HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-04 - Orange Coast Pilot.... ~ppear to ·Lead
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Dull Sex Lives
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 4, 1917
VOL. 70, NO. -4 SIECTIC*S, 4' "AGU
Dull sex Life ..
. Revealed in HB Non,.•~
t B1aOBE&TBARKE& •
Ol\9 Dlllly rl•Mlfl
When it comes to filling out a sex survey, the married
men of Huntington Beach are a bunch or duds.
HuNnNGTON Harbour resident Susie Newman has ocen c1rcu.Jating the survey for a professor friend with un·
derwbelriling success.
"They either burst .QUt laugbihg or their faces turn
brlerit red,·• she said. •'Tb en they say no.··
A glance at the survey on extra-marital sexual behavior
' ofmenoffersahintastowhytbeyacUbewaytbeydo.
QUESTION NO. 7 asks: Shae~
you've been marrled have you had ex.
tra·tnarital sex? A quick no answer •
doesn't get you dff the hook.
If the answer is no. the questionnaire
' directs you to proceed directly to ques-
tion 13
Tl\ere you al'etilled to give reasons
why you've never pafticipated in this ac-
tivity. 1'be questionnaire leaves three
lines and a partial one to put down all
your reasons.
QUESTION NO. 8 wants you to give the number ~ dif-
ferent women with whom you've had more than a passing
interest.
Question ?(o. SA asks the average duntion of:each af·
fair. ,
The survey makes it easy for you on question 10. Jt asks
why you had an extra-marital affair and offers multiple
choice answers. .. . SOME OFmE re•dY·Jnade answers mclu e:
-J was mad at my WU• arid this is bow I 1ot ev~ -Sex with my wife is bOfulg.
-I wanted a little adventure and excitement ln my life.
-TWo or more is better than one.
.. . Mra. Newman. a member al ~t; Hupthlgton ~h
Planning Commission~ satd abe ~~ tryinJ t~i..att ,}OJ'
rest>onses in Huntington ~acb. Stie hun~i:recel•eo one 1 '-
She said :she took a batch to the police department but
officers wouldn't touch the que.Uonnaires Mth a 10-foOt pole.
OOA.getits
llunt Aliens
lnFact9,Y
About 30 fedet.il 1mmi1ration
agents searched a Garden Grove
shoe factory this morning for sus-
pected illegal aliens, officials
said.
Agents entered the Sun Star
Rubber. inc., factory at 10631
Stanford A~. at about 8:30 a.m.
to see 1f aliebl without ltnrnigra-
tion visas were employed there.
The raid was the third by U.S.
ltnm1gra1Jon and Nahuahiatioo
Service l1NS> agents in Orange
County this week
Agents raided a Fullerton
mobile home factory and an
Anaheim strawberry ranch
Thursday. They arre.ted a total
of 6Q aliens without visas, said
INS spokesman Philip Smith.
About 20 INS agents raided the
Golden West Mobile Horne fac·
tory at 130 Magnolia St.,
Fullerton, and netted 20 aliens
employed there, said Smith.
Later the same day ac.ents ar-
res led 40 strawberr)' field
laborers et an undisclooed loca-
tion in Anaheim, said Smlth.
The aliens were takF,n lo Los
Angeles for ~g ,,Jnd then
traosported fo San Ysidro where
they were returned to Mexico.
About 160 aliens were arrested
in two north Hllntington Beach
strawberry fields Wedneaday
morning.
About 70 aliens also were ar-
rested in strawberry fields in
Cypress last week, Smllh added.
Birds Stolen·
Orange County shei;.iff's of.
ficers are iaYestigatiJlg th& theft
of two blrds an<l their cages from
a Costa 1\1.esaarea bottle.
DeputJcs said the birds, jointly
valued at $1,000, were taken rroni
the home or bird breeder Andy c.
Mayo, 76, of2063Tuatlri Ave.
They described the birds as a·
four-month-old wh•te cockatoo and a three-month-old gretn par-
rot known to breede"' as a Mex·
ican red head.
Officers believe t.be thief en·
tered tbe home by the rear door
while the vicUm was worklng in bis yard.
Arrests End
;
Theft Rmg
LOS ANGELES 0(AP> -A car
theft tint hu been broken. up
with the arrcwt ot elcht people,
tbe Cali!o.mia Highway Patrol says.
The CUP said lt seized $100,000
-North or cars aJonf Wltb 17 ~
auto parts. antique coins.
typewrltel"I' and movie projec-
tors duririC the arrestl,
Tbe alleaed rin1leader of the
group, Odls ~th. ~. ~f .Bell
Gardem, was attested Wednes-
along With his Wife, Lraell,
, CRPS~ DateJfelsel.nid.
. . .. '
Ex-CIA CHIEF GUil TY
Richard Helms Fined
E',...PageAJ
HELMS ••.
E'roaP~Al
•
surface mlulJes. It is also widely
believed to be capable of
manuracturtoc nuclear weaPQftl.
It was the nm time that SMC•
Uons were ordered against a
U.N. member under a section of
the U.N. Charter providing
punitive actions in cases of
threats a1alost internalloaaJ
1>4lace and security.
' The only otber Ume sanctions
tve bee,\ ordered was against
another white-minority ruled na-
tion, Rhodesia, in 1966. But
B.hOdalabDOta U.N. member.
The resolution ordered all na·
tions to "cease forthwith .. any.
provision to South Africa of anns
and related material of all types,
includlnl the sale or transfer of
wea_pons and ammunition,
mUttary vehicles and equtpme'2t,
paramilitary police equipment
and Span? parts.
All states are told to stop pro-
vldine "all types of equtpmetlt
and supplies" to South Africa df
to gr~nta ot ll~ensin&. arHnte-
ments for the manulacture or
maintenance of armaments.
The resolution also calls on all
eoveromenfs to review all exist·
inJ contractual arrancements
with and licenset 1ranted to
South Africa relatlna to atm.s
production .. with a view to
terminating them." It further
forbids all couotries to cooperate in helping Soµth Africa to d
velop nuclear weapons.
The embargo resolution, de·
manded by the '9-naUon African
lfOUPt represented a COID•
promlse between black Africans
who also wanted tconoaaic sane·
lions and West.em powers wh.lch
preferred a limited, renewable
arm• embareo.
Woman Charged
Wit~ Mesa Arrest
A Costa Mesa woman was ar·
rested 1bW'$day ..rter ahe re-
portedly led police on a chase
through a resl.deiltial area and
rammed a poUee car twtee.
Polioe •aid Dianne Homer, 31.
]Uilge Views
KUlnitp Ji~
OAKLAND (AP> -the
Judge in the ChowchlUa
kldnappln6 trial baa Ot·
dered court to convene in a
prifon Wirebo\iaelO he can
esamlne ~ mo\tfne van once \&led to entomb 27 vic-tims.
TJte van and two other
•ehicles used fn tbe abduc-
t.ioJ) of 28 •cbool children
and tbeir bm driver are
stored al the Santa Rita
Rebabllitatlcm Cesrter. Soperior Court Judie
Leo Deeean, who ls presf.d.
lng without a jury. said
strict aecurlty w°'1}d sur-round the trip to the
Warehouse tOday to pre.
vent aay .. untoward event...·•
ot 187 Magnolia St., was arrested
on suspicion ol reckless drivm1, resisting arrest, malkious m •
chief, and -driving under t.be m.
fluence of alcohol. d
The chase began at 10 »· ?Q.
after Police Sgt. Ted Cum re-cei ved a report o! a camper·
truck ramming a car parked in
the 100 block of Monte Vbta
Avenue.
Wben eurr, arrivecf .. at the
scene, a truck driven by the 1us-
J)ect reportedly sped off wltb
squealln&'tira and led police co
a chase at 40 to 50 mites per hour
around corners tbrou1b the
residential area.
Police said the ttuek ran four
stop si1ns and forc'ed other'.
vehicles otf the road. At one point
it hit a dip in tbe ro.d ancl km· porarilybecjme~ -~·~ ._ The ~ ended ID a PanaDI"
lot adjacent to a 111 staUon at
.Newport Boulevard &Qd Del Mar
Avenue When the ttuct reported-
ly cametoastOP.
Howner, pollce 07 the driftl'
refused to lean the vehicle and.
while CJfftce.rs were talkin1 to
her. threw the truct mto reverse
and rammed a police car. twice.
The suspect was arrested, say
police, after an C)fftcer smashed
the pa~et doOr window~ tbe
truck andunlockedtbedoor.
By GARY GRANVILLE Olt•o.My P1 ... ltaN
Grand Jury invest\1atora are
probing financial records today m an attempt to determine if
Orange County Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich "received tn any
amount or in any form" $287,000
paid to architect Leroy Rose in
1973 and 1974 for the design of a
new county administration build-
ing.
.ft'ullerton attorney Michael
Suspect
Released
~On Bond
~ By JOANNE REYNOLDS
_ -• _ ,_ gtU.. O•lly Piiot S~H
Alexander Kulik, the NewPort
Beach businessmat, jalled on
narcotics and murd~onsplracy
charges, was fret-d from Orange
County Jail Thursday night after
posting a bond for $750.000.
Jail offtc1als said the bond,
guaranteed by three bond com·
panies. was the largest ever post-
ed to free one of their orisoners.
Kulik, 28, dressed in denim
trousers and a sports jacket
erected his attorney, Philip
DeMassa of San Diego, in the
jail's lobby as he was released. .
Al DeMassa's insistence, Kulik
declined to make any comments
about the case.
Kulik is one of eight people
named as suspeclt; in the shoot
ing death of Stephen John Bovan,
36, who died Oct 22 after being
shot nine times outside a
Newport Beach night spot.
Rema.irung in cuslody·are An·
tbony Marone Jr., 23, and
Raymond Steven Reaco, 28, of
10121 Merrimac Drive, Hunt·
ington Beach and Jerry Pea.r
Fiori, 41, of 19822 Brookburst St.,
Huntington Beach.
They are being held in lieu or
SS00,000 bail. That bail was set
Thursday afternoon by Judge
Selim Franklin of the Harbor
Judicial District Court.
Judge Franklin also freed
Debra Ann Addison. 24. of the
J>rookhurst St. address who had
been charged with murder con·
6piracy along with the four men.
Detective Sam Amburgey of
the Newport Beach police said
the charges against Miss Ad-
dison were dropped because
there was insufficient evidence
to support the allegation that sbe
had a role in the long·range con·
spiracy leading to Bovan 's death.
Remaininji? at tare.-ton,_v ~nil
sought on murder conspiracy
warrants are Kulik's wife, Elsie
Caban Ku1ik, and his business
partners, Joseph Shelton Davis,
Joseph Gabriel Fedorowski and
Roy Christopher Richard.
The four men operated an in-
vestment firm known as ·prasadam Distributors, Inc.,
which employed Marone, Fiori
and Resco.
Police allege the dead man and
two accomplices. Robert Shea
and Stanton Keiffer kidnapped
Kulik in August and held him for
· $100,000 ransom. ·
They further contend that the
Prasadam partners offered a re-
ward tor the deaths or the three
alleged kidnappers.
Police are still trying to locate
<See 80ND, Pa1e .\%)
Remin~ opened the door lot a
probe into the Rose contrac:t tbb
week when be said that in 1973
and 1974 be was paid W\Specified
amounts of money by Rose that
he, in turn, passed on to
Diedrich.
Remington said he had not
performed any legal services for
the money. and that It was
passed on to Diedrich "after de·
ducting taxes and other costs."
In affidavits filed with the
IMlllJ' ...... ...., f>llMH
MURDER SUSPECT GREETS ATTORNEY, HEADS FOR TALK ,
Phttlp OeMaua (left) freea Client Alex Kulik Thur~ay
Mesa Council Eyes
Rezone lhitiati~e
•
• s.• Coast PJaza, Bear Street.and the
San Diego Freeway.
Citing simila r rezene
initiatlves passoo by .,oters in
San Otego aitd Ltveunore,
Campagna said "it appears you
can rezone t>y initiative.··
However, he added~ there is still
doubt about the small sbe of the
rea thO homeow{lers want to
dowasone.
"I have a lot of ptobl~ms with
SD.lailwoOd.
ar,e
lecal counsel tot him on these
matters," Remington sald ln
affidavit.
It was Diedrich in 1973 who
cast the decidin1 vote in a con·
troverslal 3 to 2 Board ot
Supervisors decision to award
the $300,000 architectural con·
tract to Role, who In 1972 wu bis
cam pal~ finance chairman.
Diedricb'a decisive vote came
after be first excused himself
from tbO board decision because
of a ~ssibte c:onfli.ct or interes\.
But. wben the ballot knotted t 2
to 2, County Counsel Adnu
Kuyper told the then-freshman
supervisor his vote would not
consUtute a conruct.
Rose, a former: .FuJlerton ~Jan·
ning commissioner, was indict4d
by the grand jury in lln5 on
bribery-related cbargea.
The architect was later ac·
quitted by a trial jury of the
charges after the indictment was
Agerits Raid Grove Factory.
Federal fmmlgra'tton agents;
raided a Garden Grove shoe fac-
tory this morning, arresting 60 ot
the factories' 80 employees as il-
legal aliens.
Thirty agents surrounaea tne
Sun Star Rubber Inc. factory at
10631 Stanford Ave. about 8:30
a.,m., accordingtoU S. Immiara-
tion and Naturalization Service
(INS> officials.
The raid was the third by U.S.
Immigration and Naturalization
Service <INS) ageats in Orange
S. Africa
E~bargo
Imposed
County this week.
Agel\tS raided a Fullerton
mobile home factory and an
Anaheim strawberry ranch
Thursday. They arreated a tot!'!
of 60 aliens without visas. said
INS spokesman Philip Smith.
About 20 INS agents raided the
Golden West Mobile Home fac-
tory aL 130 Magnolia St.,
Fullertoh, and netted 20 aliens
employed there, said Smith.
Later the same day agents ar-
rested 40 strawberry field
<See DUU SEX UFE,
FiYeinMesa
~ Six :year-old Tammy ~ Btchlmeter Qt Fountain Valley is ~.behtl aided in her strugile tor
, life by 100 U.S. Marines from
~ Camp Pendleton.
' Strtcken With leukemia and
, beset. bY'.' numerous complica-
: tionJ, TarJU:ny has used almost ~50 unlta Of l>load in her baUle r~
life. ~ The M•iinet )lave been caJled
• 1o bf. the orange County Chapter ~of the American Red Cross to
Cionate blood in Tammy's name.
• 0 •
from ti.Id aUal
Comp y.
Ttit n compan.yp ld ntof·
f ~red tho flnandal usurances
dunn1 a brukfast •P"Cb ore
more thcan 240 civic and buslnesa
leader at the Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce l'own
Hall Meet.int at Ult Sberaton lnn
at Newport.
Jn May, Tammy came dowr.
with a severe case of chicken pox
which raised her temperature to
104 dearees for five days. She bad
to be kept into cooHnt blankets at
Children's Hospital in Orange.
Doctors called her a "miraele
child" because she was able to
Ciiht off the disease so welt But
the worst wu yet to come.
Tammy's left cheekbone had to
be removed when it beeame ln·
f ected with a form of gangrene
caused by anemia and poor nutn·
tion caw.ed by her illness, said
her molher Susan Bichlmeier
Judge Visits Van
Used in Kidnapping
OAKLAND CAP) The
Chowchilla trial judge.
grim-faced and carrying a
lantern, walked into the
dirt-encrusted van today where
·27 kidnap victims once were
1mprisoned
Superior Court Judge Leo
Deegan said not a word as he
surveyed the shocking site of the
27 foot ruovin1 van filled wJth
filthy mattresses, bedding and
matted dirt which fell into the
vehicle when the 26 children and
bus driver escaped.
The three defendants. their
hands clasped in front of them in
handcufls, stood silently outside
l'roa PClfle A J
DIEDRICH ..
Remin1ton said be loaned
Diedricb $25,000 of a $75.000 fee
paid him by the Graflt Corp ..
pnrent company or Anaheim
Jtills Inc.
Diedrich has denied receiving
any mone:y in any form on any
matter related lo the Anaheim
Hills aariculture preserve issue.
Conruct of interest dlsclosute
statements filed by the county
snpervisor every year since then
do not ahow any loans owed to
Remlnston.
However, the attorney. who
was Diedrich's business lawyer
from 1966 until a few months ago.
insisted the loan to Diedrich was
made through a special account
REZONE ••.
iriitiative.
However, any court ruling
would. no doubt result ln an
appeal by the other side and
cttuse m.ore delays. aald
Campagna
·And even if the homeowners·
inltiaU~ is approved by voters,
•1Jt could be held invalid," he
added.
Dom Raciti, the only
councilman to vote against
A.mel's plans earlier thi8 year.
$lid be wouldn't support a
cond bUtiaUve drafted by tbe
the van with sheriff's deputies
guarding them
Two of the defendants· p1uents
were among the group of
spectators and reporters who
witnessed the viewing in a
warehouse at the Santa Rita
Rehabilitation Cenler.
Defense and prosecution
attorn~ys also watched 111lently
us the judge toured the
warehouse, also peering into two
smaller panel trucks which
transported the \ 1ct1ms to the
burred moving van where they
were entombed.
"This as the way the van "as
found," a sheriff's officer
explained lo the gathered group
He said it was buried four feet
under ground level ln a
L1 vermore gravel quarry
The condition of the van
verified stories told by the
kidnapped children when they
testified this week. As they said,
the van was so tilled with
mattresses, there barely was
room to move around Thick
mesh wire covered the walls and
ceiling for no apparent reason
Only a tiny hole in one wall
allowed air to enter through a
garden hose which was piped
above ground.
The trip to Santa Rita by a
30-car caravan of court
participants was convened as a
court session. The 1udge ~u1d he
would return to the courtroom for
further testimony Monday
Screams Rout
Mesa Rapist
<:osta Mesa pol1cp are seeking
a man who grahlicd a woman in
the South Coasl Plaza parking lot
and reportedly attempted to rape
her but was frightened of( by her
screams.
Police saJd the victim, a 20-
year· old Plaza employee from
Anaheim, was waJking out to her
car about 6 p.m Tuesday when a
man grabbed her and tried to
force her into a vehicle. He also
reportedly made sexual ad·
vances.
Howe~er. tbe woman's
$C~ama apparently frightened
bimoff.
The 1uspect was described as a
black male in bl• mld·20S, about.
five feet, U lnc:bes \all.
a on o!hlit1!1irift.
pra1 L
Xr m acknowledaed wh n
the Taubman·Alleh·l~vlne com·
bine bought the Irvine Company
for $337 million, "Then came the
rumon and the apeculaUon.
"The speculation .,,, that lD
order to repay the thort·term
bank loan, the ewcu>•ny would
have to ffll off buae ch"nks or its
raw land. And there would co the
concept of an intact general plan
Most recently, Tammy's lef\
eye has been covered by a patch
because of its weakened condl·
tlon, said Mrs. Blch)meier, who
1s raising four other children at
8599 Trinity River Circle.
Mrs. Blchlmeier's husband,
Gary, died recertly.
Tammy aJso hn had adverse
reactions to medicaUon ahe bad
been rece1v\ng
Mrs. Bichlmeler said friends
C'ontacted Marine officials who
decided to take on the blood dona-
tion drive as a project. She ~aid
she was extremely arateful for .
the1r help.
But the Marines aren't the only
ones to come to Tammy's aid.
Neighbors have organbed
several raffles and other !und·
raising efforts. A local hair salon
raised money by holding a "cut·
u·thon" recently
Through it all, Tammy has
been brave and tolerant as a 6·
~car old could be, said her
mother
'Tammy has taught me so
much.·· said Mrs. Bichlmeier.
·Most of all, how to be brave.··
f'rom Page A J
BOND •••
Keiffer and Shea. They say they
~ant them as witnesses in the
murder case.
Kulik. Marone. Flori and
Resco arc all slated lo return to
Judge Frankhn"s courtroom on
Tu~sday to complete the arraign-
ment 1u-ocess that has been con-
tinued through three court ap·
pearances
Only Kulik. represented by
OeMassa. has been aUowed to
enter a plea of innocent in the
case
'l'he other three men are still
without attol"fle.l's and court of·
ficlal~ said tdday prlvate at·
lorneys will be appointed to
represent them because the
Public Defender's office has
rleclared itself ineligible
At Tuesday's court ap-
pearance, the ~e men ar~ ex-
pected to enter their pleas and
have their attorneys appeal for
lower bail
Kulik's $750,000 ba\l figure was
.1 combination ol $000,000 bail set
>Y Judge Frankl\n in the murder
·onsplracy case and $250,000
-stablished in the narcotics case
n the Laguna Ni"uel munlclpal
:ourt. The narcotics case batl
Nas lowered to $250,000 from
;soo,ooo Wednesday.
Kulik was originally arrested a
·ew hours after Bovan's death 011
• uspicion of possession or heroin
or sale. Sheriff's deputies who
oicked Kulik up in a MiaalonYJe·
10 shopping center said be wu
'ound with 1.1 pounds of nearly
1>ure heroin -valued a\ more
han $1 million in street •ales -1n his car
Engine Sale Aaked
W ASHJNGTON <AP> -'nte
Carter administration ill -con·
sidering selllng the United
States' most Powerful jet enlibe
to the Sovlet Unle>n, con·
gresslonal sources and Delena&
Department omclals art C&Yirif.
General Electric Co. re~tteclly:
has requestfd pennlatton ft'om
the Commerce Department to
export 12 CF.a engtnes ror $.1.6
million.
DAILY PILOT
c Woman Cha~ed
'Solvent'
lt'vJne retldent Anthony Dln·
nell WM eentenced to one to four
y rs in Ari.iona atat.e prison to-
TONIGHT
FOOTBALL -Costa Mesa vs.
LMuna Beach, Davidlon Field, 8
p.m. Newport flarbor vs Foun·
tain Valley, OCC Field, 8 p.m. ay for his part in 1 $5.5 million
labd fraud sebeme in t.hat state. l>lnn u. SO, or 11732 Pileo
•cortez rec~lved the aentence a(~r he pleaded aunty in Sep-
tem ber to three telony char1es
I brousht. aaiainat. hi"' ln Maricopa County Superior Court by the
apeclal proeecutor·a office o( the
Artzona Stat. Att.omey General.
DlnntU pleaded cunty Sept. e
to use ot a false instrument ol nl· ins, ·aa1e of unreclstered
aecurltl• and provld1n1 false
REAL ESTATE
INVESTMENT SERIES -Co-
sponsored by Newport
Harbor /Costa Mesa Board of
Realtors and' the Daily Pilot. occ Science Hall, 7:30p,m.
FRlOAY NlGHT FJLMS -
"Dr. Zhivago," OCC Forum, 1: U
p.m. $1.
u•.,...._
EX.CtA CHIEF OWL TY
Richard Helme fined
HELMS •••
ti1hts and by h11 COIW!len.ce wu
guided by one prlnciple ..• wttat
is in Ute best lnteHSta of the Unlt·
ed States."
At that polnt. Parker lnt.erJect·
ed that high aovernment offlcials
in the Water1at.e scandal had
made the same plea.a.
Willl•ms agreed, but said,
·'There was no selC-interest in
this cue, no ulf·1ain. no aell·
emolument."
He said Helms. who had been
in 1ovemment service for 8$
years -nearly .even of them u
director oC the CIA -"will bear
the scar of a conviction for Ute
rest of his days."
Williama said that Helm•' only
con1olaUon wW be that he aot the
"sen ln tbe best interests of hls
country.••
Fr .. rflfl AJ
C£0SE •.•
schools with enrollment.I ol 300or
less.
The first public hearinf wlll be
held Nov. 28 at Bay Vlew SchoOl.
With )en than 130 stUdent.1 B8' View it tl\e Newport-Neu
UnJfled dl1trict '• smallest
acbool.
The eommtttee Wlll then move
on to Victoria SchOol on Costa
Meta'• west st de f of a bel.rina
D~.1.
A Dec. 5 hearlnt wUI be held at
a yet to be determined location in
the attendance area that supplies
students to "Mesa Verde and
Cali!omiaschoola .
All hearings are set to begin at
7:30p,m.
Lindber1h achoql alao falJa
under the commlttee-·s
recommendation tbat 1cb00Ja
with tea than 800 1tudent.1 be
con1ldered far cl01\IN9.
statements eoocemlni land for •al•. M•anwbUe, four oth4r people
involved with the firm ol Com·
blned Equity Auurance, \nclud·
tna Dinnell'a father, Clyde, 57, of
9 W anderlnc RUl, Irvine, race
trial In the cue on Jao.10.
The two Dlnnells operate a
lranchillna flnn called the Qoc
l"atber.
The elder Dlnnell, ln addlUon.
to the charcea he tacos in connec-
tlon wlth the 1804 traud c~e.
also is free while appealinJf con· vlctlon on two counts of Income
tax evuton and fact1 anotber
federal case charging him with
12 count& of mail fr,ud • .U in
federal court ln Phoenix.
The mall ttaud charaa were
in • federal erand Jury indict·
mel\t handed down after ln·
ve1tlcauoo ot a west. Arizona
land operaU.on known u Thun-
derbird Valley.
OCC PLANETARIUM -"lD-
vaslon of Mars" 7:30 and t p.m.
SaturdJiy, 7 :30 p.m. . ·occ LECTURES -"Hawaii
on Foot." Science Lecture 1;
"Marine Electronics," Fine Arts
116; ··Earthquuea.'' Fine Arts
119. "Your Heritage, Basic
Genealoiry, .. Science Lectµre 2;
all 7·30p.m.
SAnJRDAY, NOV. S
FOOTBALL -OCC va. Santa
Ana Colle&e, OCC Field, 7:IO
p.m.
Water Plan Hit
SACRAMENTO CAP)
CaUfomla'1 18 Catholic biabops
are opposing the proposed new
rules for enforcing the 160-acre
limit !or uae of federal irrigaUon
water "We believe that the pro-
posed new regulations do npt
represent a reasonably equitable
approach to reaUlaUns the use or
federally subsldl%ed agricultural
water,·· tbe stateme!"t utd.
DULL SEX µFE. • •
QUES110N NO. 8 wants you to give tbe number of dif ·
rerent women with whom you've bad more than a passinc
interest.
Question No. 8A asks the average duration of each al-
r..ir.
The survey makes it euy for you on question 10 It asjts
why you had an extra-marital affalr and offers multiple
choice ~wen.
SOME OF THE read.y·made answers include·
-l wu mid at my wife and this ls how I got even. -sex With my wife la boring.
-t wanted t little adventure and excitement in my 1ife.
-TwOorinore ta better than one. Mrt. Newman. a member of the Huntington Beach
• Planning COmmtsslon. aaid she is trying to 1et 500
responses In Huntlngtoo Beach. She hasn 'l received one yet.
She said she took a batch to the poUee department but
officers wouldn't touch the questionnaires with a IO.foot
pole.
MRS. NEWMAN said she also has sprung the survey on
the Rotary Club, the accountine 'department at Cal State
Lon1 Beach and various physicians. But no luck.
She aa1d the is ol~ulating the surveys to help a former-
prolessor st Cal State Northridge who i.s plannin& to write a
book on the sUbject.
.. lt looks llk6 Jt m~ be one ~ the briefest bOoks in bis·
tory. '' lhe observed.
ft Ud lawsmu
!!""•·~~· two Or o ty .car de I pa •ett.J Tburs-
d Y. n ~ by the dktrfct at·
torner•a Office that_P..~t .soo in
c tt lO the JHabllc COf. fen.
Toyota Santa Ana, Inc.,
reached a ~lutton of a lawtuit
in wblch the dealership was a de-
f endnot by paylnc a ·total of
$20,0001n pen81Ucs and ~ts to
thecou.nty.
The firm wu iuect in Superior
Court action aat accused ii.
operaton of advertlsJng cars for sale that Pl'OTecl to be unavaila·
ble when cust.omen made in-
quiries.
Lawvers for the firm slreaaed that the settlement was made
without ToYota Santa Ana adtnit·
• ting the truth of any alleeallons ·
made by the consumer fraud division.
Tbe second settlement in·
volved the payment of $12,500 in
civil penalties Lo the county by
La Habra Dodge.
Consumer fraud attorneys took
actJon against the dealership
after it wu alleged that smog
control devices on 30 dem-
onstrator cars at the La Habra
lot had been discoMected.
It was alleaed that the im-
proved performance of the 30
demonstrator cars led customers
to purchase automobiles on which
smog control devices had not been
disconnected.
The stipulated judgment ap.-
proved by lawyers for both sides
contains the pledge by the firm
that it wiU not disconnect smog
control devices al any lime in the
· future.
Grove Pool
Claims Boy
A 3-year-old Garden Grove boy
drowned Thursday afternoon.
when he apparent!~ rode his
tricycle into an apartment com·
plex swimming pool, Orange
County coroner's deputies said
today. '
Chad Reep, of 9611 Maureen
Drive, was pronounced dead at
2:48 p.m. at Palm Harbor
Hospital, deputies said.
Tbe youngster was found noat-
lng face down in the pool by
neighborhood children, in-
vestigators said.
Marine Recruit
Dies at Pendleton
The Marine Corps lentabvely
blames the death of a 21-year-old
recruit while exercising at Camp
Pendleton, on aspiration of food
from his stomach
~Pvt. Frankie A. Ramirez, of
Killeen, Tex., collapsed Sunday
and was pronounced dead at
nearby San Clemente General
Hospital. A heart attack was
blamed at first.
Islands Quake
PALMER, Alaska IAP> An
earthquake with a preliminary
magnitude of 6.5 on the Richter
scale has shaken the Aleutian
Islands. No damage was re·
ported.
MAATI, RAY CLIFT WITH COMATOSE SON
· 'He'• • Flghter, He'll Fight HI• Wey Back! .
Al'WW"'9C8
Keeping F&;itlt
Still Hope/or Teen in·Coma
BOONE GROVE, Ind. CAP> -A year ago today, as Kevin
Clifft headed down a rural road to buy his mother a birthday
present, his car blew a· lire and flipped over. Doctors said be wouldn't survive the night.
BECAUSE RE IS STILL alive, his par~.~-~ and Marti cum, have hope.
The hope is built on little things -and is somellmes fragile.
After several weeks on the critical list, with extensive brain·
damage, a bruised left kidney and cracked ribs, Kevin squeezed
his mother's band. .
The nurses said it was just a reflex.
It was more to his mother.
"IT WASN'T A REFLEX. I knew it wasn't a reflex ...
To prove her point, she asked Kevin on successive days to
squeeze her band if he knew she was there. He did. ·
"As long as you have communication with your child, you
can't let go," Mrs. Clifft said. "He's a fighter. He ·11 fight his way back.'' ·
But the parents admit they've had to fight against giving up.
••vou LEAJlN TO SURVIVE these things when your heart is
breaking," Mrs. Clifflsaid. "You can't believe the pressure you
live under. Each day you say, 'This must be it· · ·
And life, she said, ''has no guarantees.··
Kevin, now 17, bas grown 11'2 inches but has lost more than 40 pounds since his accident.
"The thing that no one understands is that time is the'healer.
We're very, very encouraged." bis mother said. "Kevin hasn't 111aC\,.• a backward ste et." 'l. u
l ..
. KEVIN'S PATERNAL GRANDMOTHER, a felistered nurse '
from Illinois, has moved in with the family to watch tbe y.outb·
while his parents work. Kevin was released from the hospital in September.
Clifft is a sheet metal worker in Gary. His wife is a book-keeper.
Medical bills have totaled more than S.S,000 a month. Sev-
eral benefits have been held, but the donations have fallen far short of meeting expenses.
.
'40s 'Baby· Booin'
Still :Reverberates
If you just turned 30 or know
someooeothat qe, read Sunday's
Daily Pilot to find out how that
generation affects your life.
I
-It's Not EasY.
BOOM REVERBERATES -
Society ~as never been ready for
the baby boOm that followed
World War II. First, there
weren't enough sthools; now
there are not enough homes. An
Associated Press feature ex-
amines how th.is population bulge
elbows its wav to middle age ..
VOLtJN'tBERS' VE&VE -An
unpaid corps helps Oraqe Coun-
ty's Office of Consum• Affairs Clementean Returm $533
( SIJND~~ BFSr J
jovial as be apoke to abOut 300
Mangers supporters at the cfui.
ner.
He appeared to be maltlog flDl
of soJUe of hiJ own policies in1he
talk. M. one Poiht, Brown taid,
"When I was elected, my no.
growth policies were so widdY
publlcl:ied that all tbe no-
• growlben moved to Call!Onila
and that's why we're having so
much populatioo growth."
He a1ao said, "I've vetoed
more bills than aoy other gov-
I
EPOllE YOU ST ART run-
D 111 to your friendly 1 n'11bborhood real estate person
and call your bank. however, I
should confess these. ads didn't
run tod~. They were taken from
the pages of the Daily Pilot of
Jan. 8, 1960 -almost 18 years
aco.
:Alas lt Js clear that everything a6esup.
.Back 18 years ago. you could
also get a cup of coffee for a
dlme, a gallon of cas for less than
50 cent.a and a lunch for under a
buck. Of course, you weren't
making thewaaes of 1977, either.
It does seem, however, that In
housing costs, our coastal region
1s running away from the rest of
the country.
If you don't think so. j ust uk
this fellow I was with this morn·
ing. His name is Pete. He got a
fairly decent job in our reaion
just recently.
Confident that his employment
was going to last , Pete decided lo
move his family here. The house
hunting started.
Gathered with a friendly 1roup
this morning, Pet& made the big
annowcement. He declared:
.. I WOULD UKE to make a
small penonal announcement
about a large personal commit·
ment.
••1 am now one ot you -a
Newport Beach bom~wner.
.. Bonnie, Leslie, Audrey and I
moved into our home in
Newport Beach a few days ago.
We're very pleased about that.
"So Is my bank, for whom I am
now the source of a substantial
monthly cub flow for several
decades to come."
Well, a lot of us know that feel·
ing.
This particular eentleman.
named Pete, however, may W
Just a cut different than the rest
of us. His full name is Peter C.
Kremer. At 37, he is the new
president of the Irvine Company.
lie has now been in office, as·
s igned by the new ownerablp, for
jus toverlOOdays.
Thia morning, however, as he
addretsed a capacity crowd at
tbe Newport Harbor Chamber of
Commerce Town Hall meeting,
he couldn't Jtelp but reflect on the
sbock ot coastal real estate
pticea.
HE HAS JOINED all the rest of
\ll with those euy monthly pay-
ments.
Kremer may head one of the largest land development firms
in the universe. He may sell a lot of houaes to the rest of u1.
Dut even at that, it obviously
strikes home when be has to slgn
porsonallyon th9bottom line.
At one Point ln anawer to a ~estion from the floor. Pete
d, "'l'h•· i>tlce of raw land in
wport ts rldtculous."
I don't th1Dk he really bad to
Ull UI that.
~--· ... _ . -...,,,._'.,... -. .... -
..............
FOUND INNOCENT
Frenctne Hugh••
The stagnation ln the Jobles1 flsurea ii expected to lncruse
pre11ure on the Carter ad·
m.tnls\raUoc for a tu cut and
jol>·creatlna proaram1 next
1nr.
NEARLY I.I million
Americans remained without
Jobs Jut month. about 10,000 more than in September.
Moat of the increase was
among black workers, whose Job.
leas rate climbed from 13.l to U.9
percent tn October. In contrul
the rate for wblte workers bur•
mabie<t at tU per~nt tor the past
tour months.
Over the put year, the Labor·
Department said, the black rate
baa abo11m no improvement,
wbile joblessnea1 for whites hu
declined b1 more than a full
pertentqe point.
Verdict Could Help
Otlwr Beaten Wives
LANSING. l'dicb. <AP> -A juct,e 1ays the qualified acquittal of a
woman accused or murderint the ex·huaband wbo beat her la a ailnal
to the world that thomands of battered women are •'crying for help.•·
An Ingham County Circuit Court Jury or IO' women and two men de·
liberated 6\.2 hours Tb~day ton ch a verdict of innocent by reason
of inHnity for Francine Huabes. _. ----------
Afterward, prestdlna ~ud~e 1asollne she bad poured under ~ay Ho~hklls said the decision s the bed where Hughes slept. She
immediate i_mpac~ may be ~ also contended the death was in
"turn up a little fire under this lf d f of f be ti roe to en\Ulciate to the world that se -e en.se years o a ngs
there ia a problepi here:• by her huaband.
SUE WAS TO FACE Hotchkiia
again today to determine.
whether ehe will be released
spendlna a psycblatrlc ezauib1a-
tlon requited bytbe verdict.
Mn. 'Huabes. 30, was Charged
with first-degree murder ln the
death of James Hucbea, a S1-
year-old former eoutrucUon
worker who dJed Marc~ 9 ln a fire
at his ex-wife's IH>me ln
Dan1ville.
Mrs. Huahes claimed she was
temporarily wane when she lit
THE LEG.\L IMPACT of the
decision waa unclear, and
feminists wbo rallted behind
Mrs. H\llhes and raised a $1,000
defense fund for her said a slm·
ple acquittal without u insanity
findina would have more IUl'ely
affirmed women 'a rights
Mra. Hughq can be held at the
state Center for Forensic
Paycblatry in Ypsilanti for a
maximum of 60 days while
psychiatrists determine if she ta
mentally Ill. However.
behavioral experts teaWied dur·
ins the trial that she ii not.
'My Goodness'
_House·Honon Humphrey
W ASIDNOTON (AP) -The House ot Representat.tves had never
before in its 200-year hlstoey honored a member of the Senate by con-
venin1 a special aesalon.
. But it did Thursday for Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey.
The House session in tribute of the Minnesota Democrat was tht second time in a week that bis ·
congressional colleaaue1
gathered in his honor since he re·
turned to Washington after treat-
ment for inoperable cancer.
TRUE TO HIS reputation,
Humphrey 1polte Thursday for 20
minutes -far longer than the
normal limit on apeecbes in the
House.
"One of the reason! I never ran
for the House I found out they
have a two-minute or flve-millute
rule," Humphrey quipped. The.
Senate bu no limlt on how lont a membercanapea~
A year aco Humpbrey Uh•
derwent suriel')' for removal of
his bladder. In Aueust1 doctol'8 •
discovered a cancerous tumor ln
bis abdomen.
WHEN TB£ SENATOR en·
tered the Hou~e chamber Thurs·
day, the membei'I applauded for.
five minutes. HOuae Speuer
Thomas P.·O'Nel\l, followed by
both Democrats and
l\epubllcans, praised Humphrey
as a man of principle. •
A veteran fof many unauc-cesatul bidi for the pre11aacy,
Humphrey apoke from the
rostrum just below the speaker.
"I Jtriow where l'm 1t•ndtn1. ••
he 1ild. "I'm 1tand.in1 where the
president ol the UniteCI States atv•• hla st&te dt the Union. My
goOdneU/'
IN TE&tlMONY before Uie
con1reutonal Jolnt Economic
Committee, Shlskln noted,
however. that the improvement
in emplo)'rDent. whlle eluaaiab. i.
••substantially stronger .. than
the Improvement that took place
durin1 the eo.called pause last
year in the recovery from the re.
cession.
The administration bad bo&»ecf
to reduce the unemploymtnt rate
to 6.S percent by year-end.
BVUY FOR BOY;
HE S4J'ED DAY
ST. U>UlS <AP.> -Three bombs that were triggered wbell •
motorlata ltaned thelf l!an have kllled two people, raised fear amont
resldenta Ol loutbem st. LoU1s County and aet poUce huntln& for • munitions expert.
Shirley MU"le ~ 33, a coinouter anaJYst. wu kllled nnrsaa,
wben lhe ltartecl btr compact • • • •
car 1n the parldn1 lot ot the
OVERLAND PARK, Kan. apartment compt" where 11\e
CAP> -WhenBeverlyBlmbawn lived.
telephoned police to report that a • Authorltfea Hid three 1UCb of
bull wu munching on a pine tree dynamite had ~laced under
in the yard Of her home, nve of. the drlver'I le&t WiHd to the
ficers and two animal control of· ignition.
ficers responded.
Within two hours, the bull bad
flattened the pine tree. rammed
Mrs. Birnbaum'• car and an
animal control truck and driven
the officers and the homeoWIM!r
into biding.
Then, 13-year-old Bobby
En1land happened by. He picked
up a board and cave th• bull a
healthy whack on the bead. Sul>-
dued by the swat.. the bull -was
walked peacefully down th• road
tot.be home of hi• owner.
;TON ~ -I\
3i;:.,year-old ice cream
yend<w'. on probatlon for
• ll•& crime was to bear-' nlaned today tn connec-
tiPt> 1'ith the tlaytnis of t...,o yo~ women whose
• .... ~ ~-... •-... • ...... -ft found n~ir here in the
past two weeu.
Andrew E.1 Robert.son
of Colton was booked for
investiaatton of murder
follo'fing bbl arrest. at
his patem1s apartment
by sMntrs '1eteclives Crom~ lt.1\terstde aqd
~::.l!~:!tnaid.coun-Oakland Teachers on Strike
IUV£RSJDE County sheriff'• Capt. Ray An unidentified Oaldantl student uses a bull horn to announce her
Canova smd that, at the approval of a strike by teachers which got under way Thursday.
time of RObertson's ar· Although attendance dropped sharply, the district's 89 schools re-
rest, items belonging to mained open today as secret talks between faculty and manage-
both· yict!ms were found ment continued in an attempt to settle the district's first strike.
inhia PQCkets. Robertson At issue were wages, benefits and working conditions.
ha<l been employed at ----------------------------Tropical Ice Cream
·Company in San
Bernardino for Just over
a week
Both women had been
disemboweled and then·
breasts purtially re
moved. The first victim,
Karen Litzau, 20, of
Enid, Okla., was found
Oct. 20 near Beaumont
just off Interstate 10.
THE SECOND body
was found Tuesday in
open country near ln-
te rs t ate 111 west of
ucaipa by a woman on
rseback. Authorities
were withholding the vie·
tim"s name, but said she
was a 19·ycar·old San
Bernardino s:irl with a record of several pros-
t1tut1on arrests and was
known by scv(•ral
aliases, including Kim·
berly Gano.
Robertson. sentenced
in August 1976 to a year
in J&tl and three years'
probation for sex
perversion, was released
on probation earlier this
_\ear
He had been churged
after a 20·year·old girl
was kidnapped at knife·
point near an Ontario
truck stop and sexually
assaulted, authorities
dsaid.
'Tax Dropped
Kids Vers11S State·
Youtm Test Free Enterprise
RAMONA IAP> -Young Dickie
Cessna has added gopher hunting to
his manure sales, and the state of
California wants to know his secret
weapon Dlclae says he'll never tell.
State law requires past ex·
terminators to be licensed and
pesticides to be registered if a person
claims he is killing pests, said Nuell
Lunde. who heads the Downey office
of the !>late airiculture department.
"'Th<.•rc is a $40 registration fee,'·
said Lunde. But a thick bundle of
blank license application forms has
hecn mailed back to Lunde.
AN INTEROFFICE l'iEMO of lhe
Department of Agricolture asks.
"Are we prepared to file a criminal
com pl amt on Dir.kie?"
Kiclco Inc., which gained national
attention last spring when the state
tried to tax its sales of manure, 1s
making money on its gopher·killing
work, but Dickie·, the 13-year-old
president, refuses to say bow much.
HE AND IDS TWO sisters, Ne·Ni, 9,
and Bette. 11, and half·sister, June
Cole. 14, left the next move up to
California in a test 0£ free enterprise
vs. government.
methods. They refused to pay back
taxes on sales of manure collected
from the horse stables which Cessna
manages at San Diego Country
Estates.
AFTER MUCH PUBUCITY, the
California Board of Equalization
agreed to co11ect only on future sales.
Former Gov. Ronald Reagan com·
mented about their enterprise and
hard work on hls radio broadcast. A
local state senator, John Stull, told the
Cessna children t.aey could count on
him in the future.
In a recent letter to Stull, Dickie
wrote, "Boy. do we ever need your
help now."
DICKIE SAID HE charges S'l to kill
a gopher and $IS to rid them from any
properly for a year.
The liquid he uses on ther rodents is
a ''business secret," he said in an in·
terview Thursday. He and his sister
also sw~p streets In this ranchhouse
development northeast or San Diego
an,d sell the manure to make money,
which their father banks in their
names.
IN HIS LETTER to Lunde, Dickie
said he and bls sisters "earn money
and we pay tax.es, and we don't ltke
the idea of your departtnent spending
all tlult money to send someone down
from Downey. We think the money
SACRAMENTO (AP) -There's something
new In the Sacramento Police Department's light
against prostltuUon. orncers are arreslin1 more
male cuatomers than female l"'05titutes.
As a re•ull, )>Ollce sati:l Tb'11'Sday, the,_ are
fewer prostitutes on the streets and related crimes
are do.-n ln the neighborhood where most operate.
IN THE PAST two mon~. 108 men were ar-
rested f<>r sollciUng female poUce decoys, while on-
ly 8! women were arrested forprostituUon .
Judg~ ha\le been sentencing the men to SlOO
n .. -u: nr 1n11r .<lava in Jail. whlle women get 30 days In
jail fOf a fu·stonernu:
MUNICIPAL COURT Jud1e Arthur Etsslnger-
Author
Files
Lawsuit
LOS ANGELES CAP>
-Mario P\Qo, author of
..The Godfather," is su·
ing a grocery industry
trade journal for $.1.~
million over an article he
claims falsely called hlm
a form~ shoplifter.
According to the libel
suit, filed here Thurs·
day, The Progressive
G rocet carried an article
in June 1977 bearing
Puzo's byline called
·•Confessions of a
Former Supermarket Thief.··
Winter aad .ruw bk>otat of
whJU, plnb or ndL smase ••
double and 'ro9t' fonm. ·
THE SUIT claims
Puto never wrote the
article, never consented
to the use or bis name on
it and was never contact-
ed by the publication.
According to the sult,
the article said that as a
boy, Puzo and two other
youngsters robbed a
grocery store in Elko.
Calif. An editorial ln the
same magazine iden-
tified Puzo as author of
•'The Godfather."
PUZO SAID the article
was poorly written and
left the false impression
that the author had no
literary skills.
American Can Com-
pany, the magazine's
publisher, and Edgar
Walzer, a publication of.
ficial, were named as co·
defendants in the su.it.
Sale 2.97
. 1 GAL., Rec. 8.96
IFlori1t Spttcial J.
"ARECA"
PALM
= plant.
-~5
•)~ <)-..... "). '
Some to
5'tall
Sale thru Nov. 8
\\ I \TE H B Y t·:
c.H \""" "l'l.C I \I .
~ta.la i.tm,tted to Sqp1J Oo ~ PllOIE . ~
546-5525
SACRAMENTO (AP>
-Californians who have
artiCicial legs will no
longer have to pay sales
and use taxes on the
medical devices under a
law that takes effect Jan.
I. Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr. signed SB 588 by Sen.
Bob Wilson <D -La
Mesa>
Cecil Millimer, the agriculture de-
partment's Downey field represen-
tative, drove 120 miles to Ramona to
tell the youeg entrepreneurs they
might be using a dangerous chemical.
should be spent to catch people wbo -------------------------~--~--------
"US LITTLE KIDS don't un~
derstand all this,.. wrote Dickie to
Lunde. "All we do is kill gophers. We
think you should be getting alter peo.
pie with rats in their houses who don·t
do anything aboot it."
are doing bad things to the environ-
ment.
"We are not trying to be smart
aleck or disrespectful," Dickie wrote.
"We don't break Windows or steal or
stuCC 11.Jte that. The stat.e is always giv-
ing us problems, making it very tough Richard Cessna formed Kidco Inc.
to teat'h his children business to stay in business.··
Hell's Angels' State Chieftain
·Paroled; Future Uncertain
FOLSOM <AP l Near legendary Hell's
Angels leader Sonny Barger, free after four
years in pnson. 1sn·t certain 1f he·11 resume open
leadership of his outlaw motorcycle gang
Attorney Kent Russell said Barger, the Angels'
chieftain for two decades. told him he hasn't made
plans for his immediate futurt'.
BARGER, PAROLED Thursday, may continue
college studies he started at Folsom Prison, with a
goal or achieving a master's degree in sociology. he
told Russell.
Barger doesn't know if he will remain a
member of the rou&h·ridin& Hell's Angels, whose
brutal adventures gained them nationwide notorie·
ty. Russell said.
THE 31-YEAR·OLD Barger was freed Thurs-
day after serving four years on a convlction of
p<>ssesaion ot narcotics for sale and possession of a
weapon by an ex-felon.
Alt.er his release, Barger ten for his Oakland
home, where h~ lived before his arrest. He was not
.i-vallablefor comment.
ORJGINALL Y SENTENCED to consecutive
lO·year·to-life terms, Barger became eligible for
parole after a judge ruled a five-year minimum
waiting period-tacked on because be had prior
mariJuana conv1cttons -was unconstitutional
because of law changes made to conform with re·
!axed drug attitudes.
When Barger entered prison in 1973, law en~
forcement olflcials predicted the renecade cycle
gang -whose members wear distinctive denlm
vests adorned with the aang's "colors" -would de-
teriorate for lack of leadership, But Barger re-
portedly headed the gana from behind bars. al-
though gang members deitled It.
WIBLE BE WAS in prison, a bikers' magazine ran a "Free SoMy Barger .. campatp, selling T-
shirta and bumper stickers to help pay bb legal ex-penses.
InvesUaators said B~reer bad no trouble eom.
municating with the club throuah vtaitors. who in-
cluded club members and his wife. Sharon. an
ex·beauty queen •
SOUTH COAS:I' PLAZA
Snoopy and friends-here for Christmas! The warm and OtJddly wondet-be!lgle's
ready to take the reins in his new Santa suit ••• his pals Just want to hang
around your treel Snoopy. $10 Suit and hat, $4 Lucy, Chartle Brown and Woodst~:
ornaments, each, $3 All from Determined Productl009. .
r
\
More in the Snoopy Shop. Glr1's A~1
PEANIJT8 ~Coot •• 19ti0, 1• ,. 1066,. Unlt9d r:.n... Syndloe%e, ~ • I
..
~---ch Towns Ask
State Assistance
T!le oaa'Ofna dlle:mma ol eoastaJ comrmmltle1 that are
forced to turn to )>rope1't1 tu revenues to maintain their
acbels -to a Jarse extent tar the benefit of vtalt«a -was pointed up once mCJl'e um week.
Tbe Auembly Committee on Water, Parka and Wildlife coowned in Seal Bea.ell to examine the JatMt measure designed to move eome of the rspaoslbllity ot ~-----... -.. .. .. . ~.
" " ',l'he b~ SPQll80l'ed by Aasdnblyman Dennis Mangers.
D-Huntmgton Beach. reeomme:nda diverting $3 mJWon a
year from the state's tideland oil and natural gu revenue
to he~ relieve beach mabitenance deflclta 1n .coutal com-
tmmitieS. .
• Slniil8t leglslatioa was vetoed by then Gov. Ronald ~d a la~er bill was killed in the 1975-76
Which leaves the property tai payers ln the beach
communities still tootina the beach maintenance tab. And it's not a small one. In the past 10 years. the com· mittee was told, Seal Beach alone has had to come up with more tliaJi St milllon to maintain a single mile of local
beach1 because re~enue from parking lots and PiV opera-
tions aoesn 't begin to cover the cost.
Some state officials say that if the state helps the
beach communities, it should consider similar assistance
for mountain communities catering largely to visitors.
Perhaps so. But why not tackle one problem at a time
and start with the beaches? The drain on beach communi-
ty taxpayers has been well established. State policy and
state mandates on beach use have caused the problem.
The diversion of $3 million would not break the state, and it
would provide at least partial relief for those who happen
to live year-round in areas that turn into a summer mecca
for visitors from throughout the state.
Practical Play-acting
IL may have looked a little silly last week to have
Orange County's top chieftains assembled for a morning of
play-acting.
What they were doing under the command of Board of
Supervisors Chairman Thomas Riley was pretending
there was an earthquake centered in Seal Beach measur-
ing 7.Son the Richter Scale.
Before the morning exercise was finished the make·
believe quake left 357 dead, 10,800 injured 'nd 8,400 home·
Jess in a test designed to see how well county forces would
respond in a real emergency.
When the test was finished, Riley said he was
"pleasantly surprised"' at county officials' performance.
The exercise was the first test of the county's four-
year-old emergency command center. Had the quake been
real some 170 workers would have been called to handle
the crisis and coordinate emergency efforts with other
agencies.
Such play-acting by government executives might ap-
pear a waste of time at first glance. But such exercises no
doubt are about the only way to prepare county government
for efficient action if a tragedy ever occurs.
Who Needs. It? '
Each succeeding Halloween seems to generate new
problems.
This year the big vogue was the haunted house. There
were scads of them all over, sponsored by well-meaning
organizations and communities bent on giving the kiddies
a little good, clean, hair-raising fun.
It didn't always work that way. Apparently trying to
outdo each other with the fake horrors, the haunted houses
went way beyond old-fashioned chain rattling and sheeted
ghosts.
The offerings i~cluded such items as bloody torture
scenes, disembowelments, decapitations and mad doctors
sawing on real "'leg" bones {obtained from the local
butcher shop>, complete with blood-c urdling shrieks and
flashing lights / As many a really horrified parent discovered too late,
this sort of stuff can send a small child into hysterics and
give even the bigger ones some very genuine nightmares.
Some of the sponsors say they"ll be more careful next
year about warning parents of younger children, or bar-
ring them altogether.
Our question is, do children of any aJ!e need tl:lls sort of
grisly .. fun .. when we're complaining so bitterly
about TV and movie violence? And to psychologists who
argue it's a great outlet for hidden repressions, we
respectfully say, baloney!
• Opinions expressed i" the apace above are those of the Dally Piiot
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P 0 .
Boie: 1560. Costa Mau, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. -
Harris/Things
BJ SYDNEY I . BAtSIS T1UnQa 1 ~ EJ& lto1.de to,
Looking UpOlhlrThingt:
-That aom e 3 ;ooo
American eities and towns
have no form of public
transportation except tax-
icabs.
-Tbat ~ts virtually
tho onJy Janguqe Jn tho world
Jn which three wotda spelled
as dUlerenU1 •• udoo•, .. ''Wu" and .. tuD .. v. pro-
nounced alike.
U.S. were eantinc more tban
'1octors; since that time. the
average earniDP ot doctOrs
have about doubled tbOse ol . lawyers.
t
WASBJN<nON -Several ol the natlaa•• IQOlt hl&b-powtncl
C9C'POl'lltions baw ~ .bl a co111plney to k1U t.bo WA:>ni
Com\uner ProtocUoe Aceney.
'l'be bW bu beeb remO'fleCl ti-om the BouiO c:aJCJDdar for tJwa yeu.
AD&We&GllMtattq~~ powen have RcCeeclecl 1D ~It·
in& the lllQPOlecl qeocy tor more
than eta!&~. Tbey metttdo ncb companies
as Armour. A.rmsttoq Cort.
Betblebem
Steel, Exxoo.
PlreJtooe,
Georgia
Pacific,
Maytag,
Shell. Sul1 Oil
and United·
Airlines.
They have
formed a
pressure bloc
whlcb~hey call the Ad Hoc
Consumer Issues Workine
Group. Tb.la lobbying force baa
pulled wires, scratched backs
and twisted arms on Capitol HlU.
It has also provided blist.rin&,
..anti-consumer speeches for will-ing congressmen.
Despite these efforts, the con·
sumer legislation squeaked
through the House Government Operadons Committe. Iaat M~
by a 22 to 21 "Vote. It would have created a small, independent,
nonregulatory acency to
represent the consumers ln the
policy councils.
But the horrified business
nabobs saw it as an institu-
tionalized Raloh Nader with all federal government. They got
Earl Waters
• ..
Ro .
Frfdat. CMmber 4, 1017
-----------
ANOTBEll participant also re-
jected any concessions. wamlng
the assembled business tycoons
to remember the "Trojan Horse"
story. The moral of the story was
to beware of strangera bearlni
gifts.
The assembled tycooll.8 agreed
to make a last·dllcb effort to de-
feat the consumer bill and beeao
bombarding congressmen with calls and letters from their
friends with corporate connec. tions. ·
---
CARTEJl CALLED for many
of these same measures d~
his presidential campaign. The
bill's backers, therefore, expect-
ed to have hl.s support. But they
didn't reckon with Energy
Secretary James SchJesinaer,
who persuaded the president. to
Brown's Lesson
In Use of Veto
Some fancy footwork was
engaged in by Governor Jerry
Brown in the closing hours of the
lf111 legislative s!SSlon in an ef·
fort to avoid ,What he feared
might beco_ipe a rash of veto
overrides 8nd thus indicate a
dimini.!hineofhlsstreogth.
Governon have long been ex-
erci•ln& their veto power vlrtual-
1 y without
restraJnt. It had been
nearly three
decades since
a veto was
overridden when the
Legislature
overturned
one of Ronald
Reagan's .
With this knowledge, Brown,
since taking offiee, bas been
braien in hil re~tlon of bills
and lt wasn't until earlier this
yev that be auffered bis fint
legislative "reprimand." That
was when the lawmakers, eged
on by an aroused public, over-
rode his death penalty veto.
Apparently assum.lnl that to
be an ex~onai case, Brown
hu cootinUed to act roughshod iri
the use ot Uie veto. Obviously he
bad misread the mood of the
solons for, ln rejeetlna a bill
authored by Senator Al Aqluist
designed to ease the Medl·Cal
and welfare cott burdens on
county aovernments. be 1tlrred thememben.
AJquiat bad fought too hard for
his bill to accept defeat and set
out to gather the necessary n
votea fOf an override. Re sot 31.
Indlcatlom ot support for bis bill
in the Assembly we.re sufficient
to proriilff override there tOo. To
bead lt oil Brown quickly had the
ptovialons of the Alquiat
measure amended into an As·
sem bly bill, letting it be known
that he would sign it.
JN THE SAME manner he
beaded off override of another
Senate bill, tbb authored by · Senator Ray Jolmson. It wu a
relatively uolmponant measure
which reimbui-sed tiny Trinity
County for Ciosta ot an educa· tional program wtlich bad been encouraged by the state. The
amountlnvolved was only $22,150
but Brown rejected it out of band.
Angered by this cnalier treat·
meot of a small consUtuency,
Johnson appealed to bis col-
leagues and won override in the
Senate. Again tbe provlatooa of
tbe J obnson bW suddenly were to
be found ln an amended Att· sem bty bill -belld«l tor tbe (OV·
ernor'• sienature. •
The two instances, joined with
the death penalty override, point
to a new enthusiasm for the over-
ride. Spawned by years <>f lain~
heartedness on the part of tbe
lawmakers to tt, aovemors have
grown to the b"ellef tbe
Legislature does not due to do It.
This has led to tbe mlStaken
myth that an override la an .. em.
barraument" to • govel"DOI', a
sign or weakness on hi• part, u
well aa a total misCOPceptioo of
the reasoos the veto power ls er anted the governor.
IT WAS N&r given as Preel·
dent Beajaman Harrl$on so pro-
t~undly stated "upon the prin-
ciple that be should approve only
such aa be would bave voted for
had he beeri a Member." Rather
It .was granted tor the purposes
detailed l)y one of the state's
greatest leglslators, the late Senator George Miller, Jr., "ol
protee.Ung the P'!bfic from tee·
ttonaliam, expeadltures for
whic:b there are not sufficient
funds, and inadvertent errors in
legislattoo. ••
Stomping on the idea that the
govemOl" can veto wtll7·nil1Y '·
Miller declared, "In exercising
. the veto power simply because
he doe$ not like the policy de-
cided by the people's represen·
taUves, the executive in effect la
declaring that be, and not the
people, WW make tbe laws of the
state and the representatives of
the people cannot impose .J)ollcy
upon the executive ...
"THE EXECUTIVE.•• Killer
added, "ts neither king nor dic-
tator. 'Ibis is a people's aovem-
ment and the executive branch
must carry out the policies which
the people's representatives
have deterinlned. •·
It now remailts to .be aeen
whether BrOwn's demonstrated
concern over the new-found
potential for overril\e will serve:
to make him more reltrained ln
the use ot the veto.
. . • .
DAVID WATCHES WATER RUN FROM FAUCET FOR THE F1RST TIME
After Six Yeara In a 'Bubbte,' He Flnatty Gatn• Mobltlty
"/NASA Suits David
In 'Space Suit,' He'll Leave.,.Bubble'
HOUSTON (AP> -The scientists who
sent man to the moon have developed a
"space suit" that will permit a Houston boy to
wander from the plastic bubble in which he
has spent all his six years.
Researchers at the National Aeronautics
aiid Space Administration, using what they ·ve
learned from space projects, perfected an ar·
rangement in whJch David can crawl down a
plastic tunnel and into the germ-free suit that
will m alee him an astronaut on his own planet.
FOR THE FIRST TIME, he will be able to
look out the window of his hospital room, walk
the corridors of the hospital, play catch with
his 9-year-old sister and do his schoolwork at a
desk.
Experts also said he will be able to com·
mun1cate more directly with doctors. nurses
and his family.
David -whose full name has not been re
leased -suffers from a disease known as
severe combined immune deficiency. His
body has no defense against germs or bac
teria What would amount to sniffles for a
normal child could be death for David
for the tmy space suit, said, "I thio,k this
shows how we can advance to mankind what
we have learned in the space program. This
simple space suit can be used, probably, for a
variety of diseases. For example, the young
leukemia patient who is qultevulnerable to in-
fection dunng periods of regression "
OA VJD SPENDS HIS TIME between a
~lerilized bubble at home and one at the Texas
Children's Hospital He beathes filtered air,
eats sterile food and never has felt his
mother's touch directly
But Dr. Nichols said there is a ray of hope
that David's body is slowly ·buiJdmg the cells
needed to protect him from the germs and
bacteria.
The cost or developing the suit was
$20,000. which was paid as part of NASA's pro-
gram to use space technology in advancing
hfc on earth
The design of the suit was a spinoff from
th<' Apollo lunar missions It is made of a rub-
berized, non-porous fabric like that used in
liferafls
. AT A NEWS CONFERENCE Thursday .
officials of the Baylor College of Medicine and
the Johnson Space Center displayed the su1t
and backup system.
FOR ADDED PROTECTION, IT is cov·
ered with the same white silky material on re-
al space suits. There are form fitting rubber
gloves and shoes and a clear plastic bubble for
lhe head. The suit is all one piece.
I ' .
Dr. Bufford L. Nichols, David's attending Ther~ It a filter system and a large um-
b11ic al cord attached to a push cart that pumps
air in~ the suit, g1vmg it a sUghUy islfiated ap· .
pearance.
physician. said: "Thia ls an important feature
\
in the cultural enrichtDent of the ~Y. He 1s
learning the concepts of spac;e, developing
"physical skills which cannot pe done within
the bubble and this is advancing the education David can also ride on the PWlh cart lf he
becomes tired. Doctors said David had first
tried out the suit in late July, and "the first
thing he did was go look in a m.irrer." ·
for this very bright young child."
Blll Carmean, proje~t director at NASA
Churches
To Mull
·Joining JC Penney
NEWPORT. CENTER
FASHION ISLAND STOIE ONLY .
NEW GARDEN SHOP HOURS!
Sat. 8:30 to 6 p.m. -s .... I 0 to 5 p.m.
FICUS BENJAMINA
(Weeping Fig)
a favorite which is easily adapted to
an indoor climate. Planted In 3 gallon
tub. Your choice to 4 ft. height.
SCHEFFLERA
(Umbrella Tree)
. Excellent fast growing House
Plant. Plant In gOOd draining
soil. Sun or snooe. 16.99 Value.
10 Inch.
ass
AFRICAN
VIOLETS
Now99¢
''TBQ ,J1]8T don~
WIUlt to~-ftllllil Pit!· tiOGI eo we•n wait ubtll
aftei.electioll ~)
and appoint the aame
ooea back cm the eumt·
cil."
There are five vacan·
cles tobefllled.
"tbe councilmen 1et
$4 a meeting And we only
meet every few
months," Jald,.. W91ant,
who's been oo the job -
at '60 a year -for 22
years. "1bere just lan't
that mucbtodo."
EACH HOUSE bas its
own septic system and
well and the town eave·
up having its own pollce
chief wben the 1tate
start~ulring school·
ing f«IP£W enforcement
office,.-..
.. The sberttf's deputies
get through here once or
twice a month, "hes aid.
Cll4RRO llJ!B£S
.A FllU DF£i4DE
LAS VEGAS, N~; (AP) -~
fi.,ry blonde c~er, Cham>. has
lopped 10 years from her lefal •1e.
The Spanish •tncer IWON ln "a
federal Court doeument rue. befe she
is 26 -oot86., hu beeD reported.
Tlpe Ktloo corrected naturallutton
papera 'Which lilted "" at as. ud as preparatory to becomlna a
natu.ralbed citizen here this month.
LQrt.Oo left town iD Oet®er ai Ula
eve of a m~J;wlth otflchlla J~
into the ors aUon 's flrianCW .re. conn. No quarterl.J repon Ud beeQ
filed stnee March.
l
M. w . Colt.a Mesa
Yoar husband a. rl&ht. Y.-ir ...
teoce (ftae> wa •UMDded. but. aAb'
a1~r yuu were auu~ pln.r UI ..,.,
Ylolatloo. The coavlctloa toes OD yoar
drhlDlr
'lllegltmme-' Lallel ~
DEAR ~AT: I am an unmarried
woman wbo. cl\ose lO keep her child.,
l 've worried that my daughter may be
referred to as "Illegitimate" in lat.er
life. A friend told me that this term is
no longer acceptOO in California leeal
documenbJ ·
P.A., Tustin
Callfol"llla .bu 1o&~a rid of t~e
worda, "•eg&Umate" •nd ••tt·
legitimate," whee It comes to dMCrlb.
tn,c chUdreta. tivU CGde Sectloa 7otl
now states>•ttae parent and child rel•·
tlonsblp extends equally '° every
cblld ._. to every parent, regardless
or the marital status of the parents.••
Oaemlctd c .. pact• 1'1._.
DEAR PAT: My home-erown
chry1antherpumt 1lwaya end \IP tall
•Dd u1bl How do comm.,ciaJ 1row r. k p u._.m ao 1hort Md com-
paet? Ia there anjthln1 I C®ld do to m e my plaDl.I r emble ?
A.G., F~VatJey
.., ~ d1emJcll he~bt-rotard&ait called
r too DOW la aviilal>.. at UrdeD
1Qpl1 atoree ID •mill paclr.U fs UM
1>1 tbe bome J•fdener. MJnd wttla
pottlii1 aG&J aceord1a1 to label ~
tloua, Ulll ml&ertal will produce eom-
P•d ID pl..a.. reduce aprawUDi
Poi•ectla Pl•t ,.,._.,
DEAR PAT: l was telllnc my
nel&bbor that I've managed to keep
sev'tr al bf last year'• poinaettia plan ta
allve for this Christmas, and she told
roe to be careful because my toddler
could be pousoned if he ate the leaves.
Is this true?
J .W., Huntington Beacn
PolueUla leaves a.ncl flowers both
are d~. It eat.esa. tbey cu lr·
ritate ~ qaOUUt U(l atomacb, cause
voml&,lng, dJarrbea or a more aevere
reaction In a very youn1 cbUd. Tbls
plant'• up alto may caase poiloo·lvy-
llke bU.Aertol If not qalddy removed
from Ute akln. Ano&her favcma. holi-
day plant, mistletoe, aboGld be llep&
out or &be reach of eurloua toddlen
too. Us berrlea caa cause acute
atom acb and lntestlaal lrrttaUcm.
For ·the Record
t
Dl••olutHI••
Of Marriage
Wlllllm M.; HEit.RO, Howero
M•rl4tn Jr. •n4 Miry LOUIH SEITZ, IVlillM L.. INS Otnnl1 C ..
TIGaR, Tl>Qfl't• v. -Jo.n L.. fEV, ROMIClflld P-.ile 0., $U$lOE,
Ll~I J. all4 AntlllllY C. II I;
ROLLINGER, ~ t.. llnd M, Vic·
tor; HAT1'0H,Noelltlela Mend lleb<n
O•lt; ASHaMORE, Fr ... klln •IMI
Jeulc.e V...te, H06LIE, Tl111M ~
11'4 Hardy Kay
COMITO, .Judith"-an4 Ralllll T,
CAUOI LLO, LVCY •nd Runold;
,u!OERS. O>Mltt Howard -Cyn tllUMtrtr; GR~. Ll,_M>d~rk, CAL.Of.RON, R.,_ P an4 JIM V.,
NEUf-ELO, MlllOn 0. MK! Su"'" L...
BROWN, Frenc~ T. -llooe< F CASTILLO, Pl(ty tnd Fr41nll t ,
MMtTINfl, f'r•nk end Glorle.
5"NCHEZ, I!~ ...e ROi.11.
•
ByO. C. HUSTINGS
Of .. Oel., ...... $..,.
Co n1re11 m •n Ro berl E.
Badbam,R·Newport Beach, bas
scbedulod a ownber ol apeeche9 and •
other public appearances Sn the 40th
Congreaaional Dlatrict beglnolnc
\llMn-.fav
Hts aeneawe 111c1uoes a epeecll 'tO
the Dutch Treat Club Weat at noon Wednesday at the M laslon Viejo
Holiday Inn, speaking to civics
classes at Newport Harbor Hleh
School at 8 a .m. Nov. 10, and talklnl
to Harbor Lutheran Church Women at
7:30p.m. Nov.10.
He will bold· a press conference at
3:30 p.m. Nov. 14 at the Newporter
Inn's Pacific Roo01 and will
participate in the Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce's police
~ward• hmebeon at noon Nov. 1S at
the Balboa Bay Club.
•
LT. GOV. Mervyn DymaUy will dis-
cuss the state's business climate at a
mee&.iq of t.be Huntington Beach
Chamber of Commerce Monday at
noon.
The meeting will be held at the Hun-
tington Beach Ion, 21112 Paclfic Coast
Highway. Reservations at $4.50 eatn
can be made by calling 962·'661.
*
REP. GOY Vander Jagt, R·Mich ..
chairman of the National Republican
Congressional Committee, will be the
guest of honor Nov. 14 at a dinner
meeting of the Badham Congressional
Boosters Club.
The club ts a support group for Rep.
Robert E. Badham, R-Newport
Beach. The meeUng wUl be held at the
Newport Beach bome of Mr and Mrs.
Alex Bowle.
•
SHIRLEY GRINDLE, a former
county plann.lng commissioner, will
talk about Orange County polltica at a
Nov. 17 meeting ot the Irvine
Democratic Club.
The 7:30 p.m. meeting wlll be held
at the University P.ark Community
Center, Beech Tree Lane, Irvine.
Tbe meeting ta. open to the public.
Information may be obtained by call·
ing Diane Wilson al 551-6861.
*
ASSEMBLYMAN BON Cordova, D·
El Toro, will be guest speaker for the
Sooth Orange County Democratic
Club meeting at7:30 p.m. Nov.19.
The event will be held at the home
of Die" and Norma ZleOe, 211885 La
Sierra Drive, Misalon Vlejo. Informa-
tion is available by calling Mrs. Zlefie
at 831·3268or Lola Drake at~.
Experts Join Faculty
For UC Irvine Courses
INDBORG
({~CQUET (LUB
••• In Huntington a.och
• 16 ,!!th~ tennl• cwrts 1
• .. I rocqvetboll CWr1•
• !!1!9.{ote fodlltlet for Men & Women
l#CllJOU
--LtN080RG RACQUET (LOB
141\fttl
$ovth .. Telben0ft~ ,. ,..,,.,,_,_.,.
ea11141.n•1 HILBERT, GI~ Rooo -Sue
C.•olyn, FULLER, CllMIOltt L. .....
Harry R.; MAY, Jonn SterllnQ •ncl
Jvclltll it..; PRit.TT. llOOtrt E. Jr. and
Linda J .; LEMKE, !>l\lllOll Lff .tt>d
Ntll\911 tffll, ZARRELLA, John P
•n4 Allee L.., YORK, Cynthie it.. and
M•cllffl L. SHAW. c..ro•vn 1<.. -A Nobel Prize-winning chemist and I,.~'J.~NJ'::,~vit!':',,:C,,,.E~ eicperts in such subjects as organised
Thomas Glenn; lnatructor at the "iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;::::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiilm(
Navajo Community CoUeee, Tsan,
Arizona, and Dr. Carl E. Boggs, assis-
tant professor or polltical science at W ashlnitoo University, St. Louis, Mo.,
have Joined the faculty of UCI's
School of Social Sciences for the
ROADWAY • MOITUAJl'f
11 O Broad11¥ay
Costa Mesa
842-9150 -NIM 'TVT'H1U. UMI ~nA ... IAOtAJI&
'427 E. t11n St.
• (:Qllt• Mesa • 84&-4888
Sfta Ml ChllP91
518 N. Bl'Oadwty eAna•64~_..tSt
' . DeatlU
Elsewlwre
_ _.,c. crime, the French Revolution and HELMIOC., ~ J, end ~ f · eo-.~t. A.; Mit.cv, MM'f R. -s Fr~ J.. natives o the Amencan "'1\.l\.11west
RAl'f6E, Petrkl• LH 11'14 it.Ian are among the scholars who will join
Smllll; Pll!:RCE, 0on .. J. Ind e .UC Irvme faculty durin° the Hl•MO C.; 5Nf04U. J, O.•lll!PI e
•net Alkt• G.; w•u .... Johll J. -..a tt'11·18 academic year as the result of
u 1111 G.; *"'lllt• ~ c.. ._ studentrecommendations. Oennl1 "-l Qt~ ~ Et"lllil
1114 ~lltut c;fr•le ,Tlmllert•lle. The visiting racul~ members will ~uc •.-,,,..,..,.., •ncl "1'°"0 1 teach courses in thelr fields.
:::.. N. ee-ty Jo _. °""" Dr. Konrad Emil Bloth, who re·
c•Pf'A. 1euy vvt1ia '"4 J,y ceived the Nobel Prtie in physiology P••ICll, DURFEE, SNf'lft M. ~
001 P .. "'~it. c11r1111nt •11• and medicine in 1984, wlll join the :.:i!~rds~~"=r':{..~ ~: faculty ln UCI's School or Biological
«Id M•ttNw M : .m.uSOH. see-Sclences in April to conduct a sen~ of
Fr.oer1ci....011onn1e:ou1R"ER0, lectures. Or. Blocb, Higgins ~ •1'.:t;:,i.;:=:=1.:!~ Prof easor of Biocbeml1try at Harvard
CAa.v ... KMen ,.,.,. • Oeullet Unf'lersity, is a fellow of the ~ 1wc .... T~ &.11191\-' American Academy of Arts and Mrkl41. Sciences and a member of the Na-J=-~~~:;.-.=::'J~ tiooaJ Academy ofSclences. ll~.J OOZART1 T-ll'ld tlvUI
Et•l11t; ."4"11.15• ~,u,,..,A..,.. T.,.._E WBO WB..L serve as lec-K•IU! .... HANY, ~ tt.; 4lnl' • U.V<J s,1 .. 11 L"": t.OHi,; ~= turera in U.. humanities are Dr. Anne-=:~:."n~. M. "' Marifl Feenberg, formerly a lecturer
w. •nd 1.11ni>e111 ~.: L. YL.I. in French and comparative literature
Chrhlopller •r•tt •I'd Marlene at. Cal C.•-te San Diego and Dr Carl ~erlt; KASPMlOl'I'. Slllr• Allll ~ , • ·
anc1.i.hfl ~.. HeJJl pel, professor emeritus of
MURATit.L~. F•dtf'lcullflt-; phll()e()phy at Princeton University.
it.SMAN, Ke111 "· •"° °'"'., o.; Among the courses Dr. Feenberg will
ci.AMPHT. o1bore11 ""!!1•110 tea-"'d·..,,-r• .. eyearare "The Image MlclpWI ~ar>c:e; CAPAIU, f'WYlll$ CU w w WI -'-Mn.,.., Lv11 EUQtne: a1xLu, of Man In Literature: Homer to Boe·
GM•sune ~ -H41rw, JONI: .. ac•lo" --.a """·1 .. ·-at Context of the OUINN, Oonllll¥ M. d Jelw\ J.; "' " IU.N "'!IQ.I."'
RAOSOAL.E, erenoa \.u uo French Revolution." Dr. Hempel will ~·~=,,.~=o..~= visit UCI tn May to conduct seminars
Qlltlllle Jun encl •er1 Jr., lothepbllasophyofscience.
oA11oeNl!R, u11 "....,," •11• Ira Sohni an author and polltleaJob-
iMAnK•1· server, ts ecturlng on "The Political
HECIOAAH, 0.-."" '" .... E of Or an1 ed Cri ln •1. Patrltlaatl41tM; "°°'A._.W-0 COQOll\y I Z me \nl °'" 41fl• MotrtMJ.: HA1t1t11, Jemet United States" and "Family anJl Sex
T. 1..0 P•r~ J.1 H£RN•Mo•t. R 1 in Mod Capitalism" His Nlll<Y J, •1111 .. 11l•l'llln; PAUL, 0 es em .
ur,u11 1r1n• and Ron•" Earl; courses are ottered each quarter
sus&E. TI1omH A. enc1 5""11111111 through the Program ln Comparative . ~.:=~!::!~~"'*" Mw¥<1 Culture in UCl's School of Social
1977-78 academic year.
GLENN 18 TEA.CRING ''Economlc
Development" and . "Natt~ of the
American Southwest." Dr . .BoUI la
conducting classes in "Contemporuy
Political Theory· Radical Theory''
and .. Comparative Revolutionary
Moveb'lents." '
Dr. Harry Gray, professor of
chemistry at. Cal Tech wlll conduct
course& in btoinoraanic cbeDllsti)'
during the apring quarter. .
Tbe program. to include student
participation in faculty ael~Uon was
initiated in 1970 and bu resu.lU!i! b1
lhe appolntmentl of 1everal NObel
laureates and other noted authoriUes
to the UCI faculty Oil a temporary
ltasls.
WITH
7 GAL. un11n MIN. Fill-UP
' ((
HAMILTON
COSTA MESA
AUTO WASH
2059Harbor Blvd.
&45·1039 ,
WE HAND WASH
1'iECR£ATION'VEHlCL£S. CAMPERS & TRUCKS
BURLINGTON, Vt. Sciences.
(AP) -Wllllalb Aikey,-------~---------------::----thoqbt to be Vermont's
DBLIC IUCllO
ESTATE JEWILRY & FINE-PORCELAINS, CHINA.
BRONZES, llUOs; FURNITURE, SILVER. OILS. Etc.
oldest. resident. and who
att.rlbuted. hla !Wevity
to '•good, clean living
and keeping away from
liquor," died Wednesday
ataiot09. -BIG !»ZAR (AP>
Hrk9Qlql91, 70, Wbo erved as .mayot of Com-merce 11 itc#i Ul be
was ~on9ieted;'in~8 of
soliciting a bilDe; dleid
Wednetdt\f. Q\l!g WU
v ae a tlontng \ Ui e
1•~,·~~=::::Jr!!:Ee!;J!;!!;;;:::i mOdntlili .}
1~~Hlion Dollars Worth
FREE ADM/$SION -PUBl.IC AND DEAL Elf$ WELCOVE
Don't this important sale~ .
Lots of diamond sOlitarret ancl cl1.1 ers. Fi~ me~·s •nd la4ia watches. ri~QI.
earr1ngs, brec1l1ts, necktacti! ·~ .. Sit with d1omonds, • TiJll', ralu 1
aapph1m. Several fmDort•nt laije eretds tnd sapphire&. •
..
BUT p OBIBITION against
women ln combat have eornpUcited
tbe problems of oftlclala wbO f 1var a Jara er force of women.
To C9Pe with tbls. ~rmy et8fl of·
fleer• ~ developtn1 aupPort rot for
women in combat sont.. whil pro.a
hlbttine service tn the 1trictl1 ~
branches sucb u tnf antry and armor. MANPOWER AUTBORmES 1ay
women recrUtU, all with at lea.at bJ1h ~;.;...;:JF$J'*~· school educations Gd ao.me with col·
For example, women aoldle.rl may
dri\'e Anny truckl c:lose to the W t
German bOrder wttb Communtst
countries in peacetlsne. B~ they
would not be allowed to do•ocliarlnl a
war. Rules Wlder atudy may chance
that. ·~-· ...... 60LUNOWITZ SPEAKS FOR TREATY
.HI• ~ackdrop: Recent Ad Pu1hlng 'Yea• Vote ..
r;roup Rallies
!·
rrreaty B_acking
WASHINGTON <AP> -With the blea!linl of the
White House, a group o( businessmen, politicians
and other• is mobiliz1n1 a come-from-behind
cltizens' campai1n lo rally support for the embat·
ded Panama Canal treaty
The Committee of Americans for the Canal
Treaties aees itself as the first private counterpoint
to a campaign by lrea.l)' opponents who have
llunched their campaign.
THE PRO·TREATY COMMl'ITEE fired ill
first s alvo this week With $35,000 worth of
n,ewspaper advertisemen~s in New York, Los
Angeles and Washington.
"It's a contest of ideas and facts," said lawyer
John 0 . Mars h Jr . one·time counselor to former
President Ford and a director of the pro-treaty
comm1llee.
Treaty opponents say they hope to raise St
million for thei.r campaian. So does the pro-treaty
committee At a meeting Wednesday, one buslnesa
executive told the committee that "if we can 1et 20
to 40 other companies dealing in Latin America to
do the same, we would pledge $:50,000 ·'
s. LEE KLING, A ST. Louis banldne and in-
surance execuUve and a co.director of the pro.
treaty group, said donations already ex~ $75,000.
He said the committee hopes to cQAduct maaa
maillngs, set up a speakers bureau, put pro-treaty
advertisements on radio and l,:llevtslon and
persuade cllilens to write their senators and con·
gressmen on behalf of lbe treaty.
Most of the campaign for treaty ratification bu
been waged by the White House and S\ate Depart-
ment. A key element of the White House atrate1y
has been briefing sessions for more than 800 "opi·
nion leaders," persons the administration la tryinl
to arm with arguments to counter treaty opponents.
BOTH MARSH AND KUNG attended one of
those briefinas in September and decided that the
White House needed help from private citizens to
muster support for the treaty. The committee or·
ganized last month.
About 250 persons. most of them businessmen
and lawyers from around the country, attended the
session.
lege tralnine, have demon1trated that
they learn f aat, perform well and stay
lon1er in service than many male
volunteers.
The drive for more women will coin·
cide with an expected drop in the pool
of available young men bec:au.ae the
teen·•I• population ls decUnlng, •
expertuay. .
Some senior Army officers oppose
the lnereue in uniformed women.
contendlnl they would lose time dur·
ing pre01ancy and mt1b1 not bear up
under extended hardJhtpa ln the fteld.
THE VIEWS ARE challenged by
other officers and clvHlan officials
who claim men have a worse "lost
tlme" record than women. Men have
higher rat.ea of desertion, absence
CRUMBUNG CUFFS
B.4.NISH BUIWING
SAN DIEGO <AP> -A ban betina
next month on the buildin& of new
apartment bulldlngs, duplexes or con-
dom iniuma along the crumbling
coastal cliffs from Carlsbad south to
Del Mar ·
An exception to the ban voled 3-2 by
San Dteao County supervisors ls the
construction of 1in1le·ramily dwell·
io1s and additions to present houses.
Dut none of thole may be built
cloter than 35 feet to cliff's 00,e. The
le1al dlatance now ii 25 feet.
Everything
College l~iiea
Comnumi,ty to
Its HomeComing
smart shoppers
should know.
~-··
Much more than just a beauttful 7.5-ac:re botankaJ gar-
den. It ls divided Into seven different, totally unique sec-
tions filled with thousands of colorful Ideas and exdting
ttems for your home-tnskie end out! You'll firid nothing
but the highest quality products at 1ruly competltive
~ sold by knoWledQeable h~ Sales/service pro-
fessionals. Qu~ ls a ltogeis tradltk>n,.the Unique Is a
Roge(s ~. and satiSfied customers are ROger>s
only objet:tive.
•
By JULES LOH ., .... ~,
NEW ORLEANS -lUa nine nncers manipulate tbe O)'ater
knowingly. ~ltJ.Ollilla lt ln hla
palm and at tbe same time
brushing off tbe crushed lee.
11Je lallf'e thi'Us~ ht, twists,
slice•. In a moment another
. PITTSBURGH tAP) -"Xla t1lO
sea1ton for glviag ~ an'd ~.
But mercbanta hop• • Dtw
catalog will make tb• ap·
proachlne Cbristmu HUOll a lot
Jess lucrative tor 1bopUfters. . U.:. \:4UQA UIO 4\01.4U4 .A UC&~ ... ._. ___ .,....__.L,;_. ""-'"·'--"
Index, an alphabetical listing of
every person convicted of
sbopWUng in downtown or sub-
urban st.ores since December
1976.
The indeit is new, but it already
has l,SOOentries.
''BETWEEN NOW AND
Christmast about 25 percent or
our yearly retail salec will be
madt. It's probably reasonable
to expect a corresponding 25 per-
cent increue in retail tbett.,"
said Timothy Gina of the Greater
Pittsburgh Chamber of Com-
merce. ·
The chamber estimates retail
theft nationwide i.S an $8 billion
business. Most of those who are
caught have the money to pay for
the goods they stc<U.
"You mliht attribute it to be·
ing a bit greedy," said Ging.
UNTIL RECEH'l'L Y, efforts to
stop l,bis universal crime were
hampered by state laws. For ex·
ample, Pennsylvania law pro-
'·ides stifr penallles for second of.
renders: up to $5,000 in fines and
two years in jail. But there was
no way to t~ll \\ho already had a
first offcnsf.'.
The result Regardless of po~sible previous arrests, most
people ~et u S25 fine, which
merchants considered "the lax
on shoplifting."
"For all practical purposes, it
was impossible to find out
whether someone had a record,"
satd Ging "Unless you called
every magistrate m the county,
there was no way or knowing."
'I GUESS 1 DO KNOW HOW TO SHUCK OY$'TERS'
With n Veers' Experience, Joe's Oot The Touch
Countians Honored
Robert J. Mobllla has joined MSI Data Corp.,
Cosla Mesa, as manager of marketing communica·
lions. He has more than 19 years' experience in the
marketing communications field. For the past 11
years he has been ass<><:ialed with Honeywell In·
formation Systems and most recently served as
manager of marketing communications for that or-
ganization's Western operations, based in Los
Angeles. *
Commercial Banken Liie Insurance Companf,
--.:ewport Beach, has announced the followine
personnel appointments:
Ray Perry has been promoted lo vice
pres1ol'nl, underv. r1tmg. He had been assistant vice
president and chief underwriter since 1973
-Jack Stadler has been promoted to regional
\ice president. He had been assistant vice president
and regional salei:; manager since 1973.
LEASE DIRECT
AMY MAKE OR MODS. CAR
1795 I HACH IL
HUHTIMGTOti4 llACH.
847-0017
Frank J. Gloggner has joined the company
as vice president and actuary. He was formerly
"ith National l''idelity Lile Insurance Company in
Kansas City, Mo. •
James F. Clark, Costa Mesa, has been appoint-
ed executive vice president of Keystoae Savln1s
and Loan Auoclatioa.
Clark, former vico presldentin the loan depart-
ment and bowie coun5el. bu a 22-year career in the
savings and loan business, 15 of whlch have been
with Keystone. He will continue as house counsel.
A 1958 graduate of UC Berkeley, 'he bas a
bachelor's degrM in economics. He obtained his
law from Loyola University in
1972 and is a graduate of the
American Savinas and Loan
Institute.
He is president of the Socie-
ty or Real Estate Appraisers, a
m etn ber of the Oranie County
Bar AssoclaUo.o membership
committee, the continuing
education of the Bar Committee,
and Ute CallfO?nla Savings and ca. .. u1e
Loan League attorneys commit•
tee. He holds the rl\nk of commander id tbe Naval
Reserve * Val Ely, Costa Mesa, bas been named Southem
Calirornia advertising sales representative for
Recrealioo PubUca&loos, publlJher cf American
Boating llluslrated.
* Ron Martl.D, Westminster, has joined the staff
of McC~ry Strallaa Adve.tttsta1. Newport Be•ch.
He will plan national marketina and advertisinc
strategies for clieata.
* Delpblae K•lesel has been named office
manager at Wakefteld m Assoctates. Newport
Beach. ,... ""
* Bruee E. Fettel. Newport Beach, bas" been ap-
pointed executive vice president at SbUey, 1•·
corporated, lrvine. .
}le Jolned the company \n 1968 as chief enilbeer
and was appointed to vice preslden\ of eng{neering
ln 1972, to senior vtce pr~ident
in 1976, and to president or Shiley
Setentlflc lnc., a subsidiary.
e,arl\er this year.
In his new position, F.etlel a"umes l'tflponsibUity for the
manufactunna. researcb and
englneer.ang operatlo.ns "' cardlovascutar and respiratory
care prOductS.
i.~...-.. --~--... ,, ·-~------resti In a plate on the counter. ·
ANYONE WHO HAS fuued
with a.n oyster, 1earchm1 tor
where to 1Uck the blamed lcnife in t.he first place, blood)1n1 the
bands, can appreclate the art Joe
Rando P.racUces with such envia-
ble finesse.
Joe Rando is the head oyster
shucker ln one ot the busiest
oyster houses tn tbe Jand.
.. l learned bow to shuck
oystera when l was 10 years old
standing on e apple box In my
Jat.ber's oyster and tnlit si.nd on
Magazine Street,.. Joe Rando
said. "'Thal was ln 1910. I guess 1
do know bow to shuck oysters.''
How, Joe?
"WELL. FIRST YOU find the
crack. There's always a crack.
The oyster has to breathe, you
know. Follow the hinee and tind
the crack.
"You sUck 'the knife in the
crack, pry open the shell and cut
the eyes on both sides. They're
not really eyes, they're muscles.
You cut them clean. That's au
there is to it.
·•1 suppose some people can
open oysters faster tbao I can but
nobody can opef\ them cleaner.
I'm not so sure anybody can open
them faster. either. I open them
raat and clean.
.. ONE 11ME I bet somebody I
could open oysters faster than be
could eat them. We put up our
money. I started openln& and he
started eatlng. Then I 1toP5*1.
and be thought be had won tmi
bet.
. "l aa:Id. 'Wait, I ba\len°t opened
... ' ,..L .,,,.. .. ~ ---A • '--41 t ~ -----.... ;;;u--c"G,earu: i.i1ce i aald:fcaii
open oysters faster than you can
eat them. you or •nybody elso • ...
Joe Rando, that conaivJni
rucal, has worked at a half
doien oyiter blouses aroun(l New
Orleans the paat '11 years iQd fOT'
the put two decades at Felix's, a
wondertully noisy and friendly
joint at Iberville and Bourbon
·Streets, a tiled refuge h\'&V)' with
the hanb aroma of sea creatures
and sweet with the euygo!ni
aura ot this lovely clty'a Freach
Quarter.
HIS PARENTS BROUGHT
him here from Palermo, Italy, at
ase 2 and he has never found
reason to leave. Few wbo are
blessed with a sense of the
absurd and a taste fol'Seatooddo.
"I gue$5 I'll work here unUl
I'm able to stop," Joe Rando
said. "I'm not able to stop yet. It
I stopped work. I'd go nuts.
•'The work isn't always easy. It
can get busy here, all .right. On a
regular day I'll open l5 or 20
dozen oysters. There are others
opening them too, of course.
"BUT ON A BUSY day. like at
Mardi Gras or after the Tulane-
1.SU game, I'll open, ob, man. a
eang of oysters .•.
Whether it i.s the nature of the
oyster business or the nature or
this most casual of cities, sh~
penciled precision i.s not to be
found.
A gang or oysters, fine. But
how manydoea Felix's sell!
"Anywhere from 20 to 30 sacks
a day."
Over·The Counter
' i
I
Friday, No~mb4tf 4, Ul77 N DAILY PILOT I\ J J
A1.1UOUGR _.MANY LAWYERS rn11t.akel\ly believe •
)'OU 're awck with :a lemon ao lo I as \ht dealer cont\nu.s to
lry to rePalr lhed fecU, tblaj\llt lan'llO. ··says J.Ohn Q.alnn,
director ot the .state of Kaine's Bureau of CQnsumer Protec·
lion .and author of "The
Downeaater's Lemon
Guide," a small, inex·
pen_s.lva, easy.to-read
booklet The ·•Lemon
Guide," relate• his· ' toriea Ot :,people who • ., ___ .,...._~.' '
bave 1ucceedod ln revoldni ownenhtp of ··~tmlnall)i Ill''
cars and setting their money back or another new ear. Krom lhe first day, l<eep records of all de!eets m the r
car. If it consumes exces1uve amount:s~or oil, tor ual!\plt", t
record bow rnuch 15 added. when and the odometef' readlne.
Have the service manager at the rep1it,fiop initial
each defect be has fixed and write down the dates of ser\'ice
ap1>9intments
GIVE THE DEALER A "REASONABLE'' oamtier of
chantet to fix the car and tben. it he doe.so 't or can·~ and tl
the defect tnll)' alasb the car's value. demand r p\ace·
mentor refund. .
Except when tbe owner bu 1 tull warunty, b~ must of.
flcially give the car to the dealer to eet a replacement or a
refund. This process ii called ·•revocation of acceptartce.''
The buyer must. nott!y the dealeT that ~ ls tlYt.na \IP
ownerahJp of the ear by deUvenns st and subm1Ulitt •letter
listina the reasons. The dealer must be inform~ that In·
surance and registration are cancelled Thi& shOUfd ~done
· ~;.;.. a the prbblems start to develop.
-BUYEBSMAYINFO&Mtbebanltorfinaactcomp1ny
that no payments will be made until the problem Ja, ·
solved. But some mi1bl wiah to cooUni.us m~ tbes,, ~)'·
ments to avoid the cbaoce of belna sued Cor the ~uiee.
This is a sampling of the practical asalstaric• iii th~
50-page booklet. Ifs free to Maine reaidenll; nODONltdeilta
pay $1. Write to the Bureau ot Consumer PrOleetton. Slat6
House. Box 692. AUau.&ta, Ma.int OQIO. • •
It contains tips about car fmancma and \nclud81 tebtes
to help new car-shoppers li1ure out how to t>areain fot' th•
best price.
Tables provide e!>timates oC dealers' profit m ar&tn$ on •
wide variety oC domes Uc and forei&n cars
California's stron' economic 1rowth !iWlll cont!nue into
1978, although at a slightly lower rate than tn 1t'77, Sant ol
America has predicted. '
InfinUon in California wttl moderal , but win exceed
the expected national averaae of fS per~nt.. ttie bank silld ill lts report on the state'11 econo~1c outlook Eidployme-nt.
retail sales and pe~onal Income will rile to retord tevets,
the report said
Stocks Bounce Back
Froms Week's Slump
NEW YORK (AP> -Stock pric rose in tnOderaLe
trading today following a ctutious advance ThursQay.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, which closed
near the 800 level the p~\ l'#O&tH~nl. wa. up
809. 94 on the N•w York St<ick Exchante. ..
Among NYSE·listed stoekS, triers '.iti•:ilbumhrfdU
loseers by more \han 3-to-l.
One factor cited by anal:rtt.s wa• tu\ a ~ l.,W~;-J'.,
Board report on money supply, lssued after tM cl~e of lht
NYSE Thursday, suggested that the Fed bad nq\ J
tightening or credit policy as ttaders beUe~ed t ""
Doaclene•A re rage• M'laaf ScorlO IJJd
NN 'Yorlo.IAPI Final Dow·~• eYfr•~• $TOCKS 0.. ~ IAw Close Cl!tl )t 111<1 -.$1 II O'! llO?.AI 80'.94 +-1 21 >O frn :IQ2 S1 .JO JllZ 11 ~.JI+ 2.a U Ull IOI.Jo IOl.IJ 10..14 101.ltT 0.5*' tr.an ............. ,.. 4'l.aot ull" . , .............. 212:1ot .S 5tlt .. • ........ • 1,414,SOO
AcJyenttO
0.Cl-1/M'.heflOelll T0teti.~ NfW lt11
NII• 1911
Ni.,. VORK !API NV~1· I A1>1>r01t 'J'loll ......... .;"{,";.( ,.,... ... ,..., .......... ;u.
"""" eioo t .. • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••
MOnth •OO •••••• •••···••·••• v .. , •oo ..................... Jm h•ll YHI'\ .<IQO ............ , " I ' Jefttte ................... • '"• , . .,. ............. ,.. ~, .. ttlS I• o.1t ...... ........ ~m..lnJ
WHAf AM&« OID
Nii,,,_. YClltll IA~I
and the
YOGA CENTER -.
OF CAIAIFO
4.45 ·E. 17th St. COSTA MESA
'7th
' ,.,, ' ... t You're Invited. • • OPEN HOUSE
FAMILY REUNION
All friends and students of Yoga Center
over the past 7 years are welcome to join
with the present students and celebrate the
Center's ex..istence and years of service to
Southern California and mankind. Musical
Performances, Special Events, a Talk by
Ramakrishna Anandaji. Refre~ments.
Come and renew old friendships, make
new friends.
Everyone welcome! Drop
in and visit teachers and
members of You Center.
SUN. AFTERNOON, MOY. 6, 3.5 PM
FREE DEMONSTRATION
SATURDAY EVENING, NOV. 5,
7:30 PM.
Everyone welcome! Discover how the
great science of yoga can enrich your life
m ever so many ways. Improve }!ealth,
relaxation, peace or mind, solve your
problems, realize your great potential.
MONDAY, NOY. 7, 7:30 PM
.. }\
45 .· '.:tit
' '1. ;~ • : _.,;. "
.,. -' '' ' -·.
I . 'I·
'" SRI D£Vl TARA MAl>HA VA
Come and meet Ramakrishna Anandaii
and all our fine teachers this weekend
Here's What People Are Saying, •••
"l come to the Tuesd
··1 1·an relalt.' to OJ) µ;il\t,>nb al
work, \IDderi..tand them and give
lhem more lo h~lp them get well I.
am more In tune w1lh my body in
sports, work and at rest "
.._ 1'lm l>alcr. physiotherapist
.... 0 set1H to me "My \lfe llOW ..,_ d lhe old cobwebS, the dust an . The withlnl are rapidly bern& clutter < th--'-~ to yoga and 1 •red away w...., 1 .. c e . r ve got. new eye1>. assoc~~~ms Peterka. carpenter
"\ oga has enabled me lo grow
again in the religion l have known since childhood."
-Jim Casey, computer syi.tems
analyst
_.~mlife. · ·1.,..,... d d restful body coordinate an a calmer
runc\ioninl '"tooo~~entrate and mind ab1lllY 1 ..
th ... k 'and rN&On clear Y. • •l '" s· .. •t envlronmen-LarrY .. e~ • technician
"l bave nearly eliminated worry
from my mb>d."
Tara Bleier. ac<!OUnt executive
• I see Lb Ramaknsf11u1 Ananda t1
mountain of apiriluatlty -so much
love "
feeling down and J ay ttltht class ~ead'y alWll)'9 O:!V.:.~:'17: roo· vert Week J learn aometh.ln me. actually Just b 1 I new, Rama~rishna e 01 around
h•ppy... A.oanda snake• me
-Dawn Joy Marki, waJ~s
"I've become a better person with
more underatandln& oC the leas
fortunate. I need lea 1teep anl1 am
more flexible. I have more
concentration. Belng a student
under Ramakrlabna Ananda, auch a
great being, and leaininJ from bis
experiences La pure 'joy and can
only lead to a better U(e. ••
-Alex Sltarbek
,....,.. .......... wll '9 proc:Hcdllg
yoga ..... ..., fW .. wW It .....
-tcmalaisllaa ~--
WHA rs so GUAT AIOUT THE YOGA CENTER OF CAUFORMIA7
WE'RI GUO YOU AS«EO
First, the YC of Chas been internationally reco1nbed for several yean as one ol tbe ftnelt YOI•
centers in the wwkl People have moved thousands or miles or commuted hundreds 1D order to cet the
beoent.s prof~y available at our Cen\,er. And where el.le oo lhi.s eartb does a &enu.ine Guru reewarlJ'
teach be&inninl YOI• cluaes ?' WHAT IXAC1\Y lS Y06A7 Yoga means ooentN. It i.s the science by which a person ha.rmoni.tes iMU'
whole betnl-pbyiJcally, menUlly and spiritually. This in.nu harmony leads to rtcber relati<iDihipt
with others and with life it.lelf.
, The 10t• ol health and ritality ts called Hatha Y<>1a. This yoga I.I so beneficial and important. We
allO teach all the otbtt sreat Yol&s. The bj&her yo1aa are: Raja Yota (or tnetlY and 1'U1PoWW: Juana Yoga for wisdom, discernment and peace of mind: Karma Yo&a for joy and fulfillment in dalb'
acUvlly: Bhatti Y<>1a Cor oneneos through developln1 the emotions; Mantra Yo1a for rescWn& thi
mind from eoofusioo and WOl"rY.
Each student at the Center lakes what he needs from these great yo1as, blending them Uito h1I
Individual form or practice.
DO YOU HAYI TO STAM» OM'°"' HIAD TO DO YO.A.7 The headstand is a part or Hatba YO(• and. it
glves mudl benefit. However. if a person doesn't want to do the headstand. he can get similar benefit
lhrougb other practices.
DO I HAYI TO SIT WI A PID%&1 No. oF ~not.
IS YOeA HA.Ii» The rule of yoga as IW'f'9f .._ lf you are 1tra1rung, )'OU are doing it wrong. Jn Hatha
Yoga the body la str«cbed so tbat It can relax. Tension is released In a gentle, conscious wl,Y. To
strain would onlydelay the betiet'lu oryoia. While people who take up a new sport Or' eurciff ac:tMt7 o~eo (eel sore at first. the beauty of Hatha Yo1a ls there ls no aoreness "the day arter, .. and you befin
to 1et the benefits from tbe very first day. <People from & to 98 and older practlce Hatha Yota.>
Thia a1IO appli• in developin1 the mind. Many people th.ink tbat yop Involves .iopp~ the mlod
rather than gett.inl acquainted with il and developing it to It.I full potential.
IS 'f06A A llUCMOM7 No, It is a JCJence, a atep·by-atep method ror reallzln1 our physl~. mental and
spiritual potential. Many Catholics <lncludin1 nuns from a nearby convent), mlnaters, and members
of most all Protestant denomln&UJ:>ns, Jews, Buddhist&, and ainoet1c1 joyfully practice side by side at
the Yo1a Center or California. That is to say, there .are ChrisUan yo,U, Hebrew yo1l1, Buddhist YOlia, etc. AUnnd that praMlce at the Yoga Center bu enhctltd and enhanced their cbOaen gpitttualpaUL ·
WHAJ IS ntl POtHT Of WIOrfATfOM1 Today the average person can only concentrate 11 aeconda. Our
creadve QOC.ential and even our freedom to enjoy Ufe is blocked tbrou1h the resUess, and often
(rtnzJed. mind Moel of our Ufe's decisions are made when our mind ls least capable, wben ll ls under
pressure and unclear. The restless mind, worT')lmg, roaming, creates many of our physical tendona
and contributes to most all menu, brtngtnl' a death whldt b earlier than neceaaary. MedJtaUon ls the
acience or reclaimlnl tbe mind to experience life more consciously, Our lJlner poteDtifl becomes
b.ccea11ble to help us in lhe daily event.a ot our lives. Those who w~h can, as a reaull of meditation •
al.ao clirecUy expeneoce spiritual valua and realitiea. Medlt«tlon bteralty means "belnl cedtered ID life.••
HOW DO t Mf STUTID7 Come to the ()pen House thl.a Sunday af\emoon between a and 5. Of .Uo1 the
frff D•• h..._ Monday at 7:30 PM. Our beemntna classes are on Tuesday and Wednesday rutbb.
and we also ha~ morninf claases If you prefer. Tuition la reuonable. Just come u you are and brtne
your questions.
-WHAT A WONDERFUL 7 YEARS u.,.,. .........
\ ..
"
Sue
Dress
Appearance 1s aennn 'fV ...
a factor to your success,
a consultant says.
By JUDITH OLSON oe•..-y,.....,.
You have to build the house W e you -
furnish or paint it. 1• •
This is the thesis of Shirley Simmons,t ~om·
municationa consultant and btzyer for Balffwns
department stores, wbo contends that a woman
cao 't decide what kind of clothes or ~akeup
to wear until she knows who she is and where
she's going. . ~
Ms. Simmons, guest lecturer for ranee
Coast Coll~ge's series Develop a New SelC· age
and Make It Work for You, ~ked ab®t ap.
pearance as a factor In success. ,.
The bottom line of appearance is com-
munication, she believes, and it is an inevJtable
part of success because "man cannot not com-
municate." ·
Communication begins with inter-personal
attraction, she said, or "how I see you or some
main attribute you might have." Some ~ple
have an affinity for long hair, for example, she
said.
''This affinity more or less gets you into a re-
lationship. People are going to make some sort of
decision about you.·· ·
IF A PERSON meets a woman with poorly
coiffed hair for the first tlmc.~shesaid, lhehair has
made a lasting impression on a person who ·
locked tntoplace.
No matter if the hair 1s perfectly groomed al
the next meeting, the image or the poor haitdo is
locked intolacjt.
She once asked her husband, an accountant,
what he looks for in hirhtg new employees,
The first thing he noticeS is the hands, she re-
ported. "If you don't care about them you pro-
bably won't care about the job," was his reason-
ing.
The second thing he sees is makeup. He
personally prefers makeup that looks a little
"worn, .. as opposed to that which is freshly ap-
plied
''Your dress can work for you," Ms. Sim·
mons asserted "Whal would keep a person from
bemg upwarslly mobile'" . .
Attention to dress and makeup 1s possible on-
ly when a person has a positive self-image, she
added.
• "What is your self-image? Are you happy
with the way you see yo.._rself? With the way
others see you'!" •
Ms. Simmons said there are four kinds ofim·
ages: the real self; the mirror image, or bow
others see you; the seU image and the ideal self.
"WE NEVER GET Involved with our real
selves because of our fears," she noted. "And we
never develop our Ideal selves, but we keep try·
inf. That's what makes life interesting "
One way to change a self-image is to vis·
ualize it until it changes, she said. "Actually, we
don't change but the pictures do."
A person's solf-imago can shift from day to
day, she added, noting that hers had gone from
bad to good that very evening.
She had worn her "victory suit," whic}l she
bou91l!: to wear after she lost, 20 pounds <which
<See DRESS, Page 82)
By DENNt:, McLELLAN
Ol llte Dally PO .. Si.ff
He usually was a short, thick-set unsavory
character prone to chewing on stale cigar butts
and hitting the bottle before breakFast.
He was the proverbial house dick who, when
not asleep in an overstuffed lobby chair. could be
found lurking behind a1P.Qtted palm or spying
throughaholelnanewspaper.
But while.he may live on in the works of
Raymond Chandler and l}asht~ Hammett, the
hotel detective. as we knew him, basgone the way
of" Front Page .. reporters and country doctors.
Today the hotel security chief, as he's come
to be called, more often than not commands a
for'ce or walkie-talkie-toting start members who
are as equally versed in J)Ublic rtlatlons as they
are In the law. ·
"l'M ALWAYS TRYING to upgrade my de·
partment and find ways to make it more pro·
fessional," sa)'lJ Fred Nourse, clnef or security
for the Ne.vpc>rt Beach Marriott Hotel "With my
many years In law-enforcement 1t makes my Job
easier."
Nourse. 44, a retired Fountain Valley Police
Department ,sergeant with ?2 years in law en-
forcement., runs his seven-man crew out of a
small office overlooking the hotel's rear delivery
·entrance. . ·
A man given to wearing three-piece swts,
Nourse ts well aware or the "house dick" image.
"That day," ht aays with a smile, "iS going out."
Roger Kirkpatrick, direct« of secarity for
the Diane)'land Hotel, agrees. ·
"Tb as been a total departure f that
era," says. "All my people are either peace of-
ficers or aregr,Jd a~ Of the police academy.
• "Theae peo are profeuionalslWbo d•
dicated to what ~·redoinl. l think thit matt ol
the' profeaforull that they are never throUih
training and applying that training.:· ·
ms STAFF MEMBERS all ue trained m
advanced first aid and CPR, wbJeh has resulted
in 34 life-saving incidents in three years. be aays.
They als<J irpend two hours a week wltb on-
going trainirig ln such areas as flrat aid, and VIP
. protection (everyone from ahJeka to presidents),
The main concern ol hotel security, cbiet• say,
By JUDITil OLSON oe u. o.111 P ... SUtf
. ---............
OT
911rantll\ :it-"41 al
~ e -.~·~·IUPJlltm. .. &tll~ al
. tflb e •
I • ryi b&ti1 for a
. u , H bu off hta.
•I m evervoae who will listen that· lt I
' doa 't have a boy he wlll
: : leave ua both 111 tbe
: ·: hospital.
, : , Everyone laughs lt off
BQd 10 dO I, but lt really
d oes hurt, Ann. If l
• · should have a ,Ul I will
feel •• lf I )tave falled · him. To make matt.rs
worse, hlS two brothers'
wives have bad three
1$. om liivitect her to
d.lnn r ~. My aunt
and uncle were invited,
too. He b a minllter but
not one ol t.boff aquaro
types. Real neat. His
wJte110K.to..
After dJaner Rita
tame over and sat on my
a m -PLENTY sHAICY ANN LANI>US: ~· !:::·::,:°\:.':.':.
• ANN LANDERS I HOROSCOPE
, g irla aplece and they aay
they are 1'througb.'' J'm
a fraid my in-laws are
counting on rne to have a
son, altbouib they have
~een vadous ~nougb to
~Y ltdQeSD'tmatter.
DIAa P.S.: Tia••• are Auts. IA • ~Wftll .Sb• .... Just 1ltttllJ
daUtftnpl wM speelf1 that •DPeaM nccU1 theH. My mom didn't
a prefereaee are a you ·aa[d, ~·n 11 Soocl Hf u~lna but abe
1 tr a• a e b re• 4 • f manner• to ,J>boa• Of aa.ve =• ooe of thole JaekHHI for wlllell Writ. to a boctel!IS &fter JoeblknoWIOwell. Tb.la
tbereJsaolmowaeRe.U YQU have etteDded bv morninf ebe told JD•
yoar luaabaQd was &be party." TbeQ )'OU.ldded. Rita 1bould bave bad
ltlal of Slam, M ... ~t "But dC111 't be too bard on better sense than to alt on
have a UarQl:ae probl m. the 1.uy or •oct.aJ1Y IJD.. mY. lip lD hult ol com·
What'• ea&l•I 1o•r perfect. Not evel')'one pan.y and I lbould not
cJowaf • knows all tbe ' fl•• hiveletberdolt.lthl.Dk It aeTer fall• -~~b.'' •-Do t ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ husbands wbo advertise What a lot of banana ~~~FF wroQI. .~u
, Pleaf~ _gjve me
methin1 to hang on to
-. few words ofwladom a emotional support. I
they woat aou alway• oil! I have never left a
wind up aut&y u tnLlt· party without saylna
c a k e a o v e r t be Ir thank ;you to the boateu.
dauahten. U yoa Jtave a One of t.be lioe point. o(
11r1 I'll bel yoa a blH belnl cultured la learn·
bootle agabalt a plak rat-lne not to rverdo Ullnp. &Je lb at be'll follow &.bb-'" P e op e w b o 1 a y
pattern... ..Thank you" three Umes
at. the door, then
telephone the next day or
er. Music
.. I
feel compelled to aend a
written note are just
plain insecure. J bate
thue boot·llcldnc, ankle-
Jd.salnc types • • • and I'll
bet you lU'Q one of them.
-GLAD I SAID l'J' .Is Visual
By MARY CAMPBELL
NEW YORK <AP) -If
people think she's a nut,
. Doris Halls can take it in
stride. "As someone
wrote in a book review I
read. lhe extraordinary
or unusual has become
breakfast cereal. We eat
it every day.··
If people think her
Sens Eve nls, wit h its
Ii g h t bul b·cnc r usted
ora n ge s t y r o f oam iig~es and avant-garde
music is funny, she's de·
lighted. "I'm quite hap.-
PY if people laugh at it. I
Certainly qild fun mak· tftgtt. •• ,.
• Doris Hays is an artist, a composer of classical
tn usic. working m the
niost modem styles, but
'ft'ith an artist's ancient
problem of more work
than income.
But she didn't create
Sens•vents as an oddity
t o brlng notoriety which
"'1light somehow lead to
mone y. She created
S en s Events because
: inodem music lik e she
~rites b unfamiliar to
' listeners' ears and she
I r ea soned it mieht be
. easier lo listen to if
• oomething pleasurable,
visually, also is going on.
. Sbe ulced friends for
'lDoney, gle~ing $400.
·Sh e bougnt orange
.marine styrofoam, used
io make things float, and ~culpted six humanoid
'flgures. Each has light
_ b\llbs stlcktng out for -~ma and hf:8d and each
I ~!)las. r pedal. Step on a .~a dd..the Ughtbulbs
light. Two.a( the figures
--Mila Ma,a ~alls them
.aeta ~moYe.
.. •.: ln a pertormance,
-thrff ltflitc players, a · horn pJa)'et. an oboist
anct llut14 1s assigned ~ ·to hta'~ iet. When the
·-: fl\ltilt~a set lllbts up, be
.. l>..•Ya: :wb~ tlie lights eo
· out, be stopl. He ignores
what 1$ ioinl oo with the
other fiveplll)'ers.
Mill Rays wrote an
hour·IOOf, 12-part suite,
sc>tlleWiuaiclans play the
notes she told them to.
But Jrs the a\ldlence,
s tepplnl' on pedala.
wbh:b decides the tim-. I ~·$'11Events was a
popl))ar Offerlns of this
year'• Lincoln Center
Out·ot-Doora in New York, an Exzon ..
'SpiOnaand arts festtYal.
ome .a,ooo persona f~Wed up at an Atlanta
f1IOPPlDI e«tter whtn tt
wu done lutyear. .... ~.. mtbe I •dale ao U1hta Wed an tM m\111·
l DI Defir a-..~ ~lP H making a l t.ttm Sons· r ea~ c\ cub&
c:?ne4 tor. a 1md e1SO •
Doris Hays
DEAR GL.u>: I fee)
sorry f« yo. -UNI all
tbe other eokl flail lo the
world -so 0 eeatrollM,., To aoofd cf1toppoint·
reluc&ant to appear too mcnt, ~t~ brick'•
friendly or easer to arf rcmfricUd fo hove tMtr
please, afraid ol espre11o widdittg 1loN1, wtth a
iDC a wana tboa&bt or a ., ~lillhil• glouy of
tender emotion for fear the bride 01 of the couple.
• J'vlt •igb& expese &oo to tlw Peotures Deport·
much of yourself. ment one week be/ore the The penoa wbo writes wedding
or phones to HY thank
you for &1te lo~ely ne· E!~ announu·
nlng ii neither tnsee.are. ment1, wWa black-and·
nor obseqaJoas -and white gloaay o/ the future
every hostess •P· bride or the couple. maut
pre~ late 1 1 u e b be recehed bJI the
messages. Features Department m
DEAR ANN : I am a weeb ~fore the wedding
~uy, 17. My girl Rita is date.
[ Horoscope ·]
SATURDAY, Ncw.5
1 BySYDNEYOllARR
ARIES (March 21·April 19): AK questfor\S,
fight pomposity. Be Impudent if nec,ssary to
clear deadwood. Streamline techniques and
services.
TAURUS (.April 20-May 20): G()Od llO\ar
aspect coincides with creativity, algnlflc:.at d~·
'cisions, serious relationship. un~ntandmg
limits and potential. Major adjustment occurs .
You could be oo the road to a better llf e .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Stick to fact.a .
Review specifications. Be aure of atructure .
Build oo solid base. Older family member Is in
your comer and ;you will know IL Define terms.
avoid self-deception.
CANCER (June 21.Juty 22)~ ldeas are put to
use. Short trip, mall, measaaes fl&ure prom·
inenlly. Accept added rmponslb6llty. Overtime
effort, assigntnent proves beneficial. Capricorn
is part of your penooalscenarto.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22>: CMick expenditures,
bills -get rid of altuatlon that drains you •tno-
tionally and financlalty. Study ways, means of
expanding operation -there is no o~ to be
lim ited. • ,
VIRGO CleJy 23.:$J>t. 22): Make new..-t'ari.s .
Imprint ywr own itYJe. Love, orislnallfy, ~
creativity an lri Picture. Cycl~ It hll~ -be..'COD•
fident, take Initiative. Get to heart of matters.
Timing is on tar'et.
· LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. ZZ): What bad been
restricted, censored ts permitted to .. see Ugbt or
day,'• You beoeft~ Aqauarian plays prominent
role -and so doest.be number .. 11."
SCOllPIO (Oct. ZS.Nov. ll>: Accent on
creatlvity.Jriendibip, accounting from business
or careet' endeaYor. Earalnp Jncrease, potential
is briarht. Deflne obJectlves.
8AGltt~&n18 (Noy. ~J>ec. 21 ): You'ro
as to revile. hview, to rebUlld, to dismutt•
to ln'lproye ~\ll't!S and met.bods. Aquartan
4 ~'lay 'k'1 roJes. Stlct to number .. ,, ..
SUPCilor mati: ~~~ial requeaJ.. ~'"t\Pltlt'OKJIJ'(Dec. 22·Jan. 21>: Open Un~
of c:ommunl~. Accen\ OD ttaVel, phllos'IPlif 1 higher lcmn1nf, 1bWty to C0112prebeod nMcli. Oa:
thoee at a ~e. You writ.. ad~ aet aC?MS• •de&slDd 'lift Ulat JOG ean 1Mt vibrant AQUAIU\IS (Jan. io;reb. 11): Dli be'Death
surface. Otle.cloM to 7CMl Would Uke to c:OQ.ftde
emotlon•l, money concerns. B• aentlt,
diplomatic and ~•PU•e. Relatioublp eah
grow, dePendtnc upoo your depee ot D>aturlty.
PISCES'•(Feb. U-Mardl 20)! t:le lOw, play:
walttq 1ame. Get Mc<illd wtnd. Bo ~v• con·
cernm1Jei1J rtPU. perm ~cceton ~ tract1,apodaJ~e11ta.1n~e.
(l'loia .... 81)
her doctor .miSed her to do, n.ver belleWll that •b• would roally dolt), but lbe wu unhappy
becauaett wu too btC.
"I also bad planned to cet my hair cut and
was thwartedCS' abo added ... So I wasn't feeUna
just ri~t. But before the Pl'Oll"8lQ someone
came up and said, 'You look amubln.I. • Jfy aelf-
im1Je perked up.••
Ma. Slmmon.s eauUooed that people who
have t.be same self-Image they bad 10 yean aco
are ln trouble because they haven't cha.need u
society changes.
A PE880N lblnkine about chanatnt bis or
her self.lmaae should first uk himself wby be
wan ta to make the chanae. sbe adviaed. ••Ja lt a pel"IOOal reuon? A profeaJonal one!
To be more fuhlonable! Is then any virtue
about why you want to change~ Do YOU ap-
proval from aomeoae•0
Before a person can ••r t lt all toi«!wir" he
has to look at himself as a whole to learn wbat bl.a
valuesue
Hen iodude self·esteem. loye, new ex·
periences, God, ego and making a contribution·
•••
<From Pue Bl)
is not a joy. Sorne of the women feel some ot thelr
male colleagues will never be totally at ease with
them os professional equals.
This (eeling comes in part because the
California Le .tature is a very male place -"ilot
much ditferenl from a men's club fiaYC)re<l at
times by sports talk. pipe and cigar smoke and
off-color Jokes. •
Almost every woman legislator has a story
about how she was mistaken for a secretary
when she first arrived.
1 Take Maxine Waters, a black Democratic
assemblywoman rrom Los Angeles. Aller her
election last November. Senate sergeants failed
to recognize her as an assembl)'W9fllan and tried
to remov~ her trom the front iow reserved (or
legislators in bearing rooms.
"I got mad one day and called th• Senate
seriunt at arms and said, 'If another damn\
sergeant puts me orf tho front row, rm aolng to
r aise hell."' she said.
She added that male legblaton "thlnk \tis
im portant to tell you you·re cuu, or pretty or a
''I can"tllnwithout them." abe Qlettid. ·•
1. S1mmoOI sald Ah• hu oever bad p~ ~~!D' as a black woa:aa.n and Ibo ••tqowa 11tb<i ihe.
..I've got it together." s~ userted. ~
Her most palof\ll problem lli .. &tiltlilr it
· toaetber" wu not find.Ina acceptuco u • black
but dllcOverinl w~ollle wu u a~ ~he stresses tbat people ln aeare1' of them~lvea must taUf to themaelves and take the time to liaten to tbt a.nawen.
''LEARN TO MAKE ~outracta with
yourself, .. abesuggested. "Punish yourself lt you
cbeat. But be &ood to yourself. Wt all matt in.ls·
tat es but~ are POt the mistakes.
Above an. a person mu.al care about blm.MU.
"P~ple aU..ch meanln. to wb&t ~1 •M lA )'(>µ. You cannot.ac:apethat. • ·
Wbeo • penon-maa or "°"'an-bowl who he ta, be will f~I more Ute worldila on tM ®t·
side and flnding a new look in hair or clothes, abe
sugaested. • The series will continue Nov. 7 wt.th a MSSlon
oo make up. Other topics will be balr care. Nov.
1', ancl fashion, Nov. 21.
• •• Douse Det4"etiVes
From Page Bl)
very lmportant thing 1n Just the Jut fflft yean
because of the increase in crime and dJarespect
for laW&, naJes and re&\llationa."
ONE OF TBB bt.Uest problems at tbe Mar-
riott, NOUfM says. ls "drui>Jcs or people disturb-
ing the peace or lnt.-fering with our business by
not complying with• rules . ''
ThOLW l*>pl• rarely U. l\la&s, be says, but
are vi.alt.ors to U.O bar. •mus botel•s policy ls
:very low key," N)'9 ... We do not make an ar-
.reat except u a lbt~"
Noune's staff. which usually ls dressed in
leisure suits or coats and ties, also ia responsible
for keepine dowa loud parties, helpln' guests in-
to locked cars, keeping rare lanes od han-
dicapped parking spaces clear and reporttag
burned-out.Uabta and other buards.
While the boeel bun't bad much ~
with baqJariea, aecurtty hu caught people tat·
• u.a out locmge ebaln and plant.a. They've evtb
cauchtl)eOI>lelteallogsteppingstones. ".J.fft•anot
nilled down the)'ll takelt," Noanesay1.
feel so guilty about having to
Marmaduke at the kennel!"
FUNKY WINKER BEAN
~N<i!> FROM 1\4E
HI 'MOt\l6 SI .
~IEloll' &ooKOFCMl~E.SE PMI
CASEY
MOON MULLINS
iHE MASTER SPR& : A
P~OHATRl5T 15 LIKE At-.l
INTELLECTUAL COOJBOQ ...
•
by Tom Batiuk -
WHO 1RtE.& TO HEAD 'EN\
OFF AT "THE PA5f !
i
I
l/•l(
by Charles Rodrigues ---------·~·:·----------
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
Aero.ALLY, we Po ---
®,
,.,..,_..,. __ .. __
MA1Nr.A1~ AN AWFULLY
-----· CLEAN P1CTU~~1use-.
GERIATRIX
~~~~~~---. ---~~~~---
W ~ '/ IS "~IME.
TIME:" ON TV
UCSLJAL,.1...Y A TU~K~'i?
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by Gus Arriola
ACROSS
1 lndoflealan
tai.nd
5Becorfte9 lnalpld
10 Foollatl
14 Picture
15Atctle,• ..
20.le•iah atet11c
22Slave
24ean11rne •* 25 Malayan
bOats 27 Sof Ill ~~~ 29Excu ...
32 Pab'IOllC DP 33 a. penitent 34Canary'a
telatlvt
3eGJpe1
40Sub)olna
74Rye~ .....
751.Auera
DOWN
.Moment ol Record
;crew Qi the 69-foot sloop Drifter hne the deck as a signal from the
race committee on Prieto Point indicates their finish and a new
elapsed time record fn the Long Beach tQ La Paz yacht race. The
yacht was co-skippered by Bob Beauchamp and R. B. Alexander
of the Newport Harbor Yacht Qub. with owner Harry Mol~hco
aboard. The rest of the crew were the Beauchamp family.
Top Dinghy Skippers
Battle in Team Event
By ALMON LOCKABEY Delly ~li.t .... .n ...
One of the West Coast's most pres·
tigious team racing events is
. scheduled thls weekend when ·top
flight dinghy sailors from San Diego
to San Frendso put in their bids tor
the Jean Schet\ck Memorial Trophy m
the sporty Lebman·l.25.
Jn team racing, individual skippers
do not strive to get their own boats
across the finish line Cirst so much u
helping thelr teammates lo finish in top positions.
It is not uncommon in team racing
to see a skipper bring his boat about
before crossing the finish line to eo
back and cover an opponent to help
sp.rJng a teammate tree from a
second, thirdorevenfirstpJace.
TUE 12-FOOT Lehman dinghy is
ideal for this type oC racine as lt is ex-
tremely agile and responsive, allow-
iiig skippers to make quick moves to
defend their own position or the posi-
tton or teammates.
· NHYC's defending team will be
captained by Henry Spraeue III, class
champion, along with such expert
dltiehy sailors as Tim llogan, Tom
~llock and Jack Jakosky.
Other yacht clubs entering teams
wUl be the Balboa Yacht Club, Mis·
sfon Bay Ytieht Club <San Dieao>. Alamitos Bay Yacht Club (Long
.Beach), Windjamrners Yacht Club
<Marina del'Rey), st. Francis Yacht.
Club (San Francisco) and Richmond
Yacht Club.
EACH a.VB MU. enter four.man
teams which means that 32 boats will
be scrapping for position
In other local yachting competition:
The Voyagers Yacht Club will wind
up its season·loog Bogart Serles for
Performance Handicap Racing Fleet
yachts, and its Laughlin Series for
y acbts rated under the Midget Ocean
Racing Fleet measurement rule
Saturday.
The Bahia CorlnlhJan Yacht Club
wUI play host to Laser sailors in an in·
vitation regatta Saturday and Sun·
day.
THE BALBOA YACHT Club will
host an InVitat.lonal Snipe regatta
Sunday.
The Dana Point Yacht Club will
write f1n.is to its Dana Series for
PHRF and International OfCshore
Rule Boats.
In other areas or the Southern
California Yachting Association.
Blfud Sailors Vie
perpetual. Parttclpanu
range Crom l2 to 2$ yea.rs
in age.
"These kids are tough,
compeUUve and ready to
go," said Ken Harrbon,
fleet captain. ''They
want to win. It is a very
positive experience for
skippers and crew ...
Races wtU get under
way at 12:30 p.m. !tom BYC. Spectators can
view the resatta lD the
course area between
Balboa llland Ud the
Balboa PeainsulL
-
PUBLIC NO,l'JCE
HOTIC&Ofl ......UCMllARING
TOUMCLDaYTM• OltAH"CIOUHTYf'U.HNINCO
COMll'JSSfOfolC*HOf"OSliO •
-
•
l
l'ro A 011,.iau
A J&ndlcape painUni tarted by Slr a
auuck!U int.be south of Fraoce ill l93D.na flnbhed
by live other arttsts wlll 10 for aucuon:Nov 8, said a representative or the auctloneen, Sotlleby".a.
JDUu Banu, a picture expert lrt SOtbeby's,
aaid Churchill was stayln1 with artbt PHJ Maie at
the time and four other artbt. had ~n lnvjtod to
lunch. They Included Andre de Se10_,.c and
Edouard VlllUard, the post hnpreulenht who died
on
.JW.P~mildent Carter, attempt.inc to a1ve his energy
pro ram, will address the natfon Tuuday ntcht ••to
retocut pubUc atteation .. on the ener&Y Problem •.
Wtilte Howse oftlclala said.
ABC. NBC a.ad CBS aald that they wW broad-
c:a t. live on radio and televtslon hll addieu at. 6 J>.m. PST.
The House and Senate are neariDl the end or
their work on Carter's
...,,~-··-.... ...
I
\n 1Cl~R l
Barran 1uud :,1r Winston askeo tne (IH!StS w
finish the picLure as he was havine dlftScul~ dolne
so. The guesu finJshed the painUn(, ent.llled "In the
parlc of the Chateau at St Georg~" and ~ltl"war~
all six signed 1t. Churchill wrote simply "W1tslon
( \ eoergy JelislaUon and the
-----'" I WhlU. Ht:mse. ID a Ulree-L • -..-. ..... J paragrapn announce-
"'-----------ment, said ·'tlt~ president
feels the remahltng areas
ol controversy should be presented to the American people." , * Roderick Llewellyn, the 30·)·ear-old co~panlon
of Prfnceu Marga~t. 47, said he was ''an14llsbed"
by his frierldship with the sister
of Queen Elb:abetb II.
Since Margaret announced
officially 18 months ago that she
and her husband, Lord Snowden,
were separating, newspapers
have been linking her with
LleweJJyn, son of Olympic show
jumping gold medalist Sir Harry Llewellyn.
But, in an interview with the MAltGAHT tabloid London Sun, the younger
Llewellyn said his friendship for the princess was a
•·very difficult and unique situation. "
* Patricia Hearst's attorney said that he will ask
an appellate court within 14 days lo recon~lder its
decision upholding her benk robbery conviction.
Al Jobuon said he will ask the 15-nternber 9th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to rehear a decision
rendered by a three-judge panel
.. declaring that Miss Hearst's
March 20, 1976 conviction was
proper.
John.Son said he will present
documents reconstructine Miss
1 l~arst 's decision to lake the wit-
ness stand, a move that led to
her taking the 5th Amendment
12 timt's at her trial JOHNSON •
· It lakes a brave man to
* The wealthy businessman who took over Ti·
juana 'a police and Improved their reputation as
honest and professional is leaving p promised after twoyears ..
An&Galo Escobedo resigned to return to bis eift
store$, serving also as Tijuana district chief of the Baja CallforniajuclJclal police.
• Fonner Prime Minister Indira Gudbl. facing
hostlte. rock-hurtliur demonstrators for the second
time in less than a week, suf-
fered a minor face cut, India's
national news agency reported.
Mrs. Gandhi was cut below
her right ear when her car and
several others were stoned by
supporters of Prime Minister.
MorarJJ Deaal'• Janata
<People's> Party and the Marx·
isl Communist J>arty, the
Samachar aeency reported ~0"1 from the scene of the dis-
turbances in Karnataka. southwest India.
The SS.year-old ex-leader was said to be among
about a half do~en persons hurt before Police broke
up the crowd with tear gas and clubs.
• Gov. James B. Longley. of Maine. the nation's·
only mdependent chief executive. sa~.~e_won't be.
bulldozed out of office. · · -· · -
JUde'E.a
If parks truly are for kids,
these young folks are In the
right place; the new Moun-
tain View Park in Lake
Forest. Katie Gerhard, 15
months is not much of a
match for Chad Peare. 3, on
the teeter-totter, above.
schedule an Oktoberfest featunng root beer SmaJJ
wonder the ~ods rained on President Caner'• back
yard both days set ~ide for a staff picntc that bore
the questionable label Oktoberfest.
Some 600 employees of the White House and the
Executive Omce of the President paid S3 each for
the privilege of drinking root beer and eating
Bauerkraut. sausages and potatoes on the White House lawn.
Kenneth M. Curtis, the
Democratic national chairman
and Longley's predecessor. said
an an interview that if Longley
runs again or mak~ a try for a
U.S. Senate seat, he will have
"lied to the people of Maine.··
The governor, in an in-
terview, said Curtis was, is and
"will be my friend;' but that he L.OttOUv
did not "intend to allow the
chairman or the Democratic National Committee
or the White House through pressure on him to pres-
sure me out of publlc office or from allowing the
citizens or Maine to make that decision at the ballot box··
She's better off solo on the
duck with a bucket for
sand, rigbL And sand is a
close buddy for Ray Proc-
. tor. who's preparing himself
for a golfing career by learning early about sand
traps. The park will be ded·
icatedThursday.
After two rainy days forced cancellation or the
rites. White House messengers were kept bli!y re.
turning about $1,800 lo the offices of the would·be
partyg()(!rs That's a lot of root beer
Coun~y Man Sentenced
Fence Guilty in $i.5 Million Bond Heut
ecutor Alken was released on LOS ANGELES CAP> -A La ( J SlOoOObondpendingappeaJ. Habra man has been sentenced •
to five years to life in state prison sr A.TE Poll Nbn Treaty for his CoPSpiracy conviction in
the $1.S milJion robbery of SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A
negotiable bonds from a Century Califomla Poll survey shows that
Citybrokeragehouse commit robbery. Aiken received most Californians don't appro•e
Superior Court Judge Phillip the stolen bonds and acting as an of treaties that eventually would
M. Newman sentenced Alto E . "outlet," arranged the sale of the give Panama Canal to the aov-
Aiken. 47, Thursday for his Sept. bonds out of state. ernmentOf Panama.
16 conviction of conspiracy to Despite Qbjections by the pros-Pollster Mervin Field reported
today that of 1,058 Californians
questioned between Sept. 23 and
Oct. 10, 49 percent said they dis-
approved or the treaties, 3S per-SS Plan Progresses centapprovedand1spercenthad
no opinion. •
Payroll-tax /)ills
Reduced by Vote
~
w ASlllNGTON <AP) -Intent on passing higher Social Secunty
taxes this year the Senate voted today to reduce the payroll-tax
burden on state' and local governments and nan-profit organizations by $2 billion a vear.
An amendment by Sen. John C. Danforth, R·Mo .. that would have the federal government pay
about S20 billion of the Social ( ]·.
Security taxes of such employers JN SHORT between 1979 and 1990 was adopt-•
ed57-28.
The bill being debated by the -----------SeJlate, written by ita Finance
Commitlee, would raise taxes on
all workers and their employers
fQr".>the next 75 years. To help
cusblon the tax blow, it would al-
low aid of about S300 mUUon a
year for cities. counties, states,
colleges and charitable oraa.nin-
tions.
But because or the way the re-
imbursement formula ls written
iri the bW. that would be of UWe
Mii.efit to croups, such as: th& •
S Jvatfon Arttay, that ha.ve .fow
h h·P.&id ken.
BQflden Probe Told
I.OS ANGELES <AP> -The
late FBI director J. Edgar
Hoover ordered a l~year in-
vestigation or onetime antiwar
activist Tom Hayden's P'1blic
and private life because be
deemed it or "prbne importance
to the 2ureau," FBI records
show.
The 1.os ~eles Times report-
ed in today's editions that among
7,000 pages of FBI docwnents re--
leased to Hayden under the
federal Freedom of Information
Act was a 1968 memo from
Hoover declaring:
"The tnvestfgaUon of Hayden
. . . is of prime importance to Ule
Bureau.. You will be e>cpec~ to
pumie ft aggressively and with
hnaginaUon. lnad~uate and de-
layed re.POrUng of important de-
v e Io p Jn c n ts will not be
tolerated.''
~•KW.l'etdla
I
•
EVENING
• 9:0011 C8S NEWS 88 NEWS
tage In a Njac:ked airplane
~ retut. to~
Quincy'• warning that they're
all~ to a deadly vlrua.
9G HEWS m GET8MAAT
The Chr.t tend• Max on a
vacauon and 09 rnvtstlQat•
the ~tenoua ataytng of 275
9*r\t.111a .
• MOYU!
· ***~ "Our DallL::·· (193') Tom Kell\ Karen
~.w..m.t.nd by ·-·------. ~.U~i~~,
1°"* a G~ of ~ to
fonn a fanning commune.
10:30 Ga. NEWS
• \;ATlNO CONSORTIUM
"Latin A~ t:atlv .. " 11:001••mo NEWS -.OLLVWOOO eoHNECT10H
• MOVI!
II EMERGENCY ONEI
When an elderly hertnlt falls to
frequent his ueual piece, the
~lmedtca join In a search for
him D MOVIE * * * ~ "Father Goose" ( \985)
Cary Grant, Leslie Caron.' An
Island watehman during World
War II Is )oHed by a French girt
and seven orphans. (2 hra.)
Bill Bixby plays a scientist who can become
the Hulk, a huge monster with enormous
power, in the special ''The Incredible Hulk,"
based .on the comic book character, tonight
at 8 on CBS, Channel 2. The Hulk is played
by Lou Ferrigno. _..;
**'*~"Father GooM" (1065)
Cary Grant, L.ealle CWon. Ail
llland watehman during World
Wtr II la )oiled bV a F~ gltl
and ..,... Ofl)hana. (2 hra.)
• THE 000 COUPLE
"You Saved My Ute"
• HOH6YMOONER8
An unexpected aummon1 from
the IRS panlca Ralph. • DICK CAVETT
I
I t
THI! BRADY BUNCH
"Goodbye, Allee Hello"
money.
CD THE ROOKIES
The rookies muat find those
responsible for holding up gun
thops throughout the city. fD ZOOM .rD FOODS FOR THE
MODERN FAMILY
"Ground MNt"
9 ABC NEWS
8:30 fJ THE PRICE IS RIGHT
G) MY THREE SONS
"There's A What In The Attic"
ID AS WE SEE IT
''Metco" A voluntary and SUC·
cesatul ten-year-old busing
operation; "Oreo Cookie" Peer
pressures; "Interracial Dating"
Intolerant attitudes of teenag-
ers.
~ FAMILY PORTRAIT ~ ~ltemata Llfeatylea" ~art 2)
Cl) c88NewS l 0 MERV OAIFFIN 1 7:00 fJ TH~ MUPPET'S
j Guest: Nancy Walker • D NBCNEWS l D LIARS CLUB fJ ABC NEWS
G) ILOVELUCY
"Lucy's Night In Town"
ot Q) ADAM-12 i An unlikely witness helps catch
• ak!Qer. ~ fD MACNEIL I LEHRER
j R.EPOAT l fl CALIFORNIA TONIGHT ~ Cl) TO T£ll THE TRUTli
l-7·30~~~:::.::~~: ..
D FAMll. Y FEUD D NEWL YWEO GAME l U 0 HOLLYWOOD
SQUARES tD "ntl! BRADY BUNCH
TM *1\tre Brlldy Famlly helps
; to get a boyfriend for Marela.
j ' t!) LET'S MAKE A DEAL
1 • 28 TONIGHT
l '9 VOTER'S PIPELINE
' Host Jim Cooper travels to ~ Wuhlngton D.C. to C!lacuas
currant leglslatlon belore
Orange County'• congreumen.
(J) THE MUPPET'S
8:00 fJ Cl) INCREDIBLE HULK
A scientist (Biii Bixby), eubject-
ed to massive doaea of gamma
rays during an experiment, Is
transformed Into a bizarre
man-t>Mst (Lou Ferrigno) with
super.human strength.
D CHICO AND THE MAN
"A Matter Of Privacy" Ed with-
hold• a special dellv.-y parcel
from Mexico addressed to Raul
becaute he auapecta that the
rumpled brown bundle con-
tains pornographic material. 8 MOVIE * * "The lnvlnclble Six" ( 1968)
Stuart Whitman. Elke
Sommers. Six fugitlvea are
appall9d at the treatment of an
laOfated vfffaga by bandits and
decide to protect the villagers.
(2 hra.) fJ (II DONNY & MARIE
A salute to the BaaUas with
guests Ernest Thomaa. Hay-
wood Nelson, Fred Berry, Ken
Berry, Paul Lynde, Jack
deleon. fJ JOKER'S WILD tD CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIENDS
Guests: Stiner and Meara.
61) MARCUS WELBY, M.D
Or. Kiiey, auttertng from oYer·
wor1< and after quarreling with
his wife, suffers a stroke. (Part
1)
• '1!) WASHINGTON WEEK
IN REVIEW -
8:30 8 CPO SHARKEY
''Operation Frisco" Sharkey
and hi• hefty crewmen volun-
teer for a secret wbmarlne
Ratings Guide
<M<MM ••• r.ted eccordi"l! to box
office •tttnCMnce Movlu tor TV are ludVed.,., a Cfllo< I
• • • • -Excellent • * * -Very Good * • -Good
• '1 -Fatr
• -Poor
mluion In which they mutt
share closet-a1%9d quartwa to
teat the .ttecta of strese. G CONCENTRATION
CR088-wrr8
8!) WALL $TREET WEEK
''Th• Bear Fact1" Guest:
Jame. Olnee, editor, om ..
~-. 9:00 8 ROCKFORD F1LES
"~Ulem For A Funny Box" A
eeconck11te comedian (Chock
McCann) t1* to pin a hornick»
cherge on Rocl(ford to avoid
admitting the existence of a file
box containing hi. jokea. Mere-
di.th M"~Rae, Jason Evera
Q_uiltatar. UO ,BATTlEOFTHE
NETWORK STARS
Thirty ~ from the thr• , .....
vl9'0n networka compete In a
wide variety ot ~· events. Howard COMU and Telly S.Va-
laa aerve aa hOat• for the
competition. Gabe Kaplan UP-
talna the ABC teem with Jim-
mie Walk• for CBS and Dan
Haggerty tor NBC. fJ IRONSIDE
A time bomb, tet to explode In
five hours, la locked on a 9Clen-
tlat who can tree hll'l\Mlf only
by arranging the escape of
three prlsonera. m ME.RV GRIFF\N
Cl) MARCUS WELBY, M.O.
Dr. Welby la forced tb Change
hla mind about how to treat Dr
Kiiey'• stroke. (Part 2) &l VISIONS
"Over Under Sideway. Down"
A young factory worker dreama
of quitting hla )ob and becom·
Ing a b&MbeJI player. G!> FlRINGUHE
"Governmlnt By Judiciary:
Congresa V1. The Supreme
Court" Guest: Raoul e.roer.
10:00 8 ()) SWITCH
Pete tak• on the role of a
movie studio MCMtty omo.r
whl» Mac toll• before the~
era to find a star'• would-be
murderef. Zohra Lampert,
Andr9W Duggan gutlt ... D QUINCY
"Holdlng Pattern" PotJtlcal ter-
rorltta holding pUNngWa ~
°'*1a; Sophia Loren. Marcello
M.-trolannl. (Part II) f0 MACNEii,. / LEHRER
Rl!PORT
11:308(1) M•A•&•H
When a strange 9ef1ea of •eel-'*''-befall COIOMI Blake,
Hawkeye urge. him to get away
from the ~nth for a few csaya,
not r..nztng the pilot of the
Colonel's hellc(>pter la th• one
responsible for the Mar-fatal
ocx:urrencea. (R) D TONtGHl'
Host: JOhnny Carson. Guaata:
Davtd Horowitz, Buck Henry,
Susan Ford, Steve Lawreoce. 9 LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
"Love And The Kidnapper" 89 BARETTA
"Under The City" In order to
prevent bloodahed, Baretta
helps • gang of Juvenile con~
vlcta eec:ape frolfl the police.
(R)
G) NEWS
GET SMART
Smart la aasigned to SOive the
disappearance of CONTROL
~ ...
9 CAPTIONED ABC NEWS
MOANING
12:00 D TWILIGHT ZONE
"Brain Center At Whipple•" CD FOREVER FERNWOOD
Cathy comfort• George;
Geoige •owna his IOfrowa:
Tom te6cea a tan.
• MOVIE *** "Les MIMrablea" (1952)
Mlchael Rennie, Robert
Newton. Victor Hugo'• tale of
the llfe-long purault of Jean
Valljeen and hfa ... of
eteapea, all for stealing a loef
of br,ad. (1 hr .. 30 min.)
12:30 D MOVIE ** "Man With The Icy Eyes"
(1971) Keenan Wynn, Feltt-
Oomergue. A young reporter,
covering the murder of an emi-
nent aenator. dlacovera the
uaaeln. (1 hr., 65 min.)
• NFL GAME OF THE WEEK
12:378 8TARTIME
"A Song Celled Revenge''
12:~9 MOVIE *** "Terror In The Sky" (1971) Leif Erlc:kaon, Doug
Mclut9. One man and a atew-
•
1Sam Elliott: a Choosy Actor
By JERRY BUCK
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Sam Elliott has
had only three acting jobs since 1974.
That year he had the title role in the mov·
ie "Lifeguard," playing a young man
forced to choose between the pleasant life or the beach and accepting an opportunity
in the business world.
Last year he starred In "Once An Eagle"
on the NBC Best Seller series
story. It's the people who have the money
who can hire the lawyers and go Cree.
Pdsons are lilied with the poor and
min«ities."
Be said Heyes wrote the show with
Richard Jordan in mind. but at the last
ininute Jordan turned it down. "That was
when I aot called in," he said. "From the
initial meeUng lt was six vteeks before J
was signed. They had me on the fence for
six weeks. They looked at 'Lifeguard' and
that was the final decision."
Etllott said he is probably closer to Keat-
ing than to the stoic aeneral he played in
"Once An Eagle.··
'
•
ENTERTAINMENT I TELEVISldN
4-... ..... s Top
foronto;
Shue Fired
INGLEWOOD -Marcel
Dtonne and Butch Goring scored
a~ood-period coals \o lead the
Los Angeles Jtlnis to a 4·2 Na·
tlqnal Hockey Leaeue vlctqry
owr Toronto Thursday nl&bt and
snap the Maple Leafs' six·iame
utO)eaten string.
~he MaPle Leafs roared back f Pl a 3-0 deficit in the final
p od to make lt close on goals
b Darryl Sittlet and de·
fen.seman Ian Turnbull.
But Mike Murphy added an in·
surttnce coat for the Kines into an
empty net with 15 seconds to
play.
• Ased
LADELPHIA -Gene
S • who couldn't bring
PHJ.l=• ~aUonaf;Besket· b~ atm tide With a team of milllontire supentan, was
fired today as coach and
replaced by former 76era 1tar BUl1 Cu11nln1bam, it was
learned.
.Shue, fired by owner Eugene
F. Dixon. has t.bree years re· mijn\Da OD a ~1$),000·a·year con· trace ..
F onntain Valley v~ Taris
• J ..
F~r Loop Olampionsliiu
Tbe Sunset League football
chllntJJlonsbip is on the line
tonight (8) as Fountain Valley
High 's uodef eated Barons butt
head• wJth the defense of
Newport Harbor's Sailons.
An overflow crowd of 8,000 is
expected f()l' the showdown at
Orange Coast College and the
Barons, desplte a nnking no
higher than Newport Harbor
<third) in Orange CQunty circles,
are lOYrpolnt favorites.
Both teams, bound for the CIF pla~offs, feature formidable de-
fense and each has bad its de-
fensive gems in compiling a 3-0
league record. The reason for the
10~·~.:gread ls the presence
of 175-tailback Willie Gil·
tens, a Mil!Or wbo bas...tcoted 19
touchdowns in seven victories
this campaign and 43 in his
ca\'eet ,FountalD Valley.
Gittens bias averaged 9.4 yards
a carry in claUdng up 980 yards.
Aeainst Edison <HulUington
Beach> in m emotional t-3 vie·
toey, GlU. carried 3' Umes for
U1 yards: Be figures to carry Ute
baU as much tonllht. although
the Jlarou of coach Bruce
GOU Leaders
Pickford also average five yards
a carry from their fullbacks.
The passln& aame of Fountain
Valley features 6·4 Doug
Thompson. alq with a bevy of
excellent receivers, led by 205-
pound Tim Holmes.
Coacb Bill Plidca •s Sailors
have twothinp Solni for them in
their bid for an upset-ereat de.
tense and speed.
The defensive corps of Jeff
Bitetti, Don Barker. Bob Brown.
Wayne Kasparek and others has
Says Pickford: "Newport is
the best def ens iv• team we ·u aee
this 1e~. 8Ut ther9 11 'a lot of character on um teaip ~d we've
explalrif:d th& situation. If we
don't Ml\ toniabt •e don't Win ttie champlt:mbJ&>.:.:.
LOS ANGELES <AP> 80utbem c.llfomla coach John
RoblnaOD l8Y9 the Pacltlc-8 C.·
t erence champion Will be tb8 team tbat 1umvea. anct bll TrO-Jan• and StaDfoi'd'I Ca:.-uurur••
face a atern IUi'tival teSt tw-
day :when tbey elm In tbe cou1eaat.1u:ao. stanford leads tbe aerambted Pac"8 nee wldl a '-1 reociri!.
wlllle USC, UCLA and
WubJ.DCt,on are tied for seCond
with 3-1 marb.· An dltlaaal
loss by any of the four team.a
would abDolt certalnl7 end their
Rc»e Bowl bope9.
Staaf ord and Southera Cal
have provided aurpriHI thla fall,
but of oppol1te natures. Tho Tro-i an• were projected as euy
P•c·S wtnnen, with Stanford
lumpect amex11 the also-ram.
But USC. No. l In the DttiGD •
month ago. baa 108t tbrie of lta
past four pmes to droP to s.a Ud
16th ln tbe national eollese fOot·
ball poll. The Cardinals, OD the
other hand, have won five of their
last 11.x and have a 1-a ov•all
mark. Robinson, who said bla Ti'OJans
have been ~t and anm, pre-
dictecl theJ'll ·be relaxed fOT the
meettna wttllSUmforct. but added
that the card.ina1.I are • Vf!rJ
1ood fooJMil team.
"GUJ 1$enjamin ta~t.a No. 1 ·
qaartertiaet in tbtl~:~U$'7."
saJd Roblmon ... aneHJJelr tliip re.
cel'rer, James LCftori, bas great
speed and great bands. Arid that
lltUe tail~ DarriA Nelao la a nne ruoner, ••
Benjainin, a deadlJ passer.
bu hit OD 157 of 242 passee Ulls
seuo&l for ~8'18 yaros ana. 16
touchdowns. LOfton, wbo Ht a
school record wltb bl• loth
touchdown reeeptlon bf tbe
1e810D last Week aaamst Ofelon
State, bas 41 catehes for 720
yards this fall. Nelson, a 5-9,
170-pound freshman speedster,
bas carried 131 times and
averaged 5. 7 yarda per carry.
Stanf.ord coacb Bill Walab 4JX·
pretaed jWJt as much ~ '°"' the Trojans as Robinson dld for
the Cardinals.
.. This is a tJpical tJSC team
'9ith jfeG Went at all ~
tfons, •• the Stenfor4 cot.ch said.
Co us tn.
Jury-1'iddl Cl football tHm
a1alaat Unlv raU7 Ht1b'1
<Irvine> p • . eel offense
toni1bt In o'clock South
Coaat t.eque came at Irvine
Hi1h.
Wtlh a 3-2 record. Corona del
. !!::-,_ ·"" l."'lkiDa ou an outside
c1>ance t.o reCelve a CIF playoff
berth, tRa U"'venltY. at 1-4. can
only pta:y ~spoiler's role.
Corona del ?rJar will be •t~ without Martin Hubbard, one of
the league's finest tailbacks.
Hubbard is out wlth a hip.pointer
injury. He had s cored 1ix
touchdowns in bis last two aames
before the injury, and was
averaging7.lyardapercarry.,
Five of Corona del Mar's
starten were hampered with
various injuries last week and
coach Dick Morris says bis team
will be below full strength
tonight..
Un1Yerslty 'wlU be· utlUlinf
quarterback John Davis• PaaaiDC
arm to the fullest exetent possi·
ble. In his last outing Davis
passed 21 times, completing
nine, and coach Pick Roche says
he 'II continue to go to the air fre.
queoUy.
Roche Bays be still considers
Corona del Mar the best team in
the league, despite the fact that it
Jost to Mission Viejo and San
Clemente.
''Thelr quickness is the best
in the league," Roche says.
"We've got our work cut out for
us."
In Hubbard's absence Corona
del Mar's belit rushers are Arata
Hamawakl {S·S, 135) and Marty
Green CS·lO, 190). Hamawaki is
small but quick and deceptive.
while Green is more or a power
runner.
University counters with Gil
Zaldivar (3.8 yards per carry)
c.1nd David Langmade, a multi·
threat athlete who ca~ run. pass
JOd kick
* * ..
Uftl .. "41Y $Ulrtlnt L1MVllt
0"-"• ~-Ill. T•llei I~ lh Engll>h Ol
i.r env11l>I> 19S 1qs Hugrws RI
we;. Polllerd 200 t.0 Callai-RC.
c.. H-• lf>O I,,. l Ille• LC.
LC. Ke.,,,,. l•S 200 Ortman Ll
LfH~ 19S !IS £Aley OE
~ E H.,1 IU 11s-S<11roec1tr LB
Ull oavls 150 160 lalGIYet cs
~61..a~ ''° 1.01..a~ C&
H8 Z•ldlvar 160 llS R ... tl '.))
f.L Surtl*r HO 15S Crvi F!>
CM-. .. ,_.., LIMV•
0....... ~ IL Wiitse flO llS Ml.e.M<' OE
llT Davis 1'5 208 Roll OT
WG Raft llO 1IO Relf NC. c.. DobM 160 m Bu,_11 01
LC. llelcer l'IQ 140 Tl\ay~r OE
LT ""~ lti 115 Kot Iller LB
~e Heyu uo 11s S<J>nllver Lil
QB Brockman l&S ll>O MelbOn c.u
1-8 Grfff't 190 HS JOl\n'iGf'I ca
·11:1 Hamawalll lJS 1)0 Bal<Nller " f.L. JohnslOn us 1'S Stan* .
Sunset Aetion
Anteater BllH!ks Shot
UC Irvine goahe Bob Malone, shown
blocking a shot in a recent game, hopes to
do more of the same Saturday when the
Anteaters· water polo team faces Cal Poly
•
(Pomona) at 11 a.m. and San Jose State
at 8: 30 p.m. at Newport Harbor High. UCI
also meets Arizona Sunday morning at 10
at Newport.
G WC, Rio Hondo
Square Off ·Tonight
Capo Valley
At Imperial
WHITTIER-Golden West
College goes after its fourth
straight Southern California Con·
ference football victory tonight
(7:30), tangling with Rio Hondo
at Whittier College.
. Oilers, Yikes Duel
\
'
...
To E~cap!3 Cellar
ly threat. You can't ovti1)b&Y
him. And Marina scored a lot "411
points <26> on Westminster •• a team wbichsbu.tusout:• .
~ ....... u...
Off-. .......
Tl! LYletl '*' 1'0........., LE RT R. Pl!u91m 180 21t Gt'-. LT
RG H--1'0 "° kMWlel NG C '"--W ~ Tuoer RT LG G...... Ut 170 M. Pl~ RE
\.T "NCW lQS 17S King I L8
$!! Trullllo Uf 20$ ""-' t.8 11s 110 ca,,_ ca 1• uo ~ooo ca
11S W TllOO> SS
155 US Teytcw •• FS
..
l Toro m~ • Cbarlers aDd
the Dolphma of Dana HUls, two
football teams et the opPoslte
Poles ln south Coast 'Leape
warfare. eolllde tmUlht (.8) at
Missie Viejo Hllh· For the Ctiarlen of £1 Toro
coach PbU Brown a victory ton.labt p,lb them one wlD awa1
from the leape cbam~p
(after being tabbed for last>.
For the Dolphins of Daaa llllls
coach Dena DeGroote, It is a cbanc townie. portlao otthe
camp81oi ~r falling lDto a
threeioway tie bi the ceDar.
While eadlteam •s fortunes are at mt"oppoa{te, IO are t.be c~
tlals. El Toro enters witb a
around-oriented 1tyle, bent.: oo
coDtroling the ball at a
metbOdical pace.
•
El Toro has netted 10 TDs in
five league games and the da.
fense bas allowed only ftvet'Da. , Ticket Prices
Dana Billi, meanwbUe. bas
scored 14 T1>$ but allowed 19
touchdowns.
In contrast to El Toro'• COO·
servaUve nature. the Dolpblns
are a threat to strike from any
poiDt on tbe field-as de-
monstrated by the rwuuna ol
Mitch McGre1or.
McGreaor baa 1cored
touchdowns of 95 and 90 yards on
kickoff tetums and bu caught a
25-yard scoring pass. Chip Mmes •
b~a a '6·yard. rUD for a
touchdowll to eredlt oo a flea·
flicker pass play and
quarterback Tom Thornton baa 3
TD passes to his credit. ..
El Toro, meanwhile, beiilnd
quarterback Jeff Glbbl, pecks
away wUh puncJa...es to tilt in·
terior. Dennfs Driri11 and Hector
Avella start th the backfield, but
Rich Brown 1a also scheduled for
yeoman duty in the running
game, accordina to Browo. •
Lakers Rlay
" The Las Angeles t.aters h&in
a three-week Na~al Basket· ball A11oclatlon homestead
tonight agalnat the Indiana
Pacen.
Los Angeles. which eoded a
two-game losing atitak by beat-
ing tbe New Jwsey Nets Wednes-
day·· night 10''1-102. brin,p a .a..s
. record into the game. T Puers
are3·3.
Two official• wllo llave
spea:rbead~ 1.-Anples' ~-the 1984 \ummer Otymptes-
defend.ed plans te eba:rfe f . ....,~
average tleket piice ot •
A.ttorcaey. JObll C. r1ue,
cb lrman of the Southern
CaUfonla Committee for ~e
Olymplc Game1 and Anton
Calleia. DJA10" Tom BNidley'a
Olympics liaison. both~ Saturday during an appeataOlce on KNXT·TV's "Newsni.-s ..
tnat attending the effldS~ I be a once-in-a-llfetlm• ez.
perience ~worth the prtce. ,
Argue pOinted Out tbat IOftl'll• ) mmt officlalS ba.e pledPd to
.bring the Olym}lics t.o Los Angeles at no cost to J.OcaLiup.,en.: .. m
«def t0 d&>Ulat we~" w~· healib'cntlckaadmisa.,_trom.
the games. Buttodo&hat web .. e
to charge a 1ood priri, ·as we dicl
iD 19132, .. be said. M~ to tbe Jut time the Oljmplcs wen~ ..... .......,
m t.o,Angeles. · '
Callela added. "I nbmittoJ'O'I
that $2S for a mce-•a.utedme
event is not exorblWlt bJ DY means.··
'lbe pair indieatecl that the S2S
figure would be an aver-. With
admission for some eYents hllbes' and for Otllen tower. AJ'CU8 recalled taJdna his faml·
ly to the W16 summel' G&Cllet iD Montreal, and aald tickets tor the
openlng and closing ceremonies
were$t0each.
•
than three t.aucladowns ht aslagJe
1ame. In four ct the fl.e Joilles.
Cotta Mesa was never nally
"'. •1 aOGDC.ULION
"' ... ~ ..... ·-... Jtatucla Ceo.ti Mt11a) m111•• Eaa*ha•• tiefll claalfted u • cardiac bunch la Use put and
they lived up to tbelr re·
putatlon 'l'hunday Dlabt
ln a 11..:U 1tandoff w1th
Century f.Aalue football foe'l\min.
Before a crowd of l.200 at Newport Harbor Hltb
coach Jttn Bratten's
Eacle1 picked
themselves of( the noor
r! tbank1 to a 52-yard
touchdown run by GleM
Hicks and a miracle fl· yard run by Jerry
Hopklna, which led lo
Kevin Ha1an's l·yard
touchdown leap with 1: 28
left in the 1ame.
Estancia 's t.ry for the
extra point was botched
~ and in the end the two
" · liml)4!d off the field re·
, mt,nb~t of the 1176 bat·
tie-which ended 22·22.
Tustin appeared to
, have the game locked
•u when Rieb Driscoll, who
("; tossed two TD passes
earlter, scored from a :: ' 1•rd out and Glenn Fis·
., cber kicked his third
PAT with 9:4-0 remaining
to make it 21·7 after
Eslancla quarterback
Dave Jeranko had
scored on a 2·yard run.
But after holding
Tustin on ils next
possession. Hicks went
the distance on an end·
around and when
' Jeranko ran for the two-
point conversion. the
• Eagles were within
range with 4: 34 left.
Still, Tustin seemed
·' 'out or danger when Jeff
' Partridge punted to the
" Estancia 18. Hopkins
fielded the ball and ap-
•. peared snowed under at
'the 30. only to burst
'loose, regain his b•l•bc6
' and dash to the Tustin 21-.
A penalty moved the ball
to the 11, Jeranko car-
tied to the 1 and then
•' Hagan went over the
middle.
AJtbouih the PAT al· tempi .(al)td, he tie
keep a Bratten• crew wlttiln r1n11 of a clear
1bot at thlnl. place and
the Cir playoffs wttb •
victory over FootbUl
<Tuatln) ~ next •eok
(aHum_lar. Villa J>ark
a tops FOoWD Saturday).
Bratten'• defeodel'I
nearly pulled off motb9'
miracle oa the lut pla)t
of the 1asne when Earl
Atwell lutercepted and
ran 40 yards before belna
stopped at the Tustin 8-
yard Une. ·
Steve Cuniff led a
tough Eistancla defense
and Mike Camp was ef·
fectlve as a receiver,
calcblnl five of
Jeranko's olferings for
53 yards. But it was
Hopkins' unreal dash
that saved the Ea1lea
from defeat.
Jeranko's first TD wu
set up on his 20-yard pass
to Camp after TustJn
klased away a punt at its
24. Until then, Estancta·a
only threat ended in a
mlssed field goal at·
tempt alter gettin1 as far
as the Tustin 14 1o the
first half.
OAMl:l"tATllTICS
T
P'lrtldowM"""lJ!V • • • 4 "''"-'PAUl"9 4 1'1<11 ......... t*M<!le& I f Tot•lf1rs1~ U 1'
Y eros ru~no 171 207
Y•rcll .,.1'$1ne 11 7J
Y•f'MIOll ~ 21
Netyer•19tlNd 213 hi
P\11111·• ... *''--..V.S J.2'• .,..,.,~•111411 ll..,, •»
l'111111>lesl•t .. , 2-4
"*'-"'~
u..oerc1 ... 111nrv
Pfl'l<Oll
"-""' HaMll'6<1 Total1
J•r•nko Oomlnguq
...... 11
..,.~,,
Hl<ks
Tot.II
1 0 7 1-21
0 0 7 1'-21
llUIMlltG T..-"'111 .,. yt • ..,
11 1n , •.1
2 20 2 f.O
' 1 13 -2.0 a • s 1~ a ,. 9 , ..
It 17t 36 4.S . .._ ..
" a 20 •·• 3 1' 0 S.6
~ • 0 1 ..
12 • 1 .a.t
'• JZ 0 JU Jl 101 II s ...
l'.USINO T ....
... ~ .... .,. lllJ(t.
Oris.coll 19 • 2 71 .lt•
EttMcw
JerMikO 21 1 I 7S ~
Monarch8 Rally
For 14-3 Victory
• · ·B:, DaveCu.nnJn•bam
1
··. J 0tu.o.i1y,. .... ti.n The CIF football
playoff hopes of Mat.er
Del Hiah <Santa Ana>
got ne._, ltfe Thuntday
night as the Monarchs
• $lune f\ighly-regarded Pius X ol Downey 14.3 In " ta Angelus League game
at the Santa Ana Bowl.
The victory means
that even If MattJ' Del
loses t.o powerful Servlte
(Anaheim> next Thura·
day, it will be a solid can·
didate tor the playoffs
with lta 2·2 record in the
ByBOWARDL. HANDY OUlllOallf'~i.tSt.tlf
Diving for a speeding ball alter an
opponent spikes it with a hard htt la a peat feeling when you make a save.
according to Marle Lundie,. leader of
the No. 1 rated Newport Harbor Hlah
School girls volleyball team.
"It is exciting to get the ball on a
hard hit," Lundie says. "You try t.o
watch the hitter's arm and figure
where th.at pel"80n is aimlng, the try
to get there before the ball does."
This ta Just a part ol the game at
which Lundie excels. She Is the
Newport setter and H such, is the
team quarterback Oil the floor.
How does she determine which way
to set the ball for a teammate to
spike?
••A lot de~nda on how 1ood the pass
is to me,' she explains. "A lot ot
times I will set away from a tall 1lrl
oo the other side and tr she ls left·
banded. that also· makes different
problems."
Does she enjoy hitting (spiking> the
ball? .
"In practice I get to bit it once m a
while," she says. "But reallstlcally, I
never get to hit it in a game. My job~·
to .et it for someone else to Mt.
"I usually play rlght back or rlJhl
front and then try to get into position
t.o set the ball en the front row. You.
can't overlap with the person directly
btlilnd or beside you but as long as
you don't overlJp, any formation is
fin .. ' e.
Another oC her 1tron1 points ls her
serve but Lundie Hya lh1I is only
averaae. "I'm probal)ly best at aet-
tint and on def enae," sbe say1.
Lundie bttan bet volleyblll career
on tl\e beac•. When she •u ln the etcht.ti f?Ad• ahe participated in a
jUnlorl'lib tournament and ~u invit-
ed to ptay for tbe Or.anae O>unty Voner an Club uncter c0Jd1 D le
I
Sports
Calendar
LEASE 1978 MONTE CARLO
.. JC Polo
In this cab, you'r,t king. Hi-back
bucket seats, wall-t~wall plush
carpeting, AMIFM radio, center
console and tinted glass. all
standard.
A standard 5-speed overdtlve trans~
mission which delivers hefty puRing
power~ terrific gas mfloage. In
California EPA tests the SA-5 Sport
Truck was rated at 28 high"'@Y, 21 cityr
These EPA ratings are estimates. Your
' mileage will vary depeodir)g on yc>yr
.driving habits and your lruck'sCORdrtion
and equipment.
'lbucanaJIJYon with almost
Snything,A bed <:Ner 7' l6ng
and a useful paytoact of
1100~
STORY end ILLUSTRATIONS by JERRY HERTENSTEIN
Ot the Delly Piiot Steff
/\ man neatly dressed in a
Bl'ooks Brothers type suit com-
plains to the desk clerk al a
mammoth coastal hotel that he 1 • can't find a parking place.
Indeed. Although the night is
still young, 9 p m .. the parking
' lot is full. And a goodly number
' of people from those autos are
standing in a line in the lobb>,
wailing up to30 minutes.
THEY WAJT TO dance to the
disco sounds and drink an the
crowded, smoky Mam Brace.
Not far down the Coast
Highway, cars are parked on one
side of the road in a line that ex-
tends up to a quarter of a mile
from another popular night spot.
The scene or jammed parking
lots and nightspots is dittoed
mostly on Friday and Saturday,
) week after week in coast cities.
**•
Braee. The place is so crowded
she can see, at most, an eighth of
the dancers.
Tina, dark-haired with a
pleasant smile, says she has
driven Crom Long Beach lo
Newport Beach because there's
'nothing" in her city.
"I like to dance and meet daf.
ferent people," Tina said. "I like
watching people and talking to
them, l'mnotheretoscore ...
The lines at the bar and along
the railings are three deep. A
man elbows his way through.
THREE WOMEN SIT at a ta·
ble just oft the dance floor. They
have come, '"because it 's
something to do after work, ·
they claim.
'"''Maybe there it nobody in our
• lives;· said Joan Themm of
Laguna Niguel. "We work
together, we come here together
and we always go home
together.··
JINA MACKENZIE of Long '
Beach stands near the steps lead.
in& to tfl~ dance floor at the Main
•
Joan's friend, Karen Woodrum
or Ne\fport Beach, says, "I come
to relax. It's better than watching
television."
Paula DiPietra. San Clemente.,
agrees. "l come to haye a good
time. I don't like to stay home:·
"I DON~ COME here to meet
men,·· Joan says. "All men are
creeps, stupid ... especially Uie
good looklngones."
But Paula adds, "l like lo meet
a variety of people.''
Three tables from the trio, two
men sit and talk about women.
"If I'm out with a lady shenad
better be beautiful, had better
' turn 'everyone's head," says a
slender man with long, wavy
hair. His shirt is open at the col·
tar and the first button down is
undone.
HIS TABLEMATE wears
glasses, flari!d, light blue cotton
pants and brown shoes.
Turntables across the way, emit
the words of the Floaters. "My
name is dharles and I like a
woman who is quieL •·
Rich Burnett of Corona del
Mar stands on the second level.
"I like music, .. RJch says. ··n·s •
runny, many come here looking
for the perfect stranger. I have
no expeetations."
***
RANDY WOODS or Fountain
Valley is at the controls or the
console that puts out the Sounds
of "I feel love, I feel love, I ft*
l·o·v-e." Flashing blue and ~
lights are timed to the beat oft.be
music.
Woods controls it all and seems
lo dellght ln that fact. .
"I'm t.rylnt to get people to
jump up and down," WoOds, a
former disc Jockey says. ''If I
want to speed 1UP tbe~ple, I
speed up the lights." •
Woods, who claims .he is the
h1gheat"')>aid disco DJ in Southern
Califomla, ls honest.
'
~ . .
THE IRRITATED young pickup-er seated
next to me tapped me sharply on the shoulder
and coolly expressed hls chagrin at beln& ig-
nored fot' .. such a long lime.••
.·' · i'I apologized for being so rude, (the
~ .....
..
.. WIUJ. MAYBE it's )'OW' hair."
Mine it dart brown. abc>Wder leotth1 hen
walst-lcn.U.Jntt b]onde. . Anelr\'ilm-i nable vetbal voU~. about all
the tblop M had In common ewe dld:n'O, l final·
ly cut him otr ~·Y.f.n•: •
•'Tbe onlJ thini we have ln common ia the fact that wo•ro both tauedlbly beauutul. •·
He~ ova NEXT STOP WU a fashionable disco
tputed bJ many u The Place to dlfn&l• wlth
cla.sa.
The management la picky about who they Jet
in, 10 )'OQ don't have to worey about anodatlng
wttb rlff.ratf. A dresa code keept out an1one
1lea1y enouih to wear jeans or any other unac-ceptable apparel.
Tbe code obvioualy works. All the men were
identically attired ln tight slacks, platform
shoes, had their shirts unbuttoned t.othe!r navels
revealing chains and med.Wons hu1in1 lrom
their necks.
YOU DON'T EVEN have to go to the powder
room tomake aure your mascara isn't running.
Mirrors line the walls and dance fioor, so one
A SWIRL OF NIGHTLIFE • • •
<From Page Cl)
lain Valley, bearded and dressed ma brown, leather coat,
stands near the llfllran~.
charge other times, anyone can dance to the Uvely disco of
what the employee calls a "liberal club."
A few blocks away. the cllenteleor another nt1bt1potia
almost all femab. "TIUS, .. RE 8.\ 111 "t• A club I would bring a date to.
I'm here to enjoy the aanclna fqr the exercise. You don't
met:t desirable females in an atliJosphere like this. There is
a good elemenlbereand It's euyto blend in. You don't have
to be anything other than yourself.'·
Fulwiler haa paid $350 for a ll(etlme membership, plus sis per mon~ dues, or S754>for at lifetime gold memberSblp,
no dues, for use of lbe club. There is &<>mething scheduled
every night.
.. * "
A FEW MIL~S inland, a sign above the dance floor re-
ads ''No barefeet, po smoking, no drinks."
But among the crowd, a muscular man dances
barechested, his T-shirt hanging from lhe back of his jeans.
A youthful male in orange shorts, tennis shoes and
white socks carfies a basket, plckin& up empty drink
glasses.
A trio of men stan'1 with th'lr arms around each other.
Their are few couples ifl the plaJ!e.
AN EMPLOYE. IS fearful or publicity. "!:verytime we
get publicity, we get harassment from the community," he
says.
But for n any Friday or Saturday nllht. no admission
It's Sl.50 admittance on Friday pr Saturday nights. The
worn an who takes the money. cbe&s ID and stamps banda.
asks. "Are you aware this ls a lllY club?"
THE INTERIOR IS like a bu1e, ru.sUc bam. Patrons sit
on wooden chairs linked together lo rows or on stools around
large barrels.
The spot is popular, the manacer. Sally <not her real
nameJ claims because the people "come here to relax. They
like it because there l• no need to feel lnhlblted ...
She Worries about publicity. ''Tho Anita Bryant lhinl
has everyone up lllhl. We want to keep a relax'4S at·
mosphere here,· she says. ••• STILL FARTHER inland, the -aounds or country come
from the live band of Larry Bales and Tbe Midnltbta. ·
But unlike the other spots, there la only a handful of
listeners inside the Santa Ana club t.o hear Bales give hl1 lm·
pressionof Johnny Cash.
Bales, with Blacky Taylor on the 1teel l\lltar, Ray
Mahaffey on lead 1ultar and Wally Sterling on drums, belta
out with "Riq of Fire,·• and ends with "Follom Prison.··
Taylor'• plckln1 hnltatea to near realism the
locomotive sounds of "The Orance BlOISOm Special ...
And the beat goes on.
:r:;:_-··ook for 'Mr; Goodhar'
::. Movie May Repel or Rip Apart Viewers
Richard Brooks' "Looking For Mr. Good-
; bar" is the kind o( movie that could only be made
by an artist with real vision, power and com-
pa'"•on. Under the guidance of any other director, it
could have been pornographic, seamy, sensa-
tional, depressing and filled with aelf-pity. Under
the scholarly, humanitarian tutelage of a master
ctlUtsman like Brooks, it becomes more than
jufi~ a movie about an all-American girl
murdered violently and savaaely by a stranger
she picked up in a bar.
IT BECOMES A vast and complex tapestry
o i resUess young society shaking off 100 years
:WJ>Pression in the waterlni holes of the big·
,_,,unCie night, a social document about the
-way we llve now.
It la shattering, but lt ls one of the most im-
portant.. meaningful and thoroughly consum·
mate piAces o( mmmakin11 have seen ln. dec-
ade of movies, and if any film about life the
'70s ts to be placed ln a ttme capsute tor tuture
generations to study, it should be ''Look.in& For
Mr. Goodbar."
This ls one of the very Cew movies I can re-
mem brr that is actually better than the book up-
' which it ts based. Richard Brooks took Judith
oer's best-seller about the b~tal murder of
l ung schoolteacher. fleshed out the reasons 'tllllol~.~""'' •he chose to lead. a double life, eompiled
t • res~arch ttlu of hil own on the case.
a ay the literary pretenai8Ds. Vlalted
n Rt J>ars and discos, and lnterviewed 600 ep \ii attempt to unT vet the oluos to the
o 'sauce
..
REX REED
in the raw
terranean subculture Jives out lta secret fan·
tasies without the watchdo1 disapproval of
authority. In these eettin1s, a fabrtc or society is
woven that has only been hinted al In other mov·
les
••t•DazALLY like tom yog temaht. •• J quattoned just what, exactly, did be mean
by .. meet me?"
He answered that he would love to come over to m1 hOUse and tollt to mo 111 prtvato 8" "really act to mow JOU ...
l eii>lall*1 tbat I didn' make a practice of
(See PASSES, Pate CS>
MUSI~ Yemr PARTY!
Litt Tiie -..I Diie T__..
...... TlltllSTI .,._.....,,
YOR ....... DI I 11•11 .... .,....
CPI
QWUJl'S DISCO IUllNISI
.
a.rlil 114-tlWlll D-rt ltWtl-tMt
Uc9nNd (JILi, Ul2'1 . lneur9d
Arlia L<tne '
fntematlonaity
lcnow portrtl~
Open• S.t. • Bun. Nov. S 6 l·+t p.m.
Rart A/tfcolt Sculpture
ultlbft en dotioadGin fGllny
GAtlfRY Regular Gellery hOura
W9ds. tttru Suns. 12-S p.m.
thru Oec.3
1150 Sa. COllt lfwy~ Lipa 8udl. CA 4D7-420l-404 5048
. .
.,
A fallacy bout n1Usb food bu ec:boed
down the corrtdors <:A bilto.ry to tho pres@\. day.
It'~ the belief that Greit Britain bas alwaya been
and "IO rematna '-a dining wasteland,
gastronomic diluter area.
Whether or not it was the cJever French <as
i;ome 1iU5pect> who ftrat advanced this spurious notion Cto elimblate any cross-channel challenge·
to their supremacy) 1a unimportant now. What
Out 'N About
....... -man Stanley
counts today is the certainty that the British
Islea offer dining prospects equal to those found
anywhere in Europe or this country. • THIS I SAY VERY confidenUy after a so-
journ in England last month, a visit that foWld
me eating, for the most part, with gustatory
pleaiaure and &ratification to spare. And that's
pretty much how it has been, too, during four
earlier visits In the 70's.
If a valld reason still exists for putting down
Br1t1sh focd it's the ubiquitous Whimpy
establishments. By the number of ouUets alone,
this catastrophic attempt to emulate the
American humburgcr/fast·food operation ap-
pears to dominate the dining out scene, especial·
Jy in London.
But even for this type of eating relief is at
hand wilh the arrival of the golden arches. The
first McDonald's spots opened only last month
and long walling lines and brisk business were as
evident as the suddenly emptier Wbimpy plac~s.
In another vein. however. one would
While Nor111 Was All'aJI
veto be blind to fall to find the tenulne eaIUi
t;o doA of11r.1 ln the way of fir.at cla
restaurant.. Actually, il seems to me that a point
of ~-~on c n be made with tbe Eatllsh
langtaafo itaelt.
Our mother tonaue is the world'• richest
because it has borrowed, adapted and absorbed
thousands of words from the eart.h '1 other
langua101. And so it is with London's
restaurants; the va1a metropolls embraces
every variety of food and ethnic cuisine imagina·
ble.
Not to be overlooked io this abundance, of
course, are the multitude of places to enjoy tiadi·
lion al British fare. By and large, they clearly de-
monstrate two things about the coun~cooks:
their mastery of the art of roasting meats; their
deft touch with an enormous range of national
and regional specialties. •
TO NAME BtJT A FEW there's such items
as Lancashire hot pot <lamp chop casserole with
kidneys and oysters>. colcannon (mashed •
potatoes with cabbage and scallions>, crumpets.
scones and shortbread, eccles cakes, kedgetff
<curried fmnan baddie with rice), toad·in-the-
hole (saU:>ages baked in batter), Yorkshire pud·
ding, Cornish pasties and that superb cake, fruit
and custard dessert, the trifle.
On the <Kher hand, if you want lo test Lon-
don's international maze there ~e many roads
to ttavcl: Austrian, Chinese. French, German,
Greek, Hungarian, Indian and Pakistani, Italian,
Japanese, Mexicon, Russian, Spanish, Swias and
Turkish, lo name those we noted in the coutse of
one afternoon's spotting.
Havmg sought guidance for something in
these myriad prospects, we concluded we tiad in-
deed been given a top-notch recommendation
following our meal at a splendid French
establishment -Le Cave. Chez Solange
J A
Diners Treated Royally Here
By CAROL MOORE
• Ol\MO..ll'ffl'll.tti.tt •
Coast diners heading inland
should make their next stop at
Mr Slox, 1105 E. Kalella Ave.
Anaheim, now under the expert
guidance or Chick and Phyllis
:\ta rs hall
I le 1s a formt•r \ i<·c president
with Lawry\ rt.•:.tauranls and
:.lw 1s a ~ourmt•l e..xtraordinalre
"ho adds nl,!!hlly specials <like
chicken iucchint on Thursdays)
to th e already substantial ncnu.
WHILE KEEPING such
trademarks as Cafe Slox and the
cheese fondue llppetizer. they
have warmed up the interior de·
cor, purcha!>ed new china and or
dercd tapet;tr1cs und candelabra
NOW!!
BOB WHITE
PLUS
to turn the wine-tasting room into
banquet seating for 20 .
On Halloween. the affable
Mars hall took a break from ex-
panding the wine cellar inven-
tory to don a Jtmmy Carter mask
and pass out peanuts to the
guests
His knowledge and orferings of
California vintages added to the
pleasure or the dinner which
started naturally with
pumpkin soup dolloped with sour
cream.
Menu choices of fresh ~amc
lobstn and grilled swordfish
rew deserved praise. Veal
California, with avocado and
tomato wedges. came smothered
in llornay sauce.
QASSIC ITALIAN CUISINE
or particular noie were
the vegetables: tender crisp bt0c·
coli with Hollandaise and new
potatoes, sliced obliquely and
braised toperfeclion.
The Marshalls orrer their own
eastern-style cheesecake with
blueberries and a fudge cake that
c:hocolatc fanciers will describe
as "indescribably delicious."
After dinner,lhe Ronnie Brown
Trio cntcrtalPS ln the lounge. The
inten:.1tv and excitement of their
Jaa medleys and Gershwinlunes
makes the dance floor a natural
place to end the evening.
Pianist Brown, a former
music direetor of lhe Balboa Bay
Club, has been doing national concert tours for two years with
Columbia Artists.
ORDERING A LA CART~. our savory din-
ner for two cost about the same as we would liave
paid at home, $omewhere in the n~b~b.ood of w. plus tip.
It included an excellent bottle of Ft'eucb
wine, pate maison and escargot (one-hitlf dozen>
appeth:en;, entree .s~lections ol 8CaJDP.i a la
maison and grilled entrecote steak ctiuseur, two
Clawlessly cooked vegetables and potatoes,
cassis (black cUrTant> orbet and fresh pineap-
ple with cream for de;isens, urillm.ited coffee.
A fairly new and boom~ phenomenon in
London and elsewhere is the Wine bar. Wine by
the glass or bottle <preferabty the latter) is the
mainstay of these places but. they atsO offer a
small menu that's pe.rfect for light ~nacks or meals.
ONE OF THESE WINE bars that captured
our fancy during the course of two vlslts was the
Barcave, Blackheath Village, SE3, located in the
southeast secllon of London at Greenwlch. Like
the pubs, wine bars are open for a few hOUl'a at
mid day and again for five hours or .so in the even·
ing.
Cold plates at the Barcave included ham and
tongue or a combination of the two, and roast beet, about $1.75 each; smOked macttret and
green salad, $2.75. Amons the hot dJsbes was a
sensational prawn curry with rice, $2.25. •
If one has the opi>ortunity, dining in the•
Brihsh Isles shouldn't be c~>nfined to c:1ty
restaurants with all the manelous -o\d inns that
dot the countrnlde. One of our f ~orites, •nd a
place where we've diil~ se al Ullles in recent
years, is the White Post Inn, about 150 miles
north of London.
LISTZ&
COMPANY SZECHWAN • tiiUNAN
Daily Lunch
And Olnnet
,y_.HostCIMtHOlttA-
...__..,.~ ..
VAL.IT PARKING
2125 L e..t ~. C.-.. ..._.
C411 hir...., ..... '7M2'1
. .
' .
• f
AED SNAPPER •••••• 3.A6
MAHI MAHI •••••••• 3.95
GRILLED SEA BASS • 3.95
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK '.2&
NEW YORK STEAK •• 4.95
LOBSTER TAIL ...... 6.95
STEAK AND LOBSTER 8.95"
and dozem of oth11n
DIMIMCI • DAMCIM&
INTIRTAI M
~ SUIOOO •COCKTAILS• PQOO TO GO l IAMQUITS • Pl1VA11 PAIT'llS • ~ • OMAMr~Q.NE BRUNCH SUNDAYS ' HAPPY HOURS 4-8
rotoa VJSIONS -Vorpal Gallert~ 326 Gienney_t:e.~rt'aeuna Beach. Works by
watercoJodst :l>aul Garland. Inner galleries show~ wom by 1'4.C. ~acber, Je.sae Allen and
Gar7Saiith;1'uesdaJ·Suilda1,11a.m.-6p.m.
~EE ARnSTS -Watercolon by llobert
E. Woo4 tmd by Jane WOOd 81001 witA George ?tf eldr'Um sculjJtllte at Chi1Us Gallenes, uoo s. Coaat Jl.iahuy, Laauna Beach. Saturday tbrou1h Nov. n. 11 a.m.-s p.m. Wednesday thr~ ay.
ST STAND STJIL -In photop-aphs
from blOVi d.iitSPt trom 1896 to 197' at Orange
Coast ca&ae, 2100 Falrvlew Rd., Costa Mesa. '.l'hJ-oU.ili Nov. 30, open Mocday throuah Friday.
1 :30 ua.-5 p.m. and weekends 10 a.m .. s p.m.
VlllflQtJE POrAJtOIDS -By photographer
Norman Loeb. Includes manipulated prints.
Susan Spirit.us Gallezy, 3136 Via Udo, Newport
Beach. Open 1'Jesday tbr~hSaturday. .
GENUINE CHINESE MANDARIN DISHES
Specializing In Chinese A Lo Corte Dishes
LUNCH•OtttNER L'>AIL Y
FOOd tO T8ke Out
11 30 A.M. to 10 PM
ion.--.,..
COSTA MIU
642-7162 • 646-Htl
''VALENTINO" ls one
of those lAWfuJ mov'
that 11 almon compcll·
ing in its wMneu. Nol
quite. Pa-haps .some day
il wm be hailed ' cult film. But J<en Russell':>
concept or the Valehtlno
legend is so confused, in·
ept and erroneot.15 that
one wondtrs why they
gave Russell all that
money. Anachronisms
abound . Valentino
dances to Ferde Grofe's
"Grand Canyon SUlte".
.. ---------------Genders are mixed. I 11 ~ Chinese Cuisine I Derenseless fieures hke
I ' /?Jr' ORIENTALCOCKTAILLOUNGE I Jesse Lasky, Naz1movn L~f lTBAE!tl!«::r"HgV1"•Mca18onEnRks I fi~!1;d~ ,.~fr~~~i~u~~~ r An• Rudolph Nureyev l>Ur· I l 1 SPECIAL I v1vcs all. He has dignhy
I ~ J ~ ~ I and pres~nce and should
I '\ -'"'-r D.._forT,.-o.,. Mon try acting again 1 n I ~~ I J UJJ~~~ I · worlh1et sturr. Rated R.
I f . l~l···j __ ..,,. ss.u woth. •".'Pl• nudity aOd I ·formcauon
I I A~ .. ,.,. -[QO rol 8-1~ h10t. 5.l'ohlf\0 Cn..c. lr · ::.o.. .. • E,,u .... -a .... , •. o :::...uo ~ ... I
I I l'fruc;c011 Off( AJ"'<)n(f Cll.c.a.n. fr-..... • ..CRIA" IS an endear·
I fe11na(..uuk... f 'I ~. ·J-~ Fo.3arMor•~°'°"'M"'" I ang Span1sh·madc 1 m
I ':I' iJ'-'T' by Carlos Saura. star-
•" 01"" Upot .. ,_8mbk lO 1911 I ring Geraldine Chaplin
.__!S!J EAST 17Tll . <'OST/\ ~n;sA t 645 5550 and Ana Torrent, surely
______________ ..
• .... • -}!
No"' Tlln.r Sot .. No•. S
"SIERRA"
l/t1lt1 l1tJ1l.H1~t lJ,t...•• t f1f1 t.1Ull
Every Sunday
JEUY IUIHS' DIXIECU TS
the most persuasive 10·
year-old since Shirley
Temple. Miss Torrent's
faculty 1s not for sun
shine but deep, wonder-
ing sadnesses, expressed
by her large. brooding
e y e s . D e'll 1> it e the
Spanish· preoccupation
wilt\ death, this is also a
Joyful film. filled with Iii..
494-8011/9 E\lery Monday Blues with tie-girl wonderment. A
lte "HOLLYWOOD FATS11 l..t worthwhile experience.
J4• '-COaSTHWY l.A~IUCH 0~1nq J.,,, No•. 8
lhna Sat .. No• I 2
THE BO B BROCto:MEYER ·
QUI NTH
OPEN 7 DAYS FOR
IREAJ<FAST•LUMCH•DIMHEA
Nightly Dinner Special·
GREEK STYLE CHICKEN
Served with soup or salad and our $29 S
famous specialty. hot breadsticks
5930 W. Coast Hwy., Newport lec:ieh
~202
In Spanish w1lh English
subtitles. Rated PC. but
children would probably
be more bored than
amus<."<i
"J\J\.lA" • IWUl'tllflt •¥iia11on ot -~.,, LilUMI H•ll,,,.., ~ '9<011«· ''°" "' ,,., ll'lenci.tlip wllll .. ,u ... ~'''" ~ >ciur""' '" ,,., 10 1•19tGf 111 .,..., Ger,......, Fr~ 2111
Nm•nn IMl'roin '"''tt IO lltttntt'f."
... ,,.. N1m't $1wf" ctllPl•~w n1s
Wfl•nlvlty 111 """""' 1'81attontlllp•.
J&/lt FOMa ltJIWH«\lelfl •t Ille 'l'OUl>9 Hellman. ot11,..u119 ,.,., ln~urltlH,
lltr tunuun1ty,llet' PoUIJar> f«cau>n
ll•M'" Rl8gt-IA• per1ec:I ITUltell at lhf ether.-el JuHa, 11114 .0114 1111>-
port "•iru lr'Olri J-ROIMH'dl. W•· 1mllla11 $<11111. Hll H••-•l'CI
ROMmary M<iTPl'Y ,l'atacl PO
"OM ~001 .. ltllle ~ltlltl>f'lM
01 1118 tall "'°""" -Mft." wlum"ul <O-OY Ololt relr•~ UW tou1 l1'8
Jlttl'llM MUnds hniclldlfte. ~ IOOk· 1"9c11r~y1111• • Jt-"11 '°"uc, •P. pea•• 10 Vie~ m-..r of •
C•lllornoa '"Ptrmarllel. Hi• mKH~ ~tel Ille ... II~ 10 • .,tho
,.,.., ,,,., 1110 ,. nvlllllt • mru ot
llllftl!' F0rt.,,_IY llff ltagtlt tlwrne
••• •rtlW<I Dy Larry Gtt ... rt ITV'$ .. MA!iH'•1 •"'1 dlrt(ttd ll• Cart
ll•IMr. I--'f!MIOS will! <-y,
JOfln o.n.,... ... ,. ...... ~ Ha COUid
QI•• UP ~lllCJll\t encl r•mM.t •If tile
C.•r• '"°"' ..w J_ S....,.,..t mov·
••• C.80<99 Bu,,,. ,, -'~""' '" '"" 11111 ro•v T)W r .. .,. I• -fG. l:lut U..-
hlm con1a.,,.1111re trw.1 -.i<1 ~ .. "' .c ..
•. ._... ouNo eou11oao1sE·· ".
9randly ot<ltcl, 10v1ngly phol09'8Phed
M<""'11 OI • "41~1911• mur0tr •n 1191 In Italy. D1re<lor M•uro
MOl09111nl ColtPIUre'Ji .,,. "~•dent mood",,.. .,...IOd, enct u.,. to<••• ••· ,,.., .trt balen<e<I Wiii! depl<tion• ot
up11tr·<lan llvono no. .,,,.,.,,n ettect
ll -"ul and 11'IOV1"9. Calllttrl ...
Den41u.e A U.. Ut'IMPllY wllt provH
1nat ""'•• mo<e tnan a manlt1111. Gltn· carlo Gl•nnlnl H lier .tven9in9
btOl,,.r Ol!momlrales llf' can play
M>melhlng llMl<IH • ti.rlloon. Tiie him
na, not -r.i..i, llut 11 would bot~ moll yo11nQ\ten t n 1 t•ll•n with Eng1t'11>Ublt1i.s.
•'A fl'll!C• 01' TH• ACTION ..
returm ,._., PO<har and am CO$by
1n n•• rotfff •' ma~t•r c,-ooks
bla<llm.tll8d CJ'I • retirM ""· James E••I Jone~ 11110 -n1119 tor •n 1.-r
""' ~ (-... n.. -" .. -1 '•P••. ,,_,1 .. Go1t19 IAY W•1.••
01r•<r0f Poot••• dltpl•n •lute h....S
wllhllltt.t<l--M ~lot all, ne .,"°"" -10 ,_., t,,. lle<1crt, ..,d nn sceMs ,.,,,, • t.tr.nw f"OllP of
youngtl••l recall lllt touching
qu.tllttM of .. To Sir wllll Ut\19. •• n..
re\ull " ea1ert.tl"m•nl ot •
·-""' 111nct ot.Mneu.n· '°'"" •M Pal10ff P'•Y <rilnlMIS: wtlo .._.,
•• , -· •llatil ............ _.,. -
''Yo.I U41*T tAfl' #IY '-II' 'I~ if> ~ oJ Vie ftiilly l:eti.r m11af~i.
lltt•11I • ti.9'11111ef • '°'"'''" te ~••room '" 1~11 II'• Oldl Cenn trylno
to"' •bN<S '" tho.,parl~ of TV fOl'n nHN'CIAll Ind PQP ~ Woll tlloili
mall• It, .-s,o11 .. ner l>VltlY lttl\er IM
$1IY11•), dulU"'1<• t$1tllifltll Halll•nl,
•M .tn Otl·tfl8·nwte lllm <1irtetor
fMtcNlet tawowtJ JoMot>ll G•llO~t
-· IO ..... to;ine II au lllmtall -tcrlpt, c11.-c11on ~ m11s1< • .,.. ,,.
!Ill ,,.... ..... MfNtl •nd -l11Mt t-M• mm ii a""' t•,,ibtv oe1t• \f'l!I. llUt I\ I• 9'ocf -6 i!Ol'y, ol r1•l11~1<rwn PG
·•A •1t10• 'JOO fl'A1t••
retW'Ol2uca wcnci W..r 11 -••hClfl In • IAYW! Uyte 11\al "-Wif'tlfne Alhf'
t.ilOll(MUtyMford lr•u~~t•lt ·~-. 11\d IN""-llOfi.t are 1tanl(il;:lil11 dirtcttc1 btlO ll'O oie
i • tm Cefll.tlna mut 11 iw.111 itkl .., •
"STAii WAH .. i~.t 1...sni.rll lltm.
• --of Mltll -•·l'ICI •m.tOlftfltOlt t!IR It IWlll Ml ,,.,.,._ kit tffl'J Ill
CO(lle; Tiit cnl. hNdM tlY AllC Gill• nen, Mef1I Hamlll.,.. CMrlt Flllllr,
" "4!11armiv ..-. M t~ rMI \tan ~ v. --~~wlMr ••t.s ---._.,;::--PG
'•t NllY R fl'ltOMIHO YOU A
lt0$• GAltOIM" t811t llw llatrow•nci ~, ... .,of a, ......... , .• ,,"'" .... ceol•
OUC'r ment•t 111neu "~' ·~o ... ,., n
1'•nlP4t•toel l>Y lhQ ottter INll•tcl>h •1111 •
..01111c or~Y. bl.I her 1.tl1ta11on I• tfle ~ui-te 9ct.or. MnSIU~lly
lll•ytd 1W 91111 ~-Tt>. tllm I\ tM~ !I,. 0 lturln/nt Pfff«mjll'lce
by l(athltln Qul1111n, • deMrvlnt hOmt,,.. few Atacs.tny (Dnlldff •llo"
ReltclPG.
'"OH• OH Ofll•" la -ti••" ""'°" wrn 11wr Wf'P' IM en UflP!' ttenl IOll' illm llrlml'!llllQ wltll llatrl and
tevetiter. Aobby IMnMll IA •n Ull•
4arlllld betktll>ell ,,.UllOI lltl'O
lffrM tlw pitttlls of M 8Uli.tl< lllC• torv. ll8n'°'1 end 111, l•t•. Jerry
~I, wrote ... llN•eKrlpt, -U •
mont Jo""'°" directed with an un.
oerst....ilnr,i of ti. <.-nOU\ SUM, .....
e4 PG, bUt Iller•" llllle to 9u1dlt <II•--
Landrum
Company
Due in OC
The Jacqui and Bill
Landrum Dance Theatre
of Los Angeles orters its
debut performance Nov.
10 at Orange Coast
College.
The new modern jan
dance company will
perform at 8·30 p.m. 1n
the OCC Auditorium.
TICKETS t'OR the
concert are available for
$2 at OCC ticket office,
located in the college's
Administration Build-
ing. The office is open
Monday through Friday
from 8 am. Lo 10 p.m.
and on Saturday~ rrom 8 a.m. to noon. Ticket oC·
fice information avail&·
bJe at 55&5527.
Tickets available at
lhe. door on performance
night for$3
The Jacqui and Bllt
La.narum Dance Theatre
1s a company of s~ven
dancen. The Landrums
have translated into the
new company 's re·
p_ertoi~ their lndividual
experiences in tht
worlds of modt!f'n dance.
ballet. jazz, tock, and
primitive dance,
. hen Temptation KRD«!lcs •..
The milllonaire Benjamin family expects ·daughter. The Neil Simon comedy con-
anothei-calamitous test df father Joe's tinues Tuesdays through Saturdays at ~:30
faith in this scene from "God's Favorite"" pm. until Nov. 19, with a special md~mee
. at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. Jack this Sunday at 2: 30 preceded by a~ optiontfl
Byron portrays the father c center), champagne brunch. For reservations, call
Mary Sherwood, his wife; James Patrick the box office, 494.0743 after I p.m.
O'Hannon, the son and Tanya Szabo, the
Intermission
Tom Titus
about two spinster sisters who send elderly
sentlemeo to their eternal reward via a lip of elderberry wine.
Nathalie Michaud and Elsie Painter, bo&h
well-known performers, will plu the roles of the
eccentric aunta with Michael &Uitz cut. u their
drama critic nephew, Mortimer an ... Evelyn
Wilson as his fiancee. Other featQred parts will
be taken by Dick Stewart as Teddy, Torn Titus as
Jonathan and Alan Levy as Dr. Einstein.
ROUNDING OUT THE Lido Isle cast will be
Bud Brewer, George Harris, Bob Campbell.
Everett Olenick, Roy Woolsey and Bob Jameson.
"Arsenic and Old Lace" will be presented
Tuesday through Saturday, Nov, 15-19, at 8:30 in
the Lido Isle Clubhouse, 701 Via Udo Soud,
New&><>rt Beach. Advance reservations Dl!U' be
made by calling 675-0176 or 673-5170.
Also cpAt and in rehearsal for a Nov.16 open.
ing at Orange Coast. College is Tenness,e
Williams' powerful drama "A Streetcar Named
Desire." Thomas Bradac is direcUn1 the show.
THE LEADING R01'ES ol stanley Kowalski
and Blanche DuBois wlll be played by lUcbard
Febring and Pamela Franklin, with Beth Hansen
appearing as stena. Others m the cast are Su.aan =~~~~SS~~~~E~§~~~~? Wood, Frances Hubbell, John Beksa, Ben Miles, Steve Rocco, Sandy Massad, Nick Furticella. --;;;;;;-._.._......,.,.....
Mark Whitehead, Cynthia Reynolds and Brad . Conway.
"Streetcar" will be presented at 8 p.m. Nov.
•16-19 in the Drama Lab Theater at the Costa
• Mesa colleie. Admission is free.
,
I
v.s.
Jl)' CllAEL PAI--•P ... -.............
:wli todeya• Jan t.n }Jack 11\
rctrospect, 19T7 may well be called "Tbe
Year of The V.S.O.P. Quint.et."
At a time when Jau-rock tuaion
threatened to forever rellnqulah
mainstream jazz to nostalgia, V.S.O.P.
arrived llke a 8e>d·send, dell&tlt.lna en-
thralled aillllencei worldwlk
THE MAJESTIC-return of classical
jazz first oc~urred at. tho tft:wport Jan
F'estival in 1976.
There, for the fint. Ume since their
stint.. with the legendary Miles Davis
quintet of the mld-808, Herbie Hancock
(piano), 'Wayne Shorter <tenor and
soprano sax), Ron Carter (bass), and
drummerTon:rWUllarne •ere reunited.
The lone absent.ee was Miles hjmself.
who because or a bad hip was forced to
cancel.
He was admirabJy replaced by Fred·
die Hubbard, a trumpet and flugel horn
master who many critics felt was the
surprise hit of the show.
THE i\U,STAR band was introduced
as "V.S.0.P ."lending record company
promo types to claim tM letters stood for
Very Special Onetime Performance. <In
fact. the monoiram stands for Very
Superior Old Pale: a type of alowly·qed
eo1nac>.
Tbe m'P.lc l.odeed lived up to Us true
billhla and the ma1lc of tbat
performance is captund in part on
Herbie H.lncock'• 0 V.S.O.P .• " a doublt·
aet Teleued earlier this year on Colunt·
biaReCOl'U.
Five Uilclana, all or whom bact
strayed from thetr jazz bases with mlnd
results, had recaptured the eloquent
form. content and direction of lm-provisatianal jau.
THE INCREDIBLE reaponse from
fans -many hearing this classic &tyle
for the fint Ume -prompted the quintet
to put its lllow on the road.
A 25 venue tour that ended this awn.
mer in Japan brou1ht the band to the
Greek Theater in L.A. and the Greek 1n
Berkeley. It was here that V.S.O.P. re·
corded "The Quintet,•• a (final?> two-
record live set just released on Colum-
bia.
Trust me. The record company could
offer a money baclt gunantee with this
album and never find a taker; its that good.
Its eight tracks of sensational, uncut
acoustic jazz feature Hancock's spell-
Guitar Greats
Mqgazine Nanws '77 Best
Guitar Player Magazine, the
worldwide bible on such matt~,
has just re·
leased results
of its e.ighth
annual read·
er's poll.
This year's
tally put two
artists, Rusty
Young and
Jose Feli·
ciano, into the 1
m a g 3 z i n e • s ,&LICIAHO
Gallery or the Greats. They join
such names as Chet Atkins, An·
dres Segovia, R.B. Kjng and
Carlos Montoya <Once in the
gallery, artists are eliminated
from the followin~ years poll.>
HERE'S A brief rundown by
category
11'-:.l" 01/EllALL C.UllARl~l I :,th• Howe
IOI ..... , 1 ,,,,,, B•O. J Jlmniy P•Q9 •. Ro-;
Bli<h•n•n) CMIOI S.ntane.
l:IE$T GUITAR ALBUM 01' 1911. Al Dlf•\9•>1• •
' Ef~•nl Gy!>'y" 1to1umbc•1, •n owl'WMlmlr>Q
.. 111net fol._ In •-bY ll'le CletHlt •ll>Ym uom BostOll IEpocl.
BEST NEW TALENT: Tom XhOll of ~IOOI.
1011-eci by OiMeol•-Tlcl Nuve11t.
lliST R()O( GUITARIST. Lid bppeun-. Jim
my P"lle -Wtl><IM1>9GQedoutHo••loll-bY Jette.a
ILICTllllC ILUES E .. y vKlory for JQIW\y
Wonlar 8orw..e R .. 11 plKllCI --•nG Albert K1119Ulonl ACOUSl IC BLUES Li9f\l•n· H~•n• ltw ll>P
>fCOl'd ~.,. m• '-'· 1o11gwH Dr Johll 11.om,,_ •!Id B•o•~MCGhee.
COUNTRY. AO'( Oarll r.ceo....i "• lllTlft' ma1wvotnnNs11Hr1St<Nll.....,,.
l'Olk; LeoKollllefor tl'le lourlhtlme '" .,_
JAU: Al OINoMla oPMl ta\I ~1r·1 '"""-'• Ge«oel-JoeP011ton1"*'1111re1.
CLASSICAL: Julian II,....,. kw tlW 11\lrCI alrallllll
\'Ur. S«Olld and 11\lnl pit<• hono<l went 18
Cl'lf1ttooi-P.rMnlnt ano JOhn \lflllta""· l'l.AAo\ENCO: "-blo di Lucia, ,..,,,,.,,ly l9r 1\11
1h11•11l119'Mlftl.,. DlMeol•'• ··e1eea"1 GvPlv." STUDIO: '-RU.,.,.., •lllt Jo. 8ec.ll • U.. Mcono. New,ollegoty. BASS GUil A.A; ~IM>i.y Clo&t .... (who elM 11 •llll Yff'Cllt1l5quoNlfl-
J0SE FEUCJANO attained his
place in the Gallery of Greats with
his fifth straight victory as best
pap, Les Paul finished second
Rusty Youne /won the steel
guitar competition for the fifth
straight year. He was followed by
Jerry Garcia. and Sneaky Pete
Kisnow.
•
THE LA.TEST chapter tn the stQry of
Herbie Hancock is mcst Jntn1uln1.
Cr~ited with starting tbe fUston move-
m ~nt with his milllon-selllng "Held
Hunters" in 1973, be is now planning a
fully acoustic tour with equally-adept
pianist Chick Corea early next year.,,
If the members of V.S.O.P. are never
reunited, at least we have two albums as
testimony to their collective brilliance.
With fingers crossed. I'll bet there's
more to come.
LOCAL NOJ'ES: Gatsby's Rendevous
in Santa Ana, a dinner /disco, is trylna to
make a transition to a Monday niehtjau
club. Supersax and the Barney
Kess~l/Herb Ellis band hav. already
imuck in virtually unnoticed due to J)Oot
promotion.
The flute sounds of Herbie MaM are
due at Gatsby's on Nov. 21. R4=itned
seats. at a steep $8 at'ld $10, are •n1lable
at the club, 2414 s, Fairview . .ehon
751-2668 for more information
A JERRY WEINTRAUB PRODUCTION
GEORGE BURNS • JOHN DENVER • "OH, GOD!''
TERI GARR • DOMLO PLEASENCE
Based on th~ Novel by AVERY CORMAN • Screenplay by LARRY GELBART
Directed by CARL REINER· Produced by }ERRY WEINTRAUB
~-..... ~« ~~~· ... ·---
.. .. ... . ..
W ASIUNGTON CAP> -These days her life
is as much corn on the cob as caviar, political
scenarios instead or movie scripts, a tractor
alongside the hmousane.
Elizabeth Taylor says that suits her just fine.
GONE ARE HER personal hairdressers.
trunks or clothes and private jets. Now when she
travels it maght be by bus or commerciil airliner
economy cht11s -with an overnight bag
stu!fed with jeans and electric haircurlers.
Eli:uabeth Taylor's stage ls the Virginia
countryside, not Hollywood. Her role: potiticat
wife, The co·star and occa~1onaJ director is
husband John W. Warner. ·
Warner, a former secretary or the Navy and
onetime head of the American Bicentennial Ad·
ministration. wants to become a Republican
senator from Virginia
HE Jli\S TAKEN his famous bride of 10
months on a bht1. of the state. logging more than
14.000 miles. appearing several times a week at
fairs, barbecues, rallies and fund raisers.
Almost everywhere they go. the crowd is a
record turnout. Elizabeth '!1iylor Warner obliges
her adonn~ fans ~ ith a flash of her legendary
amethyst eyes and rosy-lipped smi1e. ..
"Lit ha:; brought the role of political wife out
of uhs(·unt v ;rnrl tnto the forefront, .. Warner
says, beaming\~ 1th pride
FOR TllOSE WHO remember Elizabeth
Ta vlor as a movie queen In diamonds and
erITllnt', lt'S' trll'OllgrUOUS to see photos Of her rid·
mg 111 a pick-up tru<'k or on a tractor, calling to
the c<.1ltlc on her husband's farm, mingling with
the folks at <Jolt'ns of :,mall town receptions
· Tht•rc':; no way I'd be doing this if J didn't
behl'\l' 111 1t." "ays ~t rs Warner. "In acting.
vou ·re so do:-.d cd and protected. This is so much
inorl' one to one You're dealing with real hfe is·
sues
The Warne rs wen• honored guests al the Old
T1ml' f"iddlcr':; <.:onvcnt1on. and despite an at·
tC1d. of bur-.1ti-. and back problems that put her
into a wht·cldw1r. in the truest tradition of "the
~how mu::. I go on ... Mr::. Warner insisted on keep·
mg I ht• m~a~cmcnt
SllE TOTTERED TO the microphone, her
e) cs ghstcnmg with tears of pain as she held her
'ESCAPE
under
SAIL~
nu SAILJHw W~Ul'S "elOLHS SUMMUM
l*>W l'U YIMC")
~OHN W.RNER LIFT$ WtR FRa... HELICOPTER
Elizebeth Taytor •t•r• A• Campaigner
smile for the cameras. Then a p0wer failure
forced her to wait a pain·wraeked hour before
she could finish her speech.
Two days later, she entered a hospital in
Washington and was put lnto traction for a week.
"She would have kept right on going. but I
just had to ground her," says Warner.
IF WARNER MAKES tt to the Senate. Mrs.
· Warner could be an interesting pohtical wife
She's already said she is enthusiastic about the
Equal Rights Amendment despite her husband·s
reservations.
And when he expressed doubt that she could
make a contribution to foreign policy or defense
strategy, Mrs. Warner shot him a stern look and·
said : "There's no reason why a woman can~
know ts much abotil defense as a man, no reason
at all. It's all in the training ...
_·PASSES:··.·.
<fromP.,,CZ>
taking strangers home "to nloet me" in the mid·
dle of the nigh\.
It ieertled he bad a dilemma.
.. I CAN'T GO ROME because my roommate
is taking a girl 1 used to date home witli him and
at wlll be uncomfortable for me to have to co there tonight."
"Oh, that's too bed," l consoled .
.. You see," he went on, ''I would really ap-
preciate it if you would let me sleep on your
couch," (He seemed to use the word really in
every sentence.>
·•I promise l 'U treat you like a lildy and leave
first thing in the morning.•· •
POINTING OVT TIJE haur (1 a.m.) 1 al·
hided as to bow he might have made sleeptna ar-
rangements a little earlier In the day.
."Well. I'm going to have to sleep in my car,··
he add eel with adlstinct noteoChostility.
"Do you want me to have to do that?"
I explained, in a way that would make roy
grandma faint, that I REALLY didn'tcare. He left.
THERE WERE, however, some bright spou,
in our night on the town.
There was one fellow who looked at me very carefully, then said:
"I've never seen you before in 'my life."
Seemingly tryin& to impress us with \heir
romantic careers (as most did> one pair of
jokesters informed us they worked for an airline.
VPON FURTHER questioning as lo wh&t
they did for the company, they explained that
they "emptied the refuse tanks after the planes
landed." .,,._
And, I must admil, the &UY lookint for his
lost medal was really kind of cute.
I even made a date with one of my admirers.
I couldn't refuse. We had so much in common. '
Our hair matches.
Come to Caharet! • :Master of Ceremonies Brian Fowler leers
lover Patti Hubler and Mary Ann Dunroe
·in ".Cabaret,.. presented nightly except
t Monday at Sebastian's Dinner Playhouse
. at the Grand Hotel. Anaheim. P'or res-
' ervations. Call 772-7710. Admission prices f of $11, $14, and $16 include dinner and
1show .
"An lmproviler Ukea to daltn and feel absolutely Cree. He'U take the basic desitn and
play with it, open up bls own atream ol consclOU$·
nus to let it now and work wlthln the structure,
but m alee It aomethln1 different ev.rY time. "U that'• what a Jan peraon la. then I'm a
ju1 penen. But 1 tlalnk that bu to Include a lot of
people who are thouaht of u R & B ~en -llk•
Aretha Franklin and Stt:vie Wondei, ..
"l'VE ALWAYS been wUllna to try thJngs, to
experiment in a petformlng eltuation, It's not as
if I go home, sit down and work thlnp out.
~~~----~:--------~~--------------~_.. _______ !""-'""'!"'"~~....;_ ...... ____ _.:.;...;,;_;~;..;;..~~
Museum
Fund Up
The Laguna Beach
M us.eum of Art is
tw~-thirds of the way
toward its endowment
fund of $300,000, accord·
ing to fund chairman Charles CUJp .
The $200,000 fl1ure
·w a s a c h 1 e v e d
throu1h recent
donatlona or SS.Ho
Croni The Feattvel of Arts. $500 Crom botb tht
Ebell Club and Mu.eum
Bdueattonal Counctl.
Be
z
This is a photograph of a~ actual painting
bought on October 22, 19n at a major
California art ga)lery. It wn represented u
an Investment, ah(:t It cost $860 plus tax.
f,
l
I
s50100
CASH · REBATE
Purchase ClllJ Hew I 977 Ford MClffridl ....,..
hnton Ford md we wll ?"• y• $500.00
Cosll lebcft. -Rebate may be used for Down P..,..,..t on
approved credlt.
14 TO CHOOSE FROM
{ . ......_ _________ ._....
NEW '77 FORD LTD II
4 DOOR PILLARED HAROTO,
a.i.ct•ll ~ -lrOnl dose bnMa.-.. -.o, bnghl ~""*"'\Ill ..,.,...a._...~ __ '**--___ ..,_._ 361 CIOV ..
=-~a-:.=--..,..,_..-.,,.,..., .... ~· ...... -......... "'
DUNTON'S PRICE$4699
NEW '77 FORD GRANADA
• 4 DOOR GHIA SIDAM
FACTORY All COHDmOMIMG .. ___, ... ...,,, ..... -W>yl~,.,....--... ...--...,,,.
IOO.llld ---one,,.._...,.,,,,_ dull not• l'iorT\. ''"*"' luel --""¥ tOOI 302 CID V-4 _,,. wftll V11011b1e Venlufl c:at1lurelor ...... -lrlnl, '"*""" ~
--ITlOOMXll. Cl#IOr"'" -_.. Nlecl.,.fl --UC. FflFl•I• wsw rec!W 1----· CIOQ<lll CIOCll.I,. _,. ........ -OCMMO • .,_.
---.rid...._ --·-·po.----------AWFM -tdo. i.....ry ~ CC*On ........ ---.-...dull -1 ~ ...... ~ Plal• br9CMI. '9111 ..-, -Ooor lodlt. a. ft1'6IO a... u no
UT AIL PRICE $1666.
· DISCOUNT s 1400.
SALE PRICE $7266.
OAll.VPtlOT
PUBLIC NOTICE
,,....
l'ICTITIOUS IUllNISS
•H.AMa ITAT•MIHT
The IOI~ penen ltdolftt llu11ne11 ••• KV8 ENGINEERING INC 173J2
ltltlne Boui.vero, Tustin, California ....
KV8, INC , a Calltornl• C~tllon, 11JJ2 Irvine 8oui.v61d.
fulllft, Call torn•• 92..0
Tl'lls W.1,,..t I& conOucteo by a corparetlon
KllB,INC
"-"· Kl>egol, Prn.-1 l'l»tl HOCNMAN,Ml.ICIN .... DeltOY ti• WlllNte loulevar• .... , __ .._ta,,_
konny Hiib. CA tan
""tlllshod Orainge Coetl O•llY Pl~
Ott. 14,21,a . Hov •.1'11 ... 21-n
PUBl.JC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUStNlSS
NAMEnATEMIENT
lne tollowong "'"'°" Ii 001ng bu>t .,., .. ,
PLAY TIMI! ENTERPRISES
.,,. C•robou AW!. f'our1l••n V•llev.
-Ao'270I • Sl'llf'"J \.ynn GIY. 11>"9 C..nl>Ou
'"'' , l'OIMlatn V.lley, CA. U10I 1 h1• bUMIMH Ii <on0UCltCI by •n 1-..
.ltvtdw•I.
~"'°" L ~nn Gey
1111• staten....,I won 111eo with Ille
County (.Itri. ol Otdf>ge C.oonly on Oct.
11, ltll
l"Ullf
l'u1>11sl>fel Or•"ll' UM>I 1.o .. 111 Pilot.
O<I. 21 n ... ,,., t.o •• '·II, IY/I
PUBUCNOTICE
l'ICTITIOUHUllNHI
KAMalTATIM.NT
PUBLIC NO'l'JCE TM follOWIDl,_..,.M'tdlil\llMoll•
lliNSel -----------t KIN~ 114UllANC& IROKalts,
FICTITIOUSIUSINESS ::al Gr•tel ~ ,....P,Ort hetlll CA.
NAME. STATaMENT ta..a
u,. toll-ll'IQ per Mn 11 <IO<llQ bull· 8111 1.M Miiiet, ~ 11 G,..tel Cl.;
,.H•t. N-Hft...,,,CA.~
THE ORUC. STORE, IH71 GelCS.N.K ..... Ut,,...tw,Senta
Producer, "8, HIHlllngton e.ta<l'I, CA AM, CA.
'2M9 Tl'lll btulne« •• CeftlliKlecl .,., •
J•n10 H. AnOnw•. •9J1.,A, HW>I• gener•lparV.rll'llp.
lngton&M<.11.CA~ 81111.ffM•fl!N'
1 ht~ bl.l~Aftl" conouc1ec1 11, an tn T l'llS •lal-t "'"* llltd wlll'I IN
OIYIOual. C.-.ty Cltl1l 9' Or.not ee..nty Oft OCt. J.,,,.., H. An0rew1 11, 1977,
Thii •IAll-l WH llllld "'"" the tounty C.lerk of Or-C.OUnly on OCI
II, 1911.
l'W
.....
PuOlltl*l Oranot CMtt J)ally l'!lot. Oc1.21,2t,Wfllo~.4, 1l, ltt7 4101-77
Publlillecl Orar\99 (OHi Daily PllOI, --....---------Ocl. 21, 2¥, doO Nov.•, 11, 191/ P\JBLIC NOTICE
PICTtTIOUI IUllil•P UMalTAHMiMt
TM ftOowtne .,.,_, •r• •011141
~------------1 llull....,.~: l'ICTITIOUSIUllNIU HARRISO}f IHVIHTORV
PUBUC NOTICE
HM&aSTATIMIMT ·~ RVICE. 15141 LU L."nu ne!~~~'°"""ll per-ere OOtt>t bull-WestmlASler, tA t»1S
BABE'S TEXAS STYLE CHILI J•me& W. HMrlttfl, l ... I LU L.llNtl, W.lml"'""' CA ftta DOGS, 200 Wutclllf Or •• •JOI &Nney M. H•"llOfl. 1it41 LAI
Newport 8Mcl'I, CA '2~ Lllllefot W.l111t111at11", CA,,_
Net GolclwMer, 22"2 tr•tPI SI • Tl'll& ........... COftMtad ..... ------------
woooi.ne1 Hiiis. CA •UM general ~P. PUBUC NOTICE Tom Mili.t, 1633 Cornwall Lene, J-W.HWrison
Newpart IHCll. CA 92..o • '"'' .i.-.it ... 11 ... Wllfl Tl'llS b11slnen fl ConclUCltd by. ~tvOHtrtf~ ... CIUMYOftOct. ~ner•IP¥tntnlllp. 11, 1m Nat Goldwater .,._
ll'lli tlai-t w.n filed wlll'I Illa ~llfled 0r...-CMft O.Wly f'ltM,
Cou<llY Clerk ol Oronot County on <k· Oct 1• 21 -*"' 4 ,_,, ,_, 24, lfn, • ' ·-' ' YH • l'MU11~-....--------.-~---" f'ubllthacl Or-eo.11 0.lly Piiot,
0.,t.2.1,Nov ... 11,tl, 1911 ~I PUBLIC NO'J'lC'-
H~J IT ----------
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICTI TIOU$ IUSINISS
NAMI STATlMINT
The totlowong person IS do•no """ neu•,
HUMMCR 'S BACKHOE
51!11\llCE, ••I:. 22nd St. •>. CosUI
MeN.0.92627
ROGER Ml.MEE HUMMER, 181
E. ttlldSI. •l,CmlAI~. CA92•V
Tlllt ._,.., 1s conouctaO by ..., ,.,.
CllVICl\ial.
R.,... M. Hummer Tiii• tlal-WIS filed wltl'I Illa
C-ty Cl•ll d Or~ County on Oct. 2•. 1tn.
l'MUI Publl"*' Or..,_ CoHI Delly Piiot
Oct. 21, NOY. 4, 11, 11, 19n 4601-11
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBl.JC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUleUSIHISS
HAMIJTATllllllHT
Tl'I• lollowlng "''on It doing
11u1lneu•1:
GRIAT HOMH ,_IAUO"S, •W
Garfield Awnua, ~ta H, l'9Ufllatrt
llolley,CAfVOll
LMlllll AlttiM, 1 .. 22 T-.ftt Lane,
Hi.nl""'°" BffUI, CA~ TNs M l,.H ts c0rldue1N bY ... ,...,.....,..
LM!lon AllllM Tiiis .. ..,.,_ woa flleo wJlll ti. ~IY C1ert< tf 0r•"91 C-tv M
0Etllbw11, "" , ...
P111>11111ee1 OrMOe Coe•I Dally ~
0c1, u,21.•,Ho¥ 4, ""
PUBUC NOTICE
5AHCTUilY Unusual deslgn in thiB be uUfw brand
NEW 4 BR 2· tory hom n N.B.
Formal DR. .lge fam rm. 3 baths. Rm
for pool. View of back bay & city
Hgbts. Be lst to live here. $220,000
ll I & .S. Ja ,,,,, tUlt ll ...
HIWPOln' C1N111;. M.I. 644-4910
100 G....,... 1001
·~···················· •................•...••
CAMEO SHORES JUST USTID
Incomplete sale. Buyer could
;not ,. o now we've relist·
ed th1S Sharp 4 bedrm Costa M~a
home n South Coast Plaza. Large
yard, cl fireplace with mantle.
Quiet street. S~arate ditilng room.
Wall to wall qunlitx.'ii~ar~t. $68.000
QUlCK! C•J4~t41
OWNER'S LOSS YOU •AJH -owner has bought another home and has re-
duced hiS home to rock bottom on
Rockrose.. Yot.i can take advantage of
this luxury 2 bedrJll Condo at a
bargain price. $76,500. c• "~''"· -
Serving Cosrn Mesa-lr11inc
Huntington Bench-Ne wport Bc·ac h
From the moment you Fee almple duplex. 3 enter courtyard aatea or Bdrms., 2 baths eacb UD· this Cameo Shores beau· IL One extra larse ft'QQt
ty you atoe aware of an owner'a unit. Blt·ina,
itnmacuJate 4 bedrm & frplc. Priced at $175.000
pOOI home. Totally up· Bay Ave. duplex. 2
graded thruout. MagDJf1 Bdrm. home + 1-bdrm.
cent view. orrered al over garaee; in xlnt loca·
$374,900. lion. Pnced aU17S,OOO G....... I OOZ,G ... , al I 002 ... .. ..... ::::~~~::··~;:;· .. ·····
.. JUST USTED
llVIHECOHDO 1-------... Another great Harbor Realty ex-
2 BR, A/C; nr. park & 9/ IO ACRE elusive in lovely Irvine T~race. Lal"le.
I ,'Iii 833-9781 Hester-Brown
pool. Only '56.ooo rooms befitting the luxurious feeling in BACK BAY this spacious home. 2 Bdrms. plus ser-
I "l f II Horse col't"afs, 3 small vant's quarters. Poolside billiard =~43.oooor~"Sm room, easily convertible to 3rd big Want Ad Rc!ult.s &t.2-5678
. Ge•ral I 002 G......., I 002
bdrm. There is no finer view in the
harbor area! $349,500 .
....................... ··•············••·····•
~It macneb I Irvine ~ realtg
FINER HOMES
FROM $46.000 TO $800,000
UDO ISU
Charming 3 -BR, 2 bath Cape Cod
w I beam ceilings & dormer win·
dows. Sunny dining rm w/fireplace
& lanai w/archid plants. Offered ex,
clus1vely s ubj. to probate. $240,000.
Harriet Perry 642 8235. <X·ll )
OlD CORONA DEL MAR
Dar Jing singJe family 3 BR, 2 bath
home w/lots of charm. So. of
highway & close to beaches. Flexi·
ble financing. Only $159,500 fee
Sandie 1'1x 644-6200. <X·l 2)
AISOWTEL Y CH.ARMING!
... and NOT expensive' 3 BR on lg.
lot w/covered patio. Close to
schools, parks & shopping. Flexible
financing . HURRY ! Anita
Bradshaw 752-1414. (X-13)
OWNERS IOUGHT .AHOTHU
... Beautiful 3 BR home on oversized
lot w/34' pool & sep. jacuzzi. New
cpt; mirrored wardrobes; fountains + many other custom features.
Flexible financing. $149,500. Bob
Lane 644-6200. (X-14 )
0 SOULOQUY ..
A home that s peaks for itself!
Secluded & peaceful surroundings,
yet close to ALL conveniences.
Elegant step-up living rm; 3 BRs + fe~tive paneled pub! Jack Custer 642-8235. QC-15)
TENNIS & GOLF • Within minutes of this dehghtful 3
BR end-unit in University Park I.
Close to shopping & freeways. Only
$87,500 w/low leasehold. Dorothy
Hardcastle 642-8235. <W-16)
w ARM &i con
2200 sq.ft. of country charm in hap.
PY. carefree north Bluffs. 3 BRs, 2Y.a
baths + extra lg. family rm.
Beautifully upgraded -former
model. Priced to sell · -quick
escrow poss ible. Jean Dales
642-8235. CX·l7)
SITS THI MOOD!
Perfect 4 BR home for the
Holidays! Dining rm expands; wet
bar opens to t'amily rm & dining; in·
door g~ w/skyliahting~ charm-
ing llvi.Jlg rm w/French doors lead-
ing to raised redwood deck.
Beamed c~s -mellow hdwd.
fioors. 2 fireplaces + VIEW of bills t
$249,950 fee. Marjorie Mahon ~6200. CX-18) .
673-4400
I I 002 Ge•l"Cil 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
MOltTH IWFFS CONDO
Quiet, prestigious, warmly decorated
2 bdrm., 21h baths, den & frplc., with
secluded lanai A~king $117,500
G1wal
L ESTATE
353 N. Coast
Highway
Laguna Beach
494-7518
1002 GeMral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
·~$·~· HERITAGE
• • REAlTORS
(
SOUTH SIDE OJ UDO
On Lido's lower south side sits a simp-
ly super 3 bedroom with a lovely brick
patio. spanish tile roof, and plans for
expanding to a second flOOI' and larger
master bedroom ~uite. Room for your
imagination! Presented at $100,000.
UNl()UI: 11()Ml:i
REAL TORS.a, 675·6000
2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar
also in Mesa Verde, at 546 ·5990
I
1002 G1•r.a ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
• PEHIMSULA POIMY'
4 Bdrm., 2 ba. home, All amenities.
Lovely area, few steps to beach.
$189,500
UDO ISLE
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm .• den, 4
baths. living rm. w/catbedral ceiling.
Lge. master bdrm. suite. $224,~ •
Bill GRUNDY , REALTOR
3·l l 8uy~1d•! Orivt.'. N B 675 , t,161
7 • '
§ali!1h1tr!t
• I
-
~ HERITAGE
. • REALfORS
t
com><> SPECIALIST
Htg Bcb, CM, Ft VJy
Touchl1.ofte Realty
963418'7
red ~ill .....
~.)/·751)0
•
& aolt course vu. Walk teonil, golf course, lake,
rec cente~ Prof.
l.ndscpd, beaut. deco
w/all upgradea. Aft
wkdays 8'7-8260
BIGCANYON -
DOVERCOMDO
2br, 2ba -+. den. 1800 sq ft.
Lowest price in Canyon
Prtn only. Xlnt for re·
tired cpl or yng exec. By owner. ~.ooo. 640-4737
--
... ~~ ~ HERITAGE
• • REAi.TORS
' I H .. t -.~ '-
{ H •.:.=;()N
* ** * * * * * ....... dge ... ........,
2br hie Laauna Cyn. Im-mac. Nu cpt, drpe, pot, etc. uas I mo. ref I. i---F-ao_taat..l __ c_N_ewport ___ ~
_"96-__ 7082 ______ -t 3 Br, 2 bath bome. Only
Secluded SBr hie, deck,
view, hanlwood fin, yd,
$500 mo. 675-6167
S100/tnO.
3 Br, S ba bome $580/mo.
Call 752.1700~-
•$100 FREE
centleman, llvlac ac-....,. ________ , com. w:/1ome Dleal1.
laun. 4s •bower aulat.
Nr. tiuaiDea& area. Soc.
Sec. ls old ••o asaiR.
---------1 NoD-1 moker Non. drihur. XlAt ref•. Call
831·2.fJ'lhlU PX
/P Keobanle, carpenter, a.rt1st to abr
w/aame. Mellow bsebkl. Ref'1.83IMmO
B•J AppllanttScrv.
TIUP CHARG g $10
21QZSS. ll&Ul,!i.A
Ml-3'22 9~7·01
84'J AppJ..ianreServ.
TIUPCHARGES10
549-2'.22
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Newport Manne Entpr 1ng. s.._. ca..·q
673~
Office Rental 4400 Office Rental ... llM-11/l•nlt/ Mortgoge1, Trull Lost& found 5300 Personals 5350 Help W•ttd 1100 Help W•ttd 710CI .... w.-7100
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Fln .. ce DeiclS 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• .... ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...,_.. Pvt pt.y desires $25,000. Found stnped male kit-W/M wants to meet al· ~E.M.BLY BANKING Body man, Mio 2 )'J'S U· EXECUTIVE ROW, Inc. Oppart.lty 5005 ~.D. Will p,ay maxlmum ~:..!.. whdks,FVIVC. ~~ger t::~~:! 'fo'rF ih2; r:: ~hasiv,e lndedependent ~ ~tnt_~avc!us~!'D •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• .nterest or $125,000 .• .,...., • . ........ 5983 t 11 t• rvatt·ve .,..... s mm . o~n· · ao...,y -m ..._ ________ 1 home Jn Turtlerock afl6:30pm e ieen coose infloraquallfled Paln\l.q(7l•>U1·SS13 Prestigious office space In Newport
' Sch/Airport area. Testetul reception lob-
by, telephone message service, con-
fererice rooms, kitchen. beverage, In·
outgoing mall service, dictating & copy
machines, travel consultants, com-
puterized typesetting. Complete
secretariat services available ea
needed. From $290 per mo.
Call714J752-7170
1 ~ W--'-75 ho · type who would not 1 .... ST•• 1 ua~ f .ac-....1..ch uc1'8· l.at7• or me, FOUND: Fem. German u.ually answer an ad " "'..-5"• IOOICHPa
Now'1 your chance to 1'10-12 Shep., 2.825 LaSalle, CM, Please call Jam aft 5 30 MUDS LOAM OPCll P/Ume postcloin; flexible b.av~ ao excellentfamily w E Buy F 1 Rs T & Mesa del Mar. 667--0e'lS , atS31"3807 INDIJSJRIAL 2 Yrs exper. w /maJor hrl. Dally salea It 111onth bmmess where you can s Eco No TR us T . . . • bank. desirable. Xlnt todate.CaUMS-1111
enjoy tremendoua smog DEEDS AG ENT FOUND: Boys bike. Vic : HYPNl~IS •t woa11rltf' beDefila .• Call or .end re· l"'-.-free year round cllmatAt. 714~ • Poppy & E. Cst Hwy. yAppo n men · l\Uhl amoeto. ~1u1;;5uR
It has sleepina taclllti~ <All S'75-8107 from 6-9PM 896-22161 982-4321 *stwl Won T....._.* SAHTIAGO IAHK Sinl de1110 firm nd•
for40guests+pooltennis --, 832>52!00 f/char1e t>ktpr. Al·
court, ~rm, corrab.,~ .. mc.i-ttltl MCoaJe darkofVlagradylpoodRe le&. •SANDY'S* •P•h11n IMCE ,.4""""'··tin creuiv•, innovaU•e. horses, deer, etc. One... mer e a •T,....ASM '""•• T;',..-alOp .... "'E'" ... 1 troot olc -.pear. enjoy
look at lhi& facility & Via Jante. ET. Sun eve Ouk .. MnlOIJlt •= m-..i..i-. ~=-=u==po=r=m=p==oy=e~r~ people, able to bandle you'llwanttoownlt. 788-615SalttJPM 6PM.J.All9?3-4329 * /1'U..._..._.. :,;:::! a«try duU• u •ell u
Call u-Fr "''"" .... ,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• F d M 1 G BR"'"""' .. oasrwy take f'Ull cba-e of ofc. .... ey.-..,,.,,., • ••n•... 5100 oun : a e erman .c.......,. •a.vatCM,CSerils BANKING ·• Office R...tal 440 Office Rental 4400 Bea Hlnkle R.E. Shepherd. Nr McFadden ENLARGEMENT lntereated only lo top ...................... ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• fl Fairview, Santa Ana l1irotlgh Hypnosi• •bper'd AsM .... •n Proiressive independent notch expr'd &lrl.
65• PY SQ FT NEWOFFJCESUITES GJFl' Gallery working ATTOIMIY AT LAW &-3'23 Group therapy, weight, ll4I ~APPLY Drfn ~ seetint bank ex· =~5 or '7MSZ2 btwo
1617WESTCL!f'f''NB JNNEWPORTBEAC~ ru.rtn...-. L.lmit'ed bra & DIU.IUll'l'f'J $95 t-FO-UND--.-. -S-... -C-h_lb_ua_h_u_a depression & sex 1m-1111•1o.1cH
AGT !>115032 1000 to.2000 rt .. avail iovstmt req'd. or DNUl f"n1 ... potence.l-7pmS31-0334 14 741 -" ~·;c d fem w/beige markings. SECalf ARY r w in iv. garages. purchase option. Ph: DIJO CE $95 red jewel collar, vie PREGNANT? (Across From Airport Otflce. Xlnt Fa l e1trntnt 150 I Westcliff Dr. 645 3323 days Mon tbru Fri, 10-12. Westcliff64.2·1B64. Orange Co. Airport) firm Xlnt oppor ~per NCWJ>OrtFmunr1alCtr --67S.3!MIO BaaicDlvorceOnly Caring confidential EqUAIOpporEmployer benefit&. Call or apply • mat'"1t)' req\d. Call
Leasiag Office Spau
5r":!:1~~~~~ic~*i:g.!:a-TIA.Ya AGENCY _ 640.Z507 FOUND: Wristwatch, vie. ~0b':r~~!~ a~o~~~~~·t atSANTt.4.0 IAMK ~123. ~}~f~~~~~!~t~:~ Beach. $75~0· 497-2704 Let us show you bow to II you own a SONY g!\n" =Blvd., Bal. keeping. 1·--------1 132-5200 Boy, 18·18, ttte factory~A
DELUXE OFFICES
<.:omml & mdstl .spaces,
200 to 2000 sq. rt As low
ll!l 35< sq ft Lag Niguel &
M1ss1on Viejo urcus
Handy to S.D. Frwy.
Call. 831·1400
Airaort Offices
_. l ~ONTH l''REio:
~\ill serv1rc. No lea~e re·
q 'd. 200i;oo s11 ft. Pknty
of parking. 2082 S 1-;
Bristol St, N~wporl
Beath 557 7010
WESTCLIFF BLOG.
NC.WPORl Bl ACH '°''l"'"'•"'"hf1 0r ... .,.. ., .. lfll' ,,..
~Alt~./=-.--,/e: ... _ "''""---· .1---.t'-.,-v1c. -,/,,,,.,. .... ~ ....
Call Mr. Howard
645· 6101
SAM CLEMENTE
Medical Arts lldg
Ideal Medical or Dental
swt~. Plush carpets &
central air. S&' per ft.
Call YEATSCO~PANY
498-0660 499.2237
GATEWAY PLAZA st.art an agency. Travel BETAMAX, pleue call---·------APCARE 547·2588 . ASSEMBLY 5351!!.LstStTustln work, e.10pm eves. Call·
.,..,.. sq ft Mo to mo or exp. not nece.1ary. Total (n4) 7~ Collect. FOUND· Grey & Black LIMO.A & yw-u1 uanufacturer of pre· Equal Oppor Employer 84$-2702. """ · · • startyp & operaUnr Tabby kitten. Vic. •-... --------lse 642-8803 capital required, $25,000. Ii~ 5300 Placentia & Wilson CM. ~ MaalOIJlt c l 1 1 o n e 1 e c t r o · Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil IOYS • GllLS
NO COSTA MESA 714-226-8711.838-9Z5Z ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645-8828 • Fortt.e r.of ft! mechanical switching BA.N'K..INO 12-16 yean of ace. Eve· • orFouodapet7Call Servi.ogallOrangeCo. devices bas immed. n.in& work. Obtain new •5 Rm,803sqttS397 mo Animal Aulstance Lost Ladies gold 135.7313 openinp: ~ivelodependent eubscnptloosfortbeDu· _
•l20aqflsnglofc$85 uquoaSTOIE Leacue537·2273oofee Hamilton wristwatch --------.... .W,Lead baot haa lmmed .. opeo. JyPllotworkiqJwltban
•442sqttlgeofc$19S .. o• llhllll•d · Vic Mesa Verde Con-• .i 5450 Require• exper. In lntfonqlialified: adult supervtsor. Earn AJI p-ouod floor, front I I . N'81U I l:Tl' _,_...._.. Rm Wed f .rav... ...,--...R~ r~ r to 10 OPllATIOMS -to -t prkg, A/Cu, til pd., prof. Wil se 1 llc, stock & In· ~·~ v...,,...~~ , a·••••••••••••••••••••••• '""'""....._ wo • o up _, -per wee or bldg, etc, ventory as package OR tern o on . Rew a rd. Adventurous 000 smoking assemblers. Day shift. OFFICER more. C.U 'ZlJ/ 68'1.a&I
540-2200or540-S101 without Hcense. New 1Yf111n$ 5'8-T61S. g1rl over 26, for crew on •A111•hrs Xlnf benefit•. Call or oooq-$paa. Z:U/ 488-3''13
-------• lease avail. Ask ror Mel M'1ftUI LOST: Nr J9t.h & Whrtlier, 58• Ketch ror crwse Los. Small comPC>DeOU. ex· seod re.ume to: 5pm.9pm, Call CoUec:t. 0 C ... IRPORT 67>8120 Satire-Shuey-p if E l ....,.. no.f'd Day shift 5 • ..-..~ 1 ,...., , .~ Faith-Cleave-CM. R~ggie, Iii. SbelUe, ac 1c. xper, ma ure ,... .. ,..._ . . ~,..,..v l'U""lll' IOYSWAM'rlD
DLX OFFICE SPACE o MEN • s Ju N 1 o R HEARSE looks like small Lassie. s k Ip per . W /train. STACOSWITCH IMC. IU-5200 A .. IS I 0. IS
Best bldg. on Birch. WEAR STORE. Trade I watched a movie oo TV Reward. 646-1068 631--0270 1Ll9 Baku Costa Mesa 53$ E. !Jlt St Tustin Hunt.In ... -Beacb area.
300to 900 sq ft. name Tbe Top Drawer, 1 1 b t 11 d 549-J04 I Equal Oppor ttrnployer •-·
BobDicltll\SOn,Agt.. <fixtures & furniture). ast n I ca e LOST. Samoyed dog,.lll!.,.OW'llMlllf ~~Eq~ual;Op~por;~Em;;plo;ye~r~~:i::i:i~~~~~= Earn SZ0.:'30. per week. Call 97945ll ' •Tomb• tone, the Unlv Pk Irvine ans to G«Unir new cuatomera ------i No boleaseandhold rights. Toughest Town lo the '"Trev~r · '• r~ward. ••••• .... •••••••••••n••• for THE DAILY PILOT. luMnffs Rttdat 4450 BaJ a 111 · 833-3622 Weal." Tbe Welcome SS:Z-8968or633-U82 Jobs WCldtd. 7075 ASSEMIURS BANKING No dellveri.nc or col~-
••••••••••••••••••••••• Affiliate responsible WaionwuaHEARSE. > ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnt beodita. Small co. ~vei.odepeodent lria. caJJthl.taumberto
.. DB.UXE oFC~ ' IL ·-• LoST: Black Lab (AKC <>--" Good bank baa inimed apply .. • pe~toown.opera...,LOST: Ep1pbooe guitar Male) Frtendly & ~componenta. . open-192-4625 Cont. rm, seat 2!5, all retail custom furniture w/case, vie Pippin• pla•,.ul 178 Vi inia St PalVA'TIDUTY manual dex.terllY & ingf~r ...,0 _ ...
paneled,sm.whleinre-store.Invesl!Qentreq'd. CFlatfCoot) 10/29. CM1 ' · Tl ·HURSE EXPEi eyealg.ht.tYrrninnp. "...... ll .. HTIM ar l or 2 yr lease. Lake $12.500. Investment com· REWARD 496-6062 days, AlloQuada Call LUUan, 581·3830. COL&.IC110MS
Forest area. Kjlnt pl covered by inventory 498-3877eves '-""•ah 5350 5574441 557-6447 M.V.area. Tai.II YOUIDA.Y!
Harkins. for personal interview ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnt beneflb. CalJ or ap: A liUle moonlillit can put 714-581·9393 write Ad. No. 22, Daily LOST: Jn Bil Canyon, lg. Drlntingproblem? ASSEMILB P'" at; a lot of •WJabf.De In your
-------•Pilot. PO Box 16580, Drk. Brown/Black QilJAJcoholHelpllne BOAT SERVICE-Day shift. wlll train. 'SANn.AGOIAMK Ufe. Eain xua Income LAGUNA Co6taMesa,ca92626 Peral an type cat. 4Mbnaday835-3830 pa.lntlng, vamiahlng, & Goodoo.benefits. w/6-10 bn per mo. Mr.
2 Shops, one ·'70 sq. ft. & Fvi illh M'-C 1_Rew __ a_rd_!_644_-8829 ____ ------"------.-• boat del. 12 yra exp. Let· COMftU.t.ITE COR,. 132-1200 Sean, t44-~l.
lheother900sq.ft.inlhe l'm'lllll••~• ,.,. o. •MICHELI.I'S* ters of rec." resume n1W.17lbSt, 535~.blStTuatin heart or downtown, high Expanding company LoltYn&Blkpoodle,stolen avail. can Erik aft. 6 BldgF-12.CostaMesa EqualOpporEmployer roottrafflc,nexttopark· needs reUable person, w/car Lie te7&PUX. O\&tcaUMusage PM.759-lOllO (Corner 17th St
mg lot. XJnt retall loc. willing to roll up 1leeves Poot Sal. 631·3647 ~l~OAM:.=::,:·2.A~M:_ _ __::73~1:.:""462=~i--------:-.-i Pomona)
Realonomics67S-8700 & .work. Investment re-Found Ihle Samoyed. Cftlrit.11 ae..,. PIOPERn MGR. caUM.5-1.501. G
BULLOCKS
-------• qwred, 125.000. Salary Vlc C M at Ba'"er •-....-•--l So 18.UI Ofhce space 1100 sq n. $350 per wk + equal • "" 1.ll!iSo. El Camino Real wt.shes to reiu..ai. 0 · ASSIMILBS lmmed. openln1 fC>r div1@<1 mto 6 umccs on Store & office spaces sioo s hare of profits. For Royal Palm ~ or San Clemente. Fully lie. O.C seeking chaJlenglng We will lralo. Apply sharp, pet'IOOAble teller.
SO. COAST PLAZA
la Ho• loten'fewinJ
COOl.PJtf-
&DW.w11•tn , ... ,.._ Mesa Verde Crpts, drps, perinooth.trup. personalinterview,write,_54().0365_________ Forappt.492-7298 }J061Uon w/progreulve · 'ram, MacGreC01' Yacht. Saving$ 6' Loan uper.
A C. SO< sq. rt. Call Ad No. 23, Dally PUot, FOUND: Sm wbt short -----------1 Co. Impressive expr. Corp,H31Placentia,CM pref'd, but will train.
lladley,9638933 POBox1560C09ta Mesa; haired female dog, MASSAGE capablllt7. Write Ad J.rvWe Saviap, 752-MM.
C 92826 A~•u MODELS Ull, Dally !lot, Automotive mechanic EOE. WEARE ALSO Prnst1'g1'ous Lido o(f1rn a. Halloween night Mesa WV .ll'.M\ "'-ta...... ca d s;ace. $150. mo. up~ .t Verde'754-<84'7 ESCORTS ,_._,.,,_...;.•_..,.,.. __ ... _ ..... _, __ . -1 ~!::hl;:~;w:~.~ nkfna INT&Ylfo'1::yPOR 67~ Oppa..lwltr 5015 FOUND: Bit ar Belie OUTCAU.OHLY ~~~ ..... ?!.~ Bill Ll cht 28802 T&La C ... sntAS
Dix ores w St'<'Y 5erv1ce, . ·······;··············· Fem Germ Shep. mix. 'J 1·3' 11 Karc~rite .Pkwy )IV. MarirlenSavmp P06JTIONS xerox. Nr. o .c . Airport. Business rental, Ideal for r you re not aetttna Vic. Newport Penln. Aceto.a Bkkpq 495-1210or831·28IO is seeking a qualified llJlS.ltfstol.
From$250 1si.5626 beauty shop, Jee cream 13.8%•retumoayourtn· N5-5029or673-0120 •SHERILEE• -~-· ... 1 y moU tellet Cor Its N.B. ore. ,._..._u__ · parlour, etc. NB. 67~1451 vestment, call Sandy.,_... ,.. CertilledAfuseuH '~""-Auto ve Min. 6 mo'• saviop " -...... --
EXECUTIVE SUITES afl3 80 Ross,AJaxCo.817-3744 a.A. ... :u: Cat. Bur. w/wbJte HouseCalls -ByAppt. Re1ister Today to work New Detail Sbop needs loasuxper. r.q'd. Appll· F.qualOppQ.r.EmpJoy•
8 · f 1 b 1 d •Avetare yield on paf· lace, cJ)eat It paw1. 838.Qll8 oovariouuccounUnc• tlelp. cut must be willing to~~~~~~~~~ ea u t .1 u g · PERSON W 11d. re· offs to Aju investors Neutered Mate, gone1---------1 booklreeplng assl1n Top waaes paid. EnaiJle Work10me8at.1. XJnual .
Penonaliied Ph1one cov,· ferene6totalteoverlse. Jan. tbru July, ien'. since 10/15. Reward! DANCEOF'FUN mentl. Work close \ Steamers. eng painters, 4tbendillloclu4.dental. erage,secyserv ce, con of great art studio or state Jaw pernUta a pre· m..M7'7 Bt.Q nude gil'la dance & your home. J'i1ur but'fen • poliabers, US>-Applfat: room, xerox & more. workshop in Lag. Bch. payment penalty charge•---,...,.-----• rap ae11lon. lOAM to Clerks to Sr. Accoun· boJ1ter7 abampooen. .L515WatclittDr,NB ~sy frwy access. Near $150. Gf-61158 alt TPM IAvale"t •-80% or 8 LOST! OOld itrtped male 2AV Mot\•S.\. 125 N. tan ta needed \bruou check out; pick-up Ir de-......... Op-•-p•-.. So. Coast Plnr:n. From eq .. ..., _. Oat. Uk.e llotrla. Vtc. o Ii A J t ......... .-. c. ... -z $225. 5'6-2:982 montba unearn•u fn· Eaatblufl area N B EllCUd Aub.551Ml150 ranieco. very. if:~
MOITHCM. •••••••!.~ •• ~~.~! l.fo::~.:: U1~111:!~~: t4D-4.152 • . . FREl!S~IONW/l\D t>==~ • 205t "5·1cJ1,CM
Dix Ofc'a '6<> to Sl2!5 mo. *COSTA MUA. * 'ere;! to Calllorala r•t• : Female rox Ter-=~~~':r 500 S. ~aln, Ste 501 Ac. all uUI. pd. Joe at ?OO&UOOaqft no.no den Oftb'. rier, wht/blk/un, aocol· Outc•UN.'1M'61ll Ni:i:_"r.l1~!8a~t 75l.Q92AM's . _ 1800 sqft, sprlnkJtrect. UmJted Pattnenbtpa 'onj..;W~·~REW~~AR~D~.5Sl-=:1!!199::!...-~i;iiii~jiiiiiij;;;;iiiiiii;;ii~;;iiiwl 714/835-4103
:msq.R.delwceofnce, w. Loadingdock,12'd0ort. lmpro•ed lota ID Palm otanae male tabby ~~~~~~~~ 1ttb St, Cos\a Me... Realtor. 752-SOU Sprino a.-. FrOm ~ w/pompom an tall end,
$150/mo. Tom,540-UOO 4110 io $100,000. Prine. ~ J~ • Brlitol. •P·
7SO&» pros 11).Jt. MO-CMOO
D: rempttptwttr
l'awo • lblk munle. .... • ...... ••w••••• Yortdb\Vo ltJt '34.:zill \
ht,IMA ! ~ ....... _ ..i • LOANSi\VAILABL troO?ro: ~or •• rl I Cftdlt n0t1mponanl. wriat ~teb. 00.lar, Mr .,., 4t3d•OZ H1rbo:r Blvd, OD • 1onsn1. Eves su.eou
ACCOUNT CUii
S1f4toSl76W..
Public scb00l actount1o1
'
.11
'COOK, exper, SJ 00 & up
G.raveyard or open shift
I 6428881 ''·-
COOK
2 lOPM Shift , sm
'1 restaurant, opply t
• ' learn all aspects of the
busirn!Ss. Apply 2633 W.
Coast Hwy btwn 9AM
2PM.
•COOK WANTED •
All shifts. Exper'd only.
' Apply 1n person, Jolly
Roger, 400$. Coast Hwy, La~wia Beach.
Counter girl for dry sle
· cleaners. ~g Hills. Will
1nvol•e some pressing
Wi U tram. 837 -0840
COUNTER Help. female,
· pillme. Stax Burgers,
1199 W, 19th St, Costa Mesa
TUCHElt/ Atlhtaftt
lrvioe. J8ynoro'fer.
CalJSSZ-7~
AnUque fumUure hqulda
~ Sale! Cloaine out en
tire stock ot cabinet.I,
tables, book(aae1,
___ ,.. __ _
JOMATHAM'S
AMT19UIS
WHOLESALE
TOTHETRADE
20% off sale Wed Eve
Nov 9. 6 :30PM Preview
Tue Ir Wed.
11335Mt.a..gleyFY
961-1331 -------
. ANTIQUE English Din
ingRmSet~.
645-1609 ----Appliances 1010 ••••••••••••••••••••••••
PUBLIC FURNln.JRE
•All:TION• To.He7:JOP.M.
NEVER RIDEN
21 · · Schwinn Le Tour
L11-(hl blue Not a
~crah'h. Will hold until
Christmas Sl50 I 628 9348 eves & _____ _
weekends.
FRGHT DAMAGED Motobecane Mirage 10 HERCULOH
HOTPOINT SALE. 3308 spd New condition $110. 8' Sota & Lo•....+ w. Warner nr Harbor, 631-0185 IOTHPIECES Sitt. Santa Ana. 979.2921 Docp 8040
CASH PAJD ••••••••••••••••••••••• S PC '1.AY P1t4
For W1br/Dryns/Refna GOLDEN RETRIEVER $711.•--$1150 wotkint or oot 957-6133 PUPPIES 7 wks, $100. -7
AKC. 536-8170 aft 3 30 3LM119._1Wt .MUST SELL·Btn Washer PM Stt.
& Dryer. Super Deluxe ---------t&..-Model, perfect runmn1 For Sale. West Highland Curtis F.w•
cond. like new $250 bolh White Temer, papers. 8 L865HarborBlvd.C.M.
2 door I" F ,ref n c $250w .. :..::k~ma:.:·:.:l::..o ·:.:S200::.:.::...· ::..644~6:=3::.:JS:_+,.--.6'5-6--15•1----Some misc furn ~5 5748 ~-
---DOG TRAJNING TOP CASH pd for gd YQUrPlaceorMine per remodeling Sale!
refngs, r11m. i.toves It John Martrn 548-0059 Frig, stove, wshr/dryr, ---------i---------
dyn. 839-9123, 898·0132 Beauuful Shih Ttu pup· ~6T~~~~p~ ac· S. 1055 GarqeSaleSaturda)'9·1.
O . ., .... fe •Merritt .__,_ AKC ••••••••••••••••••••••• Furniture. clotbln1. n.~ "' p1e1, w '""""'· reg. Livi R Set C\lst t1 Gas ran1e wilh gndle. Champion lrne. S36 9627 ng oom • om. $75. Mi·l.5S4 ---------i Gold sect'l sofa, t1ble1 1---------.j lampa le much more. KB4MOU W ASHH lDMALA YAN Kl TI' ENS $1200. Call 836-U44.
& DaYER $75. YelJow Labradors
Call 64&-9076 Yorkshire Temers
REFRIGERATOR
(Repo 6 mo.) 1977 GE 14
cu ft, 2 dr. wht $14 pay
ment. Also new Crg ht
Pit Bull Terriers
Brittney Spaniel
Poodle Mix
P ARl(H'S PETS
NEWPORT BEACH
64().0090
damg 'd recond ap 1---------. pll1nces DUNLAP'S
10060Talbert lat Euclid)
FV. 963--0721Opn7 dys
StalnJe111 Steel
range oven/1ink. new
Dlsbmalilter IV &
Dsbwshr, $250. 844-7084
SCOTT TERRIERS
AKC. shots, &42·3'706 or1-------
646-l.800 Wh. prov. desk/dress tbl -7& chr. $100. Girl's antq.
ENGLISH BULLDOG wh. hr set. *395. 10..pd
pupples·AKC·REG & boy's bikes $75. Nancy
Dritiablmported Daya 540·106i Eve
l • 7:rf-8239 644.Q33 ---------------
ESTATE
GAUGES.AU
185 Flower, C.11.
9-4PM Sat Nov. 5. M1gic Cbel refri1erator, Nd to find good hme, for King1iabed,2boJl11prgs. ---------2'; cu ft, llOv 41 propane. our lovable fem, 2 yr old l matt. Great shape. SAT OMLY l-ou-d_o_n_'t_n_eed __ • __ l._Wl_t.o_
$100. 673--2009 Basset. All 5, 642·6455 Aaking $1SO. 67$-3033 UnUI sold out· IAM until "draw fast" wbe.ft you
1013 .... ,..,,. ••••••• •••• ••••••• ••• • • • .................. ····~1----'-..-.._._...,...~~_.,..
Altec 15•• apkr, $75. (2)
JlhcbelJ 1.Z' I apkrs, S35
ea. PalrAltec AT
cablaets, empty. ruo.
Feuder Vibralux amp. 40 wuu $.100. 548·S210 alt 8
.trW\:nd.S
Yamaha bass amp,
Kustoai cabinet FIJl·15, ---------•
$350/botb. Risson lead
i----~----i $125, all xlnt. 963-5792. SEA HY'S
Al 1971 Modeh
11·.30•
HARIJSOM'S
SIAIAY
23%1 So. Main, S.A.
54MS55
3101CoastHwy.N.B.
Ut·2547
? 208 W. Wilson •t 1 d · th D 11 Elec. Ovens. Nesco. 1 Male & female Malamute Sofa, chair, tables, antq Fairvi CM p11ce an a m e a Yi---------....
large, 1 small. New $15 puppies S7Sea. vanit,y, etc. 644~8 aft 5,1 ___ ew ___ , _. -·-----Pilot Want Ads! Call now
each. 5'5-2243 497.3272 pm. -642-5818.
-=--------~ Small Ho\point Refr1g. Black Lab Puppies, 6 wks, 4 Rand carved hi&b back
Whita SSS. Old fashioned S30 Spani.ah Imported din.
Bookcase Desk nds Call846-t914 chairs, cost t&SO, sell
work $1S.S. Top of t.be Black Lab male 9 wits $225. Like new. ~" Une Qn az Serta mat· old Shots At ~ur cost Smoked glau 3214
t/bos aprp & frame 4 MS 493.0835 ev 6"0-a3l& cockta11 tbl. w/mlrrored moa old $250. 8'$-3357_ dyi ' baae. Cost $.100, aell $12$,
lt74 3.0CSa
Sunroof, fully lQeloped. Sllwr with blue
leathec lntenor. (488LNT)
ALSO 1973 CS
4 &peed • .u"'°°' low mtlei: (281 MCGJ
Sunroof, stereo. ("89NIJ)
ALSO I '76 SlOla
11.000 mllee. stereo cassette. (HANS 2)
1971 IAVAAIA
AUtomatte, air cond., sunroof, stereo cassette.
NBZ)
ALSO 1972 IA V .illA
-'speed, air cond .• stereo. (LML BMW)
Al.SO 1974 IAVAllA
If 7l 2002tll
Air cond1hornng, ster~. auperb cond1tronl
(173GOE)
• Al.SO 1973 2002
4 speed. QVOOf c1nREV)
• Al.SO 1970 2002
4 s~. air oondltlooing. (899BMW)
ALSO 1976 2002
Sunroof. maq wheels, stereo cassette.,
(902POR)
1977 3201
<I epeed, air oond1t1onlng. atereo <*Mtte,
metallic pamt. (149RXK)
1974 3.0SA
sunroof. lellher. power wlndOws. mag wtleell.
(388J(LF)
Tlf c .... utl 111. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'D al()._.. • ,.. " .. , .. ,.,.... 9170 ..... ,
IJllW. Best offer over ttOQ. ....................... Clilela 9520
IC2-m7orM5-UTO l'anwUc value at '7150 ....................... . •n Kawuakl 500 1ood '13 30' TraveJeue tdr. '55 CHBVY Coupe, nm.a
eond Must tell now. A Loaded with every poeal· e<L. 2 eng~. Many ex·
rocket! Make ofter, eves ble xtra. cau tor details. traa, v.ry cln. $975. $14tt
5t0423 842.7709 must sell this 5e0739 C1111l ... Mtn WI
week. 3l01lhltIA5S-8000 '70 Kawasaki, S cyl 2 '58 MORRIS Minor ---------1 w.a. It.rob, 500 ml on nu mtr. 1r Late MdJ Aristocrat Wc:JOd1, p . enc. Needa 73 JllP Y.a ~
Super cl.o. JM')/ofr. self-contained, loaded, ·new tras. Restore thia (86731?). Automatic, pwr '70 Ford Super Van~ ton, CUAH •
5f.9.050I easy-lift hitch. $2350. investmt. 646-MS6 ateennlf, •1.000 mllea, Auto trana <rebuilt 1 mo. USS> CDS
Homs. Sale/ 548-1372 :=aculate. Wu $.1919, •eo>. new en1me W/ only NOW ...,/Sl•oge fl60 '76Terry20.~.A/C,elec 4ww.tDt:.-s , 9550 Uttt ~;:!l~~it.Aakin& CAU.P..,,T,
••••-.. ••••••••••••••• Jack, xtru. Aakia1 ~1115. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -~ t a 1977 Excutlve Xl.otcond.8'6.e&lO C .... mdMtn AN.shop Demo. '70Ford S•0•5630 '73 140Z Xl•t coad.
Jl4torboine or Mini· •70 Aratocrat. 18• xlnt • J~S •77 .. , !IOOlElltSASSf.IOOO Loqbed. Comp&ete con· Am/Fm. alr. map, •
snotorhome from Herb d R r I t CJ · I s. CJ· 1 s. S 1 Xl t d spl Friedluadu Call of con . er 1. • ove, Cherokees waionecrs 'T1 cout. 1reen. P/S, vera oa. n con . $AOOO.St8-QZl1.
these own~ any oven. Bstofr~1119 Pick-ups ~to'1.,200dla: PtB. v.-e.ftl., lurt•ee $3000/~. ta-em dys, 2626HAllOR ILVD.
8'1-6777 '71 FOXY Fifth Wheel counta. S yr 50.000 mile rack. AM/Fil a.track. -.ot~nttes. COSTA MESA lt7JDATSUM
Lea I.ban 5000 ml. Self: warrantys available. yr. or Jt,OOO mU• aerriee '72 Cbevy paneled rt'd •------,-----• 51 O WAGON
S"¥7·7777 cont. 3 burner stove Cap1l•dMtnlK contract. ~a,ooo ml. nutires"acereo'i!mi' WllUY Inexcellcntcondilion.'
IJMlll w/oven. Dbl sink. Fits 2001Etst,SA55HOOO ~itt':~;;,:o or MHl21 · · USIDCAISI •i*d. radio ai beater.
... ....__ .... ~ flOO small truck $1500 Call We'"' tho new Chevrolet Leis than 40,00I> tz1iles. _ .__ 846-2848 • . Autos, New tlOO ?STOYOT"' '72 VW camper, pop top, de ••••••••••••••••••••••• --· ••••••••••••••••••••••• --new IDOlor & tires. Xlot alerahip in the Irvine (~UV).
178 RABBITS * ·SCIROCCOS * BUSES
New '78 Rabbit wftll AM/FM stereo cassette
Including fuel Injection, 1 6 liter OHC engine. 4 speed, front disc brakes.
rack & ptn100 steering, •·wheel Independent suspension and hatchback. Ser. t 1783042536
53999 Plus
Tax
&
License
••@~•· OYER 50 USED 5ssa
ROM $14H · ********************************
HARBOUR VOLKSWAGEN 842-4435
11711 ......... ~ .. ~ w. Hrs: w...lfi '·'· w 9.7, -10.7 Al PnCi91 ""-Tl& & Uc. Ollw ~ 11 ... 77
Your 11Much More" Car Stor
73FOAD
PINTO
Dot~ 18136 e.ectl Btvd
H\lllllneton 9eeel\, CA
STA WGN 4x4 cond. $3800/best. offer. Auto Center. We need tllUY MOW!
(530WOS). 4 apd, apoke 9113-$511 Youtusedcarl
wheels, 12Xl.5 LT Urea, JOE
15 OOOmlles, exceptionat. li'l'3 Ford Van, autoinaUc. MAC PHEISON
COSTA MESA
DATSUN ly clean. Wu '4999, now P /$, aood condit.ion.
S4'9f Urgent. Must sell. CHEVROLET
C ;?i''-" Mtn 842-2884 21 Auto Oenter Drive IRVINE '75~ 211QZ. Mao/raCllalt, 2001 latSA558-8000 '70 E200 Ford. A/C, AM· , .. 7 AM /FM, 10,000 ml, 'TOCJS All off d u1 FM, tape dek, mags,1 ___ 7 ___ 22_2 __ 1 &JperCleatstet0-2380d)',
S2600/bstotr."roa eq p. paneled. $lll9S.960-3826 ' ~10ll8ev.
49'1·~ '72Ford E200campercon· ..,_, ... uifltd _.....,,.... _ __, ___ _
version. Auto, PS/PB, ••u••••••••••••••••••• "-?la..._ Here Trw:b 95' A/C, 1-t.rk. mags, nu pnt. Ge•ral 9701 Ailniodet.6colors.
•••••••••••••••••••••• Must see. $3&75. PP. "••••••••••••••••••••• lazwdlCllll 1976 FOU 631-2149 :73 Audi LS 4-speecl Del"'1 T-..Y! 5..,.,. rlcbp $2500 -Cua1o paint le lnt.erior. VAN SAU! IMI0-3760, or 84&-8803 Re•W.g 1977
4 s air cood. Cr low Surfer Vaos loaded ~GOtToh!
. ~~J.;.-4-9.r -N{~C:. ~aint. ac-o_t7A>5
._.... -1 -81 take trade and finance ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA
DATSUN llU. YATES balanceupto&mos. * AUAIOMIO *
YW..p()ISCHI 1974 Spider Convertible ~HARBOR BLVD.
SanJuaa""·pislrano wtt.b stereo, mass a: low S4M4101.0.021l ll7-48004tMS I I miles. (490MXO).
D'TfGTVCou .Stereo. 1975 DATSUN '77GllCPickup,AM/FM, 1974 GTV (!:upe with 1-ZIOCOUPE
8 track at.ereo. Loaded, lo ..._ W.W fStO stereo map It air cond. 2 Door. ' apeid trans. & mi. Ph 536-9511 c~--..;J..V). •-·· mil-. In .......... "--t --------1•••···················· ~JS Ml'# ~ .:;"'"'"'~ BEACH IMPORTS eondttJonr <Z33NDN>. '69 fn\ernatlonal
Travelall. Fully loaded.
$800 firm. 494-2130
'75 Ford FlOO Ranaer PU.
Gd cond, dual tanks,
P/S, P/B, AH·FJI. Bllt
offer. M2-1S48
WIWILLIUY
YouaDATSUM
PAID FOB OR NOT TOP DOLLAR
POITOPCAIS
BARWICK DATSUN
'-1,1'1 11 . tll C '.1p1,l 1 Ulq
831.1375 493.3375
1148 DOVE STREET rate• TO SSJ.
(Near MacArthur Blvd.
&Jamboree Road)
NEWPORT BEACH
75Z.Ot00
MIHION VlfJO IMPOATS ..... .. ·-·· l'f ¥ ........ .
831·17•8 49~·1 104
~---~--
... ~, t707 976 DateuD 280Z·Alr -cond., •ire wheel•. ••••••••••••••••••••••• stereo tape pita mru! -
1974 AUDI FOX Ute ne.t Prl. pty. But
Automatic with air cond. OUer-Must SellJ .£a}k_
SulH!r low miles·len 1S&-Ok4 daya; ao:4tu· .
t.b.anZJ..000. (172LQY). ~ lrweekellds.
MAIEOFAR '76 2IOZ, ' apct wtmas
whls, A!C. AM/Pll. lo
mi. SUH/movio1.
~
Mr$SION VllJO IMPOllfS •.. . . .. . ""' . ..
831 1746 •<>S 1704
NEWPORT DATSUN
IMW t712 '15 710 WAGON. AJC 4 ••-•••••••••••• ••••••• apd, 11000 mi. '
SADDLE BACK
BMW
COMEIN•SEE
THE AU.NEW
m.21.86
-DO't pAT8QN-ByYER
PAYTOTHEORDEROF •
• Speed. (Ser. 111382)
$2,999 $1,495
630C:SI MOWIH
'77 2l!OZ, clean, blue w /blk
lnt, pin striping.
AM/FM, air, mags, incld
5 yr/50,000 mi extended
warnnty. $7200. or best
offer. 759--0UIM day1, or
~eves.
74FORD
PINTO
Autcll'ndc, ~roof.
(Slr.11130llt
. : 00/cents DOLLARS one-Hundred Eighty-Five'
COMPLETE
IODYSHOP
HOWOPEM
SADDLEIACIC
Y AU£f IMPORTS
IJ 1·2040 495.4f49
WAMTIDTOIUY
Quality UMd BMWa.
IOY CAIVll IMW
15'0 Jamboree Boad NEWPORTBEml
64M444
CREVIER
6 110 ... aeon. At e. .._.
spd. 35,000. Jl'trat $300C)
takes tt. 04-6133, .c9f.C885
'14 Datsun late Jldl 260Z.
Loaded. llint eondlt.ioo. ~JIM0.30UJ
'73 610 Wacoo. low mi, pvt
owner, beat offer.
G\--M2
I
COSrA MESA
DATSUN
2&UHARBOR BLVJ:>.
54°"'4 I 0 540.021 l
Ml ~ION VI • 0 IMDOl!T~ . . -.. .
8J I I 11 • ' U·I
•
OVER150
QUALITY CARS
TO SELECT FROM
•
Nabers
Cadillac
2600 H,11hor BlvJ c~~a Mei.I 540.9100
OIDll YOUIS TODAY
SALIS-LUS&MG -S8YICE
CADILLAC
•
12 l!7!,!~!1!1ec~!~!O'! ~!~!'!..
81ue ei11r1or widn blue padded top .rid light blue
0 el~lnee IMt.,_ l•I ot the lwge c.dillet llAury
i!Utomobl•• 131 llNOW)
,
\
1975 Continental Mark IV
31.000 mil• lt11Col11 '1 top llllUIY cw with Ill COllC81Vllbl• opuon-. ~htul cond1hon 14t4MNO) .. ,.,
' 1974 DatsUn 2&0Z
SlllS2+2~
Autom•IC tr ens AMI'. FM llttto w/ llP• & r11tye wheelt.
Gold ·~l«IOI' With mateh•llg •nllnOI' '" m111t CondiloOO! (t21R&0)
1973 Chevy Y2 Ton Pickup
All whit• .. 1.,1or, VS: 1111om1t1c trtntmlblon. 11r
co11d1uontng. ~•hMlted eng1-139040H)
THIS WlllllMO OMLT
•
For A Classic C• Buyer
1967 Cadillac II Dorado
Whit• .n COior """' l>lu• •Ntt>• "'-and 1>1ue ~111 lop AMFM a!SIO, Ull WhMI flllllt concHtlOO 'lt472•t221
I IP"'° W~oo. *' COl'ldlhontng, AMIFM II•
with tl!Pll, t.ow mile• (t1 9Nlt<J
----. . . ." "' . ~ .... . -. --~ --.. ·-. ---.,.--~
I ..
.• ,·.
CAM WI IUILD OHi FOi YOU7 ona YOUIS TODA YI
\
1978. ,
Brand New 1918 . • GMC Y2 TON PICKUP
(TC0148Z25().1J~77)
lj i.wEDJAIE .$ -
~ DELIVERY
'72 OLDS ..
174 DODGE
fl COUPE CHAIGSt
W11h f)WI'. window.. 1teering 6 bl'8kea, With POW1f steering. radio, heater and
AM/FM etereo. •Ir cond.. vfnyl loP. vinyl top, (19983!). hettw & tilt wheel. (81 5FWAJ.
$1677 51977.
173 DATSUN 6f0WAGON
'72 FORD -'73 OLDS With air conditioning, radio and heater. {718HNW).
"MTo
WUh 1utom1t1c transm1ss1on, air
conditioning, radio. heater and tow mll ... (1oeGBKJ.
• 51777
CUTI.ASS SUt'tllM£
With automatic trans .• air c:ond .• YI vtnyt
top, radio, heater. Power steering &
power bnlke9. (858SRL).
MAKE
·otFER
173 CHEVY
SUI.Fii VAN
f
Bf GARV GRANVILLE
OlllllO.llyl"1'91S141t
Grand Jury investigatocs are
probing financial records today
in ah attempt lo determine ll
Orange County Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich "received in any
amount or in any form" $281,000
paid to architect Leroy R05e in
1973 and 1974 for the design of a
new county adminislration build·
log.
Remington opened the door. far
probe into the Rose contract this
week when he said that in 1t73
and 1974 he was paid unspectfWd
amounts of money by Rose that
he, in turn. passed on to
Diedrich.
Remington said be had not
performed any legal services for
the money and that it was
passed on to Diedrich "after de-
ducting taxes and other costs."
ti
.
Fullerton attorney Michael In aftidavils filed with the
Dull Sex· Lile
By ROBERT BARKER
Of IM o.llJ ...... $Uft
When 1t comes to filling out. a sex survey, the married
men or Huntington Beach are a bunch or duds.
HUNTINGTON Harbour resident Susie ~ewman has
been c1rculatmg the survey for a professor fnend w!th Uh·
derwbelmmg success.
·'They either burst out laughing or their races turn
bright red," shes aid. "Then they say no:·
A glance at the survey on extra-marital sexual behavior
of men offers a hint as to why they actlhe way they do.
QUESTION NO. 7 asks: Since
you've beeo married have you had ex·
tra-marital sex? A quick no answer
doesn't get you off the hook.
If the answer is no, the questionnaire
directs you to proceed directly to ques-
tion 13.
There you are asked to give reasons
why you've never participated in this ac-
tivity. The questionnaire leaves thr~
• lines and a partial one to put down all
NtwMAN your reasons .
• • QUESTION NO. 8 wants you to g\v1:pe tMaldber Ofcflf·
ferent women with whom you've bad more than a ..,.sslil
interest.
Question No. 8A asks tbe averaae duration of each al·
fair.
The survey makes it easy for you on question 10. tt a.sks
"'hY you had an extra-marital affair and offers multiple
choice answers.
SOME OF THE ready-made answers include:
-I was mad at my wife and this is how I got even.
-Sex with my wife 1s boring.
-I wanted a little adventure and excitement ln my lire.
Two or more is better than one.
Mrs. Newman, a member of the Huntington Beach
Planning Commission. said she is trying to Jet 500
responses in Huntington Beach. She hasn "t re,celved one yet.
She said she took a batch to the police depattm~t but
officers wouldn't touch the questionnaires with a lO·foot
pole.
MRS. NEWMAN said she also has sprµng the survey on
the Rotary Club, the accounting department. at Cal Stalte
Long Beach and various physicians. But no luck.
She said she is circulating the surveys to help a formef'
• professor at Cal State Nortbridge who is planai~ t.o write•
book on the subject.
''It looks llke it may be one of the briefest boOks in his-
tory," she observed .
JV' s School Boi:tr'd-. . . ... . -
;mcks .Deputy €tllef
Fountain Valley (elementary)
School District trustees began
what appean to be a major ad-
~ "1lalraUve shakeup Thursday. frust~es agreed to bypaas
normal hiring procedures and
b me Glenn M. Hard)'., 1m
A plan was presented to
aupervlsors ealling for locaUoo
of a geoeral aiiatlon altport on
~e 1rounda of the Navy's SeaJ
Beach wea~ atation.
Mrs. Wieder said the city coun-
cil acta ha an ombudsman role
and should have been consul~.
She also aaid that the HOME
Councll action was not helpful in
maklDg the city's newly.formed ·
airport com01lttee producUve.
"It dt the committee in left
field.·• .she added.
Mrs. Wieder made the state·
ment Wednesday night as the
panel was being formed to solve
proble01s between residents and
pilots at Meadowlark Airport.
Mark Porter. president of
HOME Council, said that tt\e city
council has not had a f(ood record
of solving airport problems.
"It has vacillated and
permitted factions to PQlarize, ··
be sa1<t
Porter said the county wa.s the
logical place to taJce the airport
proposal.
.. Mrs. Wieder should know all
~bout end runs," Porter added.
"She performed one in getting
the people to attend an ilJ .fated
tax cut heanng."
Steve Schumacher, a HOME
Council representative who .pre-
sented the plan to supervisors
last week, said the county was
the proper agency to deal WJth
the airport.
.. When I need a prescription
filled, I'd probably go to Coun-
c i Im an Richard Siebert la
pharmaclst).notMrs. Wider . .. Ir I needed to buy gasoline,
I'd probably go to Councilman
Ted Bartlett <a service station
operator>. notSiebert. . • .. When you have an a1~
proposal, I'd CO to Orange CMft.
ty Supervisors. They're in the
business," he said.
Supervisor& have ordered a
study of the plan.
Cyclist Dies
After Hitting
Parked Truck
)
A curve in West'mlnster, which
police say is notorious for trafnc
deaths, claimed another victim
Thursday night when Jimmie D.
Wadtlngton's motorcycle hurtied
into a paMced l"ruck.
Wadlington. 2:5. ot 6391
Longford Circle, Westminster,
was pronounced dead at the
scene by coroner's deputies.
Investigators said today they
are baffled by the encl cause of
the 11 : 50 p m. fatal accident on
Bolsa Chica Road between Dun·
cannon Avenue and the San
Diego Freeway. ·"'
"He· just nat tert the roadway
and ran into the truck,·· said
Police Officer Earle Grabam.
The roadway is near the
McDonnell-Douglas Astronautics
Company in north Huntioetoit }
Beach.
Wadlington was traveling
south on Bolsa Chica Road when
his bike shot oft tht curve aM
srnashedtntolhetruck
•'He was not wear'inlt a protec·
tive helmet and I doubt he would
have been ki11ed if he had been
wearina on~." Officer Graham obser~ed. Funeral arrangemenis wert!
peodlnttod•Y;
"""'.,..... EX-CIA CHIEF GUil TY
Rlehard Helm• Fined
Froaa Pflfle .41 ..
HELMS •••
fiic-_
-·-~ ~-
DURHAM, N.C. <AP>. -. An
elementary scb.ool prmc1pal
pressured '4~ gn wu char1ed
with kidna na~~e~ he beld his
faculty and sehOOI superinten-
dent atgunpointCour hours.
Clarence Blanton. principal ~r
Betbescht Elementary SCbool an
-Durham, was lo_ under10
psychiatric examination today.
Blanton, who agreed to give up
bis • job beeau.se or teacher and
curriculum problems .at ~he
school, burst into a meeting
Thursday in which school
Superlntednent J. Frank Yeaser
was introducine Blanton's
replacement to31 teachers·
Yeaaer said he told Blanton he
was not needed at the meeting he
called to introduce the interim
principal to the faculty, but that
Blanton burst lrito the ~~sion
and told the group he had ~ "vi·
sion from God" to remain as
principal.
Authorities sakl Blanton was
armed with a shotgun and two pistols.
Blanton ordered ~ix women
and three men, including the
saperintendent, to He spread·
eagled 'on the noor. ¥ea(_er said
he threatened to kill two teachers
and cut the right hands from
three others if anyone d what
happcmed at thesession1
t Blanton then dellvered a
monologue on the disto~ty or
his teachers and problems with
the central school office. /<
After four hours, Blanton was
persuaded to give up his weapons
and let the teachers go home.
Yeager said he then caJled the
sheriff's department.
No students were in the Jc:hool
at the time because tbe day had
betn set ~ide for faculty work.
Blant011's wife signed papers
permitting Blanton's commit·
ment to a mental-hospital. He
was taken to Duke University
hospital tor the night and was to
be transferred to Dorothea Dix
Hospital in Ralei~h.
Brick Dispute~·
Brpigs Suit ,
A Huntmtton Beach m~ who~
claims his next doOr oetihboi'
hammered bricks out of tbei~
dividing wall and threw bricb
and mortar tnto bis swimming
pool took the neig~bor to court..,
Thur&day. ,.
Jerry;i;; Gabel ol 17171 Sand rt ..
Lee Lane names Charle• P.t. Eaber, 17161 Sandra Lee Lane, as / defendant ia his Orange Countf
Superior Court lawsuit for $fS,000
in damages.
Her-claims~ al ed tneldertts
be can when tie dCCld~ to make
improv menls to a cmder bloct
wall tit dMd the Gabel and Haber~i
By GARY GRANVILLE
CMt•O.llYPllet51aft Grand Jury inveaUgators are
probing financial recorda today
in an attempt to determine if
Orange County Supervlsor Ralph
Diedrich "received in any
amount or in any form" $287,000
paid to architect Leroy Rose in
1973 and 1974 for the design of a
new county administration bwld·
jng.
Fullerton attorney Michael
Suspect
Released
·On Bond .. . By JOANNE REYNOLDS -91 tM D.tlly f'llot SI.tit
Alexander Kulik, the Newport
Beach businessman jailed on
narcotics and murder conspiracy
charges, was fret..'<! from Orange
County Jail Thursday night after
posting a bond for $750,000.
Jail officials said the bond,
guaranteed by three bond com-
panies, was the largest ever post-
ed to free one of their onsoners. · Kulik, 28, dressed in denim
trousers and a sports jacket
greeted his attorney, Philip
DeM assa of San Diego, in the
Jail's lobby as he was released.
At DeMa<ssa 's inw;tence, Kulik
declined to make> <my t·ommcnts
about the case
• Kulak 1s one of eight pe<>ple
named as suspects an the shoot-
ing death of Stephen John Bovan,
36, who dJed Oct. 22 after being
s hot nine ll mes outside a
Newpof!. Beach night spot.
Remammr 111 custody are An·
thony Marone Jr., 23, and
Raymond Steven Reac:o, 28, or
10121 Merrimac Drive, Hunt·
ington Beach and Jerry Peter
Fiori, 41, of 19822 Brookhursl St.,
Huntington Beach.
They are being htld in lieu of
$500,000 bail. That bail was set
Thursday afternoon by Judge
Selim Franklin of the Harbor
Judicial District Court.
Judge Franklin also freed
Debra Ann Addison. 24. or the
Brookhursl St. address who had
been charged with murder con·
spiracy along with the four men.
Detective Sam Amburgey or
the Newport Beach police said
• the charges against Miss Ad·
1 dison were dropped because
there was insuCClcient ~vldence
to support the allegation that she
had a role in the long-range con·
spiracy leading to Bovan·s death
Remainin« at lanrn torl11v Anrf
sought on murder conspiracy
warrants are Kulik's wife. Elsie
Caban Kulik. and his business
pertners, Jose_ph Shelton Davis.
Joseph Gabriel Fedorowski and
Roy Christopher Richard.
The four men operated an in·
vestment firm known as
"Prasadam Distributors, Inc ..
which employed Marone, Fiori
and Resco.
Police allege the dead man and two accomplices. Robert Shea
and Stant.on Keiffer kidnapped
Kulik in August and held him for
$100,000 ransom.
They further contend that the
Prasadam partners offered a re-
ward for the deaths of the three
alleged kidnappers.
Police are still trying to locate
<See BOND, Page A2)
..
Remington opened the door for a
probe into the Jtose contract this
week when he said that in 1973
and 1974 he was paJd uMpeeified
amounts of money by Rose that
he , in turn, passed on to
Diedrich.
Remington said he had not
performed any leeal services for
the money and that it waa
passed on to Diedrich "after de·
ducting taxes andotber~ost.s ...
lo af!id.avils filed with the
WASHINGTON CAP> -·
Former CIA DlrectoT Richard
Helms wasllned $2,000 and given
a suspended two-year prison sen·
tence today for failure to tell a
Senate committee all he knew
about the ClA"s covert action in
Chile.
In passlng sentence, U.S. Dis·
trict Judee Barrin;ton D. Parker
accepted a White House·
approved deal for leniency. But
Parker warned that lt would be
the last time he would do so for
o( a possible conntct of int.er~t.
But when tile bAllot kftoUed at 2
to 2, County Counsel Adrian
Kuyper told the then-freshman
supervisor his vote would not
constitute a confiict.
Rose, a former )i'ullerton plan-
ning COQUTllssioner, as indicted
by the &rand jury in 1975 OD
bribery.related cbaraes.
The architect was. later ao-
quitted by a tiiaJ jury of the
char-ea after tM illdictment was
any public official who violates
the law.
"You now stand before thls
court ln dlsgrace and shame,··
the 3udge told Helms, 64. "If
public officials lenore the laws.
the future of our country is in
jeopardy.
"From this day forward. let
there be no doubt that no one in
government or in a position o{
responsibility is above the law.··
Helms pleaded nolo contendere
-no contest -Monday to two
counl$ of f~!!.~J to mrswet" the
"material q~~-ot-.~-.... , ...
committee inqwrint about CIA
activities in au mpUng to p~
vent lhe.1970 electio.o of Salvadar,
Allende u prelid*1t o? Chile.
Parker utd that the court
ruled Hel~ guilty as charaed.
Th6 cbar1es are misd••
meanon;, each punishable· by a
minimum of one month in jail
and a $100 fi_~~ to the maximUrtt
one year in Jail and the $1,000.fi~ <See HELMS, Pap.Al• . .
F.rota Page AJ
•
e<-Diedfl~hasr receiving
any money: in 11'.Y lorm on any
m.atter r,elated to the Abttheim
Hills a~nculture preserve issue.
Conn1ct of interest disclosure
statem~nts filed by the county
supervJSOr every year since then
do not ahOw any loans owed to
Remlncton.
llow~ver, the attorney. who
was D1edr1ch's business lawyer
from 1966 until a few months ago,
insisted the loan lo Diedrich was
made throu&h a special account. H~·afso said a $25.000 loan was
11\ade "at Ralph's behest" from
the Grant Corporation's S75,000
payment.
il\ffidavit.s filed with the court cler~ Thunday indiute the in·
vestigatlon l!'t related to an al ·
le1ed bribery conspiracy.
Remi"gton was ordered to
aqswer all questions related to
the Grant Corporation and Rose
before he testified before the
Grand Jury Wednesday
Later in the day. h~ pleaded
guilty to a single misdemeanor
charge brought agal~11t him and
four o~her persons by the Grand JUh in a July t. indictment ~h11q~ing them with parlicipatmg
II\ an 1Uogal conspiracy related to
felony violations at state cam
P t n regulations
"Bf!\ed in the indictment wtth
lhJn1ngton were Die.drich
Supervisor Philip Anthony' An~helm Chy Cdunotlma~
WUltas:n Kott and one-tirne paid
P<Jllc:e infonner Gene Conrad
60 Aliens
Arrested in
GGRaid
Federal immigration acents.
raided a Garden Grove shoe fac-
tory this morning, arresting tlO or
the factories' 80 employees·as II·
legal aliens.
Thirty agents surrounaea tne
Sun Star Rubber Inc. factory al
10631 Stanlord Ave. about 8:30
~ m . according to U.S. lmm1gra
lion and Naturalization Service
ll~S > officials.
Tht! raid was the third by U S
Immigration and Naturalizatlo~
Service <INS> agents 4n Orange
County this week.
Agents raided a Fullerton
mobile. home factory and an
Anaheim strawberry ranch
Thursday. They arrested a total
of 60 aliens without visas, said
INS spokesman Philip Smitb.
About 20 INS agents raided the
Golden West Mobile Home fac-
tory at 130 Magnolia St
Fullerton, and netted 20 alie~~
employed there, said Smith.
Later the same day agents ar-
rcs t ed 40 strawberry field laborers at an undisclosed loca-
tion m Anaheim. said Smith
The aliens were taken to Los
Angeles for booking and then
transported to San Ysidro where
they were returned to Mexico
About 160 aliens were arrested
in two north Huntini;:ton Beach
stra~berry fields Wednesday morning.
About 70 aliens also were ar.
rested in strawberry fields m
Cypress last week, Smith add<.>d.
Fro• Page ~I
FRAUD •..
another Orange Coast resident K~n Duffy who lists his uddres~
with Anxona. authorilles at 3001
Red Hill Ave .• Costa Mesa
. Those indictments alle&ed the
hrm ~or which all 15 worked sold
lots in northeastern Arizona.
Which were "arossly mis
represented" as being near lakes
and covered with pines. The de
velopment, Concho Lakes. was
r~presented ~ beinf complete
with streets and utilities and
ready for construction.
InvestigaLors say, in fact, it
was rolUng grassland that had a. ~et w roadways bulldozed acros'I
I •
Investigators further allege
that the 15 indictees illegally sold
mortgages for IOts already
purchased loolher parties.
EX-CIA CHIEF GUil lY
Richard Helma Fined
HELMS •••
that Parker imposed.
Th~ judge said he was aOspend.
mg the Jail J>Ortion and placir\e
Helms on one year of '1n·
i; upervised probation. Tbe
former CIA head must, however.
pay the $2,000
Both Helms' attorney, Edward
Bennett Williams, and govern·
mt•nt attorney Benjamin R.
C1" ilcltl argued for leniency.
"Im position of incarceration
without suspension is inap·
proprrate, not justified. and will
not do JUSt1ce under these
circumstances," said Civiletti.
assistant attorney ~eneral in
charge or the criminal division.
Helms. given an opportunity to
speuk before sentencing. told
Parker he had nothing to add to
Williams' statement.
The defense lawyer pleaded
that llelms was caught between
an oath of everlasting silence he
had taken with the CIA and the
oath that h~ took when he was
(jUCStioned r'eb. 17, 1973, and•
March 6, 1973, before the Senate
1''orcign Relations Committee.
William said llelms, "by his
lights und by his conscience was
guided by one prin('iple what
IS 10 the bcsl interests or the \Jnlt·
<.•d Stat1..'S "
Al that point, Parker interject-
t'd thut high i::overnment officials
in the Watergutc .scandal had
made the same pleas
W1ll1um:. agreed, but said
"There °"us no self-interest i~
this ease, no self-gain, no self
l'molument. ..
lie ~aid llelmi;. who had been
an government servite tor 35
y~ars nearly seven of them as
director of the CIA -"will bear
the scar. of a convlchon (or tile
rest of h\a days."
Williams sa.id that Helms· only
ronsolat1on will be lhat he eot the
··~car 1n the best interests oC his
country."
I
Frona Page AJ
SOLVENT ...
da_ys ago when he look office, he
said there would be no whoJesaJ-
mg of raw hmd but speculation continued i.lnyway.
"And why not? All that was
known then about our plans or
our condition was my rhetoric "
the company chief noted. '
:r~e new ownership's SlOO
million secret was the key, he
declared
'Berser~ Principal
C~arged in Kidn~p
F,.._PQfleAJ
Keiffer and Shea. They ••Y &hey
want t~ ~tne i th tnurdercaa
Kulik, Marone. Fiori and
Resco are all slated to return to
Judge Franklin'• courtroom on
Tuesday to complete the arnltn· ~ent J?l'OeeSS tbat has been con·
hnued throuah tht~ ourt ap.:
peara~
Only Kulik, represented by
DeMassa, has been allowed to
enter a plea ot inn«>Calt ln the
case.
The other three men are atJU ~it_hout attomeya and court 'at·
f1c1als aa:Hl tod•Y prtva•e at·
lorneya will be appointed to
represent them because the
Public Defender's oftice bas
declared itself lneligtblc.
At Taesd ay 's court ap-
pearance, tho three mel\ are ex-
pected to enter their pleis and
have their attorneys appeal f«
lower ball
Kulik's $150,000 baU fleure was
a combination ol $500,000 beU set
by Judge Franklin In tile Divider
::onspiracy case and U50 000
established in the narcotics ~ase
n the Laeuna Nfcuet municipal
:ourt.
WATER BOARD ...
-Dorothea "Dottle,. Blaine
wofks u an analyst for the Coun·
ty Admlnl$ttaUve Ofrlce. She
wants to "end total control of
JRWD tiy bit money and big
~wor groups,.. throuih more
popul.r repre&entation. Sbe says
that thouJh homeowners pay ror
wastewater treatment, the
IRWD bas used It only for
agriculture, which she maintains
• isn'"t fair: 1 ..
-lackfe Boynton has 20 years·
experience teaching at every
grade level, and wu a teacher
representative for the Orange
County Teachers Association.
-BU Butta ls an electronics
en&lneer wtth Bell and Howell in
Newport Beach. "The bin4=!t ia-
aue, ·• Butts said, "is for the
public to cOntrol what's auppo&ed
to be a public agency -when it
really isn't lsn·t .. .lt·s being run
bythelrvineCompany. •
-Robert-& Sd1oenbu.rg. an at·
torney, says he doesn't have any
beef with the Irvine Company,
but wants to study water costs
comparing the IRWD with other
dlstricu . ·
-aonald £. Staaver is a
manufacturing manager with the
Hughes Aireraft. Co .. and ur1es
"strong homeowner repretenta·
Uon'' oo the bQard. Ile favors
total publie control within two
years aDd wants to re;evaluate
a1ricultural and residential
water rates. , 4
-Pffr ~. S•aa also wants to
lnsure that residential customers
aren't p~ing a disproportionate
share of water bms.
-Robert H. "Bob" Reed is a
land.planner with the Jack G.
Rau\d Co., which haa done bus.i·
ness with the Irvine Company
"off knd on 1n the past... The
Irvine Company. be said, is
doina a toOd job. "Let's not keep
kl~kinglhese people ...
-William B. ~Pl>\,i:iCer, sales
enaJneer for a comp<1tnf that
makes water woru and has con-
tracted often With the IRWD was
foundtn1 manager of the distnct,
servif\g seven years. He also has
14 y~ars experience as assistant
en&lneer of the Metropolitan
Water District of Southern
California.
-Wayae A. Clark, county
Supervlsor Laurence Schmit's
executive aide, also was charter
chairman of the Irvine Planning
Commission. The Irvine Com·
pany-appointed IRWD board, he
says. ''is spending money like it
was water ... He wants to stop
"wall-to·waH development OI lrv1oe."
-Joseph S. Dor'liey hH been•
consullin.1 eoilneer for the
Southern California Gas com-
pany, and is a member of the ~merican Water Works Asiocia·
bon. He beJleves the lRWD'a
most important reapor\slbiUty a
to plan for future water suppUes,
-Robert A. Donatb haa a bus1nells bacJc1round, "and
thinks the diatrict ought to bO run ~Y peoplt: with a strong ground·
ang in business.
-a. Patrld: Doaoelly said h&
thinks the Irvine Company bas
do'!e good work (Jveloping Irvine. but that It" time that
more or the $.SO illion-plus
water district budget comes un:
der public scrutiny.
-Andrew J. May boasts
engin~ertng and manaiement
experience. He too thinks tft•
!rvine Company bas done a good
Job, "but now it's time for us to lake over.··
-f'rank W. Boyd has called for
immediate public election ot alt
1,RWD board seats. He says ad·
Justments need to be made in
sewer rates.
-Julius L. Bognar S¥id seven
yeara in federal government
have earned him the expertise t0
deal with bureaucracy.
-David L. Rn.sbrougb l1 a reg.
istered professional en1Inee
with 22 yea.ts o! water engineer··
mg experience. He says that es
perience will save the t.axpayer -
the expense of a new boat41
member leamlt\g the ropu of~.
mg on the board.
-Cb~rles "."· Hue1y. an
economJst, considers delivery ~
water to playing fields ror usefUl
recreation an fmporhnt
challenge the board hasn't met
He'd work for tbe laylnJ of at~
le.isl temporary water hnes to
b.aseball. soccer and footbal!;
fields. He agrees with th• Jtvtne
City Council that the landowner•
dominuted board is not constit'1-
tional and should be chalfen1ed
in the courts.
if"
The polls will be open from 11
a.m. to8p.m Tuesday.
~
Adair C81led Again"
CHATOM, Ala. CAP> -Red
Adair's fire-Oehtine crew was
summoned from Texas 'J'hursday
as a blaze eruptAld in a southwest
Alabama gas we~ and
threatened to release lethal
rumes Nearby homes were
evacuated
or cofors. The
I
By GARY GRANVILLE ot Ille o.lly ,.lie« lieH
Grand Jury inveatisators are·
probing financial records today
in an attempt to determine if
Orange County Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich "received in any
amount or in any form" $287,000
paid to architect Leroy Rose in
1973 and 1974 for the design of a
new county administration build·
mg.
Fu lier ton attorney Michael
Suspect
Released
On Bond • By JOANNE REYNOLDS C}f 1M 0Ml1 ,.Ii.I $S.ll
Alexander Kulik, the Newport
Beach businessman jailed on
narcotics and murder conspiracy
charges, was freed from Orange
County Jail Thursday night alter
posting a bond for $750,000.
Jail officials said the bond,
guaranteed by three bond com-
panies, was the largest ever post·
ed to free one of their orisoners.
Kulik. 28, dressed in denim
trousers and a sports jacket
greeted his attorney. Philip
DeMassa of San Diego, in the
ja1l 's lobby as he was released
At DeMassa's insistence, Kulik
declined to make any comments
about the case.
, Kulik is one of eight peop)e
I named as suspects in the shoot-
ing death of Stephen John Bovan.
36, who died Oct. 22 after being
shot nine times outside a
! Newport Beach night spot.
Remairung m custody are An-
thony Marone Jr .• 23, and
Raymond Steven Reaco, 28, of
10121 Merrimac Drive, Hunt·
ington Beach and Jerry PNr
Fiori. 41. of 19822 Brookhurst St.,
Huntington Beach.
They are being held in lieu of
SS00,000 bail. That bail was set
Thursday afternoon by Judge
Selim Franklin or the Harbor
!See BOND, Page AZJ
Laguna Bus
· Users, 65,
To Ride Free
Sixty-five-year-old Laguna
Beach bus users can ride free
beginning Monday, thanks to
Orange County federal revenue
sharing runds duf up by Fifth District Superv sor Thomas
Riley this week.
Riley told Laguna Beach City
Council membena Wednesday
s.5,000 in federal funds are being
set aside for elderly commuters
on Laguna's transit system.
· Riders 6S years and older on
Orange County Transit District
buses presently can ride free, but
Laguna which operates its mm
transit system, has been charg·
ing them.
Assistant Manager Terry
Brandt said he estimates 33,000
free rides wlll result frorn tho
l~ding, which is tabbed for a
one-year period.
Laguna Beach is' the only
Orange County city with its own
transit system.
Rem tngton opened the oor for a·
probe into the Rose contract tf\is
week when he said that in 1973
and 1974 he was paid unspecified
amounts of money by Rose that
he. in turn, pass•d on to
Diedrich.
Remington said he had not
performed any legal stt"v1ce1 tor
t he money and th-t tt was
passed on to Diedrich "af\er de-
ducting taxes and othe!' costs.··
In affidavits filed with the
County Clerk Thur8day Rem·
mington said: • •
"I had several conversations
with Ralph D~h CODfe~
my rece!vlng cettai JP~ie.s
from ... I:;tRdy R•se and As,
sociates and lhe disbursements
of same by me.
"I neither received !\or askecl
payment for lee.I ser~cet frocn
Ralph D1eClrich and w•s ~t
hired or asked to give legal ad-
vice. I did not consider myself
WASHINGTON (AP> -
Former CIA: Director Richard
Helms was tined $2,000 and liven a suspended two.year prison sen-
-tence today for fallure to tell a
Senate committee all he knew
about the CIA 's covert acUon in
Chlle.
o.ttr ............. .,O#YA-
MUROER SUSPECT GREETS ATTORNEY. H£AOS FOR TALK
Phlllp DeMassa (left) Fre~• Client Alex Kulik Thursday
ln passing sentence, U.S. Dis·
trlct Judge Barrington D. Parker
accepted a White House-
approved deal for lerueney. 8ut
Parker tramed that lt would be
the last time he would Clo so for
Irvine Co.
Pendleton Marines
' Aid Stricken Gilfl ...
• By RAYMOND l';STltADA .JR.
OI a. 0.11f "'* Sltlf
a ~ilblecohfllctortntemL
But when the ballot knotted al 2
_to 2, COunty Counsel AdrlJ.n
JSuyper told the tben·fresbtilkri
supervisor bJs vote would not
constitute a COnflict.
Rose, a !onner Fullerton plan-
!ling conim.isai«>.het, w.-s indicted
tiy the grand jucy in 1971 on
bribery·r\?l•ted cbarces.
The architect was later ac-
quitted by a trial jury of the
charges aftet the lndit;_tmeiit was
any public officlal who violates
the law.
"You nqw at.and before this ·eourt in disgrace and $bam1. ·•
the judge told Helms, '4. Jr
public offJ.clals ignore the laws,
the future of our countcy is in
jeopardy.
"From this day forward. let
there be no dOUbt that no one 1ri
aovemment or in a position or
responsibility is above the law."
Helms pleaded nolo contendere
-JlO contest -Monday to two
counts ot falling to answer tbe '"'
''material queations .. of a Striate
committee lAqulrinl abOut CIA
activities in attemptlng to pre-
vent the 1970 electlon of Salvador
Allende as presldent of Ch.lie.
Parker said that t!ae court
ruled Helms gwlly as cbar1ect.
The chargu are misde·
meanors, each pupishable by a
minimum of one monUi in jail
and a $100 fine to th• ma)Cimum
one year in jail and tbe $1,000 fine
(~HELMS, Page AU
QUESTION NO. 7 asks; Since
you've beeu married have you had eit·
tra-marllal sex? A quick no answer
doesn't get you orr the hook.
Ir the answer is no, the questionnaire
directs you to proceed directly to ques·
Lion 13. There you are asked to dve reasons
why you've never participated in this ac·.
tivity. The questionnaire leaves three
lines and a partial one to put down all
your reasons.
QUE9'110N NO. 8 wants you to give the number of dif·
ferent women with whom you've had more than a passing
interest. Question No. SA a~ks the average duration of each af·
£air. The survey makes lt easy for you on question 10. It asks
why you h•d an cxtra·marital affair and offers multiple
choice ansfll'S.
SOME OF THE ready made answe~s include·
l was mad at my wife and this is !1ow I got even
Sex with my wife is borina.
I wanted a little adventure and excitement in my lire
Two or more is belter than one.
Mrs. Newman. a member of the Huntington Beach
Planninc Commission, said she 1s trying to get 500
responsec; In Huntington Beach. She hasn't received one yet
She said she look a batch to the police department but
officers wouldn't touch the questionnaires with a 10-fool
pole
MRS. NEWMAN said she also has sprung the survey on
the Rotary Club, the accounting department at Cal State
Long Beach and various physician!. But no luck
She said she is circulating the surveys to help a former
professor at Cal State Northridge who is planning to write a
book on the sub1ert.
"It looks like it may be one or the briefest 1>ooks in his·
lory, ··she observed.
SPCA Kennels
'
Laguna Slwpping
Eor Appraisals
• Laguna Beach is s hopping
around for an appraisal on the
Laguna Canyon SPCA ltenMl site
in the ..,.,.. Of PlU'Ch•~I the
two-aert !aeillty for tlt,r use.
Mayor Jan Brand, Vice Mayor
Sally Bellerue and Doug
Schmitz. planning director met
laet week with Los Angeles SPCA
officials to see if that agency
would be interested in selling the
kennel complex.
Wednesday night, the two
council members reported the
SPCA ls interested and has
~gun its own preliminary ap-
praisal or the value of the land
and facilities.
Preliminary estimates by city
officials indic;lte the land is
worth about $170.000. And a pre· li~nary appraisal by SPCA of·
als show a value of $64,000 for
e buildings, parking lots,
rtdscaping and fencing.
Councilmen this week
ttim:iied the plannmg stare to e~ btds for cost or preparing an
~ f~el Open
•1 In San Juan
• San Juan Capistrano city of·
ficials are seeking applications
lor a position on the mission
-clty'1 Architectural Board of
;Review.
: The boa.rd makes recommen·
:.dations an elevations and concep-
:tual l~apio1 plans for de.
-velopment ptoJects In the clty.
e group, meets the flrst and d Tuesday of each month at 1
:).m. in clt1(J(ftces
.; i'or more information, call the
~~ muac ~ oUlce.aU93·1171 . .
accurate appraisal. The staff
also will be looking into annexlng
the keMel site. located just out·
slde Ute city limits.
The council has been lookJnt at
the SPCA site and two others in
1ta search for a permanent city
ken~el. ~her possible sites eyed
earher this year by the city in·
clutied a gravel parkin8' lot site
owned by the Irvine Company
about a quarter nTile north of the
Art Festival grounds on Laguna
Canyon Road.
The panel-was also looking into
constructing a facility at the
city's old dump site on the
canyon road.
St-. Loui.s'
Arch Buzzed
ST. LOUIS (AP) -An
unidentified pilot has
become the sixth to buu
under the 630-foot St. Louis
Gateway Arch in a small
plane.
Using street lights for an
approach pattern. the pilot
flew bis plane under the
legs of the arch Wednesday
night, police said.
Federal Aviation Ad·
ministration orticlab said t11er wW invest11ate ttie in·
c1dent, but bOne ot tbe ftve
pilots known to have pre·
viously flown under the '
arch has ever bee~
located.
Laguna Theft R
Burglars /Hit Six
Homes, Businesses
Burelars broke into six homes·
and businesses in Laguna Beach
Ulis week. making orr with a
vnriety of j~welry, tools and
stereo equipment.
Thieves took more than $2,000
In tools from the home of Boyd
Jefferies. 100 R~kledge Road,
sometime Wednesday morning,
police said.
1 n a second residential
burglary, thieves took $3,,20 in
assorted gold necklaces, rings
and other jewelry at a home at
749 North Coast Highway. A third
burglary netted a water bed,
kitchen appliances and jewelry
belonging to two occupants at
1043 North Coast Highway.
Operators of the Whlte House
restaurant, 340 South Coast
Highway, said someone walked
out with a $.150 stereo emplifier
during business hours Wednes·
day.
Orficers resPonded to a call
from the manager of the Radio
Shack, 664 North Coast Highway
Thursday morning where they
fo\tnd the front door or the store
smashed open and a sledge ham·
mer leaning against a desk in·
side.
Police said they do not believe
anything was taken in the early
morning brellk·ln. .
Fro. Page AJ
DIEDRICH~.
Remington Uid he loaned
Diedrich $25,000 or a $75,000 fee
paid him by the Grant Corp.,
parent , fOmpany ot Anaheim
ill• lnc.
Diedrich as denied receiving
any money tn any form on any
matter related to the Anaheim
Hills aericulture preserve issue.
Conflict of interest disclosure
statements filed by the county
supervisor every year slnce then
do not show any loans owed to
Remington.
However, the attoTney, who
was Diedrich's business lawyer
from 1966 Wltil a f e\Ji months ago,
insisted the loan to Dledrtcb was
made through a special account.
He also said a $25,000 loan was
made "at Ralph's behest" from
the Grant Corporation's $75,000
paymeitl
Affidavits nted with the court
clerk Thursday Indicate the in-
vestigation is related to an aJ.
Jeged b'rtbery conspiracy.
Re_irrington was ordered to
ans•er all quesUons related to
the Grant Corporation and Rost
before he tntJfhid before the
Grand Jury Wednesday.
Later in the day. he pleaded
euilty to a single mls<lemeanor
charse brought against him and
fo}lr other persons by the Grand
Jury in a July 1. Indictment
charging them with p•rticipatirtg
in an illegal conspiracy related \o
felony mtatlons of at.ate cam·
palgn resutations.
Named m the ind.lctrtrent with
Remington were l>iedrlcb.
Supervlsor Phillp Anthony,.
An•hetm City Cotinetlatan
Wilham Kott ~ Qtle.tU'ne patcl
pollce fntorrncr Gene COnrad.
And, Pollce lald, nothing was
taken from a home at Sll Center
St. W ednesc:Wr. where bur1lan1
had pried. a lOt&.vered "l.Ddow
panel from Its aluminum frame.
The broken window had a
burglar alarm decal on It.
F.._PageAJ
BOND •.. " . Judicial District Court.
Judge Franklln also fteed
Debra ~ AddlSOll. 24. of the
Brookburst St. address who had
been cbaraed with murder coo·
spiracy atooa with the four men.
Detective Sam Amburaey of
the Ne'QC>rl Beach pollce said
the cbar&ea .a1a1nst Miss Ad·
dilon were dropped because
there was lmufOclent evldence-
to support the alleptioo that abe
had a role in the lone-ranee coo·
spiracy leacuDa to Bovan 'a death.
Remainiruf at JarH t.nft1tv 1tnri
sought on murder conspiracy
wanants are Kulik's wife, Elsie
Caban Kullt, and hls business
partnen, Joseph Shelton Davi&,
Joseph Gabriel Fedorowsk1 and
Roy Christopher Richard.
The four men operated an in·
vestment firm known u Pr~sadam Distributors, Inc ..
which employed Marone, Fiori
and Resco.
Police allege the dead man and
two accomplices, Robert Shea
and· Stao~ ~er lddnlPJ*l
KuRk in August and held him for
$100,000 ransom.
They further contend that the
Prasadam-partnen offered a re.
ward for fhe deaths of tht three
alle1ed lcJ~ppen. .
Police ~ 1illl trying to locate
Ketff er and Sbea. They say they
want them u witnesses in the
murde! case. (.
Kulik, Marone. Flori and
Resco are all slated to return to
Judge Franklin's courtroom on
Tuesday to complete the arral&n·
ment process tbal has been con·
tinued tbrouah three eourt ap-
pearances.
-Only Kullk, represented by
DeMaua. has been allowed to
enter a plea of innocent In, the
case.
The other three men are 1tJll
without attorneys and court of·
ricials said today private at·
torotY• wlll be appointed to
represent them because the
Public Defender's office bu
declared itself ine~lble.
At Tuesday•a court ap-
pearance, the three men are ex·
pected to enter their pleas and
have their attorneys appeal for
lower bail
I~ Sha, 45. la also seekln1
a fl'rlt term on the water board,
and cites management ex-
perloence With a utillt.y company
and several independe t bUSI·
nessea as qualifications for the
post.
Shea' has lived in Lacuna
Beach with bis family for the
past year and is West Coutsaies
represent.alive for a publi.shlng
~omp8Df.
..,.... P-se AJ ·
SOLVENT •••
Life tnSurJnce Company for a
long.term $100 mw.ton loan.
"Obviously, its principal
purpose Tt'U to help pay off the
short-term bank f111ancin1. ••
Krokner noted the Prudential
loan was neeotiated in just three
months. • •
''I believe it ls the second or
third largest private loan of Its
kind ever recorded in this coun·
try.
•'And certainly none of this sl~
and complexit.y bas been con·
sum mated more swiftly... •
The Prudential lo~" ho 1aid.
made lt clear that tne ~e Company is.an outatandJn1 Jon1·
term inv~ent. ~
''So tbeTd Deed bi ho alatressid m~rcbandl.Se salebefe. ''!Cremer
declared.
The new. companJ pretrdeet
ala• save • tip of tbe bit to previous management\a d
ownenblp of the r~cb.
''We knew that the debt we in·
curred would be blchly
manageable, given the com·
pany'1 well·concelved master
plan, its existing income prop·
erties. and various taxation and
casb flow cCOditions," he noted.
F ..... r-..AJ
HELMS •••
that Parker Imposed.
The j~e said he was sus~iid·
inc the Jail ~rt.Miri aftd pl11eiiig
Helms on one yea' of un·
supervised probation. The
former CIA head must, however,
pay the S2,000.
• Both Hetma• .a\tom.y. Edward
Bennett Williams, and govern·
ment attorney Benjamin R.
Civiletti areued fo~leniency~
''Imposition of incarcer Uon
without suspension is inap·
proprlate, not Justified. and will
not do justice under these
circumstances,.. said Clvlletti,
assistant attorney general in
charge of the cnminal dMsion.
Helms, liven an opportunity to
speak before sentencina. told
Parker he bad n~ to add to
Williams· statement.
The defense lawyer pleaded
that Helms was causht between
an oath Of everl1$lin8 isUenee he
had taken wtth the CIA and the
oath that he took when he was
questioned Feb, 17, 1973, aDd
March 6, 1973, before the 5enatft
Foreisn Relations Committee. William said Helms, '!by his
lights and by his conscience was
guided by one pqnclple ... what
ls in the best intetesta of the Unit·
ed States.··
At that point, Parker interject·
ed that high aove111ment ofncials .
in the Watergate scandal had
made theumtpleas.
WUllaipa •&reed. tiut said.
"There w~ no self.Ira erest m
tbis cue, no sell·catn. no seJf-emolument... >
He said Helms, wbo had beel ,
in 1overnment service for u
years -nearly .seven of them as
director ol the ClA-.. ..,Ill bear
the scar or a conviction for the
rest of his days."
Williams said that. Helms· only
consolation Will be that be eot the
"scar ln the beSl lnteresli of his
country."
Aspero··Homeowners
File Siit ·Lawsuit
Three property owners who
claim the city reneged on a
pledge to improve Calle Aspero
sued the ctty of San Juan
Capistrano TbUnday ln Orange
County Superior COurt.
Plaintiffs Raymond G. Leach,
Eraeat Chapman and Robert
Lyons state in tbelr action that
they granted easements on their
properties to the city when im·
provements of Calle Aspero were
promised by the City Council on
July 21, 1978.
Those improvements were
never carried out, the lawsuit
notes. A.od tt ane1es that the Clt~
Council OCt. 27 decided to ~
the fundl earmarked for Calle
Aspero to another project.
The lawsuit ask& the court to
declare the easement act.iot? .null
and void aDd to return the prop-
erties involved to their former
stat.us.
By GARY GRANVILLE
CM .. OM, ...... S ....
Grand Jury invesli&alors are
probing financial records today
in an attempt lo determine if
Orange County Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich "received in any
amount or in any form" $287,000
paid to architect Leroy Rose m
1973 and 197• for the design of a
new county administration build·
ini
Fuller ton attorney Michael
Suspect
Released
On Bond
~ .ByJOANNEREYNOLDS • •.• 9f the Dally J'ii.t SUll
Alexander Kulik, the Newport
Beach businessman jailed on
narcotics and murder conspiracy
charges, was freed from Orange
County Jail Thursday night after
posting a bond for $750,000.
Jail officials said the bond,
guaranteed by three bond com
panles, was the largest ever post·
ed to rree one or their orisoners Kulik, 28, dressed in denim
trousers and a sports jacket
greeted his attorney. Philip
DeMassa of San Diego, in the
i.ail 's lobby as he was released.
Al DeMassa's insistence. Kuhk
declined to make any comments
about the case.
, Kulik is one of eight people
named as s uspects in the shoot-
ing death of Stephen John Bovan,
36, who died Oct. 22 after being
sbot nine times outside a Newport Beach night spot.
Remaining m custody are An·
tltony Marone Jr., 23, and
Rnmond Steven Reaco, 28, of
10121 Merrimac Drive, Hunt·
iogton Beach and Jerry Peter
--Fiori , 41, of 19822 Brookhurst St .•
I Huntington Beach. .
They are being held in lieu of
1 $500,000 bail. That bail was set
Thursday afternoon by Judge
Selim Franklin or the Harbor
Judicial District Court
Judge Franklin also freed
~ebra Ann Addison. 24. of the
Brookhurst St. address who had
been charged with murder con·
spiracy along with the four men
:Oetective Sam Amburgey of
tbe Newport Beach police said
the charges against Miss Ad·
dtson were 4ropped because
there wd insufficient evidence
to support the allegation that she
bad a role in the long-range con·
spiracy leading to 8ovan ·s death.
Remalninll at lane tooi.v """ s~ght on murder conspiracy
w~rrants are KuUk's wife, Elsie
CAban Kulik, and his business
partners, Joseph Shelton Davis,
Joseph Gabriel Fedorowski and
Roy Christopher Richard
Jfhe four men operated an in·
velltrhent firm known a s
Prasadam Distributors, Inc ..
which employed Marone, Fiori
and Resco.
Police allege the dead man and
two accomplices, Robert Shea
and Stanton Keiffer kidnapped
Kulik in August and held him for
$100,000 ransom.
'.-lo They further contend that the
rrasadarn partners offered a re·
ward for the deaths of the three
alleged kidnappers ..
Police are still trying to locate
<See BOND, Page At)
Reminaton opened the door for a·
probe into the Rose contract this
week when he said that in lt'13
and 1974 he was paid unspecified
amounts of money by Rose that
he, in turn , passed on to
Diedrich.
Remington said he had not
performed any leeal services for
the money and that it was·
passed on to Diedrich "after de-
ducting taxes and other costs."
In affidavits filed wltb the
DURHAM, .N.C. <AP> -An
elementary school principal
pressured to resign was charged •
with kidnapping after he held his
(aculty and the school superinlen·
dent atcunpoint four houn.
Clarence Blanton, principal of
Bethesda Elementary School n
Durhant. was to nderso
psychittric-examinaliOn today.
Blanton, wlio agri:Cd to gtve up
County Cleric Tburs'day. Jtem· mingtonsaid:
"I had several conversations
with Ralph Diedrich concemin
my receiving certain monies
from .•. LeRoy Rose aod As·
sociates tUld tho disbursements
of same t)y me.
"I neither received nor asked
payment for legal services from
Ralph Diedrich and was not
hired or asked to give Jeaal ad·
vice. I did not consider m~elf
legal counsel for him on lhtse
matters, .. Remington said in his
alfida\'l~
It wu t>ledrlch ln 1973 who
cut the deciding vote in a con·
troversial 3 to 2 Board of Su~rvtsors decision to award,
the $300,000 architectural con· \
tract to Rose, who in 1972 was his
campaJp nnance cliaJrman.
t>iednch'a decisive vote came
after be first excused himself
from the beard decision because
WASHI NGTON <AP 1 -
Former CIA Director Richard
Helms was lined $2,000 and 1iven
a suspended two-year prison sen·
tence today for failure to tell a
Senate committee all he knew
about the CIA 's covert action in
Chile.
In passin• sentence. U.S. Dis·
trict Judge Barrington D. Parker
accepted a While House·
approvetl deal for leniency. But
Parker warned that it would be
the last time be would do so for
60 Aliens
ot a possible conflict of Interest.
But when the ballot knotted au
to 2, County Counsel Adrian
Kuyper told the then-freshman
s,upervilsor blS l'Ote would not
constitute a conllrct.
Rose, a former FuUerton p1-n·
ning comrnlsSioncr. was Indicted
by the grand jury in 1975 on
bribery.related chat'&es.
The arcfiltect wu later ac·
quitted by a trial ;ury of the
charges alter the lndlctmentwu
' ...
EMBLYMAN RON CORDOVA. ~Lake Forest, received a plaque ~
cently fw eolng up in a balloort during
the Saddlebaclc Valley Days lastsprtnr HOou
" The sponsorin1 chamber of commerce hailed the
freshman legislator for respect he has received •'in the eyes
of the non-aseending p\,lbllc."
Cordova apparently thought that was a gas. Never at a
l0$S for words, he told the chamber that It was a "self.
propelled hot-air balloon ..
***
CORDILLERA ELEMENTARY School in Mission Vie·
JO is sponsoring a special "garage sate" from 11 a.m. to 5
p m Saturday in the school parking lot.
Proceeds from the sale are going to help the family of
one of their former classmates, Micki Riley. who died this
summer. A motorcycle accident placed her in the hospital
for 35 days. Jam Wilson. her former teacher. said proc~s
will go to Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Riley to help pay the hospital
bills.
• * *
NEARLY 100 LOCAL dagmtartes and residents
attended the groundbreakmg for Saddleback College's
second campus this week. . . . .. "Probably no one will remember what 1s said here.
said Larry Taylor, trustees president and one of several
speakers. "but they will particularly remember what we do
here."
He predicted the new campus will be the center _or
population in the northern part of the vast Saddleback das ·
trict within less than 10 years.
lmine Co. Called )
.solvent by Chief
BJ'l'OM MURPIDNB ...... .,,~ .... .,,.
New lti1rie Company Presi-
dent Peter C. Kremer promised
today there will be no "fire sale" or premium properties to pay o((
multi-million dollar loans taken
out by new ownership when it
boughl the ranch.
Kremer focused sharply on
Irvine Company solvency which
was made possible by what he
termed lbe new owners' "$100
million secret.··
That secret, now divulged, was
a long-term $100 million loan
from Ptudential Life Insurance
Company.'
The new company president of·
fered the financial assurances
during •breakfast speech before
more than 240 civic and business
leaders at the Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce Town
H'.a.11 Meeting at the Sheraton Irm at Newport. · ·
lt was a report On his first 100
days as president.
~remer acknowledged when
tile Taubman-Alleo-lrvtne com-
._ bi_e ~ht the Irvine Company
fCJI' $33'T million, "Then came the
r mors and the speculation.
•·The speculation was that in o~er to repay the short-term
bank loan, the company would
hlve to sell off huge chunks of its
raw ladd. And there would go the
CQ'l\cept of an int.act eeneral plan
DByoff s Reported
and orderly development."
Kremer suggested that 100
days ago when he took office, he
said there would be no wholesal·
• ing of raw land but speculataon
continued anyway.
"And why not? All that was
known then about our _plans or
our condition was my rhetoric ...
the company chief noted.
The new ownership's. SlOO
million secret was the key, he
declared.
"Even before the final acquas1
tion papers had been signed, we
were negotiating with Prudential
Lif~ lnsurance Company for a
long-tenn SlOO million loan.
"Obviously, its principal
purpose was to help pay off the
short-term bank financing."
Kremer noted the Prudential
loan was negotiated jp just three
months. ·
"I believe it is tbe second or
third largest private }OM Of Its
kind ever recorded in this coun·
try.
"And certainly bone of this size
and complexjty bas been con·
sum mated more swiftly."
The Prudential loan, be said,
made it clear that the Irvine
Company is an out5tanding long-
term investment.
•'So there fteed be no distressed
merchandise sale here,•• Kremer
declared.
The new company president
also gave a til) of the hat to the
previous management and
owne~hip ot the ranch.
"We tnew that the debt we in·
c1,1rred would be highly
mattaaelble,. frt\'e'h the com·
p~y·~ well·concelved master
pill\ }ta exJsttrig income prop-. · ei1lei and various taxation and
cash f1ciw conclitionS. ••he noted.
KIDNAP~ ..
and let the teachers go home.
Yeager saad he then called the
~he riff's department.
No students were in the school
al the tame because the day had
-been set aside for faculty work.
Blanton's wife signed papers
permitting Blanton's commit·
menl to a mental hospital. He
"as taken to Duke University
hospital for the night and was to
be transferred to Dorothea Dix
llosp1lal in Raleigh.
· · 11 c s been under a lot of
pressure lately." Mrs. Blanton
saul "I think his mind just
snapped"
Yeager said the trouble start'!<!
in September, when he noticed
that new proarams were not be·
in6: implemented at Blanton's
school and faculty morale prob·
lem!\ surfaced.
.. Then last week there was an
outbreak of head hce at the
school," Yeager said. "SOme
parents really chewed him out. It
wasn't anything he could have
helped. It was coming out of
som e homes and it took time to
get it under control, but there
was great pressure ...
Hospital Drug
Setup Rapped
LOS ANGELES CAP) -
P s ychiatric drugs are ad-
ministered ln state Mental
hospitals through a system that
results in mar\,Y dosaee errors
and provides inadequate chei:k·
ing for harmful side..eflects, a
legislative hearinl was told
Thursday.
In a study cooducted at
Metropolitan State Hospital ln
Norwalk, psychiatrie ~cbnicians
carrying out doctors' medication
orders made errot11 in 31 percent
of the cases, said Glenn L. Stfm-
m e I of the use· School of
Medicine.
The present method of .dis·
tributin& drugs bas 11ot t>een
checked at other hofpttall, but ·
the ume method is used
throuehout the state hospital
system.
E'r .. Pfage Af
HE™S· ••
that Parker imposed.
The j~gesaid be was suspend·
mg the jail portion and placing
Helms on one year of Un· 1 s upervised probation'. The
former CIA bead muat, howev~r.
pay the fl.000. 1
Both Helms' attomey, Edward
Bennett Willlami. and covem·
ment attorney Benjamin R .
Civiletti argued lor leniency.
"lrnposltlon or inearceratlon •
without suspension ls Inap-
propriate, not Justified, and will
not do justice under these
circums~H." nid CivlletU,
auistant attorne)'. eeneral ln
charge of the criminal divaslon.
Helms, given an opportunity to
speak before aentencln&, told.
Parker he had pothine to add to
Williams' statement.
The defense lawyer pleaded
that Helms was caught between
an oath of everlasting silence he
had taken with the CIA and the
oath that he took when he was
questioned ¥eb. 17. 1973, and
March 6, 1973, before the Senate
Foreien Relations Committee .. William said Helms, "by his
lights and by his conscience was
guided by one principle ... what
is in the best Interests or the Unit·
ed States."
Al that point. Parker Interject-
ed that h\gb government officials
in the Watergate scandal bad
made the 5811\e pleas.
Williams acreed, but said. "Ther~ w~ no aelf-tnierest ln
this h.se, no self-1atn, no self·
emolument." •
He said Helms, who had beef\
in gowrnment service tor: 3S
years -nearly seven of them as
director of the CIA -"will ~ar
the, scar of a convicllort f'or the
rest of hiS days." .
Judge Halts .
'Sani' Tal,es
NEW YORK CAP> -Tales of
demons and murderous urges
contained in transcripts re!,eased
of conversations between
psychla\dsU and David
Berkowitz, the attecect Son of
Sam killer, have been cut orf by a
judge.
Parts ol the transcripts were
published Thul'$day in The Daily
News after their release by
Booklyn Supreme Court Justice
John Star.key.
Later :l'hursdJY. Brooklyn·
Supreme Court Justice J<>aeph
Corllo said he would neither
aulborue further reteue of the
eonveruUons nor 1ra11t in·
terviews .
Starkey removed himselt from
the case Tuesday after cr1Uclsm ..ol his acU~.
f',....PageAJ
DIEDRICH ..
Remington said be loaned 1
Diedrich $25,000 of a $75,000 fee
paid him by the Grant COrp.,
parent company of Anaheim
Hills Inc.
Diedrich has denied receivin1
any money in any form on any
matter mated to the Anaheim
Hills agriculture preserve issue.
Conruct ot interest disclosure
statements filed by the county
supervisor every year since then
do not show any loans owed to
Remington.
However, the attorney, who
was Diedrich's business lawyer
from 1964> Wltil a few months ago,
insisted the loan to Diedrich was
made through a special account.
He also said a $25,000 loan was
made "at Ralph's behest" from
the Grant Corporation's $75,000
. payment.
Affidavits filed with the court
clerk Thursday indicate the ln·
vesttgation is related to '8n al·
leged bribery conspiracy.
ltemington wai; ordered t
answer all questions related to
the Grant Corporation and ROse
before he testified betore the
Grand Jury Wednesday.
Later in the day, he pleaded
guilty to .a single misdemeanor
charge brought against him and
four other persons by the Grand
Juey in a July 1, indictment
chatging them with participating
in an illegal conspiracy related to
felony violations of state cam-
paign regulations.
Named ln the indieti;nent with
Remington were, Diedrich •
Supervisor Philip Anthony.
Anaheim City Councilman
Wllliaftl Kott and one-time paid
police informer G~eConrad. .
Toro Home Rifled
A burctar wboSe methOd of en-
try is unknown took sterUng
silver valued at $862 from a
nurse's home in EI Toro. Oranee
CoUnty sheriff's offi~rw said the
theft WU reported.by Marilyn R.
Johnson, 24.522 Blackfoot Drin.
She said she was in another part
or the home at the time.
OAKLA'ND CAP> -The i-
judge in the Chowchilla
kidnapplna trjal has or-
dered court to coa•ene in a
prison warehouse ao he can
examine the moving van
once used to entomb 27 •ic-tims.
The van and two other
vehicles used In the abd,..c;·
tion of 26 schoOl (hildren
and their bus driver are
stored flt the Santa \t'
Rehabilitation Center.
Superior Court Judie·
Leo Deegan, wbo is preaid·
inc withoUt ••jury, s&ld
strict security would s4r-
rou n d the trip to the war~house today to pre·
v~nt any "untoward • · events.''
.
~ .. tiveKK~
Chief Seized a
.. CHULA VISTA <AP> .!a
Police say persistence paid -~fJ~
capturing Orville Wade Wa~
described as commandel' of the
Ku KluJC Klan here.
Watldias, 26, fatted to appearJ
last June at a bearing on ch~e&:f
that he and two ether Klansmen. ~
conspired to shooJ, at tbe home
a minority family.
Watkins ~ arrested Thun·
day at the home ol relatives atter
San Diego pollc!e deteetive Ron
Zer.ber s~ him walkinC to a
car with his Vlife. !ettier sald be
had made it a practice to drive by
the home and it paid ~ff.