HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-09 - Orange Coast Pilotr
-
Officer ·
Shoi by
Mistake
By TOM BAaLE1' o ... 0..., ...... ,...,
Liquid Proteir,i Viet
(Probed in Deaths
j
. WASIDNGTON CAP> -The food and Drug Admimst.ratoion
announced today 1t has "every
reason to believe that the liquid
protein diet was at least a con·
ttibutmg factor" in the deaths or
10 obese women who lost an
average of 90 pound• usine U>e
popular modified taat diet.
FDA Commissioner Donald
Kennedy said investigators at
· tbe U.S. Center for Disease Con· t~ol an Atlanta found that the
women, between 25 and 44 years
old, ··au died suddenly, wllhout
previous symptoms, or heart ir·
regularities either while on the
· cliet or shortly after going orr it."
Kennedy said further study of
the deaths was needed.
But he warned consumers not
to go on the diet without close
medical supervision, sayinJ. "It
1s clear that the low-calorie pro
tem diets, especially the liquid
protein diets, have great poten-
ta al for damage
··Promotional messages aimed
at the publtc downplay the
strenuous nature of the diet and
fail to say that it may be ex·
tremcly hazardous ror s9me peo.
pie."
Earlier. an FDA spokesman
said the agency was considering
a regulation requiring that every
bottle of liquid protein carry a
label warning that the substance
ran be dangerou.s and should not
be tried without medical
superfisloo.
Until now, liquid protein has
escaped federal regulation
because it is sold as a food, not a
drug, and is neither a food ad·
ditive, cosmetic nor medical de-
vice, the products that ge\ FDA's
closest scrutiny.
However, several thousand
gallons manufactured by a New
Jersey fl.nn have been recalled
m rttent weeks because of bac·
tenal conta.minalion, prompting
the FD A's attention.
Without realizing it, FDA of·
facials say now, careless clieters
may upset their normal
potassium levcl.s or other critical bo~ily functions, become severe-
ly dehydrated and, in extretne
casea, go Into possibly fatal
shock and coma.
The product prompting the
agencies' attention is ~ dark,
syrupy liquid on sale In drug and
heallh food stores across the
country. All 50 or so brands sold
are chemically similar, the FDA
says, consisting of low-quality
proteins at least partially broken
down or "digested" into amino
acids, the protein products used
by the body. •
They are heavily laced with
artificial flavoring to conceal the
otl\erwi.Se horrid taste of the un-
cured .cowhide and beef tendon
from whith they are derived.
"'It's gar .. age," argues Dr.
Sidney M. Wolfe, director of
f
Ralph Nader's Health Research
Group. "U they weren 'l putting it
in bottles andsellint i~ for two or
three times the price of eood pro-
tein sources, they'd be throwing
·it out."
SHOT ...
door.
Reports comJ)llecl by ehentftia
oHicers indicate •that b\)th
Laguna Beach off~ers ~ned
fire with handguns on an occu·
pant. Officers said tbpy believe
four shots were fired.
Officers said KAnne, who ap-
parently· was apptoacbiDg1 tile ..
· door when the visitors opened
fire, was carrying a rtlfe. It was
not fired. oUicers said.
Sheriff's officers, who lat.er re-
alized bis identity, say he ob-
viously was carrying the weapon
in self defense and was in bed
whep police arrived at the borne.
Kanne was rushed to SOuth
Coast Com1'lUl)ity Hospital
where he was treated for gunsllcit
wounds ir1 the ~ht tttould~ and
right lower back. He was listed in
s~tisfactory condition today but
could no( be reached for oorn·
inent OD t6e shooting.
Officers refused to identify.
Kanne's woman companion but
confirmed that the location of the
shooting is her home.
Officers said they have now
learned th.at. Richard has never
livec;J. at the Ocean.ViS.lllc~ilress
and that bis name ii unkt\ow.i;i to
occupants oft.be bome. · · ,
Richard is one of several SUS· •
pects who face murder con-
spiracy charges for their alleged
involvement in th~ kttling of
Bovan outside the El Ranctiito
restaurant in Newport Beach.
Eight men have no• been
named by Newport Beach police
as murder suspects tn an in-
vestigation which indicates that
Bov an 's murder stems from bis
apparent role in a ring involved
in I arge scale international
narcotics dealings.
State Foiled
In Will Case
LOS ANGELES CAP)
Caliinrnia's chief piece of
evidence for millions of dollars in
state inheritance taxes on the
Howard Hughes estate bas been
removed from the state's reach
-on the same day officials
planned to go to court to keep the
document at a Los Aneeles bank.
The document is tbe cettiltcate
of Hughes' 100 percent oMtership
of the Swnma Corp., a holding
company which owns 21ix Nevada
casinos and Hughes Airweat.
Slate Controller Kenneth Cory
said Tuesday that Summa, by its
action ill'a Delaware eourt Mon.
• day, &eeks to deprive California
of assets that may be n~eded ~
UUSCY: Uie Hue •til• in· f(lllftJlo:Q(f;,i~ll'tiJierite,.nce tax ;-01'1 .£ l n ln ~~1~~0a:l~ifp~ffii··J ~ i'~ • ~""~~~
The •feas checked were:, rk~ • California, Colorado,
1'.>lstrict of Columbia, Florida,' Geor;ia, Illinois, ~apsas.
L o u ts 1 a n a , M a r yl a-n d ,
Massachusetts, Michi1an, Mis-
souri, New letffr. New York Cl·
ty, North Car0lloa, Ohio, Penn·
sylvania, Texas, Wa&bineton,
and the Norfolk and northern
areas ofVirR}nia.
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
Food and Drug Administration
announced today it bas "every
reason to believe that the liquid
protein diet was at least a con-
tributing f~ctor" in the deaths oC
10 obese women who lost an
avera1e o! 90 pounds using the
popular modified fast diet.
FDA Commissioner Donald
Kennedy said investigators al
the U.S. Center for Disease Con-
trol in Atlanta found that the
women, between 2S and '4 yeara
old, "all died auddally, wltbout
previous symptoms, Of heart ir·
regularities -either wblle on the
diet or lbortly after 1oln1 off it ... KennedY satd fUi'thm" study Of
the deaths was aeeded.
But be wamf'd consumers not
to eo on the diet ~thout close
medical aupervilloG, HYina: "It
is clear that the low-calorie pro-
tein diets, apeclally tb4t liquid
protein diets, have areal poten-
una
To Food Fi,...
Check· Traced
To Diedrich?
By GABY GRANVILLE
Ol IM o.ty ...... IUff
A $25,000 check given by
Fullerton attorney Michael Rem·
ington to food company president
William Moore iD 1973 "cou.ld
possibly have been repayment of
a loan J owed Moore." Orange
Counly Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich said today.
Remington said last week that
$25,000 of a $75,000 legal fee be re·
Few Fans,
'Big Bets
I
At Fair Day
By MICHA.EL PASKEVICll
Ot ... OMty .. lletSc..tt
The operung day crowd ror
horse raclns at Los Alamitos was
lighter \ban expected but those
who showed up certainly weren't
, stingy wbeU it came to placing
bets.
Tuesday's attendance at the
Orange County Fall Fair's rac-
ing meet was 8,021 but the fans
wagered Sl ,04-4,183 on the falr's
11 races. Race results are car-
ried today on Page IU.
Fair officials bad hoped for an
average ol 10,000 fans and a daily
betting handle of abOut $1 mllllon
for each of the 12 days of t•c:inl
at Los Alamitos. , · · • •
The fact that a smaller crowd
tnanaeed to exceed the bettiftg
handle is making lair offlClals optlm~tic about eventaial Jlroftts.
Ken Full(, director of the CO&ta
Mesa-based'fairgrounds, f11ures
the fair can net about $250,000 In
11evenues if the l)TeSent be'U.lng
andle holds up.
Profits wtll tie Uffd to 1eeUM
<See 1'Alll,P&aeA%>
ceived from the Grant Corpora·
tion in 1973 that was related to an
issue then.pending before th4;
county .8Qard of Supervisors was
loaned to Diedrich.
He also said another $25,000
from the fee was loan~ "at
Ralph's behest" to a Diedrich
friend whose name be couldn't
recall.
Neither loan has been repaid,
according to Remington.
It was learned Monday that
Moore, pl"e$ident of Golden ~le
Foods, Ins: .• and a lone:Um•
J;>iedrtcli friend, wAat recipient of
~·~~.OOO~intm: ~Th aefll~ -p~.bient and the sut>sequent loana to
Dledriclt and Moore ar«tfi• cen.
terptece in a Grand iif\M'Y.· probe
and a 1971 t;bvd deela$0D to re-tetse tana from 1ih .. ,ncuttural
preserve agreement in the
Anaheim Hills.
Remlneton was hired to
represent the dt:Vetopment com-
pany. apparently on the recom-
mendation of Diedrich, as lt
sou1ht to free land for develop.
mentontheKnoll Ranch.
It .., as later that Diedrich led
a 3 to 2 board ol supervilors de-
cision to release the land in a COD·
troYe~lal decision.
Reminston, Diedrich'~ busi-
ness Utomey, last week pleaded
gull~ to a misdemeanor charce
bro\t&bt a,ainst him and a Grand
Jury indictment that named him
as a cmapirator in a 1976 con-
spiracy to violate state political
campaip recwaUons. -
Sfmultlneously,. othtt felony
ctiar1e1 broapt •lainsl Rem-
lni\00 Oil the lndlctment were
disaallaed by Superior Court
Ji14tePblllpScb ab.
In adaiUon to Ill probe lnto the
land use issue, Grand Jury in·
vestigators are attempting to
trM wtiat Rernin~sakl was
~.ooo patd him by Anaheitn
architect ~lloy Rose ln 1974 that
WH Uaftlblitted to Diedrich.
Acconline to Remin~on, he re-
ceived two checks from Rose
totaliDg $20,00!t putportc.dly to <see <IHEClr,"Page AJ>
Three incumbents were re-
turned to office in elections for the •
Costa Mesa Sanitary District·
Tuesday, aM two iiew directors-
-were cho&eft for the Co6ta Metia Coun\yWater~ct.
Incumbents Kerm. W. Rima, c. Tbatcbet Warras'aad Francis
W. Glockner: were re,elected to
1 lhe saniUry diStnct bOard.
Hank Panian and .Thomas E.
Nelson won seats cwi JJ;e 'water
board. Incumbents Nathan L.
Rea(le anCt ~Vin Ptnkley did not
seetc re-election.
Vot~r turnj)ut wu Utht. StatJstfc5 were still beini com-
pil'4'to.«tay by~Onqe.Couhty
Re'gbl('ar Of ,Vot.erei but only 3.3
percent Of tbb r~red ;\iOW'a
•
the wind·chill factor much lower.
dipping to zero at Seottsblutt,
Neb.
Acrleulture Secretary Robert
Bercland canceled Illa acheduled
appearuce at lbo Midwestern
Confercoce on Food and &oelal 'Pfti<~V"M~ ~ Mfib .......... -~~.taA~--f;tbitftltY;i:;dj~
acrou tbe Mlssoutt River from The Nebru a .state Patrol
Sioux City, Iowa. Four inches of closed j>ortions of Interstate 80 in
snow fell at Sioux City and hl&h tbe extreme eut and west parts
winds prevented city anowplows of the atate for a time this 112orn·
from clearingtheatreeta. in1. Interstate 29. which cuts
In Sioux City, Woodbury Coun· south along lbe Nebruka state
ty Sheriff's Lt. Phil Heimbeeker line from Sioux Clt;y. wu clOled
said his department and the city wben villbllity .feU to iero.
police department were prac-tically 4but down by lbe mow and Near .. Uncoln, a number of
winds.. tractol'traller np we.re &talled on several blgbw~a. but traffic
''Our units are completely im· kept moving.
mobilized bere in Woodbury Power outages were common
County." Heimbecker said. tbroughOut the •affected area. ·
He said main highways in and Public utility employees worked
out of Sioux City were closed by to restore power to a 36-square-
jack· knifed tractor-trailers. mile area after hi&h winds dur·
Pespite the weather. he said, ~ ~e night blew down pow•
there were only minor injuries lines. •
reported. • · Schoob were clos~ in Omaha
Authorities in Ottertail County, and O(her area, ln Nebr as
in western Minnesota, said two well u ln FerfUS Jralls.· I) it '
trucks loaded w~ turkeys. ,.-ere Laies and Moorhead. Mlnb.
:Bert· BallBded
He 'Showed SUcken ·How' . ..
CALHOUN. Ga. (AP)-ltmaynotrival-Tammy
Wynette's •'Stand by Your Man" in the charts, but the
"Ballad of Bert•• has been ref eased.
The record, produced by Sugar Valley Produc-
tions of Calhoun. traces former federal budget direc-
tor Bert Lance's rise from a small town banker
"try in' to aid his neighbors,·• to a stint in state gov-
ernment, when he "showedthosecityslickershow, "to
when he was director of the Office of Management and
Budget -apostheresigned under pressure.
Singer-songwriter Wright Johnson of Calhoun
said he decided the rest of the nation should be told
about the town's affection for Lance. The chorus of the song urges: "Come rally. come
rally, come rally 'round our friend Bert. Come rally,
com c rally, let those senators throw their dirt.''
F.,....P.,,eAJ
·FAIR ••• ·
• JQ~ns for th~ local falrgrotmds
, • .$16. 7 IJlillion expansion prograln. •
,. FµUc said the track was in goOd
•. shape. the weaUier exceUen and
\he fans were in a pleasant mood ...
on opening day.
Four horses starting from the
No. 1 posiUon won ball of the
eight thoroughbred races held
Tuesday. Among the winners
was seven-year-old Cherry'
River, which captured the $1S,&&s
Orange Coast Handicap.
There was no crowd estimate
for the fair as a whole because
there is no admission ehar~e.
Homecran exhibits. llveJtoclc
shows, live entertainment and
midway rides will be open daily
from lOa.m. tolOp.m.
Racing gets under way' dally at·
noon. Fulk said the field wlU go
daily as more horses are brought
in.
Calling for a Boat'!
An unidentified man is thigh deep in water on Hyland
Boulevard in New York•s Staten Island as he makes a
phone call. Rains continued to pound the North.east to·
day. (Story, Page A4.) ~ >U P.. ,
A ~6-year-old Taiwanese ple bad been stafiDg at a res-
woman was killed and her idence Alt 4157 Candleberry
huaband and son injured wb,en Ave .• SeatBeacb. ·
their au.to crashed .at the IJi· Mrs. Liu was pronounced dead
tersectlon of Beach • Boule.vard , at P aclfica Hospital at 6 p. m.
and Pacific Coast .Hl1bway in Her husband was pulled from
Huntington Beach Tuesday thewrecl(aeeoftheaqtobyHUht·
night, pol.lee reported. ington Beach p•ramedlcs an4
Fonner FBI Official
Slain by Hunter
A 17-year-old ·Cypress boy, state beach lifeguards. He ts re-
driver of the other auto ln the ported in serio\IS condition t.Oday
eraab. was'booked on cha~es of with multiple injuries at ~ag Memorial Hospital In Newport
""'T RACI. ~ f1Kl0ll95. a r-•r olds & up. vehicular manslaughter SUS· Beach.
c101m11111.PuneS1m piclon ot drunkep drlYinL P<>l\C9 ~e 'l'aiwanese co~te•a ~
Today's results:
SUGAR HILL, N.H. CAP> -
William C. Sullivan, former No. 3
man in the FBI, was shot to death
today by' a JtUhter wl'io apl>&Hnt!
ly mistook b,im for a deer, state
Fish and Game officials said.
Sullivan, 65, was shot while
hunting deer in the woods near
his home in Sugar Rill, a com-
munity in northern New
Hampshire's While Mountains,
officials se.id.
Authorities identified the other
hunter as Robert Daniels, in his
early 20s, from Lisbon, N.H.
They said the accident was under
investigation and no charges had
b(?en med.
New Hampshire's deer season
started last week.
$ulllvan retired as assistant to
the FBI director in charge of in·
vestigations in 1971 after a falling
out with Director J. Edgar ,, ~tDreSet
On. Insurance
Hoover. He served in the bureau
30 years, 10 of them as chief of
the intelligence division.
Sullivan testified before a
grand jury in July on behalf of
agent John J . Kearney, who had
been indicted on conspiracy
charges in connection with an
FBI investigation of anti·war
groups during the Vietnam war
Sullivan staunchly defended
Kearney against charges of il-
legal wiretapping and mail open-
mg. He said Kearney was acting
under orders from Hoover to use
whatever means necessary to
track violent extremists.
Sullivan's feud with Hoover
climaxed when be arrived at his
office one morning and found
that Hoover ordered the locks on
his door changed,
His name surfaced during the
Watergate scandal when lt was
discovered be was the subject o(
a conversation on the White
House tapes.
President Nixon and aides dis·
cussed whether Sullivan might
not prove a valuable source of in·
formation about 1>0l1Ucal sur-veillance ordered by earlier
presidents. John W. Dean 111,
then White Houae counsel, con-
tacted Sulllvan, but the informa-
tion the former FBI official pro-
vided fell far abort of wbat the
While House was seeking.
In 'recent years, Sullivan was
named a defendant in several
elvi\ suits brou,lht by D\Ctlvlduala
· who allUed th~y wete tile ob-jec1'J blW8gal PBl~lllance. ,Sull~yanwas intemeweo bytn-~fatotl worldnt on Ui.1 House rlddtclatY CommitUie"S#ap11ach-
WJ\t&iu)ry agalnStNabft.
Jo41\ilnNl .. ~IC>elomMI 3.60 MO Ut · Said. "'• • • ~ rd a1 ... RnM 1,.,....11 uo J.a Rte a Huelying u. 42, o
Nov• A•r istilltf1811 tit ll'Uled in the 4:.50~m. collls_ion Gran_. Terrace. Calli., was drlv·
. ., ... ~-eoi-ru.M«1tU11,CNnt11""T1......, was Y M-\l• • " ing bis sedan west on Coast Tlme-.4'11S ~· ~ '·' h~~ 'l.J
"•11Con. 11w. ~ fll9ht, Roc:1t111 oeci.. visiting t A •re• iril h litt Highway when tbe crash OC· N~=:t=-.9uclUc:ou111. husband, 1J Chun.a IJu. Tbe cou· curnid. 1• u IXACT•~•c. 1.2 .......... ___ __:~_......;_.:.;..... _____ _;.I~..:..;;;.:....,._.,......;.. ____ ;...;..;......,. ... ____ ...... ~ __ ......,...,..~~+ ...
~IOIUI. ,,, 1: f~(( "\
SECOND RACI. ue y,..ds. 2 you -For
m••dens PuneU,200.
:>l<yw lnoer IW•Cll
T ""' 8e6Qer !Hartl llllrdTry <-I
Ttt'nt-1f4'
uo 3.00 , JO
l.IO 2.40 2.40
"''"° Aen -s.KY $uel'(. ltm I( BM, Hoopo Girl, 1Ctp1eo, kdtn Ld.
No \<r•IU•U.
THIRD llACE. •fur~. P., maldtN lye.tr
olcn '"'m•no PIJrw ~ '°°· Grett"' n \ l'•I lMorkl
G~ll•nlly 1R.,.,.1,.11
~'1)•1M ..... ~, ..... IH•ITll)
Time-t 12 J $
•. eo J..o uo a 20 2 «>
l.10
Al• R.., -Lit. Reys. Sq., F-5'-4', M6.
Mollo, Foll-Fnt. l'or~ler, ltle of PotlPY, Ow~IOl\l\<l Tom
S.Cr•l<M<l -AQ lmpacl, Direct Quote
FOU RTM RACE .• furl~. For maiden hllon,
J & • v .. r Old• Cletmlng. Pun• ._.,IOO. Pap.e's Cub !Duran> 21,IO 00 UO
Celll'd IN~zl t.• UO
Par I •n !C..rdoa I 3.IO
Time-1.121 S
it.I'° R.., -'•vor.-1 ON, H-'f Oo Win, HUI' rlcan Valdln.t. TM Tr•in, Ame OouDlo
S.CratcheG-Derk N~I
u 1aod1>r-·1ow ••c..11",.-.'1:iue.
f'lf'TM at.CS. 1 fw~ 3 Yoor Olds & •
Ctalmlt>Q PIKMl3.IOO
Pn>mtwnetl..,
INOQ~ll ~ a.GO 2 40
Trovel1 .. Mlract• (Raml,.ll • ~ 2ACI
PattlCK!lo CS4oll ... SI 2 «I
T1rne-1.u
Also Ran -Candy's 0411\dV, Chol. Comet's Hal*
!><ratcr.d-MAlte--
F,....PflfleAI
SHOT •••
Officers refused to identify
Kanne's woman e9mpanioft but
confirmed that the location of the
sh00Un1 is her bome.
()fficers said they have now
learned that Richard has never
ll'Ve4 at the Ocean Vista address
and that ht.a naJDe 'ls unknown to
occupant& of the home.
HOW TO ADD AN
/'ANTIQUE GALLERY"
LOOK TO YOUR1HALL?
WITH HERITAGE'S SUPERB --,-.-~.-..-
BRITT ANY CHEST & MIRROR
'Al'w.,.......
NECKLINES PLUNGING TO NEW LOWS IN FASHION
Model• Show Off Calvin KJeJn 0Hlgna
Ban the Bra
Neckline3 Take Big PlUlllJe
By VICTORIA GRAHAM
NEW YORK CAP> Ladies, if you have not already done so,
discard your brassieres That ts, if you want to wear Calvin
Klein's spring collection with what is known as chic.
The fashions shown here had one dominant quality the sim·
pie. unadorned V·neck, often slic111g to the waist of models who
were prey to slight breezes and avidly clicking shutters
THE DEEP V·NECK WAS everywhere. In long, smooth
dresses with wide, deep triangle necks and in wraparQund
blouses oC silky charmeuse, 1006ely wrapped with nary a button.
However, for daytime and street wear, it seems possible to
wrap the blouse a little tighter and to reveal a litUe less.
Klein's style is gentle and sensual and be does not bury the
figure in Colds and layers and blouson tops. His style is son. and
uncomplicated without being shape.less
HIS JACKETS ARE NOT tailored but softly carved linen
with defined waists. pushed-up sleeves and curved V-necks. Blouses are loose but not voluminous, skirts are full and so are
pants.
He designs m white, cream, beige, gray, pale apricol, taupe,
caramel and in various ~ubUe combinations. Here and~ Is a
pale and delicate rosebud print.
His materials are linen, cotton, suede, crepe de chine and
charmcuse, ranging from slightly rumpled to bedroom silty.
For evening, it's sim pie, slinky cbarmeuse.
Lest· T.wo Days
Boy's Trick Works
Too Well in Woods
Southern Ute Indian Reserva-
tion, except for half a bag of
peanuts devoured on the ride to
the sheriff's office.
·'I looked a little bit for my
mom and dad. then I climbed up
a tree and slept there for the
night," $ald the blond-haired.
blue-eyed third-grader.
"He's hi good shape and ap-
pears none the worse for the ex-
perience," said Sheriff Leon
Mllllgan.
Matney's parents could not be
reached for commen.t1 ~ut bis
grandfather, Oliver matney ol
Castle Rock, said he and rus wife
bad been "climbing the walls
worrying about the little fellow."
Matney lives with his parents
in Marvel. not tar f~om DurangQ.
"I saw a ~olf. Tbat rrtchtened
me aJittle bit.," he al.id.
•
Ban
A 13·year-old girl who
lifeguards said couldn't swim,
drowned Tuesday_ afternoon in
Newport Beach after she lost her
st}'Tofoam ••Boocte Board" in the
surf off17th Street.
The dead glrl was identified as
Rei!oa Coleman of Santa Ana.
Lifeguard Capt. Bud Belshe
said the girl apparently came to
the beach with a half-dozen tom·
panions. but no ad4Jts.
He said the girl was llp.atint on
the board and lost it in the surf.
"She apparently struggled for a
moment or two.and then went un-
der," Belshe said.
The children apparently were
thrown into confusion over the in·
cident and an unidentified
woman ran to a pay phone at 16th
street to call for t}elp.
Belshe said the woman called
the Orange County Harbor
Patrol and they notified the
lifeguards who seQt a jeep down
the beach from their head-
quarters at~ Newport Pier
But Belshe said the men in the
Jeep could f\nd no one on the
beach to tell them what was
wrong. He said they made a cou-
ple of passes up and down the
beach before they located the
woman who had called t,he
Harbor Patt<>l.
The woman 's call was
forwarded to lifeguards at a few
minutes a.ft.er noon. Lifeguards
began an immediate search for
the girl and recovered ber body
just before t p, m .
Earth Slide
Rep~ired
In Anaheim·
Consttuetion crews have filled
in most of the dirt that cut away
Crom a hillside in Anaheim, caus-
ing tons 9' earth and two new
homes tO l>egin sliding down on
top or an uiiftDished roadway.
The slide started Monday
morning, possibly as a result of
nearby excavation of a former
reservoir site. The houses sit on
lop of the development in a can-
yon area, said Anaheim Fire
Department Chief Jim Riley.
The soil moved six feet in some
areas, Riley said.
Al least five persons from two
families were evacuated.
State geologists had been
called in to examine the shifting
soil, and the Southern California
Gas Company rerouted utility
lines away from the slide area.
Riley said.
The $300,000 homes, both on
Vista Del Sol, suffered no
damaee. Riley said.
"There was no appreciable
damage to those homes," be
said, adding that the slide was
apparently unconnected with an
earthquake Tuesday morning.
Motive Told.
SACR.AME.NTO <AP> -Gov.
Edmund BrQwn Jr. says he's
been relaUv'1y silent on foderal
irrigation water proposals to
keep them fropl becoming a
Brown vs. Carter Issue.
Howard JleOO scrubs away at one of the . Balboa Island ferries, temporarily tiigh
and dry for cleaning. Each ferry is cleaned every six months, with about
three hours required to remove the gunk
GaJJ Station
Filter Plan
Geu Heming
A controversial proposal that
theoretically could eliminate 33.7
tons of hydrocarbon emis~ions
daily in Orange and three other
counties will be heard Nov. 18 by
the South Coast Atr: Quality
Management Distnct board.
Board member' listened to
more than rive hours ot
testimo11¥ on the topic from staff
mem ben and about US oil com·
pan1 representatives recently
before conUriulng the hearing un·
til the Nov. 18 meeting.
The proposal would require the
installation of new pumpinc
equtpment withlh ei;ht monthS
at high.volume •as stations
m Orange, Los Angeles, San
Bernardino and Riverside cou.n·
ties, said AQMD Supervising
Engineer Edward t,arsson. He
said aoobt 325 Oranee County gas
stations would be atfccted.
The eq\lipment reportedly
would collect about 9S percent. ol
the hydrocarbons that escape u
autos are filled with ga.soline.
Tbe AQMD plan would covel\
service stations that pump mo're
than 50,000 gallons a montb.
Allb~b only 27 percent.of Ule
stations in the district would be
affected, they account for Sl ~r·
cent of the gasoline pumped.
T~e pro~osal would cost
service station owners between
Sl8.8 million al)d $42-1 miWon, or
$8,000 to si;ooo per station.
'D' .Day
.
For Daddy
PVTOOWNS DEPT. -The
daua hter in our house ts laking
one of those h.lt h school Eogllsh
courses wherein you are re·
quired to do a certain amount ol
wrjtin&. And ln so doln1, she'.
sl.&Uered a certain amount of dif· flo~lty •
';\"tie &urse ls called AmericaQ
Literature. It sounds more likt
Engliah II. But you will find i.ri
th etu"tidllum these ~ays that ~urse titlee can be dec•ptive.
£uphemism1 abound.
You might see • coune UJted
as "Mass Communications in the
Software Medium," and later
come to the intelligence that this
course is Journallsm/Newswrit·
1oi. At least up at the univenity
in Long Beach, where I do some
mOQnlight JOumalism tefchin&,
they list courses by numbers and
you can look up what they mean.
BUT I DIGRESS. Back to this
high !.chool American Literature
1:ou r~l' wht·rc our coed person 1s
hanng a mN1sure of struggle.
Sbc was asst&ned to write a topic
paragraph and then analyze it by
nrcaking 1t down into its sub-
topics and various parL'>.
She turned in this work
whereupon the teacher kicked it
back for a rewrite, suggesting
that 1t contained serious flaws.
This was cause for considera·
blc distress around the house.
But never fear Grandly, I volun·
tecred my expertise in the writ·
mg dodge I announced that we
could caJI upon my more than a
quarter of a century of craft and
cunning in the daily writing of
paragraphs and abruptly
transform defeat into victory.
WE SAT DOWN at the rewrite
desk and together worked out
this marvelous para&raph with
all its sub-topics and parts. When
she finished wriUne, I patted her
on the head and sent her off to
class.
"He's JWll aoing to ltve that
paragraph .. " 1 predicted with all
the confidence or a Cbrtsuan
hold mg four aces.
I am here lo report to you that
the paragraph came }\ome
graded last night We got ..i D.
More accur~lely, I got a D •
THAT'S D A.S in Dunce, Dum-
my, Dense. Dunderhead and De-
nounced
Numlx'<i. I took the paper in
my trembling hands. It had red
marks all over it It looked like
!>Omebody had been bleeding on
1t. I felt like bleeding on it. I
thought I was going to lapse into
a catatonic stupor
Enr since this bloodied paper
-;howed up, I've been given some
funny look!> around the house.
Family members pick up my
nev. spapcr from the corner by
lwo fingers, holding it out as if it
were emitting noxious odors.
ALAS, ALL THIS makes it
clear that you can fall from grace
into disgrace in one lltUe puny
paragraph.
tis ten. I've known students
who could draw a C·minua by
JWit finding the classroom and
sbowing up with a warm body.
t should get so lucky.
•
'Y"l'p'"'.~=~·.&J ......... -...
Jn Pitt.bur1b, they voted alnal clean air. Jn Oreson, it was
thumba down on tolar enercy. Ohio ref\&sed to ban Jecbold traps for
animals and Washlnstoo stat. fave porno the tieave·bo.
Referenda, tntttaUvea and consUtutlonal amendments came before
the people in communlUes acl"Oll tbe country Tuesday. Some of the re· sults may be sl&nlficant: others
may not.
When the oeoole of 8a•ta a.a Couty in northern Florida voi.d
to ban liquor. it did QOt chance
anythina. Tbe1 vote to atay ~l'Y ln
Santa ~ whenever they 1et
the chance.
FIVE OF EVERY seven voters
in Allelbea1 CoatJ, Pa., were in
favor of a measure that urged
elected officials to "chan1e
federal environm~tal laws In or·
der to preserve exlsUill JobS in
the steel lDdu.St.ry."
Because there are '°'000 o direotlY ~ t9 steel produc·
tion In t,be county, the vote was
IJlterpreted b~ awoe 11 a cbolce
between •;s•61ment a cleaner en ment. But oppo·
nepts s-1d esaats vq~ ~
stall 'enYironrnel\fil ilhprove·
meiatt ln the Pittsburgh area
without brin(ing any benel1ts to workers,
Voters in Ore1oa turned down
a measure that would have
authorized ~ million in state
bonds to develop enersy from
non·nuclear sources includln1
the sun, wind and QCean tides.
In Oblo a constituUonal amend·
ment to ban the use of Jeghold
traps was a 2·1 loser. Animal
humane societies had backed the
proposal, but there was heavy
lobbying against it by hunters
and trappers.
OHIO ALSO kEJECl'ED the
picas of the national Democratic
Party by doing away with its
election.day registration law.
The law was used for the first
time Tuesday and gave people
the chance to register and vote on
the same day, in the same plac.e
But it was repealed by about 3 to
2
Blizzard
Slams Into
Midwest
By Tbe A.llsoclated Press
An initiative that called smutty
books and movies public
nuisances was a public favorite
ln Waaltla1toa state. The
measure wUJ make it easier to
close olf elld..lni bookshops and
theaters. Opponents had called it
"pure censorship."
For the ruth time in two years,
Toledo voters had the chance to
support a tax increase to keep the
•chools open. For the fint time,
they approved it. Public schools
would have been closed !or the
rest or the year without the
proa>erty tax Increase, which will
add $76.86 to the tax bill of the
owner of a$40,000 home.
* *
"'' •. ,.....,,. Vldted Veg.. ..
Convicted felon Patricia
Hearst was reported to
have visited Las Vegas last
weekend as the guest of
Frank Sinatra. Sh• attended
a Sinatra 8hoW at Caesar's
Palace and was reported to
have been at rinaalde for
the Ken Norton.Jimmy
Young bout Saturday ni1ht.
'Miracle' Returns·
•
Byrne to Top Office
·ByTheAaodatedPraa
A t>olitical mtracle ln New Jeney -the Breadu Byne comeback
campaign highlighted off.year elections Tuesday in wb.lcb ln·
sur1ents captured clty halls ln New York, Cleveland and Minne~.
In the Virginia GOvernor's mansion, as well as the Detrolt mayor's
office, voters went with the status quo. · t
Governor Byrne came out
fighting on the income tax issue
that bad made him vulnerable,
and capped his year·loog come·
back with a landslide over
Republican challenger Raymond
Bateman.
THEY CALLED HIM "one·
term Byrne," but Tuesday night
he celebrated to the theme song
from ''Rooky," the movie about
a prizefighter who scrapped his
way to the top.
Lt. Gov. John Dalton made it
three terms in a row for the
Republicans in Virginia, suc·
ceeding Milli Godwba with his de·
clsive defeat of Democratic
populist Henry Howell.
President Carter bad made
personal apppearances during
the campaign for both Byrne and
Howell.
AND IN NEW York, Rep.
. -~-.,....... SOFTENS PUNCHES c.terAWH'91>
In bis a~ecb Tu~day. the
president aaid nothing uotind
aboul the House. NOJ" did be volce
any criUclsm orthebatky senate.
INSTEAD. RE ladled oUt 1•
of aym~y for a Coniress thal
"bas recognized the urcency of
thlt problem and bas come to
grips with some of the most com·
plex and difficult decisions a Jegisla~ve tiody bas ever been
aaked to make."
Indeed, the ·task Congress '
faces is IO creat that Carter
asked all Americans to help their
elected represeptaUves "resist
presaures from a few for special
favon at the expense of the rest
ofut .....
Alter hearing tbat, what
member. ot CoQirea would ac·
cuse c.rt.er ol going ov ~ •
Mads tO tbe peop1e?.
ID ~ tbe.speedi wn JPOre
8' apJ>eal lor partlJ~p Ulan a call to battle.
Driven by win$ gUsting to 70
miles an hour, the season's first
blizzard roared into the upper
Midwest today, dumping as
much aa nine inches of s now on
parts o( South Dakota. School
closures and power outages were
reported in widespread areas or
the state and in neiehbortna Mio·
nesota and Nebraska.
Edward Koch completed his rise
from underdog to mayor, knock·
i.ng off Mario Cuomo as well as
hapless Republican and
Conservative party candidates in
the finale. He will succeed
Abraham Beame who was ousted
in September's Democratic
primary.
Vote Order Appealed
Tbe National Weather Service
in North Dakota said the storm
there was the worst on record for
this early in the winter. A storm
on Nov. 10, 1940, brought colder
lempetatures but couldn•t com·
pete with today's winds and
snowfall, a forecaster said.
The service said the storm,
which moved northeastward
from the Rockies ovw Wyoming,
Colorado and across Nebraska
on Tuesday and durine the night,
could leave an additional four
inches or more by nisbUaU. The
weather service issued bUtiard
warnings for parts of North
Dakota, South Dakota, Min·
nesota, Iowa and Nebraska.
But skies were clearing ln the
soggy Northeast, aoa.ked by up to
seven inches of rainfall· earlier
this week.
• •
Koch, who had a meager six
percent r ecognition rating in
Gotham when be beean cam·
palgning for mayor, told a
swarm or supporters, "Tonight
we've arrivt.-d." Beame was at
his side.
Dennis Kuclnlch, the 3l·year·
old Democratic maverick from
Cleveland, becomes one of the
nation's youngest mayors follow·
ing bis narrow victory over
Edward Feighan, who is 30
Republican incumbent llalpb
Perk was ilefeated in last
month's primary.
AS THE REPUBLICANS were
taking the Vi rg i nia gov·
ernorsbip, the Democrats were
developing a young atar in
Cbarles Robb. The son·in·law of
the late President John.son was
· elected lieutenant governor on a
la.rce number of split ballots.
Tiro Fight Ruling to Di""'ke Secret &il/O.t
LANSING, Micb. C>J» -Two
University of Mlchtlan students
facing contempt citations for re·
fusing to diV\llee bow they voted
in a challenged municipal elec-
tion will appeal a court order that
they must talk, a defense lawyer says.
Jonathan Rose. a hWYer ln the
case, said he intend? to appeal to
the state Supreme Court after
Tuesday's state Court of Appeals
ruling that Improperly cast votes
be disclosed.
THE STUDENTS refused in
October to tell Judie James
Kelley in Washtenaw CoUDty
Circuit Court how tbey voted in
last year's mayoral elect.ion in
Ann Arbor. •
Kelley held Susan VenHattum,
a 2l·year-o1d pre·law tudent, in
contempt ol court and wa.med
graduate student l>lano LadnskJ ot a limllarcltatJon.
The women were monti wJt·
nesses at a hearing a lawa\llt
filed by Republican Lewis
Belcher, who lost the election to
Democratic incumbent Albert
Wbeelet" by one vote.
BELCHER IS cballen1tn1
Wh eler's ri«l'\t to hold office!; aJ·
leging voc.t fraud. He contends
that some voters in the election
lived outside the city Umltl.
Howard Simon, dfrector of the
American Civil Libert.lea Uialon
in Mlc~cu. aaid the appeals
court declsi0n sets a dangerous
precedenl and ls an "insult to the
principles of a free democracy."
The ACLU Joined the case in Oc·
tober at Miss Laiinski '• request.
Tbe contempt citation against
Miss VanHattum wae stayed
whUe the appellate court dedded
.
if Kelley could ask how the
ballots were cast to discover if
tllcy made a difference in the
election •s outcome.
THE APPEALS court said that
votes considered properly cast
should be kept secret, bUt niled
that the women's ballots and
those of 18 otben were improper.
ly cast because eity officials
failed to DOtlce their Mldtetses
were not within the city limits..
MlctiJgan Jaw bolds that tbe
constitutional rlabt of secrecy in
voting does not extend to ~rsoos
wbo are unqualified to Tote. the
court slid. ·
lit VanHattuna could not be
reached for comment. Min
Lazlnsld ba!I decllbed to com·
menl on the case.
~
Smaetlaing Neu,, lJnder tlae Sua Af'W~
Astronomer Charles Kowal, 35, of CalTecb, points toward
microscope device for comparing photographic plates made
through a 48-mch telescope. Kowal located a tiny "mini-planet"
between Saturn and Uranus, only 300 miles in diameter, that may
become our solar system's loth planet. The last planet discovered
in the solar system was Pluto in 1930.
First G.ay Elected
To SF Supervisors
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP> A professed
homosexual has been
elected to the Board of
Supervisors for the nrst
time m San Francisco.
where an estimated one
m seven or the city's
680.000 residents is gay
Harvey Milk, a 47 -
year-old businessman
and two time loser in
supervisorlal races.
secured 30.5 percent or
the vote m District 5,
winning his seat on the
11-member board by a
5-to·3 margin.
HIS EASY victory
over 17 candidates came
in the first San Francisco
election by district in 80
years. In the past,
supervisors were picked
in city-wide voting.
NearCa•pus
3 W 001en Victims
Of Sex Assaults
SAN JOSE (AP) Three women have been
sexually assaulted in the last three days near San
Jose State University, police said. The urban cam-
pus has been plagued by about 30 similar attacks
this year.
Police said tbe latest attack came Tuesday,
when a scream\ng woman student fought off a
"very, vecy dirty rnan with a F'u Manchu mustache
and a large, prottuding stomach." The aUempted
daylight attack took place on a downtown corner in
the woman's car.
Another student was abducted on the same cor-
ner Monday night by a man armed with a butcher
knife, police said. He forced his victim to a nearby
elementary school where he raped her.
SF Snl~ Starrertder•
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -A sniper walked out
of his apartment and into the custody of surprised
officers today after negotiating with police for four
hours, authorities said.
---------Police said Bob
( '-"""'"TE J JQnes, 47, surrendered to
J.1.-.. officers in the apartment
'---------hallway after a brief scuf-
fle. He was wearing a
pistol wtder bis belt and
two shotguns and a riOe were found in bis apart-
ment.
No one wu hit by shots fired from the Western
Addition dbtrict apartment, police said.
'7 MllJlen Plaa Teld
LOS ANGELES (AP> After two days of
tnaratboo talks with his top health aides and state
and county hospital officials, Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr. has announced a tentative t7 million plan to re-
orsanlze the county's mental health followup care
sntem.
The plan, which is to be reviewed by health care
officials and ta.ken up by the governor at a meeting
next Tuesday, will "knot &ofether a fra1mented
system t.hit divides state a .. d ((>Wlty carf," Brown
said in a telephone interview Tuesday even.lni.
Jff~S~'~e:
Six incumbents and
four other newcomers
also were winners in
light balloting Tuesday
as 51.2 percent of the
city's 339,306 registered
voters went to the polls
on a warm, sunny elec-
tion day
IN ADDITION to 115
supervisorial can·
didates, the ballot was
clogged with 22 rereren·
dum measures and
choices for city attorney
and city treasurer.
Milk's district contains
neighborhoods with
heavily gay populations
But he called his victory
a mandate for bla
po li tics -n o.t h is
homosexuality.
''THE PEOPLE who
voted for me were con
cerned about the is
sues .. I will be a
supervisor who hapeens
to be gay," he said in a
post-election interview
··My allegiance is to tny
district and to my city.••
While admittlne his
role as the city's first
homosexual supervisor
car ri e• ext ra
''responslbility," Milk
compared his position to
former President Ken
nedy, the nation's first
Rom an Catholic pres I·
dent.
Tut,, Tut,,
Tickets
For Tut
LOS ANGELES (AP>
Tryin& to avoid ttie
long lines and waits that
have occurred
elsewhere, the county
Museum of Art will sell
tickets for the King .
Tutankhamen exhibit.
lt will be the first tlm~
the museum has sold ad·
vaoce ti~eta. They ao on
sale Jan. 3 at 84 retail
ouU~ts tn Los Ansele4,
Ventura, Kem, Orance,
B..iyer1ide, San
BernHdlno and San
Diego cgugtles, museum
offici•ls have an·
nouncect.
COMMUTElt
COFFHCUP
•Safe ror sipping on the
freeway •Large easy to hold handle
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2-
In Ventura County, Assessor Lee
became the apparent victim o u:--~·::r~llJC4:111'Gtla16;iar::-.~~" _,..~~·,,....,_ ..
payers anser "!~!'~itlS~enta and propetty tax alb: ·
ALMOST llALf the voters favored his fflilOvil~ tlttffiil'8l taJb'U,'INfone·
call andl,773 8'ainst. Kina'• aucc•sor, the winner in a slate
oC five aecompanytn1 the recall pro-
po aa l, is cbltf Appralur .Jack
Waterman, who received 18,887 votes -·
48.2 percent -three times as many
votes as bi.I nearest competitor.
THE MAIN CHARGE levted •lain.It
King durinl the campaign was that be
unfairly &Slelsed tract. homes, wbi~h
were appraised e\tery year by computer
wbile non-tract bOmes were reapprai.led
less Crequ.nUy.
In San Die10, 68. 7 perceot or voters ap-
proved an initiative to create a param-:_d~e service, with reaiste~d
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.....
ubl 4Jfrul dilemma rttb vtrtu trno P~ rom legal ~ction aealnst the city, Costa Mesa
.. cllmen took a rational cow-se Monday night by pJac·
lilt( a controvenlal rezone inltiativ.e on the March 7 elec· fio ballot: ... ~
That the city ehould become fUrther involved in th
legal mess ~tween Arnet Development and the North
Costa Mesa Ho~wners Association was as unfortunate as it was inevitable.
1 • Amel already ha5. filed a $2.5 million lawsuit against
some association members. claiming the planned develop-11umt has been misrepresented by the initiative.
The homeowners feel the development is too dense and
that they should ha_ve final say over what is developed near
their property.
,.... Amel now mans a suit against the city for placing what
developers fee) is an invalid initiative on the ballot. The
city would be1'efit by a court ruling on this issue.
If the s'ltuation weren't confusing enough already,
councilmei,i have discuS!ed the possibility of placing a ·
second initiative on the ballot to compete with the
homeowr1ers• proposal.
The: city's initiative would reaffirm the council's
•lier approval of Arnel's developJ11ent. However, two
eonflicting initiatives could only cloud the situation.
· · Rather than jump to the offensive, the council should
mflintain a cautious, walt-and·see attitude, pendine
further court developments. •
Water Quality
The Newport-Irvine Waste-Management Planning
Agency, otherwise known as NIWA, is one of those ghost·
like governmental bodies which is little understood by the
publi~. but which Will ultimately wield power wltb signifi·
cant economic side effects.
The agency is one of many in Southern California
creat<.'Cl to meet the demands of the federal water quality
law of 1973. The law mandates that these agencies come up
with a list of sources of water pollution for the bodies they
are stud)ing in NIWA 's case it's the Upper Newport Bay
and then devise a plan to stop that pollution.
Obviously. the pollu\ion control methods selected by
NIWA are going to have to be paid for either by the proper
ty owners in the area under study or by the government
agencies tha.t have jurisdiction
Hecognizing the importance of the plans devised,
Congress included in the bill a mandate tha'l there be max-
imum public participation in the process of putting
together the pollution control plan.
NIWA dLrectors say they want to hear from the public.
Right now they are studying the sources or p<>llution, a
process which.must be complete a year from now.
Anyone wbo has an interest in the Upper Newport Bay
and the 100,000 acres which drain into it should speak up
The directors meet on the fourth Thursday of each month
at 5 p .m m the Newport Beach city hall annex conference
room.
· "Boost for Density
A group of singt~·family homeowners on Costa Mesa's
east side is feeling uncomfortable about a general plan
amendment approved Monday night by the city council.
The. decision dldn 't rezone the area from low to
medium.density, but simply changed the designation to
reflect -the patehwork of apartments and homes that
already exists in the area. The amendment will also allow
builders to construct condominiums.
The homeownerS, particularly those on Santo Tomas
Street and Club Mesa Place, wanted to retain a small strip
6f low-<lensity designation. This, they reasoned, would dis·
courage requests for h1gher density by forcing applicants
to bring such requests before the planning department and
the city council
This same process will hold true with tbe new medium.
density d~ignation. But property owner$ won't be seeking
a zoning var1ance now. They will simply be asking to bring
their property up to its allowed potential.
• The net result of the new designation can only mean a
faster. move toward increased density in an alreadj con-
gested area.
• Opinions expressed In the space above are those ot the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors t"ld
artists. Reader comment Is 1nwlted. Address The Dally P.)lot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92628. P.hone (714) 642·4321.
L\.S..Ul~.G..LO • h~~~~IUS1;.,,Qllr<IG"!~~·~~~~f~nnt:ltiett 'l'l>.e1~~~5ar:15b.aU~F'"'iB9li~'~iirr~~~lve:'badr--•t~ft1~ Koreans aren't the ohly foretin
gents who ha\'e been b8bd.lbg
out cash on Capitol Hill. A swarm ot foreign agents, ~th reglitet'ed
ii ~ttld, aw n
moting their nattonal lnt.e~tS in
Washington.
TbeJr mtrjor effort has been
aimed naturally enough at
Con,reu,
with 1ta tight
told on the
federal pu.ne.
An "f' unsetWng
number of'
consreasmen.
over the years, have
been re ·
sponslve to
overtures and
payments from lore1gn 11ents..
Tile Koreans are pikers, for ex·
ample, compared to the Chinese
Nationalist$. he tale' Chiang
Kai-sbek channeled money into
the right congressional pockets
through friendly American busi-
nessmen who passed out -cam
paign contributions and through
relatives who carried huge rolls of $100 bUll and peeled them off
to those wtiopreferred th'at ~of gross transaction~ • .. •
JN CONJ'RA.ST to the pell,)' tfl<l~
Korean payoffs, w1tnes~ told us 1 f"l lo-V\
of a tryst in a New England field
where Chiang's ~missaiies de-
livered $500,000 tit ca.sh to a late senator.
The Chinese Nationalists also
wanted far more out of the Utiit·
t!d States than_ the military ship·
mcnts the South Koreans have
sou¥hl. The hidden aims of the•
Nationalists were' revealed an a.
collection or secret cables, which
we obtained through a Chblese
code clerk two decades ago.
Chiang Kai·shek wanted no'
less than to embroil the Uni~
States in a third world wat so he
could ride back to p0wer ln the
rumble seat of an American \lic-
tory. He recognized it would be
difncult to sell tM American peo-
ple upon attacking the Chinese
mainland. Declared a Dec. •s,
1949. cable: "Oul'hope of a world
war so as to rehabilitate our
country is unpalatable to the
I American> peopl'e."
THE OUTBREAK of war in
Korea brought new hope lo the
Chinese. A cable dated July 14.
MailbGx
To the Editor :
A recent news article desc}"ib·
ing the plight of Rheingold
breweries and its plea for a
federal loan engend~rs an ob·
servation.
Any self-respecting <ind
knowledgeable be<!r connoisseur
who has visited Germany and
prosil the eal thing or who has
resisted the YanJ<.ee;Doodle,
macho-advertising-con and. in·
stead, let their taste-buds do the
drinking, has long ago aban-
<Soned any hope of savoring in the
USA a hometown-produced. UD·
• pasleuriied, additive-free. true-
flavor. malt·beveraif. -
Why? B«ametb9'tJSB ~auot
Alcohol, Tobacco & Firearms,
wbich rules on such matters. has.
b7 ts definltion or malt Hverages, authorized an almost endle list of cnemical adjuncts
addl lvet1) used by American
breweries to make American
"beer,' look and taste like beer.
;
r
;DEAR PAT: I. pjoupt I was ln· red tor a tiomeoW11er'1 policy with
Allstate Insurance co. from Febru~
lHT through Febr&4ary 1976. In
FebruarJ or Mardi on.978 I mqul.recl
aboutnDeWll ud was informed that When a car app:roacbel a
my policy bad bMn cancelled in Oe·. atarti operat1n& ud'll"8 Ute &h'
tober 1975. No reason wu li•en tor second red lilbt. HoYal explllned. the cancellation. I received no
aotlllcation, nor did m1 moncage Then, tM lllht. WrD& tJM. car JDO'fel earner. I ha.Te called tbia inaurance fonrardancltbeUpttamatond
£adln Le•n Nca•a
~nipany many tlm• and am alwan told~ tbey will "c~lt into it," but
no Information la forthcomm1. I've
also ~ letters wltb the tame re-
ault. ·l 2stUJ. don't k:DOw why the pollcy
wu cancelled, and I haven't been is-
sued any premium refund.
DEAR PAT: l've often w,>odered
when and why hurricanes started to
be called by women'• n~ea. The bie
fuss about thb year's "Ani~" be1nl compared to Anita Bryant prompta
me to ask. I tbtnk It would be more
lair to use men's names every ot.bel'
year.
L.J.A., Costa Men ~
Wester.-ID1•raaee Information ·N Akr s
Service el Santa Ana w11 contacted ew . 0ll tore res•ntilll yoat proMem, Alktate told · • tu repniseataUn, after a rntew of •
your rec••· that your pelky ••• Opens on ~ -:..-~ ..:..1 P.I., Balboa
It all besu casuall,J _.... 1'IUI a
•arrtcue called Marla la U. .'1"1
•o•eJ, '"'Storm••, bJ Geer•••ia. '8tewarl. The praeUee 1rew dmlq
World War D &Dd in IMS H bee ... of·
flcJal National Weatlter
·~cellect October 31, 1'14, for..-. ~
payaeat .t Qi& preml•m. A notice to . ...
Gd:s eCleet wu .atled &o JCMar ,...._t Tbe 20tll Atroa Store in Sout!Minl Calitarn1a WW
Hdrela ad to yoar mortfa1e liolder. open FridaJ in the £1.pQa Billi Mall wtth a apectal
U &Ida latGrmatloa doeSa"t acne wt~ exhibition and a sale of UM ortlbW NOl'1D&D 7••r reeord1, eon tad AYS for Rockwell palnUnc at John F. Keanedy.
doc•mematloL The 3)1000.square.foot Aol'e. wtdcb wu ,....
Saddleback Sets
Business Seminar
ExJJ(!llSion
Of Camp
Saddleback CoUeae 1a offec:i.q Pl'Olpectiv• small Areas OK' d business operators two special programs desiped
lo enhance their possibiUU~ of success.
The first is a pre-business seminar, cosponsored
by the college.and the Service Corps of Retirecl Ex·
ecutives <SCORE), Thia
will be orrered from 8:3Q and seminar BJatertals.
a.m. &o 4 P·D\. S.tlllfday Because ot U.led seat·
in room 313 ot the col~ Ing, r~.ur. 1bould
lege'a Science/Math be made in adva.nce by
building. callln1 the. community
TB E s Eco No services office at
seminar will be o(fered 831-7813.
at the same Ume and ,':.;i;c;~Elc:!t;:;::;J
The 62·acre caJnp·
around· at Featherly
Regional Paft ln
Anaheim is so crowded
most of the time that
coun~y park rangers
turned away 18,600
would·be campers last
year because campsites
were filled.
Orance County
super•lsora decided
Tuesday to expand the
·place on Saturct.y. Nov •.
19. This session, Start
)'our Own Business, wUl
f>e presented WiUilhe U·
sistance of tbe federal
Small Business Ad·
--.:>AA:J...~Y-. e~ lty IO mON n~ru. altea on 19 additio.nal DlnolldfeU · · acres.
ministration. 01 lfl.rrlGge · County oftlciala said it Lee F.ckert, program ,.1 ... om.11 probably will coat about
coordinator, 1aid the w~·1AMS.Fr_M. ... ~· $114,000 to convert what
nrst'HSSi"1 wru provtde ·1:-r1o~rrT~.:I~ .,, 11 a it-acre pteutc·
participants With an an ... "'·• 1uaR, £ml~Ju111 Rkt..~ abd sp&rta area to a
derstanding of thebllstepsb ~.'°'f":~=N._,= "~1:1111'.: campground. necessary t.o eata s a R1<111,• Adema; aoGtR, ,__ business. Personal aad t11C11'1111;SMITH,w.,_,_.Pw991l • They reported 4,700
financial fact.ors, loca· t't~!.i.'::,~~~~~:=-.. s.; daytlmepatk uaen were
lions leaaliUes taxes, &aRGutOH, E•IU!ltlh ,._, anci turned •way from
1·1cens'es and reo'ulaUn• ... RkNrcl ArthW'; TRIPP, bolerff "· Featherl1 because of • ..,...... Ind Ardtll M.; CAMPBELL. Llnci. .It.... 1 t and busiQess recording """ anc1 wavne w1111wn; GRIMES. overcrow...,,.. u year
will be discussed. ~~~~~nl~~~~~.,:~:,: 1as well. But tboebe dire ~-DURING THE second m10.11$HAM,JottnP • ..,J4NL.; tori now may ~ .. -session participant.a will CflAWl"oRo, ,._ .. v. en11 wame ed to the new Yorba
learn how to evaluate ~;; t!~:U.~~ ReelOUal Park a short buainess trends llbd o.: 0URHAG£,K-i..and11t11llp diJtanee away. . } Dalt. • make their own p ana GR1sw°'-D,\.Y1t1R.•RU111•.: ,.
· modeled from a IJ"OCerJ ltGN for abGat $200.000,
will open at 10 a.m.
Tb.ls at.ore will be Akron '1thirdl:D0raUe CouD·
ty and tbe only Gile ln the toUtberD area. Store cl·
tlciala apparenUy cbole the IOC:atioa because of the
growlna population in the south county.
"WE'VE ALWAYS WANTBD to llave a 1toN .in that area to serve the people wbo we tbtnk are
very valuable customers," said CllM 1tore tZ·
ecutive. UnW now, be explained, eustomen have
had to travel to the store in Orange. ,
The oil paintina, the only Roctwill lllustratlon
to a~ar three times on the cc:ner ot the S&turda)"
Eventnc Poat, wW be exhibited l'rldQ. SaturdaJ
and Sunday. !Us beinc offered for aale fOf' too.
The atcre allo will offer decorator tt.1111, lJi.
cludiDa many imports, counntt foOdl ad Wl:Del,
housewares. an and art auppllu and i-ome
I~ J>Urln& the Christmas ~ tblf
store will CUltain • llrse toJ and cblld:NG'a a1ft de· partmeat.
.JSUY llETITA.. Wll0.1Cll'IDll'11 maDMtcltlM
Akron Stein tn Santa Barbara, II tbe maaaa-ot the
new outlet.
The neweat Akron la said to look cUtterut tllU
other ltorel in the chain becataae .tt foatunl natural
wood f1xtuns and wider~~
"Our ttor. an more tb a ~ shelves . • . they've beeo desl.Pf!!I to bea1Mt:and-
find e~ence where people eiijo7 &hopp1'1
witboUt COllfuslon and wit.bout preaaun. 11lcl
Richard JI.tel,_ AkioD president.
work. . JOHNSON. c.w.t ~, .... ~
A uo fee wm be ~~i.~~~~~t=:~= ·vn%t·~ ..,811 -.-.=....:.L.....,. charged for each aessl.cn .1amttK•nt;OUH ,u.-1e.1. • ~ n 1 .LJJI~.,.
to cover the cost of lunch :::: !,,~ :i~~~~,,;
-~· _,~••....:-and IUtllenJ A:; MlbOL&:TOH, Pea& J'W._941:'.... • ti«!llHLn..,..rTATC,Clftctr __ .-.;...:,__..;.__ __ ~ SW 1.-"°"" Mldll9t; HARRIS,
THOMHOM a1111 ... JIM!ltll..
TINA THOMJl'5C)tl, ,_,'=:!.~ DltL4Nl!Y, R*tt l' .... :n..te
Mete, C.. P..-_.,lft • M,; S'MJOER, Oltlr"a La Mid ONfl
1tn ..... ._.. rnotlMr of 11\0f'tfla Thol'llet: .IOHtS. Olllletft E. afl4 BrllMlily. "-'-4MVk•wlN111 .... JI"* L; RODRIOUU. Ototil AM
'lllMnllAly ..._..... t, 1'71 el ttOI lftd lf~ 2'n98; LYHll,. "'-J, P.M.etlf!llthT11911HIAM9C...MHa lltd Oor_,,.. L..J MAMOti!T, G&W'
MWWl!tV 0.,.. wt1ll ....._ ~ IN..,11\ll 8iW Alu -..1 '1FllGHT, JecMI OI Tllo,_. .... IMrY fhl111 _. _.._..~;.
t.dMl111. lntw.n.nf,.;illMM~llC SCOlllLO, Af9IO Mlcl\Mt ond
\11,._ #-i.I Pllftl.. MIJtll TIAA!lt Cltll•!li Ha-I; ttall!NANl)J.Z. ~ c.a. -.-a~ lllrec..,.. Mlm ~ • 1 OAJtOA. ~
........ DlflllM~ ' Hlri.MAIC, t. W o..MI tl.t HtflC:U:Q, '*-9 'Vt_ .... ._..., 'Yr.I PAIDMOfl•,Mlrlll'I' ... ._., .. ., .,,, f'OU.DClt, .... :J. "'"'
Clolll• ,,,., NOttltA. CMrlJt J. and =~~ue:::~"~ Mlf ... " Mmrttr; ,,,,, "*" .... , '*"litldlftlll UnlM Mlfle1 WIHIUCJC.
Jiiii • C. lftd" t>tlt14 UI IJitltOH, .tfftt~--JOt.i\'8ol II*'°"' 11WfOM.8Nl°"":!fM.:
X ~ JQfned 1. wm A •
-ventlllDI aad h llo a C.., 'Newport
Beach, as aperaUona mu11 • Her ®Uea f.Mludo
oveneeina the dally buslD4111 opaatloM of the
agency •·~--o=~~----~--~------Grec Newland, Costa Mesa, }au been appointed
naaiatant manager for loaqa at ol Ammca'I
San Juan Capistrano branch.
. He joined the bank tn 198e and has soried in a
similar capacity at the bank's Weatcllff Plam !r!'~t~ i~ N .:.v.•t-.,:1 Bou\::i'1u";;3':~Vlll0elf J.V/6; • • RJcbard G. Cowan of Weatmloster, o~aUona
ofCicer, has been appointed branch operations
manager of Crocker Bank'• Coata Mesa maln of·
fice.
He joined a Crocker predecesaor, United States
National Bank, in 1964 as trainee at the Los Altos of-
fice and in 1972 was appointed operations officer of
the Buena Park office. • Dayna Kerley, Newport Beach, has been
named assistant cashier at BHk o1Newpot1. She is
former purchasing administrator and joined the
bank fiveyean; aeo as a teller.
* bary t;, barrison, Irvine, has been appointed
assistant manager !or loans at Buk ol Amertee•a
Westcutf Plaza branch in Newport Beach.
He joined the bank u a teller in 1971, was ap-
pointed a loan officer at the Monrovia branch the
following year, and lo 1974 assumed lending duties
at the Newport Beach office. He most recently
served as business development officer at the Irvine Industrial branch.
* Pete N. Aadrlcb has joined the Newport Beach
office of Grubb & Ellis. In his new position, he will
be involved in investment property sales.
Before Joining the firm, he was a senior finan·
ctal analyst with Whittaker Corp. ..
James S. McCulloch has joined Bank of
Newport as vice president Jn tbe l()an administra-
tion department.
He has worked with Union Banlc in Los Angeles
and Orange, the Santa Ana office ol California
Bank. and most recently managed tbe main office
or First National B.ink of Orange County. ..
Ralph (1ock, president ol Clock Coastru~Uoo
''o., Irvine, has been elected to the board of direc-
tors of the Southern California chapter of the As·
sociat<'d Builders and Contractors.
ABC 1s an associat!on of Merit Shop Contrac-
tors The local chapter has more than 440 members.
* Edward A. Krisher has joined the engineering
firm of Van Dell and Associates, Irvine. He is past
president of the Ci vii Engineers and Land
Surveyors Association of Riverside and San
Bernardino counties
Defore joining the firm, he was vice president
and project manager for CM Associates of San
Bernardino • Steven A. Studabaker, Corona del Mar, has
been appointed as loan officer at Bank ol America's
Chapman-Brookhurst branch in Garden Grove.
He had served for the past nine months as a
loan officer at the West Fullerton office and is a
former account executive with New. England
:\1anagement Corp.
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS •us11111ss
NAMa 5TATllMINT
lh• IOllOW1"8 --Ii dti119 ~ M,, ••
DYNA KLEEN SYUEMS, 7'iol
SP••• A•env.. Huntington 8••<11,
Olifomt•W...I
w1111 .... G. MCGiii, n42 F•lkl•nd
Core le, Hun11ft910tl lle..:h, C:.lllOfnl•
92~9
T hts bu°"""'' Ii <onclU< led by .,, In·
dlV!du•I
Wm.G.M<Glll
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS aUSI N£SS
NAME STATEMENT The tol low\ng 11WIQN -dOtrlQ llu&I·
..... H .
S,A.S. TRANSPORTATION
BROKERAGE COMPANY, 6Cl Ox·
Ion! Or., Hurillftllon llH<ll, CA ""'7
Si.11tey A. SowlNltl, .Cl ~
Do' .. Hu11UllQtC111 llHcil, CA 92..,
E119enll S. Sowll'lllll, "21 Olden!
Or., Hun1111Q1.,.~Kh.CA92M1
Tllll butWss II be! .. CCl1d1Kted by
enllldlvl...i. E_.,.• S. S.Wlnllll lhts st•tfnWM •u tiled with the
County Cieri! of 0.-..,oe O>ullty on Ot·
IOl>er 21, 1911.
Thll It.I-I WH llled with tllt
County Clerlt of Or~ Courrty on Ott.
'84147 24, 1977.
PublisllPcl 0r111oe C:O.sl o.lly Piiot. N41'4
No••mber 2,9, 16,23, 1911 41•11' PubllsMd Orafl9* COnt Oitlly Piiot
------------• Oct.26,Hov.2,9,l"t9n
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
ci'M
NOTICE'tOQ&OJ'tORI
OF IUUC TUHSl'•lt cs-, .. _,.,U.C.C.)
Notice Is lltAby 1•1t•n to IM
cre•tton of Onl•n• F. lellu
TrlHltftror, ""'-~...., .. Is
IS71 O•ley Ordt, City Of H~ le•cr., c.-dy of 0r..,.., 5t.te .,
C.I ttomle u.t • bulll U'anlfer Is ebowt
tt •• m•d• t• H•n'y 80111•• ~ollllnQllla. Tr ....... ,..__ C1US1--
SVC& AS: TllE eatraftlemenl
of mlllloos from tlie free en-
terprise system, eeonomie mis·
undent•ncHnf, •rathy of voters, the blg federa deficits, the
irowtb of sovernment
bureaucracy, the perils of infla-
tion.
It isn't quite that simple -but
almost. It involves a plan, the
National Dlvldeod Plan~ con·
ceived by Perry. beginning while
he was a college 1\udent,
published in boOk form IB 196',
and refined and developed since
then.
The NDP bas attracted the al·
tention and advocac of con-
gressmen,
corporation
executives,
liberals, con·
servatives,
academe·
cian• and,
rather recent·
ly, f! former
astronaut,
Cot. Alfred
Worden, who ~""'"" returned from space convineed
that America's economic health
was as big a challenge.
What attracted Worden and
oUters is the plan's systems 81>"
proacb. It doesn 't seek
piecemeal improvements but a
vast overhaul instead, with the
motivation arising from the en·
Cases Filed
In U.S. Court
The following have riled bankruptcy petitions ln
Santa Ana Federal Court:
OCT.4 -----------w1111 .... A-IO ~m•, 5CM2 -Robert E. o.•-Y .. 142tt·•
OU•ll Clrc .. , 11<.1\tlf191on BHCll, MS VIII~ ...,..,, Wntmln&1er, ,_ lljt.d
11stedlleCllllU.SoUl."4Md-l1of lllblllll• of 116,"30 Md MMtS ef
$Ill. U,610.
-... nry R. eoi-Jr.,Ul~#Mln -Frlftk GIJW1Deto.,1220 Hwnl·
SI .. Hv"tl~on &Mell. IMIS llSl•d lngton St., No ... H..,nt!QICWI llffctl,
ll•blllbHt00end•.-Sof'2,SV. ,, .. lill9d li.cllltles of 5',311 "'° •·
OCT.11 Mb0f$7SI
-Kellnllll D«nll F1911N Jr., S~I Se~• om..~ ee..:11, '*
llsaed llaDlllllel of s.u. "' .... •!lllU oUl,:JSJ.
OCT.U -c11.,1es J•y Merr111, 1sm
C°""Mro, WWtm..,.1w, Mn llsielt
lllllllltlHett5,.lAenoftMfS9'Slll.
-Rk,_., p, Cl ..... , 41 ... SL,
HM11lln111n 8Utll, .... lhl•tl
llllllllU.SolS' ..... ..-SetJetsof$1,1S.S.
OCT.D
-OONld LM ~. J006 0--
neyt,rook ~. c.i. ~llH llst.d
ll1blllllH of Sft..Sl6 -HMO ef S14,U. •
• •• t4 I 14•
f'!u I •,44!J1:
~ ~:1. •.1 ta t111t-. . .... ...... ~ ... · ~ 'i t ,,._.,...
-.... .. ;! 'l~:::ii;
.WI',_ All t0J ~+"' ~rt .itlO u. n•-,,_ ....... , ... us lftlt-...
AU-'j" .ts 1~+ h ~!~ra •. . s ,... ..... =-., 11 .. 1110 Ill'-· .. t .... , a• 1~-1"' In ... 2' 141.-"' A"*'w .IQ S J w.,... ~ AIMno .•1• 21 1'ot+ .,.
Allleftlll ... ' • u •. ~ef\4 IA S ~ -21't-~
-ccdW ·" s t llV.+ \'t Akm1Lb .»• 1" ... , + 1w r~' ;: ' 2, J".:.:.·w , .. ,. " 11 ..... A 1 .. t lit ~+ .,_ AllMGp .10 1 19 17't+-. Al~n .SO IS 352 ~•II• Al , , 111 ~ ... " .n 1 1 n,. ..... A1'41 Aile~ 3 12"-+ '11 Allcl~ I 10 1 llJ 22~• 1 A1111W. • ~ 2~ .... A11••Ch 1.10 • 2,509 23.. ~ A rAu .tab s 6 101't+ ~
Alllf\Prt .n .. f 11 1~ ..... ,.Ult uo • 117 .,.... • ~-
.. inl$ug , • ., d10 '" AIM• 11)10 31l 3~• I
All'\e• "I.Ji . , J IH>+ I AmHpf J .. 21 ., .. _ h
AMtAC UO t 41 32\.. ••••• =d '~: ~ ~t ... :··:: ·~--· .ICll> .S .SIO 27'. ... A ''pf 3.JO,. JI 62'-..... AAlrFUt .M I 1• 171, + "" A~AI• 3 12' 91, • •,
ArllAlr'llll •• " 3 -\~ Alllrpl 2.11 .. ,.. 21 .... + h .AUmcl~ l.CM I 106 '3' o ->w
.. =pf IJO.. I 2l'r.+ lo A ti I 1 '" «i'• + ~ A .SO 1 SO 121•-'-~WIC.11 2.10 6 ti J11-. +I .t.Gtnllf 1.1.s.. z 2l'1o .... ~l'lry •• 14 Zlo ... ACrecll 1.30 S 32 11 <.-It ACy.n 1.10 t ,.. 2l~ ••••• NnDIS11 S I'•• 1,
ADT ·"IO lOZ 1S + 111 .AOvlpf ~.. • " ..... .. Al.ll'w 2.12 t ii. :i.~ ... '•
I ~~.~r./:: ·~ ~ n~: ~ • AtnfnSy$ S 41 4"9-1.
1 M 111Sypf •• 1100 ISO,, .. , A<tllld 1 IOI.. 14 2l•a 1.
AGllCY 1.l2.. • II\• lo ~'"' .90 s ass ~ .... AGllllll I... 2l 211>.-1-, AWuftLI ,a 1 U 6 0 • 1, Am~ll I 1 141 211•+1, A~ U014 Sii '""'• h A~pf 2. I IZI"' •
' AM~P .56 IJ 7't 2''"' .. I •"'I"~" .1• 1 42 s· .... w AM A I 110 1•1o-••• , AM«p .satl 1 291 141'11 + lit
AmMotrs • "'6 • -I'll ANatA 2 .. I 111 ...... +1\'t
A\lllp .60I I 33 ""' + " A!.4-2 1 1H 34i_,,.,,
A Std pl 4 7S •• 1ZO " +2..., AStt<tl .lOJI 71S <I , • ... AmSlri 2 10 I .0 30 • ~ AT T • lO 9 11'1 YI • • I. AfTpl 4.. 1t tJ•, • ~
ATT11I l W •• 211 f9 • .. , :~r~ .. J ~: ) ·~ ~-= -.: AV.et pl 14) , 11«1 19 + 't
AW•lPllU .. QOO 14 ··'• Amer on 1 6 II 1S'l'J + "-Ame•O ., • • !Oh,. A-1•k I olO 9 27 7'-.-'• Aml<K 114 1 IS~,,_. It
AMlt. . IO 4 11 11 ......
AMPln< ••• It-< 21\<o+ .... AmP<O . .0 I I ,. ...... :' AMllU 1t 1 .. il ti•-\It ""'~ •. It' , .... Amil .. 1.lS • 41 ,... ...
Amil ... 2JO • S3 S3 -"°" Amtel .4410 1k 11 ••• It An<llrH uo 1 • ,,,.. + •, AndCI•~ I 7 IJ 20't+ '• .-,,..11,. 14 I> 2'I ~ '.
Anr111w .2• I U 1'·•-lo AnwlCo .Sll.. 2 1\11 ••• ,
AP4<M .1010 lS ~~+ ~ AP<OOtl IO SI '41~ • 'h A&l""' pit," . lAllO '2 ••••• ApldDi9 12 1• ll' >-I'll AoldOl911f 1.. I• JO 1-1-. APCll.Mo 45 3 21•-W
Arat•H .Jt 1 7 "'' + '" ArdwO .lGllll 60T 20 •• '• AtttkEnl 10 JO ~ + I'll Arlll•r U 17' ~-•..,
Arllf'S 1 .. • 199 10\'I+ t t
Ari Ppl 10 10 . zS0 Ill'·•+ I''' Atkl'1 .szo S 2 .-..+ It ArkLGI 1 ... <I 2llO :M._+ ~ ArleflAly 101 2,,., ...
Arm.a. • t3 •'• • At.,,ce UO I 11 1.-.+ -.,. Armpt 2.10.. , 2*''11+ 'Ill ArnutCk ·I H t01 17 ...... . Arm< pfllS .. Z100 !O .... . Ann II II 1.lD 4 11 ,.... .. .. An1Cof11 I 7 U i.1,-It
An.in M 4 • l~h Anlfl .. 2 •• "" 31..,,,. :\&~ ,-:'; 3:t ~:; \: ~DG t • t 1tO ,. ......... Alll'-.a S lt 12tll., . ~ltwM~~·''.uiO ~ J ......... All kll l t 4l6 SO'lll + \'ti All <Pl S.. I In •2 ~::!'!~ 2 .... , 2: ;:·~ • ....
AuloOI• ,4016 t• ~. • \1 AIAmln A 6 lO 11\•-• Avc.Cp l tat 1<1 -• .... cecowt • • ,. 'ii .. .
Avco pl 3 lO • l •l .... . A•<~·· • lO • ,. .,~. + ~ ..... . ... o • 111 ....
A.... .70 6 11 1• .. 'i't ""°" 2 401) .,, 4.s'ill ~ '• -·--8T Mt9 . 2J '"'°·'"' Bol>Cll uo112 n. SJ'•····. eu-.41110 1lo3 s .. .. U.ltorln .•13 l7t1 It .. , ... . hllrlnll -"' '1 141 45~ • 1. h .. DH .IDS I 14• .. -n t lf(,p I 4 ' 11 ""'""' U'rMI .1012 nte W '>-11
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N • DM.V
(I) TOTBE ExTENT FEi\SIBLE;.aepl.fate ancl bwidJ
Christina sreetin• Cuda to local a4Cl Out;ol-town ad· dreues.
(7) Wrap ~hits secu.rely aDd tDChide your name and
addreu inside tbe pacbae on a ~ eard bi cue the
wrapper is detached. At the Christmas maillhg aacm
particularly, wrappings can be torn and dotaebecl. under
rough handlint. • ·
(8) Put Pl"QPtr pocsta(e on cU'dl and pm?tii. It ID do\ibt,
take cuds and ·packt.tea to the PQSt offl~ to bav• ttieni
weiebecl.. EnvelGpeS wiu.oat stamps Will be ~ to th
sende!; paCkages wttb tnadequac. ~·will be MrtoustJ' delayiid.
(t) DO NOT OV£atNSuaE pa.reels. A $10 lift wjll
bring only $10 in compensation lf lost, even thouCh lt may
have been insured for $100.
(10) Get to Christmas mallinJ Wks guicldy, not oruy to
saf e&uard against loss but also to eliminate trritatlOPS Utat
can be avoided by Ul1s step. ·
Stang Sets Dividend
.-REG. '~99 ~~~a~' UG~
12.11 ilfomt SPAG VINYL CUSHION
lGEWARRIOR . TOILRSEA~ ...... , ... , ... ... (-. .......... ,.,...
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.... iliiil-
•
.... · ' ·.
Hanes B~IEFS
' .
Hanes T-?,~jlR1
Billy Knight (25, above) of the Buffalo
Braves looks for somebody to pass to \Dl·
der pressure from Chicago's Scott May
during recent National Basketball As-
sociation action. Below, Kansas City.
Texas Now
Contender
Witll. Zisk?
, FORT WORTH, Texas (AP> -
It was an elegant setting replete
wttb champagne, diamonds, and
soft piano music amone Fort
.~orth'• ldgb 'aocletJ Tu..clay 'lUlht. mating'Rlcbie Zilk feet at
home at Shady Oats Cootry
Club with bis freabb aiped 10-year, $2.5 milllot ccmtract.
Zisk, the flrst of baseball's new
crop of free agents to come to
terms,-officially became a Texas
Ranaer and bubbly Raneers ma-
j oti ly owner Brad Corbett
plopped a 10-eallon ~at on the
bead of the former Cltlcaeo
White Sox outfielder.
Then came th• boots ror the slugging Ziak, who is never a
threat Oil the baserat.bs ... Maybe
Richie can stea 30 bases in
these," Wisecracked Corbett.
A bit da:rzled by Corbett's
sb()w, Zisk dutifully thalikecl
everyone, then told writers later •
.. I think I can give them that lit-
tle extra they bad miuina la.st
year."
Zisk, wtlo bas averaged .298
over h1s lut five seasons with
• Chicaso and Pittsbursh in tbe National Leatue. hit 30 home
runs last season WiUl tbe White
Sox.
It# .......
Kings" Sam Lacy <right) wrestles for con-
trol of the ball and, in the process, belts
Atlanta's Armond Hill with an ~lbow. Hill
was momentarily stunned and Lacey
charged with a foul.
,..
VEASATiLE EDISON HIGH sOPHOMORE FRANK SEURER.
Seurer Not Intimidated .
&JUon Soplwmore QB Laughs Off A.buse
• ByDAVECUNNINGHAM
Of U. DMly , ... IW!f
When Frank Seurer started
two-a-day practices with the
varsity football team at Edison
High in Huntington Beach, he
was only 14 years old.
And now, just two months alter
his 15th birthday, Seurer is the
only sophomore to ever start (or
Edison's varsity . At
quarterback, he fUls more than
just a minor role.
"He's very intelligent, ex·
tremely courageous and bas a
very good arm," says Edison
coach Bill Workman. "He's been
~ very well accepted by the up·
, perclassmen because of his
altility. '' _ ;opponents aren't so quick to
a:C c e p t a s o p h o m o r e .
quarterback, and they let him
have it with physical and nrbal
abuse.
"Every team tries to in-
timidate him," says Workman.
"They tell him be shouldn't be
playing with the big boys and
stuff like that, but be just lauam atit. ..
Seurer (pronounced slab-er)
can afford to laugh because he's
big (6·1, 165) and has ablUty to
back himself up. He's completed
55 of 129 passes on the season for a .426 P4;1"centage and tossed five
touchdown passes.
"His dad is 6-5 so Frank's go-
ing to be a big guy,'' saya
Wortman. "The hita don't tue
him and he can't be in-
titnidated."
Nor does Seurer take any IU(f
Estancia Must Wiii , · · ..
• to: .Oiiin··:cJF Berth . ...
:Estancia <Costa 'Mesa) illib'a
ffi.mula for a bid t.o.the CIF foot·
~ll playoffs is :SiQ'lple; Beat
~oothill (Tustin) High Friday
ntght (8) at Tustin High in the
Centuey-1!.eague finale: •
ment Moore~s running and guard
Chril Healy (190) and center
Dave Padilla (190) have been lm-
pressi ve up front.
from his own teammates.
Despite biS tender yeara. he as-
sumes the role of team leader
when on the field.
.. If theft'• any talking in the
huddle he'll just flat tell them to
shut up," bis coach says. "He's
come a long way and they
respect hhn for it."
Allboueh pa.ssine i.s hb forte,
Seurer can also run effectively.
He proved that against
Westmin$ler, scoring on a 40-
yafd bootleg nm for Edisoil's
lone touchdown tn a 7.0 victory
Hl.s main weakness bas been
interceptJons. Searer has been
picked off 10 times.
"He'a ao confident of himself
he thinks he can throw between
people, and be could wben be was
playing freshman ball. but he'a
rinding out be can't get away
with it in the bias,'' s.afs
Workman. 'DeaPt&e b1s con.ftdence, size
and ability, Seur,r bas not
beeome a vocal. cheerleader • type.
.. I th1Dk be was more quiet at
the beginning because of his qe,
tiut he's loosened up a liWe,"
says Workman. "He's not a real
outgomg kid, anyway But Rick
Bashore never aaid much,
either••
Bashore was Edison's standout
quarterback in 1975 who went on
~ start thJa aeaoo for Uct.A
before Hb and lun1 injuries . While the riddle is simple
<Estancia is 3·2-1, •<oothill i$ 4·2
and in third place), the Eagles of
FA1tancia coach Jim Bratten may
find the solution tough.
Defensive gems for the
Knights incl.u4e safety Jake
Blanchard, comerb~k .ramie Draper and Jeff Buel(,~· a
versatile sort usuall~ at end.
That spells trouble for Estan·
cia 's passing game.
-fotted tum out of the lineup.
The Knights o( Foothill coac.h
Rudy Lucidi feature a tough
ground game behind the atrong
runninc:oC 206-pound Rob Mowe,
a junior averaging 5.3 yards.
Much of Moore'1.• auc.cess bu
been behind the blo<:klng ot
fullback Jim Bremer~· a 1'15·
pound senior who played a Jar•e
part in Footbil1'a 26-7 victory
over Estancia in m&.1
Foothill has n9l played to tts
wtentlal yet accord\lll to Lucidi.
but the Knights hne the poten-
lial to explode.
. Quarterback Rob Gardner
(6-0, 150 ar.) threw three Tl>
passes against Sedta Ana Valley
and Moore has speed to ao with
his atrenctti. '
Bremer bas 1tiriid. over 500 ~ards in sevm aaaics to comple-, ,
Footblll bas lod four times
overall and euh O.,PPC>nent bU
already qualitl•d foJ" tbe
playoffs. "We bavm't lost to a
poor team, .. say' wcldl .. BUt bl\
the other band we tiiven~.h"~ ·
anyone of playoff a statUfe j-.
Despite Seurer's success 1n his
debut seaaon as a varalty
quarterbaek, ~ as a team is
Jutt· 4-4, so Tbursd•Y oliht's
game agimat Hun~ Beach
carries comiderable lm~e
for the O)ar'Jen It's tbi dlf·
ference betWeen a Wiilliin1 or lol· trigaeuon
JC FOOtball Stars
The biggest game in a deeade
i.s setfor'lb\irsday1llebt (7:30) •t
Santa Ana ~~h1Jbere once
mighty ~lJ>ti <Seuta Aoa)
geta a shot at'the Anlelai ~
football eb,ai:optoosblp.
The tu.U..Ue: Ser.rite <Anahetll\)
High's Friars. a 'team ranbG
No. 2 ln Ortnge County With a S.2
record. Although Mal.r Del
hold.S a 9-&-l aeries edae over the
Friar.1. Servile baa whipped
Mater Del the last five times.
"Our kids are really nOt that
worried about cbamplonablp
poulbilitles,.. says Ma~r Del
coacb Wayne Cocbrun. •'Tbll la
the 8ervite game. It's the bluest
lame for us in 10 years "
The tbOuabt the Monarchs
coulcl ~'pla1ina for' aQ)'th1nc
. other thaD pride at thla ~tnt
ifte~a 1i4 start would have been
hard to digest three ween •So-
But the XoDarchl!t with a ~d
ground p.me dd 1.De abWtt to
play dd'emive football without
mllta:te1 QI t.he~etus ~
have raJ.Ueditriallgly
··we were eoncernec1 co!q bi~
J.easue pt_v." Jldmlts ~.
11Bu all aloq we'billned In OUf.
kids anct What we were doing.
We've Played uCellmt fi8lc!)'Oi1~
JEaay HOPKINS, f;atanda <<M~ Mesa) ~ Was a solid
player 1n .ill departments and ran back a punt rot S8 yards to Civ•
Estancia good field position,
JOE WALLER, Capistrano Valley -Waller. playing at
nosegua:rd, had 13 tackles for the VaquerOI •Jain.st Imperial.
DAN CRARNITSKI, MisdDn Vleje -The leadiaa point
scorer on defense for the Diablos. Played an outstandinl aame to
pile up 23 points with 9 tac kl es and 5 assists.
1'1KE SCARLET?, Costa Meaa -Scarlett was the Mustangs
Jeadina tackler along with lntercfPUng two passes
UnlvenltJ (Irvine) -Nodefensivepl~er.
G&l!!G SCHERF, Mater Del <Santa Ana> -Scherf played an
outstand.lnl derensive came witJa 9 unassisted tackles, 6 assists
. and a quarterback sack. .
JOHN EDWARDS, San aemente -Edwa!'Qs was one of the
most consistent players on the field for San Clemente as a de·.
tensive end.
BRAD WOOD, Fowataln VaUey-Wood played his best &Ule
or the season al noseguard. Had two quarterback sacks, playea
aggreqively and put pressure on the Newport signal·caller the
entire game.
GARY JONES, Irvine IU&b -Played well both ways but
made no mistakes on defense and had three crucial tackles
SHAWN VONESR, Huntington Beaeb -A defensive strong
sa,ety, Vonesh made five unasslsted tackles, had 11 assists and
recovered a fumble.
RICK BAllLA ud JOHN BOGDAN, <Ecllaoa <Batlllg&on
Beacb)Defensive end Baria and linebacker Boadan ab.,.. the
honor t.h1s week. Bogdan made 15 tackles, caused two incomplete
passes 8Rd a fumble, and sacked the quarterback once Barla
made seven tackles and recovered two fumbles
WAYNE KASPAREK, Newport Harbor A safety,
Kasparek intercepted two passes in the first half and made
several key tackles to slop touchdowns
A~ PENNER, Marlaa (ffunttn1ton Beach) -Marina's
game plan was to apply constant pressure on Huntington Beach
quarterback Marco Paenanelli, and Penner did that better than
.. nyone else on the Marina line.
JIM SHOLUN, Corona del Mar -Shollin was constanUy in
the UDiverslty backfield from his defensive end position. He bad
two quarterback sacks and played his best game or the year.
TEAM, Dana IUUa -Like the offense, every member of the
Dana Hills defensive unit gets a star for bis helmet this week in a
team effort victory over El Toro.
College Grid Slate
'Here ts Ille IN)or <:04'-99 IOOUNlll
S<JIHUle tor Wt _-...cl
"UOAY Pre1no State v1 C•I St•I•
U:11llerlortl •I CerrlW.Cbll4199, n.
SATURDAY hit
Pill vs.. Anny •t EHi RllltwffMd,
N..I
1-!tete.t ~•Stat•
~1.0 •• ~su. Nori"""'"""' 11 Mk~n Stele Ole lahOlna stlte et Mluourl
Kanaas et Netw..U
Bowll119 GrWfl '' tftlo U lndltMlllDll'o~•
C.Otcw-• oi.i--... Mkhl~et~
N .... M .. lco SQIHI Tul ..
Iowa al Wltc.onsln
SOUTHWEST
Rkeat .. ytor
By the slimmest of marsins,
Co1ta Mesa Hieb chatked up
another unbeateo South Coast
Leag~ dual meet 1ea10o T\Ju-
day.
In a classic race that went
-t down lC) a battle between No. ~
runners, the Mustanp overcam
a fired·up Corona del Mar.con·
tinaent. 27·28, to ma~e it 71 con· secutive meets and nine years
without a defeat in league.
Scott Scbeib provided the dif·
ference Jar the visitors when he
made uP a 25-yard deficit at the
two-mile mark and out.sprinte6
CdM freshman standout Stiawn
Gallagher to the. flnish line for
the all·important ninth place
finish.
Costa Mesa's John Gerhardt
and Joe Young broke away from
a tight pack at the mile mark and
eventually won bandlly in a
col(rse record 15!°' clocking.
But Corona del Mar, whose
forte all sea.son long bas ~n
tight grouping, made a run of
things by sweeping the next fo'11'
places.
Cam Douglass and Steve Chase
gave Corona a chance to win it
when they finished S.6 but Costa
Mesa's next three runners, who
were 6-8-11 with a mile to go,
pulled it out.
YltltSITY
Costa....,_CJ71 IJllC..W.4114-., •
1. Ctlel ~Yount ICM) ISM; :L ~
ICCIM I U :tJ; .. "Uft$aker .CCIMJ UI 1'; S
Oouglau IC-I U.:•1; 4. Qiata IOIMI IS;.4Q.7. ~rlloll ICM! U:e; I. Lar• CCMI U;50; t, Schtlb
c;o1.,.., bl• •t arown
NOrtllHsl•rn•t Ge19itle
V1ll_,,aatl1oly"°66
c..oftl• Te<hel ... "Y
O•rlmwtll et~ lempleet "-""Sl•le Cornell •I Princeton
lul-•tRllloen
&olton Coll• 91 $yfKU>e
V1rtlftia Tecllat WHtVlr9ift1•
W•rv•rd•l '!'alt
SOU'JH
Miami, Fl•.atltla!Mlm• ~ol,.. OMW .. 0.-
Norlll c.r.u...sui.et DWI•
Vf•lll•m a.MMy vs. Eesl CArolin. •I ~Olk.Va.
Texas le<tl.tSoul,..nMe-••I
TeHsChrl1t1ane1T1xas
Ark•n .. uc TeusA&M
C.OIOr.0061.Uat West Tues St•••
flltltWUT
V-'11111 It Alr FOt'Ce
New Mellko•l Arlrona, nlQflt
BrlQllam 'l'_.g et Arlr-Stele,
night C.llfomluto.....,
NorthtMI L.o .. lll•n• •l Pe<lflc, night
Cal Sl•I• CL-BHtlll •I ~an
FIAT
Xl/9
Pl.it yourself behind the
wheel of an X 1/9 ... bullt by a compa11y that
Si it1 ~around 411m...,..,,,iobi'lhiles and racing
or ye.vs. The 51eek
X 1/9 body is a creation of the famed desVier
Bmone It has a removoble roof panel,
mid-mounted engine,
four-wheel chsc braka
andfully~t
KenluU<y Ill Flor Id• ..
Memphl• Slit• at Florida State, ,..glll
VMlatF......-.,n19N
_.ubllrnlt~•
n
Mlulul#I stale at L.oul•lane Stet•,
Orelle at LAIUIJ'lllla
Mltf'YIMlllalR~
LOUlll.,.. T9'11 at SoutMrn M"·
.intppl, nlQM Mlul11lppl \II. T-IMI at Mem
pl\11
NMlll c:arollnaa1Vlrg•"'8
South ~lllWallefMMI
MtOWUT Mlnneiote et llllno!•
1>1990 Stltt,NQtlt ~n Jose SI.teal Slenlotd
Ore90f'SWltalUCLA Teus CEI Pasol at Utah
Wyoming It VIM Ste•
Southern C:.llfomleat Washington
IO•ho at WMill"lton St.ale
Field Hockey
or• ... CNSl m ct> Llllt 9HCll Cl1r
OCC1<C"'lftt-HMlar. •
H•ll•IM-1 ....
~--(4lltlll' ...... GWC -tng-$ttl<.ll a. COftnOn,
Vl-Helftlmt-GWCJ.0.
-penwon. }01
couldn't atfcrrda in.
sports machine~'? Try it. You arid
the Fiat Xl/9. '
lCMIU•S1;1t.OeU ....... IC41Mll6:0I. U..........,c.MllltlL...-.._11 I. O.metriadu ILi U:ll; 2. Wtlllno (\JI 15,29;
l . J-<LI 1S:d; •· ,.,..,_, IUI U :Ot; J.
JK"-IUI 16;'11, 6. flaWtlll (UI 16:1.4; 1. lrN\1'
<VI 16:J6; .. ._. ILi ~Ill; t . C>alffll (UI '6:4;
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l OIMfne IMI 14:07, 4. Seil• <Ml '6;19; S . f'tlllhem,_ 11!) '"'1; 6. Vert IM'I 16:SS; 1 •.....
Ill 16tS1;L9-ll>11;0S;t flYM IU '1:16;
1t. IUnt 1£1 U.& t:. DaMHllll UJ) C•l-C*-'t 1, M111¥Wn 10) U:»; 2. ReYllOMll COi IS:S1; J.
Hanis 101lt:Ca;4. c-.. ts> 16:0t; s. 1'1111 COi
M;IO, 6. JelwllMt 101 1':11; ;1. 8. Jefferson COi
1•:22; .. o.r-.n COi M G ; t. llellfOll ISi 17 U; 10.
frty ($) 17:9' •
JUHIOlt VAUITY
u111 .. n11Y cm w1 u.-e..c11 1. Clloff•n IUI 17.•; 2. FrMenca.-IUI 11.01,
J.-llU W) U:U;• ...... (U) 17:2•. c.a .... at) c:wlc...• Mar
'· Tomlln (CM) '4;'11; t. "9nabl• CCMI 16:51; l . Hum..,.,t.,.ICMl17:10;4.lelrap ICM! 17:1'
Mlaita Vle)e CIJI 1111 ., T-
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(M) 11:1';4.0llllt (M) 11.01. •
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IOPHOMO•a
U•..nity CUI (44) Ul¥M -..Cll
1, Tay!« ltll tO.O. l. si.-u IUI tl:Ot; J. 0.WCS
CUI tl:Ot;•.SleW~ CUI 11:21; $. SUllO CUI 11.l1;
• HtnheY (LI 11.SI. ~YllllU:ll IUlllTar•
1. L"*r IMI 12.M: 2. ~II Cl 12:~1. J
Lllfll"I (el Ir.SJ;'· .... (El u .oz; .. z-lMI IJ:Ot;•.Gett~k tMI IS.If.
~-Mw_.., ....... t.
a. Oeme1Ca IJU C.I 0... Hllll I. SanU.1 ISi 11:0; 2. ,,, .. uce (01 10:44; J.
Riiey 1$1IO 46;4 . ......._ 1$1 ll:U ; s.oc .... 101
ll:l6;6.E...,. Ill 11:Jt. ..... '"""'" CM-. ... Ms 116) Of I c.&I Mesa
Hartl«d (COM) .... I; ZA.aC:..... CCMI I0·44,
S. Cra<llel CCM> ll:OI. 4. Col~' CCCIMI llllJ; 3'.
Wtl41n ICMI 11:'9;._ ~I Cc.AMI 11:12.
M1t11iM Yle)e ..... .., lwfelt.
S.QllllMI• • utl OMA Hiib 1. Ma"" CU llitl; 2 ...... 1$111: IO; 1. Kollr 101' 11:t1;•. v....-101 wi11s.~ co111:a.:
._ f'9td1er Ill tt :Jt. Ullll_....,W91\.., ..,...,_
Headini lnto l'riday night'•
(7 O) home 1ame with
Ca'Dbtraao Valley igh, T4om~ needs just l~ yards
pusin1 lQ reach the 1,000..yard
mark. So far this seasOQ, h bas
completed 54 of 131 paaaes,
A mfss•d shot witll seven
secondS lei\ stopped • Univ.-ity
Hieb (lrvil>J > watet polo.rally as the trojans, tanked third In CIF,
fell td fowth-r~~ Lon1 Beach
P.oly, 10-9, in tlie Joser'a PQC>l
TUeldayi-:
University, which ~eeks to
wrap up the South Co~'t League·
tllle Tbunday at Laguna Beach,
trailed 10.1 early in the fourth
period before back.to-back &oals •
put the Trojans within one
The non-conferen~e loss
dropped University's season
mark to 13-6 and was the third de-
feat in 10 days to a team ranked
in the top four .
Costa Mesa tuned up for
Thursday's battle at Corona del
Mar by defeating Lone Beach
Wilson, 15-11. Bob Dolan scored
six goals for: the Muatancs to
raise bis season total to 96 in 21
ea mes.
DAilY PilOl
.
JutllCMlYAIUITV
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Rendew IC) *' CMltllo .. 2. clef
Novick M, _, PM11to11 "'2; ~"'"
(Cl lotil 2 ... WOii M, '°'' Ver11H lCI •onw.~ .. l. ~ 8u(ll·M<~ld ICI Otf 8rl9fll· SC..11t4M\6-llOlf....,ri.GetcteH,clef Croo.~Tenle .. t; Erl<i<-SmUh ICI _ .. a, .. 1, .. 11 $1111tb..._ (Cl"'°" ...... ,...... .
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Morris <Ml tost .. .i.n11t 0'6, ... , t•
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lest .... 1-6, 'W; ,...a.lewetk IM) lost , ... u.~.
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Tflrt'111,. IM. .~
Penc:.lt•Fffly IE I to.I to Mltler-
W11 M/ Oll•••-Gwlnup IE I lost IO
fox fillu +4. J.on:l.lth-Cl•rk IE I dirt
Jttl<SOO·GUlon .. .S •
Race Results
,_~ a.er, Track fest
F111n uca -Ai-it •ll'i t1W1ont1. 3 ,.eer Old• end...,.,,.,.._ Purw '2000.
TlmtFllH
1e ... 11s1 4.IO 2.60 2 20
HrtfOf'k eree.t IHtrll 2.40 2.211
Atam.,Wfllyroc !Noguezl 2.olO
Tlm•-.~4/S
Aho ren -Plnehlll Sump, Prl11t•
RH,Mr.P«,.,.,Utc:lnoO'HNfts. '1 IXACtA S-llnw Fiia arid 7•
Heyfork Ctftll,, pelCI J 10.IO.
HCOND llACI -l~ yerds.l yeer
Olds end uf>. Pl.orseJllOO.
8elllt Bo
10.lombel Tllet T rlple Hewll
IRouglll
5'lffOy S.ventWI CWard)
Tcme-1L10
to 211 S.20 i.•
AlliO rtfl --p_..,. llld£a, M lthl'f
Cl\Artef, 819 M Tru ~. llllY
NOIU, Fly ear Too, Good ldH,
Rotkaftl .....
krtlc--Aiure l•'• Nle<.e, ~ Burreu, Clltrllt Grey, Pu11ke11
Thru\.
tHtao AACC -Six fUflQn9S. For
mtl-. J & •YNrOlcb. f'urM »•· Fl.a$hyD-CM«cedol 14.20 ~.20 J.211
Evll 8~00 IR 11N)
Grey l/Mne)
-t.12JIS.
i.oo uo uo
Also rtn -V-r Lip, Hemp•t
Leeder. Vnrlwaled, Sprln9s Fate,
LutltY Bullbl•.
S<rat<Nll-AIDll OI W1ft4I.
FOUllTM RACE -She f11r'-5.
FM 1111 .. ~ ..... & ... f'\lrwsasoo.
Allnlle Bell
ILucldel
Frtd's RW\t
UO S..20 00
""'" llAC8 -• furlenQ5. FOf" lM._ YtM _..._ c1a1 ... 1ne. f'uru .woo. Mr.Eaclllno
IResa••I 1$.20 '·'° $.<IQ OCI Relttie ,....., 1.AO S-~
Oam (ty Cllell"'O&I >. 2f
TI!llfl-t.1'1.tS.
AIW rmi -Pr•lotleft, First £cll0, Rt Pllll 11.MekeMe stule.
..... ,..a..
SIXTH •Aa -:bl) v•rcn. l ... ,
o1u.Pw..-~ .i.tE~pt ICaroo•> 15.60 HO 00
E••Y stltrllle 10.lombel
RaoteTllOROOf (ROU9hl T lme -11. IO.
320 HO
•II>
Also ,.., -A-Jode<k, A·Se9e Ofl.
Llllllff Go, Moa ltgo M«, Fly By
N191\t8#.
S<rat<--Atetnlla ~ ....
A•BI-S(l'n.-wlcll trttntd en-,,,,
1av•NTH llAU -'luttonos.' yeero~&uo.Clalmlno.PuntUSOO. Miu Slee~
ICtdlti.l
0."'!"11 T ullor INOllW&I
»AO lS.40 10.10
Lake Ac.ay tLMOJt>-
Tlme -l.1211).
1.IO ''° 7.00
Also''" -Oyntml( Mel, Lt \/11111•
ICM!, ~ F .. t Rcc>e, Vel._,,I
CMll.,W,Oellnclak .. Purec;.me
krtl"*I -tUllMlaP, Enwood,
VelOf'GIO.
p EXACTA 4-MIU Slet<afo & 10. OMC1119 TudOI', ,..HI ~.SO.
E IOHTH RAC• -• llH'lon(ls. For
ITWlfcltns.J &•yWroldl. "',.."509. XIII•• Time cllamtre&I t.IO tAO t.20
ShHr Acllen IR01>11lllt.OO L40
Ctprlcorn Ml• ILU<kt•l 2 . .0 flme-1,IH•S
Also ,.,. -Ktno AMNln't'.-¢own
Fire, LtHf' FaHr. Auler 8".
$crat<hed -Tlmllroolt, Ground
8efry.
NINTH i.ACE -'1\lrl<)f09S. l yeer
olds & up. Purw$1S,OOO --grOH '1S_...s. Cherry River (Culbernn I
Sur• Fire""""~) Tlme-1.1U1S.
SM t.20 2..111
Alie rM-59Y'llllt, Quite A O.y.
No ~r.i<tws. u liXA'1A 1-cnarr., River &. .._
S\11'9 , lnl 6elf Ne.JO.
'2.20 I•.• 7.IO
Racing
Entries
llOHTH RAU -7 furl~. l Yt•r otds & UP-oaomlno. P\lrw ueoo.
ca.1m1nvprle9$10.000 Olleker~ '~''
Lari.·~ R~ IHertlSI ~St•t 11.UUltl
wppy810t ll.Hoo\ltU
Sirlll••IAnlval (llowlftl
River°""' !MtnAI a.n.uroam{Ramlm)
NINTH llAC8 -71\Wtonos. Oalm-
in11 :) .,._, Oldl a. uP Clalmf ll9. Pvr'lil
U.00. Cl••min9fl'kA$31Gt
8olcl R-1Mw1'1 tielloGoodTI,,_ CT11<nerl
U51Word~Noguerf
Soverel9nt1t <c..su1101
CHdJ.H. tst.itlllQll
lllv"* <R•l•I
SMman• 1er-1
110 lot
111
1l4
114
11'
lot
'HNTM UC11 -"wrlof'9S. h .. ~ a. lllL Cs.lallno. P\lrw J7JOO, Cle·"""""""' .. ..,. Heppy VllllA11 lllM'nlrtrl
S9rtno'sNW1llow ,,.,..11,.1
First Reflectl-($CalllnQS)
lltal Enc-1t• IMMMI
AckACll W« r,H«U ....._
11TH •Ace -One end •11•· "•t•ntllmlleJ'l't.,.Ol~&"p,(Ulmo
11111 PurMJ.-o. O..mtne iw ic• l.5'00 Youn9fr-~IA-~ll llJ
l.OOl>•rlll la.ills I I D kn10hlofAt ... !T.N091M1l 117 W•ytertntStr....,. l.IMeHl uo 1¥16C!tlt'• .. CAii•> 12t
8~8Mf~llngsl UI
Roy91 Mlfltllll ~rt) 126
......... ~ .. ._" ..
N•wYOfll 12.J, Sell Alllc•llo "' ClllQOO 1I1, fWiuslOfl 104 Oe1t'ftr 111, Ml..,....M 101
Poru...c 1•.1t-Clly UM
OS ANGELES <AP) Ac·
tr s Nanette Fabray has lost
co trol of one eye a:s '> ~sult of a
se ere concussion she received • w ile working on a film, her
p licist says
he 57-year-old actress was re-
p led in good condition at
C~ars Sinai Medical Center,
w ere she has been recovering
s · ce being knocked down by an
ublicisL Dan Jenkins said in a eiphant.
s tement that Miss Fabray was
i roving but still suffering
• . •
"LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR" CR)
"SMOKEY ANO THE BANDIT"
"THE STING" (PG)
wt .. nNESllA y
EVEN
6:00 9. Cl) 0 NEWS
BONANZA
"Tht Companeros"
TH AVENGEAa
Aftet • oorpM walk• out qt •
mortuary, John Steed •nd
Emm• Peel are called In to
lnv.etlQate .
• MICKEY MOUSE CLUB
G) WAIT TILL YOUR FATHER
OET8HOME
"Sweet Sixteen"
. SESAM& 8TRE!T
G VILLA ALEGRE
5:30 m Bl;WITCHED
"HCIW To Fall In Bullneas" e AD.W.12
"Gltta lwJ Long Letter•"
HODGEPODGELOOOE
"Raocoona"
1:00 8 CBS NEWS D8 NEWS 0 EMERGENCY ONEl
The param9dlcla rescue an eld-
erly couple from an elevator
and take them to Rampart. U MOVIE **'n "Rider On The Rain"
(1970) Charles Bronson, Mar-
lene Jobefl. A man and a wom-
an are pitted agalnat each
other In the lntrlgu• of a mur-
der cue. (2 hra.)
0) THE BRADY BUNCH
"Gregg's Triangle"
Cl) THE ROOKIES
After Lt. Ryker Is ln)ured by an
ex-prisoner out for revenge. Jiii
Is assigned to protect him.
fD ZOOM
«!) FOODS FOR THE
MODERN FAMILY
"Basic Egg Preparation"
(ti ABC NEWS
8:30 fJ MOVIE **** "Charade" (Part 1) (1964) Cary Grant. Audrey
Hepburn. A woman becomes
the target of her murder9d
husband's cronies, who bel+eve
she knows the whereabou1s of
a vast hidden fortune (1 hr •• 30
min.)
0) MY THREE SONS
"Monstera And Junk Like
That'' fD AS WE SEE IT
"Carol City" School redistrict-
ing In southern Florlda upsets a
balance of whites, black• and
Hispanics.
«!) FAMILY PORTRAIT
"Dealing With Conftlct"
Cl) CBS NEWS
®' MERV GRIFFIN
Guests: Tex Beneke, Helen
O'Connell, Bob Eberle.
7:00 D NBC NEWS 0 LIARSCLUB fJ ABC NEWS
CD ILOVELUCY
"Country Club Dance"
• AOAM-12
Officer Malloy's apartment
house manager plci<ets the
pol~ department.
fD MACNEIL/ LEHRER
REPORT
«!) YOGA WITH MADELINE
Cl) TO TELL THE TRUTH
. 7:30 0 SHA NA NA
Guest: Miiton Berle
D NEWLYWED GAME fJ MATCH GAME P.M.
Members Qf "The Royal Family" gather to welcome the
newest member of the clan in George S. Kaufman and
Edna Ferber's 50-year-old play, televised tonight at 9 on
KCET, Cl)annel 28. From left are Mary Layne,
Rosemary Harris, Eva LeGallienne aqd Elft.s Rabb.
CD THE BRADY BUNCH
eebby'a ftnd of $1100 while
playing football ceu989 a split
In the famlly when the girts find
ex.ft they're not Included In the
~Hwy.
• LET'S MAKE A DEAL
28TONIGHT
Robert Scheer Interviews Newt
Anchorwoman Connie Chung.
G STARBOARD
··~t•
Cl) $128,000 QUJSTION 0 FAMILY FEQD
8:00 fJ Cl) GOOO TIMES
"Breaker_, BrH1'er" Mlchaef
discovers the exciting new
world Of CB radio, bu1 his Jaw
laciclng leads him down a road
that could be mOJe than he and
his h8ndle can handle. 8 GRIZZLY ADAMS
"The SMrctt" Adame races
agalnat time to locate the cub
of • dying cougar befOf'e the
hunters that ar. atclklng the
frlghteMd •nlmal find It. Paut
Brinegar go•t atars
8 MOVIE *'Ir "Vllagtt Of The Olanta"
(1965) Ron .Howard, Tommy
Kirk. A troUP of teenagera.
Ratings Guide
'Mov1H -ret..i lltCOfd•"9 to llo•
office ~ -to• TV ue 1""9Nllr•~rl1oe.l
• • • * -Excellent * • • -Very Good * * -Good * '> -Fair * -Poor
TUBE
TOPPERS
CBS fJ 6:30 -"Charade." Cary
Grant and Audrey Hepburn are en-
tangled in a dangerous adventure with •
Walter Matthau in this 1964 movie, shown
in two parts tonight and Thursday.
KCOP Cl) 8:00 ~ "Do NOt Disturb.,.
Doris Day and Rod Taylor are p~red in
this 1965romantic movie comedy.
· CBS f) 9:00 -"Once Is Not
Enough.·· Kirk Douglas stars as a former
movie producer who marries a we8.ltby
woman (Alexis Smith) to keep. hif
daughter (Deborah Raffin) living well in
the TV premiere of this 1975 movie.
NBC t9 9:00 -Police Story. Mike.
Connors stars as a police officer who
believes himself undeserving of t)le
Medal of Valor. Also starrint Martin
Milner, Cameron Mitchell and James ·parrin.
•
r , i "I think they're plotting to overthrow the dog
1 ' pound t" I 1 .
JflUNKYWINKERBEAN .
I'
l
I I I
LET~ WA1tH 1HAT
INTERFERENCE NEXT
1lff1E , HUH~ l
t i ~!'--5-E_Y _ __.,. _ __. __ -'
~r~~"'"'.9'."~TCJ-a:r--~--D14~fUl&~---------
4'ALAPA40S ISLAHOS
MUST'V' IJB/J RE'Ai.. ~LOW, Mlt"'R~ •.. ....
J t
i
J ~OON MULLINS
GERIATRIX
YES,KI~~
t..INE W~ SU5Y
~~INS.
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
.... ,... J.{M! I t'NEW oppoRTUNITY
KNOOceD, BtJT I DIDN'T
KNOW IT SASH,AYED ...
~ I I • I • • • • • l • .. • ' ! • ' I • • , i . • I • • \\ & • ' • ~ •
STAYFREE
MAXI-PADS
...
SAV-ON
GIFT
CERTIFICATES
A11 W..1 Gift
~t CHllSTMAS
fn Denom1nat1ons of
'l°t1 f;~ -~~~~ ........ IOITII STAI
j P:::\ Christmas Tree
-Stand 1 59
J •• •
~,.,
. 1000 SU..: Str.4
Icicles 3 gc .
Garland
JOn. XJll
BLUE/GREEN •
Spool Ribbon ·
ASST.COLORS C 3/16" x 300' 6 9
By JtJDJTB OISON
Of ... Oeftr ........
You cua order almost anything you want
through tbe mall nowadays, 10 why not a new
body?
Not a brand new body. d coarse, but a
modification of the current frame. It's available
tbrougb a new weight reductton conesponf!ence
course offered by the University of Southern
Calllornia'a Psycboloilcal l\esearcb and Service
Center.
The fll'lt 8l'OUP of 600 has taken the COW'H
and its founder, Dr. Albert Manton. la wortmg
on a lona·range proeram for those wbo wut to
lose more weight. •
Marston got the Idea for the coursed~ a
aabbaUcal year which be spent in Europe. 'I
came~ the procram in Germm:lf;• be 1alcL
0 Tbe eootrol group received Its m•terlal b1
mall. I decided to try it. here. 0 ;
• A newspaper advertisement bro\llht eoo J'al>PD.den who agreed to take the eoune tor
tbrie months and participate in • SUMllODth follow.up. •
The J)arllcipants weJ;e from Cali!omla, tile
East Coast and abroad. Marston said.
Each person r~etved a step-by.step
stt.ateo. lncluding •system to reaulate food ID· • •
.. w. doo't slap their hands ... be 111a. "lncl
tell them tJaey are 'foOdahollcs• or f allures. ~e
.. tell them tbat llfe ii filled with choices aDd evsry
d.ay ls anew day ...
Wdgbt 10a by mall worts, he bell~
.because il pl~ the respoostbillt.y squ.are)1 oa
the 1bouldeft of the students. Since there are no meetmo tO attend and no crowds to pve pa.be,
St ia a truly lndiYldual effort.
It abo la ehnper than many weltht conlrol
programs, costing approxhnately '8 per pound. compar~no $40 tor others. It also ls beneficial
for c:omlbUnltid where p.rofess.loOal sourees are
not readlly available.
Marstbo 1tresses that it ls an educattonal ap--
pro a c: b rather than medldal or psy~hotheNpeutle, and uks participants •Jt.,.p
in elosecootact with a physician.
Of tbe !Int lfOUP ol 600, most were women.
Tbe aver .. e ace was '4r and most "ere white.
The average.Suclltion was between t.1W> and four
years '1 colleae eiul 62 percent.were eDl,Ployed 1 fUJ)Ume. .
~ 8Vel'qe starting welabt w. 181.46 and
the avenge eodi:D1 weight (at tbe elld of ll . w ) WU l'Z0.47. Most bad lost 12.97 pounds at
the eDcl and sh: 1J1onths lat.er. ani>tber 2,28
pbuDdS.
Butterscotch swirl cupcakes have golden tones.
! ••
'.Buttel-scotchers
J •
Will Love Them .
· f\lthough an official count has
n.ever been confirmed by a
Gallup poll, there are probably
almost as many butterscotch lov-~ as there are chocolate fans
Butterscotch treats offer. special
;t_ppeal thls lime of year when
tJlpir golden tones match the
amber and gold autumn colors.
The flavor of butterscotch, or ~ih11rily associated with brown
sugar, 1s derived from the deft
u~e of mild unsulph\lred tnQ~asses in these recipes for t~te tempting cupcakes and a~ber brownies.
Once you've sampled the but-
ter~cotch richness or these re-
4tJ)es, you'll not be surprised that 4 convenient and less expensive
substitute for brown sugar is
easily made by combining or-
dinary plain white sugar with un-
. sulphured molasses. For each
half cup brown sugar ma recipe,
6imply use a half cup of white
• sugar and two tablespoons or un-
sulphured molasses. There's no
need to pre-mix the sugar and
molasses if they are to be
blended with other ingredients in
a recipe.
Butterscotch Swirl Cupcakes
have a baked-on cream cheese
topping studded with buL·'
terscotch morsels
BUTfERSCOTCH ·
Swp\LCUPCAKES
lf.a cupbatterormargarln~
1Ai cupsucar · ,.
1ta cup'unsulphured molasses
legg
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1~ teupoooaJLsplce
"'1 cupmllk
about2teaspoonssugar
Cheese Topping:
l 8-ounce package cream·
cheese • ~ legg
If.I cup sugar
1-w teaspoon salt
6 ounce butterscotch chips
To prepare cbee$e topping,
combine cream cheese, egg, sug-
ar, and salt and mix well. Stir in
chips and set aside.
The same beater can be used to
prepare the cake batter. Cream
butter and sugar. Add egg and
molasses and mix. Sift together
the flour, soda, and allspice. Add
dry jngredient.s and milk and
beat well.
Fill two dozen paper·lined muf-
fin cups about 1f.i Cull with cake
batter. Top each one with a heap-
ing tablespoon of cheese mix-
ture. Sprinkle lightly with extra
sugar. Bake at 350 degrees, 20-30
minutes.
Refrigerate or freeze leftovers.
BUTTERSCOTCH BROWNIES
l lf.l cups all· purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
fa teaspoon baklng soda
1 'l teaspoon salt
1 3 cup butter or margarine
1 .. cup unsulphured molasses
2.3 cup sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
legg
1-'l cup chopped nuts
Sift flour, baking powder, soda,
and salt onto wax paper. Melt
butter in medium-size saucepan
over moderate beat (or melt but·
ter in mixing bowl ln mkrowave
oven). Remove from heat and
add tnolasses, sugar and vanilla;
stir until smooth. Beat in egg.
Add dry ingredients and mix
well. Stir in nuts. Bake in a
greased and floured 9x9x2-lnch
pan at 350 degrees for 2S-3S
minutes. Don't overbake!
Brownies are done when a slight·
imptin.t shows when lighl17
pressed with fingertlp. Yield:
about20-24 browniea.
STEAKS ·
.mm:t: •. ,. .c .
.umJID -~
CLAUSSB4 SUCED
IOSHEI
PICKLES
StoS
3 ~ar
ltt poctAt l
lp~. cUved[J,Yt lc~'ml)k
2~aN~m1~trute,.....,... ......
1 ~cu~ atii(u-
To make &tarter, combine
flour, •~tr. salt ai.Kl Wldlsi-Olve(l
yeutlli a )8'(e bOwl. Gradually
add warm water to dey lilCre-
dieftU AOd beat 2 minut , at
medium speed ot electric mixer,
scrapiai bowl occasionally. Cov-
er; let stand at room tem-
perature (7840 deereea > four
d~. Stjr down dally.
To mate dough. combine l cup
flour, a~u. salt and Wld.ia.solftd
yeast in a laree bowl.
Combine milk and maraarine
in a saU(epan. Heat over low
beat. until liquid is warm.
<MarJarine does not need to
melt). Gradually add lo dry in·
gredie.Dtl and beat 2 minutes at
medium speed o( electric mixer,
scraping bowl occasionally. Add
1~ cups starter and 1 cup flour,
or enougb flour to make a thick
batter. Beat at hleh speed 2
minutes, scraping bowl oc-
casJonally. Stir in enough addi·
lion.al flour to make a soft dough
Tum out onto lightly floured
bOard; lmead tmtil smooth and
elastic, about 8 to 10 minutes.
Place in gr.eased bowl, turning to
grease top. Cover; Jet rise in
warm p~ce. free from draft, un -
tU doubled in bulk, about 1 hour.
Punch dough down; turn out
onto lightly floured board. Let
rest 15 mlllutes. Divide dough lo
half. Shape each half into loaf
and place lo greased 9 x 5 x 3-i.bch
loaf pan. Cover; let rise in warm
place, !Jee from draft, until
doubled us bulk. about 1 hour.
Bake in bot over (400 degrees>
about 30 minutes, or until done
Remove from pans and cool on
wire racks.
TO REUSE STARTER: Add 1~ cups lukewarm water,~ cup
unsifted flour and 1 ~ teaspoon
sugar to unused starter. Beat for
1 minute at medium speed or
electric mixer. Cover and let
stand until ready to make bread
again. Stirdowndaily
SALLY LUNN
31,2 to 4 cups unsifted nour
Y.s cup sugar
1 teaspoon Sall
WlLLIAMSBUBG BUNS
4 to 5 cupa unsifted flour
11,. cupsugar
1 t.easpooo salt
1 teaspoon grated lemon peel v.. teaspoob grollbd mace
1 packageactivedry yeut ~-cupm,llt v.. cup water
'Al cup margarine
2 eggs (at room tem-
perature)
In a large bowl thoroughly mix
i 11, cups flour, mace and un-
le mo n peel, mace and un-
dissolved yeast.
Combine milk, water and
margarine in a saucepan. Heal
over low heat until liquids are
very warm (120-130 decrees).
Margarine does not need to melt.
Gradually add to dry ingredients
and beat 2 mlnutes at medium
speed ol electric mixer, scraping
bowl occasionally. Add eggs and
'ti cup nour, or enough floU!' to
make a thick batter. Beat at high
speed 2 minutes, scraplng bowl
occasionally. Stir in enou1h addi-
tional flour to make a soft dough.
Turn out onto lightly floured
board; knead \Dltil smooth and
elastic, about a to 10 minutes.
Place in greased bowl turning to
grea11e top. Cover; f et rise in
warm place, free from draft, un-
til doubled Jn buJk, about a
hour. ,
•
SCHWENKFELDEaCAKE ' 3~ to4~ cups unsifted nour
~cupsugar
'r't t.eMPooo salt
l package active dQ' yeast
,,.. cup milk . · .
fron
~ cup potato water ,
IAt teaspoon powdered uf.
V. cup (~stick) margarloe
1 egg (at room temperature>
V.. cup mashed potatoes <at
room temperature>
Jr you "re looklog for a way to
cool oif these last warm days,
look bo turtber than Minted Pear
Chocolate Chip Ice Cream -
then serve tt as an attemoon snack or a frosty dessert.
Homemade ice cream ls always
a treat and this one ii so temptiai
that you'll haft DO trouble edlist-
iDC vohmteers to crank tM lee
creemtreeier. _ ~. Remember,,t_>eara are _pickea.
mature, but atUI· ~; tor tile
best full-fiiilt fiavor you can
ripen them eully at bome. Just
store them for several de1I in a
looeely c1oMd plastic or paper
ba& at room temperab:lfe unW they turn golden yellow and yield
to eentle palm preasure:-
JUNTEDOIOCOLATE CIDP
~JCEcaEAll
~ eupcranulated sugar
2 ublt!$POODS cornstarch
l4~1alt l~tdllt !.
2ea«)'Olb, tieaten •~medium-she fresh
Calltornia Baitlett pears (1~ to2
ltf:t.)
1 cupwhll>P'nc cream ii4 teaspoon peppermint ex,
lltact ·
® ~~.~~~-~~~~ ... 57c
@~·~~me!:-'.. .... ., .... 49c
~APPIAN WAY
~PIZZA MIX
12'h Oz. Box .••••••••••••
l'or
Laundry
. 4gc
TOMATO 39C JUICE
Rich tasty Springfield! 46 oz can
FIOUr rwmn ••••• age
Bleacbed or Unbleached -6 lb bag
Niblets Corn .... 27c
Green Giant's tender goltl kerneh,! 12 oi
Baked Beans ... 45c
B &M New England st} 1~1 16 oz
STARKIST 79c
11JNA
Solid wh11c meat, m \Hiter· 7 oz
• ,13 ... tall ••• 1.49)
Tuna Helper .... 59c
With Cheese or Cream sauce -8 oz
HashCCMDu ..... &9c
That meaty Mary Kitchen! 15 oz can
Cake Mix snt .. nosr. 79c
Betty Crocker -all varieties -131• oz
.
Glorietta 3 9(
Tomatoes
Whole Peeled • ripe, firn11 16 oz can
Zee Napkins . . . s 119
Family package of360 napkins
L & P Sauce .... ggc
Zc!-.ty Wor~tershirl'1 lOrn'. btle
Cheerios ....... &se
Breakfast favorite in IOoz pkll
Pineapple 59c
JUI a
Island coodneM! Springfield 46 oz
Macaroni..., CllISE • 27c
Kraft's· ready in minute!I! 7•,. oz pkg
Peanuts llYIOAST •• s1 39
Planter's-they know peanuts! 16 oz
Ripe Olives .... 49c
Springfield-large pitted-No 300
• GIANT
TIDE s.12•
Still th !av~ detettent! • 't'.
Catfood SQGU(llAL • 59c
All flavon-15 oz bonus pack-moist
Fabric Softener ggc
s
JO""""
Ground Beef ~s1~
Lean -does not exce.d 22% fat
CHUCK
STEAK
• /
l'D.Aft£ iaau UIUlU " ••••••••••• .
I ' ,.. "'
\ .
r "" --
. I
Ii
Chili-
Pepp~r
Cups
VEGETABLECIDUIN
GREEN PEPPER
CUPS
4 medium sized
green peppers
~"i cup chopped onion
1 .l cup shredded car-
1 ots
l clove garlic,
minced
2 tahl<'spoons butter
ur m at'J.(arine
2 cans 115 oz.) beer
l'htlt "ith beans
2 tahll'spoons grated
Cheddar cheese
Cul tops from peppers;
sa Vl'. < 'lt>an and blanch
JH'PP<TS in bmhng water
for 10 m1nuks. Chop pep
per tops. Saulc chopped
l'l'PPl'rs, onion, shredded
ca1 rots and minced
g.11 Ii<' in butter until
tt•nUt>r Add <'hili and
Ch<'ddar cheese to
veg<•table mixture. Fill
hl.1nl'ht•d peppers with
'h1:1 \ l'getable mixture.
B .1 k f" covered 10 350
de1;rce F. oven for 40
mrnut<'s. Serve on
shrc·dded lettuce. Serves
four
111-\RTY '1E \TBALI,
s "m \ICllES :u EX l t'AN C H ILI
GRER!\ RELISH:
1 ' cup chopped
gn·t·n pepper
'a cup chopped
cucumber
:i t ah I t· s po on s
chopped gn·<•n onion
3 tablespoons mild
green duh salsa
.I,..
Eg
~mDJwmi~~~~fliii'ln~~~~~
... .87 dlCGupan 114'1 Gimi ... _ c
Donuts !:Y2 __ ..,..,..._ .. _,.. ........ ,..
UINON...,ft ON COIPIJll ... C...._. eo..-Olc:to9 ..... 101WvHof '" "11.
SUPER COUPON
M '*'.:... • .._ .... ..,...._ .. _,.., ......... ,. ...
Urn11 0ne1t1n1 •o.. ~ "'c~. C014*1 Elllclve Now 10 fWll Nov. lt. 11n.
SUPER COUPON
iWfiiWilWice
..... Price. tt.... . t H4t
''"" Sweet .. * Com •acfl -:.::.o:.=.-=-
Umlt 121.,. P« COUllOll Mtd o ... Coupoll hf Cuti.-.
Coupon f.~ .. Nov. 10 fltv Hool. 11, 1'11.
SUPER COUPON
Golden Premium Meats
BHI Blade Cut
Chuck
Steak
~sOA per II l.f!t210 lb.
BHI Rib·Small Size
Beef Rib
Steak
'V\OA Who14' o• Pooni Cut
lm1t1)8eef Brisket
BnlCliuck ~.50?,i 7 -Bone Steak
~&;;rcube steak
~1. .... c""" Stewing Beef
glNflolll Tri Tip Roast
~IM!llwnd ' Beef T1p Roast
58
,.. 1•• lb.
': .89
pef 199 lb
139 pet
lb.
1• pet
It».
pet .. , ..
D 6";;"nd Beef Pattim ·--bag
~ suQn Peri: C~
' A ~ c:nby StP.J
l fff·Loln·8ontiel•
TopSirtoin
Steak
'Port Loln·Rlb CUI
CenterCUt
Pon ChOps
Meet0tlMf =-11b.ll pkg.
AS40rtef 'terieti.
MartDn'I
Din.WI
pkg. II
Pantry Fillers
Super Deli
: 121
1::.89
'::-111
;:.99
::.95
Super Produce
Super Floral
~;=,..
~ii;-M
Super Bakery
2!1 ..... ..
... 85 .....
Health & Beauty
- ----
Liberty Blue
Dinnenvare
Onee a ala the
lorloualy colorf P-l
eason of auLuain
r ds • lfC! t harvest·· I acroq land ot
mertca '• D&U o fruit. e plump, piquant cran~
rry -tr\lly • crimson
em of nature. lJterally
1JJlon1 of these
uaclous, tansy berries re coming to markets
toss thcrlind from the
rowlna 1tatea of
. Massacbuaetta, New
.Jersey, Wlaconsin,
Wa1hin9ton, and
Orea on.
GenP.rations of
Americans have enjoyed
cranberries in countleaa
recipes, many handed
down alnce colonial
women cnaUftl1 used
them in such cookery d•
li&bts as stews, pud-
dings. pies and tarts.
Here for the Fall of 1977
are six very new, fresh
cranberry recipes -all
ripe for fine eating!
Cranberry Vegetable
Soup is bound to become
a family favorite. It's a
marvelously bot and
hearty mix of ingre-
dients that is easily pre·
pared. It combines fresh
cranberries, chopped
onions, beef broth, car-
rots, celery, potatoes.
peas, green beans, and
Try fresh, crimson cranberries in these delicious recipes.
tomatoes. Make enough In a larg~ saucepan, dough into a greased and
to aerve a second time combine cranberries, floured'l2-cup bundtpan.
around. Its navor will be water and sugar. Bring
doubly Sood! to a boil and simmer for 5 minutes. Mix orange
CRANBERRY juice and gelatin; stir in-
VEGETABLESOUP lo cranberry mixture.
l cup fresh cranber-Cool and then chill until
ries, rimed and drained _syrupy. Fold in celery, a cups chopped carrots, raisins and ap-
oniou. pies. Pour mixture into a
S cups beef broth 6-cup ring mold. Chill un-
(canned or from bouillon til firm. To unmold, dip
cubes) mold into lukewarm
1 cup diced carrots · water, tap to loosen and
1 cup sliced celery invert onto a platter. Fill
2 cups diced peeled center With salad greens.
potatoes Serve with dressing. To
Cover and let rise in a
warm place until almost
to the top of the pan.
Bake in a preheated
moderate oven <350
de1rees) for 3S to 40
minutes or unW bread is
firm to the touch in the
center. Cool in pan 10
minutes, remove from
pan and cool on a rack
bottom side up. Cut into
thin slices to serve.
Serve spread with butter
or cream cheese, if de-
sired. 1 cup peas prepare dressing, com·
1 cup out green blne dressing ingre-CRANBERRY
beans di en ts and beat until CITRUS PIE
l can (1 pound) smooth. Season to taste l packaae (11
tomatoes, chopped with salt, pepper and ounces) pie crust mix
1 tablespoon sugar sugar. 1 package (<t ounces)
In a ~-quart Dutch CRANBERRY lemon pie filling
oven combine all ingre-CHEESE BREAD Orange juice
dients and simmer, cov-2 cups fresh cranber-Grated rind of .1
ered, stirring occasional· riea, rinsed and drained orange
ly for 30 to 35 minutes or lh cup soft butter or 2 cups fresh cranber·
until all vegetables are margarine ries, rlnaed and drained
tender. 2 envelopes active ~cup sugar
CRANBERRY. . dry yeast JM cup water
· CRIMSON 2 cups lukewarm i · ta6fespoon c<Srn·
SAIAD MOLD water starch
Salad ~ C'OJ>SUCW: · ~ _cupfmeJychopped
3 cups fresh cranber-7 cups unsifted all· d r a l n e d s w e e t · =--...:a and d ined purpose flour pickled watermefoo rind ries, ru.,._. ra 1 tablespoon salt P · · 1 cup water 2 repare pie crust mix
1 cup sugar cups (8 ounces> accord in& to packaae
2 cups orange juice grated Gruyere cheese, directions. Roll out crust
3 envelopes un· orSwlsscheese larse enouah to llne the flavored eelatin . In a saucepan, com-bottom and sides of an . 1 b1ne l~ cups water, sug. \lngreaaed 9 Inch p1• 1 cupdicedce ery ar and cranberries. pan, having -a 1-ln~
1 cup shredded car-Bring to a boil and silT'·· overbane. Flute over·
rots 1 mer !or 5 minutes. In a b into high ed f.i cup raisins large bowl place butter, ang a ge.
1 cup chopped peeled pour bot cranberry mix-~~c~~~mao~~~~!~~
apples lure over it, and stir until hot oven (400 degrees> Salad~ butter is melted. Cool to for 10 to IS minutes or un·
Dreutng lukewarm .. Thoroughly til brown. Cool. Prepare
lf.11 cup oil . . dissolve yeastln ~cup of · fllin •.• u.... t !f.a cup lemon JWCe water: stir into cran· pie I g acco • .....ua o 1~ cupsourcream berry mixture. Add flour. ~~~~gf!~a:! j~\~~
Salt, pepper and salt and cheese, stir until instead of water called
sugar well blended. Spoon for and omitUng eglf
••• Hire·a·Stew
<From P .. e Ct>
STUFFED IWSBllOOHS
1 cup bread crumbs
~cupbutter
14 teaspoon thyme
114 teupooQ tatra1on
11, teaspoon aarllc salt
~ c:up sherry
~ eup mouarella cheese
12 large musbroOms
Olive oil Remove stems from mushrooms
and chop rm~. Saut.e butter. spices,
bread crumbs, wine and mushrooms.
Brush cape with olive oil and bake at
350 degrees for 15 minutes. Stuff with
bread crwnbe mixture and sprinkle
with cheese and broil until cheese is
melted. Makes appet.Uers for four.
T;ry Squash· Pie
yolks. Stir in orange rind
and vanilla '+'hen mix·
ture is thick.
Pour mixture into
cooled pie sbell. Chill un-
til firm. In a saucepan.
combine remaining in·
gredients and cook, stir-
rine constantly, over low
,. Wednelday, NOV9mbor t. ttn DAILY PILOT f:7
& COMYetmOMAL COOllMii
Special ceramic cookware for roaata.
turkeys, hams, vegetables. chickens. For
everyday and gourmet cooking. Makea
foOds taste great. Beautiful serves at table.
Many~ •
.................... _ .....
learn about your microwave oven and
Masonware. Actual cooking c:temonatratfons
at l«tading LA.. Orange CoUnty area lt9f~
Holiday
I
Berry
Leather
Fresh Meats . Fresh Meats
SWIFT OUTTEP.OALL TUP.KEYS 1on1M GNoOI'" MIOU...... . .•.• ~. 79
CO~ISH GAME HENS "'°"" 'X>OL lnolf>I • • ....... lM:H 1.29
Canned&Packaged
• ~ CRANOEAAY
SAUCE 29· LM>Y LEE ..E.l.IEO 00'MO!16 OZ CAN e
p .LADYLEE
b :~ 290Z CAN .4 9'
Fancy quality;
not fancy pnces.
We negotiate careiuJJy, so we can
maintain Jow'every~y prices on
r
( ,,
r'
the entire line. We maintain a low
prOfit margirt, as we've told you in ·9
the past So it's interesting, and ~~
cOmf~, to note that our Lady u
Lee gOods are the quality-equal u
61 t>ettet~ brands. ..!.
but there IS ~uile a price
Oifferenoe. It's particUJarly rice to
keep our low prices in mind When !
you're trying to feed 'Cl famly on a d
budget. Look for the Lady tee a
label on our entire fine qUality line !
of packaged gOOds and dairy
products as well.
,& .q
:t
A Wine
BecoDles
lCnown
By'l'OMUOGE ,.,.,..........., .. wnw
An affable
Frenchman, who lives in
a thousand-year-old
cbateau aqd tends a
venerable vineyard pro
ducing Muscadet, main-
tains that a good bottle or
wine is the most difficult
thing to give birth to
after a child.
''Wine bu been made
on our estate since the
Roman occupation of
Gaul," said the Marquis
de Goulaine, "but the
Museadet we produce to-
day did not become
·prevalent until after
1709, when a frost almost
devati.ted the vines."
Tbe vineyards sur-
vived and Chateau Goulaine and other
plantings along the lower
valley of the Loire River near the city or Nantes
' now produce France·s
supply ol Muscadet.
Today the vineyards
produce about SO million
bottles of Muscadet a
year, said' the marquis.
who came to the United
States to introduce the
yield of his own eatpte.
The wine did not become
well known abroad until
about three decades ago.
''It wu after World
War II that people out-
1jde ~ranee began to ap-
preciate dry white wine
and many turned to
Muscadet," be said.
\ j "Paris is the city which
made it popular."
We recently tried our
1 first &1814 ot Muscadet
and foundlta light, fresh
wine which combines a
delicately fruity flavor
with a hint of gunflint.
"You must drink this
wine when it la young lo
capt\ll'e the flavor," the
marquis told us, ''since it
doe1 not contain auffi.
clent acidity to improve
much with age. Three
years is considered the
maximum desirable
lifespan.
"Actually," he added,
"if you follow the prov-
e r b o f d r,i. n k l n g
Muscadet not less than
two montba nor .w.ore than two y_,. atter bot-
tling, you Will D•Yet be
d.1.sappointed.'•
Muscadet should be
served cbilled, but not so
cold lt IGMa navor. It Is
Qood With seafood and is
alao ·pleasant sipped
before eattna beacause
of it.a light dryness. An
earlier m~ ii credit·
ed wttb inventing 11n
aperitif COftsiiU!l1 "of one part raapber,ry liqueur to
our a parts lluacadet.
The preHDt marquis is
a 1ounnet and amateur ~t. One of his favorite uc was created by ame an r Who
dteameCf:\IP U.o aperitif.
H ts l'«l . I~lfusc det
2 *· Ye4 1 an
YOU Al.WA Y8 &A Ylr
WIT•8TAftJIUOa.
caaTIPl•D•aP •NCIAU na•....__..,.Cll
MAU11111 •11Aun mun
&19CU"'9-
l'IOllY NCI 06lllllAl19
.....COfrtOTIOHAU Y W AA.tHtU •. 0 IO"llAa"fOll OOlt(KjOI-• 'Wta.l 111 C.t«t•ULL f lllUIJINOI
~
u.694
, .. 79c
LB.
l
• -
DAUGHTERS OF THE AMBSICAN
BEVOun10N: The Patience Wricht chapter
will bold a f\md-ralsing card party Oil Tbundy,
Nov. 10, iii the Nel1bb0tho0d Ciilsre1atl0ftal
Church, Laauna Beach. A salad lunebeon will be
served. Cost is SZ.50 each or $10 a table.
B'NAI B'&ITH WOMEN: Irma Gertler will
be guest speaker at a l p.m. Thursday, Nov. 10,
meeting ot the Orange County Chapters at the
Fountain Valley Community Center. Ms. Gertler
will 1peak on Operation Stork, a pre-natal care
program.
ORANGE COUNTY RISTO lCAL
SOCIETY: The group will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 10, at tbe Bowers Museum in
Santa Ana. John A. Randall will give tbe pro-gram.
Pl Bt.'TA PIO: The South Coast Alumnae
Club will meet at 10:30 a .m . Thursday, Nov. 10,
;tl the home of Mrs. Wallace Gerrie of Newport
Beach. Sam Bressler of the Newport Beach
police department wlll speak. For information
contact Virginia Bollman or Balboa, president.
GAMMA PIU BETA: Tbe South Orange
County Alumnae will hold Founders' Day
ceremonies on Thursday, "lov. 10, at the Plush
£.'ox m Laguna Hills. Sot.al hour is at 6:30 p.m
with dinner at 7 · 30 p m. Call Jan 'Barrett,
768-0746, or Paula Cariker, 581-6347, to attend
CLIPPED WINGS: The Orange County
Chapter will meet atlOa.m.. Thursday, Nov.10, at
the home of Gail Preston, Mission Viejo. A
luncheon will follow
WOMEN IN COMMUNICATIONS, INC.:
Ramona Ripst.on of the ACLU will speak to the
Orange County Chapter at a Great Western Sav-
ings. N('wportBeach
Jo'OUNTAIN VALLEY WOMAN'S CLlJB:
The group will hold a membership luncheon at
11:30 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 10, at the Huntington
Beach Mercury Savings and Loan Company. For
information.< all Mrs Curt Burnett, 963·2250
MESA HARBOR CLUB: The group will
meet at 10 30 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 10, at the Bull
Market Dr Robert Emmett Downing will
~pt•ak
AMERICAN SOCIETY OF INTE&IOR
DESIGNERS: The California-OraDRe C~tv
group will hold a Monte Carlo night on ~day
"lov 11 Cocktails are al 6 p.m. with dinner
~erved from 7 to 10 p.m . For reservations, call
I .e-~lie Fluharty. R70-9526.
CALU'ORNIA FEDERATION OF
WOMEN'S CLU~~ The Orange Diatrict will
meet at 10 a.m. Friday, Nov. ll, to honor ita
Junior membership.
ORANGE COUNTY PHILHAllMONIC
SOCIETY: A showing of furs will be held from
7 lo 9 p.m. Friday, Nov 11. at Bullock's Wilshire,
Fashion Island, Newport Beach. Call 644-2793 or
ll7!'l·0377 for reservations
-
VFW COASTLINE POST 3531 AUXILIARY:•
The group will hold a membership party ~• R
p.rn , Friday, Nov. 11, at the Costa Mesa
Veterans' Memorial Hall.
NATIONAL WOMEN'S,.POLITICAL
CAUCUS: The Orange County Chapter wUI
salute the county's women elected to public of-
fices at a luncheon Saturday, Nov. 12, at the
A1rporter Inn, Irvine. The bar opens at 11:30
a.m. with lunch at 12:30 p.m. Dr. Carlotta Mellon
will be luncheon speaker. To attend, send checks
for $12.50 per person to Orange Comity National
Women's Political Caucus, Box 4880, Irvine, CA
92716
SOCIETY OF MILITARY WIDOWS: The
group will meet at 10 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 12, in •
the Spurgeon Room of the Santa Ana Public
Library.
ESTANCIA INSTRUMENTAL l'IUJSIC
BOOST.EBS: Tbe eroup is bavinf a.casino ni1bt
beginning at 8 p . m. Saturday, Nov. 12. Donation
is $5 per person. Tickets may be purchased at tbe
door
Model M 1chelle Greer and Mrs. William Jenks
prepare for Ebel/ fashion show.
TIARA DE NINOS: The auxiliary of the
Children's Home Society will hold a fashion
show, boutique and luncheon oo Saturday, Nov
12 Boutique items go on sale at 10· 30 a m
ST LUKE'S ORTHODOX CHURCH: The
ladies o( the church will hold a holiday boutique
and fashion show on Saturday, Nov. 12, in the
Church FeUowsbtp Hall Social hour i.s ll: 30 a.m.
with lunch at 12·30 Make reservations by calling
636· 1800 or 546-7529 '
MISSION VIEJO ASSOCIA'510N OP
AilTISTS AND CRAFTSMEN: Christmas Car·
rousel will be held from 9 a.m. to 5 p.cn. Saturday
and Sunday, Nov. l2 ~nd 13. at the Wlneman's
CeoteratLaPazaDdMareuentePmway. ·
~
WESl'MlNSTEll NURSERY SCHOOL: The
school will bold a coW)t.ry fair from 10 a.m. to 4
p.m . Saturday, Nov. 12, at the Fountain Valley
Recreation center at Mtle Square Parle.
PRINCE OF PEACE LUTHERAN
SCHOOL: The Costa Mesa school will hold a
country day fair sale from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Satur-
day, Nov. 12, on the patio and parking lot of the
school, 2987 Mesa Verde Drive Ea.st.
IUNIOR WOMEN'S AUXILIARY: The
California Center for Biblical Studies group will
hold a country store boutique from 10 a .m. to 4
p.m. Saturday, Nov 12, at 10092 Old Ranch Cir-
cle, Villa Park.
SOUTH COAST COMMUNn'Y HOSPITAL
AUXIUAllY: The Las Madrina Chapter will
bold a fashion show and luncheon al U :30 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 12, at the El Adobe restaurant,
San Juan Capistrano.
ZONTA CLUB OF NEWPO&T BAaBOa:
Tbe group will bold a card party and salad
luncheon at noon on Saturday, Nov. 12, at the
Zonta ClUb, Newport Beach. Make hmcbeon
reservatioml, $2.50, b}: calling548-2450or548"""116.
BIG 8~ OF ORANGE COUNTY: The .
v.ouP will bold a poetry concert featurillg John
Campbell of FUllertoo on Saturday, Nov. 12. Call
&M-lll6forreservatlons. •
Eb 11 \ub of
Newpott Beach ll1
:hold it6 annual
luncheon aDd fashion
snow at the Balboa
Bay Chm at 11 a.rtt.,
'fharsday. Nov. 7.
BullOCk's W"tlshire Will
present a Prevue of
Holiday FashiDns and
proceeds will lbe used
for clUbscholarsbips.
Mrs . .P.hillip Fluhar-
ty. general chairman
for the lWlch~. wlll be -assistea by ·the
Mmes. L. William
Jenks, reservations;
' Richard Hodge, in-
vitations: Frank
Merkle, door prizes;
Cecil Shirer and Fran-
cis GJ.Ockrier, decora-
tions and William
Tritt, public relations.
Serving as hostesses
at the door will be the
Mmes. Harry Goetz,
George Stricker.
Clayton Thompson.
Ivan Rebert and
Raymond Harvey.
For reservations
and information call
Mrs. Jenks,64<M830.
The Assistance League of NeW'J)C_)rt
Beach will bold its annual cllamJ>ape and
tea Treasure Auction for metttbe" an.cl
guests from 1 to 3 p .m., Thursday, Novri,O, •
in the Service Center, 505 32nd Stroet,
Newport. Beach.
Furniture, antiques alid collectibl~
china, silver, glass, jade, jewehj,,_P.ictutes,
paintings. books, stitchery and fine Fiencb
Bordeaux wine will be some of the items for
auction in the fund raising event.
Proceeds will benefit the 3T-year~d
chapter's two main philanthropies, the
Children ·s Dental Health Center Ud the
Child Day Care Center.
MONDAY MORNING CLUB: Thi 'LalWta
Sup will have a luncheon meeting at 11:30 a.m.
nday, Nov. 14, at the Balboa Bu Club,
ewport Beach. The five other momiq clutie
that Mrs. Robert W. Roper, JUest ot ho!U>r, bas
founded over tbe last 20 years have been invited.
LAKE FOREST ART ASSOCIATION:
Dagmar Chaplin will be guest artJ~t wbe,n the
group meets at 7:30 p.m . Monday, Nov. 14, at the
Clubhouse in El Toro.
STATUS OF WOMEN: The Orange County
Commission will meet from 7 to 8 p.m. Monday,
Nov. 14, in the Board Room, Department of
Education, Bu.Hiding B, 1300 South Grand, Santa Ana.
JUNIOR EBELL CLUB: The Irvine group will bold a dessert at 8 p.m. Monday, Nov. 14, in
the home of Dianne Lundquist, Irvine. Poet
James Bruce Sievers will be featured. The
cultural · enrichment committee will bold a
Jancbeoci at 11 :30 a.m. Monday, Nov. 14, at Mercury Savings and Loan, Tustin.
ALPHA DELTA Pl: The Orange Co~ty
Alumnae will bold a salad luncheon and program
at the home of Mrs. Ted Burgenbauch ot Costa
Mesa at 10 a.m. Monday, Nov. 14. Beth Wilson
will speak.
LAGUNA BEACH ART MUSEUM AF-
FILIATES: The group will meet at 2 p.rn. Tues-
day, Nov. 15, at the museum. Painter Arden Von Dewitz will demonstrate.
ORANGE COUNTY DIETETIC AS-
SOCIATION: The group wfll meet at 7:15 p.m .
Tuesday, Nov. 15, at UCI Medical Center.
~
\ DELTA GAMMA ALUMS: The Santa Ana-l: Newport Harbor group will meet at 10 a.m., f Tuesday, Nov. 15, at the home of Mrs. Adele Cur-rey, Santa Ana.
JUNIOR EBELL CLUB: The ~ewport
Beach group will have a luncheon m~ting at 10
am Tuesday Nov. 15, at the home of Mrs. Ro~rtRiver. Deanna Edwards will be speaker.
USC TOWN AND GOWN: The Orange Coun-
ty Junior Auxiliary will meet at 10 a.m":'Tuesday,
' Nov. 15, at the home of Mrs. John Gray, Corona > del Mar. •
I ( l TEMPLE BAT Y AHM SISTERHOOD: The , ~ group will hold a Hanukkah Boutique betlllnin& at
7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 15. The boutique Will
continue from 10 a .m. to 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 8:30
p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 16, and from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday, Nov.17.
ORANGE COUNTY PBJt..RABMONIC
" SOCIETY: The Big Canyon Chapter will meet at
10 a.m . Wednesday, Nov. 16, at the home of.Mrs. Har.vey Heinrichs.
BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY NATIONAL
WOMEN'S COMl!IJT"tEE1 ~ Orange countt
chapter will meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Nov.10,
at Federal Savings Bank, Newport Be•c:b.
CJ11t1SnAN WoitEN'S CLUB: The group
will hold a luncheon atooon Wednesday, Nov.16,
at the HUQtinston Beach Inn.~ la$«, Make re:
servatlc!M l>y Noy. 11 with Mrs. Jolla Murray, Huntmgton Beach,
CPA AUDuABY: The Lcag Beacb-Oraqe
County chapter will meet at n:ao a .m.
Wednesday, New. 18. at 20th Cenru.,ry IJmlted Reataurantine&taMesa. '
' THE DOLPHIN$: The Women'• divtalon ot
the Chamber will meet et 11:30 a.m. for cbam. pagne and noon for lunch on Wednesday, Nov. lt,
at the Intne Coast Countty Club.
NEWPORT HARBOR PANRELLENIC:.
The •roui> will meet at 10:30 a.m. Wednte~ No.-. 16, at Glendale Federal Savb\P, Pu
Island. Luncheon aGd brtd,ile WUl t'ollo!.t Ule
ld"tiil'
..
MAW Is For
Appalachia
. By STRAT DOPTQAT
HUNTINGTON, W."/a. CAP> -Mimi
Ralston sat on a couch in the cluttered otrice at
Appalachian Press one day last w~ stroking a
white dove and searching for Just the right words
with which to describe her new bi·monthly magazine.
At her feet. unnoticed, a VBY kitten chased its tau.
Mhui's hands suddenly d(!Serted the dove
and fluttered into the air. Then, with her long
fingers exte~ded, she began shaping her words.
"We're trying to promote women's con-sciousness," she said, finally, the words coming
in a torrent. "I see it in terms of a pebble effect.:
if it helps just one woman become more aware of
herself as a person, then all of life .is enhanced.
. "MAW is aimed at women. all aCfOS• ~e spectrum. From the very befiruUnl, we ve tried
to solicit interested, creative WQmen who will
share their internal feelings and experiences;
we've tried to create something that people will
keep, something that will command a faith in the values ofthe tnner life."
The "very beginning" for MAW -an
acronym for Magazine of Appalacru..n Women -
was just last tnontb, Yet, already> t&e magazine
has become something of a coll~tor's item.
"We printed 2,000 copies and have Ju.st one
copy left. But, of course, we haven't gotten the
unsold copies of the first Issue bact from the dis-tributors, either,•• Mimi said, laughing.
By now, the dove bad climbed to Mimi's
shoulder and was &rooming her Jong, ~onde
ha«. 'me cat, meanwhile, had climbed to .her lap.
But tlQW that the dam had burst, Mlmi eaid
little •ttentioo to her feathery and furry frlenOs.
"I came here in J.974 with Paul," sbe said, re-
ferring to her hWlband, Paul Salstrom. "He had
Wen livine on a f~ i:n Lincoln County and we
r;net in a bOokst.ore when he returned home to Iowa.
"We stayed here fqr two years and theri left W~t Virginia last yeat. We speai some time in Minn~ helping put out a ma1aztne Qp there
bbt when lleft Huntington I was t.binkinaah'eady
of a magazine for Appalachian wom~. I had
clearly seen the need. So, when we retamedlast
spring, I took a crash course in printing at Hunt-ington East lligh School."
The first issue of MAW was Immediately
controversial, not so much because of tbe con-
tents as be<!ause of the name. Mimi r~eived
several letters from irate women who felt MAW
evoked ari image of a mindless drud~.
She held her ground, however, and replied to
tbe crJties in a column.ta whlch she said she saw
the name evotinc ima1es of strenJth and
perseverance. These wm the qualities, sa.o satd,
that Appalachian 1ro!Qen bad depended on to sur-
vJ,ve amid the harsh demands of life ln the hills.
The macazine retlects this feelinl. The COV·
er of the ftrsUasue was a symbolic Pbototrapb ot
a weathered door, presumably one that led to a world of dikent values tor W<>men.
Natural
Porcelains
Liquid
, Juliette
Nails·
Checkerb6ard
Farm a
Grade 'A'
FrO~I)
20-oz. Slze
I
!
I .
I
'77 LTD II
2DOOI
V·R. auto trans . air conditioning. Powe•
steering. power disc brakes, radio.
heater. vinyl roof Less than 7.00C
mites. Lie J270RSD Stock J2~18
V-8, auto. tra(&, f1ctofY iir oor.d1tlon-
1ng. power 1teenng, PQW9r dlk ~.
redio, heat•r. whitewall tiree. ,flnted
glass. wheel c:overa. Landau tcp, 1'tt
wheel, 21 .000 m1. Llc. ••24884 SGc t1000A
I that atie considered tbe KKJC•1 taCtrc u
' ericanlsm."
The Stale tfepartmen~ dlsas.soclatea. lta lt frOm
. Ambassador Andrew Yocm&'• deecript!on Of
South African Prime M~
John VOl"fter. as ••very ~uch
over the hill intellectu~ and~ every other kind of v •
Young also back-pedaled
somefttbat. r
"The am}>assador has told
me that he was expressing a
personal opin1on, •• Hocldlac
Ca tter. the department
spokesman, said in response to
voiuTu questions about Young's com-ments to some BOO federal employees. · • Philip W. PUlsbary, chairman emeritus of the
Pillsbury Co. and Corinne Grlftltla. daughter of Min·
aesota Twins President Cal Grlffltll, wed, it was an·
no1lllced in Minneapolis.
Tb~ .marriage--------
between Plll4bury, 74, ( P'~O'DLE ) 'randson of the f16ur ,. CJ' T
cornpaoy rounder, and -...-------Mio Griffith sa, took •
place in Paris.
The bride •Uended HoltoQ Arms School in
Wallhington, vma Mercede ln 11torence, Italy, ancl
UQch ,Junior Colleg&. New YO\'tr. She 0'"15 some ~ ln the Twins baseball club ~b a family
trust. , The famllies have been friends since the Twins
moved~ Minnesota from Wa.s~n in 1961 •
• The strained relations between Central
Micbiean University and Dow Chemical Co. are~
turning to normal, but there
may be a shortage of campus
$peakers for a while.
• Grants to the university
from Dow USA, the chemical
company's principal domestic
subsidiary, remain suspended in
fhe aftermath of an Oct. 10
speech in which .Jue FODda
criticized the firm.
But apparently feelings
have been soothed as the result F<HtOA
bf a meeting between CMU president Baroid Abet
, apd Dow USA president Paa.I Orn.flee.
Scotland
··Film Set
'At College Soviet Relation. 'Mueh IJetter'.
I I
'\•"An armchair ex·
CQnsion to Scotland Will
J>e offered tbrou1h a
feature film b~ing
,.:~ T e en_.-d b y S • d ·
4leback College at.. two
.CHffereot times tt\d
.places Friday.
, Bill Mad.seri's "A New
'Look at Scotland" will be
~hown first at 2:30 p.m. 1v; the Consumer Rdom it the Sears store in
Laeuna Hills Mall. It will
be shown 1lgai.n at 7:30
··p.m. in Room 139 of the
~ege's library.
Admission is $2 for
4!acb person who has not
• )JNregistered for the col·
lege 's travel film series.
Mad.sen will be availa·
ble to answer questions
after each showing.
• Further information
ma1 be obtained b7 call· 1fii~ the colle1e'1 com·
Mwity services office at
831-1813. .....
MOSCOW <AP> -President
Leonid L Bl'e%hnev told U.S. Am·
wsador Malcolm Toon today
that Soviet·U.S. relations lately
have shown "a def'mlte chan«ie
for the better," the official Soviet
news agency Tass reported .
l'ass said that du.rbi& a -meet· \nB between BrealmeY and Toon
at the Kremlin, "specially em·
phasized was the urgency of
finalizing the' draftiQ of a new
agreement oa llmltln• strategic
offensive arms ...
It added that finalizing of a
new SALT pact should be done
"oo the basis of the princlpalecl
accords reached as a result of the
recent talks."
( __ ,_N_sB_o_~___,,,,J
lupeetlea Pt •hcl
TOCCOA, Ga. <AP> -The 1-
inspectton of the·diun above Toc-
coa Falls lUble CoUeee was UM
subject of confusion Tuesday, but
apparently students and staff
members were the only persons
who regularly checked it.
Kelly Barnes dain burst Sun·
day, letting the contents of Its
reservoir roar over the falls and
onto the campus.~ atleutaa
people. ..
..
... SUM AT THI llAC:N $17,IOO
Enjoyj.9\llµllng or surfing, ju.st ~' mile
from tbe beach in this lovely 2
bedroom, 1 bath mobile home. Hurry,
woo't last!
IY n. SIA $67,900
Walking distance to beach
COJDmunity pool. 3 bedroom, llh bath'.
condo. Lender will finance to
investors.
IHDOO• "5UHSH1Hl $69, 900
Good news! Light up your life with the
indoor ~unshine of this beautiful 3
bedroom, 1 o/.a bath cornered lot home.
Many amenities. Bring your wife &
smell the freshly baked bread in this
sunny kitchen.
1 IOll Mepall• St. , ...... v..,.
9'3·1311
•
Geatral 1002 G.-nl ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
. PEMHSULA POIMT
4 Bdrm., 2 ba. home. All amenities.
Lovely area. few steps to beach.
Sl~.500 LIDO ISU
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm .. den, 4
baths, living rm. w/cathedral ceiling.
Lge. master bdrm. suite. $224,~
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
3·11 Bor"I•• D11v•· N B b/'J blbl
GeMrol 100 ......................
WOULD YOU
IWEYE
$52, O!!
Yes, it'1 true &we have a
Gov'mt. appraisal to pro·
ve it! Wood paneling,
Wied brick frpl, Z car
gara&e w /new concrete
driveway Run, don't
walk!!
lltA~•·hl• atty, hie. 141·2l2l
s&J~~~o~~etely OFF SEASON
redecor . .3 bdrm1 .• 2 nra.-u DllV NOW! ba~; contem)>Cltar)'. de· IKMll"'DU I
sip. Quiel in.aide loca· laamu .• aood colors.
Uon. Reduced for lm· Dew .~arpels,, nice
mediate aale -Sl.'5,9~.
-
Servmg CO$U1 Mesa-Irvine
Huntington Bcac'h·Newport Belich
BRAND NEW!!!
. ..... in fact, not yet completed -4
bdrlI)s., 3 baths; the very popular
"WILLOW,. upgraded mOdel, located
in the prestigious WOODBRIDGE
community. A splendid family home
for $114,500. including the 1&.rW!
' 759-0811 ..
HEW EXCLUSIVE •
1606 SANTIAGO DR-HI
$215,000
4 BR, li ving rm, formal dining rm,
fam-rm, spac. kitchen w/breakfast
area & sep. laundry. Lovely pool-sz
yard w/large. entertainment area
Move-in condition.
ep.. 1llurtclcry 1-4 .. ly Appt.
Ask far UW• Shea
•••UHfrED IROKDS
541-1549 646-7414
\}./ ES LI·: Y N .
TAYLOR CO.
HEA LTOHS si 11cl .. 1 ~MG
UDO ISL! IEST IUY -S2St, 950
Charming & delightful! Spacious 3
bedrm 2-story home on large corner
lot. Inviting family rm, 3 baths, func·
tional kitchen w/fine appliances &
BBQ. Prof. dee. North & South patios.
WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO. REALTORS
2111 S• J ...... H1ls R09d
HIWPOtrT CEHTER. H.I. 644-4tl 0 ·
ONE STORY
COHDOMlttllUM
$55,000
2 Bedroom• in luxury
high rise buildinf, over·
looking huee private patio area. Soper eonve· nienl to freeways. 1thop
,_ .SUM AT THI llACHSl7,500
Enjoy sunning or surfing, just h mile
from the beach in this lovely 2
bedroom, 1 bath mobile home. Hur'"" won'tlast! ·~·
IY THI SIA $67 900
Walking distance to bea
1ch
commlUlity po0l, 3 bedroom, 1 •h bath:
~ondq. Lender will finance to mvestors.
tM>OO• SUMStftME $69, 900 9ood news! Light up your life with the
mdoor sunshlile of this beautiful 3
bedtoom, 1 o/.& bath cornered lot home.
Many amenities. Bring your wife &
smell the freshly baked bread in this
sunny kitchen.
1 IOH Mopala St.
FMt• Ylley •
963 .. ll I
. PENINSULA rotMT
4 Bdrm., 2 ba. home. All amenities.
Lovely area, few s teps to beach.
$189,500
LIDO ISLE
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den, 4
baths, living rm. w/cathedral ceiling.
Lge. master bdrm. suite. $224,$0
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J ·ll Buy\ul" Drt·1t• N. li 6 /5 · 6161
Gttlff ol ••••••••••••••••••••••
WOULD YOU
IWEVE
~2,000!!
Yes. it 1 true & we have a
Gov' mt. appraisal to pro·
ve it! ~ood paneling,
used bnck frpl, ! car
garage w /new concrete
driveway. Run, don't
walk!!
ERA/Wethlde
IUty, Inc. t41-U2J
IAYSHORlS
BE.ST BUY! Completely
redecor. 3 bdrmt .. 2
ba!-bs; contemporary de· sign. Quiet inside loca-
tion. Reduced for im·
mediate sale · SUS,950.
• 1002
················~······
,NO
CREDIT
NEEDED
$68,000
BIG 4 BDRM
Off SEASON
BEACHUY NOW! Immac., good colors.
new ;carpets, nice
-
Scr111n9 Costa Mesa·lrvine
H untington B each -Newport llu<.ech
BRAND NEW,!!
in fact, not yet completed -4
bdrms., 3 , baths; the very popular
"WILLOW'' upgraded model, located
in the prestigious WOODBRIDGE
community. A splendid Cpmily home
for $114,500, including the land!
MEW EXCLUSIVE
1606 SANTIAGO · DR-NI
$215,000
4 BR, living rm, formal dining rm.
f am-rm, spac. kitchen w/brea.k.f ast
area & sep. laundry. Lovely ,Pi>Ol·sz
yard w/large. entertainment area.
Move-in condition.
Op.~ 1·4•1y ~· A* fer UIUm S1tea •••UHrrEO noaas
541-1549 • 646-7414
'\:
UDO ISLE IESf IUY -$25'. 910
Charming & delightful! Spacious 3
bedrm 2·Story home on large corner
lot. Inviting family rm, 3 baths, tune·
tional kitchen w/fine appliances &
BBQ. Prof. dee. North &South patios.
WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO. REALTORS
2111 s .. ~ ... llo.t
MIWPOIT CEMTEI. M.I. •44-010 ·
.iJ
EXCHANGE
or b~ ! Prime Easi.t;ide Costa Mesa duplex at
SUS,500. S Years olcl.
Spaclous three
bedroe>m-two bath up·
pet' unit (just like a
home). Let the lower two bedn»m unit.help mak
~»> HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
tllhclan
"' •,• • All
-----~----~
red hill ~ ....
SS 2 -7500
CHARMING 3 Bdrm S.. Jumt
home In beat location C•htfw 327a $700/mo. ON WATER with dock••••••••• .. ••••••••••••
tJ'HE t.xCJnNG
PALM MISA APTS. ~~NPT
Bads,lMB!l.
from $220." llp. Adub,NoPeta
UlllleuDr.
(SB&b Eut otNewpart
Blvd.>
548-SlllO
....,... ... w ......
880 Irvine I al 17UU
64S·OSSO
Mewport h«IVs.MI
1700 16th St.
(Dover at 16th>
642·8170
WES fCLIFF BLDG.
N(WJl(JH I BUIC"l1 .. '"'• ......... ' .... .
SAM CLIMIKTI
..... Arts ...
Ideal Medical or Dental1-_..;..~-.........,----•
awtes. Pluah carpet.a &
ABYSITTER Tue or 1bur UM. My home, re-
ference req, MJ.982$
ABYSlTl"ER Odd hrs,
Tue • Wtd off, Balboa
Jale S7a.3887
IAIER
F /time ahlft.I, 8-11 or 2 to
10 PM. No Expr nee. D·K 1------,,.-~-1 DONUI'. 3605 So. Bristol,
VOLT
• Y•l'fJol lA~• •.I n,.11 t •,
JAHITOR/
MAIMJIHAHCI!.
·----------1 CallMS-0403.
J. Herbert Hall
Jewellers Housecleaners needed. $39-1379
Mature. Top$$. Car nee. CASJUER/CreditClerk
EIL Idle Items with a
Daily Pilot Cluailled Ad.
Mlgllls or PMa
Mor , ..... n..
MZ-1403, 64.5-3439 Needed F /time pos.llion Mature, respoo adJt for
HOUSEKEEPER·LIVE ApplylnPel"IOO early A.II. newspaper ______ .;..__.
IN. Npt Sch family, must South Coast Ptaia delivery, mat bave tr au.
speak Eng, refs req'd. 3333 BNtol St. CM •uic-""
Call N4-6680or 642-8475. '""""'""'
HOUSEICEEPEll LEGAL SECRETARY· Medical
LI v E · l N, Fu LL. Lacuna Nlcuel, good FrWOfc:
CHARGE pel"IOQ to rUD ,killl, 1alary bued OD exper.~
··-
Experienced steam macbfile preaser few Uilor
1hop. Full-lime or Parl-tlme. Needed l~· mediatel,y. ..
ll'f:. ;
·-
SdtsT,_ SI 1,150
Jnt.'l foods co. seeks
career determined pers.
Relocatable upon promo-
tsmi. Call Bill, 833·!'700.
SECRETARY
Newport Ctr iuveltlnent
ftrm. Xlnt Skll1a rtq'd. eau &CO-Om.
FulJ.tlme posiUoo for ~·d aeamstteu. We
need )ICIU rilh& _.,for CIW' t.ailcr a.hop stuf.
Pleasant. wortc:llll CCD4Ulon1.
At EASE ........... c• T•• a. U••I .. 644-50)0
TOP DOLLAR
PAID
• J'ORQ,EAN
~J
11111 I~ tjf l\C.H Al VO
tlll'l lttlG I ON Bf ACI•
11·1;. 'HI "o·\ll IJ·~~
UDDUIACK
VAl&.IY IMPOJTS
IJJ-2040 491-4949 -------
CREVIER
n.781Ant4en
All models & colors .
..... elate
Deli .. ry Today! ·-...-.1977 Hli"YeGot'roc;,.1
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
2MS HARBOR BLVD.
540!641054 2t1
NEWPORT DAT SUN
~-._. -~ ~
'
BJ JO.\NNE REYNOLDS
Cll .. Dell• ...... """ Two Huntinston Beach men
who pleaded not tullty Tuesday
lO charges of murder conspiracy
in lhe Newport Beach murder
case remain Jailed loday alter
$300,000waslopped off their bail.
Raymond Steven Resoo and
Anthony Marone Jr., bolb o{
10121 Merrimac Drive, are still
. beinc held in Orange County Jail
* * * Cops
To Food Fi,...
Check Traced
To Diedrich?
By GARY GRANVILLE OI-Deily~.._.Sc.tt
A · $25,000 check given by
Fullerton attorney Michael Rem·
1 ingtoo to food company president.
William Moore in 1973 "could
possibly have been repayment of
a loan I owed Moore," Orange
County Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich said today.
Remington said last week that
$25,000 of a $75,000 le1al fee he re-
ceived Crom the Grant Corpora·
tion in 1973 that was related to an
issue tllen-pending before the
county Board of Supervisors was
loaned to Diedrich.
He also said another $25,000
from the fee wu loaned "at
Ralph'• behest .. to a JMed:rlcJa
friend whoso name he couldn't
rec.all.
Neither Joan hu been repaid.
accordlnc to Reml.Ditoa.
It was ,)urned Monday tbat
Moore, president ot Golden Stale
Foods, Inc., and a long.:time
Diedrich friend. wu recipient of
the second $25,000 loan in 1973.
The Remlngt.On fee payment
and the subsequent loans lo
Diedrich and Moore are the cen· terplece in a Grand Jury probe
and a 1913 board decision to re-
lease land from an agricultural
preserve agreement in the
Anaheim Hills.
Remington was hired to
represent the development com·
pany, apparently on the recom-
mendation of Diedrich. as it
sought to Cree land for develop-
ment on the Knoll Ranch.
It was later that Diedrich led
a 3 to 2 board of supervisort de·
clsion to release the land in a con-'
troversial decision.
Remington, Diedrlch's busi-
ness attorney, la.st week pleaded
guilty to a misdemeanor charge
brought against him and a Grand
Jury indictment that named him
as a conspirator in a 1976 coa-
splracy to violate state political
campaign regulations.
Simultaneously, other felony
charges broueht asainsl Rem-
ington on the indictment were
dismissed by Superior Court
Judce Philip Schwab.
In addltioo to its probe into the
land use issue, Grand Jur:')' in·
vestleators are attemptinf to
track what Remm,ton satd was
$20.000 paid him by Ani.belm
arcbll t LeRoy ~ 97'* tll8t
Wa$ tr l:nlWid to Dltdd~b. AecotcliD8 to Jlemlngton, he re-
celved two cb~ks from Role
totaling $20,000 purport.edly to
cover leeal services never
performed or bWed.
After deductluc taxes and
other costs, Remineton 1ave the
money to Diedrich, be said.
InvesU&ators are check.ins to
determine ., the payment to
Remington coincided with any ot
the $287 ,000 worth of county ~·
ments made to ~eJn 1973 and
1974 for the design of a new
county administration ~uUdlnc.
SUGAR m~ N.H. <AP) -
William C. SUW:van, former No. 3
man in the FBI, ••nhoUodeat.h
today by a bunter who '-t·
ly mistOOk tilm foe a d • a ~l~h and Game offtclal! 1~d_.
--·.-.··-•• ~• .... ~ ~~-• •••M°•-hunting deer in the woods near
his home in Sqar Hlll, a com·
munity in northern N~w
Hampsblre'a Wblte Mount&lm,
o!ficials said.
Authorities idenWied the other
hunter as Robert Daniels, in his
early 20s, from Lisbon, N.H.
They said the accident w .. under
investicaUon and no charges bad
been filed.
BB Crash , • Takes Life
Of Wo111an
\
A 56-year-old Taiwanese
woman was killed and 1'et
husband and son injured when
their auto crashed at the ln-
tersection of Beach Boulevard
and Pacific Coast Higl\way in
Huntington Beach Tueaday
night, poUcQreported.
A 17-year-old Cypress boy,·
driver of the other auto in the
crash, was booked ob charges of
vehicular manslaqhter and SUs•
picion ot dninken drtvinc, pollee
said.
Killed in the 4:50 p.m . collision
was Ywmin Llu. She bad been
visiting the area wilb her
husband, Li Chung Liu. The COU·
pie bad been staying at a res·
1dence at 4157 Candleberry
Ave., Seal Beach.
Mrs. Liu was pronounced dead
at PacificaH06pitalat6-p.m.
Her husband was pulltd from
the wreckage of the auto by Hunt·
ington Beach paramedics and
slate beach lifeguards_. He ii ~.
ported in serious cond1Uon tod•)'
with multiple injuries at Hoag
Memorial Hospital in Newport
Beacb.
The Taiwanese couple'~ son,
Richard Hueiyin& Liu, 42, of
Grand Terrace, Calif .. was driv·
iQS ~is sed~ weat. on Coast
Hlcbway wlien ~he crash oc·
c&lrred. lte suffered multiple in·
Juries and la reported in good
coodilioo at Hoag Hocspital today.
BwaUNton teac~r.c>Uce aqe&'t
that the tetnage ~~yer Of tM o~er vehicle ran. ~h ••I.OP
light at a high rate o( spffd and
struck Uu's auto.
State lifeguards and
paramedics struasled to revive
M~a. !Ju with card.io-pulmonary
resuscitation. She suffered
Ol.fmerous injuries lncluclinC
sewere bleeding from her head.
Both au~ were destroyed in
l~ crash, police reported.
Fro.Page Al
JAILED ••.
his own young daush~r. tMI\
swam back out for the boat, bat
wu stridben and .Upped beneath
the water. · -: ~ Wat~ the~ and~ ing ~d's criee tor hel'P,; Ule 'ioY. then ll! swam wt and saved him. a .; .. ;. ~
Onty a week aco, Mrs .
Matakovich chased a boy, 14,
from the campus when the .
youngster fied after belng found
under the influence of drugs.
She chased him over fences
and a decrepit oilfield tower, and
succeeded in bringinc hlm safely
down.
""Individuals are asWl around "TiM. value human ute.: ... ':' .l.V· Allamiri declared, bringing
the audience to it.a feet for an ova·
lion.
A &a.em b 1 y m an D e on i.'.
Mangere (D-Hun~n SQcb>
helped present awardl and ob-
served Uiat whenever be learns
or a heroic act -espectally tboee
which save chlldttn -he men·
tally puts his own younpten in
their places and gives tbaokB for
thebetoeS'oftheworld. '• 1 • '
' . . I I
.
'Satisfactory' .
A Huntingtoo Beach woman
who survived the crash of her
small plane at Meadowl•rk
Airport remained in satisfactory
condition today, as Federal Avia-
tion Administration probers
sought the exact cause of th~ ac-
cident.
She suffered a compressed
spinal disc fracture; a.knee frac-
ture, a broken nose and
numerous facial lacerations·
when her Bellanca K7 Cltabria
plunged to earth beside the
runway.
The little plane favored by
aerobatic aviators for so-called
stunt fiying lost power at 30 to 40
feet altitude aud stalled. plum·
metlng down as her husband
Charles and other witnesses on
the gro1.md watched.
• Sy RAYMOND t:naADAD.
.. Of *IMllfr fllltSUft
HuntingUJn Beach. Union Hilh
School District trustees bave ape
proved 3-2 a plan which ap-
parently clears the way for tbe
purchase of five acres ol land.
from the Huntington Beacb Com·
paoy.
The controversial plan would
mean:
-$346,000wouJd betran.sferrtd
from a district employee in·
surance reserve fund and
$154,000 frQm other accounts to
buy five acres lmmldiately south
of Huntington Beach High
School.
-The $500,000 used to buy the
land from the Hunti.D~ Beach
Company would be replac«I
wltbtn three years by ~~~!..~
10 acres of land at w~~
HJ«b School. ·
I •n ti r t ,.ftt
Trustees Doris Allen and John
Hundley voted agalnat tHe plan
Tuea.Uy, calllna.\t •'ishaky" and
"fiscally~-"
' School iboard Presid:ttn' Don Mae.Allister said Ute pro-
poeal WU ••a little UDOIUU" but
designed to in.sure the speedy
purchase of the five acres near
Huntington Beach Ui&b School. . .
The property is to be used in
connection with a nearby seven-
acre area as athletic fields and
parking apace.
The total 12-acre-atea would be
jointly used and maintained un-
Symptom :t:robed
MOSCOW CAP> -Eight of the
233 adults at the U.S. embassy in
Moscow appear to have tinusual·
ly high whi~ blood cell counts,
embassy sources say. But the
State Departinent contem!J that
continuing Soviet microwave
radiation of the bultding has
nothing to do with the blOod COD·.
ditlon.
Westminster Man
Held .. in Theft Case
der an agreement With the Clt.Y Of
Huntington Beach~ sehOol dis-
trict officials salCl. •
MacAlliSter said tbt unqaual p\U was needed to meet a Fri-day deadline to coathu .. escrow
proceed.inp wtth the Huntiftlton
Beacb CQrnpany. • Bun~ Beach COmpapyof·
ficials Weed to matntahi tbe
current•askinl price Of $500,000
for the flve-ac~ property unW
Fnday.' '
After that, sajd MacAllllter,
the land would be reappr~
pr:obably at about twic~ its eut·
retnt price.
Before, Tuesday'J vow, tho
purchase· of the Hunt1n1ton
Beach land hinged on tho aale Ol the 10.acre area at Waal!Qmster
Hilb SchOol, • • I '~
The Ctly Of Westminjter ..,.,_
to build a park on the 10-acre site
in coopera tr, fC district.
School district legal
Dave Lanen bad Pl"OVI
the school board at least four yes
votes We!J' J"J!(l~ by ster., w
to sell OM ftl'Plus W'•tm'OdA!r High School property.
But Larsen told trusle6 ~
day that recent changes in ttte
law and a state legislative
cou.nsel's optnlon would allow the
school board to use a simple ma-
jority vote in the sate M land to a
city for use es a park.
Hundley and Mrs. Allen s~d
they do not agree witb the state
legislatin counsel's opinion <lit
selUns ttie land. ·
Mrs: Allen aald tbe money
from the sale of any cUstiict sur-
plus property m.y be needed in
the future for the pUrebue or
textbooks and classroom sup-
plies. Ma~Allister said it may !ake
another year before the complex
land transae~on ls comp~
with the ltwttihgton Beach COm·
pany and tlie citie• of
Westminster arid HuntiD;tou
Beach
. ' ...
HOW TO ADO AN
"ANT~QUE GALLERY•'
LOOK TO YOUR HAL:L?
WITH HERITAGE'S SUPERB ...._,,_ ....... ,...........
" BRITIANY CHEST & MIRROR . . ..
Com Beat Up
R&~S~peet
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A yoant
man jailed for rape murder of a
17•yearodc1 high lcbool llii bas
been beaten up by other
priloner'9 ill San Di~o ~
jaU. • •
The beating toolt • place artao
Charles Colbert'1 picture was·
publhbed Taeach'J. Jall employeea~.nvmow~
of the incident but Colbeit, it,
wu lat.el moved to at>OtMi' Cell
He Pleaded banoceDt ~l!Sdlrv
•
to murder, rape ana otb r
cbar1ea in th• deatb ol ..um&
1 Anne Robinson end attacks en •. ot!i• • .-omen. .. -f'!
• I
\
· ·•,.w1,.,.....
NECKLINES PLUNGING TO NEW LOWS IN FASHION
MOdel1 Sh.ow Off Calvin Klein DHlgn1
Ban the Bra
Necklines Take Big Pliinge
By VICTORIA GRAHAM
NEW YORK CAP> -Ladies, if you have not already done so,
discard your brassieres. That is, if you want to wear Calvin
Klem 's spring collection with what is known as chic.
The fashions shown here had one dominant quality: the sim·
pie, unadorned V neck, often slicing to the waist of models who
were prey to slight breezes and avidly clicking shutters.
TUE DEEP V·Nl;CK WAS everywhere: In long, smooth
dresses with wide, deep triangle necks and in wraparound
blouses of silky charmeuse, loosely wrapped with nary a button.
However, for daytime and street wear, it seems possible to
wrap the blouse a little tighter and to reveal a little less.
Klein's style is gentle and sensual and he does not bury the
figure in folds and layers and blouson tops. His style is soft and
uncomplicated without belng shapeless.
HIS JACKETS ARE NOT tailored but softly ~arved linen
with defined waists, pushed-up sleeves and curved V-necks.
Blouses are 1006e but not voluminous, s\dl'U ar• full.and so are
pants. • ·
He designs in white, cream, beige, gray, pale ap~t. taupe,
caramel and in various subtle combinations. Here and there is a
pale and delicate rosebod print. ,
His materials are linen, cotton, suede, crepe de chine aJ\d
charmcuse, ranging from sll&htly rumpled to bedroom silky.
For everung, it's simple, slinky cbarmeuse.
Lost Twe Days
Boy's Trick Works
Too Well in WootU
DURANGO, Colo. CAP> -
Eight-year-old Matney Ellis said
it was ju.st a trick to scare h.is
parents. It did
Matney managed to lose
himself so thoroughly in the
rugged foothills or southeastern
Colorado that a search by volun·
leers on foot and horseback and
in four-wheel drive vehicles aod
planes failed to find him.
Two days later, the boy finally
wandered across two pipeline
workers late Tuesday afternoon
about 25 miles frorn where he
became separated from his
parents.
"I was going to hldO from my
mom and dad so I could pull a
trick on them and I got Jost,"
Matney s&ld in a telephone in·
terview between alps of hot le•
Tuesday night at the La Plata
County sheriff'• office.
It was the first nourllhmellt
he'd had siii~e he lost himseU un a hiking trlp among the deep
canyons atid arro)'()s ploqc
Souttlem Ute Indian Reserva·
lion, except for half a bag of
peanuts devoured on lhe ride to
the sheriff's office.
"JI looked a little bit for my
mom and dad, then I cUmbed up
a tree and slept there for the
night." said the blond-haired,
blue.eyed third-grader.
"He 'a in good shape and ap.
pears uane the worse for the ex·
pertence," said Sheriff Leon
Milligan. •
Malney's parents could not be
reached for comment.. but his
~randrather, Oliver Matney of Castle Rock. said he and his ti1fe
bad been "climbing the walls
~orry ing about the UtUe fellow."
Matney lives wi~ his pareota
in Marvel, not far from Durao10.
"I saw a wolf. That frightened
me a little bit," he said.
'A ta·yenr~old ._tr;t who
11.feauards ~atd ~oiildn't swim,
drowned Tuesd&y afternoon in
Newport Beach alter she lost her
!tyrofoam "Boolie Board" in the
surr off 17th Street.
The dead girl was identified as
Regina Coleman or Sant4 Ana.
l!lCeguard Capt. Bud Be1she
said the girl apparently came to
the beach with a half-dozen cim·
pan ions. but no adults.
He said the girl was fiQating on
tho board and lost it ln the surf.
"She apparently struggled for a
moment or two and then went un·
dcr." Belsheaaid.
Tl'le children apparently were
thrown into contusion over the in·
cident and an unidenl:tfied
woman ran to a pay phone al 16th
street to call fo; help.
Belshe said the woman called
the Oranae ~ounty Hartior
Patrol and they notified the
lifeguards who sent a jeep down
the beach Crom their bead·
quarters at the Newport Pier.
But Bel.she said the men in the
jeep couJd find no one on ttle
beach to tell ttiem what was
wrong. He said they made a cou·
p1e or passes up and down the
beach before they localed the
worn an who hnd called the
Harbor Patrol.
The woman 's call was
forwarded to lifeguards at a tew
minutes alter noon. Lifeauards
began an. immediate search for
the girl and recovered her body
just before 1 p.m.
I
Earth Sli4e
Repair ea
in·Anaheinl
CansttucUon cr.ew& have filled
in m0st'ot t.bO a1rt Qaat cut away
from a hilbtde b1 Anaheim, CAUS·
ing tons Of earth and two flew
horn s to beglri sliding down on
top of an unftniahed roadway.
The slide stattecl 'Monday
morning, ~lbly...as a result of
nearby excavatlon of a former
reservoir .e1to,; The houses sit on
top of the dey~lopment ln a can·
yon area, said Anaheim Fire
DepartrOent Chief Jim Riley.
The soU moved six feet in some
areas, Riley said.
At least five persons from two
families were evacuated.
State geologists had been
called In to examine the shifting
soil, and the Southern California
Gas Company rerouted utility
lines away from the slide area
Riley srud '
The b>0,000 homes, both on
Vista Del Sol, suffered no
damage,. Riley said.
''There was no appreciable
damaie to those homes." he
said, adding that the slide was
apparently unconnected with an
earthquake Tuesday mom.inc. .
Motive Told
SACRAMENTO (AP>.-!-Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr. says he's ~
been relatively silent on federal
irri1atlon water proposals to
keep them from becoming a
Brown vs. Carter issue.
•
Gas Station
Filter Plan
Geu Hearing
A eontroversial ptoPQSal that
theoretlcal\y could elimiriate 33.7
tons of hydrO<!arboa emissions
dally in OranJ(e and thte~ other
counties will be heard Nov. 18 by
the South Coast Air: QuallJy
N anacement Dist.net Ward.
The proposal would require the
installation of new pumP,ing
equipment Within eight months
al hiJ(h·volumo .aaa slati9ns
in Orange, Cos Angeles, San
Bernardino and Riverside coon·
ties, said AQMD Supervising
Engineer Edward Larsson. lie
said about 325 Orange County ltts
stations would be atf ecttd. ·
The equipment reportedly
would c<>llecl about 95 ~c~nt of
the hydrocarbons that escape as
autos ~e filled with gaaoliho.
The AQMD plan would cover
service stations that pump more
than S0,000 gallons a month.
Although onJy 27 percent. or the
stations in the district would be
affected, they11ccount for Sl~r·
cent or the gasoline pumped.
The proposal would cost
service station ow11ers between
$18.8 million and $424 million, or
$8,000 lo $12,000 pet tation.
For Daddy
PUTDOWNS DEPT. -The
daughter in our house is taking
one of those hiah school En&lish
courses wherein you are t'e-
quired to do a certain amount ol
writing. And in so doint, she's
suffered a certain amount of dlf-
ficully.
The.course lS called American
Literature. It sounds more like
English II. But you will find in
the curriculum these days that
course Ut,les can be deceptive.
Euphem.lsalsabound
You mlaht see a course lisUCS
,1s "Mass Communications-in tile
Software Medium," and later
romc to the intelligence tbat Otls
<·ourae is Journalism /Newswrit·
ina. At least uo at the university
1n Lona Beach, where I do sottae
moonlight joumaUsm teaching,
they list courM:S by numbers and
'ou can look up what they mean. •
BUT I DIGRESS. Beck to this
high school American Literature
<·ourse where our coed perSdh 1s
having a measure of struggle.
She was assigned to write a topic
paragraph and then analyze il by
breaking it down into its sub-
topics and various parts.
Shl' turn<'d 1n this work
whereupon the teacher kicked it
back for a r('write suggesting
that it contaim.'<i serious flaws.
This was cause for cons1dera·
hie distress around the house.
But never f<>ar Grand Iv, I vol un-
teered my expertise in the writ·
1ng dodge. 1 announced that we
could call upqn m~ more than a
quarter of a ~entury of craft and
cunning in the daily writing of
parai!raphs and abruptly
transform defeat into victory
WI!' SAT DOWN at the rewrite
desk and together worked out
this marvelous paragraph with
-all its sub-topics and parts. When
she finished writing, 1 patted her
on the head and sent her off to
class. ,
"He's ju.st going to love that
paragraph," I predicted with all
tht.' confidence or a Christian
holdm~ four aces.
l am here to report lo you that
the paragraph came home
graded last night We got a D
More accurately, l got a D.
THAT'S D AS in Dunce. Oum
my, Dense. Dunderhead and De·
nounced
Numbed. l took the paper in
my trembling hands It had red
marks aH over 1t. It looked like
somebody had been bleeding on
it I felt like bleeding on it I
thought I was going to lapse into
a catatonic stupor.
Ev<>r smc<' this hloodied paper
show<•d u11, l 'H' b<.'l'n given some
funny look:-; around the house
Family members pick up my
n<'wspapcr from the corner by
two fingers, holding it out as if it
were em1ttin~ noxious odors.
ALAS, ALL THIS makes it
cl<'ar that you can fall from grace
into disgrac<' in one little puny
paragraph.
Listen. I've known students
who could draw a C-mlnus by
: JUSt finding the classroom and
showing up with a we.rm body.
I should get so lucky.
FIVEOFEVEllT aevem voters
in Alle0my Collit>'. P.a., were.ID
favor of a measure that ut&ed
elected official• to "change
federal environmental f"
OHIO AL.50 REJECl'ED the
pleas or the national Democratic
Party by doing away with its
election-day registration law.
The law was used for the first
time Tuesday and gave people
the chance to reg.ister and vote on
the same day, in the same place
But. it was repealed by about 3 to
2.
Blizzard
SlaJDs Into -
Midwest
By The Assoclat.ed Preu
Driven by winds gusting to 70
miles an hour, the season's first
bliuard roared into the 'Upper
Midwest today, dumping as
much as nine inches oC snow on
parts of South Dakota. School
closures and power outages were
reported in widespread areas of
the state and in neighboring Min-
nesota and Nebraska.
The National WcUher Service
in North Dakota said the stbrm
there was the worst on record for
this early in the winter. A storm
on Nov. 10. rn.-to, brought colder
temperatures but couldn't eom
pete with today's winds and
snowfall. a forecaster said
The service said the storm,
which moved northeastward
from the Rockies over Wyoming,
Colorado and across Nebraska
on Tuesday and during the night,
could leave an add1lionaJ four
inches or more by nightfall. The
weather service issued bliuard
warnings for parts of North
Dakota, South Dakota, Min-
nesota, Iowa and Nebraska.
But skies were clearing in the
soggy Northeast, soaked by up to
seven inches of rainfall earlier
lb.i! week. · -:,·t
ByTbeAsaoclaledPresa ~
A political miracle in New Jersey -the BRaclail Bnae comeback campaign -hilblilhtA!d oil.year tlecliona l'~ la wblcb iD-
-aurgeot5 captured City hall.9 t.nNew York, Cleveland~ MlnDeaJ)91b.
In the Virginia Governor's mansIO_O; as wtll as the ~t mayor's
offtu, voters went witllthe status quo. ·
Governor Byrne came out
fighting on the income tax lssue
that had made him vulnerable, and capped his year-long come·
back with a landslide over
Republican challenger Raymond
Balfman.
THEY CALLED HIM "one·
term Byrne/' but. Tuesday night
he celebrated to the theme song
from "Rocky," the movie about
a prizefighter who scrapped his
way to the .,,p.
Lt. Gov. John Dalton made 1t
three terms in a row for the
Republicans in Virginia, suc-
ceeding Milla Godwin with bis de-
cisi ve ..defeat of Democratic
populist Henry Howell. ,
President Carter had· made
personal apppearances during
the campaign for both Byme 8.nd
Howell. ·
AND IN NEW York, Rep.
Edward Kocb completed his rise
from underdog to mayor, knock·
log off Marlo Cuomo as well as
hapless Republican and
Conservative_party candidates ui
the finale. "He will suoceed
Abnham &eamt who was ousted
in September's Democratic
primary
Koch, who had a meager six
percent recognllloo rating in
Gotham when he began cam-
paigning for mayor, told a
swarm of sup~rters, "Tonight
we've arrived." Be•me was at
nis side.
Dennis KuelnJch. the 31-year-
old DemocraUc maverick from
Cleveland, becomes one of the
nation's youngest mayors follow·
ing his narrow victory over
Edward Fei1ban, who is 30.
Republican incumbent Ralpb
Perk was defeated in last
month's prim~Y· .
'
Ill
-' • ..... .:;,i,;o...t,,;..A-.v..;;t:-.H,,,.U ... t:---1 g
• "' .J 0 •
z
« ~ ....
AS THE REPUBLICANS were
taking the Virginia gov-
ernorship. the Democrats were
developing a young ~tar in
HUNTINGTON HARBOUR SHOPPING GUIDE
Cbarles Robti. The son·in·law ol
the late President Jo~son was
elected lieutenant aovemor on a
large number of split ballots.
.
REAL ESTATE
CheerReahy .
Call Chttr lAotWt' /or.a Harbour HOPM
(714)~5111(213)~92-5040
Huntington Harbour Realty
SpeclaUltl "'N"" $al.ta & R4~
(714) 84MM1(213)592-2118
~ .. ,.~ ..
So.laetlling Nfte llnder the Sun '
Astronomer Charles Kowal, 3S, of CalTech, Points toward
microscope device for comparing ,photographic plates made
through a 48-inch telescope. Kowal located a tiny ''mini-planet"
between Saturn and Uranus, only 300 mUes in diameter, that may
become our solar system's loth planet. The last planet discovered
in the solar system was Pluto m 1930.
First Gay Elected
To SF SU.pervisors
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP > A professed
homosexual has been
elected to the Board of
Supervisors for the first
time in San Francisco.
where an estimated one
in seven of the city's
680.000 res1denls is ga}.
Harvey Milk, a 47.
.,. ear old businessman
and lWO·llmC loser in sup(.•rvt.!>Orlal races.
secured 30.5 percent of
the vote in District S,
wmnmg his seat on the
11-member board by a
5-to·3 margin.
HIS EASY victorv
over 17 candidates came
in the first San Francisco
elccllon by district in 80
ye ars In the pas t ,
supervisors were picked
m city-wide voting
NearCa•pus ..... _____ ~---~
3 Women Victi:nis
Of Sex Assaults
Six incumbents and
four other newcomers
also were winners in
light balloting Tuesday
as 51.2 percent of the
city's 339,306 registered
voters went to the polls
on a warm. SUMY elec-
tion day.
IN ADDITION to US
s upervisorial can·
d1dates1 the ballot was
cloggeo with 22 referen-
dum measures and
choices for city attorn.tf
and city treasurer.
Milk's district contains
neighborhoods wltti
he•vily eay populatk>D'
But be called his vlclOD' a mandate fbr hls
politic• -not his
homosexuality.
"THE PEOPLE who
SAN JOSE CAP) Three women have been voted for me were con
sexually assaulted in the last three days near San cerned about the i
Jose State University, police said. The urban cam sues· ·I w i 11 be •
pus has been plagued by about 30 similar attacks supervisor who happen$' this year. to be gay:" h~ said lo a
Police said th~ latest attack came Tu~day, ~t·A.leet.t~n mt.er-view •
when a screaminJ woman ttudent to\ight Oft ~ .... !4Y aUe11ance Js to Y
•·very, very dirty man witb an. Manchu mustache d1strl!tandto 1;11~cl •.
and a late~ protrudlna stomach." Tho aU~m~t~ Wh1l~ adm1ttipg l\.&S
daylight fttl&ek took place OD a down~WD ~mer in ~ rQle 'OI the city S ~
· the women's car. · ./. ~ homo:1cxuat supervisor
Anoth\lr stUdent was abducted on pie same cor· ~ a r t"i e ~ e .~ t r a
ner Monday naght by a man .x'med ~th a botch•r .,.e~ponstb111ty, . Milk
knife, police said. He forced his victJro to a nearby compared his. poslt&on \o
elementary school where be 11lP.ed her. former Pres1f:1ent Ke.d· nedy. the nation's ffi"st
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -A sniper walked out
of his apartment and into the custody of surprised
officers today after negotiating with police for four
hours, authorities said. .--------""I Police said Bob
( . '-"'"" ~rr'E J Jones, 47, surrendered to
o.:7..1..tI..I J officers in the apartment
hallway after a brief scuf·
fie. He was wearing a
pistol under his belt and
two shotiuns and a rifle were found in his apart· ,. ment.
r. No one was hit by shots fired from the Western
t Addition di$trict apartment, police said
S7 1'1118 .. Plan Teld
LOS ANGELES (AP) A.ft.et two days of
marathon talks with his top health aides and state
and county hospital officials, Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr. has anDO\ll\Ced a tentative $7 million plan to re-
organize the county's mental health Collowup care
ayslem. ·
The plan, which is to be reviewed by health care
otficlala and taken up by the governor at a meetin1
next Tuesday, will "knot to1ether a fra1mented
system that divides st.ate and county care," Brown
said in a telephone interview Tuesday evenin1.
~ Stupeet Free?
Rom.W Catholic pre5l·
dent. -
Tut, Tut,
Tickets
For Tut
LOS ANGELES (~P)
-Trying to avoid the
long lines and wait.a \hat
have occurred
ebewbere, the county
Museum of Art wlJl ell
ticket• for the Kine
Tut.ankhf.lnen exhibit.
Il will be the lifll lime
the muset4m bas sold ad-
vance tickets. They go on
sale Jan. 3 at M retail
outlets in LOs Angeles,
Ventura, Kern. Orange,
Riv rslde 1 San
Bernardino and San
Dleto counties, museum
oUiclals have an·
nounceet.
•Sare ror &ippin& on the
rreeway •Larl!e ea.~y to Mid handle
& drink-lhru lid
•Allachcs magnetically lo
metstl. plasUc or carpet?
·SHARP
CAROUSEL
MICROWA¥E
OVEN
•Spend time with the family •
. . not in the kitchen
•Fast meals • • .._ balanMd
meals , •. hea?olby ~•la "'I'heCarousd\urn9foodf~
even cooking
•Browning unit loo. IR8200
BU_HN DRIP. COFFEE MAKER
• Jfow can 1 iet restaurant coffee at home? •
Alwayi with a BUNN. Only with a BUN!'li. • And
Ira super fut ... 8 cups in 3 minutes • Built to
• Jul with copper tublJli & stainless ~ • Wby
Bunn? Value.
•Pop! 4 q\lGU or popcorn
au\omaUcally butttted!
•Serve m the tlear cover
•Non·stick . . • euy to
clean.
· • 1''or your ktlchen . . . or
lied w1Ul a nbbon for a
super a:ltl!
•Spoons • . • rork5 .
spurlles ... and more
.I
llehate Fades Out --
Afkl" almost two years of debate, Fountain Valfey has
scrapped a prop()sed law to restrict antennas in the city's
residential areas.
The brouhaha peaked in May, 1976 when about 350 resi·
dents and radio buffs squared off at city hall to argue the
merits and disadvantages of antenna restrictions.
To avoid further public confrontations, the city began
taking testimony through the planning commission on an
antenna law
Originally, residents claimed antennas were unsightly
and would lower property values. But then only silence was heard and only the planning commission and city
aides cont.ipued this argument.
Radio buffs claimed the law would severely hamper
their broadcasting ranges.
They waged a constant battle against the proposed an·
tenna law by bringing up technicalities and stalling to pre·
vtut a final deciston on it.
Last week, the city council scrapped the proposed law.
Part o( the re~son for dropping the antenna law was
that in the past 18 months, not one citizen has spoken in
favor of it.
This all goes to show that no one will bother to complain
about antennas unless one goes up next to his back yard.
Romning Reef
A visionary project for using sunken old rubber tires
as a breeding haven for red snapper, bonito and jack smelt
• has turned into a rt:>cky reef -of Orange County controversy
The artifical reef constructed of 25,000 castoff
Micbelins and Uniroyals lashed together with nylon cord
and weighted with cement is now breaking up periodically.
Naturally, the tires wash ashore, at least 1,000 in the last
two weeks' storm swells.
Lifeguards and state beach park rangers along with
the California Department of Fish and Game have been
cleaning up the tires originally sunk offshore two years
ago by the Los Angeles Rod and Reel Club.
The program initially calJed for a 1,000-tire reef which
would first be studied for stability and feasibility for two
years, but well-meaning clubmen got carried away with
the idea and dumped 25,000 tires.
Club spokesman Russ Izor says ruefully-but
charitably and generously -that his fishing compatriots
just got a little premature. The reef still is a feasible idea.
"It all just goes to show," Izor says, .. the road to hell is
paved with our good intentions. And our tires."
•
Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Ptlot
Other 111ews expressed on this page are those of their authors and
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Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321.
Boyd I ~sistance
ByL.M.BOYD
ln every conquered country
occupied by foreign soldiers
there thrives a resistance
IN CONTRAST to the pe'l,Y
Korean payoffs, witnesses told 'US
of a tryst in a New England field
where Chiang'a emis5aries de· Jivered $500,000 m cash to a Jate
Senator.
The Chinese atlonali$t5 ~ • wanted far mor~ out.' of the l1n1t··
ed States tbM tile 111U~ aru~ ments the south Koreans have
aougbt. The bl~ aJms !!( tbe
Nationalists ~re revealed in a
collection Of secret eables. wJiich ,
we obtained through a Chinese code clerk two decades ago.
Chiang Kai-shek wanted .no less than to embroll the Ul\ited
States in a third world war so he
could ride back to power in the
rumble seat of an American vie·
tory. He recognized it would be
dlfO.cult to sell the American peo-
ple upon aUack,ing the Chinese
mainland. Declar~ a Dec. 5,
1949, cable: "Our bope of a world war so as to r@abilltaie our
country is unpalatable to the
fAmerican) people.··
Mailbox
To the Editor:
A recent news article describ-
ing the plight of Rheingold
breweries and its plea for a ·
federal loan engenders an ob·
servotlon. -
Any self-respecting and •
kqowledgeable beer connoisseur
who has visited Ger.many and prosl~ the real tl\lng or who has
resisted the Yan~e~·Doo<lle.
macbo-advertlalng-<?on and, in·
stead, Jet their taste-buds do the
drinking, has long ago abao·
doned any hope of savoring in the
USA ~ hometown-produced, un·
pasteurized, additive-Cree, true.
flavor, malt-beverage.
Why? Because tbe l1S Bureauot .
Alcohol, Tobacco & Firearms~
wblch:rules on such matters. has.
by its definition of malt.,
beverages, authOriied an alm06t
@diets list of chemical adjuncts
<CM.tttttives) used by American
bre~ries to make American
" r"lookandtastelikebeei. •
Olaritfl S~etl
To the F.dltor:
Your recent editorial comment
on Sheri.ff Brad Gltes' news re-
lease regardliig the Association
of Orange County Deputy
Sheriffs must have been created
out of emoUon, gut reaction; if
you will. but not out pf true, •
~oumalistic factual reportil\g. ,
You stated that Sheriff Gates
referred to a coastartt atteam ol., phone sol1citatl0N resutt.1ng·in a 1
flood. of complaining calls. The...:
facts~ ~ ttported clsewhere re-
veal that. the Sher.iff's ad·
mlnlstratiYe assistant. Joe
Mestre, acknowledged that very
few callS were of a complaining
nature. 7he Sheriff's release. in fact, stated tn ·•some tnsta11ces.
comp1atn1ng•· occurred. Th.ls is
:somewhatahort of a Oood.
\
I l
BJ PIDUP aOSMA Ol ... D .. lyPlllt ....
A divided and dmlttedly C(IO·
fused Irvine City ,OoUncll a put.
tered over, then postponed votina
on, a campaljn reform ordlnance
aimed at the March coun·
cilmanic election.
The proposed ordinan e would
prohibit council members from
participating in decisions which
have • material financial effect
.
on a "major ca_mpal.ln con·
tributor." It alsO w9U1d aet a cell·
1n1 on campAign con\tlbutlops by
a singleeonwtbUtOr. I
Further, it wOuld require an
additional ftJiq hte for cam·
paign disclosure statementa, on
the Friday before the elec:UOD.
Council oplnlon on the proposal
contrasted sharply. •
It ranged from Gabrielle
•
Pryor:~ recommendatio11 that
any c trlbutlon, even u litUe aa
a dollar, should qualify a con·
trlbutor as am~ contributor,
to Jobn Burton's sµggesUoa to
Junk the oi-dil\ance.
Debate continued until 12:30
tJl1a m~ with t.be council de-
cldinl to tackle the compUcatelcl
propoul a1aln at. its Nov. 22
meettni. Councilman David Sills. wbo
una
IRWDBoard
Bill ~ppinger,
Clark Elected ..
William H. Eppinger, founding
manager of the Irvine Ranch
Water District, and Wayne A.
Clark, executive aide to county
Supervisor Laurence Schmit,
were elected to the IRWD board
of directors Tuesday.
They become the first di.rec·
tors elected by the general public
m the district 'S 16·year history.
The board's other five members
are elected by landowners who
Re~ington
Payment
For Loan?
By GARY GRANVILLE Ott .. OMly Pla.c ltaff
A $25,000 check given by
Fullerton attomey Michael Rem·
ington to food company president
William Moore in 1913 "could
possibly have been repayment or
a loan I owed Moore," Orange
County Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich said today.
Remington said last week that
$25,000 of a $75,000 legal fee he re-
ceived from the Grant Corpora·
tioo in 1973 that was related to an
issue then-pending before tbe
county Board ot Supervisors was
loaned lo Diedrich.
He also said another $25,00I)
from the fee was loaned "at
Ralph's behest" to a Dledrieh
friend whose name he couldn't
recall.
Neither loan bas been repi.ld,
accordlng to Remington.
It was learned Monday that
Moore, president of Golden State
Foods, Inc., and a lona·Ume
Diedrich friend, was recipient of
the second $2S,OOO loan in 19'7!.
The Remlngton fee pa7ment
and tbe subsequent loans to
Diedrich and MOore ue the cen·
terplece in a Grand Jury probe
and • 19'13 board decision to re-
leaae land rrom an a1rtcultUral
preserve acreement in tbe
Anahein& Hills. 1
ReminJton was hired to
represent .the development com·
pany, a~renUy on the recom~
mendation of Dledrlcht b lt
( CH~Pa1e.U>
are assigned voting strength on
the basis of assessed valuation.
The new directors were elected
by ·2.6 percent of the district's
22,590 eligible voters, together
gathering a mere 586 votes. 1
Total voter turnout for the
special district el~Uon was 8.7
percent, below a 10 percent-plus
response predicted by County
Registrar of Voters A.E. Olson.
Clark was elected with five
votes more than hls nearest oppo-
nent in the Division 2 race. Clark
polled 283 votes: water engineer
Davd L. Hansbrough got 278
votes. Ill Divtsion l. Eppinger re-
cet m~~i.rid to bis
nearest Ctiallenger'• <corporate
ftw'e1iihti D..,.St Pett A.
Swap's> 208votes. Clark~ '31.1 "rcent of the 909 votes cast ln his dlvbion
coo*'; EppiD,_ ~eel to vie·
tory with 29.4 percent of 1,0M
votes counted in Dlrislon 1.
Unofficial results are:
Division 1, representing
northern Irvine and parts ol
Tustin:
-WIWam E. Eppinger, 313,
-Peer A. Swan, 208.
-Ronald E. Shaver, Hl.
-Bil Butts, 137.
-Dorothea R. ••Dottle"
Blaine, 76.
-Ernie Machado, 62.
-Jlobert H. "Bob" Reed, 61.
-J aclde Boynton, 44. 1
• -Robert B. Schoenburs. 22.
Division 2, representing cen·
tral and southern Irvine:
-Wayne A. Clan, 283.
-David L. Hansbrough, 278.
-Frank W. Boyd, 116.
-AndrewJ. May,56.
-JosepbS. Dorsey, 53. '-Julius~ Bognar, 43.
-Charles W. Hueey, 35.
-Robert A. Donath, 25.
-R. Patrick Donnelly, 20.
BurP.~ts
Irvine Home
The Irvine City Council signed
a formal agreement Tuesday to•
housing lawsuit settlement
reached in September between
the city, the Irvine Company and
the Orange County Fair Housing
Council. ,
The lawsuit, brought agalmt
the city and Irvine Company by
the fair housing body challenged
lkatlu Said
f>Ue Liquid
Protein Diet
\
' '1 PIDUP aos N . . ................. Tbe MOODd project propoeal r the 1c;lq-de1a)ted Untveratty
own Center devolopme.nt in
vine is. like the nnt ,Prop<>sed
J?roiect, for housinl ·1ntendtd _._ ___ ... .._~,,,.,,,.. ............... ,,. ,..,., .. ".
"' Tuesday the Clty CouncU ap.
proved the a pending of $269,000 in
·federal Hou.sine and Community
Development funds to aubeidlae
Specific
Tenn Asked
By Hinshaw
·Convicted former con·
gressman Andrew Hinshaw is
}raking the Orange County
Superior <;ourt jud1e wbo sen·
ienced him to determine exactly how long be must stay ln stai.
prison. Judge Robert P. Kneeland dis·
cussed the request for a hearing
Monday with defense attorney
fdarshall Morgan and prosecutor
Michael Capizzi, but declined to
comment on the outcome of the
meeting
Cap1zz1 and Morgan comment·
ed after leaving the Judie's
chambers that he has not ytt
reached a dee1slon on whether to
hold the suggested hearing.
Hinshaw, 54, will remain in
state prison until August, 1918, it
he serves the minimum portloo
of the stale prison term of one to
14 years ordered by Judge
Kneeland.
But if the state's new de·
te~m matc sentencing law is ap· plied to llinshaw's conviction it
<'ould be August, 1979 before the
former Newport Beach
Republican legislator ia released
from his confinemej\l at the
Chino correctional facil ty.
Hinshaw was sentenced after
being convicted or acts of bribery
committed while he served as
county assessor
lie is serving <'oncurrenlly a
one year jatl term ordered after
his conviction on further
criminal charges related to his il·
legal use of county manpower
and materials while serving as
county assessor and running for
Congress in 1971.
Irvine School
Board Votes
On Standards
Irvine school board trustees
are expected to give final ap-
proval to a set of minimum profi·
eiency standards students will be
required to achieve before
graduation, al a 7·30 meeting.
tbnight.
The meeting is al University
High School, 4771 Campus Drive
in the multipurpose room.
The standards are Intended to
assure every student a modicum
of the education needed to func·
tion ln society
The district will need to design
tests to measure minimum goals
9f education in reading, writing
and mathematical skills befort
next June, by state law.
A first reading of the standards
was approved last month by the
full board.
School trustees also wlll be
asked to advertise for blds to COD·
struct two new schools, Wood-
bridge High School and
Northwood Middle School, plans
for which await state approval.
?dark A. Maltzman, a
spokesman for the company,
said 100 of the apartments would
be federally au&sidiled, with TS
of those reserved for family OC·
cupancy a.ad 2S for the elderly.
The remairung 60 apartments
in the project would be rented to
senior citizens, without federal
subsidy.
M altzman sald an un·
subsidized one-bedroom apart·
ment would be priced at about '
$280 a month ren~.
He told the council that wltb
the city sha.ce of HCD mbney,
rents could be reduced another
$10 a month, if spread evenly
over the 168 apartments, or up to
' •Fought to :&Id'
. ...... .,,
Second Youth Dies
From Coast Crash .
Ao accident pear the Zigiurat
Oct. 24 claimed its second youna
vict.im when Steven Pender1ut,
19, of South Lagun•, died thla'
mornlrtl at Mercy General
Hospital, Santa Ana.
The former Lttll\lna Beach
High School student "fouaht like
a son of a gun all the way to the
end," his father, Donald Pen·
dergastsaid Ws n:ornin1.
The teenacer, who ll~ with
his p~ at 308"2 DriftWOOd
Drive in South l..agun~ was the
passenger in a car drlyen by
James M. Riddell, 18, oU!O Vista
de Catalina, South Laguna when
l"ro9t Page .4J
HOUSING •••
for trial next month.
The settlement outlines two
alternative approaches to low in·
come housil)g.
The first would require the ap-
prov al of University of California
Regents. Up to 1,400 apartments
would be built on 78 acres at UC
Irvine. Half the lower income
apartments would be reserved
for rental members of the
general community. Hall would
be rented to UCI faculty mem·
bers and students.
According to 1976 county
statistics, lower income means a
combined famil)" income ot un·
der $13,440 a year.
tr UC reseats don't appro~.
the second aitemalivei calls for
construction of 725 low income
apartments on 33 to 41 acres of
Irvine Company land.
Possible sites are the vlllaaes
of Woodbridge and Unlvenity
Town Center.
the accident happened at about
lOp.m. Oct.2'.
Riddell di~ of bis injuries four
days after the crash.
The car ln which ~e pair w~e
ridlaJ( slan:a.med in.o a ~oncrete llJht standard near El Lazo.
Road in Laauna Nleuel.
Rescue crews spent more tb!Ul
four hours eXtracUng youn1 Pen·
der111t from the wt'eckage. He
remained conscious t.b.ri>ugbout
the tescueitry, &lid h1S fa th er s~d
be was conscious until bis death
at 5 a.m. this piorning.
"He was a. very brave young
man;· his father said today.
Pendergast said the family
was impressed with the re$cue
efforts of the fire departments,
paramedics and Edison com·
pany officials who helped re·
move the young victims from the
mangled wreekage.
He said hospital workers and
doctors at Mercy General
''worked at0und the clock to save
the boys ~nd comfort the
familles. l'
F.uneral arranaements are
pend"1g, but Pe1tdernst said the
family would appreciate blood
donations to repleni'sh the supply
used during surgeries on their
son.
F,...PClfleAJ
FAIR •••
shape, the weather excellent and
the fans were m a pleasant mood
oo openlnf day
Four horses starting from tJ\e
No. 1 posltlOn won hall of tbe
ei&hl tboroulbbred racea held
Tuesday. Amon& tbe winners
waa seven-year-old Cherry
River, which captured the $1S,64S
Orange Coast Handicap.
There was no cro,,d £~~ate
for the I.air as a wtii>le "because
there ia no admiuioo. charge.
ltomecratt exhibtts, Uvea~k
ehowa, Uve entertabiment and
tnldway rides W!U be open daily , from 1oa.m. to J.Op;m.
case remain Jailed today after
$300,000wuloppedoffthelrbail.
Raymood Steven RHCo and
Anthony Marone Jr., both of
10121 Merrimac Drive, ate still
bein& held ln Oran1r: ~ounty Jail
in lieu of$200,000 baileacb.
That figure was aet by Judie
Selim Franklin Tuesday wbal
the two men ap~ )fith tbeir
two co-defendants to enter pleas
in the case.
One of the co-delendan\s, Alex·
ander Kulik, entered bis not Pil·
ty plea Jut week. He was freed
after postin1 a $750,000 bond.
The fourth man. Jf!fTY Peter
Fiori, ot 19822 Brookbunt SL, Huntinston Beach, did not enter
a plea Tuaday nservln1 that
right until the preliminary hear-
ing in the case which was aet for
Nov.22.
Fiori, who remains In custody
in lieu of• $500,000 ball, fac·es
death penalty proceedln11 ln the
case. Deputy District Attorney
Dave Ca!Ur told the court that
he will seek the deatb.ptnalty
against Fiori because be alle1ed·
ly ha.a a prior mucder convictloO
from anotJterSUI• ~
is accused of commtttln1 a
murder durine a kidn,ppinJt at.-
Ji'~P-AJ ·
CHECK •••
sought to free !and for develop-
ment on the Knoll Ranch.
It was later that Diedrich led
a 3 to 2 board of supervisors de·
cislbn to relea:se the land in a con-
troversial decision. ,
Remington, Diedrich •a buisi·
ness attorney, last week plea~
guilty to a misdemeanor curie
brou1ht against him and a Graoct
Jury lJ:ldictment that named bJm
as a coasptretor in a tm coo-
spira.o)C to viOlate atate pc>l
campailn reg\tlation.s. , •
HOW TO ADD AN
"ANTIQUE GALLERY.,
LOOK TO YOUR HALL?
WITH HERITAGE-S SUPERB ......-+..uM~
BRITTANY CH~T & MIRROR
•
occupants of the home.
La1una Beac:h Police Capt
Neil Purcell said detectives ten-
tativel)'.. believe that an tnfor·
mant close to Richard provided
Newpo.-t.Beach detectives ~th a
?,hone ntlmber for Richard's
tlome. .
Purcell said that somewhere in
th4t process, two digits in
the phone number may have
been transPQ,i~.
·:Therefore, the two addresses
wtsY iniles apart,•• ho aaid.
He aalcHbe two ~•Im.I• Beach
investigators involved in the,
shooting have been placed OD ad-
m 1 n ls tntlve d&aty until a
tborouih iDvesUcation iS com--
. plelecl,
<•> DO Ncn OVEalNSlJRE parcels. A $10 lift Will
bring only $10 ht compen.saUon U lost, even tho\&lb it may
have been jnsured for '100. • •
_, (10> ~to Christmas millin.1 tasks CJUlckly, not only to
lueJuard a,al.ri.st JOM but also to elim.tnate lrrltaUons that
ean be avaided by this ~tep.
NEW' :YORK <~P) -The •~k market wu mired to-day. coaUinring t.he io..onchaalve patttrn of Tuesday•s '.
seat ion. • • The t>ow Jonea averaee of ao in~witriats ralned 2.16 ,.
points to8lB.4S. .. •
GalAera outpaced losers by a 4·3 spread am.on1' New -
York Stock Jbchange.llated lasoes.
The market ahowed no clear-cut response tO an ap-
pearance by Arthur Burns, the chairman ot the Federal
Reserve Boaril, t)tfore the ~ate Baruanc Committee.
Bmftl de:teoC!ed Ule Fed's mo•• Jn recent piontbs to
Uahten eredlt, &rl'Jlnt that infiation fears wOuld have
mount.eel stroncJ,V bad the cerittat bank not acted to restrain
monetary growth. · • ' -
What Sl~b Did
NEW Y'ORlt IAPI
'
I
REG.
12.99 ---~,,, 99 ltG~
12.U
..-.. ~ RA YDEEN SPACE
AGE WARRIOR
... 11 .... , ...... , ... -.c:.-•• ....... ... ..........................
VINYL CUSHION
TOILET SEAT
:~::a 1 s•
CHRISTMAS
GREmNG CARDS
r:
"./I' •" .. I• . .
Hanes
BHIEFS -......... ,. I
....... , z ...
..............
s~~, 59c
8110" , .,
Sill •
111r ...................
I l
WASHINGTON (AP>-A ~· pute~ check of welfare n>ll5 in 20 ,
states and tbe D1-tr\ct or Coiwn·
bia bu turned Up 26.334 CDIJ'eGt ~ recent federal employees who
al.so get welfare HEW 5ecretary
Joseph A. c8lliano Jr. aJ}d ~
day.
Callf ano said the government
is cbeddftl payroll records to learn the employees' earnlncs
and will refer cL'5es to state and
local officials foe further acuon.
S. LClflUllCI Teen
Victim Dies ... .
After Crash
An accident near the Zlggµrat
Oct. 24 claimed its second young
victim when Steven Pendereast,
19, or South Laeuna, died this
m o rning al Mercy General
Hospital, Santa Ana.
The former Laguna Beach
Remington
Pa~nt
ForEOan?
cei\'lnl the rijht amount or were
underp81<1. Twenty percent are
atlll under UlvesUaaUon.
The names of l .t mllllon
federal emJ)lOyoea were c:hecked
aeamst weltare rGlta lD the 20 states and the dlatrict. About 8.2
million ol tbe 11.2 million AFDC
recipients llve ln those 21·
Jwtidlc\ioas.
Tlie 28,334 included l!,3SC cur·
rent fedenl empk>yees and 12,980
who recentl)' left the eovern·
Three incumbents In the
Laguna Beach County Water J>is.
trict race were returned to their
seats in unofficial final retums
from Tuesday's voting.
SU01lt H1tJ'.;. ~.n. (AP) -
WUUam C. Sulllv ., former No. 3
maninthoFS.tw tiottodeatb
today by a hun who apparent· Jy inl•took hlni far a deer, state
Flsb andGam•Otftrialit~.
Sulllvan, 65. was sho~ while
AUJIUll" ~ .JU '-UC WUUW. .,_
his home hi Sugar Hill, a com-
m unity In northern New
Hampshire'• White Mountains,
ornctata said.
Margins Show
AutboriUes identified the «bet
hunter as Robtrt Daniell, in hla
early 20a. from Usbon, N.H. '4) They Nld the accident was under ~ ea .... mveauia&n a.Dd no charges bad
. ...... been filed.
· New HamP1hire's deer sea.son
started last week. • 2 of· 3 EleCtions · Sullivan retired as aSJlstant to
the FBI director in charge of in-
vestigations in 1971 after a f~
put with Director I. Edgar
Hoover. He served m the b\D"Uu
30 years~ 10 of them u chief of
the ln~1encedh1sion.
!. lJnomcial Cinal returns tn.
'fuesday's Capistrano area ~cial district elections sboWed die~r marsins victory today 1\1" wtnnen J.n two ot the three f!ls:ctions . .. .
, 'J'be county reglgtrar of ~
PfOvlded these r~tums:
In the Capistraoo 1$eac~
County Waler District, where
5,467 voters were eligible, a
handful of them elect.eel two
incumbent.a to serve four.year
terms on a five-member board:
..... -Ken Lawrence, 454 (incum-
bent)
Sall Clemenie
Hotel for
Elderly OK'd
A proposed rnidentlal hotel
for the elderly in downtown· San
Clemente passed its first test re-
cently as city planning com.
missioners approved a residen·
ti al homes use permit for the San
Clemente Hotel
The commlt1s1on vote was 4-0.
with Commissioner William
• Greenwall absent.
The hotel, al 114 Ave. del Mar,
is located m a C-1 commercial
zone. The building dates from the
fQunding of San Clemente. SO
)ears ago and is currently used
as a residential hotel.
Its owner, Roy Stevens, had
apptied for the use permit to io·
stall cooking units, malntabUng
the hotel would lhen·provldo ht·
expensive housing ·tor elderly
persons on fixed incomes.
The use permit now requlre9
City CoUJml approval. A public
hearing will be scheduled In
December, said Clay Dlllman.
city planner
6BandA Play
At GridSlww
Music themes from popular
movies will be performed Thurs-
day by Cap1~lrano Unified music
students as halftime entertain-
ment at the San Clemente-Dana
lltlls football game tn San
Clemente.
High school drill teams \\ill
101n mon· than 25-0 band students
from the district's i.ix high
sc-hools and Junior highs to pro-
'1dc the musical mtrrludc, said
\ustin Ruffum, d1slrtcl music
l'Oordmator.
The game will besnn al 8 p.m.
on Triton F1rld al San Clemente
ll1gh School. 700 Ave. Pico. Addi-
t 10 n a I information on the
halftime pro~ram is available by
<'alhng Buffum at496-121S.
-J)GDCM Blackbara, 29S <in·
cum bent}
-L. W. "Vern"StirliA&.203
-Henry Hal!D~ld.182
-In the Capistrano Be~~
Sanllary: District. where 4;!ll
voters were elfgl&l • '11
tur11out eie<:ted two dfredors io
four.year terms and on• 4iroctor
to a two-year· ~rm on a five·
member board:
-Robert Shaver_, 4'$·(inewn·
bent> • · ' -LUIJ' Moatoya. 420 <tncum·
bent>· • ..... ffenr,. Halmlnski. 218 for
· fout-yeartenns. and.: ....
-Erna~ f(1( Uncumbeat) -Joe Gomalfie, Wfortho two-
year term. "'
-In the Capist.r8!l0 Bay COin· •
rnunity Services District, where
158 voters were eligible, they
elected three directors to· four·
terms on a flv•member board to
provide security protection,
s treet lighting and maintenance
and trash pickup for the Beach
Road private eommunlly ·in
Caplstrano Beach: • ~es Petenoa, "8 Chi cunt
beat>
-James SaUoa, «
-WWlam Tumaae, Jr., 44
-Wayne Schafer, 2S Oneum~
bent> •
-Gwen Reese, 22 (incumbent>
-HobleAlter, 12
.Candidates •I•
For Adjustjng
Board Sought
Laguna Beach city cOUAdlmen
are looking for applleanla for a
job that pays Jillie, involves long
hours at times, and is good for on-
ly three years.
The council will be interview-
ing candidates for the c1ty·s
Board of Adjustment later this
month. The five.m ember panel
oversees design review duties
and variance requests ill the city.
Board rn'ember Peter
Weisbrod is stepping down Dec. 1
and member Lewis J. Whitney's
term ends that date.
Meetings are Thursdays at
7 30 p. m. The pay is $40 a month.
Interested candidates for seals
on the panel are asked to call City
Clerk Verna R o llinger at
494-1124.
Obese Women
Sulllun teatlried before a
grand Jury in July on bebalf Of
agent John J. 'Keamey, who bad
been lndicted on conspiracy
' charges in connection w\lh an
FBI jnvestJgaUon of anti-war
eroups during the ~ietnarn war.
· Sullivan staunchly defended
Kearney agai.Dst cb&rle$ of il·
)e1al wiretappl.hg and matt open·
1ng. He sald Kearney was actinl
under Orders fro'm Hoover to wse
whatever means neeeuary to
(l:aek violent extremists.
Sullivan's feud with Hoover
cll1'!Ued when h.e arnved at bls
office one momlne and found
that Hoover ordered the locks m
bis .door changed.
Hls name s"urtaced durinf the
Watercat.e scandal when ·it.ras ·
p,...p,,.eAJ
Liquid Protein Diet
Probed in-Deaths
In recent years. Sullivan wu
named a defendant io aevetal
civil sulta brO\.libt by tndlrlduals
wbo ..Ueged rtbeJ we~ the ob-
jects of UJeial FBI lurveillanee.
Su tu van was intenlewed by in·
vestigatort work.ing on the House
Judiciary Committee's lm~acb·
ment inquiry N•inlt Nixon.
Lacuna Beach property
owners who are thinklns ot lay·
ing a slab of concreto on their
property or tossme up a small
fence. might be able to avold the
long planning process bestnnJna
today.
Plannlne director Do1.11
Schmitz said the city hes de-
veloped a mlnl·pettnlt'prqram
to cut down the red \ape'
necessary to process sntnor home
projects.
The J>f'Oll'atD • applies 0~1 to
Ciementeait
Held in Theft
HOW TO ADD AN
"ANTIQUE GALLERY"
LOOK TO YOUR HALL?
··--· ._ .
•I
-~·
WITH HERITAGE'S SUPERB . ~ .......... ~
BRITT ANY CHESt & MIRROR
I
C&Jt9 Beach
• Street Named
t 1
\
,
• •
)
l
f
•I
__...._;:.._..,,
Something Ne.e Vader the s ... ·~-~
Astronomer Charles Kowal, 35, of CalTech, POints toward
microscope device for comparing photographic plates made
through a 48-mch telescope. Kowal located a tiny "mini·planet''
between Saturn and Uranus, only 300 miles in diameter, that may
become our solar system's 10th planet. The last planet discovered
in the solar system was Pluto in 1930.
First Gay Elected
To SF Supervisors
SAN FRANCISCO
CAP) A professed
homosexual has been
elected to the Board of
Supervisors for the first
time in San Jo'ranc1sco,
where an C!;timated one
m seven of the city's
680.000 res1denLo; 1s gay
llarvcy Milk. a 47·
year -old businessman
and l wo·ttme loser in
superv1sorial races.
secured 30.5 percent of
the vote m District 5,
winning his seat on the
ll·member board by a
5·t0·3 margin.
HIS EASY victory
over 17 candidates came
in the first San Francisco
election by district id 80
years In the past,
supervisors were picked
in city-wide votmg.
NearCa•pus
3 W 01nen Victims
Of Sex Assaults
SAN JOSE (AP) Three women have been
sexually assaulted in the last three days near San
Jose Stale University. police said. The urban cam·
pus has been plagued by about 30 similar attacks
this year. .
Police said the latest attack came Tuesday,
when a screaming woman student fought off a
.. very. very dirty man with a Fu Manchu mustache
and a large, ptotrudlng stomach." The attempted
daylight attack took place on a downtown corner in
the woman's car
Anothorstudent was abducted on the same cor-
ner Monday nighl by a man armed with a butcher
knife. police said. He forced bis victim to a nearby
elementary school where he raped her.
SF S11ip~r Surr~d~r•
SAN FRANCISCO (A Pl A sniper walked out
of his apartment and into the custody of surprised
officers today after necotiating with police lot four
hours, authorities said.
--------.. Police said Bob
( ~ ~T'E J Jones, 47, surrendered to
o::1i n.i • oHicers in the apartment
'---------hallway after a brief scuf-
fle. He was wearing a
pistol under his belt and
two shotguns and a rifle were found in bis apart-
ment.
No one was hit by shots fired from the Western
Addition district apartment, police said.
S7 Muu ... Pia• T old
Stx incumbents and
four other newcomers
also were winners in
light balloting Tuesday
as 51.2 percent or the
city's 339,306 registered
voters went to the polls
on a warm, sunny elec-
tion day.
IN ADDITION to 115
s upervisorial can•
didates. the ballot was
clogged with 22 referen-
dum measures and
choices for city attorney
and city treasurer.
Milk's district contains
neighborhoods with
heavily gay populaUon&
But he ca.tied his victory
a mandate for bis
politics ..... not his
homosexuality.
... TH E PEOPLE who '
voted for me were con
ceTned about the is
sues .. I will be a
supervisor who happens
to be gay," he said in a
post-election interview
"My allegiance ls to my
district and to my city "
While admitting his
role as the city's first
homosexual supervisor
carries extra
"responsibUlty." Milk
compared his position to
former President Ken·
nedy, the nation's first
Rom nn Catholic presl·
dent.
Tm, Tut,
Tickeu
For Tut
LOS ANGELES CAP)
-Trying to avoid the
long lines and waits that
have occurred
elsewhere, the county
Museum of Art will sell
tickets for the Kin&
Tutankhamen exhibit.
It will be the first time
the museum has sold ad·
van~~tickets. They 1oon
sale Jan. 3 at 84 r~tail
oullets in Los An1eles,
Ventura, Kem, Oran1e, River )de, San
· Btrl\•rdltio and San Dlego counties, museum
officials have an·
nounced. ·
•Safe for s1pp1ng dn the
freeway •Large easy to hold handle
" dtirlk-thru lid •Attach~ magnetically to
metal. plastic or carpet'
.
THE MAIN CHARGE levied acalnst
Kini during the campaign was that he
unfairly assessed tract h~mea. which
were appraised every year by computer
while non·t.ract homes were reappralJed
less frequently. •
In San Diego, 63. 7 percent of voters~
proved an initiative to crea,t' a param~i_c 1ervice, with reclstered
SHARP
'CAROUSEL
MICROWAVE
OVEN
•Spend time with the family •
. • not ti\ tHe kitchen ·
•t'asl meals ... balanced
meals ... healthy mea.11
•The Carousel turn& food for
evM cookmg
•Browning wtlt too JR8200
939988
BUMM DRIP COFFEE MAKER
• How can I get restaurant coffee at borne? •
Always with a BUNN. Only with a BUNN,• And
it's super fast ... 8 cups in 3 minutes • Built to
last with copper tubing & stainless stet! • Why
Bunn'! Vnlue.
II
,, 3688
• 0 ....
THE GREAT
AMEltlCAH
POPCOltM
MACHIME
•Pop• 4 qu.arta of popcorn
aulomnllcally buttered!
•Serve in lhe clear cover
•:"won ·stlck .. , eai.y to
clean. , ...
woooa.
UTENSILS
·•For your ktich~ . . . or
lied with n ribbon for i1
super gift.' •Spoons . . . forks .
spurtles ... and more
19!
HOOVER ,
COMVEITIBLE
·v.ACUUM CLEANER
• •4 Pos1Uon beitht control, low
pile to hl&M sba1 • •3 Posit.bi band!e
•Full time edsc cleaninc
•Vou'\·c Seen it on TV . :
..
""' . A proposal for the f ormatlon of an arts council to
.replace th 11 ccld u 8 ch Clihural Committee. wUl
fleed_ ~ l~ ~rc;..._ri~u\iy tieJore It c n be acc.~ptM. bv re."i·
:....__;;/;,:, ••• .. nr A••" '-' U1UJ1). ,
-Cultural Co'mmittee members claim they have no
power within tY1e Political strUcture of Laguna Beach. An
m-ts council, a~ they")>ropose it, would coordlnate efforts to
bring art forms out m the streets, for public view, rather
than in studi<">s and private homes.
They er1vision culturnl events in the streets, and im·
provements to exterior architecture on new commercial
-;tructure!; ln the city
And 'i.hey believe their new cultural clout should come
from imposition of a one percent "tax commitment" from
commf:rcial builders' project costs.
Making the developer foot the entire bill i~ crossly un-
:fair. Councilmen should be wary of any scheme to p\.D\lsh
one segment of the business community for the betterment
-0f the whole.
The proposal for an arts council..and a means of sup-
'POrting public art forms deserves a serious, very careful
examination.
r •
·Good Riddance ..
A proposed San Clemente building mspectlon or·
«linance, described by one councilman as taking a hammer
after a fly , got the swat it deserved at last week's city
council meeting.
The ordinance would have required a. $25 city mspec·
lion of any residential. commercial or industrial building
tnore than a year old before 1t could be sold
Planning Director Richard Ahlman told councilmen
.the ordinance would require hiring additional city staff to
handle the more than 1,500 property sales annually
-The citahon procedure now in use is enough to bring 11·
legal building conversions and additions into compliance
with the cit.y building code, the council decided.
. Citations a re issued as violations are uncovered,
without a burdensome mandatory inspection system.
Whatever the city's need for additional staff may be, it
fs not to shuffle another layer of papers every time a build·
tng in the city changes hands
;Law Misinterpreted
Last week, San Juan Capistrano city councilmen met
in private to discuss "'hether or not to turn over deeds to
the city's sewage treatment and approve an audit setting
the city's costs for improvements to the plant at SL 7
million.
·, City Attorney James Okazaki claims the so-catted ex-
ecutive session was legal under the Ralph M. Brown Act.
California's open meeting Jaw. OkazakJ maintains the
closcd·door session was a protected attorney-client rela·
tionship. He is mistaken. _
The attorney-client relatlonship is only valid when di&·
cussing actual litigation that is in progress against th~
~ity. In thi~ case, the c~cil was reacting to a threat
of possible legal ection. .ARJ.!tlst the cjty made by the
Southeast Regionat Rectamat.iOn Authority <SERRM
The threat of legal action is not enough to bar the
public from its right to kno.w how the public business is
~onducted. Such logic would preclude public meetings on
any issue councilmen thought might prompt legal action
As an example, when San Juan councilmen were dis
cussing the city's controversial growth management code
last year, several area developers were threatening to sue
the city and many, in fact, followed through on tltose
threats. But the council at the time held open discussions
on the code.
The sewage treatment plant discussion should also
have been held in public. The public's business is exactly
that, and it had better be conducted in public, not behind
~losed doors Secret government is bad government.
•
Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment Is invited Address The Daily Pilot, P.O
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321
Boyd I Resistance
ByL.M.BOYD
In every conquered country
occupied by foreign soldieri:;
there thrives a resistanc~
movement, an underground. One or these nourished lll
Ciecboslovakla when the Sov·
ietl m9ved into that. nation.
Anet therein was conceived:
.. Tbt Teti C<>mmandments of
Jte1istance -We haven't
learned anything. Wt! don't ·now anything. Wedon'tbave
anything. We don't glve
anything. We can't do
anything. We Clon't &ell
diiythlng. We WOb't help. We
don't understand. We don't
?tetray. WE WON'1' FO'RGET
ANYTIDNG:~
Lords debate on porno·
grnphy. "Women would not
be prostitutes were 1t not for
men"
Q. •'How big is Costa Rica's
standing army?"
A. It hasn't any Nor eny
arsenal, evidently. When
President Lyndon B. Johnson
visited there nine years ago,
Costa Rica had to borrow :i
cannon from El Salvador tor
the 21·gW1 salute
Wodnesday, Nov.mbot t. 1171
WASHINGTON '""" T e
Koreans a.ren 't the onl}' forei~
agents woo have l>een tian<lln&
Nft "••h cm /?a.~ unt '-' ---
of foreign agents,1>otll rec~~ed and unregistered. have been Pto-
motlnl th r national il\ttresta in
Wasbington.
Their major elfort has been
aimed naturally enough at
Congress.
with ib tight
told on the
federal purse.
An linaetUing
number of
congressmen,
over the
years. have
been re •
sponsive \o
overtures and •
payments from forelgn arent.s.
The Koreans are't)ikel"S; tonx-
ample, compared to the Chinese
NationaJi ts. The !•te <(hiani
Kal·sbek ~nneled money into
the rilht congressional pockets
through friendly American busi·
nessmen who passed out cam·
pa1gn contributions and through
relatives who carried huge rolls
ol $100 bi\ls and peeled 1hem all
to those who preferred thaL sort Of
gros~ transaction
IN CONTRAS'I; to the petty t~}.QL.\1
Korean payoffs, witnesses told us \tTI~
of a tryst in a New England field
where Chiang's emissaries de·
livered s.>,000 in cash to a late
senator
Ttie Chinese Nationalists also
wanted far mare out of the Unit·
ed States than the military ship·
ments the South Koreans have
sought. The bidden aims of the
Nationalilts were revealed in a
collection of secret cables, which
we obtained through a Chinese
code clerk two decades ago.
Cb1ung Kai·sbek wanted no
less than to embroil the United
States m a third world war !>O he
could ride back to power in the
rumble seat of an American vie·
tory. He recognized 1t would be
diWcult to sell the American peo-
ple upon attacking the Chinese
mainland. Declared a Dec 5,
1949. cable ·our hope of a world
war so as to rehabilitate our
country is unpalatable to the
rAmerlcan> people ·
THE OUTBREAK of war in
Korea brought new hope to the
Chinese A cable dated Juty H : ! '+'
M8ilh0x
To the Editor:
A recent news•article descnb·
ing the plight of Rheingold
breweries aod its plea for a
federal loan engenders an ob·
senaUon.
Any setr respecting and
knowledeenb\e beer connoisseur
who has vi!lited Germany and
prosit the real thing or who has
resisted the Yankee-Doodle·,
macbo·advertU:ing·COft and, in· •
• stead. let their tastt'·bods do the
drinking, has Jona .ago aban·
doned any hope of savoring in the
USA a bometown·produced, un
pasteurized, additive.free. true·
flavor, malt· beverage.
Why'> Because the US Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco & F'irearms,
which rules on such matterli, has._
b)I its b~finltjon of malt
beverages. authorized an almost
endless list or chemical adJuncts
<additives) used by American
breweries to make American
"befr" look andtastellke beer.
lack of citizen interest in the
campalrn and later the poor
turnout on erection da).
As one or the candidates. I
called for greater parental and
community in\·olvem nt at our
schools -not just at sehoot board
meetings. It was an Issue that
meshed with your concern then
over widespread cilizen apathy
in our local school hoard election .
NOW WE have law in
California tb t wUI .:mandate
parental and community
participation and you would like
to torpedo It. As for your name·
less schQol administrator. what.
I think, he meant to say is: "Now
I'm going to be legally accounta
ble lo dcw.cns of parents through
the Sch9<>1 Sile Councils and not
JUSl fivo-trustc:es who I can slam·
pcde · and 1 Cion 't like it."
The Leg11lature hu 1uven the
people the unique opf)Oftunlty to
participate in lhe\r schools at the
l(Ul level. We should au b~
gratefill, There are bOund to ~
problenus at first. as we w~tk out
the kinl<!. But the Sthool Site
Council will helP. the educational
proces . Our ctuldren w,ill be the
ultimate beneficiaries ol AB 65.
ICHAEL P. ONORATO
crowd." often accused or ad·
vocating a return lo the rnor~
primitive days, Joins with the
water planners in supporting
constructive. not obstructive,
legislation.
Senate Bill 34& <Ayala> is a
hopeful compromise measure
negoUated by reasonable people
having a mutual respect. Jl is
believed to be a big siep forward
toward the construction of vttally
needed water projects in
C~liromia. including the Jong de·
Iayed Peripheral Canal, while at
the sa'lbe time satisfying the en·
vironmental requirements. ,
All of Calilomia wm benefit,
but it is ol vital importance to the
11 mlllion people served by the
Metropol!lan Water District of
SOuthem CaJifomia that SB 346
gets the legislative green light in
January.
As a long·time Orange County
resident, a memt)er of MWD's
executive committee and vice·
chairman of the board, I hope
that you will do all that you can in
support of the Bill .
LYNNOON L . AUFDENKAMP
1>BAR PAT: I've often wondered ._,hen aa4 why hurricanes started to
be called by women's names. The big
fuas about thia year'a .. Anita" being
cbmpartd to Anita Bryant prompts
me to ask. I think it would be more
fair to use men's names every other
)'ear. ·
P .I .. Balboa
U all begaa casually eno. with a
lnarrleue eaDed Marla In U9e 1Nl
aovel, "Storm", by Georse a.
'S&ewart. 'l"llie pradJee grew llmag
World War D ucl ID 1113 It beca1ae of.
tlclal National Weatber
DEAR PAT: I thOu&bt I was in·
aured fOC' a homtoWMr's policy wtth
Allatate InSuruace Co. from February
1967 tbroash Febnary 1911. In
Febnuuy or March of 19'1$ l iDQ'1ired
about ratewil •nd was infori:lled tbat
my poUey bad cucelled lD Oc·.
tober 19'1S. No reason waa 4lven for
Uae cancellation. l rec~aved no
nottncatton. nor did my aionaaae
carrier. I have called this insurance
company many Uines and am alwaya
told that they will "check into it," but
no IJiformaUo11 ii forthcomin1. l 've also written tetten with the same re-
sult. l 1Wl don't know w~ the policy
was cancelled, and 1 bften't been is·
sued any premium refund •
L.J .A., Cost.a Mesa
Western lanraaee laforlllatlon 'N ~ 1~-s
Service of Santa Ana WH coatac&ed ew ~-on tore resardlns yoar problem. All~ate told .
It.I represutatlve, after a review of •
yoar records, dtat your policy was o ~ l
cancellN October 31, 1114, for aoo· pens 00 U03S
pa1•ent ol tbe premium. A notice '°
this ~ffect waa malled to you preeent
address and to )'Oar mort~ .. e bolder.
If tftla IDlormaUon doesn't airee wl&la
your records, contact A 'YS for
docameatatloa. ,,
The 20th Akron StOre ln Soutbem California will
open Friday bl Uiet,qwaa ffilllll.U w1tb a spectal
exhibition and a aate of the orislllil Nonnan
Rockwell pam~ Of JObn !' .. KennedJ.
Tbe 2J0,000:1quare.toot atore.t which was re-
modeled from arocer.r atore for atiOut '200,()(JO,
Sad(Jleback Sets Expa!lSion
Of Camp
will open at 10 a.m. This store w1ll be Akroq •a third lD Oruge COUil·
ty and the only oae fD tbe IOuthelD area. St.ore ~· ficials' appa.renUy ebole the location becwse of tile , Business Seminar
and seminar materials.
Because o( limited seal·
ing, reservations should
be made in advance by
calling the community
services office at
831-7813.
For the
growing population hl the •outh county.
A 0 1l7'd "WE'VE ALWAYS WANTBD to bave a ltOte :~!!~~~~~~~ reas n in that area to serve the people who we think are
very valuable customers,'' aald one store ex-
1' he 62-acre camp· ecutive. Until now, be e"plalned, customers have
ground at Featherly hadlotraveltotbestoreinQranie.
R e I i o n a I P a r k i n The oil painting, tbe only ~tll lllustn OD
Anaheim is so crowded to appear three Umes on the corer of the SitWdQ
most of the time that Evenln& Poet, will be exhibited Friday, Sitlatday
county park rangers and Sunday. Itta being offer.:lfoualefot-5,CIOO.
turned away 18,600 The atore also will offer deci>rator items, ln·
wowd-be C"aJnper1 last cludinf many Imports, sourmet foods and Wtne1,
year because campsites housewares, art and art supplies and hom
were filled. fumlsbin&s. Du~ the Cbrittmas aeuoa. tb1i
0 range Count Y store Will CClfttain a large toy and ch1Jdten'a altl d•
,auperviaon decided partment. • , • '
Tuesday to expand the
campground by 80 more • .JERRY BBTITA. WHO formerly mcac~ t.M
sites on 19 addltlooal AkronStonlDSan Barbara,isUre an er'l!i ~
-acres. • ~ewotitfff • 1
County officials said lt Tbe newest Akron ia sald to look differesrt than
probably wt11 coet about other it.ores in the cbatn beeauae tt f eat&&re1 oatlatal
$114,000 to convert what wood fillturel and wider ables.
now is a 19-acre picnic "Oar stores are more than a colleCtloa cl
and sports area to a shelves, •. tbey've been d~ to be a seek·ud·
campJround. find e•perience wbere people ertjoy $\opphui
They reported 4,'100. without confusion and wltboul pr....ure, aald
daytime part users were Richard Hadel, Akroo president.
turned away from
Featherly becauae of
overcrowding last year
as well. But thole vis·
ltors now may be direct·
ed to the new Yorba
Regional Park a short
distance away.
ADON RECENTLY WAS ~ulred by the
Thrifty Corporation and ls in \he mMbt of an ex·
pan1ton program. In addition to openlna ,new atOres.
extstln1 stores are being .remodeled. •
l The first Akron was opened in tM late O~qn
Sunset Boulevard in ffollywOod. Tile cbtin nbW
spans the state, from San Francisco to San D\eao.
. .
* Dayna Kerley, Newport Beach, bas been
named assistant cashier at Bank ol Newport. She ls
former purchasing administrator and joined the
bank five years ago as a ~Uer. ...
t.ary \.:. tiarrisoa, Irvine, bas been appointed
assistant manager for Joans at BaJak ot America'
Westcliff Pina branch in Newport Beach.
He Joined the bank as a teller in urn, was ap-
pointed a loan officer at the Monrovia branch the
followJng year, and in 19'74 assumed lending dutie!,
at the Newport Beach office. He m05t recently
l-.erved as bus iness development officer at the
Irvine Industrial branch. ...
Pete N. Andrich has joined the Newport Beach
othce of Grubb & Ellls. In his new position, he will
be involved m investment property sales.
Before joining the firm, he was a senior finan-
cwl ~malyst with Whittaker Corp
* Jamei. S. McCulloch has joined Baak of
Newport as vice president in the loan admihlstra-
tion department.
Jle has worked with Union Bank ln Los Angeles
and Orange, the Santa Ana orlice of California
Bank, and most reQenUy managed the main office
of First National Bank of Orange County. • Ralph Clock, president o( a.ck Coristnactloo
Co., Irvine, has been elected to Uie board of direc-
tors or the Southern California chapter of the AB-
~oc i ated Builders and Contract.on.
i\ BC is an associat!on of Merit Shop Contrac-
tors. The local chapter has more than 440 members • • Edward A. Krisher has joined the engineering
firm of Van Dell and Assodates, ll"Vine. He is past
president of the Civil Engineers and Land
Surveyors Association of Riverstde and San
ncrn ardino counties
Before joining the firm, he was vice president
and prOJ(.'Cl managcr for CM Associates of San
Bernardino • St.even A. Studabaker, ~ del ~ar, has
been appointed as loan oUicer at Bank of America's
Chapman-Brookhurst brancbiil Garden Grove.
He had served for the past nine months as a
loan officer al the West Fullerton of'ftce and~s· a
former account executive with New. Eneiand
Management Corp.
PUBLIC NOTICE
'ICTITIOIJS IUSIHllll
MAMI. ST ATlMUn
r~ .. IOllOWlllQ """'"" •• ""'"' b•m· ..... ~ ~· DYNA kLEEN SYSTEMS. 7Mol
SPt>er A._.en"°', H"ntt"'OIC>f\ tie4U'I, c .. 111orn1•9'2 .. ,
W1111...., (, McGill. 1142 l'•lkl•nd
corue, HunllnQlon beatn, C..Hl0tN• '11•••
I hi\ bu'°'M>> " CondU<i4'd by •n ln-cJ1..,.10\i.tl,
Wm. c:,. M<C.111
1111• >l.irm.nt """' lilfd wllh llw County CHrrk OI Of""911 Cou ... y on ()(.
IO~t ll. 1'1/
U~R AS: Tlllt estrangetnent ot mtlllo.D1 from the free en-
terprlJe system, economic mis·
undentanding, apathy of voters,
the big federa\ deficits, the
growth of eovernment
bureaucracy, the perils or infla·
tion.
lt isn't quite that simple -but
almost: It ttnvol\'es a plan, the
National Dlvtdend Plan, con·
ceived by Perry, beal.nning while be was a college student,
published tn book form in 19M,
ancJ refined and developed since tMn.
The NDP has attracted the at-
tention and advocac of con-gressmen, •
corporation
elteeutives,
liberals, c'on-
ser v ati ves,
academe-
clans and,
rather recent-
ly, a former
astronaut,
Col. Alfred
Worden, who cv .... ,,.,.
returned from apace convinced
that America's economic health
was as big acballenee.
What attracted Worden and
•others ts tbe pJaa'a systems ar>-
pro a cb. It doesn't seek piecemeal improvements but a
vast cverhau.l instead, with the
motivation arising from the en-
OOWHt Pct. ~~Off..., ~ -h Off H• .s -... Off 11.f • -n Of( 11.1 2 -"' Off U,f I 2111 -"' Otf ..... 2'--.. Off )0.0 A ---Off u ,~ _, .. Oft a.• '°"" _, °" .., 2-lliOffU 2 -\lloOtf 1J 1-\illOttU , w. -s~ Ott 1.a
lloo -"' Off •• , ' 1 -ft Off 6.7 .an-\loOff ,J ... 1\-2-won u • 7\'i-nOH U • -'lllOlt s.• .. -11otOlf s.• '-~on s.•
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lllt -ft Oft u ..
W ASHJNGTON CAP> -The
Food and Drug Administration
announced today It has "every
reason to believe that the liquid
protein diet waa at least a con-
tributing factor" in the deaths of
10 obese women who lost an
averaie or 90 pounds using the
popular modified fastdtet.
FDA Commissioner Donald
)S:ennedy said investigators at
the U.S. Center for Disease Con-
trol in Atlanta found that the
To Food Fi""
Check Traced
To Diedrich?
By GARY GRANVILLE
Ol lllf o ••• , l'llM $1Aff
A $25,000 check given by
Fullerton attorney Michael Rem-
ington lo food company president
William r.loore in 1073 "could
possibt:; have been repayment of
a loan I owed Moore," Orange
County Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich sajd today
Remington said last week that
$25,000 of a $75,000 legal fee he re-
Feu; Fans,
Big Bets
At Fai~Day
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
OIU.Oall'f P ... 1 llAff
The opening day crowd for
horse racing al Los Alamitos was
lighter than expected but lho6e
who showed up certainly weren't
stingy when it came to placing
be ls
Tuesday's attendance al the
Orange County Fall Fair's rac-
ing meet was 8,021 but the rans
wagered $1,044,183 on the rair's
ll races. Race results are car-
ried today on Page .84.
Fair officials had hoped for an
average of 10,000 fans and a daily
betting handle of about $1 milllon
for each of the 12 days or racing
at Los Alamitos. •
The fact that a smaller crowd
mariaged to exceed the ~tung
handle is making fair officials
optimistic about eventual profits.
Ken Fulk. director of the CQsta
Mesa.based fairgrounds, fiiutes
the fair can net about $250,000 1n
revenues if the present betting
handle holds up.
Profits will be used to s~ure
(See FAIR, Page Al>
ceived from the Grant Corpora-
tion in 1973 that was related to an
issue then·pending before the
county Board of Supervisors was
loaned to Diedrich.
He also said another '25,000
ftom the fee was loaned "at
Ralph's behest" to a Diedrich
friend whose name he couldn't
recall.
Neither loan has been repaid,
according to Remington.
It was learned Monday that
Moore, president of Golden State
Foods, Inc., and a Jong-time
Diednch friend, was teclpient of
tht seCOQd .$2S,OOO Joan Jn 1973.
The ~mington fee payftlenl
and the ~ubsequent lous t.o
Diedrich and Moore are the cen·
terplece in a Grand Juey pr'Obe
and a W13 board declilon to re-
lease Jarid from an atricultural
preserve agreement Jn the
Anaheim Hills. .
Remington was hired to
represent the development com-
pany, apparently on the recom-
mendation of Diedrich, as it
sought to free land for deYelop·
ment on the Knoll Ranch.
It was later that Diedrich led
a 3 to 2 board or supervisors di!·
cision to release the land in a con·
troversial decision.
Remington, Diedrich's busi·
ness attorney. last week pleaded
guil\y to a misdemeanor charge
brought against him and a Grand
Jury indictment that named him
as a conspirator in a 1918 con·
spiracy lo violate state political
campaign regulations.
Simultaneously, other felony
charges brought a1ainst Rem-
ingt.on on the indictment were
dismissed by Superior Court
Judie PbillpSebwab.
In addition t.o lta probe into the
land use issue, Grand Jury in·
vestigaton are attemptJni to
track what Remington said was
$20,000 paid him by Anaheim
architect LeRoy Rose in 1974 that
wu t.ransmiped to Diedrich .•
According to Reminaton. he~ ceived two checks from Rose
t.otali.nt $20,000 purportedly to
<See CHECK, Page A?)
WASHINGTON CAP) -A com-
puter check of .welfare rolls in 20
states and the DI.Strict ot Colum-
bia haa turned up 28,334 curren\
or recent federal employees wbo
also get welfare, HEW Sec~
Jbsepb A. Califano Jr. uid to-·
day. .....
Callfano said the government
is checking payroll records to
learn the employees• earninJS
and will refer cues to state and
local officials for further ~on.
. .
Tel Avav the rad lsrMl'a
respo to um attac:a
acros1 t.bo border-, and apote ot
damage done by Jara1U
warptanea.
He aald the Israeli aircraft hlt. ••tertorilt campe, trahilnc baes
and tteld bases" and that at'leiaat
some targets were deatroy8d.
rt ...... •!.!# '"-!.. ·~-:-~, 2, lt75, that the Israeli mlllt.ary
announced an air attack on
southern Lebanon, and it came
aftei; Palestinian rocket attacks
killed three Israelis this week.
A spokesman f01: the provincial
Lebanese governor's office in
Sidon said Israeli iunboat.s did
heavy damage durio1 the Di&bt
to the harbor and customs head·
quarters in Tyre, 15 miles north
of the Israeli border.
But a guerrilla spokesman
labeled as "ridiculous" Israel's
r Bert Balladed
He 'Showed Slickers HOUJ'
CALHOUN, Ga. (AP> It may not rival Tammy
Wynette's ''Stand by Your Man" in the charts but the "Ballad of Bert" has been released. •
. The record, produced by Sugar Valley Produc·
t&ons of Calhoun, traces former federal budget direc·
tor Bert Lance's rise from a small town banker
"tryin' to aid his neighbors," to a stint in state gov·
ernment, when he' 'showed those city slickers how,•' to
when he was director of the Office of Management and
Budget -a post he resigned under pressure.
Singer·songwriter Wnght Johnson of Calhoun
said he decided the rest of the nation should be told ·
about the town's affection for Lance.
The chorus of the song urges: "Come rally, come
rally, come rally 'round our friend Bert. Come rally,
come rally, let those senators throw their dirt."
Former FBI Official
Slain by flun~er
SUGAR HILL. N.H. CAP> -
Wilhan;i C. Sullivan, former No. 3
man in the FBI, was shot to death
today by a hunter who apparent-
ly mistook him for a deer. state
Fish and Game officials said.
Sullivan, 65, was shot while
hunting deer in the woods near
his home in Sugar ltill, a com·
munity Jo northern New
Hampshire's White Mountains,
ofCicialssaid.
Authorities identified the other
hunter as Robert Daniels, in his
'early 20s, from Lisbon, N.H.
They said the accident was under
investigation and no charges had
been filed.
New Hampshire's deer season started last week
Sullivan retired as assistant to
th~ FBI director in charge of in-
Crash Victim
Characterized
'Satisfactory'
A Huntington Beach woman
who survived the crash or her
small plane at Meadowlark
Alrpor:t remained in satisfactory
condition today. as Federal Avia·
lion Adminiatration probers
sought the exact cause of the ac·
cident
vestigations in 1971 after a falling
out with Director J. Edgar
Hoover. He served in the bureau
30 years, 10 of them as chief of
lhe intelligence division.
Sullivan testified before a
grand jury in July on behalf of
agent John J. Kearney, who had
been indicted on conspiracy
charges in connection wilh an
FBI investigation ot anti-war
groups during the Vietnam war.
Sullivan staunchly defended
Kearney against charges of ii·
legal wiretapping and mail open.
mg He said Keamey was acting
under orders from Hoover to use
whatever means necessary to
track violent extremists.
Sullivan's feud with Hoover
climaxed when he arrived at his
office one morning and found
that Hoover ordered the Jocks on
his door changed.
His name surfaced during the
Watergate scandal when it was
discovered he was the subject or
a conversation on the White
House tapes.
President Nixon and aides dis·
cussed whether Sullivan mi&ht
not prove a valuable source of in·
formation about POiiticai sur·
veillance ordered by earlier
presidents. John W. Dean Ill,
thea Whtte House counsel, con-
tacted Sullivan, but the informa-
tion the former FBI official pro-
vided fell far short of what the
White House was seekint.
In recent years, Sullivan was
named a defendant in several
civil suits brought by individuals
who alleged they were the ob-
jects of Ulegal FBI surveillance.
Sullivan was interviewed by in-
vestigators working ory the House
Judiciary ~mntittee•s hn~ach
menilnquiry againStNi:icon.
~ . .
FAIR: ••
t .. • ~
· loan• foi the Joc8l f1lr1~ $18. 7 pi Wion t;bansion program,
Fulk said tb1 track was in good
sb.11pe, the weather excellct and
the fa,ns were in a pleasant mood,
on op!ntng day.
Fol.Ir hono·es starUni from the
No. 1 position won halt of the'
eight thoroughbred races &eJd
Tuesday. Aln,ong the winners
was sevea.ye~r~o(d Cherry
River. which captured the $1516'5
Orai:i.e Coast Handicap. ,
There was no crowd estimate
Calling for a Boat?
An unidentified man is thigh deep in water on Hyland
Boulevard in New York's Staten Island as he makes a
phone call. Rams continued to pound the Northeast to·
day. <Story. Paee A4.)
• tor the Cair as a wbole beeause H • € h
thereisnoadmisafoncbarge. ~ . 11ntmgton . ras Homecratt exhibits, livestock ---
shows, live entertainment and
midway rides will be ope'! daily K JI
rrom1oa.m.to1op.m . 1• S Wo 56 RaCtJ\Cgets under way daily at man
But if the state's• new de-
term\n:ate sentencing la•· ls a~
pll64 to Hinabaw'a coavlcUon it
could be August, 1979 before'tbe
former Newport Beach Republican lealslator is released
from bia confinement at tile
Chino correctional facllity.
HjnahaW was aenten(ed after
being convicted of acts of bri~
committed while he served u
county assessor.
He ii~ concurrently a
one year j&ll term ofd:ued aftei'
his conviction on further
criminal charges relat.d to his ll·
legal use ~ county manpower
and materials while s~ as
county assessor and tu.nn1ng foe Congress in 1971.
noon. Fiilk said the field wW ao , ' ~aily as more horses are brought . A 56-year·old Talwaneae pie bad been ata1in& at. a res· ,,... Pflfle Al
in. Today'sresuJts: woman ,was killed and her idence at 4151 Candleberry husband and son injured 'When Ave Seal Beach
c1a1m1,... Putwi1200. their auto craahed at the in· Mrs. Liu was pronounced dead · FlllST llM:a. 4 fvt ... i )'Mr Oldt 6 up. ., • CHEC' -K
Joqu111N••e.ap10.1om1191 tersecUoo of Beach Boulevard al Pacifica Hospital at8 p.m. • • •
Blue RUM IN09Wl1 • uo ~:: i: and Pacific Coast Highway in Her h\,ISband WU pulled from covor lea•• aervicea Dever
No• R•nS1•11nvo uo Huntington Beach Tues.day the wreckage of the auto by Huot· n.rfor-edorblll-. Tim•-•t) ·ght ~;;,. rted . Be h -..ll • ...a Y"' ••• ~ Aho Uan C.l·Tex, Mark Lin, Ch•nQlng Times, nl t l"'U"e repo • angt.oo aC parasp'l:U.l.cs_ °"""
R-..con, Mr. a..mp,avne F11t111. Roorn ~. A 17.year-old Cypress boy, state beach lifeauards. He it re· After deductluc taxes and "'~~~~~· &ucbeoun1 • driver ol the other auto In the ported in serious condition today other costs, Remington gave the
NIXAcT11i_,...._,.,1ec.,a2.a1w••us. crash, was booked on charg· es or with multiple injuries at Hoe.a moneytoDiedrich,bea&id:
'"10•uo. Memorial Hospital in NewPQrt HcoHo 1111cs. 3JO ••ro~. , ym otc11. fO( vehicular manslaughter and SUS· Beach. lnvestieators are check'---to
1N•Otn1. P1WH'2,200. picion of,drwiken driving, police .. ._
"••tnoer1w .. 01 '·'° JOO 2.20 said. The Taiwanese cOUJ>le's son, determine 1l the payment tel
T•ue 8••• 1H•r11 uo z..o Richard Huelying Uu, 42, of Remington coincided witJi &.Q1 of T~lrOT"' ""°''"" 2·.0 K'Ued in th .. 50 lt: -r.t:f th -000 '"""' t T1m•-11.At • J e .. : p.m. co ton Grand Te.rraefl, ~.,was drlv· e _,, wo • ...,, o COUDb'-pay·
"' .. ".,. -s.ucv *""· l\'1m tt a..,.._ was YuimJ.n Lia. Sile had in• bis sedan west on Coast ments made to Rose Jn 1173 ancl Glrl,!Opleo,iCMn~. • j . t • b o 197 f lb d l..W. Note••<'-vas \1ng he area wath er Highway when the crash oc-4 or e es116u of a new 0 nuu 11-.cc. • ,..,..,.._ for inai*nl 1 ~ husband, Li C uni Liu. The cou-currt¥f:. county admil\lstiatlon bWl~
okh Cla•mt"9 Pur1eS4 )()!) --.-~:-!';:-;-:hrr~:--.-~-.....----------......,-:----~~--7.'--~~~~;.;,.;.....;.... .. ": C.rttcl'ttn'•P•H~lol •• lA 2.111
C.•llMl\ly tR.-n!,...I 3.20 2 . .0
!>urprlw ll•lenlf,.. IHarri>I 3 lil
Tim•-t.IUtS
Ali,o R*' I.tie ~ays. Su Foam SI•<. Ms
M•bo. Fou-Fe\I, for..:••l•r. hi. of "'1WY, Clw••-• Tom
S<r•ttrwo "11. lmP«I. Otrttl Quote
Fro. Page Al
SHOT ..•
Officers refused to identify
Kannc's woman companion but
confirmed that the location of the
shooting is her home.
Officers said they have now
learned that Richard bas never
lived al the Ocean Vista address
and that his name is unknown to
occupants of the home.
Laguna Beach Police Capt.
Neil Parcell sald detectives ten·
tatively beUeve that an infor·
mant close to Richard provided
Newport Beach detectives with a
phone number for Richard's
home.
Purcell said that somewhere in
the proceu, two dicUs ~n
the phone number rnay have
been transposed.
·'Therefore, the two addresses
were miles apart," he said.
He said the two Laguna Beach
invesUgators involved ln the
shootl.fll have been ~Hett-on ad·
ministrative dut7 unt.O a
thorou1h investiution is com· pleted.
HOW TO ~DO AN
"ANTIQUE GALLERY"
LOOK TO YOUR HALL?
M
w ...
..
M
-
1 .... •
WITH HERITAGE'S SUPERB ~"""""""~
BRIN ANY CHEST & MIRROR .. . "
Something Nfte llnder tlae Stm A~WI .......
Astronomer Charles Kowal, 35, of CalTech, points toward
microscope device for comparing photographic plates made
through a 48-mch telescope. Kowal located a tiny "mini-planet"
between Saturn and Uranus, only 900 miles in diameter, that may
become our solar system's loth planet. The last planet discovered
in the ·solar system was Pluto in 1930.
First Gay Elected
To SF Supervisors
SAN 1-'RANCISCO
!AP J A professed
homosexual has been
elected to the Board of
Supervisors for the first
lime in San Franctsco,
where an estimated one
in seven of the city's
680,000 residenL<; is gay.
Harvey Milk. a 47
year-old businessman
and t\\'o·tame loser in
su1><•rv1sor1al races.
secured 30.S percent of
the vole in District s.
winning his seat on the
11-member board by a
S·to-3 margm
HIS EASY victory
over 17 candidates came
m the first San Francisco
election by district in 80
years In the past,
supervisors were picked
Ill city-wide voting
NearCa•pus
3 WoIDen Victims
Of Sex Assaults
SAN JOSE (AP> -Three women have been
sexually assaulted ln the last three days nea,r San
Jose State University, police said The urban cam·
pus has been plagued by about 30 similar attacks
this year
Pohce said the latest attack came Tue$day.
when a screaming woman ~udent fou&ht off a
"very, very dirty man. with a f'u Manchu mustache
and a large. protruding stomach." The attempted
daylight attack took place on a downtown corner in
lhe woman's cur
Another student was abducted on the same cor
ner Monday night by a man armed with a butcher
kmfe, police said. He forced his victim to a nearby
elementary school where he raped her.
SF Std)Jf!r S11rr~•d~r•
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) A smper walked out
of his apartment and into the custody of surprised
officers today after negotiating with pohce for four
hours. authorities said
---------... Police said Bob
(
{;."'I' ~T~ ) Jones. 47, surrendered to
.::Ji.Ai CJ officers in the apartment
"---------hallway after a brief scuf·
fie. He was wearing a
pistol under his belt and
two shotguns and a rifle were found in his apart·
ment.
No one was hit by shots fired from lhe Western
Addition district apartment, police said.
17 MHUeit Pia• Told
LOS ANGELES <AP> -After two days of
marathon talks with his top health aides and state
and ~ounty boepilal orficials, Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr. has announced a tentative $7 million plan to re·
organize \be county's mental health followup care
system. •
ThQlplan, which is to be reviewed by health care
ofrtciats and ta.ken up by the governor at a meeting
ne~t Tuesday, wilt "knot together a fra1mented
system that divides state and county care," Brown
said in atel~hone btterview Tuesday evening.
II~ S•pe~t Freer
Sax incumbents and
four other newcomers
also were winners in
hght balloting Tuesday
as 51.2 percent of the
city's 339,306 registered
voters went to the polls
on a warm, sunny elec-
tion day.
JN ADDITION to 115
supervisorial can -
didates. the ballot was
clogged with 22 referen-
dum measures and
choices for city attorney
and city treasurer.
Milk's district contains
neighborhoods with
heavily gay populations
But he called his victory
a mandate for his
politics -not his
homosexuality.
••THE PEOPLE who
voted for me were con
ceroed-about the 1s
sues .. I will be a
supervisor who happens
to be gay,·• he said m a
post-election interview
"My allegiance as to my
dist ricl and to my c:aty ··
• While admitting his
roll' <tS the C'll\'1S rarst
homosexuJI surH"n 1s11r
l' a r r. 1 «' s c x t r a
"respons1bil1ty," ~talk
com pared has pc1s1 lion to
former Prcs1dc•nt Kl·n
nl'dy, the nation's f1r~t
Roman Catholic· prc•si
dl'nt .
Tut, Tut,
Tickets
For Tut
LOS A>'GELES <AP>
Trying to amid the
Ion~ line:. and waits that
have occurred
elsewhere. the county
Museum of Art will sell
tickets for the Kang
Tutankhamen exhibit
It will be the first time
the museum hai; sold nd·
vance tickets. They go on
sale Jnt) 3 at 84 retail
outlets in Los Angeles,
Ventura, Kern, Orange,
•Ri verside , San
Bernard.tno and San
Diego CQW\Ues, museum
officials have an-
nounced.·
THIRTY-SIX candidates were vyinc
for a five-seat cily council, whlcb ftu1d
reedy to function ii the proposition
pa •· • Three incorporation measures wen on
the ballot in San Bernardino County.
. .
ln Yucca Valley, citybood failed 2,258
to l,731, while Bi& Bear residents voted
down incorporation 723 to 57t. Voten in ,
Rancho Cucamonga voiect to become a
TRB MA.IN CHARGE levied ea.Wt
KlnJ dUrinC the campaign was that he
unfairly asseMed traet bomes, which
were appraised every year by cor6puter
while non-tran homes were reappralseCl
less rrequenUy.
In San Diego, 63. 7 percent of voters ap-
p rev ed an initiative to .. create a param~lo lervlce, with reiistered clty by a4,462to3,071 votes vote.
SHARP
C~ROUSEL
MICROWAVE
OVEN
•Spend time with the family .
. • not in the kitchen
•Fast meals ... balanced meals ... healtlly rOeals
.-i'he Carousel turns food for
even cooking
•Browning unit too. tR8200
BUNN DRIP COFFEi MAKER
• I low can I &et testMurant coffee nt home? •
Always with a BUNN. Only with a BUNN. •And
at's super rast ... 8 cups to 3 minutes• Built to
last with copper tublna & stainless 1teel -Wh,y
Hunn? Value.
3688
HOOVER
CONVERTIBLE
VACUUM' CLEANER
·~ Position hcll!hl control, tow pile to high •hag
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•1''ull time edge cleanaoa
•You've Sec.-n it on T\'
••• ' .
~-------------_...., __ ...,. _ _. _______ ~•Keeps bot cider hot
COMMUTER
COFFEECUP
•!->.ii•• tor l:>rppang un the
tre~"' a)
•L,ir~l' l.'as) to hold handle
& drmk·thru hd
•,\ttarh~ magn<'tirally to
mt·lal, plastic or carpet'
THEGllAT
AMEllCAM
POPCORN
MA CHIME
..
•Pop' 4 quarts of popcorn
au tom aUcally buttered!
•Serve in the clear cover
•Non-stack •. • ea.ay lo
clean. , ...
WOODEN•
UTENSILS
•For your Jctichen . . or
tied with a ribbon ror a
super a1ft!
•Spoons . . . forks .
spur11es ... and more
19!
. .. cold beer cold . •taay to pour •••
stopper & hand14t
•Copper fuw;h
3•
•Put the kettle on ..• it ,.hlSUe. wben ready
·~hrro 21':1 quart
•Choose rhocolate/11vocado1han-C'Jll
L' I
Newport Beach city councilmen, along Witti officials of
at l~ast ten other county cities, are f acina a ~Y
problem in a state court-mundoted reform of tbeli' bUsi· lfeas license f t>eS.
. Ci~ officials l~arned of tbe Q\8nd..~te \iA~:f~f-llM>. mu. 1.eatgue 01' C1ftes Convention during whtctrtheywere
briefed on a re<-ent Court of Appeal decision in Braba.nt vs.
the City of Sotathgate. That decision held it WJtonstitu·
llonal l<> charge a flat license fee for businessmenJocated
outside the city who do their business inside the city.
Currently. the city or Newport Beach charges $S0 to
businesses locatt.'<i inside the city and S70 to businesses
located outside the city. ,
City staff members have devised a new ordinance
which they hope will satisfy the court ruling while continu·
ing to bring in the $470,000 currently generated by the ex·
isling business license fee.
The new fee operates on two levels. Business
operators will have the choice of continuing to pay their
Oat fct• or they can choose a fee based on gross receipts.
The l{ross receipts method is based on a $45 minimum to
t·over administrative costs with the fee calculated at 30
t'Cnls P<'r every Sl .000 gross income
It seems a reasonable way of handling the situation.
Wat er Quality
The "Jcwport Irvine Waste·Managemer\t Planning
Agency, otherwise known as NIWA. is one of those th<>St'·
like govcrnm<·ntal bodies which is little understood by th~
pubhc. but which will ultimately wield power with signifi.
c:ant economic side effects
The agc•ncy 1s one of many in Southern California
c)'eatcd to meet the demands of the federal water quality
l~w of 197:! The law mandates that these agencies come up
With a ltsl of sources of water pollution for the bodies t~y are studying tn NIWA's case it's the Upper Newport Bay
-and then dc\'lsc a plan to stop that pollution.
Obviously. the pollution control methods ~lected by
NIWA an.• going lo have to be paid for either by the proper·
ty owne.r~ tn the area under study or by the government
agencit•s th,1t ha\'e Jurisdiction.
Recognizing the importance of the plans devised.
Congress mch1dcd in the bill a mandate that there be max..
imum publit' parllcipat1on in the process of putting
together the pollution control plan.
. NIW.\ dirc('tors say they want to hear from the public
Right no"' they are studying the sources of pollution, a
process which must be complete a year from now
Anyone who h:is an interest in the Upper Newport Bay
and the 100,000 acres which drain into it should speak up.
The directors meet on the fourth Thursday of each month
at 5 p m in the Newport Beach city hall annex con!erence
room.
ltoaniing R eef
A \. ts1onary project for using sunken old rubber tir~
as a breeding haven for red snapper. bonito and jack smelt
has turned into a rocky reef of Orange County controversy.
The artifical reef constructed of 25,000 castoff
Michclins and Uniroyals lashed together with nylon cord
and weighted with cement is now breaking up periodically.
Naturally, the tires wash ashore. at least 1,000 in the last
two weeks' storm swells.
Lifeguards and state beach park rangers along with
the California Department of Fish and Game have been
cleaning up lht• tin•::-originally sunk offshore two ye&J"S
ago by the Los Angeles Rod and Reel Club.
The program tnttially called for a l,OOO·tire reel which
would fu-st be studied for stability and feasibility for two
years. but well-meaning clubmen got carried away with
the iclea and dumped 25.000tires.
Club spokesman Russ Izor says ruefully but
charitably und generously that his fishing compatriots
just got a little premature. The reeJ still is a feasible idea.
"ll all Just goes to show," Jzor says, "the road to hell is
paved\\ 1th our good intentions. And our tires.··
•
Op1n1ons expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot
Ott1er views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
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B oyd I Resistance
By L.:tt. BOYD Lords debate on poNI
graphy: "Women would not
be prostitutes were it no&. tor
men,•·
ln e\'ery conquered country
occupied b~ foreign soldier.r
there thrives a resistance
movement. an underground.
One or these flourished in Q. ''How big is Costa Rica·s
Ciechoslovak1a when tbe Sov· standing army?"
1ets moved into that nation. A. It hasn't any. Nor
And therein wa11 ronceived~ , arse.nal, evidently. Wb "The Ten Commnndments of " President Lyndon B. Jobn
Resistance We haven't visited there nine years go.
learned anything. We don't Cosla Rica had to bOrrow
know anything. We don't have ""Fannon from El Salvaddt for
anything. We dbn 't eive ~the.21-g\&nsalule. "
anything We can't do
anything We don't sell
anything. We won't help. We
don't understand. We don't
betray. WE WON'T FORGET
ANYTHING.··
IN CONTRAST to the petty
Korean payoffs, wi.nesses Jold us
of a tryst in a New Englend field
where Chiang's emissaries de·
livered $500,000 in eaah. to a late
senator. ,
The Chinese Nationalists also
wanted.far more out of the Unit· .
ed Statb lban the military ship·
menta the ,South J<oreans haie
sought. The hidden aims of the
Nationalists were revealed in a
collection of secret cables, wbicb
we obtained through a Chinese
code clerk two decades ago.
Chiang Kai-shek wanted no
less than to embroil the United
States in a third world wat, so he
could ride back to power in the
rumble seat Qf an American vie·
tory. He recognized it would be
difficult to sell the American peo-
ple upon attacking the Chinese
mainland Declared a Dec. 5,
1949, cuble: "Our hope of a world
war so as to r~habilitate our
country Is unpalatable t.o the
(American) people ..
THE OUTBREAK or war in
Korea brought new hope to the
Chinese. A cable dated July 14,
, .
ii 'I' IE STATE Department .
nds to proteeti t lea.t the reg. ilf
istered .foreign aaents. pre· •
1umably to .sare1uard U.S.
prfYUegd in tither countries. In 1 fact, Sta.le inter:~ened '1-'iUl the
Jµsttce ,~rtmcnt last _r Lo
stop the prosecution of an Egyp· f
tlan who had violated the reg·
istntion net.
TblS forced the Justice ePVt· •
menttodropt.hecue, Noriti \lJl·
common ror the State ~Part·
ment toaidfopign a1ents whoiet ~
caughtlri&hocoilsofU.S. Jaw. • l
r ..
• ' I
Ersatz Brew Cheats U.S. Beer Drinkers
To the Editor:
A r~ent news article desciib· ini the plight of Rheingold
breweries and its plea for a
federal loan enaender& an ob-
servation. '
Any self-respecting and
knowledgeable beer connoisseur
who has visited Germany and
proslt the real ltung or who has
resisted the Yankee-Doodle.
macho-advertis\ng-con alld, in·
stead. let their taste-buds do the
drinking. has long ago aban-
doned any hope of savoring in the
USA a hometown-produced, un-
pasteurized, additive-free. true·
flavor. malt-beverage,
Why? BeeausetheUSBuruuor
Alcohol, Tobacco 8lP f:trearms.
which rules on such matters, bas.
by its derinilion of m.all
beverllges, autho:-ucd an almost
ndlQS list of chemical adjuncts
(additives) used by Amel!lican
breweries lo make American
"'beer''look and taste like beer.
school, r found that ll was almost
impossible to learn. For me, it
takes mote than Just sitting m a
classroom, reaaing from a book
and takiog tesL'>. IC you are a fast
learner, it's great because that's
all you rr.ed, but students who
need more end up being
neglected.
McNALLY has provided me
with classes and material that I
can learn from. Whether I work
alone or ma group, I still have as
much attention as I ne«t and so
does everyone elst. McNally has
given a lot.or kids ambition and
understanding that they can sur·
ceed as well as the next person.
As for the people tttal attend
we are the same a& any other
high scbOOI students. ~e have In·
terests ond ideas that heed to be
brought out. McNally has group
activities and projects that
everyone can get together on -
something yoo couldtt' do at a
regular ~blic high school.
McNallY. Isn't divided up into
cliques like other schools, so you
don't f~I as if you're com~ting
with then xtperson.
When 1 started high school, l
• thought M. would be a lot better. 1
found crowded classrooms, pre-
occupied teachers tid soon I
dfdn 't care about 11chool. Why
would anyone care tf they were
(ailing aodcouldn'lgct ny help9
n~d to come down and visit the
school.
SUE HERRLICH
ffi.i Water. Biii .
To the Editor:
It was. big news in Lacuna
Beach when we got our IJl'Jt
domestic waler supply system
Prior to that the Aufdenkamp
home on Forest Avenue, the
main street ot the town, de·
~nded upon rain gutters on the roof down spouted to a 200 gallon
galvaniied metal lank. A few of
tbe ltlore well·&O·do residents had
elaborate underground'· cisterns
with a hand pump at the kitchen
sink.
lt was big news wben we first
got electricity in our town. It was
from an Edison COmpaQy plant
consisting of a huge stationary
engine with a belt driven
generator located on Broadway
where the Buick Agency now has
its car lot. Prior to that we bad
been using candles. kerosene
lamps and carbide gas made by,.
d roppina water on pellets,
Metropolitan Water Diatnct of
Southern California that SB 348
gets the legislative green light in s nuary
A~ a lonc·timc Orange County
resldent, a member of ftfWD's
executive committee and vice-
chairman ot Ute board, 1 hope
that. you wru do all that you can ln
support of the BUI.
L,YNNDON L ~UFDENKAMP
Oacirlt 11 Sn-"ftl
To the F..ditor:
Your recent editorial comment
on Sherif( Bra'<FGates' news re·
lease regarding the Association
of Orange County Depuly
Sheriff• must have been created
out of emotion, gut reaction, if
you will. bUt not out or true.
journallslic f aCWal repottinc. ,,
You stat.eel tbat Sheriff Gates ,
refer.red to 11 «mstanltttream or
phone solicltatfons reiultinj in a • >
flood ol c6mplaliil,,,-calls The lacl.i, as reported ~ewhere ft· ,,
veal that tbc Sheriff's d--
miniatrabve a iatant1, Joe
Mest(e. acknowledged that very
rew calls were or a complaining
nature. :Jbe Shenrrs rel~as . in
tact, stntea m • spmc in lances
complaining·· occurred. This i
so,mewhatS1\ortt>f a OOOd
WASIUNGTON CAP> -The
Food and Drus AdmhU..tratolon
announced today it bu "every
reuon to believe that the liquid
protein diet wu at least a COO·
tributing factor" in the deaths oC
10 obese women who lost an
average oC 90 pounds using the
popular modified fut diet.
FDA Commissioner Donald
Kennedy said investigators at
the U.S. Center for Disease Con.
trol lo AUant found that tho
women. between JS Arid« years
old, "all died 1Uddenly. without
previous symptoms, of._ heart lr·
reaularities -either while on the
diet or shortly after golrif off It.''
Kenl'ledy said further study of
the deaths wu needed. .. •
But he warned consumen not
to go on the diet without close
medical supervhion, sa)'in1: "It
is clear that the low-calorie pro-
Hold Retained
By Landowners
Large landowners retained
their hold in the election for three
directors of the Santa Marganta
Water District Tuesday.
Opposition lo landowner con·
trot of the district prompted
Remington
Payme-,µ
For Loan?
l By GARY GRANVILLE
OI Ult DMIY 1"1Ml$~
A $25,000 ~heck 9iven by
Fullerton attomey Mkbael Rem·
ington to food company president
William Moore In 1973 "could
possibly have been repayment of
a loan I owed Moore,•• Orange
County Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich said today.
Remington said last week that
$25,000of a $75,000 legal fee he re.
ceived from the Grant Corpora·
tlon in 1973 that was related to an
issue then.pending before the
county Board of Supervisors was
loaned to Diedrich.
He also said another $25,000
lrom the fee wu loaned "at
Ralph's behest" to a Diedrich
friend whose name be couldn 'l
recall.
Neither Joan has been repaid,
accordlne to Remington.
Jt was learned Monday Ulat
Moore, president of Golden State
Foods, Inc., and a long-time
Diedrich friend, wu recipient of
the secbnd $2S,OOO loan in 1973.
The · Remington fee payment
•nd the subsequent loans to
Diedrich and Moore are the cen-
terpiece in a Grand Jufy probe
and a 1973 board decision to re·
lease land from an agricultural
preserve agreement in" the
Anaheim Hills.
Remington was hired to
represent the development com·
_,any, apparently 9n the recom·
mendation of Diedncb, as lt
sought to free land for deveJop-
tnent on lh4' KnOll Ranch.
It was later that Diedrich l"
a 3 to 2 bOvd Of auperiis~ de..
<Bee CHECK. ~age AZ)
three Mission Viejo residents to
seek a seal on the five·member
board. These men were defeated,
however, with a great majority
of the votes going to represen-
tatives ol Rancho Mission Vie~o
and Coto de Caza. The election 1s
determined by land ownership
with one vote permitted for eacb
$1 assessed valuation.
The final unofficial results
were:
Robert S. Clark -11,965,140
votes
Robert WU.elm -11,873,190
votes
Warftll W. :wUsoo -11,855,030
v ' • om "'•
Walter S. Yort -414.250 votes
J. Richard Killellfew Jr. -
52:1, 130 VQt.es
BobMonrOe-
Clartt. alriculture manacer of
Rancho MI.sslOll Viejo, will be a
new member of the board. Heap·
parenUy was selected for the
position to replace Richard
O'Neill, one of the ranch owners
who did not seek reelection after
servlng on the board since the
district was established in 1964.
Wilson, a trust officer with
Crocker National Bank with the
responsibility or administering
the Jerome O'Neill Trust, also
has aerved on the board since the
district was formed.
NeltherWilsonnorClarkisare-
side n t of the diatrlct.
However, they (and Thomas
Blum, vice president of Viejo
Management Comparty and the
water board's president who was
not up for re-election) qualified
for the seat wlt.b an interest in a
26,000.~foot parcel of the
ranch.
· Wilhelm, vice president and
11eneral manager of Coto de
Caza, has served on the board
since March, 1975.
Fecfural Emp~y:ees
,,
Also Get Wel1are
W ASJUNGTON CAP} -A com~
puter check or wellare rolls in 20
states and the Di.strict of eotwn:
bia has turned up 26,334 current
or recent federal employees who al~ get welfare, HEW Secretary
Joseph A. Califano Jr. said to-•
day.
Califano said the government
is checking payroll records to
leara the empl9yees' earninp
and will refer c~es i& state and
loc:lll officials for further action.
Many or the federal workers
lnael'a chief of staff. Lt. Gen. ·
llordecbal Gur told nporters in
T 1 AVtv the raid was Jarael'a ~-~~-~~e to Palestinian attacks c U>e .. bciider, n<l spoJte ot~
~':.:l':...~~!!:-C"'~~2"'.A a clo11 by Is r 'll
warpla.nes.
He said the llraeU rcrift hit
.. terromt camps, trainms bases
and field bases .. and that at least
some targets were destroyed.
•
Saddlehaek Bistriet
It wo the first time alnce Dee.
2, 1915, that the Israeli military
announced an air attack on
southem Lebanon, and it came .
Special Education
after Palestinian rocket attacks
killed three Israelis th.la week. A.. a~esman tor the provincial
Lebanese governor's office in
Sidon tald Isr,eli gunbOata did
heavy damace duf'ln& the ntght , .. Classes Approved ·' to the harbor and customs head-
quarters in Tyre, lS miles north
or the Israeli border. .
t.Faced with full classes and a
law demanding that youngsters
b~ given the apecial education
they need, Saddleback Valley
Uu.ified School District trustees
uhanlm~ly agreed Mon8ay to
aOd three new special education
classes to their-program.
Trustees approved an addi·
tional learning dlsa.bilily ffld
aphasic class at the elementary
l~el and a class for the educa-
4 Los Alisos
Incumbents
· Wm Election
tionally handicapped at the in-
termediate level.
The classes bad been· planntd
this summer but were not irlitilt·
ed when trustees decided to hold
the line on district level e""'9.·
ditures until a needs assesltllent
is com{>leted.
Although that study stIU ts ~t
done, most of the district s
special education classes are
now f1,1ll, said Dr. Joeeph Pl~tow.
director of pupil services. He
said the district has several stu-
dents ready to move into the
classes as soon . as they are
begun. ,
Under new state and federal '
leeisfat.loo, the districi is r ..
quired to provide special educa-
tion classes for youngsters in
need or them. If the district does
not provide the classes, it bas to
pay the ~t of private school education.
But a guerrilla spokesman
labeled as ''ridiculoUs .. Israel's
claim that tb• attacks •ere
directed exclusively at Palestin-tan guerrilla tarceta. •
"Al least 80 -~rcent of the vic-
tims ate cMUcu .and m06t of them are Lebanese," th~·
spokesman said.
He srud guerrillas had no bases
in Anieh or Hannieb, the two
villages heavily bombed by
Ioraeli planes. .
'the two villages al'e only five
and six miles north i>f the Israeli
border ln line.
.. P~lestinians have only
civilta11 presence ln the two
villages," the spokesman said.
•'PaleWnia.n.familles scared by
lsrael's recertt ~ats of action
fled refugee camps ln Tyre io
Hannleb and Alliefl. So did hun-
dreds or ~ebanese civilian
families from vUlages closer t.o
the Israeli frontier."
•
6e• 1.fli~per .
This is the Victoria-Transvaal diamond,' largest and
most valuable gem gift to the Smithso~an -lnstitution
since the arrival of the Hooe DiaJDOftd,.. ~ }Sfar-sbaped
'57 .89 carat, champagne.colored gem '1S set in a yellow
gold necklace containlil& 108 diamonds
Four incumbents were re·
turned to their seat.s on the Los
Alisos Water District's bond or
directors in Tuesday's election.
A new assessor-tax collector-
treasurer also was elected.
Diane T. Johnson won the as·
sessor's seal and incumbents Harry C John~on, George D.
Stringer, A J. West and William
P . Trilt were re·elected.
Platow estimated that the
classes will cost the district
about $38,000 from its general
fund. An additional $13,000 to
$14,000 will be paid by the state.
The administrator said the
cl~s will be started as soon as
teachers are hi!"ed.
2 Slaying Suspects .Fail :Pail
Voting was restricted to land-
owners, with one vote permitted
for each $l of assessed valuation
of land. A total or more than 45
million votes was possible, the
Orange County Registrar of
Voters said.
In the race for assessor-tax col·
lector·lreasurer, where no in·
cumbent was running, the unof-
ficial results were:
DlaneT. Jobnsan, 10,927,02S ·
Kendra J . Sturgeon, 2,865,805
The unofficial tally for two full
four.year terms as director
werfl· GeorQg·m .. •" 1 Rarrt . . , , .. Rober.&: dli ~ , , ~ 'l
Howd·Farst, .1a.w · '·· .. ~ 1
Unofficial resultNf.r lwo unex-
pired two.year lersis ·on. the
board were. .
A. J. West, 10,7061905
WllUam P. 'l'rlttrt.958.198
J. R. PhilUps, 3,&ee,925
Mild~ Hudgim, 3.091,74$
FromP'*fleAJ .
FAIR •••
shfipe. the weather excellent and
th~ rans were in a pleasant mood
on opening day.
Four horses startln1 from the
No. 1 pos1bon won half of the
etght thoroughbred .racts held
Tuesday. Among the winners
was seven-year-old Cherry·
River .. which captured lhell5,&U
Orange Coast Handicap.
There was no crowd estimate
for· the fair as a whole because
theTe is no admisaion charge.
Homecraft exbibllS, livestock
shows. live entertalnment and
midway rides will be open daily
!rom 10a.m.to10 p.m.
F,...PageAJ
CHECK ••• ·
cision to release the land ln a con-
troversial decision.
Remington, Diedricb's busi-
ness attorney, last week pleaded
guilty to a mi$dern,anor charge
brought againkt bim and a Gr&ftd
Jury indiclmenl that named him
as a conspirator in a 1976 con•
spir~7 to violate sl•t• polilital
caaip~ regulat;ions. .
SimultaneouslY, oth•r fek>nJ
charges brou~t· against Rem·
ington on the indictment were
dismissed by Superior Court
Judge Philip Schwab.
In addition to its probe into the
land use issue, Grand Jury in·
vestigators are attempting to
track what Remington said was
$20,000 paid him by Anaheim
architect LeRoy Rose in 19'7' that
was transmitted to Diedrich.
According to Remineton, he re-
ceived two checks from Rose
totaling $20,000 purportedly to
cover legal .services never
performed or billed.
After deductlug taxes and
other costs, Remington gave lbe
money to Diedrich, he said.
Investigators are checking to
determine tf the payment to.
Remington coincided with any or
the $287,000 worth of county pay-
ments made to Rose ln 1973 and
19'14 for the design of a new
county administtation buildlng.
Tijuana Fire
De;fi& Eflort,;
U.S. Givea Aid
By JOANNE REYNOLOS Ot ... Oet,.,~,. ...
Two Huntington Beach men
who pleaded not guilty Tuesday
to ctuarges of murder conspiracy
in the Newport Beach murder
case remain jailed today after
$300,000was lopped off their bail ..
Raymond Steven Resco and
Anthony Marone Jr., both or
10121 Merrimac Drive, are still
being held ill Orance County Jail
in' lieu of s200,000 bail each.
That figure was set by Judie
Selim Franklin Tuesday when
the two men appeared with the~
two co-defendants to enter pleas
in the case.
One of the co-defendants, Alex-* * * . FromPageAJ
SHOT •.•
occupants of the home.
Laguna Beach Police Capt.
Neal Purcell said detectives ten-
tatively believe that an infor•
mant close to Richard provided
Newport Beach detectives with a
phone number for Richard's
home.
Purcell said that somewhere in
the process, two digits in
the phone number may have
been transposed.
·"Therefore, the two addresses
were miles apart,•' he said.
He said the two Laguna Beach
investigators involved in the,
shooting have been placed on ad·
minlstrative duly until a
thorough investigation as com·
pleted.
Richard is one of several sus-
pects who face murder con-
spiracy charges for their allegec:t
involvement in the killing of
Bovan outside. the El Ranchito
restaurant in Newport Beach.
F...-PqeAJ
PROTEIN •••
•
ander Kulik, entered bis not au.ii·
ty plea last week. He was freed
after posting a $150,000 bond.
The fourth rtian, Jerry Peter
Fiori, of 19822 Brookburst St ..
Huntington Beach, did not enter
a plea Tuesday reserving that
right until the preliminary hear-
ing in \,he cue wblcb wu s.et for
Nov. 22. •
Fiori, who remains in custody
in lieu of ~.~ b~.u. f •
death eeoaJty P!OCeedirigs lD the
case. Deputy District AUomey
Dave Carter told the court that
he wlll seek the death penalty
against Fiori because be al1eged-
ly has a prior murder c~nviction
from another state because Fiori
is accused of commiltiog a
murder during a kidnapping at·
tempt and because the rr,aurder was committed for pay.
P'iort and Resco are both re-
louted federal witnesses, people ,
HOW TO ADD AN
"ANTIQUE GALLERY"
.LOQK TO YOUR HALL?
WITH HERITAGE'S SUPERB .._,_i.UMl...+t-
BRITT ANY CHEST & MIRROR
'
•
moved to the Orange Cout under
assumed names by the U.S ••
Marshal's office. Carter said the
two men were paid monthly
stipends of $800 to $1,~n retumi
for their testimony aaaimt Mafla5
figures on the east C08$t.
Fiori, in a surprise move, gave,
Kulik'• 11ttomey a letter.absolv-
ing oth~ rutures in.the cue andJ
assumm1 all the blame for 1hei
murdetofStepbenJ()hn Botanof.
Fountaiil Valley.
•
\.
.,.~
Sonaething Ne.e lfndn-the Sun
" Astronomer Charles Kowal , 35, of CalTecb, points toward
microscope device for comparing photographic plates made
through a 48-mch telescope Kowal located a tiny "mini-planet"
between Saturn and Uranus, only 300 miles in diameter, that may
become our solar system's 10th planet. The last planet discovered
m the solar system was Pluto m 1930.
'r
First Gay Elected
To SF Supervisors
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP> A professed
homosexual has been
elected to the Board of
Supervisors for the first
ttme m San Francisco.
where an estimated one
m seHn of the city ~
680.000 res1den~ 1s gay.
Harvey Milk, a 47
year·old businessman
and l'f\o·time loser m
super\'isorial races.
secured 30.S percent or
the vote m District S,
wmning his seat on the
11 member board by a
5 lo-3 margin
H I S EASY victory
o\Cr 17 candidates came
m the first San Francisco
elccllon by district in 80
years In the past.
supervisors were picked
in city-wide volmg
Near Ca•pau
3 WoJDen Victims
Of Sex Assaults
SAN JOSE (AP> Three women have been
sexually assaulted in the last three days near San
Jose State University, police said. The urban cam-
pus has been plagued by about 30 similar attacks
this year.
Police said the latest attack came Tuelday,
when a screaming woman student fought ott a
r very, very dirty man with a Fq Manchu mustache
and a large, protruding stomach.·• The attempted
daylight attack took place on a downtown comer in
the woman's car ..
Another student was abducted on lhe same cGr·
ner Monday night by a man armed with a butchel"
knife, police said. lie forced his victim to a nearby
elementary school where he raped her.
SF Sfli~r S1trrnafi~r•
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ·A sniper walked out
of his apartment and into the custody of surprised
ofCtcen. today after negotiatUlg with police for four
hours. authorities said.
.....--------...... Police said Bob
( ~ ..ilT'r J Jones. 47, surrendered to J i rt. CJ officers m the apartment
Six incumbents and
four other newcomers
nlso were winners In
hght balloting Tuesday
as 51.2 percent of the
city's 339,306 registered
voters went to the polls
on a warm, sunny elec-
tion day
IN ADDITION to US
superv1sor1al c&n·
didates, the ballot was
clogged with 22 referen-
dum measures and
c~oices for city attorney
and city treasure!'.
Milk's district contains
neigh borhoods with
heavily gay populations
.But he called his victory
a mandate for ft is
poJitics -not his
homosexuality.
"THE PEOPLE who
voted for me were con
cerned about the 1s
sues .. I will be a
supervisor who happens
to be gay," he said in a post-ele<:tion interview
"My allegiance is to m y
district and to my city."
While admitting his
role as the city's first.
homosexual supervisor
carries extra
· •ruponsUftllty." Milk
compared his position to
former President Ken·
nedy. the nation's first
Rom an Catholic presi-
dent.
Tut, Tut,
Tickets
hallway after a brief acuf·
rte. He was wearing a r'Or T ....
pistol under his belt. and E' 1 .I "4
two shotguns and a rifle were found hl-hla apart· ment LOS ANGELES <AP>
No on(' was hit by shots fired from the Western Trying to avoid the
Addition district apartment. police sald long Unes and waits that. have occurred '7 MiWon Pla11 T old elsewhere, the county
LOS ANGEI~E.c; CAP) After two days of MU.seum of Art will sell
marathon talks with his top health aides and state tickets for the Klng
and county hospital officials, Gov. Edmund Brown Tutankbamenexhibit.
Jr. ha~ announced a tentative $7 million plan to re-· It wlU be the first time
organize the county's mental health tollowup care the museum has sold ad-
system , vance tickeu. They go on
The plan. which is to be reviewed by heaJ.tb care 1ale Jail. 3 at 84 retail
officials and taken up by the governor at a meeUnt ouUeta in Lo5 Angeles,
ned Tuesday, will "knot toaether a fragmeated Ventura. }(em, Orange,
system that divides sta&e ~nd county c,are," BJ'O'llm · R i ~ e r • i d e . S a n
sald in a tefePhon• interview Tuesda)' evenina.• ' Ber nardino and San
· ., Dteao counties, museum M..-det-Supeet ... ree"/ officiah h ave an·
nounced.
Till ;;s candidates were vylna
fpr a fi ·8 at city couneil, whlcb woWd
tie rhdY: ti1 IU.ncUon it the proposition
P.USts. I
Three mcorporation rneasures were on
the ballot In San Bemardlno County.
In Yucca Valley, cilybood falled 3,2S8
to 1, 731, whlle Big 1Jeir residents voted
down incorporation 723 to 57,. Vat.en. in
Rancho Cucamonga voted to become a
city by a'·~ to 3,cm votes vote. · ·
SHAU
C~ROUSEL
.MICROWAVE
OVEN
•&Pend time with the family .
•. nol iJ1 the kitcbBa
•lt~asl meals • . balanced
meals •.. healthy meals
•The Carousel turns food for
even coolung
•Browning unit too. IR8200
BUMH DRIP COFFEE MAKER
COMMUTER ·
COFFIE CUP
•Sure for Mpping on the freeway
•Large <.'as.} to hold handle
4 drink·lhru lid •Attaches magnetically to
metal. plasllc or carpel:
2-
...,-. '
Gow can I get restaurant corree o.t home? •
Always with a BUNN. Only with a BUNN.• And
it's su~r f&l ••. 8 cups in 3 m1nut11 • Built to
last with copper tubing & stainles:. sled • Wb7 ,
Bunn? '?1~
TH&GllAT
AMERICAN
POPCORN
MACHINf
•Pop• 4 quJrts -of popcorn aLllomaUct)ly butlered' -Serve in the clear cov-er
•Non-!lltick . . eosy to
clean.
1888
·• fo'or your ktichen , . • or
bed with a. nbbon for a auper gift•
•Spoons . fork1 •
spurtles ... and more
19!
t
•4 P011t1on heitbt control. Jow
pile to ht&li shaa
•3 Position handle
•Full time ec:t&e deanin •You've Seen 1t on TV
• ...
•Put the kettle on ..• 1l whistles when
readf •MU'l'o 2\.-2 quart
•Cboose.chocoh>1te/a\~.ado1bar"al
WOdnad11y NOYWr!bet t, 1'77
------------ ---
--I -----------
Saddleback Vall y U~ed School DlsU1ct trustees
• ill decide Dec. 7 whether they should call for a bond elec·
,tjoo in the spring.
: · Their admlniatratora have been recommendinl that ~e~p.ut....$'LlJnllm in local bonds and another $10 million
..in stat~ School BUilding f>rOiram unds on~ M11'1'Ch 7. 1~~78, &.illot .•
1'his shouldn't surprise anyone.
Trustees and administrators have been talking of the
need for a bOnd election now tor well over a year. Original-
ly, they talked of putting it on the ballot last spring. Then
they discusssed calling the election in November. Now
they <Are talking 'Of the spring again, but there still may be
some reluctance to actually call the election
Since so few bond elections have passed lately, this re-
luctance would be understandable, However, th.e school
"board can't continue to hold olf the inevitable
· · If it is delayed longer, voters may conclude additional
'building money really isn't needed.
_ There's every indication the building funds are sorely
needed if minimum educational levels are to be met. If
..that is true and trustees can prove the case, they should .
put the question before the voters. That is their obligation.
Water Quality
'\ The ~e" port-Irvine Waste-Management Planning
Agency, otherwise known as NIWA, is one of those ghOit-
like gO\ crmnental bodies which is little understood by the
public. bul which will ultimately wield power with signifi·
cant <'Conomu.· sidf' effects
The agency 1s one of many in Southern California
•created to meet the demands of the federal water quality
1aw of 1973 1'hc law mandates that these agencies come up
:With a list of :;ources of water pollution for the bodies they are studying in NlWA's case it's the Upper Newport Bay
.... and then devise a plan to stop that pollution
Obviously, the pollution control methods selected by
-NIWA arc gomg to have to be paid for either by the proper-
.ty owners in the area under study or by the government
·'agencies that have jurisdiction.
Recognizing the importance of the plans devised,
·congress included in the bill a mandate that there be max-
im urn public participation in the process of putting
together the pollution control plan
. NIWA directors say they want to hear from the public.
.Right now they are studying the sources of pollution, a
process which must be complete a year from now.
Anyone who has an interest in the Upper Newport Bay
·and the 100,000 acres which drain into it should speak up
.The directors meet on t~e fourth Thursday of each month
at 5 p m in the Newport Beach city hall annex conference
.room
Voice for Public
Tuesday':; election of two new directors to the Irvine
.Ranch Water District may not have seemed impressive, if
one judges it by voter turnout.
But in throwing open the contest for the first time to
popular election of som e board members, the majority
landowner-elected board opened the door to fairer
representation.
While tt\.~ Wt~ • ajority should be in the
hand&.of. popular\Y ete 'members (the count now is 5-2
in favor of the landowne ;t, the people at least now have a
foot in. t~I · •
Even though outnumbered, residents now will have
increased ac~ lo th• JMer workings of their water
board. ~
With t.he e~clion ot popular members, new chan-
pels or eopununltation anCI information have been opened.
If lhere was one thine this elect.ton demonstrated, it is
that a great many people are interested in holding these
J>OSitions '
With 18 candidates for the two division seats, the
Jrvine water bOard election was the most populous and
probably the liveliest of all Orange County special district
contests decided Tuesday
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
arti'>ts. Reader comment is Invited. Address The Daily Piiot. PO
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321
Boyd I Resistance
ByL.M. BOYD
• In every conquer<?d country
occupied by foreign soldiers
there thrives a resistance
movement, an underground.
One of these flourished in
Czechoslovalua when the Sov-
iet.a moved into that naUon.
And therein was conceived:
' The Ten Commandments of
\sistance -We naven't
learned anything. We doti't
tgl9w anythlna. Wedon'thave
an1tbing. We don't give
M..Ythlng. We can't do aaythin,i. We don't sell
Jinything. We won't help. We
dGi'l understarid.. We don'l
betray. WE WON'T FORGET ~YTHJNG."
A. It. hasn't any. Nor any
arsenal, evidently. When
President Lyndon B. Johnson
visited there nine years ago,
Costa Rica had to bortbW a
cannon from El Salvactor for
the2l·gunsalute
w ashlnitOft •
Their major effort has been
aimed naturally enough at
Congress.
with its tight
told on the
federal purse
An unsettling
number of
coneressmen.
over the
years, have
been re·
sponsave ~o
overtures and
payments from foreien agents.
The Koreans are pikera, for ex·
ample, compared to the Chinese
Nationalists. The late Chiang
Kai-shek channeled mon.er into
the right congl'essionat pockets
through friendly American busi-
nessmen who passed out cam·
pa1gn contributions and through
relatives who carried huge rolls
of $100 bills and peeled them off
to those who preferr~d that sort of
gross transaction
IN CONTRAST to the petty
Korean payoffs, witne:ises told us
of a tryst in a New England field
where Chiang ·s emissaries de·
hvered SS00,000 in cash to a late
senator
The Chinese Nationalists also
wanted far more out of the Un.it·
ed States than the mllitary ship-
ments the South Koreans have
sought. The hidden aims ot the
Nationalists were revealed in a
collection of secret cables, which
we obtained through a Chinese
code clerk two decades ago.
Chiang Kai-shek wanted no
less than to embroil the United
States in a third world war so he
could ride back t.o power in the
rumble seat of an American vic-
tory. He recognized It would be
difticult toscJI the American peo-
ple upon attacking the Chines~
mainland. Declared a Dec. 5,
1949. cable "Our hope of a world
war so as lo rehabilitate our
country is unpalatable to the
fAmerican) people."
THE OUTBREAK of war in
Korea brought new hope to the
mese A cable dated July 14, J 1
Mailho~ ,
To the Editor:
A recent news article describ·
ing the phght of Rheingold
breweries and its plea for a
federal loan engeruh!rs an ob·
setvalion. ,
Any self-respecting and
knowledgeable beer connoisseur
who has visited Germany and
prosit the real thing or who has
resisted the Yankee-Doodle,
macho.advertisiog·ccm · ~nd, m·
stead, let their tast ·buds do th~
drinking, has Iona ago 1lb•n·
doned any hopeotuvorlnJ ih the
USA a hometown-produced, un-~ .
pasteurized, additive-&ee, true·
flavor, ma.lt-t>everage.
Wby? BecauseUie US Bureau<>f •
Alcobol, Tol5acco & Firearms.
which rulesonsuch matters, has,
by its definition of sn~lt·
beverages, authoriied an almost
endless list or chemical adjuncts
<addlUves) used by American
breweries lo make American
"beer" look and taste llke beer.
t~
.
seems. wants to assume the
financial responsibility of its sup-
port -it reStoratlon -its mere
existence.
the barn and the adjacent
pasture land stand io the path of
progress. As every other piece or
vacant lond In OraJtge County
does. I believe most dcf101tely in
progress. sincerely. pro
JcssionaJly, idealistic.ally_
But. I also believe that \\ 1s
tame \\e tried topresenie a s~'all
linmple of the past. In anothet-"20
years this migM well b the last
authentic barn let\ fn Orange
County.
J •
pende<l upon rain gutterS' on the
roof down spouted to a 20() gallon
galvanized metal tanlC. A few of
the more well-to·do residents had
elaborate underground cisterns
with a hand pump at the ktlctien
sink.
It was bi~ news when we first
got electricity in our town. It was
from an Edison Company plant
consisting of a huge stationary
engine with a belt driven
generator located on Broadway
where the Buick Agenty aow has
its car lot. Prior to that we had been using candles, kerosene
lamps and carbide gas made by
dropping water on pellets
... ,
"
" .
Hanes
~Rl~r:~