost
Froin Kelly
VaJenc:1a H1~h of Placentia ha~
won just one football game m the
past three years -but new coach
Norm Parker has high hopes of
turning that around
"1d with his background,
Pai .. er JUSt could be the one who
does it
Valencia <tnd El Toro high
schools open the 1977 campaign
Friday night at Valencia's Brad
ford Field at 8 o'clock
"J was an assistant coach 11l
Temple City High for six years
and -ke didn't lose too many
games," says Parker. now in his
first season as a head coach
"We've already seen a b1J:
<;hange in attitude at Valencia,
and b ecau se o r that lh t:
performance level has picked up
We have good people, but we·n ..
very inexperienced The key to
ol!r season is how few mistake!>
we make," says Parker.
Valencia will rely on 1~ dl'
It:nse to carry much of the load
during the early part of lhe
season and the key player on that
uoit is 6·1. 190-pound senior
linebacker Andy Kell y . He's rat
ed as one of the Tigers· lop
athletes by Parker.
· Other defensive gems include
3eni0Minebacker Rod Evan!>
H>·O, 180> and senior lineman Joe
Castillo (5·10, 180 )
·:·Offensive ly, seniors Scott ~enedict and Gerado Hurtado
:are about equal al quarterback.
iays Parker. Benedict, a 5·11.
·160-poundcr will start against F:I
'roro.
:: The Tigers' top running back 1!>
~8. 150-pound Robbie Hoff. a
)e nior And another good of
jensive player is tackle Steve
~arlow C6·3. 190 >.
;,;,:·Hoff is a key one for us. but
DJ(e most of the rest, he is inex
perienced. 'And Benedict and
Hurtado both were on the varsity
last season, but didn't play,"
sllys Parker.
· · As for El Toro, Parker believes
the Chargers will be 11 very tough
test.
"El Toro will be a very
formidable opponent. El Toro 1s
very well coached, it executes
well and it hits real well on de
fense. We think it's going to be a
aood football game, .. s ays
'Parker
;:l{NOX ..• . .,..
:•,,• Cont.lnued From Page Bl
"'Uaden argument goes on. The
!totter ts a local favorite because
(JI stardom in high school and at
'USC, where he led his team to a ;•Rose Bowl victory over Ohio !~le in his senior year.
..-:;., Knox observed that in meeting
J~Uanta there Sunday, the Rams ~~I be racing a team coached by
~eman Bennett, who last year
,,. ~as a Los Angeles assistant.
# ':.-O••Jt will be a chess match,"
~~ox asserted. "Their offense is
:Jllfetty simllar to ours. So our
em is how to 10 out and atop
,/ Re admitted the loss of
arterback Steve Bartkowski
U hurt the Falcons, but said
placement Scott Hunter will
~esent different problems on his
~!louts.
• ~ Overall. Koo1< observed of his ~lteriiig Rams, "We are not in·
• dually up ti> what we con·
tute as our performance level.
'You lose a few pr~eaaon aames
and see If they ate untmportant,
u aome aay, or not. Y,:»u 1ole and
all the fuse ahoWI how important
~nallyare. • , •'Thi.I b the btssest cballeqe ~e hid alnce I've been here."
Says GWC Coaeh
Have to Throw
To Beat Pirates
It would seem hard to find fault
with a 45-14 victory in an opener.
but Golden West College football
coach Ray Shackleford says his
crew is in trouble Saturday night
1f it coughs up the ball as much as
it did in whipping Santa Ana.
Saturday the Rustlers collide
with Orange Coast College on the
OCC campus and Shackleford
says, ''IC we fumble as often
there is no way we can beat
Orange Coast
"And I'm sure we'll have to go
to the air more often. There is
really nothing we can take adv an
tage of against Orange Coast
they arc very balanced."
Shac kleford sees little to
c h oose from between hi s
Rustlers and OCC m terms of
style. "It's not a matter of what
we run, but who can execute the
best." says Shackl eford
Nor does he sec the annual
Orange Coast area showdown as
an offensive explosion. "l don't
think it'll be a scoreless game."
says Shackleford. "But 1f you
look at the past it usually seems
in the area of 14· 13 .
'The thing that sets ttus game
apart 1s that so many kids have
friends on the other side of the
line of scrimmage. It becomes a
very emotional thing on the
fie ld ...
Shackleford says there will be
no lineup changes for his crew
with the s tarting lineup against
Santa Ana intact.
It Is the offensive line wbich
has had Shackleford pleased the
most off the victory over Santa
Ana. "We only had one returning
s tarter in that group <Tom
Formica> and I thought they
jelled well," says Shackleford.
As for the obstacle Saturday-
Orange Coast-Shackleford saY,s
he expects no surprises.
"We're both very similar. We
both run a veer offense and we're
approaching this game exactly
like we do every game. The only
difference is on game night with
the emotional aspect.
"Everytime you see Orange
Coast it's the same thing. Orange
Coast has good coaching and
players and it's a very emo·
tionaJ. tense game.
"Mistakes, breaks and a little
bit of luck have decided the out·
come of most of these games.
There really isn't any area that
you can take advantage of, you
just have to probe a little ,here
a nd there and try to find
something that can get them off
balance."
f'ASTKO•ll•
'*--Or-Coa•l 14 GoldenW .. 1 ll
1 .. 7--0r-Coa•I 10, Gol"""' Wot 1 , ... ~ Wnl ~. OrW>91t Coa•l 20
IM--Or-COHI JO, Golden WHI )0
1'10-Goldtn Wul IJ, Or-C:O.•t O
,.,, -(io!MnWHl1l.OrM109Co .. 111 (lj~·
1•11 -Or41f191! C:O.\I 10. Golden West•
1'7l -Golcltn W~•I 21, Or-Coest J1
1'14-GolOtn-\I '3.0.-C:OHtJO
1'1S-<>r-C:O.•I JI, CiolOen Wilt II
1'76---0olOOn Wnt u. O.an111 Coast o
S.rln tie<!. S-S-1
PALOMINO WINS. • •
Continued From Page Bl
and brought his record to 23·1·3
It was the first time he hadn't
knocked out his opponent in a ti
tic fi ght
Lopez won the title from David
Kotey m Ghana last November
There was some talk that be
might fight Kotey Tuesday night
"I think this was a &ood fi&ht,"
Lopez said. "l don't think Kotey
would have been this tough "
The gross gate r eceipts
a.mounted to $498,000 including
television money. This ls a rec·
ord for fights promoted by
Aileen Eaton. including one
between Cassius Clay and Archie
Moore at the Sports Arena in
1968.
Palomino collected $125,000,
his biggest payday as a pro·
ressional . Lopez took home
$75,000.
In other bouts on the marathon
card, Howard Davis punched
Terry Pineda out with a fourth·
round KO: Mike Spinks dropped
Roy Elson twice and ended his
bout in 45. seconds; John Tate
won a aix·round split decision
over Eddie Lopez; Alberto
"Superfly" Sandoval KOd Rafael
Rubio In the third round; and
Ray Hollis battled Marvin San·
ders to a six-round draw.
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
New York
Boston
Baltimore
Detroit
Cleveland
Milwaukee
Toronto
W L Pct. GB
89 S6 .614
86 58 .597 21h
85 58 .594 3
67 78 .462 22
88 79 .45$ 23
6\ 87 .412 29'AI
48 94 .338 39'-' Wut l)Jvlaloa
Kansas City 61 54 .617
Chicago 81 63 .563 71,-Ci
Texas 78 65 .545 10 .
Minnesota 77 68 .53112
Aageh 69 73 .486 18\l!i
Oakland 56 84 .400 30~
Seattl~ S'l 90 .388 3.1 TwMlr•._.
Oe!IJlll'det K-Clty,t,• .rel11
Oelroltet 0.Wltftd, ""If•• rlllf\
N-Yorll •. llotttll 1 Cll~•. Ml-*•' Cellfonll1 12, 'r•u1 r
Ml,_,.. ........... 11 !Mlfto• 0n1.,..-ldlMlll .. ,...." ........ ~~'""~"" ... , .... ,.,..,. lo.Mfl ...... ~ ........... '"" OHi_, t~ .... Md ,......,.. ,., ot
CoMflWI Ml .. ICMM& Cltr I~ •ti Ml
1.ltWll 7"41 t, I.fl lttlt11 ICleWI.-._,, at ..._, Yn 1""""'9
, ..... 11 ~ taeMI 0 .. 1 M~ OCt-•U,
II ~ ,.,_ "•) .C Tell# Wt.-., , ...... 11
........... lll"'91tilflt IJ,161 8t ........... ..... ,.,.,, ..
Olll .... :i=~fs.t:"" ... '"'-.......... . .......... ,..,., . ........ ~ ..
Cell ................ .. ~·.-.~
N"TION.U. LEAGUE
Eut Dlvbloll
Philadelphia
Pittsbur&h
Chicago
St.Louis
Mantreal
New York
W L Pe&. GB
90 54 .625
83 63 .568 8
75 68 .524 141,-Ci
16 69 .524 14 'It
86 11 .458 24
57 87 .396 33
Wel&Dl.WO.
DodCetl
Cincinnati
Jlouaton
Sa4 Francl.sco
SanDieao
Atlanta
• S6 .814
76 70 .521 131/t
13 n .503 16
61 79 .45$ 221/t
63 .. .'29 27
~ 90 .37934
·--
Veteran
Brea Big
Up Front
Laguna•Beach High will face a
rugged obstacle when the Artists
launch the 1977 football season at
Brea Friday night (7: 30).
Not only does Brea have an ex
perienced team returning, but
the Wildcats of coach Jim
McAJllster are very big up front
"We average about 215 pound!>
across the offensive line and we
also have very good size on de·
fense," s ays McAllister, a
former Utah Slate and Cal State
(Fullerton) defensive coach in
his second season at Brea.
Leading the way for Brea is
senior fullback Steve Selvig, a
6·1, 215-pounder and juniQf
quarterback Dan Dubay, a 6·1 .
180·pounder who was a starter
last year.
"With Selvig we thmk we'll be
pretty strong on the ground this
year. especially with-our big line.
Our kids have worked very hard
in the off season and we've
looked pretty good, so far,·· says
McAllister.
The defensive sta rs include
tackles Don Fretwell (6-0, 225>
and Dan Valenzuela C8·1~. 225)
and nose guard Todd Anderson
(6·1, 225).
Another good one is linebacker
KenSuUlff (5·10,200).
Of the 18 lettermen returning,
14 were starters for McAllister in
'78.
"We're fortunate to have ex·
perience, so the kids have caught
on very rapidly to the things
we've told them. A year ago we
had only four starters back and
we had a lot of problems getting
going,·· says the Brea coach.
McAllister doesn't know what
to expect from Laguna -and he
lsn 'l very happy with Artists
coach Dennis Haryung.
"He told us their scrimmage
would start at 7, but it began at 6,
so we didn't see a lot of It. And last year they were s upposed to
have a night scrimmage and they
changed it to the morning
without telling us.
"Hopefully I can remind him
Fr iday night of the things he's
oulled on us the last two years."
says McAllister
Brea holds a 26·15·2 edge in the
oldest high school rivalry in
Orange County. The series start·
ed in 1935.
...
Football for '77
Murio Calls It
MJl's Best Team
John Murio doesn't pull any
punches when he describes this
year's Mission Viejo High foot
ball team.
·'This will be the best team
we've ever had at Mission,"
boasts Murio, who enters his
fourth season as head coach of
the Diablos.
There are plenty of reasons to
be optimistic. Of the 18 let·
termen, 12 were starters on last
year's team which went 4·3 in the
South Coast League and finished
4·5 overall. In addition, most of
the returners man the key posi-
tions on both offense and defense.
"Last year was a big disap·
pointment for.us. This year won 't
be," Murio said.
With seven starters back on of·
fense, Murio doesn't have to
worry about scoring points this
season, something that plagued
the Diablos In 1976. The only pro-
blem. if you could call it that,
would be deciding which of two
equally capable quarterbacks to
go with.
Terry Brockman C6·1, J.85>.
who started at ijle helm last
season, is currently sharing
duties with multi-talented Scott
Spear (6·0, 192 ), a two-year
starter at tailback. Murio calls
Brockman a very good thrower
while Spear is an athlete who can
do it ail.
Last weekend 's scrimmage
against Foothill High of Santa
Ana was to have decided the
starting QB for Friday's season
opener against another Santa
Ana team, Saddleback, at the
Mission Viejo field . However,
with Spear playing with a hurt
shoulder and Brockman unable
to move the offense, the question
still remains unans wered .
T" further complicate matters,
M ao said third stringer Craig
S .midt and Mike Ochoa, moved
c •r from running back to
q..iarterback as a sort of af.
Prep Water Polo
YllltSITY
1,.,,1,.. M .... Ill 10 C"re•• ''"'f'W 1 1 1 l •
C'PtH• I 0 I 1 • trvlr.e KOrlno-O. M<Cormto 1 s P.u• • J.
M<Cormldl I, ~erlOn 1, T•YIM t
... OSM·IO"M
, ...... " .... !ti Ill c, ..... lrvlnt I 1 1 1 t
Cypr .. s J 1 1 1 I
l rvln .. urlnq -Mu•i>t>v • Bond• J C PaUI I
SCOTT SPEAR
terthought, actually outplayed
Spear and Brockman in their
short stints at the helm. ·
"We're ahead of last year's
pace by far but were just not as
far as we thought we were,'·
Murio said after the scrimmage
In another flip-flop move.
Murioswitched Alan Parker (5·9,
165 ). last year's fullback, over to
tailback. The fullback position is
now a two-way battle between
Mitch Hopp (5·10, 165) and Bob
Casper (6-3, 185). A third can-
didate, Dave Hodge, broke his
leg in the scrimmage.
The offensive line is pretty
much intact with both tackles
and both guards returning.
Barry Balter C5·11, 227) and John
Hennessy (6·1, 210), the tackles.
are the only Diablos that weigh
over 200 pounds. Al guard will be
John White (5-9, 180) and Kevin
McDonald (5·5, 190).
Mike Brawley (6-3, 18S> and
Devin Bower (5·10, 160), return-
ing starters as derenslve backs,
a re pegged as the starting wide
receivers. Scott Ross C6·1, 190 ) )
are dueling for the tight end slot
while Dan Swingle (6-0, 180) d
Jon Peal C5·10, 16Sl are fighting
for the center position.
Defensively. co-captain Dan
Chamitski (6-0, 185) wili team up
See Mission Page 83
RULES
WIN PRIZES
WORTH
1 "*"''' Ille '"''' 111•11• IMtlow., I N•-bl• l•nlmlle el it te
eftttf' llMI ""'••'-"ltUIOftlblt IKslmil•" I• clltll,,.., H •n "•UCI =•·" l1UrlK "'"'' IMt Ullllorm '"sire •IOCI '"rll: It lec:lllt•le ni.-.w11oc"•M'tcwltm""l(fn.,.•l~l lff.
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... IMO, Cot~ Mt••, CA tUU .
,. :!f:,:n:.~::-~~:i~~:-~;ci"'-:!',:::e.:· =~~;~
MORE THAN
S3,000
IN
'77
PIGSKIN
PICKEROO
Sponsored by
and
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4 lf"4r!H ,,,.,,, IMt l>O'tmarllecl Nt 1.tltf' tl9n Fl'ld.ay Of" nwll .....
1 ....... totl\t 0.11, ""'' c .. i. MH•ellKt"". p M ....... ,
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t Tll altl(AIC lll aLANIC MUST al( FILLIO IN O• INT•Y I\ VOID.
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • ENTRY BLANK • e • • • e • e N•me ..•................................. • • • • Address ...•........................... : .. • e • e • e CJty' ........................ Zlp ........•. e • • e • • Pllone •••...............................•• • • • • Cird• &Hms you think will win this week's ~mes • • • • • • • • Rama at Atlanta • • • • • • Cleveland at Cincinnati • • • • Dallas at Minnesota • • • • • • Detroit at Chicago • • • • • • San Diego at Oakland • • • • St. Louis at Denver • • • • • • Miami at Buffalo • • • • • • Kansas City at New England e • • e NY Jeta at Houston e e • • • • USC at Oregon State • • • • e • Kansas at UCLA e • • • Stanford at Tulane • • e • • e Oregon at TCU e • e • e • Kentucky at Baylor e • e
e Houston at Penn State e • • Alabama at Nebraska • • • Duke at Michigan • • • Notre Dame at Mlaalaalppl e • Missouri at llllnola • e e
Minnesota at Ohio State • •
Princeton at Dartmouth e • • Air Force at Cal • • • Wash. State at Michigan State • • • Brown at Yale • e
Cornell at Penn • e • Clemaon at Georgia
Boaton Coflett. at Tenn•••••
Oklahoma Stat• at Arkan•••
San Diego Slate at Arizona
Virginia at iT ••••
t
' .
• I --· -----·---·----. ---'I ~. -•
DAILY PILOT 83
B t FV Friday .. , a· Millikan
Terriers Recall Veer Keeps
'76 Nightmare Pressure On
Similar Problem
Tritons' Rival
Inexperienced
REDLANDS Th~ memoriea ue aUU vivid for
Rf!dlaoda HUlh football cOAcb Paul Womack, who
·aaw b1I Terri.en 1ulftr Ulroulb a 1-8 camp1l1n in
1111-a =•t• ,.venal of a tnnd that bad seen 11 dwD p yean in the put 1' Huona.
It ltarted wllb a M-0 lou to Fountain Valley,
the tHn:l wblcb Inv.ta Redlandl Un.lveralty Frl-cta.y niCbl Ct> to open the Tenien • 1m 1H1on.
••f'ouDtaJn VaUey didn't really •et UI off to IUCb
a rotten •tart." uy1 Womack, "we d!d."
Redlanda went on to la.e five m«• in a row
wit.bout aeortni and Womack aays: "It wu a
ni&btmaN."
The cause? "We bad a real lack of leaden, but
that'1 never1olnctobappenqain,"Womacllaays.
Womack and hla Terriers await Fountain
Valley Hiab'• Barons with 23 lettermen, includin&
11 r~ starters who also recall the '76 opener
with Fount.ain Valley.
Among tbe standouts in the Redlands camp,
who rambled over Upland High In a scrimmqe
with a domination of 320 yards to 60, are
quarterbacks Gene Larson and Chet Dawson,
tailback Greg Martinez and Rick Tyler and
fullback Mark Blankenship.
Other Redlands aces include fullback Kenny
Larson (6+1, 195), guard Gree Womack (the coach's
son) and receiver Harold Cethas on offense.
The secondary is deep with Cethas, Gene
Larson, and Rick Edwards returning. Also,
linebacker Scott Reeves (6-0, 190) and middle guard
Chris Wagner <6·1, 190> return on defeme.
Womack viewed the films of the recent Foun-
tain Valley.Santa Ana Valley scrimmage and says:
"Santa Ana Valley threw on Fountain Valley, but
Fountain Valley appeared very tough on the run-
ning game."
The last time these two met in Redlands the
hosts captured a 6·3 decision and the Terriers figure
to present an attack very similar with the J.
formation based around the crunching blocking of
the fullback.
As for putting the skids to Fountain Valley
Womack says: "We have to stop Willie Gittens. but
we also have to contain the passing game."
Womack and his Terriers are aware of Gittens
off the '76opener when Gittens rambled 67 yards for
a touchdown on the first offensive play or the game.
Prior to that Womack had opined Fountain Valley
~ould not score on the ground agalnst his eleven.
Tillers' '77 Eleven
Has More Balance
Tustin High's Tillers won only one game in 1976
and have no one with the ability to replace stand·
outs Tom Banks (quarterback>. linebacker
Richard Umphrey or tight end John Jessup.
Yet Tillers coach Jeff Jesperson says he
believes his squad will be a stronger unit than the
one which struggled to a 1·5-3 '76 record.
The Tillers will get their first chance to im-
prove on 1976 Friday night when University High
(Irvine) invades for an 8o'clock skirmish.
"We are a much more balanced team," says
Jesperson, "and our overall outlook is brighter. But
University always seems to be up for us and we've
really been very evenly matched in the past.
"SWl, this is a different University we'll be see·
ing, one which can pass. We'll be a little different.
too, relying more on the running game."
Among Tustin 's offensive arsenal are
quarterback Rich Driscoll (6-0, 170) and tailback
Joe Henry (5·8, 170).
Henry is a trans"f er from Indiana and the Tillers
shurne Chris Forbes 075). Miguel Bustamante and
Doug Feeney atfullback.
Defensively the Tillers are strong In tne second·
ary with Mark Sutlon, Mark Lauderdale and
Lance Wong, and linebackers Jason Hitchens and
Feeney.
"We don·t have an arm like Banks' nor do we
have a receiver like Jessup, but we have four others
who can do the job-Scott Smart. John Hamilton,
John Hagerty and Lance Wong," says Jesperson.
Injuries were a key to TusUn's struggle in '76
and Jesperson says the future depends on avoiding
same.
Net Pros at Laguna
Bernie Mitton and Byron Bertram, touring pros
respresenting the host club, will play first·round
singles matches In the Laguna Niguel international
tennis tournament Thursday, along with other out·
standln& professional stars.
Singles play in first round competition will be
held at 10 and 12 Thursday with club owner Peter
Paxton adding additional players to the slate today
from the doubles tourney in Woodland, Texas.
Eight singles and four doubles matches were
played today including Roy Emerson of Newport
Beach and defending champion Bllly Martin.
Second round matches wlll be played at 11 and
noon Friday with the same singles format on Satur-
day and Sunday. Doubles acUon wlll follow in the •
afternoon.
Cross Country
LONG BEACH-Millikan High
of Lona Bench possessed unreal
credentials tn 1976-and the
Rams of coach Dick DeHaven a,ain enter with an unpredlcta.
bleoutlit.
The Rams trampled such foes
aa Westminster (32·1S), San
Gabriel Valley Lea1ue champion
Warren (35·14 ) and CIF 4-A
playoff entry Lakewood (49-0), in
addition to extending Angelus
League power St. Paul of Santa
Fe Springs before falling, 6-3.
Yet the Rams did not earn a
playoffs bid.
"It's hard to explain," says .,
DeHaveo. "We operate out of a
veer and that puts a lot of
pressure on you. And our
quarterback was really inconsis-
tent. But we had a veteran team
and it's really hard to put a finger
on it."
Thursday the Rams open the
'77 season al Newport Harbor
High at8.
Among the Millikan attack are
swift running backs Fred Moore
and Tyrone Mitchejl, along with
1976 backup qu1'terbat:k Al
Hawkins.
Moore (5·10, 170) rolled to a 7.8
yards per carry average (58 car-
ries, 453 yards) and five
touchdowns in '76, and Mitchell is
up from the junior varsity. Both
are quick and in the 4.6·4.7
second category for running 40
yards.
llawkins (6-0, 160 sr l 1s the
central figure an the veer,
however, and his stats for '76 in·
elude 17 completions in 27 at·
tempts for 268 yards and two
touchdowns. He also rushed for
103 yards.
Millikan is big up front, but
lacks depth with Carlo
Caldarella (5·11, 210), Randy
Hausauer (6·0, 196> and Tim
Bailey (6·3, 246) the leading
linemen. All must go two ways.
Caldarella is a rarity at a
three.year school, having started
as a sophomore. He was an All·
Moore League choice in '76.
0.11., rnet sc.., ~
When San Clemente Hiqh opens its football
seaS-Ofl this Friday pight, it will be against a Bolsa
Grande (Garden Crove) team pla1ued with a
slmllarproblem: youth and inexperience.
Of the 66 players on the Matadors roster, 15 are
seniors, 41 are juniors and four are sophs. San
Clemente oounters with a Junior·loaded team that.
has just two returning starters.
"It will be a game of two young football
teams," says Bolsa Grande head coach George
Asleson. 'There will be more juniors on the field
than seniors."
· Al least five of the seven men up front on the
Matadors offensive line will be juniors and both or
Bolsa Grande's wide receivers, returning let·
termen Darius Durham and Mike Walker, ar&llth
graders.
Asleson says Durham, a 6-3, 187 speedster who
runs the 40 in 4.6, "has all the tools to be an out·
sCandlng college athlete. He bas outstanding bands
but after he gets the ball he's really dangerous.''
San Clemente head coach Allie Schaff should
remember Durham quite well. In the 1976 opener.
Durham caught two long passes for 100 yards to
lead the Matadors to a 28·14 victory over the
Tritons. ·
Quarterback Tom Stormer <5·10, 185) is the oo·
ly other returning starter on offense for tbe
Matadors. As a junior operatin1 Bolsa Grande's
veer offense, Stormer threw nine touchdown passes
and r2'1 for more to lead his team to a 6·2 regular
season record. Runnerup in the Garden Gro\fe
League, Bolsa Grande lost its first round ClF
playoff game to Santa Ana Valley.
Asleson sWl isn 'l decided among which of four
running backs to start, Jerr Sudyka <5·10, 175>. soRh
Randy Benton (5-11, 165), junior John Marshall C5·9.
175 ) or Tom Scarborough <5·9, 160). All have been
clocked in under 5.0 for 40 yards.
Sudyka started six games at linebacker last
year and Scarborough started at comerba~k .
Bolsa Grande 1sn 't particularly big on the of·
fensive line with center Jerry Elizondo <5·11, 205 1
and tackle Jim Hendrick (6·1, 205) the big men
Dave Braun (5·11, 190 ) is the other tackle while th~
guards have not yet been decided. ·
Starting linebacker Jack Mitcham <5·10, 190 >.
another junior, is the strongest man on the squad.
having bench pressed 360 pounds as a sophomore.
Eddie Varela (5·11, 175) will s tart at either
linebacker or defensive end, Breu Venus C5·11 , 170!
will open at nose guard or defensive tackle.
sophomore Hiram Winn (5·11, 160> will start at pre
safety and junior John Cornett <5·11, 180! at de.
tensive end. All the other positions are undecided.
Asleson expects San Clemente to concentrate
its wishbone offense on blasts up the middle, spicetl
with intermittent passes. · "Newport puts a lot of pressure
on you defensively with a dif·
ferent alig nment (four
linebackers) and it attacks,
which we don 't see a lot," says
MISSION VIEJO TAILBACK ALAN PARKER.
De Haven.
"Hopefully we can contain
their running game, our secon·
dary and linebacking is in pretty
good shape." DeHaven 's record
as Rams coach has resulted in 31
wins, 31 losses and a dozen ties.
San Diego Man
Wins CM Event
Terry Raymer of San Diego
fired a three under par 68 at
Costa Mesa's Mesa Verde Coun·
try Club to win low gross honors
Monday in a tournament involv·
ing the Western Amateur Golf
Association and PGA pro·
fessionals.
Raymer won by one stroke
over Bill Viele of Hemet and by
two over Lynn Stone of Chino.
Low pro at 70 was Art Schilling of
Riverside.
The winning team at 10 under
par was pro Jack Harden of
Oceanside and amateurs Steve
Fink of Studio City, Marc Cuva of
Sylmar and St.one.
Wade Needles
TOKYO -Wimbledon cham·
pion Virginia Wade of Britain
declared Tuesday she gave Dr.
Renee Richards a lesson that "a
good woman player is too good"
when she beat the 43·year-old
transsexual In the women's
singles at the U.S. Open Tennis
Championships.
The 31·year-old Briton made
the comment upon arrival in
Tokyo with 11 other leading
women players to compete In the
$100,000 Toray Slllook Touma·
ment.
9110 DAYS
MISSION VIEJO ...
Continued From Page BZ
with Spear at linebacker, Jerry
Nelson <tH. 195 > returns at tackle
and rover Paul Lajoie <5·10. J6S>
returns along with Bower and
Brawley in the secondary. Lance
Richardson <5·9, 120) looms as the
other corner back while Mike
40choa (5·9, 180) should start at de·
fensive end. Muno says Rich
Davidson (5·11. 175), a transfer
from El Toro, will see plenty of ac·
tion somewhere on the defensive
line.
Mission Viejo will operate out
of a pro·type ofCense and Muno
expects to see a better balance
between running and passing
than a year ago. "Last year, we
were by far a better running
team but we are noted for pass·
Ing," he said. "We haven't been
that good doing so lately but we
will return to it this year."
The Diablos will go with a
pursuing, swarming defense, re·
lying on quickness lo overcome a
disUnct disadvantage in size in
comparison with other league
schools.
"We're not as big as most of
the other teams I 've heard about
so we have to do it some other
way," Muriosaid.
The key to the defense lies at
the hard nose or middle guard.
White appears to be the heir ap-
parent to the position and Murto
says he's in the same mqld as
Marc Mummert and Terry
Greer, all·league picks at hard
nose the past two seasons.
Murlo says there isn't a whole
lot of blazing speed on the scauad
but overall the Dlablos are
quicker than average. "The
team speed is very, very good but
again, as I read it in the papers,
we don't have anybody as fast as
some of the other teams have. I
do have some of the fastest kids
I've ever had but they don't com· --:;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~ pare in times with some of the
kids I read about." ELIMOll IAGGETT MARILYN GUST Brawley is the Dlablos •
speedster with a clocking or 4.7 in MIGHTY
the40. HARBOR FRESHMEN
Mission Viejo will rely on the FOOTBALL TEAM -
big play offensively but will have BEAT RANCHO ALAMITOS! most of Its top players on de·
rense. "We like to score a lot of Travel Ba. ... points but we stock our team ~ilh 'Cl'
defensive players first," Murio AIR TICKETS • TOURS • CRUISES
said. "Our players are defensive -NEVER A SERVICE CHARGE-
people first and then they come MARINERS MILE SQUARE
over lo offense. We work harder :a7oo w . c o ... n Hwv .. N1<Wl"OIOT Bo:Ae ... CA oa••• on defense and then I take what I (714) e31 .1~76
want for offense.'' --~~~~~~~~~!!!~~~~!!!~~~~
GW Soccer Cup
This Weekend
Golden West College's second
annual Soccer Cup tournament
will be staged Saturday and Sun-
day with four junior colleges
competing.
In first round play Saturday,
El Camino meets Grossmont al
10 a.m. with Golden West facing
Arizona Western at 11:45. The
championship game wiH be
played Sunday morning at 11
with KOCE·TV (Channel 50)
bringina the game Uve.
El Camino and Golden West
are the tourney favorites. El
Camino ls the defending cham-
pion.
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FUNKY WINKERBEAN
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™E. BAND IS U5JNG
THE FOOTBALL FIEl...D
1<16HT NoW !
UJ€U.. r I HATE 10 DO
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TANK McNAMARA
MOON MULLINS
UNITED Feature Syndicate
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"YtX> SAY 'l't:>U~ WIFE: IS CONSTAN'T'L-.,.,
ON ')lt)LJR !!'>ACK, SH,
.MR.-,_FRE!l'T'AS ~ OKAY-L.e , s _ "T"RY -ro 161NP
O<J I WHY •••
MOTLEY'S CREW
CM~~ roz 'Tlte '~~ N ~.,~ ...
Wednesday. Sepl•mbet 14. 1977
PEANUTS
00 'f'OU LOVE 1\\E
A BUSMEL AND
A PECK?
DAILY PILOT U
by Charles M. Schulz
HOW AeOUT A ,\\ET~
AND A LITER 7
by Roger Bradfield
by George Lemont
by .TempltlOn •.,,S Forman
.. 10~
ML1M066
PQ.rnGIAN5.
' l
\
DAILY PILOT WeclnHday Septembef 14. 1977
103·12%* ···1 0RAr~GE~M IN11RESI ~ '1 , , llJ):(Yt 0 JeJ
~t Dun Huct.on, Coata Mtbu, has been named
d1n.•('Wf of operational plllllnang for Allee Corp.'• secure Al~ Lanaln& sound producta dtvli;lon.
• He wlll coordlnal4' elforb of marketing.
) 111 '"\I di\
1mi1\ 1d1u1I '""' •tu1,. •" '4•'" "'" 1111~1 .. ntt r11c.l11
.. tid111"1 1111111•. lw\11
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1mt·,h·1l 111 :Zud rru-.1 d1·1•1t...
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h •ti l''IJh' thr lll'lh
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tu lb "'""' "" ""' hd .. '"\,l·I lo'I J I 1•111 (If
ldlll'd Ill t'Jrll JI lcct\I 10"•
••r mor,· -IH• tnu·
·~h .. 11 d '°"" I'
rm·pd1d belur1• mJtunl\
1,,011 rvn•h.t' up to a '>Ill
month m1erc'tt bonu .. un
8000 ol the loc1n b.tldm•·
Thi .. nMy inc rt•d•I' tlw
1;11·IJ up to 12<1u
I M d dlltd 1 ll·d
brochure. pledi.c writl'
or t.dll
(714) 837-3744
~k for Sandy Ros~
Suite 202
TaJ Mahal Professional Bldg.
Laguna Hills, CA 92653
M0<lq•9e brokt••
Oll•rt•J 10 C...hlonu• r<>kl•nl• only.
enstnt.'t'nntc and manuraclunng durins develop
ment llOd HlMrl up operation& or new products. He ts
thu ftrm'11 former m~n&ger of en&lneerine ad·
m lnh1lra.t10n
• •'rank A. Leo has been promoted lo aeneral
m anagtir of Panel Coocepta, lnc., Costa Mesa.
lie will oversee company operations, Including
1ww product planning and development, a new
m arkt:lml( proeram and a fitcihly expansion.
• ru. part of an organizational change at Applied
M agne&lcs Dlcea.. Irvine, Larry Kl.aseUa, Irvine.
has been promoted to the post or vice president of
manufacturing. His responsibilities will include
overseeing production activities. material and
facilities.
He has served in a variety of production and ex· ,
ecuhve-level positions since joinmg the company
nearly nine years ago.
•
Barbara A. Gould, Irvine, has been appointed
design coordinator al the Design Studio, Laguna
Niguel. ,
She is a former interior designer at U BX
Design Studio, Santa Ana.
• Harry A. Soutbron, C<>5ta Mesa, has been
named controller of Computer Sciences Corp. He
will supervise the company's corporate accounting
staff, with responsibility for general accounting.
tax and Securities and Exchange Commission on
reporting activities.
A .. WI,...,...
---, , ....... --
May Spend More 1li
A.dministratiori Hints
At EcoTWmic Spurs
\ASHINGTON <AP1 -The (
I
I
I
Carter administration, acknowledg-TAKING J ing problems posed by rising un-
employment and sluggish growth, has STOCK
indicated it is prepared to spend more
money to sllmulate the economy if
I
I
current efforts faller.
Two key administration figures
delivered speeches Tuesday, s pelling
out a wllllngness to prime the
economic pump by creating more
jobs or seeking more tax cuts if
needed.
Labor Secretary Ray Marshall
said it is already clear that a bigger
effort is needed lo find jobs for un-
employed blacks and youths. He said
the administration may seek to ex·
pand its efforts under the Com·
prehensive Employment Training
Act. under which 725,000 jobs already
are being created.
Charles L. Schultie, Carter ·s
chief economic adviser, said the ad·
ministration's economic polisy "is not
,based on putting balanced budgets
·ahead or everything else. Nor does it
reflect blind faith in forecasts of a
strong private economy.''
Bott\ speeches reflected
something of a departure from earlier
administration pronouncements on
the subject, which have stuck by the
goals of a balanced'budget by 1981 an<i
gradual economic recovery.
A eeot111tcn1t• to Meet
will take no action that could lead to ~
merger or bank credit card systems 11'
the United States, and will actively re•
sist any merger actions by othel1
firms. I
Dee W. Hock of San Franclsc9,
addressing the American Bankers As~
socialion bank card convention Tueio.t
day. dismissed any suggestion th~'
recent developments in the indus
would resull in a merger.
"Visa has not and will not ta.k~
any action which could lead to merge~
of the systems and wUl resist any suet(
action by others." Hock told t~
gathering. I
·'Visa will continue lo compete
aggressively agains t lnterban~
Master Charge and all others. Thelri
eventual future, and ours. should ~
determined by the results ol that com-'
petition," he declared.
Decisions by the Department o~
Justice last year led lo the widespre~
"duality" in the industry as in ..
dividual banks issued both cards. · ; . ' lft•tltwte to /tleet ,
John F. Lawrence. Los Angele~
Times assistant managing editor ton
economic affairs. will discuss busiJ
ness reporting at the Orange CoUQ~
chapter meeting of the Financial Ex1
ecutives Institute Thursday. 1 The meeting will be held at th~
Sheraton Hotel in Newport Beac~1 Cocktails will be al 6 p.m. and dinner,
at 7p.m. BE
CONCERNED
PREVENT
TIME CERTIFJCATES OF DEPOSIT
$100,000 OR MORE
6.75% 6.25% Alf.weather Tire
Ronald P. Thon, vice president or
Certified Plans, Inc .• will speak on the
·'Impact and Development of
Qualified Retirement Plans" at
Thursday's meeting of the Orange
County chapter of the American
Society of Women Accountants.
The dinner meeting will be held in
the Saddieback Inn, Santa Ana, at
6:30 p.m. Guests may make reserva-
tions by calling Dottie Metzger,
More information is availabl~
from Dion Cairns, 549·9961. I I
180 DAYS 90 DAYS
Goodyear has developed the Tie mpo
radial tire that it claims ends the need to
change tires for driving in snow and ice.
The tread design features deep shoulder
lugs, meeting industry definitions of a
winter tire. while providing a ride
Goodyear says is ideal for year-round use.>.
BGlllc Bra•eh Pla•llftl
FIRES
"'
Pacific J .. ct,...,,.
City Bank 11141141-1234
-FDIC.
If You Have Maturing Savings
Certificates of Deposit ...
Now Is the time to take en objective look
at your future savings planning. Don't
1orget. you must take action on maturing
certificates within ten days to avoid
interest penartles. So contact us now at
any ol our twelve offices ••• and without
any oost or obhgation ••• take advantage
ot Repubbc's fifty years or experience by
talking to our savings representattve who
will assist you m determining saVlngs
advantages now available to you.
****** REPUBLIC FEDERAL SAVINGS
RFS
1111
---.. ~~and loan HSOC1811on
SANTA ANA 17111 Sl West ol NewPOrl Freeway (714) S41·S2116
ANAHEIM 202 Anaheim Plaz.a, SOON. Euclid SI. (714) 1156·8190
LAOUNA NIGUEL 30232 Crown Valley Parkway (714) 4~0 •
WESTMINSTER 134 Wesrmlnster Mall/Bolsa 8 SJn Ole90 Fwy 1714) 894·:.3A 7
-0-• AlfAOEllA 2246 II Lake ...... 1~•3171"1'81/1&1·6611
T-l,oatlo ... : ALTA00CllA • AllAHtlM •ARCADIA • BUADANK
Cl.AACMOHl • HACIENOA HEIG!<l8 •LAGUNA HIOUEl • LOS ANOtll 5
!'ASAOC""' • !'tCO At VE AA• SANT A ANA • WUTMINS !CR
ln1ure<1, ChtNtfld •nd 1uperv/Hd by •11•nc/H ol lht United si .. 01 Go~ornmtnl
SAVINGS ACCOUNTS INSURED TO $40,000
WHAT IS A VETERAN
byO.W. Priu
Compliments of World ~ Eslote (714) 556-7777 -Vets fk/ping Veis
Rick Byers, Owner/Broker
HE'S A MAN who looks the world in the eye, and who feels dn e><tra heartbeat
when the Flag goes by. He's a man who steps a little faster when he hears a military
band.
He comes from an a&sorted races, sizes and shapes.
He's big, small, short and tall.
He's the "Doughboy" ol World War I, The "G.I.'' of Wo.dcl~ar ll, Korea and
Vietnam. · 't"' \
He is a Sailor, Soldier, Flyer and Marine. •
He Is Artillery, lnfanlTY. Medic, Chemical, Engineer, Armored, Ordnance and
Col'J)Sman.
He is Republican, Democrat and Independent.
He is a plumber, doctor, salesman, mechanic, farmer, banker. He is Catholic,
Prot11tant, Jew. He Is rich and poor and in between.
He's a man who lows peace because he knows the cost ol war.
He iii a good citizen and a man who knows the price of freedom.
He knows that eternal vigiance and preparedness are MCaMfY if freedom it to
be preaerved. '
He likes the majesty of American mountains, the tranquifity of America's valleys
and the bottle ol America '11 citiu~
He la proud of his American heritage, alert to his American present and
confident of his Ammcan future. He hkea the legends of America's great -the WAahlngtons, the Jeff arsons, the
Lincolns, the RooaewJt1, the Trumai\s, the Robert E. l.eu. the Stonewall Jack·
50llt, the Pattons, the Eiscnhowers, the MacArthurt and all the proud patribt1 who
hav« marched througt, America's hlttory bool<._
Ht has bivouaced at Valley Forge, ~rg.zd th. Nita at Gettysburg, faced the fire
at sen Juan Hin, atorrned the sands at OuadalcaMI, aioughed through the Mame,
swamied ashore et Omahe &ach; waded the c;Qld mud of Korea and the stean-61
iunsleJ of V'11tnam. In ll'le v.ry rear d l'\i• secret heart there la alw3ys a tinga or eotrCM.1. a sou\IC'llir ol
sadneu k>r lost end departed comred ... He• a first claU Cighting man, a cJU~ ~ ·~ • pc~ th"-i.acter. ~·· Alncri(•'• moet hooored citii4n ·~.member of hiatorv'• MOit e~dulj\19
fratenlty.
Ak!1ftll him In hi. duties at • ftahting ""n are the W.vei, the Wees, the Ltdy ~rli4. •ncl thoM "'iile OI Me~y,1 the NurMS. ~ b6IN them. They too ere ~~ ~
871 -8774.
Card /tlergn-Blasted
ATLANTA (AP> -The president
of Visa U.S.A. Inc .. says bis company
Wells Fargo Bank plans to open a.
branch al 4525 MacArthur Blvd.~
Newport Beach, late this year. The'
building is being remodeled under
terms of the lease.
Ov~r Tht> Counlf•r
NEW YORI( IAPI Cros«:o H '> , ••• ICtl\Sll pf '°'" 71 T,,.. fOllQwl.,. liSI CullrFl'd p, t"• IC•lv•r 2 J :~n:I setec1S:ur1~~ g:~~b~b ,. ... I~ K"1TIAft A m. 24
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801\Mlt !~ 107~ FFllC.lt"91'1u 1'"41 1$'11 Moore p 13 ,. Beehne .~ w, '• '" Mor9 Att "o '" 8tULaO JO ~ Forni 0 ,._,_ I~ MO\ffll ,. .. u
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Buckbee J'·> • Grwen Mt U Y> tl P'kltft A 21-14 uv. !ll..r 'SD ta ..I;! 3 Buch... 11'1' 11 Or.., NIY ,,.., 24Vt Nlel111 8 21ac. n•. ·~' I ., -.;,UlltlltOrfl • Ce.u1r~p.,S '"" ' Gvlf ll'llU "'. 11'4 N.C.r ~ 11~ 11-14 s .. ,s JO', 31 Gyredll 2>41 J\Q fffEOI .., ~ 1'' 1 6 C•mllbCll ..., 4 H•tpel' R 10'-'t 11 NW HAIG •'> '"" NEW YORK IAPJ -Mo11 <t<llv• -· 1 C•nrMIH 71'1 2 ~Wff P'C 13'> 14 NW PllS¥ 1 .. • I~ tM<°"'t~ 5IO<ltl sugr.:led bY NASO I g:~: .. ~~ r S H:: ,. 1'~ 1r1a ~r..,!, ~ ;.~ ~'..! O.NB-= • YOIU"'4! d Ai.11..S O>Q 1~
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Wedrntaday. September 14. 11n 1/N DAILY PILOT 87
'Geldell Oppert-••tl'
Ex-inmate Finds
Investment Joys
Av 411Vf.VI~ POSTER
Fted Parker, 31, has been lnveaUn1 ln the stock market
for the last nine months. What's new about that! Two facts
separate him from most otha-nnt-tlme lnveston.
(1) UnW recently, Parker was an iomate at Ohio State
Re!ormatory ln Mansfield. servlnt a two-to JS.year sen·
tence oo a narcotics and robbery convicUon.
(%)THE VALUE OF IDS POBTFOUO bu climbed at
least 25 percent since the end of 19761 wbll• tbe Dow Jones
industrial average has slumped almOst 14 percent and the
New York Stock Exchange index: bu fallen more than TW
percent. ·
Parker and several other inmates became interested tn
stocks while taking a continuing education course run In
cooperation with nearby Ashland Colle1e. The course ls
part of a two-year associate degree pro1ram. About HO of
the prison's 2,6-00 in·
mates are enrolled.
Money's
Worth
Outside s peakers
are routinely asked to
speak to the students,
among them James
Nordstrum, a vice presi-
dent of Prescott, Hall
and Turben, investment bankers. Nord.strum spoke about
the state ot the stock market and the economy and menUoned
a few stocks he thought might beeood iA•estments.
"Parker and a few other men asked me for more ln-
!ormaUoo," he said. "l sent them additional facts about
several companies and, shortly thereafter, a couple of them
sent me a Jetter requesting that l open accounts for them.••
SAID PAllKER: "IT WAS A GOLDEN opportunity to
take part in the economic interests of our country. to
become part of the system even though we were locked up."
Parker, on parole, living with hla family in Cleveland
and studying for a degree in finance at Cleveland State
University, is. booked on the stock market and convinced
that many of his former fellow lnmates are potential in· •
veslors. .
"One major reason why people commit crimes for
which they are jailed," he said, "is because they want to
make money. But either they didn't have the means to 10
• about it or weren't willing to lake lht time to learn how.
"I RAN ACROSS INMATES ALL lbe tlme who would
bull about waya they were 1oing to make money. When l
began talking about dividends and price-earnings raUos,
they were fascinated. Guys can identify With success. Soon
a number of them were telling me, 'Hey. I want to look at
your Wall Street Journal or Business Week.' We'd go out in
the yard and instead or exercising we'd swap information
about Lnvestments."
Parker launched his market portfolio with his modest
savings.
"Many guys have small bank accounts," according to
Parker. ''You 're locked up, so you don't need much for ,
personal expenses. Buying securities certainly beats put·
ting your money in a non-interest bearing account available
at the reformatory."
"A FEW OTHER INMATES ARE TIUNXING about
forming a profit-making corporation aimed al doing
something in relation to juvenile consulUni1" said John
Flood, director or continuing educaUon at the reformatory.
"I doubt that this has ever been done before, but there's
nothing like trying. It shows an tnvestment in the system,
and once the men have got that, then they are less prone to
become aggressive toward that same system."
Stock Market Gains
Despite Rate Hike·
NEW YORK <AP> -The stock market advanced moderately today alter overcoming some early selUng.
The Dow Jones avera.ie of 30 industrial 1'lnc-h nin~
4.l5pointsto8S8.71.
Gainers held a 3-2 lead over losers among New York
Stock Exct\an1e-listed issues.
Trading remained fairly quiet. Bl.I Board volume
totalled 17 .33 nJlWon shares. ~.,._,. J 1 • • GTirw 1 20tt s 7' 2'"'··. •• L.:L ... •,.. '·,· .! _ -~ O...t'Sll .-1 e m.+ ~ smtlm -~ s, ,. •1••,i,-111 we<llfttv · : • ,, ,.,,_ '.\
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Some weakness w"s attributed to the announcemeot by
New York's Cbue Mar)hattan Bank lateTue.aday thalit was
raising its prime lending rate from 7 to 714 percent.
But brokers noted encouragement over tbeJ)ow's abW·
ty the last lo sessions to bold above its previous clQflnl low •
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s~f:C.~f" IAPI Ff,,.I Clow.Jones •--.n
Olltf1 HICl'1 I.Ow Clow Ole
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v,, •....... .., ••
'
SA\.al
Due to late transmission
today's fisting will not
appear In the Dally PUot.,
wftAT ••JC DfD HIW \"Oltl( IA•> .
l
DAILY PILOT WednHc:ta • 8 tember 14. 1977
COASTWATCD: Tonight's Tl' Fare
\\ t '"'"I)\'
EVENING
6-00 •• Cl) NIWI 8 THI HEAVVWWHTI
A nlQhl of heavyweight bO•lt'lg
IMturlng Ken Norton YI LOf•nzo
Zanon Jimmy Young 111 Jody
Ballatd, Ron l.yt• va Stan Ward.
and Larry l'iotmes va Howard
Smith at c .... ,., Pll•c• In Laa veo .. 8 BONANZA
A ... ~tain and hta d•ught•r
au1ve at the Ponderosa Cl WILD, WILD WE8T
"The Night Of The Oruld'a Blood"
A magician and a beeuttfut girt ar•
auapected In the violent deaths of
a numbef of dlallngulsMd ac1en-
1tsts
G) MICKEY MOUSE CLUB
Cl) I DREAM OF JEANNIE m SESAME STREET
'1') MISTER ROGERS
5:30 0) TOM. ANO JERRY
G) ROOM222
'1') VILLA ALEGRE
6:00 fJ CBS NEWS 8 EMERGENCY ONEI
A female Journalist Incurs the
wrath of the entire fire department
when She accuses Gage, DeSoto
and Or. Brackett of chauvinism,
exploltatlon and denial of opportu-
nities to women.
0 NEWS f> MY PARTNER THE GHOST
Alcoholic spirits give a con man
the psychic power to see ghostly
spirits
G) THE PARTRIOOE FAMILY
Danny goes out for Little league
and becomes a strike-out king.
Cl) ALIAS SMITH ANO JONES
Curry and Heyes are set up to take
the blame for a bank robbery
EE) ELECTRIC COMPANY
'1') LOOKATME
"The Single Parent"
@)ABC NEWS
6:30 f) MOVIE * * * "Experiment In TerrOf"
(Part 1) (1962) Glenn Ford, Lee
Remick. A terror-stncken girl must
ald the F.B.I. In the capture of a
master ~rlminal. ( 1 hr., 30 min.)
G) THE ODD COUPLE ED ZOOM
'1') PUBLIC POLICY FORUM
"Freedom Of The Press: F1rst
Admendment Protections"
Cl) CBS NEWS
@l MERV GRIFFIN
7:00 0 LIARS CLUB
0 ABC NEWS
0 CONCENTRATION
0) I LOVE LUCY
"Lucy Goes To The Rodeo"
(!) THE F.B.I.
Erskine goes undercover as a
blind, electronic scientist to trap a
well organized intelligence ring
EE) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT
Cl) TO TELL THE TRUTH
7:30 9 NEWL YWEO GAME
0 MATCHGAMEP.M. 0 JOKE.R'S WILD
,.,
WILL SAMPSON, a-Creek Indian, stars In his
first TV role as an Arizona state trooper who
rescues MARIANNA HILL from bank robbers
in the special film, "Relentless," airing tonight
at 9:30 on CBS. Channel 2.
Q) THE BRADY BUNCH
Greg and his teammates steal a
rival school's mascot.
fl3 28TONIGHT
'1') THE SESSION
"St. Louis Ragtlmers"
(I) UNT AMEC WORLO
"Getting The Job Done"
@) FAMILY FEUD
8:00 fJ Cl) SPIDER-MAN
(Premiere) A student sc1ent1st
(Nicholas Hammond), bitten by a
radioactive spider, becomes
endowed w ith superhuman
strength and pursues a mind-con-
trolling extortionist (Thayer David)
0 MOVIE **'h "Loving You" (1957) Elvis
Presley, Lisabeth Scoll. A member
of a h1llbllly band eventually wins
the heart of the band's female
singer.
8 MOVIE * • • "Whispering Smith'' ( 1948}
Alan Ladd, Brenda Marshall A
special agent Is assigned to cap-
ture a gang of train robbers, one of
whom Is his close friend. (1 hr .. 30
min.) 0 @) EIGHT IS ENOUGH
(Season Premiere) "Is There A
Doctor In The House?" Tom and a
temporarily single Doc Maxwell
(Michael Thoma) try the1r luck as
Ratings G uide
MOVit'\ •rf' r•ted ~(OfChnq to 00•
otuce •tteftd.An<.r Mo"1t\ fOf" TV ,.,~
1U<19t'CI DV A (rl!IC I
* • • • -Excellent
• • • -Very Good
• • -Good
• •, -Fa11
• -Poor
middle-aged swinging singles 0 MOVIE **'It "Captain Apache·· ( 1972)
Lee Van Cleet, Carroll Baker.
When an lndlan commissioner Is
brutally kllled. a full-blooded
Apache Is assigned to Investigate.
(2 hrs.)
0) WILD, WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
"Jungle R111er"
G) PERRY MASON
Mason suspects that the pretend-
ed suicide of a house builder Is
really a getaway plot in a land
swindle
EE) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"Upstairs, Downstairs: Dlsllluslon"
Hudson's future as butler Is threat-
ened when he is seen at an exhibi-
tion In the company of a young girl
'1i) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"Upstairs, · Downstairs· Such A
Lovely Man" The Bellamys face a
sooal dilemma--Vlrglnla Is Invited
out by a rich and polltlcally lnlluen-
tlal man whose help her husband,
Richard. needs.
8:30 CD CROSS-WITS
9:00 0 @) CHARLJE'S ANGELS
(Season Premiere) "Angels In
Paradise" A new angel, Kris Mun-
roe (Cheryl Ladd) and Don Ho join
in the search when Charlie Is kid-
napped by a Hawaiian syndicate
leader (France Nvyen)
0) MERV GRIFFIN
(!) Bill Y GRAHAM CRUSADE
EE) CHILDHOOD
··easter Tells Such Dreadful Lies"
by Barbara Waring. Contemplatlon
of the mysteries of love between
adults works havoc In the mind of
an 1mag1nallve nine-year-old glrl
'1i) AUSTIN CITY LIMITS
"Guy Clark I Steve Fromholz"
Songwriter Clark sings his newest
hits Fromholz ol 'Toxas Tnlogy'
A.BC Forges Ahead
But NBC Grabs Top Tiro Positiom
NEW YORK !AP> -ABC won the
first week ratings battle of the new
television season. but failed to match
'. the record-breaking success of last
season's "Roots " with "Washington:
Behind Closed Doors." according to
A.C. Nielsen ratings made available
Tuesday.
The No. l show of 46 rated programs
was "James at 15," NBC's Monday
movie. Another NBC show. "Laugh
In." was a close second.
The Sunday and Thursday episodes
of "Washington" were third and
fCl,lJrth, respectively, and Tuesday's
was eighth. Other Installments of the
12 "'2-hour television adaptation of
John D. Ehrllchman 's fictionalized
account of the Watergate scandal
finished in 16th, 17th and 2Sth places.
FOR THE WEEK ending Sept. 11.
was aired, was an unprecedented 35.5
In order. the top 10 shows last week
were·
"James at 15," a 23.8 rating,
representing 17 .3 million homes:
"Laugh In,'' 23.7, or 17.3 million:
"Washington," Sunday, 23.6, or 17.2
million; "Washington," Thursday, 23,
or 16.7 minion; "Elvis on Tour,"
NBC, and "Miss America," both 22.9,
or 16.7 million, "Six Million Dollar
Man," ABC, 22.2, or 16.2 million;
"Washington," 22, or 16 million;
"What's Happening!" ABC, 21.5, or
15.6 million, and "Logan's Run,"
CBS's Tuesday movie, 21.2. or 15.4
million.
THE NEXT 10 shows were:
fame sing• at>out Ht• In the South-
waat. t:SO 1J RELENTLESS
A band of crooks, led by a combat
veteran (John Hltterman), la fX,tr-
aued acroas the high plalns and
1nowy mountains of Arizona by a
trooper (Sam Watchman) and an
FBI agent (Monte Markham) 8 FILM FEATURE
(I) MOVIE ***IA "Clau Of '63" (1973)
James Brolln, Joan Hackett. When
a woman allenda a clan reunion,
ehe dlaeovers herself tempted 10
leave t'ief husband for an old col-
lege flame.
10:00 D $100,000 NAME THAT
TUNE ao NEWS
«I) ROOM222
A boy, raised In the wllderness,
learns that clvlllutlon has some-
thing to otter.
fD PIOCADILL Y CIRCUS
"The Author Of Beltralflo" Henry
James' confllct between an English
novelist and his wife for the affec-
tions of their ailing young son.
Q!1) DOCUMENT ARY SHOWCASE
"Guess Who's Pregnant? One out
of evety tan A~rlcan teen-age
girls.
10:30 0 0) Cl) NEWS
11 :00 0 HOLL VWOOD
CONNECTION
O ®l NEWS 0 IRONSIDE
"Backfire''.
0) FERNWOOO 2NIGHT
Guests: Barth's Aunt Edith. defec-
tor Serge.Na~ov.
Cl) MARCUS WELBY, M.O.
When his father suffers a stroke,
Dr Kiley faces a life-or-death d~l
sion.
fl!) REALIOAOES
''Mestlzaje" Three dramatic
sketches of Latino family life: ·11
You Dance The Rumba.' 'La Vlctl-
ma,' and 'Ay Cocomacaco •
Q!1) MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT
11:101) (I) NEWS
11 :30 D TONIGHT
Host: Johnny Caraon. Guests·
Myron Cohen, James Garner.
0 LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE
A plaln-looklng man staggera Into
a police house and reports fle has
been assaulted by two love-
starved females.
0 @) ST.ARSKY & HUTCH
"lady Blue" Starsky and Hutch
Investigate the murder of an ex-
pollce woman who became a go-
Sports 011 T\I
AFTERNOON
5:00 II THE HEAVYWEIGHTS
A night of heavyweight boxing
lealurlng: Ken Norton vs. Lorenzo
Zanon: Jimmy Young vs. Jody
Ballard; Ron Lyle vs Stan Ward:
and Larry Holmes vs. Howard
Smith at Caesar's Palace in las
Vegas.
Together Again NBC was a strong second and CBS a
thin third overall.
~dancer (R) m NEWS
fD CAPTIONED ABC NEWS
11:..40 8 (() HAW.All FIVE..()
A comfX,lter, programmed to solve
11 murder, accuses one of McGar-
ratt'a own men -Duke. (R)
MORNING
12:00 8 TWILIGHT ZONE
"Th• Trade-Ina"
G MOVIE ••on "My Man Godfrey" (1957)
June Allyson, David Ntven. A bum
is given a )ob as a butler In a 'soci-
ety' woman's h~ and turn• out
to be a member of Auatrlan royal.
ty. (2 hrs.)
II) MOVIE • * "Playgirl" ( 1954) Shetley
Winters. Barry Sullivan. A pretty
country girl looks for love and
exltement in the big city ( 1 hr .. 30
min.)
12:30 0 MOVIE • * 'h "Promises! Promises!"
( 1964) Jayne Mansfield, Marie
McDonald Two couples become
distraught when one of the w1vea
becomes pregnant. after the other
had tried 10 hard and failed. ( 1 hr .
55mln.)
G) MOVIE **** "The Brave Bulls" (1951) Mel Ferrerr Anthony Quinn. A
famed matador overcomes his loaa
01 self-confidence to return to the
ring. (2 hrs.)
12:37 0 ®l MYSTERY OF Tl-IE
WEEK
*Vt "If It's A Man, Hang Up"
(1975) Ca.rol lynley, Paut Angells.
A fuhion model with countleu
male admirers, Is pursuaded by a
mysterious. heavy-breathing
phone caller to change her waya
(R)
12:40 f) Cl) CBS LATE MOVIE * •'h "Money To Burn" (1973)
Miidred Natwick. E.G. Marshall. A
man In prlaon. with the help or his
wife, engineers a multl-mllllon dol-
lar counterfeiting scheme. (R)
1 :00 D TOMORROW
The government providing new
Identities for crlmlnals Who give
evidence tor the prosecution will
be discussed by Fred Gra~am, a
Washington baaed correspondent;
Robert Metz wlll dlacuss the
broadcasting Industry.
1:30 «1) MOVIE **'h "Abandoned" (1949) Oennts
O'Keefe, Jeff Chandler. A con-
cerned newspaperman exposes
the black market baby racket. ( 1
hr .. 30 min.)
~:00 00 NEWS
f> MOVIES * *'h "The Raging Tide· (1952)
Richard Conte. Shelley Winters.
After committing a murder, a rack-
eteer seeks refuge on a fishing
boat and tries to pin the murde< on
the fisherman's son. (2 hrs.) * * •;, "Mississippi Gambler"
( 1953) Tyrone Power. Julle Adams.
A riverboat gambler decides to
bulld a leg11fma1e gambling house
-in New Orleans. (2 hrs.)
G) MOVIEI
***~"The Strange OM" (1t5tt
Ben Gaz:ure, Julie WIJIOn. A mlll•
tary • 1Ch0ol cadet terror&zee hie.
IOW&f-dutmen In an attempt to
dlacredit the aon of an otfloer. (2
hra.) "
•• "Crlmlnll lawyer'' (1951) Pat
O'Brien, Jana Wyatt. An aleohotlo
criminal laywer decldaa to defend
his friend wtio haa been accused ot
murder. (2 f,)ra.)
2:251 NEWS 2:30 MOVIES ** "Madame" (1983) Sophi
Loren, RoWt Hoa&eln. A ~
drest rlaea to the poaltlon of ducn~
esa during the Nlgn of Napole()n.
(1 hr., 55 min.) •
•in "Island Prlnoea" (1965) Mer~
cello MUtrolannl, Sllvanc,
P&tnP*'lnl. A Spaniard'• romeno.
wl1h an Island pt'lneeu It compJI;
cated by a local rebellion. (1 hr •• 30
m~J ~
2:401J NEWS 3:oo m NEWs
3:1511 MOVIE •*on "Man In The Looking GIUl'!1 (1965) Steve Forrts1. Sue lloydr,
An art dealer dlaguisea him='
a gangster end makes an attem
to thwart the theft or the
Crown Jewttls. (1hr.,2S mini)
-4:40 11 NOONTIME
Thursdag'•
~ .Daytime Movie• .
MORNING
9:00 fJ MOV1E * * * "Thunder Bay" (1963
James Stewart. Joanne Dru. Trou~
ble erupt1 when shrimp fllhennal\1
resort to sabotaging off-ahore Olf'
wells. (2 hrs.) '
10:00 8 MOVIE * * * "Wonder Man" ( 1945) Dan•,
ny Kaye, Virginia Mayo. A
nlghtclu,b entertainer'• twl~
brother is accused or murder. (2
hrs.)
AFTERNOON '
12:00 0) MOVIE **•'A "China Seas" ( 1935) Clark
Gable, Jean Harlow. Piracy atrlkea
a ship eanytng a valuable gold
shipment. (2 hrs., 20 min.)
2:00 G MOVIE • • * "Wlnchelter 1~:i ( 19~ James Stewart. Shelley mntera. ~
man's prized rifle is stolen, and if
passes through many hand9
before II is returned. (2 hra.)
3:00 @) MOV1E • * • "The Hucks1era" {19d)
Clark Gable, Deborah Karr. A ww
veteran finds he can not return to
his advertising job. (2 hr1.)
3:30 0 MOVIE • * • "Run, Simon, Run" ( 1970)
Burt Reynolds, Inger Stevena. An
lndlan Is torn between his desire t~
avenge his mother's death and ~
love for a white woman. (1 hr., 30
min.)
Tonight's TV
Highlights
CBS fJ 8 :00 Spider Man. This new
, action-fantasy show features Nicholas ·•
Hammond as a spider-bitten student en.
dowed with s uperhuman strength.
Thayer David guests as the heavy.
ABC & 9:00 -Charlie's Angels. The '·
new angel CCheryl Ladd> makes her de-
but in tonight's season premiere episode
as Charlie is kidnaped by a Hawaiian syn-
dicate leader <France Nuyen).
NBC S 8:00 · "Loving You ." It's
Elvis Presley in one of his earlier movies
(circa 1957 ) as a hillbilly band singer '
pursuing the remale singer <Uzabeth
Scott).
CBS fJ 9:30 "Relentless ... A
When ABC scheduled its $7 .s million
production of "Washinaton" two
weeks earlier than the wiual beeln·
ning of the season, the other networks
counterprogramed wlth blockbuster
specials. The number of programs rat·
ed -46 against the usual 65 -is In·
dicativeofthenumberofspecials.
"60 Minutes," CBS; "Emmy
Awards," NBC; "Dirty Harry,"
NBC's Saturday movie; "Us Against
the World." NBC; "Happy Days,''
ABC; "Washington," Friday, ABC ;
''Washington," Wednesday, ABC;
"Bionic Woman." NBC; "Welcome
Back, Kotter," ABC, and "The Magic
of ABC."
Sid Caesar and Imogene Coca. who teamed up on "Your Show of
Shows" from 1950 to 1954, will be reunited on the Johnny Carson
show Friday night. their first appearance together in 10 years ..
manhunt in Arizona is the subject of this '
TV movie with Monte Markham and SJtm
Watchman chasing the bad guys, led by
John Hillerman.
Although the counterprogramlng
strategy largtoly worked ,
· 'W a.shlngton" cul into the ratings of
such traditionally big d~ws as the
Emmy awards show and the Mlss
America contest. And lt won four of
the slx nights on which it -as aired.
NBC won the other three nlshts.
.ABa1 R.$.DNG; FOR the week was
11.8, which re_,resenta an estimated
13.3 milllon households. NBC bad a
17.S, or 12.7 million, and CBS bad a
15.6. or lU million.
WE.4JIER TO PUY
WIFE BEATER
LOS ANGELES (APJ Dennis
Weavet and Sally Struthers star as
husband and wlfe in "Battered," and
NBC movie about wife beat-
ing ... Character actor Richard X.
Slattery, a former New York City
policeman, Joins N BC 's "CPO
Sharkey" as Don Rlctes' command-~ officer ... Dick Martin, formerly
of "Laugh-In," directs eight episodes
of CB.S' "Bob Newhart Show" In his
new Job as creative consultant for
MTM Enterpris~. By contrast, ABC's ralinl tor the
week ending Jan. 30, when "Root.a"
~--------------------,..------------,~I
Undel"8tudy
Takea Over.
.. ,~ ....... ·•· ... ............
'"THIAX
MACHM"tll
-Ml
·-. '-;-.. . . ----------------..-----... -·
Wednesday. Septembor 14, 1977 DAIL V PILOT 8 9
#'
~ew 'Road' f9r Bob, Bing
~ BEVF.ttL'\ llJl.l .!'i ll\1'1 Hob llopci and Bina l Cro.by •111 b..ltllt: tor Uorotny Lamour • afftt\1on1 for~ ttrat Ume tn 16 )'Hn 11&y1 a BriUsh producer
who wanta lO brtn1 \ht tr.lo back tor a new "Road''
picture
Sir I~ <:r•clt 11a1d th him will be callt:d "The
I tload to t.ht-Fountain of Youth. with Ho~ i.nd
CN>flby playan1 two old ~how hualneu veterun•
looktn« ror pt'r~tuul youth
Croab~. r urri.'ntly in l.ondQI\ on tour, and Hope i J t t!bolh nolt\ 73 Mhs l.amour1•62
• The ftlm will c mul1te the 111& tilled "Koad"
, rnov1es llope, <.:r oi.by and Lumour made tn the 1930s ! a.nd '40s, andudanic "Thll Ro1td to Morocco." "The ·----1 ..------~
I
i
i
t • i ' ' t
a
I
I ,
I : I • • I 1 1-~...-
J :lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiilliillllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
~ ~-------------------
An
THEATRES-ORANGE COUNTY
Wl'S 0 THE SPY WHO ,,.. IATl9~N SO. COAST PWA LOVED ME" f PGI ,.,,. i.:,:i $ cw..., ••RETUIH OF THE ll'IHI< e:n
,.. ... • .a. ..... HER0 SAT/--ttn '"""' ~'"'"u
llAll'S
SO. COAST PWA
CllUIN ,. ........
"LOVE AND DEA TH"
1-·~· "'''_,,,.,7_,.,,.
"ROCKY"
MU111 l:M l.U,_h~:H '-~~~~~--=-~:::=
llAll'S
SO. ctAST PWA ..... ,..,
1111'$
ClllDIALUD ........... ...... ...
.. A STAR IS IORH" ....... .,. ,._,,_.,,._.tLM .. °CAIARET0
"" UT/_:l!l_H
-•n•.J• ... , ... ,_,.,,_,.
"END OF THE WORLD" -.n1-'"" \Al·-1:4'-1'""'"''
Homl lo Zun.uhur, ··"The Road to Utopia" and "Th•
Roud tu H111 "
Thoy all frature<t the bumblln& anUcs or Hope
und Croeby l'mbrollcd In a friendly rivalry for Miss I.amour's alfccuons
The lust " Road" movLe was "The Road to Hong
t\ong" In 1961
Grude said neioliallons on the film would be
r1nuh.tcd ln two or three weeks.
--A New World Picture Cl» ~
------DAILY 7:15-9:15 (+11 :00 FRI.) __ .._._ ...
SAT /SUN 1:30·3:25-5:20-7:15·9:15
(+ 11:00 SAT.)
• • IN HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER • •
EDWARDS
HARBOR C~N~1~A 2
HARBOR BLVD . AT WILSON ST.
COSTA MESA 646·0573
2 MILES SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY.
"I had to stand up
for myself alone, and you
know what. they did to me.
Until atl men st.and up
for what. t.hey believe ln ..
the same thlng can
happen to you'.'
Sht>rlff Buford Pusser
lliIS MOVIE IS lUTAll.Y
Olff OF CONTROL
He fought wus
and won them.
He defied
Presidents -
and might
have been
one.
ttJIJllADI\ 4 • WEWOOO 4 WAcr.tiriAt'OAIN ~ICl I UO
MONDAY lflfw IANIUMY the.pl H~I 12:30 lo 1.00
I.A MlllAOA 4 ONLY IUNDAVI a HOUOAYI 12ao'iO11!0
I OIOIOI MGM • ~ IOTTOMS .--... ~.;;:=. IOLLllCOASnl (POI ~-·--194 2400 . "OICA" TMI .&\Ua WNW lllOI
'ASKS
~ha.tit ........... •• .. ~=-I THI SPY ~~OVID MltllOI ~-··-"4-2400 . 01AND THI" AUT01N I IOlln. NO 'ASKS
MCltllU '""' JAllllWALK 1-i PWI
SIJl MACMINI <-i
......... MO'llll
"What we have here 19 1
total lack of respect for
the lawr·
Burt Reynolds
"Slnokey .. 1111 Bandit"
Sally Field· Jerry Reeddt\i
.Jackie Gleason f •• Stott111&•ooa 1 ' '"''
Sc1eenptay 111 JAMES LEE BARRE n and CHAR\. ES SHYER
& ALAN MANDEL· S101y tJvHAL NEEDHAM & ROB(AI l LEVY
MIJSlC by Bill JJSTIS anu JERRY AEEO OtrCCled t>y HAL NEEDHAM
P1 OCUCed by t.m TE NGEL & flG . I " ". • •• .. .. ... •• • • ' ..
A RASTAA PrOduction • A UNIVER::iAL P1c1uie • letMicolor~
.~ .... -....... ___ .... _ . ._: ~~-=
t
.,. DAILY PILOT ___ Wudnnday September 14. 1977
~~~~~~~~~-
COUEGENOW
A UNIJ/ERSITY
Toy Banks Recalled to Get Lead Out
SACRAMENTO (AP I
CaliJomla State Colleiac at Dom·
1na:u_.a lhll' w 1 ofllclally made
it full OedRed university by the
C.i hfornu ro,,t Sttcondary
S('hool Edueataon Comml111lon.
The school was the htst school
in tht' Los Angt•lo1 arn under the
i.tatt' college system to be named
.j un1vt.>rs1ty, state omc1aluald.
WASIUNGTON <APJ The
Conaumf'r Product Safety Coin·
m l11lon hs ordcrlnt the recall of
ubout 00,000 painted "Snoopy"
toy banks lhal have exceulve
umoun~ of lc1d.
The federal agency said that It
did not know of any ln,uries or ill·
ncHl'l' ussocluted w th lhe toy
b1U1lu. patterned after the dog
Sn oopy, a curtoon strip
character
IT SAID A ROllTINE check by
the manufacturer, Ideal Toy
Corp., of Hollis, N.Y .. revealed·
that the paint used on the banks
had a lead content which ex-
ceeded the government's present
permiSsible level of five-tenths of
one percent.
The regulation limiting the
amount of lead in paint ts in·
tended to reduce the risk of lead
poisoning in children who may
ingest paint chips or 'peelings.
The permissible level will be re-
duced, effective next Feb. 28, to
six-hundredths of one percent
THE COMMISSION SAID the
recall of the banks Is being car-
ried out in cooperation with the
manufacturer.
The six-inch-high banks
feature Snoopy In four poses.
They are : Snoopy Joe Cool bank,
model no. 5272-0: Snoopy Santa
bank, model no. S270·(; Snoopy in
tuxedo bank. model no. S273-8;
and Snoopy dog house bank,
model no. 5271-2.
PERSONS WHO llAVE these
banks should return them to the
place of purchase for a full re·
fund. the commissioJtsaid.
Jf consumers desire further in·
Any low-tar cigarette will give you a low-tar number. r.-.o---. ...
But there's something else that you should consider. We
call it "filter feedback~' 11 ·
As you smoke, tar builds up on the lfam ..... ~
tip of your cigarette filter. That's "filter
feedback~' Otdinary flush-tipped _ filters put that tar build-
. up flat against your lips.
And that's where low-tan PaFliament has the ad-·
vantage. Barliaments filter is recessai to kee~ tar builduP.
from touching yout lips. So theres no "filterffeedoack~' .
lJ All you get is that smootll ,Parliament taste.
I t
formation about the Snoopy toy
banks, they can call Ideal collect
at 212-454-5000 or the com·
mission's toll-free bot line .at
800-638-2666, the agency sald.
II COHCHNID f: :
.. H VINl WllDUHO I:~ .... :__~
<:. -,.. . ---)
er~
I
,
t
Madine Carpenter
at health club:
Buttermilk donuts
are not to be
resisted.
Wednesday, September 14, 197.7
Franz X. Kubak, chef, Five Crowns:
Chocolate raisins, popcorn, ice cream.
C l
Tim McKay, carpenter:
An occasional Twinkie.
Rev. Charles Dierenfield: Dorothy Wenck, home advisor:
Popcorn, sinful chocolate cake. Easily addicted to chocolate.
By MARCIA FORSBE&G
l Oft•Dalty ...... 5c.llf
There's somethin1 fl.shy eoinl on around
here.
Orance Cout residents have lonl known the
merits of seafood-the delicate flavor, easy
preparation, quick cookinl time and low-calorie,
high-protein advanta1e!t offish.
There's a wealth of fresh fl.sh available in
local flab markets, and people are tattni advau·
ta&• ol the abundance.
They have learned t)iat seafood cootery lSD 't
that ditncult, after all. Neither 11 recotnl%1nt If
it'• fresh .
.. It should have ·pracUcally no amell at all,
and U It does smell, it should be pleasant to the
noH. It lbould look nice, too," said Doris Canon..
who baa IOld ftlb for 10 yea.rt for DelantBl"OI. Seafood ill NeWport Beac:ll. .
Matt Bartlett, aaleaman at ~ Flab
Oo. la con. ..... noted that altiieore keepe lot
about tllne d&1'1 aDd 1w0rdftlh lUtl abOut five . .. P'riilhftab'ibOUld have a pretty IMln ~It, ..
added Blanche Denio of Paclrlc Ftab and
seatood, Ccieta Mesa.
A UNDO• IA•PLE ol area flab marketi
revealed that 1wordfl1b and albacore are
popalS clliDIH• for end«· summer meili. BOth • ......_ :t!•Uf(al, .. t.bQ,are eaet aiaq
our e.11& Ill UM .. ..-,&hat ,nu lalt a few
mcn.-.•tilOc~. IWcildfttb curnll\IJ ...U. f• ...... U.15 a
Ken Bannister: four feet
of licorice.
Superior Court Judge Betty Lamoreaux:
"I've got to eat the whole bag."
Junk Food:
Indescribably
Irresistible
By JUDITH OLSON
Of u. D.ity Plle4 '"'"
The Junk Food Junkie is lurking
in the shadow of old Saddleback.
He may be as near as your
oeiihbor's house, or he may even
be you.
Most people laugh when they are
asked if they eat the stuff. But after
the laugh comes the admission.
"Wellllll, I do like a little licorice
(or potato chips or layer cake) once
in a while."
One extremely health-conscious
woman, who is the proprietor of a
health club, admitted that she stops
to get three buttermilk donuts
EVERY Saturday morning and
eats them all by herself.
What's worse, she hides Cokes in
the juice bar of her club.
An executive, upon being asked
about his favorite junk food, denied
adamantly that he indulges in such
things at all. Under pressure,
however, he admitted that he ate
four feet of black licorice during
hiB last trip to Las Vegas.
Most people have a favorite junk
food, which they usually keep a
secret, but the vice isn't all bad, ac·
cording to several nutritionists.
If the snacks aren't eaten as an
alternative to good food, or con·
sumed in too large a quantity,
there's nothing wrong with an oc-
casional potato chip or candy bar.
They won't add too many bulges to
the battle.
.
Here are the "vices" of a few
people who were willing to admit
them.
The Rev. Charles Dierenfield,
pastor of St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church, Newport
Beach, says he likes popcorn but is
not addicted to it.
He also loves chocolate cake,
which he gleefully eats
periodically.
Could it be called a sin to have
chocolate cake, when it really
doesn't add anything beneficial to
the diet?
"If I have to eat with so much
righteousness all my life I'm not
sure it's worth it," the minister
proclaimed.
Franz X. Kubak, head chef at the
Five Crowns restaurant in
Newport Beach, has all the finest
food available to him every day of
the week but prefers to eat
chocolate-covered raisins when he
watches TV.
"I also like popcorn and ice
cream," he added.
If anyone should know about the
empty calories in junk food, it's
Dorothy Wenck, the Orange County
home advisor. She lectures about
empty calories month after month
but sits down to eat a piece of
chocolate candy when she's ready
fora snack.
"I could be addicted to it," she
said, "so I just don't have it
(8"JUNK,Pa1eCU>
Hungarian-style cabbage beef.
A Family Meal
To Serve Guests
The high prices or 1973
and 1974 which prompted
people to cut down the
use or convenience foods
have lert a legacy in the
form of continued in·
\eresl in baked goods
a nd other "do·it ·
from-scratch" types of
food.
of wheat flour for 1976
was ill pounds.
It is loo soon to tell
what the picture for 1977
will show. But some in·
dustry sources predict
steady interest in home
baking and consumers
will find that they can
save money and time if
they learn what types of
flours are avaHabre and
which ones do what.
percent of the flour
milledintheU.S.
The other two parts
are the bran or outer
layer and the germ -the
part which would sprout.
The bran and the germ
are removed from white
flour, but are left in
whole wheat flour. They
also are sold separately,
usually in breakfast
cereals.
Enriched white fiour
contains vitamins, iron
and sometimes calcium
which· are added to
replace nutrients lost
when the bran ls re·
s:=::-: PICK.LES
IOSHH DIU. . ., . , : . -, ~.. ~
"'!'i""<#', •• • • ...,.,,
Government statistics
show that per capita con·
sumplion or wheat flour
in the United States
declined steadily from
11$ pounds In 1960 to 106
pounds in 1974. The trend
was reversed ip 1975,
however, and estimated
per capita consumptio!_l
There are three parts
to a kernel of wheat. The
inner part, or en-
dos perm, is the part
which is ground to make
while flour which ac·
counts for more than 90 moved lo processing: t
TISSUE
lllNS
TOMATOI
200COUNT
-....--.. -. .. ------
Store Hours:
9 to 9 Dally -Sunday 9 t o 8
Pricn lffKil••
Thurs., Sept. I S thru Wed., Sept. 21
FRESH SLICED
BEEF
LIVER
··~·
DUIUqUl IEEF
FRAIKS
CAMPIBJ.S
CHUt«Y
TURKEY or IEEF
'"'" ~ .. Sted1 .. ..__.
We Gtodty Acupt Food St-..•
We Res..-.e The RJght To Limit QuontltiH
And Refuu Sale To Oeden And Who&~solers.
LOWER
.PRICES!
HEW CROP
JONATHAN
BAR M SHAHKLESS
SMOKED
HAM
:;:1.19Li.
USDA CHOl~E THICK CUT 119 SWISS
STEAK ..•.
SOUP ·~: . 59c
SPRINGFIELD
BLEAcH49c
PLAmc
GALLON
'· SPRIMGA&D
MONDAllY
COFFH
:::r:s: SUCKS
IREEN19c BEANS
---~ .. -. ----
. -...
, DAILY P1LOT c:J
ClassiC Potato Pancakes
Fall menu" lltk•• a
natural turn awllJ from
hCht •( uonal a ummt'r
food to M>m th1n1 1 bit
hr&r1.kr. It'• • t banai• or
pate that ~Hml to flt
t•ool '' {·n1n11. footb<1ll
wffk~nd!l .and the Ilk~
Hou...,• of llanovc•r l'un
N kt:oi, fot 4.'Xllmpl~ \\Ill
be a v.t:-kome .iahl 111 tht·
dann r table thh full
"h ·th~r pot11to panc·H k1.•"
art' un 11ld unw lamll)-
f 4nor1te ur d br•nd nc•w
clai.h
l 'hel'lt' l(oldt•n h1 own
.i 1111 t' r 1 :. p p u I ti ... , o I
\hr ~d d t:~ vot•lo~•
lf'rvC!d wjth appl ettauc
a nd 11our cu 1am, aro
a.uPt'r almplc lO make.
1'hun.ka tu une ln&redienl
cumplt•lf pancake mlx
i.ome ol the prep1&rn
lion ates-uru cllmlnal
t'tl Jual ~when mMklo&
511.&lll'ak_,. for brukfaat
with <'Omplcte pancake
rnax , there'• no need. to
add wi eu . ll't1 uJreud y
111 lht.• ml• !ulc>nlf . with
lht• nour and lcavenin&
... o nt'<'Cbl>lir) for potato
IJli n1• 11keb I
lloun of tfitnover Pan
1 iakc'll, Owvore<J with Jui.l
u bat ol 1r en onion. will
complement pork roast.
chopa or a variety of
111 au1uaaie1t Sweet-sour
rtd cabbaae la onother
German favorite to add
color to thu menu Or,
1.another theme ml1ht ln
dude u cheese omele t
und u variety of fall
har vest vegetables.
P(YfATO PANCAKES
3 c ups p ee l ed ,
Mhredded potatoes
• • cup green onion
:.h ces
1 .• cup complete pan
cuke mix
2 tablespoon~ water
l teaspoon salt
Combine a ll ingre-
dients, mix well. For
euch pancake, s p oon
ubout •,4 cup potato mix·
ture into \4-lnch deep hot
oil (375 degrees F .). Fry
t to 2 minutes on each
i.ide or until golden
brown Serve hot with
applesauce and dairy
sour cre~m. if desired.
Ma kes about 1 doze n
potato pancakes
Try A 1
Trifle
Meats , Meats
Semi Boneless
CHUCK
ROASTS
fht•rc J.n· m .111 \ \\ .. \., j
to makt.• a dt·r1·nt Tnflt·
Some ~ood fl'<'lfl(''> «Jll
for '>pongt-<.'dkt• layer ..,
... omc for ladyfingers
Somt't1mcs crumhlc:tl
macaroon:-. or sil vered
almonds go 1n .
Sometimes ii Jam , Jelly
or preserve 1s used
APRJCOT~BERRY
TIU FLE
2 3 :i ,.oun c c
package!> vanlllu pud
ding mix
3cup). milk
I cup hcu\ > 1·rca m
-l ·ounl·c put·kagt•
I ad) fmgl'r..,
' 1 <·up <1prt(·ol pn ··
'>Cr\,('S
2 pound-. fresh
apnc·ots
I pint slr~wbernes
'~cup cream sherry
1 1 c up s li vered
hlanched ulmonds
Cook the pudding mix
according to package
d 1 r ect1ons using lhc J
cup), of milk ln).lead of
th<' 4 l'UP'> th~ d1rctt1ons
1·:.dl for Cool to room
t <'m pl•rat u1·t'. sl1rrin.:
oft 1•n
Whip the 1-rL•um until
"' 1ff, without washing
I he beater. bcal the pud·
cling until s mooth; fold in
c-rcam. refrigerate while
you attend to the next
steps
J:>. 0-Bone Pot Roast 89 ~ Belli C.nur.k lb C
~ Chuck Steaks 79 ~ 5eml Bon111en Beel Lb C
.a:.\BLADE CUT
~~~~~~B~•OAST Lb 55c
IL\ Family Steaks .f!!5I Elonetu•• Ooel Chuc~
~SHOULDER
~STEAKS
Beel Chu"
Val~e
Trimmed
Beel 65~
, ) ~~~!~r Cut .Chops lb s1s9
, ) Country Style Ribs $139
\ Pork Loin l b
PORK
@ LOIN CHOPS ~~:·•
Incl J (ncl Chops & 6 $149
Cenlur Cut Chop~ Lb
Picnic Roasts
Fre•,n Poo. SnouldN
1c} ~!~1~~~m~~d~sage
Lb SSC
s1s9 L lJ
~,~.~~J~n~ Beef Sausagl~ $148
Polska Kielbasa s148 lb
BONELESS
~,!~!!~NG BEEF lb s 12s
,.
Meats
@ Boneless
SHOULDER
CLOD ROASTS
Value
Trtmmed
Beel Chuck s1~?
a;;x Sliced Beef Bacon ~ Real McCay 12 Ot P>q
11\ Blt-0-Shrlmp ~ H0"6$ 10 Oz. Pkg
TASTIBASTED
@ TURKEYS ~·.:;:~· ~m"" 59c
Hen1a90 Houae tO. 11 l b Lt>
) Zippe Corn Dogs
Hl 01 P,u;.k11g11
~ ~t~,~~!..!,'~~ Fillets
, Turbot Fiiiets
C>t>11c.1ou~ Ocu4n t , n
Now Open 8 A.M.
r tlt.'< k 'y•J Jr I 1 11 '.)f" ICJr
~unuay i111 I tiohcJt1 / 11 iw ,
A platter
of potato
pancakes tor
fall suppers.
Produce
,. .,
@ Delicious Melons
JUMBO
HONEYDEWS
Peak ol 69~ the
Season
.. ...
® Prune Plums Lb.29c llat1an·N0<ltlwetl Grow"
\__) Bell Peppers
Freth Gree" 6i39c
@BARTLETT
PEARS Lb.29C Northwosl Grown
® Brown Onions Lb 1oc Sweet Mild
~ Seedless Raisins 5:79c· Sunmo•d • I / 01 BO•M
SALAD
@ TOMATOES lb 39c Small S~e .•
tlower Boutique
a;;x Velvet Cordatum ~ 6 inch H1no1no Pot
Sandwich each pair of
I adyfingers together
with the apricot pre·
:-.er ve),
Dip tht• upn cots into
boiling water until t he
skins are loo<1ene<I 30
to 60 seconds Remove
the skins and pits and
di sc ard ; s li ce the
a pricots. Rinse, hull and
halve the strawberries.
big saWngs on our own Herltage House products.
Arrange half the lady-
fingers in the bottom of a
serving howl (preferably
glass and straight·s1ded J
that 1i. ut leas t 2 1 ~
quarts.
Sprinkle with palf the
sherry. Top with half the
<1pricots and strawber
ries. Sprinkle with half
the almonds. Pour on
half the pudding mix
tu re.
Repeat the luyering
Chill at least 3 hours.
Garnish. if you like.
with additional apricots,
~trawbcrrics, whipped
cream and almonds ·
Servings: 10· 12
\ngs
Pear Up
In last week 's Food
section, t hree ingre·
dients were inadvertent·
ly omitted from a recipe
for Pear Bread Pudding.
We run the recipe again
this week in its entirety.
PEAR BREAD
PUDDING
6 slices firm tex·
lured bread
31., tablespoons but·
ter or margarine v.. teaspoon c 1n ·
namon
4largeeges
l 11'il cups half and
half 11cuphoney
:14 teaspoon sail
2 fresh California
Bartlett pears
2 teaspoons lemon
juice
T oa st brea d a.nd
spread w i l h butler, us·
Jn1 'h tablespoon ror
~ch slice. Cut tout Into
J'a{ge cubes to meas ure 3 cup•. Turn lnto shallow
&-inch square or round
baklnt dlah <B·cup capacity). Sprinkle with
half of the cinnamon .
Bea\ eal• wlth llatr and halt, hobey and aatt:
our over toatt. P.1re,
cqre and 1Uc• pears to
meuure J CUPI and at·
ranre over all. Sprinkle
with lemon Juice and re· ma1nln,I \41 teupoon cln· namon. •
Bike In .,.._ 0( OVtb at•~-'1fi!UtOIO mtnu&il: wat.U Pliddlnl I•
puffy, Nltaid JI. Mt and r.art1Aco0ked. Malt•
·~
Groceries Groceries Groceries Groceries
'I @ Heritage House
SWEET
PEAS
17 Oz 25c Can
.. ...Ill
a;;x Peas & Carrots 3 '89c ~ Heritage Houw No. 303 Ca" :
( ) Whole Kernel Corn 28c Herotoge House Vac PllGk 12 Oz Can
@ ::!~1~ou~O~~!~~ns 2i89c
a;;x Tomato Sauce 25c ~ Herol8ge HouM 1S ()? CM •
~TOMATO
\lYCATSUP
Her11•oe House 211 Oz au
a;;x Converted Rice ~ Uncle Ben ' •II Oz. Bol<
a;;x Kraft Dressing 99c ~ Fr...c;h C11111kna. 1000 Island 16 Oz Bii
@ Strawberry Jelly .
Troe>o<:al 18 Oz Jar • • •
~ Peanut Butter =:: ~ Laura Scudder 111 Oz. Jar. , • • • . • .
@ ~.~~~,h~l~~el .......... *1 81
~Cranberry Juice s113 \.f!!5I Ocean Spr ty Cocll'tall •8 Oz 811 ..
Wines & Spirits
Kamchatka Vodka
80 Proo• *4" Ou•rt
~ Calvert Extra s4tt ~ Blended Wt\tskey. ,. •• F1t1h
r:C"' ~ Ronrlco Rum s4n ~ \.f!!5I wt\lte or GOid F1t1h
@ ~!!!!i:!,~•!-!~~~11~~,uh 1149
Cribari Wine• i:!.. 0 MOUrtteln Vin ~, Mountain
Reel BU•Quf'ICfy, Mo1.11111111 Chollll,. 1231 orMettow 8u<vuncty (50 T Or I I ~ Ltler
Stewed or
WHOLE
TOMATOES
Heritage
House
No. 303
Can 33c
() Tomato Paste
Heritage House 6 Oz Coln
() Pancake Syrup
Heritage HoUM 16 Oz Bii
0 ~!!!!~!,a:_u~eJoJ can ..•• 3i85c
l ) ~!.~.!! ~c!~:!1 can .... 2i77c
TOMATO
@ ~~~~~ 8 Or Can
a;;x StokelyTomatoSauce 7 :s1
~ 80z Can •
a;;x Premium Saltines 59c ~ Nabiac:o Slllle<I Or Unsalled 16 Oz Bo•
~ Nablaco Oreo Cookies s114 ~ ChOC.Sandw1chtDoubte Stut 16 Ot Pkg ...
a;;x Bathroom Tlaaue 75c ~ Scolt Fem<ty Anl. 0< PrtnlS·4 Peck ...
0 Y~~~ ~r~P1~: c~~~~~~· . 53c
0 ~~~J!o~:f:: ~~.~~~~ .... 61c .
Health & Beauty Aids
0 CREST BOllUI Pac:IC.
TOOTHPASTE
Mini or Regular 11 Oz Tube ••••
"'@ Heritage House
CANNED
.BEANS or COR~
• sroced Green Searle 2 9 · • Cul Green Beans
• Whole Kernel Corn C
• Cream S1yte Corn'
No. 303 Can
Your Choice
0 Apple Cider
He11toge House 11• oz Bii
r ) Apple Juice
\_ Henlage House 64 Ol BU
0 Enriched Flour
Hlltllege House s LI> B•o
0 Lunch Bags
Heritage Hooae Pacio&qf' nt '>0
MOTTS
@ APPLESAUCE
25 Oz Jar
~ All Purpose Detergent $148 ~ Het11110• Hou..e II• Oz P~9
~ Fabric Softener· ~ Downy-Incl t!ic 011 lBIJel 64 0 1 811 s110
NOW AYllLAIU: AT M UNllUtYABL Y LOW PltlCt!
rtlt'WORLl>HMOt :-.
llrJfitlllli(•U
• u11l•w ~:IK'\t'ictP,Ht'fl bt
"® Heritage House
PEARS OR
PEACHES
FRENCH FRIED
@ ~2,!,~!?.,~S age
Cnnkle Cut 5 l b Pl<g •••••
l
....
C.4 DAIL 'I PILOT \ W9dn .. dar S.plember 14, 1171
\
Try Low-Calorie Meals Cooked Burgundy Style
ft)' BARBAR
GJBMNS
In •·r~n<'h cu111ne,
8our1u11non ·' means
prep.arf'd In lh• cooltlna
't}lr of Buraiundy, the
re11on that 1tvea Ila
numt' 111 1rc-at wtnea 11
wt>ll a. .. food Rur1undy
"')It> d11hf."2. ar"" gt-nt•rail
I\' lilow ~lmmt•rC'd in dry
rt'd "'"t' und hc•rb,, Mnd
't.·rvt1d ~Ith llny on1un11
and 11l11m11 mu11hroom"
('urroL' un· 1.1 grt•al 1.1dd1
lion
An td~al "ot) tu handle
the l~ane..o;t and lt'u'll fat
lt'ntnl( <'Ub or btt'r I~ lo
m a k l' H o t-u f
Rourgu1&non, u Slim
Gourmet's delight
SLIM GOURMET Bo•:uF
80lJRGlilGNON
3 pounds lean well
trimmed bee r round
cubed
1 o nion. ranely
chopped
2 doves garlic ,
minced
2 cups dry Burgundy
wine
1 bay lea!
1 pound small car·
rots, scrubbed
1 6 ·s m a 11 p c a r I
onions. peeled (fresh or
frozen) "
one-half pound small fresh mushrooms ...
one·third cup cold
water ·
t tablespoon flour
I tablespoon corn·
!-tlJrch
saJt. pepper lo las le
Use a nonstick Dutch
oven or a very large clec·
tric skillet. Spray well
with cooking spray for
no.rat frying. Add cubes
of beer and brown well on
all sades over high heat.
Add chopped onions,
garlic. wine and bay
leaf. Cover and simmer
until tender. two hours or
more. Use a bulb·type
baster to skim fat from
liquid. Add carrots. Cov·
er and C<X>k 20 minutes.
Add pearl onions and
mushrooms. Cover and
cook 10 minutes. Mix
cold water, nour and cor·
nstarch and stir into sim-
mering sauce. Salt and
pepper lo taste. Makes
eight servings, 300
calories each. <Garnish
with parsley and serve
with cooked brown rice
or broad noodles, if de·
sired. A ha1f.cup cooked
brown rice totals 88
calories. a half-cup
noodles, 100 calories.>
The same combination
works magic with ham·
!.>urger.too
EASY HAM
80URGUIGNON
1 pound lean ground
beef round
garlic salt and pep-
per to taste
4·ounce can sliced
mushrooms, undrain~d
8-ounce can whole
boiled onfons, drained
16-ounce can small
Belgian carrots, un·
drained
l cup Burgundy, or
It's Slaw
APPLE SLAW
':i cup mayoMaise·
stylesaladdressing .
1 tablespoon cider
vinegar
1 tablespoon bottled
white horseradish
12 teaspoon sail
1 teaspoon sugar
3 cups coarsely gral·
ed green cabbage
l large red apple. un·
peeled and diced (about
l' 4 cups>
Paprika
Whisk together the
salad dressing, vinegar,
horseradish, sail and
sugar.
Stir in the cabbase and
apple. Sprinkle with
paprika. Servings: 5.
1i1ny di')' red, wane
1 tH1poon mlxed
poulU'y HuonlDI
1 teupoon parsley
naktl
me t and brown quickly
over hl1h heat, with no
fat 9dded. Draln any fat
from pan. Seuon Uber al·
ly with •arllc ult and
pepper, Add rtm•lnln•
ln1t«lient1, exe.pl cor·
natarch and cold wettr.
Simmer uncovered 15
mln11tea, 1tlrrin1 fre·
quently , to heat
ve1etables throu1h and
permJt the liquid to re·
duce. Skim fat, If any.
well. SUr into simmering
liquid, until thickened
and bubbling. Serves
rour, W>der 225 calories
each. <Serve with pre·
pared Inst.ant rice, if de·
aired. One·halr cup serv·
ln1 · lnstant rice hu 93
calories.)
1 clove aarllc.
minced <or one·elahth
teaspoon instant)
2 large onions ,
peeled and cut In chunks
1 small bay leaf
three-quarters teas·
poon mixed poultry
seasonings
chopped fresh parsley
In a Outcb oven com·
blne all ingredients ex·
cept carrotl, cornstarch
and cold water. Cover
and aimmer untll turkey
is tender, about two
houra. Remove turkey
legs from broth and set
aside to cool. Meanwhile,
skim rat off broth with
bulb· type baster. Add
ca rrots and cook 20
minutes, until carrots are tender.
enou1h to handle. cut
meat from bones In bite·
size pieces. Discard
bones, skin and sinew.
Add turkey meat to pot,
heat through.
THE SLIM
GOURMET
1 lable1poon corn·
at arch
OM·quarttr cup cold
wulcr
A111mble all ln1r•·
<l 1 cnt1. Shape 1round
mut lnto 16 1maU meat·
ba1l1. or cut the block of
meat lnto cubea. Spray .a
non1tkk skillet with
fookin1 •pray. Add the
Combine cornstarch
and cold water, mixing
Here's an easy ,
economical, nonfatten·
Ing favorite:
TURKEY BURGUNDY
2 turkey leg s,
defrosted
2 cups dry red wine
1 pound carrots,
sliced
1 teaspoon cor·
nstarch, or arrowroot
one·half cup cold water
4 tablespoons When turkey is cool
Mix cornstarch and
cold water, and stlr into
simmerb•g liquid, until
thlc~ened. Serves four,
295 calories each.
<Garnish with minced
fresh paniley. if desired,
and serve over noodles.
A half·cup noodles con·
-
~llJJ~jSJl.a:::illUJl~at.lt:Ji:::ill~Ci!:llat.lmd:.:l..ll.ft2 /, .. ,.
Save this ad
and Lucky •
' ' -....... ~ .~' ·~·-··.·~ save you
, I
We won't make.out your
shopping list for you.
We feel offering coupons for a few selected items is
a little like telling you that you can save on dog food
this week ... although you don't have a dog. Lucky
doesn't want to pick and choose which items you're
allowed to save money on. We want
you to save on everything you pur· /
chase from us. So we keep pricey~
low on each and every item .. ,, ·
not just the handful to be
shown in a newspaper.ad.
(
Manufacturer's coupons
vs. store coupons.
Many fine products are prom~d by the companies that produce
them. These promotions often ta~e the form of 'cents·off'
coupons in newspapers~ and mirgazines. The manufacturer has
chosen to take it upon himself to call attention to his product by
offering you savings. Redeem all those manufacturer's coupons
when you shop at Lucky and you save two ways. First, because
of our low, everyday prices. Second, because of the manu-
facturer's coupon saving. This combination will bring your food
bill about as low as you can get it today, on your shopping lisr.
So clip them all out .. and bring them to Lucky.
'·
money
... or why· Lucky doesn't off er coupons. . .
Pre-priced items.
We're a discount store, as you know by now, so we
take a very low mark-up. Normally this is reflected
in the competitive prices you see on our shelves. Some
items, though, are pre-marked by the manufacturer.
When you look at magazines and paperbacks at
Lucky, remember that we subtract an extra 10% off
the price at the checkstand. Things like greeting cards and
razor blades, have even greater discounts. Sure, this is a
very small part of what you come to Lucky for. But it
illustrates our point. We discount every price we can,
except those that are government controlled.
Here's a sa~pler.
:0 The prices we list below are meant to whet your appe·
tite for all the savings you11 find on our shelves,, .i~n2'.o~u~~l'--7.~i.;i~~~
meat case, on our produce displays. You can ~ -
almost make out your weekly menu from what
we show here. We think that building your menu at Lucky
might just save you more at the register.Check us out and compare.
Fresh Meats Fresh Meats Canned & Packaged Dairy & Frozen Health & Beauty Aids
LARGE END
RIO STEAK
OONOW 0££F .. . . . .. . . lO 129
BLADE CUT ~~~E~~~.lD .68
BONELESS
ROUND STEAK
GONOEO D££f .......... LO
CROSS RIO
118
~k ....... LD.138
TOP Sll\LOIH STEAK
CICMWS llOl<Of.D OUfl.ON ........... IA 1.97
CHUCK P.OAST
'1'«ltC IOIQO ICO' .................... lot .88
T-DON£ MAK
00!«0 OIV LOii ................. , • IA 1. 98
MJMPP.OAST ~ lkC»I aJ. IOllDlO IOI ••• , UL 1.28
DOHEWS TIP STEAK
OQMOG) Oll1 IQMI ................. "° 1.5 8
;~~~~,~TP.SWc. • 1t .69
PON( LOIH P.OASt ~O. ............ IA~.2C2
NDOtoPS
flOM ION .. , IA 1
~L.OtH ~~1.7~
POAK SPAP81BS
COJWlllUl'l\l ~l.O'O .i1HO LO 1.29
LADY LEE BACON
!ltCIO t LO ,.-, 1 . 19
Canned& Packaged ..
b HARVEST DAY
DREAD 39 OEl.UX£ 'tlHITE QA \MEAT
......... 24 OZ. LOAF e
pTREESWEET 6~.~CANe49
pPRJNGLE'S o;c?.~~':~89
L ~~~.~OuA1.59
r PL.AHTEk'S P£N4Urs
# 6 Oll'I'~ .... , ... , ..... , .. CX.IM 1.29
.p SAi.AD ONSSIMG 6 """'1000ltNCI ........... 1001 •• 89
P GMHAM CM0<W ~ ~ ............... ,, .. , ... t•Ol..IOl.55
i·s=.~s~~~C&""' .89 r DB. MOMJS nur aws 6 OUUDlllA C. \IMIN\l .,4/t 0L C"'6 .69
GM:>UHO ltACKftffla
.-.. D"f •••••••• , ••••• t .. -'•··'°' C#t .66
:.r tJJff LEE GOlDDt CCf\H 9 • ~--....... 110Z.t;Nt,2
I ~~.~~J.,29
Delicatessen
bOSCAA MA YER
V~~PAf( ~39 ~12oc~ 'I
}I BANQUET }' ROSEMILK 6~~~oc~ 198 '6 .~?.!1.?~1aozgZE 13 !
LADY l££ ICE CREAM <~>.. . . .. . . . ~r....i...CIN .99 L OllOCCOU CUTS lllC'IS'41'! ................. 100t~.ss
l' STOKELY VEGETADl.D 0 ~GCO.IOl.'wtG ONl:lll •• IOOl lllCG .77
OP.ANGE JUICE
l.AOf W CXllOQl<IM!J • • ....... I '1 01 CM .5 9
Household & Pet
L ~!~.~~~.~~~et"41.99
L ~~.~~ ... ,:ioaPllG.59
L a.~~.~~ .... 500."'4.47
p SCOTT PAPP. TOWS l> ClCCMllO~~ ••• ,ooinou .. 58
b ~.~.~.~-"OLCNl.~2
P FMKllS CAT'fOOO l> Dilt.iiiiM. LMA ........... ~ OUloG 1,64
Liquor & Beer
A ~U< ~A'!-~.~-1.~)7
A~~~~ OOtll\.1.17
l ~~~. 1•0t011.1,67
b ~l~~~ .-.Ol c...,d.87
Produce
LARGE
CUCUMBERS
EXTAA FNfC'f . . . . , .• ~.15
ITALIAN
SQUASH 23 ..................... LO. e
PfWHE PLUMS IJi.l'O .......... .
MUSCAT GMPES ···············
\0 .19
•• \0 .29
DAATI.£TT' PEAAS ~l"OI ..... UI .29
4• ASSOATtO Pl>.HTS
..... .. .. • ..... lA .98
°"'-,___ lldo<v.------... ...... ~~··...,, ,.....,,,.,~~·•11:
~· 1t77b!-lutJorllOl-.t!LM""'9---.. ,_....." .. __ .. ~_......
_i...,_...~91'~*"'
-
------------· ~~ .,
Wednesday. September 14. 1977 OAIL Y PILOT C$
Add Tuna ta Pizza, Dip and a Curr}'
f>on t p.mac-"ht·u ttw kstb
H 'll, tle y ~tom . m,1\ I 111\Jlt•
J c:ouplu ot frttnd t11 '' ·•~ Im 'u p~r •··
\\1th tht• J td nf u I•·"' lia'"''
from the rupbourd and vou1
rcfnaerator <1hetr. n111 t•an
pl~~ e the whok 1tan.: and
~.ua~ry their rav('nous up
pelJt c.;too
llen•~ . p1ua ""1th d nt!w
lOlH'h Tasty T Ulld P1u1t
\\'1th h1scu1t m ix. cunn cd
tun .t. mu\<>lllld l M '. rhee~t.'.
,rncl l'gR~ on hand, \OU 're all
'>el to create lhts nutritional
meal in minutes for lunch or
supper. Extra zest to accent
Che tuna is provided by pre
pared yellow musta rd.
To keep the children oc-
cupied while the pizza bakes.
entertain them with a tray of
wh1m s 1cal v e g e t a bl e
characters Whal a great
time they'll have dismantl ·
mg the vegetables and dip-
ping them into the enticing
Dandy Dip of cream cheese
flavored with seasoning mix
for sloppy joes. Vetetables
were never so much fun !
For maximum nutritional
value and taste appeal, add
fruit juice or milk, plus oat.
meal cookies with raisins.
TASTY TUNA PIZZA
4 cups biscuit baking mix
1 cup cold water
2 cans <7-oz. each' t una,
drained
1 ta bl espoon inst ant
minced onion
2 tablespoons prepared
\lellow mustard
:• 1 cup mayonnaise
2 ha rd cooked eggs .
s li ced
2 cups grated American
cheese
Choppe d tom a toes.
green peppe r , a nd olives, if
desired
Mi x together biscuit mix
and water until dough holds
together: kn eud dough 10
times. Di vi de dough in half
and roll out two circles or pat
to fit two medium-size pizza
pans. Combine tuna. onion,
mustard and mayonnaise;
s pread over pizza dough. Ar·
range egg slices and cheese
on pizzas and sprinkle with
chopped tomatoes, green
-.
Tuna mushroom cakes are inexpensive. Tuna pizza: a hit with the kids. /
pepper and /or olives, if de-many restaurants specializ· which is baked rather than mashed potatoes or prepare
sired. Bake in 425 degree ing in wholesome meatless fried. <A decided plus for cut· 4 servings of instant mashed
oven 15 to 20 minutes. Makes fare that have sprung up in ting down on saturated fats!> potatoes according to
2 medium-size pizzas. and around the New York Another tempting recipe package directions, reducing
DANDY DIP FOR area. The success of these with "stretchables'' is Tuna water by ~ cup. In a large
VEGETABLES eateries attest to the fact that Rice Cakes with Curry bowl combine potatoes, tuna.
l package (8-oz.J cream more New Yorkers are Sauce. Tuna and rice go un-egg, onion, parsley, salt and
cheese, softened choosing meatless dishes usually well together -·and pepper; mix well. Shape into
1 enve lope < l lt:!-oz. > these days when they dine their subtle flavors are a 12 patties. Press mushrooms
se asoning mix for Sloppy out. It's relatively inex-perfect foil for the savory -· onto the surface of tuna
J oes pensive,fillingandfullofde-yetmild-currysauce. cakes: Place cakes on a
~cup milk licious flavors. Both recipes are the kind of greased foil·lined baking
Cut up raw vegetables You can adapt an item popular dishes you11 ~ sheet and bake in a 350
such as radishes, carrots, originated at one of New serving over and over again degreeoven25mlnutes.tum.
cucumber, zucchini, celery York's old·time famous no matter what shape your bake 20 minutes longer.
Combine cream cheese, .. dairy" restaurants --budget is in. Serve with tomato sauce. if
contents of seasoning mix en-Mushroom Potato Cakes. TUNA MUSHROOM CAKES desired. Yield: 6servings.
velope, and milk; blend well Add tuna, and the result is 2 cups mashed potatoes TUNA RICE CAK~
a nd chill. Serve with cut up •delicious main dish Tuna 2 cans C6~ or 7 ounces WITHCURRYSAUCE
raw vegetables or create Mus hroom Cakes. It's a each>tunainvegeta bleoil TunaRiceCakes:
whimsical characters from great stretchable in the days 1 egg 1112 cups cooked regular
v e g e t able pie c e s he 1 d of shrinking food budgets ,., 112 cup chopped onion rice
together with food picks. because it's made wltli let't-•;,.cup chopped parsley 2 cans (61t2 or 7 owices
Makes aboutl1/2cups dip. over mashed potatoes or in· 11:?teaspoonsalt each>tunainvegetableoll
Budget cooking doesn•t
have to mean boring
cookery. Take a tip from the
stant mashed potatoes and , a.,, teaspooo pepper 3eggs
thrifty canned tuna. The .. 1 can (4 ounces> sliced 2 tablespoons grated
mustv:ooms are pressed into mushrooms. drained onion
the patties raf:her than in-For 2 cups mashed ~teupooasalt
corporated in the mixture potatoes, use leftover \4tteaspoonpepper
I MJB
RieeMixS al!
Good news!
Caffee prices are
beginning to come down !
2 tablespoons salad oil
In large bowl mix rice.
tuna, eggs, onion, salt and
pepper. Shape mixture into
patties, using 1h cup mixture
for each patty. Jn a large
skillet heat oil. Add Cuna
cakes, 4 at a time, and cook.
turning once, until golden
brown. Serve with Curry
Sauce.
Curry Sauce:
2 tablespoons butter or
margarine
1 cup chopped cel~ry
l cup chopped pared ap-
ple
1 teaspoon curry powder
>12 teaspoon salt
3 tablespoons flour
1 chicken or vegetable
bouillon Cllbe
2cupsmilk
In a large saucepan melt
butter. Add celery, apple and
c urry powder : cook over
medium heat 10 minutes.
Sprinkle with salt and flour.
Add bouillon cube and milk.
Cook, stirring frequently.
about 10 minutes, until mix-
ture thickens and comes to a
boil. Serve over Tuna Rice
Cakes. Yield: 8 cakes: 4
servings.
TEXASSl'YLE PIZZA
'h pound ground beef
1 envelope chill sauce mix
1 can <lib. )'tomatoes
1 can <1 pound> kidney
beans, drained and rinsed
1 package active dry yeast
· ~cupwarmwatel'
214 cups btseuit mix
~cup cornmeal
SblWded Cheddar and Jack
cheese r
Cook beet In larp atlllet. stir· rtna to crumble; pour off excess
fat. Stir In contents of cblll mix.
tomateee and beans; simmer. uncovered. 10 mlnutes.
Sprinkle yeast over warm
water ln large mixing bowl;, stir
to dissolve. Add biscuit mix and
cornmeal; stir until smooth.
Knead 25 strokes on floured sur-
face. Divide in half, roll or pal
each to a 14-lnch circle.
Place CJD uDcreased plna pans
or bakinl abeeta. Spoon f1llblg on
top of cruats; sprtule with
ebeeee. &Ike atG5dqrees for 15
to 20 mtnates, unUI erast. is
Colden brown. lto8Rnlnp.
)
And to celebrate, we're giving you a big ...
We're as happy as you are that coffee
prices are beginning to come down.
~~any price there's nothing like the
ric'h, af'Qmatic, mountain grown flavor
l
1
----
........ ..__ ...... o,_A..,;.IL_Y_P_IL .... o_T ___ __,,_W_ed_n_•ld•J Septembet 14 1971
..., --· .... .. _________ .,,., ..... -.. -... ~ ... --· ----L-~-------
Soft Fruit ·season · ls Fast Coming to a Close
ue.\y \<lrll'l) w ith
re w price fluctua11cm1
e•rmerk tht comln1
wttk ln rr h rru1t.1 and
v Qttabl The aof'1. Crull
1ea1an I.a rapidly t'Omlna
to a ct with r m•lnlna
•uppliea havln1 1c>od
flavor but lackiftl In cul or. Peaches and n~c
tarlnea have approx
imaldy two week• re·
ma1n1n1 In the season
Plums are tht-not.•blc
"xcoptlon with the
<:auclman v ariety 1n
good aupplles . •nd re
Plum
·Good
Pie
By TOM HOGE ,.,. ........ ._ .... ~
For the r est or the
season, America's fruit
m arkets s hould be
deluged with plums since
California, where more
than 90 percent or our
crop grows, is enjoying a
record harvest this year.
Despite the drought
gripping the West Coast,
California growers say
they are harvesting 40
percent more plums than
last year. This is 9 per·
cent higher than the all·
time record ror plum
s hipments. says Virgil
Ras mussen, chairman of
the Plum Commodity
Committee .
ffii.llOIOM • 1tuocJ ~Ofl
~Uml·r buy
s,·•~dlt•11 1rapea con
Hnut1 Lo ~ the enlamM
Consumcra wlll flnd pre
mlum Nr&apH bul prices
will btl htah bt-cause of
t;a lt>m demand. Lower·
prlcC'd 11rapc1 will be
uvollab)o buL cuetul
11elecllon ll ln order hQre
111 thu Au.tu.sl rains wilt
have o.lfeeted ahelt life
and quality. Tokay
variety 1s very &ood.
BANANA PRICES
SJAH•B•O~
MOMIY BAC• GUA•AMlll
OMOUAUlY MlAU
f •l•I I f W •
····~ u ... ......... ,
11•• ••to .. I
'1 he roccnt hurricane
1n Ccntrot America may
huve 1ome effect on
banana 1uppliea and
lt\ereforo prices
All mtilons except
walcrm_,lon are ln ex · ccillent form and remain
1ood buy1. Other fruits
on the itood buy list In·
elude Bartlett pears,
erupefrult, Northwest
apples , ttnd Italian
prunes
Pineapple s upplies
wlll be short throughout
the month of September.
America has raised
plums since the days or
the colonial settlers, but
the fruit is not nallve to
our shores. I'm told the
closest thing to a true
American plum is the
wild persimmon, which
is apt to be pretty bitter
if not properly ripe.
deli.
While lhe current plum
crop lasts and the price
remains within reason,
consumers should take
advantage or the many
ways to enjoy this adap-
table fruit.
If you don't have the
time or the know-how to
preserve plums, you can
plan ahead by simply
popping a bunch Into a
storage bag and freez·
ing. The plum 1s one of
the few fresh rruilS that
can be handled this way.
And they say a plum
taken out of the freezer
and thawed only a few
minutes. so that it is still
frosty, tastes delicious.
There arc many ways
of fixing plums, from
pureeing them with sug-
u r and sweet wine to
mixing them in a blender
with vanilla Ice cream.
But one of my favorite
desserts is old fashioned
plum pie. Herc's a re·
cipe.
2 cups of pitted,
quartered plums (any
variety)
2 ounces apricot
brandy
I cup sugar
2 tablespoons
tapioca
1 tablespoon butter
Dash of nutmeg
Mix plum pieces in a
bowl with apricot brandy
and place in refrigerator
about 30 minutes. Then
place ln a deep pie pan
lined with pastry.
Sprinkle plums with sug-
ar, tapioca and s pice
combined and dot with
butter. Cover with a top ·
crust, perforated. Place
in a 450-dearee oven ·10
minutes. Reduce beat to
350 dearees and cook 30
minutes Ult fruit and
crust are well done.
Some supplltti. are ex·
peeled Crom Central
Amenca but quality is
unknown at this time.
Hawaii production
should be In top form by
the 1.St or October.
VEGETABLES
Look for slight in-
creases in all lettuces
this week. Weather, new
plantings, are all affect-
in1 prices this week.
Celery, cucun;ibers,
bell peppers, squash and
beans head the list of
good buys this week. The
demand on tomatoes ls
heavy causina· some
price increase u sup-
plies wm be short for the
next week. The corn
market will be very er-
ratic for the next three
weeks. Some stablll:&lna
wlll occur by the end of
the month when Florida
supplies be1ln tq arrive.
Artichokes are coming
in but quallty is atlll
marginal.
SPECIALTY ITEMS
Quince are 111 and wlll
remain al 1ood prices
throu1h the winter.
Pomerranates are arriv·
Inf but supply is still
below demand. Quality
ls 1ood but prices will be
high for another ten.
days. Rhubarb, pearl
onion.a, horseradish and
apple pears are all good
b\IYI. A look to the future:
There remains but 10
percent of the avocado
crop on the trees. Prices
will therefore be high for
two to three months Early esl.Jmates indicate
Present indicators poml u yield for the Hass
to a smaller new crop m variety comparable to
California k e eping this year. Total produc·
prices blah until Nov· t1on is expected to reach
ember when Florida's approximately 130
begin to arrive. Fuertes million pounds as com-
a nd other greenskln pared to 229 million thls
varieties are In an off· year and 116 million
year production wise. pounds in 1975·76.
r ..,
Have someth ing you wunt
Lo :.ell'! {;la!!s11icd wds do
1t well. 642·5678.
.... SM OK ID
CllUCK
ROAST
PORK
SHOULDER
,.~. ··~ •••• SLICID
RIB LUNCHEON
·ROAST MEAT
STATER BROS.
LARGE END 10 VARIETIES 8-0Z. PKG.
LB. s12~ 59~
--"" .. -·-.__ ----------.... --..... _.. ~ -... --......,.... ..... ___ .. _____________ _ . . ..
(1J DAILY PILOT Wettnetday September 14 1971
Soft Fruit Season Is Fast .Coming to a Close
lhHAV\ \._.fl<'l )' 't\ l\h
h•w Prlt'C nul'lU;ttlOn~
t>armark lht> c·om1n•
wttk In I h rru1ts and
vercttabl The sort fruit
~C"uson ua rapidly cumana
to a dcae with rt1ma1n1 n1
tupphe:. havan" aood
flavor but hacluna in col
or. Peach s &&nd n~<'
tarlnea have approx
i mat.tJy two we<'kl r e?·
m intn& in the season
Plums are the notable
tixcept1on with the
CusselmJtn 'i:ari('ty an
good aupphea 1tnd r~·
Plum
Good
Pie
By TOM HOGE .,._...twnwn1er
For the r est or the
season, America's fruit
markets s hould be
deluged with plums since
California. where more
than 90 percent or our
c rop grows. is enjoying a
record harvest this year.
Despite the drought
gripping the West Coast,
California growers say
they are harvesting 40
percent more plums than
last year. This 1s 9 per-
cent higher than the all·
time r ecord for plum
shipments, says V1rg1I
Rasmussen, chairman or
the Plum Commodity
Comm1ltce.
America has raised
plums since the days or
the colonial setUers, but
the fruit is not native to
our shores. I'm told the
closest thing to a true
American plum is the
wild persimmon, which
is apl to be pretty bitter
if not properly ripe.
While the current plum
crop lasts and the price
remains within reason,
consumers should take
advantage or the many
ways to enjoy this adap·
table fruit.
If you don't have the
time or the know.how lo
preserve plums. you can
plan ahead by simply
popping a bunch into a
storage bag and freez:·
ing. The plum is one of
the few fresh fruits thal
can be handled this way.
And they say a plum
taken out of the freezer
and thawed only a few
minutes. so that it is still
frosty, tastes delicious.
There arc many ways
or fixing plums, from
pureeing them with sug.
ar and sweet wine to
mixing them in a blender
with vanilla ice cream.
Rut one of my favorite
desserts is old fashioned
plum pie. Here's a re-
cipe.
2 cups or pitted,
quartered plums (any
variety)
2 ounces apricot
brandy
I cup sugar
2 tablespoons
tapioca
I tablespoon butter
Dash of nutmeg
Mix plum pieces in a
bowl with apricot brandy
and place in refrigerator
about 30 minutes. Then
place in a deep pie pan
lined with pastry .
Sprinkle plums with sug·
ar, tapioca and spice
combined and dot with
butter. Cover with a top
crust, perforated. Place
in a 450·degree oven 10
minut.es. Reduce beat to
350 degrees and cook 30
minutes till fruit and
.er.USt ar«t well done.
mUllllllM IA 11u111J \:00
l\Untt•r huy
St•c-tllt•.. 1r11pc1 con
tlnul• lo tx• the enlam11 .
Conwumt•n wall ltnd pr•·
mlum a&rMpe11 but prtcea
wall b(• hllh ~UUH OI
t-:11tt•rn demand. Lower·
priN•d Rrapea will be
uvalluble but c*feful
11elecllon ii In order here
us the Aucu t rain• will
have arr~t.ed shelf life
anct quality. Tokay
v a rlcty 16 very good.
BANANA PRICES
UA fH8aO~
MONIY eac• c;uA•AN fll
ON QUALITY MfAfS
tfl•f I·'""• .. ..• . ....... .. . .. . . .. .-..... , ,
Th\• rt'C\'nt hurrlcllne
In CcntreJ America may
huvc tom effect on banana 1uppllea and
therefore prices.
All melons except
watermelon are in ex·
cellcnl lorm and remain
«iood buya. Other fruits
on the aood buy llst In·
elude Bartlett pears,
grapQfrult, Northwest
upple11, and Hallan
prunes.
Pineapple s upplies
wlll be abort throughout
the month of September.
Some &upphei. are ex-
pected from Cent ral
America but quaUly 1s
unknown at thls time .
Hawaii production
should be In top form by
the lat of October.
VEGETABLES
Look for slight in·
creases in all lettuces
this week. Weather, new
plantings, are all affect·
me prices this week.
Celery, cucumbers.
bell peppers, squash and
beans head the list or
UM>t. • OllADC t.
CUT.Ult ·
P•TI .. CNICKaN .LL 49c ~---' deli.
... l• 45 c llP,.f • JUlllllO • t VAFtK rl( ")
BURRITOS IO-Ol l'•C
9.t.ll PAM"• Mt AT OR
BHF FRANKS ' "' Pfl.C.
~u lfA eAos
CORNED BEEF BRISKET
,,.$109
18 $1 19
l A $1 39
IA $129
f At ~H • f MOil N
TURBOT FILLET
1Al\H •IH0l(N
BITS 0 SHRIMP
f Al ~'I• f RO/lN
DOVER SOLE .
lll $1 29
16 $1 79
18 $2 49
good buys this week. The
demand on tomatoes ls
heavy causlne iiome
price increase as sup.
plies will be short for the
next week. The corn
market will be very er·
raUc for the next three
weeks. Some stablllzing
will occur by the end of
the month when Florida
supplies begin to arrive.
Artichokes are coming
in but quality is still
marginal.
SPECIALTY ITEMS
Quince are in and will
remain at eood prices
through the winter.
Pomegranates are arriv·
ing but supply ls still
below demand. Quality
is good but prices will be
high for another ten
days. Rhubarb, pearl
onions, horseradish and
apple pears are all Sood
buys.
A look to the future:
There remains but 10
percent of the avocado
crop on the trees. Prices
will therefore be high for
two to three months
Present Indicators Polnt
to a smaller new crop ln
Callfornia kee pine
prices blah until Nov-
ember when Florida's
begin IA> arrive. Fuertes
and other greenskin
varieties are in an off.
year production wise.
Early esllmates indicate
n yield for the Hass
varie\y comparable to
this year. Total produc·
lion is expected lo reach
appr oximately 130
mjllion pounds as com-
pared to 229 million this
year and l16 million
pounds in 1975-76.
llave something you want to sell? Classlhed ads do
it Well. 642-5678.
.... SMOKID
CHUCK PORK
ROAST SHOULDER
LB.
s·•~· •~~ •••• RIB
ROAST
LARGE ENO
s12~
SLICID
LUNCHEON
MEAT
ST ATER BROS.
10 VARIETIES 8-0Z. PKG.
59~
Fll£SH•$llC(O 9c KU•atUCll 99c I EC••k AOCCU• 79' allf LIYIR : .. le 6 7·•0• lt.OAST .1.1. CHUCK aTIAK ... l•.
ll(CF • CHUCll • l'Ot 9 5 C llCF • llO>ff:.... • , 39 IHJ • l AllOC [NO $139 ARM •oAST ll •OUND aTIAK .. ll ••• STIAK .11
Fll[S>j•llAN •11<0TTOllCC£0 21'ofATt$11• lfl'•CHUCll•llQNfl(6$ , , .. 9 lllf•llOUNO•-tlLU $1••
GROUND •••• . II • SllOULDIR emuc l8 Tiit snAK .. .. l8
ICH • AOUNO • llON£ It< s 12• l fE• • ION[l(S9 s 1 ... lfCJ • SMAll l NO $179 RUMP ROAST ... ,lll ROUND •TIAK LB RI• STIAK .. 18
8£Ef. 80"llE~~ $139 IU" CHllCll • IOHUUS $139 IHF•LOllll s2os
STIWMIAT LO •OULD•• HA•TL•. T·•ONISDAK .LU
bfff•RO\INO•!IONflfSS s 159 UEf•SMAllCNO $169 11(0 •lOIN•SfU• $209
TIPROAST 1e RlaROAST... LI PORTIRHOU~l .. La $ 89 llEEJ s i •• 8U,•l01N•SHt.A•IO"llt~ $219
18 I cu••• aTIAK. LI TOP s11u.01N ..... l.
I: I
---·----~~ -.... 1f" -· --..--
~ednesoay. September 14. 1977 DAILY PtLOT tr
Two-Person Households Affect Consumption
By 001-0THY WS K ..... c....-. .......
TM number and pro·
pottkJn ol one or t '*o peo-
ple hou1ehold1 11 an
<'re tna and t.hll chance ~ altec national food
consumpUon patterns
ln 1~. 43 per<'eot or
.lll U.S. hounholdl W•r•
m up ol ono and two s>eOPI•, in lt7S lt w u ~
per<"t!nt: aud by 1990 the
predacUon as that 1l w all
be 56 pc r c t n t T h e
lura~t mcrusc an alntle
ltvm1 ln the 1970's has
IJe~n for those under~.
R e a sons for this
change tire obvious: t,he
blrthrate is declining,
the lnc1dence of divorce
11 mcreasine, young peo.
pie are leavine their
parents' homes sooner
and are setting up their
own households, and
~omen and men are
marrying at an older
uge.
The people who com·
pile statistics about food
consumption have ob-
s trved that there are
significant differences
between larger families
a n d s i n-g I e s o r
twosomes:
*The sm a ll es t
households h a ve the
highest per capita con·
sumpt1on of poultry and
two-and three.person
households have the
highest per capita con:
sumption of red meat.
•S in g l e-person
hou s e holds cons ume
potatoes al a low rate.
•Persons living alone
c911s ume more fruits
and vegetables (except
potatoes) per capita than
pers on s in larger
households.
"Older men and
women. and one· and
'two-person households
are high consumers of
cheese. ..
"Lar,::c households and
families with children
are high consumers of
<·ereaJs and pastas.
"Large households are
high cons umers of
brea d, whil e small
households nre high con·
sumcrs of baked goods
.other than bread.
. •one· and two-person
households· and teenage
·-ooys are high CO!'sumers
of ice cream.
Many of these dif-
ferences can be account·
ed for on the basis of in -
come or convenience of
size of appetite.
Those that are the hun-
grie~t or have to get the
most food for the least
cost use the most bread,
cere als. and pasta.
Th06e who care little for
cooklng are high users of
· foods that take little
preparation such as
cheese, ice cream, baked
good s . fruit s and
vegetables.
One study of one and
two young pers on
households showed some
new food related" at-
.... titudes and behavior pat-
te\'nS, such as : • •
•Eating considered a
necessary but secondary
activity requiring
another accompanying
aetivity or othe rwise
considered a waste of
time. Eating alone can
be prererable.
•No ritualistic three
meals a day at appointed
times Eating perceived
as casual, adaptable to
c~rrent circumstance
•Buy food for today,
don't plan for tomorrow
Bqy with more regard
for what you want than·
for price Nutritional
needs subordinated
Food preparation
must be. simple. require
one-half hour or less. r•
quire little muss and ruaa. .
'Storlna perishable
leftovers ls an Irritant to
ba avoided <allhou&h
sterinl nonperlsbable stapl• ls not).
Jf the survey results
are really descripUve of
tocJay's young adults. we
m sht. anticipate a
dtf:llne ln consumption oq...utrtuous rood and aft
lnteaae ln expenditures f food among this
• p. . ,, * •
ONSWEAaE
Q. My frleacl work# ln
• 1upn•arket and 11ht1
told me &.ht lbl' baaana~
the7 ldl u• •·aan ed" to
lftlM *• rlpt"n. If l~ll
I• lnle, •lllat kind of c••
do tM)' , and •~ it aafe
to •at b•n•nr• •ftc r tlt~y'vebffn 11 11rd!
A Bananaa atrt• IJlclted a.nu abippcd art:t•n and
a r l' placvd 1n ts peclal
r 1l>enln g r oom a in
m urkel warehouees to
.!llOW for t•ompll'liOn of
the rlpenin& procciu •.
The rtpeninc may be in·
Any Size Pllcil-ee
Gl'Ollld
Beef
per I lb.
BHI Round Boneleu
Rolled
Tip Roast
1Uated hy treatment with
ethylene aus. Ethylene au• Is naturally pro·
duccd by fruits during
rtJH!lllni so you need not be concemed that this
prO<'t!U mlghl make tho
lru1t harmful to eat. II
you put unripe fr\&Jl in a
<"l oscd paper baa to
ripen, you are maJdna
your own ethylene "eas
chamber" to help speed
up the ripening.
* * • Q . Recently 1 've
noticed that tbe price ol
48
medium etl• ll muclll
lower tlaaa &hat ol Jars•
egc1. Wllat b11 eaaled
tbll! Are medh&m e111
poorer quall~y &baa larso! How madl e11 do
I 1e& wben I bay
medlom1 lutead of
large'!
A. Supplies of medium
eg1s have been great
lately -apparently
California hens are
working overtime -and
because of the large sup-
ply, prices have been re-
duced.
JlaUnp of extra large, a wei.bt dilrerencc of
large, medium, and 12.5 percent. So any time
small are strictly size the price difference
grades and have nothing between the1two sizes is
to do with egg quality. So 1reater than.12.s percent
a medium egs will be the you will aave money by
same quality as' a large buying med ium she
e11 if both bave the eggs. <For example, if
same quality grade -large egcs are 80 cents,
AA, for example -and ~ 12.5 percent ol IK> cents l5
both have been stored 10 cents: so mediums
properly <kep.t cold) and will be a eood buy if they
aretheaameaae. • are more than 10 cents a
A dozen large eggs dozen c heaper thn
wei&hs 24 ounces while larger.)
medtuma w e igh 21 * * *
ounces pet" dozen. This is Q. We Md some vis·
. ..
lton from EaalaJld, aad
wbea &bey saw &be
masllroom• "•t came
up oa our lawn after Ute
rain. &hey wanled to eat
Uaem. Tiiley said tllle
muslaroom1 looked Juat
like tt.oee tlaey eat at
bome. We dissuaded
tbem from eating tlae
mu1laroom1, and aow
I'm wondering if we
were overly cautlou1.
A. Not at all. We just
heard of a case much
like this where a man ate
just 14th of a mushroom
be found I~ oo t.he
toll course. Re became
violently ill and had to be
taken to the hospital
emereency room. The
doctor said that If he had
eaten just a couple of
bites more It could have
been fat.al. Even experts
can't td1 fbr sure wbicb
musbrooml u. safe and
which are polJOOOUS. So
don't take chances. Eat
only mushrooms you buy
at the market that have
b ee n grown on
mushroom farms.
&a
...., Loin
TopDtotn
Stlak
~
BftfChucll
7Bone
Steak
per
lb.
...... •IX•EIFU .................. ,
..
MA ... ACI_. cow•
u.nouL • • IScon! ..
... .,.aw • -
1/2 •
°"" ............ --......... .................. TlllYA&.m :
•YOIAl.Of ·1 ..................................... . .
TOTAL
SAVINGS
Manufacturer's cents-off coupons from newsP-apers
an.d mag1zinea are like coupons and. a half at Aalphs
this week, when you buy the Item. .. .
One coupon per item and one item per coupon unles!,_.
specified otherwise. Not to include "retailer'' or
"free''· coupons or exceed ... fhe value of the item. ~ -
Ohr .... ~ ........... 1} .......... ; 2t, 1977 .·
USDA Golden Premium Meats -
CHOICE All Ralphs Beef Roast and Stealcs AN USDA Choice lxclusiwely
lu'S'liA1 IMIChut:ll·Pol A-1 ~c~ Round Bone Roast
filsoA l"4Clludl .. ~-
c•o1c1 Family Steak
USDA CMltfClll
CMDIC( Beef Shank
~C.Uv~
~ K~..,..S~ed Ham
Super Bakery
Wines & Spirits
~W~"vodka
~R~~
I lo 7 lb. AoHI :' .99 ~Rib Half Pork Loin :· 119
r::· 21• DsklOin Pork chops i::· 11•
i:· 1•• DP'o:k'Stea1c :· 11•
~ 1••
~.89
':: 1"
:~ .88
.r
~ i=o;;;mOtUmsticks :~ .99 ow.:Thin&acon '*• 131
Do~RoUnd~1111e1 2~·
~ •dle.fretll 1•• ~ Red Snapper Fillet '::.
Super Deli
hL 97 ... . .
,,., 111· Ill.
!ha. 1•• '*• , .. ,. .....
1111. 1'' 1111•
::: .83 ·~·'1iV
Pric.t Ehctin Sept. 11~lept.21, 1871
We,,.., .. the rlgM to U"'lt., rlfuM .....
to c.mtMrcial ._. ., wttot"•l1,.,
460.i.ll . can ... -
A1IJ)M DellClCM.11
Olympic Meal
an.I
2401-11 . loaf
MeltOf ... f
Ralphs
lalogna
11b.ll pkg.
12oz.. buket
AMOfted FlaYOfl
Ralphs
ShertJet
9'91f.ll ctn.
Pantry Fillers Super Produce
, ... 18 p119 ••
!Jor 32 ,." .
1101 37 c ....
~:·.37
,~ .... 39
,~·.59 . .
~.29
': .08
:.' .29
..... 19
..-.88 ..
2retl 44 Health & Beauty Aids .....
~L .47 ~i;-A:i*tn
~.49 ~H'-*Sir'iY
=: .19 ~a~ t.o11on
'~"" .31 _ ~ Lk;.t Aniadct
-::.59 ~w~•-n ................ ...,
~Hair ConcltiOlw
:'i..73
•..:.93
·.: 1"
, ...... .... ,,--.
" .. ,.
CM .. 1
ff ... ,,. ., ...
.. t __ ......._.
.... w ·---
a D•ILeUePjdGj ••• llundPeds of SPECIAU! l
1
euePyday ••• tllousands of LOW _.RICES!
Serving
Suggestion
Does Not Exce~d 30% Fat
lb.
Blade Cut
Marinate &
BBQ This
Gre~t Steak ...
Real Meaty
Heartiness. W:*~lb.
Fresh Hen· Turkeys ~
Here :are ·some excellent reasons that so many ·
homemakers choose to serve Safeways fine beef.
Young Grade 'A' .................................... lb.
Smoked Ham . 1,..,'/}$>
Farmer John ,Shank Portion ......... 1b. 11•J ..... lb. . ~:~!~.~~.~.~-.~~~~.~ .............. ~-~:: $10' .
~ Round Tip Steak uso~o~~?~~= Beef, 1b. •159 White Magic , ..
~ .Cross Rib Roast ui~~e~~~,~~~:" lb. *139 LAUNDRY§~;)>
~ Cat Fish Steaks Frozen & Defrosted lb. $179 DETERGENT4t-oz.
~ Safeway Wieners Meat or Beel 11':· 590 . Pkg.
.·
IJ,fllj ... Ral .. .__ .. 9!:2DE!t!E~r::l!:"~-c-!h....... Lucerne
RUSSET
ATOES
FROZEN
YOGURT ~
·' 4 • .!'
Colonial German
CHOGOLATE
CAKE ~ 2~:·
Every steak and roast cul al Safeway from
beet is U.S.D.A. Choice •.. this is your
assurance of fine flavor and great eating !
CLOSE-TRIMMED FOR BETIER VALUE
Our famoos close· I rim method removes uces·
sive fat and bone before we1gh1ng so that you
can get more meat to eat for your m'>ney. This
method also helps assure you each cut will
c.ook just right •
GUARANTEED TO PLEASE
We !>pare no effort 1n bfinglng you fine beef.
But we go beyond that. We uncond1honally
guarantee your satisfaction in every way or
your money 1s promptly and courteously re ·
funded.
AGED FOR GREATER TENDERNESS
Saleway's aging of selected cuts is still another
extra step designed to assure top tenderness.
flavor. and ealll'Jg goodness.
_ ... .. --~--. -------........ --.. .. . . . .. . .. _.... .... -----. -
French
Wednnctax. September 14, 1en DAILY PILOT C9
Say 'Gheese'
By EDWARD CODY ._.......,.. .. ,... where It. was invented by ference because cheese lesser varieties that c
a womaa whose statue in ls a serious matt.er ln travel without dlautrous
the middle of town beara France. A French meal result.I. LA CAPELLE, France witness to the gratltude ls incomplete wltbout Within France, wher•
CAP> -Charles de of the people of Camem-cheese between salad palates are educated to
Gaulle used to aay you bert. and deuert. A good meal appreciate the best.
can't covern a country .. Of course,'' satd Hen· re q u i r ea s e v e r a 1 cheeses need a reputa·
which, likote Fbrance, hu nebelle, wlth drops of varieties. . tlop. Wlth that In mind,
400k.lnds c eese. cham::ia1ne drlppln1 French housewives La Capelle producers " ..... yes," retorted the bo pe ..... , ... .-.1 •L.--1.oh a 20· ,........ from s Ups, •'there also uaht nearly $2 b!llioo ·-~ uuvu._ m 8 Y 0 r o f t b l s are commercial cheeses" worth ot cheese 1D 197S, year court battle lo have
cbeesemaklng town 120 th at flower by t be the latest year for wblcb their lfaroill• placed on
mlles northeast of Paris, thousands every day. statist.tca . are avaUable t b • ••a PP e l l at lo n
"but Churchill used to But they have nothlnl to Last year, French pro-d'orieiDe'' Ust. pte'Vent-
say a country that has do wllh real cheese." ducers exported $500 lnl others (rom st.eallng
400 kinds of cheese will It all makes illlon In cheese ostl the name. neverperish." ~~=~~~;!;;;!::;;.;2;;;;;~~~~~~5;..~~=;;;~~~-li Mayor Louis Hen-
nebelle dispensed his
wisdom this weekend
during the annual cheese
fair, where producers
from across France ex-
hibited their: pungent
wares and sought deals
worth millions of francs. . ~
Open 7 Days Including Sunday 9·6 They showed off giant
88-pound wtreels of com-
te, paprika-covered Cheese is a serious matter in France. Boulette d'Avesnes and, ..........
salads
ISftALIAM WHOLE sis! IOUMDCHUC TOP --------------------------------------in the starring role, the local delicacy -
Maroilles, a creamy
Ethnic Food To Go
square redolent of a
barnyard.
De Gaulle. being
French, was exaggerat·
ing a llWe. Tbe experts
here counted about 240
kinda of cheese in the
French repertoire. Only
20 carry the seal ''ap-
pellation d 'origine,"
which guarantees they
come from the area that
gave them their name
and were made accord-
ing to ances tral
folkways.
By STEPHEN FOX will be spent away from
LOS ANGELES CAP> supermarkets.
-Victor R ose 11 i ni Restaurant sales in the
peered into the Cast.food first six months of 1977
"' future the other day and grew at the rate of 10.3
saw a p r ofu sion of percent, 50 p erce nt
"~th nic" establis h-faster than food store
menls. sales. Rosellini, a Seattle
"Mexican food is mov-restaurateur, credits ris-
ing all over the country," ing personal incomes
said Rosellini, president and the di verslly or
o f the National res taurant s for the
Restaurant Association. greater gains.
· • The G e r m a n "People have more
, restaurant is coming Into disposable income," he
nu al sale growth of about
25 percent.
"This isn't a fad,••
Rosellini maintains.
"These restaurants have
a clientele that likes
them."
Th e tradition a l
American appetite for
hamburgers, hot dogs,
french fries and so on
hasn't suffered either,
says Rosellini. The
number of franchised
restaurants in the United
States grew 10 percent
fastest-growing chain in
the COWltty.
Despite the profusion
of fast-food outlets,
Rosellini thinks there's
still room for new ideas.
"There are a lot of in·
dependents coming on
the market," he said in
an interview. "Many,
many of them have
bright ideas and even·
tually, the chains or con·
glomerates will latch on·
totbem."
Camembert, for exam·
ple, doesn't earn tbe
seal. It is made all over
France and not just ln
the Normandy hamlet
last year to a total of -------------------47,000.
McDonald's is still far
and away the biggest,
,.._ 99c . , .... ·-.. UNDYS PAHCY • Mac
• CaltSlaw C.l<Me . ... s I'!
FlfElRIEEF l'IA'l'UltM9 .....,...., ..
,!!f!.~OIM .,.... $149
.u.-099 WT.Ulf LI,
HIND ~ARTEll wmtlOltlT '93!
SIDEOFIEEF 85! """111¥1' ~
PHONE IN ORCifR
H"H OCLIVtlH 01'< SJS on OP MO H
W .'Hll" IS Ml llAOIU'>
CA l l R /\ N 0 Y Oil CH AR L I I ----~·
• its own again. You're go-says. "There are more
ing to see more Greek families where the
food. The Japanese are husband and wife both
~ becoming an influence. work and they naturally
People are accepting eat out more often. And
' fish and you'll be seeing they have a variety of
more fl sh bars in the places to go -from fast·
near future." C o o d l o I u x u r y
Americans are now restaur ants. They can HERE ARE A FEW BF BUR
SIRLOI~
FL.At« STEAK s1•? .....
FILET MIGMOM sr!
TRl-11P
llO.t.IT • lftlll:I ......
SLICED
BACON
o ...
7D4Y
IMCLUD
SUND A ...
s1•!. .
s13!
270 E. I 7th ST .,
COSTA MESA
642-7191
-~ F• -~
! spending about one-third make their own decision
of their food dollars in on where to go tonight
restaurants and takeout and bow much to spend."
stores. Ten years ago, Increasingly, that de-
the ratio was one In rive cision turns out to be an
and the NRA estimates ethnic restaurant, the
that ten years from now, fastest-growing segment
half of all food dollars 'l of the business with an-
with almost 20 percent of
the market and a 21 per-
cent sales Jl'Owtb in 1976.
Next is Kentucky Fried
Chicken, with 8.5 percent
or the market and a 17
pe rcent sales growth
from 1975 to 1976. But the
appeal of ethnic food is
evident -Pizza Hut's
sales rose more than 38
percent, making it the
~ · Drought Affects Beef
THllSAl•IF
DllCll T PRICE 11.1...-rlf==-·-· ... -· ..
OMAHA, Neb. CAP>
-Drought is taking its
, toll in the West Coast
. • meatpacking industry.
• • sending the beef busi-~,.: ne ss back t o t h e
Midwest, a University of
California agricultural
:••. economist s aid.
Eric Thor told a four-
•state Federal Land Bank
range future of U.S.
grain exports.
Although a worldwide
wheat surplu s has
slowed development of u .s. markets abroad,
"the need and the size of
the need for feed grams
1s staggering," he said.
Bllcher said China has
"big potential as a grain
user , but their idea of
trade is $10 a ton below
price."
Over the long term, he
said, China will face a
growing need for grain
imports.
Bilcher also pointed to
a change in eating habits
in Japan.
"The new generation
in Japan is demanding
more meat," he s aid. 't!C9nference the extended
<troughl in the West Is disrupting the beef pack-.-------------------
tng business. Citing $9 to
$10 hourly wages being
· paid to some California
packinghouse employes,
he said1 higher labor
~sts will continue in the
!West.
"The drought has left
no feed on the ranges and
die large quantities of
-. feed In the' Midwest are
upsetting the catUe in-
.. dustry," Thor sa id .• ~J;More beef business is
-moving back to the
lWldwest. That's where
t,befeed Is."
1 t:. He saJd the high meal·
~ttint costs in the West
make boxed beef favora-
~le for the Midwest.
'• "Belore long you will lie shipping the beef out
' tO us,'' he saJd.
,. S.N. Bichler, executive
• •ice president of Farmers Export Co .• ·-------------------
Shawnee Mission, Kan.,
told the 400 bank officials
and farmers attending
the conference he is op·
tlmistlc ~bout the long .THRIFT
STORE
UNION MAID BAKERY
BACK TO SCHOOL:
SPEClaLS
• 3-I '/2 LI. BREAD ':: 99c
• I DO%; iACHLS 69•
--
A sour cream crab quiche is fall fare.
Fall Ch-eese Tempters
Cheese with the drinks or
cheese "before" is the
p l•r fcct s nack. It 's
wholeso m e, nutritious,
fl avorful and well liked by
everyone. And there are so
many ways to serve it.
Almost de rigueur is a cheese
board. Fill it with one or two
slicing cheeses like monterey
Jack or provolone, or pungent
ripened varieties lik e
camembert or brie. Offer,
too, a choice of good quality
crackers both plain and
seasoned. For greatest
flavor enjoyment serve the
cheeses at roo m t e m -
perature.
Another nice> addition to
th e spread is-a flavorful
cheese ball. Grated jack
cheese and butter mixed with
a little mayonnaise makes a
very spreada ble mixture.
Chopped nuts, green herbs
and sesame seeds ars:., nice
flavor additions. A cheese
ball made in advance and
wrapped, keeps very well in
the refrigerator.
No gathering, however, is
complete wiQtout at least one
really delectable hot item. A
savory cheese .quic.he is
always a big hit. This one
m·ade--with sour cream and
Jack cheese is exceptionally
tasty. Make two s mall
quickies using the same base
for both with crab in one and
ham in the other. Bake them
in 7-0r-8-inch dishes, then cut
into slim wedges for easy
nibbling.
Cheese· in all its forms is
on·e of the oldest and most
nutritious foods known to
man. It's also one of the
tastiest Fortunately making
a nd storing excellent natural
cheese poses no problem
with today's efficient produc-
tion and marketing techni-
ques. Some cheeses of course
keep better than others. In
general , the lower the
moisture ~ontent in the
cheese, thelonger it can be
·stored.
SOUR CREAM
CRAB QUICHE
3eggs
1 cup dairy sour cream
2 tablespoons flour
•12 t e a s p o o n
worcestecihire sauce
% teaspoon salt
11.i teaspoon pepper
2 cups grated monterey
jack cheese
1 (7l,'l-0unce) can Alaska
king crab
1 baked C9-inch > pastry
shell•
Combine eggs. sour cream.
flour, wor<;estershire s auce,
salt and pepper. Place
cheese and crab in baked
pastry shell. Top with sour
cream mixture. Bake in 300
degree oven 55 to 60 minutes
or until set and knife inserted
into center comes out dry.
Makes 1 (9-inch > quiche. •or
2 baked 7-inch pastry shells.
llAM VARIATION: Omit
cra b. Substitute 8 ounce:,
diced ham. Heduce salt to 1-1
teaspoon.
MONTEREY ALMOND
CHEESE BALL
2 1 2 cups grated mon-
lerey Jack cheese
14 cup butler , :,oftened
112 cup almonds, chopped
14 cup mayonnaise
2 tablespoons minced
parsley
~ tea s poon c urry
powder
3 tablespoons toasted
sesame seeds
Combine cheese, butter,
almonds, mayo nn a ise,
parsley and curry powder.
Shape into ball. Roll in
sesame seeds to· coat. Chill to .
firm before 'serving. Makes I
cheese ball.
Toffee
Nut Bars
Summer fun days call for sum-
mer fun foods, sweet snacks to
stoke up a supply of energy for
1unny day activities. ·
Cookies and milk are classic
energizers favored by the mem-
bers of sweet-tooth set; whether
tots, teens or adult.s. To keep them happy, home economists
suggest ~tocking the cookie Jar
"1th Toffee Nut.Bars. Toffee Nut
Barf are double·layered sweets
studded . with c hocolate-flavor
coated caramel s:an4le~
TOFFEE NUT BARS
<31Ban> v.. cup ('At stJ.ck> butt.er, sof-
tened .
'1ia cup packed Uaht brown
suaar
1cup1lfted aJl·pu:rpose flour
Mix butt.er, lt.t&ar and nour UD·
U1 well blended. Pre.as into but·
tered 13x9x2-inch pan. Bake in
preheated 350..cievee oven for s
minutes. Cool.
Toppin&:
2 ew. beaten
1 cup packed ll&ht brown
auaar
1 teMPOOO vanilla a tabl•poon.a nour
1 taapoon bakln1 PoWder ;fo.
Mi teupoon ealt
~cup mQtaUla.ked cocoaut ~cup ebopped nu ta
~ cup milk dud1 (3·1.6 oz,
pkp.) omrecuonen • 1uaar
Beet totetber •t(•, brown aua· ar Ind vlllilla. Aoa dry iqre-
dlentt. Stir ln coconut, nuts and
mllk duid8. Sprelid emir baited
cnatt. Bia ·m '~'*I *" depee Ote,.. 2S ....... mote
or..U~=lftn. Coot 8lft 1e-• .....-
O'ftrCOp.Oltmto• ....
T
••
lb.
•LEGS ..... 89 4\t>. . * •BREASTS ... l.19 \b.
Fresk or mcu·&f\.o.te.d. .
BEEF K-60BS.~l~b.
Mo..-\~o.ted, q9t
8£Ef · Rl8S . ···~ tb ...
Mc.Ltif\o,tfid.• LOIN END 'I 19 PORK CMOPS.u 'tb.
60~e\ess $,l'L'I STEW BEEF .... ,,b.
Beef-aa~ St40lT RIBS. .. o7,b.
RUMPRoAst~l'!.~b.
EYE OF ROUND ~189 ROAST....... , tb.
---
O..tR.i~
SOILED HAM 98~ M. t"'" sliced, PASTcAAMI... Y-i lb.
COOKED ~14'1 ROAST BEEF.... ''/11b.
Sko.rp or Mild, L 1 l!O
tHEODAR ~ ;,7
CHEESE.... 'lb.
TILLAMOOK 159 CHEESE .. ~ 'lb.
8orieless • Req. 3:29
10P SIR\.O\M •19
. STEAKS ..... Ii 'lb.
0o'1ale~s 1 CHUCK 9av ROA5T.. ..... ii lb.
1'JlUz.vi 'OEEF ~PECIA\.. !
• 1£EF LOIN . tlLO 1'c>ps. ~aet,T·bo'1e, ~ 07
po.-teY-kouse ... ,_
e,o lbS. O>JQ ... .••• •••• lb.
• HALVES ....... 89t.
• HINDS ..... ~l.09tb.
Cut, w to.pped ., rtoz.e~
' ,J
Do-It-Yourself Fishing
When food prices •tart·
ed akyrocketlns.
ve1etables lovers fou1ht
COit.i by src>wlnl their
own.
But it you thlnk the
anawer to soarlnl flab
prices la catchinl your
own, especially on a
small charter, you're
wrong, aaya a Newport
Beach enthwslut.
•'You 10 out on a
chart.er for the fun and
challenae,'' claims
Bruce Denton, who
estimates his recent
junket out of San Diego
coat b1m about $22.50 per
pound.
"If the idea is to save
money, (orget it," be em-
pb•sizes, adding that
perhaps on a large
charter a trip isn't quite
so expensive.
On his particular
charter for five men plus
skipper, be says, each
paid $100 a day.
Other costs include $20,
tip for the skipper and
"you bring aboard your
own provisions of food
and refreshments.••
Once back in port
there are a few more
fees, such as a canning
charge for an exchange
of fresh fish. Cleaning
and refrigeration, if
needed, ls free, be says.
But for Denton, who
was anxious to board,
there was an additional
charge -Impounds on
his car which was towed
out of an illeaal parking
area.
Was the fish worth the
price?
"If the idea is to save money, forget it, "
says one do-it-yourself fisherman.
After a neighborhood
barbecued dinner, one
guest summed it up:
"It was the best." -
Bea Anderson
FromC1
... Fish: Barbecue It
then into hot, spicy J apanese mustard," Ms
Cummings suggested.
Squ~ze the juice of two limes into •;., cup of
soy sauce, she advised. The idea of eating raw
fish,.might "tum your stomach a little until you
tr.¥ it, but once you get a taste for it, it's de·
licious, ··she added.
Robby Robfogel, who has bought and sold
fish.for:the Crab Cooker in Newport Beach for 20
yeai:s. recommends smoked albacore -"ready
for eating at $4.30 a pound."
"It's eaten cold, as a snack, maybe in place
of,potatochips. It's tasty." he said.
BARBECUED ALBACORE is a big favorite
for ceoks in a hurry. Preparation time is
minimal, -rub it with oil (to l<eep it from stick·
ing tq the grill) and cracked pepper. stir up some mel~ butter with lemon juice to baste it with
and cook.it over bot coals until it flakes.
Add a tossed salad, green vegetable and
crusty bread for a.simple. time-saving supper.
Dian DiScala, proprietor at Dana Point's
Dana Wharf fish market, mentioned that shark.
inexpensive at $1.89 a pound, is popula.r year
around because it lends itself to any way of cook-
ing.
"It's versatile since it can be made into a
chowder or cooked in a wok. You never have to
worry about a bone, it's moist, mild and white,"
she explained.
She added that sole, another inexpensive fish
(around 69 cents a pound scaled and cleaned),
can began fried, stuffed or poached.
Yellow tail, white sea bass, halibut, red
snapper and bonita -all can be prepared as
simply or as fancifully as the cook desires ...
Shellfish, from lobster to shrimp to crab, can be
fixed in a variety of ways to please any palate.
Most seafood cookbooks list characteristics
of fish, cooking methods and how to make
sauces, as well as recipes:-
The following are some recipes from the
Sunset Seafood Cook Book that a beJinner will
find simple and that an advanced cook will find
satisfying: •
SESAME·SOYBARBECUEDALBACORE
4to6Serving·sized pieces albacoruteak
4 or 8 bacon slices (optional)
4tablespoons (~pound) butter
3tablespoona 59Y sauce
2 tablespoons 1,mon juice /
2 tablespoons sherry
2 to 3 teaspoons sesame seed
Albacore steaks may be wr,11pped with bacon
if desired. The bacon adds good flavor and holds
the piece neatly on the grill.
ln a small pan, melt the butter and stir in soy
sauce, lemon juice and sherry.
Arrange the steaks on a greased grill ; brush
fish well with the baste and barbecue over
medium-hot coals for a total of 10 to 15 minutes
cooking time.
When the steaks are half done, brush tops
with baste; sprinkle with sesame seed, using
about Y• teaspoon on each steak and tum over.
Cook until browned on the second slde and
brush tops again with baste; sprinkle with more
sesame seed and turn back to the first side long
enough to toast the seed. Makes 4 to 6 servings.
ALBACORE WITH SOUR CREAM SAUCE
6aervtng-slzed pieces albacore steak
1.4 cup butter, margarine, or salad oil
salt and pepper to taste
1 medium-sized onion, sliced
1 cup sour cream
2tablespoons chopped capers
Heat butter, margarine or oil in large frying
pan. Saute the steaks over medium heat until
nicely browned and they test done with a fork,
sprinldiq with salt and pepper to taste.
Remove fish to a serviAg plate and keep
warm. In the same pan, saute the onion until
lightly browned. Reduce heat and stir in the sour
cream and ca~rs; beat through and pour over
the sauteed steaks. Makes 6 servin1s.
BAKED SWORDFISH, MANZANtLLO
Along the Mexican coast, swordfish ls baked
in a generous quantity of olive oil with 1reen
onions.
Sprinkle four swor~ steaks (about 8
ounces each) with li..ia teupoom salt and\.; teas-
poon pepper. Place fish ln a llnale layer in a bak-
ing dilb; brush with 6 tablespoona olive oU to
coat heavily.
Sprinkle 1h cup sliced green onions over the
fish. Bake, uncovered, in a moderate oven (350)
for about 20 minutes or until fish flakes easily
wlth aforlt.
Remove to platter and serve sprinkled with
• chopped parsley and garnished with tomato and
lime wqes. Makes' servings. ..
' .... --..... . --.............. -.. . ..
Wec:tne!d8y. September t•, 1971
DELANEY BROS. FISH
Fresh BroadbW · ·
Swordfish ......•. ¥lit t4t11JcrTAf ••••••••• $4.49 tb.·
Green (Raw)
Shrimp ....... 3Jt.laq,,6J·7Cl fQ~J •••••••• $7 .98 ea.
Fresh
Rainbow Trout ..... n R· .a.vi, ••••..• $1. 79 lb.
OAJL Y Pit.OT CJ J
. .
..
,
TOP QUAUTY MEATS FARM FRESH PRODUCE
Top Round · .
Steak ....... ~-....... $1. 79._
Rump Roast ·
of Beef ..... ~~":'! ...... $1.79 ..
Ground /
Beef ......... ~ .......... 79c ..
Zacky Farms Freab ,
Frvlng Chickens ~ &.;;;;-N9 ,.,_ ..... _ MMI
..... 9M7 ,.,,..._., " ...
49c lb.
Hawallan
. Papaya •.... ·'""'' "''"-•.... 49C ••·
Honey Dew
Melons ....... l'te. ~ ....... 59C ...
Driscoll Northern
Strawberries ... to.tr. tl,. .... 49C ...
A complete selection of exotic
Callfornla Wines
..
. . . . . .
-
Mrs. Stanley Molander in
caftan for Glamor Auc tion.
Glamor Auction
The• fund ra1~1ng Clamor Auction of the
Lido bk· W1n·k1ng Committee or the Orange
Count y l'h1lharmonic S0<..·1cty '<\Ill be held at
l l u.rn Thur:--cla~" Sq>l. 29, al the L..ido Isle
('lubhous1" 701 \'w Lido Soud. '.'\ewport
Hca<'h
PrnC'l'L'Cls will benefit the philharmonic
T ht• auction will f(.•;Hure a gourmet food
booth sf..'ll111g s pee1ally made relishes. Jam s
and fn11l t'akt·"
CALENDAR
LAGUNA NIGUEL WOM EN'S CLUB: The first
general mcetan~ will be at 7 30 p.m . Thursday.
Sept. 15, in the Moulto11·N1guel Water Distncl
general purpose meeting room Further informa·
lion is available from Gani Boureston. 831-2197
RE ACH OUT: The free community service
for women 1s forming support groups to begin an
late Septemb<'r
Information is ava1lablt: by calling the
Women's Cent~·r. 556 5557
ASME: The Orange County Woman's Aux·
iliar y o f American Societ y of Mechanical
Engineers will meet Wednesday, Sept. 14, on the
Allstate Savings and Loan, 1107 South Har bor .
Fullerton.
Lunch will follow a program , How to Say No to
a Rapist and Survive, which begins a~ 11 a .. m .
Reservations may be made with Mrs. Louis Kolich,
525-6938.
AME RICAN B USINESS WOMEN'S AS·
SOCIATION: T he Pacifica Delsol Charter Chapter
of Los Alamitos will holds Its annual Enrollment
Event Titled Roundup Wednesday, Sept. 14, at the
Edgewater Hyatt House , in Long Beach. .
Dinner reser vations may be made with Ruth
Hollingsworth, (213) 431-0972.
Y·WOMEN: A membership cofCee will be
held by the Sant a Ana-South Orange County group
al 9:30 a.m . Thursd ay, Sept. 15, in the Y.
NEWPORT HILLS GARDEN CLUB: A
welcome coffee will be held at 9:30 a .m . Thursday,
Sel>t. 15, In the Har bor View Homes Phase 2
clubhouse.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY UBRARY j'RIENDS:
Vick Knight Jr. will speak on Confessions of an
.. . . . .
. .
. ..
Car Rally
The Junior Ebell -CLub ot Irvine will
hold its "Wheelie Big" Car Rally on Satur·
day, Sept. 24. About 150 cars will begin from
fi ve different starting points in I.rvine and
conclude at a secret party and di!sco dance
somewhere in Orange County. Prizes will be
awarded lb drivers c locking the best time
and mileage in eacb of the five routes.
Proceeds will go to club phUanthropies. For
tickets, call Jeri Konopsis at 559·0873 or
Mar y Ous ley at 552-5340 .
r"f;'l~'~-;':~l •.~ . .-i:t•'' JI .. • • :',.
...... , .. , •• -.-••• _.,_., ... ~ ..... h .... "" .. ~
~"-; ·· · Sharon Allen s ·, .
• =? )EREN ITV .
:~ · Skin Care Center ~ . £.~....... w ....... ,..
_.:
1 ~·'· : ' toh1bc ... et,-wH
• '• )I J riroft '"°"°' •l n COie C~'"'
',f.C< >I j " r"'
w •• olftot .., 200/o dlscowd d""NI
•h .. "'°""' c.I September on o1I ICY.o·
lo,.qnud • 1 mol" you notur<JI •
t>eouo,f.J
Terri Ferrari and Fay N~kaguchi plan Wheelie Big Rally. ~; .·' Coll """" IOI nn opporn1men1 one! w!l U
'1'•0 yoo th.. ~p.'Ciol Ollf!nlo()ll 'I'>"
d<o\O'V" -
0.11, ~I ... -.. •• , I.ff~.., ...
Docents
Wanted
The Docent Guild of
the Bowers Museum of
Santa Ana begins its fall
scheduJe with a coffee
for prospective p r o ·
visionals at 9 :30 a .m .
Monday, Sept.19.
Persons interested in
becoming docents should
come to th e cofree or
telephone t he Bowers
Museum Foundation Qf.
fice.
The guild is made up of
70 volunteers who, dur·
ing the past year, have
guided adults and almost
20,000 school children
through the museum and
exhibits.
Featured speaker for
the m eeting will be Dr.
Wendell Oswalt.
Euro-l'llCl"' ~llCllf a IOOY w ... nv Ma~e UO 1r11truel'°" AIOA Orey c-r-1te:t
M111>•C:•"" 6 Pedoc:ur•
I
504 North Newport B lvd. i
(old Newport Blvd.I .:!
Newport Beach CIQ .~
. 6~2-491 , ·: "':!JI/
®
Open 7 days
erijHrie
"After the !ights
go clown low •• !'
Mrs. Willis Longyear, docent, with McGregor
Donohugh, W. D. Longyear and Ulric Longyear.
Candles glow couples l<llk sollly ... lhe
scent ol fresh flowers on your lable. There's a
quiet radiance that makes a delicious crl!pe
dinner even more elegant, a carafe or wine
1aste extravagant Your dinner or late supper
1s served at a leisurely pace to suit your mood.
You linger over coffee. dessert for two or an
alter dinner liqueur.
Author at the meelln~ al 10 am Friday. Sept 16, in
the library
•'AMILY SERVICE .ASSOCIATION: A series or four classes lo help prepare ~pie lo deal with
the proble m!'> associated with divorce a nd s ingle
parenthood v.111 began al 9.30 a m. Saturday, Sept
17 Further information 1s available at838·7377.
MAYFLOWE R DESCENDANTS: Mrs. Les
Fahy, an ins tructor of genealogy al Los Angeles
Har bor College, will speak al the meeting of the
Orange County Colony Saturday. Sept 17. in t he
Airporter Inn
J U NIOR WOM EN'S CLUB : The South
Coast grouJl. will present a fashion show, Bfighl
Ideas Especially for You. for mastectomy pat1en~
;it 9:30 a.m. and 3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 17. m
Bullocks, Fashion Square, Santa Ana.
A portion of the proceeds wall go for cancer re-
search through the American Cancer Society·
Orange County Unit Tickets may be obtained ~rom
Dorothy Liff of the Orange County Untl, 4030 Birch,
Newport Beach
AAUW: The Laguna Beach branch will bold a
coffee at 9:30 a .m Saturday, Sept. 17, in t he
Festival of the Arts grounds, Laguna Beach.
SIGMA Ptu GAMMA: Lambda Zeta chapter of
n€ttl€ ,CR€€k
S H 0 P
King and Queen
DECORATOR QUALITY
BEDSPREADS
Values to $260 Now $99 . .
Newport Beach will hold a rush tea at 2 p.m. Sept.
18. in the Hunlanglon Beach home of Mrs . Ed
Greenstreet
~IONDA Y MORNING CLUB: The Huntington
Beach group will meet at 10:30 a .m Monday, Sept
19. in the Huntington Beach Inn
Join us one evenmg soon. Both of yoo will en·
JO~ a dehghlfully d1flerenl d1n1ng advenlure
Wine• • Cocktails
Costa Mesa: South Coast Plaza, 556·1~25
Open unl!l 12 00 m1dn1gh1 Friday-Salurday
1 O 00 PM Sunday and 1 I 00 PM Monday· Thursday
M.i1or crlldrl cards accepl<>O
Amusing •
observations
of life along
the Orange Coast,
penned by ..._,., .. ct
WehrCW.,.
• Ready to Serve w1thHoney'n Spice Glaltl • Spiral Sliced '
From Top to Bottom • We Package and Ship from Coast to ..
coast • Full Service DehcatesJen • Imported Cheeses
a native son.
in the
DAILY PILOT
ORAM SE
T ...... -1 ..... •
41tM..T..tlaAn
14) 991·9960
New. ..
Exciting
portrait
00.ckgrounds.;:
Jl~ErM Tiie te..ttt
1222 s. .,.....,_,.
tllfWR&l
(714) 635·2461
pleasing prices, too!
COtoMl DEl MU )700 l. Comt Hwy.
(714) 673-9000
~9m . ....._._....
PALM Sl'llMGS 115Shtwy. 111
1tt Raido Miit.
RANCHO MIRAGE
(714) 346-3194 •
..:_ I
---------"!"" .. .. -.
Wednesday September t• 1977 DAILY PILOT CJ3
Homosexuality Bewilders Mother NOTICE
nMPOURY WOllEIS •AJrt. .••
WANTYAllm? t olsten
nf'tS'fl·~a.-s fSHUI''
DEAR ANN~ I am 1 mother. '4 yeart of 11e
(dh·tt'Nd>. and h ve low: children. My lhr
daupt.en are wondl'rful -Heh one la a joy -
but my aon ii a problem
V t rday wb n l wu ln roy bedroom read tn• I btard Mm and hta el()t4mt Criend tallrlnc and
laUCbinJ Sudd~nly tt b.eame elur that t.hoy
WtRI d«lartn11 tbetr love for one another. I
couldn t ~bevo It. Now 1 underaland why my aon
hu nn dated 11rl1 and why he and lhll youn&
man1~nd IO much ume toeelher.
I am completely bewildered and U.ere Ja no
un~ I can talk lo. The boy I.I a rolle1• aophomore,
m.U. ~ 1rad•, ... rm well·adJualed and
normAl Ui t-\'f'ry way. He ls DOt depressed nor
does ~ ahow any of the outward 1l1n1 of
bomoeuuahty. Would therapy help? Whal
(Ann Landers ~
should l do? -BESIDE MYSELF
DEAR BE8JDB: Until &be boy comet &o you
ror ltelp <uct tll1a m ay aever •appe•> ~ere la
aotbln& you abould do. Therapy II ueleu aaless
a penoa feela the need for It.
If yoa are "Bellde Yoanelf" I HHest that
YCN 1et aome cou.mellal .. JOU can leant laow &o
accept you.r IOD u be 18. Fl'Ml 7ou leUer I l e& &be
lmpnaloa &be boJ la perfedb' <*a&ea& wl&la Ma
UfeulU1.
un DEAR ANN : Occaalonally you r
1omet.bfn1 of value, "Author Unknown." I ho
you will print tht1 poem which I have curled
my wallet for years. It made me a better pers
-FROM IDAHO~
CAN YOU ESTLY JUDGE?
Pray don't find fa It with the man who
Umps or stumbles along the road,
Unless you have worn the shoes be wears
pe
ln
on.
'SKlllAlllS• llY NllCll Ol'llATOIS
DPDM*9Ut"IWCW ••
'-'
NO,_
CAU. AH'ITWI
DAYS. IVININO$, Wl8Clla
973-1303
~ ........... ".
....... J ,....=t. ..... s.e.a..a..mu
orstrusgled beneath h!Jload. ... - - -----------, There may be tacks in his sboa that hurt, 1 ·
though hidden from view; I '--I
0rtbeburdenbebearsp1acedonyourbac1t I COUpOn I might cause you to stumble too.
Don't sneer at the man who's down today.
tmleu )'Otl have felt the blow I Good untll ~ •n •er • I
'!bat caused Ill.I fall, or felt the sbam~at I I only the fallen know.
My Son, the. Studen.t You may be stroftl, but tUD the blows that II FR E El I were his, if dealt to you
In the self-same way at the very same llme
might cause you to stagger too. I Be • I
oon'tbetooharshwiththemanwhosins I g1nners .11' I or pelt him with words or stones,
I have never sat on a
bus, at a dmner party, by
the pool, or m a doctor's
office in my entire life
that I didn't find myself
next to the parent of a
college over·acbiever.
You know lhe ones I
mean. The parents
whose son or daughter
was the recipient of a
four.year·all-expense-
paid scholarship to one
of the Big Ten schools
that is recognizable by a
single letter on a T -shirt.
The kid who turned
down 12 other schools
because they didn't offer
Conversational Arabic.
didn't graduate one
Secretary of State, and
discriminated against
accepting 13-year-olds in
the freshman class.
I
,
.
AT
WIT'S
END
I have the kid who,
sometimes during the
last two weeks of August,
rolls out of bed and an-
nounces, "Hey, college
starts in another two or
three weeks, 1 'd better
get it on."
Aft.er polite, but firm
refus;lls from Harvard,
Yale, Duke and
Dartmouth, they work
their way across the
country ..• Ohio State,
Missouri , Colorado,
Tulane and San Diego.
As the time gets
shorter, catalogues start
coming in from places I
never kn ew existed:
Alpha Frisbee College
<a free car tune·up for
every 16 credit hours),
Eddie's Bualnesa School
of Masaage and
Acupuncture of Moline,
and Guam School of
Technology for Losers.
One daY. I picked up a
catalogue from a school
in Hawaii. Under "Loca·
tion of Campus." were
explicit directions for
Jumping from a boat in a
cork vest and swimming
ashore with your lug-
gage.
..The trouble with
you," I told my son, "is
that you don't plan
ahead. You knew you
were going to graduate
at least three hours
Unless you are sure, yes, doubly sure that I Racquetba 11 before they awarded the you have no slns of your own. I
diplomas. You should -ANONYMOUSPlULOSOPHER 1· I have •.. "
''Don't worry, Mom .. 1 DEAR IDAHO: Thank you ud "Anollymoaa I I
have found a college. It's Philosopher"' for a beautllu.l contrlbuUon to Ulls I Coupan entitles you to 8 on&-hour Introduction to the I accredited, bu absolute-space. What an eloqffnt way of •lYiaa ... l lldge sp0rt (for non-members). we soppty racqueta, bellt.
1 Y D o a t a n d a r d a not ••• " I court, and instruction at no c~ to Introduce you to I
what.soever, and is small _ . this fun, exciting new sport. No obligation. lnatrudlon
enough to live individual I limited to adults. ( 18 and over.) I
attention." .. r@'----4A,:~---,
"When do classes ' th . ·' I I CallRaCQuetfunat(714)963-08&4 I begin'" e openllt6 OJ
•'Whenever I eet FINE TIDNGS I Racquetfun is nearby and open for play. Low annual I there " f f I S50 individual membership, Pay as yau play wilh n~ I "I . · t i th f FEATURING THE BARBARA ESQUtNO COLLECTION monthly dues
s t n e ree f of ORIGINAL BRASS PIECES f I world?" Tables Lamps & Un Iqua Decorative Aeceaaoriet I
''Let me just say that it ' ' for Home and Otfioe f I "' I accepts .five major credit ALSO THE HELEN CERDA COLLECTION • Rncquetfu
cards .. of FINE HAND-EMBROIDERY t I ..,, ~ n Inc I
I d~ 't mind wearing a f Shins. Skirts & Handbags ~-•
T-shirt with a big D on il, ' Order Early for Chnst.mu ' I 9872 Hamllton Ave., Huntington a.en, CA 82948 I
but I feel like a fool driv· 148 Garry Ave .• s..ta Anet 546-6600 L · a.P. I ing aro~nd wit~ a L m•.--.-· ... --or-.o....1M....._..,,..-. J _____________ _.
bumperstickerreadmg, -----------· "SEND DOO DAH TO :
THE ROSE BOWL!"
.Pisces: Get to Root
THURSDAY,
SEPTEMBER 15
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES <March 21·
April 19): Contractual
obligaUons, the way you
deal with people, your
partner, mate -these
arc spotlighted. Money
in escrow or held by
another is released only
after necessary details
are attended to, papers
filed.
TAURUS <April 20·
May 20): What seems to
be opposition could be an
objective lesson from
which you will gain.
£igureinscenarlo.
SCOR PI O (Oct. 23·
Nov. 21): Follow through
on hunch; give run play
to intuitive intellect. You
know withou t formal
knowledge . You
perceive, teach and
team. Aquarius. Cancer
persons are very much
in picture.
SAGl'ITARIUS j_Nov.
22·Dec. 21): Friend with
secret reveals It. In ef·
feet, 1ou t h us share
responsibility. Know it,
protect yourself, become
involved at your own
risk. Question is whether
you seek intrigue or hap-
piness.
CAPRICOR N CDec .
22-Jan. 19): Accent on
p ractical affairs, sum-
ming up, deciding on
what ls real, at hand as
contrasted to visions,
speculation, wagering
"on the outcome."
AQUARIUS (Jan.
20-Feb. 18): Accent ~
long-range communica-
li on, philosop h y ,
spiritual concepts. Open
lines of communication.
If single, you might be
making plans for mar-
riage.
P ISCES (Feb. 19·
March 20 >: Affairs of
heart, affection
dominate. You g et to
root of m atters -you
learn what counts, what
is transitory. Key ls to be
aware, to believe in
yourself.
II Septem ber 15th Js
your blrlbday, you have
fine volce, compelling
demeanor, dramatic
awareness; you are
perceptive, attractive
and you have a "sweet
tooth." You travel this
month, socialize and de-
molish your diet.
Gemini, Virgo, Sag it--::==========================~ tarlus Individuals are
fQi\NCI0 -QQQ part or picture.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20 >: Luxury items, ways
of beautifying surround-
ings, affairs of heart -
these are on agenda.-';::;:=:=:=::;;;::;:::;:::;::;::::;=::;:::;::::;:;:::;:::;:::;::::=;::=:=:=:;::::;;:;:;;~ Taurus, Libra persons -;;
rla ure ·prom inenlly.
What had been hidden or
subdued flashes into
open -opposition can
run but they can't hide.
fine stationer corona del mar
CANCER (June 21·
J ul y 22): O b tain
legitimate hint f rom
Gemini message. You
know what you have in
hole card. Key is to play
it wisely, to lime it, to
utilize surprise element,
to insure security .
Pisces, Gemini, Virgo •
figure in scenario.
LEO <July 23-Aug. 22 >:
Older persons play
significant roles. Ex-
perience, seniority
become major issues.
Relative claims to know
whal is best, but key is to
protect your own in-
terests. Check leases,
contractual arrange-
ments, appraisals.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
Hi, I'm Mia Sand,-inf1il~ all of
you lo call me llnd regialoT /or
our clau '4!.,011.a now.
Le,,oru in o il leveu and all ase
grOUIM f onninw NOW.
JOIN THE FUN -LEARN
TO ICE SKA TE AT TWO
BEAUTIFUL CHALETS IN
COSTA MESA.
Ia CAPADESCHALET
· ·AND SKATING SCHOOL
Costa Mesa
Harbor & Adams
979-8880
Costa Meaa
Bristol & Paularino
979-1750
22>: You finish project; ----------------------------you collect, pay, protect
m vestment potential.
Some would interfere,
warn and cajole. Many
are envious, others are
mere "busybodies.•• K ey f to be coofident, calm.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0 ct.
22): Cycle is such that
.a,tback becomes vie·
tory, agpuent loss can • '>e tran1formed into
frofit. Leo, Aquar ius
Jet HOel'tTAL .. OAD, NO. fl2
N(~T H ACH, CA 92MJ
1114) .. 2.910:Z
• Atrotl trM,HOla H(ltpltll
This Page Effective
lhru Tuu., Sept. 20.
Short sleeve
polyester
dresses
lfai-•l-699
Ha lf sizes 7 49
• Foll colors and patterns
• Easy care double knit jocquord
• In various flattering styles
•With matching belts to tie or not
Fashion
h~ndbags tf
499
• Assorted styles and colors
• Convenient pockets and comportments
• Wipe-clean vinyl with leather look
A1k about Seara Credit Plan•
t I
\
,
HALIBUT $2''· STEAK
Center cu l trvm ~ .. r1 Jann l11h. .
Butterf ish FUns •• s 14~
Enjoy ll dillt-rt'nt 1>l:ul<Ml th11> time.
Sh . SJ89 r1 mp SlllJ. Oii • • • • • •
White i.hramp, firm, ll\lvorlul' No. l
Oysters ~ •.•. s l 49
So many people like 'cm tried 8 oz. jar.
Cooked Shrimp s3 5t
Just right fo r 11hrimp cocktuil.
ScallopsawKM .......... 535!
Large size · means more value.
Smoked Halibut s2st
Love that smokey goodness.
' '
S ~1· h FRESH s4st woru 1s sTEAKs........ · •
Center cul to afford the m<Mit value· and fresh to offer the finest flavor!
Fresh Trout mAKo ••••••. 69!
Frei.h from the chilled waters of Idaho streams ... net weight.5 oz each.
S PACIFIC RED $189 napper FRESH FILLETS ....... •
A favorite in so many rc11taurants. why not enjeoy it al home this wC'ck
<MUL # ..
N. Y. ftriJJ 18. 1/l
Loin cut of naturally aged U.S.O.A. Choice beef •.. hearty satisfaction assured!
New York Steaks39! Beef Roast ::i:s s 1 ~9
Loi n cutofU.S.O.A. Choice beef. Chuck cut Choice shoulder clod.
0 Bone Roast •• 99c. Chicken Livers • 49~
Chuck cut of U.S .D.A. Choice beef. Fine for frying (S ll. IAC ••• USI
Grocery Values
~J!P..~!"~'~!.~~"!'"'~ ~=-~::." · .20c
Crisco Oil 24oi. ••••••••••• 98c
Ui;e it for frying, becaWJe it fries almost grease-free ••. for salads, too!
Sour Cream IMITATION •••• 29c
Use it for dressing, for baked potatoes, in all your recipes! Springfield · 12 en.
Tomato Juice ....... _49c
Sacramento ... M> thick it 'plops when you pour it! The big 46 oz can, for value.
Tomatoes • • • • • • 39c Green Beans • • • 29c
Glorietta solid pack ••• wh~le ••• No. 303. Del Monte Reg. or French Cut .•. No. 303.
Tomato Sauce •• 2sc Lemon Juice. • • • 59c
The bi1 No. 300 can ••• Springfield. Golden Crown· the ea1y way! 24 oz.
Spaghetti • • • • • • 39c
Globe A·l ••. one pound packa1e.
Tomatoes • • • • • • 35c
Sprinifield ·stewed ••• No. 303 can.
Spaghetti Sauce 59c
Prima Sat.a· 3 varieties . 16 1~, oz.
Clorox ll ........ s1 ss
Gentle dry bleach .•. 61 oz pkg.
Snack Pack •••• s 1°9
Bell'• Variety Pack ••. pq. of 16.
Jumbo Napkins • 49c
Viva • colon, decorated • pq. of 1-40.
Cookie Mix ••••• &9c Toilet TiSSSM.. 6~
Quaker ••• cbokt Ol (our ldnd1.
' .
I e _.._........,.._. _....,.._ °'
FRESH
CLAMS 89~
Atla ntic Cherrystone
(UTTWICU .•• 1.19 .. ,
They'll love you for it! Firm flavorful salmon ... rushed here to offer the freshest
of freshne&s •.. just waiting to be baked for delightful dining! Whole or half Stuffed Clams 5 FOil s 1
Matlaw's ... net weight 2 oz each.
Squid ••.•.••••• 79i
Cu · bits and deep fry.
1 River elts. • • 89i
l/J..
Mahi-Mahi. • • • • • s 12t
Reminiscent of Ha waiian nights.
Fillet of Cod ••• s21!
Salmon Steak ......... s3 4! Freeh! and true Pacific cod.
Perch couuo .............. s 1 •!
Center cut slices that will tempt you to fire up t he coals! Fresh frozen to lock in flavor
CRAB
LEGS
Meaty! ... from Alaskan crabs.
Crab Meat .••.. s3s9•
Alaskan · and all from crah lei:s.
Ocean Perch ~~s ... s 1 ~!
Another of those favorites that can be offered from the skillet, broiler or oven.
E I• h 5 I FREsH s2s9 ng 1s o e FILLETS..... . •
Seems as though almost everybody enjoys the mild flavor of fresh English Sole
DEVILED 69c .. CRABS
Stuffed ... 2·1,• oz each . Mr. Frosty.
Rex Sole FRESH ••••••••••••• s2 4! ,
CHUCK
STEAK 69~
Center Cut! U.S.D A. Choice beef.
Pa n ready! ... that makes it so easy for you to serve up theHe favorites!
GM-Cl.·~
lparo libs 1llll
Deliciously meaty •.. finger lickin' flavor of·finer FAster grain-fed pork ••• and Fresh!
Turkey .~ ••• 49~ Sliced Bacon ••• s1 3!
Rich dark meat from El Rancho birds. El Rancho'• thicker "ranch style" TURKEY s139
BREAST •
El Rancho's w/rib co~e & giblets. Ground Beef ~s1o~ Beef Rib Bones ~ ·79e, 1·
Frozen Food
SPINACH 59c SOUFFLE
Stouffer's preferred quality! 12 oz
Vegetables 20 on• 49c
Springfield Peas or Peas & Carrots
Chicken Pie • • • • 35c
Van de Kamp'• goodness! 7 11? oz pkg
Junior Pizza •1 . s 129
Pepperoni or Sausage ... .Rix 3 oz.
Broccoli SPUIS •••• _59c
Lean ·does not exceed 22~; fat. Meaty I Delicious. bake or barbecue.
.. Super fresh produce ·-
B arl lett PeilrsiARcE .. 29!
Sweet and juicy! ..• from Littlerock, where California pears are at their beat. • •
Concord Grapes 49~
Nectar aweet. darkly delicious!
Fresh 29c Broccoli •
Fresh Lemons •• 29~
Freeh! Juicy! Just tangy enough
Italian 29' Squash •
Garden fresh . · •. all green Garde~(,..}\ ••• all rreen I
Delicatessen ..
Ch · --· s13' Jack eese ....•..... ~
From the jolly Green Giant -lOcn Everfreah, from Utah's famed Cache Valley -by the pieai'-larae cute :urc~it 29c. . 2r.~~!~.~~l~!.~.·e:!~~9 ~~p~~t~P.~ed.·;:.IP~I
Minute Maid Pink or Res • , • 6 oi -Price• in. effect Thunday Sf!pt. 16 through Wtdneaday Sept. 21
Open daily 9 to 9 Sunday 10 to 1
No tal dealer•
TARTAR OR OSCAR
· ·. SAUc1 59c iOCOGNA 59c ' --L-t ~.-.I a 8 • Meat or beef ••• 11tced ••• 8 01 pq . .r -uuan a Wbi.rf • • • oz 11ze
' -
Liquor Dep 't. IUh• k SAVE $1.00 ON · $J98 1ww, IS ey • Bl.Em ••••••••••
Relska VOdka ••• 1841
Th• 1.7& liter bottle nductd 60e
I
' I
---
FINAL CLEARANCE -~ 1977 DUIOSI
YOUR L4ST c
UNIELIEV AILE Hs4.~~~ FOR ALMOST
SHOWROOM FRESH ST _.FFG S 0 N TH IS E CARS. ~ AND . EXECUTIVE
.THE NEW 1978 M9DELS
ARE NOW ARRIVING
T SUCCESSFUL CAR EUROP~'~ ~~;ORY IS HERE!
fE51A CHOOSE FROM AT OUR DEALERSHIP ALMOST DAILY.
AL( REMAINING 1977 MODEL:S MUST GO!
BY fORD
-4 P•ros
6 •USTANIS
16 GRANADA$ letetf ..... .,.nette•... ... toclaY for o cece•
WHILE THEY LAST, GET TOP
DISCOUNTS OF THE YEAR ON
THESE BRAND NEW '77 MODELS. f.St drh • _. I
.... C9' pet fec -c•.
IT'S DYN-O-MITE ON A
90-INCH WHEELBASE! " 13 l1D's
BIG SELECTION
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
22 PINTOS • 24 GRANADAS
3 MUSTANGS • 2 MAVERICKS
8 THUNDERBIRDS• 8 LTD ll's
DRIVE A LU
CAR FOR A x~~~Ru1PSPL y E9UIPPED
PRICE! ED" MODEL
BUY YOUR
NEW '11
10DAY!
COME IN AND SE
GROWING SELECTI E OUI CONST ANTL y
IMMEDIATE DEuv::: OF NEW .,. FORDS
RELEASED MODELS! ON ALL FACTORY
I 5 L TD's • PLUS ALL '77 TRUCKS,
VANS, AND RV VEHICLES.
EXAMPLE uva..-s
. MEW '77 Fl SO ~.~-5;.::sa97
Full loam seat. Seitt·knitted vmyl, ammeter/011 pressure gauges. trans
cru1se-o·mat1c 3·spd , power steering, earner spare 11re-1llde out
dual bright swmg lock mirrou, tinted glass. cigar lighter, extra coot: 1ng radiator. fuel tank frame mounted, 5 L78x15 B 4PR PT and more
Ser IHZ07311 J (Stk T1608J
WHEN YOU GOTT A CLEAR CARS YOU GOTT A MAKE D'EALS! COME IM AND TRY
US ON FOR SIZE! 21/i ACRES OF BEAUTIFUL TRADE-INS TO CHOOSE FROM!
THUNDERBIRD
SALE!
Pr0CED TO SELL
'76 THUNDERBIRD
V-8. auto trans factory a1: c:ondltioning. full
power. AM/FM stereo racho with tape, heater.
vlnyl roof leather. tilt st wheel, luxurv
Interior. speed control, approx 13,000 miles
Lie #504PHH Stock #2813
56599
175 THUNDERBIRD
V-8. auto trans .• factory air cond1tion1ng, full
power. AM/FM stereo radio w/tac>e. heater,
vinyl roof, speed control, lilt steering wheel.
Lie. #612LXH Stock #2983.
55599
'73 THUNDERBIRD
V-8. auto. trans • factory air conditioning, full
power. AM/FM stereo radio w/tape deck,
heater. vlnyt roof. Lie #122HPZ Stock #2888.
52999
OTHERS .
'75 MERCURY
MOHARCH GHIA 2 DR.
V-8. auto. trans.. factory , air conditioning.
power steering. power disc bfakes. POwer
windows, AM/FM stereo radio w/tape, heater.
vlnyt roof. Lie. #026MXA Stock 12914
53899
a76 GRANADA 2 DR.
V·8, auto. trans.. factory air conditioning,
power steering. POwer disc bral<Att. radio.
heater. vinyl roof. Lie. 19-41 MWD Stock
13028
SPECIAL PURCHASE
FROM FORD MOTOR CO. OF
1977 Models
'77 LTD LANDAU
4DOOR
V-8 auto trans . factory air cond111oning. full
power. AM/FM stereo radio. heater. vinyl roof.
Landau top, tilt steering wheel. speed control.
with approx 8,786 miles Lie 1233RFB Stock
#2923
s5799
'77 LTD II 2 DR.
V·8, auto trans . air cond1t1onlng. power
steering, power disc brakes, radio. heater.
vinyl roof. Lie. #270RSO Stock #2918
177 MAVERICK 2 DR.
6 cy1 . auto. trans.. factory air conditioning,
power steering. radio. heater. Lie. #588RFB
Stock #2938. .
53699
'77 LTD SQUIRE
ST 4TIOM W lCiOM
V-8. auto. trans .. factory air conditioning. full
power, AM/FM stereo radio. heater. lug. rack.
speed control. Lie. #231 AFB Stock 12916.
'77 LTD II WAGON
V·8, auto. trana., factory air conditioning.
POWer ltHrtng, p0wer dlec bfake1. radio.
heater. lug. rack. POW9r door locka. approx.
<4,507 m11 ... Lie. t"41RSO Stoek 12941.
STATION WAGON
SUPER BUYS!
'75 GRAN TORINO
S9lHRE WAGOM
V-8. auto trans . factory alr cond1t1onlng.
power steering. power disc brakes. radio.
heater. lug. rack Lie #530LXH Stock
#10078
s3399
'75 MERCURY
MOMTEGO MX ST 4. WGN.
V-8. auto trans. air condltlontng, power
steering. power disc brakes. radio, heater. lug ·
rack Uc. #383LWS Stock #277<4
5 3299
'75 TORINO
STATION WAGON
V·S. auto. trllns.. factory air conditioning,
power steerihg, radio. heater. lug. raci< Lie.
1379MOX Stock #3020.
'72 FORD
5 P4SS, CST. CU. WGN.
V·S, auto. trans.. factory air conditioning,
power steering, radio, heater. Lie. 1011 HRX
Stock #12<42A.
52699
'72 VW 9 Pass. Wm.
• cyt.. • •P"d. faotory air cond1tron1n1.
AM/FM stereo radio, heater, new tlrH.
approx, 80,030 mllet Lie t281GIP St()Cf(
t3035.
ECONOMY
CARS!
GALORE!
'76 PINTO
STATION WAGON
4 cyl., 4 speed, air cond1t1oning. radio. heater
low mileage approx 19, 140 miles Lie
#318PKE Stock #2995
53299
173 PINTO
S9UIRE WAGON
4 cyt.. auto trans .. radto. heater. Lie
#124HSX Stock #2988.
'76 AMC PACER
2DOOR
8 c~L auto. trans.. air conditioning, radio.
heater, vinyl roof. approx 22.203 miles Lie
#483NLP Stock #3043
53299
174 MERCURY CAPRI
6 cyt., 4 speed, factory air condltlomng, radio.
heater. Lie. t518WX Stock #304'4.
174 DATSUN B210
2DOOI
4 cyl., 4 speed, radio, heater Lie. #696JJU
Stockl29A
IMPORT
BARGAINS!
'74 TOYOTA
WAGON ICorolaJ
4 cyl . 4 speed, radio . .heater. luggage racl<,.
Lie. #112MNN Stock #3010 ·
'74 V.W. DASHER
4 cvt .. auto trans , radio. heater. Lie.
#551MOO Stock #1414A.
1 73 AUDI FOX 4 DR.
4 cyl . auto. trans . radio, heater Lie #005JSO
Stoci< #1106A
'75 DATSUN 610
4DOOR
4 cyl.. 4 speed. air condltlonlog. AM/
stereo radio, heater. Lie. 1263PPL Stoc
#1558.
'74 HONDA CIVIC
-4 cyt., • speed, radio, he1ter, Uc. t81-4N
Stock J2944A
I
(
P\JBlJ PUIW PUBUC NOTICE ..
l'te'Tin wt autt•Ht litM>e n4TllllllaNf to-..,_,,,. --h ""'"~ ...... ..
OVl\l C.OAC.Hf ~ l<t , ... •1 OM1.-.. CAtaa• W•-l 1•-a. "'I lolh ti , c .. 1. ~CA 9116.11
f '"' laiu\+,.\\ ... ('Vind"'-tlld bY' t" I" •.. ,~ w._, i,...,..,.
~ ,.,,, ,,.._ -·· "'"" "'"" .... <•""'• (I••" 01 °'""~ ''"'"'' 0,. ~·•n .. ,, ' .. ..,. -""-'"''"Or-(N\I O••IY P1101
-
..... 1• >I 5"11 I " 1'11 1'W. 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITtOUS e UStNIU
lllAMI ITATIMl•T
'"" l•-·"9 ""' '"'" .r ............ ,.u ..
QY GEOllC.l '!>.1•411e Shop • t
... J.orlf'\,I .... lumbift 'f'•td 4 11
L..-8e«ll CA w.,,..., P-t·on\ Corporal-
~ C..lltoff'h• (Of'l)uf'dhO" ... F-Or•1t
A•e . LumMr Yard • 11 Ln1111a •N<ll. CA
Tiiis bu\I,_.," <-llCteCI l>J • cor
PO<•llon
WMmt'# Promoc '°"'
Corpor•t'°"
WI II lam J KH l•r. Sr
Tiii\ \IAll.....,....t ... 111..:1 wllll tllo
County Cler-Of Or•nv-County on Sept. I, ttH "",., Publl\hMI Or•r>Qe Co.t\t O•llJ Piiot, Set>t. U,Jl,ll,()(t S, t911
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS eUtlNIH
NAMI STATIMENT
T"9 lotlOwil'IQ per..,,,> •re dol119 l>u•I· "-'~ .,
PUBLIC NOTICE
P:ICTI TIOUS eUtlHI! SS
NAMI STATIMI HT
T lie loOowl119 per iOfl IJ 001n9 bu>I ,..,, .\
JONES M URPHY NCVAOA
, PROPEIHY. 'Ill Son Joociuln Hiii•
ROOcl Nf'WPOrt 8oac11. CA '16-0
flt'fcller ~. IH60 E Wlllltl•r ' Bovleverd. Wllllt ier, Cot1t0<nl• t0to2
Wlltlom J Murpl\y, 1034• S,,nt•
Monie• Bouie .. •o. Lo• Ano~U>. C•lllornla 'lllon
SEA LARK ENTERPRISl!s,
la...., ~'"" Ave., Newport 8e•cll.. CA t16U
Cll•rlf'\ H••l!ert Cl•rkt. Hot''
M•rcu~ A•• • NrwPorf 8oec11 CA '1661
Thi~ bu>tne~ h ~u<.IAld by •n In·
dlvldu&I
CNrt•' H. Clarl<t
PUBLJC NOTICE Tiii\ ".t~ w•I lfled with th• CounlJ Cltr• of Or•n9" County on
------------1Auoustt,1'71
. .'
Tiiis but lneu I\ conouc 100 by • oontr.i e>ertner.,,10.
Fletcher Jone•
Tiiis ''"-' WH "'"° wllll IM County Cieri< Of Or ln9f County on S.PI I?, 1'71.
l'llJU
Publi""°" 0r•"91> Co.tit Oe11y Piiot,
S.-ol 14, >I, '9. •nd 0t I S lt71
ms11
PUBLIC NOTICE
SUl'IElllOlt COURT O" CALl,OltNIA
COYNTYOl'SANMATIO
ltALLCH' JUSTICI & ••coitos
•1M.1nlUllStnt
ltEOWOOOCIT ,CA
CAHHUMe • 211 ... SUMMOHS IMAlllllAOE I
tn r~ tn.t '""'"-or Of ~Uhont'r WILLIAM p MUNNS""" llu POft<lont CHR ISTI NE S MUNNS NOTICE• y.., l\ove-..., ,_, T ...
c..,r1 !My ~--1"'t VOii wit....,. , ............. _ .... 1 ... .,.. ,...,. ...
wllllll\ » MY\ ltNf tho 1 ...... _IOll ··-AVISOI U1ted ............ 114 .. II
trtbvnat ,....,_ ..,<ldlr '°"'" u•. '"' •...tleftC.I• o ---u•. r.....,... dontro • JO lllH Lu lo lftlWIMCleft ...... ~
I Tothr R~POl'ldenl IS.etootnoto'I:
• Hoe P"llllon"' II•• 111911 • pelltlol\
contt1tnrfl9 VrNr mltrtf\09 You mey
Illa a writ Im rt\pon..., within ltdOt ol '"* dllt INt l"I' summon• I•'""°" on
"tCTITIOUSeUSINUS l'tOUO
NAME STATEMENT Publ•\r.eo 0.-enc;,e Coast D•llJ Piiot Thelottowl119per50nlsdolnobu11neu Auq ,. 11. lt.Soot ••.1t77
H
MODERN AIRE, ,.,, Port< A~•. ----------='SO!:!?
Cos I• Mew.CA. 92•21
Eclw.,.dJ. Cony, llSO Acloms 4vt
E.101.CAKIAIMHo,CA.92'»
Thh bu\I""' I• conducted l>y an In dl .. dUol
Ectw111rdJ.C«o
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS •uslHISS
NAAitf ST4TIMIHT
T .... IOllowl119 per-art CIOlllQ bu>I ,...,,\M Tiiis ll•ttfMnt WM lllad wolll Ille
County Ci.rll Of 0.-anga County on S.PI LIVING WATERS ENTERPRISE,
2191? Vaullon L•n•. Huntington 1'11711 8••<11 CA
12, ttn
Publl~ Or•llQll Coast O•••v Pilot, C..,roe J•mH McC•lftrly 111 ~e>I H 21 •.-0c1 S 1'11 21'17 V•c•llon L•~•. Hunllnoton JU J.17 Buell.CA
------------Oomts M•c.,.tl M<Colttrly 1l2t PliBUC NOTICE ' L-•llAw.,Sant•A,,. CA'1m Geor9" Jamn McCefltrlJ 211S ------------Santi-Or .. N__, loocto, CA '1660
"1CTITIOUS eUSI HESS Tllomes Pelrkl< McCott•rlY, 211S
HAME STATIEMEHT S.ntle.,Or Nl'W-18oacn CA•7660
TllelollowlngperlOf'ls•r•CIOlnobu<I· Tiii> bUslneU It conducltd bJ •
neu "' gpn1,,ol par1,,,.rtlllo HORIZON LEASING, S'7 San ~geJ M<Celfff1J
Nlcolu Orfvt, Sult• 106, N•wport Tiiis slal""""I was 111"1 • '""
8 oocll, CA~ Countf Clerk ot Ou"911 County on SVEN E BACKLUND ltS s .. ouU Auqv>l21, 1917
L•nt, MO JOS. N-Port 8oocll, CA ""'"
'12W Pubh\hed er.,,,,. Coo\t Dally Pilot OAltllYL C. 0 4L8EY, II I Orleo<>J AUQ. 24, ]1, ~ 1, U, 1'17 ,..., 11 Eu t Pl~ Woy, A one ho LO Co1te, CA'llOOI
Tiii\ l>u\lness I• conducted by a
O•Mr•I part,..r\11111.
SW<l E aec-tuno
PUBLIC NOTICE
T n1s sl•te1n1111t w .. llled w1111 the
Count y Cltrk ol OrM>99 CounlJ on Auo
you 2', 1917
b II vou l••I to 111~ a written rr\ponM ""'" "''"I~""" lime. vou• delau11mo 1111 PubOSlled Or-C011st O•llY Pilot •nlet'eG and the court may tnltr • llHIO· A119. 31, ~ 1, u , JI, 1971 m9nt contel,,.119 lnfuncllve 0< other or
Cll'>ri conu,.,,•no OMslon ol pr_rt,,
toOUHt >uPl)Or'I, Clllld CU>IOdy, Child
\upport. Oltorn•y. '~'· <.OU\, •<Id
3117-71
PUBLIC NOTICE
>UCll other r•ll.., 0\ mev ~ Q•M>led bf ·------------the court. Wf>ICP\ could reiull In ot "'CTITIOYS 8USINISS
v•ro•l"'ment of,._., tOlllno ol molWy
o,. Pf'QOlltrty or other reti•f
( ...... wit/O lo_.. tllit """I<• ef ...
•UWMF lft lllh nuttt~. VOii .-14 ..
ta •r•..._t ly H lllOt fe11r wrl lllY!I .,.n-.11 ... y,,...,._,M.,. ... 11_
00ttd~t.1•11 ' MARVIN (.HURCH. Clt<-
8J5dLEOAO BUENO.
~.,
PtJBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
IUl"t•101t COU•T 0, THI!
STATI CH' CALI POaNIA "0"
TI4IOOUNTY0,0.ANOI .... .....,
litOTI Clt 0" HEAalHG 0"'
l'llTITIOtl ..0. f'•<>eATI! 0" WILL
ANO l'Olt LET T llllS O" AO•
._.IH ISTllATlotol WITH WILL All'
Hl!XIO
E\t.ieot GUSTAV H !>CHULZI!: •~•
GUSTAV HENRY SCHULZ!, ~·Md
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVt'N tl\al
JAMES E HEIM, oubllt •O·
m1111s1r.ior. "" hleo herl'in e petltJon
for P..-e Of Wlll ono for L•ll•ra ol Admlnlter.tlon with Wiii -ICed, for
AutllOrlr••IOl'I to Aomonhltr under 1"'I
llldel)ltndent Of Esi.1" Act, rererenco
lo whl<ll I• mod• for further
p.,llcul•"·.,.., IMl 11"' Ii""' ano place
ot 11Hr1"8 Ille um. lies beHI Ml tor
5op1. 21. 1tn , ot t :GO o.m., In tho
courtrwm of O.O.n ll-« No. J ol Hl4
court, et 1QOC1vlc Centw Drive west, In
the Cltvot Sent• Ana, C•lllornto.
OotMIS.iitemeer I, lt17.
WILUAM 11. St JOHN.
County Cieri• AO•IAN KUYl'l 11
COUNTY COUNSEL
.. ,, .............. Oepul,
.... tOffke .. 1 111'
S.ftte AM, CA t21t2
Tfl: C7WIU..1'M AttwMotor: ,...ltl.,w
Pub11si.d Or-Coast D•llY Pilot
S.pt '·'· 14. lt71 J92>7)
PUBLIC NOTICE
SU~l!•lo.t COUaT 0" THE
STATI! CH' CALl"O•NlA 1'011
'"41COUNTY0" OltANOI ...... .u.
NOTICI 0, HIAlt l N G O"
~llTITlON l"Ott ~ltC>eATI 0" WILL
AND L1n1u TESTAMINTAllY.
l'Olt AUTHOatZATION TO AD· MINISTlllt UNOlla THE
INDlf'INDIHT ADMINIJTltATION
0 " ISTATIS ACT
l;nete ol J AMES O. MURPHY Olla J AM ES DEN NIS M URPHY , Oitcu~
NOTICl'i IS HEREBY GIVEN 11\al
JOHANN 8 MURPHY P\A\ llled herein
• Pl'hllon lor Probat~ of Wiii """ l~t·
,.,. T•i.n.nt.ry IOI"" Pl'llhon&r and
tor Autnoruy to Admlnl•l•r """~r 11»
I nae"°""""' Adrn""•tr•tlon 01 E•llttes Act. r•ler..-c~ In Wf>ICI\ Is maor tor lur1t..r paf11cull•r\, •nd 11\at It>• tlnw
Mid pl<1te °' """""9 Ille wmt 'I•• bHn •@I lor s..i>tembfor 10, 1971, at 10 00
• m . In 11111 courl•oom 01 OepartmHOt No J Of wld coun, al 100 Civic Center
Drive WHt, In IM CHY of Sonia An•.
Colltom!a
Dated $itl)4ember1 tt71
Wll..LIAMl.SIJOHN,
CDYftly Cle<lt
ALEX O "llEO
1 .. 1~1'-lnt
SultitMeO
L .. A ..... et,CA ... J Tet:CJm s~
A"-YNI" -111-
Put>ll-Or0t190 C:O.\I O•llJ Piiot Sept I I 14, 1917 3911 77
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS eUSINIESS
HAMI! STATEMENT TM lollowi119 Pl'r!IOn ll d0111Q buso-
nei• •\ IAI ERA JERRY S GILLESPIE
REALTORS • 181 ELl!CTRONIC ·AEALTY ASSOCIATES. JEl~RY S
GILLESPIE, REALTO!lS, 17400
8rooltllurst St• 203. Fount•ln V•lleJ,
CA'270I
JERRY SIMPSON GtLLl:SPIE,
• • llorlownlo Cl NoWPorl Baecll, CA
91663
Tiii> l>trllnP\\ Is ~onducltcl by .,. lft-
dlvldllOI
Jtrry S. c;,11 .. p1e
T ~11 11.atemenl Wd\ llleo wllll tlle
County Clerk o1 Or anQe Couoty on AUQ.
23. 1977.
A9l4'
PubtlS1'4<1 Ora119e Coast Delly f'llot
A119. 31, S.pt. 7, 14, 21, 1917
]JU.71
PUBLIC NOTICE
SU~E•10. cou•T
7te CIYI< C:...w °"" Wott leM• AN. C.l!Mnlle ti"!
SUMMONS ca.e...,..,:mztt
Plolnlllf JOANN 8EHARKA
Oot-..t CHURCHOFTHEWAV,
INC., THOMAS J ELLIS, GLENN EL.-
LIS. RUTH STEFAN, AL STU'AN, AAOE NA CONWELt.. LAR•Y
CONWELL. JAMU C. CRANFILL, LOIS CR4NFILL, •UTH ll'LUMI,
MERLE f't.UMll, R08ERT4 OIXOH.
JOSE f'H DIXON, THOMAS W.
01 XON. JESSICA 'CAR ROLL, end OOIES 1 lf\rOUQfl XX, lnctia1,,_
HOTIC91 y.., ..._ -...._ Tiie '"" _, _ .......... .,.. ........ ,_ ...... ....,.. --.,.. ,.....
•1111111'1 ... .,.. ·-... ·~~ .... Mlew. ,
AVllOI Va• 1191141a~ .... •I
Tri..,_. ,.... 11Kt41r "°"" UC. •Ill •IMll-le1-.-utt .......... -.itn * • ,.,_, LN la ...,._ ... ........
1, TO Ttil! DU'ENOANT· A 'lvll
COn\llllhll llM bHn llled by llW plelnlltf
•9'1MIVW. Q.fffaotnott•I
a , Ir you wish to deftfld 11111 llWIUll,
y0<i l!llAI, wt lllln to doyt •fter U1l1 aum-
mont 11 wryec1 on y0<i, Ille wttll tlll1
court • written p1Ndt"9 In rt~to
tlle '°"""""'· llf • Jvstlct Collt1, Wi1 mlltt Ille wtth the court a wrllttfl !IMM-
1,.. or -aot oral p1e911i.., I• be.,,
teroci lfl 1111 -.ot Jn f'ftllllflla lo ""' cem.-aint, within 30 doy1 •ftor thll
1111 ... -. .. ....wci .. Y'll\ll. •.u~.,ov-~ . .._.,._,.,
Wiii .. eMilfW 1111011 •ul~ Of Ult
plelllllff IM W1 cwn -\' Ollter • ,.....,.... ... lftll YoU ""' ... ,., .....
IMfllMd lfl ... c.empl~, Wlllcll C6Ul4i
reMllt lit 9"111"""'"' fll ...... 1e11i..,
Of """"'• ...-<1V., otfler rtlltf r• ctuetlledlfl .. ~llM.
t.'.H,...w1111• ....... •tc.•11111 ......., ..... tNnar,.,.. ..... .. .... ,.,.. ...... , ...... , .... ""'* ,....._,H_,,_., .. ,,._,.tlMt,
0-...Mvt. 1'71.
WILltAM•.MJot4N~
trD90f•1' w........ '
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
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I
DZ DAILY PILOT * Wednead•y. September 14. 1977
The Bluest Marketplace on the Or•na• C01st
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
You Can Sell It , Find It ,
Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678) One Cal I Service
Fast Cntdit Approval
ltol h tote ........ 1000.2999 lost & "f:::r'· ~5.ett MerchondiM ..•.•. IOOM099
lttntof1 ......••• 3000-"699 •S.:Vkea & 1.-;.· • '000-6099 =~· ... 9Q00.9099
8u1lnt.u , lnvtttmtnt & ~Jment & Aut~s & other
flnonc1al · · · · · • · · •• 5000-S0.9 P at6on .••••• 7000..7199 Tron ot1in •.•• 9100-9999 -------•IHousu Por 54* . Housff F« S. HouM1 For Stile ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ERRORS: Ad•ertf1en GtMral I 002 GtMrol I 002 GeMt'Cll I 002
should check their ad1 ••• •••••••••• • • • ••• • • • • • ••• • •• • • • • • • •• • •••• • •• • • •• •• • • • • • • • •••••• • •• • dally md report .,..
ron lnntdl.tely. the
DAILY "LOT GI .....
lablllty for .... ff"t ....
cornd lftMrtlon Ollly.
PMblJ1her's Hotlce:
All real cstaw ad verUsed
1n th1s newspaper is sub
1ec.t to the FL'<ieral Fair
l10ulo1ng Act of 1968
wluch ma.Ices 1l illegal lo
ildvcrll6c "any p re
fe rence. 1Jmll1H1on, or
d1scnml.llullon based on
race, tolor , rchg1on. sc'I. •
or n.itionul on.:in. or an
intention lo make an)
l\uch prt•fon•n<·c, lim1la·
lion. or d11>cnmmnl!on "
Th1& new!.papcr will not
knowingly uccept an)
adverl1sin~ fo r real
estate whu:h 1s 1n v1ola-
l1on or the law.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Gwrol 1002 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
CORONA
DELMAR
3 Huge BR, 3 tile UA,
den. dining room, 2 s ty
w 26' open beam cell
ings. tile entry. frplc, we
h:.ir, laundry PeOm, over
HUNTINGTON
BEACH
NEAR OCEAN
SI 12.000
'1 Gigantic bedrooms. 10-
cl udin~ huge master
swte. This large scaled
home 1s design ed Cor a
family that enjoys being
to~ether. J u.st 1 mile lo
sandy beach. Owner may
help finance . Coll
1162-7788
,.Q.. K€Y
WREALTOP.sN
ATI'EHTION!!
.i Pnme beach apt. ren-
lal units. Perfect for the
owner manager t hat
wants coastline location.
Steps to the beach. Call
for app'l. $23S,OOO
C. F. Colesworthv
REA.I. TORS 640-0010
GARDEN GROVE
$60,950
3 BR, l o/.t ba, COV patio,
dbl gar. Priced to sell,
call now.
646-3928 or 5*3483
Lachenmyer
ncallor
!>!led dbl garage. 3000 Sq. ---------•I rt o( very unique Uv1n
i.pace $149,SOO.
JACOBS REALTY
675-6670
NERVOUS
OWNER
Need
4 Bedrooms?
FOR $72,500? A great
Santa Ana a rea. Nice
homes. n i ce street.
Paneled, convertible
db l e garage. 4
Bedrooms, 2 baths, large
DUPLEX--OPEN I TO 5
61 I CARMA TION, . CdM
A very attractive duplex with an un-
usual floor plan -the ground floor
can bt used as 4 bdrms .. den & 3 baths
-or -3 bdrms . & 2 baths + a 1-
bdrm. & bath unit for the mother-in·
Jaw or tt:E:nager. Also, there is a neat
l·bdrm. & bath unit ovtr the large 2
carport; price rtductd to $179,000.
YOUU LIKE OUR E5'
.tx-pt:riE:nced sales ~rsonnel
759-0811
Fi.ut ""' Gu.at Wu ftiut Btctg.
450 NEWPORT CENH II un1vr 159 08 11 .
G1.....-al 1002 G...eral 1002 • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
MEW-IACK 11. Y VfEW-4220,000
Be first to take advantage or owning
this striking N.B. home now under
construction ! Brick trim 2 story with 4
s pacious bdrms , fam rm & formal
DR Well d esigned kitchen, 3 firepl, 2
lge patios & rm for pool. .
2111 S. Joaquin Hilb Raad
MEWPOIT CENTB, H.I. 644-49 I 0 :.ays "SELL". Jmmed
occupancy. L ow est
pnced in complex & im-
maculate. $.5:!.SOO.
1722 Ml1'CJlt:LL
UNIT70
yard. Large fa mily din-,.~-a1
Ing rm. All terms. """'""'"' I 002 Gttt~ral 1002
MIKE SAVAGE
REAL !-~STATE
642-9601
Real 1".slate
PRICED RIGHT
400lll" * RIR AU C.M;,cgy.;-w
LOOK
LIKE
LOVE
that 's wha t 'll happen
when you see t~ lovely
home 4 6edrm, 2 story r .,er> fom room, form d in
room & pool. AU on a
manicured corner lot in
Coi.ta Mesa. SllS,000.
..............................................
MOUNTAIN AND VALLEY VIEW
-LoTefy ladcNff .... wftlt 4 be_~ ..
fcmly l"OOM, Ylrf large lot, M.tfWy
•••d•c•p•d Hd In Hcellent CHdf-
ffOIL ••• $109,950.
LAGUNA
NJGUt-:L
49S-1720
499-4551
DANA
POINT
493-3812
LAGUNA
BEACH
497-2489
llcaut1ful 3 bcllroom. 2
hath family home on
qWl't stret•l in one or
Orange Counties nrccst
and mosl t·on venient
neighborhoodr-. This
Century 21 Weslch ff
64S·7221. !---------.--------• home sho"s exceptional,._ ________ _
care ancl I!. only ~'73.SOO 1•
Offered with V.\ tl!rms.
CALL 751·3191.
t;::SELECT
T" PROPERTIES
Life Can Be
Beautiful
Local builder wants
bulldabl• propnty
Hewpart, Costa M.aa
area. .Tecr-down1, ad-
d-ons. muttiple unit
property. Fl.ST
ESCROW. Call
64o.8208 mtytime.
Yo u c an e njoy t he l•---------
beautiful life for aim sl
the same as r ent. Doe
one of Irvine's finest
areas appeal to you?
Owner has bouiiht
a nother home an d
doesn't want 2 hou.se pay-
ments. Priced al only
S'82.900. Call for info.
640.6161
~
COATS & WALLACE
REAL ESTATE , INC.
OWHER
DESPERATE
Must sell , big customized
home near Mesa Verde
Country Club. 4 Large
bed room s and loft.
Private swimming pool.
Asking price j ust r e-
duced to S14S,OOO. Call
50-USl •.
•-:s::. HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
•
..
DUPLU
WESTHEWPORT
New on the m~rket, 3
bdrms .. 2 bath! eoch. On
fee land. Steps to the
be3ch . X ln l s um ·
m e r /winlc r rcntnl .
Price.'<! at $189,500
673-3663 675 4777 Eves
associated
81101' EllS llf l\L TORS
Z·JJ•, w ,Bofbn J t>1 • 14&1
DUPLEX/BEACH
Best rental area in
Newport Beach Great
Summer/winter income
Spac 1o us un I t s w /2
.bdrl'@i. _each. Ba lcorues
for lndOOr/outdoor living
&year round enjoyment;
lil\l.BOA ISLA '0
• 613-6900 •
$58,750
ll~c family room with
used brick wall a nd
fireplace. 3 Bedrm, 2
bath, dble car garage,
new 18' Doughboy pool &
filter. All t his on a
secluded street. Hurry,
call 5'16·5880. •.
;~:;a. HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
*HEW LISTINGS
PRIME
PEHIHSULA PT.
$275,000
Exceptional corner loca-
tion with easy walk to
bay & oceanfront. Clean
& fresh, contemporary
design home w /unique
features. Open 2 story, 4 bdrm home with fa mily
rm & den. Soaring 2 story
Gr eenhouse insid e .
Patios, balconies & 6
s kylli.;hls. Shown b y
uppl.
•
... ---·~·-· -_ .... _. __ ... ~ .... -
' .._ • _ IA
1
... Hon.ts For 54* Houtta For Sale Wedneeday, September 14, ten DAILY PILOT D:J ~ ......... .............. ....................... ----.-....----~.-.. ...... .,;,,;;.;..;.... ____ _.;:.~;.;...;.~:;.;.........:::;.::.
~-~~....... ~~-~~~ ...... : ~-~~ ....... ~::.~~ ....... ~~~:! .......... !~!!~ =~-~~!':' ... !~.~~ ~!!.~.~ ••••••. ~!!!.~~ .•.••.. ~.~~ ...... .
·,
• ... ,... I 00 ••we.. I 00 ......... I 002 • ....,... • • I 002 COZY HA VEN Colta Meto I 024' Costa Mna I 024 •••••••••• • •••••••••••• •••••• ••••• ••••••••••• •••••••• • • ••• •• •••••••• •••••••. ••••••••••••••• SUMMERTIME... DUPLEX •••• ... ••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
®herbert
ha wk in s
Rl: Al lO F~S
IALIOA ,._.SUI.A OUfUX S llJ.HO
Pm·t-l"\.odUf\1on Jus t authorm~d. This
l tSO hutlding 1!> u prlrnt: fox sh~ltcr tn
u ht:u" y uppr4'cliillun urt:a Yt:t It will
r•t·ld u pos1tiv.-('8lah flow 1-'or mort:
informuUon on this sort or nrng1c . call
~·8311
4 llDIOOM POOi. HOME '72,500
kt:lax or play by tht: pool Entt:rtam
on big t·ovcrtd patio w/bnck built-ms.
C'omt:r lot home in sought aftt:r Loara
St·houl 01:-.t Roc:k roof, luxury
carptL-.. nt-w tt:xturt: coatmg Livt: &
t-nJOY''
ftllCE JUST IEDUCU>. $I 29,900
Custom home on 1,:i acre, 4 bedrooms,
3 bath:-.. 2800 sw ft Hilly cliffside lot,
oct:an Vtt!W . xlnt neighborhood. Easy
freeway & beach access. Hugt: gamt:
room w/proft:ssaonal wt:l bar. This is
om: of a kind.
SEAGUUS & SEAWEED $67,900
Price just redu ced onl.._this 3
bedroom, I 1h bath , s urfside
townhoust:. Ilomt:ownt:r and investor
financ in~ available. Walk to the
b<:ach, schools, and shopping. This is
a 1300 sq. ft. homt:, doublt garage and
brick patio. 963-8311.
GPel"'OI
11055 MOCJ!tola St.
Fo.tain Vahy
963-1311
I I 002 GetMral 1002
···········•··•··•·····•······················
THE BLUFFS
359 VISTA MADUA OP84 THUIS. l·S
Bt:autiful Carm e lita t:nd unit: 4
bdrms., 3 full baths. $162,500 -
Includes tht land!
673-4400
I 1.i\Jlll()R
Dh•ision of Harbor ln•Hhneftt Co.
I 002 General 1002 ....•••••............•.•..•••••............•..
S llDIOOMS OH,... WATH
Al"luully, OVER tht: watt:r (when tht
tide is h\-4 >. sits this 5 bt:droom beach
hm.18u with funky-junk decor, sunny
kitcht n. artist's studio and top-of ·tht·
world sun roor Don't lt:t the words
fool you, this home 1s solid roowood
and adjact:nt to China Cove ooach.
Truly Uniqut at $395,000.
U~l()UI: lif)MI:§
REAL TORS·. 675·6000
2443 East Coast Highway. Co1ona del Mar
.ilso 111 M t:'MJ Verde . .ii !>46 5990
~~~:! .......... !~!!~,~~ .......... ~?~~
IJ/u/ft Owtwrt1hip
'J-or $5000 ::Down
UHlalEV AILE? HO l
Owner/ Agl·nt will :.ell Bluf~~ Bdrm
home on contract for a~ hllh: as $5000 down.
A:,,king pnc~ s~l btlow mark<.{ at $90,000. For
information or appointment to stt:.
Call 640-2779 or 551-6467
OftEH HOUSE Fri/Sat/s..day
Sept 16, 17. 18 from I IAM to 4 fitM
2323 Vlstal ~
General I 1002 G•Mrat 1002 ..............................................
LUXURY waterfront condo, 2 BR, 21.h
ba. Pool, 1acuzzi. 24 hr. security.
Brand new ; comp. furn. $220,000
PENINSULA. 4 BR. 3 ba. horn<:. All
a mt nities. Lovely an:a. $195.000
LI DO ISLE. 4 BR, 2 Ba. Nicely decor.
Lge. patio. beamed ceil's., hdwd flrs.
48 Ft. lot. $225,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Ba y!>1dc Or1ve N.B 6 75 ·6161
Ii. pool lime an tlu~ J • s..s Reaal• Speclallt&IJ. a.
bod(oom, llke new borne You It your tenant• wlll ~ SUbmit 4 or 5 bdrm modtls~ail, With (~h paint. plui.h Cl\JOY the eooc:t llft! ID lhla ..v. ..
•C&rpellllg and beJ!t of all Coronu del Mitr duplu t 1<>11\e"/pool•. -·
IAO 18x36 heated ond plU» guest 1tud10 Walk Antsy Owners! Penninaioa Propcrtiiu.
"1tered pool. Located In to "hopplnai & beach Ne.it 1mct clean. bl& cov· MARIHBS COVI
ColleJ«! Purk. Full pnco Tennis & r ccre.il1on PRiME cf'l'd polio. trailer park· 2Brlwnbseinuniquepvl
li. rro.ooo. CALL ~·2660. center clo•c by Old mi.;, 3 bedrooms. eattna adult commwut.y. 2 Bib C:: SELECT world c harm. invut E.ASTSIDE area, red bnck fireplace, to bch. 2 poob, jAcuul. T' now. e njoy forever. COSTA MESA 564.U50. BKR.~1720 tennis court. uuna in
PROPERTIES $1.:'oiiHs REALTY DUPLEX TARBI c1bbousc. sm.soo. 3 Bedroom upper unit lL O.C. Rkbtts Rltr
cua...DE-SAC * 494-8057 * With sundeck. lower 2 955-0497or642·3263 bedroom with enclosed .. -Hf ..
M ~ S A v Jo: R D E 4 CDM 1£ .A.CH palio & yard. Kmg sited --#I '"_c-omJo bedroom. 2 bath, large --rarnrmctintenngaround COTIAGE bedroom:,,, .lndi v i~ual By owner 6 mo o ld, BRANO NEW
16x36 pool. Shake roof, Lots of wood and stained laundry areas, built-in rnod@rn Condo. 2 Bdrm 2 Jluoo 4 br, :n~ bath + double fireplace & dimn•' I ..., range, oven. garbage bu $74 000 Coll S48·971S -" g ~s. $1 .... ,950. dLSJ>()Sal, & dll>hwasher _...;......;' __ . _ _,;_ __ __. f1i1m rm with fplc. Walk
rm, Priced right. Call R.C. TAYLOR CO. Just S years old . Owner to golf course and park.
S46·5880. 955..0350 desires exchange for ad MESA VERDE Choice F .V. tocaUon.
-----d1tional units in San EXECUTIVE HOME Sacrifice at $86,500.
A ST ARTER Clemente. s14s,soo. Jwt RHuc:ed S5000 IJIJ16@1llt; lfiiffit!i
llomeonocean viewi.1te. COLEOFHEWPORT lo $154,900 io•,;, dn to •-M.!M.&::.:.li-llil-lllillll.Waf!WiiAigm~il
Like new. 2 bedroom, 2 675-5511 qualified buyer Pool & 982·4471 • •
ball\, $122,500. Try ---------• 1acuzu spa+ 4 Bdrms. 3
~HERITAGE
REALTORS
~.ooodown. MESA VEttDE ba. fa m rm, din rm. LG SUPER DLXCONOO ~lt'JSIOE CUTI£ HAL PIMCHIH SPECIAL! Walk lo ~oll cour..e For adults over 16 yrs UW REALTORS liesuretoseetbisbr1ght DaYidlo..,..Rltr. Mus t leave area by
2 BR VA BUYERS 675-4392 &cheerlul 3 bdrm. Great ___ 54_6-_9950 ____ , owner, bargain pnce
• floor plan ~/screened Xhn JBr, dbl garage, S!S.900. Consider all of·
Bltn BBQ with trec cov \!cry ruce 3 br, 2 ba & 1 br pauo. Jo'resbly painted & owner aniuous 574 95-0. rers. 536-0807; 842-8073;
11rcd patio. Hardwood r c n ta I. $16 2. O 0 0 . wall papered. Walk to 67J.J.i30. 751.3082 ' 544·2477
floors. country pam>ll·d l.f';.isr/opt1on $10 .000 schools & :shopping ----------::....--
kuchen with bllns. Back do'A1\ Owner, 640·7030 0 w n e r ha s be c n RARE FIND PRICE
lot bonanza . Perlec·t for SfitYGLASS HILL transferred. Make a n ol· 4 Hdrm, family condo. SLASHED
truck :.tora~c. bal·k rer.545·9491 Centrally located.$63.950 . on this 3 bedroom multi use bwld J.l ·u Dramatically situated, fu
tools: have a w;;k~·h~p1~ oce.m & bay views: 4 BR. (~lwm3Ji' i§r1 Tty ~:_~HCH~Hde. ~~~!~ ~lph a~f.s:e!~.;
guest room Just ~'13,500 fam rm., pool & Jacu~ZJ. C.:all 3Car ~or S289.500 Real Estate REALTOR & shopping. Priced for
546-4141
~
COATS&WALLACE
REAL ESTATE, INC.
BEST VA.LUE
IM HARIOR VIEW
:! & a den or :J bedrm
l>ehJ!hlful patios. y.ird
ll i ~hl~ upgruded
lmmed occupanc).
CORONA OEl MAR
DUPLEX
l.o1.>\l0ly duplex. c•arh un1l
ha\lng :? bt'drms l.'ach
,Walk to bl-ac::h. Priced to
l!t:ll
~
ll '>lo...l<l\ll Y
"i ,, 1' I,• \ \ "t
7$15 ! Cu~t Hwy Co1tna Gel tthl
PAUL MARTIN -----675-4392 ___ -i QUICK SALE. Call to.-
REAL ESTATE 644·7383 BY OWNER day. ' .
Sh 2 B 8 540.3666 Duplex • 2br, 2ba hse arp sty, 5 r. 1~ a. Vets Attention
+4!br, 2ba apt over home w/new palnt, cpts VA appraised value & drps, auto gar opnr, ga rage. $178,500. many other xtras: only SS0,000. Offered at llf ltelc-.11
RfAl l~IATI Larks pur, 500 bl k . S82.900. 1122 Charleston, S79.500. Quality built 3
544·W03 5574887 bcdrm, 2 bath. Shake ---------roof, brick fplc ,
hardwood firs. Near
schools & park. Vacant.
see a nytim e . Call
540-1151
Beach Pad!
SPECTACULAR
DUPLEX
MESA DELMAR
New listing · immaculate
ms1de & out. Lge fmly
rm, 4 bdrms. 2 butlu>.
abundant storage. Walk
to schools & i.hoppang.
Call for more info. 6~HERITAGE . ..
Oper>airy feellng .. .lots of
glas.'i and wood. Galley
kitchen-vanity bath &
dressing. Fenced yard
Across the street from
beach. BKR 962·SS11
If }'Ou are d1ssut1sf1ed
"11 h the ordinary or con·
~1der hie too short to sur
round yourself with hum·
drum. consider this ex·
c ept1onal first tim e
oHcnnl! of a quality n<•ar
new 2 ijR home with
545-9491 i.:::=====-======~r--~~~~~--LoTs OF LAMD
REALTORS
vuultl•d wood beamed Real Estate
REDUCED $3,000
TO SELL
Bai.l51de 2 Br 1 Ba Doll
house. Heady to move in!
Seller motivated. Call to
W1lb small 2 bedroom
house. Ready to expaod.
Only '89.lJOO.
SCOTTREALn
536-7533
see! ~~~~~~~~~
cc1hng, the finest kitchen ---------
a p po 1 n t men ts with OWNER sent us a tele·
beautiful oak. cabinet iµ-a m. Reduced pnce. 3
work thru-0ut. fireplaces b r G r e ~ n b r o o k .
m living room & master VACANT. B e I o w
bt'droom, leaded l:lass marl<et. u can saves~ btTI-Offwed
\\tndowb, and a ceramic Hadley 963-8933 Seller has bo&lght other
b;ith MES .A. VERDE ALrium ........ • ~·---wn ttll· Jacuizi an the ma:stcr ' ~ ~~.::,~RULTY property. 3br \fi·level.
PLUS ,,,_ 1163°'~~oe.eo.t•..... ........,, ~ ... --• 5ne.c1 •L 545.91.:1 fam rm overloottng
Balboa Island
u rharmanA 2 BR Rental rs; "' ~ gorgeous pool. i,; mile to 1006 with fireplace and a Thts 4yrold3 bedroom.2 ---------•ocean. Quiet. Cul-de·sac
••••••••••••••••••••••• i-l•pa.rate puliodcck. bath home, ju::.t listed Dana Polnt I 026 street. (213> 431·9922.
3 Br I' 2 l!a. xira lgt• lot 644-1211 hall pnde of ownership ••••••••••••••••••••••• 431·3Ul5 Ra) ''''-'w Bv owncl' ~throughou t & pro· N!W6MOMTHSOLD _________ .,..
SIR.'i.lltl() ll73 som f S , • fc!>s1onal landscaping. Plush JBf'. 280, Ownl'r HUNTINGTON • Owner will arcept. low LANDMARK down. Call l11r showm~. licensed $'9l,OOO. 496-7775 38r, 2Ba, single story
~~.a.~~."!~~~!~ .. !?.~~ ~Wff4.~ 540-3666 BToro 1032 Condo, upgraded, shqwn ••• •••• •• ••••••••. ••• •• ~Y appt. 960-4923
BEACH COTTA.GE •HEW LISTING* VA or lO'il> down. 3 bdrm, BY o---~
plu.o, mc::omc Duple' on l!ll TIME OFJo'ERfo:O nr park, ~tr conditioned. ,,..."lllOA I 002 Jfalboa P<•nino,ula. om· Har<-Old (;d M Tnplcx on super i;tarage tor hob· Rustic semi custom bll ~-------•••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• block tu l>l'ach. Uo,c ~our 1;,• lot 1 Bdrm mini -----byist. trailer acces. nu W/used brick. Atrium 1maginut1on tor remodel home w ,wallL>d garden. JUST REDUCED hstmg has more to offer patio, frplc. 4 Bdrms, 2
GeMrol YA TERMS
LOWDOWN!
1002 G-....ral
MAGNIFICENT! or cnJO) it:-. intrtn!l1c ::.1.ite floors , h1gh ce1l'gs S77.900. Colle~c Park 3 than any comparable ba. Cum rm. hiih~ UP· BOAT SLIP DUPLEX
O<:ean 1 blk . :I bdrm .. :! Shdrp 3 bdrm & fml} rm
on t rl.·c'..!_med i.lrt.>el
Grc.1t floor plun llnJwtJ
noor-. Walk to Sl'hool-. &
!>hoppmi: Beller hurry.
1t 'sonly ~.000. 54~ !f\91
baths ca. unit Seller at your door step Btnty
anxious S1S7,950' decorated hcach retreat
F:xperlly upgraded charm ai. is 2 Ddrm up PLUS two 1 Bdrm units, Sr 2 Ba. RV access. home. See for yourself. grd'd. Next to eoJr
thruout F caturinR per . s tudi o lower. ea w1ownpvtpat10.New Move an cond.831·1340 S72,500. B.J . & Aasoc. coune.l~rnitoocean,
i."'"Clal lJghlm" fi xtures. Sl2l ,SOO cpls, drps Mint cond 581.()892/768·7)64 or scbls. churches; & Balboa lay Prop. only 5 yrs old w 13 b<lrm:..
Realton 3 balhs & frml dman~ rm
,... .. HORIHSREALTY k JTOWNHOUSES park. s91.ooo. sso2 dd ~so tile, beuut1ful Sl8S,OOO Br 759.0358 Custom built Colonials , ... ~on '"TOR'S '"'-'hy Dr. 846-6989
car s & drapes. *494-8057 * """"' ""' .. ..,... slam glai.s windows REDUCED •by European craftsmen. DEUGHT HURRY~THlSI Treat yourself lo the El ... Condo VT" Close to pools . tennis & fi t Call Ce 2 .oro less than Owners have bough•
b h 3 Bd 2 r-i A classical V1ctonan de· mes · · ntury 1 one year old. 2 Story, 3 anoth •-__ , "
Features ceramic lllc en ~-·*•6•7•5--7•0•6•0•*-_.. try. Palo!! Verdes frplc ,
....__.....,iMllililil.,..Wiiltili6 decorator wallpaper,
Super Condo
N 0 Near new. 2 bedrm 2
bath. one story. Located
1n park·llke setting
wiSpamsh architecture.
liood terms.
~~;,;~.~l.::; ~
:'-/e\\port·s BaC'k Ba y!I~~~~~~~~~ u ... ncr must sell now ~I ·
l'nn' rc'<luced to S89.900 1---------i Cull RL'<I Carpel, 751 1202 Cozy Cottaae
Owner moving lo M'Orro
Bay & needs fast escrow
Home 1s lovely 3 bedrm,
2 ba. F1P. F1A, B/t,WiO
a.rea m k1tchen-t!I. aar:
opener. Fantastic condi·
Uoo-fantastic buy. Only
163.000 ~~~~~~I Ruth Laurie. Afj.
I oo21--·'·4·"'·4•3•a•o--1 •••••••••••••••••••••••
macneb I Irvine
realty ..
STOP LIVING
Jn your landlord's dream home &
START LIVING iq; ·your own
beautiful 4 BR hom~ in the exciting
Village of Woodbridge! Flexible
financing -$104,900. Lila Harper
752·1414. (N-83)
..... TO MOYI
IH A FIW DA. TS7
Attractive, award-wln.nlng
De:e:rtteld townhome -ready &
walling for you &I prict:d to s~ll
quickly I 2 BRs. den, dininr,
fireplace car~r~ patto. CI01e to
pools, U:iuils & n~w park. '79,900, Ma~lrits Cross '742-1414. CN-S4>
•ACI + LOCATION An: ~ r.,atured ln um hipty up.
ll'adt9d Vlllage n .. La Salle••. (
BRs, 2 ftrf:places w/ovf:f' 2400 sq.ft.
Walkirig diltance to schools, para,
4shoppin1. bus Une a ttiMls club. •t27,900. 8111 HutcbJBll 152·1414.
<N.:SS>
mirrored wnrdrobes.
hand carved copper hght
fixtures. Only Sl55.000.
and you OWN the land!
646-7711
b
eahc . r m :,,h .. k _....,stranoBeac:hl018 ~1i.1n.tolally re-donew/l Marten R eal Estate bdnnl' ... bathover1--1.. erq;areawuous to at i.. 2 story. s a e ••••••••••••••••••••••• CAI\ "'.,"'7 ..,~ UUf\ ft-11 t .. :. 3 bdrm 2 b th
f Yr. warranty& rcaturin° ~....., 1n " greenbleit and ~ '"" ·• a ~~OR~~~·10~~PORT OCNFROHT DUPLEX a most dramatic view or -sTSl.DE or~ge fields. Upgraded hDmebo. nr. beach, scbl)ols
LIDO REALTY S2SS,OOO 644·8185 the b a Y & ocea n . '".. thruout . all earth tones . &s pping. $67,900 Drastically reduced by DYNAMITE drapes from Germany . NEWPORT IEACH
673-7300 :~.~~!'!" ... !?!.~ SJ0.000. Owner is very FREEDOM HOME parquet floors . covered REALTY 675-1642
motivated. Owner heading North, patio • come and see to 1---------·1""-"T...~l"_lllllll'....Ml-.,.JllllllJ.-llllllJ.-~...-".o."-,..."--".,.-111T...lllllt_.,-.,_,_,, VALLEY 640-9900 very anxious. This one appreciate! Hy owner · ATI'N: Builders. psoic,e
_____ ;,..__ ___ PLEASE call & have us l!J elk to Ocean ~ won't last long! 3 br, $82,000. Call 581.00SS to-lots nr bcb. 75 x117 •
tell you about a tcrnfic Com~etely .remodeled ~ODO\ Bc."'~'Ot¢ P\QQ!.. ~ Cam. rm, dbl detached day! Reas.ofr,.2U·799·5627
buy in b eautiful on ~n overs1Y.ed lot. A ~ gar. Tree lined sL Lg. FountoiftValley I034 4 BR, 2 Ba, assume
Ea!llbluf(. A 5 bdrm .. 3 smashi~ 4 BR plus den brick frplc. New roof, ••••••••••••••••••••••• S'll,000. 1% VA ot new
batb,wilhdininerm.&c. plus forrltal_dining Pl.us CostaMesa 1024 :%.~f~~f1bing, paint, financing. $85,000. Va·
vlew, too. Walk to pool. h~e family room with • cant. 9391 Neolanl Dr. lenrus,schools,churchcs open beams, natural •••••••••••••••••••••• Ol'fNll19•11HUN1091Nl(f• In Law Quarters 956-2200daya,or532·2117 .......... ~J:~~::!~!~1~~ Sb cRv sso.ooo [ e 1NMM1J -, ... :;~~'!in.. ow; ............. VETS
••FREE••
VA COWtMfing &
Info. s.r.ice
Just steps to Ocean Blvd. arp 4 br in Costa Mesa. , :: _ • $6& MO • -WHY NOT ENJOY IT? ~· 551 Pierpont St. . S89 950 "" Country club llYin& at the i--------•I Cdl 644-72 I I Ho Oowtt VA Mesa Verd~ 3 Br+ Fam DO Y 0 u' NEED 2 be&bh. Beautiful Hunt· 556-7777 Rm. vacant. 771·2386 HOMES IN ONE? Try ingtoo Landmark Con·
0 833-9781
Hes1er-Brown
RI Al IOU
Mo Dowtt fitaymeet
FrHLlstofVA
Honas in O.C.
BY OWNER Wortd Real Estate th1s French. Chateau ! do'a Crom~. Million ~~~~~~~~~· Br, 2 ba, sprinklers Lots or "old world " dollar recreation LUXURY UVIMG I· Cmt/bclc, patio. Hall or charm. from wooden facUiUes, manl~ur
3 br, 3 ba Blg Canyon NewCondos,2Br,21,;Ba. Famearea.SlOOOCarpet sbutters&cedar1hinglcs eroundsand24hr ri
Townhome. Luxury ~nrurorur~ 2 frplc's, ceramic tll allow. Close to scbls, to tbe 11uspended, wlnd· ty. All realdenls muat
Orange Co's. Largest features . Drnmatlc -· -· kitchens & bath. Pool shops ~ frvry. Open Ing staircase. Beautiful atleasUOyrsofa1e • .For
VA Home Broker architecture! Tenni!'. CORONA s pa.675-4912Broker House Sept. 16th & 17th. plush carpeting aod moreinformaUottCttt:
Call 24 Hrs. P o o I & J a c u z z 1 • HIGu• .A. ~DS . Owner is real est. broker. custom drapes. Sc<:haded Jodc Fide I AUOtll.
675•2626
Owner/Agent ~" House,da11yl·6.4b Call55'7-1646or549-1864. plush patio. Acree o 96).0926
759-0087 The ideal combination or . e•shoded corner. , green grass & towering ---------
WORLD REAL ESTA. TE _.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;: a new home In un Dan r frplc . many By0wner,3BRhouse93 \reeg s urround tbla ..... ~ , e i; ta b I i s h e d xtras. S79,000. 3158 Cor lnlerest.20%down.OWC . popular TNHSE + Harliour IQ42
neighborhood, featuring Ln.j>46·7713 mortgage. 940 Congr~. private apt! Call now ••••••••••••-•••••••••
HESnED
RETREAT
Nestled among
Southwest landscaping.
Four bedrooms and new
drapes in family room
and 1Mn1 room. Ai, new
kitchen appltances .
Patio with fire ring. Call
immediately. 546-2313
oPfN Ill 9 • fJ S IUH 10 •I NICI' [~·INl'I
Want Ad Kelp?
MESA DELMAR
SPECIAL· $82,900.
Cls. to parks1 schls, ten·
nls clb. Big 4 or's on huge
lot. 2750 Portola, CM.
762-0861
all the latest appoint· M V rd G 11 Co To see, 646-3490 Pnnc. this unique home won't•---------m e11 l s. Oversized esa e e o urse ooly. last" ,-
garage, large room11, 3 0000 sq.ft. n57•950. Open 213:S92.1346/714:963·8961 ISL;AHD bat~.stepdownwet·bar , House Sunday 1 · Vi18W tbe COLONIALR.E. WATIRFRO._... mlnioccan view, all fully 556-60760wncr , ________ _. "'
landscaped. walking dis· 3 8 1 b..a.......a 1 GoH Cours New llsUna by orle lance to private beach. r, n ce D """""' ae e Pool home. $58,500. 3 owner. Beaut DavenjlOl't
$195,000. fee. yard~~· f'l SPM Lovely clean home, large Bdrm, 1"' ba. New cpta. ls11d 42 B8r,da ba. ju per
CALL 6•4-72 I I ...,..&0,., a co V' ere d p ~ti o • 3 913 So. A1&1Un. 839-4821 Pan, r own. -~
By Owner. ST1 ,500, 3 BR, bedrooms, dining are•, Owner. on water & 1 more . ea, frplc, cov. paUo, faintly room. brlck Fantastic vlew of Ila Aln NIC1U.
[lt\IL[V ~ work •bop. 488 cost f I replace , de 1 u x e MH111a111tf"9•MOft leacll I 040 Channel. H UJe aar Is
MesaSt.831·286S kltct\en. reduced to ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Wldeclc+45' boat dock. ~~~~===::;!l.:°"============:::--1.$118,950,BK.R,M0.1720 BY OWNER Hunt'& l»,000dntonew$2S0,000 • Landmark adult condo. 2 loan. '
-
Br, 2 Ba, brand now PUllC&LlllALTY
,'\C,~LJ[l/\1(5
ph~b cpt & drpa. CaU (714) IM8·2141. ~
54M585. I~~~~~~
TRAHSPORTATIOH
• • t. I ·,I I n 1 S r:JN ... -·
Cltreted on th.la NEW
bedroom condo on lb water In Orangetree.
AIR CONDITION ED and
eommu.nUy recreatlona
'facllllles. Irvi n e'
newett adult complex.
Tennis, spa gym and
pools. Asklna $74,000.
CAlltoeee.
IAHCH REALTY
551·2000
IEAUTIFUL
WILLOWS
____ _.......
----·
l
. ---...
FORCSTE
O LSON
··~ .......... ...
··~-c-
for Ad Action
Call a ·
Daily Pillt
THE I LUFfS
Better than new! Lge. 3 bdrm. split-level with
bay & lights view. Total·
ly aew lJlterior decor.
Truly outstanding at
Sl.:11.50().
AGENT 640-5560
WESTCLIFF dlx 3 br, 2
ba, country s tyle fam
rm. outdoor entertaining
patios. Open daUy, 1201 Pembroke. By owner,
SHB,000. 648·9836 /Eves
646-0100
Wahrfl'Oftt Cape Cod
3 Bedroom home w /boat
dock in front. $189,500.
Peggy ll'Olftl
Rtaltot' 645· I 53 I
4-PLEX
Excellent rental area -2 miles from
bc:ach. All 2·bdrms & fenctd back
yards. Great buy at $134,000.
3 UNITS
Two are townhouse units with laundry
hook-ups. All have garages.
I
·1 UNITS
Pride of ownership. Six townhouae 'On·
its with huge owners' unit. Garagas.
3 UNITS
NEWPORT BEACH
Bc:autif ul area! All units have
refrigerators & laundry equipment in
laundry room. non•t pass these by!
TWO 4.PLEXES -
COSTA MESA
Excellent corner location, newly
painted & completely decoraWd in.side
& out. Will .sell separate or together.
PRICE REDUCED -SUBMIT OF·
FER!
TRl-PLEX
Pride of ownership, only 2 yrs. old.
Spacious 3 bdrm, 2 bath owners unit
w /fireplace.
DUPLEX-
EASTSIDE COSTA MESA
2-bdrm unit w/privaU: patios ~ de-
sirable corner lot in NEWPORT
HGTS I Completely remodeled ex·
terior, landsca~/sprinkl~.
l!!lllQuail
liilPlac•
Prap•rli••
752•1920
1400 QUAIL ST. NEWPORT IEACH
REDUCED!
3br home. New aru. ~TT8C110M1t
Fncd, Frplc, etc. '78,900. n--. -s
A bo r · Mike Madl&a.o. A1t. ....,_""""_ aorl*>US . rne o to· 492•5151 Rlveralde County 1n Sim-
co m para b J e quality --------1 nymead, approx. 490
situated nr. the bay. Tht. 2 BR, 1 ba home. Wood acres. Perfect ror Jll\ni·
home w/pool k Jacuzsl deck k encl. yard. ranches. 5 Mllea ftQm cannot be deacrlbed ~Y Q ,000. 29412 Edfewood Lake Perris.
words. W fa mountain Rd, SJC. 495-5216 R.C. TA YLOI CO. view & waterf111l in the ---------4 cou•yard, tbls home s..to.... 1010 tll-0350
muat be •een to be ••••••••••••••••••••••• 20ACllS
believed. V AWY . 640-9900 XJnt for investment or 2 STORY /POOL can be aplit. .some •llb
ONLY Sit.too. views. loaded witb oak
Th1s' bedrm, 2 bath Cen· tn.. Seelnll lJ wev.
I lq.BKR. tury Home is on • ar11 <?1•>-a.rn7
lot at end ol quiet cul-d•· oR --uc. Many up1rad ... ----------
Low malatenuc• yard LOAD• W /OAD IY OWNll with Jl V accet1. Good 5 Acres loedild wt&b eat td\Ools. Close to South tr... lft tbe a.Yelancl 111,000. J Br, 1 ba; Oled Cout Plau. SeJler bas National Forest, So. of ~~~~~~~~I brtck ltplc, beam eell'a, bought new home. Call Oran1e Co. Munlei,al r.: _•_al...;..k_to~&ch._"2_·_7822 _____ , l«addJUonal ~. water , •entfe tolllDI
14M ' kDOlla for v'e• •ltea. OwDet will eany . .,._
m4> •n·•i oamouo
' r ,
r
r
•
..
• . I
--···-·-
...... Uttfunlihsd Ho.Ht U~ ....... U•fwW•d w.dnMday, S!ptember 14, 1977 .. DAILY JltLOT j;5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• c
~~~~.~!~!~ ...... ~~~~~.~!~!~ ...... 1t1Rttb C... .. Mw 3222 ........ ..,IHch JZ40 ~Hlh 3250 ..._..U.fwal•1d ~alw•b'-..... 11 ................ -D I a..c....,,. 0 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·······································~ cs.. llOO ......... ~~!? .. ~.~~ ..._..,..,,....... 38r, 2& Hae, yd, 2 car 4br 3ba Upa.raded $650 3 Br. 2 ba. AC, builUJlll, S-.._ Mtwport .. .U 376' CGrw .. M .. _Jml
,,.,, .. "' ~ Pl I .. .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tar•••· .. 1$ mo 75'9·1131 A ~t ,· u Ile a~e .0809 S3'75 mo Nr Moulton C-'-"-3271 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••-••.-••••••••••••••••••••••• ..-'f • n· •• a•<# gr ........__ , •• ~ 3 Io... or~........ • • "' · • Pl 237"., So I "'P"• "'•--• -.._... • -84.2-7.el •ia. vv rea oa. ••••••••••••••••••••••• WATBFtlOMT 2 Bdrm Buhwa ttplc
4 P'l.F.X l24J,000 o-ti l.IDlt, I )''11 old ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ouplea 2 bd I ba No ~9503 or 9~·2200 - -Lovely • br, 2 ba, fplc, 2 Bn. lwcury condo pool. iundeck, •patio'.
WIHTU HMTALS hlkl N la $3SO CLOSE TO BEACH Le · r:NI, cpts. d.rps. ltlcb/pet F\lll.vtum $1500Mo Adu.Ill. No peta S32S.
2 br, 2 ba IS50 ~13_1;.~n. 0 P'1 · · Clean 2 Br. formal din i:e 3 'U8pt~o~ tc b~y • OK, aood area. $42$. etLL GRUNDY 6 7 3 . 14 1 a eve• o,. ---------iNl>;W7UnltP'.n~lduCM, ltbr,lbuS45U rn;;: •t'I ~atJo h~e. tully uparade~0 1°n 963-4567.Aaem,nofee. R!:ALTOR 61H181 weekends. 2 ...... He-• builder will flnianu• 61~ l)'J94 Cottaac. 2 Br 1 8&. patio, D/~.cbtt:'.~tT!~ru~~r;!i eleaant earth tonea. Cu.al Charming 2 br, 1~ ba! --B-R-.-1-~-Ba-.-n-e_w_\;-~ ~tarp Int. 9CllWd for 3 Ul u.1C.l;Jor ... 701$ t-: --new dtcor, carport. S. of & RV ato~age. $42S mo. bit bar. rrp le• etc fplc, OW, 2 car lllrage, oe••MFIOMT drpa c.io.e to bc:b.
Juoau StllO mo AMUMUSUAL Ml':.ylr:~t~t·~ft'ti:n~~ 1lwy.llM3S47 eves. 9722 Verde Mar Panorumlc view. $4$0. cp_l s, drp1, aood WlNTERRENTALS mo.·J/)ay•651-09SO,eves ~forqU1ckaalet11 Ot•O.-A .. IMD lndr t1rdnt1>ulio. 40' allp Soartlllnc 1 Bdrm, partly C 8 rook burst & mo.S81-0075or6:M-3956 neighborhood. $37S . 2BR,1ba. t370 868-8025
A . ~ avtl. Winter or yrly . lurn. Patio So/Hwy. Hamilton) 545·3359; ~NICJUltl J252 96.1-4567Agent,nolee. Lge.3BR,2ba ~ -.--------
Li.rie l'onl Tro" in t'ro011011.~ 1769 S3S0.873-8611,S49·1967 848-2600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br+ den, bltns pool 2BR,2ba. $400 CosteMeM 3124
,...,... <"OIU'tyard, bubbly foun N BAYt.RONT 10 rno CosteMHe l224 38r,2ba.cpls,drpa,2car NlGUEL SHORES, priv. lakes, rec. fae. sai5tmo'. S.STOl .. CH .................. ~.
8n.nd ~ ' 3 2 ~rm tam. UBQ No o1w llv1nai winter rental $600 mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• iar. renced, frplc. $400, commun., dramatic 3 8J8.3807831·3U8 2BB.den.2ba $575 Poxt.olowVll9gt
\l'\JUltl'bt-drmun1\ ubon· your lenonta 114i-Ui70dllY•.~·t!647 MesaVerde3+famlly, 615-5810642-0393 IJR, 2 ba ., comp .Sant Ana 3,.10 l·BR.,yearly · '400 62tW.Wlltoo148<aotO
Uper9ded thruout t'r!lt' f>n vary 11bound11• L.ota of l'V4 ba., new 11aint. $400 ' privacy; sle~ to pool, a • FURN OR IJNFUR.N eocb unit Lu11h ~ridtt ahow• ht'r" -...OaP.-aula 3107 Mo.Nopel.i. 3 Br, Fam Rm. Jge llv lennl11,1l>.:uch . s:uo . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4brtownhomew/f11)1
I• n • d a c •pt 11 11 , SIW.UOO SOUTH <.:OAST ••••••••••••••••••••••• Agenl833·1768 Rm, dinette, bltns, dbl 493·7278 Great 5 bedrm, 2~; baths, •J..cepaUo&enc. gara,iu •PftftkJt-n. tic Sl&~.ooo INVl::sTMENT 1145·1103 SPACIOUS ocoianfronl 4 C le 1 gar . corner lot. Encl fplc. OW, cpts, drps. •Adulla child 16 &over l.y McC.,.. . llr 2 & cumJ>lcluly furn. OM4MWf"S ware. back yd. Grdnr serv. ~ OCIAN VIEW F. V. Ml Sq. J;lark area. Pool &Jacuzzi avail .
..._. 1110 Newport IWO hou.'le• un h>t Dy bme fo'plc . W8hr/dryr, Bcfor.~ you pay ~?me ml rr beach. $475 mo AJuJt11. 2Br, 2 ba. Frplc, Kida/pet welcome. $425. • c.t. Mne 541·772t ~ner S67.~ ,income &ihW11hr, 2 cur gar. no aeenc1es tor, ~he run 546.3429 2 Clubhoui.es J.icu:uls & 963-4567, Agent, no fee. Bay( Z & 3 Bit $SOO & 2 & 3 Bdrms, ma[tire
"'2C> !"o ~)nly 10 'down . pt!b. Yrly rental avu1I ~ONoS~~;RS GcU· 1'h~~ l Bedro6m condominium pools. $460/m~. 752-9260 l.u.xW'Y 3Br, 2Ba Condo, seoo':o~. Wtnlcr. • aPld.~~~:J.!3s pd. 178 8(0• Lt 510 So Gimu.ey. Santa Sept. 15th. 64'1·9582 A t675 7060 """">141• ...._Pro rt1 JOOO Alw 1139 WI Many have and are glad near pool and tennis. 3 BR. 2 ba home. pool, nr So. Cst Plaza, $365 mo. gen · . •••••••~::!....... --Winter rental nr Buy & they did. lOO's or hse's, S2 90 I mo nth . Ca 11 new cpl, $475., l mo rree 64().4462eves Oceanfront "Right on $UO E/Slde triplex. 3bf.
27 UNITS, INOUSTfUAl.
l'ARK Annual income
$109,00o Pr1ct'd al
SSJ0.000 Seller w carry
contract at 9' • Print> on
ly Bkr.~171
5 HOUSES Ocean ~or 4br, trplc & plex's & apt's available 646-4477. reot w/t yr be. 546-6274 v t 2 b 1~ ba C d beach". UtlJ. pd. 1 b 2ba, rrplc, yd, encl ia':' furnace No p e ts . NOW• Al beach or Up ---acan. r. on o S270 $330 61S·0513 TSLM&mt 642·1fi.03
All z bdrm, beam ceiJ. 1213,2tJ.5316 to loo·s or NEW hst~ngs SPACIOUS l level. 3 br. 2 t!lewport leoch 3269 in family area. Highly · · · ; • in.:~. wood frplc'i., pvt e 8 c h day s ma I I ba, pvt yard & garage. l ••••••••••••••••••••••• upgraded. $275. BKR 968-M:IS $375. New 2 br, 2 ba, 4·
yards PLUS 3 older un-4 BR, 2 ba, Seashore Dr fee FREE hf~ service. child ok. No pets. $325. •Nl'TWATHFROHT 962·"471968·1317 plex .. Encl. yd, lauod,
I Willll" I a -15 ,,.c •"""" 8122 Michael Dr, Days u......---11:.._1_ .... _..,. bltiru; 1h. Al for S270,000 .. r e se ..., · mo. ......, . ......,., iw7.3541 eves SJ6.l638 3 Br, bltns, frplc Yrly ..-. rwnw-or BACHELOR TSL Mgmt 642-1603 1o:asts1de C M . Agt 536-1827or!l60·1830 ••COftSUIMl'S Ciulct. ' lse. Days, 774·4384 or Unfwttlshed 3100 __ _.::;, _____ _
SAHCLEMEMTE ~1103 ec;istranohachllll $W0 New E·side 3 br 2 Sl9821r,ROLH. eves1wknds675·6169. ••••••••••••••••••••••• APT 2br. l 'hba studio tyee.
TH l·PLEX -i!Xlra.n1ce:i Nwpt Hgts triplex ,••••••••••••••••••••••• bo, yard, encl. garage, Circle this! Fncd yd,+ BLUt'FSCONDOS Uv~ o~ BAY FRONT & • patio. pool. Kid OK. no
BR, 2 BA owner~ unit $100,500. Three 2 Br un· On The Beach 3 Br. 2 ba. W o. No pets more. Nice area. Call the Leal!~ i.tartlng al $500 enJOY living. 4br, 3ba, din ALL UTILS. PD! pets. nr scbl. $295 & UP
w frplc. Walk to b~ach & its, A"l. 581.0427 or s.550/mo winter. Avail TSL.Mgmt · 642·1603 experts. many more av!. Month. AgenlS44·ll.33 67rm5_.0525Neat. $1100/mo 100' trom the ocean per mo. 2310 Santa Anu, n<>rk s•c.2 ,.,,,. " Call ..., Small f e Pl p C t Avail. now .' 201 E . 64.5-5088or213·371-4032 .--. ..., •""" S.l-0-9007 • now -t...,·~13. 3 BR, 2•r.a HA, gorgeo_ us serv. ,,. es ;N\Ax. ro ren
DUPLEX-Sharp 2 & J
near l>each & purk
$91,SOO.
.,... _.....,., Xlnt family home . .SBr. · Balboa Blvd. Only S2 BRANO NEW CONDO 2
ChJllCh..tl•Loc. Hwttingtonhoch 3140 brand new condo. W1th2 ••ConsumersCiulct. 3i,, ba, lgc fam rm, lge Bayshorea winter renl~I per mo. NO f'EE. Coll: Br 2V.. Ba Fplc E1 ~1de front dplx., 3 br ••••••••••••••••••••••• lrR. patios, 2 car garage. kllch, nr schls & shops. 8600/mo. 3br, 2ba. Avail SuealS.56-7777 anytime. dshwahr, trash cmptr;
hse, all new redwood Bach condo, l blk from J>O:Ol.jac1_Jzzi,tennis.Sub· fZl.S, check this! Nice 2 WesteUff. ~/mo. Yrly lmmed.646-6833 pvt~atio, $400 yrly.
encl. patios, all encl beach. Harbour Pacific. nut on kids & pets. $49.S. Br. kids OK. xtras, rent lse. 640..5231. Condominiums 1 or 2 Br furn or unfurn. 642-3783evs, be!9PM FOUR PLEX Best buy f F 11 f r p I •· CallS49-3710orSJ~H956. serv. ree. No l"•t mo. .._.__,_ .... _..,. · -garages, pool, rpl, . u Y .u n . oo .,,. ..... BLUFFS WATERVIEW _..__ 3425 Adults. no pds. $225 &. uJ I b near beach. $182,500. 1 n d s c pg. $14 2, o o o. J a c u z z 1. i2 SO I mo. 674 Cove St. 3 Br H'' Ba. MUit see. 645-4900 3 BR. & ram., beaut. gat· ••••••••••••••••••••••• $2.50. 2421 E. l6lh. N. Hts. 2 B1,nr, Ondo tsts. C ose to s OP· BE:~~tT~Erft,RY 542.0759 & 752·1920 Gen 213-592·3171aft.6:30pm. huge Fam Rm & fplc. ••ConlUIMrs Ciulct. ed courtyd Agt644.1133 Nu 2 bdrm co~do beaut 646-1801 P g, ~5.8939 Ryan Laguna Beach 3 l 48 Fncd yd. $425. 642-0282 vu, nr shopping mall. -------.....
2l5De1Mar 492·4121~--------mj••••••••••••••••••••••• Jbdrm 2 bu. builtins. \~~l~ik~atocC~~-~~: OntheBay,2Br,2ba,un-LagunaHillsS375mo. ~EANFRONT APTS. 1 Large 2 BR IV.. BA in
3 Arch Bay. 2 Br, frplc, carpets,.drapes, dbl car 848.9468. 842·9700 dergnd prk'ng. full sec. 963-9356 r, wnlr. rcntul. $225 per beautiful T'riplex. Den ~LEX OM 7 UNITS ocn vu. pvt brh. $485 gar, fenced yrd. w/pal10 , Red cc I yr lease . n....a.. Fu 3550 mo.S48·1930or673-7844 with fireplace, country
Costu Mesa. $17 ,500. in· 544·44l8or 499·2066 cover. Gardener paid. 4 B R , 3 8 a N r . i7SO/mo. 833-9442 Eves. ;:r;:.·.~~ •• :': •••••••••• 2Br. $400 mo. yrly or S3SO kitchen with all built-ins. GOLF COURSE --$'50 pr mo. IW-1084 aft Brookhurst & Adams. I Cpl & d H l & Id Great opportunity to own come. Huge lot. sioo.950. Quiet, rustic -I br furn 5 00 PM. No pets Will ne". rent w/ri"ht Newport Crest Condos. 2 & 3 Br. frplc, w/w crpt, mo .. winter. uti included, pdrps. 0 CON
6 S "' " ocean vu. 2br. den, ore. d , Furn & unfum. Ya avail Sept 10 1019 W. water . $345/mo ... !! be a ut1 ru I u n 1 t s o n UNIT house. S250 Older empl. 4 Br. 2 ba Me~a dt!I Mar party. Larry Dunne frplc, all rec racil. Al . BW to bay 675.2773 or Bay Ave. N.B. 673·1674 pe~. See at 2279 A ~o°u:s~~ ~ l:C~~oo~~ I~ oo 30,000 sq ft + + + lot. per~on49.i.8170 ~!~· ~liH~u~tg, cov ~~4~~·.lSSl. 8-4 wkdys. lge 3br, ram rm. frplc. 751-5000. Bail.st. $210/Winler. Ocennfronl ~~l~ St. 631·3149 or
bath owner's unit with l'.oned C 2 R-4 Easts1de -l Bedroom. 3'2 bath~. 67S6SOJ.2332. ea. Sell $125,000. n...a... ...... •&-.&.-3600 Bach (furn) Also 2 Br w flreplacn, only 1 yr new Costa Mesa. $129,950. large It v1ng room, 2 M~a del Mar, lovei'Y3 Br 3 Br, P~ Ba. Nr. Warner & ~ ...... ~ N CONDO 2 b 2'h b "' 2 Ba lk d ••••••••••••••••••••••• <Wllurn) 673-2493 e . r, a . AskingS227,000. 67S.2626 8b'l. private patios, 2 car ·,wa mg 1stance to Graham . ~400 /mo . 2 Crplcs blUns pool & !-~~~~~~~~~·garages In very popular 1111 schools. Avl Oct. 1. 846-7250 W'ESTCUFf 2 Br. l ba. $285/mo. 7~ Very ruce 3 BR, 2 ba. on spa. ~ mo.' 675·4912
area. Avail. Sept. 20th $4.2Smo.SS7·9049 Nottingham Rd .• lge 2 Scot l PI . C. M . the bay, nr. ocean. Bkr Loh for Sale 2200 for year around lease. $21S! Circle this! Nice loc. 3 br. 2 ba, fenced yd. Br. &den, 2 Ba.)~e living 714-642·7743/ 213·592·2067 Families only. Winter. .
I I ••• •••• •• •••••••••••••• Sl200 per month. call the experts for the ~~n ok. $360. mo. rm, separate dining rm, $000 Mo. Agent Npl Hgts area. lbt,•pu
VACANT LOT ~I ~gewater. sp.elxr .. v,;C.50MllllMt'SY?900u'll hkeG. ufi·.ee, dEbll fplc, lge pvtG dyar~: " ...... ,.,..sa.ed 675-1642 615-1566 crp~-wtrl pd.dS240t_~ .. ;f" REALTY INC.
714/846-1371 CDM .,.. ... N h ec gar opnr. r nr .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1st .,. ast + ep • t--g eat, 2 br. 1 ba ome, wtr 1n cld. $625 mo .• ......__1•1_..,. 3706 2 Br upper. oceanfront. tee.213-6S4·51M "•
Rare Spyglass Hill lot w,cpt.s. drps, 2 car gar. 549-1089 dys, 5 18·1300 -.,_ A\'all tiU Dec 1. Utll pd. .
w, magnificent ocean & REAL ESTATE · Checkthis 2 Br 2 Ba kids f'enced yard. Ice area evea. ••••,•••••••••••••••··~ SJ25/mo. 631·3836 Eastslde beaut. 3 br, 2 Ja .
t-'ash1on Island views. ok r -·• d pt' g $350. 963·4Sef. a nt, no BA"tHELOR w /fully . $360/1110. • 1350 S.Coast Hwy. · n~-.. Y • 8 io, ar. r 3 B b f I ( d · ped k' h 'l pd 2 B i al bk • Distr.ss Property! Perfect for your custom 494 _8536 Call the expert rental ee. r. 2 a, rp c. ge yar . eqwp 1tc en ut1 • r w nter rent , 1.-'.I I 548·6885 .•
I r·d ·tr home. serv.Plx.Fee.645·4900 ..,."lB r 1 $400.mo. S200mo.61.S·S578 to ocean. $325 mo. i can m 1 or you. R.C. TAYLOR CO. Laguna Hiiis 3 l 50 1 ""'""· r,. rp e. n w,w 675-4912 Bkr , 673-6210 STUNNING a Br 2 '°9'J Beach area spcc1alti,t ••••••••••••••• •••••••• *•Con~ Gu de t·pt .& pa mt. Front hse lc6oo Pettlftsulo 3707 -garden apt, pool, rec rm .
Probates, ft'nreclo!>ures, 955-0350 Leiirnre World Condo. 2br, S275. 3 9; 2 Bu, kuts pets w big yard, rncd. 'f{U!>S Oceanfront 2 BR, 2 Ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• STEPS TO BEJ\CJI 2 Br, $275.110 W. 18th St.
Bunkruplcies,Olvorcc. t'ull /\ere view site m Iba, carport $IOO mo. OK. Pool, etc. Must see. & trees. Nr Beach I, & gar, crpl/drps, rcfrig Winter. 2 or 3 bdrm Oplx. gar. winter, $275. Adults, -
Investment properties. L•atlbrook. Bwlder start-Ba mes 545_3722 C:i ll the rental expert major shop'g ctr. Pel ok Yrly lsc. 5650. 642·3443 S295 up. 114 E. Balboa no pets. 673-0040 Small l bedroom. Below market pnce r Pl L' 645 900 Owner 675· 1~. Blvd l ·879·5991 -All utilities paid. WortdWidelrobrs ing sp:irwus3 BRq~ality ..... _wport-;-ach 3169 :.crv x .. ee ·4 NEW4br,3ba,bltns.cpl · OCEANFRONT Class 838-1742 home. Will customize to nc uc ••ConlUfMf"'SGuide S17S. l Br. new w/w l'pl & & drps Npt. Hgt s Roomy,lu.x.uriows "A .. No pets. 3 Br. 2 Ba.---------
•
--•C•a•ll•6•7•3·.454_5 ___ 1 s u1 t . we l I financed. •••••••.•••••••••••••••• Jb 2b N ls $375 paint. Nice yd. Rear hl.e. 631 0.103or646·7085 Ba. y View·apt, large 67S-4688Nostudents. ' l Br apt. Adults/no pet~. 928294 Would hke to rent studio r. a. u crp · · Nr. Bc h Bl Owne r ------Part furn. $175. 1876 4 · apt for Under $200 Ulll mo. lsl & la~l +$lOO. 675-1959. MOOt;RN 2 br. 2 ba, den. NearN.ll.Y.C. Sein Clement• 3776 Fullerton A.ve. 548·1356 DUPLEX LOT R·l, San Clemente, pd. Friendly but qwet ..._S48·8204.6<16·2316___ condo. Poo1. jacuzzi, 1 Br.Z,Ba~= ••••••••'•••••••••••••• ---------Corona *I Mar ocean.park view. By fem. Stephanie 646·3818 IHSTAHT MOVE-IN 2 BR. bllns, new ci-pls & Wash, dryer. Nr. beach. 2 Br.3 Ba. • Immaculate 28r, l ba apt. lllANJ) HEW
Two bedroom.home plus owner. $38,000/oHer . L<>vel •ba front 3 br 2 ba Nr new twnhse. 1921 drps. Beach/Gurneld S475.5.58·8S34or 675-1938 Pool & sundeck . 2br.2ba.allbltns,frpk,
large r.enlal unit; ex· 492 7517 or 492·5721 bch fu.e bshwhr. w~~her Anaheim St 2 Br, I' 2 ba. $350. mo. 554·7210 __ 4 Br. 2 ha 1444 Santiago, S'l75/mo. 494-7281 encl. gar. Balcony, PJltlo,
cellent income potential R·3 LOT 13 Units Costa & dryer C213 l697-6087 sm pct child ok. All ~on NB SISOO mo. Agent, laundryrm$300-'32S. •
ID fines t es la blt~hcd Mesa. Prine. only. Call 1213)749·4-145 , bltns + air Only $315 Hart.Our 3242 541·5032 Apw l11wttls TSL Mgmt 642·1803
are<i. Carpel. drapes, 2 5 Spm 559 5935 mo Call Mgr 645~-••••••••••••••••••••••• --------1 /b ~shed Cirepl.aces.$175,000. --· -------Be a ch duplex. 3 br ~1e..,a Verd~3 br i.i. ba, Wik .lo bch. t e nnis, lmmac.2br,tba,w ay ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nice & clean 2 bdrm.'
Walk to everything!,,
S260. Agent 644·50M · Out of County Winter~-Students ok Fam $425 tst. L:.t $l<il manna. Elegant cl_ean. Shorec-hffs Qual 2Bram ~-~nec)Jr~W .. ~~~.~~ G1n1ral Jtoi II .Quail l. PT'Optriy 2550 ~a1~9 15 751·9392 l>CC New crp-drp pnl No 4Br. JBa. 2 frplcs, $700 rm home Lge patio & ly. 673.0566. • .................... .. Plac• ••••••••.••••••••••••~•• SHORT TERM RENTAL pets. SS1·6623 aft 6 PM m o. 848·115 85 days, back yard. P\ t bchs. Lg 2 Bdrm, clean. Jtjds Prop9rtl•a Ranc ho Ca hf? rn 1 a · 2·4 mos. Pvt bch c(lplm 2 Br. child & pet OK. 278 846-8852eves _ i700 mo lse. I &2 BR nextto beach. Aft 2 Bdrms. Never Uved in. O.K. Carpet, drapes. No
752-1920 Temecula. 5br. ram rm. I-um Unr. 2or 3 Br:] Ba , K St $320 E L1<lo Isle. 2 Br+ den. 5:30PM 1 mi lo beach. Also de· pets. $235/mo. 1st & Ja:>l
14ooouAtlS1HIWl'OlfllACH 3ba , rrplc . wet bar . Cplc. bay view. Grdnr. nox · mo ves '"N 324 \'1ew.~1 mobe. 673-9034 luxe new townhouse. 536·1857 766 No . 1
Premium lake & mnt vu. Reduced rate s.i8·0SS4 548 ISlt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Open 12.5 dully, 1407 Shalimar Dr. C.M.
SKY'S THE LIMIT
2-4· 12 & 24 Units Beuch
and Inland Orange Coun
ty location for highest
value. Call 979-8533. Bob
K. or Chris.
Clbhse rac. 2600 sq rt. Qc. --. --3Br, 2liu, bltns.recenlly · RENT'ALS Lido hie. 2 Ur+ den. Oceanfront all elec, furn. . Oc led & d r d il2001mo. . 1 B~ Jnt'ld gar . S300 mo. Delaware. Huntington $260. 2 Bdrm, cpts, drps. cupancy t 1. $12S,OOO. Oceanfront 2 br hsc. patio, cdrpe poinle • nc 2 BR, 2 ba .......... $440 On Waler. 3Ur+omre, 642.21640r 673.0782 Beach. 642·9601 846 1826 bltinli. 1 mile to bch. 792
Qill owner at 644-4779 or gar. Ulll pd. ·No pets Y · covered patio, boat 3 BR, 2 Ba ....... •13Si700 r"m rm. din rm. Lge or A.... Shalimar. New paint, no 64&-8402 or 548-1789 Winter S375 , mo. 646-2510 or RV storage area. $375 3 BR 21 B · r•50 "' "• mo 979·6761 ' 2 a ......... '" h 0 m e w I c 0 mp I el e OCEANFRONT deluxe,•--------111111 pets. Open house Sunday
8UMITAPT. 1 Br.1 blck lo ocePn, 4 BR,21 11 Ba ......... S795 privul·y. On water at g"llr,bltns,winter,lBr,lalboalslaad 3806 orca11Saturday67S·7~79
2Bdrm,2ba.Lovacancy clean. quiet, ulll pd, no 3 Br.2 ba,cpl~.drps,kids 4 BR.C20SB.aT.A .. M .. E.S .. A .. S420 turnin1: h<1!>1n VIEW. ~.3Br,$.52S.673·6640 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Id d sz7.s · 25 ok. 2 car gar. $410. grdnr SISOO . area. 4 yrs o . Air con . pets. 1wmtet 54~1-14 incl. 831 9!)8l 3 BR. 2 baths ........ S450 . · •mo. Corona def M• 3722 t'ROM S22S TO $750
$188,000 Steµs tu beuch, 3 Bdrm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• All yearly: also houses
Cal1 Mr.t'rey542-3456 HousftUnfvmilMd Eastside lge 1 br house. beaut de c orated . Avail. yrly, 1 BR on Included.
2 Br .+-studio, encl gar,
cpts, kids OK. No pets.
$310. See Bart 376 E. 16th
St.
BEN HINKLE R. E. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beamed clngs, fncd yd. $750/mo lsc be h R bold R It f l ==--_:~!!!!~:_:::::_i Ranchei, Fanns. CieMf"al 3202 util pd. No dogs. S235. WATERt'R.ONT HOM ES ( 2a~ 3-,Prz ~a.t1lfi '°c,0~ um 675~2/ nves . 2 Br l Ba, $325 n;io,' l Br 1 '"-•·s _mo_._548_·6680______ CALL63H400 1710675.7764 --Ba, $210 mo, ullJ pd.1st.
WTV... 1~~~~!!!!!!!!~~ ---------lcAooP...msuta 3107 last & dep. 548-8204 or Sweet 3 br, 1 ba, cpts, r: 2 Br. sparkling clean, new ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-2316. CM. 4 ri.x Hunt. lch.
Pride of ownership, 3 hr, •••••••••••••••••••••••
H'i ba owner's unit. Just W~•Bch hse, duplex,
reduced to a low $148.000 uruts or for exchange or
963-oati NEV RANCH
TWENTY
UNITS
Priced for quickie sale -
Oceanside. $435,000.
12 Bldgs. 8 wells. 300
PLUS level acre Close
CA line , $420,000.
biJ.2617
Rad Estate Exchancp 2800 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Why pay iaxcs1 ·Trade
t'rank zetarney Realtor
494~502 HOMEFIMDERS
California' largest
Rental Service EXCHANGE Sl4S l br furn. Orange
DELUXE DUPLEX, Npt $150 l brk1~s. plex
lkh. It's a beauty. Has 4 .. i1701 br, k!ds.11!1ll
Ddrm und 3 Bdrm unit. $1902 br, air, unit
Roth rented. Exchange $2102 br, kids ok
only. Prefer Industrial $215 3 br flniplace
prop. S2352bbr,plex,C.M.
675-496 I S2753 r, pets. frplc
THI C USO $325 3 br 2 ba condo AL M CO. Open7day11 Fee
REALTOR 152S Meu Verde E, CM
2819Newport Blvd, N.8. SS7.0IJS
dfW, pauo, 2 car gar For L!ie. "Seovlew" cpts & appliances. 1 blk $350. 2 br, rba. block to
Fncedyd.Kids&petOK. w swim.tennis club to beach, lndry. garage, beach. Nr. all Garage. 2 _er 1 Ba w/gar. lndry
$38.5. 963-4567 Agent. no pr 1 v 1 I e lt es. Near no pets , $3 7 5 mo. Adults/no pets Yearly. facil. $250 mo. 2009 14a·
fee. ..Spyl.(labs Hill"! 3br. l-492·5372 collect. TSL Mgmt G42 1603 pit'. Mgr Apt. K. 54S-6U.S
Enchant\iig 3 Br 2 Ba . '+523 CAMPC15Dl~lfl'll"E ~ced. 'c~~~~/1~~!1~~~!· Costa Meta l 724 Corona ct.I Mar llfi 2 br apt remodeled. Water
great loc, quiet nbrhd. B C & U 7.,, '""" • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• pd, no pets. Refs. $275 . i.tone fplc. lovely yd 3 .r 2 Ba, nr U I nlv. .,. .,.v.. mo 1st I t + d po l 'd l1 dbl g High, ava1I immed. $.525 $40.00 WEEK & UP · • as:9'69 e il w,cov pa o. ar lse 559.5229 Condo Blue Lagoon. 2 Bd, •Studio" 1 BR A..J. 645-81169; 675-w,opnr. Nr rwys, Ian . .pool, tennis. Sec. pvt bch. .,~ re .... ..,. ~-8908;Jeanne646·7173 TURTLEROCK 4 er; ~/mo yrly. No petS. *TV&MaidServAvail I ' MesaVerdetriplex2bt"+
DClftCIPoint 499-4896 *PhoneServ,Htdpool 'Tl,. ~''!!'",~~~ den, 1 ba, frplc, p~tio. 2316 Newport Blvd, CM t.. .. _ " ~~0 encl gar. no pets. $300 .
YSHORES nearly ne 548-97SSor645-3967 2849 Lemon, 979-3432 •
..:....--------T"2 Br den! Ba, 16'e patio, 1 Fun1 lge & small 1 br CORONA DEL MAR
blJc to pvt bcb. l8C)O mo., clos.ed in gar. lncl'd: i Br Townhouse. frplc. ...-.... Pool, tennis. Some ocean Adulu. nu pets. 2110 &. Catalina views. Clo:iie Newport Blvd. to .shopping &. fine beach.
Bt.fl bacb, lg, m0<f kit, util 644-2611 .................
M•1•illunl M arln
• &WI 1,2 41 ..,,.. 4Q.Olm
:ii BR. maJnll\«al Utt vv Wondbun11a1 frpl
Avl. 10/l. esn mo . ..aa ....... , ...... ,, . ......................
Hurr Whit .-lkd t~r '
'.41! t4 , . .,,,, ~II I' t\t.11 r. U
I 1 1 1 11 ' • \t, ~It
t
. --. --
•
e•,..v•oeq
lll-1441
or63&-0761
Dental Ex~r OttbodOntl ~ptlonlst needed . lo busy trv. omce. 552·1900
........ ___ .,.. __ .. ~-.---.. -----------------. ---'
Add it ... 6u1fd u ... 01ap0r ll •.. Hammer It ... Carpet SERVICE it ... Cem nt IL.Wire lt ... H lt ... Ctoan lt...Move
it...Pr•ss U ... Pa1nt 1t .Nall It .. Rla5t.er lt. .. Fl>c It ... DIRECTORY
,,.._,..,. C-tllf/Cwret. ...,rtul 01 ., .. S..lces MMKl.a1int I ~llllnl , .... /P.,."-9 ' ,,...._"••..... an,... · · .................................................................................................................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ir.~ ................................... .
86.I Appllan~S.rv Ct:M l:.N 1 WORK All l::Ltt'I'RICIAN prirod llANOYMAN-flomn & lMMAC\J'LAT£ CLEAN· S yrseicper, tree eat. alao Floe wot'lt. St.Ile ltc & In· Coes ... P.... ftOOIS FORLl!:SS
Tttll'CUARGt.llO kinda Kl•uonablt• lo'r" rt11bt·(reu ~•tlmala on Aph. Con1clentlo"' ING. YouD!SERVEthe lndscpoa matertat•vall, 1rd. Exti!tior 1peclallst. lnt·Ext. s 11ro,.1 n Ail,,.,... nean avail.
S Main. A l'»ti Call7~ l1.raeor1m11l1Jobt. Crl<amun.Pb645·0302 BF.Sr.75'-0377 clean up• ref'a. Jay TryDM-CaltcoW.MSS craf(smanlblt>. Qual ft'• est. l1e/bond'd. ln· IMH&D n 01 ---L.lr 873·0359 848-4<M3or99S·2W pa&.nt.t "104'4 otr normal u SenJotctuaeosclllcnL ff 61 O Conc-rete All ---Profeulooal window CARPET, WINDOW, WORK GUARANTEED rai.';1'1$.U21Ctee.a.. --an)'time ~. coarrt't•, bl~ll ai h•u:Mg • w11t1er. Palntlna. In· PLOOR CLEANING t1• a 1 r Ifttertor/f;"tr. Ft .. tit. •
brick work. rrr" e•t.i. •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• lt/t'xtr. odd Jobs. J erry Dutch Malnlenance •••••••••••••••••••••~· 2Synexp.~·029S Palnilni. Hoex\ei, latr" ~. lJe'd 6 JMJ'CI.
II• t'1n11Jl n'rnod, Ur'd .. 1-ond.dl7:1· 7ZO Wt.:l':DINU·CLt-;ANUl'S MS-llW? Servlce~·lS08 Brtckwork. Small Jobs. K l 1 p I ti Dldlor. ApU: Jt:C'-1· ~I*· Free eat. Call l!jt::Cc':r~~ Ca:tsectw ,..,.::e::y•t.inw'm'.~7 Gf'ecllng HOUSECLEANING ls our ~:.':..;)~~~!~•" 1:~/Ext co:u~cr:l~i \1.LOratea.m. ......_ md'1.-0Walt ~ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• --••••••••••••••••••••••• Buslnoaa. Reliable apts, resldentlal ",...._../l.,.ir ••
---------Ji J lluffman 41 Son, Oen Oardcnln& Service clean Sklploader, d\&mp tnick, i>ervlce, Janice'• Rae· Mo•lll9 mobile homes. 836·1120 ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• •••H••••••••H•••••••• c:.r,.t S.,,.tc. l'.ontr Cwstuan Alt 6 Add, up Ii huullnai. weekly tuuwna. tree work, arad· gedy Anu at 67~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• VERY NEAT PATC1t CERAMIC TILE. New or
••-••••••••••••••••••• p • l • o a. t' ab 1n•t1 , malntunance. ReHon1&· lnl. demo. et<'7M·3930 Houtecleanlng by reliable Local & Lone Dl1tance 1~'!'~l:,~rr/,. ;;:~ JOBS&Tl!XTURE re~l. l'ree eat, 1ml
C:it:r1"t Mu •1ll I•;, )oun font11\'a Now l'\11U1l H•·11 bit' rut81, fr~ etllmalt!I HeG couple. References Movln1 .. Lowest rate111, ests.64s.IS76 An~y ll'ree._ 813·14• Jo'-welcome. W-1268.
ur mine llep11 r~ • Ir romm 80 484'/ Alter 4.30 ••k for l<on. lllJ 963-Mll llS26QlS · fast, efrlcient aervlce. • 1IU ,-l'Cantnc l001 Guar work ~I L\c ltondwd ~~ll ur541'"'817 •••0 •n••••n•0 •• .. •• or · · Frets est. MaJeatic Cornm'I" ResldenUal No Pt illlht ..._. _______ _
at bill r H\'lnai. •'rt't ---Hau.Uoc. movin1. clean\&p Houlewon RtUCllble Modern Moven638-8552 job too bll or too s~all ................ •••••••• Ttade JOUI' old atull for N ,CIU»al ltoom •d d1tlnn1 RcUablu Expr Japane~e 17/up.Treework.Reae, • 20 )'rt axpr. RoomsHOMESAVERI. Ph1mb-new .1oodlea with a
----lfr mo1k ltn .i , Cua tom Gardener. lte1u1onable, fut, free est 842·4597 Own trans. 548 0431 ,......,/l'-.erint $15/up Fully lnsrd & lie ing " Heat1n1 Ir air con· Classified ad. 642·5678 iw¥>., 1tt-c1m dun bomea bv l.ayn~ t:xp'd, !_!:~ci;t.84.s-S230Mike. Xlnt bousecleanln1 done ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oddjobtstooe36-Ql9.5 · dltiooin1, Fr" esi, $10 .,.. ___ ,.. ____ ..
Cofor bnahtener•. wht reasonable. 552 3H6 p f J L d OCC Stladent. Bl1 ~ 'f by lady w/expr. Depen· PETERS P,\INTING hr. Honeat It reliable USI THI cpg 10 mln ble11ch Clu11n cv~ ~. t,~~~':/e~~n ~~~~ truck. Trub, tree trim, dable, own trans 1147·3837 Eicpr'd. Reas Rates. Int/Ext dependable, reaa. service. BofA, MIC OK.
Uv, chn rm. ball ,JS Av& Oryw"ll And Ac uiH . lnel mowinl trimmlni etc .. Randy 642·5703, Free Est. Call <rene lreeestlmale.CallJay 751-31!!0 DAILY PILOT nn f7 ~. COl.lt'h SlO. ch . . , o . •c · • • 549-3666 . Ho~ecleaning. Expr & 552·°'58 845·7965 --------·• .. , ST SS.. Guar ellm Pt'l odor ~pe<: .• St. Lie, 63tl-S7:lll or 1>praymg, weed.log. Free . rehuble Japanese lady. DRAlNSCLEARED A
Cpt rt'p.alr 1S Vrd ex pr (213 »&22 0279. _est S45-7Q72 CHEAPEST hauling I~ Nda trant1portatlon Paint Your Ccntle Sml painttni co. 1mall FROM $3.~ RISULT ..
Do work myselC Ref G-.ral S....lc•s · town. Fr est.. CHEAP· 642-4389 Average Extr 1 Stry $39.S prices lnt/Extr. Depen. Call T51-llM2 SllVICI
S3l·010l . a.c:trical ••••••••••••••••••••••• M2-2995 or 645-1390 . 2 Story $5iU, lntr $45rm dable. Work auar., Cree •
-••••••••••••••••••••••• HANDYMAN· c l ~8""') Xlnt housecleaning · by Prices incl matr'M•bor _es_t_._754_..an_l ____ _. DlllCTOIY
C:....t/Co.cr.te ELECTRICAL SERVTCE elec:tnul, p·lu~~n.,r~ •••••••••,•••••••••••••• day.Owntraruiportatlon. Guu/lnsrd,Freeeat. PAJNTl""-,... I t /Et ...., For Result
•••:••••••••••••••••••• CAU.S ~s. hr, & SMALL Ooors646-6851, 147·27S7 Want a REALLY CLEAN ~ Ted 627·7900or6J4.7085 .Expr'd'. .. h~ne~t~ n!at ••••••••••••••••••••••• Service Call
ONE MAN Crew. S yrs ex· JOBS842 8233 HOUSE? Call Gingham COMPETENT, DEPEN· . Reas. Llc:'d. 984·10(5 RC?QPS lnstall~ factory 6,.2•5671 pr pounnc Ir fuushing. u....&...a..~d Rt-~....1c HANDYMAN Girl. FreeestMS·Sl23 DABLE custom i;ervice. PROFESSIONAL Paml· Dave direct; estab I 35 yrs. ,. Set your own forms, save .._. ._..-.n NO JOB TOO SMALL HB/Npt. &48·-0647 Ing. Jnt.er/Exter. Reas, Call Harold Gunn, w. JJl money.661-2423 Lie 327136 645.0074 675·244() WantAiiReswta 642·5678. workguar642·0386 ClasallledAda 642·W18 So&S-2961 ._ _______ ,.
HefpW•t•d 7100 H.lpWattt•d HelpWantecl 7100 tWpW.ted 7100 HefpWanhd 7100 ~pWmst9d 7100 HlfpW..ted 7100 tWpW._tH 7100 HtfpW..e.d 7100 ••....•.....•......••.. ......••..........••.. . ........•...•.•.....•.•••.•...••.•.••..................•..••..••••.•.....................•.•..•...•.••••.•...•..•• ··············~········ •••.....••••.....•.••..
Dental. Orthodonllc, ESCROW SECY chalrskie, exp'd, Hunt Bc:h,1142-7707 Mariners Savinfs is
-:Wiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;l 'eeklna a quallCled • 1'lirrow Secretary for Its Dept. St-Ore
ROBINSONS
...._wport .. ach
Will interview
applicants for:
COSMETOLOGIST
AHTHETIClAN
ALSO
HUD CASHIER/
CASH OFFICE
F/time positions. Xlnt co. benefits. Apply
Personnel )ton lhru Fri
Hpm ·
2 FClshloft tslattd
Equal Opp Emplyr M /F
N.B. ore. Min. 6 mo's ex·
per. req'd. Xlnt 11al,
working condff & benefits
mclud. dental. Apply Al.
Manners Savings
1515 Westcllff Or
Newport Beach
Or Call Personnel
i''or appt. 642·4000
Equal Oppor .Employer
ExecSecys/RE loS12K Secy;&nk to
Recepl/Typlst to S7
?\cctng Ct:k/EDP S7 Irvine Personnel Agency
4B8 E 17lh Costa Mesa
Suite 22a · 642· 1470
General Office HOSTESS, DAYS .... ...tory Control/ 1-------•IOLDER COUPLE u com· flPoducffcNI Asdtt.
HOUSIWIVES Apply ln Per'$0n ~or Tra&Me MACHINIST NEW JN TOWN? D!,I· plUlions & aides to elder· ~per 'd In production
SSS SSS S COCO'S Sm-irowln& CO$ta Mesa nUsCied w/present post-ly couple. Room. board& apec1n" <mark·up) or l.Jl YP I req'd. Xlnt Mfgr Is looklna for a Uon? Would • .-ou like A llOO/mo in lovely home ....... us;ri,..• ror tyn.5et· Fall is here & although it 78 Fashion bland, NB co. benefits. Call betwn 9 "ood m chi' 'st ror our ea 1 1 1 ....... ,,.._ M -· -.... ll'ft ... Op E 1 11> a m reer oppor. w /mu t n """'"""ta esa area. ••·g & pa ire layout. Xlnt may be early It's lime to ~u.. por illP oyer &12, 545-0403. machine shop; Should million ss firm? Earning OUI Mr. H at 631·0210 p~freadTng ability re ~~s~~:"C~~IB;~x~ HOTEL-BELLMAN, day JANITORS·P /Tlme, haveexperon•et·upand potential In excess ol days or 541-4200 unUI t q'd.S760&.o1tart..Educa·
Time/Lire Libraries hau s hirt, Alrporter Inn Irvine. Fountain Vly, short run punch press. 12(),000. Will train. Call eves. t1onal P"ubllshlnf Co. in
" Hotel contact Mr Ha N B h c II Al\ cbuciter, mill. lathe, and 751·9'"~. --------"• c .. C 11 Ca II the finest & one of the • · · D· wpt c · 8 5...,.7311 , drill press. tool & die ex· ..,. OPTOMETRIC TECH., .~... 8 ro nc.
most profitable -p/tlme nanll33-277o !7182 Armstrong Ave, per h elpful but not ~ approx. 30 hrs p/wk.1_75_1_·2_113 ______ _
jobs avail. We o!ler 3 HOTEL Receptionist, _l_rv_l_ne_.______ necessary. NURSE/Aide/Companion Hours nex.lble . Exper. ftlOGRAMMER
shlfts per day to fit Into neat, honest, willing t Jewelry Waxer Cole Instrument Corp. Must have car .. 8:30 A-lo req. M lsslon Viejo. 2.3 Yrs ex.ger. Honeywell
your schedule, o base learn. Advancement opp-. Orange co. &t.2·8080 E.O.E. 1:30 P, Mon t.bru Sat. SS 831.0SSl eves. · , Easycoder pref'd. Bu.i.
hourly wage + a com· ty. 49'7-2.446. . 714.·979·6124 hr.~. · -oa PllOCISSlur-degree rrerd. CPI. 180 mission & un xlnt bonui1 . -"• No travel. F/time is Housecleaning. 2 Days iewelry sales, exclusive *MAIDS• MURSESAIDIS Cl.HK Newpor Ctr Dr. N.5.
avail. wkly,. short hrs. Must be shop, So. Cst Plaza. 3 Tile Inn at LagW1a 7-3 and 3-11 abU\a. Every Busy ofc It phonec. Uae 644·436(), ask for Ray
1'IREDOFTHE t;CCic~ent. No smoke. Cun days per wk. Some nltes. 2ll N. Csl Hwy, LagUJ1a other weekend orr. H.B. calcwat.or, type, follow· C-Orulelly, ext~. ·
ROUTINE? tive-m. N.B. 642·3481. Apply in person. Ci ro, S. MAINTENANCE MAN Coov. Hoep. U.7·3SlS. ~. Poreigo markellQg P/TI,_ COOKS _
THJSJOB IS FOR YOU! HOUSlllMEEPER.S Csl Plaza. te<tulred by Our Lady exper. dtslt1ble. Irvine Pvt Coun Cl b E CALL US NOW AT 151\ '" ---------Queen of Angels Catholic Nunes Aide, exper'd on· Complex area. Send re· · ~ u · x· 8lMOt5 Mature, exp er' d J. Herbert Hall Jewellers Church, salary + alwilo Jy. Pvt duty. Eldtrly suma or letter to Person· ~enced. tr Interested
TIME-LIFE &FtllCme. Bayview Manor ,car1reer minded jewdelrdy aPt. Contact Rev. w. R. 1ent w5heeSulchr. Chonv nel, PO Box 2415, .... ~°!,! ... t~>''p'!utr~w:'°al~ LIBRARIES onv. Ho11p, 2055 sa es person nee e . HarveyS44·0200 Hosp. at/ 1.1 12 rs. Newport Beucb. Ca .. ~ " ....
OESIGNEJt F.qual Opp Emplyr M/F Thurl.n Ave, CM 642·3:i06. Leading to mgmt posi· 640-8292 Leave naame & 92l8Q. _644_·5404..,..... _____ _
Restaurant & com-lion. Apply in person. al phonenumber. ~M...-c.e mercial interior. Min 2 Exler. Lunruscape "Main·•--~------• HOUSEKEEPER 3333 Bristol St., S. Coa11t Malnt. Engineer _________ ,Paralegal for small law ....,._.,
yrs exper, capable of tenance Person needed. GEN Ofc. girl. p/tlme, lite & Compaulon_. Youne Plaza, Ste87. ROBINSON~ NURSES oClice. AiJ'2()rt area, N.B. ltt.,.dors
rendering for presentu· Ex per. ne e. Call olc duties. Mual be de· Lalin Woman pref.Some Ke h ~ Probate.1:u return&. ~/F. Good visual &
tion with client, xlnt Margaret. 557·0150 pendable&haveownrar knowledge English re· Y0PunTc ~TRYO•R ,,__.. .. ach a~DES tO tAQ funding oC.tr"5lll. steno· manual dexl.erity. Elec· f wkdys 8:30-4:30. ~ ~ errands. HB. quire d . Room & A A r-"r.· · Al .,.. graphic skills req, Phone tronlcs background. G ~fie< it:) salary open. -~' board +small ulary. Day shift.. n·house com· Is lnl1~inj P'Cor: J-11 & 11·7 83J.'9982 Yu mtn. ex per·. Call 71 S40.2860 FACTORY Wnte to P.0.Box 2674. puters.Req'sspeed&ac· MA .... """'AN I Stcrff&,.+Duty Carol, 581 -3830. Xlnt
Dlshwasher·lunch. Short PACKAGIRS GEHOFC $750 NewportBeach,CA92663 curacy. Key lo disc ex. EHGINHll Exper.&RefsReq'd PARTS/STOCK benefita.M.V.area. ·
hrs. Nr Bristol· Buker. Female. Merit raises. Jnlluentlal publisher of. . per. helpful. Sal open. Must have exper. In air Gooda.._........._ a....~ Exper. deSlred, not re·
5-10.J&ll aft 6 is:n Monrovia Ave, N.B fer& vanety to dependa· HOUSEICEEr,.Ett . Xlnt benefits & -working cond.., plumbing, elec -..nw...,... · q>d. Will train. Must paes•--------S48·S12S. ble pers. Call Rene. 2 days a week. Own conds. Apply, National tri.ca.i worlt . Apply A•.U4owCo.at co. physical lncllad. back RealF.8tateSalespenon Document Control · 833-2700. ~nnis & Den· transPortation. Laguna Syste ms Corp .. 4361 PenlOOJ')el Dept. LISCOUUE X·rays. Call for appt. 1000/oCOMMISSION .
Cleric Fiie Cierk nis PersoMel Service or N1&uel. 496-095& Birt'h St, N.B .. 1.Near OC Mon·Friday 2·4Pm HlrMl R-.htry ~7639E.O.E. We forn is h desk-
Small Orange Co. firm M.•trAOullMomet1t g:,ine, 2082 Michelson Housekeeper, live·in, _AJ_rport)E.O.E. 2FosMonlsland &M.dlcalSenlcH Part·tlme In tlamburl'r teltpbone-secretar.v 'Ir
has nero for self i.tarllng Beautiful . surroundings N.B. Pvt rm/bath.. Good JUTCHIEH HEL,ER Equal OpJ>Or Employer JS I Hospital Rd & Sandwich stand, CdM hill~ .... C ... ~ ... RLTY
• 'indlv. w/'J.5 yrs ex~r. in plw; act1v1ty gaJore for G... Ofc Trne $600 salary, 644~ p rt tJ M th F · · ... _..._. .. Kh area 873·3'30 --~ document control. Typ. career seeking person. E h f · ~ me, on ru ri. .. ,..... • ---------• 485-1870 eve: 831.(JT3'7 '
Ing skillsreq'd. Sal com· Call Lisa, 841H288. Pen· r!~~~rs~~·v~0~. ~~I~ ,Ho.u se k e_e P.1 n g 2 hrs~day,549·944s 1-M•a•in•te•n•an-ce-.---•I AcrosefromffoatH<>&p Part time abllt. S.1or 1-8, ---------
nwnsurate w/exper. Ap-nls & Denrus Perso~el Carrij!, S33·2'700. Dennis Ch1ldc1;1re. bve·in or d11· llitchen $teward FAA WEST CALL TOLL REE T•lepbone Answering REALF3J'ATE ply In person, Scientific Service of .. Huntington & Dennis Personnel ly basis. 644-6887, Nwpt " 642-9955 540-9954 Bureau. work OD but)'
Drilling Controls. 4040 Bhch,16168BuchBlvd, Service or Irvine, 2082 Bch. Pvt Country Club, Expr. SERVICES I~~~~~~~~~ 1wilC!hboard. EOE. *SALES• ,. D N 8 Ste 121. -----------• nect'llSar.Y. 1-'or interview Productioo Facility' I: 5411-3333 ........_ J .,am pus r. . ~ ----....------• M,!chelsonOr. HOUSEKEEPER call!M4·:k04 . Real Estate aaleepeop~ _ss_:_.905___,t.__E_O_E_. ___ Fl.OOR WAXER. FJlime, ·NptBch. IRVINE, CALIF. NURSES AIDES PART·TIME t!olle.ge open yeur future. Let us DOORMAN exper requll'ed. Call GIRLFllDAY I..ive·m. must have car, Launey?~ An excellent job OP· AJI Shifts. Good bene. man. Mon·Frt for help you into the bu.si· ~· 540·7811. 17182 BLACKIE'S room, bond, aalary. l(\ature, ex.per'd . portunity for a perso& Apply Garflel~ Conv. warehousework.S54-2730 ne1t..-Join •.com9any
Must have neat, rlcan Armstrong Ave .. Irv. BOATYARD 151.71~ days, 645.4628 Fi time. Bayview .Conv. w/mecl'tanical ability Hosp. 7781 Garfield Ave, ---------• name 16 years in Orange
t.tudent. Apply aft 7 pm, t3> General Maintenance keeping, typing & bk· ---~-----• CM &42-JSos electrical & plumbing lo l8320. Pllb caUon11 firm W a fr en al RE A 1.
appearance. Xlnt job for ---------• 20·25. tfrs wk. Record eves/wknds. Hosp, ~ Tburin Ave', adequat.,e lmowledge in H.B. 847-967\ E.O.E. • ,att.~·Out County. Call Claire or
MaM's So. Coast Plaza People needed. Apply in kpng. Req. Knowledge of Housekeeper/Live lo, bi· ---------make repairs & preven· Nurses Aide for paralyzed aeeka ca e pen. Call ESTATE by MoVAY.
Theater 3, Next to l};rson, 1131 Back Bay boat terminology· & hni;ual OK. Balboa lsl. LEGALSECR£TARY live maintenance oC food yowig woman. 8-5, Mon· Marion, 833·2700. Dennis C714tl42·tJ7t
Sumitomo Bank. corner r, ~ B. hardware. Non smoker. Children. 67S·S074 Corporation. Eicper'd. C~~~f::. equipment & Frt: Bal Isl. 675·5652· & Dennis Peuo.nnel -Real--F.li-'_ta_t_e_S_a-les_P_eo_p_lt!
Bristol&Sunflower. G'~E RA L shop. Call · HOUSEKEErlA NewportCenter.M0.0800 MULTIPLE CO.· NURSES AIDES =i:c:ro:~vlne, 2082 wanted. 1J.P to 90/l~
Drcrft1,.non ma In Ing, assen1'1y. Girl Friday for busy .ore. F)lgllsb tfl>eak.ina. Small Leg•I Secy $10 800 BENE1''JTS. E"xper'd. Full· Time. comm. split. Nwpt Deb
• Mechanical DnlgMr f1be • lass. Small co. Need person for f1gh f«mlly. Pvt room & bath. Prominent civil prac. Equal ()ppor Employer • Tramees·Class Start.a "1X AM1S•c Opn 548-8614
5· 10 y ra &x per. in Good ~dvancement for bookkeeping & .\yp~na. Unda Isle NB. 675-0558. s-ks confldenUal pers ,.__c•a•ll•<•71•4•>•540--5'62--• Sept. 26th. Earn while lmmed. niwnJn-. Apply -R-E-.. -,1C"-.,,..-A-T_E ___ _ right ~eople $2. 75 to Gareflll alt.en. lod~t.all. a • .... . ,. you learn. -..-..... nu~& mechanical design & art\645-6252. . m.ust. Pleasant ok uea. Hskr needed pt time 3hn/ for key poe. Call Lara, Apply. Park Lido In perlOl'I. betwn 9am & $ ES
dralUng of devices, pre· ~ ~-; Reaular hrs. Call Ma. day, 5 days/wk. L•ke 833-2700. Dennis & Den· Malnt. man, ptt: &·12PM Convalescent Center 4PD1 Mon· Frl. 1S5 * Al *
asure vessl!la or rolaling Gfneral Office Miner for appt. 64S-l!640 Fores l. 0 w n trans nis Personnel Service or daily. $4.18-14.58 per hr. 466 flagship Rd, NB tl-:.Moc8huler St, Costa Negotiate YOW'OWft tplit.
mechanisms. Duties to RIClPTIOMIST necessary. 768--(7.U Irvine, 2082 Michelson Capistrano, La&una • . 642.8044 es . We need ex.per. Llaters &
include delaU design. Our lovely exec. offices Giil FRIDAY Dr. R.0 .P. 496-3118 nv .a.--•-. Sell .... ·support. (or engineering. ___ ... 1 uuRSIS 1o•s ~--, _... ... checldng&draltlng.Sal , .... .,,..onaltractve,well Type SSWPM, lO key, LIN 0 LEU MATUllE WOMA N " A 5 .Wanttowotkda)'t,afler· ·551..c7u
,_ / groomedrecept.whohas non.smoker preferred, INDUSTRIAL 1 NS TA .. L E"R, S ]>/time to welcome Full & p/llme. 3PM· noons •·evenlnos'-N.B. RIC..., to$700 ronunensura..., w exper. a chee"" personality & a good pay, hours lo swt. ,.,.., •-nt t UPM •-lJPM 7AM e.. "' .. wW k _.,. ::~~1~Pf!s~nc~~~~fi~ good
0
phone manner. 697 Rudolph, C.M. . W.--Ji~R, call for appt. ~e~h:~•F1':xlb~eh'~. per'd; tr•m~. Me;~ ttt1DM areu~ti or Marv._ wa1 to start
li Varioua dutJe1 require a 54().6791 VacaticMI was fw a we · .Need car, lite typing. Verde Conv Ho1p, 861 W-"~n~-oar .!. .• t. X~.·r~ your~day. wfn/buapu~b~. coCanl·l Dril 'ng Controls. 40-lO typlftd· skill or 50 wpm. cld ..A---1..-1.. LOTM. ..... ~ ....... ". "-·A-st c M c~a tU:ao: _ ..... Wt --•• tad ,..,..,
Cam Pus Dr• N · 8 · Thi;":; an entry level pos. GIRLS MHOED __ !::!:
1
"°1oww._&_lt't d "" _.,._, _ _.,., ______ -1 \A:l.IKll ' • • _, • .......,. Pa Y 1 0 r ,.!.,• ~ "-!-1 e 833-2'7 Dennis -~-7-·905-1 .... ·_E_O_E_. ____ that inclwies xlnt work· Sandwich del. 5 Day wk. _.. Goo hours • Good MECHANIC _ --------• ~rat«'I. _.. .. o..,_", as Deiu,la Peiaonnel
. Diar;ry Manur. needs Ing condt, beneflu & s 4 hr day. Own trans. ""-to ,..,, call t(elty benefit.. Apply In person Must have own toots. NURSES .O.E. Service of rvlbe, 208a mo. ""la"" reviews. App· Earn over $3.SO hr. Call Girt tod•'f & w•'ll Fl'i. 9116/7?. lo Mr. 8111 RH'• u.a_sn SH l'llSAJ..• .__.......,. .........__ u•-a.....1---Dr. · ul or p/llme female -.,, Harold or Mr. Bill Her-Must be able to perform • --"'"~ -.-.~ ~~
help. txper'd or will ~~~nsi' ~§~t~~s 8am·lpm.Pbone540-8339 lhowyoeethewayl rera nineety;;:rsefadlri;_!eYl.nFleexx.pelblre. LV~Pris·!~teS~~lsya.a :J.1.t Teleplt••• ... • JWeeptionltt·Bltkpr. Ex· , train. $2.75-$5 hr. EOt:. ., re ' . . GIOCRAY ,,.. ... ., . ... ~.. "t .,_ - " ..da...&c...__ ~d Educatjonal c ~ Also, need Installer. <Nr. OC Airport) EOE. 151\ -" Pacuaera: Asaemblere, ·on . Union ahop. Only M'Prtva&e Duty • • .,...... _,,, · 0 •
male, fllll or p/Ume. Ex· ._ _______ •I 1-11 Store, Upm·Tam. Warehouset Inventory & 540 • 5630 qualified ne~d apply. AIDIS $36-$)1 SH -. ""'9 i., •••I h/Ent. Xia\ op.
per'd or wW train. Will"" General Office ~f,1',!-.~~a~i~F.i!. GeneraJLaoorera. Contact Dick Wllllder, $31PrivawDut1 ••rtftl .._ typo J:=lt7. Good pay.
ne&ollate w3ees. Phid MISSEHCHR/ 751..m . n4t170.73llO. Servin&allotOranieCo ..... Wll .,._..·.,.e,: --------
hol It vac. Apply, 1835 WORK WHEN YOU Woddnl' hrs • daya o C'o ft Dr• p • r I UCB'f ,tnPIST
W?dtUer Ave, UnJt 8 -7. GENERAL OFC GUARDS: WANT. YOU DON'T MEDlGAL Exp., manage YOW' cbolce. R'efa le mal C l••••rs • I 7 0 Needed full-Um-' for C.M.orcall642·1843. M.a rinera Savin&• has PAY, WE PAY YOU. oCc. ol 1eo. •l.U'leon ln prac ills. req'd. Group .,._ _.., ...1 CM Newport Beach
. hnmed. operUna for • Qilta Mtsa. S~ $2. 7 PAID VACS. -----------• · H · B ~ X l n t • ' a l · in.,• paid •ac. avall. tw.,... ••• • Pub)lablQf Co. Good
DRIV!lp ~~~~me~ &E J~·I O,~ fi!1%·,~:11~~n~st'1~~: IEL[~. 7t""7«ie'7 · WISTCUllP 64Z.0270 knowled&e of spelling at Dependable, consclen· Ov 30 C ... h --~a.~.._. -c.-....Ot. !.':a!lm
1
ar eu.uUal.· tlous man tor frelcbt Asst. uat provide own er '"· ar • P on · ..--.... .... F • .._. ~'"' .,...._,
company. F/time. M\&•l vehlcle & type min. 3S n ee. Call coUect: ee"'v1oea l&l'TWeat fDr Steacl7 Job for rl1bt ----~---
be2lofover.5'G-050l. wpm. Xlnt benefits & <213)112-ml lll-1441 Ste2U N•WPOrtBch ~· No ••I*· ~. llC•llONIST workln& conda. Apply1;.-.-.-.-.-.-,;-.-,;-.-.-,;-.-.-t.. or'6Jl..07'l5 . . UI-0810or1sa.a111 Prof¥ •h.uint 6 ~ _ _,_ __ .......__.
DllVlll At' · OUARJlS Oltlht.S Moo.Sot IMoltll. Atpl\, rtldoy, ~ ~~~a1::o1t> 1s~W1:u~D..~rs. SECURITY ~~ ... ~.~Mc.t~~A~CJfllCY~~~I_--------• t::.==.~· :~.·* 'J*uant~
~ PS~fllP win So.1cau f. EQ\IAlOppor Employer SHIDO$ aecntary .-Sales. LV.M. Cor R.M.1 '· farltri,-.otlO. ,.Ult.,. llP arw area. UM SaJuy Ii comrni•aloa, to work in cllntcal lab In :a':'r:.=.~t~ ~--------i au• rd f 0 1 • 0 P • n )>refer some lnau.rane. + 1~ mlla. Call Killie, ~IRALOFFICI Ne•por !Such oper.HBa,.a.MWIMf.
f6.5IOOafUam. Lite. Needed immad. l'uhionfaland. Wlll be dotn.e fWn1, Ute . , OllYllS typing. Imaned. .,sl1n·
E'lrfy AM, N..1. delivery ment. MO HIS IA TIMES. \;.v , '300 mo+.MUnOBob CALL'I'ODAYll
EARN VJ> to Sll-SOO tn MAMPOWll. IMC
evenlnl without expe'r. ._ W. uthSC., C,M.
Sell 8"ltH r••lllona at ~~~6~41-i~i~0~4~J~~ ln·bom11t7l .. bows. Uae 1 .. ol;cpaphoaa.~t PrOOt c.becka. Sample ......,.. al aocotL Call
for tnt.inMW, •T'70 or.
Ml-Da
Jntervlewtnt appllcantt Tlundaytam·2P~
9208. MatnSt.S.A. 541-ISOT few appt.
!'.Q.Ull Oppor • .Em*yer
,,
'
. __....... ... -·-'
.J. '''"'""o' w-.:· ....,.., ... """ , ~!~'::! ..... ?!~! ~!~ ..... ?!!! ~~!'!~.'!':.!!.~~ ...__.-· . -;'~o Mi~,-·IOlo --••..&
....,W..te.I 7tooj .... W-W 1t00""9tW .. te4 7100 1~~~u~:111:;t~d~/i~ WAITRESS. ex per l hund* :SO lb bo"8 of ...... ~•••-•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~,,_,.. 8015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••u••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Exp•r'd Apply, Hiii u1H'i'll i.t1ry, O\l'r 21 , lt4!.-n s1nkt'r n il•. 2 DBL BEDS I brand (RVINE COAST C.C. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Salt SANOWl~ll MAKt'RS l\Hh Chevron Sto1llon. lunchb. A11P}Y in person. ~x. G7S·Wl7 Bob nc:w. SBS. 1 used ror $2S. memberahlp '1S(). Quick Oakoffic~ de k
&. G 1-'Nt:R!\J , 2'CM1 1-;1 Toro ttd. LJti LeU111rntt fr('nch Cufe Slid!n1 11111 doors with 640-0S76 •ale + tr•nsfer fee. C•ll and cruu~ "5 TRAINEE 1''000 PRt;l; Hdls ~:~;n ~~;':,;~6,'~,vd i.crcen.<,, 9 & lO fl. S75 <:ooch & matchtnC chair, 7~5041. 496-0l RX
Id :it fora.t~crua S.rvlce St•. Attendant. --, ---each. 644 03M hm & wht check Man's USED Like new cota Take over IHsc on 700 \ wuv for a lURh 1t1Ch°nol Bt•dutalt \1 I' u .J. Sl ~Sl n cxpcr'd fo\dl or pi lime WAR ~HOUSE MAN. CCllfttrot Ir l().sp<t. bike. 642.s3.Js rromSpyeloss Hall home. photo copier, lndud1n~
tu t.'nltr lh«t ncw•P•l>t'r b~'1nt: i. OJo.IJVl'.KY AQllly Arco Sbaliun, 11th shlppinwatrece1vmg. ~pMt..t 1030 $1. sq.yd. 496-6505 ~'ffclt:;,.,!1!!.,~~-~~";
DAILY PILOT Gue1c.J !lrl\ina rvl•ord. llfrvlne C M S4().3236&bkforZeke ••••••••••••••••••••••• Roundlble.4Capt'schr, p ft4"F rd _ ..... -.. ., d"Y"• "'"""l7" M f J Jo \Pm . -----Supt!r8Kot1nk In \;,imallc d1n'g or gun · • .solid a1ro o mugs • .., ..... ~·-.... ~ " $2 $0 ~ 7:, Surv. ~ Uelpruwilitd im· Woman to cook & do odd Movie Ca m er• Ex . wood . re/1n'd. 548·1454 each. Baja renders. hood eves. Thti. h1 g hl) "UC <'t:1uful 1ocal \hi>crhora.lrvme nx'<i Fullorp1t Apply, chotlH'K fo3rh~ldderlly cellenl Condl.l 1 on .S-;L''"'l~""w1 tBufft &enginecover$30.Ford --------l -0_1_7
l I M1 O<IJ4! ew r.. Clll Jfwy, Nwpt aen ~·mun. . ri. iu y, 494.21417 '3 "'""' a nu e . truck 15". 5 lug wheel & rfts nt:WbpHp<;r ha un opun n.i Or lkb •l 30·H' M . fo or "ppt __ --(Lane) $175. Lowrey tire $5. Ford truck :>lug ••-•••••••••••••••••••
trutnt"I.· in lh\1 carculutaon 1nlt-ilf\lU. SC1'Y tu pr11 ol m¥Jor K biJ..-0406. t:dM Trumpet, Bundy • .t;x. Spinet Organ <walnut) split rim JS " wbeel & For .. ie red beaded par '\:h:ch-cJ uµpltcunl w'll rt:Ct:IVt a K l"1rm o~nm1Jln CclM Serv Stat Attend ~xp'd. X------cellenlcondition. Sl75. Marble top Curree tubeSB.642·3379 rot, very young, doei. I b I LI l I l 01Jportunily to loarn Cumm .. c1vertm . ·RAYTECHMICIAH 49'1·2417 Tbl.$4S.AJlinxlntcond. l&lk.l200.64S.9109 1 l ra stur n)( ~u ury, f4$&U ar 'Y about 1~al catuh.• 'f>i>c JIOU\'u t:htvron. :1043 Orimiie Coa11t Collel{I!. -962-7Sl7aft.Spm P~ table. 4x8 Custom ---------,,·ht1luh<d r<tl.it:S. bonus c>pportunlt•t!ll. mm oo Wt•M, 11ho1thund Unstol , <.:M. :>45'<1257 81!u P/t.iml! io mo's flexible DoCJ1 8040 builL Slate, with Ucht. ~ • OnJon• 8090
.tnd muny Cnng(: bt!nt:flt.l sUC'h u P,~ld vrcr s u lury uiiun . Chuck scheduie .Sul ~.982 per •••••--•••••••••••••••• EVERYTHING 979-U.8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·a l. .. .1., I .. a .. •nd t·1• """" hr. CRT tk req'd. Con DOOTKAININO M~STGO . LIKE -HEW \ l'U IOf .. , paiu .rou1> n ... ur nc., a '~-SIUPPJNUCL~RK tact YourpluceorMlne f''urn, misc, decorator 2 Brau lampe, $100.
l'rt:dtt unaun Ht· wlll ut.o ~ provUkid Purt-tlmc help wanted CoastCommun1ty John 675-2440 itcms 673-1700 Surfboard. $20. Guitar ~:~ t1a~r ~~!~~
i.I companv rar with µursonal ust: •SICRITA9ttlS rnuture responsible in · c 11 , •• o· t · S40. 2 Flsh1n1 poles, etc. P I I I h 0 .cgc "'r!ct . AKC West Highland FullbraBSbed,lowhead& 640-8688 rolls, $200 • r e tty f.>rlVt t!'Gt~ To$H.400Local d v1dual for ig t 11hlp· 1370Adams.Costa l\1estt root brd ~ .,,·de rftil"" French Prov. w/hand 1-& I I d While Terrier pup s. ... o .. .,, Applicant.. mu.st bt ltt hav~ a cJ.,an W. LA Arcu S22K r>m& r~ce v ng ays, CA, 92626. MB-SS.17 tJ7 7801 bt & Full size Hlde-a·bed, pnfd Oowers, Organette drivin o rtcord, havt: a hln" school l!:m11lu)t•r11 P'}Y All Yee~ hours fluxible. contact Final filing date 9/20177 gMrouni 1'' ·d. £,~~9~~ back· $225. s-wn 9 • herculon cover $179, & splrr by Allen. asking
w ~ o-• L Ru•nder" A"'ency Micro Electronics Corp rrA I 0 em 1 ~ ...,.. 12.A.M d I b d I t'. ,...""" """"""'3 .. " .. 77"" diploma Hours art: "cnt:ritlJy ll AM. ..~,.~1·...,.hs"'t.S"'la \"" iut.Ln .... 5 _..,..ua PPor. _ £..0 Ye!:._ Trun e e w ma·• ~.....,....,.,.....,, ....... ....,
" ""'' o " .., ~ __.,.,, Dob10 pups, AKC. chant-Sale· Bamboo furniture SlSO. W11J rebuild your •• to 9 P M. with somt: Saturday over-Newport Bench 833 ~.100 SHOE SALl'.:S ~mti-~ Merchandi pion, sired. shots, ea~ arm. swivel chairs, 4 mattresa & box sprtnga, Kawai 44 Plano console
tirnt Cull for appl1csluh 65 pr pre!. Part~ t'/t.Jmc. ••••••••••~••••••••n• cropped 836-4664 tables. mag rack $150. lwn or rull, both for w/bench, walnut. $92S I ( ar J ( • .A d t t··~ 559 SUD S39 SO. Ph: 547-5636 PP. 962-8172 YOO · t qua I loc;u an art: In t:rt:s oc;u ----Salary+comm.+.incen· AntfquH 8005 WANTED: Temporary . ---------
In lt:arnmg mor~ about wht:rt: this SECRETARY t.'vei.. M_r . Milter.••••••••••••••••••••••• spacelor21emaleLabs. NEW/GORGEOUS' HURRY! Foryouf'read REFINISHEDUPRIGHT
lrl'.iming leads. comt to tht: DAILY !:>ale:. & Ac.Jmin:.trauvc Children :. Boot.cry · Ulonderland Call Valerie Martin. Sofa bed · 3 pc corn~r 1ng & dining pleasure, PIANC>. XJnt cond. P ILOT o(f1c~. 330 Wt:st Bay Strt:t.1. and !Npt lur lllll!MOr Des i.in Fal>hion Ii.land. 644•2464 -"I 673~ group, bolsters, etc. 160 15Sues of Gourmet &1 _m-_1_808 ______ _
..i sk for Malan Lt:avitt in tht CircuJa-Firm Shorthand & a l .. S1ll~rnet.'<ied to watch two Of Anta"ques• Drop leaf tbl, seats 12. Bon AppeUt Kap. CaU: TV. Radio, curate Typing rL>q. Apply • d . . d • Afghani Eng sheep dog, Be h hrs din t 551 5444 uza $&..-....... 8098 hon Department at 250 Ft:.cht:r A\'e Co:.tJ c~1l r cn ag~s. six an HUGE warehouse M. _l 'hyrs ndi; loving nc t . s pc el e ~-·-------~ ~ ~
An Equal Oppartunaty Employt:r Mesa 54(}.2116(1 eiJ?hl afler i;chool <2·•5 crammed w1tb over 500 f:uruly & yurd for ex· set. Old cedar cheat. 130 Yrds of Brown Plush •••••••••••••••••••••••
----PM) 111 their home · music boxc:.. n1ckeJo. ercl.l>e. Lab/ SheP6. pure L;,mps, tbls. mirrors. Carpet. S4.SO yud. Ph ExcelJent system as well SECRET ARY Pr~fcr h111h school fltrl cleoo pianos, c1.rc\.IS or-& nux.ed, 8rea~ prolec· bedding, Make Ofter! 615-941'1 Bob as beautiful furointurt' .... WOl'lt•d 71 OCl ...., W Cltlt•d 11 OCl hvtn~ in v1c1n1ty or 221')d g ans. w a II cloc k s lion for home or work. 64.S-3167 piece. Magnovox stereo ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••···~ t0Cha1rmanofthc8oard li treet a nd Ne wport df• h 1 k ' · . ( · d & University Albletic Clul:l consolewith8track.An· SALESLAOYS & President of build · Blvd CM $20 00 per gra~ .al e r c oc :.. w ,peacl\~i ~ °:'d Rural FrencbDua.rmset. Membership for sale tJque reproduction .. Dry Rt;::, I AU n A ".J 1 o\ 11 ing;devclopment com· week' Pl~ue . phone fascmating antiques. s.ecur.& ~-" mdad '!bnla-China cab etc. $2600. $400. 844·1091 dys St"nk" cab1"ne t. $550 w n11:"' 1.l\:r:.011111!1 Apply 1-'Ull umc und parl time, . . M ·t be . bl t · 0Ver$1.000,000Worth hons l<IX e ucti e. SM-12llor881-7ot. ds
in pcrbon :J tu 5 daily needed for our South pan). us a c 0 83l·3l49after 5 PM. American lnlernalional Lag. Bcb 's Pro· Ii re 67J.5746evcstwkn · new-2Mi years old-$350 handle both corporate & . · Sh I W TERBED r or~ I · a:c."1790 :!1750 Crown Valll'Y <..: o a li t PI a z a & personal secretarial Stationery S t ore in 9allenes; 180~·T Ketter· Animal e ter. 49'7·3552 A w / rame, RmREOACTR.SS or .er. rvme . ....,.,.
Purkway,.\f v Westminster Mall loca-duties telephone mail CoronadelMarnecds ex· ing S t., Irvine. Tel. or497·1'20evea. mult&Mahog.hdboard. wm·seUbeaulifulcollec Old TV's, l color & 2
-tJons. Exp'd only need dict'ation 'etc .' per'dsalesladyfult.time 7SC-1777. Open Wed lhru Okle lt gUt hSbeepDog 4 4 dwr. wood c h est . tion or unusual colore< B&W's. Good wood
Restaurant ctpply. Knowledge of re'a1 estate 5 days, xlnt working ~Oil· Sat. 9 AM to4 PM. Visit! mo. AKC, shotl.1100. ' 548·5786eves jade, flno jewelry cabinets, also an old Hi· P~ Boy Maternity necessary. Backgl'ound ds, especfally line cben· &autirul, unusual couch 6H·Ot90 MAPLE Couch, chrs. end licurines. Clolsonne Fi. $20 takes alL 642-4336
COUNTER
PERSOMMEL
f·ull·t1ml', ParH1ml·
Day!. & N1ghli.
IM or O\ l'r for mi:hb \pply m per:.on
:!Sp m l'ul·~1lay Saturt1.1'
CARL•s JR.
1720 1-: Oyer Rd
Santa AnJ, CA
557·5734 m legal or C P .A rune· lele. 675·1010 & chair. 9· long. Custom tbl, coff tbl & desk. Ivories, seri!ens. mall.l orM&-6188
--lions helpful. Call made In 1900 for a BATHE & DE FLEI\ Matcb'g , Lamps . out.standing misc. Sta • ..iv:J _;__...;.._ ______ _ st;;~~~~n~ y 5 ~:; ~;: wkdays 644·6433 ask for Stock boy tor local light· Pas adena E s la t e . ~nimals s!!ietC~I ~ { 897-82:>6 ing 11 AM Fri/Sat/Sun; 8~allktt stg:o ~MrJ~M
9 5 30 Conl·A cl Phi' I, _Pat in•' fixlurc store. Full Stuffed with horsehair & umaqc Y orm 0· Septl6,17,l8. as c ce a e. 0
----- -" 536-8480 Fr. Prov. Dining Set. MARRIOTT HOTEL _,. 497-2417 6-12 1133 SECRETARY time. l!:xp. preferred but every time you lay down <cherry wood), tbl. 6 N rt Be h _....,_. _______ _
--IMM ED. OPENING not t:i.senuul. Apply in on it. you .fall ~sleep. German Short.haired pup· chrs. cust. pads. china ewpo ac Sansul 331 Receiver & 222
SALES Sh prcf'd, but not es:.cn person, 222 V1ctona St, Great for visitors Deep pies , AKC, rel(istered. cab. 640·1180 Karastan area rug 18x1C turntable, Fisher XP 75
I.oral tl1v1:.1on ol IJr~e \Ji.e ot to key calculator CM. 646.3737 gold color W!lh cut velvet 548-3249or 548·3673 wool, avocado,• SlSO spkn, cost S6SO new, J
national corp has open-desJgns. Fringed velvet ---Dinette, Couch & Love h h h'd it '""""'o•.a M-"e orr Gene Good bene Call ror appt. - - -head covers & carved BOXER PUPPIES Fawn ot er 8 • ems ......., ""· .... • in~ tu be fille d 1m-Slli 25-ll S hbo d O W II Seat. Dbl Bed. cof tbl & 642-0864 5411-3064 mlodlJtCI) for :.harp. •n· -w1tc ar pr ' feet. Heavy hardwood color,9wks. cortbl,Lamps.545-5457 ---------train Supenor Answer-frame. It ta· ke~ 3 men lo CaU 979 '""""' b _ ... _.~•~ New RCA Cb r b I" tl1\ inte res te d 10 a Seerctary 10fhec Mg r .,,. """" L· 7 b 0 ... ,,.,., Bar w/3 high a ..... ......., O· a k T h h mi: ..crvicc, "'1u c. l L move 1t. Truly an un· -Liv-rm set. 9 pcs , Sora. drk brwn v: .. yt Cab'-e generator WR5088. SSO. rnar elm~ career. e Small NewportBcac m· Sl,Stef.Upstaus.CM .. ~ual addi.L1on to your ForfttoYo. 8045 Love Seat, China .... w :.ucces:.f.uJ upplicunt with vestment n. Jo;. company ---,--..., in bar has locks for ll Ph: 968-7366. h b t home. Also a malch1ng ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cabinet. 2 Chairs. Cof. $400/b t I ---------i t e u i ity lo meet peo· m'ed:. illl around office TAXI Drivcrs:--i~ wool rug that sets ofr Female Rabbit, 1 yr old. Tbl, End Tbl, 2 Swag Coqunosrole Packa11rd.0Berl SOECONY· VRETEAMAX VIDEO --- -pie amb1t1on, and a mgr. Ltlc bkkpng, Sil Beach & Sun Clelnente R D R $825 •--------1 clean cut appe arance and typmg skills req'd. for Checker Cab Co your couch & c·ha1r to Very tame to good home lamps. l 'h Yr old. ssoo. Solid State AM I F~ • · RETAIL :.hould earn i16.000 . Sal;i ry Commensurate Mtl·', must have mature best advantage. 646-6I.sg only.6734956. aU.581·5664 <John) s tereo w /turnt•bl• 642·2113.
PLUS p,yr. Company fr. w,exp Exl'el growth op-pleasa nt disposition. or&42·4336 Black female kitten, ~ McGuire Ottoman, teak SlSO/bstofr.5'9-3151all:tm--------· CLERKS lfl(!C benefits included. ~ort u n1 ll es. ( 714 ) neat appear. xlnt driving Wool rug. Custom de-months: Gray & white finish. Loose orange ..:pm:..._. _______ _, NEW ULTRALINEAR.
Need depcnd~ble lransp 6'4-8153. __ rec. Call PaUy, .494-7211 signed for a Pasadena mate 18 months. 631-0078. cusb. Beaut. piece which 3000 WATJ: Generator, lC 21lOW ''Disco Mont.or &
We will train '' ne~ or493-88887·l lAM. F.stale in 1900. Beautiful 1 't $70 548-8868 speakers. List S380 e3, UTOTEM
Con• ... IHtee Markets
1'~1L1oni. opc.•n 1:-.t. 2nd &
:!r el :.hilt :. 111 S an
l"l t•m cnll' &. Lai!una
lk•ac.:h l>llwr H l"l'Jb h:H'l'
upt'ntn~~ also. No cxf)t\r
rcc1'd 1\pply at any ol
uur ::.Lores
258R Ne"' µorl Ill vd
Costa Mc1>.,1 li l2·77M
Hubber Prei.s Opr Will
train. Day :.h1ft All co
benefits . 962-66411
R~P!~ advancem_ent if SECRETARY -colors. Deep Rose back· SIAMESE CAT. Male. can use. . bnJ.use.$375. . Atla ntic Music'• •ale
quah£1ed. Apply to. HE. ore. Prop. mi: mt Teacher· Pre-School. Cert 1o:round with Oriental de· About l~ yrs old. To Med it styling, Pecan 49S-4328aft4PM priceS149 ea.
TELEPROMf'TER Sh, typing. Non.smoker <>rcxpcr.formom.t'la:.s. sign of blues & beiges. good home. house wood. 4/p!us h beige Completed boatfmovinf ATLANTICMUSIC
!lOl W. 16th St. N n <~le n _dr· dr ~d u n;i.c~ I o S2.60~lr ~~-_ Approx. 9'x15'. 646-6188 trained. 833-8146 velvet
1
brig~ btabclk Suchrs, s ale. Furn. a pp J 445 E . l?tb C.M.
646 0585 · assi ie a no."""· <·1o 642 4336 xtra c.-a 1or · per hrdware, t.ools, stereo~~~~~~~~~~ · Dmly Pilot, PO Box 151~1. T.&ephone Sales ~-.:_ ---- -Grey a nd white remale rond. but. must sell now. s bot is J SALES MANAGER Costa Mesa. Ca 9'l626 Want to makr money? Antique Wint tbl Wi4 cane ca t. Jtesc ued from S350/ofr. To see. caU alt ~l wa~, ~-6123 m IC loah&Mariff
Mobile Home resale t•or· ---Can ;'!u s ell on t hl' chrs. S495. a· leatherette Animal Shelt er . Good spm.645-7857.C.M. • pa · · Equip..nt
poralwn Busy orf1ce. SECRET ARY phone · ro11 S'" our bus•· sofa, S275, match cofCcc home. 642·7564 an 7 Lady Kenmore W1br / •••••••¥••••••••••-••
Must huvt· cxpcr. in t o• t ncss 646 3030, ask lor & end tbl. Sl2S. Sat 9.5,. GcrogeScH 1055 dryrS100/pr.CltTV$75 loah.Mcwftte
Mol11lt• Home .Resales & 0 tree or Hay t702Circlc, NB. 675·3568 Free adorable puppies lo •••••••••••••••••0 •••• An\1que wood cash re-~-nt 9030 Tr~u11n•• und M a nag1nP E~(·ellcnt oppty for an - - - - --good hom763e ,.__, L( 00 ISLE. wool ra1. 0•..ter c:..a ........ eves ......,,...-~ " "' d Tel ph ne S· le Ad ........, ....,.. · .....,._.... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sale:. Force. Terrific.: op e:\µenence sccrelury ' c o ~ ·:.. . · Antique Country French _ beige l3xl7• Lge wht
portunity for quulif1cd with accurate typini: & vert1i.lni! Will train. D1n1ng labl 7• w,2 TwoAKCMaltesedogslo swivel chair,Offlcedeslc. WATERBEO,brand new 1974, 7.5 HP Mere Out-
managcr Gre .tl op-shorthand sk1ll R Pos1 Somcsall':.cxper Full& benches. S2900 4g7.;n54 aGOODUOAfE many,manyotber ilems. king size deluxe w1 board,loogsbaft,remote
Jl()rtunity for <ic.Jvarrce lion involve:. ~tbthly to ~(Jf~!1~-~2comm. evs. 759-0598 ~2A3S vibrator, $900. value, oonlrols, aood cond $375. ment m expandm~ cor work mde µend1:nlly ___ _ -mustseU! $500.673-2300 _7_68-_9052 ____ ,,_.. __
SALES JJOrlltaon HiJ:h earnings Good start1nl( i.alary. TclephoneSalc." N EWENGSff(P~ENT! Purebred young Siamese s FAMILY SALE-Furn, 2 Y.anrubberraft. SUPPLEMENT S<:nd resume today. to l"Ompletc benefit:.. To ar· Need Money$$$ SSS SSS Fme Oak, xlnt vanety. male cat Jl&eds good glass~are. ~llectibles. Eledricalty operated due
YOUR INCOME I' 0 Box 5373. Garden ran!{<' apPomt.s call V A Work on Phone new h:o.l· best prices. New hrs : home & lovin1 care. clothing, masc. 8211 control adjust.hie quee11 ~m
Grove. Ca. 92645 Tator, 546-2518. lOAM to 9PM for your S48.Q02 Evelyn Circle H.B. Thur-sz bed. xJnt cond. ideaJ ---------SSSS SSSS -t-:qual oppty '"~ 9·30 AM. to 12.30 convenience. Sun<AUanta&Beach> for invalid or person Tamaya~sextant PART TIME SALESMAN-MFG REP employer M I" A.M .. 5 30 P.M to 8:30 ANTIQUE FA(R PUPPY. white male, 3 wiback problem. $390 TEUPHONE WORK K'>tab firm will tram ag----p M. Phone f.i4G·4223 or 2051 NewPort Bl .. CM mo's Alaskan Malamute Fri. Sat & SUn Something ~ 83~2682
HOUSEWIVES gress1vc man or woman Secretary to $9300 i'Ome lo 250 E . 17th St. 646·5454 type.' Adorable. 646-1413 for everyone. Free kit-
COLLEGE STUDENTS to sell lo warehouse dis A TCMICh Of Closs SwtoO.Cost3 Mesa__ Dealers Welcome! tens. 9342 Portsmouth, ~~.~~ue~~ Krueger ~ydrauli c
lr1butors Ea;tah Ler · Mothukd pers . will en· Telephone Tool Room ----KfM'ENS,6wk.sold,free HB stereo & record P layer, backllt.ayadJuster.$450.
c;uaranteed H ourly ntorr. must hem .! car. JOY prof~ss1onal altitude Salt'S·i::arn to S20.000+ GLASS.CHINA togoodhomc. Horses 8060 good cond. Mako offer 831·2682
W;ige Plus lionus. !\.30 Lruck1ni;i and1or fl .V. ex m resp. post Call V1ck1c. 11 Locations Orungc Co 54-0.7532 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 955-1746eves. w--rcarb" ...... ~rs4SIDA 11m t o 1:1 30 pm C..:-'11 fier , helpful. 645·4983 MB·l.288. Dennis & Den & LA Great benefits. &f'OTTBlYSALE .,..., ... """" t~64223 or cometo 2SOE & h f p 1 Sc c ·• SEPT 7 &18 Adul_t m ale Afghan. ENGLISH Saddle, xlnt. on McKay manJrold for cave name 1> no or ms en;onnc rv1 c o. '"Curily & rupid ac.Jvan l •• 1 i to Sale 12:!E20 ahuo paUo cov small block Chevy, throl· 1-lh St Cost" M"l'>U JI Be h 1616'• ""' ER · sens\uVe, ov ng ap-cond. Comp. wtrittings, . ' ...: -··-.. ,. -appt Wltmlfjon ac. ic ecment. Call Rel'ubli< 4SDEAL S! provedbome673-22U pad,girth.$100.631-0208 er,youdJsmantle&take tJe linkage & fuel l.ine5 SALESCLERK . Si\LESPEllSON-~t~ml'. Beach ~d.Sl~2~ -Distributors. Inc. Mr W:sto~~~ttt~:'ah~\~ away.6pm968-8SS2 compiete&readytorun.
II ., m<>tur•. Hunt Bch. oiftSecretaryTrame1• Roy,7141834·9088. Sat lOAM·9PM. Sun MaleVisla Dog.13mos/w Ha r1holdGoodtl065 DeWalt radial saw, -IU\ or ofler. 631-2092 llardwitre, Hrs · "· .. .. ,.. papers. Call office SAM ••••••••••••••••••••••• _., 7\ton thru Friday. Con· shop. 963-0000orfl63·6096 FEE PAID 12·6PM. Meet Jo Cun-t 1 2 M I F cabinet & accessories. daysor979-6247eves.
tact Phil. 642-1133 -S"'LISPERSO.._. -Unhehevable oppor. is Banking ningham Editor of The o noon . . 6 pa;. Philippine rattan ~-613-0160 •~ '"'""W-90 .. 0 • "' " l213)828-l8'74 lurnilure. c hairs. --. • "" ,. waiting for bright go· TIRED Of Glaze of Mo. and get free
S·ALL•c.-• .f'or fine jewelry store. i:etter wtestab'l firm samples. see "Autumn Free klUen. 6 moe old. foots tool, coflee/eod
CA> Know'I or china. crystal. cau L1sa. ll48·l2.88. COMMUTING Leaf Jewel" Tea display. Lavable.spayed. tables. $'TS. 847-4903
4S yds good peen shag •••••••-••••-••••••••
carpt•iw/hvydut,y pad. S COLLEGES silver . fine jewelry & ALSO FEE JOIS ·SI.SO admission. Free 648-4290 Jew•..,, 8070 STUD ..... TS wmdow display F /lime kin '
.... call 673-9334. Dennis & Dennis Person· TO YOUR JOB?. par g. Seek.inc l•m.i11 •Ille yd. •••••••••••••--•••••• Gd Your P jTlrne nel Service of Huntington Vng M. Shep. Gd w /kids. W' .._ ~ED
JobLiMd Up Now! Salespersoh needed S~nl2chl.16168 Beach Blvd, Excellent! employmentl Singer Sewing Machine. xlnt watch doe, s hots. TOP C~ASH I DOLLAR
T1mei LHe Llbr:Jrtes P1tlme forreu11 l storein .e op~rtuntles at.Joe~ decorated, really old. 90-7386 PAID FOR YOUR Inc offers xlnl money N.O ~tu&t be interested savu~gs & l~~n offices in Cabinet is worthless.
U1·9317
Illness forces eale:
'Thomas organ, Cd cond SllOO. F1 sz bed, comp.,
S12S. Chest S20. 2 maple
barstools $35. 642.3280 ror short flexible hours m energy & water ron· c...-urity Mission V1e10. Lagun~ wrought iron frame F.wnlt.. 105( JEWELRY, WATCHES,
·We ha\·e a guaranteed 5'!rvalion 615-4>730. "'""" JC pr. ...... EYS Beach, & La&una lhlls could make njce plant ••••••••••••••••••••••• ART OBJECTS. GOLD. MATl'RESSSALE
hourly wai.:e + u com """" Ex per d personnel pre· stand. $50 831.2551 Sl'OREWIOE SAL£ SILVER SE RV ICE, Save~. Beaut.yrest. mi:.io.um & 3 handsom~ Salesperson wanted for 24 Falw. Island rerred. For rurtber in· · New & used rum. appl'e FINE FURN 6 AN-Springair, SeN, twin
bonlll> Our ·1tmosphere C .M. fabric sho~. M.wporile8Ch formation coll Mrs. A.pfllmces 1010 misc. Wilson'• Bargal11 11QUES.645-2200 reta$79.FullS99.Queem
The Only Boat
.ff JOU CCIN ~to
~"9nrybeatl '
ll> a fun casuol one &ell.•t r~~~~Joi,1;:.0~i~ t:a~~. Jg Now fntervlcwing For Jcrue ••••••••••••••••••••••• Noot. 545 & 814 w. 19th U..stoct 1075 Fime~:S :!9i t;'!~
takes to qualify 11> S4:>-0m PlalftClothes SADDLEBACK Washers, dryers. Clean CM.842·'1930&548·3282 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Warehouse,. 1145 Baker •1978 MODELS• ' PERSONALITY tr you Sfturfh. Offic"' late modela. 1100. l yr o-M b ok
• hkc tallong on the phone SALESPERSON~ Even· Hrs. l\tµ~[be nexlble guar. Free dell very. **I BUY** .lo .. r1:!'8: '::f:~. rblk ~Fairview) C.M. fll 1977 PRICES
& h3VI! a httl~ sparkle m IO(t$. Entbuslasllc & Outstanding Benefits SAYINGS r.tstr Chg. wm also buy. Good used Furniture & parade Morgan geldtng,1----------1 WMleCMldkplay .yourvo1c.e,t~1sJobis for cnorgeti~. HICKORY ApplylnPcrson 836-~. Appllances--OR 1 wil Eng. West ern (714) Misc"••oa ATTHEANAHEfM
your.F,1llme 1s avall fARNS,WestcliffPlua. Mon·FrilOAM·4PM FRGHT DAMAGED ldlorSELLforYou. 3JB..lOU W..tecl IOI• IOATSHOW
SOUND GOOD'! 642-0972 Equal Oppor . Employer 759 ft}81 HtvrnnlNT SALE. 3308 MASTERS AUCTION •••••••••-••••-•••••• C'ALLUSNOWAT -U vuv Mlscel•1ous 1010 .AHGB.STIJHUM 833.eOtS 5 •LES W. Warner nr Harbor, 64"'8686 IL•ll-9625 ~ Want to buy: palr. of _... SantaAna.979-2921 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6.50x16til'Wl'S. SEPT.9-fl
TIME-Lin : Pan Ume. S·9pm, Moo· Sec'y,CoramallA~chflrm. nRE Service, 5 da1 wk. CASHPAJD w:• ~JED ----~-_337_9 ___
1
Alf t...1111-..1-.1 5
1
·-s LIBRARIES fti. perlee?t for College TyJ? g ~wpm man Bat1ic Salary + comm. Apply: CASH PAID For td used Cum, anti A" "9UUC'I -
l'.;qualQpp Emplyr m1f Student. no pressure sec yskllls. 3000£.CoastJlwy,CdM .For Wshr;Oryn1/Retrig ques&clrTV's,95Nll33 TOP ~ASH DOLLAR Wanted: 10" table s aw-19·20.22-24·26-lO 1
sa.tea or quotas to meet. Call540-5538 , workingornot957-8133 PAID FOR YOUR a lao bench 1rioder. OPIM IOWV
$Jl-08U , Tow Truck Dnvera ex· LOVELY JEWELRY. WATCHES, Pl~call548-1487 .r1.._.., ....... _S ---.-----1 SEC Y·SALES per'd. Top pay. Apply, BIG SPENDER NEEDS LikeNew7'Sofa ART OBJECTS. GOLD, _,..__ SALES . SALH/RITAIL Sallboat Mfg. lo Irvine GftWTowlne.lOOOJrvine REFRIGS: working/not $100. 983-~ Sil'..VER SE~VICE, Wanted: Ptcturoe. CUTTYCA1tt4S
Wccllrren(l•y haveopen. looklngtorsomeonewilb Ave,N86',2.IZ2 phone price quote FINE PURN. 41 AN· manualafcputafor1B3B SWfOAMC•s . For 'RM Jewtetry
,Commi.uion Safu
):ba'afltxibJe. Out&tllnd·
i h sales & ma.rketlne exp. 63H2Sl ~hoe Beautlhd olive and wblt1 11QUES. 645-Z!OO Packard. _ _,._.5 Ina• ava lable ~n t e Outtes ioclude typtna. '"" .. Acl to saoo prl n t c 0 u ch • D ( eG.33TI ...... _....._
following claS"SilicaUons: sales reports, he•vy Free. GrowltJd travel WASH~RYEa ~hint chair with oa~ 1 •~•Alf .A.ft.S •Lft-i!-.. SPOltTlalOGU
· lnl co. benefits. . JC ,IHMIY CO.
SALES /Bulldln g • SUP ..... 0 •r.1£ 'Mdl { __ ... n ' ...... t 1' ~--~.. ·--_ ....... Cll'lll•-s Mntet'tal, Cuhie r's , tel e phones , and aaency leek• attract. r.n 'IA . ra.llllN otl .... n wa., tromyourbustnesacard· ... ~. t na• _.. .,.-,. .... _ .... or •arvl-. Must .......,..... wJa ......... •-com• Hulti cycle, like new, ban1ha1 Ii matchlt11 ~ ..... , h·c • q •
. -lit FclaW• hlaftd
Mewport *each
Equal 0pPOr Employer
0~1vtn1 De..,. "'"p· 1y lo .. .......,_ ... .... ..... ~--_... .._,.. one ca.u 1or eac .. -•••••••••-.. •••••• .I"-~ ~ "" be famill•r Wtlh 10 key. plete travel services. pert cood. SUS ea. piUOft, Lovely Uvlnf tag piua one spare. We
penoow·-'..a • H·-I-'-~rorappt, EOE Xlnl benefit.a lncludJng 545-S748 room aulto -exceUen1 return permanently UJ)l'l
1
~~~
mv ---• ·~'T.-~ .,.td trt'pl. ~ J'ee '·· . condltloo. l2SO OC' otter lealed attnctive tag " • c-................. .._.. 1Z7SBristol,CoSta~esa Service St.a. Nllh'Atteod Jobs Call Carr y Current.., worktng ap· IJ'\'ine.5SM790 strap. m~nc alrllne sr.aoo. t75-"17 SaJes-Scrvl~ i Ot6 ~i~" wk. A~ply , ~ Coutll Penoo: ptiances, sto•o: O"Keefe r>utt :! LD. requlreroenta. P.cc· '?$ Whit• Rtcboblicbr
G <-a Sbell, 17th It J"ine, B net ~t'Y Z790 Harbor & Men1tt.. •teen $'TS. Lf watlnut nn~ed ... Yd bs fc theft.! ror a .-.. --
1
• .i•a• .. , ........... SIJ,.ES lRLS, P/lll\te. -+ c.,._ +~er --I~°' Calf•-• capacity washer dra.,.. W....tt, rrencu -·"-..., --•~-_. -us...---.~lnl pay, no pres. ui'e. Fee Paid . ..Pbotocraphlc SllVICISTATIOM ' OJ• ~" ·".!'·_ drytr, Kcnmor9, whit., .,.vinclal at,yle. Very _...,.._llllCU ta•.,.._.._ l50Q.Oi1J...._..1.
• ~-al\ 5:ao or lve eqdp. Ci.rm aeoa rtap. AnatDMCTS 1:1... ftAYB:A..n pafrS7&.64&-f1'8aA lor 1ood eoodtUoo. M! ~~~f:,r·.::.n: :! Mciordia.ubilew. Used -" mu lor Sc:otlie at ~"· lor~ed terr. Afternoon;, eve1 .'4 Qifttt C)ppur. Leisure ~ 1rvt.M.55a-t7IO wm beck • trim your onl1 e mo•i. LGlaettJ
83MO&Oan)'tlmc. awl. Fee J ~· wknds. ~pt'd. ~pply In trav.l exper. req'd. Call G.E. rifrlJ, coppeftofte WATaR8&0 SAL.£ tap. Ol' try t1WO cacdl w/pkkqp. Mab offer. ~Betpwanted FvU°' eau Bill . m.2700. .,... ... penoo till• PM. SbcU tM-m1. '5Q. ltaJprovcoucb'12S. snt.J~ cUlplt w/h&r. '*ktobett. ~, ,
; part Umo. Apply .ln n1s le l>l"Dn.ls Peraotto~I StaUoa. Hat ffubor, TYPtSTCLEKKfllECPT 2 .,,._Ide~ cbain leH tlO PLOAT ~, PRICES: ~ 1bo Penlmmon ~~-~·, :11112 Coetdl.._a~ "'·~ 81111 oftlce, benr ldnl<Oocl _. ... -..Ji D&f:All WATERBE.OS. •h•ar3/$5 1~1~· ™ ;~~i.2f ::::'Ee .. _ --~·--" Service~&illpwuted, J>hODH fc \)'plbl lD· at\?pcn,.,__ t~L. +-~~~AU.In· =~=t:: L• '751 ..... UJ'I JBal~~·~bd: Balbo~" ~-.. ~., ~= ... ·~·· .PbU~. YOIYtd. Jneom •••· McnbldbldOOthf'dc . ;fT • 10or.,.,...t1A0H. oz••tNRAlJlD'I
\'--"· A \ ~~~ A .-,.,...... ' .-... mall, Call Sall· noo. Drue! , ... t•ble 'Mt SaMaTaalMllMltd ... • Now lr1M1 I~ 4'.lotia· 1 Cll,,,_!~ d1.a.f111 . -·~;.._d ~,.,~~ w/cl'9clioaa t500. (ftC) NOCABDt .11.STUJ>Drrft.O'l'Eemo.
ls-AL=rH0rr1b1i'>.Cb. : 'b: !!.1:J':t=: s.rv1ce'Sta\!o" Ait•n· TYPllJ', puWintt.11*1 ,_,.., • &1' .-r .... ,.... _,,,, ··.,...,. · • '" · Dr'I• ~ow.a • Mild =iir. ,~ .~ ~ --~ .·~ lOAK Ii: fPal S.Ulab dul. URer d. Day ~ .,.altr, '""" at UIOCM, CJ.a ltSet dtbwr tanp Ca1to1D t' SOra, down MN, Mdretl. pllieM. -
hr +GCND~~ . 1~: rabht but E\w. "'11'_6 f'IUme. AP· ,oc~uioUl)r at 0Mtte • 'Prti. 'ltthl Ii pf dryr'. cUlfL X1nl eoliid. a.t Of· we'U make°'" fanl l*' ~~~·· ! a0&-.1~pp1yla.,..._ llb'.Sbill~ l'l'Ut. o.c. AlrpcM't. '1•xlble ~ -.n17 fer .... -. .... ':J.:... ·~ l9._Add2"•cb. , la&.. •• "' • ft'Vlne.; NB: ""' 1~, hr., Yutet;. a.1.S fl. _. ,. · • •, Send cbict or_.,. OC'o ---.. -.......
__,_.. uMuM o.a•y Pnot ~-I~ Cillh PICICe 1'~ e=~~aa.....,....Mteoda•t.a Dal11 .1Ptfot! 11'.0.JIOx llaytq, 1.' yr old. cot>· Rattan' D,•••porL II cllr~:---ITI•• 11,WEjlitTYUStl>OrPICS
_i "FMt~eAlt''aenlee ii tWHtcNaatfrBI .• ~Dume._,_, ,/ti;.. u., C4ltt •••·ca . .,.._&tllortndelDr ..,,.., .. ...,.blit. ~·.-.....·-,, fUlMITURS .. ~.Yo.it ) 1,•_,_, "Wetllililll'* .. v• I!••• 4t •k•; •.clt'f !!!! _..._. ,~~ _ __. ~ ,.. dr1tr. Jl4MOll OI' .,.. ,,-' ftS.W -. • P.O.BOsi. 1• , ••• ir -~
' ...... .,,, . ~Me. Naat ... P.' -, 'NMltil. ~-.x. ~ . -.OYHILI. Diii.. l'ID~~ I•' CQile ..... c..... l ~ IBM...-: ~r: } !fihln N~.1.'.*-. ,... ... ~~;~ -MOllbiA. Mr.~ lt.• BTU wt.•1 •CW. t*bn&J •*-• Bir ............... eN< .... ..._.. 0.... ·": CJ.I ... ,. m 1)j"=~JC-~al• 1tb1 ply. 3511 n::-:;-., ~ .. ;.e.-StOIMlJIWJ, ............ dlllliU•WLhe. 1 ..,~INitbo =ble e&.dne .,Ii '~~0:-,• . 1/Ml!llO~>'--a.alf-.~-~-;._OSI(,, .J ~-a•-• ..... !Ml , -, ~· ......... 1111< ·' l•.il ID-181 ·-'
WARNING! .........
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Migctiedll»OOll!
•
Aatto .. 1,.,ort.d Mfos. IMported A.ufoa, 1.:.porl9d * DAILY PILOT D9 Wedl'M!Sd•Y· Soptombef 14, 1977 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• INh.Pew"' t040Motarh e411 .. • 91 40 v-9570 IMW 97'1 Mercect.sleu 9740 Pcnc.tM 9150 Auto1,Uted Mtot,U1ed Autot.Uat'CI .......................................................................................................................................... ·••···•·······•···•·•· .•.••.•..•.•.........•. ~·············~···i
31' C1lR1 Craft TIS ca Min.I blk (four> brand t ton 'GG Chev 1tep·vH '71 914 Porsche. Ap· Nck ttlO Ca111• 9t33 .... '!!! ........... !.~. rrw. •abp, XI.it. cond. new. Ort•l off a tree& w/'11 O cyl. cn1 , 14 mv~, Le cue pearance aroup Mau. •••·~··•••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• .. •••• '61 Mwtt9") $600 __ m.m~;.;;.;..;•,_____ bl few l na1 ,.. IO •v.er~\h1n1 aood con Mew• UHd Koruia, rblt \'n". AM t-'M '78 Sk)'hawk. onlY J.Z.000 'T.? Coug:tr Xlt7 AM 1-'M lM9 Pl Ha •W•JACI• M 1-lTOI 14 ~fl bed. wlnilow.•: ~x· OVH 100 t•pu, Clcun $3300, ml. AJr, AM·FM, auto. &-trlc, PB/PS. 1U: Xlnt Seeat a~o
_ •-t nu C' 1& II tl I~ 32611. MllCIDIS ~l Xlnl cond. 651·110& 01 cond. ~ • 4 apd MWlt•nl auiwr 1'b 'f brtdae crulHr Tl Uonoa US. Tl R•t 2)08. M61~ COMI IN & Sii ,...... DIS-"'Y a.-u.. • J. 752·7&» ..... _:...,_ body .Wrk & t , l ~ ZZ$ ltf', 4~ &JOVft vn r--"ore• 975. ,~,.~ O'C'llllQ.9 ~ ff. fl.Ill eltctronlo, Ml·U'H '7~ fol"l Van F· 100 ~rfer THI ALL HIW Ho8H of Im~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 Buldc RJvl~ra. extra Dodp ttll trans. 541 SOil
,.,._,"·' Hl·up. lull)'............__ _ (.;uQ\vtwlon AM /f_M 6JOCS.NOWlll · #1.oEAlER-IMU.S.A. clean, lu&b mileue l> ·--·-••••••••• .. •• ·~ Mwila.nt convt. Xlril Iii• d , 0911 100 hn _.. aflr. m• ... ~T1Tti tTre . -AUlriORIZ very ~harp . Sacrifice '74 Oodae Dart 8,...rt, lft. cood. Oril ownr $3500
Doal b u 9110 cu.L pi.lot, ..J•:, P u COMPUTE Mt;RCEOESOEALER ~ ROY $1,495.840-4167 • rv .. f\ • •rnow ••••••••••••••••••••••• .00 C.lltM.I noon ur IOOYSHOP 68t)2Mand1e1ter, CARVER back. Alr/powf;r, lun 6'13-3'14evesa I -ra..t' ...,, .000 N"' tm Y•maba 600 £n. ult 4;30, 67~ OH77 , Buena Park ROllS·ROYCE For Sale 1976 Bwck Le roof. Make otrer. CaU •(t PWo '957
orfil'-IZ:Zhiw du.ro r~ condition l ~ HOWOPEM 521..7250 Sabre culllom. 9,000 SPM.832~8 •••••••••••••••• .. •••••
11' Iaboard Lo lt'r in n\I, 1tm ·under factory '75 · E Tradt•i.ui.Jo On the Santa Ana Fwy :!~:~',\ mllH. •·door· S$50o 9940 ?3 Pinto Sq. Wa1 w/rack.
witrlr •90<M sear C11JI warruty. C!ullom u 100. Pll & pirne l .: SAOOLllACK ~4 ~·:i094 foord ldo.keolfer.
I b •.. ~t. alr operat~ tro11t or ~L olr. ~~ 11111 V"'UIY IMrORTS 1956 Merccdei> Bent. lOO • C ll646 ...... -... ~ CLOSED SUNo•vs '68 Riv1"r3. l lealer, A/C, ••••••••••••••••••••••• a .__.
ihoc:l" Al•o itod' t•x 1af\ 9 M dr sedun. Gd shape. Jn " ' · IWl\&M IUSIJ 1131 3100, UI 't>7 l"Ullf) 1-:cunoh1w~ ua.zo40 495-4t49 tact. Not Optiratlonul. COMCAHHOH'S ~~o.~~1~:1~:~~0000 . -PHtL '12. Pinto Runabout. l7' Owen1 twln •n1lne
O.bm Cruller. xlrit cond Sip. 4, ball tanlll. •tc. On
ly 15.:M>O. 4H·llll:l or
la.kl• ,,..,.r p11 ymc111~ d d & I t ri -• ll.IAI '"OU .... TY'S $'150. 841 ·3778 HORSELESS LONG 2000cc. Auto. new tirt!t>, .: "U · p.iint n l' or ~ '-" '71 RIVIERA Loaded. S SlW 536-8018 71! ~uzuki TSIOO, lll'W $l!50 1-'lrm 1145 7007 OLDIST '72 MZB 280 SE. White. ST•ILES RD _._..ac.;..'..;.._.;..· ____ _
cund.. 1H1Hir 1n d I rt '$ tan lntr. lmmac. clcun, ~ lSmpi:. reg. aas. New 74 Panto Runabout, Jo ma. ---9lO betl f m . 71 xlnt cond. low mi, orig Brokers or fine conlem· ure:.. ong. owner. $1500. ~ xlnl cond. 540·1144 or
':()' O'" • ....,...RE\\I I I 0 , •44' Autol.Mtl'"J tHO owner . SU·8900 •. por.iry 644·2'766 .• c•w. ........ ~ V6• ·~1 • In ••••••••••••••••••••••• w , .,.,.,....,... rn11c, fast 100 M1•ll' I o H.llrley D11v1d1on 77 FXI-'. 52'7·2297 llOLLS HOYCt:; ST G • ln ""' • ·....;...,.;_ ____ _
I" hr"'·wi3•' "•' 1·~•u•1• onl" 1.000 m1 b•uuta'ful 1'71FOltD BENTLJ::Y '70 A E 1• x t . cond. ") ·~ • .J.• '71 HATCHBACK Gd. -" .. .... -•"' ' ~ ~... S.lh.·~ Scrvlce·Lea1m1 11r.11.. ;~ ........ New cng & trans. Many ·
4$'Mt!eU
.:.Up.UT!Oiolr 5-1\J:t~~. bike w 1:.1>tiCl1AI paint. FllSTA ~'""' .,..,...,. -·i 3utomoblles. xtr•".,bcstofr.•.10-a"'" '•cao :.." lr~naportation. P.P.
--. bJ1·i..01lt'OOlcr.otc Paid Holtet.l car on th e RoyCwver,lnc. '7U4BZ4.50SE. 2711E.Cooslflwy "'-" '" .....,.. ·~· •o• S750.873-S338or673-31ll
DRAKECRA,FT 7b Jto ~100 + T"l.. liell for market! 30.40 mi P'!r gal Holb flo} l'e BMW Best used car ln O.C. <714 > 67$ 0930 CodilSoc 991 S ..._..., 9960
Jolybr1dt• Sedan 1111•. 0 .aS.S an c ludana 2 AvaUablt:for1mmed1atc l~OJarnboree LoMl,PP,64Hl449 ir......&. 9760 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:.! . .'':~("!.°.~°'"'"', .. ·•~::: ••r-'"
comp $30,000 or olr l'I' ht-lmeta 840 U67 delivery. Lnwel>t lcu::.r t'i<:wport,Beach 840-64'4 ---••••••••••••••••••••••• ~l..:iSll -----" '67 Mercedea 2.505, 1un· ••••••••••••••••••••••• • '73SatSebring. P/S, P /B.
7G llONDAXL2.SO 1700 rateontbemarket. 73 1\a,,uiahpd,AC,aun· roof, automatic. P /S, umSaabV~.64,000mi. '76 Ranc ho Squire . A/C,Aulo.$2300/bestof·
11 Sc1& Ray. 24 rru , pcrf cund Lac tor SeenowotCORTFOX roof. AM/FM radio. P /B. AM/FM. $3400. xJnt<.'Ol'ld.$1900. loaded, all elec. crulae fer.979-6612After6pm.
Weekender, 4S• Aero str~l ~s Yh IS.H67J i586Newport Bhd Wb1te/bJue Int. Mint 642-1965 49:J.9479aft s ,. • control, $5300/bsl ofr.
\tanne, rad101. depth ---- -64S.36'1 cond. Ori& ownr. 541>-3232 ~ -vCMIRty' 837-4926 '73 Duster; v.s. alr-cond. finder. 69 hrs total lime HONDA ATC 1'0. $400. '7S A..to. W.ted 9590 wkd) 8 S; PP Mercedes 220SE, sunroof. Toyota 97'5 S.•lh Cewht' ---------1 oria. owner. Fold down iU,500. 540·7494 or 250 XL. S900 Bi 11 . 97.,0 cpe. 4 spd, new mech & ••••••••••••••••••••••• • '73 V-6 Qipn. Good cond rear aeat. Only 39,000 ma.
&t2·1323UkforJlm ~or496-7S61 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DatMm 6 ext. Have receipts. $7SOO llFOREYOU Good price. $1750.833-1768 . • WI WILL IUY ••••••••••••••• • ••••••• invest ::.uc. ss.ooo. Financ tt76 CADILLAC 548·9706. Make
18 Electric Bo1H. Motor Homu, SaM YOUR DATSUN * DRIVE A * avl. PP. 494·1®1 eve~. SEU. YOUR StYIW '72 Duster. Gd '
l'~Gr~o meeharrifft COiid. 11200.
coupe. steel radial::.. V 41, mu at sell ltn med.
lllllo, P.S., r3dto, healer, 54&6673
JustUkenew. $4000. ....,./~ _ .... :,.,-ft ..... r...---*"[fni[E:·.-. *-------'?-CM~-r----+--l"'Ttfttl'td'r.ln After6 "'5·3262 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -..-A&urv vn -.v4 '71 280SL. T o bac • ' TOP DOLL.Al co/cO"nac int. Auto, 2 ~e U.'> for a lop doll:ir power assists. cruise
16' Runabout, divided MOTOR HOM ES FOR TOP C RS SAVE A LOT .. <.-sumatc' control, AM/FM stereo FOR RENT A tops, mtntc:ond. Bc:.t ofr. MAR"'UIS TOYOTA w\t h l ape pl ayer.
windshield, SS Johnson From $1SO. wk. TI0.0644 SH".'P •-COMPAR"' 213-622-33251714-640·6108 Ml!.,lON VIEJO w/lrlr. Lot1 of xtras '<J "' "' ~ (666RSH>. $11.00. Call 548·3504. RENT Fireball 23• Self '68 2SOS, full power. steer· 831-2810 495-1210 $9988
coot A t / I CC CB Ing, brakes. windows. -17'RElNELL.0 /D.50 hp · uoar. • ' air, low mileage, ivory 17 T.o yota Corolla .
Men:. HID trh:. t:xlras. st.ereo.slpsSCl45·228J with mmt red Interior, AM /FM stereo, under ·Nabers
Perf cond. H1·:.t ofr. AutoSenfce,,.... WE BUY new radials, xlnt cond. 10,000ml,642·8944
642·333Sor642 6-078 & Accessories 9400 CLIAH CARS $5500. 979·9721, art 6, ,,,...1705 '71 Toyota Corona. Stick CadiJI
MAR AUD F, R 2 it ' • •7•••.•••••••••••••••••• Ir TRUCKS .,..... shift. Perfect cond. $1295. ac.
f1ybrldge. lwn sl·rew. ,64· 77 Us ed Mustang FOFL!,!HPEAllCl?5T '66230SL4sp. stereo, botb 67s.&SS
low hrs, VIW, like new. I arts. 9tJO No. Parker. CONNELL ""' .. tops, lo ma. Roma N76496 "Streaker". Sl2.7~i-O. PP. Orani:e. Call 997-2000 Cal J im Mffdhom '67 250SL ran; .i seater Volbwogett 9770 ~or 7S2 0087 _WANTED Hardtop tor CHEVROLET TODAY! w ifull leathcr, auto.•••••••••••••••••••••
Bronco. Call 546-7790 and 88SDOVESTREET t.tereo, lo mi. Roma '7S 7 pass. bus. Ve
ask for Jerry. 2828 Harbor Blvd. Near MacArthur lt.12263 c I ea n . n I au pun Boats, Soll 906 COSTA MESA & Jamboree Road:. Both tn flawless cond AM /FM/coss. $4700 or
•••••••••••••••••••••• '74 Toyota Landcrulser 6 546-1200 &ll ·llOO Scriou::.mquiric.:.. ofCer66_! l!~J1
33' LAPSTRAK E SLOOP cyl £NGIN E. Overseas Imports Norwegian c:.tm. dbl. 54_5_·1267 ___ --1 WE PAY TOP DOLLA H IEA T THE PRICE
00 VW Van, 1971 eng,
good condition
$1.S2S. •96-9789
'iO Cad Sedan. Fufl
power, nu tires&: brks.
$1085 548-0285
bucket seats. vinyl top, p--t.1-------9-9-65 611,000 mt. $2000 or bc::.t ~
offer. 1976 Ford Pinto. •••••••••••••••••••••• •
R ./li, •·speed, steel '73 Pont. Grand Prix
radJals, 3·door runoboul, OutatandJna beaut. cond.
9,000 ml, $3000. ~vt!ntng& Loaded. Guarn. By orii;:.
552-0129 owner. $2495. 831·70115
'70 Torino. Convertible.
Engine pcrf, l)ds minor
body work. $1000.
494.()387
ORANGE COUNTY'S
eves
FANTASTIC IUY
Must sen nowt
·75 Pontiac Trans·Am
AM/FM stereo w /tapc
deck. Very clean. ~495
957.0338
HEWEST VeCJO 9974
LJNCOLN·MERCURY .. •••••••••••••••••••••
Dealershlpl.snowOPEN VEGA 76 ~nder. Well found. Crula Chevy Mags, hke new, FORTOPUSEOCARS INCREASE!!! 675-7903
ang diesel hveaboor willrcs. also vw adap· FOREIGN. DOMESTIC 67~1!p2388. $34K or offer . torsS>S. 768·9052 orCLASSlCS 56NEWCARS --------1 '73 VW Van <nowlndowa> '64 C.ad. P1S, P fB, air. RAYFl.ADEIOE HATCHIACICGT
7l M.ftedH 280 xlntcond. Mags, AM /FM AM/FM radio, all elec. LlNCOLN·MERCURY AIDEMO. 5 tpHd .,. ll your car is e>Ctra clean
' C 5) Goodyear AT see us larst. ATTJlE OLD PRICES
1975 18 Sol Cat, So" sails. Trackers !Ox IS while IAUER IUICK AU models now 11vaila·
duel trape1e, l'Slm trlr, spoked ~heels. $2ZS. 2925 Harbor Blvd. ble. Call or see us before ~-~~ n d • S 2 • 0 O 0 · &10-9L51 eves. Costa Meaa 979.2500 you buy! 1 !
• . Weber carburetors 48 lDA 77 ~estsa1J 32. Fully on McKay manifold for ~quipped. Sacrlfic smaJlblockChevy,lhrot· ~.500 or trade lor O.C. lie linkage & fuel lines ~eal Estate. Pvl pty. complele & 'ready to run. 073-4220 SSSO or offer. 631·2092
Hobie Cat 14 '• movln11 days or 979·6242_ e~ -
must sell. $850 bsl orr.
646· 1291 or 67S·S707 Autos for Sal• --....••..•....•........•
By owner. 32' O.t;. Alkins Anti /
·Enc· ketoll, beaut1cu1. cl::ics 9520
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
FOR CLEAN
~J
18113'> l:lEACll OLVO
HUNTINGTON OEAOI
1142 7781 '>40 O·M~
loaded. Locatl·d Yacht Haven 112. Wilmington, ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMPORT CARS
•, ml W. of Ford bridge. 40. Ford, pkup. $1200. 38 ALL MODELS
!!051245-1830, if no answer rord pickup, $600. & 28 ---------
213/518-1091 Model AA Trur k. $300. WE -PP 837-0279 or 768-6396
WANTED to exchan~c : 4--MEED ~o· motor/sailer ketch WMel Drives 9550
for house or condo an ••••••••••••••• • ••• •• • • CLEAH
Palm Desert or Palm AMC-JHP USED CARS
Spnngs Pvt party. Call #I la Calif. MOW
714,833-3544 WE OUTSELL ALL CAU ,APPY
'73 Hobie 16' w/Ur. dbl
trap. life jackets, whl.
hulls. blu sails 556-4729.
556-4729. suoorobo. Mu~t
Sell.
JEEP DEALERS
lNTHESfATE 540-5630
HUGE INVENTORY
AJI Models New & Used
Lcnsmg Available
CostoMHo
LIDO 14 w/trlr. No 2200. AMC Jfftt
Xlnt. cond. $9SO, 6+H13S 2524 HARBOR BLVD.
or_64_4_-&1_s7 ______ 1 Costa Mesa 549·8023
Ion ~so~ & so~
• LINCOLN ·MERCURY
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
284SHARBOR BLVD.
540-6410 540-021 l
'76 r>ati.on 280Z· Air cond.,
AM 1FM stereo w/lnpe,
leather l'Crnsolo, wire
wht:els. 1:1k1 rack & mag
caps. Extra snow lire:. &
wheels included. Im ·
maculall' Pr1. pnrty.
Call 7Sl}-0l)4\ days ;
6 7 3 · 0 5 I I n i l 1• S
weekenrls
'7 1 Dat!>un Pkkup. l"H'ell
rond Many xtras.
S3000 Ri.l of r . 968 ~
'71 Dnti.un !HO. mus t -.ell
Im med 1 Best ocrcr.
&io 9'.J03 btwn 3·1lpm.
'72 SIO Wagon 1-cavm&
for Europe SI 100 or of·
fer. Eve!\ 673 8260
Mi rac.IE~
n1azda
J • ...... ...
Auto, air, power win· s~reo. tape. 768-6640 ~. 847-8032 16-lBAuloCenter Dr. ......._ air ~ etc. ~~:s·M-?:~!~~·~'-~t:O '70 VW. New engine. All '74 Cpe De Ville, xlnt, full SDFw>'·lf:~fJ~reslexil C6505 /35l2t. Wa s
miles. "Pristine condi· records kept since 1970. ~~~~.~Bat olr 130.7000 $37'5. t Ion th r u 0 u t ! • • Some body work needed. _.....
"Probably the finest stoso. Doug 751-2223 or 74 CADILLAC MlilltancJ 9952 0ML y $3198
used · 280 anywhere!" _642_-8m9 ________ 1 a DORADO ••••••••-••••••••••••• HOWAllD CheYrolet
Mustbesecnanddnvcn' I600Engine&Transaxle. Tinted glass, PS & PB. '66 Auto 289. S7.000 orig Dove&Qual\Sl5.
(MBHBl Gdcond. $400. alr cond., auto. trans., ml. 2 OWJI~. Xlnl cond. NEWPORT BEACH
Call640-1G7g Power antenn3, AM/FM $1800.831·l548 . 113-0555
'56, oval window. Clean. stereo tape. Power win~. '67 Mustan~, yl'llow w/blk 74 Vega Wgn, air, auto.
$
Lie. GTX 201. 673·~328 & seaL'I. Power d~. lo<:k:>. int, clc3n. $800/ofrcr new tires.
CREVIER
1 sr £ HOADWAY • An noons & eves Landau lop. Crwse con· 586-0597 · · 541H144 or 548-8618
sAHTA AHA ----1 trol. Tilt wheel. New ------' ------
835·3I7 I ·ss VW Van, rcblt en", ~~·y~~st like new.~. Uaed Autos, U1ed
TNI ULTIMATE DlllVINC MACHINE new brakes. new gen. Retail Blue Book $6315 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ···············~······. MG. ---91.... $1.200/lradc. 675·2515 .... Our Special Price S.SOOO
••••••••••• •• •• •. ••• ••• '68 Bus. st.ereo caaaette. HANSEL •75 MGB cstm int, Hans rebll eog
Convertible. 4spd .. clec· _S1_300 __ . 64-5-'1-114-1----
tric overdrive. Al\l/l''M, •6z VW lun.. $600. OLDSMOllLE
d. 1 11 h 1 -7 1325 W. commonwealth, ra aa s. ra ye w ee s. 645-3389 '-'ullerton. c714 )S70-4200· "Sparkling red w, black ----r trim·' Nice thruout ! 'SJ vw Bua. Needs engine North on Euclid offramp
··superb example'' work.Bes•olfer. from Riverside frwy. to 1480NXM> 586-6207 Commonwealth, turn left. lA mile to Hansel
CREVIER
·ee TARGA 911T, xlnl.
cond. MUlt see! Luther
int W/XlrU. 541-$831 aft
5PM
'62 VW Gd Cond.
$700/farm.
646-9809
'71 Sqbrk VW. Auto. lo ml.
runs xlnt. Must sell now.
$1295. 586-2911
01ru..
76 S.VIU.. S9SOO
loaded leather. wires.
cruise, A.M/FM tape, till
wheel, P. seats. air, etc.
29.000 mi. 04.2TDF. PH:
752·0687 or 6'5-2963 Dir.
SELECTION w .............. best 1ll1ctl1• ..
...._ 'n-lebltt. D......._ Seine-.
hMI _. Ca .. ra la 0....,. eo.ty.
EXAMPLI: w, t..Te l .... • z c "'" c... p.22•. ,_ p.zn.
CLASSICS
,. __ .................
'72 K.-..._ #70IO
"7J ·--ONa #toll .,, .......... ,,..u
'72 IC.-GM. H OU
7J ·--GWe ..... SAYE
let'• ... ycMt Mat ...... prtces'
7Z~•T6 ........................ UHI Hntolnd.1tmt4
7.~ .. 1<'1i ..... • • • • • · • • • .. ···•••• ..... a••
•7f TewteC....4•.w ............... Sllll Auto. Jr,' tWk teoo ,_,. d<lwtt. 01 ~
7J,... ''° ~ c... . ............. 11n1 TOt>-.... lllO-, 74TNIN
'7S T!'-1!'!! C.e .... · ............. • ... Ulll 4 _. :AM/f'M .._ r91110. vlftYI f'OOl. IO ..... 407 Gt«
71 Ptnl c-ter l'lclllp .... ., .. .. • • • • • • ti I ..
4 ...-. •oorw11110111no. -llltll. dllol IMll&. '4MIW .,, .., .................................. ...
AM IWIO.M ........ IJOM 13AOT
'61-75 BUGS
O¥mt 25 TO CHOOSI MOM
llMAllc
I
• DAILY PILOT
---·--
W9dnuda le tembef 14, 1977
BRAND NEW
1977 PLYMOUTH VOLARE 2 DOOR SEDAN
$
225 Cid 6 cylinder engine. automatic transmission. left remote control mirror. protection
rubber stnps, front & rear bumper guards. wsw tires Ser JHL29-C7B-265569
SAVE NOW WITH CUSTOM CAR
LEA SI MG •••••
LEASE THE ALL MEW COIDOIA AMO VOi.AU OR ANY NEW
MAU CAI. TIUCIC OR YAM DIRICT AND SAVE! LOW
COMPETITIVE IATIS.-.FOR INFORMATION AHD PRICES
CAU. PAUL DIFAILIS-546-ltlf. FLUT SALES: 546-1934,
PAULDIF .... S.
AU
1977
DEMONSTRATORS
ON SALE
THI$ WEB END!
GIANT SAVINGS ON ENTIRE
INVENTORY . OF BRAND NEW
1977 CHRYSLERS AND
PL YMOUTHS, DURING ATLAS
CHRYSLER/ PLYMOUTH'S
CLOSE OUT ON ALL '77s.
.,
FABULOUS V,ALUES ON Fl~E USED CARS ......
'75 CHRYSLER
COIDOIA
V-8. automatic. air conditioning, pawer steering,
power brakes. power wlndowt. power 1eat1.
AM/FM aterto radio. heater. whitewall tires,
leather. ('409MVO).
53995
174 AMC
AMIASSADOI
V-8. automatic. air conditioning, power •leering.
power brakes, POWer windows. AM/FM radio.
heater. whttewall tlret, Vfnyt roof, cruise control tilt wheel. (838MXG) '
171 PLYMOUTH
GIAN FURY
V-8, automatic. air conditioning. power steering.
radio, heeter. whitewall tires. vinyt roof. bucket
seats. (601 CPC) •
5 1095
'74 FORD
PIMTO
,. cylinder. -4 speed, 1lr .conditioning. radio.
heater. whitewall tires. C878KHC)
•
'72 DODGE
SWINGER
V-8. automatic. air conditioning. power steering,
power brakes. radio. heater. whitewall tires, vfnyt roof (418MEB)
5 1395
'73 PLYMOUTH
FURY
V-8. automatic. air conditioning. power steering,
power brakes. power win~. POW8f teats.
AM/FM stereo radio, heater. whitewall tires. vinyl
roof. (770JFG)
'73 OLDS
CUTLASS SUPREME
V-8, automatic; air conditioning. pawer slfflfng,
POwer brakes. radio. heater. whitewall tlrn. vlnyt
root (011 JJSJ
..
5 1.895
1 76 PLYMOUTH
VOLAIE
V-8, automatic, alt conditioning, PC)Mr at"'1ng,
power brlkea. power windows, Pl>W9r •e•t•. ~M/FM stereo radio, heeter, whitewall tlr• 'l!nyt
roof, aunt00f. rallye whffft, tilt wheel. (854PCW)
l
Huntington Beach
Fountain Vffi,0~y Afteraooa
NY. Stoeks ..
VOL. 70, NO. 2S7, .. SECTIONS, '6 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEM BER 14, 1977 TEN CENT~
Land Use Proposal BB Pied Piper?·
By ROBIEaT BARKER
Of .. o.lty """ ..... HunUn~on Beach citv offirh1I"
are cons1derin1 changes ln land
uses that one planning com·
missioner declares "could dnve
out lots of people and workers
from lbe city.'·
The proposal under study tn·
e ludes rezoning or about 200
acres along Gothard Street from
industnal to residential uses.
More than 30 older homes
would be affected, generally
along Gothard Street between
Warner and Garfield avenues, 1f
ch a nges are approved in a
general plan amendment.
The zoning also would have an
effect. in the same area, on a
church. two worm farms. several
warebouses. an auto repair shop,
wrecking yards, a boat repair
and storage yatd, a pallet busi·
Fleeing From Flood
Robert Wi ggins carries his cat "Mutray" and his
favorite pair or boots lo high ground from his half·
submerged trailer home in Kansas City on Tuesday. For
story on flood damage, sec Page A4.
RB-built Rocket
Blows Up in Air
Divers began probing seas off
Cape Canaveral, Fla., today for
pieces of a Delta rocket built in
HunUnglon Beach and blown up
when it apparently railed 54
seconds after liftoff Tuesday
night.
The $4 2 million aerial ex·
plosion vi&'ible for miles over the
southeastern U.S. also claimed
an experimental communica·
lions satelLite built by the Euro-
pean Space Agency.
Spokesmen for McDonnell
Douglas Astronautics Company
in Huntington Beach said today
their $17 million Delta rocket was
insured, but the ESA satellite
was not.
The $25 million Orbital Test
Satellite built in a cooperative er.
fort by 10 European nations was
blown up when a U.S. Air Force
sarety officer made the judgment
in a split second and pressed the
destruct button.
A remote control television
camera aboard the space vehicle
bad flashed back a picture show·
Ing fire emitting from one end or
an englne Inside the Dolta rocket
Co ast
r. Late nlaht and momlne
low cloUd., wttb afternoon
a nd even ln1 clearln a .
Lowa tonlaht ui>per ~ t.o
mld.eos. Hi"1a Thursday
ln upper 80I to Jow 70. t.o
rnld·70s inland.
right after liftoff, officials Sj\id.
The rocket was blown \.Ip at
that point to prevent any possible
accident that might affect in·
habited areas.
"All we know at this point is
what NASA aqd the Goddard
Space Flight Center are releas-
ing,•• McDonne ll-Douglas
Astronautics Compan)'-Director
of External Relations Walt
Cleveland said today.
Spokesmen ai. the Greenbelt,
Md., tracking ceni.er said rurther
information would be forthcom·
Ing after recovery of m&JOr
pieces of the Della wreckage
from SS.foot-deep seas.
"This was the first destruct of
a Delta rocket since 1969," a
spokesman at the Goddard facill·
ty in Maryland said this mom·
ini;.
Officials sludylng the rocket
blowup said Delta vehiclea com·
monly used in orbital test nights
have logged .a 92 percent success
rate in night.
The satellite blown io bits only
12 miles downrange from the
Kennedy Space Center waa
cooperatively constructed by
Belgium, Denmark, France,
Germany , Italy, The
Netherlands , Sweden ,
Swlturl a nd, The United
Kingdom and Spain.
It was to be part of a com·
\nunlcationa nelwork of four
satellites to be operational wit.h1n
tbe next decade.
ness and other uses.
Planning Director Edward
Selich said the present uses
would either be "recycled" or
abated.
He said recycling would come
rn force when higher land values
or residential property would
force the owner to do something
else with his prosSerty.
Some or the "marginal" busi·
ncsses may be abated It they are
ruled a non-conformlnit use in the
new zorung, Sell eh said.
In that event, buslness owners
would be given between five and
20 years to amortize investments
before bein& phased out, Sellch
said.
"It is my opinion that the plan
goes too far," Planning Com·
missioner Chuck Gibson said to-
day.
"I have to be conce'rned that
we don 'l squeeze these people out
of the city," be added.
If the plan is implemented
art.er approval by both the plan·
njng commission and city coun·
cil, ~pulation in the area is ex·
peeled to climb by 6,896, accord·
ing to a staff report.
Four additional police officers
would be needed,
The switch to residental uses
also would add 2,000 students in
the Ocean View, Huntinaton
Beach Elementary, Huntington
Beach High School and Coast
Community College dist.l'icts.
Existing schools could accom·
modate the new students, the
stare report said.
The proposed chang"e also
would cul employment if in·
duslrial acreage is reduced.
Existing uses for the entire
<See ZONE, Page A2>
Carter Backs Pipeline
Long Beach Facility Urged in Reversal
WASffiNGTON <AP > -Tbe
Carter administration reversed
an earlier stand today and urged
Congress to authorize speedy
construction or as many as two
pipelines lo transport s urplus
Alaskan crude oil from the West
Coast to the inland United States.
FederaJ Energy A'aministrator
J ohn F. O'Leary told a Senate
subcommittee that the overland
lines are needed because of an
Ex.. County
Man Fights
For Life
! TALLAHASSEE, Fla. CAP> -
Attorneys for former Orange
County resident John A .
Sptnkelllnk, whose execution has
been scheduled for Monday, have
opened a two-front attack to keep
their client from the electric
chair.
SplnkeUink, 28, faces death al
8:30 a.m. Mol')day after Circuit
Judge John Rudd of Tallllhassee
refused to delay what would be
the second execution in the coun-
try since the U.S. Supreme Court
upheld captlal punishment! last
year.
His attorney, Andrew Graham.
Tuesday filed an a ppeal with the
Florida Stale Supreme Court im·
mediately after the circuit judge
refused to stay the execution or·
der signed Monday by Gov.
Reubin Askew.
Graham said the appeal is
based on Spin~elli nk 's 1973 murder trial in which he was con·
victed a nd condemned for
the shooting de ath of Joseph
Szymankiewicz, 43.
The attorney claims the con·
viction and death sentence are
uncons titutional because pro·
spective jurors opposed to cap·
tial punishment were not seated
to hear the case.
Meanwhile, Toblas Simon-, a
noted civil rights attorney from
Mlanu, planned to file an addi·
tional 01ot.ion in tile U.S. District
Court at Jaci<sonvllle \.oday s~k·
mg a stay of execution by attack·
Ing the Florida death penalty as
ra,caally discnminatory.
The National Association for
<See EXECUTE, Page AZ>
'Soap' Helps
ABC to Win ..
In Ratings
anticipated glut or oil from the
newly opened Alaska oil pipeline
on the U.S. West Coast. "The ad·
ministration firmly believes
that the construction or at least
one, and perhaps two, of the pro-
posed wes t-to-east ptpeline
systems is urgently needed to as·
sure an efficient means of de·
Ii vering Alaskan crude oil to
those ares of the country which
need it," O'Leary said.
Tbe two proposed routes are
the Sohio project involving a
pipeDne from Long Beach to
Midla nd, Texas ; and th e
Northern Tier Pipeline proposal,
which would bring a pipeline
from Port Angeles. Wash., to
Clearbrook, Minn.
O'Leary said the administra·
tion would like lo see the legisla·
lion broadened to include other
poss ible routes, including
Sprinter Strikes
Thugs Select
Wrong Victim
The two couples in their SOs looked like easy
targets for four teen-aged purse snatchers prowling
Balboa Island.
Two husbands were walking aboat 25 feet ahead
of their wives when two of the youths approached
from the opposite direction. passed the men and
zeroed in on the women.
As the youths passed. one reached.. out and
snatched the purse worn on the arm of Shirley Patton,
throwing her to the ground as he sprinted away with
the handbag.
SHE CRIED OUT for help and her husband,
Melvin, sprang into action. .
Four blocks later. the startl~d teenager was
brought down from behind by a flying tackle.
The young thug, it developed, had selected the
wrong victim in Melvin Patton's wife.
lie had just been ~un down to justice by a man
once called "The World's Fastest Human.'·
J'alton, in the 1940s, was known in sporting Jore as
sprinter "Pell Mel" Patton.
NOW UVING IN Tarzana, the Paltons were visit·
ing the Theodore Olsens of Newport Beach last Thurs·
day when the mcidt!nt occurred.
Police said both Patton and his wife suttered
minor abrasions from the incident but were otherwise
unharmed.
The four youths, from San Juan Capistrano, were
released to their parents by police but they face
further action in Juvenile Court in the case.
PATTON, A T RACK STAR at USC from 1946 to
1949, was i'"t.riple medalist at the 1948 Olympics in
London, winning a gold in the 200 meter, a silver in the
100 meter and anchoring the gold medal s print relay
team.
A native of Long Beach, Patton set world records
in the 100 and 200 yarq dashes. His record in the 220,
which was later disallowed due to wind, still stands as
the tastest time anyone has ever run tne distance on
the straightaway.
He demonstrated in Newport Beach that he can
still move right along.
Lance Says Media
BBrrage Untair
several that might go through
part of Canada.
Currently, Alaskan oil is either
being sent to West Coast re-
fineries or shipped via tankers
through the Panama Canal.
O'Leary said the administra·
lion bac~ legislation that would
cut through federal and state red
tape to gel tbe pipeline, or
pipelines, authorized as quickly
<SeeOIL. Page AZ)
'Park-out'
Stliged
ByTeachers
Westminstef (elementary>
School District teachers stqed a
"park-out" Tuesday by parkiQ1
tbelr Cllrs away from school lots.
A teacher spokesman said the acti~ was intended to show
parents what It would look like if no contract settJement is reached
by Monday.
Westminster teachers also
filed six un/alr Jabor practice
charges with state officials stem·
ming from alleged "inlimida·
lion" by school board and other
district ornctals.
Teachers and district officials
plan to negotiate all day Thurs-
day in an effort to reach a setUe-
ment on disputed contr act issues
includina salary, fringe benefits,
arbitration and duration of the
agreement.
Bill Bian c h i, a teacher
spokesman, said his group is urg·
Ing parents to attend a 7:30 p.m.
school board meeting at Stacey
School, 6311 Larchwood Drive,
Hunlineton Beach, to hear what
trwitees have to say about pend·
ing contract talks.
Last Friday, t~tees voted to
pay teacbe,.. 25 percent more
than their reauJar salary if they
crossed picket lines in the event
or a s&uce.
Bianchi said teachers believe
this was approved to Intimidate
their attempts to reach a con·
tract settlement. •
Dlatrict officials have offered
teachers up to a 5.5 percent pay
boost Lr they aeree to a thtee·
year contract. ~ ·
But teachers, who have worked
without a contract for t he past 18
months, want a one-year pact
with a 16 per cent acrosa the
·board pay hike for first year
teachers and raises for other Jn·
atruct.ors baaed on education and
expertenc• with the district.
Nord& in Power
OSLO, Norway (AP) -Late
electioft ntums ,today cave the Left Sodall.tt party a 71-17 ma·
jor lty In ,parlia ment in a
turnaroUnd that would put Primo II~ Odvar Nordll back ln
power. 'lbe mt.Cb cam• M boYn aft.er a four-party noa.soct•t
coaUUoa blid been pl'OlllOUIM.'ed
tho election wtnn1rs with a 78-TT majority ln tho new 155-aeat Stortlnl.
. 2 DAIL V PILOT WednHdlX S1p11m1>er 14 1977
Cops Get
Stolen
'IV Gear
81Aan1Va R. VINSEL ..... IY ...... ,...
Videota~ televl•lon equip
ment aUecedly •tolcm by Jalled
tleetnlnics and a&amc ahow whl1
Daniel J. Portley waJ eonttaeal-
e-d Tueaday trom flrm• lo
Newport Beach and Santa Ana
by Founlaun Valley police.
The asaorted electronic compo·
nent.a are valued al about S:UOO,
accordinat lo Detective Robert
Motlef, who earlier estimated a
S2,620loss in the March and May,
19'76, bur&Jaries.
"We ended up getting another
thousand out of it," Detective
Mosley said today, addina that
lhe merchandise allegedly taken
by Portley was apparently better
than even he realized.
The items including cameras,
monitors and recorders were
seized at a modeling studio, a
videotape manufacturing plant
and a pawn shop, police said.
Portley, 31, of 1601 S.
MacArthur Blvd., Santa Ana, is
held at Orange County J aJl on a
variety of charges stemming
from his Aug. 26 arr~st by Santa
Ana police.
Since he is a U.S. prison ,
parolee who served time at the
Federal Correctional Institution
for Men at Lompoc, Portley is in·
eligible to bail out or jail.
Specific charges against the
second highest winner in the his-
tory of NBC·TV's "Celebrity
Sweepstakes" game show in·
elude:
-Burglary.
-Possession of a firearm by a
conVJcted felon.
Federal parole violation.
He is scheduled for court hear·
ings on those charges Friday and
again Tuesday in Central Orange
County Judicial District Court.
Investigators say several law
e nforcement agencies have
placed hold orders on the defen·
dant for prosecution and Santa
Ana police believe him responsi·
ble for 40 residential burglaries
in their city alone. He also al-
1 eg ed I y made fo r ays into
Riverside County.
Fountain. Valley Detective
Mosley and his partner Tony
Marley claim the defendant com-
mitted one burglary at the Red
Carpet Realtors office, 18151 S.
Brookhurst St., the s ame day he
struck it rich with his game show
prowess.
Thal day Portley received a
check for $17,546 in cash won as a
-contes tant on Celebrity
Sweepstakes. He also won a
brand new car and a variety or
other prizes worth $29,000 in
total.
FV Planners
'Expect to OK
Antenna Law
The Fountain Valley Planning
Commission Is expected tonight
to okay a controversial 45·foot
vertical antenna restriction that
amateur radio buffs in the city
have fought for more than a year.
The commission wilJ meet at
7:30 p.m. in city council cham-
bers, 10200Slater Ave.
Planning commissioners say
residents complain that the radio
antennas are eyesores.
On the other band, radio
operators, including Citizen
Band (CB) buffs, say proposed
city antenna height laws are "un-
constitutional" and U mil their
broadcasting range, '
If the commission approves the
antenna height law. It must be re-
viewed by the city council belore
it goes into effect.
The council tentatively ap-
proved a 35·f oot limit April 19,
but balked at a final okay of the
law May 3 to allow the planning
commission to reconsider the
.matter.
OftANOI COMr "'"
DAILY PILOT
APWI .........
SEX SYMBOLI MARILYN AND FARRAH
The Acting Ability la Irrelevant
What Acting?
F~ Marilyn Compared
STEVENSON, Wash. (AP) -The question of Farrah
Fawcett.Majors' acting ability is irrelevant to her fans, says the.
onetime press agent of the 1950s' ultimate sex goddess, Marilyo
Monroe.
"When I handled Marilyn, in her happy days, she was ex-
traordinary," said Roy Craft, recalling his five years, 1952-1957,
with the actress.
"THE DIFFERENCE IS, PERHAPS, that Fawcett-Majors
is more of a personality. But an extraordinary personality."
Craft, editor emeritus or the weekly Skamanis County
Pioneer who s ays he finds Miss Fawcett· Majors "delightful,"
said there is a simple rule in show business: Hustle what yoll
have.
"IF YOU ARE TALKING ABOUT popularity, marketability,
the acting isn't important. Any fine dramatic actress will play the
role to which she's assigned." he sa1d.
"But when you get a personality. I think it's a mistake to
have her play anything but herself. . .The thing is, when
someone turns to Farrah Fawcett-Majors on TV. they want Farrah
Fawcett·Majors. The question or her acting ability is beside the
poJnt."
E',... Pase AJ
EXECUTE. • .
the Advancement or Colored Peo·
ple in New York also were work-
ing on the appeal brier.
Spinkellink is white.
Graham is ar(uing that persons who kill whites get the
death penalty but those who kill
blacks do not. He said the 90 men
and one woman under death sen·
tence in Florida were convicted
of killing 111victims,108 of whom
we re white.
Spinkelliuk's mother , Lois.
who lives in Buena Park said she
plans to leave today for Florida
with her daughter and son·in·law
to visit her son in prison before
his scheduled excution. She is re·
covering from surgery to remove
a blood clot near her lungs.
If the execution goes ahead as
planned, it will be only 1the
second in the United States since
July 2, 1976 when the U.S.
Supreme Court upheld the death
penalties of three states, includ-
ing Florida.
In January, Gary Gilmore
became the first convict to be ex-
ecuted when he died before a fir-
ing squad in Utah.
Spinkellink, who was serving a
prison sentence for a 1968 Orange
County armed robbery convic-
tion, escaped from a minimum
security prison farm in Big Sur in
1972.
E'ro.. PGffeAJ
LANCE •••
testimony today from officials of
the Justice Department and the
Office of the Comptroller of the
Curren<'y about an investigation
of overdrafts by the Calhoun
First National Bank of Calhoun,
Ga ., to Lance's 1974.
gubernatorial campaign com-
mittee at a time when Lance was
chairman of the board of the
bank.
The case was closed late last
year by John W. Stokes, then the
U .S. attorney in Atlanta, without
prosecution.
Glenna L . stone, former chief
of the fraud section in the U.S. at-
torney's office, testified that
Stoket told her after clostnc the
case "that be should call 'Jlmmy
and Bert' and tell them what he
hkd done." She took this u a ref.
erence to then Preaidtnt•lect Jimmy Carter and to LaDC?e.
Mill~ tfttlned that StA>ke5 told her a.ft.er Jut Novemt;er·a
electklft that be wu anxious to It&~ Jnhla pOSt for one more yeaf
ao that be Would be ellslble for a
f tdenl penalon.
On another matter, Sen.
William Roth <R-Del.>, aaJ.d he wauld Mk the eoauntttee to call ' pre.. aeeretar1 Jody Pow~u.
,WJltt• ffouat coun1,t Robert u_. J>Nlldeatial uatstant
HlllidltGa Jor4• and Jobn L.
llOON Ir., DOW 'P"lldent of the
BxPGlt'tmDOrt• Bia and a lt1al •
.ctoiliW to Carter -etbJet .. &be "'104 after Illa tleetJon, to ·.er: ...... tUt be, JOC'da
W IM:Q:, uw •FBI l'lliOrt ·~ .. ftiiaMlal trWtilel la 1-•rJ INt diet DGt Ml tbe 11'•1111 ,..,_1t.1loonW11• =~·---•lloUtliow ~1'm.-rr.c:.~
Magdalena
V ahland Dies
In Huntington
Bible-carrying Magdalena
Vah l and. w ho tended th e
wounded in Bremen, Germany,
during World War II. has died in
Huntington Beach, after achiev·
ing her dream or American
c1tizenship.
Private family fun eral
services for the lO·year local
resident were held today with
commission or her ashes to the
sea off Newport Beach.
She was 85 and saw the horror
wrought in two World Wars as a
res ident or lhe industrial city or
Bremen. before emigrating to
the America.
"Her father was in the United
States for a while." says one of
Mrs. Vahland's daughters,
Gisela van der Straeten. "but we
don't remember where. It was
somewhere in the east."
Magdalena Vahland suc-
cumbed to the illnesses and com·
ptications of age eight days ago
at a Huntington Beach nursing
home.
"We got bombed out in Bremen
and moved to Salzburg, Austria.
and we got bombed out there
too," says Mrs. van der Straeten,
a San Francisco resident who re·
members the war years well.
"She believed very much in
God and always kept our spirits
up," Mrs. van der Straeten re-
calls or those times in Bremen
and Salzburg bomb shelters.
The ramlly eventually moved
to the U.S. in 1953, settling first in
Soulh Pasadena, then Alhambra
and finally Huntington Beach.
"She was a native German but
she got her citizenship papers,"
says Mrs. van der Straeten. "She
Just felt America had been good
to her and she learned beautiful
English."
Survivors in addition lo Mrs.
van der Straeten include a son,
Otto Lanirtahr. of Hamburg,
Germany; daughters Magda-
lena Langjahr of El Monte, and
Lillian Klasnn, of Huntington
Beacb,andfou.r1randch.Udren.
Rites at sea for Mrs. Vahland
were under direction of Newport.
Beach's Neptuae Soclew.
l',...P,,.eAJ
ZONE •••
West OC
Schools
'Down'
By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR.
Of Ille Dally,. .... ~
West Orange County school
enrollments continued to dip
slightly, accerding to attendance
figures compiled after the first
day <:I clus'5 Monday.
But school officials agree Ural
attendance figures may rise by
next Monday when all students
get a round to reporting to
classes.
Huntington Beach Union High
School District attendance is ex-
pected to reach 20,150 students by
the end of the week, said Assis-
tant Superintendent Howard
. Roop.
Last year, about 21,000 high
scbool students enrolled in the
fall.
District officjaJs said enroll·
mer.tat West county high schools
has leveled off and is expec'ted to
begin a gradual decline in the
next few years.
Marina High School in HWlt·
ington Beach is again "one of the
largest high schools west of the
Mississippi," as 4,074 pupils re·
ported for classes Monday, said
Roop.
Roop added that Monday's
school opening in the district
"was one of the smoothest ever."
Meanwhile, in the Ocean View
(elementary) School District in
Huntington Beach, 12,350
youngsters came to class Mon·
day, according to the district's
Gayle Wayne.
The first day attendance was
450 students less than anticipated
and worries some district of·
fi cials. The district has seen 1,500
Cewer students come to school
since a peak of 14,000 last year,
s aid Mrs. Wayne.
At some schools, said Mrs.
Wayne, more students than ex-
pected showed up. Al other
schools, fewer students attended
than had been expected lhe first
day of classes.
Mrs. Wayne blamed .the
decline in enrollments on the
high price or homes in the West
County area. District ofCicials
now predict that only one child
goes to elementary school from
every three homes.
In the Huntington Beach City
(Elementary) School District
7.460 students came to school
Monday.
District official Jim Macon
said this figure was about 150 stu·
dents less than anticipated. He
expects more studen~ to show up
for class by the end of the week.
Last fall, about 8.000 students
came to class on the first day or
school.
TAKES HELM
Clinic Chief Elson
NEW ASSISTANT CHIEF
Clinic's Earl•baugh
Elson Appointed
HB Clinic Director
Doug Elson, 29, has been ap-
pointed executive director of the
Huntington Beach Community
Clinic at an annual salary of
$15,600.
At the same time, clink direc·
tors selected Marty Earlabaugh,
32, as assistant director. Her
starting salary is $13,200.
Elson and Miss Earlabaueh
have been heading the clinic
since May when former director
Barry Crawford was discharged,
according to Suzie Newman,
president of the board of direc-
tors.
Elson is a graduate of
Arizona University in Flag-
starr. He has been with the clime
sincel975.
"We're going to do our best to
re·establish the credibility of the
clinic," Elson said Monday. "It
is a credible place and.it serves
an important need in the com·
munity." -
A series of dismissals and res-
ignations have rocked the clinic
(formerly known as the Hunt-
ington Beach Free Clinic) almost
from its inception in 1970 .
Mrs. Newman said today,
"The cloud that has long been
hanging over past administra·
lions and the credibility of the
clinic is now put lo rest.
"Both Elson a nd Miss
Earlabaugh are thorough pro·
fessionals who will do a good
job," she said. "The clinic is out
or its infancy and is becoming a
viable community resource.·'
The clinic offers free medical
ser vices, counseling and legal
advice to all segments or the
community.
It operates on an annual budget
of $1.30,000 with most o( its rev-
enues coming from t e seers els
Department of Health, general
revenue sharing funds and the
West Orange County United
Crusade.
The clinic gets its building at
6th Street and Orange Aveoue
from the city of Huntington
Beach free or rent.
I',.... Page Al
OIL •..
as possible -as previous legisla·
lion did for Alaske oil and yet· to·
be built gas plpel in es.
In the past, the administration
has opposed such an approach
for a west·to·east oil pipeline.
O'Leary said the fact that
these earlier pipeline laws have
seemed to work well has
''brought us increasingly to the
view that a legi slative
framework for a decision on
west-east oil pipeline routes
would be in the public interest.•·
He testified on legislation by
Sen. John Melcher <D-Mont.)
that would mandate a federal d~
cision on\one of two proposed
pipelinerdutes by Feb.1, 1978.
Bandits Identified
SAN YSIDRO (AP) -Police
say illegal aliens identified two \
youths and an unemployed Mex-
ican man as bandits who beat
and robbed them north of the
U.S. border.
Scene Stealer.
I
Drexel's oriental adaptation
in antique bone with chinoiserie decoration
is destined to play a lea(jlng role
in your decorating story.
Sale! There are room accents and mere are room ~!.
Here·s one that doet everything. Adds. contrast. sel• the
moods, brings rlchness=o part of )'OUr home. An en-
chanting Et Cetera boo with Interior llghhng, ad-
.Nstable gla51 shelvos gill finish bade panel. 56" wide
by 79~ .. high bY 1-4" deep. . .•
l
\
----.
-•
OrangoCoast Daily Pilot Editorial Pag.e••••••••w•edtl•..cs•••Y•. s.•p•t••m•be•'• , ••.• '9•1•1•••••R•o•oo•rt.=.~.r: •• e:.:.~.:.u~.~.::.:.:.:•d•n•o:.1:.~.:.:.:.,K.e".d.~.~.:e •• d'.•o.r
AG •IF
Council's Losing
Its Manners Again
• Most city hall watchers ca.n '4tadlly recall the "good old
doya" In Huntington Beach when the Monday night olty coun-
cll neettngs w ro known u the beat 1how In town.
• Ftroworks were s regular thing as recently u two years
ago and hardly a meeting went by without at leut one offl,cial
slashing a·Nay at anothe<.
Council members were quick to shoot from the hip end
slow to keep their tempers. · ·
Three new council members came to office after the elec-
tion of 1976 and manners improved.
Courtesy and good will were more evident and there were
eyen references to "madam mayor" and other niceties of that
nature.
But recently, manners have falJen apart. The honeymoon
of more than a year.may be oyer.
A donnybrook erupted when the council refused to let the
public speak at a tax-setting session. .
The meeting sparked a display of hard feelings between
Councilwoman Harriett Wlede,r, who urged the residents to
attend the meeting, and Mayor Ron Pattinson. who did not.
More recently, the city attorney was threatened with ejec-
tion from the chambers unless he restrained himself In a
verbal battle with a councilman.
The meetings are lively and offer head-to-head competi-
tion with Monday night football telecasts.
• One wonders, however, If city business .couldn't be ac-
complished more effectively If it were handled with more de-
corum.
Work with Marines
Fountain Valley residents are still waging a battle to have
the 130-acre core area of Mile Square Park officially declared
as recreational space.
Last month the U.S. Marine Corps said it was eyeing a
plan to build military housing units for servicemen and their
dependents.
Thanks to the public outcry, the plan was scrapped -at
least for now.
Military officials admit they may again eye plans to build
housing at Mile Square If needed In the future.
Fountain Valley residents and city officials are well aware
o f this possibility and are pressuring county and federal of-
ficials to have the 130-acre core area declared as surplus and
converted for park use.
The fact is this property is not that appropriate for military
housing, particularly in view of the recreational belt surround-.
ing It.
The Marine Corps obviously must have justification for
giving it up, however. and Fountain Valley should work with
the Marines in helping them resolve their obvious housing
problems tor personnel stationed in Orange County
·Debate Prolonged --The Ocean View (elementary) School District teachers·
call for a state-appointed "tact-finding" team will prolong a
negotiation proce&S already under way for seven months.
The slow-working state Educational Employment Rela-
tions Board machinery could prolong contract talks another
month.
From outward appearances, the district and teacher
negotiators are not that far apart on key contract Issues.
Perhaps more could have been accomplished during the
summer.ii negotiations would have been held -but that's
t1 me that can't be recaptured.
The problem at hand is how to break the cufrent
deadlock in the talks.
The fact-finding team may ultimately find the answer, but
unfortunately negotiations on both sides are halted while this
avenue is pursued.
Certainly tha,t's better than a strike or work stoppage, but
it isn't likety to bring a fast curtain over a wrangling process
that already has stretched out far too long.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invited.
Bf.)yd/ 4rtists.' Wives
ByLM.BOYD
Art editors c laim that
sketches submitted. to them of
females , clothed or
o\berwise, tend to be drawn
wlth the proportions of the
artiat 's wife in each case.
That's even if the artist
worked" wl th some other
model, they aay. The artist
evldenUy la inclined to .. cor-
rect" the rendering to more
closely match that most
ramruar filure. ,,-
King Loula XVI of France
kept a daily diary. But he got
bored pl"«ty easily, so most of
hit entries Juat read :
"Notbtn1." .Hlstortcal re·
• searchers say th•t•a what he wrote thel'etn on the day the
ButWe wu stormed, aetti.nl
· off tbeFreQcb Revolution.
• A witter hearlns rettre-m-1 says., .. l 1ve ~nown for
yean that people tip better
' whmeacb la retpob.Slble for a
bill. That's why I always give
separate checks, i( ~ssible."
In Switzerland, you can be
Clned for tax evasion, true
enough, but you can't be aent
to prisoa tor it.
Nominations are now open
for candidates whose descrip·
tlons may aptly begin with:
"He's the kind of guy wbo
. . . "For example. Omaha's
Gunner Brown: "He's the
kind ol IUY wbo orders an egg
salad sandwich, and
says 'Hold the mayon·
nalse'."That's bad. Very bad,
Anyotbera?
It's a little known f1ct that
wllen actress Katharine Hep.
bum married Ludlow Odaen
SmJth bl li28, tbe uked hhn
lo chance h1s Jut aam• to
01den to ahe wouldn't be
ldenUflecl as another Kite •
Smith.
Earl Waters
These Strikes Endanger Lives
lf the specter or city firemen
standing idly by while your house
burns to the ground frightens
you, the opportunity to take ac·
hon to prevent It lrom becoming
a reality may be yours at next
June's election.
Two southern Californians,
Dolly Swift and Betty Cordoba,
are currently
g a·thering
signatures to
place a ·con·
s titutional
am"endment
on the ballot
prohibiting
strikes by
publi c
employes .
They have un·
til Dec. 2 lo qualify the measure
for ballot placement.
No doubt the recent events in
Dayton, Ohio, will give impetus
to their drive. Jn that city the
s pecter did become a reality,
Art Hoppe
when st:rildnr firemen permitted
at least 20 fires to go unchecked
durlnf their holdout for higher
waies.
The Dayton strike continued
after a judge had ordered the
strikers back to work. However a
contempt ol court action was not
pursued because an agreement
was reached in the time whicb in·
t ervened between the hearing
date set on the contempt charge.
In California. despite repeated
·court rulin gs that public
employes do not have a right to
strike, work stoppages, sick-
outs, and other refusals to work
by those on public payrolls have
been increasing.
VARIOUS legislative pro·
posals, including a constitutional
a mendment have been in·
traduced at past sessions to spell
out a ~trike prohibition without
s uccess. Last year Orange Coun-
t y Sen. Dennis Carpentu
authored such a constitutional
change only to see the Senate de·
feat it by a vote or 19 to 14, far
short of the 27 votes needed.
Asked why he had authored the
bill in view ol the consistent court
rulings against strikes,
Carpenter said he believed a con-
stitutional amendment would be
helpful. Ir nothing else. he in·
d icated, passage -Of such an
amendment would make it clear
that the people are not sym-
pathetic to strikes by public
workers.
He also suggested that even
though the courts have ruled
against strikers, there are no
s pecific prohibitions in the law.
Until recenUy there have been
few instances where striking
public employes have suffered
a fter effects. Usually the
scenario has witnessed manage-
m ent going to court and obtain-
ing injunctions and orders for the
employes to return to work. Even
when such court ord~rs are
blithely ignored no pe~ties
have been imposed and workers
have been permitted to return to
their jobs alte.r the strike is set·
t1ed.
IN FACT, attempts to
terminate s triking employes
have nm afoul or court rulings
a nd sometimes pub1ic sentiment.
But a most recent decision by
the court or appeals in Los
Ange les, holding s triking
Pasadena school teachers liable
for damages may signal a turn in
altitudes towards illegal strikes
against the public.
lf the effort lo place a direct
prohibition against strikes on the
ballot fails to qualify such court
rulings are the public's only im·
m e diate hope of protection
against walkouts by firemen and
police and other essential public
t?mployes because no legislation
on the subject is currently pend·
ing before the Legislature.
A White House· at the End of the Canal?
All right. kiddies, just one
more story about Sir Ronald of
Holy Rood and then it's beddY·
bye.
Well, as you remember, Sir
Ronald and his faithful squire,
"You mean our cowardly King
Jimmy would abandon this
magnificent real or modern
engineering, this eighth wonder
of the world, this bastion of de·
mocracy, this key to southwest
Central America, this freedom·
loving canal for which our boys
S ancho
Nofziger, had
plunged deep
into Th e
Tangled
Thi c ket in
quest of The
Holy White
House. But
that glimmer·
ing goal had
tantalizingly
_ ) fought and died? Would he
violate the holy Monroe Doctrine If by yielding up this sacred soil of
_., -the Americas to a foreign power
'l/ without a fight?"
"Well, I guess Panama is a
foreign power, sire," said
1. Sancho, "when you put it thal
' way."
eluded Sir Ronald over the y,ears
and he was not growing any
younger.
So it was that he limped weari-
ly around a bend in The Thicket
and came upon a large ditch
filled with turgid water.
"Hola, Sancho!" be cried. "Be
this a moat encircling some
fortress wherein the fair damsel
or fiscal responsibility pleads to
be rescued from the ogre or def.
1cit spending?"
"Nay, sire," said Sancho. "Tis
but the Panama Canal.··
"PFAR!" snorted Sir Ronald.
turning his back. "Obviously 'tis
but a creaky antique that has
long outlived its usefulness.••
"Verily, sire," agreed Sancho.
"Thus would King Jimmy give it
away to keep the peace.''
"WHAT of our Manifest
Destiny, varlet? Does not this
canal stretch from sea to shining
sea ? Should this mighty canal
slip from our gras p, bow could
our Great White Fleet sbow the
flag?"
"As good a question as any,
sire."
"Let us not forget The White
Man's Burden, Sancho, while at
the same time we Remember the
Maine!"
"Can you see the light at the
end of the tunnel, master?"
asked Sancho hopefully.
"No." said Sir Ronald, "but I
"What 6ay you?" snapped Sir
Ronald. "A give-away program?
To whom would this coward give
it and why?" 1)'
think I can see the White House
a t theendofthecanal."
With that, he drew his famed
Swinging Sword, s houted his
a wesome battle cry. "For Decen·
cy, for Purity and for Just Plain
Goodness!" and vanished into
The Tangled Thicket, yelling.
''CHAAAARRRRGGGGE!"
SANCHO sat on a rock and
4mopped his brow. "I should have
known," be said, shaking· his
head ... He always gets emo·
tionally involved when anyone
wants to get rid of a creaky an-
tique."
''To Panama, master," said
S anc ho, crin ging s lightly .
"Primarily because it bisects
that land from which we stole it
75 long years ago." " •... ANDTUl5 ON~'S FOR VIETNAM .... AND"Tl-flS a.JE'S FORT+.#EMA.YAl::sUU ..... ANP, -ru1s ume BJTIY NEW ONe 1s FOR PANAMAT.:. '' , "Ahab!" cried Sir Ronald. .. . -,
Mailbox
• .
Teacher's Contplaint Bings True Through Ages
'
To the Editor:
"What have you done. what
good came of your silting here?"
ream af:erian clay tablet of
about 1 B.C., now in the
Universlt of Chicago's Oriental
Institute recording his · i,nstnac-
tor 'i irate lecture a(ter a st.udent
had nunked bb writing test.
"YOU ARE already a rlpe man
and close to being aged! Like an
old ass, you are not teachable
any more. Uke withered grain
you have p8S8ed the aeason. How
long will you play around? But it
is 1till not too late! Jt you study
night and day and work all tho
time modestly and without at·
rogance. ii you Usteo to your col-
leaaues and teach~. you can
st.ill become a acrlbe." What upset the lnltnactor wu
that the youth'• father wu a
teach«, and he claimed ~1t tt
• was iM father and bls brothers who have failed. not. be. , .Solomon wu rlcht. tJMre's
nothing· new under tb• 1un.
FRANK KLOCK
.... ,....1 ••• .,
would be an improvement over
that decaying firetrap standing
on single residential home
property.
I am not a realtor.
FRANK 8. WALKER
C-'t Aller.ti It
To the Editor:
I 1ure laudied at pilot Dale
Jobn.scm'a letter in the Sept. 8
Mailbox. • He ls flying on single-family
resldentlal 1one land at
Meadowlark Airport. Now he is
screaming it's the reaJtora• fauJt
th1t. the c1ty wan\I to get rid of
Meadowlark Airport before they set 1ued tor a million dollars like
San Jua Captatrano la. Our tuee are too hlch: we
ca,n't afford to pay for deaths uuaect by pilots.
B.C. DEADRICK
fluorocarbons don't harm the ozone. You notice that they never
say that it does, only that it
.. may .. harm the ozone.
The theory depends on
nuorocarboos beln& changed into
chlorine in the ozone. There is no
evidence that the fri1id alrorthat
altitude changes nuorocarbons'
int.ochlorlne.
IT WILL soon probably be
Jearned that. t.be more gasoline a
car bums. the more pollutants it
pumpe into the atmosphere. The
eff ec:t ol smoi control& on an
englne ls to cause it to bum more
aasoline. .
Nothing ls "burned up •• It ls
Ju1t changed. Tberelore. t:be ear
tbat bums more guolln.e wlll
cause more pollutantl.
The prablem Lt that the ltDOI
contra& baa beeotne IO hup tb1t
lta colJapae mlcbt triC1er a
depresaloo.
All the 1ovemment bu to do to nx tb.inp up la t.o put a law.
They have IOlved the problem Of
childrel\11 clothlnl catcblnl ft.re:
they have fixed \he 010ne and the •m0f. lt'1 all ln the books . JAll~W. BOLDING
has never represented it in his
role as President Carter's
delegate.
The ambassador became a
Marine Midland director in 1973
but resigned in March c( this
year ratber than permit the im-
proper allegaUons concerning
his relationship with our bank to
impair bb effectiveness in
representing President Carter •
His position on the Panama
Canal la not a banking lssue and
Marine Midland's good name
should not be draaeed into tbe
political arena.
YOU MIGRrbe interested that
the ambassador'• buaineu af-nuauons were fU1.lY MPOrted to
the Carter adminbtrat.lon IDd
elearecl throa1h. the ~e
Department be!ore his a t-
mct by the Pnilldelrt. hrtbtt.
th19 bank baaed a pubftc release
ffltinC forth It.I Panamanla in-
volvement Gess than S8 mUBot\
In lo1111 to Panam•. '•Jl current
IDd repnsenUii1abOut1/1'Ut ol
1 -percent of, our auets) and I ~met with a number of
eonsrstmen t.o be certain ~~
unitenitciod Marine MlclJMd 1w
no •i*1al tnteswt Of' liik Jn the Panama Canal treaty;.
t1DICJttaaatefi. ~ Ml dts·
doluN -not tt®"4 tbe ..,_ ~'npoN 1ielica bdillid
ID tM KlllC letteri • ARTHUR B. zrmt.aR. Ex ....... Vlff Pridilinl
....... 8Mk
I
·.
... Wednesday. September 14. 1977 s DAILY PILOT
Controversy Swir& Over Pt. ConceptWn LNG
POINTCONCF.PTION IAP> -Thll a"nlc, laolattd aplt ol lancJ
Juttlna lntoth• Pacific hu be n larctly bypustd dunna th• arowch
of Cafifomla from rar·Oun1 Spa.nJ h colony Into a populalC!d , tn
duslrial at.alt
Bu\ no•. UU. &rH ha~ bttn cat1pulted lnto lht htlldllnn by a
bill Uteataltleogill1ture ha. pUAed lh1tha1apawned1 complex, ol\to
bltttteMTay-ven uJ eon v1ronmentdeb1tt
THE a.ILL WOULD PEllMIT 1tvcrll uUJatiea to build 1 '800
mLl.Uon Uqu.lned natural au <LNG> wml.nal at CoJo Bay ln tbe ltc uftbo~t.
Jt • • irubatJlute loealloo, wbkh wouJ.d 1'eplace earlier propoaaJs
t.o put Ut~ plant ln Oxnard or Los Anaelu Harbor.
On one!' aide are gas industry apokesmen and state and county
pohUcla.ns who say ener-o t.hort Callfomla muat import auper·
( ]
cooled natural aas by stllp by
•at least 1981 if the st.ate is to ECOLOCY avoid cutol(s or gas to homes
_ , and businesses.
ENVlRONM£NTAUSTS, nGHTING the scheme throuah a
loose coalition called tbe Point Conception Preservation Committee,
say buildang the state's tint LNG terminal here would ruin ooe of
the last. unspoiled eecliona of the California coast.
It's a controversy with some local twists:
-A dispute between Santa Barbara County and the state over
who will make the ultimate decisions about shoreline development.
-Intra-county rivalries so bitter there's a good chance voters
will be asked next year it they want to carve a new county, Los
Padres, out or the northwestern half or the present county.
L.OS ANGEL.ES
Dalty .......... .,Jeny .......... l!I
X MARKS SPOT OF LATEST PROPOSED LNG-PLANT
Pt. Conception luue Alarm• Envlronmentatlata
Conception Preaervation ComtnlU... i1 vocally qalnst the ~G
plant.
MAllKJNG, WHO SAYS IDS GROUP includes Sierra Club
leaden and several score other oraanilaUona "basically oppo1ed,to
this whole LNG ~hnology," explained:
"A couple of years from now, when this 'crisis' trumped up by
the gas companies disappears, there's 1oin1 to be an LNG facility at
Point Conception. It's planned aa a mlle-loa1 T·pier, with rooD\
enough for two 1,000.foot 1upertank~ and one wattinr to unload.
Onshore, t.bel'e'a four 13·story atoraae tanks and the reausiflcation
plant. Then there'a 200 miles Qf pipeline. It's eDOnDoua/'
"Uthe LNG facillty is alted there," H)'lt Mark.lnl, .. other in-
dustry will naturally follow. We'll loao one of the last semi-wild
parts of the Southern CaUfomJacoast. •• ·
HARRELL FLETCHER IS A SANTA Maria fu.miture store
owner, chairman of the Santa Barbara County Board or
Supervisors, and prime mover of the attempt t.o create Los Padres
County, which would include Point Conception.
He is al.so afraid the county ls loelni control of shoreline de·
velopment, but he wants the LNG plant built here.
b Says Fletcher: "I understand the LNG f•cilily would ultimately
e worth something like $'2 billion. That would brini in property tax-
es of about $12 million a year, because we'd not only be able to tax
the plant but al.so 200 miles of plpell.ne 'and all the au that flows
lhrougbit ••
"IP WE CAN GET THE LNG facWty at Conception,,. predicts·
Fletcher, "and if the voters approve Los Pad.res County,' it would
pay 40 percent of the new county's tax bue. We'd be in beautiful
shape. . MANY OF THE HANDFUL OF people who Ii ve here are reluc·
tant to take sides. Most say they'd like to be left alone to raise beef.
hunt white-tailed deer or wild pigs, drag their trawler nets through
the rich fishing grounds offshore, tend musty lighthouses interesting
enough to qualiry as historic monuments, or surf on beaches some
experts say are among the best on the Pacific coast.
He hasn't made up his mind about the plant, but he's worried
about change:
"The Sierra Clubbers are opposed to a plant in Conception.''
Fletcher says, "Maybe they'd rather see It in the heart of Los
Angeles where it might kill millions of people if It blew up. The Clllly
thing you'd kill al Point Conception would be three· toed fro1s."
Santa Barbara attorney George H. Allen, who represents
Hollister Ranch and more than 100 owners of parcels of at leut 100
acres. disagrees with Fletcher. One resident is Lee Mann, 35, a security officer for the 10,000·
acre Cojo Ranch.
Mann, who moved here with his family to avoid the hassles of
city living, spends much or his time chasing surfers from the area's
beach. He is also hard-nosed about an LNG plant:
"What I've got is the satisfaction of producina something in
what I think is an ecologically harmonious way with the world. I'm
not making anything plastic or polluting the air. I guess what I have
is a love of the I and." • "'WE'RE CONCERNED WITll THE~ety of that huge facili-
ty," says Allen. "It ian 'hnoral or ethical xpose 200 people here to
a facility that's too dangerous to put a Oxnard or Los Angeles
"IT'S VOLATILE, THEY TELL US. Everyone here is con -
cerned with that. Maybe they'll have lo preserve the ranch as a buf·
fer. If the plantdld blow up, it would involve fewer people.··
Another who doesn't want to see Pl. ConcepUon changed ls 37.
year-old William Towne, a Coast Guard cbief electronic tebnician.
He drives 80 miles round trip every week from hi• station at Point
Arguello to lend Point Conception's automated Ugbl and bellowing
foghorn.
Harbor. . )
"We're also opposed to the facility o6 the grounds of reliability.
Point Conception iS known u the 'Cape Hom of the PacWc' and this
entire coast is called the •graveyard of ships .... Mann's closest neighbors, who live a mUe away in one of the old
Pt. Conception lighthouse buildings, are the Lund bergs.
Brad Lundberg, 37, manages the Cojo Ranch for the Los
Angeles-based Bixby Ranch Co., which also owns the adjoining
16,()()().acre Jalama Ranch. Both were originally parts of a Spanish
land grant.
TOWNE, AN 18· Y Ell VETERAN OF duty on icebrea.ken and
such isolated stations as Cape Christian on ~affin Island, is reverent
about.the point.
Allen said the homeowners have hired a marine weathe.r expert
for research to back up their contenUon that because of high winds,
strong currents and dense fop that have plagued sailon in the San·
ta Barbara Channel for centuries the LNG port facility .. would be
closed alleasl 2S percent of the time."
A TIDRD·GENERATION COWBOY, Lundberg runs about 400
feeder COW$ and calves with the help of his two hired hands and his
two sons.
"When you work around the light and those old buildings," says
Towne, "You realize you're a part of history that goes back to the
first lighthouse keepers who tended whale oil lamps here in 1856.
There are some things we can't afford not to preserve." "WE ABE SCllED OF rr." aays Allen. "'But we're buing our
opposition on economic grounds because we're afraid not f'D<Migb
people will worry •bout our safety.'' Philip Marking, a Santa Barbara attorney who beads the Polnt
'·
WarSIUp
Reactor Fuel Sunk for
Bomb Tested ~':!~BEACH
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A secret teal explosion
in the Nevada desert proves that low-erade
plutonium Crom civilian nuclear power plants can
be used to make atomic weapt»U, the Los An&eles
Times reported today.
The Times saiq a recenUy declassified report
shows the United States exploded a nuclear device
using lhe special kind of plutonium on an unknown
date. The paper said the test was declassified July
(AP> -A World War IC
Navy cargo ship that has
s pent the last 30 years in
mothballs was resurrect·
ed only lo be sunk in San·
ta Monica Bay to im·
prove sportfishing.
QUEENIE Bv Phil lnterlandi
.. ·.
'""'·"'"'"'. _, ' 29, but was never made public. ~ifi~~~! The newspaper said the test was confirmed by a
The 420-foot-long
Liberty ship "Palawan··
went down m the ocean
Tuesday to becom e the r r a m e w or k f.o r an
artificial reef.
...
A .. WlrwjlflOte
CONSTRUCTION OF LNG TERMINAL COULD CLOS~ LIGHTHOUSE
The 121-year-old Pplnt Conception Lighthouse Is Near Cojo Bay
ByBrewn
Aerosol Spray
Solons OK
LNG at
Point Site
Ban Approved _s~c~=~...:::~
favors Point Conception
SACRAMENTO <AP) -Sales or fluorocarbon ~ s the s ite for
aerosol sprays will be banned in California on April Calirotnia 's first Jiq.
15, 1979, under a bill signed into law by Gov. Ed· uetled natural gas
mund Brown Jr. terminal baa been sent to
Leglslative sponsors of the measure, Sen. John
Dunlap, <D-Napa), and Assemblyman John
Vasconcenos, <D·San Jose), told reporters after the
eigntng Tuesday that California's action should
serve "as a lever" to make sure that the federal
·government follows through with its proposed ban.
The bill follows proposed federal re1ulations
that wouJd ban the manufacture of the comoound , Oct. 15. 1978, and ban the product In interstate
commerce 1n April 1979.
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
Gray Davis, Brown's
executive secretary,
said Brown is expected
to alp lt soon. "We think
it's a good bill, the result ot hundreds of hours of
work.
.. IT'S NOT the precise
bill'' Brown has pro-
posed, but "it accom-
modates the very real
need to insure adequate
supplies of natural au
a• well as very
leeltlmate health and
safety quest.ions."
A aomewhat reluctant
Senat. approved the bUI
3()..1 Tuesday.
Polnt Conception is the
only propoul ol the gu
companies that would ~
allowed by tbe
meu~s definition of a
~emoi. alta baaed on
population density ot no
more than flO persona per
square mite wlt.hin fQUr
mlles.
spokesman for the Energy Research and Develop·
ment Administration. The ERDA said details of the
explosion, conducted by the Los Alamos Scientific
Laboratory at the Nevada weapons test site, were
still classHied. ·
The "Palawan," com·
missioned in 1945 as a re·
pair ship, was decom-
missioned two years
SACRAMENTO (AP> -California la reported· later. After 30 years of ly a production center for child pornography _ nonactive duty, it was "Think of it thi11 wuy -you ·rt• lclling the world, •JT'S nut
hence the state Assembly bas voled for tougher donated to the state thco(ficc11paccthalcoun111,lrslheoutpul'!"
penalties for employers in the boomlne business. Department of Fish and --------------------
The members voted Game by the Depart·
10·0 Tuesday despite a ( ) mentofCommerce. Re • Mi
complaint that the ap-STATE AFl'ER 96 pounds of pairs nor proach in the bill was naive. Protested As· "'--------~ plastic explosives went
sert1blyman John Vascon· off aboard the ship, it A duct Fl
11 <D eo took about 30 minutes for que OW ce os, ~an Jose), "We're looking at the wron1 it to fall below the . end or the problem. The problem or child porno-graphy is not a problem of supply, primarily, but a ocean's surface. Fishing
problem of demand." experts say it will quick· D b SUmla ly become a feeding ue y . y OU~ £..,,.1/•eeiletl placeforsportflsh.
LOS ANGELES (AP> -The state Air
Resources board bas unveiled a new nine-part plan
to cont.rot oil emfsslons, whlch ARB Chairman Tom
Quinn calls the lar1est single source ol pollution ln
the Los Ange.I es Basin.
Quin outlined the program Tuesda1 to tbe peo-
ple res~lble for complyln1 with new restrtc· tions-oll execuUves.
Cops ll•e•f 6-...... ,,.
LOSANGELES (AP)-PolJceofflcerunaybe
liable for wrongful death damaies ll \bq 1h0ot to
death nee1n1 suapects Wbo are not •niaced, In
violence, the state court of appeal has ruled.
In a 2-1 declalon, the seccnd appellate dl•trlct
court ruling which held that a Lona Beach
Poticeman was not negligent when be fatally abot an
unarmed college 1tudent 11le1edly fitelna a
buralary in um.
BERKELEY (AP) -An ordinance rejQlatlq
research on 1enet1c tlterlldon ba wan un.ammou
approval trom tbe Berkeley City CouDcU.
The ordinance adopted Tueaday e.U. for any
or1an1uuon wtshin1 to conduct recombinant DNA raurch~ dty to.be~ aDd appt09ed by
.clty public health offlcla11. Aerttelq I• the ft.rat clty
in Callfomta and 1econd l.n the nation to adopt the
reguJatJon. •
The "'Palawan•• had
been stripped down and
cleaned of all oil and
grease, as required by
the stat.e Regional Water
Quality Control Board.
The •lnkina was the
fJrat of three surplus
1hJps planned to become
fishing reefs in Southern
California. The other two
are to go down off
Newport Beach and Ox-
nard .
Tax Seiitence
SAN FRANCISCO
(AP> -A San Jon man
comtcted ol tneomo tu
•iolatlooa wat fined
$20,000 and Mlltmced to
five ye.a In llrilan. But
U.S. Diatrfct Court
.Jtadp Speocer WllHun1
1U1peoded all but »days
of the prilon sentence
aialnst Robert Stratton,
-46, a coast.ruction com·
panyowner.
SAN DIEGO (AP> -Offlcla11 estimate
water wtn begin flowing qaln through the Colorado
River Aqueduct by Jate Sunday, much to the relief of San DietoCounty residents wbo have been relylq
on well water and cuttinl off cropln1gat1onaincetbe
weekend. ...
Tbeeounty's waw supply, whlcb_la 95_pel"ffllt
depmderat on tbe 241·mlle aqueduct. virtually dried
up Sunday when a weekend flub flood pu1bed ~
2,SOO.pound steel accesa cover ooto the Fan HUis
siphon structute near Desert Hot Sprin11 ucl a
comblnatloo of mud and boulders clo11ecl siphons.
As the water now was reduced to a muddy
trJcle. the Metropolitan Water Dtltrlct in Los
An&elts County ordered five pumplnl 1taticns to a
halt. It was the first limo the aqueduct had ever
been abut down. •
MN DIEGO COUNTY WATD AtmaltiTt
dlldala hid Tuesday that ~-ratlclalDi becw ot UM aqueduct sJmtolf lm't likely. Lynn B~tlMfal DJanqer of tbe water amborit;r.
•aid ottbe county baa a ~ay Jocal water~ ply ··u we eut baclt to so percent today (TlleldQ). •
TbecityotSanD1efohaaatlx·mont.h1uppJ7.be1ald.
ToCCJUel'Vewater, com.munltlel Hned bytJM
Yumaud Valley Center waterdiltrfcta stopped tr-'
rlaattna'avocldo and citrus m>PS. Burzell 1akl.
Before the pulDJ)8 were turned off, more tU:n '& •
billion aalloaa of water -mouib to 1Ul)pl1 a fQlllj
of five for a year -wu aDWed oo thedtelltrt&ori
., mud-elogecl wai. backed up. .
TWO U·WOOl'·WIDB ClONCaBTIJ Pfpee l&tbi
!'an 1U:t oa1J ~ damaf9t ._.. XWD •
Irvine
EDITION
*
T oday's Clo sin g
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 70, NO. 257, .C SECTIONS, .C6 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A WEDNESDAY, SE PT&MBE R 14, 1977 TEN CENT!
lr1'ine Council Restricts •u•ed lJse
By PHIUP aosMAAIN
Ol .. o.lty~lttff
Advocattni a sort of Darwinlan
natural selection, Irvine City
Councilman John Burton led tbe
c harge Tues day to keep
motorised bicycles (mo-peda) on
the s~ and off bicycle paths.
Said Burton of mo-ped riders
who will have to negotiate city
streets or the striped bike lanes
within the roadways:
"Thole who are more brilllanl
and flt are 1olne to survive.
"We need to come to ertps with
the crowded htahway and share
it one way or another -squashed
or otherwise," he added.
The collncll vote to keep mo·
peds off bilce trails and paths that
are not physically a part of the
roadway was 3-2, with council
members Mary Ann Gaido and
Bill Vardoulls opposed.
The measure was sponsored by
Councilman David Silla and city
Transportation Com missioner
Juanita Moe. It follows similar
action by the city of Newport
Beach. .
Sills and Moe argued that mo-
ped operation on off-street trails
is unsafe to bicyc lists and
pedestrians.
The particular targets of their
measure are bicycle trails along
Dally f'ltet st.it ..,,. ..
DESERTED SKATEBOARD PARK GIVES MUTE TESTIMONY TO LEGAL HASSLE
A Good Idea, But the City Did Only Helf of Its Job, Said the Judge
Skate Park Wall Due?
Irvine Facing Enforee~nl Deciaton
l
The City of Irvine may have to
build a $20,000 block wall. nine
feet high, around the $30,000
University Park skateboard
course-now virtually unused-if
it wants to keep it open.
Attendance dropped to near
zero last week after Superior
Judge Mason Fenton ordered the
s kateboard p ark s upe rvised
fulltime. and said safety rules ·
must be enforced, or the course
closed.
But few skateboard riders own
the helmet.a, gloves and elbow
and knee pads the rules require.
and, presumably, are doing their
skating on the streets again.
Fenton also ordered city of·
flcials to devise a plan to insure
that the park, opened from 8 a.m
until duslc daily, won 'l be used
alter hours.
The city council met for nearly
an hour in closed <secret) session
Tuesday lo decide how to do lhat.
The co~cil 1emerged and or-
dered city lawyers to propose the
block wall when they meet with
Judge Fenton Friday.
Mayor Bill Vardoulis said the
council will vote whether to
spend the money after hearing
Fenton's reaction to the pro·
posal.
Councilmen David Sills and
John Burton repeated a call to
simply close the course, but were
CSee WALL, Page A2>
Bg For111er Co1111tian
&ecution Appeal Sought
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. <AP> -
Attorneys for former Orange
County r esident John A .
Spinkellink, whose execution has
been scheduled for Monday, have
opened a two-front attack to keep
their client from the electric
oh air.
Spinkelllnk, 28, faces death at
8:30 a .m. Monday after Circuit
Judge John Rudd or Tallahassee
refused to delay what would be
the second execution in the coun-
try since the U.S. Supreme Court
upheld captlal punishment last
year.
His attorney. Andrew Graham,
Coas t
We athe r
Late ftlaht and morning
low clouds with afternoon
a nd evening clear ing .
Lows tonltht upper 50s to
mid-80e. Highs Thursday
ln upper 809 to 1ow 70s to
mid·'IOl lnland.
Tuesday flied an appeal with the
Florida State Supreme Court im·
mediately after the circuit judge
refused to s~y the execution or·
der signed Monday by Gov.
Reubin Askew.
Graham said the appeal Is
based on Spinkelllnk's 1973
murder trial in which he was con-
victed and condemned for
the shooting death of Joseph
Szymankiewicz, 43.
The attorney claims the con·
vicUon and death sentence are
unconstitutional because pro·
specUve jurors opposed to cap·
Ual punishment were not seated
to hear the case.
Meanwhile, Tobias Simon. a
noted civil rt"hts attorney li;om
Miami, planned to file an addi·
ti on al motion in the U . S. District
Court at Jacksonville today seek·
ing a stay of execution by attack·
ing the Florida death penalty as
racially discriminatory.
The National Association for
the Advancement of Colored Peo-
ple in New York also were work·
ing on the appeal brief
Spinkellink is white.
Grah am la a r guing that
persons who kill whites get the
death penalty but those who kill
blacks do not. He said the 90 men
an4 one woman under death sen·
~nee in Florida were convicted
of killing 111 victims. 108 of whom
were white. ·
(~EXECUTE. P a1e AZ>
'Elash Roll' Gone .
In Narco Arrest
By STEVEN MJTCJIEU. .................
Shoriff's lnve1U1aton are 1Ull
ee•ldAI an $18,250 "Ou b roll" they aaid tumect up mluiq when
t b ey arr ested three South
Lapna raldeoa-Jn a narcotics
bu1 I~ Friday.
Sheriff'• Lt. Rlck Drake aal&
undefto"' q enta l lVe the froGt
m-., to Kevin GordOn l'eiTeU,
D,.'Of:lll11 Clffl• Drive, South
La.-.. to IUfd' .... 121 .... ofCelombAan~.
"/
Culver Drive, but the effect ol the
action ls citywide.
They cited sJx accidents in-
volving mo-peds since January 1,
three of them occurring on the
Culver Drive trails.
Police Chief Leo Peart areued
unsuccessfully that it would be
more dangerous, at least along
Culver Drive where the speed
limit is 50 mlles per hour, ror mo-
ped riders to use the street.
Peart showed councUJDen a
schematic dla1ram of Culver
Drive, using rect.ancular pieces
of paper to represent can and
mo-peda moving along tbe road.
An assistant moved a piece of
paper representing a recrea-
tional vehicle aloni paper CUlver
Drive. It overtook a much
smaller piece or paper represent-
ing a mo.ped. The paper mo-ped
crumpled on the aide of tbe paper
road.
Burton remarked that he, tao,
has been dodging mo-peda oo the
hlgtiway "to avoid squashing
them." But, be said, "It's time
they learned they are on wheels
and in traffic."
Sills said mo·peds have ter-
rorized some people who fre-
quent city bike trails. He cited
chancinc upon one lady walking
<See MO.P EDS. Pa1e AZ>
Lance Declares .
Media 'Unfair'
WASHINGTON CAP) -
Budget Director Bert Lance
declared. ~ay he has been bar·
raged unfairly with innuendo and
hearsay and "we're in sad shape
in thil country'' if people believe
his errectiv.eoe~J h~s been crip-
pled as a result.
Lance lashed out at the news
media when reporters q ues·
tioned him as he emerged this
morning from bis Georgetown
home. Again, he denied any in-
tention to resign.
Said Lance: "If you can take
allegations and innueQdoes and
hearsay and everything else, the
words of a convicted felon, and
* * *
Jody Powell
Apologizes ..
To .Senator
WASIDNG'J'ON CAP> -White
House prqa 1ecretary Jody
Powell telephoned • personal
apo19gy tod•)' lo Sen. Charles H.
Percy CIH JI. >. for spreading
rumors a~ bne.of budeet chief
Bert Lance's principal critics.
Powell called the Washington
bureau or the Chicago Sun-Times
Tues day and 'passed along
rumors -hotly denied by Percy
-that the senator used Bell and
Howell corporate aircraft and
facilities of a Chicago bank dur-
ing his 1972 re·electlon cam-
paign.
After the Sun-Times disclosed
PoweJl 's call, a storm of COD·
trovei-sy erupted here with the
press s ecretary initially
a cknowledging he made a
"dumb mistake."
Later, Powell said:
''l called Sen. Percy and told
him I regretted the situation very
much."
Percy said a note was handed
to him at about 10:20 a .m . sayine
<See POWELL. P ace AZ>
Dr. Weaver
Of· Clemente
Dead at 68
.
all these other things, and put
them in the paper and show them
on t e levision and then say
that's a fact. ..
"And then, without having a
chance to refute that and have
mv . .day .in -ceuit, and be fa~
with the char1e that because of
that my effectiveness bu been
damaged and crippled, then
were we're in sad shape in this
country."
Lance will have his day Thurs-
day, when be will appear before
the Senate Governmental Opera·
lions Commi~ee.
Lance's referral to the "words
of a convicted felon" seemingly
applied to a visit by Senate in-
vestigators to a man imprisoned
in Atlanta for embezzlement at
one oCLance's former banks.
The embezzler, Billy
Campbell, reportedly tried to im-
plicate Lance ·in hls··acttvittes;
but his story was contradicU!d by
Campbell's former attorney and
has been given no apparent.
credence. The sen ators were hearing
testimony today from officials or
the Justice Department and the
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency about an investlgaUon
of overdrafts by the Calhoun
(See LANCE, Page AZ>
SPAINTEf' PATTON DURING OLYMPICS AT LONDON
He CM Stltl Come Ou\ of tl't• Starting Blocks " , . .
Thief No Match
For Ex-sprinter
Four teena1~ puraeanatchers who were prowllnl B•l~ IilaM m\Jlt 1UU be sb-'ng their heads in disbelief
tod91, WOhcleriD(" who that mlddle-ai~ man ii that dld
themln.
\Z D.\ILY PILOT I • Wednnday, September 14 1877
SEX SYMBOLS MA.AILYN AND FARRAH
The Acting AbUlty la Irrelevant
-What A.eting?
Farrah, Marilyn Compared
STEVENSON, Wash. <AP> -The question of Farrah Fawcett-Majors' acUng ability is irrelevant to her fans, says th6
onetime press agent of the 1950s' ultimate sex goddess, Marilyn
Monroe.
"When I handled Marilyn, in her happy days, she was ex·
traordinary," said Roy Craft, recalling his five years, 1952·1957,
with the actress. ·
.. TllE DIFFERENCE IS, PERHAPS, that Fawcelt·Majors
is more of a personality. But an extraordinary personahty."
Craft, editor emeritus or the weekly Skamanis County
Pioneer who says he finds Miss Fawcett·Majors "delightful,"
said there is a simple rule in show business: Hustle what you
have.
.. IF \'OU ARE TALKING ABOUT popularity, marketability,
the acting isn't important. Any fine dramatic actress will play the
role to which she's assigned," he said.
"But when you get a personality, I think it's a ml.stake to
have her play anything but herself .•. The thing is, when
someone turns to Farrali Fawcett-Majors on TV. tbeywant Farr ab
Fewcett-Majors. The question of her acting ability is beside the
point."
Iaguna Bills
Superoisors Vote
Fossil Preseroation
A 17·million·year-old fossil reef
in the Laguna Hilla described as
"perhaps the greatest acoumula-
-tion of fossils anywhere in the
world" is not likely to fall victim
to a developer's bulldozer.
That conclusion was arrived at
Tuesday by the Orange County
Board or Supervisors.
The board voted to .. be
sensitive to the arcbeolo1lcal
and paleontologlcal value of the
fossil reef" adjacent to Moulton
Parkway between El Toro and
La Paz Roads. ~
Supervisors also voted to
direct the county Environmental
Management A1ency ••to in-
F,....PageAJ
WALL •••
defeated by the majority.
The coat for continued
supervision of the .coune was
estimated by Paul Brady, assis-
tant city manaier, at $10,000 to
$12,000 per year.
The Parkcrest Community As-
soclatloa. whose lawault to close
the skateboard facility brought
Judge Fenton '~ preliminary in·
· · junction order, offered its own
·· estimates of the city's coats:
--$15,000 for a fence (computed
before the council action).
-$15,000 for counsel to defend
the lawsuit.
-$20,000 to $25,000 to supervise
the course, assuming it will be
open 80 hours a week .
In comments laat week, Jud1e
Fenlon appeared reluctant to
close the course, saying the city
action to put It in was "one or the
finest tblqa that I've seen the ci· tydo. ..
Fent.on added, "But they only
dld part of their Job.•' I , •
CMANGI COlltf
DAILY PILOT
vestigate the preservation or the
most significant portions" of the
s1x·square mile reef.
Tbose board actions are not ex·
peeled to deter Aliso Viejo Com·
pany from submitting a develop-
ment plan for the reef area.
However, the board's position
is expected to be refieeted in
whatever development plans are
finally approved tor the area.
According to a report reviewed
by supervisors Tuesday, the
prized fossil reef "consists or 95
percent invertebrate fossils with
marine mammal bones as well
as shark teeth and fish bones."
"In addition to the paleon-
tological importance of the reef,
the area also ~ontains important
archeology sites," the report
said.
It went on to aay lhe reef area
appears to be the source for lime
used in construction or San Juan
Capistrano Mission.
,,.....P-.eAJ
MO-PEDS •••
I next to a trail, in the dirt. When
he asked her why. be told the
council, she replied she was
afraid to use the pedestrian path
because of the mo-peds.
''It's kind of ridiculous to spend
thousands of dollars to build
paths. then have people too
frightened to use them,'' he said.
Mrs. Gaido said the councll
measure will diacoura1e mo-ped
use. She said mo·peds ought to
be encouraged, claiming they
use little fuel and produce little
air pollution.
However. Mrs. Moe araued i.il
her letter t.o the councll that mo-
p eds emit five Umes the
hydrocarbons per mile over the
typical American automobile.
lroine Field
Not Ready;
Game Moved
•
Costly Facility Puzzle
87 GAaY GaANVILLE ... o.i ............ who have commuted offenses
which would not be offecaes if
they were ldultl. Examples of.
atatua offender• include such
JUVENILE JUSTICE Juvenile balls with you.npi.ta ln·
volvod in crlmlnal activftles. Oran1e County otflclala are
trytna to fJsure out wbat to do
with a juvenile home that 11 COil·
lng $100,000 a month to operate
for what now ts just .a few
troubled youngsters.
• tran11reaalon1 as truancy,
curfew vlolatloo and running
away.
1sn
Those same laws said such re-
ception centers or other homes
devoted to the temporary hous-
mg of stabls offendera must re-
main unlocked, meaning that
juveniles sent there were free to
leave ao.y time they chose to. The cllent load at McMillan
Reception Center in Santa Ana
dropped to Just three Juvenllea
thl1 week fn tbe aftermath of a
recent ruling by Juvenile Court
Judge Raymond Vlheent.
In that ruling, Judge Vincent
said be no longer wlll send status
offenders to McMillan.because of
the h1&h rate of runaways from
the reception center which, by
Jaw, cannnot be locked.
Status o!fenders are juviniles
As a result of JudJ(e Vincent's order that no more status of-
f enders were to be sent to
McMillan, a staff of 33 people at Ure reeeptlon center Tuesday was
there to tend t.o the needs of just
threeyounpters.
County supervisors made it
elear Tuesday they are dis-
. pleased wltb the probation de-
partment's ataffin& of McMillan
in light of the evaporating work
load.
They appeared to be even less
pleased when deputy probation
officer Rex Castellaw appeared
b~fore them without advance
notice to auggest ao alternative
use for McMillan. .
Castellaw suggested returning
the reception center to its former
status, a detention home for
juveniles serving fixed terms for
criminal offenses. . .
When McMillan ln early
January waa bit with a rash of
runaw&;s, Judge Vincent issued
an order saying that those who
run away in defiance of a court
order sending them to McMillan
would thereafter be confined at
Orange County Juvenile Hall.
Last May. an appellate court
F,....PageAJ
"That would put us back to
w.here .we were a year ago,"
SupervtSOr Thomas Riley said as
Castellaw outlined probation's
plan. Supervisors ordered county
officials lo return next week with
a proposal to remedy th& cos Uy
problem.
. said Judee Vincent's order
violated new juvenUe justice
laws that said noncriminal
juvenile offenders cannot be held
in Jocked facilities with criminal
youthful dfenders.
POWELL APOLOGIZES. • • Charged with the responsibili-
ty of finding a solution were
David O'Dell, county human
services agency director, and
County Administrative Officer
Robert Thomas.
After Judge Vincent's order
was struck down by that ruling,
the rash or runaways from
McMillan resumed.
that the press secretary called
and he immediately left the bear·
ing room and returned the call.
He sakl be told Powell, .. You
have expressed your retret and I
accept that."
But Percy said Powell did not
tell him expressly that he had
found the report to be incorrect
and "I think to clear the record
he should be a.sked to clarify
that."
At bis daily news briefing
hours later, Powell again termed
his action "inappropriate,
regrettable and dumb."
Asked what President Carter
said to him about the matter, be
replied, "He seemed to accept
my analysb as accurate."
· Powell acknowledged be called
at least one other newspaper
besides the Sun-Times to talk
about Percy. He did not identify
the newspaper or newspapers in-
volved.
The press secretary said be
acted Tuesday without consult-
ing in advance with Carter or any
member of the White House
staff. He said the information did
not come to him through any gqv·_
ernment agencies. However, fie
acknowledged Plis sources were
government employes, who, he
said, picked up the rumors out-
side the•course of their official
business. He would not. identify
them.
Percy and officials of Bell and
Howell noted that the company
does not even have an airplane.
Sen. John Heinz III <R-Pa.) said the Powell episode smacked .
of White HoUie "diny tricks"
aimed at "stifline fact finding
and serious inquiry" into Lance's
affairs.
Sen. Abraham A: Riblcoff <D-
Conn.>. chairman of the panel
conductlng the Lance_ probe,
called Powell's actions "a stupid
thing to do.''
Powell said be told the senator
it had been "inappropriate" for
him to pass alon1 the rumors to
the SWl-nmes and that be had
not intended to see inaccurate in-
formation find its way into print.
Powell said that Perc:y. who
was reached at abd\it the time
the Senate Government Affairs
Committee was resuming bear-
ings of the Lance matter. ".very
graciously accepted" bis ex-
pression of regret.
Powell said he placed a
telephone call Tuesday morning
to Loye Miller, Wasbin1ton
bureau ct)lef of the Sun·ntnes,
with allegations about Percy that
he said be told Miller he wanted
to "pass along just between me
andyou." ~ •
President <:arter•a chief
F,....PageAJ
DOCTOR •..•
spokesman said he told Miller be
could not vouch for the accuracy
of the rumon. However. he said
one ti two sources be bad for
them claimed to have first-hand knowled&e that Percy bad reg-
ularly flown on aircraft owned
by Bell &: Howell Co., which be
formerly beaded, in recent
years.
In addition, Powell told Miller
he heard reports that Percy used
airplanes, meettng rooms,
security guards and other
facilities or the First National
Bank ol Chicago during his 1972
camp&ign, and did nol fully reim-
burse the bank.
.... * * * F...-. Page AJ.
LANCE •••
First National Bank of Calhoun.
Ga .. to L a nce's 1974
gubernatorial campaign com-
mittee at a time when Lance was
chairman or the board of the bank. _
The case was closed late lut
year by John W. Stokes, then the
U.S. attorney in Atlanta, without
prosecution.
Glenna L. Stone, former chief
of the fraud section In the U.S. al-
torney 's office, testified that
Stokes told her after closil'!g the
case "Lhal he should call 'Jimmy
and Bert' and tell them what be
had done." She took this as a ref·
erence to then President-elect
Jimmy Carter and to Lance.
Mils Stone testified that Stokes
told .1er after lut Nove~ber's
election that he was anxi~ to
stay in his post ror one more year
.so that be would be eligible for a
·federal pension.
•
It was last Jan. 1 that
McMillan was converted to an
unlocked reception center for
status offenders.
That conversion was• dictated
by state· laws that said status of-
fenders can no longer be held in.
F,.._PageAJ
Judae Vincent declded as a re-
sult that it is fuWe exercise send-
ing younisters to the unlocked
receptioo center.
Woman Hurt
As Auto Hits
Irvine Tree
A Leisure World woman sur· EXECUTE. • vived a bead-on car crash into a tree along Laguna Canyon Road
in Irvine Tuesday, after she was
thrown ball out of the car :she. was
driving by the impact.
Spinkelllnk's mother, Lois,
who lives in Buena Park said ~h~ plans to leav·e today tor Florida
with her daughter and son-in-law
to visit her soo in prison before
his scheduled excution. She is re-
covering from surgery to remove
a blood clot near her lungs.
U ihe execution goes ahead as
planned, it will be only the
second in the United Slates since
July 2, 1976 when the U.S.
Supreme Court upheld the death
penalties of three slates, includ-
ing F1orida.
In January, Gary Gilmore
became the first convict to be ex-
ecuted when he died before a fir·
ing squad in Utah.
Spinkellink, who was sJrvlng a
prison sentence for a 1968 Orange
County armed robbery convic-
tion, escaped from a minimum
security prison farm in Big Sur in
1972.
He reportedly picked up
Szymankiewicz, who was
hitA:hhi.king .in the Midwest, and
tile pair made their way to
Tallahassee.
Momristi who stopped to help·
her said she was draped face
d6wn over the driver's-side dool'
of her smashed car.
The woman, 82-year-old Naomi
Hawkey Smith. 398-A Avenida
CasWla, Laguna Hills, suffered
cuts on her bead, both legs and
left arm. Orange County
paramedics also treated her for
possible internal injuries.
She was taJ(en to Saddleback
Community Hospital, where she
was reported in "very satisfac-
tory" condition today.
Mrs. Smith told Irvine police
she blacked out before the acci·
dent.
Witnesses said her car, travel·
ing not'tb on Laguna Canyon
Road, weaved across the center
line and back into her lane, then
went off the road, striking what
police called a "medium·sized"
tree.
Police were called to the acci-
dent by a motorist, Morton
Firestone of Newport Beach, who
summoned them on a citizen's
band radlo.
Scene Stealer.
Drexel's oriental adaptation
in antique bone with chinoiserie decoration
is destined to play a leading rote
in your decoratlng story.
Sale! There are roam ac:cents and \here are room ac~nts.
Heres one that does everything Adda contrast, sets the
moods. brings riehnea to an~ yaur home. M en~
chanting E! Cetel'a bookcaSe With Interior hghteng, ad·
Juttable glaas shelves end gilt finish beck panel. 86" wide by 79~ .. high by 14" deep.
'7
Lag11na/South Coast
EDITION
Afternoon
N.V. Stoeks
VOL. 70, NO. 257, 4' SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1977 TEN CENT~
BRUCE DUNN AND 'FRIEND' STUDY THEIR SCRIPT
In Laguna, the Snake HH All the Lines
,
'Unfair' Cries Lance
'B~aged With Innuendo,, Hearsay'
WASHINGTON <AP) all these other things, and put
Budget Director B rt Lance themlnthepaperandshowthem
declared today he has been bar· on television and then say
raged unfairly with innuendo and that's a fact. . . ·
hearsay and "we're in sad shape "And then, without having a
in this country" 1f people believe chance to refute that and have
his effectiveness has been crip· my day in court, and be raced
pied as a result. with the charge that because of
Lance lashed out at the news that my effectiveness has been
media when reporters ques-damaged and c~ippled, then
tioned him as he emerged this were we're in sad shape in this
morning from his Georgetown country."
home. Again, he denied any in· Lance will have his day Thurs·
tention to resign. day, when he will appear before
Said Lance: "If you can take the Senate Governmental Opera·
allegations and innuendoes and• lions Committee.
hearsay and everythjng else. the Lance's re(erral to the "words
words of a convicted felon, and of a convicted felon" seemingly
I
applied to a visit by Senate in·
vestlgators to a man imprisoned
in Atlanta for embezzlement at
one o! Lance's former banks.
The embezzler, Billy
Campbell, reportedly tried to lm·
plicate Lance ln his acUvlties,
but his story was contradicted by
Campbell's former attorney and
has been given no apparent
credence. The senators were hearing
testimony today from officials of
the Justice Department and the
Office of the Comptroller or the
Currency about an Investigation
of overdrafts by the Calhoun
First National Bank of Calhoun,
Oe01ent e's Sprinter Strikes
I
Dr. Weaver
.. .
Dead a t 68
By ANNE COOPER
01 tM Dall• ~llet St•ff
Dr. Harry Weaver of San
Clemente, internationally known
for his medical research, died
Monday at his home, following a
three-month illness. He was 68.
"Jonas Salk once tolct me that
science is a very demanding mis·
tress," said Or. Weaver's widow.
Ja ne. "He was rig ht. My
husband was still working when
he died ."
Thµgs Select
Wrong Victim
.
The two couples in their sos looked like easy
targets for four teen-aged purse s natchers prowling
Balboa "Island.
Two husbands were walking about 25 feel ahead
of their wives when two of the youths approached
from the opposite· direction, passed the men and
zeroed in on the women.
As the youths passed, one reached out and
snatched the purse worn on the arm of Shirley Patton.
throwing her to thc~round as he sprinted away with
the handbag.
Ga., lo Lance 's 197(
gubernatorial campaign com-
mittee at a time when Lance was
chairman of the board of the
bank.
The case was closed late last
year by John W. Stokes, then the
U.S. attorney in Atlanta, without
prosecuuon.
Glenna L. Stone, former chief
of the fraud section in the U.S. al·
torney's office, tes tified that
Stokes told her after closing the
case "that he should call 'Jimmy
and Bert' and tell them what he
had done." She took this as a ref-
erence to then President-elect
<See LANCE, Page .U)
Quake Fault
Found Near
San Onofre
A 2~·mile-long earthquake
fault has been located on Camp
Pendle~ property south of San
Clemente, within orie mile of the
San Onofre nuclear plant.
The fault -the first located in
the vicinity in recent years -is
inactive and poses no safety
hazard, according to a Southern
California Edison Company
spokesman.
Mrs. Weaver said Dr. Salk
phoned her last '.fuesday to offer
his condolences. He told her a
chapter of the autobiography he
~ is writing will be devoted to her
husband.
SHE CRIED OUT for help and her husband,
Melvin, sprang into action.
Geologists, working as consul·
tants to Southern California
Edison, spotted the fault about a
week <ago, while they were· monitori~ the area surrounding 1
the nuerear plant.
The fault was reported to the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission • on Friday. -8~!::!:8.re'!~?. :.~.~~owe 's ~.,. o.1., "' ... '~" custody. • Il wasn l the (U'Sl time Bru~e And Elizabeth made her debut.
Dunn lost a boa constrictor an under the spotlights Tuesday
Laguna Beach. night. ·
But this Ume, the snake had all A Burmese python which
the ~nes. escaped from Dunn's automo-Eliz~beth IV. a seven· fool ~a bile more than a year ago in
constnctor owned by Dunn, is a Laguna Beach did not fare so cameo performer in the Laguna well.
Moulton Playhouse's "The Royal That 10.foot snake was found
Family," being staged through dead last April after a frantic
Oct. 1 in Laguna Beach. search by police officers and a
The snake crept out of the 22· mild panic among nearby resl· y~ar·old Lagunan's bedroom dents who decided to keep their
window a few weeks a~o. and pets inside until the snake, as
was later captured by police near thick as a coffee can, was re·
Dunn's home on Oak Street. covered.
Police incarcerated the snake What fate awaits Elizabeth IV
for about a week, and lt wasn't after her two-week engagement
u°'I Laguna Moulton Playhouse at the playhouse?
managing director Doug Rowe Dunn hopes he can convince
promised to keep the slithering the police that Elizabeth has
star caged that police let become a reformed reptile.
Elizabeth out on bail. "I'd like to open a petting zoo,
For the duration of the play, or 11omething, to display my
thatis. pets " he said stroking
Rowe told police the reptile Elizabeth's powenui jaw.
would be kept under lock and lo addition to the snake t>unn
key, except during the third act, also owns parakeets cockatiels
every night. mice other snakes' an lguan~
"The play calls for a snake, ao and 'a green·cheek'ed Amazon
when I found out Bruce's boa was parrot named Miss Ruby Stone.
Joc ked up, I went to the police de· Both Dunn and Miss Ruby ap·
partment," director Rowe said. pear brieny In the play with
"I told them we were openln1 Elizabeth, with Dunn portraying
Wednesday nJght and I had to an Indian by the name or Gunga. have thesnakeback." Hls two pets portray
Laguna Beach police, used to themselves.
such goings-on, consented to re·
Lale n11ht and morntn1
low clouda with afternoon
and evening clearin1.
Lowa tonight upper 50s to
mld.eQs. Hi1h4 Thursday
ln upper 80I to low 70a to
mid·'708 ln1and.
'Flash Roll'
Of $18;250
StillSo~t
Or. Weaver moved to San
Clemente in 1964, after retiring
as vice president of the Scbering
Corp., a New Jersey drug finn.
From 1946 to 1953 he was re·
search ditector for the National
Polio FoundatJon in New York
City, where he worked with Salk
to develop the now famous Salk vaccine. ·
Arter the nationwide fieht
against polio, Dr. Weaver was
appointed vice president of re·
search for the American Cancer
Society. In 1961, he was hired by
the Schering firm.
Dr. Weaver went back to work
after a year's retirement, ac-
cepting a position as research
director for the National Multiple
Sclerosis Society.
"I never realized how famous
<See DOCTOR, Page A2)
.FQUr bloclts lflter1 the startled teenager was
brought down from behind b;-a fiying tackle.
The young thug, it developed, bad selected the
wron~ctim in Melvin Patton's wife.
He trad just been run down to justice by a man
once called "The World's Fastest Human."
. • Patton, in the 1940s, was known ln sporting lore as
sprinter "Pell Mel" Patton.
, NOW LIVING IN Tarzana, the Pattons were visit·
ing the Theodore Olsens of Newport Beach last Thurs·
day when the incident oecurred.
Police said both Patton and his wire suffered
minor abrasions from the incident but were otherwise
unharmed.
The four youths, from San Juan Capistrano, were
released to their parents by police but they face
fu rther action in Juvenile Court in the case.
PATTON, A TRACK STAR at USC from 1946 lo
<See PA1TON, Page A2 J
The regulatory commission re-
quires~ utility company to test
the area continuously, the
spokesman said.
The San Onofre plant has been ,
in operation since 1968 .
The fault located a week ago,
lying entirely within Camp
Pendleton, is inactive, 'the
spokesman said. Geologists have
said it has not moved in at least
35,000 years.
One nuclear generator is cur-
rently operating at San Onofre,
and two more are under con·
struction. They are constructed
to resist earthquakes. Energy
produced there goes into the
Edison system, lo serve
customers throughout Southern
<See FAULT, Page AZ)
)
' .. l .2 OAllVrlLOT l SC WwcJ110$day September 14, 1917
Fossils
Remain
In Hills
A n mJlUon·y~iar old rowu rttf
• la tbt Lqvna Hall deacnbfid u
.. i •"perhaps the 1reatat accumula
~ tlon ol foulls anywhere In tho
"" •orld" ls not likely lo fall vlcUm ~ lb a de\-eloper's bulWoaer
.. That C'Ol'lclusion wu arrived at
: Tue.d~ by the Orange County
' Boud ol Supervlaon.
The board voted to .. be
sensitive to the archeologlcal
-1 and paleontolog1cal value of the
~ fossil reel" adjacent t.o Moulton
• Parkway between El Toro and
' La Pu Roads.
' ~· .. .. Superv1sors also voted to
direct the county Environmental
Management Ageney "to ln·
vesti1ate the preservation ot the
most si&nlficant portions'' et the
.. six-square mile reef. ...
Those board actions are not ex·
peeled to deter Aliso Viejo Com·
pany from submitting a develop.
menlplan for the reef area.
However, the board's position
is expected to be reflected in
whatever development plans are
finally approved for the area.
According to a report reviewed
by supervisors Tuesday, the
prized fossil reef "consists or 95
percent invertebrate fossils with
marine mammal bones as well
as shark teeth and fish bones."
"In addition lo the paleon-
tological importance of the reef,
the area also contains important
archeology sates," the report
:;aid.
It went on t.o say the reef area
appears to be the source for lime Used in construction of San Juan
Capistrano Mission.
The Ahso Viejo Company
bought the reef site last year as
part of its $15 million purchase or
the 6,700-acre Moulton Ranch.
OldSeaD~ .
Gary Hill p~ he can teach an old sea dog new
tricks. This sea lion has been hanging out lately around
Hill's fuel dock near the Balboa Pavilion in Newport
Harbor. When he isn't there, he can be found dozing on
some old boat moored in the harbor. But when he's hun-
/:!ry, he'll sit up and beg, just like a pooch.
Water Bonds Issue
Study Set in LB
Laguna Beach City Council
members will meet tonight to
consider an ordinance authoriz-
ing the Aliso Water Management
Agency to issue up to SS million in
revenue bonds.
The special meeting, called by
Mayor Jon Brand, will begin at 6
p.m. in council chambers at 505
Forest Ave.
The AWMA, a si!ven-agency
organization, was formed in 1972
to develpp a regional wastewater
trcatmtnt and disposal system.
'Parlor' Ordina~e
Gets Clemente's Eye
Members include the city of
Laguna Beach, the Irvine Ranch
Water District. South Coast
County Water District, Emerald
Bay Service District. the
Moulton-Niguel Water District,
the Los Alisos Water District and
the El Toro Water District.
The city Is considering asking
A WMA to Issue bonds to finance
LaglD'la Beach's share of the $36
million wastewater project.
San Clemente councilmen are
expected to adopt an ordinance
tonight, regulating sauna baths
and massage parlors in the city.
The meeting ia scheduled for
7:30 p.m. in council chambers at
city haU, 100 Ave. Presidio.
The purpose or the ordinance IS
to establish minimum require-
ments for the operations or
masS11&e parlors and qualifica-
tions for massage "technicians."
The city currently has no
massage parlors or sauna baths.
Youth Must
Be Served?
San Clemente civic leader and
Cormer Capistrano Unified
School District trustee Ro~rt
Beasley attended a school board
meeting this week and was asked
to say a few words,
"lo 1964, when I Joined the
school board, I was amued that
the teachers looked so young -
mueb younger than when I was in
school," said the tray-haired
Beasley.
"Tonight I'm amued t.o find
that the board members look ao
young."
Charges Denied
CONCORD (AP) -Union
spokesmen ror striking teachers
in the Mt. Dtablo Unified School
district dented char1e they had
encourqed atudenta to 1tay out
of 1cbool, wblle enrollment ln·
creased 1llcht1y despite the
three-day walkout..
DAILY PILOT
A city spokesman said the or-
dinance is t.o assure city resi-
dents will be protected from un·
safe operations, if such a busl-
n e ss s hould open i n San
Clemente.
Other items on tonight's agen-
da include:
-Consideration of an over·
night recreational vehicle park·
mg proposal
-Approval Qf a proposed city
slogan: "San Clemente Home
of La Cristianlta Festival"
-Discussion of an amendment
to the hillside grading ordinance.
City Manager Al Thiel ·Said
that share amounts to about $14
million, adding that the city ex-
pects to receive about $11.4
million or that from federal and
state grants.
"The net Cost t.o the city would
be the difference,'' Thiel said.
Councilmen tonight will con-
sider asking the agency to issue
bonds not to exceed SS million,
and more likely. in the range of
$4 million.
, fi'roaa Page Al
PA'ITON NABS THIEF. • •
1949, was a triple medalist at t he 1948 Olympics in
London, winning a gold in the 200 meter, a silver in the
100 meter and anchoring the gold medal sprint relay
team. A native of Long Beach, Patton set world records
in the 100 and 200 yard dashes. His record in the 220,
which was later disallowed due to wind, still stands as
the fastest time anyone has ever run the distance on
the straightaway. ·
He demonstrated in Newport Beach that he can
still move right along.
Carter Aide Sorey
For Percy Remarks·
WASHINGTON CAP) -White
House press secretary Jody
Powell t~lepboned a personal
apoloay today to Sen. Charles H.
Percy CR·Ill. ), for apreadln1
rumon about one Of budaet ch1et
Bert Lance's principal criUca.
Powell called the Wutun,ton , ........... )
DOCTOR •••
• ti
bureau of the C1Uea10 ~un-·uma
Tue1day and paned alone
rumon -hotly denied by Percy
-that the HDator used Bell 8ftcl
Howell corporate aircraft Ind
f aclllti• Of a Cblcaco b• dW'·
ins h1I 197Z re .. lecUon cam·
palp.
After the Scm·Tlm• dllelOMd
Powell'• call, a sWr1D ~ ccn-
troveny enqMd bere with the preu aecretary lnltlally
acknowled1tn• be made a
•'dumb mlltake. ;r
Later, Powell 1&ld:
"I called Sen. Percy and told
blm I ftlretted the alt~atlOll Vtl')'
much."
• Percy Hld a not. WU handed .
to blm at abocat 10:20 a.m . AYiDa ltiat tbe pnet HCrtWy calleCl
And be lmlnedlately 19'\ the bear-m,c room and ntW'lled tbe ealL
Airport
Use Fee
Attacked
BJ WIILIAM HODGE llll-0.liilo:eiay ~lltft
CIUng grave phllosophlcal dlf-
f erences with city-mandated
airport control regulations, re·
si1nlng Capistrano Airport com-
p ll ance officer Frank Lewis
lashed out Tuesday at "exorbi-
tant" fees charged to transient
aircraft at the tiny airfield.
"A $10 monthly use permit for
transient aircraft is extremely
excessive and without precedent
in my experience," the 20-year
Marine Corps and civilian pilot
told a gathering or reporters al
the airport.
"I've never heard of anything
like that for light aircraft transit-
ing any airfield," Lewl's said.
The Santa Ana resident was re·
f erring to f ees San Juan
Capistrano began charging re-
cently for airport use.
Both aircraft listing San Juan
as home base and transient
aircraft pilots are required to
pay a SlO monthly use fee.
Transient aircraft also are re-
quired to pay $4 per landing at
the Capistrano Airport.
That means the pilot of a
transient airplane, which may
only land at the field one time.
would be charged $14 for the
landing.
Lewis also listed personal dis-
agreements wath caty policies
banning use or certain aircraft at
the airport.
"I strongly disagree with reg-
u I a tions now enforced and
particularly the banning of twin-
engine aircraft, airplanes in ex·
cess of 5,000 pounds gross weight
and aircraft in excess or 300 '
horsepower," Lewls said.
Lewis was aware or con-
troversy over the airport when he
accepted the compliance officer
job, but believed the trouble re-
lated to a May 28 aircraft acci·
dent that killed a five-year-old
girl playing near the airport.
His "Philosophical desagree-
ment ·• began when he became
aware or the new city ordinance
regulating airport use. "I really
couldn't believe after looking at
it that the city would pass and en·
force an ordinance or that varie·
ty," Lewis said.
The aiJi>ort ordinance, which
became law Aug. 20, is the sub-
ject of a lawsuit filed by local
pilots and aircraft owners seek-
ing to have the ordinance ruled
unconstitutional.
RAPS AIRPORT FEES
Ex-panelist Lewi•
Laguna Girl
Still Critical
Mter Crash
Lisa Brobeck remains in
critical condition. at South Coast
Community Hospital today after
the J-year-old girl's bicycle col-
lided with a car in the hill& over-
looking Laguna Beach Monday
afternoon.
Hospital officials said the
youngster remains unch161lled
after surgery Monday for in-
juries she sustained in the crash
on Caribbean and Atlantic Wayr,. '
Lisa, the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. David Brobeck of 1675
Tahiti A\re., &uffered a fractured
left leg, as well as head and
stomach injuries.
• Police said the girl was ridlnC
her bicycle down Atlantic Way
when she struck the right front
side of a small car driven by
Karen Marie Langdon, 32. of'
Laguna Beach.
Art-a-Fair Gives
Trees to Laguna
Members of the city's Art·a·
Fair have donated more than
$1,000worthof e1m, mulberry and
oleander trees to the City of
Laguna Beach, and have asked
the city plant the 11 trees on
Lag?llfllCanyon Road.
Art-a-Fair president Chuck
Foster suggested the larae box
trees be placed near the fair
grounds t.o decorate the show
area.
LB Sets
Village
Party
Laauna Beach residents will
~lebrate the end or the summer
congestion Saturday by crowding
on t.o Main lleach Park for a day·
long vUlqe •arty.
City recreation orficlals and
members of several clty service
groups will be organizinl 1ames,
food stands and tournaments all
day at the Main Beach area.
The Exchange Club is organb·
lng volleyball and basketball
tournaments, slated to bectn at 9
a .m. But deadline for registra·
lion in those tourneys la 1bura·
day. Sign ups are at city ball.
Other activities lnclude sand
sculpttll'eS, a swim competition,
inner tube races, and other pic-
nic-type contests.
Music from the Jazz group
Scratch begins at S p.m. at the
north end or the beach. continu-
ing unW8:15p.m.
The Laguna Beach Jaycees
will begin serving barbecue
sparerib dinners at 4 p.m. at
$3.50 for adults and $2.50 for
children:
A display of rireworks will be
held rrom 8:30 until 9 p.m., and
the end-of-summer festivities
wiJI end with a giant bonfire at 9 p.m.
F,....PqeAJ
LANCE •.•
Jimmy Carter and t.o Lance.
Misi Stone testified that Stokes
told her after last November's
election that he was anxious t.o
stay ln his post for. one more year
so that he would be eligible for a
federal pension.
On another matter. Sen. William Roth (R-Del. ), sajd be
would ask the committee to call
press secretary Jody Powell.
White House counsel Robert
Llpshutz, presidential assistant
Hamilton Jordan and John L.
Moore Jr., now president of the
Export-Import Bank and a legal
adviser to Carter on ethics in the
period after h ia election. to
testify.
Powell bas said that be, Jordan
and Lipthutz, saw an FBI report
about Lance's ftnancial troubles
in January but did not tell the
president about it. Moore was in·
volved in discussions about how
t.o deal with press inquiries con·
cerning dllOcuJUes of Lance's
banks. '
Scene Stealer.
Drexel's oriental adaptation
in antique bone with chlnolserie deeoration
is destined to play a leading role
in your decorating story.
Salel There are room accents and theri Mt room ecoants.
Here's one that does ewrythlng. Addi contrast, aets the
moods. brings richness to any Plrt of )OUr home. M en-
chanting Et Cetera bookcase with Interior hghting, ad·
Justable glass tshelves and gilt finish bid( panet, 56" wide
by 79Y:z .. high by 14" deep.
\
\
I
-
Wednesday. S.pt•mber 14. 1977 L SC )AIL y PILOT AS
Controversy Swirls Over Pt. Conception LNG
POINT CONCF.PTION <AP> 1'h1J aconlc, laolaled aplt or land
JuW:nr toto ~ Pactnc h•• bctn lar1ely bypuaed dw1n1 the arowth
of c.litom a from a f ar.nuna Spwab colony lolo a populated, ln·
d~ltalc.
lul now, Ulla uu haa been catapullecl Into the btadUnes by a
blll the st.ale tetrlllature haa puaed that bH a pawned a complex, often
bitter eneru·venus envaronmentdebata
BILL WOULD PUMIT 1everaJ u ttea to build a $800
mllllon llqullled natural I• <LNG) tennlnal at ~o 1ii'lM lee ot the point.
It'• a subltttute •~atJon, whlcb would replace earlier proposals
to put the plant In Ox,oard or Loi Aa1ele1 Harbor.
On one aide are 111 tnduatry apokeamen and atate and county
poht.m ans who HY ener()'·lhort Callfornia muat Import super·
,,.------------... cooled natural gu by ship by
( E'"'FH' Flry J at lea.st J981 if the state is to tJV~ a void cutoffs of gu to homes
and businesses. --------------ENVIRONMENTAUSTS, FIGln'ING the scheme through a
loa&e coalition called the Point Conception Preservation Commltlff,
say buildln1 the 1tate'a first LNG terminal here would ruin one Qf
the last unspoiled sections of the Ca11fornla coast.
It's a controversy with some local twists:
-A dispute between Santa Barbara County and the state over
who will make the ultimate decisions about shoreline development.
-lntra·county rivalries so bitter there's a good chance voters
will be aalled next year if they want to carve a new county. Los
Padres, out or the northwesiem half or the present county.
MANY OF THE HANDFUL OF people who live here are reluc·
tant to take sides. Most say they'd like to be left alone to raise beef,
hunt while·l•iled deer or wild pigs, drag their trawler nets through
the rich fishing grounds offahore, tend musty li&hthou.sea interesting
enough to qualify as historic monuments, or surf on beaches some
experts say are among the best on the Pacific coast.
One resident is Lee Mann, 35, a security officer for the 10,000·
acre Cojo Ranch.
Mann, who moved here with his family lo avoid the hassles or
city living, spends much of his time chasing surfers from the area's
beach. He is also hard-nosed about an LNG plant:
''IT'S VOLATILE, THEY TELL US. Everyone here is con·
cerned with that. Maybe they'll have to preserve the ranch as a buf·
fer. If the plant did blow up, it would involve fewer people.··
Mann's closest neighbors, who live a mile away in one of the old
Pt. Conception lighthouse buildings, are the Lundbergs.
Brad Lundberg, 37. manages the Cojo Ranch for the Los
Angeles·based Bixby Ranch Co., which also owns the adjoining
16,000·acre Jalama Ranch. Both were originally parts of a Spanish
Jandgrant.
A TmRO.GENERATION COWBOY, Lundberg runs about 400
reeder cows and calves with the help of his two hired hands and bis
two sons.
LOS ANGELES
Dally rltlitMllllWWrr......_. ...
X MARKS SPOT OF LATEST PROPOSED LNG-PLANT
pt. Conception luue Alarms Envlronmentallat•
He hasn't made up his mind about the plant, but he's worried
about change: ,
"What I've got is the satisfaction of producing something in
what I think is an ecologically harmonious way wtth the world. I'm
not making anything plastic or polluting the air. I guess what I have
1s a love of the land."
Another who doeso 't want to see Pt. Conception changed is 37.
year-old William Towne, a Coast Guard chief eleetronic tehnician.
He drives 80 miles round trip every week from his station at Point
Arguello to tend Point Conception's automated U1ht and bellowing
foghorn.
TOWNE, AN 18·YEAR VETERAN OF duty on icebreakers and
such i.solat~ stations as Cape Christian on BaffiO Island, is reverent
about the point.
"When you work around the light and those old buildings," says
Towne, "You realize you're a part of history that goes back to the
first lighthouse keepers who tended whale oil lamps here in 1856.
There are some things we can't afford not to preserve.··
Philip Marking, a Santa Barbara attorney who heads the Point
~~~ Paper ClcJims
ReaCtor Fuel
Bomb Tested
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A secrettest explosion
in the Nevada desert proves that low.grade
pluwnium Crom civiUan nuclear power plants can
be used to make atomic weapons, the Los Angeles
Times r eported today.
The Times sa.i4 a recenUy declassified report
shows the United States eicploded a nuclear device
using the special kind of plutonium on an unknown
dale. The paper said the test was decJasalfied July
29, but was never made public.
Conception PreservaUon Committee. 11 vocally acainat the LNG
plant.
MARKING, WHO SAYS IDS GROUP includes Sierra Club
leaders and several score other or1mizaUoP.s ''basically opposed to
this whole LNG technology." explained:
"A couple of years from now, when this 'c:riais' trumped up by
the gas companies dlsappears, there's 1oin1 to be an LNG f acilit.y at
Polnt Conception. It's planned as a mile·lont T .pf er, with room
enough for two l,OOO·foot supertankers and one wailinl to unload.
Onshore, there's four 13·Story storage \,anb and the reguslflcation
plant. Then there's 200 mUes of pipeline. It •a enormous."
"U the LNG faclllty Is sited there," says Marking, .. other In·
dustry will naturally follow. We'll lose one of the last aemi·wtld.
parta of the Sou them California coast."
HARRELL FLETCHER IS A SANTA Marla furniture store
owner, chairman of the Santa Barbara County Board 0£
Supervbors, and prime mover or the attempt to create Los Padres
County, which would include Polnt Conception.
He is also afraid the county Is losing control of shoreline de·
veJopment, but he wanta the LNG plant built bere.
Says Fletcher; "I understand the LNG facWty would ultimately
be worth something like $2 billion. That would brin1 ln property tax·
es of about $12 million a year, because we'd not only be able to tax
the plant but also 200 mile.s of pipeline and all the aas that flows
throughtt .•
''IF WE CAN GET THE LNG facility at Conception," predicts·
Fletcher, "and if the voters approve Los Padres County,' it would
pay 40 percent of the new county's tax base. We'd be in beauWul
shape.
"The Sierra Clubbers are opposed to a plant in Conception,"
Fletcher says, "Maybe they'd rather see it in the heart of Los
Angeles where it might kill millions of people if it blew up. The only
thing you'd kill at Point Conception would be tbree·toed (ro&s~.. ·
Santa Barbara attorney George H. Allen, who represeQts
Hollister Ranch and more than 100 owners of parcel.a of at ltut 100
a cres, disagrees with Fletcher.
"WE'RE CONCERNED WITH THE safety of that huge facili-
ty," says Allen. "It isn't moral or ethical to expose 200 people here to
a facility that's too dan&erous to put at Omard or Los Angeles
Harbor.
"We're also opposed to the racllity on the grounds of reUabllity.
Point Conception is known as the 'Cape Horn of the Pacific' and this
entire coast is called the •graveyard of ships.'" .
Allen said the homH'mers have hired a marine weather expert
fo r research to back up their contention that because of hJgh winds,
strong currents and dense fogs thet have plagued sailors in the San-
ta Barbara Channel for centuries the LNG port facility "would bCI
closed atleast 25 percent of the time."
''WE ARE SCARED OF IT," says Allen. "But we're buiq our
opposition on economic grounds because we're afraid not enough
people will worry about our safety."
THE ORIGINAL
SHEEPHERDER
BREAD
COPYRIGHT 1938
•~w .... .-.
CONSTRUCTION OF LNG TERMINAL COULD CLOSE LIGHTHOUSE
The 121-year-old Point Conception Lighthouse Is Near Cojo Bay
By Brown Solons OK
LNG at
Point Site
The newspaper said the test was confltmed by a
spokesman for the Energy Research and Develop-
ment Administration. The ERDA said details of the
explosion, conducted by the Los Alamos Scientific
Laboratory at the Nevada weapons test site, were
still classified.
Ollld Po~ E•ple,,en ~,,ed
SACRAMENTO CAP> -California is reported·
ly a production center for child pornography -
hence the state Assembly has voted for tougher
penalties for employers in the booming business.
The members voted
10·0 Tuesday despite a ( )
complaint that the ap· ST A.TE
NOW OPEN IN
LAGUNA BEACH
Aerosol Spray
Ban Approved
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Sales of fluorocarbon
aerosol sprays will be banned in California on April
15, 1979, under a bill signed Into law by Gov. Ed·
mund Brown Jr.
Legislative sponsors ol the measure, Sen. John
Dunlap, <D·Napa), and Assemblyman John
Vasconcellos, (D·San Jose), told reporten after the
alantni Tuesday that California'• action should
1erve "u a lever" to make sure that the federal
government followa through with its proposed ban.
The bill follows proposed federal regulatloni
that would ban the manufacture of the compaund
Oct. 15, 1978, and ban the product in interstate
commerce In April 1979.
BtJT IF THE FEDERAL reculaUons are de·
Jayed or chaqed, Ca1Uornla'a 1>an on salet would
1Ull •Pl>lY. Hid Dunlap. Five other states have
puted sueb laws, with Ore1on having the only ban
in effect. u aald.
At ataW ln the poten.Ual ban of the product na·
UClllwide and eventually worldwide la the 1avtn1 or
an unlmo'!nl number of penona from akin cancer,
nld two UC Irvine 1clentllts who flrat ralsecl the la·
1ue more than thr~ yean ago. · Dn. F .S. Rowland and Muto Mollna, both
from tbe Irvine campus, Joined Dun.lap and Vueon·
qellol at the capitol news conference.
SACRAMENTO (AP>
proach in the bill was ,
naive. Protested As---------
semblyman John Vascon·
c~llos, (D·San Jose), "We're looking at the wroa1
end or the problem. The problem of child porno-
graphy is nol a problem of supply, primarily, but a
problem of demand.•'
OU E......._ L•te• lf•eelled -A bill that strongly
favors Point Conception LOS ANGELES (AP> -The state Air
a s t h e s i t e f o r Resources board bas unveiled a new nine-part plan
California's first fiq -to control oil emlaslona, whlcb ARB Chairman Tom
ue fled natural g aa Quinn call• the largest single source of pollution In
terminal hu been' sent to the Loe Angeles Basin.
Gov. F.dmtmd Brown Jr. Quin outlined the program Tuesday to the peo..
Gray Davia, Brown's pie rspoulble for complyiq wlth new restl'lc-
executlve secretary, . tions-o.llexecuUves.
said Brown is expected 19_ wr I 11. a.a --~to ailn it soon. 0 We think --.-~-• ... .. ml....C:
it's a good bill, the result LOS ANGELES (AP> -Pclllceofftcen may be
of hundreds or hours of liable for wroqful death c1am.,. U they 1boot to
worlt. death fteelna suspects wbo are not en1ated in
violence, the state court of aJ'pffl bu nltd. ·•rr•s NOT th• p-' .. e 1n " d a .. 1 h .. ·~"... a vl ec1o1t on, t e seccnd appellate district
blll" Brown has pro· court ruling which held that a Loni Beach
posed, but ''it accom· pollcemanwasnotnegllgentwbenhefatallyebotan
modates the very real unarmed college student alletedly fieehli a
need to insure adequate buraJary in 1972. •uppUes of natural gas • .
as well as .very GaeeeteO ..... ••eePe,...
legtUmate health and • , •
aaletyqueetlons." BERKELEY <AP> -Anardbumee refQ1aUni
A somewhat reluctant researcb GD 1....UC alteratba b.M wca unaa11Doua
Senate approved the bW approval from tbeBerkelqat)'CouncU.
30-TTuelday. The ordinance adopted Tuelday callt fOf' _,,
Point COnceptiGD l8 tbe or1.matloa w1lh.lni to cGDduc:t recomblnat DNA
on11 propoeal ol tbe/u research In the clty to be lnlpeeted and •PSll"Ond by
cornpanlea that wouJ I>\ city pqbllc healtb offlclals. Dekelq a. tbe ftnt ~
a 1 1 o w e d b y t h e in Calilomla and 1ocond Jn tbe nation to adopt the
meNure~• definition of a reaulation.
remot. alte baa•d on popula~on den1lty or no
more than eo persona per aquro mile wttbl.D tour
nillea.
------_........_ --·· I
FOR THE FIRST TIME IN'THE U.S.A.IU
The Europeon Conc.pt of:
EXHIBITION BREAD BAKING
S.. your own bNod ~ batted fNan oll day In our ntlW 1foie In
LAGUNA BEACH
The SCHAT famlty ~ lbhap, C:Oll'°"*, home of the only~
SHEEPHEROB IUA09 19:11' rs.now bnnglng to you in' lt\ta new wfl'f
their '-'out productlJ
''SHEEPHERD!R BREAD'':
made wfttt hW-protein unMla:Md Monfofto *'*"· ~,j
0 SHEEPHERDER CHEEZE BREAD"9 1977:
s.hredd.d cheese folded by hond Into~ lniod.
"HONl·SKQUAW 8READ"8 1977:
a bMnd of whole wh.at ffo4Jr ond rye flour1 contoiN iahln ~' ~
ond lecithin. '
''VOLKOREN BREAD'we 19171
M '1f'Oin Dutch low<Dlory health ~ c.ontoina raitin ,_ _.
hoMy, but no 11Ug01'1 ~·lg « prw• •Oti"*S.
. "We mo m11ke Sour poug11 &;eed"
A'50: CoOkles .... Pastnes •, w ........••... ~ ..... .,fil .. watl~
T
'
•
\
Orange Coast Dolly Pilot Editorial p ag.e ________ W·td·n·e·ad···"·· s.ep.tem·be·r·1·4·, 1·9·77·----R·o·be·rt·e·:.·,.:.eed.ra·~·p·r:.~b.':_:~.'.~.d.lt·or·T'.~.I :.a.·~-Ke.:.: •• ~.';·E·d·it-or • u
.
'Ideal' Site May
Be Out of Reach
On the surface, Laguna Buch community centtr locat-
ed at Heister Park atop the blutfa appears to be an Ideal pro-
posal.
A mult~purpoae community area overlooking the Pacific
Oeun and located on land alreedv owned bV the city of
)..ag~ Beech would seem to flt the. needs of community
groups to a tee.
And council members last w"k -.greed to look Into build-
Ing a community center at the tite, near the lawn bowling
greens.
But there are problems associated with such a venture.
• For one. parking is at a premium along the blutttop. Nearby
residents are certain to oppose the center on that basis.
Oppos1t1on will probably also come from the Coastal
Commission. Even if approval does come from that panel, the
going would be rough.
Added to these problems. the park area Is shown as open
space on the city's general plan and a community center pro-
posal would entail changing the plan In order to encroach up-
on 1t with a structure for community use.
Mayor Jon Brand, in endorsing the Heisler site. asked
why the city "should take a Chevy when we can have a
8adillac." ...
Fine, Mr. Mayor, just so the city doesn't end up w ith an
Edsel.
· Council listened
Atter last week:t 1sformy council session, operators of a
refurbished Laguna Beach restaurant bordering on res"lden-
t1al homes have been put on notice to watch their step.
And that's not dance steps, councilmen warned two
· owners of the Old Brussels restaurant on South Coast
: Highway. .
' Nearby residents accused the owners of planning to
operate a discotheque, complete with dancing, loud music
and pool tables. .
They also claimed new activities at the restaurant would
mean increased traffic, slamming car doors. parking conges-
tion and loud noise until late hours. r
, The homeowners' well prepared grievances did not fall
on qeaf ears. · ' .
Council memb.ers reminded the residents that the
restaurant owners would have ~o approach the council for an
entertainment permit -which they admitted they would be
~ seeking.
And· the council pointed out that if there were any
•. problems, such a permit could be revoked. ·
r"
In short. the city has controls to protect the
neighborhood from a nuisance.
: A Hefty BUI
San Clemente merchants, some of whom have tried for
years to improve the downtown shopping district without hav·
ing to foot the entire bill, may have found a way to spread part
of the expense among city taxpayers.
City planners have drawn up a $4.6 million blueprint for
improvements in a proposed downtown assessment district
• blanketing Avenida del Mar from Avenlda Cabrlllo to Avenida
Granada and extending from Avenida de la Estrella to Calle
Seville.
Improvements would Include new parking lots, new
sidewalks, landscaping and optional undergrounding of
utilities.
There's a catch. Assessment districts are created so that
those who stand to gain most from improvements pay for
them. But in th.is case 20 percent of the property involved
wQuld be shifted to the city by purchase of 42 lots to be con-
verted for parking.
With the shift of ownership, city taxpayers .would find
themselves faced with a bill of nearly $1 million for improve-
ments which are theoretically the responsibility of the assess-
ment district.
Th~vious question: Is this fair?
-. Opinions expressed In the space above are tho5e of the Dally Piiot.
• Other views exp,.essed .on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Readercommef\t ls Invited.
\• .
Boyd/..4rtistS' Wi_Ves
ByLM.B0\1)
Art editors claim that.
sketches submitted to them ol ••
females, clothed or
otherwise, tend to be drawn
with the proportions or the .
artlat's wife in each case.
That's even if the artist.
worked with some other
model, they say. The artist
evidently is lncllned to "cor-
rect" the rendering to more
closely match that most
familiar figure. . .
King Louls XVI of France
kept a daily diary. But he got
bored pretty easily, IO m01t of
hit entries just read :
, "Nothing." Historical re·
searchers say that's what be
wrote therein oo the dar the
Bastille was stormed, 1ettin1
off the French Revolution.
A waiter nearins reUro-
ment says, •·1·ve known ror
y;ars that people Up better
when each ls responsible for a
bill. That's why I always give
separate checks, iC possible.··
In Switzerland, you can be
fined lor tax evasion, true
enOUih, but you can't be sent
to prllon for it.
Nominations al"e now open
for cand.ldates whose descrip-
tions may aptly begin with:
"He's the kind of guy who
• • • " For example. Om ab a 's
Gunner Brown; ••ue•s the
kind of guy who orders an egg
salad sandwich, and
says 'Hold the ma yon·
naise'."Tbat's bad. Very bad,
Anyotbers?
It's a UtUe known fact that
when act.reas Katharine Hep-
burn manied Ludlow Odgen
Smida lit 1128, 1be uked him
to chqe h1I l11t name to
'01den IO she wouldn't be
identified u anotber Kate
Smith.
'
Earl Waters l
These Strikes Endanger Lives
)f the specter of city firemen
standing idly by while your house
burns to the ground frightens
you, the opportunity to take ac·
taon lo prevent It from becoming
a reality may be yours at next
June's election.
Two southern· Californians.
Dolly Swift and Betty Cordoba,
are currently
ga the ring
sigrfatures to
place a con·
stitutional
a mendment
on the ballot
p r ohibiting
s trikes by
puJ>li c
e mployes.
They have un-
til Dec. 2 to qualify the measure r or ballot placement.·
No doubt the recent events in
Dayton, Ohio, will give impetus
to their dnve. In that city the
· specter did be~ome a reality,
Art Hoppe
when striking firemen permitted
at least 20 fires to go unchecked
during their holdout for higher
wages.
The Dayton strike continued
after a judge had ordered the
strikers back to work. However a
contempt or court action was not
pursued because an agreement
was reached in the time which in·
tervened between the hearing
date set on the contempt charge .
In California, despite repeated
c ourt rulings that public
employes do not have a right to
strike. work stoppages. sick·
'outs , and other refusals to work
by those on public payrolls have
been increasing.
VARIOUS legis lative pro
posuls, including a constitutional
a m endment have been in·
troduced at past sessions to spell
out a strike prohibition without
success. Last year Orange Coun·
ty Sen. Dennis Carpenter
authored such a constitutional
chanae only to see the Senate de·
feat it by a vote or 19 to 14, far
short of the 27 votes needed.
Asked why he had authored the
bill in view of the consistent court
rulings against strikes ,
Carpenter said he believed a con·
stitutional amendment would be
helpfUl. If nothing else, he in-
dicated, passage or s uch an
a~t would make it clear
t the ople are not sym·
pathetic t strikes by public
workers.
He also suggested that even.
though the courts have ruled
against strikers. there are no
specific prohibitions in the law.
Until recently there have been
few instances where striking
public employes have suffered
after e ffects. Usually the
scenario has witnessed manage.
ment going to court and obtain·
ing injunctions and orders for the
employes to return to work. Even
when such court orders are
blithely ignored no penalties
have been imposed and workers
have been permitted to return to
their jobs after the strike is set-
tled.
IN FACT, ulte m pls t o
terminate s triking e mployes
have run afoul or court rulings
and sometimes public sentiment.
But a most recent declsion by
the court of appeals in Los
Angeles, holding s triking
Pasadena school teacher~ liable for damages may signal a tum in
attitudes towards illegal strikes
against the public.
If the effort to place a direct
prohibition against strikes on the
ballot fails to qualify such court
rulings are the public's only im-
mediate hope of protection
against walkouts by firemen and
police and other essential public
employes because no legislation
on the subject is currently pend·
ing before the Legislature.
A · Whit·e House at the End ·of the Canal?
~ , . . "
All right, kiddies, just one "You mean our cowardly King "WHAT or our Manifest
more story about Sir Ronald of Jimmy would abandon this Destiny, varlet? Does not this
Holy Rood and then it's beddy· magnificent real or modern canal stretch from sea to shining
bye. . engineering, this eighth wonder sea? Should this mighty canal
Well. as you remember. Sir of the world, this bastion of de· slip from our grasp, how could
Ronald and his faithful squire, mocracy, this key to southwest our Great White Fleet show the
S a n c h o Central America, this freedom· flag?"
Nofziger, had loving canal for which our boys "As a:ood a question as any,
plunged <seep fought and died? Would he sire."
i n to Th e violate the holy Monroe Doctrine "Let us not forget The White
T a n g I e d by yielding up this sacred soil of Man's Burden, S~ncho, while at
Thicket In the Americas to a foreign power the same time we Remember the
quest or The without a fight?" Maine!"
Holy Whit e "Well, I guess Panama Is a "Can you see the light at the
· House. But foreign power. sire," said end of the tunnel, master?"•
that glimmer· Sancho. "when you put it that asked Sancho hopefully.
ing goal had way." "No," said Sir Ronald. "but I
tantalizingly
eluded Sir Ronald over the years
and he was not growing any
younger.
So it was that he limped weari·
ly around a bend in The Thicket
1 and came upon a large ditch
filled with turgid water.
"Hola, Sancho!" he cried. ''Be
this a moat encircling some
fortress wherein the fair damsel
or fiscal responsibility. pleads to
be rescued from the ogre or def.
icit spending?"
"Nay. sire," said Sancho. "Tis
but the Panama Canal."
"PFA.H!" snorted Sir Ronald.
turning his back. "Obvlously 'Us
but a creaky antique that has
long outlived lts usefulness."
"Verily, sire," agreed Sancho.
''Thus would King Jimmy give it
away to keep the peace."
"What say you?" s napped Sir
Ronald. "A' give-away program?
To whom•would this coward givt:
• it and why?" 7)1
think I can see the White House
at the end of the canal."
With that, he drew his famed
Swinging Sword, shouted Ms
awesome battle cry, "For Decen·
cy, for Purity and for Just Plain
Goodness!" and vanished into
The Tangled Thicket. yelling,
"CHAAAARRRRGGGG E ! "
SANCHO sat on a rock and
mopped his brow. "I should have
known," he said, shaking his
head. ..He always gets emo·
tionally involved when anyone
wants to get rid or a creaky an·
tique."
·;
r
I
,. ,.
"To Panama, master." said
Sancho. cringing s lightly .
"Primarily because it bisects
that land from which we stole it
75longyears ago." . ,. u .... AND !UIS ONE'S FOR VIETNAM .•. AND-rnl5 ~f~ FCR T+/E. MAYA~f.Z ..... ANO
. IU/S L..ITit.E BITTY NEW ONE IS FOR PANAMAL" "Ahab!" cried Sir. Ronald."
Mailbox
• • Teacher's Compl~t Rings True Through Ages
To the Editor:
"What have you done, what
good came of your sitting here?"
reads a Sumerian clay tablet or
aboul 1800 B.C., now in the
University of Chicago's Oriental
Institute recording his lnstruc·
tor's irate lecture after a student
had flunked hla writing test.
uyou ARE already a ripe man
and close to being a&ed I Like an
old 88$, you are not teachable
any more .. Llke withered grain
you have passed the season. How
long wijl you play around? But it
ls 1UU not too late! If you study
night and day and work all tM
time modestly and wit.bout ar·
rogance, if you listen to your col·
leagues and teachen. you can
still beeome a scribe."
What upnt the instructor was
that the youth's fatMr wu a
teacher, and he claimed that It w.-the tat.her and hil brothers
w b o h a v e f a i l e ·d , n o t
he ... SoJ_omon was rt1ht, there's
not.bin& new under the sun. FRANK KLOCK
.... 'IFllli•
on the front page Or m y evenina
paper today. ·
These situations, which occur
every few months in every state,
usually merit front·paee cov·
erage only during the dramatic
first day or two or legal confilct.
The end result ls usually not
published at all, or perhaps
burled on page 16 of the fourth
. section. Fo.r your paper to pro-
vide such promloent ancl detailed
coverage of the conclusion of this
situation is an unusual and very
much appreciated editorial de·
cislon.
GARY C. SPENCER •
. • ..... 1 ..
To the Editor:
Amidst the clamor tor fUI ,.....
l1nadon. let me stand up and be
counted as One who favon keep.
tnc Bert Lanee In the f edenl 1ov·
emmmt. Th• Only thln1 we need
· to dots chani• hl•Job olwiftc1·
·lion. 8ued on h1I prior be.nldn1
dnUnas, it •~ara l'le 11 the OClly
one who could save our Social
Security system.
JOHN E. WOLF' n.e ..........
.
IT WILL soon probably be
leafned that the more guoline a
car bums, the more pollutants it
pumP.S into the atmosphere. The
e(fec( of smog controls on an
engine ls to cause it to bum more
gasoline.
Nothing is .. burned up," lt Is
just changed. Therefore, the car
that bums more gasoline will
cause more pollutants.
The problem ls that the smog
control has become so huge that
its collapse might trigger a
depression.
All the government has to do to
fix things up ls to pass a law.
They have aolved t.be problem. of
cblldND'• clothtnc cateblnc fire;
they have fixed the oaone and the sm9C. It's alJ In the books.
.JAMES W. BOLDING
la11tt••e
To the F.dltor:
TIM O.H.P. King letter in the
Dally Piiot's Mailbox. of A\11. 28
is in11Ceurate concemln1 Marine
Midland Bank.
Ambassador Llnowits is no
lonaer a di.rector of t.h1a bank and
has never represented it in his
role a s P.resldent Carter's
delegate.
The ambassador became a
Marine Midland director in 1973
but resigned in March or thjs
year rather than permit the Im·
proper allegations concerning
hla relationship with our bahk to
impair his effectivenlSs in
representing President Carter.
His position on the Panama
Canal is not a banklnl issue and
Marine Midland's good name
should not be dragged into the
poliUcal arena. ·
YOU MIGHI' be Interested that
the ambuaador's butiness af·
filiatlons were fully reported to
the Carter adminlltreUon and
cleared tbrou1b the State
DepUlment before bis appoint·
rnent hr. the Pres~dent. Further. thil bank issued a public release
settlna forth Its Panamanian In·
volvement Cleta than a mllUon
ln loans to Panama, all turrent
• and reprnenUna about 1 /14lh of
l percent Of our anell > and I
penoaally met with a number or concressmen to be certa.ln they
undmtood Marine Midland has
no 1pectat interest or risk in the
Panama Caal ~ai.y. Uatortuaate11. 'tbe full dJs-ekilUl'9 Im iiOt'.ataed th OD•
trVtbfa1 rtpqrta loefa --lnclwted biUle~=RB.mGLE~
ExecuUve Vice, Prilddent
ll;ttiM MktJUd 8Ulc l
..
Orange Coast
ED ITION
Today's Clo lag
N.Y. Stoeks
I VOL. 70, NO. 257, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES
Powell 'Regrets~ Attack oii Percy
ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI~ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1977 TEN CENTS N
Lt
WASHINGTON IAP 1 While '
House preas secretary Jody
Powell telephoned. a personal
apology today to Sen. Charles H.
Percy <R-111. >. for apreadin&
rumors about one of budcet chief
Bert Lance's principal critics.
Powell called the W ashlngton
bureau of the Chicago Sun· Times
Tues day and passed along
rumors -hotly denied by Percy
-that lb~ senator used Bell and
Howell corporate aircraft and
CacilllJes of a Chicago bank dur-
ing his 1972 re-election cam
palgn.
After the Sun-Times disclosed
Powell's call , a storm of con·
lroveray erupted here with the
press secretary initially
acknowledging he made a
.. dumb mistake."
Later, Powell said:
"I ·called Sen. Percy and told
... ", .........
Fleeing Fr.-Flood
Robert Wiggins carries his cal .. Murray ~· an·d hi's ,
favorite pair of boots to high grouncj from his, half·
s ubmerged trailer home in Kansas tity on T.ut>sday. For
him I regretted the situation very
m uch." ll
Percy said a note was handed
to him at about 10:20 a .m . saying
that the press secretary called
and he immediately left the hear
Ing room and returned the call.
He said he told Powell, "You
bave expressed your regret and I
accept that."
But Percy said Powell did not
tell him expressly that he had
* * * 'In Sad Shape'
round the report to be incorrect
and "I think to clear the record
he should be asked to clariry
that.''
At his daily news bnefine
hours later, Powell agaln termed
his action "inappropriate,
regrettable and dumb."
Asked what President Carter
said to rum about the matter. he
replied, "He seemed to accept
my analysis as accurate."
* * *
Lance Blames
Media Barrage
WAS HI NGTON <AP>
Budget Director Bert Lance
declared today he has been bar.
raged unfairly with innuendo and
hearsay and "we're in sad shape
in this country" if people believe
hisfrrectiveness has been crip·
pie as a result.
Lance lashed out at the news
media when r eporters ques·
tioned him as he emerged this
morning from his GeorgetOwn
home. Ag~in, he. denied any in·
tentlon to resign ..
Said Lance: "If you can take
allegations and Innuendoes and
hearsay and everything else, the
words of. a convicted felon, and
all these other things,, and put
them in the paper and show them
on television and then say
that's a fact. . . ..
... And then, without having a
chance lo rertJte that and have
my day in court. and 'be raced
witli the charge that t:>ecause or
that my,...~tfecttveness Ol\S 't>ef;ln
damaged and crippled, then
we re we're in sad shape in this.
-country.•· ·
testimony today.rwm officials of
the Justice Department and the
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency about an invesUgaµon
qr overdrafts by the Calhou.n fiir~t National Bank of Calhoun,
,Ga ., lo Lance 's 1974
·gubernatorial campaign com·
mittee at a time when Lance was..
.chairman or the board of the'•
bank.
The case was closed late'last
<See LANCE·, Page A.2).
•
Oe01ente's ' .
Dr. Weaver
·Dead· at ·68
91 .\NNE <'-ooP£R \ . ; Pf"" Oe!tf. ..... ..... •
story on fl<><><i .damage, see Page A4. .
Irvine's Mo-pei1s
Lance will have his day Th••
day. when We will appe'l\r befift'e
"= ' the senate Governmenlal10&>eh·
Uon1t:ommittee. , ..
Dr. Harry Weav~r of ~a~
Clemente, internationally knOwn
for his medical rtJea'rch. died ·
Monday at hi& home, following a
thP.'e-month Ulnus. He wu 68.
· · Jooas Sallt once told me that
science ls a very demandlnc mis · tre~:· said Dr. Weaver'• widow,
Jan e . ''He was' right. My
hus,band was still w~king when
he.died," .
> Can~t Use Trails
Ry .PJUUP ROSMARIN
Ol IM Dally .. , ... Slall
Advocating a sort of Darwinian
n atural selection. Irvine ~ity
Councilman John Burton led J.he
c harge Tu esda y to keep
Lecturer
Protested
MELBOURNE, Austr alia
O\P) An American
psychologist who holds that
blacks are inherently less In·
telligent that whites was driven
from the stage at Melbourne
Unive r sit y Wednesday by
aboriginals and other d em·
onstrators shouting "racist 10
home.'' ·
Arthur Jensen, a proressor of
psychology at the University or
California at Berkeley, left the
stage but dell vered most of hls
address from an adjacent room
using an audio·vlsual linkup with
the hall. However. most of his
speech went unheard U. the con-
tinuing din.
Coast
Weather
Late night and morning
low clouds with afternoon
and evening c learing.
Lows tonlght upper_ 50s to
mld-808. Highs Thursday
In Upper' 80s to low 10s to
mid·10a inland.
motonzed bicycles (mo-peds> on
lhe streets and off bicycle paths.
Said Burton of mo.ped riders
who will have lo negotiate city
streets or the striped bike lanes
within the roadways:
"Those who are more brilliant
and fit are going to survive.
"We need to come to grips with
the crowded highway a\ld share
it one way or another -squashed
or otherwise," he added.
. The council vote to keep mo·
peds orr bike trails and paths that
are not physicall y a part or the
roadway was 3·2. with council'
members Mary Ann Gaido and
Bill Vardoulis opposed.
The measure was sponsored by
Councilmon David Siils and city
Tra nsportation Commissioner
Juanita Moe. It follows similar
action by the city of Newport
Beach.
Sills and Moe argued that mQ·
ped operation on off-street trails
is unsafe to bicyclists and
pedestrians.
The particular targets of their
measure are bicycle tralls•along
Culver Drive, but the affect of the
action is cit)twide.
They cited stx accidents ln·
volving mo-peds since January l,
three of them occurring oo the
Culver Drive trails.
Police Chief Leo Peart argued
unsuccessfully that it would be
more dangerous, l\L least along
Culver Dtive where the •peed
Umlt ls SO mJles per hour, for mo-
ped riders to use the street.
Lance's referral to ttie "words
of a convicted felon" seeminJ.lY
applied to a v)sit by Senate in·
"Vestigal.(>rs to a m an Imprisoned
in Atlanta for embezzlement a'
one pf Lance's former banks .
T h e e mbezz1er. Bill y
Campbell, reportedly tried to Im·
plicate Lance ln ~ctivities.
but his story wasi:ontr-adicted tu'
Campbell's former a lldrney ana
has been given no apparent
credence. The senators were hearing
MrS". Weaver said Dr. Salk
4>honed her Tuesday to offer
his condolences. He told-her a
chapter or the autobiography he
. ls writing will be devbled to ber
husband. '
Dr. Weaver moved to San
Clemente' in 1964, after retiring
as vice president or the Schering
(See l)OCTOR, Page A.2) ·
Governm~Iit .Urges
Qujck. P~peline JOb
WASIBNGTON <AP> -The
Carter administration reversed
an earlier stand today and urged
Congress to authorize speedy
construction or as many as two
pipelines to transport surplus
Alaskan crude oil from the West
Coast to the inland United States.
Federal Energy Administrator
John F. O'Leary told a Senate
subcommittee that the overland
lines are needed because of an
anticipated glut of oil from the
newly opened Alaska oil pipeline
on the U.S. West Coast. "The ad·
m lnlstration firmly bell eves
that the construction of at leut
one, and perhaps two. or the pro-
posed west·lo·east pipeline
systema is urgently needed to U ·
sure 11.n efficlent means of de·
liverln1 Alaskan crude ott to
those ares or the country which
need it, .. o·~ary said.
The two proposed routes are
the Sot\io project involving 4l
pipeline from Long Beach to
Midland, Texas; and the
Northem Tier Pipeline proposal.
which would bring a pipeline
froin Port ~n1eles, Wash .. to
Clt!arbrook, Mipri.
O'Leary said the administra·
1,lon would like-~ aee the legisla· tlon broadened o include other
poulble ..ro es, lnQJuding
severel that mlght 10 through
part. o( Canada.
Curre'ntly, Alaskan oll is either
bein1 aent to West Coast re-
fineries or 1hipped vi~ \a11kers
through the Panama Canal.
.. He t~flecJ bft le&11latlon by
Sen. John Mefcber (D·MOnt.).
\bat would ll'aod•te a fedwal de·
clslon on ooe of two proposed
plpellneroot.e&by Feb.1, 19"1J,
I
Powell acknowledged he called
at ' least one other newspaper
besides the Sun.Times to talk
about Percy. He did not identify
tbe newspaper or newspapers ln·
volved. .
The press secretary said he
acted Tuesday without consult·
ing in advance with Carter or any
m e mber or the White House
starr. He said the infQrmati~ did
not come to him through any 1ov·
. \
... I
"'
emment agencies. However, he
acknowledged his sources were
go_vernment employes, who, he
said, picked up the rumors out-
side the course of their official
business. He would not identify
'them.
Percy and officials of Bell and
Howell noted that tbe company
does not even have an airplane.
Sen. John Heinz III (R·Pa.).
<See POWELL, Page A.2)
SPRINTER PAnoN DURING OLYMPICS AT LONDON
H• Can Stlll Com•Out oft~• Starting Btock1 . . '
· Thief .:N.1--~Match . .
~ • J ....
For Ex-Sp.~l!:'r
-\. . , .Four teenaged pursesnatchers who were prowUr,g
IJelboa Island must still be shaking their heads in disbelief toda~, wonderh'lg who that middle-aged man ls that did
them i,n. "' .
THE THUGS HAD selected two couples in their 50s,
who were h iking on the island, as their victims'. One
youngster sprinted· past the husbands and grabbed Shirley
Patton's purse, throwing her t.o the gr~und as he sprinted
away. · · .
That's when her husband Melvin went into action.
Already many yards behind the youth, Patton took ofC in
pursuit.
HE RAN THE YOUNG thug down and relied him with a
OY,lhg tackle within four bloc~.
The young_ thief had just been outsprinled by a fiflyish
Melvin "Pell Mel" Patton, who In· the UMO$ was famed in
track.rui "The World's F astest Human.·•
Patton wu a 1JSC track at.ar from 1946 to 1949 and a tri·
.Pie medal wiriner in the l!MS Olympics ~l Lon~on. He set
world records in ~e 100 ~nd 220 yard dashes .
PELL MEL PRQVED on Balboa Island Thursday that
he can sUll aprint some when necess~y demands.
~
SUpervisors Vote
t
lfossil re.reservation
A 17·m1Won·year-old fossU reef
in the Laguna Hilla ducrtbed as
"~ha215 Q>e great.est accwnula·
lion of loesUJ any\¥here in the
world" ii not Ukely to fall vicUm
to a deVeloper'a bulldo1er.
Tbat conclualon w.a anivtcl at
Tundar by ~e Oranae County
Board ol Supervllors,
The board voted to "be
aensttiye to the archeoloctcal
and pai.c>nt.oloctcal value of th• fosatF·~, adjac,nt~to Moulton
Parkway .betweeri Et Toto and
LePuft.oMll.
' . .
O.\ll Y PILOT N Wedn .. dal Seplembe1 14 1171 .
Ex-countian Fights Death
F/,orida Attorney-s File Execution Appeah
try a.Inc th U.8 Supreme Court
upheld c1ptt1l punl1hment lul
ye er
HU. uttorncy, Andr w Graham,
Tuee.cioy filed 1n appeal with lbe
l''lorida St•tAt Supreme Court Im·
mt.-dlately after the circuit Judae
rt>fused to •la)' the execution or-
d ti r signed Monday by Gov.
Rt•ubln Aakew.
Grahum said the appeal is
bued on Spinkelllnk 's 1973
murder trial in which hew~ con·
vlcted and condemned for
the shooting death of Joseph
SzymanJuewicz, 43.
The attorney claims the con-
viction and death sentence are
unconstitutional because pro-
spective jurors opposed to cap-
t1al punishment were not seated
to hear the case.
Meanwhile, Tobias Simon, a
noted civil rights attorney from
Miami, planned to file an addi-
tional motion in the U . S. District
-~
V a/,Wy Police ConfiAcate NB Equipment
:.i.: By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
'• Ofl"' O•llY ...... M.Mf
Videotape televis ion equip-
-ment allegedly ~tolen by jailed
electronics and game show whiz
Daniel J . Portley was confiscat-
ed Tuesday from firms In
Newport Beach and Santa Ana
by Fountain Valley police.
• The assorted electronic compo·
nents are valued at about $3,500,
according lo Detective Robert
Mosley, who earlier estimated a
$21.620 loss in the March and May,
,." · · · · 1976, burglaries.
•. "We ended up getting another
thousand out or it," Detective
Mosley said today, adding that
the merchandise allegedly taken
by Portley was apparently better
than even he realized.
The items including cameras,
monitors and recorders were
seized at a modeling studio, a
videotape manufacturing plant
and a pawn shop, police said.
Portley, 31, or 1601 S .
MacArthur Blvd., Santa Ana, is
held at Orange County Jail on a
variety of charges stemming
from his Aug. 26 arrest by Santa
An~ polic~.
Smee he is a U.S. prison
parolee who served lime at the
Federal Correctional Institution
for Men at Lompoc, Portley is in-
eligible to bail out of jail.
Specific charges against the
second highest winner in the his-
tory of NBC.TV's "Celebrity
Sweepstakes" game show in-
clude .
Burglary.
Possession of a firearm by a
convicted felon.
-Federal parole violation.
He is scheduled for court bear-
ings on those charges Friday and
again Tuesday in Central Orange
County Judicial District Court.
Irvine Co. Removes
Hospital Site Sign
Investigators say several law
enforcement agencies have
placed hold orders on the defen·
dant ror prosecution and Santa
Ana police believe him responsi-
ble for 40 residential burglaries
m their city alone. He also al·
legedly m ade forays into
Riverside County.
Fountain Valley Detective
Mosley and his partner Tony
Marley claim the defendant com-
mitted one burglary at the Red
Carpet Realtors office, 18151 S.
Brookhurst St .. the same day he
struck it nch with his game show
prowess.
·-Irvine Company officials said
today no decision has been
reached on the fate or a land gift
once offered to the Western World
Medical Foundation for a
hospital, but acknowledged they
had ordered removal of a sign
marking the proposed hospital
site.
The hosptial, which was to
have been built by the non-profit
Fro• Page AJ
LANCE •••
• year by John W. Stokes, then the
U.S. attorney in Atlanta, without
prosecution.
Glenna L. Stone, former chief
of the rraud section in the U.S. at-
torney's office, tes tified that
Stokes told her after closing the
<'ase "that he should call 'Jimmy
and Bert' and tell them what he
had done." She took this as a rer.
erence to then Presidenl·elect
Jimm.v Carter and to Lance.
Miss Stone tes tified that Stokes
told her after last November's
election that he was anxious to
stay in his post for one more year
so that he would be eligible for a
federal pension.
:, On another matter, Sen.
" William Roth (R·Del. ), said he
" would ask the committee to call ~ press secretary Jody Powell.
j White House counsel Robert
•1 Llpshutz, presidential assistant
"' Hamilton Jordan and John L. ~ ~ Moore Jr .. now president of the
• Export-Import Bank and a legal
adviser to Carter on ethics in the
: period after his election, to
testify.
Powell has said that he, Jordan
and Lipshutz, saw an FBI report
·• about Lance's financial troubles ~ in January but did not tell the
preaident about it. Moore was in-
volved in discussions about how
to deal with press inquiries con-
cerning difficulties of Lance's
banks.
Kidnaping Charged
TEHRAN, Iran <AP> -Pnn-
cess Aahraf Pahlavi, twin sister
of the Shah or Iran, WU quoted
today as saying she beUeved the
aaaailanta who ambushed her car
io,J'rance were lr)'lni to kidnap
her.
ORANOICOA8T N
DAILY PILOT
group on 18 acres adjacent to UC
Irvine, races an uncertain future
in light of a million-dollar gift
from Joan Irvine Smith to the
UCI medical school.
Foundation and company of·
ficials said the girt may signal an
end to the company's long stand·
ing offer of free land for the
·hospital site.
But Tom Wilek, company vice
president for public affairs, said
today company directors are still
considering the land gift, but
they decided to remove the sign
located alongside Mac Arthur
Boulevard at un;versity Drive
until a' decision has been
reached.
The sign on the property im·
plied that we had (reached a de·
cision)," Wilek said in a pre-
pared statement.
"This was brought to our
attention as possibly mislead·
mg, so we had the sign removed .
Western World officials were
nollfiL'CI and they understood ...
E'ro. Page AJ
POWELL ..•
said the Powell episode smacked
of White House "dirty tricks"
aimed at "stining fact finding
and serious inquiry" into Lance's
affairs.
Sen. Abraham A. Rlbicoff (0.
Conn.~. chairman of the panel
conducting the Lance probe,
called Powell's actions ''a stupid
thing to do.''
Powell said be tola the senator
il had been "inappropriate" for
him to pass alone the rumors to
the Sun-Times and that he had
not intended to see inaccurate in ..
formation fmd its way Into print.
Powell said that Percy, who
was reached at about the time
the Senate Government Affairs
Committee was resuming hear-
ings of the Lance matter, "very
graciously accepted" hia ex·
pression of regret.
Powell said he placed a
telephone call Tuesday morning
to Loye Mill.el". W aahln1ton
bureau chief of the Sun-Times,
with alleeations about Percy that
he aaid be told Miller he wanted
to ''pass along Just between me
and you."
President Carter's chief
spokesman said he told Miller he
could not vouch for the accuracy
of the rumors. However, he 11id
one of two IOW'cea he had for
them claimed to have rlnt·hand
knowledge that Percy had reg·
ularly nown on aircraft owned
by Bell & Howell Co., which he
formerly headed, in recent
years.
That day Portley received a
check for $17,546 in cash won as a
contestant on Celebrit y
Sweepstakes. He also won a
brand new <'ar and a variety of
other prizes worth $29,000 in
lot al.
f'ro• Page A J
HOME .•.
Castellaw suggested returning
the reception cent.er lo Its former
status, a detention home for
juveniles serving fixed terms for
criminal ofrenses. ·
"That would put us back to
where .we were a year ago,"
SuperVJsor Thomas Riley said as
Castellaw outlined probation's
plan. Supervisors ordered county
officials to return next week with
a proposal to remedy the costly
problem.
Charged with the responsibili-
ty of finding a solution were
David O'Dell , county human
services agency director, and
County Administrative Officer
Robert Thomas.
It was last Jan . 1 that
McMillan was converted to an
unlocked reception center for
s tatus offenders.
That conversion was dictated
by state laws that said status of-
fenders can no longer be held in
juvenile halls with youngsters in-
volved in criminal activities.
Those s ame laws s aid such re-
ception centers or other homes
devoted to the temporary how;..
ing of status offenders must re-
main unlocked, meaning that
juveniles sent there were free to
leave any time they chose to.
When McMillan lo early
January was hit with a rash or
runaways, Judge Vincent issued
an order saying that those who
run away in defiance or a court
order sending them to McMillan
would thereafter be confined at
Orange County Juvenile Hall.
Last May, an appellate court
said Judge Vlncent's order
violated new Juvenile justice
laws that said nonc.timlnal
juvenile offenders cannot. be held
in locked facllltlea with criminal
youthful offenders.
After Judge Vincent's order
was •truck down by that rulin1.
the ra1h of runaways from
McMiilan resumed.
Judae Vincent decided aa a re-
sult that It is futile exercise send-
ing yOWlpten to the unlocked
reception center.
l'.._P.,,eAJ
In addition, Powell told Miller DOCTAft
he bewd reports that Pe~y used V • • •
alrplan .. , m&•tlftl r'>oms.
aecUrltyJuarda and othtr
faclUIUI ih• Pint NaUonaJ
8anlt ol Chlca•o durtq bJa 1972 cam~lftt *'4 did b0Uull1 relm-
bune tbe bank.
Qui@tum I.aeking
WAmllNGTON <AP> -l'he
S.aat.e ludl~lar1 Committee fatlM . .....,. Tuelda1 to ad on
l4i11atitfoii,,U..t would permit
lnaediedl ol Amerl'w ln Mex·
to•-jlMI to NIW'a tb tblAr own
C!Ountry. ftii eommlttee dkt not
Ila¥• ...,.. ••ben •t lti pa..uq to tondud bUalMU un·
dtr11Uteni19.
Court atJackaonvllle today seek·
iog a stay of execution by attack·
ing the Florida death penalty as
racially discriminatory.
'l'be National Association for
the Advancement of Colored Peo-
ple in New York alao were work-
ing on the appeal brief .
Spinkellink is white.
Graham ls aq~ulng that
persons who kill whites aet the
death penalty but those who kill
blacks do not. He said the 90 men
and one woman under death sen-
tence in Florida were convicted
or killing 111victims,108 of whom
were while.
Spinkellink's mother, Lois,
who lives in Buena Park said she
plans to leave today for Florida
with her daughter and son·in·law
lo visit her son in prison Wore
his scheduled excuUon. She is re·
covering from surgery to remove
a blood clot near her lungs.
If the execution goes ahead as
planned , it will be only the
second in the United States since
July 2, 1976 when the U.S .
Supreme Court upheld the death
penalties or three states, includ-
ing Florida.
o.llYl'i ... I .... ._•
OJdSea Dog In January, Gary Gilmore
became the first convict to be ex-
ecuted when he died before a fir-
ing squad in Utah.
Spinkellink, who was serving a
prison sentence for a 1968 Orange
County armed robbery convic·
tion, escaped from a minimum
security prison farm m Big Sur in
1972.
Gary Hill proves that he can teach an old sea dog new
tricks. This sea lion has been hanglng out lately around
Hill's fuel doek near the Balboa Pavilion in Newport
I I arbor. When he isn 't there, he can be found dozing on
som e old boat moored in the harbor. But when he's hun·
gry, he'll sit up and beg, just like a pooch.
He reportedly picked up
Szymankiewicz, who was
hitchhiking in the Midwest, and
the pair made their way lo
Tallahassee.
Fire Destroys
HD-built Rocket
Blows Up in Air
Cabin Cruiser
Off Newport
Divers began probing seas off
Cape Canaveral, Fla., today for
pieces or a Delta rocket built in
Huntington Beach and blown up
when it apparently failed 54
seconds after liftoff Tuesday
night.
Newport Beach firemen h've The $42 million aerial ex-
listed as a total loss the 36·foot plosion visible for miles over the
cabin cruiser that caught fire southeastern U.S. also claimed
Tuesday morning at its dock in an experimental communlca-
Dover Shores. lions satellite built by the Euro·
The boat, valued at $134,000 pean Space Agency.
was being Cleaned by workmen Spokesmen for Mc Donnell
using acetone when a spark, Douglas Astronautics Company
possibly caused by an electrical in Huntington Beach said today
s hort, ignited the cleaning flw~ their $17 million Delta rocket was
One of the workmen, 27·ye r-insured, but the ESA satellite
old Fidel Valdez of Santa a was not.
was treated and released fr The $25 million Orbital Test
Hoag Memorial Hospital aft~ " Satellite built in a cooperative ef.
s uffering burns on his bands and fort by 10 European nations was
face. blown up when a U.S. Air Force
The boat is owned by Stewart ~afety officer made the judgment
Kipper, 405 North Star Lane. an a s plit second and pressed the
destruct button.
A remote control television
camera aboard the space vehicle
had fl ashed back a picture show-
ing fire emitting from·one end or
an engine inside the Delta rocket
right after liftoff, officials said.
The rocket was blown up at
that point to prevent any possible
accident that might arrect in-
habited areas.
''All we know at this point 1s
what NASA and the Goddard
Space Flight Center are rfileas-i n g, q McDonnell-Douglas
Astronautics Company Director
o f External Relations Walt
Cleveland said today.
Spokesmen al the Greenbelt,
Md., tracking center said further
mformalion would be forthcom-
ing after r ecovery of major
pieces of the Delta wrec'kage
from 65-foot-deep seas.
Scene ·Stealer.
Drexel's oriental adaptation
in antique bone with chlnoiserie decoration
Is destined to play a leading role
in your decorating story.
~I There are room accents and there are room accent$.
Here·s ooe Chat does everything. Adds contrast, sets the
moods. brings richness to any part of your home An en.
chanhng Et Cetera bookcase with interior lighting. ad-
justable glass shelves and gilt finish back panel. 56 · w1oe
by 79~ .. htQh by 14" deep
L
Orunge Coa~l Daily Pi lot E
I
Beach Access Rule
Won't End Debate
It appears tho bell is about to sound on the final round of
the ~otng fight over beach encroachment• on Edgewater
A~ue and B~a Vista Boulevard In Newport Beach.
Monday night. city councilmen denied the appeals of
r11ne homeowners and ordered them to remove chains block·
1ng the public b4tach. If th• homeowner• fail to comply. the
C:•ty Wiii take out the fences and bill the homeowners.
It h8$ been a long and trying process to restore the public
beach to use by the public -a procen that It likely to remain
a source of controversy because of the compromise used to
solve the long-standing pro~lem. .
Some encroachments have been allowed to remain = because the city feels they are estheticatly pleasing. At Ong
, Buena Vista. lawns and gardens planted around patios built
:, on the public beach remain in place. On Edgewater. the un-r :sig_htly £hains -which may have been. less of an impairment
td'beac:h ·access than the patios and landscaping -Will ~ave ~o
go. •
Homeowners on Edgewater feel they've been d is-
• criminated against, but city officials say their policy has one
basic factor -what will provide the most benefit to the
greatest number of people. Obviously the scenic landscaping
rates higher than the fences.
CoD1plaint Groundless
Last week. the Newport-Mesa Educators Association de-
cided to let the school board know that vacation was over by
opening the school year on a sour note.
The president of the California Teachers Association af-
filiate complained in a letter to Superintendent John Nicoll
that his organization had been left out of the selection
process in which a successor to.Trustee Marian Bergeson was
• chosen.
The N-MEA president. Don Kimble, said he felt his group
should have been given special notice of Mrs. Bergeson's re-
. tirement and replacement.
School board members went out of their way to conduct
the interviews of candidates and subsequent voting during
public sessions.
We are mystified that the teachers' organization should
feel left out of what was a very public selection process. Or
feel that the union has rights that transcend those of any
other district citizen.
School board meetings are always . well publicized. If
teachers had wanted to participate in the selection process.
they had only to read the ne~paper and attend the meetings
as other members of the school district did.
Credit to Harbor Area
This weekend will mark a couple of milestones in the
growth of the Harbor Area as a residential community.
Saturday, Hoag Memorial Hospital will celebrate Its 25th
anniversary with a health fair and Sunday a series of public
events to mark the opening of the permanent home of the
Newport Harbor Art Museum will get under way.
Both are worthy of attendance and both institutions are
• worthyofnoteforwhat they have brought to the community.
They stand as landmarks in the community"s recent past as it
grew from a summer tourist town to a thriving year-round
community. .
The hospital and the museum are also remarkable in that
they would not have come into being were it not for the In-
volvement of residents who saw a need and devoted a lot of
time and talent to finding a means to fill the need.
Finally • both institutions should be a source of pride for
all the Harbor area because they represent the highest quality
in the medical arts and lhe fine arts-a tradition we hope will
continue for years to come. ·•
• 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.
Boyd/Artists' Wives
ByL.M.BOYD
Art editors claim that
sketches submitted to them or
fem"ales, clothed or
' otherwise, tend lo be drawn
with the proportions of the
artist's wire in each case.
That's even if the artist
worked with some other
model, they say. The artist
evidently is inclined lo "cor-
rect" the rendering to more
' closely match that most
familiar figure.
King Louis XVI of France
kept a daily diary. But he got
bored pretty easlly, so most of
his entrfes just read;
, ·'Nothing." Historical re·
searchers say that's what be wrote therein on the day the
Bastille was stormed, setting
• off the French Revolution.
A waiter nearing retire.
meat says, "I've known lor
years that people tip better
•hen each ls responsible for a
bfll. Thalia •hY I ahuys ctve aepara~ cbeCM, ti J)Ollible.''
In Swilletland, you can be
fined for tax evasion, t.rUe
enough, but you ca!l't ~e sent
to prison for it.
Nominations are now open
ror candidates whose descrip·
lions may aptly begin with:
"He's the kind or guy who
... "For example. Omaha's
Gunner Brown: "He's the
kind of guy who orders an egg
salad sa ndwi ch, and
says 'Hold the mayon·
naise'. "That's bad. Very bad,
Any others?
It's a little known fact that
when actress Katharine Hep-
burn manied Ludlow Odgen
Smith in 1928, she asked him
to change bis last •name lo
Ogden so she wouldn't be
identified as another Kate
Smith.
Q ... Sherlock Holmes' pro-
cess-of-e11.rninaUon tcchnJque l•r solving cril'.nes wu bued
on the meth~ of a real de-
. tecUve. tight?'"
A. On the methods of a real·
aU(Jeon. <me Dr. J~ph Boll.
Rob<lrl N. Weed Publl!.her Thomen Kc~ .. 11 Cd1tor
Wed"••oay, September 14, 1977 Barbara Krelblch/Edltorlal PaQe Editor
Earl Waters
These ·Strikes En·danger Lives
If the specter or city firemen
stttndlng idly by while your house
burns to the ground frtghten:!>
you, the opportunity to· take ac-
tion Lo prevent it from becoming
u reality may be yours al next
June's election.
Two southern Cahforni"ans,
Qoll y Swift and, Betty Cordoba,
are currently
g at h e ·r in g
s ignatures lo
place a con·
s titutional
a mendment
on the ballot
prohibiting
s trikes by
.publi c
e mpl oyes .
They have un·
til Dec. 2 to qualify the measure
for ballot placement.
No doubt the recent events in
Dayton, Ohio, will give impetus
to their drive. In that city the
s pecter did become a reality.
Art Hoppe
when striking firemen permitted
at least 2() fires to go unchecked
during their holdout for higher
wages.
The Dayton strike continued
after a judge had ordered the
strikers back to work. However a
contempt or court action was not
pursued because an agreement
was reached in the time which in·
tervened between the hearing
date s et on the contempt charge.
Jn California, despite repeated
court ruling s that public
employes do not have a right to
strike, work stoppages, sick·
outs. and other refusals to work
by those on public payrolls have
been increasing.
VARIOUS legislati ve pro·
posals, including a cbnstitutional
am e ndment h a ve b een in ·
troduced at past sessions to spell
out a strike prohibition without
success. Last year Orange Coun·
ty Sen . Dennis ,carpenter
authored such a constitutional
<'hange only to see the Senate de•
feot it by a vote of 19 to 14, fur
short of the 27 votes needed.
Asked why he had authored the
bill in view of the consistent court
rulings a gain s t s trik es.
Carpenter said he believed a con·
stitutional amendment would be
helpful. If nothine else. he in·
dicated, pass age of s uch an
amendment would make lt clear
that the people are not sym.
pathetic to strikes by public
workers.
Ile aJso suggested that even
though , the courts have ruled
against strikers, there are no
specific prohibitions in the law.
Until recently there have been
few instances where striking
public employes have suffered
after effec ts . Us ually the
scenario has witnessed manage-
ment going to court and obtain·
mg iltjunctions and orders for the
employes to return to w~rk. Even
when such court orders are
blithely ignored no penalties
hnve been imposed and 'Workers
have been permitted to return to
their jobs after the strike is set·
tied
IN FACT, atte mpts to
terminate striking e mployes
have run afoul or cou rt rulings
a nd sometimes public sentiment.
But a most recent decision by
the court of appeals in L os
Angeles, holding s triking
Pasadena school teachers liable
ror damages may signal a tum in
attitudes towards illegal strikes
against the public.
If the effort to place a direct
prohibition against strikes on the
ballot fails to qualify such court
rulings are the public's only im·
mediate hope of protection
against walkouts by firemen and
police and other essential public
e mployes because no legislation
on the subject is currently pend
ing before the Legislature.
A White House at the End of the Canal?
All r ight, kiddies, just one
more story about Sir Ronald of
Holy Rood and then it's beddy-
bye.
Well, as you remember, Sir
Ronald and his faithful squire.
S a n c h o
Nofziger, had
plunged deep
into Th e
Tangl e d
Thicket in
quest of The
Holy Whi t e
House. But
that glimmer-
ing goal had
tantalizing ly
eluded Sir Ronald over the years
and tie was not growing any
younger.
So it was that he limped wear1.
ly around a bend in The Thicket
and came upon a large ditch
filled with turgid water
.. Bola, Sancho!" he c ried. ··s e
this a moat e nc ircling some
fortress wherein the fair damsel
of fiscal responsibility pleads to
be rescued from the ogre of def·
icit spendilla"! ··
.. Nay. sire." said Sancho. '''1'1s
but the Panama Canal.•· ·-·· .... "PFAH!" snorted Sir Ronald.
turning his back. "Obviously 'tis
but a creaky antique that has
long outlived its usefulness."
"Verily, sire." agreed Sancho.
"Thus would King Jimmy give it
away to keep the peace.''
"What say you'?" snapped Sir
Ronald. "A give-away program?
To whom would this coward give
it and why?" "T.o Panama, master," said
S ancho, cringing slightly .
"Primarily because it bisects
that land from which we stole it
75 long years ago."
"Ahah! ·• cried Sir Ronald.
Mailbox
··You mean our cowardly King
Jimmy would abandon this
magnificent feat or modern
engineering, this eighth wonder
of t':\e world,. this bastion or de·
mocracy, this key to southwest
Central America, this freedom·
loving canal for which our boys
fought and die d? Would he
violate the holy Monroe Doctrine
by yielding up this sacred soil of
the Americas to a foreign power
without a fight?"
"Well , I guess Panama is a
foreign power, s ire ," said
Sancho, "when you put it that
way."
"WHAT of our Manifest
.Destiny, varlet? Does not this
canal stretch from sea to shining
sea ? Should this mighty canal
slip from our grasp, how could
our Great White Fleet show the
flag?"
'"As good a question as any,
sire."
•'Let us not forget The White
Man's Burden, Sancho, while al
the same time we Remember the
Maine!"
"Can you see the light at the
end of the tunnel, master?"
asked Sancho hopefully.
"No," said Sir Ronald, "but I
think I can see the White Hou&e
at the end ofthe canal." •
With that, he drew his famed
Swinging Sword. s houted his
awesome battle cry, "For Decen-
cy, for Purity and for Just Plain
Goodness!" and vanished into
The Tangled Thicket, yelling.
"CHAAAARRRRGGGGE!"
SANCHO sat on a rock and
mopped his brow. "J should have
known," he said, shaking his
head. "He always gets emo-
tionally involved when anyone
wants to get rid of a creaky an-
tique.''
Teacher's Contplaint Rings True Through Ages
To the Editor:
"Whal have you done, what
good came of your sitting here?"
reads a Sumerian clay tablet oi
about 1800 B.C., now in the
Unlversity or Chica¥o's Oriental ,
Institute recording his inslruc·
tor's irate lecture after a student
had flunked his writing test.
"YOU ARE already a ripe man
and close to being aged! Like an
old a.ss, you are not teacnat>te
any more. Like withered graln
you have passed the season. How
long will you play around? But it
is still not too late I Jf you study
night and day and work all the
time modestly and without ar·
rogance, if you listen to y9ur col·
leaf ues and teachers, you can
sUl become ascribe."
What upset the Instructor wu
that the youth's father was a
t.eacber, and he claimed that it
wa• the rather and hit brolhen
who have failed, not.
be ••• So1otnon was rlcht. there's
nothlngn&w under the aun.
FRANK KLOCK
existence or a legal
moratorium .. There was unan-
imous assent to the last action
or the meeting, which was to
have chairman-designate Bill
Ficker get together with Mrs.
Jean Watt lo define the purposes
and objectives of the committee.
Like Mrs. Watt, Mr. Ficker re-
Cused to accept the chairmanship
until the comltlittee's plan of
work bad been Identified and
agreed upon.
Jf Mrs. Watt had "walked out"
as the Pilot implied. why would
she agree to meet with Ficker
subsequent to the meeting at
. which lt was claimed she had
decttnedrurtherpartlcipaUon?
AS 'ro THB position actually
held by the environmentalists,
there is an evident misun·
derstanctlng on the part ol the
Piiot editorial staff (and perhaps
the reporttft1 st.aft u well>. We
had exprelned &Nbt wbetbe?' or not the committee could aucceed
u presentJy~tttated. Forn· amPle, we are outrtutnbered on
tho committee almost. a to 1 by
thon who 1tand ln opJ)OllUon to
u..
Unleu there was 1ome hope ol
1ucce11. the effect of o~r
partldpadO& btycDd the encl ot
tlle IO·Cf&) ••Jtremer
moratiariurn" wouJd be to defer
any enwt tO ObtalA a bait to me-
lOr ~within the city until a eom,,......ve revtew ol
the L"eral ptan was ac-
eomp w. bl...-. WGiel, me
develoDen would be bulldlit• whlWtfM nmmlttet ... talldnt·
Al w locilted at It, our iOOd·
fattb ~UOn ID the tommft· t• Wcllllll ......,.. 111 t.o Mk ac·
U Ve effort.a to Helt a le1al
morat.orhlm, •int• lH ~ ~ill ....... the fOIDDlil· .. ,,.. • ......,..towNrta
a•owaowD OYer aueb a
moratorium.
And, 'therefore, we believed
that a reciprocal act of gpod faith
was required on the part of the
developers, namely an extension
of the voluntary "Kremer
moratorium" for aome more rea·
sonable period or time so as to
give the committee a chance to
funcUoo free of the externally ap.
plied time pressures felt by both
sides. 1n other words. there had
to be a stand-down, or cease fire,
in which neither side could gain
an advantage while "peace
talks'' were underway.
DANIEL W. !:MORY
AJl••IW
TotheEdltor:
1 am appalled at reading the
Jetter ln '-'e Sept. t P,.Uot en-oouraclnl the moratorium com·
mlttee to atop all comtructlon
and Ul'I"'-further tftortt to keep
the villton out ol our area to pre-
vent ineonveolences due to eroWdlna~. and to pNVent more seitlm here.
How can people expresslna
lh0te vttWS take on the air ol pa.
tJ and deplore \be 10-called ..,,.., .. ~ wbo are at
leut jlutt.tft1 up bout• (when
permitted) lot tbOM 18'4 anball
and~ peop&e._tlbl ltalUd
In the ~ IO Uaat tbq11iiabt
baft ebelter M prieel •UleJ Hft .,, .... n• tbDuP tbe d• •kr
mllbt'"'t.IOUr than &DJ 'fJI \11 redj.,....llh?
nesses and consider it a just re·
tu.rn on our investment) and pro-
vide low cost housing?
At least the developers would
provide lower cost housing if
they were not restricted by out-
dated building codes, harassed
by the Coastal Commlsslon, de-
layed by permits interminably.
~nd held up by unions and
workers demanding ever more
increases in salaries and fringes.
It.ls hlgh Ume we started think-
ing about our children and their
need for bouslng. Most ot the
young employes If not all or
them. of the city of Newport
Beactl are unable to Jive In the
ell)' Umltl.
Let the envll'Ollmcntalists get
off their pious perch and negative
approach and at.art. to work with
the developers for a better
harbor arear
LAX>lSLAW REDAY
..... 1 ..
• •
~ --..
Wednesday. etptemoor 1.i. 1977 s DAIL y PILOT AG
Controversy Swirl.s Over Pt. Conceptton LNG
POINT CONCEPTION <API Thl11cenlc, I olated apll of land JuWna into th Pac1f1c hu bttn lar&e.ly bypused durina tho 1rowth.
ol Ca.ltfomia from a far Owtt SpaniJb colony into a populated. ln·
du trtal te
8ut now. lhla arta h11 *n ca\1pullod loto tM btadllnes by a
blll \he late lt>1tsl1tureo haa pu1ed that hu spawned a compleit. of\ en
bUt reneriy verau. envl ronmentdebatt
THE llllL WOULD PBJlMIT Hvtral uUUUn lo build a t1iOO
mllJ on liqulfltd oatunl 1u <LNG) terminal at CoJo Bay io the Jee
ul the point.
It'•• aublUtute louUon, which would replace oarUerpropoaals
to put the plant in Oxnard or Lot Ansel• H1rbor.
On one side are e as industry apoltesmen and state and county
polltman. who aay enerey-1hort California must Import auper
]
cooled nall.U'al gas by ship by
(
at least 1981 if the state ls lo ECOLOGY cavold cuto!fs of aus to homes
_ . und ~messes.
ENVJRONMENTALISTS, FIGHTING the scheme through a
Jooge coaliuon called the Point Conceplion Preservation Committee,
say bwldina the state's first LNG terminal here would ruin one of
the last unspoiled sections ol the California coast.
ll 's a controversy with some local twists:
-A cfulpute between Santa Bar~ara County and the state over
who will make the ultimate dee: is ions about shoreline development.
-Intra-county rivaJries so bitter there's a good chance voters
will be asked next year if they want to carve a new county, Los
Padres, out of the northwestern half ot the present county.
LOS ANGEL.ES
O.llyf'ttet~..,,,.,,,..,"-"-....
Conception Preservation Committee, is vocally a1aJ.nat. the LNG plant.
. MARKING, WOO SAYS HIS GROUP Includes Sierra Club
leaders and several score other or1an1zatlons • 'b&llcally opposed to this whole LNG technology," explained:
"A couple of years from now, when. this 'crisis' trumped up by
the gas companies disappears, there'11oln1 lo be an LNG facJUty at
Point ConcepUon. It's planned as a mlle-lo~ T-pler, with room
enough for two 1,()00.foot supertanker. and one waltinS lo unload.
Onshore. there's four 13·st.ory 1tora1e tanks and the reeassification
plant. 'lben there's 200 miles of pipeline. It's enormous."
"If the LNG faclllty la alted there," saya Marldnf, .. other In-
dustry will naturally follow. We'll lose one of the tut aeml·Wlld
part.a of the Southern Calllornta coast." ·
HARRELL FLETCHER 18 A SANTA Maria furniture store
owner, chairman or the Santa Barbara County Board of
Supervisors, and prime mover oft.he attempt to create Los Padres
County, which would include PolntConception.
He is also afraid the county is loslng control of shoreline de·
velopment. but he wants the LNG plant built here.
Says Fletcher: "I understand the LNG facility would ultlmateJy
be worth something llite $2 billion. That would brine in property tax-
es of about $12 million a r.ear, because we'd not only be able to tax
the plant but also 200 miles of pipeline and all the gas that flows
through it .•
• "IF WE CAN GET THE LNG facility at Conception,'• predict.ir
Fletcher, "and tr the voters approve Los Padres County.' It would
pay 40 percent of the new county's tax base. We'd be in beautiful
MANY OF THE HANDFUL OF people who live here are reluc-
tant to take sides. Most say they'd like to be left alone to raise beer.
hunt white-tailed deer or wild pigs, drag their trawler nets through
the rich fishing grounds offshore, tend musty lighthouses interesting
enough lo qualify as historic monuments, or surf on beaches some
experts say are among the best on the Pacific coast.
X MARKS SPOT OF LATEST PROPOSED LNG-PLANT
pt. Conception l1aue Alarm• Envlronmentallat1
s hape. .
"The Sierra Clubbers are opposed lo a plant in Conception,"
Fletcher says. "Maybe they'd rather see it ln the heart of Los
Angeles wbete it might kill mllUons or people if it blew up. The only
thing you'd kill at Point ConcepUon would be three·toed froas." He hasn't made up his mind about the plant, but he's worried
about change: Santa Barbara attorney Geor1e H. Allen, who represents
Hollister Ranch and more than 100 owners of parcels of at. least.100
acres. disagrees with Fletcher.
One re!>ident is Lee Mann, 35, a security officer for the 10,000-
acre Cojo Ranch.
Manti, who moved here with his family to avoid the hassles of
city living, spends much of his time chasing surfers from the area's
beach. He is also hard· nosed about an LNG pl ant:
"What I've got is the satisfaction or produoin1 somethin1 in
what I think is an ecologically harmonious way with the world. I'm
not making anything plastic or polluting lbe air. I 1uess what I have
is a love oflhe land." • .. WE'RE CONCERNED WITH THE safety of that huee facili-
ty," says Allen. ••n isn't moral or ethical lo expose 200 people here to
a facility that's too dangerous to put at Oxnard or Los Aneeles
Harbor. "IT'S VOLATILE, THEY TELL US. Everyone here is con-
cerned with that. Maybe they'll have to preserve the ranch as a buf.
fer. If the plant did blow up, it wou ld involve fewer people."
Another who doesn't. want to see Pt. ConcepUon changed is 37-
year-old William Towne, a Coast Guard chief eleetronic tebnlcian.
He drives M miles round trip every week from his staUon at Point
ArgueUo lo tend Point Conception's auto10ated light and bellowing
foghorn.
"We're also opposed to the faclllty on the grounds of reliability.
Point Conception is known as the 'Cape Hoen of the Paclfic' and this
entire coast is caJled the •graveyard of ships.'" Mann's closest neighbors, who live a mile away in one of the old
Pt. Conception lighthouse buildings, are the Lundbergs.
Brad Lundberg, 37, manages the Cojo Ranch for the Los
Angeles-based Bixby Ranch Co., which also owns the adjoining
16,000·acre Jalama Ranch. Both were originally parts of a Spanish
land grant.
TOWNE, AN 18·VEAR VETERAN OF duly on icebreakers and
such isolated stations as Cape Ghristian on Baffin Island, is reverent
about the point.
Allen said the homeowners have hired a marine weather expert
for research to back up their contention that because of bi&b winds,
strong currents and dense fogs that have plagued 1Jailors in the San--
ta Barbara Channel for centuries the LNG port. facility "would be
closed at least 25 percent of the Ume."
A TlllRD-GENERATION COWBOY, Lundberg runs about 400
feeder cow~ and calves with the help of his two hired hands and his
two sons.
"When you work around the Light and those old buildings," says
Towne, "You realize you're a part of history that goes back to the
first lighthouse keepers who tended whale oil lamps here in lMG.
There are some things we can't afford not to preserve.·· "WE ARE SCARED OF IT," says Allen ... But we're buing our
opposition on economic grounds because we're afraid not enou1b.
people will worry about our safety." Philip Marking, a Santa Barbara attorney who heads lbe Point
Af'Wlrel'M'•
CONSTRUCTION OF LNG TERMINAL COULD CLOSE; LIGHTHOUSE
The 121-year-old Point Conception Lighthouse Is Near Cojo Bay
ByBrewn
Aerosol Spray
Solons OK
ING at
Point Site B A d .
SACRAMENTO CAPJ an pprove -A bill that strongly
favors Point Conception
SACRAMENTO CAP> -Sales of fluorocarbon as the s It e for
aerosol sprays wlll be banned in California on April California's first liq.
15, 1979, under a bill signed into law by Gov. Ed· uefied natu ral gas
mund Brown Jr. terminal has been sent to
Legislative sponsors of the meuure, Sen. John
Dunlap, <D-Napa), and Assemblyman John
Vasconcellos, <D·San Jose), lold reporters after the
signing Tuesday that Califomia•s acUon should
serve "aa .a lever" to make sure that the federal
government follows throQgb with its proposed ban.
The bill foll<>Ws pro~ed fed•r-1 re1Ul•tlons
that would ban the maoUtacture of t.he comoound
Oct. is, 1978, and l>an the prodl.ltt ln interstate
commerce in April 1979.
Btrr IF THE FED~BAL re1ulations are de·
layed or chan8t!d. California's ban on sales would
sUU apply, aald Dunlap. Ftve other states have
passed 1ucb laws, with Oreaon bavtoe the only ban in effec:t, be 1ald. . At stake In the potential ban oltbe product na~
tlon...wtde and eventually worldwide Is the Hvinl of
an dDJmown number of persona from akin cancer,
said two UC Irvine aclenUats who flnt rabed lbe 11-
sue more than three years ago.
DrJ. l'.S. Rowland and Mano Molina, both
lrom the Irvine campus, joined Dunlap and Vaacon·
cell01 at the capitol new• conference.
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
Gray Davis, Brown'•
executive secretary,
said Brown is expected
to sign it soon. "We thlnk
it's a good bill, the result
of hundreds of hours o1
work.
"IT'S NOT the precise
blll" Brown haa pro-
posed, but "It accom-
modates the very real
need to insure adequate
supplies of natural aas
as well aa very
le&lUmate bealtb and
aafetyqu.tlona."
A IOmeWbat reluctant
Senate approved the bill
30-71\Mlday.
Potnt Coneeptloa ta the
only proposal of tM IU
companies that woulcl ~
allowed by the
meuure's deflnltion of a
remote 1ite ba11d on
populaUon d~lty or no
more than eo per1ona per
square mllo wltbln four
mil•.
EVEN SENATE
buken erttlclaed th•
l•Cillatloa. Sen. RIJJ)h 001' (D-
Gardma>. called Jt '''u b•d a blll as I've ever
....... because it would
llmlt the atu ()f th• nnt
fatWC, to bandte Oftly Jn-
doae1l an and aouth
,Ala11!1 alH, He a110
doem't Uke It bieeue it anon,_.,,...••• t.obe~.
MheMdedtbltlt61.
•dllftllliam•INL
Paper Claims War Ship
Reactor Fuel Sunk for
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi
Bomb Tested ~':!~BEACH .; . -
LOS ANGELES CAP> -A secret test explosion
in the Nevada desert proves that low.grade
plutonium Crom civilian nuclear power plants can
be used to make atomic weapons, the Los Angeles
Times repe>rted today.
The Times sai4 a r ecenUy dedassified report
shows the United States exploded a nuclear device
using the special kind of plutonium on an unknown
date. The paper said the test was declassified July
29, but was never made public.
The newspaper said the test was confirmed by a
spokesman for the Energy Research and Develop-
ment Administration. The ERDA saJd details of the
explosion. conducted by the Los Alamos Scientific
Laboratory al the Nevada weapons lest site, were
still classified.
Olll4 Pora E•plo,,ers Eflf!d
SACRAMENTO CAP) -California is repe>rted-
ly a production center for child pornography -
hence the stale Assembly has voted for tougher
penalties for employers in the booming business.
The members voted
70·0 Tues. day despite a ( J complaint that the ap-ST ATE
proach in the bill was
naive. l>rotest ed As· ---------
semblyman John Vascon-
cellos. (D-San Jose), .. We're looking at the W1'0lll
end or the problem. The problem of child porno-
graphy is not a problem of supply, primarily, but a
problein of demand."
fNl .... n...£a~•V•eellftl
LOS ANGELES <AP > -The slate Air
Resources b'oard bas unveiled a new nine.part plan
lo control oil emissions, which ARB Chairman Tom
Quinn cUb the largest single source of pollution ln
the la Angeles Ba.sin.
Quin outlined the program Tuesday to the peo-
ple ~ble for complying with new reatric-tlons-OU executives.
<»Jls llN ef ,._ ...... ,,, ..
LOS ANGELE'S (AP) -Police ortlcers may be
liable tqr wrontful death dama1es ll they ahoot to
death neeing suspects who are pot engaied in
violence, the st.ate court or appeal bas ruled.
Jn a 2-1 decision, the second appellate district
court rullne which held that a Long Beach
policeman was not negligent when he fatally sbot an
uoarm~ colle•e student alle1edly fleelnt a
buraJary 1n 1972.
GMdle O"""•w P••••
BEJUCELEY CAP> -An ordlnance reiulatlnl
raearch on aenetlc alteratloa bu won unanlmOUI
approyal from tbe Berkeley Clty Cquncjl,
The Cll"dJ.nance adopied Tueedq ealla for any
or•ul1atlon wllhin1 to conduct reeombinant DNA
research 1D the city to be lnlDected and approved by
clty public health offtcials. lerntey ta th• f\rst. city
ln Callfornta and second In the nation to adopt the rel\llaUon.
<AP> -A World War II
Navy cargo ship that has
spent the lasl ao years in
mothballs was resurrect-
ed only lo be sunk in San·
ta Monica Bay to im·
prove sport.fishing.
The 420-foot -long
Liberty stup "Palawao"
went down in the ocean
Tuesday to become the
framewor k for an
artificial reef.
The "Pal aw an," com-
m iss1oned in 1945 as a re-
pair ship, was de<:om-
m issioned two year s
later. After 30 years of
nonactive duly, it was "Think or ii lhi11 wuy-you'rl' telling the world, 'IT'S not
donated lo the s tate the orrlcc space lhul counlis. ll's the output'!"
Department of Fish and ---------'-----------Game by the Depart-
mentof Commerce.
AFTER 91 pounds of
plastic explosives went
off aboar~ the shJp, It
t.<>ok about 30 minutes for
it to f a Jl below the
ocean's surface. Fishing
experts say it will quick-
ly become a feeding
pl ace for sport fish.
The "Palawan" bad
been stripped down and
cleaned of all oil and
grease, as required by
the state Regional Water
Quality Control Board.
The sinking was the
first of three surplus
sblps planned lo become
fishing reels in Southern
California. The other two
are to go down off
Newport Beach and Ox-
nard.
Tax Sentence
SAN: FRANCISCO
(AP> -A San Joie man
convicted ol lneome tax
vlolatlons waa tlned
120,000 and sentenced to
five years 1D prilon. But U.S. District Court
Judie Spencer WUUams
aUl)M!Dded all but 30 days
of the prison sentence
atainl~ Robert Stratton.
•6. a construction com-
pany owner.
Repairs Minor
Aqueduct Flow
Due by Sunday
SAN DIEGO (AP> -Officials estimate
water will begin fiowlna •lain throu1h the Colorado
River Aqueduct by late Sunday, much to the relief
of San Diego County residents who have been relylne
on well water and cutting off crop irrieatlon llncethe
weekend •..•
1be county's water supply, wbtcb ls 95_pereent
dependent on the 241-mile aqueduct. virtually dried
up Sunday when a weekend fiaab flood pusbec{ a
2,50().powid steel access eover onto the Pao Hllts
siphon structure near Desert Hot Springs an4 a
combinaUoo of mud and boulden clo11ed siphons.
Ju the water now was reduced to • muddy
lricle, the Metropolitan Water Dlltriet ln Los
Angeles County ordered five pumptna station.a to a
halt. It was the !int time the aqueduct had ever
beensbut.down. ·
MN DIEGO COUNTY WATER AVTBOJtJTY
oftlcials 11ld Tuesday that widelpnad ratlooiJl&
became ol tbe aqueduct •butotf llD't n •. Inn BUJ"MIJ, 1eaeral manater ol the water atithortt)-,
Hld molt of the county tiu a le-day local wattr no-
ply "it we cut back to so percent t0ct11 (Tutlldq). ••
T&ecltyofSu Dlqo bas am· month 1upply,be.ald.
I
LL
• •• • sy ...... ...,.
Saddlebaek
EDITION
•
"'fterooon
N.Y.Stoeks
VOL. 70. NO. 2S7, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGl!S ORANGE COUNTY~ CALI FORNI A weDNESOAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1977 TEN CENTS
Ex-OC Resident
TA.LLA~EE, Fla. (AP> -
Attorneys for form er Oran&e
Count y rcatdti nl J ohn A
Spinkelhnk, whoae execution has
been scheduled for Monday, have
opened a two-front attack to keep
their chent from the electric
chair
Spinkellink, 28, faces death at
8. 30 a m Monday after Circuit
Judge John Rudd of Tallahusee
refused lo delay what would be
the second execution In the coun·
try since the U.S. Supreme Court
upheld capUal punlshment last
year.
His attorney, Andrew Graham,
Tuesday filed an appdl with the
Florida Slate Supreme Court Im-
mediately after the circuit judie
refused t.o stay the execution or-
der signed Monday by Gov.
Reubin Askew .
Graham said the appeal is
based on Spink"ellink 's 1973
murder trial in which he was con-
victed a nd condemned for
the shooting death of J oseph
Szymankiewicz, 43.
The attorney claims the con-
viction and death sentence arl
unconstitutional because pro·
spectlve jurors opposed t.o cap-
tial pwllshment were not seated
to hear the case.
Meanwhile. Tobias Simon, a
Lance Declares
Media 'lJ nf air'
WA S HINGTON <AP>
Budget Director Berl Lance
declared today he has been bar-
raged unfairly with innuendo and
hearsay and "we're m sad shape
in this country" If people believe
his effect.Jveness has been clip·
pied as a result.
Lance lashed out at the news
media when reporters ques -
tioned him as he emerged this
morning from his Georgetown
home. Again, he denied any In·
tention to resign.
Said Lance: "If you can t.ite
allegations and innuendoes and
hearsay and everything else, the
words of a convicted felon, and
all these other things, and put
them in the paper and show them
on television a nd t hen say
that's a fact. ..
"And then. without having a
chance t.o refute that and have
my day in court, and be faced
with the charge that because of
that my effectiveness has been
damaged and crippled, then
were we're in sad shape in this
country.''
Lance will have his day Thurs·
day, when he will appear before
the Senate Governmental Opera·
lions Committee.
Lance's referral to the "words
of a convicted felon" seemingly
applied to a visit by Senate in·
vestigat.ors to a m an imprisoned
in Atlanta for embezzl ement at
one of Lance's former banks.
The embeu l er, Billy
Campbell, reportedly tried to im-
plicate Lance In his activities,
but his story was contradicted by
Campbell's former attorney and
has been given no a pparent
credence. The senators were hearing
testimony today from officials of
the J ustice Depa rtment and the
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency about an Investigation
of overdrafts by the Calhoun
<See LANCE, Page A2)
* * *
Laguna Biiis JOdy Powell
Superoisors Vote Apologizes
Fossil P.resetVation To Senator
A 17-mUlion-year-old foull reef
in the Laguna Hlllt desc~bed as
"perhaps the greatest accumula-
tion of ros~lls anywhere In the
world" is not likely to fall victim
to a developer's bulldozer.
That conclusion was arrived at
Tuesday by the Orange County
Board of Supervisors.
T he board vot ed to "be
sensitive to the arche.alo.iical ..
and paleontological va.tue of the
fossil reef" adjacent to Moulton
Parkway between El Toro and
La Paz Roads.
Supervisor s a lso voted to
direct the county Environmental
M anagemenl Agency "to In-
vestigate the preservation or the
most significant portions" of the
State Orclers ..
~
RejundA
SAN FRANCISCO <A P ) -
California telephone companies
have been ordered to cut rates
$73 million annually and refund
$270 million in a ruling that could
cost them $1 billion more in back
taxes.
Tuesday's 3-2 vote by the slate
Public Utilities Commission or·
ders refunds or about $29 for
Pacific Telephone Co. customers
and $34 for General Telephol\e
Co. customers. Rate reducUon.a
would be 70 centa a month for
Pacilio.and 60 ce.._t.a for General.
Coast
Late nilht and mornlq
low cloudl with afternoon
and evenln1 clearln1.
Lows ton11ht uppet 50I lo
mld-eot. Jfllhs Thunday
in upper 80I to low 1'91 to
mld-?OI inlJl\d.
INSIDE TODA 'W
TM .tQte 11gfflolur1 bcia
palHd a"'"~ Gil f;NO J)lom at Pomt Catklp&n. 8vt
mOff '""""'' of IM rna«t
Gr'N t/l'I • "' ClrMI ClbOut Ulf ,,.,. ........ ...
pftofo °" PoOf AS.
1ax-1quare JJ1He r-:ef.
Those board actions are not ex-
pected to deter Aliso Viejo Com·
pany from submittlnf a develop-
ment plan for the ree area.
However, the board's position
is expecte,d to be reflected In
whatever development plans are
finally approved for the area.
According to a report reviewed
b.y supervisors Tuesday. the
prized fossil reef "consists or 9S
percent invertebrate fossils with
marine mammal bor\eS as well
as shark teeth and fish bones."
"In addition to the paleon·
tological importance of the reef,
the area also contains important
archeology sites," the report
said.
It went on to say the reef area
appears t.o be the source for lime
·used in cdnatruction of Saa Juan
Capistrano Mission.
The Aliso Vi ejo Company
bou1ht the reef site last year as
part ol it.a $15 million purchase of
the6,100-acre Moulton Ranch.
WASfUNGTON (AP) -White
Ho'l$e 12reu se(retary Jody
Powt!ll telephoned a personal
apolO&Y today to Sen. Charles H.
Percy CR·lll.), for s preading
rumors about one of budget chief
Bert Lance's principal critics"
Powell called the Washington
bureau of the Chicago Sun-Times
Tuesday a nd passed along
rumors -hotly denied by Percy
that the senator used Bell and
Howell corporate aircraft and
facilities of a Chicago bank dur-
ing his 1972 re.election cam·
paign.
After the Sun-Times disclosed
Powell's call, a storm of con·
troversy erupted here with the
press sec r etary initially
ac knowled ging he made a
"dumb mistake."
Later, Powell said:
"I called Sen. Percy and told
him l regretted the situation very
much."
Percy said a note was handed
to him al about 10 :20 a.m. saying
<See-POWELL, Page A2)
Thief No Match
F~r Ex-sprinter . .
noted clvil rightJJ attorney from
Miami, planned t.o file an addJ -'
tlonal motion in the 'U. S, District
Court al Jacksonville today s~k·
ing a stay or execution by attack-
ing the Florida death penalty as
racially discriminatory.
The National Association for
the Advancement of Colored Peo-
ple in New York also were work·
i ng on the appea I brief.
Spinkelllnk is white.
Grabam h• ar1uln1 th at persons who ldtl w6ltea get the
death penalty but tboH wbo kill
blacks do not. He said the 90 men
and one weman under death sen-
tence in Florida were convicted ,., of killing 111victims,108 of whom
were white.
Spinkellink 's mother, Lois,
who lives in Buena Park saidsbe
plans t.o leave today for P'loftda
with her daughter and son-in-law
to visit her son in prison before
his scheduled excution. She is re•
covering from surgery to remove
a blood clot near her lungs. If the execution goes ahead as
planned, it will be only tbe
second In the Unite<t States since
July 2. 1976 when the U.S.
Supreme Court upheld the death
pena!tie1 ol three states, includ-
inll Florida.
<See EXECUTE, Page AZ>
01Uy f'llol Si.ft ,,_
VETERAN SKATER STEPHANIE KITNER, 6, TOPS SKATE-A-THON EFFORT
'My Friends Were Helplng Me,· Says MIHlon V!•Jo'a Little Big Winner
Skating Eun fer.· Funds
I
6-year-old Stays Up Ltµe to Aid MD Drive
By LAUBB kAsP2R
Of Ill OtftY ~ .........
Six-year-old Stephanie Kitner -
stayed out all nif.ht recently. But
her parents didn l mind.
''This was her night to shine,"
said her mother.
It was ttie night of the Mission
Viejo Skateway's Skale·A-Thon
be n e fit for the Mu scular
Dystrophy Association;
Stephaii.ie, daughter of Mission
Vlejo's Mt. and Mrs. Neil KJtner,
was the youngest and smallest
participant.
And she won one or the biggest
prizes.
She skated for seven 1traight,
late hours to raise ~for the as-
sociation and win herself a year's
free. admission lo all public
sessions at the rink.
"Jt was a little hard but I didn't
care," said the first grader. who
is juat a few feet tall.
Why didn'tshe care? "Because
my friends wer e helping me."
The event ran for 12 hOllrs,
from 7 p.m. t.o 7 a.m . Stephanie.
who ilad never been up put 10 :30
i>efore, la8'ed until 2 a .m.
''Mentally. she was okay," her
WomanHwt .
As Auto Hita • t '
IrvinB Tree . ..
motblr 1tlid, .. bul 1he Ju1t
couldo 't lift her little legs up."
Dwine the tut hour, older kids
held her up and.rolled her around
the rink . "They knew she bad it
in the bag," Mrs. Kitner said.
But no one seemed to mlnd.
"She'• their tittle mascot," her
mother e"plained.
For her age, Stephanie Is a
veteran skater. Her father, who
played ice.h0ckey when he lived
in Cleveland; put her in ice
skates when Sbe was three. She
just took t.o the sport.
But then the family moved
from Newport Beach to Mission
Viejo, Where there are no nearby
Ice rinks. Stephanie was 4 when
the roller rink opened and she's
been a reeul~ customer there
ever since.
D.urlng the summer, her
mothe.r said, she would spend 10
to 12 hours there. Sometimes, she
stayed for five hours "and then
didn't want t.o come home."
Now. with the free pass, her
mother predicted, "She'll be a
skating bum." ·
Stephanie said there are a lot of
youagsters her age who skate but
"not as ~ood as me." When asked
<See SKATER, Pate A2>
A.2 DAILV PILOT SB
~esearcher Dies New Plague
l:aae Tol,d
'San Clemente's Weaver Was 68 BAKERSFIELD (AP> -
A 48-year-old Bakenfield
woman contracted bubonic
plague while campinf at a
private faclUty in the
Tehachapi mountains east
Of here, authoritiea said to-
day.
-.
.·
'
SEX SYMBOLS MARILYN ANO FARRAH
The Ac:ti"9 Ablllty la lrretev•nt
What Aeting?
Farrah, Marilyn Compared
SfEVENSON, Wash. (AP> -The question of Farrah Fawcett-Majors' acting ability is irrelevant to her fans, says the.
onetime press agent of the 19505' ultimate sex goddess, Marilyn
Monroe.
••When I handled Marilyn, in her happy days, she was ex·
traordinary," s aid Roy Craft, recalling his five years, 1952·1957,
with the actress.
"THE DIFFERENCE IS, PERHAPS, that Fawcett-Majors
is more of a personality. But an extraordinary personality."
Craft, editor emeritus of the weekly Skamania County
Pioneer who says he finds Miss Fawcett-Majors "delightful."
said there is a simple rule in show business: Hustle what you
have.
"IF YOU ARE TALJUNG ABOUT popularity, marketability,
the acting isn't important. Any fine dramatic actress will play the
role to which she's assigned," be said.
"But when you get a personality, I think it's a mistake to
have her play anything but herself ... The th.ing is, when
someone turns to Farrah Fawcett-M~ors on TV, they want Farrah
Fawcett-Majors. The question of her acting ability is beside the
point."
117 ANNE OOOPE& .... ~~ ..... Or. Harry Weaver of San
Clemente, lntemationally known
for hiJI mecllcal research, died
Monday at h1s home, following a
lhree·month illness. He was 68.
"Jonas Salk once told me tbat
aclence ts a very demanding mis·
trest,"sald Dr. Weaver's widow.
Jane. "He was right. My
husband was still workin& when .
he died."
Mrs. Weaver said. Dr. Salk
phoned her last Tuesday to offer
bis condolences. He told her a
chapter ol the autoblography he
is writing will be devoted to her
husband.
Dr. Weaver moved to San
Clemente In 1964, after retiring
as vice presldent of the Schering
Corp., a New Jersey d~g firm.
From 1946 to 1953 he was re-
search director for the National
Polio Foundation in New York
City, where be worked wtth Salle•
lo develop the now famous Salk
vaccine.
After t he nationwide fight
against polio, Dr. Wefver was
appointed vice president of re·
search for the American Cancer
Society. In 1961, he was hired by
the Schering firm.
Dr. Weaver went back to work
arter a year's retirement, ac-
cepting a position as research
director for the National Multiple
Sclerosis Society.
"I never rea!Jzed how famous
he was, or in what e~em he was
"held, until he died," rs. Weaver
said. "He died late onday, and
on Tuesday I received telegrams
and phone calls from all over the
world.
"I had a call from Amsterdam
Airport' Use F~e Rapped
Resigning Officer Blasts Expense
By WILLIAM HODGE
Ol IM D•llY ~let Staff
Citing grave philosophical dif-
ferences with city-mandated
airport control regulations, re-
signing Capistrano Airport com-
'pliance officer Frank Lewis
cess of 5,000 pounds gross weight
and aircraft in excess or 300
horsepower," Lewis said.
• Jashed out Tues«ay at "exorbi-
tant" fees chaTged lo transient
aircraft at the tiny airfield.
Lewis was aware of con·
troversy over the airport when he
accepted the compliance officer
job, but believed the trouble re-
lated to a May 28 aircraft acci-
dent that killed a five-year-old
girl playing near lbe airport.
His •·Philosophical dehgree-
ment" began when he became
aware or the new city ordinance
regulating airport use. "I really
couldn't believe after looking at
it that the city would yass and en-
force an ordinance o that varie·
ty, ·•Lewis said.
The airport ordinance, which
became law Aug. 20, is the sub-
ject of a law$ult filed by local
pilot.a an<J aircraft owners seek·
ing to have the ordinance ruled
unconstitutional.
"A $10 monthly use permit ror
transient aircraft is extremely
excessive and wlthout precedent
in my experience," the 20-year
Marine Corps and civilian pilot
told a gatherin. of reporters at
the airport.
"I've never heard of anything
like that for light aircraft transit-
ing any airfield,•' Lewis said.
The Santa Ana resident was re-
ferring to fees San Juan
Capistrano began charging re-
cently for airport use.
Both aircraft listing San J uan
as home base a nd transient
aircraft pilots are required to
pay a $10 monthly use fee.
Transient aircraft also are re-
quired to pay $4 per landing at
the Capistrano Airport.
That means the pilot of a
transient airplane, which may
only land at the field one time.
would be charged $14 for tbe
landing.
Lewis also listed personal dis·
agreetnenu with city policies
banning use or certain aircraft at
the airport.
"I strongly disagree with reg.
ulations now enforced and
particularly the banning or lwin-
engine aircraft, a!rplanes 1n ex-
Procedure Studied
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ttie
Board of Supervisors will bold a
special hearing SeP.,t· n to look
into controversial 'no code" or-
ders, which permit dooton icr.te-
ny dramaUc llfe-savtn1 aid to dy-
.ing patlenta.
SI
DAILY PILOT
E'roaPageAJ
LANCE •••
Fro•PageAJ
SKATER •..
First National Bank of Calhoun,
Ga ., to Lance's 1974
gubernatorial campaign com·
mittee at a time when Lance was
chairman of the board of the
bank. why they're not as good, she
The case was closed late last replied, " 'Cause I'm better."
year by John W. Stokes, then the Although her brothers and sis-
U.S. attorney in Atlanta, without ter skate, they're better at other
prosecution. things and didn't participate in
Glenna L. Stone, former chief the Skat&A-Thon.
of the fraud section in the U.S. at-·'Th.is was Stephanie's thing.
torney's office, testified that Having four (children), we try to
Stokes told her after closing the make each one special in their
case"thathesbouldcall'Jlmmy own way," Mrs. Kitner ex-
and Bert' and tell them wh~t plained.
bad done." She took this as a r Her father solicited the pledges
erence to then President-1 ~or _his daughter's effort. He even
Jimmy Carter and to Lance. ftad fliers, wit h her picture,
Miss Stone testified that Stokes ma~ to explain what it was
told her after last November's all about-"
election tlrat he was anxious to Mrs. Kitner stayed th.rough the
stay in bis post for one more year night watching Stephanie and
so that be would be eligible for a her friends. Nei&hbors dropped
federal pension. by to encourage her. * * * The ramlly didn't plan to get in· volved in the Skate·A-Thon but a p,... P.,,e AJ photographer chose her one day
for some publlcity pictures.
Stephanie was pleased and "we
were kind of almost committed,•'
Mrs. Kitner said.
POWELL ••.
that the press secretary called
and be immediately left the bear·
ing room and returned the call.
He said he told Powell, "You
have ~ressed your re1r et and I
accept that."
But Percy said Powell did not
tell hUn expressly that he had
found the report lo be lncornc:t
and "I think to clear the record
he should be u kecl to clarify
that.''
At hla daliy news briefing
houn lat.er. Powell aeain termed
h it action "In a ppropr iate,
rearettab&e and dumb.••
Asked what ~esident Carter
11ld to blm •boat UM matter, he
replied, "He teemed to accept
my ana11lil • aceurate."
But then, she explained, she
and her husband 1t.arted thinking
about the purpose of the event
and their four healthy children.
"We're so fortunate that ocme are
disabled In any .way," she said.
"After~ 1ot lnto it," ah~ ex-
plained, "lt'a kind of a good feel· inl to help ...
Valerie WUUam$, 15, ot Mis-
1lon Viejo won the other snnd
prlze from the Skate-A·Tbon by
brinah\I in about ft,5'.
A total ot 1.52 people, *led 6
throu8b 40 and llvina ~
tbe county, participated in the
event. About 130 people skated, Ule entire l2 houri.
Together, the1 railed '7,000. the moat money ot a ny
partfciDatlDj rink in ~ state. lortbeiiilOclaUon. ,
to let ~ koow thal a seminar at a neurologleal conference there
was to be held In my husband's name.
"Anotller caller told me the
world ls a better place for Harry
Weaver's having lived in It. 1 feel
lhal, of course, bul I didn't know
so m&I\)' other people felt it, too."
Mrs. Weaver said one of the
many honors conferred on her
husband was an appointment by
former President Nixon in 1973 lo
a presidential com mission to
study multiple sclerosis.
Dr. Weaver bad planned to re-
tire for a second Ume ln June and
hoped to become active in ci vie
affairs, Mrs. Weaver said.
No funeral services are
scheduled, but crem~Uoo is
planned, with burial at sea.
Besides bis widow, Dr. Weaver
is survived by two sons, Edward
Schofield or Newport Beach and
Dr. Phillip Weaver or Sacramen·
to: by a daughter, Patricia Jine
Aschleris of Long Beach, by a
sister , eight grandchildren and
one great-grandchild.
The family sugeests memorial
donations be made to the
Research Deoartment of lbe Na-
tional Multiple Sclerosis Socie-
ty, 205 42nd St .. New York, N.Y.
10017.
Nareoties Arrest
The woman, whose name
was not released, ap-
parently wa1 bitten by
neas which bad been in·
fectecl with the disease
from wild rodenta, said Dr.
Leon M . Hebertson. Kem
County health officer.
The victim "is making a
good recovery," Hebertson
added.
She felt tU a few days
after a Labor Day weekend
camping trip.
Mi-ssing Money Mystery
By STEVEN MITCHELL OUM DMtr ,. • ._ ltaff
Sheriff's investigators are still
seeking an $18,250 "Oash roll"
they said turned up missing when
th ey arres ted three South
Laguna residents In a narcotics
buy last Friday.
Sheriff's Lt. Rick Dr ake said undercov~r agenta gave the front
money to Kevin GoJ'don Ferrell,
23, of 31875 Circle Drive. South
Laguna, to purchase .125 pounds
of Colombian marijuana.
''The guy went after the first
load oJ the stuff, brought it back
to th~ 'house, and then went after
the rest." Drak~ explained.
Officers arrested Ferrell, his
brother Lawrence, 27, and Cyn.
thia Ann Wilson, 25, all of the Ci r-
cle Drive address, hours later in
a parking lot at Monarch Bay
Plaza.
Drake said undercover officers
were to pick up the rest of the
marijuana and pay a nother
$28,000 to complete the deal.
"But when we arrested them in
the Safeway parking lol, they
didn't have the original $18,250,"
Drake said.
The $46,000 purchase price was
to obtain 125 pounds of the illicit
weed, comprised ot the flowering
tops of the female plant.
"Tbat was really good mari-
j u ana," Drake said. When
broken down and sold on the
streets, it is worth about $125,000,
he said. .
"When you think about it, we
re ally got our money's worth,'.
he said.
"Of course, we dldn 't plan on
spending that by any stretch of
the imagination.''
Drake said he is confident of-
ficera will recover the missing
flash roll.
Meanwhile. the three atJeged
salesmen were being held in
Orange County Jail on suspicion
or possessing marijuana for aale.
SaD Onofre Fault
'No Safety Hazard'
A 2'h·mile-long earthquake
rauJt has been located on Camp
Pendleton property south of San
Clemente, within one mile ot the
San Onofre nuclear plant.
The fault ~the first located in
the vicinity in recent years -is
inactive and poses no safety
hazard, according to a Southern
California Edison Company
spokesman.
Geologists. working as consul.
tan ts to Southern California
Edison, spotted the fault about a
week ago, while they were
monitoring the area surrounding
the nuclear plant.
The fault was reported to the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
on Friday.
The regulatory commission re-
quires the utility company to test
the area continuously, the
spokesman said.
The San Onofre plant bas been
in operation since 1968.
The fault localed a week ago, lvin~ entirely-within Camp
Pendleton, is Inactive, the
spokesman said. Geologists have
said it has not moved in at least
35,000 years.
One nuclear generator is cur-
r ently operating at San Onofre,
a nd two more are under con-
struction. They are constructed
to resist earthquakes'. Energy
produc~/ there goes into the
Ed isoy syst em, to serve
customers throughout Southern
California.
Discov!!ry of the fault fs ex:.
peeled to have no effect on opera-
tion of the San Onofre plant, and
i?nstruclion is expected to con-
<!1..!"ue, the company spokesman
said.
When all three units are
operating, by 1981, the plant will
generate enough energy to serve
a population of one million.
Bandits Ictentified
SAN YSIDRO <AP> -Police
say iUesal aliens identified two
youths and an unemployed Mex·
ican man as bandits wbo beat
and robbed them north ol lbe
U.S. border.
' Scene Stealer.
Drexel's oriental adaptation
in antique bone with chinoiserle decoration
is destined to play a leading role
. in your decorating story.
Sale! There are room aocents and there are room~
Here's one that.does everything. Addi contrast. seta the
moods. brings richness to any part of Yoor home. An en-
chanting Et Cetera bookcase with Interior lighting, ad-
fustable grass snetves and gilt finish back panet. 56 .. w1de
by 79}'z" high by 14" deep, .
' ., 4 DAILY f'tLOT s . •
·.-
.!::.."Q Flood Dam.&~e Set
•·. ~-~-1,200 Home"less in Kansas City
'
wu• T._
~ldae ,., ..
G&TTING TBE WO&D:
lfuold Leevera ol Su Cltmtote
had • rouih daJ tb1I wMk when
h appe.,.-before t.be coutaJ
comaliuion up lo HunUnston
Bucb. Not mucb went rlabt for
blm.
YOU see, Mr. LeeYen owns tJm
blufftop home in the very nice
Cyprm Shores sector of San
Clemente. He want.tel to build a
swimminc pool ·and adjacent
therapeutic pool for bis wife, who
bu suffered serious hip prob-
lems.
Mrs. Leevers• physician felt
that treatment in the poola would
aid her recovery.
So .Mr. Leevers appeared
before the coastal commlsaion ·-· :sc.ekine a -::_Peanil,..to. ~ulld .Jlle -poOls. He asserted tliat tests
show his blufftop land is stable
and he pleaded for his wile's
health.
BVT HE WAS TURNED down
in one of those frustrating S to s
tie votes on the coastal com-
mission where you need seven
yes ballots to get approval.
Now when Mr. Leevers
pleaded that hla wile's physician
had prescribed the pool treat-
ments for her post-operative re-
ct>very, the comment of Com-
missioner R.J . Walsh was
enlightening. ·
Commissioner Walsh, noting
he voted in favor of the pools
permit, told Leever, ''Sir, if God
had prescribed it, there are some
on this commission who wouJd
vote against you."
Now if some commissioners
really do feel that way, they cer-
tainly must believe they are the
highest authority.
You can almost see how this
might develop in another case,
with apologies to comic Bill
Cosby:
THE VERY OLD man stood on
the San Clemente blufftop,
watching the setting sun, when
suddenly a voice came out of the heavens. . _ .
"Noah, this is the Lord. Can you hear me?"
Startled, Noah stammered,
"'Yes, Lord, I can.''
"Noah, I have a job for you. I
know this will be a surprise here
in a drought year but I'm really
going to make it rain around here.
You're going to be in one awful
flood.
"Now Noah, I want you to get
your three contractor sons down
here and their wives, gather
some gopher wood and build me
an ark. Make it 300 cubits long
' and three stories tall.''
"Wow, Lord, that's almost a
600-foot boat. I don't think I can
do that."
"Why not, Noah?"
"Well, Lord, we're in an R-1
' zone around here. I don't think
the Coastal Commission will give
me a permit for boat building in
an R-1 zone."
"'Noah, you just tell them who
ordered it.
"They don't impress very easl·
ly, Lord."
''WREN YOU nNISH the ark.
Noah. I want you to eather two of
every beast and fowl, male and
female, and put them on the
ark,."
"Oh listen, Lord, I could never
get away with that. It would up·
ut the ecology. The coutal com·
mission would never live me a
permit lf there was even a hint of
messing with the ecolo1Y."
"Now Noah, don't you f~t.
Just remember wben I 1et
through for 40 days and 40 nlebts,
the coastal comml11lon will
know who ls really the Boss."
· KANSAS CITY, Mo. <AP> -Tb• flood watera receded today
u 1wt.ftlv u thev J'OM, leaYiu at
leut 1t dead, 1,200 homeleu and
propertydama1• esthnated at $30-
mlWoo. TM fate of at least 15.
ponons1t1ll wu unknown.
The awful Mtacy of 12 lncbes d
rain in 2' houri wu devutatlon
lo the e~ve sbopa ot the
city'• Counlry Club Plau,
tedious cleanup alone Brush
Creek and the Blue River. and
ravqed farm Janda to the north andeut. ·
SOllE FAMILIES had to Jeave
tbelr homes below Winnwood
Lake in a northern aectlon unUl
crews that were frantically plac-
lq eandbap aaw the water re·
cede.
Six hundred resident.a were
evacuated from an apartment
house wben leakin1 gasoline
from 300 submersed can in a
basement garate created a fire
• Uu.aL.-And--llU~D~ ~HWS worked arounath;;o.c~ in two
public underground garages at
the Country Club Plaza, fearing
they might find more dead in the
cars trapped there by the surging
waters.
THE DAMAGE, like the
metropolitan area, crossed state
borders and the governors or
Missouri and Kansas eactt
planned to ask for federal dis-
aster aid. .
Still, because the shopping
area is so well known -its
Christmas lighting has been de·
picted in dozens of magazines -
the fiood ls likely to become
known as the ·'Country Club
Plaza F1ood."
The damage was awesome.
I
Cini Ser.,a,.ts
' Preliminary eathnatea in the
metropolitan area showed 65
bus lnesaes dam ag~d or
deatroyed · 228 houses, 150 ~
menta and~ mobile homes suf-
fering at least some damage.
"It's devastating," said Mis-
souri Gov. Joseph Teudale, a
Kansas City native, after a 2~
hour tour of the area ... I hope I
can get as much money as I can
for the people who have been
hurt." ' Gov. Robert F. Bennett of
Kansas pronounced the need
critical after his two-hour tour,
wblch included a shopplng center
in suburban Mission where one
store alone estimated $500,000 in
lost merchandise.
AT THE HEIGHT of the storm
Monday night, 2,600 had to nee
their homes: The rain stopped by
the next midday and 1,400 were
able to return.
For the rest there were
shelters, like the Salvation Army
·center able to accommodate 300.
But moat we~ able to move in
with friends and the cent.er bad
only 35 overnight guests.
Damage to public propeny in
Kansas City alone was estimat-
ed at nearly $.S.25 million.
Despite the destruction, it was
nowhere near that wrought by
the season's other major flood -
in the Johnstown, Pa .• area.
There, the waters broke dams
and swept aside houses and
trees. The toll was 75 dead and
damage or $200 million.
In terms of property damage,
the hardest hit area was the
Country Club Plaza, which
prides itself on being the coun·
try's oldest shopping cent.er and
one of the prettiest.
EmplOyes to Pay
Social Security?
WASHINGTON <A P) -More than six million federal, state and
local governmental employes could betin paying into Social Securi·
ty under a bill passed by a House panel. • • - .
The change, if finally approved by Congress and the President,
would make Social Security virtually a universal retirement plan
while providing a quick revenue boost of some $10 billion to the financially pressed system.
Social Security already covers about 108 million Americans.
more than 90 percent of all employed people. The government
workers account for most of those left out.
•• .. lflj.re 3 t. Jfledee
MEXICO CITY <AP> -A score or bombs exploded within a
three-hour period in three Mexican cities early today, causing
severe damage and injuring at least three persons, police said.
Several other bombs were deactivated.
,.-----------The bombs exploded in [ J Mexico City; Guadalajara, IN S ff 0 RT the s~ond largest city, and Oaxaca in the south.
-----------Officials said it was the worst such occurrence in decades. Police in-Oaxaca said a pamphlet
found in the cent.er of town attributed the bombings to a terrorist grouplmown aa the "Unionolthe People."
Paleditlla• M.ee 0,,,,.Ntl
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Jn a three·way split. Syrlan·backed
and radical Marxist euerrillas challenged Yasir Arafat's Palestin·
ian movement today over the U.S. call for Palestinian representa-
tion in·Arab-lsraeu Mideast peace talk.a. · · -
1be pro-Syrian Saiqa group and Dr. -George Habash's Popular
Front for the Llberatioo of Palestine contested Arafat's public slate·
ment that the U.S. move comtituted a "po1lt1ve step confirming an
obj~tivity" about the Palestine Uberation Organization.
Ol~leftl sirllce\ ......
BEIRtrr, Lebanon CAP) -The Moslem world beean a th.fee.
day feast today with prayers to Allah ''to protect the Arab world
asalnst the menace of cholera," which bu stricken more than 2,600
penoos In Jordan, Lebanon, Syria and Saudi Arabia this month.
Health officials ureed care in preparing the cookies and tarts on
which M0tdems corge themselves during Bairam, the feast that
ends the month of daytime futinC called Ramadan.
Street vendon were ordered to sell no sweets to children
Five T-0rnadoes Sigh~ed
T~ Uproofet4 Bui"ldinga Unroo/ed
THE PLAZA sns alonf one
. side ol BJ'\llb Creek, normally a
trickle dividing the city fflt and
west. Tbe concret.e·llned creek
became a torrent after two six·
inch rain.a Monday.
Water couned through under-I
ground 1arages and through the
street level floors of some of the
finest stores In the Midwest -10
feet deep in places.
Fire Chief John H. Waas said
an underground parking garage
was pumped out during the niebt
and no bodies were found in the
wrecked cari In the bottom level.
"We would not have been sur·
prised to find bodies," Waas
said.
He said other underground
garages were being pumped out
today.
Among the storm victims was
a family of four, whose car was
s wept off a street in suburban
Leawood, Kan., into a rain
s wollen creek. The bodies of
Marshall Kleinatein, "4>, and his
2.year-ol son were found in one
place; the floodwaters had car·
ried tlle bodies of his wife and
6-year o ld son four blocks
farther. Their bodies were found
hanging in a tree along the banks
of the creek.
&recharin
Alert Urged .
WASHINGTON CAP)
The Carter administration
is pressing Congress· to
s upport plans to place
cancer warnings on diet
foods, soft drinks and other
products containing sac·
Charin.
Four administration of·
ficials urged the Senate on
Tuesday to pass legislation
requiring the health warn-
ings on product labels and
in advertising.
Canadian studies have
s hown that saccharin,
widely used in diet foods
and diet sodas, causes
cancer in animals and may
cause bladder cancer In
humans.
The administration ap-
parently is r esorting lo
health warnings in view of
indication s that lawmakers, una~r pres-
sure from many voters,
are wiwilllng to permit the
government to ban most
s ales of saccharin.
............
UNDERGROUND FUGITIVE SURRENDERS IN NEW YORK
Mark Rudd, Left, Faces Charges From the 19e0a
'Weather' FUgitive
Surrenders in NY
NEW YORK (AP> -Mark Rudd, a fueitive member of the .
radical Weather Underground since 1970, surrendered to authorities
today but refused to tell reporters where be l)ad been in hidin&.
Rudd. 30, walked to the Manhattan district attorney's· office
about9:20 a.m. He would not answer reporters' questions.
"He'll have his say in court," sai<l attorney Gerald Lefcourt,
who accompanied Rudd inside the building to an assistant district
attorney's office for the formal surrender . • · ·
RUDD, WHO PACES a variety of misdemeanor charges stem-
ming from antiwar demonstrations in the 19605 and a student protest
at Columbia University in 1968, ls the first major figure of the clan·
destine group to tum himself in this year.
Lefcourt said Rudd would be flown to Chicago on Thursday to
face Illinois charges.
Rudd led the student takeover at Columbia University in 1968.
and engaged in bloody street fighting with Chicago police a fear
later. He faces charges related to both incidenta. ·
IDS DECISION to surrender follows earlier reports that the
Weather Underground had split into factions and some members
wanted to "surface," abandoning the tactics of violence to concen-
trate on above.ground political activity.
In Maplewood, N.J., Rudd's father, Jacob, told a reporter,
"Mark's 30. Maybe he wants to join the establishment ...
Rudd is the best known of several Weather Underground mem-
bers who have turned themselves .in this year. The FBI says 14 Un-
derground members are still sought, including Bernadine Dohrn
and several other longtime leaders of the group.
· PHOEBE WRSCH and Rob.by Roth, who tumed themselves in
six months ago, were sentenced Tuesday to two years on probaUon
and fined $1,000 foT their roles in "Days of Ra.ee,.. the 1969
Weatherman demonstration in Chicago.
< u "' x .J u < 'HlmlJI IWJ..H--El,_L~-"'-v_E_M_u_E_-1 ~
lrer.1f ...,..1 < :
..., IL
5 "' •
HUNTINGTON HARBOUR SHOPPING GUIDE
:BANK
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Full Service !lank ·
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•
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• Wednnday, S!ptam~r 14, 1977 DAIL y PILOT A3
Tax Relief Wins Panel's ·Support
Pr-esley
Imitator
A Hit
SEAITLE (Al' 1 It's taken
five years, but Johnny Rusk's
night club act has finally caught
on
Rusk does an unabashed 1mtta-
uon of El vii. Presley, singing
Presley's songs, using scarves to
wipe the sweat off his forehead,
.1nd passmg them out to women
1n the aud1ence the whole bit.
.. Some people are fortunate
t'nough to get a hit record or a
Broadway show. Obviously. I'd
ltke to do Johnny Rus k on stage, ..
he said. "But as I said, every-
_,. body is looking for a way to get
from A to Z u1 th1s bui.mess. I do
Elvis."
Rusk says he 1s not trying to
cash in on Presley's death, smce
he began the nightclub act five
years ago. llis albums of Presley
songs, which comes out this
week, was just a coincidence, he
says
"That was timely, or untimely,
you might say. We recorded it
four months ago. I'm s ure it'll be very popular."
"We have some people from
New York City mlerei.ted in put·
t ing together so~ sort or
Hroadway-type i.hows. People
are calling about havmg their
songs recorded · ·
Fullerton
Woman Killed
In Hit-run
/\ La Habra girl was killed
Tuesday in Fullerton when the
small sporL'I car she was driving
was sideswiped by a pickup truck
and knocked into the path or on-
com i nr. trarr1c The pickup
driver ncd.
Teresa Witter. 19, of La Habra.
was identified an a coroner's re·
port as the victim
Police are seeking the pickup
truck driver whose purported un·
safe lane change ignited the five.
vehicle collision that cost Miss
Witter her lire
Witnesses told police the
pickup driver slopped his truck
about 200 yards from the multi·
car wreckage, walked back to
the destructi ve scene and then
ra n off on foot
Police said the regis tered
owner o' the pickup lert In the
roadway reported selling the
truck two weeks ago and they are
checking today to identify the
new owner.
ft is expected that whoever was
at the wheel of the pickup truck
when it sideswiped the victim's
lightweight C1Ut<> will eventually
be charl,!('d \\ llh rt'lony hit and
run dnnng
..
STILL ENJOYS A GOOD LAUGH
Sunaet Beach's MIH Edna Snowden
Happy at I.00
'Mi.ss Edna' Still Active
Can a farm girl born in Vermont, Ill., just down the road
from Rushville, find happiness in Sunset Beach, Calif., en-
joying the surf and sun?
Surely can, is what Miss Edna Snowden will declare to
anyone who asks.
Especially after spending 52 years more than half her
llfettme -at th~ same address on Sixth Street, in a little
cottage a stone's throw from the sea.
Miss Edna will be 100 years old Saturday and is holding
open house al her corner home at 17065 Sixth St .. for fellow
members of the Sunset Beach Women's Club and Las
Damas Club
"I HOPE THERE WON'T be too much fuss. . .. says
the diminutive lady who 1s a familiar sight on her daily
strolls in Sunset Beach.
Miss Edna loves life and s he loves people
She also loves the Los Anl(eles Dodgers and the Good
Lord, but not necessarily an that battmgorder.
"I take each day as it comes, but I didn't count on being
100 Y.ears old," says Miss Edna, a 1925 arrival in Sunset
Beach.
STILL SPRY, SHE ENJOYS seas ide life In her cottage,
where during the baseball season one can hear the Dodgers
on the radio.
Miss Edna-doesn't ne~lecl other matters for baseball.
She studies her Bible along with Dr. Vernon McGee over the
radio, too.
Visit with her for awhile and she'll tell you that the year
she was born. 1877. Rutherford B. Hayes was inaugurated
as the 19th U.S. Pres ident and Thomas Alva Edison patent-
ed the phonograph
SHE'LL ALSO REGALE you with tales of Uncle Finley,
Aunt Hattie, Uncle LeRoy the Dentist, Cousm Effie and Un -
cle Job. all or whom worked. lived and laughed hard.
because that's the way 1t was m those days.
She'll sit in the hllle house and tell how many times a
thundering, angry sea swirled through the front door and
out the back and how the 1933 Long Beach earthquake
knocked the blamed place off 1Lc; foundation
But the house where she's lived for 52 years is still
there, and so is Miss Edna Snowden.
Sailors Facing Pot· Rap
HONOLULU <AP> -Thirty·
two crewmen Qf a U.S. Navy
Polaris submarine were charged
with possession of marijuana in a
previously undisclosed incident
last month, Navy officials say.
It was not immediately clear
whether the crewmen involved
•l were aboard the submarine at
the lime or at a shore facility.
Navy spokesmen said Tuesday
the men were assigned to the
ballistic missile s ubmarine Sam
Houston. which is based al
Guam.
Voting
Slated·
Thursday
SACRAMENTO <AP) -A
$4.48-billion tax reliet bill -
promitling annual rebate checks
for 6.8 million Calitornians -was
approved by a special le1islatil.>e
committee early today.
The lax plan, which Is $280
million smaller than a bill reject-
ed 12 days ago by the slate
Senate, is slated for final votes in
the Senate and Assembly on
Thursday, the last day ot the lm
session of the California
Legislature.
The bill that emerged from 11
hours of hearings Tuesday and
early today follows the general
outline of the plan which the
Senate rejected on a 16-23 vote
Sept.12.
It offers annual rebates
averaging $225 to $250 to 4.2
million homeowners and $118 lo
2.6 million renters. plus elimina·
lion of the business inventory
tax.
But the marathon hearings of
the six-man committee which
rewrote the bill produced rel-
ti vely minor changes which
backers say give It better than
even chances of passage.
One change puts an extra $646
million in the pol over the next
five years for homeowne rs in the
$15,000 to $30,000 range --enough
to boost annual rebates by about
$35 each.
Another would boost the bank
and corporation tax -the major
California tax on business ·
from a 9 cent percent rate to lOlf.-
percent. Earlier drafts of the
plan raised the tax to 10 percent.
That tax increase is intended to
offset the proposed elimination of
the business inventory tax, a
$500-million-a-year tax on busi-
ness.
"I think the changes are good .
I think the bill has a fighting
c hance," said Sen. John
llolmdahl <D-Castro Valley>,
who chaired the committee
which rewrote the tax bill.
The bill needs two-thirds ma·
jorlties in both houses -27 votes.
in the Senate and 54 in the As·
sembly.
The earlier bill, which got only
16 Senate voles, passed the As·
sembly on a 57-18 vote. As-
semblymen Gordon Duffy or
Hanford. who represented As-
sembly Republicans on the tax
committee, said he sltll opposes
the plan. but expects a two.thirds
majority of lhl• /\ssc•mbly will
pass the bill, leuving the final de
cision in the Senate's hands
In th e Se nate, wher e
Democrats are one vote short of
the needed majority, GOP noor
leader George Deukmejian of
Long Beach, said the revised bill
won't win Republican support.
"At the end of five years,
you 're going to end up with a
$1 .2-billion deficit instead of a
Sl.5-billion deficit,·• Deukmejian
said of the amendments.
APWI,..,._•
EXPLAINS DETAILS OF PROPERTY TAX REFORM
Sen. John. Holmdahl Surrounded by Lobbylats
Faees Life Term
County Teen Guilty
Of Holdup Murder
A 19-year-old youth s howed no
e motion Tues day when an
Orange County jury found him
guilty or first degree murder in
connection with the s hotgun
death of a Santa Ana market
o wner during a meat locker
shoot.outlast March.
In addition to declaring
Michael Ramon Bradley guilty of
murder, the jury found him guil-
ty or five counts of attempted
murder, two counts of attempted
armed robbery and using a
firearm in the commission of a
c rimei·
Superior Court Judge Jerrold
Oliver will sentence Bradley
Sept. 29.
He was the first defendant in
Board Finds
Marine Guilty
In Assault
A black Marine. in whose
Camp Pendleton barracks build-
mg two crosses were burned Sun-
day night, is guilty of particjpat·
ing in an attack on white person-
nel last year, a court martial
board ruled Tuesday.
Cpl. Clarence Capers Jr. of
Edgewater Park, N.J .. was
found guilty of six counts of as-
sault and one of conspiracy. The
court martial board now must set
his sentence.
th~ murder of How Yow Lau, 66.
to stand trial.
The market owner was one ot
10 persons herded into a meat
locker at the Santa Ana Market.
1216 W. First St., Santa Ana, by
four youthful gunmen last March
2.
During Bradley's trial, sur-
vivors of the bloody shootout that
occurred in the locker said it was
Bradley who pulled the trigger of
a sawed-off shotgun he was car-
rying to touch off the bloody gun
duel that ended with Mrs. Lau's
death. . •
Those witnesses said Bradley's
shotgun tailed to fire but as a re-
sult or bis obvious attempt to
shoot the hostages, other guns
were broupt into play. .
One or those was fired by Mrs.
Lau's son as he attempted to pro-
tect the host.ages. Ken Lau' sue-•
ceeded in wounding Bradley and
another bandit.
But in the exchange of gunfire.
Lrw was seriously wounded and
h s mother was mortally
wounded.
Still to stand trial in the case
are Russel Capers, 19, Sammie
Dunn Jr., 18, and Tyrone
Robinson, 16, all or Los Angeles.
Boots Made
ForWtdking
Dad Wanted Miracles Protesters Booked
CffiCAGO (AP> -Police ar-
rested 31 adults and young people
Tuesday after students walked
out or Bogun High School in what
they called a protest against the
Capers was one of 14 blacks
charged last November with
raiding a barracks room ot seven
whites in what the blacks have
testified was a mistaken belief a
Ku Klux Klan meeting was being
held.
ESCONDIDO <AP> -
The customer tried on bodts
for 45 minutes before he
found the ones he liked.
Then the store clerk found a
pistol pointing at him when
he tried to ring up as ale.
"I'm leaving the store
with the boots," said the
six-foot-three gunman,
without paying. Karen Quinlan Book Detaila Family Ordeal, Subsequent investigation
s howed none or the whites, six of
whom had to be hospitalized, was
a KKK member, although the
probe uncovered a 16-member
cell of the white raci,t oreaniza-
NEW YORK IAP1 Even
after Karen Anne Quinlan's fami·
Jy won the dramatic court fight to
pull th<' respirator plug, her
father was w1th1lrawn behind a
"wall of fantasy," certain that
she would recover
''I believed in miracles," said
Joseph Quinlan. in a new book
portraying the Quinlans' strug-
gle to deal with a personnl ordeal
that captured worldwi<lo in-
terest.
' "Karen Anne: The Qwnlans
Tell Their Story" ls a poignant
behind-thc·scenes look at the
Quinlan family as told to Phyllis
Battelle. It is to be released by
Doubleday and Company on
Sept.23.
Miss Battelle, the only
journalist to see Miss Quinlan,
visited her May 17, 1976.
"My reaction was not s hock
but ~P pity -a feeling of 'Oh,
this poor child'," she writes.
Quinlan, an Irish Catholic, tells
how it would be nearly three
months after Karen went into a
coma that he was able to accept
what he would come to believe
wasGod'swJlL _
"I could hear people all around
me saying that Karen ml1ht
never recover, and I knew they
were wrong. I thought what they
were saying was obscene. I
couldn't bear talking to them,
and l tried not to listen to them,"
be said.
Miss Quinlan lapsed into a busing of black elementary stu-
coma April 15. 1975, after taking dents under Chicago's voluntary
He drove oft Tuesday in a
camper truck, the boots sit-
ting on the seat beside him.
tion. a combination of alcohol and desegregation plan.
tranqu111zers . Even though the ---------------------------------------New Jersey Supreme Court even-
tually granted her riiht "to die
with dignity," the 23-year-old
woman remains com al-OSe in a
nursing home.
Julia Quinlan tells how her
daughter tried to hold the family
together, how even a routine
family meal became nearly im-
possible.
''I felt I was walkln1 on eges.
Or walking a t11htrope without a
balance pole," she said. "I didn't
dare make a false step or we'd
fall apart."
She said that by the end of
June, 1975, everybody in the
famUy, Including her 100. John,
and daughter, Mary Ellen, had
lost weight.
· •. . . John could never sit
through a whole meal because
somethlne about Karen would in·
evltably come lqto the converaa·
lion ... Just the mention of
her, and John would have to
leave the tabl•.
''But the worst wu poor Joe.
He had bulll up hit wall ot Ian·
tasy, where he was abeolutely
certain Kaun would come out ot
the coma and be all rt1ht. J wu
80 afraid that it f Hid tht WronJ
thlne -I really didn't know llthat
would happen. He "•• Withdrawn aftdJl'tkable. U WU
81 thouab hie WU ftOttnl IM,....
the,. chfldNn, aD61;iklft 't care
abOut anyone exef'pt Kuen." • ''You·,. 10MJ111 ,,_ • mlraole.
Joe. Sven ll GM 61 mike a
111lree&e. Ml at.. came Moel ~ ~ "" lli'ili ........ • IO tftlilillve tbl IM ftUid lpm&t I.hi ,.. ,,, ..... Hf• ... ~ ............
Gem
·Talk
By J.C. lfL'MPllHIES
MYSTERIOUS JADE
baao~touch
Jade ... the very word conjures up•
Utout!U of the mysterious Orient, and
vision.a of ~n abades oC 1reen. It la a
1tone of 8reat hl1tortcal, mythJcaJ and
practical bockirround.
Chinese. lwho call It. "yu .. ' onct
thouaht that jod•, If swallowed properlf,
could 1uarant4e lite for 1,000 years. May•, Aztec• and otJJera uHd Jllde aa a
b•d1e ol rank1 or utUbed lta hatdnm to
make it into f11h hooks. knlvee and other'
utenlill.
JQde II born detp down tn t.be eatth
comtni to t be 1urfact when "aturai croelon weathere away leu formidable
roclce. 'fttoufb w• "-ily t.hlhk ot lt u alwaYa ~' Jade com In 1bad• of Nd
and nm blacll. Some are ~ and olh«a.,.. eo clur )'OU an ttt thrOQcl\
diem. But iroen ~omln IM.
The precious gift!
COIN
JEWELRY
IN 14 KARAT GOLD
PENDANT. Rope border
design for elegant simplicity.
24" H~~D MADE ROPE
NECk CHAIN . With spring ring.
__ .. ,....... __
'I
Wedneaday. September 1', 1977
Robert N W~d Publl~her
Barbara Kre1blch/Edltorlal P~ Editor • o •• _eo ... o"''yP110• :Editorial Page ......................................................
Parental Concern
Voiced Too Late
A numbof of parent• trooped into the Saddleback Valley
Un1ftod School 011tr1ct srusteet' meeting last week to ~com·
plain t~t their children no longer are getting bus tranSAOrt&-
hon to school.
They expressed normal parental concern tor the safety
ar,d well-l:leing of their children -a concern anyone can easi-
ly\JnderStand However. several parents also complained that
tt1• district ct)anged transportation plans without informing
the public.
As was later pointed out by another parent. this was an
unfair charge
The issue had come up publicly during several trustees'
budget discussions and had been reported in area
newspapers well before the decision was made.
This 1s the way things happen. The parents should have
shown up and voiced their concerns then.
Parents should realize that dec1s1ons which affect their
children are being made the year around by the trustees dur-
ing their twice-monthly meetings. And especially al budget
time. :-:-..... ..
If they can't ~nd these meetings, parents should at
least make themselves aware of the trustees· discussions and
actions by'reading their local newspapers -or even talking
10 school officials.
HoQSing Need Remains
Senate Bill 344, which Monday went to Gov. Brown for
signature or veto, holds important consequences for the city
of Irvine and the proposed Irvine Company Industrial
Camplex-East.
The bill would prevent groups now suing the city and the
company from delaying the development until the lawsuit is
settled. The groups are trying to force the billion-dollar
pro1ect to include low-cost employe housing.
Specifically, the bill says no one can use such a tactic to
challenge city general plans where water or sewer bonds
have been approved and cert1f1ed. Irvine Ranch Water-District
sold $9 million in sewer bonds in 1971 to accommodate the
Irvine Company pro1ect .
Proponents of the bill argue 1t w ill remove a legal cloud
from the project. while allowing those who filed the suit to
work toward a settlement without delaying the start of the
project.
Opponents contend the bill itself is an attempt to ob-
fuscate the.real issue of the future of low-cost housing 1n
lfVme.
Whatever the pros and cons of the bill. Irvine should not
lose sight of Its oft-repeated goal of providing housing for all
income ranges.
Skateboard Rules
Superior Court Judge Mason Fenton has declared that 1f
the city of Irvine wants to keep open the public skateboard
course at University Park. it'll have to enforce its own rules.
That's only logical. The puzzling thing is why the city
didn't enforce them in the first place.
The rules are clearly posted in three places. They require
that skateboard riders wear protective gear 10 guard against
undue in1unes from falls on the concrete track.
Helmets. gloves. sh~ and knee and elbow pads all
should be part of the skateboarder's unitorm. the rules say.
But until Judge Fenton·s order. city officials had looked the
other way on violations.
' • The mandatory supervision of the park and enforcement
of the city's well conceived. but heretofore ignored rules. as
ordered by Judge Fenton. actually may help the city win re-
newed liability insurance coverage -from which its in-
suraoce carrier reportedly Is shrinking.
• Opinions expressed in the ~pace ebove are those of the Oallv. Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authOts and
artists. Reader comment I s invited.
Boyd/Artists' Wives
pyL.M.BOYD ~rt ~ditors claini that
sketches submitted to them of
females, clothed qr
otherwise, tend to be drawn
with the proportions of the
artist's wife In each case.
That's even ir the artist
worked with some other
model, they say. The artist
evidently Is Inclined to "cor·
rect" the rendering to more
c losely match that most
familiar figure. ·-King Louis XVI of France
kept a daily diary. But he got
bored pretty easily, so most of
bis entries just ,read:
"Nothing." Htslorical re·
searchers say that's what he
wrote thereln on the dJl)' the
Bastille was stormed, setting
olrthe French Revolution.
A wailer nearins retire-
ment says, ''I've known for
years that people Up better
when each la responsible !Of' a
bill. Thal'• why I always elve
11parate checka, if poaalblo."
In Switrerland, YOU CID be
fined (or tax evasion, true
enough, but you can 'l be sent
to prison ror it.
Nominations are now open
for candidates whose descrip-
tions may aptly begin with:
"He's the kind of guy who
... "For example. Omaha's
Gunner Brown: ''He's the
kind of guy who orders an en
salad sandwich , and
says 'Hold the mayon·
naise'."That's bad. Very bad,
Any others?
It's a little known tact that
when actress Katharine Hep.
bum manied Ludlow Odgen
Smith In 1928, she asked him
to chance his last name ,to
Oeden ao s he wouldn 'l be
identified as another Kale
Smith.
Q. "Sherlock Holmes' pro-
ceu-of-elimination technique
for solving crimes was based
on the methods of a real de-
tective:, rl1ht~
A. On the methods of 1 real
surteon. One Dr. Joseph Bell.
Earl Waters
·These Strikes Endanger Lives
If the specter of city firemen
:ilandmg idly by while your house
burns to the ground frightens
you, the opportunity to take ac·
lion to prevent It from becoming
a relllity may be yours at next
June's eleetion.
Two southern Californians.
D'Olly Swift and Betty Cordoba,
are currently
i::athering signature~ to
place a con-
1> l i tut 1 on a I
amendment
on the ballot
prohibiting
s tri~e s by
public
e mpl°oyes.
They have un·
lil Dec. 2 to qualify the me.asure
for ballolplacement.
No doubt the recent events in
Dayton, Ohio, will give impetus
to their drive. In that city the
specter did become a reality,
Art Hoppe
when striking firemen permitted
at least 20 finis to go unchecked
during their holdout for higher
wages.
The Dayton strike continued
after a judge had ordered the
strikers back to work. However a
contempt of court action was not
pursued because an agreement
was reached in the lime which in ·
tervened between the hearing
dute set on the contempt charge.
In California, despite repeated
court rulings that public
employes do not have a nght lo
strike, work stoppages, ~ick ·
outs, and other refusals to work
by those on public payrolls have
been increasing
VARIOUS legislative pro·
posals, including a constitutional
amendment have been in
troduced at piist sessions to spell
out a strike prohibition without
success. Last year Orange Coun·
ty Sen. Dennis Carpenter
authored s uch a constitutional
change only to see the Senate de·
feat it by a vote of 19 to 14. far
short of the 27 votes needed.
Askt!d why he had authored the
bill In view of the consistent court
rulings against s trikes.
Carpenter said he believed a con.
stitutional amendment would be
helpful If nothing else, he in·
d1cated. passage of s uch an
amendment would make it clear
that the people are not sym.
pathetic to strike1> by pubhc
workers.
I le also suggested that even
though the ~ourts have. ruled
against strikers. there are no
spec.ific prohibitions in the law.
Until recently there have been
few instances where striking
public employes have suffered
a rter effec t s. Usually th e
l>Ccnario has witnessed manage·
m ent going to court and obtain·
ing inJunctions and orders for the
empl oyes to return to work Even
whon such court orders are
blithely ignored no penalties
have been imposed and workers
have been permitted to return to
their jobs after the strike is set-
tled.
IN ft'ACT, attempts to
terminate st riking employes
have run afoul or court rulings
and sometimes public sentiment
Hut a most recent decision by
the court or appeals in Los
Angeles, holding s triking
Pasadena school teachers liabl~
for damages may signal a turn in
attitudes towards illegC\) strikes
against the public.
If the effort to place a direct
prohibition against strikes on the
ballot fails to qualify such court.
rulings are the public's only im·
m ediate hope of protection
against walkouts by firemen and
police and other essential public
t'tnployes becausc no legislation
on the ~ubjcct is currently pend·
ing before the Legislature
A White House at the End of the Canal?
All right, kiddies. just one
more story about Sir Ronald of
Holy Rood and then it's beddy·
bye>.
Well. as you remember, Sir
Ronald and his faithful squire,
Sa n cho
Nofziger, had
plunged deep
into The
Tang l ed
Thicket in
quest of The
Holy White
House . But
that glimmer·
ing goal had
tantalizingly
eluded Sir Ronald over the years
and he was not growing any
younger.
So it was that he limped weari-
ly around a bend in The Thicket
and came upon a large ditch
rilled with turgid water.
"llola, Sancho!" he cried. "Be
this a moat e ncircling some
fortress wherein the fair damsel /
of fiscal responsibility pleads to
be rescued from the ogre of def-
1c 1t spending'!··
"Nay, sire." said Sanctio. "Tis
but the Panama Canal "
"PF'A.H!" snorted Sir Ronald.
turning hi s back. "Obviously' 'tis
but a creaky antique that has
long outlived its usefulness."
"Verily, sire ," agreed Sancho.
"Thus would King Jimmy give it
away to keep the peace."
"What say you?" snapped Sir
Ronald. "A give-away program'>
To whom would this coward give
it and why?"
"To Panama, master." said
Sancho. c rin ging s lightly
"Primarily because it bisects
that land from which we stole it
75 long years ago."
"Ahah!" cried Sir Ronald.
Mailbox
"You mean our cowardly King
Jimmy would abandon this
magnificent feat of modern
engineering, this eighth wonder
or the world, this bastion of de·
mocracy, this key lo southwest
Central America. this freedom·
loving canal for which our boys
fought and died? Would he
violate the holy Monroe Doctrine
by yielding up this s acred soil or
the Americas to a foreign power
without a fight?"
"Well, I guess Panama is a
foreign power. s ire." s aid
Sancho, "when you put it that
way "
..
"WHAT or our Manifest
Destiny, varlet? Does not this
canal stretch from sea to shining
!>ca·? Should this mighty canal
slip from our grasp. how could
our Great White Fleet show the flag?"
"As good a question as any.
sire."
"Let us not forget The White
Man's Burden, Sancho. while at
the same time we Remember the
Maine!''
"Can you see the li&hl at the
end of the tunnel, master?"
asked Sancho hopefully.
"No," said Sir Ronald, "but I
-I
__.-'/ --~-1 .,.___ ~
think I can see the White House
at the end of the canal."
With that, he drew his famed
S winging Sword, s houted his
awesome battle cry. "For Decen·
cy, for Purity and for Just Plain
Goodness'" and vanished into
The Tangled Thicket. yelling.
"CHAAAARRRRGGGGE'"
SANCHO sat on a rock and
mopped his brow. ··1 should have
known," he said, shaking his
head. "He always gets emo.
tionally involved when anyone
wants to get rid of a creaky an·
lique."
" .... A~D/HIS ONE'S FOR VIETNAM .. AND-rtfl5 ONf'S FORTf-IF-MAYAGUEZ. •... ANO
-rn1s 1..rrrtE BITrY NEW ONE 1s FOR PANAMA r.. "
Teacher's Contplaint Rings True Through Ages
To the Editor:
"What have you done. what
good came of your sitting here?"
reads a Sumerian clay tablet of
about 1800 B.C., now in the
University of Chicaga's Oriental
Institute recording his instruc·.
tor's Irate lecture after a st.udent
had nunked his writing test.
"YOU ARE already a ripe man
and clos.e to being aged I Uke an
old ass, you are not teachable
any more. Like withered grain
you have passed the season. How
long will you play around! But it
is still not. too latel If you study
night al)d day and work all the
time modestly and without ar·
ro1ance. if you listen to your col-
leaf ues and teachers, you can stll become ascribe."
What upset the instructor wu
that the >-outh's rather was a
teacher, and he claimed tbat tt
wu the father al'\d his brothers
who have failed. not
he •.. Solomon waa right,. there's
nothing new under the sun.
FRAl'«t KLOCK
......... dt
on the front page or my eventni;
paper today
These situation!!, which occur
every few months In every s tate.
usually • merit front·page cov
erage only during the dramatic
first day or two of legal conflict
The end result is usually not
pu bllshed at all. or perhaps
buried on page 16 of the fourth
section. For your paper to pro-'
vi~e such prominent and detailed
coverage or the conclusion of this
s ituation Is an unusual and very
much appreciated editorial de·
cision.
GARY C. SPENCER
., ..... 1 ..
To the Editor:
Amidst lhe clamor for his r
ignation, let me stand up and be
eoaanted as one who favors keep-
ing Bert Lance in the federal eov· ernment. The only Wn1 wen~ to do II chance h1.I Job ct~l~~a·
tion. BaMd on ~ prior ~
dealinp, tt aepean he ls the OfllY
one who could aave our SoeJaJ
Securityayatem .
JOHNE.WOLF
IT WILL soon probably be
teamed that the more gasoline a
car bums, the more pollutants 1t
pumps into the atmosphere. The
effect or smog controls on an
engine is to CQUSe It to bum more
gasoline.
Nothing is "burned up," it is
just changed. Therefore, the car
that bums more gasoline will
cause more pollutants.
The problem Is that the smog
control has become so huge that
its collapse might trigger a
depression.
All the government has to do lo
fix things up ls to pass a law.
They have solved the problem of
children's clothlog catch!ng fire;
they have fixed the ozone and the
smog. It's all in thJ books.
JAMES W. BOLDING
la.ee...,e
To the Edltor:
The <1.H.P. King letter in the
Dally Pllot's·Mallbox or Aua. 26
la Inaccurate concernlna Marine
MfdlandBank. •
Ambasiadof Ltnowlti 11 po
tonser adir~tor of this banlt and
has never represented it in his
role as President Carter's
delegate.
The ambassador became a
Marine Midland director in 1973
but resigned in .March of this
year rather than permit the im·
proper allegations concerning
his relationship with our bank lo
impair his ef(ectiveness in
representing President Carter.
His position on the Panama
Canal ls not a ban~ing issue and
Marine Midland's good name
should not be dragge4 into the
pollticnl ar~a.
Wednesday September 1! 1~77 L 'SC JAl,LY PILOT A.'.i
Controversy Swir/,s Over Pt. Conception LNG
POINT CONCEPTION <AP> -Th.1.1 scenJc, laolated aplt of land
.,..."'-.. tbe P•clfic bu lar&tly bypuaed durin1tM1rowth c.11r11'"''• from a far nuna Spanlab colony into a populated, in· d al.Ute.
But now. lhls ...... hu bee.a catapulted lftto tbe btldlines by •
bill tbellate le1lalalurt has pUNd that bu 1paw1ted •complex. often
bitlercncrl)'-\lenus envlronm~tdebat•.
T'UE mu. WOULD PE•MIT Hffral uuhues to build I $600
mWlon Uquilled natural 1u <LNO> termlnal at CoJo Bay ln Ult lee ol the l)OlM.
Jt'• a auhltJtute location, whJcb would replace earlier proposal~
to put the plant ln O•na.rd or [.()I Anaelea Ka.rbor.
On one side are au industry apok .. men aod atat• and county
poliUclana who say enerl)'-aboJ't Callfomia muat import super-
cooled n1Lural au by s hJp by
( ]
al least 1181 lf the state la to ECOLIJG Y avoid cuto(f1 of gas to homes
_ _ and bualnesaes.
EN'VlltONMENTAUSTS~ FIGHl'ING the scheme lhrou&h a
1008e roalltlon ca.Jled the Point Conception PreaervaUon Committee.
say building the state's first LNG terminal here would ruin one of
the last unspoiled sections of the California coast
It's a controversy with some local twists:
-A dispute between Santa Barbara County and the state over
who will make the ultimate decisions about shoreline development.
-Intra-county rivalries so bitter there's a good chance voters
wlll be asked next year if they want to carve a new county, Los
Padres, out or the northwestern half of the present county.
M_ANY OF THE HANDFVL OP people who Uve here are reluc-
tant tO take sides. Most itey they'd like to be left alone to raise beef,
hunt white-tailed deer or wUd pigs, drag their trawler nets through
the rich fishing grounds offshore, lend musty lighthouses interesting
enough to qualify as historic monuments, or surf on beaches some
experts say are among the best on the Pacific coast.
One resident is Lee Mann, 35, a security officer for the 10,000-
acre Cojo Ranch.
Mann, who moved here with his family to avoid the hassles of
city living, spends much of his time chasing surfers from the area's
beach. He is also hard-nosed about an LNG pl ant:
"IT'S VOLATILE, THEY TELL US. Everyone here is con-
cerned with that. Maybe they'll have to preserve the Tanch as a buf-
fer. If the plant did blow up, it would involve fewer people."
Mann's closest neighbors, who live a mile away in one of the old
Pt. Conception lighthouse buildings, are the Lundbergs.
Brad Lundberg, 37, manages the Cojo Ranch for the Los
Angeles·based Bixby Ranch Co., which also owns the adjoining
16,000-acre Jalama Ranch. Both were originally parts of a Spanish
land grant.
A TIORD;GENERATION COWBOY, Lundberg runs about 400
feeder cows and calves with the help of his two hired hands and his
two sons.
LOS ANGELES
O•llVPllll,,....,,_,..,~
X MARKS SPOT OF LATEST PROPOSED LNG-PLANT
Pt. Conception laaue Alarms Envlronmentallata
He hasn't made up his mind about the plant. but he's worried
a bout change:
"What I've got is the satisfaction of producing somethinJ in
what I think is an ecologicalJy harmonious way with tbeworld. l 'm
not making anything plastic or polluting the air. I guess what I have
is a love of the land."
Another who doesn't want to see Pl. Conception changed is 37-
year-Old William Towne, a Coast Guard chief electronic tebnlcian.
He drives 80 miles round trip every week from his station at Point
Arguello to tend Point Conception's automated light and bellowing
foghorn.
TOWNE, AN 18-YEAR VETERAN OF duty on icebreakers and
such isolated stations as Cape Christian on Baffin Island, is reverent
about the point.
"When you work around the light and those old buildings," says
Towne, "You realize you 're a part or history that goes back to the
first lighthouse keepers who tended whale oil lamps here in 1856.
There are some things we can't afford not t.o preserve.'•
Philip Marking, a Santa.Barbara attorney who beads the Point
Reactor Fuel
Bomb Tested
LOS ANGELES <AP) -A °'secreltest explosion
rn the Nevada desert proves that low.grade
plutoruum from civilian nuclear power plants can
be used to make atomic weapons, the Los Angeles
Times reported today.
The Times s aiQ a recently declassified report
shows the United States exploded a nuclear device
using the special kind of plutonium on an unknown
date. The paper said the test was declassified July
29, but was never made public.
Conception Preservation Committee. la vocall)' acalnlt the (.NG
plant.
MARKING, WHO SAYS ms GROUP includes Sierra Cl\Jb
leaders and several 1core other organizationa .. basically oppoeed t.o
this whole LNG technology," explained:
"A couple of years from now, when this 'crisis' trumped up by
the gas companies disappears, there's coint to be an LNG facilit.y at
Point Cooceptioo. It's planned as a mile-lone T-pler, wttb ~m
enou&h for two 1,000·foot supertankers ud one waJUnc to unload.
Onshore, there's four 13-story storage tanks and the recassilication
plant. Then there's 200 miles of pipeline. It's enormous."
"Uthe LNG facility ls sited there," says Marking, ••other in-
dustry will naturally follow. We'll lose one of the la.st semi-wild
parts of the Southern Calllornia coast." ·
HARRELL FLETCHER IS A SANTA Maria furniture store
owner, chairman or the Santa Barbara County Board of
Supervisors, and prime mover of the attempt to create Loa Padres
County, which would include Point Conception.
He is also ah-aid the county is losing control or shoreline de·
velopment, but be wants the LNG plant built here.
Says Fletcher: "l understand the LNG facility would ultimately
be worth something Uke $2 bUlioo. That would bring in property tax -
es of about $12 mlllion a year, because we'd not only be able to tu
tbe plant-but also 200 miles of pipeline and all the 1as that flows
throughiL .
I
.. IF WE CAN GET THE LNG facility at Conception,•• predicts ·
Fletcher, "and if the voters approve Los Padres County,' it would
pay 40 percent of tbe new county's tax base. We'd be in beautiful
shape. ·
"The Sierra Clubbers are opposed to 11 plant in Conception,"
Fletcher says, "Maybe they'd rather see it in the heart of Los
Angeles where it might kill millions of people if it blew up. The cnly
thing you'd kill at Point Conception would be three-toed frogs."
Santa Barbara attorney George H. Allen, wbo represents
Hollister Ranch and more than 100 owners of parcels of at least 100
acres, disagrees with Fletcher.
.. WE'RE CONCERNED WITH THE safety of that huge facili-
ty," says Allen. "ltisn't moral oretb.icaJ toexpose200 peoplebere to
a facility that's too dangerous to put at Oxnard oc Los An&eles
Harbor.
"We're also opposed to the facility on the eround.s of reliability.
Point Conception is known as the 'Cape Hom of the Pacific• and this
entire coast Is called the •graveyard ofshtps. "' .
Allen said the homeownen have hired a marine weather expert
for research to back up their ~tenUon that because of high winds,
strong currents and dense fogs that have plagued sailors in the San-
ta Barbara Channel for centuries the LNG port facility ••would be
closed at least 2S percent or tbe time ...
.. WE A.RE SCARED OF IT," says Allen. "But we're basing our
opposition on economic grounds because we're afraid not enough.
people will WOl'J')' about our safet.y."
THE ORIGINAL
SHEEPHERDER
BREAD
COPYRIGHT 1938
, II~ Wlrw•loftt
CONSTRUCTION OF LNG TERMINAL COULD CLOSE LIGHTHOUSE
The 121-year-old Point Conception Lighthouse Is Near Cojo Bay
By Brown Solons OK
The newspaper said the test was confirmed by a
s pokesman for the Energy Research and Develop..
ment Administration. The ERDA said details of the
explosion, conducted by the Los Alamos Scientific
Laboratory at the Nevada weapons test site, were
s till classified.
OliW Port1 E•p~• Ellftl
SACRAMENTO CAP> -California Is reported-
ly a production center for child pornography -
hence the state Assembly has voted for tougher
penalties for employers in the booming business.
The members voted
complaint that the ap· STATE 70-0 Tuesday despite a ( J
NOW OPEN IN
LAGUNA BEACH
Aerosol Spray LNG at
Point Site Ban ~ nn,,~'ed SACRAMENTO (AP) fI_r _r ~&I -A blll that strongly
Ca vors Point Conception
SACRAMENTO <AP> -Sales of nuorocarbon a a t h e s i t e f o r
aer0601 spr~s will be banned in California on April California's first flq-
15, 1979, under a bill aianed into law by Gov. Ed· uefied natural gas
mund Brown Jr. terminal bas been. sent t.o
LegialatiV"e sponsors of the measure, Sen. John
Dunlap, <D·Napa), and Assemblyman John
Vasconcellos, CD-San Jose), told reporters after the
signing Tuesday tha1 California's action sbould
serve "as a lenr" to make sure that the federal
government follows thto'Uah with its proposed b&1r.
The bill follows pTOposed federal reeuJaUons
that would ban th• manufacture of tbe compaund
Oct. 15, 19'78, and ban the product in interat1te
commerceinApril 1979.
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
Gray Da\tis, Brown ·s
executive secretary,
said Brown is expected
to alp it soon. "We think
It's a good bill, the,reault
of hundreds of hours of
work.
''IT'S NOT the preciae
bill" Brown has pro·
posed, but "it accom-
modates tbe very real
need to insure adequate
supplies of natural gas
as well as very
le1lUmate health and
safet..v quesUons."
A somewhat reluctant
Senate approved the bW
30·1 Tuelday.
Pomt Cooceptton ls the
only propoial of tbe/u
COtJJpanl• that ~oul " allowed by the meuure•a deftnition of a remote site based on
population denslty of no
more than 80 pel'loDS per
1quare mne wilhln four
mil .
ZVltN SENATE
tiacbra crJtlciled the .... lllon. • . -·Ben.: RalpJs DWI <D·
Glldlila), ealled lt 11u
Nd a 11111 u l'n ever
..... ~ it "'60lcl
proactt in the bill was
naive. Protested As· --------
semblyman J ohn Vascon-
cellos, <D-San Jose), "We're looking at the wrong
end of the problem. The problem of child porno-
graphy is not a problem of supply, primarily, but a
problem of demand.''
OU ...... L...,• ll•1'elled
LOS ANGELES (AP> -The state Air
Resources board has unveiled a new nine-part plan
to control oil emissions, which ARB Cbalr~an Tom
Quinn calls the largest s ingle source of poUuUon in
the Le» Angeles Basin. ·
Quin outlined the prop-am Tuesday to the peo-
ple responsible for complying with new reslric· tiona-oilexecutlves.
o.p. Ilse •I 6• Rd"9 ,.,,.
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Police omcera may be
liable for wrongful death damages lf they aboot to
death neetn1 suspects wbo are not eh&aced 1n.
violence, the state court ot appeal baa ruled.
1n a 2·1 decision, the secood appellate dJstrlct
court ruling which held that a Lone Beach
policeman was not negligent wben he fatally 1bot an
unarmed college student alleaedly IJeelnt a burglary in 1972.
Gelletle Onll••w P•ua
BERlCELEY (AP> -An ordinance r.1utat.J.Dc
research on aenetlc alteratlon bu won unanJmoua
approval from the Berkeley City CouQcU.
The ord..laance adopted Tuetday c&Ua for any oraaniutlon wllhlna to conduct recombtna.ot DNA
reaell'Cb tn &be city to be wpected and approyed by
clty OUb}4c beahb Offtctala. ktele7 lt tbe ~t clb' fn Cillfomta and second ln tho naUoo tO adopt the reruJat.lon.
FOR THE FIRST TIME IN THE U.S.A./!/
The European Concept of:
EXHIBITION BREAD BAKING
S.. your own bread b.ing ~ed fmh oll doy In our new store irt
LAGUNA BEACH .
The SCHAT Fomlfy from Bishop, Cqlifornio, home of the only original
SHEEPHERDER IRE.AO-1938 Ja now, bringing to you in this new way
thtfr fainous product11
"SHEEPHERDER BREAD'':
mode .tfh fllgh pro,. un~ Montono W'Mot.
"SHEEP.HE~R CHEEZE BREAD"8 1977:
, ihr.dc.W~ folcW by hand Into ~d« hod.
"HONl·SKQUAW BREAD"8 1977:
o blend of whole wMot flow ond rye flour, contain• roilift iuice. hoqey
ond ledthln.
"VOLKOREN BREAD"e 19n: . ~
full groin Ovtch lbw-cokwy Malth breod1 cofttolf\s roltfn fuQ c.d fO\llt
he.My, but no IU90f', lhoffltnlno « pntMMrtive•.
"We ateo male• Sour Dough 8,.ed'' '
ALSO: Cookies and PaatrieS
We .-u~,,,,...., pwlW..,,,., In aft our""'*' goods_.
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Wedn!lldey, September 1~. 1977 s DAILY PILOT 87
'Goldea 0Jiport .. li9'
Ex-inmate Firids
Investment Joys
avqvt.VI-' PORTER
Fred Parker. 31, has been lnvestJ.ni ln the st.ock market
for the last nine months. What's new about that? Two facts
separate him from most other flrsl·llme lnveston.
(1) UntU recently, Parker was an inmate at Ohio Stale
Reformatory in Mansfield, serving a two-to 15-year sen-
tence on a narcotics and robbery conviction.
(!)THE VALUE OF IDS POllTFOUO bu cUmbed at
leaat 2S percent since the end of 1978. wblle the Dow Jones
industrial avenie has slumped alm06t lf percent and the
New York Stock Exchange index bas fallen more than 7~
percent.
Puker and several other inmates became interested in
stocks while taking a cont.inulnf education course run in
cooperation with nearby Ashland Colleae. The courae ls
part of a two-year associate degrff pro1ram. About 140 of
tbe prison 's 2,600 in---. --------mates are enrolled.
· Outside speakers
are routinely asked to
speak to the students,
among them James
Nordstnun, a vice presi·
dent of Prescott, Hall
\
Money's
Worth
and Turben, investment bankers. Nordstrum spoke about
the stat.eolthestoclc market and the economy and mentioned
a fewst.ocksbethoughtmightbegoodtnvestments.
"Parker and a few other men asked me for more in·
formation," he said. "I sent them additional facts about
several companies and. shortly thereafter, a couple of them
sent me a letter requesting that I 6pen accounts ror them.'•
SAID PARKER: "IT WAS A GOLDEN opportunity to
take part in the economic interesll ol our country, to
become part of the system even t.bou&h we were locked up."
Parker, on parole, living with his family in Cleveland
and atudying for a degree in finance at Cleveland State
University, Is hooked on the stock market and convinced
that many of hls former fellow inmates are potential ln·
vest.ors.
"One major reason why people commit crimes for
which they are jailed," he said. "'ls because they want to
make money. But either they didn't have the means to go
a bout it or weren't wllling to take the Ume to learn bow.
"I RAN ACRO~ INMATES ALL the time who would
bull about ways they were going to make money. When I
began talking about dividends and price-eamincs raUos,
they were fascinated. Guys can Identify with success. Soon
a number of them were telling me, 'Hey, I want to look at
your Wall Street Journal or Business Week.' We'd co out in
the yard and inatead of exercisi.ng we'd swap intormaUon
about i.nvestmenls."
Parker launched his market portCollo with his modest
savings.
''Many guys have small bank accounts," according to
Parker. "You're locked up, so you don't need much for
personal expenses. Buying securities certainly beats put·
ting your money in a nbn·interest bearing account available
at the reformatory."
"A FEW OTHER INMATES ABE TJDNXJNG about
forming a profit-making corporation aimed at dolng
something in relation to juvenile consulUng," said John
Flood, director of continuing education at the reformatory.
"I doubt that this has ever been done before, but there's
nothing like trying. It shows an investment iD the system.
and once the men have got that, then they are less prone to
become aggresst ve toward that same system.''
Countians Win
Job Advancement
Beth Crlmmlnga has been appointed branch manager of
Union Federal Savings and Loan Assoc:latloa's Mission Vie·
jo branch.
She succeed~ Dorl Voss. who bas resigned to pursue
personal interests.
Miss Crim min gs is a for mer training specialist for
Union Federal and asalstant manager of the main office. ..
Keltb Swayne, Laeuna Beach, has been named presl·
dent and chief execuUve officer of the CaM·Swa.yne Com·
pany, Santa Ana. .
Fonnef' vice president and general manager, he suc-
ceeds his father, Amos Swayne. who, with partner Paul
Case, founded the firm in 1943. Amos Swayne ass es the
position of chairman of the board or directors.
Before jolnlng the company ln 1969,
Swayne served a.s a commissioned of·
fleer ln the U.S. Navy and was assoclat·
ed with the Dole Corp., division of Castle
and Cook, San Jose. ' • Alan 8. Lam. Laguna Beach, bu
been added to the loss control staff of
Western Employers luuuce Com·
pany, Fullerton, as a specialist In the
handlln~of toxlc c.bemlcals. A Californla
workets compen.aatlon insurer, Western •••v••
Employers bas changed Its name from Leatherby
Insurance Company.
ft
l:lo*ard Gad, Latona Beach has been appointed area
manager for A\rco Coaunlllll&y D;;eloPers. lac., Lacuna
Ntcuel. He is Involved with market and consumer research, ules and pubUc rel1Uon1 and ls tbo dlrector of the Lacuna
Nll(Uel Information Center. He ts a CorlJler bousiq analyat for Market ProfJles ..
trvint.
* ~ FeMral SaYlap auouactd the appolntment of Jerr7.11Ulmler to manapr of their Buntlnston .BMeh
branch at MUnotla and Adams. He l• ronner manaaer or
tbe S8n PedrO branch.
llGbed B•• former HuntJnaton Beach ma.n.aaer.
mOftll to Sa Pedro In tbe same c1p1cJ&.y
-
-DAILY PllOl Wedneld•X· &eptembe1 14, 1t71
.
COASTWATCD: Tonigllt'i Tl' Fare
\\I IJ'\t "U.\ \
!V£'NINO soo•• N!WI 0 THE HE.AVVWEIGHT8
A night of t\Nvyw41igh1 1><>x1no
•••luring Keu N0t1on va Lor•nio
Zanon. Jimmy Voung 11• Jody
Ballard. Aon Lyle va Stan W.trd,
anct I tarry Hotrne. 111 Howard
Sm11n at Caetat 1 Patace lr1 LH
Vegaa D BONANZA
A Ha c:i.ptaln and h11 daugnter
a1r111t1 •I the PonderoN G WILD, WILD WEST
'The Night Of The Druid's Blood1'
A magician and a be~utitul g111 are
suspected in the vlolenl death• ol
a number or dlattngulahed sc1en-
llsts
.. MICKEY MOUSE CLUB a> I DREAM OF JEANNIE
&l) SESAME STREET
'1!) MISTER ROGERS
5:30 CD TOM ANO JERRY
«!) ROOM222
'1!) VILLA ALEGRE
8:001J CBS NEWS
0 EMERGENCY ONEI
A female 1ournalisl Incurs the
wrath ol the entire fire department
when she accuses Gage, DeSoto
and Dr Brackett ol chauvinism,
exploitation and denial ol opportu-
nities to women fJ NEWS 0 MY PARTNER THE GHOST
Alcoholic spirits give a con man
the psychic power to see ghostly
spirits. CD THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY
Danny goes oul lor Little League
and becomes a strike-out king.
(!) ALIAS SMITH AND JONES
Curry and Heyes are set up to take
the blame tor a bank robbery
El!) ELECTRIC COMPANY
'1l) LOOK AT ME
"The Single Parenr
@)ABC NEWS
6:30 iJ MOVIE * * * .. Experiment In Terror
(Part 1) (1962) Glenn Ford, Lee
Remick A t&1Tor-st11cken girl must
aid the F.B.I. In the capture ol a
master criminal ( 1 hr . 30 min ) CD THE ODD COUPLE
Ell) ZOOM
'1l) PUBLIC POLICY FORUM
"Freedom 01 The Preas: First
Admendment Protections"
()) CBS NEWS
@) MERV GRIFFIN
7:00 I) LIARS CLUB
D ABC NEWS
0 CONCENTRATION CD I LOVE LUCV
"Lucy Goes To The Rodeo"
(!) THE F.B.I.
Erskine goes undercover as a
bllnd, eleC1ronic scientist to trap a
well organized Intelligence ring
Ell) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT
(J) TO TELL THE TRUTH
7:30 0 NEWLYWED GAME
D MATCH GAME P.M 0 JOKER'S WILO
WILL SAMPSON, • Creek lndl•n, stars In his
first TV role as en Arizona state trooper Who
rescues MARIANNA HILL from bank robbers
in the special film, "RelentleH, •• airing tonight
at 9:30 on CBS, Channel 2.
CD THE BRADY BUNCH
Greg and his teammates steal a
rival school's mascot
fl!) 28TONIGHT
'1l) THE SESSION
"St. Louis Ragtimers"
Cl) UNT AMEO WORLD
"Getting The Job Done"
®J FAMILY FEUD
8:00 f) Cl) SPIDER-MAN
(Premiere) A student scientist
(Nicholas Hammond), bitten by a
radloactlOe spider. becomes
endowed with superhuman
strength and pursues a mind-con-
trolling extortionist (Thayer David)
0 MOVIE
••11, "Loving You" (1957) Elvis
Presley, Usabelh Scoll A member
ol a h1llbllly band eventually wins
the heart ol the band s female 1
singer
U MOVIE * * * "Whispering Smith' ( 1948)
Alan Ladd, Brenda Marshaft A
special agent Is assigned to cap-
tur4? a gang of train robbers, one ol
whom is his close friend. ( 1 hr .. 30
min.)
0 @) EIGHT IS ENOUGH
(Season Premiere) "Is There A
Doctor In The House?" Tom and a
temporarily single Doc Maxwell
(Michael Thoma) try their lucl< as
R at hags G u i d e
fMO\l'IM •re tated <t<<Oroinq to bOa
Offf(,t AUftndoin<• MoYlf\ for T \I Art>
1u09eo bv • trl l•c 1
• • • • -Excellent
• * • -Very Gootl
• • -Gooo
• -Fair
• -Poor
middle-aged swinging singles
0 MOVIE **'It "Captain Apache" ( 1972)
Lee Van Cleel. Carroll Baker.
When an Indian commissioner Is
brutally kllled, a lull-blooded
Apache Is assigned to investigate.
(2 hrs.)
CD WILO, WILO WORLD OF
ANIMALS
"Jungle River"
Q) PERRY MASON
M&1on suspects that the pretend-
ed suicide of a house builder is
really a getaway plot In a land
swindle
El!) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"Upstairs Oownstairs. Dls1llusion··
Hudson s future as butler Is threat-
ened when he is seen at an exhibi-
tion In the company of a young glrl
'1l) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
·Upstairs. Downstairs: Such A
Lovely Man" The Bellamys lace a
social d1lemma--Vlrglnla is Invited
out by a rich and politically 1nlluen-
tlal man whose help her husband.
Richard, needs.
8:30 CD CROSS-WITS
9:00 0 ®) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
(Season Premiere) "Angels. In
Paradise" A new angel, Kris Mun-
roe (Cheryl Ladd) end Don Ho join
In the search when Charlie Is kid-
napped by a Hawaiian syndicate
leader (France Nuyen) CD MERV GRIFFIN
Q) BILLY GRAHAM CRUSADE
fil) CHILDHOOD
"Easter Tells Such Dreadful Lies"
by Barbare Waring Contemplation
ol the mysteries of love between
adults works havoc In the mind of
an imaginative nine-year-old girl
'1l) AUSTIN CITY LIMITS
"Guy Clark I Steve Fromholz"
Songwriter Clark sings his newest
hits Fromholz of 'Ttlxas Tnlogy'
ABC Forges Ahead
But, NB C Gra bs Top Tiro Positio~
NEW YORK IAP) ABC won the
first week ratings battle of the new
television season. but !ailed to match
the recotd-breaking success of last
season's "Roots" with "Washington:
Be hind Closed Doors,·• according to
A.C. Nielsen ratings made available
Tuesday.
The No. l show of 46 rated programs
was "James at 15. •· NBC's Monday
movie. Another NBC show. "Laugh
In." was a close second.
The Sunday and Thursday episodes
of "Washington•• were third and
fourth, respectively, and Tuesday·s
was eighth. Other ins tallments of the
12~-hour televis ion adaptation of
John D. Ehrlichman's fictionalized
account of the Watergate scandal
finishe<J in 16th, 17th and 25th places.
FOR THE WEEK endlng Sept. 11.
was aired. was an unprecedented 35.S
In order. the top 10 shows last week
were:
"Jam es at 15," a 23.8 rating,
representing 17.3 million homes;
"Laugh In,·· 23.7, or 17.3 million;
"Washington." Sunday, 23.6, or 17.2
million; "Washington." Thursday. 231 or 16.7 minion; "Elvis on Tour,"
NBC, and "Miss America,·· both 22.9,
or 16.7 million; ··six Million Dollar
Man." ABC. 22.2. or 16.2 million :
"Washington." 22. or 16 million ;
"What's Happening!·· ABC. 21.S. or
15.6 million, and "Logan's Run."
CBS's Tuesday movie. 21.2, or 15.4
million.
THE NEXT to shows were.
fa.me alnga about lite In the Souttt--
we.t.
9:30 G RELENTLESS
A band of er()()t(a, l•d by a combat
veteran (John Hiiierman), 11 pur·
sued acroaa the high plains and
snowy mountain• of Arizona by a
trooper (Sam Watchman) and an
FBI agent (Monte Markham)
D FILM FEATURE ~
())MOVIE . ***tn ·1c1a11 0 1 '63" (1973)
Jamee Brolln, Joan Hackett. Whan
a woman attends a claa& reunion,
she dl1COVer1 herself tempted to
leave her husband for an old col-
lege flame. •
10:00 0 $100,000 NAME THAT
TUNE
DD NEWS
Q) ROOM222
A boy, raised In the wildarnesa.
learns that clvlllzatlon haa some-
thing to offer.
fl!) P1CCAOILL V CIRCUS
"The Author Of Beltrafflo" Henry
James' conlllct between an Engllah
novellst and his wife for the affec-
tions of their ailing young aon.
al) DOCUMENT ARV SHOWCASE
"Guess Who's Pregnant? One out
of eve<y ten American teen-age
girls.
10:30 D CD m NEWS
11:00 0 HOLL VWOOD
CONNECTION
D ~ NEWS 0 IRONSIDE
··Backfire"
CD FERNWOOD 2NIGHT
Gueata: Bar1h's Aunt Edith, defec-
tor Serge NabOlcov. ·
Cl) MARCUS WELBY, M.O.
When hla father suffer• a atr~e.
Dr. Kiiey faces a llfe.or-death d,cl·
alon.
tJ3 REALIDAOES
"Mestluje" Three dramatic
sketches ol Latino lam1ty Ille: 'If
You Dance The Rumba,' 'La Vlctl-
ma.' and 'Ay Cocomacaco ·
'1l) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT
11:10 f) ()) NEWS
11:30 D TONIGHT
Host; Johnny Carson G1£esll
Myron Cohen, James Garner.
0 LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
A plaln-looklng man ataggers Into
a police house and reports he has
been uaaulted by two love-
starved females.
0 llJ) STARSKY & HUTCH
"Lady Blue" Starsky and Hutch
Investigate the murder of an ex-
pollce woman who became a go-
S ports 011 Tl'
AFTERNOON
5:00 D THE HEAVYWEIGHTS
A ntght of heavyweight boxing
featuring· Ken Norton vs Lorenzo
Zanon: Jimmy Young vs Jody
Ballard, Ron Lyle vs Stan Ward;
and Larry Holmes vs Howard
Smith at Caesar's Palace 1n Laa
Vegas
NBC was a strong second and CBS a
thin third overall. Together Agaia
~dancer. (R) m NEWS 9 CAPTIONED ABC NEWS
11:.40 G (I) HAWAII FIVE..O
A computer. progra.mmed to solve
a murder. accuses one of McGar·
rett's own men -Duke. (R)
MORNING
12~00 fl .JWILIGHT ZONE
"The Trade-Ina" 0 MOVIE **'h "My Man Godfrey" (1967)
June Allyson, David Niven. A bum
la given a job as a butler In a 1SOCI·
etY' woman's house and turns out
to be a member of Austrian royal·
ty. (2 hrs.)
«!)MOVIE * * "Playgirl" ( 1954) Shelley
Winters. Barry Sullivan. A pretty
country girl looks for love and
exltement in the big city. ( 1 hr .. 30
min.)
12:30 D MOVIE **'h "Promises! Promlseal"
(1964) Jayne Manafleld, Marie
McDonald. Two couples become
distraught when one of the wives
becomes pregnant, alter the other
had tried so hard and falled (1 hr .
55mln.)
CD MOVIE **** "The Brave Bulls" (1951)
Mel Ferrer. Anthony Quinn. A
tamed matador overcomes his loas
of sell-conlldenCll to return to ttie
ring. (2 tirs.)
12:37 fJ ®l MYSTERY OF THE
WEEK
*'h "II It's A Man, Hang Up"~
(1975) Carol Lynley, Paul Angella.
A fashion model with counlleaa
male admlref's, Is pursuaded by a
mysterious. heavy-breathing
phone caller to change her ways.
(R)
12:408 (J) CBS LATE MOVIE * *'~ '1Money To Burn" (1973)
Miidred Natwick, E.G. Marshall. A
man In prison , with the help ol his
wife, engineers a multi-million dol-
lac counterfeiting scheme (R)
1:00 D TOMORROW
The government providing new
Identities for criminals who give
evidence for the proaec\Jtlon wfll
be d1SQISsed by Fred Graham, a
Wuhlnoton based correspondent;
Robert Metz will dlscusa th•
broadcasting Industry.
1:30Q) MOVIE **'Ir "Abandoned" (1949) Dennis
O'Keefe, Jetf Chandler. A con-
cerned newspaperman exposes
the black market baby racket. ( 1
hr., 30 min.)
2:0000 NEWS 0 MOVIES •*'Ir "The Raging Tide" (1952)
Rlehard Conte. Shelley Winters.
Al1er committing a murder, a rack-
eteer seeks refuge on a fishing
boat Bild tries to pin the murder on
the fisherman's son. (2 hrs.) ••'Ir "Mtsslsslppl Gambler"
( 1953) Tyrone Power, Julie Adams.
A riverboat gambler dec1des to
001ld a legitimate gambling house
In New Orleans. (2 hrs.)
• MOVIU
***~"The Strange One" (10151)
Ben Gazzara, Jutte WIJ90ft. A mm.•
tary • IChOol cadet terrorlz" hi•
loweraelu.men In an attempt to.
dlacredlt the aon of an offtc.t. (2
hrs.) ** "Crim inal Lawyer" (1951) Pat
O'Brien, Jane Wyatt. An atcohollc
crtmtnar laywer decides to defend
hi• friend wno hu been accused ot
murder. (2 hra.)
2:30 MOVIES
2:2151 NEWS
** "Madame•• (1983) SQS>hta.
Loren. Robert Houeln. A tlun~
dresa rlM• to the position of duch'
eas during the reign of Napoleon
( 1 hr .. 55 min.)
•'h "Island Prlncesa•• (1965) Mar \
cello Mastroianni, Siivan
Pampanlnl. A Spaniard's r~noe
with an Island princess i. c:ompff
cated by a local rebeltlon. ( 1 hr .. ,
min.)
2:4011 NEWS
3:00tl) NEWS
3:115 1J MOVIE ~ **'h 1'Man ln The Looking Glau'\
( 1965) Steve Fo«tst, Sue Uoyd
An art dealer dlsgUlses hJmaetf a(
a gangster and makes *' attem~
to thwart the theft of the Brill~
Crown Jewels. (1 hr .• 25 min.)·
4:40 8 NOONTIME ~
\o
Th u t-s dag's i ... Daytime ltlovfe• ; . t.
MORNING
O:OO D MOVIE * • * "Thunder Bay" ( 1953)
James Stewart. Joanne Dru. Trou.'1
ble erupts when shrimp fbhermart:
rnort to sabotaging off·ahore oif:
welfa. (2 hta.) •
10:00 D MOVIE ~ * * * "Wonder Man" ( 1945) Dan~
ny Kaye, Virginia Mayo. ~
nlghtclub entertainer's twl~
brother la accused of murder. (~
hrs.) ~
AFTERNOON ~
12:00 tD MOVIE !' * * * 'h "China Seas" ( 1935) Clartl
Gable, Jean Harlow. Piracy str1kM'
a ship carrying a valuable gold
shipment. (2 hrs., 20 rrMn.)
2:00 0 MOVIE * * * "Winchester 73", ( 1950j•
James Stewart, Shetley Winters. ~·
man's prized rifle Is stolen, and ti:
paues through many hand• ,
before It Is relurned. (2 hrs.) ;-
3:00 QI) MOVIE : ** * "The Hucksters" (1947):
Clark Gable, Deborah Kerr. A W-:
veteran flnda he can not return to~
his adv.rtlslng job. (2 hrs.)
-3:30 D MOVIE * ** "Run, Simon, Run" (1970t,
Burt Reynolds. Inger Stevena. An
Indian ts tOl'n between hi• desire to.
avenge his mother's death and hW.
love IOI' a white woman. (1 hr .. ~
min.)
Tonight's TV
Highlights
CBS tJ 8:00 Spider Man. This new ;•
/ action-fantasy show features Nicholas ~!
Hammond as a spider -bitten student en-!~
do wed with superhuman strength.
Thayer David guests as the heavy. ·" "i-
ADC fJ 9:00 -Charlie's Angels. The
new angel <Cheryl Ladd' makes her de-
but in tonight's season premiere episode
as Charlie is kidnaped by a Hawaiian syn-,
dicate leader <France Nuyen 1.
~BC I) 8:00 · · "Loving You." It's
Elvis Pres ley in one of his earlier movies
<circa 1957' as a hillbilly band singer ~
pursuing the female singer <Lizabeth
Scott>. .
CBS tJ 9 :30 .. Relentless." A •
When ABC scheduled its $7 .S million
production of "Washington" two
weeks earlier than the usual begin·
ning of the season, the other networks
counterprogramed with blockbuster
specials. The number of programs rat-
ed -46 against the wsual 65 --Is ln-
dicaliveof thcnumber of specials .
"60 Minutes." CBS: "Emmy
Awards," NBC ; "Darty Harry,"
NBC's Saturday movie: ··us Against
the World," NBC; "Happy Days,"
ABC: "Washington," Friday, ABC;
"Washington.•• Wednesday, ABC:
"Bionic Woman," NBC; "Welcome
Back, Kotter," ABC, and "The Maile
of ABC."
Sid Caesar and Imogene Coca, who teamed up on "Your Show of
Shows" from 1950 to 1954, will1be reunited on the Johnny Carson
show Friday night, their first appearance together in 10 years.
manhunt in Arizona is the subject of this
TV movie with Monte Markham and Sam f 1
Watchman chasing the bad guys, led by
John Hillerman. •
Although the counterprogramlng
strategy largtdy worked,
.. Washington" cut lnto the ratings of
such traditionally bl& draws as the
• Emmy awards show and the Miss
America contest. And it won tour of
the slx nights on which it .-as all'ed.
NBC won the other three nl1hts.
ABC'1 ~TINO POR the week was
18.3, which repraenta an esUmated
13.3 mllllon households. NBC had a
11.s. 0t 12.1 mUllon, and CBS had a ts.a. or 11.( rollllon.
WE.4.YER TO PUY
WIFE BEATER
LOS ANGELES IAP> Dennis
Weaver and Sally Struthers star as
husband and wlfe In "Battered," and
NBC movie about wife beat-
ing ... Character actor Richard X.
Slattery, a former New York City
policeman, joins NBC'a ''CPO
Sharkey" as Don Rlcles' command-
ing ofOcer ••. Dick Martin. formerly
of .. Laugh-ln, •• directs el1bt episodes
'>f CBS' "Bob Newhart Show" ln his
new job as creative consultant for
MTM Enterpriaet. By contrast, ABC'• rat!na for the
week endina Jan. 30, when "Roots" ~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~--~~...;.
.. ,.-w.....-r1t
flt Ill~
'-nttsu MACHINrll t
-1119
-·------:.:::.. ......... _ .
--~~..::.-: =----.... -.................... ., =-~--~ .......
"THE SPY WHO LOVED ME'*
"THE SORCERER" (PG)
"SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT ..
0 THE STING .. (~)
"NEW YORK. NEW YORK"' (PG)
.. RETURN OF THE PCNK PANTHER ..