HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-09-21 - Orange Coast Pilote Beac • IX oters u
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Newport's Ex-Chief
Eyes Assembly Race
DAILY PILOT
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WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 21, 1977
VOL 7t, NO i.4, 4 SICTIONS, .. l'AGIS
II
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Nixon Staff Drugged Overseas
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Ex-agent's Claim
CIA Tried
Use at Party? ..
WASHINGTON <AP) -A former CIA psycholo&ist has told a
flabbergasted Senate subcommittee that he once planned to spray
LSD on a houseful of unsuspecting California partygoers but gave
up the idea because the unseasonably warm weather meant the win·
dows could not be closed.
In frustration. another CIA agent closeted himself in the
bathroom of a house in San Francisco and sprayed himself with the
hallucinogenic drug, which was in an aerosol can.
THE AUDIENCE IN THE SENATE Caucus Room exploded
with laughter Tuesday as the witness, Dr. David Rhodes, told hla
story.
"Do I understand that three grown men flew from the East
coast to the West coast to recruit people at bars for a party so that
they could be sprayed with LSD?" asked Sen. Edward M. Kennedy
<D·Mass.)
Rhodes said that he and another agent went to San Francisco In
the late 1950s and s pent a week getting to know people in bars "so
that we could subsequently invite them to a party."
HE SAID THEY WANTED TO learn if LSD could be ad·
ministered in small quantities by being sprayed in the ai~.
Rhodes said the amount of LSD in the spray was very small, "so
s mall that it would take a practiced person lo see any result."
He said the CIA already knew the effect or LSD on persons who
knew they were being given the substance, and that the agency
believed it importabt to learn what effect it bad on people who did
not know.they had received LSD.
Btrr RHODES SAlD THAT IT WAS discovered that the house to
be used for the party bad no air conditionJng, meanina the doon
and windows would }\ave to be kept open.
"The weather defeated us,•• Rhodes said. ''We decided to
scratch lt at that point."
Rhodes said later that be does not believe the experiment ever
wu repeated. .
BlJT HE SAID THAT BEFORE tbe &roup of aaeots left San
Francisco they had one further mission.
"We attended the first D&tlonal convention of lesbians," Rhodes
said. ·
He said the purpose was to test a psyc;hoJogical theory, but did
not elabora~. ·
Newport's Glavas
Coverup for · Nudity I
""wi..,.... SIGN URGes BLACK'S BEACH BATHERS TO PUT ON THEIR CLOTHES ANO GO VOTE
But St n Diego Citizen• ReJect 'Swimsuit Optional' Stretch of Sand
~~~~~~----~~~
Cash Stolen ·
From Church
~Newport
Sii,n Diego Voters
Nix Beach NuJ,ity
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Sup·
porters of th& nation's only
municipally sanctioned nude
beach say they will try to aet the
City Council to reject the ap-
parent dei:i on by voters to
make swim its mandatory.
The unof clal tally on a prop-
os i U on bannln1 nudity at
Black's Beach wu 86,113 vot.et tor the proposition and 70,884 for
contlnutna th'e "1whn1uit op·
tional" rult pu1ed by tbe council
1n 1974.
Peculiar
Actions
Reported
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
former science chief o( the CIA
told a Senate panel today be was
asked to determine if any rpem·
bers of President Nixon's travel·
ing party were drugged during a
trip to an "unfriendly .. foreign
country sometime in 1971.
Dr. Sidney Gottlieb, who left
the CIA in 1973, said the Presi-
dent definitely was not drugged
but that other members of his
riarly. including his personal
physician, Dr. Walter Tkach, ex-
hibited peculiar symptoms. in·
eluding outbursts of crying at in·
appropriate moments.
Describing the symptoms, Dr.
Gottlieb said, "My best recollec-
tion was that it was disoriented
and unusual in terms of the
person's normalbehavior.
"lnappropriate tears and cry.
ing I remember as part of the
manifested behavior, .. Dr. Gott-
lieb told a Senate health sub-. committee.
Dr. Gottlieb did not name the
foreign country involved noF' did
he identify the drug suspected or
causing the unusual symptoms.
According to. records of the
White House transportation of-
fice, however, Nixon did not
travel in 1971 to any countries
that were considered unfriendly.
He went to the Azores to meet
with the French President Pom-
pidou and to Bermuda for a
meeting with the British prime
minister.
Otherwise. the records showed
<See DRUGGED, Page AZ)
Coast
•
We a t h e r
Mor'nlng clouds will bum
off yieldlng lair, warmer
weather through Thurs·
day. Lows ton}Jht wlll be in
the 50s. Hlgtu. Thursday in
the mid·70s.
Mmibrr1 of Oril cltd> Hf
fl/f to ~-T~ belong tq Cl~
Ttllt Club of Orange CoimtJI
Inc. 8'orv, pMCoe, CU
• rl ! DAil Y PILOT
Kiss Me, Etee Fool . . .
When the Hardy Boys telev1s1on show
moved to Lion Country Safan, lrvmc.·. for
filming this week. guest st<ir Anne
I .ockharl, whose mother June co·sturred
with Lassie for several }t•ars, found some
t, • ~ \ \ , t' , ~ I rouf.tooted rnends ot her own.· Yerttaps
we '11 learn what secrets .she's trading.
with these mouslon ewes -when the. show is'
aired on Channel 7 in mid·October.
Federal Pay
Hi/re Signed
WASHINGTON (AP>
President Carter is grant-
mg federal white-collar
workers and military
personnel a 7 .05 percent
pay increase that will cost
the taxpayers about $3.4
billion.
The White House an-
nouncement Tuesday said
the hike will go into effect
Oct. 1 and cover 3.4 million
people on the federal
payroll. Jt 1s below the 8.8
percent increase sought by
a group of federal employe
union leaders.
Front Page Al
DRUGGED. •
that Nixon left the contlMntaJ
United States only for brief
weekend trips lo friend Robert
Abplanalp's home in the
Bahamas and to the Virgin
Islands for a weekend stay
Gottlieb re fused to answer
questions as he left the hearing,
saying, "I'm not going to talk
a bout anything to anybody now.'·
He also did n,ot identify those
persons he said' asked the CIA to
check out the possible use or
drugs but said they "wanted us to
• help determine and review it that
might have happened."
Dr. Gottlieb made the dis·
~losure as an addition to written
testimony which centers around
the CIA 's own drug experimenta-
tion program over a 2l·year
period slarting in the early 1950s.
Gottlieb also said that it was
his understanding that in most
cases foreign intelligence agents
used drugs to steal documents
from American officials. He did
nol say this was the case in the al-
leged drugging of members of
the Nixon traveling party. He
gav<' no reason for that alleged ocrurrence.
<:ottlieb was in general charge
of Lhe CIA's testing of mind alter-
ing drugs in the 21-year period
beginning in about 1952.
Quints Meet
SextiqJlets
TbxYO (AP> -South Africa's
sextuplets met Japan's quin-
tuplets today.
The 3 lh-year-old South
Africans and their parents called
on the l lh-year-old Japanese
children and their parents. The
children appeared to enjoy play-
ing together with toys and dolls.
The sextuplet., who are In
Japan for a television ap-
pearance, are the cbilren ot Colin
Rosencowitz, 41, a Cape ~own
clothing salesman, and his 19-
year-old wife, Susan. The quints•
parents are Yorlmltsu
Yamashita, 33, a radio and
television reparter. an,d his 27· year-old wife, Notik~
ORANOS COAIT s
DAILY PILOT
SavalasApp~ilra~ce
Ordered at Trial
MIAMI CAP) -Telly Savalas.
star of television's "Kojak," has
been ordered to appear in court in
the murder trial of a 15-ye~r-old
boy whose lawyer' is using TV
violence for his defense.
Circuit Court Judg~ Paul
Baker ordered Savalas a
sometime Newport Beach r~si
dent, to be in court Monday in case
the court deci.des his testimQDy
would be relevant in the trial of
Ronald Zamora, charged with
killingan82-year-oldsocialile. He
1s being tried as an adult.
Defense attorney Ellis ~ubin
has said Zamora's constan~ ex-
posure to TV crime shows such
as "Kojak." "Policewoman."
a nd a TV fi Im depicting
the Charles Mans on mass
murders wer e responsible for
"diseasing his mind and impair-
ing his behavioral conttols."
Rubin said the testimony is
necessary because "Kojak" is
Zamora's favorite crime show.
Savalas could not be reached
immediately for comment.
''ll was special to him
<Zamora ) and he was copying ,
what he saw," said Rubin.
He s aid Savalas "does have· •
something to contribute and is
familiar with the effects of TV
violence ... " Al~gh he brderedS..';+s~
appear in court, Baker expressed
reservations Tuesday that the ac-
tor could lend anything to the
trial.
"What does he know about lh1$
case?" Baker asked Rubin at a
pre-trial conference. "I don't
think his personal opinion is
pertinent. Has he met or ~ver
talked with the defendant?"
Whether the actor testifies will
be determined next week after he
gives a statement to the defense,
authorities said. Baker said he
would read Savalas' comments
and then decide whether the
E'ro• Page AJ
GLAVAS •• ~·
the California Chiefs of Police
Association.
''I think I understand the
legislative process and what il is
that permits a legislatodo beef-
Cecti ve. I understand the faults
and well as the virtures of the system," he said.
Glavas said he bas not set a
deadline for reaching his de-
cision, although he noted be would
continue to con.sider the idea for
thenextfewweeb. ., • ., ., _ .. ... "" . .....
Search Ret!~
EUREKA (.AP~ -n.t> Coast
Gu atd ti~lic9ptU&· a tid an
airplape fanned out-over the
Northern California cqilst at
dawn today~ ,-e$umil)I ·• search
tor two va!ll.sb,ed . •allOlj. The
1DtlS1ng roen"S ;!O>feot ftllboat,
Vagabond, WU dis~~ Tues· ct.~r drirtlna about~~ miles nonnwestotbere. ,.... .... ~ ... .. -
testimony will be needed and
permitted.
Zamor.a am. Dm:rell Agrella,
14, ha'(e be.en chareed with
burglarizing Miamf.Beac!h home
or Elinor.Haagarit on.June 4 and
killing hec .. when ebe •returne4
home and surpt1ised. them.
Agrella is to be tried separately
Nov. 7. · ..
Savalas ·spoke out against
violence on te-1,~vision last
weeken<l during 1l "look-alike"
promotional contest held here
last week. But he said the
particular "Kojak" episode
earlier described by Rubin did
not exist.
• ' 4.1 ,•
Fro,,; Page Al
~l)ITY ••.
1974 ordinance is repealed. ,
The publicity efforts· of both
s ides in the final weeks of the
campaign were almost strident.
A flyw 1distributed bl{•the
"Save t.11? B'eaches.cc>mrw1lee"
dlMed for ah end tO i\ud~ b8thing
in public, "not so much to pre-
vent sin, which nydity rpa..y or
fia..Y n~t bc.P'-' t~e Defz:.pcca;on OJ *1·· • \ fl ~ .J, 1 ~, i
Arguments were bandied
about that taxpayers ml1bt be re·
quired'to pa'y to provide sate ac-
c,~s~ pattw apd proyide Ufepard
stations and restroom& on the
beach.
Radio talk shows. bad many
calls from people concerned
about reports that childr~ bad
been P!¥>tographed at Black's
and that "bQdy painting" was
prevalent. .
Altho'lgb a city councilman ~aid .he beard reports of sexual
intercourse on the beach, POiice
said crime at Black's has prof>.
ably been lower than at .other
municipal beaches.
Four.Facing .. .. ...... .
~aigDr'1ent
~Ga!"b~
Four people described by,ar-
r~sting omeers. as members' of a
bopkmak.ing ria3 thl bro\lihl in
at least •.ooo a week wlll be ar-
raigned Thursday ia West
Orange County municipal court.
Faclng court ac·tion on
bookmaking cbarees are George
Hatanaka, 33, and his wife, Lana,
31, of Buena Park,1 q4 Vern G.
Wharton, 57, and !Us son, Kb\, 25,
;(If Garden Drove,•,:
• Sberitf 'f officers workect with
Garden Grovel~ Bue.na Park
pPlice ~ a t ee-month tn-
>'stica that ded w~th the
arresto eacc tout. ·.
Arresting eu sA\4 an
Irvine address was one of several
locationll uaed by the def end ants
to accept beta on the outcome of
horse races •
,.. ,. : .
Lance A@tions· . .
I
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
SecLaritiea and Eichange Com-
mission said today it is ln the
"early stages" of investigating •,
Budget Director Bert Lance and
the Nallonal Bank of Georjia,
but denied i.hat it was workinl on
a civil fhudsuit ii'\ ttie ma.Ltei:;,
The S°EC has been inquiring in -
to whether Lance and the bank he
beaded in 1975 and 1976 made a
complete discloS'41'e or tranaac-
.Peace Talks
" . . ...
'Hopeful'
WASJUNGTON CAP) -Egyp-
tian Foreign Minister Ismail
Fahmy met today with Secretary
of S!ate Cyrus R. Vance and said
he believes a Middle East peace
conference can be convened In
Geneva before the end of the
year, but only if all parties work
hard toward that objective.
Coming here following a visit
by Israeli Foreign Minister
Moshe Dayan, Fahmy met with
Vance at the State Defartment
for 45 minutes before goa.ng to the Whit~ Hous·e for a meeting with
President Carter. .
Asked by reporters about the
prospects for a Geneva con-
ference, Faht'ny said: "We are
working hard to accomplish this
target. If it is possible. it would
be a very good achievement. If
·we work bard, it will be possible.
I hO{>eSO .. . .
Hardship Claimed
LONDON CA P > A Roman
Catholic commission accused
Rhodesia 'a white government to-
day of putting 580,000 blacks into
conditions of "great hardship"
, by moving them into so-called
protected villages to gel them
away from the black guerrillas
fighting the government.
.
tlons lo istockholdera.
It was di1closed iD con-
1resslona1 test,Jmony and press
accounts laat month tba~ the SEC
was conducting an investigation,
but today's ata~ment wu the
first~odunenton the matter. The
~noouncement did not say what
subjecta the SIC WU coosider·
ing, I
The SEC aald, •1n respmae to
inquiries. the commission said
today it was ln the early stages of
an lnV'eSti8at\On of certain mat-
ters involving the National Bank
of Georgia, and others but that no
conclusions had been reached as
lo what action, if any, should be tak~n.
0 Press reports concerning a
proposed lawsuit against the Na-
tional Bank of Georgia and Mr.
Bert Lance are accordingly in-
correct."
The SEC's responsibilily would
be dlsdosure of pertinent in-
formation to stockholders.
The SEC, If it found a violation,
could either reach an agreement
with the bank to end illeeal prac-
tices or could refer the matter to
the Justice Department. It bas no
authority to ask for fines or jail
terms.
Littl,e Piggy
To Market?
WAUCHULA, Fla. (AP>
Jean Burton is offering a $100 re-
ward for informal.ion leading to
the arrest and conviction of the
thief who kidnaped her five·
month-0ld, l~·po\Jnd hog named
Little Pig. •
Mrs. 'Burton said she bad
raised the white-banded, red
boar hog on a baby bottle since
April. He was born along with 12
piglets, but his mother couldn't
care for him.
The Burtons took a fancy to the
animal and sometimes Jet him
stay in the house where he made
pals of the family cat and dogs.
. ... , .......
lt's·Slidte Beesness
'Sin' Liuuhl ·
Her in Jail
KUALA LUMPUR ,
Malaysia (AP> A 40·
year-old divorcee was sen·
t.encecl to serve two months
in JaU ror livln1 out of wedloct wit.tr a 117-year.
Old sell-deferise instructor,
accordihat to r~ports
published tiere. She sald
she had no other pJacc to live.
They said Doyah BinU
Dan was "Clven the sen·
l4lnCe by a 1do1lem . re-
. Ugiou,, court in Alor State,
240 mlle1 northwest or
K'U•· Lump\.u', when she j
was unable to pay an -1 fine.
Moslems are banned
from living together out of
wedlock and Malaysian
laws permit reliJious of-
ficials to arrest those ac·
cused of such condu_ct and
'try them In religious
Cpurts.
.
Publisher
Bids Child
Porn$tu4y
WASHUlGTON CAP) -The
publisher of one of the nation's
most wtdely-read sexually ex-
plicit picture magazines is offer-
ing to underwrite a study of child
abuse and child pornography in
the interests of bette r un-
derstanding human sexuality.
Larry Flynt, whose "Hustler ''
magazine has sales of three
million and a readership of about
10 million, says the only condi-
tion atlached to his offer is a re·
quirement that the government
give backing t9 the study in some
way and thus lend it credibility.
Flynt made his offer Tuesday
to a House judJciary subcommil-
tee.
· He urged Congress to avoid
tampering with First Amenll-
m ent a;uarantees of freedom of
speech and the press. The pan~!
is considering several possible
ways or strengthening laws
against the sexual exploitation of
children.
Some of the approaches sug -
gest prohibiting the display of
photographs showing children
engaged in sexual acts.
Flynt and his lawyer, Herald
Fahringer, argued that
restraints should be imposed in-
stead on producer s and dis-
t,rjbutors of suc)l material.
"The need rather than legisla-
tion is Cl need for a better un-
derstandihg of human sexuality,"
the publisher said.
Flynt has been convicted of
conspiracy in a Cincinnati court
for violating stale obscenity
laws. F1ynt, who served six days
before being freed on $50,000
bond, is appealing his 25-year
~entence.
Flynl's offer to pay for a gov-
ernment-backed study may be
worth thousands of dollars.
"If I have a bad year this year
J may make $20 million. IC I hav~
a good year, I may make $30
million."
Oscar winnin~ ~ctress OUvla de Havilland maintains
greal.l Mmposure for this scene in the movie "The
Swarm" as hundreds of bees crawl over her face. She
was suppooed to unconscious following a· train wreck.
Miss De Havilland was stung only once tluring tl')e scene,
on 'the hand.
He said be would donate all his ~ magazf,t)e profits to the proposed
studY for as long as !he ~oney i~
neede<!to complete the work. •
I
, ·orange Coast
EDITION
Today's Clo Ing 1
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 70, NO. 26.4, ~SECTIONS, ~6 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1977 c TEN CENTS!
r CIA Lured Barflies to LSD Party?
WASlflNCTON <AP) -A former CIA psycbolo1lst haa tokl a
flabbergasted Senate subcommittee that be once planned to apray
LSD on a houseful of unsuspecting California partyaoers but 1ave
up the ldea because the unseasonably warm weather meant the win·
dows could not be closed.
In frmttalion, another CIA agent closeted himself In the
bathroom of a house in San Francisco and sprayed himself with the
hallucinogenic drug. which was in an aerosol can
111E AUDIENCE IN THE SENATE Caucus Room exploded
with laughter Tuesday as the witness, Dr. David Rhodes, told his
s tory
"Do I understand that three grown men new from the East
coast to the West coast to recruit people at bars for a party so that
• they could be sprayed with LSD?" uked Sen. Edward M. Kennedy
<D·Mass) · RhOdet said that be and another a1ent went to San Francisco in
the late 1950s and spent a week getting to know people ln bars "so
that we could subsequently invite them to a party."
HE SAID THEY WANTED TO learn if LSD could be ad·
ministered in small quantities by being sprayed in the air.
Rhodes said the amount of LSD in the spray was very small, "so
s mall that it would take a practiced person to see any result."
He said the CIA a lready knew the effect of LSD on persons who
knew they were being given the substance, and that the agency
believed it important to learn what effect it had on people who did
not know they had received LSD
BVT RHODES SAID THAT IT WAS discovered that the house to
be used for the party bad no air coodltion.ln1. meanin& the doors
and windows would have to be kept open.
"The weather defeated us," Rhodes said. "We decided to
scratch it at that point."
Rhodes sald later that he does not believe the experiment ever
was repeated.
Btrr HE SAJD THAT BEFORE the group or agehts left San
Francisco they had one further mission.
"We attended the first national convention of lesbians,•· Rhodes
said.
He said the purpose was to test a psychological theory, but did
not elaborate.
Lance Formally Resigi:}s Post
Zany Antics
CIA Tales Regale Congress
WASHINGTON IAPJ -Those
zany CIA agents, who once tned
to make Fidel Castro's beard fall
out, have Congress in stitches
again with tales of m elting
swizzle slicks and t ear gas
l aunchers for agents w h o
couldn't throw straight.
Members of a Senate subcom·
mittee broke up in laughter Tues-
day as former agents told about
Mesa Tract
Ruling
Delayed
By TOM BARLEY
Of 1M o.lty l'lleC SUtf
An Orange County St4Perior
Court judge refused TuQday to
immediately rule on a develop-
ment company's demand that a
petition campaign mounted by
the No rth Cos t a Mesa
Homeowners Association be
halted.
Judge Philip E. Schwab told
lawyers for both sides after
listening to their final arguments
that he needs more time to con-
sider the issues stated in the
lawsuit filed by Arnel Develop-
ment Company.
The d evelopers want $2.S
million in damages from the as-
sociation and an injunction hall·
ing signature gathering by as-
sociation members.
Association members are !leek·
ing support for a zoning cbange
that would prevent construction
of a 665-unit apartment complex
on a 46-acre site bounded by
South Coast Plaza shopping
center and the San Diego
Freeway.
The petitions urge an initiative
which would go before Costa
Mesa· voters in the March 1978
election and which would allow
city voters to accepl or reject
current zonin& l(l the area.
Lawyers for Arnel ariued
Tuesday that signature
sather~ra are usin& misleading
JnformaUon to persuade Costa
Mesa residents to slgn the peli·
Uons.
And they defended their proj-
ect as a low and medium density
development that will ;>rovide a
number of aln1Je famtly homes
aloo1 wtth ~e apartments.
Auoclatlon lawyers told Judse Schwab)~ the ltljuntUon de-
ml:nded by Amel woYld, lf1rant·
ed. amowu to the denial Of free
speech. '
They pointed otst that
(See RVUNG, P•1e .U>
the agency's use of special de-
vices designed specifically to in-
troduce drugs to unsuspecting
test subjects.
One that strained the commit·
tee's imagination was the at-
tempt to make Castro lose his
hair. That was revealed in 1975
by the intelligence committee.
which said the Cuban leader sur-
vived at least eight C IA ·
sponsored assassination plots
The committee said the attack
on Castro's beard wasn 'l a1me<I
at killin~ the Cuban leader. It
was supposed to humiliate him
It called for the dusting of
Cas tro's shoes with a hair·
removing substance during a trip
Castro was to make out of Cuba.
But the Senat e report said,
Castro foiled the conspirators by
canceling tile trip.
Another former agent, Philip
Goldman, told the subcommittee
about tools designed to deliver
dr~ or other chemicals to CIA
targets.
For instance, Goldman said he
made billy clubs that shot tear
gas. drug-laced swizzle sticks
that melted in cocktails and a
hypodermic needle that shot
drugs into corked wine bottles.
Some devices were born of
desperate need. Like the gadget
he built lo launch a small glass
vial filled with tear gas up to 100
yards.
He said the tear gas device was
ordered after an agent attempted
to hurl one or the vials out of his
hotel window lnto a rally the CIA
wanted to break up. The agent's
aim was bad. The vial missed the
window, bounced off a wall and
broke open, filling the agent's
hotel room with gas, Goldman
said
MOVE FURNITVRE
QUICKLY IN AD
If you have some furniture you
want to get rid of, don't hide it, or
roll it away -sell it through the
Daily Pilot classifie<I ads .
An Irvine man round out bow
easy it la when he placed this
classified:
Jlide-n-bed. like nu. Sl2~ 5
<frawet .chest, $46. end
tbl, SZ5. roll away bed
S20. xxx..uxx.
/'
He sold everythtn1 t.bankJ t6tbe
pulling power of a Daily Pilot
classified ad. Call 8'2""78 and an ·
expert in classifieds will help you
phrase the ad and sell your goods.
Staging on Tlaeir Toes
Young summer graduates of Costa Mesa ·s
Leisure Service ballet class warm up for
the start of fall program that begins next
week. Ballerinas :ire (from left 1 Dana
Tunnicliffe, Kelly Clover, Misty Maurer
and Mary Anne Mosher. all S Registra-
tion for all fall Leisure Service classes
starts Monday from 6 to 8 p.m. al the
Downtown Community Center. 594 Center
St. For information call 556-5300.
Ex-Newport Chief RYParking
To Get Study
Eyes Assembly Seat By CM Cowreil
• ' Former Newport Beach police
chief B. James Glavas said today
he Is considering running against
M arian B ergeson for the
Republican nomination for the
74tb Asse1J1bly District in next
spring's primary election,
The retired police cblef said h~
bas not made up bla mind to enter
the primary, but he will be fivin1
the matter "a 1ood, bard look tor
the next month or so." •
Glaval, 65, said, "Several peo-
ple have approached me with the
idea otbelnt a candidate.
.. Since then, J've pjked to a
fe\f people about it. I teel that the
publf c wants a broad range of
caftdidates from which to
choose -at least in the
primary,"
Tbe retlred police chlef ~an
hl1 "-w enf orcemeot career ln 1*38 With the Lot Anaela Police
Department which he left ln 1961
to head the Newport Be11eh de·
partment. He retired from that
postthlssummer.
Glaves sald part or his con·
<See GIAV AS, Pa1e A2)
~~,.....
RUNNING fOR OfACI?
Fonner Chief Qlavaa
Casta Mesa city councilmen
plan to take a closer look at com-
plaints that parked recreational
vehicles in the city are eyesores
and safety hazards.
In a letter to city officials,
Gregory J. Cecconi or 885 Capital
St., says a "serious omission"
in the city ordinance allows RVs
to park anywhere they want. · .
The RVs "are being parked in
s treets , on lawns and in
driveways without regard to the
obstruction of their neiahbor's
view," wrote Cecconi. "These
vehicles make lt dilflcult to back
out of one's driveway ln safety.··
"We are all concerned abOut
the number of llleaally parked
vehicles on our streets,·• Mayor
Norma Hertzog said Monday.
The councll tbeb Ht Oct. 10 for a
atudy HSSlon on tfte lasue.
The eouncU directed city it·
torney Robert Campa1na tQ
check l~al ramllications of any
chances ln the ordinance.
Currently, RVs can be parted
anywheTe on the owner'• proper·
ty as loog IS the vehicles are In
runnln.& condlUon.
If parked on city atreeta. the
campers must be moved wlth1n
72 houri or tMy can be Ucketed
and removed.
Ceeeont allo cJaims aome of
the Vetilcl• .,.. beln1 \lied as
permMeDt uww ...,...,. with
unlijhd1 lllctrte Wini ....
up betw .. the C!llDPIJa udlhe owner's bOlne.
Carter
Accepts
Letter i .
WASIDNGTON (AP> -Bert
Lance resigned this afternoon as
director of the Office of Manage-
ment and Budget after weeks of
controversy over his private
banking practices and personal
finances.
Lance stepped aside minutes
before President Carter held a
nationally televised news con·
ference to pronounce the fate of
his aide and close friend.
An informant said Carter de·
layed his news conference for
two hours so Lance could meet
with attorney Clark Clifford to
work on the resignation state-
ment.
After Lance informed Carter
at an early afternoon meetin'
that he would quit his post, it w~s '
learned that Clifford was not im·
mediately available. The infor· •
maqt said the delay in the news
conference wu decided on 8'>
Lance would have time to locate
Clifford. who was hla counsel at
last week•s televised Senate
hearings.
Lance has been under in·
vestigation by the Senate and
several federal agencies, includ·
ing the Justice Department,
because of irregularili~ in his
private business and banking af-
fairs before be joined the Carter
administration.
Before the news conference,
Carter and the Lances talked
privately for 45 minutes during
the early afternoon at the While
House. For the next several
hours, Powell declined to talk
about their conversation or about
a m ornlog m eeting between
Carter and Lance.
As close advisers and a
speeehwriter hurried in and out
of the Oval Office, Lance indicat-
ed -and another source said -
that Carter had decided whether
Lance would remain as bead of
the Office of Management. and
Budget.
"I can't read the Pre3ident's
mind," Lance told reporters as
he left his home in the f ashiona-
ble Georgetown district followtnc
lunch with his wife.
Lunches at home are unusual
for the budget director .
<See LANCE. Page A%)
POiice Auction Set
The Costa Mesa Police Depatt-
ment will hold a publlc auction of
unclaimed peraonal pr6Pert:y tbls '
Saturday at lOa.m. at the depart~
ment, 99 Fair Drive.
t. 142 DAit. v PtLOl C Wedn .. d•y. Soptemtwr 21 . ion
Uttle llsed
' DetentiOn Unit:'.
Ruling Delayed
Or .An&e <.'ountv .,upurvl ors
ti.• H ' put urf unt11 next Wed •DY
dt't'IMon on wh•\ lo do wltb th
t·ounty's uJI but abandoned
,·ent t>r fur troubled youngsten..
Before prolongma their de·
ltberallons over Mc Miiian
Recept.Jon Center m Santa Ana.
,upervr!>ors were told its client·
less operation 1s no longer cost·
ing $25,000 a ~ct'k .
All but four of the 33 probation
,~orkers who were stationed at
McMillan 1Ahen Juvenile Court
.I udge Raymond Vincent ~wo
,~eeks ago said no more Juveniles
would be sent there have been as·
:.1gm.'<l other duties, Chief Proba
t 1on Officer M argarel Grier said
Judge Vincent, who was on
, acallon, sent word .to the board
· that he would like to see
McMillan converted to ~ locked
detention center for juveniles
.serving short fixed terms.
But County Administrative Of-
ficer Robert Thom as l?ld
supervisors he favors closing
McMillan down.
Such a move would save the
$25,<XX> a week rl costs to oper~te
Mc M1ll<.1n and free the probation
worker:s who would be assigned
there to reduce overtime and ex·
t ra help costs at the county's
other Juvenile ins t1tut1ons,
Thomas suggested.
Should Juvenile Hall become
overcrowded because of the short
termers, the overload can be dis·
bursed through other youth
facilities, Thomas s aid.
Supervisors ended somewhere
pear the middle or the issue when
they decided to wait for Judge
Vincent's return before deciding
?rt c Millan's fate.
At the outset of 1977, McMillan
. "as designated Orange County's
reception center for troubled
youths who, according to state
law, tould no longer he locked up
with juvemles who have com·
m illed criminal offenses
However, without locks on the
doors and with probation
workers helpless lo stop them,
youngsters sent to McMillan
were free lo leave at any time
they chose.
Judge Vincent for a while ·~becked the ensuing rash of
runaways with a court order that
those who nee couldi be pl~lll in
Juvenile Hall.
When an appellate court s truck
own that ord,r, the vrf(fful ,, .... ;J .•t•\ ., ...
Meet ...
Sextuplets
TOKYO (AP> -South Africa's
sextuplets met Japan's quin·
tuplets today.
The 3 ¥.i-year .old South
Africans and their parents called
on the 11 2-year-,old Japanese
children and their parents. The
children appearecl to enjoy play.
ing together with toys and dolls.
The sextuplets, who are in
Japan for a t e levision ap-
pearance, are the chilren of Colin
Rosencowltz, 41 , a Cape Town
clothing salesman, and his 19·
year-old wife, Susan. The quints'
parents a r e Yorimltsu
·"Y4lmashita, 33, a radio and
television reporter, and his 27.
~ear-old wife, Noriko.
TONI GR'I'
"PRIVATE LI\1.}\S'~ -· SOutb ". Coast, .Repert ory Theater ••
Tuesday-Sunday ti'@~ ?Jt. .JO.,. . 8'P.m. . ~ , ,
-TBV88DAY j.f;ft. 11
OCO LECTUi'.I} ....,, "Sllrn '
Cbanee in a -F•t World,"
Women•s Center. 7 p.m.
DAILY PILOT
JUVENILE JUSTICE
1977
flights from McMiilan beaan again.
And when the state legislature
two weeks ago failed to amend
the state's new juvenile Justice
regulations, Judge Vincent said
non·crirrunal j uvenile offenders
would no longer be sent to
McMillan
Thal decision left McMillan
without a chentele and a ~tarr or
33 persons with no juveniles to serve
Fro•Pa~A J
WILSON •••
sites with the idea that McNally
will be put elsewhere," said com-
mittee member Ann Be~pre.
"But we may keep· it there,11tiliz
rn g lhe north three acres." she
added.
Wilson PTA President Mary
Hornbuckle, who presented lhe
committee with a 40-fool petl~on
with 1,077 signatures a_gamst
closing the school. said . the
Wilson site is impractical.
''McNally students cannot
function in a normal high school
and the idea is to remove them
fron the influence of a high
sct\ool," she said. If _Wilson is
used for the continuat100 school
its students would be within
blocks of Estancia High School.
If Wilson is shut down, its 36J.
students would be distributed to
Victoria. Pomona or Whittier
schools, according to Deputy Dis·
trict Superintendent Norman
Loats.
The school's enrollment 1s
below its capacity of 660.
But Wilson parents questioned
why Victoria School, with 188 stu·
dents out of a potential 301,
shouldn't be shut down instead.
While a few residents said they
feared the effect of Mc Nally stu-
dents on the west s i de.
neighborhood. most did not at-
tack the continuation school.
"We don't want WU son to
close. but we need a good school
too, .. said McNali&y !itudenl
Helene Retcf\in. -'tie• asked
parents to tour the continuation
~chool. to remove their fears that
McNally younsters might "ter·
rorize--theneighborhood.
However, former McNally stu·
dent Bill Gannenman said the
school is only "a waste of time
and a good place to score drugs."
. Wilson's kindergarten enroll·
ment is up 25 percent and parents
expressed confidence that in·
creased enrollment is on the
way.
How'.!ver. district officials are
projecting only a slight increase
in enrollment next year.
If Wilson is closed. some of its
students would have to move to
their third school in s ix years. ex·
plained Mrs. Hornbuckle. A
number of s tudents were
transferred to Wilson after Can
yon School was closed ..
The district advisory commit·
tee will meet next week . with
parents at Whittier and Monte
Vista Schools. The dlstrl~ hopes
to relocate McNally by the start
of the next school year.
•
New Face for River
Concrete· ccew pours new hard surface on
bank of the Santa Ana River channel that
forms the border between Costa Mesa and
Huntington Beach This work is being '
done just north of Adams Avenue. River
lovees are being strengthened with con-
crete facing in Orange County Flood Con-
trol District project.
'Hot SLAW' Cooled
UCI Students' Balboa lslaml Bmh Quashed
By JOANNE RE YNOLDS
OltM Dalt., l'lleUt.ff
A 12·hour block party on
Balboa Island sounded like a
good idea to organizers of UC
Irvine's orientation week.
It sounded like trouble t o
Newport Beach city councilmen
\\'ho t:efused to grant a permit for
the party.
Councilmen said they didn't
want the campus Hot SLAW
'<Support Your Local Anteater>
Week that starts MondHy spilling
over onto their streets.
They also vetoed a proposal lo
ha ng banners publicizing the
week in Central Newport and on
the island.
The two requests filed by UCJ ·s
student services office were ex·
plained to councilmen by UCI
student George Ainslie, a 6fllboa
Is land resident. ~·
Hecaid the puepQiSe Qt ttle ban·
ners and the party was to ac·
quaint the community and the
students who live in it with.each
other. The party, to have been
held Oct. 8, would have been a
"community open house," he
said.
But councilmen and represen-
tatives ot the Balboa Island lm·
provement Association and the
Little Balboa Island
Homeowners Association were
not impressed.
Bob Millar of the Little lslarfd
association called the banner
propo5al "totally gross" and sajd
the s ign "ould "junk up the
island."
Councilman Paul Ryckoff
called the banner request inap-
propriate and incomprehensible
and noted that "Bal boa Island is
not a bedroom community for
UC L " Ryckoff lives on the
island.
Ainslie saJd realtors have told
him about half the' winter rentors bn the island are UCI students.
f . ~·~ l ~ ·fi"rfl• Page A I ••
LANCE QUITS ...
'Tm not exerted or upset." he
said . then got mto his car, which
a Policeman had ticketed for a SS
parkmg violation.
He drove to the White House
and walked in, holding LaBelle's
hand.
After their session with his
boss, Lance walked with his wife
back to their car, kissed her
goodby'c and went to hi~ o(fic~ in
Che otd Executive Offic e Build·
ing next door. '
Lance aides were clustered al
the Office of Management and
&udget. Two of them, among
~ance·s top advisers, said they
knew nothing beforehand about
Lance's fate.
the budget director said as re·
cenUy as Tuesday tha\ 1'e did not
intend to quit. When a reporter
knocked at the Lances· house as
thev ate lunch. Mrs Lance !>atd
there had been "no decision yet. ..
Carter's news conference
came as the Securities and Ex-
change Commission said it was
rn the "early stages" of its in·
ves11gat1on into Lance's a c-
tivities as tohe head or the First
National Bank of Calhoun, Ga ..
and National Ban~ of Georgia.
The SEC denied a report that it
was working on a civil fraud· suit
in the matter
• Other probes are under wpy at
th e . Internal Revenue Serv· ic~ and the Federal Elec'
tions Commiuk>n. Included in
the FEC probe are overdrafts by
the committee that ran Lance's
campaign for governor of
Georgia in 1974.
University officials say more
than 400 studeots live on the
isl and and another 750 Ii ve
e lsewhere in Newport B~acb .
primarily in West Newport and
on the Peninsula.
Councilman Lucille Kuehg,
noting that she has worked on the
UCI campus for the past eig~t
years, said she was sympathetic
toward the problems of "com·
munication between town and
gown," but told Ainslie s he Op·
posed his idea because "rt
doesn't help lo get the hackles of
the community up."
Councilman Trudi Rogers sug-
gested that orientation week ac·
tivilies be confined to the UCI
cami>us.
'Sin' Lands
Her in Jail
KUALA LUMPUR,
Malaysia (A,P > A 40-
vear-old divorcee was sen-
tenced to serve two months
in jail for living out of
wedlock with a 117-year·
old self-defense instructor.
according t o r e ports
published here. She said
she had no other place to
live.
They said Doyah Binli
Dan was given the sen-
tence by a Mos lem r e-
ligious court in Alor State,
240 miles northwest of
Kuala Lumpur, when she
was unable lo pay an $80
fine.
Moslems are banned
from living together out of
wedlock and Malaysian
laws permit religious of·
ficials to arrest those ac-
cused of such conduct and
try them in r e ligious
courts,..
./.BI8Ck' s ·
Nudity
Rejected
SAN DIEGO lAP > Sup-
porters of the nation's only
m uniclpally sanctioned nude
beach say they wUI try to set the
City C.Ouncil to reject the ~fl·
parent decision by voters to
m ake swims uits mandatory.
The unofficial tally on a prop-
osition banning nudity at
Black's Beach was 86,113 votes
for the proposition and 70,~ for
continuin1 the "swimsuit op·
tlonal" rule pused by the council
in 1974.
lt is up to the council to decide
whether to go lllong with the ma-
jority on the vlote.. and expecta·
t1ons are that it wiU .
But supporters or nudity on t he
900·foot beach began talking or a
camp&Jgn to Influence the coun·
cil members even while the votes
were being counted.
"lt's not 'a clear-cut order to
the council,·' said one svpporter.
More than 150 000 voters, about
44 percent of tho~e eUgible.
showed up Tuesday to pass on the
proposition and to vole in a coun·
cil election.
The turnout was almost 10 per·
cent above what had been ex·
peeled.
The beach js nestled bet ween
rock out.eroppktgs below UC San
Diego and the Salk Institute.
lncrea.sinM use 01 the beach
with 15,000 or more bathers on a
warm weekend day made many
believe San Diegans would vole
to keep1L
But this tourist city of 750,000
residents is ''fairly conservative
-a Republican tbwn with many
retired people." commented a
resident of the exclusive La Jolla
Farms area which overlooks
Black's Beach.
Fro• Page A J
GLAVAS •..
s1deration involves giving up his
retirement, "which J have been
enjoying. I have no compelling
reason to become involved in
public life again, although I have
some strong feelings about what
rs happening in ourcountry.''
Glavas said he thinks he has a
good understandinit of the
legislature. gained in h is work as
an of.{icial of the California
Peace .Officers' Association and
the Cahforma Chiefs of Police
Assooialion. ·
"I think I unde rstand the
legisla\1ve process and what it 1s
that permits a legislator to be ef·
fective. I unders tand the Caults
a nd well as the virtures of the
system," he said.
Glavas said he has not set a
deadUne for reaching his de-
cision, although he noted he would
continue to consider the idea for
thenextfewweeks.
l",.._P~AJ
RULING ...
thousands of Costa Mesa resi-
dents have been angered by con-
s truction of apa~tments in a
clearly residential 41"ea apd laave
readily signed tbe Htitions.
-
Wedneeday. September 21, 1977 DAIL y PILOT Al
Woinen's Ranel SU!rVives Assault
By K.ATll CLA!\CV Ot•htlr..,....._
Thl' Oran1tt Couniy Cum
ml~JOrl un llw' Statu11 of Womtn
won imutht!r torm~ batUe for
'l!lurvtnd before l'O unh ~u~o 1~n Tut· dll,) ·
Hut bdorl' '1ctory WM~ 1rt1i.l)tXS
1n aa pm:k .. '<1 bo .. rd hurlnc room
11 ~Pl' kt:rl> and Su pen l•or
Luurcncc SChm1t u1ut.'<1 un .. uc
cesislull) thut lht! commission
'en es no ui.eful purpose and
i.hould be d1~bunded
Th« pla)'ers on the battle
around were \hose on on aldt
~ho acru.rd the commlJ on or
promoUn• lomlru1t phllosophlei.
to th d1•trim nt of tho •o·called
tr1td1llonul Amorlc n woman and
thoM.• on Uh: other 1nde who con
tendl'd womt!n havo 1pecl1al
problema. thut deaorve com
mlaMon uttenllon
Wh1 lo 1 he: lwo year-old
women" comml1 ton survived
Tul'11d10 'i-. challenae. county
Al"WlrellMI•
DOCTOR PULLS PLUG WHEN OTHERS WON'T
Dr. Ronald Wright Says Courts Shouldn't Decide
Plug Puller
Decision Up to Doctors?
MIAMI CAP J Dade County's deputy chief medical ex·
aminer, Dr. Rona!!) Wright. says the issue of "brain-dead" pa·
tients doesn't belong in court That's why Wright pulls the plug
when others won't.
"I'm not playing God I pronounce people dead all the time.
and nobody gets very excited about it," ~ays Wright, 32
He adds that as a Vermont medical examiner he ordered the
plug pulled on 11 patients and has intervened in at least "ix cases
in Florida.
"TIUS IS J UST ONE WAY tn which people are dead The.}
JUSt happen to have an artificially maintained heartbeat and
respiration. but they're dead just the same." Wright said
His remarks were m a copyrighted article in The Miami
Herald's Tropic magazine.
The problem of living death has troubled doctors for years . It
happens when the brain dies but the body lives. nourished by a
respirator that supplies oxygen to the heart and other organs.
TIIERE ARE NO LEGAL standards that specifically permit
Florida medical examiners to remove lire support systems. But
Wright believes state law gives him the rl~ht to claim a dead
body, and believes a person is dead when the brain stops working.
Wright was especially infuriated by the case of a 5-year-old
child who received massive head injuries in · a hit-and-run acci-
dent. f'or four days, a machine pumped oxygen into the boy's
lungs and kept his heart beating, even thsough the brain was
de-.d. Wright decided never lo stand by again and watch parents'
anguis h as they begged a judge to let their child die
"I GET INTO IT BECAUSE I think lt's r idiculous to ask a
family to go to a judge," Wright says. "It's not just the money
(from S400 to Sl,000 per day for a respirator a nd intensive care).
it's the terrible emotional drain
"It's ridiculous to go to the courts. The courts aren't compe·
tent to deal with this problem. This ia for the doctors and family
lo decide. We have the solution. It's been here all the time.''
· Ju~e Halts Sale
Of ie~esJey iUbunl
NASfML~S. tenn. <AP> -A
Clrcuit Court Judge has issued a
temporary rest~nlnt order
a1alNt further ptOductlon and
sate ol a.o Elvit Preslnr record,
billed as a htstorlcal 4ocumen·
tary. (Related story, A9).
million troll\ the ~)lelb)f.
Sinaleton Cotp., and •n uol
enumer.aled. amoa~t in· corn
pentat.ory dama1es. • l
'uperv1sor1 set the •tage for
whut could be a nother 1ie1e by
ui;klnt comml •lonera to return
later with Iii II ol projeets to be
ca rricd out this year
Supervlaor1:1, durina a raucous
two·hour budget hearln1 in July,
&a.vo lhc commli.sion $28,265 to
finance 1t.s activities and hire a
full lime COOl'dinator this year.
Bul tbe.v crit icized commlaslon
goals which included coordlnal·
1ng rape counseJlng services,
Lawyer
Given
One Year
Newpor t Beach attorney
Roland Stewart Barcume has
been sentenced lo one year In the
Orange County Jail and fined
$40.000 tor his admitted em·
beulement of a San 'clemente
estate he was supervising as ad·
m inistrator.
Superior Court Judge Kenneth
Williams additionally ordered
Barcume, 39, of 901 Sandcastle
Ort\ e. to am mediately resign
from the State Bar and not prac·
lice law during his five years pro·
button.
Judge Wilham~ ruled that the
$;10,000 fine will represent resUtu·
lion to the estate of the late
Wilson Eugene Luther of San
Clemente Barcume will repay at
the rate of SlOO a month for fiv~
vears
· Barcume was indicted by the
Grand Jury in January, 1975.
after invest igation of claims that
he was r esponsible for the
diversion or $53,000 from lhe
estate oI Luther. 85, who lived at
138 W. Escalones. San Clemente,
before his death on June 24, 1970,
in a Capistrano Beach nursing
home.
Witnesses told the Grand Jury
that they had been unable to
trace a "Mr. Harris" who had
been identified by Barcume as
the recipient or sums of money
paid to him from the Luther
estate
Barcumc s ul>sequently i.pent
some time in the county jail when
his answers to then probate court
.Judge Claude M Owens failed to
sat1i.Cy the curious juri~t
Barcumc then pleaded guilty
to reduced charges in Judge
Williams' courtroom and was
sentenced lo six· months to five
years in state prison.
lie was allowed to withdraw
that plea and was scheduled to
face lriaJ on the revived 20 felony
counts when he offered the
second plea accepted by Judge
Williams.
Barcume pleuded that he was
destitute a nd drawing food
stamps in an unsuccessful bid to
have t he public defender
represent him in the now aban-
doned trial
'Joy Ridi~'
Kids Trapped
,.Jn Jf~tor
SOIDi:ne~ mischief. not yet
fortMten d~ptt~ ~e ring of fall
school bell~, left four Los
Alamitos y~ters trapped in
an office _,levato"' for about 20
miautes today;j)Olfo~ reported.
• lt seems ~bildren, ages 10
and 11, had been pausing in their
trek to :.,eebool the past few
dtl)'l,-.~~g t.he way to rid•up~ ,,_repeatedly in
Jn office but ng elevator, of. off>~N~ald lut suangsters over·
side ~· •ald. J Judge Joe Loser sitned the or·
der .Tuesday blockl.Q1..1ale of the
album, "El vb Pruley -tbe. Sun Yens," produced by S'fflby
Slnateton.
The albusn contains ~art' Pr"'~ recordin1s CO\'eted by a 1955 acreeinent tn which' RCA
ourcbaae<l ••all recordinc
mat.erbill'81&fi.D1 or pertainiri& to
Elvta ~·tiromS• JIMOtd Comp , 1'":Ne.t. Ceil. 1'5m ...
Park$ ey'i lon,_. busl· ·
neaa man.a1er. and Presley, the
suit sald. Sincleton boucht Sun R~U.thelMOs.
leili8ect 9* ii Ill.Or circultg by
geWnf .UilW ups and downs too
h'eqUeeU)'. Tbe. elevator shut on
br~en • rapP1ftt the children tn·
ce workers symmoned
poli end firemen, who quickly
freed the children. officers re-
RCA Corp. asked ror the
reotrat.nlQ1 order,.u1lns lt-owm
all rleht.1 to reeordJn1s by the
late sinter. The firm asks $4
million ln punitive damages from
Sun International Corp.. S4
Jn addition, the S\llt ta)'s lhe
albunr does not contain the 11
early Sun recordings by Presley
that are pictured on the cover.
ported. Police dropped tbe four
9ft at their prlnClpat•s olttce at
school.
"We tioi their promises and
thelr parents· promises that It
wouldn't happen again." poUqe
said .
publishing a newsletter and help·
ing sc~l distncts comply with
federal laws prohibiting sex dls-
cl'imlnaUon
Supervisors voted 4-1 Tuesday.
however. to support the com
mission's redrafted goats. which
spell out t he commission's ad·
visory c apacity and call for
~upervisors' approval before any
projects are carried out.
Supervisor Schmit. who cast
the lone dJasentlnR vote. com
plained the new goals were s1m
ply a restatement of tbOfle pre-
viously presented.
.. , don't know wbat the com
mission has been doing all this
time except discussing bow to aet
around the board's directives."
Schmit argued
"J don't think we should be
funding an organization that has
no reason for being." he con·
tended.
But S upervuors Ralph
. Treaty 'OK'
John Wayne Supporti~ It
Actor John Wayne won t be saddling up to JOtn Ronald
Reagan in his fight against ratification of the Panam a Canal
treaty Wayne has signed on with the pro-treaty outfit
WAYNE, ONE OF Hollywood's most prominent con
servatives, confirmed Tuesday he has decided to support the
controversial Panama Canal Treaty, according to the As·
sociated Press.
''I have agreed to s upport the treaty tf what 1 understand
about It is true." Wayne told AP in a telephone interview
Tuesday.
Wayne said the provls1ons of U\e controversial pact were
uplained to him during a recent visi~ by
P anam a nlan business man Arturo
McGowan who stayed with the actor at
his Newport Beach home
THE ACTOR'S support of lhe treaty
was announced Monday by Panama's
chief of government. Gen. Omar Torrijos
told a group of reporters at his home in
F'arallon, Panama that Wayne had called
him and congratulated him on "the
magnificent task you ha ve ac ·
compUshed... WAYNE
According to AP, Wayne said McGowan invited him lo
visit Panama in October as the guest of Torrijos and the actor
said he would probably go.
The proposed treaty, which still must be ratified by the
U.S. Senate and Panamanian voters. calls for the U.S. to turn
overcoJltrol of the canal to Panama by ltie year2000.
Torrijos said Wayne "has an effect on t.he American
public and we are happy to have his backing.··
THE TREATY FACES stiff opposition from con·
servallves who usually count Wayne among supporters of
their causes.
The actor's Congressman, Bob Badham <R·Newport
Beach> is opposed to the treaty. In a recent press release.
Badham said mail from his constituents wai. running about
600lo1 against the treaty
New Mexico Man
Guilty in Kidnap
By TOM BARLEY
OUlll D~ly .,"9tlt•tt
A New Mexico man who was
extradited from that state to
Orange County as a suspect In a
San Juan Capistrano killing has
pleaded guilty to unrelated
charges in Superior Court.
Judge Jerrold S. Oliver sen-
tenced Gilbert James Lovato, 19.
of Santa Fe. N. M .• to 10 years In
state ptison after the defendant
offered the plea'~o char1es or kid·
nap. assault with a deadly
weapon an~ possession ot a
sawed,.off shotgun.
Those charges were filed
against Lovato in connectjon
with a lddnaping on. Dec. 13.1976,
in which a Corona del Mar
wQman wu abc)uqted al knjfe-
point as ahe left a Pacific Coast
Highway s\ij)emlarkel
The victirn testified that she was~~bed with a knife and
thre with a shot1un •• she w,as. orced to dtjve Lovato to
Laguna Beach and a motel in
tbat~ity.
Sho bro~e awa)' /rom her ab-
dllct.or ai¥S fled lO 1afety "fore
she w,. takeo fA) Ule mowl. I.tie
tesilfied ..
Sheriff's officers said Lovato is
still being held in the county jall
despite his state prison commit
ment while they continue to
probe the killlng Dec. 20, 1976, of
Maria Padilla, 22, of Santa Ana.
The wom a n 's body. s hot
through the head. was found on
the top of a hill in the San Juan
a rea after a 12-year·old girl rid·
Ing her horse through brush
covered country spotted the vie til}l 's 2-year·old son
Little David Padllla. sobbing
and crying "Mama. Mama".
p(>illt.ed out to sheriff's officers
the area where his mother had
been left by her kldnaper
Mrs. Padilla's husband, llav1d.
25, told officers he last saw his
wlfe Dec. 17 when s he left their
home in her van to visit a
nearby bank and go Christmas
shoppina, Her body 1'.'as found
three days later
Lovato, allegedly drjvlng the
vlctim ·s van, was arrested Jan. 4
by New Mexico authoritJes and
held for extr1tdltion to Orange
County
Dledrich and Thomas Rlley aald
financing the commission wa11
not the ~uesllon. They said the
rinancing was decided ln July
and commission goats were the
only question Tuesday.
Commission opponents tub-
m itted petition8 wlth ltl
signatures Monday askin& that
the advisory panel be abolished.
While Schmit's name was at
tt1e bottom of the petition.
although misspelled. be insisted
after Tuesday's meeting he was
not responsible for its circula·
Lion.
Newport Beach resident Nora
Lehman asked during the meet·
ang how many of the 100.plus
women at the hearing were res1·
dents of Schmil's West Orante
County district
But Board Chairman Riley told
her the request was inap
propriate and It went un
answered.
Diedrich surprised Com·
mission Chairman Pauline
Rangel by presenting a llst of
suggestions prepared by a group
called the Orange County Coali-
tion for Constitutional Govern-
ment.
The list asked lhat the com·
mission, if allowed to exist, con·
fine Its activities to problems
faced by women working outside
the home and begin with a salary
and worldhg condition survey of
women working for counl)' go\'·
ernment.
· Mrs. ttangel sa1d she had not
seen the list but would study the
suggestions.
"We are there to serve every·
one and that 1s our purpose,•·
she srud.
Susan Tepper. leader of ERA
(Equal Rights Amendment)
Orange County. was among four
s peakers arguing in favor of the
commi8sion.
"I would like to know what the
problem is in Orange County.··
she said.. ·•w e seem to be bogged
down in semantics and rhetoric.'·
Supervisors DiedricJa and
Riley questione d the com·
mission's makeup during the
session. asking if members real-
ly represent views of a cross·
sedion of county women.
But Supervisor Philip Anthony
reminded them that it is
s upervisors who appoint com-
missioners and supervisors are
responsible for its makeup.
Dana Harbor
Dock Lease
t'Jan Okayed
I
Lease arrangements cadtna
tor construction of a 120·foot·l~g
public dock. In Dana Polht
Harbor won (he unanimoua ap-
p r ova I of Orange Couhty
Supervisors Tuesday.
The lease calls for Dana Point
Marine Corporation, operatQr of
a boat launching facility. to tSuild
tbe dock an~ be reimbursed by
the county for 60 ~rcent or up to
• $20.000 of its cost.
In addition, the agreement pro·
vi des th at Dana Villa_1e
Properties Inc., operator or a
sportlishlng business. would iup-
ply utility hookups and dock ac-
cess.
A report to supervisors said the doc~ would replace a s maller.
deterioratin1 dock.
IL would provide temporary
moorlne space for dinghies and
water taxis and atlevlate boat
traffic conaestion, as well as pro·
vlde mooring for a vintaae·t~
boat the dock operators would in-
s tall -as a publlc·attractlon, the
report satd .
;I DAILY PILOT
..... Te• ~ld•e
WILD 81..UE 81.ATllER: You
may have noted in lh• news that
Orance Coun~ 1ovemment ml.)'
be puttmc up money for another
nolae study to residential areas
around EJ Toro Marine Corps A.tr
Station. Well here we 10 again.
If the county aupervuora 10 for
it, Uus will be the second rnajor
study of aenaJ racket in the El
Toro rt!g1on 1n the past two years
Somehow. I really get weary or
all this
All thest! sc1ent1r1 c stud1e!>
aside. why don't we JUSt admit
that airports can, and probably
clo. create some eer-jarrings.
Rather than going through one
exhaustive and expensive study
after another, maybe the
supervisors or their bureaucrats
would do better to get out and
talk to people who Ii ve around the
airports if they really want to get
views on aircraft racket.
IF 111EY DID, they 'd find out
there are a lot of varied opinions.
I was lounging, for example, on
the rear deck at a friend 's home
out in Lake Forest just the other
day. sipping from a cool glass
and contemplating u\I! bucolic
wonders of his back yard which
e>pens out onto a eucalyptus
grove.
AbrupUy. a military jet which
was doubUess headed for the El
Toro runway roared overhead at
low altitude, momentarily shat-
tering the rural tranquility.
"He's either Jost or having
some kind of trouble," my friend
remarked calmly. "We hardly
ever get jets over here ''
So there's one resident who
didn't leap up into the flying
rings just because a jet came
11ear · · s house.
You go out around Oraoge
County Airport, on the other
band. and you can gather all
kinds of opinions on aircraft
noise. . . SOME PEOPLE who live m
Upper Newport Bay don't g.et t:OO
excited about the commercial Jet
flights out of the county strip. But
they do grind their teeth over the
constant buzzing and snarling or
little private planes that ply the
airways in and out of the county
strip, particularly on weekends.
~ Elsewhere on the Newport-
Balboa Peninsula, residents are
• also treated to a lot of engine
. clatter from private planes, ban·
11er-towing craft aod helicopters.
• You have to figure that the
Peninsula must be a favorite spot
· to fly over for sightseeing or ad-
\'ertising purposes.
Yet still other residents or the
Newport Beach-Costa Mesa area
see the big commercial planes as
the real threat to eardrums and
these people ride the Ban the Jets
bandwagon.
Additionally. when you ponder
the noise pollution front, you
have to figure that some aircraft
are inherently noisy and some
are more quiet. And you must
suspect it's possible some pilots
have more consideration for us
earth-bound mortals below than
do others who do thelr thing at
full throttle.
The same variations on the
theme could likely be applied to
sports car driven, motorcycle
J"iders, power boaters and
truckers. Some are considerate
of human ears and some aren't. POINT 18, when you get Into
tbe d~bate over aircraft noise,
you can get all kinds of opinions
and different shades of Yiew. A
Jot of that opinion ,night vary
from day to day just depending
on which way the wind is blow·
ing.
And it won•t make much di!·
fertnee how many noise studies
get financed by tbe county tu~
payers.
Inflation Slowing
Workers' Purch.tue POUJer Declines
WASHJNGTON (AP> -lnlla·
tlon 1lackened In Au1u1t, for the
second con.ecutl ve month, w.
consumt!r prlcea roso by only a
modest three-tenthas or one per·
c~nt, tJ\e smallest ri!se m runts
months, the government report
t.-d today
The mcrease was the lowest
bJOce a btm1lar rise last No -
vember and followed a rtse of
four·tenlh.s or one percent tn July
and increase of six-tenths an May
and June.
The s teady decli ne in
wholesale farm prices was
reflected on grocery shelves last
month as food pnces rose only
slighUy
M EANWHJLE, THE cost of
services, which had been the
fastest rising component of the
Consumer Price Index this year,
slowed sharply last month
The slowing of inflation ttus
summer has been one of the few
31.8 Million
bright spots ln the nation's
economic picture, which bas
aeen unemployment rising qaln
and the rate of ecoooQlic arowtb
a lac ken.
Grocery prlces, which had con-
tributed to an annual infialion
rate of about 10 percent at the
begmning of the year. rose only
two-tenths of one percent in
August, following a decline of
one-tenth of one percent in July.
THE COST OF other com-
modities, such as household
goods and autos, rose three-
tenths of one percent in AUIUil,
but these had not contributed to
the inflationary sur1e earlier this
year as much as had food.
Carter administration
economists are counting on slow
increases in food prices to help
hold down the overall rise in con·
sumer prices durin& the rest of the year.
If averaged out over the entire
FBI Informers'
Earnings Revealed
WASlllNGTON <AP) -By financial standards. Informer No. SOS
was a real go-getter.
No. sos earned $11, 100 from the FBI in 1973 and a total of $48,383 over
seven years ending in 1976 What dld the FBI get Crom No SOS to warrant the payments? "Ap-
proximately 55 leaflets and pam-
phlets regarding Socialist
Workers Party activities, ap·
Tijuana City
Street Lights
Face Blackout
TIJUANA, Mexico (AP>
Mayor Fernando Marquez Arce.
angry that lights in City Hall
were turned off with the electric
bill unpaid. warned today
against the next step threatened
-an end to street lights.
•'There is no way we can move
traffic in Tijuana without
lights," said the mayor. "There
will be pandemonium in the
streets." ..,
A DEADUNE of noon Tuesday
passed without payment of the
$90,000,owed to the federal power
agency.
In early afternoon ... they start·
ed with City Hall," said an aide
to Marquez Arce.
THE COMPUTER in the
tre'asurer's office clicked off. The
telephone switchboard went
dark. Electric typewriters were
dead. Employes normally held
until 9:30 p.m . w're sent home
withdarkness. r .
A police officiaJ asked that
federal troops be ready in case of
looting in the darkness. but none
was reported.
NO PRIVATE houses or busi·
nesses were affected by the
blackout.
Marquez Arce, in an interview,
said bis border city of 700,000
persons was without money to
pay the bill, due for months.
LAST WEEK Marquez Arce
flew to Mexico Clty and pleaded
for help, telling federal officials
that 9'1 percent of all Tijuana tax
revenues go to the state and
federal governments.
"I am left with 3 percent. run-
ning a clty of this sjH on about
$11 hillllon ~ually," be said.
An appeal to oth.t'° Baj a
California cltfea also fat.ml.
proximately 38 SWP newslet-
ters." financial statements,
membership lists and schedules
of party activities.
On the other hand, Informer
No. 28 apparently told the FBI
hardly anything it wanted to
know about the small Trotskyite
oolitical party. No. 28 received
only a single $5 payment in 1966.
THOSE DETAILS emerged
from FBI documents made
public Tuesday by the Political
Rights Defense Fund, which is
financing the party•s
multimillion-dollar lawsuit ac-
cusing the FBI of illegal harass-
ment and disruption of
legitimate political activities.
During the course of the four-
yenr lawsuit, lawyers asked the
FBI for details about money paid
to informers to spy on the party.
The FBI was~r8flulrect to provide
the information in a procedure
which allowed the informers to
be designated by code numbers
to protect their identities.
THE DOCUMENTS show that
the FBI paid more than $1.6
million during a 16-year period to
301 informers who jolned the par-
ty or its affiliate, the Young
Socialist Alliance, as a way of
gaining more information about
party activities.
The bureau bas actnowledfed
havtng 309 informers who were
members of one eroup or the
other, and the documents show
that all but eight of them were
paid.
TH'l: FBI BAS aeknowtedged
that more than 1,000' other in-
formers ~pied on. the party
without jolnl.ng it. The bureau
has remained silen~•bout money
paid to those infomien.
Informer No. 505, according to
the document.a, was tbe hlahelt-
pald of the list or 301 informers
and earned the most in a ainaie
year. No. SOS's annual eanll.ftgs
Irorp the bur.etu bffan with
about $3,lOe in 19'1~. the )'eat be
began worlclng, and rqee to the
high of $11,100 in ms. Bil earn·
ings dropped to $2,800 la.st year.
The records show that the
other informers uaually were
paid from $2,000 to $5,000 annual-
&y for several years.
year, the August lncfease would
mean a 3.6 percent rat.e ol lofla-
llon, a sharp improvement over
the earlier pace. Consumer
prices rose at a 10 percent annual
rat.e in the first quarter and at a
rate ot 8.1 percent in the aeeond
quarter.
DESPITE THE improvement
in the pace of inflation, the Labor
Department reported that tbe
purchasing power of workers'
paychecks declined for the
second consecutive month. Real
spendable eamlnp -take-home
pay a<ljusted for taxes and infia-
tion -for the average worker
declined sllc-tenths of one percent ·'
because of infiaUoo and a decline
in the average nwnber of hours
worked, the government said.
In August, the Consumer Price
lodex stood at 183.3, meaning
that a basket of goods and
services that sold for $100 In 1967
now costs $183.30. Consumer
prices wt month were 8.6 per-
cent bijlber than a year ago.
All percentages in the price
report are a<ljusted to account
for seasonal influences but the in-
dex itself ls not adjusted.
THE LABOR Department said
the cost of services rose five.
tenths of one percent in August,
the smallest increase since
December, when these prices
rose only four-tenths of one per-
cent. 11\e slowdown was largely
due to the first decline this year 1n mortgage interest rates,
seasonally adjusted. Gas and
electricity prices continued to
rise last month, but at a lower
rate than in June or July.
At the grocery counter. the
government said beef prices
declined while prices also fell for
pork. poultry, eggs, sugar and
ground coffee. However, prices
for fresh fruits and vegetables
rose last month after declining
sharply in the preceding three
months.
Prices for non-food commod·
ities continued to rise at a rel-
atively small rate last month, an
encouraging sign since these are
regarded as a more sensitive
measure of inflationary trends
than food prices, which often
fluctuate widely.
CLOTHING PRICES rose
sharply last month as the new
fall fashion lines went on display.
but prices for used cars, alcobc)l
and beverages declined. Fuel oil
and coal prices rose nine-tenths
of 1 percent last nlonth while
gaaollne and motor oil rose two.
tenths ol 1 percent after declining
in June and July.
':A
AfJandoned Ba"9 ·
Mary Stephens holds baby found in a Hamm.ond .. I~d .,
alleyway. next to a garbage can. The umdenllf1ed.
six-month-old platinum-haired boy was dumped by
someone •·driving a green car.·· The well-fed. baby wa,s
dressed in a T-shirt and diaper. and wrapped ma mans
blue plaid shirt. Mrs. Stephens. 27, unable to bear
children of her own, named h~m Johnny after her
husband and is seeking to adopt him.
Daughter of Judge
Shot to Death
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP> -The trial of two men charged with
murder in the bombing death of Ariiona reporter Don Bolles was
suspended after the daughter of the judge was found shot to death in
her Tucson apartment.
Court officials said the trial would be delayed at least miW
Thursday.
Tucson authorities said an autopsy was scheduled today to de-
termine whether Lynn Thompson, 24, bad committed suicide.
~ 1110MPSON, daughter of Maricopa County Supe.rlor
Court Judge Howard Thompson. was found by a roommate Tuesday
afternoon in the home they shared with two other girls near the
University of Arizooa.
Police said they believed Mist$ Thompson bad killed herself with
one bulletfrom a .22-callberriflefowd next to her body.
A roommate said Miss Thompson. a law student, had been
depressed recently, police said. _
THOMPSON RAS been ptesic!lng at the trial of James Robison.
55, and Max Dunlap, 48. They are accused of first-degree murder
and conspiracy in the June 1976 car bomb death or Bolles. an in·
ve&tigative reporter for the Arizona Republic.
You Can't
Tell The Players
•
SF Offers le•kemla Fatal
Killings Little Leaguer
Reward 'Most Happy'
S \N FRANCISCO
I \ r I Thl' (.'1\y of San
}''r1tncbt:l• lli utr..-nn1 •
$100,000 rt•wud ror '"
formtiuon lcadina to the
"rre:.l und conv1cUon of thr~ gWlmen who killed
fi ve poopl~ and ~ounded
11 other~ al 11 Ch1nlltown
restaur 1tnt
~t.1 yo r Georae
~to!>conc announced lhe
reward at a news con·
rerence Tuesday after
( State )
consulting "1th homicide
1nvest1galors who said
they ha\ e 'rertain SUS·
peels" tn the Sept 4
s hooting s hut "not
enough lei make an ar·
rest "
OHac1all-said It was
the largest reward of·
rered in the city's his-
tory
No E%tension
FRONTERA <AP)
Emily Harris, convicted
of kidnaping and robbery
1n a 1975 shootout while
she was a fugitive with
Patricia Hearst, will not
have her 11 -year 'ien
tence extended.
The Community
Release Board at th<.·
California Institute for
Women. where Mrs
Harris 1s being held.
made the dec1s1on at a
hearing Tuesday. The
action makes Mrs
Harris eligible for parole
on April 20, 1980.
Job F a i r S~ce••
F' C)EGUNDO <AP >
Mot, .han 500 former H 1
workt.•rs from Rockwell
lntcrn;it1onal turnc<l out
at a Job FCJir al the com
pany's plant here to
meet with represcn
" tativcs from about 175
firms.
Rockwe ll . which
spoDiored a similar job-
h u nt s ix weeks ago.
hoped the success of that
one would carry over in-
to Tuesday's event. A
s pokesman said more
than 600 persons found
jobs as a result of the
first Job Fair. The
aerospace company Is
sponsoring the program
in an errort to help its
laid-off employes find
work
F lood Bea 1'f1
REDDING (AP)
The heaviest September
storm on record here has
flooded several homes
and two shopping malls.
The National Weather
Service said Tuesday the
four-day rain total was
6.8 inches, the highest for
the first three weeks of
September in 100 years
of recordkeeping.
PlanOka~d
LONG BEACH (AP)-
A standby plan for com-
pulsory water conserva-
tion was approved by
the Long Beach City
Council, but wUJ be used
only if voluntary
measures fall, a waler
department spokesman
said.
Tuesday's approval
would permit the depart-
ment to eruorce a man-
datory 10 percent reduc-
tion by its 84,000
customers should volun-
tary e£forts fall.
l''rom AP Ol1patcb"
llldaard Wade Helma&«Jer w•• voted "most tn-
splrutlonal player of 1977" by the other 12-year·olda
on h11 Little League baseball team this summer In
El C.'aJOll
They d1dn t know be was dylna of leukemia. Not
even Richard knew it, but he waa the happy guy on
the team, the one who made the others feel good.
"I never told him he was d~inl ," said his
father, Jay Helmstetler. "I was 1oin1 to tell him
after one last baseball season."
But Richard died in a hospital Fnday. The
funeral was today •
The Judge who presided over the "Water1ate
West" trial was assigned as judge in the third
murder trial of former Charles Manaon follower
LesUe Van Houten.
Van Houten, 28, was ordered to appear In Judie
Gordon Rln~er's court Oct. 20 for setting of a trial
dat(• She 1s charged with murder and conspiracy in
the Aug. 10, 1969 slaying of Leno and Rosemary La·
Blanca and with con-
spir~cy in ~he slaying the ( J
previous mght of actress PEOPLE Sharon Tate and four
others. ---------
Ringer was assigned
more than four years ago to preside over the trial of
four White House aides accused or breaking into the
office of Dr. Lewls Fielding, the psychiatrist who
treated Pentagon Papers defendant Daniel
Ells berg • Singer Freda Payne gave birth lo a boy.
Grt>gory Joel Abbott Jr., at Cedars-Sinai Med ical
Center. a hospital spokesman said.
Miss Payne's husband is songwriter Gregory
Abbott.
She records for Capitol Records and has had
'><'\cral million-selling records. including "Band of
Gold" and "Bring the Boys Home ··
• Tennessee's Gov Ray Blanton, who vetoed the
!>talc's death penalty law. has drawn the ire or some
al.ANTON
polilicans and newspapers by
promising to pardon a man con-
victed or double murder who
works as a photographer for the
state.
The focus of the controversy
is Roger Humphreys, 30, son of
the Democratic governor's
patronage chioi in Johnson City
Humphreys was convicted of
second-degree murder for kill·
ing his ex-wife and her lover in
1973.
Blanton says Humphreys, a trusty serving 20 to
40 years in the state prison at Nashville, has been
rehabilitated and Blanton bas promised to pardon
him before the end of bis term as governor In 1979.
Humphreys would be eligible for parole in 1984.
* Arnold Miller, president of the United Mine
Workers, was on hand for the opening ni1bt
performance in Cleveland of the
one-man play "John L. Lewis.
Disciple of Dtscontent. ••
Miller. beleaguered by
wildcat strikes and internal
problems in his union, joined a
capacity crowd for the
performance by Robert Lansing
at Cleveland's Little Theater in
Public Hall.
Miller said he was working
{he mines when the fiery Lewis MILLH
made a name as a pioneer of mining's labor move-
ment. and never had a chance to meet him. • The will of chewing gum magnate Pbillp K .
Wrigley has been admitted to probate in Los
Angeles Superior Court because of property in Los
Angeles that produces an annual income or $18,000.
The bulk of the $60.3 million estate ts being
handled in Chicago.
The senior Wrigley, who owned the Chicago
Cubs and Santa Catalina Island, died April 12 at age
82. His wife, HeleD, died June Z7 at age 75.
* Leon and Bonnie Tolster "stirted out on a sum-
mertime st.roll around the nation's Capitol. They
ended up in a magazine phOto in the middle or a
demonstration against the Panama Canal treaty.
··Picketing the Capitol: Trouble ror the Treaty, ••
says the caption on pa&e 46 in the current Newsweek.
But in the middle of the photo -that white-
haired genUeman? -lt'sToister, 75,asemiretlred.
and unpolitical, real estate salesman from Lake
Placid, a small community in rural central Florida. • Preslclen& Carter aMounced he is nominatlng
Coretta Scot& Kiac and three others to joln Am·
bassador Andrew J. Yoanc in representing the Unit-
ed States at the 1977 session of the United Nations
General Assembly.
Being nominated besides Young and the widow
of the Rev. MattlaLatberKIDg, Jr., are:
James F. Leonard Jr .. Youns·s deputy at the
F talfb Daw U .N.: Rep. Lester L. Wolff <D·N.Y.> and Rep.
AID~Struek ..... ,..,.....
A refugee from Bangkok appear~ cm cd on
her arrival at San Francisco lnternat1onal
Airport. She is among the first of 15,000
Indochinese. most of them Vietnames e . lo
he ~iven homes in the United States.
SWINGLINE
STAPLE GUN
Qne SQUEEZE and v<>u"ve nailed it'
• All purp05e: for electrical wiring
woodworking. upholstering. and
more. much more • Heavy Duty •
Safety guard and Safely lock
Reg. 13 50
20~y. 499
6 PIECE SET
CORNING WARE
• Who couldn't use a little more
Coming Ware? • Boxed for a gift •••
for weddlng. shower: anniversary •
Treat )'OUf'Mlf ••• you desenie It.•
1 ~ qt covered SM skillet, 1 ~ qt.
c:owr.d baking dish. 2 petite pana.
Bl ue cornflower pattern
A-8275-N
.1688
CharlesW. Whalen, Jr. <R·Ohlol. LOS ANGELES (AP>...::;:.:.:.;.;.:.:..~;.;.;;;,;~;.!..;..._._~;.._--:~~-:"~-::--
Salad
Spinner/
Drier -'Ibis city has won a
2'h-year court' battle for
$9.6 million in federal '
funds to help pay for a
nolae buff er zone north of
Los Angeles Interna-
tional Airport.
The U.S. District Court
ror the District of Colum·
bla ordered the Federal
A viatlon Administration
to reimburse the Depart·
ment of Alrportl for the
money lt coat to con•
atruct the buffer io1111.
Tuesday'• rullnc upheld
a federal appeall court
decllion that the c1ty "" entiUed to the money.
What CAN TouGet
lor a411me
tbeaedap11
. • The l<Jdl wm beO to dry the eatact o,...,,.. •Spins out au th• water In
an lnetant. • Great for 1alad. · v.;etlbttl. fruit• Elegant too.
888
Wednnday, September 21 . 1977 L SC DAILY PILOT J\5
Refunds Law OK
Meaaure Ainu at PUC Action
SACRAMENTO <AP) -A blll to
prevent the state Public UUUties
Commission from witbholdine re-
funds of utillly overcharges to busi-
nesses has been signed by the &ov-
ernor
Sen. John Stull <R·Escondldo).
authored the bill, criticizing what he
called a PUC scheme to withhold
millions of dollars in refund.a from
commercial customers.
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. signed the
measure, SB604, on Tuesday.
IT REQUIRES THE PUC to con-
tinue ordering refunds equitably
among all its customers, business u
well as residential.
The PUC ·•was considering bow to
distribute refunds, but had no
ironclad proposal. It must be con-
sidered moot now," said PUC
spokesman Gene Rale1ab. '
Richard Spohn, state ctmsumer al-
falra chief, had propased using busi-
ness refunds for energy conservation
proerams.
Raleilh said backers or such a pro-
posal felt businesses raised their
prices wben their rates wenl up. H~
said they usually do not lower them
when they receive refunds.
RALEIGH SAID A .. ballpark
flg\tre" for the amount or refunds the
PUC could consider ls $500 million.
roughly half of which would have to go
to buaineases.
Of the $500 mJIUon , the PUC recent-
ly ordered Pacific Telephone Co. to
refund $14 milllon to all classes or
customers and made a similar Pacific
Telephone and General Telephone or-
der involving $270 million.
Terminal Talia Lag
LOS ANGELES CAP) -After meetinl all day
to overcome a hurdle blocking plans for an Ala4kan
oil terminal in Long Beach, officials of Standard OU
of Ohio and Southern California Edison. aay they're
still far from reaching an agreement.
Top executives of both firms held preliminary
talks Tuesday on a pollution tradeorf proposal in
which Sohio would pay for cleaning up emiaaions
from Edison's facilities in the harbor area.
Under the plan proposed by state Air Resources
Board Chairman Tom QUinn. Sohio would be re.
quired. to finance some $90 million in pollution
cleanup work at Edison to offset smoe which would
be created by the oil termlnal.
Al a p!ICe ltl<e thla
~shouldbuy
5(>f'ed Satln now. even if you c1on·1
plan to paint unlll
later. There's Just
no war=• could make otter
unless n cut• tis prlee to us.
ANO THEY DIDI
BUNN DRIP
COFFEE MAKER
• How can I get rest81rant
• doffee at home? • Alway9 wtth
a BUNN. Only with a BUNN. •
And it's super fast ••• 8 cupe
in 3 minutes • Built to last with copper tubing & atalnl•H
steel. • Ylny Bunn? Value. •
White or Brown.
39ss
RIVAL3Y2 QUART
CROCJC POt
• Cooks an d8f wtin, me
cook's away. • S·L•O·W
cooking niducn shrfnbQ•.
retains JufoM and nutrfente
• Costa ~ tO COOlt all dllV •
#3100
1088
'
KWIKSET
DEADBOLT
• Protect your family! •
Pohce-tesled ... as burglar proof
as a lock can be • Full 1" deadbolt
with free turning steel rod Insert •
All steel tapered cylinder guard •
Two solid steel relnforclno rings • Solid brass keyed cylinder
me<:hanlsm. Brass. etched nickfe
or antique brass.
1oss
S~ll
CORDLESS DRILL
& SCREWDRIVER
• use this drill anywhere •.. boat.
. • Camper ••• cabin •.• yo'1 will
love the freedom It gives you!
Reo.24.95
t
.
I I ,.
l • • t ' I
Orange Coast Daily Pilot Editorial Pa9.1e••••-•••w•ed•Mtd••••y•. s.p••'••m•be•.r•2•1•. 1•t•'TT•••••R•o•1>e•rt.~.·.:.eed., •• :.,~.~.~.::.~.1~•d•'•to•~•,:•;•:•:.•s•l(•;•d•~~.'r•e•d•l•to•r
U~necessary Fears
I
Block School Plan
Neighbomoocf Hntlmen19 al,..ady have been arouMd
against the Newport-Mesa School Oi1trlct'1 tentative plan to
close one of thrwe etementaty echool1 In Costa Me .. and use
th• ei• for relocation of McNalty High School.
A ctttz.ens' advt.ory commfttee appointed by the district 11
now In tho process of staging publlc hearing• to receive com-
ment from parents at Wiison, Monte Vista and Whittler
schools.
While parent. are justified in their high regard for the
value of their walk-In neighborhood elementary schools,
district otf1clafs say dectf nlng enrollment and reduced
f inanoee mean cutbacks are Imminent.
However. a key issue concerns the image of the McNally
continuation high school and its 300 students.
Contlnuatfon students too often are thoughtlessly
stereotyped as misfits or delinquents when in fact many
choose McNally as a productive alternative to regular high
schools. The school's contributions should not be under-
played.
Leaming more about the school's program would do
much to reduce fears and misconceptions about McNally.
If you're one of those bothered about what a continuation
school does, how It operates and whom it attracts, McNally
principal Jack Coleman has quite a story to tell. And he'll tell
you about It or arrange a visit to the campus at 1901 Newport
Boulevard. If you call him at 556-3570.
Haven for Seniors
Cooperation and sound planning has brought Costa Mesa's
long-awaited senior citizens housing project a step closer. .
Planning commissioners last week okayed the city
Redevelopment Agency's request to construct the $1 .9
million federally-subsidized project at the southeast corner of
Park Avenue and Center Street.
The site selection was a good one. When completed. the
75-unit three-story housing project will be close to shopping.
library and park facilities, as well as the recently opened
Downtown Community Center.
Already-approved Housing and Urban Development funds
are expected early next spring to begin construction.
The low-cost housing-f'ent not to exceed 25 percent of
monthly tenant income-could be of great service to the city's
older residents.
Water Saver
We join the Costa Mesa City Council in its enthusiastic
endorsement of an Orange County Water District proposal to
tlse reclaimed wastewater for the irrigation of city parks.
schools. golf courses and other recreatlonal facilitles.
The city had long been pursuing the Idea of pipelining
treated effluent to Irrigate the Costa Mesa Golf Course, but
(he plan was dropped when the city's cost approached
$500,000 .
Now the city has learned there is the potential for
wastewater irrigation to be used on 3,583 acres of city land.
Much of the original financial burden could be lessened
through state funding of the water project.
While there is still no cost estimate on the project
(expected to be approved this month by the State Water Re-
sources Control Board). the ctty stands to save money as
well as conserve our most precious resource.
• Opyiions expressed in the space above are those of the Dalfy Piiot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
utists. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Dally Pilot.
P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 .
Boyd· /Tlw Fly*
ByL.M. BOYD
Wasn't until the space
$dentists undertook their
earliest studies to land a man <?h the moon that they found
out how rues llgbt on ceillnp.
front feet first Is bow. Speed
pbotography proved that. The
Oy zooms upward at about 10
ipches per s~ond. At a body's
length away, it extends all
legs out. When its front le15
touch down (touch up?), it
swings its body, and plants its
back legs, winglnc to keep
balance. Already mentioned
it always lakes orr
backwards.
' ~ Not widely reported was
the fact lhet about one out of
every four railroad bridges
100 years ago crumpled under
weight of the trains, splll·
locomotives, trelgbt and
sengers into gor1es and gullies, most u1u~ly way ~t
'" the lonesome, no\ even .itttbfn Umping dJsi.nee of the
neAl'eat town.
It's a ~mall steel fnatni. ~•nt, alx or seve.a tnchea
lph&, with .aa l ry or ~llerwl1e ~'J!' la•n· we. and ' blunt rtllilte etrook on Ol\t isMI. Wl lt 1'bme year. ba~k , your
a-anddad couldn't have put
bJ1 lhoel on. 8Ut il°I a l•ct to-dN that lhtee Mt of four
citizens hereabouts wouldn't
recognize a buttonhook ii they
were to see one.
The Bloody Mary was
named after Mary Tudor,
who lost her head. Lot or
girls, who've drunk them.
have done that. in a manner
of speaking.
A restaurant cashier of
lengthy experience says
women, unlike men, never
forget to pick up their change
after they pay the check.
Any Virginian will tell you
that the name Roanoke came
from an Indian word meaning
"shell money."
Q. "What was the point of
putting glass bottoms ln the
ancie nt English beer
tankards?"
A. Some of the old lnns were
prettJ'rOWdy. And dangeroua,
t09. Men of · means therein
were teared to raiae their
heavy beer mues bottoms up
for fear of gettlbC their
tbroata cut. So some en-
terprl•lni craftsman In·
troduced the l)asa-bottomed
tankard to permit drinken
something of a vlew of the
ropm while they drained their
dtlnb. Or~ aoes the tale.
'1liose stamps the collectors
see-k rnotl now, I'm told,
depict space conqueau.
Jack Anderson·
Soviet Leaders Showing Age
WASHINGTON -Age is slow·
Jy, inexorably overtaking the old
revolutionaries who rule the Sov-
iet Union. In a few years,. they
wm be completely replaced in
the Kremlin by a new set of
leaders.
Th.is is giving U.S. strategists
the flutters as they try to an· tic I pate whom
the new
leaders will
be and how
their views
will affect
world affairs.
No one has
enough soUd
information
to judge
whether the
moderates or harqheads will
come to power.
The real political power in the
Soviet Union is concentrated in
the Politburo, the policymaking
arm of the Communist party.
There are 14 full members, but
only six really count: Leonid
Brezhnev, Yuriy Andropov, An·
drei Gromyko, Andrei Kirilenko,
Aleksei Kosygin and Mikhail
Suslov.
December, has had a strenuous
year. But Jut June, he showed
signs of severe fatigue and dis-
orientation dutin.C a three-day
visit in France. He was. say
A merlcan observers, "very.
very Ured." But he returned to
Moscow, disappeared for a two-
week rest, and emer&ed with re·
newed energy.
Aleksei Kosystn, now 73 years
old, is a sturdy' Slav wlth few
health problems. For years, U.S.
analysts studied every new pic-
ture ot him 1n an effort to de-
termine whether a dime-sized
moJe on his Jett cheek showed
slgos ot skin cancer. Apparently
tired of the rumors that he was ·
affiicted with the disease, he dis-
appeared for nearly three
months last fall and reappeared
with tbe mole removed.
During Kosygin's absence, the
diplomatic gossip mill carried
the tale that he had suffered a
heart attack. American officials,
however, give the story little
credenee. They note that he sWJ
THE AVERAGE age of the full ~~. Politburo is 661h ; but the average i•n, ,....-1
age of the Big Six is 70. Accord· mg to our sources, none of the
Kremlin patriarchs are
threatened with "identifiable,
lire· threatening conditions." But
several are showing signs of ad·
vancing age. They tire easily,
and a slight case of the flu can
keep them in bed for weeks.
Leonid Brezhnev, the Grand
Sachem of the Communist party,
js plagued with circulatory
problems and may even have suf-
fered a stroke. He occasionally
slurs his words and has difficulty
walking. He is a bad air traveler
and doesn't adjust easily to jet
lag.
In the old days, he used to
smoke and guzzle vodka heavily,
but he has now sworn off
cigarettes and cut back on his
alcohol intake. He also has a
painful dental problem, which
may be the result of bis former
smoking habit. More likely, it
stems from a dlstorition of the
jaw which has bothered him
since he was a young man.
Breihnev, who will be 71 in
Mailbox
, ..
goea on lengthy fishing expedi-
tions and ar~uous bikes with
President Urho Kekkonen of Finland.
SINCE 1913, it has been
rumored that Mikhail Sualov, the
party's ideological high priest.
has tuberculosis. For a man who
will be 75 ln November, he ap-
pears to be holding up under the
burden pretty well. Suslov,
nevertheless, is succumblng to
advancing years and is visibly
slowing down. He is the last of
the romantic revolutionaries.
say our sources: when he 1oea.
there will be no one around "who
can interpret the faith like he
can."
Andrei Kirilenko is the Pollt-
buro 's chief of indus try. If
something should happen to
Brezhnev, KirlleoJco is the mao
most likely to step into the big
shoes. But Kirllenko, already 71.
would probably bold the job for
only a short period. He ls con-
sidered a bard worker and suf-
fers no known health problems.
Also in good health is Foreign
Minister Andrei Gromyko, 68. He
was out of sight for a-period dur-
ing this past winter, and rumo~
circulated that he had been
stricken with a heart attack. Just
aa the gossip reached its peak, he
reappeared. It is now believed be
was merely down with the nu.
THE REMAINING member or the Big Six, secret police chief
Yuriy Andropov, 63. also was
rumored to have a heart condi-
tion. But be, too. was apparently
slck with the nu.
Of the remaining minor mem-
bers of the Politburo, only 78·
year.old Arvid Pelsbe is thought
to be knocking at death's door.
U.S. analysts through him nearly
gone in 1971, when bis official
photograph depicted him as
positively cadaverous. But he
bounced back, appearing in a
subsequent photo cheerfully at-
tired in a pink shirt and Glen
Plaid jacket -avant garde ap·
'parel for the stodgy Soviet
warhorses.
GREAT FOREIGN RJLlcY
ACl-lIEVEMENTS ~
H'£~VSOVT OFW>R ...
PRESIDENT
CART.ER..
WlTH 0111tJJ.LIES .. (~)
•
'Health Nuts' Invade His Bed and Board
To the Editor:
The health nuts have .never
made me mad before, but now
they've done it. They have pre·
viously aggravated me · when
they tried to make me feel guilty
for eating something that tastes
good Instead of yogurt and
birdseed.
But recently I went on a trip to
Medford, Oregon. After driving
for 16 hours, I found a mote\ with
a large neon sign saying,
"Reasonable Rates." This won
my heart until I paid the $22
'·Reasonable Rate" for one ·
night.
federal level is required-a
person who has the ear of the
President and the respect of
Congress.
If excellence is what we seek
for our children in terms of what
education can do to help each
child become as fine a human be·
ing as our love and resources can
provide, then we must a have a
separate Department of Educa·
tlon.
SONDRA SCOTT
W.neel1'f~
To the Editor:
I went to the budget bearings of
the Board of Supervisors to pro-
test the fundJng of the Com·
missian OD the Statua of Women.
CSOW ls-a "Wbte of taxpayers•
money; it overlap1 what is done
by other agencies and, for me, it
is counter-productive as its
women are lobbyinc for ERA,
which I oppose.
The n)Om was !Uled with pro-r amily taxpayers who opposed,
the funding. A CSOW
spokeswomen tr1ed to Justify the
comrnluion's need for our tax
aioney on the sround that it did rape C!OUDSeling and htlpecl to
hnplement Title IX (UNISg]C) In
the1cboola.
WE ALREADY havt a county
rape qency and the aohools are,
by la-w, lmplementtn1 TJUe IX
t.b~maelws.
The 1upervlaon voted 3-2 to
c•v• csow nearly sao.ooo ot our
tax money, but uk.d !Mm to 10
bome and dream up lame new
IOU llDce the on. they had
.... _... behlt done. • ......,. '° M eul• to eet m.., • of Ute MP.llrillOrl tUD 10.,, tL Nri& ,_. I em
temPted to aH foe-$.10 .. fot -own ProJ41Ct anCI I wUt '9 b•• ID ao home and tbln' up tome roaJ.t, attM 11et the......,. 1
KORLEl:N BOGDANOVICH
where one can usually drive from
south to north ends or town without hardly a stop.
Sure, it takes a lot of calculating
to sel the signal clocks properly.
but it is a cinch with the aid or
computers. It would be worth
while alone for the frazzled
nerves it would save.
FRANK KLOCK
Carter deals, not with the Presi·
dent of Panama, but with the die·
tator of Panama who is a very
close friend of Mr. Castro's. The
Panamanian government has
had fifty.four leaders in sixty.
nine years. With such instability
it seems our control is very es·
senUal of this very important
waterway.
S. Besides the similarity of the
...,elling of names: Carter --
Castro, what else is behind the
bond o! these two men?
MARGARET M . WALDEN
Cltlutu' ...,.,.
To the F.clitor:
Millions of illegal aliens are destroying our way of life as na-
tural or legalized citizens. All the
benefits of citllenship including
voting on ballots printed in
foreign langua1e, are available
to foreigners. Our several past
and present govemment.s •P·
parently have found no com·
passion for We, the people.
The only solution for tbe illegal
alien ln our country ls to enforce
the lmmigratlon laws a1 original·
ly written and intended. Return
the illeeal aliens to their home
country wbo have not complied
with the immigration laws by
becomlng lawCUI cititens.
A SO.CAL~EO stroke of a ,
pollUCal peo aboald not be
permitted to disenfranchise the
lffal clUzens of our country. The
flleaats have created their own
clrcwnatanca and they must not
be forciven bec:au•e they are
bere. I
Th government is responsible I
to We. the people. Army, Navy,
Air Force~ Coast Guird and
M artnea NOid have been \&led to 1
1eaJ our: bOrden. IJut the iovem·
meat dJd n0thln1, and now the
IOVtnulMlll_1a~tJy UpecfJJ We. the peOp1e ·.o aorsl•• &hCl torset.. we. the people bave worbd,
•truaiact and 1acrifteed Ill orchr
to ••blJ1b • life we bne ,
bftoine llCC\Wtomect to 04 if the ~
IO>etillled biaDiaft rf lbtl snQV• r.
ment ti Mi'loUI, ll ltiould &»j>li to our UrUted St.it.ti c:tdMM.
C.11. GIBBENS
' I ' l ;
Wednleday, S.p\embef 21 , 1977 ; DA.IL y PILOT. A 1 ~
Plastic Beverage Bottles Ban Sought
WASHlNGTON CAP ) The
Jo'ood lllld Oruc Admln11traUon la
trym& for the sttond tlme th.la
) t•u ln ban the uae of pJuUc
bt•vt'race bottles contalnln1
ac:t)lomtrtle. 11 t htmkal llnktd
to canct'r 1n anlmala and
humans
The chc:macal was U3ed unW a
ftw monW. ago m plastic Coca
Cola bottles and some
Musselman Frutt Products Ju&ce
containers
IT ALSO HAS been used for
years m margarine tubs, veaeta·
blfl oU botUc11, plutlc food wrap•
and ln lh manufacture of acrylic
fi~rs. but th propoted ban does
not CO\# r thoet produetl.
The P'DA tried l11t March to
halt tho uae of acrylonitrile In
oft drtnk cont.alnera after an ln·
terlm rerrt of • ltudy by the
c hemlca tndu1try lloked the
chemical to poaslbly caoceroua
leaions ln the central nervous
syatem and arowths In· the ear
ducts and mammary restona of
laboratory ratl.
MONSANTO CO. OF St. Louis,
( CONSUMER )
which manufactured the bottles
for Coca Cola, asked a federal
appeala court in W ublniton to
block the FDA ban, claiming
there waa no evidence tbat
anyone drinking from an
acylonltrUe bottle would ingest
any of the suspect chemical.
The court sidestepped the
scientific lsaue but ordered FDA
to reconsider on procedural
1rounds, which the aaency hu
done.
Jn the meantime, the DuPont
Co. in Wllmlngton, Del., which
used the chemical to make
acrylic fibers, announced that a
company study found 16 of 470
e mploye s exposed to
acryloaitrUe for many years in
the firm's Camden, S.C., plant
contracted cancer, and eight of
themdled.
DuPONT SAID THE cancer
deaths, four times higher than
company rates and more than
three times higher than the na·
tional averaie, "raise a aerioua
suspicion" that acrylonltrlle
causes cancer in humans.
The FDA ban on use ot the
chemical in plastic beverage bot·
tl~ is scheduled to take effect 90
days after publication in the
Federal Register later this week
or early next. But an FDA
spokesman said Tuesday that
none of the bottles may be on the
market anymore.
AMERI CAN
Cl'/ IL LI SERTIES
VijlON
....... _ ---
Here's a comforting thought:
Save now on fine bedding
from JCPenney.
5.99
Soft, lightweight all
polyeater thermal
blanket. At this price.
you'll want a couple!
Quantltiea limited.
2 for 5.881tandard
Plump, re1illent pillow
of 100% polyester fill.
Comfortable and
lightweight. Covered with
100 °lo cotton ticking.
Queen size. 2 for 9.81
King size, 2 for 7.81
20°/0 off
'Parfait'
bath
ensemble.
Sale 4.40 •""
21x24" contour, Md" oblong
Reg. 5.SO. Contours, obi~.
ovals and wall -~o-walt color In
deep, rich nylon plle wtth safety
$kid-resistant backings.
27x45" oblong. Reg. $9. lale 7.20
24x36" oval. Reg. $6 ..... 4.IO
27x45" ovat. Reg. 9.60 ..... 7.IO
Untversel lld cover.
Reg.2-.... UI · 2-pc. t91lk Mt. Reg. ta ..... UO
6x8' carpeting. Reg. $2~ .... 11M
Special
11.99 ~r;:
l uxurioue comforter Is all
cott~n with polyester fill.
Choose from a large .
assortment of beautiful printed
patterns. Give your room a
touch of nostalgia "In your
favorite color and print.
Full size. Special 16.99
King I Queen size. Specia l 20.99
Quantitl•• limited
Save on plush
towels.
Sale 2.40 :r:
Reg. $3. 'P•redlM' towels 'of
soft cotton/polyester velour
with fringed Jacquard borders.
Soft, pale colors.
Hand towel. Reg. 2.20 8ale 1.78
Wash Cloth. Reg. 1.10 Sale Uo
Sale 3.20::::
Reg. M. •lrlX' tone-on-tone aeOmefrfC deslgntd towels.
PIUlh lheared ten"Y Of cotton/
pofyester. Luth, fashion colors.
~Hind ..... fteO. ~75 ..... uo
'Wliif1 CIOlft, Aeg.1.79 • ._ 1AO
Solid color dust ruffle
of polyester I cotton
with cotton platform
top. Decorator colors.
Full size, $13
Queen size, $15
.T'A'4L. King size, $17
\ .
i i ' ~ I
I
i
DAILY PILOT
QUEENIE Bv Phtl lntorland1
San Francisco Bay
Sunken Booty
Lures Divers
"I TtDNK YOU CAN UN DERSTAND why I'm
leaving here." Fasold says. "At least there in Hon-
duras you can see what you're doing ancl you can
use explosives without having the Sierra Club go
after you."
Wicked currents, zero visibility and chilling
depths protect the ship graveyard from would-be in-
truders. Worms and rust join in the effort, devour-
ing hulls. And mud covers remains which haven't
been swept to sea by rapid currents.
And to make matters worse, bureaucracy has.
added a few restrictions of its own.
DIVERS MUST GET PERMITS FROM several
agencies, including tbe state Lands C.mmission
and the Army Corps of Engineers.
The land commission also demands a cut of any
salva~ed loot, requiring 25 percent of anything un-
der $25,000 and 50 percent of anything over that
amount.
Death Notl~e•
ISllLL ... u . The wife of 8 .lll. LAeclvnan re•
LESTFR LIVINGSTON ISBELL,, .. llre4 l~rner P'"ldent •f!Cl-ner ol el't
: sidenl of "leWPOf'f 8H<ll, Cellfomle. lndutttl•I el'td com'Mrcl,i constrlK·
, Pa~W'CI away on September "· 1'17. llofl '-Y of 0."'91.,.d, otllo. Mrl.
1 Survl"9d b'f Ill\ wife tttlen M. Isbell, LH<llmerl WH • netlve Of Gll>son,
I two OeUQllle" Patric le IN>llec:ll of Te,,,,.._ -Md IM'lvata K-11"9 In -1 Sanltt, CA • ....i Dolores Wlllell of s.... New 0r1 .. ns, Loulslane. SM was •
I• BartMlra. c.. .. son Donald IL Elder of member of El Nl9U91 O>untrv Club.
8e lboe, C• , five 9rendclllldren. a.sides '-'hlnbend llw 1..,,.s two sl ..
• Prlvale l•mlly •••VICH. ln19f'mtnl ,.,..Mn.JM. FOfd Of P•Mdene. ea .. ~ Pec:il•< Vlew Me..-lel Parll 1n lleu of Mrs. F.M. e...h of Vista, Ce .• t-
• tlOW<'r\ contrlb<flons rnev be m-to l>ratl'lltn -twin Rwel Q\endl9f' Of J 111a Amerlcert cancer Society CH' Ho.o L•kewood. I-lllld Hll9f\ Olaf!Cller of
t Memorlel Hospllel. Pacific View PHedlne, ea., three nl«" end llW
~ Mort-ydl•Klor• ~,._,Ill tank" wlll be held
•A 11 TON et 11 :GOAM on T-..oay, ,,..,...., ..... »,
LE$TERJ . BARTON, -S2,ofH.-.. ltn et P«lfk Yi.'# OWl"I lntal'J'Mftf
lln91on Beach, Calltort\la. PHMd ••av Pacific vi... Memorl•I Perk. Peclflc
on 541111_, "· "" Survived by Ills Vl•wMot1uervdlrec:1~1. wlle a.tty, owntr GIGI'• Hair FHlllOM llOIJON
and 1-0.119Mers, Su""" 8ar1on ertd ETHEL M ROBSON, .resident ol \ M,, R~n Flaneo•n, motr1tr Mrs Co\I• MH<i, <Alllornl• PHW<! aw•v
Cerri• Barlon. Slrwta. ""411 be held on S.Pl-r II, \'11. Survl,...d by two
Frldey Sept1>mber 13, 1t17 al 1.lOPM at dau911ter\ Vlolet E Baun ol Sit\ PMk Famlly Colonlal Funeral Home Bernerdlno, Ca. and Mer9aret J.
wllll Interment at Westmlnsl•P J enwn of San Clemenl1, Ca , sort Memonal Pa'11 Wiiiiam D. R-of "lortll,.dQI, c.. •
LEACHMAN ,,., Mlle' llNll Watkins ol Colt• Mesa, MARTHA RUTH CHANDLER Ca., 91ewn Qf'encklllldun end \lxleen
LEACHMAN, roldanl of Leoune 9rH l-Velldelllldl'9n. 5ervlc11 wlll M
N'°'*, c.lllomla. ~est.Id •••Y on held~ Saptember 21. ""et i Sept-tt, 1m In South eo.11 Com-lO:OOAM et The l'lrsl Unlttd Melllodlst 1 "'"""Y HM!lltel ~ • llnoerlno 111. C111irc11. Offletenll Rtv. Cllarll1 Cieri! l and 11 ..... Olu<ll Smith. lrtter,,,.,nt wlll
1 be at tN Mountain View C.metery ol
I
' !i':=. Ca. hll Broadwey Mortuary
HtOC•Y = .......... ,a "'Ml JA'il\ES E. HICKEY, retldenl of • •• ~ -Gm• Mesa, Catltornle, PetMd awn CO A Wit.A CM4PB. Sept.,.... 16, 1971. Survived llY 11ls
~27 E. 17th St. •If• LMty Hklle\'. -J•"'" F. Hkkn
Co u --., .. .., .. 888 Of C.le MllM, Ca., deuQ!lter Jo.n sta ,,,_ * ~ M•nhoft of Mira L•"'•• Ce .. one Sant a Ana Chapel t>rotllef' Jeck Hkk•y °'co.ta,...,.., ca 618 N. Bro.dway Fri.not nwy c.e11 ,_., Wectnffd.ly
Santa Ana • 547.,..131 Sept.,.,.,_ 21, J:OOPM to 1:ao1M et
Pt•<:l •OTMUS
SMll'MS' MOllUAIY
827 Main St.
Huntington Beach ~539
lell lt'OHW•1 CM"'· Crypt side Mr¥1<H wlll lit MIO Tllursoay et
3;00l'M M ,.._.,_ Ablley HI Orentt, ca .... I 8'Mclway Mortuart dire< ton.
YOUNT
HAIU"ln' N. YOUNT, rftldetlt Of
Celt• ..... Callfonll• ... ..._ ... .,
"' ,_......_ 1', tffl. SllNl""4..,. •ltter A11911Re A. Merrlll of Cotle
MeN,Ce.,IWOlll-•1-r Y. TlllX·
tan Of Fr-. Ca., •wtp Y. lr1eo1 Of IUlllaM, ca ... l•Hllll•<• J•·l!I
Tran fers
Patients Need .
Care Centers
By MICHAEL PASKEVJCB
OfU.Oe41'1>1 ... ,Wff
A1 many aa 700 of Fairview
State Hospltal 's 1,500 patients
could be transfered to limited
t'ure raclllties wit.bin com·
munJties. but a lack or such care
centers keep them institu-
t1onalized. accordin1 to tbe
hospital's director of medical and
clinical care
• uons are stiU dehumanizing to
some patients who are not severe· ly retarded.
These mildly retarded patients
don't need to be institutionalized
and would be better off in smaller
convalescent homes or ln foster
homes, Ms. McLain said.
0.11, ~•tot 5'.it "'91•
Drug Chances
Guilty Pleas
Filed by Trio
Thrte men jailed on drug charges after they sold
marijuana to an undercover Co6ta Mesa police of-
ficer in a Newport Beach apartment have filed 1ullty
pleas and have been sentenced in Oran1e County Superior Court.
Judge H. Warren Knight accepted the pleas in-
volving sale and possession or Thai sticks and sen-
tenced Kelly Creech Brewer. 26, of 202""-42nd St ..
Newport Beach. to 90 days in the county jail and
three years probation.
Tony Ray Siebel, 18, of9331 Leilani Drive, Hunt·
ington Beach, was sentenced to three years proba-
tion and a $550 fine.
Judite Knight ordered a six-month jail term and
three years probation for Leslie Arthur Benfield, 28,
Rolling Hills.
Calling the hospital for the re·
tarded "a last resort." Keri
McLain said the Costa Mesa in·
stltution "would be very happy to
close Its doors."
Ms. McLain said conditions
have changed ''drastically" at
the hospital because of new laws.
A verbal request from a patient to
leave now forces officials to set
court dates for hearings on the re· quest.
-THEY HAVE RIGHTS'
Fairview's Kerl McL•ln
The trio was arrested May 9 in Brewer's apart-
ment by an Wldercover of11cer who testified that he
handed over $3,100 for a tot.al of one and one hatr
pounds of processed marijuana, including Thai Sticks.
"111EY DO HA VE rights and
we won'tdenythem," she said.
While officials are making an
effort to improve conditions by in-
stalling curtains, wall graphics
and lamps to brighten hospital
wards, Ms. McLain said condi·
Attorney Mark Lane,
who's made a career
questioning the official
version of the assassina-
tion of President John F .
Kennedy, beadl a panel
of conspiracy \heorists
meeting at UC Irvine
Saturday.
The 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
conference, sponsored by
UC extension , will
analyze how the
Fr eedom of Information
f\ct is an ald to unoover-
i n g political con·
spiracles.
It wtll be held in Room
100 of the Social Science
Hall. Admission ls $20.
THE CONFERENCE
precedes eight weeks of
Tuesday night seminars
examining conspiracies
from the 1950s McCarthy
anti-Communist hear -liB!li .. ilillll£~~M1S:~dil• ings tb Watergate, begin·
nlngOct.4.
Other conferen ce
participants include Carl
Cohen, anthropologist
and journalist, and John
Gerassi, UCI visiting lec-
turer and former Latin
American correspondent
for Time. Newsweek and•
the New York Times.
P LA YWRIGHT
Follow Their Lead
..Leading praises of the Orange Coast
College football t~am are these Pirate
song leaders. At top are Sherry Phillips of
Santa Ana ' <left> and Nancy Higlesy of
Huntington Beach. In the middle are
Crissy Grissom of Orange (left> and
Esther Pijl of Newport Beach. At bottom
are Jani Smith <left> and Karen Stalp,
both of Costa Mesa.
Donald Freed, author of --------------------
"The Killing of RFK"
and co-author Cwltb
Lane) of "Executive Ac -
lio,n," is conference
coordinator.
Lane contends that
John Kennedy's as-
sassin, identified as Lee
Harvey Oswald, was an
agent for the CIA.
Guard Arms Okayed
SACRAMENTO CAP> -Callfomta's nuclur
power plant security cuards are now allowed to
carry ftrearms while on duty. even if there'• no
public emer1ency.
Tho permlulon came in a bill that Gov. Ed-
mund Brown Jr. allowed to become law without bis slenature.
CEU ENDS 'SPREE'
mg," according to U.S.
District Court Judge
William Schwarzer. who
imposed sentence.
A Costa Mesa woman
who admitted defrauding
the Orange County
welfare department of
more than $4,500 ln finan-
cial aid has been sen-
tenced to six months in
the county jail.
Superior Court Judge
H. Warren Knight or·
dered the jail term and
five years probation for
Mary K. Yuzva, 32, also
known as Mary Vitonis.
,--------------, 1Ad_vanced 1 I VI deo & Communications 1 I 729 W. 16th St. s.tt. A-4 Coste Mfte Ul.0170 I
I Name
DISTRICT attorney's I Firm .
...•......... Title ..•...••.••..• I
investigators said Mrs.
Yuiva drew $4,561.13 .I
from the welfare depart-I
ment over a 13-month
period after s he falsely I
represented that. she
lived alone with her two I
children and received no I
support rrom their
father.
They said investigation
revealed that her
children were living in
Ohio throughout the
period of welfare pay-
ments and that their
Cather bad contributed to
their support.
Call 642-5171.
Put a few word•
to work for ou.
. ................................... .
Address ······ . .. . . ................... .
City .... .•••..•••. State .••••••• ZIP ........ .
Phone .... .. ...................................... 1
~ I
-
Our Car
Phone is Superior
A S.,.C.0 c_. ,._..Is ..,.,-. ..... ef ........
"'"' .... It off-,.. .................. ~..,.._, .. tti. .....,, CClllpled wttlt ,. ... •ta WT ...... = ...... mcf of COW'M. .. t11rlt o.fM• wt1kt9 lllfalw loc .... the ftnt .,.. cllwML llt • ~o e .. .._. '°" .... t1rn • ._.,._.,,. .. _ .. feet .... -..
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I
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COLOMIAL N 8•L
NOMI
7801 Bolsa Ave.
w.stmlnster
893-3525
V ..... of Qo.lll, Ca. tffflN,._ 1-.=~===~:ii:~:~==~iiii:i:iiiiiii~ii~iiiiF.~~-i ltklleN L TN!ttmi of ,.,.._, ca .. '-
tre.......-.ecet,Jennalleeftt!Cllrlal'f
Yautllll ef Clo¥h. Ca. OrnHldo
tenial ... II 119 Mid on Thvrltley s...-
tllf!IW tt. tm • 1 :OOl'M et l'ell'lleWOtt
MetMrlaf 1'1"11 Wlltl IN It...,, OWlr!H
Cieri! affl,1•11119. lell lroeclw•y
IN SHELTERED SECLUSION
PAClfM; YllW ...om ... , ...
CetnftetY Mof'tuatY 'Chapel
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport.
Calltomla
8444700
MOttUW.,dlr.ct .....
Neptune Society
CR•MATIOM IUltlALAT ...
646·7431 .,.., ... ~ ..... --...., .... c, ..::,~. ~fWfN I ...... °"f'.111!·.
•
FAIRHAVEN MEMORIAL PARK & MORTUARY offers COMPLETE
MORTUARY and CEMETERY SERVICES. all located In a tranqult
Mtting. Mal\)' famlllea are finding how convenient It Is to "4AVE
EVERYTHING IN ONE BEAUTIFUL LOCATION, thus eflmfnatlng a dreeome funeral proc .. lon through city traffic. You .,.. cordially
Invited to take a drive around our tree-Jaden park and enjoy the aylvan
peace that Fairhaven otters.
j
I ):
' ! I
Protest Jailing Late
Action Uproots Peace ful Lifestyles
\\ A..'J{JNGTON t.\P) · Al tht•
turn ol the dccadt', d"'rtn1 an a1w
uf t1luclent protN t, three youna
men part1capated in an anti·
Vietnam war demonst.rat.lon in -.
~mall Var1m1a c0Ue1e lown
T bla week. uprooted from
utherwbe typical middle class
hvt.~. they went to jall for t.hetr
JIU rt tn that protest of 20even
years ago.
JAY G. RAINEY, 31, U. mar-
nt-d, the father of two children
.md Wllb head of employe rela-
tions with a V1rgan1a manufac
luring firm. J ames G. McClung,
J6, wm; a pubhc Information
s pecialist at the Library of
Congress m Washington. Stephen
B. Rochelle, 29, of suburban
Fairfax works with computers at
a Maryland engineering firm.
Last week they were ordered
b y Rockingham County <Va.'
Circuit Court Judge Joshua
Robinson to report to the coun-
ty's jail Monday to begin serving
six months jail terms.
SUITCASES JN HAND. neatly
dressed, they did so.
Robinson said in court that the
us ual reasons for sending people
to jail -punishment, retribution
or rehabilitation-did not ap-
ply in this case, according to coun-
ty prosecutor David Walsh.
But Robinson was quoted as
s aying he would not overturn a
jury's dedsion, even one made
seven years ago, and that he had
to uphold the integrity of the
judicial process.
RAINEY FOUND IT "a hell of
a reason to send three people to
jail who've built up their Hves the
past seven years.••
In 1970, Rainey, Rochelle and
.McClung participated in a slt·in
with about 40 students at what
( THE UW J
'""'" then culled Madison College
111 llarrlsonburg, Va., about 100
mllt>ll from Wuhington. Rainey
.and Roehelle were students.
McClung was <&n assauant
f;ngllsb professor.
According to news reports and
ml~rv1ews, the group was pro·
teslln& the Vietnam war, VlOla-
tiorui ol student rights and refusal
by the school, now called James
Madison University, to renew
contrac~ of som e professors, in·
cludmg McClung.
COLLEGE OFFICIALS called
police to dis lodge the de·
monstrators 1.nd many were con-
victed of t.cespassing and fined
SlOOeach.
But Rain ey, Roc hell e.
McClung and four others argued
that their constitutional right lQ
free speech had been violated.
They asked for a trial in circuit
court, without a jury, according
to their lawyer, J ohn C. Lowe.
Their request for trial without a
j ury was denied. The jury that
heard the case imposed six-
month jail terms and $500 fines
on Rochelle and Rainey, Lowe
said. McClung got a nine-month
sentence and a $1,000 fine . The
four others were fined $500 each.
ROCHELLE, RAINEY AND
McCIWlg a ppealed. A federal dis·
trict court decided their right to
free speech had been violated.
But the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals overturned t hat de·
cision, saying Pirst Amendment
right of students on campus are
not as broad as those of a citizen
in public places, Lowe said.
As for Ramey, Rochelle and
M cClung, now upright citizens,
who were first sentenced when
times were diflerent, former pro-
~ecutor Jack Depoy said: "It's
hard t.o s ay they shouldn't have
t•xerted their right to protest.
They could have served their
lime then. To appeal, they paid
their money and took their
chances. They knew what they
were doing ..•. It was a serious
criminal offense. not in exercis-
ing their right, but in creating a
~1tuation that required use of
pollce in a crowd.''
JlE ADDED: ''I FEEL like
they are being treated fairly un-
der all circumstances. lf you just
hear that three people living de-
cent lives have to go to jail,
anyone would be concerned. But
when you know the
circumstances, I don 'l know how
1m yooe can get that upset about
at."
County She riff Glenn M.
Weatherholtz said the court re·
commended that Rainey
participate in a program that
would allow him to work at his
JOb during the day and stay at jail
at night.
"ll's essentially like renting a
room in jail." he said.
He said the court also urged
that Rochelle and Mcclung do
community volunteer work in ex-
change for time off their sen-
tences.
McCLUNG, ASKED I F he
would do it all again, said: "I
think ... '1l. M~principles have not
changed. I i.l1ll believe in the con-
s titutional right of people who
want to protest. But I would cer
talnly not do it again knowing
t hat the law's punishment wa!>
anything like-what was meted
out."
··cot a problem? Then wnle to Pat Dunn. Pat u.•111
c ut red tape. getlinq the. answers and action vou need
to .solve mequ1tzes m government and busme.~s Mail
your que.dtons In Pal Dunn. At Ynur Serv1c1'. Orangl'
Coast Do.1111 Pilot. !' n Hor IS6<1. Cnsta Mesa. CA
92626. A.s many lrllL•r11 as possible will be answeri·d .
but phoned mqumes or lelll'1s not 111clud111g tht'
reader's full name. ad.dres.~ and business hour.~· phone
numbf>r camwt be wns1dered This column appears dai-
ly exct:f)t Saturdays ..
LotD Co•t X·ra11• A l'allable Bui.hC'<i !>hould tw cut hack from t'ntrie~ and "In·
dows. !>O burglar' can't hide In them. Sliding gla.,,
doors al!>O !>hould haw a piece or dowel that m s Into
the track to prcvc>nl a forced o~ning. DEAR PAT: Arc there 1>lill any mobile chest x·
ray buses around or clinics where one can get an an·
expensive chest x-ray?
H.E .M., Newport Beach
California Chest X·Ray Surveys, 2101 W. Cbap·
man, Orange, operates mobUe units, and bas office
hours on Thursdays from Z to 5 p.m . and 6:30 to 7
p .m. A "mini film" x -ray costs $4, and no pbysl·
clan's prescription is required. Phone 633-6%20 for
more information. Chest Re11earcb Survey, 12062 ·
Valley View, Salte 105, Garden Grove, also offers Inexpensive x-rays at Its office.
Aid.al Vlrtl .. Require ~rt
DEAR PAT: Please settle a family argument.
My husband claims that car accidents that injure or
kill an animal must be reported to the police. I had
the unfortunate experience of hilling a dog recent·
ly. I contacted the owner and took the dog to a
veterinarian, but m y husband says I also should
have reported it to the police. ls he riRht?
· H.E., Costa Mesa
Yes. Section 20008a of the veblele code requires
that all ucldents involving IQJury or death M\ll l be
reported to the California Highway Patrol or city
police. Tbls bacludea anlmala as well as people.
l1U11ra11ee Pia .. Sl•llar!'
DEAR PAT: My employer is offering a disabili·
ty income insurance plan, and I don't know that I
want to pay the premium involved since I already
have health insurance. ls this type of insurance the
same as health insurance"
The dl'parlmC'nt rurtht'r f('COm mC'nd'I a Pl'l'JI
hole as a wi se inH''>lment and a tim<'r to turn on
lighL'i when no on<' bat homt'. Garage doors and all
windows Nhould he kept l~kcd.
Recommendation'i for specific locks are availa·
ble rrom firm!> lli.ted under "Locks mith!>" in thf'
Yellow pages. (jnlc.,i. you arc mechanically Inclined.
yo ur best protection would })(' afforded by a pro·
resslonal l<>tksmlth 's Install ation.
<Jaarroal A '1•orh• Weed Kiii.er
DEAR PAT: I had a bad weed problem in my
yard this spring and had to use a lot of weed killer .
l s there anythinl'( I can add to the soil to get rid of
the chemical residue before I replant?
L.O .. Irvine
Gardening experts advtse adding activated
charcoal to reduce levels of organic pesticides In
the soil. T his Is porous, like a sponge, and deac-
tivates many chemicals by absorbing and trapping
pesticide molecules, rendering them ineffective.
Fl"" Offtt>S B.,..per Stieb.-.
DEAR PAT: Is there any place I can order a
personalized bumper sticker? ,
N.K., Fountain Valley
Write lo Miies Kimball, Oshkosh, WI 59401. You
can requnt 15 large or 25 small letters of yoW'
c hoice. The nominally priced self·adbeatve
bumper stickers come In black on yellow or nores·
centred. ·
.~..,......
DAILY PILOT A 9
Shark Fight On
Fish Worth $300,000
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The battle over the 2,000·
pound great white shark began soon after lt died.
A commercial fis herman caught it off Carlsbad m
June 1976 and sold it lo three meo for $400.
THE TRAILER IN WMCR they were taking it
home -to a future.sideshow exhibit. -fishtailed on
a freeway and cruhed. A tow truck finally scooped
up the JS.loot-long sea monster but by then its
stench was overwhelming.
In desperation, the owners sold it to Robert T.
MacBryde but he took them back as partners •
refrigerated their prize and together they showed it
at fairs throughout the United States.
But bickering ensued. In a $300,000 damage suit
against his partners, MacBryde claimed:
"THE CONSPIRATORS MALICIOUSLY
deprived my business of the chance of success and
in so doing they deprived bundreds of thousands, iC
not millions, of people around the country.of a thrill-
ing and educational experience."
A defendant, Tarley Branson, said the suit "will
be defended vigorously.''
The great white shark was silentin cold storage·
somewhere in Los An&eles. .
Teen Law Courses Set
QUIET LIFESTYLE INTERRUPTED
James Mcclung Leaves for Jall Capitol News Service
Elvis Statue
Funds Sought
SACRAMENTO -The California Department
of Youth Authority announced that eight more
~chool dlslricts will conduct law education courses
designed t.o familiarize teenagers with elements of
the criminal justice system.
The six-part curriculum developed by the
Constitutional Rights Foundation has been m pro-·
gress jn three Los Angeles County districts since
1973.
Joining the Pasadena. Long Beach and Los·
Angeles Unified school districts will be San Juan
Unified, Sacra mento Unified, Grant Joint Union,
and unifted districts in San J ose, Oakland,
RiversideandSimi Valley.
MEMPHIS, Tenn . said , would be used for
CAP> -The Memphis other memorials t o
Developme nt Founda· Presley, who died Aug.
lion h~ won approval to 16. solicit $276,000 for a 25-__________ _.... __________________ _
foot statue of E lvis
Presley.
The Board of sohcila·
lions issued the founda·
t1on a 90-day permit.
which can be renewed
a Her that period . The
foundation asked for an
unlimited amount of
tame.
LAST WEEK. Vernon
Gamble, board
chairman , denied the
foundation a lemporary
permit because lhe ap·
plication dtd not say how
s.5fl.500 would be spent.
The a pplication t h e
board approved ~aid il
would cost that a mount
lu prepare a site a nd
creel lhe statue
FOUNDATION al
torncv Ronald Borod ~:ud the roundatton plans
to donalc to the aaty and
county a 50-ton bronze
Elvis shtlue by sculptor
1-:rac P a rks of Penn·
:-.ylvania
Any money collected
over the $276,500, Borod
In
Your
Bes I
Interest
Higher interest than commercial banks pay plus the
assuran ce that your savings are safe, insured by a
Federal Ag ency. A deposit of $1000 or more in a 6 year
Investment Certificate yields 8.06% annually. Or, a
$1000 Certificate of Deposit Account for only one year
yields 6.72%. Of course, interest is compounded daily
at ~os Angeles Federal Savings. Investment Certificate
and Certificate of Deposit savers qualify for a sate
deposit box, just one of over 20 most wanted services
available. It's in your best interest to start your savings
account today. One minute and one signatur.e is all
1t takes.
H.J .• Newport Beach
Not exacUy. HeaJth lnnrance 1enerally ls con-
sidered as i>rotectlon for yoQ against specific
medical costs related to u Ulneas or lnjury. Dia·
abWty Insurance protttts you agalut Joa of yov ~al IQcome tr you become diHbled aDCl your
paycheck stop.I. It Is a means of keepln& lDcome
nowtng In wblle yoa are unable io work. V•aally,
yoa can puttbase dlsabWty 1.Dco1ne tnnrance for
up to • percent of your lac:ome. ta your cue, yoar
employer probably pays pad of the prellliam lf ln· s.arance ls offered aa an employe beaeflt.
Bo , Beachcomber Restaurant
Bentley!. $350
Depedt lfl•t Be llft•raecl
I SAlTTEEDIN · FREE Scallops aARuc eunER · L: · ..... _ l/2 Liter .~l ·:-of Wlne
I ' · '°""" 1M1S ·~
lncJudN soup or our popular Beachcomber ael•d
8'1fV'ed With condiment ttay and choice of baked
Po(8to or our homs fries. ~-1 ' -•Nrwd ,,__,,,_
All Interest Compounded Daily
Annual Yield Current Annual Rate
8.06% $1000 for 6 to 10 years 73/4%
6.72% $1000 for 1 to 2 years 6Y2%
5.39% Paid day-in to day-out sv .. %
F9daral •tgut .. 1on1 j>trm1t drly ~1h011.,.a1 ""'" t~m account& 1u11tec1 to au11t1at11l1t Inter· •'t 1tctuc:tlon,
LOS ANGELES
EEOERJ\b
SAVINGS
I
I
Ii
!
\
Jfl OAIL Y PILOT
Fhlal Sailed
.. .
66Race Won
By Dog Patch
l>t>N 1'0&tch, 11 40 foot t-.o tun yacht owned und
s klPl.»t•r1.>0 b) Don A) r\'i., Ntwport I harbor Yacht
Club, "as tht• oven~ll and Chts'> A -. innur or Balboa
Vachl Club':-. G8 ~rica. _. :;ene:. ol ofb hort! d&y
rut·es satlt.'<1 throughout the s e111>on ·
!-'ma.I r ac~s ol the: :,er1ct1 \\CJre blUlt d ~aturd1&y
und Sunday with u twin ball to Snap Rock 1md return
Winner of the Stup Rock 1tnd Return race was Blue
''fort.her saalec.J by Uill ~ullivan. Los Angele:; Yacht
('!uh
THE SERl t:s ALSO ft :iturv:. .Perfor mance
H undlcap Racing l''lect M1dgt:l Ocean Racing
F leet and Midget Ocean Racing Al>Soc1ation yachts
First lo finish and fll'!>l overall an PHRF was
Du;patch. i.kappcred by Rachurd Dorns. Huntington
Har bour Yacht Club Wanner an the MORF d1v1sion
was Vivacious II. sailed by Ball von KlemSm1d.
BYC. and the MORA winner was Little Pooner.
Ste ve Schock. Newport Harbor Yacht Club
Series rei.ulli.:
OVERALL I , Dog Patch . 2. Puazz.
Ou Bose/Johnson. VYC . 3. Ruffian. Earl Dexter .
VYC.
CLASS A 1, Dog Patch. 2, Blue Norther . 3.
Ra ider. J ay Linderm an, BYC .
CLASS 8 l, Ruffian ; 2, Antares, Al an An·
drews, BYC: 3, Huc klebe rry Duck.
CLASS C: -l, P lza11; 2. Andiamo, Bob Sodaro.
UYC: 3. Preamble. Ter ry and Saint Cicero, BYC.
MORT<' 1, Vivacious II : 2, Wildcat. Pete
Schoonmaker. BYC: 3. Giant Killer . Stedek/Foster. ssvr ~IOHA I. Ila'-' kc.> c. Mike ~c hacter. BYC . 2.
Scquo.>ah .Jim Moon· HYC. :l, Seduction, E
Wllhams. BY C
New Safe Boating.
Oass Annouiiced
Dana Point f'lot1lla 2 29 or the U S. Coast Guard
Auxiliary hus announced a new s are boating class
• for sailors of ltm1ted experience s tarting Thursday
In Lht.· ca rctt.-ria of the R. JI. Dana Eleme ntary
school. 21212 La Crcs t:i , Duna Point.
Heg1slration anti lhc rirst class will be conduct -
ed from 7::l0 to!) 30 Thursday. The course will con·
tlnue ror eight ~eeks on consecutive Thursday
• nights . /\ certificate or !'omplelion will be given
after a n <'xam1naltun ·• /\mong lhl• stthJl'tls covcn:d will he bas ic boat
handling, s:.11lors ltncs and knots, coilini:{ and heav-
ing. se1t1ng, wh1pp1ng and splic ing lines, lighting re·
q uiremcnl!-., hghl wcuther suils and various rigs.
Also discus:-.cd will be wind and weather, man
: ove rboard procedure<,, tuning, balance and sail
tram and thl• tht.•<ir.> or running. reaching and beal-
m,::
• •
The course 1s o pen to the public and fa milies
a rc encouraged to attend. There will be a nominal
charge for texl materials. Further informa tion may
be obtarn <'<l hy ealhn~ 493·7119
~Big Sailboat Show
i'
::~Set for October ..
'• Plans a re shaping up for one or the largest
• Southern California Sailboat Shows io the history of ~ the Southern California Marine Association 1: <SCMA l sponsored expositions, according to J erry
•: Sehi or Ncw1x1rt Beach, chairman of this year's ~show. ~. The show as sc heduled Ocl. 22-30 at the new t· $51.5 million Long Be ach Convention Center com·
: .. ple x.
:: The sailboat show will be the fi rst public exposi-
~: hon 1n the new 100,000 square.fool building • ~~
BOATING
Newport's
Yachtsmen
In Front
SHI ZUOKA. Jupun
CAP 1 Ameri c an
y achtsmen David Ult
man and Tom Linbkey
f r om Newpor t Beach
maintained their lead
after the third race. in the
s ix ·race 4 70 ·c l a ss
seventh world yachting
championship today
T he U.S yacht. which
fi nis hed sixth Monday
f or 11.7 poinli; and
s econd Tue:;day for three
points. was bixth again
today nnd scored 11. 7
points for ~ three·racc
total of 26.4 points.
Forty.fi ve yachts from
16 countries s ailed in
good weather on L11ke
ll a m :rna l n Shizuok a
Prefect ure 17S m il es
south>A esl of Tokyo
Willia1™'
Boat Wins
Tiro Races
Pintado. a 22-foot :;loop
5 kippc rcd by Oa v e
William!. wai. a double
winne r in Voy a g ers'
Yad1l Club '5 a nnual
race eru1sc lo Long
Ele:n:h Yacht Club. T he
fleet s ailed t<1 Long
Beach on Saturday <lnd
returned Sunday Thl'
races Y.<'re sailNI under
the Pcrformantt· ll an
dicap Hac1ng Fleet rule
NEWl'OllT TO LONG BEACH
Pll\lac20 1 Lum"'"" ttttl Aon''
p..,f\p1(«11y Jim S .... UQ
LONG BEACH TO NE'w~o•n
P lnt#ldo 2. Qut,1 A,,q .. r r,0001nq
Vtll1nQ Dan P1tl•
Old Charts
Fallout
Moving
Rapidly
By The Associated Press
An uir mass car rying
ra dioactive debris from
a Chinese nuclear test
explos ion will m o v e
t h roug h th e P ac ifi c
Northwest today a nd
th en c urve n ea r the
California coast. federal
officials say.
The air m ass carrying
the debris is expected t o
mQv e r ap i dl y
n orth e astwa r a a n a
reach the Great Lakes
region Thursday and the
East Coast on F riday, a
spokesma n for the En
vironmental Protection
Agency said Tuesday
IC some of the radioac
t1ve material is caught in
r ainfall over the Pacific
Northwest! it could con-
( I N SHORT )
Laminate pasture land in
Washi ngton , Oregon.
most of Idaho and parts
of northern California .
the agency said.
Ban De la11 OK
WASHI NGTON (AP 1
/\ proposal t.o require:
t·anct>r warnings on pro
ct ucl~ conta ining ~ac
c haran Y. as r e ject e d
Tuesday bv the !louse ln-
1 e rs talt-<tnd F'or eig n
Comme rce Committee
But the commi ttee
followed the Senate by
'otanl! to delay banning
t he artificial sweetener
for 18 monthi. U th~
!louse ~oes along with
the committee, the de-
cision against requiring
warning labels could s el
the scene for a battle
"'1th Senate conferees.
Cannon Fatal
BOLLA. Mo. fAP 1 A
21 ·'ear old college stu
dent w:is killed when a
c u nnon u sed b y a
University of Missouri
Ho lla fraternit y t u
celebrate foothall vie
ton es blew up.
Randall C Crus tals.
21. of Florissant. Mo .
w as dead on arrival at
SL John 's M e r e)
Now Aval.lable Hos pital in St Lou•~ w h e r e h e wa 5
Th c Li b r a r) 0 f transferred after being
Congress bas compiled a tre ated at Phelps Count}
por lloho of old vellum Memorial Hospita l in
c ha rta and atlases in its Rolla. lie had suffered
cotte.:Uon. The illustrat-seve re head inJuracs. At
ed guide covers 33 c ha rts least six other persons
Crom the 14th through were injured .
18th centuries with the .Plan Thtearted
oldest dating from 1275.
"Naut ical Ch ar ts in WASlllNGTON CAP J
Vellum" contains 12 i I· -The Hous e is resis ting
lus trations and can be the Carte r admlnistra ·
purchased for $6 from lion's plans to phas e out
the Superintendent of the nation's only nuclear
Docume nts, U.S. Gov· breeder reactor. which
ernment Printing Office. would yield _weapons ·
Wastungt.on DC 2<>402 g rade plutonium as a
O rder Stoc k ·num b er byproduct of electricity
030·004-00016·7 p roduction The House on Tuesday
~High Roler Tops in SF
I f lhgh Roi" o• ned a nd ,k•P · mies fo• s.lill small<' '""ngs, and
t hwarted an administra-
tion-backed a mendment
t hat w o uld h ave
authorized spending only
enough money next year
to continue current re·
search on the project at
Oak Ridge, Tenn. ~· pcred by Bill Power of the Newport the. Keath Kil born serle~ for Two Ton
I!• II a rbor Yacht Club, won the fi rst race ratings. . ~ of the City or San Fr ancisco Trophy Winner In St ~rancis ~~nes ope ner ~ ser ies being sailed out of the St. Fran-Monday was Whistle Wang, Hastings
cis Yacht Club ~iarcourt. Santa Barbara YC; winner
1n the Rheem series was Mirage, Les
., St. FYC is conducting four t rophy Hollander, and the winner in the Two
els Series for big TOR Rated yachts ; St. FYC.
• the City of San Francisco series for The second r ace of the series was
11m aller yachts. the Rheem Trophy ~cheduled today
raz Prepe•ed
WASHINGTON <AP I
A House subcommit·
tee is calling tentatively
for higher payroU taxes,
especially on better ·paid
w o rke r s a nd th e ir
employers, in an effort t.o
pull the Social Security
system out of the red.
For the
R ecord
Country S t ar
Dl••olutlon•
0 f M a r r la9• ,. ..... ,...n .. ••
KEARNEY, Pt1•• T •no JO•n G
AUSTIN. Sll••YI L~n •no Georo•
Winston; PRICKETT, LeRoy Le•ler
•nO N•I• -·MASTERS Ju n M
•lld Brian, WILSON, Niii V •nd Wiii
8r1Qht, WRIGHT, Ellt1bllll 0. I ncl
Plllllp s .. GARGANO. Clle rlu
Mlt11 .. 1 •nd Palrlc1a f'rtncu ,
CARLSON, Rlcherd LH ""O Tereoll•
M10ar1; ALLEN, Krl•llM L. ano
S.muel d ; ARMAND S1tva11 0 •M
Ltnd•ll
HOUSER Marllyn 01.on• ...o Em m oll Uyr~ll !>!i:V lN ~
Palrlcla Ann •nd Cl'•''•• V 0( AM
8 1rb••• e •nO ~ooe r 0
GR E ASBV Cll•rl•• b•IU •nd K•llll~n V1v1•n, fRTMAM, Rtcl\arO
E •<>d Donn• G FLfGAL LYM•
f.r .. n<o """ A•noolpn M~ HOFF
MAN N•nc.y F ia v• .. nd Rubtr
EOW••O Jt MAXWELL Oonn• J
•nO CortOI o..-PET l RS St...,..,,
'> •ncJ S.lly 8 MAC.ALLA NE l
Jtttt~J.,M M4AU••
COFFEE, N0<m• LO<ll\t -Fr•n•
H•rbvrt ELS TEN. f lHl\Or •ncl John
LOno HERSH Laurel A •M J aco
A , WOOO, K•ren O end Fr•n• P
HOLSTEIN flll\O< •ncl G.oroe M
MC CONE. Sonora L •nd l(eftMlll L
ROBINSON Je<Qutllnt V •'\d
Rol>ert E KUSIAK C..Oroe Paul •ncl
AllUM.M-SHERMAN N•n<y M •M
Cltrrncnl C , Sf EVENS M•ry E llt n
tncl OI Vld MIC,.,atf,
WEDDLE. K•rtn f. tn<I Mith.ul
P • HOGUE. Uno S •ncl Otnnls P
WEI.. TER, C.nclece L . .nd J.itrey l .
SAMUELS, Jl<ll Ktltf\ •nd Ju ,,.,.
Alleen; 8ROUWEllS, Lera E. ano
fioblrt L.; JONfS. Mlldell,.. P, •nd
Wlltl•m CU I. J ACKSON S1n111
M .. lt ""° Kallll 8 e,,,..I; STEf Lf. L y dl• M and C.r•oo ry w ,
W ILLIAMS. JatQUt llnA A alld
Aaymcnd l • IOHNSTON, K4tlllttn w .no OollalCI 0 • ROKS, Lind• J
•"d l"°""\ A RICHEY, Oenlu M
•nd O~,..,y G OTT Jo1nne T ano
Rlcll•rOL
Birt h•
UNCLl!M&NTI
Olf Nlf llAL 140Sl'IT AL
~-rl,1'17
Mr •M M o 'l•loft ~ll•1t0f' S•ri
J"an ~\trano bOY
Mr i ncl Mr\ 0•W't0 V•rt Ouyrw S•r·
Cltmf'nt•-got
,,,,., lnd .~r\ Ro9er Ht'•t", S•rt
Cl•mentt, DOV
Mr •nd Mn Jo"P" Robin'°" San
Clement• bOV ~-·t,•'11
Mr .,,., M t\ R.ollll V••o•• San
Ctem..,1t,bov
Mr and Mn K1nne111 Mlllor S•"'
J uan C.p,,lr-. olrl ,.,,._, J. lt71
Mr •nd Mr\ Cer•td Conwn , San
Clement1,01rt
Mr .,,., M" J•me • P04', MIHIOn ""
s.,._, 4. "" M r •nO Mr\ Jolln Werd Si n
C11men10.DOV s.,.1--· '· 1'77 Mr •nd Mr' G4rad0 llalOtt ~~n
Ctementf', 91rl
Mr and Mr\ (P'h,,lt \ ~·I~ L•Qvn•
bu<n.01rt Mr "'no Mr\ Rt90.,...rto N&varro, S•rt
(l,mt-ntr. 01rl
l'OUNTAIN VALLEY
COMMUNITY HOS~ITAl
S."1•mblr 1, 1'11
Mr "'"°Mt\ S&tvitOt>• 'o""'" "'Oo"
•141" Vatlf'y q1tl
Sf:pttmo.r • tt11
M • tM Mr\ (htitrlt' r "• n • l')•,n
•411nV1lHfy QHI
~, titnd M r\ vonq t< '"" ••~'""'"1'0"'
hf'"" Qtfl
Setrlomller t lt/7
M r f'tnd Ml'\ J•"'<""' M~"'" H11tt'
noton &.,,)(I\ Q•t'I
S.P1•mller 1 1'11
M• •'ld Ml"· Oetlbe ,, f=UO•' Httnl
nQton Bt-Atf't DOY
SOUTKCOAST
COMMUNITY '40S~IT'AL ...... ,. u , ,.,,
M t .1,,.;:t Mr\ J•mt\ OtlVI\ \.)n Ju•"
C•01\lrMVJ. 91r1
Mr .tno Mr\ O~v10 Otct\lt't' D•n"
Point. 01rl
A ..... ,. 21, 1'71
M r 4,1nd M r\ Ch•rlt\ Jtt ftlflil
l.tt9un• N•Qlitl glrl
AU9">1H . lt11
M r dnd M n JO<• Hf lfr1rt'I M l\\l()rt
Vl•J<.i ;irt
Mf ,.ncl Mr' C.lvfk L•Cnvr Odntt
PotrH OJV
A"'JUtl 27, 10 1
Mr df'ld M r\ O•nl•I lundberc
L•Qut'ld Bt6<".Q1rt
AU9Utl 1t, 1'17
Mr •nd M r\ Stt'f'r Oeto-,, O•n ..
Point ou·t ......... JO."" Mr •nd Mr\ Hert>4rt Jtnn1no ...
Co•one dtt AM•. oln
~-->·"" Mr •nd Mn Sl.,.rl G000.11 \oul"
l•Qun•.bOY
M• and M-. w1.11am WrlQlll L•OuM
Buch.DOY s..t•-· •. 1tll Mr ano Mrt.. JOlln M<Cloll1nC1 ~n
..1u•n C.pf\tr~. bov
Mr •nd Mr' ~rt on H•tr"•' E 1
Toro. Qtrl s. .. .,,. .. , 1. n 11
Mr •nd Mn Wlll1•m ,_,.,..,'"°" t..•oun.-.
lltatll bOy
Irvine Marine
Take8 O ver
Dottsy Sees
No Jealousy ...
NASHVILLE. Tenn (AP l A rising country
music singer upproacht!d a moderately successfu l
'ocaHst recently. e xcited about mct:ling som eone
~he admired.
·1 introduced myself and said I'd always want·
ed to meet. her." the newcomer said. "All s he said
wab. 'Hello.· and turned away. I was disap pointed ."
TllE BRliSH·OFF TYPIFIED REPORTS of
JlWlousy and bitterness a mong wom en country
music singers
But there·~ a frei.h fact: who doesn't folio"
fo rm She's Dottsy, u sweet. wholeso me. friendly
2·".> ear-olc.J who calls the country m usic industr y "ll
b1~ happ) Cami!)" and wishes everyone could ha H
u ~o I r ecord
With thr ee Top 10
( N1!JH Jll UE J '"" ancludine h<' ment
VND "After Sweet Mem one11
P l a y B o r n l o Lo s l'
Again." she could be a
larget of jealousy. But she's detected nothing
negative
''THERE'S NO JEALOUSY." SHE said in un
interview in a Music Row office: "I don 'tdetecl It at
all." ''The entertainers all work together." she said.
"It's a big happy fumily . I like to see other people
get No. I songs because it m akes me happy to see
others do well. If things were too compe titive. It
would be boring. ...
She. Crystal Gayle. He len Cornelius . Mar go
Smith. Stt:lh.1 Parton llnd others represent new
as piranli. to tht: kingdoms of t he Dolly Partons and
th(· Lorl'tla Lynns. T her<: haHn 't always been !.o
many challengers
Countr~ mui.H· ,.,
traditionally a man·~
domai n Of t h e 29
personi. in the t ounlr)
~usic Hall of Fam e. on
ly five arc wom en · Sara
and Maybelle Carter .
Kitty Wells, Patsy. Cline
and Minnie Pearl.
"Women ar c getting
m ore willing to get into
the busineSl>." said Dot
tsv. \\hose real name is
Oottsv Brodt. "It's hard
for women to go on the
road und lcun a fa mily
1 But I think it ·s ~ood thut
·~ \\omen reahtc the~ t·an
Al'WlrellM•• ~l·I awa~ ·
DO TT SY
SIS C'f: SIGNI SG A REC'ORDING CONT.RACT
thn•t•:. c:irs ago. "Storms 1'eve r La~t" and "1'11 Bc
' our San Antone Rose" h:ive been Dotts~"s other
hits Sht has rel<'ased one album. "The Sweetes t
Thing, .. \\ hich Cashbo>. magazine ~elected best
.tlbum or the year b~ a newcomer It'!. quite an ac
l·omplt:-.hmcnt for someone who had ne\•er been out
of her nati\'c Tex ai. unt1 l s he was 21
·1 still ha\<.' to pmch myself sometimes. "h<'
"a ad
.'\nd i.ht· admit~ i.hc hai. learned a lot
·You learn all the time You learn to deal \\1th
... 1tuations and how to entertain people m ore. You
"ut ch others. practice and apply what you see
''IT'S FUN TO PUT MY MUSIC and m y an
ll'rprctations a cross and see how people react. It's
nice lo see people reacting and clapping."
lier big, pure \'Oice has been compared to the
late Miss Cline's
"My style is jus t m~ O\I n. [just s ing and j ust be
myself and try to put a m essage in a song. I'd rather
not be compared lo an ybody I'd like to have m y
own i.lyle."
"You project your own im age. JC you present an
image , you ha\'e to live up to it. The best thing is lo
he your:;elf ..
Art and Des ign
CHALLENGED
Loretta Lynn
.... 1,..,... ..
IN THE KINGDOM
Dolly Parton
HALL OF FAMER
Minnie Pearl
CHURCH BACK ·
I N THE FOLD
PASS CllRJSTIAN.
Mi i.s. (API The 36-
m cm be r P inevilll'
Ch urch con grcgatioo.
which in 1974 withdrew
from the P resbyterian
Church in the U.S. to join
u new break·a way d~·
nominatio n . lh t-
P resbyteriun Church in
America. has returned to
the former deno mina-
tional fold
Career Help Needed
( CAREERS J
AS FOR YOUR D AUGHTER 'S
credlt cnmch, you hit it on the head
whtm you said she probably doeso 't
as k enough ques tions . It 's good plan·
nlna to determine lhe frequency and
ttrnlng ol co1.1rse offerings before
e nrolHng in a degree pro,~am ,
particuJary If one attends part-lime or I events simultaneously the St. Fran-T on category was David Allen's Imp.
·Ted 'Bought' Cup
Shelled Out $10,000 for New Saiu
NEWPORT, R.l.\..(AP> Atlanta
Braves' owner Ted Turner, whose
yacht Couraecous was being readied
to leave Newport, says he had to plunk
down $10,000 Cot sails late in the
America 'a Cup effort.
The proposal , which
would come in addition
to higher taxes already
planned, would increase
bolh the tax rate and the
m aximum amou nt of
earnlnas on which the
levy is applied . ...t.or ve ry
hiab-paid emp1ofes, the
tax could more than dou-
ble within five yean
Lt. Col J ames L. Un-
de rwood of Irvine will
take command of Head·
qu a rters a nd Mni n ·
t e nan ce Squad ron
CH&MS>-13 from Lt. Col.
Rodney R. Letchwor th of
E l Tor o during
ceremonies Friday at
MCAS, El Toro.
Letchworth, who com·
manded ll&MS·13 since
October 1976, will retire
from the Marine Corps
after nearly 21 years.
Five Tribes'
Work Shown
has a deadline. ,
The solution for anyone ln this tairly
comrnon blnd could be to . <a> alter
work hours, (b ) pick up ~ouraea as
you can over a period or Ume , (c) quit
work and attend ~cbool fQll•Ume1 <cl >
aak t he school's counselors lf the in·
sUlution offers non.tradlUonal pro·
grams that pennlt a solution. or te>
check with academic credit bolu
(such as the Regents .E>t\.emal Dertee
Prosr•m. University of the Stat. oC
New York, 99 Washlncton Ave ..
Albany. N. Y. 12230) to see if you can
oblaln a derree In this maMer.
a.ttle0.1
A.fritao ulptur• from
Wedneeday, September~. 1en
Dy Bil Kf'ant' KKK to Abandon White HoodS
eep 50 much water in that little
hydrant?"
SAN DIEGO <AP J Tile Ku Klux
Klan wtll no longer hide behind Ule long
white hoods tind flowln{ capes its
Coundtin wore u century ago, a Klan of·
tlciulba)11
Tom Mel.tgcr, 61rund draaon or the
KKK in Cultfur nau, i,u1d his oraanization
hus luWlchcd u public relationa drive to
bolster Its image and an economic
boycott to help whites.
METZGER SA.JD a directory or busi-
nesses which look favorably upon the
Klan ls being compiled in San Diego
County. He said lhose businesses will get
the exclusive "buying power" of the
Klan.
Metzeer, a television repairman in
Fallbrook, said the directory will be
positive rather than negative. Said
Melzge• · "It's time while people stood
up for ""hite people" in economic terms.
He added that the businesses being
contacted are mefely asked 11 they are
friendly toward the KKK or discriminate against it.
.. WE'RE COMPILING a llilt or mom·
and-pop grocery stores, independent aas
stations, restaurants, small businesses
of all kinds that will benefit by our buai·
ness," Metzger said.
"We're not asking for oaths signed In
blood," he pointed out, add.ins that other
racially-conscious gro&.U>S have stqed
such economic boycotts for yean.
Metzger. who admitted playing a role
in the formation or a Klan chapter
amona Marines at Camp Pendleton. wo
said a public relations drive was belna
mountep_ 'f help whites who are aced or
infirm ana Deed blood or leaal aid.
METZGER'S ANNOUNC,MENT
comes in the wake of en lncldel'\t bl
which about 50 members of the KKK
forced their way into a tavern In
Lakeside, east of San Oieao. They wore
T·sh.trts that said' "White Power" and ••KJC.}(. ,,
Although no violence w aa reported, the
Bus Stop Bar, owned by two white men,
was forced to close four hours early and
sbettfr1 officers were called to quell the
disturbance. No arresta were made. ---------OPPORTUNITY .•
knock.a oft.en when you
use result-1ettlng Dally
Pilot Clualfled Ads to
reach tbe Orange Coast
market.
Authorities said the tavern problblta
the wearing of "colon," emblems or
badges of groups such u motorcycle
gadgs. Metzger said the Klan wanted
only to show its buying power without
·'looking for trouble.'' P~e 842-5678
Because Of The Response We Are Repeating This Sale 3 More Days ·
THURS., FRI., SAT., SEPT. 22, 23, 24'
WE MUST CLEAR EVERY DIAMOND IN STOCK
Buy Now Or Lay Away! Diamond Prices Are Headed Sky High!
lob ladff, ~ of Raciti
Jew9y Ca .. mry, rec...tty w...t
to ~ .ct Mew Yortl to
p11rcha1e fine. exq11hih
dia..-d1 directly fro111 the
c.tlws. ..,, clnct Giid HYe!
UNMOUNTED DIAMONDS
l
5893-1 38 ct. Round. exceptional qualtty and value
586&-1 49 ct Round very good clanty and col~
5885-1 49 ct Round. line clarity. oll·white
5869-1 53 ct Round, dazzling bplltance. slightly included
5894-1.72 ct. Round, excellent clarity and brflJiance
6010-1.75 c1 Round. gorgeous clarity. color and cut
5895-1 90 ct Round, allghtly off-white dazzler. Clean
5888-2.08 ct. Round, very colorlul
5870-2.10 ct Round. line color, sm. wht. inclusion
5887-2 17 ct Round. vibrant value
5888-2.20 ct Round. (sp) conn1seur's choice
5977-2 65 cl Brtlltant cut flasher (A Steal)
5898-1 96 ct Rovnd Brilliant Cut
5873-QO ct Round Bnlltant Cut
5969-1.-« Pleasing Stone-Oreat tor f'te Money
ME/$0-1 74 Very Brilliant-Included
5875-.94 ct. Brilliant cut white, eye clean
5874-.95 d . Brilliant cut. Some inclusions. Good color
587&-1 ct. Brilliant & very clean
5877-1 ct. Brilliant. Excellent quality
587&-1 06 ct BrllJiant-whlte. eye clean. tiny Inclusion
5879-1 10 ct. Brllli1nt-whlte & clean
5880-1.12 ct. Brilh1nt. c;lean. color oll
5881-114 ct Brllllint whit• brilll1nt. Infractions. (more)
5882-1 16 ct. Brilliant whit• clean
6883-1.22 ct. Brf!Uant Wh}te clean
~1.23 ct. BrtlU.nt ;tt1t•. dMn, am lnduslon, cioudY
eoo&-1.02 ct. ~ulte. very white & llvety
eo12-1.01 ct. PW thape, outltandlng quality
5853-1.11 ct Pew 1h10e. twrlfto clarity & brilllan<:e
9009-110 ct Marquise, gorQeOUt oolOI', cut I otarltY
I'
Sale
Price
•2720
$2590
~240
$3120
S4720
SOLD
S4660
S4992
S49e0
'4886
S8320
51999
$2120
SOLD
SOU)
S1739
11~
11120
11440
S2080
S2080
12480
12080
$1.«0
12080
SOLD
t2580
11109
s21eo
11775
S3QOO
SOLO
No. DIAMOND EARRINGS
5396--W/G Studs 1.60 cts
5142-W/G Fancy Studs .95 ds.
5586-&n. V /G Studs 08 cts.
5997-Y /G Studs .45 cts.
5441-Sm W/G Studs .05 ct
4825-Yel/G fancy studs .81 cts
5685-Y /G sm. fancy studs .1 O c:ts.
5986--W/G diam stud screw backs .15 c:ts.
5143-Y /G fancy studs . 76 cts.
408&-Y /G fancy studs approl(. one ct.
RINGS
ME/JC-1.00 ct. round brilliant diamond In IOlltllr•
Sale
Pnoe
11909
S909
S85
1375
150
U&o
S135
109
S850
SOLO
Sale
Nee
tiffany-style setting. Very nice 11095
5160-1.04 ct. round brill. diamond S1200
15187-1.08 ct. round bflll. diamond 11100
5492-.94 ct. round brill diamond In aolltatre mounting SOLO
6103-1.03 ct. brilliant diamond. Very nice. ,905
5189-1.28 ct brilliant diamond S095
5168-1 73 ct. brilliant round diamond in solitaire Mtting. Very clean. ·
· S1200
5953-1.81 ct. brilliant diamond In Y/G aolttalre setting '1200
5052-1 73 ct. bnlhant diamond with W/G six prong Tlffanv setting s 11ou
51 40-1.08 ct. round brilliant diamond In W/G mounting
with two baguettes
4992-1.03 ct. brilttant diamond aet Into a WIG
mounting with two baguettes
'1905
12100
12400 M&'CD-1.10 d MatQuiae diamond In WIG eo41taita niount!na
PACKAGE OF
DIAMONDS
v ou mav Hied one diamond. Pl"l of a P90kaoe °'.a 'and s-v ror «ttt the weight you Ml-.ct.
FORMULA -If you select • 1/10 d . (.10 Cll'llC9'l atone: Multl1)fy .10 x
S350 00, which would eQual 135.00. the prtoe you would pay for the gem
or gema1hat you selected. *100 Points "" 1 Clr1t
5823-1/.20 .05
5833-1 /8 ct.
5832-1/5 ct.
5830-14ct.
6933-1/3 ct. aizea
5831-1/5 ct.
5827-113 ct. alte•
582&-Ylct.
d872-.4ot.
182~/6ctl,
15873-6 Br11111n~
Mot-a Bttln.ntt
...
5094-CZ Kltet llT\., fiery W/lnfrlc. lg. wttfle lnfrla.
&988 4Pca. Gm. Melee f
681$7-<Ze BtUI ~ se~ eanwy en"
59'8-2 l)CI Gr .. t. CQonac Mlr'Q,.
584'2~ Fe'ar ShaQe
584&-e .. QUIM .13 ct T.W.
6841~· 1/5 ct. ~,_.Sheoe
$504 Peret. 1338 Peret.
1304 Peret.
SOLO
1380 Peret.
f380 Peret.
••Per~
SOLO
1810P.,Ct.
. t780 ... Ct.
80LO '876P«ei.
SOLO
8320..Wet.
1312PwC..
NMP.,Ct.
MOOPerCt.
UOOP«Ct.
MeoPwCt.
H80Pwct.
MOO,,_Ct.
for OYW 20 ,.... ill doWlll'OWll
Costa MeM. D-locltl .._
pledged • ••141•• 41• ... d
g••ra•tee: dl••o•d• •Ht
... ] ..... fw 4"'-...... -wW ..,!9'., a.dtra ar ,_. _, ........ .._... .. w•••.,•• ur 1 • s _ ..
No. UNMOUNTED DIAMONDS
588~1 53 ct. Peat Shape, gorgeous. be.,tiMtycut
58~.18 ct. MarQUl'9. good d.tty.'9perj(llng oft.wMea>lor
589()...4.89 ct. Pear Shape, very alight lnduslon
5891-Q.C>1 ct. Peer Shape, eye.clean stlghdy yellowed
588~.80 ct. Ovid. briOht fancy )"lllow
588&-.84 ct. Pe• Shape, fancy ClfWY YtflOw
58~75 cl Oval. dean. delf' a 'Vtbnlnl
15851-.75 ct. Marqulae. eye cteen. white
5834-.33 ct. Round. brilliant, good color
~37-.42 ct. Round, eye.clean
583&-.48 ct. Roond. exoellent clanty & brillfanc•
5840-. 75 ct. Round, eye-c!Hn. good oofor
6854-.89 ct. Ovid. fantastic COier, cut 'dlrity
587~78 ct. Aaund. beautif\Aoff.wtit. ll*lder
5858-.82 et.~ dar1c Y9l1ow
8882'-o\81 ct <Ml. cognac aDlor
ME/JM-Mounted 8PPfOX. 5.75 ct. Brftlllnt cut. fancy ~cinnamon color .
5880-. 7&ct. canary Yellow Mlrq.
see1-.M ct. Pew Shape Fiery Yellow
5863-. 79 ct. Brilliant. bright Canary
5884-.79 ct. Blue Dia. P .. r Shei>e. fentastlc cofor
5847-.63 ct. Pear 8hlP9. YetfY brtllllllt
1849"-.&kt. Mr~ flety-....... ·'
., f •
~ct.,...8'Mlpe..t>c•~wtllte
507 ..... '3d. ,_.Shloe. .__ ccia , .
*3-Mct.flWS.-bhmn.etM ·
aa...-12ct.~CINn&whll
684~98 ct ,_.Shape. flMcolor
5982-.13ct. MO, 8arg81n-~dla.
Goe&-. 78 ct. MwQulae
l &M7-1.01 ct. Mlf'QUlet Natunil Clnlry. ~ 1nrr.c.
'
~ .
I
, •
COOKS s ROUND
HAMBURGERS
OR SQUARE
SANDWICH'5
IN SECONDS
81 oa. &lNCROHN
Dear Dr. telacrolla. My wife
complainl of belna weak and
tired eyery day. Thi• bu been
aolna on for monthlt. Al the day wean on 1he reaalnl tome ol her
former 1trenath and pep.
However, by late afternoon she
11 too tlred lo mah dinner
without ef(ort. or courte our
toclal Ute bu come lo a halt. She
couldn't pou1bly 10 out at nlabt.
AJthouah 1he 11 65, 1 do noC
believe ~t ber explanation ol
"aee" a• a reaaon i1 1ood
~nou,h.
Some of her friend• call
GREAT AMERICAN
BURGER MACHINE It,_ ew• *' .,., ctell. lltt '*'..,.. ,,..._ & i..1 .... , ... , .................... ~,,w.
her a hypochondriac. Others call
her lazy. AU In fun, of course, yet
lt bot.hen her.
Some advise her to stay in bed
lonaer. others aunest sbe see a
doctor to get vitamin shots lo
11 ve her enern.
At last I've convinced her to
see a doctor. Meanwhile, can you
suagest anything that will relieve
her tiredness? -Mr. L.
COMMENT: The friends who
advised her to see a doctor gave
her the best advice. 1 recom·
mend it, too. But n9t necessarily
for "getting shots."
,
DOCTOR IN
THE HOUSE
~ ~
What ls important is diagnoels.
The causes of fatigue that wears
one down are almost endless.
The reasons may be simple or
complex.
FOR EXAMPLE. anxiety ls a
common cause. I have known
men, laced with financial prob-
lems, whose fatlaue magically
disappeared overnight after
overcoming money obstacles.
DECORATIVE
STRAW MATS
7" ' 9"
EACH
c.ltttlll ......... ..., ~
Wltl. tCCHf ltle,k~H. t1lllttfl, ................. u .... tm.r1.
I have known women who were
tlred because they were in·
decisive about whether or not
they should sue for dlvorce. Once
they made up their mind to SUl~·
or leave, the fatigue faded away.
Btrr "NERVES" AREN'T the
only reason for chronic tired·
ness. Is the underlying trouble
heart disease? Is it anemia? Un·
der-outrlUon? Or any one or
scores ot illnesses that require
adequate treatment?
Occasional tJrednesa -due to overwork, lack of sleep, overex·
ertlon, etc. -11 not reason
enough for ha't'lng a medical
checkup. However, when it stub-
bornly drags down a person day
after day, it's time lo stop auess·
ing. ••• Those suffering chronic arude.
t y should be given tboroueh
physical examinations to see
whether organic disease ls in·
volved says Or. Steincrohn in his
booklet, "What To Do For
Chronic Anxiety." For a copy
write him at U.e Dally Pilot.
enclosina 50 cenla and a
stamped, self-addressed en-
velope.
7" DECORATED
IRONSTONE BOWLS
Celtrllll ~It witll '""' et 2 s 1 .. _.. & t--..,. .. WW.....,, tf.,.. & l1yta.
filli1llt1' ....... ft,,. .. .,..., , ..... "-· ,.. • ..,.
CHROME-LOOK
FRAMED PIOURES
'8rtt 12 I H" ~·...., ..... 11 t .w. ......... .t ~It,._._, it.. er tffict .......,.,, S-l '
UHi. !Mir fer fllt f....,. Ult fo.
...,. --'· .,._fli, dlili. flerwl. FOi
LARAMI 2 $1 STORAGE 351
TOYS fOI CONTAINERS Fot
G.1 • hte4 tlwt 111 ••tr1ttt Mtilifttt A
.-11ty ,.,., pried fo. ""' Cltri1t111e1 •~•· • 4e1lp1, c•lon.
w... .. ..,,.., tf ~ """ ~ ••• "-..,...,,, Ill''""· ... ""'"''-·-'---·
........... rict ....... IK1Wlfelw IW
• .,., 1tyfe1 fer ,.., flew Mtrt l111t
lu19t&wtl..-.1wJ-•
llf'Ulll, Stwlky _,""" dtf YV ,., •
..-.lltltt. IH ~wt ,itm .
.. .................... tt
24 H. frttltt lt1, 20 11: ... , wl'll:
!W, 1 It. ltf .... ..nt. CJ:HM ~I, It
;a. J. wltlt IW. c.., , ... ,,. ... . ;
(
l
l •
..........
STEVE BUKICH WARDS OFF A DEFENDER IN HIS FIGHT FOR STARTING DUTY.
My Chance Will Conle,
Says Bruins' Bukich
By ROGER CARLSON
Of-o.i1y .,,,.. S••tt
For every quarte rback
directing the attack on the field
there is another standing on
the sidelines, awaiting his
chance
lt"s a dilemma many have
endured, but for UCLA junior
Steve Bukich it is especially
ditficult in view or the fact the
starter is a sophomore. Rick
Bashore, an Edison High
<Huntington Beach) product.
Bashore appears to be the
first choice or UCLA football
coach Terry Donahue, getting
the nod in the opener at
Houston and going the dis
lance, then starting and play
ing three of the four quarters an
leading the Bruins to a 17-7 vic-
tory over Kansa!'..
For Bukic h . a fo rm er
Newport Harbor High standout
who red-shirted one season
and is now in his fourth year at
UCLA as a 1unior, the future
appears less than ideal
"I just want to be ready,"
says Bukich. "Something will
happen soon and when my
chance comes I have to he
ready. I don 't think the starting
position has been totally de-
termined yet "
Although he generated only
38 yards totaJ offense, gained
no first downs. fumbled once
and had no completions in four
series against Kansas, Bukich
says he's sattsfied with his
showing.
But he admits the situation is
beginning to tear at his con·
fidence
In contrast, Bas hore ac
counted for 256 yards. direct
ing the Brwns to their 17
points, including· a touchdown
run. 1.
For three years Buk1ch has
wa ited hi s turn to guide the
Bruins. lie exhibited patience
while John Sciarra and J eff
Dankworth led. the Bruins
· This was to be Bukich's re-
ward -even to the point of red
shirting the one season to
further cement his position.
Touted as a prospect with a
pure passing arm while earn
ing AJl-CIF honors at Newport
Harbor, Buk1ch's main obsta
rle has been in adjusting to a
veer offense with tbe option
series. rather than the usual
custom of handing off to a
tailback or going back to set up
and pass. •
A strong runner, he Dtlot as
quick as Bashore.
When Bukich dedded on
UCLA one of the thqugflts dls-
cussed at the time was that the
Bruins might switch Crom the
veer in a couple of years. But
coach Dick Vermeil left for the
pro ranks and Donahue has
stuck with a system that has
provided UCLA with success.
"It was a possibility at the
time that a change would be
made," says Bukich.
Bukich suffered rib injuries
during spring practice, but he
says the in1ury is no factor at
this time.
With football being the team·
oriented game it Is, the dllem-
m a for Bukich is such that he
u s ually plays only when
Bashore fails -which isn't
very good for the Bruins. It's
like a field goal kicker waiting
for his offense to flop so he can
go in and do his thing.
"That's exactly how I feel,"
says Bukich. '·I am really in a
dither. I've been playing as
well as I can and I know it's not
an easy decision for the coach.
"I'm getting a fair shot.
more or less , but I've just got
to wait until I do something
before I can really talk.
"I wish l could say more, but
1 ·m just wailina./or.soMethinf
to happen. I'm going to hang in
there and not let it get me
dOWf\,"
Buk.ich, Bashore and the rest
of the Bruins continue pre-
paration for Minnesota this
weekend in the third l"lon-
conference game of the 1977
season.
But there will be more bat·
ties aoinf 'on than just the one
between th~ two te11ms ·satur·
day in Minbeapolis.
,
Sports Cl ipped Slwrt •
Gorman Ousts Stockton
LOS ANGELES · Seeded
players Dick Stockton and Sandy
Mayer have fallen in first-round
•Ingles play at the $100,000
Southern California Open tennis
championships.
Tom Gorman beat Stockton.
7 ·6, 6-4 and Onny Pa run defeated
Mayer, 7-6. 6·7, 6-4.
Second-seeded Manuel Orantes
()f Spain needed three sets to
down Terry Moor. 4·6, 6-3. 6·3 in
another first round match.
Also on Tuesday, Alex Olmedo
defeated former UC Irvine star
Scott Carnahan, 2-6, 6-3, 6·1; An-
drew Pattison topped Hank
Pfister. 6·3, 7-6; Saabi Menon
eliminated Charlie Pasarell, 6·3. 1..e, S-1; Marty Riessen topped
Rick f'a&el, 6-t, 6-t , and C<llln
Dibley whipped Paul Kronk. 6·1,
6·2.
Also, Butch Walts topped
Woody Blocher, 7·5, 7·5 ; John
Yuill defeated Oreg Halder, 6-4.
6·4 ; John McEnroe defeated
Frew McMillan, 6-2, &-4; Eliott
Teltscher eliminated Laguna
Niguel's Bernie Mitton, 7-5. 6-4,
and Stan Smith downed Mike
Cahill, 1-6. 6-3, 6..0.
Nutcue Otutftl
PARIS -France's Georges
Goven beat Ille Nastase, &-4, 2·6,
6-4 Tuesday in the first round of
the Coupe Poree tennl$ com~·
lion.
In another match Patrick
Pl'oisy beat Nicky Pille when the
latter reUred With Prolsy having
won the first set 6·'1 and the
second set tied 3·3.
PaU.er 1fl•• J 8tll
BALTIMORE -Jim Palmer
(18·11), with home run support
Crom rookies Ed.die Murray and
Rieb Dauer, posted his fifth con-
secutive victory and kept the fad·
ing hopes of the Baltimore
Orioles alive with a 5·2 decision
ovet the Toronto Blue Jays Tues·
day nlihl· The triumph enabled the
Oriolu to break a second-place
tie witb Boston and move within
thcee games of New York in the
American League East. Tuesday
night's New York-Boston game
was postponed by rain.
Naeltartd A d 1'a ..ee•
PENSACOLA, Fla. --Top·
seeded Jeanne Evert met former
UC Irvine atar Jean Nachand to·
day in the second round ot the
Women's Tennis Association and
Professional Championships
tournament.
Nacband defeated C~l Balley
in first round action. 2~. 7~. 6--2.
l..a•··--LOS ANGELES -Former In·
dianapolil 500 winner Parnelli
Jones. hu been banned from
drivtng in the SCORE Baja 1,000
due to hll alleeed rammiq or
another ear dwioi lhe Off-R<>ad
World Cflampion shlp at
RI verstde Intern a\ion al
Raceway Au1. 28, SCORE Pt~i·
dent Sal nsh said Tuesday. Tbe~ty, which wu banded
out after C!Onlultatton wltb Jones.
bars blm from cosnpetlftl in any
more SCORE International
events this year -meanlnc In el·
fed be won't be allowed to drive
in the Nov. 10-12 BaJa race.
I
Wednetday, September 21. 1977 DAILY PILOT •8J
Dod.gers End R~~e
That Never Was
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -The
Los Angeles Dodgers have
clinched the National League
West title with a flourish, ending
a race that never was.
"We jumped ahead with a 22·4
record and never looked back,"
manager Tom Lasorda said after
Tuesday night 's pennant-
clinching 3·1 victory over the San
Francisco Giants.
The Dodgers. second to the
Clncin.nall Reds by 10 games a
year ago, dethroned baseball's
defending champions with a
combination of solid pitching and
power bitting
Tommy John. 19·6, came
within one out or pitching a
shut.ourTuesday night, before al-
lowing the Giants a run and being
sa ved by reliever Lance
Rautzhan. Rick Monday's 14th
homer -the Dodgers• 180th of
the season -provided the
margin of victory.
.. To beat out Cincinnati, a
team that had won two World
Series in a row, is a tremendous
accomplishment," said Lasorda,
who was drenched with cham-
pagne. s hower water and Ice
cubes during the postgame
celebration.
·'The Reds thought they
guaranteed themselves another
pennant when they got Tom
. Seaver," s aid Dodgers second
baseman Davey Lopes. "Well, we may not be as good position
by position, but collectively.
we 're the best team in baseball.
''Until someone can prove dif-
ferently, l'm going lo keep feel·
ilfg that way."
The Philadelphia Phillies, on
the verge of repeating as Eastern
Division champs, will meet the
Dodgers in the NL playoffs open·
ing iq Los Angeles Oct. 4.
The Reds, who won behind ·
Seaver's two-hit pitching at San
Ryan Through
For the Year;
Halos Win, 5-2
Strikeout artist Nolan Ryan or
the California Angels will have to
wail until next year in his quest
for a lhinl 20-victory season.
The American League's win·
ningest pitcher has been advised
to rest his ailing, right arm for
three weeks. Since the Angels
won't be involved in post-season
competition for the 17th straight
year that means the season is
over for Ryan.
Ryan thus finished the cam·
paign with a 19-15 record , 22 com-
plete games. 331 strikeouts a~d
an earned run average of 2.73.
Only 11 games remain for the
Angels, who are mired in fifth
pl ace in the AL ·s Western
Division.
Tuesday was a big day for left·
handed pitctier Ken Brett. He
signed a contract with the Angels
through 1979, then celebrated by
hurling a complete game (5-2)
victory over the Texas Rangers
at Anaheim.Stadium. The teams
meet again toolaht.
"My litUe brothei-tried to up·
stage me again tonight," said
Brett after his 13th victory.
which equalled his career high.
Kaneas City's George Breu., the
defending AL batting champion.
hit two hoine runs as the Royals
topped Minnesota 4-2.
Bobby Bonds, Dave Chalk and
Ron JacklOn hit bome runs to ac·
count for all of California's scor·
ing Tuesday night. Boncb, who
stole a pair or bases, now bas 36
horners and 39 steals in bis quest
to become the first player in ma·
jor league history with 40 homers
and 40 stolen bases in the same
season.
CA\.l""NIA •tttM ltO O
t#OO
4 2 J' t I 1 2
2000
0000
400t
•I 2 O
'' 1 ' $020
4 0 I 0
'" H • •tt 11 IO 1.lfldlltMI t\., ... 11 S ' S S t 0 ttc:u.tlef l .J 0 0 2 0
1(.9"" ('fll:l>111 • • ' • 0 ' ~•~-4'flt ar•t ts lftllt11).t ,.,.._,.,,.,.
Diego Tuesday ni&ht. are now
1111'2 games behind with 10 to play
and never couJd get within slrlk·
Ing distance of the pacesetting
Dodgers.
·'The only thm& I asked of
them in spring trainmg was that
they believe in themselves as
much as I believed in them,"
said Lasorda, who became the
o.. Tl' r .. '""' C'Jla•ael JJ a t 1:30
Dodgers· manager after Walter
Alston retired last fall,
"We never even thought about
the Reds," third baseman Ron
Ccy said between slugs of cham-
pagne. "Once we had the lead.
we felt all along that if we stayed
healthy, we were going to win it.
·•A lot of things had to go right
-and they did.''
Monday, whose two-run, 450-
foot home r folJowed Du,ty
Baker's run-scoring double in the
second inning off Ed HaJicki, was ·
one or the few Dodgers with
physical problems this year. He
missed 43 games with back trou-
ble, but feels fine now.
"That homer put the icing on
the cake for me," he said. ''l feel
like a little kid right now.''
Lasorda said. "This ts my
greatest thrill in 32 years of
baseball."
The one it topped, obviously.
was being named manager after
27 years in the Dodgers organiza-
tion.
"To manage this club is a great
thrill and an honor. These cuys
worked hard. knew what they
had to do to win and knew they
were going to win from the day
they left spring training."
LOIANGaLU SAN -llANCllCO
l-tt>
llus""" Smlthn
Cev:ll>
Guvey lb
Be11v 11
Mond•ycf
l!luru c•
VHQfl'<
Jonnp
R•u11-P
HrllM it•rllW
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• O I 0 Ev.tftUI> J 0 0 0
4 0 0 0 MlKll"• 70 4 0 I 0
4 0 0 0 M<Co.,.y Ill 4 0 0 0
4 I 1 0 Cl•rk rl 3 I 1 0
4 I I I Ellloltlf 4 t 0 6
J I I 1 Hiii ( ] 0 l 0
0000 ~Pf' O OOt
l 0 I 0 UM•Sl9')$ 3 0 0 0
l 0 0 0 H•llC111 p I 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 Ht,rllph 0 0 0 0
H .. wrtop 0 0 0 0
ThOm.NIOll pn 1 0 0 0
Tolels ;n l 1 J Toi.ls ~1
l.oSAngitlH 030 000 00lk4 ,.,. F'r.-CIKO 000 ODO ott.-1
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LOJ>H, Ye.,. 31!1-Cl•rlt. Hlt-Moftclrf lt4,)1
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WINNING CLINCH --Los Angeles Dodgers manager
Tommy Lasorda hugs catcher Steve Yeager as Lance
Rautzhan and Bill Russell CrighU move in to celebrate
LA ·s division-clinching victory at San Francisco Tues· ~
day night. The National League playoffs begin in LA
Oct. 4.
Lack of ExecUtion
Big Problem---"f(nox .
LONG BEACH CAP) -Coach
Chuck K.hox• or l}le Los A.DJ~es
Rams diseoonta any theof)' lh'ai
old fJfeods come back to hat1nt.
you. but it ~at happened to him
and may happen qain, '
AUanta's Falcons, coached by
former Rams assistant Leeman
Benn«t, upset Los Angeles, 17-6,
last Sunday and this Suhda1. in
the second gatne of the new Na·
tlonal Football League season,
another former assist&J\t, Dick
Vermeil, brings the Phlladelph.la
Eagles to town.
In addition, The Eagles will
have Conner Ram Ron Jaworslci
at quarterback and Jaworski
was unhappy he didn't get more
oh chance with Los Angel•.
\
I
DAILY PILOT WMlnffd.1 Se tembet 21. 191'
FVOppon nt
..
~~ 2 Quarterbacks
Lead LB Wilson
LO'li(, Bt.A<.'lt Th~ f\ruan• 111
Lon& fil'och Wll1<>n arc O l •l thl'
point. but Wllaon co•ch Jon
Meyer 1i. h.11rdly talk1n1 llke a
JOSl"r
Hi.JI l:lruan." colhdt with t'oun
lain Valley J;'riday night (81 1&t
Huntinlt.on Beach Hl&h "Then•
15 noth.in& hke playlnt: th~ b1&
aies, eh?" aay1 Meyer
Meyer's teams have hrushed
aecood and lied ror the crown an
his past two 11ea1001 and he says
··we feel we are entenng each
game as ddendtne leacue
champs
··we had West Torrance beat
fast year, had Westminster beat
with 50 seconds to &o and we beat
Carson
.. Fountain Valley .:ave us a
thrashing, but we've got tough
kids "
The Bruins rel y on two
quarterbacks to eng1ncf.!r the of
fense--bot.h in the 5-11, 175-pound
range and seniors. They are Bob
Diilinger (the better pa~ser) and
Ken Seymour (the better run·
ner).
Fullback Uob .Hlsso 16·2. 205 1.
'tailback Mel Penny (5-9, 175l and
·receivers Greg Parkin (5-11, 175
l!lr.) and DaveCourdy <6·3, 190 jr. 1
make up the bulk of the Bruins at·
1~ck.
,. Others an the ot1en~1 vc struc
ture include tackle Donn Seaman
(6-2. 240 ) and tiJ(ht end John
Cross County,
Polo Ratings
The Orange Coast area's an-
nual superiority in cross country
and water polo is again evident in
the first poll for the two sports
with area teams dominating the
· tpajor categories.
· '.· Costa Mesa's all-consuming
: tross country team 11 ranked No. . t and the Mustangs' 1lrls cont·
bl gent is rated No. 3.
· Newport Harbor is second to
r,ura Costa in water polo ratings,
. with University <Irvine>, Costa
: Mesa and Corona del Mar also
: llsted ln the top 10. ' .
•· 4-AC:-C ... ntry ; 1. Golt• MMe, 1. Simi, J. adl1M !Hunllllglo..
, flMClll, '· Pelo& Verdes. S. ,.OUllt.lft Vollley. l . ·~ .. tlllll, 1, EIMftl>Ower, I. 811rbltMI, '· Oo• .._blot, tO Merln•.
;-· ........... l t .MlreC.0.la, 2. New1'0f1 Het11or, l . "'"'8 llffc" ~ ...,.,, '· Unl .... •11'1' lll'\llne), .S. Sulln'I' Hlfft, •
: ~.7.l..OnQ8eecf\WlhOfl,I 0-.....,t.Coti.
:; ~.1t.CAW-del~r f
\6 0-.1c-~y
• t.8"'-,7 o.rt1H/ll,J.(M .. -,, ,..._.
' "··~ s. ~ Clt'-9<••11 ••. ldlMn I •Hunt'"91011 IHCll), 7 . .._1t19t_,. lleKtl. I.~
' ............. C--delMe•.10 SAuvu•.
• ~ Race At a Glance
' r. AMllUCAN UIAOUIE f.. •• utOIYl•-i W \. "<I. Oa ~ewYor~ •J )t ·"• • a.111.._.. eo '' .,.. J
I 8o•IOf'I " '1 . ffl )'> > Nl!WYORK -HO"lfl C1>;CM,..lllftd4,5ept.1', ~ "'· 2t, 1'; o.troll l.~. JO, Oct. 1, J; AWe'I' C•I. , 8otton1,S.pt.20; Tor011tol. Se9t. tJ,2',15.
8Al.TIM01tl! -Home IS); Torontot, s.111. 21,
• U 1 Oetroll l, S.111. 27, 71, tt. AWl'I' C•>s Clevel..,4
; 3, Stlll. 23, 14, 15; BoslOll l , S.p!.)O,Oct. 1, 2.
10$TON Home Ill: N-Yorll 1, Sept,~:
• "roronco •. S.Pf. 26, 2t, u . tt; laltl~•. 3, S.DI.
; lO.Oc;t.1, 1 11••'1' 141, O.tro11 4 ~pl tt, 1J, 14, 1\
qu1&ll') 16 J . Ill~ 1 ~l·amtan, ll
Junior. &11 a ratumlnt starter
l>ef •vt-ly tht Bruins have
11omo blue chlpporM In noae11uard
Tony Mot11ha1en l~·ll, 185>.
tackle W1ll'e Mulcraon <CJ·O,
200J. Unebacker Oon Miller (tJ.<I,
t 75 l and Parkin In the secondary.
Mot.sbaeen and Muteraon are
reiurnlni All·Moore League
s e I ectiOC'UI
Meyer says he's not worried
about Fountain Valley's beefy
!tlze. stating "We 're not a small
football team and 1 don't think"
we'll be overwhelmed with Foun-
tain Valley's size. Size is nOl real·
ly that important on the high
school level anyway. It's a very
emotional game and the quick
175-190 pounder can play awfully
good football "
Inconsistency
Bugs Aztecs
Two teams lookin& for their
first victory or the season tangle
in a non-league foqibaU outing
Friday night (7 : 30) when the Los
Amigos Lobos <Fountain Valley )
host the University High (Irvine 1
Trojans at Garden Grove High.
One problem racing coach Al
Calonico of Los Amigos Is that of
consistency. The Lobos and Dana
Hills battled to a 13-13 tie in their
opener last week while Universi-
ty lost to Tustin, 28-14.
"My feeling 1s that we will
need to improve the intensity and
co n siste nc y of our
performance," Calonico says.
"We played a good first half last
week, then let down.
··we have three things in mind
this week. We are striving to
broaden our attack after running
only a few plays off the veer '?f·
tense.
"We also hope to throw more
passes. Our quarterback. Art
Wilcox, completed six of 13
against Dana Hills and didn't
have any interceptions.
"The third thing we want is to
l)e able to sustain our drives. We
died twice inside the 20-yard line
la&t week an~ we haven't been
able to put any punch jn our at·
tack."
Wilcox is a junior. s tands 6-l
and weighs 160. He won the start·
ing spot.from senior Ernie Fisher
after his performance last week.
Wilcox is rated the better
passer and Fisher the b~ run·
ner. But right now, Fisher has
been relegated to a comerback
spot on defense. This is a switch
from last week and Calonico
hopes it will shore up the defense.
He has made one other change
in the defensive alignmeoL Mll<e
Harris (6·1, 180) has been
swit(:hed f'rom offense to defense
as a starter at a tackle spot.
"If we can improve our de-
fense and get that CJfth play in
with as much intensity as the
first four, we will do much-bet·
ter," Calonico s~y8.
He is looking for University to
utilize speed aroUJld the outside
with a good passing attack.
~ Offensive ShOw?
Tustin, MV Have Top Stars
When two teams with good
: athletes at the skilled politions
: get toaether, an offenalve ahow is
: usuallytheoutcome.
: And that's what Tustin High
• coach Jeff Jespersen feels could
• happen when bi• TJller• host Mla-
• ston Viejo High F'tlday nl~t (8 >.
• "Mission Viejo has some very
: good athletes at. the •kill~ posl-
• tiona. They have some tood
• linemen, but tbelr athletes at the
; aldlled •pota are exceptJon1I.
• They deftDltely have a lot of of·
• f eme and their coach •IYI thia
toutd be tbelr belt team "er," : uyaJesperaen.
But Tultln'• offense allo bu
: lootect aood. Th• Tlll•n = • tbe MJIOft wtth a 2&-14· etcwy : over Un1veral$.y (lrvl.oe> wlth
• Mite 1.Auderdale 1'\lnntna for tn
: yardt.
: "We have • couple of Sood run· : ntq bacu ln Lauderdale <5-11, • 185> and Joe Henry cs.a. J'IO>.
; Lut week eveTJt)llns went n1ht • •
lor us. We had good offensive
balance," says Jespersen.
And the Tuttln coach is op.
timistlc 197'7 could be a winning
year for the Til,ers.
"This is not really an ex-
perienced team, but we htave a
good blend or juniors and seniors .
If we don't have Injuries, it could
be a f(ood year for us," says
Je1persen.
The Tustin ~oach figures his
club must control the ball to de·
feat the Diablos.
··we're goin& to have to control
the ball becal,lle we've eot to
keep it away from thelr offense.•·
Tustin has elaht start.era back
from Jut aeaaon'a 1-5·3 club, ln-
cludln& defensive a•m• Lance
WQOa and Doua Finney.
Woo.a. a1JO a wide receiver, ta a s.e, US-pounder who was a
starter as a Junior last season.
He's rated Tuatln'1 beat de·
·tensive player.
And Finney, I 8-0, 190-pounder
\1 a eood mfddlt llnebacktr.
·------------~~~~~~----~--~~--.......
o.11., ............
MARINA'S JOE SARTAIN (15), RON ROY TEST MAGNOUA FRIDAY AT WESTMINSTER.
No Argument Over~ Call
Shackle/ ord Cloudy on Game-ending Ruling
Controversy. as usual. swirls around the outcome or the an·
nual shootout between Golden West College's Rustlers and the
Orange Coast College Pirates, won by the latter, 13·7, Saturday
night in non-conference football. ,
What happened in the closing seconds was this: The Rustlers,
trailing by six points, got a first down at the OCC 39 on the last·
re~ularplayofthegameviapassinterferenceonOCC. /
Thal ii;.ive the Rustlers one more play-which resulted in a
39-yard pass from Bill Holst to Mike DeLaura. /
Hut 1l did not count as a touchdown and the KMme was over due to a Oag thtown for illegal procedure. The Ila& went up
;.i~amst Golden West immediately and GWC coach Ray
Shackleford says he doesn't argue the ref's decision.
"Our flanker was standing up and he was leaning as the ball
was snapped," says Shackleford. "It's very seldom called, but
the official was right there and called it immediately.
"The thing I can't understand is the rule termlnatln& the
game "
The officials maintain, however. the foll owing: When a viola·
t1on 1s called on the offensive team on the last play of the same
when that play is an untimed down <no lime showing on the clock
when the play began>. the play is nullified and the game is over.
"I saw the flag go up right away so it was hard to get excited
on the completion." continues Shackleford. "lt was a judement
call and my only question was the ruling that no additional play
was allowed."
OCC coach U1ck ·rucker aod,h1s aides also det~ted the in-
fraction on the film, and Tucker adds: "I don't think lt was tlcky
tack at that tlmeofthegameon ah obvious passlns situation.
"We also spotted an illegal receiver downfield about eight
yards. but 1 'm not sure a flag was also thrown for that." ·
And had Golden West scored on that last play you can be sure
there would have still been controversy. The play prior was an in-
terference call on OCC and Pirates backets steadfastly claim
there was no foul. ·
Says Shackleford: "This game always has controversy and
excitement, it's nothing new. Looking back on it, breaks told the
story. We had some close calls go against us earJy and It made a
difference. But those are the way thlnrs go. Sometimes they 10
yourway ... sometimes not."
As for the pass interference call on OCC that set up those final
hectic seconds, Tue kw is adamant in defendln1 h1I defender.
· "Both players were playing the ball and the ball wu over-
thrown. They collided in the air after the ball wu past them. But
J don't like to dw-ell on the officiating.
"We had 11 penalties to Golden West's Uu'ee, but I've DO
11:rlpes. The officials kept their cool and did a food Job. Tt\ere
were no wild-eyed characters runninl around."
RAY SHACKLEFORD
DICK TUCKER
Vikes QB .
Impresses ,
Coaches
~Ma1nolla Hl&h <Aoabelm>
football coach Jim Howell la lliU
trylne to forget about the flbal
play ot tut Friday's tame wlth
Oran1e.
"We played well enouib to
tle," says Howell, whose Sen·
Unell face Marina (ffuntm,ion
Beach> this Friday night (8) at
Westminster Hi1h.
And Mll,IJ)Olla almost bad a
lle except Oranae pulled off a
screen pass that went for 85 y ardl and a TD u tlme ran out.
Thus Howell flcures Mapolla
wUl see a Jot of pUllnl trom
Marina.
"Marina puses the ball real
well. Joe Sartain (Marina QB) iA
more than an adequate pu&er.
We're very impressed by lum.
I'm sure they're eotnc to try to
paaaon us. We're aoin& tobaveto
atop their passing and 1et our of.
fenae 1oine." says Howell.
The Magnolia coacb II.JS bis
offense has sputtered so far.
''Our offense la just not jelling
' al this point. We just can't get it
together," says Howell.
The big problem has been at
quarterback. Senion Rick Ward
and Dan Kottman, a atartlng
fullback in '76, have been
al t.ematlng at quarterback.
The best o( the Magnolia of·
fenslve stars is 5·8, 160·pound
fullback Doug Beatty, wboisalso
a starting defensive end.
And linebackers Mike Allen
(5-10, 170) and J elf Lusk (6-0, 210 >
are the leaders on defense. aays
Howell.
Howell figures his Sentinels
will have to play better this week
than they dld against Oranae if
MaanoUa is to win ... 1 thoulht
Marina was impressive against
Corona del Mar. Marina played
good defense unUl lt aot some
bad breaks in the la.at quarter.
Marina wu in the game all the
wa~ · ·'And we didn't play \Well l&iSt
week but we did pl ay well
enough to deserve a tie;· aays
Howell.
Tars, CdM Vie
In Volleyball ;I
Two of the top contenders for
the CIF girls volleyball cbaf!l·
pionship this season will meet in
a noo·league encounter Tburs-
d ay night at 7 at Newport Harbor
High School.
Corona del Mar. runnerup t4
Laguna Beach in the CJF finals
I ut season, will meet the
Newport Harbor Tars, cbam-
pions of the Sunset League a year
ago. A Junior varsity matcb
begins al 5:30 with the vanity to
follow.
Many or the girls on the two
high school teams played
together for the Orange County
Volleyball Association during the
summer. CdM has elght return-
ing lettermen and Newport has
SIX ,
On the CdM roster are Dale
Keough, Cheryl Johnston, Alleen
Semonsen, Monica Park, Susie
Crone, Marcie Wurts, Lori Webb,
Kathy Tyler and Sue Correa. All
but Tyler played for the OCVB
team at one time.
Making up the Newport f08ter
will be LyM Droke, Marie Lun-
die, Karen OlBon, Korl Pulaski,
Kris Pulaski, Kari Rush, Llz
Echternach and Anne Yardley.
Droke, Echternach and Yardley
did not play for OCVB dlllina the
summer.
Toomey Canceled
A proposed golf tournament.
featuring Ruby Keeler and Rita
Hayworth with proceeds going to
the American Heart AssociaUon,
Oran1e County Chapter, has
. been canceled for lack or suffi·
ciententries.
Brea Seeks Polish
Wildcats' MiBtake1 Coatly
There is nothing wrona with
the Brea High football team that
a llttle poll&h won't cure.
Baseball Standings
At leaat that's the opinion of
Wildcat.a coach Jim McAllister
who la tryina to get hls t.eiyn up
for Friday'• game against El
Toro (8 p.m. at Mlasion VleJo
Hllh) after last week'• t -6
Josa to Laiun• Beach.
·'We're not doinc anything
apecf al, Just trying to iet better
at what we do." McAllister sald
of lhll week '1 pracUce plans.
"Hopefully." he added, "lbelr
<El Toro't) quarterbec~ won't
1cramblo."
NewYOt'k
Baltlmare
8c¥ton
Dettblt
Cleveland
Milwaukee
Toroftt.O
GB
3
NA'l10NAL LEAGUE
Eaat Dlvllloa
Philadelphia
Pltt.aburg'h
St.Louis
Cblcago
Montreal
New York
W L Pet. GB
94 S6 .621
87 ~ .S'12 8
78 72 .$20 16
78 73 .$1T 18~
69 80 --2f1'l 80 92 .395 35
-
-. ,
0.ltyrtllot-
SAN CLEMENTE'S KARL BISH (33), MARK McELROY BA'TTLE LA QUINTA FRIDAY.
Double Duty .. ...
Batchellor Sparks
Young (:,dM Unit
t
I
Bruce Batchellor is a dedicat-
ed athlete and a spirited leader
for the Corona del Mar High Sea
Kings football team.
He is one of the few players do-
ing double duly for coach Di~k
Morris' Corona del Mar outfit,
although he doesn't start on of·
fcnse.
"He's a super athlete," Morris
says. "He's probably the most
spirited guy on our team.
"He's one of those athletes who
can pick the team up in practice
when things are dragging. He
also~ voll eyball and was the
team captain as a junior last
year.
"As a setter in volleyball, he is
the kind of player coaches like to
have on a team. He is similar to
Chris Crosson who was with the
football and wrestling teams last
year.
"Their own enthusiasm picks
up the entire team."
Batchellor has taken over at
· rover back on defense this season
with Kurt Brockman moving to
quarterback. Brockman played
rover as a sophomore last
season.
''Rover is probably the most
di((icult position lo play," Morris
says. "You have to be able to
come up on the run, play tough
defense and be a leader. We think
we have a great defensive team
this year and Batchellor is our
leader.•·
When the Sea Kings are on of·
tense, Batchellor alternates with
BRUCE BATCHELLOR
way this year," the coach says.
Starting at safety is Rick
Starnes, the team's second
quarterback, which may be the
r easoning behind such a move.
But right now, Batchellor is
the startin& rover back and
Brockman the starting
quarterback for the Sea Kings as
they prepare for their second
game against Newport Harbor
High Friday night.
Area Calendar
flanker Craig Johnaton, bringing TI11nNYCML1t•
i n the plays to signal caller flootbll~ uu-..1 .. MIW' °" .. Brockman. s.nc. ,,.,. ..... c:....tttr-v•111Y •• ...,.,..
"He's a good receiver for any •ti~~=i:· ll«ft w l.o"8
quarterback to throw to." Moms 8MchJillnllllflfl""1t1ca,LMA1emtt•11tlilWllMI
adds. "He's very intense and a ~~ ~!:.~tler<ll" c:.i Hltll Mid •r1111u• vc
. auperleader." w.wl'lllo CDMMeM,""'"'"""·c.w•
'· Dur l n I the s ummer, ~::;:_r:~tec"'-8!r'~= Batchellor att~ded two sports tourM'fl ettencl•, Lot ••• ,,,1101, €dlson,
I f tb 11 d th New'l*t Herta*, •stiMCll. Mer'IM tt •stancl• camps, one .. or oo a an e 1,,,.........-, ... • ....,,,..,, """'1 .... 1 .. c11 ec other for volleyball. He also lift· v111e Perti '-"'Y. <>fenee co.st tolle9t-' s.ci.
ed weights to strengthen hls ~=~,;'~ .... v1ew ,, MMln• 13 body. At 5-8 and 150 pounda, be ,.,,..>.
doesn't have the size of some 01"• •olllWNl•-•".,.c'• " c .. 1 ..... c-• ,_•...,,I ttM"Mr, CM LUlfllf'• players but his desire and in· ,, ...--c:.ec.,_.. c.1 .... "'' 11t 11, HuMo •--·It -'-es u~ for t• If!!!* llltC1I 4lt """"'Dtl ci1 m, &411H11 It Lt .... .,. Y m-•· Mltllll .. Q), f1ft•1ct1~tiMl.1911 NI> As a rover ack, Batchellor ""'• al. --. --. " or.,... CN1t c.1.._
bu done so well that Monts uys ::..CO:::~~ c:;r.:;
Brockman will be moved to safe .. • et•.,..= c.:111.
ty 1l1f he returns to the d.,enalve .:;:' e>~~~= .--::,:,. ~": un . T-11 c.n.~•~*'Mllt "Wt hope to two-platoon all tbe ":•I, 'Nlt.., ....... Vtett CIJ.
Hirt, .Abarca
Spark Aztecs
Ground Grune
In winning their first football
game since 1975, the La Quinta
(Wes tminster) High Aztecs
sta¥ed mainly on the ground
against Costa Mesa Saturday.
And when they shoot for vic-
tory No. 2 against host San
Clemente High on Friday, head
coach David Selph plans more of
the same.
"We'r e basically a running
team," Selph said Monday, still
savoring his first football win
since taking over as La Quinta's
head coach a year ago. "We feel
Chuck Tyson, our quarterback,
can throw the football but if they
let us run lt, we'U 1·un it."
Run they did against Costa
Mesa, piling up 240 net yards in a
13-0 triumph. And it w:is a two-
way attack. Jlm Hirt (6-0, 180)
netted 99 yards and Anthony
Abarca (5-11, 170) 101 yards
against the favored Mustangs.
Both carried the ball 22 times.
Tyson completed just two of
'five passes for 24 yards but one
was a nine-yard TD toss to Hirt.
who a lso scored the other
touchdown on a two-yard run.
It was a complete turnaround
from the 1976 opener in which
Costa Mesa destroyed La Quinta
31·13. The Aztecs went on to lose
all of their games before a forfeit
by Garden Grove gave them a
notch In the win column.
Selph sees brighter. things
ahead for this season. "The kids
this year have a good attitude
a'bd confidence In themselves,"
be said. "They were very happy
with the win. They know what
lbey want now and they're loin&
afteril"
La Quinta ls small compared to
moat Garden Grove League
teams but Selph, a former Los
Amigos uafatant and Garden
Grove head coach, says be has
one of bis biggest teams ever.
Mlke Jacob8 (6-0, 205) and Jim
Kruse (6-31 210) are lbe defensive
tackles and the Alteca • 1tants.
As far u San Clemente ii con-
cerned. Selph said there wUJ be
no changes.
w.dneedey. s.pi.mber 21. 19n DAILY PILOT
Coast Area Vik.es Nab
15-9Polo
Victory
Girls Spons
WddRallr
GivesOCC
12-11 Wm
Marina High of Hunt·
lngt.on Beach had a field
day while three other
Orange Coast.area
schools came up empty
handed in Tuesday water
polo action.
With Bob Hume erupt·
ing for eight goals, the
Vikings of head coach
Topper Horack whipped
Long Beach Jordan, 15·9.
Andy Weissenberger
and Andy Rosenberg
scored two goals apiece
as Marina, down 3·1
after one period, erupted
for six goals in the
second frame.
Fountain Valley,
Irvine a nd Estancia
<Costa Mesa> could have
used some of that s ur·
plus Marina firepower.
The Barons of Fountain
Valley were thrashed by
host Villa Park, 11-4.
after trailing 8·0 at
halftime, Irvine was
dumped, 18-8, by Rancho
Alamitos at UC Irvine
and Estancia faded in
the stretch to lose. 12·8.
to visiting Brea.
VAllSITY sc-11yo.art ....
Brea I ) l 3 1?
E"<lt>etl 1 1 3 I I
E'UN>eie KOf'l~-<errol, WY•ll. Ohle 2, Len, Or eke 7, RtHtSe
JUNIOll VAllSITY
"-Illy O..rten
Brea 1 3 7 • 21
ESl•n<te 0 0 0 I I
Estencl• .corino-1111-•.
l'llOStf·SOl'N Sc-ltyQuart ....
Bree o 1 o 1 t
E1len<le S 4 7 •-U
EstM>CI• KorlnQ-Auitl S, Holl!.
L•,.o•v. BrOflnlch• •. Hurle" 2.
IMdoml,Mlll ...
VAllSITY
~ltyQuften
VIiie~ 4 4 1 7-11
Founte1nv111.., o o 1 3-'
01111.ST8!11NI• VAllll'YY
ltt.Kle(1J) IJll'..WitlV .. ...,
LY11 MaYtln (£)def. Mclrlde •11
def OlllllOCI ..... lost 2 .. ; JIAle Me1'9r&
U!:l io.U-4. Cvtlw (E)del. llltslll .. a,.
-· Garfield .. 1. Gil<.1111.C Ill ...ti! .... lost«
0.UWM
Je mltoft end Cemerol\ IEI def
8e<t1111orn end rlOer .. ,, .. a; oef. ,..,._..st -c-6-3; Culvt!ntNl'n
endl'el-.. (Elwon•2.wonM.
JUNloi. VAaSITY •f1Mc11 1111 m ,........., .. ...,
~ l'~h(E)def.MlllsW.daf N-
cloa 7•; Or-(E) lotl 2 ... lost W ;
CwW!lllgNm IEldel. Frtft<ll .. I ; def.
OU"" 1·4: ~ CE I lost U ; loll, .. , "e11 CE I dllf. Bresll M ; Clent (I! I
def. Hatfield W ; Frenc.ey U!I clef.
S.t~k •>.;Wells lEI del. ~rllld w
~
Mellhm -Mcl..eUOhlln (El clef. Whiltal<lr encl Hell .. t; clef. z,....,. •"d Willis •·O: Keremeno1 lftd Wtwley IE ). IOlt ..... won 7 .. ; Clerk
el\d Pool IEI def. Merg.erlnt •nd Gin-
ni!! •t; oet Vell11 encl Ll11er M .
LOftOlleld -Zabonll" CEI won t>y defelllt. WOI\ 6·2., MCl"hlll clef.
'llauiblndff end hoendo end Pe-
6-1.; ICltcl\-McN•ll (l!)def.Sll,..r
encl Morrl• Morrl• 1·S.
VAllSITY .__. tAAeMiM) (ISi
IJ)Mat«o.4 , .......
Or.-,tus CMOI loSt to Jonmon t-4.
...... S.W• 7 .. ; Iott to Delay 2•. Ber-rows (MDI loll U ; lost U ; loll l ...
llettll (MO) lostM; losl 1-4; lost0-4.
o.MM
OrevfllS -Glrcta <NIOl lost to Rutt encl &ry.,.0-4; lost lo WelllOn Md
Gr•ro 6-6; loll to Trill"'° Md Cllf-0-4; l'ul~ end G.llllven (MDI lost .._.;won .. ,; won 7•; llUU end Mor·
rl"4tY IMO) lotl W ; lost2 .. ; toltt ...
VAllSITY
lllT-01) ISi C:.yw
11 ...... Cat1ff IETllostloLl .... ccl H ;def
llllllnoton IC) 64; Ov•lle (ETI won
••; won .. 2; 51-.d (£T) def. llryon
IC) .. 3; def. Pryor lCI 6-3; Fllvtell<t IET)loslH;wonM.
0.......
Bry'°" 11\d Burke Cl!T) lost lo
Y•memeto -Purnell CCI .... def R~tke -OOVI• ICI •·t. Dick Incl L~h IETI won M , won M . Smlll\
end Price CETI ICKI to Mlesler encl
NellAft ICI 6·7; def. AllMIS •ftd wiener .. ,; MorM Md o.v1, CETI
lolt.W;-.M.
VAllSITY
• .......... , (111 (t) Utllwenlt't ,_...
Gr•v• (U) lost 0·6, 1·•, O·•: Aue-.,. CUI Iott H. 1_., M ; Ml-
(U) lost I .. , 1 ... 0-6.
JUNIOtt VAHIT'I ~ CMINl!t• ft) ft),,.., .. ....... s .. rllnt !SI dlf L. V•lfa '-1; -H~ ... ;~CSl*l....._t ... ; dtf o.-.. ,; v.a IS> 1111 0.11-w. .,,....
Ll,._C. Cl'" <SI clef Sally·~" 6·0; Cl4lf l'.,tl'lnell•AbltOll (51 def
Hod9M-V.IOA •2: Melll-MoOte IS I
..~ ....
VAaStTY
U-CUI '11 T•tllft ........ J-11!1 Clef N.wtty 6-1 ; del Ze1
1,.... M ; Coele IEl won M , ~I 3-6,
8rHCNf IEI del 5mlll1 ... ; def
J el'NI .. 2; Blc!Mtr IEI .... S-1; "4. &"""-ru e1e1 Mvkloon H . def
Wllco-M; Ju lEl won .. J,•.(); Von
Lutzow Ill oel OM> 64, dal ~n
..O; McMlllen le 1 won •1. w.
~
Belles·W•ne• <El def Rt•u
Greyblll .. I; def 0.DomGorls 6-1 .
Tomes.lc·Scllollf.._ IU won 7·S, lost
2·6: Hel<l-1..ent CU def M cOenlet-
Torn1 •2: oel Connolly.Joe" 6-3;
SkodOOlllSkl·Lff CEI WOfl 14, •·3, f<or~vecuo"" ce > Clef Merl••· Oudl« ... ; def hrdM-l'orter M ;
Wllll•-·~r 1e1 won•·•. •·O; Hile~ CE> lotl lo Scllll-
Len9 $-1; Olf Pell~·Wleoend •·•. V1leW+al--lEllcKl1 ... 2 ...
VAaSITY OIM(HllJI~
JUNICHt VAaSITY OIM0.1121~
OlllLSVOLLIVULL
VAllSITY
MM1nadaf. FoolhUI IS.S, 1).5, 1S.13.
WlllOI\ (l.ol09 le«hl clef. Edllon
1S.t, 1+.16, 1S.IO.
8retllreft lPer-..tl "9f. Llb9tt't'
Cnrlsllen CWWlllllQlon 111 .. clll 1H,
ts-9.
CoslAIMKldef lhi.n<la 1 .. 14, 1W
El T-a.f, T11111ft 1S.11, 15-4.
Meter 0•1 def. E1per1nz•
(Ana!MlimlOS.15, IS.11, 1s.I.
N-1 ~ "9f. s.nte Montee
lS.), Is.&.
JUNICHt VAllSITY
Foothllldel. MeriN IS., 11·15. !S.S.
Wll!ondef. Edlscn IS.., 1S.IO.
Eslalcl•def.Costei'MM IS.12,4-IS,
ls-4.
T11ttl11*9. El TO'o.
Mllter Del*'· ~ .. u 1s.1. 1~ ~ HlftlOr def. $111\H Monie•
t).1S, 1S.IO. IH.
VAHITY
Fountel" V1tley def 0-HlllS u-n . 1z..is, 1s.t. ·
Vftlvwsllydef Estan<le 1s.1, u .11.
JUNloi. VAllSITY o.ne Hiiia dlf Fountelft ve11er 1S-4,
1S.l.
Eal.encl• def Ulllwnl IY 1S. 17, 1 MS, , .. 14.
O.ldln w.st oel. Or11191 Co.~ 1 H . 1).IS, 1S.IZ.t-15, 1 .. U.
•
With his team lralling
powerful Long Beach Cl·
ty College by three 1oals
late in the final period .
Orange Coast College
water polo coach Jack
Fullerton came as clQse
as he ever wlll to thrd" ·
iog io the towel.
"I never think we're
out of it-unless we're
four goaJs down," b e
said. "You never know in
a waterpologame.''
Fullerton's never-say.
die altitude pald off as
the Pirates erupted for
four unanswered goals in
the closing minutes to
edge n e m esis Long
Beach, 12·11, Tuesday.
The turning point.
Fullerton said , camt-
when Erin Sloan passed
up a clear shot and in·
stead passed to Eric
Klitzner, whose quick
goal made it 10-8 .
Klitzner finished w\th
five goals while Elcfer
had three.
In other junior college
water polo action. ~ff
Myers scored five goals
and Jeff Scolman four as
visiting Saddleback de-
feated El Camino, 17-16.
while a penalty goal with
a minute to go gave
Grosamont a 4-3 win ov'er
defending state cham -
pion Golden West at
GWC.
Groumonl 1 I 1 1-•
GoleleftW.SI 0 2 1 Or l
Golden West HO•lf19-WOO,..., B...,.,Alley.
k-ltrOIN,._
Sadd!MMKk • ' J 6r11 El <:Amino .. :J 3 .._I•
S•ddltl>l<lr scoln11-Mvcr# s. FOUnleln V•ll•'f scorlno-lcnOls.
Twyrnert, Net\OI\. Slft<la1r.
PllOSH·SOl'H ~ · The correct name of L_.,.ls -Co11ner IUI 10Sl 0-6, 6-7. S
S<:olrnert 4. Rlofneldefl 3, Hlft-e~41'
3, Fr._, Wlllltoclt.
k••lty0Mf1er& 4-6; arenc1e -euu.,. 1u1 1011 ,... Gene Tenace, the an Scerw111¥0..rten Vlll1Petil 0 1 1 •-7
"°""~"Velley 1 I 0 1-o LOl\O llMch l 3 3 2 -.J I
OrangeCoes1 1 • 1 .._12
..,, ... : untet1ta1* Mid~ ... <u> Diego Padre catcher-
'0'1s.1·2!u1:io11vus1TY first baseman, is Fury Fount all\ Velley KorlnQ-EICMr.
Johnston?. 0.mPHy.
YAIUITY
Sc.. tty O..rt•n
l(llUNr s, Eloer 3. Davidson; 7.
Smith.~ • •• w~ m1 ,,., u111""'"' Gene Tenace. 11"'* --;;;;&iliiililiiilllll-:=~=;;;=;~~:;;;;:;;~~;:=:;;;;;:;;lir;::;;;::=~
RancllOAlemltcK 3 I 2 •-"
Irvine 2 2 o •-8
I rvlfte 1corlft9-JOhft•on,
McCormkk 2. Sc>reoue 2. 0111ow 2. Pe1uson.
Siii_, N) Iott 1•; -.. 1. 6·1;
SlllOlfV !UI lost 2 .. , 0-6; won •·•; Burton (U I won 6-3, 4·l; loll W.
~
Mii.Chali end .>omson lUI lost 1 .. ,
3•, l-4; ~end 0.-(U) !Ott
PllOSM·SOl"H H , 3-6, ... H ; Mer-elld LuMn (U) Sc-•,0...11.... tosll-4,2 .. 1-4.
Ral\ChOAlemllol 1 2 0 1 6 VAllSITY
lrvlne J l l l -' SMc;._,...111 IJllmllO·
lrvlne S<Ml110-8oncll l, Anclrew• l. ~
Pruen,Muoihv, Peul. Lund lll oef Whltfll4d 7-4, lost lo
VAllSITV Roberts ... ;Valdli 1Sltost•7,won7·S;
tc-111¥0llertrl Ol•ISIOllDr~
Merine 1 6 3 s-ts Lewl .. M.Chce CSl defVe ... 9rtlftt JorCI.,. 3 ? 1 J-t M · dlf NOo;ICJl•Slltunt M • T..,_· Merl,.. scorlno-Hum. I, weiu.,.. Mc.Donald (51 won w M· flou-
t>•reer 2. Rosent>ere 7, Ett>ero, llre-IS)losttoBrklhi·SC..:IOft1.,. Tlllelen, McGlynn. •
WIN PRIZES
WORTH
MORE THAN
S3,000
IN ·
'77
PIGSKIN
PICKEROO
Sponsored by
and
Soat~Jlu1
RULES
. •
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
: ENTRY BLANK :
Name .•.........•.......................•
Address •....•.............. ············•··
City •....•.......•. · · · · · · · · .ZJp. · · · · · · · · • .....,,.. .... : ................................ .
• • • • • • • • • • • • Circle teams you thi'* will win this Wfflc's ca-mes :
Minnesota at Tampa Bay
Phlladelphla at Rams
San Diego at Ka"sas City
Atlanta at Washington
Baltimore at NY Jets
Buffalo at Denver
Chicago at St. Louis
Houston at Green Bay
Miami at SF
New Orleans at Detroit
NY Giants at Dallas
Seattle at Clnclnna~I
TCU at USC
UCLA at Mlnnesot•
Cal at Missouri
llllnola at Stanford
Washington at Syracuse
Washington State at Kanaaa
Army at Boston College
Arizona at Iowa
Na~ at Michigan
Baylor at Nebraska
Notre Dame at Purdue
Oklahoma llt Qhlo St~t•
At•btm at Yanderbllt
~uburn at Tenn•••••
Texat A&M at Tex•• l"ech
Clemson 8t Georgl• Tech
Maryland at P.enn State
Wt•conaln •t Oregon
ufi ! :_y Pl LOT
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e •• ·~ : • • • • • . :
' . .. • • • • • .. • • • • • • .. • . . • • • • • • • • • • I e • .. • • • '. 1• 1• • 1·
I I
I l
j
I! l e
Ii Ii •
-·
\
Facts of Insulation Detaikd
.... -,..,
Top-selling Ford?
8y Tbe Auocla~ Preu
HOME INSULATION -Tho
Beller Business Bureaus of the
counlry are joining varioua
federul aaencies ln trying to do
their part to keep homeowners
from belng deceived when lhey
mJSulate lheir houses.
The 146 local bureaus are dis·
tributing a new pamphlet setting
out advertlsing and selling atan-
d a rd s for home insulation
materials.
The booklets are meant for
C4HFER UUDS
CONSUMER BIIL
WASHINGTON CAP) -Presi·
dent Carter, signing a blll de·
signed lo protect consumer bor·
rowers from overzealous debl
collectors, said, ··u·s not a minor
matter to treat consumers fairly
m this country."
Ford Motor C-Ompany expects its newly designed Fair·
mont.s to be the firm's top-selling line in 1978. Offered as
two-door and four-door sedans and as four-door station
wagons, the car features a 2.3 liter standard engine or
optional 3.3-liter V6 or 5-liter VS.
The new law. signed in a Rose
Garden ceremony Tuesday, bars
the nation's 5,000 credit collec-
tion agencies from cursing~
threatening or assaulting bor·
rowers, or from harassing them
with midnight phone calls.
"This is the first consumer bill
1 've had the privilege to sign,"
Carter said, adding that he hoped
ll would not be the only one.
Countians Move Up
Loi11 Moriarty, Huntington Beach, has been pro·
moted to supervisor of board assembly operations
at Technicolor AudJo·VlsuaJ Systems, Costa Mesa.
She joined the firm in August 1974 in the.assembly
departrnenL ' • WUliam E. Dletbrlcb, El Toro, has been named
vice president for loan admltlistrat1on at the Bank or Newport's main office at Dover and Sixteenth
Street, Newport Beach.
He has been a banker for 22 years, first in
Arizona and later an San Diego where he worked
with U.S. National Bank Cnow
Crocker Bank). For the past 2'h
years he worked with the
Westcliff office of California
First Bank, Newport Beach.
He attended the University
of Arizona and has completed
several American Institute of
Banking courses.
* Jack C. Po1ley, Irvine. has
been elected senior vice presi-
dent or Am cord, IDc .• Newport Beach.
OlllTHlllC:H
He joined the company in 1973 as manager or
corporate communications. In 1975 he was elected a
vice president of the company.
* J. Edward DUlard, general Counsel for Pacific
1'1utual, Newport Beach, plans to take early retire-
ment effective Nov. l to become a partner in the law
firm of McDonald, Pulaski & Harlan or Newport
Beach and San Diego.
He will continue to serve in a consulting capac1·
ty to Pacific Mu~uat.
* Jann Cburcb or Jann Church Advertlalng and
Graphic Design, Joe., Newport Beach, won two
;iwards in the recent 11th annual Belding awards.
One was for her design or a brochure for Sporting
J louse of Newport Beach. It was designed in the
:.ha pc and size of a racquet.
An award of excellence was also presented to
Ms. Church for an advertisement created in black
and white for magazines. The ad also featured The
Sporting House. • Russell J. Torge, Costa Mesa. has been named
manager of the Magnolia and Adams office or
PaclOc City Bank, Huntington Beach.
lie is former assistant vice president of the
bank'!> head ofhce, a position he has held since
August 1976. • Mary Louise Scudder, Costa Mesa, bas been
promoted to assistant vice president or Imperial
Savings and Loan Association. She is a loan officer
at the Newport Beacb office on Via Lido.
She JOaned the associauon an October 1960, and
has served in various capacities within the lending
and escrow fields.
* Pamela L. Fayles has JOmed Crowell McKay
Advertlslng and Public RelaUoos. Newport Beach,
<tS accounl coordinator.
Glynnita Schreiber has been named to
the newly created position of manager of customer
services administrallon for Air California. Newport
Beach.
She will be responsible for standardization and
application of policies and procedures m the operat-
ing departments of the division. She also will be
responsible for application of fiscal control prac-
tices in the station services, inflight and reserva-
uons departments.
She joined the carrier in October, 1967 and most
recently served as internal audit.or.
* Susan E. Morgan, Costa Mesa, has been named
regional merchandiser for children's . lines for
JCPenney Comp&Ay. Inc.
An 11-year veteran with the company, joined as
a salesperson In Tucson in 1966. She completed the
management training program there and became a
department manage r . In 1974, she moved to
Port.land as a merchandiser in the district office
and, three years later. transferred to Oakland in
that capacity. • Uoyd L Garner, San Clemente. has been
named vice president for research and develop-
ment at Smith Tool, a division of Smith Intema-
t1onal, Inc., Irvine. He will be responsible for the
technical services department as well as the firm's
research and development projects.
He joined Smlth in 1957 as a sales trainee. As
part or his Orientation to the company, be WL'>
placed in the engineering de-
partment for a month to become
acquainted with the product.
During that month, he changed
his career objective and decided
to continue in· the engineering
department as a draftsman.
He progressed through the
department. serving as develop-
ment engineer and research and
development engineer, and
working on the development of °"'""u
the Dyna-Drill and the company's first sealed btar·
ingbit.s.
In 196S, Gamer was promoted to chief teat
engineer and, later that year, became chief
engineer, a position be held for 10 years. In 1975, be
was named manager of product engineering and, in
1977. direct.or or product engineering.
103-12%*
1m1ES1
Free Evaluation
steady,
safe,
secure.
For 16 year~
lndl\lidual lnvutor., ae
well as trust Md profit
sharing plans, have
~arned 10-12% on their
money-and sometlmu
more. n,e me>My h111 been
lnw ted In 2nd trust dttd1
oo choice California
real estate through
A. A. AJaK C.O.
In 16 years. no oiw
has ever Iott • cent or
lelltd to earn at least 10%
ormott-no~
-wtlCn a Ion s.
prepaid befON matuttt\4
)>Q.I ~up to a the
month lntCNlt ""'--a<* of the loan baYnce.
Th1t may 1ncneee..,.
yield up 1.0 12-.
' for a ct.tailed
bl'OChun:. plcaM wtit.
'orc•n:
Energy-saving Ideas
Sought by Bureau.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The
federal government, looklna for new
aohrtlons to energy problems, ls en-
coura&ing individuals and small com·
panies to come up with energy-savin'
inventions.
The Ener(Y Research and Develop-
ment Agency CERDA> ,,..m evaluate
the invenUons free of charge, aaya a
spokesman for the National Bureau or
Standards.
••&\SJCALL Y. THIS IS seared to
the little man;• •aya the bureau's
technical tnlormatlon officer, Avery
T. Hortoa. ,,..ho delichta ln the llmtted
p,aperwork the inventor bu to ftll out.
'Wltb our program. be can Mad it in on a pece of tabl~ papef. • •
A two.step evaluatJon ~,ls
t'""71Jol1cft, •lid, and u the mvtriU.Ori
has merit, the inventor can receive
ERDA assistance in the form of a
Joan. erant or muketlng feasibWty
iludy.
Some of the inventions funded by
ERDA have been simple, like the
modified automotive· carburetor
whose deslp could reduce gasoline
conaumptlon and exhaust emissions
at the tame Ume.
A MOU COMPLEX offerinJ was a
computer-controlled thermostat that
automatically tu.rm fUmaces. of.f and
on wltb more preclalOn beat•
monitorin& than tho standard
therioo1tat.
AllllOlt G,000 lnva.tfons bave been
1ubmlu.ct to the bureav 1tnce the pro.
iram becan in U'IS, Horton aald. NBS
hu recommended 41 to ERDA from the of'ftce here. ..
Booklet Seeks to Halt Homeowner Deception
manufacturers, home builders.
hardware at.ores and other retail
sources and for advertlsln&
media. Their lntent is that coo-
sumen get the right information.
The new ;standards call for ad·
vertiaers and sellers to disclose
fully the •0R" value of the
materiab. That means the re·
siatance value. a standard
measure of the resiJStance of the
insulation to the flow of beat.
They also say no claims about
tax relief for homeowners who
insulate should be made until
S\JCh a law la passed.
WINE I.ABEU> -Public hear·
ings on a propQsal to increase the
amOl,pll of information on a wine
label open in Washington Tues·
day.
The Bureau or Alcohol, Tobac·
co and Firearms in the Treasury
Department, which regulates the
wine industry. has proposed that
the labels provide specific in-
formation about a wlne's origin.
content and production.
Further hearings will be held
ln San Franclsc:oNov.1·3.
TAX STAMPS -Those
familiar paper tax stamps stuck
over the tops of liquor bottles
may become a thing or the past,
iC the Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco
and Firearms can fiaure out a
way to replace them.
The "strip stamps" are the
traditional method of showing
that the tax has been paid on the
liquor and guaranteeing that it
has .not been opened. Bureau of-
ficials say 1t costs nearly $1
million a year to print and dis-
tribute the stamps and they are
looking !or another way of doing
the same thing.
"With modern teehnology, we
recognize other methods might
do the same job at a substantial
saving to taxpayers." said
Stephen E . Higgins of the
bureau. For example, be said, an
excise lax seal might be printed'
on an aluminum cap.
{ NEWS TO USE J
The main requirement, he
said, ls that the seal be broken or
voided when the botUe la opened.
The bureau la open to augae.s-
tiona. Hlu1ns said. Send ideas to
the Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco
and Firearms. W~ D.C. 2022.6..
MATADOR RECALL -'I1le
National Highway Traffic Safely
Administration reports that
American Motors is recalllnc
26,500 of Ha 1976 Matador
automobiles because of coollnJ
far problems.
Officiala said the recall in-
volves autos equipped with flex-
fans and air conditionlnc or a
maximum cooling ayalem.
The fan hu curved blades that
ncx und officials said the cons·
tant nexlnc can cause metal
fatigue. allowing the blades to
break off. No injuries have been
reported.
American Motors officials said
owners of the autos will be
notified as soon as possible, but it
wlll be several weeks before
replaceme.nta can begin.
SPA HEARING -Got
eomethlna to tell the government
aboutbealthapas?
The Federal Trade Com·
mlsaion ls looking into that busi·
neas and will bold a bearing in
San Francisco Oct. 17. U you
want to speak at the hearing you
have untll Monday to notify
Jerome Steiner, FTC Regional
Office, Room 121.38, San Fra:t-
cisco 94102.
Another hearing will be held in
November in New York.
Royal OU
Windsor Guards Wealth
TUI.SA, Okla. <AP> --If the British royal family
ever falls on hard times, maybe it can drill an oil well
in the backyard.
A geological consultant says Windsor Castle, his-
torical summer home of English royalty. may be sit·
ting on oil and gas reserves.
Allen P. Bennison visited the area recently and
studied at the British Geological Museum. He based
his assessment on surface geological studies.
But the SS.year--0ld scientist acknowledges that
one just doesn't go around poking holes in the royal
turf.
"Intrusion with a drilling rig in such a historic
area is the obvious reason for not drilling the Windsor
Dome ... is the way he put it. ' ·
Bennison said, however, that a "slant-hole" could
be drilled from the bank of the nearby Thames River
that would not disturb the castle grounds.
Over The Counter
NASO LiStincJS
l!JJ• aad Do"'ns
DOWNS
Pct.
Up JOO Up 20.1
Up 10 S Up 200
Up 1'• Up 1S8 Up 14 J
Up 14.:S Uo UJ Up 17.S Up 12.S
Up 11.5
Up n• Up 11 I Up 11 I
Up 100 Up 10.0
Up 100
VP 100 Up 9 ~
Up 9~
VP 9.4
UP '9 I
VP 19 Up l .o
I.Ht Chq Pel 2\lo -v. Oii 11.1 7V.. -1'• Off U I
4 -II> Off 11 I 4"• -'I> Off 10.S ...,, -\It Off 10 0 .... -\It Off ,. 4'1/o -..... Ofl • s s -.... Off 91
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1' I-Vt M~-1-
TRANSACTIONS
""!d'~· S!ptetnber 21, 1977 l /N DAIL. Y Ptl01" 85
ABAAd~
·Hints Aid H11nt
For Best Lawyer
By SYLVIA PORTER
Consumers can shop for lawyers by readlnc ads, a de·
velopment that could inlenalfy contusion over prices and
services.
Is competent leeat service available ror the advertised
fee? WMt guidelines apply ln aelecUDI a lawyer throu&h
price advertialng? WW hard·aell tactics prevail?
LA8I' JUNE, THE U.S. SUPREME COURT ruled that.
for lhe flJ'St time ID 69 years, lawyers can advertise their
fees and publicize their services. Richard Morris, assl.atan\
executive.director of the American Bar Association, offers
these suggestions:
-Don't take an ad literally. Use common sense. Before
retaining a lawyer, ask for bar association references or get
client references. Normally, this is considered a matter of
confidence, says Morris, but lawyers have increasingly
been willing to do it. Client references are a matter of
privilege but, it available, can be useful.
-Don't let communications with the lawyer lapse and
don't let time and dialogue drift once an action has started.
Don't pester the lawyer but don't be afraid to ask questions.
Those concerned with how their cases are being handled
should check with their
local bar committees.
Clients are entitled to
monthly reports.
-Know the extent or services provided in
the lawyer's ad. What is
a simple will, for in·
• Money's
Worth
stance? What is an wiconiested simple divorce?
-<.'LIENTS SHOULD KNOW about add-ons in alimon~
action, property settlement costs, jurors fees and court
costs. The lawyer should speU them out.
-ls the lawyer's contingency fee off the top? The re-
covery on the net, for example, can make a.difference.
-Use a checklist approach so that a profile can be
established by the lawyer. Get a flle of documents together
to provide the lawyer with relevant material. This can save
hours of work, thus reducing the legalfees.
-BE CLEAR ABOUT LEGAL fees and ask how the fee
is fixed.Uthe lawyer charges an hourly fee, get it in wriUng
and try to ascertain the number of hours of work involved.
-Consider arbitration. Morris says, as an option. lo
Cleveland and San Francisco, among other cities, arbitra-
tion is becomin& increasingly popular as a means of putting
a lid on coet.s.
The ABA also suggests these guides for shopping for a
lawyer.
-CHECK THE LAWYER'S QUALIFICATIONS.
especially in similar cases.
-Discuss fees and lawyer activities. with the un-
derstanding that there may be unforeseen legitimate cost!
lo be added.
-Get a receipt for a retainer.
-Be informed about payments, proJected moves and
the progress of the case.
-Be aware that a client can change lawyers even if an
agreement has been signed.
Market Continnes •.,
lt,s Long Decline
NEW YORK <AP> -The stock market slipped into~
steady decline today as Wall Street awaited President
Carter's scheduled news conference.
The Dow Jones average or 30 industrials was off 11.00
Points lo840.78, dropping well below the 21-month closing low
0(851.52 it reached Monday.
Losers held a 7-5 lead over gainers among New York
'Stock Exchange-listed issues.
Big Board volume c ameto22.2 mllllon shares.
Analysts said traders were cauUously awaiting th~
President's news conference.
Brokers said traders were fearful also that weekly.
statistics due Thursday would show another bulge in the'
money supply. prompUng further credit.tJghtening by the.
Federal Reserve.
They also noted some dismay among chart-watching in·
vest.ors at the Dow's decline below the850 level.
Dotelone•Average• M1tat Sto<"k11 Did
.~~CAl'I "''* OwN_e,,.regn
ao ''"' ~ =r'n i:1t ~-1?.;1 20 T"' tlUO 2iU2 22p.tm 211.lS-t.41 U Utt 1U.l1 tltM 111.M m .tol-0.1' 6S Stk 2'1.14 tn.21116.'4 217..U-2,61
lnd\IS • • • • .. • .. • • • • • •• • • • • •• 1,"1.100 Tra" .............. ,.,..... "2,tOO Vtll• ...................... Jft.«IO e.s Sta • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • • • • • • • • • 2,'71,000
NEW 'l'ORlt IAl'I-sates. 4 11.m. twto
.,.. Mt (,_. .. "" '"' f!IOSt •• ,.... ~ lttdl EK,..,... ''"'*· lrecllllel MtlONlly •I "'°'• IMfl St. HWOllM •••••. • 117.400 ~ I'• oe"'-011.. '2.AOO 11 • '• Gllemo Ho. • .. M,900 2 . . . ~. " 11111 • I0,500 "'"' "" .. , .., • • .U.«111 u
fli:-: 8r.~:: 1!:: ~ -~ 4.0lpl • • • lJ. lOO 12~ •••• ~ P91r1... 2+• ... _ .. '"~Y (41... • 14,700 17'h •••••
HEW YORK tAPI
Due to fate transmission ·
today's I lstlng wlll not
aPC>ear In the Dally Piiot.
~ WMAT AM•X DID NEW \'O"IC IAPI TOdrj~
200 i5
lO 101 32' Jo ., t60
,. 10 n n
A#•X SA\.•S
Due to l•te transmission
today's Ustlng will not appe•r In the Dally Piiot.
Stoelu '"Tia~
Spolllgllt
• DAILY PILOT
MARMADUKE by Brad Andenon BOOMER by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson
PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz . ,
~ k'1NO
Of SA~'°'! Wt HAv~ NO Ol2f'551NG I
' • y
l/ .. i • • ..
J ' :> ... .. .. .
/ °'e~ SAL.Ac>
CAt5.411Z 6ALJP
utt6t( SAi.AP
C~IC~~ SAL.AP
6Pl~AC~ SALAD
AWCA~ ~I.AP
kJfJ NUC't~
5A~AO .
f
\
f
~1 MISS PEACH I
I,
I I
I
I_
I "He Just can't take rejection'"
I l=UNKY WINKER BEAN
,,,_ . . . 'r I I I:
I I ,.
1Ul. ME, NA1E , HOOJ DO
<X>U LIKE "TEACHING ti:> FAR~
t~ TANK McNAMARA • ,:
\; '. ,;
J: l:
. ..
t ·-' -
, • •
.......
............... ,.
l REAL.l<./ LI KE IT FINE
tf'R. BURCH !
~ ~V VOU. MAVI A WILP FANTASY
VOC..VIN& Ml~ PIACM? CAM, WHAT IS THAT ~TA+V?
I
by Tom Batiuk
I'M GLAD HE DIOO'T A5K ME
t()U) I UK£ 1tACHIN6 HERE f
by Jeff ~illar an·d Bill Hinds.
DOOLEY'S WORLD
. HI, WoRMLI. SEE
YA Gar A FRJEND
WITl-4 YA TODAY!
DR.SMOCK
E
PTEO
MOTLEY'S CREW
NCJr1,;e(! CAN 't'OU EXPLAIN WMY 'TH!; Afl5~~y
t.1~ 15 RUN~IN6 1H~~~ 5~CONDS 6WVJ? !
,, I ~ ~~ L~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~:::J 5 '------:~WJ -------~ TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PVZZLI
• ACROSS SO Swedish .
1 Might of a
·-nation r, 6Young
bovme
10 Burmeso
tribe
14 Exisflng
15 lnatrument
16 Pairs
l 7 Lateral
surlaces
1 8 Man-k1ll1ng
fish: 2
words
20 ••. lhe mark·
Conlorm
21 laceraled
23 Free of
superfluity
24 Greek •
marketplace
26Demanded
aadue
28 Bonus
30 Social units
11 Stone
J:> Family
relat1onah1ps
2 words
36 Tibet ox
37 Amph1b11ns
38Can Nal . '° Expo
"' 39 Spenla
. nigl'tl
42 Rellgious
pa1nllng
44 Bold
, 4SPieceof
shot 46D1ck1n·s
tharactor
49Hoodtd
lacket
island
51 Alleges
52 Canadian
northland
Abbr
55 Giving 1n
great
amounts
58 More
unusual
60···· Cong or
Nam
61 Century
plant
62 Din
83 Ending w11h
div and rev
64 Morning
mo1sturu
65 Steno· a co·
worker
DOWN
UNITED Feature Syndicate
Tuesday Puule Solved
1 Gone by 19 Remain "1 Goads
2 Mixture unchanged 42 Individuals
3 W11h botn 22 Cahlorn1a's 43 Type
eyes open Fort ··· 45 81 profll•·
4 Fem1n1ne 25 Narrow ble name c111nriet 46 Find a aolu·
5 Make like 26 Obstruct• hon
new 27 A11an c:Oun-47 ·····de lune
6 Snake try • 48 Speake In·
7 Showing 28 lrradlatea coherently
kno\Nledge 29 Equal: Ft. 49 Congreaa
8 Boy'a or 30 ····-shave employHI
girl's 32 Mark over• 51 T\' lnler-
nlc:kname vowel lerence
9 Gratuity 33 Of an lalend 53 Compeaa
10 Non~ repubhc: point
btllever 34 Being. Sp 54 Playing card
11 Oofony of 35 Fix firmly 1n 56 Chealld
bees place 57 ···di
1 'l Equine 37 Emblem France
13 Pull he 40 Hard rubber 59 N1ma on e
QUHllOn product watfant ------------...... ~.-r.:-,-
\ t'
~ c. I
~
.,
~
;
~ . . . ...
by Mell '
. 0
'f-2.I
I
i "
SIMPW,Ml'Z. D2UDG~~
,, W~.'R6 ON ~~G"1"
5AVING5 'TIME.
by Gus Arriola
ALL I HAVE Ta 00
15 KICK rr: RIGHT'
•
E
PTEO
by Roger Bradfield
by George Lemont
1.-ZMN.J e> H ...
by Templeton and Formatt
GERIATRIX
rt
l
h•
M
lh
bl
al
D'
SI p
rr •J
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ABC Sweeps Field
Three New Slama Fini.ah in Top 10
NEW YORK <AP> Only U\ree
nt*w prosrama flnl1.,.d •rnona the 10
mn t "alcbed 1bow1 for t.be week
endana ~pl 18. A C Nlt>11'en n1urc11 tndicat~ One of them waa ABC'a con
lroveralal "Soap "
11po n1orln1 lhe show ABC
acknowlttdled the program's adult
content, and advises parents to use
dai.cretion In letting their children
w1i1tch 1t.
TUE FIRST EPISODE of "Soap"
was opposite an NBC movie, "~x and
the Married Woman," which was
__,,,,.~~ ---.............. ·--.. ..,. .. . ·-..... --~--" -..;.._
• .. • • • • • • • ' • • • p • • ....
ENTERTAINMENT
Wedn!!d!y. September 21 , 1977 DAILY PILOT 8 '
CBS Buys Tivo Books /or TY Projecl'8
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two
major books have been
purchased by CBS for develop-
ment as a minJ aertea and a mo·
tion picture.
Producer David Merrick, in his
flrsl television venture, will tum
Thomas Thompson's best·aeJUn~
"Blood and Money" into a miru
series o! up to 10 boun.
· SOl "1'11 ( ·o .\S'I'
lttl ,..,,,,
I A<.11N/O 111 f•• 1 ,,.,•\II . ~
Pete Hamill 's new bool
"Flesh and Blood," about prh
ftebttnl. will be made into a Cow
hour movie by the Jozalc Co. an .
Paramount Television.
"Soap" flnlahed fourth ln a sweep
by ABC of lhe top six places. An
e~t1mated 18.7 million homes were
tuned in for the Clrat episode of
"Soap" the nieht o( Sept. 13, accord·
ina to Nlelaen r•lln&• released Tues-day
ranked 14th for the week, and CBS' __________ _l!!!!~M!;!~~ "Night of Champions," which
I ~-s.t.-s-.1:•1
1-ntUtut
• 11THE SPY
ABC finished ahead of rivals NBC
and CBS in t.belr competition for
viewers 1n the second week of the new
season. Nielsen checked S2 PtOif&ms.
and ABC's rating war 20.8, which
represents IS 2 m1lllon households.
NBC had 17 1 or 12.S million and CBS
16 4 or 12 mil hon
THE ORDER OF finish was the
same the first week. Three ABC
s hows popular last season were
ranked one-two.three, "Charlie's
Angels," "Happy Days " and
"Three's Company.''
Two other programs new to the cur-
rent season were ranked in Nielsen's
toQ.. 10 -CBS' "Betty White Show,"
No~. and ABC's "Eight is Enough,"
No.10.
, "Soap" had been attacked by re-
ligious and other groups for its sexual
content, urging advertisers to avoid
hniahed 46th.
In ocder, the top 10 shows for the
week were:
"Charlie's Aneels," a 32.6 rating,
representine 23.8 million homes,
"Happy Days," 31 or 22.6 million.
"Three's Company," 25.8 or 18.8
milhon, "Soap," 2S.6 or 18.7 million,
"Welcome Back, Kotter," 2S or 18.2
million, and the Sunday Movie,
"Young Joe: The Forgotten Ken -
nedy," 23.7 or 17.3 m1lhon, all ABC;
"Betty White Show," 23 .3 or 17
million. and "Best of All in the Fami-
ly," 23.2 or 16.9 million, both CBS ;
"Barney Miller." 22.4 or 16.3 million.
and "Eight is Enough," 22.1 or 16.l
million, both ABC.
THE NEXT 10 shows were:
"Carter Country," ABC; "Maude"
and "60 Minutes," both CBS; Tuesday
Movie. "Sex and the Married
Woman," Saturday Movie, "Rooster
Cogburn," and Monday Movie, "Bil·
-------------------ly, Portrait or a Street
He fought wars
and won them.
He defied
Presldenli -
and might
hive been
one.
Agyferent
kind of
love storg.
MARTIJ FELDMAN ANN-MARGRET
MICHAEL tJOiK
PETER USTINOV ..i JAMES EARL JONES
"THE LAST REMAlCE OF BEAU GESTE"
[!QJ
Kid," all NBC; Sunday
Movie , "Judge Roy
Bean," CBS ; "The Redd
Foxx Show," ABC ; "Lit
tle House on the Prairie,··
NBC; and "Rafferty,"
CBS.
• "STAR WAH .. U'GI
A "AMAL CHAPTU: ~ W.A&MIMG TAU."
.. A llllMlt TOO fAl" INJ
DAVID CAJUUJIJINE
KATE JACKSON
lt'IUO
Proolhn!
... S '"LIGHT UP YOUll UFr IPGJ SO f'Alft .. IU 1-lt!M
• """'' rwa "'''_. ..,. ... ::'-'= "FUNNY LADY-*'"" _ .. ,,__. ... , ...... -
-S.DIWIMDM OHi" CPGJ
Me-IWIAT/w-llM M' ..
"'PllMISSION TO IOU." _.,,,~ .............
WHO LOVED
ME" (PG)
..._ THIATll 11---
.. SIDEWINDER
ONE11 IPGJ
H.xt AttNcffell
"OHION lPGJ
OMI"
NIGHTL y SPECIALS I
CHOPPED STEAK r-A-1
LIVER AND ONIONS I TUESDAY'S SPECIAL
WEDNESDAY'S SPECIAL
CHOPPED STEAK
THURSDAY'S SPECIAL
TURKEY with DRESSING
..... ....., ... 1 ... ---' -.... .,. .-.,..4 ........... ., ............. . , .... ~ .... ,...,. c..-u •• ..... _.-41elrM...,,
RUDAY SPECIAL
All THE FlSH ' CHIPS
YOU CAN EAT. ..
219
I •I ·~ illcludes fish &
chfp1, cre-y cote slow,
roll & bvtter.
ALL
FOR I''.
SUNDAY SftECIAL
All THE FRIED CHtClDI
YOU CAN EAT. •.
219
I st s'er•f119 l11cf•lfet
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t<IDDIE DRUMSTICK
PLATTIR
SOUTH COAST l'LAU 546-2071
ll33 So. lriatol, Costa MIN
HOUUc McM..Jrf. I l·I s.t. 11•7 a 11·6
"AN AUDIO·
VISUAl DIP.
"Allegfo Hen T~· It 'well wort" anyone'•
time and money 11
IOl'Nthlng of a modem ·matterpt.oe of motion ptcture lnllnltlon. ..
-<:MICK·~.,..
"IRIUAHT •••
•• net 1110WL •
-AIMll•OUlf UClA DAAL Y MM#
(PG)
SHOWTIMES
DAILY 7:15-t:OO
FRI 7:15-9:00.10:40
SAT..-SUN. 2:00.3:'5-a:
7:15-1:00.10:40
..
~ -~~.. . . .. -.--.... -,.~~~ . . . . . " . . .. . . . . .. . . " ~ . '.. -
-1Mtl) PILOT Wedn•lld1y, September 2t, 1977
COASTWATCB: Tonight's TV Fare
\\'U)!\ l~SUJ\'
EVENING
5 00 8 0 0 t 1.Q. NEWS
0 BONANZA G WILD, WILD WEST
Night Ot lhtl uyp•y Peril W1111
and Gordcm ire auigned to eacort
the Sufi•,, of Ramapur and ht1
sitcred whit• •1ttphan1 a gilt to
PrHldent Gr11nt
Q) MICKEY MOUSE CLUB
Cl) HECKLE ANO JECKLE fD SESAME STREET
'11) VILLA ALEGRE
5:30 Q) TOM ANO JERRY
«I) WAIT TIL YOUR FATHER
GET'S HOME
mi HODGEPODGE LODGE
6:00 f) CBS NEWS
00 NEWS 0 EMERGENCY ONEI 0 MY PARTNER THE GHOST
CD THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY
Keith falls for an older college stu-
dent and then discovers she's
ma med
(!) THE ROOKIES
EI!) ELECTRIC COMPANY
01) FOODS FOR THE MODERN
FAMILY
.. Marlu1t1ng •
®J ABC NEWS
6:30 I) MOVIE * * •,, .. The Assassination Bureau"
(Part 1) Telly Savalas. Diana Rigg.
A newspaperwoman 1s determined
lo expose an organization of
assassins for hire ( 1 hr • 30 min.)
CD THE ODD COUPLE
A woman goes looking for Felix
when her husband-to-be does not
show up for the wedding
EI;) AS WE SEE IT
Trials 01 Air.hard Art 1n-dep1h
look at a black youth s experience
1n a new1,-0esegregatec/ school
'Ahll1ty Grouping" or ·tracking' in
relallon to desegregatton
01) FAMILY PORTRAIT
'The Learning 01 Love
Cl) CBS NEWS
QQ) MERV GRIFFIN
Guests· Arnold Schwarzenegger
Sasha and Lena, Marilyn Sokol.
1:00 0 NBC NEWS 0 LIARSCLUB 0 ABC NEWS
0 CONCENTRATION CD ILOVELUCY
"Bon Voyage"
Q) LET'S MAKE A DEAL
€li) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT
01) YOGA WITH MADELINE
(I) TO TELL THE TRUTH
7:30 0 SHA NA NA
Guesl Bernadette Peters
0 NEWLYWED GAME
0 MATCHGAMEP.M 0 JOKER'S WILD
CD THE BRADY BUNCH
Jen considers her11elf a loser when
her latest interest. tap dancing.
drives Iha whole family crazy
(!) ADAM-12
€li) 28TONIGHT
'1i) THE SESSION
"St Louis Jazz Quartet'
In Deflui
C l1 ff Poll~ tol ·onn· an
Eagle' 1 ~Lar~ tn the ne\\
series "Big Hawaii." debut-
ing tonight at 10 on NBC.
Channel 4.
(]) $128,000 PYRAMID
®) FAMILY FEUD
8:001J (J) GOOD TIMES
(Season Premiere) Tbe Evanses
Inadvertently discover little Penny
Gordon (Janet Jackson) has been
fabricating stories to relieve the
deep hurts in her life. However.
thetr efforts to save the chlld may
be leading to her destruction
(Parts 1 and 2 of 4)
0 OREGON TRAIL
(Premiere) Western-bound
pioneers. led by wagonmaster
Evan Thorpe (Rod Taylor), become
stranded when Thorpe's 12-year-
old son (Tony Becker) takes a
sacred burial spear provo«ing a
massive Indian attack 0 MOVIE
• 'h "Snafu" (1945) Conrad Janis,
Robert Benchley. Basic training
proves to be easier than adjusting
to post-war Ille. (2 hrs.)
0 ®J EIGHT IS ENOUGH
"Trial Marriage .. Tom disapproves
when his oldest daughter. Mary.
moves Into an apartment with her
liance (Don Johnson). Meenwhlle,
Tom begins dating Tommy's tutor
(Belly Buckley).
0 MOVIE
Ratilags Guide
IM°"l~ aro raltd ...:corolno to Do• ottlce •ttend•n<• MOvt.,., for T\I .,.
1..0o;itd DV. critic I
• • • • -Excellenl
• • • -Very Good
• • -Good
•' -Fair
• -Poor
New Action Shows
Plodding in Debuts ..
By JAY SHARBUTT
LOS ANGELES CAP> Two
new NBC series, "Oregon Trail"
and "Big Hawaii," premiere
tonight al 8 and ~O on Channel 4.
NBC hopes they give ABC 's
"Charlie's Angels" and ''Baret·
ta" a ratings right NBC may be
dreaming
"Trail" starts the night with a
two -hour opener . It's a
westward-ho saga set in 1842,
stars Rod Taylor, other pioneers
and a supportin-. ~c.:11. of wagons.
They're heading to Oregon to
start a new life.
The plot almost dies en route.
It meanders from one crisis to
another gambling so slowl y and
awkwardly you may get the feel·
mg the pioneers forgot to pack
the script.
TAYLOR, MARRIED in the
pi lot show. now Is a widower, but
still has three kids, aged 17, 12
and seven. They're respectively
played by Andrew Stevens, Tony
Becker and Gina Marie Smlka.
The first hour's woes. lnvolv·
Ing the normally peaceful
Omaha Indians starts when
Taylors 12-year-old son and a pal
explore the Indians• sacred
burial ground and take a spear as
a souvenir, a definite no-no.
But wait, there's an interlude
in which Taylor help• two
pioneers, a lovable lrlsh rascal
(Wtlliam Windom) and the
rascal's comely da\lgMer
<Darleen Carr). Seema on4},.,of
their horses has thrown & Cl!k.
by golly.
WREN TUE INOIANS finally
( TJI REJ'IEW J
do commit mayhem. it's general-
ly low-key mayhem. as the
networks have told them ex-
cessive TV violence is out.
They do steal pioneer horses
on-camera. but they go orr-
camera to dispatch a pioneer
guarding the nags and put an ar-
row in the back of the wagon
traln's grizzled guide.
Before he expires, he recom-
mends another grizzled iuide.
Charles Napier. who lives
nearby. And, after various inci·
dents. Taylor, aided by Napier,
reluctantly becomes the head of
the wagon train.
THE NEXT HOUR'S gambling
crisis 'involves a crooked card
shark. played by John Vernoo.
This crisis is so badly put
together it can serve only as a
sure cure for insomnia.
"Tra!l" right now bas but two
things JOini for tt -Taylor's
professionalism under trying
script circumstances and
Napier 's equally sturdy
performance. They are mirhty
rood. but not the show.
"Bia Haw an " about a
powerful ranchinalamilY. is kind of a modern-day pineapple Pon-
derosa with CJUI Potts, a flne ac·
tor, as a pltOdiJal son who has re·
turned from wherever prodigal
sons halli out.
TONIGlfl', ll£'8 tryin& to help
• • • "The Lall Wagon .. ( 1'167)
Richard Widmark. Felicle Farr. A
hunted man guides lhe survivor• ot
an tndjan maaaacre to safely (2
hrs)
Q) WORLD OF SURVIVAL
G) PERAV MASON fa MASTERPIECE THEATRE
•'\.Jpetalra. Oownetalrs: Alberto"
An embatrasslng situation arise&
when Georgine develops a friend-
ship with a wlld society girl. m MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"Upetalra, Downstairs: Wiii Ye No'
Come Back Again" Whlle Richard
la fishing In the Hlghlanda, James
reveals his romantic feellngs ror
G90!illna.
1:30 m CROSS-WITS
9:00 f) CBS MOVIE
"A Kllllng Affair" (Premiere) Elize-
beth Montgomery, 0 J. Simpson.
Whlle hunting for • vicious klller,
detective Vicki Eaton becomes
entangled in an lnterraclal Jove
affair with a maverick cop assigned
as her partner
0 ®) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
.. Angels On Ice" The Angels
become skatere In a big time Ice
revue to find out why two of the
shows stars have disappeared.
Phil Slivers, Hervey JaSOf'I, Edw&rd
Andrews and Jim Backus guest
star. tD MERV GRIFFIN
«!) BOLDONES
fJi) CHILDHOOD
"Posseaalons" by George Ewart
Evans. A battle of wllls between a
poor widow and the alcoholic junk-
man who buys, and mistreats. her
pony mi AUSTIN CITY LIMITS
"The Dirt Band I Kiwi" Cons1stant-
1y innova11ve. The Dirt Band com-
bines tne best of peat and present.
Two guitars. several spoons and
three voices add up lo Kiwi
Cl) MOVIE **'h "Puzzle 01 A Downfall
Child" ( 19 7 1) Faye Dunaway. Berry
Primus. A fashion model suffers an
agonizing breakdown.
10:00 D BIG HAWAII
(Premiere) "Gandy" With a sugar
cane blight about to spoll her 18th
birthday luau, Karen Fears Is unde·
cided 1f she should help a charm-
ing crop duster (Don Johnson)
save his hellcopter from being
repossessed by a banker (Peter
Marshall).
00 NEWS
Q) ROOM222
f1l) GREATPERFORMANCES
"The Pennsylvania Ballet" Class·
room and documentary segments
are Included in the Pennsylvania
Ballet's performance of some of
their best pieces. •
01) DOCUMENTARY SHOWCASE
"LF Stone's Weekly" A portralt of
the intensely lndlviduelislic news-
paperman, considered the polltical
conscience of the Washington
Press Corps.
10:30 mm NEWS
11:000 CJ 0 Cl)@) NEWS
ON THE 'TftAIL'
. RodT•ylor
his stem. autocratic father, John
Dehner, save the ranch from
ruination. A sugar-cane blight is
afoot. -
To save the cane, a h{lppy-go-
1 u c ky helicopter pilot. Don
Johns•n, is hired ~ spray the · crops. Johnson is a al of Potts
from the old prodlga days. And
bis heUcop00r is about to be re-
posessed.
Somethinc about a $2,SOO bank
toan is involved. For some rea·
son, Johnson gets involved with
Dehner'• niece (Lucia Stralser)
who is about to tum 11 and buy a
horse with $2,SOO from a trust
fund.
Despite all tbla. the show isn't
all that bad. Tbe actors are ap.
pealin1 and the scenery ia
buauttful. But against 1he
dramatically stron1er "Baret-.ta," it m-r prove NBC's aloha
. hour in the Nielsen..
8 HOLL VWOOO OONNECTION G IRONSIDE
8) FERNWOOD 2NIGHT
Gue1t1: Mra. Ruth Dunbar and her
dlSCOV«)', Kevin McCormick, Har-
old Clemens. Mre Liiiian Letti·
more.
ti) MARCUS WELBY, M.D. fD REALIDAOES
"La Oelensa De La Tierra (The
Defense Of The Land) y "VIiia
Victoria," a pair of plays that re-
create the efforts of com'l'unlty
organizations.
Ii) MACNEIL/ LEHRER REPORT
11:301J Cll HAWAII FIVE-0 ·
When a wealthy auto raoef' (Rlcar·
do Montalban) find• his mechanic
slaln the night prior to a big race.
McGarrett su1pect1 the racer'a
~!friend (Diana Muldaur). (R)
U TONIGHT
Host: Johnny Carson Guests.
Tony Randall. Anthony Newley,
Ronnie Claire Edwards. Richard
Reeves.
0 LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE
0 0 STARSKY & HUTCH
"Death Notice" Strlppera Ginger
and Sonja are murdered after
recetvlng warning notes from a
timid man. (R) tD NEWS It CAPTIONED ABC NEWS
MORNING
12':00 9 TWILIGHT ZONE
GMOVIE
li * "The Black Panther Of
Ratana" (1962) Marianne Koche.
Heinz Drache. Ari enormous dia-
mond Is stolen from a native idol
by four men. (2 hrs )
Q) MOVIE • *~ "love 01 Tnree Queens"
( 1953) Hedy Lamarr An actress Is
pursued by a wealthy nobleman ( 1
hr., 30 min.)
12:30 I) (I) CBS LA TE MOVIE * * 'h "The Astronauts" (1971)
Monte Markham, Jackie Cooper.
Officials of the space administra-
tion ask a civilian to pose u a di ...
abled astronaut. (R)
lit MOVIE *** "The Boas" (1956) John
Payne, Doe Avedon. A ruthlesa
and ambltloua polltlclan joins
fOf'ces wllh racketeera to gain con-
trol of St. Louis. (1hr .. 55 min.) tD MOVIE * * * "His Kind Of Women"
( 1951) Robert Mitchum, Jane
Russell. A man, being used to
bring a racketeer beck into the
U.S. from Mexico, works with the
immigration olficals alter discover-
ing the plot. (2 hrl., 30 min.)
12:37 0 @) MYSTERY OF THE
WEEK • * "The Werewolf Of
Woodstock" (1975) Mlchael Parks,
Meredith MacRae. A peaceful
farmer, struck by a bolt of light-
ning, Is transformed Into a Cl'azed
wolf-like killer. (R)
t:OO .CJ TOMORROW
Various religious cults will be dis-
cussed by CarJoll Stoner and
TUBE TOPPERS
. NBC CJ 8:00 Oregon Trail. The premiere ~p1sode of a new ~·es tern series with Rod Taylor lead-
ing a wagon tram through the westward perils <re-view below).
CBS 8 9:00 "A Killing Afra1r ... Elizabeth ~ontgomery and 0 .J . Si~pson play a pair of detec-
tives who become romantically involved in this new
TV movie (story below).
ABC fl 9:00 Charlie's Angels. Phil Silvers
~uests in this two-hour ep.isode as the Angels Join an
1ce revue to probe the d1sappearanc<.' of two of its
stars.
KCET @ 10 .00 Grea t Perlormancl'~ Tht.'
Pennsylvania Ballet perform~ dol'Umentan and
classroom sc~ments rn this showcuse spC'r ial · •
Joanne Park. authOra of 'All God's
Chlld.ren.'
1:308 HEWS
.., M<ME **'"' "The Battle At Apache Pua" (1952) John Lund, Jett
Chandler. An lndlan and a cavalry
major work together to atop
Geronimo from massac ring
settlers. ( 1 hr., 30 min.)
2:0000 NEWS CJ MOVIES * * "The Pirates Of The Mlseisslp-
pl" ( 1964) Hansjorg Felmy, Horst
Frank. River pirates attempt 10
defraud the Cherokees or their
lend. (2 hra.) • • *'-" "Stanley And Living-
stone" (1939) Spencer Tracy,
Richard Greene. An Engllsh
reporter dllCOVt!ll"s a mlaaionary.
believed to be dead. alive and llv-
lng In Africa. (2 hrs.)
2:o5G MOVIE **V. "The Breaking Point" (1950)
John Garllek1, Patrlcle Neal. A fish-
ing boat lkJpper rents his boat to
fortune hunters. (1 hr .. 26 min.)
2:259 HEWS
2:30 8 MOVIES ** "Wall Of F"',Y' {1962) Tony
Seller, Richard Goodman.
Romance and jealouay compllcate
a mountain climbing expedition. (1
hr., 55 min.) * * "Danger • Love At WMk"
( 1937) Ann Sothern. Jack Haley. A
young man and woman find them·
selves forced Into • snot-gun
wedding. ( 1 hr .. 30 min ) CD MOVIES *** "The Black Knight" (1954)
Alan Ladd, Patricia Medina. King
Arthur finda an atty In an unknown
knight who helps thwart an
attempt to overthrow the throne ( 1
hr., 30 min.) **"The Vampire's Ghost" (1945)
Grant Withers, John Abbott. Arn.
can natives are lerrorlz.ed by a
human vampire. ( 1 hr • 30 min.)
3:00 (I) NEWS
3:30 6 NOONTIME
Thursday's
Daytime Mo.,ies
MORNING
9:00Q MOVIE ** "Arabella" (1969) Vlrna Lisi,
James Fox. In an attempt to raise
money to pay back taxes. a beauti-
ful woman resorts to extortion (2
hrs.)
10:00 8 MOVIE *** "Edge Of Doom" (t950)
Dana Andrews, Farley Granger. A
young man alruggles against soci-
ety, the church and his own Inner
emotlonel conflicts. (2 hrs.)
AFTERNOON
12':00 tD MOVIE •*'Ir "Florian" ( t940) Robert
Young, Charles Coburn. A stable
groom m·arrles a countess alter
they emigrate to the U.S. (2 hre.,
20 min.)
2:00 8 MOVIE *** "Sunaet Boulevard" (1950)
Wiiiiam Holden. Glorla Swanson. A
faded movi. star proves to be tri.
downf8'1 of a promising young writ•
er. (2 hrs.)
3:00 9 MOVIE * *'"' "Fear No Evil" ( 1969) Louis
Jourdan, Lyn Dey. A scientist bUya
an antique mirror which lures hlf'I' ,,.
Into 1he macabre world of th~
supernatural. (2 hrs.)
3:30 D MOVIE , *'n ''Hot Blood" (1956) Jane
Ruaaetl, Cornet Wiide. A scheming '
gypsy girt meets het match In t~
son of a gypey king. ( 1 hr., 30 min.)
'Affair' Strikes Sparks·
Monlgo~ry, Simpson Teamed in Movie Tonight
By BOB THOMAS
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Last
spring Elizabeth Montgomery
was visiting the Renaissance
Faire in the San Fernando valley
when a middle-aged woman ap-
proached her. She was a fan of
"Bewttched" and sbe asked what
the actress was working in.
"I'm doing a televlslon movie
with O.J . Simpson," Miss
Montgomery replied.
"Such a nice person," said the
woman.
"Yes, it's a love story between
two police detectives." the ac-
tress remarked. ·
THE WOMAN'S face went
blank. "You. O.J. Simpson. A
love story? Well!" She stalked
back into the crowd.
Elizabeth Montgomery ls pre-
pared for such reactions when
she and the football and TV com·
mercialstar appear in "A Kllllng
Affair" on CBS tonight at 9 on
Channel 2. Not only do they fall in
love while investlgaUng a case
together; hfs character of
Woodrow York happens to be
married.
"Oh, I'm sure I'll be getUng
hate mail, and 1 don't care.'' said
Miss Mootaomery. '1Both O.J.
and I realized we would 1et a
strong reacUon from the abow.
but we went ahead and, dld it. 1
think it'• a &ood 1how, tboulh 1
hate the tiUe.
.. WE "SHOT IT AS 'DHQ,'
which I think is an intrigulng ti·
tie. It stands for Detective Head-
quarters, and it doesn't take an
IQ of genius to understand that.
Much to my chagrin, some brl&b1
minds at CBS came up with 'A
Killing Affair.' I think 'DHQ' is
much classier. and I screamed
bloody murder when I heard
about the switch A lot of good
that did!"
She is outspoken, this Liz
Montgomery. She draws an in-
dependent air from her father,
Robert Montgomery, who defied
the studio moguls ln his era as
star and director. Lis can afford
to speak her mind. She still earns
a handsome lncome from her elgbt years in "Bewitched ... She
also may be the most sought,.
after female star for TV movies.
The reason can be found in
sheer numbers, which is nearly
all that the networ~ bqsses tm•
derstaod. Her tllm ''A Cue ot
Rape" still holds the record ror
the highest raUng ot an ortainal
TV movie. "The Leaend of tlule
Borden., and "Datt Victory"
alao acored hlcb nwn1*'s. So
when the proaram planners are
lookln1. for tnsuranct, they say~
''Try to ait Montaome.ry. ''
"I DO NO •oaE tban two
ntm1 a year " 1he remarlted.
"Good,mat«lat ls •ard to come
by. Surprlltn,lJ, l l f•t moetly dramu. they don' '"m to
make many two-hour ~medies,
and judging from the scripts 1
see, I can understand why. They
are totally lacking in sophistica-
tion and old-fashioned ln their aJ)-
proach.
"Again it's a case of network
nerves. They're afraid to tr)'
anything that takes a chance. It
seems to me that if you want to
try comedy in the Jong form, yoci
have to be as adult as 'All in the
Family."'
Miss Montgomery also as-
satled "network nerves" aboUl
film content. She recalled on "A
Killing Affair" that the censor,
eupbemisUcally called the Stan-
dards and Practices official, In-
sisted on deletion of the words
"virgin" and "virginal.'·
''ORIGIN ALL\' THE script
~ailed for O.J . and me lo ap~•r
together tn bed," ~he actress r~
cilled. ''1'hen we got the pin~
pages (revialons). The sctne h841
O.J. beside the bed, fulty clotlle41..
putting on his Ue and m~ uqder
the sheet, apparently naked.
"Both O.J. and l hit the ce~.
Hia character miabt Just as wtll
have thrown the money QQ lbe
blanltel -~at's what It md
. bet loot llke, \Ve reached a cont·
promlse. The scene was play*1
wttb Mm sitting on the 1ldeot the
bed arid me rubbll\8' hll bare
back. tt •as a classy. sweet.,.,
of pla)'I the love scene."
Morie
By aoa THOMAS
LOS ANUF.L£S (AP 1 Wit.ti the nlm companau cla1m1n1
ttcor<b with tht:&r \Ummer r•
leaa~. t'olutnb1.a Pictures may
have thl' topper in · 'Thl• Dflt'p "
Th~ Hri.l tv.o week totul of
$8,124,318 ln &r'03~ rt'ce1pts at HOO
Ulealm-s WM!i a record for Colum
bla and perhap.' for the Industry,
since few mrus have opened in 10
m&QY thealeni ut once The huce
sum la a comfort lo direct.or
Peter Yates, who earlier re
marked, "I don't want to remake
'Jaws.' I'd just like the same
amount ol people lo see 'The
Deep.'"
The comparison 1s mev1table
Both mms stemmed from novels
by Peter Benchley, both star
Robert Shaw. both take place on
or under the ocean As Yates was
putting the fmal touches on "The
Deep." Columbia Pictures pro·
duction ctuef Daniel Melnick ad
monished. "We don't want thll> to
look like · Jaws .. ·
THE DIRECTOR'S comment
.. l suppose it's a reflex action to
be defensive about not inviting
comparison. But why avoid a
film that has e~rned S300 million
worldwide? I think people will re·
alize that although the two pie·
tur<~s have the same writer they
are not the same film.''
Yates, a 48-year-old graduate
of British televis ion rtl ms
l"Secret Agent," "The Saint" 1.
had previously been most famed
for action movies. principally
... Bullitt." In the 1968 Steve
McQueen movie the director set
a new standard for mov1e car
cbases; other film makers have
been trying to top 1t ever smce
"The Deep" presented an en·
tirely different challenge. Forty
percent of the filming was to take
place under waler
"I USED TO sail, and I learned
to swim in Egypt wfien I was
six." said the director. "bull had
.--. --
Wed~. September 21 . 1917 OAILY PILOT 89
,Festivals Launch 'Deep' in Profits
Concert Seasons
. .. ............
EVEN THE DIRECTOR GOT WET IN 'THE D~EP'
Peter Yatea Dlacu11ea Challenge of Movie
never done any scuba diving.
Before the picture started, l
~pent 10 weeks in training, taking
four or five dives a day
"Having never dived before, I
experienced the anxiety that hits
all first divers, plus the physical·
ly tiring routine of remaining un·
'STAR WARS' HITS $100 MJLUON
LOS ANGELES (AP1
Domestic riJm rentals from the
i-.c1ence fiction feature "Star
Wars" have passed $100 million.
20th Century-Fox Film Corp has
announced.
ce1pts from "Star Wars" through
Sunday were $147 ,666,858
The share received by 20th
Century, known as film rentals.
was more than $100 million, they
said "Star Wars," now playing in
9'8 theaters, was released 17
weeks ago. The film will be re·
derwat.er. 1 not only had to sur·
vive in the water, I had to get
performances from the actors.
remain awure or the composlt.ion
of the scenei> and the progress or
the story.
.. Even a western couldn't have
been as tiring as 'The Deep.' We
were working in a totally dlf·
ferentenvironme.nt-water."
AT LEAST 30 minutes of ''The
Deep" takes place in five
separate dives, and Yates wor·
ried that audiences would not be
able to endure so much sub-
mergence. Previews in San
Francisco and San Jose proved
they could. "The previews were incredibly
successful," the director report·
ed happily. "It really helps to
have previews; it's like openin&
a play out of town. The important
thing is not to learn how eood
your picture is , but how to im·
prove it.
.. You can sense from the au·
dience what ls working and what
isn't. After the previews I took
four minutes out, re-scored one
scene and subtly recut the end·
ing, juxtaposing a couple of
shots. Just by changing the pat-
tern or the cuts I was able to pro·
vlde a better idea of the ending.•·
YATES INSISTED on reality
on the Bermuda location, which
meant that most or the cast had
to learn scuba diving. Robert
Shaw. Jacqueline Bissel. Nick
Nolle and Lou Gossett proved to
be good sports and adel>t divers
(only Eli Wallach remained dry).
Even though the entire film crew
made the dives, no mishaps OC·
curred .. We must have set a record for
so many people making so many
dives," Yates observed. "It's
amazing that no one was hurt,
since there were only 12 ex·
perienced divers in the entire
company. We had excellent safe·
Ly people."
Our 1977-78 music and ballet
aeason is just around the comer
but lt mJght be just as well this
week to J,ook at the unusual way It
is getting orr the ground thib
year. This writer, for one, cannot re·
call a more novel and intrlJuing
way of ushe ring in the new
season than the two·pronged ef·
fort provided this year by or-
ganizations in Laguna Beach and
Irvine. Actually, it will be ushered in
via a cooslderable number of al·
tractions at the Laguna Festival
or Arts grounds, 650 Laguna
Canyon Road.
THE nRST ANNUAL "Music
Festi,val '77" is organized by the
Orange County Philarmonic
Society and will run from 9·30
a.m . to9p.m .
Tbcat long and carefully
planned feast of talent will
feature 16 instrumental groups
raneing from bluegrass, dixie·
land and jazz to classical string,
brass and woodwind ensembles.
More than 2SO entertainers will
be on hand for programs that will
include ethnic dancing, puppet
shows, mimes and a magician.
CHORAL SINGING, opera and
madrigals will be offered by six
larger groups. among them the
California Chamber Symphony
directed by Henri Temianka and
USC's Opera alla Breve under
Natalie Limonick.
It's the most varied agenqa of
its kind that this writer has ever
see n with concerts by
Elizabethan groups. a steel band •.
balalaikas and a bell choir on the
day-long agenda. Evening festivities will
leased overseas in 1978.
Dermis C. Stanfill, the com
pany's chairman. and Alan Ladd
Jr., its president, said Tuesday
that total domestic box office re· ;_:_:..:.;.;,..;;.~:.:;......:...~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"YOU LIGHT UP MY LIFE"
COHIT-"FUNNY LADY" (PG)
"SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT"
''THE STING" (PG)
"NEW YORK. NEW YORK" (PG)
"RETURN OF THE PINK PANTHER"
"FANTASIA" (G)
"THE SPY WHO LOVED ME"
COHtT-"THE DEEP"
"ONE ON ONE" (PG)
"A BRIDGE TOO FAR"
"GRANO THEFT A T '
"THE SPY WHO LOVED ME"
.. HERBIE GOES TO MONTE CARLO"
"NEVER A DULL MOMENT .. (Gl
llPt!CIAl CHl1.0AEH'11 ~8
"EXORCIST II: THE HERETIC""JOY RIDE"
"OTHER SIDE OF MIDNIGHT" (R)
•What we have here is a
total lack of respect for
the lawl''
,.
LA MlllADA 4 • LAl(EWOOD 4 WM.lt·IN tAllOAIN l'lllCI Jl.IO
MONDAY 11•<11 tATUllDAV (hOOl'I ~ t2.JO to loOO
LA MIRADA 4 ONl Y IUNOAVS 6 ltOl.IOAVS n :JO te 2.'00
••a MOVtl \'CIU'U NIV11 fOllOIT"
TOU UOM1 Uf MT Liff Cl'OI """ fUNNY LADY Cl'OI
-· MO'tll "°""' NfYlll fOllOIT'" YOU UOMT "' MY un'"' f'lUI
fUHNl' LADT !NI
LIZA_..W
NIW Tome. NIW TOU<Nt MUI ...__~ 1"I WT llMAlll Of IUU taft CM1 90lllrY • NO f'UICI
TOM BAR Ll!Y ..._...... ...
Muaic Box
highli&ht the Matriz Jazz Ensem-:
ble and Eulogy, a rock group.
MEANWHILE, musk will be:
very much in the air on the same:
day out in Irvine where the Irvine:.
Harvest Fest.ival will be mount-·
ing heavy competition t.o the·
Laguna Beach program.
Two concerta on the festivaL
site at Culver and Barranca
particularly take the eye:
-Maestro Joseph· Pearlman
of Orange Coast College Com-
m unlly Symphony Orchestra
fame will be on the podium at.
1: 30 p.m. to lead bis ensemble in
a concert dedicated to the·
American Association of Retired:
Persona and all senior citizens in:
the area. ·
-THEN CONDUCTOR:
Carmen Dragon will take over
the baton at 1:30 p.m. for a "Pops
Come lo Irvine" proeram at.
8:30 p.m., which wlll feature
soprano Kathy Knight, the
Barnette Ricci Dancers and a·
combined chorus from the Irvine:
Unified School District and Sad·
dleback College.
How's that for a two-fisted
opening to the music season? It·
leaves this writer with one un-:
answered question, though.
How do you cover them both aL
once?
C..11642-5678.
Put a few words
to work for ou.
• 40 Ol. ''SCOPE'' ADORN "FIRM &
MOUTHWASH & GARGLE
•w IMPlatll
Sill ...
MILD FRA~RANCE
. ft "AJAX"
OISHWASHING
UQUI>
~a aac ~ 32oz.
-·· _ ... 1-
master charge
U<fl 1MJ[,.8Att9'. C.-'RO
\ I I
"Oil of Olay"
Youth for Your Skin
Protects the skin
against wrinkle
"CHECK MA TE"
Wallet/Organizer
Wit~ h A Poilt PH ' Pa•
~I, '2'.9ll9
All leather mull1compartment
purse In
assor!ed
•1 colors
~~~
NIGHT CREAM 3 2 9
V1talmng 2 oz. Ill •
-·~
fAlATUSS "TlfYIUf'
Feminine Hygiene
SYRINGE
Comes with •ls own carrying
case Ideal 101
travel Capacity 1 7 9 16 oz. #2700 •
DIAPARENE
Baby Wash Cloths
Pre mo1s
~~~~~~::{~~~ 1 6 g
ISO SHEETS •
"VISINE"
EYE DROPS
Soothes 1mtahon
. . . clear .. ggc non·sta1nmg
'lz tz. SIZE
"BEN-GAY"
OINTMENT
Help soothe 8 9 arthritis pain C
1 · 14 tz. TUI(
"CHARLY"
Fashion DOLL
by ESSUY
1111 '• w I th
moving arms
and legs
"CHARLY"
Fashion
CLOTHES
r 0 r 11 ·~ ..
Charty doll
FREE ''
REVLON "FLEX" "SECRET" SPRAY
BAlSAM & PROHIN • OL ANTI-PfRSPIRANT.,
7 OL DEODORANT
INST ANT HAit
COflMTlONER
. 3 ~ ~· 1.19u. Fl.EX 1601.149 "'1UN' SIZE -"* -----. •
Fire Station Set r--~ Flower & Bead Set
by ESSU Y-w1th \ ~ 1~ bf ESSKAY-for the httie lady
trucks . car. & 88 "a -~sv to make her own 88 rescue copter c ~ clJt, r costume 1ewelry c
Moments of Magic Aircraft Kits
by PRESSMAN-quick
l~~cks tor ewting BBC by AM T-Aircratt
assortment with 88 authentic decal C---' markmgs CA. "~~~
Socko ·The . Clown
by ESSUY
34~ With
noise nose
"G b " um y ., JHCO
Superflex
animated
toy
Milk Bottle
lty ESSUY
With toys.
beads and
hammer.
;;1inm~s IEST~ft
Ensemble
assortment
tl .. , U~·tO·
~e minute
$tylts.
"MARINA"
TOILET TISSUE
Specially Embossed for
Extra Softness
4 ROLLS
73c
17 01. CANS 7 • u p
REGULAR OR
SUGAR FRH
PAK OF 6 99~
Waterproof nylon
MENNEN
.. Ad1ustable. wide
web shoulder
straps #WP·IP \
6.88 Day Pack
r Two zippered
compartments .· ' -'. 8.49
Skin Bracer
r~.~hg~~~ 1 39
refreshing 8 ll. •
"HEADUSS" AUTO
Door Lock Knob
Anti· Theft . . . 49 Stippled recess C
makes finger grip
easy.
• ASPIRIN -FREE
ANACIN-3
Extra strong 139 . f ast .
Gentle
60 TAIUTS •
Ne o. Synephrine
DlCONGlSTANT
. NASAL SPRAY119 V2%·3/~ oz. •
'
Inside: Goin' Bananas
Cake Cookery
Produce Picture
People Pages
Page CS
Page Cl
Page 011
Page 012, 13
Recipes for Our Own Crops
. T hough Or ange County at
limes appears to be losing the
battle against urbanization. its
farmlands a re still highly pro-
ductive.
cent over the past year: the
OCDAsaid.
a cres of prime orchard land
were subdivided or sold for
business, industry, school and
chw-cb use last year, orchard
crops showed a 2.5 percent in·
crease in value over 1976. Eight different truck crops.
1ncluding celery. asparagus
and tomatoes. mad e t he
"M11l1on Dollar Enterprise"
ltsl, according to the Orange
Cou nty De p a r tmen't of
Agriculture, with more than $1
millionin FOB value.
Production of t ruck crops
was 159,869 tons and total value
was $26,169,200. an increase of
three percent over 1976.
Tree fruit and berry crops
also were big in Orange County
l ast year with strawberries
bringing the top yield of 50,981
tons, worth $29,569,000.
The leader in Orange Coun-
ty 's "Million Dollar En·
terprises" for 1976 was nursery
stock and cut flowers, with total
sales last year of ~9,881,300.
A total of 11,974 acres were
planted in truck crops last
year. an increase of two per.
Valencia oranges, a vocados
a nd lemons were the other
large tree fruit and berry crops
last year.
Here are recipes for the top
truck crops in Orange County,
which are asparagus, cucum-
bers, celery, corn, mushrooms
and romatoes. -Judith Olson. Though nearly a thousand
Celery
Holiday trad itional foods are won·
derful .... the fluffy whipped potatoes, baked or
mashed sweet potatoes, cranberry rellah, minced
and pumpkin pie along with the prbed turkey,
ham or chicken. A good menu planner bas to
keep from being carried away with all the family
favorites in one meal. Contrasting flavors and
textures are needed for a well balanced menu.
Vegetable dishes play an important part in
alternating from soft to crisp and bland to sharp.
Celery Oriental bu texture, crispness and a
mild aromatic flavor that comptementa the meat
course and other heavy or rich tasting foods in
the menu.
CELERY ORIENTAL
I large celery bunch
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
2 lablespoons flour
1 chicken bouillon cube
1 tea.spoon soy sauce
15-0unce can water chestnuts
13-0unce ean chow mein noodles
Wash and trim celery. Cut the celery
branches into ehu.k.s about 1 tr.a inches long. Cook
the pieces in boiling salted water for 10.12
minutes. Drain aad reserve the liquid. Use cook·
ing liquid and add hot water if necessary to malre
two cups. Dissolve bouillon cube in liquid. Melt
the butter and add flour. Add the hot liquid and
soy sauce to the paste and blend together by US·
ing a French whip or hand beater. Cook the sauce
until it ia thick. Drain chestnuts and cut in ball.
Layer the bottom of the vegetable serving dish
with noodles. Add cooked celery and chestnuts to
sauce and pour over ooodles. Garnish with a few
noodles. Make14-S servings. .
CELERY ALMOND
4 cops diced celery
1 teaspoon salt
Pepper to taste
V.. cup butter or margarine .
2 tablespoons finely-chopped green onions
V.. cup butter or margarine
1 cup blanched, slivered almonds
'h teaspoon minced garlic
2 tablespoons dry white wine
Cook celery with salt and pepper and v.. cup
butter in covered saucepan over low heat. When
t ender, sprinkle onion over celery and cook 1.
minute longer; then arrange on serving diab.
Brown almonds in~ cup butter, add garlic and
wine. Cook for 1 minute and pour over bot celery.
Makes 4 servings.
Tomatoes
Wedneeday, September 21, 1977
Corn
GREEN CORN SOUFJl.E
lcupmilk
3 tablespoons biscuit mix
Y.t teaspoon mustard v. teaspoon chili powder
JAi teaspoon salt
1 cup medlam sharp cheddar
cheese, grated
1 cup fnsb eom kemels (2
ears>
3 eggs, separated
.,_teaspoon baking powder
Preheat oven to 350 degr~s.
Combine small amount ol biscuit
mix with milk, then add all of it to
make a past~. Add the mustard,
chili powder and salt. Heat the
mixture over medium beat; add
cheese. Cut raw corn kernels from
ears and scrape the milk with a
knife from the cob. Add to the
sauce mixture. Separate egp and
put egg yolks in l·qaart mixing
bowl and beat ligbUy. Add small
amount of bot mixture to the yolks
then mix all of it. Beat the egg
whites with ha.kin& powder unW it
holds a soft peak. Fold into mix·
ture. Put an ungreased li,A,.quart
casserole in pan of warm water.
Pour in mixture. Run the top of a
knife about 1 inch from the edge
around the mixture. Put in bot
oven. Set tjmer (or SS minutes.
Cbeclt with file tip of a knife to see
if the cent.er is baked. Makes 4
servings.
CORN CHOWDER
1 tr.a cups raw diced potato
1 ~cups water
6 slices bacon, cut ln pieces
~ cup chopped onien
~ cup chopped green pepper
Tomatoes a l 'Italienne is a de-
licious antipasto or the main salad
to serve with a barbecued steak.
The tartness of the marin• the
bouquet of sweet basil and the
slight whiff d garlic will make the
tomatoes sing.
1.4 teaspoon salt
U tbe diab ls planned for an ap-
petber, choose small tomatoes ad
mush.rooms; medium sbe for a
main salad. Very large tom•toes
may be difficult to sene from the
platter arrangement and especial·
ly if it ls from a buffet setting.
Thia ls the lJpe of salad that can
be prepared hours ahead of time
and It will only enhance the flavors
that go perfectly with beef.
l small clove garlic, minced
C1
2 cups milt, scalded
1 a.4 teaspoons salt v. teaspoon pepper
4 cups fresh raw corn kernels
(Sears)
2 t.ablespoom butter
Cook potatoes in bolling water
unW tender. While potatoes coot.
fry bacon piecee in ll·incb skillet
unW brown and crisp. Drain. re·
servtna 2 tablespoons bacon fM 1n
skillet. Add chopped onion and
green pepper to bacon fat and try
until golden. Maab potatoes and
add with potato water to skillet.
Add milk with seasoning and corn.
Cover and simmer for about 10
minutes. Stir in butter. Serve, ad-
ding extra butter and dusting with
chopped panley and chives. Makes
&servings.
SWEET CORN WAFFLES
2 ears fresh sweet. com, un-
cooked
~teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon sugar
2 eggs, sllghUy beaten
1"4cupmilk
1 tablespoon butter or
margarine, melted
2cupsflour
3 teaspoons baiting powder
With a small, sharp knife, score
down the rows of corn kernels on
cob and with back or knife press out.
pulp. Combine with salt, sugar,
eggs, milk and butter. Sift flour
with baking powder and add to first
mixture. More flour may be added
if the pulp is watery. Eoougb
should be used to make the mixture
the oonM8teric1 ol waffle batter.
Bake in preheated wattle iron.
Makes 6 medium waffles.
TOMATOES A l'ITA.LIENNE
3"" ripe medium tomatoes •s medium mushrooms Coarse cracked pepper
a.4 teaapoon dried sweet basil
115-0unce can aarbanzo beans
Iceberg lettuce
Choose a large chop plate or plat·
ter. ~ed lettuce to make a layer
on tJie platter. Remove skin from
tomatoes if you prefer. Cut into
thick slices. Overlap the slices
around the edge of the platter on
top of the lettuce. Leave an opening
in the eenter to set a stem bowl to
hold the beans. Waab mushrooms
in cool water. Trim the stem end
but do not remove. Cut the
mushrooms lengthwise. Put on top
of tomato slices. Crush basil in the
palm ol the band a{ld sprinkle over
the top along with ~pper. Shake or
blend together the marinade lngre·
dieota. Open can or garbanzo beans
and drain off liquid. Add tome of
the marinade to Ule beans. Cover
the can with plastic wrap And put ln
refrigerator and do llltewlse with
tomato platt.er. Let all of t.bia
marinate fol' several hours for best
flavor. When ready to serve. put
the beans in tbe dilb and place ln
center of platter. Maku • servtnp.
Asparagus
Cucumbers
SEA BREEZE SOUP
3 medium cucumbers
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
l,ia teaspoon grated lemon peel
2 cups chicken broth ~ teaspoon grated areen
1tn1er 1 teaspoon beau monde aeason·
lni l ta.apoon salt
Duh ot white pepper
1 pack&&e Wlflavored 1elatin
~cup cold water
~teaspoon curry
Dollop of aour cream
Dlll or chervil
Remove attn ot cucumber with
vegetable peeler. Cut cucumber in
quarters and remove aeeda. CUt ln·
to-pieces and add a few at a time in·
to tM blender. Tb.LI abould make
two C\IPI ol. puree. Add to the ~~en brotb, lemon julct, peel, ~.beau mood• aeua.
lnl, peppel' and 1alL Brina to a
boll, th4D almmer f« 20 m.fnutes.
ttaln th• Hq.alcl tbrou1b a
ebeeNCloth. If there la not• C\qll ol
liquid. add more chicken broth.
Reheat. Meanwhile add gelatin
to the cold water and dtasolve in the
hot broth along wlUI the curry. Ad-
just aeaaoning. Cool slightly and
pour into glaas bowls. Set in
refrigerator at least 3 hours.
Garniab with a thin cucumber
slice; top with a dollop ot YQIUJ't or
sour cream and a Ooww ol dlll or
1prtnkle of chervil. Makes 4 eerv·
l.npsildPCVCUllBU SALAD
2medlum cuevmbers
1 pactaae boneradlab dip ~cupnne1ar
2t•llfPOOGI water
lceberl lettuce
Remove lkln ot cucumber wlth
vegetable peeler If t.oush. or ac:ore
with tines i:Jt a fo1'k. Cut in thin,
crouwlae . allcet. Di11olv1
horaeradl.ab dJp in vin11ar i.nd wat«~ Pour ovt1 the oucumbei'9.
Marinlte for a f .. boun. Serve the
1UCflll OD a bed of ibredded Ictblr1
l«tuce. MakeS M Mr'Vlal•· Thll+,t
very..,..Ultftonn.lalit.
MartDade
~cup 1alad oil
1"' cup wine rinetar
I
•
t • I
' .. • • .. • .. . . . ..
.. ..
~.
Malfatti: A cheese-and-spinach dumpling
'Badly Made' Dish
Is Elegant Meal
N~xl lime you're planning lo serve
.1 fancy chafing dish meal, think
Italian. Many dishes from Italy's
)
gastronomic repertoire are excellent
choices for easy tabletop cookery, Ul·
dueling malfattj, a delicate cheese
and spinach dumpling.
Meaning ''badly made," mal!atti
bears a most inappropriate name
s ince it has all the sophistication in-
dicative of most northern Italian
cuisine. And, it's a cinch, to boot!
It's believed rnalfatti was so named
because the cheese and spinach mix-
ture is poached and then sauteed
without being wrapped in pasta or
dough as are ravioli or gnocchl. But
instead of being poorly made, the dish
is actually easier and more elegant to
prepare and serve than the wrapped
offerings.
Smee much is done ahead or time.
final preparation at the table is slm-
p le. To make things go even
s moother, be sure lo use canned heat.
A solid fuel , it is smokeless, odorless
and spillproof. The flame is easily
controlled, too, an jmportant element
of success.
Malfattis is best when the mixture
is allowed to "res t" in your
refrigerator overnight or at least
several hours. Poaching can be done
1n advance, and the finishing touches
are put on at the table.
Fettuccini Florentine is another
Hallan favorite that can be beautiful-
ly adapted to cbafine dish cookery.
Serve it as a separate pasta course or
as an accompaniment to chicken or
veal.
MALFA'M'I
Jcggs
1 pound ricotta cheese
lfJ cup grated Parmesan cheese
2 teaspoons dried leaf basil
1 teaspoon salt
1 • teaspoon pepper
''•teaspoon nutmeg
1 pound fresh spinach, cleaned
and finely chopped
1'2 cup chopped parsley
''• cup finely chopped onion
clove garlic, mmced
2t,.ii cups soft bread crumbs
1,2 cup flour
114 cup butter or marearine
.... Ml ·BoBi'm
•-n:eD lm1en-
o,en 7 Days lncludlncJ Sunday 9·6
·-----------~-------------'Wt'O'I TOP SIRLOIN .._ .....
1alad1
MAllMATID
SIStMC-1015
_.STIAll Fl.Al« STIAIC ......
FILIT MIGNON
MOUMTAIN
GROWN
IARTLETT
U.S. No. I
PINTO
EARS BEANS
29! 5:5 1.
':'Jr •~m -Drnr PERSONAL y_,o.e_.
Store Hours:
9 to 9 Daily - Sunday 9 to 8
'"CH iff.Kh•e
Thurs.,Sept. 22 thru Wed.,Sept. 28
f'rlcn S.ltj«t to Stock .,. .._.
We Gtadty Accept Food St°"'PI
W e b1eue The RiC)ht To Limit Quantities
And R•fuH Sole To Deden And WholeMlers.
LONG
GREEN
UCUMBERS
4~29c
LOWER
PRICES!
SWEET 'H JUICY
NEOARINES
~C~, SERVICE H~=-TlJll~..J I
UllYS
COINED
HORMEL EASTERN
PORK SPARERIBS
JUMIOROLL
'
BEEF CHUCK
SEVEN-BONE
STEAKS
il89c LB.
EXTRA LEAN
GROUND
ANY
SIU
PKG.
BEEF
99~.
MOT TO EXCEED 22% FAT
12 oz. 129 ARMOUR 120%. 69c
a HOT DOGS
BARM
BONELESS
BONED
'N ROLLED HAM
2.29LB.
HILLSHIRE FARM
POLISH
SAUSAGE
I LI. STICK
s::CHICKEN 50%.
CAM
D&MOMIE PEAS 16 0%.
~
SPRIMGFIELD
Black Forest Dinner features thuringer or frankfurters.
Meal With an Accent
Centune!:> ago the Gl•rm<Jn
"wurstmacher" b<>camc !:>o
adept at spicing and process
ing distinct ive types of
s ausages. that their proclueh
became almost synonymou!-1
with conven1t•nt and
nutritious meal makmg
•Busy homemakt•rs to<l;.1'
wi ll still find lhuringer.
bratv.urst <md largc. plump
frankfurter!-. 1clto;1l me<.1l pro·
ducers for t·rt•at1ng th1..,
quick. 8<.1val'lan fla\'ored
vegetable and sau s~1gt· chnn<'r
that can be <·on\ en1t•nth
<·ooked togethc1
Chopped parsley and
ground pepper
I n a large skillet. lay
sausages in a circular pattern
around well-scrubbed new
potatoes C:1nd peeled whole
onion~ Arrange carrots
around outer edges of skillet.
t'over mixture with boiling
\\ ater ill which bouillon has
been dissolved. Cover and
..,1mmcr until "egetables are
Lt•nder Remove carrots and
J.!laze. L'sing ovcn-to-tablt•
1·ook, .. are. remove remaining
\ t•gptahle~ and arrange on an
oven-proof platter or baking
pan. Sprinkle with Swiss
cheese and place under the
broiler until cheese is melted.
Add glazed can;ots to platter.
Sprinkle lightly with chopped
parsley, pepper and serve.
To Glaze Carrots: Melt 2
tablespoons o f b utter in ~a ucepan or skillet. Add 2
teaspoons sugar. Heat until
hutter 1s melted and sugar
hegins lo disso lve and
1·armelize. Add l teaspoon
lemon Juice. stir well. Add
<·arroti,, tossing them until
they are completely coated.
:'\lew crop polatot's. \\ holt•
tender carrots and onions an·
combined with sausages and
Simmered 111 natural JUIC<'!-1.
forming I he1 r O\\ n la !-.t~
seasoning.
A Honey Of Treat
BLACK FOREST DINNER
1lo11 :! pounds lhunngcr.
large f rankfurters or
bratwurst. Select sausuges tn
sui t ever yone ·s last<•
Sm a I I w h o I e n 1• "
potatoes. unpel'led
Small whol t' 11111011 ..,,
pel'led
l pound !-.mall tcnclt•r 1·,1r
rots. whole and unpc•t>l<•d
I eupboilmg ~alt·r ~ 1 teaspoon gr;inul.1tt•d
. heef bou11lon
4 ount't'" S\\ ,,.., t'IH•t•..,( .
grated
,\ sweet cookie bar with lots of
<'hocolate flavor.
HONEY BROWNIES
1 ~cup flour
1 11 teaspoon baking soda
1 , teaspoon salt
21 z squares (21 i ounces I un
"wcetcncd chocolate
1 :1 cup butter
2eggs
I cup sugar
1 1tuphone)
'~teaspoon vanilla
I t·up coarsel~ chopped
\\Jlnuls
Stir together the flour. i.oda
;ind '.'>alt :\1clt the chocolate with
thl· butter
Ill-al eggs until th1ckt>ned and
lemon color : beat in s ugar,
honey and vanilla to blend; beat
in chocolate mixture to blend;
add flour mixture and beat to
blend. Stir in nuts.
T um into a n 8 by 8 by 2-inch
cake pan whose bottom has been
lined with wax paper and t he
paper greased.
Rake in a prt'heated 350-degree
oven until edges come away
'.'>lightly from pan -40 minute:.'
a cukc lester inserted m center
will not com<: out clean
Cool on wire rad( for 15
minutes. turn out on r<Ack, re·
move paper. with another r&ck
turn right s ide up. cool complete
1} Cut into squarei. Makes 16
r•
.. ·~ .
'. ':--~-. ..
'It·
Oelanev's has the reputation
of having the finest selection of seafood
anywher e. Now, at Ma rket Street, we are
featuring the very best in TOP QUALITY MEATS. Top
of the grade USOA Choice and Prime Beef. Our meat e1eperts are here to g ive
you personal service. our beef Is aged to perfection, porperly tr immed, illl •
personally selected from feeder lots to bring you the tvpe of meat you will be ••
proud to serve. We also feature Callfornla-grown Zacky Farm Poultr y Eastern ···~--; milk-fed veal, Eastern grain-fed pork and American fresh lamb. ' •
MEAT SHOP
Spe n cer Steak .......... -~~«; .~l'.e. '!'. t.h.e. ~!~ ........... $3.981b.
Standing Rib Roast ... ~.r~~~~~ ~~~ ~~~r.<:~r.v_tng ....... $2.29 lb.
Delaney's Lean Old F hi ed Fl Pure Pork Sausage ........ ·. -~·-. ~ .... ~~C!r: . . . . . . . . . 98C lb.
Short Ribs of Beef ........... ~~ .'! '!.·~~. . . . . . . . . . . . 98e lb.
London Broll Steak ......• :1:~1~.1'.~~~ ........... $1.791b.
Ground Beef.-................. ~~L ................ 79c 11>.
FARM FRESH PRODUCE
Jumbe PUtk _
GRAPEFRUIT .. ~~·.·.~~ ......... 5/$1.00
Beel Dellclou.,
APPLF.S ...... ~7.~~~-......... 39c ..
Estral.arc«'
TOMATOES .... '.~.~~ ............. 39C ..
mt N.,.,.rt Blvd.
"'llewpori 1ttath en.wt
FISHDEPT.
EASfERN
SCALLOPS ....... $2.89 ..
GREEN CRAW)
SHRIMP ~'!9.9!'~ $1.98".
-. ---· - ---..-..:: .. -· ,..._-:_ ... -. ~
-r
MR,9: MON.t,k,w,~AT. qAM-6PM • 9UN.\OAM-SPM
Prices efl>ective tk.ru 5ept. 1.7~
MOR,E BEST BUV6 ..•
6oW'eles• L 1fl sea11 •I BRlSK&T.. ... 4t 1b •
&o.,e\e•• ~zq
STEW BEEF. .. :a 41',b.
O'Je"'•Nad~ ~
MfAT LOAF. .. 19 ID.
eee-r 119t p;\,.. tliceo, lie SHORT RIBS.: .. 1 lb. /of lt~t;... t111l
GROUHO 11~ ~Q, ... o~ mBd, :ti" ROUND...... lb. Clcaddon,Cff EESE.. , \b·
A~~ .. ~~ t\.A1T&Rs ~:. ~tc~:. ... ? C!Md.COOKED MEATS
1 I
• ' I
,
I
t
·squirt of Lemon Adds Sour Pow·er to Menu
By Ba.rt»ua Glbbou
Do )OU know how to
taaon wllh "aour
>wer-t" Smart cook•
~v• alw ya known that
duh of ~ ll'le6[ar or "
1ulrt of h•mon l'cn1ld
1rn oo t.a!ilt'. actdina J u't
IC riAhl t't\Uflll'fJ>Otnl to
.her M~ta,onmN' Swc~t
1' sour " '0 much mor.,
>ph1:1llrJh'1J thun JU!ll
.-eet'
VinegJr ,.nd lt•mon
ren't lhl' only 'ource• or
>Ur po"cr Other citrus
uce.. chopped p1rldes •
ven ~wcet and sou r
·uits or vegetables can
ombme lo crcllte JUl>l
1e nghl tart n tangy
verlont."!'>
Today \\(>'\e got a trio r tnm m .. un courses to
how \\hat we mean In
he ftrst s lim recipe,
resh purple plums add
1e sweet 'n sour dash
'resh plums are sour·
kinned but sweet on the
nside, so we slice the
·lums lhanly, leaving the
kin on which also
dds a lovely wine-color
o the sauce
•LUM GOOD CORNISH
HENS
Two Cornish hens.
plit, or 2 pounds <"Ul·up
rying chicken purls.
4 unpeeled purple •
1rune-type plum s.
1ilted. thmly sli ced
2 red onions, peeled.
hanly sliced
5 tabl{•s ponn., soy
.aucc
On&oquarter cup red
wine
Mix~ pumpkin pie
;pice
Generous pinch or
dnise seeds <optional)
Put hen halves or
chicken pieces skin-side
up m a shallow non-stick
pan. Add no seasonings.
Put the pan in u preheat·
ed Chol) 450 degree oven.
Bake 20 manul<'s, unlll
-;kin 1s <-risp and wcll-
rendcrcd of fat Drain
and discard fat
Put the plum and onion
slices under the poultry.
Sprinkle with remaining
ingredients. Return to
oven and continue to
bake at 450 degrees.
basting frequently, until
poultry is· tender and
:;auce is reduced, 30 to 40
minutes. <You make a
thicker sauce by stirring
! teaspoon cornstarch or
arrowroot into 3 table·
spoons cold water; then
add to the liquid in the
pan, stirnng welt. Con-
tinue baking until sauce
thickens.)
Chili and vinegar com·
bine dehghtfully in this
toned-down Indian dish.
Add more chili powder,
1f you wish. If you'd
rather be cautious, sim-
ply serve with a bottle or
Tabasco and let your
ta blemates add the
·'fire" to suit themselves.
INDIAN SPICED uo·r
'N' SOUR PORK
1 pound lean pork, or
fresh hamsteak, cut In 1
and one-half-inch cubes,
tri med of r al
1 cup canned
tomatoes, broken op
1 larite onion
2 cloves garlic,
minced Cor one-quarter
teaspoon instant)
One·9 u a rler tea ·
spoon pt'eJ73Ted mustard
Barbecue
Try this easy barbecue
sauce for your next
cookout
Combine in a small
saucepan 2 cans (So/•
ounces each) mushroom
steak sauce: 1 envelope
(1% ounces) dry onion
soup mix; 1 cup ketchup;
2 tablespoons brown sug-
ar; 1 tablespoon each
prepared mustard,
Worcestershire sauce
and aalad oil and 1Aa teas-
poon bot pepper sauce.
ont• h41lf tea-poon
lurmnk
oven. Cover and .ilmmer
over very low heat -or
place in a 200 desree
oven &nd cook three
houra or more, until
meat Is tender. (Moy
ulso be prepared In a
crockery slow-cooker ac·
cording to manulac·
tu rer's directions .)
Stirve with rlce, tf de·
sired. Makes four aerv·
tniis. about 240 calories
each. <Cooked rice adds
ubout 110 calories per
halt-cur.iervint. >
Here 1 a recipe to save
tor the upcoming first
froal ... when you'll be
wondertne what. to do
wltb those gre e n
tomatoes you've
rescued:
dlced(or4cups,canned>
2 oni~ allced
1 teaspoon around
cinnamon
over hl&b heat wlth no
fat added. Cook, tumlng
oc c aslonally, unll l
c hunks are well ·
browned. Drain and dis·
card fat, if any.
onu half ttu:ipoon
cumln'leedl 4 s talks celery,
sliced
l tablespoon drled
oregano One lableapoon 1 green pepper,
seeded, diced
Salt and hot pepper
to taste m1u-d plckhn& 1op1ct1-
C>nf' Cfuurtcr ttiu
'lpooo l·hlll powder, or
mun· lo La.atle CUBAN SKILLET
2 cloves 1•rllc, minced <or one-quarter
teaspoon instant)
Spray a large nonstick
skillet or electric frypan
with cooking spray. With
a sharp knife, eently cut
the ground meat into
c u bes , or· c h u n k s ,
without pressing or com·
pacUn1 the meat. Put
the meat in the skillet
Add remaining Lngre-
d le nts. Simmer un-
covered 20 minutes,
stlrrin1 frequently, until
sauce ia thick (add a lit·
tle hot water lf sauce
becomes too thick .)
Makes elght servings,
about 240 calories each.
Sult llOd pepper lo 2 pounds lean ground
beef round
4 tablespoons ralalns
2 cups plain tomato
sauce (no oil added,
check label! )
tu ate 3 tublespoonll white
or cider vinegur
Combine all ingre·
d1ent.l> tn u heavy Dutch
2 green tomatoes.
diced (or 1 small pickle.
chopped)
8 ripe red tomatoes, 2 tea.spoons cumin
seeds
How to hit it big
atthesu~rmark'et
without playing games.
\.. <'.'\
A whole lot of los ers pay ·~·~
for very few winners. ,~~~-.-
Games. gimmicks and promotions can be very :-:fr.
expensive. And the cost, as every ad manager · .. -~ ,
knows, has to come from somewhere. So for the ,\~ ~f • --1!i0~~~,.~~
handful of folks who hit 1t big. others simply have to
pay higher food costs. At least that's the way 1t would 5e 1f
we ran games. It's entertaining for all of us to think in term::.
of getting rich quick. But it's no fun at all to pay higher food
prices. That's why we won't allow any of our other cus·
tomers to pay the pnce tor Harry Whoozit and his f clmily
to fly off to Hawaii. Besides, Lucky is in the food
business, not in the travel business.
-·
We blew the whistle ____ Here's our policy.
on high prices. /.1t I When yuu ::.hop through our aisles, you're likely to find
"It's not fair!" we cned. We're proud -prn.:es lower by ,1 few tents here and a few cents there.
··~ to claim as our own, the brave and It mdy not seem like a dramatic ::.aving, item by item. The
brilliant souls who dared to be d1f· l<1ct of the mc.11tt•r 1.;, 1• mdy not be lower than some stores
ferent by inventing the discount • nn ,,mw itl'lll">. p.irlh: h(•c,1u-,c we don't ~ell~
supermarket business back m 196J 1 \~ below cost. But we're lower on so many~ ~
They reasoned that to make the . )1 items. it adds up. When you ::.ec the total at the , ' .&;.~.
. whole discount idea work properly . \. \ · ~ \ Cd!>h register. you'll know you'rp un to cJ ~ure / . ·:s~
•
f .\ to really keep prices low ... ove1 \ '\ thmg. Becdu::.e Lucky h.c.1s lower pnce::. ,'~· .. .:;~~· .... < ·
·r;,;.; head costs would have to be kept low · · ~overall ... .:rnd that s what discount 1::. ,,' . ·i~r"·=: ~ So, voila! Away went games, stilmps, give ( I' reillly all abol'1t. Check out the ;/' ·~\lll<)l"1 · ---~W aways, never to cross our advertising depart· ) ''sampling of prices below, then 11 /!
~ ment's door again. In came lower prices overall, · come on in and see for
· every day. Which made all our customers into · yourself.
winners, every day.
Fresh Meats
COP.NED OEEF 89 DP.IS KET
W>Y l£E PQINl~. • • LO e
BLADE CUT ~~~J~~.ln .• 68
CROSS P.10
ROAST
OONELISS OONDlO GW~UCK .••..
TOP SIP.LOIN
~~.~~ ...... L0.197
T·DOHE STEAK llOOCllO DUf lOll .. .. ..... .. .. ., lO 1. 98
I.AP.GE EHD PJD P.OAn
OOHOlO 0((1 .. .. .. •• ... .. .. ..... lO 1.39
~~~.~~AST 10..88
Fresh Meats
Canned&Packaged
HAP.VEST DAY !?~I~L .39
! HARVEST DAY
DREAD 39 00.LCCE \\IHnt: OI\ \\IHEAT, 24 OZ. LON' e
Canned & Packaged
rKMfT b ~~~~x ~27
!JELL-0
DESSERT
GO.ATil'IE . 6 Ol OOX e 34
Ho usehold & Pet
,. TOIL£T msuE b COlOll!U • "t . . .. •CO lf llOU. .65
p OISPOSAOl.E OIAPE!t.S . b 1.AUY\.11 t()C().(l\).lt • t1CT ooa 1.19
p TMSH CAN UNEP.S 0 -Ct!'YJO<.Ao. • .... , ..... 1.99
I' GWS Cl.EANER
b .;.A;)'l.UI ••• ..,1 II ,58
I' KAL KAN DOG FOOD b t'H'(..,.,~. • u .... cAM .. 32
b o .. wr.oR~-~!.~~<IAG 1.59
Dairy & Frozen
Prod uce
DELICIOUS APPLESw~H1NGION 29
G0U>CN EX1T\A FANCY • LO e
CASADA
MELONS 08 .................... lD .•
F~SH
LIMES ... £A a09
PURE OONElm P.UMP P.OAST
ll()tC)(O OW lolll.OH CUI • t O 1 . 29
OONEWS TIP P.OAST
OOMO(l) DllJ AQUt() .... lO. 1.39
f"6H our ONSK£T 1 19 l()oC)(I) Olli IG •
DOHEillS STEWING OEEF
llONOCOCllll • .... • lO. 1.28
Health & Bea uty Alda
P MULTI-VITAMINS •• 1 66 6 M(~0-.0 ()CW WG Of-:0)0 ,
I ~~~~.~EW~ ~,,94
A ~~~.~AMI!£ •<1' .86
Liquor, Wi ne
LUCKY OOUMK>N
_,.,. &'NoAOIO eoOllOOf Cl Dll.5,33
Just peanuts
and salt
suao om uvtl'
-.o} ........ ., ...... .
CHICKEN MEAST ~~.°'.'~:19
lAOY LEE DACOH
lllCIP • , Ht.._.1,27
USTOJNE AHTISlPTIC
E'mNim T'.4:owr •• OL ...
1·19
.. .. .. .. ""1 or eo 1 .59
TPJPl.£ SEC LIQUEUR '°''°" ... . .. ,.ou~3.19
GAl.10 CHAOUS 01.AHC
...,.. .. • .. .. .. ... J\11\ .,..., .~8
IJOllOI' A¥A&AIU Al IQD -llOUOJ.
~· 10111>1'!"°'1~ .... NA~ --....... .... --.. _ ... _ ·-·· .... l_,..,.. ___
~-
..
Wedneeday, September 21. 1977 DAILY PILOT CS
Bananas Over
Fiber is the latest concern
of those who think about what
they eat: but getting more
fiber in the diet doesn't have
to mean a radical change in
eating habits. Consider the
mellow banana --something
everyone has in the kitchen, a
favorite of children. oldsters
and everyone in-between. It's
an excellent source of food
fiber.
Why is fiber suddenly so
important? Some medical ex·
perts feel that the lack of
fiber in the American diet is a
contributing factor in cancer
of the colon, the second most
your family's fiber intake.
An industry-sponsored
center for consumer in!orma-
tion, The Banana Bunch, sug.
gests bananas as an accom-
paniment to ham, chicken or
fish. With Stir-Fry Carrots
and Bananas you've got a col-
orful side dish of sliced
bananas and carrots that are
sprinkled with raisins and
cooked until heated in a
brown sugar glaze. It's fresh,
natural, full of fiber, and
tastes great with chicken.
Fiber
2 tablespoons brown
sugar
•11 teaspoon ginger
3 firm bananas, cut in
1 2-inch slices
11.a cup raisins
Melt butter in large skillet.
Add carrots and cook over
medium heat until crisp-
tender, 5 to 10 minutes. Blend
in lemon juice, brown sugar and ginger. Add bananas and
raisins, and cook just until
heated through.
Yield: 4 to 6 servings.
HONEY BAKED BANANAS
4 finn bananas
• frequent cause of cancer death in this country. and in
Honey Baked Bananas will
complement ham or fish as a
side dish or stand atone as a
dessert. Just brush peeled
bananas with butter, pour a
mixture of honey and orange
juice over them, garnish with
nuts for more fiber, and bake
for 15 minutes. Your family
gets its fiber and you've
triumphed with a quick.
luscious and healthful dish.
2 tablespoons butter or
margarine, melted
If.a cup honey
Stir-Fry Carrots and Bananas; Honey Baked Bananas
other intestinal diseases.
such as diverticulitis.
Fiber is simply the parts of
whole grains, fruits and
vegetables that resist diges-
tion; because we eat so much
refined and processed foods.
we miss the fiber we need to
function in the most healthy
way.
The versatile banana, in
quick and easy desserts and
unusual side dishes, is an ex-
cellent means of increasing
STIR· FRY
CARROTS AND BANANAS
3 tablespoons butter or
margarine
3 carrots, pared and thin-
ly sliced
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 tablespoon orange juice
1 1 cup fine ly chopped
walnuts
Peel bananas and place in
shallow baking dish. Brush
with melted butter. Mix
honey and orange juice: pour
over bananas. Sprinkle with
nuts. Bake in 375 degree oven
10 to 15 minutes. Spoon sauce
over bananas and serve im-
mediately.
Yield: 4 servings.
What Makes a Pie a Champion Dessert?
Just what is it that makes a
particular pie, cake or cookie
better than the others? What
goes into a champion candy?
At the compet1t1on at lhe Heart
of IlliQOlS Fair in Peoria, Ill.,
featured on "State Fair
America," a two-hour spec1aI
highlighting the best or
American fairs. · Out of the 800 entries re-
ceived for everything from
peace pie to exotic jellies and
relishes. there is only one grand
champion class.
This year, a t>ecan pie baked
by Kathryn Kempf of Roanoke,
JIJ ., won the grand champion pie
ribbon. Kathy Matney of Prince-
ville. Ill .. walked away with
the cookie honors for her
chocolal&drop cookies.
Eleanor Driscoll got the grand
champion ribbon for English tor-
rec. and Esther Stear's burnt
s ugar cake received the grand
champion cake riJ>bon.
Mrs. Driscoll says she got her
prize-winning recipe Crom a
neighbor and that it's "very sim-
ple." She won three other laurels
at this year's fair -a first-prize
ribbon for her raisin pie and two
second prizes, one for peanut but-
ter cookies and the other for a
candy display.
She credits her husband for
much of her success: "He en-
courages me. He thinks I'm a
good cook." To make Mrs.
Driscoll's English toffee, here·s
what to do:
ELEANOR DRISCOLL'$
ENGLISH TOFFEE
\"l pound good quality
margarine
'h pound milk chocolate
lcupsugar
2 teaspoons water
chopped nuts
Cook margarine. water and
s ugar together untJI light brown
("the color of a brown paper
bag"). Pour into 9xl3 buttered
pan.
Place chocolate pieces on top
and, as they melt, spread evenly.
Sprinkle with finely chopped
nuts.
Kathy Matney says her recipe
for chocolate drop cookies was
handed down to her by her
gr andmother.
KATHY MATNEY'S
CHOCOLATE DROP
COOKIES
4 s quares unsweetened
chocolate
1f.t cup salad oil
2cupssugar
4 eggs (unbeaten)
2 teaspoons vanilla
Face-Saving Offer
From Face Quencher.
by Chap Stick
Save s1.00 on your first purchase and
Save s1.oo on your second purchase.
Duy any Face Quencher Product and we'll man you
$1 refund (Includes your postoge)along with o
store-redeemable coupon worth $1 on your~ purchase.
Just indude proof of purchase (net weight statement
from the silver package plus register tape) r'
with coupon below.
All Face Quencher products are drenched
w.itb.molsturtzers to help make your skin
~eel OS good as It looks.
Oloose Make-up, Dlusher"or Powder. Do your
face o fovor as well as your budget.
face Quendier
Creme Olusher
Face Quencher
Noisturizi09 fv\ake-Up ·
2 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1h teaspoon salt
1 cup powdered sugar
Melt the chocolate in a double
boiler. Blend in oil, sugar and
eggs, beating well after each ad-
ditioo. Add vanilla.
Sift fiour, salt and baking
powder together. Add flour mix-
ture to chocolate mixture and
mix. Chill dough at leasts hours.
Roll into small balls and then
roll in powdered sugar. Bake on
greased cookie sheet in a 350-
degree oven for 10-12 minutes
dime cookies carefully; they
may .-iot look quite done, but take
them out of the oven when the
t.jmeisup).
Mrs. Stear says that she's won
••scads .. of ribbons at the fair.
noting. ..I've showed for 27
years ...
ESTHER STEA R'S
BURNT SUGAR CAKE
lcupbutter
2cupssugar
~cupmilk
4 tablespoons brown sugar
syrup Csee note)
3 cups cake flour
4eggs
1 tablespoon baking powder
l teaspoon vanilla .
<NOTE: To make brown sugar
syrup, brown l cup sugar in
heavy skillet. Take off stove,
then add l cup boiling water. Let cool.)
Cream butter and sugar
together. Alternately add flour,
syrup and milk (begin with flour
and end with flour>. Add eggs.
one at a time. beating well after
each addition.
Add baking powder and
vanilla. Pour into greased and
On Folger$
• Coffee Crystals.
· The delicious
coffee that
tastes as rich
as it looks.
floured 9-inch layer pans. Bake
in 350-degree oven for 40
minutes. Use decorator frosting.
Here's Kathryn Kempf's rec-
ipe for her grand champion
pecanple:
KATHRYN KEMPF'S
PECAN PIE
1 cup dark com syrup
'12 cup light brown sugar
3 eggs slight beaten
11. teaspoon salt
·~ cup melted butter
1 teaspoon vanilla
l cup pecan halves
Boil sugar and syrup together
for about 2 minutes. Pour slowly
over beaten eggs, stirring well.
Add butter, vanilla and pecans.
Pour into pie shell and bake in
a 375-degree oven for 40-50
minutes. Pie is done when the
filling is approximately set when
gently moved.
')bu can always enjoy the rich
flavor of folge~ Oystals, but
OONwith this coupon you
can enjoy a 50¢ savings, too.
A real savings Md a r~lly
rich taste. rotsers oays ft
,.,._,_ ---here egainl
. i .
' j• •• • 'i •; ,.
. .
I •:
.
' .. . . •
,. .... .. ... .. !I('
'!:
. .
, . ·'
Q DAILY PILO f
Corny,
But Good
CORN CASSEROLE
3 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons finely
chopped onion
11:1 cup s hredded
dried beef
3largeeggs
•, .. cup milk
2 lablespoons flour
11 .. teaspoon salt
12 cup grated ched·
dar cheese
12·ounce can whole-
kernel corn, drained
Cook the onion and
b eef m the butter until
onion wilts. Beat the
eggs until they begin to
thicken and are lemon
color; add milk, flour
and salt; beat to com.
bine; stir in cheese, corn
and onion·beef mixture .
Tum into a buttered 9 .
inch glass pie plate.
Bake in a pre heated
35-0·degrce oven about 25
minutes. Let stand 5 to 10
minutes before serving.
Makes 4 servings .
Aspic
Gels
For Dinner
BROCCOLI EGG ASPIC
l e nvelop e un-
flavored gelatin
10112 ounce can con·
somme, undiluted
... 6 cooked broccoli
:: flowerets ~ • :y4 cup mayoMaise
:• 2 hard-cooked eggs,
·: sieved
:: 2 cups cooked diced
; broccoli ·
~ Soften gelatin in IA cup
• of the cold consomme.
~ Heat the remaining con·
•. som me until very hot s and add to the gelatin
mixture : s tir until
• • gelatin dissolves. Ar-
r a n ge the broccoli t,. nowerets in a 5-cup
: m old; carefully pour in
: 1h cup or the gelaUn mix·
: ture. Chill until alaiost ~ firm. Chill the remaining
' gelatin mixture unUl the
' consistency of unbeaten ~ el(I( whites; fold in the ~ mayonnaise, s ieved
~-eggs and diced broccoli.
~ Carerutty spoon into the
mold. Chill until firm.
• Unmold at serving time
~ and garnish as desired.
' Makes 6 servings.
... " • t •
Salmon, Tomato TeCm Up in .Aspic
Dy C"E('ll. Y c·annt.'d tomato Julee wai;
tUtOWNSl'ON E introduced, cooks found .,_ ... ,..,,., .. ,,. .. .,"., they didn't have to
At tht• t'rlll nf the lu"t bother :slralninJ stewed
ct•ntun 1'11m1110 Aspic tomatoes! they could
rusnt· inll) rnuuu and 1t '1 make tho uplc with the
been .iotnl( •lronai ever canned Julee.
1uncl' Fanniu fo'armer, In
her UIOO lio!'CtOn Cooklna· Over the years tomato
Sc.'hnol Cook Book , ~·aJled abpic ha1 had a good
11 1'omuto J~lly Salad m any partners. One of
and mudc al with Btewed the best of these is
and 1tramed tomatoes, salmon. Recently we
gelatin and powdered came on a new·to-US way
i.ugar Years later, when or teaming the two:
STA TH ••OS.
MO .. lY BACK GUA•AIUll
ON QUALITY MIA Tl
f'lll•' •ttr 1 Qt flll'ot•f~ Uf+(n+t01h()H•u' <.U•••NUtn
f(ll'tt•\I 'OU O• ,,,.,,. ,_0..t I
*'II II ("fU IVU '•tfUl"OHt
deli. ___ t
s almon salad bedded
down belween layeri. of
the jelly. And very good,
too. This combination is
turned into custard cups
and unmolded to serve
ror a main dish with
crisp greens and other
adornments. However, it
may also be turned into
s herbet cups or other
footed glasses and
served as a cocktail; in
this case it is not un-
molded.
WElllSlllV( tt<E t\l(lHI JO
LIMIT 01111rryu UUStO
C000¥0Cl4l
OU lfJISOll
WHOLfilol.lU
SALMON TOMATO
ASPIC
thin
2 cups tomato juice
1 small onion, sliced
Lar1esprig parsley
1 bay leaf
4 whole cloves
1 envelope Un·
flavored 1elatin
1:i. .. ou nce can
s'almon , .
11.a c u p C 1 n e \ y
chopped celery v .. c up finely
chopped green pepper
2 tablespoons finely
chopped scallion
3 tables poon s
mayonnaise
'Al teaspoon salt
l to 2 tablespoons Add theon1on, parsley,
leroonjulce bay leaf and cloves to the
overnight lo allow
flavors to blend. Pour off
'i cup of the tomato Juice
and sprinkle 1elatin over
it to soften. Heat the re·
mainlng tomato Julee
and seasonings to boll·
in1; simmer for s
minutes; strain; add the
softened gelatin, salt,
lemon Juice and tabasco:
stir untll gelatin dis·
solves. Chill until very
thick, Drain and flake
salmon; toss with re-
Tabasco sauce to tomato juice and
taate refrigerate, covered,
..........
QP.RYING
CHICKlllS
CUT..W4"La.
-WHOLEIOOY
matntnic inaredients.
Add about 2 tablespoons
or the tomato mixture to
each or s ix 6·ounce
custard cups; add a
layer of the salmon; top
with remaininC tomato
mixture. Chill to set. At
aervlna time, unmold
and gami.sh with lettuce.
hard-cooked eae
quarters and• sliced
cucumber. Makes 6 serv·
in gs •
......
BllF
LIVIR
SLICEO
45~ 69~ c
LB.
... noz.58c
\$1 1CUIN'S.56C ..... ...oi.
NEAlPJ.Alius
' 19~.
BELL PEPPE
EXT"A FAHC.'Y LAROE 0R&H
10~.
SMOKID
HAM HOCKS
79~
. .
Chocolate Pineapple Upside-Down Cake will be a hit with traditionalists.
Having Your Cake
And Eating It, T 00
1
This new version of an old
favorite keeps things right·
s ide up when it comes to
budget and ease of prepara-
tion.
Golden slices of canned
pineapple glaze in the tradi·
tional brown sugar syrup
with a few c herries and
sliced almonds for accent.
What makes news is the
• chocolate buttcr·s ponge cake
;· topping.
: The cake is li ght and
•• sponge.like in texture. The
· flavor is pleasantly chocolate
:-: and a delicious contrast to
the tropical fruit. t Serve "Chocolate Pineap-
~ • ple Upside· Down Cake ..
warm. either plain or topped
with a chocolate flavored
whipped cream. Chocolate
lovers and traditionalists
alike, will unite m praise.
CHOCOLATE PINEAPPLE
UPSIDE DOWN CAKE
1 (20 ounce> can pineap-
ple slices
1 2 cup melted butter
12 cup b r own s ugar
<packed)
5 maraschino cherries, halv(.'(}
1 tablespoon s liced '
almonds
1 2 cup sifted all-purpose
flour
212 tabl espoons un ·
• • sweetened cocoa
1 .. teas~<m salt
4 large eggs
2 acupsugar
Chocolate Whipped
Cream
Drain pineapple well. Melt
~ 1 .. cup butter in 9-inch upside
down cake pan, and mix with
brown sugar.
Place 1 pineapple slice in
: center of pan, and overlap re-
• maining slices around it.
: Place a cherry half in center
• of each s lice. Sprinkle
: almonds around edge of pan.
• Resift flour with cocoa a nd
salt twice, and set aside.
.. Combine unbeaten eggs and
: sugar in top of double boiler.
: Set over hot over hot but
: not boiling water <water
• should be just simmering,
and not touch bottom of up-
per pan). Warm mixture
gently, stirring constantly
with a wire whisk, until mix-
ture reaches lukewarm,
abouts minutes.
Remove from beat, and
beat at high speed until very
thick and light, about 5 to 7
minutes. Mixture will have
consistency of a ort mer·
ln1ue. Gradually fold in
I n.--cocoa mixture until no
stre"akl of four remaih.
Driale rematruri1 ~ cup
melhil bilttet over batter,
and fold bi qwcklY but llJht·
ly. Pour batter into prepare<!
pan. Bake In center of
moderate oven (350 degrees F.> SO to 55 mlnutes, until
cake bat rilen ln center and
• .apnnp baiitk when touched
U1hllY. llimove from oven
and let'atmd 5 mlriut• (cake
will aettle •lilhUy ln center>.
4 LOOien ed1•• wllb 1ma1l
•P•w•. and Invert over senm.t; plate. Serve warm
wJtb .Chocolate Wlllpped ~ llak•IMl'Y-Cioe ola te Whipped .
Cream: Beat 1 cup whipping
cream to soft peaks with 2
tablespoons sugar and 11 2
teaspoons chocolate extract.
ANISE SPICE CAKE
1 :! cup softened butter
1 cup sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
2eggs · t
2 cups flour
1 table s poon baking
powder
1 :? teaspoon salt
1 2 teaspoon cinnamon
1·2 teaspoon ginger
1 1 teaspoon cloves
1 2 cup seedless raisins
1 3 cup chopped licorice
:i, cup milk
Buttercream Frosting
Cream together butter and
sugar until light and fluffy
Blend in vanilla . Beat in
eggs, one at a ti me Stir
together remaining mgre·
dients e x cept mi l k
Thoroughly blend flour mix-
ture into creamed mixture
alternately with milk, begin-
ning and ending with flour.
Pour into greased 8-inch
round pans. Bake in preheat-
ed 350 degree oven 25 to 35
minutes, or until toothpick
inserted in center comes out
clean. Cool 10 minutes before
removing from pans. Cool
completely and frost with
Buttercream Frosting.
BUTTERCREAM
FROSTING
1 2 cup softened butter
2 cups sifted conf ec ·
tioners' sugar
1 to 2 tablespoons milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
Combine all ingredients.
Beat with electric mixer at
high speed until smooth.
Almost every nation has Its
favorite version of a delicate
yeast·raised dessert cake.
Among them. there's the sug·
ar·sprinkle d Austrian
kugelhopf, the ring.shaped
French savarin and the puff.
top p e'd and fr u it. fill e d
Russian kulich.
Historians of cookery tell
us that the most ancient of
these}. distinguished cakes is
kouge1bof, which supposedly
was made in Poland as early
as 1609. King Stanislas is
credited with the idea of
drenching the cak~ with rum
syrup, adding a tangy
apricot preserves glaze and
blazing it in the same way
the British flamed their
famous plum puddings.
The luxury -loving
monarch named the delicacy
after the hero of one of his
favorite tales, Ali Baba. As
the popularity of the cake
spread to France and other
nations, the name was
shortened to baba.
The fonowina adaptation is made with the new Rapldmi)<
Method which eliminates dit·
eolvina the yea11t in warm
water. The technique not
only saves time, bUt it makes
the cake lighter, more un·
if or oily texfured and euier to handle.
FOi' flavor YUl1Uon. the
cake ean be glazed and
sauced with other f rult
apreaa1 such as oranae
matiiiilAde or P1n••l>PI• or peach preserves .
BABA AU RUM
WITH APRICOT GLAZE
P 1 to 21, .. cups unsifted
flour
1 1 cup sugar
1 package dry yeast
12cup milk
1 1 cup (1 stick > butter or
rnurgarine
:J eggs (at room tem-
perature)
In a large bowl , thoroughly
mix % cup flour", sugar and
undissolved dry yeast. Com·
bine milk and butter in a
saucepan. P lace over low
heat until liquid is warm
I butter does not have to melt
completely >
Gradually add to dry ingre-
dients and heat beat 2
minutes at medium s peed of
electric mixer, scraping
bowl occasionally. Add eggs
and 1 2 cup fl our; beat 2
minutes at high speed, scrap-
ing bowl occasionally. Stir in
enough additional flour to
make a thick batter.
Cover; let rise in warm
place. free from draft, until
bubbly <about 1 hour). Stir
down batter. Tum into a well
greased and floured 2-quart
tube-shaped baking. pan.
Cover: let rise in warm place
free from draft 30 minutes.
Bake in a preheated
moderate oven (350 degrees>
for 30 to 35 minutes or until
done. Remove from pan and
cool on wire rack for 15
minutes; return to pan.
Prick top with fork .
Gradually pour hot Rum
Syrup <re cipe follows>
over cake until all the syrup
as absorbed. Let stand 30
minutes or longer. When re-
ady to serve, reheat cake in
pan in a s low oven <300
degrees) for 15 minutes or
until heated. Invert cake on·
to a serving pl atter.
Spoon part of the hot
Apricot Glaze <recipe
fo llows) over the cake and
pass the remaining portion
separately for spooning over
each serving.
To serve flaming, heat 2
tablespoons rum in a large
ladle. Ignite rum i stir it into
the hot Apricot Glaze and
while flaming, spoon the
mixture over the cake.
Makes lOto 12 servings. RUM SYRUP
1 cup s ugar
1 2cupwater
1 2 cup light rum
11.-cup orange juice
Combine sugar and water
in a saucepan. Cook, sUn1.ng
constantly, until sugar is dis·
solved. Simmer 10 minutes.
Remove from heat: stir in
rum and orange juice. (If
preferred, substitute 2
tablespoons rum extract for
· the light rum>.
APRICOT GLAZE
1 CUJ> apricot pnserves
ltabletpoon lemon juice
2tableepoona ll1ht rum
Heat apricOt preserves in a
small aaucepaa until melted.
Stir in lemon juice aDCI rum.
... -------. -
Anise spice cake features
licorice and buttercream
frosting, above
Left, elegant Baba is
glazed with apricot
preserves.
-.
---........ ~
........__DA __ ILY PILOT Wednadey, Septem~ ~t. t071 •
eueP_..y .. .Jaundreds of SPECIAU! euePyday ... tltousands. of I.OW PRIC~•l
•••
.AND
-A-
The "Experts" At Safeway are offering COUPON AND A HALF savings to
you. Bring in your manufacturers' cents-off coupons and Safeway will add
50% to their value through Sept. 27, 1977 when you buy the item. One
coupon per item and one item per coupon unless specified otherwise.
Not to include "retailer" or "free" coupons or exceed the value of the item .
Offer effective Sept. 21-Sept. 27, 1977.
JC MANUFACTURERS COUPON -a 1 SAFEWAY ADDS I -'C5 One Coupon Per Item andOneltem ~: ONE HALF THE 1. -TOTAL ::-c;~ Per ~oupon, Unless Specified Otherwise. jii' I VALUE FOR A : ~~~fi[~t ~~~!~~~~~~~~~-!!~~!f~·::._J SAVINGS
U.S.D ••
ROUND
STEAK
Full Center Cut. Bone-In.
lb.
(lonllea Rump llollt....llt. 1.29)
-f.!tt!~.~-~~''2-~~ 79°
-f!!~'!c~!!!n ...... 1~pq. 89C
M-8>f!~!!!!'~.~-~ ...... , .... ~ ....... •111
f!!!t~~!~~~ ........ : ......... ~~ •1••
Pork Spar;aribs
Small Slz:es
Frozen-Defrosted
,
Green Giant
NIBLETS ~· co~c~Pack
Minute Maid ORANGE JUICE ,c
. •,
WE ACCEPT USDA FOOD STAMP COUPONS
WEXFORD CRYSTAL
By Anchor-Hocking
Ttll• Wiil's oner .. 49° ICED TEA GLASSES
80-Proot .. KAVLANA
VODKA
29
• Prices
Effective
In Licensed Saf~ya.
General Miiis
TRIX CEREAL
c
18-oz. lox
' ' '
'•'
. ·' "
'•
•'
I
't -
•'
•'
fl I
Wednesday, September 21, 19n DAIL V PILOT £'9
Prehistoric Man Had _Diet
8y ROB WOOD coprolites .•• The un·
llOU~'TON <AP) -Dr. digested seeds and bones
Vaughn Bryant Jr. is foundinthefecesofpre-
convinced modem socie-historic man gives us the
ty has done everything clues to the types of food
wrong as far as eating is he ate."
concerned and claims B r y Jl n t • a
"we'd be a lot better off paleobolanlit. decided to
If we followed the diet Of try the prehistoric diet in
prehistoric man." an effort to remove some
How does Bryant know of "the flab gathering
w h a t p e o p I e a t e around my middle from
thousands or years ago? sitting behind a desk and
The Tex as A& M eating loo much junk
University scientist has food."
treated with a chemical
which softens the sub·
stance for bet ter
analysi5 and releases an
offeMlve odor.
With his work now cen-
tered 1n a dlg along the
Trans-Pecos area of
southwest Texas. Bryant
said skeleton remains in·
dicate those who lived in
the arid area were
healthy, des pite the
hardships of existence
and the absence of
medical attention.
' the fancy displays in lhe
grocery stores and the
easily available juok
foods."
Bryant said pre-
historic man knew
nothing or minerals or
vitamins, "but they were
not deformed. And, look·
ing at their teeth, they
cou\d have said, 'Look
Mom, no cavities•.••
The study, Bryant
said, revealed pre·
historic man bad suffi·
ci en t vitamins and
minerals without pop-
pingpllls.
t'alcium, we think of
dairy products, milk and
cbeese. The prehiaotric
man ate hackberries, ln·
1ide of which is a little
seed the size of a BB that
is 99 percent calcium.
.. Our ancestors ate
flowers, all of the flower.
The sunflower. for exam·
ple, is high in Vitamin
B-6 and B·l2. The cactus
pad had a tremendous
amount of bulk, and it
tastes a lot like green
beans," be said. ·
Research shows people are hun§ry for green bean recipes.
~pent the past several He admits he bypassed
y e a r s c o l l e c t i n g the lizards an4 rats, "but
t•oprolites -petrified I did eat a lot of bulk,
human was t e -at turnips, a plant called
archeological sites, tak· jicama, some cactus
mg them to his lab and pads, berries, honey and
determining the food fruits, with the pr•lein
t•aten by those short. coming mostly from
"These people led an
active life. They had to to
s urvive. My research
shows they ate a well·
balanced diet. There was
something in man to
seek out the types or food
his body needed. that is
before he was lured by
"First they ate a cer·
tain plant that grows in
the desert, a plant that
one leaf contains the
same amount or Vitamin
C as one lime. ~loop-shouldered. bandy-fish."
Beans Supreme
In a Super Salad
legged people who once The 190 paunds en his "When we talk of
roamed earth. 5-foot-9 fra me dropped to----------------------, ··1 gu~s you could say 170 paunds in less than
w~ started al the bottom four months, "and I have
.rnd worked up. Whal never fell better."
goes in, must come out,•· One or bis graduate
Bryant said in a recent stud ents existed one
interview. week on the pure pre·
"lnthepast1twassuf. historic di e t and.
f i c i e n t f o r a n ''although she admitted
archeologist to evacuate the food was bland, it
a site and later repart his didn't hurt her and she
,Americans consume
over 300 pounds or
vegetables each year -
and the quantity is rising.
Wilh this kind of demand,
the search is on for more
fresh. frozen and canned
vegetable recipes
Better Homes and
Gardens new "All-Time
Favorite Vegetable
Recipes" contains re·
cipes for over 35 types of
readi l y available
vegetables.
Research s hows that
people are most mterest·
ed in fmding recipes for
b e ans. cor n . peas.
potatoes and tomatoes.
Following are some ex·
cerpts of itemized in
formati on for the~e
popular vegetables .
BEANS. Selecting .
Green {Uld wax beans are
grown for the tender.
fleshy pod. Choose long,
straight pods that snap
crisply when bent. Lima
a nd fava beans are usual·
ly cultivated for the seed.
Select dark green. cris p,
full pods (fava pods arc
lima-like in shape, but
thicker and s lightly
larger}. The s he lled
beans should be plump
with a tender green or
greenish-wh1te skin. You
. an store unshelled fresh
beans in the refrigerator
for a few days. Dry beans
a r e avai labl e 1n
numerous vari eties.
When selecting, discard
beans that are wrinkled
or discolored. Store in
tightly covered container
in cool, dry place.
CORN. Cooking: Cook
ears of com in a covered
pan in a small amount of
boiling salted water till
just done, 6 to 8 minutes.
Or. cook in uncovered
pan in enough bolling
s a ll~d water lo cover
cars. For foil -baked corn.
spread ears with butter
and sprinkle with salt and
pepper. Wrap corn in
foil; bake at 450 degrees
about 25 minutes. Turn
several limes during bak·
ing. For cut corn. cook in
a covered pan ma small
amount of boiling salted
water or milk till done. 12
to 15 minutes.
PEAS. Serving: Offer
buttered peas with an
herb for a fresh-tasting
dish ; try basil, mar-
joram or sage. Creamed
peas and new patatoes 1s
a papular combination.
Dry peas or black-eyes
peas are tasty additions
to soup.
or70degreesoutofdirect l S·ounce can re4i findings solely m terms came out as healthy, 1£
light. Store fully ripe kidneybeans oflheceramic, lithic and not h ealthier, than
tomatoe s in the l m edium sweet fibrousartifacts. before."
refrigerator crispi,!r and onion, sliced and separat· "Great qu<Anl1ties of Bryant. his office clut-
use within a fewdays edintorings pote ntially valu<Abl e tered with the pre·
Two of the foflowing 1:.icupchoppedgreen artifacts were in a tl · historic coprolites. one
three recipes Green pepper vertenlly destroyed or 400,000 years ohl. said his
Beans Supreme a nti ~:icupvmegar discarded through a lack research work may
Marinated Three-Bean 12cupsaladoil of understandine of their seem somewhat unus ual
Salad are asked for 1 4 cup sugar usefulness,·· the scientist to some people and con.
often. The third, Twe-l teaspoon celery went on. '"One such item. cedes the laboratory is a
Bean Fritters. is an un-seed which has only recently far cry frem a perfume
usual dish made with Dram canned beans. In been saved with any factery.
green and wax beans. large bowl combme Lima degree of regularity. Once the coproliles are I BEANS beans. green beans. red i ~ h u m a n taken to the lab, they are
Selecting: Green and . kidneybeans.onionrings -------------------~--------------------6---------wax beans are grown for and green pepper. In a
the lender, fleshy pod. screw-top jar combine
Choose long, straight vinegar, salad oil. sugar .
pods that snap crisply and celery seed. cover
when bent. Lima and and shake we ll Pour
fava beans are usually vinegar mixture over
cultivated for the seed . vegetables and star hght·
Select dark green. crisp, ly. Cover and rcfri&erate
full pads <fava pods are for 8 hours or overnight,
lima-like in shape, but stirring occas1onally.
thicker and s lightly Drain before serving.
I a rger). T he shelled Makes8servings
beans should be plump TWO·BEAN FRITTERS
with a tender green or 1 cup green beans cut
.l(reenish-white skin . You in 1 :i-inchpieces
t"an store unshelled fresh 1 cup wax beans cut
beans in the refrigerator in 112·inch pieces
for a few days . Dry beans l 1h cups all· purpose
a re a v a i I a b I e i n flour
numerous varieties 1 tablespoon baking
When selecting, discard powder
beans that are wrinkled 1 beaten egg
or discolored. Store in lcupm1lk
tightly covered container Fat for deep.fat fry·
in cool.dry place. mg
Preparin g : Was h Cook green and wax
~reen and wax beans: re-beans as directe d on
move ends and strings. general cooking m!>truc
Leave whole. or cut in I· lion sheet. Drain well
inch pieces For French-Stir together nour, bak·
style, slice diagonally in~ pawder. and 3,4 teas -
cnd to end. Shell Ii mas or poon salt. Combine eg~.
favas and wash. Rinse milk. and cooked beans.
dry beans: place anheavy Add to dry ingredients,
saucepan or kettle with m i x 1 n g j u s t l i I I
about 3 times as much moistened. Drop batter
water as beans. Cover by tablespoonsful into
pan: soak overnight. COr. d e e p h o t r a t C 3 7 5
bring to boiling; simmer degrees>. Fry, several at
for 2 minutes. Remove a time, till golden brown,
Crom heat. Cover pan; 3 to 4 minutes. Drain on
soak at leas t 1 hour.> Do paper toweling. Makes
not drain. about 24 vegetable fr it·
Cooking: Jn covered ters.
pan cook whole or cut
fresh beans in s mall
amount of bolling salted
water till crisp-tender, 20
to 30 minutes. Cook
French·style beans 10 to
12 minutes. Cover and
simmer dry beans till
tender. GREENS BEANS
SUPREME
1 pound green beans
or 2 9-ounce packages
frozen l''r ench-style
green beans
1 small onion. shced
1 tables poon snipped
parsley
3 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons all-
pu rpose flour
l/:r teas poon finely
shredded lemon peel
1t'.i cupmilk
1 cup dairy sour
cream
lh cup shredded
American cheese
V. cup fine dry bread
crumbl
Cut fr es h beans
French-style and cook as
direcled. <Or, cook
frozenbearus according to
packa11e directions.>
Drain. Cook onion and
parsley in 2 tablespoons
of the buUer till onion is
tender. Blend in flour,
lemon peel, ~ teaspoon
salt. and dub pepper.
Add mUk: cook and stir
tJll thickened and bubbly.
Stir ln sour cream and
cooked beans: heat till
Just bubbly. S~n Into
l ·quart cauerole.
Sprlnkle with cheeH.
)felt the remain.in& 1
tablOlpoon buUer; toll ~ltb bread cnambe and
•Priftlll• a\Op buna. Broll • to I ~ from lleat till ChMMmelt.t Ud enmbt brown. 1 to 2
mlmlttl. Maes a ·~· ~.JIQDl.\TBD
TDBE-8KAlfMLA
11~ MM• tM Ima .....
ll-.o9DC• ~ ....
Fresh green beans are
in the markets at least on
lhe East and West coasts
for consumers during the
winter months. The
variety is principally,
Kentucky Wonders.
South Florida is provid·
ing this fres h produce for
the east side and West
Mexico has been harvest·
ing for the Pacific Coast
markeLc;. The imparting
of green beans from Mex·
ico during the winter
months has grown five-
fold since 1955.
One of the most produc-
tive vegetable states or
Mexico is Sinaloa. and
the Culican Valley ef
Sinaloa ls producing 70
percent or that country's
winter vegetables. The
area is located In Mexico
roughly across the Gutt of
California from the toe of
Baja California.
The number or rail cars
and truck loads or green
beans entering the Unit·
ed States from the border
city of Nogales, Jocated
close to the Arizona llne,
baa increased from 390
ratlcart and trucks ln
1983to4CMIn1964 with the
.h•avy aupply montbs
from January and Aprtl.
Nearly all v~getables ar-, Federal-State in·
spected at Nogales. The
Conf ederaclon de A.aocl•· clonH Agrlcc>laa dtl
Eitado de Slnaloa known
at CAAi>~ baa adopted
very bigb quality tan· dardl. Only Iota me.Uns
the a&IOClatlon'• Q\4ality
ltandu9a IH lllO'f'ed *°
Cl'Oll &hi border.
SiiiM:liled tlrMD B•ana
ta •orb*l*i 'UlbtlY with ~acfont0nUd
cooMd ooty Ull tendtt'.
HOW much be• navor com•~ Wlll d•·
pend an JOUr seJ.cU<"m. LoGk for p.Mll lhat bne a
fretla 1htieli UCI 1nap;
leaft the d• and rub:-~GM1antbell*I,
HERE ARE A FEW DF DIR
THDISAIDS DF
DISClllT PRICE
NKIS lfR<TIVI WO., SIPT. 21 t•I 'lllS., SIPT.17. 1'17. -
MEWCROP ~ .i
RED DELICIOUS ~
APPLES
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CJe IWL Y PtL;;...;O;;..T _____ w_.ecs ... needa_......_...x._. s.e ......... '•-m ... 1»._r.-2-'1 • ._1 ... e;..;_11
Households Alter Diets for Healtn · Reasons
Dy ooaamv Wl:NCK ... Omit ............. _
Ac:rordina to • recent
Ec:onom1c: Ruearcb
:wrv1~ aurvey of 1,400
U S hou5eholds, a
,11nlficant s ha" of
m r1cana are chantlnt their du~b for healt6
reasons
The s urveyors found
lhat conaumers in about half ol tht households
studied were alterln1
their dlets -eJther t.o al·
about U porcent fut
lmaxlmum allow4:d by
luw 11 30rrcent and le1n an tlxlru le1n
around beef which MM)' have 10, LS, or 20 percent
fol dep~ndlna on the
11tundal'1l._of the murkot
tt'iv'liO 5lble that t~ la 1 erence m
the kind of sed in the different 111 nds.
This, too, would be to
the market •elling t.
Moat around beet made from older
antmals uaually cowa
that m1cy be o.s much aa 8
to 10 ye1&n old. While the m1:ut from older beef ls
usually more navorlul. it
11 ortcn touah, due to the
type llnd amount of con·
nectlve tisaue. The
leaner grinds may be
made from more tender,
h11her grade animals
This could help to ex· plain the large price dlf·
ference between re1ular
and lean grinds.
ecently, USDA re·
searchers developed a
method for removing the
connective tissue from
ground beef. The process
is called "desinewio1."
Whether or not it will
ever be Implemented re·
mains to be seen,
however.
Q. Recently we bad a
Ore lD our home wblcb
cau1ed smoke damage
a nd scorching of our
clotbln& and draperies.
Is there anything we can
do to remove tbls
dama1e?
A. We know or no home remedy Cot this problem
it requires skills
beyond those of a
homemaker. You will
need to take your
damaged clothing and
draperies to a pro-
fessional cleaner to nnd
out if they can be
salvaged. There are
firms which specialize in
the treatment and repair
of fire and smoke
damaged fabrics. Your
local fire department or
your insurance company
claims office may be
able to refer you to one of
these firms.
Q. My bu.thud and I
are having • "friendly
dlsagreemenl" over tbe
relative quality of cane
and bed 1qar. I alwa1s
buy cane sugar as I've
found It 1lves t.be beat re·
1uJta when makln' Jam, etc.· Be telb me I should
buy bed sugar becaue It
coata len. Wblcla do yoa
recommend?
A. I'll have lQ support
your husband on tbia
question. There ls no di!·
ference whataoever
between cane and beet
su1ar. Both are pure
sucrose -a crystalline
form of sugar. They are
equally sweet and . wtll
have exactly the same
chemical action in foods. Thus, you might as well
buy whichever type b
cheapesL
The only difference
between them Is the
'Source ol the sutar: cane
sucar comes from 1u11r cane; beet sugar comes
from· sugar beets. Jn
each case the sugar is
extracted in liquid form,
water evaporated,
sucroee crystallized, im·
f urltles removed. The
lnal product, pure
sucrose, la Identical. So don't let .clvertisera fool
you into thlnJdn1 one
type la better than the
other. .
levtate exisUng health .-----------------------------------------------------------------•
problems or to avoid
potential ones. No al·
t e mpt was mad e to
measure the amount or
change tn diets and con·
sumption however.
Jn more than three out
of five or all households
surveyed someone had a
health problem (either
diagnosed by a physician
or self·ascrlbed). The
health problems most frequently mentioned
were: overweight, high
blood pressu re, al·
lergies, heart disease,
kidney problems, and
diabetes.
One-fourth or the
households surveyed re·
ported diet changes to
avoid potential health
problems with half of
these households also re-
porting djet changes to
meet existing health
problems.
In general, the dtet-
consc ious consumers
sought to cut down on
items relatively high in
s ugar, saturated fats,
and oils -and also in
calories.
The diet changes were
more likely to occur in
higher income
households, where
families were larger,
and where the
homemakers were more
highly educated.
The diet changes re· .
ported by the surveyed
families make sense.
Research evidence ex-
tsts to support the belier
that cutting down on calories, sugars, and fats
all can be helpful in
treatine many of the
health problems that the
people reported having.
Recently the U .S.
Senate Nutrition Com·
m ittee, chaired by
Senator George
• McGovern <D·S.D.).
after conducting bear·
ings where members
heard from foremost
nutritionists, set forth some dietary goals for
Americans. The goala in·
eluded:
•A 25 percent reduc·
tion in fat intake;
•A 40 percent reduc·
tion in sugar consump·
lion;
•A 50 to 35 percent
reduction in salt intake;
•A cholesterol intake
or 300 milligrams dally.
Researchers have not
yet proven, to everyone's
satisfaction, that reduc·
ing cholesterol intake
will in fact help prevent
coronary heart dlleaae. For this reason, a
number or groups, in·
eluding the American
Medical Assn., tbeSocie·
ty of Nutrition Educa•
tioo, and the United Egg
Producers, have object·
ed to the committee's
acroS&-t.he-board recom-mendation that all peo-
pl e a bould reduce
cholesterol int.ate to 300
milUgrams a day.
The Society of Nutrl·
Uon Education, while aereeln& in general with
the need for Americans
to reduce a~ar. fat, and
calorie intake, also ob-
jected to the specific
percentaae reductions
recommended by the
committee stnc-e tbey
are not app~rtate f9f
everytndlViduaJ. QUESTIONS WE .UE
AS&J:D:
Q. 11 ll •1 lmaO-•· tloa, or 11 &tie lower
~priced ll'Oaad beef
........ ~ &M lall'er '1::!3r'"..,.~, , I die dllfenaee bet ............ ,.
lylatlllea...-otfat.
A. It'• true that there is a dlfference in fat con·
tent betweiii ·~ar'' ~ beef -Wldcb haa
0
®
Meats
~~·~.!IP Steak• Lb •1sa
Rolled Round Roaat S137
8oneleM 8"1 . . lb
r Boneless ~
@yop ROUND
STEAKS
Value $139
T''=•ed Lb.
~ ~
Rump Roa1t1 ~· S139
Bonec.s. Beef Round Lb
~~~~~~ Roaat lb s119
CORNISH
@GAME HENS
Medallion Ot Pattie Jeen
0 ~~~~~~. !'~-~~~~~~ Lb s155
0 ~!!.~~.~~.~~!~er L11 69c
~ Spilt or Cut-up
'l!Y Quartered
FRYING
CHICKENS
U.S.0.A. Inspected Farm Fresh c
Lb.
Frying Chickens c..o."°
F•mlly Pack Incl 4 Orum1tlclt1. 59 4 Thlgha with llllCltl. 4 B<eul Halvn C
Wllh 9-clta. 4 Wino• No Glblell Lb
~ DRUMSTICKS
'l!Y OR THIGHS
0
®
®
U S 0 A In~~ Frying Chtckena
f!~o~~ry ~~y~~ ~I~~. L11 S139
~'::~~,:~!~--~~~~~~Lt> s1 II
Boneleaa Ham ~
lhOmu E Wllaon Ma11arp.ece • Lb.~,--
e
10
tow
......
Meats
U.S.O.A. Inspected
TURKEY
DRUMSTICKS
® ~~·=~ ~-1~~--~~~n . s11•
@ ~sh~.~~n~t~r=~~. ~~11. 99c
HERITAGE HOUSE
@ ~~~~:~~ '179
~ Pork Loin Chop• \lY F11mtly PKk incl 3 End Cbopt & e Center Cut C!lopa . . . . . . . 0 Pork Loin Chop•
Centtr Cut ................ .
Lb s1•st
Lb s1n
~ TASTI BASTED
~ TURKEYS ~= 59c
Hafttage t-tou.. GrllCN 'A' 10· 14 lbl LB.
Produce
@ITALIAN ~'!!!E PLUMS lb 25c
Solld Crisp
ICEBERG
LETTUCE 3i89c
~ ~
®
®
0
Red Velvet Yam• 29c
Smootti Taxture . • ~II
~~'!!!~r~-. ..... . ~-25c
~~~~-~~~~ ........... 6 i 39c
~HANGING
~POTHOS
Ea '2" e Inch Poe • .. • .. .. . • • • . . •
••• low prices )JOU can count on, and saWngs )JOU can count up!,
Groceries
... Refreshing
COCA
COLA
."l Liter 8 gc No Return
Bottle
~
® ~e!~14~0LC1n ......... 23C
® ~.!:~!·c!~~~~~-· ......... 33c
® ~~~!~~.~.!~~~~~~ ....... 41c
@MACARONI & · f.~1~~~0, .............. : .. 27c
a:.\ Soup n' Noodl• =.. s~ \lY Ctllc:Mn, 8Mf or Portt 2 ~ Ot. Qip ••.. • ' -
a:.\ Spaghetti Sauce =.. \lY Prlrile 8&1M Thlcll I z.ty 15'-+ or. 54c ~" w/M"t "' w/Muttlr6om Jar •··
® .~~, ~~~~~ ........... 39c
@ J~:'!·!~ c~~-·~~ ................ 49°
0
Printed
Large
Roll
0 ~°!':~0c.n~~ .............. 1~
0 ~~~ c~~~!~ ........ : ...... 53°
®
0
®
®
®
®
0
Groceries
~:-~,~~~.~~ ....... ~
~~~~L ~~~~ .. ~.~~~~-~... &&e
Flaky Flhc Wafera
Mothefa-Fudge er-°' 59c Vanilla Creme-Your ctiolce 7 Oz. Pkg.
32 Oz.
BoUle
Hunts
TOMATO
KETCHUP
79c.
~°t!!.'!!P. .!!'.~!~ ...... 54c
Mazola Corn 011 t.lh1 48 Oz. Boute,.: .•. , ................... ~ £-
Potato Chips ~
Heritage HOUM Aeaular. Olp 73c or 880-8 Oz. Twin Pecll ............ .
@GLOBE A·1 !-!!~!'!~or. Pk~ ........ 2gc
®
®
®
0
0
~~~~~~.~~~~~ ....... 6i9SC
~i:e'!lt~:~~ ........... •1°1
Mothera Cookl•
"-"" lutt9r ~. Taffy, 89C ~ Piny Time 1f Oz. Pllo ...... .
~~~.~.~~~ .......... •111
~!e:.~.~~ .. ~~~········· •1 79
Wines & Spirits
Quality Farms
Grade 'AA'
LARGE
.EGGS
Dozen Carton
c
® ~!~~t:!'o~ ............. 7gc
® ~ !!'..~ ~~!,~~~-~.~.~ .... •411
Health&. Beauty Aids
0 ~-~T!'!!~t~oo .............. 1131
O ~~~~~~~:tt ...... aac
0 ~~.!'~~.~~~~~~.~ ............ 1138
0
0
0
Ultra Ban Roll-On
Anti ~"'' Deodorent 97c ~I( "' Unec.Med 1.5 Oz. 81111 •••••.
Ban Baile ::.;....: s121 "9Q. or Neutr• 3 Oz. Noll Aeroeol Spr111
Cona•Dlrln Tablets 55c COid Teitei. for CNldnln Pkg. of 3e. , , •
CANOES
• Just one of the hundreds of topics in .....
BRITWICI BIOR
ENCYClOPABJIA
on sale this w~ s2•·
Frozen Foods
Quick and Deflclous
DOWNYFLAKE
@ WAFf:LES .. ~.·2ac
~ ~
0
0
®
0
0
0
Aunt Jemima Pancake 9nc Ree.« ...... e.tter 11 Oz. Catton.. ~-
?~: ]~9!~. ~.~.~.~~ ..... 95c
~.!!'.!-oc~y:_~~~. ~~~~ ..... 84c
1.-:'~:J! ~on~.~~~.*123
~= ~~~~-~~~~~~~.esc
~:~~~~~~~ ..... 4SC
Deli-Dairy
{
• Sebool h11 atarted, '~ aumrnC!ll' "-endlnl and ~. 't hal meana t bal aort
.,. trull. and melona are
. 2 rapld),y f laJJ.hln1 lhctr
.. Ml.IGD. nun
Consumers can •xpecl
, a r~ windup &o plum.
peach. and nectarlnea
wttb this w kend bein1
.. the last "aood one" un-
'• \II next season. Peac:h ~
• will remain available
• wlLb color bem. much
more pale compared to
s ummer varaetlea.
Italian prune pluma are
cominl In fresh rrom t.be
Northwest and remain a
aoodbuy.
•
Fall l{rapes will be ap-
pearlna with varaetiea
s u ch a s Tokay ,
Calameria and Alamerla
being heavy an Yolume.
Prices w1U be somewhat
higher due to supply loss
from August rains.
A full complement of
.apples s hould be in
-.stores now. California
: and Northwest growing
t districts are in full pro-
:duction with Washington
Districts increasing
•weekJy.
Citrus is a mixed bag.
·oranges are in short sup·
p l y; grapefruit is
'-0 iminlshlng. F lorid a
l emons and limes are ar·
riving in volume. Prices
are low with quality ex·
cellent.
Super
Suppers
RICE A LA ROAST
1 cup chopped green
onions with tops
1h cup chopped
green pepper
2 tablespoons butter
or margarine
3 cups hot cooked
rice, cooked in beef broth
3 tables poon s
chopped pimiento
Salt and pepper
Saute onions and green
pepper in butter until
tender crisp. Add rice
and pimiento. Toss light-
ly. Adjust seasonings to
taste. Serve with your
favorite roast. Makes 6
servings.
STEAK UKRAINE
l lf.t pounds lean beef
round steak. cul In than
narrow strips
3 tabl espoo n s
'vegetable oil
2 cups each s liced
onions and carrots
. ~.. cup Burgundy or
;other dry red wine
~ cup beef broth
21h teaspoons
!seasoned salt
• 1r.i cup sour cream
3 cups hot cooked
rice
Saute steak In oil until
,brown. Add onions and
·cook 2 minutes longer.
Stir in carrots, wine,
broth, and seasonings.
Bring to a boil . Reduce
heat. cover. and simmer
20 minutes. Stir in sour
cream; beat thoroughly.
Serve over beds of fluffy
rice. Makes 6 servings.
Perteet for picnics and
barbeques.
ANCHOVY EGG SALAD
6 large eggs, hard·
cooked
2-ounce can f lat
anchovy fillets, drained
-\4 cup minced eel ery
3 table s poons
mayonnaise
2 teaspoons cider
vinegar
1A teaspoon paprika
Salt to taste
Lettuce, cucumbers.
tomatoes and radishes
H a l ve eggs
l e n a tbwise; remove
yolka and mash them
with 6 of the anchovy
ftlleta (cut up), t he
cel ery, mayonnaise,
vtne1ar, paprika and
salt.
Refill whites with the
mixture; if It is very aoft
you can cover and cblll it
before refUlint.
Arran~e the ew on
lettuce •nd s urround
wUb sliced cucumbera
and tom~ ud the
• radl•hea; 1arn t1b the
eiaa with the remalnlnf
· anchovy ftlleta. Kun " .toe~.
llONHSICS
3 CUP1 cootld rice
, ~cup ral•llMI 2~~mlllt ~~--,. 2 tab~ bUtter
or marii.iifte
1 teupocm "'Jl'•ted
lemoni*il ~:,...
l ~lemon
juice ·
Combine rtce, ralllol,
mla, lllOoly, and bUtttlr.
lril)I to a ad1, NdU(e
tM ~ lnl ilmmer for
11 ·~· IUntnl Of· nelOURy. air la letnCMa ,..-_, Julet. Kallei t .......
q
For all Snttnta and
purpo1es m Iona are oo
lb• way out. Casaba r•·
m•ln your beat buy 11
flavor ts excellent and
the price leaa expensive.
Bananu wlll reflect a
11upply loe1 from the re·
cent hurricane and
heavier demand with the
advent of achool
lunches; prices are ril-
ing. Another item 1oln1
up in prlce will bts
avoeadoe. ·Summer aus>-
pllea are Sone. Pineapple
1upplh1 are non -
exlatent. Some produc·
Uoo from Mexico and
Central Amertca ia ap·
pearlq. Quality this
lime l ooka p-o or.
HawaUan auppUes are
atlU three w~b away.
VEGETAllL'ES
The btg news la ln the
lceber1 lettuce variety.
Quality Is up anct prices
are down. Heavy de·
m and on radta1'es and
1reen onions witb aup·
p Jlea comin a . f r o m
California Grown
,... Chuck·Bl.de Cut
Fo.FamiSFryers Clu:k Roast
O.,.Frahwl per II lb.
W!dn!!d!y. S.ptember 21, 1877
Sall.Das only ts causing a
dramatlc prlce increase.
Conaumera with a
taate for uparagus will
see a general improve-
ment tn quallty in the
next week. Prices will
remain h1tb however.
Banana aquaah ts an
excellent_buy this week
with zucchini remaining a closeaecond.
Corn, carrots,
cauliflower and bunch
goods Will remain hJgb in
price for at least 10 d~s.
Another excellent
ve1etbale value this
week is green beans.
A LOOK TO THE
FUTURE
Produce departments
wlll be re-merchandising
as t h e gradual
shift to winter items
tak es hold. Apples
and cooking vegetables
wlll be receiving much
more prominence. Figs
and dried fruit are items
to watch for In the future.
The first week of Ock>ber
5
...,,.,
lntrocluctory
Off er!
We invite you to try
the quality of
Ralphs Brands
Any ltll Peclleg•
Grallld
Belt
new crop nuts will be ar-
riving. At this time It ap-
pears that prices will be
much higher even
though crop yields are
tremendous. Almonds
are experiencing a
heavy export demand in
ruture trading. Walnuts,
rllberts, and pecana are
enjoying a resurgence in
consumer popularity
'thus creating a tenific
demand. Brazil nuts will
be oil in supplies this
year as the pollinization
Orange
Juice 6oz.
Clft
Fhfotlhe
... IOft
DAILY PILOT €J J
period in Brazil was
aborter plus many trees
are being torn down for
new cooatrucUon in that
country.
SPEaALTY ITEMS
Thia area of the fresh
Jruit and vegetable In-
dustry will be enhanced
tbla week with the in-
troduction of several
new items for the' fall.
Quince which heretofore
baa been on the small
size will begin to arrive
in lar1er sizes.
you
whole per.
lb.
• per
lb.
Golden Premium Meats
Al Ralphs Beef Steaks cmcl Roam_. USDA Choice ••duUwely
pet 89 lb ••
'Uso• ""' &M1 .. one1eea 22• mict Tri Tip Roast per
lb.
USDA aMf. Tllicli Top Aeund 1'' m iu London Broil Steak jMt
lb.
JMf , ..
lb.
p« 121 lb.
~.88 :: , ..
Super Deli
per 211
lb.
1201. 111 pllg.
tu. 111 p~.
~ llelplle D1"'9ll"S•lflff" ~Swiss Cheese ~ 1''
~ llllplle-CrH _, ,,..... ~Whipping Cream
\ ·~~.49
D W"-'11Hf
Jumbo Franks
['ii All•tavort ~Ralphs Fruit Drink t:t .• 87
Health & Beauty
,, ... 48 M. a
... 21• tf1•
o rut~Panc chops '::. 1••
l'21 P'~7oast ~.79 D , .... ...,.,rw... 2'' Ground Chuck Patties pkg.
D ~eacon 120Z. 1• ...
~T~ey Drumsticks ~.39
o ;.;;;&=r '::. , ..
~ e";d'Of the Fryer ~.89
Super Bakery
~c~.dc;iWt.at Bntad .... 59
1 ~rn;..euns .... 49 oll e
:t.89
~.89
Wines & Spirits
Frozen Foods
=. 371
~ 311
111 211 lllM
3or.
pkg.
Compere & Sew• ="
•
S ib. II b19
Aalpht Own Brend
AllStm'
CannmlPeal
11 oz.
c:.n
Pantry Fillers
D "--0...llrMd'l.-lrtllilV....._ 19 Arlltocrat Cat Food ~ •
[']! ~-toleMtl ..... • 19 ~ Ralphs Cleanser '.:i: •
(;1sc;;.. Tomatoes '~·.39
~ CMi-o Mix ,~:-.27
~~Ofllill 35 ~ Long Spaghetti ,:.:-•
~ &r;m Gravy Mix ·~: .19
:.99
,.. .119
per.
lb.
"2 011.11 ctn.
Supet' Produce
Super Floral
:: .10
~.29
': .09
':: .08
•• 89
~s'".!!.~---79 ~ VCllllllVIRllll• !Klftc" a
~o7'tBouqueta ~ 1·~ ---•ll••••11•"'""""' .. ••·--....;.·
Liberty Blue
DinnenVare
11111lo In Sc.1l11\L.hl~ End.~
exclumely at Ralphs
Hlatortc1t Scenes
lriild & 8ulllr
Plates
t
a
~ s
e
l
$
p
(
n •
p
I h
b c
l·
d
b
~
t• a
a
q • • • ti
l ti
' ....
CJ DAIL v PILOl W9dnNda , S embet 21 , 11177
Member Martin Brux
stands tall In the
food line .
•
The TaU Club
If you are 6 '2" in your stocking feet,
this club helps you see eye to eye.
By MARCIA FORSBERG
Cit tale o.11, ...... ~
For tall people, the traditional question
''How's the weather up there?" 1s as common as
panUegs and sleeves that are too short and
nicknames like Beanpole aQd Jolly Green Giant.
There are advantages to being tall, though,
like standing out in a crowd. and being able to see
over the tops or peoples' heads at a parade.
Still, those good points have their dismal
counterparts, like trying to fit into a sportscar or
taking a Jong flight on an airplane with little
legroom.
And when a 6-foot woman is asked to dance,
it can be embarrassing when she unfolds herself,
stands up and measures one whole head taller
than the asker.
Where can talls meet people they can see eye
to eye with? The Tall Club of Orange County, Inc.,
provides a social atmosphere for uniting men
and women who are above average in height.
Requirements are 5' 10" for women and 6' 2"
for men -barefoot. Members may be single or
married, but if married, both must meet the
height requirements.
U one partner falls short, be or she can be·
considered "a short friend of a tall person," says
Pat Minshall, creativity chairperson who is also
known as the "Safeway Snatcher."
The title stems from her somewhat un-
orthodox method of recruiting new members, ex-
plains Stretch Grant, editor or the club's monthly
newspaper. He experienced her technique in a
supermarket last year.
''Stretch was lurking between the soda pop
and the crackers when I spotted him," she says.
At 6' 6' ·, he att.racts his share of attention.
Ms Minshall literally comers tall people and
tells them about the non-profit organization
which j s a member or the California Council of
,
Tall Clubs and a member of Tall Clubs Interna-
tional.
Funcllons s uch as bike rides, volleyball
games, dances and Friday evening TGIF parties.
give the 200 members, most or whom are single,
a chance to meet ln sociable surrroundings.
"It sure beats the bars," revealed Grant.
Marilyn Caron, vice president, agreed. say-
ing, "U you go to a bar. you 're going to meet a lot
or short people if you 're a tall girl, and you
probably don't want to be dancing with some guy
who only comes to your navel.
"At the tall club, everyone's going to be tall
-you have that in common right away."
Being tall means being noticed and being re-
m embered. Members agree that as youngsters il
often was difficult to accept their height.
"J was 6 feet by the time I was 13 years old,"
says Ms. Minshall. Now, even though she has to
buy her clothing in tall shops -which usually
are more expensive than regular stores -she
thinks being tall is "the neatest thing in the
world."
Miss Caron feels the same way. "I owe it all
to the tall club. I used to wear flats, but now I
wear heels all the time.
"I'm proud to be tall, and I admit that I 'm 6
feet instead of saying I 'm 5'111ia" likel used to."
Diane Darby notes that those who are tall
"lend to be leaders." Grant concurs: "People
look up to us more than just physically, which
kind of puts a responsibility on us to meet that ex-
pectation."
The club will host a Welcome to Our World
Party for prospective members at 8 p.m. Satur-
day, Sept. 24, at 10337 Slater, Fountain Valley.
Also planned is a sandcastle building contest on
Saturday, Oct. 8, at Corona del Mar beach.
More information is available from Miss
Caron at964·1244.
New Look at Diabetes
By GIL BROYLES
OKLAHOMA CITY
<AP> -Why is there a
higher incidence of
diabete s among
Oklahoma Indians than
among remote villagers
in East Pakistan?
Why are Japanese
spared some tragic com-
plications of the disease?
To what extent does
diet and environment af-
fect one's chances or con· -
tracling diabetes? How
la rge a part does heredi-ty play?
Pursuing answers to
th ese questions , and
raising others, is the aim or a worldwide study
which culminates its
first phase Oct. 1 with a
m eeting in Geneva.
The multi-national en·
deavor is coordinated by
the World Health
Organization of the Unit-
ed Nations. For the past
three years, each
· cooperating country bas
been studying and
gathering information on
500 diabetics aged 35 to
54. Now, scientists will
gather to review the re-
sults and plan further
studies on the disease
which knows no national
boundaries.
DR. KELLY WEST
clinical profeasor oE
medicine at the
University or Oklahoma
Health Sciences Center,
is a member of the plan·
ning panel of the study
and planning chairman
of the International is 20 times great~ than
Diabetes Federation. or the population in Eut
which first conceived the Pakistan.
long-range program. He One goal of the multi-
predicts that the findings national effort is to re-
will affect treatment of solve the old scientific
diabetics around the argument or bow much
world. "genetic and environ-
"It could be that the mental" influences lead
s t and a rd d i et o r to frequency ·of diabetes.
diabetics is not well con· Some of the compllca-
c e i v e d • " h e s a y s • lions are thought to be
••carbohydrates may not genetically related. West
be bad for diabetics. But says.
the study suggests that certain old truths will THUS FAR,~ study
hold up well. For in· shows that the mcuie~ce
stance. fat diabetics of dlabetes ~~ Its side
s hould reduce their effects are similar~ all
calories." ~.eveloped co~ntr1es.
Dr. West also says re-.Switzerland is very
sults of the atudy may similar to Ne~ York,
"lendstrengthtotbenew C a l i r o,; n 1 a or
view that the reduction Oklahoma, Westsays.
of starchy foods is prob· •'There is 10 ti mu as
ably not an important much diabetes ln the
part of the dietary United States than in
strategyin&abet.es." certa.in rural. com-munities of Asia and
DIABETES charac· Latin America.•• he
terlzed by insulin defi· says.
ciency and excess sugar And comparative
in the blood, affects 10 studies in Japan have
'million Americans and shown that. among
causes 300,000 deaths in diabetics. ••nene and
this country each year, kidney damage is
according to the similar, irrespective ,of
American Diabetes As· the kind of diet and way
sociation (ADA). or life."
But the only U.S. group But certain other
in the study is Oklahoma complications associat-
1 n d I an s , s e l e c t e d ed with diabetes, includ·
because or their biib in· ing gangrene and heart
cJdence of diabetes and attacks. abow a marked·
because tribal rolls are ly less frequent in·
available. Dr. West says cidence in Japan than in
uslne other U.S. groups manyotberareas,
would be of Jlttle value "IAPANESE dla-
slnce race it seldom betJcs who live tn Ha·
catalogued. . ailba th in ta
• • t
0.11, ............. ..,~*td!O'~ 2
Paul Fe/Ix, 6'4'~ is signed up by Bonnie Sheetz. : •
Maureen Du Belko, 5 '4 ", left, waits on
Bob Titus and Pat Minshall. over 6:
J.tn(jng the members, Stretch Grant,
"5 ft. 18 inches," and Marilyn Caron.
jSe~,~q~t}\IJ!UltJunJ.~P !:
SAVE .. Thi• f>og• Effe<riv•
Through Sept. 27th •
.20% to 25% 4.--. .... x.
·'·
West says the project's w · ve e same c •
1081 11 to learn •'the ex· ence of heart attacks as l•-----!lmllllllll ....... .__
tent to which varloua fac· the general population In
d.J __ ,__ k Hawaii and more than
tors oew&·~ mar ed the Japanese in Japan.
dlfferencea among That auuests the race 1oclet1es. among the fre· factorlanotakey ... queney ot diabetes and lo , · • particular the frequency The ltUdy s aim, then,
ofthecompllcaUon.s." be says. ts to "'let clues to why It's different.
THE STUDY la fQCut· "a it diet, l.., amok· ina on d.labet1c1• 1121t•P· tng, lower blood 1u1ar.
tlbUlty to bllndneu, type of treatment?" The
heart attack And other answers, West bellevea,
coronary dJ1order1. may belp dtabeUca
lddne1 tau.,re and everywhere, tnclud.lnc c111_,rene of the foot thOMtntheUnltedstaws
lelldlnlto~putMion. wbo 1pend about 1$ ·•we ant~& tllat bilUOll·aDmaally. most!Y
dlf f ere...,•• am on 1 totreetcomp)ICllilonl. 1od~e• ari! 1reattr "lt we cOuld nduct thai*l hHD U19tiaht.'' amDUtiUCIDI beeaUlt ot w-..,.. 4l•bttea from 30,000 to Fer lDltarice atudl• 20,000 a year tbat•a
ahow that tbe tncldftoe 10,000 people wbo
ol di•~ amona .... ~ouldn't have to bave • American lndian trlbea l•I cut ott." '
Knit pants
• Proportk>Md fit • Polyester knit
• Easy.care potv-tter kntt • Many col6rs
• Ootslc top wff1' 1~Jrta or pants
•Ml1M•'1i1.._ •
5 59 ·~"'-s.."
Women's slzH 32-38t
hgulor $7.99 Sale 6.39
449-...o." ..
Women'• 1tx.140-44:
leplar $6. 99 Sale 5.2'
LACE-TRIMMED
Panties
• Eiasy-car• acetate
• White, po1t.l1
•Sl1t1~+1
-----... -·--------·---···. , " . . .. --............... " " .. . .......... •-' ... --..
Black
Tie Event
A black.tie dinner
dance will be
spnsored by the board
o f directors for
Providence Speech
and Hearing Center
in Orange on Thurs-
day, Oet. 13. Mary
McDonald of Corona
del Mar is fund -
raising committee
chairman. Festivities
will begin at 7 p.m .
with social hour at the
Marriott Hote l, Newport Beach
followed by dinner at
8p,,m.
From left, Susan Russell, Christoper Shaw, 2, and Margaret Anne Inman at
Providence Speech and Hearing Center.
Persons wishing to
pa rticipate in this an-
n u a 1 fund r ais ing
event to b e ne fit
Providence Speech
and Hearing Center
may c ontact the
Center, 639·4990 or
c all the ticket
chairman, Carl
Karcher of Anaheim
at 774-5796.
CALENDAR
TROJAN GUILD OF ORANGE
COUNTY : Geoff Gilc hris t and
Danielle Dietrich from USC will
s peak on the current status of the
university at 10 a.m., Thursday, Sept.
22 at the. Newport Har bor Yacht Club
ORANGE COUNTY ORT: A bowl
ing party will be held at 7:30 p.m ..
Saturday, Sept. 24, at the Fountain
Valley Bowl.
Proceeds will go to ORT's Social As
sistance Project. For information call
963-8588 after 6 p. m .
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF
MEDICAL ASSISTANTS: The annual
Fall Fashion Show will take place at
Sebastian's West in Anaheim at a
luncheon Saturday, Sept. 24 .
For inform a ti on contact Jackie
Fisher or .Judi Larson, 542·5681 or
551-1958.
ARTHRITIS FOUNDATION: New
offi cers have been elected by the
Orange County Branch. They are Dr
Sanford H. Anzel, president; Mrs
Evelyn Copeland, vice president;
Charles Bond, treasurer, and John P.
Kingman. assistant treasurer.
HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
AUXILIARY: Mrs. Jack L. Hetzler,
Corona del Mar. has been cited for her
donation of 3,500 hours as an auxiliary
volunteer.
Others working l,000 hours or more
are th.e Mmes. L. Murnetta Lohr,
W.G. Price, R.S. Pattison, George
R ay, Edward Rose and Cha rles
Bowman. Also honored was John
Rolens.
WOMEN'S CRISIS SEMINAR:
Golden West College is sponsoring a
series of seminars on women's prob-
lems ; the first being held at the col
lege at 8 a.m., Saturday. Sept 24
There is no admission charge.
DELTA GAMMA ALUMS: The
Santa Ana·Newport Harbor Chapter
will open its fall season with an eve·
ning barbecue at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. John Everett of Villa Park.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
LITERACY COUNCILS: A workshop
for Lauback Englis h tutors will be
conducted from 9 a .m . to 3 p.m.,
Saturday, Sept. 24, at the Garden
Grove Community Church.
SUM CHANCE: A lecture designed
lo help participants control eating
ha bits and their weight wul be offered
by Orange Coast College beginning
Thursday, Sept 22, at 7 p.m m the
women's center.
Admission is free and the public 1s
invi ted to attend.
The program is for both men and
women and will include 12 lectures
Information is available from OCC,
556·5880.
TEEN CHALLENGE WOMEN;
Madame Bilquis Sheikh will speak fo r
the Thursday. Sept. 22, luncheon of
the group in the Teen Challenge
Center, Orange.
The speaker, from one of the lead·
ing families in Paklstan. organized
the social service work in her country
and received the Order of the Brit.iab
Empire after World War II.
The luncheon will begin at 11:»
a.m .
THURSDAY MORNING CLUB: A
fashion show and friendship tea are
scheduJed at 2 p.m. Thursday, Sept.
22, in the Balboa Bay Club.
DUSTY WINGS: The organliation
of former airline stewardesses will
have a membership reception at 7:30
p .m. Thursday, Sepl. 22, in the home
9fCathy Ryan.
Prospective members may call
Veronica Von Grosse, 830-7671, or
Barbara Pollem, 551·1009.
ELDERLY EMPLOYMENT:
Orange County Senior Citizens Coun·
cil will discuss employment for the
elderly and funding under Tille XX of
the Social Security Act when it meets
in Fullerton at 11 a. m. Friday, Sept.
23, at California State University,
Fullerton.
Information is available from H.
Ross Miller. 834·6017.
EL CAMINO 'REAL JUNIOR
WOMEN'S CLUB: Prospective mem-
bers are invited to a Park Day Thurs·
day, Sept. 22, at Thunderbird Park,
Dana Point.
Club members will be at the park al
10 a.m. lo explain the program and
answer questions. Child care will be
provided.
The Chain Letter Racket
DEAR ANN . ~ LANDERS: May I make ·
a comment on chain let,. 6 ·~rs? I re!er to those (Ann Landers ~ similar to the one I am •
enclosing T he Good
Luck Prayer '
l 've been asked to
send 20 copies or the
prayer wi thin four days.
<Postage alone is S2.60 -
not lo mention the time
aMtroublc.)
I can't think of 20 peo-
ple J dislike enough to
hand them s u c h a
bothersome burden. The
chain. letter I am now
looking at threatens
death to anyone who
breaks the chain. How
would I feel if I sent this
terrible thing to a friend
a nd s he died sho rtly
after?
Since t am not a c·
quainted with any of the
sign~tures on the letter,
who knows if it has been
around the world nine
times or whether the ex·
travasaot claims are
true. Please comment.
-MAD IN UNION-
VILLE, ONTARIO
DEAR MAD: Chain
letten are a racket, a
erublq bore and a pala
la tbe ukle. They are
allO We1al. My advice to
one ud aU wbo reeelve
t)\ete Q'al'hy auoyanc:ea
.,~. to feed tbem to· the
nelll'elt coat.
DEAR ANN
1 LANDERS: I 've noticed
complaints from your readen becaU10 you use
0'be0
• Mam )'OU mNn he
, or abe. W}Ut ~ 't you create I! new pronoun ex·
• dmtrel)' denotlnf him or w? May I auuut ··1tern.••
ADT newly made-up •ord, ID order t.o IUn IC•
cepta!M!e, would ba•e to
be launcl>ed by a widely·
l'dd l*'IGD 1uch a1 10u.
I bOpe you'll do It, Ann.
Sfxtlt e~110D1 an
aa JU.alt to tb• aew
...... Clf JfGllHin. -P.T. ~ROii SAN l'BAN-CIICO DBdl'.T.:N-. .......... *9ih .. ... ..... ,r· • ... ~ .... .. ···~ ···= ( 1) ,. , ........ id .. (I)
husband five years ago
after 38 years of a happy
marriage. In 19751 start·
ed to see a fine man
whose wife died three
years before.
I do not wear my wed-
ding band but he insists
on wearing his. I told
him this is not fair to his
wife, or my husband. Do
you agree with me, Ann?
-UNSETTLED IN THE
WEST
DEAR UNSETTLED:
I do aot. Since hi• wife
and your bubao.d are no
longer Qvl.Dg I don't see
where they ftt lnto tbe
picture.
My advice Is cool I&,
dear. Whea la• sets
ready to put a ring on
your finger be wtll ua·
doub&ed.ly take h1a off.
DEAR READERS: I
was nearly stomped to
death by the shoe in·
d us try for saying the
new models a re crip-
plers and a woman has
got to be suicide·prone to
venture out in those fi ve·
inch spikes. The solution
I suggested -wear your
old ones.
Severa l m a nufac-
turers hastened to In-
form me that those five-
inch spikes are mosUy in
the windows and there
ar e plenty or lo wer·
heeled numbers in the
stock rooms. I took time
out to check today and
am happy to report that
safe, sane, and (uh\ona·
bl e shoes for women are
now avallable. Jn fact, I
bought a pair myself.
Wednesday September 21, 19n OAILY PILOT CJ3
Leo: A Contract
THURSDA!18EPT.H
By 8YDNE~Aaa
ARIES (~arc h 21·
April 19): Accent on de·
sire, fulfillment of hopes,
wishes, friendship that
lntens ifles. C ancer ,
Capricorn and Aquarius
figure in picture. Stick to
number "2." Get ac-
counting of busines s
traMaction, appraisal of
property.
T A\JIUJS (April 20·
May 20): One who 11
nnerally lndiff erent or
r.auperior" extends In·
vltation. Be iovJal, flex.I·
ble, but don't kick toe ln
sand. Stand tall. Be
aware of your own
capabilities -and poten-
tial.
GEMINI <May 21-June
20): Good Moon aspect
coincides now with
philosophy, religious
concepts, journeys ,
bridging communica-
tions gap. Aquar.ius,
Taur.Uf and Leo could
play J.Oadlni roles.
CANCER (June 21·
ings. You've uked for a
treater chance at bappl·
ness.
VIRGO (Aue. 23·Sept.
22 >: Low-key approach
brings best results. Be
sure of basic services,
plans, material. Accent
on employment, health,
getting the most for el-
f orts, money. l>isces
figures prominently and
so does the number "7. ••
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct.
22): Emphasis on excite-
ment. variety, specula-
tion. Creative juices
flow. Be confident -
know that personal
magnetism is at peak.
You attract envy -and
i romense popularity.
Cash flow improves.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·
Nov. 21): Conclusion of
deal, transaction, cycle
is strongly indicated. Let
aio of pas t -give
yourse lf room to
"breathe in the future."
Yes, that special person
cares, but you don't own
anyone; no one owns you,
either.
abort trips, Ideas that
neecl nurturin1. r e-
lativ•, cloe ne11hbors,
new tlarta, creativity,
stubbornness and in-
d e pend enc e . Leo.
Aquarim peraon.s fi1ure
promlnenUy.
CAPBICOllN <D ec.
22.Jan. 19): Money, col-
lectiona, disputes over
bUla, payments, gather -
ing of data, protection or
possessions -these are
featured. Cancer indiv·
dual is in picture.
AQUARIUS (Jan.
20·Feb. 18): Lunar cycle
high -.. get going, take
advantage of momen·
tum. Spread your wings
-means don't permit
situation -or person ·-
to restrict you. Stick to
number "3."
July 22): Involve~ent ~ SAGl'ITABIUS <Nov.
keynoted. Nothing ts . 22-Dec. 21): Accent on
lukewarm -it ia now all
PISCES (Feb. 19·
March 20): Look for sub-
tle hints, clues. Differen·
uate between fact and ii·
lusion. Get backstage
glimpse. Evaluate data.
Take nothing ror grant·
ed. II thorough, you win.
Persistence, patience
are twin allies.
or nolhine; especially -------------------where romance is con·
cemed. In business, you
also make commitment.
Go all the way, check re·
sources. insist on more
knowledge about rights
and penni5sions.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Emphasis on publicity,
contract. special agree-
ment · and marriage.
Keep promise regarding
home improve m ent,
beautifying surround·
DA.IR LID
PUCISIOM CUTT1•
PUSCll"IOM ~
NUCUIC COLOIU._
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
211 wu .. w ,.., ....
Costa Mesa S4a.J344
HAMS
'"So Good ••• ff Wit
'Hamtt' YOll 'tR lt'1 Gc.e".
...._ncard .,......c"-9'
::: .. • Ready to Servo wlthHoney'n Spice Glaze • Splral Sliced 't From Top to Bottom • Wo Package and Snip from Coat to
Coast • Full Service Delicatessen • Imported Cheeees
ORANGE
TwHn -Kcrtetla
141fHo.T ..... An
' (114) 997·9960 .
lMAHEIM Th. Vila,. ce..t.,-
1 22 z s.. lrooldllll'st
CatW lld.I
(714) 635-2461
CORONA DEL MU
3700 e. Coast Hwy.
014) &73·9000
PAL.II SPRINGS 7f5lo Hwy. 111
• '" ltCMCho Mid. RANCHO MIRA;E
{114) 346·3894
Grapefruit 45c
1 :-JUICE
• Pure Pink juice· 1'reeeweet 46 oz ··--------t Cocktail cumn •• 79c
I • ~ : Healthful, del1c1ous! Springfield 48 02
~· Corn Chips. • • • • 59c
Frik>e· Regulu or Km& size. 12 oz
Hot Cocoa Mix • 99c
: Carnation Ref. or Milk· 12 one 02 pk~ . . TOMATOES
39c
Nucoa •••••••••• · 49c
The ubiquitoa margarine! 1 lb ctn
' Preserves SlUWIOl'f. ggc i • Knott's· they know beniee! 16 oz
;. Peanut Butter • ggc l Laura Scudder's old faebioned· 16 oz
DIET OR
SHAs1A 1 lc
Soft drin"-· all flavors! 12 oz can
Jell-o • • • • • • • • • • 35c 1
Choice ~ flavoni-6 oz peckage i ' Pears ......•... 49c r 1 Sweet firm Springfield-No 21h can ~ : J Pancake Mix • • • 59c
•• • Los Cabin Buttermilk. Complete! 32 oz
. Pancake Syrup. s1 11
• , Lor Ca9m maple-y IQOdneia! 24 oz
TOILET 79 . TISSUE c
• M.D. 4 roll peck-cok>ra, white ~ ·: --------------~ .. . : . , .. c . .
' • ' .
Dressing ".. • ••• &9c
Hollywood· natural! 12 oz btle
Mixers ~-... 99~
Club Soda, Ginger Ale· 10 oz NR
Purex Bleach • • 79c
For whit.er whlta! Gallon size
. Liquid AH · •••••• s21•
:.'~ Deterpnt in half-pllon (25c lff) ... Bottled Water • 39c
Sprincf'ield Purified, Drinking! Gal.
DOG
FOOD
0... Choice Is llw1p U.S.O.l Choice In beef • • • SoW""'*1t &radecl Ind inspected and
sqmped ••• ,_ C--.. that tl9t qllllitJ Ntf,. ._is Mil bit IS aooct u JOU
expect it to be. But -IS adde4 Insana, • ="* ...t buJ• insists thlt wt offer only the top of .... O'ldt-... Nit" u.C....-.... ,....., that
, ... choice ...... -Qolce!
OUR LEANEST • • s 12.9
Does not exceed 15% fat content
CUf(I STEMS S ,., t ... SUt
Ground Beef :tr: s 1 ~·
Lean! Doea not exceed 22% fat
CHUCK 69c. STEAK
Center cut! U.S.D.A. Choice bee{
MUSS
111.lD l&F
ROAST
Chuck cut shoulder clod! Choice!
BEEF
LIVER 69~
Sliced! Freabt YoUD1! Tender!
Bound 8i11k ~:ce ......... 1lll
They'll Jove the hearty satisfaction that accompanies beef at it's best ... beef that'• selected for quality and trimmed for value
Swiss Steak •••• s 1 ~5
Round cut U.S.D.,4.. Choice beef
STEW
BEEF
Extra lean! Boneleas! U.S.D.A
Choice
Omaha Roast ••• s1 ~9
Thick cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef round
T eriyaki s 1 ''· STEAK
Boneleu top round of Choice beef
Beef Shanks • • • 89~
Center cut ••. U.S.D.A. Choice beef
Round cut U.S.O.A. Choice beef
Ip/& BroilBPB GRADE :~ ............. 51!
Meaty U.8.D.A. Grade .. A .. fryers that will be a deli1ht hot from the broiler or from the coals! Compare quality! (willl &l'eb)
Sausage rrUlmu. s1•!
We make it the old world way!
SLICED s 1 n .. BACON
El Rocho'• thicker .. ranch atyle"
Chicken =... 69i
Large U.S. Grade .. A .. fryera!
W£ FEATURE GBIJINE
m.FED
VEAL
Look for the dilrerence in value
Super Fresh Produce
Bratwurst •••••• s 14!
Pork, milk-fed veal and aeaaoning
~
App/11 ....••............. I I! ·~·
.CASABA ac. mLOIS
Mellow melOl'll -and IO ,...t
Compere the quality t4 jud1• the value! Thne are "Extra Fancy" ••• from Idaho State!
IWc• in tH~~ ~ a2 t~h·W~&pt.18
Ol'f" daily g U1 9 Sunda.y 10 to 7
No '°'" to dtolo-•
...
ITALIA 39c
GRAPES •
Swelt! Juieyt lArp clustert
FRESH Fll£TS
PACR RED $199 Snapper •
For the oven, broilinr or 1kilJJt
P £ · s11' ercn COl.OUDO • • • • • • • (
Pan ready for convenience-fresh frozen
~'1~! .. ~t ~~ ~: 52'·' I
Cooked Shrimp s3s,9
The ri1ht size for shrimp cooktail
Mahi Mahi ••••• s 12~
Bring back memori~ ol Hawtii
Halibut Steak •• s3~9
Enjoy the quality of Northern (ish
Swordfish s4·59 STEAKS fllSI •
Center cut, fini!st flavor! -
A II you need ;, candklight,
soft music ... and wine! •..
an ordinary meal becomea
a tpecial qccaaiont
llClEJIOOK .
ViiiiES SJ39
French Columbard, CMnin Blabe or
Ruby Cabernet .•. •mqnum
Riunite Wines •• 5259
Lambruaco, Bianco, R.otato-2• oz
~~-~t!~s!21'
Champagne or Cold Duck ••• fifth
Fine Spirits
Reduced 83c
HOlllAY TIMES $666
VOKDA
For aavinp-and quality! 1.75 liter
Ballantine's ••• s14••
Great acotch reduCed l .00! l.'16 ltr
Ronrico Rum ••• 1499
White 01 Gold-uve 3Gt-Mb
Canadian Club 11650
The 1.76 Uter list reduced 1.001
Bacardi Rum •• s11 •1
Your cholCl4 Silver or Ambert 1.76 ltr
REDUCED 70c!
El.~'S $399 Tequla
lt'a•Mitprita time-aQ)'Qmtl fifth
.; .. •
..
£ , c .
.. . ---__.. ........... .-................... ,. ... .,. ................... -., ...... -... ---.. ... . .. . . .. . . . . . . . . . , .. , . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .
EUROPE'S MOST SUCCESSFUL CAR
IN HISTORY IS HERE!
THE NEW 1978 MODELS
ARE NOW ARRIVING
RNAL ClURANCE
You1f!}tn DIMOSI
UNIELIEYAIL~HtA"v~=:so• ALMOST
SHOWROOM NESH ST_.~ 0 N THES E CARS. ""rr AND EXECUTIVE FIESIA CHOOSE FROM
4 PINTOS
AT OUR DEALERSHIP ALMOST DAILY.
ALL REMAINING 1977 MODELS MUST GO!
BY FORD WHILE THEY LAST, GET TOP
DISCOUNTS OF THE YEAR OM
THESE BRAND MEW •77 MODELS. ·6 MUS1ANIS
16 llANADAS
13 LTD's·
· ....... ~for o wc .. hl•tr M W • .,.n.-• • rest ...... -,_,
... t.cr pwtoa ,....ce!
1T•S DYN-O-MITE OM A
9 0.1NCH WHEELBASE! 22 PINTOS • 24 GRANADAS
BIG SELECTION 3 MUSTANGS • 2 MAVERICKS • DRIVE A LUXURI
, CAR FOR A .. s.?.u,,s1,yE ~9UIPPED
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 8 THUNDERBIRDS • 8 LTD H's ·
15 L TD's • PLUS ALL '77 TRUCKS,
VANS, AND RV VEHICLES.
PRICE! D MODEL
IXAMPLI SA VIMGS
NEW 177 FISO
~ CUSTOM STYUSIDI PICKUr
-SELL-OFF s4197 PRICE
WHEN YOU GOTI A CLEAR CARS YOU GOTI A MAKE DEALS! COME IM AND TRY
US OM FOR SIZE! 2 1/2 ACRES OF BEAUTIFUL TRADE-INS TO CHOOSE FROM!
THUNDERBIRD
SALE!
PRICED TO SELL
176 THU"DERBIRD
V-8. auto. trans .. factory air eoodltlonlng, full
power. AM/Flt1 stereo radio with tape, heater.
vinyl roof. leather. tilt st. wheel, luxurv 1ntenor. apeed control, approx 13,000 miles
Lie #504PHH Stock #2813
56599
'75 THUNDERBIRD
V-8. auto. trans .. factory air conditioning, full
power. AM/FM stereo radio w/tepe, heater,
vinyl roof, speed control, tilt steering wheel.
Lie #612L.XH Stock #2983.
55599
173 THUNDERBIRD
V-8. auto. trans., factory air eoodlllonlng, full
power. AM/FM stereo radio W/tlf>9 deck.
hest•. vinyl roof Lie. #1 22HPZ Stock #2888.
52999
OTHERS
'75 MERCURY
MONARCH GHIA 2 DI. v-e. auto. trans.. factory llr conditioning,
Power 1t"'1ng. PlfJWet" disc tnkee. power
windows. AM/FM atereo radio W/ttPf>. h•ater,
vinyl roof. Lie. to26MXA St~t2,U4.
53899 ,.
'76 GRANADA 2 DR.
V-8. •uto. trene., factory air conditioning,
POWW st..,-ing. power dltc brak-. radio.
heater, vlnyl roof. Lie. t~1MWO Stoe~
13028.
SPECIAL PURCHASE
FROM FORD MOTOR CO. OF
1977 Models
'77 LTD LANDAU
4DOOR
V-8. auto. trans . factory air conditioning. full
power. AM/FM stereo radio. heater. vinyl roof.
Landau top, tilt steering wheel. speed control.
with approx. 8. 766 miles. Lie. #233RFB Stock
42923.
55799
'77 LTD II 2 DR.
V-8. auto. trana.. air conditioning, power
steering. pOWer dlac brakes. radio. heater,
vinyl roof. Lie. #270RSD Stock 12918
s4799
'77 MAVERICK 2 DR.
e 'cyt., auto. trans.. factory air conditioning.
power steering. radio. heater. Lie. t5e&FIFB
StOcit 12938
53699
'77 LTD II WAGON
V·8, auto tr1n1.. factory air conditioning.
PoWer steering. POwet dlac tnk... radio,
heater. lug. rad(, p0w9r dcSOr lookt. approx.
4.607 miles. Lie. 1441 RSD Stock 12945.
55399
--....OTHERS-
, '74 MERCURY
COU4SAl°'xl7
V-8, auto. tran1., factory ,tr conditioning,
POWW lteerinQ Power dllC ~ power
eut, f'9dlo. t)ater, vtnyt roof Uc. no<>HSU
Stockt2959
STATION WAGON
SUPER BUYS!
'75 GRAN TORINO
S9UIREWAGOM
V-8. auto. trans.. factory air conditioning,
power steering, power disc brakes. radio,
heater. lug. rack. Lie, #530LXH Stock
#10078.
5 3399
'75 MERCURY
MONTEGO MX STA. WGN.
V-8. auto. trans.. air conditioning, power
steering, power disc brakes. radio, heater. lug.
rack. Lie. #383LWS Stock #2774.
53299
'75 TORINO
STAnON WA&ON
ECONOMY
CARS!
GALORE!
'76 PINTO
STAnONWAGON
4 cyt., 4 speed, air conditioning. radio, heater.
low mileage approx. 19.140 miles. Lie.
#318PKE Stock #2.995
53299
'73 PINTO s9u11E WAC'iOM
4 cyl., auto. trana .. radio. heater. Lie.
1124HSX Stock f2988.
52099
V-8. auto. trans.. factory air conditioning.
power steering, radio. heater. lug. ractc. lie.
t379MDX Stock 13020. 1
176 AMC PACER 2Dooa 52999
'72 VW 9 Pass. Wan.
• cyt.. 4 1peed. factory air cond1tron1ng.
AM/FM stereo radio, heat•r. n•w tires. approx. eo.030 mil". Lie. t281GIP Stock
t3035.
53099
-OTHERS--
'71 MERCURY
C0U.AIX17
V•8. auto. tran1., factory air conditioning,
POW« steering, power Clltc brak•, pow.,
wfndowe. AM/FM tter~ caaa-11• rectlo.
hat•. vinyt roof. Lie. 18830LI( Stock 12852.
e cy1.. auto. trans.. air oond1tlonlng. reclio.
heater. vinyl roof, approx. 22.203 m1tea. Lie
t483NLP Stock 13043.
53299.
'7 4 MERCURY CAPRI e cyl .• 4 speed, fectOfY •Ir conditioning. radio.
heater Lie. f618LJX Stock 13044.
IMPORT
BARGAINS!
'74TOYOTA
WAGOM ICorolal
4 cyl . 4 speed, radio. heater, luggage r
Lie # 112MNN Stock #3010.
52599
•74 V.W. DASHER ..
4 cyl .• auto. trana., radio, heater. \..lo.
1551MOO Stock t1414A.
'73 AUDI FOX 4 DR;·
4 cyl., au1o. trans .. radio. heate<. Lie 100
Stock t1106A.
52499
175 DATSUN 610 .. ·
4DOOI •
4 t:yl., 4 apeed, •Ir conditioning. AM/~
atereo radio. h .. ter. Lio. t253PPL St
11558.
• i it •
WednMCll I &1mOet 21 . 1911
NOTl<'E
lU'lll
fllCTITIOUS •UllNIU
NAMUT4YIMINT PUBLIC NOTICE ... ~....:•-·no--• .. , • .,.ne ...,.,. 1--------------
llY GEORC.E. \.tl<ti•I• Sl>OP • I
Jl4 '"°"" ... Lumi.r Y•rd • 11 ~llN<ll.CA
WM,,.., P-omo1.c1M Corpoul!Gft
• C•lll•n<" cor-.ai1on Jl4 f-o•nl
An •• Lumll4r v.,o II I /, L•Qul\4
~l\,CA ll\•• bw,.,.., .. <~tecl Illy• cor -•tlan W-rPromol .....
Corilor•lton
WllllemJ k.MI«,~.
TN\ si.1-1 w .. 1119'1 wlUI Ille
C-ly Clet1' ol 0rM91t C.W..ty on s.ot.
1,ltn. ,.,m
Pvbll\hed Orange eo." Delly Piiot,
Sept. "· 11, ZI, Oct. S, 1•77
40tP1
PUBUC NOTICE
"CTITIOUS IUSINESS
NAME ST4TEMUIT
Tl\e lollowlng "'""" •• 001ng bu•I
l'K\M' IA) IE'IA JEllllY S. GILLE!>Pllf
"EALTOAI ; 18) ELECTRONIC
AEALTY ASSOCIATES, JfAAY 5
01 LLESPI I!, REAL l0A5, 11400
Bl'OOIChll•ll St. 203, Founltln Velley,
CAmal. Jl!ltAY' SIMPSON GILLl:.SPIE,
••..,~Cl ,_,,.,,, hacll, CA tt6'l.
l l\lt 11Ut1nH• •• cOnduclad llY •n 1 ....
c11¥1d ... I Jer,.,s c;111~
ll\ls U•t-wet llled with IM
Cbufll'f Cl•rll ol Or~ eou<>ty on Aug.
~. '911 ......
• Pullll\hed Orenve co .. 1 Dally Pilot
J1t11i9 ll,Sepl I, U , 11, lt77
flCltTIOUS 8USIHEU ""'61111iTATIMlNf
flle fOI~ W-h dOlnO 911\1 ........ PlllESTIG( SEC RE fARIAL
SERI/ICE, "JI A•Yff Str•I 1,.1,,..
C.A'17W Ge<ttclllW LoulM 8elll •IJI Re.,.t
St , trvfne. CA'!171'
fllll t>oSn•H " ""'°"''""bf en ll\-
OIYl-1. O.reldl,,. LovlM 8•111
Tlllt •ta-• WK tllod "'"" 11\e county Cltf-o! Orange counly en
AUQll>llD, 1917. l'ltlf1
Publlll'l9CI OrMIOI ~~t Oellv Piiot
Sept '· '4, 21, :it,"" Yt01·11
P VBUC NOTICE
SUPl•IOlt COU•T 01' TH 1£ U ATIOl"CALH'O"HIA l"O•
THECOUHTYOF O•AHGE
He A-tt9M
HOTICE 01' HfAll lNG l"O•
P•Ohfl! 01' WILL ANO l'Olt LIET·
llltST!STAMl!HTAltY 1!1te1t ol MARION E. OWEN, •U
MARIOH£ PONTIHG.Oe<eeMO.
NOTICE IS HfltE8V GIVEN 11\et
Colo ... I Herring S l"r•,.1111" hH llleCI
herein • oelli•or'I For ~t• of Will
•nd ror l.ettert Tul•mentery ••· l•••n<• • W!lkll Is m.o. lor t....U..r
P••llcul•n. Md t"•' the tlmt and
ple<t ol l'tearlnQ tl\e ~mt na• bHn wt
for Oct~ '· 1971, •I 10 .a rn 1n 11\e
courtr_,., of 0.0.rlmem No J of •*
COUtl, 411 IOO(•Vt( Cenler Ortw Well. In
llW City of s.nta An•, C.ltlornl•
OeleclS.PI-• 14, 1'11
WIU.IAMe.$tJOHN
County Cieri.
COLOHILHl•1t1HGS. l'ltANKLIN
n,~ .... CMM
141M.t I~, CAt'HU
Pub11"'9d OrMIQf eo.st O•llY PllOI ----1 ~pl 10,tt.27, t'11
P UBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TOCltlOITO•S SU .. lltlOltCOUltl 0111 THI
PUBLIC NOTICE
UATIOlllCALllllO•NIA fllOlt l'ICllTIOUS I USINIH
THI COUNTY 01' OtlANGQ HAMI ITATEMINT
IN. M ii• l M loOOWlnQ --·are dOoftQ bUS.
Estalt of HERALD C. HYLTON, ,,_, .. ,
Ot<HS'ld I MAGNIN, ll3J 8•1•tol Strtt4,
NOTICE IS HEREO~ GIVEN to llw CO'\teMeW, CA91•1'
cr..it..,.. of'~_, ,,.,,,_ 4-<*""1\I Fedt<•t..S 0.0.rlmenl SlorH, Inc
l!Wt ell --....,,no claims ~1ns1 '• 0.1-• corpor•lt0nl 7U Wost
U.. Mid --recivtrwcr to fll• s. ... 11tl\S4,...1.C1nc1n,,.11,011100J01 tlWtft, wllll tl\e N<HMry _,,.,., In Tiii• -lntK 1s c-ucteo by • cor·
tlle Offke ol tlle cl«lt of tne _.,. ..... por•llon.
tlt...,~ortopnMfll INfn. with tlle ...-111eo Oe!>9rt-SICM'fl ...ceurt -..cNn. to Ille_.,.,... di» I. M,eoftln
8' tM 9"lc:e of OUtlANT& AHO W4A· A.,_, f ~. C I! 0
ltEH, Attorneys .. I.aw. UOI WHl<llll Tiii\ ,1111...-1 -·~ llled ...... trw
Orlve, Sull• 212. Nt•POrl llttcl\, County Cler-of Or•"O'I County on
Olllornl• 92660 wl>lcl\ 11 tne place of Au1iu"11., 1t11
buslne»ol IM->lon@CI In •II met· 1"1111t
teo ._,.,..n1no lo Ille Httlt of Hi. de· Pub41JN<I Or~ eo.~\ <>•"• Pilot
<telenl, •1111" lour ,_,tM el19< Ille S.pC.1, 14.11, ZI, 1'11 H11·11
llr" oub41ullOl\o! t!\11 no.ica.
0•\ed AuQ.15, 1'11. PUBLIC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTICE
•• MOO(llN 411tli. lff'1 P•t1' Aw
c .. 1.-.c• .,." (-J eor .... tUOA4em1Awt .
I 101,c.o.i.~w.CA.t?•» ""' ....Wnn• 1, ~,..,DY •n 1n .,,.j_
IO..er Cl J '4><•Y
Ttllt 1i.1-t w6• lllM Wiii\ Ille
C-ty C.14'" 01 OreftQe (.ountyon$ept. u 1911
"'"" Pub11"'""' Or6ft99 C:O.tt Delly ,.llOI,
\eol U 11. II •net Oct. S, ltll
n.111
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUl9UllNESS
NAMI ITATaMIHT
Tno IOI-Ing --It 001119 bu•I
neu•' FRONTIER TV •• SllO Wu,..r
Aw., H'-"11"911on 8HCI\, CA.,..,
Henry J T-, '2'2 Senta Yf'tt1
Ori w, HuntlnQlon a.ec11, CA t1M7
Thi• ~Inell IS Conduc:lecl lly an ln-
dlYI-..
l*'>ryJ T-
Tlll• st.i-t wet 111..t w ltl\ t ..
County Clfftl of Ortnoe county en'""-
13. 1917.
~ ..
Publw..d Or"IQ9 C.0.•I O••IJ PllOt, Sept .••• 21, Jt, Oct. s. lf17
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUStNESS
NAMISTAT•MENT
T .... tollowl"O Pltf'IOI\ IS6041>Q bUSIN\\ ..
E V. 5UP"L Y -SERI/ICE l()Jt North s.tMne, Ana,,.lm, CA. '2t01
HERlll!ltT OEWl!Y SELLl!RS,
3'71 Alvlilo. lllwrtlde, CA. W50S
llllS bull-t Is~ .... lty el\ fn.
clilvlcMW
Hert.r10 s.11 ....
T11l1 ~-wolS llled ""Ith Ille
County Cler"k of Orenoe C.untr on Sept.
12, ltn. n o" Publi""" Or....,. Coe" Oelly Piiot.
Sepe ••.1•.•.enc10c:1.1,s, ''"
P UBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
flllCTITIOUS IUSIHIH
folAMe ITAT•M•NT y,,_ 1o4,_,,,. .,.,_,, ••• clolfl9 ....... MA•Y f . HYLTON
En<vtrhofll\fW1ll
olttw-M.....t~nt 1~-----------~1ne••.n
ouaAMllEAMDWA•••M
Aft-YI Ill Law
UOt Wftltl/tt Drift
Svlt•JU .. .._. lffcll.
Clllfwflle-
Tel: Of41U1 .. 151
At\-YI fer •ucwtttc
Publl.,,.., Or-CoHI <>•lly Piiot,
1'119 l•. 5'-pe.1, "· n. 1t11 X? .. n
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS I USINEH
NAMll STATIMINl
Tiie loll-1119 per ton• olrt CIOlng b<.1$1· ........
JONES·M U•PHY NEllAOA
PROPERTY, 7111 Sen .>o.Quln Htlll
Road, N-1 llutll, CA '1"41
Fletc"9r JOPl<tt, ttl60 E. Whltti.r
8oultv .. d, W!llt1 i.., C..lllCM'nl• '°'°1
Wllllem J Mu'lll'y, tO~ Senle
Montee Bouleverd, Lo• .Angeltt,
C•l lfomlo1 t002S
'Tiiis bu•l,,.H If concluct•o .,., 1
oener.t1119rtner..,,lp
flel<l'ter Jontt
ll\h •lat-. wtt filed will\ Ille
C-.y 0.'1( of Or tn9I Countv on Sec>t.
12.1•11.
1'11114 Publl\lled 0r.,.9' to.st O•llY Piiot. Sepl 1',l1,lt,-Oct.i,tUl
J'1H1
PUBLIC NOTICE
MONll!SSORI SCHOOL OF SAN
CLEMENTE, >AU S l!t Cimino A,.1, s.n Clemw>t•. CA 91612
6#11er• Lind• Slm111on. llt11 S.n-"•oo o. .. o.ne Point, CA n•,. J-0..rtone (erl, 41 I Fltg•nlD
Ad., "-1 8"cll, CA,, .. ,
Tiii• -lnHt Is condllctecl by •
-~·• pennt~lllp. ~•LSlmj)ton
lllls slat-w.n Hied wllh trw
Cowlty C.I.,,. of Of•"9't County on Auvust 2', "17 ... , 121
""911111ed 0r..., Coa" o.llv Piiot,
Sept. 1, "· 21,-. 1971 -.. n
PUBUC NOTICE
NOnca TOC••OIT09tS
SUNltlOtl COUltT 0, THI
STAT•04'CA~ll'Ot1NIA 1'0"
THI COUHTY 0111 OtlANOIE
Ne.•·•H ..
E\tatt! ol ROBERT ANSE L
WILLIAMS••• A08ERT A
WILi.i.AM$, R0 11£AT WILLIAMS,
Olt•tted.
HOTlct! IS Hl!Rl!IV GIVEN to trlt creditor\ flt l!lt """-........, MCed9ftl
11\el all WDIS ....,1"9 <"Im' _,,,,t ,,,. ~ ~ er. ,...1...i to Ill• t._m, wfll tllt nKeswrt _,..,,, 111 ,,,. omc. of 1111 c 1 ... 11. Of l!lt allO.,. ,,,.
lltledeow1,«IO.,..._ttlltm,wltht,,.
_, _,.,.., 1011\e unclenignea
ti tlleoflb_, lto«lel't A. Etslm.,., tttO
Harbor 10u1..-en1, Sult• atJ, Cott•
,,.,. .. , Callfomla '261', wtlltl\ ll Ille piece of tanlnets of tM undllrsf9nff In
all fl'lltlerl per1"4nl1111 to 11\e .. t ... of
.. .., decedtfll, """'"four ...-M •lier Ola flNt jlljbllcel .... of llll t ftOtlU,
Oal8d '""lmller ", 1'11 JOHNH.WILLIAM•
Adn'lll'll SI r Ill°" o4 \Ill
Wlllolt"'•-.....,....,.,..
1to1•1tl A. IAITM.UI PWH.,..,11..._
'411WIU
c.sw-...~ ... ,. • ......., ...... "·*'"l-P\lllllsl\9cl Or ... Coetl Oath• Piiot,
S.ot.tl, Jt-Oc!.S, ti, lf77 •IOS-11
PUBUCNOl'ICE
' --. • •••
P UBLIC NOTICE PUBlJC NOTICE
PtlMJ .... ..
Pvlll'11wd Or-Coa\I Delly Piiot, Publl~ Or ... Cont o.tly Pl ... .
A119 11. ~ 1 "· 11. lf17 J171-77 A119us1ll,SepC-rl, M,21, 1tn
-----3111·77
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
• • 1lilP
PVBUC N«n'ICE
~..,., ............ fll•Oy l,_ pllolMIH ... , .. .,...,cs.., ...... .
•·If.,_~._..._ Ws 1-11. YOU-. wllllln••~eft.,.11•11 ..,,.,..
-It_..... on you, fjlt wltll tllb
PllBIJC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUCN011CE
"ICTIT10USM1111flta
lfAM9tTAYHlUtT
--
lllt totlowl ... ,.r-,, ............ ... u ..
Rt!Al. TOIU GUILD, ••• 0.1-.. ~ •. """'I"""" ... "' Cellloml.,,..
Ronelel 0... 0-, sot D11-.
Suite 8, HYn!lnotonlt.cl\, c.elHtnll• ' ll'll\ .._.nitt, I\~ ft M ~
Ojvldutl
11-ldO.Cutw
T1111 51.i~ was fl!M wlUI tN
CM#ll'f Oer1i ol Orenot Cowlty 911 ...
ltmti.P IS, tfJI --11\ibll~ 0r.,.., C:0.11 D4111y ,. .....
Sept 21.2111nc10c1. s, 12, 1m "'°"'"
PUBUC NOTICE
f'ICTITIOUS IUSIMUI
MAM•ITATl!MINT TIM ......... ,__is~ ..... ,... .. ,,
FU•NITU"e WARE..OUSE AN·
Ntlt, 114«1 "O" Amltl4MI, ~lrt
Vetley,Cll~'27GI
1 .... rty """ eo-, "'" LH Fler.t, l"'-talft Vellt'f, C.llftnti.
t210I Tlllt 1M1Ntt It CllllllllcW .,., 911' ...
dlYlcllMI. aewnyc..tMt .,...,. ~ •• fllef wfllJ.,.
c.wit't °"" -Oraftlll County Oft --tM\lllr 1~ tm. .....
~ .... Or"'91 c:oatt .,..., .......
S.pt.21. .... 0d..J. 12. ,.,, 4JOW1
. . ... . . . -..... ............... ~ .. _..,,,.. ............ -.. , . . .. . . .
... fo,.~•
HouH• For Sde Hot1tH For Sde Wednesday. Septeml>olr 21 197 T * DAILY PILOT D3 ....••...•.••.•........ ......•..•••••......... ,,
I 002 GtMNI I 002 HottMt For 54* ~SH For Sd e Houset Fors•
··············••······· ·•••···•·····•••·••·•·· ············•·········• ···············•··••··• Ge•u.. I 002 G""°el I 002 GeMral I 001 GeMrol I 002
..............................................................................................................
G..,... 1002 G..wf'al 1002 lal»o,Cftlnwlo ~ i>o1 . .••......•.............................................•..••••• , ... ·····••4 ··············· •...............•.•.... ········•············•· ..........•.•.•.•..••.. DUAL EASTSIDEGI
l>1,1r;1hll' Y..1r.1111d1•
\lolrm I ;un1h ho11n1• •11
hw;t• l11t l .• 11 1· !lune:
ru.1111 Iii rlh 11 .. rwh d
l.111~1 •"\ '1 11ul1 1'1
H1·• 11.111110 .. 1 "·hr.It
'"'ri..m 11wn1•1 10 111 1•1n
l,J>llllh .,II \OU I ,111 ll~l
'"ur 1,1 ht·n1·f11i. .lu~I
"'""' !'\hould .:11 f;t .. l ' ~· i ill
(~IW1 1:Mliifi:I
llcul 1':11tJh•
COROMA DB.. MAI
DUPLEX
Ju,,l ·'• blo1 k to h1J.:
( oron• l~.ich :i bdnlh
HI t'Jl.'h Ullll jJIU'> d llUl'lll
1111 1111 )•IUr o\ ~rn1Khl
\ '''U)1' twam 1 clhn.:'
llri·µIJn J :.upo.·r riru
t,·11v ~ 111.UUU LJll l.nt
MESA DEL MAR
s1 .. 11111u11 I 1 .. ·dtoo111
h.11h '"'"" ..... 11. h111;• .:••UI "" • o1tnu lilt ta\' II
kllt h111 11111 .111111111111;
I ,1111 ii\ 11111111 • I ""Ill
'"'"' 1111111 IJl,111 "'''"
'"'"'' •l\I lthl I l'f ~UI It'
hli( h \llltl IU41111 IOll •I 1111
IK'I "'' """ II\ ·"'I hill 111 11" -.XI 1IM1 I \I.I
~j 1.llll
C:SEL ECT
T'PROPE RTIES
EUGAMT IRVIHE
COHDO
FJhul1111" 1o1oll 1·11111 ~· .1111
F.u.h11111 11olJ11tl \ ... " UIJ
i.(rJllcO ,! I lh-11 lllCKlt•
""Ith l>fl'f' tlll\O II I I\ I II
""1th 1111 l'I"". h11 m .1
thOIOI! I 11.111"" JU:.l I l'
clu<c d tu )II.! aUll
tii:J !SjJC1
(~i-RiN l®·m
BEST VIEW
BEST PRICE
PRICED REDUCED
LIVE I ...
MEWPORT
VETS
.. FREE••
YA Counselin9 &
Info. Se rvice
No Down Payment
Free List of VA
Homes in O.C.
01.ing1• I 'o .., l..1ri:o.·,,1
\' \ ll11rnt· kr11k1·1
Coll 24 Hrs.
646-9898
WOHLD JU: \L ESTATE
I hl' .,l'ltcrs h;J\'l' mm o.•d
.md ""111 c11rn ,1 'l'<'t1nd
1ru.,t dt:t:d A h1-.wl1ful
l'M·t·u11' c home .! li1lr111,l---------1
S+S =-9
S and ~ t·on!-ilru<'llOll mt:ans quality!
And ~o 1t 1:-. with this Park Huntington
4 txlrm 2 stor y that s hows bt:autifully.
1-\·aturt·s inc:lud<: Bt-rvan carpeting.
t•ui-.tom 1h·a1H:S. dchghttul rtar yard
with wcxK.1 cl<:t·kmg, wal<:r softt:n(!r a nd
,, rl.'allslu: in-.tslmtnl of $119.750.
U~l()Uf ti()M f.S
RE::AL TORS 6/5 6000
::14 43 Ee.1st Co,1sl Hoqh\VdY Corona dt1I l\.IJr
,,1 .u HI 1\11""' \; ,.,,,.. 11 !i·1h '19!JU
General 1002 G~al 1002 ..•...................• ....•..................
MEXICO CITY
Twelfth floor condominium pn pres·
t1geious Tolanco area. 2500 sq. ft. 3
Bdr ms.. 2 baths + maids room &'
bath. Guard on duty assures privacy.
$90.000 Unfurnished. Xlnt terms.
673-4400
DiYision of Hari>or lnndment Co.
®herbert
hawk ins
REALTORS
1\1 • 'lol l
IALIOA ft&UHSULA DUPt.IX SIU, tlO
Price reduction just authorized. Thi.s
3450 building is a prime tax shelter in
a ht:avy appreciation area. Yet it will
yit:ld a positive cash now. For more
information on this sort of magic, call
963-8311 .
4 IB>RoOM POOL HOMI $72,500
Relax or play by tht: pool. E ntt:rtain
on b\g covered patio w/brick built-ins.
Com t r lot home in sought aftt:r Loara
School Dist Rock roof , lux ury
carpets, n<:w texture coating. Live &
t:njoy! !
PRICE JUST REOUCEO. Sl29,900
Custom home on 1 :i acr e. 4 bedrooms.
3 ba ths, 2800 sw. ft. Hilly cliffside lot.
ocean view . xlnt n<:ighborhood. ·Easy
frt:<!way & beach access. Huge game
room w/profE:ss ional wet bar. This is ·
one of a kind.
SEAGULLS & Sf.AWEID S67,900
Price j u s t redu ced o n t h is 3
b e droom, l l/:? ba th . s urrs 1d e
townhouse. Homeownt:r a nd investor
financin g availabl e. Wa lk to the
btach, schools, a nd shopping. This is
a 1300 sq. ft. home, doublt: garage: and
hrick patio. 963-8311
11055 Mopolla St.
Fo.tain V,..,
963-tll I
LARGE FAMILY
ATTEMTIOM!
Largest 1-level Harbor View Home
CMONTEGO MOD EL>. priced
thousands below com µt!lltion by OUT
OF COUNTRY OWNER. 4 Bdrms.
large cul-de-sac. pit:-shaµt!d lot with
room for pool & pl ay yard or small or·
chard. $1~000 -includes land, not
l eas~ h old". Sh ort ~sc r ow -quick
possession.
YOU'LL LIKE OUR ESP
•.. experienced sales personnel
759-0811
POSSlllUTl{S
()uplei. on 13ul1f'Ou
l'enim.ulol, l blue~ lo
beach 2 8tid. \IJ,.hlr
studio lower U:.o ~ou1
1mag1nauon tor remO<!t·I
or en1oy 1111 1nlrlp a11·
rh.irm a:. 11.>. R :! 1.<lhln~
chan11tnK \oC·l. Sl2l.:!6IO
MORIHS REALTY * 494-8057 *
~.~~~ ... l'9~
COIYHAVEM
Dt1i,>ltix plus i:uest 1tQdlo
EnJOY Old World ehlrm
of Corona del Mur. \tAJ i..
to bt.•uch & shu~. tt!ritl1~
& r1•t• cl.'nlcr. ln1&e-1
1111w. enjoy forever
~IK-t,500.
MORIMS REALTY * 494-1057 *
CDMBEACH
COTTAGE
Lots ol "Olid and stoinc1\
.:Ja.-.:.. ~139.950
I
R.C. TAYLOR CO •
:~~! .......... !~~~ ?.~~! .......... !~~~ --955-0350
A STARTER
,RICE REOUCED SI 0,000!!
lloml' on ocean view sill..'
t.1ke new, :! l.lcdroorn, :!
b.tlh. Sl22,500. Tr.\
$15,000 down.
HA.LPIMCHtM
m:ALTORS
675-4392
.1ml th1• i.tru·, to mJk•· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ lh1~ Olll' ur NC\\ port ~ IRVIME
Someone's goinJ.! to gel a ~ood buy' 3
Bedr m in beautiful condition. well
maintainl'.d a nd anxious to movl·
Fam rm. country kitcht:n. atlracllvt
low maintamancc landscaping and a
location just steps to the park. p00l
a nd school. But look at that pr1c(!
again: just $142,000. Someont: s going
to get a good buy!•
11z Blk to Ocean
('omplctl•ly n•modt•lell
on .in uH•rs11ed lot •\
sm.1l'lhml! I UH plus dl•11
11111~ lorrn.11 dmmg 11\u,.
ht1J.:t' I attlll.\ rlJ(1m with
opl.'n hto,1ins, n:.r1 ural
\41ic1d ll•\lure.., antl 01 t>:in
.ind Jl'll" view lrom
master suite & sundetk
Ju:.t st.cps to Ocean Hlvd
~.00()
mo'l ou1stand1ni.: TOWMHOME I 1002
h ll m <' s Y 0 u l' a 11 Jkaut1lully dccoraLC'd. ~~~!'! .......... !?.~~ ~~~!••••••••••••••• purl'ha~t.' for lt•ss than hkl• new 2 1>4.•droom home
Cml 644-7211 em ~1'' down.S.IG-231:! w1Lh all bwlt·ms. 1n1:lud • I • ~' ,, ' mi.: 11."ntrnl ;11r. Th .... 1s a [ ® IHIU\ll ~i-~~~~·~:£a~'.;b:1
--_ -CAIJ. 75L ·:H!JI
CUSTOM BUil T
«;:SELECT
t PROPERTIES
Can you cnv1s1on i......_.......-...._.-..---~
\Our,,l'lt l11111i.: m ) our
proft•ss11111all.\ de1·orall'd
11111111"' Tht• 1k•c11r;ilor's
""n ti tx:drm n·~11lent•e
now tor !-.ale This u11
IL'<Ual honw IS l)rll'Cll ,1l
s.!75,000. Call
640-616 I ee
COATS& WALLACE
REAL ESTATE , INC.
•OWNl-:R Wlt..L usn;N •
\lu!>l move Jor hcallh re
"""""· Jlrl•ady purchuscd anulh1•r hm,
Ocean Vu Condo
Newport Crest. Tasteful
I)' wallpapered, up·
i.:radetl t'pls and drps.
1"1r1tplace Ila lcony with
view ofl hvmi.: rm an<I
m a s l l' r h c d r m . :i·
Hedrml>. dmm.i: rm, <!'·-:.
balhi. & <louhlt• i:arai.:c
s1i1.soo
PETE BARRETT
-REALTY-
"BAYSHORES
Qwet m:.1dc street lot·a·
tum" 1th lresh landM''1fl\!
& cla,src lnll'nor des1i.:n
hy ttlll' of NI.'" 11111·b
flnl'Sl Lots of tcaturcs m
gourmet krlchcn such as
instant hol waler, new
llll'. O\'cn & r:rni:•· to
name a Lew . 3 Sµacious
htlrms & 2 baths. Xlnt
lease hold Must sc\! to
LL 00 ISLI·: allracll\'l· 4 hdrm. 2 bath. sm~le
..,Lorv. u:.t·d bred, lrptr Bi:amtcl rt:lltn,i:!.,
h anl~oooJ lluor-. L l-:l' patio. o\K It. lot $2'.!S.000.
l.1111) TSU·: nt·wlv n·moclt-11!<1 4 b<lrm. chm. 4
bath. living rm w rathedr al ceihngs. Lge
m.1.,l.._·r 1.Klrm "u1t .. s:i:M.950
l.l XL'HY wati·rfrnnt c·on<lo :! Bdrm. :!1l! hath
1'1~11. 1m·11111 2·1 hr ..,,.,.ur1l~ Brand llt'W, comp.
lurn $220.00(I
P .. :NNINSl'J.,\ I lldrrn ;: l)c• homl' All
amcnit11 .. --. l.ov\'ly al'l'tt S\!15.000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Boy!>ide Orovt:. N 8 6 75 6161
COHTIMPOURY UHCH STYLE
Bi~ Canyon 5 BR CUSTOM home on
golf course! Unusual design m a kes for
r eal informal entertaining. Abundant
wood. hugt: recreation rm. plus study
& 51/z baths Ont: of largest lots in
arc:a. Private-community with 24-hour
St::<:urity. $350,000.
2 I I I San Joaquift HH1s Rood
NEWPORT CENTER, M.I . 644-49 I 0
Ur-.ll()U I:. ti()Ml:S
REAL TORS~: 675-6000
2443 East Coast H1qhway, Coronet cit'! M.ir
Jlso in Mrsa v .. 1ct1'. dl S·ll>·b990 SPYGLASS HILL
Drumatkally s1lualt!cl
ocean & buy views: 4 BH I 002 f:lm. rm , JXIOI & jacuur I 002 Geewrol ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••4••• ••••••••••••••• ;1 Car J:t;Jr S2R9.f,00
EASTSIDE R·2
With charming 2 bdrm
home bnnRIOJ.! 101·omc
w h 1 I c yo u de v 1• I o p
another unit. Close to
shoppmg & tnmsport ;i ·
lion Just listed. 11cllcr
take a look. 646-771 I
J',\llL MARTIN $58,750 I nEAL ..:sTAn; ti44-7:J11:1
HUAe lam1ly room w1lh IJuµle:\. 2br, 2ba. hsc
t1Sl'" bntk wall un~I +2br , :!ha apt over
llrcpl:u·l'. .1 Betlr m. i J(a r a~e . S178,SOO .
b;ilh. clt>le c:ir i.turai.:e. Larki.p u r , 500 b ile.
llt'W Iii' l>olll{hl><IY pool & 5'14-tlK);I
I lit er All 1 l11s on a
!>1.'<'lud<'d ~tn•cl. Hurry, HOUSE + lnco~
cull !>ou;.5880
General 1002 GeMral
GHerol I 002 G....,.al I 002
I 002 •••••••• • • • • ••••••••••• ••• ••• • •• • ••••••••••••• Heal Estate ---·-----~HERITAGE
Nice 2 Bdrm house with
m·~ 1 rar .:ar+custom :.!
Ur 2 h.1 apt over Askin!!
Sll!ll,(111() l'h 1)73 0571 ....•....•.•.......••.. ·•················•····
11,000 GROUMD FLOOR
COMDO
$55,000
" Rt.•drooms tn lu!(ury
BYOWMER
LUXURY LIVING
:1 hr .. I hJ U1~ C.inyon
Townhomc L11-<ury
f<'Jl11n•s Drl.lmatic
an·h1tcl.'111rc' Tl'nn•"·
r1ool & 1acu111
Owner i :\Rent
759·0087 0 FF h11.:h rise bwldmi.: O\·cr·
lrtoking hu~c pnvatl'
patio ;.iren Super convc
111cnt to trecways. :.hop· ---------1
. pin.i:. churches c:.i111---------1 la.'t wt•t·k l> pnn• on near '16<! nM MESA DEL MAR
n t' w U u p I 1· ' ' :i . l:k'drooms. 2 bath 1•:11·h ! JQ. K€Y SPECIAL · St2, 900.
Gn•al Ea!.lsiclr Co11la 41 RE:ALTORSll Cls. Lo parks. schl!t, ten·
:'llesa locatmn! C;ill RF.1> ---------msclb. B1g4 br 'son huge
Ct\lll'E1', 7~1-1202 lot. 2750 Portola, CM.
IESTVALUE
IM HARIOR VIEW
2 & a clt•n or 3 1>4.•drm
Ochi.:htrul patio!>. yard
ll 1 14 h l y u 11 ~ r a cl e d
lmmt"<I 0<.•t•upun!'\'
CORONA DEL MAR
DUPLEX
Lovely duplex, each 11n1l
havmg 2 bcdrms each.
Walk Lo belleh. Priced lo
MEARSOUTH •• REALTORS
COAST PLAZA CdM DUPLEX
Almo!-.t new. 2 :-tor~· 1---------filti Goldenro<I &I0·-1708 "Cla~su:" h<Jmt• "' owr CAPE COD $1g.c),l)(J(lo"'n. ()p house
23(1) sq ft. \·aullC'd cell --·
mw.. watk-m bar, lmt> DUPLEX SPECTACULAR •
rm. din rm & 4 bdrm1>. CORONA DEL :'llAH ::! Quality Dupln
Reduced S4.000 to o nly bC'<lrm. fm•plat'l'. front An t•xt·cptional custom
SVJ,995. S45-!J..i91 unit. e11do:.ed y.ird. Up biull home-with vaullt'd
per un1t-lw:1mccl t•t•ll wood ht•am reilinf!t.
ings, 1 b<.-drm . Walk to hl•aul1ful solid Ol$k
:;huµp1ni: an cl beat'h cah1nt·ts thru -out .
sell ---------Aiiktn~ Sl54,500. 64 1·7270 lirt·pla<·rs in hvmi.: room
...o~ «4ti« S""'4
lt:a\ m~ lJH'll lovely hm
Jor :.alt• m Npt llch al :iooo Clay St. 3 HH .
lormal d1n1nJ.! rm. 23'
lamth rm l:111a1 llui.:1· :i
n1r g;ir ltcarf'd tht-ir :J
d11ldn•n IWrl' for 211 yrs,
lx•t·au1it• vr bt.>Sl M'hl an•u
& tx·1·au:.e only r:i minutes
10 bc:ll'hCs & to ever
vthm,:: 01>cn cvl.'ry ckl\'
1~ s. Come hv & make
your olr to tLtW, their
h!i!heve at thi:. pnce.ii---------1 752·086t
STEAL l l\"lml<l\llY
I , , i i /, t t \ •1 !
COMMERCIAL ti~
60xlSO Lot. S mall build · REALTORS
and master bedroom
lca!kcl #tlltSli window ...
1111d a cl:'rl.l m ic t11 ..
JUCuz:t.1 1n the masl1•1
bath. $159,500
al(l
UNITED BROKERS
C. F. ColesworthY
REALTORS 640-0010
DUPLEX ACROSS
FROM BEACH
$1 75.000
&lli 7.tl.t S.'8 2739 ________ _ 'Bc!-.l rental areu of
Newport Beach with
summ1•r,wml<'r rt-ntalR
Spar1ous units with 2
bdrm,, e::irh. Ba !conics
ror mdoor1ouldoor hvmit
and year round cnJOY
ment.
OHTHlllACH
1 bl'. lurn'd. condo
w /supcr laaoon view ,
tool Sec. bklf. on tbe aand al sse.eoo. Call:
WA.&.UCI Ir C o.
dALTottS
714·129·5'6'
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
•LISTINGS•
SELL idle items w ith a JoM Socr 752-2020
DaUy Pilot Classilled Ad. ~ti Pl Properties_
GeNr.. I 002 Want Ad Results 642·5678
this b1g4 br, 2bn beauty!
l\lany ph.ases included
tamily rm. patio. fruit
lrl.'l'S etc. etc. Pr iced
$1.000's below mrkt. at
SG-1,950. Convt. or VA
loan OK. s.i6·9898 Agt..
MINI
RANCH near Newport 's Back
Bay! Own er m ust sell
now' On~· $89,900. Call
Rl.:OCARPF.T. 754-1202
NESTLED
RETREAT
Your new home is set off
wrth sout hwest tandscap·
ing. 4 Bdrms and new
drapes in fam. r m and
liv. rm . All new tutchcn
appliances. Patio with
fire-ring. Call soon.
~2313
mg. Room to hui ld addi·1 • .:~~~~~~~~ tional, good parking.
7~1~ I Luisi Hlff Co1on1 dtl M11 PLUS
Now operating as beauty •-.--------1 a charming 2 bedroum I • t l · ,. Rental with f1replacf'
Local b . ..sld•r want• sa on , .. s a ions Jn· d t. "' .. • eluded. Tcrnfic walk-In. OWNER an a separate pa Ill
bltlldabl• p r operty Good for many types or DESPER .a..TE deck ..C.wport, Costa M•M bus1neu Great op· A Ca11 644·721l
..._ T..,...wn1, od-portun\ty. Complete Mustsell.b1~cuslomized mslB
d-ons. multlplt Uftlt e.900. ~lr~eig-l~~.Cb43 ~~;:! t .l..__:..._
property. FA.ST 400Ltre· FORJM ~~~reo:..~m~~K 1~1. 1
• ~SCROW . Cal C.M • ..,~ k ,. _ _. ....,
64" •'90I _..._, ~r;. •• • -r:::... As 1ng price just re· ..__,a Mffa Io, ..
u-eA _.,....... duced to $145,000. Call •••••••••••••••••••••••
54(}.1151.
GoHers Dream ~,.. HERITAGE
·•· REALTORS
COSTA.MESA '
Eastside ch1irmc-r. 2
Adrm !\larter or n:th·r
m~nt home. $59,500~
Balboa Bay Prop.
R•mtON .
• 67S.7060 .._.
TRl-PLEX ;(6·;
Uy owner , clost.' to all ft,~~ THE REA -~~
M csa Ve rde's mo!!
SPECTACULAR home.
BR. 4 ba, FR, DR. LR,
Spanish 2 story. 1~ acre
The golf course i11 you
back yard. Open Hous
Wed. thru Sun. 1·5. 17
P a n ay Ci r c le Agl
54().()808 _ _....
llhp'~ In C.M. 2 BR, I 'Al ~;~,.· -. :$
BA, lrg den or dino·rm ..
ESTA!~_R
Lath & p laste r . Xlnt
<:ond. Bltns, dshwshr.
cpt, d~, frplc, Vlln Lult,
wnllpaper w /1 &t 2 Bl\ un·
Its. Good Inc. 1170,000.
Will earl')' 2nd TD. Prine.
only. 548·S777.
macnab I Irvine
realty
THI TllUCI 11 TlltlAC
And so ls this gre:at 2 BR, 2 bath
"Cardiff'' w/dtning r m & lovely
patio. Air cond. AFFORDABLE at
$83,500. Bill HutcbJngs 752·1'14. <P-95>
360° YllW Of Mtvn'On
$261.000
Architectural delight. -one of a
kind. Thr~ story homts with ex-
traordinary design. Lots of wood
and slass with the latest. amenities.
New in & out. STEPS TO OCEAN-
FRONT & BAYFRONT. This Is
somtth.ing really special !
PIJMI PIMIMSU&:A POtM1'
$271.000
Exceptional col'tl"r location with euy walk to Bay & Octtanfront.
Clean & fresh contempor~ d~gn home W)Ui unique features. ~ 2
1tol'Y. 4 bdrm. lam rm. and den. ~~"'.;-. two story grMboUie in· lfa.;~atio•. balc onifs1 and e
1kJJJ•btl· Shown by ap~.
' .r : VACANT .. ~,~
MESA MORT~
~pct" loc11twn~loso• ~
bopp1na and schools. 4 bedrm home, nl'.;<ts
aome TLC. Seller ~ vecy
m .,\.iYat e d . bo1&1th t
11 nother ai nd H IS'r
SF .. U .. ! Take ad\anCa ' now• Coll 6'5-0303. ,
r:cn11 S TE
OLSON. . ..
t
, ...
~ Walkm ti ltm
Real E&lat•
fllfltela11
A!Al !HAT!
associated
II..,• ., , w • wt I\ tr ...
• I fl'\. b I ,. ' C.
OCEAHVIEW?
BRAND NEW You bet! Tnis one year nc•w duplex has views
from both units + fireplaces. balconies. Huge 4 br, 2'~ bath +
and low maint. landscap. fam rm with fplc. Walk
mg. $135,000. to &olf coun.e and park. WICJCjtfthomRltrs Choice F.V. location
G75-6l60 673..s447 Sacnfice al S86.500.
JUST REDUCED l'MffU:1jrMl!t.;mm
$77,000, College Park 3 &Toro 1032 e6£!J47fofuf546·8103
Br 2 Ba, RV access. •••••••••••••••••••••••1--------•
FAMILY BY OWNER Hunl'g Move 1n cond. 831-13.tO,
Agt. DELIGHT Landmark adult condo. 2 --------•I Hcaut1ful 4 bdrm home Br, 2 Ba . brand ne w Vets Affenffon on quiet cul·de-sac. Plen· plush cpl & drps. Call
VA appraised value ty of cxtr811: Family 548~.
$80,000. Offered ut room, covered patio & ---------l
S"rJ.500. Quahly built 3 large fenced yard. Walk
bedrm, 2 buth. Shake to lhe high school. Ask·
r 0 0 f, b r I C k f p l C , ing $84,000.
hardwood fi rs Near
schools & P!irk. Vacant, m·n fi~fiGll:?~ see anyt.1me. Ca ll~ nn ...... "'""n.-.~ 540-1151. ~\)~ 499·2800
... ·.,s ~ HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
F...talnValley 1034 •••••••••••••••••••••••
M. v. Golf Course. <>wner. In Law Quarters S Br, 3 ba. Newly up-AND/OR
graded. $1S7 ,9SO. THH9'f'lltfnot
S56-M76.
• 4 BR, 2 Ba, lrplc, D/W. $66,°"0
Mesa del Mar. Owner DO YOU ~EED 2
Avail. now. $82,000. HOMF.S IN ONE? Try
963-5993 this French Cha tea u !
LOTS OF LAND
with nice 2 bedroom house. Ready to expand.
Only $00,900.
SCOTT REALTY
536.7533
llWARDS
llWARDS
llWARDS
Lots of .. old world" MESA VERDI charm , from wooden•--------EXCWSIVE shutters & cedar shingles•-------•
Giant aame rm with
massive used bnck fplc
expanding from rloor lo
ceiling. Complete with
owner's prized pool t11bl e
and bar! 1''ormal living
rm with dramatic 2nd
fplc' 4 BR's. Manicured
neighborhood. Just re
duced. BKR536-93ll.
to the suspended. wind· HIGH OH A HILL
.Just like new this custom ing staircase. BeautifuJ 4 br. 2 ba on qulet Cul-de·
3 bedroom, 2 bath with plush carpeting and aac. $77,500.
plush pile e1rpetlng, custom drapes. Secluded R..t •tote laree faauly room. Wllh 1 h 1 A 1 used brick Clreplace !or P u.s pat 0· cres 0 ProfetsloRQl1 green grass & towering 96~ •377
RAMCH REAL TY
551-2000
UHIYEUt'TY PAIK
$94.950
Exc1tln1 Edtnbura
model lownhome w/3
ixirms, ramity rm. 2~ balhll. Huge backyard
w,brick patio & rlrepit.
Waterfront Homes
631·1"&00
~ ~
RAHCH REAL TY
551-2000
CREEKSIDE
WILLOW your dining & entertain· trees surround this._ ________ _
ment,callagt. po pular TNHSE +,.. Is in the popular Wood· 540.3666 private apt! Call now. bddae Villa1e and with WHELAN this unique home won•t ~ UU. 4 bedroom home,
---------1 last!! I 042 you have acceu t.o all the East.side Buccola. 3 Br. 2l3:592·1346/714 :1J63.8961 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---•t I 'lltl f COLONIAL R. E. 'l'FDED -1 N Be h comm ..... y ac1 es o fam rm. Tile patio. Walk~~~~~~~~~1 .. ~... u• ewport ac th.is beautiful area. Con· t.oCalhollc & NB achools.1. congestion &high prices. venlentt.oschoola, parks, 183;~,~000~o~wn~/a~gt~.:_:548~·~30~1~1 .~--------1 How about Huntington poo1a and sboppini. A -Harbour? Waterfront very aood buy today al
FORECLOSURE
<>wner must sell 3 Br 2
Ba. approx 1800 eq.n .
Recently painted, lie
Fam Rm, and cuest apt in rear. Im med . posaeuion O_A.C .
$111J,950. 631-1261 Ast.
Mesa
$84,500. Condos from $130,000. $125,000. Call for aJ.>pt
Spaniab style 3 br, 1~ ba A 1 so B e a u t l I u 1
Waterfront Homes from I + fam. rm" encl. paUo. $275,000. All with BOAT New cpt , palnt " landscaping. All thia in a D<XXS & fee 11i mple.
prime Fountain Valley FURCELL REALTY loc. Call 848--2848
'
WALNUT SQUARE
Attractive .. A" Unit w/2
bdrms, 2 batM, fam nn ..
J.iule patio, pool & park
nearby. VERY SHARP!
Thia is a sunny end unit
w /lot.s of glau. SISUOO.
IVS. YM COPELAND
REALTOR 552-0434
UOUC:ID
\-t acre ln Lapoa w!tb ~mercfal ke1ultl1, ~mln1area&. o(ftce. of room lot
~ t.o ,make thl•. real money maker.
O.W.C. lltT.D. $111,800. c-.,aco~•r , 1104So.~l .w,.
LAGUNA B£4CB '
497-2457
~ --
DUPLEX-Sharp 2 & 1 • near beach & park.
$91,500.
BERTHA HENRY
REALTORS
215 Del Mar 492-4121 ...
I can flnd itforyou. ··
· D11tnu Properfyl ,. ·
Beach area apeclaliat. •
Probates, Forecloeutts, '
Bankruptcies, Divorce.
Investment properties. Below market price. Wor1dWJ•lrobrs ,.~
Call 6734545 ••
,
-
•••• -.,, •• ··~·----· ................ t •• . . . . . . .... -·--·-.. ......... _ .......... .
-
.. I 1 ~:!.~~~ .... ~~!.~~~ .... ~::.~:!~~.... Wedn.c!!y. September 21, 19n DAILY PILOT •If.:._ ~~"Y 1000~,,.,.,..y 2000 ........ u. ...... 11. ...... ........... U40 La)llMeNlt 1250 s-ca. ....... t 1276 .\l'•l•e11ts,_..a.d • l11tt1th""""-....._ ··.-i$t ....•..••.•.....•..•.•• ············•·•······•• ......••.••....... .... .................. . . ....... ··-~· C:.--.. M• SZ21 • • •• • •••••••••••• • •••••••• •••••••••••••• • ••• •• • •• ••• ..... • •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
----------------..-••••••• .. •••••••••••••• POOLHOMI New 3 BJi 2 ba condo. ~leach 1741 Co.ta~ 3824 ColtaMna 112,,r.") • .,,/IDO 3Br, Iba. fpk. ~/month 4 Btdroom. Mew. A/.,;, pool, tennis. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••" ...... ....... u .,uuo. 1ur wullr. to b\'h ·' bulti. double aar11e. Lquna Vlllaae. No pets. 4 Bdrm. 1>r1\ UlC bNH'h Fodtollow VlllocJe .i
t-:xcdll·fll fl·ntul ,1rt:a 2 m1h·~ from '31Golden.Nd.M411277 hJ» p ool , t •lor)', $450.&«-9$(M __ ~mo . "liccly Cu rnu•hed yrly 62lW Wtlsons.IB~OIO lw.trh ,\II i hdrm~ & r Ol·UI bul·k dnhlrt•n oil, no J>t!h1. Call 2 l~lrm i·t1ndo s1~·1r1 lO rrnt .. I l Bdrm. $300 /mo. f'UR'll OR UNfo"URN
Ylin1: t'n•ut hu\ ut SllS onu I.it• dtile• bomllln l'.d)I " .... k. ~ 77M ....,.. Hh)utl 3252 bt-1u:l1 ~1(111 Oii> Oil (ilcnnl')rl', l blk lo •2br lownhomc"' rrpl • • • 3 (\ rm• & 3 8 u . -••••••••••••••••••••••• "I. lk.h m l:un.i.. l-'rl\ .ill Ix h m:1 0003 or \U-i . .t.\:!U ·l.~t.' pullo & enc IP'°lll<•' M. Jomisoa 1 UMrTS l"11bA&lou.1 muster 1u1I\! :J Hr. 2ba. cpta. drp1. 2 cat OCE"' ~uch ~,., 1110 •Adults c•hild u; &. OH'I
Pri.11. nf ll\\ l\l•r:-.hl p Sa'\ lu" nhoU!'>t· un Sm p\ I yd JllUU n\U ~Jr (1.'nrcd. ftplc $400. AM VIEW l! lldrm I urn rnntl11 Slc·Jh Pool & jucurn U\ u11 2'739'l1'06Hm11r
tb.\\tlhhu.:l·O\\lllr' unit <iltrUJ.(t·" 7~0617 Aait. 67S~l0.6-t20393 Ad111ta.28r ,2ba.f"rplr. fromtx>uch~111U <hc .. 11f1ont. 2 liR . M11111:hnV!eJo
lu...am Co1t.M... l2J 4 --.-,-2 Clubhouaes.Jacuuis& SHOHE61ll0ftt.TY luliulou.-.dl.'tk,lrpl<"..:ar.~ & 3 Bdrmi.. rn uturc YoJ1n'u~L.J...WtolD.~~of .~;
" l lledroom condomm1um pools. Lease. 752.9200 492 ... ""·' no peti. Winter $400. adults .. 85 pd 77~ Srott .. MWJ• ..,.
••••••••••••••••••••••• lll!Ur pool and l•nnls. ""'" '9-&·5792 Pl oo:s0-73 '""" HC1PY•1t : •
•••
H!WftOIT llACH Mt"tlu V4!rde 3 +-fumlly, S:l !JO / mo nth Ca 11 Newhom~. 3Br3 Ba, wet· . Ffttt •' Ul·,,ut1ful ar t·a' All untl ~ h.tvc la• b1& .. n•w paint. $400 ti4tl-·M77 bar,nrpark&lake.$4SO S..Jucm -Almostoceanfront,lovely OAKRIDGEVIL.LA val r<:fnJ,tt>rator~ & la undry ~uipmt:nt m Mo. No J>t1t1. -. • mo. 493-9796 Cap1trofto 3278 2 BR Duplex_. icur. Wint.er 3 br, 2 ba, bltns. Cblldren l"ami'&Entertainmenl -;:)
luun,}t'" rfl()ffi l>on 'l na!'I" t .. st: by' A1'~nt833·l768 Nuat. :.! br. 1 bu home, ••••••••••••••••••••••• $425. 4!t7·1144 Marion, welrome. $'2'7~. 858 W. W'"""'britd.11!~12rv•-~ • 1• o ... --w/cpb, drpi, 2 car aur. SEATERRACE·3Br,den, Ah'l.orl/492-MOteves Cent St 64611S69 uuu "u• mr TWO 4-PLUES -COSTA MESA Ja-0(). New t.:·1ide 3 br, 2 to'eonced yard. Nice area. pool & b c b a ccess, Lovely 4 br, 2 b~, fplc. -er · · (CulverDr.al
1-:"cclh·nt (.•orntr lot·ution. nt:wly ba, yud, encl. aara.:e. $350. 963-4567. ogent, oo guarded, ocn view, lse. fNI, cpts, drps. kads/~l Newport leach 376t $410 E/Sldo triplex, 3br, Barranca) ·-. laund. No pets. fee. $650.1·156·3629 OK, good areo · S42S. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2ba, frplc, yd, encl gar. Please call 64.2·5678, Ext,
pamlt"(l & t•omplt:h~ly dtcorattd inside:: TSLMamt 642·1603 -~.Agent,ooree. On Lhe beacb·winter ren· TSLMgmt 64.2·1603 333, to c laim your & out. Will '>t-11 st:paralt: or togtthtr 4 Bdrm, ramily rm, 2 Lease Sea Terr, 3 Br 2~ --tal Duplex 3 BR 2 Ba ---------• Ucketa. PHICf: ru:DUC.:ED SURMIT OF llrand new.condo 3 Bdr, bath, buJll.sns. frplc, Ba,T/H·tennls,pool,bch 2 Br+ den. bltns, pool, up:$495.2 BR,tBadown m>. New 2 br, 2 ba. 4.
L·L:R• :.!11 &, all' ''Ond , crpt, paUo.gardener.Nopets. access. view . $475. !!!es. rec. ~~·8 S3751mo. DJ5.8othw/gar&frplc. plex Encl. yd. laund,
r r_ drpl, aut.o-dr dbl 1ar, all Nr Graham & Slater . 831·1678 o.n·3807831·_.. Mature adults. 2914 W. bltlns. •••
. ..
' . .,
TRl-PLEX
Pndt ol n" nt-r!-.h1p, only 2 yrs old
Spac1ou~ J txtrm 2 b<ath owntrs unit
\\ (1n.:pl .an
CQJr appl, pvt patio, ten· $475/mo. Oceunfroot 646-2030 TSL Mgmt 6C2·1603 ---------nai., pool, jacuzzi, no 898-2028 Evei. 493.9431 Niguel Shores-3Bt + de!'· ---· --------l Br. enclosed at10 pets. $480 mo. 540-8886_ , --. -. -re!ng, stove, dues mcl d ~!'.~ •••••••• ??~~ Oceanfront 3 BR. 2 Ba, 2 Br. adults. close to shop· $220/mo. No pets~ quiet -
3 Br . 2 ba. frplc. patio. 5 $500 mo. 494·2245 !rplr. Sept . June_ or yr· J>1ng. no pets. rnuture person 6'2·16194
J BR. 2•,2 BA. gor&eou,, blu ocean. Bltlns. New -. Vacant. 2 br. I '• ba Condo ly 996-6756 645-8939 · brand new condo. With 2 cpt!>/drJ)6 213.425.0314 3 Br. 2 Ba. nice home, as· Ill fam1I~ .ires HJgbly -- -----l UNITS
EASTSIDE COSTA MESA
Owntrs · n :al' unit has largt: f am1ly
room w f1n·plac<: Umts arc frt:shly
p:11nkd t·arp<:ts. drapt:s. pool
lrg pallol>. 2 car garag~. --soc pool, new cpti.. $425, up1traded $275. BK H Occaofronl · R1 ~hl on New CONDO 2 br, 2'~ ba, DcMa PoW 3126 ~l~a~~J:i~e;~~· ~: 3 ~:~:. 2fot>;~e:1t~d'. 2~{ ~· 546-627~ .:._?51::111 962 .a,m 91l8•1317 ~~~\33~~11sfs\~1 ~~ ~P~rpl:z.., b!!::i· 6~~9f; ••••··~··•••••••••••••• ,.
Call549-3710or !)36.1956. S.WO. 14431 Chateau La. u r • Vi • 3267 3 Bdrm lu:<ury Condo nr 9683558 Bkr Magn1C1cent .Marina ---673-4545 -•llOft •10 So. Cousl Plozu Pool, -----V1ew,Rorgeous1.2&3br
bi4 Cove St. 3 Br 1 \.'& Ba, •••••••••••••• •• ••••••• gar $350/mo 640-4462 East.side beaut. 3 br. 2 ba. Apts. 493-0075
huge Fam Rm & (pie 2 BR. 2 &. convertible eves. BACHELOR $360/mo. -------ft"ncd yd. $425. 642·0282 · REMTEAS den. drps, frd, lndscpd, ---548-68115 Panaroma view, new 2 •
--"-------• Let us show you how you auto. sprnklrs, reCrig. Beaut1Cul 3 br, 2 ba, with -BR & Den 4·Plex.. No
4 Br, 2 ba Mesa del Mar. wtll be living rent free 770.1435or 830-3725 brick Cplc. cpts. drps, APT FOURSEASONSAPTS pets. Mgr.498-1097
DUPLEX-
EASTSIDE COSTA MESA
2·bdrm. unit w /privatE: patios on dt:-
s irablt cornt r lot in NEWPORT
llGTS! Compl<:t t:ly r t:modt:lt:d t:X·
tt:rior. la ndscapt:d/sprinklt:rs .
Cln. frpl, nu cptg, cov and mak.lng money by lovely area nr Ml. Sq. • Spacious2brtwnh.se,1~
pat. $450. 64().()()()8 purr haslng your own _...le h Park. Kids/pet OK. $395. ALL UTIL.Sb . PO! ba, pool, pvt pallo. child 2 BR,Wmapiflb cen1 t oc1ean ....;._--------1 home.Call anytime. He .. ,...... oc 3269 963-4567,Agenlnofee. 100' from t e ocean . ok. No pets. $260. 735 vu. oodburn n1 rpl.
Mesa Verde 3 br 1~~ ba, SCOTTRIALTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---Avail. now! 2 01 E . JounnSt.646-6483 Avl. 10/1. $375 ·mo.
Fam. $42.5. 1st. Lst. $100 ..... PT W"nRFRO..._.T NEW Paint & Wallpaper. Balboa Blvd. Only S250 -493·5845 sec. New crp·drp-pnt. No 536·7533 ,.. "" " 3 br. H 3 bu condo. Pool, per mo. NO FEE. Call: STUNNING 2 Br 2 Bat--------
11,.Quail
lliilPlac:• Praperties ·
pels. 551-U2.3 ·~~~~~~~~~ 3 Br, bltns, frplc. Yrly patio. gar. Nr. So. Cst. Sue at 556·7777 anytime. garden apt, pool. rec rm, l;li BLOCK SHOPS . lse. Days. 771-4384 or Plaza. $375. 640·<Y135 S'l75. 710 w. 18th St. 2 Br, Crplc, l ba $275. incl.
3Br. 2Ba. bltns. recently Executive home near eves/wknds 675-6169. gas & water. Extra lge 2 '\
carpeted & painted, fncd ocean: 4 bd, 3 ba, ram -----South Loguna 3286 Newport Oceanfront. 2 IRAMD HEW br, 2 ba. frplc. $295. incl
yd. covered patio, boat rm. dsn rm. 11et bar, n re BLUFFS CONDOS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Br. 2ba. bltm:>. Avaal IO/l 2 br. 2 ba, all bltns, frplc, gas & water. Adults, no
or RV storage area, $375 rl n g. outdoor 8 BQ & Leu:.es starling at SSOO 2 bdrms .. ~ b11lh, bwlt sn:., to 61 l. $450 mo incl util. "'ncl. gar. Balcony. patio, pets. 493.7439 or 499-4147 .
mo. 979·6761 pool S7~/mo. Coru.1der ~~nlh: Agent 644·1133 _ fireplace. & beams < 7 14 ) 6 7 3 · O 8 8 l or laundry rm S300·$32S • -----lse;opt 848 <n07 . $425 nor month 121JlW6·00111 TSL Mgmt 642·1603 Br. 1 ba. Carpet & drpi., :\1E.5A Verde 3 br, 1"2 ba - --Xlnt family home. 5Br. .,.. ----bltns, garage. $285. mo. 752-1920
1400 QUAIL ST. NEWPORT BEACH home 3161 Sicily $425. sn· S215. 2 Br' Ai.teal! Kids 3'"' ba, lge ram rm, lge CcmlffY & Company Winter Rental, 3 Br & 2 2 Br 1 Ba w;gar, Jndry 498-0318aft6.
cl.gardnr.645·0836 OK. small rec. unit. call k1tl'h, ~r schls & shops. 497·2457 Rr. completely r e fac1I. S2SO mo. 2009 Ma· • ___ .., 3840-
---the expert rnll JServ Weslchfr. $950/mo. Yrly --modeled. 12 blk to bch. pie. Mgr Apt K. 548-6185 • __.,,, Condo. new 3 Br 2 Ba, 2 ~900 · lse.640.SZH. Wntminster 3298 t:ncl gar . $375& $3'l5. l st ---•••••••••••••••••••••••
Mountain,Deurt. Hou1fffuf'ftillwd car gar, refr1g, wshr ••COMUIMnGuicle ----••••••••••••••••••••••• &last+dep.673-9404aft Nice&cleao2bdrm. FAMJ.LlES
Resort 2400 •••••••••••••••••••••• dryr. pool. tenni~.yrly BLUFP'S WATER VIEW Very nice 4 hr. 2 ba home 6P~I Walk loeveryth.ina~ STOP HUNTING
••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport a.och 3169 lse. $480 mo. 642-3443 Kids & Pets OK! Only 3 BR. & fam., beaut. gal-with OW, drupes, cpts, 2 $260. Agent644-5046 THINKING OF ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'k $230. lge 2 Br. call tbe ed courtyd Agt 64•Hl.33 car gar .• good area. $395. SUPER lge 3 Br apt. 'h
PALM SPRINGS? Lovely bayfront 3 br, 2 ba ~3f5.ne:u 2 P~~':1 ~P~!· rental expert.~900 3 Br. 2 ba, Crplc, lge yard. IJ63.4567 Agent, ooree. ~:~~ ~s~r':;.F~ MEW OWNERS
bch hsc. Dshwhr. washer dr G & '1 · • ••C-rsGuic» S400mo. u.......--Fu-t-1..-~ .... EWM" ... "GEM~ Think of a luxunous 3 & dryer. ,213 )m7.6087. apes. ar enc pnv. 6754912 Bkr ..--...,.._or mo. 752·0729or 1·998-3423 " ~""" """'
Bit, 3 UA. 1700 sq. fl ,2LJnoi9 4445 ' yard. 2043 #A Charle . 2 Story, 4 BR. 3 Ba. + -u..MWlhed 3300 SUMFLOWER l\~nhm w pool, JUl0u1t1. . S404752 !am·tm, close to bch. Oceanfront 2 BR, 2 Ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEANFRON'f YRLY, 2
wet har. cmplll y furn. 01.'arh duplex. 3 br-2 br cpts encl yard Edison High. New crpt.s, gar. crpl /drps. r efr1 g. Uvton BAYFRONT&en· Hr ! 8~· fe~clNgar, :i,t
1 b*1nanddett
Clo:.e to dwntwn Palm Winter SS95. Students ok. Gar~ge kids ok · $250 &, paint. $500. mo. Call Bill, Yrly lse. $600. 642·3443 JOY living. Near 4 br, 3 ~e72~; 0
559 422~wpo 2 and 3 ~
Sprini;s. Jo'or ddails Avail 9 15. 751-9392 S275.83i.9081 · 5·3859 ba, din. rm. Pier. No _ · or · lbrtowfthousn
WE HAVE IT ALL AT
BANBURY CROSS.
Close to beach. schools.
freeways.
•Pooh• •Jacami•
2 Bedrm from $2.85.
842~
Viewpoint La. off Beach
betwn Warner & Heil
-. .
phone :agl K!l3·4773 or ouTHES"....aD , 4 Br, 3 ba.fa~ rm, 3200 pel'l.$1100/mo.ti75-0S2S PROMONTORY POINT lwlthfinplac•1) 8!1!17855 ,.. """ MesaVerde3br,2 ba, 3Br 2Ba,cpts,drps,2car sq.lt.1444Santaago,N.D. --Smartly rum. 1 BR & 3POOLS
flcaut1ful 3br. 2ba, puti'?, 2fplc, view of golf gar, lge yard w/ encl Sl500mo. Agenl,541·5032 Condo"""lums lolt. $7SO. mo., 90 day
n('W crpts, d~. Avail course. $.500. 540.3590 patio. 7062'Ford Dr. $450. Uftfwniihed 3425 minimum Tennis Pool JACUZZI 1mmcd111t~ly 'Lil 6i78. -_213~·0'.!81 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• fun G75·5626 ' '
StiOO . 752-74 10 dys 2 Br. lba, fncd yrd, very I iM 1244 Shorechffs . Qual 2Bram Super 2 Dr Condo sn nice · SAUNA
3br 2ba $350. 2br 2ba , ,
$200. Gar, rec area. loon
Holly. 848.3896
49'1 4851 evsiwknds ' clean. new paint. pvt st, " rm home. Lge pallo & area Avail Oct $295 mo 3 Hr 2 Ba Cpk d.shwshr Close lo S.A. frwy & So. nr schls. i360/mo. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• back yard. Pvt bchs. 347.3871 · · eating d~ck. lgc dlx· up: Cst shop'g. Tiny . Tota
PT MANAGER; Rent dedoclioo on new deluxe
units in Hunt. Harbour
Big llcur Wt•ckl'n d
I l11leaway on lt•vl·I lol.
lo ts of trccb, x lnt
~loonnrli:c lo<.' Close lo
11old mme, ~kimi: & JlOlf •·o urs('. fo"urn1 .,hcd Oceanfront deluxe family
673-7737 home. Co mpl. rum. 3 br,
---2 ba , frplc. garages. O.~~y llel<1. Avail. 3 to 8 mos.
.. 1 2500 ~700.G75·1849
btwn5·9pm,642·1.316 REMTALS $700;molse ---per. steps to water. S495 welcome.3playgroundi1
S2 ISUtllPcl. ~BR,2 ~o ... 2 .. $425/525 L.ido Isle. 2 Br+den. Apdlw;entiFumi•Md mo.<?ctto June.2094lst FROM$285UP
+Do 3br, ba .. S525 view.$800/mo lse. ••••••••••••••••••••••• St. 213·869·5985 or 2511 W.s-flower
Sharp,ref+more,many 38R,2Ba ....... S435/700 Lido Isle. 2 Br+dcn ..,_ollland 3706 914-6914; wknds 714 557-4800,S.A •
more avl. S m oil rce 3 BR,2t,.2 Ba . . . .$450 Sl'lJX)i mo 673-3057
area. Adult couple. Write C~asslfied Ad #21. Dally;· .•
Pilot. P. 0 . Box 1560.· .,.,
Costa Mesa 92626 • ....................... ----
By!Owner. Jbr. fJm rrn. ON Bft;ACll an ltmall
ronn din, nr :.hop'Jl & pri vutc com mun1ty
LIFE serv. Unit. Prof 4 BR 2"'1 Ba S795 · . ••••••••••••••••••••••• -------7 days 10-5 No pets Rnll serv.645"4900 4BR0 2Ba .. $420 On Waler. JBr +oCCace, LrTI"LE ISLAND super •-t t • · •ALI.NEWAPTSI.2,&3
••ConSWMnGtllde 'coSTAMESA. rum rm. ~an rm. L.gc ruce.cherry.2 er:&s un· ~sf.ct QUIET·CUTE·PRIVATE bdrms e ncl. gar.
3 BR 2b·th ,....50 home w 1complet e deck $375 no""ts Quiet 1Br.uulpd.$290 mo. fireplaces. blt·ins !>Chi Garden Grove Uel·orator furn1:.hed 4
213·531-0401 bed rm with VIEW of Best area! $235. Lge 2 Br, ~lam Chann~I & J etty. kids OK. Nice. Small fee
, U 5 . .,. • 0 t l ' ' ,,_ • ••••••••••••••••••••••• CA., lw>'>C ,.r DAD D A.... ffi4)DAa "1881d pnvacy. n wa er a mature adults 673-4394 •------i-•-~ 3806 __ """ . .......," ~ ~ ays.
turning basin VIEW. ---~ _... $1500 mo S400imo for l Bdrm w/loft ••••••••••••••••••••••• $3'15. 3 Br 2 Ba, no pets.186 , dbl gar. Condo. Pool. Ste~ to beach, 3 Bdrm. & &unroor o n Grand FROMS300T0$750 2L'it.St.£/Slde. $400 mo. 962·3519
beaut decorated , ~nal. Sahsbury Realty All yearly: also houses 54~ eves/wtndsFred
Wttbnd Home Houws Unfurnished EASTSIDE 3 br, extra lg $750imo lse. ~3-aMlO _ included. • 2 Br aptS, & 2 Br Ilse luxe 2 bdrm., air cond.
:! HR. on 2 acres, 1050 sq ••••••••••••••••••••••• rear yd. $350. WATERFRONT HOM ES Yrly SSSO/mo. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Rumbol~~~ Invest. w;~ar. cpts, kids OK. no Condo $260. No lease, no
rt. frplc. horse arcu. 90 General 3202 5"18·3765aft 6~ CALL63H400 321sapphire,B.I. pets.S235-$250.831·908l dogs. Call 768-7117 or
min. from Oran~e Coun· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~c~ B Ba I 170-0066 DUPLEX 2 Br 1 Ba, $295 675-l...,.. 2 r 1 • c ose to bay, MESA PrNES 1----· -----ly. SJS.000 termi, C<i ll I & A RENTALS & $275 9 OA & 1952 -----winte r rental. $350. BRAND NEW St d . • f'ry, Den lllnkle Ht•al WhypayS35·$30when · 1 5 't573CAMMJ>a~IRVtME NewNptTerrare3br Con· Upper 2Br, cpts/drps. 640-0626or673-8700Jean · 0
lOfl DaUXE21R ~"°tale. 542 3456 you can get t.he bestror Meyer Pl. 645·4855 do, nr bch. $525. 634·1441 Crplc. ,.,, blk to bay. $425 & 2 bdrms, S230, S23S & Bilce to bcb-ttew cpt-R-~ Es-tat• less, Sl5. fee. 7 Days Lg 4 bdrm 2 ba Greatly dys 645·6763 evs mo. 675·2773 8c6oa Pe•ldo 3807 S350. Im med. ~cupaocy. fresh pot-encl gar. S26S -$IS01'~m4 Pl xutll pd d d · ~ I t TURTL.EROCK 4 Br, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pool, jacuzzi. lrplc & Al lO'L C JI Exch~ 2800 i lSo Nwpt Bcheutil pd upgrt, e d, new ri!o" • Fam Rm, lg. Din Rm, 4 Br. 2 Ba, spac. beaut, So. Bayfront, 3 BR, 2 ba 1 br steJ)8 to beach $250 dshwhr. ~dult.s, no peta~ Clke':i..ooro· /
a
••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl7SDplx,frpl,yrd ~ri::w~.o:f:i~~ lace1 atrium,28a,nrpark& Dove!' Shores, fplc, lge apt. Lovely luitury mo'. yrly . Incl. util. Open daily. 2650 Harla i.-;.___;__:._;_:...:..;. ___ _
Why pay taxci.?. Trade SlllO 1 RR. pool. util pd 'Ddoo BBQ As P lil pool. $S95mo. '752·0188 kit & din rm, 2 car gar. duplex, $625. 675-3878. 67s.5800 Bkr . , St. C.M. <Mesa VerdeH111HtlClt1
Prank Zelarncy ncnltor $200 2 BR 2·Plx. will con· I r . suma e $150/molse/opt. 673-4545. ' . Or.off Harbor Blvd.) 491·11502 s1der rhlldren VA loan. at $43,000. L.ovely3br,2ba,w/DWd STEPSTOBAY,l BR. 1210.Nicelbr.Responsi· lMONTIIFREE Agents welcom e LB. cpta, drps, patio, fence 3 Br. 3 ba twnhm. Frplc, Great patio, frpl. gar. ble adults No pets Ulll 549.2447
Real Estate S2252 BR C.M. Apt. Priced $80,900. Brkr. yd. Nice neighborhood. heated pool, 2 car gar. OPEN $275 incl Ava.ii 9/2:5 100 E Wanted 2900 S2'703BR. kids OK 546·8477 Kidsfpet welcome . $405. Plush oew brn cpt'g, 328~Sapphire,644-0954 Bay opt9 • · S200 Large. immac. l br,
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1826NewportBl,C.M.
3
B 2 Ba r 963-4567Agent,Nofee. freshly p a inted. Xtra I ' . patio. pool. Mature, ________ _
Local bu1 Ider wants $15 Cee 645·5990 r.. . om/rm, on nice. $525/mo. No pets. Duplex L TTLE Isle $360. Yrly. 2 Br 2 Ba. den. adults. No children or 3848 cul·de·sac. carp/drp1, Call Marianne. 646·7414 W/boat dock. 12><24 llv gar util, w/sofl water. pets. 1887 Monrovia""°11191a
bu1ldable pro perl y HOMEFINDERS ·1425. in c l gardner. or640-0663. rm, 2 Br. gar. Adlts, no Penln Pt. No pets. 548-7924 NcwJl(lrt. Costa :\1esa 831·9081 pets. Wlnter/yrly. 67~ ----------11 BR,No.La.guna,fum or
area Tear.Oowns. 11dd REAL.TY CO~IPANY LIDO ISLE lovely 2 story $350-$400, n o p ets. unfurn. UUl pd. Adults.
oru.. multlple unit pro 2 BR. !rplc. patio. yd. UVE & PLAY on eo• lol. 2 br, 2 ba, 673-5644 CoroM del M.-1122 LA CASA 11.AMCA No pei.. Walk to bcb &.
perty F /\ST E.5CROW. Adults only. No pets. 1..._. WOODllJDGE part.ially rumlsbed, hu1e ._.____ .. _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ._.. I •-2 IR llhop'g. $310. mo. 49U54.l Call640-8208anyt1me S27S. 645-1103 or 646-41710 " patio. $850/mo. 759·9SSS -P•lil1u.u 3707 _________ 1 -.... •
or 548-6019 Lake-pool·P•rks 1 Up-••••••••••••••••••••••• A•all. Mow-S50.,.,.
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1
--ed--1--1 eraded new S"5 bulll 3 UDO 1~• IE Winter. 2 or 3 bdrm Dplx. n;S -;; All uUJs pd .• cpta, drps, 2 r, m1 e ag cp pre· BR r 11 2•L ~ t t. an..:i-. f • Adw•· fd. No pets. $275mo, $1 . + am Y rm., .,... Large 3 BR, 2~ BA, tux· 1295 up. 114 E. Balboa 'n icfOr"'~ poo '".T· ac a. wo b •th town home ury bm. Lrg. family Blvd.1-879-5891 J,. ""' over 35, no fell or
1_de-'p_._646-_563'7 _____ __. w/redwoocldeck.s&patlo room w/frplc. Eleiant children. Ca I Soe:i-;-_ _..:;_;_ ____ _
O..Polftt 1226 coven. Air cood. Prof. wallpapered Jiving rm Roomy,luxurlous CQDONADELMAR 556·7717 or Henry : lands caped patio. w /Clr to ceilinl (rplc. 3 BayViewapt.large n 642-9137
Jmme d . occupan cy. car gar. Approx 4 yrs. NearN.H.Y.C. 2 Br Townhouse, frplc.l~~~~~~~~~~I
1625/Mo.yrly <P·98) old.Sl400/mo. 1 Br,ZBa,SSOO Poot,tei;mts.Someocean SHARP 1 br. lncl's bltna1---------
Out of County :s8S01m<>, winter Agt . Prof. RntlServ.645-4900
Property 2550 631·1400 * •Co.tsunMn GvHM ....•...•..............
3142
•••••••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••••••
lc6oa Island 3106
•••••••••••••••••••••••
I'
'J BA YFRONT 10 mo
winter rental $600 mo.
&12 1670days. 548·8&17
l~~L.~ar~ry~O~y~c~r~642-~823S~~~l-63-1_-0400 _____ 64_s-_1_9_19 28r,3&&.$650 &Catah,naviews.Close +D/W nopeU.kidsOK M. Bach apt. Kllcb, -
1. to shoppmg & fine beach.. S225 645..9161 CUrt patio, gar. 2 blkl. to bch. , •' 644-2811 · · S250utlls. pd.494-3223 ·!·~JG Uu rr Whit l lll.dt~r
STEPS TO BAY, JUR
2ba,dlnrm. frpl, ~ar.
2 patios & garden $425
328 Sapphire, 644·0954
WIMTb REHT AL
Charmin& 2 Bt2 Bu,'rplc,
garaiie. 675·0994
lcAoo Pttthtsukl 31 07 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Park. xlnt. greenbelt elC· Rm Fam Rm Game poeure, cov'd. atrium. , · '
Lndscpd. court.yd. & Rm. $650. 759·9289
MIWPORT CRIST
I 2<JO t Nl'wporl Hlvd N 0
f r I ·I 1 h 7 '> 41, 10
2 Br studio, 1.\-it Ba, patio, IO, util pd. 2 blks.••1
Oceanh'ont 1 br. l/p, gar. gar, s:m. Adlt.s, no pets Cress St. ~acb. $250. · ~
Adlll no peta. Winter &45-052'1 5484291 mo.. 491·2920 art 6 Ii
Winter Rental, auper loci $3.W, yrly $425. 613-1187 X>lx lge new 1 Bdrm bome. wtads. • .~ ~ing2b~ ~·::-~:r Spotlealuxuryd~!! Patio, yard, gara~. Mi9lll 3112:· ·· =~:.OO~U~u, no Jil>t!tC:C:~bp~!E..d;.r ~~t~1'a;::':· ~:'o'f mo~ ••;;;;·;;·~;.~~ ;
&U'wt.r Incl. Yr. ·Jy lease: SS7-45'19. loC. Nr. Bcb. POOi Is rec. •. ,
Brdm Deluite. A.11o 3Br 3Br3be1700 -1
!t::clou1 bouae. B•'I -mo a BR, 2 ba, new cpt. drJJe. rm. $310-UP + dep. Gas 4Br3bafam·rm2100' aar. No peta.. l'fr. occ. ltwtrpd.llWZ98 ••
• Wlnter.1-811.eHT 111195/mo Adults prcf'd No $310. 751.·:&e tt1!
Bedroom ApartmentJt pmS08AcaciaMS-1CM8 MtWllOl'tlHdl 316~ ~ Next to Beach. Call fft La. 2 br 2 be bea~ view lkSde 2 br, 2 be. Twnble, .................... _ •
S:l!OPM,813-90.14 iii ba .'Trff.1 Privat.. f!~o:i;~ar, yd. 2Br,lba.US«bSl.UP""· • M'll.~$-5205; 61M841 TSLMsmt • &U-1103 pet. (2.IJ)t.'7.o:Glatl25 -:=::-::=--:=:--:=--=--:=1-.::.=::..:::~:=-~-:..=..:::.::1aa11. •••• (211> SPACIOUS ,_'18MISlf __ • ___ _.... . I
New cllx. 2 bt, 2 ba on Lrl 3br, 2be Dpb, lt.ejll to= • •
Bhtfe. 2231 Paclft.c Ave., bth, trplc, JM patio, •ar. . "" CM. SZ8$. No pet.a. COG· Wetr or yrly. $475 • .-,e
tact: w.s. Petersoa, '7M230alU
..
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•
D.t.f Y '1\.0 T * Wttdnelda , ttmbet 21. 19T7
Add lt...Bulld 1t •. Diaper lt...Hammer It. .. Carpet SERVICE it...Cement ll ... Wlre 1t .. Hoo lt. .. Clean lt ... Move
lt...Prt!tS lt ... Pa1nt IL.Nall lt...Plaster lt...Flx It .. DIRECTORY
·-•c•..,.... C-.t/Cwrwt. -.c.triHI C'h•rGll Stt'•fcff H .. n9 HcMIMc..... ,...,./Paperittt PaWinc)/P ...... "9 l'tumb"'9 .•••••••••.••....•.....••.••••••.•.•....••..••.....•..•.••.••••.••..........•••••.•••••.........••••••••.•.•.•••..•.••....•.•••.•.•..•..••...•.•...........................••••.............•...•••.•.•• , ..... .
86JAppUa11t~~n ONIMANCrew.&1nu •:LECTRICALSEIW ICJ:: UANDYMAN :Carpent.ry, HAULINGlcLABOR p .. y C fie llOMESAVERS. Plumb
TRIPCHARGEJ!U pt pou11n1 & rtnlthlnll cALJ-.i;pihr,lcSMALL electrical. plumbtn1" FreeZ.Umatea Housekeeper.exp. Averace=1c:.!!!$39S When you're talking lnA&HealJ01aiatr con
1a2$ S . Mam. S A liiel )OW' own roriru, 1ave JOBS Ml·ml rloors 846-ml, S.47·2711 559-1!58.l Moo· Fri. af\ernoon1. iStory IMS. ln~rm uboul lsl. you have to be d1llonm&. Free est, $10
!14-1122 -~ 01• money.•1 M.23 u .. NDY .. AN H _, _ _.__ 644·'1&18 Prices incl ma•-·1.tabc•r lit. & we are bl Jo'or lsl hr . Honest & rellablir Hl•fl--4 m.ctric "" in ane .... _, 0 /I rd p;. . d u.as work and top hne i.en•1ce BofA. M C OK
... ,....... 8 • U Concrelo All U c3Z7_LM 845-8974 NOJOB67!~~MALL •l:::i• .. •C•U••,•:•T•E•••C•L•E•• .. •:.•. "°t•usnecdalebal~l.n1l.boerxop,u1dho· uarT_1!'.,...:.7,,,,.~ee1t. muteriol, intr & ei.tr ~ :u.so ----
• •••••••••••••• ••• ••• •• pha1•• l'Ql\Crote, block ft ,...,._ ..... ~ &.n _,,, " """....., ....., MRS JACOBS bnt k ~ork. Frre o.ala. F:t.Ji;CTRIClAN·pnced HANDYMAN H le ING. You DF~ERVE the efa. 731-0362 PROFESSIONAL P111nl Statt' conlr h e'd Bon· RoofincJ U•b)'alUloa in )our u c·dfrbondM8'75.9120 r11ht free HllmMle on omes BEST.'158-0377 i ded in!>r. Please contact ••••••••••••••••••••••• home Occa11on•l ,,_L.ll ... C lar1eort1m•llJobll. Apta Con1clentlo1.&1 MosOlr( ftl. Inter/Exler Reas. Blue Diamond Painting. ROOFS lnstalloo ractory
ilil)l/\l\'ltl wa.11"° "'--.. U c 873-0359 Craflllman. Ph6'5·0302 Rosemarie'• Housech1an· ••••••••••••••••••••••• work~642·0388 548·0352 direct; estab'l 3S yr:. , -••••••••••••••••••••••• h•"' ---Odd Jobs pointing In· Ing. Xlnt work, refs, &d Brickwork. Small jobs. WORKGUARANTEED Call Haro ld Gunn . c..,.. Serric• cHt· ... CAii • I tr I e" t 'r • w I n ci 0 w rates, own trans. 642.1403 Newport, Coeta Mesa & Inlerior/Extr. Free e•t. •...r.a !>19·2961
••••••••••••••••••••••• -••••••••••••••••••••••• J I 67.5-3175 .. .-~OS 1---------~rpel Man will lay )'OW'll l2 Noon . 5 P.M Wf,F.DINO CLEANUPS wulung. Jerry 645·11197 HOUSECLEANING la our rv ne. evea. ~yrs exp. 842.0295 u••••••••••••••••••• •• ROOFS FOR LESS
or mine Re pal ra " w .. kd•ya W"4!kly Maintenance HANDYMAN Bus ineu. R~ II ab I e Movl119 YOUNG Man, 5 yra expr Ex Per . de s I g n e r I All types, finan avail tlunJnc too' Guar wotk All hours on weekenda, f'ree eat M2·9907 service, Janice I Rag· ••••••••••••••••••••••• In wallcoverlng. Free carpenter will help you Free est, llc/bond'd, tn·
.it bluer uv1ngs Free any a1e. Call Rou, Gatd Se l t i 645·2333 ~edyAnnsal67S·8553 Local & Long Distance ests.645-8576,Andy build your project sr.Sen!orc1tiiensdiscnt
N ti4S 3li40 M2 ~ __ u :ru~:uh~v.ce~eet~n Grodlft9 Housecleanln& by reliable Movlng. Lowest rates. Sml Overheads, decks. etc: 8!M4'21 anytime
mpalnten•o"e'Reaso ay ••••••••••••••••••••••• couple. References fl$t, efficient aervlc~. . pallntl~Eg tco.Desmall Save5SCaU645-2333 . 'ih•mpoo" steam clean odor a .. n . . Free eat M ajesllc: pncea n I x r. pen· ---Repairs. Lie d & lmsrd
Color br1chteners; wht ••••••••••••••••••••••• ble rates. Cree eahmales. Sklploader. dump truck. 963-S8Ll or 1·626-8128 Modem Mo~ens 839-8552 dable. Work guar .. free l'taster /Repair All t~'pel>. i''rce est. Call
cpti; to m10 bleach Clean R.J Huffman & Son, Gen After 4 ·30 a!>k for Ron. bauhng. tree work. &rad · Housecleanln w kl est. 754-&nl ••••••••••••••••••••••• anytime 541 ·5930 Wall
bv,d1n rm,hallSIS.A"g Conlr CuatomAlt&Add, 64Hl5llor5484987 lng,demo,ctc75t·3930 Good work ~oodee (' Palftffng/rCllpfftftCJ VERYNEATPATCll n•-rm S'TSO co hSlO h to · b ' els ---E . re1.•••••••••••••••••••••••PAINTING.lnlr1Extr JOBS&TEXTURE ,... • uc • c r f d 1 Ii· ca 1 n R • Prof Jopancse L11ndscap· xper. 675·9589 PETERS PAINTING Expr'd honest neat •••••••••••••••••••••••
S5. Guu t'hm pet odor ;:'~~c:;:; :•w6~o5~~S4 :~ mg & gardening. Mainl HaullftCJ EXP'D Mature lady for Expr'd Reas Rates Reas i..1c'd. 9B4 ·10~5 t"rce~ 893·1139 CERAMIC TILE. New or ~ ~e:r~r·,;:s~ff5 ~~~f11 5411.4541 Lui. Bonded incl mowing. trimming. ••••••.•••••••••••••3~•·• clean'g. & personal mold Free Est. Call Gene Dave Putch Plastenng. nil remodel. Free est, sml ~1 0101 spraying, wel!dlnG Free OCC Student. Big ~ T s e r v . M th r u ,.. S52·o.u8 , --l) pes, Cree estimates. Jobs welcome. 536·242ti
---Dryw.tll And Al'OUllllC l.'Sl. 545·1072 truck. Trash, tree tnm, 8-<&·30PM ref' 979 0877 FOSTERS PAINTING. S40·682S nf\5
C....nf/COKnt• :>pcl· St Lie 636 5738 or ------etc Randy 642·5703 Fri h • T !>. · Qualttv PolntlrtcJ Comm'I & Resldenllal ••••••••••••••••••••••• 121:11 j22.0z79.' Hcl1ablc Expr Japanese 5'l9·3666 ' t ru ue!I •Lowest Prices No job too big or too Plumbl1MJ Kitchen, Bath. Enlr) ----Gardener Reasonable.---•liouael/AJ)U. small.12yrsexpr.Fully •••••••••••••••••••••••Patio, pool s . Tile
l.:EM ENT WORK. All Slat!! w e'd Exam Prep. free est. 645·5230Mtke. CHEAPEST hauling in Brighten your home or lntr/Extr 1n11rd1 lie. 636·6995 & OR \INS CLE \RED Quarry, Brick. 554·205lS
kmds. Reasonable. Free Class now starting. Ed --town. Fr estt.. CHEAP! business. Call The •WorkGuar.-Rers. 673-3202 'Jo'ROMsa'so eves .
f'llts. Call 750-6625 Jackson, ~·1192. Wa~A~al~ 642-5678 642·299S or 645-1390 Sunshine Girls. 552.0245 * Free Ests. 552.0575 Sell Idle Items 642·5678 Call 751.6942 Want Ad Help? --;;.;78
~~'!.~ .... ~~ ... ~ ........ !~~~ ~~:.~~!1! ..... ~~.~~ ~!'!!:.~~~ ... !~.~~ ~:~•·Trust 5035 ~=! ......... ~?.~~ ~-~--He4p W..ted 7100 tWp W..t.d 7100 wa~nvw 7005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... wporileach 3169 S27.~PERWEEK ••••••••••••••••••••••• Drln.ldngproblem? •••••••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••• • •• I BLK F'ROM BCH, HB. Airport Offices SHOP RENTALS call Alcohol Helpline DESIGN WORKSHOPS:
Nwpt Shores, steps from 536·4728, LVE MSG 1 ~ONTH FR Ee Artistic atmosphere C.M. properly. $10,600. 24 bn; a day 835-3830 "How to survive • enjoy
ocean. 3bd, 2ba duplex -----Fl.Ill servit'e. No lease re-CANNERY VILLAGE 10% · 3 year balloon. s e I e c t I n g h 0 m ~
Yrlse.(114)956·5871 Room1bath. CM home. c(d.200·600sq rt. Plenty Severalavallable from 979·9849.eves. SpfritualReac:S.r furnishings '' 8 wk
Female Pref nurse or parking 2082 S.E. S6StoS.130permo 181SSo.EICamlnoReul sessions ·lnslructorPeg BOYS & GIRLS
"ipac1ous3br,frpk.bltni;. Kltchprtv Cull631·2b26 Bristol St. Newport &~~ ...a / SanClemente Fully h e. g1e Collins. Author Put near lloag llosp1tal S315 ---Beach 557.7010 _..._."'1 For appt. 492·7296 &&2·4381 N1t·t! areJ in Anaheim. szo P~t/ lmg ll All Together Call A!tE:r school and evening work
Earn $20·$30 per WE:E:k or more r.M.!r v. c~k K1Lch pm'. 201 Executive Row Inc Lost & FoUnd *MICHELLE'S* for schedule 640-6714
PARK .,.EWPORT 11-1 Wakefield. 7SO 1261 Ofc lipace m Sewport· ••••••••••••••••••5••1•0•0• Outcall Massa~e Learn to play banJo' Blue
Uachelors, l <J r 2 • Al A R · Allnowlc......... 10AM2AM 731411!2 lo . C II G Bedrooms & Townhouses Room tor rent. ~t F. 5 rport rea. eccpl1on, ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · , gragg Jazz. a rc11
From$264.50 bdrm hsc Avail now. phone serv .. conCcrence --You deserve to meet so-642·9006orS48·4987
Apply now by calling 646·2443
bE:tw~n 5:00 and 9:00 p.m .
Spectacular s pa, total C_osta Mesa. 5'15·0546 -rm, k1trh. secy serv. die· Approx 400 sq. fl C-2. meone you belO"" with. Jobs W..t-~ 7075 toting & copy machine. A ·c. al 130 E. 17lh St • * * ,..., wu.
recreation program. Neat emplyd lady, best f'romS290. (714 )752·7170 S14S/mo. DoyleS48·ll68 Call
Monday through Friday. •••••••••••••••••••••••
socialprogram.8pools,8 NB loc. Lile kitch. Sl35. ClndyJeNdns 1 ____ 6_31_·28_76_ PATTERN CUTTlNG·
tenmscourt.s.AtFashlon Ref.S48·02Gl befSPM DESK Space avail. 17:J01 2'1 Alderbrook L 0 0 K 1 NG FOR moat .Patterns 75c·$l.
Island, Jamboree & San Be a c h BI v d . II . 8 . AMERICAN SPOUSE, Can pickup and deliver. JoaqwnHillliRoad. Vocati0ttRenfal1 4250 S751mo. Modern sharp Irvine 21 ·y Id ( I C lk. 547·3182 HelpW•fH 7100 WCMhd 7100
(714) 644.1,00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• office. "•"·0236 You are the winner of r o ema e o .,..., 4TIL I Id ' occ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
-Plan yo'u r winter vaca· c .... to the c ass1ca ancer, never accounting major de· s:m 3 br. 2 ba. encl. gar uon. Palm Desert Tennis ~=-..-W IRdustriol Rnt.a 4500 l"hte HtrYHt mani~. wants to meet sires work exp. oppty. AUTOMOTIVE Babysitter girl 8 aft schl.
Block lo beach. bale . yd Club. 38r condo. 639.3211 .I' 11...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Festival widower over 30. Wnte: w busy CPA firm. full or K'i/t Auto Ha rbor View. Cd M .
No pets. -./,.,,. --· Ind. Units W /ofc Miss Kim Ml Ra. Kwang p Ume. Malure. gd. bll) Mech echnlclans 640-7658, 9'79·6600X·2S9 ,_ --Family Entertainment H •1 po Bo TSL Mgmt f>.12·1603 Cabm Big Bear Sip~ 12. " 150().4-000 i.q n from 19' Oct. 1and 2 wa •• oon. · . x backgrd. Exe secy skills for new car prep! Busy
-· --Pool tbl, cir TV $50 day. ~::;,::::-.....-l:\tMl-:DOCCUPANCY 1329.Seoul. Korea Ph, call. Iv message. Pat Chevy service dept m 1 Br. 2 ha. garage, new 494.8611 Woodbridge In Irvine w 1 64-0 cr.1• 1 B a k e r y . M a t u r <'
( l..e;ii.ini: ore open 9.5 du•· <Culver Dr. al EXOTIC GIRLS 1 son. -vv.. I ast ·grow ng Orange S 1 1 d f C c pls1 reshly painled -----I s n 7 •·v Count" airport complex ·a Cli a y, lime . · M Ylry lse SSS01mo.34thSt RttltaktoShan 4300 l)7 .• h.Sat .. CJ4noon 11 • Barranca > Massage&Modellng Practical Nurse. PT. to add experien"cd new bakery. Exper pref'd
(·1.-....iltobch,532-3331 l t. .. ·or Pleusecall842·5678, Ext. Ref Coll 49A 9119 t " c.,'"3031 _v_.'~-------••••••••••••••••••••••• ---642·4'463 333 , lo clal m your Outcall542·3Ull•S43·3250 9 30P"1 ... 0 cur prep technicians. _.....,._. __
---------1M!F' Shr Beaut. 4·bd con· tickets RELAXING M A""SAGE $9 S01hr. Excellent work· Bakery sales clerk. F T do Woodbridgc-lrv . " '"" Ur ••ent . lady seckin" 1nH conditions 1n Pete's Bakery. 25260 La
BACHELOR
APT.
A it. M k rM BobJnmes·LIC Mas11cur " " I d' men 1e1i. ar .....,.7111 "'* * Outcall 9·9.4.94·Slll perm. Waitress job. Yrs 0p easa;nt sudrroun 1ngsl . Paz Rd. Laguna Hills exp. al Hilton Hotel. pp. ior a vancemen . 581-7060
Cutdown -----•SHARON'S• C.Club, Top R ests. See service Mgr.,•----------
U•litghpMses! Lost&Foound 5300 548·392Sbyl0:30am HOWARD Chevrolet , ir--------
ALLUTl.LS. PD!
100' from the ocean. Sh.areabomeoraplment ••••••••••••••••••••••• OUTCALLMASSAGE Dove & Quall. Sta., BANK LOST: Toy Pomeranlan, 838-6838 Refined Dentist & wife de· Newport Beach.
Avail. now! 201 E . Qowt·CDAns ThruM!ro>
Balboa Blvd. Only S2SO 'Uk--i«~~·
per mo. NO FEE. Call: o.i ~ b.>uetWG
Sue at 556· 7777 anytime For over-5 yrs. 832·4134
Block from water, Shores Want eong'I roommate?
areu. •l bd, 2 ba duplex Call 64S·746S; 640-8468
Yr lse. (714)956·5871 •SHARE A HOME•
OCEANVJEW yrly nu M, F wanted to share
q>t.s & paint. 2 Br 1 Ba furn. 2 Br, 2 ba. APT.
64:!·3639
f 111re to house sit your -----.---em. Vic. Ward & Ellis BE AU TI FU L NU D E home nr water 10 NB Aulo Repair Shop needs
---------• FV.962·8687REWARD! GIRLS. 625 N. Euchd, Month or 2 during Exper'd man to help In
4600 FOUND Se Anaheim winter. Lovins care no office. S Day wk. Give : Irish ller PUP· S59·61~/535 5363 charge. 63l·0174 ' estimates. write invoices
EXPltllEHCEO
COHSUMH LOAH
PROCESSOR/
SECRETARY p y, fem. Vic. Mesa & answer phone. Paid
Verde, C.M. 545·0612 DIAL-A-SERVICE College grad does mop· benefits. Pll'ase apply in UNITED
FOUND, female Poodle ESCORTS. MODELS ping . seeks po111t 111n person. 1747 Anaheim CALIFORMIA IANK 4
mix. grey w/Whl paws . MASSAGE w , adv er .. puhl or ·• Ave. Costa Mesa.
Vic. ExcelsiorSchl. G .G. 645·8616 f1rm.846-8ll4 Auto Speaker Enclosurl' 534-4388 Ask for ext. 25 Fill your graphk netds. Mfg. has opening for
Found: Killen. Tort shell. Abshic·Record past life dl'sil{n. color. logo, speaker installer .
Ocean Hills San analyses w1counschng airbrush. 336 Bluebird. packaging & order con·
630 A Newport Clr Dr
Newport Beach
C7' 4, 644°6464 Clemente. 496.4266 by metaphysical Rev W/ LB troller. Good advance·
---------• PhD. 631-2853 ---ment for nghl person. An Equal FOUND: Aust. Shep:, -Housecleaning. weekly. S2.75hrtostart. 645-6~ Opportunity Employer
male. Vic. Edward's •KAREHS• Good work. Good refs --~1J1;o&;fRjljC~-~~~~~~~~~ Cinema . Harbor & OUTCALLMASSAGE Exper.642·2556 AUTO&TRUCK
Adams, CM . 548·6614 6PM·2PM 973-0893 Help W..ted 7100 TUMl-Ur MECHANIC Bank ma
•Pnvate omce S75 per ---------
---------• month incl ul1l. Opport to have a busi· ---------•440 SQ. Jo'T. Carpet. ness of your own in the
Promontory Point 1 BR.
qew Short or long term
lease. 644-8415 ---·------3876 •••••••••••••••••••••••
2Br .. 111Ba, near Be~ch, ---------
~75. 237 W. Escalones
4112 M57 or 830·6725
drapes. air c:ond. $195 per rast growing weight con·
month•rncl ultl . trol Industry. Contact
•Two office suites. 630 Beverly Weier. VITA IV
SQ. FT. 1225 per month LABORATORIES. INC
Incl ut1I. IRVINE 751·9178 540·2200 <213)697·2064
FOUND: Male Irish Set· Enslneer 43, S'lO", 170, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Night work. Smog lie re· Branch S•cmary
ter, Mesa del Mar, CM. meet sincere aal 30•40. q'd. Paid hol & vacs. Independent bank seek·
979-7799toldenllfy P.O.Box 1148, G.G. 92640 Acctng Bkkpng 556-3706 Betwn9·5. Ing bank exper. branch TEMroRARY secretary. 0 .C. Airport
Found: Keys, Opal Ave.
Balboa lsland. Call
675-8362 •••
AUTO & TRUCK area. Apply At:
Rcgtster Today lo work MECHANIC SantlCICJO lank .
on various accounting & y h d S3S E. l•tStTustln b k" i I 5 ra cxper, own an " oo ,.eep ng au gn-I D •. I h Equal Oppor Employer Found: Blk yng male cat J....,fer JtftHft men ta. Work close to too s. ay • n g l open·
w1c:ollar, 19th & Maple 2'1795Peral8ll you r home. Flgure1..'..!ln:.!gs~.be:::::l.::wn::..:.9-.::5'.!.,.::556~·:r7=..:.:::06:__J•--------
Sl. area, CM. 548·7440 • Mission Viejo Clerks to Sr. Accoon· Aato & Truck Bankin&
EXECUTJVISUITES Youarethewtnnerof lonts needed thruout LubeSenfceM• TILLEtl
Deluxe private office. Opportun!ty forambltlous Found:Whit.eSamoyan, 4TlckettfotM OranceCo. NI Mariners Savings i
S l d Pe le Dldnlfi d • Capl•trano Beach Robert Hau·~ ghla. $3.75 per hr to unny , a r con . op . • e . •D· " l"M"-'°'Ht ~ seeking a qualified Personalized phone cov· tereaUnc. Good earning 496·2860 e....1tl•al Account.emps _start __ ._sss_.:n_oo_._9_·5_. __ _, Teller for Its Laguna , era~e, s ecretarial potential. Full or P/T. ---------"' SOOS.Main,Sl.eS01 &UTOW .. SHHELP "-h t Ml 6 ' ... ( W how ho l FOUND: Youn1 Boxer, f'amUy Entertotnment No. Tower, Union Bank .. .. oeac: o c. n. mo !-4 serv ce. c.aay wy ac-e • you w. Cal vie: Beach It Ellis, H.B. Oet.1 and2 ln TheCltyo!Orande F/tlme. Over 18 Savln&s & Loan exper ces11. 666 Baker St., C.M. aft 5:30, 557-6016 1dentl(y968-5516, &46-6543 Woodbrfdoe In lrvlne 71A1 .. ..., .. 103 • 5 Locations req'd. Applicants must ---------• Nr. OC Airport. 546·2982 (C 1 •r D t .....,... MITR C R be willing to work aomo Partner wanted oil pro· FOUND: a mo. 014 male u ve r . 8 O A WASH Sata. Xlnt salary, work
2 bdrm apt. near bch In
Nwpt. '187.50 + utJl. Call Bernlo. 63t.105'1
Wanted: Female room·
mat.a to thr COM houae.
ll.50. Cindy. m.a120
NB aeelta atral#ht prof, or
bl11. Mal\ to sbr beaut. rum, 19-e vu tune w I 2 otb era, Plenly of
prtvacy. fl8a Incl~ olll.
fl maid irdhr. 1ara1e.
6W--OCM
1770 0,.-.. AH. duct, industry & retail -... Salt & pepper cir . Barranca> .. d 1 t 18400 Beach Bl, H.B. 1 d •. be efit 1 M':anolla Adams H.B. Please call 642·56'71. Ext ~ m n •tr at I v e _____ __.... __ _. ng con 1.,. n a, n ...... ~14 333, to clal m ,you Sectttary, Sh & typing clud.dental.
4UMITILDG.
joo sq.ft., A/C, prtv bath.
near frteWay Ii So. Coast
Plua.1150.
loyMcC ....
It ....... l 110 Mtw,.,..
eon Mes. 1a.t12t
THI lfflCllMT
ALTaMATIVI
.,....._ tickets. r e q ' d . F t t I m e . Q Please Call USOO·U0.500 yr AV N Peraonnelatmalnok F~i!1ei:~~et Fm~x~ ~f; * * '* Caplalrano Latuna ROP. C7H) 842-4000
wbt. 6 moe. old. Vic. Elll• 2lfleOO Acjachema St, SJC MUD EXTRA CASH7 for appointment
" Brookhurtl . PV. ---------l _• __ 31_18_.______ Earnlnp are good·boura l~~Eq~u~al~O~p~p~E~m~p~lo~y~e~r~
968-0010 . P........i '-"lctt 5360 A/PAYA.ILi CUii< are nexible whe(I you're 1-
Muat be exper'd ln beavy an AVON. represen·l•--------
dotall tallve. can 540·70Cl or Banklna
7.enlth 1-l.359. TELLll l~~~~~~~~~~I P /time. Branch ofhc< ----------------------1-----.;.._---seeks bondable teller t work 9/llmo. Exper. pre
f'd. Contact Hilda Tet
ranove al ('114) M(..72$$
Wffhnt , ...... s.. ....
2'144 E. Coul HW)'
Corona del Mar
EOlt/M/F
I
\
i
t
(
' '
..... .,... ......... ,-------.. -· .. ,.. .... ·-... ··-· .. ...... .. __ ............. ___ .,....._.._
• • • •
' -fiii4!!z+ *''t4!5:r'f91'f "4 'F --' , l .W.W.... 7100 N.a.Wtllled 1100 • · "'· ~.smemt>er21 , 1911 DAILY PILOT D1 . . ·~i................... ...i................... ,;;;& ' ~W..t.4 7100~W..W 7100.W.Wlllh4 7100 UY BOUD PLAYP llATURS WOMAN HtlpW..W 11oolHetpW-'94 11oowmw..w 71001....,w..t.ct 7100 ••t.•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••. ••••••••'•••• •~Tt.!ttt.•!t•1!'.Ltt.J.•.t•• or 8uMl dcl:lu.ct by • p/Ua:nt to walco-.• ...................... ~!·•••••••••••••••••••••• •;~T•••••••••••• .. ••••• •••••••••••••••••••••·•
f0ATllPAllM move, DART&NDEU. ·llQKAl.~a pn1hln1er.Applyoa>yla ..-comert •contact ~...,...._..--.......... ..w"'
M l hau waterfronl DfllVERS. r /Ume. Over 1\111 Da)'I a k. IOHIU ..-.m~k. merc1-dl. ,,ex:lb)t brt. ' • I
-.O.t u ~r. on wood 11 yn. lmnaed. opeftLDI•· tam"'F, Cdll.Adfeifll.lkt. Need ear. llt• tnlQ. PR.QDUCTION A )' to ... M\aat be Apply In pelt .OD Me •n SfJ-11J15, ' ltll .....
.u wwl"r w/t!Mr n Edi Pt.Ma. •u.1s:1Tth St ... <>'<: To $700 Keypunch 1
corcl. a1 u 1&1e·• 8H l c.81 • ' 1~ Malp at\Mllo la DATAIMftYON M81CALF/O TYPIST fOOO PREP PERSON vn . ...-. -cfuiJ"'dl• ..... DoJ""1ft.~-· ,..., ... _.....m11. 1
for ti poa. Call Sal· p.i&.-L &t!Cl'• &peed •ac-f« auper bQAJ olca of ....... ...-......__ -....._ i IOAT STOCK c 0 b M E T 0 L 0 G y ly, 133.17 • 1>41ani• • curaey. ~y to dltc •· raotaatlc Dr. Heklne IBM sr• rl'TRIC II """-" _ ..... ,,,,_,
llOOM MAM lnttructor needed for lh : no I 1 P e rt o n n el per. ~Jpful. Sal opn. bdabt, taJented lndlv. for ~ eeod ,.,. A"'1 .. ,.,...
Wt Deed • mature, ,..111 new achl. ln Dana Pt. Sctvlco ot Jrv1no. 20U X1nt beocfltl '5 workina key poa. Call Betty. ExperiEmced accurate Typist nttt:d~ DR JIM
bleroan.f.unlllar• boat Al•o n.eded. t ucher Mlchet.ooDr. condt. Apply, NaUooal ... iaa. Dtnnla Ii Den· 1 med} t 1 70 ( t) MIU b&rdwan. wbo 1" lookln1 u-.koee. cau collect: .Sr •• Syat•m• Corp., oei nJa Pei"IOQnel Service or rn 8 e Y. ~m mus Jl212 L• '•,ad. &...,.... HM• • ro.-a perm rMlll<>n Xlnt Scavo 213 Bf7 '7556 or Mr. G1n&bam dOlrl houaeclne Birch St, N.8 . (Near OC Hunt1DILOO Beach, 11168 Part time or full tim& c:o. ~n,fll , 111dudlna ~acro%13-"3·1'0S 11t:rv1ce n •women pit, ~rt)E.O.E. BeachBlvd,~121. ExcttllElnt Working Conditions
p;ald m~acal (4'mplo)'Of top I. car nee 845-5123 u:GALSECRETARY Apply ln Ptfl"!Oll :.~nd•nu 1 & vuic.l IHe CX>SMttJC <.'lrk ror H.B Girl Frlday.1 ui. l>lk11111, Corporal.Ion. Exper'd. MEDICAL ASSIST O=e Coast Dally Piiot
• P•tll1caliv dprcfl'lllJt.on : P tTlrne. exp JA1tBe CmaLcho!1!r,ym~otthk., _N_ewport--'-_eenw ___ .M_G-OIOO __ gx~r'dlnbackofc.Wlll 330 , .......... ._St .. -~A-u~-HefpW-.cl 7IOOHtlpW..tecl 7100 . 'd 0 24 847 2S63 ~ " I tr to OB --.-1 ...... ..., ~ ....... • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Klppu '/achls -v~r ·-.:.___ N\:wport • La&\lna Leaalaec'y. E~p. 1 to2 .,. __ _.urea. AskforPaulWard Sala mW.lTl.b~CM _ Cowlt«Girl,Days.App a r eas. 07·3233 or yrs. Xlot typing, no :arm• ~eoi&l Z alrl AnEqualOpportunityEmployer Chri1t.1MoMy •SALIS*
Retail aalesperson.
jew~ & am wear. Ap11·
ly at R.M. ABRAHMS,
1819Newporl Blvd, C.M.
Bookkeeper /Secy. no ~ Capt.. Ma lee'• F11h 642-4162 i llt.hnd. Call '7SZ..2511 fOt o~·:Bsel4t.a Jloulewivea " 1ala over
•borthaod. H 8 . olrea y,815W.19tb St.CM GlRLYRIDAY lnt.eniewappt. AaencyofOran&eCo. 30, •·10 hrs per week.
SAllary commensur ate COUNTERffeip. days & Clen cal 4' t.yplog recep· Leaal Secretary. Salary 1201 W.LaVela,Sle209 ......._W__._.. ,~ 7100 Earn up to S2000 by
w/experlence.MtH328_ morn1nc. McDonalds lion desk. 6424400 for cotnmenaW'~le wllh exp Orao&e 633-9'1'0 .._..., ...,.. 7100 HlfpW-Chrlalmu. Simple a-Ktr.E8£A ~taurant. 31U Harbor appt. Meaa Upbolat.ry & ability. Employer paid F\'ee" Fee ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... •••••••-.. ••••• enrollment plan. Call """"' ~ 81··.. CM "'u' ""'""3 .. benefi\I t,33..1332 p.t.-TIME Hm • Paula S:U.UUor 772·3403 Secnt-to $950
Full char&•. part time. 3 forvuSu• • _.,.,_. • as. GIRLS MllDID · ...... -~ .t.1 -•· _. -' mom1nas wk to :.tart., " Sandwk h del. 5 Day wk, LlQUORCLEllK • .:--~-:I' Daya Ii Nlibt o_penlnca. RealEllateSalespenoa SAl.ISC&.BJ( ~~ ~~~~,S .~~~~
mual be accurate & fast Counter help& coou. Day 4 hr day. Own trans. P/tJme,over25. ~.nOMIS ~Y In Person aft 2pm IC)O'll.COMMISSIOM Full-Ume. Days corp. of ca. Call Barbara,
opply w1advancement:. Appy Del co. 1120 8am·lpm. Pbone~ energetic, peraon ...., telepbooe-Acretary • ExpertencePrcferrecl nls Personnel Service or Some typing, Ion& term shlf'\s only. ~ood hours Earn over S3.50 hr. Call Nl&tu~ buay Dr'• need roapon, Briat:~~·,~~:; We farolab duk-e.GUVB 8113-2700. I>ennia & Den·
831-1890 Superior Ave M. W/froot ofc ex~. 40 Rn ,_Trua __ Ul'Y_;;...·------1 be!p. Wiii Train. Irvine. 2082 Michelson
---- ---631-1 i GOOD PAV for dependa· LUNCHCOUMTB wk, beneflu. Call PIX .. S•c,.._ LACASAILTY Applyweekda~t-5:», Dr. IOOKKEErER ble hard working you.n1 Pood ,..,_ ..... M&a03. -,... '"' e5-1170 eve: 831-G"l17 Noack rr-....b'/ & 1--------P /l' c I I t r-lmmed. openings. Apptz &•VI' 1--------1 me. a <: u a o r CREW man with truck. 54fJ..968'7 Person wanted to work ...... .: .... , ·-•y ........ hav• In pe-... -t-"am Encraving, 102 E. 18tb, touch. Restauranl ex~r t t h ter re ~......... .... .... ~ "' "'"~ ""' .... • at Su ri CM SECRITARY -nref'd. call 542·148~ for . GROCERYCLERK a unc coun P par· lm.exp.WUUngtowork •pm llon·Frl. 155 REALESTATE pe or,. ' r MANAGERS lng aandwtches & •alads. i n a b u a y o f c RochHtet St, Coata Super oppor. to land one appt. H J swe. llpm-7am. 3 some irlll work in· w/diverisfieddutiee.Hn N *SALES* Saltt·FoodaTrainee of the top exe c. ~USBOYS, for private Port tame, evenings and Nights wknd. $2.50-$2.75 eluded. Un\form furn. 9·6 . Moo•Prl. Call'..;__• .... •-·-------• Real Esta.Le aales-nle Sal+ C• + .._ eecretarlal poaitiom In
• Country Club. full or Silt urdays managing p/br 675 Paularlno, Med & holp benefits. Ap. MMI08I PIX .Aatww5er¥ open your future. t;;t'ua SuccesafuJ core. eeeks Pf'!Stige lrvme co. You
P /Ume. xlnt. benefits an Jimlor sales persons sell-751~ ply, Ll.ndbera NU\rlUoo, WanttoW01"kd.a19,after· help you into the bual· aelf motivator (or $0. wUlenjoyabeautlfulofc.
beautiful working Bur· m~ subscriptions door to GUARDS betwn the Cam>UHI & MEDICAL T~A NS· noon14'eveolnp ln N.B. ne1&-joln a company Calli. terr. Call Marlon, xlnt ralsea & benefits. roundings.496.5767 door. Requires van or BulJockl, lower level in CRlBER Daytlme hns., &. CDM areH? Work namel6yearslnOranae 833-2100. Dennla & Den· Call Rita 5'0·6055. ___ _..::;___ _____ large st ation wagon . Universal 1-expanding So.CoaslPlauShopplng exp.neededCorimmed. f/tlme or p/tlme. County. CaU Claire or nisPenionnelServlceof CoaslalPersonnelAJen·
IUSIOY Contac·t Roland Presley its operations In Orange Center, CM. Apply al opening. Apply In Weekends a must. Xtra Warren at REAL Irvloe, 2082 Michelson cy.2790Harbor,C.M.
Ml Casa, 105 Main St. atthe DailyPllot,330 W. County &need940part& V1tam1nCounter. perion: San Clemente pay for exper'd !SI'ATEbyMcVAY. ...:Dr __ • _______ 1
Balboa. Apply daily, 11 Hay St. Cos ta Mesa or full time security of· Gen'I Hoep .. 65' Camino ~at.on. CaU 6'0-8292. 1714,.4z.tl7I
tll 5PM . 675-9600 phone S.2·4321 for ap ficers immed. Ex per. not .. ~ .. cun..1IST de los Mares. San Clem. E. SECRETARY· Nwpt Bd t ---------• paintment. nee. Top waecs for ex· -"'" SALES 2 girl oCc, self-motivated, CAFETERIA HELP ~ per. personnel. Car & Min. 7 yu e:itp, large Medical Growing Medical p l.X REAL ESTATE type 65 plus, diruapbone.
&AM ·•·JoPM, I\ Days -.ustomer Service phone req. 21 & over. variety of work. Top pay Supply Ktg, needa neat • Forfhle.JewWr1 $700+644·'613
Good benefits. Call Ray, FEEPAID Veterans & r et irees w /2 wka vacation. person Cor position lrl :~.·~!·,:~n!f~~~ HUNTINGTON Comml.salooSalea. Part• Secretary, Travel Agen·
5S7-4700, ext 24 43 for ap. Ideal pos. for outgoing welcome. Uniforms Cum. 548-7784 production. No etlfer mature penon. Eves, time. Outstaodlnc co. cy, for busy office. At··
polnt.rnent. and1v. who seeks to ad-Time & ~for over 8 hrs. neceuary. 7 51·49io, nrlY a.ft.ernoon le morn· BEACH benefit.a. curate \)'ping, filing & vance OD merit. w/nat'I Apply lpm·5pm Mon-Fr•. • MAJDS. 8-SPM. as& rorStephanle Office ma .. .aer l.n Hunt· JC--.. .... IY co. phone sk1'lls. La1una .--------1 .. _. ~_..__..__..1 ThelnnatLa1una lnp.P/&.lme.Namoyour ---"'ln r~" co. Cal1Cecha848-1288. "'"'"•...--.-ruT-• °" 211N. Cat Hwy, La1una "8 RECEl'TIOMIST own ah Ht. 892·1212. inltOD Beach ls luua g 24 Falltloa I.a.cl Hillaarea.827·3720
CASHIER ALSOFEEJOIS 1226W.SthSt.S.A. Sba11>PRpenonw/cen'l E.O.E. • ~ .... expe-r~ sales~ooole Mewportlffdl SECRETARY/ASST
Dennis & Dennas Person· M A I N T E N A N C E front ofc akilla as In-•-------:..---1 w.-~ wan earn ..,.,, "'-ual n..-.. E 1 nel Service or Huntington FOREMAN for residen· aurance knowhow. Xlnl PIX OPMATOR a year or tncll'9. I can of· ...,.. V)I'...,. mp oyer Sharp, eJtper. sec. for F/lime for Retail Store
in Fashion Island. 9AM ·
·~ 6PM Monday t.hr u f'n
da~.
Beach, 16168 Beach Blvd. GUARDS tlal gardenlnc. J:luat sal4'fuJ.lbenefit.a. Exper oaly, mature, de· feryou~otha'So. Calif. medical mgmt firm, by Ste l2t. SECURITY have 2 yn exp. Mutt be 0 __ .r,_. IL pend.able, able to foliolll locaUons, nationwide re· O. C. Airport. Require. quality mlndtd and' abJe R. r__.....M lnatructiona. varloua ferral coverage, xlnt. ad· min 60 wpm; basic dic-
Del i ver y· Dri v er & GUARDS to lead men. $17S.$800. ApneyofOraneeCo. boun. Wknds &holidays verttaln& pro1ram, •SALES* t.apbone; phone&recept. ProdUl'tionWorker.$3 to mo. Call for appt. 120lW.LaVeta,St.e209 incld. Please apply In bonus pay iiroinm to NOTaGIFTSHOP Challenging job, good ~·Call 642-22S6. G u a r d p o s. o pen 446-7"1 MEN for LA Times home per90n, btwn 8Al'd-4PM, llO'Jo. Expanding co with lmm*11at.e opeoln1 ex· ~ftk~~oo " salary.
44 Fashi on lslund Deli veryma n for L.A. N cw po rt Be a ch le delivery in C. M . Mon·Fri. a57 W. 19th St. management opportunl· iBtl for a peopleoriented1---------
, Apply In Person
At Ease
Newport 8ea<'h Times route, north Costa Fash10nbland. $300/1350 per mo. CM,SteH. ' ty. Maoa1erpaidooopen peraon able lo work1--------· --------•I Mesa area. No collect· MAIMTIHAMCE _:548-~~17~.0~·------~1-.-.-."-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-_--t-1 escrowa lmmed. open· evening hours. Enjoy ex·
Cuhle rs, mornings mg. Muist have dependa· Int.ervlewingappllcants POSmOMS MESSENGER Person Ptno.llA1ti1tant ~e':~~~w~!~~Q~k1N .~~nt company
Secretary. Newport
Beach consulting firm
seeks Sec retar y;
Research assistant.
Position requires excep-
tional statistical typin~
skills and ability with
figures. Recent college
prefered. Advancement
potential. 640-0755
weekdays. 1<;xper1cnced ble car. _S46_·_448_1.___ 9AM··ZPM Daily We are seeking qualifled w/car. Guar. 25 hrs per $944 to $1148 per mo. HACKWORTH Apply9~m·noon Mon · Fri
oSrh__:all trial inn. kStandJa.rd DJo:NTAL ASSISTANT 9205. Main St, S.A. lndlviduala In tbe follow· wk +mUeage. Must be Resp. for supervising, 5*983'l '968·3301 Personnel Dept. ..... s. ca 1<: or 1m Full-lame, exper. or re· 547.8501 ror appt. avail when needed blwn performing & partlcipat· MARR)OTf HOTS.
_540.5611 _ ceolgrad. NB.644-9211. F,qual0111>Qr. Employer ing ~llions: 9 & 4PM. Call: David Ing In a wide variety of ._._. O ...,........ -•Bwldinf Mn1ntenance Smtth,549-8811 technical & complel( --·· toS6S 900N .... ...,..etrDr
CASHIER DENTAL RCPT Pt·lime ---------• Engineers ---------• u · th Pleasant gereonallty N~ Beach · h h · ' l-2 yeq ... experience 1·n R apera ona in e person· h f -" 1" ... ual Opp Tmplyr m/r F/tlme, s arp. growl 12·5PM . Mon·Fn. Call HOSPITAL ..... MODEL INST UCTOR nel ofc. De sirable IOU& t or ront UIC pos. A"'t P co._ 5 Loe. Over 20, we Thurs. 9/22only. 968-1.461 CUSTODIAM maintenance of orrtce neec:ted,'totake charge or qualification• include in busy co. Call La.ra,
l
tram. ~ ~ ~ .-. bulldinp, air coodlUon-proaram. New school. ability to meet public 833-2700. Dennis " Den· 5.t.• -· ... DYS
• MmO CA.R w A.SH ------~_. lrnmed. openjng for lead Ing. electrical, plumblni 1Jimate. Send resume tactfully. 4 Vra of in· nls Personnel Service of --2SSO Harbor RI, C. M. DesEngr/Elec· to$1500 position 3-11 :30 shift. andmlacellaneousmaln· &-photo lo Box 51, c/o crus~gly reap. clerical Irvine, 2082 Michel.son F\llldtl~r•ndpartsthnt~ SECRETARY/TYPIST
- -Elec/MechTech to $1200 Prior s upe rvisory & tenancetroubleshooting. Dally Pilot. P.O. Box worit, exper. In public Dr. nee e or 0
1ur ou •. Needed for Yacbl sal~s
:--------• lndusl'I Engr $1500 acute care facility exper. 1S60,330W. Bay St, Costa employment & exper. In ·-------• WC ~a 1
1_t_._P M~lzl ~--a .. firm. 5 Full days a wk . • cashier Offlce Mgr SISM + nee. Apply m person & •Apartment BuiJdlng Mesa Ca. 92628 supervisor)' capacity. ..::'~mE ....... p.rd 00"'1 ~-.; Knowledge of boa tin~
F Sh
lrvane PersonnelAgency ask for Mrs. Coco, San Maintenance Typing 6owpm. sh RECEPTIONIST ~pp\y·. x Y .,'!:CU nomenclature nee. $2 50 ashion Op 488 E 17th Costa Mesa Clemente Gen'l Hosp, 6$4 2·4 years experie nce Noon Supervisora needed 90wpm. Apply in person, p tty per hr. Call 548-9373 or •
Suite 224 "·'"· l•70 Ca mano de los &tares, main•·nance and repair for gra~ 6, 7 & 8. Davis GEN'l OffJCE -1of Moten °•"'"""" .,-. San Clem. "" School 1~ h t & by 5pm Thursday Sept. -.-.... ·"'7".11!.. ~· ..
•HEAD CASHIER• ~~ ---------1 ol waahers. dl')'ers. dis· · · • n a noonl M 22nd . Fountain Valley ~ " -l-'ull or parl t1mt! DISHWASHER Hott.u-Coshlff hwasben. etc. Abo ex-.Snuna •• erschoo on· School District. no. 1 Wby betledinknotsloa SALESLADY Wanted , SECRETARY
Pl d
perlenced in general Fri. $3.11 per hr. Call Ll ghthouse Lan e. permanent job. Tem· ma• .... e. Befiin p/time. P time. Flex hrs. Ex-
easanl surroun angs Apply an person, Mui-foroceenfrontdinlngrm. afnUn I rt I d BobNoel"'...,~"•"" •-
E 11
P •· e ect ca: an -------------•<Comer or Newland •-poraryworkolferavarle· u-llmark 0 "" •-party per 'd o n Selectric
xce ent compensal1on. doon·s lnsh Pub. 202 Apply lo audltor, Holel I bin "' ~ ., •• • Apply lnPerson Only NewportCtrDr.N.B. Laguna. 425 So. Coaat pum g. NURSES AIDES Talbert) Fountain ty &spice,opportuolty& ahop 840-155'7 typewriter . Must ha\e
l
JUH RYA.M ll L B h ....._ __ are tull·time ...... ,·. All Sht"·. Good ben·.~V~al~le~y~. E~·~O~.E~.~~~~I e.xper.CaUTod.ay!! . carforerrands.673-UZO
F"'SHIO .... S DISHWA.SHERS • .,,"!_1Y15•1. a g una c . a~ -~ ,..., ... ~Q SALESMEN led E "' " ...,.. tiona wttb good pay and Apply Garfield Conv. ~ office •. per. In re"'ta
8
tnl ·s t'erexo· SECRETARY
a ... °" s an Stavro's. 5930 S. Coast HOUSECLEAN ER wlt.b ene 1 • you are nuap, "04 a e ve, ZZA 0 OVerload sales.Call~. Conatruction Dept • 48F -LI 11 d A p ply in p e r s on , b f it lf u-...... G rfi ldA Pl CHEF
tAcro!IS rrom The llwy, N.B. loving heart. Prefer qualified, please call: ILB. 947·8671 E.O.E. & BAR MAN Orange Co. builder. Good Broadway Store> • _ spiritual person. The Im· 644-3317, 9a.m.-Noon. om Hel P/U will train, apply Back Al· 557.0061 SALIS · typing req'd. 833-9331. o M d Th d ce P me perm. ley Pizza 4253 Mart· pen on ~· urs ay OT~!tn~>e~o~~l;:e~ ~:!~ ~~;te Cleaning Co. THlllVINICO. Hpoa. fM~·dUpenon. lnga\eWay,N.B.152_7880 ~~3723~~B~lrc~h~S~t.~N~B~~ .Now recrultlnlt sharp Secretary, legal. Salary
Friday Kvenin°s Jord---'s Pet Shop, 21"• ..:..:..:....:..:.------~ """Ne...-'"•n•-Dr eavy ,_...._. ae of lO 9AM·2:30PM Mon-Fri i:: ambltloua men to sell commensurate with exp. .. .... ""' ..,.,,., .. ...,. • ...., -· "'ey add'-~ mach lmpor ' hardware, tools " shop •. blli E l 'd ·--------•I E. Coast Hw y, CdM HOUSECLEANER 2 hrs. NewporlBeacb a. w • RECEPTIOMtST equip. to indust'J ac· ... a ty. mp oyer paa
CIVIL
~ .... Gl ..... EER 6444000. daily, AM, Mon to Fri. ~ Ile typln1. p~~~ M:Ucal ~ubl'W. M/F. Xlnt typing req•d. cowit.s. Avg lo $'l8Q per benefill.833-3332
U"O " $5. hr. CdM.675~1&7 F,qualOpportunlty pe or-pac er. 0 & good phone exper. k No x c Call
Designer-Calculalor. DR IVERS·3 routes open, ---------11~~~~E;m~p~lo~y;er~~~1~;;~~-----1 exp. needed. Beat aulted Small co. Good beneflts. Mz.:aro!i~~i.:~'. SECRETARY Donald E. St.evens, Inc. AM & PM. p/l.lme. M,uat HOUSSCEEPER OFFICE faor~~woly.mlenat', b2nutda1!. msaryd Mission Viejo area. Call Pl. time. Call: Pat at
1828 Fullerton Ave, C :\I. have clean dr1vini re-Mature. To care for 5 yr • Ca \ 581 3830 646-8915. cord. neal appearance. old&newborn.Cleaning, Maintenance mechanic, IMMEDIAJE s !la. Smooth -Bor ro • · · lsaJeepenon needed Wed, Health Care Develop.
--------19 yr11 &over. !)48-0470. cooking. Car req. Salary exper. restaurant relal· Plutica. 23322 Del Lar&o Recept beauty aalou. At· ThUl'I, Fri 10arn-6pm for ment. 833-3995
Cteric·EJlPtf''d
• P /tlme. 4 Hrs/day
Penonnel. Req·s typing
4S wpm. Start $3.917/br.
Apply. Laguna Beach
Unified School Dislrlct,
550 Blumonl, Laguna Beach. BeforeSepl. 27lh.
open. 4 daya week, no •d equip. Saale OPENINGS Dr,LagHlllt.581-aslO tract.I ve w/pleaaant retall •l.orein N,B.Muat s~RET ... RY
Electronic Assembler wknd.8. So. Laauna. Ph knowled1e of elect.. penonallty btwn 20-30. be lnt.eresled In enerfy & ~ ,.. 6 Montha or more exper. 49&-l403evea. plwnbln1, 4' carpentry. For People With Tues.sat, Irv. 752-61'1 waler conservat on. Girl Friday: Acct.a Paya.
an soldering PC boards. Apply ln person, 2601 Secntsfal. Clerical p d ti 67~30 ble, AC~. Receivable. Must know color code, Housekeeper/Cook, live· Da1mler,SA5'&--0348 ro UC on ·. RECEP'l10NIST • payroll, invoices, some and read schematics. In or out. English apeak· Swttcllllo•11. TypllMJ. Salea. PIT belp. Fabric typlnC & recpt. S600 +,
CLIMATRONINC. ing. CdM. 6U·8172 Maintenance Kenmdtor T • t ~OD experienceoeceaaary. depending oo exp. tor
1370CLogan Ave.C.M. eves/wknd.t ; 646·•639 Geo'l main\. lndlv. Dahl;r.c...Sldls JPIS + .,_ __ c_all~~--°'°---• aail&ofl.64.2.si'lS Ca~l.~o~~· _wk_d.;;..ys_. ______ 1 ~for plant A ofc CbOOM \he daya, weeks s•• l!.S SECRETARY. l Sirl ofc •
....,._....,. ....-&.-..1 1 n•u-~ .. •-· ln-'ud & locatlon In which you ,__, ... =--ust be neat. attractl~.. _.... A bl ~w--ac~ ...... u......,. "' e odt _,.,..,,-...... .,__ lch Part Ume, 5-9pm, Moo-exper. ecta paya e & ·CL.Hiii Expe rienced main· 5S6-29S2ot.SS7.3870 almple carpentry, ~w · pcirt.HWll °" ~ 1n Newport Beac Fri, perfect for CoUece receivable,tnvoicingetc.
Position• Immediately tenance man for large p\umblns, electrical A--WA be able area. Student, no presaure Newport Bch. West.port
available to work in the apt complex. Xlnl salary HOUSEKEEPER ma l ft t.. Pal n t Ing -,-... Type: 40 + W,.. tt.-sales or quotas to meet. Marine. 645-"520
Correctional Me dical & bene'1t.s. 25 11 W. ·NptBch. warehousing etc. Send to type• llM Seltc• •r....y...... S3l-08ll ServtceaatOrangeCoun· Sunflower,SanlaAna. Llve-ln, must. have car, resumeorletterdeacrlb· trfc.t ..... 70WPM. Start. lmmedlatety .1~~~------11-~~~~~~~
ty Jall 4' Orange County F .. CTORYWORKERS room, board, salary. Int put work exper. ln· 714·75!H'°7, ask for Mr. SAUs.IETAIL •SECRETARIES Juveolle Hall to provide "' 151-7125 d ays, 645·4628 clud!ni salary history f; ~cu•" '1.-"""2 APPLY AT Davia Office 1upplles & print· To S 14,400
• clerical support ln tho Manuractunna pla nt eves/wknds. to: crassl.fied ad no. 955, w..a. "'~~~Jo ·.o. DAILY PILOT \ng. F/Ume ~· avail. EmployenPay All Fees
ablence or regular stDH. n~ factory help. Call c/o DaJly Pilot. PO Box . tlnifX>'OIY MMc9 330 W. ley St Phone for appt. 557-9212 U z Reinders Agency
.• Thlslaanon-callpoaillon rorinto.646-8244. HOUSEKEEPER 1580, C:O.la Mesa, Calif. lll-7711 Cott•Mesa RESALES ask for Mr. West. 4000BircbSt.,St.e104
.. work~i var1o~shifts & FA.CTORY =~k~~~per· 1~~~· _9211211________ ColdwellBanterBldC A ~ J LUSKRIALTY Newportstationers,Inc. NewportBeach w.&190 daya. Require 1 yr. of ... "" 40t0MacArthurBlvd n ua i• openina a new resale .,_......;.-------• C.llforappt/estab 'GS
clerical eicperience. Call Tr ainffs M6-86Sl Ste308 New\lOrt Bcb Opportunity mpJoyer office in tbe Huntington Salea, \elephone. Na·
{1 u ) 834. 45 4 s l m . Work in an air condi-MAMA•etlMT Beach area. Needs both tlonwlde 1portin1 cood medl•tely for an in· tioned & carpeted area OPPOaTUMmlS --..t.-tto.Aalllt manager, salary+ com· tnfr. Good hoots, Jllnt $. Sec}' w/bookeeping exp.
tetviewappolnlment. with FM music. Making HOUSEKEEPER. prcfet Carl'1Jr.baacareerop· OfftCICl.BK ~ • misalOQandaalespeople. M0-6142 PfT,3dyswk,8-5.lrvine COUMTY 11mall· parts under a llve>ln. Worklnl cpl & portunitlH for eMtCttlC Pull tlmt. XJnt tJPlnl Exper'd In production Better than avera1e Ranch Farmer's Mkt.
mlcroacope. lat ot" 2nd tld\l. boy. I d•Y wk, own and dynamic lodlv1dualt •kUJ1 +do f1Un1 .tr apecln1 (mark·up) of comml11ton + lncenUve 831-2851 · ..°'sc:=:::n. :~~~~1J>~ + eom· ~:~~on .. mkr. w. =fn'!':i::?::J =--~mNr o.c. ;;:~r.i~tT..!t ~.,;.~:~~~~~:m! SALr.;OUDOM'T Serv--,ce-Sta-.-N-1&-h-tA_t_te_n_d
... GSN.RoaSt GalserCo. u..a.-tou ~ i.1Un rtelaurantl lhr'Oulbo~1----"-------1prooheadinf ablllty re-a\ololco~nyaupport. MAVITO 20rGnlte11twk.Apply.
SantaAna.Callf.92701 1701 E. Carneaie Ave .... .,. " m · • Oran1• Collaty. q'd.l750to1tart.Eduoa· CaUPaW.114:175-3411. ST' ....... D..u..a Sbell,l'lth&lrvlne,NB
AnA.fnrmaUve s A ap'd, ooo • Refa. Clata'OOft) and ln•&on Uonal PubUthlnl Co. ln ""-" """
.,
1
.,AeUooErnploJer ~ N~Bcharea.M>-1114 tralAlntw\llbepfO'llded $l 62 DAY C.1:1. Call Caroline, YOUIMIAD Service Stal~o11 At&.en·
• ' ":'-T ... __ rar ~ canclldatea. • per m..auJ. . -TO AMO dint, ::r.= d. Day &
.. fl.DOR WAXER. f/tlmw,H ac•~Y W• uek moUvated, RETAIL . A600DJOll Evea. p!Ume. Ap-• .._..\. COCKTAIL exp rcq'd. $40-7811, 17182 FJ for exper In car-.. .-........ ....ai _ , Tblt'•ALLJou pay P/Ume help wanted, over ....._. h DlY. SheJl Station, tnh le WAITllSI ArnUttoniAve,lJ'V. ~ualt1 torih"~~~p':'4~ fOC'a 11. Appl)' ln penoa, 89.1 CLERKS '11me-l.Jfe 1.J...-.,,ea ••1_t_rrvi_o_e..;_N_B_. ___ _ ~l . N~ kb ol(l~. run• JOdaJad S. Cout }fwy, Lafuna abaolutely lh• fl"Ht ~ • • n .o bn \he moat General Office Sal 'opes to uper • manaacme.nt exaetlttlC!, ,.,. tn the bftcb. p/Urot •alea Jobe avalla· .,... ... ce Sta. Attendant.
eitclt n1. 11amourou1, FHPAID qu:ffncatlona can wouldbibelpful.. 1r • UTOTIM ble ln Orauat Co. No exper'ct Full or p/Um o.
101•hlv n.m=cl .., Day ,...__ f Ut-• * -.. -1 .... ' Public 0 -lationa ,,._ to ........_ • no -· A""'
1
" Alto c: .... a..... 11l'· • ~=---. P·lace-... , .... ce. o a ..... me.or• 'D•~ or•vr· . Jn ...... ltl-to a -o-· DAILV PILOT , A'liJ ,. _ _. M__j._.._ ....,... -..... , _... ..... """" •• -..... brt hl to h t uu ..,.. "' ,.. , I ' ' TUIMR -·••W• m ., ... Ladles We UM • • l"Ine. C.11. . • 1'ftllltllllilt.00odiobop. I person av ffttmtorYCoDttol pedtlva 11111r1 and• 0n-1nat1•-'1-•.-...... PotltJoosopealtt.2nd• .. 1-~'a~cba. '~ adv. &aecu.rllY. Xlnt co. ... ~--... flt ...,.,,. comSMmY paid ~CE ... v i .. ,,.'"'Y' .. ,._.. 3rd ahlfU ln San ;m laaum.,;...,....c• Sta. Attendant. ~714nlt·flt4 CallRay, .. ma. ..._.";T.2!'!' ... !' 1111',binemt;pac;.ll••• a &all ' fot ...,....1v4 pe,.., to Clement• " La•u.,a ,,11-thtbalillMIM.: ' \'ENA •wbdf. Nat ap ..
i· i2' caut,. cocllhll ~~~~~;!Olp s · 'mrtt;~w~l utW' •tut cer1a 'Jr. ..rnoay l'nd aucc ... "1t="tni e.ach.OtheiaMatJtav• w':oa.a.,.....at•fY+ JllMf'.A\aodwritiotoaly
altrwa, Jf'C. 17922 ..,..._ • ~ ~· ..._ 18 actW. JiOS.' Call ~ °"iiS• eM!tUent ~I ~1L ~ p.=: opeatnp a1ao. No aper. a CIOdltnlliliOA •a 1,.,, ~ •Pllb'· IS01 N~ Park Bl S•• c nelSuvl~oo(ltuo= AJll1; ... ia; .,..;...11 potential ott &dvanc• IOIT1'0W'f MIServtoeolHuntlnston req'd. ~al HJ ot bOft• p&a. n.rt la IX· .... , .... Cll-' --'• caan{ • e .. c1a,111•11eacbBYd, D•o•b Peno•••• ...,.; ,_,..ume, 1.;; BIAi&•Be~bB\vd, ourl&O:IW. eellen\191ft1J•tMJobtUVIC& .__ ._.
"Coll•.&'J'ITJVS IWJM ::omeo . .-. =~==·~~-Ilea· 64Z'h11 "lloW... o.:"i&..-_~-:..=r~=-~#,·~~ ::':'rcro!':::':Ad;?: .r,Jl~ ·Midi coadt for • ja.in; ~ .. -, n.-tttA1 ••• ;:'11.....,...,.IViach-••. 1.... .-··· • c..:.-•n •••--...... TRAl .... EI ~-,y ~·• ' _ _ T J " • ._,.,, P ... ...-,... ..,,. .I • ..._ UP_.... .... ~c,,~ --, 'L \-J _ ~ ... ,....... w,n-..._ O ..... m arttthtt• r ~ •
-'• ICAT, P. o. 8o• WI"'-• to traba aUtwc· JANJ'ft)1t1AL Ol'ZNDIO ~ . .., .. o-~.... .. I IL .. ~ ... Pilt>Umt la °' llei"YINStiUon attftdane
u -ca,...,,.. Beach. U\':'':.t1~tndtY. II······~'° .-u. ,I ~ '-~U•Tlll . ...... -..u;u~} wuna•rr ~ ....... bit. Our P/Um• or 'p1ume,
-.. call (1)-11$8 !•to ·····i OUl' n•CJ· , ..... VIJIU .,... • • < DA· r PILOT tf'OlllCI ~-11~· • TOUI MCOHI ~aun ....... tldoY •t· ~ IOOO ratmew.
•' ..._ •• • 1·~enttu1. :M&aat type Apt11''•twn :1PM • ~ "' y,. •••· 11per. Call tmllll ......-•nftMi·bifrddM; al. • COOi •" aa,,,....Dll....., ~:111'11 •& J'Jlll ,1 ~AST , ~:;Ii, Nl·IUt. Xhal ...... ....Jiu.~. a.n.Mdtelp ..... tm~
Dlek c .. •re fl •a ;::.·~~""11· :=.rog A•• .. 1'~; .v a,..,~-! •ULr. ' .11.v.ana. ,...._.... ''I:.':'·~-.-i. l'aH•~p/t,APllb'.
i1a•rau, Jiii •Bmll 1'9.~:.fl ·-... ~ ·,.;-,i.1 ~1~-•YICI .·t .... ._... ..... :..... ........ CIVSJUIACALL •&.~ltlr1.ff"'
NeW.-rl ••••·~ta oc'Alru• > S. . ~ ............... ~ ._,..,. , .. •••£"\11 ... tt11K~ .. ~ar .... 11U1•m 7WA8.•11 ............. · .., ~ =-· ' z.._..... ~ , -. '*i ~.. .... ~-• ;. \ .... Iv ... ~ 11-. ~~---M GHraatM• ... rlJ ---·: , ........... Oprt , ~cat•.,.....,.· . .; ·: ·-A."'1"{;; -. ~----t ".;:91.:J.••a. ~~· !!fl!! 'l'\! •• ... .._. ·~ i ....--c..-. •tinar ~{ls; ·'~iiifitl/itillli•:-• •· ililii!'i.W:,;''..,.._••H•"'Pilf u ...U1 'l'_!Jr • D1li1 •n•t ~ .. :;•'"':; c~ · _ --:: -·,.; lo'!!: ... ;k, a.a..-. 11~~·-~~~ ·-'-'-.,_ •• z-' _f .~--~I~\~ I~~· _ .. ~... ... :,:~lliit 1M'9_,, .. ~~ca:::a~ ••if lJ .. ;•·•~rO•I•.~ -~·
= i ~~ .. -- ----C-~ ~ C? . ,,..-. ... _ .................. ...-__
t ••• . . ........... -.
,....... 1050 -........... --······· -. -~ \ ., ~ , ...... IOOS A.....__._ 1005 8T01tEWlDl!:SAl,.E Mhcel-oa IOIO Mf~oa IOIO Mlskal • ,ladlo. ' •
_..,..... .., __ ... _ ..... ,,,_ .......... "••••••••••••••••••••• -·•••••••••••••••••••• 'v', 11 .. • 101• ~ • .ir&...--IMll . .............................................. , ......... ~ ...... .,.,.~ ..... .. . ...., ~ ~
V~a~ TllAINJ:t: for m1IC. Wllloo'• Barcaln ............................ •••••••••••
Travel /q&•noy in Nook.~ 41814 W. 18th, FLUTE Student arade. SUPER BOY ta,.bf•
,.. h.ionl•lend,ND Non •TOOUICUSTOMIRS* Cll.G079301t64f.aaa * U ... USU .. L co••m~10~.* .. a st~~· turotablo All/JUI """*"r.&yJJJncrc.ct'd. Wt **I BUY•~ 1"1111 A .....,_, " MS,J.'506~..; .. ,. ~!,?~ mlllUplex, two ''*"• ••II tr111114 lf'Jlwl. ~II JI(° playtna -. ,...., _... 1tereo beadpb~J •
b.o•IH•. e•o·61ll or WI All CLOSI.._ OUT Good used Furniture & s..aia stereo a trlt t ape , ...
im.ma •o)'tJ~. -OUR Bfnll LIMI OF AppU.ncoi-<>a 1 wUl Selling Out I 0,000 Pieces TR u HP ET· U o o · mrder, pjayer, SOkl for .... .,.t11DllYll sellorSELLforYou. H.._ ...... ~-OWN Ir G-u"'M ft.I ,...5 CLARINET uo. Gd ~.11ac.,l400orbcs~-•~ Orfeatal Planters MASTBS AUCTIOM ,......, .. w ·~ Qiod. 540-7180 ter.1163-1115T1 eves. u..,. s=~!!, ll !:: ,~.~~:~~e Egg Poh, Ek 64M616&1ll-tUS . ltOO.ltJO Trumpet-Old• Am-loah•M--.
td ru.u. 1"'" · *' w. ~~ :1t":.wt0~~~10:' OYB 1600 POTS AVAIL.AILE C~HPAID GLASSES. PITCHERS. PLATES bas•ldors:mU'70CQDd. •• !:r.f'!:!'! .... ~ C.'ob1Hwy.NB £..£..!.._ "'• S... ...._ Coet For ad used furn, o.nu. _ Ge•ral tOtO
--· r•·" ··--Must be neat,,..., .• ""'' ~ues&ctrTV'a,951..SW PllFUMIS. YASIL ITC. CustommadeAJtecVoice .... ·-·-·-----Sht.)e _. mea. ..... IUMH', apply In perwn l>\wn •1c S 10 ,.._.......
inoin.saert lrahu.•t". •;• MM~ UAM. USA Cwil 11.._IHILlll ... FINI .Alt"l't. INC.. LOVELY • to 4. oft.betheatrePA.Glbloa • ·1 l''f'leDl~or-.lUtr•i.n lo&~ •• *L\W.Ultb, l'lA-~-~ _ • .._ LlteNew7'Sora AIA.11tl1tllllc: GPAlOOHDbeAd.Homa *** oc Standud 6ho ... call CM.6C·11la l&l4"9w,.,. ltfd.. c .... w... $100. 963-2082 &mocu&.orcabloet.Great " R1d;orJ1m~Sitl Pt.:641-360J M.lces WawdetM Pt&1al1. cood. $850. Maeatro ·•·,•
-------•TYPt:SETT£R, eJl WATERBED SALE. KAIHLER-S FINE AaTS. IMC. Pbase abJfter $100. .,......._ ••. Sltter~odtowat.cbtwo pericncud lBM eystem $179.85 emplt w/btr. .za~..-M .... ~ ,._._ 492-0839. "50akSt. 1~ c:hlldn:n •&H six and C'ompo1er/CompSt1t Save $.SO. FLOAT & _,..,,.., _ ....... -..._ LagunaBeadl 1 ,·1«ht af\er »<'hool <2·5 :ioG/~ 8 to 6. '-\. hr. Ar,d.cn IOIO fwdftwe IOSO DREAM WATERBEDS, 111:642·3'03 Officefw•lwelr Yo11aretbewtnnerot1
PllU lo thear home. 642·J.SS2fw• ... " ...., • 2ll6'l Beach Bl at At.I.an· ......... IOIS 4Tkbhtottl9·· l'rt•fcr hi&b 11c:bool Alrl rY'' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••·--•••••••••• ta H B 96Q.320i ••••••••-••••••••••••• Int. H--·.
hvmg in viciruty ol 22nd nrtsT DISHWASHER Nearly DIVORCE Necessitates • • . . OVING SALE --·-:-;treet. and Newport new. Wasteka.ng. h ~ale of quality (pro-M Fe.HY ..
tUvd., CM. $20 oo per Fut. Accurate 5 Days pnce. J145. ELEC. Oven, fess1ooallr decorated) Geroge Sm. 1055 Mnc.1•1-. 1010 1080 Dealar. S3S-f75. cbrll all •""amily Entertalnmmt
week Pleaisu phone ~ :~~l~.a':!_.:C~ft~. Tappan bltn. ~ price furn1ah1ogs & ac ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••-,.••••••••••••• •••••••••••••-•••••• styles $5-$35, dratting Oct.land2
t.31·3149aflcr5PM. A .... ppl'y"", ...... nvsa\lar, 1""" ~1 10 640 7317_ ·-. ee530r1es. 2 children's Super Bi .. Yard Sale, all FANTA.STlCSAVINGSon tbls $75, letter & legal sz Woodbridgeinltvble ..-......., "' """ Bd m · g I bit & 0 WANTED filu $30-$80, reception (Culver Dr.at -----Pl11c ntaa C M SC 1 W--L...-.... r s· reen w e must go. New King si TOP CASH DOLL .. R quality furnlahlnp & ac-room f"•na·ture. wor'-Barranca) Sous-CHEF c ~ ·~ _ ornm ~ yellow, etc. TV, ch~, etc. quilted Headboard " · •· ,_ "' 4 G"" Comm'l Dryers 3 67., .. ...,., cess. Draper1e1 .,. tbla. Pl""~c~n a .... ~.._. TY-ST -.. · .............. w/match'g spread PAID FOR YOUR C u· ail M ... ....., ..u..._-.... ,.,.,........ w 1 t h c x t e o s a v c .-. Yrs old. Good cond. $5S _.___ --. • arpe ng uv • any C.E . SUPLUS 333. t.o claim your knowledge an all phases PJtime. Must~ fu~L & Eachor$450forall.Must Lovely ''like new" 4 pc ~range. Misc. anti~ues, JEWELRY, WATCHES, items seen in Model F'lJRNlTURE tickets.
111 1''rench continental Jccurutc. Exper'd on Sell CallS4<>-0oa32 Spanish seel1onal Jewelry. oll punts, ART OBJECTS. GOLD, Homes.S0-70%offretall. 900Westl.9t.bSt.CM
•wsine e""enllal. Am· Xerox llOOor will train. · · woodenfountatn wood&• much,toomuchtomen· SILVER SERVICE, Come early Sept. 24, 6312m 6312510 *** ·t.,·
' dd I ' taoo Thurs S t 9-5 21701 FINE FURN. & AN. 8:30-5, corner Red Hlll & • • • ": brosia, Rm 211, 505 30th DJveirsilied work. F ex Refrigerator, GE, side by metal wall decor. Super. · • a • · TJQUES. 64.>Z.!OO F.dinger, Tustin. 731_.131 1 B M E LE CTR 1 C .~ St.N.B. hn. Heply lo Class1f1ed side. 24 cu. ft. Almond. 962·2509 l(Bm pba Ida .~nH. HUlo. B). TYPEWRITER..cl\ adno.61,c/oDaiJy P1lol, Goodoood...$250.~ ----us ar """ am o 11 ~.._GE.. _.,.
SPRAY PAINTER PO Box 1560. Costu Ong rm set with 4 chrs, foUowslgns. ..VVWA 1ACiS 968-21665 loats.M..... ··'
Helper, 18 yrs or older Mesa ca 92626 W bi r IP o o I u P ri g b l liko new $95; 3 pc crner Horses 1060 =:~ors c.,a.,.rdch. * * * Plmoi Ir n--8090 Eqill..... '""°
musthavecar. 76841749 , , Froozer, 16 cu ft, white, grp, near new $150. toa p'•-ooe spa'' re ..... We -=HowOI...&&. "•••••••_...•••.,.....••••••••••• •••••••••••••-•-••••• ---------1TYPIST M/F. non xlntcood.$150.548·3888 644-7240 •••••••-•••••••••••••• ._ •--~
Stationery Store in smoker, SS wpm, good Hermes 16'h" saddle return permanently 23195 ista Way Small 4'" Studio Upright l'UU Canvas Cowr.~
CorooadelMarneedsex· pay, advancement op-Refrigerator, for sale ORrENTALSHOWCASE wtfittings. Brand new, sealed attracUve taa & ElToro plaao •lbencb $.500. Col 22. Good coad~ ~r'd sales lady fuJJ.time portunitles. New AUanl.Js very clean, $50 Elegant band ·carved never used. $725 cash. strap, meeting airline You are the wtnnerot 675-00N $1.50. ~2530 1
5days,xlnlworkingcon· 697 Randolph. CM . 536-6795 Teakwood decorator 549-0507 I.D. requirements. Pre-4Tldiehtothe Cutdowouprightpiaoo Mercury15bpo:dr£;.
ds, especaally fine clien 540-6791 hilcing Materials 80l5 screen. Four 18" panels, ,73 Hi k K " 2 h vent loss & theft! For 8 l"fne .._..,est SSOO can. $150. ,
lele.67>1010 VET . ttn 1 t d" ••••••••••••••••••••••• 61~· high. Brass & glass t 1 de 0
1I'Y 1
111g,_t orsde personalized tag encl06e ~ 1 -•• . 9&2-4990 , mt~ a ·.rec 8 u 10 , din. tbl w 16 Chinese Tr, ua axe, xw con · wallpaper, fabric or h1t1n• ,., ... ~ 0 .... v -STUDENTS apt., ulll pd. Must be BARN WOOD PANEL g Chipnnndalc chr~. Other 49·Ml898days,4.94-7784 all •• 0 GI .. •~ F·~-;ty Ente ... nm· meot ,,.., ..
C M 0 , --J I J ,... " PM ay 0 paper "' we ....... •.... PIANO. contemporary ._-£-p-~O Rartcnder trainees, no resp. d 673-105 • ....... ge oca se ectJon. stunning OnenL. accent _6 will baclt & t.rim your Oct land2 w I t riaht XJ t -..,_,,...
cxper necessary. mu!ll !Hi~ __ _ _ __ Beams,decking63l·2460_ itcms.552-3632 HcMneholdGooch 8065 wgs. Or try two cards Woodbridge in Irvine a nu up " • 11 • •••••••••••••••••• ·~•
he clean cut, 2L-25. Hrs. Waiters & bus boys want· 78 Pieces 2x6 T&G V-joint Dec to c u t . S r-••••••••••••••••••••••• back to back. (Culver Dr. at ~.213-553--3270dys 31' CHRIS Craft T/&-tofil1.t~oucrsllc~e:u~~n~~ ed. Private Club. Apply cJA:ar Douglas fir deck-ns:.coldlealCoftee~bl: Moving: Everything PRICES· Barranca) Sohmer Baby Grand crsr. w/allp. Xlut..AIOIMI. ~~pt;& ,;h i1·00AM m person 4-6PM_. see ml{, no. l !!elect. 16' S95. Kang sz Headboard goes. Everyday except S2eaor3/$S Please call 64Z.S678. Ext. Piano, refinished, $8900.919-22$1 ,.,
•·JOPM to~~:OA....,.· Larry.ThcConfcthFac· lengths. All or purl. Lamps, misc. decorato; Fn. 336 Bluebird Cyn. 4i5tag.s$1.60ea. 3.33. to claim your walnut.$1000.Bestoffer. 20' GULF'STREAlL ~'
• •. 3 °""'""""' tory,23861EIToroRd. Belowcost-548-4984 ;•ams."""'" .. = LB 6i9lags$1.SOea. tickets. 497-4210 f t .,,.M. ...... .,,.,..,_,.. 10ormore$1.40ea. mac, aa .1..., ere ~'TUD~. Will train to WAlTRESS, part t1ml!. Cab 1035 ---Cont;mpo~fa & lov-Sales Tax Included * * * M4ldliMa 1093 Lo hrs·w/35• Newport
workmpiua.restaurant. Some cxper Apply in•••••-•••••••••••••••• *FURNITURE* eseat, velvet chrs, glass NOCARD! ............... •••••••• slip.$37~/olr.~~ Apply, Original Ptiza, • D b · Dr Del ... g· tr Sew·ng 2121 Balboa Blvd N n Pc rs on. er Y H1ma-layan Kittens, &wood coffeetblll, noral aw your own or send u .. e m e a • Owens twin enlfJle
bctwn 3-4pm.. • • · Restaurant, 1262 S. E. C.F.A. Ricadoro line. CooSpatemnispohroar..,.; sofa & loveseat, game tbl name. address, phone & Hollywood bed, makes in· Portable. oes ever· cabin Cruistt xlnt~
. Bnstol,CostaMesa. StudserviceS40-1760 ·J & cl'lrs, matching coffee we'll make one card per to twin beds with in· ything. Newiab. $275. Slps4, bait~ esq§a-
Swimming pool service . Complete 3 rooms of all tbl & server, lamps, tag. Add~each nerspring mattresses .+ 960-4113 ly $4,950. '93:518~ or
man wanted. Mst have WAITRESS Adora~le kittens. nice new furniture. Includes dinette, glass top eofree Send check or money or-2 bolsters. Used very lil· ~l"-Goods 1094 497•1666 •
n1ckup truck. Will train. Combo, small coffee ~leclaon. Goodba .... ~r~~~-MBeadroos sma vseet. !,Aapuat· ,.erucl e7 tbl, wall uruts. king or derto: Ue. $75. 751-4840. ....-_,
" hop N B S D 9-3 mg Angora c-..ou.uu .,., b d PILOT PRl..-IHG ••••••••••••••••••••-• 11' REINELL. 0/B .L..'111. cau aft 6pm. 897-4540. s an . . ays. . • . I & 5 q u c en rm sets . "• Bolt surfboard, approx Mere H/D ._._ E·~! ----'------t CallaftSpm,548-4702. $20.979-8978 piece avmg room set 839·5868 p 0 Bo 1560 ...... .. .. _
Tech Tme SI 0 244 piece Din Set Costa·M·esa.xCa . .,...,,.., ~ 6'1". Leash included. No Pert' cood. 8~st ·otr. . ' . WAITRESSES 18 yrs. or Sensational kitten! Free, MUSTSACRIFIC,.; Queen bed. matt/spring .,...,..... W..t.cl 1081 chips.Allen.~5595 642-333Sor642"6078
Prominent electronics over. Apply in person 8 wks, M, box trained. $5&8 Naugh sectn'l, work Free estimates on up-••••••••••••••••••••••• .,._._ "ystems man.ur. see_ks btwn 1 IAM & 1 p M Aft-r5PM.49<-S790 00 h h d d C II ._.... used Ka.ltle 180's .,._.Gr .. ~ON~. d c UM "' ~ • bcnc • r w . a holstering.. sofa hidc·a · Wanted: 10" table saw -bindin'. •-1 1 cld' '"""' .....,.... ... n eur~m iv. 3 anon Stubenvillc West . 2900 .l!.aSYTERMr 979·6536. beds""'·ial.768-6494 also bench grinder. --•~s""p~f«>..!!,.!.. · deep V buU, lSO bp• • 833-2700. Dennis &. Den· New rtBI NB DoCJI 8040 ~ ;;,-..-~ .......... ~. in~ board lb d ..... g ms Personnel Service or po " · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cwtis Furnitunt ---------Please call 548-1487 · ·ou oar _. • Irv me. 2082 Michelson DOG TRAINING CAHPET 30 sq. ft. quality King site mattress. hrm. 3 Winchesters Hodel CompletelY overbatll.~
Dr. MacOr~:tCOTp. YourplaccorMine 18656~~~1.CM bluec~~eves. ~7~.7~Jrundlc bed ~~~~1~:.~~ii~~~~: =St~~M::ef~~s~~ ~~~Ooa ~
l631Placentia,C.M. JohnMartin 675-2440 LF:VOLOR l" s lat etc. Send me a list of auto, 22 caL rtOe $160.
.. , 1177 t>All.Y .. LOT
..... W..t.4 .......................
Wire haired Foit Terrier ----bl d I $50 AO" !Contractors & Han· what you bave. PP. Box JC>.30 rubber acUoa S6f>. SEA RAJ'S' •, TelephoneSGIH Weneed2Speoplewhoal'e • Sofasleeper,qn s1ze, ltbr 1 in, 8 71<0~~e~d· ...,;,9'"204 'dymen! 4 whirlpool gas 613LagunaBcbCa.926S2 All new sta"ll in box
.. •u.AA" " wea·gbt NewporL & l , AKC g $100. toourr· vanys'2ooeepModu on eveni'n"s . rurnacH w/~atei-coil Strugglingcollegestudent oeverflred.962-4990 Al ~ W"'nt lo -........ mon"'Y''. al least 10 lbs over-f~male, 7 mos. AU shots, 1 k 1 d b tt ~ x w1 e .....,. • ,
..
Can you sell on th • ~7724 re • mg, . ern ., _ top new stlllintheshlp· AD 1971Madde ... ._
phone? Top$ in our busi· Irvine areas. Call Mrs. side boa rd. sohd wood Jewelry 9070 pini ca$es $lSO ea set desperately needs &0:00 TV Rocio 18' •30' ,,... •
ness. 646-3030, ask Jor ~~~· 751·~75. ~c 1can AKC West Highland Sl00.S56·0525 ••••••••••••••••••••••• P .P.541l-1338 · · draftif'i lbble..&42~· ;~: NFi, ShNo 1091
Ray. c YO'l ow o osc White Terrier fem pup. - ------para e ar u ••••••••••••••••••••••• HARRISON'S, { pounds&!!arnmoneyat Cbampbkgrnd.962-9563 Dblbed.cheslofdrawer, WANTED suunlessSteelCookware. Jamp . Reasonable. Z5" Zenith Colr TV, SEARAY .
TeJephoneSales thcsa~ume. . -& nighl .stand, maple. TOP CAS H DOLLAR New. 19 pcs. Lifetime 53S-364S Completely reblt, good t1 ALASKAN Malamute, S200.751-6570afl6_ -PAID FOR YOUR guar.mustsell536·2403 ttlllkGI cood.Makeofr.957-0730. 2327So.Main,S.A.. 1().4 f'.: fem. 1 mos. old, spayed, MOVlNG! Antq. ran~e. JEWELRY. WATCH~. TAYLOR Soft Serve ICE Im~ 8013 . .. S40o65SS ~J:.siift~;~:s $175. pcrf. cond. 8' Blue \ICl\lel ART OBJECTS, GOLD. CREAM MACHINE ••••••••••••••••••n••• AdG:daJ19dl C!>lor:;f· 310iCoastHwy.N.B. ON THAT -sofa.536-4150 SILVER SERVICE • .Bestofr.67~2650. . Gerneinhardt Student ~~n, • 631-2547
WESTERN PACIFIC erman Shorthair --------.-l<~INE FURN & AN· . . Ftut.e,111lverplaled,6 rno. 18' Udo Sbpyrd Clelsic
SALES JOB PERSONNEL SERVICES Pointer Pups AKC. LADIES Dresser w/m1r TIQUES.645-2200 Dinette table. 42 lncb d1a. new barely used $175. 23" Motorola Quasn con-Bay Boat. 4 cyf. rblWp&.
20002 Brookhurst Champ. blood' lines. ror. Walnut. !J_ drwr. Xlra --. marble top with four 548·S73S sole color TV Spanish S2500 PbMS-1410 h Wormed shots 548·3673 Ing. twan, firm, incl's CASH IMMEDIATELY! ch8JJ'S. Qua!Jty construe· M d A 1ti '1 $250 , ___ • _____ __..._
GOOD
BUDDY!
Stc2()7,Huntington8c 548•3249 ' .. ' frame, pad, hdbrd. HlGHESTP}UCESFOR tion, bwlt to last many Alpaclarinet$80 ~-11 n . BAYBOATSo.~
(714)963-0804 . 8-U>-466Sall6 :30PM JG~~LWD.ESILLRVEYR. yearsS300.631-3474aCter ViolinSM Chris eng, cabin,~ ..
--------AKC Pekinese. 4 mo's old. --------" • 5 or week ends 6'5-1897 23" ZenJt.b. cokw TV mt Jko' at $750 675457 Women as trnc's for Collie 3 mo's old. Jta_I. Prov. Couc~_. good DIAMONDS. DENTAL cond.S175 · • · •w•
metal fabrication work. 646-0142,645-2801 aft5. cond. $125. 2 hrcside G 0 L D, WE 0 DING Designer clothes, btfl eve UITAR AMP. 2'0watts. "93.st7Z • TOLLYCRAJl'T '"lr.
lite assembly &packing. green chri> S3S ea. BANDS. STERLING, clothes. suits & dresses. Twn 15" spkn. Treble VHF. 9• cUncb,-. bqit TltisJstfwmosthonest, No exper necessary. O.E.Sbeepdogs.1M,1F, ~3718 CLOCKS, WATC!iES·IN Ukenewsz16.Cal1Thur born, fuzz, reverb & tank.1011rs.2~
interestincJ&funsales $2.50hr.714-847-22.\4App· 6 wks. AKC. $225 . TWIHIED ANY CONDITION . aft.10:30orFri/Sat/Sun more.Xlntcond'35C).Pb i\od what yoo wd In ~SICIPJ"'CICJI• .... ·
"iobinn---Co.Wc Jyinpersonl809'lRedon· 494-8940evea. n--T bed Sil.VER COINS TO 3 beforet:00.548·7082 645-3233 DallyPllotCiassifiedl, • "' ...--·-...,..-doCircle H 8 n.we Y ~ guest • TIMES FACE VALUE; F1ylng bridge cruiser offer a beast' pay. Cl ' • • FreetoYOll 8045 $20.SemHirm.675-3812 MORE FOR RARE sips t. twn 225 BP. 4$
good comm •• xlnt YAR.DMAM ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---COINS GOLD & FIND YOUR NAME MPG. full eledroni-& I M t fi d h f · Butcher blk bar w/5 bar ' -. bonus casua at· Rental center needs us. n ome or m-stools dining tbl w/4 D 0 L ~ A R S . _ • • • lishilfg est-up, fuU7
mosphere-to CJO along F /time man. Weekday telligenl spayed cat or hrs MS 645_7857 BENTLEYS, 220 E.17th WIN FOUR TICKETS equlp'd. Onl,y 100 hrL . ofC.Handwritingmustbe she goes to pound. c · pm, · SL. COSTA MESA . This boat Is beUer _..,
w/OAllr staff nbe .. n"'tefit"",..._ neat. Mechanical ability Urgent! Please call Hollywood bed, makes in· ~ (Closed Wed & to the than when new.1»-0109
Ho door t~ door. c:>ur helpful. Apply. 1930 ~3474 after 5 or wk. to twl.n beds with in· Sat>. or675-32228'Vel.
ofc spoc• as beautihl Newport Blvd Costa • nerspnng mattresses .+ MAN'S 18K solid gold IRVINE HARVEST FESTIVAL & no ex.,..-. M~Hs. Mesa. Kittens 1 all blk male. 1 2 bolsters. Used very hL· wnstwatch. $975 ot' beat
W•Train ~ gray/blk female. 1 wka. Ue.$75. 751-4840 offer.
SOUND GOOD7 •••••••••••••••-••••• 546-5392 BUNKBEDS Less than 646"'540
TMnCall ........ 1005 ee dog, baa bad all his one year old., brown UY1111ock &075
RUBBER DUCK ••••••••••••••••••••••• shots, needa good bome w/White, extra firm mal-•••••••••-•••••••••••• At 6411-7656-tt 7P){ tre:MeS •• Come and see to Re Mor brok
833-8095 Wonderland Friendly male doi needs ~~c~:S:~new. tog.ride'&!' '::I':~. bl:
TIME-UFE Of Ant•s! ram. Sm Germ Shep, parade Mor1a.n gelding, LIBRARIES HUGE warehouse shrtbair.673-048aft~ .. sMOS.OLO Eng, Weatern (714) L'~ 10 E I 'r crammed wltb over 500 . . QUALITY• ~• __ ion ______ __.
""4ua PP mp yrm/ mu·a·c box"s, na·ckelo· Flame Siamese male kit-8' Velvet aora bide·n· Moc:ht.. 8071 0 " ten.a u Id bed, 5 pc dlnet~. bkcses,*MY deoo piabos. circus or-wee. 0 · chest, drpleaf tbl w /3 lvs, •••••••••••••••••••••••
Telephone Tool Room gans, wall clocks, Callsn-0332 rclnr. Imps, mirror, 220VoltArcWelderSe~
Sales-Earn to $20,000+. grandfather clocks, Aclorable Germ. Shep. WOWfdrcsser mirror 80 amp. Never used. 4
11 Locations. Orange Co. fascinating antiquea. Puppies, male ac (em. Nd pictures, paintings, des~ Rocltwelljoiner. Motor &
& LA. Great benefits, OverSl.000,000Worth goodbome.673-5586 misc. S7C17 Seashore Dr. staDd. MOO for both.
1'1..--cunty & rapid adv an· American International N.8.663167 Gloria 963-~ <·ement. Coll Republic Galleries; 1802-T Ketter·
Distributors, Inc. Mr. in1 St., Irvine. Tel. * * * 56" Bound dropleaf tbL 4 Lg. production belt Roy.'114/834·9088. 754-1777. Open Wed thru Captains chrs w/pads. aander,l"x78".220TOlt3 _..;..:... _____ _,. Sat. 9 AM to4 PM. Vlaitl A.S. c:.tsoa Gm chr &ottoman. Anti· phase, 5 HP w/dust ptck-
Telephone Sales IOIO .. "lWi-by que gro twin beds, 2 . up box & .Wter. $1200. NeedMoney$$S$$$$$$ Afpl-.Cn ~Vie~ dreuers, 2 nite at.ands. 98M55S
Work on Phone new list. •••••••••·--••••••• "' Full l b d I ---------• tnP 9:30 A.M. lo 12:30 FROHT DAMAGED You-.retbewlonerof 646-l~l .ce e rarne. Mha ... owa IOlfl
A.M .. 5:30 P.M. to 8: HOl'POINT SAL!:. 3308 411cWs t. tti. ••••••••••-•--••••••
P.M. P&oae 64MZZ3 or W. Warner ISi' Barbor. 1""'9 .._..nt ptoett.e eel $120. Stereo camper Sb.II for El
C!OmO to 250 E. 17th St, s.ntaA.na.tm-2921 hltt•.e ccmote $130. Small or· Camino. Colt new $189.
SultoO,Cost&Mesa CASllPAU> Faml~~ment ~~=~=· ~ce. Sell $250.
1BJ.H S600 f'or Ws.br/Deyrs/~rrt;
Ala • b h ff --....,or-11571'1U Woodbrtdielolrvlae S.Pc Solid ll""""anv DR ueo.. ranc o era .... ..... -(Cul .. r Dr. at Mt. buffet '(.Ide chain exclllng PR po•. to WASta/OIYB Barranca> ·• • =.n~r!e~~~~ SVP£R DElUXE MdJ. Ple.ue call M2-6t18, Ext.
Deonla J>oraonnel MutU cycle. like new, 333, to claim your
Servico of lrvlne, pert .cood. $125 ea. tlt'kets.
Mlchea.oll J>r. ·-54_&5-__ S'l_• _ __,, ___ -t * '* •
ARPET lUU HMo
aha1, mu:W color yellow,
brand new $100. pad ln-
cl'd. Brown, dbl. Sofa
bide.a-bed, 1d. cond. $31.
SG-050
Oct.1and2
CUiver Drive at Bananc., Woodbridge In lrvln•
Box office opens 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. daffy from Monday,
Sept. 26. Continuous, Wholesome f amllv entertainment from 10 a.m. to midnight Saturday and from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sunday.
FUN FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY
Toddlers, teens and senior citizen's! Games, exhibits, dancing, music, temptl~ taste treats, refreshments
ELECTRIC
IAYIOAT
IB• Duffield1 F.dSOD. ~
plete w /life Jacket.a.
auto. batterY charger, all cusbklim, surry top ....
dows, 2 full coven, ,ere.•
All ln brand new e66cl.
$ll000.17W982or6'5-_,
loafs.Sall •1i• •••••••••••••••••••••••
'77 WeatsaU 32. FuU,
equJpped. Sacrifice
M9.SOO or trade for al:. Real F.!Jtat.. Ptt 11':'f.
6'fS..C220 ~'
KITE 12'. New aail. bV -trlr. $525. Nice!
c.Newma.a. 6'15-9711 or
891-1551
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A.Yto1, l•porhd Autoa. lmpc>rl9d Avtoa, Imported ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
.... WI t 060 Alltet fer 19 W..t.d UtO PafM1t 9720 'NIJ"t 9 741 Vol.-o t 77J Mfot. Used Alltel. UaH Mtoa. UMd ~ .............................................................................................................................................................................................................. .
WI\ TID: 14• 1llp I Allltetft// WI * DllYI .._ * 'SJ CLMSIC 403. lmmac. 1.-0.1 YOU 9901 C. ,.... ttlJ Merc.y 9t50 ~ Bch b1 N" 1 c::tiiltlCI 9110 .,_ Rul\I perfett. Mu1t '"Ir , Sii.i. YOUI •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .~n .,, .. ,. ult T.C. ....................... M• * LlnLE... * makeotr.t97·ll07 VOLYO, Pacer. fully loaMd, '12 CORVETI'~ Convt. ·12 Colonr Part St.a -·~·~~l\u • audebaker. rwanln1. CLIAM S •VE & LOT Ponche f710 See \&I foe a top dollar All/FM sttreo. ..ir. blk Gd. eond. Lo ml. $S.D>ot W1n .. al xtru, low .,;.-but Dffd1 work. auo. USID CAIS A A ••••••••••••••••••••••• •timat.e! oa bllc. llSOO. 48'M.919 or boltofr. -.a.o mll•. SM81$. M6-7023 ~!!!!~~-..----I ISTUGI MOW " 5'0RTSCAIS M4ROUISVOl.VO Ma"8nukforO'res. '73 VeUe, fuU1 loaded, "'12 Mar ul1 Brouabam
tt.U' llebM, xmt road ~ CAU.PAIPY ._._.., Sokt MISSION VIEJ O ''15 AMC Hornet, ' dr, ract. cond. l.o mi. Cpe. ;ht, vin t op. v. trailet. •at offer VtWdtt t H O __,.., IJt..JllO 4tJ.t210 A/C, aooo. Xlnt abape. SIMMSor99Mle4 (TH) i.o.ded. AM·FM stereo.
311·?111 ....................... 540 •5630 catl'*'914aa1Upm. C · ftlJ cnase eont. all pwT, tit
--. ••• aoa• -Id 1,.. ·11 OMC luhul'bln Sierra WEST GERMAN ORAMGI COUMTY _.. tt 10 D 1111F wbl, ii.et rada, Make ..... _ .... _ ""' 0 -••••••••••••••••••••••• ol $41-T'167d.Ya ·&S' uJI t. Bl otfu ~ .... va, dllal air IMPORTS YOLV ....................... "720oucar XR7. F\all pwr.1--r_. ----------~MMIU.m ::-~IT.:~~·~-:;: 2626 HARIOR ILVD. 7 14/ 548-1116 EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO "19 Skyhawk, ool)' 12,000 Nu Urea, alr. AM·FM. tt52
..... a.a-t'Olld. COSTA Ml!SA FOi THI IEST "76 PorscEe 911S Taraa. ~est Volvo Denier ml. Air, AM·F'M, auto. SZ800or ooat. 842·11141 .............. ••••••0 • ~~/ 9070 PbfTM:llS R.llTPRICES Xlnt cond, AM/FM tape in rangeCountr! Xlnt cond. 141·1108 or ft...&-99•5 '88 Auto 289. ~!,000 orig
-WllUY d k BUYorLEASE 752·78.'>5 -......... • mt 2 ownra Alllt cond ......... -............ Cafl Jim H..dha.t ec (714) 73.5·7722 DIREcr ............ ••••••••••• m. 83t·l.54i .
WANT two 21' SaJlboat 4 Wlieel DftYea t H O USID CA.RSI TODAY! '77 Porsche 9211. Silver. ~·,~~ill-~,~·~ "11 JUvkra, extra clean, ·1• DART, z:sooo mJ, xlnt. su ... Newport. BaJboa ......................... We're the new Chevrolet Sunroof, AM /FM 1tereo. _. __ • _. ~--bl1b m ileage, very cond. eoo. rtrm. ·es Mustan1, v.a. xlot
Mr. ftlle, t1$-UN AMC~IU' dealenhlp in the Irvine 881 DOVE STREET A 11 o y w ht s. u , 6 o o .~ • lharp, $U95. 84().4167 642·2082 eves mecb CODd, needa tome
Auto Cooter We need Near MacArthur be a u t l f u I m 11 es . ~~ . body wll. $1000 or make
Wuc.t: dock a~ce for #I 119 Calif. yC>ur WMM.I car! &Jamboree Road.a Sll ,000/bstofr. 4N-8338 202.6 S M ~ ..... -'87 Buick Wildcat, 2 dr, 1ll8' Dart, depend t.ransp, otler. 491-2113
If' Mil boll. N.B. aru WE OUTSELL ALL JOE llJ.1300 · 81lC11~:r.:na1 P/8, P /B, A/C, Auto 75000mi, HW clutcb, 1d1---------~l2 after 5PM. JEEP DEALERS .... uc PHIRSO.... ------1 Pora/ bchl ek '7ii6 Tar1•.11•reen Anaheim 750-2011 trans, Gd tranaportaUon u.:e.. $350. Mf.W1 '61 MUST ••• 31pd. P/~ IN THE STATE J11t11A n IUTTHIPRICI w nt., a oy1, · • · car. Shows x1nt u re. Gd P/B,nm1sreaL
.O' MOORING HUGI IHVIEHTORY CHEVROLET IHCR!ASIU! cassette, air. 768·S737 '75 StaUon Wa1on. Auto, paint. Gd upbpl. lluat Pont 9940 -..a11
AVA.LLABLE AU Model& New Ir Uied '70 914. Nd.a work, body In PS, A/C, AM/F M, st.et aell. SIOO/Orm. 875-1331 •••••••••••••••••••••••1·.---------87s.m4 640~l Leaa1ngAva1lable 2lf1.utri~~e~Onvc NEWCARS 1ood ahape $3000 or bst cu. rf rk. 1 owner, buy ,J 681111.tltan&. Loeded. Jn
l'he faatest draw in tht CoataMHG 761·7222 Ar~11UWLDPR1CES olr.87s.192'l0ave =°'~r &ake over lae ·~b~~:<iMU-:!~1,A./~'. ~ t~~m..m.Af\er
Wea& •.. a Daily PaloL AMC Jeep All modtds now ovall•· '73 914 2.0. appearance l&'iO UIS-913SaA5Pll I PH IL <..1~ed Ad. 642·5673. ~HARBOR BLVD. Wl'U. IUY ble. QJll or aee us before group, good cond, asking '70 Volvo, below ~tall. · LONG 67 Mustua. au orl& ln &
Costa Mesa 549-8023 your foreJgn or compact you bizy ! '! S4500. 548·7417 af\6PM Best offer over SUll5. "7Z ~SABRE 2 dr, PIS, FOR.D 01.tt. Oris owar. Xlnt
Tr·a.,art.._ --------t»ar. pa.ad for or not! <.:all ·75 914 1.8 air app srp AJC. Auto. 831~ till wbl, A/C, AM/FM cond. Air. wire whla. v1n J~. S "77" ' ' · • 11ter V·top '8800 ml bucket ... ta. $1000. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...::r-Sales Mgr. very. clean. Beat. offer. 1970 H5 Sta W0 n. X1·1 Xln't. co.;d. •aooo: <... M. E."'"'11Jor'7SM108 Cwu~1. S•/ C J • S ' 1 • C J 7 • s · BILLY ATES 714 .~lff. cond. AM·FM, • radtab. 833-81'3 • \"'>.
l1ilt 9120 Cherokee1, Waaoneers, vw· •ORSCHE 2MS HARBOR BLVD. •• '71 911E Taraa, best $1.800/ofr.~ 1---------1 ~~.... otcla_.. 9955
••••••••••••••••••••••• Plclt·ups, up to Sl,200 dia· ..-540.'4 Io 540.02 t J orrer. Good cond. 188S Bui.ck LaSabre 4-dr. ~.., ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·n ,Ood&e van camper. count.a. s yr so.ooo mile SanJuan Caplatrano 581.7919 '63 Volvo Futbaclt ... lm· ctn 2nd ear.ta.Por1D· ~._ '73DELTAOaavt.Cream· ~ll&nae, oven btr, 3 way warra.otys available. 837-4100 493~5 I I '67 P L·411 Datsun Sta maculate cood. i.llte fo60880I J)Wf. s.dUl:ed &o "950. ·re1rt,. Air, 11terec>, P/S, Copeland Mtn lllC 1---------Wa1. New mt.r & many '74 Porsche, 914, 1.8. Xlnt new. $900. ~1.58 _ __.""Y " ~ dr PPMO-eec>I P Ph538-8809 E S xtras. Good eo11d. $UOO. cond. Must sell. S31·7800, ._... " C,...,,,."'a ,.f, " • ~ ... ,._ ... ...,._.,.,,_., 1---------/8. sio.
7
so. 2001
lat, ASS8.SOOO Autos. Imported 646-lS:U roomU. Autot. u_... · P /S, P /B, auto, alr, "'"--c-. '--1900 ()Ma Cutlw J.dr. 8~· Cab-Over, ga1/elec: '69 Landcruiaer Wagon. ....................... .. ..................... AM /FM . V·t op . 11· Radio. A/C. de..i. "50.
ref r I g, 3 b u r n er Xlnt mechanics, new eit· Getwral 970 I '71 240Z. silver, hick vinyl Rola Royce 9756 ~al 990 I 20mpg. 24000 mt. $C700. 1972 Ford Gran Torino ~·1127
•stove/oven, alps 6, xlnt tras. AM /FM caa. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rf, air cond. & 8 Lrk. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• M'1·7741 coupe,steelrad.lal1,V.S,1---------:----
cond. '90().548·2118 Jensen apkra. Tocoma '56 IEHTLIY SI 55,000 ml. $3800. Lisa #l DEALER IN US A auto, P.S., rad io, heat.er, Pinto 9957
---------1 while spoke whls, Maxi· Immac. 968-8119 549·2441 aft. 6 • • • '77 Personal crisis cuts bucket. aeata, vinyl top, ••••••••• .. •••H• .. ••••
Cab6ver Camper w/xlru trac ti res, curtain11 & cpt. ROY rare $10,680 Buick's 111..1000 ml, $1700 or beat '72 Pinto Runabout.
ffU LB im port truck 752.14510 home846.3537 '68 Datsun 1600 Road1iler. CARVER flneet. '7500 ml, Electra ouer. 1976 Ford Pinto, 2000cc. Auto, new tlres.. .. ~uoo. (714) 6Z7-1618 --' * * • Nu pnt, valves, SlOOO. ROLLS·ROYCE Ltd Park Ave. sa.200. R ./H, "4·1peed, s t eel sac. SlG85. 53M011 "----------·n JEEP J4000 truck. 494·2130 crua/C, fact m ag will.I, radiels, 3-dOOI' tunabout,1---------......,b•d l lkn 9140 nres & nms. cstm cab & H-• ... 10 ...... __ 1woJemtMr" W/W, plush velour. R/S 9,000 ml, $3000. Eveninp '72 Pineo 2000CC. 4 epd, --•••••••••••••••••• cmpr shell. 673-1817 '" .,._... New-" ... ch tape. '73·5644 SS2·0129 mags. A1'/FJ4.tape. Gd Mini blkes <four> brand -- -----23722Via Et Rocio 1976 2802 \'----' ~ condSlJQO.m...a .
oew. Great off·i.trcet ·77 Scout 4 wheel drive. Mission VleJo Air, stick, stereo tape, CLOSED SUNDAYS 99 IS '70 Torino. Convertible. .
bike for teenagers. $18C lotsofextras! Low miles, Youarelhewlnnerof xlnt cond. $8400/Bst ofr. ---------»igine perf. nda minor '73 P lnto Wea . C01pd.
ea.Ml-1706 Excellent condition. 4Tidtetstothe 640.2428 days. 675·9626 CONCANNON'S 1 _________ 1CPEDEVILLE'71.Good body work. $1500, clean int. Runs sreat.
830-6688; 837·9710 lrtlM H«rTfft eves HORSELESS "Where The cond,1leel radials, 4IM--0381 Must tell. l40-a421 dys
'71PUCH Maxa.3Mo'sof .. _ 9560 r....-tf•al ST..,ILES DealerMakt!IJ $1995.CalliU-9801. •Fl S W 675-BaSevm.'150/betofr. ~. xlnl cood. S370. Call rue-m A Q a rlane ta. wag. 633-0f10· ...................... FamiJyEntertalnmenl "70DatsunS10.Auto,A1C, Broken of fine contem· TheDlfference" "73 Sedan de Ville, orig. A/C. 1 owner, gd CODd. Moforocvdn/ LW Pickup, AM/FM, · Oct.land 2 Good cond. Low m1. porary NABERS owner, below wholesale. Pl(). 645-2333 '76 SJ'A'nON WAGON 6
. Scoofen ~~o mi. S2000. Call W~~n:egrcJ~.r~tnc S1200. Eves 6·9 673-530.S RO~ ROYCE AUTO _SM00. __ 06-0108 _____ --t "IS Fon! LTD, Mr Brbm. ~ ~~ =~· -:~~
•••••••••••••••••••••••1---------1 Barranca) 1974 Datsun 8210, xJnt BENTLEY ''70 Cad Sedao. Foll Xlnt cond. Best oUw. 5'0..-. days, 6"-COil '71 µarley FXE onJy 1200 Ford Couner, custom Please call 642·S678, Ext. <..'Ond. $2350. automoblles. CENTER power,nullreallbrb. ~~or 7&W341 evalcwlmds.
011, w/1peclal paint, paint w/ sceoea, custom 333. to claim youi 673-~ 2711 E.Coastffwy ADf "'-of $1095 5C8.QZl5 ---------•·---------
bars, oil cooler, etc. Paid lntenor, Vector mags. tickets. <71')675-0030 • ---------i'65 FALCON Sta. Wgn , 'J'2 PbdoW11oa,rebl&eng,
S4,300 O.D., sell for Firestone tires, molded '77 /280b Z,alirt,mla3gaooo.bromwln BentleyS2'61Blk,nueng. MabenCtldllac 19'18a1tCarodailulancrEJdooofraFdoulwl~ ~a11, bwlde er~ .. ata'tr' ~~CODd.NN366 -370 un~1s7 nares. spoiler, AM/FM * * * w rn n • • • Good bs e • ., wnion an, r -111~....-----·--· .....,...------1 caQ•,,•tte sun roof au•-AM/FM 1tereo, musl of' 4~7 . .,,.S2a,ooo. t loaded, orl&inal oWQer. abocu as morel ttoo.1------......
9
-
9
-:-
6
-
0 """' • "'· sell!837·5121 .er.............. SPECIALTY $8700.831>-1710,133-928' 648-%113 '13 Honda 500, lots of ex· Runs good. $3000 or best 1---------1_________ ---------:i---------· .. ••••••••••••••••M••••
Jraa. $850 or beat offer. offer. Ask for George, AllCI 9707 5 Toyota 9765 CAR CIHTIR "IS Coupe de Vllle. Fully '86 STATION Wp. Vt, ,
70
D1.titer Rut ty brn
8.17·Z178 638-7992 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Flat 972 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • loaded, bea uu.rul & P /S, A/C, new a uto w/blk inte rior. Good
* .. DAILY PtLOT
••••••• •••• • • ••• ••••• • • 1-.......RE YOU orr Honda S00.4, xlnt cond. Lo 63 Ranchero, 6 cyl stick. '74 Audi Fox. Auto, air, '7S Spyder 124. Alr. AM· _......., '71 Dahwt $3699 clean. Beet er. 551..s818 trans. $850. MC.a.6 & cond. Ask in g $800.
t miles, fairing, rack, new brks/tlres, good AM·r:'M stereo, t!lpe dck, FM, xlnt cond. $4SOO. SELL YOUR 2i10Z .... (3-46DMK) 1975 Coupe deVllle, 32,000 751.o?to Stephanie 6'1-3111 or
t _b_a_.ss_._89"7_s_.968-__ 937_i __ 1-cood:.:::.:...:..mo..:...:....·-:.979:_-0368...:....:_ __ 1 ~tt!.!o~~. ~~.*:ik.~'Vi 634·1«tdysS.S-6783eves TOYOTA, 4 spd. AM/FM, radial ml, new t.IJ'es, sunroof. Merc.y ttl01_M_7~-------
t Toyota PU w/camper dys, 499-3585 evea, Ask See ua for a lop dollar tires & u1r cood. mJnt cood. $8000. Avail ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... tt74 I socc In top condition. shell. Good bumper. AM · for Gary '75 F~at :;-8 Spo.rt LS2,X~~t estimate! '72 ()kb $1999 until 9/28. Glenn Olsen, ORANGE COUNTY'S .... -............... ':
' • Jdeal for campers with FM. very gd cond. Low •-.---. ------~3i62, ~~s~: 1 · MAR9UIS TOY OT A Toronado .... (988F1J0) 644-8174 or'8S-3725 HIWIST V.A '76 •
motor homee or trailen. mi. S2100. 67 13 at\6 73 Auch. Owner must sell. MISSION VIEJO ""II powe~. fact. air, Ult '76 Seville, wbtlblue Int, LINCOLN·MERCURY HATCHIACIC •T ;:
fi31-3474 alter Sor wk Xlnt cond. Radials. '72 124 Hard top Sport 831·2810 495-1210 wheel,crwse cont.rol. flawless, loaded, only DealerahlplanowOPEN n~o 5 -----· -.:
ends. '65 FALCON Ranchero, 6 $2100. 675-2571 Coupe 5 ~pd. mags, '72 ChH $24t9 9000 mi. First $10,500. RAY FLADEIOI r..in • ._.... .......... • • cyl,aut.o.mags.$750.or W --971 ~ AM/l'·M. yellow w/blk 1972 Toyota Corona M C 1 <Se l 71J) alr c ond., etc. ~
•I '76 VespaScooter,12SCC, bcst.962-6735 .. interior. Xlnt cond. Deluxe.4-dr,A/C.•-spd. onte aro r55 taka.~ LINCOLN·ME RCURY (~/3Sll).Wu'37115. ' Beat Offer. 1----------;•••···················· Auto trans. air COD~.. l&-18 Auto Center Dr. o ... •y $31 ti CaJISSZ..1864evenlngs. '76Chev. El Cam1ft0, all Sl6SO.Tammy646-3818 economical, nu r adial P steer., brakes, tilt '72 CdV, Xlnt cood. fiJy SD.Fwy·Lakel''orealexit n-. SADDLEBACK xtras.Xlntcond.Bestof· Honda ---9727 tires.Good cond.968-6630 wheel. loaded, radlal1. llu1t IRVINE HOWAIDCht"old
'74 Yamaha TXsoo, good fer. 66l·o.t34 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Toyota Corolla. Low '72 Wck S2699 tell. Bestorrer 545-3211 830.7000 Dove &Quall Sta. BMW cond. Low mi, 1 owner.1---------mileage, xlnt cond. Riviera .... (625FTF). "77 RED &WHT. Cpe. do-NEWPORT BEACH
SS00.640-5047 S21SO.Call499·2407 Full power. fact air Ville Perf cond. War· '71 Mere Colony Park 133-0555 '74 Yamaha SOO DOHC, 8
valve, 4700 ml. Minlt---------1
cu)d. $850. 548-8148 aft GMC ~Too w/camper
~;30 shell, V6 305, runs xlnl.
536-.f795 uk for J lm Bultaco 2.SOcc Frontera 1---------1
blue '71 model. $8SO '58 Chevy short.bed, 327
n,,vid. MS-2138 Corvette eng, Muncie 4
Molwtto.H. Sale/ spd, mags. Sl.800. or beat
ll....t/storoge f 16CI orfer. 548.Q08
••••••••••••••••••••••• Vans 9570
MOTOR HOMES
FORRE;NT
From $150. wit. 770.0644
RENT Fireball 23' SeU
conL Auto/air. CC, CB.
"Stereo, alpe 6 645·2283
•••••••••••••••••••••••
pu new b~rwick
dataun reverse lofo
WE BUY
CLIAHC:MtS
&TRUCKS
CONND.L
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
C06TAME8A
546-IJOO .
COMEIMlrSH .76 Toyota wagon. air, cond., LilL wheel, low rantYsUll~Iectlve.P.P. Muqui1.All power.New '7&Ve-Ba•-'"back kpd THIAUHEW mUa. · G+-3ll7aft4PM water p u m p , n ew •-""" • auto., xlnt cond. S37SO Or '76CordobaSS199 brakes, new batt, new A1!f/1"M stereo, 15,000
630CSI HOW!U best offer. 552-3356 Jl\Jll pwr fact air .k tilt C••• tt 17 tune-1.tp. Good tlr H. m1 , recent tuae·up,
wheel <s82REM) •••••••••••• .. •••-•••• Good clean 2nd family minor Int. d a mage.
COMPLETE •76 Atldi s4j 99 •• camaro. Auto, g cyl, car or 11urfer. ueoo. Ph Great cond. fJOOO.
IODY SHOP Fox 4.dr. (S63PQF>, 4 new paint. gd pa mi. G48-8580or67S.2180. 1_80-_JJ_llO _____ _
HOWOPEH speed trans., AM/FM $137S.Pb6?S-3ll67 1970 Mere Marqali. Lo VIGA"76
stereo, factory sunroor, '74 Camaro, Super clean, mi. Gd mechanical c:ood. HATCHIACIC
SADDLHACK loaded. alr,tape.lowlowmUes.1 $600.882"'990 Pertectr • I Speed
Y ALL1Y IMPORTS • Owner. sa:soo. 67Hl.20. '13 M ul Brouiti tnmmllaloa., etc. OnJy
IJl..aG404tMt4t ECONOMY '77 L.T. camuo. Cboc loadeariw~everytbl'::: elevea,j~i~>
CARCEMTIR bro.P\lllyequlpped. G.M Low ml. xlnt cood. LuX· HO~ ...... C. .... ...
----.
CREVIER
Sales&rvlce·Leaslng
Roy C.-Yer,lnc.
Rollll lloyce BM W
lS40 Jamboree
Newport Beach IU0-8444
•ee Bavaria,
$3200. •94-8620 49M768 or 494-4855
'81 VW Camper. Xlnt Intl',
nds tram, -~ beat ofr.at.zm
•
•
exec must aell. aa.5117 \d'Y at low prtce. SKSO. "-111Wv;'" aft6pm. ~ DovefJQuaUSta
NEWPORT BEACH ·• Cbemtet Camuo. au Anade St. Balboa.~ Raft IOIMthlna to tell? SELL Idle ttema wt1h a
Call 6TS-762l a auUled ad.a cfo It well. Del11 PlJol Claulfled Ad.
***
LWeHlll•11
uos~ HuDUuton Beach You are tlwwtn.oer ot
4T1dllttlto ... .,.. ... , ... .... ~, ..
FamllYEQ~
Oci.l and2
Woodbridge i.o lniDe
<Cu.lffr Dr. at Barranca)
Pl .... call "2·&171. Ext.
IU, to claim 1our ~·
VWWAGOMS
., ........ w-...................... .... ._. ..... ,..O.iO ....... ..
74411 ·--........................ .. ,.......,..,._,..... ...
71 41 t W-••••.••••••• ••••••••••••II• ,,...,_.,....~
"70 YW ~ 1•1sl .................... 11• AIM. l'ldlo. t'IV:i•
'70 YWSfii 1•u• ..................... 11111 ..... i'liil ...
'•tYWt;r: llUI& .................... 11411 "*",.... •
'•IYW1'J itsdl ........... _ .. _•••II ... ......
Al ... -.-_,_ -~ -
••• DAILY "LOT w.anetday, September a1, 1en
BRAND NEW
1977 PLYMOUTH VOLARE 2 DOOR• SEDAN . .
$
225 c1d 6 cylinder engine. automatic transmlu1on. left remote control mirror, protection
rubber strips. front & rear bumper guards. wsw tires Ser. #HL29-C7B·265569
SAVE MOW WITH CUSTOM CAR
LEASING ••...
LEASE THE ALL MIW COIDOIA AHO VOLA&Ol AMY MEW
MAKE CAR. DUCK 01 V AH DlllCT AHD SA VII LOW
COMPITITIVE IATIS.-.FOI IHFOaMATIOH AHD PllCIS
CAU PAUL DEFAlllS •... 546-1934. R.EET SALIS:
ALL
1977
DEMOMSTRA TORS
ON
SALE
THIS WEB END!
GIANT SAVINGS ON ENTIRE
INVENTORY OF BRAND NEW
I 9 7 7 C H RY SL ER S A N'D
PL YMOUTHS, DURING A Tl.AS
CHRYSLER/ PLYMOUTH'S
CLOSE OUT ON ALL '77s.
IRANou 1977LE .,EW
R BARON OLLING OUTS,.
AT CLOSEOUT
SAVINGS!
FABUlOUS VAL:UES ON FINE USED CARS ••••• •
'70 PLYMOUTH
SPORT FURY
V-8. automatic. air conditioning. power steering.
power brakes r1dlo. hHtlf. wh1tew1ll '""· vinyl roof (81 tASll
5695
'75 CHRYSLER
CORDOIA
I
V·8, autometJe, air condlt•onlng. power steering.
power brakes. radio. heater. wh1i.wall t•r•. vinyl
rqof, crultcr control. (381MMN)
'71 PLYMOUTH
GI.AM FURY
V-8. automatic. air conditioning. power ateering.
radio. heantr. whitewall tires. vinyl roof. but~et
seats (801CPC)
1 4 MAZDA
RX4WA&OM
I
Rot.-y engine. 4 speed. air conditioning, racho,
h•ter. bucket 8"tl. luggage rKk. (378NIH~ ,
'72 DODGE
SWINGER
V-8. automatic. air conditioning, power steering.
pawer brakes. radio. heater, whitewall tires. vlnyt
roof (418MEB)
5 1295
'71 t;ORD
RAMCHWA&ON
V·8. automatic, air oondltlonlog, power ateerl11g ...
power brakes. radio, heater. (1 E70H202270).
'76 PLYMOUTH
FURY
V·8. automatic. air cond1ttoninq. powe< steef'lng,
power brakes. radio. heater, vinyl roof. (023RBI)
Huntington Beach
Fo1•ntaln Valley
EOITI ON
Afternoon
N. Y. St.oeks
VOL. 70, NO 2~, •SECTIONS, •6 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1977 TEN CENTS
CIA L ure d JJarfties to LSD Party?
WASHINGTON IAP I A forme r CIA psycholo11st has told a
flabbergastoo Senate s ubcommittee that he once planned to spray
LSD oo a houseful of unsuspecting California partyaoers but gave
up the idea because the unseasonably warm weather meant the win ·
dows could not be closed
In frustration, another CIA agent closeted himself in the
bathroom of a house in San FrancISco and sprayed himself with the
hallucinogenic drug, which wru. man aerosol can.
THE AUDIENCE IN THE SENATE Caucus Room exploded
with laughter Tuesday as the witness, Or David Rhodes, told his
story
"Do l understand that three grown men new from the East
coast to the West coast to recruit people at bars for a party so that
* * * * * *
they couJd be sprayed with LSD?" asked Sen. Edward M. Kennedy
<D·Mass.)
Rhodes said that he and another aaent went to San Francisco in
the late 19506 and spent a week getting to know people in bars "so
that we could subsequently invite them to a party."
HE SAID THEY WANTED TO learn it LSD could be ad·
ministered in small quantities by being sprayed in the air.
Rhodes said the amount of LSD in the spray was very smafl, "so
small that it would take a practiced person to see an)> result."
He said the CIA already knew\he effect of LSD on persons who
knew they were being given the substance, and that the agency
believed it important to learn what effect it bad on people who did
not know they had received LSD.
* * * * * *
Btrr RHODES SAID THAT IT WAS discovered that the house to
be used for the party had no air conditioning, meaning the doors
and windows would have to be kept open.
"The weather defeated us," Rhodes said. "We decided to
scratch it at that point."
Rhodes said later that he does not believe the experiment ever
was repeated.
BUT HE SAID THAT BEFORE the group of agents left San
Francisco they had one further mission.
"We attended the first national convention of lesbians," Rhodes
said
He said the purpose was to test a psychological theory, but did
not elaborate.
* * * * * *
Nixon
*
Overseas Staff Drugged
* * * * * Zany Anties
Tales Regale Congress
WASHINGTON <AP> Those
zany CIA agents, who once tried
to make Fidel Castro's beard fall
out , have Congress in stitches
again with tales of melting
swizzle s ticks and tear gas
1 a unche rs Cor agents who
couldn't throw straight.
Members of a Senate subcom-
mittee broke up in laughter Tues-
day as former agents told about
the agency's use or special de·
vices designed specifically to In-
troduce drugs to unsuspecting
test subjects.
One that strained the commit·
tee's imagination was the at-
tempt to make Castro lose his
hair. Thal was revealed in 1975
by the intelligence committee,
which said the Cuban leader sur-
v i ved a t l east eight CIA·
sponsored assassination plots.
The committee said the attack
, on Castro's beard wasn't aimed
at killing the Cuban leader. It
was supposed to humiliate him.
It called for the dusUng of
Castro's shoes with a bair·
removing substance during a trip
Castro was to make out of Cuba.
But the Senate report said,
Castro foiled the conspirators by
canceling the trip.
Another former agent, Philip
Goldman, told the subcommittee
about tools designed to deliver
drugs or other chemicals to CIA
targets.
For instance, Goldman said he
made billy clubs that ::;bot tear
gas, drug-laced swizzle sticks
that melted in cocktails and a
hypodermic needle that shot
drugs into corked wine bottles.
Some devices were born of
desperate need. Like the gadget
he built to launch a small glass
vial fiUed with tear gas up to 100
yards.
He said the tear gas device was
ordered after an agent attemfled
to hurl one of the vials out o bis
hotel window into a rally the CIA
wanted t.o break up. tbe ac'°h aim was bad. '!be vial missed the
window, bounced o{f aw~ and
br~e open, filling th' a1ent's
hotel room with au. Goldman
seid.
UCI Class Studies
Neae WOC!e t or Rie er
Concrete crew pours new hard surf ace on
bank of the Santa Ana River channel that
forms the border between Costa Mesa and
Huntingto.n Beach. This work is being
done just north ot A~ams Avenue. River
levees are being strengthened with con·
crete facing in Orange County Flood Con-
trol District project.
'
Peculiar
Actions i
Reported
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
former science chief or the CIA
told a Senate panel today he was
asked to determine if any mem·
bers or President Nixon·~ travel·
ing party were drugged during a
trip to an "unfriendly" foreign
country sometime in 1971.
Dr. Sidney Gottlieb, who left
the CIA in 1973, said the Presi·
dent definitely was not drugged
but that other members or his
oarty. including his personal
physician, Dr. Walter Tkach, ex·
hibited peculiar symptoms, in·
eluding Qutbursts of cryina at in·
appropriate moments.
Describing the symptoms, Pr.
GotUieb sald, ''ftfy best recollec·
Uon was that. It was disoriented
and unusual . ln terms of the
person's normal behavior.
"I,nappropriate tears and cry.
lnJf 1 remember as part of the
manifested behavior," Dr. Gott·
Ueb told a Senate health sul).
commJttee.
Or . .Gottlieb did not name the
foreign country involved nor did
be identify the druf suspected of
causing the unusua symptoms.
Marine Environs · · ~-Y alley Bingo Finns Win Ro11nd
According to records of the
White House transportation of·
flee, however, Nixon did not
travel in 19'11 to any countries
that were considered unfriendly. By PIOLIP ROSMARIN
Of .. Dally P'l ... Staff Law l~eases
Eligib'le Units
The Fotmlaia Valley City
Council unanimously approved a
revised bingo ordinance Tuesday
that increases the . number of
if'OUJJI which may play.
The revialon was made possi-
ble by chan,-es In state law which
now allows cities to grant
permiU for bingo games to more
groups for charitable purposes,
said Fountain .Valley Ad·
miniatratl ve A.1511,aot Qlll
Ackerman.
The Fountain Valley law.
ad~ ., an uraency mea&u.re
and etrecuve Immediately al-
lows 1tnlor citbena, clvic·
oriental, fraternal and aemce croupe to obtain bln10 pennltt.
'1'be r.Maed btn10 law alto al-
lowsJroups to hoJd games in
rent ot temporary meeUng
plac•. Previoualy, the city Jaw al·
lowed blneo J>4tr.Uta only fQr'
those troupa involved ln "re-
ll1iou1. cbatitab&e, aelentlflc
tesUna tor publlualety and ~
veatlon d cruelt)' to clalldren Gd
anlmalil."
The old law also restrtcttd
<Bee BINGO, P .. e AZ)
. . on G othard .Street
By ROBERT BARKE1l •
Of Tiie Deity ...... M.tf
Owners seeking to keep their
small industries in Huntin&ton
Beach fought the battle or
Gothard Street Corridor Tues4•Y
night atld ca111e a"ay with an
opening l'OOnd victory.
They pac:)ted .city counc:il
chamber& ana voiced ne~ly un-
aohrious ·opposition ·to a con·
troverslal general plan amend·
ment undergoing its first pUblic
hearing before the planning com-
mission.
Tbe amendment would
change the zonln' of about 200
acres ilon' Gothard Street Crom
Warner to Garfl~ld A\tenues
from indu~trial to restdenUal
use.
A tn1mber of \hose in the au-
dience said~ were fighUJti for their llvell . 'l'bef sald that they met all clty requJrements
wh~ they tame to the clty and
that it was not proper to face
poaalble evlctlon as n~n ·
conformln1 user because or
changetinaonlng.
"U)'OU'loree me to close, I'll be
out ot work and ao wlll about~ of
my empJoyes," Mel Mermel·
stein, the owner and president of
the Ideal Pallet Co., said.
Others argued Uiat it doesn't
make sense t-0 zone houses next
· to ind\IStries and that this type or
planning could cause a great deal
or conflict in the rut.ure.
Resident Herb Chatterton said
. l.he proposed 1eneral plan
amen<lment appeared to be a
capitulation to private building
developers who reportedly are
running low on raw residential
land. "U this 1goes through, some
housing develapers are-going to
make Iota or money,'' Chatterton
said.
Mark Porter, president of
HOME Co\tncll, 81so aaid that the
Gothard lapd was the tarcet ol
f\?Si~ land developers.
H& claimed that the staff re-
port wu not objective and that
argument& supportin1 lnduslry
were either eliminated or un·
dentated.
'l'he pl~& commission took
a seriet of Informal 11\raw votes
on propoaed rez.i:uitn1 of in·
duatnal land and witll 9ne excep..
tloq on a S.88;-acre parcel~ to
retain industria.l u.se.
Prim Sbea, who wu act.\ng
chairman ln the ab1ence of
Ro1er Slate•• Hid the items wowd cgme up for formal vote
after the 1K1blic hearlnt ta com· pleted~···
(SieOOl'llAaD, Pap Al)
He went to the Azores to m~t
with the French President Pom·
pldou and to llermuda ror a
meeting with the British prime
minister.
Otherwise, the record5 showecl
<See DRVGGED. Page A2)
MlWE FURNITURE
QUICKLY IN AD
Ir you have some furniture you
want to get rid of, don't hide It, or
roll it away -:-sell it through the
Daily Pilot chwlfied ads.
An Irvine man found out bow
easy It is when he placed this
classified:
Hide-a-bed1 like nu, $125. s drawer cnest., ~ end
tbl, SZS, roll away bed
$20. XXX•UXX.
HesotdeverytbinfU>anu to the
pulling power of a Daily Pilot
clasalfied ad. Call 6'2..s6'78 and an
expert in clanUieds wJll help you
phrasetheadandsellyourgoods.
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Detention Unit
Boundary
Studies
R11ling Delayed Launched
Oran&~ County :.u11Prvlaora
huv~ put off un\U next week any
derlslon oo whal lo do with tho
r ounty's •It but abandoned
1·enler for troubled younast.en.
Before pro\ongln& their de
liberations over Mc Millan
Reception Center 10 Santa Ana.
supervisors were told its client·
less ope.ration is no \onger coat~
mg $25,000 a week
All but four or t.he 33 proballon
workers who were stalloned at
McMillan when Juvenile Court
Judge Raymond Vincent two
weeks ago said no more Juverules
would be sent there have been U ·
s lgned other dut1es , Chief Proba·
tlon Officer Margaret Gner sa1d.
JUVENILE JUSTICE
1977
two weeks ago failed to amend
the state's new juvenile justice
regulations. Judie Vincent said
non-criminal juvenile offenders
would no longer be sent to
McMlllan. That dectmon left McMillan
without a clientele and a staff or
33 persons with no juveniln to
serve.
,.,,.,...... Judge Vmcenl, wbo was on
vacation, sent word to the board
that he would Jake to s ee
.McMillan converted lo a locked
detention center ror juveniles
serving short fix ed terms.
Sava las
Ordered
To Trial
SIGN URGES BLACK'S BEACH BATHERS TO PUT ON THEIR CLOTHES AND GO VOTE
But San Diego Citizens Reject 'Swimsuit Optional' Stretch of Sand
But County Administrative Of·
ricer Robert T homas told
supervisors he favors closing
McMillan down. Such a move would save the
$25,000 a week it costs to operate
McMillan and free the probation
workers who would be assigned
there to reduce overtime and ex·
tra help costs at the county's
other juvenile ins titutions ,
Thomas suggeited.
MIAMI (AP> -Telly Savalas.
star of television's "Kojak," has
been ordered to appear in court in
the murder trial of a U·year-old
boy whose lawyer ls using TV
violence for his defense.
SEC Nixes
I ance Civil
Fraud Suit
San DiegO Voters
Nix Beach Nr.Ulity
Should Juvenile Hall become
overcrowded because of the short
termers, the overload can be dis·
bursed through other youth
facilities, Thomas said.
Supervisors ended somewhere
near the middle or the issue when
they decided to wait for Judge
Vincent's return before deciding
McMillan's fate.
At the outset or 1977, McMillan
was designated Orange County's
reception center for troubled
youths who, according to slate
law, could no longer be Jocked up
with juveniles who have com·
milted criminal offenses.
However, without locks on the
doors a nd with probation
workers helpless lo stop them,
youngsters sent to McMillan
were free to leave al a ny time
they chose.
Judge Vincent for a while
checked the ensuing rash of
r unaways with a court order that
those who flee could be placed in
Juvenile Hall. When an appellate court struck
down that order, the ~uthf ul
flights from McMillan. ~:In
again. ,
And when tile atate te«tatat e
Taxpayers
Foot Bill?
SACRAMENTO (AP>
California taxpayers will have to
put up an extra $39 million a year
if special federal fundlnc or
welfare for Indochinese refugees
ends as scheduled this month, a
state official sllys.
''It was a brainchild of
Washington, D.C., but it appears
now that the Indoc hinese
Refugee Assistance Program is
the stepchild of California," state
Health and Welfare Secretary
Mario Obiedo said Tuesday at .a
news conference.
Half ill the lS0,000 Indochinese
refQted ln the United States set-
tled in California, Obledo said,
and about 22,000 of those in.
California are gettin1 ca.sh as-
sistance.
Circuit Court Judge Paul
Baker ordered Savalas, a
sometime Newport Beach resi-
dent, to be in court Monday in case
the court decides his testimony
would be relevant in the trial of
Ronald Zamora, cbar1ed with
killing an 82· year-old socialite. He
is being tried as an adult.
Defense attorney Ellis Rubin
has said Zamora's constant ex-
posure to TV crime shows such
as "Kojak," "Policewoman."
and a TV film depictlng
t he Charles Manson mass
murders were responsible for
"diseasing his mind and lmpalr·
ing his behavioral controla."
Rubin said the testimony is
necessary because "Kojak" ls
Zamora's favorite crime show.
Savalas could not be reached
immediately for comment.
.. It was s pecial to hlm
(Zamora) and he was copying ·
what be saw," said Rubin.'
He said Savalas ••does bav& ~
something to contribute and is
familiar with the effects of TV
violence ••• "
Although be-9rdertd S~v'1as to
appear in c~rt, Bakerixr~Hed
reservations ~esday tha the ac·
tor could lend anythln1 to the
trial
"What does be tnow about thl.s
case?" Baker asked Rubin at a
pre-trial conference. "I ct.on 't
think his personal opinion is
pertinent. Has he rrtet or ever
talked with the deCendant?"
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
Securities and Exchange Com·
mission said today it is in the
"early stages" of investigating
Budget Director Bert Lance and
the National Bank of Georgia,
but denied that it was working on
a civil fraud suit in the matter .
l'he SEC has been inquiring in·
to whether wee and the bank he
headed in 1975 and 1976 made a
complete diaclosure of transac-
tions to stockholders.
It wat dfscld1ed in con-
gressional testimony and prds
accounts last month that the SEC
was conducting an investigation.
but today's statement was Ole
fint comment on the matter. The
announcement· did not say what
subjects the SEC was consider-
ing.
The SEC said, "In response to
inquiries, the commissio« said
tOOfY lt ,...,,m the early,s~ges of
an mvetltigatlon of certain mat·
ten involving the National Bank
of Georgia, and others but that no
conclusions }\ad been reac~ as tt~~~t ~tlon. if ~t·}bo"1 be
"Press reports concerning a
propoged lawsuit against the Na-
tional Bank of Georgia and Mr.
Bert Lance are accordingly in·
correct.··
The SEC's responsibility would
be disclosure of pertinent in·
formation to stockholders.
Bill Slighted
OCTaxNeed
-Carpenter
The SEC, 1f It found a violation,
could either reach an agreement
.. ~ with the bank to end illegal prac-
tices or could ref er the matter to
the Justic.t Department. It bas no
authority to ask for fines or jail
State Sen. Dennis Carpenter
(R-Newport Beach) Tuesday
night defended his "no" votes on
the recently defeated property
tax relief bill and tbe five-
year $4.216 billion school finance
1awenactedlutweek.
terms. ·
·.
.F~P-.,AI
DRUGGED ••
that Nixon left the eontineQtal
United States only for brief
weekend tri~ to friend Robert Abplanalp'a home ln the
Bahamas and to the Viriin
Ia lands for a weekend stay.
Delay Threatened
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.
<AP> -ReCusal by Cambodia's
Communist government to paY,
any of its back dues threatened to
d e lay the work of th' U*N.
General AssembJy•a 32nd aealon
today. 'l'be Cambodian• loe.t ~
asaem'b)y vote •Y Jallina \two
ye.,s behind In thelr payments.·
and nobody •PPlland wltunc to
ernbUTU8 them by forc:inl a
voteCIDSodeY'S bullnes ...
Carpenter, Oranee County
Supervisor Laurence Schmit and
Huntington Beach e<>uncU mem-
ber Harriett Wieder addreu the
HunUngton Harbour Property
Owners A.ssdtiation.
Cerpente.r said the senate·
deleated prqpercy tas oieuure
wouldhave meant "60 wreent of
all'Oranse Collt retlctetlt\ would i~eive no ~N~x' ·Wt relief"
th!ayear. • . .:
..<tibougti he favorict '°1111 pro-
visions in tf\e f4 bi)lloo tax relief
plan. Ca.rpater er.tftledr .''peo-
• pte ~ alrUdy Pa)' tbe m&best ,1,ufll,wou!Uet DO relief ...
Gottlieb refused to answer
queatiooa aa be left the bearing,
saying, "I'm not 101.nl to talk
abOut anything to anybody now."
He also did not identi.fy thole
persons be said asked the CIA to
check out the ponlble use of
dru11 bUt aa!d lhet '°'*anted ut to
belp deta'ftline and review lf tbat
mlpt.have hal-'J*l~· •• Dr. Oottlleti ,made the db-
cloeure u an addition to written
teeUmony whi~ centers around
tbe<nA'a oqdne expe~ta·
tiort progra.._ pver a Jl·}'ear
perlocl atartiDCih tbe early 1950s. Tbe .... 1Cho61 ftaaetr bill. •P· =by Gov. &ddlund G. FriQy, ....... ~
by='1~ Mrt. Wl~er also
dilcalled t-.. ~UM JOO Hun-
'tlntwn H~~ ownen 1>~ Mn?"WJeder;llfPI rest·
denb to exp ...... tbflr feeltap
coacemiftt~.....,... tues to loe~ 1cwen:ulsli6W-oftletal1. r ..
Gottlleb allO Hld that it was
bis Lnderltandinl that in moet
cues foreign intelligence ag~\a
used drup to steal documenta {r~lp· Aultl'ico efficl.t..tl{e d1d Mt._, tbla wai the eile1D tbe al·
leged dnaalril of members of
the Nlxoo-l:taV.llna party. He
gave no reqoa for Uiat· alleCed
oceurr~ GotW~•N 111 •enual claarfe
of thl ctA't tel~ o( mind l&ter-
ins .. In tM 11-1eu ~ btatnn•nchi about 1152.
SAN DIEGO CAP> -Sup-
porters of the nation's only
municlpally sanctioned nude
beach say they will try lo get the
City Council lo reject the ap·
parent decision by voters to
make swimsuits mandatory.
The unofficial tally on a prop-
osition banning nudity at
Black's Beach was 86,113 votes
for the proposition and 70,884 for
continuing the "swimsuit OP·
ti on al" rule passed by the council
in 1974.
It is up to the council to decide
whether to go alon1 with the ma-
jority on the viote, and expecta·
lions are that it will.
But supporters of nudity on the
900-foot beach began talklng of a
campalgn to influence the coun·
ell members even while the votes
Four Facing
Arraignment
In Gambling
Four people described by ar-
resting officers as members of a
bookmaking ring that brought in
at least $8,000 a week wlll be ar·
raigned Thursday in West
Orange County municipal court.
Facing court. action on
bookmaking charges are George
Hatanaka, 33, and his wife, Lana,
31, of Buena Park, and Vern G .
Wharton, 51, and his son, Ken. 25.
of Garden Grove.
She,ut's offieert werked with
Gar• Grove and Buena Park
police in a three-mouth. in·
vestl(l¢l00 . tbat ended wltb the arrest«~ accused four.
Arresttqe offlcers sai.d an
Irvine addle&S was one bf several
locationa used by the defendants·
to accept bets on the ou~ome of
borseraces.
were being counted.
"It's not a clear·cut order lo
lhe council," said one supporter.
More than 150,000 voters, about
44 percent of those eligible,
showed up Tuesday lo pass on the
proposition and to vote in a coun·
cil election.
T he turnout was almost 10 per·
cent above what had been ex-
pected. ·
The beach is nestled •between
rock outcroppings below UC San
Diego and the Salk Institute.
Increasing use of the beach
with 15,000 or more bathers on a
warm weekend day made many
believe San Diegans would vote
lo keep it. But this tourist city of 750,000
residents is "fairly conservative
-a Republican town with many
retired people," commented a
resident of the exclusive La Jolla
Farms area which overlooks
Black's Beach.
As voters went to the polls,
dot.ens of people without
swimsuits were on the beach as if
to give Black's one final fling.
lt could be weeks before the
1974 ordinance ls repealed.
The publicity efforts of both
sides in the final week;; o( the
campaign were almost strident.
A flyer distributed by the
"Save the Beaches Committee"
called for an end to nude bathing
in public, ••not so much lo pre-
vent sin. which nudity may or
may not be, but the near occasion
of sin."
Arguments were bandied
about that taxpayera might be re·
quiJ'( 1 to pay to provide safe ac·
cess paths and provide lif~uard
stations and restrooms on the
beach .
Radio talk shows had many
calla from people ~c)~c~med
about .eports that cblldren bad
been photographed at Black's
and that "body palntln&" was
prevalent.
Although a elty councllman
said be heard reports of sexual
intercoune on the beach. police
said crime at Black's bas prob-
ably been lower ~ al other
municipal beadMI.
Fountain Valley School Dis-
trict trustees are initiating a
study that could mean the re-
va mpina of school attendance
a r ea boundaries and bus
schedules next ran.
Trustees asked district
Superintendent Bill Plaster
Thursday to form four citizen-
employe advisory groups to
study the possible revision of the
dlstrlct's master plan.
The four committees, with a
total of 11 members, are slated to
present recommendations to the
scbool board Jan. 2G.
The commlttees wlll consist of
members from various district
community groups, employe or-
g aniaatlons . school ad-
ministrators and r andomly
selected district residents.
Randomly selected members
will be picked by lot from those
residents who submit their
names to district officials. All 71
committee members wt11 be
chosen by Oct. 7, Plaster said.
The committees will gather in·
formation on the best use of
classrooms, school enrollment
capacities, location of schools in
relation to enrollment and finan·
cial considerations, the superin·
tendent explained.
The committees are designed
to rep.resenlall district residents
includ.1nitlon .. P8fents, be added.
Public hearings on changes
recomm~od&d by the committees
would be held during the first.
three weeks in February.
Plaster said be hopes for adop·
lion of a revised district master
plan by the school board in
March.
The plan would be put into ef.
feet in thetall, he sald.
District officials are now seek·
ing volunteers for the four. com·
mittees. For more information,
call842·6651.
Stuffing Due
For Giraffe?
LONDON (A> -Britons
mourned today for Victor, the
giraffe who died for love, and the
Glasgow museum proposed
stuffing him so it could put him on
display.
The 18·fdot·tall animal did the
t1pllts at Marwell Parl( Zoo
Thurs4ay night while trying to
mate one of his three wives ud
couldn't get back on bis f~.
After 125 hours reclining and
the loss ot ~of hts 2,000 pounds,
he was hoisted lo his feet in a can·
•as sling Tuesday but started
gasping and died minutes after
the workmen lowered bJm for a
rest.
From Pflfle AJ
BINGO.~.
bingo games to be held on prop·
erty owned or leased by the
sp<>n50ring organization. ·
Ackerman said the council Wfll
soon consider changes in the fees
to obtain bingo permits.
CurrenUy, a $50 fee is requirtd
for groups who hold an unllmit~
number of bingo games during a
calendar year.
Groups pay a $25 annual fee if
they sponsor not. more than four
gam-.in the city ad $10 if only
· one gaine l.rbelcl.
•
... ......_
oranae C4ast 0001v Po 101 Editorial Page ____ mmll! ________________________________ ll!llm ______ _. Wedl'lffday, S.ptember 21. 19n
Robert N. Weed/Publisher Thomas Keevll/Edltor
Barbara Krelblch/Edltorlal P~ Editor
Clinic Looks to
Smoother Sailing
The first Mven yeart of the Huntington Beach Commun!·
ty Clinic (formerly the Fr .. Cllnlc) have not been 1mooth or
easy
The staff hu experienced eporadlc 1trtfe. shakeups and
dismissals. Bickering tt all too common.
Thia 11 unfortunate because the clinic offers an Important
service to the cltlans of Huntington Beach. .
It provldn free medical eervlce. counseling and legal
advice, regardless of age or need.
Until recently, however, the good work performed by the
chnic seamed to be overshadowed by controversies and ad·
verse publicity.
The chn1c now 'Ppe&rS to be in the position where it can
turn the comer and beCome accepted by all segments of the
city.
Gordon Elson recently was appointed the clinic's new
director and Marty Earfabaugh assistant director. Both are
knowtedgeable and are considered to be professionals by
those in the field.
Moreover. Elson served notice he is well aware of past
problems and wants to rectify them. He says he would work
hard to re-establish the clinic's credibility.
Optimlstlcally, this may be the time the clinic really
reaches its potential as one of the community's most Im-
portant citlzen--help programs.
How High Is Ugly?
The Fountain Valley City Council next month will con-
sider a revised 45-foot antenna height restriction.
The antenna law, strongly opposed by city amateur radio
operators, has been In the works for over a year.
It's time Fountain Valley residents told their leaders if
1hey want the law or not. In the past' year. the Planning Com·
mission has heard few complaints about the tall antennas.
Over a year ago. about 60 residents claimed that a radio
antenna near their homes was "unsightly."
They have not been heard from since.
Radio oper~tors say the law would greatly restrict their
broadcasting range.
· And 71 Fountain Valley residents recently signed a petl·
tion opposing the 45-foot antenna restriction.
We can see where citizens pould object to tall antennas
on the basis of their being unsightly or impeding regular
television and radio programming.
But without definite complaints and specific reasons, we
wonder if the city council ought to bother with the proposal.
Critical Changes
The Huntington Beach Charter Revision Committee has
just completed a round of public hearings on a number of
recommended changes in the city charter.
The changes, if eventually approved by residents. would
seem to have far-reaching effects in the manner In which the
city of Huntington Beach Is gover:ned.
The of d argument Is again surfacing on whether the city
attorney should continue to be elected or appointed.
There also is a recommendation that each council
member be limited to two four-year terms end that the mayor
continue to be elected by fellow council members.
Other key issues Include a possibility that department
heads and employes could be removed from protection of the
personnel system and elimination of the office of city
treasurer and election of a city auditor ..
A change would permit the city council to meet as far M
100 miles away if It didn't take action or meet In executive
session. Another change would permit the council to hold
emergency meetings without 24-hour notice to the press.
Both endanger the citizen's right to know about and
participate in chy government.
At this point only a handful of persons testified at two
public hearings.
It's still not too late, though. Residents can mail wr1tten
comments through Sept 30 to Jeri Chanelle, Post Office Box
190, Huntington Beach.
Residents should take advantage of this opportunity. The
issues deserve more consideration than received so far. • OplniOM expreaed In the apece above are those of the Dally Pilot.
Other views expreaed on this pege are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment la Invited. Address The Dally Pilot,
P.O. Bcoc 1580, Costa Mesa. CA 92826. Phone (714) 842-4321.
Boyd /The Fly
8y L.M. llOYD
Wasn't until the space
1clenlists undertook tbelr
earliest studies to land a man
on the moon that they found
out how rues llebt on ceilinp.
Front feet first is how. Speed
photography proved that. The
· fly zooms upward at about 10
incbel per seeoncl. At a body's
lenlth away, lt est.Ilda all
leas out. When its ftont lep
touch down (touch up?>. It
awlnp lta body, and pl anti tta
back lep, wtn&lna to . keep
balance. Already mem.klned
It always take• off
backwards.
Not wtde)y reported W•
tbe f aet that about one ~ OI
every four rallfOad brtdhs
100 year9 aco crumpled una.-
Ut• wtl&ht"' the tnlnl, apill· t.a &ocomdivM, hqbt and
passengers into gorges and
gullies, most usually way out
in the lonesome, not even
within Umping distance of the
nearest town.
It's a small steel lnstru· ment. six or seven Inches
long, with an· ivory or
otherwise ornamental han·
die, and a blunt wire·llke
crook on one end. Without it
•oD)e years back, your
granddad couldn't have put
hls shoes on. But it 'a a fact to-
day that tbr.. out of four
ciUaens hereabouts wouldn't re~ a buttoftbook If they
.j weretoaeeone.
The Bloody Mary was
niuned alt.er Mary Tudor,
wbe JM ber bead. Lot of
cirll. who've drunk them,
have done that, in a manner
of apealcj.aJ.
Jack Anderson •
Soviet Leaders Showing Age
W AStuNGTON -Age is slow·
ly, inexorably overtaking the old
revolutionaries who rule the Sov·
let Union. In a few years, they
will be completely replaced in
the Kremlin by a new set of
leaders.
This is giving U.S. strategists
the nutters as they try to an·
tlcipate whom
the new
le aders will
be and how
their views
w i II affect
world affairs.
No one has
enough solid
information
to judg e
whether the
moderates or hardheads will
come to power.
The real political power in the
Soviet Union is concentrated in
the Politburo, the poUcymalring
arm of the Communist party.
There are 14 full members, but
only six really count: Leonid
Brezhnev, Yuriy Andropov, An·
drei Gromyko, Andrei Kirilenko,
Aleksei Kosygin and fdikhail
Suslov.
December, has had a strenuous
year. But lut June, be showed
slgns of severe fatJaue and dis·
orientation durini a three-day
visit in France. He was, say
American observers, "very,
very tired." But he returned to
Moscow, disappeared for a two-
week rest, and emerged with re·
newed energy.
AJekaei Kosygin, now 73 years
old, is a sturdy Slav with few
health problems. For years, U.S.
analysta studied every new pie·
ture of him in an effort to de·
termine whether a dime-sized
mole on his left cheek showed
signs ot skin cancer. Apparently
tired of the rumors that he was ·
afflicted with the disease, he dis·
appeared for nearly three
months last fall and reappeared
with the mole removed.
During Kosygin's absence, the
diplomatic gossip mill carried
the tale that he had surfered a
heart attack. American officials,
however, give the story little
credence. They note that he still
goes on lenethy flshJng exs>edl·
tions and arcJuous bike4 with
President Urbo Kekkonen of
Finland.
SINCE 1913, it has been
rumored that Mikhail Suslov, the
party's ideological high priest,
haa tuberculosis. For a man who
will be 75 in November, he np·
pears to be holding up under the
burden pretty well. Suslov,
nevertheless. is succumbin& to
advancing years and is visibly
slowing down. He is the last of
the romantic revolutionaries,
say our sources; when be goes,
there will be no one around "who
can Interpret the faith like he
can."
Andrei Kirllenko is the Polit·
buro's chief of industry. If
something should happen to
Brezhnev. Kirilenko is tbe man
most likely to step into the big
shoes. But Kirilenko, already 71,
would probably hold the job for
only a short period. He ls con·
sidered a hard worker and suf.
fers no known health problems.
Alao in good health la Foreip
Min.later Andrei Gromyko, 88: H&
was out of slcbt for a period dur·
tng t.hls past winter, and rumors
circulated that be had been
stricken with a heart attack. Just
as the goasip reached its peak, he
reappeared. It 1s now believed be
was merely down with the nu.
THE REMAINING member of the Big Six, secret police· chief
Yuriy Andropov, 63, also was
rumored to have a heart condi-
tion. But he, too, was apparenUy
sick with the nu.
Of the remainine minor mem·
bers of the Politburo, only 78-
year-old Arvid Peishe is thou&ht
to be knocking at death's door.
U.S. analysts through him nearly
gone in 1971, when his official
photograph depicted him as
positively cadaverous. But be
bounced back, appearing in a
subsequent photo cheerfully at-
tired in a pink shirt and Glen
Plaid jacket -avant garde ap-
'pa rel for the stodgy Soviet
warhorses.
THE AVERAGE age of the full ~~.
Politburo is 66'h; but the average 1"'' y-J
age of the Big Six is 10. Accord·
ing to our sources, none of the
GREAT FOREIGN roLICY
AClllEVEMENTS
cf
1.\£ l<f.PT \TS OllT
OF WAR ... wm{ OUJ1.}LL1£S._ Kremlin patriarchs are
threatened with "identifiable,
lire· threatening conditions." But
several are showing signs of ad·
vancing age. They tirt easily,
and a slight case of the flu can
keep them in bed for weeks.
Leonid Brezhnev, the Grand
Sachem of the Communist party,
is plagued with circulatory
problems and may even have suf·
fered a stroke. He occasionally
slurs hls words and has difficulty
walking. He is a bad air traveler
and doesn't adjust easlly to jet
lag.
In the old days, he used to
smoke and guzzle vodka heavily,
but he h as now sworn off
cigarettes and cut back on his
alcohol intake. He also has a
painful dental problem. whlch
may be the resuJt of his former
smoking habit. More likely, it
stems from a distorition of the
jaw which has bothered him
since he was a young man.
Brezhnev, who will be 71 in
Mailbox
Hf: KEPT
Affrt()WNG
~M 1NSl7LTlNG
ANYBOIY'! FOR
THE ENT1R£.
MONTH OF
}.UG{TSt.
PRESIDENT
CARTER..
t~)
'Health Nuts' Invade His Bed and Board
To the Editor :
The health nuts have never
made me mad before, but now
they've done it. They have pre·
viously aggravated me when
they tried to make me feel. guilty
for eating something that tastes
good instead of yogurt and
birdseed.
But recently I went on a trip to
Medford, Oregon. After driving
for 16 hours, 1 found a motel with
a large neon sign saying,
"Reasonable Rates." This won
my heart until I paid the $22
.. Reasonable Rate" for one
night.
WHEN I bit the hay, it hit back.
That bed wasn't just firm, it was
hard. After tumbling and tossing
until 4 o'clock in the morning, I
decided that I wasn't tired
enough so I went walking around
the neighborhood. All of the dogs
barked at me and luckily the
police patrol didn '\ happen along
'!Ind arrest me. J staggered back
lo bed and I beUeve that l dozed
off once before daybreak.
On examlnaUon the next day,
we found a five-eighths inch
piece of plywood between the box
springs and mattress. Wasn't
that thoughtful ot them to think of
my back problems? Or could
they h've done it to make the bed
so uncomfortable as to cauae the
traveler to~rise early and pt out so the roo could be re-rented?
These b alth nuts have-cone
too far when they 10 to aettini in-
to my bed. I feel that the btd that
11 healthy la the bed tbat you can
sleep on. Food is POt nowilblnc
unless you can eat It without 1et·
unaukera. You bealtb nut. eat blrdleed
a.ncl a1eep oo a board it you want to, butbuiio(t. ..
lAMF.SW. BOLDING
federal level is required-a
person who has the ear or the
President and the respect of
Congress.
If excellence is what we seek
for our children In terms or what
education can do to help each
child become as fine a human be·
ing as our love and resources can
provide, then we must a have a
separate Department. of Educa·
lion.
SONDRA SCOTT
w .. ce •I llettq
To the Editor:
I went to the budget hearings of
the Board of Supervisors to pro-
test the funding of lhe Com·
mission on the Status of Women.
CSOW ls a waste of taxpayers'
money; it overlaps what ia done
by other aaenclea and, for me, it
is counter-productive as its
women are lobbyin& for ERA,
which I oppose.
The room was filled with pro-ramUy tupayera who opposed
the funding . A CSOW
spokeswomen tried to Justify the
commission's need for our tax
money on the grounds that it did
rape counseling and helped to
implement Title IX (UNISEX> ln
the schools.
where one can usually drive from
south to north ends of town
without hardly a stop.
Sure, it takes a lot of calculating
to set the signal clocks properly,
but it is a cinch with the aid of
computers. It would be worth
while alone for the frazzled
nerves it would save.
FRANK KLOCK
C•rtae•llCI c .. ire
To the Editor:
What i.s the real relationship
between Mr. Carter and Fidel
Castro?
One must seriously wonder
when weighing recent events,
such as:
1. Reestablishing ties with
Communist Cuba who ls employ-
ing anti-humanistic rights.
2. Our American POWs were
tortured by CUbans while being
held prisoners in North Vietnam.
But Mr. Carter takes the stand of
ignoring this matter and has the
United States officially not vote
regarding the entrance into the
U.N. by the Communist govern·
ment of Vietnam. Now that Viet-
nam is in the U.N. they are bor·
rowing from the International
Monetary Fund which is funded
priauuily by the American ta.¥·
payer. ·
They do not need to retum
American POWa or remains ol
our men to 1et any money from
our country. But they are trym,
to &et it twice from the American
taxpayer and With Mr. Carter's
eumpln we can expect this
Communist dlctati>nhlp aovem·
men.tin VletDUll, ln time, to aet au tbCYMtb':ntardJeaaolanw
ti.bumanlltk rtptl.
3. IF Ila; CAaTBa II truly a
Chrlatlaft, n1 doet be have bla
appointed. U .Jlf. Ambaasador.
AodreW Ya.i. proaliH v~
fonna ot aid to African dtctawn
and~ Wbo are t«turtna -~Cbdstl•mll' alonart•• from Ila• ctlff ehnt ~? Alaln'W• bave Caltto
and Im CUban tore. pllJ'ln1 a
role ID &he tike-oYer ot Africa tor Comma.tat ruie. Aaabi we .._._
a P._olley ~ •tl·humanlltle trut.-mtnt ot the peopi• ot -..-~. · c. ........... llr. c .... tr/· ........... ~...,ot
tbe P ma a.Ml. 11 Ilda tNN =-........ ,. .... to -t~~·:.:= =~-:.'\.--:·~--:. .
'. ...... , ............... .
Mt alOit t•eleellona.. •r.
Carter deals, not with the Presi-
dent o( Panama, but with the dlc-
talor of Paqama wbo is a very
close friend bf Mr. Castro's. The
Panamanian government has
had fifty.four leaders in sixty.
nine years. With such instability
it seems our control is very a;.
sential of this very importaflt
waterway. s. Besides the similarity of the
spelling of names: Carter ..._
Castro, what elae is behind the
bond or these two men?
MARGARET M. WALDEN
C'ltl~ ......
To the Editor:
Millions of illegal aliens ate destroying our way of life as na·
tural or legalized citizens. AU the
benefits of citUenship incl~ voling on ballots printed n
foreign language, are avallab e
to foreigners. Our several paat
and present governments ap·
parently have found no com-
passion for w,, the people. •
The only solitlon for the illegal
alien in our country ia to enf9rqe
the immigration laws as orlgmaJ.
ly written and intended. Raum
the illegal aliens to their home
counlr)' who have not compll.a
with the imOil&ratlon laws by
becoming lawful citizens. t
• A 80-cALLED stroke of a
political pen abould not be
permitted '° diaenfrucblae the le1al citlzW'ot our country. Tbe
Ule1als h.vo created tbtit own cir~~ and tbey must nOt
be foralven because they ate
here. ·
The IOftl'ftmeD.t ii resJ)Onllbie
to We, tlllle people. Arniy, NaYf,
Air FoTce, Cout Guard ~ MarllM!ll could have been~
seal our b9n1en.; bUt the ,_~ •
ment ~'.~· and now-UM
1ovemmeqt+apparently ex~
We, the piljople to torstve and for.-.
:Wi, tbe pieople bave wortef,
1"11Qled irid •~riftcid la ordtr
to e1tabll1b a Uf e we ha"
become ~eel to and ll lhe
IO·Hlled human rt;llta IDO\ft.
meat II Hrioui, It 1bould appq to
our Urut.cla.&ea dt.f ....
C.111.0JBBSNS
SF Offer
Killings
Reward
'i\'\ t-"KA"1< IS('C>
I \I' 1 lht• (It\ of ~IHI
FrJOl'l!i1'11 1s ufl~nnic 11
S tOtl,Wt n .. w arct for 1n
turmMt1on IC".tdln" to \ht•
urrt>:.\ ,111d c·onvu·tion of
thn't" .:unnwn v. ho k&llt'd
II H' sx·oplt. and v. oundcd
l l olhl'r'> Jt u l 'huu&lown
rei.lau1.111t
M a) o I' t; l' 11 r K e
\loscww .. nnou111·1·d the
1 ewanl <tl J new:. con
reren1·c T111·'>c1ay after
['---~-·_tu_t_•· __ J
t·on-,uJt111g v. 1th hom1c1de
in vc:.t1gator:. who said
they ha\ c · certain :.u:.-
pceh ' 111 lhe Sept. 4
shootings but ··not
enough to make an ar
rc:.t '
Offu:ials said 1t was
lht! largci.t reward of-
rt'red tn the city ':-h1:-.-
tury.
No E.rten•ion
1-'IWNTEHA <A P )
Emily llarris, Mnvitted
of kidnaping and robbery
111 a 1975 shootout while
she was a fugitive with
Palr1t·1a llcarst. will not
ha vc her 11 year sc:n-
lt•ncc extended
T h e Community
Rdca:.e Board <.1 t the
Cal1forn1a Jnst1tutt• for
Women. where Mrs.
ll arris 1s being held,
rn;.ide the dcc1s1on at a
ht•aring Tuesday. The
action makes Mrs.
I Iarris chg1ble for parole
on April 20, 1980.
.lob Fair s~~e••.
El,SEGUNUO (AP J
More than SOO former B 1
workers from Rockwell
I nll'rnatmn;il turned out
ul a Job Fair al the com-
pany's plant here lo
m eel with r c prcscn
tat1vcs from about 175
firms
Ro<•kwell, which
spon!>ored a similar JOb-
h unt s ix weeks ago,
hoped the s uccess of that
one would carry over in-
to Tuesday's event. A
s pokesm an said more
than 600 persons found
Jobs as a res ult of the
first J ob Fair. The
cterospace company js
s ponsoring the progra m
in an effort to help its
laid-off employes find
work.
Flood Heav 11
REDDING CAP)
The heaviest September
:,lorm on record here has
fl ooded several homes
and two shopping malls.
The National Weather
Service said Tuesday the
four-day rain total was
6 8 inches, the highest for
the first three weeks of
September in 100 years
ofrecordkeeping.
Plan Okayed
LONG BEACH CAP> -
A standby plan for com-
pulsory water conserva-
tion was approved by
the Lon ~ Beach City
Council, but will be used
o nl y if vo luntary
measures fail, a water
department s pokesman
s aid.
Tuesday's approval
would permit the depart-
ment to entorce a man-
datory 10 percent reduc-
tion by its 84 ,000
customers should volun-
tary efforts fall.
leak mla Fat I
Little Leaguer
'Most Happy'
•·rorn AP Dl•pa&the
Rieb.rd Wad• Helinatetler wu voted "most ln-
splrullcmal phtycr of 1977" by the other 12 year-olds
on h1~ l.Jltle Leaii:ue bastibaJI team this s ummer ln
l!:l l'ajon
Tht>y dJdn'l know he was dymg of leukemia. Not
t•ven Richard knew it, but he was the happy auy on
the te:.im, the one who made lhe others feel good.
· I nevt:r told him he w1&s dying," said his
father. Jay Helmstetler. "[ was going lo tell him
uflcrone last baseball season."
Hut Richard died in a hospital Fnday. The
funcr1.il was today.
•
The JUdgt: "ho presided over the ·'Watergate
We~t ' trial was assigned as judge in the third
murdt•r trial of former Charles Manson follower
Le:.lie Van Houten.
Van Houten, 28, wus ordered to appear in Judge
Gordon Ringer's court Oct. 20 for setting or a trial
date She I!> chttrged with murder and conspiracy in
the Aug. 10, 1969 slaying of Leno and Rose mary La·
Blanca and with con-
!-.p1racy in the slaying the ( J
previous mght or actress PEOl>I,,f;
Sharon Tate and four others. .__ _______ _.
Hinger was assigned
more than four years ago to preside over the trial or
four White House aides accused or breaking into the
·offi ce uf Dr. Lewis Fielding, the psychiatrist who
treated Pentagon Papers defendant Daniel
E llsoorg • Singer Freda Payne gave birth lo Ii boy,
Gregory Joel Abbott Jr., at Cedars·Sina1 Medical
Center, a hospital spokes man said.
Miss Payne's husband is songwriter Gregory
Abbott.
She records for Capitol Records and has had
st•vcral million-selling records, including "Band of
(;old" and "Bring the Boys Home " • Tt•nnessce's Gov. Ray Blanton, who vetoed the
state's death penalty law, has drawn the ire or some
Bl.ANTON
politJcans and newspapers by
promising lo pardon a man con·
victed of double murder who
works as a photographer for the
state.
The focus or the controversy
is Roger Humphreys, 30, son of
the Democratic governor's
patronage ch1er in Johnson City.
Humphreys was convicted of
second-degree murder for kill-
ing his ex-wire and her lover in
1973.
Blanton says Humphreys, a trusty serving 20 to
40 years in the slate prison at Nashville, has been
rehabilitated and Blanton has promised to pardon
him before the end of his term as governor in 1979.
Humphreys would be eligible for parole in 1984. •
Arnold Miller. president of the United Mine
Workers. was on hand for the opening night
performance in Cleveland of the
one-man play ••John L. Lewis,
Disciple of Discontent.'·
Miller. beleaguered by
wildcat strikes and internal
problems in his union, joined a
capacity c rowd for the
performance by Robert Lansing
at Cleveland's Little Theater in
Public Hall.
Miller said he was working
the mines when the fiery Lewis M11.1.u
made a name as a pioneer of mining's labor move-
ment, and never had a chance to meet him.
The will of chewing gum magnate Pblllp K.
Wrigley has been admitted to probate in Los
Angeles Superior Court because or property in Los
Angeles that produces an annual income or $18,000.
The bulk or the $60.3 million estate 1s being
handled in Chicago.
The senior Wrigley. who owned the Chicago
Cubs and Santa Catalina Island, died April 12 at age
82. llis wife, Helen, died June 27 at age 75. • Leon and Bonnie Tolster"stiirt.ed out on a sum·
mertime stroll around the nation's Capitol. They
ended up in a magazine photo m the middle of a
demonstration against the Panama Canal treaty.
"Picketing the Capitol: Trouble for the Treaty.··
s ays the caption on page46in the currentNewsw~k.
But in the middle of tbe photo -that white·
haired gentleman? -it's Toister, 75, a semiretired,
and unpolitical, real e state salesman from Lake
Placid, a small community in rural central Florida. . .
President Carter announced he is nominating
Coretta Scott Klag and three others to Join Am-
bassador Andrew J . Ybung in representing the Unit·
ed States at the 1977 session of the United Nations
General Assembly.
Being nominated besides Young and the widow
of the Rev. Mar&lnLutberKing,Jr.,are:
James F. Leonard Jr., Young's deputy at the E'IOIU Dtw U.N.; Rep, Lester L. WoUf <D·N.Y.> and Rep.
AmeSt~k
A refugee from Bangkok. <1ppear s <.iw~d on
her arrival at San 1''ranc1sco lntcrnat1on;.1 l
Airport. She is among tpe first of 15,000
I ndochinese, most of them Vietnamese, to
he given homes in the United St ates.
SWINGLINE
STAPLE GUN
One SQUEEZE and you've nalled M
• All purpose: for electrical wiring.
woodworking. upholstering. and
more. much more. • Heavy Duty •
Safety guard and Safety lock.
Reg.13.SQ
'°°"'· 499
6 PIECE SET .
CORNING WARE
• Who couldnl use a little more
Corning Ware? • Boxed for a gift •••
for wedding, shower. anniversatY •
Treat ')'OUrself ••• you d8'erw It. •
1 ~ Qt. covered 8" skillet, 1 ~ Qt.
COV9red baking dish, 2 petite pans.
Blue cornflower pattern •••.
A-9276-N
1688
LOS ANGELES (AP>-ic~~·~r~les~W~.iWib~aleiin~,J~ri.i(R!·~O~hl~O~).!i!!!ii!!!iiiiiiiiiiii -This city has won a I
Salad
Spinner/
Drier · 2'h·year court battle tor
$9.6 million in federal
funds to help pay for a
noise buffer zone nQrth or
Los Angeles Interna-
tional Airport..
The U.S. District Court
for tbe District of Colum-
bia ordered the Federal
A vlation Admlnistration
to reimburse the Depart.·
ment of Airports tor the
money it cost to con-
, atruct the butt&r zo~e.
Tue1ft:lay'1 rulln1 upb•ld
a federal appeals ClOurt
decision that the city wu
tntiUed to the money.
• The kids will beg to dry the salad
greens! • Spir-. out all the water In
an Instant. • ~ .. ~,· for SJlad, vegetabl.., in.lit. • Elegan~ too.
I
WtdMtd•l'. September 21. 19n s DAILY PILOT A5
Refunds Law OK
Metuure .Ainu at PUC Action
SACRAMENTO (AP> -A bill to
prevent the state Public Vtll1Ues
Commission from wltbboldint re-
funds of u~llty overcharges to busi-
nesses h8' been signed by lbe aov-
ernor.
Sen. John Stull (R-Escondldo),
authored the blll, criticizing what he
called a PUC scheme to withhold
mllUons of dollars in refunds from
oommercial customers.
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. signed the
measure, SB604, on Tuesday.
IT REQUIRES THE PUC to con·
ttnue ordering refunds ~~itably
among all its customers, b esa as
well as residential.
The PUC "was considering how to
distribute refunds, but bad no
ironclad proposal. It must be con-
sidered moot now.•• said PUC
spokesman Gene Raleigh. .
Rtchard Spohn, state consumer ar
fain chlM, had proposed using bus1
neas refWlds for energy conservation
proararna.
Ralelgb said backers of such a pro
poaal fell businesses raised their
prices when their rates went up. He
said they uaually do not lower them
when they receive refunds.
RALEIGH SAID A .. ballpark
flaure" for the amount of refunds the
PUC could consider I& $500 million.
roughly half of which would have to go to businesses.
Ofthe$500 million, the PUC recent-
ly ordered Pacific Telephone Co. to
refund ~4 million to all classes or
customers and made a similar Pacific
Telephone and General Telephone or·
der involving $270 million.
Termituil Talks Lag
LOS ANGELES (AP) -After meetln1 all day
to overcome a hurdle blocking plans tor an Alaskan
oil terminal in Long Beach, officiala of Standard Oil
of Ohio and Southern California Edisoo, say they're
still far from 11eaching an agreement.
Top executives of both firms held preliminary
talks Tuesday on a pollution tradeoff proposal in
which Sohio would pay for cleanln1 up embaions
from Edison's facilities in the harbor area.
Under the plan proposed by state Air Resources
Board Chairman Tom Quinn, Sohio would be re-
quired to finance some $90 million in polluUon
cleanup work at Edison to offset smog which would
be created by the oil terminal.
Na price fitle thie you &hoUld buy
Spr9d Satin now, even if you don't
plJn lo pelnt unlll later. There's Just no way we could
make this olf« unlesa Glidden
cull "' prlCe lO ua. ANOTHEYDIOI
BUNN DRIP
COFFEE MAKER
• How can f get restaurant
doHee at home? • Alwav-with
a BUNN. Only with a BUNN. •
And it's super fast ••• 8 CUOI
In 3 minutes • Built to fast with
copper ·rublno & 1talnlea1
steel. • Why Bunn? Val119. •
White or Brown.
39ss
RIVAL 3V2 QUART
CROCKPOT
• Coob alt day While the
cook'• away. • s.;L~-W
cooking rectuc.t shrinkage.
r9talrw Julcel ahd nuh1ent.
• Costs 2-to cook all day •
#3100
KWIKSET
DEADBOLT
• Protect your famlly! •
Polie»tested ••• as burglar proof
as a tock can be • Full 1" deadbolt
with free tumlng steel rod Insert •
All steel tapered cylinder guard •
Two solid steel reinforcing rings •
Solid brass keyed cylinder
mechanism. Brass. etched niclde or antique brass.
10~8
S~I~
CORDLESS DRILL
& SCREWDRIVER
• Uae thla dr111 anywhere ••• boat.
. • Cemc>er ••• cabin ••• you will
love thf freedom It gives youl
Reg.24.95
,,~ 1288
Irvine
EDITION
VOL 70, NO. 26-4, ~SECTION S, 46 PAGES
---~~--____ ,.. . -~ --....
ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A
Today's Closing
N.Y. Stocks
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1977 TEN CENTS
CIA Lured Barflies to LSD ·rartg?
WASHINGTON <AP> -A former CIA psycboloahst has told a
rtabbergasted Senate subcommittee that be once planned to spray
LSD Oil a houseful or unsuspecting Cahfornla partyaoen1 but cave
up the idea because the unseasonably warm weather meant the win·
dows could not be closed.
In frustration. another CIA aaent closeted himself in the
bathroom of a house in San Franc1&co and sprayed himself with the
hallu<'inogenic drug, which was in an aerosol can.
ntE AUDIENCE IN THE SENATE Caucus Room exploded
with laughter Tuesday as the witness, Dr. David Rhodes, told bis
story.
"Do I understand that three grown men flew from the East
coast to the West coast to recruit people at bars for a party so that
* * * * * *
they could be sprayed with LSD?" asked Sen. Edward M. Kennedy
<D·Mus.>
Rhodes said that be and another aaent went to San Francisco in
the late 19505 and spent a week getting to know people in bars "so
that we could subsequently invite them lo a party."
HE SAID THEY WANTED TO learn if LSD could be ad·
ministered in small quantities by beina sprayed in the air.
Rhodes said the amount of LSD in the s pray was very small, "so
small that it would lake a practiced person to see any result."
He said the CIA already knew the effect of LSD on persons who
knew they were being given the substance, and that the agency
' believed it important to learn what effect it bad on people who did
not know they had received LSD.
* * * * * *
BUT RHODES SAID THAT IT WAS discovered that the houae lo
be used for the party had no air conditioning, meaning the doors
and windows would have to be kept open.
'1'be weather defeated us," Rhodes said. "We decided to
scr atch it at that point.·'
Rhodes said later that be does not believe the experiment ever
was repeated.
Btrr HE SAID THAT BEFORE the group of agents left San
Francisco they had one further mission.
"We attended the first national convention of lesbians," Rhodes
said.
He said the purpose was to test a psychological theory, but did
not elaborate.
* * * * * *
Nixon Staff · Drugged Overseas
Little Used
Detention Unit
Ru1ing Delayed
Orange County supervisors
have put off until next week any
dceision on what lo do with the
county's all but abandoned
Federal Pay
Hike Signed
WASHINGTON CAP >
President Carter as grant·
ing federal wh ite-collar
workers and military
personnel a 7 .OS percent
pay increase that will cost
the taxpayers about $3.4
billion.
The White House an-
nouncement Tuesday sai4
the hike will go into effect
Oct. 1 and cover 3.4 million
people on the federal
payroll. It Is below the 8.8
percent increase sought by
a group of federal employe
union leaders.
Chula Son
Freed After
Arraignment
" Steven Chula, son of prominent
criminal attorney George Chula,
was arraigned Tuesday before
the U.S. Magistrate in Santa Ana
on charges of smuggling cocaine.
Chula was freed following his
court appearance after he posted
a $10.000 bond.
Chula, Z1. a one-time Newport
Beach r esident, surrendered
himself to Newport Beach police
Tuesday m9rning. Narcotics in·
veatigators had eought him smce
last Thursday alter he was one of
11 people named in a federal
grand jury indictment.
The indictment came after a
three-year investigation of an in·
temational cocaine s mugaling
ring allegedly responsible for
bringing $7 million worth of the U·
llcltdrueintothe U.S. from Peru.
All but five of the people Usled
In the indictment are residents of
Hawaii, one of the stopovers al·
le1edly used in amut1llni the drug.
Along wlth Chula. local resi·
dents arrested in the case were
Joe and Sergio AvUa, owners or
the El Ranchito restaurants m
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach;
Joy Marlene Chaban, 26, of 2'056
La Ronda, El Toro, ar\d Steven
Granat, 28, of NewPort Seach.
MOJ'E FURNITVRE
QUICKLY IN AD
If you have .aome fumlture you
want to 1et rid ol, don't hict. It, or
roll it away -aeJl it throuah the
DaPy Pllot claqlftflt ads.
• An Irvine man found out how
euy it 11 "hen IM Plated thJa claaaitltd: .
JUVENILE JUSTICE
(,
19n
center for troubled youngsters .
Before prolonging their de·
liberations over McMillan
Reception Center in Santa Ana,
supervisors were told its client·
less operation is no longer coot·
ing $25,000 a week.
All but four of the 33 probation
workers who were stationed at
McMillan when Juvenile Court
Judae .Raymond Yince._t two
weeks ago' said no more juveniles
~uld be sent there have been as·
signed other duties, Chief Proba·
lion Officer Margaret Grier said.
Judge Vincent, who was on
vacation, sent word to the board
that he would like to see
McMillan converted to a locked
detention center for juveniles
serving short fi xed terms.
But County l\dministratlve Of·
f1 cer Robert T h om as told
s upervisors he favors closing
McMillan down.
Such a move would save the
$25.000 a week it costs to operate
Mc Millan and free the probation
workers who would be assigned
there to reduce overtime and ex·
tra help costs at the county's
o t her j uvenile institutions,
Thomas suggested.
Should J uvenile Hall become
overcrowded because of the short
termers, the overload can be dis-
bursed through other youth
facilltJes, Thomas said.
Supervisors ended somewhere
near the middle of the issue when
they decided to wait for Judge
Vincent's return before decidin&
Mc Millan's fate.
At the outset or 1977, McMiHan
was designated Orange County's
reception center for troubled
youths who, according to st.ale
(See CENTER, Page A!)
Ex-NB Chief
Kiss He, Ewe Fool
When the !lardy Boys television show
moved to Lion Country Safari, Irvine. for
filming this week, guest stat-Anne
Lockhart. whose moi her June co-~tarred
with Lassie for several years, !ound some
four-footed friends of her own. Perhaps
we'll learn what secrets she's trading
with these mouslon ewes when the show is
aired on Channel 7 in mid-October.
'Hot SLAW' Cooled ·
VCI Students' Balboa Island Btuh Qumlwd
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of -Offfy f'I ... Slaff A 12-hour block party on
Balboa Isl-.nd sounded like a
good Idea t.o organizers of UC
Irvine's orientation week.
1\ sounded like trouble to
Newport Beach city councilmen
who refused to grant a permit for
the party.
Councilmen said they didn't
want the campus Hot SLAW
(Support Your Local AntHter>
Week that starts Monday spilling
over onto their streets.
'QleY aiso vetoed a proposal lo
hang banners publicizing the
week in Central Newport and on
the island.
The two requests filed by UCI 's
studept services office were ex-
plained to councUmen by UCl
student George Ainslie, a Baiboa
Island reeident.
He said the purpose of the ban·
ners and the party was to ac·
quaint the community and the
students who live in it with each
other. The party, to have been
held Oct. 8, would have been a
"community open house," he
s aid.
But councilmen and represen·
tatives of the Balboa Island Im·
provement Association and the
Llttle Balboa Island
Homeowners Association were
not Impressed.
Bob Millar of the Little Island
association called the banner
proposal "totally gross" and said
the sign would ''junk up the
island."
Councilman Paul Ryckoff
called the banner request inap·
proprlate and incomprehensible
and noted tl\al "Balboa Island is
not. a bedroom community for
UCL" Ryckoff lives on the
island.
Ainslie said reallors have told
him about half the winter rentors
on the island are UC I ;;tudents.
University officials say more
than 400 s tudents li ve on the
island and another 750 live
elsewhere in Newport Beach,
primarily in W•l Newport and
on the Peninsula.
Councilman Lucille Kuehn,
noting that s he bas worked on ~e
UCI campus for the past eight
years. said she was sympathetic
toward the problems of "com·
munication between town and
gown," but told Ainslie she op·
posed his idea because "it
doesn't help to get the hackles of
the community up... .
Councilman Trudi Rogers sug-
gested that orientation week ac-
tl vltles be confined to the UCI
camous.
Kno_wledge
Of Ecology
Said Lacking
By PJOUP aOSMARIN Of ... OeltY ...........
Peculiar
Actions
Reported
W ASIDNGTON (AP) -The
former science chief of the CIA
told a Senate panel today he was
asked to determine if any mem·
bers of President Nixon's travel·
ing party were drugged during a
trip to an "unfriendly" foreign
country sometime in 1971.
Dr. Sidney Gottlieb, who left
the CIA in 1973, s aid the Presi-
dent defmitely was not drugged
but tllat other members of bis
oarty. including his personal
physician, Dr. Walter Tkach, ex·
hiblted peculiar symptoms, in·
eluding outbursts of crying at in·
appropriate moments.
Describing the symptoms, Dr.
Gottlieb said , "My best recollec·
tion was that il was disoriented
and unusual in terms of the
person's normal behavior .
"Inappropriate tears and cry· -
Ing I remember as part of the
manifested behavior," Dr. Gott·
Ueb told a Senate health sub·
commjttee.
Dr. Gottlieb did not name the
foreign country involved nor did
he identify the drug suspected or
causing the unusual symptoms.
According to records of the
White House transportation '4·
fice, however, Nixon did not
travel in 1971 to any countries
that were.considered unfriendly.
He went to the Azores to meet
with the French President Pom-
pldou and to Bermuda for a
meeting with the British prime
minister.
Otherwise, the records showed
that Nixon left the continental
United States only for brief
weekend trips lo friend Robert
Abplanalp 's home in the
Bahamas and to the Virgin
Islands for a weekend stay.
Gottlieb refused to answel\
questions as be left the hearing.
saying, "I'm not goinr to talk
about anything to anybody now.••
He also did not identify those
persons he said asked the CIA to
check out the possible use of
drugs but said they ••wanted us to
help determine and review if that
might have happened.''
Dr. Gottlieb made the dis· '
closure as an addition to written
testimony which centers around
the CIA 's own drug experimenta.
lion program over a 21.year
period starting in the early 19SOs.
Gottlieb also said that It was
hla ' understanding that in mOit
cases forelan intelligence agents
used drugs to steal documents
(See DRUGGgD, Pace A!)
-~----------------.
'Earlfl Stager
A .. W1 .........
SIGN URGES BLACK'S BEACH BATHERS TO PUT ON THEIR CLOTHES AND GO VOTE
But Sen Diego CIUzen1 ReJect 'Swlm1un Optional' Stretch of Send
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Sava las
Ordered
To Trial
MIAMI (AP> -Telly Savalas.
star of television's "Kojak," has
been ordered to appear in court in
the murder trial of a 15-year-old
boy whose lawyer is using TV
violence for his defense.
Circu1l Court Judge Paul
Baker o rdered Savalas, a
sometime Newport Beach res•·
dent, to be in court Monday ln case
the court decides his testimony
would be relevant in the trial of
Ronald Zamora, charged with
killing an82-year·oldsocialite. He
is being tried as an adult.
Defense attorney Ellis Rubin
has said Zamora's constant ex·
posure to TV crime shows such
as "Kojak." "Policewoman."
and a TV film depicting
the Charles Manson mass
murders were responsible for
·'diseasing his mind and impair·
ing his behavioral controls."
Rubin said the testimony as
rf~cessary because· "Kojak" is
Zamora's favorite crime show.
SavaJas could not ,be reached
jmmecllately for ~011J8l~-
.. ll was s pecial to him
(Zamora) and Jlt!l was co~ing
wflathe•~.haid'Rub!Jt, ,
lie said Savalas "does have
something to contribute and is
familiar with the effects of TV
violence . . "
Although he ordered Savalas to
appear in court, Baker expressed
reservations Tuesday that the ac-
t.or could lend anything to the
trial.
· ·'What does he know about this
case?" Baker asked Rubin at a
pre-trial conference. "l don't
think his personal opinion is
pertinent. Has be· met or ever
talked with the defendant?''
Whether the actor testifies w1ll
~ determined next week after he
gives a statement to the defense,
authorities aald. Baker said he
, would read Savalas' comments
and then decide whether the
testimony wall be needed and
permitted.
Zamora and Darrell Agrella,
.\.4, have been charged with
bur1Iarizlng Miami Beach home
of Elinor Ha11art on June t and
kllUng her when she returned
home and surprised them .
A1re.Ua ls fo be tried separately
Nov. 7. • .
Savalas apok'e out a141ln1t
violence on t•~•vl1lon last~
weekend durtn1 ,_ •-toot-alike•'
promotional contett beld here·
l11t week. But be -·ald the
particular .. KoJak'" epl•ode
earlier described IJ¥•'llubin did
notatst.
DAILY PILO T
San Diego Voters
Nix Beach N~ity
SAN DIEGO <AP> -Sup-
porters or the nation's only
municipally sanctioned nude
beach say they will try to get the
City Council to reject the ap·
parent decision by voters to
makeswimsuJts mandatory.
The unofficial tally on a prop.
osition banning nudity al
Black's Beach was 86,113 votes
for the proposition and 70,SM for
continuing the "swimsuit op-
tional" rule passed by the council
in 1974.
It is up to the council to decide
whether to go along with the ma-
jority on the viote, and expecta-
tions are that it will.
But supporters of nudlty on the
900-fool beach began talking of a
campaign to influence the coun·
cil members even while the votes
were being counted.
"It's not a clear-cut order to
the council," said one s upporter.
More than 150,<t<JO voters, about
44 pereent of those elifiible.
s howed up Tuesday to pass Oh the
proP<>sition and lo vote in a coun
cil election.
The turnout was almost'Hf ~t·
cent above what had been ex·
peeled. a
The beach is nestled between
rock outcroppings below UC San
Diego and the Salk Institute.
Increasing use 01 the beach
with 15,000 or more bathers on a
warm weekend day made many
believe San Diegans would vote
to keep it.
But this tourist city of 750,000
residents is "fairly conservative
-a Republican town with many
retired people," commented a
resident of the exclusive L~ Jolla
Farms area which overlooks
Fro•PageAJ
DRUGGED. •
from American officials. He did
not say this was the case ln the al·
leged drugging of members ot
the Nixon traveling party. He
gave no reason for that alleged
occurrence.
Gottlieb was in general charge
of the CIA 's testing of mind alter-
ine drugs ln the 21-year period
beginning in about 1952.
Delay Threatened
UNl'iED NATIONS, N. y .
<AP) -.o:Refaaal by CatJtbodia's
CommuniJt aovenunent to pay
any ol lts back dul!S threatened to
delay the work of tbe U.N.
General Aaaembl)>'• 32nd session
tOday. The CaanbcXllana lost their
asaembty vc>te by t,.µ1n1 two
yearw bt'hlnd tn their ,ayment.a,
' an«l DObodY •""*"4 wtlllna to etnbln'51 them by fcirctns a
~OD today'sbu!..IMll· ... -
Black's Beach.
As voters went to the polls,
dozens of people without
swimsuJts were on the beach as if
to give Black's one final fling.
It could be weeks before the
1974 ordinance Is repealed.
The publicity efforts of boCh
sides in the final weeks of the
campaign were almost strident.
A flyer distributed by the
"Save the Beaches Committee"
called for an end to nude bathing
in public, "not so much to pre·
vent sin, which nudity may or
may not be, but the near occasion
of sin."
Arguments were bandied
about that taxpayers might be re·
quired to pay to provide safe ac·
cess paths and provide lifeguard
stations and restrooms on the
beach.
RUNNING FOR OFFICE?
Former Chief OlevH
FreaPageAI
GLAVAS •••
some strong feelings about what
is happening in our country."
Glavas said he thinks be has a
good understandinl( of the
legislature gained in his work as
an official of the California
Peace Officers• Aaaoeiation and
the California Chiefa ot Police
Association. ·
"I think I uncfera(J11d the ·
lepalaU\te process and what it lJ
thai permits a le1lslator to beef~
f4!ctlve. I understand the tault.a
aftd we~ u tbe vlrtures of the
jystem,' hesaJ"t' • Glevu aaid Kt bas not set a
deadline for l'eachlnlJ hla de· cllion. althoulll IM noted he would
continue to CONlder the idea for
thenextr.w.-..
. SEC Studie~.
Lftnce Actions
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Securities and Exchange Com·
m111lon said today It ta •In the
"early stages" of tn"esti1ating
Budget Director Bert l'..ance and the National Bank of Georgia,
but denied that It was working on
a civil fraud suit in the matter.
The SEC has been lnquirln& in·
lo whet.1'er Lance and the bank he
headed in 1975 and 1976 made a
complete disclosure of transac·
tlons to stockholders
It was disclosed in con ·
gressional testimony and press
accounts last month that the SEC
was conducting an inveaU&ation.
WASHINGTON <AP) -Those
zany CIA agents, who once tried
to make Fidel Castro's beard fall
out, have Congress in stitches
again with tales of melting
swizzle sticks and tear gas
launchers for aeents who
couldn't throw stralgbt.
Members of a Senate subcom·
mlttee broke up in laughter Tues-
day as former aeents told about
the agency's use or special de-
vices designed specifically to ln·
traduce drugs to unsuspecting
test subjects.
One that strained the commit·
lee's imagination was the al·
tempt to make Castro lose bis
hair. That was revealed in 1975
by the intelligence committee,
which said the Cuban leader sur·
vi ved at least. eight CIA·
spo!15orc:d assassination plots.
The committee said th·e attack
on Castro's beard wasn't aimed
at killing the Cuban leader. It
was supposed to humiliate him.
It called for the dusting or
Castro's shoes with a hair·
removing substance during a trip
Castrp was to make out of Cuba.
But \he Senate re port said,
Castro foiled the conspirators by
canceling the trip.
Another fo~me.r agent, Philip
Goldman, told the subcommittee
a bout tools designed to deliver
drugs or other chemicals to CIA
targeLc;.
For instance, Goldman said he
made billy clubs that shot tear
~as, <!rug-laced swizzle sticks
that melted in cocktails and a
h ypodermic needle that shot
drugs into corked wine bottles.
Some devices were born of
d~sperale need. Like the gadget
he built to launch a small glass
vial filled with tear gas up to 100
yards. He said the tear 1as device was
ordered after an agent attccnpted
to hurl one of the vials out of his
hotel window into a rally the CIA
wanted to break up. Tbe agent's
aim was bad. The vial missed the
window, bounced off a wall and
broke open, filling the aaeot's
hotel room with gas, Goldman
said.
but today's statement was the
first comment on the matter. The
announcement did not say what
subjects the SEC was consider·
ing.
The SEC said, "In response to
inquiries, the commission said
today it was in the early stagea of
an investigation of certain mat·
ters Involving the National Baruc
of Georgia, and others but that no
conclusions had been reached as
to what action, lf any, should be
taken.
·•Press reports concerning a
pro~ed lawsuit against the Na·
tionAl· Bank of Georgia and Mr.
Bert Lance are accordingly in·
correct."
The SEC's reaponsibllity wouJ(f
be disclosure of pertinent in·
formation to stockholders.
The SEC, lf It found a violation,
could either reach an aareement
with the bank to end illegal prac-
tices or could refer the matter to
the Justice Department. It has no
authority to ask for fines or Jan
terms.
FroMPageAJ
CENTER •••
law, could no longer be locked up
with juveniles who have com-
mitted criminal offenses.
However, withoµt locks on the
doors and with probation
workers helpless to sJ,op tbei:n,
youngsters sent to ldc?rUUaq
were free to leave at any time
they chose.
Judge Vincent for a while
checked the ensuing rash or
runaways with a.court order that
those who flee could b' placed in
Juvenile Hall.
When an appellate court struck
down that order, the youthful
flights from McMillan began
again.
And when the state te~islature
two weeks ago failed to amend
the state's new juvenile justice
regulations, Judge Vincent said
non-criminal juvenile offenders
would no longer be sent to
McMillan.
That decision lert McMillan
without a clientele and a staff of
33 persons with no juveniles to
serve.
QuimsMeet
Sextuplets
TOKYO (AP > -South Afnca ·~
s extuplets met Japan·s quan·
tuplets today.
The 3 1h-year-old South
Africans and their parents called
on the 1112-year-old J apanesc
children and their parents. The
children appeared to enjoy pla,y·
ing together with toys and dolls.
The sextuplets, who are in
Japan for a television ap-
pear&IJce, are the cbllren of Colin
Rosencowitz, 41, a Cape Town
clot.bing salesman, and his 19·
year-old wife, Susan. The quints'
parents are Yorimitsu
Yamashita, .:.aa, a radio and
television reporter. and his 21·
year-old wi!e, Noriko.
•
'TOO MUCH OPINION'
Golden WHt'• Williams
F,....Pa~AJ
STUDIES •••
island areas for moN homes.
But another part of the trouble,
WUllams said, was the lincom·
promJsing altitude of sorne en-
vironmentalists not to change the
landscape by artificial means, no
matter what.
What some dldn 't understand
at that lime: according to
Wjlliams, was that the bay had
already be.en artificially altered,
filled wit& silt carried into it by
runoff waters from development
on higher ground.
In the February, 1969.
rainstorm alone, he said nine feet
of silt was washed into the bay.
burying beds of eel grass off Lit-
tle Balboa Island.
Natural tidal action wasn't suf-
ficient to remove the muck which
alao buried tbe shells and hard
surfaces upon whieh marine or-
gani9ms attach themselves.
Without man's artificial re·
moval by dredging, Williams
argued, the upper bay eventually
would be a dead bay.
Time proved him right. Today
state Fish and Game authorities
are making plans to dredge the
upper bay to reclaim the dying
marshland.
Williams urges continuing en·
vironmental research as a hedge
against the possibility of time
running out while scientists and
environmentalists debate the ef·
fee ts of man's influence on the
planet.
"We need to train researchers
as rapidly as we can to find out
what the requirements for a
healthy environment are," be •
said.
As part or his own effort to in-
t crest people in research.
Williams is teaching a UC Irvine
Extension course on the marine
en.vironment or Southern
California
And. if you're looking for a
particular Vl('Wf)Oinl about Which
group developers or environ-
m~ntal1sls -is doing what to the
land, has isn 'l lhe co'urse for you.
"There is nothing evil, devious,
or d1ah<>lical about either
~roup, ''Williams said.
'
Ban Not Clear
NAIROBI, .Kenya <AP>
Some of the Christian organiza-
tions banned by President Idi
Amin of Uganda say they are
waiting to see whether the order
m~ they must strut down their
o~atlons comple~lJ. • ·•
Lag11na/South Co~st lllternooa
N.V. Stoeks EOITION
VOL. 70, NO 26", 4 SECTIONS, •6 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1977 TEN CEN~~
CIA Lured Barflies 'to LSD .Party?
WASIUN<..TON <AP ) A former CIA psycholoMlat haa told a
01bber1uted Senate s ubcommittee lhal he once planned to spray
LSD on 1 houseful of unsuspect101 California partnoera but save
up the idea because the unseasonably warm weather meant the win· dows could not be closed.
In frustration, 111other CIA agent closeted himself in the
bathroom of a house m Sin Franc1sro and sprayed himself with the
hallucmoeenlc drui, which WM man aerosol can
11tE AUDIENCE IN THE SENATE Caucus Room exploded
with laughter Tuesday as the w1lness, Dr. David Rhodes, told his
story ··no l understand that three grown men flew from the East
coast to the West coast to recruit people at bars for a party so that
* * * * * *
they could be sprayed with l.SD?" asked Sen. Edward M . Kennedy <D-Mass.)
Rhodes said that he and another agent went to San Francisco in
the late 1950s and spent a wet!k getting to know people ln bars ''so
that we could subsequently invite them to a party.''
HE SAID THEY WANTED TO learn If LSD could be ad·
mlnlatered in small quantities by being sprayed in the air.
Rhodes said the amount of LSD \n the spray was very small, "so
small that it would take a practiced person to see any result.''
He said the CIA already knew the effect of LSD on persons who
knew they were being given the substance, and that the agency
believed it important to learn what effect it had on people who did
not know they had received LSD.
* * * * * *
BUT RHODES SAID THAT IT WAS discovered that the house to
be used for th' party had no air conditioning, meaning the doors
and windows would have to be kept open.
"The weather· defeated us," Rhodes said. "We decided to
scratch it at thalpoint."
Rhodes said later that he does not believe the experiment ever was repeated.
BUT HE SAID THAT BEFORE the group of agents left San
Francisco they had one further mission.
"We attended the first national convention of lesbians," Rhodes
said.
He said the purpose was to test a psychological theory, but did
not elaborate.
* * * * * *
Nixon Staff Drugged Overseas
Meet Tonight
Cars, Checks
To Get SC .Eye
A ban on overnight parking on
city streets and mandatory build-
ing inspections or homes lasted
for sale will be discussed at
tonight's San Clemente City
Council meeting.
The meeting is scheduled for
7:30 p.m. in council chambers at
eity hall, lOO'Ave. Pres idio.
Police Chief Gary Grown has
prepared a report on the pro-
posed overnight parking or-
dinance, which would prohibit
Hearing
OnScMol
Plans Set
Trustees will hear represen·
latives from five architectural
firms describe Thursday how
they would move buildfri1s. fields
and the pool at Laguna Beach
High School. The meeting begins
at6p.m. in district offices.
The school board is shopping
for a firm to i>repare a high
school facility master plan for
the campus, which was con·
structed in 1928.
Last week the five-member
panel heard plans from two
architectural firms on how to re·
furbish the campus, currently
packed tightly on 14 acres above
Main Beach park.
They heard architects describe
how they could save this build·
Ing, refurbish that one, and add
another elsewhere
P~al architects do have a
problem. The high school ls
about half the size of a normal
campus for the number of stu-
dent.s ·expected to attend the
school.
But trustees listened to two
architects outline plans for a new
25·meter pool, a foot. bridge
crossing Park Avenue, and cen-
traltied academic areas on the
campus.
Tl'3re are many other prob-
lems the board will be facing in
the multJ-million dollar campus
revJmp, includlna decisions on
which buildings should remain
and which should be tom down.
Some studenta fear ,a modem
structure ii\ the midst of the cam·
pus mtght clash with adjacent
<See SCHOOL, P11e .\2)
curbside p"arking without police
permits.
Brown said banning on-street
parking makes city streets more
attractive and makes city police
and street-sweeping operations
easier.
He also said, however, that the
proposed ordinance might in-
spire hard feelings toward police
officers, who would have to cite
violators, and would add to the
police department workload.
''Having been a resident in a
commuruty which restricts over-
night parking, it is pleasing to the
eye to see the removal of unsight·
ly vehicle11 from residential
streets," said Brown.
·'I am of the opinion that pnce
homeowners become used lo the
ordinance and lta positive fac-
tors. 1 doubt they would want to
revert to the former way."
Brown said he would expect
the major opposition to the pro-
posed ordinance to come from
residents "who feel they have a
right to utilize city streets lor
parking their automobiles,
especially in areas in which there
is limited olf-streei parking."
City Manager Gerald Weeks
has proposed that councilmen set
a date for a public hearing on the
proposed parking ordinance.
Weeks also prope>sed a public
hearing tonight on a proposed
building inspection ordinance,
which would require that all
homes and commercial or in·
dustrial buildings be inspected
lor safety and city code com·
pliance before they can be re· sold.
The inspection would c~t a
<See COUNCIL, Page A2)
LagunaM~
Facing Trial
Ronald Paul Egardo of Laguna
Beach bas been ordered lo @ ·
pear Qct. 7 in Oranae Count,
Superior Court tor settlne of his
trial on charges stemmlng from
his alleged sexual relaUonship
witb a young boy. ·
E1ardo, 29, of 2645 Laauna
Canyon Road, is tree on •10.000
ball. He was jailed J\,\ly 6 on
charcea ot lewd acts with a mlnor •
and sex perversion.
Lacuna Beach police said the
child was beaten and threatened
by !:lardo.
Death Sought
Ehiaii:Or 'Aalted lJvenloae'
Kus /tie, Ewe Fool
When the Hardy Boys television show
moved to Lion Country Safari, Irvine, fqr
filming this week. guest star Anne
Lock~, whose mother June co-starred
with ste for several yearg, tound some
four-footed friends of her own. Perhaps·
we ·n learn what secrets she's trading
with these mouslon ewes when the show is
aired on Channel 7 in mid·October.
Chula Son Heard
On Drug Charge ·
Steven Chula, son of prominent
criminal •tlorney George Chula,
was arraigned Tuesday before
the U.S. Magistrate in Santa Ana
on charges or smuggling cocaine.
Chula was freed following his
court appearance alter he posted
a $10,000 bond.
Chula, 27, a one·time Newport
Beach resident, surrendered
himself to Newport Beach police
Tuesday morning. Narcotics in·
vestigalors had sought him slnce
last Thursday alter-he was one'of
11 people named In a federal
grand jury Indictment.
The indictment came after a
I
three-year investigation of an in-
ternational c6calne smuggling
ring allegedly responsible for
bringing S7 mlllton wor\h of the il-
licit dn.ag Into the U.S. from Peru.
All but five of the people lilted
in the indictment are residents of
Hawaii, one or the stopovers .al·
legedly used in smuuling the
drug.
Along wlth Chula, local resi-
dents arrested In the case are Joe
and Sergio Avila, owners of the
El Ranchlto restaurants in Costa
Mesa and Newport Beach; Joy
Marlene Chaban, 26, of ~ La
Ronda, El Toro, and Steven
Granat, 26, of Newport Beach.
tJfficer Gingerly ••
RemoVes LB Rattler
Jt was probably the hamsters
and gerbels that drew a ,aeven·
button rattlesnake Into i st.orqe area \m4emeath the Mint of
Mrs. Atl•ne Canoon laat
weekend •.
tBut lt Wat' obvloua to t!M: Laiuna JUach WOllllll that th reptile wu not compatible wlih
her eon'• peu.
Lacuna Animal Services of·
ficera Shawn Cbriltenaen aQd
Mariann• Slevin went out to tbe
home on Tta JUIU\if Street alter
Mrs. Canpon called to uy ber
90n spotiatt tbe lnalle coiled b)' an entryway:lb,.°"~u~orage area. otneer ~., admitted
ab• was leu Uian pttued with·
the ~~ eapecJally aft* ~ni her taead in tbe 1torero()ln
and ftndlna Ute •nak• less than a root ai)d. hAlf from bet face.
••QUtct, fll me a follonp Code 2, •• •hi ltiOuted to her com~
panlon, Iller 11tal>U1htn• t.lle
an alee was Jndeed a rattler.
"I can~t." ahouted back Officer
Slevln. "You've aot the only
radio." ;
Which was true. Otl1cer
Chrlst$laen took the dfapatch
radio from her hip and called for as1i1tanc~.
When Offtcer Mar)c Mille' ar·
rived, ChH1ten1en pulltcl the
two-and.·•half foot anake from
. the •mall room with. devicttbat kept It at a Hf• dlat.nce and it
was d•trorid.
· ''I can IO 811 Clay wtthOU& a call
like that, .. the •1•ar-old amrnat
servlcea otnc•ald. '
JUrE HOTLINE
IN CLBMENTE
Rape victims in San
Clemente, or their friends
or family, now have a local
number they can call for
sympathetic counseling, a
hot line sponsored by San
Clemente Citizens Against
Rape.
The number, 492-3264,
will operate from 3 p.m. to
8 a.m. daily, San Clemente
police announced today.
Capo Bike
Financing
Plan Approved
After more than a year of
stUdy, Orange County planners
have found a way to finance at
least part of a $21-a-foot, 2.4-mile
bicycle trail along tbe Capistrano
Beach shoreline.
Tuesday superviaors approved an agreement with CalTrans lo
obtain $46,000 of the trail's
estimated $270,000 building cost.
The state gr,.nt wtll ftnance w
percent of ..the construction coat tor the traWs flrat 4,200 feet
be\ween Beacb R_.t and Doheny
Park Road.
The remaining •8, 700 feet
str~blng between Beach Road
a.nd ClllDlno Caplttrano must be
redeslened to become ellsible for
po11lbte CalTtana flftanctn1,
county recreation plannen re-
port.d.
The red.esilJl WW tii Wider way
In the comlq year whUe con·
st.rfl<!tlcm of the first pc>rtion of
the btteway la undet way.
~lion lat yew baJQd at
bUU.di.n1 wbat they •aid was tQO
npenslve a bicycle trail and
asked plann«a Lo com•~ with
other routte.
Peculiar
Actions
Reported
WAS,HINGTON CAP> -~
former science chief of ~ CIA
told a Senate panel today he was
asked to determine if any mem-
bers of President Nixon's travel-
ing party were drugged during a
trip to an "unfriendly" foreign
country sometime in 1971.
Dr. Sidney Gottlieb, who left
the CIA in 1973, said the Presi-
dent definitely was not drugged
but that other members of his
oarty. Including his personal
physician, Dr. Walter Tkach, ex-
hibited pecullar symptoms, in-
cluding outbursts of crying at in·
appropriate moments.
Describinl the symptoms, Dr.
Gottlieb said, ••My best recollec-
tion was that it was disoriented.
and unusual in terms of the
person •a normal behavior.
"Inappropriate tears and cry.
inR I remember u part of the manif~ted behavior," Dr. Gott·
Ueb told a Senate health sub·
committee.
Dr. Gottlieb did not name the foreign country involved nor did ·
be ldenuty the drug suspected or
causing the unusual sympt~rns.
According to records of the
Whlte House transportation of-
fice, however, Nixon did not
travel In 1971 to any countries
that were considered unfriendiy.
He went lo the Azores to meet
with the French President Pom-
pidou and to Bermuda for a
meeting with the British prime
minister. ,
Otherwise, the records showed
that Nixon left the continental
United States only for brief
weekend trips to friend Robert
Abplanalp's home in the
Bahamas and to the Virein
Islands for a weekend stay.
Gottlieb refused to answer
queations as he left the hearing.
saying, "I'm not going to talk
about anytblne to anybody now.'·
He also did not identify tho6e
peraona he aald asked the CIA to
check out the possible use of
drugsbutaaid they "wanted us to
help determine and review ii that
might have happened."
Dr. Gottlieb made the dis·
closure as an addition to written
testimony which centers around
the CIA 's own drug experiment&·
Uon program over a 21-year
period1ta.rtlng!n the eat'ly 1950s.
GottUeb alao said that It was
his undentandlne that in most
cases foreian tntelllgence qents
used drup to steal documeets
<See ORUGGED, Pase A!)
1r.tz OAll.Y PILOT L SC
&g Law
Enfo~ed
-Chief
Lqu.na ~ach Police Chutf Jun
Sparks 1akl today hh1 olficera are
on the look()ut for 1>unbandl~ra
und IOlldton who a.re recetvlni
t hear handouts without the
benefitol a~nn1trrom tbedty
Bul Uie police ch1er s&Jd he
does not believe there have bee n
any incidents of sohc1Una for
funds since the city's 10-called
.. anti-begging" ordtnance was
revised two weeks ago
Councilmen will gave a second
read.in& lo the allert:d ordinance
ton1ght in council chambers
begmning al 6 JO
Wbtle not pmpoml1ng the Hare
Krishna secl specifically. Sparks
said bis officers wall be on the
lookout for anyone soliciting
without permits, and will be en-
forcing the law.
The ordmance rev1s1on ca~e
as a result of a feder al court de
cision in favor of the Kris hna cult
which had challenged the city
law on Constitutional grounds.
Jn the U.S. Districl Court de·
cision lasl month, Judge David
W. Williams determined Laguna
Beach's ordinance agains t
solicitation was arbitrary. and
allowed officials to deny permits
to anyone they choose.
''The old ordinance did not
specify a time limit for a permit
to be processed, .. Sparks said.
"Now it's nailed down to 10
days."
He said the Krishna sect has
aot applied for a permit smce the
law was revi se d . to ha s
knowledge, and that they would
still be in v1olat1on of the or
dmance
The Krishna society has re·
fused to divulge their finances.
which is a requirement for a
charity solicitation permit.
"To enforce the Jaw, we have
to have an officer see someone
s oliciting, or receive a citizen
complaint," Sparks said. "We
might have had some orricer con-
tact with Krishna members since
the ordinance took effect. but I
don't believe we've had lo en
force the (soliciting> law."
SC Prowler
Plays Possum
Many prowler calls ~t came
into city p6llce staUons tum out
• to be false alarms, but Tuesday
in San Clemente police ofQ~rs
could Maure their c:aii.r lhe
wasn 'tjlisthearlng things.
A Trafalgar Lane resident told
police she heard someone on the
side o( her house. Sure enough.
officers surprised the culprit -
an opossum, eating out of the
lady's trash can.
The nocturnal visitor made out
better than m ost other prowlers.
He was not taken lnto custody -
merely c hased away.
Gym Classes
Set for Girls
Slgnups for nmnastics classes
at the Girls Club or Laauna Beach
will be held Monday for girls six
years and older.
·Skills in tumblin&, cheerlead·
ln& and parallel bars will be of·
f~ed beginning Oct. 4 for eight
weeks.
Registration will be held at the
clubhouse, 1470 T e mple Tet·
r'ce from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. and
Tuesday lhrou&b Friday from 2 to
5:30p.m.
For more information, call
494·7630.
Fair Skies Return
By 'l1le Aaaoclabed Pres•
FaJr and warmer·,..eathtr was
forecast for Northem California
today after the fir-.t atorm of tht
seaaon ln the realon brought
heavy ralnt.
'TOO MUCH OPINION'
Golden West's Wllllam•
Ecology
Ignorance
Assailed
By PIDLIP ROSMARIN
c:w '"-Dally '"°'Stall
Men don't know enough about
their e nvironment to save it, a
Golden West College dean who's
s tudied m arine environments for
two decades says:
The fact is, says Hayden R.
Willia ms, scien tists haven 't
learned enough to know how
changing the environment will
a ffect it, and environmentalists
haven't learned enough t.o know
how doing nothing will change it
"There is too much that is a
matter of opinion." he says. "We
need t.o reduce that element, and
learn as much as we can about
environmental ecology." w ltli a m s, who ·considers
himself an environmental
ecologist a nd a "popularizer of
science," found himself years
back on lhe other side of ''en·
vironmentalists .. over· Uooer
Newport Bay .
When at that ttme it was sug-
g cs t ed b y some Wi llia m s
a mo n g t.h e m l h at U ppe r
Newport Bay should be dredged.
many ecologists angrily de-
nounce<! the plan, Williams re·
calls.
Part of the trouble was that the
trvine Company wanted to use
the dredged material to bultd up
island ax:eas for rnore homes.
But another part of the tro®l~.
Williams saia, was the uncom-
promising attitude of some en-
vironmentalists not to chan1e the
lan~cape by artificial means, no
matter what.
What som e didn't understand
at that time, according t o
Williams, was that the bay t\ad
already been artificially altered,
filled with s ilt carried into 1t by
runoff waters from development
on higher ground.
In the February , 1969,
rainstorm alone, he said nine feet
of silt was washed into the bay,
burying beds or eel grass off Lit·
tie Balboa Island.
Natural tidal action wasn't suf.
licient t.o remove the muck which
also buried the shells and hard
s urtaces upon which ma,ine or·
ganisms attach themselves.
Without man's artificial re·
moval by dredging, Williams
argued, the upper bay eventually
would be a dead bay.
Time proved hlm ritbt. Today
s tate Fish and Game authorities
are making plans to dredee the
upper bay to reclaim the dyine
marshland.
..
SAN DIEGO <AP > -Sup·
porters of the nation's only
municipally sanctioned nude
beach. say they will try to get the
City CoUl\ctl to reject 'the al).
parent decislon by voters to
make swimsuits mandatory.
The unofficial tally on a prop-
o s i lio n bannlng nudity at
Black's Beach "a• 86,113 votes for the prbp()sltlon .and 70,884 for
cohtlnuing th~ •'swimsuit op-
tional" rule passed by the council
tn 1974
It-is up ~ the ~u,icu io decide
whether to go along with the ma-
jority on the vlote. and expecta·
tions are that It will.
But s upporters or nudity on the
900-foot beach began talking of a
campaign to influence the coun.
ctl members even while the votes
were being counted.
"It 's not a clear-cut order to
the council," said one supporter.
More than 150,000 voters, about
44 percent of those eligible,
s howed up Tuesday to pass on the
proposition and to vote in a coun·
cil election.
The turnout was almost 10 per·
cent above what had been ex·
pccted.
The beach is nestled between
rock outcroppings below UC San
Diego and the Salk Institute.
Increasing use or the beach
with 15,000 or more bathers on a
warm weekend day made many
believe San Diegans would vote
to keep it.
But this tourist city of 750,000
residents is "fairly conservative
a Republican town with many
retired people," commented a
resident of the exclusive La Jolla.
Farms area which overlooks
Black's Beach.
As voters went to the pollf,
dozens of people without
. $Wimsuits were on the beach as.if
to give Black•s one final fin&.
It could be weeks before the
1974 ordinance Is repealed.
The publicity efforts of both
sides in the final weeks of the
campaign ,were almost ~tcrldent.
A flyer distributed by the
"Save the Beaches Committee"
called for an end to nude bathing
m public., "not so much t.o pre·
vent.sin, ;which n~dity m ay or
may hot be. but tbe'near oeca.sion
of sin ."
A"rgum e nti l#ere baladied
·at>ou..t that1axpayers might 6e re·
quir~ to pay to pso..lde safe ac-
cess paths end provide Hreguard
statiQnS bld •nntrootbs on the
beach.
FroaaPageAJ
SCHOOL ...
older structures.
And board members asked
how much disruption to school
a~tivitles would be necessary
while the facelifting is under
way.
District officials said ten of the
original classrodms, built 49
years ago at Laguna Beach High
School are still in use, as is the
id ministration building.
The school auditorium was
constructed in 1931 by the Work
Projects Administration <WPA. >
The cafeteria and library were
built in 1954 and wort on the boys
gymna1iium began in 1962'.
Trustees wtlJ hear plans from
five more architects beginning.at
6 p .m . Thursday, and from
another two firms Oct. 6.
Newport's Glavas
-----------
PROMOTED TO SERGEANT IN SAN CLEMENTE
Policeman Jame• Spreln• (teft), Paul Falk
2 Clemente Officers
Nt;imed as Sergeants
San Clemente police officers
James Sprelne and Paul Falk,
have been promoted to ser geant
and three new officers hired.
Chie f Gary Brown has an ·
no unced.
Phil Lock, Russell Lane and
Lauren Menard have been hired
to replace three retiring police
officers, who had been on dis -
ability, Brown said.
Sprein e and Falk we re appoint·
ed sergeants. also to fill spots
'Sin' Lands
Her in Jail
vacated by retiring officers.
When Chief Brown was hired in
May, he said one of his chief
priorities would be to alleviate
the departm e nt's manpowe r
shortage, caused by the high
number or officers on disability
leave.
Falk, 30, served on the police
reserve from 1969 until 1971,
when he was hired by the depart·
ment. He holds an associate of
arts degree from Saddleback
College in adm inist ration of
Justice.
Spreine. 30, has been with the
department since 1970. He, lli<e
Falk. was graduated from Sad·
dleback College with an as-
sociate of arts degree in the ad·
ministration of justice.
Phil Lock, 22, and Lauren
Menard, 20, served as San
Clemente police cadets and were
on the reserve force. Russell
Lane. 33, is an eight-year veteran
or the San Jose police depart·
menl.
Annexing
Policies
Expected
Development policies for an·
nexed land -subject of heated
City Council debate since early
July -are rinally up for ap·
proval before San Juan
Capistrano councilmen tonighl.
The controvers i al Growth
Mana1ement Code amendment
would allow buildine on annexed
land to be phased se1>4Tately
from in-city projects.
Under the proPQsed amend-
ment. building on annexed land
would be alloc•ted using a
formula based on UM n_µmber of
acres in a development project.
The cowtcil cotdd approve an-
nual building permits up to one
dwelling unit per acre of the
pro1ect. •
That means a 20-acre project
could be allocated up to 20 build·
ing permits per year.
The annexed land building
poltcies iss ue surfaced e-rlier
thls year when councilmen
became concerned over controls
on two developme nts located
close to clty borders.
Councilmen commissioned city
staff t.o research an amendment
that would provide some benefit
to projects outside the city and
lure them into annexation, thus
givl.ni San Juan some control of
t he devel~ment.
Tonight s amendment is up for
adoption after preliminary ap-
proval was given on Sept. 7.
Fro• Page A J
DRUGGED. •
from American officials. He did
not say this was the case in.the al-
leged drugging of members of
the Nixon t raveling Party. He
gave no reason for that alleged
occurrence.
Gottlieb was in general charge
of the CJA's testing of mind alter-
ing drugs in the 21-year period
beginning in about 1952.
KUALA LUMPUR,
Malaysia CAP) -A 40·
year-old divorcee was sen·
tenced t.o serve two months
in jail fpr liviog out of
wedlock witti & ll7·year·
old self-de(ense tQltructor,
accordin1 to reports
published hert. She said
she had no other place to
live.
They said Doyah Bmti
Dan was given the sen
te n ce by a Mos lem re ·
ligious court in Alor State.
240 miles northwest or
Kuala Lumpur. when she
was unable lo pay an $80
fine.
Zany Anties
Moslem s a r e banned
from living together out of
wedlock and Malaysian
laws permit religious of·
ficials to arrest those ac
cused of such conduct and
try them In reh gioui.
courts.
FroMPageAJ
COUNCIL. • •
minimum of $2$ per unit, said
Richard Ahlm~n. buildlpg and planni~g director. Additional
units on t.te s~me piece of proper-
ty would cost $2 per uniLove{ the
!nllial $25 ree.
Ahlman said that· If resale
market holds 1teady, the new or-
dinance might generat.e about
$20,000 a year to \be city.
CIA. Tales Regale Congress
W ASHTNGTON <AP) -Th09e
zany CIA agents, who once tried
to make Fidel Castro's beard fall
o ut. have Copgress in stitches
again with tales of m elting
s wizzle slicks amt t ear gas
I a uncher s for agents who
couldn't throw straight.
Members of a Senate subcom
m 1ttee broke up in laughter Tues·
day as former agents told about
the agency's use of special de-
vices designed specifically to in-
troduce drugs to unsuspecting
test subjects.
One that strained the commit·
tee's imagination was the at·
tempt to make Castro lose his
hair. That was revealed in 1975
by the intelllgence committee.
which sald the Cuban leader sur-
vived at least eight CIA·
sponsored assassination plots.
The committee said the attack
on Castro's beard wasn't aimed
at killing the Cuban leader. It
was supposed lo humiliate him.
It called for the dustina of
Castro's shoes with a hafr·
removing sub8tanc~ during a trip
Ca11tro was to make out of Cuba.
But the Senate report said.
Castro foiled the conspirators by
canceling the trip.
Another former agent, Philip
Goldman, told the subcommittee
'about tools designed lo deliver
drugs or other chemicals to CIA
targets.
For instance, Goldman said he
made billy clubs that shot tear
gas, drug-laced swizzle sticks
that melted in cocktails and a
hypodermic needle that shot
drugs lnto corked wine bottles.
Some devices were born of
desperate need. Like the gadget
he · built to launch a small glass
vial filled with tear gas up to 100
yards.
He said the tear gas device was
ordered after an agent attempted
to hurl one of the vials out of his
hotel window into a rally the CIA
wanted to break up. The agent's
aim was bad. Tbe vial missed the
window, bounced off a wall and
br9ke open, filling the agent's
hotel room with gas, G~d.lnan
satd. • ·
SF Offers le•kemla Fatal
Killings Little L eaguer
Reward 'Most H ap py'
SA!'! FRANCISCO
I AP l The Cit) of San
t'rancbw ts oflerina a
Sl00,000 reward for in
form•Uon leadina to the
urrt: l and convlcuon of
three aunmcn who killed r. va people and wounded
I l others at a Chinatown
restaurant.
Ma y or Georee
Moscone announced the
reward at a news con-
ference Tuesday after
( Stu It• J
consulting with homicide
in vesl1gators who said
they have "certain SUS·
peel:." 1n the Sept. 4
shootings but .. not
enough to make an ar-
rest."
Officials said it was
the largest reward of-
fered m the city's his·
Lory
No E.rten•lon
FRONTERA CAP 1
Emily Harris. convicted
of kidnapmg lind robbery
in a 1975 shootout while
she WCJS a fugitive with
PCJtricia Hearst, will not
have her I l ·year s en-
tence extended.
T h e Community
Release Board at the
Californja Institute for
Women. where Mrs
II arris 1s being held.
made the decision at u
hearing Tuesday The
action makes Mr!>
llarris eligible for parole
on April 20, 1980
Job Fa ir Succe••
F'' ~EGUNDO CAP)
Mm ._ ,han 500 former Bl
workers from Rockwell
I ntcmational turned out
;it a Job Fair at the com
pany's plant here to
meet with r epresen-
• latives from about 175
rirms.
Rockwell , which
sponsored a similar job-
hu nt six weeks ago,
hoped the success of that
one would carry over in-
to Tuesday's event. A
spokesman said more
than 600 persons found
jobs as a result of the
first J o b Fair. The
aerospace company is
sponsoring the program
in an effort to help iL<>
laid.off employes find
work.
t'rom AP Dlspakhes
R.lehard Wade Helm•&etlff wu voted "most In·
splrational player of 197T" by the ottier 12-year-olds
on hb Lltlle League baaeball team thb summer In
El Ca,1<>n.
They didn 'l know he WU dyln& or leukemia. Not
even Richard knew 1t, but he was the happy guy on
the team, the one who made the othert feel good.
"I never told him he was dyine." said hi s
father, Jay HelmateUer. "I was goln& lo tell him
after one last ba.seball season.''
But Richard died in a hospital Friday. The
runeral was today
• The Judge who presided over the "Watergate
We:.t • lriaJ wes assigned as judge in the third
murder trial of former Charles Mauoo follower
Leslie Van Houten.
Van Houten. 28, was ordered to appear in Jud&e
Gordon Ringer's court Oct. 20 for setting or a trial
date She 1s charged with murder and conspiracy in
the Aug. 10, 1969 slaying of Leno and Rosemary La·
Bianca and with con-
spiracy in the slaying the ( )
previous night of actress PEOPLE
Sharon Tate a nd four .
others. ----------
Ri nger was assigned
more than four years ago lo preside over the trial of
four White House aides accused of breaking into the
office of -Dr. Lewis Fieldlng, the psychiatrist who
treated Pentagon Papers defendlinl Daniel
Ells berg. •
Singer Freda Payne gave birth to a boy,
Gregory Joel Abbott Jr., at Cedars·Sinai Medical
Center, a hospital spokesman said.
Miss Payne's husband is songwriter Gregory
Abbott.
She records for Capitol Records and has had
several million-selling records. including "Band or
Gold" and "Bring the Boys Home " • Tennessee's Gov. Ray Blanton. who vetoed the
state's death penalty law. has drawn the ire of some
poltticans and newspapers by
promising to pardon a man con-
victed of double murder who
works as a photographer for the
state.
The focus of the controversy
is Roger Humphreys, JO, son of
the De mocratic governor's
patronage chief in Johnson City ·
Humphreys was convicted of
second-degree murder for kill·
•LANTON ing his ex-wife and her lover in
1973.
Blanton says Humphreys, a trusty serving 20 to
40 years in the state prison at Nashville, has been
rehabiUtated and Blanton has promised to pardon
him before the end of his term as governor in 1979.
Humphreys would be eligible for parole in 1984.
* Arnold Miller, president of the United Mine
Workers. was on hand for the opening night
performance in Cleveland of the
one-man play .. John L. Lewis,
Disciple of Discontent."
Miller, beleaguer ed by
wildcat strikes and internal
problems in his union, jolned a capacity c rowd for th e
performance by Robert Lansing
at Cleveland's LitUe Theater in
Public Hall. Flood Hea"ll Miller said he was working
REDDING CAP) <he mines when the fiery Lewis M1Lu1t
The heaviest September made a name as a pioneer of mining's labor move·
storm on record here has ment. and never had a ch;mce to meet him .
rtooded several homes • and two shopping malls. The will of chewing gum magnate Philip K.
The National Weather Wrigley bas been admitted to probate in Los
Service said Tuesday the Angeles Superior Court because of property in Los
four-day rain total was Angeles that produces an annual Income of $18,000.
6.8 Inches. the highest for The bulk or the $60.3 million estate is being
the first three weeks of handled in Chicago.
September in 100 years The senior Wrigley, who owned the Chlcaeo
of recordkceping. Cubs and Santa Catalina Island, died April 12 at age
82. His wire, Helen, died June 27 at age 75.
Pla n Olca11e d •
Leon and Bonnie Toister"started out on a sum-
LONG BEACH CAP> -mertjme stroll around the nation's Capitol. They
A standby plan for com-ended up in a magazine photo in the middle of a
pulsory water coo.serva· demonstration against the Panama Canal treaty.
lion was approved by "PicketingtbeCapitol:TroublelortheTreaty,"
the Long Beach City saysthecaptiononpage46inthecurrentNewsweek.
Council, but wlll be used But in the middle of the photo -that white-
on 1 y If voluntary haired 1enUeman? -it's Toi.ster, 7S, a serriirelired,
measures fall, a water and unpolitical. real estate salesman from Lake
department spokesman Placid, a small community in rural central Florida.
said. *
Tuesday's approval President Cart.er announced he is nomj.nating
would permit the depart· Coretta Scott Kiili and three olher4 lo join Am-
ment to entorce a man-bassador Andrew J. Yoaacinrepresenting the Unit·
datory 10 percent reduc· cd States at the 1977 session or the United Nations
lion by Its 84,000 GeneralAssembly.
customers should volun· Being nominated besides Young and the widow
tary efforts fall. of the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., are:
James F. Leonard Jr., Young's deput.y at the Ji',_U Due U.N.; Rep. Les&er L . WoJfr CD·N.Y.> and Rep.
CharleaW. Wbalett1Jr. <R·Ohlo•. LOS ANGELES CAP)....;;;.;...;;....;.....~~~...;..~~~~~~~~~~
• -This city has won a
21h-year court battle for
$9.6 million in federal
funds to help pay for a
noise buffer zone north of
Loa Ange les Interna-
Uonal Airport.
The U.S. Diatrlct Court
for t.be Diatrict of Col um·
bia ordered the Federal
A vlation Administration
to relmbune the Depart-
ment ot A1rporta tor the
money it cost to con·
atruct the buffer ~·
Tuesday's rullq upheld
a federal appell1 court.
declalon that the city wu
entJUed to the money.
What CAN You Cet
lor adl•e
thesedap?!
J
~------~-_,.,,_
,, ... _,.. ____ ..
A we StnK'!k
A rcfuj:!ee from Bangkok appl'ar~ •HH•d on
her arnval at San Francisco l ntr rnat1onal
Airport. She is among the first of 15,000
Indochinese. most of them Vietnames e. to
he given homes in the United States
" . ..
DAILY PILOT AS
Refunds Law OKi
Mell8ure Ainu at PUC Action ,.
SACAAMENTO <AP> -A bill to
prevent the state Public UUlitlea
Commission from witbboldin1 re-
funds of utility overcharges to busi-
nesses has been signed by the 1ov-
ernor.
Sen. John Stull CR-Escondido),
authored the bill. criticizin1 what he
c alled a PUC scheme to withhold
millions or dollars in refunds from
commercial customers.
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. signed the
measure, SSOO., on Tuesday.
IT REQUIRES THE PUC to con-
t1n ue ordering refunds equitably
among aJl iL'> customers, business as
well as residential.
The PUC "was considering how to
distribute refunds, but had no
ironclad proposal. It must be con·
sidered moot now," said PUC
apokesman Gene Raleigh
Richard Spohn, state consumer af-
fairs ctuet, had proposed using busi·
neu refunds for energy conservatiqn
programs.
Ralei1h said backers or s uch a pro-
posal fell businesses raised their
prices when their rates went up. lfe
said they usually do not lower them
when they receive refunds.
RALEIGH SAID A ''ballpark
fi&ure" for the amount or refunds the
PUC could consider is $500 million.
roughly ball of which would have to go
to businesses.
Of the $500 milllon, the PUC recent-
ly ordered Pacific Telephone Co. to
r~fund $14 million to all classes of
customers and made a similar Pacific
Telephone and General Telephone or4
der involving $270 mJWon .
Terminal Talia Lag
LOS ANGELES CAP) -After meeting all day
to overcome a hurdle blocking plans for an Alaskan
011 terminal in Long Beach, officials of Standard Oil
of Ohio and Southern California Edison, say they're
still far from reaching an agreement.
Top executives of both firms held preliminary
talks Tuesday on a pollution tradeoCf proposal in
which Sohio would pay for cleaning up emiaaions
from Edison's facilities in the harbor area.
Under the plan proposed by state Air Resources Hoard Chairman Tom Quinn, Sohlo would be re-
quired to finance some $'90 mlllion in pollution
cleanup work at Edison to offset smog which would
be created by the oil terminal.
we•we aot ltaraauns
you'd nwe1• expect U f~lld
lin a Hardwa1•e sm1•e:
SWINGLINE
STAPLE GUN
One SQUEEZE and you've nailed •11
• All PUrPOse. for electrical wmng.
woodworking. upholstering and
more. much more • Heavy Duty • '
Safety guard and Safety lock
Reg t3 50
10oN1. 499
6 PIECE SET
CORNING WARE
• Who oouldnl use a lil!fe more
Coming Ware? • Boxed for a gift •••
for wedding, shower. anniversary • Treat yoorself • • , you deserve It. •
1l\ qt. covered 8" sldllet. 1l\ Qt.
covered baking dish, 2 petite pans. Blue cornflower pattern
A-9275-N
1688
Salad
Spinner/
Drier
• The kids will beg to dry the salad
greens! • Spins out all the water In
an Instant. • Great for aelad. 'vegetables. fruit.• Elegant too.
•
At a price ~ke this
you Should boy
Sprod Satin now,
even II vou don't
plan to pelnt un1N
tater. There's Just nowa~could make aotter
unless en cuts Ila price to us.
AND THEY DIDI
BUNN DRIP
COFFEE MAKER
• How can f get rest1t.1rant doffee at home? • Always with
a BUNN. Only with a BUNN. •
And it's euper fast ••• 8 cups
in 3 mlnutea •Built to tut with
copper tubing a atalnleH
steel. • V\.tay Bunn? Value. •
White or Brown.
3988
.~·RIVAL3~ QUART
CROCKPOT
• Cooks Ill dq wt\I .. the
cook·• away. • S.l-0-W cooking reducea ahrfnk.909. retllna J~ and nutrtenta • Cotta ~ to COOk an dly • 13100
]Q88
KWIKSET
DEADBOLT
• Protect your family! •
Pohc:e-tested ••• as burglar proof
as a loci( can be • Full 1" deadbolt
with free turning steel rod insert •
All steel tapered cylinder guard •
Two solld steel reinforcing rings• Solid brass keyed cylinder
mechanism. Brass. etched nictde or antique brass.
1088
S~I~
CORDLESS DRILL
& SCREWDRIVER
• Use thlt dl111 a~ere ••• bOat .
• • camper ••• cabin ••• yoa will
love tt,. freedom It glvet you!
Reo.24.9&
1&0., 1288
• Worth petting all stealMd up! • Keept In natural flavors &
Vltarnlne. • A nutrlttonal must. •
Stalnfea ••• fits In most POta.
]88 ,
---~ ~ .. ._
W9d"9eday, S.pwmber 21. 11n
Robert N. Weed/Publisher· Thomes Keevll/Edltor
~rblira Krelblch/Edltorlal P• &dltol" orangeeoas10111vP1101 Editorial Page ............................................................. --
Another Ro11nd of
Parking Proposals
l.4igun. Beach Plannlng Commlaalonera are atudylng a
multHnilllon dollar parking management program which
could ease some of the congestion woes that have hlatorlcally
plagued the Art Colony.
It's hardly the f lrst time the city haa attempted to eolve its
parking problems. Plan suggestiont, eehemea. maps and
charts haw beef1 preMnted for at least 30 years. But It seems
f1nencln~I opposition or just lack of steam has defeated
most of t efforts.
A parking structure proposed for the downtown area tn
1975 went down to defeat In a bond election.
But now the planning commission is considering three
parking structures in the downtown section. as well as park·
Ing Improvements for the north and south entrances and
along Laguna Canyon Road.
The Park Management Project proposal will get a public
viewing before commissioners on Sept. 27 at 7:30 p.m.
Just the first phase of development -three parking
structures-ls expected to cost in excess of $12 million. But
commissioners need to hear from the merchants who would
foot much of the bill.
Another dream plan? Or at last a realistic program for •
f-8guna's most pressing problem?
It'll be a while before we know.
Cmnping Ban Wise
1 , Taxing San Clemente folks to pay for visitor overnight
camper parking at the city's North Beach would have added
insult to injury, and It is good the city council didn't go for the
idea.
• The "Insult" is that North Beach. one of the best bathing
beaches on the south coast, is al ready crowded at peak beach
times.
Bringing more people to the beach by building an adja·
cent city parking lot for overnight camping probably wouldn't
t>e popular with San Clemente residents, already grumbling
about having to share the beach with inlanders.
To expect city taxpayers to pay for constructing and
maintaining the parking area would only compound their
.. grievance."
San Clemente has one state park within its boundaries
and two more adjacent to the city. The three parks offer 554
overnight camping spaces, with better amenities than the city
would be likely to offer.
Councilmen made the right move when they decided the
overnight camping business is one area better left to the
state.
An Unfair Penalty
· A city·hired San Juan Capistrano Airport compliance of-
ficer resigned last week with criticism against' newly adopted /
regulations governing operations and outlining use fees at
the airport.
His remarks were appropriate.
The City Council figuratively signed a death warrant for
the tiny airport years ago when it approved housing off the
end of the runway. In July, the council passed a resolution
• setting June, 1978, as the date by which the airport must
l close. J But the council ls penalizing airport users through
fudicrous regulations during its last year of existence. The fee
structure, ostensibly imposed to discourage transient traffic
at the airport, is exorbitant.
And there ls no proof to tie the airport's problems to
transient aircraft use of the airfield. The fees serve only to
ward off any possible economic benefit to the city througH
1ourist or businsss travel Into the airport.
Council action in the past and the present has sealed the
fate of the tiny airport. We believe the airport should be al-
lowed a peaceful death, free of harassment from unreason·
able city regulations.
• Opinions expressed In th• apace above are those of the Dally Pilot.
Other views expressed on thl• page are those of their autho,. and
artists. Reader col"Qment Is Invited. Address The Oelly Piiot.
P.O. Box 15e0, Costa Mesa. CA 92826. Phone (714) 642-4321.
Boyd /The Fly
ByL.M.BOYD
Wasn't until the space
•cientlsts undertook their
•arllest studies to land a man on the moon that they found
QUt bow flles light OD ceilings.
Front feet first 11 bow. Speed
• ..-i_hotography proved that. Tbe
9y zooms upward at about 10
~ches per sec:ond. At a body's J.,nJth away, it extends all
l"ga out. When ita front legs
wuch down (touch up?), It
1wlnp its body, and plants its -•ck legs, winging to keep
balance. Already mentioned
it always takes off
backwarda.
Not widely r~ported was
the fact that about one out of
every four railroad brtdsea too yean aco crumpled under
the wellbt of the tralni, apUJ· s locomotives, tret•ht and uamcen tnto aoraea and
ullle1, 1D09t usually way out
the lonetame. not eHn
llmpln& dtatance of tho
arwttowll.
It's a small steel instru·
ment, six or seven Inches
long, with an ivory or
otherwise ornamental han·
die, and a blunt wire-like
crook on one end. Without lt
some years back. your
granddad couldn't have put
his shoesoo. But it's a fact to-
day that three out of four
citizens hereabouts wouldn't
recognize a button hook I( they
were to see one. .
· Q. "What was the point of
putting glass bottoms in the
ancient En&llah beer I
t.anhrds?''
A. Some of the old inns were
pretty rowdy. And dangerous,
too. Mm ot means therein
were scared to ralae their
heavy beer mup bottom• up
!or feal'. of 1ettlf\1 tbelr
throats cut. So aome en-
terpr1ain1 craftsman tn·
troduced the tlUl·bottom~
tankard to permit drinkers •
aomethlq of a view of the room while they drab:led their
drlnks. Or IO Joel tbe t.ale.
Jack Anderson ,
SQviet ~eaders ·showing Age
WASHINGTON -Age is slow·
ly, inexorably overtaking the old
revolutionaries who rule the Sov·
iet Union. In a few years, they
will be completely replaced in
the Kremlin by a new set or
leaders.
This is giving U.S. atrategists
the flutters as they try to an-
ticipate whom
the new
leaders will
be and how
their views
will affect
world -'fairs.
No one has
enough solid
information
to judge
whether •the
moderates or hardheads will
come to power.
The real political power in the
Soviet Union is concentrated in
the Politburo, the policymaking
arm of the Communist party.
There are 14 full members, but
only six really count: Leonid
Brezhnev, Yuriy Andropov, An·
drei Gromyko, Andrei Kirilenko,
Aleksei Kosygin and Mikhail
Suslov.
December, has bad a strenuous
year. But last June, he showed
signs of severe faUaue and dls·
orientation durini a three·day
visit in France. He was, say
American observers, "very.
very tired." But be returned to
Moscow. disappeared for a two·
week rest, and emeried with re·
newed energy.
AJeksei Kosyein, now 73 years
old, ls a sturdy Slav with few
health problems. For years. U.S.
analysts studied every new pie·
lure of him tn an effort to de·
termine whether a dime·siied
mole on his left cheek showed
signs of skin cancer. Apparently
tired or the rumors that he was
afflicted with the disease, he dis·
appeared for nearly three
months last fall and reappeared
with the mole removed.
During Kosygin's absence, the
diplomatic gossip mill carried
the tale that he had suffered a
heart attack. American officials,
however, eive the story little
credence. They note that he still
goes on len1tby fi.Bblng e.xpedi·
tions and ar~uou1 hikes wlth
President Urho Kekkonen. of
Finland.
SINCE 1913, it has been
rumored that Mikhail Suslov, the
party's ideologlcal hieh priest.
has tuberculosla. For a man who
will be 75 in November, he ap-
pears to be holding up under the
burden pretty well. Suslov.
nevertheless, is succumbing to
advancing years and is visibly
slowing down. He is the last or
the romantic revolutionaries,
say our sources; when be goes,
there will be no one around "who
can interpret the faith like be
can."
Andrei Kirilenko is the Polit·
buro's chief of industry. If
something should happen to
Brezhnev. IGrUenko is the man
most likely to step into the bl&
shoes. But Kirilenko, already 71,
would probably hold the job for
only a short period. He is con-
sidered a hard worker and auf-
r ers no known health problems.
Also in good health is Foreign
Minister Andrei Gromyko, 68. He.
was out of sight for a period dur··
ing thls past winter. and rumors
circulated that be had been
stricken with a heart attack. Just
as the cosstp reached Us peak, he
reappeared. It la now believed he
was merely down wlth tbe nu.
THE REMAINING member of
the Big Sbc, secret police chief
Yuriy Andropov, 63, also was
rumored to hate a heart condi·
lion. But he, too, was apparently
sick with the nu.
Of the remaining minor mem·
bers of the Politburo, only 78-
year.old Arvid Pelsbe is thought
to be knocking at death's door.
U.S. analysts through him nearly
gone in 1971, when his official
photograph depicted him as
positively cadaverous. But he
bounced back, appearing in a
subsequent photo cheerfully at·
tired in a pink shirt and Glen
Plaid jacket -avant garde ap·
'parel for the stoday Soviet
warhorses.
THE AVERAGE age of the full ~~
Politburo is 66'h; but the average 1'n 1 y-1 GREAT FOR£IGN roLICY
ACHIEVEMENTS age of the Big Six is 70. Accord·
ine to our sources. none of the
Kremlin patriarchs are
threatened with "identiriable.
life-threatening conditions." But
several are showing signs of ad·
vancmg age. They tire easily,
and a slight case of the nu can
keep them m bed for weeks.
Leonid Brezhnev, the Grand
Sachem of the Communist party,
ls plagued with circulatory
problems and may even havesuf·
rered a stroke. He occasionally
slurs his words and has difficulty
walking. He is a bad air traveler
and doesn't adjust easily to jet
lag.
In. the old days. he used to
smoke and guzzle vodka heavily,
but he has now sworn off
cigarettes and cut back on his
alcohol intake. He also has a
painful dental problem, which
may be the result of his former
smoking habit. More likely, it
stems from a distormon of the
jaw which has bothered him
since he was a young man.
Brezhnev, who will be 71 in
Mailbox
HE KEPT
AfITl'( )WNG
FROM lNSULTlNG
ANYE!ia''l FOR
THE EN'l'lRf.
MPNTHW
.AJJGUST •
,
or
PR£SlDENT
CARTER..
lt£ l<£PT VS OVT
OFWAR, •..
• WITHOUP.~ ...
'Health Nuts' Invade His Bed and Board
To the Editor:
The health nuts have never
made me mad before, but now
they've done it. They have pre·
vtously aggravated m e when
they tried to make me feel guilty
for eating something that tastes
good instead of yogurt and
birdseed.
But recently I went on a trip lo
Medford, Oregon. After driving
for 18 hours, I found a motel with
a large neon sign saying.
••Reasonable Rates.'• This won
my heart until I paid the $22
.. Reasonable Rate " for one
night.
WHEN I hit the bay, it hit back.
Thal bed wasn't just firm, it was
hard. Alter tumbling and tossing
until 4 o'clock in the morning, I
decided that I wa'sn't tired
enough so I went walking around
the neighborhood. All of the dogs
barked a~ me and luckily the
police patrol didn't happen along
and arrest me. I staggered back
to bed and I believe that I dozed
off once before daybreak.
On examination the next day.
we found a five-eighths inch
piece of plywood between the box
~prlngs and mattress. Wasn't
that tboughtlul of them to think or
my back problems? Or could
they have done it to make the bed
so uncomfort,ble as to cause the
traveler to me e8J'ly and get Qut
ao the room could be re.rented?
These health nuts have aone
too far when they 10 to cetUng in·
to my bed. I reel that the bed that
ls healthy la th• bed that you can
sleep on. Food is not noumhilll
unless you can eat it without get·
Ung ulcan.
You health nuts eat bJrdsffd
and 1leep on a board 1f you want
to, but buzz off.
JAMES W. BOLDING
federal level is required -a ·
person who has the ear of the
President and the respect of
Congress.
If excellence is what we seek
for our child•cn in terms or what
education can do to help each
child become as fine a human be·
ing as our love and resources can
provide, then we must a have a
separate Department of Educa·
tion.
SONDRA SCOTT
lt' .. te of M.-q
To the Editor:
I went to the budget hearings of
the Board of Supervisors to pro-
test the funding of the Com·
mission on the Status of Wome{I.
CSOW is a waste of taxpayers'
money; it overlaps what ls done
by other agencies and, for me, it
is counter.productive as its
women are lobbying for ERA,
which I oppose.
The room was !Hied with pro·
family taxpayers who opposed
the fun<llna. A CSOW
spokeswomen tried to justify the
commission's need for our tax
money on the grounda that it did
rape counseling and helped to
implement Title IX <UNISEX> in
the schools.
where one can usually drive from
south to north ends of town
without hardly a stop.
Sure. it takes a lot or calculating
to set the signal clocks properly,
but it is a cinch with the aid or
computers. It would be worth
while alone for the fraizled
nerves it would save.
FRANK KLOCK
Fedllp
To the Edit.or:
As a member of the jury of
American people before whom
Bert Lance laid his case, 1
carefully read every word of his
published plea. AlthO\llh he
didn't request a verdlct, or sug·
gest a mechanism for it, mlne
follows.
I DON'T want him on my
payroll. He reminds me or
numerous other unprincipled
minor leaguers wbo got caught
throwing splt balls in Wuhlngton
-to our nation's acute embar·
rassment-and I'm fed up.
1 \Vant persons in cabinet level
positions whose ethical stan-
dards are above reproach. One
with an adln1Ued record of con·
tinuina criticism by a regulatory
agency of thef ederal 19vemment
simply doesn't measure up. WlLLlAM M. COCKRELL u1i.,.,., ., .... -\
To the EdJtor !
It aNru tm.,erallve that I
speak out to Jou concernlnl your
very misleadinl edltorf al o/
Thunday. Sept:. a. re1ardin& the
contract neaotiaUOn1 within tho
C~plJtruo'r'UnUlecl School Dia·
1. .ct. • The edltonal 1111Pllet that tht
dlstdtt has taken a ttnt step
toward blndln• arbllraUon ln
contract ne1oUaUon1 whlcla It
totally filM. Now.,.... lo"---~·;
tract ii tbli'e any form or·~
• arbitration relaUna to cont.tact
neaotlaUorie.
Also, I must disagree with your
comment to the effect that the
negotiations this past year have
been "the most discordant in the
district's history.'' This simply is "
not true and I believe both the
teachers' organization and the
school board can attest to this 1
fact. Your statement that media·
lion was called tor after a threat
of a strike is also inaccurate. A
strike threat was never an issue
during the contract negotiations.
JEROME R. THORNSLEY.
District Superintendent
Cldseu' .... Cs
To the F,ditor:
Milllons of tllegal aliens are
destroyine our way of life as na·
tura1 or legalized citizens. AU the
benefits of citizenship including
voting on ballots printed in
foreign language, are available
to foretpera. Our several past l
and present governments ap-
parently have found no com· ·
passion for We, the people.
The only soluUOG for the illegal ,
alien in our country la to enforte
the imm1rraUon laws as original· J
ly written and intended. Retwn ,
tbe llle1at allens to their home I
country who have not complied '
with the immtaratloo laws by ·
becomtna lawfUl cJtUena. ,
I
A SO·CALLED ttroke of a 1
poUtlcal pen should not be
permitted to dlaeiitrancbiae the
lea al cituens of our country. The
llleJala have cr.ated their own
clreumst.nces and they must "4>l '
be forttven becaUje they are J
be re.
Tile aoternment ta ntsPoDStble ,
to We. the people. Army, Navy. 1 Air Foree, Coast Guard •nd Mannes could have beien ~ to
tHl our boiden, but the 10.etn· •
ment did Doth.Ins, and now th
aovtmment apparenUy eXJ)eCtl
We. the people' to for;tve and
foratt.
We, the people have worked,
1trualid ind 1aettftced In order
to Htabllth • Jlf • we have become a~ to and. lf th•
10-:C!alltcl human ~bta move-mem 11 la1aal, tt 1hcMald apply to
ourUnlticl8tatll dtlMftl.
C.M.OIBBZNS
. . • I
. '
--~ --. ---. ,, .•. _____ __
Orange Coast
EDITION
VOL. 70, NO 264, .. SECTIONS, .. 6 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Today's Clo Ing
N.Y. Stoeks
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1977 N TEN CENTS!
CIA Lured Barflies to LSD Party?
WASHINGTON <AP> A former CIA psycbolo11at bu told a
nobbergasted Senate subcommittee that be once planned to apray
LSD on a houseful of un.auspeetin1 Calif ornla partnoen but 1ave
up the Idea because the unseasonably warm weather meant the win-
dows could not be closed.
In frustration, another CIA acent closeted himself In the
bathroom of a house in San Francisco and sprayed himself with the
hallucinogenic dru1. which was in an aerosol can.
ntE AUDIENCE IN THE SENATE Caucus Room exploded
with laughter Tuesday as the witness. Dr David Rhodes, told his
story
"Do I understand that three grown men new from the East
coast to the West coast to recruit people at bars for a party so that
* * * * * *
they could be sprayed with LSD?" asked Sen. Edward M. Kennedy CD-Mass.)
Rhodes said that he and another aeent went to San Francisco in
the late 1950s and spent a week setting to know people in bars "so
that we could subsequently invite them to a party."
HE SAID THEY WANTED TO learn if LSD could be ad·
ministered in small quantities by being sprayed in the air.
Rhodes said the amount of LSD in the spray was very small, "so
small that it would take a practiced person to see any result."
He said the CIA already knew the effect of LSD on persons who
knew they were being given the substance, and that the agency
believed it important to learn what effect it had on people who did
not know they had received LSD.
* * * * * *
Nixon Staff Drugged
* * * * * * Zany Anties
CIA Tales Regale Congress
WASHINGTON CAP> -Those
zany ClA agents. who once tried
to make Fidel Castro's beard fall
out, have Congress in stitches
again with tales of melting
swizzle sticks and tear gas
l aunchers. for agents who
couldn't throw straight.
Members of a Senate subcom·
m ittee broke up in laughter Tues-
day as former agents told about
the agency's use of special de·
vices designed specifically to in ·
troduce drugs to unsuspecting
tes t subjects
that melted in cocktails and a
hypodermic needle that shot
drugs into corked wine bottles.
Some devices were born or
desperate need. Like the gadget
he built to launch a small glass
vial fiUed with tear gas up to 100
yards.
He said the tear gas device was
ordered after an agent attempted
to hurl one or the vials out or his
hotel window into a rally the CIA
wanted to breaJ< up. The agent's
aim was bad. The vial missed the
window. bounced orr a wall and
broke open, filling the agent's
hotel room with gas, Goldman
said.
Btrr RHODES SAID THAT IT WAS discovered that the house to
be used for the party had no air conditioninc. meaning the doon
and windows would ha veto be kept open.
"The weather· defeated us," Rhodes said. "We decided to
scratch it at that point."
Rhodes said later that he does not believe the experiment ever was repeated.
Btrr HE SAID THAT BEFORE the group of agents left San
Francisco they had one further mission.
"We attended the first national convention or lesbians.·· Rhodes
said.
He said the purpose was to test a psychological theory. but did
not elaborate.
* * * * * *
Overseas
Peculiar
Actions
Reported
WASIDNGTON (AP) -The
former science chief of the CIA
told a Senate panel today he was
asked to determine if any mem-
bers or President Nixon's travel·
ing party were drugged during a
trip to an "unfriendly" foreign
country sometime in 1911.
Dr. Sidney Gottlieb, who left
the CIA in 1973. said the Presi-
dent definitely was not drugged
but that other members of his
party. including his personal
physician, Dr. Walter Tkach, ex-
hibited peculiar symptoms, in·
eluding outbursts o( crying at in·
appropriate moments ..
Describing the symptoms, Dr. RUNNING FOR OFFICE? ~ Former: Chief Glave•
One that strained the commit-
tee's imagination was the al·
tf>mpt to make Castro lose his
hair. That was revealed in 1975
by the intelligence committee,
which said the Cuban leader sur·
vi ved at leas t eight CIA-
sponsored assassination plots.
The committee ~aid the attack
on Castro1s beard wasn't aimed
at kiJUng the Cuban leader. It
was supposed to humiliate him .
NB Wants
Help With
Reef Fight
GotUieb sajd, "My best recollec·
lion was that lt was disoriented
and unusual in terms of the
person's normal behavior. Newpo~'s
Ex-chief
To Run?
Former Newport Beach police
chief B. James Glavas said today
he is considering runninf asalnst Marian Bergeson or the
Republican nomination for the
74th Assembly District in next
spring's primary election.,
The retired police chief said he
has not made uphls mind to enter
the primary, but he will be giving
the matter "a good, hard look for
the next month or so."
Glavas, 65, said, "Several peo-
ple have approached me with the
idea of being a candidate.
"Smee then, l 've talked to a
few people about it. I feel that the
public wants a broad range of
candidates from which to ·
choose-at least in the
primary.,,
The retired police ch1ef beaan
his law enforcement car~r in
1938 with the Los Angele. Police
Department wblcb he left In 1961
to head the Newport Beach de-
partment. He retired from that t><>Stthl~summer.
Glavas said part of his con-
sideration involves giving up hls
ret.lrement.. "whlch I have been
enjoying. I have no compelling
reaaon to become involved in
public life again, although I have
aome strong feelln1s about what
ii ha~ in our country!'
Glavu said he thlnkt be has a
1ood ander:standkig of the
lecialature fained 1n hta work as
aA officlaf of the CaUfom.la
Peace Officers' Assoclatfon and
the California Chiefs of Police
Association.
"I think 1 ·understand the
h1iaJative process and what it ii
that permits a lealslator to be eJ.
<See GIA VAS; race .U)
It called for the dusUng of
Castro's shoes with a bair·
removing substance during a trip
Castro ~ to make out of CUba.
Butf the Senate report said,
Castro foiled the conspirators by
canceling the trip.
Another former agent, Philip
Goldman, told the subcommittee
about tools designed to delh:er
drugs or other chemicals to CIA
targets.
For instance, Goldman said he
made billy clubs that shot tear
gas, drug-laced swizzle sticks
Cash Stolen
From Church
In Newport
Newport Beach police are
seeking the burglar who
ransacked a Balboa church in an
apparent search for money.
Father Egburt Nolan of' OUr
Lady of Mt. Carmel Catholic
Church told police whoever
broke into bis church late Mon·
day or early Tuesday, took about
$60 In cash from the rectory.
Investigators said the burglar
got into the rectory office beside
the church at 1441 W. Balboa
Blvd. by prying e screen off an
open window.
They said the thief ransacked
the offlcta and then broke into
the church pToper. After
ransacklna th• aanctuary, the in-
truder then broke into the aacria·
ty, leaving the contenta strewn
about the church.
The break·in was discovered
early 'l'Uesday memtn1 by Veta
Zarp, housekeeper for the r«·
tory.
Newport Beach city coun-
cilmen want to recruit a wave
specialist to aid them in their fight
with the State.Department of Fish
and Game over the creation of an
artificial fishiqg reef oflthecity.
Citing an article written in the
mid-sixties In the Scientific
American, Councilman Ray
Williams suuested the city try to
hire its author, Willard Bascom.
William!, a biology instruct.or
at Rio Hondo College, said
Bascom worlts for the Southern
California Coastal Waters
Researc}l Project (SCCWRP or
"squirp"> and might be available
to help the city-gel an analysis of
the effect or the reef on the on·
shore currents.
Councilmen are fearful that the
reef, whlch is to consist or an old
Liberty ship sunk at 120 feet 1.85
miles off the Newport Pier, witl
dilturb th& c~en'-and lead to
more beach eroalon problems.
The B••COJ!l • arliale -In the
magastne ••• a general dis-
cussion ol ocean tf'aves and bow
they work under different
circurpstat\~.
Discwsslng retr•cUon or..vaves,
Bascom said "studies must take
into account surprisingly small
underwater irregularities." He
cited as an eJtample a "smell
bum,1>" 2:50 feet deep, seven miles
off Loni Beach that refracted sionn wave• causlni breaches in
the Lona B•acb Harbor
brellkwaterin 1'30aDd l93t.
Because ot the 11vere beach
erosion problem• experienced
from about 21st Street to ~
Street in $est Newport, coUb-
cllmen are fearful the ship could
<See REEF, Page At>
0..ly ........... _..
FLAME OUT --Newport Beac.h city employes Glen Stan·
dage <foreground). John Standage <background left>
and 'Ralph Van Houten (background rightJ work on
pump station where natural gas is brought to the sur-
face and burned off. Station is near recreational vehicle
storage lot on West Coast mghway.
~ Wells Plague
N~P!Jrl .Officials
Newport Beach city orflclals
would like to do sometbinJ useful
with the gas they are burning off
fromt.hreewellslnWestNewpcrt,
but so far they haven't been able
tocomeupwitha&ooddeal.
The three wells were dug last
year by petroleum consultant
George Zebal to help alleviate the
noxious gas odors ln tbe area that
et tends from the Arches bridae at
Union to Move
tos :ANO~LES (AP) -Tbe
450,000-me°'ber Weaterrl Cori· ference of Teatnaters will
estabU1h Its headquarters here
wlthln a month, a union ottlclal
said Tuesdu.
,Net.'part Boulevard to Seashore
Drive in West Newport.
In a report given city coun-
cilmen Monday, Zebal said the
three wells appaerently have
tapped the pool that bad caused
health and safety problems in the
area in the past.
City officials h!ld hoped to be
· able to sell off the natural cas
fromthetbreewellst~anelahbor
Jng oU company, Ge~ral Crude.
But Zebal said the Pl'Oj~t has
proved too cosUy. ije nqted the
gaa is a low grade variety clue to
the praence of lar1e amounta of
bydroten sulfide, the cilemtca.1
which hu caused the odor pro-
blems.
The gas, which fa also explosive
under cert.in condiuona. bas
1eeped out I~ f variety of
nelgbborh()od1 from Balboa
Coves to Channel Place and city
offlciala under:toc* the project to
re41tce the city's Uablllty from
hitardlcausedbytbeg~.
Zebl1 aald Lba.t r•an.a to pump the au tO Genera Crude, which
woi&ld'.cott about '70,000, were
dropped wben tbe volume
~:rrom 212,000 cubic feet• etiy]o~}MIOcabkfeetiday.
He lllCI Oiit 1inlal a UM could
---,.. the .... lb• ctty will ~ lei bum i& otf as lt ls
~totbHUlface.
"Inappropriate tears and cry-•
Ing I remember as part ot the
manifested behavfor," Dr. Gott·
lieb told a Senate health sub-
committee.
Dr. Gottlieb did not name the
foreign country involved nor did
he identify the drug suspected of
causing the unusual symptoms.
According to records of the
White House transportation of·
fice, however, Nixon did not
travel in 1971 to any countries
that were considered unfriendly.
He went to the Azores to meet
with the French Presl'dent Pom·
pldou and to Bermuda for a
meeting with the British prime
minister.
Otherwise. the records showed
that Nixon left the coptinenlal
United States only for brief
weekend trips to friend Robert
Abplanalp's home in the
Bahamas and to the Virgin
Islands for a weekend stay.
CSee DRUGGED, Pa1e A2)
Trash Pact
OK'dinNB
tr CoroAa del Mar merchants
can raise the cash, NewP<>rt
Beach city councilmen wUl see to
it the city stashes their trash.
Councilmen have a1reed to
1pay for the anchoring and empty-
ing of trash cans members of the
Corona del Mar Chamber of
Commerce want to put alone
East. Coast Hlahway.
Funds currently are belnt
raised by the chamber to buy the
$107c~.
' Weather
Momin& clouds wlll bum ore yielding fair, warmer
weather throuch Thurs-
day. Lows to1111bt will be In
th• ms. ma:11 Tbt11'1<1•Y 1n
tb• mld-709.
A2 DAIL. y Plll)l • N W~netday, C•pt•mber 21. 1977
'Sin' Landa •
Her in Jail
K lJ Al.A LUMPUR,
lhJa.yata <AP) -A 40-
Yfl r old di vorrt•..-w _.. Sfln
ll'nceod to n·nt' two monlhl
in JAii for II\ 1na out or
~edlock with • 117 year
old »dt~tfonse lmllructor,
at('nrdtn.r t o r~porta
pub~~ hcrf' She ~!lid
:.he had no ulher pl1tc" tu
li\e
They said Doyab Hlntl
Uun was 1aven the sen·
lt:nce by a Mo~lem re·
b&lOUS court ui AJor State.
240 miles northwest of
Kuala Lumpur, when she
was unable lo pay an $80
ftne
Moslemb are banned
from living together out of
wedlock and Malaysian lawli permit religious or.
f1 cials to arrest those ac
cused of such conducl and
I r y them in religious
courts.
SEC Eyes
Activities
By lance
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Securities and Exchange Com·
mission said today it is in the
"early stages'' of investigating
Budget Director Bert Lance and
the National Bank of Georgia,
.but derued that it was work.in& on
a civil fraud suit in the matter.
The SEC has been inqutrinl in-
to whether Lance and the bank he
headed in 1975 and 1976 made a
complete disclosure of transac·
lions to stockholders.
It was disclosed in con-
gressional testimony and press
accounts last month that the SEC
was conducting an investigation,
but today's statement was the
first comment on the matter. The
announcement did not say what
subJects the SEC was c00$lder·
mg.
Ecol()~ ~~¢.8 . J.J.es~a~ch
UCI Coune Studiel Marine Enviro~nt
81 PIUUP llOSMAUN .... ~ .............
Men ~ 't know nouih about
lhC!lr env\ronment to aave lt, 11
Colden Wt11t Coll~a• dean who'1
atucl)ed manne cmvironmenla for
two docadea .ay1
The fuc:l 1!i, U.Y• Hayden R
WUUam11 , sclentlata haven't
learned t:nougb to know bow
chanitne the environment will
affect il, and envlronmenlalists
haven't learned enouab to know
how dolne nothinC wlll cban&e lt.
''1bere ls too much that Ls a
matter ot opinion," he s-.ys. "Wo
need to reduce thld element, 8Qd
learn as much as we can about
environmental ecology."
w1111ams. who conddertf'
himself an edvlr6hmental
ecoJogut and a "popularizer of
science... round himself years
back on the other side or "en·
vlroomentalists" over Upper
Newport Bay.
wnen at that Ume it was sug-
gested by some-Williams
among them-that Upper
. Newport B•y 11:\0llld be dNclied,
en any ecoto,lata apjrUf de-
no\.tocod th• plan, wuu.._ t"e· ralls
Part of the trouble WU that the
lrvlne Company wanted to use
the dredged material to build up
lsland IU"eas for more homes
But another part or the trouble,
Williams sa\d, was the uocom·
promising attitude ot some en·
vironmentalists not to change the
landscape by artificial means, no
matter what.
What some dldA'\ understand aLtb~time, ,-4ccording to
Wl01a • wa+ ti) the bay had 81r~ady en arti~ially altered,
filled with silt carried into it by
runoff waters from development
· · OJ?.hi.jtber gll)U~ , '. '
·In tf>e Februar)', 1969.
rainstorm aJone. be said nineJeet
oJ slit was washed into the ay.
burying beds of eel grass off Lit-
tle Balboa lslaod.
Natural tidal actjon wasn't suf-
ficient to remove the muck which
also buried the shells and hard
surtaces upon which marine or-
11ni8rr11 •tl-cb themselves.
, WlthOJ.lt •m•n '11 arli'1clat re·
moval by dredging, Williams
argued, the upper bay eventually
would be a dead bay.
Time proved him right. Today
state Fi.ab and Game authorities
:ire making plans t.o dred&e the
upper bay to reclaim the dyin1
marshland.
Williams urges continuing en-
vironmental research as a hedge
against the possibility of time
running out while scientists and
envirobmentalfsts debate the ef.
feels of man'r. influence on lbe
planet.
"We need to train researchers
as rapidly as we can to find out
what the requirements for a
healthy environment are." he
said.
As part o( bis own.effort to in
l erut people in research.
Williams is teaching a UC Irvine
Extension course on tbe marine
environment of Southern
California.
And, i( you're looking for a
particular viewpoint about which
......, .......... ._
'TOO MUCH OPINION'
Golden West'• Wllllan\9
group -developers or environ·
mentalists is doing what to the
land. his isn't t.he course for _you.
"There is nothing evil, devtous.
or diabolical about either
group.'' Williams said.
McMillan Deci,sion Delayed
Orange County supervisor1
have put ore until next week an~
decision on what to do with the
county's all but abandoned
cent.er for troubled youngsten.
Before prolonging their de-
li b er a ti o ns over McMillan
Reception Center in Santa Ana.
s upervisors were told its clienl-
leas operation is no longer cost,..
ing $25,000 a week.
All but four of the 33 probation
workers who were staUoned al
McMillan when Juvenile Court
Judge Raymond Vincent two
weeks a_,to said no more Juveniles
would be sent there have been aa-
signed other duties, Chief Proba·
lion Officer Margaret Grier said.
375Attead
JUVENILE JUSTICE
19n
Judge Vincent. who was on
vacation, sent wonl to the board
that be would like to see
McMillan converted to a locked
detention cent.er for juveniles
serving short fixed terms.
But County Administrative Of-
fl c er Robert Thomas told
supervisors be favors closing
McMillan down.
Such a move would save the
S25,000 a week it costs to operate
McMlllan and free the probation
workers who would be assigned
there to reduce overtime and ex.
tra help costs at the county's
other JUvenilc institutions,
Thomas suggested.
Should JuvenHe Hall become
overcrowded because of the short
lermers, the overload can be dis·
bursed through other youth
facilities, Thomassaid.
Supervisors ended somewhere
near the middle or the issue when
they decided to wait for Judge
Vincent's return before deciding
McMillan's fate.
At the outset of 1977. McMillan
was des1&nated Orange County's
reception center for troubled
youths who, according lo state
law. could no longer be locked up
with juveniles who have com-
mitted criminal orrenses.
However, without locks on the
doors and with probation
workers helpless t.o stop them.
youngsters 1enl lo McMillan
were free to leave at any time
they chose.
Judge Vincent for a while
checked tbe ensuing tash of
runaways with a court order that
those who flee could be placed in
Juvenile HaU .
When an appellate court struck
down that order, the youthful
flights from McMillan began
again.
~nd when the state legislature
two weeks ago failed to amend
the state's new juvenlle justice
reguJation.o;, Judge Vincent said
non-crimfnal juvenile offenders
would no longer be sent to
McMillan.
That decision left McMillan
without a clientele and a fllaff of
33 persons with PO juveniles to
serve.
Black's.
Nudity
Rejected
SAN DIEGO (AP) Sup
porters of the nation's only
municipally sanctioned nude
beach say they will try to get the
City Council lo reject the ¥1•·
parent decision by voters to
make swimsuits mandatory.
The WK>lficial tally on a prop-
os i tlon banning nudity at
Black's Beach was 86,113 votes
for the proposiUon and 70,884 for
conlin\lln• the "swimsuit op·
tional" rule passed by tbe council
ln 1974.
ll i& up to the council lo declde
whelh~ to go aloog with the ma
Jority on tbe vlote. and expecta
lions f.fe thal it will.
But supporters or nudity on the
900-foct beacb began tal.ldog of a
campaign to influence the coun-
cil members even while the votes
were bemg counted..
''It's not a clea.r·cut order to
the council," said one supporter.
More than lS0,000 voters, about.
44 percent Qf those eligible ...
showed up Tuesday to pass on lhe
proposition and to vote in a coun·
cil election.
The turnout was almost 10 per-
cent above what had been ex-
pected.
The beach is nestled between
rock outcroppinea below UC San
Diego and the Salk Institute.
lneteasing "5.C! 01 the beach
with ~.ooo or more bathers on a
warm weekend day made many
believe San Dle1ans would vole
t.oke.pU .•
F,....PogeAJ
GLAVAS •••
fective. I understand the faults
and well as the vtitures of the
system,"hesaid.
Glavas said he bas not set a
deadline for reaching bis de·
cislon, although be noted he would
continue to eonsider the idea for
the nextf ew weeks. The SEC said. "lo response to
inqwries, the commiuioo aald
.today it was in the early ataga u(
an investigation of certa.in mat-
ters involving the National Bank
of Georgia, and others but that no
c:onclusions had been re~ as
1o·wbat action, U bJ. sblllltll4 be
Wilson Affiliates
Seek NO :·~i.Qg~ Pllrk Me~ure Defended . ~-
I taken.u
,F,_. Plllfle AJ
'~IJ~ rt 1 f • .primanly in West Newport and
on the Peninsula.
Councilman Lucille Kuehn.
noting that she bas worked on the
UCI campus for the past. eilht
years, said she was sympathetic
toward the problems of "com-
m unicatioo between town and
sown." but told Ai.Mlie ahe op-
posed bis Idea because ''it
. doesn't help to get the hackles or
the community up.'•
Cowicilman Trudi Roters sug-
gested that orientation week ac·
livities be confined to the .lJCI ·
cam PUS.
Fro. PageAJ
.REEF •..
BJMICllAEL PASKEVICB °' ... .,.., .........
P=cben ~student& from PJem...,,. Sdlool
in Cost.a turned out In force
Tuesday night to tell a acbool dis-
trict-appobrted ad'riaory commit·
tee they don't want the aebool
converted into a contlnoaUon
high sc:bool.
Tbe public hffrinf was the
flnt or three scheduled by the
committee wltb parents at three
ea.ta lltsa el9mentar7 ICboola
ing consldered -tM future atte o1 llcNally mg11 SC!hool. Other
potential alt.es are WbitUer and
Moote Visla Schools.
to make way for the redevelop-
ment o( downtown Costa Mesa.
The ~t ad~g .corJ1mil· ~was a re-com·
menda the school board re-
g a rd lug 1th~ ,JW.Ure home of
McNally. . 4 uwe have been studying 12
sites with the ldea that McNally
will be put e!Nwhere, ''said com-
mittee member Ann Beaupre.
.. But we may keep it there, utllii-
Jng the north three acres," she
added. I
FroaPageAJ
"We're here to listen to your
concerns and vie-.n, •• said com· DRUGGED. mtttee Chairman BUI Bandrtch, • ··so IM it all bang out ...
The o"erflow ot about 37S peo-Gottlieb refused to answer
pie politely, but empbaUcally queations as be left \he bearing, complied. saying, "I'm not going to talk
Nore than 30 speakets ap-.abo11t anything t.o anybody now."
peared before the 11-member He also did not identify those
create a similar, but more committee, tellin1 them that the persons be •aid asked the CIA to
devutatingproblem, placement ol McNally students cbed outi the possible i.e or
While seeking Bucom's ad-al Wilson School, 801 Wilson St.. drugs but said they "wanted us to
vice, councilmen are atm trying would be a mistake. help determine and review if that
to gettbeI>epartmentof Filband Parents don't want their stu-miabtbavehappened."
Game to supply them with the in-dents bused or forced to walk Dr. Gottlieb made the dls-
, formation that led to granting a across busy Victoria Street to closure as an add1tion to *1iUen
d.eclaration of ne1aUve environ-another school. tesUmony. which centers around
mentalhGpacttotheprojeet.. A group or pi c ketl n c ttaeCIA•sown dnlguperlme11ta· ·
Jnspiteoftheclaims byf1.1hand youngsters held signs ur&lq the lloa , program '°"Mr a 21-7ear '
liarne spokesmen, city Marine committee to "Keep Wilson perlochtartJni in the early UlliOI.
fJU'ector Dave Harshbarger said Elementary," and "Save our GoWieb also aaJd that it was
the project will need a permit Playground.•· bia unde~I that lo most
from the ArQ>y Corps ot tc.~·Meu ~ Dlstrlct cases forel&n lnteWaence qeots
Engtneers. off~ last year cloeed two used drup to steal documents
But Harshbarger ·qotec1 that sch~ '(Harper and Balearic) from American ~ He d1d
corpe oftlcl.als and flab and'came bee: we. of decUnln& 'district not say tb.la wutlle cae bl the al-
offtttal8 1ay they'are ee>e*ceCI enroll.meat. OMdll» '11 more ·'lea~~ oC memlM!n ot t.be~wlll pose~fOI ~ooldolln1• ate unupldable. thir 1'1100 ~ party. He
west Newport .: .... Jd llldlt:Jon, Uaedlftttef llaeek· ga"e no reu~. for that alle1ed
t.IMt llMeet with Dr\ J&-Ii tM.-wa eon. iqirc~. maii el·tbe Se.-.' · ~ • McNally .. Gbtdieb •• • c~ dw'te Oce~aph.Ylnt"•'IQl11. .. • ~ewport • ·ot ll\eCL\'• t.., 6t ~ ~r-
•r -· tna dnlO la the ~·year i*iod
o«AH66'aw • .. ~ ,. . ·J.t~tl9 be told belfmlqlnaboutlt52. .. : ~. ' 1 ... .. .. • ·'": ... ': , • ... DAILY PllOT
Or. Gehe Atherton, the prime
mover behind Newport Beach's
controvenlial parkland law de·
fended the measure Monday,
telling city councilmen it ls not a!>
<X>stly as city omciala claim.
Atherton told councHmen the
$286.189 figure contained in a cily
staff report on the median per
acre cost of parkland in the city
was in error because clly staff
members included Peninsula
Park al the root or lhe Balboa
Pier.
''That. is not. a neighborhood
park," he .declared. Atherton sajd if the park were removed
·rrom the list of 1S parks int.he ci-
ty the median per acre figure
would drop to ~;000.
The tnedlan per atre cost or
parks is used to calculate rees
paid by devel~n of prqjects of
le6s than Souniu.
Councilmen were shocked laal
week when they we" tOld a pro·
posed ltvep unit condominium on
the Balboa Peninaula faces a
park fee or $22,000.
The parkland meaaure was
enacted last May by councilmen
after Atherton led a petition cam·
paign that had gathered enough
signatures to put the measureonra
ballot. •
The law now requires de-
velopers of large projects to
dedicate five acres o( parkland
ror every 1,000 new residents liv-
ing in their development.
The law al.so says that. for any
project between four and 50
units,* fee mu.st be paid instead of
giving land. The fee ls based on a
formula using the median per
acre park price.
City staff member David
Dmobowski. who calculated the
$286,189 figure, told councilmen
that even removal of the Balboa
Pier park would not substantially
lower the med1an naure.
He explained that a per acre
cost was obt.ained for each ol the
15 neighborhood parks. They
were listed in order ranging from
highest to lowest.
The median. be explained ~
not the average or all the (igures.
Jt.is the figure that is in the mid·
die oCthe list.
"In of(f er to lower the fieurt," • I
Dmohows1d said. "we would
have lo take a\l parks in the
coastal zone off the list.,. He in·
eluded West Newport Park,
Matinapark and Channel Place
park in the list of coastal aru
parks, and added their removal
would only drop the figure to
$212,000.
City Attorney DennJs O'Neil
told councilmen that even if they
wanted to, they cannot alter the
law unless they put ft to a vote of
the people first.
I Atbe.rtoo suggested the city
drop lls excise building tax.
which is levied at 20 cents a
square foot on all new buildings
to r~ funds for parks, libraries
and fire stations.
But that idea was opposed by
Councilman Paul Ryckoff who
noted tbat the libraries and fire
~lions would su(1er if the tax
were drop~d.
----.
Robert N. Weed/Publisher Thomas Keevll/Edltor
Oran Editorial Page ........................................................... O.rbara Krtlblth/Edltorlal P~ Editor • • .. W9dnetday, September 21 . 1tn
Park Fees to Hit
Small Developers
Las1 $pllng the NewPQrt Beach city council opted to Nve
the caty aome money and adopt the •~•tied Atherton
par1d~lcatlon 1n1uauve. rather than wait to put the
meesu.-on the ballot where n eeemed obvious It would pasa.
The Dally Piiot conourred.
Last week the cost of that parkland program 1ur1aced
and it was Shocking -shocking enough for a reappraisal of
our earlier views.
Based on figures provided In a formula contained In the
Atherton measure, It It clear now that small developers are
going to be paying staggering park fees for residential
projects of more than four but fewer than 50 units.
One example given was a proposed seven-condominium
development on the Peninsula. There. the developer will pay
about $22,000 in parfc fees. That works out to $3,143 to be
• added to the price of each unit.
Big developers don't face the same kind of cash expense.
·Their cost will be in parkland to be given to the city.
The $3,000-plus park fee calculated for each unit strikes
us as unreasonably high, but the council cannot adjust 1t
without putting the change on the ballot.
We should have recalled from history that ballot
' measures drawn by people with a narrow zeal for a particular
• cause almost always are technically deficient, lack careful re-
search and evaluation, and cause needless mischief, however
pure the motives. .
Adopting such measures without subjecting them to long
and revealing prior public debate usually turns out to be cost-
ly. Remember the QDastal commissions?
t ·unnecessary Fears
Neighborhood sentiments already have been aroused
against the Newport-Mesa School District's tentative plan to
close one of three elementary schools In Costa Mesa and use
the site for relocation of McNally High School.
A citizens' advisory committee appointed by the district is
now in the process of staging9ublic hearings to receive com-
ment from parents at Wiison, Monte Vistjl and Whittler
schools.
While parents are justified In their high regard for the
value of their walk-in neighborhood elementary schools.
district officials say declining enrollment and reduced
finances mean cutbacks are Imminent.
However, a key Issue concerns the image of the McNally
continuation high school and Its 300 students.
Continuation students too often are thoughtlessly
stereotyped as misfits or delinquents when in fact many
choose McNaUy as a productive alternative to regular high
schools. The school's contributions should not be under-
played.
Learning more about the school's program would do
much to reduce fears and misconceptions about McNally.
If you're one of those bothered about what a continuation
school does, how it operates and whom It attracts, McNally
principal Jack Coleman has quite a story to tell. And he'll tell
you about It or arrange a visit to the campus at 1901 Newport
. Boulevard, if you call him at 556-3570.
Expensive Debate
The three-year dispute between the city of Newport
Beach and federal officials over the potential hazard posed by
flooding appears flnally to be over.
The city apparently has won some major concessions
from the Department of Housing and Urban Development'!\
Federal Insurance Administration. Federal officials sa'/
they're willing t.o go along with the city and exempt all but
Newport Shores and Balboa Island from the mandatory flood
• insurance program.
They say they will also waive the requirement that resi-
dents of these two neighborhoods raise the ground floors of
their homes above the water level anticipated In a 1 ()()..year
storm.
While it is reassuring that city officials have been able to
• talk some sense Into the federal agency. the fact that the dl9-~ pute arose at all doesn't speak well for the people from HUD.
, It would be ltnposslble to estimate how much city 1taff
time went into fighting the absurd conclusions contained In
~ the report which launched the case, but city taxpayers have
• had to foot the blll-including a $5,000 engineering study
t and a couple of trips to Washington, D.C.-while the
problems were worked out.
l •
Opinions exprested In the apace above are those of the Dally Piiot.
Other views expressed on thia page are those of their authors and
artlats. Reader comment It Invited. Address Th• Dally Piiot.
P.O. Box 1560, Costa JAeu. CA 92628. Phone (714) M2-4321.
Boyd /The Fly
ByL.M.BOYD
Wasn't until tbe apace
acientists undertook their
earlie.st studies to land a man
on the moon that they found
• ou.t how rues lleht on ceJttno.
Prom feet tlrat ta bow. Speed
' phot.op-aphy proved tha\..-The
1 fly zooms upward •t about lt •
tncbel per second. At a bod1'• l l nsth aW&)', it ext.nda all
Je11 out. When it.I front lees 1 toucb down (touch up?),. tt
' awinp it• body. and plan ta its' back Jep. wlnlinl to hep bal~ Alreatfyrmenuonea tt always takea off
b&dwards.
The Bloody Mary was
named after M•ry Tudor,
who lost her head. Lot of
girls, who've drunk them,
ba•e done that, in a manner
ors~.
, Q. "&t WU the point of
putting iJaa• bottoms tn the
ancient 'En1Ueh beer
tan.kardl7°
A. Soloe al the old lnDI ~
pretty rowdy. And d&l\lerous,
too. Men of · means therein
were scared to ta1-e their
heavy beer mu1a bOttoma up
for fe•r of 1etttna their tbroatl cut. So some en·
~rlalng craflamao in·
uced the SJ.,.bottomed
tankaid to ~mlt drinken aomethinl of 'a Ylw Of the roem .while they dra&ned their
dJipltl. Or'° 1oea the tale.
Jack Andenon •
Soviet Leaders Showing Age
W AStnNGTON -Age ia slow·
ly. inexorably overta.klne the old
revolutionaries who rule the Sov-
iet Union. ln a few years, they
will be completely replaced in
the Kremlin by a new set of
leaders.
This is giving U.S. strategists
\he flutters as they try to an.
ticipate whom
the new
leaders will
be and how
their views
will affect
world affairs.
No one bas
enough solid
information
to judge
whether the
moderates or hardheads will
come to power.
The real political rower in the
Soviet Union is concentrated in
the Politburo, the policymaking
arm of the Communist party.
There are 14 full members, but
only six really count: Leonid
Brezhnev, Yuriy Andropov, An·
drei Gromyko, Andrei Kirilenko,
Aleksei Kosygin and Mikhail
Suslov
December. has bad a strenuous
year. But last June, he showed
signs of severe fatigue and db·
orientation during a three-day
visit in France. He was, say
American observers, "very,
very tired." But be returned to
Moscow, disappeared for a two-
week rest, and emerged with re--
newed energy.
Aleksei Kosygin, now 73 years
old, ts a sturdy Slav with few
health problems. For years. U.S.
analysts atudled every new pie·
ture of him in an effort to de·
termine whether a dlme·siied
mole on hia left cheek showed
signs of skin cancer. ApparenUy
tired or the rumors that he was .
affiicted with the disease, he dis·
appeared for nearly three
months last fall and reappeared
with~ mole removed.
During Kosygin's absence, the
diplomatic gossip mill carried
the tale that he bad suffered a
heart attack. American officials,
however, give the story little
credence. They note that he still
goes on lengthy fishing expedi·
tlons and ar~uous hlkes with
President. Urho Kekkonen of
Finland.
SINCE 1913, it has been
rumored that Mikhail Suslov, the
party's ideological high priest,
has tuberculosis. For a man who
will be 75 in November, he ap-
pears to be holding up under the
burden pretty well. Suslov.
nevertheless, is succumbing to
advancing years and is visibly
slowinl down. He is the la.st or
the romantic revolut\onarles,
say otft-sources; when he goes.
there will be no one around "who
can interpret the faith like he
can."
Andrei Kirilenko is the Polit·
buro's chief of industry. If
something should happen to~
Bredtnev, Kirilenko is the man
most likely to step into the big
shoes. But Kirilenko, already '11,
would probably hold the job for
only a short period. He ls con-
sidered a bard worker and suf-
fers no known health problems.
Also in &ood health is Foreign
Minister Andrei Gromyko, 68. He
was out of alght for a period dur·
ing thia pQt winter, and rumors
circulated that he bad been
stricken with a heart attack. Just
as the gos.sip reached ita peak, he
reappeared. It is now believed be
was merely down with the nu.
THE REMAINING memJ'>er of the Big Six, secret police chief
Yuriy Andropov, 63, also was
rumored to have a heart condi·
lion. But he, too, was apparently
sick with the nu.
Of the remaininf minor mem-
bers of the Politburo, only '18·
year-old Arvid Pelshe ls thought
lo be knocking at death's door.
U.S. analysts through him nearly
gone in 1971, when his officiaJ
photograph depicted him as
positively cadaverous. But. he
bounced back, appearing in a
subsequent photo cheerfully at·
tired in a pink shirt and Glen
Plaid jacket -avant earde ap-
'pa rel for the stodgy Soviet
warhorses.
THE AVERAGE age of the fl411 l..llaJlJ.V Politburo is 661h; but the average IU''"ll Yl GREAT FOREIGN 'POLICY
AClllEVEM.ENTS age of the Big Six Is 70. Accord·
mg to our sources, none of Uie
Kremlin patriarchs are
threatened with "identifiable,
life.threatening conditions." But
several are showing signs of ad·
vancing age. They tire easily,
and a sUght case or the nu can
keep them in bed for weeks.
Leonid Brezhnev, the Grand
Sachem of the Communlst party,
is plagued with c1rculator,y
problems and may even haveauT-
fered a stroke. He occasionally
slu rs his words and has difficulty
walking. He is a bad air traveler
and doesn't adjust easily to jet
Jag.
ln the old days, he used to
smoke and guzzle vodka heavily.
but he has now sworn off
cigarettes and cut back on his
alcohol intake. He also has •
painful dental problem, which
may be the result of his former
smoking habit. More likely. It
stems from a distorition of the
}aw which has bothered him
since he was a young man.
Brezhnev, who will be 71 in
Mailbox
Hf:KEPT
f>#TJ'{ 'lt>UNG
m:>M. !NS\JLTlNG
A:NYBOP'i FOR
• THE'ENT1~
MONTH CF
AIJGUST.
or
PRESIDENT
CART.ER.
..
HE~VSOVT
OF WAA. ..•
W !TH OU)'( JJ.l-1'5 ... {-..)
'Health Nuts' lnvftde His Bed and Board
Tolhe Editor:
The health nuts have never
made me mad before, but now
they've done it. They have pre-
v ~ously aggravated me when
they tried to make me feel guilty
for eating something that tastes
good instead of yoeurl and
• birdseed.
But recently l went on a trip to
Medford. Ore1on: After driving
for 18 hours, I tound a motel with
a Ja~ge neon sign saying,
"Reasonable Rates." This won
my heart until I paid the $22
•'Reasonable Rate" for one
night.
WHEN I hit the bay, it bit back.
That bed wasn't just firm, it was
hard. After tumbling abd tossing
until 4 o'clock in the morning, I
decided that I wasn't tired
enough so I went walking arQund
tbe neighborhood. All of the doss
barked at me and lucJcily the
police patrol dldn 't happen along
and arrest me. I ataf gered back
to bed and 1 believe that I dozed
· oft once beforeda7break.
, On examination~ next day,
-we fo~nd a five·elgbtbs inch
pleceotplywood bel'feen the box •
springs and mattress. Wasn't
that thoughtful of tbein to think of
my back problem•? Or eould
they have doM it to mu• tht bed
so uncomfortable as to cauit the
traveler to rise early 81Jd 1et out
so the room could be re·r-.d?
These health nut.a bave eone
too far ,when they eo to lettini in-
to my bed. I feel that th~ bed that
(a healthy is the bed that )'OU can
sleep on. Food is not nourtahl.ns
unlesa you can eat it wttboui.1ot-
Un1 ulcel'S.
You Ilea.1th nuts eat birdseed
and aleep on a board It JOU '4flnl
to. but bull di
JAMES VI. BOLDING
federal level is required-a
person who has the ear or the
President and lbe r espect or
Congress.
U exceUence is what we seek
for our children in terms of what •
education can do to help each
child become as fine a human be·
ing-asour love and resources can
provide, then we must a have a
separate Department of Educa·
tion.
SONDRASCOIT
.... ie.111-.
To the F.ditor:
I went to the budget bearings or
tbe Board of Supervisors to pro-
test the funding of the Com·
mission on the Status of Women.
CSOW is a waste of taxpayers•
money; it overlaps what is done
by other agencies and, for me, it.
is counter·productive as its
women are lobbying for ERA.
wbiCh I oppo1e. ne l'oom was filled with pro-f amlly taxpayers wbo opposed.
the funding . A CSOW
apokeewomen tlied to JusUfy the
commiuion'a need f0r our tex
money on the eround.I that lt did
rape counselln1 and helped to
impleroent TlUe IX (UNISEX) in
tb• aehooll.
W& ALREADY have• county
ra~ ag~y and. the eicboola are~
by law, tmpJemenUaJ TiUe IX
themM)veiJ.
The 9UPWvltor'I VGted 3-2 to
etve CSOW beai-Ji t30,000 of our
tax money, but uked·°'9m to ao
bome•and dNam up "me MW
1oals llnce the ont1 they bad
wen ~l>Wil dont.
\& "'::r to be.,._. to set ::i=n1:z: own projeqt Dd I will.be.._, to
10 hoale bcl tbliak •P ·~tolsle
1oa1t. -:fll:tM.....,t XO BQODANOVICH ,..
where one can usually drive from
south to north ends of town
wi\houthardly a stop.
Sure, it takes a lot of calculating
to set the signal clocks properly.
but it is a cinch with the aid of
computers. It would be worth
while alone for the frazzled
nerves it would save.
FRANK KLOCK
Bftlell Aeeeu
To the Editor:
l have just been reading the
editorial tl18t appeared in the
Sept. 14 edition of the Orange
Coast Daily Pilot under the bead·
ing, .. Beach Acceas Rule Won't
End Debate ... '
It. ls truly revealllll to note the
expertise of your editorial desk
in being able to twist· the facts
and misrepresent the problem as
lt. exists on Buena Vista Blvd.
Through skillful wordlnc, the
editorial gives the impression
that the public ta being kept from
the beaches.
May I quote an excerpt fl"Om
your editorial: "Along Buena
Vista lawns aod tardens planted
around patiol built on the public
beach remaiJ1 ln place." There
are NO public beaches Oil Buena
Vista -all of the beacbes are
private p'l'Operty on which the
homeownen pay taxes each
year. . ..
beautiful street in the entire
Newport Beach area and enjoyed
by thousands oC people
throughout the year.
Again, may l remind you that
by so doing the above, no one is
keeping the public from access to
the beaches because all the
beaches on Buena Vista are
private.
To quote your editorial again:
.. Obviously the scenic landacap·
ing rat.es higher than the
fences."
W.B.J'AGER
t.
) • '
r. ...
~
ID· •• 11e
led
~ lef
ert tie
jln
,er
iii. ~ v.
as& Uo ot ato ut
lla· tten
~ ear ,..
ti!
pots
)
SF Offers Leukemia Fatal
Killing Little Leaguer
Reward 'Most Happy'
SAN F RA N CI SCO
(/\Pl Th«' City or S•n
t•ran<'1a('O l!I offenn1 a
$100.000 rt'ward for In
formauon lctdln1 to the
u rest and conviction of
three gunmen who kllled
"''~people and wounded
11 othen. at a Ch\natown
re:stourant M ayor G.:orge
~1 o~con~ announced the
reward at a nt'WS con· fen~nce Tuesday after
From AP Dlal)atcbu
atd1ud Wade HeJm1&etler wu voted "most in·
spir•Uonal player ot 1977" by the olhtr 12-year·olds
on has Llttle LeMgue bueball team tbla summer ln
El CaJon
They dldn 't know he was dyln1 of leukemla. Not
even RJchard knew it, but h~ wu tht happy IUY on
the team. the one who made the othera feel aood.
"I never told him he waa dyln1," said hla
father. Jay Helmstetler. "l was goln1 to tell him
1after one lu t baseball season.·•
But Richard died in a hospital Friday. The
runeral was today.
( Sta le ) The j udge wbo presi~ed over tbe "Watergate L _ West" trial was assigned as judge in the third
m urder trial o! form er Charles Ma.uon follower consultmg \\Ith hom1c1de Leslie Van Houten. •
tn vest1gators who said van Houten, 28, was ordered to appear in Judge
they have "certam sus-Gordon Ringer 's court Oct. 20 for setting of a trial
peels" '" the Sept. 4 dale. She as char ged with murder and conspiracy in
::.h oollngi. bul "not t heAug.10,J969 slayingofLeno andRosemaryL1· enough to make a n a r-Blanca and with con-
rcst." -----------.] Offacials said it w<1s spiracy in the slaying the (
the largc::.t. reward of-previous night or actress PEOPl..E
fe red 10 the city 's hu,. Sharon Tate a nd four other:.. ---------
tory · Ringer was assigned
No E.rten•lon more than fou r years ago to preside over the trial of
FRONTERA CAP)
E mily llarris, convicted
of kidnaping and robbery
m a 1975 shootout while
she was a fugitive with
Patricia Hearst, will not
have her 11 -year sen -
tcn<'C extended.
T h e Co m mun i t y
Helease Board at the
Caltforn1a Institute for
Women. whe r e Mri.
H arris 1s b eing held.
made the decision a t CJ
heann~ Tuesday. The
action makes Mrs
Harris eligihlc for parole
on April 20, 1980.
.lob Fair Succe••
f'' ~EGUNDO CAP>
Mnr< ,han 500 former Bl
workers from Ho<'kwell
International turned out
at a Job Fair at the com ·
pany's plant her e lo
meet with reprcsen
\ tativcs from about 175
firms
Rockwel l . w hic h
sponsored u s imilar JOb·
hunt s ix weeks ago.
hoped the success or that
c>ne would carry over in-
to Tuesday's event. A
spokesman said more
than 000 persons found
jobs as a result of the
first J ob Fair. The
a erospace company is
sponsoring the program
m an effort to help its
laid-off employes find
work.
Flood B eav11
R EDDING CAP >
The heaviest September
storm on record here has
flooded several homes
and two shoppjng malls
The National Weather
Service said Tuesday the
four-day rain total was
6.8 inches, the highest ror
the first three weeks or
September in 100 years
of recordkeeping.
Plat1 Olca,,ed
LONG BEACH CAP> -
A standby plan for com-
pulsory water conserva-
tion was approved by
the Long Be ach Cit y
Council, but will be used
o nl y if voluntary
measures rail, a water
department spokesman
said.
Tuesday's approval
would permit the depart·
ment to ent6rce a man-
datory 10 percent reduc-
tion by its 84 ,000
customers should volun·
tary efforts fail.
four White House aides accused of breaking Into the
offi ce or Dr. Lewis Fielding, the psychiatrist who
treated Pentagon Papers defendant Daniel
E ll s berg •
Singer Freda Payne gctve birth to a boy,
Gregory Joel Abbott Jr., at Cedars-Sinai Medical
Center . a hospital spokesman said
Miss P ayne's husband is songwriter Gregory
Abbott.
She records for Capitol Records and has had
... cveraJ milJion-selling records, including "Band of
Gold'' and "Bring the Boys Home " • Tennessee's Gov. Ray Blanton, who vetoed the
:.tale's deaU1 penalty law. has drawn the ire of some
BLANTON
polilicans and news papers by
promising to pardon a man con·
victed of double murder who
works as a photographer for ~he
state.
The focus of the controversy
is Roger Humphreys, 30, son or
the Democrat ic gover nor 's
patronage chief in Johnson City.
Humphreys was convicted of
seeond-degrce murder for kill·
i~ his ex·wife and her lover in
1973.
Blanton says Humphreys, a trusty serving 20 to
40 years in the state prison at Nashville. has been
rehabilitated and Blanton has promised to pardon
Mm before the end of his term as governor in 1979.
Humphreys would be eligible for parole in 1984.
* Arnold Miller. president or the United Mine
Workers, was on hand for the opening night
performance in Cleveland of the
one-man play "lobn L. Lewis.
Disciple or Discontent."
Mille r, beleaguered by
wildcat strikes and internal
problems in his union, joined a
ca p acity c r o wd for th e
performance by Robert Lansing
at Cleveland's Little Theater in
Public Hall.
Miller said he was working
the mines when the fiery Lewis MtLLU
made a name as a pioneer or mining's labor move·
ment. and never had a chance to meet him.
* The will of chewing gum ma1T1ate Philip K.
Wrigley bas been admitted to probate in Los
Angeles Superior Court because of property in Los
Angeles that produces an annual income of $18.000.
The bulk of the $60.3 million estate is belng
handled in Chicago.
The senior Wrigley, who owned the Chicago
Cubs and Santa Catalina Island, died Aprll 12 at age
82. His wife, Helen. died Jwie 27 at age 75. • Leon and Bonnie Tols&.er"stirted out on a sum·
m ertime stroll around the nation's Capitol. They
ended up in a magazine photo m the m iddle of a
demonstration against the Panama Canal treaty.
··Picketing the Capitol: Trouble for the Treaty ...
saysthecaptiononpage46int.hecurrentNewaweek.
But in the middle of the photo -that white--
haired ee~leman? -it's Toistet". '15, a semiretired,
and unpolltical, real estate salesman from Lake
Placid, a small community in rural central Florida. • President Carter announced be is nomtnatint
Coretta Scott Kin' and t.hree others to join Am·
bassador Andrew J. Yoaa1ln representing the Unit·
ed States at t.he 1977 session of the United Natlons
General.Assembly.. .
Being nomtn.ted besides Yount and the widow
oflhe Rev. Martln l.utherKJ.n1, 1r., are:
-
A.eeStruek
A refugee from Bangkok _appears aw~d on
her arrival at San Francisco Inte rnational
Airport. She is a mong the first of 15,000
Indochinese. most of them Vietna mese, to
be given homes in the United States.
SWINGLINE
STAPLE GUN
Orie SQUEEZE and you 11e nailed 111
• All pvroose· lor electrrcal wlnnQ.
woodworktnQ. upt'lolslenng. and
more. much more • Heavy Duly •
Safety guard and Safety lock
Reg. 13 50
10c-MV 499
6 PIECE SIT
CORNING WARE
• Who couldn't use a little more
COmlng Ware? • Boxed for 1 gift •••
tor wedding, shower. anniverssy •
Treat )'O'Jrself •.• you des8f\19 It. •
1 ~ qt COYered 8" skillet. 1Va Qt. covered baking dish. 2 petite pans.
Blue cornflower pattern
A-9275-N
James I'. Leonard ~r., Young's deputy at the
U.N.; Re.r'-~ter L. WoUI <D·N.Y.> and Jtep.
Charles W}'wnalen, Jr. (R·Ohlo l. LOS ANGELES <AP)_;,.;.;.:;;.;....:.:;..---"-_;._~..:---.-;..~~~~~~~
Salad
Spinner/
-This city bas won a
2l,.;.year court battle for
$9.6 million in federal
funds to help pay tor a
noise buff er zone north or
Los Angeles Intern•·
tlonal Airport. •
The U.S. District Court
for tbe Diltrlct of Colum· bla ordered the Federal
A v1atJon Adminlslrallon
to reimburse the Depart·
ment of Airports tor the money it coat to con·
1truet. the buff.r IOfte. _.
Tueaday'a rullni upheld
1 federal appeala coutt
docillon that the city wu enUtl~ to the money.
What CAN YoaGet
loradlme
tbeae clayaT?·
Drier ~
. •The ldda will beg to dry the NllWf
oreenal • Spine out alt th• Wlter· In an ln1tant. • Great for utad. '~lbl-. fruit. • Elegant too..
Wedn!!day. September 2\, 19n L c;c OAIL '( PILOT At;
Refunds Law · OK
Measure Ainu at PUC Action
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A bill to
prevenl the 1tate Public UUUtlea
Commission from wlthbolding re-
funds of utility overchar1es to busi·
nesaes has been signed by the gov-
ernor.
Sen. J ohn Stull <R-Escondido),
authored the bill, crlticlzing what he
called a PUC scheme to withhold
milllons of dollars in refunds from
commercial customers.
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. signed the
measure, SB604, on Tuesday.
IT REQUIRES THE PUC to con-
tinue ordering refunds equitably
a mong all its customers, business as
well as residential.
The PUC ·'was considering bow to
dis tribute r efunds. but had no
ironclad proposal. It must be con·
s ldered moot no w," said PUC
s pokesman Oene Rale1&h.
Richard Spohn, stale consumer af·
fairs chief, had proposed using busi·
ness refunds for cneray conservation
prosrams.
Ralelgh said backers of such a pro-
posal felt businesses r aised their
prices when their rates went up. He
said they usually do not lower them
when they receive refunds.
RALEIGH SAID A "ballpar k
figure" for the amount of refunds the
PUC could consider is $500 million,
roughly half of which would have to go
to businesses.
Ot the $500 million, the PUC recent·
ly ordered Pacific Telephone Co. to
refund $1• mruton to aij classes of
customers and made a similar Pacifi c
Telephone and General Telephone or-
der invol ~ $270 million.
Terminal Talia Lag
LOS ANGELES (AP) -After mfftinl all day
to overcome a hurdle blocking plans for an Alaskan
oil terminal in Long Beach. officials of Standard Oil
of Ohio and Southern California Edison. say they're
still rar Crom reaching an agreement.
Top executives of both firms held preliminary
talks Tuesday on a polluUon tradeoff proposal in
which Sobio would pay for cleaning up emiaaions
from Edison's facilities in the harbor area.
Under the plan proposed by slate Alr Resources
Board Chairman Tom Quinn, Sob1o would be re-
quired to finance some $90 million In pollution
cleanup work al Edison to offset smog which would
be created by the oil terminal.
Al a µ<1<;t! like th1!;
yOY shOUUl bvY SPffld Saltn rtOW. even rf You don I plan lo 1><1ln1 \Jnhl
later. There·s 1ust
no way we could make this Oller unleaa Glidden cuts lls price 10 us. AND THEV OIOI
BUNN DRIP
COFFEE MAKER
• How can I get restaurant
· doffee at home? • Always with
a BUNN. Only with a BUNN. •
And ifs super f8't ••• 8 cups
1n 3 minutes • Built to lat with
copper tubing I 11talnte11
steel. • Why Bunn? Value. •
White ot Brown.
39ss
RIVAi: 3~ QUART
·cROCXPOt
• Cooks Ill dsY whlle the
cook'• away. • S-L-O·W
coolcll'IQ reduC* ~nkage.
retaJne jul<:el and nutrients
• CQsta ~ to COOlc all "-Y •
#3100
KWIKSET
DEADBOLT
• Pro t ect yo ur family! •
Pohce-tes1ed •.• as burglar proof
as a tock can be • Full 1" deadbolt
with free turning steel rod insert •
All steel laoered cylinder guard •
Two soltd steel reinforcing rings •
Solid brass keyed cyl inder
mechanism. Brass. etched n1ckle
or antique brass.
1oss
Sl(IL
CORDLESS DRILL
& SCREWDRIVER
• Use this drill anywhere ... boat • .. Camper .•• cabin ... you wrll
love the freedom It gives you!
Aeg .24.95
l&~ 1288
VE$ETABL
STIAMER
• Worth petting all steamed up! •
Keee>• In natural ftavora a
vttamlna. • A nutritional muat. •
Stalnt ••• f1111n most oots. •
188
7
s r.
6
ti s
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A
p1
ti
th c.
OJ
m
de
sa .
W( m(
da
l i I
CUI
tar
.Fa
t
21.-2
$9.4
fun nou
Lo•
t1011
I T.
Cor l
bfa
A vii
to l'4
'men 1moc atnt
·Tutt a ,.
"dee
enU
.Saddlebaek
EDIT ION
VOL. 70, NO 26-t, •SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Afternoon
N.Y. Stoeks
,
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 , 1977 TEN CENTs)
CIA Lured Barflies to LSD Party?
WASHINGTON <AP> -A former CIA psycholoalst bas told a
flabberaasted Senate subcommittee that he once planned to spray
LSD on a houseful of unsuspecting California partycoera but aave
up the idea because the unseasonably warm weather meant the win·
dows could not be closed
In frustration, another CIA agent closeted hjmsel! an the
bathroom of a house in San Francisco and sprayed himself with the
hallucinogenic drug, which was man aerosol can.
THE AUDIENCE IN THE SENATE Caucus Room exploded
with laughter Tuesday as the witness, Dr David Rhodes. told ltis
!>lOry.
·•0o I understand that three arown men flew from the East
coast to the West coa~t to recruit people at bars for a party so that
* * * * * *
they could be sprayed with LSD?" asked Sen. Edward M. KeMedY <D-Masa.)
Rhodes said that he and another agent went to San Francisco In
the late 19:508 and spent a week aetUng to know people in ban ''so
that we could s ubsequently invite them to a party."
HE SAID THEY WANTED TO learn ii LSD could be ad-
ministered in small quantities by beint aprayed in the a1r.
Rhodes said lbe amount or LSD In the spray was very smaJl, "so
small that it would take a practiced person to see any result.··
He said the CIA already knew the effect of LSD on persons who
knew they were being 1lven the substance, and that the agency
believed it important to learn what effect it bad on people who did
not know they had received LSD.
* * * I * * * I
BVT RHODES SAID THAT IT WAS discovered that the house to
be used for the party had no air conditioning, meaninJ the doors
and windows would have to be kept open.
"The weather defeated us," Rhodes said. "We decided to
scratch it at that poinl."
Rhodes said later that be does not believe the experiment ever
was repeated.
BUT HE St\ID THAT BEFORE the group of agents left Sao
Francisco they had one further mission.
"We attended the first nationaJ convention of lesbians," Rhodes
said.
He said the purpose was to test a psychological theory, but did
not elaborate.
* * * * * *
Nixon Staff Drugg1ed Overseas
Little IJsed
Detention Unit
R11ling Delayed
Orange County supervisors
have put oCC until next week any
decision on what to do with the
county ·s all but abandon ed
center for troubled youngsters .
Before prolonging their de·
l iberations over Mc Millan
Reccplion Center in Santa Ana,
supervisors were told its cLient-
less operation is no longer cost·
ing $25,000 a week.
AJI but fdur of the 33 probation
workers who were stationed at
McMillan when Juvenlle Court
Judge Raymond Vincent two
weeks ago said no more juveniles
SEC Eyes
Activities
By I.ance
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
Securities and Exchange Com·
mission said today it is in the
"early stages" or invesUgallng
Budget Director Bert Lance and
the National Bank of Georgia,
but denied that It was worklng on
a civil fraud suit in the matter.
The SEC has been inquiring in·
to whether Lance and the bank be
headed In 1975 and 1916 made a
complete disclosure or transac-
tions to stockholders.
It was disclosed in con·
gressional testimony and press
accounts last month that the SEC
was conducting an investigation,
but today's statement was the
first comment on the matter. The
anno~cement did not say what
subjects the SEC was consider-
ing .
The SEC said; "In response to
inquiries. the commission said
today it was lo the early stages of
an invesUgaUon or certain mat·
ters Jnvolvihg the National BanJc
of Georgia. and others but that no
conclusions had been reached as
to what action, if any, should be
taken.
"Press report.a concernln& a
proposed lawsuit a1atnst the j(1a.
tional Bank of Georcta .,,d )J(r.
Bert Lance are accordltlllY ln· ' correct... .
TbeSEC'a responslbWtywould
be dlacloeure of pertinent iD·
torm1tJon to atockholden.
Tbe SEC, 1f it found a violatJon,
could either reach an agreement
with the bank to end illegal prac·
Ucea or could refer the matter to
the JusUce Department. It has no
authority to ask for fines or Jail
terms.
JUVENILE JUSTICE rim 0••1 ;;;·
would be sent there have been as-
signed other duties, Chief Proba·
lion Officer Margaret Grier said.
Judge Vincent, who was on
vacation, sent word to the board
that he would like to see
McMillan converted to a locked
d etention center for juveniles
serving soort fixed terrn,s. But County Adminiltntlve Of.
ficer Robert Thomas told
supervisors he favors closing
McMUJandown.
Such a move would save the m.ooo a week It coets to operate
McMillan and free the probation
workers who would be assigned
there to reduce overtime and ex-
trai help costs at the county's
oU\er juvenile institutions,
Thomas suggested.
Should Juvenile Hall become
overcrowded because or the short
termers, the overload can be dis·
bursed through other youth
facilities, Thomas said.
SupeTVisors ended somewhere
near the middle or the issue when
they decided lo watt for Judge
Vincent's return before deciding
McMillan's fate.
At the outset of tm, McMUlan
was designated Orange County's
reception center for troubled
youths who, according to state
law, could no longer be locked up
with juvenil~s who have com·
mitted criminal offenses.
However, without locks on the
doors and with probation
worken helpless to stop them.
younasters aent to McMUlan
were free to leave at any time
theycbosa.
(See CENTER, Page A2)
82,00 in Tools
Stolen at School
Buritan who cut the cad.lock
wiUt a cutting torch to•• n entry
to ) ttore~m carried Off tools
vah.led at '2,000 from a MlalOn
VteJo •c--ool. Orah1e County
Aerifra cilficeta aalcl the UMft OC•
@!'red at the SUverado CGntlmaa·
Uoll SchOOI, 25631 Dtaeno Orlve.
MOit ot Chl..atolm iooa. .-.. be-
ln& used in the echool's auto
mechanics co~. •
Kiss Me, EtDe E'ool
When the Hardy Boys television show.
moved to· Lion CQuntry Safari, Irvine, for
CUming. tl}i$ week. •u~1t $tar AnQ~ tdckhart. whose mother June M-9tarred
with Lassie (or several years, found some
four-footed friends of her own. Perhaps
we ·u learn what secrets she's trading
with these mouslon ew~ when the show is
aired on Channel 7 in mid·October.
·chfila Son· Heard
On Drug Charge
Steven Chula. son of prominent
criminal attorney Georae Chula,
was ar.raigned Tuesday before
the U.S. Magistrate in Santa Ana
on charges of smugglin& cocaine.
Chula was f~eed following bis
court appeara~e after be Polled
a $10,000 bond.
Chula, Z7. a one-time Newport
Beach resident, surrendered
himself to Newport Beach ~lice
Tuesday morning. Narcotics in·
vesUgators had sought him since
last Thursday after he was one of
MOJ'E FURNITURE
QlJICK£Y IN AD
If you have some turnltu.re wu
want to aet rld of, don't hide lt~'4>r
roll ll away -aell It throu&h the
Daily Pilot cluslfled ads. ·
An Irvtne man foµnd out "°"' euy lt ts when be placed U$ cluslllecl:
lllde·a·bcd, llke nu, $125. s drawer ~belt. MS. end
tbl, $2.S, ron away bed
S20. XlUMllCXJC.
11 people named in a federal
grand Jury Indictment.
The indictment came after a
three-year lnveaUgaUon of an in·
ternatlonal ce><:alne smu11llng
ring allegedly responsible for
brlng\n& $7 million worth of the il·
licltdruglntothe U.S. from Peru.
All but five of the people ll&ted
in the lndJctment are residents of
Hawaii, one of the stopovers al·
legedly used in smuggling the
drug.
Along with Chula, local resi·
dents arrested in the case are Joe
and Sergio Avila, owners of the
El Ranchito restaurarita ln Costa
Mesa and Newport Beach; Joy
Marlene Chaban, 26, of 2'056 La
Ronda, El Toro. and Steven
Granat. 2.6. of Newport Beach.
Help Demanded
SPRINGFIELD, Colo. CAP> -
A farmers' caravan or tractors ls
maldn1 a two-day trip to Pueblo, co 1 o., to 111 e et t be u . s .
A&riculture Secretary and de-
JJ)and help from the federal gov-
ernment. "Tbla ain't no damned
three-ring circus. We Mean bdai-
.nes1," 18ld Derral &~so,
who has farmed near Sprinantld
ldr tine deca4a and w11 one ol
the or•anllen of the lfOUP that
call• HseU A.aier'lcan
A&riculture.
'Sin' Lamb
Her in Jail
KUALA LUMPUR .
Malaysia <A P) -A 40·
year-old djvorcee was sen·
tenced to serve two months
in jail for living out of
wedlock with a 117-year.
old self-Oefense lnstructor,
according to reports
published here. She said
she had no other place to
live.
They said Doyah Btnti
Dan was given the sen·
tence by a Moslem re·
ligious court in Ator State,
240 miles northwest of
Kuala Lumpur, when she
was unable to pay an S80
fine.
Moslems are banned
from living together out of
wedlock and Malaysian
laws permit religious o(.
ficlala to arrest th~e ac·
cused of such canduct and
try them in religious
courts.
Knowledge
0f Ecology
Called Lacking
By Pm UP BOSMA.JUN
Ot .. o.11 ............
Peculiar
Actions
Reported
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
former science chief of the CIA
told a Senate panel today be was
asked to determine if any mem·
bers of President Nixon's travel-
ing party were dragged during a
trip to an "unfriendly" foreign
country sometime in 1971.
Dr. Sidney Gottlieb, who left
the CIA in 1973, said the Presi·
dent definitely was not drugged
but that other members of hls
party. including his personal
physician, Dr. Walter Tkach. ex-
hibited peculiar symptoms. jn.
eluding outbursts of crying at in·
appropriate moments.
Describing the symptoms, Dr.
GotWeb said. "My best recall~
lion wu that lt was disoriented
and unusual in terms of the
persoo'anormal behavior.
"Inapprdpriate tears and cry. •
in~ I remember as part of the
manifested beb•vior," Dr. Gott-
lieb told a Senate health sub-
committee.
Dr. Gottlieb dJd not name the
foreign country involved nor did
he identify the drug suspected or
causing the unusual symptoms.
According to records of the
White House transportation of.
lice, however, Nixon dld not
travel ln 1971 to any countries
that were cansldered unfriendly.
He went to the Azores to meet
with the French President Pom·
pidou and to Bermuda for a
meeting with the British prime
minister.
Otherwise, the records showed
that Nixon left the continental
United States only for brtet
weekend trips to friend Robert.
Abplanatp•s home in the
Bahamas and to the Virgin
Islands for a Wei!kend atay.
Gottlieb refused to answer
questions a,s be left the bearing.
saying, "I'm not 101Dg to talk
about anythfn• to anybody now ...
He also did not ldenUfy those
persons he said asked the CIA to
check out the possible use cl
drup but sald they "wanted us to
help determine and review if that
might have happened."
Dr. Gottlieb made the dis-
closure e an addiUon to written
tesUmony which center,a around
the Cl.A •5 own drul experiment..
lion procram over a 21-year
period starting in the e•rly 1850s.
Gottlieb also s~d that it was
hit Wlderstandlng that in IDOlfl
caaes forelp inteWc..-ce aients
uted dnlp to •teal doeubMnts
<See DAUGGED. P .. e AZ> •
..
'
·~-1 ........
SIGN URGES BLACK'S BEACH BATHERS TO PUT ON THEIR CLOTHES AND GO VOTE
But San Diego Citizens Reject 'Swlmault Optional' Stretch of Sand
San Diego P oters
Nix Beach Nudity
Dall, ~llol Staff ~o
'TOO MUCH OPINION'
Golden West's Wltllama
Fro.a Page A J
STUDIES •••
island areas ro.r more hcubes.
But another part of the trouble.
Williams said, \WlS the uncom·
promising attitude of some en·
vironmentaUsts not t9 chan1e the
landscape by arllCicial means, qo
matter what. 1
What some <idh '\ unde~~
at that time: according to
Williams, was that the bay had
already been artificially altered.
filled with silt earned into it by
runoff waters from development
on higher ground.
In the February, 1969,
rainstorm alone, he said nine feet
or silt was washed into the bay,
burying beds of eel grass off Lit·
tle Balboa Island.
Natural tidal action wasn't suf-
Cicient to remove th' muck which
also buried the shells and hard
surtaces upon which marif\e or-
ganisms a\tach themselves.
Without man's artificial re·
moval by dredging, Williams
argued. the upper bay eventually
would be a dead bay.
Time proved him rieht. Today
state Fish and Game authorities
are making plans to dredge the
upper bay to reclalm the dying
marshland.
Fro• P.,,e AJ
DRUGGED. •
I
SAN DIEGO <AP l Sup·
porters or the nation's only
municipally sanctioned nude
beach say they will try to get the
City Council to reject the ap·
parent decision by voters to
make swimsuits mandatory.
The unofficial tally on a prop-
os i ti on banning nudity at
Black's Beach was 86,113 votes
for the proposition and 70,884 for
continuing the "swimsuit op-
tional" rule passed by the councU
in 1974.
It is up to the council to decide
whether to go along with the ma·
Capo Bike
Financing
Plan Approved
After J.,ore tha·n a year of
study, Orange County planners
have found a way to finance at
least part or a $21-a·f09t, 2.4-mile
bicycle trail a19:DJ tpe Cqjs\f ano
Beach shorelinls. 1 •
Tuesday supervisors approved
an agreement with CalTrans to
obtain $46,000 of the trail's
estimated $270,000 building cost.
The state grant will finance 90
percent of the construction cost
for the trail 's first 4.200 feet
between Beach Road and Doheny
Park Road.
The remaining 8, 700 feet
stretching between Beach Road
and Camino Capistrano must be
. redesigned to become eligible for
possible CalTrans financing.
county recreation plannen re-
ported.
The redesign will be under way
m the coming year while con·
struction of the first portion of
the bikeway is under way.
Supervisors last year balked at
building what they said was too
expensive a bicycle trail and
asked planners to come up with
other routes.
But they were told that por-
tions of the bikeway muat run
along the bluff side portion of
Coast Highway and require 1,230
feet d retainii.g walls to protect
both the trail and bike riders
from debris.
Supervisors then agreed to
seek state financins to help build
the trail. ·
from "MJ1erican ofllclals. He did not~ this waa tfl~case tn lttt af · • : ~ui)ervoor Thomas )\Aley bad
le« druea1"• of mem~rr of not~tbe tralJ was an tnaoortant
t.ne lXOI\ travellne P•Pit1 ~ .,. liallt iJ! what 1$ to be • blkeway
1ave no re-.on tqr tbat'J}tecd "':strelcN:ng al~ the alliorellne
occutrence.· ' t ~ ~ ~ Callf6tnla, GCWfel>'Wal1n.~a Cblrgv ~ t ... · ,
cf tb8 Clk's tesUril of Slbtd alW· · Su~ ~annot proceed
inl 4JuO 1(1 th6~Y.ar ptrfod wffh bulldinl•the roadway until
beJinninginabouU.952. •• coq•h' offlci.-h ·~~taln ~~ frois. .tbe tre,atonal
ORANORbOAsr sa Ooptal~mm}st4Qll · •'
DAILY PILOT
JOrtty on the viote, and expecta·
lions are that it will.
But supporters of nudity on the
900·foot beach began talking of a
campaign to influence the coun·
cil members even while the votes were being counted.
"It's Dot a clear·cut order to
the council, .. said one !Supporter.
More than 150,000 voters, about
44 percent of those eligible,
showed up Tuesday to pass on the
proposition and to vote in a coun-
cil election.
The turnout was almost 10 per·
cent above what had been ex·
peeled.
The beach is nestled between
rock outcroppings below UC San
Diego and the Salk Institute.
I ncreaslng use of the ~ach
with 15,000 or more bathers on a
warm weekend day made many
!lclievc San Diegans would vote
to keep it.
But this tourist city of 750,000
residents is ''fairly conservative
-a)tepublican town )Vith.many
retired people," commeztted. a
resident of the exclusive La Jolla
Farms area which overlooks
Black's Beach.
As vote'} weq,1. to the wlts, dp~e\;s Of peqpJe "it~ut swim~uits were on the beach as if
to give Black's one final fling.
lt could be weeks before the
1974 ordinance 1s repealed.
The publicity efforts of both
sides tn the final weeks of the
cu mpa1~n were almost strident.
A flyer distributed by the
"Save the Beaches Committee"
called for an end to nude bathing
in public, "not so much to pre-
vent sin, which nudity may or
may not be, but the near occasion
of sin."
Areuments were bandied
about that taxpayers might be re·
quired to pay to provide saf~ ac-
cess paths and provide lifeguard
stations and restrooms oo the
beach.
Taxpayers
Foot Bill?
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Califomla taxpayen wm have to
put up an extra $39 million a year
if special federal funding of
welfare for Indochinese refugees
ends as scheduled this month. a
s tate oflicial says. ••It was a bratncbild of
Washington, D.C., but it appears
now that the Indochinese
Refugee Assistance Program is
the stepchild of Callfcnnfa," state
Health ~ Welfare Sec~ary
Marlo Oblfido aalcl ;ru~ at a
h6wa conference..·
Hall of the 150,0QO lndoehfnese refua• ln the uDU,ed States set· tl~ Ill California, Obledo said,
and about 22,1JOQ ot ~e ln.
Calllomla are aetttol casb u -
alstance.
lVB's GW,vas
Eyes CandiJacx
Former Newport Beach police
chief 8 . James Glavas said today
he is consldetlni running agalnst
Marian Bergeaon for the
Republican nomination for the
74th Assembly District in next
spring's primary election.
The retired police chief said he
has not•made up his mind to enter
the primary, but he wlll be giving
the matter "a eood, hard look for
the next month or so."
Glavas, 65, said, "Several peo-
ple have approached me with the
idea of being a candidate.
legislature gained In his work as
an official of the California
Peace Officers' Association and
the California Chiefs of Police
Association.
''I think I understand the
legislative process and what it is
that permits a legislator to be ef·
fecUve. I understand the faults
and well as the virtures or the
system, "be said.
Glavas said he has not set a
deadline for reachinl bis de-
cision, altboutb be noted be would
continue to consider the idea for
the nexlfew weeks.
RUNNING FOR OFFICE?
Former Chief Glavas ·'Since then, I've talked to a
few people about it. I feel that the
public wants a broad range of
candidates from which to
c h oose -at least in th e
primary." The retired police chief began
his law enforcement career in
1938 with the Los Angeles Police
Department which he left ln 1961
to bead the Newport Beach de-
partment. He retired from that
post this summer 1
'Kojak' Appearance
Ordered at Trial
Glavas said pbrt of his con·
sideration involves giving up his
retirement, "which I have been
enjoying. I have no compelling
reason to become involved in
public life again, although I have
some strong feelings about what
is happening in our country."
Glavas said he thinks he has a
good understanding of the
Fro91 Page A J
FOOD •.•
"Kids really do like something
sweet,·· the rood services
supervisor said. She said that
sweet things weren't eliminated
from the menu.
But she explained that such
things as baked goods don't have
as much sugar as items sold pre·
viously. They also are made wilh
whole wheat flour apd no pre-
servatives.
Natural style potato chips are
sold only at lunch and only at the
high schools. "They are an ac·
companiment to a sandwich."
Mrs. Carter explained.
Although chips are usually re-
jected by health food advocates.
Mrs. Carter said, "Heck, they're
not all that bad. They (students l
could be doing a lot worse."
In past years, the Intermediate
and high school students also
could buy the same lunches sold
in the elemenlary s~hools. These
weren't very p()pular, Mrs
Carter said, probably because
the students had been eating the
same lunches for six years.
Now, the older students can
buy a "combo." which includes a
"big fat thick sandwich, fruit.
salad and milk, or a chef's salad.
In addition, Mrs. Carter said,
she plans to form ta committee of
students to sample and judge
new food offerings and suggest
the proper price.
New Site Sought
SEOUL, South Korea lAP> -
Tongsun Park's American
lawyer said today he had asked
the South Korean government to
allow Park to meet in a third
country with U.S. officials in·
vesligating his lobbying ac·
tiviUes in Washington.
. MIAMI (AP) -Telly Savalas.
s&anof television's "Kojak," has
been ordered to appear in court in
the murder trial or a l5·year-old
boy whose lawyer is using TV
violence for his defense.
Circuit Court Judge Paul
Bake r ordered Sa valas. a
sometime Newport Beac~ resi·
dent to be in court Monday m case
the ~ourt decides his testimony
would be relevant in the trial of
Ronald Zamora, charged with
killing an82·year·oldsociallte. He
is being tried as an adult.
Defense attorney Ellis Rubin
bas said Zamora's constant ex·
posure to TV crime a.bows such
as "KoJak." "Policewoman:·
and a TV film depicting
the Charles Manson mass
murders were responsible for
"diseasing his mind and impair·
ing his behavioral controls."
Rubin said the testimony is
necessary because ''Kojak" is
Zamora's favorite crime sbow.
Savalas could not be reached
immediately for comment.
"It was special to him
(Zamora) and he was copying
whathesaw,"said Rubin.
He said Savalas "does have
something to contribute and is
fAmiliar with the effects of TV
violence ... ''
Although he ordered Savalas to
appear in court, Baker exrressed
reservations Tuesday tha the ac·
tor could lend anything to the
trial.
F,.._PageAJ
CENTER. • •
Judge Vincent for a while
checked the ensuing rash or
runaways with a court order that
those who flee could be placed in
Juvenile Hall.
When an appellate court struck
down that order, the youthful
flights from Mc Milla n began
again.
And when the state leJdslature
two weeks ago failed to amend
the state's new juvenile justice
regulations, Judge Vincent said
non·criminal juvenile offenders
would no longer be sent to
McMillan.
That decision left McMillan
without a clientele and a staff of
33 persons with no juveniles to
serve.
.. What does M know about this
case?" Baker asked Rubin at a
pre-trial conference. "I don't
think his personal opinion is
pertinent. Has he met or ever
talked with the defendant?··
Quints Meet
Sextupkt.s
TOKYO CAP> -South Africa's
i.extuplets met Japan's quin-
tuplets today. .
The 3~-year-old South
Africans and theic' parents called
on the 1 lh-year•old Japanese
children and their parents. The
children appeared to enjoy play-
ing together with toys and dolls.
The sextuplets, who are in
Japan for a television ap·
pearance, are the chilren of Colin
Rosencowilz, 41, a Cape Town
clothing salesman, and bJs 19-
year-old wife, Susan. The quints"
parents are Yorimitsu
Yamashita, 33, a r a dio and
television reporter, and his 27-
year·old wife, Noriko.
Stuffing Due
For Giraffe?
LONDON <A> -Britons
mouri\ed today for Viet.or, the
giraffe who died for love, and the
GI as'gow museum proposed
stuffing him so it could pulbimon
displlly.
The 18-foot·lall animal did the
splits at Marwell Park Zoo
Thursday night while trying to
mate one of his three wives and
couldn't get back on bis feet.
After 125 hours reclining and
the loss of 500 of his 2,000 pounds,
he wall hoisted to his feet in a can-
vas sling Tuesday but started
gasping and died minutes after
the w6rkmcn lowered him for a
rest.
·Fair Skies Return
By The Auoclated Pnss
Fair and warmer weather was
forecast for Northern California
today after the first storm of the
season In the region brought
heavy rains.
SF Offers Leukemia Fatal
Killings Little Leaguer
Reward 'Most Happy'
SAN FRANC l :,<..:o
IAP 1 Tb~ City of 5an
fo'raneasro Ill offeinnt •
$100,000 rtv.nd for lfl
formauon lud1n1 to the
arrest and convicUon of
thr~ aunm~n who killed
h\•t: ~le and wounded
11 otheri; ul It Chinawwn
relllaurant
Ma yor Georac:
Moscone announced lhe
reward al a news con
ference Tuesday alter
[ Slate J
consult.mg walh homicide
investigators who s aid
they ha..c "certain sus-
pects" in the Sept. 4.
s h ootings but "n o t
enough to make an ar
rest."
Offictals Said ll Wal.
the largest reward of
fered in the city's his
tory.
No Ezte11•lon
FRONTERA (AP)
Emily Harris. convicted
of kidnaping and robbery
tn a 1975 s hootout while
she was a fu gitive with
Patricia Hearst, will not
have her 11-yt!ar sen
tcnce extended.
The C ommunit y
Release Board al th<:
California Institute for
Wome n, where Mrs
ll arris 1s being held.
made the decis ion al a
hearing Tuesday. The
action makes Mrs
Harris eligible for parole
on April 20, 1980.
Job F air Succe••
F' <;EGUNDO <A P J
Mor ... han 500 former Bl
workers from Rockwell
International turned out
at •• Job Fair al the com -
pany's plant her e to
meet with rcpr el>cn
' tatives from about 175
firms.
Rockwell . which
sponsored a similar job-
h unt s ix weeks ago,
hoped the success of that
one would carry over in·
to Tuesday's event. A
spokesman said more
than 600 persons found
jobs as a result of the
first J ob Fair. The
aerospace company is
sponsoring the program
in an effort to help its
laid·off employes find
work
Flood H ea vfl
REDDING (AP>
The heaviest September
storm on record here has
flooded several homes
and two shopping malls.
The National Weather
Service said Tuesday the
four-day rain total was
6.8 inches. the highest for
the first three weeks of
September in 100 years
of recordkeeping.
Plan Olcat1ed
LONG BEACH CAP>-
A standby plan for com-
pulsory water conserva-
lion was approved by
the Long Beach City
Council, but will be used
only if voluntary
measures fail, a water
department spokesman
said.
Tuesday's approval
would permit the depart-
ment lo entorce a man-
datory 10 percent reduc-
tion by its 84 ,000
customers should volun-
tary efforts fall.
From AP Dllpalcbtt
RMterd Wade Helmac.tler wu voted "most tn-
11plr11llonal player of 1977" by the other 12-year-olds
on h1.1 Little> Leaaue hHeball team thl1 summer In
El C'aJon
Thl·y dadn t know ht! w1&11 dyan& of leukemla. Not
even Rlrhnrd knew at , but he was the happy fUY on
the team, the one who made the others feel good
I n<>ver told ham he wu dylng," said his
rather, Jay HrlmsteUer. "I was goin& to tell him
after ooe last baseball season "
Rut Richard died in a hospital Friday. Th•
funeral was today
•
The 1udge who presided over the •·wateraate
West" trial was assigned as Judge in the thlrd
murder trial or former Charles Manson follower
Lei.Ue Van Houten.
Van Houten, 28, was ordered lo appear in Judge
Gordon Ringer·~ court Oct. 20 for setting of a trial
date She 1s charged with murder and conspiracy In
the /\ug 10, 1969 slaying of Leno and Rosemary La·
Blanca und with con
splrucy in the slaying the ( J
previous night of actress PEOPl~E Sharon Tate and four
otht•rs '------------
Ringt'r was assigned
mor<' than fou r years ago to preside over the trial of
four White House aides accused of breaking into the
office of Dr. Lewis Fielding, the psychiatrist who
treated Pentagon Papers defendant Daniel
Ells berg • Singer Freda Payne gave birth lo a boy,
Gr~11ory Joel Abbott Jr., at Cedars·Sinai Medical
Center. a hospital spokesman said
Miss Payne's hus band is songwriter Gregory
Abbott.
She records for Capitol Records and has had
:-.C'veral million-selling records. including "Band of
Gold" and "Bring the Boys Home " • Tennessee's Gov. Ray Blanton, who vetoed the
state's death penalty law, has drawn the ire of some
politicans and newspapers by
promising to pardon a man con-
victed of double murder who
works as a photographer for the
state.
The focus or the controversy
is Roger Humphreys, 30, son of
the Democ ratic governor's
patronage chief in Johnson City
Humphreys was convicted of
second·degree murder for klll-
eLANTON ing his ex-wife and her lover in
1973.
Blanton says Humphreys, a trusty serving 20 to
40 years in the s tate prison at Nashville, has been
rehabilitated and Blanton has promised to pardon
him before the end of his term as governor in 1979.
Humphreys would be eligible for parole in 1984.
* Arnold Miller. president of lhe United Mine
Workers, was on h and for the opening ni&ht.
performance in Cleveland of lhe
one-man play ••John L. Lewis,
Disciple of Discontent."
Miller, beleaguered by
wildcat strikes and inte rnal
problems in his union, joined a
capacity crowd for th e
performance by Robert Lansing
at Cleveland's Little Theater in
Public Hall.
Miller said he was working
ihe mines when the fiery Lewis M1u.o
made a name as a pioneer of mining's labor move-
ment, and never had a chance to meet him. • The will of chewing gum magnate Pblllp K.
Wrigley has been admitted to probate in Los
Angeles Superior Court beeause of property in Los
Angeles that produces an annual income of $18,000.
The bulk of the $60.3 million estate is being
handled in Cllicago. ,
The senior Wrigley, who owned the Chicaeo
Cubs and Santa Catalina Island, died April 12 at age
82. His wife, Helen. died June 27 at age 75. • Leon and Bonnie Tolster·started out on a sum·
mertime stroll around the nation's Capitol. They
ended up in a magazine photo in the middle of a
demonstration against the Panama Canal treaty.
··Picketing the Capitol: Trouble for lhe Treaty.··
says the caption on page 46 in lhe current Newsweek.
But in the middle or the photo -that while·
h aired gentleman? -it's Toister, 75, a semireUred,
and unpolitical, real estate salesman from Lake
Placid, a smaJl community in rural central Florida. •
PresldenL Carter announced he is nominating
Coretta ScoU King and three others to join Am·
bassador Andrew J. Yoaagtn representing the Unit·
ed States at the 1977 session of the United Nations
General Assembly.
Being nominated besidea Young and the widow
or the Rev. MartlnLutberKtac,Jr.,are:
James F. Leonard Jr., Young's deputy at the fi' ..... D~ U.N.: Rep. Leiter L. WoUf <D·N.Y.> and Rep.
Charles W. Whalen, Jr. < R-Ohlo I. LOS ANGELES CAP>_;:=.:;:..:.=:....:..:..:~:.=.:.::.:.:.:..:..:..:..~...:..;.;.,;..;_~~~~~~-
-This city has won a
2'h-year court battle for
$9.6 million In federal
fundl to help pay for a
nolae buffer zone north of
Loa Angeles lnterna~
'tional Airporf.;
1 Tbe U.S. Dtatrict Court
for the ~trict of Colum-
bia ordered the Federal
A via lion Administration
to reimburse the Depart-
·ment of Airport.a for the
money ll coat to eon·
struet the buff er ione.
TUelday'a ru11n1 upheld
a federal •Ppeala court
•declalon that the clty-wu
ent.lUed to the mOIM)'.
t
What CAN YouGet
loradime
these daJ'• TT
ALL YOUR
FAVORl ifE
A we Struck ...............
A refugee from Ban~kok appear!) awed on
her arrival at San Francisco International
Airport. She is among the first of 15,000
Indochinese. most or them V1 etname~e . to
he given homes in the United States.
SWINGLINE
STAPLE GUN
One SQUEEZE and you·ve nailed It•
• All purpose: tor electrical wmng.
woodworking. upholstering. and
more. much more • Heavy Duty •
Safety guard and Safety lock.
Reg 13 50
?Oun~. 499
6 PIECE SET
CORNING WARE
• Who couldn't use a little more
Coming Ware? • Boxed for a gift •••
for wedding, shower. anniversary •
Treat yo\.lrself ••• YoU d"91'Ve It. • 1~ Qt. covered 8'" sl<illet, 1~ Qt.
covered baking dish. 2 petite pans.
Bil.le cornflower pattern
A-0215-N
1688.
Salad
Spinner/
Drier
. •'The kJdl wm beg to dry th• talld
greens! • Splnt out all the Wit• In an lnttant. • Great for aalad.
· veQ9tabl• fruit. • Elegant too,
WednMday, September 21 , 1977 L SC DAILY PILOT A 5
Refunds Law OK
Measure Ainu at PlJC Action
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A bill to
pr event the state Public Utllltlea
Commission from wlthholdin1 re-
funds of utility overcharges to busi-
nesses has been sianed by the gov-
ernor
Sen. John Stull <R·Escondido>.
authored the bill, crltlcizing what he
called a PUC scheme to withhold
millions of dollars In refunda from
commercial customers.
Gov Edmund Brown Jr. signed the
measure, SB604, on Tuesday.
IT REQUIRES THE PUC to con-
tinue ordering refunds equitably
among all its customers, business as
well as residential.
The PUC "was consideri111 bow to
distribute refunds, but had no
ironclad proposal. It must be con-
s idered moot now.·• s aid PUC
spokesman Gene Ralelah.
Richard Spohn, state consumer af-
fairs chief, had proposed usln1 busJ-
ness refunds for eneray conservation
programs.
Raleigh said backers of such a pro-
poaal felt busineeses raised their
prices when their rates went up. He
sald they usually do not lower them
when they receive refunds.
RALEIGH SAID A "ballpark
figure" for the amount of refunds the
PUC could consider is $SOO milllon.
roughly half of which would have to go
to bualnesaes. or the $:500 million, the PUC recent~
Jy ordered Pacific Telephone Co. t<>
refund $14 million to all classes of
customers and made a similar Pacific
Telephone and General Telephone or·
der involving $2'70 million.
Terminal Talks Lag
LOS ANGELES CAP) -After meeting all day
to overcome a hurdle blocking plans for an Alaskan
oil terminal in Long Beach, officials of Standard OU
of Ohio and Southern California Edison, say they're
still far from reaching an agreement.
Top executives of both flnns held preliminary
talks Tuesday on a pollution tradeoff proposal in
which Sohio would pay for cleanl.n1 up emisalons
from Edison's f acilitles in the harbor area.
Under the plan proposed by st.ate Air Resources
Board Chairman Tom Quinn, Sohlo would be re-
quired to finance some $'90 million in pollution
cleanup work at Edison to offset smog which would
be created by the oil terminal.
At a pncu like this
\IOU shOYkl bUy
Spied Satin now.
ellt!!' ~ you don't plan to pelnl until
lale< There's lost
no way we coold
make lhJs ofl8f' unless Glldden · cuts Ill Olloe to US. ANO THEY DIDI
• How ca11 f get reatairant
doffee at home? • Alw.ya with
a BUNN. Only with a BUNN. •
And It's super fast ..• 8 cups
in 3 minutes • Built to last with copper tubing & atalnleaa
steel. • Why Bunn? Value. •
White or Brown.
39s8
RIVAL3~ QUART
CROCKPOT
• CCXlb all dq whlle ttte cool('a aWI)'. • S·L..0-W
cooking reducea •Mnk19e, retains tulces and nutrftnt.a
• Costa ~ to OOOk all dav •
#3100
KWJKSET
DL\DBOLT
• Protect your f amily! •
Poh~ested ... as burglar oroof
as a lock can be• Full 1" deadbolt
with frve turning steel rod insert •
All steel tapered cytlnder guard •
Two solld steel reinforcing rings •
Solld brass keyed cylinder
mechanism. &ass. etched niclde
or antique brass.
1088
S.fll
CORDLESS DRILL
& SCREWDRIVER
•Use this drift anywt\ere ••• boat.
. • Cam()er ••• cabin •.• yoiJ will
rove t~ freedom It gives yout
R90.24.95
,,~ 1288
-VECHTAB&.
STEAMER
'
Ro~rrt N. Wt>cd /Publlshcr Thomas K!!ellil /C:C:ltor
orang "'-'o.11vP1101 Editorial Page· .......................................................................
as•
Wednnday. September 21. 1977 e.~ra Krelblch/Editorl•I Pege Editor
Joint Park Plan
Makes Real Sense
A.II too often. large chunka of public mon9)' a,. spent on
prolects °' actMt• that ban.tit relatively rew taxpayers.
Many ume1, thla lnefflclient expenditure of tax funds la
unavoidable but aomellmea It stoma from ploddlng tired old
paths.
Orange County govemment and the Capistrano Unified
School Distnct have managed to put their heads together and
come up with an Imaginative way to make maximum possible
use of one pending publlc project -90-acre Oso Viejo Com·
munlty Park in Mission Viejo.
Under terms of the arrangement endorsed by the school
district, the county and the local Municipal Advis~ry Council,
the cost of developing the park will be shared.
Ten acres will be a school site with another 10 acres for
joint school and public uae. The remainder of the park will be
for public recreation.
This way, two specific public needs will be fulfilled. The
community will have an efementary school with many acres of
play area plus a hlgh·lntensity use park.
More public agencies with overlapping jurisdictions
should consider such jo!Dt use efforts. They distribute the
cost more equitably and make the most out of the public's in·
vestment.
Valuable Guaraiitee
One of the world's richest deposits of prehistoric remains
- a fossilized limestone reef on the Aliso Viejo property in
Laguna Hiiis-seems assured of preservation In the future.
Orange County supervisors have apparently recognized
the immense scientific value of the reef to future generations
of students and paleontologists seeking pieces to the puzzle
of the earth's past.
, . The board directed the county Environmental Manage-
j'nent Agency to investigate possible preservation of the most
.-igniflcant portions of the slx~uare-mile reef.
Though this action probably won't deter preparation of
development plans for the property, it wm probably be reflect·
ed in whatever plans are ultlmately approved for the area -a
6.~acre piece of the old Moulton Ranch.
Too many valuable links to our past already have been
Jost to the advance of urban development.
It is encouraging that county officials have recognized
the importance of the f ossll reef long before planning for con·
struction on the land has been completed.
This avoids the common scenario of scientists working
literally in the paths of bulldozers to extract invaluable relics
before they are burled forever.
WJSe Mo-ped Rule
Perhaps Irvine City Councilman John Burton was a bit
hyperbolic when he declared the best and the brightest would
survive.
· But he and the rest of the council maJority were-right to
follow the example of Newport Beach and make mo-peds
travel where they belong-in the street with the rest of the
-fllOtorlzed traffic.
(It wasn't as restricuYe as all that: The motorized bikes
• may travel the 12·foot-wlde street bike lanes.)
The machines have no place on the same off-street paths
where quietly pumping legs power bicycles and softfy pad-
ding feet tread.
For one thing, the noise is distracting when you're out to
commune with nature-one of the reasons Irvine's ruraJ·type
9ff--street paths were bulll
For another, It's just not safe to be padding at three miles
per hour, or pumping at 10, on the same small track Where
swifter means of transport can knock you for a loop at up to
40 miles per.
' . . Pplnions expressed Ir, the apace above .,. thoee of the Dally Pflot.
t>ther -views exprnaed on thla page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment 11 Invited. Address The Dally Pilot,
P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) ~· ;
Boyd /The Fly
ByL.M.BOYD
Wasn't until the space
scientists undertook their
earliest studies to land a man
on the moon that they found
out bow rues light on ceilinp.
Front feet first is bow. Speed
pbotolJ'apby proved that. The
Oy zooms upward -t about 10
inc bes per second. At a body's
leneth away, lt extends all
legs out. When ita lront teas
touch down (touch up?>, it
IWU\,p Its body, and plants its
back lep., winalni to keep
balance. Already mentioned
tt always takes off
backwards.
Not widely reportecl wu
tile fact um about one out ol
nery fou. r railroad b= 100 years qo crumpled
tbe welebt cl. tbe tr.W. Sn• Jocomotlva, !M&bt And
paaenaera Into ·~· and auW•. IDOlt UIQalJ.1_w., OUt
ln the l~••"i.~t n• wjtbln llmplnl·d.latuCe ot I.be ,
Dnrelt town .
long, with an ivory or
otherwise ornamental han·
die, and a blunt wire·llke
crook on one end. Without it
some years back, your
granddad couldn't have put
bis shoes oo. But it's a fact to-
dar that three out of four
ciuzens hereabouts wouldn't
recognize a button.book if they
were to see one.
The Bloody Mary was
named after Mary Tudor.
who lost her head. Lot of
girls, who've drupk them,
have done that. in a manner
of speaking.
A restaurant cashier of
lengthy experien.ce says
women, unlike men, never
forget to pick up thelr cbanae
after~ pay the check..
Any Virginian will tell you
tb,.t Lheutne Roanoke came
from an Indian word meanlnl
••abell rnoney.'•
Not even oiUrown Lantuace
man fttt refers to the red·
breated robin ~ its other
name, the radcloek.
Jack Anderson
Soviet Leaders Showing Age
W ASJUNGTON -Age is slow·
ly, inexorably overtaking the old
revolutionaries who rule the Sov·
let Union. Jn·• few years, they
will be completely replaced in
the Kremlin by a new set or
leaders.
This is giving U.S. strategists
the nutters as they try to an-
ticipate whom
the new
leaders will
be and how
their views
will affect
world affairs.
No one bas
enough solid
information
to judg e
whether the
moderates or bardheads will
come to power.
The real political power in the
Soviet Union is concentrated in
the Politburo, the policymaking
arm or the Communist party.
There are 14 full members, but
only six really count: Leonid
Brezhnev, Yuriy Andropov. An·
drei Gromyko, Andrei Kirilenko,
Aleksei Kosygin and Mikhail
Suslov.
December, bas bad a strenuous
year. But last June, be showed
signs or severe fatlaue and dis-
orientation during a three-day
visit in France. He was, say
American observers, "very,
very tired." But be returned to
Moscow, disappeared for a two·
week rest, and emeraed with re-
newed energy.
Aleksei Kosygin, now p years
old, is a sturdy· Slav with few
health probl~ms. For years, U.S.
analysts studied every new pic-
ture of him in an eUort to de-
termine whether a dime-si~ed
mole on bis left cheek showed
signs of skin cancer. Apparently
tired of the rumors that he was ·
afflicted with the disease, he dis·
appeared for nearly three
months last fall and reappeared
with the mole removed.
During Kosygin's absence, the
diplomatic gossip mill carried
the tale that be had suffered a
heart attack. American officials,
however, give the story little
credence. They note that he still
goes on lengtbY fishlne expedl·
lions and arcjuous bikes with
President Urho Kekkonen of
Finland.
SINCE Jt63, it has been
rumored tl)at Mikhail Suslov, the
party's iaeologicaJ high priest.
has tuberculosis. For a man who
win be 75 in November, he ap-
pears to be holding up under the
burden pretty well. Suslov.
nevertheless, is succumbing to
advancing years and is visibly
slowing down. He is the last of
the romantic revolutionaries,
say ow-sources; when he goes,
there will be no one around .. who
can interpret the faith like he
can."
Andrei Kirilenko is the Polit·
buro's chief of Indus try. If
something should happen lo
Brezhnev, Kirilenko is the man
most likely to step into the big
shoes. But Kirilenko, already 71 ,
would probably bold the job for
only a short period. He is con·
sidered a hard worker and suf·
fers no known health problems.
Al.so In good health is Foretgn1
Minister Andrei Gromyko, 68. He
was out of sight for a period dur-
ing tbls past winter, and rumors
circulated that he had heel\
stricken with a heart attack. Just
as the gossip reached its peak, be
reappeared. It ls now believed he
was merely down with the nu.
THE Rt:MAJNING member of the Btg Six, secret police cbier
Yuriy Andropov, 83, also was
rumored to have a heart condi·
lion. But he, too, was apparently
sick With the nu.
Of the remaining minor mem-
bers or the Politburo, only 78·
year-old Arvid Pelsbe is thought
to be knocking at death's door.
U.S. analysts through him nearly
gone in 1971, when bis official ·
photograph depicted him as
positively cadaverous. But he
bounced back, appearing in a
subsequent photo cheerfully at·
tired in a pink shirt and Glen
Plaid jacket -avant garde ap-
1parel for the stodgy Soviet
warhorses.
THE AVERAGE age of the full ~~.
Politburo is 661h : but the average 1"' 1 y-!
age of the Big Six is 70. Accord-
ing to our sources, none of the
Kr em lin patriarchs are
threatened with ''identifiable .
life-threatening conditions." But
several are showing signs of ad-
vancing age. They tire easil¥.
and a slight case of the flu can
keep them in bed for ~eeks.
GREAT FOREIGN POLICY
ACI-IillVEMENTS or
H£ 1<£PT US OUT OFWAR. ...
WlTH ClllRJ.I.1.Lt.S ..
Leonid Brezhnev, the Grand
Sachem of the Communist party,
is plagued with circulatory
problems and may even have suf-
fered a stroke. He occasionally
slurs his words and has difficulty
walking. He is a bad air traveler
and doesn't adjust easily to jet
lag.
In the old days. he used to
smoke and guzzle vodka heavily,
but h e has now s worn off
cigarettes and c ut back on his
alcohol intake. He also has a
painful dental problem, which
may be the result of his former
s moking habit. More likely, it
stems from a distorition or the
jaw which has bothered hlm
since he was a young man.
Brezhnev, who will be n in
HE KEPT
NW{ \t>lJNG
FROM. lNSlTLTlNG
J\NYBWYFOR THEENTI~
MONTHW
AIJGUST.
PRE SJ DENT
CARTI.R.
(~)
.
................................................................................... 11111,!1 ....... mll!~~~~!"ll-,J
Mailbox
'Health Nuts' Invade His Bed and Board I
To the Editor:
The health nuts have never
made me mad before, but now
they've done it. They have pre-
viously aggravated me when
they tried to make me feel guilty
lor eating something that tastes
good instead of yogurt and
birdseed. But recently I went on a trip to
Medford, Oregon. After driving
for 16 hours, I found a motel with
a large neon sign saying,
"Reasonable Rates." This won
my heart until I paid the S22
"Reasonable Rate" for one
night.
WHENI hit the hay, it hit back.
That bed wasn't just firm, it was
hard. After tumbling and tossing
~mtil 4 o'clock in the mornin1, 1
decided that I wasn't tired
enough so I went walking around
tbe neighborhood. All of the dogs
barked at me and luckily the
police patrol dldn 't happen alona
and arrest pie. I 1ta1gered back
to bed and I believe Uiat I dozed
off~ before daybr~ak.
Qn examination the next day,
we found a five.eighths inch
piece ct plywood between the box
springs and mattress. Wasn't
that thoualit!"1 of them to think of
my back problems? Or could
they have done it to make the bed
so uncomfortable as to cause the
traveler to rise early and &et out
so the room could be re-rented7
These health nuts hne 1one
too far when they 10 to aettlnl in·
to my bed. J feel that tbe bed that. a. healthy ls th• bed that )'OU can
sleep on. Food it not nourishlnC
unless Y<Ml can eat it withQUt Cet·
tlngulced.
You heallb mJts eat birdseed
and steep on a board it you want
to, but buu o(t.
JAllESW. BOLDING
federal level is required -a
person who has the ear of the
President and the respect of
Congress.
If excellence is what we seek
for OUT' children in terms of what
education con do to help each
child become as fine a human be·
ini as our love and resources can
provide, then we must a have a
separate Department of Educa·
ti on.
SONDRA SCO'IT
W~te •I 1'1eteet1
To the F.ditor:
I went to the budget bearings oC
the Board or Supervisors to pro-
test the funding of the porn·
mission on the Status of Women.
CSOW ls a waste of taxpayers'
money: it overlaps what is done
by other agencies and. for me, it
is counter-productive as its
women are lobbying for ERA,
which I oppose.
The room was filled with pro. family taxpayers who oppc)sed.
the fundll)J. A CSOW
spokeswomen tried to Juatlty the
commission's need for our tax
rqoney on the grounda that it did
rape counseling and helped to
implemeAt Title IX (UNISEX) in
the schools.
--. --
-t
where one can usuaJly drive from
south to north ends of town
without hardly a stop.
Sure, it takes a lot of calculating
to set the signal clocks properly,
but it is a cinch with the aid of
computers. It would be worth
while alone for the frazzled
nervesitwouldsave.
FRANKKLOCK
I
Carter deals, not with the Presi-i
dent of Panama, but with the die· j
tator of Panama who is a very ,
close friend or Mr. Castro's. The I
Panamanian government bas
had fifty.four leaders in sixty-,
nine years. With such instability
it seems our control is very .es-:
senUaJ of this very important t
waterway. 1 s. Besides the similarity of the
spelling or names: Carter -
Castro, what else is behind the
bond of these two men? ·
MARGARETM.WALDEN
atfHIU'IU9llu
To the F.ditor: 1
Millions of illegal aliens are 1
destrofin8 our way of life as na-t
tural or legalized citizens. All the I
benefits of ciliumhip including
voting on ballots printed in •
·foreign language, are available I
to foreiplers. Our several past ·
and present 1overoment.1 ap-I
parently have found no com· 1 paasioo for We, the people.
The only solution for the Wegal
alien in our country is to enforce !
the immigration law• as orjgin.iJ·
ly Written and intended. Betu111 j
the Illegal aliens to their home
country "ho have not complied c
with the lmmlpadon Jews by 4
becomina Jawful cltl1ens. 1
A SO.CA.LL.BO 1trot• of :.a J
political pen 1ho11ld not be •
permitted to dlaenfranc.hlse the
Jetal citizens ot ~ country. ~
lllecala have crea't.ed tbeit OW!\
clratmatadc?al aod UllJ m .. t not
be f0(''1HG because they uie
he rt.
Tbe aovernment ia raponslbM
to We, the pec>ple. Army. Navai.
Air Force. Coast Guard aQa
Marinel could have been uMd tO
seal our bOl'cten. bat the IOftJj-
ment did riOUililt. and now tHa
government apparently expedi
We. the peopJt>:to .lorltv• Hid
forget.
We, the people have worbd. ·~-·~tnardir to ••t•bll•b a llfe we bave
bffome ~uitomed to ud Uthe
ao-calJe4 buma riltitl move.
ibenlll ...... ltMoald..,to
• OW' United..-dtl--.
C.M.OJB8SNS
~dneaday' NYSE COMPOSITE
2 p.m. (EDT) Prices
TRANSACTIONS
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s DAILY PfLOT 8$
ABAAd1'1ee
F o r B est Lawyer
By SYLVIA PORTER
Consumers can 1bop ror lawyers by reading ads, a de-
velopment thaL could lnt.t.nalty confusion over prices and
services.
Is competent leaal aervice available for the advertised
ree? WbaL l\lldellnea apply in selecting a lawyer through
price advertislng? WW hard·aell tacUca prevail?
I.AST JUNE, mE U.S. SUPREME COVllT ruled that.
for the first time in 69 years, lawyen can advertise tl\elr
fees and publicize their services. Richard Morris, assistant
executive director of the American Bar Association, orrers
thesesuggesUona:
-Don't take an ad literally. Use common sense. Before
retaining a lawyer. ask ror bar association references or cet
client references. Normally. this is considered a matter or
confidence, says Morris, but lawyers have increasingly
been willing to do it. Client references are a matter or
privilege but, if available, can~ useful.
-Don't let communicaUons with the lawyer lapse and
don't let lime and dialogue drift once an action has started.
Don't pester the lawyer but don't be afraid to ask questions.
Those concerned with how their cases are being handled
s hould check with their
local bar committees.
Clients are entiUed to
monthly reports.
-Know the extent
of services provided in
the lawyer's ad. What ts
a simple will, for in-
Money's
Worth
stance? What is an uncontested simple divorce?
-CUENTS SHOULD KNOW about add-ons in alimony
action, property settlement 'Costs, jurors fees and court
costs. The lawyer should spell them out.
-Is the lawyer's contingency fee off the top? The re.
covery on the net, for example, can make a dllference.
-Use a checklist approach so that a profile can be
established by the lawyer. Get a flle or documents together
to provide the lawyer with relevant material. This can save
hours or work, thus reducing the legal fees.
-BE CLEAR ABOtrr LEGAL fees &{ld ask how the fee
is fixed.Uthe lawyer charges an hourly fee, get it in wriUhg
and try to ascertain the number or hours of work involved.
-Consider arbitration, Morris says, aa an option. In
Cleveland and San Francisco. among other cities, arbitra-
tion is becoming increaaingly popular u a means of putt.lng
a lid on costs. ·
The ABA also suggests these guides for shopping for a
lawyer.
-CHECK THE LAWYER'S QUALIFICATIONS,
especially in simiJar cases.
-Discuss fees and lawyer activities. with the tm·
derstanding that there may be unforeseen legitimate costs
to be added.
-Get a receipt for a retainer.
-Be informed about payments. projected moves IU!d
the progress or the case.
-Be aware that a client can change lawyers even if an
agreement bas ~n signed.
OC SpeculatWn
Wanes, SaysStudy
Single-family housing speculation "is on the wane in
California's two largest metropolitan areas." according to
Anthony M. Frank, chairman and Chier executive officer of
United Financial Corp. of California, parent company of
Citizens Savlnp and Loan Association.
In remarks Tuesday in New York to investment offi~rs
and security analysta from major Eastern fl.Dancial insutu-
tions, Frank described bow hia firm is tracking the level or
real estate speculation in the Los Angeles-Orange County
and San Francisco areas. ·
"Although we felt speculation bad played a major role
in pushing up the prices of single·family residences In
Caillornia during the past two years and had recently
leveled off. we wanted to get a better handle on the situation
and see if there were any measurable indicators .or
speculative activity." be said.
. ·~ ASS~MED THAT WHEN REAL estate specula·
taon mcreased speculators' would advertise to try to rent
their •investments,' Waitinl (or prices to increase.
"Results of a study conducted by Citizens Savings• re-
search department show that home rental advertising jn
Los Angeles•Orange County and San franclsco suburban
area newspapers. increased dramaUcally beihmlng in the
spring and summer ol 1976, levellng of( and declining during
lhia past ~mer.
Frank said his company wil1 conUnue to monitor thl.s
apparent new indicator of real estate speculation level and
re~ significant findings.
Ai 'ing Amtrak Asks
For Federal F1mds
WASBINGTON <AP> -Amtrak'• board fA dt.r-.eton
wlll ut eon,i... for a tse.5 mUllon lt.Q>plemental •P· proprtaUon for fiuaJ year U'18 to prop~ Lbe fi.Dancia11,y all· ln• rallrold mt.m.
Thi board made the decision after bein1 tokt b7
map.,ement th moat)' 11 needed to Pre'f nt add1Uoma1 re·
ductkm in trains or servka durina the filcal ye.r that be"°9 Od.1.
'
• DM.Y"'-OT Wldn!!d!r. l!p!!!!lb!f 21, 1177
MARMADUKE by lrld Andtr1on BOO Me A
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OF BAU°'?
.
we, MA~
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CAU...~ 6AL.AP
<iflUt{ s.4L.AI)
CHIC~N 6ALJP
6PINAC~ SALAP
AW1CA~ S4LAP
AHO HUOt~
SALAO .
MISS PEACH
•,
I· I ..
I ..
"He Just can't take rejection'" ..
' ..
I l:UNKY WINKERBEAN
I lEU. rtlE I NA'TE I HOW DO
\.-. ~ LIKE 1EA041NG SO FAR~
I REAU..9 LI KE IT FINE
MR. BURCH!
l i
J
'
night
42 Rellgloua
painting
..... Bold
45 Piece of
• •hot . .ce 01(ken'a ~ ciWacter
49Hooded
,.Cket
50 Swedish
Island
51 Allegea
52 C1n1dl1n
northland
Abbf
55 Giving tn
gfHt
1mounts
SB More
unu1u1I
60----Cong or Nim
61 Century
pl1nt
620in
63 Ending with
dlYlnd rev
84 M()(nlng
mo11tur11
65 Steno'• co-worker
DOWN
I Gone by
2 Mixture
3Wlth both
eyeaopen
4 Feminine
~•mt
6t.4akell\\e new
6Sn11te
7S~lng
knowledge
8 Soft OI
g1rl'1
nickname
90ralully tONon· btlleYer 11 Colonyof
blea
12Equ1r1e
13 Put lht
queatlOl'I
0
UNITED Feature Syndicate
Tuesday Puule Solved
t9Rem11n
unch1nged
22 California's
Fort--
25 Narrow
cl\anntl
26 Oblttucla
27 Aalan coun-
try
28 lrradlatea
29f®aJ;Fr.
30··-anav.-
32 M11k OVtf a
vowel
33 Of an Island
republic
34 Being: So.
35 FIX firmly In
place
l7 Emblem
40 Hard ru~r
ptodUC1
41 Goads
42 lndivtduals
43 Type
45 Be prof111.
bit
46 Find a aplu-
tion 1.
4 7 -----de~une 48 Speaks In-
coherently •9Congreaa
employees
St TV Inter-
ference
S3Coml)IM
pOlnt
54 Playing card
68Cht1ltd
ST·-· de
Franca
59N1mtona
warrant
9.z1
by Tom Batiuk
I'M GLAD HE Dlf>tll'T A&K ME
00<.U I LIKE ltACHIN6 HERE /
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
1
by Wm. F. Brown and Met Casson
NO D12eS61NG /
DOOLEY'S WORLD
. HI, Wc>RMLI SEE
YA Gar A FRIEND wrrn YA TODAY !
DR.SMOCK
\
g
: .. . . l t
by Mell •
E
F INE! ••• NOW ReAP 1'He 1'"HIRt::> i...1Ne .,.-o Me e>ACKWARPS
PTEO
MOTLEY'S CREW
NCfi,e(! C.A~ '(OU ~XPLAIN WMY 1HE A66G>l-Sl'l
I.It-IS 15 RUt4N1N<:> f
1MREe ~CONDO GI.OW~.
by Gus Arriola
1
!I i
·'
PEANUTS by Ch1rles M. Scllulz
ALL I HAYE Tu 00
15 KICK IT, RIGHT ?
•
E
PTEO
LZMMJ&M .... ..,...,,..ao1c.1 .......... .. . . . . ..... . ............. ············
0 '' ur ""'f .,.,.,.,. ··vr · ·-..._
by Roger Bradfield
by George Lemont
by Tempttton and Forman
GERIATRIX